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Wednesday .

By The Bend

The·Daily Sentinel

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those men in their ·late 40s and 50s ·
who are looking for young "trophies" are no barga\n. They are vain,
empty-headed fools. If you cannot
have ,a quality man, you are better
off alone. Trust me. Keep reading
for more on this subject:·
Dear Ann: I would like to
respond to the ' single woman who
recently wrote to explain how happy
she was with her lifestyle and how
some people have a hard time
believing that single life can be fu l·
filling.
I'm 42 and have be.en married
twice and divorced twice. Both of
my ex-husbands remarried within
months of our divorces, and one has
been married three times si nce. Both
remarried because they didn 't want

to be alone.
I have one girlfriend wlu&gt; is supporting her sweetie atid another who
is involved with an alcoholic
because she "needs somebody" in
her life. Two women in my social
circle are in loveless marriages with
husbands who ·cheat left and right,
but they tolerate the indignity
because the thought of being on
their own terrifies them.
After my last divorce, I cried for
months, thought about my ex all day
long and dreamed about him at
night.
When I couldn 't stand the pain of
the separation, I would go back to
him, like a heroi n addict returning to
get my fix . .
Of course, I W'!S returning to

what caused that pain in the first
plsce. I can't believe I was so stupid.
My second husband was controlling,
unfaithful and a congenital liar. I
must have been out of my mind ·to
think I could change him. The
divorce cost me plenty, but it was
worth it to be rid of him.
It took time, but I stayed strong,
held my head up and eventually got
through it. I am now living .a happier, healthier life alone. I.don't need a
map 10 make me happy and whole •.
thank you . ., OK Somewhere in the
U.S.A.'
.
Dear OK: You have found the ·
answer to thai well-known Ann Landers question, "Are you better ofl"
with him or without him?" and I
salute you for being wise enough

High: 70; Low:SO
Tomorrow: Rain
High: 70; Low:SO

ma~e~

and strong enough to face the trulh.
How I wish more females would fol·
low your example.
Too many wonderful ·women put
up with cheating, lying freeloaders
because they think "it's better than
nothing.'' I can tell them -- "nothing" is a lot better than a liar and a
cheat. There is no price tag on dignity and self-respect And while you
are putting up with the liar and the
cheat. you may be missing out on
some truly decent man who could
appreciillc your wonderful qualities
and make you very happy.

..

and make tapes so·their children will
know about them. The business
meeting was opened with prayer by
Rev. Sharon Hausman, and by the
group reading the pledge. Secretary
Poole and Nina Robinson. in the
absence of Treasurer Osie Mae Follrl)d. gave their repons. The group
reported 35 friendship calls.
Arrangements were made for
members to attend the district .
retreat Program Resources Chairman Sarah Caldwell discussed reading books for 1998 and showed the
tool assortment offer.
Thelma Henderson gave a missions report on the development program for women in Haiti. which
encourages better living conditions,
literacy; disease control and an aid in
improving income.
Charlotte Van Meier had the
prayer calendar, and chose Patricia
Patterson, laity worker in New York.
The society signed a birthday card
for her.
·
Caldwell served refreshments
during the social hour to those mentioned and to Aorence Ann Spencer
and Marjorie Guthrie.
The next meeting will be at the
church on May 19. Mrs. Robinson
will be the program leader ·and
Spencer will be hostess.

BY BECKY BAER
Melge County Exteneion
Agent
Femlly end Consumer · Sciencea/Communlty Develop~
ment
·

May is known as "Tourism
Month." .
Tourism is the third largest
industry in the United States. Over
3.25 billion dollars is spent each
year on ·tourism. While !raveling,
visitors spend more money on
shopping than anything else
except lodging and meals . Many
of their purchases are souvenirs.
Can you supply them with
mementos of their travels?
How can you know what
tourists will want to buy? First,
you have to consider the four different types of tourists. These are

D of A past couneUors meet
An Ellster theme was carried out
at the recent meeting of the Past
not "carved-in-stonen distinctions,
Councilors' Club of Chester Coun' Tales of departed to be told at
however,
because · people may
cil 323, Daughters of America, held cemetery
fluctuate
between
types depending
at the hall with Charlone Grant as
The Athens County Historical
on ..their travel destinations..
hostess.
,
Society and Museum's successful
After you decide what type pf
Erma Cleland presided at the Mother's Day program in the West
tourist
your area auracts, you can
meeting, and read scripture from State Street Cemetery last year will
work
towards
supplying the parMallhew. The Lord's Prayer ami- be~pealedthisyearonMay IOwith
ticular
souvenirs
that those
pledge to ·the American Aag were new stories.
·
given in unison.
Fifteen interpreters.· each stand·
For roll call members read an ing by a grave, will give a brief
Easter poem or displayed a cross. A account of ihe l.ifc of the person
Destincc Danae Blackwell cclccommi!tee of Esther Smith. Opal buried, there or some incident in that
htated
her first birthday with a party
Hollon and Elizabeth Hayes was person's life.
appointed to rewrite the by-laws.
. The free program will !&gt;egin at at McDonald's. hosted by her mothh was noted that Dorothy Myers the cemetery at 2 p.m. and tours will cr. Arica Blackwell.
Attending and presenting gif'ts
is to have eye surgery. Officers' begin approximately every I 0 minwere
her maternal grandparents.
reports were given by Charlollc utcs until4:30 p.m. The presentation
Steve
and
Shari Blackwell; maternal
·Qrant, secretary, and Mary lo Bar- lakes an hour and a half.
·
ringer, treasurer.
Marj Stone. program chair, great-grandparents, Jerry and Bar· ·
At the May meeting members arc woman, said the tales give bits of the bara Colmer; maternal great-great
to give Mother's Day poems.
history and ranging from the first g,randmother Mamie Stephenson;
Refreshments were served by the mayor of Athens to the mothers of Amber Blackwell and son, Austin
hostess. Games were conducted by sons killed in the Millfield Mine . Hendricks; Aja Blackwell : Ryan
Dill; Tainmy, David, Jeremy, Kim
Jean Welsh and Elizabeth Hayes. Disaster .to a runaway slave.
and -Megan Johnson, Joyce, Jamie
Door prizes were won by Laura Mae
Gail, Jeremy and Sheena Ash: ConNice, Opal Eichinger, Elizaheth Area Rnident Named Outstandnie, Shannon and Devan Soulsby;
Hayes and Opal Hollon. Others pre- inll Campus Lader at Ashland
Jim, Kim and Aaron Oliphant:
sent were Thelma White. Mary K. UniYenlty
Holter, .Marcia Keller and Margaret
Joshua Moles of Cheshire was Tammy, Brittany and Olivia Crenamed the outstanding campus means; Pauline, Erin, and Lindsey
Amberger.
leader at Ashland "Univcrsity during Paucrson; Timmy Yates; Savannah
the leadership and service recogni- · and Melinda Miller.
Alfml UMW meets
· Martha Poole and Nellie Parker lion ceremony held April 26.
led the program. "Finding Hope,
Moles, son of Terry and Sharon
Love, and Dignity," when the Alfred Moles of 2624 Lillie Kyger Road, i~
· UMW met ai the chulch on April 21 . a senior majoring in toxicology at
Due to family illness, Martha Elliou Ashland University. He is a 1994
was unable to be present to lead the River Valley High School graduate .
program.
The program told of the program On de110'1 lilt
Melissa Nicholson of Pomeroy
for abused and HIV-positive teens
by Tabcrman Settlement House. was inadvcnently omilled from the
· Inc .• in San Pedro. Calif. Teens who list of studenis named to the Winter
Refrteerators
won'tlive to sec their children grow Quarter Dean's List at Hocking Colup are encouraged to lteep diaries lege.

tourists will want to buy.
I . Ethnic, Arts, and People
Sty lc - These tourists really gel
into their travels. They become
· ~ng rossed with the culture, art's
and way of life for the peop!e of
the specific community. They
view the experience as ·not only
ed ucational, but also as a means of
personal development.
The visitprs become involved
in community festivals, aucnd
concerts and plays. visit art museums and galleries, and talk with
local residents.
These travelers like to buy ageless crafts such as folk art, design. er and ethnic crafts, as well as the
traditional crafts associated with
that panicular region.
They want crafts that can be
used in the home, jewelry, and
items that can· be added to their
·craft collections. They expect
good quality. an attractive color
and design, and work that has
been signed by the artist.
2. History and Parks Style These people appreciate the land·
scape and encapturing the "feel·
ing"·ofthe area's past and what it
means to them.
Many of today's vacationers
choose spots that .have historical
significance. They plan their trips
to include visits to historical sites
and homes, museums, recreated
villages and buildings, gardens,
and state and naiional parks.
Tourists to these areas like to
buy crafts that have historical,
regional, ethnic, nature. country.

Birthday celebrated

By JIM ~EEMAN
Sentinel New• Steff
A seated Meigs County collllnis- ·
sioner was narrowly defeated ·Tues·
· day in a close, three-way race,
according to unofficial primary election results from the Meigs County

90045

and western themes that correlate so many times they select package
with the locale. They are particu- tours that enable them to constantlarly interested in crafts that can ly be "on the go."
be displ'ayed in their homes. Other
This group is mostl y comprised
requirements include clever ideas, . of young men and women in their
superb workmanship, aesthetic twenties who greatly enjoy the
color and design, ease of packing city's night life.
and care. and insignias relevant to · Socializing is extremely
the site.
important to them. They love to
Postcards, historical books shop, attend professional sporting
abOU\ the area. local food products events. visit theme parks, arid
and collectibles arc also on the dance.
.
shopper's souvenir list ·
Most of these tourists want to
3. Active Outdoor Style - These buy items that depict the .location
vacationers enjoy hiking, camp- of their travels. T-shir~' and sweat,
ing, backpacking, fishing, sailint. shirts arc always popular. but -so
boating, hunting, swimming; ski· arc pens. bumper stickers. and key
ing, and playing tennis and golf. .chains.
Their main goal is to treasure the
They tend to select crafts with
great outdoors.
a contemporary or designs well as
T·shirts and sweatshirts with western handicrafts. They like to
names and·.logos for the area ·seein make an impressio~ with their disto be the holiest items. Crafts are plays of crafts and seasonal or hoi·
usually made from natural materi- iday items.
. .
als such as grasses, corn husks,
Clothes, accessories, or jewelry
pine cones, · dried flowers and play a significant role in their
stone.
vacation purchases.
Rural, western, recreational
Craft prOducers, retailers, and
and traditional themes are pre- businesses can become savvy in
dominant Folk art is also in supplying sduvenirs to sightseers.
demand. The visitors want craft · Which type of tourist do you think
items that can be displayed in their our .area will draw? Probably all
homes that have a whimsical but t.hc Urban Entertainment
accent. Names. of attractions and tourist, with the majority of the
corresponding designs are impilr- · visitors being In the .Active Outtanl, along with signed, marked or door category.
limited edition crafts made by
Once the community . deterwell-known artists and crafts peo- mines which tourist styl~ their
ple.
·
.: area attracts, they can then strive
4. Urban Entertainment Style - to furnish the appropriate memcnThese people want to do as much . los that those tourists will want to
as they can during their vacations. · buy.

UALITY..FU.RNITURE PLU
.

Announces
Wuben

JTAG

NTH!.

M•lleChef
Ranees

Dryers

Board of Elections.
Republican candidate Pa!ty Goe·
glein Pickens, Pomeroy, received
I,341 votes. Cunent Commissioner
F~ Hoffman, Middleport, ~ived
1,317 votes followed closely by a
thind candidate, E. Jim Sheets,

PAnY G. PICKENS
- ~

Voinovich :wins
Senate primarY

COLUMBUS (AP) - Oov. ·of other school issues in the CincinGeorse Voinovich didn't bother to nati81ashowsvoter.iareti~oftax. Camp&amp;ign Cor his U.S. Senate prima~
ry election. But then, he didn't need
"!think my message, l!(hen lt.wa,~
to.
able to get out, wli• a strong mesVoinovich ea,•ily won the Repub- sase," said McCollough, who spent
lican primary Tuesday. bea!ing a so little money that he did not have
Cincinnati suburban l;O(:ial studies to file federal pre-election campaign
teacher making hi~ lint run for pllil- di5&lt;;i0surcs. ,
.
ical office.
_ • McC&lt;?IIough said he decided to
With 99 pen:ent of the pm:incts - jet ill the race in early 1996 when
reporting. Voinovich received 72 per- Glenn had not decided whether he
cent of the vote to 28 pen:ent fot' was going to run for another tenn.
David McColloush. acconding to
f&gt;JcCollough said he thought about
unofficial results tabulated by 1be dropping out .when Voinovi~h
_ Associ•ted Press.
announced he was running, but
;
"We're pleased with the results of · decille!Jthat it wa,• important to firi- tonisht's election," said Caryn Can- ish. ,
disky, spokeswoman fo~ the
. '&lt;0\ltovich, constitutionally bamd
yoino•ich. c11mpaign. "Obvtou~Jy, from running fot' a thind consecutive
we'll be runnin&amp; a strong campatgn four·)'W term as sovemor. also used
lookinsto the November election.:· his time to focus .on one' of his
Voinoviah's opponent in Nove!ll- strcn&amp;t.hs- raising money.
ber, Mill}' Boyle, was unopposed in
~n Voinovich lost the Senate
Tuesday's Democratic primary for race in 1988, ~ and Democra1ic
the Senate seal held by Democrat opponent Howard Metzenbaum set a
· John Glenn.
.
state record by spendins more than
Ratherthan campaign for the pri- $16 million combined.
mary, Voinovich turned his attention
Voinovich h_as collected millions
to backing the penny-a-dollar sales more than Ms. Boyle, who lost to
tax incrca,'it that would have provid- Democriuic lawyer Joel Hyatt in the
ed more money for Ohio schools' 1994 primary for the Senate seat now
while providing prilperty lax relief for held by Republican Mike DeWine.
homeowners. The issui: was defeatMs. Boyle said the absence of a
ed Tuesday.
primary challense gave her the lux. McCollough· wa,~ pleased with the ury of spehding more lime becoming
support he received for his conserv· familiar with the problems she would
alive. anti·lax message. He said the be asked to solve if elected to the
failure of the sales taX and the defeat Senate.,

es.

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Hometown Newspaper

Meigs
upsets
Wellston
Page 6

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Single Copy- 35 Cents

.

Pick~ns, ·Davenp~rt.

---Community Calendar'-----

DESTINEE BLACKWELL

Meigs County~s

For county commission seat

Scnll questions to Ann Landers, Cre·
ators Syndicate. 5777 W. Ce ntury
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

TUESDAY
noon.
ALFRED - Ofl\ngc Township
Trustees. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the ·
POMEROY - Meigs County ·
hoc nf the clerk. Osic Folltod.
Health Department. free i•mnunizatinn clinic. "Tuesday, 5to 7 p.m at the
POMEROY - Fraternal Order Meigs Multipurpose Center in
of the Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m Pomeroy. All children must he
Tuesday, at the hall . Elcetio~ of nfli- accompanied by a parent or
ccrs.
guardian with the child's shot
record.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at .
MIDDLEPORT - Department
township hall on Rocl&lt;.springs Road. of Veterans Affairs, health care ..
enrollment and preventative health
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport services event, American Legion
Maso~ic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, reguPost in Middleport, Tuesday, 10 . .
lar rilcting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at a.m. In 4 p.m.
temple.
REEDSVII,.LE - Olive Town. POMEROY - Free blood pres- ship Trustees, regular meeting,
sure screening by VMH nurses, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. township, buildFarmers Bank, Tucsdav, 9 a.m. to in~ .
·
·

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A Gannett co . Newspaper

Society Scrapbook -'------1 ime Out For .l·i ps---1

Members' health talk of Daughters oC America
Several members were reported
ill at a recent meeting of Chester
· Council, Daughters of America. held
at the hall.
Ella Osborne, councilor, presided
at the meeting which opened with
pledges to the Christian Flag and the
American Flag. Erma Cleland ~ead
six verses from Matthew, Chapter
28.
Goldie Frederick was reported to
be home from the hospital , and .a
thank you card was read from Alta
Ballard for remembrances during
her recent hospitalization . Also
reported were {he deaths of Doris
Grueser's father, William Fields, Jr..
and Delores Wolfe's father-in-law,
Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
Wolfe was pianist for the meeting. The meeting time was changed
to 7:30 p.m . Erma Cleland, Shirley
Beegle, and Everett Grant conducted
a game after the meeting closed,
with winners being Ella Osborne
and Opal Eichinger. Others allending were Gary Holter, Julie Curtis,
Mary K. Holler, Marcia Keller,
Thelma White, and Laura Mae Nice.

Primary election results, Page 10
Beat of the Bend column, Page 11
Reds.lose, Indians win, Page 5

Today: Cloudy

Page10
Tuesday, May 5, 1998

Lots·of middle age single women would .be perfect
I am a divorced, well-educated,
self-supporting woman, not homely
Ann
or overweight, but I don't look like a
fashion model or a beauty queen.
Landers
1991, Lot AIIFkl TiMeS
I was dumped for a dizzy blonde
Sy.titalt alii! Crutur1
with no children and a part-time job.
S)lldiclle.
I keep busy with various community
activities and would feel uncomfortDear Ana Laaden: This is a able going into a bar unaccom paresponse 10 the. letter from "Glad to nied. Meanwhile, I am so lonely, I
Be Sexless in Canada." I am sorry don't know how much longer I can
she is so biller and turned off against stand it.
all males, but she does not speak for
All of you 4(). and SO-year-old
all women.
·
men out there, please don't overlook
I have always enjoyed sex and women your own · age. We have
long . desperately for a loving, learned how · to satisfy a man and
monogamous sexual relationship . how to he grateful for the opportuniThe problem is that I am in my late ty.: . Lonely in Memphis
40s and all the inen my age wanr 20Dear Memphis: Perhaps it will
year-old trophy wives or mistresses. be a comfort to be reminded that

.

Sports

Mliy 6, 1998

Weather

.

to s.quare off in. November

Reedsville, who received I,312 votes.
Pickens will compete against
Democratic primary wjnner Mick
Davenport, Middleport, in November
for the seal commencing Jail. I,
1999.
.
In the Detiiocralic primary, which
also fea!Ured a close, three-way race
for county commissioner, Davenport
received 629 votes while Charles E.
Williams, Rutland. received 610
votes foll.owed by Arthur Knight,
Racine, w.ho got S33 votes.
There wen: no other contested
county races and nobody filed as an
independent candidate before Mon- ·
day afternoon's deadline.
Appro~timately 40 percent of regiJ;te~ voten, or 6,374, reported to
the polls in Meigs County with 2,100
Democr.tl, 4,140 Republican, three
Reform party and 131 non-partisan
ballots cast for a total of 6,374 ballots.
Republican County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell, Racine, received
3.34S complimentary votes.
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Meigs County Democrats gave
. uncontes~ gubernatorial candidates
Lee Fisher/Michael B. Coleman
I ,378 votes.
Attorney general candidate

Richand Condray received 1,277
votes while auditor of state hopeful
Louis N. Strike got I ,242 votes.
Meigs Democrats preferred
Charleta B. Tavares over Mark A.
Hanni 797 to S57 votes.
Uncontested Democratic U.S.
Senatorial candidate.Mary 0 . Boyle
received 1,390 votes while uncontested Sixth District Congressman
Ted Strickland, Lucasville, garnered ·
1,805 complimentary vQtes.
For Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court fullterm commencing Jan. I,
1999,GIII}'Tyackrec:eived 1,217. For
Justice of the Supreme Co!ln full
tenncommencingJan. I, 1999, Francis E. Sweeney received 1,316 votes.
Fllt' Justice of the Supreme Court full
term commencing Jan. 2, 1999.
Ronald Suster rtteived' l, Ill votes.
For Judge of the Coun of Appeals
(Fourth District), full term commencing Feb. 9, 1999, !.,. Alan Goldsberry receiv,ed 914 votes COillpared to
Lynn Grimshaw, 643 votes.
· Tim Barnhart for member of State
Central Committee, man, 17th District, received I, 117 votes while
Karen Matney Simmons, for member
of State Central Committee, woman,
17th District, received I, 139 votes.
Stale Senator Michael C. Shoe-

maker, Bourneville, received I ,356 ing Jan. I, 1999. Stephen W. Powell
complimentary votes while Bill Oil- got 2,408 vote~ for Justice of the
er, candidate for state representative, . Supreme Coun Commencing Jan. I,
94th District, got I ,235 votes.
1999. Paul E. Pfeifer received 2.3 13
REPUBLICAN PARTY
votes for Justice of ·the Supreme
For governor and lieutenant gov- Court full term commencing Jan. 2.
ernor, Meigs County Republicans 1999.
gave the uncontested Bob Taft/MauMeigs County Republicans
reen O'Connllt' ticket 2.731 compli- favored David T. Evans for Judge of
the Court of Appeals, Fourth District,
mentlll}'. votes.
Anomi!y General Betty D. Mont- with 1.834 votes over Mill Nuzum
gomery received 2.45 I votes while who received 893 local votes. Mar·Auditor of State Jim Petro samered shall Brown Douthett received 294
'
voles.
'2.368 votes.
For member of State Central
J. Kenneth Blackwell received
2,330 votes for secreiary of state Commillee, man, 17th District, Phil
while Joseph T. Deters gqt 2,237 A. Bowman received I,748 votes
while Shane E. Foe got 516 votes.
votes for treasurer (if state.
For
member of State Central ComGovernor George V. Voinovich,
seeking a seat on the U.S. Senate, millet, woman. 17th District, Kay
received 2,400 Meigs County votes Reynolds received I ,221 votes com·
over David McCollough's I ,032 pared to Beth Lear, 679, and Patty
Decheccolo, 306.
vote~.
In Meigs County, Nancy P. HolFor State Senator. 17th District,
lister easily beat formerCong'ressman
Frank Cremeans. I ,895 to I, 193 'Lee Thatcher got 2.122 votes while
votes. MichiiCI T. Azinger received Stale Representative JQhn A. Carey
693 votes while Tom Sharpe and Jr., Wellston, got 3,076 complimen·
Grant Michael Browne received 6J lary votes. ·
and 48 votes, respectively.
Reform Party candidates for gov·
Thomas J. Moyer received 2,468 emor and lieu~naill gQvemor John R.
votes for Chief Justice of the Mitchei/Lawrence Ande~n received
Supreme .Coun fUllterm commen'c- three votes.

Hollister to face Strickland·in November
BynMPUET

Auoclltld Preu Writ•
COLUMBUS -Afom~erconJftSS!Il&amp;n WhO' ,narrowly ' lost" ·a
, Repjiblicllll congrcssiottJI_pri!'!!I"Y in
soothea.•t Ohio to the li~utenanl governor said his conservati-. support
was split in o five-way race.
In· the Cleveland area, another
five-way primary Tuesday wa.' won
handily by Cuyahoga County Prose. cutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a
Democrat. Her victory in thl: heavi,
ly Democralij: lith Congressional
District makes it likely that Rep.
Louis Stokes, Ohio's first and only
black congressman, will be succeed,
ed after IS tenns by a tilack woman
he endorsed.
The Republican nomination fot'
the 6th Congressio'!al District seat
went to Lt Gov. Nancy Hollister of
Marietta.
Hollister, whose views were considered·the IIIO!it moderate among the
fi-. candidates. received 39 percent.
FOrmer Rep. Frank Cremeans, a mil·
lionaire busines.~man from Gallipolis,
had 3S pen:ent and political newcomer MichiiCI Azinger, a 1¥!arietta
insurance salesman. had'21 pen:ent in

-

· complete' but unoffil!ial returns tabu··
lated by The AsSociated Pn:ss,
Cn:mea,ns said· Azinger·s entry
into the ritce may have coot him his
p;uty's ngnijJUIIioq from the district,
which covers all or part of 14 southern Ohio counties .stretching from
Marietta in southeast Ohio to Warren
County near Cincinnati.
"Tiiere went my conservative
ba.'it," he said late T~y. "All four
of the conset'\'Diives runnil18 divided
that block of votol'!l. If I had 10 percent of Azinser's vote, I would.have
won. ·... Running in this race was as
difficult a.~ running in the last two
ge'neral elections."

Azinger said he planned 10 mn ·
again in 2000. "It's always tough
going against a challenger of that cal- iber." .he said of Hollister. "We did
.welt, we learned some things and
we'll be back."
·
Hollister was one of eight women
t&lt;J win party nominations Tuesday in
Ohio's ·19 congressional di~tt1cts.
Another wa.~ Tubbs Jones, who had
the backing of the Cuyahoga Coun· ty Democratic Party.
With 99 percent of precincts
reponing, Tubbs Jones had S I percent of the vote. The Rev. Marvin
McMickle, a Baptist minister, and
state Sen. Jeffrey Johnson, D-Cieveland, each had 20 percent. .
"I have said over and over again
· Cremeans defeated Democralic I dOn'l·intend to try to fill Congrel\sincu'rilbenl Ted . Strickland of man Stokes' shoes," Tubbs Jones told
Luca.~ville in 1994, but washeaten by · reportel'!l before !feclanng victory. "I
Strickland two years later; Hollister, can stand ·on his shoulders and conwho had the state Republican Pany's tinue his work."
endorsement, will face Strickland in
James D. Hereford. a radio talk
November.
show host and auto repair shop own"This wa.~ a toughie.'' Hollister er who was the endorsed Republican
said of t)le primary. which dn:w candidate, defeated three other cnnnational auention. "This wa• a real didaies 10 win his party's nomination
challenge. I knew that when we with 46 percent of the vote.
started this race." ·
Cincinna!i Mayor ~oxaline Qualls

won the Democratic nomination in
the I st District and will oppose
Republican incumbent Steve Chabot
of Cincinna!i in November.
Other. women winning contested
races were Democrat Susart Davenport Darrow in the 5th District in
nonhwest Ohio. Republican Grace
Dmke in the 13th District in nonhea.'l
Ohio and Democrat Elizabeth Kelley
in the 19th District, also in the northea.'!.
The slate's two congresswomen
-Toledo Democr.it Marcy Kaptur.in
the 9th District ant! Columbus
Republican Deborah Pryce in the
15th District - were unopposed for
renomination.
Incumbents who defeated primary challengel'!i were Republican Dave
Hobson of Springfield in the 7th Dis·
trict, Democrat Dennis Kucioich -of
Lakewood in the lOth District,
Republican John Ka,ich of Westerville in the 12th District and Republican Ralph Regula of Canton in the
16th District.
Stokes wa• the only one of Ohio's
II Republican and eight Democratic
membet'!i of Congress not running for
re-election.

Sales tax and bond issues so.undly defe~ted
COLUMBUS (AP) - With the . w~ losing by 80 percent to 20 per- 1997, Oh.io Supreme Court mling · today voted for the rea.,on that they
mounding defeat of a proposal to cent in unoffrcial retum;;;tabulated by that found Ohio'~ system of funding believe that our schools weren't
public schools was unconstitutional. doing enough· with the money they !
·
increase the state 511les tax to provide The As.wcioted Pn:ss.
Phillis said some state officials already had," a clearly agitated
Issue 2 would have generaled
. more money for schools. a key oppowill
assume that the defeat was Voinovich told supporters Tuesday!
$1.1
billion
a
year
to
be
split
between
nent says he hopes 'stale officials do
because
people do not want to pay night. "I can understand how some of:
what he did as II superintendent school~ and property tax reduction
more taxes for schools.
them feel."
when a levy lo!lt: find out what the fot' homeowners.
"II hud nothing to do.with the tax
He defended what the state has
Also rejectCd Tuesday was Issue
people want.
increase."
he
said.
"It
was
rejection
done
for public schools since the
I,
a
propcNithal
would
have
allowed
"We have a situation with sta~
of
the
state's
flawed
plan."
coalition
tiled the lawsuit iri 1991.
.officials who arc out of sync with the the Legislature to IXlrrow money for
. Scott Pullins, ~ampaign,di~orof
He said funding ha• increa.o;ed well
coon. they arc out of sync with the school project~ usin~ bonds bucked
people," said Willialn Phillis, head of by the stale. With 99 pen:ent of Ohioans Against a 20 Percent Tall above the inflation rate. more mon·the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Ade· · precinct\ reporting, it wa.\ opposed by lncrea.o;e, agreed that Issue 2 was "a ey is beiog spent _to build and renobad idea" but said: ."It wa.' a clear vale schools, and districts are being
quacy,the coalition of !IChool districts 61 percent to 39 pen:ent in Tavor.
anti·tax
vote,"
held more accountable'for how they
. The general obligation bond., 1111-.
that successfully sued the stale over
He ·said legislators ought to look spend money and educate children.
lower interest rates than the .bonds
its.school fundins formula,
at
ways
to save money from other
· With 99 percent of· the •precincts backec!:· sillely by money set aside
reporting, the proposal t*ked by every t'Wo years in the statt budget. stale operations that could be used to
Both proposal~ were part of the provide more money for schools. ·
Gov. George Voinovich to inc~,..
"A lot of ~pie who vOted no
. the tu ftom 3 pen:ent to 6 percent Legislature's restionse to a March 24.

Good Afternoon

,

Mare Powerful than the thunder
And more abundant than the rain,
Is the love a mother.

It's impossible 10 explain.
lt'sl!Cntler than the sea breeze
Tid litis the sea gull so high,
It'~ mac awesome than the lightuiug
Tid picn:cs a summer night's black
sky.
It's deeper than an 00:1111
And it's softer than the sand,
It's plainer than the daylight
Bta impossible to undcBtaid.
It's wanner than the sunshine
And e\'l!l'lasling as a star,
It itlddles fai1her than the shoreline .
Of the .81 ' I land afar.
It's ti'IIR continuous than 8fC11 rivas
And pm than falling snow,
k's migbier than the heroes
I

It's more prok:Ciivc than the fortress
That stands its grwnd so long.
-And more refreshing thai the mom- _
ing mist
· . 'J'hal cdloes the spowrow '~ song.

Counclt on ging levy, bond issue
fo.r Souther schools witi approval.

It's mac valuable than.ancient treasurr;s,

Yet. how ironic, it'~ free!
k Stops a1 no ~'tflain mcastRS
To give the world to you ond me.
And though this painful road has led
us far apmt,
I swear I'll never quit _
Becattse I'm still rnssed onwanl by
the love of your ' - '
And I'D never again forget:

That of all the m)'Sieries of time,
The su ' 1e111 be no other
Than tile ¥ - of a dJild
Thttl is the JXide, the joy nf the lo\e
of a mother.
t

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614·667
1•800•
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, Dltltll1 At Store! '

Meigs CoUnty voters approved a
renewal levy for the Meigs County
Coilncil on AglJii bot rejected, again,
a proposed conlinuins levy for the
Meias County Board of Mental
Retandation and Developmental Disabilities.
The gne.mill, five-year senior citizens levy Jlll'llcd by a marain of 66
percent: 4,078 votes for the levy, and
2,M7 votes qainst. The &lt;MRIDD
levy failed by 58 percen! of the vote:
2,.546 votes in,favor, and 3,S 17 votes
.,ailllt.
.
. Voten In the Southern Local
School District ll'PO\'ecla 4.89-mill

bo!ld Issue and tu levy for the con· the real work begins."
struction of a new elementary school
Lawrence said the issue lii(ely
buildiiiJ and rcnoYalion of the South- pa.o;.'led this time due to the; shifting of
. em Hl1h. School.
· · students throughout tile district. a
That levy was approved by a vote new elementary school in the neighof 92S fot', and 804 IB•inst - pass- · boring Eastern Local district, and·
ing by S4 percent.
. pu~lic concefll over deteriorating
"II took five times. btit we finally buildings.
The new elementary school and
did it." said Southem Local Superinlelldent James Lawrence. ·~m 10 hlp- high school renovations shoUld be
py fpr thl: childlen of Southem Local completed by the besinning of the
having the oppoctunity 10 haVe a new 200().2001 PK:hool year. · Tellltltive
buildinJ and to comp:te with all of plans arc to construct the new buildOhio's children," he said.
ina on district-owned propeny on the
"It won't Je' 1ny ~ier ~~· but ' weRt side of the existing~igh school.
now we (lave a future, he said. Now . Offrcial.results will be tabulated
on May 19.

