<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8491" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8491?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T11:52:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18909">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/823699945e52f2c9c129ea52af928dd6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>44a34fef8155ddf91174195792a45698</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27427">
                  <text>.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel·
·

Page 10

.Tuesday, May 12, 1998 .

64th anniversary of Chester Cound,

I atlcndcd a production of "Faust"
at the New York Metropolitan
Opera. A staff nurse who had two
tickets had invited me to accompany
her. I could nut swy awak~ and slept
through the entire perfonnance.
We have humane societies fot
dogs and cats. Shouldn'·t we hav~
one for young doctors in training.
programs'/ .. M.D. in Santa Barbara,·
Calif.
:,
Dear M.D.: You bet. The ne~
breed of medical students are:
rebelling against such brutal hOurs :.
·and it's about time.
'

mailed out soon covering the various

activities being planned for the year.
Mass preceded the meeting con·
duced by Olita Heighton: vice prcsi·
dent. The pledge to the nag wa&lt; given
and reporiS were heard. Several reports

.

Lawrence Schiller, who co-authored "American Tragedy: The Unce~
sorcd Story of the Simpson Defense" with James Willwenh, said Simpson
wii'l he a mere presence and not a,character in the lilm based on the book ..
· "O.J: docsn 't exist in the film,'' be said Monday. "This is a film about
attorneys dealing with evidence and the real process that goes on behind thi:

on upcoming events were given. Anna
Blackwood reported on the Senior Cit·

izens renewal levy, and it wa&lt; note,d
that Sister Fidelis Bell visited over the
weekend when First Communion was
given to five children.
The program was given by Anna
Blackwood who used "Why D'o
Catholics Do That" as her theme.

'

An exchange of seeds. bulbs and.
plants was a fcalure of the Winding
Trail Ga;dcn Club's meeting held
recendy at the home of Valerie Notting·
ham. Long Bottom.
Hosta. glads. dahlias, diU, and ele·
phant ears were among the plants
exchanged with Alice Thompson giv·
ing tips for llowering plants. She said
that after digging the hole. pul in a mix·
tune of one cuP Epiloo saiL&lt;, three cups
bone meal, and bile cup of sugar.
It was noted thai Peggy Crane.
Gladys Cumings. Noningham. l'hompson Karen Werry. and Bea Bacca
al.te~ the regional meeting held
teeently at the Senior Citizens Center.
They repoited on a talk given by Scou
Damitz of Bob's Mmt on bedding
plants. and an anangernent dcrnortstratinn by Pal Holter.
Gladys Cumings presided at the.
meeling with Nottingham reading "A
'Pack of Seeds." Members made bas·kets in a workshop conducted by Pam
Milhoon of Basket Weave. Reti'eshrneniS were served to those rwned and
Debbie Mohier. Addalou Lewis, and
Melva TlliC)'.

Schiller is producing the three-hour special. which is to air on a Sunday
night on ABC. He hopes to stan lilming at the end of this year and get the
movie on the air next spring.
Schiller said Levinson, the director of "Wag The Dog," "has the ability
to bring humor, wit and irony into the most diffi~ult circumstances."
Schiller collaborated with Simpson on his jailhuuse book , "I Want to Tell
You," and is working on a book about the Jon Benet Ramsey murder case. '

'•

P .0 I N I

PLIAIANI

w-

c11oc- jubilee
.. ..~enary c I .,......,
. Celebration of the jubilee anniver·
sary of Sacred Heart Oudl was dis·cussccl 81 a recen1 mcc:ting of the
Catholic Woman's aub held rm:~llly
Ill the cfudt,
c.dlollt

. Janis
Macomber. community ser·
vice
chainnan. reponed that the collec.'
tion will continue until the third Satur·
day in June at which time it will be
delivcn:d. Janet Morris. .vomc~' s activ·
itics chairman. noted ;hat a yard sale
has been planned for J•tnc 6 in Rutland.
Opal Dyer gavc·the yr·~•h rcpon stating
that Eric Montgomery 1\lCeived fil'lil ·
place on his pcanUI butter brownies a1
Pomona judging. The junioos earned
$20 in a split the p&lt;11 they held recently
with Wanda Fcny being the winner, it was noted.
There wa.&lt; a discus.•ion on renova·
tim wOO; at the hall. Vicki Smifh. lee·
turcr. bunorcd the oldest month presenl
Dorothy Bolen. and rcmill!blii'LiiM
to fClllCtllber their II10ihcr.l on M001er's
Day. Next meeting will be on May 16
6:30
·

LAS VEG.AS (AP) - ~ annual
World Series of Poker got a royal flUsh
when red-hot actOB Matt Damon and
Ed Norton ~wed up to do·a little catd
sharking.
·
The actors. who play poker players
in the upcoming movie "Roondcrs,"
entered the oo-limit· '!Cxas Huld'cm
contest. wltich has an estimated puniC: of .
$1 million.
The duo tried to lit in on Monday
·with the other 350 players in the oolimit Teu&lt; Hold'em evenL bulthat did·
n't wm for long. Horilcs of rcponcrs
and gisglins girls swanncd about the
poker room with Ra.&lt;hin~ cameras

If the 992 Exchange Is a FrH Part of Y~ur
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel
DIAL

I992·7834

By .IM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Swtf
Meigs High School and Middle
School an: the targets of a S4S2,464
eneogy conservation project, follow·
ing Tuesday night's regular meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
lion.
·
The board accepted a· !'fouse Bill
264 proposal from the Trane CQm.
pany of Columbus following a ~sentalion by Ron '1'homu. school ser·
vice engineer for Trane. ·
.HOiiSC Bi11264 is a stale program
in which energy conservation pro'
jeciS 11e paid for through energy sav·
inp.
The company proposed n:piacing
boilers 81 the two schools and mak·
ing lighting UJlll'lldes with a total cost
of $452,464.
Last month, the board met with
n:presentatives of Sabo 8t Associates
Inc. of Grove City who submitted a
proposal for·lighting !1J'811111es, boil·

pan of educational funding.
Buckley said the district will get
additional funding, but added thai the
state will exercise mon: control over
how the money is spent by districts.
"DPIA is going 10 run school dis·
tricts in this pan or the state," he said.
The district will likely have to use
DPIA funds to offer all-day. every_day
kindergarten. Buckley said, nccessi·
tating the hir1ng of at least three addi·
tiona! kindergarten teachers.
"You will have to addless all·day,
every~y kindergarten by your next
meeting, • Buckley told the board
members.
In ·personnel matters, the board
hired Carolyn Smith a.&lt; Elementary
Summer Enrichment Program direc·
lor and Donna Wolf as ~umrner
school math teacher.
Karen Walker was hin:d as middle
school volleyball coach and Linda
Lear a.~ middle school newspaper
advisor. ·

er n:placernent and renovation (II a
Theboardestiiblishedthesalaryof
tolal cost or S275,000.
.
director of transportation and main·
The Trane proposal is mort: tenance al S46.119 and cn:atlll! the
expensive because the company pro- position of .middle~ ;;chool assistant
poses replacin&amp;, 1101 RibUildin&amp;lhe principal/adminilllrative D.'lsistant.
boilers. The ne~ boilers will be · The board also accepted the res·
more efficient thali the existing ones, ignation of Ruby King, cook at
Thoma.\ said. More effiCient boilers Meigs High School, for n:tirement
an: available, but they arc 11101e purposes.
CRYSTAL COLEMAN
EVAN STRUBLE
expensive and frequenlly encounter
The following were hired a.'l submaintenance problems. he explained. stitule aides: Phyllis Witherell. DebAfterwanls, Superintendent Bill bie Cundiff, Melissa Conde, Nancy
Buckley updated the board . on Freeman, Kimberly Oliphant, Teresa
changes ip Disad'vantased Pupil Pauerson, Wanda Shank and Connie
Impact Aid fUnding for the 1.998-99--Soulsby.. ~
·ldtoof'year. ·· •
••
Hired a.t sllbstitutc bus drivers
Schools are awarded DPIA fund• were: Gary McKnight. Kevin Jewell,
Southern High School's cla.'ls of regional scholar in 1997.
delermined
by the number of student~ Oliver Norris. Ron Wililon. David
1998 will be led by three w-valedic·
She is a two-year member of the
on
public
assistance, Buckley Williams. Carla Milhoan. Ben Upton
torians and one salutatorian during National Honor Stx:iely where she
explained.
In
poor.
rural district, the Jr., Diana Johnson, Janet Hartley. Dec
the annual baccalaureaiC IUid com· serves as chapter vice ~sident, a ·
. mencernent exereise Sunday. 8 P·n:'· - rnemlll'r of the quiz bowl team. 5111- DPIA fund comprises an important Willis, Lou Hemsley · and Carlos
nt the Charl~s W. Hayn:'an Gymrta.'ll· dent council and Fellowship of Chrisurn at the htgh school m Racme.
tian Students. She has wolted in the
Co-valedictorian Cynthia Kaye school store for several yean;.
Caldwell. daushter of Mr5. Ch11,~1y
She. .will a11end Berea- CoiJege,
greenhouse farming and the othef on
Lavender. Sy~u.~. arid ~r.. How~ Berea. Ky.. on scholarship and plans By JIM FREEMAN
Pomeroy's downtown business area.
Caldwell. Rac1ne. ha.~ partiCipated m to eventually pu11!UC a degree in vet· Sentinel Newa Stiff
He also criticized an article in the
·
Becoming
"souvenir
savvy•
was
basketball, volleyball and soflJ!all. erinary medicine.
Columbus
Dispatch Ia.~ month con·
serving a.~ captain of both the vol·
Evan Tyler Strub~£. son of Mr. and the !IUbj«l at Tuesday's luncheon
Ieyba! I and basketl)all teams and Mn;. Michael ,Strub~£ of Syracuse. is meeting of the Meigs COunt~ Cham· cerning Appalachian illiteracy.
·The story is full of stereotypes
~eiV!ng numerous at~l~tc awards the ~~enior class president. president ber of Commerce.
Guest speaker at the meetin1 was including one comment that the "fiN
111Ciudt~ll Southeast D10tnct Second and two-year member of tbe school'$
Team _Sortball. All-TVC Volleyball chapter of the National Honor Soci- Becky Baer, Ohio State Unive1'5ily · thing Appalachians lenni in high
. and Dtstnct 13 .~VP V~lleyball. .
ety, editor of .the yearbook staff and Extension Agent for Family and school is that Route 33 · lead.&lt; to
Consumer Services.
Columbus,· McDade said.
She has partiCipaiCd 1n the ~e1gs school jr.lge correspondent.
She
said
there
are
four
tourism
McDade !IBid Meigs County is
County Academic Banquet and tn the
He is in the drama club and has
Soul~m Academic Banquet every participated in quiz bowl for four styles: ethnic art.\ and peoples style; "headed in the right direction" liS far
years1.nce I~'J. She serves as student years, being AII-TVC quiz bowl for history and parks style: active out· a.• economic development is con- ·
council ~·~~nt and has been ~ two years. He was Governors Schol· doors style; urban entertainment c:emed. He cited the recent opening
of the University of Rio Grande'~
51udent council for four years. She 1s ar leader for two years. a National style.
One thing al{ 'tour Slyles share in M~igs County Center as an example .
a two-year_member of the Nalional Day of Prayer panicipant and a
common is the desire for souvenirs.
MeiJs County Human Services
Honor Soctety.
.
member of 4-H for two years~ .
She IS a Red Cross Blood Drive
He has received the Ohio Regenl5 she said. Tourists spend about a third Director Michael Swisher said the
volunteer. has ~lped ~e Otambe.r Scholarship and will altend Ottctbein of their money on souvenirs, she anicle did a "disservice" to the
of Commerce dmnen. 11 a two-year University where he. m:eived the added.
APJllllachian region, and he encour·
'!acation Bible School teacher. a President's Scholarship. He will study
"You luive to produce what age people to write !ellen; to the
tourists will buy," she said.
·
Columbus Dispatch stating the arti·
llfesuard at t~ Syrac~ ~P'l! and organizalional communication.
was named M1s.~ Congemahty tn the
Saluworian William Albert Young · Be CJU~ive and original. she said. cle was unfair.
Racine Fall Fe.•tival.
11. son of Mr. and Mn;. Bill Young of Ways to do this an: by bivins unique
Palty Pickens. speaking in the
This fall .she will atlmd Ohio UniCondnued ,.. .-ae 3
logos. numbered limited editions or absence of Touri&lt;rii Director Karin
versity. where she ha\ received a
biographical information about the Johnson, said the Cumberland
scholarship. majoring in biolosy.
crafter. Souvenirs should be signed Princess tour b9at will make its first
·Ford recalling
Crystal Lynn Coleman. daughter
slop for fhe year in Pomeroy on May
by the crafter, she added.
of Mr. and Mrs. Dave K~1m;a of million vehicles
Effective promotion of IOUVenirs 27 at4p.m•
Racine, ha.• been in the county acad· ·
The National Ploa Hound AssoWASHINGTON (AP) - Ford requires close CCJOperation and comernie: banquet for several years in Motor Co. is recalling 1.7 million municlllion between the crafter and ciatiOii Days will be held June 25, 26
addition to the Southern Academic vehicles including' .wme F-series mailer, Beer llid.
and 27 at the fairground, she said.
•
Banquet. She was named outstanding pickups to replace faulty l'us nuts thai . 11le community needs to luive an
URG Meigs County Center coorjunior and received the Ohio Uni· clllild let the wheels fall off.
· active tourism a.\sociatiOn. ~sent. diMIOI'· Gina Pellesrino Pines said
versity Alumni Award and wa.• a
The: automaker is voluntarily hospitality training to local employ- open enrollment and registration at
recallinJ F- 1SO pickup trucks and ees.. building awan:llell5 throughout . the center went well. ·
The university is considering COO·
most F-250 pickups and the Expedi- the community about local products,
tinuing
'education ci~R.'&lt;Cll at the cen·
and
know
about
local
atll'liCtioM.
tion and Navi(!ator spon utility vehiincluding
a Kidll' College for
ter
raourees,
culture,
artists.
products
cles from model years 1997 and
youngsten
ages
7-12. she said.
1998. Ford spokeswoman Karea and services, she said.
Ron McDade, economic developShaughnessy said Tuesday.
She al110 pmented McDade a .
Today's
ment
ilirectnr, noted t111: tecent issue
Ford said there were 98 reports of
new URG T·shin for his effons in
l S«tions • 16 Pa1es
wheels separating from the vehicle of Southea.'lt Ohio mapzine features establishing the new Meigs Center.
Vol. 49, No. 16
two stories on Meigs Cc!unty: one on
and four injuries were reported.
'

•

McKnight.
Hired as substitute mechanics
were Dennis Tillis. Gary King Jr..
Ronald Mullins arid Rollie D. Stew·
art II while Coleen Whaley, Kay
Dodson, Jacqueline Hoover, Tammy
Jarvis, Tana Kennedy, Debbie Riffle
and Diane Hendricks were hired as
substitute cooks. Hired as substitute
custodians were Anna Welsh. Nancy
Blll't'ell, Marvin Roush. Lester Stew.
art .and Lonnie Taylor. Hired as substi!ute secretaries were Julia Sayre,
Jacqueline Justis, Patricia Clark and
Cindy Fields.
Hired as substitute teachers were:
Nancy Aldridge. Robcn Austin, Lor·
ri Bmnes, lise Burris, Clarence Ed ·
Evans, Kenneth ..Panner, Michelle
Gillilan. Robyn Hawk, Ami Jo Hold·
en, Beth Ann Hollanbaugh, Tiffany
Jones, Randall Kempton, Shannon
Korn, Ryan Lemlel', Rita Lewis, ·
Christi Lisle, ~ary Ann Neal. Lorre

Osborne, Gay Perrin. David Ramey,
Wanda Ray. Herbert Redman, Angela
Rigsby. Kelly Satterfield. Nancy
Scarbrough, Aaron Scheuer, Rita
Slavin, Jared Spencer. Teresa Va.~ko
and Michelle Winebrenner.
In other business, the board:
.. Approved a contract with the
Educational Media Resource Center
to provide media services to the
school district at a cost or $2.1~ per
student or $5.334.1 S;
- Approved a CORI!'IlCt with the
Auditor of State's office for General
Accepted Auditing Procedures
(GAAP) reponing for $30 an hour:
.. Met in executive session at the
request of.a parent.
·
Present were Buckley, Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus, board President
John HOod and board members Scotl
Walton. Roger Abbott. Randy
Humphreys and Wayne Davis.

Rut'and.lie''l·eu''S
I
h
·
·
t
purc as.e reques
V' 1

1

·
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department discussed purcha.•ing
property from the village to construct
a new firehouse when Rutland Vii·
lage Council mel in regular session
on Tuesd;ly.
RalPh Bailes met with council to

propcJSe tiK ~artment'tJ!!!lChalie_o(

property adjacen'f to the civic center,
in front of the old Rutland High
School, 10 facilitate the construction
of a new fire house.
Council discussed the proposal at
length. expressing concern that the

. .. , •

area will likely be needed for park·
ing or other uses for civic center
activitie"' especially in light of the
renovalions a1 the center.
According to Bailes, the new
facility would be constructed in the
middle of the lot, with a roadway to
be f!ln51111Cted in_front of the build·
.ing( • ~ · ~
The department contends that a
new firehouse is needed because the
existins facility is too small for pre·
sent and future needs. and becau.•e
Continued on page 3

M

'

•souvenir .savvy• topic of chamber meeting

..,

• Wednesday. May 13. 1998-7 p.m.
State 1'heatte (Main Stteet)
• Tickets:-$7/PCrson Or·$5/Sttadents &amp; Seniors

..

· • Tick.ets Can Be Obtained
~t The State Theatre
•

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppcn;
CHESTER - Chester Township Plains vFVI 9053, Thursday. 7:30
Trustees. 7 p.pt. Tuesday at the town · p.m. RefreshmeniS. ·

Actors' take a
shot. at poker
.

.

Three co-valedictorians
to l~ad SHS:-graduation

Artist Series

ISSUC .

A collection ~ rood ror the rooc1
hank wa.• discu.&lt;scd when Star Grange
77K met rcccntlv at the GranllC hall.

CYNTHIA CALDWELL

scenes.''

'
•,•'

Single Copy- 35 Cents

.

90045

~~ -

Hometown Newspaper

Mei-g s Local Board approves
energy conservation proj-ect

By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Norman Mailer is writing the scrccnrlay and
'Barry Levinson is directing a TV movie &lt;1bout the OJ. Simrsim ca.&lt;e.
'
So who 's completing the all•star trio and starring as the tarnished foutball
Hall of Fa1ncr'?

It was reponed that the committee is
preparing tri-fold pamphlets to be

Lakers,
Jazz advance
In playoffs
Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.

DofA, to he observed
Plans for celebrating the 64th
anniversary of Chester Council,
Daughters of America, were made
when Chester Council met recently at Greenhouse toured by garden club
the hall.
members
It was noted that there arc two living
A tour of Karen's Greenhouse at
charter members to· be recogni1.cd at Portland was taken by members of the
the observance. The upcoming gradua· Riverview Garden Club preceding its
lion of Greta Riffle, who has received last meeting.
several scholarships fium the DofA
On the tour were Beny Boggs,
was noted. She is completing law Delores Frank, · Marilyn Hannum,
school this month. The anniversary of Mary Alice Bise. Ruth Anne Balder·
John and Mary Rose was also son, and Frances Reed. At the. green·
announced.
house members viewed a wide variety
Erma Oeland thanked the members of flowers, vegetables and herbs .and
for their participation at the rally. Law:a each one received a package of seeds
Nice, councilor, presided at the meeting and infonnation on planting and caring
which opened in tituali~tic fonn includ- for plants. After the tour, they went to
ing pledged to the nags, prayer, scrip- the home of Mrs. Frank for a meeting. . HELPING OTHERS - The Meigs High School Nursing Alllltlnt
ture and singing of the National
Steve Bcha, executive director of claaa recently vialted Children's Hoapibllln Columbua. While there
Anthem.
Carleton School/Meigs Industries, and they pre1811tad a collection of pop tlbl to the R-Id McDonltld
The 93rd binhday of Ethel Orr wa.&lt; Jared Spenc'Cr. a teacher a1 Carleton, Houae. The tabs will be redeemed and the ~ · uaed to provide
noted. During a Mother's Day program presented information on the 1.8 mill support for familiee of children ccinfinad to Children'a Hoapltal. PicMarcia Keller was recognized as the levy which was on the May 5 ballot. A tured with the Ronald McDonald Houae administrator, center top
oldest mother, and Julic Curtis a.• the film was shown on the program and the era students, left to rig'ht, bottom, Save Cline, Jennifer Husk,
Chrlatlna Neece and Tish Metheny; second r-, Sara Craig, Stefani
youngest mother. Readings included club endorsed the issue.
Bearha and Brandle Eliott, and third row, Andy Vance, Ginger Darst,
"Special Mom" by Charlotte Granr. · · ~':or roll call members named their Chad
Folmer, and Carissa·Ash.
"Mother" by Curtis; ''Mother's Day" favorite &gt;igns of spring. Devotions
by Erma ClclaDd, ..The Love of a were hy Gladys Thomas wl]o read
Mother" by Goldie Frederi~k. and '11toughts f1f Spring•· and "Bright
"Mother's Cooking"·by E.&lt;ther Smith.
Tomot]'Ows." It wa.• noted that the tm.&lt;h
At an earlier meeting announce- · pickup was handled by Nola Young.
The Community Calendar is pub- hall.
ment of state session to be held Aug. Marilyn Hannum, Frances Reed,
lished
as a free service to non-profit
16-19 in Cincinnati ·whs made in a let· Delores Frank. Maxine Whitehead. '
BEDFORD
Bedford Town··
ter from Helen Taylor. secretary. Ruth Ann Balderson. and Roy ·Han· groups wishing 10 announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is ship Trustees, 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Report.&lt; on the health of several mcm· num.
bers wa.&lt; given. It was noted that · Buffet style refreshments were . not designed to promote sales or town hall.
Dorothy Mycn; had eye surgery. that served by the hostesses. Mrs. Frank and fund raisers of any type. Items arc
POMEROY
Meigs Cnunly
Mary Rose broke a bone in her hand.. Mrs. Hannum to those named and Ella rrinted as space permits and cannnl
and that Goldie Frederick is nut of the Osborne and Nancy Wachter: Mrs. be guaranteed tn run a specific num, Health Department. free immuniza·
tion clinic, Tuesday, 9to II a.m. and
hospital. Also reponed wa.&lt; the death nf Rccd received the door pnze. and each ber or days.
I to 3 p.m, Meigs Multipurpose
,Etta Will's husbdnd, Harold. .
members received a decorative magnet
TUESDAY
Center, Pomeroy. To be accompa·
· Doris Grueser and Deloris Wolfe ll)adc by Mrs. Hannum.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers nied by parent/legal guardian, to
ihankcd members for kindncs.&lt;es at the
Plains Regional Sewer District take immuni7.ation record.
·
ilcath.&lt; of their father and liuher-in-law.
board.
special
session,
Tuesday.
7
The llarmonville Sripio Alumni
Readings included "You Know ll's
POMEROY - Mass at 7 p.m.
Going to be a Bad Day. When ....... hy A.&lt;SOCiation will meet May 23 for its p.m., Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Erma Cleland. and "A Letter from ann4al banquet and dance. The Alvin Office to consult with legal counsel will precede the May Gathering or
Cousin Mother to Cousin Son" by Shutes Band will provide music for and discuss future project deveiOJI' the Catholic Women's Club. Tucs·
day.
round and square dancing. Dinner and mcnt.
Velma White.
Refreshments · were served · by dance is SIO, the dance only $4. Dinner
CHESTER - Meigs County THURSDAY
E.&lt;ther Smith. Eli1.abeth Hayes. and will be served at6:JO p.m. For reservaCoalition, Tu.csday.
·Conservation
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
tions.
alumni
arc
a.&lt;ked
10
contact
Ruth Smith.
6:30p.m.
Chester
Bowhuntcrs
Club.
Rachacl Lefebre. 742-3099. or Harold
· Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Soruo··
discuss ' upcoming · fund raisers to ity. Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Epis·
Graham. 7420-3033 by May 20.
combat proposed anti-hunlirig ballot copal Parish House.
Club members n.:IJan&amp;e lhinp
to
.
grow

Meigs County's

Send questions to Ann Landers, ere:
ators ·Syndicate. 5777 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif,

Community Calendar

•

Beat of the Bend column, Page 7
Local softball, baseball scores Page 5
Atlanta drops Reds 5-1 , Page 6

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low: SO ·

Where's O.J.?
. Not in his TV movie

Society Scrapbook
Banquet held at Bradbury
Chun:h
·
Bradbury Church of Christ held iiS
annual mother-daughter banquet
recently a! the church.
. The dinner was cooked and served
by the men·of the church at tables dec·
or:~ted with seasonal flowers: P1occ set·
tings were fan replica.&lt; made hy the
women of the church
A message ·in song wa&lt; given by
Jennifer Hicks of Tuppers Plains.

lions of dollars every year. A warn·
ing in your column could save many
an aspiring writer from learning a
cruel and expensiye lesson. ..
A.C.C., Pro Writer in Maryland
Dear Pro: Thank you for an
extremely valuable letter. You have
sa\'cd heaven-knows-how-many
dollars for countless would-be
authors who are easy prey for tile
sharks you've described, not to men·
tion the heanache and disappoint·
ment. Bless you.
Dear Ann Landers: You asked
for comments about overworked and
weary residents and interns. You
stirred up the memory of an incident
many years ago, when I was an
intern at a hospital in New York.
After being on duty for 48 hours.

Sports

May 13,1998

Tomorrow: Sunny
H.lgh: 80; Low.:SO

Dogs ca-n teach us im~portant lessons - if we would just learn
Things You Can Learn From Your sio nal writers organization, and late, Iars to see their work in print. Sad to
ly, we have seen a proliferation of say, they receive a few copies of
Dog
Ann
I. When your loved one comes con artists who promise to make poorly made books, or nothing at all.
best sellers out of aspiring authors. for their money.
home, run to greet him.
Landers
l\HJ . l..OJ AnJclcl Times ·
Getting published i; hard enough
2. Eat with gusto.
The same thi.ng goes for "literary
SyiMhc::aw: an.J Crc•l•lrli
without
these
sharks
cruising
the
agents" who advertise for clients,
3. When i!'s hot, drink lots of
SyftdtUIC.
water.
waters.
especially those who troll the Inter·
The facts are as follows: Any net looking for new writers to scam.
4. Take naps.
,
Dear Ann Landers: I heard
publisher who asks a writer to bear These "agents" charge "reading
S. Don't bite, just growl.
something on the radio this morning
some or all of the cost of publishing fees," along with fees for photo·
6. Give uncondttionallove. ·
and jotted it down . I don't know
7. Stay close 10 your loved one in and marketing a book cannot be copying, promotion, travel expenses
who the author is, but I'm sure any- times of distress.
considered a real publisher.
.. anything they can dream up to bilk
one who has ever owned a dog will
Real publishers pay writers for authors out of money. Would-be
&amp;. When you want something
relate to it. I hope to see it in your 'badly, dig for it.
their books, not the other wav writers also should be aware that
column ... Berkeley, Ill ., Reader
around.
Any publisher that actively any "agent" who pushes.an "editing
Dear Ann Landers: After fol·
Dear Berkdey: There's a good lowing your columns about assorted advertises for writers to submit man· service" or ... book doctor" is proba·
bit of wisdom in those lines, and I frauds and rip-offs. I would like to uscripts should be viewed with bly receiving a nice kickback from
appreciate your sending it on. I caution would-be writers about eJC.Lreme wariness. Naive writers those same editors or book doctors.
would like to give credit to the scam "agents" and " publishers.'·
have been.known to pay these fraud·
Scam artists are ripPtwg off inex·
author, however. Who arc you?
.
ulcnt
·'publishers"
thousands
of
dol·
I am an officer in a large profcs·
.periepced authors to the tunc of mil·
Please let me know. Here it is:

Weather

1.7

Thanks Southern Local Building Committee ·
.
The Bond lsaue for Southern Local School District waa a
controveral-.1 Issue for many years..I think There were niany
f~ctors which led to Its. final approval. First, we had a great
campaign committee. There were several lndlvlduala who
came to the Tueaday meetlnga and helped devise the
Information brochures. The committee kept us aware of the
queatlons the public waa aaklng, ao that we could send out
needed Information. ~any went door to door to hand out
Information. The local Churchea and businesses got Involved.
There were also aome great letters written to the 'editor about
the luue. The moat Important effortl were made at the polla
on Juesday, May 5. Every per.,on who voted for the Bond
luue made a difference.
· '
Thanka to all who were on the team~· Now let'a get on wHh
the bualneaa of making Southern Local the beat lt'l ever
been Ill
Brian Harkneu

P.O. Box457
Racine, OH 45771
(

'
'

Sentinel

C*'"'•r

7

n·illcds

IHH4

cmnn

1$

&amp;!Hmi*

2

Log!
Sporta
Wgthcr

J

+5-6
J

Lotteries
&lt;ugo
l'ld; 3: 04,: """'tl: S9~
~5:

1·3+16-21

W.VA.

. . , 3: 6-).5; DlilJ 4: 3-M-3

848-2741 "
·f

Good Afternoon

0 ltlll OliO&gt; Vollty PIIMJIH.. t'o.

•

DIRECTOR RECOGNIZED • . .lp

c-ty E-..lc Devel-

opment dlteciOr Ron McDidt, rlghl,- NCCiflllad Tu1111ay durIng the ......., monthly lunctt.cM ..-Jng alltte Melge County
ChambarofCO!nmelct br Gina Pelagi'liiO Pl-,dltecttw al . .
Unlvenlty Gl Rio G1•1de Illig~ Centlr. She Jill 1nnlad McDecllt
with a ehltt In Neog~~ltlon Gl hla wwllln Mtabllllllng tile C81olltW.

Community Association.discusses improvement projects
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SanllniiNe•• Sllllf

Villap beautifiClllion piOjectlllld
llpe(ial JIIVItams and activities wae
planned 11 Tuesday's meeting of the
Midcllepoft Community Auocillion
held in the c:onfetence room of Peo. ple5 Bank.
Mary Wise reported lhat Ann
Bonner, urban forester with the
Department of Natural R - .
Wall in town. rccenrly to look • the
trees whicllline Nonh Second Sawc.
It was her rccommenclldon.
Xa!tding 10 Wise, that the am be
removed becaose they have been

"bulthered 10 IJedly over the yean. •
She .ako said thai some ill't now
beJinnifll to die.
W'tse said Bonner also rccom·
mended thllonte die tftes have been
removed, IR!G lllould not be
pluled for. more thM 1 yar. Slle recotmnended apeciftc: ltindl of trees for
the - piMKinp. Witte IIOied.
While in Middl eporl. Bollner llso
viewed the rivedlltlk antlm.de rec·
tru plantin&amp;•
ommeadltions

them will be carried out by volunteers. There arc 37 aitcs to be planied -plus the beds al Diles Park. and
gardens around the Rio Grande
br.lndl buildina on Mill Slreet.
Mayor Dewey Hortiln said that
village workers would remove lhe
bricks from around the trees and
"'"'' in top soil ror the flower beds.
W'IIC reported that some plants have
been donated and tbe Community
AuoNtion set up $300 for the pur·
ct.. of lldditionalllowers. ''
Mei'dlants will be requested. to
It - decided that the trees will
remaili in plalle until fall•llftd !hat .weed and wllel' the plants in front of
pl•s for puttlnJ flowen- IIIOUnd their busines!ICS.

.__

ror

"report was given on the aix·mile
The front pordilenlrance decoral·
ina contest will be Judaed in July. it yellow fllg yard sale and another one
was reponed. Sheets of the contest was planned for theJirst weekend in
rules will be prepared by Myron OctcJber. It was noted that there were
Duffield, president, and PrW will be 7' puticipants in the recent yard sale.
awarded to the winners.
Gina Pines of Rio GnJ)de Uni·
versity,
Middleport Bruch. reported
It wa.• IIOied lhil ne~t week the
orange and lilack Raas will go up for "a run agenda rOc- the summer" not·
ins doll ~ill computer courses
Alumni week. ,
A celebration of Aag Day in June may be olfeml this summer and a
was diiiCII5.'!ed a.• wa.• the July 4 activ· computer lab will be in plalle by the
ities in the villap. Bob Giii'IIOI't i• end of 111111mer. She uid 8 COIIiliiU·
helding up the July 4 ·parlde com· . nil)' opea house will be held in liter.
mittee. Wise n:ported thai planning and spob of lailltive p!Ms for a
for the program is underway. Food "kids college", a wtek-long. half-a.
day event.
booths will be i~ opernt!on.

•

•

�'

Commentary

•

..

Wednesday, May 13, 1998

'

•'

'Esta!Jfulid in 1948

\111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 ·Fax m-2157

A Gannett. Co. Newspaper
.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Qenerel Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

Budget surplus poses
tough decisions for GOP

Thursday, May 14

Washir:~gton
By Jack Anderlon
and Jan Moller
Washington is a (own full of numbing nicknames, asinine ljCil)llyms, and
codenames designed ui obscure and
obfuscale. The capital is well-peopled
wilh nattering nabobs of nomenclature.
Every agency of government has its
own vel'\i'lll of bureaucmcy-speak -perllaps the best-known is lhe Secret
Service, which has assigned codenames to every presiden~ candidale
and family member lhey protect.
In many cases, !here's little rhyme
or reason to lhe codenames. Who can
reckon how lhe following presidents
and first ladies got their codenames:
Lyndon "Volunteer" and Lady Bird
"Victoria" Johnson; Richard "Searchlight" and Pat "Starlight" Ni&lt;on; or
Gerald "Pass Key" and Betty
"Pinafore" Ford.
By the mid-1970s,lhe names began
to make a little more sense. Jimmy
Carter was culled "Dusher" during the
camprugn. suggesting his come-frombehind chances ut winning. After
becoming president, he was "Deacon,"
uptly suited to the Buptist Sunday
School teacher. (Rosalyn was
"Duchess" during lhe campaign, and

'' Dancer" as
ftrst lady; Amy

Caner
was
"Dynamo.")
Ronald
Reagan was
"Rawhide,"
which called to
mind his Cali·
fornia ranch,
acting career and
Moiler &amp;
American
Anderson
heaniness.
Nancy WaS rererred to as "Rlunbow ..
when ~~Service officers whispered
her name into their lapel mikes. That
was probably lhe nicest name anybody
in lhe White House crowd called her.
George Bush was "Timber Wolf,"
while Barbara, quite appropriately, was
"Tranquility." Piesident Clinton was
"Eagle" during the campaign, and now
is "Elvis." College-student Chelsea is
.. Energy."
Vice President AI Gore. meanwhile,
has often joked lhat he's so boring that
his Secret Service code name is "AI
Gore." In fact, ihe Secret Service calls
him "Sundance," while wife Tipper
goes by "Skylark:" The couple's eldest
daughter, Karenna, hattd lhe name

CfJJ.

D?

P.rotect .the privacy
.

.

Norma F. Riggs

"Smurfene," so lhey granled her a new. Dale Van Aua for ·reasons unknown.
Our -source was almost apologetic
unknown moniker.
aboul
how ridiculous and voluminous
But lhe king of code-speak is, and
always has been, !he military. They've the Pentagon's acronyms sometimes
But lhen he added: •·or course,
loved this form or shorthand ever since
World War II acronyms like Gl (Gov· Russia has many more' possibilities
emment Issue) and snafu (Situation lhan 'we do. Their alphabet has 48 letNonnal All Fowled Up) . ~arne in ters; we only have 26." I
Under lhe Pentagon's sysiem, the
vogue.
Some favorites of ours include various military commands •get differNEACP (pronounced "kneecap"), ent blocks of letters fr'om which they or
refetring to lhe National Emergency !heir computers can choose for twoAirborne Command
(or lhe presi- . word operational names. Wh&lt;:n the mildent's doomsday plane); MULE for itary was in Saudi Ambia fer Desen
Modular Univer&gt;al Laser Equipment; Storm, lhey were allowed n first word
SOW for Stand-Off Weupon; MAD- . beginning with either lm, In, lo, lp, lq,
MAN for Magnetic Anomaly Detector or Jr. So they chose." Imminent ThunContaCt; and WARS for-- what else? - der" for one or their pre-war exercises.
• Worldwide Ammunition Reporting President Bush later hroke military tradition by. dubbing the buildup as
System.
Nolhin~ ·s as easy a' ABC at lhe
"Desert Shield" and lhc war ;p; ;·nesen
Penlal!on - 'which can be either Atom- Stonn."
ic, Biological and Chemical; American,
Sometimes. 'L' in the 1989 inva.,ion
British and Canadian; Argentina, Brazil of Panama and the 1983 in~a.,ion of
and O!ile; or "Advanced Blade Con- Grenada, the computer randomly
cept." No wonder lhe annual dictionary coughs QUI two inilials for human
of military acronymic definitions is beings to usc. So when "JC'' popped
more lhan 40Q pages long.
out for lhe ,Pmiam3J1ian ,OJlCrati\)n. they
What brint.; some of lhis to mind is called it Operation "Just Cause." The
a secret list of 2,000 Air Foree code computer lhrew out a stumper for
names that waS
"UF. " But the Pentagon
.. leaked to our associate · Grenada:
whizzes qui&lt;;kly came up with Operation "Urgent Fury.:•
.
So what abouttlicAir Fon:c list'' We
don 't really want to bore you with that
hush-hush stulT. The real sccref of these
classified program cQdcnamcs· 'is the
very lock
imaginali&lt;m witfl '• which
the Air Furcc deployed' them.
Do you think it wa." tough li1r them
to give names hcginning with "Peace"
for military sales to allies'' Not on your
life. It takes no imaginative stretch to
guess thut "Peoce Amazon" is a mi,itary support program for Brazil.
In a similar vein. "Comfy Ahode"1s
a program involving "Modcmi7.ation
of Operational Fadlitics,'' which prob. ably means gu..,ying up the officers'
quarters. Then !here are presumptuous
names like "Ritzy Pix" for lhe . Air
Force's Film Clip Progr.ini; Aitd "Constant Fish" tor an ''aerial sea-water
Sampling" program.
All in all, that's a loj.of nicknames
10.. President Clinton, er, Elvis, t!l get a
handle on as commander-in-chief.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature Syn·
dicate, Inc.

