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Ohio Lottery
Mats

Pick 3:

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Pick 4:
1881
Super Lolto:
11-14-15-3144 44
Kicker:

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~-· 01i1o ~ Puiiii1Nng Con a4ilr

IIIII -.11 ...... ~_...:;
AQww... C:O:Na I P.l .',

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 24, 1987

111.1111
,.
prisoners,
p'~jects ,wiill go on inside the pri!IOn
.waus, tisks s11ch as refinishing desks
for local schools..
·
.' ·The city spent an estimated $7
million acquiring, clelring and clean·
i~g . up the site, · improving nearby
!lllreel$ and providins utility service.
• · A .conatrlletion contract for the
prisOn 'is likely to be awarded early ·
. in the filii, said David Blodgett, chief
oflhe correction cJep.tment's Bureau ·
of Facilities C9nstrilction.
· The groundbreaking follpwed the
gc}vemor's visit to Northwest Sta(\1
Conimunity College near Archbold.
where he held a regional cabinet
tileeti!ll and dedicated a new engi:
ntierins ~hnology building. ·
. Voinovich was greeted ·there; by
.til!out 70 pickets representing north·
west Ohio unions who were protest·
itig ·liis •suppon of' a new workers'
1;0mpensation bill.

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PPHS
student
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Mason Board
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• POIN'rPLEASANT, W.Va. -A .
Point Pleasant High School student
:.Vas expelled from any and all school. relattd activities unti1April22, !998·
by the Malon County Board of Edu- ·
cation Tuesday.
.
· ··The student, known as lffi97' 13,
expelled for bringing a bomb
onto school grounds. Su~rintendent
Dr: LI!I'\'Y Parsons made a recom·
11\endation to the board to follow state
cc:iile tRA-S-1 A and expelthe student ·
frdm school for one calendar year.
: Board members went into execu·
ti:YC session at 6:~8 p.m. with Par~s. PPHS Principal Rick Nonhup
aild V'ace.·Principal Larry Martin to
dlfCllss the situation. At 7:~ they
retur:ned' and the board voted 4-0 to
exjlel the student. Board . member
Amanda Clark was out of town and
.did not attend, the meetina.
•, -TIIC 15-yelit·bld student was
il-iaied April 15 after a bomb was
discovered in a student's locker. S!u!Jepts were ,ev,acllalcd from school '
aftdlater'relcased. The 1111~nt faces .
fi\i' felony counts as a result·of the
incident. The county prosecutor is
aliU investiplin1 the episoilc.
l'lni!IJS •id lhe ll(udent will have
- ilppootunity to be pro¥ided with an
~ve form of education. Board
~idlnt David Mcqan aaicl he
wllllld to quaah any rumors by aay- ·
lni the 1tu ....t wiliiiOI be .I lowed on
l. ~I site for any IUIOO .