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sedions - IIi Pages
Vol. 49, No. 12
Calcpdar
Clas.dDeds

8
IH3·14

Co mig
Edi!orlals

15

Lual
Sports

Weal her

2
3
4-S·Ii :
3

Lotteries
QJIIO
Pk:k 3: 658; Pick 4: 7026
Budleye 5: 14 ~ 15-26-28-30

W.fA.
"Daily 3: 9S3; Daily 4: 8299
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publishih~ Co.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page2

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Wedn•ct.)', Mlly 8, 1~

But lately, this
state's officials
are cracking
down. Work·
ers
comp
claims
had
been skyrocketing, and a
significant
number
of
them
are
believed to be
· fraudulent.

'"'""lot·

Truman's former yacht has
a champion in GOP senator

Moller &amp;
Ander.On

. uWhen

claimants steal money by padding
claims or faking injuries, we all suffer," charged reform-minded Florjda
Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson
to our associate Dale Van Atta. Nelson ·
has been 'applauded by officials in ·
other states for the example he has set
by cracking dowp on fraud.
He believes that the issue is a nO'
brainer. "Every state should be placing the highest priority on fighting this
fraud because we are all paying for it,
one way or another. We're all victimized when someone commits workers ·
comp insurance fraud ."
Pan of his initiative included the
impaneling of a grand jury specifically to investigate workers compensa·

tion Bod other insurance fraud. And it
was not a moment too soon. It's been
costing state taxpayers millions of dollars .. and hiked insurance rates, costing businesses and individuals more in
premiums.'
Until now, tl)e Rende,Aibenon
case was an exception because it was
uncovered and prosecuted. And so
was the Lenahan case, one of the most
colorfuJ .we came across in a,thorough
investigation of wtvke!'S.comp fraud.
Bill Lenahan, a friendly ex-New
York cop known as Uncle Bill to
friends and neighbors, was working.a
private security job ·when he got into
an argument over a parking space with
a man who then threw· him over the
hood of a car. The injury required the
removal of a ruptured disc.
Lenahan and his wife, Phyllis,
maintained that Dr. Douglas Martin
had botched the surgery, which , had
somehow unsettled his 64· year-old
brain. First, the couple applied for a
workers cornp claim and handily won
$900,000 in workers compensation,
including $60,000 a year paid to Phyllis for the 24-hour care of her husband.
Had the Lenithans stopped there,
they might·never have been found out.
.But they got greedy: They lodged a

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Would not Truman, known for his campaign against a· "do-nothing"
Republican Congress, find Kempthomc 's help a litUe ironi.c?
"That's true, that's true," said the senator. Butttmes have changed and
Truman is far more admired now than when he left. office with dismal
· approvai ratings.
"One of our great presidents," is Kempthorne's assessment.
The Idaho' senator said he first became aware of the Williamsburg when
he ~, ould see i.t docked on the Potomac River during his commute to the
Capitol.
· ·
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"I kept seeing this big white ship," he ~aid . "I made some inquiries to
find out what ship that was. " .
At that pbint, the Williamsburg ~as moored next to ~ sewage.treatment
plant. Trees were growing through tts deck, whtch was httered wtth broken .
beer bottles.
But there was hope that it would be restored and become a tourist attritctioo.
·
.
.
Five years ago, t.he plan for restoration of the Williamsburg ~as celebrat·
ed at a congressional reception. Before long: the shtp was on Its way to be
transfonned into a "floating embassy for the United States."
·
Spearheading that plan was Boris Kirildff, a'n 'engineer and naval archi·
teet who ,owned a company called Boldcratl Manne m Jacksonv11l7, Fla.
There no current listing in Jacksonville for either the company or Kmloff.
"Once the .ship was simt over to Italy, that's \he last we heard.of it, and
we looked forward to the announcement it vias coming back under its own
power," said Kempthorne.
,- . ·
..
The announcement never came. Whatever chances .there were of ratsmg
the millions needed to put the ship back in the shape it was in when Truman
used it c.vaporated. The W~lliamsburg now is in the hands of recetvers who
hope to recover its salvage value of about $1 OO,OOQ.
When Kempthorne learned of the plans to destroy the vessel. he contact·
ed the Italian ambassador in Washington to sec what could be done.
,
"I told him I could not do this in an official capacity,'' the senator satd.
Instead, he was acting as "an interested party and someone who does not
want to ·sce the loss of a significant pan of our history." .
·
Truman .ccrtainly would be saddenc!l to. learn of the Williamsburg's fate.
In hls biography of the president, Da~id McCullough v.:rot~ :
.
"Truman loved the Williamsburg. ' Its JUSt wonderful, he often told tts
commander, Donald J. MacDonald . 'In 10 minutes I'm away from every·
thing.' He loved cruising on the (Potomac) river in placid wate.s, the green
Virginia shoreline slipping by, other boats passing."
.
Often those quiet evenings included poker games and the consumption of
quantities of bourbon. Th&lt;: commander in chief, described by McCullough
as a moderate drinker, watved the ban on scrvmg alcohol on board a Navy
vessel.
·
Truman's trips were not confined to the Potomac. J!c traveled on the
Williamsburg to the Maine coast, as well as to Key West, Fla. .
.
Among those who joined Truman fpr crutses on the yacht was Wmston
Churchill.
.
"It was the floating White House, our ship of state," ~id Ke~pthomc ,
· who conceded nonetheless that he has not generated .much mtercst m savmg
it.
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ARETRIAL!

administration.

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What Is a Christian?

It's not how people kill, but why
The point
But hardly any politician, least of
is that, where all Bill Clinton, is willing · to
there is a moti. acknowledge tl)e deleterioi!S consevation . for quences of father-absence, fur fear of
murder,
a alienating the lcgionr"of single moms
meahs to carry who find it insulting to suggesuhat
out the . foul they need a man .. for reasons other
deed can easi- than mere child support .. to help
ly be found: A raise their children to be well-adjustfirearm is cer: ed, law-abiding adults.
•
taiitly the·most
Concurrent with the breakdown of
efficient way family structure over the past three
to kill another decades, there ha~ been the decline of
Perttlns ·
human · being, religion in our society, as evidenced
by the decreasing numbers of Ameribut is, by no means, the oiliy way.
So .the issue, then, is not how peo- cans who attend church services on a. ·
ple kill, but why they ki II. And if we, regular bai&gt;is.
This is attributable in small part to
a' a society, can address the "whys,"
we can pursue measures that truly the assault on rcligiQn that ,began
will reduce the level of violence in with the Supreme Court's ill-wrought
this country.
decision to ban prayer in public
Of course, · this requires that we schools and that continues to this day
accept some hard truths, that we with state and federal court.~ turning
make some value judgments, that we on its head · the First Amendment
hold ccnain industries and institu· guarantee of "freedom of religioo" to
tions accountable, t'hat we adapt "freedom from religion." · ·
.
some controversial' public policies.
The result of this attack' on reli·
First and foremost, we have to gion .is that an entire generation of
recognize that like . many other Americans has grown up with no reli·
pathologies besetting our society, the gious und!lrpinnings,. with ·no moral
· No. I predictor of murderous behav; · conscience. And when an individual
ior is family structure. ·
is amoral, has no real sense of wrong
Indeed, at least 90 percent of the . and right, has little capacity .for gen·
nation's death-row inll)atcs arc prod- uine guilt, there is liitlc to deter him
ucts of fatherless homes, never devel- or her from acts of violence.
oping a proper respect for authority,
Meanwhile, we have .a popular
for law and order; never learning that culture in this country that celebrates
it is possible for a real man (or crime and violence. Just two weeks
woman) to resolve a problem or dis- ago; in fact, a three-year study of
pute without resortin~; to violence.
prime-time programming on regular

Jl

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Thursday, May 7

proved to be .
painfully dys·
functional.
Assessing
blame - and
proffering solutions - for this
troubling situa·
tion became a
national pas·
time and an
ideological tug
Wickham ·
of war.
Liberals blaJlled the explosion of
teen-agers having chil,dren on the
poverty that .bred this nation's under·
class. Conservatives argued thai it
resulted from thi~ nation's moral
decay. Both claimed to have a fi~ .
Conservatives pushed abstinence. Lib-:·
·crals promoted contraceptives.
While this war of words raged, the
human toll rose.
. Disproportionately, children born 10
teen-age mothers have low binh
weillhts, which gives rise to a lot of
medical problems and a liigh depen·
dency on the ~blic dole 10 make ends
meet
Not swprisingly. the public health
director for Palm Springs·· county,
Rivenide. credits welfare refQ1111 for

convincin"g some teens to ahstain·from · somcthi.ng to do with this twnabout
sexual intercourse.
As the ini:idents of AIDS infections
I suspect there's a lot more at Wott among li:enage girls grew in ' ra:ent
here.
years, the percent of them engaging in
According to federal dala, teen girls premarital sex fell off. The use qf conare having less"Sex and using birth con- traceptives -- especially condoms,
trol more. The former is a victoty for which can block the spread of. AIDS
those who long have argued that Con· - among those who remained 5cxU&lt;IIvincing teen-agers to fdrego intef· ly active teenagers also rose. .
course can help reduce the number oC
Whatever the reasons, the decline
young girls who have babies. The lat· in births 10 teen mothcn; is good news,
tcr proves that contraceptives, too, are an important rebuilding bloc;k for
an .effective deterrent to teen mother- America's trOubled family stnlcturc.
hood, In other words, thcn:'s plenty or Cbildren need parents who arc:thcm·
credit 10 go around.
selves beyond puberty. Girts $hould
But the ,lion's share belongs to the grow into womanl1ond !'&lt;f~ they
growing nQmber of teen-age girls become mothers. These stmplc•truths
deciding to "jilst say no" to the self· young girts ignon:d. ,
:
desttuCtive behavior that turns them
· That's changing. Many &lt;If the
intb parents long before they are ready experts who track this issue thidk that
and locks most of thein- all!l their thencarlySO.ycartrendoftccnsbcgin·
· children - into a lifetime of poverty. ning tq have sex, at younger and
· No amount of pious musings aboUt younger age.&lt; ha.&lt; bottomed out •
abstinen&lt;:c and frank discussions aiKiut
ThC ~-onnuence oC incs.&lt;agcl/ from
contraceptives cln llet th.roup to the lcfi and the right - and the 4eadly ·
ytltlnll llirts whQk minds are closed. reality of AIDS - has convi!l'Cd a
That many now are listening to these · · Jll'(IWing number of young girls that
messages is a great reversaJ.or fortune early motherhood can kill their li'cams
for this nation, which continues 10 itnd irn:ptnbly dlimage their chiJdren.
experience the highest teenaier preJ.'
nancy rate of sny indusaialized nation.
"·
The rw of AIDS also may have

.

Meigs County customers of the Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative will be without electricity for approximately two hours Friday
beginning at I0 a.m.
Customers in Bedford, Columbia, Orange and Scipio townships.
the very northern portion of Rutland Township and the northern hall
of Salem Township will be affected. Consumers may also consult the
"map location" block on their monthly statements. Those with the fol ·
lowing map location designations will be affected: L23, entire line
L24 Y, 1. through 195; L24, letters A through G; L25. e.ntire line.

, MICH.
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Theft of tools reported

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Car break-in reported

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Meigs announcements

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Via Associated Presll GrapllicsNet

.. Today's weather forecast
.. · .By The Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
. . Today... Patchy fog int~ mid mom·
. ing ...Otherwise partly cloudy. Highs
· . in the upper 70s. Southwest wind 5
to 10 mph.
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Achance
.of showers and thunderstorms ...
· Mainly after midnight. · Lows in the
, -mid 50s. Light southeast wind.
. . Chance of rain 50 percent.
,
Thursday...Occasional showers
.. : andach311Ceofthunderstorms. Highs
. :· .. · in the mid 70s. Chance of rain 80 per·
• . cent.

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Hospital news

Extended torecast.
Thursday
night. ..Occasional
showers and a chance of thunderstorms. Lows in 1/le mid and upper
50s.
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and · thunderstorms. Lows in the. mid 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday... Panly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder-·
s.torms. Lows in the mid 50s and
highs i~ the mid 70s.

.

In celebration of Healthy Moms
Week, Planned Parenthood of South·
cast Ohio . is offering $30 health
exams for women including a pap
test. pelvic and breast exam.
- This is pan of a nationwide effo.n
to heighten public awareness of
women's health and its importance in
fostering healthy families and a
healthy society.
The special rate is available during Healthy Moms Week. May I0-16.
An appointment is necessary.
Area service sites are•in Athens
County, 396 Richland Ave., Athens
OH 45701, (740) 593-6979, and Gal' lia County. 414 Second St., Gallipolis OH 45631. (740) 446-0166.

· · • ' Gallipolis attorney David T. Evans · Mar.;hall B.' Douthelt received 9,782 ·
emerged a~ .the vi_ctor from a three- votes (20 percent). Nuzum is a ·
way race for the Republican nollii- . municipal court judge in Marietta.
nation for a seat on the Fourth Dis- and DOutltett is tlte municipal judge
..,trict Court of Appeals in Tue~y·s in Jac~. ·
tprim~. winning 44 percent of the
Locally, Evans received 1,834 .
vote. in tlie 14 counties representing votes in the primary, Nuzum 893 baJ.
tlte appellate district. ·
lots and Douthett 294.
.. · : · He will face Athens County Com· ·
The normally sedate campaign for
. "' ;· · mon Pleas Judge L. Alan Goldsber- the judicial post 'heated up last week
:. • •'•fY in tlte Nov. 3 general election. when Nuzum and Douthett alleged
''"'-l'ioldsberry 1won· the Democratic that 'Evans misrepresented his record
' ' • nomination in a narrow defeat of his . and endol1iements in his campaign lit. : ' primary challenger, Scioto County erature. Evnns answered their allega- ·
.., · ·Prosecuting Attorney Lynn Alan lions. saying his opponents raised
Grimshaw.
"non-issues" with their objections.
' ·.
Evans and Goldsberry will lle
Gold~berry, a previous appellate
··" ·vying for the seat to vacated by Judge coun candidate, netted 18,399 bal. ;! -Earl E. Stephenson of Portsmouth, lots, or 51 percentofthevotedistrict,. · who is retiring after three decades wide to win the Democratic nomina··: . ·with the court, which weighs appeals tion. Grimshaw, who's been Scioto's
· '· ' · ·of decisions from the district's low- ·prosecutor for the past rwo decades.
:-: ' er courts.
· netted 17.767 ballots for 49 percent
'.
Evans polled 21,643 votes in the of the vote.
·district's. 740 precincts, while chal.In MeigsCounty.locai·Democrats
lengerMiltNuzumnctted 17,882bal- gave Goldsberry 914 votes and
. · ' lots: or. 36 percent of the vote. and Grimshaw 643.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .... :..................46}.
Akz:O .......................
106}•
Ami'Tech :....................
..43\
A11tl1nd 011 .........................53'},
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COLUMBUS (AP, - Indiana·
' ·Ohio direct hog prices at selected
-' . 'buying points Wednesday as provid, ed by the U.S. Department' of Agri·
.: ..' culture Market News:
.
. ' · Banows and gilt~: SO to 1.00 high' '' ·er; demand and movement moderate.
· r· I '
· ·•
U.S. 1-2, 230-2611 lbs. country
1
,'~· . .' point~ 40.00-41.50. few 42.00; plants
,. "41.50-42.50. few 43.00.
·····:· ' U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 35.00' " ' ' 39.50; 110-230 lbs. 31.50-35.50.
Sows: steady to 1.00 lower..
:·.n. U.S. I·3,300400lbs.23.Q0.25.00.
' few 22.00;'400-SOO lbs. 2S.Q0.26.00;
500-600 lbs. 26.()()..28.00. few over
600 lbs. 29.00.
Boar.;: over 300 Ibs. 15.00-18.00;

Th~ Daily Sentinel
· (USPS lll-"'1
"'l ; ··· · , hblilfw!d every •fkrnooa. Molldlr udoup
,
Friday, Ill Court 51-. Pomrroy, .Ohio, by lhe

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Oh.io V.llcy P'u:blidtiltJ Company/GanMn &lt;:"9••

..

POSTMJ\STIR: Send lddrcn corm;tkms to
TIM: Dai ly Sentinel. Ill Court St. Pomeroy.
tlloio 4516'1 .
StJBSCIIIPI10N IIATES

..
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..
. .,,
•"

.

•

I

IJ c.mororr.t- .....

011e - • ................................ ..............SZJJit
Olle ldonth ............................................... SII.111
One Yc1r ...............- ...... -....................:..SHM.tX•

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Sublcribcn 1101 dHirinJ 10 J*J lbe anic:r nuy
rtmit i• advarict direcl to The: D.tily Seminel

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1tvat Clll'ic:r e.:• wcct. '

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No sublcfiption b)l ~n~il p~rmiued in ~relf.

•ltett home canit:r xrvic:e iJ avail• .

,,

Publisher

rt•rvt• ahe npt 10 ~... ,m ctur-

;.1 tlw nbKriplion ~ Subtcription r11e
ciiUJH may br implcmensed bf ch1aJ,ina the

dur11ion of lhe sllblcriplion.

'
M.ULSUIISCRIPI1~S

.
•.... ,...... c• ..,
t) w.eu ..............................................S27.JO

.

711-.............................................$53.112

52 W..b........................................... ...$lltl.56
--lllotp~

w..u._..,. __..................................$29.:1$
l6 w..u................................................ $56.611
11

'

.

.

..

SIMMER·FDIIIftJIE

Cl'tlm Shps ..........................4,.
City Holdlng ..........................44'1.
Federal Mogul...:.....................66

SALE ·
Reg. 5162 Mid-lack Chcir....~............Sal~

GIIIMft .................................66'4
Goodyear ..............................&amp;9'1.

$99
Reg. $182 High-Back Chair,_......... Sale ·$119
.Reg. 5403 2-Seat Grlder ................. Sale •249

Kmart.....................................17'.!.
Kroger ................;..............~.41'•
Ljlndl End.............................35'1.
Umlted ................. ;.•.•.. ~·········35\
O•k Hill Flnl :...........................28
ova ·-············..................~....48\
One Valley..........;..................37\
Peoples ................~ ................31\
Pretn Flnl .............................~.z11,t,

RECLI ER SALE

Rockwell ••'\........................sa'lz
RDJSM-11 ......................1 ........ 56'~•
Selrs .....................................57~. ·
Shortey'a ....................
.S't.
u ..........

..

25%oFF

Star Bink ................................62

Wendy'1 ...............................24Y.
Worthington ........................ 17'~•

.

.

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. CIUQIH provided by Advell
of Galllpolll.

OUI fllrllf STOCK 01 ILEXSTEfl
AIIIJ IEIKIIIIE IECIIIIEIS
SALE PRICED FROM 5269.00

National Day of Payer .

..

on

TOWNESctlJARE

Thursday, May.7

GLIDER ROCKERS

a

MANY STYLES AND FABRICS
TO CHOOSE FROM.

CONCERT of..PRAYER
will be held at the

StNI;LE COpY PRICE
Dlily .................................................... JS Cents

.

In conjunction with the

Cllll p0111p p1id :II forneroy. Ohio.

"'

MOTHER'S DAY SAL·E

B..,.onhton .................,............. 16

IInder 300 lbs, 18.00-.23.00. few
25.00.
Estimated receipts: 34,000.
Prices from Producen Livestock
Association
Wednesday's trends:
Hogs 1.00 higher; sows s.teady;
cattle steady.
Summary of TuesdaY's auctions at
Caldwell, Eaton. Farmerstown, Lan- ·
caster and Wapakoneta:
Hogs:
Market hogs; 35.00-43.25; light
sows 12.S0-28.SO; heavy sows 20.QO.
31.6o.
.
Feeder pigs; 21.()().39.00 head;
30.00 and down ewt.
All boars 15.00-28.50.

t • • .Pomeroy, Ohio •.s769, Ph. 992-2156. SteaM
· • '' :' •M•ber. The As~P~tilted Prt:u. 1ad the Ohio
_l# 1 '
Nuupapc:1 A»otillion.

. ANDERSON'S

.
'
CMmplon .............................
13;{.

.:: ·.Joday's livestock report ·
~

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded four
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:16 a.m., Middleport Police
Department, Mike Yuunkers, Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital;
7:20a.m., South Seventh Avenue,
Middleport, Robert Davis, Holzer '
Medical Center:
10:43 a.m.. Plum Street. Pomeroy,
Glenn Giueser, Pleasant Valley Hos·
pi tal.
POMEROY
· 8:42a.m., County Road 7A, motor
vehicle accident, Cecil Roseberry,
Tory Swartz, and Josh Hooten
refused treatment.

AT&amp;T................. .-...................&amp;1'Bank One ..............................58'4
Bob Evan• .... ~ ..... ~ .................201,1,
'Borg-W-...........- ............&amp;9'.!.

• I

;

Meigs EMS runs

offering disc~unt
tlealth exams •

GOP nomination
.,.. ,f or 4th District Court of Appeals

' ,

.

Planned
Parenthood

~:·..Evans.captures

SALE PIICE ·
StARniG AT ONLY

Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church
· at 7:00pm
The public is invited,and this even is

sponsored by the
Middleport Ministerial Association.

.
.
"If My peopk, wllie,IJ are ctllletl by My - . wiU IJumblt
tiJtmstMs tmd pray aiUI sulc My /t#t aiUI trim from tiJtir
wkbd -_ys, tlltn will I luar from lttlll't, and wiU forgive
tlttir rill aiUI will Mal tlleir ltuul. '!

52W..b.....,........... ............................IJ09.n

/
I

Voters in' the Republican and OLIVE: Democratic .. No candidate
Democratic primaries elected mem- · filed. Republican .. Janice Young, 97.
bers to their central committees in SOUTH OLIVE : Republican " '
William D. Durst, 73, Paula Jane
yesterday's election.
Winners, by party and precin~t. Filch. 65. Democratic .. Melody L.
were:
.
Roberts. 71 . ORANGE: Republican
BEDFORD: RepuDlican •• Tom -· No candidate filed. Democratic R. Reuter, 33, 'Brenda Roush. 73. Norman 0 . Weber, 79.
Democratic -- no candidate filed.
POMEROY I : Republican •• BRADBURY: Republi~an .• Dennis Judith Sisson, 84. Democratic-· Ann
L. Faceymyer, Jr.. 57, William E. Sissan, 38. POMEROY 2: Republi· Paul E. Dailey, state Route 124, Racine, reported Tuesday mom·
Morris, 24. Democratic ·- No candi· can .. Eugene Triplett, 125. Democ·
ing that power tools, a set of golf clubs and beer were stolen from hi!
date filed. NORTH CHESTER: ratic •• Rebecca J. Triplett, 39.
garage either early Tuesday morning or late Monday evening. accord·
Democratic -- Mary J. Hunter, 29. POMEROY 3: George L Harris, 71 .
ing·to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
. Republican -- No candidate . filed. · Democratic -· No candidate filed.
SOUTH CHESTER: Republican ..
RACINE PRECINCT: RepubliEdward J. Werry, 163. Democratic · can .. Grover Salser, Jr., 85, Thoma'
- No candidate filed . WEST ·Theiss, 85. Democratic .. No candi·
Mall Dill, Oak Grove Road, Racine, reported Tuesday morning that
CHESTER: Republican ·- Blair date filed. ,VILLAGE: Republican ·
someone entered his 1987 Chevrolet Blazer, stealing a Rockford Fos·
Windon, 229; Democratic .. Elsie • No candidate filed. Democratic ·gate speaker box and an Audio Art 400-watt amplifier, according to
Folmer, 55 . COLUMBIA: Republi· Anna Layne, 51 ROCKSPRINGS:
a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report. .
can-- Marco Jeffers, 104. Democra- Republican --· Judith A. King, 84.
tic -- No candidate filed.
Democratic .. Carol Ohlinger, 47.
LAUREL CLIFF: Republican .. WEST RUTLAND: Republican ·Oscar Smith, 106. Democratic -No Charles b. Barrett, Jr.. 68. Democra·
7
p.m.
at
the
school.
Comme~OrtltlVe
candidate filed. J.EBANON Repul1· tic .. Norman C. Will. 67. EAST
Singer coming
Chris Adkins of Newport News. Items will be ·available for vtewmg. liC:m .. Cecil Wayne Roseberry, 131. RUTLAND: Republican .. Wilma J.
Democratic -- No candidate filed. Davidson, 62. Democratic .. Karen S.
W. Va. will he singing at the Bend
LETART: Republican .. ·Don R. . Williams. 59. RUTLAND VILArea Gospel Jubilee, Mason, W. Va.
Hill, 126. Democratic - David Sayre, LAGE: Republican -· Roben F.
!)n May 14, 15 and 16.
51 . MIDDLEPORT 2: Republicnn - Snowden, 65. Democratic .. Samuel
Chamber meeting
.
Veterans Memorial
- Ruth Powers, 122. Democratic .. Bruce May, 52. SALEM: Republican
The monthly general membership
Tuesday admissions - none .
luncheon will be held on May 12 at
Tuesday discharges - Curtis Jew- Kenneth E. Imboden, 57. MIDDLE- -· Ralph Keith Oiler, 90. DemocratPORT 3: Republican -- Emily Faye ic -· No candi date filed. SCIPIO:
noon at the Carleton School in Syra· ell.
Manley, 68, Billy J. Browning, 41. Republican -· Raridy_Butcher. 119.
cuse. Becky Baer of the Meigs CounHolzer Medical Center
Democratic
•• No cpndidate filed. · Democratic .. No candidate filed.
ty/OSU extension service, will be the
Discharges May S - Christine . MIDDLEPORT
4: Bernard Gilkey, SYRACUSE VILLAGE: Republi·
speaker.
Meadows, Elizabeth Walton, Kermit
Lodge to meet
Cisco, James Franklin, Macie Priddy, 86. Democratic -· Barbara A. Hud· can ,: Emmogene Hamilton; 205.
son. 40. MINERSVILLE: Republi .. Democratic -· No candidate filed.
Shade River Lodge of Chester, Marion Hall, Richard Eggleton.
F&amp;.'\M, will meet on Thursday at 8
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Darin can -· No candidale filed. Democratic -· John · N. lhle, 79. NORTH
p.m. at the lodge hall in Chester.
Walker, daughter, Point . Pleasant,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James Westfall,
PTO final meeting set
daughter,
Gallipolis.
A final meeting of the Che~ter Ele·
(Published )With permission)
mentary PTO will he held Monday ,

IToledo I 7Z' I

Drop in teen-age birth rate go9d news~ irideed

or

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

1V and basic cable revealed that twothirds of shows included violent
scenes last year, up frorn ooc-half of
shows in 1994. The· mOiiQII· picture
industry is no better. It continues to
chu)ll out films like TriStar's "The
Big Hil," which makes murder-for·
·pay seem crazy, sexy. cool.
Then there's the record industry,
which continues (O disscminaic
·music that glorifies violence and the
so-called "gangsta'' lifestyle. And the
publishing industry is just a.&lt; corrupt,
only too willing to make a buck oiT of
sensational crime stories, actually
paying murderers in more than few
cases for first-person accounts of
their crimes.
I will say it again: The president's
import ban on the nearly 60 types of
so-called assault weapons will· have
little, if any, effect w~atsQI:ver on the
murder rate in this country..
But if we, as a society, stop pretending that chi ldrcn arc no worse otT
in fatherless homes than in mother· ·
father homes. if we properly rccog·
nizc the vitall'Qlc that religion plays
in imparting morality to our children,
and if we insist that the custodians of
our popular culture play a fai more
socially responsible role, then .it will
not be long before we sec a m'c~ning­
ful decline in the number of Amcri·
ca.ns murdered year by year; )With or
without guns.
,
Joseph Perkins is · a tolamllist
for The San Die&amp;o Unjjm-'Jnbune.

r---Local briefs-__, Central committee
BREC electric outage planned
members named

OHIO Weather

.

'

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Dear Editor:
Grn"'8lt Newa Service
What's a Christian?
·
.
PAlMS SPRINGS, Calif, - The
This has been an ongoin' debate for many centunes. Some say only those story out of Washington was front·
who go to Church can be Cpristian. white others say they can he a Chnsttan ·page news in this Cklifomia desert
widtoul going to Church. 1
.
·
..
community.
So the ~uestion has been asked, "Will going to Church make me a Chns·
ilinhs to teen-agers in this country
tian?" The answer is' "no!" Neither will goi.ng to the bank 111a~e _YQU a bank have been !leclining in recent years, the.
teller or goingJo McDonald's make Y.ou a Btg M~c. To be sure, tits very pos· DepanmentofHealthaooHumanSer· siblc to go to Church and not "BE" a Ch.risJii!P:
·
. .
.. .
vices reported last week. Nationwide,
Blff •. the problem lies in t~ q~cstiO~, 'f!!O "'ql questton ts not,. ~tll ­ tf1C number has,dropped sharply, down
goinl to chur.ch make me a Chrt$ttq"," ~I 'It l Q~ll my.~lf a ~hns.!tan, nc8rty 12 percent since 1991, offiCials
should 1 go to Church?" To that quesllan 1 •n~wor ts postttvely yes! .
said.
·
The Apostle Paul, . inwriti~g ~o 1'¥' Carllh!llt ~~~fllh, states•."Now ·you
, The country's good fortune has
arc the bOdy of Christ; and each of Ylllll- 1 pllfl ~f... U Connthtans 12: ~ 2· deep roots in Palm Springs, where
31) Who is Paul writing to1Thc q.~.,;h, T11o Church IIi the B~y ofChnst; births among teens dropped 10 pcrtent
How can y~u be ~,Pari. of lh~ b!xiy Cllt'l•l pnd rot be , pan of the Churcll. · between 1994 and 1996, the last years
According to Sj:npture, yo~ can .
.
.
.
,
fl"' which statistics are available. Bul
. Let's ask another questi~,n. " ~o ·II Chr,i&amp;t cooung back for?"
.
1f1c: Bood ~ is not limited to this
·Ephesians 5:22-33 laJks about "lfhc ChifCh" bei.ng·the "Bride of Ch~st." l1f$l1fl tow!dJirths to teens are down in
In Revelation 21: 1-4, it ~os,;ribc~t~~d ~¥n.Ch~s!.comes. ln ~~s p~a~e 9~'1)' state, led by a 21 percent drop in
it states that He is CjJ'!IiPJ for tS Brtde 1whtch IS the Church. Chnt~ •s
ber of babies born to young ·
not cotl}i~g for indivi~uals w · are. unconnected from the QIJin:h. but
rls between IS.and 19.
instead; ~. is coflli~g f~tr those l)o aJe a part of the. Chu~ ..
'Jl-ooghout much of the latter half
"Being a Christian~ i; n11t jus! abo11t what you heheve. lt:ts a~l ~~;
this . a:ntury, the phenomenon of
in1 of our sins and t~rnfng our ~v~s over to God, through ttle ••~·~· .
jlllbia ltavi1111 babies has.had a corro··
1·
. . h h C'-· h,
· ~ live etrm on our society. As the teenof the ci'OilS.
Scrvin11 and ~Drllt!Pfng God,in connecuon wit t c .... ~ 1s ~
I8C binh ra1e pushed upwards, the
by our lo'e for Qed aftj ot~ers.
,
IIIUCtUI'C oC the Antericsn tamily was
So are you a parf oft~ Churc~?
,
. .
1.
redefined. The two-ptmtt unit inereas.
ingly was replaced by one headed by
I .
sinsJe mothers, too IIWIY of which
'
I --•. -

..

malpractice suit against Dr. . Martin
and put on a slam:dunk civil suit with
s~ldom- equaled panache. A ·halfdozen highly respected neurosurgeons
· pronounced Lenahan mentally incapacitated.
.
The jury, hearing Mrs. Lenahan's
· tales of her husband's mental impair·
ment, was moved to tears and awand·,ed him $2.6 million. The insurance
company qUickly settled for $2.25
million.
· •
That should have been the end of it,
excep~ Dr. Martin was furious. He
couldn't believe his back surgery
could have caused such mental problems. He was so sure the Lenahans
were faking, that he hired a private
investigator to tail Uncle Bill and
videotape his movements.
It was hard to keep up with the
traveling couple, ~ho used the settlement to buy a neet of luxury cars,
· three boats, a custom-~uilt home and
two condomini'ums in the Florida
Keys. But with persistence', the
gumshoe caught Lenahan dancing a
jig, jogging, climbing stai·rs. and decorating their $250,000 yacht, as well as
conducting numerous ·coherent conversations with individuals.
Anned with this the civil trial judge
vacated 'the settlement, and Palm
Beach prosecutor· Moira Laisch tried
aod convicted them of defrauding the
state workers comp system and of
grand theft, They were sentenced to
seven years in prison imd•ordered to
tum all their assets over to ihe insurance company.
Antj the Lenahan lawyers? They
had been fooled along with everyone
else, consequently maintaining that
they should not have to give up their
contingency fee, which wa~ a third of
the insurance seulemcnt.. The courts
upheld them: They were allowed to
keep the $750,000, not a dime of
which they'd have ri:cci~ed if the
fraud had been uncovered just minutes
before the j4ry reached its verdict.. ·
J~k Andenon and Jan Moller
are wrilen for United F~lure Syn·
dkate,IDc:.