I

ciJI··

•

~ ... &gt;
0 ..... ""HfA. '""·

"let's rake a page out of Europa's book and do a

MONETARY UNION.•

:Today
.l·n .hI. sto.·ry
I
.

the
Clinton
administration
patie;,ce
wilh the
slow pace of lost
the .
Middle East peace talks - ne!otia.
.
tions that it believes arc in dan!cr of
•
By The Aaaoc:lated Press
collapsing 'because or Israeli intran. Today isWednesday. May 13. the 133rd day of 1998. There are_232 days leftsi,gence.
· in the year.
.
•
AI queslion is 'the amount of
· Today's Highlight in History:
·
· occupied land lsniCI will give the
: On May 13, 1981. Pope Joh.ri Paul II was shot and seriously w&lt;Jllnded,in St. Palestinians in this phase of the
: p~·s Square by Turk1sh assa1lant Mehmel Ah Agca.
slow-moving peace talks. Currently.
• 0\ Ibis date:
·
Palestinians control just 3 percent or
J In 1607, the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was settled.
the West Bank lind; Netanyahu says
rn 1~. the United Stales declared th~t astate or war already existed against turning over anochcr 13-percent to
Me~ico.
.
·
·
Vasser Anfal's Palestinian Authority
·
rn 1914, boxing champion Joe Louis was born in Lafayette, Ala.
endan,cr IJrael's security.
·
.
·
Netany&amp;hu's aversion to giving

I

I

will

•

Arafat land ·is
rooted in his
vow to prevent
creation of a
Palestinian state
- ~~~outcome
poll~ters
say
most Jews in
the
· United
States and Israel
believe
inevitable. The
Wlclthllll
Israeli
prime
minister's fear of such a tum of
events was stoked by a remark
Hillary Clinton made last week. ·
"The territory thai the Palestinians currently inhabit and whatever
additional territory they will obtain
through the peace negotiations
should be considered and evolve into
a functioning modem state." she told
a group of Arab and Israeli teenagers.
Her words drew an immediate
disclaimer frpm White House officials, and a strong rejoinder from
Netanyahu. "Our position on Ibis is ··
w.cll known," he said after the first
lady's remarks.
But that hardly will be the last
word on this issue.
· Any lasting peace settlement in

Norma F. Riggs. 95, Mason. W.Va., died on Sunday, May 10, 1998 at
Rocksprings ~ehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
She was a cook at the Mason Elementary School.
She was born on July 24, 1902 in Clifton, W.Va., daughter of the late
Robert A. and Cora H. Henry Manine.
·
Surviving are her son-in-law. Paul R. Anderson, Mas~n. W.Va.; three
grandchilcjren, five greal grandchildren and eight great-great grandchildren
and several nieces.and nephews.
Funeral services will be held on. Thursday at I p.m. at· the Fogelsong
F~neral Home in Mason, W.Va .. with Rev. John Hart officiating. Burial will
rollow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at lhe funeral home on Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

=·

• IColumbus las• I

.,

¥

of

Connie K. Scholderer

{1 '

Connie K. Scholderer. 51. Middleport. died on Tuesday, May 12. 1998
at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. She was born on April21, 1947
in Gallipolis, daughter of lhe late Carl and Eva Criner Moodispaugh.
Sutyiving are a daughler and,son-in-law, Tracy and Hobert Cundiff, Middlepon; two sons and daugters-iil-law, Shannon ilnd Tangie Scholderer, Mid-dleport. and Carl and 1ina Moodispaugh. Middlepon; and nve grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Gary ·
Scheiderer.
Services will be held on Friday, May 15, 1998 at I p.m. at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home, with Pastor Les Hayman officiating.
Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m.

W.VA.

~Today's

weather forecast

· By The Aaaoclated Preaa .
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Partly sunny and wanner.
. A chance of shower or lhunderstorm
·during the late afternoon or evening.
Highs around 80. Soutll wind 5 to 10

mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
· Tonight...Panly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 50s. Light and variable wind.
Thursdliy... Mostly sunny and
warm. Highs in the )llid 80s. ·

--Meigs EMS logs 12·· calls
.

~

'

er, VMH, Middleport squad assisled;
10: 13 p:m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Mary Offutt, VMH.
POMEROY
2:44 p.m., Ea,st Main Street. Sam
Williams, VMH.
RACINE .
I:47 p.m.• volunteer fire department and squad to Fifth and Main
streets, motor-vehicle accident, Elizabeth Salser, George Sellers and K-elly Hill, VMH, Central Dispatch and
Syracuse squads assisled.

RUTLAND

7:39 a.m., State Farm Road,
Shawn Hoslettet, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
5:42 p.m.; Happy Hollow Road,
Brian Priddy, HMC;
8:25 ·p.m., Martin Avenue, Gar}
Cremeans, treated at the scene,

tions Curp. (not to pick tin telephone .
companies 1. which agreed Ialii monlh
to send SIOO checks tu nellrlt 13,0QO
Vermont residents tn settle a complaint' t~at the lung-distance · carrier
performed credit checks on them
without their knowledge or' penni,._
si&lt;m. Of "'ursc. MCI xkoowledged
no wmngdi•ing.
Consumers know that they have to
volunteer certain pel'lionul inl&lt;•nnation
in exchange

l~lr

ccnain SCijVkcs and

privileges.
But because they . arc required to
tmtkc such ll tmde-uH' -- a proverbial
deal with the devil -- doesn't mean ····
that the company nr aguncy that
acquires this information ha' a right tO""
usc it fur whatever purp&lt;iscs they sec
fit. whether the consumer likes il or
not.
Stronger laws need to he pas.'&lt;Cd at
both the federal and state level that
raise the penalty for . misuse, or consumer infom~atioh, whether intentional or not.
WhCn snmc company gets 'slapped
with a multimillion-dollar ftne for
trompling upon consume..S' privacy
rights, that will send a ro.'ounding
message to other companies that traf·lic in consunq information, ,.
Joseph Perkins is a ~olumnist for
~ San Diego Unioo-Tribune.

the Midd~ East must have at least
tw'l basic e.lcmcnts: a strong security
guarantee for the Israeli people, and
·.n acknowlcdgmenl of the .right of
Paleslinians to creale a natipn of
their own. Thc.two go together like a
hand and glove.
Israel' cannot be c&lt;pected to tum
over !urger chunks of the occupied
territory without assurances lhat in
doing so i,t is'·'not digging iL• own
grave. And the Palestinians cannot
he c•pected to accept a peace deul
that would relegate the land they
inhahit to colonial status.
Ldt to their device., neither side
SI.'Cms willing to give enough ground
to cause peace to hrcak out in a
region of the world that has drifted
back and forth between war and
ncur-war for SO years. Nothing short
of the kind of heavy-handed American intervention thai the administration tried last week is likely to produce. meaningful result.
The United States has a right to
prod Israel.
' The Jewish state is the biggest
recipient of this nation's fon;ign aid
dql9. Having ended welfare at home,
we need to begin 10 pare it back
abroad. That can't happen until a
111$\ing peace agreement is s!n~ek in

•

the Middle East.
As Israel'~ largest ber.·!factor, the ·
Unilod States ha' Cllqlcd a say in
how the long-runnin~ Middle East
conOict is settled. As lh~ only superpower. it has an obligat1on to _ensure
thai lhe deal· it ullimately brokers is
enforced,
What Hillary Clinton said about·a
Palestinian state may not be her hu1·
hand's position at the mo}llCnt. but It
is un incscupablc reality. 'l1te sooner
the state of Israel accepts Ibis truth,
the closer it will he to a permanc~t
;
peace.
..
. . , 1
The Israelis 'lfC a pf'llud ~oplc ~
and haV. every right to~ .~. They
have survived lhc Holocaqst and tile
indifference of many nations lo tile
savagery they suffered it\ Nazi Germany and elsewhere. Now they must
find the strength to move' beyon~
their fears.
"Opportunities do not las1 forever," PresidcnfCiinton said about tltC
stalemated peace talks la~t week du~­
ing a speech to a group of Ara~
Americans. "They have · to be
seized."
:
What worries him is that the government of Benjamin Nctanya!Ju.wiil
let peace slip i{s grasp.
·
.

i

Theft of guns reported
·Jim Runyon, · Parkinson Road, · Middleport, reported Tuesday
evening that two 12-gauge Remington shotguns and two shotgun bar- ·
.rels were stolen from his ·home during lhe day. No other items were ·
reported missing. ·
.
·
.
In addition, Billy Goble Jr.. Pomeroy, reported Tuesday .that a neighboring vacant house had been broken ·in!O. A small window near the
. door knob wa~ broken ouL allowing entry into the house. It is unknown
if any items were stolen.
•
Also, Paut'Raybum, Stoutsville, reported Monday that 15 wooden
posts and two plastic tra.~h cans were stolen from his propeny off Ross
Road near Portland.
·

Syracuse pool mtmaget mimed

.

Brenda Neu~ling, Pomeroy, wa&lt;i hired a~ manager of London Pool
in Syracuse. She will be at the pool beginning Saturday,.JO a.m. 'o 4
p.m. for people wanting 10 purchase pool passes. She will be there dai.ly until the pool opens. Pool passes are $25 per person~ith the sec·
ond pass at half price for total of $37.50 through Memorial Day.

UP UP AND AWAY - Boys and girls at Pomeroy Elementary
School were treatecl to a ride In a leathered hot air balloon at Bob
Roberts Field on Tuesday. The rides were given to the studente
belled on their academic achievement and conduct for the school .
year, end the weather waa perfect.

Meigs announcements ·

A Reedsville woman was cited on two charges by the Gollia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol rollowing a one-car accident Tuesday on Stale Route 681.
·
·
.
Troopers said Ani.ta M. Thomu, 22, 54459 Curtis Hollow Road,
was westbound in Olive Township al6:30 a.m. when the-car she drove
went off tlie right side of the road and struck a renee.
The car then continued on into an open field, ac~ording to the
report. .
.
The car was moderately damaged, and Tho!Jla• was cited for fail•
ure.to control and fictitious lags.
from pap 1

Sign up_deadline announced
Hu,;day is th~ .final day to sign
up for the multi 11om rose cost-share'
program through the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District. Maximum cost-share is $100 per acre and
treatment must be completed by July
I 5. Residents may stop by the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District
Office, 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy,
45769. No phone applications will be
taken.

Bosworth Council 46
Bosworth Council 46 will hold a
special meeting Friday. 7:30 p.m. at
1he Middl~pott Masonic Lodge with
work in the Super Excellent Ma~ ler
Degree. ·
Cal\'er Day
Eighl!l Graders in Meigs County
· will attend career day activities at
Meigs Middleport School on
Wednesday. Approximately 30 career
representatives including those in
arts and communication, business,

industrial .and engineering work,
environmental and agricultural systems. health services and human
resources will 'attend, with a focus on
gender ,equity oppo,nunities in the
wort place. The program will begin
al9 a.m. ·
Serllces set

Patrol issues citations

Rutland reviews... Continued

'

checkout clerk. oncling a crcdit,card
number too dcponment store sales
auendant. or volunteering my lhumb
print to a motor vehicles department
functionary.
Well, it's not llc!cause I'm in the
government's witm's.' protection program,.. anything like that. And it's not
because I jealously guard my privacy
(otherwise I wwld not self-disclose inthis columnl.
·,
·
It's because itls almost certain that
the infonnation I provide will. at some
point or anothcr, J'c used for purp&lt;Jscs
other than what i was led to believe.
other than 'what! consented to.
And· there ~(., numerous recent
examples of tht;.lc abuses of,privacy.
F11r instance, GTE Corp. recently
published a diroctory -- tai'lleted to
tclcmarlctcl'li and mail solicitors -disclosing the ~nlistcd telephone numbcrsandaddresscsof50,000ofitsLus
Angeles cust&lt;lfflcrs.
The L'Otnpal!y claims that the dircctory was puiJlished ''mistakenly,"
which is liulc,kolace to its clients who
acquired unli~tcd rJtiinc numbers and
addresses not merely to avoid telcmarkctcrs and mail solicitors, but also to
protect them.:Ctvcs and their families
from those wlio mean '"do them bodily harm.
Then there's MCI Cot)lmunica-

---Local bri·e fs-.--...

1

of alf. CQnSUil)ers'

Separate Palestinian · st~~e an inevitability
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
GMnett Newa S~rvlce
WASHINGTOJ'&lt; - Even before
Hillary Clinton·;, diplomalic gaffe
last week, B~niamin Netanyahu
hardly could contain his anger wilh
the administration.
"We don't accept dictates," the
Israeli prime minister said after U.S.
officials tried to pressure him into
_ agreeing to a 13 percent withdrawal
from the West Ban~ territory.
"We're a sovereign country," he
said. "We must decide alone what is
imponant ror our future." .
Netanyahu's "go-it-alone" decla' ration came during a week in which

conditions und h.

nicknames and .acronyms

ByALANFRAM
Associattd Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Through two decades of fighting for deficit reduction,
Republicans never found it easy agreeing how to do ,it. With fat budget surpluses emerging this election year, they still are tussli ng over their course.
Piroucuing on the year's top budget issue, House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
R-Ga., said last week that expected surpluses now look so · big that they
should be used half for strengthening Social Security and half for tax cuts•
1101 completely on Social Security as he had said before.
. Many conservatives loved hi s shift because using the surplus for tax
reductions they will propose this year could make the cuts tens of billions of
dollars bigger.
Others, led by House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio
'-- like Gingrich a 2000 GOP presidential hopeful - want tax cuts paid for
by cutting federal spending.
They want the surplus used to shore up Social Security and to trim the $5.5
trillion national debt, and worry that using it for tax cuts will remove pressure
for shrinking government, one of their big goals.
Still others, including Senate Budget Committee Chainnan Pete Domenici, R-N.M., and moderate Rep. Michael Castle, R-Del., say some additional
spcnding cuts are fine, but they have liule taste for deep reductions.
· ·They say ever-bigger surpluses - now estimated by the Congressional
Budget Office at up to $63 billion this year - make it unnecessary for
Republicans to embark on a fresh round of slashing fed~ral programs.
' "We're a coalition," said conservative Rep: David Mcintosh, R-Ind.
' 'When we balanced lhe budget, people for whom that was a top item had to
rethink their priorities. This is a very mature political argument that takes
time."
But that argument also describes a pany lhat is di•dded over legislative
'goals ilnd the political strategy it should use to retain ir..; House majority in the
.November congressional elections.
A new internal Republican Nationa! Committee ;.oil seemed to provide
ammunition for Republicans who say the pany's core, conservative voters are
Clepressed and should be motivated by a tax-cutting fight with Presidont Clinton and Democrats if the GOP is to hold the House.
' The poll, obtained by The Associated Press, said Republican volers lhink
'lhe country is moving ·in the wrong direction by a 58 percent' 34 percent margin. It also showed public approval of Congress positive by 53 percent to 34
percent - a healthy stamp of approval but I 0 points weaker than in Febru- By JOHPh Perlclna
I bought a new
ary.
"Nomanmightbuyorsell,savche
comfoner and
Those results could signal low Republican turnout for a 1998 election in that had the mark, or the name of lhe
wanted to get
. which there is no presidential race tO.pJIII people td the voting booths. But the beast, or the number of his name."
c&lt;tra matching
same poll also points to tax cuts as the way· to excite GOP voters.
-- Revelation 13: 11
sheets to go
Cutting taxes was listed as the most imponant issue for Congress by 38
I'm not one who readily subscribes
along with it.
percent of Republicans polled. with rebuilding schools finishing second at 28 to apocalyptic prophecies. whether
But the store
:percent.
·
·
.
they uppear in lhe Bible. lhe writings
didn't have any
Just 9 percent said the top issue is ··personal retirement accounts," a Gin- of Nostradamus or The National
more. So I
grich·Kasich plan 10 buttress Social Security hy dividing the budget surplus Enquirer.
a.'kcd the sales
.,mong A'!'ericans so they can make investment~ to supplemen~ their retireBut I must say that thi~ part.icular
attendant if she
ment incomcsr ~
·
~
prophecy. authored hy the· apostle
Perklna··
could call a sister
Yet, S&lt;&gt;cial Sccunty remains an enormously popular prqgram. Public polls John nearly two millennia ago. comes store to sec if it had the sheets, and if
have found that Clintons call c:~rly thi• year to usc the surplus to •trengthcn to mind when I think ahout the unholy so. maybe I could rick them up. No
: :'Sociul Security has ~II hut won {)VCr the nuhlic.
.
.
tradc-()ffs individuals arc forced tu problem, she said -- all we need from
:
Thus. even though Ka•ich •uppnm u•ing part ur the surplus for the per- make on a regular ha.&lt;is tu ·:huy or ynu is a credit-card number.
: &lt;S&lt;mal retirement accounts. he said. " I dnnt want any or that surplus used for sell... to uhtain this or that service or
But why do they need to know any
&lt;tax cut&lt; .... We should not let an nppnnunity get away to truly transform · privilege.
of my credit-card numbers, I a'ked
:;Social Security."
.
.
For instance, at the checkout mysell'. if I am going tu pick up the ·
•
counter of my local supermarket, I am sheets at another store location'/ Stan•
:
EDITOR'S NOTE: Alan Fram reports on budget legislation ror The a.'kcd if I am a member of "the club," dard procedure, I was told.
• 'Associated Press.
which W!JUid entitle me to discounts
Then, there wa' my most recent
•
on my shopping items. To become a drivers license renewal. No pmhlem
! ~~----~-----------------------------, member of the cluh, I merely need to with having my photo taken, "r the
!
.fill out an upplication form providing eye lest, or even having my heij!ht,
"routinc" information (name, address. weight and eye col"r cmhlawncd on
Berry's World
•
phone number, date or birth. Soeial my license.
'
Security number).
But why, I asked myself, did they
But why. I a•k myself, do they demand my thumh print'! It's for my
nccd to know my Social Security own protection. I am informed.
number to cut me a 20-ccnt price
Now some folks may find me a hit
break on a loaf of bread?
paranoid. They may wonder why I am .
•
1 had a similar eKpericnce tbc last .so retil:cnl about disclosing my Social
time I wa.at a major department stnre. Security number to a supermarket

•

'

OHIO Weather

I

AccuWeather0 forecast for

-The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Danvitie Church of Christ will
have services will be held at 7 p.m.
Satt~rday and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
on Sunday. Denve~ Hill of Foster W.
Wa. will be lhe speaker. ·

'Grange meetings set
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
&gt;Grand 878 will hold a fun night and
potluck supper on Saturday with ti),e
potluck supper to begin at 6:30p.m.
followed by making final plans for
the consignment sale to be held at the
grange Mil on May 2. There will alsp
be a work session on Saturday begin·
· ning at 2 p.m. at the Grange hall. All
members ure urged to attend.
Banquet planned
Friday is the final day to purcha.~e
tickets for the Meigs County Grange
banquetto be held on April 24 at7 :15
p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Tickets are $8.50 for
adults and $7.50 for children and ca,n
be purchased from the Meigs County Pomona Grange Master Ziba Midkill or from Subordinate Master.;
Norman Will , Rosulie Story.m
Charles Yost or Pauy Dyer.

Syrac11se water turnoff
Syracuse water will be turned off
from 9 am. to 3 p.m. on SI'Cohd
Street and Wuter for the purpose of
replacing values.
AA and AI-Anon to meet ·
The AA and AI-Anon will meet
Thursday at 7 p.in. at the Sacred
Hean Church on Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy.

lhe existing. firehouse on Larkin to notiry residents in rhe village
what ha.&lt; been accomplished and
Street is freQuently 1100ded.o
. Council took· no action on the what cah be expected in lhe future .
The . t~a~~urer's report was
request,!lut asked the fire department
approved
as follows: Cashbook bal- League t!) meet
to
submit
construction
plans
for
.
The Middleport Child Conservaance $97 ,218.89; gener~l fund,
Connie K. Scheiderer, 51, Middleport, died on TuesClay, May 12, 1998 council's consideration.'
tion
League will meet at 7 p.m.
Council also expressed their inten- $7,307.20; civic center,$2,559.58; Thursday at the Rock Springs
at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. She wa• born otl April21, 1947 ·
tions to discuss the proposal with res- police fund, ($625.14). law enforce- Church. Norrnll Torres will be the
in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Carl and Eva Criner Moodispaugh.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Tracy and Hobert Cundiff, Mid- idents near the proposed conslruclion ment, $487.33, street rund. speaker on Aids and children.
·
$1,426.36; highway, water $3,458.43; .
dleport; lwo sons and daugters-in-law, Shannon and Tangie Scheiderer, Mid- site.
Boyd Ruth, project manager for sewer, $2,934.25; sewer debt; ·Trustees set session
dlepon, and Carl and 1ina Moodispaugh, Middleport; five grandchildren:
Rutland's
FEMA hazard mitigation $1,844.18; FEMA $44,900.07;
Chester Township trustees will
Travis, Tyler and Trevor Cundiff of Middleport, Dylon Ward of Colu(llbus.
replacement,
$20.430.04.
gran!,
updated
council
on
the
project."
meet in regular session. 7 p.m. Tuesand Ciara Scholderer. Middleport.
Council alsli:
day'at the town hall.
Besides her_parent~. she
preceded in death by her husband, Gary noting that the first five proposals for
- Decided to seek price estimates
Scheiderer.
•
· purchase have been made to homefor
disabilit}' insurance for employees
owners.
and
that
environmental
studServices will be held on Friday, May 15, 1998 at I p.m. at the Middlewas
discussed;
port Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home, with Pa~tor Les Hayman orticiatirig. .ies are about to begin ror those homes
- Authorized ·the dert 10 seek
· to be demolished. Elevation surveys
Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery.
·price
estimates for a pager system to
will
begin
soon
on
homes
to
be
purFriends may call atlhe funeral home on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m.
J
be
used
by en-call employees;
cha.o;ed outright through lhe program.
-Approved
the mayor's repon of
It wa.~ announced that the village
will begin issuing a a biannual' com- fines collected in the amount of
munity report, in a ·newslener format. $3.935;
Holzer Med~l Center
(liSPS ZJ.l.,_,
-- Approved the sale, by sealed
AGo-Co.~
Dlscha...es May 12 - Vi~ki
bid,
of a car confiscated in a
Kern, Lois Hammond, Geo!J!e Clark,
PubUahcd every aRc~. Monday thfouah
DUIIFRA suspension case.
Friday, Ill O&gt;ud 51 .. ~roy, 011\o, by die
Mary Divers, Rhoda Knox, Mrs.
Present were ,eounci I members
Olllo \'alley hbtishln&amp; c.mpony/Oanoea Co.
James Stover and son, Mrs. John Far·
.· Sooond c:l111 pDIIUJt p1id at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Judy
Denny, Dick Fetty. Vema Marle~ and son, Virginia Howell, John
MaUer: The Associlted Prca and die: Ohio
tin.
Jay
Dewhurst, Tammy Searles ·
Nt:wsptptr Aslociltion.
·
Vance, Rita Kiser. Sarah Cavins.
........, Send llddras wncdionl to 1'1.-:
·and Martin Andrew, Mayor Jo Ann
Births .- Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
O.ily ScnlinCl. Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio
Eads and Rosemary E.~kew, Clerk.
• 5769.
Bowman. daughter. Gallipolis; Mr.
SVIISCRIPl10N IIA'RS
Also present wa.• police officer Kevin
and Mrs. James Brewer. son, Jack· ., Conter or
Dugan
and aux i1iary officer Mark
. One Wuk.. ..............................J1,00
..
·son.
Ole -·h ....- ....................- .... 11.711
COLUMBUS (APl - Indiana- Bolin.
(Published with pennlssioo)
One 'rw.... -............................. I!IM.OO
Ohio direct liog prioes at selected
SINGU: COPY PRICE
Dlit~ .........................- ............ 35 Ccn&lt;o
bUying points Wednesday as providSubKribcr5 rJOt dcliri.. 10 pi)' the earner Ny
~
liy the u .~ . Depanment of Agriran it in ldvarw:t dirca to·'T'be Dlily Scnlincl on.
culture Market News:
a three, 1ix or 12 month buis. Credit will be
pvc• grricr c.eh week.
Barrow~ and gills: steady to 50
Am
Ele
Power
,,
....................
48\
No aublaiplion by mrlit pcnnillcd In II'CII
Akzo
......................................
103'cell
Is higher; demand good on a mod-,
where horne AITk:r ~~~:rvice il •vtilab14.
hblisher JCICI'¥ts the ript to llljUII n~e~Air~
AmrTech ...............................~
erate run.
ina '1hc IUbscripiMMI period. Sublc:ription 11tc
Ashland 011 ...........................54~
, U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. countl'y
...... may ... i0lplc11C1110d by ........ ""
AT6T ....................., ................11~
61ration of the IUblcripion.
points 42.00-43.50; plants 43.00·
Benk 0118 ....................:........511).
45.00.
Bob EYMI ............ , ..............20~
MAJLSVUCIUPl.ION
U.S. 2-3, 230..260 lbs. 38.00. - Mdp Coolly
~Warrwr ....,............;.......51\
II'OIIghtOf't,.,,,.,
..
,,,.,,,,..,,.,,,,,oa18~
13 - .................,........... J27JO
4L50; 210..230 lbs. 34:00-38.00.
26 _ .. _.........................JS3.12
Cr.np~ort .............................13\
""Sc?ws: steadr.
.
52 - b ..........................J IllS-56
Charm stlpl ........:........ - .......4-,.
u.s.
1-3 300-400 lbs. 24.50~
Holding ...••••••••••••.••••••••.•••43
13 - --Mtlp~
...................... _... .$29.25
26.50; 400-500 lbs. 25.00-27 .QO;
I Mogl.ll ......................84\.
26 ........- ..:.............. .1:16.68
500-600 lbs. 27.00..29.00, few over
O.nMtt ............, ...................eet.
52 - .............- ........ ,... .$109.72 •
600 lbs 29.00-31.00.
Gooclve1r .••~......................... 11~
Kmerf
.....................................
18\.
Boars: over 300 lbs. 16.00..17.50;
Reader Scrv1ces
Kroger .•••.~ ..............,................42
under 300.Ibs. 20.00..25.00.
•
t...a. Er.ct••••••,......................33\
· Eslimlll¢ receipts: 28,000.
. ComcUon Polley
Limited ...................·.......~.........34l'rices from Producers Liveslock
O.r-ooo ............. be
0.k till Filii .....................~ ....27\
Associlllion
ova
·········~·oo••••••oo••otooooo••········..
...,., ...... - - ot (1411 m0.. Vlllty.............................37', • ·Wednesday's trends:
1155. We .......... , _ 1&amp;11111 u..
PI apile .................................30'1.
Hogs ·so· cent~ higher; sows
. . JUlie ......,.• ., ........
,...... Flrl1 ..............................;"•.21
steady; cattle steady.
RockMII ...........................SI\
· Summary ofThesdiy's auctioniat
1Ww1Dif6bi..11'RMwl.;
................~,............ 51\
• 'l1oo . . o ' .11 llfWI!$. o.,ort..
Caldwell, Ealon, Fannerslown, Lan_.,, ,
am
.............................................12\ caster and Wapakoneta:
Sllot111y'a ...............................4'GeMni M 1 t ......_.......- ...... J:D. IIIJ
Hogs:
Star Blrtk •••.••~ ......................~
II~SON,
.Market hog5; 40.00-44.85; light
.23\
WOI'tltlrlgton ........................17"sows 2S.00:29.00; heavy sows 27.00·, W.VA.
.
.
34.00.
Ollw 81n.llreJ1
Stock· reporta Ire the 10:30
·Mew ' ' &amp;.,,.,...,............,.,,...Ell. liM .
.Feeder pigs; )6.00-42.00' head;
a.m.ttuotH provldld by Adveet 36.00 cwt. and down.
Cli I I' o........ - ..........-...........En. 1113
·
of Gllllpolll. .
.
0 r IW .Aa...................... - ....llt. 11•

Three co.....

Continutd rrom page I
Pomeroy, ha.• been active in golf and
ba&lt;ieball, and National Honor Society.
He is a member 9f the yearbook staff
and panicipant in the Southern Academic Banquet.
He will auend Ohio University in
the fall where he will major in engineering.

Connie ·K. Scholderer
\

.

was

The Daily Sentinel Hospital news

Today's

livestock
report

M--

lilt COII'lf I "'''
4:41, 7:4&amp;
ii&amp;i. A 1:li5, 4:11, ni
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00 :

·stocks

Mountain
Ice Cream
Freezers
• Ice Chests
• Water
Coolers

_.,,.. ..... ., ........... .

PICKENS

.""'-... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-•.=: :::

HARDWARE

w..,.,.·................................

***************

•

BIG
•
[ ] Movtes

c.,, '•• """ ''""

1-740·753-3400

M.1f,~m ncr.ID4t

.~he rJig rJend

. eommunity IJand

~:. will· hold a .~oncert
· saturday~lvtay 16th
·
6:30pm
.~:
.4t the ·pomerou·Parklng .
Cot .4mpltheater ~Fj":•

'" case·of high water, concert
~FJ~·wili- be held on Court.Street .

-·-·-

..

'

�•

Sports

The Daily Sentin..!J

•
..

•

Southern beats Crooksville 13-7, wins D-Ill sectional title

Wednesday, May 13, 1998''

...

~·

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Corre1pondent .
The Southern Tornadoes rolled to
a power-packed 13-7 victory overthe
Crooksville Ceramics Monday night
in the Division Ill Southeast Sectional final at Racine.
The win lifted Southern to 20-3
overall, while Crooksville bows out
at 13-5.
Coach Howie Caldwell said, 'This
was an important win for us. We hadsome ·pressure on us. but the girls
played well in the clutch. Crooksville

Wins by L·akers, ·Jazz close Western Conference semis
Tuesday night with an 87-77 victory
at home.
Los Angeles had the le~gue's best
regular-season road record at 28-13
and the Lakenl are 3-2 on the road in
the playoffs.
"We're a great road team," Van
Exel said. "We've got a lot of confidence in ourselves.··
They should have after the way
they h~ndled the Sonics. They missed
four shots in the first quarter'( 15-for19) in taking two leads of 18, were
shooting 74 percent at halftime (23of-31) and didn'tlet Seattle get any
closer than seven points in the fourth
quarter.
The Sonics tried to stop ()'Neal
with double- and triple-teams.
O'Neal, a six-year veteran who is
finally beginning to understand how
to beat NBA defenses. found his open
teammates and they connected for a
franchise playoff record 13 threepointers.
Rick Fox and Eddie Jones each
finished with 17 points, and Van Exel
added 15 off the bench.
For Seattle, Vin Baker had a
career playoff high 28 points and
Payton added 20 on 5-for-16 shooting. The Sonics' backcourt of Payton .
and Hersey Hawkins was a combined
7-for-24.
·
"We thought the Lakers had some
weaknesses," Sonics coach George
Karl said. "But we didn't bring them

How hot are the Lakers 1 In one
word: sizzling.
In t~ e laS! three games against the
By JIM COUR
SEATTLE (AP) - The Los Sanies, a team thar allowed 93 points
Angeles Lakers are so hot they'd like u game during the r~gu l ~r &lt;eason,the
to be playing the Utah Jazz right now Lakers averaged 114 points. shot 56
· percent from the field and 48 percent
instead of Saturday.
" We defin itely can feel it.'' Nick from three-point range.
O'Nealmi.sed 22 regular-season
Van Exel sai d. "We're kind of upset,
games
because of injuries. With 31
beca use we have so many days off.
point ~. nine rebounds. eight blocked
We don't want to relax and let up."
After beating the Seattle Super· shots and four a~ s i st• in the series
Sani es for the fourth straight time. fin ale . he inj ured the Sonics' psyche.
"The key word for him these days
110-95 Tuesday night. the Lakers are
is
dominating."
Lakers coach Del
back in the Western Con ference
fin als for the first time in seven years. Harris said of his 7-foot-1, 315Get ready Utah. Led by Shaqui lle pouhd center. "'The Dominator' may
O' Neal, wh&lt;;fJ&gt;a monster himself. be the new nic kname tHat's tacked
the Lakers ate on a monster playoff onto him ."
Pity the poor Sanies. They had to
roll after winning 22 of their final 25
play
nine times against O'Neal this
regul ar-season games.
sea,on.
As the Lakers' Pacific DiviFirst Portland in four games. Then
,
;on
rivJh.
they're ·going to see a lot
the Sonics in five.
.
"They shot the ball well in th is more of him in the future.
"Thev Hhe Sonics) have to find
series." Seattle's Gary Payton said.
"The guy in the middle {0 ' Neal} someone who can match up with
Shaqu ille O'Neal. " reti ring Seattle
made the big difference."
After losing Game I of the series · swi ngma n Nate McMillan said.
by 1,4. the Lakers beat Seatt le by 24, "Dude is not going an ywhere."
The !..akers will pl ay the Jazz in
16. 12 and 15.
Salt
Lake Cit y in the first two playIn George Karl's 6 1/2 seasons as
coach of the Sonics·. it was the off games. No problem. the Lakers
·
team's first four-game losing streak. snid.
,
During
the
regu
lar season, lhey
The Eastern 'conference semifi ·
beat
Utah
three
of
four.
Ulah. which
nals resu.me tonight with New York
at Indiana and Charlotte at Chicago. wo n the West last season.. beat San
Both home teams hold 3-1 se1:ies Antonio 4-1. wrapping up the series
leads.

NBA playoffs

Ca~dinals,

Homers help

Cubs

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Mark McGwire went deep. Mark
Grace went deep end. And the Atlanta
, Braves went deep ,again.

Scoreboard
Baseball
AL standings
E11sltrh

Pm sburgh ,u H ou ~IO n , ~ - 0.~ p m.

l!' t. f&lt;l,
7

.71H

""

'. 641)

.......... ll
New Yor k ..
Bost{ln ..... . .... ....... ........... .24

.4 W
.4-14

..

Central Oivisiun

.. 20

"

Chicago ..........
Minnt!sol a ....................... .. I~
K un~a~ City ..................... 14
.10
Detroit ...... ,

Western

'

17
20
22
2.1
21

.

••
JO',

:'i l ~

IH
Bal.llmorc ......
............. 17 20
Toront o ...
16 20
Tnmpo Bay ..............

CLEV ELAND...

,.

,

•
'

~ 71(

'01

Tell &gt;~~
An:~he1m ...

......... ,...... 24 -11
.. ......... !? 17
Scallle ........
. ........ 19 l ti
Oakl;'lnd ...·.................. , ...... l.'i 2 1

6-+9
,"i2J.I
~ 14

417

Tuesday's scores

•·
'

'

Tcxns 6. BoJton ;\
Sc:attle 4. ~troll 2
Tllrr&gt;llfo 4. Oltl&lt;lund ·' t 10)
T;uilpa Day 6. CLEVELI\ND ~ (1-l)
N Y Yankee~ ·' · K ;msn~ City 2
Mintk' itll0t.7.Jblt tllltlfC4
(h 1 ~·a~'' Whllc S&lt;ll ~ . Aru tijcl111 :!

Tonight 's games

(lnstol1) 304·343-8686

N~w ~.,I..

.ll lrtJillll&lt;l, 7 p m (TNT )
Cb;trlto ll .: .\, ~ l,p 'fa. '1·.\0 p m. (llo!T)

304-757-2 16
Rt.33

304-312·2926

WO!-Mort 304-372-7134

Hwllli .. Ni,WY

Hun~ Mol

304·

304-733-4966

304-522·2355
35fR US Rt. 00 East

304·736-2355
VIenna

i7 Main Street
304-424&lt;&gt;'1t2·

Tnnighl 1s games
111O n a w;~ , 7 p.m &lt;ESPN 21 .
· D: 1lla ~ .11 Eolmr,111tm1. 11' JO·p.m. (ESPN 2l

1')

-• .

7 01 [.Ill .•

Thursday's games

(' F.VELAND ~Na!!Y ~ - 2 1 :It IJ:.h nlwrc ( Mu ~• ul. t
Jl.m. .
·
Tc 1as (01\V\'r 1--l ) :rt NY. Y:mkl!l'S (lrahu -1·11).

7..\~ p.ni.
C
'"I
e
Scnnlc (Juhu ~ '1 n 1-1 I 111 h t t:ll~t ' " Hit: .• o~
(lkre J 4 1, M : O~ pm.

NL standings
Ea.'lllrn Division

~;!

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

~I~

New Y(Jrk . ...................... I!I l:i
Pluliklc lphi ;J. ............. ·· ..... 19
Mootrenl' ...................... · 11 _)
fl(lri¢1 . .. ........................ 1."\ 1fo

f

Cene.-.1 I:Nvi!ion
HouSiori .................:..............2! 4

1·'

. Ctlica~o .... .. ................. ... 11 17
Mllw:lllkt.'e ............................ l9

St. U111i ~ .

............... ,... ,. ... !~

CINC!NNA11 ................... 1
Pttlstlurj:h .......

17

~~
-

.. ........ l )t 20
WHitm Dlvi!ikln

S;m Dict:&lt;L....
........... 24 1~
S ;tnFr.u~i~n ...................... 21 ~~
u~ An~ks . .............. .......... IR -

- ~~~=..::::::.:::.::: ::::·::::.::::::.'. ~ ~

. ~ .'iJ

J 2N
.'i2K
.a'74

m

..,.,
~ :'i 1

1'

•
•',,
..

m

(l\

.211

16',

,4 16

'

. Tuesday's scflres
Pittsburgh h, Cnlomdn 0

Attan1a ~ . C INC INNATII

Houlton 4. Floridoa 2
Sc. Louii 6. Milwnukri ~ ( I Ot
Chicagtl Cubs 7. Arizonn 6
Philadelf'bil1- ~ . Lps .Angeles :1 •
N.Y. Mets D1 San .DieJa (pp.l -r:~•n).
Monueal at San Francisco (ppY - ral~)

Tonlght"s games
Munnt:tll (Perez 1-3) 111 San Fr,.ncitco (Gardflet

•
T! (r c
fk.ri® p.m.
(Snnc:ha 2· 1) at CINCINNA
om11o

1). A:O.I p.m.

