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Page 10 • Ttte Dtllly Santlnel

·Reedsville UMW discuss
railing for church
The Reedsville United Methodist
Women met at the home of Mrs.
Grace Weber recently.
.
Weber read the "Purpose of the .
u .M.W. to open the meeting. Emma
Dorsi read "When Mother Made An
Angel Cake."
.
More than a hundred shutin calls
were made and cards were sent to
several friends. A thank you card was
received from Weber for a donation
· made to Carleton School. A thank
you note was sent to Tommy Reed for
' electric work at the church.
Frances Reed, Regina Reed. Ann
Lacomb, and Debbie Weber were
hppointed to a committee to buy urns
the

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuaedey,llay21, 1M

Ohio Lottery

Southern alumni royalty Good Sams pick up ~litte~
Nllional Good Sam Club Meal- area.
Tbe Bil BCII!l Sams Ja:Cntly
ben (R.V. owners) -will Uke to die
roads, streets and hiib-ways to pick attmded lhe Wesi Vlfllnia Oooii
San1 Chjb Spring S1111boree 111 Holly
up litter today.
•
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Each sttte has several chaplen. Gray Park. There were lpiXOllrute-

Buckley and Diana· J~ are in
charge of having the church piano
tuned. Also, a discussion was held
about a new railing for the church. A
new member, ~o5c Niday, was weicorned into the Oft!anization.
Refreshments were served to the
above named and to Pearl Osborne,
Susie Mash, Rosemary Young, Lillian Pickens, - and guests, Maxine
Whitehei!d and Bernadine Snyder.
Games were played and prizes
awarded. Niday received the door
prize. The next meeting will be with
Nina Boston.

West Virjinja's newest chapter, The
Big Bend Sarns, covers Mason, Jackson and Kanawha Counties in West
Virginia and Gallia and franklin
counties.
The local chapter will pick up
traSh along U.S. 33 BIIIM.R. 2 in.the
Millwood area of Jackson County,
which is their "Adopt-A-Highway"

-

0978 .

Pick 3:
821
Pick 4:
9270
Buckeye 5:
8-19-26-28-38

Sporla on P~ge 4

Southern High eenlora Ja~n Shuler, son of Steve and Wanda
Shuler of Letart, and Jyl Matthews, daughter of Charlie and Rita
Matthews of Racine, were crowned Racine Alumni King and
Qu..-. at the annual gathering of Racine High and Southern High
Alumni at Racine Saturday evening. Crowning Matthewsl.s 1995
Raclna Alumni Queen Courtney Roush, rlghL (T. Hunter/Sentinel
photo) .

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Cle•r tonlahl, lowe In
40a. Tl'luracfay, aunny.
High In 80s.'

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Hamm -receives
state FFA qegree

F'ISCher t0
church. Nancy . observe 89th

An open house to celebrate the
89th birthday anniversary of Hattie
Fischer, 45267 Baum Road,
Pomeroy, will be held 2 to 4 p.m.
Sunday, June 2, at the Meigs County
Public Library, 216 West Main
Street, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Fischer is the mother of
three daughters, Alice Jones of
Chesapeake, Dorothy Schwarz of
Mason, W. Va. and Joyce Mills of
Pomeroy. She also has nine gr8)ldchildren and 17 great-grandchildren.
The family requests that gifts be
· omitted.

ly 130 rec,telllional vehicle&amp;.
The Well Virginia Oood Sana
Club will have their Fall S..nbolee II
the Muon County FaiiJI'OUftds il!
September.
•
If anyone is interested in joining
the group, ~all . Don Youn1 II 882,
2373 or Steve Trapani (614) 446;

Indians,
Reds lose
.contests

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211 I ne,t2Pttgee

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednaaday, May 29, 1996

A OMnell Co.. FJ&amp;

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Later this week

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By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff

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to sevendoct'?rs and create 18 to 22
new jobs. Doctors will usc the Veterans Memorial Hospital facility for
testing and other services including
in-patient and acute care. in joint use
with the new facilities.
The county entered fonnal dis·
cussions on the land transfer on
March IIi meeiing. '"I know that Con·
solidated is very anxious to break
ground on the project. We're hopeful
that the lease agreement will be
completed this week," said commissioner Janet Howl!l'd.
In other matters, the board:
- opened and accepted the following bids for the county highway
depanrnent: Bituminous .bid by
Asphalt Materials, Inc. of Marietta;
Pit Run Sand bids of $.50 per ton by
Forest Run Ready Mix and Jeffers
Coal, T11,1Cidng, and Excavating, both
of Pomeroy.

• approved a requested five percent raise for employees of the Meigs
County Depanrnent of Human Services, with the funding for the salary
increase to be taken solely frotD avail·
·able state and federal funds. '
- approved three percent raises for
all county employees who have not
received them as of yet. under the pay
increase provisions as set in the
1996 county budget.
- heard from Chester Township
resident Pearl Edwards concerning
.the possible closing of Chester Township Road#413 (Edwards Road). The
board e~plained that the township
trustees must make the request, which·
is then evaluated by the county highway department. No action was taken on the issue.
- appointed a nood variance board
which will be involved in any appeals
of Hood claims, consisting of corn- .

m1ss1on president Fred Hoffm.a:
Meigs SWCD otr~eial Mike Duhl,
prosecuting;dtorney John l..entes, ~
Chester Township trustee Gary Oil~
· . approved certification :Or.
$183,780 as new funds for 1996 tol;
the Letart area water project whic(ti(
being funded through the Appalachl-&gt;
an Regional Commission.
'-·
- approved employment of DreG:
da Leslie as part-time grants assistatif
for the county, upon the recom~
dation of county grants administrafoi
Jean Trussell.
·,read a infonnational memo fro.ii.
the Meigs County Board of Election· announcing the increase of poll work,;
ers salaries to $70 for elections wot£
- approved payment of the wee ly bills of $174,075.41 consisting of.
174 entries.
,
:
Present were commissioners Fred.
Hoffman, Janet Howard, Robert·Hanenbach and clerk Gloria Kloes.

Jury convicts Tucker, ·Clinton's
1110¥•·
ex•business
-~partners·
Of
fraud.
RA.c takes ·steps ...
to aid profitabillfy

with coupon

!

hope to complet~l
hospital leaSe agreement ~:1.·.

PUBLIC OFFERING -: Gerald A. Meyers, president of
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp., Ia credited with lmprov!ng labor·
management relations after • 2CI-montt! dispute with the United
S...lworkera. RAC Ia offering Its stock to .the publiC and plana
big chang. In the form of technology, equipment ~d a ~
~
(AP)

70o/o

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Arkansas governor to step down

ALL KIRSH BLINDS

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Offici~;~ls

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with Meatballs &amp;Garlic Bread

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·VoL 47, NO. 23

County officials will meet later
this week with Consolidated Health
System officials to continue work
toward a lease agreement for property to construct a $1.5 million propoSed medical arts building to con\plemenl Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes stated that he is
scheiluled to meet with Consolidated
Health Systems officials, comprised
of Holzer Clinic, Holzer Medical
Center and Veterans Memorial Hospital, at which time he is hopeful that
both sides will reach an agreement on
the lease agreement of land located
adjacent to the Meigs County Infirmary.
.
Plans call for construction of a
I0,000-to-.12,000-square-foot build·
ing on the site, which will house three

2 ·sPAGHETTI
DINNER .

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P)lilip Hamm, son of Tom and
Linda Hamm,. Racine, recently
received his state FFA degree in
Columbus. The award is awarded to
the top two percent of the FFA mern·
bership in the state.
Other awards won this year
include first place in Dairy production in District I0 FFA competition,
and fifth place in Beef Production.
Philip was also awarded the Star .
Chapter FFA award from the Southern Racine FFA chapter.
Philip has served as presi~nt of
PHILIPHAMM
the Racine FFA chapter for the past
two years. He is a member of the
Hamm's supervis~d occupational
Meigs County Junior Fair Board. He
experience
prog!'lllll consists of ten
has also panicipated in the state farm
feeder
calves
and Holstein milk cows.
business management, forestry and
.Hamm's
FFA
advisor is Aaron Sayre:
soils competition.

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LITI'LE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - In he testified he took no pan in dis- tioned in the indictment," she told the
ln the first trial to en\crge from the
a verdict that breathes new life into cussioris about 'llegalloans, he said: New York Post. "It was not a politi- investigation into the Arkansas real '
Whitewater as a political issue, jurors "I doubt that. I doubt that that's what cal issue- it was a criminal trial." estate venture, Tucker and McDougal
· paid lillie heed to President Clinton's was going on, but you ought to ask
But Republicans were quick to were conv1ctcd of conspirfng to
testimony
and
convicted
his
former
\llern."
pounce
- calling the president's arranj!e nearly S~ million in fraudu'
In 1990, the company's busmess
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. (AP)business panners and Gov. Jim Guy
Jurors questioned after the vendict . credibility into question even though lent loans from two federally backed
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. is was heavily concentrated on produc· Thcker of fraud.
said 'they largely ignored Clinton's he faced no charges.
banks, including the McDougat$i.:
offering its stock to the public and ing nat-rolled aluminum used. in
Reactjon ' to Thesday's convic- •testimony and were swayed more by
Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, the New Madison Guaranty Savings and Loam •
plans technology changes and a bead· beverage cans. But much of that busi· . lions of James McDougal, his ex-. a devastating papertrail- 618 docMcDouga.l was found guilty of 18
quaners move as it looks for prof- ness disappeared during the dispute. wife, Susan, and Thcker came quick- uments, including canceled checks Yorj&lt; Republican who chairs the Sen- .
ate
investigations
commillee
on
of
19 counts of fraud and conspir.i- :
itability after a biller 20-month labor
Aluminum for beverage cans con- ly.
•
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and
loan
papers
against
the
defenWhitewater,
said
the
convictions
cy, and Tucker was convicted on twp !
dispute.
stitutes only about 20 percent of . Within hours, Tucker, a·Democrat dants. ·
"indicate the seriousness and depth of seven felony counts - one cacti •
Now the main subsidiary of Cen- Ravenswood's business. The remain- who succeeded Clinton as governor,
"President Clinton is a very cred- of Whitewater for those who said .of fraud and conspiracy.
;
tury Aluminum Co., the 2,~00- der goes to aircraft, automotive and announced that he would resign by ible witness. but his testimony didn't there was nothing there."
Mrs.
McDougal
was
convicted
i
·
employee company has been offering boating and marine industries, Taylor · July 15, saying the state should. be reallv relate to .the transactions we
Sen. Lauch Faircloth, R-N.C., a all.f~ur fraud -related charges again~i l
its stock for public use for six weeks. said. Also, the company has a con· spared the distraction of his appeals. were dealing with," said juror Risa
member of the Special Select Com- her. mcludmg charges she illegally •
The initial price was S13 a share and tract with the Steelworkers that runs
At the White House. Clinton said Briggs.
mittee
on Whitewater, said the ver- benefited from a $300,000 loan made !
that has moved up to $15, a stock through 1999, he said. ·
he felt sorry "on a personal level" for
"It was the ·documents we went dicts "clearly demonstrate that the in 1986 when Clinton was govemot. !
analyst said Tuesday.
"'We've tried to focus on the his three Ark.ansas friends and with," added juror Janice Greer. Whitewater hearings and. the indeThe prosecution's chief witness •
In the three years prior to going things that we can really do. well shrugged off ·any political blow. " I "The documents told me more than pc!ldcnt counsel's investigation have
former
banker David Ha'tc, had ;
public, Ravenswood lost $76 million. where there aren't a lot of cpmpeti· was asked to give testimony. I did the testimony did."
not been motivated by politics, as the claimed two .years ago that Clinton l
according to filings with the Securi- tors," Meyers said. "'I'm pleased at • that. And for me, it's time to go back
Sandy Wood, a 38-year-old moth- White House has suggested for the press'ured him to make the $300 000 ;
ties and Exchange Commission.
how everything has turned oul. We're to work."
er of two, said Clinton's testimony last two years, but have been based loan to Mrs. McDougal. An 'FBI ·;
"We do not intend to just tend the a pretty solid company. and I think
Asked whether the Verdict meant simply wasn' t relevant.
on real criminal acts by close busi- agent testified that nearly $50.000 of l
garden," said Gerald A. · Meyers, time will show that to everybody.''
the jurors did nOI believe him wben . "Bill Clinton's name is not men· ness associates of the president."
the loan went improperly to White- !
president of Century.
The plant has run at full capacity
water transactions.
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since
the
strike.
Meyers joined the comp.tny after
the June 1992 seulement of the labor
Meyers and Steve Sedberry, Cenproblems between the company and tury's vice president of marketing,
the United Steelworkers.
will leave West Virginia when Cen.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Will lion budget correction bill. which
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincin- the money to pay for the c.ut would.~
"Maybe it took that~ and I don't . t\lry moves its headquaners to Mon·
he or won't ·he•
· updates the operating budget that nati, said he had no idea whether not come from the state's $800 mit... :
recommend it -to wake everybody terey, Calif.. by early next year.
That
was
the
question
in
the
went into effect on July I.
Voinovich would warm to the idea lion-and-growing budget surplus ~·
up to the real world, both the hourly
The headquaners move will not
.mindi
of
state
senators
T11esday
after
The
current
budget
increases
the
after the governor last week accused Democrats had proposed.
and salary work foJCe," said Dewey affect other employees, said compa:; :
passing a income iax cut just ~ys deduction this year and ne~t. The new Democrats of political grandstanding
Taylor, president of United Steel· ny spokesman Pat Gallagher.
Finan could not say how much~:
"'It's a good location for cus, after Gov. George Voinov1ch plan Will ratse the deduction for tax- when they put forth the idea.
workers Local 5668 at Ravenswood.
tax cut will save the average Ohioa4.!
payers and their spouses to $1.050 by
"I haven't a clue," Finan said.
When the union's contract with tomers and prospective customers on 1 promised to veto one.
but said the move will cost the stat~;
Senate
Republicans
tacked
on
a
1999.
.
.
But he added that Republicans about $100 million overthrcc budgti(-~
~avenswood expired in 1990, the the West Coast," Gallagher said of
The b11l now ~oves ~n to · the tried to pass a tax n:duction that years.
union offered to continue to work the move to Monterey. "Ravenswood SIOOincreaseinthepersonalincome
::.:
tax
deductions
.
for
1998
and
1999
House,
where some Republtcans also might survive Voinovich"s velo, not·
under the terms of the expired agree- is primarily East Coast-' and Mid·
Voinovich spokesman Michacit;
ing that Voinovich already signed on Dawson gave no indication that ttMt~
ment. But the company locked out west-oriented . and this will assist during debate on the state's $21 mil- have been clamoring for a tax cut.
.
to
the concept in the last budget, and governor had changed his mind. :~!
the wqrkers and hired replacement them."
Improved ·equipment for the alu~.:
employees.
minum
plant
is
in
the
works
to
keep
The union. however. waged a
.. -..:1
high-profile campaign that persuad- the plant ~ost-effective, Meyers said.
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The
Meigs
Local
Board
.
o
r
EduTodd Gardner, district EM!SffechCentury also. owns a minority
ed Coca Cola Bcltding Co. and Stroh
·~
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Brewery Co. to slop buying alu- interest in an aluminum smelter in cation approved the hiring of summer nology coordinator, to eleven-month
".:'
progr;I!D instructors and a new junior contracts effective at the beginning of
Mount Holly, S.C.
minum from Ravenswi,)Od. ·
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high science teacher during their the 1996-97 school year.
.:-1.
regular meeting Tuesday evening at
- approved a contract with Ohio
Middleport Elementary.
·
University to provide a licensed AthThe board appro~ the hiring of letic Trainer to the Meigs Local
·~
David Barr as Science Teacher at School District ·for the 1996-97
·.:
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Meigs Junior High School on a one- school year and for the District to
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year contract, effective ·at the begin- provide a $1 0Q a month stipend to the
CINCINNATI (AP) - A West barges that the company was clean-. ning of the !996-97 school year.
trainer to assist in mileage and
Virginia-based towing company and ing.
. :~
The hiring of.the following sum- expenses.
Judge S. Arthur Spiegel accepted mer program instructors, pen4ing
'one of its executives have pleaded
- approved entering executive ses~
guilty to felony charges of illegally the guilty pleas. Mayes, 53, is free on · enrollment. were IIJIProved: Mict.el sion for the discussion of pending lit-='
dumping oil, solvents and sewage his recognizance, pending sentenc· Wilfong, program director; Ed Bar- igation.
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intO the Ohio and Kanawha rivers.
ing. A sentencing hearing will be held des, summer enrichment instructor; . - approved the advertisement of
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. Kanawha River Towing Inc., of ·in abouttwo months after coun offi. John Bentle~, science; Joy Bentley, bids for fleet insurance for the dis....
Point Pleasant. W.Va., and Ronald G. cers complete a pre-sentencing · English II.
trict.
•
Mayes, port captain of the company, report.
ak .
.
The list of 131 graduates from the
- approved the minutes of the May
Federal law m es tt a cnme to Class of 1996 at Meigs High School 14, 1996 regular board meeting as
admitted in U.S. District Court on
•
Thesday that the discharges fiom knowingly discharge pollutants into was approved by the board, as sub- submined.
STRUGGUNO WITH WEATHER • Warble contlnuad con- ' .'•
1991 to 11}115 occurred with their navigable waters.
nutted by Fenton Taylor, hiJh school . Present were Supcrintel)(lent Bill
atruc:llon on the Pomeroy R~t Promenade pntjlct Frld8y . :~
knowledge.
Kanawha River Towing faces principal.
a"*•llCICM.....,.
aunny 11t111, • 1My piKed..,.... on hroat • ••
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Buckley, Treaslnr Cindy RhoneProSecutors said the pollutants fines of $5,000 to $SO,OOO for each
In bther mallen, the bolnl:
of ... -.ct
a In the 1oww end of the IDt.. Wot~ re on tile ••
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mus, board members RDaw Abbclu.
wtte dumped from the company's . .daY of the viol~s: Mayes f&amp;lfCS. up
- approved 1 chaitge ia the con- Scon Walton, John Hood, Randy
proj1ct, • w.lllli other conabucllon Jlf'CIIu181n l i e - . . . ••
•
tow bolls, ast0111ge tank on land and to three yeats tn pnson and stmtlar tract statUJ of Dennis Eichia,U,
• •
once
lglln
ltrultllng
with
....
_
ltoin11
that
h8w
han~
1rwc1
Humphreys and Larry Rupe.
••• ••
fines.
work throughout lie eprlng. (T. H.. llllrfSan.. NI phoea)
assis!Ut HiJh School PrinciPII, IIIII
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o'n

Senate OKs tax cut, await governor's veto ...·~

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COUPON

lOK &amp;14K Gold
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Ropes &amp; Herringbone
Chain Best Prices

JJI.cquisitions
!fine Jewe[rg

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Meigs board hires personnel

91 Mill StrHI, Middleport
992·6250

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river pollution charges ·

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Wedn11ct.y, lilly 21, 11M

P~~ge.2

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111 Court St., P~. Ohio
614-992·21511 • Fu: 992-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
· ROBERT L. WINGETT
· Publisher

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:CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Manager

--Tiley-,_,_.
tNn- ""''·AN,_..,__Inc__
-lelopllfKIO .....,.
· - , . Ill
,..or....,.._
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L - . 101M odltor.,.
orw subjoct 10~7.:::.No ~
... , . ,...,_. MldNaing l:uUN, nor

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EL PASO, Teus -- In a sq1111 red
• brick building on an Anny base here,
i some of the nation's top drug-figluers from a half-dozen inlelligence
1 agencies cboperaae under the umbrella of the El Paso Intelligence Center.
"We need all !he minds we can get
on this," one official told us.
"because the drug traffickers are
working overtime coming up with
clever methods of smuggling drugs
· into this countty."
.
EPIC keeps track of the everrchanging methods that dealers use to
get drugs across the border. It then
provides alerts and information to the
U.S. Customs Service, the Drug
Enforcement Administration and other agencies that-.monitor America's
borders.
·
Confidential EPIC alens. and other reports shown to our associate
Dale Van Atta, reveal some of the
inventive mc!thods that drug smugglers use to gel their co~traband into
the countty:
-- Body concealment methods are
the easiest to discover, EPIC con-

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What they are saying
elsewhere
around Ohio
.
,
Qy The Associated· Preas

j Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio news-

.
~ Beacon Journal, May 26
: Gov. George Voinovich prides himself on his honesty, political and otherwise. He would .be the first to admit that he hasn't fulfilled the pledge he
11\ade in the 1990 campaign to be the "education governor." Indeed. he said
a.{ much in January 199S when ·he launched his second term.
; The state continues to neglect its public schools, failing to provide the
r~ulj:es , the money, necessary to operate a first-rate education system.
• That is a sha!Jie. It is ail the more so because politicians routinely uuer
p~litudes abou( !heir responsibility to the state's future, to its children. Do
tbl:ir words mean anything to them?
· ; To their·credit, Yoinovich. and others in the Statehouse have pushed the
education system ahead somewhat. The current state budget inclodes the first
soiJstantial increase in school funding in almost a decade. The governor has
made Head Start and similar programs aimed at younger children a high priority, and he has delivered.
~rs :

The Lima News, May 2S
1\re you wondering why the Republican Parry is taking such a beating
in rbe national public opinion polls? Just look to the current tax debate in
Ohio.
GOP Gov. George Voinovich. a contender for this year's vice presidential ·slot, by the way, has willingly cast aside one of the main issues that has
histcrical.!y unified the Republican Party: tax relief. Despite the state's SI
billion budget surplus, he has asked the Legislature to bOrrow $1.6 billion
_to build stadiums, university buildings, prisons and other facilities.
While many states go about lowerin·g their income tax·, Ohio under
Voinovich 's leadership clings to a high rate that discourages new business
formation. ·
·
·
As long as GOP politicians are content to stiHe tax cuiS and increase
spending, especially on such obvious private-business concerns as sports stadiurlls. they shouldn't be surprised·when the Democrats score election ·vic-

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•tones.

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cedes, if one follows a few basic
steps. Caniers use lailored' vesiS,
underwellf and ~~ or ankle bandlges
to conceal drup and cash. One report

-- In a variant of IIIII scheme, one
•• Drugs are sometimesconcealed
in false compiutmeniS of both mu-d trafficking OI'Jillizalion tried to conand soft luuaae -- and the baagage cea16,240 poullds of nwijuana inside
carts shouldn' t be overlooked. U.S. a propane tanker truck IIIII crossed
Customs offiCials at Houston and the border in El Paso. They had fixed
New York airports once discovered all the valves so tha~ if checked,'they
By
this was a speci~lty of Nigerian would aclllllly release some propane
couriers arriving via Nigeria Airways. gas. But they made a couple of misAltogether, some 130 to 300 grams of [4kes. according to an EPIC report.
heroin were found inside their tubu- , The "tanker was freshly painted,
. tar metal bauage cares. The only which is unusual ." The company
advises inspectors to be on the look- tipoff was new soldering and' paint. name, · "Hydro Gas Juarez, " was
out for loose-fitting clothing, use of The metal tubes had to be broken misspelled. 'n!e coiTect spelling is
heavy clothing in the summertime, "a open to retrieve the heroin packed " Hidro." Tapping the side of toc
stiff posture and gait," or this final inside.
.
tanker produced no echo, but a dull
giveaway: "Observe the subject bend
-- Some drug couriers use hot liq- thudding sound. And one handle
over. If bending is difficult, suspicion uid asphalt tanker trucks to transport could not he turned because of the
should be aroused."
large marijuana shipments. The drugs marijuana stuck against it.
-- Many couriers bring drugs in are loaded into front and rear com-- Some traffickers con51ruct fiberhollow-soled shoes. The "indica- panments and asphalt is put in the glass camper shells to in!tude a false
tors," according to the report, are the middle. The easiesr method for dis- front wall compartment for concealodor of glue. shoes that are new or covery is a hands-on test. If part of ing drugs. Another favorite method is
"show yery little wear, whereas the the tanker wall is n&lt;i! hot, it's likely . to install a false compartment in the
other clothing articles worn by the a hidden marijuana compartment. tool boxes that are comn,ton in pick-.
The next step for the traffickers, prob- up .trucks.
subj~X:t may be well worn." The only
J
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ably;
will be a thin skin outlining the
wa~ to check out for sure. EPIC sars,
EPIC also provides a list of warnos to dnll from the bottom eMenor whole . tank~r wall and pumped ing signs for inspectors who monitor '
through with hot liquid asphalt.
side. ·
trucks, trains and ships coming into
the CQuntty. Any &lt;&gt;f the following
signs. inspectors warn in a. report,
could indicate a drug shipment:
-- Freshly painted conlainers.
-- Unprofessionally stenciled or
improperly positioned container identification numbers.
-- Co~tainers that have been ·
placed
into·a normally unused area ai
/
the port of entry.
..
, --Attempts to move.specific ~on. tainers away.from inspectors. . ' .
-- Requests to move containers to
normally unused locations for fumi· COFFEE
gation or manipulation of merchanPt/fftTIVE
dise.
-- Containers with inside and ou_tside numbers that don't ll)atch. .
-- Paneled container walls that
should sound solid when tapped, but_
don't.
--J:'Iew welds or.r~cent repairs on
tanker containers.
''
Once suspicion h·as been aroused,
drug enforcement agents are then
able to use one or more of the more
sophistkated checks that they have at
their disposal.
Jack Anderson and Michael Bin. stein are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
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Berry's Wo_rld

/an

JOE
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Lau·ra See Garlinger

•I Columbul!7f1' I

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~ Southeastern Ohio

Today...Mostly cloudy with show: ers an~ thunders10rms likely...Main; ly this morning: High ~n die upper
, 60s. North windS to.IO mph. Chance ·
; of rain 60 percent.
,. Tonight...B~X:oniing mostly clear.
• Low 40 to 4S. Northeast wind 5 to IS
: mph.
·
: ' Thursday...Sunny. High i;s to 70.