By 'Joseph Perkins
My rece,nt column questioning the
president's ban on imponed "assault
weapons" provoked much sounfi and
fury from gun-control advocates·.
Some accused me of being a "gun
nut" (although I've never owned or
even. handled a fireaim in my life).
Others accused .me of·being a fro.nt
for the National Rifle Association
(with which I have&gt; never had any
associaiion whatsoever).
· ·
But at least a couple of letter writ· ·
ers .raised a valid question. If, as I
posited, the recent ban on nearly 60
types of imported semiautomatic
weapons will have only a negligible
effect on the number. of murders
committed in ·this country, what
should we.. as a society, do to reduce
the carnage'?
Well, the lirst thing to do is to
address the root causes of violent
crime in our society. rather than
merely focusing on the instrllments
of violence. Indeed, one-third of mur·
dcrs in this country aren't even gun·
related.
"
Roughly 2,500 Americans are
stabbed to death with knives, icc
picks, letter openers or other sluup
objects. Some 1,200 are beate" to
death with hands, fists or (eet.
Roughly 900 are bludgeoned to death
with.clubs; tire irons, hammers, baseball bats or related objects. And
anoiher I ,200 or so arc victims of
EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg is head or the eoagression· poisoning, drowning, explosives,
narcotics or some other exotic form
al s.talf of The Asscx:iated Press.
of murder.

Letters·to the·editor

,..