~~ Hou11on (HPmpt on .1•

·

p !'

Atl,.nt.ll (GkiYine 4-2) 111 St LoutS ( e ttte 2·21 ·
ii!IOp.m.
'
c·• I (A
Chi~qo Cutn (Tmc: h~l J- 1) at v1011H 11 sta·
cio J-4). 9~ p.m. . ·
.
. ().• )
Mil~... k~ (Judea 4-1) 111 Am:o1111 (BI11 tr o .

10:0~PNiadtelphiA
~m.
• Anae~
•·- iP:.r k
(Gm:n ;t.l) at t..n•
j . I). 10:~5 p.m.
.,
A hb ,_
· }..Y. Mcti(Miicti J ••• , atSanl&gt;ieJO( 1 J .

2).10:3.1 p.m.

•

~:ames

llanYIIo. wv

MC519 Materi al Collection System

PlftMiiuoV.WV
3417 MUidoCI\1\v&lt;).
304-&lt;122-2355

Amtrk un l . ra~ur
DCJ'RI )J"J TIGLH. S Al'ttvat.:d INF BtJ) Rnh..-n ~
l romr the 1-;., Jay d t ~ai&gt; Jc, l h ~ t OJltinncJ OF K,illlcnt
ll.~rlc'l' 111 TnkUor1f the l n tcrn ;~ t imm l Lcugtu!.
~
MlNN I' SOTA TW INS · Anpllr ~ d OF K~n
H.:mru' !'rt•nr the H t l\n l~•n A ~ tn•~ mki a ~igneJ him
ru 'i:1l1 L1l.c ut Ihi! PCL
'
"&gt;tA -tTLE. MAR INERS : R e~· all t: J INF-dF
l).tYHI ~h:C:1 11 y lrnlll 'i'OJC!llll.l l' f the P&lt;.'l..

• Potw-.or. ott
204 West Second Street
614·QQ2·7070

..

•

614-28fXI073

Polllii ayfh, OH
1403 Ele\lenlh Slreel
. 614-353·8583

.

--

Wc!·Morl614·894-3801
-..ty,OH

phone

t98=P!aza
6t4-947 226

468
·- F'lk:'st:eet
OH
614-374-2355
WOI-Morl614·37i&gt;-9277

40 Loader

.,

51-111 Broo m

a•:at:.,OH

603 Central Center
614-772... 700

614·775-7200

1100 Eaot StOle Street
614·:l'l4-41100

Natlun•J Football Ltqut
CHI CAGO BEARS· Si, ned LB Ricardo Mc Don.'lld ami 0 8 Jtm C:m h~ l u pe .
JA CKSONVILLE JAGU ARS: Promoted Rick
Rctpnsh to dtret'I&lt;V of pltLyer personnel. Fran Folc!,Y
ro d1rector or pro sooutmg. and Rick Mueller to dlrectur a ( colle.8c ~oou ting.

OAKLAND RAIDERS: Sii ned DT Loon ...
·

-.lY..

Oeorea

'

006-3~2365

.

&lt;Attain reotric1ioM Of'Py. 'froe Wlllll.onds kul unhl Sepaooobet 9lh "' 2511! depend;ng
on bilirtg qdo. AI .,;,.,... en local minulor,' toll end rooming oro no1 inclvdod .

..

.
•
l\ I I 'l l

.

·•

I

.,

54 -ln. Front Blade

(740) 446·2412 .

818 1Nrleenlt1 SliM!

'

\\

GALLIPOliS, OHIO

668 PINECREST DRIVE

238-Rocxl
00f&gt;.32S-1038

909~-00f&gt;.32f.321:) I

47 · tn Snow Blower

CBAEL'S·FAR

.t

•
,.

WOI-MOr1 ~2&gt;1-27511

Hockey
Nallnnal HKktJ Lape
, EDMONTON OILE RS: AssiJned tiW
Laraquc to H:u111 hon of tht: AHL..

CELLULARONE

A-,OH

450 Til ler

-It's easy tci get attached to a 400 Series Lawn and Garden Tractor. With over 25 different imple~ents to chOose lrom, the 400 is designed to work on more than just your Lawn or garden.
· ·
With the Ouik·Tatch implement mounting system that lets you get hooked-up in minutes, you can change attachments as fast as you change your mind. No tools needed. Which means the only
problems you'll have wnh a 400 ~eri es Lawn and Garden Tractor is dec iding what to get attached to next. Get hooked-up with the best lawn equipment. See
John Deere dealer today.

82 Consl.mei onve

,

The versatile 40(j Series
liquid-cooled, 20- to 22-hp
engine and 54· or 60-inch mowing deck.

OFA

.lac"-. OM
384 Main Street

!l1awne'e Square

Basketball ·
Naliunal B ~s ktlball AIIOdtlion
SEATILE SUPERSONICS; .E•r:rcised tht'ir optiun Ulll ll l.:(jUi rc J the Ln' A.ngclet Clipj'Jen' 199tl.
J4.&gt;(HIId-roltlld clmft prck to complete the Eri~; Snnw
lnllit

•

Includes Riders, LX Lawn
Tractors, GT, 300, &amp; 400 Series
Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors, F500
Front Mowers, and all
attachments.

USE

Ia&lt; IIIt .._ OH
1502 .EoSiem live.
614-441-0547

ARIZONA ntA MONDBACK~ ReJ;i!llal tiHP
Utyan Curcy lrr&gt;m Tuc~1• 1l of the pCL AntKJUIM.'e\1
RHP lJiirry Manuel t:l earcll wnivc:rs and was acnt
•mLrij!ll! In 1 u.:\on .
HOUSTON 1\STR OS: PIOII.'etl LHP ,Mike Mtl,_.
11 11 n t ~· em the I~ - U;t~ .Jisuhlcd li ~ r. t\!IR'I:"-'Iive to Muy
11! w. ~·\·alli:'d RHI' Mtk ..: Gn.ank ll frnn1 New Orlean~ \•! !he I'CL Sigt1ct..l OF P~c IOCUYigliulo ami·.
n u r - lc a~:-u~ cMu rat t ILOd 11\! t g.n~d him to Nt:w Or·
km 1~ nf til!! PCL
MILW AU KLE BREWE RS. Plactd RHP Child
Full em the 1.'1 -day tluuhled hit. refmatliltlt to May
10 Ptu ch;l!ed the conn acc of RHP Bron•wcll l' ntmt. lrnm Lmn1vtl le of the tnte:rnncionull..clcut.
Tro m ~ fcned RHP Jeff D'Amico from the 1~-d#y IO
lhl;' 00-d.ty d1sablcd lrst.
NEW YORK METS: Acquired C Rick Wilkinl
ftnm thl= S..attk M.uinra for LHP lindJny Qulin.
Tr ao~rc rr ;c llUW Paul Wil son fron1 the 1~ -day h'
Il k: 60-day J ! 3 :'1 ~1t: tl t.s t. retwucrivc IG Murch ~I.
IX.~I~I\iL ihl i.N I · ~ n.n"n Ci1 lher fur 0\~ign~nl .

der.

Po!d lor by,can&lt;l&lt;late

304-369-~

Ra&lt;ehall .

Football

.Charles E. Williams·

.'

Denville Plaza
Solie 6

Tran actions

2~ 11 1:~~

.._li. ~:M p.m.
PimtM&amp;h !Ueber 1-4)

J04.43I&gt;.M92

Na.liunal LtaRUt'

..,.,

Eastern: Durst (LP), Will and
Broderick
Miller: Keller (WP), Pulk and
Bolyard

for service from Cellular One.

-.wv

32 EA&lt;horn Street

.( lltaw;~ .11 Waslllllj:hlll. 7 p.m. (ESPN )

4- 2 1.' 7 : 0.~

Batteries

Absolutely FREE when you sign up

~.wv
17
Slreet
304·752·1144

llu ll ;iln " ' Mtmllcal. 7· ~0 p m fESPNl)
O..:tr"'' ,11 S1 L•mh . 7·1fl p m (E.."OI' N)

}"riday's

Ea.,tem with relief from. Josh Will.
Dennis Keller picked up the win and
Chris Fulk got the save.
lnnlne lmBb
200-032-0=7-7-4
Eastern
131-322-x= 13-10-2
Miller

•

1315 Foorth Ave.

W:,~ l lln~ l nn

I 1.1 111~

731

Wof-Mort Rt.OO Eaol

n o:' ~· I

W II

I

_...,,wv

Ou!T.tl!, 'i. Monlr...•,tl ~ 12 OTl: Buff;t ltl lcnd~ seno:• 1.0
.Lktnur 1, St \..olt l .~ 2 ~:! OT): Dctrml le:lds Ne•

Anahdm(Fiu~ y -1- i )at T M•ln l llf

u 'ted·
Local Minutes
Every Weekend!'

Scofl~.wv

30.'1 Greol ~ Blvd.

· Tm~sday 's scores

? :0~ JI.R\ .

Just as when she started. Mrs.
Lutz still trains with her daughter; Pat
Neubert. who lives hext door in Saxonburg. a rural B~tler County town
(See RUNNER on Page 6)

ss than five minutes and you'll,
be hooked on the 400 Series!

215 Oeleware Ave.

NHL second-round
playoff slate

II

..

304-7 -8511

Hockey

C ity (W:IIk cr Q. () J :H T:Hnl' ·' :ty
(Sjll'in1cr 1-!h flJ~ r m
Oakl:J mi(.Oqm ~ l 0· 1) ;~t Dclrm l 0\i.·:~)!.k' IJ . '\).

the women runners .

To Everyone Who Supported Me. In the.
May 5th Primary 'Your Support and
Influence Was Gready Appreciated

~

· Despite trailing ·0-2, the Miller Erron Aldridge, Joey Dillon, and Wes
Falcons came back to win a 13-7 Crow with singles, while Dustin
game over' the Eastern Eagles Tues- · Huffman had a double, and Josh
day in high school · regular season Broderick two singles.
baseball action.
~teve Durst took the loss for
Eastern hitters were Josh Will,

lonely country roads.
Nineteen years and five mamthons
later, Mrs. Lutz is still leaving her
competition in the dust.
"I figure when I can't run any·
more, I'll. still be walking. " she said.
"I have a lot of men competitors.
They don't like it if I beat them especially the young ones. "
On Saturday, Mrs. Lutz. 69. win
l')ln the Vintage 5K Masters Race in
Pittsburgh. Competitors are age 40
and up. She won her age group last
year and was the second overall of

Spedallhank You ·

'

Soutn~ Center

Cl11l,1gu ,ol Cilllrlmte. TriA {TRA). 1f lli:CI!L~al')'
ln, h:m:t :11 New '1-'m L, TRA !TilAI. if~c ~Jtll'}

KnM5lll

I

166 Konawno Moll
304-925-2778

Friday 's games

IJ, l : l~(l . m.

MHS spring ·
awards banquet
set for Tuesday

Miller beats Eastern base·ball team 13-7·

BLOCKS

201&gt;7Town Cent&lt;!! Mall
304-345-9230

Ut&lt;th lt7 . San Anlumu 77: Ut;th winu crics &lt;l- 1
LA_ Lakm 11 0. Sc:ll tl"" 9~ : L.A. U1kCr~ v.in
M:rl;;ll J . l

BO!IInn/Manint::t. 4·0 ) ;n MmnellniH I Murgnn I ·

Lutz's concern grows
into racing passion

.Alexander top·s M.eigs 5-4 in eight frames
By DAVE HARRIS
Stewart launched a home run over the
Sentinel Corre~pondent
left-center field fence.
Lance Rolston Scored on a wild
Meigs cut into the Alexander lead
pitch in the eighth inning .to give in the bottom of the fourth . Rusty
Alexander a 5-4 win over Meigs in a Stewart doubled · and advanced to
TVC ba.o;eball make-up game Mon- third on an Alexander error. Ryan
day even.ing at Mei~s High_School.
Ramsburg then singli!d in Slewart,
. Alexander with the win is 16-5 .Ramsburg later scored on a passed
overall and 11-3 i~ the :rvc. Meigs ball io make it a 3-2 game.
drops to 12-8 overall and 7-7 in the
Rolston led off the sixth inning
.TVC.
with his 16th home run of the season
: The Spartans scored an unearned over the right-centerfield fence to put
run in the third inning to take a 1-0 Alexander on top 4·2.
tead. Jordan led off. the inning with a
8111 Meigs came back with two in
double to right-center field and carne the bottom of the sixih to tie the game
into score on a Meigs error.
with a pair of runs. Tony Dugan,
The Spartans increased the lead to .R1110sburg and J.T. Humphreys had
3•0 in the fourth iMing, Rolston led singles to make it a 4-3 contest.
off the inning with a single and P.O. Ramsburg then scored on a sacrifice

got a 4-3 ground out and a strike out
on Toeller. J. Brannon singled, A.
Holcomb s ingle~. A. ,Wood walked,
and J. Dusenberry slammed a double
that scored two.
Sayre changed speeds on her
pitches to end the game on a S.
Baughman pop up to second. The
finalended at 13-7.
Southern's lone hits were by Cyntliia Caldwell and Regina Manuel.
Crooksville hitters were Holcomb
and Dusenberry with two hits each.
Dusenberry had two doubles.Getting
one hit each were Toeller, Brannon,
Wood, and Harper.
Ionjng l.a.IJl.b
000-300-4=7-8-5
Crooksville
006·610-x;o 13-2Southern
· Batteries
Southern: Sayre (WP) and Davis
Crooksville: Toeller (LP). Bateson
and Dusenberry

304-345-2355

No ~ames Thursday

Thursday's ~tames

past Miller 9·1

wv

Tuesday's scores

O iYi~on

allowed seven runs. struck out nine, pulling two runners on base with a
Sayre retired the side in the fifth,
walked five, and received a good walk and hit batter, but could not but Southern came back to score six
defensive effort from her teammates. score .
more in the bo(tom half of the frame.
So~thern committed only one error.
Crooksville took a 3-0 lead in the Holman and Kara King each walked
Ashlee Toeller was the losing · top of the fourth when eight of nine and were advanced by a Lyons sacpitcher of record allowing 12 runs on Southern batters reached on walks rifice . Cynthia Caldwell had a twoonly two Southern hits. Toeller. how- and another reached safely . on an run single. Sayre walked and Regina.
ever. walked 14 bailers and hit two error. Walking and scoring were Ash- Manuel singled followed by a Davis
batters in pursuit of the strike zone. li Davis. 1\s~ley McKinney, Kim fielder's choice and walks to McKShe struck out three before Sommer lhle. Trish Holman, and Stacy Lyons. inney. lhle. and King. Holman was
Bateson came on in the fifth 10 walk while Sayre reached on an error, but hit by a pitch to score another run for
four anf an none. Crooksville made came home when McKinney walked a 12-7 tally.
fi ve errors.
for the second time in the inning. The
Sayre wal~d a batter in the sixth,
Southern threatened in the second result was a 6-3 Southern lead.
but worked out of the inning. South·
em added a single run in· the sixth
when Caldwell walked, but was
retired as Sayre reached on li'fielder's
choice.Sayre then scored when Davis
Eastern added two runs in the sev- istered against her.
walked and McKinney reached on an
enth when Evans walked and scored
Eastern hitters were Kim Mayle error.
on a Kfisten Chevalier lriple. Cheva- with three singles and three RBis.
Then in the seventh Crook.svilie
lier then came home on a Milhoan 6- Chasatie Hollon a single and two rallied. Bateson walked. then Sayre
3 ground out for the 9-1 tally.
RBis, Kelli Bai.ley a single. Karr a
Stephanie Evans was the winning single, and Chevalier a triple.
pitch~r. giving up four hits, walking
Eastern goes to Southern tonight.
none and striking out seven. The lone Innlnellll.lb
run was an unearned Miller run · Eastern
061-000-2=9-7-2
scored on two errors.
Miller
000-1 00-0= 1-4-7
Batteries ·
Lesiie Gottke suffered the loss for
Miller with 'seven walks and eight . Eastern: Evans(WP) and Bailey
By NIKI KAPSAMBELIS.
strikeouts and seven Eastern hits reg· · Miller: Gottke (LP) and Cook
SAXONBURG, Pa. . (AP)
When she took up runnin!l at the ten,
der age of 50, Margretta Lutz·wasn't
looking to improve her health or win
any races - she just wanted tp keep
an eye on her daughter as she jogged
fly off the bat of Collin Roush to tie two combined to give up seven hits,
the game at 4-all and force extra walk one and strike out three.
Humphreys and Ramsburg had a pair
innings.
With one out Rolston struck out, of singles to lead Meigs. Bentley and
but reached on a passed ball. Two Stewart each added a double, Martin
·. walks later, the Alexander all-state ·and Dugan had a single each.
candidate scored on a wild pitch.
Meigs will play Athens today in
The annual Meigs High School
Meigs was unable to score in the bot- the first round of the Division II sec- spring sports banquet will be hold on
tom Qf the inning and the Spartans tional tournaments at Atltens High . Tuesday, May 19. at Meigs High
had posted the .win.
School's Rannow Fteld. Game time is School.
P.O. Stewart, who picked up the ' 5p.m.
Th~ banquet will begin at 6:30
complete-game win, struck out nine. Inninal!lllll
p.m. Everyone attending is asked to
walked two and gave up eight hits. Alexander
001-291-01=5-7-2 bring a covered dish and a desert.
000-202-00=4-8-2
Rolston had a ·pair of singles and a t.;1eigs
home run tq lead the winners. Stew- ·
Batteries
Alexander: · Stewart (W) and
art aided his own cause wiih a home
Daniel Jewell
run and Jordan added a double.
Meigs: Collin Roush (L), JeremiRoush was the loser with he!p in
the eighth from Jeremiah Bentley, the ah Bentley (8) and J.T. Humphreys

ChaltlilfOii,
701 Lee Street

NBA second-round
playoff slate

4
I

429
40&lt;

The Eastern Lady .Eagles lifted to let ·in two runs.
their recprd to 10-9 by defeating the
Kelli Bailey then slammed a twoMiller Falcons 9-1 Tuesday night in run single to conclude the EHS
Hemlock during regular season soft· offensive explosion and a 6-0 tally.
ball action . .
In the third inning Eastern scored
. Ea!tem took a 6-0 lead in the sec- one when Angie Wolfe w~lked' and
ond when ·Valerie Karr walks, scored on a Kim Mayle single for a
Sie.phanie Evans reached via a field- 7-0 tally.
·
er's choice, Suzy Milhoan reached on
Miller scored on in the fourth
a~ error, and Amanda Wheeler ·· inning for a 7-1 score as pitcher
walked. Kim Mayle singled in two Stephanie Evans laced the binders
runs. Juli Hayman walked and tightly around the Miller batters in
Chasatie Hollon slammed a hard hit pitching a four-hitter.
to left the the left fielder mi~played

•

Basketball

II

had one of the best hitting teams I've
seen. We did a good job keeping our
eomposure and holding on for the
win."
·
For Southern, 'it was a landmark
20-win season, a mark that separates
the good years from the great ones.
Southern will move. on to district play
on Friday. See Thi! Dai/,1•Stmine/ for
further tournament details later in the
week. .
Kim Sayre again picked up the
victory for the Tornadoes, scau~ring
eight hits across seven innings. She

. ~astern - softballers ro./1

straight game.
. Andres Galurraga's shot in the .
eighth inning enabled Atlanta to
match the mark of the 1953 Brooklyn Dodgers. The Braves can tie the
major league record of 25, shared by
the 1941 New York Yankees and
1994 Detroit Tigers, tonight at St.
Louis.
"I was so happy and excited,"
Galurrasa said. "I don't go up there
L.A. Lakers' S~::~~~!:.~·
during Tuelday
trying to hit home runs. But in that block the shot of Seattle forward Jerome
night's
NBA
playoff
game
in
Seattle,
where
the
Lakera'
11M5 win
situation, .I really wanted to hit a
closed
that
semifinal
series
and
sent
the
Lakers
to
the
Weatern
Con·
hOme run.··
.
ference
·
f
inals
opposite
the
Utah
Jazz.
(AP)
(See GAMES on Page 6i

At l &lt;mt &lt;~

(iJ!

the third straight year and fourth time
in five years.
Utah held San Antonio's Triple ~
To wers frontcourt of David Robin·
son, Tim Duncan and Will Perdue to.
ju'st 35 points qnd 31 rebounds Tuesday, their lowest totals of the five,game series.
Jeff Hornacek had 19 points for
the Jazz, while Bryon Russell added
15.
.
Robi nson led San t".ntonio with 21
poi nts and 13 rebounds. but n of the
points came in the fourth quarter after
Utah had a comfortablelead. Duncan,
added 14 points and II reboundJ,,
while Vinny Del Negro had 17·

wins

nt St L!l lli ~. ~ ~ 1 0 r m.
Md wau h·e ;II A n zn n ;~ . IO·O."i p m
Philnd!!'lpiH:I al l..us An,~::t:lc s , IO:O:'i p.m.

Oh-i~ion

Iwn

ter than Wilt and I agree With h1m...
. Said Harris: "I don't know if the
Said O'Neal: ''My. guys took
average fan realizes how well we hud great shots tonight and we mixed up
to play to win four straight games .our game well."
·
against the Sonics. "•
In the fourth quarter, the Sanies
Tuesday was Karl's 47th birthday. got with in 98-9 1 . after Dettef
He needed a . big slice of birthday Schrempf scored on a hook shot wi th
cake to take the .bad taste out·of the 5:15 to go.
painful night.
But O' Neal responded with a
Karl isn't expected back next sea- ·layup and Jones made three free
son. His contract expires on July I throws to put the Lakers ahead I 03·
and he probably won't be offered a 91. And,it was all over fo r the Son·
new one, despite his regular-season ics.
winning percentage of .719.
Jazz 87, Spurs 77
"I don't think that's a good ques,Karl Malone had 24 poi nts and 13
tion for me," Karl said when asked rebounds and the Jazz came up wi th
if he would coach the Sonics next an impressive defen Sive effort as they
season. "I don't hav~ that answer. .advanced to the conference fi nals for
That's a question for ()ther people."
Sonics president and general Wally Walker refused to shed any light on
Karl's future in Seattle. It will be discussed between himself and owner
Barry'Ackerley.
"There hasn 't been any decision
made," said Walker, who plans to
meet with Karl in the next few day~ .
. Again~t the Sanies, O'Neal averaged 30.6 points. shot 63 percent
from the floor and averaged 9.6
rebounds. while blocking 20 shots.
He even shot 60 percent from the·
free-throw line.
"Us coaches were talking about
Shaq,'~ Karl said. "(Assistant coach) .
Bob' Weiss played against Wilt
Chamberlain. He thinks Shaq is bet-

p~st

Grace became the tirst playet to drew a bases-loaded waik in the ninth
hit a home run into the pool beyond inning that lifted the Chicago Cubs
the right-center field fence at Bank .over Arizona 7-6 Thesday night.
One Ballpark . sending'fans in swimMcGwire hiCthe longest home run
&gt;uits splashi ng for the souvenir.
in the 32-year history of Busch s·ta·
"I didn't even know it was going dium, a 527 -foot drive over the left·
to be a home run ," said Grace, who field scoreboard.
"It excites ihe people, but I have
to look at it a.~ one at-bat. I can't sit
there and say .'OK. great,' " MeGwire
said after the St. Louis Cardinals beal
the Milwaukee Brewers 6-S in 10
Thursday's games
innings.
Ctu c:1g!1 C u h~ al Cl•lor:.J u, J:O:'i p.m.
M Pil ll'l!':ll :ll s~ n F.raocisco, 2. J:O:'i p.m.
The Braves tied an NL record by
N Y. M ~h :11 San Ou::j!O, 2. ~ : 0~ p.m.
Florida :11 CINCINNATI. 7 : 0~ p.m
hitting a home run in their 24th

NL roundup

out.••

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 13, 1998

dt·t·u ·, ""'

NOTHING RUN S LIK E A DEERE

.,

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Atlanta ties 1·956 Dodgers for National League mark

Braves get home run for 24th straight game, beat Re~s 5-1 .
By JOE KAY

The only teams with longer
CINCINNATI (AP) - As their streaks are the 1941 New York Yanstreak of consecutive games.with a kees and the 1994 Detroit Tigers.
homer began building. the Atlanta
"1 wouldn't want to see everyBraves paid little attention. Now body go up there and .try to hit home
that it's one game shy of the record, runs, but !think it's happened natuit's all they can talk about.
rally," said John Smohz (4-0), who
Andres Galarraga hit his Nation- extended the best start of his career.
al League-leading 15th homer Tues- "They're getting their pitches and
day night in a 5-1 victory over the they're making it happen.
Cincinnati Reds, giving the Braves .
"Everybody's talking about it
24 consecutive games with a homer. now and all eyes will be on tomor. Galarraga's eighth-inning shot to row, whether we can tie the all-time
center field off Scott Sullivan left the record. That's something extra sJieBraves tied with the 1956 Brooklyn cial."
1
Dodgers for the NL mark. They can
The Braves have been special.
, get a share of the major league period. They're off to the best start in
.record with another homer tonight in franchise history at 28-11. they lead
St. Louis.
the major leagues in wins and they're

doing just about everything right.
They have the major leagues' best
rotation. they lead the NL in homers
and they're the league's top defensive
team, too. ·
·
"I think thi~ is the best place to be
in baseball right now," Oalarraga
said. "Right now we"ve got everything together."
The Braves have so much confi.
dence th.at once they got ahead :l-1 in
the fifth inning. they started swing·
ing for the fences and the. home run
record.
~
·Galarraga came upwith one oot in·
the eighth and worked Sullivan to a
full count. The next pitch was a slop·
py slider, and Palarraga was ready.
He drove it to center field. then stood

•
home runs," said David Weathers (2- streak: 10 by Galarraga. eight each ~y
2) who lasted five innings. "Tonight. Javier Lopez and Michael Tucker,
seven by Andruw Jones, live by
they strung hits together."
Smoltz allowed only four hits over Chipper Jones, three by Keith Lockeight innings. including Eddie hart, two by RyaQ Klesko and one by
Taubensee's second homer. and made Tony Graffanino. ... Smoltz is 8..0 in
a nice defensive play to cut down a his last 10 starts against Cincinnati
run at the plate. He finished at 103 since 1995 with 1.92 ERA... : The
pitches, his most demanding outing Braves are 61 -36 ·against the Reds
since he had arthroscopic elbow since 1991 .... Taubensee \Vtnt 2-fot3 agai.nst Smoltz, improving His
surgery last December. ·
"Today I established everything I career numbers to 15-for-43 (.349)
wanted to establish," Smoltz said. "I with two homers. · ... Reds starter
felt I dictated .the game ..Aside from Steve Cooke was arresJed early Thesthat (fourth) inning, I was in cOm- day after leaving ~ bar and wns
mand."
charged with drunken driving. Cooke
Notes: A breakdown of "the is on the disabled list with el.bow ten'
_Braves' 44 homers duting th~ir dinitis.

·and watched his fifth homer in six
games.
.
The bench . erupted. The Braves
had their record.
"I was so happy and excited,"
said Oalarraga, who got the ball afterwards. "I don' t go up there trying to
hit home runs. But in that situation.
I really wanted to hit a home run:
"We had been talking about. who
was going to hit it. Everybody wanted io do it."
On Sunday, the Braves hit four
homers. They added thre.e more in an
8-1 victory over the Reds on Monday.
They didn't really need their only
homer on Tuesday- they built the
3-1 lead by piling up singles.
"Last night, they lieat us with the

'

·
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)When the count went to 3-and- 1,
Kevin Stocker thought more like a
power hitter than someone who has
averaged less than five homers a year
in the major leagues.
One of the least likely bats in the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays' lineup sent
the Cleveland Indians to their fifth
straight loss Tuesday· riight when
Stocker hit a two-run homer off
Mike Jackson in the 14th inning for
a 6-5 victory.
.
"He throws hard. He's a power
pitcher." Stocker said. "He threw .me
a fastball, and I knew he was gomg

.

to throw it. I.decided to stay back and scored on a sacrifice fly by Manny up a sacrifice fly to Paul Sorrento,
hammer it."
Ramirez.
· allowed one run on a wild pitch and ·
The loss was especially tough on
"Any t.ime you play 14 iimings yielded a t)Vo-run single to Bobby
the .Indians because they had ove,i- and you lose, it's disappointing," Smith' that made it 4-0.
come a 4-0 deficit after a horrendous · Alotnar said. "We didn't finish what
A television camera caught Oevefirst inning in which they committ~d we staned. But we showed how much land manager Mike Hargrove
three errors and allowed four talent we have because the.way we addressing the team in"the dugout
·unearned runs.
started, it looked like it was going to between the first and second innings.
· David Justice doubled and scored be a horrible night."
Outside of a fourth error that neariy
·on a wild pitch in the fourth. and
Errors by Ramirez · and Omar cost another run in the third. the lndiSandy Alomar dou,bled to drive in Vizquel, whose niiscue· stopped, the · ans settled down to do everything
three runs in the sixth to make it 4- fourth-longest streak of consecutive needed to get back into position to
all. After stranding the potential win- errorless games by a shortstop in . win.
·
ning run at third in the ninth before major league history· at 70 games,
"He just told us to refocus and
leaving the bases loaded in the 12th, were a big part of Cleveland's poor basically said this is nOIIike.the team
Cleveland went up 5-4 .in the 14th start. ·
..
he· s accustomed to seeing. that we
when Kenny Lofton tripled and
Indians starter Bartolo Colon gave weren't pla~ing aggressive," Alomar

said. "We're not the 'Bad News
Bears.' We're the Cleveland Indians.
He was trying to pump us up. We
were playing terrible. Tbe iniensity
wasn't there."
The Devil Rays, iike the Indians,
squandered several opportunities to
score before Aaron Ledesma led oiT
the 14th with a single"and Stocker
followed \Vith what he said was his
first game•winning homer at any level.
.
Cleveland first baseman Jim
Thome threw out runners at the plate
in the third and 12th inni~gs. Tampa
Bay, whose three-gl)me winning
·streak matches its longest, also had

two baserunners in the 13th.
"Winning like this is the best way
to win," Tampa. Bay manager Larry
Rothschild said. "We've played them
five times and had a shot to win every
time. It shows the hean in this team."
The Devil Rays, who also. won the
only other exira-inning game in their
brief history in 14· innings, swept a .
series for the first tilne after losing
three straight when the'teams played
in Cleveland earlier thi's month.
Jackson haa {lne ofhis-10 saves in
the first series. l:le fell behind Stocker and paid for challenging,the Devi,l Rays shortstop with a pitch over illf
heart of the plate.

Ninth-inning rally helps Mariners top Tigers;· Twins d·o wn O's
(6-~) beat his former Boston teamcollision with umpire Rich Gart:ia eighth save,
recently, pulled up at first in.pain, but
Thompson was perfect through six mates for the first time and Tom
stayed in the game after being innings, but . fell behind 1-0 when Goodwin's two-run bomer highlightBy The Associated Press
checked
by a trainer. He then scored Alex Rodriguez led off the seventh ed a six-run second as Texas won its
Ken Griffey wouldn't come out of
fifth straight. ,
the
go-aheild
run from first behind with his 13th homer.
. the game, and for once, the Seattle
· Sele wa~ in trouble throughout his
Amaral
when
David
Segui
doubled
Before Rodriguez's homer, the
Mariners wouldn't be denied.
·
Mariners hit only three balls to the 5 2/3 innings. The Red Sox stranded
~
Down to their last out after being· off the left-,field wall.
thought
we
were
going
to
have
"I
outfi~ld
and Thompson got ·12 seven runners over the first four
. held to one hit for the first 8 213
to
pinch-run
for
him,"
Piniella
said,
groundball
outs. Griffey is 2-for-16 innings, but Sele worked out of the
, innings by 'Justin Thompson. the
"Junior
wanted
no
part
of
that.
He's
with 10 strikeouts against Thompson. · jams, leaving runners on third in the
Vlariners rallied for three runs Tues"It cu just as easily go the other first and fourth.
iay night for a 4-2 win over the been hurting since he had that home
Texas sent 10 to the plate in the ·
plate
collision
with
the
~mpire,
but
he
way;
it just hasn't gone my way,"
)etroit Tjgers. .
·
second
against rookie Brian Rose ( 1wouldn't
come
out."
·
Thompson
said.
''II
wears
on
you.
J
The win. Seattle's first when trail4).
Segui
fell
behind
0-2
and
toOk
two
don't know if I had no-hit stuiT, but
ng after eight innings. moved the
John Wetteland pitched the ninth
pitches
before
Segui
drove
a
fa~tball
.
I could get all my pitches over for
\iariners a game over .500 for the inifor his I Oth save in 10 chances. ·
from Thompson that just eluded left strikes.·
:ial time this season.
·Yankees 3, Royals 2
fielder
Luis
Gonzalez.
"I spotted the fastball. I felt so free
"Let:S stay the.re," Seattle manAt
New
York, Bernie Williams .
"I
only
had
one
decent
swing
and easy, it barely felt like I was
lgCr Lou Piniella said. "That's a great
homered
for
the first time this sea.'IOn
against Thompson," Segui said. "He throwing.''
way for us to start a road ~rip.''
Elsewliere in the AL, it was Texas and David Wells (4-1) pitched eight
. Thompson (2-5) retired the first 18 was nasty. He threw great pitches. He
never
gives
you
anything
good
to
6,
Boston 3; New York 3, Kansas strong innings.
batters and had .a 2-1 lead in the ninth hit.,
. .
Williams hadn't connected since
City 2; Toronto 4, Oakland 3 in 10
·' wheri Rich Amaral singled with two
last
Sept. 28 .:._ 119 at -bats - when
Paul
Spoljaric
(2-0)
got
the
win
innings; Chicago 5, Anaht!im Z; and
outs and Griffey beat out an infield
he
hit
a 3-2 pitch in the first off Glendespite giving up a two-run homer to Minnesota 7, Baltimore 4.
hit on a bad. leg.
.
don Rusch (3-5) for a two-run homer.
Ran..-. 6, Reel Sox 3
Griffey. who injured his leg in a Bobby Higginson in the eighth. Bob- ·
by Ayala pitched the ninth for his
At Arlington. Texas, Aaron Sele

AL roundup

NL gam~S ... . :.:(C:;,;o; ; t; ;i~; ue; ,;:d;.;.fr; o; ;m. ;.P,; !ag~; e. ;4:. 1,..,- - : - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - , Grace. hit a drive about 390 feet , tied a team record with its seventh
into the pilol for a rolo home run in straight loss.
the sixth inning. Ratherlhan kee'p the
, "Two outs and four walks?That'll
· wet ball, though, a fan threw it back. make you insane," Rodriguez said.
onto the,field.
. .
"I'm going· to h~ve to let the game
, Grace hit his first home run of the pass. The game is over."
season a day earlier against the Dia. Kelly .Stinnett. homered for the
mondbacks.
second straight day for Arizona.
In the ninth, Felix Rodnguez (0In other games, Philadelphia
;; 2) retired the tirst two Cubs batters defeated I:os Angeles S-3, ;Houston
;i before walking four in a row. Arizona · .beat Flonda 4-2 and Pittsburgh
.,
downed Colorado 6-0.

.'.
;~

.

Vintage runner...

';'

(Continued from !'age 5)

A .special section
devoted to your
favorite· "alumn'us"

Remember your spowe, child,
grandparent, friend, .childhood
sweetheart, couples, teacher, etc.

daughter, who is now 45. prompted 5. McOwire's three-run hill'ller, his

..

was

Meigs sports
physicals
slated for June

girls' cage camp

~

i

1Meigs High School Band·to host
golf

J

'

on May 23

-

Page7

.Parents Who le.ave ki.ds unattended in stores .should think again
.

,_

'

Meanwhile, their bored 8-yearold was running amok in the bookstore. After · an hour, the assistant
manager, thinking the child had
been abandoned, called the police.
When the officei'S arriv~ . the
parents came back, saw all the fuss
and proceeded,to yell at the assistant
manager for "causing a problem."
The parents assured the police
that they were only gone "for a few
moments," so the whole matter was
dropped.
If those parents truly .cared for
their children, they would not be
leaving them in strange places.
We've all read stories about children
being abducted in stores or malls.
.Parents should know better.
Ann, please tell parenls it is not
the responsibility of. storekeeper.;,

Ann
Landers

I !W1. lol Anfclci Ttm,••
Synd1c:atc ;moJ Cruh ,r~
!yndicalc.