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with'a chance of rain in some areas.
~ Clearing skies tonight will-bring Rain and ihunderstorms were possi,
' relief from !he persistent rain, but also ble from the .Southeast to the midwill· allow temperatures across Ohio Atlantic region, and in Ohio, parts of
to dip in 'the 40s; forecasters sai~.
Indiana and southern Illinois.
. • Heavy thunderstorms this mom·
Showers also were forecast from
ing dumped an inch or more of rain the Pacific Northwest and Sierra
on parts of ·northern arid central Nevada to Mcin13Ra and Wyoming.
Ohio. The National Weather Service
There was a risk of severe weath.posted Hash Hood warnings for sev- er and locally heavy rainfall from
'era! counties. However, no major northwest Otah to Montana. There
:flooding was reported. ·also was a chance of some afternoon
A sunny day is on tap for Thurs- thunderstorms in Colorado and New
~ay, the NWS said, with highs 6S-70. Mexico and from the Dakotas.
n• Dry and warmer conditions should ' Nebrask,, Kansas, Oklahoma and
·continue tl!rough Saturday. forecast- Texas to Missouri, Arkansas and
'ers said.
Louisiana ..,
;; The record-high temperature for
Severe weather also was forecast
this date at the Columbus weather from Mississippi to the Virginias.
station was 94 degrees in .1914 while · Carolinas, Georgia and northern
the record low was 38 in 1949: Sun- Florid&amp;. Thundentorms there could
set tonight will be at 8:S2 p.m. and ' produce isolated tornadoes. large
sunrise Thursday at 6:06 a.m.
hail, loci!! rainfall amount~ of up to.
Across the nation
two inches, aild local wind'gusts to6S ·
Clouds hung over much of the mph. .
.
nation early this morning and a
Temperatures were expected to
P.redawn 'thund'erstorm brought 7S climb into the 60s and 70s in the
mph winds to Laredo, Texas. The Plains, New.England, Pacific NorthSouthwest was warm.
westt Midwest
mid-Atlantic
and
,
t
,
- Temperatures ranged from 83 the Great Lakes regions. Readings
degrees in Houston to a chilly 3~ at could top 90 in the Southwest and
¥ellowstorie Lake, Wyo.
South.
~ Cool weather was. expected to
Rockford, Ill., received 4.77 inchcontinue across the upper Ohio Val- es of rain Tuesday, bre!lking !he.old
l~Y and northern mid-Atlantic record of 1.95 inches -set on the date
regions. Skies ·could clear in those . in 1914.
regions as drier air pushes south from ·
The nation's hot spot Tuesday was
Ganada. ·
Laredo, Texas. at 107, while the cold: It could be breezy and C(/Oier from est reading was 28 at Grand Canyon
!he dreat Lakes to New England, Ariz.
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To punhis into perspective, consider other day-to-day . risks: nie
Odds of dying from falling out of bed
are one in 2 million. The chances of
'dying in the bathtub (or shower) are
one in a million . The risk of choking
to death on food is one in 160,000.
The prospect of dying in an auto accident is one in S.OOO. ·

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The harsh rcafity is that we do riot
live in a zero-risk sociel¥. While it is
understandable that the public is
alarmed whenever a plane crashes,
there is some solace in knowing that
air travel is much safer than it has
ever liccn.
.
Joseph Perkins is a coluo";nist
rorThe san Diego Union-Tribune.

Twister hits .P:utnam County·area
BANCROFT, W.Va. (AP) ,.-- H~lan Casto had just returned borne
from baseball practice when he
noticed water froin the Kanawha Rivet "swirled and swirled" into the ait,
. It was 'a tornado that briefly
.~ouched down before lifting back into
the clouds,
'
"It sounded like ~ freight train," .
Harlan said Tuesday night after the
twister ripped up trees a~d power
lines in Putnam County.
Thirteen-year-old Hailan said he
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"saw the rivet suck up into the sky. "
A large tree on the property was
twisted and splintered.
''It 'Picked up the tree and turned
it around three times, just like it was
standing there, and threw it," Harlan
said.
, The tree skidded abQut 40 'yards
into a ferice, demolishing a swing set
and wooden patio furniture.
Harlan said he saw a lawn chair
along the bank get thrown several
hundreds yards into a neighbOr's
property, while a small plastic child's
pool a few feet away was untouched.
No injuries or serious damage was
The Daily Sentinel repOrted
Tuesday i1s rain, high winds,
(USPS1t~)
. ·and hail plagued southern and central
West Virgi'!ia regions.
Pllbliohed ....,. allenioon, Monday ....Up
Aida)~. Ill Coun St., PonllltO)I; Obio, by the
Rains led to Hash flooding in porOl!io~leyi'Ublllhioa~Co­
tions
of Cabell, Kanawha and Putnam
- , . Ohio 4~69. I'll. m:1156. Second
counties, the National·Weather Serclou postqe
0(.........,., Ohio.
' .· vice. Most streams returned to their
._.,., n. """"1..... Pia., ond die Ohio banks early this morning, the wcathNewspaper A&amp;locllllion.
er service said.
POiTMAS'I'ER: Scowl -.u -ou10
The tornado ihat touched down
.Tho Dolly Scnti,.l, Ill Coon SL• .._.,,
brjefl~ in Putnilm A~unty, knocked
Olllo .,769.
down trees and power lines, residents
SUIISCiliPTION RATES
· said
·
.BY C.nleror-'
.
One w..t..................................................$2.011
Several residents reported the
OneM-..............................................$1.10
One Yeor .......................... .............. ..... StOtOO . · twister kissed the Kanawha River
, near Bancroft, a town of 381, about.
SJNGLB COPY ..Uca
7:30 p.~. The twiste'r reportedly folDolly ............ .......... _......... .. ~..............lSCoOII I · to~ t)le northern bank brieRy
SuiN&lt;riben "'"""~~ oo
llefm retn:ating, tesidenll said.

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• '11le Dlllly llldlil
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.'Hoa·pltal ·news
·-'lal
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an
Tuesday adlnissiOillnOM.
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Poor school districts say they
need more than computers

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Am Ele Power ....................... 40'1.
Akzo ......................................58\

Ashland 011 ..~ ........................ 42\
AT&amp;T ................................;....63%
Bank One .............................. S&amp;~
Bob Ev.a ........:...................13\
~w.,.._ ........~·.................40'4
Chemplon lnd....................... 18'0
ChltmiM Shop ......................7'!.
~~dlng ............................ 23
I Mogul..................... 18\·
ft~- " - ' .........,.........................Gooctp•• TAR ......................;so'.-·
K-1111it ...............................:...11'0
LIIIIM-End .............................22\
Umlltcllnc.....................: ........ 21
"-DpiiiJ!Iancoi'p. ..................23
Qhlo Valley Blnk~ ..................32
0111
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v.,.,. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .

RCIC:I!MI' ..............................n ..

Rollblritl Wtrs..... ~ .......... ~~
R~ Dl.llcttllallell ..............1507.
Sl.......,il,~alnc ' ·
12

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MF

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Pool to open

The LOndon Pool at Syracuse has tentatively been scheduled to open ' ·
Satl!rday.
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Season tickets are on sale at $25 a person with a second 9ne
available in the same family at half price until June 5. The tickets may • .
he purchased at the pool now or at the Water Board office, June 3, 4 ·.
or S.
•.
Single admissions will be $3 for adults and $2 for children. The ·:
pool may he rented for parties at $35 an hour for a minimum of two ·~
hours,, member of Villa,ge Council reported.
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Due to a leak Tuesday night, Leading Creek Conservancy District .':· · ·
has issued a boil advisory for Happy Hollow Road: Mash Roa~, and ·~ ·..
Hutchison sub-division. This boil advisory will be tn effect unul fur· ·
!her noti~e.
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Meigs announcements
Ch"tus at Tuppers Plains
The Walker Brothers Circus will
present shows today and tomorrow.
uhder a "big top" tent at the Tuppers ·
Plains Fire Deparrment grounds.
There·will IJ!: two shows each day·, the
first at S:30 p.m. and the second at
7:30p.m. The show is sponsored. by
the fire department. The 30 vehicles
of .the circus caravan arrived this
morning.

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Golf tourn,ament
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A golf tournament to raise fun~
for the restoration of the Chester :
Courthouse will be held June 20 at ll ·
a.m. at the Meigs Golf Course.,
Pomeroy. Rain date has been set for ,
June 27. Certificates of $300, $200 .. ·
and $100 will be awarded . Cost is·: ..
$40 a person ·to include green fee.; ..
cart and beverages. To register rcs(dcnts may call992-6312 .
•"&lt;c•

Fund raiser
.
·Firemen's festival
A baked steak dinner will be he,ld...
A firemen'S'festival will be held
at the Olive Township Fire Station ip . ..
Saturday at the Scipio Township Fire.
Reedsville Su~day with serving 'tf?"-.. ,
Department, Harrisonville 3 to 11 begon
at II a.m. Funds will go to supp.m. There will be food, games,
port
Squad
90. Carryout dinners will ,
prizes, homemade ice cream, a bake
be
available.
. .. ·
sale and other activities. C. J. and the
... ···..
Country Gentlemen will play for a
Craft
show
, .. .
square dance from 8 to 11 p.m. Steve
show
and
rummage
sale
..
A
craft
Young will be the called. A dinner
will
be
held
at
the
Reedsville
Fi'i'e''·
·
will be served at $5 for adults, and
Department
Saturday,
9:30a.m.
to
j
.
$2.SO for children.
p.m. at the Alfred Livestock 4-Il '"
Group.
SIK:ial planned
·'
An . ice cream social has been
Dance to be held
planned for June 21 at the fire station
A round and square dance will ~· •· •
by the Bashan Ladies Auxiliary.
held Saturday .Sto II p.m. at the Tup- · ·
.
pers Plains VFW hall. Music by Out
Bible school
of the Blue.
" .' ' ·
Vacation Bible School will be held
at the First Baptist Church, Racine,
Mo.nday through Friday. 9 to 11:30
a.m: Theme will be "Ready, Set,
Roll." Kickoff for the Bible school
will be held Saturday at I :30 p.m. to
4 p,m_ at the Skate-Away Rink,
Chester,

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) ·A civil service board has reinstated
one corrections officer aiKI upheld the
firing of another in connection \\:itli
an alleged mock .haniing at the
Cabell County Jail. ·
Sheriff Ottie Adkins fired S~l.
Gary Lambert and Officer Steven
Rickman last April. ·
·
Both Lambert, 3\l, and Rickman,
32, appealed their firings to the Corrections Officers Civil Service Commission, which conducted a hearing
Tuesday in the Cabell County Courthouse.
The commission ruled Lambert
will be reinsta~ed after a 60-day solspension without pay and a demotion ..

jail.
Ziegler testified Tuesday that
Lambert watched the incident from a
nearby scat a~d .oqJy 'removed the
handcuffs .. when a prison minister
began walking toward ihc room.
Lambert said he did not approve
of what was done. and would have
reprimanded Rickman had. he realized what happened.
"! .think he (Rickman) was trying
to joke with an inmate and got carried
"Lambert testified .

SUPERIOR JOYOTA
SU,UKI

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turned by the commission.
The two guards were accused of
slipping a rope with a hangman's
noose around Kenneth Ziegler's neck
and making him stand with his hands
~uffed behind his back in front of seven white inmates. The officers said
they were joking.
Commission!\~' R. Lee Booten said
there wasn 'I enough evidence to
' prove Lambert "kn,ew what was
. going on," but said Lamben shared
, some responsibility for the incident
because he allowed the rope into the

FREE TICKET :
ADMrr

o~~A ~~!!-D
TO

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rew•r•

for

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........
....
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ctlp..nl

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CllwrciiC.....,. .

1171

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Boil Advisory issued ~

Rickman's lenni nation w~ not over- ·

Stocks

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Civil service board reinstates
guard fired over mock hanging

Of.

Tuesday disc~s - Deboflh
W= lnt'l....,.......................18).
'
· -.........
_
. King• s.,.,.,...... ·. .
w--n-otn ....
........ ......._.~
p~ .......................
13Weeta............................... ................ WJO· . ,
H"_._ MeollaiCmtet
.
~-·. .v:...
:16 WeetJ..............................................sna
-r
·
1toa1t t'lporta .,. the 10:1
n-._.~. •- ...........SUIIJ6 IP
Dlldwipi Ml)' 211-... Maudie ' 'ot·m.J!If:•~by
13 ..................._..........~ .. $:1!1.25 \ 'Mabom; Juslin . Smith, Vemie
Clalllp..UO.:
)6 ......................... , ................... ssua .
Helen Rinehart.
:
•. .
. ~~~ .... ............~: ..:,,:..~-·~-· __suan j · (Pell'•d~M ~ 1 lfo). · • • - - - - -..- - - •
MAU.IUIICRilTIONI

that the $895 th~y get to buy each
computer isn 'I enough to buy the
multimedia computers the program is
designed to accommodate.
Although the Schoo!Net program
targets poor districts, abOut 40 per·
cent of the poorest schools in the state
are not in the program, The Cincinnati Enquirer repQrted on Tuesday.
About 2S percent of the state's
I00,000 classrooms have been wired
for SchooiNet since it began in the
summer of 1994.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A state
program that provtdes. classroom
computers · and Internet access . is
helpmg some schools that otherwose
co.uldn't af!ord the equipment. But
some dlstncts say they have more
pressing needs.
The state-funded Sc~ooiNet program is ~esigned to provide a computer work statoQn for ev~ry five students in kindergarten through founh
grade. -.
.
· However, some poorer school districts say their building~ are too old
to.accommodate the wonng needed to
run the computers.
In a Hamilton middle school,
teachers must choose whether to run
the fan or the computer, since the
tum-of-the-century classrooms have
only one outlet apiece.
In Vinton County, home of one of
Ohio'.s pliorest districts, coal dust
from .an outdiited furnace clogs the
keybOafd
new computer.
"We hear all of that. It really
depends on the environment they' re
in,',' Rebecca Chapman. Ohio Department of Education spokeswoman,
said Tuesday.
.
She said the department provides
specialists to help school districiS prepare a technology plan that is part of
a district's application to receive
equipment, money or bOth.
Some school districts complained

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............-Local briefs_....,...._.;..:·

Harry Hayman
Funeral· servlces for Harry Hayman, 86, of 31460 Pine Grove ~oad,
Racine, who died Saturday, May 25, 1996, at his home, were held 11 a.m.
Tuesday morning at !lie Cremeens Funeral Home. Racine.
·
The Rev. Clyde Henderson officiated and burial was in Gilmore Cemetery near Racine.
·
.
Born Feb. 12, 1910 at Appie Grove, he was the son of the late George
and Mae Crawford Hayman. He was a retired farmer and well-known musician in the area ..He attended the Hobson Clvistian Fellowship Church. .
He is survived by his wife, Vera Belle Swan Hayman, along with five
daughters, Vera Price of Pataskla, Miriam (Andrew) Hrivnak of Colum~us,
Judith (Robert) Hrivnak of Columbus, Cheryl (Carroll) Knight of Hartford,
W.Va. and Donna (Bill) Nease of Racine; five sons. Harry W: Hayman of
Pomeroy James C. Hayman of Albany, Sidney R. (Carol) Hayman of Rutland, Ge~rge W. (Tere) Hayman of Columbus, and Jerry C. (Cindy) Hayman also of Columbus;,34 grandchildren, 38 great-grandchildren, and on~
great-great-grandchild. .
. Also surviving are two brothers, Waid Hayman of Harrford, W. Va. and
Dan Hayman of Syracuse, and five sisters. Ruth Ours of Wellsville, Ruby
Wolfe of Hebron, Marge Packman of Wellsville, Gladys Richardson of Port .
Huron. Mich., and Doris Rogers of Columbus. .
.
.
Besides his 'parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Robert Hayman,
and two brothers, Gerald Hayman and George W. Hayman who was killed
in World War II .

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CHESTER MEMORIAL DAY • ·The formation for 1M Chlttlt'
Me~l Dtiy ()llt'lde lines up along State Route 248 priOr to tM
&amp;tart of tM ennual event Monday lftlmoon: Unlta Including the
Ea1ern High Marching Band, Melga County Sherlfl'e Oepei bi*tlo
varlout veterana and ahrlntt groups, along with HVeralaru fll'l
clepatbi .. tle stayed through. tteedy lfl8moon downpour to~
tlclpate Jn the only holiday parade In the county. (T. Hunter/Sentinel photo)
.

Laura H.·Elliott See Garlinger, 76, of Middleport died Monday, May 20,
1996, ~~ Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born March 21, 1920 at Graham Station; W.Va., 'she W!IS the daughter of
the late Everett and Mary Poole Elliott. She w~ a hotne!llaker.
..
She is survived by three sons and daughters-In-law, Dave and &lt;;bene See
of Pomeroy, Bill and Debbie S~e of Boston, M~·: and Cecil.and Kathy See
Exteadecl forecast
of Pomeroy; two sisters: Minme Lyons of Gallopolos, Mane Ro~riS o~Long
Friday...Dry. Lows in the 40s. Bottom; one brother, Dolphie Elliott of Vienna, W.Va., eight grandchildren.
Higlls from the lower 70s north to two great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
near 80 south.
She was preceded in death by her husband, .Robert Ray,19n May 3, 1996;
Saturday... Dry. Lows SO toSS and . four brothers, Peail Elliott, Emil Elliott, and Harry "Huck" Elliott, and Rayhighs 7S to 80.
.
mond Clarence Ellion; and a sister, Gladys Lewis
Sunday...A chance of- rain. Lows
No callipg hours or services were observed. 'At Garlinger's request, her
in the SOs. Highs from the mid 70s body was donated to the Ohio University School of Osteopathic Medocme
north to the lower 80s south.
·
for medical research.

!Dry weather on

1978. In. fact, the odds of dying iri a
plane crash have improved from one
in 2 million in the 1970s to one in 7
million in the 1990s.

. The government cannot protect us
from these every~ay risks no matter
how hard it tries. And no matter how
milCh it tries to regulate the airline
industry, to make air travel safer, we
must accept that, from time to time,
a pla 0e may drop out. of the sky arid
crash into a house or plummet ·into
the Everglades.

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: Today's weath~r forecast

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cJUy) gain ~ore credence_ Don't you ket. R'l;'sia will ~oon be a free marget it? Republicans are undercover ketplace ruled by gangsters, .pirates .
hippies! They'Ie all wearing lie-dyed and corrupt officials.
T-shins under their blue suits!
So Boris ·Yeltsin is actually a
Look at the militia movement. Communist. Zyuganov a democrat
Militias all settle in armed com- Gingrich is Jerry Garcia's evil twin:
-pounds. Could these compounds he and Clinton really didn't inhale after
-virtual hippie collective~. with gllns? all. Who's behind all this? Well, the
'Do the militia not allow federal 'Mafia of course, the CIA. and the
,agents on their property because Illuminati. But who was the master'they are ttying to conceal the fact that mind?
they are actually organic gardeners.
Surprisingly, it wasn't John
'They spend their free time not on tar- Kennedy, but Jackie! Her demise was ·,
get practice but playing Frisbee and faked, you know. The entire latter
learning the chords to "Uncle John's half of the 20th century was just a
Band."
fiendish plot to drive up the value of
Here's.a horrifying thought. What her personal possessions. Slie's
·,if we aren't America at all, but Rus- secretly living off her auctioo profits
sia in disguise? And what if Russia is 10 a sumptuous underground mansion
actually America' Yes, the giant cor- in Bethesda, Md., with Aristotle
p&lt;irate mergers of lhe last few Years Onassis' clone. I think Howard Hugh, .'
were not capitalist movements, but es, Amelia. EarJwt and Jimmy Hoffa' · •
·socialist When the time is ripe, are on on II too. I don't know what
these materialist gianiS will reveal they're up to down there, but it .can't
_'mat they aren't corpOrations, but be any good.
·
revamped socialist multinational col(To receive a complimentary Ian
lectives, in which shareholders, not Shoales . newsletter, call l-800-989-' '' .
workers owh the means of produc- · DUCK or write ouck's Breath 408
tion. ' · ·
.
.
Broad St., Nevada City, cA 95959.)
·And Russia? It is Iast 'going down · Ian Shoales Is a syndicated ·
the road to laissez-faire capitalism at wrl"r for Newspaper Ent,rpriR
·,.. '
its most emblematic-- the black mar- Auocllltlo,n•
_ _ _..;..;-:---..:.·...:.._ _ _ _.;;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;..""T- • ·., J'
.
Ten years ago: Some of 111e United States· cloSest allies urged the Reagan administration at a NAIDforeign ministers' meeting in Halifax, Nova ' .
Scotia. not 10 scrap the SALT n anns accord.

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ij. Claude Evans, 8S, G.rlipoljs, died Monday, May'27, 1996 in Holier
Medical Center.
Born Dec. 25, 1910 in Covilll(on. Va., son of the !ale Roben Lee and Anna
Dove Plymale Evans, he retired in 1974 from the Williams Energy Bottle
Gas Co.
He·was a member of Masonic Lodge 469, Eureka, Commandry 79, Order
of the Eastern Star 283, and attended the First Baptist Church of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death in 1992 by his wife, Beatrice Eileen FOwler
Evans, whom he manied Dec, 30, 1933 in Greenup, Ky. He was also preceded by four brothers, John Evans, Tim Evans, Basil Wilford and cousin
Estus Plymale.
.. •.
Surviving are rwo daughters, Marlene (Farrell) Houck and Juanita E. Dailey, both of Gallipolis; a son; D. Dean (Henny) Evans of Gallipolis; six grandchildren and live great-grandchildren; three sisters, Ruby Houck and Elma
Evans, both of Gallipolis, and Virginia Hoyt of Pomeroy; and a sister-in-law,
Genrude Evans of Gallipolis.
'
·
Services will be l p,m. Friday in the Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor
Archie Conn officiating. Burial will be in the Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
may calliU the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Thursday.
Masonic services will be conducted in tJte funeral home at8:30 p.m.'Thurs.day by Masonic Lodge 469. Eureka.

•
•

Go - with t~e odds: .Fly ValuJ'e t

Boris Yeltsin's rival for the Russ- who is this so-ca!ted "we'"?lthougll(
ian presidency, the Communist Gen- we were supposed to believe that the
nady Zyuganov, has been running United States' media are run by a left.around telling potential voters \hat the leaning cabal. Did we stage a topUnited States was to blame for the secret journalist exchange in the
collapse of the Soviet Union.
. Hooray for our side, huh? Presi- ·
,
5hOaleS
dent Reagan knew what he w"
doing after all, right? Well, not quite. '60s? Did we swap our right-wing
· .Zyuganov says that President John F. reporters for their left-wing reporters,
Kennedy did it.
· to try to cause the collapse of both
According to the San Francisco Communist and democratic ways of
Chronicle, Zyuganov claims that life?
''the Soviet breakup occurred as a
If s{j, who is behind this conspir·
direct result of a secret 'new war' · acy? What is to be gained?
Kennedy started after the 1962 Cuban ·
Let's examine this further.
missile crisis. Under Kennedy 's
In his day, President Kennedy was
orders, the United States took control - considered)I liberal. Nowadays this
of the Soviet mass media and used it ·means "socialist." No true socialist
to sow dissension -- including nation- would strive to bring abQut the col. ahst and religious separatism, and· lapse of socialism. Therefore John
disrespect for the elderly -- that led Kennedy must have been a covert
to the collapse."
Republican.
~- Doesn't that sound like what's ·
If !hi~ is true, however, what does
going on in the United States today.?' that mm Republicans7 Back in the
Somo wan_t to build a wall bet~n _·,'60s, .hippies warned us to mistrust
America and the rest of the .world:· authQrity. Today, it is Republicans
there's nationalist separatism in·.a nut· .•who warn us that authoril}' is not to
shell. Others are setting up quasi-reli- ·. · ~ trusted. But Republicans, unlike
gious enclaves in Wyoming, ~~~ . ~ippies, are themselves authority figand Montana-- religious 'Separalis~!. . 'ures. By telling Americans to trust
And of trymg to ehmmate S.ocial .them when they say not to trust t)lem,
Security isn't disresp,ect for the i:l\lel· '· they undent}ine1their s~.as autl)orIy I don 't know what is.
: · . ity ligures, thus driving.lhemselves to
But I'm still confused. If we · the fringes of culture where their
undermined Russia back in the '60s~. 'extrert)e opi~ions would (paradoxi·

H. Claude Evans

•
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Everybody look what's going down

•••

•

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The o.lly SliiUnel• IIIPigil-~

•

Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnstelri

In "The World According to -· in half. The airline has done so voi- Newsweek that she persomilly avoi!lGarp,:· John Irving's 1978 bestseller. untarily (at a cost of $611 ,000 a day) ed Valulet because of ics "many
Springfield N~ws·Sua, May 23
the title · character decides to go because it recognizes that such an
,
Philip Morris, the nation's largest cigareue maket, has proposed signif- house-hunting. He sees a plane drop, action is a first step toward winning mishaps."
This
contradicts
her
boss,
Trans.i~ant steps forward in the fight against underage smoking. Considering the
from the sky and crash into one parportation
Secretary
Federico
·Pena, ·
source, the self-imposed restrictions ihe company called for arenotjust rea- ticular home. Garp immediately
who
said
that.
despite
the
recent.
ValJoseph Perkins
sonable, but radical.
.
decides to buy the home, reasoning
wet
crash,
the
Hying
public
needn't
ll'ut this gift comes not bedecked in ribbons, but with very large strings that the odds of such a freak accident ·
back its customers.
worry about the airline's overaltsafe:
auached.
re-occurring are next to nil.
Indeed, the entire airline industry · ty.
The tiggest string, however, ia the company's insistence that it will adopt
This comedic passage comes to has a tremendous interest in safety,
So the public doesn't know what
its proposals only if the Food and Drug Administration is never allowed to mind after reading a Time-CNN poll 111hich would exist even without the · to believe. Are discount airlines like
regulate tobacco products. Though tobacco critics contend that cigareues arc · .in which a majority of those surveyed government's regulatory oversight. ValuJet less safely-conscious than the
simply a delivery system for the drug.nicotine- which comes under FDA • said they a~e less likely to lly Valu- As the Air Transpon Association major' carriers? Is air travel less safe
regl!l;llion - .the agency has no jurisdiction over cigareues.
Jet in the wake of the recent fatal declares, "Safety not only is a moral. in the wake of deregulation? The
fPA regulation of cigarettes is k~y not only to prevent underage smok- crash of one of its planes {but, of imperative. it is .good business."
answer to both questions is no.
ing, which brings the industty an estimated $2 billion each year, but also to
course). Although the public 's reacIf an airline.gets a reputl11ion for
Valulct is just one of a dozen or so
limit the damage tobacco companies do to the public health while raking in
tion is entirely understandable, the being unsafe, it imperils its own low-cost airlines that operate I00 or
S4~illion annually.
reality, is that now is probably the · financial future. It loses passenger more daily Rights. Critics suggest
~ilip Morris is asking too high a price for the promise of what is sim- • absolute best time to lly the discount revenue, it sees its stock price decline ,that these carriers ~ave to cut comers
plitesponsible behavior.
·
. airline.
(by 27 percent in ValuJel's case)1 and -, like maintenance. safety inspec~
.
.
.
That's because the very last thing it may very well risk bankruptcy. ·
lions and pilot training --to offer their
CIOtikothe Gazette, May 22
·
·
·
that Valulet executives want to hap- ·
ValuJet executives recognize this. 'discounted fares while turning profpen at this point is another accident And they have done all the right iiS.
~cry y~ar a bigger P:rcentagc of the stale budget goes for prisons and
that further undermines public confi- things in the aftermath of fatal Flight . But a reGen!' report by the Federwem.&lt;e while the percentage for schools shrinks.
. .
!j:the mid-19805, Ohio spent a little more than-30 percent of its budget ·. dencc in the Atlanta-based airline's 592. Yet, some federal regulators are at Aviation Administration provides
. safety. nfat's why ValuJet announced exploiting the tragedy to criticize dis- .cuntrary evidence. In the past few
on~cation, By 1990. that percentage fell to'27 percent, then on down to
this week that it is cutting its daily count carriers in particular and to rail years, according 10 the FAA, only one
leslitlan 25 percent •in 1995, the lowest pojn(jn at least 30 years.
ill&amp;te officials blame federal mandates that leave less of the state budget · llighiS from 320 to 160 (to have a against deregulation of the airline· other low-cost airline --Tower Air -'
to ~ecided by state lawmakers.
·
··
back-up jet for each llight, in case industry in general.
·. has experienced a serious' accident.
there
arc any mechanic.al or safety
~at may contribute to the problem, but we think·priorities arc wrong
Perhaps the' most irresponsible Ten discount airlines have a zero:
problems whaisoever).
on ~ state and federal levtl.
remarks were made by Clintonite accident rate.
This is the free market at work, Mary Fackler Schiavo, inspector gente' re spending the biggest share of tax dollars on the wrong end. If
As for the entire airline industry,
The government did not have to dic- eral for the Department of Trans- safety records have gotten considersc~ls were adequately funded and managed. the need for both welfare and
tate that ValuJet cut its daily nights portation, who wrote in last w.eck'~ ably better since deregulation in
prif!l'S would drop.