Flo.rida cracks down on insurance fraud

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
'E.stiiD[is/id in 1948
TALLAHASSEE, Fla... Dr. John
Rende, a 38-year-old dentist in Jack·
111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, OhiO
sonville, decided he didn't want to
614-992-2156.• Fax 992·2157
work anymore. But he still wanted to
be paid.
So he arranged to have a pair of
miscreant brothers, Robert and Kenneth Albenon, chop off his right index
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
finger with an axe. Because he oould
ROBERT L. WINGETT
no longer practice dentistry wit!tout
Publllhtr
the crucial digit, Dr. ReruJe-,was set to
collect at least $72,000 a year in disability for nearly three decades. (He
was also making a sizable amount
· DIANEHILL
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
from his homeowners insurance poli·
Controller
Gene1111 Man•g•r
cy for the "woodcutting" accident.)
But the Albenoos were not satisfied
with their cut for the C4t, and
Tilt S.rmel -..ro 11M -or from- em • - - ol lop/a.
Short- (3DII- ,...,..., - , . - - ol (Ming pub//-.
began pressing the digitless dentist for
- - pre-.ndoll,...yt.- &amp;th llltouldlncle«»• ............ ...
more money. Dr. Rende got fright- -~ numlw. Spot:lly a dalo lttllate'o • , . , _ fo a prerkluaor 1a11w.
to: ~.at~oq to 11M Edit!&gt;&lt;, Tilt S...llnal, 111 CoUf1 st, ""'''"'lOll Olllo
ened, and went running to the FBI.
U181; or, FAK to 11~-2157.
B~sed on his confession and other
evidence,. in 1994 the Albertons were
each sentenced to 33 months in jail for
fraud, and were orqered to make resti·
tution. The nine-fingered dentist got
27 months in jail.
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
The Rende-Aiberton case was a
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON. - A piec~ of American history is sitting in an Italian rare one at the time for Florida,
shipyard. destined for the scrap heap unless rescued by an unlikely champi- because the con artists were caught.
on.
..
It is the former presidential yacht, the USS Williamsburg, beloved by
Harry S. Truman, who used it throughout hi s presidency.
·
·
Retired by President Eisenhower as "a symbol of needless luxury," the
~~~~~ l!lSf.1?}1)
244-foot vessel has fallen on hard times and may be carved up for scrap
jliiiMIAar&amp;5@aOI I'M\ '
· within days.
,
·
" Here we have a great ship, a great history, and once it's lost we can't
recover it," said Sen. Dirk Kempthorne, a staunchly conservative Republican from Idaho who is trying to generate interest and private funding to save
the Williamsburg from destructi.on.
.
Not lost . on Kcmpthorne is the fact that when Truman was president,
Republicans of his ilk were merciless in their attacks on the Democratic

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_Wednesday, May 6, 1998 .

•

9:30 to
\

5:00

"See Store tor
Details

$209°

0

.9L!ft['lJt£2{SO!}.{:S
FURIITURE &amp; APPLIANCE
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

992-3671.

ill

•

�\

SpOrts

Wednesday, May 6, 1998

.The Daily' Sentinel
·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Gian.ts rally to beat
Marlins; Pirates win

Page4
Wednesday, May 6, 1998

NBA playoff action continues

J~zz,

Pacers beat Spurs, Knicks in second-round openers
JUmper to give the Jazz an 83-821ead
with I: 121eft. On San Antonio's next
possession, Avery Johnson drove the
lane for an uncontested layup, but
Robin•on was called for an offensive
foul for a pic~ he set on Stockton.
Afler.Greg Foster and Chuck Per'"" traded missed shots, the Jazz ran
the shot clock down before Malone
missed a jumper with 4.6 seconds
left. S'an Antonio grabbed the
rebound and called timeout.
"If you get ·someone like lim
Duncan shooting a I0-footer (actually 15). that's the shot you want," San
Antonio coach Gregg Popovich said.
"We gave it the best we had."
The inbounds pass went directly to
Duncan, who immediately turned
and tired a jumper off the back rim
with Foster squarely in his face. Utah
rebounded and time expired.
'.'It felt good when it left," Duncan said. ·· 1 turned around and
thought I had the· space, and I let it
go."
In the night's only other game,
Indiana defeated New York 93-83 to

By GREG BEACHAM
..,
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - lim
! Duncan's near-perfect game had
, everything but a perfect ending.
.,
Duncan missed a IS-foot tumaround jumper with two seconds to
play Tuesday night. and the Utah Jazz
escaped Game I of their Western
Conference ~emifinal with an 83-82
victory over the San Antonio Spurs.
Duncan's final misfire was a disappointing cap to a phenomenal performance by the Rookie of the Year.
He scored 17 of San Antonio's 22
fourth-quarter points to fi nish the
game with ~3.
In the fourth quarter, the Spurs
looked away from David Robinson.
who missed all seven of his shots in
the second half. and put their fortunes
in Duncan's hands. He responded
with 13 points in the final seve n minutes.
"He was just t11JIY amazing in the
last minutes," Utah's John Stockton
said. "We dodged a bullet, the way
he was playing."
·Karl. Malone hit a spraw ling

Scoreboard
New \-'v(~ at lndwna, Rpm (TNT)
S:1n Anwnto m Umh ~ IO:X! (TNT)

AL standings
Iwn

NewYork .......

6

778

!.il!

9

7
10

.. .... 21

.... :.16
. ......... IJ

I~
J8

700
511l
.-11 11

Bay ...................... .... 12

18

-100

HMIOn ................................. 2 1
Baltimore ...
Toronto ...
T:~mpa

Se~nk· &lt;lt Lo~ AnJ:d c~.

,,

.1!: L 1:&lt;1.

12
18

Hockey
NHL second-round
playoff slate

. . 12 I K
Minnesota ........................... 12 19
Ortroil ....................................7 20

ChiC:IJO .......... .

Wuttm Dh·lsiqn
............. 19 II
....... ,. 17 14
......... 15 , 16

TtJtas .......... .
Anaheim .: .. .
Sell ttl~ .•.. ·r·
O:Lklnml ..

...... 14

16

41?
400

.~ }

:tR7
259

6\

9'1:

,l48

'"
467

games

Satur~ay's

games

rr.m
1 -Tnlhtl.'ld~~ (~l ...... ........... .... .. .... .
2- L.-,(irant~ Kcy~tOI)C . .
~-Hilhartl O:~rby (I l. ................

Ohio H.S. sports

4-Akrnn HtLharr ............ ........
5-Rocky Rin:r ...
h-Cuy. F:tll~ W.nbh J c~mt (II ..

Coaches' baseball poll

Today's games

7 · ~pm

7-Daytnn Oal:wnoJ ... ... ....

COLUMBUS. Ohro (AP) - How a lll:ltc puncl
of C(•:x:heuarc~ Ohro ht/!h sehoul basc:b;11l tl.::rn1s in
rhc 1hml n:gular-:.cnson pull fur Tit!! Anod;rtcd
l~cu .(by Ohm H1gh SL:h•lOI Athklir,; A'Mli.:l;llinn ~.li ­
vt\ tons, Wit h firn - p l:~t,l! \'01\!S tn jlan:mthc!ies):

Dil'iSion 1

·

Ta~~ Bay (Arrojo J-2) at KaM:ts Cuy ( R~~eh

I'Jo.

1-Toled o Slllrt {~ (,) I _'1-0
.. ..J'Z'J
2- Hudson {4) IJ-0 .. . . ................ ....
.. .200
8 : :t~ p.m.
· .1- Hotmilton{4t 17-2 ...... ; .. ,..... ,... ,...
.177
Chicago Wture Soil (Baldwrn 2-J) at Senttle -1- l:ktlanL:tl \.J
•
15K
(Cioude ~-I), IO:J5 p.m.
5- M:ISSII!on Washul~ton (I) 12-0 ..
l .l5
Toronto (Hanson 0-1) ac Ananeim (0liv:m: s 1-4!.. 6-Wt.:SICrvllic ;.lnrr tl {l} 16-2 ........... ... ........ .. .. 12.\
IO:J5 p.m
7-Sylvri.nlil Sou 1h v1~ w I6-2 ............................. 11 1

· · N.Y Yank~s (Wells 1;\·1) m Te11as (Wrn 1- 1).

It- Harmon {! l I b· l.. . .... . ... . .. ...................... J(JO

Thursday's games

9- M rm~f'idd M ,t~bon

p.m.

Allomra .
New York ...
Mliladdphm
Montreal ...
FlnnLb

Division

.1! L

10

!ill

22

r&lt;L

L'i

14

511

;'

bKK

7 - Sh~twncc

[I ) I' · :!
(1111 -J
.
9-L:IOC:lill:rF.IIrftcklUntnn t I J 20-l .
IU· Dovtr )4-~
. .. ...... ~K
Str omd ' In: 11 -0 rrville ~1 I! llle,-S;tnol
Pctkm~ (I ), Bcllch•ntmnc. PORTSMOUTH ~2. 15·
Sp111~ghorn ~() !6-Rry;m 4LJ 17-0h-.:rhn Fird ;m~l ~
-Ml PI -Fr:mklm ~~ lli-NOCI. _\4 20-C;rnl'11n Snurh
lbm r h OnR 1• ~s

'67

ll

ll

..... 17
17

"

.....
~7

......... l .l

2'

'
;

14K
'i!f-1

14

,.

,,

4

m

-&amp; ~

4~
. 411
'K

S:m Diego .
Snn FmndM:u .

- . 22 t)
.. 17 I~
l..ttSAn,:~:Jc~ ·'· --·¥· · ....... 16 15
(,llnmtlal
........... , .......... l.li 17
Ari1.1111:1 . ..
11 2-J

710
~ 11
"ilfl
-lOIJ

2~o

Di'vision Ill
I "ilm!hcnv•llc C.11h HOI 1-l" l

,.
-

~- Ot: llvolk

l 'k:Lf huk [ 1-il 1ft· I
) - G • . m~•11 c- (7) lb- 1
4-LinuC:cnl C1th II) 14- 1 .

h

~ - WELLSTON 1~- l

7.

.:77

Mnnrrenl .1, CINCINNATi l
t,qlo t.. Philotddrhi:l I
.San Fr.IIM..'I~l:n It Atlfllia 2 ( IOJ
P ~tt$1'1ufJ! h ~ . St Lo111 .;!
Allmtl&lt;l tl. 1..4'1!'1 An_!:da .1
N y M.:!$ •). 1\nLrlll:.l 1
Hou~wn 10. OUL::If:tl Cuhll ~

'"

Srm Dtegu ).1, Milwaulla= 4

Today's games

Parkw;1y t~J .... ...... ... ., ................. 1111
1-l..um.lnnvillc (41. ...
.:.......... Ml
~ - Convo 1y CrcSivicw .....
'i,
4-SOUTH WEBSTER... . ....... , .. ...... ,........ ~ 1
"1-H:tvil:mrJ Wayne Tr.k.:t' . . . . .. . . .
.. ~0
t..N Ruhm~nn Col Cr;tw(nnl ............ , ..... )II
7- Srrnu~hurp. ........... ,..... ................. ., ............... :..... ~ 1

1- npp Cny G.:thd (!01 17-:!
2 S1 Henry l'iJ tl-,, ...
\ .1\kw Rll'nll:ll (I) 10-2 ...

4 - Sn n r l~~,. ~, l · nt(!ll" · ~
'i-Mrn~ll·t I~ -

CINCINNATI (R&lt;nlhn,:er ~ -.1 1 at Mt&gt;ntr~. •l
(V;utp=z 1 - ~). H&gt;:li J'.m
·
Cnlor:"Jn (TbompM'In 1-2 ) :rt Phrl:ttklplu:1 llkl"l h

•J.(';r..l•l ( llii -J.

0-2l.7 Mp.m.
.
San Franci~Cl jltcut~r .l-·1) · &lt;~1 1-lllntlir tHL:ffl.lll1lc-!
2-2) 7 :0~ p.m.
.
St ltun s lStnllh:myr~ _
1 .]) .1t P1ruilur~h
{SchnmJI \.I). 1.~· P: m.
' A.ria~t (1\ntla:non 1-J} at NY M~t~ (}nfk·~ I·

IJI·Oid Fort ..... ....... ............................................... 26
Bar.l)l:l:r..... ,.................... .............., .. :!J
Ckhtrl r«ti¥iftlll·ur ~ort JHMnll'i: 11 -HANNIIlAL RIVER (I) IIJ. 12- N. U11inn 1M. i.\·M11nal
Rrtl~o..•dak 1-&amp;

Transactions

An,:d~•

(R Mattintz J-2) ilf 1-lnuda (I-bmmood ().()I. 7 :~ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Weather' 1· 1) ar Puuburah
(Loiou.a l -1).7 :~pm.
St Lovi• (Osblwnc I-ll at N 'f Mtts iYO!lhu 1- • .
IJ. 7:40p.m.
.
•
San Oieg" (H:anUiron J. l) at Atlarua (SmnltL 2ubs ,

Tuesday's .-:ores
lndl•na 9J, New York Bllndht!J'I kudt 'Cfll!~
. 10
Utah 8.1. San ANOOIO 82; Utaf'llcadllltnC'J
O..tn~w a1 Chial~o. 8 p.m. (TNT)
LDtr An,elo :tt ~ric. lll JO p m (TNT) ·

1\llantil-

.....

120

...... II'}
.. IIU

•
•

•:

..

· -· ~

Remember your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, childhood
sweetheart, ·couples, teacher, etc •

IXa)IUC.

TORONTO RI.UE JAYS : Acilvntcd lnf Crm~

Gr~hl:d .

frnm lhl.' 1~ - li;a~ lii~lrhlcd lr ~t Optinn..-.1
J.HP'Stl.'\'~ Sh-.: l:rir 111 Syr:11.11~ nf the IL

CH((.'i\(i(ll'UIIS: Tmtkd LHr lkn VanHyutto
Ilk.' S.m lJI~fll Palir~:. fnr RHr l)"u W.:nl"en
l'INCINNI\TI H.El&gt;S: A~·r iv:11e1l Ill S..•:m &lt;.' :t.""')'
"""'the 15-tl:ty dt ~:tblcdlisr . Dclli):llalc,f HHI' To~ltl
Wt llt:nns lnr ;t~Stj!IUUC IIL
MILWI\UKH: IJHEW[H.S · 1'1awl KHI• Ju~·

M.-n:..'lk~ 1111 the 15-tby dr~~.:thk,11t~t . H~·, :tlk· d I. HI'
Or;1d Wmdall l'wm l..mri ~ '· tlk nf the lllt t•rmtriun:rl
l..c: i).:lt...
MONTREAl. EXPOS: Al.·ll\';'tl"ll ( ' fl,l\ Ht:nlcy
lrum tho,' 15·ol:rY, Jrsahk:d li ~l ;lnlllll'li''/ll.'d tum w
Ott:rw:rt•l' the lntcru:uic"l&lt;~llca)!o~·.
NEW YOKK MI ~TS · l'lu~i."ll C Tun Spdtr n11
lilt.' l~ - ol:1y tli s uhktll!~l H.cL:;dk"ll (.' T•"-kll 1mu rr" m
Nurlt1lk 11l'lho.: lnk•rmrtiun:rllx:r)!ue.
I'Hil .AIJI-l .I'HIA PHII.I,lliS: Scm HHI' (i:rrrl'll
Slq•l~en"'llll' Sa,mtniJ WiiLt•s-llam: tl1 tiiC hrlt'rltr·
11111\,lll.t.•:rguo.: kL:L'otU~.•,t HHI' Hya11 Nyt: lr• •m .1\.:rau.
.

SAN UIUiO 1'1\URES . l'l at:cd .111 Kt· r~
Cnumili nn the 1.~-tl:ty tlis:lhktl li~l . 1\'lrtl&gt;k.'fh·~,· Ill
M:ay 2. Purdtlk.~ dh:' 1.'111\UUI.'I u( I R I:;,J.Jic Williillll~
ftt lm I.IL~ Vq:n~ •• r Ilk: f'('L Tr;lll~ti,.r,· ·II.HI• Ed
Vt!!&gt;ill.·tj! rrnn1 1111.· I~- '" Ilk· hll-d;ry oli ~: •h k1 l h.~t

F•w•tball
N111iunal 1-' tl!ltlhalll,nlltUr
CiREEN 1M 'f I•At' KBtS ."ii j! n•·tl liT M all
Wrlhf!
NI: W 'r'UMK ClJANTS Sr~n~,l (.' lh ~an ·
S.•hcn""r~ .
.
SAN I: H!\N&lt;.' ISl'~J -l'h"B ' Stj!n~.l (i lu ~
R11tlulph an.II.H Vt•rnun Srrit"'-l:uultt•t•nt:-yl':tr r.:nn·

To be
published
Friday,
May 22, 1998
'
in
The Daily
Sentinel
FREDW. CROW
Pomeroy High Schoo
Class of 1932

JOAN RIFE WOLFE
. Rutland High School

tl' i ll.'l~ .

Use your Senior, cheerleading or sports
picture. $6~00 per photo or $10/couple.

.

FREE HEARING

2l.7 ;~pnt

NBA conference
semifinal round

1.\1
12M
.. ... Il-l

··

A special section
devoted to your
favorite "alumnus''

BaStball
Amuican UaJiur
CI.EVEI.ANI) INDIANS: PllK&amp;:ol OF G..·nmimu
Ocrru;r lliiU I.Hl1 Alvin Murm:tn un tiki- 1~ - J:r~ litsahk:tJ li~t . R~.::tii~LI kHI' J:L~III Raker ~ f'rum A~ruu
n( lhL' Eit.~ l ..'rt! Uoa~u~ .
I'EXAS H. ANGERS · 1\~li\' iltl'd RHP XU\' I CJ
Hcrn:nnk.-1. lmm lite l~d:ay 1li~:tbl~d list. Oprinnl!tl
RHP AI lA." viti'-' til Oklothnma nl'thc 1'("1. !'M:nt H.HI1
l11~nn lk itcy ru C-'ICtttkt111prtn~ lr:unin~ H.t·-; •~ ­
~lj!fk:d RHI' Oui~ 1)n&lt;tn 11~ Sar:mnal• uf the: Suurh

.COUPON

Thursday's gamts

Bas ketbal l

17~

~

Remember
When?

10-Kin~ n,;rn

••••• *'* ••••••

Cnklf;M)o (Wnght 2-2) al Mo ntr~al ! PI!rt'f ().l).
1-m p.m.
.
AriiMII (Bene~ 2-2) :11 Pbiladrlphm (Sch•llrn, .\-

Sun r=r.. ndsco (Gardner 2-1) Of Ch 1~1110
(Gonz.u)tz. 2-J), tl: ~ p.m.

.:!.1-1
.

10-(."ulumhmrt;r 11 ·-1 .
...
...................... ,7fl
Strond 10: 11 -GUk$ Mtll s (rtlmmu A~ad M
1:!-GUlUSTI:R lH.IMTILE l ~) -11 . l.l -MdA•1miJ
{l l _\I IJ-r ;u'l&gt;t•t Hurb,.w 1-br~linr- ~ ~~ I ~· Pk:••~ :mt

"

C

&amp;

........ ~M

-

8- RACIN£ SOUTHERN ........................... 1')

..

I
fl CmlcmrlkPcuy IJ- .1..
7-Aycr,vrllr 1-1-'i
~- .St.Wo.:mkhn ( I ) I~ -,

2-2l. 2 20 r 111.

. .

Division IV

Michael Davis, Jordan Wllll110a~ Brindyn Bumgarner, Brandon Wllllama and Keith Dey. Stllfldlng are coach Chris Shank, Ryan Hannan, Corey
Woods, Zachary Shuler, Ty Ault and Anthony Ten·
nant.
---

IIIII .

fum

S:m l&gt;k!r-n tRmwn !-2) at Mt lw;wk.n- (K:lrl.f-0).
1.05 r.m
'.
Lo~ Ang~~~ (On-rrt'lf1 0.11 al Athmla IM:M.klux
1-2). I ·IOpm.
,
. Huu\hlf'l tRcynnltb 2-! l :rf Ch11::1J:1&gt; (ut. ~ (W•"'"·I

· Tonlpt'o games

fl.!.

..... 277
...... 2flll
2.'i"i
.. .. ltJO
14.\
. 11 11
'IH

1-,\tlo(,o!--w..-n(T: • Lr.tl 1-+- 1
!( .Qo:u.J lmh.m v .•tlc y 1-l-7
9 Ctn Madcna 14--6 ~
.. 4'J
ICJ·lyndihurj! -CI&lt;ty 10.'1
. . -IJ'i
St'CIIIUI 11'1 : 11- l.klra -l'i 1 ~- l'lull Unnlhl 4 1
I '- II IHnnKi:llt: EhuwtKM.I &lt;I() 1-I·L •Gr;tnj:e Ke y~ ltnrc
l 1J l 'i-tU &lt;"/\SVI LLt VAI.I.EY til _\ I 16-l):ly.
O.tlwoud 26 17·Kl'lllolll 2C. 1~- Sprm~ N •ll'lh wL:~I ­
~rn 2.1 !IJ-I:Iyrra C.o th 111 ~O. M .m 11 11 ll rvcr V:1lky

('0

01.7:40 p.m

..

b- WHF:ELI::RS8URC, 1~ - 1· .

1-*'·

TU~ay's Stores

J). 1·.Wp.n1

fl.!.

1 - kU~.:krllrd

Nalinnt~ll.ta(Ut

Imn
W~Sit'm Dlvi.~ion

.WINNING WAYS RECORDED- The Pomeroy
Elementary elxth-grade boys' basketball team
complatid the 1997-98 season with a 13-3
niCOrd.ln the past thr.ee years, the team has complied a 41-7 mark, Including eight tournament
championships. In front are (L-R) Paul Will,

l

7

419

...... 11)1,1
........ lOb
.. .. fl7
...... 115
,... 65
.. M

-~·i\Vo nL.•kr= { lll.~-1
fl- Hannl ... :•[tuhn (I) 15-.'i .

" ,.... 10'

21

.:!Ill

4-J&gt;crry 11-.1

4~:\

J7

20

... ' 2.lJ

~ - Ort:)tlcn Td · V;~ IIcy l .'i-1

ll
.. 15 16

Pin~ burgh .

.112

1- lkbrofl Laktwootl (\I IK·:I

16

CINCINNATI

flo.

1 - StcUbt:o~Jild1-IJ21 - I ·

ll

Milwaukee .
Sl U 'II II S ....
01icato ....

....... ,__ ... 98

Iwn

Ctnlral DiviUon

.

4)(

Divlsl11n Ill

Dil'ision ·II

::: ... 1~
... II

Hou~lllfl

1~

JIJ

17.

mum 20 19-Ctn Moeller 17 l(l..Stllun 16

NL standings
Ea~urn

~~rd

Sc10tn 4K 1 ~-Uppcr Arl1ngton 4~ lh -C1 n . Sl.
X:~v t er 19 17-N Royalton 24 IR-CI:ryrun Nftflh ·

·

Icam

1-"·-' -

10-Shaker Hcrl!lll ~ (I) 10.1 .............................9)
. Sr:cond 10: II -MARI ETTA 117. 12 -Canron
GknOa k 77 11-Cto Gkn E1tt 55 14-Dubho

Dt:trOtt (Worrt112-:\l ar O;akland !C.mdrott• J.l).
,1: 15 p fll .
t
Bos10n (RoK 1-2) at Kansas ny IRapp I· lJ.
R:05 p m
CLEVElAND (Colon 't. l ) at Texas !Sde ~ - I ).
!U5 p m.
.
TomniQ (ClciD(m J&lt;l ) ::u Scallk i Swrfl 2- I J.

Lot

&amp;
. Ml

12
9-Cnl. H.c:ult
.
, !7
10-Wuucnv•llc lt11.h:m l'rl~k ill . ...
. jl)
llthull rn:tlvina llur mort puinL•: 11 -HIIh-

Iwa

Iwn

1-11.8.05 p.m.

100~

....... ~;\

It-M INFORD ... . .. . .. ....

Detroi t (Kt&lt;~glc: ()..5) ill Oakland { a~nes 1-1),
J : l~ p.m.
Bnltimorc: (Etick.son J-2 ) &gt;~I CLEVELI\
( lur·
bot 2-J). 7:05p.m.
·
Minoesn~a (Hilwkins 0-~) :II Bos1on (Chec
· I).

'.

., ... 67

Division II

U11nwr1:11 Washinglon. 7 p m. (ESPN2)
Edmomon ~~ IJall.:u , 7-:W p.m. (ES PN)

q.

.f!')

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

4-Wadswurrh ............ .
... .. -Ill
5 - Sprin~ftcld Snulh .. ....
. . 4!
6-Ashlaw.J .
· ·
.............. 12
7-Akton S prin~fi~IJ .. .....................
. .,, .. 2M
~-Pid:.eriogton .. ... .... ... .........
. ................ · .24
!).Akron Elkl.......
.. .... 22
10-Hilli i•rd .. ·
. .............. .
11

Mvnuc .•l at Buff:rlo, 7:JO p.m {ESI-'N1l
c;;, l.mm ;u Dt:trml, 7 &lt;10 p.m (ESPN)

CLEVELAND 6. Baltimore 5
Boston 4. Minlk!sol_a 2
Knns.1s City 4, Tampa 8 Jy 2
NY . Yanken7. Texas 2
Xanle R. Oucago Whne So1 I
DetriJiL al O:.kland 1 ppd .. r.lln
Toro n1 0
AnaOOm J I

I

2-M:r~~~llunhK:hun(ll
~ -C ur Sy~amurc t2L .

at

t~ riday 's

on

fl.!.

1-N Ctntml H..uvcr It&gt;)

W::~~ hmgwn. 7 p.m. (ES PN 2)
EdmmHon l\1 Dallas.~ p m. (ESPN)

Ot!.IW:I

Tuesday's ~ores

_

Division I
Iwn

Thursday's games

'

,.

sometimes. n

will lte IIYIIII Meits/hll.. C......s .,

~-· HEARING AID CENTER
Friday, •r 2, 1991
In Dr. A. Jackson Balles' OHice
224 •••• Mala, ....,.,
- 9:00..10011 .

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••
:

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Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
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~-

Nickname---..,.----__;_-----------Deadline Fri. May 15- 4 pm

REACHES ON ERROR -The Cincinnati Reds' Dmitri Young geta
to the llrst base bag as Montreal flrat sackar Bred Fullmer loses hla
grip on the baseball and Is charged with an error In the seventh Inning
of Tuesday nlght'a National League game In Montreal, where the
Expos won 3-2. (AP)

Yan.kees, Blue Jays,
Royals, ChiSox win Expo~ notch 3-2
, Vizquel hits game-winning single .
victory over Reds
Clevel.and Indians
get by Orioles 6-5

GETS GAME-WINNING SINGLE - The Cleveland Indians' 0111ar
Vlzquel watches his clrlve get out of the Infield for the single that sent
. teammate Jim Thome home with the winning run In the ninth Inning
'of Tuesday night's game against the vlslllng Balllmore Orioles, who
Joat 6-5. (AP)

(U:Idt!!~ rut~\

lir~t -pl:11.·c. vo~tc~ mprtrcnrltesc ~) ;

IO'n

.600

COLUMUUS. Ohiu iAPJ - Huw ;, ~l:tl~ )land
Ohin hi}!h 5\.:'huol Sltlih;lll k:Uil~ Ill
fh~ lourrlr pull (nr The A s~tKiillcd Pr~~ ~ (hy Oluu
H1~ h Srhuol Add~tto.: A~M-...:1;otl1111 tl •n~ i ~&gt; ns . w11h

ur

Cenlral Dh·islon
CLEVELAND ......... .......... 18
Kansas. City ...... .
. .IJ

10 \0 p.m (TNT)

Rich Aurilia. who entered as part
By The Associated Preu
It was an eventful homeeoming of a double switch in the ninth, led ofT
for San Francisco reliever Robb Nen. the Giants' I Oth against Vic DarensPitching in Miami for the first bourg (0-3) with his t~ird homer in
time since last year's World Series• th=games.
Kent's RBI double off Jay Powell
the fonner florida Marlins closer got
made
it4-2, J.T. Snow added a threea standing ovation, blew a save
opportunity. then got the victory run douhle. and the final run scored
on an error.
against his former team.
Nen then pitched a perfect IOth to
Arter Nen squandered a 2-0 lead
complete
a combined three-hitler.
in the ninth. the Giants came back to
"You're not going to win many
scone six runs in the lOth and bent the
games when )'QII get three hils in 10
M'!J'lins 8-2 Tuesday n_ight.
Nen, traded in November as part innings," Marlins manager Jim Ley.of florida's payroll purge after win- land said. "But we had a shot."
Aorida 's rally prevented Ore!
ning the World Series, loaded the
bases with no outs in the ninth, and Hershiser from getting his first NL
Jeff Kent:s error at. second allowed victory since 1994. Hershiser, pounded twice by florida while pitching for
two runs to score.
"I started pressing a little bit a~d Cleveland in last year's World Series,
walking guys." said Nen. who wa.~ ,this time allowed only two hits in six
the Marlins' closer for fo.ur years. · shutout innings.
"Of course you like to win, but
"This wasn't the way I wanted _it. I
I'm
not about to not give Robb Nen
wanted the save. But I went out and
· (See NL on Page 6)
geeked up. That"s the way it happens

By The Associated Press
Home or road. day or night. lowscoring or slugfesi. nothing is stopping the New York Yankees these
days.
.
Oavid Cone took a no-hitter into
the fifth inning and led New York to
its 20th win in 22 games. 7-2 over the
Texas Rangers on Tuesday night.
"The thing is, nobody is satisfied.
Webster was the catcher when
Marquis Grissom scored the winning We can always do better and we want
run on Vizquel's missed squeeze to do more." Cone said. "I really
bunt in the 12th inning of Cleveland's wanted to throw quality pitches ·
2-1 vi&lt;;t.ory in Game 3 of the ALCS. agai'nst the hottest lineup in the
. ·
I
Websler maintains to this day that league.''
Vizquel foul-tipped the ball.
Paul O'Neill hit a three-run homer
He was also behind the plate in in the first off John Burkett (2-4) aad
Game 4 when David Justice and drove in four (Uns. At 21-6, the YanSandy Alomar scored on a wild pitch kees are off to their best start since
in Cleveland's 8-7 victory. Webster the 1958 team opened 21-5.
cried foul in that one, too- and had
"We're pumped up and we'.re on
a point - wl)en he argued that Jus- ; a hell of a run. no question," Yankees
tice. who scored first. blocked him manager Joe Torre said.
Cone (4-1) won his fourth conout of the play as Alomar came in
from second.
·
Secutive start. allowing two runs and
The Indians won the series in six
games, selling an LCS record with

' softball poll .
Coaches'

Frida_( s gam~
l'hrc1go at Charlotte . !I r m (TNT!

l': utrrn. Dlvi.tion

an Il-l run in the final three minutes
of the period.
"We can't talce any solace 'out of
playing a good first quarter;" New
York coach Jeff Van Gundy said.
"What we need to look at is why and
how we got dominated over the last
three."
Jalen Rose aod Travis Best finished with 18 points apiece and
Antonio Davis had 14. Indiana's
reserves outscored New York's 5620.
Reggie Miller had nine of his 17
•points in the 'period, including a 22footer with 3.4 seconds left to gtve
Indiana its biggest lead of the night
to that point, 73-64.
New York closed to 89-81 on a
three-pointer by Charlie Ward with
I:31 to play, but Miller answered
with a basket 16 seconds later, and
the Knicks were ·unable to get any
closer.
·
"We softened up defensively and
they played with much more force .
We got our heads handed to us." Van
Guody said. " Rose hurt us with his
size in the post. Best hurt us with his
penetration and his pressure on the
ball. Davis hurt us with his effort."

Hill Ntwtoo Loc:ol 27. 16-Greenwich Snuth C!!m·.
24. 17-TOJonto 22. iS-Lockland Ill. 19-St. lkrnnn.l·
Elmwofld Plnce 16.

Thursday's games

Baseball

talce a 1-0 lead in their second-round NBA Finals to Chicago and the first Jazz countered by replacing their secgame of their first-round ~eries with ond-leading playoff scorer, 6-foot-7
series.
Bryon Russell, with 6-foot-9 Adam
Chicago, leading 1-0 in its second- Houston.
. Utah will be trying to take a 2-0 Keefe.
round series, plays host to Charlotte
The Spurs pounded the ball inside
tonight. The Los Angeles Lakers, lead over the Sp~rs on Thursday
night
before
the
series
moves
to
San
all evening to max imize their height
trailing 1-0 to the SuperSonics, play
Antonio for gllllles on Saturday after- advantage, and Utah's only 7-footer,
at Seaule in the second game.
Greg Ostertag, spent the night in foul
The Spurs, )Nho hadn't played in noon and Sunday night.
San
Antonio
started,
the
second
trouble and played just seven minsix days after eliminating Phoenix,
half
with
a
10-4
run
and
tied
the
game
utes.
trailed from the opening·minute until
Utah jumped to a 32- 16 lead earJohnson's free throw gave them an on Duncan's free throws .with 6:02
80-79 lead with 2:48 left. But Mal- left in the third. But the Jazz closed ly in the second quarter with a 16-2
one, who finished with 25 points, hit the quarter with a 12-4 run and run. Hornacek s.cored eight straight
points for the Jazz during the run, and
two jumpers in the closing minutes. entered the fourth up 68-60.
Stockton
shook
off
a
sore
back
San Antonio committed seven firstRobinson's disappearing act in the
and had 15 points and eight assists for quarter turnovers.
~ourth quarter was distressing for the
Spurs. He finished the game with 16 . the Jazz. Hornacek had 13 points and
The Spurs have never won a play.
a
·pair
of
steals.
rebounds, exactly his league-leading
off game in Utah. The Jazz have beatJohnson, who was San Antonio's en San Antonio in seven of their last
playoff average, but just 16 points on
leading scorer in the first round eight meetings over the last tw,o sea5-for-17 shooting.
against
Phoenix, had 14 points and so ns. Utah beat San Antonio in three '
"It's tough to be out 'there and
·eight
assists.
of the teams ' four regular-season
have the opportunity to take the
There
were
no
physical
conmeetings this season.
game and not be able to get it, ..
frontations in the first meeting
Pacers 93, Knicks 83
Robinson said.
At Indianapo lis, the Knicks
Utab, which holds home-court between the two teams since Malone
advantage throughout the playoffs, knocked Robinson unconscious with . ju!'Jped out to a 19-point lead in the
avoided starting its 'third straight an enrant elbow on March 8. At that first quarter. but it was gone by the
playoff series with a loss. The Jazz time, several Spurs vowed revenge. time halft'ime arrived.
San Antonio started its Triple
There were four ties and four lead
lost the opening game of last year's
Towers frontcourt of7-footers Robin- changes in the third quarter before
son, Duncan and Will Perdue. The Indiana ·rook the lead for good with

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Lenny
Webster must have spent the entire
winter looking at mental replays of
Omar Vizquel. Did he miss that
squeeze bunt in the ALchampionship
series or foul it off?
This lime. Vizquel definitely ·connected.
Vizquel hit. a two-out, game-winning single in the ninth off Armando
Benitez as the Cleveland Indians beat
Baltimore 6-5 Tuesday night in
another nightmare for.the Orioles in
their House of Horrors.
Benitez (I~ I). haunted by Cleve_land to the tune of a 12.00 ERA in the
: ALCS. walked iq the t.ying run and
·eave up Vizquel's bases-loaded sin- four one·run victories.
gle that scored Jim Thome with the
"Last year was last year," Indians
winning run. h was Cleveland"s manager Mike Hargrove said.
•fbilftb cohsetutive victory and sec- "They're a very good team."
ond straight in their last at-bat. ,
Afomar led off Ch:veland's ninth
· The Indians beat Tampa Bay 10- with a bloop single, and Thome
8 on Sunday with five runs in the walked. Travis Fryman was hit by a
ni.nth, including Sandy Alomar's pitch after fouling off a sacrifice bunt
grand slam.
. attempt, and pinch-hitler Giles
. "If this situation had come up a walked to force home the tying run.
; week ago, we · probably wouldn'.t
After Shawon Dunston struck out
·: have gotten it done," Cleveland's and Kenny Lofton foul~d out,
)' Brian Giles said. "We're building on Vizquel pulled a 1-1. inside fastball
J ; this."
from
. Benitez to right
. for the game" The rally wiped out Webster's go- w1nner.
; ahead single with lWO.OUIS in the tOp
"I threw my best pitch, a fastball
· bf the ninth. fleeting redemption for inside, and he hit it," said Benitez,
:the homeplate hijinks that marked who also gave up a grand slam to
:two stunning home victories for the Albert Belle in the 1996 AL division
: Indians in the ALCS last fall.
series against Cleveland.
· · "We've got to get through these
"I thought it was going to be over
:guys." Baltimore's Jes.~ Orosco said. before I came up," Vizquel said. "I
"They've got a lot of spirit over was telling the guys. 'Pack up, pack
. here." ·
.
up, pack up. It's over.' "
Evil spirits. where the Orioles an:
concerned.
'

;Eastern drops 5-2
\decision to Water,ord
' By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correaponcltnt
In the first round of league play
. Ft~stem upset Waterford. one of only
i.two teams to accomplish the feat,
however, Waterford sought revenge .
and came home the victor in a TriValley Conference make-up softba!l
contest last week.
· · Waterford claimed a 5-2 win and
COmDined with Southern's Joss with
Trimble takes over first in the league.
Waterford is 18-2 overall and 13-1 in'
the league.
· ; Waterford went up 1-0 in the second when Katrina Greene reached on
in error then scored on another error
in right field. 1-0.
· Eastern's first round win was a tor.rid pitching battle between Tammi
Muck and Eastern's Stephanie Evans.
The rematch took about the same
· ~ourse. ~ut this time the Eastern
defense couldn't plug the leaks.
. The Wildcats went ahead 3-0 with
.'!Wo more runs"in the. third inning on
~o unearned runs as T. Barns and J.
Starkey reached and scored on errors.
, Waterford went up 5-0 in the
tDurth on a T. Neill single. and two
more eiroiS. A fly out and a throw. ·ing error allowed in the final run . .
: ·Eastem scored two runs in the
sjxth when Juli Hayman singled. but
was out on a fielder's choice,
Chuatie Hollon walked, and
Slephanie Evans had a two-run tripie.
·. Eastern threatened in the seventh,
but didn't score.
: Despite pitching a three hitter.
Evans suffered the .loss with five
unearn¢d runs, five strike outs. and

no walks.
Huck picked up the win with five
strike outs, three walks. and five hits
allowed. Waterford had three errorS
and Eastern had eight errors.
On Tuesday night. Eastern was
trailing 2-1 in thefourth inning of the
Division Ill sectional tournament
against Trimble when lightning
forced cancellation of the game. The
game will be finished tonight at Tuppers Plains.
Inoina tmaJs
Waterford
013-200-0=5-3-3
Eastern
000-002-0=2-5-8

Batteries
Eastern: Evans (LP) and Bailey
Waterford: T. Huck (WP) .and
Greene

Meigs Chamber
schedules golf
tourney for May 28
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will sponsor a golf scramble on Thursday, May 28 at the Meigs
County Golf Course, tee time is
12:30.
The tournament will be a fow:-man
scramble. wilh an A. B. C and D
player blind draw: Cost or the tournament is $SO and includes lunch,
beverages, snacks, can, lots or fun
and prizes. The proceeds will benefit the Meigs County Chamber or
Commerce.
For II10R information you can
contact Jim Anderson at 992-3671
(dny) or 949-2534 (home).

.

.

straining his' left knee when picking
up Luis Ali~ea's bunt single. and Darren Holmes and Jeff Nelson completed the four-hitter at the Ballpark
in Arlington.
"I had reconstructive surgery on
the same knee 16 years ago." Cone
said. "Any time you tweak a knee
like that. you are concerned. But it's
not too SO(e and I think I' II be OK."
In other AL games. Boston beat
Minnesota 4-2. Seattle routed Chicago 8-1. Toronto outlasted Anaheim
13-11 and Kansas City beat Tampa
Bay 4-2. Detroit's game at Oakland
was postponed by rain.
Red SoK 4, Twins 2
BOitoil won for the 18th time in
22 ·games as Nomar Garciaparra
broke a 2-all tie in the seventh with
a two-run double. Troy O'Leary tied
the score 2-all earlier in the inning
(See AL on Page 6)

MONTREAL (AP) - Ryan
McGuire wouldn't have been willing
to trade places with Stan Belinda.
Belinda forced in the winning run
with a two-out. bases-loaded walk to
McGuire in the ninth inning as the
Montreal Expos beat Cincinnati 3-2
Tuesday night. halting the Reds·
three-game winning streak.
"There's more pressure on him
than there is on me." McGuire said.
"He's got to throw a strike. Alii have
to do is try to p.ut the bat on the ball.
"It was nice that it wasn't a borderline pitch or anything like that In
that situation you definitely either
want it right down the middle or a
prelly obvious ball and fortunately it
was down and in.''
Vladi'IT)ir Guerrero hit a one-out

double in the ninth and advanced to
third as center-fielder Reggie Sanders
bobbled the ball. After two intentionaf walks by Belinda ( 1-4), pinchhitter Jose Vidro grounded to first
baseman Sean Casey, who forced
Guerrero at home.
McGuire then worked the count
full before Belinda. who struck out
the side in the eighth. threw ball four ·
inside. 011 Saturday, McGuire came
. up in the same situation in the 12th
inning against Arizona and delivered
a game-winning RBI single.
"ll's nice to be in it at the end of
the game." McGuire said. "I think
it's an indication that we're starting
to play a linle bit better baseball.
We're starting ·to click. Winning
(See REDS on Page 6)

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

W~nesday,

. W~nesday, May 6, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Portland makes
McCulley first
pick in ABL draft
By ROB GLOSTER
SAN JOSE. Calif. (AP) - Even
while stocking its eight existing
teams and two expansion franchises
with some of the nation's top college
players. the American Basketball
League felt compelled to defend its
honor.
As the women's league held its
third annual draft Tuesday, ABL cofounder Gary Cavalli methodically
disputed reports he said were unfair
to the league - which competes with
the rival WNBA for top players.
No. Cavalli insisted. ABL players
don't travel long distances between
games on l:!uses and they don't stay
in lousy hotels. And Cavalli said the
ABL never even offered a contract to
Malgorzata Dydek, who was the top
·overall pick in the WNBA's draft last
•
DUGAN SCORES - The Meigs Marauders' Tony Dugan crosses week.
Cavalli said players who were
• the plate behind Wellston's catcher during Tueaday's Ohio Division
baseball game at Meigs High School, where the Marauders won 9·5. recruited by both leagues heard tales
of second-class conditions in the
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
ABL. and it was time to dispel such
ideas.

Meigs kn·ocks .off ·
· No. 5 Wellston 9-5

a

" It was significant enough that I
wanted to make a comment today,"
Cavalli said. "I wanted to dispel all
the fairy tales and myths about the
ABL."
.
'
But Cavalli admitted the ABL lost
the recruiting -battle to the WNBA
this year. He said the ABL signed a