Dear Ann· Landers: I have a
fiiend ' who works for a big book. store chain, and she has told me
.some stories that shook me up. She
&lt;Said some parents bring their children to the bookstore and let them
"tun loose while the parents go shopping somewhere else.
She told me one set of parents
dropped off their 8-year-old 'son
while th~y went out shopping and
then had lunch at a nearby restau. rant.

.

..

movie-theater managers, toy-store
owners or anyone else to baby-sit
their children.
•
The employee.s of these stores
already have full-time jobs taking
care of their customers. They should
not be expected to serve as baby sitiers, too. -- W.R. in Virginia
Dear Virginia: You told them,
and I thank you on' behalf of all the
bookstore owners, theater managers,
toy-store folks and so on who are
unwittingly tapped to baby-sit children. It is scary to think that there
are so many thoughtless parents out
there. For shame.
· Dear Ann· Landers: While
cleaning out my closet, I cam~
across a column of yours from 1977 ·
about a woman whose · ~osband's
· snoring kept her awa.ke.

My husband had the same problem -- only I was the one who
snored. He once told me he couldn't
fall asleep until he heard me snore
and knew I was OK, but I knew it
disturbed his sleep. When I visited
my sister, she solved the problem by
plugging .a set of earphones into a
little radio. The soft music drowned
me out.
I hope you will reprint this column for your readers who may have
missed ·it. -- Eighty Years Young in
N.Y.
D,ar Eichty: I'm glad you
asked. Here it is:
Dear Ann: This is for the crazy
lady who wrote to say she loves io
watch her husband sleep at night
because he looks so much like a little boy. Then, she added, "I adore

Graduates from Miami University
Michael Todd McKelvey, son of ·
Marvin and Eleanor McKelvey,
Syracuse •. graduated summa cum
laude Sunday from Miami Univetsi·
ty with a d.egree in .microbiology.
He has been accepted in the
School of Medicine at Ohio State
University and will begin his training there in the fall .
Attending the graduation cere:
monies were his parents, his grandfather, George Schneider, of Syracuse, and his brother, Jay, who also
attends· Miami University where he
is . a junior majoring in systems
analysis.

thing to quiet my husband. I said,
" Yes, but it's against the law."
Last year, our family dOctQr suggested either ·a sedative or earplugs
for me or separate bedrooms. I am
now using all three. Pass the word to
my sister sufferers, Ann. -- Peace,
It's Wonderful
Dear Peace: Consider it passed. I
.can't imagine worse punishment
than being up all night while the
mate lying next to y'ou is snoring up
a storm. Your suggestions all sound
"good . Too bad it took you .so long to
get relief.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

.'
,.
'

"

!· )

By Bob Hoeflic.h

•

..
,.

The hills around Pomeroy will
be alive with music this Saturday
evening beginning at 6:30 p.m.,
when the Big .Bend Community
Band will be playing a concert on
the ne~ stage ·on the river frorit.
If the river is high and the
' ;: stage can't be used, the concert
will still be a go and will be held
'I on the parking lot or, perhaps, on
r ,. Court St.
·
. '
InCluded in the program will
be some Dixieland, a Glenn
., ". Miller :number, ·musk from the
1 Broadway show, "Sweet Charity"
' as well as some great marches.
Sounds like a grearlineup, huh?
.
Directed by Toney Dingess,
· the' band includes people from
Meigs, Mason and Athens Coimties, solne of whom are retirees,
some students, some from the
,summer band of Ohio University,
several loeal teachers and other
'" ' adults from the communities
1• ' · involved. The band . practices
weekly on Mondays at the Meigs
1'
High Schooi.Band Room.
That'll be this Saturday night
' · and there is ntJ charge.
,1

.

.

class and Pat has located 53 of
them. TOO two "missing" members are Carol Lucas and Ron
Dodderer. If anyone .knows how
to locate either Lue115 or Dodderer, would you please contact Pat
at 740-378-6233 so that she can
get in touch. Than!ls!
And a reminder that the
Burlingham Modem Woodmen
will be .holding their matching
fund smorg.asbord on Monday, ·
May 25, at the hall in Burlingham.
·
Serving w.ill ·he from II :30
a.m. to 6:30p.m., and you can eat
at the hall or 'go the . take out
route. The Modem Woodmen
home office at Rock Island, Ill.,
will match moneys raised
through th~ smorgasbord and that ·
money Will be divided equally
between the • Pomeroy · Fire
· Department and Joyce Sauters to
assist with her mediql expenses.

Celebration Slated
The JOist anniversary celebration of the Naomi Baptist Church
will be held Sunday.
The morning worship sermon
will he conducted by Pastor Arius
Hurt at 10:45 a.m. The Rev. Edward
Buffington, pastor of Providence
Baptist Church of Kerr, will .be guest
speaker at the 2:30p.m. service. He
will be accompanied by members of
his congregation and the church
choir.
Dinner wil.l be served following
the morning service. The public is
invited to attend.

Despite serious health prob"
lems, Middleport's Opie Cobb is
keeping iri touch with friends:
Opie was hospitalized last
November for a' couplc.of weeks
during which time a feeding tube
was place~! in his stomach. Since
lhl'n nary a drop of water or any·
food has entered his mouth. · It's
amazing how he . continues to
continue to do things and
although ·an 0\'togenarian still
reads t~c newspaper without eyeglasses.
He undoubtedly could handl,c .
some demonstration of support.
His address is 6\11 Sycamore St ..
Middleport.

S~bolarshlp given
· Stacy Price of tlomeroy and Stacie Reed of Rutland arc the beneficiaries of this year·s scholarships
from Fony and Eight, Drow
Webster
-

Individuals, organizations,
businesses-whatever-arc
•\;• being invited to join the l'omc~oy
American Legion Post 39 in the·
Memorial Day Parade to be held
,. in Po1neroy on Monday. May 2S.
l~' · Registration. is oot required to
~.
take poin but it would be appreciatcd
if you'd give Howard
•
' · · Mullen. 992-3782, a call if you
'\ . plan to participate~ The parade
will form at the tennis coun on E.
Main St.. at 9:30 n.m., moving
out ut 10 a.m.
Since Memorial Day should
You also might want to send
have a special meaning to everyone. you arc asked to cooperate ,along a' card or note of encouragement to your good friend, Ferand help with the project.
ndora Story. who. I understand, is
· Pat Martin of her husband of having some health problems.
'•
Reedsville arc hosting Pat's 30th Her keen sense of humor has kept
class reunion of Eastern High . many of us smiling over the
.years. Such a gem. Now it's
School on June 20.
There were 55 members of the time to help her keep smiling.

,.

·:

'·

~.

-~

·-c~

~

Post 39, American Legion.
The unit sponsors a fund to help
those who have one year or more of
nurses training. The money is designated for use in furthering their .
nursing education.
The fund, calied the "Charles
Marcinko Nurses Fund" is the main
project of the Forty and Eight. .

Unable to attend but recognized .Grover and Loraine Vcnoy.
were Ellis McMillan, Jack Wolfe,
She also received a telephone call
George Sayre and Carl Robinson, ·from .her grem grandchildren, Rob
live years; Lynn Mallory and Don and Marcy Wyatt of Cincinnati, who
Bell, 10 years, and Thomas Hill, 30 were tinablc to attend.
year.;.
Certificates for 50-year member·
ship were presented posthumously
to Otis Knopp, with Don Hupp Lisle leads UMW meeting
accepting, and Dale Hill, with Larry
The United Methodist Women of
Circle.. accepting. Paul Moore was Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
recognized for 51 years of member- Church met recently. at the church. ·
UC honor roll
ship.
The meeting was opened by
Jason Taylor, .Pomeroy, was
Thirty members and wives Mary Lisle, president, with a readnamed to the dean's list for the win- attended the ceremony. The next ing, "God Has Been Good to Me."
ter quarter at the University of meeting will be held on May 21 at
Lisle had the 4evotions reading,
Cincinnati.
6:30p.m.
"Mary Kept All These Things in her
Heart," and a reading about Mother.
The secretary's report was given
by secretary .Jean Stout. There were
Legion elects officers
Barton honored
20 sick calls repon, and a free-will
New officers were elected when · · Edith Barton of Pomeroy was · offering Was taken . .
the American Legion Post 602, honored with a party 81 her home on
.The program was given by Elma
Racine, held a .recent meeting at the the occasion of her 80th birthday.
Louks, "Finding Hope, Love and
hall.
A birthday cake, soft drinks, cof- Dignity." The Love of God is a free
Eiected were Gene Mills, com- fee and ice cream were served.
gift, not something any9ne need
mander; Bill Finkenbinder, second
Gifts were presented to her by earn.
vice commander; Don Hupp. adju- Bob and ~atty Barton, B~tty Reed •
The scripture was taken from
tant general; Tom Diddle, sergeant at Judy Denny, Crystal HQOd and Mark 3:33-3S. Hope Moore liad the
arms; Tom Wolfe, financial officer; Tyson Lee, Judy Stewart and Tyler, closing reading, The Good ShepGene Lawrence, service officer; and· Brian Denny, Mark, Deann, Kasey herd, and a prayer.
Jay Lance, chaplain.
and Jordan Williams, Keith and
Marj Lisle and Hope Moore
A ham dinner was served to Brenda Phalin, Tara Wyatt, Adam · attended a district meeting at The
' members and their wives. and niem- Wyatt, Edeana Russell. Mike Wyatt, Plains United Methodist Church and
bers were recognized for their years Amber Blackston, Jeremy Phalin.
Moore gave a repon on it.
of membership: Gene Mills and Don
Joey and Peggy Barton, Angie
Six shoe boxes of gifts were
Hupp, five years; Clarence Brad- Bass, Mia, Jordan anll Dylan Bass, taken by Moore to Good Works.
. ford, 10 years; Howard Frank, 20 Nelia Seyler, Scott and Renee Bar-· Others present at the meeting were
years; Rqgcr Hill, 30 years; Lowell ton, Zack and Morgan, Mick Seyler Ruth Crouch, Rose Ann Jenkins.
Bing, 35 years; Dclben Smith, 40 and Anna Chapman, Artie and Hope . Freda Wilson and Marie Hnudasbelt.
years; Ernest Bush, David Yost and Ebhn. Justin Eblin. Madelene
Bill Fox. 45 years:
Pcn~leton. Joyce Romine. Myrtle

--~commu.nity Calendar-----~THURSDAY
POMEROY
Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday. 6:30 p.m. at the Episcopal Parish House.

officers. Thufllday. 7 p.m. Meigs
Middle School.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Home
Health Care of Southeast Oliio. open
house. Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Free
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers blood pressure and glucose testing.
Plains VFW 9053. Thursday, 7:30 . Refreshments. door pri1.cs.
p.m. Refreshments.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
OAPSE. Local 17. installation of

SATUR1)AY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teacher.; luncheon meeting,
Saturday. noon . Trinity Church.
Pomeroy. Program on vocal music.
SUNDAY
POMEROY- 10 Ist anniversary

Church. Sunday. Morning worship
service by Pa,tor Ariois Hun. 10:45
a.m.; Rev. Edward Buffington. pasttlr of Pr&lt;ividencc Baptist Church t~•
s[lCak at 2:30p.m. Choi.r fmm Prnvidcn~.:c In sing al aflcrnoon scrvi.,;c.
Dinner following mumin~ service.
Puhlic invited.

OVERBROOK·CENTER'S

POMEROY
Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting Thursday. 7
p.m. at Sacred Hcan Catholic
Avenue,
Church.
M lhcrry
Pomeroy.

29{_1}) f4.9{_9{_tz.IJU

SP!R]!J{fj C~9{9{Io/JLL

\

SJ{Pl19{1J;{r, MYI.:Y l~tli, 12:.4

To be
publl~hed

.S TOP .BY AND lOIN IJS
•Food laOtll
•Arts &amp;Cndts s•ow (ltglas at I0)
•Displa,S of lew Cari,
.•torcycles, Jet Stis·&amp;ao,ts
•FaciiiiJ tours
,
•lia h•d Clotaen· 2 ,.
•UHie
Ow•llrook Coatnt
•Doir Prizes

Friday,
May 22, 1998 ·
· In ·
The Dally
Sentinel
•

listening to him snore. It's such a
comfon to know he's right there
beside me. " (That broad musi catch
up on her sleep in the daytime.)
For 24 yl!ars, I have been married
to a man who snores. If I turned on
the light to look at him, I'm sure the
only thought · that would come to
mind is murder.
His snoring -- even under ordinary c.ircumstances --is enough to
shake the fixtures, but when he's had
a few drinks, he makes such a racket, the people in the next apartment
bang on the floor with what must be
a sledgehammer.
Several years ago, we took The
City of San Francisco (a great train)
to the West Coast. The people in the ·
next compartment knocked on our
door and asked if I could do some-

,,

,•.

Remelllber
·When?

A pair of games were rained oui
-New York at San Diego and Montreal at San Francisco ..
The Padres were postponed at San
Diego for the first time since April ·
20, 1983, a span of 1.172 horne dates
without a washout. The Mets were
rained out for the eighth time this sea-.
son.
.
(:ll!'dinals 6, B1ewe.'S S (10)
· Delino DeShields singled home
the winning run in the bottom of the
lOth inning.
·
·
Jeff Cirillo hit a two-run homer in
the ninth, tying it for the Brewers at

qbout 30 miles north of Pittsburgh.
••
'l
t:
Together they cover ahout 40 to 45 her to try jo@ging. ·
•J
Jllth, broke his own stadium. record,
miles a week - and this year, after
"She was out running on these set with 517-foot drive last Sept. 16.
ba,k roads, and I was fretting· so The longest borne run of his career
•• much prompting. Mrs. Lutz finally
:l~ bought a jogging suit to replace the much," Mrs. Lutz said.
measured at538 feet last June 24
The long hours of running have for Oakland.
• plastic trash bug she used to wear in
·
., inclement weather.
drawn mother and daughter closer
.:
"Now we can go out and look like together. They have raml:lling con·.j· human beings·and not garbage," Mrs.
versations aboui whatever pops into
Lutz said with a laugh.
. their heads. They refer to tlieir routes
:;
She has the slender, athletic build with names only they recognize, like .
:1 of a competitive runner and moves . "the' eight-mile loop." They laugh
:j gracefully through her home, step- about their little quirks. like the
Sports physicals will be held on
. :• ping ·carefully ·tO avoid a long cord trash-bag raincoat.
.
Friday. June S (or anyone wanting to
:l that is hooked up to her husbimd's
The two ran the Pittsburgh
sports in tile Meigs Local School
;1 life-support machine . .He underwent Marathon together in 1987 during a play
District for the 1998-99 school year.
;j surgery to remove his esophagus after · driving thunderstorm. Mrs. ·Lutz,
The physicals are for students in
', developing cancer two yea~ ago. and · who managed to qu;ali.fy for the
;; the .stress of his illness. combined Boston Marathon, had pinned a $5 grades 7-12 and will he given at Vetrans Memorial Hospital from 8 a.m.
:! with the re.cent deaths of her mOiher bill to her number arid took her ·euntil
II p.m.
·l and stepfather. have taken a toll on daughter to a hotel near the finish line
;! Mrs..Lutz's running.
for a cup of coffee to ~elebrate.
·
;;
Still. she is optimistic about SatThey were so chilled that tlley MHSto~ost
:· urday 's race.
shook as they dnmk their coffee. and
·l . "I J"ust hope to finish," shel said. waitresses took pity on them and
t•,l "There are a lot of fast 40 year- wrapped thern in tableciOihs.
. The 1998 Meigs girls basketball
·'l olds."
. .
"We were driving hOflle thinking.
.,
When she starred running with her 'That wasn't so bad,"' .Mrs. Lutz said. camp will be held from June 8th-12th
·
., daughter. her only form of exercise ·
So far, her doclor hasn't limited - if Meigs High School:
The cost of the camp is $35, and
:~ wlis mowing the family's consider- her running, although her husband
no family has to pay more than $60
.j able expanse of lawn.
has expressed concern.
•
"I went to an all-girls Catholic
"He tolerat~s it," Mrs. Lutz said. if more than one girl attends the
high school - they had no gym. no "He has.to, because I'd probably do camp.
Grades 4-6 will hold camp from 9
·· basketball." Mrs. Lutz recalled.
it anyway.~·
"1111-11 :30 am, gJlldes 7-8 will be from
·~
But worry for the safety of her
~
12 noon-2:30 pm, and grades 9-11
will be from I pm until 3:30pm.·
. Instructors for the camp will be
coaches Ron Logan, Darin Logan,
~
tourn~ment
Mick Childs and Mick Davenport
and
senior members of the Lady
~
The Meigs High School' Band your own team format" and will feaMarauders t~~~~- Bach camper will
~ Boosters will host the eighth annual ture a chance at a hole-in-one car give
l Memorial Golf Scramble to be held away sponsored by Don Tate Motors ~eeeive instruction in aU fundamentals of the same and will receive a
i on Saturday. May 23 at the "Meigs of Pomeroy.
free
camp t·shirt and a ba.~ketball .
Golfers ~ill receive gift packs and
.f County Golf Oub.
'
·• . Each year the event recogniies a be eligible for many skill and paJtic- . ·Applications are available at all
prominent Meigs .County educator. ipant prizes. For more informllion schqpls in the Meigs ~ School
., Thisyear'st~ will hoitortlie contact tournament chairman John olstric:t, for more information call
memory of Jack Slavin.
Kriwsczyri at MHS at 992-2158 or at Ron Logan at 992-2158 (school) or
992·2723 (home). ·
'
The scramble will be a "bring home at 992-6394.

The Angels tied a team record for
Wells, criticized by manager Joe
double
plays, turning one in each of
Torre.after blowing a 9..0 lead in his
last start, allowed five hit•. )Valked the fir.;t four innipgs. It was the fourth
time they've made six, and the fir,;t
one and struck ·out nine.
Mariano Rivera got hiil sixth save time since 1975. Still, Anaheim has
.
a.• ·the Yankees improved baseball'~ . lost six of eight
Carlos
ca.~tillo.
(
1-2)
got
the
win
best record to 25-7.
New ·York, which has won I0 of with 3 1/3 innings of perfect relief.
Omar Olivares (1-1) t~k the loss.
II, sco~d the go-ahead run in the
'
Twins 7, Orioles 4
fifth on Joe Girardi's squeeze bunt.
·
At
Minneapplis,
Minnesota
b"rokc
Blue J!IYS 4, Athletics 3 (10)
At Toronto, Jose Canseco beathis out of an offensive slump with 13
former.team by homering to lead off hit~. including Alex Ochoa's tiethe bottom of the I Oth. .
. breaking two-run homer in the sev· Canseco. who played for Oakland· enth Qff Arthur Rhodes (2- 1):
Marty Cordova added an RBI sinfrom 1985-1992 and again last season, hit a 3-2 pitch from Billy Taylor gle in the seventh for the Twins. who
(0-3) over the left-field wall for his entered the game with a· 19-inning
scoreless streak and hitting just .224 .
lith homer.. ·
Randy-Myers (1..0) piichcd a per- a• a team in the la.~t 20 games.
Paul Molitor went 3-for-4 for
fect lOth.
Minnesota.
. While Sox S, Angels 2
LaTroy Hawkins (2-3) won his
At Chicago. Alben Belle hit a
two-run homer and Chi~ago won second straight start and Rick Aguildespite hitting into six double plays. era got his sixth save.

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, May 13, 1998

a

·stocker's 1·4th-inning _
HR helps Devil R.a ys beat Indians 6-5
By FRED GOODALL

B~TheBend

Wednesday, May 13, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•·••s.

EMMOGENE EDWARDS HAMILTON NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
Pomeroy High School
Recine Hlih School
CIIU of 1850
CIIU of 111115
••
•

Use your Senior, cheerleading ot sports
picture. $6.00 per photo or $10/coupl~. ,
Fill out form below &amp; drop off wlth payment to:
·
The Dally Sentinel
. , ''
, 111 Court St. ·
Pomeroy,
. Ohio .457&amp;9

FOR AI.t. THIS FUN!
•EdiCIIioaallootll •
··Rides&amp;Games
•Un.latllo Re•tes
•la.lloon ·Sc•lpllres
•Frtt Fl1ger Prl•li•1 for lids
. •IHII.HI ltlkopltr
••btiqn .Tractors

AND MUCI, MUCI MORE
to•• Join In 16• fua
Saturday~ May 16th, 12 • 4 pm

'

\

Ham•------------------~----------~
~

School----------------------------~

.ALL OUTSIDE ACTMnES CANCELLED IF IT RAINS

.

1/

To~

FUNDS RAJSeD- Youth of the Rutland Church of God l'llllld $124.23 to help build a Mllllury
Quito, ECUidor recent!~, by perllclpetlng In a Royal CoUrt conteat. Win-. were Joe Sltl8rlllkl,
aline••' Maggie Salllrfleld, prlnCeP Nnner-up; Jelsk:l Hag, pr'•lCIII•; Joah Kennedy, king; Sinh
1f'lc:llen., qwen. Nol plcllnd Is Joe Schllm~nn, prince ~
•

6

333NIIn.
•

·..

992·6472

' . --- - ~-- ---· -...,. ..
',..

·~

�'

'

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesdey, May 13,1998

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ByMARKLIU

I

By CHRIS SWINGLE
Rochester Democrat and
Chronicle
Don't wait for your cat or dog to
start scratching its rump like crazy.
The mild winter is expected to
breed a fierce flea season, and now
is the time to prevent your pets and
your house from getting infested
with the pinhead-sized blood-suck"As soon as heaters go off, the
Oea protection ought to go on," says
Dr. William Miller, a veterinarian
and professor of dennatology at the
College of. Veterinary Medicine at
Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.
Flea eggs survive the winter and
. neas are easil y spread by squirrels, ·
racoons and pets.
New nonprescription flea treat-

•

•

'
•

FOODWW IPECIAt COUPO r~ 'I 0 I
fFFfCTIV£ 5 1010 lilb,98

FOOOtMW IPfCIM COUPON I 09

.

half gallon etn)\881irirttlioes

FOOD LAND

Broughton
Pnmiumlce

KnftPasta
Salad

............
FREE

FREE

.., •....•.. ..,•..•..•..

Services
•Greeting Cerda

Joy Cake
Cups

•Roral Sales
•We accept credit Clrda

• Allllla's Hea•y DUty

Austin's Fabric
Softener

FREE

Uquld l.audry

Deteraeat

.., o........

FREE

FREE

Limit ooc fret: willl

...,......,Milli
t..F .......

"''*'Dozen
Baker's

I
I Italian Village
I Cbee~ Ravioli
I
I llf ........
I

sapq, Po.

"'""
HomeBest""'
Pink

HomeBest
Blade Cartridges

.., ......... ..,•..•..•..

Cheese ·&amp; Potato
Pierogies

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

Mario Pitted Ripe 1
Olives
I

ChexMix

81f0atltt0at I

. FREE

FREE

.., •.....•.
..,
•..•..•..
.., ......
FREE
FREE
C•llor .
Caullllower

15 otbtl,
Ean
Strc. .h or AIM .t Unolitl

H~meBest SIOn

Betty Crocker
DlinkAroos

free

Lotion

l201jlr

Ajl[lle.

Cr1aberry

R~ny or

..,
.........
.., •..•..•..
..,•..•..•..
. · FREE
FREE
Bismuth

FREE

FREE

1.1S.Sm pto,Aoo'o VoricoO..,
GENERAUIIUS

......

64 oz bll, Conccnuncd

12 ct box

"SuJ~&amp;rbank"

Foodlaqd
I Cnnberry Juice
I
I .

Foodland Gnpe ,
· Jelly

.., o.•••••••
FREE

. Umil oac free wil.lhia cc:M6pon.

FOODl.\tW IPFCIAL COUPO~ '118
EIFf CTIVE 5 '10 TO S 16 qa

IOODL"ND IPECI"l COUPOfl 'I\ I
EFFECTIVE S 10 TO 5 \6 ,98

w-.... II
EXPRESS
I
Russet Potatoes Cole Slaw Mix I
JOlb.bq, U.S. No.1

oz.

L

FREE

C.li(omil

Mario
Olives

•.,........

oOhlo Valley Bank

''

B•y One Ott One

FREE

~"=""'~,.,.,...

I
I
I
I

Gold Medal FIQur

B•y 0•• let 0••

(except llucQye)

z...

5 lb. bag, SeH-Rislng or All
. Purpose

Cream

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
· Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodlend Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

"excessive." parents should be on
the lookout for sudden changes in
paUe(nS. If a chi ld who has always
slept through the night now wakes
up asking for water. if a child suddenly becomes a bed-wcuer or if -J1
baby's diapers arc markedly wetter than before. these arc signs that
should be checked out. The lirst
diagnostic test is a simple check for
glucose in the urine. which can be
done right in the doctors office. A
pediatrician or family physician can
determine whether hlood tests ·
should also be performed.

unexplained weight loss is uftcn unc
hallmark of the disease. As the condition wurscns. a r hild may also
complain or ahdominal pain. loss of
appetite. headache. fatigue or blurry
vision. There may he vnmi1ing. The
child's breath may alsn have the
cylor of acetone. which gives nil a
fruity smell . Irritability rn;w also
occur, especially in children too
young to explain "their symptoms
verbally.
When lhe insulin deficiency is
severe and prolonged, diabetic
((cloacidosis will occur. If diabetic
ketoacidosis is quickly diagnosed,
the crisis can be overcome by immediate intravcnou• nuid replacement.
fpllowed by insulin treatment and
correction of electrolyte imbalances.
OKA requires immediate hospitalization.
Type I. or juvenile diabetes, is an
autoimmune disease. This means
thai a child &gt; own• immune system
perceives a component of the pahcrcatic bet;· cell (or insulin-secreting
~-ell), as a foreign protein. This
results in inflammat-ion and destruction of the beta-cells. which normally secrete insulin into the blood.
Families with an incidence of Type I
diabetes need to be especially alert
,fjJr early symptoms of the disease.
Juvenile diabetes can o.:cur at any
age during childhood. bul il is most
common around age 5 and 6 and in
ellrly puberty.
Treatment of juvenile diahctes
requires a very extensive family
.(ducation process. First of all. the
child will need injections of insulin
several timd a day. before meals
and snacks. The child's blood sugar
r~eeds to be monitored throughout
the day with a finger-prick bloodslucosc monitor. And a nutritionist .
or doctor needs lo work with the:
family to determine a diet and exer~ise program for the child. The doctors who specialize in this disease
1ili pediatric endocrinqlogists.
Juvenile diabeteJ is a frightening
!lisease and often difficult for a famj ly to accept.

It looks so easy in the movies.
You walk into a crowded ballroom, grab some champagne - then
suddenly, from across the: room, you
catch a glance. The music swells.
lnstanlly you're in love. And not just
any love . You're swoonir-g with
Kim Basinger! Or Leonardo
DiCaprio! Or Jim Carr~y! (OK,
there are limits.)
.Hollywood knows how unfair
this is, which is why one of the
happy celluloid lovers invariably
turns out 10 be a contract killer. But
the excruciating reality is that regular people do, in fact, experience ·
love at first sight. And they end up
gelling married, not murdered.
People who haven't felt il tend to
scoff. So do many psychologists,
who say we're probably falling for
. just ·an idealized "type." Even hard
science is trying to reduce anraetion
10 liule more than animal magnetism.
But as souhd as these theories
arc, they can't fully account for ·
some of the actual stories about
instant love. If love is a mystery,
then love at first sig~t is, a mystery
wrapped in an enigma- at least for
those who have experienced it.
Katy Fournigault, for example,
was looking for a lozenge, not love.
She was in the throes of bronchitis,
coughing all over the place, and her
friend had dragged her to a crowded
liar. Just survivi ng the evening
·would have been nice.
: She says she still can't . explain
"what happened that night.
.
"! don't remember other people
walking in -just him. There was
'j)!St something about him," says
.Foumigault. 41, of Irondequoit, N.Y.
."I don't even remember feeling sick
after meeting him."
. The "him" in question is now her
husband of almost 14 years. Before
they· mel, she scoffed al lhe idea of
love at first sight. And marriage was
the furthest thing from her mind al
the lime. She was 25 with no plans
to marry until her late 20s. That all
changed when Dave entered her
sights.
"I was !ust standing in the middle
of .this .rowd of people, and I
thought . 'I'm going lo marry this
man.' A~d I don 'I know where that
cnme frutn. It wasn'tlike I said il to
myself. It just came into my headI've never had that experience
before or since.''
It wasn't as dramatic for Dave,
bu'C he · does remember fcclinlf
unusually comfortable talking with
Knty. In fact, they talked all night.
Within two weeks they had fallen in
walk"into-walls love. Three months
later. they were engaged.
Psyj:hology would explai~ it by
looking at past experiences. ·
"Someone might have similar
facial features or physique to someuric from the past who they've had a
positive experience or relationship ''
with,'" says Susan Horwil1., assistant ·
prflfcssor for Strong Family Therapy
Services in Rochester, N.Y. "If it
happens consciously al all, it's a
llccting thought."
That would cxpltiin most occurrences of instant love. But Fournigauh has hnd a long lime to think
ahout it. anJ she insists that Dave
didn"t remind her of anyone.
.' Dolly Tulin of Hcnricua, N.Y..

Buy One ·Get One

mine how much thirst or urination is

If these earliest signs arc missed,
there arc other warning signs that
j(lyc~ilc diabetes is progrcssin!\ An

.OeleJ,.ate Jau-t~
o.l'ft~ir t~~eel: at oq

EASTMAN'S

Knowing the signs of
juvenile diabetes is
critical in treatment

Rochester Democrat and
Chrona.te

ize you don 't save money if you try
something that doesn't work. "Flea
prevention is far less costly than letting your pel and house become
infested," says Miller.
If you're lucky enough to .live in
a flea-free environment, you should
still check your pet once or twice a
week with a fine-tooth flea comb
during wann weather. "Flea dirt"
looks like pepper but turns red on a
wet paper towel.
- If your pet gets Oeas, flea eggs
have probably fallen. onto areas
where the pet sleeps, so you need 10
clean or treat those locations, too.

Topical treatments such as the Brownstein and other veterinarians Oeas. They can carry tapewonns,
prescription-only Advantage, sold in say.
cause anemia and even kill a pel.
multi-packs of premeasured monthA once-a-month pill called Pro- They can also infest your house and
!y doses costing $8 or $9 per dose, · gram is effective al sterilizing fleas bite you .
are in vogue now.
Other things to consider when
so they don't reproouce, but doesn't
"It's been probably the greatest work until a treated animal is bitten. choosing the right treatment:
thing since the invention of the This birth control for fleas also . - Evaluate the time and energy
wheel, for fighting fleas," says Dr. doesn't kill ·any adult fleas already required for different treatments.
Michelle Brownstein of Henrietta hiding on the pel's skin, leaving a Sprays, powders and dips work bul
(N.Y.) Animal Hospital.
.
pet who is allergic to flea bites to must be used regularly. Keeping up
The liquid, which has been en the suffer.
with the recommended treatment
market for two years, is highly
Meanwhile, some products com- schedule might be particularly diffi effective at killing adult flea, -and , bine flea and heartwonn protection, cult if you hn , ~ numerous pels. AI
only needs to be applied to the ani- which is convenient and cheaper the same time, products that take
mal's back once a month. Its effec- than separate me&lt;,Jications, Miller less time are also the most expentiveness only drops slighlly if the pel says.
si\le.
gets wet from a bath or a swim,
Whatever you do, don't ignore
- When comparing costs, real-

ers .

By DR. BRENDA KOHN
New Y(!rk University School of
Medicine
For AP Special Features
· A few months ago, a 10-year-old
New Jersey girl died in her sleep.
People in her community were
shocked when they learned that the
girl died because of undiagnosed
juvenile di abetes. The ·girl had
entered a state called diabetic
ketoacidoSIS, a dangerous condition
which can result when ~iabetes is
either unrecognized or untreated.
This news story underscores the
need for everyone to learn the symptoms of diabetes in children.
Juvenile (or Type I) diabetes
occurs when the pancreas fails to
produce insulin, the hormone
required to process carbohydrates.
When juvenile diabetes is diagnosed, injections of insulin make up
(or this deficiency and keep blood
glucose le~els in balance. But if the
warning signs of juvenile diabetes
are nol noticed and the disease progresses unchecked, blood sugar levels become dangerously high, dehydration begins and a medical trisis
called diabetic ketoacidosis can
occur. Such a crisis can lead to
shock, coma and even death.
This makes early diagno&lt;Js of
juvenile diabetes critical. Th&lt; primary warning signs are excess;, .: thirst
and e:u:essive urination. which is the
body's way of making up forthe fact
that it is becoming dehydrated.
Although it can be difficult to deter-