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By JOHN SEEW!R .
AtiOCIIIIed PrMI Writer ,
.COLUMBUS- School administrators should
running their districts more like a bUsiness rather than
speilding without rcaard for the bottom line, the state auditor said.
one atory structure. The cll!IIC II being
bY
Conetructlon of lhe $2 mill~ Meigs COunAuditor Jim Petro said WediiCJday'
Holnl' Clinic HCI Coneolldlllilcl tt.allh
ty Medlcll Cll!'lc on lll'ld ldjlcent to Vetlrana
that too many schools operate withttma,1nc., .,.,.,., of ttot.. ii.dlcll cant1r end
Memorlll ~lit underWay. Heavy aqulpout a financial plan that is based on
·
, ment blgln moving dirt WICIMidey In .,._ · Vetlr8na Mamorlll Hoepltll. Conb ICtal' It Erdtheir future needs.
man and Aaaoclllils.
" •
, ration for building 1 new
aquare .fMI.
"One of the thinss we keep dri. ving home is. the importance of planning," Pelro told members of a Sen·
ate education subcommittee.
As the May 6 election approach-' and William Young, all incumbents, May 6, to decide a 1.8 mill additionThe auditor's office has COII\plet·
es, so do deadlines 'for candidates in are challengejl· by Kyle Woods and at levy for the Carleton School and ed detailed analysis of the financial
Frederick Werry, Jr.
Meigs Industries. That levy is for conditions in both 'the Younptown
the November general election.
' Those interested l'n running for
In Middlepon, where four seals maintenance, capital construction and and Cleveland districts, Petro aaid he
.
miahl do simil(ll' ev81uations for all
-.:illage offICe can still do so. The are also open, only two candidates, . program operation.
Sandy
-lannarelll
and
Rae
G~iazTownship
offiCials
.
w
ill
be
on
the
21
of the state's urban schools.
deadline for filing as an ltlllependent
The auditS woul\J help lhe lcltools
.:andidate for villaae council seats i~ dowsky, bot~ incumbents, have filed November aenerel election ballot,
petitions.
and.clllldidaiea have be;un to pick up set their own slrllteJic plans. He said
MayS.
Another Pomeroy man has picked petitions for thQIC offices. Thi: dead- · schools should have an idea of how
. 1lle only \COntested primary in
up
petition from the board of elec- . line for tilina as a candidate for town- to avOid fmancial pitf.tls.
Meip County will be in Pomeroy,
"Just like a business mi&amp;ht devel·
where five Republican candidates are tions to run as an independent. but. ship office is August21, i!ICCording to
Jane Frymyer, Deputy Directill' of the. op," he aaid. ·
seeking four seats on lhe villare ha.'l not yet filed.
Sen. Roben C11pp, R.·Lima, uked
Polls will _open county-wide on Board of Elections. ·
council. John Musser, George Wright .

start

bul"s,...

May 5 Is deadline for Independents to file for posts

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Petrd whether .he thouahl !IChoolS:
should be forced to spend within their
budget.
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"I mink that is perfectly ap~
priate," Petro responded. He iddecj:
that schools should focus on financial'
stability before they · stan t.tkinf;
about improving the q~ity of edu&lt;
cation.
'
"We've found that l.r.e, urbail:
districts m excessively wastelill," he
said. "There is no doubt that there In!,
schools with excess flc:llitiea."
"
Petro pointed · to Younastow~ ·
•
sehools a5 an example.
'n1e district now has about 2,800
studlmts in its four hi&amp;h schOols, bu~
at one point it had u many u 6;000
in those buildinp. Petro asbd whY:
administrators have not INde better
use of lhe buildings.
"There needs to be Ill lllldlr~ .
standina that cloaina lllliklt~~~ ca
save money," he IBid. "In any 1C11aoC
district, IIIey first tUe a Jot ol ~
when lhey close buildiqa, 11u1 It'
really Bood judJIIICnt."
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�Commentar
By DeWAYNE ~

o.r...n NMq 81rllce

'E.sttl6fislid in 1.948
111 Court 811181, PomerOy, Ohio
· 81411~2151• Fu 1192-2157

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A G41nnett Co. Newspaper·

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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher

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MARGARET LEHEW

CHARLENE HOEFucH
. Genenllrtrnagat

Controller

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Lawmakers·may be
unpro~u~tive, but not idle

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.WASHINGTON - Here we so
again.
Fi~t, there was the Confederate
1113 that flew atop South Carolina's
CaJ\itol. Then there were the special ·
license plates i!ISucd by the slate of
· Maryland that are embossed with a
replica of the Confederate battle flag,
Now Virginia Gov. George Allen has
joined the ranks of those who think
it's OK for states to glorify the acts
of a traitorous lot
Last month be issued a proclamation namingAprii"Confedcrate Heritage Month" in his
News of
this outrage surfaced a few days ago
when civil rights activists protested
the Republican governor's pandering
decree, which described the Civil
War as a "four-year stritggle 'for independcnce and sovereign rights."
Whose independence? And whose
sovereignty?