large majority of the most saught·
after players last year, but got just six·
of the top 15 players it had identified
this year- while the WNBA signed
the other nine.
The top picks in Tuesday's draft
all expressed their delight at being
ABL. players. with No. I selection .
Danielle McCulley saying she chose
·the ABL because of its longer season.
The ABL season runs from Octoher to March. The WNBA is a summer league. and some of its pla)'ers
. head to Europe after completing the
season.
·
"I wanted to stay here in the states
so that my family and friends would
be able to see me play," said McCulley, who was chosen by the Portland
Power. ·

' those close games is always an indi-

i cation that you' re on a winning
1

team . We seem to have a little confi: dence now."
:
Cincinnati tied the game 2-2 in the
' eighth when Casey hit a one-out RBI
double off Ugueth Urbina (2- 1).
Urbina had relieved Marc Valdes,
·: who allowed a leadoff single to Brett
!. Boone and a groundout to L1rkin that
• advanced Boone to second.
l Casey, recalled from a rehab ~tint
~ • at Triple-A Indianapolis earlier in the
~.,day, went 3-for-4. Boone went 3-for• 5 with a double and a run scored.
~
"It felt good to get in there and
feel like I was part of the team and
• contribute,"Casey said. '"lt'sgood to
• be out there driving in runs and mak,• .mg some pIays." Cincinnati scored a run in the first
• on Ed Taubensee's RBI single, but
' Montreal tied it in the bottom half on
:~ Derrick May's sacrifice fly.
'
Montreal took a 2-1 lead in the ·
third when F. P. Santangelo scored
• from third as May grounded into a
': double play.
I Montreal starter Miguel Batista
I. allowed one run over 6 2-3 innings in
his secood stan since being inserted
1
·, jilto Montreal's starting rotation .

!·

••

••

Batista allowed eight hits, walked ..
two and struck out three.
"All I was thinking was, 'Let
them hit the ball, don't try 'to be too
line.'" Batista said. "I wanted to stay
·away from the walks in crucial situat ions." ·
Reds starter Pete Hami~ch went
seven innings. allowing two runs on
eight hits.
Notes: Santangelo led off the first with a double, extending his hitting
· streak to 14 games .... Cincinnati has
sco.red first .in each of it~ last nine

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STEALS BASE -VInton County's Calvin (first name unreported)
alldea under the teg of Meigs shortstop Stephanie Wl(jal for the steel
of aecond baae during Tuesday'a Division II IICtlonal tournament
game at Meigs High School, where the Marauders won 3·2 In eight
lnnlnga. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harrla) ·

Division II softball sectlonals start

Meigs gets past
Vinton County ·a-2·
in eight innings . ·

By DAVE HARRIS
Tangy Laudermilt scored the
game
winning. run on a Casey SanEverett's two-run single. and an error
ford
sacrifice
fly in the eighth inning,
by shortstop Jeff Blauser.
to
give
Meigs
a 3-2 win over Vinton
' • Houston added two runs in the
eighth on homers · by Brad Ausmus County in Division II sectional softand Craig Biggio. Everett had three ball action Tuesday evening at Meigs.
Meigs (9-7) will advance to the·
hits and .three RBis for the Astros,
championship
game on the road Friwho have won 13 of 16 games.
Lima (5-1) gave up four runs and day against either Belpre or Sheridan.
four hits in six innings, and C.J. Those two were rained out in the
Nitkowski pitched the last three third inning with a 2-all tie on Tuesinnings for his second save. Brant day. The two t~ams will try and finBrown, Jose Hernandez and Scott ish the game today.
The Lady ·Marauders broke a
Servais homered for the Cubs.
scoreless
tie in the third inning. KelPadres 13, Brewers 4
ly
Gilkey
led off the inning with a
Wally Joyner hit a grand slam and
triple.
Amber
Vining followed with a
Andy Sheets added a three-run homer
for the second straight game as San single. Vining scored to make to a 20 game on a single by Laudermilt.
Diego routed Milwaukee.
The Vikings tied the score in the
In their two games at the NL's
sevemh
inning. Prater reached second ·
newest city, the. Padres have feasted
on
a
Marauder
error: Jewitt then fol on Brewers pitching for 26 runs and
29 hits. Milwaukee entered the series lowed with a single to score Prater .
with lhe NUs best ERA among· with the Vikings first run. Jewitt's single was the first hit of the contest for
starters.
But one night after Jose Mercedes Vinton County off of Lauderrnilt.
Jew itt stole second and went 10
allowed 11 earned runs on 12 hits.
Paul Wagner (1-3) surrendered II third on a passed ball and scored on
runs (six earned) on nine hits in sev- a ground out to tie the game at 2-all.
Laudermilt led off the eighth
en innings.
inning
for Meigs with a single and a
Mets 9, Diamondbacks 1
Dave Mlicki finally got a win in two base error by t.he Vikings moved
to third. She then scored the
his si~th stan of the season, pitching Tangy
winning run on a sacrifice ny off the
a six-hitter forthe second complete bat of Sanford.
game of his career as N~w York Mets
Laudermilt struck . out nine,
beat Arizona.

. UMIT

walked.three and gave up the one hit.
Melissa Ramsburg ,and Lauderrnih
had a pair of singles each to lead
Meigs. Gilkey added her triple, Vining a double. arid Abby Harris a single.
.
Cecil. the starter and loser foe ;w;nton, gave up seyen hits. struck out
five and walked three. Jewitt had the
only hit a single.
lnnine l!!.W:i
Vinton County 000-000-20=2·1·2
Meigs
002-000~01=3-7-2
Cecil CLP) and Prater
Lauderrnih (WP) and Sanford

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the ball," Hershiser said. "He can
have it in every one of my starts."
By DAVE HARRIS
run in the top of the fifth to tie the
In other NL games, it was ColSentinel Correspondent
game at 5-all. Kuhn singled and orado 6. Philadelphia I; Pittsburgh 5.
· Meigs scored a pair of runs in the moved to second on a balk. Kuhn St. Louis 2; Atlanta 8. Los Angeles 3:
fifth and sixth innings as the Maraud- stole second and scored on a Maraud- !'lew York 9. Arizona I; Houston I0.
ers went on to upset the state ranked er error on a pick off attempt at third. Chicago 5; and Ban Diego 13, Mil·
Wellston 9-5 in TVC baseball action
But the Marauders came right waukee 4.
Tuesday at Rock Springs. The Gold- back in the liflh inning to take the
Rockies 6, Phillies 1
en Rockets went into the contest lead for good. Martin walked and
Darryl Kile left the game with a
ranked fifth in this week's state rank- moved to second on a Bentley sacri- bruised kneecap after pitching live
ings.
lice. Dugan singled to score Martin shutout innings as Colomdo ....,on at
The Golden Rockets ( 13-4 over• to make it a 6-5 contest. Dugan stole Philadelphia.
all and 10-2 in the Ohio Division) second and moved to third on a
Mark Lewis' hard-hit grounder up
jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the first Rusty Stewart single. Ramsburg then the middle ricocheted off Kile's right
innjng. Matt Hatten and Nate Fen· followed with a sacrifice fly to right knee to start the fifth. Kile (4-3), who
wick both walked. Hatten stole third to make it 7-5)lame.
lias won three straight starts. finished
The Marauders. closed out the the inning before limping off the
.and came into score on a sacrifice fly
• off the bat of Brent Ewing.
scoring in the sixth inning. J.T. field.
·
The Marauders came back with Humphreys and Collin Roush sin· · Da'nte Bichette had three RBis for
two runs in the bottom of the inning. gled. Odie Karr pinch running for Colorado, Todd Helton and Larry
Jeremiah Bentley singled and stole Humphreys scored on a Wellston Walker hit solo homers and eight difsecond. Tony Dugan struck out, but error and Roush scored on a sacrifice ferent Rockies hit doubles. ,
reached on a passed ball with Bent- fly otT the bat of Martin to give the
Pirates 5, Cardinals 2
ley moving to third.
Marauders a 9-5 win.
·Francisco Cordova continued his
llentley scored on a wild pitch
Bentley went the route to pick up run of effective starts, limiting slumpwith Dugan moving to third . Dugan the win. he scattered four hits, he ing St. Louis to two runs in 6 113
then scored on a ground out off the struck out eight and walked eight. inninss.
bat of Rusty Stewart making it a 2-1 Bentley and Dugan led t.Jeigs with a
Cordova (4-2) has .allowed two
Meigs udvuntage.
pair of doubles each, Stewart, Rams- rims or fewer in all but one of his si~
Wellston tied the game i,n the sec- burg. Humphreys. Roush and Dav." ~tarts for the Pirates, who won for just
ond inning. Chad Kuhn was hit by a enport all singled.
the second time in seven games. The
pitch and moved to .third on a single
Kuhn was the loser for Wellston, ' Cardinals have lost three of four
by Andy McGinnis, Kuhn then came he gave up nine'hits, walked one and overall.,eight of I0 on the road and
, into score on a wild pitch to make it struck out five. Kuhn also led the nine of their last I0 against the
~ , a 2-all game.
Rockets at the plate with a pair of sin- Pirates.
••
Wellston scored a pair of runs ilt - gles. Ewing and McGinnis also had
Mark McGwire, one homer away .
' ; the third inning. Fenwick reached on singles.
from becoming the 26th major lea' an error. Morgan Stevens walked.
Meigs (II- 7 &amp; 7-6) will host guer to hit 400 homers, went 2-for-3
both runners moved up on a stolen Miller on Thursday and Nelsonvi lie- with a double and a singl~.
bases. Kuhn then singled in both run- York on Friday.
Braves 8, Dodgers 3
Denny Neagle- won for the 14th
• • ners to give Wellston a 4-2 lead.
louin~ lll1llb
, ;. Martin walked to lead off the third Wellston
112-010-0=5-4-1 time in 15 home decisions since joininning. Bentley and Dugan followed Meigs
203-022-•=9-9-2 ing the Braves, and' Javy Lopez tied
with singles. One out later Ramsburg
Wellston: Chad Kuhn (LP) and his career high with four RBis as
Atlanta beal Los Angel~s.
singled to give Meigs a 5·4 lead.
Chad Bowman. Etic McGinnis (5)
Atlanta has won seven of eight
The Golden Rockets scored o a
Meigs: Jeremiah Bentley (WP)
and J.T. Humphreys
· and 16 of20.
· Neagle (4-1 ), acquired by the
Braves in 1996, allowed two runs and
•_..:.&lt;c_o_nt_in_ue_d_fro_m_P...:ag:...e...:5&gt;;___ _ __ four hits in six innings. He pitched 13
I'
co~secutive scoreless innings before
: "• with a leadoff homer against Bob season .
Jose
Vizcaino's fifth-inning homer.
• Tewksbury (3-4).
Alben Belle hit his seventh homer.
Lopez
hit an RBI single in a three;
Tim Wa~efield (3-1) allowed two Scott Eyre {1 -4) gave up five runs_
run
fifth
and
a three-run homer in a
~ runs and five hits in 7 1-3 innings at four earned - and live hits in five
' Fenway Park. winning his third con- innings. allowing four solo homers. ·four-rud sixth. lsmael Valdes (2-4)
dropped to 0-4 on the road, giving up
; secutive stan. The Red Sox came
Blue Jays 13, Angels 11
: from behind for the 15th time in their
On a wild night at Anaheim, Dar- four runs and seven hits in 4 1/3
' 21 victories.
rin Fletcher hit a three-run homer off innings.
Astros 10, Cubs 5
l
Mariners 8, White Sox I
Troy Percival (0-2) and Tony FerJose
Lima
tied teammate Mike
!
Ken Griffey Jr. hitbisAL-Ieading nandez capped the comeback with a
Hampton
for
the
NL lead with his
~
13th homer. David Segui homered two-run double as Toronto rnllied
flflh
victory.
and
Houston
scored five
~ twice, and Jeff Fassero (3-1) pitched from an 11 -6 deficit iri the eighth.
, a three-hitter at the Kingdome as
Anaheim led 7-6 in the seventh runs _in the seventh inning to win at
·
1
Seattle moved within a game of .500 and appeared to put the game away Chicago.
Trailing
4-3.
the
Astros
rallied
in
• at 15-16.
.
on a bases-loaded sacrifice ny by
the
seventh
to
take
an
8-4
lead.
The
•
Alex Rodriguez and Robert Perez · Paco Martin and a three-run double
runs scored on Derek Bell's RBI sin: •.; also homered for Seattle. which had by Garret Anderson off Dan Plesac
gle.
Bill Spiers' RBI double. Carl
: live 1n a game for the first time this ( 1-2),
•
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

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�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
•

Page&amp;

Wednesday, May 6, 1998 •

Stories _
about l~a Hogg still abound - Ann sets record straight
mail:
Dear Aim: Fifty years ago, when
my brother, my sister and 1 used to
visit our grandparents in Texas, we
were told that the venerable Hogg
family had not one but two daughters. They were named !rna and Ura.
We once drove past a lavish new
fountain in . front of the Warwick
H'btel in Houston, and my folks told
us it had been built by lma and Ura

Ann
Landers
1¥'17, Los AI!Jdc.lltme•
Sy1.ditatc al\d Creaturl
S)'fldin6e.

Dear Ann Landers: I was
amused by your column about off·
beat names, but I have a comment
about lma Hogg. There's more to
the story than you printed.

· ~·

Hogg in tribute to their parents.
Were we Jhree gullible children just
getting, a litl)e "slop" thrown our
way. or is your memory slipping.
Ann? We'd appreciate an answer. -Sisters From the Nonh
Dear Sisters: So far; my memory.
is holding up p~tty well. Meanwhile , go with the slop theory.
Here's more:
.
Dear Ann: The Hogg family of

----- '

Houston actually had two daughters them?-- Delores inlJes Plaines, Bl.
who were songwriters. In 1951, I
Dear Delores: Whoever thought
work,cd in lbe music library of WLS up that !rna and Ura fantasy must be
radio when it was a prairie-fanner spinning in his (or her) grave. It
station in Chicago. While going never ceases to amaze me how some
through nld papers. I ran acruss utterly groundless stories take on a
some sheet music hy the daughters. -lif'e of· their own. Here's the last
Irna and Yura Hngg. It is cvidcAithal word on the subject:
the Hngg sisters c"ri t"li'.cd nn their
Dear Ann: !rna Hogg may be
names and endeared themselves 111 ·remembered by ·others for her odd
.many. And whn wuld ever f'nrget name, hut for the thousands who

knew and loved her, her name is
irrelevant. She was Houston's
Queen Mom. -- Dorothy at Bayou
Bend
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Svndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd.; Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif-:
90045

s I -'

••

I.,.•••••••••••.-------------.;.,-------------:----------::-----::-~--::-, ;
EASTMAN'S
.

Hogg
family.
According
to hirit,
I had
a friend
who knew
the
Mr. Hogg was a wealthy Texas
businessman who desperately
wanted a son, but his wife
birth to twin girls. Mr. Hogg was
so disappointed and angry that
named them lma and Ura. Neither
girl ever married, but they did
over their father's business when I
he died. llhink they are still an've.l
Please set the record straight. -Correct in Cambria, Calif.
Dear Cambria: I received .
quite a flurry of leners from my
Texas readers aboutlma Hogg and
her sister. Ura, so we did some
checking. According to David
Warren, director of the Bayou
Bend Collection and Garden~ at
the Museum of Fine Ans in Houston, there was ·never a Ura Hogg.
Here arc the facis:
James Stephen Hogg was the
. first native-born governor of Texas
from 1891 to 1895. He had three .
sons, and his wife gave birth to
their only daughter, lma, in I 882.
The governor did not name her out
of spite. His brother, Thomas .
Elisha Hogg, had written a Civil
War poelfl about a beautiful Southem girl named lma (wliich is a
shortened version of Imogene),
who took care of a Union soldier.
Gov. Hogg thought !rna was a
lovely name.
· Ima grew up to be a wellrespected and much-admired phil-anthropist and founder of the
Houston Symphony. She also started the first child guidance clinic in
th~ United States in 1927 and
founded the Hogg Me~tal Health
Foundation in Houston. She never
1uarried or ·had children, and she
&lt;lied in 1975 at the ripe old age of
93. At the time of her death, she
had given all her wealth away to
various charities and the Houston
Museum of Fine Ans, which owns
and manages her magnificent
home. Bayou Bend.
Dozens of people wrote, however. to tell me ,about the imaginary
Ura. Some even said they knew her
well. Take a look at some of my

ot

8

1

.

•

:

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

.

Prosecutors win executive privilege, ·wind _. up Arkansas phase
WASHlNOTON(AP)-AfedcrAt the height of the WatefJ . .e
al judge rejected President Clinton's scandal in the summer of 1974, the
effort to use executive privilege to Supreme Court took abouuix '!Veeks
block cenain testimony by his senior voted to uphold U.S. District Judae
aides in the Monica Lewinsky inves- John Sirica's deciJion ipinst I'Rsi·
ligation, The Associated Press dent Nixon, who invoked executive
learned Tuesday. •
privilege to deny access to tape·
Meanwhile, prosecutors finished recorded convenations in the White
'their work with an Arkansas grand House. Nixon resigned five weeks
jury that had investigated Whitewa- after the Supreme Court ruled· amid
ter for two years and tut:ned their impeachment proceedings in the
attention back to presidential friend House or Representatives.
Vernon Jordan, questioning him a
Lawyers in the Clinton investiga'third time before . a j!rand jury in. tion declined to say whether U.S.
Washington.
District Judge Norma Holloway
The White House could appeal the Johnson ruled outright that executive
'executive privilege ruling, conf11111Cd privileg~ did not apply to private
'by several lawyers familiar with the 1ssues hke the Lew1nsky ~r. or
legal dispute between the adminis- . whether she acce~
clatm but·
tration and Independent Counsel ruled prosecutors tnterest out·Kenneth Starr. Any decision to appeal weishcd the White House's interests'
·would further delay Starr's investi- in keeping the matter secret.
!
·galion into whether Clinton had sex
In any case. the la~yers said, the '
. 'with Ms. Lewinsky, lied about it or judge ruled aides like Bruce Lindsey
urged others 10 lie.
and Sidney Blumenthal must ans~er
The White House and Starr's the questions IIIey earlier refused to
office declined comment, citing the answer before the grand jury on execfact that the issue is under court seal. utive privilege grounds.

Speaking on condition . of
anonymity, the IJwyen also said the
judge's ruling applied only to e~ecutive priviiCJ!e,and left open the possibility the White House could make
a separatc claim of attorney-client
privileJe ia trying to block teslimony by Lindsey.
Lindsey, the president's closest
adviser, is a White House deputy
counsel. .
'
Oinion has publicly refused to
even acknowledge he invoked exec-utive privilege. Aides speaking on
condition of anonymity have said the
claim was limited: It pertained to
grand jury questioning about White
House strategy, not about the president's relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, moved
their. investigalion forward on two
fronts.lnAltansas, they bid farewc:U
ala brief courthouse pizza party to 24
pand jurors in Uule Rock who 'had
investigated Whitewater the past two
years.
·
The grand jurors wrapped up their

!'W

work bY indicting former Whitewa- ing the Lewinsky case called Jordan,
ter business partner Susan McDougal a Washington power broker and freon Monday, and were dismissed quent golfing panner of Clinton, for
Tuesday - two days before their testimony a third time. In addition,
tenn expired.
sources familiar with the investigaProsecutors indicated they would tion said that Clinton's personal secshift the Arkansas evidence and any retary, Belly Currie, will testify this
remaining decisions to Washington, week.
where the Lewinsky probe and sepShe and Jordan have testified prearate inquiries into possible obstruc- viously and both befriended former
lion of justice by the White House are Ms. Lewinsky, a onetime White
ongoing.
.
House intern, raising questions of
Charles
. Bakaly,
Starr's whether there was an effort to keep
spokesman, said it was still possible her quiet about .a possible presidenthat prosecutors could seek a new .tial affair and coverup.
grand jury in Arkansas to hear addiLeaving the counhouse, Jordan
tional evidence. "That is a possibil- said he "answered all of the questions
iry, but there's been no decisiot truthfully, honestly and to the best of
about that," he said.
• my ability. ... I believe that I will be
Mn. McDougal issued a defian1 called ag:Un and if so, I shall return:·:
statement promising, "If they expect
Investigators are .interested in why
to see the same p~~Ssive woman" whc Mrs. Currie and Jordan were so
was convicted in a previous White- inierested in getting Ms. Lewinsky a
water trial, "they are in for a sutprise. private sector job -· especially
I in1&lt;nd to fight these charges.-... whether this was an attempt to urge
There is a great deal of-information her 10 lie 'under oath in the Paula
that has not yet come to light."
Jones lawsuit about the nature of her
The federal grand jury investigat- relationship with the president.

After his March testimony, Jordan
told reporters he helped Ms. Lewinsky search for private employment in
New York and introduced her to her
first attorney. He also said he " kept
' the president of the United States
infonncd about my activities."
·
But Jordan insisted that he "did
not in any way tell her. encourage her;
to lie: and secondly, that my effons
to find her a job were not a quid pro
quo for the affidavit that she signed"
in the Paula Jones case. In that affidavit. Ms. Lewinsky denied having
' an affair with Clinton .
While Jordan testified. a federal
appeals coun panej upheld a lower
court's decision to conduct closed
proceedings on matters relaied to the
Lewinsky investigation - including
executive privilege, grand jury leaks
·and a subpoena to the former intern's
first lawyer.'
The three-judge panel of the U.S.
Coun of Appeals denied a motion by
a dozen news organizations, including The Associated Press, for immediate access to proceedings

29 animals, plants to be taken .·off endangered list
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WASHINGTON (API- Declaring that die Endangered Species Act
works, the administration says two
dozen birds, plants and animals,
including the bald eagle, are.on their
way 10 recovery and may soon be
renioved from the law's protection.
. The proposal to be unveiled
Wednesday by Interior Secretary
·Bruce !labbitt marks the first time in
the law's 25-year history that ~uch a
I!Uie number of species would be
earmarked for removal from the
·endangered list, although it would be
done over two years.
' . Babbitt is scheduled to trumpet the
proposed removal of such species as
the
·ne falcon. lhe bald·easle;·
the Easte timber wolf and the
Aleuti.an C
soose' during a vis·
ft to a bald sle nesting area in a
wildlife refug near Gill, Mass.
"For 1
I time we can see the
tight at
end of the tunnel," Ba~
-bitt says · renwks prepared for tbe
Massach setu audience. "We can
now prove one thing conclusiJiely.
'The Endan~ Species Act works.
Period."
· · Critic;so~the 1~31awclaimilnot
·:only has caused .widespread eeo-riomic harm to landowners but has
: mown little evidence of protecting
species since only a !landful over a
quarter..Cnlury !lave recovere,j
enough to'ba,ltft on their own.

~ iue 1,135 species oit the list.
Babbitt, speaking to reporters
Tuesday, acknowledged thai efforts to
get species off the list have lagged.
but he said that's in pan because
"we've had to dig our way out from
under" a backlog of species awaiting
to be Iis ted. That backlog grew when
Congress imposed a yeirlong moratorium on new listings in 1995.
Since the moratorium ended in
April 1996, the backlog of species
awaiting a final listing decision has
dwindled to about 100. The Fish and ·
Wildlife ~rvice is putting new priority on unlisting some of the plants
that have shown significant signs of
teeovery.
The
Interior
Department
announced 2'f species, including animals, fish, reptiles. birds and plants,
that. have recovered enough to be
seriOusly considered for removal
from !be endangered list. Some of the
species will be downgraded to threat·
encd and others removed from die
law's protection altogether, although .
states may still regulate them.
To remove a species from the .
· endangered Jist, biologistS of the
Fish and Wildlife Service must ·fi111
tletennine whether iiS numbers" have
returned to a certain level and
whether it has adeqlllle habi.. for
likely IUrYival. Then a proposal is'·
made do "delist" the species or

downsrade it to "threatened." After And there are obscure plants such as ~early 1960s, has steadily rebounda review period, a final decision is the Missouri bladder-pod; the ed and now total about5,000 nesting
made on the species. All this often Hoover's wooly-star, which is found . pairs. Likewise, there were fewer
can take a year or more. officials said. mostly on federal land in California; than 35 active Peregrin falcon nest
The 29 include such well-known and the lin ian monarch, a bird found sites the mid- I970s. About I,SOO
species as the Peregrine falcon, bald only on a Pacific island in the North- ·pairs of Peregrine falcon now can be
eagle, and Michigan timber wolf- em Mariana chain.
found across the West. Both btrds
all of which have made widely pu~
The bald eagle population, which becaine widespread viclims of pestilicized comebacks in recent years. had declined to 417 nesting pairs by cides and their recovery· coincided .

with the ban of DDT in the United
States.
"It is an unprecedented action.
They've never before put together
such a list of species," s.aid James
Waltman of the Wilderness Society.
But he also said the environmental
ci&gt;mmunity intends to examine the
list closely to make sure the.species
have recovered sufficiently.

at

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HoneyCnd

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.

Community
Calendar

MaxweiHtouse .

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Special meeting. Eastern L&lt;&gt;L:al School District,
Wednesday. 5:30 p.m. at the school
to revkw orders. cenify payroll,
award f umiturc hids and tramacting

Master
Blend
•

Coffee.
or,. ........... ,/$5 .

olhcr business coming hcforc the

hoard.

-·.... ---

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
at Pagcville town hall.

.--'

8

Pkg.

Bounty
Paper

CHESTER - Chester Garden
Club. Wednesday. home of Judy
Bunger. Baum Addition. 7:30p.m.

Towels

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Kindergarten screening. Call 9492664 to make an appointment or for
more information.

. Golden Ripe ·
Chiquita Ba~anas

'I

POMEROY - AA and AI-Anon
Thursday. 7 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Town
meeting regarding Tuppen Plains
Regional Sewer District project. 7
p.m. at Tuppers Plains grade School.
Members o( sewer district board,
county commissioners. Anomey
John Lentcs, and Paul Reed, president of Farmers Bank. to auend.
FRIDAY
RACINE - Southern . Local
Kinderganen ..:rccning. Call 9492664 to make an appoinlrncnt or for
more information.
POMEROY - Friday's Fun,
F&lt;xtd and Fellowship" project at
God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Teens can UfC the Jame room
at the center located on Main S!rect,
Pomeroy. Nutritional foods for
snacking. Everything free. Center
opca• at 6 p.m. and closc:s a1 10:30
p.m.

•

BIG BEND

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Rewm Jonalhan
Meias Chapter. Daulhters of the
American Revolution, Saturday,
Pomeroy Ubrary. 10 a.m. Man:ic
Scjfen. Ohio State treasurer, of
BrUnswick will be the speaker.

•

Wednesday, May 6, 1998

•

•

•

ATLANTA (API - Cable giant antenna. The statement, however,
• Tele-Communications Inc. is threat- did not promise that TCI would carening not 'to"carry CBS' and NBC's ry NBC's and CBS' digital signals on
new digital high-definition TV chan- its systems.
riels unless they s~itch to a format
A spqkesman for Rep. Billy
that takes up les5 channel 5pace.
Tauzin, R-La., chairman· of a Hous.e
TCI Chairman John Malone. talk- telecommunications subcommittee,
ing 10 reporien TUesday at the indus· said that if Malone foflowa through
try's annual convention. ~~aid. "lfthey on his threat Tauzin will introduce
want to play spectrum hog, ·I think it legislation to forte carriage,
Malone said he would cany CBS'
is almost sucidical for them. I think
it would be very foolish for them." . and NBC's high-definition signals
CBS and NBC have 'saidthey will only if forced. "I'll do whatevert!H;
offer high-definition television, . government orders .me to ·do." he
which provides viewen with super- said. But he added lhat carrying the
sharp pictures and sound. in a iech- two networks' technical format
nical format dubbed 1080i that Mal· would force TClto clrpp many cable
one said would eat up too much space channels.
on cable TV systems.
Next month, the Federal Commu,
He said he is talking to ~BC. nications Commission will consider
CBS, NBC and fox to wort out vol- whether to forte cable systems
untary agreement&amp; to carry their nationwide ' to carry broadcas~·
high-definition and other digital sis· diBital chan,ncls.
nals on cable systems. Some digital
·FCC Chainnan Bill Kennard,
high-definition broadcasts are to addressing the convention Tuesday.
begin this fall.
.
Ufled the broadcast and cable indusMalone said the networks other tries to come up with.a plan for cable
. than CBS and NBC 1rc using fCJm!IIS systems to carry TV stations' digital
that won 'I take up too much space.
prognuns.
Unless those two cltange. Malone
"We are going to sive you a perisaid he would not voluntarily carry od of time to try to work these issues
their stations onlooal cable systems. out. but we've all iot to ~nize
Such a move would mean that cable that the clock i~ ticking,.. he told .
' TV customen who wanted to watch cable executives.
.
those networks' digital channels
BroacJcasren Wanl lhC FOC to .
would flick an 1/bswiu:h, bypa.d the require cable systems to carry their
cable and set them from an antenna. new digital channels along with sta·
"We are disappointed." said Bob lions' analOg ones, which are cur.Okun, an NBC vice pre5ident, adding renlly carried on, cable systems. The
that tltc;,netWorJI has no intention of cable industry prefers voluntary car·
changing its fonnat. Malone's threat- riage qreementl for the digital sigencd action "will disenfnutchise con- nals.
5umers and there is always the pol·
"We'll fight 'must-carry' to the ·
sibility of a consumer backlash." tlelth," Malone slid. .
•
Okun &amp;aid in an iotcrvicw. ~e llid
Some TV sllllons will beJin air·
Milone's ~ appeared to con- ing digital show~ this fall. All TV statradict ISIIIIIIICCS TCJ president Leo lions must offer diJilll brotlllcasts by
Hindecy m:endy gave to House Jaw- 2006. Cable carriaae is important to
makm. '
broadcasters Jiven thlltwo-thirds of
Still, Okun said he was hopeful an TV homes in the. United StileS .aCt
arrangement with. TCI would be their TV via cable.
:. .
worked out
"Fundamentally, I ll,tink lhat it ·
A CBS spokesman saijl, "CBS' would be a miSialle not to lei tbe
· disc:ussiona with the cable industry industries try to work these comprohave been constructive and we mises out." Keanard said.
believe pro1ress is being made
'Malone quipped that the XC
toward mutually beneficial carriaae • wanls a "summer of love~· between
.,.-eemellll that will scm the bt11 the rival cable and bruldcutiiiJ
immlu of the audience we shale." induslries.
·
Houn after Malone's remarb,
Tbe FCC also intendtt to iuue
TCI issued. lfalemcnt sayi11J: "lifo final ftlles J11!Xl inonth aimed al sivcable customer with an HDTV ing clble CllltOrnerS the option of
receiver will be tlilenlianchiaed from buyina rct--top boxes in retail stores,
reccivinJan HDTV broJidcalt lipal Kennard ~.
throuJh the l:llble ayatem" becl'tse
A 1996 tclecommunicalions law
C1llltlnlen can tel the aij!llals from an requires the FCC to do 'this.

,,

CliiJ i d' 1e A ae --~ CWI:II&amp;

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~fl&amp; DtltU CWI:II• or

cucacola
,

ClaSSic
Pack 12--. can.

salnfon
Steaks

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Smoked Pbics....• ~:l=

•

�Page 10 • The Dally ~lnel

Wednesday, May.6,1998

Wedoeaday, May 6, 1S.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

/t:~

//.

-

.

Beat of the Bend ...

i ...

1,1

By Bob Hoeflich

0

"
//

li'
....

a~

\

~j

.

tl"

'

. e ' ' x-mt e ye ow ag
etgs emones ts t e t em
ale-the first such experiment for the annu~l observance o
·n yard sales here-over the Meigs County Heritage Day t
eekend unfortunately didn't be held on June 14 at the Meig
ave the best weather in the Museum under the sponsorshi
orld and the rains dido 't do too of the Meigs County Pionee
uch Lo enhance the annual and Historical Society.
eigs Hi gh School JuniorResidents born before 192
enior Prom on Saturday night. ·' are being in vi ted 10 come to th
Bummer&lt;
museum during the observanc
lo recall their experiences an
"America, Return to God" is possible historical events of th
• ·· he 19?'8 theme for the National county during the program.
·;
ay of Pmyer.
·
Those wishing 10 participate ar
This is the sixth annual obser- asked to call Karen Werry, 949
I •
ance bei~g held in Mei p 2746 : Patly Cook, 992-2447
ounty and activities in prepara- both in the evenings, and th
' - ton fort he day- really got under- museum, 992-3810. Those tak
'
ay on Sunday, May 3, with the ing pan are being requested t
ginning of the annual Bible take mementos of their earlie
Readin g Marathon held at the years and old photographs to th
avilion on the Pomeroy levee. observance.
prayer vigil was begun at the
Hours of the observance wil
• ·arne hour at I he Pomeroy Unit- be from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
d Methodist Church and these and plans are being made to hoi
wo a~tivities .will con1inue from a sing-along during the after
a.m. to 8 p.m. daily concluding noon . Singers and pianists wil
•
·
t
10 a.m. Thursday .
be invited to be on hand for tha
••
Thursday
will
be
the
official
portion of the program . Musi
•
uhlic World Day of Prayer to be featured with singers gath
bservance from II :30 a.m . 10 ering around 'he piano will b
. 12;30 p.m., on the steps of the primarily from the 1940's era.•'•
ourthouse .in Pomeroy. You arc
I
invited
to stop by during the
Open house will be cjbserv
~
b ervance even if you can stay at Vetera~ s Memorial Hospita
•I
for a few minutes or for the Monday 10 mark National Hos
I
ntirc one hour program .
pital Week and National Nursin
''
·A prayer breakfast will be Hom.e Week .
·~