:t..,

CJ HI 0 1/vc&lt;lllwr

Agents
fight.
a.
n
EPiC-battle·
with
smuggle_
r
s
The Daily Sentinel
'EstJJI1slid i7t 1948

•

•

CALL UNDI
.3Q4-424·51

Wed &amp;Thurs
May 29th &amp; 30th
Tuppers Plains ·
I Fire Dep&amp;rtment Field
5:30 • 7:30 both days

I
I

'1\Jppen Plalus Fl"' Dept: ,

'--~..;:.,..--.;J
:t.:___
---~I

�•

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SpOrtS

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t~

Pometoy • MI:UiapDi"'., Ohio
.

The DBily Sentinel?
.

Wlldn11dly,

.

JOHNSON SCORES - Florida's Charles Johnson (right) alldea
into the ~ to IICOre while Cincinnati catcher Joe Oliver watchea
tha wild throw go by In the fourth Inning of Tuetday night'a National League gerne In Miami, Fie., where the Merlina won 6-2. (AP)

By STEVeN WIHE
MIAMI (Al') - A break in the
clouds was the best break Kevin
Brown has had in weeks.
The hard-luck pitcher survived
two rain delays Tuesday for his first
victory in a month as the Aorida
Marlins beat the Cincinnati Reds ~
2.
Brown has been plagued this season by poor run support. and he spent
two weeks on the disabled list with
a bruised right leg before being activated prior to the game.
He has a 3-4 record despite a 2.20
ERA, best in the major leagues.
"Maybe everybody should go on
a search," Brown said. "Horse·
·shoes, four-leaf clovers - anybod;,:
who wants to send in anything, I II
take it"
Mother Natu~e nearly washed out

,

Brown's latest w1n. Play stilted 20
minutes late because of rain, and
there was another delay of I hour, 37
minutes in the fifth, when Brown led
3-0 and was two outs shy of an official game.
"It seemed like every time I
touched a ball or walked on the fteld,
it St.af1ed.raining again," he said. "I
was holding my breath the last
time."

But he returned following the second delay to .retire two more batters
and qualify for the victory.
Brown allowed the Reds three
hits and one run in five innings. He
also drove in a run with his first
major-league hit, hiking his average
to .053 (1-for-19).
·
By the time Brown left the game,
the announce!~ crowd of 14,052the smallest at Joe Robbie Stadium
in the Marlins' four-year history -

had dwindled to lbout 1,000.
Barry larkin hit an inside-thepark homer for Cincinnati, his ~~ev·
enth homer. Gil')' Sheffield hit his
17th borne run for the Marlins, who
won their third in a row.
"It took. a long time, but I'll take
it," Marlins manager Rene lachemann said.
Cincinnati has lost three In a row.
"It's JOing to get right," manager Ray Knight said. "Things are
going to tum around. Bad things
seem to be following-us aiound."
The rain was nothing new for the
Reds, who have had four games
postpOned. They've played just 46
games, feweSI in the majors.
"I' ve never seen so many star:ts
and stops." Knight said. "It's like the
season can't get going. We had
enough days off early on, and now
we're haVing these delays. There's

c"oach- Mick Winebrenner's
Southenl IMoleiMoll team will meet
Columbus Bishop Hlnley (18-9)
Friday at 4 :30 in lhe tint round of
the Division IV regioaal tOW'IIIIIICnt
at Dublin-Coffman Hich School.
This will be.the third time Southern
has reached Ohio's "Sweet Sixteen."
The winners of that came and the
qo p.m. game will play Saturday at
I p.m.
Hartley, in the top 10 in the Ohio .
High School Baseball Coaches Assodation's final poll, defeated Fairbanks ( 13-8) S-O..score Friday night
in Newar.k.
Hartley had defeated Worthingion
Christian 13-10 in the first round of·
the disll'ict. •
Southern's pro!lable starting lineup includes sophomore .Michael Ash
. in •Centerfield . According to the
coaching staff, Ash is the quickest
· Southern player, ahd in the leadoff
· spot needs to get on base. Ash has a
good eye and a good, bat.
Senior Kevin Deeni~r will start at
pitcher. Deemer has pitched three ·
great games on the toumamenllrail,
and · according to Winebrenner
"needs one more."
. Deemer has been the Southern
ace and knows where to put the ball
in the strike zone. Deemer also carries .a good bat and a lot of weight
will be ri!ling on his shoulders Friday:
·
Junior Travis lisle js the SouiJtern catcher and has been a big plus
in controlling the Southern pitching
staff. lisle had four hits in the district and needs to have a good game
Friday. lisle has thrown out 16
opponents atlempting to steal this
year, ~factor that Winebrenner feels
will be an important pari of Friday's
game.
'·
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Marlins record 6·2 victory over Reds
I

Southern diamondmen to face Hartley in reglonals

, ... 4
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no way to pt lilY 1110111e11111111 JOinl· 1 •
The season has been realltrlnp." · ~ ·
Play wu delayed in the fifth
inning after the Reds, trailin1 3-0, •
lootded lhe baes wilh one out. Brown ;
remained in the game for two bllaen
when the inning resumed, ..,tiring !·!.
Hal Morris on a sacrifice fly and :t ·,
striking out Reggie Sanders.
h ·
"It was my decision to put him rl l . •
back out there," lachemann said. ~·1
wanted to see if I could act him a :;, · ·
win. It was' touch and .go. If it hlld .:,. · ·
rained 'a little longer, there would ·
have been no way."
:: .
Dave Burba ((Ui) allowed five "·' · :
hits and three runs in four innings to .,.. ..
t:emain winless since Sepc., 22.
,.
"I didn't pitch bad," Burba said. ·~ ·~
''but then again I'm not going to .,. · .
write home to mom about it."
Terry Mathews pitched I 213 .:,. : :
scoreless innings for his third s&amp;V!;. .,

..

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In other NL action,

Rockies slip past Cards; Padres win

...
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~;··
,-,
·'

'-·

.x-:, _,,_'d····iii .

:: ~:-:-:f·\
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•
KE;EP RALLY ALIVE - Texas Rangera Will Clerk (left) and Ivan
Rodriguez celebrate after scoring on teammate Dean 1Palmer's.double 1'1 the flrat Inning of Tuesday night's American League contest
against the vlslllng Cleveland Indians, who lost 11-3. (AP)
,

Rangers hammer.
!ndians in 11-3 rout
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) The Texas Rsngers staned the season
with several questions about their
pitch4!g staff. left-hander Darren
Olive( was near the t.op of the list.
'Oliver continued his comeback
from~ panially tom left rotator cuff
that ended his 1995 season on June
26, hOlding the potent Cleveland
Indian~ to one run and five hits over
seven innings, as the Rangers
stretch d their winning streak to four
games·with an 11 -3 victory Tuesday
night.
. .
· The' Rangers' fitlh starter, Oliver
impro~ed to 4-2, matching last season's victory total and boosting his

career mark against Cleveland to 30 with a 1.38 ERA.
"That was a terrific effort by Darren Oliver," Rangers manager Johnny Oates said. "He had an excellent
fastball and he was able to throw his
breaking ball over when he had to.
It was a magnificent performance .."
Oliver sees his comeback as an
ongoing process. He is continuing to
rebuild arm strength and threw 91
pitches against the Indians.
''I'm just trying to stay healthy,
have fun and put together some solid outings," Oliver said. "I felt
good throwing. I threw a lot of
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Keep your eye on the ball.
That mantra is repeated over and
over to lillie leaguers learning the
basics of baseball. It also applies for
the big boys.
On Thesday night, rookie Miguel
Mejia forgot the rule. .
The Colorado Rockies scored
three nins in the ninth inning, and
then executed a unique pickoff play,
catching Mejia off third base, to preserve a 6,5 win over the St. louis
Cardinals.
Trailing 4-3, the Rockies scored
three rUns in the top of the ninth on
Eric Young 's one·out, two-run single
and an RBI double by Ellis Burks.
. In the bouom of the inning. Colorado reliever Bruce Ruffin got one
out before being relieved by Darren
Holmes after giving up a double.
Ozzie Smith's RBI single sent
pinch-runner Mejia to third. Holmes
then faked a pickoff move to firs\
which Mejia bought and broke
toward the )&gt;late. Holmes threw to
third and got Mejia in a rundown
while Smith took third.
Holmes then struck out Brian Jordan to end the game for his first save.
"They used the play that never
works, fake to first and throw to

' I I

In other AL action,
By BEN WALKER
AP Basebsll Writer
Cal Ripken , it turned out, got a
good look at third base. In fact, he
passed it three times.
Ripken, told before the game that
he wouldn't be forced to move from
shortstop, hit three homers for the
first time and drove in a career-high
eight runs Tuesday night as the Baltimore Orioles beat Seaule 12-8.
"It'd be a nice story to say that
finally having that weight off my
shoulders about moving to third
helped me accomplish what I did
tonight," Ripken said. ''I'm not sure
it's true."
Orioles manager Davey Johnson
had considered shifting Ripken
because of injuries. But Johnson and
. the I J·lime All-Star talked earlier in
the day and the manager now says

that plan is "on the back burner."
After the game, Jdhnson joked
that perhaps he'd ignited his star
player. Ripken hit only tliree home
runs in the Orioles' first 47 games
before connecting for a grand slam
and a pair of two-run shots at the
Kingdome.
"If I have to hack him off every
night to get him to hit three home
runs, I'll do it," Johnson said.
"Maybe I'll ask him to DH tomorrow. " .
.
Ripken 's two-run homer off Bob
Wolcolt gave the Ori9les a 3-1 lead
in the fourth inning. His fiftll career
grand slam, off Mike Jackson, put
Baltimore ahead 9-61ead in the seventh, and he homered off Scott
Davison in the ninth.
Ripken 's three home runs gave
him 333 for his career, tying Eddie

NL standings

F:astern Dl'lsion

»:

Inm

Ballimort: .......... ...28
Ntw York.. ....•.... 28
Torun10 ............... 22
Boston .,.............. 20
~troil ..

r.s.

I.

20 . 58~
20 58~
29 .431
29 .408

. .... 12 .19

.2J.'i

liJI
1~1

8h

1 7~

c~ntral

Division
CLEVELAND ...... J J 16 .6H
Chicago ....... ..... ... ..JO 19 1 ,612
Milw:mktt ............ 2.1 2.~ .479

Kam"MCity .......... 24 28 .462
Minnesota ........... ... 22 27 .449

.1
II

. ~58

~

..'i iO

7'h

-~

NewYork .............. 21 28

.429

Ctntral Division
Houslon ......... ........ 26 27 .491
S1.Louis ................ 22 29 4JI
CINCINNATI.. ..... I9
Chicago ........ ......... 21
PiltsbufJb .............. 20

27
30
31

.41J
.412
..l92

7~
II ~

.
, Wtsttrn Division
San Dit:1o .. .......... ...'u 19 .6J.Ii

Color.Kio ................ 25 23 .521
LooAngeles ........... 27 25 . ~19
Snn Frnncisc:o ........2.~ 24· .SIO

8~

8, Toronto ~
.. Milwaukee 7, Minnnota :t
Tekas II , CLEVELAND J
CaJifornbl I ,'New York 0
DakiMtd 6. Bosron 2
Biillimore 12, Stal:lle 8

ca-•

Mi/JneiOta (Robeftsan 1-7) ill Milwaukee(Mirandal-3~

l :llp.m.
Ch'icaao (MaJrane 1·0) :11 Toronto
!Hanipn ' ·6). 7:35p.m.
Dein&gt;il CGoh• 2.6) • Kllll... Oily (Apo
pier 4-4}. 8:05 p.m.
Cl!EVELANO (Anderson 0 - 1) 11
Teu.s'(Win ~). 8:3$ p.m.
B011on (Sele 2~4) a1 Oakland {Wenaen
l·ll.IO:O.! p.m.
Ne~ York (t.1eodou 1-0) at Odlf!)fnia
'(I'Jnlet 6-2~ 10:35 p.m.
Balrlmore (Musrlrul 7-2) ol $eaule
(HitchCock .&amp;-2). 10:35 p.m. .

Thundll)''l pmet
CIJOVELAND (NiiiY 8-1) • Mllwou·
1c&lt;&gt;e &lt;Sptrkt ).j), 1:05 p.m.
.
.., . Ddroil (Oii&lt;Jate~ 1· 1) Ill CbiQJO (AI·
VOiezl·)J, 8:05p.m. .
8011011 (ll«doft &lt;1-2) • Snide (MilocIU 1-1 ), IO:Ol p.m.

NBA conference finals
Tuesday's score •
Urnh 98, Sennle
leads serits J-2

9~

(0T) : Senll le

Thursday's game
St:nttle nt Urah; 9 p.!fl. {NBC)

.l

J''l

Hockey

4
~

NHL conference finals
6
6

Tuesday's score
Piusburah J. Florida 0: Pinsburgh

6'6

k:ads series .l-2

.~

Tuesday's scores

'

!ill

.660

26

Florida ................. 27

TueSday's scores

7'6

Ofic~~go

Wednetday's

I. 1:&lt;1.

Allnmn ................. ~ .\ 17
Montreal ................29 23
Phil:ulelphia .......... 2.'i 24

9 '1:

10 1~

Wnttm DiYbMin

Tellai: .....•............... :t2 ' 19 .627
Seauk .................... 26 ;n . ~31
Califomi . ............ ... 24 26 .4_80
Oakland ................ .'23 27 .460

,

»:

Iwn

Tonight's game

Aoridn 6. CINCINNATI 2
• Pirfsburgh 6. Ho\mon $ ·
S.nn DicJO J, Montrta1 2 (I 0)
Philadelphia 9, Los Anaelt:t J
New YOJt4, San Franciiro 0
Atlanta at ChiC4JO. ppd.• rain
Colorado 6. St. t.:oofi .5

Detroit at Colorado ' 8·10
pm
(ESPN)
.•
. .

. Thursday's game

P111sbur11h

(ESPN)

at Florida 7·JO p m
• .. · . '

Friday's came

Wednesday's games
4-dant a {Smoltz 10-1) a1 Chicaao
(l'rach"l :t-3). 2:20p.m.
CINCINNAn (Portugal 0.4' a1 ADrida
3-6]. 7:0l
Houuon (Wall -0) a1 Plnaburab
(Darwin 2-l]. 7 : ~ p.m.
San Dicao (Valenzuela 3·2) at Mon11&lt;al(lhl&gt;ina 2-0), 7:Jl p.m.
Los Anaelea (Nomo 6-4) al Philadel· ·
phi a (SchillinJ 2-0), 7:35p.m.
San -francisco (Vanl..andinaham 2·7)
al Nt:w York (hria&amp;hauaen 2· 6), 7:40

,a......

r.m.

. p.m.

Colorado (Thompson J.-4) a1 Sr. Louis
.

(M"'JU 1.0), 8:0$ p.m.

nunda;,'opmos
5an Fran~:iiCO (Watson 5·4) bl New ·
York (Wiloon 1· 5), l:o!Op.m.
. Lot ~nle,ler (A,Iacio 3-)} at
Ptuladelplua(Mnnbs ~2). Bl p.m.

'

.

Colorado ar Deli'oit. 7 ~ :to p.m.
(ESPNJ. if ncccuary

Tran sac tion s
1

Auto ntclaJ

BRISTOL
INTERNATIONAL
RACEWAY : Announced !hat lbe tttc:k
will now be known as Brhrol Motor ·

Speedway.

BaseiMoU
AMorkant.aoue
'
AL: FiDed Olicaao 'Rhill S'oa Oijf·
fteldt:r Tooy Phillip~ S$,000 lor hi• ahuc.rion with a fan 11 Milwaukee County 1
Staidium on May Ulh.
.
MINNESOTA TWINS : Cloime·d
LHP Scon Aldred off walven from the
Derroit Ti1eu. Transferred OF Kirby
Puckett from the 1$-day distbled list to
the 60-day disabled Jilt.

Nalloul Uape
C HICAGO CUBS: SiJn4:d C Bob

Usanti.
FLORIDA MARliNS : Activated
RHP Kevin Druwn from the I:HIDy disabled list.
PHILADELPHIA PHILUES: Deli&amp;·
natt:d 18 J.R Phillips for :assicnmem.

.

FoolbaU

N•ionll Foot...ll l..t1Jue
JACKSONVILLE
IAGUARS ·
Signed WR Jimmy Smith, WR Cklrencti
Spoon, WR RegJie Barlow :tnd DE Ton~
Brackens.
NEW ENGLANO PATRIOTS: Re sicned LB Olris Slode to a otte-year contnl4.:t.
· SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Siane"d P
Josh Mill«.

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By ALA~ ROBINSON

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AL ames...

We've Come up
•
on
•
to aRevi e
Downtown.

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lnd'•s'ns 'Oct8..
1

Dept. Store

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Kawasaki •tor .Sports Center his ·
••rchased t•e former J&amp;R Sports ··
Shop In .Pomeroy, Ohio and has ..e
Largesj l•veniory ever arriving dally• .
Over 25 4 Wlleelers.ln stock.

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.R~ugh .and Ready.

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Basketball

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Peng,u ins edge ~anthers 3·2
.~p force 'G·ame
7·
.
Th'-'rsday
·
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Eastern Division

AL standings

.In th~ NHL playoffs;