ByTOMRAUM
Aaaoclated Pntu Writer
WASHINGTON -Some call it a do-nothing Congress.
But there's been plenty of activity. House membets shove each other on
the Ooor. Senate Democrats,make fun of Republicans in '.'cellophane swim
suits,"
And senators hotly debate whether to allow il guide dog on the floor for
a blind aide. (Fitstthey said no, then relented and said yes.) .
.
While there isn't much solid legislation to show for the 105th Congress,
there has been a multitude of votes. resolutions and parliamen!arY feints.
Much·of the hustle and bustle seems to lead nowhere.
· An example: WbCn Rep. Jo~n Lewis, 0-Ga., denounced Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga., last week for "doing something be should have done
months ago, paying $300,000 for lying to Congress," Republicans took
umbrage.
..
They demanded Lewis' words on Gingrich's ethics penalty be stricken
• from the record as a violation of House rules against pe!SOnal attacks.
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Democrats objec.ted to the GOP objection.
So a recorded vote was called on "Shall the gentleman's words be strick'
:
en from the Record~" The vote in the GOP-led chamber was 227-19() and • Lewis • words were ordered excised from the Congressional Record.
~
Well, not really.
·:·
His attack.on Gingrich was reproduced verbatim in the next day's Record
• -not when -Lewis delivered it but when the House clerk recounted exact: . ly what was being stricken.
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Sometimes, arguments aren't handled so civilly. 'IWo House m_embers got
:
: into a shoving match in an earlier attempt to have words stricken,
%
A month .after some members attended a retreat on congressional man• ncrs, GOP Whip Tom Delay of Texas shoved Rep: David O~y, D-~is.: in
: an argument over whether Delay had allowed lobby1sts to wnte leg1slauon
~ in his Capitol office.
.
In the more sedate Senate, members were talking about swimming suits
•
•• and reminiscing about the past.
· ·
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At a news conference of Democrats, Sen. Byron Dorgan of North Dako' ta complained about GOP tactics in trying to. limit fund-raising inquiries to
~
, Democratic fund raising only, . ·
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"I mean, you know, this is like wearing a cellophane swim suit here.
, Everybody understands what the motive is," Dorgan said.
.
At that, Minority Leader Tom Daschle blurted out: "Can you 1maglnc
:
Orrin Hatch in a cellophane swim suit?"
Senate Democrats chuckled out loiill -at the mental image of their Utah
colleague, a Republican.
.
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Added Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vennont: "The very thought of some of ·
·my colleagues in any kind ofa swim suit ... "
His remarks trailed off in laughter.
.
When he wasn't reflecting on senators in swim suits, Leahy was voic. ing nostalgia for tradition.
He complained on theScnate floor that the Office of the Official Reponers .
of Debates hail been moved suddenly. .
"In the 22 years I have been ·here. it ~~s been ri~ht ~,Cf the floor, which
• is the logical place for that offi~e to ~· Leahy sa1d. As a senator who
· ' prefers tradition over perks, I wtsh thmgs would go back tothe way they
; . were. Sometimes we should realtze as senators, we are only here temporanly.
The Senate outlasts us."

state.

Certainly not that of lhc. millions
of black slaves held in Vqinia and
the 10 other Soulhem s.- th8l compriscd the rebel alii~: The_ Civil
War wu foupll to !Nintam therr CORclition of servitude, not change it. 'The
cause Allen's proclamation celebrates
sought to tear apart this nation and
perpetuate the enslavement of
African-AII\Crlcans.
Don't take my word for it.
"The immediate cause~· of the
rebellion, Confederate Vice President
Alexander Stephens said in a 1861
speech, was ~'all the agitating queslions relating to our peculiar institution" of slavery. The Confederacy, he
said, was founded upon .the belief
."that the negro is ·not equal to the
white man; that slavery- s.ubordination to the superior race.- is his
natural and normal condition."
Stephens was no loose catlnon.
His perception of slavery ~the
cometslonc of Southern life was

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etcbecf inlli lhc c4ti(eo' liMI:OIISiitu- BJ!IMtl might tum ~se~ tQ the Con-