eld for public officials at the
A little different concept i
,
omeroy · United Methodist taking place with the open hous
hurch to open Thursday's this year ' with the event to b
.,.
ctivilies-Lhe hour is 7:30 . held on Monday evening, Ma
''
.m.-and at 7 Thursday II : Hours will be from 4 to
·vening a concert of prayer will p.m . and there will be free cho
e held at the Ash Street lcsterol screening a~d fre
reewill Baptist Church in Mid- refreshments . .
l
· leport.
. As usual, the public is invite
fv\llmbers of the committee . to be on hand .
,.•
bich
goes to all of the work
••· ·~
Have you noticed the record
Ianning
and staging the week's
•'I
ings
of the voice of th.e late Jud
clivities
include
Steve
Beha,
'~· ...
ladys ..Cumings, Bill Frazier, Garland as the backgroun
aith Hayman , Curtis King, Bob music.'' for ·several lelevisio
obinson, Martie Short, Nonna · commercials · recently? . Jud
:~
orres and Les Hayman, coordi- could always sell a song. I won
der if she's selling the product
nator.
~
(
involved. Do keep smiling.
I'
~~-

PRECINCTS ·

.

BEDFORD
NORTH CHESTER
SOUTH CHESTER
WEST CHESTER
COLUMBIA

'

· LEBANON

LETART
NORTH OLIVE
SOUTH OLIVE
ORANGE
RUTLAND VIL
EAST RUTLAND
WEST . RUTLAND
. SALEM
MIDDLEPORT 2

'

MIDDLEPORT 3
MIDDLEPORT 4

.31
1'1

?

9

.P. /ft
:J9 ..51

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HI ~J-

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~~~--~~~~~~~IJ~/~~+-~~fo/~~~~~~~~~-.-+--~~~~1
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POMEROY 2
POMEROY 3
1'1 1"1 7
33 . 3/J i l
q'; .31
~? Jl
/f3 ~ .
:2.1 ?;J...'f~-1
BRADBURY
.1'/_ J" ? .
.E :LS" 36
83 . ..7?
9'..2. '/7
s~ ?.A
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lAUREL. ---.CUFF'
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J? ~~ . ~"/PI .9j
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PI //9'
7'71 .'/~j
POMEROY 1

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:r'·

ROCK SPRINGS
SCIPIO

SYRACUSE VIL
MINERSVILLE
RACINE PRE.

.

..••·!'.

£?-9

Senat~ Dem~

533 1/tl

/JI'/ IJ-fJ 13/P.

' .·.

hope to _
ride lss.ue 2 defeat to November victory

Sales tax for. Toledo Mud Hens .stadium defeated

'~

.

to play in this facility for more than
a few ~ years."
One option would be to resurrect
the sales twdssuc in the November
general election. Selling bonds is
anOther possible op!ion.
One thing's ce11J!in: The stadi11m
issue is noc dead, said Lucu County
Commissioner Sandy IIICIIbe'l!. who
helped 'gel the sales tall issue on·the
ballot.
·
"You live and learn. ToiiiOITOW is
another day. We'lllook at the numbers, see what happened and decide
where wcgofromhere. But we need
a new stadium," she said.
. And thjlt's OK - as long as the
·
·
.

stadium is privately financed, said
Galen Fries, spokesman for People
·Incensed by the Stadium Tax.
"Look, I want to see a.stadiu111
built downtown. Bullet's look at oth:
. er options - realistic oplions - to
gel this stadium built without taxpayer funds," Fries said.
With 99 percent of precincts
. reporting, the proposal wali losing by
. 59 percent to 41 percent in unofficial
returns tabulated by The Associated

Press. ·

·

Local leadm planned the new
12,900-.ICDI downtown stadium to
ensure the Mud Hens don't leave
town. The sales tax increase from
6.25 percent to 6.5 percent would

have brought in about $3S.4 lllillion
before eKpirin&amp; afler 35 months. Of
that. $26 million would have gone
towards the stadium and the rest
would have paid for an aquatic center in suburban Maumee.
Supporters expected 1o receive
SS.S million from the state and ariother SS.S million in private funds to
cover the siadium's remaining cost.
The Mud Hens play their home ,
games at . Ned Skcldon Stadium. a
horse track-turned-ballpark ·at the
county's recreation · ccrlter in
Maumee. The stadium needs at least
$10 million in repairs, and more than
half of ·the 10,000 seats bave ·an
obst!llcted .view.

Supporters say a new stadium
would draw thousands of fans and
could be used for concerts and other
events.
· Ms. lsenbe'l! said a new stadium
· be a boon to the downtown.
'
"I think it would have been ali
absolute anchor for the renaissance of
downi';'WR To)edo.l would hope that
this community at some point would
realize how very important something li~ a new sllidiun\ in the downtown would be," she said.
Among other local issues decided
around Ohio:
·
- Tuscarawas Valley Local
School District voters defeated · a

nit Lee Fisher, f~er state allomey

general. ·. .
lndiana and Ohio also had primaries to replace long-lime i&gt;emoc· ratic congressmen who are retiring.
DemocraiS in southeastern lndi·ana's 9th District chose Baron Hill, a
former state representative, to replace
Lee Hamilton, who is quilling after
24 yean. Republicans nominated
Jean Leising, a former state senator
who lost the last two ·elections to
Hamilton.
In Ohio's lith District, which cov-·
crs Cl~veland's ea.~lside and suburbs,
Cuyahoga County prosecutor
Stephanie TubM .Jones won the
Democll!lic nomination to replace
Louis Stokes, the stale's fant and only
bl111:k congressman,' who is Jcavina
after 30 ycen. The Republican nom·
inee is talk show host James Hereford.

Minutes after winning North Carolina's Democmlic Senate primary. 1
millionaire ·lawyer John Edwards '
vowed to oust Sen. Lauch FairciG1th
in lhe name of the man who lostltlc
$aliR 1992.
~In the fall, we are goi~g tq cake .
bid Terry Sanford's Sfl!l iq the
Ullilcd States Senate for 1f1r JliiOPie of
North f;arol.ina." EdwardF tc~d s~pporters Tuesday.
··
. Sanford, also a formcf Jqvempr.
died two w,eks ago
at IF
80. He had served oncain !he
Senate before losing IP li ·
.
Edwllllls, 44,g01 ~~ 1
of 11Je
primary v~e. more t!Wt i ~j to
avoid a rwlpff. Faircllldl, •In• a
.seoond telflk got~ ·~ evety

ot c;er

l'iiJ!l!III'Y 10
~··
I

,·

.

tal, for funeral flowers, and to provide a gift for a member who is hospitalized.
Emphasis was on things 10 do
everyday for a friend - write a letter. call up people and thank them
for something they've done, take a
gift to a friend, or add a gift to the
love gift box.
For roll call members gave a
Bible verse . Barbara Gheen had
devotions using "God's Care in
Practical Ways." Thank you notes
were read from di fferent people that
the organizati on has assisted.
A luncheon was served and the
Named STARS
Brian Gibbs of •Mipdleport and · afternoon was spent in rolling banHeather Johnston of Chester have dages for a hospital in Zaire. Cards
.been named STARS at Hocking &lt;;:ol- were sent to the ill and shutins.
lege. STARS is an acronym for student team involvement and academic recognition system. S'rARS rec- CCL members learn aboul chilognizes students who achi eve acade- dren and AIDS
mically, in extra-curricular activities
A program on "Children and
Aids" was presented at a ·rece nt
or leadership .
Gibbs is recognized as having the meeting of the Middleport .Child UMW hears program on sharing
· hi ghest grade point average in Asso- Conservation League held at the importance
ciate Degree Nursing and Johnston Rock Springs United Methodist
Do not neg lect 10 do good and
in · General Office Administration Church.
.
share what you have was the mcs·
programs. As STARS , students will
Norma Torres, R.N., Meigs sage of the progra m presented by
rece ive a ce rtifica te and medal and County Health Department nursing Lenora Lcithcit at a rcccn1 mee ting
will be invited to, lake the lead posi- director, and Marjorie Skidmore, . of the Rock Springs , United
tions in their graduation process ion youth se rvi ces coordinator, were the Meth odist Women.
during commencement on Jun e 14.
speakers. They poi"ted out Lhal the
. Scripture from Phil :1 and prayer
total number of AIDS cases through by Dorothy Jeffers opened the meetDecember 1996 was 8,742 , with one · ing. The UMW purpose was given in
Missionary group's love gifts ·benelit others
"Journey of Love" was the theme
of the love gill program presented by
Martha Lou Beegle al a recent meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society of the Racine First Baptist Church.
.
A love gift offering was.taken and
disbursed to the scholarship person ,
Neighborhood Ministries, Meigs
County youth program. Ladies Auxiliary· of Veterans Memorial Hopsi-.

Do Something
Wonderful
For Yourself And
Your Family.
Schedule A
Mammogram.

in four new infections occurnng in

uni son and orficcrs' report s were

· th 0se und er the age of 22 . Half of all

given . Several prnjects were di s-

new HIV infectio ns occur in th psc

cussed.

under 25, they reponed, noting that
it is the sixth leading cause of death
among the 15 to 24 age gro up .
Both Torres and Skidmore
stressed Lh~ importance of Leaching
children how they can avoid ge llin g
HIV by making healthy decision.
Included was the negative consequences of health deci sion s, and
how to handle peer pressure and
teasing . Abstinence, said Torres, is

Pl ans were made for the election
day dinner for for furnishing food
for God 's Net the· first weekend in
May.
Hazel Ball and Iris Collins represen ted the church at th e spring
retreat on April 25 at The Plains.
After a closing prayer Leifbeit
served refreshments. Norma Baker,
unable to aucnd, was·a contributing
hostess.

Breast cancer has killed millions
of American women. Probably
someone you know. Regular mam- ·
mography at our fully accredited
mammography facility is one of
the best things you can do to protect your health.
•
A mammogram, though,
depends greatly on the professionals who perfonn it and those who ·
interpret it: That's why we offer·
you only certified technologists and
board certified radiologists on ·our
mammography staff at O'Bieness

Hospital. Talk to your 'doctor about
a·referral to O'Bieness.
Even if you show no signs of
breast cancer, The Amencan Cancer
· Society recommends a screening
mammogram every one or two
years after age 40 and every year
after age 50.
Now is the time to take charge
of your health. Do· something wonderful for yourself and your family.
'
Schedule a mammogram at the
mammography facility at O'Bieness
Hospital.*

•I

..

In the 6th District, 'ohio U. " ·
Nancy Hollister won- !f!c GOP ·6fimaty, thwarting· mill\bnaire ~­
nessman Frank Cre~ans'· bid;lo
reclaim the seat he lost iP Dernoc!iitic Rep. Ted Strickland ~~ ·years •.
Strickland wa.~ first electeCtto the.
in 1992, lost it to Cre~a\ts in' 191114,
.then won it back in 194¥1
::
\ '·
•
••
In oche~ election resul~ Thcsdi1:
• - Qhto VOiers turned down ,.
proposal to inctuse theil· stateWide
sales lax by a penny to rai~ Sl.l bOlion each year thai wouJil be sji!Jt
evenly between school illlpi'C)vemeltt:tt
and propeny tall relict
,
-;:
. -Voters in Luca.' County,
rejected 1 proposal to increw ·~
tales tax a quarter-cent for three yd;i
to help pay for a $37 million stadium
for the Toledo Mud Hens.

Nicole White earns
URG scholarship
Nicole White', Pomeroy, has been
"presented the Trustees Scholarship
by the University of Rio Grande,
which provides partial tuition fqr
qualified applicants. She is a senior ,
al Eastern High SchooL
She plans to major in elementary ··
education at Rio Grande, and is the
daughter of Deborah While.
"The university is very ple38Cd to
offer this special award .to Nicole,"
said Mark Abell, executive director
of admissions at Rio Grande. "She
displays the l)1any qualities we want
to see in a Trustee Scholarship recip- ·
ient and we are happy- thai Nicole
has eleCted to study at Rio Grande."

I

OJtio: .

I

•

She s~id forsythia 'is a nati.ve of of
Spring activities were reviewed
at the recent meeting of the RUIIand Europe and Asia, and that the plant
'Garden Club held m the home of is adaptable and a vigorous grower
which requires little care. She
Pauline Atkin·~ .
described
them as excellent accent
·•· Rcrons were given on planning
' ~~ssions' held for the regional meet- plants often used as hedges. for bor·i~~ of th~ Ohio Association of Gar- . ders and bank planti ngs. The key to
' 'den Clubs held recently atlhe Meogs growing forsythia is to give it plenty
of room· to grow. she said.
' ~ultapurpose Building.
1
The shrubs should be pruned every
' · It' was rlo1cd I hat several mem bers auendcd the Rutland Friendly year or 1wn right after it blooms by
' Oardcners' open meeting where Hal · culling the oldest branches nearest
, Knccn. Meigs Extension agent. the. ground which allows for ne.w
', srokc on landscaping . Atkins report- shoots. She recommended that
.'cd (hat she had aucnded a master before pruning it is besl to root the
·· ·gardc.ncrs session in Athens recently tips of the arching branches by burying them.
'taught by Knc'en.
Marjorie Rice talked about winA therapy visit to Veterans
Extended Care was planned and it . dow garden!ng which she is said is
was reponed that tulips planted in perfect for the plant love with little
space. She said many plants can
Rutland last fall are blooming.
An Easter theme was used by thri.ve in window bQx, mentioning
•Ann Webster for devotions and for ivy, nasturtiums, ornamental pep•roll call members responded l!_y pers and tulips. _/';, _goO&lt;!_ box, she
.telling what they have blooming for said, is light enough to stay put on a
.Easter. Contributions were made .to. sill and should have adequate
·several slate projects. IL was report- drainage holes . .
·ed that Atkins, Eva Robson , Mar- · SoiJ should be fertile and light. If
jorie Rice. Chclcie Brauon an'd Mar- · the box is more than six inches wi~e. ,
'oia Denison auended the open meet- she suggested planting two rows in a
·ing of the Rutland Fri~ndly Garden- checkerboard design with the tall
ones in back and the draping plants ·
ers.
.
· A paper on forsythia was given in front. She emphasized the winliy Betty Lowery. She said the bush dew boxes need frequent watering
a, well as fertilizing.
- ~shers in'spring with its brilliant yelDorothy Woodard concluded
:low color, but can be forced to
bloom earlier by culling a few with "This is Easter" noting that life
·!&gt;ranches and bringi~g il indoors. is repeatedly reborn, renel'Jed, and
•'She suggested putting the branches . lilled with faith and hope.
Joann Sorden and Bob Burer
in wann water changing it each day,
ann placing it out ofdircct sunlight. were guests.

proposal that would have allowed
three property owners to have their
land become part ot lhe neighboring ·
Sandy Valley Local Schocl District.
The.primary beneficiary would have
been I)-year-old Travis Keirn, who
is required by district lines to commule 12 miles by bus to school. But
the school board didn't want to lose
the rax revenue.
~ Hamilton County voters
approved a measure to raise $6,7·millio.n a year for five years for the
Cincinnati Zoo. which ha.~ had staff
cutbacksandhisheradmission prices
since a bigger levy failed in Novem!Jer. They also approved a levy. 10
modernize police cpmmunications,

Senate races off.• nfl running - nominees chosen in Indiana, N.C. and 01Ji9 ..
By NED KILKELLY
AIJJtlnH ,._Writer

. ;;, .
the on I¥ I 00 percent sure way to
protect oneself, it was noted .
Kathy Dyer presided at the meeting which . opened with the pledge
and Mother 's Prayer. Devotions by
Dyer were taken from "Chicken
Soup for the Soul" entitled "Moving
Mountains."
Officers elected were Dyer, presidem: Donna Pullins, vice president:
Nancy Morris, secretary ; Linda
Broderick, treasurer: and ' Paui
Arnold •nd Lorie Nash , reporters.
Refreshments were served by
Dyer.' The traveling prize was won
by Peggy Harris . Hostess gifts were
won by Helen Blackston .
It was reported that Dyer, Nancy
Morris and Peggy Harris aue nded
the South Central District meeting
held at Rodney. The Middleport
League won first place in the district
program book .

'

proved his caucus was right: lt'·s an Patrick Ungaro with 37 percent and
"Ob~iously, we ·were heartened a primary in the House, ·where She dismissed the matter as being:o.;e·
is.~ue Democrats will take to the fall Thomas Gilm~rtin at 9 percent, that Mumper had such goOd num- Republicans hold a 60-39 majOrity,
questionable transaction . . ·
.. .
aampaign.
according to final. unofficial figures bers." said Brian Perera. an analyst
Rep. Marilyn Reid; acc.u.'led of ·
The losing Democratic incumbent.
"I think our chances are real tabulated by The Associated Press.
on the Senate GOP caucus staff.
irregularities involving a liquor Rep. Mickey MQttl of Parma. wl).•
good. Our caucus is ·on the right side · Republican Sen. Larry Mumper.
· ElSewhere, Rep. Lynn Wachtrnann · license application for her son, lost ·defeated by Dean DePiero, al,;o :qf
of the issue. I think it's going to play R-Marion, fended off a challenge by of Napoleon beat Stephen Oman of her Republican primary on Tuesdljy Parma. DePiero criticized Mocll for
very big in the fall," Espy said Tues- Lisa pfeifer of Crestline, who made Findlay in another GOP Senate pri- · to financial adviser Steve Austria of accepting an appointment to the Se.iat
day night.
her first run for off~c:e.
mary, while incumbent Republican Beavercreek.
held by his father. former Rep. Ron
Republicans hold a 21-n majorMumper's last-minute TV ads, Sen. Scou Oelslager of Canton
TheOhioDivisionofLiqu~Con- Mottl.
.
. :
ity in the Senate, but both sides rare in a slate Senate primary, noted defeated challenger Paul Schiffer.
trol accused Reid, a Beavercreek
Fonner Democratic Reps. R,ay
expec11ough races in several ~istrict~. that pfeifer has never held elective · Democrat Eric Fingerhut of . lawyer, of providing false informa- Miller of Columbus and ThOll)¥-'
One jncum~nt Senate De~ra~ . office. and sugge~ted lhlll her only .Cleveland won a four-way primary tion in a permit application for a bar Seese of Akron won nomin·alion and
had an espectally .tough pnmary. expenence was being the daughter of for the Senate seal he lield before in which her son wa.~ an investor.
Rep.
Sylvesier . PallOR . ' of
Robert Hagan, D- Youngstown, fin- SuJ!reme Court Justice Paul Pfeifer, , leaving to serve one term in Con·The Ohio State Bar As.'IOCiation Youngstown, a Democrat wlio wiis
ished with 54 percent of the vole 'who once held Mumper's Senate gres.~.
filed five claims against Reid. whose appointed to the House. beat fo4;1r
against former Younastown Mayor seat
. One incumbent of each pany lost hearing is scheduled for November. challengers.
'

COLUMBUS (APJ - Senate
Democrats hope to tum Issue 2's
defeat into victories of their own this
November.
.
Issue 2. tile sales tax increase that
voters soundly rejected Tuesd~y.
moved through the House this spring
with bipanisan support. But in the
Senate. all but two Democrats
opposed tile bill. saying it was an
unfair rax on the poor and that busonesses would not have to pay their
fair share.
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy,
0-Columbus. said the overwhelming
80 percent vore against the mea.•ure

10LEOO, (AP) ..,.- Volers shelved
a plan io raise. taxes to help replace
the Toledo Mud J'jcns' aging stadium
- atlea.~l for the time being.
The vote in Lucas County . on
Tuesday to reject a three-yew: (lllles
tax increase to help pay fora $37 million downtown stadium left execulives of the minor lcasue ba.~eball
team and local officials pondering
their next move.
"We don't have a concrcie Plan B.
so to speak," Mud Hens E~ecutive
Director Joe Napoli said. ''I think
what we're going to do is ovaluate
what transpired and decide how 10
procced further because, '!llfonunatcly. we're just not going to, be able

i,__-Rutland
Garaden Club meets.
.
at home of .PauHne Atkins

•

'·

Eastern Honor 'Roll
Eastern High School recently
named students to the honor roll for
the third nine-weeks grading period.
GRADE 12: Kelli Bailey, Brandon Buckley, Christine Causey.
Michelle Harris, Jeremy Kehl, and
Joe Weeks, all A's: Jamie Drake,
Joanna Gumpf, Kim Mayle, Heather
Naylor, Nicole White and Corey
Yonker, overalL
GRADE 11: Jessica Brannon.
Stephanie · Evans. Valerie Karr,
Heath Proffiu, Sari Putman , HeaLher
Rockhold, Jennifer Starcher, Ann
Wrggins and Aaron Will ; overall .
GRADE 10: Molly He ines and
Jessica Pore, all A's; Jason Barber,
Josh Broderick, Mall Caldw~ll ,
Mendy Guess, Chasatie Hollon ,
David Rankin, Cassie Rose, Leah
Sanders , Aaron Schaekel, Eric
Smith, Steve Weeks and Josh Will,
overall.
, GRADE NiNE: Juli Bailey, all
A's ; Brandon Brownin g, John
Cooke, Wes Crow. Josh ·Kehl and
Joe 'ray lor, overalL
GRADE EIGHT: Tammy Bisseil, Bradley Brannon , Ben Holter,
Garrell Karr, Tiffany Kidder, Chris
· Lyons, Danielle Rucker, all A's:
Theresa Baker, Holly Broderick,
Darlene Connolly, Lindsey Cross,
Tina DeLaCruz, Jon Duffy, Ashley
Hager, Rachael Hupp,
Whitney
.

,,",,
.

'----T--O_TALS
_ _~_.........

t&lt;

Barsotti personal
Karr, Robert Lawrence, Sarah MansTina Barsotti, of Eastern Avenue, field , Kim Marcinko, Josh Marcum,
Gallipolis, was recently a patient at Eric Needs, Janet Ridenour, and StaFlorida Hospital in Orlando. She cie Watson. overall.
.underwent quadruple bypass surgery
GRADE SEVEN: Miranda
on April21.
Buckley. Carrie Crow, Sonya FredA former busin ~ss woman, she erick and Nicole Honaker, all A's;
also worked at the Senior Center in Cacy Faulk, Cory Faulk, Tara Fisher,
Gallipolis. She is the widow of the Beth Gregory, Erica Lemons, Leann
late David Barsotti. ,Cards . can be . Marcinko, Thomas Simmons,· Tyler
sent in care of her son, Joe Barsoui, Simons.. Jennifer Thoma, Brandon
at 411 Smiley Court, Wi'nter Haven, Werry and Chelsey Wood, overall.
Fla .• 33882.

~-

RACINE VIL

eastly W~/Ml

·"""'*

r

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fiy~ VOleS 91'1_fll~

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

•

Here's results of ·Tuesday's primary election,- precinct by precinct

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, -Qhlo

NICOLE WHITE

'· '

'.

.

.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
SS HospiW Drive, Athens, 011 45701
614-593-5551

A hospital we can all
be proud of.

"Fully IICCoecliled by the Americon Coneae of Rodiolon ai1d
the food ond Dnoa Adminislnltion. ·
I

•

�•

' Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 6, 1998

Wednesday~. May 6,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reti.renient planning ·seminar offered for area teacher~
::-------.!...---.---=-----:.----,

crm1/p
edicine

®: ..

john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

-

, Question : There · are numerous
commercials for ibuprofen and
Tylenol. but I usually take a&gt;pirin
when I gel a headache or sore joi nts
and mu•cles. Is there anythin g wron g
with lu -:ing plain, old asp irin?

mill1ons of people eac h day. It is prim ar~y used as you described . for
the relief of everyday aches, pains
and fe ver. However, it also reduces
the inflammmion of arthritis a ~d the
ri sk of heart attacks. It is t1~\y an
A, ;wer: The "active ingredicn l' amazmg drug with nearly a-ce ntury
in asririn is acety lsalicyli c acid . Th is of experience 10 document its safety
., very &lt;lfective pain killer and anti - record. For adults. most of the probinnamm.atory ag.cnt is class ified r~ s a lems with asp1-rin are limited to
salicy late b) chemists. Salicylates patients who must take more than 12
have been used for thousand s of reuu\ar strength (325 mg) tablets a
years · at least since the time of Hip- · da~ or lesser dosages for extended
pocrates ~ by people worldwide to periods. So go ahead and take aspirin
help aches, pains and fever. For when you need it, but follow the
1
instance, North Amcn can Indian.., pack age directio ns to ayoid compli ~
and the anc ient Chinese knew of the cations
Question: Should I buy brandbenefi ts of willow bark · an unre name or ge neric aspirin? Answer: It
fined source of salicy late .
The use of _ sa l ic~ l n tc s rn oyetl probably doesn't make any differfrom folk remedies to mainmcam ence. However, I'd recommend that
med ic ine when the Rev. Edward when you buy generic you pick a
Stone of Chipping Norton. England. hig h-quality gcncri~.: aspirin -such as
submitted a lener to the Rnya l Snci- that sold under the name of a nationety in 1763 desc ri bing hi s diScov,ry al phnrmacy chain. These prod ucts
of the be nefits of. wilrow bark for should work the same as the brand munc varic ti t:s. But be sure to watch
trcming arthritis nnd fever.
Will ow bark ext ract, th ough the ex piration dates on LhC aspirin
' effective, had several major proh- products you buy. They can go bad
lcms. In addition to it s biltcr taslc. :-. itting on. the ~hc l f in the store or in
whi ch mos t people prohabl y fnund vou r mcLhcinc cabt n.et at home.
quite annoying, it caused noticeable - One llnal poi nt about aspirin. It is
stomach upset. Because of the stom· 'till the &gt;l andard by which the other
ach irri u.uiun . it was very dt lficul t tu diUg.'! irt 1ts c1nss arc evaluated . For
take for more than a -kw days and ~cncral usc, none of the others arc
was un suitable for itlnc&gt;Scs like Zlcarly ~u pcrior lo aspiri n. YOu' d
arthrit iS where treatmen t lasts for ne ve r know th is, however, from the
years. Feli x HolTman, a chc1n·ist adverti sin g bli1z that's bei ng con~
working at Bayer Industri es in Gq- dueled hy the manui:lclurers of the
man y, designed a more d i ,gc.'!tibl~
pmducts you ment ion. TI1e -compa~
form of sali cy lmc t&lt;Jr his fat her who nics ha ve spent a lot of time and
suiTcred from rheumatoid arlltrills. mon!.!y in developin g tht:sc aspiriri
His discovery - acctyls' al i ~y lit: acid - suhslitulcs and ·they want to .recoup
was given th e trade name ~· Aspirin ." · thei r investments. T~eir direct goal is
II became commercia ll y availobl c in to take some of the reve nue away
\899 and has since become world - from nspinn sales. That's no small
.wide in its usc.
potat.ocs ei ther. Abo ut 30 billion
Aspirin, which is no longer the asp1ri n tablets are used in the U.S.
exc lusive trademark of the Bayer each yea r. Wow, that 's a lot of
Co .. is not without its side effects. headache, and a lot ormoney to light
Although to a lesser degree tha n over. I get a headache just thinking
unre_lined salicy late , ,it still causes about it!
some stomach upset. When taken in
"Family Medici ne" is a weekly
large amounts for prolonged peri ods, column. To submit questions, write
it can also produce kidney damage. It to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Unican even cause death if it is con- versity College of Osteopathic
' sumed ln huge quantities all at once. Medicine, G rosvcnor Hall, Athens,
Despite these pote nt ial ri sks, Ohio 45701.

topic of Karl Kebler lll, CPA and
Retirement Investment agent/tax
consult an\. Steve Highland, the
investment planner and certified
fund specialist of Peoples Banking
and Trust Co , presented a program
about investment opportuni ties.
Both speakers discussed various
wavs of investing money to prevent
the-loss of money va lue due to inflation. Diversification of investment

~

fundmg was also stressed. ,
:
John M 1\hoa~, d~stnct direCt()( of
the ORTA. Galhpohs, gave the closing remarks.
•
. Barbara Beegle and Saun~ra
Tillis were awarded door pn~s ,
hanging flower baskets donated ,by
Ty Bnnager and Sons. ~orne Nallpnal Bank sponsored Retirement Pl~n­
ning handbooks.

.

70

.

Ohio River
Campgrounds and
'
Bait 6 Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
New &amp; uaod ltema. We
Buy - Sell - Trod,_. Toola,
llahlng equip., lV'a,
C8'1, IIIFeOI • IIIUe bit
ol averythlng. Loolled
on Ohio River Camp' grounda, St. Rt. 124,
Roolne, Ohio.
•
741M149-1D12

Over 30 teachers, administrators sions for teache rs. He explained h o~~o
and spouses from Meigs, Gallia and service credit may be earn ed f01
Washington Counties attended a years of military. serv ice or other
recent retirement planning· seminar government employment, employ.held at the Meigs High School
ment by the state and years tau ght in .
The seminar was sponsored by other states.
the Meigs County Educational SerOther topics discussed were the
. vice Center and _the Meigs County . p~rch ase of credit, dis~bility retireRetired Teachers Association . The men1 . survivor benefi ts. medica l
event was held to inform teachers of insurance available af1 er reti rement
benefits available at the time oftheir and plan s of payment of retirement
retirement, and to encourage teach- monies.
·
•
ers to make additional investments in
Ohi o Retired Teachers Associaorder to supplement their retirement tion Retirement Plann in g Commisincome from the State Teachers sion Chai rm an L ·Dale Van Tync
Retirement System .
stre ssed the importance of careful
John Riebel, superintendent of the plann ing and investin g to supp le·
ESC. wel comed _the group, and John ment retirement income during the
Buch. benefits co unselor for the earl y years of a teacher 's career.
STRS . explained retirement pro viThe Basics of In vestment was the

Authorized Chaparral Dealers with 4 models In stock. ;

''

Tuppers Plains

667-6245

•

••
••

Bring Your Mom

~ fOOtLONG

91

In Mother's JJc,w~
and She Will
Receive a
FREE Sundae!

HOURS: Mon.-Sat. B am-10 pm ; Sun . 10 am-10 pm

CARPET
Business PLUS

Services

-

0
0
0

s·s-

~o{:ll£4,,~,:
990 PF lor the Kibble

Foundation, Bernard . v.
Fultz, Truolee, Ia ovallable
lor public lnapactlon at
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,
111 '/• Wall Second Street, .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
during regular bualneaa
houra lor a period ol 180
daya
aubaequont
to L~~~~~~ ..:::;:._:___1
publication
of thla notice.
(5) 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,

15,17,18, 11, 12tc

YOUNG'S.
CARPENTER SEVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garage•
•Eiec!rlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing .
•Interior &amp; Exterior
'
Painting
Also Concrete Work •
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
'
Pomeroy, Ohio

PICKENS
HAULING

•

'

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
(ommerdall
• Weedeoling
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance

B031d's
Mowing, Mulching,
71 0 Autos lor Sale
Pruning
Clean and Install Gutter
Flowers,
Brush Removal,
Install New Bed•
Free Eallmaloa
IMPOUNDS: Good running Horlda~;.l
"Go Anywhere" .
ITovtltas, Chevys, Jeeps arid Sporty Utility.
No lob too amoll. ·
Mon.·Sel
Must sell. aoo-n2-7470 ext. 7320

'

'

.

(740) 742-7405

1C/2WIMn

Galilpolla, Qhlo 45631

• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding
Insurances

COUNTRY

.

So~

,•

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Ill!~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding
i:..
. Commercial &amp; Residential
i:..
iil!!l 27 yra. exp.
Ucansed &amp; Insured iil.'!l

HOW"IARD : \ ~
EXCAVATING CO~- .

~

Open r..-Frl. 11).4
1D-4; Clootd Sun. &amp; Mon.

'

,i i
'

j

Top Soli, Fill Dirt ·
- . 614-992-3410

12/1111111

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete

•Ma$0nry

• Vinyl Siding • SoHit
• fGKio • Seamleu
Gutter • Roofing

.

• Slationary Docb
• Blown Insulation
• Garages • Decb
24 X 24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2n2

•

..
;
~
:

(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

******** ****** ***********
Any Professional, Business, Individual or Civic
Organizations who would like to have an
advertisement in this special edition please

Call Dave Harris
I
992-2156 Ext. 104
,

•

• House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $100
• Hedges trimmed • GuHera cleaned

INVESTORS
WANTED
Developing 87 acres south of
Portland, Ohio (across from .
Bullington Island) .
Lots.lor house buildings,
rots lor sale, acres available,
nice creek trees. Any way you •
want il..Investors needed contractors, realtors,
!
bankers, anyone.
Everyone welcome. Contact
Mike Warner, P.O. Box 13,
Racine, Ohio 45771 ,
(740) 949-2874 Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Michael E@eurekanet.com

Joe N.Sayre
614-742·2138

lewn cara program.
•

I

• '"" .

..

' ..

...

Auction
. and Flea Market

41111/111

p:m. ·

90

Valf&lt;l Ohio Teaching Certificate.

Miriroom Qua6ficatKms:

Wanted to Buy

E•perience in Adull Basic Utera-·
Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sil· cy Educarion: or reaching txp&amp;f'i·
ence. KnoWledge of computer
hardware, sofrware ancilor operating systems.

Specialized skils:

ctaali(f information; ~ of
and abi~l'f ID """' In Wonl'•loct,
Windows as and Newell; mamteln

local ar.. compute( Mtwark: or-

or

ma intain a"ective working rala~
tionships with. clitnll, co-workers,

salvaged vehk:les.

criminal justice systems personWanted To Buy: Used Mobile nel, ere: .; skill in oral and written
Homes, 740·448·0175, 304·875· comrn.tnication; cornplele monrhly
5965.
.
and qUIIf'laiy r&amp;piN'IIi.

Gutters
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting

SEPTA Comctlonol Facility to
an Equal Opponunlly Empior.

...

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
I Shirtev
Carpenters wirh interior and eJterior experience , must be able 10
work unsupervised . Send resume· The Daily Stnlinel, P.O.
;eox 729·62 , Pomero'f',

Personals

Neecl 4 ladles Who Would Like
T&lt;To~Soi~A~""'~n~,~740~~u~e:33~5~.8~­
New 8feaktaat Shih Downtown. ..
Pltaae Apply Far Walt Staff Or
Kitchen Poai~lons, Mogles. 39

·. ..:;.=-----'--1 Coun Snet. GaMipol\1.
• COMPUTER /FREELANCE •

Data Entry, Word Pro.ceasing, Now hiring 1afe drivers, good
Graphitl And Web. Many levelo poy, lle1iblo hours. Apply In per-

Be 18YtL
(81V) &amp;4!&gt;8434

And Position's I Flexible Hrsl Mo· IDf1 at Oomi'lo's i1 PL Aaasant
·dem Req. Start Nowl Call : 800· Olk Hill, Ohto TrudUng Campany
336·4433 ltll0-821 -2220. ~
Lookino For Experienced .semi

30 Announceme11tB

40

CPR

FIRST AID COURSES Trac10r Ttollet Drlvero. E1ttllen1

&amp;

Par
=882=-.=1

For ThOse ind iv iduals Working
&amp; lnsura·nce Packege, 740~
Wilh
Public And lOr Childoon.
::3:_:
, Be=tw:::••::.n:::&amp;-:::5:._
. -Two Classes To Choose
Opttning feN' Ex~ienced M.trine
SaturdB'f', May 2, 1998 Or Satur· Ttchnic:tan, Apply AI Big Bays

The

Dia~

day. May 16. 1998. llolh Classes WatOt Toya, ChHhira, Ohio. 740Are From 9:00A.M. -5:00P.M. 307-1802.

Giveaway

Con1ac1 Buckeye Hilla Career
Centtl, Adult Services To Reg- Overbrook Center hal full time 1
1ster. 740·2•5·5334 Ext. 209. lui- part time STNA ·positions IWiil·
lion:$40.
able for alllhiltt. \n-od pl.... DP' Iil' I !II Out an opEarn $1,000 Weeldy. SluNing en- plication, 740· 11112· 04 72, Over~
velopes, no prior experience, free brook Center, 333 Page Slfeet,·

4 Kittens, 8 Weeks Old , Litter
Tnoinod, 1.a-446-1730.

5 Kitrens &amp; Macher Cat, 7•0·&lt;4489305, It Nb Answer Leave Mes-