lhl=liop

in the Stanley Cup finals for the third doing it Pittsburgh; style - running
· PITTSBURGH (AP) - One time in silt seasons - even if they and gunning, shooting from everj
more victory.and the Pitisburgh Pen- might get the(!: in a very unconven- · conceivable angle, scoring goals ·
,,ional-for-the Penguins way.
from the parking lot.
guins will go from rats to riches.
. But the Penguins lead Florida-3One more victory and they.' II.be , · Be assured they'd much rather be
in the Eastel'l! Conference finals
g·
(Continued from Page 4)
1101 ;because of their unequaled
offense, but rather their defense,
single l~ading off th.e eighth. With
Mark McGwire, 2-for-36 lifegoaltending, and, remarkably, their
one ·out iri the niht~. Rex Hudler time with. 12· strikeouts against
patience.
reaehed on· shortstop Andy Fox's Cleme~s ente,ririg tl)e game, and
Or just· how the Panthers· have
second throwing error of the game Gcron~mo Berroa each homered.
won in, the playoffs, Until now.
and moved to third on Randy
Wlilte Sox 8, Bble Jays 5
"It's good to know that we can
Velarde's double.
"
Robin Ventum had a pinch-hit
play wi~ open if we have to, and it's '
' I I( • •
good to know that. when it's ti~e to
After Tim.Salmon was inlention- : ~orne run in the ~eventh inning, then
"u u....
ally walked, Chili Davis.drew afourhomered again !n the eighth as
shut it down against a team like lhe
'
pitch walk that forced home the only Chicago won at SkyOome. .
FlOrida Panthers, we can do it,"
..... .. .
run. Roger~ kjcked a'!d threw some
Tony Phillips led pff the game
defenseman J.J. Daigneault said of
cquipment'in
the
dugout
on
his
~ay
.
with
a
home
run
and..Ozzie
Guillen
Pittsburgh's pivotal 3-0 victory in
Murray for the most in Orioles his- ~2. Chicago lopped Toronto K-5 8f!d ~-~·­
.. ,
to the clubhous~.
. . ·.
·
also 'con.nected for 'the White Sox,
Game 5 TueSjlay night.
tory.
MilwaUkee defeated Minnesota 7-3.
,.,
' Two weeks ago, Dwight6ooden who have won nine of 10. ·
Daigneault - and Petr Nedved
The most durable player in baseAngels I, Yankees 0
.
pitched a no-hi iter for the Yankees, · The benches emptied in the sixth. scored goals to make·it2-0 after two
ball history has started every Orioles
. Kenny Rogers lost his no-hitter. in ':.~~ ·
The 'last time a major league te~rp when Toronto stancr Fmnk..,Viola hit
periods. And Tom Barrasso, sitting
game since July I, 1982, at short- the eighth inning and walked home '; :.' ...·
had two different pitchers throw no-' Ptlillips with a pitc~ in the hip. · on the bench onl'y a couple of weeks
stop. He began his major league the winning run .in the bottom of the :~:· ..
hillers in the same season was 1972, Phillips had to be held back from
ago, made 28 save,s for .his fifth
career the previous season as a third ninth, giving California its win over .~ ;;
when Burt Hooton and Milt Pappas Viola by. plate ijmpire Tim Welke.
career plnyo(f shutout
.
baseman.
New York.
did it for the Chicago Cubs.'The I..St but no punches were thrown.
:
No longer the aggressor m a
1.rn , • .
The Orioles scored all of their
Rogers (3-1), who pitched a wr· 1 " • ,
AL team with a pair oh1o-hit pitch, ' .·An .inf\ing earlier, White Sol? · 1 senes t~ey ~om mated for most of
runs on homers. Brady Anderson hit feet game againstthe Angels in 1994 ' '"....
crs in the same year was Boston in starter James Baldwin hit Joe Cattcr
four gnm.es, the Panthers no':" return
his seventh leadoff home run of the while with Texas, lost despite a two1962 with Bill Monboqueue and in the hand with a pitch.
10 the Miami Aren.8. unofficially
season, and 19th overall, and Rafael hitter. Jason Grimsley (3-4) pitched ,~··.
Earl .Wilson.
·
BftWtrs .7 TWins 3
known 31i the Rat Trap, for Game 6
Palmeiro had a two-run shot.
a five-hitter for his first cpreer "~ ·
1
- Aihletics 6, Red Sox :Z .
Kevin Seitzer ~nd Mall Mieske
Thursday, facing elimination for the
··
In the ninth, after Ripken home- shutout
John Wnsdin won in his first stim hom4red as Milwaukee overcome a
first lime.'
.
red, his brother Bill -who s!arted
Rogers held the host Angels hit- · ',; . 1 of the season and the Athletics again pair of solo home , runs by Ron
"I think we're goi~g to play real
at third base - also connected.
less unti I Garret Anderson blooped a .:.~ ., · I
beat Roger Clemens: ·;,_ ' ·,
. Coomer 'to beat Minnesota.
.hard, absolutely. But 1t puts a lot of
It was the second.time the Rip(See AL on Page 5)
·· · i
Clemens ~3-5) is 9-11 lifetime
Seitzer's firsl homer since April
pressure on everybody •." goaltender .
kens have ·homered in the same
against
Oakland,
the
OI)IY
team
that
18
started
a
three-run
sewnth
inning
John
Vanb1esbrouck sa1d,
.
.....
game, and the 16th tim!l in major
owns ·a winn\ng record over the that helped (he Brewers stop a fourThe Panthers were al~y fechng
league history that brothers have
Boston'ace.
Wasdin(l
-0),
wl!omade
·
game
losing
streak.
The
visiting
the
p~essure The"!ay n~ght In th1s
V •l ...
·· connected in ·the same game. 1be
his
season
debut
in
a
relief
appearTwins
had
won
three
in
a
row.
case,
11 was defens1ve pressure from
. .....' ,,
Ripkens were the last lo do it, in
ance iast week. made the third start ·
Coomer has six home runs this· two .unexpected sources ·- Mario
1990.
of his major league flr~r.
,
season, three off Scoll Karl (5·2).
Lemieu~ and Jaromir Jagr, the
"Any time you see your bro hit'
·
NHL's two ,leading scorers who
one deep and then you get one your(Continued from Page 4)
have bet;n sttyggling offensively in
self, it's a pretty special feeling," Bill
· 1.' ~ • • •
1
. this series with just a goal apiece.
~·· .·
Ripken said.
Imagine how ·the Panthers fell
stn'kes and 1he.guys rnade the' p1ays game, that was ,·t,"·Oates said. "vou
,.
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 16th homer ·
behind me, ns usual."
.
don't want to let them get 11 rally · when .Jagr, who was roughed up
for the Mariners.
·
lv~n Rodrigu,ez..and Dean Palmer started."
twice " in Piusburgh 's come-fromIn other games, California edged
provided
Oliver
with
offensive
supRodriguez
hila
leadoff
homer
in
behind victory in Game 4, came out
J UJ ' ' •
llllddllp llrt 111124141
New York 1-0, Oakland beat .Boston
port .•Rodrigu~z fiit two home runs the second inning. Hershiser gave up
throwing hits in every direction. And
and Dc'"n' Palm•r homered, doubled two. ,more singles before manager
Lemieux came out throwing .., bosJy
..
and
d,;,ave
jn
fo~r
runs.
.
.
.
Mike
Hargrove
pulled
him.
checks'/
. '•
/
'! 'f: .
Albert Belle hit his !flajor league- _ ''The ball wasn'qinking," Har-.
" Wjhen . you
see
Mar[o
leading 21st home fll" for Cleveland. grove said. "It was Oat. He wils leav(See J&gt;ENGVINS on Page 6)
Kevin Elster hit his lith homer for ing everything up. It just wa,s'\'t JIV.ide·n ••emorlal
Texas, which won a maichup of diyi- working." ·
,'
Ill
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sion .leaders for the s~cond straight
' Elster hit a solo homer off relievLittle League.
,_;i.; 1/ ..' I
night and beat the didending league .• er Al~n Embree in the third. Elster Tournament set
~ ifl; '
champion
Indians for the third time set n career high for home runs, sur~·;-!,:.. ·• .
in
five
gam~s·
this 'sei\Son . .
p~ssingthe IOhehit i~ 1989forthe for June 29
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New York Mets.
.
.,
The Jividen Memorial little
"They won last year and w~
Belle's solo home I"" in the
league
To(lrnamerlt has been sc:l\ed•
haven't," Oates said, "Hopefully'this fourth, but Palmer came bacic,with a
r •.••J .. ..
uled
to
begin
on Saturday, Juge 29 at ·
year is our .turn." ·
lwo-run shot, his 14th, inthe bottom
Harmon
Park
in Point Pleasant,,
•'
~ Rangers scored five ~ns in · ., halffor a 9-1 lead.
W.Va.
the first inning oi'f'Orel Hersh1ser (4·
Last
Belle hit his 21st·
1 The tournament will be limited to 1
• • ~ J::, . ••
4). On .May 17, Tellis tag~ed H~rhornerinhis87thgame:Thisseason,
16 teams.
·
· shiser fqr seven run~. and e!.ght h1ts he has the same total in 49 ·games.
For
more:
infonnation,
call Rick
The hllll-workins. hud-playin&amp;
in three-plus innings.
He has 215 career hom~rs. moving
I fl1 • . ,
Kawualci LaklllaN 300. Who dys
Simpkins
at
675-4122.
: "All the runs we got early deli- into a third-place Jie with larry
you can't have fun on the Jo111
. ,.
~itel~ · helpelf,'' Oliver. said. "They
Doby on the Indians' career !is,t
.
;;.n.•·•
Tllce one out ror·a
were ·trying to come 00ck and 'were I!elle is 11 shy oftying Earl Avenll s
Closeout ·specWZ.
tat ride today.
swi!lsin·g at bad pitcheS. In .tha! ftlt· ' • club record.
~-;:· ,. '
AI fllh Reg. $6.50 IIOW $5
11'!•• . .
uati011;.you W8!1t to lhfow. stn~• ~~ . . . -. .lllitil
. llii-!![lli!-"!1
..........tis
let '!hem hit the ballto:your fte!ders. '
;
r11~ •· :'
R~!&amp;',75&amp;$6.75
· · Palmer 's• bases-loaded , double
.\ •· , !
. ·IICIW $$;00
drove in.two, runs. Warrert Ne&amp;son
4'"Gx I '"-.S1
~ollowed o,yith an RBISingle aria Lou.
~~~·! :
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Frazi~r· hit a t"(o-run s1nsle for aS•M'-CJ
•I
'f I 11\t. ' 5 I....
qJ ,.
Olead.
748..
St.
Oliver thQn retired the side in
'I 1
Os!en ~ 8-5,_ Clo:~ Sunday .
•U.Tiwllt '
7 •
•
~-w. OhJo .
order in the IIC(;Ond 011 five pitches.
t)1t\ • ·•
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114-IN-2184
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"If you want a b)' ,part of the
=·~'
lyNottn, 011.
IIIMm

Ripken's HRs help O's beat Mariners

Scoreboard
B aseball

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third, but they used it at just the right batting average, left the game in the
At Pittsburgh. Charlie Hayes hit
time," Cardinals manager Tony La first inning after hyperflexing his a two-run home run and Jason · ~. '
Russa said. "You have to give them right knee. He hurt himself sliding Kendall tripled home the go-ahead
credit"
tnto second ! 1Se and was listed as run in the eighth inning.
'".
Atlanta at Chicago was post- day-to-day.
Trailing 4-2, Hayes-tied ii with his ' 1"
poned by rain.
Piazza doubled high off the right- two-run shot off Greg Swindell (0- •'··
The Rockies have won 10 of their field wall and his right leg, tucked 2). Swindell got two outs before Jay ··• ·
last 12 and are 5,0 against the Car- underneath him, apj.eared to Bell singled and Hayes followed · · ' '
dinalS ·this year.
momentarily catch on second base as with his eighth homer.
, •"11
Colorado manager Don Baylor he slid. He got up limping and
The Astros rallied in the ninth and . ; ·, !
was familiar with the trick pickoff walked off the field.
pulled. to 6-5 on John Cangelosi's "
play.
lncaviglia tied a Veterans Stadium one-out RBI single off Francis.co ·•,, •
"We practiced it in spring train- record for RB!s in a game by a Cordova. But Cangelosi was thrown ·
ing . I won 't say we do it once the Phillies player.
. .
out at• the plate by right fielder .~ '
season starts, but I have used it once
The Phillies jumped on · Jsmael Orlando Merced on Craig Biggio's • 'I
or twice before and it's worked," he Valdes (5-3) in the first, with lhe first single, his fourth hit·
~ ·,
said.
four batters scoring.
.
· Mets 4, Giants 0
'· •
"I had it done to me a few times
Padres 3, ExJ* 2 (10)
At New York, Bernard Gilkey , • .
when I was playing and it worked,"
At Montreal, pinch-hitter Scott · homered twice and Mark Cla'rk ·: ' ~
he said. "There was a pitcher named Livingstone singled home Wally . pitched seven shutout innings ~ ~-~"'1·
(Steve) Busby who won a game by Joyner with the go-ahead run in ~ Mets pested tiielr'second straight
picking me off that way when I was · lOth inning as San Diego won for the shutout.
"' .. ·
with Oakland."
siltth time in seven games.
Clark (4-5) scattered four hits - ·, '
Elsewhere in the National
Montreal tied it 2·2 in the ninth over seven innings and Doug Henry , . , .,
league. it was: Philadelphia 9, los on Henry Rodriguez's NL-Icading finished up as the Mets posted con- ,.,, . .
Angeles 3; San Diego 3, Montrea12; 18th homer off Trevor Hoffman (3· secutive shutouts for the first time
Piusburgh 6, Houston 5; and New I). Hoffman got the win· despite since 1992. New York blanked San
York 4, San Francisco 0,
blowing his second save i~ : 12 tries, Diego 1-0 on Sunday.
• •
Phillies 9, Dodgen 3
and Doug Bochtler earned his third
Gilkey led off the sixth and eighth ~.. · •
At Philadelphia, Pete lncaviglia save.
innings with solo homers. Gilkey, •
hit a pair of three-run homers tb help
Montreal has lost five straight and
who has 13 homerS, has driven in II ~: ·•·
rookie Mike Grace improv~. to 7-2.
n of its last 13.
runs in his last seven games. .
.... •
1
Dodgers All-Star catcher Mike
Tim Scott (I· I) was the 1oser.
Mark Leiter (2-5) lost his fourth ·:~ :.·.'
Piazza, leading the NL with a .373
Pirates 6, Astrus 5
straight decision.

WilY on IMole. Offensively, Hartley is ticipated in making siJM fot the tum left onto ~bid .. Bob
Going into lhe season iS S.oulh· Williams, and Billy Youna.
very
IJireSSive on the b•lepllhs, 110:hool_,alooa the hi,tlway. lf the EYanJ restaolriiiL 1b aet ID Dllltittem's most likely pik:hin1ro::e1 junior
Winebrenner said, "The players
havinJ I I steals apinst Worthington
Tornadoeiwin Friday, !hey will stay Coffman Hip~· c/radlue., .c
Jcaae Maynard had IIOIIIC 11111 prob- have come toptherduring the tourin Cohlmbus thai ni,tlt. Anyone BOb Ev- to
lip_.
lems llld has 1111nlod in at shortstop. , namenL Kevin Deemer has pitched , Olrislian in the fint district 1ame.
Jto.l. Tit
Other plute• are that they are solid
wishing to make donations may turn rl,tlt omo
There he hu become a p-eat defen- his bell I;MII1 and Joe Kirby and
hitten tlvoush lhe lineup, are expesend them to Southern High School . Hiah School is on · ri.lpPII!' ,.. .;...::
sive player llld had six hits 111he dis- Shawn Dlliley have really improved
hnuely half a miR away. Fr
rienced, and have been there before.
or drop them off there.
•
trict.
at the plllle. Our team de.fenae has
should
park on the north side of
. Winebrenner added, "We must- - Fabs should exit lnterswe 270 on
Senior Shawn Dailey has come been really aood in this lUI wiMins
keep lhe Wooten boy off base."
lhenorthwestcomerofColumbuson buildins on the stadium side.
on strong in the IIIIer put of the sea- s~lk. We have imp~oved from 6-11
The
coaches
and
players
would
U.S. 33 and State Route 161 nprth fteld house is behind and un•« f, l
son and has become a major factor three weeks IJO to 12-11 lllld are
like
to
thank
all
the
people
wbo
par'&gt;
towards
Dublin. Go to the first light, sll(lium.
in ·Southern's success. Struggling now in the relionals. These players
through the ' first pmt of the year l)OW believe in themselves."
despite being a good contact hitter,
"Going into the tournament, I
'10
Dailey has IMolted over ,500 in his last thought iJ would be nM:e if ~
...
six games. Dailey, like Maynard has seniors got to win a sectional. Everpicked ue sever key hits along the thing else has just been icing on the
way. · •
cake."
Senior Jay McKelvey is at second
Hartley is now 18-9 and returned
base.· McKelvey helps anchor the $even~ nine starters from J'ast
Southern infield .fl$ well as provide year's sq ad and seven of nine from
a good contact hitter in the lineup. the tea that went to the regionals
McKelvey had two . key RBis in two y
ago. They are very expoSouthern's district championship win rienced throughout the lineup, but '
over Portsmouih Notre Dame.
have lost nine times this season.
Juni&lt;?r Joe Kirby is.the Soulhen~ · They lost in the district champifirst baseman. Kirby made a great onship last year.
defensive play at the district by shag~ . . Hartley is led by pitcher Dan
ging a high line-drive and doubling Dudzinski, who owns a 2.40 ERA
up the.. runner at first, the 1pl!tential and a .410 batting average. He has
winning run. In the process Kirby been an all-district player for three
broke his glasses and required five years, and a member of the aii-Censtitches in his chin, b111 never left the tral Catholic League forth~ years.
game.·He is hilling over .400 the last · This year he was an all-state candisix games.
date, averaging one strikeout · per
Man Dill, a sophomore third inning.
· baseman, is a solid defensive player
Another key player is Randy
and has pitched well as Southern:S Wooten, a lead-off hitter with a .433
;
second man on the hill , Junior Ch~ . average and 31 stolen bases. He is a
Blount can also pitch, but has.found three-year starter and three·time aila home in right field. Blount is not- district player. .
·
ed for liis strong arm from the out·
Another key player is number two
field.
pitcher Scott Martin, who beat FairOther players aie seniors John banks in the disirict championship
Card and Paul Chapman; juniors game 5-0 on a four-hitter.
Tyson Buckley, Jason lawrence,
, According to the Fairbanks
Billy Sl!eppard, Nate Sisson; and coach, "Haitley is an all-around
,sophoi!'Q{es Danny Sayre, Corey greatteam." They play solid defense.
so Southern will have to earn th~ir

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: downtown can help to create jobs and retain them, not to mention provide a pleasan,t
place fo~ folks to get together and enjoy themselves. That's why we've al}ocated
.$3 million in awllable loans for downtown revitalization projects. The loan may jbe
used for le3sehold improvements, fixtures, equipmm~ landscaping or other strudlfiraJ
and beautilication·projects.• In addition to our own r~talintion program, we/:also
support a number of federal and state

... ..

LOWDOC,

Unked Deposit, the 166 Program and
.\

others. If you've got ideas for downtown
improvements, we may be able to help
you 3Iong the way. Stop in and see us.
·All loans are subject to standard credit.
criteria.
•Tbts program lxcludes loans for ~base
ofbuildings.

.,•
•••

Gallipolis

Middleport

Pomeroy

(614) 446-0902

. (614) 992-6661

(614) 992-2133 .

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Rutland
(614) 742-2888

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Peoples Bank believes that vital downtowns make
for healthy communities, because an atll'active and prospe~us

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Jazz hand Sonics 98-95 loss in OT
By CIIFIIS SHERIDAN
SEATll..E (AP) - The handmade sigll$ were strew11 around Key
Arelll. abandoned like so many
bell-laid plans for a weekend in
Chicago.
"BrinJ on Da Bulls." "Goodbye
· Jazz, Hello Bulls." "Hey Bulls, Prepare for a So11ics Boom."
No one brought them home Tues·
day night as mementos of the Son• ics' Western Conference clincher.
That's bec11U$C there was no clincher, only a shocker for those who
thought Seattle would brush aside
the Utah Jazz.
Utah staved off elimination and
forced a Game 6 Thursday night at
Salt LakeCity with a 98-9S overtime ·
victory that redoced the Jazz's deficit
! to 3-2 in the best-of-seven series.
j "Prpbably the biggest _win I've
been associated with in this organi. Z@lion," Karl Malone said.
" I try not to read the p~q~ers, but
. you sec headlines like "Jazz Done"
and "Stick a Fork in Them, They're
Done.' Well, we're still cooking a little bit," Malone said.
II was Utah's first victory in nine
conference finals road games in
1996, 1994 and 1992. And it gave
the Jazz. a shift in momentum they
can carry into the Delta Center as
they try to improve their 7-1 home
record this postseason.
J · ESCAPING Utlh guard John Stockton (In the background) Ia the
"We knew they were trying 'to
'fl:tlt~ of the moment for Seattle guard Gery Payton during Tunday blow us away and we knew they
.... n~ght'a NBA WHWn Confwence champlonahlp 88flea geme In S..t- ·were selling Bulls tickets," Malone
·~··t~e,, wh«w the Jazz won 98-951n,overtlme. (AP)
said. "Those are things you keep in
the back of your mind. If that doesn'1 get you ready to play, nothing

~-t~~dge aid~ R~dman's
jpu~h to halt f1rm's

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will."
Pay'ton, who led Seattle with 31
it woriced out he missed and we aOt
Malone scored 211 poi Ills, Jeff points but had a career playoff-hish
a little bit 9( luek." Sloan said. • .
Hornacek had 27 and John Stockton five tumoven;, then missed a jumper
"It showed the class of Utah. You had • big offensive rebound late in in the lane. But the Sonics recovered
have to give them credit for wllal
overtime and a key ileal with 18.1 a loose ball and called timeout with
they did," Seattle coach George _
seconds lelllo make up fOI" an oth- 18.I seconds left.
Karl said. "Now, we hopefully t.....
erwise poor game- four points and
That's when Stockton, who has
to give them a banle up there "!!d •
six assists in 38 minute~.
struggled through the series while
show our class Thursday night."
During overtime, Seanlc had four being outplayed by Payton, made his
Antoine Carr came off the bene~
turnovers and went scoreless over biggest play of the night. Detlef
to score a season playoff-high J6
the final 2:48. The Sonics had a Schrempf's inbounds pass went off
points and Bryon Russell had 15for
chance to send the game into double Payton's fingertips and Stockton
the Jazz, who won despite missing
overtime, but Gary Payton friisQ a grabbed it for a steal.
14 of 40 free throw•. Utah's bench
three-pointer at the buzzer. T Utah moved the ball around,
outscored Seattle's 38-19.
The Key Arena crowd, strangely avoiding a foul for several seconds,
Kemp had . 24 point~ and 13
quiet in the final seven seconds of and the Sonics finally hacked. Horrebounds, avoiding foul trouble for
action, turned mute as the shot nacek with 7.8 seconds left.
the first time since Game 1. and
missed, then filed out stunned after
He made one free tl\row, making
Hersey Hawkins ·scored 12.
,
witnessing just the fifth borne loss of the score it98-95 and setting up the
The Jazz are trying to become jqst ~
the season for Seattle.
, final sequence. The Jazz had a foul
the sixth team in NBA history to sue- . " If we win Game 6, I think the to give, but Stock(on let Payton fire
cessfully come back from a 3:1: :'
momentum will be on our side," away and the shot drifted off to the
deficit. The last team to do it was
Hornacek said.
right.
Houston in 1995. and no team hlt•
Game 7 would be Sunday at Seat"We didn 't wapt to foul him on
ever done it in the Western Conferlie.
.
a three-point sliotl obviously, but as
ence finals .
"Those guys are capable of beat•
ing us in our building if we're not
_-...~f.:::C~on:!!t!!!in~ued:::::...:fi!:ro:::m~Pa:llg:::.e.;;,S)~·-----ready IO play," Malone said. "But I backchccking all the way from the
With Daignea~h stationed ~y
guarantee we' ll be ready to play in defensive zone, it sets the tone for h'
If
he · h
L ·r
our own place."
•
he
f
ard
1mse neart rog t post, em1eux
0
The Jatz.outscored Seattle 8_5 in t rest o the forw s," aigoeault- could have risked a tricky, across, ·
k' he
~
said.
the-slot pass into traffic. Instead, ~e
overtime, Ia l_ng 1 1ead · or good at
The Penguins' fans also came out threw a shot that rebounded out 'IO
97-95 on a pair of foul shots by
throwing mouse traps, at. least until Daigneault, who stuffed it by :a
Stockton arter he grabbed an offen- public address announcer John -Bar- sprawled Vanbiesbrouck.
:
sive
rebound
and
was
fouled
by
bero
asked
them
not
to
embarrass
"I h. k h k ·
h
Shawn Kemp.
t m t e ey 1s. to get t e eat. Seattle committed turnovers on . Pittsburgh by acting like the Pan- ly goal," Lemieux said. "Once you
thers' rat-throwing fans .
get. die first goal, lthink they'ic
its next. three possessions, but MalOnce the gam&lt;
and
the
'ans
set· to get a I'1111e nervous. "
',
c
•·
goong
one mtssed two straight jumpers and tied down, Daigneault's power-play
After that, the Panthers didn't
Antoine Carr overthrew an inbounds ·
goal at 8:48 of the first period, sci up resemble the team that showered
pass with 37.7 seconds left to give by Lemieux's quick thinking; gave Barrasso with ~early as many shois
the ball back to the Sonics.
P1'ttsburgh the early lead 1'1 so cove· ts. (61) as thetr
· 'oans d'd
· rats .,
1 I'Iastoc

bodl~man has about a dozen tattoos

on his upper body, including that of

:ur~:r~a~;~ l:;. T-shin also fea-

"I am greatly offended and disturhed by having my tattoos, partieularly my daughter's image. misap::1
propriated and mass produced on
1
'
T-shirt and sold nationwide," Rod;~; · SA'NGELES (AP)- All the man said in a declaration attached to
~ JYmph nodes removed from the neck his lawsuit.
CofBren Bu11.ler- with the exception
David S. Katz, Goldschmidt's
!:_,Of the' one cancerous nude - are lawyer, told the judge that the short's
•li.enign, Th,, . Los AngeltJ Times artost would testify the baby was the
~f\oo~ .toda .y.
,
artist's nephew. He maintained that
~ · : ~1110- LosAo~ge_les Dodgers center . • the shirts are only "loosely based"
-11elt1cr ilad a llo\&amp;hgnant thumb-so zed ' on those worn by Rodman, whose
;r,tm~~~~ node excosed May 21.. The nicknames include "The Wonn"
!bfoliS·y report,shobws ~~the other 49 and "Tattoo Man. ;;
,
;l!~~.removed ;ql the lime were all
Rodman's lawsuit, fi_led May 7,
!~n~~~..
.
wants Fanatox to g1ve hom all prof~
~ ~~ve great news, Butler sa1d, its from the shirts:
-when ' called Do!fgers spokesman
·
~ay Luc os. "I'm fci:ling a lot better.
·r'~ IJCII ng better every day."
, ;&gt;fluller , was to meet Wednesday
tf?)~~""'o~&gt;V,ilh Dr. 1William Grist, who per~
-!'~Inned thle surgery, and radiation
SPF..I!\J(}
:.Pa1ments~were tentatively sched.llrc(l for J nc 10. The treatments
jere first
uled for a week ear(}A.RI)EN
IJJer, t;ul the lay will allow Buller
@)~
-~d' repin his trength.
~ - · If his trea mcnts begin June 10,
:aJ,tJer
done with them on
;l'!IY 19. That ves 10 weeks before
:t!ie lind of 1~ season.
S· "That's great news," third base~an Mike Blowers said. "It would
if~, SQIIICthing if he felt good enough
•to' sec us when we're in Atlanta. I
iUitnt thai would make all of us feel
.a lot better."
· • ' The Dodgers, who go to Atlanta
oo June 13·16, have have been hoping for Butler's return. They carry
his 'unifonn on the road and have a
'
~&amp;i:Ur' for him.
~·'! 17 really miss til J JUY and we'd
1o tee him back," mana&amp;et Tom
~ laid. "Believe me, when
)li's !Udy to return, we're ready 1,0
Jilve him.
•: ~ m*lignanl tumor was diKov~ IIIII removed whe~ Butler, 38,
~a tonsillet101h~ May 3 •
~tal near his home In Duluth.
f 1:

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~INE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE!,

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Diet Coke or

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coca cola
Classic

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GOlD U'IIISPY

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ASSOIIII£0 VARE'IIES

BlgK
SOft Drinks

Dell

Fried Chicken

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HARDWAR.E
MASON, W. VA.
773-5513

Plans were made for the Memor-.
ial Day planting of Chester Cemetery
10 be done by Debbie Miller and
Eleanor Knight. Dorothy Karr and
Edna Woods will do decorations for

..

_..KlAlJSSitit

-..--......
.BaS' II
LA-Z-BOY

'

(~rmatrong ~~

$!j99

eDOIIIII~u'~

·eeL hears
about herbs

. A program on herbs was given by
Denise Arnold at a recent meetihg of
the Middleport Child Conservation
League held at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
She spoke on herbs and their uSes
and recommended reading "'The Pleasure of Herbs."
Linda Broderick opened the meeting with the pledge and Mother's
Prayer. For roll call members named
a favorite summertime activity.
A thank you note was received
from fonner member, Nancy Broderick, for a "thinking of you" sunshine basket sent to her.
The annual family pi,cnic was
planned for.2 p.m. on June 22 al the
home of Helen Blackston..
·
It was announced that next year's
will be "Bunons and Bows.".
No meeting will be held in July or
Augtlll. Meetings will resume in September.
·
At an9(her recent meeting, ·members named their favorite flower in'
response to roll call. Nancy Morris
had devotions titled "Power of
Prayer" and "You're Special."
Donations were made to a child
with a brain tumor and a child with
leukemia.
Abrown bag sale was held. The
traveling prize was won by Peggy
.Harris and hostess gifts were won by

21-Fv.
CllldiD ...
lrW!es6~ .

d1ai's willa.tllhions.
6 !Be mala. 37' x·
54'~11i*l

tnl7".tllfb• ' .
with --441301

__,

ERIJUIIII.._IId 1111
• Traditional! • Colonial!

• ContemllOf!IIYI • Lealher!

•All Uvlll Ro.elll Bdruaal
•All ClriiJI
•liiSI... Brl
elll -b dlab. .

•llll. ...

• All DIMltiS

·

Refreshments were served by
:Broderick.

PICKENS

\Ve

mceq.,g.

· · Kymbenee (Mcintyre) Jacobs, ~t.
'Clairsville, will receive her Bft!:helors
. of Science de~ in education Sunday from Ohio I'Jniverslty.
, .
Jacobs, · a 1990 Eastern High
School graduate, has been named to
the Dean's List every quarter of her .
oollegiate study. Pot: her efforts, she
will graduate with magna cum laude
honors and has been accepted as a
charter member of Kappa Delta Pi, an
honorary society in education.
'Jacobs initially llltCnded the Uni··Yerlity of Rio Grande, excelling i~
aca&lt;lemics and sports. She is married
to Eastern and Ohio University alum- .
nus Gene Jacobs, son of ,Ron and .
Alice Jacobs of Pomeroy.
. .Kymberlee is the daughter of
Patricia Matson-Ferguson and C.D.
Mcintyre, both of Pomeroy.

Moms.

·~rrovws

•Shovels
•Spades
•Rakes
•Hoes

A report wai pven 011 worlrwidl
81Udc111s a1 the Chester Scbool by Pat
Hoher and Mort.
Six members anended the Re&amp;ion
II spring meetin&amp; at Syncuse Carletoe Scbool The club won a book
011 bwedlies for having !be 111051 ~
~ Maurita Miller, Holter and B~t­
ty Dean assisted in pteparing for the

theme

lAWN
&amp;·
SALE

will

" - rec:ently.
.
Bob Blnliu. Jr. toot the gardenas 08 the tour llld told them the history of the family operation, each
with a specialty in the busiiiCIS. Barnitz showed the group an automatic
seed planter which they got from
England last year and announced
plans for building several more
greenhouses this ye.-. He noted thai
!IIOSt plants are shipped south to
wholesalers, and that 9S percent of
the business is in flowers.
. Members were taken on a tour of
the plantins room, shown where
seeds are left to sprout, bow they are
removed and put in larger flats, and
!hen shipped in large trucks which are
loaded_automatically.
Foli()Wing the tour members went
to the home of Jean Frederick.
Pauline Ridenour and Barbara Sargent were co-hostesses. For roll call
members answered by telling what
·most impressed them on the lour.

'degree in
·education

a

,' !tuand beninn

M '-en of the Chester Gardea Devotio!ls fnlm Sunday Dip 08
aub toured Bob's Market llld gnu- .....,_-si-llY KaiNyn Mora.

~ Jacobs earns .

·
until two weeks after the basketball
• ; ~ NEWARK, N.J. (AP)- Chicago · season concludes.
· ~ut'~swr'ebounderDenitisRodman
Wolin left open the possibility
!flas amed\ with a federal judge to that Rodman could he required to
~l«lk Ne~ Jersey T-shin that the
remove his shirt to show the dozen
~pliy&lt;lr ys is',unfairly profiting from
tattoos on his upper body and anns.
'his faf,t and 4tttoos.
.
Rodman lawyer Jules D. Zalon
\ In · jssuing preliminary injunc- said afterward that there are less
· tion n.'tesday,dl~ judge continued to . intrusive methods to show opposing
· bar Fan•.atill' A.pparellnc. and its 24- counsel the tattoos, but added he has
")'ear-olo\~sident from marketing a not decided whether to seek a pro'fin
. g-~1~ ve, cream-colored T-shirt tective order limiting what Rodman
·
(las , mages of talloos on the is required to do.
•• G t slee\·,es and front.
He likened Goldschmidt to a
•, .S. Di;~·ct Judge Alfred M. bootlegger capitalizing on Rodman's
·:· )Volin, ~o I. granted a reslraining persona by selling T-shins that depict
~order sought y Rodman earlier this
tattoos "virtually identical" to those
"mooth, award,ed the injunction after worn; by the player.
.
~ de~tn)ining th.~t the lawsuit brought
Goldschmidt, who runs Fanatix
~y the flambo 0vant forward has a
out of his parent's home in Tean~k,
·.: good chance of 1orevailing. .
.
claims that few woul&lt;l equate theT, ·-;: Wolin ruled fo·llowing a half-hour shin with Rodman.
.:bearing jn federa:l court here. RodBut Wolin,- noting thai invoices
·.: ;'titan, whose team .clinched a spot in from Fanatix itself called . the gar. .lhii NBA Finals on Monday, did not ment the "Dennis Rodman Tattoo T~:;cnd.
•
ShiR," said that buyers incorrectly
• 'J1Ie judge said thotlawyers forT- believed they are getting an item
· · l.;birt entrepreneur Micky Gold- endorsed by the player.
:51: '. jtmidt have the right to take a
Rodman's name or image does
"cle1~sili~n from Rodman, but not not appear on the shirts, but Wolin
1
examined one and said the designs
:~~ ~I
were similar to those on Rodman's

"~ ,,·,Iu,.Jnh
nodes
, ·I"
,

Southern _library donation

KYMBERLEE JACO.BS

:'l."Y JEFFREY GOLD·

~ te1)10ved

-Chester,Garden Club tours-greenhouse

Penguins win ...

·:prQfits
on his tattoos
..

1

••
••

The Deily Se tiiMI• P I

Pomeroy •lllddllport, Ohio

Wednesday, llay 29, 1~

In the NBA playoffs,

.
but one
:bt
~- Butler S
,

••• ••

Reunion poliqy

Jackie Robinson had a lifetime
baltiDJ average of .311 and was
named National League MVP in
1949.
' .,
'

DO.U8LE
•'

· ~,

n

With the family reunion se1150n
quickly approaching ~ny will__be
submining articles of farnoly acUv1ties
for publication. ·
···
To ensure prompt publication. the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune requests
thatlrticles be iiejlly typed and double sjllced (or CMY editing. Reunion
items should not exceed 300' words
and must be Subrilitted within 30 days
of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publi,
cation is subject to editing. Articles
will be published as S0Q11 as possible.

\

'

AdditionaL Bona! Take•••

Or... W• Al.o Acctlpt:

=tiC~'

125 Off...

'

~

DouiiiB Sarlngsl

or

150 Off•••

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

---

.

408.MAIN STREET
PO~NT PLEASANT, WV

· w.- ..

Co. I -

•

l

I

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1

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�•

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• Middleport, Ohio

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~·

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1

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_!he Dilly Sentinel• Page,-

PHS alumni reunite, award scholarships ·

aY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' of ac:holuiic merit.
Alma fell ~I of New Haven, ,ley of ~ddleport, George Vaughan
Sentinel ..... Staff
'
Ro.:ipienls oftbeCbllrlcs S. Gibb&amp; W.Va.; Erwin Gloeckner and Mildred ofHarruhon, Mary ~u Reed lhle Qf
Pomeroy Hilfl School grad" ' 1 Schollnhipl which ll'e awlnlecl to Heilman lhle of Racine; Eugene Racine, Patricia M;uer Sucboza of
in classes &amp;om 1917 to 1967 plbered .ooenu planning a carw- in tile ftc lei Wolfe of Cleveland, Margaret Jones McMWTy. Pa.
Sat.W.y night a1 Meigs High Scbojjl of education were Cynthia Cotterill Stewan . of Syracuse, Ch~lo~te
I ~SO. Emmogene Edwards
for· the annual Pomeroy Alu~i andTravisJ.Abbott.bothinlhe 1996 Thomas Cremeens . of Galhpohs, Hamilton, Syrac~se, Betty Thomas
m:socialion reunion.
Meigs class.
Margaret Nease Davts of Athens:
Grant of Crooksville, Ger&lt;&gt;!!e Paulsen
· ~)he nearly 300 graduates and
Cou.crill, daupler of Becky Baer,
1937, Margaret Thomas BaJiey of Ashhmd, Dal~ E. Hamson, Martheir glleSIS carne from across the plans to attend Rio Grande Colleae. and Charles E. Sayre of Pomeroy, and lene Scholl Hamson, Robert Burton,
coiintry to join high school class- while Abbott will enroll atOhip Uni- Allegra Wood Will of Rutland; 1938, Nora Rius Eason, and Helen
mates for a banquet and dance. Trav- versity in the fall. !loth plan to Marie Dorahs Curd; 1939, Thomas A. Grueser Blackston, all of Pomeroy.
eling the farthest distance to be there become teachers. ·
Smith; 1941 , Marg~t McCallum
195 I , Shirley Hysell Sapher,
was George Dallas of California who
Officers elected forthe 1997 year Harbrecht of Worthtngton, Wilma Hazel Schreiber Ball, Joanne
was among those recognized.
were Morris, president; Wise, first Eynon Reiber of Ra~ine, Laura Van- Willialtls, Mick Williams, and DonGiven s~ial recognition was vice president; Joann Williams, sec- Meter Nice, Don E. Mullen, Wanda aid Hunnell, all of Pomeroy, Alice
u.;rold .Martin of Fort Lauderdale, · ond vice president; and April Smith, Jacobs Eblin, Charles Lewis, Edith Kitchen Werry of Centerville, Norma
fla., class of 1917, the oldest alum, secretary-treasurer.
Holter Sisson, all of Pomeroy, M. Scholl Harrah of Vandalia, Janet
ni present. He was presented with a
Named to the executive commit- Paul Tedrow of Wellston, Bob Jay of Theiss Hill of Racine, and Yvonne
miniature hand painted replica of the tee were Kitchen, Mattox, Kenneth Columbus, and Lois Leonard Taylor' Jtous~ Richardson of Gahanna. , .
old Pomeroy High School.
Wiggins, and Bob Burton, and to the of Kenton,. . ' , .
, 1952 Sarah Stowe N~igler of
· , &gt; Kathleen Scou, _
Minersville, advisory committee, Yvonne Young,
1943, Belva Young Glaze, Mary Racine, Phyll.is May, James W.
OLDEST Ai.UMII HONORED - Herold Mllrtln
Fort Uiudclass of 1925, was honored as the old- Judy Sisson, and Vaughan.
Wiggin&amp; Betnz, Marvin Bun, Mar- Kitchen, Clarice Clifford Kitchen,
erdllle1 FIL, a grllduata 0t Pqme~oy High"School, clue of. 1117,
est 'female PHS 8flldwlte and was preThe annual necrology report pre- jorie . Reuter Leonard, Laurence Marlene Moore Wilson, Frances
was thl oldeat·gnclu8te lltandlng the Pomeroy Alumni Alloclseated a floral arrangement by Ellen pared by Lila Mitch
displayed. Lepnanl, all of Pomeroy; 1944.-Mary Evans Hunnel, Shirley Smith Smith,
ltlon banquet Sttturclay night. He wa• preM!IIIKI with a rapllca of
Jane Rought and Ge9f8e Nesselroad Door prizes of Ohio River Valley McCaJiuim Leonard, Robert Hysell, all of Pomeroy, Ted Scott of West- . · tt1a IChool by Charle1 Kitchen, emc11.
•,
iti"lilemory of their sisler. Also rec:- bears 'were won by Bobby Hill and Harold Blackston and Lois Neutzling land, Mich., and Sue Cramer TubbsJ
~
.
'
ognized was Martha Husted Green- ·. Dave Bumgardner.
1'
Bun of Pomeroy.
. of Phoenix, Ariz.; 1954, Joan11e Bearhs, Eva Carl King, . H_arold Bumgardner
of Middleport, John
ai\'~Y· the oldest al1.1mni .teacbcr pttAlumni attending were class of
1946, Victor Sponagel, M3f)' Thornton Vaughan of Pomeory; · Brown of Pomeroy, William Qualls , Young of Lan~aster, Beverly Hutton
sent; and Mary Francis Rose ofAori- 1917, Harold Martin,Yort Laud- Gjlmore J)obb. Carl and Blanche 1955, Nancy Jacobs Hanold and . o( Gallipolis, David Boney of Chapmim.ofSyracuse,.Charles Withda, the youngest alumni attending. erdale, Aa.; 1925, Kathleen Scou of Hunnel of Columbus; Rosalie Parfitt Donna Parfitt Ryan, Columbus.
Columbia, S. C., Carol Baker Jell or' ee of Rio Grande, Mary Scott Wi,se, '
BOlli were presented gifts.
Minersville; 1927, Nonga Aeming Claar of Chillicothe, Mary K. Foster · 1956, Carolyn Brown Charles of Racine, William Sheridafl. of Waver- Margaret King, Kenneth King of
'The reunion classes of 1931, 1936, Roberts, Pomeroy, and Avice Freck- Yost of Syracuse, John lhle of Syracuse, Tom and Janice Reuter, ly, Mary K. Hayes of Albany, Mar, Middlepon; Dana· W. and Linda J.·
1941, 1946, 1951, 1956, 1961 and er, Hillard; 1929, Martha·.Husted Racine, George Wrigbt, Roy Holter, Dale Harrison, David Riggs, Ronald "garet Hawk, Custer, Shirley Bowers
. Continued on page 12
19~ were recognized by Charles Greenaway of Pomc;roy; Maxine Howard Mullen, Howard English,
~tchen, emcee
·
Jenkinson Russell of Crooksville, and and Edgar Abbou, all of Pomeroy;
...
_~residing offtcers we1'c frank Loretta Beegle of Pomeroy, .
James L. Rose of Coventry, Conn., .
Public Notice
,.
Public
Notlc8
Public llof!ce
Public Notice
Vaughan, president; Dan Morris, first
1931, Lawrence Blake and Ken-. JannineEvans Cunningham of Gal•
,...,.,..... right .to rellat
lncl '
11 iOf elgnll'l the band.,
vice president; Mary Jane Wise, sec- neth Blake of Parma; Lula Russell lipolis, Eleanior Smith Waller of
PUBUC NOTICE
or Ill bide eubonlttld:,
·Bid• ehall be MiliCI and
e '•
. The Scipio To.,nlhlp eny
ond vice president; and Sharon Mat- HamJII!ln, Genevieve Well; Olen Har- Toledo, Beman! Paulsen of McKinl'llrthlr;
the
lbOYe
end
•
aa Bid tar Scipio
tox, secretary-treasurer.
.
rison of• Pomeroy, and. Mary K. ney Texas, Paul Karr of Long Bot- Truete11 will lla leall- coiiMtlrel will ... IDklln .,. Townehlp
llancllar
1oo%
:
·
Street
pureheeing • roed griller. condition It le In, • II, with
. four scholarships were awarded at Roush of Racine; 1932, Harlan to.m, and Ralph Lambright of Cort- The
Jmpro~lmlllllncllllllled
or
olll!l
r~ed
greder
Na bidder mey withdrew ·
tlii: banquet to descendants of gradu- Wehrung of Pomeroy, and Victor land.
epeclllcatlon ehould lie et n'o expr11a· or Implied dlllvarad to: ...... c-ty
~
hie bll within thirty ,(30) :
a~s; SClected to receive the Bob Stewart of Syracuse; 1933, Louise
1947 Horace Abbott, ~en Nease, IIIII 110 HP •t 2200 PAll • For further lnlormetlan, Commli1lantr~,
Co&amp;¥1hDUM,·POIMf'Oy, Ohio dey• elter . dete ·ot the ·
Rollerts Scholarships of $600 each Bearh~ ~_and Kathryn Welsh of Joe Struble, Mildred Kapttna Plulhps, · L.lckld/Uniockld
.
contact Lyle Sweln 11 114- 45711.
opening thereof. llelgl !
dlllerentlel,
front
wheel
115-4215.
•
1\'cte Dorothy Lc;ifheit, daughte~ of Po£11eroy; 1?34, Thomas Bowen and Frank Vaughan, all ofPomero~, Mary
County Commllllon!ira ·
Attentlqn
of·
.bkldere
11
drlva, blnk cut englee to" R
R91er and Lenora Leifheit. Pomerov. Sarah Gibbs of Pomeroy, and ~il- CL.urtis Stark of Glendale, Anz .. and &amp; L Circle llotlltlan :teo', (5) 21, 30, 3t; 3TC
celled to ell ot the ........ the right 10 WIIYI :
nqulnmanta -lned In any lnlormllltlel or to raject •
ani Adam Sheets, son of James and helmine Smith Maier of Wester, Elizabeth Betty Tedrow and Kenneth w1t11 ecorllllr, weight over
thle
bkl tieckai. perQcuterty •nv or ell bide.
, ., , •
Jeii'riifer Sheets of Rutland. Both ville, 1935, Joo Gloeckner and Edna Harris of Pomeroy, Betty Phillips 30,000.1ba.
Public Notice ·
·
l'rad
Hollman,
Pnelcilllt
;
to
the
Fedaral
Lellor
The, Selplo Townlhlp
' wlll' graduate from Meigs High Durst Slusher. of Pomeroy, Dora · Sayre of Middleport, and June WhaShlnclerde PrcMalona · end
llligeC~ .
TrUitlll
1110
h
..
.
I
t
17,1
S;;'J)Ooi;Suoday.
·
Swank Crispin of Westetv'~lle, and ley Vanvranken of Norfolk Va. .
Devle•Bacon
Wlflll,
Comml.aeloner.a ·
p~~N-~~TO
J!)hn Deere 570A Rold
COifTRACTORS . . var.Joue
lneurence (5) 28, 3t; (e) 7; 3TC
· Leilbeit plans to attend M~et~ GenevaHan.ey ffFtndle)l&gt;
. .. 1949, Marty Struble,Lo1s Smtth Grader to Ill conoldlnd 11
·S.lld propo•ta tar the requl._me, vartaue eqUII
College where she wtll maJor ,m
1936; Richdrd.l.lrown of Chtlb- Hawley .of Pomeroy; Btll Tubbs .of • po&amp;alblelradl ln.
Scipio
Townehlp Street
The Selplo · TOWMhlp tniprovemente
SPQrts inedi~ine and then will work cothe; Er_nma E,bersbach Oatwonhy Phoemx, Anz., Ann Foster Co~tll,
. lie
fight received by thewillllelge
toward a degree in physical therapy. · an~ Cunts Jenkinson of Mtddlepon; Lancaster, &lt;?eroge Dallas of Cabfor- ~o reject •nv end 111 bide.
tIt 111111 t- 11111111111111111111111111111111,1111111
.,
-.I.Ill
. .tIll
. -···-... --·· -····--- -L.:
She' is an honorarian · in the MHS . Ehzabeth Duffy, Agnes Sutton n1a, Lee Wmce of Zanesville, Laur. llde will Ill opened June 4." County C'onimiMIOIIII'I It :JIll
tlillr
olllce,
Courthou11,
cla(s.
. ,
•. Dixon, Charles Swatzel of~?mc~.~y; Slaughterbeckand lreneAnguskBai- 1ft&amp; 11 7:00 p.m. lind P-v. Oho 45718 until -ehould
be -lied to Clerll, tO:OO. e.m., June. t7, 11M
·•· ·;~IS. s~lutatOri!Ul ofthe_grad~- ~--------...;;... _ _ _ _ _ _
. -.
Connie ·I(. Chapman, Stall end t!lln 11 t :DO p.m., June
--· .cl~~;ts enrol!ed at.OhiO U~t- l i i G 1 f i l l ' f i n i 1 i
lloute 143, Pomeroy, Ohio t7, 18M et ••td . olllet
-.
··~~:·z thi~ -yClll" u!'der-the post sec- • 1~1 45711.
QIICIMd llncll'lliiiiOUd.
.
(5)
24,
28,
28;
~TC
,
opuons·prog111Jl). He wtll con~
f'll!ta, Splclftcltlonl, lncl
-studies in psyc.hology there
.
1
bid tonne mey Ill MOund · ----,n .··
to attend law !;Chool I
·
• •
11 the .olllce ot U., llelge
-C.unlj Co:mmllllonert, .
Courlhoue.t,
Pomaroy,.
-..
Ohlos
-atlop _pl"eSIC~m Frank Vaughan npled I
~'h
k'
l
.
"""lleturdey, June 1, 11M,
Eech
llld
IIIUII
be
;:
BULLETIN
BOARD
DEADLINE:
;:
~;,. ee s pecw •
11 1o:oo e.m.. • public ••• IIOCOmplnlld·Jrr lllthlr Illig ·
' ....
.
•
will Ill held .. .,. ..~.l~de:-~ bond I~ • ~O!Inl wllh • . ;: 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ;:
I
I of Lyle Sweln :•·~~
eurety, ealleliMtory, to the
1
etor~11ld IIIIi•' Countr
cHIPs
·•·
Cammi11tanera
ar
"
br
·-1 for . CMh the 10
•rtlllold ch""• oaahlere
YOUR MESSAGE
DDII. . . .:
.,
or letter · al credit
e
1171 Model Cammender check;
e eo~ven~
1n the
·CAN BE SEEN HERE
.I 2, · S 1 r I·II . No. ution
emount
at
nat
leaa
lhon
,
2TRCFQt022U2
White.
tO% of the bid om~unt In
FOR A TOTAL OF
I.
I truck. .. ~t ,.
fevar of the . , ..........
I · SUN. • SAT. 1():00 AM • 10:00 PM • 992~2~56
I Lyle Sweln, nMrvM the County Comnl11eloM1'1. lid
$7.00 PER DAY.
·
i
I
right to;blcl et thle Mil, end llandt
eholl
'
lie
1
11 1
110oompentad Jrr Proof ot
.i .
Aulliortty of the alllcltl or
Further, ' Lyle Sw•'"·
'

_,
or-·
1111- -!~'Win .......

i

I
Psychic~Line

• I

T. . ~ 1D our glllld .

PIYd1icl on qu nhna ot

.J

love, It ICC Ill, caN, IOUI
ITIIIIea, . . . . a

1371RYAN I'LACI

mole.

81441H772

1-1101).255 0500
Ext. 3605
$3.119 per min.
Mull be 18 ,._

Setv-U (819) 645-8434.

w.................

-·-price. .

.

I.

Alu~n~~~ :~:l1.).

'fl ·

J

'··
AJM)LPH'S

D/l.JRY V/l.LLJ.:Y
m s .

-----------------

---il

.•1

,. 'I Nof.~:~:~~~Eglvan

--

l

~_. FISH &amp;

_· ~=.~.~o=.·~-·.i~:ri,~·
1

$1
'
7
9
.'
.

_,.,.,1!'1''1''1''1''A.M\,!'r 1'r'l 'r)!!tl.t!
.. 1\_
l!-------------------~-!.1

•

&lt;Completw

· 1:30 AJI,-I.'JII P.ll.
.. II II M 1 111

...... ,I '

....

,..niOCiellng
Stop a CoinP~Je
FREE 'ESTIMATES

eS1niMrsh1dli

$3.99 Per Min,
Uult be 18 YJS
SetV·U 819 1145 8434

985 4473

I.

COMMERCIAL 10d RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Call$) .

LBIUII
··"·Dill
IIIIICI
Quality Work ·
'Competitive Rates

I

Rea.:

614-992-2524
Truck:

614-441·7558 .
511111 mo. pel.
I

'

-

Sidi!'U • Vinyl
Aluminum • Roofing
NeW •~:~eP&amp;ir .
'
Gutters I ' ·, ·
DoWnajloute
Free Eetlnuttee
9112-3607
1/JtiNI-

ENTEATAINI4ENT

-

~P.IGK~~~SPREAOS; ·

FINANCE .
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1·900-n6-2525 EXT.

.......