tiO!I, which forblldc the pauagc of te&amp;ra~ p,rnil!io~~ and~ll.deConnor
fense

lilY l•w that denied the fight of pco- ·could have been one of 15
. pic .to own •:ne.,v sla~."
secretaries, .
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That's the herilagcAilen's procl_.
BUI to Stmply .call IJ!cm traitors
mation embraces.
. • falls sli\lrt,of ltle mark. ,
In the past, rvc tried to argue
liThe Confederate~ npt only
aaainst the glorif\Cation of tht Con- believed_in the master-race tbeo~,"
fcderacy by pointiag.QIIt.!)lat the Sons Hugh 1'8ce, pres1dent ~f the Na~onof Confederate V~terans are the al UrSin 'le&amp;sue,.swd m reaction to
descendants of · !hUuirS. T ihOiighi ~ Allen 'l; t*bcltynalioll; :.~they. sought to
most people woufd· rally arouriil the build a separatq;"nllion; on lhat evil
idea that ,dJose who' took up armsi foundation."
.,
aaainst 'this natioti are not American
That's ·the harsh realtty.
heroes. Raben E. Lee uid Jefferson
The ind~pcndence. that -ConfederDavis - and tbose who followed ate statOs wanted ~"!1\e'ft-eedom to .
.them into battle- were rel)els whose hold black people itt lf'petpetual state
traitorous actions took the 'lives of of slavery. The sovereignty they
more .than 364,000 U.S. servitcmcp... ·sought ;.vas the pow.er l'!,;~_ver treat
Had their treason succeeded, the us as property, nOI as li~s . .
United States would have been ft'acAllen, a histllll maJor tn college,
tured into~~ least two !liwll{~ ~., .. ,!laid be .didn.lt--.tll."\\f*l)atl~one
and the COU!SC of history wollld ha'(_c when he ,proch!im~ April Confederbe~n dramatically · changed, Bigots •· ate· Heritage Mol\df. Last 'Week, ln a
like former MiSsissippi Gov. Ross havc-his-calf:~·and-ei'Ht-too lll!ture,
, :{:. . · . · ·· -. ·· . . . , . • : the.. govemor apologized t!! ,ail~o. ne
lle'/.T
(;&amp;~ ~
.., who w~'offeh&lt;l~d by the decree ~at
· TRattss.,c.u~ \'!I;W ··~',, .. ; he. J~f!!l\,pl~"- ··.~~. ~~~t;;-lo
$lei!PWin4 TAelR' J · ~ "' .:··1'1\e''NM.~~ ctltfifillii""" gy
elt-WiVeS I dnu~.,
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d;;,-.:~-~ ·-... i! tt"err' ;·'
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·
. haMlf;he,,~,
ea y-mou '""f JS,!!e , . . , ..
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Those who cele)ratc Co~federate
history,' regale the ilc!ion~ &lt;if a group
of people whO. like Adolf Hitler,-'
used the f~rce of government to
impose their theory of racial superiority upon ·an oppressed,''l!inority;
"Wilh us, all of the white ·rllfe.
however high \1~ low, rich qt poor, arc
equal in the eye of the law," Stephens
· 5aid in his infamou~ address. "Not so
' ··' , with the negl-o. S(il10fdination is his
. I
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ac,:iie~s;;y·~;hi~·p~ocfamation .:.as

meant to recognize the, diversity of
'Virginians. That's a commendable
. goal. Byt .his efforts should ~01
exte(\d 19,,11\os~; "!PO fought for .(he
Confederacy, or their apologisls.
To&gt;do. so4s1o:ep~llrace the r!W/st
.notion inai whites ' are -~ua)erior to
blacks -" - an _idea Stephen's called the
"cornerstone'' ·Of 'the ·C:onfeder~tte ,
.. States .o f.America: · '
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Fifty-two pe.rcentGof Jews _intermarry·these:day.s· ·~ .
By Ben Wattenberg