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

The look of love: Fora few lucky people, a .dream partner comes out of nowhere

Over- the
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 13, 1998

Buy One Cet One
Fresh Baked Apple Pie I ~i:r •··
FREE
~~~ Ott One=-·--·--··----....L~.2;;l:::;;;;_:;:J
'·· ....... .
I

wilfllhll c:oupoe. Good only .a

· · ·-

--·

FOODLMW SPECIAL COUPON' I Si
EFF[CIIV[ S 10 TO) , lo 98

llb.IMI, FRESH

Buy One let 01e

FREE
fru wilh this cuupon,

Oood ottly at

IOODLAND \PfCIAt COUPOI•
c!SJHf[CTIVE I 10 TO I 16 og

I Foodr:.dw..ole I II 10 bq, FRESH EXPRESS II
FOODLAND SPE CIAL COUPON • 1~ 5 EFFECTIV E5/ 10 TO 5/ 16 / 98
CAMPBELL'S
I Peeled Thmatoes I
II
I ,., ... ,,,,. I 1 Spinach
11 Mushrooms
U.S.D.A. GRAD)!: A
I
FREE . I I Buy 01e let Ote I Buy One Cet Oae
I
I
Farms
I
I
I FREE I FREE
Chicken Breast
"'"~ ... r........... .._.iiooo...,. - · ~~-;;~~...~-~·~·~""';...
~·~""""=~.;:ly~~~~
.
Foodlllid Pancake ~----------------~~
Tenders
&amp;Warne Syrup
Buy One ·Get One
pilot,

01

L-~.11'~-.r~.!F-o-.J

FRlE

IOODtl,riD \PECIAL CDUPOfl '1 ',0
EFFiOIVE I iOTO 5 16 'IS

24PACK

Rockyrop

s

88

Velvet Push Treats.. Sl.l9
Velvet Sherbet qL.:. $1.19

Bedding Plants Over 50 Varieties SDk Memorial EASTMAN'S
Fl()Wers

Spray

l2Packs

1\

$

99

Big Bend, Buckeye, Galllpolla,
Ohio Valley, Twin Rivers
••

99'

Vegetable Plants
• Top Soli • Rich Peat • Mulch . W.aboiN&amp;w.,.
spra,stllfd~ttutlar

W. A

..... IIIIIIIIID 1.111111 Qo

IIIII • '*-l!llo:tlullllru

•

SUPERMARKETS

•

I

-----------

-----~-

- - ----

But then there are people - like
George Werner of Irondequoit who !!fCn' t looking at all.
"I didn't want to have a permanent relationship. I didn't want 10
get married, ever." says Werner, 53.
"That whole plan went out the window."

A.stained-glass window, in fact:
It was in 1995 at Corpus Christi
Church, "lhe last place I expected to
meet anyone," says ·werner. But
when he sal down with friends at
church one day, he met their daughter Lisa for the first time and was
smitten.
"I knew right away, from the first

time," says Werner. "I don't have
anything tangible lo explain it. We
just always knew we were going to
be together."
For the envious, there's a saving
pe. Love at firsl sight doesn' t
mean love without effort.
. "For any relationship to endure,
il takes hard work even if it's love at
first sight." says Collinge. "It's a
great device to get people together,
but once you get together, you're on
youn&gt;wn."
And if the person turns out to be
a contract killer, well, that 's what
you get for being so lucky in love.

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

hovv.~nay

' .

The ~ora to Your New Wai·Mart Supercenter Will Be Open ·soon ...
We're Here to Serve Youl
L

At Wai-Mart,

we want

to make a

.

difference in your community and be the

'

best neighbor possible.
'!

W~

commit to keeping our prices low, OUr

-.._~ua..l.ity and selection high and alWays

having ·what you .want -

•

•

all Wlder one

roof. Also, we'll make sure we do those

.,

things you expect from your best
neighbors- greet you when you come in,
I .

help you on yo~ way out, ·treat you with
respect, and care about your needs.

•.

'

.

We guilrantee your satisfaction during

eaeh and every visit to your Wal-Mart
•

store. It is our pledge, promise and reason

ByMARKUU

FREE

Soft.Drinks

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

for being in business -

RochMter Democrat and
Chronicle
.

l4'"EIIII, ....... or UO:

.., .......

----

Some researchers
say your nose knows
if it's true ·love for you

Umn oae fn:c wilh litis CDupOil

IOC).AIID '"CIId COIIPOI&lt; -II~
fFFf(TI'If I I 0 TO I i" Od

another first-sighter, says . her love
"To feel that phenomenon, it author of "Subtle Energy" (Warner,
interest wasn't even her type. II hap- really is amazing. You heard about it $24), attributes the phenomenon to a
pened during her very first day at growing up, and you say, 'Yeah, different kind of consciousness.
State University College at Fredo- right, sure.' Then it happens to you."
"We each have our own unique
nia, back in 1960, as she stood in a
She: told her parents about it, and enelllclic signature; we ~II radiate an
welcoming line being run by an they said, "Yeah, right, sure." Tulin enellly.'' says Collinge. He uses the
upperclassman ..
herself says that on her first day of Indian Ayurveda medicine system to
"As soon as I saw him, I was just college, the last thing on her mind identify personal energy types that
hit by a thunderbolt, and I said, 'This was marriage. But true to her word, either clash or click between two
is the man I'm going lo marry.' I'd she and Alon were married several people. Send off or receive the right
had crushes, but nothing like this. years later.
energy and you might just find yourNever," says Tolin, who didn't want
Tulin explains it the saine way self falling . for someone without
to give her exact age.
Foumiga~h does, "I can't explain
knowing why.
· Alan was a brown-eyed guy with it," she says.
It doesn' t always happen that
curly brown hair, as opposed to her
It's no wonder that less tradition- way, says Collinge. Sometimes, peoideal type: blonde and blue-eyed. al · theories pop up: William ple simply fall for someone who
Bul thai di\ln't seem to matter.
Collinge, a psyc~olherapist and matches li,Jeir ideal image of ti mate.

your 100010

satisfaction. It's been true for more than ·

Some researchers think "love at
first sight" is really " love at first
smell."
In the animal and insect worlds,
it's true that ardor and odor are
closely linked. ·Chinese alligators,
· mochs, rats, cockroaclfcs - there's a
long list of creatures that send chemical mating signals detected through
smell.
The
chemicals,
called
pheromones, may or· may not exist
· in humans. But not everyone is waiting for definilivc.pruof. Several perfume and cologne manufacturers
claim they've isolated pheromones
and bottled them, promising
enhanced sex· appeal to customers
hoping to sniff out a date.
"I lhinli it's all bogus." says
Wendell Roelofs. professor of insect
biochemistry at Cornell University's
Geneva campus. Bees nnd educated
ncas may do it. hut that dnesn't
mean humans do .
Odor, though, docs play '.'a huge
part in our everyday life." says
Roelofs.
·
P&gt;opic associate smells - freshhated hrcad or someone 's perfume
- with strong feelings, including
aurnclion.Anlhropologisl Edward T.
Hall found that Arab matchmakers
&gt;ometimes ask to smell the breath
and overalfscenl of a potential wife.
rejecting ber if they catch the: scent
of anger or discontent.
But whichever sense is at work,
, some would say the best one ta rely
on is cmnmon sense. ·

33 years and will continue ... always.

Come See Us Sooa.

We Cu't Walt to 1\teet Yoal

•

2f~ . .aternAvenue
GaUiaplla

/

-'

I

•

--

-~----

---------

. -

---

-

----

-

~--

------

--

---

•NDI Alii 1i ••II far1l/p&lt;a "lplllcalor Plc.,olool Emn.

-.

.-

. 1'

•

•

•

�I

hge 10 • The DaHy Sentinel

t

Wednesday, May 13, 1998:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 13, 1998

'' I
'\."'

~

Clinton orders sanctions on India ·for nuclear tests.
POTSDAM. Gennany &lt;AP) Preaidenl Clinton today ordered
lOUgh Sanctions against India in retaliation for its underground nuclear
test~. The Uniled States acted a.• India
~id it had conducted two more
nuclear tests.
Climon was to announce the sanctions after talks with German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. He executed the
n«es.o;ary paperwork this morning'
before flying here from Berlin to
mec1 Kohl. senior U.S. officials said.
The sanctions include an end to
U.S. a.~sistance to lri&lt;!ia. a prohibition
on lhe export of certain defense and
technology material, an end to U.S.
credit and credit guarantees to India.
and U.S. opposition to lending by
international financial institutions to
India, the officials said. While U.S.
assistance is to be halted. there is an
exception for food and humanitarian
aid.
Clinton has mndemned India's
nuclear tests. Under U.S. law. sane'

tions are lllalldatory.
While the p'unilive ramific:~t~ions
played out. CIA officials questioned
how the test~ could have caughllhem
so unaware.
U.S. spy satellites trained on
India's nuclear test site observed
routine activities thai proved to be
elaborate efforts to conceal impend. ing nuclear test explosions. U.S.
intelligence. otlicials say.
India announced Monday that -i.L
had set oft' three underground.nuclear
explosions at a'lest site in the Thar
Desert. 70 miles from the horder of
arch rival Pakistan. an act universally greeted. as destabilizing in an
already tense pan of Asia. Lncallndiun news agencies. qlm1ing an ollidiil
1mnnuncemen1. n:pon~'&lt;.l that India
conducted two more underground
nucle"r tests today.
Before leaving · Wo1shingtun on
TucsJ~'Y· Clinton urgt..~ lndiu and il~
nc!ighbors tn refrain from further
lc!sling. and he prnrnisL-c.l lo invnkc

..

By IIIAACV GORDON
Fla., said the House bill was "proAP Bualneu Writer
family" bccawe it would help people
WASHINGlON -As lawmakers with good credit records by cracking ·
on both sides of the Capitol shape down on debtor abuse and thereby .
major legislation to rewrite the iowering interest rates for credit
nali\)n's bankruptcy la~s. DemocraL&lt; cards.
.
backed by Hillary Rodharn Clinton
But Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.,
are warning that it could hatm chil- insisted the measure would result in
dren of single parents.
"ruined lives lost homes, broken
Along with consumer and labor families "
'
groups. ~orne Democrat~ are trying to
Ac~ the Capitol, some 30 senslow the legislation's progress. They ators have written th~ Senate Judiare calling attention 10 a provision ciary Committee chairman, Sen.
that, they contend, would make thou- Orrin Hatch, R-U(Jih, expressing consands of mother$ and children owed cern abOut the legislation's potential
support take a back seat 10 credit card . impact on children and single mothcompanies in collecting debts from ers. Most of those signing the leuer
fathers who file for bankruptcy pro- are Democrats, jllined by three
tection.
'
. RepubliCII!ls: Sens. James Jeffords of
As lhe House Judiciary CommitVermont, Alfonse .D' Amato of New
tee embarked on its dmfting task York and John Chafee. of Rhode
·Tuesday, Rep. Bill McCollum, RIsland.

haJir.\

warnings t~at this wa.' going 10
pen."
Nevertheless. U.S. otliclals in ,,
those meetings strongly urged India,,
tn n:frJin from any dnun:11ic respon.~
10 perceived provocations by Pak;:.
·istan. such as the recent testing of a ,,
medium-mnge ballistic mi.-,ile. .. ,_
Even after India had announced
'· we~ "
the nuclear test. U.S. otlictals
slow to offer independent corroboJ¥.· ;
tion, based on seismic evidence. th'l(
nuclear tests had been ·c~nducte~. :. ;:
S'i!nate Majority Leiider Trent ,
Lou. R-Miss.. said India's actioo
shan-circuited po.-•ible Senate con- :
siderJtion of the Comprehensive Test ,
Ban Treaty. a pact signed by 149,.
nations- though not India and Pakistan - banning any nuclea,.,
weapons testing.
.
.,
Lou said that the test ban treat
"probably has been set a.•i'le" a.• ~
result of lqdia's action.
•
•
••

IIERLIN (API - l'ihy years ahcr
the llerlin airlift signaled the opening
nf the ('nl~ War. l'resi&lt;lenl t'linlnn is
('CUllll\Cilluraling thai hcnliC em.lrt
while scHing ·:new directinns '' fur u
Europe peaceful and secure. ·
Flying inltl Tcgcl airport, built
during the 19411-49 Soviet blockade
cxpn.'Ssly ti1r the airlift. Clinton's itinemry lnday called for a mixture nf
politics and pomp.
Amhassador to Germany John
Kornblum said the president intended to use the trip nol only to recall the
historic ties between Berlin and
America, but "to set new directions"
for Europe almost a decade after the
Berlin Wall fell.
1lte trip comes just weeks after the
Senate approved the fir.&gt;l wave of
NATO expansion and the European
Union ratified plans for a single currency.
·
~

.. ,

Israeli jets strike ·Palestinian guerriJia base, killing eight ·; .;

GERMANY - Pietiidel\t Clilnton,
_ , _ In the crowd In front of the Neue Pallllaln PabdMIBerlln on Wednesday. Clinton Is on a two-day vlsiiiO Germany
and will take parlin the celebrallona marking the 50ih annlver·
aery of the Bertin airlift. (AP)

Indonesia's crisis worsens
as police kill six protesters
JAKARTA •. Indonesia (AP) President Suharto's security forces
finally made brutal. reality Tuesday
oul ·nf his threats to crush growing
unrest. firing into a cro~d of student
pmteslers in Jakarta. Si~ stude_nts
died bel'ore the eyes of the1r ho!TIItcd
companions.
At lea." 16 other people were
wounded. so1ne seriously. It wa.• by
'ar
police action yet in
•· the tuu••hest
.,
weeks uf intensifying protests
!~parked by the worst economic crisis ·
of Suharto's 32-year rule.
'
Witnessessaid officers fired continuously for several minutes- first
rubber bullets. then live ammunition
_ after students beat up an undercover intelligence agent sent to spy
on them. An intelligence agent wa.&lt;
recently beaten to death by students
at a similar college protest in the
nearby city of Bogor.
Some of Tuesday's victims were
hit as they tried 10 scramble back to
·
the grounds of Trisakti Universlly
through clouds of tear gas.
"The police went crazy. They beat
us up. They cho.&lt;;ed everrbodY while
other.&gt; were firing." said Iwan
l(arimun. an economics student.
The killings were likely to set off
a backlash against the 76-year-old
leader. whom much of the nation
hold• accountable for soaring prices
and joblessne.s.
·
'
So far. the retired five-star army
IJCneral. now attending an intemationa!'conference in Egypt. ha&lt; resosled mounting pressure at home and
abroad for democratic reform.
La.'ll week. Suhurto warned that
poli&lt;:e and military troops would use
ron:e lo quell unruly student protests.
On Tue!lday. he made good on the
threat.
The police and military confirmed
the death and injury tolls at a news
L'OIIfencnce early Wednesday. However. Jakarta'• poli~e chief, Maj.
Gen. Hamani Nata. said each riot
offtcerwa&lt; 10 be is.~ued only 20blank
and 20 rubber bullets, which can be
lethal al up 10 130 feel. ·
· Some witneS.~s claimed snipers
had delibenlk:ly aimed at the heads of
liOIIIC oflhe vK:Iims. Student leaders
Iller collecled whlll they said were
1p11111 Cllinp rrom live bullets.
NICJ lllid nothing directly abotll
... • of live 1111munition, but said
• inaligarion had bcm IIIUIIChed to

TAANAYEL, Lebanon (AP) Israeli warplane:. auacked a training
camp for radical Palestinian guerrilla.• in ea.'ilem Lebanon early today, .
killing eight guerrillas and wounding
al lca.•t 20 as they slept, Lebanese
security officials said.
The rare night raid on a ba.•e for
the Syrian-backed Fatah Uprising
faction wo.~ l~e deadliest by lsro~eli
11(arplanesJ;ince a I(Hlay Israeli aeriahaflll. ground f:lo{nbing blitz of
Lebanon killed atlea.•l 175 people in
April 1996.
.
II came as tension mounted on the
la.•l active Arab-Israeli warfront On
'Tuesday. ro&lt;:kelli and morlatll fired by
Iranian-backed Hezbollah guerrilla.•
in southern Lebanon landed near
l~rael's bonder in apparent retali3!ion

a-·

(

•

·'

ty of child-support payments.
But Jeffords said Tuesday that
would not be sufficient. since big
commercial creditors "have so many
more weapons and ways they can dun
people" for payments. ·
. In another area. Gekas' bill would
establish a "needs" test to determine
how much debt relief people should .
receive and how much they are able
to repay - a provision to whic h
many Democrats and some Roepublican·senators have objet~.
The Senille measure proposed by
Sens. Charles Grassley, R-lowa. and
Richard Durbin. D-111 ., seeks to prevent people who can afford to pay
their debts from escaping them. But
it also includes tough new fines for
abuse by creditot;S that try to intimidate or harus consumers into giving
uo their legal protections.

President Clinton's budget request
· for missile defense seeks $822 million for continued testing and development of TfiAAD next year. The
House National Security Committee
has endorsed that figure.
The· Army, which runs the
THAAD program, wants to begin
buying 40 interceptor missiles as a.
first inslallrneot on a system that is:
projected to cost $15 billion to
acquire and $18 billion to operate
over 20 years.
·

a

. callfOIIIIa .

an

...t

Senate·eyes re.verse

of '96 food stamp law

' ...

strawfl8rrles
flUid .

for"legal immigrant$
'

~ WASHINGlON (AP) -

_We remember those,who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Friday, May 22, we will publish a special page devoted to those .who are
gone but not forgotten. The names will be placed in alphabetical order and will
be similar.to the sample below:
' wWI,Idfd IMN' of I'"' ,.............;t: "'""tMtuw to
lr ~~
JOUr h1Mk.
I. We hi'IW ynu in tlllr thnutrl•.~ ;utiJ nll'nlutk•'! (utC'\'t.'f.
l . May G~ nill.lko yuu in flis ann&lt;~, 11uw wnd tttrtYcr.
3., f•nn:vcr mi~'lf.'d. rte\'tr '••lfltn. M11y Ont.l huld yuu in the
palm uf llill llllft&amp;J.
4. Titant. )'UIIIur lit~.• wutldt••ful W.7~
"~lhtr. My

.:c:..,.•J

JIJ'Ifaycr. will ht: wilh

'

Y.•• •••til we 1111.'\:l a~am.

S1·11w .J:•y~ ~-..· ~11;11\'ll we" •w.'Ct't.

July 10. 1961-May 5, 1980 .

• c;.-.r:\ t~~.·.. vl·nty alut,..

'

'''"'r 1u M."i: Y"~ uJ~ait• in

, , "' )t&gt;lll -••mile ftlf, II' \'- ilh j11y 111NJ IMir,lfl'-'1.
_7. 'f1MIIIJ:,h IIIJI Ill \I(!IM , )'11U' IIItwtn•t h .• in Ill)'

guide you and

lk·art ;uklmintl
II, 1'111' day~ 11101)' ~-un..: ~~~ ~~~ . tlultlw llllk:\ IH' \ltoul'll will

protect you
throughout time.

'l

afWOI)':' R'llllltlt

, 1.··

f. Mil)' tik' lif.hl Ill fk'IIC&amp;' 'hin1• nn )'nUt t..._-l' lut' cl~'1'11ily
_II. Mot) li4:J-~ "''IJ:d_, cu•do..- )Utl .wid Pi'Uifl"l yuu rhmutJ-IUI tillk'.
11. 't'•&gt;tl .t' :•lt,•hl ill nm lilc that ltrrrm fllfi.'\CI ill'"'' ht•lfn~
11. M· ... Ill\ l!tltl'n _
,J,it-.: " ''l"J yuu tnr illlllllkt
1.\. y,l\1 ,m• in t"llr lhUUfCIM~ 111MJ twl)'t'l'll IIUPIIIMiniiiiJ! In' nlp:hl

Ah••Y• In our he•rt,, ·
John .... MoM Andre~

••

'

)

atlll hun• yeou 1t1 )"C:tr.
'r'lol ~ ~·rt&amp;l lhi'J mc.~'OIIr.x wilh 11 lnvlo1• ti~' lur~cm.l rc"' 11 nd

· and t'amlly
'

hllppil'k"'l\.

.

•

1$. Mrtt Ute l .ufd t&gt;lt!\\ )'tiU 'ol.ilh lit\ lllk'l.:\ Oftlltl 1'".11111, luwir1,11111.'~l1
~

.

.

...

'

TO REMEMBER YOUR,LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICfURE INCLUDED

.,

Fill oul the fona below and drop oil' 111

The Dally Sentinel
Witt,;Fondest Memories
110 CourfSt., Pomeroy, Ohio 45631

Numborofoelocted..,,..

1Do&amp;. ofblrth
I v........
1 Ra11•
1

.

.I

1

...t

111el•tloaohlplame
'

oY"

.

·

I

'I

:aNo

i

llnlleho(llf¥iee

I

J

.
\

;-&gt;

11

II

'!j

••

.

.. 0

I

'I -

•

.

·

'•j

,1,
I

1

'•f,

,i1

L-~------------------~---~---~~

'..

'

·. : .

· Dote of puofn1

I PrllltJVUtD_.....
•
IA
~'!tone l!llfllloer
I et"
....
7;1p
I
Make Chefk Payablt TO THE DAILY SENTINEL

IC 5oft Drinks
12-Paek 12« cans

., ..

Chicken Breast

English lloast

l'tiUnd

to restrict teen drivers ·

• •
'

Please publish my tribute in this ,special Memorial Day Page on Friday, May 22 '

I

AI" 1/JUlEftES

AAA pushes campaign·

r-----------------------------,

I Nomur ~.

d

••

\. ~-

DEADLINE: MONDAY, MAY 18, NOON

'

•'ian

~ \ '• 1111 ~11UI&lt;Ir.c a1Mftlf&lt;1Wl'f') :\fiJI lll'fJitt' II\ all. ~lnillh!: IIICfllllfJ

May God's angels

•

I ,

we...._. .

Andrews, David C

'

Food disa•ter.
.
Sjamp bCnelits would be restored to . · ''There is no new entitlement
2;50.o00' legal immigt:'Jnts under leg- , here." said Sen. Dick Lugar. R-Ind ..
;~lation pa.~sed by the Senate, w'hich
cl)atrrnan of the Agncullure Combrushed a.•ide IIIJ!Itmel\111 thai it would inittee. "This is a question of a comreverse the I~ welfare· law,
milmenl to farmer.o."
• The five-ycal·. S 1;9 billion bill. .
T1le fOod stamp '1115lpratlon applies
senl lo tht HoiJse on a 92-8 Vole· . to fewer than one-third of the esti1~esday, also would pfllvide new
mated 935,000 legal immigrants who
flnanci~l guarantees for crop insur- . lost benefits u~er lhe welfanc. l~w,
· ance aitd set aside new money ror but supporters sa1d they were wtlhng
a@ricultural research in what sup- 10 accept that as a down payment.
Ji&gt;rters said wa.~ a balance intended
Targeted are the elderly, those
It) appeal to both urban anti-hunller under 18, the disab~ and people
forces atld farm advocates.
who came to the Uniled States lo flee
! "This is a carefully crarted com- political or religious persecution. To
ptomise," said Sen. Torn Harkin, D· qualiry. those immigrants had lo be
l&lt;)wa.
·
ljvitig in 'the United Sta~ts as of Aug.
• On ·a 77-23 vole. the Senate 22, 1996.
·
&lt;lefented an auempt by .Sen. Phil
The deal to restore the benefits
(tamm, R- Texa.~. to send the bill wa.• 'initially struck by House and
bfck to committee. w~ich would Se~ate JJCgotial~rs i~ Man:h, who
have effectiv~ly killed 11. Gramm, splltlhe $1.9 blllton tn admtntstrahve
~ had blocked a floor vote for
savings from the food stamp program
~Necks. argued that restoring more
for the three major provisions.
$818 million· in benefirs for . ln. ·crop ins1!13nce, 1~ _measure
seme legal immigrants amounted to would guarantee $470 mtlhon over
a (full retreat from the welrare over· fi_ve y~rs to pay agents and ~o':1ipahtul'that cui them off.
mes for expenses and comm1sstons.
· "The biggest problem with litis 'In _addition. the .money would be
b 1 is il poL• a great big neon sign at placed in mancjatory spending cate. tfle border of the United States of gories, meaning it would not have to
Americd, 'Corne and get wei rare,"' ~'OITIPc;te wilh other priorities year ·
&lt;lramril said. "I want people to come after ye~.
· .
. .
t&lt;l America lo go lo work."
The bill would add ~ million
• President Clinton had indicated he over five years for Jlgrtcultural
Would velo the bill without the food resean:h, stressing such areas as food
stjlmps provisions, and supporters ~afety and biotechn~logy, and
sqe&gt;!led that fAnners needed the crop tncrease five-year spendtng fbr ru.':"l
insurance to renew policies. which development programs by $100 mti,W.,uld allow them to obtain bank lion. ·
~tlcdit and peace qf mind in c~ or

•

Escape plans
distributed in
strlken Italian
communities

see if the procedures set up had been
followed correctly.
Distraught students :~~~id the yiolence broke out a(ter police, dressed
in heavy riot gear, skirmished with
protesters who had left their camP"'
and blocked a busy road.
SARNO. Italy (AP) .._ Experts .
Hundreds of P.Oiice surrounded the are scrambling to devise a new evacTrisakli campus after nightfall a.• uation plan for towns in southern
grieving family member.&gt; identified Italy stricken by mudslides after
the· dead at the Somber Waras Hos- st00 tess
- how a ro·ad designated a.• an
pital morgue.
escape rouie would be blocked by
"I know he .did not take ~ in new slides in ca.&lt;e torrential rains
any demonstratiOn. Why dtd tl hap- return.
pen 10 him'!"the mother of one of the
Rivers of mud rushed down
dead.screamed a.• other.&gt; tried to con- Mount Sumo· la.•t week, killing at .
sole her.
lea.•t 139 people and burying much of
A long line of student&lt; laterpaid this town and several hamlets neartheir respects to the dead .._, 'other.o by. ~ast&lt; "'~Y more min is expcclshowed reporters ca.•mgs tmm what ed a.• early a&lt; soon a.• Thursday.
they said was live ammunili•m.
Officials were trying to have pamAlthough news photoJ!raphers phlets with evaqmtion insuuctions
accompanied students a&lt; they identi- ready for distribution door-to-door
fied sever•l bodtes at the morgue,
oda
1
senior security personnel said there
Soy. 3 000 r. r. h · ld'
·
ffi · 1
f
nne • •lre.tg lers, so 1ers
1
wen:. no o tc•a ,reports o ca.wa ttes . and other rescue workers used bull'
and declined lo comment further.
dozer.&gt; and shovels to clear escape
"The student protests will go on paths down streets clogged with
and might become bigger," &gt;~aid the hardened mud up 10 10 feet high.
university's law dean. Adi Andjoyo,
"Every day we discover a new ·
a retired Supreme Court judge. "We front, a new, tiny fracture" 00 Mount
are very. very sad this ha.&lt; happened." Sarno lo analyze, said Lorenzo .
Andjoyo said the total \Ieath toll Alessandrini, one of the experts
wa.&lt; six. There was no word on working on the evacuation plan.
arrests.
"We still need a Hnle more time,"
Student leaders in Jakarta and oth- Alessandrini said Tuesday eve~ing.
er cities vowed large-scale proteslli in
Experts examined photos ·taken
resfl?n~ to Tuesday's blood.'llled. from helicopters and readings of
Earher m t~ day. pollee clubbed pro- sen.~ studding the mountain. which
tellters dunng a face-off between ~ _ iuboul 20 miles inland from Naples,
de~on~trators and about SOO !lot
New data convinCed them that any .
pollee m B~ung, ~~ 75 m1les new mudslides would come racing
ea.'ll of the captlal. Poltce fired warn- down ·'exac:lly where lhe road which
ing ~hots into the ai~.
.
had been lhou&amp;hl of for the evacuaFIVe prote~t~~· tncludmg a ~- tion mule pa.•ses," Ales.~drini wa.~
dent and a taxt driver, both bleedtnl qu.oted by the Italian news agency
from I~ head. were rushed to
ANSA as saying.
by h&lt;np1tal.
Many citizens henc complained
.. And at least t.wo procesters we~ they were 1\01 given adequate warntnJ~ when ~ltce shot tear ps and ing when 1wo days of torrential rain
pla.'lttc .bullets 1nto a ~d of 300 lrigered mud.,lides May s.
people tn ~ e!l'~clly of Kujlang.
Sarno's town hall on Tue!lday
The nauonwt~ protests have night finally offered a total number of
g~wn m_arkedly tn lht; lw. '!~k. mining here- 1~.
wnh onltnary lndoneswts. jOintn.l
Makina the head count difficult
shldents and students ex~tnathetr wa., lhe widespread practice he,e of
protests otr-campus.The unpelus f'!" em:ting houlles without building
su~e. of anger was die aovemmen.ls licenlteS 10 ·avoid taxes. Such homes
dec~t~n lut week to ~ away wnh don'llhow up on registrars.
~~~tdteA on gas, tnnspolt and elec11te wlde~pncad u~~e of illegal
lrlctty.
immilfllllll as farmhands aiJIO made
it dilrteialt to arrive 111 a figure for the
number or missin11.

ian-controlled B~kaa Valley.
The ca.•ualties were rushed to 1
The security otlicials. speaking on · three area hospitals. Some of th~:
customary conditipn of anonymity. wounded were reported in seriou~
said eight guerrilla.• were killed and condition.
·
about 20 wounded.' The targeted area
Guerri lla.• sealed off the area.'
is 30 miles southeast of the Lebanese fearing (jelayed detonation fro'!! ·
capital of Beirut. near the border with bombs drOpDed by the jets.
Syria.
"
Israel. which occupies a border :
· "It struck like earthquake that zone in southern Lelianon with thC '
shook us out of bed." said Matwan aim of shielding it• northern' cornHashe'!'· a_mm~ ow~r ir the _ 'fl:llibitl~frorn;:auin1illa~f~~
nearby mark~t town u( Chtaum: Lebanon. ha• lllfllely been engalleU ift
"There wa&lt; aJOIL then a bang, anolh- a war with Lebanese Sltiite Muslim
er jolt and anothel'~afening blow." guerrillas of f1ezbollall in the sputl\1.,

for Israeli shelling that wounded two
Lebanese civilians.
Atlea.•t four jets fired four air-tosurface rockets in each of twownies
at the base of the Fatah Uprising, a
group thai broke away from Vasser
Arafat's mainstream Putah faction in
1983 and ha.~ since opposed the
Palestinian leader's peace negotiations with Israel.
In the I:30 a.m. raid, jets new in
from the Mediterranean and over
mountains in northern Lebanon to
swoop down on the ba•e in the Syr-

.erased or wrinen down. Child support
and alimony, federal U~xes and student loan debts are oondischargeable
under current law.
..
The Democrats contend that ·
would hun children because nondischargeable debts. usually get paid
firsL forcing single mothers to compete for payment with credit card'
cornparKes.
But Rep. George . Gekas, R-Pa..
chief sponsor of the House measure,
disputed lh~t, saying child support
would continue to have a higher priority. .
·
Banking industry groups and credit.card COII)panies have been lobbying hard for the legislation since early last year. A coalition of lhpse
groups said recently they would be
willing lo accept a provision that
would explicitly establish the priori-

off

Germany. Japan. t.:anada and th~..
United States, plus Russia.
., 1
Apart from the so,called Group of
Eight summit. Clinton will hold sep-.
arute talks with Japanese Prime Min~;
ister Ryutaro Hashimoto,' Frencli
President Jacques Chirac and Russ;;
ian President Boris Yehsin. The summit is expected to intensify pressure '
on Japan to deal more aggressively .
with its economic problems. which :
allies fear will deepen the economic :
problems in lhe rest of Asia.
·
This is Clinton's thiod interna-'
tiona! trip this year. after vi~ils 1~ ·
Africa and Chile. Keepinll up a busy
Ira vel schedule. he will visit Ch.ina i~
June followed by trips p)pnned later'
in the year to India andJihkisu!n and :
M&lt;tlaysia. However, plans for the .
India and Pakistan stops have beeri ·
complicated hy India's nuclear test,- .
ing this week, which has drawn .
lll(orldwide condemnali&lt;m.
·

former communist east Germany, to
lour a car factory hought after German unification by Opel,the German
operating u"it of General Motors
Corp. Kornblum said Clinton wanted to stress the importance of U.S.
investment iR the region, which is
still struggling with high unemployment a.• a 1'\'~ult of the wrenching
conversion lo capitalism.
Clinton alsq will visit the historic
Wartburg Fortress, where Manin
Luther hid in !It• early 1.61h century
and lranslate(j ~Greek version of the
Bibl~ into Gerpmn. making the New
Testament w.:cessible to the general
public for the first time and paving
the way for the spread of Protestantism.
,,
On Thursday. lhe president will
depart Germany for Birmingham.
England, for t~e annual summit of
leaders from Britai~~ France. Italy.

m 1L~ current form would have a
stro~g and disproponion~e e!fect"
on smgle parents and the1r ch1ldrc!lt
by putting certain types of credi! card
debt on the same level of pnonty as
chtld support alld ahmony payfi1CnL~.
Mrs. Clinton, in her column last
week in The Wa.~hington Times, said
she had no quarrel with responsible
bankruptcy overhalfl.
"But I do quarrel with ~(lecls of
the btll that would fore~ st~~le parents to compete _for the1r chtld-s~pport payments ":1th b1g banks !!'f'"g
to .coll~ct cncdtt card debt,. she
wrote. The welfare ~four ch1ldren
must come first."
President Clinton ncprised the idea
in his weekly r~io address Saturday
on a Mother's Day theme, sayir.g

&amp;Ome changes lo bankrupk:y laws are
in order, but "mothers and children
should keep their priority."
As they grapple with bllnkruptcy
legislation,lawmaten. are alarmed by
the rising number of debtors in a
strong economy. The number of
Americans filing peoonal bankruptcies last year jumped IO 1.2 million
- up more lhari 300 percent since
1980 - intensifying criticism that
people take court protection from
creditors 100 lightly.
Of those 1.2 million ca.&lt;;es, some
300,000 involved court orders for
child and spousal support, ilccording
to Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.
Under the House and Senate bills,
credit card debt Incurred 90 days
before an individual files for bank·
ruptcy would~ considtred nondischargeable, meaning it couldn't _be

.
.
.
Air
Force
Lt.
Geil.
l.:.ester
Lyles,
the
their
backers
on
Capitol
Hill,
said
the
in
its
"TEM"
pha.'it!,
a.
planned
spiLcitL
R-Miss
..
noting
that
India
had
WASHfNGlON {AP) - Tlie
a nuclear test this week. " It is
Pentagon will keep working on its program's manage.-. should keep trr- ral maneuver that has the missile bum director of the Pentagon's Ballistic set
·
·
· · ofr fuel for a shon time before shift- Missile ·Defense Organizatipn on still a very dangerous world."
. ·
$15 billion THAAD anti-missile mg.
· what to do next, the official said.
But other lawmakers question
"I
am
.discoumged
by
today's
ing to attack its target.
defense system despite five consecBacon
pledged
to
move
forward,
whether
taxpayers should be investresuiL~
but
I
remain
confident
in
the
..
"It
went
into
the
spiml.
It
did
not
u,ive test failures, it11, backers say. ·
saying
"then:'s
no
discussion
to
slow
ing in such missile defense systems.
· "We wil~ntinue to test this pro- technology," said R~p. Cun Weldon, come out," said the official, who
dowR the program."
"For rea&lt;ons that an: sOmewhat ...
gram until we get it right," Defense R-Pa. "This confirms the need for spoke on condition of anonymity.
on
Capitol
Hill
were
Supporters
scheduling
more
robust
testing
as
That
gave
the
appearance
of
a
mystifying
to many·of us, our GOP
Department spokestnan Kenneth
also
unde!etred.
·
soon
a.•
possible.
We
need
10
ensure
problem
with
the
system's
control
colleagues
want to push ahead to
Bacon said Tuesday. speaking only
country
and
the
American
"This
thai
this
program
continues
to
move
mechanism,
but
studies
are
under
committing
tens of billions qf dollars
hours atter the latest test failure was
forward."
wily to determine the exact cause, the people IU'e entitled to some sort of to a technology that has not been
confirmed.
. '
·defense against incoming missiles;" developed yel, "·said Senate Minori:'Preliminary
investigation
indi.
official
said.
· ·
· The Theater High-Altitude Area ·
said Senate Majority _Le&amp;dcr Trent ty Leader Tom Daschle. D-S.D.
cates
that
the
THAAD
missile
lost
"Options
are
being
presented"
to
Qerense failed to intercept a target
ballistiG missile during a test at White control shortly after launch," the PenSands Missile Range, N.M., rising tugon ·said in a written statement.
only I ,053 feet.in the air, ·tfte Penta· "The missile impacted on lhe White
gon saiil. The test lasted only ~.8 sec- Sands Missile Range abOut two miles
nonh of the launch site.... Analysis
onds.
.
The missile system, built bx·Lock· of tlie night data is under way to.
determine the cause of the malfunc~ Martin Corp., is being developed .to protect troops in the field tion."
The Hera target rOCket that the
from auack by Scud and other shortmissile wa.&lt; to have intercepted was
and medium-range missiles.
The THAAD is supposed to be an detonated in night and its debris landed harmlessly in the desert, as.
improv~~nt on the Patriot missile
system. whi~h aained rame in the planned in the event of a ·miss,
accooding to the Pentagon.
Persian Gulf War.
The lest, at 7:20 a.m. EDT, was
THAAD's "hit-to-kill" technololhe
eighth ovemll for lhe THAAD
gy is suppOsc:d· to be monc precise.
aiming to destroy enemy incoming and the fifth involving an actual 'missile night and atte111pted intercept.
~t;~issiles that could be carryinll chemical. biological or even nuclear . The Pentagon rejected media
VJeapons as the missiles 'leave the requesL• fQr release of videos of the
atmosphere 1\nd. aim for targets on failed launch. Television pholos
showed a wavy trail of dusty white
Earth.
'
.The 'goal has been likened to smoke in the early morning sky over
"hilling a bullet with bullet... a the missile mnge. ,
A senior 'Army official familiar
tc:chnical challenge as yei unfulfiJied . .But Pentagon offteials. and with the program said the missile was

•'

"We've huill a pretly strong
framework ... Komhlum said. "Now
the· ljUestion is: What comes ne•t'!"
• After meetings tnday with Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Clinton's itinerary calls for lunch at the IRth century Sans Souci palace outside Berlin
-former home to Prussia's Frederick the Great. who signed the fiN
friendship treaty with the new United States in the early 1780s.
· Ointon also was lo meet with Ger~ard Schroeder. the opposition Sodal
DemocrJI who hopes to unseat Kohl
in this fall's parliamentary elections.
Schroeder has been compared to
Clinton for.his efforts lo move his tmditionally leftist party 10 the c~nl~r to
auract middle-of-the-road voters.
On Thursday, Clinton will speak at
Tempelhof airport with airlift veterans and christen an Air Force DC-7
as the "Spirit of the City of Berlin."
He then goes to Eisenach. in the

While the banluuptcy laws need to

~revised, they wrote, the legislat~n

Pe.ntagon·_ wi.ll co·ntinue testing ·failed
.anti-missile
system
.
.

'

Clinton to set 'new directions' fdr post-Cold War world .'