~~~~:~~~r~~;,o~h~o ·::~~

. SUII per min.
MUat be 18,..
(611) 845 8434

..,...•.
.....i

Sc......

oftoollng
•lnt8rlor &amp; Exterior

Pel""ng

.

(FREE ESTIMATES) .

$2.99 pllr min
Must be 18 yrs.
SetV-U (619) 654-8434

1182sl211
Pomeroy,
,. Olllo

Thw:.-sat. 111-6

V.C: YOUNG HI

lltmloclt Gtovl Rd
~;Ohio •

.,.,.,

tte2·7S73

-

........

New Locatloh

Ohio
With 3 Bedi. to
Serve You B.mtr.

, The lft~UII .report Form
.no . PF tor the Klllllle
; Foundellon Bernard v.
• Fultz, TruitM, II IVIRIIIII
,' tor publle Jnepecllon II
• Blrntrd V. Fultz a..w Olllol,
: 111 t/2 W. Second lti'Ht,
' P0111110y, Ohio 4$7..,
; during regular bueln"'
• houre tor • parloel of 110
' dey a eub11quen1 lo
• publlclllon ol .lhll notice.

--·

CHAT LINE

'

· Public Notice

1-800-889-3943

Air Condlllonera, Hlet ~.
Fu~. AI! equipment In stock
for lmllllltl... lnlltallliUon.

I'll . ..., -- ., .• '

r··.,... .
. '

. .

rillh , .

FIM~

IWV0t021 •

,_.a
u,

..v~a

6445 -t

$3.99 per min.,
Must be 18 YJS old.

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

."

•I

..
15 Yra.

32124·Happy Hollow Rd.

Middleport, Ohio 145760
Damy &amp; Peggy 1!ric:1c1es

814-742-21!P .
•

•

•

S FamilY- Rt2 North, beaid_
.. dt .
Rolfina Wrecker. Thur-Fri- Sat

May 30fh1Jne11L
Big yerd ule Satu1day June J11 ...
Q-? 201 Brawn St. Uuon. Wa terni ty, baby, juniors; plus aize• ....
mens cJorhes. Nir,tendo. trum~,:
!lute, dnk. old baoobalf tor~s.
etc. Canceltd if

be lonely IQUI.

CALL NOW

,.In_

Community Yard Sale. Jun(li)

lost- black ma~ cat, 4th S1raet.
Syracuse area, Reward, 614-992·

1-1100-888-e003
Exl-1021
12.99 per min.
Mull be 18 YJS. '
Serv-U (814) 845 8434

only~ BtCilld Run Road, turn right ar -

the Phillip Sporn Plant.Come-•1.

3717 .

en~ the fun

Lolt· fnale Sl. 8et'nard, lUI seen
on Sellers Ridge/Portland Rd .
arH, very timid . REWA.RO!H Con·
1ae1 Suzanne Bentz, 814 -Sl4Q -

Huge 2 lamilr moving_nle. Mar •
31 &amp; June111. 2305 Je~lerton

23e9.

Ltatan-Sa!Urday, June1-Q :OOe.tft..:
Besidt VIllage Plua, childufri I
adult clothes. f1oulehold itei'nl;

sales. -

Ave. llam-?

lOll: Basket lor 3 wheel KoolerBervwten First &amp; Third Ave's, Gal·
~polia. R-td. 814·~8.0t3G. '

k)ta

·,

Sat-June ut,
Jericho Rd.

9-3.

WELCOME

Personal Psychic to
Melet You

Joanne's Kur &amp; Kurl

.

1.fMIO.eas 8800

Joanne Sheets

lull t1me auc:l_ioneer, com~ Le$e'
auction
serv~e .
licens.e-d
166,0hio I Wtil' Virginia, 304-.

Chuck McGuire
Karen Burns

ExL1217
sue Per Minute , .
11ua11111errs,
TCIUCihsTone ~ulrad

na-5785 Or :¥1H73-5447.

&amp;tol-448-9496

70

ect. Will pay lair price based Of1 ,
Condition. 814·446·6830 artet·i;t
pm
.

Gallipolis

,.._

&amp; VIcinity

IIIII

1001 Roush
31s~

Clean late Model Cars ~ o; ·
Trucks, t990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 Eut-· ,
ern Avenue. Galhpoi1s
-

lane, Cheshire, May

..-,no 2nd, ~ :00To6:00 .

3 Flf!1il)' Garage Sale 2·13 Mer·
ctrvillt Road Across From Han-

WttlfE PINE ROUGH .

J &amp; D's Auto Pans. Buymg s. .. f.,',

nan Trace H1gh School May
30,31,and Jun~l 9 :00-4 :00 Kids
Clottlel

SAWED LUIIBEA.
1d,1d,2ll4,2d
s'!1o··- • ft.
. 14~·18' 3~ • tt;

vage veh1cles . Selling pans. 304 - •
773-5033.
•. ,·
Tpp doiiBr- ant1ques. furnmJr8&gt; ·
glass, c:h1na, c:locks, gold, sil¥'er•
coinS , watches, e!lrarea.. Osb~ . . ·
Martin, 614-992·7441 .
·_ •• :.

4 Family ; 6 Miles So. On Rt. 7
' 30th, 31st, ts,t. f!/3, &amp;4, 615198.

Also IMIIIabla
4x4'e-4x6'a
114 185-4107
814-742-3337

5131. tO-•: 811196, 9-5. Aodne~
Grange, 6 Famil~ I lots Ot Evet';'·
tl"lingl FurniDJre, Clolhn. Etc.

Top Prices Paid : Otd U .S. Coins. ,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collec ti bles. PaperweiGhts,
U .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Seco1111d ..
Avenue, Gallipo69, 6 14-446·2842. , .

etc:..

5131st. 6/tsr, 3 Miles Out 14t,
Girls 3·12, Boys 06 _
M onth 2T,
Dishes, Srereo, Toys, Bike, Nicknacks, 'Gerry Backpack. Nursery_

Monimr.

Date-Line

:::---:-::--::--:---:-::-:-'""'"

Wanted To Bu~ : Junk Autos Witt.f·;
Or Without Uotors. Call Lal-ry·...
Lively. 6t4 ·38$-~3. .
: ,;

Jack Neal Residence.
All Vard Sales Must Be Paid In
2 :00 p.m.
the day belort the ad Is to run.
Sunda~ edition - 2:0Q p.m. Friday.
Monda';' edition - ·IO:OQ a.m. S81urday.

Advance. DEADLINE :

1·900-988~988

Ext. .1449

Friday,

Saturdav.

Wanted. To BUy : looking for (\'r-~
tie l ikes Sand Bo•. Picnic Tabl.e-:...
&amp; Outdo9r CoJtage, 614·2~s-; -·
5887
.,: ,;_~

Seashells,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Grafts. Misc. Delillo Bkl&lt;.l. Rodney.
Friday. Saturday. 4 112 Miles

$2.99 per min.
Must be ·18 yrs.

.·FIND TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
ihi"Ough a Live
"P81'10n11 Psychic!

. Ext. 4009 •
$3.99 per (hin.
Must~ 18yra.

..

Wanted To Buy : Auto's &amp; Tr~k-6 •
An~ Condition, 8 14-388-9062, Or.'
614·446-PART.
· '' •

'

63 Homewood Drive, 2nd House
011 160 At Pofl:er. 611, 613, 614th,

No arguments!
No Naggir.lg!
Just the mate of
your choice. ·

" '.·

90 · Wanted to Buy ..
1960'S IO';''S , G .i. Joe, Star Wa~s..,

Yard Sale .

s.nr.... (&amp;1t) 845-8434

·"

v •

Rick Pearson Auclion Compqny,

West Of Rodney Off Cora Mill
Road, See Signs. Household ,

SeiV·U (619) 845-8434

Tools, EIC.

·

'

""~TTENTIOir"
Ha~r SJVIisr Neeoeo For JoAnne's
Kul And Kurl, 614·446 -9496.

la~ille Pike 5 Mi. Turn R ight On

ILL. HOUOII
TRUCKIIII

Help Wanted

110

Garage Sale : Uud Furniture
Only. Saturda';' 9:00-• :oo Out BuKeeiBf Road. 2nd House On letc

JoA.nne Sheets
And Karen Burns.

(lll uo House).
Large Neighbor hood ; Sat, June
1II, 9:00 Til 2:00, '13 Porrerbrook
lane Olf Fair field Cenrenary

AVON t All Areu ! Shirley
Speers, 304·67S..t429.

Road.

Able Avon RepresentatiY.aJ ...
needed. Earn money for Chrtar-~
mas billa at home/at work. 1~~
992-6356 or. 304·882· 2845. li'id;:

May 31st, June t st. 9-4, 380S Rt.
7 Addison Everyth.ng In HoOJse
For Salel

Umeetone • •Gravel

Rep.

Ma~ 31st. June tst ,

9-5 , Past
College On 325 Turn R1gh1 On
J

Cherry Ridge, 1 M1le On R1ghr,
WomGns &amp; Mens Clothing, Cur rains, Misc. hems.

DATE
LINE
Your Sweetheart ss
close ss your phone

Yau:t Sate: Saturda~. June 191, 8
To 3 19 Oebb1e Drive (2 Miles
Oul 141) 2 Family, 3 Co llege
Girls. G. E. Washer, Dryer. 198t
(;adi llac Coupe Deville, leather
Jackel Clothes. Load5 Misc.
Thurs. Fri , Sa t, Girlscout Sat lri Side &amp; Our Ram, Shine, 9· ? lots
or EverythlnQI .1699 McCormiCk
Rd. Gallipolis.

Pomeroy,
MiddlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity
3 family garage sale, State Roure
248 Chester, borrom ol Chester
Hill, 9·?. May 3t, June 1.

--::..• :

ATTENTION :

Highly mollva)iq;:

Team players. The McDonari"
resrauranls in Gallipolis and . -:
Grande have Immediate full t
:"'
po!itions lol opening and cloMf:
shilrs. In-house training progrw
so no experience is requir~
Compe,titive wages. Paid bi~
days oil. Free uniforms. Aurom.tii-~
rate increase in 90 days. Medlc"it·.
benefits available (certain restt lc-·~...._
t1on·s apply). If interesred, slop by
McDonald's ol GaiH~olls or RIO
Grande and pick up an applicl: tion.
·Babysiner needed lor 12 year old
boy in summer. Call after 4:30 PM
614·446-83&amp;l
Bookkeeper!Secretary AR , AP,
Payroll, Reports, Computer Kno:legde and Various Accounting
and Oflice S~ i ll5 25 -30 Hou {s "'
Weekly Mail Resume· and Ref8fences to : CIIUsid&amp; Goll Course
100 Ctillslde Dflve, Gallipolis. Ot-1
4563t
.
:

loss Product: s·t.oo
A Oay. lase We1gh1 And Make

O';'namite Fat

· Money." M inimallnvestiTlflnl. 614·
448-t23t$ .

. uc. - t,., 0wnor;- JOl1nlon

'

JONES' TREE .SERVICE_
.

•

'

·-

'

J

Education Coordinaror position" At
lhe Moiga ~WCD, lor rurth"' inl:ir- •
marion and applicarion catl 611J ....

.'

TFN

1-~255.()5()()

, ~ 114mi.·Cia-t ·

Public 5ele
and Auction

Family Matters
Allow Your

,

more.-Rain data .Nne 8th. \

992-6647.

.

· •

,

•

'(I

308 4th Sl Mason, Thur, M-31:.

Fri, May" 31st &amp; Sar. Junit 1st

lost or stolen- white mala Chow,
SR 2481 Chester Keno vicinity .
Reward for return , no que!ltions
asked, 814-915-3558.