Russian_immigrants has bo_lstered the levels below those re_qui.red to l&lt;~p there will be fewer American Jews in
populauon. A strong Israeh economy a populat1onJrom shnnking. The s1t- the future \han·now. (Jewish fenility
will get stronger if Nctinyahu deliv- uation ·is particuhitly acute in the nites in Europe are •even lower than
ers ~e market-oriente~ reforms he Amcric.~ Jewish c_ommunity. . ,
in America. Only in Israel, with a
. pronused. Some of thts good news
Fertthty moves3nve!SCI:y: w11h the · TFR of 2.6, is·the JeWish ~tion
comes from lsrael.i diligence and ·level ofeducation;'incbme ani! urbiin rtplaclng 'itsclf.) ' ·
· ''!&lt;.-' ?
some. comes fl'j&gt;m external sour~, residence .. Successful yuppies want it
Why all the intermarriage~ ·Amerpanicularly ~m support by Amen- all, but chtldren oftc~comc _at th~ c_nd ican Jews are Mcepled •as ·iri 'tio othca, wheise'' s1gnal achtc'(ement was ?f the process. typ,~~~ly ln d1mtn·, er societx ever. This shQuld be no sarvictory in the Cold War.
.
1shed numt?ers. Al!.l~ttcan)e)Vs: arc · prisEAmencais tile masl.fnil\ nation
External success allows for tnten- d1sproporuonate~y h_kely to be ~ol- in history. (There iS' some anti-Semi." ·
sified internal tension, in Israel and lege-educated, hve tn metropolttan tism left, buttberc ihl5o philo-Semifor Jews elsewhere. A bill before the areas, and_ have highu incom~s than tism, i.e., ·gentiles who1want their kids
Knesset provides that· any conver- all but Ept~copahans. The esumated to gMo school· with•Jews, ..who wat1t
sions to Judaism in Israel be effectu' Total Fcrtth_ty Rate, ~) for the to go to a Jewishdoctilr, who wantto
ated through the office of the Chief ~hole ~encan populatton.for I~ liye in a neighborhooiJ.with Jews:)•lf
Rabbi, wbicl1, as always, is controlleq IS 1.98 children pe~ woman._The est1- Jews are accepted; and·98 percent of
·by Orthodox Jews. This offends mate for the Amencan Jcw1sh popu- potential marriage panners in Amcrmany Jews in America who fear· the lation. is about 1.5, about 30 peicent ica are.non-Jewish,'there will be plende-legitimization of Reform and Con· below replacement'levcl'. · ·
ty of intermarriage. Egon Mayer of
servativc Judaism, with which most
· More9v~r. 52 percent . of Jews the Jewish OUtreach· Institute says.
American Jews identify. Some Qnho- intennarry these days, according to "Our problem is 110 kingcr anti-Seniidox rabbis in America have declared the 1990 National Jewish·Population tism, it is·romanc~. We have met the
that Orthodoxy is the only true Jew- Survey (compared t!r9 percent before enemy .and it is us.',' He preaches: a ·
ish faith. Some non-Orthodox Amcr- 1965). Of the chil$ten of interlilar- more inclusive Jewish faith :hhink it
ican Jews demand.that(srael elimi- riage, fewer than" 30 percent arc would be'Wise" if J~ws hqd babies at
nate 1he office of the Chief Rabbi in . raised in the Jewish religion; although rates ·similar to··other Americans. •
Israel, allowing all styles of Jewish that rate is more complex dtan it · • The •situation i~ serious, even ·if
religious practice lo flower, thus . seems. (40 percent observe Yom driven by good tiews ..There won't be
making it easier to be Jewish, not Kippur.).
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'!'any Jewi.sh problems if there aren't
harder. As with most internecine
There are now 'an estimated '5.4 many Jews.
·
religious arguments, this one is bitier, ffiillion Jews in America, about 2 perBen Wattenberg.' a'senior fellow al
probably destiped to get worSe, albeit cent of the populati~n. (Compared to , the American, E!!t~tpri~,Ipstitute,~s
within the realm of manageability,
4 percent in 1930.}:'There are argu.: the au,thor·of '' Vallfe~· M\rtter Most" .
A'third issue is transcendent. Binh rncnts about projections. Some Jews a_nd i~;_the host .&lt;jf t(le w~~lY, p,ublic
and fertility rates in 1he modem fear tha!AJT1erican Judaism will ftide tele.viSion program ~~Thi~k1 Tank/'