Midd_, Oh 45180. EOE _

oageOo-ngMIChlno.
demita, send SASE 10: N.D. Dept
7 Monnth Old Pup, 112 Lab, 112 1'74·301 Ea115th Ave. Suite 112

Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Corsicana, TtKal 75110.

G&amp;W

::=-=.:::.:~:.:.:=--- Weekendo and Nighll,

CoOia pup1, 8 w~s. otd; 740-742-

2828.

l\t~ Plelnl, Ohio 45783

.

Coon Puppies.

7o40-256-1318.

Free S.agte Puppies, 2 Mates.

Part·Time Bartender

For
Up
Experienced SalespersonApptlcallon Ar 408 Second AveFurnishings, Carper, Window nue Gal=i• OH w.d MIY llh
Trea1mants. Furniture, Raaume · '. ·
'
.,
-3~,m~
--~~·lh~t2~~~------­
To : Tope Furniture, 151 Second ;'2~

English Sen:er, To A Gooa Home,
7411-2-45-5444.

lwenue,Gallipolis, OH 45631.
· IS••ON
H..•tRSmm
-

1

1

SOCIAL WORKU. Qua lily,
Conwnitmonl .... tho Keyo D Our

Succe111 Managtment lwei ap4" thru 48" plaetlc culvtr11n stock
Femole7-.&amp;-759!i
•
MANAGER
pO(IUnitV availabll. Requires a
Full line of water atoraga tanka Free To Goad Home. Black Lab 1 Smart Style Will Soon Be Opening BSW degree trom an accredited
Retriever Oag. 1 Year Otd, love In The New Wai-Mart. Super program of social work. Mus1
Septic 6 Clltem Tank!l
Cenler (And Is ~fled By Regis have currenl licenae lo practice
Kid~ Good Walch Dog, 7.0.256Corporati on) And Will Be Hiring social work in Well Virginia and
Water line • 100' thru 1000' Rolls
1337.
Several Hair Stvlista, As Well As e•perience in medical social
Sawer Pipe • 3" thru 8", Gae Pipe I RttaullltMal Mixacl CooMound pupa, 2 males, A WOJking Salon Manilger, No work, gerontotogy or 'health care
8 famalea : mixel:i German Clientele ·Needed, Just Have tacillty is required. Tuition reimOpen:
Shephard, 1 ma·le, 1 lemale, 740- Shetts &amp; Uconse AI Hand, I Wo llutoemen~ helllh, denl81, vislon.Shall Supply The Rest Benefits hooring, life, and 401(k) With em7&lt;2-0202.

Your Dream"
Joe Wlleon

As Followed:
• Guar11nteed HoUt'ly Wlge
Verses Commislion Progr11m

Tree tor firewood, already on
ground. 7o40-lltl2-\1031.

• · Re18"c--~a.-

• •DP

" "''"·· - ·
Wllhl'ricoo
• Hoollh lnout1nce - • Paid 1/ac:aliooo

: Female While Dog, Near
Holzer Hospilal, 7.W..U1413.

• GARDEN SEED
e MIJL~B

• Martlger Ia Eligible Few
Mollhly And Annualllonlaoo
• ScJpplleo Fumlohed

2181.

e GRASSSE~D

e Merchandise Diecoont

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES.

• AdYinc:ed Training
• Opponunity For AdYincomont
For Mote lntormalion C1ll Bill
Rooker, 1 · 888~ 888 ~ 7178 , En

1813.

lt~iiY} E .
STATE TESTED NUIISulca
ASSISTAHlS

Arbors At Galllpolla. Currenlly
Acc;epling ApPlication• Far Stall
Ttated Nursi ng A11itants. We
Are Look ing For Hard Working
Oepeondable Applicatnta. Benefits

Aoe AYalallll.
If You Hava Any OuestiOnl,
Please Conlac:t Uaa Shan At

740-441-7112.

HVAC ln1111lers Needecl For Ex·
panding Company For tnstalla -

·-

piO)'er contribution. Point Pleasant Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation
Center, Staa. Route 82, Roule 1.
Box 328, Point Pleasant, WV
25550. ~ Glan,.ark-Genesla

• 9IOc:i&lt; Purdlaood Plan

Lost: Bl_onde CoCker Spamel, VI·
Cinity: Cadmus. Reward I 740-379-

tiono Of Heotlng &amp; Cooling Equip-

ment In Manufactur•d &amp; A••t·

• Paid Medicat lniLutnce .
• Paid 'lllc:lllono

Applications Will Be Accep!ld

Ftom U

.ll To 4:30 ~M.

A - AT OALUPOI.IS
t1U-ttltW
Goltipolll. OH 4!!1131

740-448-7112
The S.u-n Local Sc'-' Oil- .

lricl hit the lollowing COIIChing

poaldOnl IVIMiblo fot lhe lVII·
VI school yell: tlllotorit high
•Ex-W.gn
....... junfor hilt&gt; boltlol~
I n - Appoin1m01111 Orlvl Clll aaalotant high ac:hool volleyball,
Benne111 Healing l Caol(ng At junior high school volltfball, ju740-448·V418 Or 1-100' 172- nior high boya llloketboll 12
coachH), Junior h~h Olrla baJ~.
!5!117, Gal ipoll~ OH 45831.
.....
uo~....
gltlo
I Am Sooklng A Stlf·MOIIYIIOd boaketboll,
, ...hilt&gt;
,.. - boo-11,

•'=-~ Hol!daP

I

Jndlvidual With A WOf'king Knowt- . Vl,_ty chMIIsllll~ ICMIDr, and

od9l Of Becorlng• And lloc:heni- ·jllnlor hiGh school -•ding
cal And.Eitclriccll Rollllno Equip- advi-. Ali oppllcantl . . ., poament To Sell To lnduatilal And
Pow•r Generlting Facilities In

or acquire a aport• medl·
Cet'liftcate lind a CPR card.

Southaaot Ohio. Tho Applicant Pllone 740·141·2111 .,, luriher
Will ACI AI An Agent For A Fac- lntormltion.
·
tory Rap And Income Will Be
Buod On 27~ Commloalon. Plaut ttnd lnquirlll 10 Mr.

CALL

1·740·949·20 1s·

Uandar

2:00

Houny ra~a : sa.u

304-773-5033.

You. For Uore tnrormalion 1-888-

JIM'S
•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating ·

Schedult:

10:00 p.m.

defllial H®Jing
•3YII.E~­
~ RSES C•lifiod

-BACKHOE Ilia
DOZER ·s ERICI

Work

,through Frldoy,

Rick Pearson Auclion Companv.
lull time auctioneer, comptera
auction
serv ice.
licensed
tee,Ohio &amp; Wea1 VIrginia , 304713-5785 Or 304-713-5447. '

wrecked

POMEROY, OH,

740ile5-3113

Position : Leamlng Lab lnatruc·

lor

J &amp; 0 Auto · Parts. Buying load; abllily to establish and

877-6581 .

e, FERTILIZER

Hauling, Excavetlng
. 6 Trenching -.
Um~loGrevel
Septlc·Syatema ·Trailer·• Houae Situ
RN.onabl• Ratu ·

ROOFING NEW·REPAIR

belie Supplies. At No Cost To

M&amp;J

pjoymonl S.rviCM. Complete job

dascrlpUons ere aveilable for re ·
vlew at the OBSS affice. The
deadlin e for application far this
poobng is Friclty, May ZV. 11198.

ganize, prepare, and teach from
dally lea~n plans· for indhllduals
and large and small groups :
Clean late Model Cars Or maintain dally attendance and
Truc::ka, '1990 Models Or Newer,
OYO!uollon rocotda; ability to - k
Smith Buick Pontiac, tGOO East· lncltpoudou11y; ablll!y D oftoctivoly .
ern Aven.te, Gallipolis.
manage time ancl organiZe work~

614-992-5479

St. Rt 7

Applications may be abta ined
from and returned lo the Athens
Office of the Ohio Bureau ol Em-

·992-6576.

Howard L WrHesel

Bt Entitled To Receive Your

Remodeling

May 7th &amp; 8th. 9am-8pm. Gunville Ridge Community Sale 5 11
2 milea long, 15 hou111, 33 families, from Pl. Pteasanl Rl. 2 N.
10 Rl . 87 go 8 miles. Follow
Signs!
·

Antiques &amp; clean used lurniture,
will buw one piece or complete
hOusehold, Osby Martin, 7.40 ·

ANNOUNC EMENTS

-~Po:m:e:roy:::·:~:~:lo:·45:--:;76:·9-:=:::::=(6:1~4)~992!!-4~277~-' _I; ~~~~~~~==~a:;00-4~:~30~W~e~ek~dll~y~•~
8:00.12:00

SAYRE
: JRUCKING

MAII,.IIIiiCB

"'

20. Yrs.

Jol1-ln·

2526.

1ft taltiNt ........................'8.00
Sho!r Oildtan .....................57.30
These prkls 111 for SOt bag

DIABETIC PAnENTS: You May

Call 614·843·5426

1998 Mar11n Street ·-

~:

CLELAND'S OUTDOOR

360° Communications

113 W. 2ND ST.

A" Replleo Conldenlial
SEPTA Co,...lonol Facility
Halaomolllt, Ohio

Cll..ASSIFIEDSI

Over 20 years experience.
FrH Estimates ·

"Bull~

.·....-----·- . . . .-

Carr now for a

\j.'!l

Custom Homes

:
·
:
I

(740) 985-3948

.SPECIALS

Owner: John Dean

; • Rtpla~Windows

•General
Commercial and
Ruldentlll
F-fllhMIH
No Job Too!lnw/1
Br\81'1 Morrleon
111/11110.

On Friday, May 15th, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition wiih photographs
of high school ~eniors graduating thi~ year.
Now through F~iday, May 8th, Drop Your
Photo Off at The Daily Sentinel. ~r At Y~ur
High School Office to Be Included In This
Special Edition, At. No Charge.

i:..

P.Q lieu 485.
Gallipolis, Ol1o 45631

Ability to adminis«er, score, and
Antiques, top prieta paid, Riwr·. lnlet'pret 1he te111 of Adult Basic
ine Antiques , Pomerov, Ohio, Educallon: k-'"&lt;loo of tho GEO;
Russ Moore owner, 7•d·992· aDiliry to gather, fntarprat, and

12X (ontpleh Hane..........15.60

ft JEFE,WARNER INSURANCE

Free Eatlm1t11

Of Corrrntrce

Aoonj"": R. V. Gt1ham

Absalute
ver And Gold Coins, Prooreeta.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelt'y, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. AcquititiO!"I Jaweltv
. U.T.S. Coin Shop, 161 Second
Avenue, Galipolis, 7..0-441-2142.

33100 Pine Grove Rd,
·Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2461 .
Pig Graww .........................16.25 ·

Gallia CouniJ Chaml&gt;ot

949-2168

4124r1111mo.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

•
• •
••

·

To:

loll for kids sizes newborn &amp; up
Sat 9-? 607 1Sl St New Hawn

80

·-

On Skillo And Experience.

Send Resume ' By May 7, 1188

FREE ESTIMATED

• Vinyl Siding • ·Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Ucnestone,
Gravel, Sand,

(614) 992-3838 .

Phone 740-:992-3987

Based

dette Addition PL Pteaoant

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY . ·-.

Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrlldes or consulting.

challenging Positi on, People
1SkHia VtrJ Important, Comput•
E11perliaa And Wr iting: Abitny A
!Mutt Some BookkMping ExPif'i·
,enet HMpful, Ply II Compe1irivtt,

Yard Sale Fri &amp; Sat Qam-Spm.
furniture I craltl. 9 Bur-

ESTIMATEES

Your One Stop
(o•p•ter Shop~

Steretary JAdm lniltl'tl11vt Allil ·

Clothe~ ,

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

66

LOnG'S
COnSTROCTIOn

'' ..:· WICKS
;
l - HAULING

Umettont Hlullng : ·
Houee 6 Trailer Srtn
Und Clttrlng I
Oradlng ·
Septic: Sylltlm 6
Utllltln
Eatlmltn

COMPOIER
PERFORMA.C£
~ UPGRADES

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

{lime SIQneLow Rates)

l: ·

Hanging Bask•ts $6.13
.
Rebtoomlng Ull.. , Hollo, Peonlta, Bleeding Hearta, ate.
Variety of Perennials 94C
Fruit &amp; Flowering Treet, Shrubl, Pinta&amp; Azl\111 ·
Momlng Star CR 30
RIICine, Ohio ·
.
1149-2115

~C;~~~~~~~f.t~~

7--4551

.. · --" ..........

•Garages
·Com plate
Remodeling

985-4473

. Bedding &amp; Vegetable Fleta

CI-Cown(f

Clo-01 eomn...

1:OOpm Frldoy.
· Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

ll.~law Homes

.

ind/11--

-DIATIOPENtiO

g.5_Hull,

Be
Advanct.
1:00pm
day btlort the acl Ia Ia run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·

ROBERT BISSELL

992·5513

~

Al·124, llntrtvtllt, OH

~-

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

CELLULAR PHONES

CANDLE SHOP

Alromathtntpy,
Woodtn Angela,
' Slullld Robbltl &amp; Ieora

..
.

Agricultural •"Industrial • Automotive
•R•corea·• New Radiators
. Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
&amp;J&amp;tlck ~ Tlg • Aluminum Welding

INTERNET SIGN-UP P9INT
POIIIERC)~ OH

• OIFEIJNG Willi MAKING SUPPU!S.
,
2 n.r Angel Blrdblllt
; · Fountaine, tncluclea pump,
.
fur $129.00
Ctndlta, Refills,

-

(740) ~ll-8904

'

Plants,
Trees &amp;
Shrubs

Rutland, .Ohio 45775 Deli: featuring
Amllh
..;;~ ChttMI, Soli
Sei'Ye Ic:e
Cream·

. 740·949·3006

..

•

P/8 Contractors, lni.

.Lanlfseapi..,

~

•
•

'

No ]ob too small, -•
Some too big. 740-9411-4802
740-949-4903 ' '

Plan ahead. Call
today lor free estimate
742·2803 cir 446·3622

tABS $100 to $500

I

301~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity .

.-

•

:_ OHIO-RIVER SERVICE

•

'....

CARE -

-

ma.

15 North Moln

Pick Up for
Residential &amp;
Commercial
(No mH• loft bohlnd)
Coli

Gravel, Sand,
Limestone, Dirt, Top
Soli, Anything you :
'
need to haul.

3I3IW8 1 mo pel

'
• •"

.,

.

.. , ..

51~

Help wanted

111n1. Thtl It A Very Vltlblt And

740-9115-4422

614 949-2804

"We don't want to IJUllce monel• we juat
want to aeU jlotller•, '

•Chester, Ohio

.

·-....------~

LARRY'S lJ\WN

1

•

Verlaty, Q111ity 111! Llw Ptlll

98s-4422 .

l

Avon $1 420 /11r, No Door ·To ·
Doo r, Easy Cuh , Fun, 1-BOO·

Ptayet, Mlac.l1ems.

Computer Graphic•
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Resldentlll
. Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

SIJE'S GREENHOUSE

Quality Service
For All Your
Garbage &amp;
Rubbish ,

.,-

614-691·7231 .
.

740·742·3411

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
;. ;

Professional Floor,
' Coverfug .,'
or

The ennu•l report Form

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1998

Free Eatlmatea
4/8118 1 mo. pd.

•

FREE ESTIMATES:
614-691·5716 •

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE

XI"I'EN'I'ION!

Free Estimates

-

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Alter&amp;
(740) 985-4180.

Minor Repairs • Cabl_
nets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

p.m.

....

•Mower• ;Chlln SIWI •Wetdellera •Authorized
.. Dealer For:
•Brlgga 6 Stratton ~MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
llllns &amp; Strlllll! Master Stnkt TtdtakiiM
O.hloor Pow. E; l;t•••t AuodatloL CMIIIW 2 Cyd.
State Route 338 ; At Vlnt • Racine, Ohio

REPAIR

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

DUMP TRUCK
.'
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,

HART'S GREENHOUSE WILL HAVE
FLOWERS FOR SALE
DURING OUR GRAND OPENING

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright '

SDISftHOME
.COISfRDCtiON

::• R•.L. HOLLON
•
-\TRUCKING

Three inducted i~to chapter r----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Three Meigs County residents
arc among 25 Hocking College stu·
dents who were inducted int o the
Alpha Mu Delta Chapter of Phi
Theta Kappa.
Melissa Coleen Ni cholson and
Troy Lee Bearhs, both of Pomeroy,
and Edna Mae Hensley, Tuppers
Plains, were inducted in ceremonies
conducted by Steve Swan, director
for the Center for Business and
Industry and Evening College.
Qualifying students must have
ac hieved a 3.5 grade point average
ond completed 12 credit hours. They
mu st also excel in areas of fell owship, leadership and community se rvice.

Chapter 13

Teke the pain out of
painting, and ret me ·
do It lor you.
Interior
Before 8 p.m.
leevemea.. ge.

•

Stop In and register lor a Lloyd Middleton Doll to be given ·
away on Sunday. Other prizes donated by area merchant• ·
will also be given away.

Parts and Servlcell

4/30198 1 mo. pd.

LINDA'S
PIIHIIG

.·...

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Fenton, Roseville Pottety, CO

LIIDSCIPI
DDIDI

Rlctll MIWD CLoiiC

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
•
William Safranek,
Attorney AT Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio

•

l&amp;S TACK SHOP AND TRAILER SALES

t.P.

Chapter 7

.

AND
St. RT. 1

KRUP!CY

OPEJIIIIO APRIL 1

WASHBURN'S DAIRYETTE

11 o

Spoing Valley, Foi,

~

THURSDA\', MAY 7 THRU SUNDAY, MAY 10

Yard Sale

Two Fam11y : .110 Pecan Street,

·-· ...

GRAND _OPENING
DISCUSS INVESTMENTS - A program designed to help teachers
plan their retirement . was recently held at Meigs High School.
Speakers were John Milhoan, ORTA District 7 Director; John Buch,
benefits counselor lor the STRS, Steve Highland of Peoples Bank,
Karl Kabler Ill, L. Dele Van Tyne of .t he ORTA, and John Riebe\ 1
superintendent of the Ohio ESC.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Gaoaoe Sole : Rain /Shine, 1432 Send Resume and Referenctl ......,.., Superintandtnt,
Brli:k Schaal Road, Acrooa From TO! Mlchlll Loolvor, lmpro /Seal Southern LoCII Sc-. ao. 171,
Addavllle. Few Antlquea. Furni· ;co. P.O. llo• 200. Mlltn, llllnolo Rllclr111, Ohio 45171 . St.SO io an
81 26&lt;.
ruoa, ClotleL ToyL Mloc. Frl, Sit
Equat ~"~'~ty

e....,_

.

•

lit

I&lt;

\

..

�Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 6,1998

Wednesday, May 6, 1998·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-The Dally Sentinel• Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~LEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

-to,_,.,.,. Puzzle

417 MIA
42 Lagr' aid org.

ACROSS

" Roinan .....
47 DMcle
51 Blood nutcl

1 - up

(IICCUIIIUiettllfl)

7 Column
13 Bring -nlort 53 Painful

1

Rooter, must be experienced I
:know carpentry, ca ll alter &amp;pm ,

Double Wide
3 Bodmoms, 2 Balho
$1 ,8851lown $2119 Par Monlh
Includes Ooliwry And Sel Up

.7&lt;0-378-8349.

·Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
~ Now Acceptin~ ~ppf ication s For
,Part-T1me BeautiCIAn. Please Apply Uo.nday - Frida~ From 8:00 ·
•4:30 ~~ Scenic Hilla Nursing Cen-

'lllr, 311 BuckridQe Road, Bidwell,
:otH5614.

..------.

Thornton Greenhouses looking
lor labOr workers lor greenhouse
work . E11perience not necessary,
SS. 15 hour, 7.t0..2ol7· 433'.

WANTED : Ued1c:al Assislant or
LPN for Physician in office prac tice lor month of July. S&amp;nd re sume ID : , Boll CW· 7 CIO Point
Pleasant Register 200 Ua in St
Pt Pteasant. WV 25550.

C.l

All real estate advertising In

this newspaper Is subject to
the FBderal Fair Housing AJ::;t

1-1100·251-5070

of 1968 which makes It Illegal

to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or discriminallon
based on race, CQk)(, religion,
sex familial s_tatus or national
origin, or any lnten11on to
make any such preference,
llmttation or discrimination:

i&gt;Oiit. rio-·30-o-875·5182.

Oiscouru Mobile Home Parte a
Ac:C:euorlea Warer Htatera, VI -

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Bloc: king Wood &amp; Wedgef' And
More l Call Benneu·a Mobile

Home Supply~ 1-7-114111.

This newspaper wHI not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which is In vkllation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all ~elllngs
advertised in this newspaper
are ayailable on an equal

180 Wanted To Do
Mowing Servlee
Fr• Estlm~~ln

304-675-&lt;435
Aftor5pm.
ANV ODD JOBS ·

Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulching, flower bed s. landscaping;
,aidewalk
edging , mowing,
etc ... Free Es rimates . Call Bill
304·675-7112.

·N· Convalescent Home,
Has 3 Openenings Elderly Or
Handicapped Person In My

~ cifC ie

Home. 740-441·1~ .

Make 2 Payments Move In No
Payments Aher 4 Yeara, 1-800·

4 Bedroom Brick &amp; Vinyl Fenced
Yard. Fami ly Room &amp; Laundry
Room &amp; Walk -Out Basemen!,

I
Olllce, Fri. Sat a Sun.
12pm·!ipm o1her daya. 304·273·

New 3 Bedroom Home

leave Message.

Antiques,
StrHI:, on Rt. 12-4,

4672.
Onveways, patiOS, Sidewa lks,
basemenls &amp; gara ges, also lay
block &amp; small jobs, 74()..742-2261 .

Experienced cirpenter. will do remodeling, decks, vinyl siding,
plumbing. Free estimales. Call
Jim Shull. 304-675· 1272. References upon requesl

440

$189.00 Par Monrh
1·1100·251·5070

8:00 p.m. 7-40-Q92· 252e , Russ
Moore owner.

4 Bedroom 2 acres,

Slm1les
north of Pt. Pleasant. Ask1ng
h1gh 50's. 304-773-5787.

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
ineludes 6 months FREE 101 rent.
Includes skirring, delu•e steps
and setup. Only $187 .08 per

1 ·5 BEDAOOII HOliES FROII monlh wllh $1075 down. Call 1Aepo's Ca ll 1-800-522-2730, X 800·837-3238.
1709.
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 Ioiii

$4,000 local Gov't. &amp; Bank

Still under warranty, owner fi·
nanclng available. 304·7557191 .

For Sale By Owner: Bulaville Pike,
Brick, Morton Building, 3.6 Acres;
35 Ferguson Diesel. 740-446·

4286.
New Doublewldo 3BA. 2 balh.
Furniture repair. refinish and res·
roralion, also CU!!IIOm orders. OhiO GOV'T FORE CLOSED . Homes $1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. I·
Valley Refinishing Shop. Larry From Pennies On $1 Delinquent 888-928-3426.
Phillips, 740-992o6576.
Tax. Repo 's, REO's. Your A[ea.
Toll
Free (1) 800·218·9000 Ext.
Georges Portable Sawmill , don't H-2814 For Current listings.
haul your logs lo lhe mill just call
304-675-1957. •

1192·2218.

MerchandiSe

\12· Wood Planer, 5 HP Planer

lt.lolor, 2 HP, Feed Molor, 10'
Table Saw Seara Several Other

.

Wood Related Tools, 740 ·448·

9408.

.

.

175,000 BTU LP Ga• Healer, For
Swimming Pool, Never Used, 740'24S.544ol.
I

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp; '

Refrigerator Furnished, All Utili· 125• Zenith slereo-c:olor-c:onsole
ti es Paid, Handicapped Aec., 11Vl75. 30-o-875-3804.
Cleen &amp; Ouio~ 740·388-9770.
3.1 Leading Edge computer wilh
1 BedroOm Apartment, Stove, ~e­ !CO Rom, &lt;:olor moni10r, Oecwriter
lrigerator Included, No Pets, 740· .color printer, modem, $600, 740-

446-251!3

992-7518.

1br ·Apanments• Ma10 St. Pt.

46· 1nch big screen TV with tree
Pleasanl . furn ished/all utiliti es · VCR. Onl., 118 down delivers to
paid $3451mo. Idea lor smgle your door. Call Home Products@

1-800-77!1.¢536.

perso~ ~4-675-2200 .

Amazing

.

MetabOlism

Break

Through. Lose 10 10 200 lbs., Call

For tree consultation and Free

Samples (740)441 - 1982

: Are Your looking For Avon Produels Bul Don't Know Where To
; F!nd Them? ·Also, II You Would
l1ke To Sell Avon, Call Pam AI

K&amp;S Remodeling Painting; Roof -

ing, Call 740·446o6984, 30&lt;-8756021. .

1

to 940 discs. al1o holdl tapea.

Need odd jobs· painting, root1ng,
carpen1ry ; or lawn care, he\le
tools &amp; time, can fo, reasonable
rates . free estimates, 7&lt;40·992·
11049.

. Call 7•0-992-8836 alter 6 pm.
COs &amp; 111pes nol lncludod.·

Pick up trash or Junk. $35. load .

Complete living room suire with
flee matching lamps. O'nly S HI
down delivers 10 your door. Call
Home Products@ 1·800·779·
0536.

9848. 814-367·7010.
Oualily Spring Cleaning AI Alklrd-

Compuler system with free P,inl·

able Prices , No Job Too Big Or

1·1100-77!1.0536.

Small Free EstimaleS, 740-446 ·

picllup l011d . 304-875-5035.

Will Mow &amp; Trim lawns, R811sonable Rales. Contac:l Joe Saun-

' defl Al740-«&amp;-2450.

FINANCIAL

1-800-537-9528.

River View 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,

Now Taking 4pplic:ations- 35
Well 2 Bedroom Townhouse
4partments $295/Mo., 740·4-46·
0006.

(An::~IIUSINEliS,

CA, In-Ground Pool, 740·256·
9393

COUNTRY ESTATE)

Seller relocating, 4 bdrm, 2 112 63 .95 4c:res, Approx. 8 Acre
bath wl whirlpvol tub, 2-car ga- lake, Mobile Home Wilh large
tage, fireplace, hardwood floors, Add On Den, Gallia ~ Countt.
solid wood &amp;·panel doora. qua,lily County Waler And Electric
throughoul, loc:aled on 3.2 acres $2.800 Par Aero. 740-318-8878.
In new subdivision . 1148,500. ' - - - - - - - - - - ~4-875- 1306.
,.
3 Bedroom Mobile Home 12xe5
.Three bedroom home 1n Rac:ine, ~air Condition $3,000; 2.1 Acres
one bolh. $39,500, 740.949·3228. On Paclon Road, Eleclric Avail-

One -bedroom apartment in Mid·
dleport. all utilities paid, 1270 per
month, $100 depo.sit, call 740·

992·71106.

Three bedroom. S300 per month
plus dOpo~l o_nd ublilies, Third St,

able $3,500; McCullogh Choin· Recine. OH.. 740·2~·4292.

210

Three bedroom mobile hofM wilh

Business
Opportunity
$IS

COKE /NABISCO II'EPSI

on

saw With Carrying Case tao.
740·441-1821.

Three bedroom, balh and half, In

4 Building Sitea-2 Acres each,
convenient yet priYalt, 8 milts

Tw1n· RivetS Tower, now acceptIng applications for 1br. HUD
lubsldized apt. for elderly and
handicapped. EOH 304·875-

Middleport coil 740-1192·3485 al· lrom Point Pleesanl 1 114 mile oft 887!1.
Belhel Rd. off Sandhill, no alngle 450
Weekly ProliiS, 1·800·337·1375, ,., 5:oooranyjmo-endl.
wldas . $14· 16,000ea. 304·875-

Local Routes Available, $1,500
Call24 Hours -7 Days.

Three bedroom. two Dalh home
with 70 acres in Meiga Counly,
free gas, above ground pool, de-

!NOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. lached garage, loll ol emu,
recommends that you do busi·
$1211,000, 740-667·pD7~
ness wilh people you know. and
NOT to send money lhrough 11\8 320 M bll H
0
e OmtS
mail unlit you have investigated
fOr 5ale
lhe olfefing.
~4-875-6149.

14 x70 3BR, $9119 Down &amp; ONLY
1179 P8f' mo. Free air a·rraa akining. 1·888-928-3-126.

Business. Medical Bills.

-Repay.
CBII ToM Free

1·1100-218-tiOOOExl G· 2814.

230

1968 12x7q Kirkwood trailer. 304·
675-4534 alter 6pm.

Professional
Services
Joo'a TV·VCR Sorvlco

HH2 Schultz 14x85 c•ntral air,
located near town, must bee
1986 Commodore 14x85, two
bedroom, one balh, stove and re- .

304-&amp;75-1724

lrigeraiO!' included, gll hea\

llvlngston·a bastment water ·
proollng, aU bastment repaira
done, lrea ettlmates, lltelime
guarantee. 10yrs on job experi·

REAL ESTATE

ea
e
W8nted

2 Aquariums 30gal. llinks wtdou ·
ble rot iron 118nd, lufly equipped
Wlpower liltet'S, hoods, lights ere.

$125.304-675-3101 .

3 AKC registered minialure
Pinscher puppies. call 740-992·
. 7546 after 5prn.
A Groom Shop ·Pat Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Balh . Don
Stteeta. 373 Georges Creek ·Rd.

Hear From You NOW! We

Pa~

Top SS$ For F1rms And Vacant Sleeping rooms with cooking.
land, 20 To 300 Acrea. Road Also lrlller space on river. AI!
Frontage And Woodl A Pius. nook·upa. C•ll after 2:00 p.m.,

Callllitlo Anlhony Land Co.. l-td. 30-o-773-5651, Muon WV.
1-213-11305.
460 Space for Rent
RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

Mobile home sile available bet· 1
ween Athe.~• and Pumero~. call '
!
7•0-385-4387.

R""ah

COil·

tral air, two porchtl, very good
condition, StO,OOO negotiable,

For Lease
2 Bedroom HouM IIUI'khorl Lano, 490
GaltipoNa, 134011141., W.O Hock- Building 32x78, 1110 Viand
Up, Deposit Required, 513-574- Street, Point Pleasan1, Call 7-40·
25311.
448-65115.

310 Homes for 5ale
2 tiouaea On 2 1/4 . Ac:~•• With

River Frontage Garfield Avenue,
Gallipolla, Main House 2 -3 Bed·

rcom1, 1 112 Balh Full Ba-t

AC, Gas Futnace, Second HouH

transmission $75. 1964 2.5
Quick ccyl. $200. 1979 .- .3 V·6
$159. 1D7D Au1o. transfer caae
Jeep $100. 304·578-2387.
1987 Mustang GT, 5.01 convert·
lble, au.,, AIC, while, new mp, r•t
nice shape, $5,.495, 740· 742·

3802.
1987 Nlssan red, 4dr, new stereo,
good 1ransmission. engine,
Drakes &amp; battery $1 ,000. 304 ·

AUIO, Air, 132,000 M1181, $1,600

1992 ChtiY'f BlaZe! S-10, 4x4, V·

miles. $8800, can colleCI 740·
898-7019:
1993 Pontiac: Tranaporl Van, 3.8
lltet V-6 engine, AJC, cruise, (Sk
miles, $7500 firm, ciH 740·982·

7028 or evenings 304-882-34110.•

•,

1996 Chevy .-wd, 350, 5tpd, air,
cruise, tilt. am-lm cas&amp;ette, 304·

D(PT

Motorcycles

IP8f CB 850cc oleyl. Honda road
bike, good CGnd. $900. cau K&amp;K

&lt;f.

Mobile Homtt. lam·Spm 304-

875-3000.

..

a

90hp. Chrysler motor w/rrailer

~

'Il-l:tO £II.CJ.\ LIFE. ~ ~ ~

~T FIIU, ~ ~'OII-4bT .

'

QCZENt.'("

1g76 Taylor Clllt 1711. opon bow,
$800. ~4-1175-SOIP after 5pm or

Norlb

BIG 'NATE

power, boughl now July ot 't7,

three matching Kawaaaki ~ki
veatt and uailer ail go wilh ,It,

$5000, 740-1149·2203 or 740-lloiD-

2045, will con1lder lrada tDr· a
good pontoon boat

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
8h. Ford bod "'-• 4-16'""""""
whHis with good rubber. Air tor
,$350. 30-o-875-4501.
·760

Pass

3 NT

New gas tanka &amp; body p~~rra: D &amp;

31133 or 1·1100-273-03211.

AtHWAl{, I DIO
M'f9EST.. I
TRIEP TO

· NICe fiberglass toppet to lit anwll
pickup; ocl....,d and tinted IOinctows, bronze in color, must IH,

HELP IIER ...

740·742·2192.
Two now 205175 R1 5 Reminglon

ISN'r THERE MORE
TO UFE TJ.IAN
, 6ETTI N6 THi

m•~­

sage.

piano Or. 740.446·4525

199C Coleman Pop..Up. Exc:etlent
Condition, Sleapa S ·8, MtninQ,

IWEDNESDAY

Slove, Sink, $2,100, 740·250·
8889 L88Y8 Ma11age.
1998 Sprinter 30' travel trailer,

e-a. 1-537·95211.

like new condition, ulld 4 times,
all aceestotits $11', ,750 . 3041."

1175-3823.
:
Summer Special: 11191 32' Dekillil
Terry 5fl Wheel Trallor Haw Over
S25,ooo Priced To Gol '12,100
Aftor 5P.M. 740-448·43111.

King Silt WatOfHd $100;
Several Chalra, Roctlnora $15
t;ach, llelal Oeak $800 Lafge
Wooden Ooak.- $50 ~ 740·441-

30511.

recliner, Floranct.
GrHn, 1200, non smoking rtli·
-.740-882·3301 .

La·Z·Boy

SERV ICES

Lilt Cheir. Good Working Condl·
·11011, $150, 740-3~720. AFTER

Hoine

810 .

~

lmprovementa

I P.M.

NOw Thai Spring Ia Here II 11

Tima To Stock-Up On Your Avon

Un~ndttlonai I
guarantH.
Local references furnl1htd . Ea-

Plus, To brct.r Call Pom At 740.
245-5443.

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

tabllahod 1g75. Call (740) 446·
0870 Or 1·100.267·0176. Aogato
Wa1erproo~ ·

Appliance Parts And Set.Yice: All
· Name Brands Over 25 Veara Experience All Work Guaranteed

French CIIJ Maylag, 74.0·448:
. 77!15.

C&amp;C · General Homa Ualn·tenenca- Painting, vinyl lidlng.

w1.-.

carponlry, claora,
balh~
mobile homo rapolr and more. For
trH eodmale call C"-1, 74().9911.

Tam-• conatructton, tni:.'

Anention Mobile Home Ownera:

For Ill JDUr building -

. Carpentry; Framing IIICI

....

PoJn:ol,...
•.
anct Etactrtcat:

linilh f'M

Aoofiro.

.

Plumbing

For-.. addition~ rllllba.

tiC::
Fora Ina ..tllilla catt:
740-192-1307
· Senior Cllzon DilcGun!l-

Polly'a Now &amp; Used FumHufo
We - have Army Surpluolll
2101 Jelloraon Ave.
()pen 9 :~ · 5:00 Mon-Sat
304-4175-SOFA (7e32j

840 Electrical and •
Retrlglt'ltlon '

New Clayton Mabile Harne Garden Tub, Skylighl, CA. On Aenledi
l.ol, Best Ollori740"1A6·P•20. .

•

labellld a
(June 21-July 22)
big or stating your inlen·
. ASTRO·ORAPH
· tions won' t , assure you of success
today. Acci&gt;mplishments will have t9
~
be earned the hard way, through
~ay 7, 199S
effon and application. ·
, • Several deep and lasting friendLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Instead of
.ships are likely to be established in i assessing matters in a realistic fash·
· 'ihe year ahead. None trom this group, · ion, you 1f!ight distort the facts today
•·'however, i:&lt; likely to be in your pre·' to suiJ your desires. Judge things
· ·sent field of endeavor.
based on what they are, not what you
:, ' TAURUS (April 20-May 20) : wish they would be.
•·Sweeping responsibilities under the
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Some·
) ug today won't pre.o;ent a problem. one with whom you're closely nsso·
The trouble will come later when you ciated may think the wOrld owes him
· try 111 catch up and you see what a · or her a~ ride today; you ')light be
larse pile of debris you have to deal · expectecl'to b1,1y the ticket. ,
with. Know where to look for · ·LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A per·
romapce and you'll find it. The son who let you down before might
ASiro-Graph Matchmaker instantly make some rather lavish promi~ to
reveals which signs are romantically you again today. It's best you don't
perfect f"" you. Mail $2.-75 to Match· hold your breath until they happen.
makcft c/o lflis ne~spapcr: P.O. Box
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) UsuJ758, Murray Hill Station, New ally you're a person who tries to be ·
York, NY 10156.
industrious and productive, buttoday
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) If you you might do only that which you
.cJon'tltonestly think well of another, think you ·have 10 do in order to :
.'it's best not to SlY anything today. squeak by.
.
SAGmARIUS (l'jov. 23-Dec. .
liaise flattery or criticism will be .
quickly detected and could result in 21) Pn:tending to be something oth·
.I

•

19 Compaaa pt. ,
21 Circumvent
22 Tidily

23 Poetic toot
24 Entrea meal
25 City In
Norway
Spanlah

artlat

29 Egyptian
lloddell

30 lltver In

Germany

31 watclle~
37 Sedative
36 Med. teet
41 AI- In

France

42lhlsa(ctog)

.

·43 lletated,group

44 Reporter,
Lola-

45 Employed
47Sulface

meeaur•

48 Muslim luclgo

49 Cultivate

50 Oagger(oba.)
52 FoCicl eddlllve
(abbr.)
54 Writing

tool

CEL,EBRITY CIPHER
by. Luis CBmpoa

Celebrity Cipher t~W»~ograrr. ·~ crutta from qyotMionl by flllmOUI ptople, past and preaen1
Each lcitter 'II lhl ~ •nell for anocner. Today'l Clue: u ~/$ 8

JO

OZKD

KAC

FKSKLN

ozc
0

z c.

DCKXZJMA

ZKloc

MR

OJFC

RGW

KWC

NRGMA

UOON

SCKWM .'

Ry

GO

DZKD

SCYD

DR

CWJ X

Z A Y Y .C

OR

DZCN

W

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·c~Jidren need love. especially when they .do not.
deseiYe it.' - Harold S. Hulbert
III&amp;T DAILY

lAM I
SCC\\dlltA-~t.tfS•
CLAY I. .POUAN _;.__.....,._ _
WOlD

PUZIUI
- - - - - - lttlto&lt;t

O Rearrange
~s of
lovr · scrambled words

~r

the

~

I
I I 1 I I.

low 1o form four siinple words.

KONTYT
1

I
Ie

Professor to class: 'Cruelty
was the vice of the ancient'
world. For the modem- world it

is .. -- ... - ... "

0 .by
Complete the chuckle quoted
f.illing in the miuin; wordsyou develop lrom step No: 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED . LETTERS IN

THESE SQU,t,RfS ·

UNSCRAM8lE ABOVE LETTERS

TO GET ,t,NSWER

I• I•

Gossip- Windy- Juror- Leaven - PROVEN
It's sad·thatwe will believe evil on rumor and believe
iruth only when it is PROVEN.

.

Motor Homes

740·388-1322, 740-388-8570.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rebull In Slridl

11 MatufBa
12 Take a bf8ak

SCIAM LITS ANSWERS

campers &amp;

790

Jazzy Model 1100 Power Chair,
Price: $1 ,500, Cimcord~tr $700,

10 Frilly b1mmlng

26 Decllya

I.

ANSWERS RI6HT?

Dras, original cost St 10, wan1 $~.

call 740·985·4334, love

Grubb's Plano- luning &amp; repairs.
Problems'? Need Tuned? Call lhe

(BUIIel IOIIfl)
5 tatandera' org.
6 Actra11Davto
7 Type ol apple

28

' ·J D

. three
one
and
one ·
Youheans,
have six
topdiamond
tricks: one
spade,
. · j club. Three more can be established
. in diamonds (probably four if West
' has the king). Yet if you lose a dia·
. inond irick, you must.hope the opponents cannot promptly cash enough
tricks to defeat you.
·
With this: layout, if you win trick
1one, you will go down. But everyone
. · beyond the total beginner stage will
duck. However, many will also duck
. West's spade continuation. Now the
contract is in jeopardy. Knowing that
South has the spade ate.(if East had
·it, he would have won trick two) and
aware that he has no entry to his suit,
1a clever West will switch. And if in
1midseason fonn, he will select a club
.. and suddenly the contract is dead.
The defenders collect two.spades, one
·diamond and two clubs.
. South must win the second spade
: trick, then take the diamond finesse.
:If it loses and East still hilS a spade,
:presumably the suit is splitting 4-3
l and the contract is safe.
How do you kn\)w.to win the sec·
: ond trick? Either by working it out
l from first principles, counting win·
ners and losers, or by tuning in
tomorrow.

A Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304·3P2·

goodcondilion; 740·1149·2905.

a tfere, Henri
II For fur lhat

e:r.:=:;r....

Ealll
All pass

l

Kawasaki STS Jet ald. oUII under

8323.

•

· ~

warranry, lhrH IHter, 83 'hot•

Goods

•

..------,

7.0.4t1·1536.

ArMs Largett tnv.mory or lnt•lherm &amp; Coleman Heal Pumps,
Air Conditioneri, Furnace• &amp;

wl-•

51(,1-\

1'£ DNtl'.. »~()

190hp. MercruiMr lnboanl mom,,

si11"P· $1485, 740·1192·8824.

. -;.L
. ."'

:.~

~

24 Foot Pontoon Boat Fo' Seto:

manti, hauma loan, ownet fi.
noncing available. 304· 755-7.191.

2 Bedroom&amp;, Ga1 Fur,..., Good Parll, Hugo Buying - . , lloono
Ren111 Income, S55,ooq 740·448· The L.,..ll lnalllited Price, Eaay
011311.
O.or T"- Phone Bonk Flntncing.
Call Bennen'o Mabile Home HTG
3 Bedroom 1 1J2 bath, :JI• biiM- a CLG 1-1100-872·5887. •
mtnt. - rool. ~ding &amp;
on 2.4 acres on Sliding Hut
BUV IN Ai'Ril.
Crook Ad. In Hantorrl. Haa been