~
-~~-.'
~~~~,,
·~;&gt;'

economic sanctions against India
Nonethele... the acknowledgment cials.
under lhe 1994 Nuclear Prolifemtion that the lest site was being watched
The Wa•hington Post reported in
Prevention Act.
indicates it wa.• a high-priority target today's editions that a U.S. spy satel"Our laws have very stringent of U.S. intelligence. Moreover, lite picked up clear-cut evidence of
provisions ... and I intend to imple- India's governing Hindu nationalist test preparations at midnight Sunday,
ment them fully." he said.
party announced in Man:h. before it six hour.o before the blasts. But
That U.S. intelligence failed to took power. that it would re~xamine because no unusual activity had been
warn of the test drew sharp questions the country's longtime moratorium detected earlier, none of the U.S.
from Capitol Hill and within the on testing. ·
inlellig~nce analysts responsible for
agency.
"This wa.• a colossal failure on the tracking India's nuclear progmm
CIA Director George Tenet pan of our intelligence community." were on duly. They did not see the
annolmced Tuesday he had appoint- said Sen. Richard Shelby. R-Aia .. more revealing satellite photos until
ed a review team headed by retired 'chainman of the Senate Intelligence they arrived at work Monday. after
Adm. David Jeremiah to "determine Committee. ·II is inexcusable. he the tesl 'had been conducted.
what -le.sons can be learned."
said. "when.our intelligence gatherIndian officials were careful to
In a sign of the urgency 'the CIA ing agei)Cies do not in a timely man- give no i.ndications of the impending
places on the 4uestion. Tenet asked ner lind out that there is a likelihood tests in talks with U.S. counterpart•
that Jeremiah report back in 10 days. nf some type of nudear testing. just days before the blasL~.
A U.S. intelligence oflidal. whn esJll.ocially of this magnitude -three
"I don't believe that any of our
spoke on ct&gt;ndition of anonymity. lesls ~ in an area that we' ve heen officials knew for sure that there wa.•
said the initial fecdhack fmrn 'aiel- watching fur a long time and could be · going to be such an announcement,"
lite ilmtgcry sp.:cialists · w;•s that " n..sh pninl for .. nuclear exchange ... State Department spokesman James
rccl!nl nc1ivi1ics looked mulinc anti
Shclhy's committee planned a P. Rubin said. In meetings Friday in
lhl!re were no clcotr indic;.uur,.; nf an hearing lnduy nn India. plus a closed Wao;itingtqn with India's foreign minimpcmJin.e test .
hearing Thumluy with top CIA nffi- ister. Rubin said, "there were no ... ·

NatiOn's lawmakers drafting bankruptcy bills

il

l

I'

; WASHINGTON (AP) - A
tt¥tional campaign lo limit teen' driV!fll is working,.ac~'Ording to,i lllfrvey ncleased tod•y thai found nearly
.h4Jf.lhe sta~s in the country have
li.hlened taws for young drivers.
~ress report issued by the
Automobile As!IOCillion
~IIStl~ the number of states that.
adopted a graduated licensina
m, whicfl inaea.1es driving privil~es uexperience srows.
;.AA/'( ncpprted thai · eigllt lilies
haft enacted such programs, 13 have
a4pjlted partial graduated la\YI and
~ ot11en have increased reslriclions Ofil·teen drivers. Seven stales

=

.

'

~

rejected legislation 10 implement the
Jli'OIIram and rour ochers hive yet to
vote on il.
In 1996, the last year for which
figures·are available. aboul6.300 dri- ·
vers a,es IS to 20 were killed in ctr.
crashes in the United Stales. Y,A
reponed. All addilional600,000 leeDs
wenc injured in accidents.
People ases I 5 1o 20 IICCOUIII for
.jusr 7. percent of all drivers, butlhey
anc involved in 14 perCent of raral
crashes and 20 percent or all accidents, the usocillion ncponed.
The graditlted licensing proJTIIIl
prornote.J' by AAA has lltree SlageS;

\'

'

·'

•

..

.

�.Page

12 • The Dally

Sentln~

•
1

ED.gagetn:ent
.

~-

Wednesday, May 13,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Mlddlel)9rt, Ohio

1998 •

!80

Blueberry wraps to Wrap up a m·~a
~y

The AIIIOCialed Press
Blueberry Dessert Wraps are
nicely packaged blueberries, easily
prepared and festive-looking. Tortillas are the wrapping material, the
fi lling includes cream cheese.
Blueberry Dessert Wraps
3 tablespoons sugar
I 1/2 teaspoons cornstarch
112 cup orange juice
·
I 1/2 cups fresh or frozen blueberries, divided (see note)
I package (8 ounces) light or
lowfat cream cheese, softened
1/4 cup confectioners' sugar
.I teaspoon vanilla emact
8 (7- inch) fl our tortillas
2 1ablespoons butter
To prepare sauce: In a small
saucepan combine sugar and comstarc h; stir in orange jllice. Cook and
stir over medium heat until s~ uce is
clear and thickened, about S minutes; stir in I cup blueberries; return
to a boil ; boil and stir for I minuie.
In a mix ing bowl beat cream
cheese until light Add confectioners' sugar and vanilla; beat 0 until
smooth and creamy.

Spread each tortilla with about 2
tablespoons of the cheese mixture.
Place about 6 ,.Jueberries across the
center of each t('f[illa. Roll jelly-roll
style.
In a medium skillet, melt I tablespoon butter over m edium heat;
place half of the wra(ls seam side
down in skillet and cook, turning
occasionally u~ti l evenly browned,
about 3. mmutes.
Repeat with remaini ng butter and
wraps. Serve topped with blueberry
sauce.
Makes 8 wraps.
(Note: you may use either fres h •
or frozen bluebeiTies according to
season and what is available in ypur
market; you do not need to thaw the.
frozen berries.)
Nutritional information per serving with 2 tablespoons sauce: 234
cals., 6 g pro., 10 g fat, 31 g carbo,
27 mg sodium.

ft II COISTRUCftOI · ft RUII,.OR
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive

New Homes &amp;Remodeling .
-.
il!!l Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding · I.!!:
Commercial &amp; Realdentlal
• 27 yn. exp.
l-icensed &amp; Insured
u
I!;)
Phone 740-992~3987
~

·CJ

C·

992·5513

ftft~ftft~~ttft~~~
~--------~
- -· -· Stone~··~------.. ~
·
THE CARD Bo)( lj. ~-,~
(Umt
Tuppers Plains
Now has Beanie

· Babies- Still
Baseball-FootballBasketball-Sillr TrackVideo .Games &amp;
Rentals

Recipe from the Blueberry CounBlueberry wraps add a festive touch to any meai.

740-667-6092

..__ _ ___,

...

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
. Down•pouta
· Gutter Cleaning .
Painting

FREE ESTIMATED

949-2168

.....

Mary Kay Co nou~nt .
740-742.2125.

Parts and Servlcel!
•Mower• •Chain Slwa •Weecle1te111 •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga &amp; Strltlon :MTD •Murray •McCollough
·Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear

.

U[J'Iestone,

1rfip, 5.,:.:, ~':!':!a.rec~ee+•

Gravel, Sand,

~~~~- Powtr Eq

TQp :Soll, FIII,Dirt

·

......._ -

!·

If••"' Asseclallol: Cerllfltd 2 Cydt

JEff~' WARNER
113 W. 2ND.ST.

.

POMEROY, OH,

&amp;t4-992-341'0
State Route 338 • ~t VIne • Racine, Ohio
•992•5479
614
..._---!,..._.,.;......;~_ ~~~~,!)~~94~9-t:2!,!804~--~~ ;~==~~~~~~~~

CHESHIRE
FOOPHART
Open 24 Hre. A Day

• 7DapAWHk
Hot Brealtfelt ·
Blaeult Sandwich,
· Hot&amp;Cold .

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
·• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 year• experience.

Lurich Sandwich

Including Pizzi
12" $7.4g Deluxe
All Topplnp
Cell In Orcltrt Aeeaptad

Call·61•·843·542!., .......

7~·~.......

Free Estimates

Chapte; 7

•

,\

Homos, 740-446·0175, 304-675·

box, 740-865-3689.

Two e wsek old blonde killens.
7--e745.

Attorney AT

614-592·5025

HOWARD

J;•v••at

(0.

U~HaUIIng

Houae:&amp; TraiM' Jllll
. Lind Clearing ..
.
Grading .
Septic 8yltem ..
Utllltlel
- E~t~ma~M

(614) 992-3838
'' Quality Service
· For All' Your
Garbage' &amp;
· Rubbish ·
PickUp for
Re•ldentlal &amp;
Commercial
(No.,... 11ft bthllld)
Call

OHIO RMR SEIMCE

'

74o-t49·3001

DDIUI
I·C4Hnputer Gnphlca
. . Dellgns ·
. All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Sarvlc11
-CommerciiI
•Rtllldantllll
:OWner, Mickle Hollon
•. ChHtar, Ohio

•

740-885 4422

·

Athens; Ohio
4130198' 1 mo. pd.

.......

60 Lo1t and Found

l mo.

"'"'""'''"'

a

umutoM a. GnMI
Stpllci ·SPt~ms ·.
Trlller ·a. Houea Sltaa
R_,.R,_
Joe "N:s.yre
614-742·2138 .

-·- .e. ~. HOLlON
'1RUCKIIG

7.40-148-4903

.II a J

DUMP TRUCK
· SERVICE ·
Umestone ·Gravel
Dirt • Sand
.I

'

236!1 .•

FOUND: Small female UQerslrlped eat at Foodland on Sat.
May 9. owner pte&amp;se call. 304-

875-2208.

FOUNO; . Terrlsr mil. Shadle
Bridge, Set Mal 9. Approllmate·

Rutland, 0111o 45ns 0.11: featuring
Plants, ~--Amlah
Trees&amp; ~ Chea111,Soft
Serve Ice '
Shrubs
· Clllitm
Open: Mon.·Frl. M
(740) 742-7405
Sat.
Sun. 12-4

ment. gun rack. some· conectibtes,
many lte'ms: must gol 9 :00am ~ ?

Thurs., Fri., sat,

books, Cnrlstmaa decorations,

BUILDERS, IN(,

~ISSELL

moe. ALLYird&amp;eitoBePoldtn-.

ounu!j£; 2:00p.m.
the dly bofort the ld

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

•

6.1"':'
''-992
7643. ·
. •
C

J&amp;L SIDING..
· INSULATION

.

=~'o':e~ION

•GB11Jgel
•Complete
Remodeling

PIIIIIH, Cebllllga, ,
Broccoli; CaulifloWer,
Hanglng·BUketa.

Stop &amp; Compare

Phlox, Azllua,
Shruba, Spruce,..._

• Vtnyl Sid'11111 • 5olfit
• fascia • ,Seomlm

.
1

~~~
:::

Gut!tr • Roofing
• R•pla-IIWainlldowi-,.
• Slliliot1111 t Docb
· • 11own lnlulolion

'

·I

II )

24 X 24 Pole. L.U:....
-.........
11ar1ing at $5M5
, ....,.•2772
7.-

1._~~"!!'--..:7.:~:122/tfn;:::::..l i L--,;.------~

:~

COMPO I

WR

M

::::~.~Thursday. Friday.
corner of ut ana Neigh-

P£RFDRMAIC£
UP~RAD£S

hOUH

U

. ., • •,

borhood Rd. Jr. clothing. hodge
flimmtr,lo1Smtsc.
Huge yard oa"'- Clagg's on 588
In Rodney, Thursday thru Saturdly. Goodltl gatoret

UPflrtJdH or consulting.

Out Georges CrHk Road, Every
Friday, SaiUrday. 9 A.M. · 5 I'M.
May 8111, 91h, 15111,'1 1Bh.

'S

GREENHOUSE
Syncuea 992:-ffl6

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
7 family ~ salt. May 14th. 15th.

·B ICKIOiua
lOIII
SERVICE
.
.
··septic Systems.
•Basements
•Excavating

·Rd .. Middleport. JOirigerator. Couch. dresser, baby
ilems•.mlsc.

-u. ,

'

All Yard Sileo Muol Bo Potd In
Am-.
1:00pm the
dar before the ed It to run ,
Sunday • llondoy edition·

1:IJOpJn Frldly.

Btnellt yard 1111. for liver trans·

plant petlent. Fri. a Sat. . 9-?
35670 SR 7, (ecroso ~om under-

· CALL ,

ground hou1e) appro• . 1 mile
1100111 ol Chnlor.
·

1·740•9.49·2015
32171 ROSE Hill ROAD
POMEROt OHIO

:-

~ 3 Bedroom • 2 Balha
~2
Garage
~ Quality COMtructlon

'"

CARPET
.
PLUS

• Total EleCtric

; 1237 Sq. A. ot Uvtng sP.ce
VA FHA APproved $87;500
SeriOU. Only 8y Appointment

a

"

-:

Gen. MtrchMdl.-.

Buy - ..., - ~ TDolt,
tlahlng equip;, 'rY'a.

CB'a.ttwr 1 - -btt
of •••tlllt4. LaaalsJ
on Ohio Rlwr Canlp.
a=e, 8l Rt. 114,
• Ohio.
740-Mt-1012

UNtl-1711

.,

114-191·7231

. . off R1. 1' Thurl.,. ""·' Sol.

Recine ·Aree Community OrgenlzlliOn. Slar Mil Pork, Mly ,,._15.
9am. 5 Longobergtr baskets, 2
TV VOR, 2 computtrl, upright

• GARDEN SEED
•MR(;B
• GRASS SEED

New I UNCI ...... We

FREE ESTIMATES

IM!ano 1011 mare, SL RL 143, 1/4

• .FER'fU..Ji:ER

Belt A TIIOkle, I

cOming

Big salt· Home Interior, gt•n

..

Ohio River
Campground• and

Professiooal Floor

:.·call Mornings (740) 992·2478

t

OPEJIIIIf APRIL t

.

car

•

Chriotmu
-·
--_.cllltcl.
·· -lumltln.
CIOINng,
dONIIIOns
Fnlnk
Cleland,
74oIMII--. Dawld Zlr1clt. 740-IMI·
2031 . pld&lt; up -

oppiLid 10 - . . . . . ..

SHADE RIVER IG SERVICES
.
.
Near Cheater on St.

740-985-3831

'·

.'

••
•

'

·

Moving Sole; Grilling Card
R~ctll, Tables. Sewing Machine
Cabinets, Satellite Dish, Children.
women. Mons Clothl~g. cnrl11·
mas
Items, Crofts, Mlac. New
Things Every Weekend, 2 Mites

INTERNET SIGN-uP POINT
POMERO~, 01:1
. 740-992·1135
411-1 mo.

HUIIAiDS

•

81 lJniver~ty ol RiO Granda Dining
Services. Applicat ions can .be
picked up btlwftn 11-11 am &amp; 1·3
pm dally at the stUdent dining 1'1911.

Sudexho Marrton Servlcos. EOE.

,
l.von · $9 :S2o /Hr. No Door To.
Door. •Bonuses• t -800:296·0139
lndlslo/rep.

Certified Nurse Aide Nlieded Fo~
In Home Care. Weekends &amp;
Weekdays Available. Call Angi At
HIOO..OSI-6334.

• COMPUTER IFREELANCE •

Rt. 7

822· 1133 /81)().352-8880.

COOROINATOR

· ,._.

Pt. Pleaeant
A Vlc:lnlty
BIG 4 Fomlly Ylld Soit·Miy 151
· 18th hn1·5pm. Clothing, hOUH·
woreo. - . I miK. Rt 2 South

--t&gt;r-...

In front of entrance to Robert

Locks &amp; Oem. Rain canctlsl Not

4/11/1 mo.

I

Of

Talented and

Gltled Services beg inning tne
1998·99 school year. Submit let·
ter of Interest, resume, 3' leners ot
recommendation, copy of lr'IJ'I----.j.
script and currant certitlcate
John Riebel. Supertntendent, P.O.
Box 684, f'llmefl!y. Ohio 45769 by
Juna 15. 740·992·3883 tOr more
information.
FIRST

AID COURSES

For Those Individuals Working
With The Putl'lc: And lOr Children:
Two Classes To Choose From!
Saturday, May 2. 1998 Or Satur·
·day, May 16, t99B. Both Classss
Are From 9:00 A.M. ·5:00 P.MI.
Contact Buckeye Hills Career
Center, Adult Services To Reg·

isleJ. 740-245·5334 Ell. 209. Tul·

and LOlS
of Misc.
9 tll8
Dally
and
pans,
Rugs,
china
. tables,
Frlooy 5115 Sat 5/16. 9-Spm.
627 Third Ave. Baby Clothes,
Plus size. Women Cloths. Mon

"Your One Stop
~~"olllpu'"'-r Shop
·,
'-'
...,.
Gllie us a call for sy"em rep~~lrs,

I . Garogts • ._..

FREE
. '1
UA':TEE.s· i
ESTI
·
"""'
· ,
· 985-4473

'Open.Daly 9·5

.

~

00
• 0: ..... s.tutdly.
Big Close out and Yard Salo. lrl·
nay 15. Sat 16. and Sunoay.
Beach's Auction HOuse. Stall Rt.
160 :l!nllos pass Holzer Hospllall
Shelving. Building supplloo, Gro·
cerloe. Dlohas. Cameras. pots

FREE ESTIMATES '

(N S d

10 "'"·

Fr:!t~:;;;io.;
1

- - . .. . .
,.. . . . ............. ~ . .
;,;
~=~~~·=====-;:===~~~~~~
~====~==O=~u=n=a~y==a=s~==~"":~:-:""'~

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

Applications are now being ac·
cepted lor Food Service workers

227 Fourth Avenue, 5/t6/96,
10:30 ai1H:OOpm. No~ salas:
Spring cleaning! Clothoo, shoos. CPR a

. . -·· -·-- ·-

• Joe Wilson
(81 992-4277

' IOIEIT IISSELL ·

I Shi1ley

Data Entry, Word ·Processing, .
Graphics And Web. Many levels
And Position's! F1e11lble Hrsl Mo·

· Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity ·
2 Fomlly 011 160(3ml north of
Hosplllll) onl~ Evergreeb than on
to Green valley . EKOrtlsa.equlp-

·

!f

.

Stnlay '12·5

area, 740·949·7009 or 74Q-949·

'15 North llal~ Sine!

"Builll Your Dn••"

Martin str-1......
"""'
'•
-•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

Base pay!! Fun atmospher.e.
' Serious inquiries only. Ask fo r

dam Roq. Start Nowl Call: BOO·

..

;

· •C~lller, OhiO

GRIENHOUSE

Found- amall white dog, Dorcus

.

l •1422 .

·HUBBARD$

7.a-992-8839.

""""· 740 446 4467.
Yard Sale
"70

Plumbing

Agricultural Urne,

Singers, Bands, ~ngwrilers, Elc.
All Styles /Ages, Major RecOrd
label Exact's, Seeking New Ar·
lists, Coming To Hunting1on, 901 ·

Sam. 304-576-2966 day. 304-

loal Sunday: man's wrl&amp;.twateh,
sliver and gold band, Third "ve·
nue, cash reward, sen timental

!:!!L!:::::=====.
Custom ·Homes
Remodellog
Roofing

Help Wanted
" STAIISEARCH COMPEMION

abou1 money? Want to bo Indo-/ pendenl? NIIW Clubl New Ownert

875-1270.

No jOb too small,
Some too big.

('TAO)II&amp;altCM

.

Tired "Of men? Tired ol worrylnl}'

ly 1yr. Old, mate, tan color. 304·

Gnvel, Sand,
Umeatone; Dllt, Top
Soil, Anything you
· neld to haul •.

74A411.4802

110

Found On Laurel CIH Rd., modiUIIl 63J.SlAM(7526). ·
size black &amp; brown.with white on
chl•t male dog, very triendly &amp; AVON I All Areas
~. 'cannot kaep. please claim. · Spears. :JOH75-t429.

HAULIRG

-Mon..sat.

EMPL OYiv1ENT
SERVICES

1\

BeautftuH Black lab. Ca!l to claim

PICKENS

Mowing, "'ulchlng,
•
Pruning
Clean and lnatall Gutlerl
Flowtll'lt,
Btuah Removal,
lnltlll New Biela'
FrMEtllmal"
·ao~··
No
Job tl)o . . , . ._

Hlullng, Excavating
Trenching·

'

427·,5490. 901-427·9514.
·wadneaday aher 3pm 300-675- 'ATTENTION l!ANCERS AND
6874.
MIXERS•. ALL LADIES

• Deck clean~ &amp; treated
· starting at$100
• Hedges trimmed .• Gutters cleaned
can now tor a
lawn
program.

Law

5965.'

Yard Sale Items . Must take alt.

•House was~

Wliliam. Safranek,

Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile

'

Pltuant, WI/.
Full blooded St. Barnard io good
home (by Friday), comas with dog

''
,'

couch, chair. recliner, floor model
dishel, atrotler, call 7.a·446·

~'~lint

SPECIALS

Chapter 13

For Information Re~rding
.Bankruptcy contact:

'

f

J &amp; D Aula Parts. Buying
wre cked or salvaged vehlclu .t.·
304-773-5033.

Free puppl11 : 402 II'Jr&amp;l Street.

·

740·742·3411

e Week old gra~ klu, ns; Bordet

0577.

Roofs • Decks • Garages
'

ern AYOil\IO, Gallipolis:

home , ml•ed breed , 7.a0-446·

Minor Repairs ~ Cabinets • Siding

.p,.. E•ttmste•

Clean l ale Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Model&amp; Or Newe r,
Smnn Buletc Ponuae. 1900 East·

1318.
Elghl wook old puppies to good

New Conttruetlon &amp; Rernodellng
·

Antiques, top Prices paid, RI-ver·
Ina Anllq uea . Pomeroy, Ohio, '
Ruu .Moore owner. 740·992·

Coon dog pupplea, 740-258-.

IUISft a·oME
COISftUCtiOI

LOftG'S
COftSTROCTIOft

DIRECTOR OF
PATIENT ACCOUNTING

At The State Theatre

INSURANCE

·

Must Be 1BY11.

Collie, 3 1/2 months, malo. 740·
992·1453.
Baby changer (droning table ),

.

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second :

A"""'"·Gallpolls, 740-446-2a.q.

992-6576.

soiv-u (619) 505-1434
40
Giveaway

MIIITEIDCE

I

Rliit

•

Ringo. Pre-1930 U.S. Currfncy,•:

Sterling, Etc. Acquisition• Jewelry • ·

. EXT. IH4

$2.99 Per Min.

3&amp;o• .Communications ·

Absolu te Top Dollar: Ali U.S. Sit· ' :
V11 And .Gold Coins. Proolsats ,, •
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold• ·

Antique&amp; &amp; clean uaed lurnllure, •
will buy one piece or complete
househO ld, Osby Martin, 740·

1.acJ0.216m7

CELLULAR PHONES

Wanted to Buy

' 2526.

COMI'I\N!ONI

.,

rcscnl
yi n real-world
and yang rcpercusof those • for
198_4hoo,ti
and gi•
'· Semfe ld"
no credit
r==:;:;:::::::::::::==r-=========-r-===-======:r==::-=-==-=~=====-1
~o ared the
by the
ng C&gt;
business,
arguing
that
sions of a fictional show.
he was known lor great stlufllong
Public Notice
Public Notice
___:Pu
:..::b:;:l:::lc::..:.N:.:o:.:t::lc:.:e: __ _ _..;Pu...;;;bl;,;,;,;lc;..;.N:.::otlce;.::.::.:..._-'J ·
Kramer embraced his accidental hefore the ; how came on the air.
.
celebrity with a bear hug. frequentl y Sintc the notorious episode, he said,
The"!=~J Form County afore..ld.
Ohio on channel :&gt;'AA with Prtndplee of the •ppt1011
·
h · . h'
· b ·
h &lt;- be · d b
--..tt.lhe&lt; Down Goble an effective radl•tad power art: . Jam.. R. Jonklne, ,
tall in"
to 1el l em '" rm " 1" ' · "' "'"" as ""en siege Y .:f
110 PF for the Kibble
Sworn to before mo and ot 6 kl lowatta vertical Janet . A. Jonklllt, Jane '
- rcnnrlers
•·la test projec t and encouraging Sill- curious illuris ts and ·:scinfcld" fans. l-.e\1l's
e Foundation, Bernard v. tlgMdln my PrtltOct, thlo polarization ffom an Wllllt, Jam.. Waybright, :
rics c1hout his "shameless aucmrt s"
" It \ :ill a di&gt;traction," Yeganeh
Fultz, TruttH, It 8\'llllable
12111 day of May, 1M. antenna he ight above Max Hln. .
.
.
\o cash in.
sa1d. "My uld customers ~ave 10
for pullllc lnepectron at
Anne L Norman, terrain ol341 metera.
A copy of the tppllcMion :
1~1~nd related .
. , hc SUI.d. .. 1I &gt;U 1.1.cr. ..
·
l-.' _ __
llemanl
V. Fultz
Law s-~,
Ofllce,
Public. toTha
.. 0 nIy .m Amc nca,
,,,, yt-~
•---d
II y eomm INotary
1ocaAppUcant
te Ita antpropoaet·
111
...
.......,
....
Ilion •xplret
anna on ~~a~m~•~n~dmj~~·~ntE
ere
Ol.l ftlt for :
takes a guy o f my kind of talent and
Yegnnch '"id he has turned down
POIMIOV\ Ohio . 415711,
3124/211011. property located at Eden
at: Mtlgt ,
tc mperamcnl to milk this for all it 's numerous husincss offers linked to ·
.-,•
·
&lt;luring reauler bueln.., (I) 13,1te
(Meigs County) , Ohio .3
at 211 Wtlt •
worth...
hh~is~n~o~to~r~ic::ll~'_:·~·l~r:_ei~c~ct~t~he~m
~a~ll~.'~'h~e:J~~~:!~:::~~~~=~,I houn for e period of 110 1---=-~:-,.,.---,--- kilometers @73.496 dagrHt
Ohio :
Yc•:mch. who runs his. lntema- l r- ·
daye aullttquent to __..:.P.:u:.::b::l::lc:..;N:.:.:ot.::l.:ce;:__ True from the Eden (Melgti4!S719
tiona!-Soup Kitchen out of a mid:
publlallan ofthla nollco. 1
County),· Ohio reference
,
(I) I, 7.1, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
NOncE OF AVAILABIUTV
point.
•
lown Ma nhallan storefronl. lives
111, 17,11,11,12tc
FOR PUBUC INSPECTION
less cmnfortahly with his depiction
Tht Ctrltton College
as a 1yran nical but brilliant chef whn
Public Notice
Board of Truete•e hit Hltd !g&amp;~WJ:U
ye ll&gt; "No soup for you!" at cusfIta annuli!
d return of a private
--·
... NO-ICE
oun th•
Ilion,
form Revenue
990-PF,
. rules.
'tomcrs who hrcak hiS
'
.. v......
"
with
Internal
Ycganeh condemns "that idiot
Notice lo hartlly given Strvlc• for celender y..r
t:lown.. Jerry Sci nfcld for branding
'
;:'...1YIIr 1111
rtt Df 23ott" 1H7. In eccordance With
1 yrecuu,
,him wilh "Ihe n-word .. and "!a kin ~
·
ltntt,
Internal Revenue Code
•
- hilt app..,.
I'_, to lh• 1,,$jlcllcm
·
-"~•
6t04{b), thla form Ia
thai word so lightl y.''
Co111mon . Pltaa Court, avellebl• for public
. "He used me. he used my rcputa•
Probate Dlvlelon, llolgt lntptctlon et the home of
lion. insulling me: · Yeganeh said.
P O 1 N T. p L 1 &amp; 1 &amp;.N 1
Counly, Ohio, for an ordtr Robert Wingett, Protldtnt
10 TYler and Principal Meneger, 1367
::::."" 1111 " Would you like to be called that
word'!''
laid appllcltlon will bt College Road, Syracuoe,
hiMif In aakl ,.__ 1111 ,30 Ohio, during th• 180 dey
Kramer. 54, lucked into his fame
·
:
"""'·"
period btgl(1nlng Mey 15;
by living for 10 years across the hall
P.M., on llte 111111 tlercolllay, 11111.
1,., at 11e1ge ounty (I) 13, 1tt
from "Seinfeld" co-creator Larry .
Jlni~JII Court.
---------David in ' a federall y sub,&lt;idi zcd
•
f:::llrlst~·
of()JIIo,
Public Notice
apartment building fo r artists in ,
GLAMOUR SHOTS
Manhattan's Hell 's Kitchen.
BHOFAR BROADCASTING
SHEER ILLUSIONS
•
111 McGOVRAN RD.,
David based the TV character
CHARLESTON, W.V. 2531ll
played by Michael Richords on his .
F
• Monday, May 18, 1998
On April 6, 1998 on
.peculiar neighbor, whose em::loyapplication wae tendered
Call for Appt. 992·2550
menl history included manuf;,cturlor ftllng with the Federal
Communleatlont Com·
ing disco jewelry, managinr J rcgml811on by Shofar
,gac band and performing s•.•nd-up
Arthritis Support Group
Broadc
..tlng Corporation
comedy.
.
lOr euthorlty to con1truct
Thursday, May 14, 1998
The real Kr~mer laeks.the fi ngerend operat• a n- nan3p.m.
in-a- light-socket hair of his TV
comnMOc~ltd~naiFM
llrOtdc..t elation to 11rve
PVH Wellness &amp;
counterpart (he has long salt-and the community .or Eden,
pepper curls) but both have a blissRehab Center
fu l, easygoi ng attitude that's easily
Topic:
110 Help Wanted
mistaken for cluclcssness.
"Care of the Arthritic FoOt"
In 1996, Kramer statlcd a
Guest Speakers: leah Ann
.. Kramer Reality Tour: · a bus tour
· Jackson, senior occupalional
of Manhattan sites f&lt;aiUrcd on
therapist student, and ·
"Scinfc ld .'' The tour. of course.
Kim Burdette, a physical therapist
became fodder for a "Scinfcld "'
assistant studenl
episode.
~· l!le1110ot11 Hoepltaf hal an Immediate
Kramer has done radio and TV
apanlng tDr Dhctor· of Patient Accounting. ·
YA~DSALE '
gigs. too, and there arc T"shirts and
R•p
Dlllllile
tDr
management
of
tiM Account•
Racine
Area community,
hats. a slage ve rsion of lhe lour that
I
Rt
uhlllla,
Cllldlt
and Collectlona, and Patient
.
Organization,
Slar
Mill
Park,
I
Kramer lakes to college campuses
• Wednesday, May 13, 1998-7 p.m.
tlllon functloua. A BBA degrM (maJOr In
May 14;15, 9 a.m.
-and even a short-lived mayoral.cam- ·
..
Auau6411illl'wit~
and
thlllblllty
to
promote
StatoTheam:
(Main
Street)
5
Longabergei
baskets, 2 TVpaign last year.
pnlthe
lll•lnna
l1llltlonlhlp1
r.qulred
tor
VCR, 2 computers, ~prlght
With the show's fin ale looming.
• Tickets:·$7/Person Or $SJStudents &amp; Seniors
... p a 111.DIL Muat hiYe 1 minimum of two years
freezer, fumilure, Chrisbnas
·Kramer's been bu&amp;y. The man 'who
af pal lla~uunta I'RIIIIgefMnt experience. Thl1
items, dishes, books, clothing.
once said he did :·anythi ng to kee·p
·
Donation appreciated. Frank
••
111
a
11
up
D
Ia
dll1lclty
to
thll
CFO
and
oftara
.a
from having a real job" and who
Cleland
949-2071 , Dale Hart 949lllarr ~ wllll expartenca and
dropped his mayoral rae~ because i1
2656, David Zirlde 949-2031 . Pick
eM tft II berlllta paclt8ga. To apply for lhle
• Tickets Can Be Obtained
was too much work ac tually hired a
up available. Proceeds applied to
opportunity,
pltlll
11111m11
your
1111UIM
to:
CFO,
'full -time assistant to keep up with
scholarships.
'Aitl'll• lllmarlal lloapltal, 115 E. Memorial
the flood of interview requcSIS.
DIM,
ott 45768.
He' ll be all over New York on

Artist
senes
•
.

.

CJ.D.IID'S OUTDOOR

Arthur.~~Butch" Knight~

...

makeup shades, and with Mary
Kay, WI """" mort lun.
C&amp;i Shirley COleman

afler5pm.740-379-9432

lwould.hke to thank all the voters who 'i
supported me in the recent election.
.Your support.is appreciated.
.

99'» 2156

Penona11 .
DEFINE YOUR STYLE
Everyone enjoys trying the laltst

Mowu lild

·Low Ratea)

So long,
cheers from
soup guru, optimism from· Kramer

ni:

005

MEET 'lOUR

· ,,, WI C.KS
HAULING

Howard L Wrlt...l

--'WERVEY-KNAPP-----

· d
Seinfel . -

.,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Owner: Joho Dean

1 1/2 mile south of

90

•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

FrH E•tlmatt•

By DR. JOHN FROUDE
directly on the skin.
where they arc bitten..
rcnici ll in -allcrgic childre n. Left
New York University School of
If a child is bitten by a tick, parThe center of the spot may he untrcalcd. Lyme disease can affect :
Medicine
ents need not panic . A tic k must be clear, giving a '·bu ll's eye" arpcar- the joints, cent ro! nervous system or ;
For AP Spttial Featuru
attached (o the body for at lea't 24 anee. FluI ike sym ptoms such as hearl.
Since Lyme disease was first dis- hours to transmit the disease.
fever; headache. fat ig ue, joint pain
In these cases, doclors may :
covered in Old Lyme. Conn. in
To help prevent infections, tick and swollen ly mph nodes may fol - admi nislcr JOorc potent antibiotics :
1975, thousands of children have checks should become part of the low.
intrave nously. After antibiotic \l'CS!· •
Sherry Wervey and Gregory Knapp
been infected with this tick-borne nightly bedti.me routine.
In the 20 QCrcent of ci&gt;ildrcn who mcnl is completed. the child should :
illness.
Begin with.a visual inspection of do not develop a red. 'spot, blood again be seen by a physician.
·
Many · parents worry about pro- . the body including, the torso, legs, tests can detecl the di sease. The
Parents can look forward to a :
tecting their children from a threat arms, groin, neck, behind the cars tests, however, will not be positive · vacci ne sometime in the near future, .
Sherry Ly nn Wervey of Pomeroy, terson of Racine. The prospective they can barely- see that seems to and tl)e buttocks.
·
until at least 30 days after the hitc.
but . in \he meantime, if you have: ·
and Gregory Williatn Knapp of Mid-· bridegroom is the son of George and . lurk where children love to play. . If a tick is found , remove it careNin ety-fi ve percen t of Lyme di s- questi o·ns about Lym ~ disease you ;
dleport , will exchan ge wedding Bertha Knapp of Middleport.
There are, however, several defen- fully with tweezers by grasping lhe ease cases treated in .the first stage ca n con,tacllhe American Lyme Dis- :
vows in a open ceremony to take
Wcrvey ·is a 1984 graduate of sive strategies parents can employ . tick as close to the skin surface as · can be cured with .a 2-to 4-wcek case Foundational (914) 277-6970, •,
place at Jimmy's .Sports Bar in Meigs h1gh School and is an over- throughout the lick season that runs possible and pulling straight back course of antibiotics. sllch as amox iPomeroy at 9 p.m. Friday.
the-road truck driver. Knapp is a from April through September.
with a steady force. Use gloves, cillin.
'•
The bride-elect is the daughter of 198 1 graduate of Meigs Hi gh.
Lyme disease is a bacterial infJ:C- cloth or a tissue while doing this.
Although doxycycline is the
Dorothy and Jesse Morris of School and is employed by Car Care tion transmitted by two different
Although the head of the tick trealment of c hoic~ in adu lts, it is
Dr. John Froudc is a Clinical:
Pomeroy and Larry and Sandy Pat- Doctors.
types of tiny ticks, each barely the often remains embe.dded in the skin, only given to children aged 9 or Assistanl ProTcssor of Medicine at:
size of a poppyseed.
it is the belly of the tick that is most older because it can discolor New York University School of;
ThedeertickthrivesfromMass- iniportanttoremoveasitcontains younger children'stceth .
Medic ine.
'
'
~
·
achusetts to Maryland, in Wisconsin m~t, 01 all of the bacteria. If possiErythromyci n is an altern at ive for
and Minnesoia. The western black- . ble, keep the tick and bring it to the
legged tick makes its home in the doctor'for analysis.
By TIM WHITMIRE
Thursday - hanging with a morn- Pacific ·coastal zones, especially in · After the 'visual inspection, chitAssociated Press Writer
ing radio show at Tom's. the Upper · Northern California. These ticks dren sbould take a brisk' shower or
' NEW YORK (AP)- Fame came West Sictc Jincr whose facade is fea- flourish in wooded, bushy or gr&amp;SSy scrub with a washcloth in the bath.
calling for AI Yeganeh and Kenny lured on ·se infeld," working as a areas.
The force of the water and, scrubKramer in the form of television's TV CO I cspondcnt and playing .the
To avoid tick bites, chi!dreri bing, along with vigorously drying
most popular comedy, which carica- host at · "Seinfefd" bash at the should wear light colored, •ung- off with a towel, will rid the body of
tured them in the .name of " Must Comedy Nation club in Times
sleeve shirts and long pants tucked · ticks which could not be se~n .
Sec TV."
Square.
into socks when they venture into
If Lyme disease is ·transmitted by
.'
..
,
Yeganeh gol mad. Kn mer got
Yeg• nch isn't ignori ng the hype. potentially infested areas.
the tick bite, sympioms of the fir:st
even. Both seem to have profi ted.
He IS supposed to ' appear on the
·
As "Seinfeld" comes to an end Home Shopping Network on ThursApply insec) repellent that is stage of .infection capP,Car within _,
d
specifically formula!~ for children. three to 32 aays.
_....,_ _../"~
Thursday night, Yeganeh - the . ay to promote his froze n soups. . DEET (N-Diethyl-metatoluamide),
Approximately 80 percent of
soup chef branded "The ·s oup Nazi"
But make 110 mis1ake -' he is eel- a widely used insecticide is general- children will develop a painless big
Paid tor by 'canclidate 46970 Morning Star Rd. R$:1ne, Ohio 45n1
in a·l995 episode- and Krame r .:... cbraling the show's demise.
. Jy safe, but can caus.: head~hes or red ·spot (called erythema migrans) L----~~;.;;,:.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~;;;;.;;;;:,,;;,;;;.;.,;;,;,;,;;;;,;~~
.
Ycganeh, who declined to gi ye tremor if 100 much is·useil. It is betthe inspiration for the show's " hipsler doofus" Cosmo Kramer- rep- his age. has run his soup shop since , ter 10 spray it 00 cl.othes. rather than
'

,\taZZeJ •

773-5785 Or 304·773-5-447.

1111&gt;

.:r
1-.eWS
NeWS BotUne.
a·otUn
.:re-'S Bot.JJne

Auction
and Fill Market

Rick P11110n ~uc t lon Company,
full ti me auctioneer, eompt,l e
auction
service.
Licensed
t66,0hlo &amp; Wes t VIrginia, 304·

t;Jft&amp;'ftftftftftftft~ft

cil.

13

Now aelll"no merchandlie bV tt'le
akldl &amp; can lots for Auction&amp; &amp;
Flu Mkta., 7.a-2!1&amp;-1270.

Your Child's Helth: Checking children for Lyme disease important __
.

-

The Dally Sentinel • Page

lion: $40,

.

Earn S1,000 Weekly. Stuffing an·
velopes, no prior axperlenc:e, free

details, stnd SASE to: N.B. Dept
t74·301 East 5th Ave. Suite 112
COislcana, Telos 75110.
·

Established working band with futu.re engagements teeking professional drummer. serio us Inquires only, call 740.446· 4953 or
740-441*36, leave message.
Expertenced Salesperson- Home
Furnlaf'lings, Carpet, Window
Treatmen ts. Furniture, Resume
To: Tope Furnitu re, 151 Second
Al'lnue. Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
011111 · M•Igl CAA Is AcceptIng PreapplicatiOns For tempo·
rary position witn work assignments wfl!cP'I may include;
Mai'ntenance. Office/Clerical .
Food Sen.-Ice,
Road Main·
·~enanoe. Vetlic:le Maintenance.
AppllcariOns must be a resident
ot Gallia or Meigs county, ape 14-21, and meat JTPA guidelines.
Jobs witt begin In early June and
last approximately 1 o weeks,
wage rate $5.15 per hour, .t$0
hOurs per week. worksltes will be
at various locaUons in both sourlties. High schOol students. high
school graduates, college s t u d~
ents. and those who nave not
completed hlg n school are en ·
coL:J rag ed to apply, GMCAA i s
especi ally se,ll;lng appplleants
age 18-21:

PreappUcatlons are available at
GMCC A office, tlign school offk:es. Unlversity!. ot Rio Grande

Crossroads Oltlce, Hocking Col·
lege JTPA Olltct, Buckeye. Hills
Career Center-Adull Education

and Student Service Ollica,
and OBES· RIO Grande
AProaWucalion can 110 Ollr.llnod
by calling &gt;146-1018, 367-13&gt;12 ....
Ollico

992'-6829.

Galla·Meigs Cornrrur;ty ActiOn
Aglncy

• P. 0. BOJ&lt; 272
60 I 0 NOf1h 81011 Routt 7

Cheshire, Ohio 45620

Equal Opportunity ~

MEDICAL SOCIAL
IIIMCE

'lmmtdlota Opening For AModi·
cal Sodtl Strvlct P!toidon.

Sodtl Strvlct llegrH floqulrtdJ

P1tut Cell Or 1«ty In"""'"'

Allfors At G••RC*I

170 P""""'Drtwt

o.lllpailo, Ohio 4!1831.
740-448-7112

).,

/
I

�Pomeroy • 'Middleport, OhiO ·

Pets for Sale

560
DJw.Mod

and Bar Ia looking lor a OJ lor
one 10 two nights per week. Use
your music on our eQuipment.
Pity lift ftlUSt Include Top 40,

tor

Now Taking Applications At Dom·
.lno's Plua. Gallipolis, &amp;. Pomeroy

Oak Hill, Ohio nuclclng Company
Looking For Experienced Semi
Tractor Trailer Drivers , EKcellent ,
Pay &amp; Insurance Package, 740·

6821613, Between 8-5.
Opening For Experienced Marine ·
Techn ician, Apply At Big Boys

Parl·lime wallress. Expeftence requirad. Apply at Hoklay IM.
Is look·

lng lor a part· tlme Ph8rmaclst.
Musf be licensed or eligible for
licensure 'in WV. Hospital experl· ·
encfl Is a plus. Computer skills a
musl. Applicant should have
good communication and super·,
s~ill s.

9049.

$end resume to Bill

.Barker, Assistant Executive Dl·

2520 Valley Dr .. Pt. Pleasant,
WV 25550. AAIEOE.

Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; Aeha·
billlation Center Is looking for a
part-time LPN·Pil . Must be WV 1&gt;
censed. Must be able to work all
shifts. holidays and weekends.
Long term care experience pre- ·
!erred . Contact Angie Cleland, .
Assistant Director of Nursing,

rey, wv. has an opening lor a II·

con sed Physical Therapy Assi&amp;·

9648, 814-387·7010.

River Vltw 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths,

IIIIALL BUSINEIB,

We' De 'Vinyl Siding, Roptacoment
Windows, Roofs. Room Additions.
Ramodoltng, Clramlc TIO. &amp; Hard·

CA, tn·Ground Pool, 740-256·

9393.

wood Floors. New Construction .
No Job Too. Big Or Too Small!
Contact Joe Saunders AI 7.CO·

ono-.- $39.500, 740-949-3228.

COUNTRY ESTATEI
63.95 Acroo, Approx., 8 Acre
~ako, Mobile Homo With Large
Add On Don, Gollla County;
Coun11 Water And Electric
$2,600 ~Acre, 74tl-388-e678,

«6:2450, References Available.

Middleport, cal 74G-892·3485 attor 5:00 or anytime-~

Three bedroom, battt and hall, In

Will mow yard&amp;, clean out attics,
.oaragas, basements. Will haul
junk or traah $35. pick-up load.

320 Mobile-Homea
. for
. Sale

Opportunity
1-.,---::..:..___,____.::..·__

tne ot1erlng.

.FREE
CASH
' GRANTEI
Collogo.- ~5-

Scenic Hills Nursing C4tnter Is
Now Accepting Applications For
Part·Time STNA'S. and Part·Time
AN 'S (Day &amp; Evenings Shlfls ).

Please Apply AI Scenic Hills

Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
now accepting appUcatlons for a
Full-time Cook with prftk)us we·
perience (Day Shift) &amp; a PartTime Dietary Aide. Please apply
at Scenic Hills Nursing Center
Monday -Friday from 8:30 iJm to

1

nancing ...-

Now

once, Call 1-800-339-6!18 For
An Appointment. Equal Oppor·

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, LR, FR,
Kltcheri, Laundry Room With 3
Acres, Bulavllte Pike, 740-441 ·

304-ll7'5-7112.
Car.- for tho elderly day, ntght or

14,000 Local Gov'l. ·&amp; Bank

Aopo'o Call 1·800·522·2730, X
1709.

weellend . References. 304-fJ75·

.cozw thrte bedroom ranch In
7981 .
Hlde·A·Way 'Acre&amp;, Gallll County. Formal dining .... grN1 room.
Clrclt -N· Convaleacent Home , laundry room. filii 0111c• ..,.. lo!Or.
Hao 3 Opononlngo El~erly Or two car anachld garage with r•
Hancucappad Person In My motes, all on one plus t:cre In
HOmo, 740-441·1531S.
beautiful counlr)' llttlng With

c..,.

~- Sptng, Vlrrjt 5Ith.
l'lnlllng. _.,, Monthly, One
nmo.OJIIII1V ~- Fraa
--7-2378

Don't Lawn Clrt, Fraa Eotinw'",
Atuonablt Ratto, 304-87•·

-~Will do bab)'linlng In my homo,
trom -loport parfr, any
lfllll. 740-1111-~73. .
Will Do Landocoplng And Corfllnltr Work, •Froa Eotlmtltlf
7~3811 81186.

211dr houoa, $300. month, depOtH
and raloronceo. 304-ll75-3424.

520

2tlr houoa. country oautng $2501

Wild·Turkey aeaaon. buy Army
woodland tree·bark camouflage

at _Sam Somorvlllo'o by Sandyvtltt Poll Oftlco, Fri. Sat. a Sun.
t2pm-,pm other dayo. 304-273-

i!M.

530

•

Pillo,
Briel&lt;, Bulfdtng, 3.8 Acrtl;·
35 Forguoon Dloool,. 740·4•8·'
4286.

304·7&amp;e-

~