nations arc sinking dramatically, to away. In ·any event, it •is· likely that
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It is the weelc of Passover, the fitst
festival of human freedom. In many
ways Jews have never hail it so good,
and much of their good fortune is
associated with f'teedom. But Jews
have some monumental problems -somc perennial, some self-inflicted,
and some linked to liberty.
lsrael's Prime Minister Benyamin
·'Bibi" Netanyahu will remain in
office, not indicted for '.'breach of
trust." But there is still an alleged crisis in the peace process, which may
be the !17th such during 25 years of
negotiations. Notwithstanding, those
negoiiations have been generally
fruitful, extending Israel's survivability as a free ·nation in a rough
neighborh,ood. The Mideast seems to
be headed towanl some- sort 6f a
nasty, cold peac~. The key to it is not
Netanyahu, but Yasir Arafll. After all,
Nctanyahu delivered his earliest with
the Hebron · pull-out agreement,
which honored the Oslo accords and
the pl~gc of the prior lsrll!'li govemment. But Arafat promised to
contain terrorism. He hasn't. If he
cah't deliver that, why would the
Israelis negotiate?
The bedrock beneath the negotiaDear Editor.
.
soon as possible.
The trial of-those responsible for
If. we do not do this, we will ·bl: tions is Israel's posiliQn of strength.
• the bombing in Oklahoma is the tri- putting a sign up that says all terror- The Arabs have had no patron super; al of terrorism in the U.S. with the ists arc welcome here. Such a terror- power since the fall of the Soviet
whole . world watching, ' including ist attack can happen anywhere, even · Union. Oil 'prices are low and the
those countries around the world that ..here. 'There ,are organiza,Jions and pctro-princes are strapped. A wave of
have in the past supported. that are groupsinAmerica·lodaywbobelieve
now supporting, and may support ter- that the Constitution and Bill of
rorism in the future.
Rishts give them the power and
This is not the trial of people who authority to commit any and all acts
Pentagon official Frank Gaffney, gressional .,Oint man OJi ~uperhawk
hate the federal government and law that they want to against the Amcri- · ~Morton Kond111Cke .
A huge ideological struggle is who is trying to convince Rcpubli- polit.ics, rqughly equivalent to· excnforcemcnt. This is a trial of mon- can government aiid people.. If such
under way over the Chemical cans that the CWC is to the late- Sen. George Mc:Ootern, S.D:, or exsters. The same type of monster who teJTorist acts could force our governWeapons
Convention that may decide 1990s GOP what the Panama Canal Sep. Alan Cranston, Calif., on the
. ran .the Na7.i death camps and .who ment to change, then it would be up
whether superhawks or moderates Treaty was in the late 1970s for the Democratic side.
..
ran the communist death caffips from for grabs to all.
dominate
the
Republican
Party's
forparty
--the
key
to
victory
for
future
On
CWC,
the
hawks
have
gained
the· time of Lenin to this very day.
The d'd . ha
kill !66 ·
They are the same type of people. ·
y 1 not veto
tnnocign policy -~ and which &amp;roup Sen- presidential contenders as it was for · the support Of sucbjpminaries as fOJi·
The are people who have no value '-"ent people. 'They were asked why
ate Majority. Leader Trent Lott, R- Ronald Rcapn.
mer United Nat~o~s Amb~ssador
ofll~man life and people who do. not,, they didn_'t blow it up ci!her early in Miss., will join. .
Actually, a beucr parallel is a Jeane · Kirkpatri~ .and . formO..
·care about anyone else.
the momtng or late at n1ght when 11
Potential 2000 GOP presidential ' Democratic one. In the 1970s, Defense
'Secretaries ·' James
Thc areatest and stiddest loss is was completely empty so tlutt no·one . candidates are lining up on the issue, ' extreme llo~es forced presidential -~ Schlesinger,. Dick Olency, Cap ~ill'that of the children. Wl\cn 11 bomb would hav~; been killed. The answer with Jack Kemp and Steve FOrbes candidates in the aftermllh of .dtc , beJ1cr and Don Rumsfcld. ,