ANNO UNCE MENTS '

• Stump Grinding

Pt. Plttunt
&amp; VIcinity

Loat Friday evening , fell off car
near Gingerbread House, camera
with 5 rols ol W'ldding picrures in
.ca10, piOONcaH 814-247-2981.

New24hr.
. Dllellne
Meet the Min or 'NorM'!
of yqur DrMml ~

Se(viceU
-~-81 645 8434

H&amp;H
·SAWMILL
'

-School.

Wo!-el'OIIm 10

$2.99 per minute
Must be 1a yrs old

~

Yard aai•May 3111 I Junt ' tllt.-

ucond haute pall Selisbu(J
e ~ ?.

Found: small blown Boxer pup,
Smith Run Rd . vicinir~. can 114·

1-900-988-8988
Ext. 6733

SeMotU '
(619) 654-8434
. . ·----.
. - .......,

• '

21 Burdena Edition, ·•PP'ianctt,
rurniturt, baby clothtt. and M.ts'
rmra. fti.Sat ~ 311l~1tt , . ,

Moving /Rummage Sale : May
30rh ·June 1St, 8 :30 A.M. · 5:00
P.M. 4 112 Milas Back Of Add ison, {Swisher- Hill) !Rain tShine) .

to'-*" up

u . ...., . .n..,per,old

-.m~oc. a...r•

Found; Ftmatt Medium S11td
Wl"tilo Oog Will! Snou Black Toil •
Black A-nd HOOd, Block Loother CoNar. Vidnil)' : Ceruenety, 141.
814-"8 ...753.

814-992-347o

Dirt• Sind
915 4422
· Cheater, Ohio

s.rv~ng
Ohio a West Vltglnla
Toll frla1-800-872-5187
· . 4t8 1411

' 1·900-446-1414

: (5) 17,. 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,

•211: I TC
•

. Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
~
Guttllrs and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms·- Kitchens - Siding
36 Yo,.. Exp#lrlent» ·

Mobile Home Heat!ng It Cooling

.

Ext

Plastic Cul~rt- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4" .t 6" Fie• pipe
4" .t 6" Sch 35 pipe .
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe .
.
314" .t I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thN J.j)OO' roll's)
314" IJ.L. approved Conduit
8" Oraveless Leach piP.,
Gas pijle I" lhru 2" - Fittings - Rfgulators- Risers
full assortmcnl or P.V,C. ~ Fie• fittiog• &amp; Water fittings
Fuilline or Cistern. Septic.&amp; Water storage tanks.
•

BENNEnS

Live 21 Hrs s day
. .Talk to Beautiful
· Girls
Public Notice

Tuppera Pllllne, OhiO "-713 ·
61+e85-3813 or 61oHII7-1484

and Manufactured Housll'!g

Phon&amp;992·2489

PUIUC NOTICE

St. Rt. 7

r•

Block C - Found 0. Tho Junelion Or tot And 233 814-4482418,814-44&amp;-..-.1 .

WICKS

. -·

""

Neloon Acr.,.
Ruland, JuM 111. Hice cto.;. ...
_ , lo-ltld mono; - .·

10 Lost llld Found

Low ....)

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

'

I &amp; W PUSIICS UD SIPPLY

(614) 992-2364

Ml~dleport,

Public Notice

1·800·291·5600

BIB BOOftiG and
CONS,.BUftldl

Evtrlutl111

AIIO Concntll W. .

5961

~--

FRAGUNT
"FIELDS

:==-:..-t~

Ohio

Pomeroy,

1·900-ttO.l737
Ext. J261

-Room AddiiiOnl .. .

rm '""

.......
. me .,,.,

QUALITY W-DOW SYSTEMS

s..-~er Images

•

L ' ,... Jn

Ceil today with your
window sizes for 1 frM
quote!

'

CARPIIIfd SEIM(I

lnatallecl

•Insulated

ARRACTIVE
&amp; WILLING
TO TALIIII-

YOUNG'S

•

•Double Hung ·

All Kmds of Earlh Work

.s.rv.u

;:.:~IIA1-

•Tilt-In

Senilcea
HouH Sites end
• Utilities

MGM

Gutters
DownsPouts

SPORTS/

Bulldozing end
Ba.:khoe

.. 992-3838

Serv-U (i1t) 841 U34

IEIIEUL
COIITUCIOIS

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnl,fATES
Me.2188

----

Ext. 430t
$Utpwmln.
Mult•ttyn.

·cu-•ane

Llmeetont,
Gr1vel, Sind,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

· (t14)11112. . .
14 -47N

*Itsoo

. Um•stone .

1~481414

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

-

Trucking • .

' HUIFIOII .
YOUIIOWUI

Tine lomiir -

HAULING

•NIIwGDrllll
•RemDdiHnt
•lltllng
RaCilw•

~ ·.

Mldllleport
' VIcinity ' ,,

REPLACEMENT··::::Need=Direct=,on=?~
WINDOWS
a~'::..

Howard Excovatin

AUWAITIIITO ,

eu;w

..... ltolnn
•'dllllane

• Weldng Sttllflllet •Industrial a - •lh Chile Shop
Servictt • Steel Salea &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welclng
• Alumlnurni'Stalnllte • Toot Dreeaing • 01Mmenta1
Stepa·Stalns, Railings, Pallo FumHure, Flreplhema, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stullfJ.
. "No Job Too~ or Too StUll"
.
•
We wUJ work within ~our budgel
Pll. 773-1173
FAX 77s.aaa1
108 Ponte
Street
MIIOII, WV

-

•

IUUfiFut WG""

,•

Ho-rd L Writnel

-

••

• •I

~,,

Aulhorlzed AGA Distributor

• Rtpi1Cef1l11'11 Window•
ROom AcklltiOna·• Roofing

]

CO&amp;IIUCINI

~j,u~ ,if,ea~

Gar~gu

rrua-...•,.• .,., ...

'

.a,,...

~ Homtl ~ Vlny,! Sl~lng N•• ·

I•

'

IIIDDLEPORT, ott,

•Newttomee

...... I'•

Ct!at·Ut'le
HeyGuyslll Your
speQial girl is wal!lng
to hear from youll
24 Houra·A Dayll
Call now
1-900-446·1414
Ext. 1477

IISSEtL· BUILDERS, INC.

was

""''*"'

,.........

-.a ••ll

JIL . . . I
•ILIIIOI

•

Panlln:ly, I

. . . . . .1. 1'11171.

... ~...

.

ElCperienced heating and coonng
man. musr be able 10 install and
terYice, good pay, relerencaa .,~.;,_-,
quired,614·985-3511.
:· :: ~
HELP WANTED Men IWorf\P..):.. ~
Earn $480 Weekly Asse mbt~:·~
Circuit Boards /E lectronic CotJl~"~ ...
paner)ts At Home. Ell'perienc:a,. ::
Unn_ecessary, Will Train . lmm~ .,...,
d iate Openinga Your Loc;al Arei. :;:

Call 1·!520·680-1891 Ext 01014.Ja. &gt;-..:

. ...... ..
~.

~,

$·WANTEO.$
10 people whQ need 10

Sitrv.U.(8t8)
846·8434''

•· .... '

14•

!

weight &amp; makt money. 10 try ,._.,: ·-~
palenled weight-lou produ-c t.(~· ..

004-773-5083 24hr&amp;'day.

$200-$500 wKiy

• • ·..:;

In your

op•' • :

rime. No exp needltd. Call naw1 ~.

open 7 doys.

0526H21

·

(407)875-2022

•

EG, .•.·

!...~,

,- ·Antj: AMnt_P1•11n1" ~, r.:
Poltal Patirilns. Permanent t4h~ ~
time for clefkl&amp;orttrl. Fult Benefils. For e.iam, application a'nd

'

I·:.TRAVIS ABBOTT

SIIB[Y into &lt;Oil: 708·264,1839
.31170, Bam 10 Bpm.

'

'

L

•
•

I

E~t.

\

•

..

�i

I

".;.....

Pomeroy •lllcldleport, Ohio

•

.,.. 10. The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

--------------------------------~--~--~~----..- ~·

· NJ:A Cro••word Puzzle
.,~

.,..
44-W..ol

PHILLIP

ALDER

. . D.

Computer Uaera NHded WorJ

own houfl. e20111 to SSOktyr 1·
800·348-7181 11501.
Home Typist•. PC UMfl needed.

S45,000 income pot..-till Catt •·

800-513-4343 E&gt;&lt;1. 8-11388.

Local Butunett 11 lookang to hlrt
someone who Ia easy going ,
~mows computers, un iefl, good
at math can work WHtl public and
has e.. eellent work ~blta. Exper1·
ence a must Will hava to .,...,,,
out of town on occ:as ront for
mee11ngs Full ,,.,. wuth benefitt,

-good pay Send retulne to. P.O.
BoK 542. Kefr Ohto •56A3
Need 6 Ladles To SeM Man, 114446 3358

ou-

Servtce Man For Vaccuum
Cleaner Company Need Expen ance Wtth EtecU1c Moters, Will
Tratn A1ght Person. Call 614-441 1975

neta, cpmoltte unit, ••c. cond
$3.000 30447&amp;2207
Heat pump, 2 112 ton Hell, MtOs
new rtveramo value, Byra old
$300 080 8,.-441-()108.

180 Wanted To Do
24 Hour Care For Elderl'f Or
HandiCi pped Person In Po\late
Harne, 814-441 ·0000
Couple- 'Mn oo lawn nMt~nleNnc.e,
lor furlher mlormatJon call8t4 -

992·2065

Oomi ·

Overbrook Center has part tim e
posfttons available for CNA'e, all
sh 1hs For more mformation
please contac1 Jan Ehas. ADON
01 Sheth Ptckens OQN 11 61A 992 64 72 or stop rn and fill out an

appllcabon
ParamedtcsiE MT' S •mmedtate
operungs, lor l'ud 01 part-time post·
t10ns. 304-372·9855.

Petra Falhlona. Det.1gner hng$ri•
Now bookmg shows &amp; recru1ting
co naultants 1n thts area Great
opponumty, extra cash free llnger~e &amp; lots of run For 1nlo call

Johnna 614-245·9633
Post Al &amp; Gow't Jobs $21 /Hr +
Benefits, No Exp Will Tram For
Appl And lnlo 1·800·538·3040
Postal Jobs 3 Po slltons Avail able, No E•pertanca Necuaary,
Fot Information , Caii818-7G4
9016 E•t.t030

RESPIRIITORY THERAPIST

oonallle Ro1•1&amp;tot-319·2847

Yard Work W•ndows Wuhed
Gunera Cleaned l1ght Hauling,
Commencal, Resrdenual, Steve

3811-04211

George&amp; Portable Sawmill don't
haul your logs to rht milt )USI call
304-8 75-19 57

Housecleamng . Restden tt~ l . Com
mere tal $8 00 Hr 120 Mtn1mum ,
loolung For Mow 1ng Jobs W1ll
Coma Out And Gtve E11•mares
On Ltwns Have All EQu ipmen t
To Do The Job 6U -U1 03 18
A.sk For Norman 6U·446-3798
Ask For Dean
New Bu stnt51· BJS Odd Jobs Open 304~75-4676

S And S Home lmpro ...emen1 Wtll
Do Remodeling A nd New Con
struclton No Jo b Too Btg Or Too
Sma!l' Free Es11mates• 614 446
2450 Ask For Joe saunders

Sun Valley

Nurser~

School
Chtldcare U-F Bam-5 30 pm Ages
2- K, Vouflg School ~ge D ur~ng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mintmum 614-446 3657

Must Mlntmal Travel And On
Call Requtred Call Beckt At 1·
800 551 · 2273 Or f:ax Vout Re

F INAN C IA L

Soc1at Worket'S, ,..ow H~rlng $23 1
Hr + Benefltl, on The Job TrainIng To Apply In Your Area , 1-800-

:139·6150

Prtvlll bCII!On S3S.QOO eu
3118-9693

210

Six room house wlbarh &amp; laundry,

btg Jed barn , on 2 112 acres,
33821 New Uma Ret , Rutland. Oh .

61042·2797

Three bedroom home 1n country,
to-ground pool, 614-992·5067

Three b&amp;Cfroom home Wl\f'l car por t, ~llage and OUtbuilding lf"' P1
Plauaru Wrll sell on land contrac I. 614 992 5858
To se111e ESTATE of ltroy and
Elladene Wa tson, 42820 State
Rou te 12.&amp;, Mmers~llfe, wtn s8n 5
room home, ba th and laundry
taom Aft8f 5pm, 513&gt;7.&amp;7-22115

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

!NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that ~ou do bu s1
ness With people you know and
NOT to send money th rough the
mail unltl you ha~e tnYest•g a ted

the otfenng.

Some one to help care tor etderty

2500 50 000

la d~.

even1ng1, must be depend·
able 304-89S-3403

FAST APPROVAL
No MY Fee One Call

Someone to mo~e mobile hOmes
tmme d1a1ely must have own
eqt.upmenl, pay 11 n&amp;go!lable

14x70 Schultz 2 bedroom I bath
on approx 1 ac re '" Ga tt1 po ll s
Ferry aru $ ,6 ,500 304 6 75·
!617
1968 A•chmond 12x60 New lurnaee underp1Anmg panta lty fur

rushed $4.500 304 882·3630
2 bath, $6.500 304-875-2926 or
304-675-2382
1995 14x52. 2 bedroom, heat
pump $14,995 Call 304-675-

2642 or 304 675- nos

Apple Grove 3 bedroom, 2 bath,

wl 3 8 acres 149,000 304 -576-

4()01

Ltm1ted Oller l 1996 doubh~Wtde ,
3tH •2bath S1 799 do wn , $2751
month Free dehvery &amp; se tu p
Only al Oall,wood Homes Nttro

wv 304-755-5885

'

Mobi le home for sa le, needs re
paws. $2000, 614-992·5858

New Bank Repos. Only 4 leh Snll
m warranty 304-755-7191
Buster 1996 3bedroom
$825 down, St591mo Free deitY·
ary &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Pr~ce

Business
Opportunity

1-18001629· 7687

Homes. N•tro wv 304-7~1:5885

Sa~ass 1996 double w1de repo
3bedroom 2bath Wtll dehver &amp;
setup on you r lot 304 755·5566

330 Farms for Sale
14 Acr es With Bulldtngs 1670
Kerr Bethel Church Road , 614
457-3412 Ewen1ngs
90 acreas 4yr old modular 28r70

3 llod•oom, 2 Ba1h, LR,DR,BK,LIT,

FR,Ftre Place, Metal Barn. Block
garage Clay Townsh1p C t l~
School Otstnct, Rural Water

304-BQS-3357

S75.000 Call 614-258-61211

Summer Sifter needed fat 2 child·
ren 1n my home 33 hrs week
Must be abl!t to aw1m CaU 614

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 Acre tooters, water, septtc, garage blacklop road, 1n Add1aon
area 814·388-8978

44fHI217 alter 4~
WANTED EMERGENCY RELEIF
COMMUNITY SEVICE WORK ·

All rooloalato adyerll&amp;ing In
thiS ._.par Ia subjocllo
tho Fodera! Fair Housing N1
at 1968 wt11ct1 makos n Illegal

ERS (Substitutes) needed at twO
community group homes for per·
sons w1th MJVDO In Bidwell
Hours as scheduled/as needed .
must be able to wotk e... enlngs
and weekends
Hooh school degree, valid drtver' a hcenae. three
years licensed dr~vrng expenence
anCI good dr1v1ng record requtreGI
Salary $4 75 l hr, to start Tratnlng prav1ded Sand resume to
PO Box 604 , Jackson, OH
45640; ATIN : C&amp;CIIta Deadhne
lor appticanla. 513119f5 Equal Op-

to adVertise •any pretarance,
llmttallon or discrimination

baaed on race, color, rel~n.
sex familial status or nallonal
origin, "'any lnten110n 10
make any such preference,
Hmltalion or discrimination •
This newspaper will

porour•ty Employer

adventsemenrs lor real estate
whiCh is In viOlatiOn of the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dweiNngs
advenfsed tn this newspaper
are available on an equal

Wanted ' Dnver wiCOl. class 8,
haz mat I lank endorsements,
2yra e•p 304 -675 4393 alter

5pm
Wanled. Full-l•lll4' Mechamc For
Autos I Trucks. Must Have Own
Toots, Be Ret 1a ~e &amp; Honest, Ref
erences Requ1tid Start lmme~
d•aret.-. 814 - 446 4514 Monda~
Thru Fnda)' 8·5

WANTED

opportunity baSIS.

REAL ESTATE

Part -ltme POII\IO n

ava1lable at a communtty group
home tor persons wuh MAIOO tn
Galltpohs. Hours 11 pm· B 30am,
Ftl, 7pm-Stam, Sal, 2-hour INGekly
staff meallng (currently 9 11am,
Thurs~. or aa otn er wtse sch&amp;CIuled H1gh school degree. ,vahd
dmer'a license, lhree ~ears h·
censed dm1ng ex penance and a
goad drrvmg record reqUired Salary , $5 OOfhr, to start Tratn1ng
provided Vacalton and SICk ltme
benehts Send resume ro PO Box
604, Jackson , Oh 45640 A nn
Cectlta Oeadl1ne tor appltcants 61
5r96 Equal Opportuntly Employer
Wanted Part· lime poatl•on ava1l·
able at a communtty group home
fo r persons wnh MRIOO 1n Galhpohs
Hours
11pm-8 30am,
Thurl, tO 30pm-8·30am, Fn. 7pm
9am, Sat. 2 hour weekly staff
mee ung (curren tl y 9 1 t am ,
Thurs). or as otherwise scheduled H 1gh school degree vahd
drtver·s license, three years

proYtded.
beneflll Send
Box 604 Jack son ,
ATTN Cecttta Oeaef line lor ap·
~hcants 815198 Equal Opponun1

oyEmployer
WILDLIFE /CONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Hlttng Game Wardens, Securny, Maintenance, Park Rang-

=~~Y EJ:~ ~::~~!~~~n:~n~r~!:

uon Call 1·800 ·299-2470 Ext
OH316C 8 A.M To 9 PM 7
lleys
WILOliFEICONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Htrong Gomo Wtfdona. Se·
cunty, Ma1n1enance, Par1l Ranger.
etc

not

knowllngly accept

No Exp neetssary For appl1

catoon ond lnlo clt111·800·29!1·
2470, e)Cl OH310c 8om-9pm. 7 •
days.

110 MIICellaneous
Baby Bed Mallrltlllb&lt;!ddlng 61444Hl234
Baby bed, twin stron.,, SWIRQ, car
sea l &amp; &amp;Ingle s11olfer 304-875·

4546
Campbell's cletn•na terYie••
Comerctai· RIIldentlal Low Ratat:

Pager • 1·800 -724·31t9 !hen•
558-1807 Mon·SOI8am 10 9pm

310 Homes for Sale
1 1f2 stOry, 4 br , lr , dr fr base
ment &amp; sun porch $36 000 ca ll

614·992·4460
, bedroom conage. Jellerson

Ave, $45.000. 304-675·7o482
2 Bedroom 1n New Haven, hard
wood lloors, carport &amp; porch

$32,000 304-372 439S
2 BA , 1 Bath . Nt ce Level Lot
Newly Rremodled Fatrland or
Ga tha County SchO ols Ca ll lor
Deta•IS 1614) 256 1095

14170 2 Ba ~ ooma. 2 S.k C~
nl Ait, GrHn Tenac•. •••-~·

1111113.

-oom

20f 3
Mollile Home• In
REOUCEO 3· 4 bedroom . 1 112 Porter
Area You PaJI Ut!lllltl,
bath, basement, ere location
Refaranc:e11 Oapo&amp;lr Req 81.t·
30H7S.3030 01 30H7S.3431
3811-9182

1975 Festival 14X70 3 bedroom.

Protesstonal Tree Serv•ce. Slump
Removal. Free Es1tmate st In
suranc::e Btdwell Of'lto 614 388
9648 614 31:37 70 10

W1ll do all 1ntertor and ex1er1or
pamt, plua aome carpenter work
Free Est Call 614·446-2637

Small local Firm Seeking Part
Ttme On Catl Ctean1ng Persons
Send Resume To SCCS P.O BoJC
538, Ke&lt;r, OH •5843.

tOr tO 11'\.ed All new t1nee Ul80

Ask For Debbie 614 245-907Q

Ho!Tlecare And Skilled NF PrOYid·
er Has OpenWig For PT &amp; FT Pc·
stt1ons Chmcal Assessments ,
1/V And PSV Exper~ence A

sumo To 218·243·!&gt;457

Pontr H4 m1 ort St Rl 180 2
acres 2•J32 t BR 2' car garage

WI'III&amp;S Hill Rd Rudand , one barh,

Don't lawn Cart Rn•dent11L
Churches . I Cemetalltl, Rea ·

61~

1 62 5 Acreas. 1973. 12x65 nunbow Tratlor wtth ater and Sep11c
Tank add1aon Pike 014-387· 7~99
or 814-367·5043
Rtdgewotld Subd1vlalon - Two
beaullful hilltop lots, OYer 3 1f2a·
cres tolal, $30 000 for both. 304

67S.6648

2 Bedroom T,.der In Smelt r,.wer
Pori&lt;, No Po11 And Oopo"t &amp; Rei·

~ Requwlld, 01 4_.40-1 104

2 Bedroom Trailer On Neighborhood Road, Rent Plus Oepos•l.

514·448-07!5.

3 Bedroom Mobole Home On McCormiclt Rood, 814·448·9069
814-448-M-40.

Two and three bedroom mobile
homes . starling at 1240 $300 ,
sewer: warer and trash mcluded .

3711 EOH

3 Bedroom, m Pt pteasant 304·

67S.1000

RENTALS

Four bedroom, two bath hotl)e 1n
Syracuse, 14x36 family room one
car gar~~~-·~ equ1pped k1tchen,

000 OBO. 614·992·5862
HOUSE FOR SIILE
BY OWNER

Small 3 Bedroom•. Very Good
Condition, New V1n~1 Sid1ng, Car-

pou Unanac:hed 2 Car Garage
Wtth New Apartment Above 61•·
446· 1774 Home . 614 -.. 46 -0374
Work Ask For Mark Palmer

2 bedroom 1n Hartford S225mo
No pets 304 88 2 21 08 or 304 675-3100 after 4pm

3 be',droom In Hanford $350mo

No polS. Call 304 882 -20 16 or
304·67!&gt;-3100
4 Bedroom,

tn

Pt Pleasant 304 -

675· 7000
Farm Hause For Rent Pnvate, In
lecta Area 614 -643·0252 After 8

PM

Conu Tables,
Apt Stze Relrlgerator, Olnelles,
Couches, 130 8utav1lle Ptkl Gal·

lo polos, 81 ...46-47112

VI"RAFURNITURE

male Papert &amp; wecclnarton
reeotdt 12112 weeki old . I~

Cash And Canyo RENT-2-&lt;lWN

81 ...48-0522 Dolort 1pm M·
&amp; Stll

And layaway Also Available
Free Oellver'f Wilhtn 25 Mtlet

AKC RegiStered Bostan Temer
Vmy l 64 Pauerns large selec
Male Pomer~an and Femalt
liOnS, Kitchen Prtnts "' SIOck Car- ~~~~Spo~ritl~_!61~4~..t~46-!".!g7~4~2~_:.
pet 16 50 and up Mollohan Car
pet1614·446-7444
AKC ReQIIItred 8ollef' Puppln

304-875'8095

Antiques

Pup·
ptea, Beeutiful Wh1ta Coals,
Make• Good Companion• For
Young And The Oldl 81ol·

On the way home
By Phillip Alder

1G75 Uncaln olfS,OOO Acruat M1IH

A· I Whllt, Maroon lnt See· Tom
Kooool, 814-446-7787.

1083 BuiCk ltSebre, loaded
1, 200
30A ·B7S· 2352
after
430pm

t985
1930

Ar~ea

K car SSOO

~4

675-

1911 Lincoln Continental 4 Door.

Good CondiDOn, Runs good$1500
814·- ·1!iQ8
1088 Ponttac Sunblrd New T1res
&amp; E•haust And M1ny Other New

pauenger, excellen t c:onGitton.-$2500080,814·949-2311 dlya ''; ..

1977 Starcrah 16' and lrailel';' •
1978 Mercury 90 HP w1th power
1979 Galaxy 10Ft Open Bew,
170 HP, 110, Mere Crutllr, Ga rage Kept, 13.800, 614-388-87""

1987 Ronkor 195 Boat Wlih 4 3

1988 crest Pontoon 25ft, Ev•n·

1U7 No11an 300ZX Turbo T·

1993 U~rada 18 Fl. Open Bo,'7'1'
Extra Canvas &amp; Covers , 4 3 V-1 hi:

Cooko MoiOr• (814)·446.01037
1988 Cr]ev Cava11er 2dr, whlte,

sPorty, 1'11gh m11e1. auto, c:ass
(nice car for work or school) 304·

713-DSM.

U~ll Ford Eacan

Wagon , Au ·

rad•os, Fenton glassware, to.-•,
1~" speakers for car boom bo•.
portable CO player, 1987 ChttY~
Astro MmNan, S2jJ95, flat top guitar, everythtng reduced Dave'a

Dog &amp; Cat Grooming. rnoonablo

Moderen One Bedroom Apart ·

-

No Smoil'"' S300 Oeoosn. $3501
Me • 1743 Centenary Road, Gall•·
pohs , (114) -446 2205 or (614)

446·958S Aslt lor Gonny

vided
Pn vate Park1ng Water &amp; Gar

bage Pa1d Deposit requ~red
(814 ) 446-4345 after 5 PM

(6 14)-379·2827

Concrele &amp; PlastiC SeptiC Tankt,
300 Thru 2 ,000 Gallons Ron

EYan5 EnterP.r~ses, Jackson, OH

1·800 5379528
Couch, love seat. Coffee Table,
614 446-4385

Garden, Tiller $60, Chry1ter Automatic Tranam tss ion Fits Most
Chrysters $100 Boarder Collie
Puppies, E~rc:ellen1 Blood l1ne

$100 614-4o48·9280

AERATION MOTORS

caf\614-949-3027

JET

Repaued , New &amp; Ret..ult In Stodl.
Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537-9528

qu~red. 304· 773-5352 Of 304·882· ~~~~c~he~B~
tJ1y~p~a~l~re=•=•=•~r~3=0~4
~~
after 5pm

Grande
Now accepting applicatiOns lor
IWo bedroom aparlm&amp;ms Apart-

menta han atr cond1t10n1,ng,

Peacocks 3 pa1r, $100
814.-379-2701

lat5 For Sale Gra~et Hill C&amp;·
meier.- Cheshlfe, $200 per grave
1nctud1ng Corner Stones and Petpotual Care 614-367-0214
UO\IIes for sale, $51ea ., alao
for !lie, 81o4·092·3309
Queen S•ze Orthopedtc Mattress
Se1 And Frame Never Used S111J
In Plasttc Cost $800 Sell $250,
614 775-2360

1-:-..,.-,-:--------A &amp; S Furn1ture Mason WV 304

pei patr.

Puppy Polace Korvtola, Boording,
Stud Soovoca PupptH, Grooming.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade. All Brtoda.

old Earl, Taol, Fi•od. All Shota.
(814)·2588155
Reg11tared A~recfale pupp1es •

-

old, lhola and worniod 1200

Chatrs, Re fng_. ratore, Fretzera ,
Washer, Dryers Oineue ,Sets, Etc.

ev~r~lngo

Furnished
Rooms

Extra Can\las &amp; Covers, 4 3 V·l • 1
Uteri7,800814·44&amp;-M81

:_;!
'

1994 Celabri~ 180 Be., Rtder .._ '
sport mtenor, lillie new, 38hr ~~ 1

~-773-5113

_....;..