~~~~~r.~~=:l

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
From PonniH On 11 Dallnquent
Tax, Atpo'o, AEO'o. Your Aroo.
Toll Froo (1) 100·218·1000 Ext.
H-2et4 ForC111tnt Liltlngl.
badfoomo, 2 batho, 2 kllchono,
many 01111as1 ~40-992·2019.

Compallbto Syottm) $475. Call
:JOt675-5428. '
Pomorov Thrift Snop now buying
largo oytoldo toya and baby
ltomo, walkoro, toddtar car oaats.
etc. T\Jtaday -througlo Friday, 740·
992-312!5.

....,u_

.

lipolis, OH. 740-4-48-1528.

Spinal plano for sate, ralr condl·
Uon, leave message after 5pm,

740-lol&amp;-2201.

.

'

FARr11 SUPPLIES
&amp; LiVESTOCK

610 Firm Equipment
2000 lb. corn cribs, excellent
condition, 12 ton aUger, e~celletft
condition. 740-B86-6731 •

Ford 800

Str'-•

Farm Tractor,

Recant Ovamaul and paint." Must
See. Jlvldena Farm EqUipment,
Ingalls Rd. 740-446-1675
International 990 711. Hay Sine ,
Gahl 95 Grinder Ml•er, John
Deere 12fl. Transport Disc, all ax.

oond.304-273-4215
Moy 8ptng Bovtngo
Ford New-Holland all 20 series ,
Compact Dl•sel Tractors $500.
~iiCOUJdl.

All 40 IO 100 HP

.

pi•: 3010 DO.oel 42 PTO HP, Dltf

lock, 8x2 Trans, Independent

Tracloro From 2Q To 38 HP. All
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
TractOfl, Hay Equlpm111t, John
Daero Skid Staor Loadart. Chtcll
About .financing As Low
On Lawn Tractors And

I

On Now And

3 Sutfolk Ewos/2 Suffolk Lambs.
Joseph A. Peachey. 2 112 mltBI

paot Meson Co. Fairground~.
FUll

blOOd~~

Jer&amp;t!YB, age 3·1/2,

Conmtor~Unils

Frdn $1111.00 •
Low Monthly Paymants
FREE Color Colaiog '
CaiTtodaj 1.soo-711 -o 158 _,

actual miles , $3995.", 740·882·

•

Ford XLT 4 ely. Standard,

AC, Extras. Excel Condition.

66,000mtles . $6,000 ~lrml 1•0- .
-.207
95 Dodge Ram, 314 ton, 4x&lt;i, die- ';
sal, 4spd, std overdrive, 41.000 '

'

'

Factory S-10 Whtelo (7•01 4411419
.

1

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs 1979 Dodge Van 8cyh 2 front

seals, good tires , runs good.
$600. 304-675-3886. .

1986 Chevy 4 WD. Short Bod
With Toppe.r. 10.800 Miles On
Rebuh Engine, Hao Uft &amp; Shift K",

Clean Inside &amp; Out, $6,500 Firm,
Coli Alter 5 P.M. 74Q-_24&amp;-5829.

i
4"we -·.
. .

Tk1"'! l'to\ 6041-16 F~""

1992 Chevy Blazer S·IO, 4x4, V· .._,
6, 4.3, air conditioning, 94,000 I
mile&amp;, $6800, call collect 740· i
698-7019.
.

"~ \o.IN.,J(.!

Motorcyclee

198'1 CB 650cc 4cyl. Honda road
btke, good ccnd. $900. Call K&amp;K ·' ·
Mobile Homes, 8 .. m-5pm 30-4· •. ' '

~ :;

.

t9B4'1ionda Gold wtng Interstate, ; :

I

-~

1991 Honda -4·WD ~ whaelar. ·~
Exc. cond. 304·675·2148 01 304-\ d

BIG N'ATE

_67_5-_3:_308
__
. - - - , . . - - - - - - •• ,
1996 KljWallki 250 Nlnje Sl- . ·-:
Bjke Excel!. Cond. 740-446-8112 ... 1

Oualtty Black lingua Butta 11·15
mond1a. 504-675-6248.
.

Miles. E:lltra Corbin Seat-, S.,clc-

Muotano SVO, 5 spaad, PW,
PL. N:. 73,000 on body, 1,000 on

·1

Yamaha V-Max 1200: t3,ooo:
rest, Wlndlhi4id,

.J ,

Excon.ril Condi-''"1

lion, $3,800, OBO 740-379-2825.

·

'

.

750 BOlla &amp; Moton . .:
for Sale
• '1
12ft. aluminum Jon bc~t•. l'!'lilf. 2• '

fotqing 11a11, alumlntm· oars &amp; ·• •

anchOr. Like now. $700\ 304-675- ~ : !
19e9 Sea Imp 19 t/2f1.1fltp-V, ,
botgo w/sand lntoriol. 8cyi ,' •

1970 Subaro 360, rare lind, 2cyl

190hp. Marcrulser Inboard motor, ' • .
wllh trailer. life praurvtra &amp; , I

elate. KIK Mobile Homn Um·
!ipm '304-675-3000.

ltto ·1HO HONDA CAR'S FOR
f100 SJizad a Sotd Locally Thlo
Month. Call 1-BOG-522-2730 Ext.
4420.
11110 ·1990 -

s

For 11!0111

SttzadAndSold
• Localy Tlol&amp; Month.

ltucko. 4x4'o, Etc. ·

t-600-!522-2730, X 3901 .
1881 Corvette Ctaaatc, 50,000
lllleo, Alklng SI0.700. 740-3670219.
:1::98::2--:C:-u-::lla_o_s-:5-up'"'r-..,-:-e-,-2-:0, 2-60
VB . Good Condition, 11 ,800 Or
Ball Oftar, 740-892-1588.

bumpers. $2,7!50. 614-4,46-31114.

West

Norih

1t

Pus

2a
3 NT
6t

Pass
Paes
Pass

·1 •
31

41
Pass

2 Badroom Apartmtnl, 74Q-«t ·
mt.
2 Badroom upllail'l opt. 304875_
-·•.

~

Kawaoaki STS Jat akl. stiR under

warranly,' three seater, 83 "orae·
power, bought new July of '97,
tnree matching Kawasaki ski
vesta and rraller au QO with It , ..

IWEDNESDAY

$5000, 740·949·2203 or 74G-949-

2045, will consider trade for a ; i
good pcnloon boat.

Auto Parte ~

780

Accaaaorlea

45e 112 8tcoftd Avtrtuo, Gollipo111.2 ... N:;, Ao191toncao,
f425/Mo.,$225 Dapoott. UtN~O.o
Pold7&lt;1f).4o11.2128.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
SUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wootwood Drive
from $278 .to 1358. Wtltto lhop

JbouiiiO""""'- _..,..,

. .,

Local refa,.nctalurnrshtd . El·

tobttthad tt7$. cau (reo) «8· ...
e870 Or 1;800-287-0e78. Fl- '. ,~

naces: electric wood ct'llpptr,

180: Aollbn tor- tn.dt, 1110:
CO'o (rocklabout eoo lflttOO;
obcut 200 VCR tiopoo oll$1110;

Home · ,.

.
.TIIIPIIOOftNQ- ·
,
Unconditional llttlmt guerontoo. ·

leo

~

for,llle

2 Aquoifulno 30gol. tonka w/dcu·
btl, ro« iron lllnd, fully tqulpoad
" ' - r flnoro, hoodo, tlglota oto.
1125.304475-3101.

ol! 1100: saooo com~lot,, t&amp;e
oooh; tbcutiiO now adult rotad
VCA . . . . $7 - ; inoA Groom Shop -Pot Grooming.
toro; - 1100;dlgitol;
ICIIoo
(propop mochlrio with · Footurlftll Hydro loth. Don
ShOlto. ~73 Goorgn Crtok Ad.
;- oop111g 1 - l!
[~;!;~b:oo:k~o,~t4:45~00~- 0~8~0;
AKC Reg moll Molltll. AKC
Anttqut Pocklt Watchto out of Reg Poktngooo pupa. Bo11r1
Eotollo . Good Bvyol 422 Bee· Englloh BuHdog pupploo. 740ondAYI. 7-1815
~ 843-526&amp;.

___
•...-ptoowg.

oklo &amp; out, $3895 nag .. 740-H2·
6124. .
.
11193 Lullino' Z 30, 11\Cflonl oondlllon, - rad lnllrlor, uttro
clotn, garoga k1111. tully loodad,
,_ tireo, 74,000 mttao. cal 740·
1112-5293 aflor !lpm.
Cradlt Problema? Wt Can Help.
Eooy Bonk Flnonolng For Used ·
Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call

Vi:ldl, 740 4t8 2887.
811&amp;1&lt;1 Coro F!om 117&amp;. Porocttoo, CodiiiOCI, Chtvya, BMW'I,
Corvtttto. Aloo Jttfll, 4 WD'o.
Ycur Arto. Toll Frtt t •eD0-211·
8000 E11. A·2114 For Currant
Llltlngo.

40 Drlw
42 SemiJne'-

,,

·---

\

atone

I·

44~Miut

41 Kind of

11'

iatt110 Dutch town

1'

52

'

Grul:-2. land

. 13 AliiM 111dlr ',.

,.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c..tty ~

Y

II C : ·

""'..=._. ... . .by Lull Cltl'iPQ

Eadl

lnfll~llllnealorllnOthlf. T~c.U.· J IQIMW

•Y

XHIYDHX

8HFII8H

'SF C
FP

.

r...-. from quotltlicJN by r.mou. peoclle, PMtllnd Pl'a.n4
HL N F •'
••

KYSCYOYSY _

CNH

UIIHYX

I R PH. '

WHYS

'·

UYC

JRSH

0 Y VI

for-··

loiRLNCHII

•'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Bella Abzua was biaaer titan IKe,
the 1trugg1e
equality."- bonna Snatata ·

a tnie pioneer in

'

·

,.

,.

won

•,

lAIII

,.

I
~

·...
LIKERL
2

I I I 1 I

'

I
I: I I' I I'

..,.

•:J
,.

SKLUY

~

_,.,R_I.,.
.f,. . . · Morality may be simply the
. l5 I' __WI,...E...,P.......l,
I
. . . .
allitude ~-pi toward people

I

.

,...._........,.........,.........--.we personally- - -- - - -.

I

,,,.

DODYTI
~...~~~1,..;.........17....,..1....:..,...1~

G Complotw

.' ."·'

..

•.

J

.'

-.

..,,.

··.1

.~, .

' ' I '

-iiiT-"-·'. "·I .
--1-.m~iisii
ltiEMENT

18112 Toyoto Corolla, air, ""· outo,

'

1988 24ft. Pontoon 1189-SOHP' ' '

810

good llroo. oxcollont CfHICfltlon In-

01'138 SoUl (Fr.)
31 Cancefo:le

motoe, hard top, sltrtO wllraller. • I
304-87.S.73A6.
.
' '

~-

Major achievements are possible aware of it, you' II project a charisma
ioday. Don't be afmid to go a~ sev- today that will make you mon: attmceml goals simultaneously.
tive ohan usual to members of the
Tiiur!Zy.'May 14. 1998
LEO
(July
23-Aug.
22)
The
way
opposite
gender.
. Substantial material -urity is a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
strong probability for you in the year you'll handle matters loday ..will
serve
to
enhance
your
image.
You'll
Toendot
are moving in X'!!Jr favor at
ahead. Your gi t1s and talents will be
bock
up
your
words
with
action~
and
this
time,
especially lhose thai are
utilized effectiVely, and a labor of .
will
be
appn:ciated
by
your
c:oworkc:ommeotial
or financial. Don't start
love might herp falten your wallet.
ers.
_
making
changes
simply for.llie sake
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) FolVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Sev- of cha~ge.
.
lowing yQur hunches today might
eral
situations
in
which
you
have
vital
AQUARIUS
(Jun.
20-Feb.
19)
prove 10 be advantageous. These I
interests
mighl
undergo
changes
·
Dealings
you
have
with
friends
today
peoteptions could provide you with
valuable insights on ways to handle · today that could f.I'OVe lo your liking. ·should tum out to be favorable e~pe­
paramount issues. Know where to Sqme will be vistble: othet's may'J!9L riences for everyone concerned. If a
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 23) Whlll pal tries to inject somelhinf: rnateri- .
look for romance and you 'II find it.
you
cannot accomplish sinslehand- alistic, however, tum off the switch.
The Astro-Gruph Matchmaker
PISCES (Feb. 20-Maoth . 20)
instantly reveals which signs are edly a! this time can be achieved\ in
tandem
with
effective
partnersrUn~
OW\Irfunitics
for personal gain are
romantically perfect for you. Mail
up
with
individuals
who
share
your
prevllent
in
your
chart today. SeverS2.7.S to Matchmaker, ~o this newsinterests.
al
people
with
whom you have
paper, f.O: Bo~ 17S8, Mu1111y Hill
SCORPIO ' (Oct.' 24-Nov. 22}. arringements could tum out to be
Slalion, New York, NY 10156.
Focus
your efforts today on devel" gcnef'IIIOn of Jood fortune.
GEMINI (May. 21-June 20) Do
opments
thaln meaningful to Y01!
ARIES (March 21-April 19) If
not be ~luclalll to plllicipm in
materially.
You're
llicky
now
at
your
hopes and aspirations stlrl rungroup ellllcavOfS today. Someone
improvif1J your lot In life in worldly: nina _a bit hiah today. don'l restrict
with whom you may come in conllet
ways.
'' ' them or hold them in check. Condimiaht have a IJIOP.OS&amp;IIhat i• tailored
SAGmARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec:
· ti0111look hopeful in aeneral, so flow
10 your prcaent needs.
21) Even thouah you may not be with the lide.
,
CANCER .&lt;June 21-July 22)

~~O·GRAPH

and 1111; t7&amp;, 3 WOO!I/COII
ljowt; olr COU'Gr1110r, ttOO; s ·
mlc'!,"!."'·
aac-~; lhtl'l""; ltoek, brN:k, • - plpeo, wlndOil ..-• ..,_., 1'• - ; owo, llntolo, Ole. Clouda Wlntoro,
II.,.. ol .....111-.: clloln Rio Grondo. OH Coli 140·245·
1101,1, f80; Yilt, flO; 2 o•• fur- &amp;121 .

35~

I

.

010, 4 ' - -.-·

.
,.

.,

$800. 304-675·5019 after 5pm or . '

578-2667.

-.IIMpo -·with-

,

28 o.ctlvt
Clw1ia28 Dick 01t Jane
30 Abatltacta
34-moak

·. '

TO 60 WITH ME?

90I'Ip. Chryslt_r_motor w/frtiler . ,

121110 lftlbllo homo In gootloondltfon. ' " ' c-.111 CC!Wtr1ton

t and 2 bedroom apartmtnto,' fur·
nllhad ond unlurnlohad. oacurlty
d~IU r-ut~d.
-• •• no pato, 7'0·
·221 e.
-•
1 Badroam Apt. .3rd A'IO. GaNI·
111 7•o-245~3
7
r,&amp;o' •
-~ dr 40"'41 '

24 Arlc. city, El -

'&gt;

WOULD '1'00 LIKE

1978 Taylor Cron 17ft. opan bcw,' ·, ;

.460 Ford engine, auto transmis&lt;"' '
slon &amp; rrenster case, can hear ....
run $1,100. You take out 304-

von ln,nlco condhlon. 740-4488178
1188 John 0a • • Lawn- Mower,
Chad iJtllo Spotlof Addition. 740.
44&amp;-31118
.
'
ic
• · ·
••·lncll big ocr- TV wnh lreo
Vt;:R. Drily t!t dalhlers 10
vour - -CllltiorM P - e
1-800-,_,
Ail flbtrglooo Apocho, pop up .
I, ... - · ttOOO

....--

12 FredAiteiN'I ;'
19R-1,002 :
22Staap ........ '

tho chuckle q"'"*t
.-.I..-..I.-..1.'--...J.L....J..
-..1
by
filling
in
the miRing WOI'da
1
you develop lrom llop No. 3 below.

SPitiN6
OANCE,CIIAR.LES..

:

c
--~~-~~~~~~;,;,'l8~·----------

......

Pau
Pau
Pau
Pass

.IT'S t~E

'

,

11 Plaza

Eattt

PEANUTS .

nlco car, f4000, 740-892·7614 or
7~9G-2210.
'
w/oll lnje&lt;:lion, rune &amp; drive•
good. $2,800. Must - to - · ·

tr8111f101'1

By Phillip Alder
As I mentioned yesterday, Mike
Lawrence's new computer product.
"Private Bridge Lessons, Volume
I," is excellent. Let's have a look at
a deal · from 1he section on safety
plays. A warning, !hough: Almost
everyone would fall to defeat given
this layout of the cards.
Against your six-diamond ron-tract, West leads the club I0: qu=t.
king, ace. HoY( would you continue?
North did incredibly well to
remove three no-trump. lfl h.ad been
Lawrence, I would have made the
trump suit a major, which would have
made a strong-two opening by South
virtually automalic.
.
You are faced with a loser in each
minor suit. It looks so obvious 10 start
with three rounds of spades. discarding dummy's club loser. Then you
play a_top trump. Here, though. disaster strikes. East wins with the diamond ace and returns his lasl spade,
which W~st ruffs wilh lhc diamond
nine.
True, you were very unlucky. But
good playen make_their own luck.
Here's a better plan. Cash the hean
ace at trick two. cross to dummy's ·
spade queen, and lake the~ king,
discarding a spade from hand. Then
play off your remaining two top
spades, throwing dummy's low club.
See the difference? When you play a
trump honor to ·East's ace and hereturns a spade, you can ruff high 111)11
draw West's final tromp. ·
' Look out for all pcissible traps; not just the conspicuous one.
.
You must have Windows 3.1or 95
·on your computer. The disk is available for $37.95 postpuid from Mike
Lawrence, 131 Alvarado Road.
Berkeley, CA 94705.
·

•

mites. $20,000. 740-446·1082.

Soalh

8 FMIIiy7 Baldly
I Era
9 Fiaur-cla-10c-tn

Another bite
from the bytes

-

' ...
•

1883 Dodge D-150 e.tended
Cab, 6 1/2' bed, good ~ondltlon ,
$6316, 740-992-e154. I

875-3000. .

z

Opening lead: • 10

1

_or_7...;40-_;2;.;.56-62:...:::..51_ _~
' _ _ :-!

new engine with Ford warrantv,

·i

:

due July 1~ 2nd coif $400. Ago
3·112, not brad $300. 18mo. old
1'"1" $250. 304-675-3750.

crowave. Cell Home Products 0

WOLFF TANNING iiED8
Tan AI Home
BuyDintctandSAvEI

WHO TOLD YOU MY BROTHER BUBBA
WAS COMIN' FER A VISIT?

package, 6 cyt., 5 speed, custom
wheals\ 4 new tires. q_ntv ·as,ooo

740

•

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

--~~~----------1691 Chevy S-10, wllh !Tahoe '

rita only. 304-f75-5172.-

'8~

blko, rowing machine, col·
lot totote, 2 end !litotes. comprH·
oor, oink top, Clro'l8ly orator. 304·
875-5946.
•

.

1987 Mitsublshl 24 Ft. BQoc Truck, ,
740-256-e766.

.

5 ~UIII

K Q J 10 3
• A64

..:

1988 Nlsaan Pathfinder

•KJ875

t

. '

$4,000, 740-379-21311.

1
-Ru- .
2 Dlltaii{_..
3 Pnvw plenet
4 llulider'a unit

A

•A

Paint 70.000 Miles $5 ,300 OBO '

19~4

t

DOWN

• A K 8 4

720 Trilcka for Sale

!40-379·2825.

a8 3
SouIll

Car, Stt ,OOO 740-146-7527. Anor
6P.M.

garage kept, exc. ·running cond. , t
many extral: $3,000. Flrml After r 1
Spm before 9pm. Serlqua lnqul· '

Rofrlgoratoro·Dnly 1·19 dcwn d•
livers to your door. FrM ml·

Sktt·b..-·slde refrigerator. extr·

1.

EIUI&amp;
• J 10 8 2
• J 9 4

• 9 2.
10 9 3

Of Ita Kind, A Real Collectors

682-4.

710 Auto• for Slle

Scoottra, Elt&lt;:trlq WheeJchalrs,
Salea: Rental, Trade, New 1
Used, Bowman's Hornecare, 7.CO.
44&amp;-7283.

Luxury Spor1s Coupe When Yo~

-·

Furnilln.

weld oator. Onty $19 dOwn dallY.
oro to your door. Call Homo ProdUCIIO 1-800-779-0536.

187854

• Q2

i Welt
9 75
• Q 10

Can Own Tho Best F..- A Frac1of1
Of The Coat. Currant Red , Adult Drlvan 94' Cougar, XR7-V8 . 28
mpg• .3.000 MIIH, Lcodad, Last

05-13-tl

• K 7 52

I.

.

mlnum Wheels, .New Green Sltver

TRANSPORTATION

Aiding lawn mower with your
chOice or e " " pus~ mower or

A -.304-458-1069.

1888 Ford F-150 4&gt;4. ShOrlbod,: .
302, V-8, MPFI , 00 Auto, Air:
AM/FM Caosette. Badllnor. Alu· •

Musical
lnlllrumenta

570

!Jiad &amp; MtiqiM .

1-800-779-0536.

~K&amp;MEEK

Upton Used C8rs At. 62· 3 Milts
South of Leori, WV. Finanelng "

Professional Grooming by Ap- ' 1974 Dodgo truck, t/2 ttm flatbed; .'
pointments. Over 15 yra. experi- 18 H.P. Whlzard mowar; 740·25&amp;- · •
ence, evening • appolntmenta 1424.
"
available, 650 Second Ave .Gal-

Mlllan,WV ·
Buy,Soll,ltadl

304-773-530I.

• Q3

Morqulo wadding 1811/2 carot ,
olzo· 7, paid 11400, will toko
St2eo: woddlftll gown wllll 'IIIII
lizo 7, ptiid' l700 will toke, 1300;
740-367-&lt;1216 or 7~:1411 .

I·
f

aevertl gam11. (Complete IBM

Nortll

:S5000=::·.:0BO::..:CI::1:..:7_:40-446-:...;_::..;.36:..77~::::

!l:.c::-.,;,:;::,~:r:=;

Aperbli11111
for Rent

&amp; movloo. Coli 740-441-25e8.

-()pent

"COOL DAWNI"
Control Air Cond111on~. Frtt E&amp;·
ttmatool If Ycu DOn't Oil "1, Wo
~
Both Looal 740-4411308; 1-100281-oo81t.

7~8112-31111.

Equoi Houllng Cjlportunlty.
Furnflhtd 1 bdr tlupill, ldosl for
Spocltl 18xt0 31A. 2 both. 1 paroon. No omoklro. 1200. da·
11,325 Down, f205 MO. frM Oir poou a rottroncto. 304·675&amp; trae oklrllng. t-800-89t-em.
28e1 .

-for oalo or 2 ..,.._,... 3

Antlquee

540 MI-IIIIIIOUI
Meochendlie

lneludod. 7~8112-2167.

FronehCityPot~

Personal computer: Cyrix Penll·

clo~

Pom_oroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m.. -su~ 1:00 to
8:00 p.m. 740·882·2528, Ru11

~~b~~;;t;;;;;;;;;--

Schult Now Otnorotion 18x72, •
3bdr. 2 belli, vinyl oldlng, ohln- .
gild roof, 2x8 Willi. 127.280.
Clayton Wln"!!r 24x•o. 3bdr, 2
both. 125.800. Mountain &amp;toto
Homol 3411 Jacklon Avo. Pt.
_ , _ 304-875-1400.

ilv Owner: -

'

---

NOTICE

urn Proceuor 188 MHZ, 17'
monitor, 24xCOR Rom, ·4B MB
llam, .Microsoft mouse, 32 bit
vidao card 2fo!B. Softwore: MICTosott DOS 8.2, WI Mows 3.1 I

Buy or 1111. Rlvtrlnt Anllquea,
1124 ~-Main StrHI. on Rt. 124,

2bdrm. opll., IOIIItiOCirlc, appllanctOJurnllflad, O.undry room.
- · c!oll 10 1c1too1 In toWn.
Ntw Ooublowldo 3BA, 2 bllh. . Ao1911cotlon&amp; ovollobft ot: VUtago
11.325 Down a $20&amp; pat' mo: t · · OrMn Apll. ,., or cal 740-1182...... 342e.
3711 .EOH.

"-1hll-.

Sporting

Goodi.

Two bedroom mobile home , In
Mlddloport. CA. all olo!:trtc, $325,

Still under wtrrtntJ, owner fl·

Green '!Wp. ochoolo. A root otool
In the mid 90'1. Call Will If 740245-7221
""' Salt

10-1:.(740):Mf;l782

Mobllo home In country, Roclnal
Portlond .... $225 monthly rant,
!:&amp;:r."tt, 740·992·7824, call

NEW lANK IIIPO'I.Only 31of11
nonclng IYOtllbll.
1111.

t

••· M~Hre1111, Eel. Hrs "'-T-W.

2 bedr
·
oom mObile homo In Middloport, 740-1111-5039.
'

Now 1188 14x70 -dt'oom.
tileiudao e monilll FREE 1111 Nnt.
tnctudoo oklrllng, doluxo ottPI
and ootup. Only 1181.08 ptr
month with 11015 down . Coil 1·
eoo-837·3236.
•.

1 ·5 BEDROOM HOMEI fiiOM

2·3 Bdr. house on 7tl'l Street in
New ·Haven. Available June 1.
Gar1g1, air-conditioner, nice

Wo 'Movadl Ulad Furniture Store
Betow The Holiday Inn In Kanauga, Ohio. ·Elida. Drauars, Couch-

U80·1300, 11wor, water and

1-800-2!51-~70

high 50's. 304·173-5787.

740-441-7391.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homoa

. _.

ducti 0 1·800-779-0536.

ranty $205; Skaggo Appllancoo,

16 Vine Stroot, Galllpclls, Ohto,

bast·

ment, no pato. 740-9112-5868. ·

_

OnlY $19 down delivers a com·
pleta living room sulle. bedroom
and dinette to your door·pli.ts ai
tree 25·1nel'l TV. Call Hoione Pro-

Wuher Llkt Nilw 1 Year War-

420 MobHe Homes
for .Rent

Naw 3 -8 1oom
oo ....._Home
Montll
, Only II - - ~

4 Bedroom 2 acres. 5/miltl
north of Pt . Pleasant. Asking

·al~e

&amp;randy and Tookle Phone (740)
441-1419

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential · And Commercial
Lawn Equipment. Compact Utility.

waahor $85; Dryer $7': Eltctrlo
Aongo $95; Nlco Freezer $195:

Nice 2 bedroom, relefences. de·
pooll. no pOll. 304-t75-5182.

UIIITED OFFER
1988 ooubtowldo 3t&gt;r, 2 botho.
$1 ,688/down 12!9/mo. Only' at
Oakwood H?mt•. Nitro: wv 304·
7)15-!5815
.
.
Moko 2 Poymonlo Move In No
Poymtnto A"" 4 Yaaro, t-800383-81112.

0038.

bldroo,l'l', full

8030, 7~388-951 5.

9621.

•ncv

~

'car·

poi 112 Price Kitchen Pr1nl' $5.00
Sq. Yd. 740·«6·74•4. Mollohan
Carpal.
.

3 Sldrqom, In Poner, 740-388-

avallablo. 304-755-5588.

MtftOn·Rt 1111, Glonwood-3 boC1room, 2 both mobile homo w/1
aero tond, city water 132,000.
CIIt N
30ol-e7• 5540 ~. ,
or - '
175-4024.

Retirement Sale Room Size

3 Bdr, Full ~aMtnenl, central air,
Camp Conley area. $350. mo.
pU tlopoolt. 304-t75-3230.

ol uoad home~ 2
or 3 badroomo. Slor1lng 11 $2885.
Quick dollvtry. Call 7•0-315·

1 Mile outliavtng Rd . weat Col·

house in Racine on

mo. plul 1250 deposit, .located

Largt -

umbla, 1800 aq.ll. 3 bdr. 2 both,
Priced WI 70'L 30-1·173-5379.

Pollj'o- I Ulad Fumllln
Wt now '-krr'rl Surplualll
2101 Jotlorson lwe.
. Open 9:30. 5:00 Mon-Sai.
304-675-SOFA (7632)

on Bethel Church Rd. In Gallipo111, QH. ~75-4833.

3428.

310 HomeaforSIIe

King size brass bed . like now.

nolghborho!&gt;d. $335. mo. plus
dapcolt. 740-159-4408.
.

Hugo 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath.
Starting at ONLY 131.1119. M1n1
opllono ovoltablt. t-888·928·

REAL ESTATE

saoo ouo.504-675-7242.

2 or

Blocking Wood &amp; Wodg11 And

~---oppon-•u"!niitty"!baS-is•. _ . ._I

poto,,pay own utllltO.o, call740·
992·2381 Monday thru Friday
8arr&gt;-4pm.
•

olda pata, dapoaH rtqulred, 740·
8112-3080.

nyi Skirting Kill . $298.8e, An·

Divorce Forces Salea·Tall:t ovt.r
paymenfs, 2br, 2 bath, financing

Vine Stteet. Call 740-448·7388,
1-800-4119-34119.

2 !)ldroom hoUse. clean,. carpet·
ed, stove, no refrigerator, no In·

clloro, Wood &amp; FlbarQI!o•• Stope,
Root Coalinga, Dooro, WlndOWI,
Plumbing &amp; Eleclrtcal Suppllll,

ad\lartlsed in lhls newspaper
are ayailable on an equal

2 &amp; 3,badroom, In Pomorov. $300
per month, depoalt raqulrad, no

'

Olscoun't Mobile Home Perla &amp;
A(:CIIIOflet Wiler Heatera. VI·

inlonned that al dwellings

washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 71

2 bedroom

from the Ark about one year ago
please call mall Ferrel&amp; names

PTO Wei Disc Brakos, 1 Ocuble
Hydvatvo
$12,900.
4·WD
S16,900. Good only until May 26.
Koeltrs SarYlco Cfntor
St RU7
PoWl1 Pleaaantl Rlpiay ~oad
304-695-!!874.

Reconditioned

410 Hou... for Rent

Ohio RIYor lot, nice yanf, all utililit~ paid (ixcept ale.), 1350 per
month, $200 dopoolt, 740·949·
1012.

Clayto~

Moret Call Benne It'I Mobllt
Home Supply Att-7411. . .9418.

'a Bedroom wlfull finished ball·
ment, detached garage. prime tocation . 2 Bedroom, blltment ,
good starter home. 304-675-5162.

etc .•. Free Esllm•tu .

. 304-755-7181 .

Mobllt Homo Gar·
CA. On Ronlld
Lot. Bolt Oflo~ 740-lol&amp;-9428.

advenisements .tor real estate
whicn Is In violation of tna
taw. Our readers are hereby

Wanled : 'eQuipment Mechanic
Ex·perlenced In HtB'IIY Trucks,
Equipment, And Hydraulics, Salary Commensurate With Expert-

co.