No f'aymtlill Unltl July 1tllltl
appra ised. $27,500. 304·882·
f.Z Flr.nclng
3851 cal~ aprn.gprn
Cal Fi,.,.. Lint

Wet~l

this three-no-trump contract?
Even if you play 16-18, you
should open thai South hand with one
no-trump. The good fiye·card suit
and those aces make the hand worth
. nea'rer 17 points than 15.

IT'S TOO
..., TTL e TO

-

...

''

19P2 II Ft. Nllro Bua Boat,
Gteat Condirionl740 •41 8481. •

Full set ot 858 Irons, tiDerglaas
shaft two lwin size mauressea,

34
35 Socllilgroup
. 36 Produce
IIDWIIHI
· 39 Mlaplacea

duc~~w would you plan the play in

••••

.f' '-

.'

beige Wiland interior, 8C)'I,
I

·.' ·

- THE:BORN LOSER.

750 Boata &amp; Motors
for S81e
1989 Sea Imp 18 1/211. doap·V,

ur. Prelervera
bu...... 12,750.1114-448-3814.

Tttf rANK

..rP~

1Ei~E=5:~~~~~~~~~~~~~=6=0~8~Y~I~T~I~t~W:~.J
Z]

1991 Honda 200 C· wheeler.

s 1800. 30-o-875-2040.
aa f11rley Oovld"'" aok 1111 CJII·
1om. acolltnl conctlllon. very tow
miiH. 740-742-1803.

with trailer

~ tfAVt TO TAKE MY
. PAY GtffG.IC. TO

·pAYROll
...

OWner, $3,000 Cal 740-318 8744..

Free camc:order·with purchase ol
52-inch blg screen TV. Only $19
down delivefa to your door. Call
Home; Productl @ 1 ·800 ·77D·

4 Let - -

By Phillip Alder
Yesterday, I introduced the holdup
play. · The o~ponents attack your
weak suit. You hold up .your stopper
for one or two rounds in the hope of
breaking their communication in that
suit. But sometimes you must be
: careful e~actly how many rounds you

8, .-.3, air conditioning, 94,000

Mercrulaer, Glfltl Kept, O)'le

Couch's 2 Years Old $300, 740..0·7171.

3 Clayey earth

,33Thea181:

More on
holding up

1970 Galaxy 10 Ft. Flberalus•

.

32Fablewrtter

getttng IOUnd
2 Tiny particle

Opening lead: • K

oeo. 74().256-1233.

·675-7981 .
1988 Chevy

Corsica, 2.8 V-6, a1r,
tilt, c:ruise, new tires, runs good,

&amp;tORY BEll

Deep Vio, Open Bow 170 HP,

740.1192-7822.
2 or 3 bedroom, tun 1111 bueMERCHANDISE
111Time
lllyoro.
E·Z
Finarting
ment. ro ""'· 740-1192-511511.
.
2 or 3 Bedroom, Around 1200 per 3 -oom, lli-ovillo, $350 ptuo
month. Call crtdllllna 1·800· depolit, 740-902-8542.
51 0
Household
948-51178.
•
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay&lt;

·$700. F!ont clip 1984 Ford Tempo
$100 . 1988 Dodge Aries auto

I NT

leave mwuge.

7mos.

Skln-So-Sotr Moiature Suncart
for rent.

1986 Ford Escort Station Wagon
$1,200 . 1986 Uercury Topaz

BARNEY

1988 Plymouth VoY.aaer V·6, .

740

Flreplac:e 1n1er1 Bronco, Wood f
Coalburning , T.hermos,tat And
· Blower, u Ft. Slainlesa Steel
Flueliner 1500: 2 · Matching

Coli Ron

Bell Otter, 7G-992..C568.

tuak

1988 Nlssan Pathfinder 4 WO

198S Trant Am 30S auto trans,
blac:kigray interior, t-tops, loaded.

In

Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cinemax, Showlimo a Disney.
Wee~y Aetoa, Or 14o~lhly AaiOs,
I NEED LAND
Conatru&lt;:tion Workers Welcome
II You Havo Land. I Need To 740-441·5698, 740-441·5187.

moYOd. 304-875-5025.

Free Ellmetes
All Work Guaranleed

enca. 304-&amp;75-2145.

Rooms
,....,-..,.-,..,.--.,..--

7948 before 9pm.

r -~---------1
360 R I Estat
Circle Motel lowest Rares

t2x80 New wiring, Recently re:
modeled , must see appreciate.

FREE .
CASH
GRANTS!
. College. Schola""l&gt;'·

Fumlshed

locally This Monlh.

South

$4,000, 740·37!1·213&amp;.

Building
Supplies

0536.

One Bedroom ·Apartment, Utilities
Paid, No Pets, References And
Deposit Required, 740·-4-48-1370.

$tOO Seized &amp; Sold locally This
Manth. Call 1-900-522·2730 Ext.
4420.

A 6 4

27Foea

DOWN
1 Attonllori-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

1968 F-150. • WD 90K ss.apo ,
\
740-367-7727:·

67S.533&lt;(or 6"·992·8119.
'
1998 Honda 300 4x4 Like Now
3.1100 740...0-8936.

Pets for 5ale

South

With Topper, 10,000 Miles Qn
Aeti&lt;Jih Engine, Has Lik &amp; Slik Kit
Clean Inside &amp; Oul, $8,500 Firm.
Call Aker 5P.M.740·245-5129.

1984 Old Cullass 305 V-8 ps, pb.

Concrete &amp; P•aslic:"Septic .Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

We Do Vinyl "Siding. Replacement
Windows, Roofs. Room Additions,
Remodeling, Ceramic Tile I Hardwoad Floors. New Construc:tion.
No Job Too Big Or Too Smail !
ConlaCI Joe Saunders AI 740·
446·2450, References Ava ilablt.

TRANSPORTATION

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245· $2,500 060. 304-875-4220.
5121.

560

• K QJ 6

.. 8 7

1988 Chevy • WD. Sholl Bad

$1 ,500 Firm. Can be seen a1
2405 Monroe Ave. Pt. Pleasant,
WV. 304-675·5019 alter 5pm ar
leave message.

758-4135.

• 9 63 2
+K 73

~~o67S.6171 .

Dryer, 740-3'~~~- 2405 ·

lect.open marketa. Huge prof11
potential. Call Mr. Uoonie. 304·

K Q J 10 9
• 8 7 5 4
• 6 5

Oekalb Seed Corn. Kay Farms.
Call 304-675-1508 II No Anowor
Le~ Measaoa.

.:.75-~:.:...:::.·-----..,--·1 V8. Good Condillon, h8oo Or

Steel Building Dealerships In se-

Eu&amp;
• 52

e

1983 Dodge Caravan low miles,
runs good , in good condition .

8040

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows,. lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

23 Elephllnl'a

West

·engine, auromatic, new 33" tires,
,.. steel ftatbed, many new peril,
$2000 000, 740-742-2192.

58 Store toddar

.. A42

650 Seed &amp; Fenlllzer

1961 Corvelle Classic, 50,000
Wedding Gown-Beautiful ivory Milea, Asking $t0,700, 74o-367lequined, re·embroldered lace, 0219.
liza10 wilh Wlil. Only S225. .3Q,. . 1982 Cutlass Supt8fTle 2 D, 260

550

141.P
730 vans &amp; 4·WDs ;
1
'78 Ford F-250 4x4 High Boy, 3&amp;0

Docile

.. 9 5 4 2

e

Truck' 4x4'!, EIC.
1-800-522- 27~. X3901.

Pipe, Seers

u1-

IFaclory S-10 Wheels (7-'0)

17

18 Woolllber
20 Exam
21 Bllhroom
lelturw

• A 10
tQJ1098
.. A 10 3

pre981on FIWngoln SIOCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
J..,k,.n. Olio, 1-800·537-9526

Woodburning Fireplace ·

.

05-08-98

1979 Jeep CJ·S •x4 good cond.

1980 ·11190 Trucl&lt;s For $100111
SaizedAndSold

8

Norill
• 8 7 3
• K QJ

$2,500. 304-578·2988.

-w"'a-te-rl-in..:e:.S,.p-ec-la-1:_31_4_2-00-::P-S-II
$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Bran

245-5616.

Wl8nchlng
!55 Mo81Mnllbte
56 s.wtngtool
57 Nervaua (2
wda.)

zaiii8C

1092 Chevrolet Suburban. 3'4
Ton Charcoal Gray. New Tire,_ ,
Towing Package, RuM1ng Board,
Excellent Condirion. $1G.OOO 7...0·

Ear corn tor sale, 740·247-3CM2.

1i80 ·1110 HONDA CARS FOR

er. Only $19 down delivers 10
your door. Call Home Produc:ls 0

2376.

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Washer &amp; dryer pair wilh tree va·
euum cleaner. Only· $19 down
dtllvera to your door. Call Home
P!Oducts@ 1-SOO- 77!1.0536.

oiler refused, 740-1192·2358.

Professional Tree Service. Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In ·
suranca, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·

1050.

-r.a

Carport tor sale no reasonable

304-675-2647 or 304-895·3067. ·

Will haul junk or nsh away. $3SI

Victor Vlc1rola VV· XIV 204841,
wa11111, lloor model. 4 -~

. 740-245-5443.
Brand Nowl Great Glnl·Clllvldeo 740-448.¢231 .
I storage unit Black and cherry.
Never out of box . $125. Holds up AKC

odd jobs; ·babysitting, any shilL Call Jim or
Paula in Minersv ille, 740 -992 ·
4286.
Of

Will do baDysinmg In my home.
across from Middieporr park, any
snitt, 740·992-5073.

TJ' Beanie Bab ies Reaaonably

quarter horae getdlng, 740-7.42·

;;;54;.;0=;;;M;;;Is;;;ce_l_la_n_e_ou_s--l =t-~~1 : 150 wllh recorda, 740. 710 Autos for Sale

Apartments
for Rent

nished and unfurnished, securlly
deposit required, no pets , 740·

FREE Color C.laiog
Call Today 1~- 711.0158.

PornelllY. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 Prieedi740-..0·8051.
a.m. 10
p.m.. Sunday 1:00 10

1 and 2 bedroom aparrments. fur-

On~

ComrnorciaiiHomo lJnlll
From $1119.00
Low Monrh~ Pay""""'

388·9182.

383-13882.

$60 ,000, 740·245-9620. Or

WOlFFTANNINO BEDS
Tan At Home
Buy Di111CI and 8AYII

Somervlll•'• b)' Sandy-

LIIITED OFFER
2 Bedrooms , City Schools, No
1998 Ooublewlde 3br, 2 baths. Pets, Depos it $200 Plua Ulililies
3 Bedroom wlfull finished base- $1,899/down $259/mo. Only a1 Req1,1ired, References, Close To
ment, detached garage. prime lo· Oakwood Homes Nitro, WV 304- Galllpoli' 740·448·3907.
calion. 2 BedFoom, basement, 755-5885.
.1fJ cal'l~ round diamond saKtalre,
good !tarter home. ~4-675-51 82. Lacatad in Uorganlown- H385 Mitchell Road , 1315/Mo., In- size 8, paid $800, will take 1550;
cludes Water /Sewer $250 De· Marquis wedding aet 1/2 carat ,
po!il, 740o643-2916 AllOr 4 ~M . .
3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath. LR. FR. Skyline 1Cx65 nwer moved, two
size 7, paid $1400, will take
Kit~hen , laundJ.Y Room With 3 owner, heal pump, like new con:$1250; wedding gown with veil
Smalr
rwo
bedroom
mobile
hOme
dition.
304·598.¢520
or
304-6
75Acres, Bulaville Pike, 740·441·
size 7, paid $700 will take, $300;
lor rtn~ in Racine, 740·992·5039.
5025.
I,740·3&amp;7·0288 or 740·8~11-2481.
0038.

Den's Lawn Care, Free Estimates.

Reasonabfe Rates . 304 ·6 74·

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woodland tree-bark camoullage

310 Homes for Sale

Andy'alM~tn

Mowing, trimrring

Wild Turkey ' aeaaon, buy Army

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
S260-$300 . .sewer, wa .er and
Irish included, 740.1192·216 7.

3 Bedroom Mobile Home, You
Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit. References· Required, Porter Area 614·

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.,
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House work got you down? Give

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MaiChlng Dreaaer With Mirror, 448·4053.
GOOds
Chaar 01 Drawers l Night S111nd: Pigs· ready to go, excellent blood
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while; 740·9~;.3012.
Boxl Vent AI&gt; With Turuy Choljo, STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
$350, 740-~48-3117.
Uprlgh1, .Aon Evana EnlorpriHI, Registered Morgan harH mare,

14x80 Trailer 2 Bedrooms WJD
Aelrigerator, SIOYe, CA. Porch, At
218 Deposit References, 740-

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Foster's Uoblle Home Park, 740·
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Radio, TV &amp;
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12x60 2 Bedrooms. Localed Skid·
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Divorce Forces Salta-Take over
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available. ~-756-5518.
Huge 28180 3BR, 1 1J2 balh.
Starting at ONLY S39,N8. Many
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Table &amp; End Table; King Size
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Wattrbed Wilh 8 Drawers,

2 bedroom, (tfftt'ences, de-

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nyl Skirting Kilt $299.95, An·
chors. Wood &amp; Fiberglan Stopa,
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Plumbing &amp; Eleclrical Supplloa,

Dark blue couch &amp; love Mil with
mauve ac:cen11. $400 . 304-e75·
2157.

7&lt;0-742·3033.

Ntet!~

menls, ao..-736-7295.

Fair Pigs ExCQIIant Bbodline. Call

New
bedfoom house, Harril · ~&lt;lrwillllt,-,area, total electric, 1325
Ptr monm plua utilitiea, deposits
requlrtd, no &amp;making, · no pets,

14 G18Cl81 epoch
(2 wda.)
15 HllfM'a home
141 Sign ollh8

er
make a
impression on others today. Just be your own sweet
self, nothing more, nothing less.·
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Persons can't always be e.actly what
we would like them to be. There's a
c~ance you could be disappointed
today •when someone yq_u greatly
admire fails to live up to your expec· ·
·lations • .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Today you might experience one of
those awkward moments in which
you'll wish y,ou could vanish after
blurtins out something wrong .to the
wrong person. Think before you
speak.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You
may not be as shrewd' a shopper as
you think you are today, and a sharp
sale.sperson who recognizes this
might ·unload some shoddy merchandise on you thai's suppose to be
a bargain.
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
1Don't treat contemporaries in a.con··
.descending fashion today, because it
:could produce uncomfortable results.
·Deal wid! others as equals and fo111o
all forms of one-upsman"'!ip.

MAYS I

�hge 16 • The DaHy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Gingrich goes on offensive in Hubbell tapes controversy
wrongdoing.
White \{ouse spokesman Mike
McCurry said Bunon "decided he
was above" federal privacy laws
when he released the tapes.
And congressional Democrats
renewed claims that Bunon- a controversial figure who makes 'some
Republicans uneasy - had issued
excerpts that had been distoned to put
Hubbell in the worst light.
"Things shouldn:t be taken out of
context They shouldn't be censored
to Roscoe and Sandra Mills, Sutton and cut. doctored real Iy," said Rep.
parcelsi
Henry Waxman, [).Calif., senior
Deed, Jonathan Scott and Carol Democrat on the panel Bunon heads.
Sue Miller to Douglas L. Miller, Sal- . On the tapes, Hubhell.ind his wife
isbury.
talked of White House pressure to

WASHINGTON CAP) - Strug·
"The question is, Have crimes
gling to gain the political offensive, been committed? Has there been a
House Speaker Newt Gingrich systematic effort to cover up?" Gin·
IICCII.Ied the White Hou.'le on Thesday . grich said in comments designed to
of trying to "spin away" from trou· deflect public attention away from
blesome comments contained on questions concerning GOP Rep. Dan
tapes of Whitewater figure Webster Bwton,leader of a politically chalpl
Hubbell's jailhouse phone calls.
probe into alleged campaign finance

Meigs land t.ransfers·
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogcne
Hamilton:
Deed, Mildred K. Eskew to Lewis
Taulbee, Rutland, 80 acres;
·
Right of way, Gary E. and Penny
L. Wisor to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Columbia. 5 acres;
Right of way, Gary and Kathy
Spencer to BREC, Columbia, 74.83

avoid legal actions that would raise
"allegations that might open it up" to
Hillary Rodham Clinton. But. in
comments originally excluded from
Bunon's excerpts, Hubbell also
denied that he received "hush mon·
ey" from friends of die president
while he was on his way to prison.
While Gingrich was sharply crit·
ical of Waxman and other Democrats,
he did little to defend Bunon, who
once staged .a mock re-enactment'of
White House counsel Vine~ Foster's .
delllh to call into question the finding
that the former offtcial had eommit·
ted suicide.
·
Privately. of'ftcials said Gingrich
was unhappy that Bunon had ignored

his own weekend suggestion that an
impanial third pany be brought in to
prepare the transcripcs of Hubbell's.
conversations with his wife, his
lawyer and ochers.
At the same .time, they said no
thouaht was being given to transfer·
rina the entire investigation to a separate panel, or of giving in to Democratic demands \hat Bunon be
removed as head of the investigation.
~·can you imagine in 1973 ... if
· Republicans had 1111nounced if Sam
Ervin (the Democrat who chaired the
Watergate Committee) had stepped
aside they'll be gild to do some·
thing," Gingrich said at one point.
"They would have been driven out of

High: 70; Low:50

town."
Leaders of bolh panics met privately Thesday to plan their next

Tomorrow:· Showers
High: 70; Low:50

'
The controversy flared nearly a

moves.

week ago, when DemocratS on Burton's .committee refused to join
Republicans in ¥oting to grant immunity to four witnesses in the campaign
lUnd-raising probe.
Waxman said at the time the
chainnan was running a thoroughly
panisan investigation.
· In replY,. Gingrich said he would
give Democrats one mole chance to
vote for immunity, then transfer the
issue to a different committee

~·ieigs

· Hometown News}'aper

County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Shell to
cut local
workforce
by 170

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel ~· Staff
Recognition of 58 top students in
Meigs County schools highlighted
the 14th annual ac;idemic excellence
banquet held Tuesday night in the
Meigs High School cafeteria.
Trophies were presented to each
of the students by Jeff Harris, presi·
denl of the Meigs County Service
Center, as their names were
annourx:ed by Bill Buckley, superin·
tendent of Meigs Local, Deryl Well,
superintendent of Eastern Local, lind
James Lawrence,' superintendent of
Southern Local.
·
Another highlight of the evening
was the presentation of the Fmnklin
B. Walter Awru:d by County Supt.
John D. Riebel, Sr. to Michael
Leifheit. He was one or three senior
nominees for the award. The other
two were Michelle Caldwell of East· 1
em Local, and Evan Struble of Southf
oum
· ANDiNG·SENIOR ~This -r's recl..._t of the F111nklln
em Local.
Selection, according 10 Riebe , . B. W1ltlr Awllld Wll Mlchllel Leifheit, 1 Mnlor It Meigs High
School. Here he accepts• pllque from County SUpt. John D.
was based on academy abilit • · Riebel, Sr. It the ICidlmlc exc:elr.- -rd. He wiiiiiiO 1ttend
schol"tic achievement, activities,
1 progl'llll In Colilmbul next - k where he will p~~rtlclpatl In
and SAT scores. Leifheit will be
tlle.I'ICOfl
. nhlon of -rd wlnMI'I from ICrOII the ltlte.
guing to Columbus next week for a
.

...

i

acres:
Deed, 'keith Herdman and·
Richard L. Gilmore, Scipio;
Deed, Federal Home Loan Mon• gage to James H. Jr. and Jane G.
Crace. Sutton, 7.52 acres;
Easement, Meigs County Com·
· missioners, Patrick O'Brien to GTE
Nonh Incorporated,' Salisbury;
Deed, Nancy A. Bums, Karen R.
and Donald Randolph Jr.. Middle·
pon;
Deed. Clara Anna Baer to Charles
William Baer, Sutton parcels;
Deed, David A: and Albena K.
Hysell to Connie M. Manley Trust,
Middlepon;
Deed. Michael and Mary A.
O'Brien to Robe~ L. Ramsey, Olive
parcel;
Deed, Fred E. and Ruth A. Smith
to Tonya M. Griffin, Chester, .66
acre;
_ ...
Deed, David G. Dodson to Connie ·
J. ·Dodson, Middleport parcel;
Deed, Franklin E. Sr. and Ann M.
Mills to Oma M. Hysell io Richard
and Wilma Jean Vannoy, Syracuse
village;
·
Deed, Richard and Wilma Jean
Vannoy to Virginia Madel Pendleton,
Syracuse;
Deed, Dan P. and Donna J. Smith

,_ . . .,.

'

You've just spent all day fighting traffic

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everything on your shopping list. Now
you're home, eXhausted, and ... ob no!
The lettuce! You forgot to stop at the

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Kiss those frusttating diys goodbye!

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Come check out your new Wal-Miut

with. a full-service ·supermarket -

lupercenter Wlil

all

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for fabrics and craft supplies or cleaning

Be Open

supplies, fme jewelry or footwear, Grade
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Soem ...

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ordeal. Let us make your 1\fe easier at
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Need Is
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the

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Bo"y of .missing .·Ohio
-

Unit~~
. ersity·student found

on

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ShOpping doesn't have to be an ail-day

.

Voters OK town$hip
and viHage issues

•
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Henderson
man killed ·
by gunshot

suppon, noting that it takes everyone
•
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HENDERSON. W.Va. - A Henworking together to bring about aca·
COLUMBUS (AP) - State tax Tuesday overwhelmingly defeated spe!fding on welfare programs has state programs with otl1,er state ta~es. derson man died after being shot
He said committing 88 percent of once, at what appeared to be close
demic excellence.
.
revenue is growing so fast that the state Issue. 2. a proposal to generate decreased the amount.of money the
the
income tax, and lottery profits to range Wednesday evening, according
Well used li "Roads ofUfe" theme state expects the fiscal )'e!ll'-end sur- more.money foreduc01ion by·raising state receives from the feder;il govand qllDICd from Robert Frost's ''The ·pluk'td-t!e S350·milll&amp;n higber lhan the state sales tax from 5 percent to emment. meaning total state revenue schools would provide an immediate to the West Virginia State Police ·
$600 millron increase in education Poinf.Ptea.•ant Detachment.
Road Not Taken." He sfressed. indl· wa.~ anticipated when·itfii!&gt;. biidgft.' 6.p:~~~el\l, ;
·l'
is up $241.7 m.illi!&gt;lt for the year.
funding,
viduulity. noti1111 iha!it doesn't hun to was enacted 10 monthS ago. The
The surplu~ for fiscal 1~8: which
A spokesperson for the detach·
"You've got this continual growth ment said the victim was William
be different, and that sometimes it Columbus Oispatch reponed today:
ends~une 30. 1s ~ $936.6 m•lhon and
Some of the surplus ha~ been
pays to tak~ "the road less traveled."
The $350 million will go toward growmg, accordmg to the Office of committed to olh.e r programs and.for of ihe income taK. And that;s what Harry "Butch" Thompson, 51, of Rt.
· "The right thing to do may be dif· .a personal income-tax cut next April . Budget and Management.
a year-eOd ca.'lh cushion, the Dispatch will pull schools out or the rut. If edu· I, Henderson.
cation ·is the No. I "priority,. put the
ferent.lf it doe~n't infringe on othen, unless the · Legislature spends the
The amount includes nearly $700 said.
Friends found Thompson's body,
then do it," said Well. "Things are - ffioney elsewhere. An additional $200 ·million that was budgeted, but notr The surplus vindicates some Issue money. there,". he said.
and called police at a~ut 8:30 p.m.
Despite. the surplus, state Budget . The shooting occurred at Thompson's
-happening hen! in Melgs County, and million th!\1 had been designated for spent. Most of that money was set 2 opponents who argUed that school·
you may be satisfied to stay here, but tax relief has been committed to pub- aside for welfare programs and health funding reforms could be financed Director Paolo DeMaria defended the home. which is located off Crab
if you're not, lake your own road."
lie schools.
care for the poor. disabled and blind. without a tax increase because of the proposed sales-tax increase. He said Creek Road.
it· would have provided steady rev·
He concluded with a poem. "The
Gov. George Voino\lich had con· · Tax receipts for the first 10 growth in til)( revenue.
The spokesperson said police do
Man in the Gla.~s" and called on the sidered spending the $350 million on . months of the fiscal year were ahead
State R:ep. Roben E. Netzley, R- enue for schools had the economy flave a suspect, although no arrest' ha.'
students to consider their reflectiori in repairing and building schools. But of estimates by $564.5 millipn, with Laura. renewed his call to fund edu- . slowed and had higher unemploy· been made. Details. of the incident
the mirror and then go about to s~t- the newspaper . reponed that he most of the increase coming from the cation with the penonal income tax ment and·welfare spending eaten into were not released due to the ongoing
isfy themselves. "But remember," dropped the idea after voters on personal income llix. But reduced and .the lottery, and financing other the surplus. .
investigation.
cautioned Well, there's no fooling the
·
•
.
.
The body was transponed to the
medical examiner's offtce in
Charleston . The Deal &amp; 'Brown
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, will be
. visor, gave the welcome and in'ro"'•
duced guests which included school
in
charge of the funeral arrangements.
Friends and family joined author·
Univenity police Chief Ted Jones
Noble's parents identified their
ATHENS (AP)- Two Ohio Uni·
board members from all three dis·
Senior Trooper IO.B. Starcher is in
versity students walking along. the said the body of Keith Noble, 19, of son's body. His wallet and driver's ities la.•t weekend in an unsuccessful
tricts. He aisq introduced Kitty- nearby Hocking River discovered the Columbus, was discovered on license wa.• found in his pants.
search of the river and the area charge of the investigation and will
Hazier, talented and gifted coordina·
The freshman was last seen leav- around the west side of Athens where be a•sisted by the other member.; of
body of a student who had been miss· Wednesday. Jones did not say
tor, who planned the program.
the local detachment, who were also ·
Noble was last seen .
ing a pany on April 2S.
ing from the campus for more than a wbether foul play wa.~ suspected.
Qualifyinil for trophies on the
at the scene Wednesday. .
week.
ba.~is of their academic achievement
were these students:
Meigs Local: Grade 4, Samantha
Cole of Bradbury, Miranda Beha of
Harrisilnvillc, Whitney Thoene of
Pomeroy, .Sarah Dawn Jenkins of
. Rutland, and Christopher Van Reeth ,
In addition to approving the Meigs the amount of 1.9 mills for five years
: of Salisbury; Grade 6. David Boyd,
1
·
County
Council on Aging's one-mill, was ·approved by a vote of 281 to
: Jaynee Davis, Maegan Dod.o;on, Henfive-year levy. and rejecting a per· 180, and a fire protection renewal of .
ry· Rider. Ryan S.toban. Brandi
manept levy- for the Meigs ·county one-mill for five years was also
Thomas, Meigs Middle School:
Bo~ru of MRIDD. voter.; in Meigs
approved. 359 to I05. ,
Grade 8. Amber Ellis, Monica Moon,
County
approved
several
township
Middlepon voters. approved a
Mindy O'Dell, Amber Snowden. and
and village levy issues on Tuesday. . renewal fire protection levy of one
Tara Wyatt, Meigs Middle School.
In Rutland Township. voters mill for five yean, by a vote of 446
Grade 10, Stevt&lt; Bella. Beverly .
approved an additional Qne-mill fire to 15~.
.
Burdelle, Marjorie Halar, Kyle Srilid-·
Local
voters
opposed both State
profection
levy
b~
a
vote
of
256
to
die, Jeremiah Smith. Joshua Sorden,
237.
.
Issue I. which. would ha ve allowed
Wesley Thoene; Grade 12. Michelle
the
state · to issue bonds for school
Township
voters
approved
Scipio
. Continued
fll[lt 8.
.
a replllcement fire protection levy. of construction, and State lsoue 1'1.
two mills, for five years. by a vote of which would have rai sed the state
169to 69, and in Cbester Township. sales tax from five to six percent.
''oters approved a replacement one- Issue I was defeated countywi~e by
W.VL lternewhlllw. They ... 1-r, Jlmle ~.
EASl:ERN PROM CANDIDAtES • TheM
mill, five year fire protection levy. a vote o( 3,695 to 1.863, and State
Angle Riling IIICI Kelll Billey, 1nd blclc, Nlte
524.10 200.
Hnlol'll ..... ClndldlltH fof Prom King lncl
Issue Il by a vote of 4.55 1 to 1.462.
Rlldford, Chris Buchlnln tlnd Sltlun Lona. The
Queen lit e..t.rn High School'l pn1111, which
In the village of Pomeroy, a Both issues failed statewide, as well.
2 Sections • 16 Pages ·
w111 be !!ltd on~~ lbolrd I_PI!I.*Iburv. lhernefottllllyur'lprom II "F.--Toriight."
_renewal of a current expenses levy in
Vol. 49, No. 13

ma~~nt~~!r:;~:elementarysuper·

•

Supercenter, a full-line discount stote

ACHIEVEMENT ACKNOWLEDGED • Sam11ntha Cole, a Tourth
gl'lder 1t the Bl'lldbury School In the Meigs Local School District,
waa the first of 58 acsdemlc 1Chlenrs to receive a trophy from
Jeff H1rrl1, prssldent of the Melga Servlcs Center board, at Tuesdsy nlght'aiiCICiemlc;: IXCIII!InCI ~anquet.

APPLE GROVE, W.Va . ..:..- A glut
· in the polyester resin market is forcing a Mason County chemical plant
to cut 170 employees from its payroll
this year.
Employees at the Shell Chemical
Point Pleasant plant are being offered
enhanced benefits to either take early retirement or voluntarily leave the
company. said Paul Mcintyre . the
plant's hUman resources director.·
· The plant employs 524 people and
the cuts will affect both hourly and
staff employees, he said.
Special se"erance payments have
also been approved for any employee that may be involuntarily laid off.
Outplacement services will be offered
to employees.
· "Our initial plpn is to open the voluntary period in June," Mel ntyre said
Wednesday." All of this is pending on
a vote by the local union for us to ··
Continued on page 3

State"budget surpiU·S of $350
:=:~~~~=~=~~i million above previous estim·ates
Speaker for the banquet wa.~ ~upt. •

to get from store to store, trying to find

By AP, Staff Repons

:~::_.~e:~n;~~nctu~t'!:~!~

•

·FDA approves
automated
system to help
·diagnose Pap
smears

.

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

.·-

home of true, onC.:stop shopping ... from

C!auifitc!s
.

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15

Comks
Editorials

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)

Cumberland Prin.cess wilt visit Pomeroy Tuesday evening

10
12-13-14

Calendar

•

Air Freshener to Zucchini.

l.ocll

L
3

Sports

4-5-6

Wnthcr

3

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Lottenes
omo
Pick 3: 280; Pick 4: 2220
Super Lollo: 12· 1·9-28· 31-40-46

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· JIIIUII'y that AUlD~ PRnot detect
IU~ lfl"l of ll.ltual[y lr8Nmitted

..

Page5

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a1

Righi of way, James W. and Sandra A. Nelson, Huben L. and Judy
Wolfe and TPCWD, Chester, 59.14

dlfue'

Cubs'
Wood
fans 20

•

acres;

"' smears 11\(1 help carc:h mi"cd
~ems.
· ·.
•Advi~m to - PP4 CIIIIIO!Ied 1n

Sports

Top Meigs
·students are
recognized

Deed, Robert L. and Tamara L.
Mash to Michael 0 . Dickerson II,
Salisbury;
Easement, Sammy L. and Sherry
Darst to Lloyd Douglas, Columbia;
Deed, Kenneth and Betty Young
to Gregory and Paige Winebrenner,
Olive parcel;
·Right of way, Parthenia L. Vance
to Tuppers Plains..chcster Water Dis·
trict, Scipio, 154 acres;
Right of way, Virgil M. and
Pamela J. D,ill to TPCWD, Suuon,
2.46 acres;
Right of way, Don C. Weese to
TPCWD, Suuon, 22.08 and 31.35
acres;
1
Right of way, Evereu T. Calaway
to TPCWD, Orange, 2 and 32.0858
acres;
Right of way, James E. and Elsie
M. Folmer to TPCWD, Chester, 1.07

pera~ion AufDPip: to doubre-dleck

.

Beat of the Bend column, Page 10
.. Meigs High School news; Page 9
Chicago Bulls lose. 78-76, Page
4
.

Today:ShoMra

acres~

WASHINGTON (APl- Labora·
tories that check Pap smean for signs
of cervical cancer may soon become
more automated: The Food and Drug
Administration approved a computer
system Tuesday that means some
women wi II have their Pap tests
checked solely by a machine instead
of a person.
The goal is to allow NeoPath ·
Inc.'s AutoPap Primary Screening
System to sort out the lowest-risk
Paps so that lab workers will have
more time to spend on lite Pap
smean most likely to show subtle
signs of cancer.
"A lab that has a very high rate of
accuracy is not going to see a great
deal of improvement with the
machine," said FDA device evaluation chief Dr. Susan Alpen. "A lab ·
that has a lower rate of acc:uracy ...
Willjlet more benefit'.''
Spme 60 million Pap smears are
performed every year, simple scrapings of the cervix that c:tl) detect cancer and prec:ancerous changes early
enough to cure thousands. Pap
smears have helped cervical cancer
rates plummet, Still, an eslimaled
13.700American women will Jet cervical cancer this year, and 4,!100 will
die.
The test isn't foolproof: C)'rotech·
nofogists must visually hupl tiny
chll"aes in huiK!reds of lhou~a~~ds of
tin,y cells. Between 3 pen:ent and 25
peftCDI of ibf!ormal Pap 110111n Ale
mi,sed, depending on the lab.
'In 199~. the FDA lppiO~ two
COfllpuler sylll:ms, irx:ludina a filii·

....,,,..

· Thursday

Wedn•day, May 6, 1998

Kltker: 164el9

2:141 laatem Avenue

w,VA.

Galllpolle

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\

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~y 3: SIO Dilly 4:4127
0 1991 Ohio V.llcy l'ul&gt;lillllnJ Co.

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BY CHARLENE HQEFI.ICH
Sentinel ~ st.ff.
The Cumberland Priitc:eas will
.make its firslatop in Pomeroy Tues·
day, it waa alinounced at Wednclday
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
' Association. .
.
· Ann Chapman. presidellt, sald
that the boat will arrivt at the levee
about 4 p.m. r The 30 puienaen
aboard wiiH~ejoined by anodler JO·
·people who 1,1e being bused in to
board the boal.,A local quartet will
provide entertainment and~ in
costume will conduct tours and'tlve
historical infDr1111tion on the villaae.
.The visito!'·R expected 10 .be in

town for abOut th~ hours, until
aboUt 7 p.m.. Chapman reported. She
also noted that at least nine stores will
be open durinJ that period and will
be panicipatina in a myStery game
which is gean:d to get visitors in each ·
store.
Trinity Church will have on icc
cream social for the visitors, Chipman said.

Shealso~portedontheuseofthe
$6,000 'received from the Ohio
· Depanment of Development..A por·

lion is going into makin&amp; costumes
for Jreelers and the balal)ce will be
used for providing the guide service.
Cliapman complimented Becky Baer,

,.

.

Meigs Extension agedt. on the cos· sale provided a "good weekend", said
tume work~op held recently at the Chapman. It wa.~ decided 'to contin·
ue cooperating with Middlepon on
Museum.
the
eveht.
It was reponed that the .first per·
Alull)ni weekend was noied and it
formance in the amphitheater will a
cqncen by· the Community Band was ilccided to decorate windows and
directed by Toney Dingess on Satur· fly flags in the purple and white colday, May 16.6 p.m. Merchants. are ors of Pomeroy High School, and the
being a.~ked to remain open an addi· ·maroon and gold colon of Meigs
tiona! hour that evening as an added High School.
incentive to bringing people into the . The two new bu~inesses in
Pomeroy, Always and Forever, and
downtown shopping area.
Bill Quickel who serves on the Rainbow Ceramics and Gift Shoppe,
amphitheater cpmmittee announced a
gospel nijlht to be held there on July were noted and cards of tongratulations will be sent.
18.
July 9 was the tentative date .
Despite thetain, the six-mile y,ard
announced fora .1(isit ofthe'OU Com-

••
'

muQiversity Band sponsored by Peoples ·Bank and for the an:in·the· pa{k
program.
. Also announced was an o~n
house at Peoples Bank held last
night and today for viewing the newly remodeled facility.
,
It was noted that Sarah Fisher is
completing plantings downtown. A
variety show to be held Friday night
at Meigs High School wa' announced
with funds raised from that to go into
tbe unifornl fu~d.
,
In other busmess Wesley Thoene
was hired to continue mowing the
mini-park this summer with the cost
to be paid by the Merchants Assooi•
ation .

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