760

"X&gt;: :

____________,._,,.,
·1-Jo:.

I

'*

I

,._,. J
'J~ I

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

*; ;

cauett•. 11r, power moonrool.
aiarm syatem, eo.ooo m11es,

$3100, 114-742·2125
,ggo Thunderbird $8 ,900 nago
Coil alter 1:30pm 304-882-2030

1991 Mullang Onverr11be V8

Au10,
Loaded!
$10,500.(814)·446·2510

23K,

t993 Aect Co.wertrble Mullang,
Am-Fm CassetJe, PWIPL
48,000 Miles, ExcMiant Condtlion.

LX. AC,

$10,500 614·992-5488. 814·992-

... 81 ..2511-17tla

570

1885 Pontiac Grend Am :J ,OOO

MUSICal

Miles, 614-448-8238

Instruments
Yamaha Swnthea1zer Keyboard
.80; ACDUIUC GUI\Ir $80 614·

448·4084.

.

FI\RM SUP PI 1!- S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

Hollind tobacco ttner, exc

c:ond ts50. 304-e75o3824.

SqLi'are baiera, hay rakea-$400

r·),.

1974 aell-c:ontamed camper wil~ ~ ·
1wn1ng, &amp;leeps IIIC, $2500 0P0, ,...,
caH 614-949-3027
• :
I

19go ColobriiJ 110 BaaL 11 1~ • . :
130 HP Sillr!IIM,SOO IIIID .....: 'I
28 II. Nomod Ct....,; Llkt No!&lt;""', S7,9!i0.00 (814}·4411-2510
• ,·:

810

Home
Improvements

looks and runs

great 28 MPG $1800 QBO 61&lt; ·
378·2845
Au10 loans Dealer' wHI arrange fi.
nancmg even d ~au have been
turned down elsewhere Upton
Equ1pmem U5ed Cars 304-458·

10iltl

WATERPAOOFNQ
1\--/it f
Unconditional lifetime gwrantee. ~~ 1
Local telttencas furnllhtd.
1,
(814) 448·0870 Or 1814) 237-'~ '
0488 Roge11 Waterproofing. E•-:.
tabJishad 1975,
&lt;I I If'

•

ahapo Call 304-875-U87 Ed 187g Oodge, 310. ou1o. $1 ,000
304-875-2352 Ahtr 4 30pm.
Manowllom 12·12.

1gae Nlsnn Truck AfC , Tapper,

48K Wtlts, Runt Great! 114-446
A good ustd dock mede wlpen 3200 EvoningL
etl'llttd lumber lor rtvtr uu, 814 -

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F G J M I D B .P .
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SZCUZYMC

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KYHVHYDBP

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Q Reorronge

letters of
four scrambled wordt
low lo form four words

~r

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SUTLY

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I'OIU~•

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••

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "He looks like a greyhound, bul roe runs hke a bus."George Brell, on Royal thord baseman Jamoe Quork

- - - - - - - - - Uito4

"

f

...

..

.,;'

;:~I=,F~_~E:B~T:~,
.II- I_ I. I5 .•

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Wlule watching people leave
an office building, one gent Mid
to the other. "Hard work nuver
.---:N:-=E~L--:G:-:-:-H-:T:---....,., killed a man, but il sure has
1--...--:,....:.:."T""",...:....=-l scared a - - - of - - - - "
1 6 I I I 17 ' O Complete tho chuckle quoled

." .'

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WITI-1
Ali10ST
:&gt;UPiru-IVM.AtJ

"Ill

'

MODESTY"?

!

•

TAAT:!&gt;
THE

ONE
I 'l1

. '•

I I l Ior I I

SCRAM·Lfs ANSWERS

1'\0~T

PROUD

--...........

Outlaw - Queen - Jumpy- Camper - PEOPLE

OF~

""''~~

UNSCRAMBLE L-ETTERS
FOR ANSWER

Sovfnes You'll Find In lhe
Clllssl(led Sec110n.

Granny gave me t)le ~sl advice when I left home for
college She s~1d that the best exerc1se is when you
reach down and help up olher PEOPLE

.•.....••-'
"""~""'
..
..,... . ..
~

'

IWEDNESDAY

+

.....

General Home Maln.,:_d
tenence- P11nting, v1ny1 1tiding, I ' •
carpentry, doors. wtndowa, t.lhll' .. • · •
mobile home repa~r end more For- ~ ­
' ' " estimate call Chet, 114-H2t•A : • .
8323
• ••,
•

C&amp;C

-·...
..
··-.....
...

MAY1[)

·

.

-------:==~~-------:~ ~~~
,'

I ,.
"

•

Ceohngo textured, plattor ropolr. ·~ •

·.-

•

I•

Call Tom 304·675- .. 188. 20oyeers ..) •
experience.
•
~ ~

\:-:•

sidtng, roolmg, ••rettor and ln•ri..:,. ~
or patnnng, pOW8f ¥'81~ng. room , •1
add1110ns Free E~1mate1 814· " 1 •

."

"
. I .,,

•

Roon~ a outtora complole home
romodollno docka &amp; aiding , 35

~ ..,. e~epenenct, B 1 B ' Aooftng •

eu -Dit2-2314.

•

~:­

\

~~~~~~~--~_.-;:.•

Slucco and Stano lnotaliatlona

1tucco matn1enance, small ha

:a-

•:
1 ..

ropa]ra, all dry-wall ropolro, ,..,.. •'
e~rperlence, cell m•ke appoint- :

"*"

814-_192--1171.

.

'• ·'

LivestOCk

730

Vans

... .,

~&gt;.J. '

0015. WV304·5l'tl-231111i
, I

and Can1trucdon,
or1'-800-881-3i43.

"

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.....

~

.,. i, •

&amp; 4·WDS

........ .,
·-----

WHITE'S METAl DETECTORS
Ron Ah!n, 1 2 1 0 - twohook -upo. Call afler 2 00 p m. ' "'"· GoHipoll' 0!1io 81ol-4484336
304·773-5851 , M..on wv

RE:&gt;VMr.;. , JUST AS

!'.tit&gt; MIGHT r SAV,
1T:S QUITE AWESOME

..,., .

WATER WELLS DRilLED

Watklna Pro~ucta lor oolo, call
614·949·3027.

"ILE~ED

J

593· 2172 doyumo or 814·898·

r.~·· OOt!d with kkla 304·578·

DCMHIK .'

'LZMOB

conditiOn , great work truck. '"" 992·4232.
''
.1 • • •
13850 ttkes 11 nome, 6 14·1149 ··1
'' ' ,
2311.-..
Ron•s TV SoI'YIC8, ap.claUiriQ tn ,II, ~' · ,•
..-,s
Zentlh also •rvlcing moat olher ., t • • ,
10&amp;8 GMC 350 Small Block brands HOutt cella, 1·100·117, ~,..J J

Tobacco HU., wlother Qtlrl fQr North Carolina Ong pa1nt &amp; tn IDmltoel I c:~bl.ge. atrnosr new terror 78.000 miles $2700 080
Alh1 Chal"*a 4·row, no-till, corn 814·441 ·1199avt6·9pm
ptanrer W/monlror cant , In good

2 Rldi"ii houoa, lyra. old, vory

au.

Eatl's Home Malnrenance, vlnyk • •

up. MOflrt, haybind' $1400 up,
dilka, pfowt &amp; corn plantera, cui·
t•packtr,, cultivators, orl'ltr $1,100 1980 F-150 $1.000 614
equi'pment Howe'a Farra Mae~hin· 245·5812
ery, Jo&lt;Uon, OH 814-2811-SO..O
1977 JHP wagoneer. • dr From

630

l "VE WRitTEN UP A

ll.loiVONE \oo/OULD WHEW
AP!'L'(tlol&amp; FOR "' Joe. •

c.u , ·
•
{f.·. ,

~- llnlah, repllf

742· 1100

are era ated hom qwlalllonl by f.mout peop. put Ani J pttlft
Each lett Sf 1nthe apl:ler standi lor ai'IOiher Todtly'•
U .quM 8

Celtbrlt~ Ci9hef CfYp!OQrams

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I'
'I:JI' IN THESf SQUARES
I

iS!.---~:-:::::-::~~--"''"'
BASEMENT
.. r 4 .

DRYWALL

by Luis Campos

.
.
•
_
_
•
•
by f.lltng •n' the mts.s•nrJ words
L......l--..1..-.1--1'--L-.J you develop from sfep No ~J below

'&gt;

''

.'·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1

.(
~,(·

SE RVI CES

7195

WindStlage Wegon, 11ft tandem 3 '89 F'-250, automatiC, sfidirJ&gt;
...
meter. Roo• Good 114·245· 5193 ow 1n back, 300 6 cyl , exce!fen!
Ahaer Ferm Eu!plmenl

..' .

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

90 Escort LX 4 Door, Auto, Atr,

John Ottrt 8 raw earn planter 720 Trucks for Sale
30 ondl r - . Corwwltional. Pltlo·
looa. Real good lor plan11no soy· '79 Ford F250 4WO, $1200, 81•·

beena. 304-e75-1825.

790

Covered (614)·446-0109
AM·FM Cass

'RE BORN LOSER

New gas tanks, one ton true·;·. :
wheetl. tadl8tors. floor rT'BII, Itt
D &amp; R AuiO, Ripley, WV 304·372·
3933 or 1-!KI0-273-9329.
.!~ -

:-~--~-----~....:.....;.._ ,
Appliance Parta And Service· All ,' :
Name Brands lOver 25 V.•ra Ex·""i: ~ •,
per~enGe 411 Work GuatentHd~
:
French Coty Moytag, 8U-441 ,..· -~

88 Olda 4•2 f.Topa Gray Solver
Uke New- One Owner 20,21)0
M1les Full Power, Garage Kept 1

.
•

OltlV

448·2501 or 614·367·0612

SteeptnQ taomt wnh cookmo
Also trailer space on r1ver All

I

614·448·4039. 814·4411-1004

Feat Reasonable Service 61o&amp;Circle Moret. Gallipolis, OH 814· t
1186·nl1
c11ncy Rooms, Cable, A~r. Phone,
Moowave &amp; Refngerator

1990 Hyund11 Excel GlS. amflm

3867

1250 nlgln.

Tra1ler frame for sale, Ux85, wtth
four 11re &amp;.Illes no bras, 81 c 9CSIWedge Apartment• 506 Burdette 3132 b e - 7 30pmo10.00pm
St 1bedroom No pets. Furn11hed
l unfu rnoahtd 304 - 6JS ·~0 72 Uted Fur m ture, Couches &amp;

g49·2CMS 01 614·94g·2302.

1992 Taurus Gl:. Loaded, $7,000,
080 81H46 2751

NOMIC AND COMMUNITY DE · Woll Detlver 814-669-6441 .
VELOPMENT
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Jackson, Otloo. 1·800 537-9526

v.e,

Reg11ted Female Box., One yr

620 Wanted to Buy

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprlsea.

1889 Bu•ck LeSabre. excellent
running condll•on ,
PB PS,
AC. power Windows, $3800, 61C-

Pa.-ments Welcome, 8U·· 388·

0428.

kitchen appliances, fenced 1n 77 3 53 41 New Slore Hours
pla~grou!')d , laundry fat1hty, on
Mon-Fr1
12noon 7pm
Sal
site managamenr and water sewWe Bu~
Sell :
er, and trash paid by owners For
more mtormat1on plaae call (614) I :::--:-:----::-'-~~-245- 9170, Monda~· Thursday from Re lngerators, Stoves, Washera
Noon to 3pm EOUAL HOUSING And Dryers, All Reconditioned
OPPORTUNITY &amp; RURAL ECO And Gaurantoedl $100 And Up,

Very clean one bedroom fur A.shed apartmentrn .t.hefdlaport,
call 014·446·30Q1 ptel8fabl~ belore 10:30am or al18r 4 OOpm

&amp;EARNEST

·
Lllor $7,800 814 ..- 1.
• ·, ·· .
1993 Mora~a 18 Fl. Opan Bo ...
" •·1'

And Drlvea Groall $1,500, 614· ;:-:;-::-;o:;-:-::;:~:::-':'7:':'::"-:::::f., ' 1
Budge! TransmliiiOns, Used /R~ t
buoll, All Typos, Acttsllblt Tcj'.4 ~
1gea Subaru XT Dl selectove 4 Over 10,000 Transm1nion, AltQi:- 1
WD, loaded, I Owner, S3 500 OverhuaiiO t~ 814·24S.5877
• ~
a14·2511·8854 or 81•·258'6:128

1992 Chevy Camara, 25th I MI·
vtrsary Fully loaded Rod With
black stripes Ctll 114·245-5912
leave message

446-7283

One bedroorn apartmenl, ver~
ntce. stove &amp; relr•g erator Uttltttes

Valle~ Vtew Apartments, A1 0

Ft\le m1n1 Schnauzers, 5 weeks

t.t'inlarure Schnauzer pupplea,
AKC, chamPIOn bloodline, thotl
&amp; wormod. 614487·3404.

IBM compallble compuler (2 ftoppy Cltsc drrves), some sof1ware lfl·
elude-d and pnnter, $2000 080,

Twm Rive rs Tower, now accepting
applications lor 1br HUO subs1d
1zed apt for e l dtrl~ and hand•
capped EOH 30C.675-6679

8ppl5 304~75-8831

Boots e.- Aedwmg, Chtppawa ,
Tony lama Guaran teed Lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe. Galttpolls

Now accepttng liiPPIIcallOns for
one bedroom ap;Jrtmencs Appll
cations can be p1cked up at Po meroy Cllll Apartme-nts O lllce,
814 -992-7772

furmshed, trash plck- up,c:e11tng
fans, alf conditiOned, garbage dtS·
posal Na pets . References ra -

pnees, 15~ra experience Cell for

old, uklng $300 oach, call 814·
ggz.5407anylmo.

N1ce 2 bedroom, wasner &amp; dr.-er Electnc
Sc ooler5
And
hook-up, references requ~red de· W heetc ha~ts , New tUsed Van 1
pGSII no pelS 304-675 5162
Car Lllt Installed, Sta1rghdes, ltft
Chatrs,
Call For Brochure 61C·
Ntee One BR
Unfurnished
Range 1 Refrtg pro·

6107

Cheshire

Broyhtll Collee and End Tables,
Queen Ann Legs, Bleached Pna
F1n1sh, $225 00 Uatchrng Entertamm&amp;nt Center, $325 00 '27'
Sony Tnnogron. S200 00 Mi se:
Wallpaper, Ta rkett Fl9or T1la.

1

-:-:-::~-:--:-::-::-:--::-- -J·

3111-1221,

S250 Malo and Fomalt 014·258·

Swap Shop. 8129 SR 7 N,

TI-IAT..

&amp;pm
rude HP. and Toaolor S5.500. 1971

AulD Tranam1110n

KNOWS

Chevy eng1ne. &amp;xceltnr canoman,
w1th low hours, $7,900 wllh cusram trader call e 1A-4.&amp;6-6130 after

starcrart 19fl Mercury 175HP and
Tratlor$3.000614-256-6471

'

I TllOUGilT IT WAS
GOOD

EVER'( BOO'(

~tor

1087 Dodge Charge;, SIIOD OBO
81.._...1-11125

1081 Olds Royal, 1988 N1saan,
1880 Cavalier All Havel AC .

CFA Reg111ered Per111n K11t1nt

aparrments at Vtllage Manor and
Riverside Aparrments m Middle
pori From S232·$355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor

There are no cats
on the moon.

''"· S2500. oall 304-713-5707

Por111 $1,000, 81""2584109

tion. 814-2511-8535.

BIQ sale- an guna reduced, llhlng
equipment, Craftaman tools, CB

GtaCIOUI hv•ng 1 and 2 bedroom

This column l6 being written on the
plane ride back to the United States
It's a boring 24 hours door to door '
The tournament in Surfer's Paradise,
which followed my few days in Sydney,
wa.s a great success, with some 30 percent more players than in !995. It was
an opportumty to play high-level bridge
in a relaxed, social atmosphere
The Open l&gt;airs was won by the
English pair, Brian Senior and Mark
Horton. The last board, which lS m the
diagram, was pivotal
Aller West opened With a weak twobid in hearts, North &lt;Horton) made an
aggress1ve takeout double . He was
lucky that his partner had such good
diamonds for the sort1e to the five level - not that four hearts can be de·
feated, of course
When West led the club mne, it was
apparent to East that th1s was a stn·
gleton So, he gave a suit-preference
s1gnal, droppmg the seven under dummy's king , hls hlghesl card showing
spade values.
A trump from dummy was covered by
East's Jack, declarer's king and West's
ace At this point, a spade switch defeats the contract by two tncks . But
West had been quietly dozine He hadn't
noticed hts partner's card •. tnck one.
Going on the ra1se, West led a low
heart. Gratefully, Semor won w1th his
ace and played two rounds of trumps
He claimed a moment later, hts spade
losers going on dummy's clubs
If West had switched to a spade at
tr~ck two, the winners would have
be~n P~ter Hainsworth and Ralph
Parker from Queensland. Afterward
West, a friend of theirs, dld the nght
thing, buying them both a big drink to
compensate for the lost t1tle and reduced prize money.

~~--.,--~~------~·
90 Yamaha Wavetunnar , twQ ~·

Tops, loeded, E•cellent Condi-

BAHAMA CRUISE I 5 dayS/4

9

PITCHER,

1t1. S2!i0 oach, 014-ioe-3021.

llam-10pm

446·9289 between 9am-9pm.

Opening lead: •

YORI! "LAST

At&lt;C mini Ptntchers. two malo,
ready June 15, accepting depos.

Ouaftry Housanold FutnltiJtl And
Appliances GreatOnlsOn

East
4.
Pass

AN' NOT ONI

AKC Gorman ShOIJMrd IJUpo.

Garage Apanmenr · 29 rear Netl
A.ve., Galhpol11. Furnlsh8d (lw1ng
room, kitchen, 1 bedroom, bath·

450

eveR'BODY

-~75-a311

poloo, 614-4411-4416 Alter 7 RM

room) utilonn paid. S27S/rno 614·

Dealer; West
Settth
Weat North
2•
Db!
Pass Pass

Male Ia 1 good stud dag, 114256· 1851

n1ghts, \Jnderbookedl Must Still
S279Jcouple ltmlled nclileta 1·
800-4 14-4151 ext 8589 Mon-Sat

Apamnem

Vulnerable: Neither

Pets tor sale

AKC Roglottrtd ltlut &amp; gold
Yorkshire ttrnen, 2 metea•.1 ft-

ShorteQI

'

.. .

I Chrtetm.oa
plllnt
10 C..t • bllllot

71Aaove - -

tKQ8542
• QJ 2

palnt6d tltel aldtt root, 1 QUI·

61"'·446-3158

I Dant.. t'e

5 CIOparu.
6

••
.,,

•

......,.,

3 CMruefruh
• Br&lt;NKI nacktie

.,.

Building, 30w48d C4lllna. 13' onlrY - · 1-14xt .....,.. door.

..._

1 Box for alme
2 Campue-

• 10 9 8

.,.Tu_•_•·_Sa..;1.:.9-..;6.:.. .:.SU.:.n..;1.:.'.:.5.:.__ _ _
1
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 4 Yoor Old Roglatorod Rot Tonltr,

1-800 49!1-34911
Used End Tables.

DOWN

••

1g17 KXao Oor1 Biko S300. 814· •
378·2701

lomallc, Atr, 2 New Tlrea, Runs

Paid, Ji07 Second Avenue , Galh·

676 2

....... 304-182-2427.

710 Autos lor Sail·

111~

•K974 32
t A 10 7

1888 KX-80 Kawuakl, all now

TllM&lt;Sf'OilTI\ TION

~~~­
.~~ld

e

Weat

1-IIOQ.:J52.11M5.

Ave 614-446-3945

One bedroom furnished apartmem, 614·992-2178

2 Bedroo m. S175mo Need reler·
ences &amp; deposit Call 30• · 675·
1429 after 4 OOpm

...... -

FurniShed Eff All Uttltlles pd ,
Share bath S145 Mon11'l 919 2nd

Furmshed Ell1c1ency 2 Rooms ,
Share Bath, $1D51Mo Ultl1t1es

• Ge 3
• A K 10 I

•

Poonlod S1HI Siding, Golvelumo
S1oo1 Rool· "·"4 Eroctod· bon

919 Second Avenue, S265rMo .
614 .(.116-3945

pets, 3:14-773-5764

Country settmg, 4 bed room, 2
bath, ltv•no room, eat in kttchen
fam•ly room, walk '" closets, 2 ca r
garage, 1acre 304 -882·3326 a f.
ter 6pm

Door,

Furmshed Apartment 3 Rooms &amp;

2827

• Hospjtal 61A·4A6·7940

1 -3' Yen

9atl'l, AU Ut~ 1 11e~ Paid DownstairS,

2 bedroom house remodeled , no
2 Bedroom Hou,e , 2 Bedroom
Trailer /JIG, In Galhpolls, 614-446
8849 For lnlormatton

GOQC!s

boor.

Furn1ahed 3 Rooma &amp; Bath, Upsta~rs. Ut1l1t1es Furnished, Clean,
No Pets, Reference , Depoa11 Re
QUtrad, 614-448-1519

basement 61•·992-6389
3 BR . 2 belh ranch 2 car garage
SpHng Valley area, close to Holz-

Household

8ldo Sill 30'x4S4'. t ·tSd'

Eff Apartment 2 Rooms Pnvate
Bath, Excellent Neighborhood ,
Ulthll&amp;l Patd S225 Month 614
446-3117

41

o Houses for Rent

51 o

O r~ ve

Don't Let Thts One Sl1p 8~ !1
Small but very Clean wnh lots or
Extras. 1 Bedfoom, Washer lOr~
er, Stove, Relngerator No Pets

2543

MERCHANDISE

'

-

Stuflno

from $244 to $315 Walk to shop
&amp; movtes Call Gl.t- 446 2568
Equal Housing Opporl!Jmty

South 01 Vinton , $10,500, 614·
388-8521

Wa rned to bu~- one acre lot mil,
mostly leva! Aactne/ Syracuse/
letart l Por tland area, 614 -949·

Or EverJngs, 014·447157

BHUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

5 Acres Located Sa1lor Road.

Scentc Valle y, Apple Grove,
beaut•ful 2ac lots. public water,
Cl~de Bowen Jr ; ~4·57&amp;.23.16

a....

.. :O::l•

• A 4 3

• Qe

I ~

CoRO¥"""'t11814-448-1tl54

Tra11er Space For Ren1 On Ball Mtlll Roofint &amp; Siding
Ru n Road $100/Mo., References ilod. Galvolumo, lild Polnltd. AIReqwred !114-A-'8·4.111 Oayll:nw, .,.., Ftfm 5up1Jiitll14-265113

530

ESTATES. 52 Westwood

•'

1988 Honda 10cc, • ·whMI•r.

304~75-2722

Washers, dryers. relngaratora ,
range.s Skaggs Appl•anc", 76
Vme Street, Call 614 ·446· 7398

2bdrm apia • total electric:, appll.$incet furms.hed, laundry room
facilities, close to school 1n town
Apphc altons anllable at· Vtllage
Green Apts 140 or call 614·992

Soil In ~~g·~·~t_a•~4-·~~-~·~·----~· :
-

t08e Kaw111k1 SOO ATV 2 '; ,
WhHI Orlwe, RUt'tl Good $281, .,, •

$27.000

57-autCIIIIIkM

1M&amp;- XLdOOR 11:1110, .....~
HondO ZSOR 1&lt;100. lo1h and • .

Six properties lor tent on land
contract ranging from $10,000

1 Bedroom New Exira Ntce l
Range, Refrtgerator Furn1thed.
Ga1 HHt. l26e!Mo , Plus Unllries.
Depot!! Required, 81 ot-4-21157

1 BR Apartment Unfurmshed WI
Stove I Aefflgerate No Pets•
119500 Water Included $10000
OepoS1l61ol-448-3617

or ••••

~S8~50~304-8~-7-S-_7_;~~-~------~
· ~­

560

lng washer &amp; dr~er Oepos 11 &amp;
relerences. 304-882·2566

allllla lwy

Ar... &amp;14·25e-e338AfMte PU

Groom Shop -F'-1 Groamlna. Fel·
tunng Hydro Bath. Julie Webb
Catl&amp;14·444-0231

New Haven, 1bedroom. unlurntst\ed apt ,does have stove. re

,.,... -

304&gt;t1S-1107.

'=-.-.,-,.;...

Coun1ry FurMure 304 675-6820
Rt 2 N, 6mlles Pt Pleasant, WV

992·2218

Eer ..
Cllflllor.. - ·
100
- . ... - Slllou
3$47.

Building
Will bo C&lt;lltling illy soon
flold. 304-5~-~·-a!!~'-~--,-.,..
....,...._

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unh.Hnllhed, security
depo11t raquntd, no pets. 614 ·

ment 614·448.0390

675-5253

460 Space for Rent
550
Bu1int11
LKatton,
1,000
Sq FL
Larve
Poricong,
SR ,.,
, c.,..,..,

7195

440 · Apartments
for Rent

Mtddleport 1 &amp; 2 bedroom. lut
n1shed apts Also 2 room ell1cren
c~ Oeposll &amp; references te
qutred 304 882-2566

Parcels avatlable for naw home
construction on F4ayburn Road 5
parcels rang 1ng from 1 84ac to
5 32ac Paved road. county water,
reasonable resuictiona Map and
mlo ava•lable on requtlt No a~n ­
gte wide •nquUies please 304 ·

la4klet lor lbelllill IHMIIMI poof,

....lf2·10D-Ipm.

· Patl
oroctod
lll'ico MaOO, Procla.on
F,.,. Sidra. lnc., 114802-841hr 1 100 :11113021.

22 1f2 Acre Mason Co Pleasant
Rtdge Ad 114mt btr AI 2 all
fe nced 10 Acres flat. C1ty water
2 61 Acre 1n GalhpoU Fen'y or Will
sate m lots C11)' water 304·576
3150

Lots lor ren t Now taktng apphcatlons Counlr~ Lane Mobil&amp; Home
Park , Gallipolis Ferry Wv 304

&amp;14 4418580

Would llu •• •Y uiM ....do

Appliances
Recondlllontd
Washers , Dryers, Rangea. Refn grators. 90 Oay Guartntetl
French C tly Maytag, 614 .tee

814·992 2U57

tuACes

Bulldtng sites 1r1 S~racuse. three
d1fteren!lots cafl614·992·2282

Rooms for rem Wftk or rnoftlft
S~anong 01 S12Dimo Golha Hotol

Tra1ter for ttnl in Gall1pol11 area

2 3 bedrooms, bnck , OR. new
w•ndows , car pet. complete
k itchen and bath , garage ,

$90

. :. . .,. __
c-.

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General Ua1ntenanca , Paln~~ng.