BurfrMr! t.ano,
Golllpollo, 1340/llo.. WID Hook·
Up, Dopoott Roquiied, 513·5742539.

don lilb, SkyiiQht,

This nowspaper will.not
knowingly accept

appraised . $27,500 . 304·882·
3856 call-o8pm-9pm.

Appliances:

Wa&amp;hera, Dryers, Ranges, Refrfgrators, 90 Day Pueranleel
French Cltj Maytag, 740-4487795.
'

2 Bedroom -

BUY IN APRIL .
No Paymonta Until July 1998 ·
E-Z FIMnclng
_Call Finance Uno
1·800-948-5878
Fraa Sa1·'4' &amp; _
De!Wry

P.M. Interview&amp; And ' lOr Hiring· ment. new root, tiding &amp; window&amp;
Will Take Place Before June 1, on 2.4 acres on Sliding Hill
HilMI.
Creek Rd. In Hartford. Has bHn

ANYOOOJOSI
Shrubs a woadl tr1~~~:e~~~~~
lng .- flower bed~ ,
oldliwalk edging,

1

merna, Inurn• loan. owner" fi·

Through FrldaV 8:00A.M. To 4:00. 3 Bedroom I 1/2 bath. 3/4 bail-

180 Wanted To Do

1-800-251·~70

ciW;7-7803-8:30pm.

HouHhold
GOode

GOOD .USEO APPLIANCES

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay-

to alt.lertlse ·any preference,
limitatiOn or dlscrimlnadon
based on race. color, religion,
S8K familial sratus or nallonal
origin, or any intentiOn to
make any such preference,
~mltallon or diSCfimlnatklr1."

Wantad· full time desk cO.rk. Apply at HcMday Inn.

510

I am laoklng for two ferrets II vou
are the peraon who bought them-

e11ra

MERCHANDI SE

RENTALS

Save . My Credll, Asuumt Paymtnll, 304-736-'1295.
•

All real estate a(tvenlslng In
tnls ni!wspaper Is sub}ecl: fo
tne Federal Fair Housing ACt
ot 1968 which makes it iUegal

The VIllage Of Rio Grande Is An
Equal Opportunity Employer On
The Basis Of Race, Color, ReligiOn, Sex. National Origin, Handi·

tuni1Y Emptoyer.

Anlltony Land

.

446-6565.

Wo Buy Land: 30 ·BOO Acres,
Wo Pay Cnh. 1•800·213·8385,

.

Pans, Huge Buytng Power Mtano
The Lowtfst lnotallad Price, Euy
Over The Phone Sink Flnanctno.
Can Bennatra Mobllo Heme HTG
&amp; CLG H!OD-872-51M17. -

And Haw AValid Ohio Driver Ll·

Applications May Be Secured At
The Village 01. Rio Grande Mu·
nlclpat Building, ..C01 E. College
Ave .• Rio Grande. Ohio. Monday

--

thernr &amp; Coleman 1Heat Pumps,
Air Condlllonera, furnactl 1

lnlormatlon.

Building 32x7t, 1110 VIand
Stroot, Pclnt Pieaoant, Call 740-

try acrtl for Of with 80'a t three
bedroom, two both mobiO. homo.
Cheoter to Gallipolis, 740-44) ·

Allonlon Mcil&gt;lloHomtOwnonl:
Areas Laroest Inventory Of Inter·

·ro""'rov-

cap. Ancastry. Or Age.

.

Cal

once. :JOi-675-214 .

Box 664.
Ohio 45769 t&gt;v
June 15. l-40-992-3863 for mora

cense. Individual Should Be Motl·
valed, Willing To Work. Like Be·
lng Out·Of·Doors. Willing And
Able To Follow DlreeliOns; And In
Good Physical Condition. Rate 01
Pay .Is 16.25 An Hour And A -40 •
Hour Week Is Expected . Workday Ia From 8:00 A.M. To 4:30
P.M. Monday Trvougn Fnday.

Waflted· approx. 1·3 Oblo coun·

Free Estlmales ·
All Worfr Guaranltad

TEACHER of Preschool Handi·
capped Students beginning the
1998·99 school year'. Submll lei·
ter of Interest, resume, 3 'leners of
recommendation. copy of Iranscript and current certiUcale lo
John Riebel, ~uparl ntendent, P.O.

OD The Av'aiiabla Work And
Weather. Person Apptying Netcls
To Be At Least 18 Years 01 Agea

cond. Can stay In park w/ap·
proved application or will dflllver

Joo'oT¥-VCA Somco

6606.

And Ending Sometime In September Or Octob8r, 1996, Depending

Singlo Chrtallan looking ""
houoo to rent in Gallla or Molga
County, rotocaVng from Cokimbuo,
call Ria 814-781-Q265 ASAP

DoW~twldo
3 BadRIOI!II, 2 Bllhl
$1 .885 Down 1269 fW Month
1 - Detillary And Sot Up

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 at 740-992·

The VIllage 01 Rio Grande Is ~ ·
capllng Applications Unlil Friday,
May 22, 1998 For Temporary Em·
p~r:nent Srartlng June 1, 1998,

1988 Clayton 14170 3 bdr, 1
bath. neat pllmp, good cond. WHI
doll,., local. $11 ,000. 1882 oakwood 14d0 2 bdr, 1 bath , iuc .

948-5878.

Livingston's
sement water·
proofing, all ba ment repairs
done, free esll tea, lifetime
guaranJH. 1Oyrs n job IKPirl·

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Ropatrad, Now &amp; Rabulll In Stod&lt;.
Colt Ron Elllloo, 1-800-537-9~8.

1181 TOjola Corolla . 83,000 ..•
mites. slpd. Very good condition,;,_,

Why Pay 25 ·30K For A Now

Kitchen table with "' chalra; At·' Tractora $1,000. ax1ra disCount OJ
pint 01 mltchinr.. E Force extr· 0% financing tor 12 mos. Exam--

ForLeaae

490

month . Cell credit line 1·800·

Professional
SerVIces -·

Space lor Rent

304·675-10110. Independent Dlo·

~- ot Fullor Brush Producta.

14 x70 3BR, $999 Ocwn &amp; ONLY
$179 par mo. Frat 11r &amp; no oklrtlng. j -888·928-342e.
.

Real Eatate ·'
wanted

lstTirre Buyoro, E-Z Ananclng
2 0&lt; 3 Bedroom, Aroootl 1200 per

:IOW75-1724

Seeking beautician to provide
nrvlces to residents of facil ity.
Amiable staff and goOd working
hours. II interested, please con·
tact: Rocksprlng!l Ael'\abllttatlon
Center. 36759 Rocksprings-Road,

hook-ups. C•ll ofltr 2:00 p.m.,
304-173-5e!l , Malon wv.

Houu cleaning products now
180. IQ-25% oH. Call Dale Wo'Od

304-SU-2531.

6083.

1-800-21 8·'1000 E111. G- 2814.

4:30pm.

Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Alao trailer apace on river. All

Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; ropatrs.
PrllbiOmt? Nead lllnad? Calltha
piano Or. 740-448-4525
·

740-3M-1367.

rooms, 1 Bath With Awning &amp;
Porch On Ranted Lot, 740-.C.C&amp;-

Call TOll Free

230

from Point Plouant 1 t/4 milo on
Bolhot Rd. on Sandhill, no alngle
widas. $1•·18,0008e. Of 8 acres
for $37.000. 304-875-7946 bofortt

(www.'-Jacklnc.com)

down delivers to your door. Call

360
·

1992 Breezewood 14180 2 Bad·

Never Repay.

•740-441-5888, 740-141-5187.' .

Nonh Produce, 740·4148·1933.

~ret camcorder-with pwChase of

Kenrflore waaher, needs work
$85. 080. Kenmore dryer $85.

Buslness. Medical Bils.

Nufllng Center, Monday -Friday
From 8::1&gt; A.M. -1:30 P.M.
.

4 Building Sltoa -2 Acreo ·each,

HAPPY JACK U FLEA CbL•
L.\R: killo floao, tick, 1114 mnoa
llllllllltl oystom~ pcloonlng. J 0

52-tnch big acreen TV. Only $19

Mobile home 1111 available bitween Athena and Pomeroy, call

local . $8 .900. K&amp;K Mobile
Homos 6am·5pm. 304-875-3000. ·

.

WMkly Ratto, Or Monthly Ratol,
·Construction Workers Welcome

~

-OFF

YE OLDE THRIFT &amp;HOPPE
:l2t MAIN STIII!ET
POINT PlEASANT
ACIIOSS FIIOM POST OFFICE

5 Lots on Alltaon lane ror more ·
Info call all« !ipm. 304-875-5108.

304-675-6149.

.Bljalneea

2,0

Town, Newly Remodeted; HBO,
Clnemax. Showtlma &amp; Diane~.

9pm.

12x60 New wiring, Racenlly remodeled, muet see appreciate.

ENTIRE SnicK

Homo Products 0 t-800-779·
05311:

Fumlahed
Roome

450

convenient Ytl priva1e, e miles

$126,000, 740-667-0074

FINANCIAL

handicapped. Avoltobte Nowt
EOH 304-ll75-tMI79.

30 Aorta With Timber Cloll To
Gallipolis Wllh Good Homo Site,
$2!j,000 740-2M-6574.

tached garage, Iota of extraa,

504-675-2647.

er. Only 119 down deliver• to
jOUr dOOr.•Call Homo Producta o
t-IOQ-7?9-o$115.
111

-Circle Mottl Lowell Ratoo In

Three bedroom, two bath home
~~~ 70 acres In Meigs County,

lree gas. · - ground poqt, dt·

992·7808.

Twln Fllvera Taw.-, nOw acCept·
tng application• tor tbr. HUO
aub&amp;ldized apt tor elderly and

(ATTBmON DEVELOPEIIS,

Three bedroom home In Racine,

Home Products 0 1·800·7790531S.
Computer ovotom with frae print·

Rio Grande, one rocwn and bath,

350 .Lot• &amp; Ac*ae

hoopital &amp; town, 740-448-4173.

Ono bedroom oportmont In Middloport. all utiltlol paid, $270 'par
month, $100 dopoolt, call740·

$200 month tndudoo ulllltloo, dopciM roqulrad, 1 888 84~1 -

Full B - 2 mo1o 4 - Rctweltor Pupploo. $125,00 ooch.
Cal: 740-379-2883

free matching tempo. Only $18
down 'delivers to your door. Call ·

Paid, No Pets, References And
Oopoolt ~- 740-146-1370.

Strnt, ~lnt Pleaaant, can 74o446-6565.

!'Mea three bedroom ranch,. fr, two
baths, lnground pool , ca, near

rant The posllion InclUdes Mme
INOTICEI
health visils, lnpa1ient and outOHIO VALLEY PUBLIS'HING CO.
patient ph~slcal therapy 'lisils. recommends fhat you do busl. send resu1n9 10 Human Rasourc- · ness wilh people you know, and
86. Jackson General Hospital,
NOT 10 send money through the
PO Box 720, Ripley, WV 25271 . mall until you have invesllgated

EOE.

Building•

""'iudad.

0006.

One -oom Apartment Ut!HIIol

Building 32x18, 1II 0 Viand

pclntmen1, 7~992-5243.

Will Mow &amp; Trim Lawns, Raason·
abla ·Aates, Contact Joe Saun·
do" A1740-lol&amp;-2450.

to 800 diiCI, 1110 hOidl topao,

Ntce one bedroom furnished . Call740-982·6836 after e pm.
COo llltltl 1101
Carport for sale, no reaaonabla
offorroluood, 70-992·2358.
Coint;Jiete living room suite with

Professional Tree Service, StuiT'ip
Removal, Free Estimates! In ·
surance, BIDwell, Ohio. 614-388·

304-675·5236. AA/EOE.

PT ASSISTANT
Jackson Genaral Hospital, Alp·

clblneta. Jtnn·alr range, dish·
washer, detached garage, by ap-

Will haul junk or trash away. $351
pickup load. 304-ll75,5035.

rector. Pleasant Valley Hospital,

740 446 0380.

340 Bualneaa and
.

-out

Brand Nowl Grtal Glftl COivldoo

7.;;;-tu;d;;;;Ap,;;;;;;,;~.
l•toraga unit.
Black and cl'lerry.
Modern 1 Badroom
of boll. $125. Holda up

Ropoo

dOOrs &amp; tAm, Smith's custom oak

Painting, Pll.lmblng , Remodeling,
Any And All Odd Jobs! Free Es-

eond, Antiquo wood toots. oxcoll.
eond. 740-3711:_2882

DoWie Wldas And 5.llglo Wldos
' Won't LNil.ortgl
Call: 1-1188-738-3332

Mlddltpcrt, beautiful iwo otory, 3
br, 2 bath, large l.r. &amp; fr .. oak

.

111M1o. ,.,......
f17 ...... :IBR. .

TAll IPECIAL·

tlon.

Hmalts, 740-245-5151 .

Wa18r Toys, Cheshire. Ohio. 7-40367-7802.

visory

Nee(l odd lobs· palnling, roofing,
carpentry; or lawn care, l'lave
tools &amp; lime, call for reasonable
rates, free estimates, '740-992·

cond, Wood Bunkbads ••cell.

Riverside Apartmonto In lllddlo·
pert. From $241-$373. Call 740·
992·5084. Equal Houalng Oppor·
tunl11eo.

Now 3br 1989/down $188/mo:
Free Sot-up &amp; Delivery. Only 3. aportmont In Middleport. clean
Loft! Only II QalcwoOd HOmat NI- and quiet, no petl, 7-4()..992-5633.
tro wv.304-755-8815.
Now Taking Appllcatlono- 35
OW Ropo 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, • Wtll 2 Btdroom To,wnt'IOUII
Apartmonto. I2851Mo.. 740·448Eaov lllrmo. 1-800-383-8862.

Call Virginia L. Smith Realty AI
740·446·6806 Or Call Cora At
74G-245·9430 For Mort l!lforma-

2807.

Locations.

aparlmenls at VIllage Manor and

-.WY.-7SWIII

Flroptaeot, Now Heat Pump, Now
Kltcnen. Mini' E111rta. Won't Last
Longll $110,000.

Mowing and odd jobs. 74G-992·

Apple 11 Computor/OIIk. IXCOII.

,_Dol-r&amp;8ot-up

1/2' Batha, Hardwood Floor&amp;, 2

KIS Remodeling Palntlng, RootIng, Call 7.0-146-6984, 30H756021.

Glaclous living. I and 2 bedroom

OnlyAt--

Lovely Countty Hcimt On SA 7
South Wlih A Breathtaking River
VIew. Very Privott Sitting On 2 II
2 Acre a But Onlj 10 Mlnuteo
From GallpOiil. 3 -1 Bedrooms. 2

haul your logs to 1l1e mill•)ull call
504-675-1957.
.

Now hiring safe drivers. good
pay, flexl~e hours. Apply in per·
aon at DominO's In Pt pteasant.

H~;~spltal

-.m. .

Georgea Portf!ble Sawmill, don't

.,._SPECIAIAI
$4111Dowll

._.,__

House, 2 Story Ouplax, 1 Bid-

tOt'ation, also custom order&amp;. Ohio
VaHey Reflnl.ahlng Shop, L.arry
PhJIUps, 740-992-6576.

two children, good pay, reterenceo required, call 740·9.92·3668
9;00am-2:00pm.

Pleasant Valley

S13MOO. 740-882-!ie.t .

room Cottage, 13 Pine Street,
GalllpQtll, Largo Lot Shown By
Furniture repair, refinish and res- Appclntment. Prlco; $98,000 740-

Donee. Rod&lt;, Sou111trn Rock and
bluoo. Call 740-446·9596 to arrongo ti'IIOrvtew and audition.
NIH I babysitter In my home

House for aale, 3 bedrooma,

Experiencld CII'Pinter will do remodeli ng, decka , vinyl ildlng,
plumbing. Free t1tlmat11. Call
Jim SMull . 30•·875·1272. Refer·
&amp;lllt85 L4JOrl AtQUe&amp;t:

LaCanuna MtJtlcan Restauranl

,

___;:......;__ ,. .. r-

Appllanca- Po~ta And. SorYico: AH ' •'
Namt 8rtndl Over 25 '*trt EK· . 1·~,
perlence All Work Guartn1etd, 1 ,

French City Moytog, ·uo-4•8· • "'
7715.
I
~~!'T
C&amp;C Gtnirtl Home Main- 'l,'tH
tenenc1- Palnttng, vinyl aiding, ,;"f}l
C8'1&gt;0nlry, - . .
bathe, - ~ l
rrllbllo homo 01jlllr and . _ For

wt-.

''" ootlmoto call Chet, 7•o-im2-.,,,;q

~

1 ~11

.840 Eledlrlcll.~nd
Rehlfplllon'

'

t

•t

Roildantlott·

.•.,.
l:~l

or cointnoleiol wtrrng}.,.:

oarvlctorqpa~re. ~u-

.11 1•

cenlld tlt&lt;:trlcltn, Alttenour' ..

'

Eloctricel, WV0005011 304·"75" • ~~
1780.
.
'
•
•

•

IJ •.

•

I

\

..'•.•
~

MAY13I :;

�Paae 16 • The Dally Sentinel

;

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May

Thursday

1998

RC COLA
PR.oDuc·r s

Ann Landers .column, Page 6
Family Medicine column, Page 6
Reds wallop Marlins·, Page 4

Today: Sunny ·
High: 80; Low:SO
Tomorr.ow: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

STORE HOUIS
MoiHiaythru

8U·10PM
. 291 SECOIID ST.

a1

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THIU MAY 16, 1998

Meigs County':;

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

$ 79
Steak···········'=-···
OSC~R MAYER 8 VARIETIES . $
119
Lunchables•••:~:~ ••
BUCKET BEEF CUBED .

.

1.

.

.

collected-

2 LITERS ·

149

$ . ,9
R1b Eye Steak...... 3 .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEELt. $
29
Top Round Steak.. 2 .·

r

$ 39

Ha111s •••••••••••••••• .

KELLOGG'S APPLJ
JACKS cu ozt OR
RAISIN BUN c20 ozt

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BE~

.I

. ~Y· Fl'liJ)k.X~ng i~ ~~..'!J!Id ~r

•

c

•I
•
'

•
•
•

DOG FOOD

Lettuce ••••••••::!••

BORDEN

Orange Juice.:.-:. 9
SHEDD'S SPJEAD
$.
179
Country Crock... · ··

.
ChipS .••••••••••••~:•• 1
4
Potato Chips::.~•• 99
$ 69

LAY'S

- ..

FOI DElUZE
PIZZAS

$
~

HAGAN GOLDEN ROUNDS

.

5
99C
•••••••••••••••••

Ice Cream ••••••:1:'•••
1

COOL

.

. STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

SUGAR

c

$ 99

aoz. .

(OU or Water) .

"

.

5L8.

'

'
.

$ 99

,•'

...

• &lt;

---~------·1:··:~•

.

.~

TIDE ULTU 2
POWDERED
LIUIIDRY
DETER&amp;ENT

••
'•
·'.'
•(

.

·.

92-940Z

c

year's ll-yearlowofl .7percent.
Immediately after the report.'s
n:lea.'le, prices dropped a bit in the
inHation-sensitive bond market,
pushing long-term interest rates
slightly higher.
The Labor Department said neW
applications for unemployment benefits totaled 307,000 last week, down
by 2,1100 from the ~vious week.
That' level sho~s strong demand for
labor.
Also. the Commerce Department ·
Said inventories rose 0.5 percent in
March after a big 0.7 percent rise in
February. That would be a sign that
businesses are having trouble selling
good~. except sales are increa.•ing
even fa,ter, up 0.6 percent in March
and 0.9 percent in·February.
•
Economisl' have been poring over
price numberS for signs' that brisk
economic growth and labor shortages

are causing in nation. So far. there's R. '· Reynolds Tobacco Co. this week
been scant evidence.
o.nnounced 5-o:nl-a-pack ini:rea.o;es in
The 1.2 percent increa.o;e in the cigarette prices.
,
cost of lodging away from home · And that .wasn't the only contriillustl)ltes the pressun: on services, bution to a 0.3. percent increa.o;e in sowhich haven't been much affeclcd by : called con: pnces. .
declining energy costs and compeli·
Prescription drug pri~ rose 0.8
tion with cheap impon.~ from eco- percent la.~t month, helpmg to push
nomically troubled Ea•t Asia.
the cost of med1cal care o~erall up by
Other problem 4rens don 'I have 0.4 percent..
.
much to do with overall economic
Even wtth lettuce, food costs
conditions. The 16.5 percent April overall roSe just 0.'1 pe~nt. The
increa.'le in lettuce ~ up 30.1percent price of new cars and trucks wa.~
from a year ago - is a b; producl of unchanged for the month and down
El Nino·~ rains. which left California 1.4 percent from a year ago.
truck .farms too soggy to gro"!
Airline fares. which rose 8.2 perhealthy plants.
cenl dunng the firstthre~ mont~s of
. A 3.8 percenJ increase in tobacco the year, fell 0.3 ~rcent1n Apnl.
- the hujltst in more than 15 years
The c.:ost of m-state telephone
- came a.' tobaccO companies ~lrug· .calls' jumped 1.3 percent but comgled to pay for multi--billion-dollar puler prices fell 2 .41'Crcenra~d eelliability settle·ments. And there's lulqr telephone serv1ces declmed I
more 10 come. Philip Morris Cos. and percent.

·
&lt;Jovemment Fin: Department Ser·
Glnnelt New8 Service.
vices · Revolving Loa!! Program
• ' COLUMBUS - Riding to the res- which would help small townships,
: . , cue,of sinall, rural tire.departments is municipalities and fin: districts expe.
: :. legislation ~stablishing a SSOO.OOO dite tlie construi:liOf! or renovation of
; loan program. spon501'Cd by Rep. fin: department but!d~ngs; II c~ld
During the ~vious four months,
John Carey. R-Wellston, that wa• al~ be used for purc~ma maJor 'declines in ene!Jy costs had held Jhe
unanimously approved by the Ohio . equ1pmcnt for fire. fia.htmg, ambu- · overall index either unchanged or at .
Serulle Wednesday. ·
lane~, emergency mc;d1cal or rescue a slight 0.1 percent increa'le. But, in
The legislation. which only need.~ 11e~1ce~. . .
April, ene!Jy prices slipped only 0.1
the signature of Gov. George
Th1s bill 1s nec~s:v&gt;'· because pen:entandthatwasn'tenoughiOoffVoinovich to become la'!l', passed by there are urg~nt ~~- m.. re~anl to set increa'ieS elsewhere.
a vote of 33-0 on the Sena!e floor rural fire .fighting In Olt1o, s&amp;l~ Sen.
· For the first four months of the
yesterday, The loan•PfOII'lllll, known Jay Hottinger. R-Newark, dunng a year, inflation ran at a modest 0.9 peras Substitute House Bill 192. was n~ speech. "As •.he cost o( fire ·cent annual rate. With.cnergy co~tS
originally slaled fdr $S million but equ1pment ~alatcs,ll becomes more expeclcd to drift higher now, econowas scaled back because ofbudgetaly and more difficult_ for rural fire mists predict inHation for the full year
coru:ems.
departments to ob!a•n lhe resources will come in about tbe same as last
The $SOO,OOO needed to establish they need for ba.~ic safety. .
lbe 1)0-interest loan proaram was
" .ManY of us represent rural disincluded in the last budget pa.wd by tricts that have lire department• with
the legislature in June. Future fund- budgets of less than $:1000 annually. By The AeiOCIIIIed PI'HI
knOcked out some car windshields. in Clermon.t .County.
Wilmington.
ing would 1110111 likely have to come They dO not have even enough manThe storms, which started moving
Strong wipd' and hail the size of
Wilkinson said smaller hail wa.~ the sheriff's office said.
from the state's general revenue fund. ey 10 provide each tirefighte(with a ba.'ll!balls and golf balls rained down
Heavy rain
much a.• 4 inch· througli southern Ohio and nonhem
reponed in several areas, including
Created in the bill is the Small radio."
on part.~ of southwestern and south- Warren. Greene, Clarlt 11nd Mont- es- wa' reported in the Bethel area Kentucky .on Wednesday evening,
in Clermont County.
had mostly ended by midnight.
central Ohio a.~ thunderstorms swept gomery c011nties•
lUthy Meinke, a Cinergy spokes· ·
Skies were expected to continue
lhiiiUgh the area. bul no injuries were
Wind gu.~ts of up to 70 mph wen:
'
.
reported.
reported in some areas, and strong woman, said there were 2,SOO CUS' clearing overnight, and no storms
Bao;eliall-size hail wa.~ reported in ·winds ripped part of lbe roof otJ a car tomen hi Brown .County who IQSI were foreca'l for today. tbe weather
Clinton County, while Highland a11d dealership in liill!lboro, about 60 power due to lightning strikes and service said.
BUller counties n:portcd hail a.~ big a.~ miles northeast of Cincinnati in High- high wind•. Areas suffering outages
golf balls .Wednesday night. said land County, Wilkinson said.
in Brown County included·George·
COI:UMBUS CAPJ - The inter· · their sit-in. which started Monday, Steve Wilkin5011, a .·meteorologist . S9me trees and power. lines were town, New Hope, Rus.o;ellville and
• im president of Ohio State Unive11i- will continue.
lll!ilh the National Weather Service in doWned in Highland County, 'and hail Bulord. along with the Hamlet area
ty ha., allreed to one dembnd of stu:
Richard Sisson agreed . that
dents staging a sit-in outside his n:structuring ofthe univeri!fs Offa
oday's S~ntinel
: · office.
of Minority Affairs will be etOpped
2 Sections • 12 Pages
l'ivtesters from the Afrikan Stu- until studctlts' concerns are heard.
. Vol, 49, No. 17
deni Unionandtheunivenity's - Bu1 he refused 10 n:move BalbaraJ.
li:r of the National Association for the Rich as interim .vice provost for
: •.
COIIIIatlld 01111111' J
. . Ad~nt ofColomt
. People say
CLEVELAND (AP) - .Three Carolina and Tennessee sold whiT he failed to monitor ·when: they were
::: Child
car, probe
fireworks dealm have asreed to pay · called · ' 'family fireworb" to the going. The victims also charged the
$1.3
million into uettlemcnt fund for shop qperalcd by David J. Pruitt il!. firework.~ were in "unn:a110nably
.
A Racine girl was hospitalized
'('he airl's condition WIS not availvictims
ofa 1996 fin: dtat killed nine Scottown near the . Ohio River in danaerous condition."
: after she WUIIJ'PIIR'ndy hit by a car lblc u of press time Ibis. momins•
people
at
a ftreworks store in south- · Lawte"" County.
. All three deale11 said they were
· : while bicyclins alons Yellowbush She is a studenlat Portland Elemen·
em Ohio, The . ~ain Daier reported
The settle- ~:overs South (!6- passively inwolved in the explosion
: ' . Road ne.- Racitie.
11ry SchoQI.
today.
·
·
olina
Di51ributon Jnc. ol Chcrokt:e solely becuuse Pruitt bought fire'
Unils of the Meigs &lt;;ounty EmerThe patrol wu iii Racine u the
The
deal
was
worked
out
last
Falls,
S.C.; "IOilliC Fireworks of · works fran) them. Pruitt testified in a
gency Medical Service were 511111- time invesalptiq a motor-vehicle
Lottenes
month
in
closed-door
neplliations
lnnessee
Inc.
South Pilbbur&amp;, · pre-trial' deposition that fireworks
mooed ·to Y~llowbush ROIId around IICCidellt near the junction d Elm
4:22 p.m. for Sasha ~11.... 12, who Sftellllld 1)ne Boulevard. A llpOit with a federal judJe in. Cinc:iniiAII IIIII Wet Willy's Fin:works. Super- dealers in the South a.o;ked few ques·
.lions when he bought large amounts
OH!p
wu lrllnlpOited from Southern Hlaft - not availllble on chat IICCidlllu who is presidinJ over alaw111il filed market of Tenneasee in Juper.. ·
by
fllllilin
and
IU!Yivonl/(
the
July
Todd
lUll,
26.
a
brain-injlml
man
of fireworks. ·
School in Racine via · helicopter: ol..-lime 1111111101"1111&amp;.
Plc:k 3: 204; ~ 4: H792
ambulance to Cabcii-HunlinJIOII .
In thll IICCidell. UDits of the Mlip 3, 19961ire, die tle'WifiiPC' teponed. from ProciQI'Ville, was chiiJed with . Numerous defendants in the ca...e
Super
Louo: 9-ta-24-25-36-39
Hospi14! in HtainJIDn, W.Va.
; County EMS. iacludlq CcntntiDis- U.S. Dillrict Juclac Herman .Weber causins the fire but wu found incom- have not !ICIIIed, i~~Ciudina Pruin. oth·
Kicker: 356262
A dilplll!:her II ithe a.Jii•Meip ; ptlldt, Syn~~;~~~e and heine 'qll'llt, hu scheduled a 5:cl*mbcr trial for petent to illand trial. Eleven people er dealers and manufactun:rs around
W.VA.
· were injured in the fire.
·
the nation IIIII the nonprofit 'trade
Poll6f lhe Stilt Hipway Pllrolllid I a..poned three to Vellnnl Millin- several ocher defeadanb.
It is the 'filii ielllemeni in the cue. · VICtims said the ·dealers pla&amp;:ed a.•soc:iJllion for Ohio·s fireworb
O.Uy 3: 144; Dltlly ..: S249
~ incident - under inWIIiption i · rill tlolpital in Rae!• ud tn 'r •
llidnntothy
P
.
Hadter,
aCincinnati
"ultra-hazanlous"
fireworks
in
the
industry.
All
deny
any
n:spqnsibility
' this momillf' by · p111ro1 SJt. Kevin :. one penon al thn:ene.
lawyC1' ·wltose three clients In South nation's stream of commerce and for the explosion.
.
'latford.
.
.

Hail~ wind storms reported in parts

of southern Ohio

- a•

.Sisson refuses to remove
·Rich as interim vice pro.vost.
for minority affairs at OS(} · ·

sJruck by

Win A
BANKROLL .
This Week
Powell's.Super. ·
Value

•

..
..&lt;.

$300

..•

•..!'

FreeCashr
Stop In The Store
For Details
.

,.

They will be construclcd by Eagle pay approximately half of the cost mortgage procedures, and other con. Home Builders of Jackson County.
per house. Rumley said, with the bal· sumer information, ail well a.~ home
The loans 10 purchase the ho"'1CS ance being as.~umed through a mort· maintenance 1111ining.
will not require a down payment and gage in the clients name. Rumley
.Potential homeowners must meet
through an arrangement with Star estimated tbe interest rate at approx· income guidelines a.• well a.• the
Bank, based in Cincinnati, will carry imately five percent.
bank's credit guidelines. hicome
low closing casts.
As a condition of participation, guidelines begin at $ Ul,200 for a
The total cost of each boose has those approved for participati9n must three-person household, up to
. ~d ~=Sii~ _at_ !J!:~ee~5.000 , :._~~nd a ~~es qf bomcb\1~ coun• • $30,,10.fqr .• sill-person houidtold . .
ana 89.000 each, accordmg to selmg se~s1ons through the CAA.
Applications for the program
Samantha R11mley, housing develop- Those sessiollll will include instruc- requin: an appointment and must be
.er for Gallia-Meigs CAA.
tion about budgeting. credit repon.~. complelcd before Wedne'i(lay.
Federal and state grant funds will

Good Afternoon

·Report: FireW,:orks dealers to pay
.$-1.3 million for fire that kUied nine

,

STARIIST
CHUNK TUNA
&amp;oz.

14.25UmiJ ' 2 please add
.
15.25 oz.
.
. pwch. 38e

/$
2

•'

181bs, ..

31(RegorUght)

DOll~~~

•
•

(Chunk
or
.
bite Size)

. ·

.

By AARON MARSHALL

SUNSHINE

c

WASHINGTON (AP) - ·consumcr prices ro,;e modest 0.2 percent in April, pushed up by substantial increases in tobacco, lettuce qnd
hotel clulrPs.
The increa...e, though restrained,
wa5 the largest in the Consumer Price
lnjlex in six months. the Labor
Department said today. •

•

•

FRESH HEAD

. J

• I

SINGLE ROLL
I

cuts in domtstic priorities." Raines
wrote to Hoose Transportal ion Committee Chairman Bud Shuster, R-Pa.
The administration is proposing
that $218.9 billion be spent, but that
the programs be spread out over seven yean, instead of six. It has suggested that the only offsets needed
under this plan would be about $10.5
biUion from a program to lreat vet:
erans with tobacco-related disea.&lt;;es.
Veterans groups strongly oppose thiU
idea.
Vice President AI Gore at a news
conference on Wednesday urged
Congress to enact a tough national
standard for drunken driving.
The Senate bill, backed by the
administration, would lake highway
1119ney away from stales that don't
adopt a blood-alcohol content standard for drunken driving of .08 percent, the strict standard that is the law
in 16 states. The House bill would
offer financial incentives·to stales that
crack down on drunken driving, but,
more sensitive to states rights issues.
would tiot endone a national standard.

. .Sen~te OKs $5Do,ooo Consumer pric~s climb modest 0.2 percent
·,- :./oail'prog·ram ·for.· small.
a
~ liU' •al 4r·,e de•na
' ...m t
I
I"' I ll en s

LO
BIG MOPPEi
TOWELs·

·

•

Ten new homes •- six of them in
Meigs 'Coonty -· wiil be built with
. low-intcn:stloan money ~~!rough the
Gallia·Meigs Community Action
Agency and made available 10 qual. ifying residents. .
.
The agency will place I0 factory'built homes, six on ptopelly OWned'
1n the Plantz subdtvtston·tn Galhpolis. The homes will have three bedrooms. two ,b&amp;ths. dining rOom, liv,
ins room, kit~hen and a garage:

·
·
·
79c
Hot Dogs •• ••••••••

.

CAA loans available for new homes· in Meigs, Gal~is

2/$

ARMOUR STAir -

12oz

.

WASHINGTON CAPJ - The Hou~ing Administration. The ogre,:- way lrusl fund will be lrealed in the .
White House is warning il will veto . ment did not, as earlier proposed, future and how tQ reduce drunken dria massive ·highway spending bilf take · money from Medicaid pro- ving.
Graham said GOP leaders have·
that it says would bustl/le buds-;1 ~· grams, said Nicholas Graham.
hurt the administration's social pri· spokesman for Senate Environmen! senled on a compromise figure of
and Public Works Committee Chair- $167 billion for the highway money,
orities.
· The veto lhreal came with time · man John Chafee, R-R.I. .
about $6 billion less than what wa.'
running out for Congress to come up
For weeks, President Clinton and sought previously. but {hey are still
with a bill in time for states to sign . other senior officials have expressed negotiating 0ri a funding level for
contnll:ts for · summer construction concern-about the spendin$evels in mass uansil, which traditionally has
competing highway spen · bills been ·about 20 percent of the total
projects.
"We need final action now on this · passed by the House and Senat . But transportation money. · ,
A provisional six-month spending
critical legislation,'' White House they had avoided talking about veto. budget chi~f Frankiin Ritines wrote, ing a highly popular bill that pa'ISCd · ·program expired on May I, and law·
issuing a threat to veto.any bill that both chambers by overwhelming maken agree that if they don't.come
spends lbe prpjccted budget surplus margins.
·
up with a oompromise bill by tbe end
or forces cuts in education and other
"We use the veto word sparingly. of this month it's going to start hurtand we've been careful to use it only ing staiCS that are wailing to stan new
domestic programs.
· Congressional Republict~~~leadeni when we · mean ic;:·Transportation construction project,. .
on Wednesday agreed on a.package SCcretary Rodney ·slater said in an
The administration contends that
of $23.4 billion in federal spending inttrview.
both bills would allow spending well
cuis that would offset the extra mon·
The .Senate-passed bill seeks a beyond the caps set in the balanced
ey they want for hiJhway projects:
tot81of$214billionoversixyearsfor budget dealla~t year. requiring big
The cuts were about SIS billion · both highway and mass transit pro- cuts in other programs.
from veterans programs, $4.5 billion grams. The House bill would provide
The president will be urged 10 veto
·from the government-chartered mort- · $217 billion, while differing with tbe any bill that disrupts lhe budget ·:by
gage market company Freddie Mac, Sen;uc on such key issues as how lbe spenqinl! the surplus, by reducing the$3 billion from soi:ial service block money will be distribulcd to ·the domestic discretionwy caps, by usin~
. grants and $1 billion from the Federal states, how the gas tax-funded high· unacceptable offsets, or 'by forcing

Bacon ••••••••••••~•• 9 9 c

COOK'S SPIRAL SLICE~~I.,HEY . .

Single Copy - 35 Cents

President threatens to veto
massive highway
spending.
bill
.
'

7 UP, DR.
PEPPER, MUG
ROOT BEER,
OUN.GE SLICE

CHUCK WAGON BREAKFAST

H9metown Newspal'.e r

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co Newspaper

PEPSI &amp;
DEW
PRODUCTS

DOUBLE

Chuck·Roasts ••••••••.

Chicago,
Indiana
advance
Page 4.

•

Su•day

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF,,_$

Sports

. Mlly 14,1998 .

Weather

:·

'

I

•
!

continues ·

of

.•• ..

h

l

,

••

.

'

... rl

.

•

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="413">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9837">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27429">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27428">
              <text>May 13, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5954">
      <name>martine</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1073">
      <name>riggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5773">
      <name>scholderer</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