,
goes off. an tidult, because of the ca~c back that they had to be taken joining the hawks and Sen. John Vietnam War trauma 10 oppose near- ~ .The pro:-CWC side is also'impi-esyears of experience. may have a . senously.
. .
McCain, R-Ariz., and former}oint ly every new weapons system and sively led, by former PresidentS
chance to survive, but a child docs
We the Arncncan people must Chiefs.Chairman Colin _Powell help- military involvement and to support &lt;Jw-&amp;c Bush and Ocrald Ford, all livnot have this experience ... especially s~and together and demand .thll Jusing lead the moderates.
such · wrong-headed ideas as the mg fonner Secretaries of State,' and
when they sec their parents, teachers uce be done fot: those whose hves
. The CWC is ~uled for ll VOle nuclear freeze.. .
8Jl • fanner chairmen &lt;!f ~ JOj~t
or guardians that arc slaughtered were dcsiroyed and cannot ask for _it tn the Senate, WI~ a JfOUP of 33
As a consequence, t'!e Democra- Chtefs of Staff. .I;· . . . : _ •
before their very eyes. No one has the thems~lvcs. The whole world ts undeclared Rcpubltcans ··led by Lott tic Party came to be vic,.,ed as unre- , .'The 1996 GOP standird-boarer,
right to kill America's children. We watchmg us and what we do.
-- holdina the balat1ce in detennining liable on defense and foreign policy Bob Dole, said during.die campaign
the American people must stand
Col. Da¥1cl Edwvcll whclhcr the United States joins the issues, helpina to doom such Demo- · that he had "serious doubtsM '•IJ!tut
r-roy test of tbc civilized world in declar- cratic nominees as Walter Mondale the treaty. but hasn't .spoken mr it
toJelher and demand that if found
guilty that they receive the death
United Stalls SpeW Field ina a ban on chemical weapons.
and Michael Duklkis.
since. Former Vic~ President Dan
penally aJ!d thl!t it is carried out as
Force~
All 4S Senate ·Dcmocrtlts and
Republicans now arc in danger of Quayle, 1, contender for :ZOOO,',i.J.O
eight RcpublicatiS are c~pected to reacting to the end of the Cold War · ~been silent. · ',,
. ..
~hawks bllsically,contend lh8l;
support the tn:aty, leaving the Clin- in an' extremist way thallnirrors the
'
ton adminisiration 14 voles short of Democrats after Vietnam. Super- because the treaty c:andot .JII*d!Dit
Dear Editor,
..-e so borrilic, tllere's no need 10 the two-thirds neccsslt)l to pus the hawks want to SUStain a setue of that ·a "roaue" nation will be prcI'd like ui challenge Jim Freeman exal!JmtC or distort. And Pm'A has SenMe.
high-alert and are lookina few new . ventiCd from maAufacturi114 cbitaical
10 provide an example of the "misinnotblna 10 pia ,fiMnCiaJiy from dis.With President Clinton llllki!'l CIICIIIiciiO do so.
wceponi. it ii "fatally ~"
•
formation and half-lnltha" lhll he tortina the tntdl -- but those who ~ly_ calls to Lo1t llld ocbcn, adminThat f*tly accounts for the tenSupporterS ~e~~~ibly JIQI1t Gilt..
claims~nimal rights ~~:tivilll 111e ("In ·make money l'rom hannint animals ~ vote-counlln filund recatt· denc:Y of hawk RepubliciiiiiO make ~~ow-. that 110 1n111 COitllal ...,.
lhc Ojien", Mardi 9). All PETA's • c:enalaly do.
ly lhlt II OOP MlltliOis -leaniDI Oli11, cenainly a dilfic:ub cauntry, it ..,.. -.,.Coct. bul lhll die CWC.
Alloll G.- tn favor of the IIUiy, 12 wen: aen- into Americ:a's new ~~r~~egic adV«- maiMially improve~ .-ilorina o(,
Nlerials 1n bllckcd up by exlelllive
PITA (P'Npb for die !linely ~ided. and 10 wa-c leu- · Ill')'. It it definitely behind the IIIIi- ~ jlrodtiCiillll 1111111 .1&amp; Vlllly
~ -llltd I would be http., to pcuvlde Mr. Freeman with proof
••• ell1\ • ••• af ''-" .,...., dne whom were c:oncamplip.
better than 10 coatroluuu.
•
A ' h),ma ;ada t . I~ pei'IUidlble,
Szillll: Fcnip Rdlll.i._• a.irMoreov«. the lllpp'MIM - - .;
. of lillY fiiCI he q.-ionl . .
The opposition is led by former man Jease Helms,.R-N.C:, ia the c:on- 74 countries Mve already l'lliilletlilill
Sadly, lhc facts of 111imal lburc