NEED IMMEOIATELY

Now Taktng apphcanons
no s of GaHipoiiS.

tW1y

lei

. . . . . . OfoloNe
• "' IIIII II
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54 c·rr1tllt

on prOjeCt~
ly significant.
SAOmAAIUS "(Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Conditions
a whole look favorable lor you
today. Your s1rongest probab1htoes could
be on Slluatoons which directly affect your
ftnancoal allaors'
CAPRICORN CO.C. 22.Jtin. 11) You may
have good fortune in regard to personal
relatoonahops today. Good things could
happen through good lrlends who admore
you.
~
AQUARIUS CJan. »Feb. 111) A winOOw
ol oppOrtunity might open lor you today In
18Q8rd to your career Whal QC~:urs t;Ould
bring you cloler lo a valuable ctienl.
PIICES Cfeb. IIOollareh 20) Thia woH be
a good day to lry to work out specoal
arrangements lhal require an aaaoaale'a
coop818110n. He or lhe shOuld be receptive to your Pfopoeltl.
ARIES CMerch 21·Aprll11) You can
mekll a valuable cantribulioo lo an ongoIng project today, As a reeull, you can
ptOII flom 1hllllpllllve liluaUon.
T"'URUS (ApriiiO ._, 10) StSot&gt;nm~etetthhlng

lor romance and you'll fond ol. 1M AstraGraph Matchmaker onstanuy teveals
which signs are rornantocally perlecl lor
you. Mall $2 75 lo Malehlnaker. c/o thiS
•
newspaper, P 0. Box 1758, Murray Holt
Station, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156.
BERNICE
CANCER CJune 21.July 22) Someone
• '
&lt;
BEDEOSOL you seldom acknowledge could help you
'
today II you keep an open mind. Hos or
her suggestions might be more onlelflgent
than yours
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today's developments could be promising , especially
where your matertal needs are concen\ed Keep your eyes open lor ways to
add to your resoull:eS. - ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) People whO
Thurldey, May 30, 1996
are
easenllallo the """""" of your .,.,_
'
In lite y~ar ·~~ad yo~ can ullafy both will Usten 1o your p~li Wifh lntereat
your ,rllllaltn••• e.nd yowr material loday Self your Idees with enthusiasm
needli. Do r'lal let any opportunities allp and authority.
pa11 you .• Keep alrlvlng lo ree,ch your lii"A Clept. 23-0ct. 23) Commercial
condillona wllllool&lt; lavorablllloday, ...,..
goq..
GI!IIN (May"21-.llllll 20) MeullrM you dab II you are ~. Hllll)g or promotl&amp;ke today lor thOH you lOVe wih bring Ing a new product. Try to inllce a dMI.
OOCUIIty lor them and personal gnollflca- SCORPIO COOL 24 liDo. D) You might · ~can be~ ltldlly
llon lor ~- Make . _ dUIIel your rnoet have ·good luck today In endeavore In ........,.,. of a compe..~ elf~. Do r'lallll
imPQIIanl priorlllle. Know whale 10 fqok 1 which you have, a llrong Input. Focue your pride lland In your wey.

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Pom~y • Middleport, Ohio

PM•12 • The Ddy Sentinel

meets
pdenen
April 21

Family .
Medicine

j

873

PEPSI COLA .•

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Plck4:
1217

PRODUaS
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STOlE HOURS

24 PK. 12 OL WI$ CUll :;:

482865

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Ma ..ay tin S111llay

man,
wel·
- ···--·. ···--··
.,
corned 82 garfriend 's baby was original infection fr9m lhe baby.
deners TCpre· sick with a
infection and
Most infections of lhe conjunctiscnting 24 dif· was on oral
A few days v~ clear up wilh u,e of eye drops conferent clubs, later, bolh of'his parents came down taining medication that kill or at least
...
three state offi· wilh pinkeye. Now I have it, too. My cripple the offf nding organism. The
•
cers and three doctor gave me one type of eye drop, choice of eye drop depends on the
" - CUito
guests. Devo- while their doctors each gave them particular germ causing lhe infection.
: :
lions were read different ones. Why were different We physicians often make an edu• ~y Pauline Adkins.
·
medicines prescribed'
cated guess about which organism
· Tom Shisler, naturalist from
Answer: Pinkeye is a common causes an infection based. upon
Wahkeena Nature preserve enter· name applied to a variety of medical appearance and nature of discharge as
: :i.ained the crowd with "Nature's conditions that cause the eye to well as the history of the illness and
, Myths and Misconceptions." The become irritated and inflamed and, its progression. The alternative to Ibis
.~ video "I Love This Land" from hence, appear "pink." Most of these 'educated-guess approach" is to take
; -Ameriflora was available .for view- are infections of the conjunctiva ··the a culture and then wait two or three
1 ing during breaks.
mucous membrane that lines tl\e days for lhe results before starting
' .• The morning business included in'ner surface of the eyelid and lhe treatment. You were given a different
• R:poriS from regional and county exposed surface of the eyebalL 11\eS. medication than either of the babyis
; chairmen. Linda Hensler, .OAGC infections usually cause discomfort. parents because, while the doctors
' convention chairman, announced Rarely, a "pinkeye" infecti6n can . made guesses, they came to different
''that plans for the July I6 through 18 actually threaten vision, as can other conclusions about the nature of the
,;Otecting arc almost complete. non-infectious disorders that cause offending organism. Question: I play
~:'\Cgions II and 12 are hosts this the eye to become red.
wilh my dogs every day. Is there a
}'t'W· The theme will be "On the · In babies under a month old, the chance that I could give my eye
~ ' ld Side." ·
·
most common cause of pinkeye is an infection to them? Answer: Dogs and
; r ~\tate secretary Virginia Cooley infection lhat is acquired while pass- cats get conjunctivitis quite frc. · :ot'M "· Victory reported that March ing through the.mother's birth canaL quently, just like we humans do.
;~ w '•as the deadline for OAGC This condition carries the cumber- Many of the organisms that cause
~.hol 111 ~hip applications. Interested some medical label "ophthalmia
infections in humans can also cause
·· tttgb S&lt;. '.bool and college students neonatorum," and the·eye infection is lhem in our pels. So yes, it is possi'slibtlld a,tlJlly next year.
often associated with a respiratory ble. for you to give your pinkeye to
f , There IIJ'e a few sealS. still avail• · infection from the same infecting your dogs. Fortunately though, this
..ble ·oh tho.\ Sept. 16 through 20 tour . organism . Prompt treatment with doesn't seem to happen all that often.
:to:Branson ' Mo.
antibiotics is necessary to avoid seri- Both veterinarians and physicians,
. : ~egional' Advisor and Second ous damage to the baby's eyes as well however, are concerned when a cat.
; ~ice Preside• 11 Charlene Thornhill of as damage to other organs. Since partieularly a young cat, has con·
:C:reenville t •ncouraged clubs to most people call babies under a junctivitis. This is because the infec'apply for ·tht I various gardening month old a "newborn," and you ~se lion may be caused by Chlamydia tra·;a~ards listed ;.~ the handbook. She the term "baby," I suspect the child chomatis; and, if so, it can lead to per•also thanked llh ~ ones who suppon has another type -of infection. ·
manent eye damage without proper
,Wahkeena and 'Mohican Outdoor
Respiratory infections can be treatment.
..achool projecls. · ·
caused by several different bacteria or
So, I'd suggest that as long as you
; : Faye Collins, f,irsl vice president viruses. Many of these organisms, have an eye infection, you should
· fiom Minford, rentinded gardeners particularly H. aegyptius, Strep. wash your hands bolh before and
~\P altefl\llhe upeot.~ing c~nvent~on pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Staph. after handling your dogs, and keep
;i!( Worthington, Region II IS hostmg aureus, Chlamydia trachomalis and your face away from theirs. If your
..ll'je meeting. ·
.
adenovirus also cause infections of dogs develop an eye infection, take
• · Jose Cueto, bonsai expert from the eye. Your .friend and vou have them to.the veterinarian.
·columbus, shated slide-s and a histo- probably shared one of these org~n''Family Medicine" is a weekly
· r:V of bonsai for lhe afll.ernoon pro- isms. This often happens from genmg column. To submit questions, write
Th~' of his prized specimens the infecting germ on the hands, then to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohjp Uni·
Y/ll:re exhibilfd.
spreading it into the eyes by rubbing versity Collece of Osteopathic
, .~ \{elgs County ciubs provided tbe them. You've probably done this, and Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ju•d
~ and door prizes.
you may ot may not hate gouen the Ohio 45701.
V ' I

8 AM-10 PM

49

298 SECOND ST.

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eaners••••

BY CHAALENE HOEFUCH

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POTATO CHIP~•
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6-7.5 oz.

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amllpt wlsliln&amp; to ...-ace
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1 a lid ft11CW ·events. The
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: ;.tea q.; ru. td railers of any type.
• : 1tema idl'eJtinted u space permits
· ~ 'aiiCI auuiot.t~e guaranteed to nan a
• apecUic narill;t• of days.
h vEDNESDAV
·
. PORI'LANiO :· Lebanon Towri':sh)p, Wed~sday,111·r'· at the town;sliip buildmg.
·

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Ice Cream••••• !:~=~~....
· CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE

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·ntln~ from page 8
~ · ~urra Dry llidge, Ky. Bobby Hill.

· :C:Oiumb s: J01\an Deck Rathjen of
iFoslriria. onru'l Grinstead of Belpre.
~ · 1957, , arol .~iggs, Linda Moore
J.l)an f;. Mo'fris, all of Pomery,
; · anet Su'ubl~ Wil.\iamson of Rutland,
• d•Janice G. Rotlsh of Chesapeake:
: . '958, Robert E
. . \\lill of San Antonio
_; -:t~xas; ~ob and Shetla Eastman of
· :tiampolh.
; ,\ ' \960, Barbara : Eskew Fi.elds,
l!on'leroy, and Charl~s Kitchen of
;tason, W.Va.: 1961, Mike Roberts
Akron, Norman L. Price, Ben
!wing. Sandra Drake Stobart,
. William A. Young, all of Pomeroy;
;Sa'i;lh Foster Williams of Marion,
~ic)lael Swatzel of Lillie Hocking;
-1962. Anita Neutzling RL ussell of
"P.arkersburg, W. Va., and Mike Wer.ry of Belpre; 1963, Juc!y Wehrung
Sisson. Jim Sisson, Sharon Zurcher
~altox of Pomeroy.
• · 1964. Yvonne Young, Robert
Buck. Nancy Bums Van Meter, all of
·Pomeroy. and Jennifer Crew of South
&lt;Carolina; 1965, Donna Hauck Cam
· ~(Pomeroy, and Carla Will Werry of
ielpte.
" 1966. Vicki Feuy Maning of
Dublin, Jeannie Ebersbacb Simm .or
;(lallipolis, Carl Aleshire of Frankhn,
Sill Nease of Racine, Charles of Mid' ~Qihian, Texas, Dennen Roush, !eff
· ·~ibbs. Jay C. Russell of Medma,
arJie Warner, Carson Crow, Guy
,
eat, and Beverly Johnson Felty
Pomeroy, Bruce Simpton of Sey, ~.Ind .• Bill Francis of Reedsville,
~ Gillmmore of Amlin, Gail St.
·r.' :Jerry Aleshire .of Syracuse,
·~:t·
I NeUUiing, Htlah Vaughan
• fAy of Richlands, Va., Charlocte
.i .dl rt of Nelsonville; ~d 1967,
t.fary rancis Rose of Ronda.

.il ,

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HANGING BAS

89C

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4 $1

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3 FOR $1 0

BOUNTY
TOWELS

4 IN. POT SALE 12 TO A FLAT
FLAT

$1
00
2 FO.R

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VIETTA BEEF :
OR PQRK : .
BARBEQUE:j
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: worlien wttf; Advanceci Palntlnt. Atllenl, .work on the eeconjl

·or the Davie and Qulckellneurance Building t;tn the cor111r

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Court and S1co."'d Sll&amp;lta In Pomeroy Wedllllday. The con18 completlng...m.ce painting work, a• a part of the ongodowntown ravttallzlllon program. (T. Hunter/Sen-

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LIMIT 2 PLEASE

GROUND

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10 LB.

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·$ 90
EA.

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·8Y:TOM HUNT!R :
'Siihllnel Nllwe Sa.tr
, ~iddlepon Counci.l.took action lo
help correct severe drainage ind
sew!~Je backup problems in the vii·
lase during their regular meeting,
W~esday ni.... !II ~lddleport Vii·
lag. Hall.
.
Mayor Dewey Horton reponed
thai work will begin 1~q~e 1 10 correct
drai.._JC and backup problems in lbe

May 13 meeting of council. and
asked lhe village to do si&gt;melhing ·io
address the problems,
Residents stated lhal drainage
problems along Pearl Street. .between
Lincoln and Grant Streets, have
caused basement flooding ani! sewer backups· wilh more and more fre·
qucncy over lhe last few years.
Crews will completely dfean out
the lines, taking some out 1 nllCCs·
SixihStreet.PeariS~t.andOrant . Sll)',inan._...toendthesJrainaae
'StRetareu.
, • runoff,ICCordiJ18IOrcorton, .
''
In other matters, ouncil:
· Several viii·- midenls voic:eil
,..._.,_ued
, I:&lt;JIICCOIS over-.~
the problems at . the
...,...~
on pap 3

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three inches of rain in less lhan a two neverclearCd up enough for workers
Building damage assessm,ents :"
hour period on most of .the county IQ fix t11ose roads dan)nged.in Janu· include: Middleport Fire Department :
Saturday May 4.
.,
. ary, wilh lhe May storms compound- •water damages, $3,500.00; various :
Meigs County was the.only coun- ing lh@t previous damag~nd creat- church damages, $8,000.00: Portl311d :·
ty placed under a State Emergency ing some real problems for county School roof damages, $2,500.00.
•
Declaration by Governor George V. and township officials."
In March, $1,388,430 was ··.•
Voinovich after the early May storms.
Damage assessments include : . released to Meigs County officials·' :
The.declaration provided local offi- County roads, $411 ,582.68; $alem by the Federal Public Assistance •
cials wilh some relief, givinglhem an Township, $52,355.00; Salisbury Program. for repair and construction '•
cipponunity lo seek state and federal Township-, $354,843.00; Rutland of roads damaged during the January ;:
aid for repair of flood and storm relat· Township, $202,045.90; Chester flooding in nine of Meigs ~!)unty's •.
ed damages.
. Township, $128,271.68; Sutton twelve townships, according to : . Much of lhe damage is attributed . Township, $13,000.00; Olive Town- Meigs County Engineer Robert H.- , •i
lo incomplete repairs from flood and ship, $78,443.00; Lebanon Township, Eason.
·
: ;~
stonn damage to·township and coun- $15,500.00; Leading Creek Conser·
'fhe latest assessments pla~e 1996 . ;~
ty · roads after January flooding, vancy District, $26;300.00; Tuppers storm and flood damage· totals ' in ::.~
acco~ing lo Byer. "The ·weather
Plains-Chester Water . District' Metgs County over the $2.7 million ~
$22.400.00.
mark .

Anti-consolidation effort's hopes rise In Mason County
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
President Paul Doeffinger, bolh of
AssoclataCI Praas Writer
whom supported lhe plan lo build a
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - First single high school wilh $14.4 million
came the Election Day ouster of two · . from the state School Building
pro-consolidation members of the Authority.
Mason County Board of Education.
Tbe : consolidation plan was

Until the election, Siders was lhe
longest serving board of education
member in the slate, having served
for 32 years on lhe Mason County
school board.
"Bolh of them were unseated over

approved in October 9n a 3-2 vote.

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By TOM HUI'rtER .

•ddleport
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d.ra.i."·age. pro b.lem
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May
storm
damages
top
$1
million
-.
Sentinel Newt Stllff
The endless cycle of ptperwork
· on the desk of Meigs County Enlergency Services director Bob Byer is
becoming somewhat manageable,
but still is overflowing as local officials 'continue to figure damage
assessments from heavy May rains
which caused well over $1 million in
additional storm . damage in Meigs
Coqnty. ,
,
·' Early estimates indicate over S1.3
million in damages occurred to coun~
ty and .iownship roads, water systems,
and community buildings as a result
of heavy rains which dumped over

-'

BEEF

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$566

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FIELD TRAIL..-:
CHUNK DOG&lt;
.FOOD

FRANKS
PORK&amp; BEANS

ONIONS1o1s

NON STOPS DOUHLE lf.1 PAfiENS
NE\'J iJ VIW\ lf\1P ,\T I [ ~J
2 FOR ~, 1 Ol!

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100Z.

VADELIAOR
SWEET

WE WILLIAM
SWEET WILLIAMS
4" POT

$299

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ARMOUR TREEJ
lUNCH MEAT

· 'or

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..

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fot 50 years.
.The residents asked to be kept
updated on efforts to solve the flood·
ing problem in their areas and anolher meeting wilh Council was set for

., ,'~ Mei~ County Ytttiins' As~is· for help. The program' ~ff~- ~fet'!'al
·. · tarice program has' been honored ' and legal advocacy for vtcums tlf vto·
wilh.a state-level award presented by lent crime at no cost to clients.
I 'i'-J ~
.. ( l ; ' '
Ohio Attorney Generi Betty Mont·
"I am proud of our local victims
\ !i ~ ] : '
gomeroy, recognizing the program as assisll,mce · program," Lentes said,
;,\ 1 f 1
one of Ohio's outstanding victims ' "and I am most pleased that we are
f '! ; ' ' '
'!Ssistance programs. ·
beginnin~ to ge.t recognition ~om
,u··
ll ; ;
The award wa5 presented to coun· slate offictals. 11lis sort of recogmhon
i r; ' ; : f 1
i f. ' ': ; ' ' ~
ty victims.' advocate Connie Dodson will benefit
only the program, but
. l;~ff . \\1' ~
. ...j '!, i : ' \ . I •
and prosecuting alJOmey John Lentes those clients ~o.need lbese services
•. ' o.¥-J ' ' ,,
I
' by Attorney Gdieral Montgomery · so desperately.
.
·
'· 00
I
following ·&amp;statewide victims assisDodson credited much ot lhe suc·
..
"' .,.,
. . tance celebration in Columbus May cess of the program td lhe assistance
1·8tli. The award recognizes out- of !he Meigs County Department of
'
· standing victims assistance programs, Human Services, the Meigs Co~nty
· . and cites Lentes' "distinguished ser· Senior Center, local law enforcement
vice and selfless dedication 10 victims agencies, medical providers, and
STATE AWARD • The Melg1 Couoty
pro. of crime in Ohio."
Serenity House in its successful
gram ha been recognized by Ohio Attorney Gerleral
Mont· .
The Meigs County Victims' Assis- ·implementation.
gomery 11 one oi .Ohio'e outlttandlng viCtims a88lstance prolance program, started in 1994 by the
"Without .these agencies, we
grams. The prog111m, under the direction of Vlctlml advocate
Meigs County Prosecuting Auor- would not be a~le 10 adequately pro- .. CQI!I!Ie Dod801'1 aod pro~utl,ng attorney Johl! Lentaa, waa
ney's office, has provided victims of vided these important services to lhe
Ntabllehecllhrw v-ra ego and provldee crime vlctlma with legal
·crime !n Meigs Coun'¥ a place to turn county's crime victims," said Dodson. · a1aletance and health rvferral1. (T. Hunter/Sentinel photo)

•

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4ROLL

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Meigs'County Engineer Bob Eason
who said lhe county c.ould offer littie assistance, but encoura~· eyeryone to work together, and 10 remember that rain's like lhOSC( .earlier this

not

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. SEEKING SOLIJ110N~ - A group of Mulbeny/Unlon Avenue
raaldente met with Pomeroy VIllage Council and John~.
village edmlnle1rator, Wldneadlly night to dl1cuse the ara's
floocllog problem. 1t11ra Melinda Strong cella on Council fof some · ·
aolutlcin1.

Victim,s• program
rec_
ei)(es state ;award _.

_./-ii " "

DISH DETERGENT

: ; . 'pOMEROY-- Big Bend Stem· .
:"
1Festival Association, Thurs~av
:7 :~ 'tl p.m. at the Carpenters Umon

,._

being too small" to handle the water problems in that area.
when downpours come, and also
He told lhe group that lbere is a
complained about me odor.
plan for sewer line replacell!ent
Gene Houdashelt said he. spenf sometime within the next few years,
$6,00!) last year repairing his home but said lhat is noi possible until grant
and now be .has many · of the same monies are avliilable.
problems.
Strong charged that residents are
"Something ~las to be done," he "getting lbe run around."
said.
"We want answers,;' she said.
Among lhe-others who spoke at
She qilestioned AndersOn on what
the meeting about pioperty damage, happened to the flood money which
inconvenience, oc!oi problems, and lbe village got last year.
·holes which suddenly appear in their
Councii!IWI Bill Young respondyards ·were David Edwanls, Richanl ed lhat it was only $7;000 iuld it went
Fetty, Becky Triplett, Frank Sisson, for street repair. ·
Melinda ·strong, and Patsy Ward. , Council President· John Musser
Several presented pictUres.
stressed lbe need 10 identify why lhe
Anderson assured the residents sewers are not carrying off lhe water.
that he is looking; ai the situation and He said the village _will do what can
trying to come up wilh solutions.
be done 10 alleviate !he flooding sitHe said lhat work~rs will be , uation now, and lhen go after some
checking the sewers 10 detcnnine if grant monies for sewer replacement.
the~ are clogs which cause the water Councilman Larry Wehntng, George .
to back up, lhal channels will be Wright, and Young agreed. Ma,yor ,
opened so lhat surface walel' can .. Frank Vaugban moderated lhe meet·
drain off better, and that every effOrt in g.
' .
'will be made to solve the fl~ing
Meetill8 with the group was

· Pomeroy -·· "~~... ,. .

High School alumni lianquet iit 6:30
Hall.
.
and dance at 8:30p.m. at the Chester
FRIDAY
.
school
auditorium. ·Classes to be
POMEROY •• Meigs County
Library Board ofTrustees, I p.m. Fri· honored, 1921, 1926, 1931, 1936, ·
day at the library, accept a bid on the 1941, 1946, 1951. and 1956. Reserconstruction of the Racine Library vations due to Beuy Dean, 3~t)40
Sumner Road, Pomeroy. Music by
and discuss personnel matters.
George Haii : Two scholarships to be
SATURDAY
CHEStER •· Annual Chester awarded.

• '111VRSDAY
·.j'OMEROY •• Pomeroy Qroup of
· i'k:C.•Itolics Anon~mous, an ,open·
lead s·,peaker, meeting Thursdliy al 1
· :p.m. basement of Sacred Hearl
:Catholi.c Church.

'

those losses were covered by insurwl\ile otliUs were nol, 'he said.
He talked·abQul the inadequacy of
lhe sewers to handle heavy rainfall,
asked what plans are being made to
replace lhe sewer system, ani) urged
that the village apply for sewer
' replacement grants from state agen-

: Sentinel newe etaff
ance
:
"We're lookins at everything and·
, trying 10 come wilh some solutions to
•· rehabilitale lhe sewers, but there's just
' no quick fix," John Anderson told 21
.pltizens gathered at Pomeroy village
hill Wednesday night for a town
~eeting.
.
cies: ·~
• : The village adminislrator along
• with me~!&gt;ers of Pomeroy Village
Jim Soy{sby ,talked about the
:tpuncil met with residents 10 discuss flooding on Uniop Avenue and sug·
· ways they can work together 10 solve ges\el! aredging out lhe ditches along
. lhe problems of surface water flopd- lhe street an~ putting in _barricades to
: iljg in the Mulberry/UI)ion Avenue catch lbe debris. He told about the .
•area.
quanlities of irash which·hiS'family
. . Torrential rains this month and in had removed,from the sewers during
· ~May, 1995 have resulted in massive lhe flash flooding earlier this month.
..-fl.-h flooding of properties along lhe
He proposed later in the meeting
: two streets.
a "village sweep'' much like lhe June
:· · Chris Pines, who lives on Mul- Ohio ·River sweep to remove some
:·berry and last week presented a peli- the debris which washe.s into tbe
:.tion to council appealing for help in drains and clogs them up.
· solving lbe problem, said that he had · · The extensive damage at die Mul~
: taken a survey of 12 homeowners and berry Avenue apartment complex
:,C&lt;!IIIeupaftgttreof$142,000indam~ was di'scussed by tbe resi3ent man·
:.age in.lhe past two years. Some of a~er. He described the sewer a5 just

plllll.

Ill

•

Pomeroy Village Council.meets w1th 21 c1t1zet:Js to
~ ciiscuss situation as "esult:.of torrential rains in.May·.

,.

. :·
Com~unity calendar
··&lt;· . The. •comm\anlty Calenclilr

.

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PRINGLE

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31-.

30, 1996

!No quick fix. to ill_lPr'!ye s~wer problem~
s~·.

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"'.·...

JIFF .PEANUT '•..
-.,,
BUnER

s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thuraday,

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WIIISERVE THE RIGIT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JUitE 1 , 1996

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

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POMEROY, OH.

Clear to night, low• In
401. FridaY, tunny. High 1r1

Kicker:

~

I

John C. Wolf, D.O.
A&lt;SOCiate Professor
cr Family Medicine

Carpen-.r.
Meias County
contact chair-

I

Ohio Lottery
Plck3:

Ohio University
College of Ost~thic Medicioe

• ·: Ana
met
11
,O..\iit011 School in Syracuse for the
:oti.\o AJiiocialiOR of Garden Club's
tOAOC) Relion II Sprin1 mccUIIJ.. ·. M.n Wootten, Reaional
: directoor from Atbens, called the
~·
meetina
to
"
order. Suzy

..

..
...
•
."
Wednaaday, . , 29, 1916:
..

" work on lhe new consolidated high
school.
.
. .
Mason County foes of consolidation say they have new hope lhat they
ultimately will defeat a plan 10 combine Point Pleasant, Hannan artd
Wahama high .schools into a single
QI:W school1n Point PI~L
"We'rej'ust tluilled,'' Shir.ley Gue,
a leader in lbe anti-consolidation
organ,izalion knodwnWednas
M':l: Coon. ty Kiill First, sai
e y.
In 1be ~•Y 14 election, COUIIt)'

VOiaSIRIIMIO-Ihepopouldefeal· ,

"''"

e&lt;1 Muon County Board.of Educa-

-·~ Vitee
li.on Pre
. st'de.nt Harry S'tlen
1
.....

.

Ibis one issue," Mrs. Gue sai4. .

enfr.y .n .

Portsmou

ous,e

WASHINGTON (AP) _ rM Boy Behind the Book bail come out,
from under c:over and he'•llitllils center sta&amp;e
Nationlll Spelling

Bee.

allhe

.

Jimmy McCarthy, the ftnt proloaDdly deal pupil to compe~,
advanCed to loday's Wb wllb lltde trQuble. AU he ·had to do_ 81
· he apelled It_ .... "v+MHt-c·o·l·•r-1-z.:e." That .,..... expf'el!l•
Ia&amp; ~ t. alUiliYe languaae, whlcb for Jinuny Ill a tnb of...
and tpeeda.
· ·
Oat of 247
In ·the 69th 111111..r Scrlppt Howard Natloul
Speum1 Bee; 103 n..-elt tuwp lite ftnt tllne ~on Wec!nra
,._
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''The two new people ... definitely view things differently than the •.
current board. That puts us in the ~
m~ority, and we are hoping the new
board will want to sit down and negotiate over these lawsuits," she said.

Jud':es~~ee;p~~:;:'g~~~:::d~i~~~

'
porary halt 10 site work on the new •
school. He gave lawyers for lhe
Mason County Board of Education :
and1tbe anti-consolidation forces 60 "
days lo prepare their written argu- . ~·
ments.
. -;
But Carla Ball, spokeswoman rdr ;
Mason County School Superinten- .;
·
, ·
tdent Michael Whalen, said lbe rejoic- ~
ling over Spaulding's ruling was pre-. ;:
mature.
.
·
•.
, "The only thing he did was stop :,
lhe work until both sides have .luJ :,
·
bmi
•
,
r
· ·•
Ms . ,•
· opportunity
Ball md. to su . t ·.briefs,"
.
•
•

.

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