:Letters to the editor
. Terrorism on trial

Chemical weapons vote is key~ f~f L~~.,,:.9 :Q~~d: :

Wants to challenge writer
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!reaty - ap4·it is set !0, gb:in\o effect
@\!h!=..mltoi:Jb~ llllll1liL.wJielber ibe
United States ratifies it or not-- anlt
u.s. Rfitsir would deprive this i:outttry of~ role in determining how the
'treaty is enforced.
.
:
• '• Ondcr·a 1985:1a~ sign_td by Pre*
·idcnt Reagan, the United StatCJi
already is pledged to dismantle its
,chemical weapons' arsenal, so til$
refusal of the Sen_.. to ratify wou~
have no effect on U.S. prcparednesl.
U.S. refusal would put this coun!~ry in company with Iraq, Nonli
.Korea, Syria and Libya, which will
be subject to trade sanctions undelthe treaty. .
. • . '
'
' ' The big U .S. chemical manufact
lurel15, represented by the Chemical
Manufacture($ A$soci~tijlll, support
the treaty .because they do not wanl
to be hit with export f On\l;ols. ~
CMA also.refutes chifge. that Inter
nlitional inspections· will make ·.;
·possible for enemieS 'to 's ttll Ameri~
· ~an secrets. ·
:
, 'The Clinton administration i.
wapna an all-out camp.;gn to con• .
vince undecided senaton 10 s~
the trelly. R.ccelllly, iU,....cl to 2lC

llipulatioalto 1111wer lbc concen or:

••on.:

waverina
iDGWiq a-A
..... lhlt the Uaited S11111 willi
ll4it i ... 111'011. anti-cllemieal
• and lllllw \JIHIIII SU... rwill ncitl
,l it ...... to ~ militlril;
11aJ clftiaa IO'. .wrury natiON ii1ICIIO
.. ~llltd lrin.
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clef--;

..e.:

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The following land transfers were son, Bedford;.
lecorded receiltly in the office of
Deed, Edna F. Harmon, Edna F.
Mcip County R~order Emmogene Warner td Myron Wcsl;
Hamilton:
Deed, Myro.n West, Edna F. WarnRight of way, Christopher W. and cr and Clarence M. Warner to Robert
ArtiRtr by Martin, 86, Racine, formerly of Campbclls Creek. W.Va., died Megan E. Baer to Thppers Plains- . L. and Denise M: Hurst, Olive parcel;
·,
Tuesday. April 22, 1997, at Blount, W.va. ·
.
.
ChesterWIIerDistrict,Sutton, 37.50
Deed; Dcborah, G. and John Carl
He was a retired janitor for the Kanawha County Board ofEducauon wtth acres;
r Hazlett II to Donald W. and Mary R.
30 y~ of service. He was a member .of the Antiquity Baptist Church,
Right of way, John T. and Juanita Barnett, Rutland, 5,594 acr~s;
Racine.
·
1&gt;. Grueser to TPCWD, Sutton, 97.50
Deed, Bernard W an&lt;l Linda E.
He is survived by his wife. Nancy Hackworth Manit:t: a daughte~, Jessi- acres; ·
'
'-ludson to.Michael L. and Florence
IND.
ca Martin of .the horne; sons. lsaac L. Manin and Randy Ray Martin, both
Right of way, Harry J. Douglas taf M. TadiQCk, Middleport parcel;
of the home, and Gary Wayne Manin of ~lount; t)Vo grandchildren and a TPCWD, Letart, 25 acres;
Dew; Michael R. and Lura R.
brother, Mac Martin .of Oklahoma.
.
.
.
. Right of way, Benny S. and Patri- Swiger to Jeff S. and Tabitha l
·. ·Services will be held Fri&lt;lay, I p.m. at the Letart Falls Cem~tery !=hapel eta Dent to TPCWD, Chester;
Campbell, Syracuse;
,.
with the Rev. Jesse Witiegrove officiatjng. Burial will follow 1n the cemeDeed Richard Liebmann and
Rtghtofway,DeanJr.andEvelyn ·
tery.
.
· ,
:
.,
,
Wibl!n toTPCWD, SciP!o!Pagcville; Natalie
Young to James L. and
Friends may call today, 7-9 p.m. at the Stevens and Grass Funeral Home,
R1ght of way, Wilham R. and Cindy Parker, Rutland, 30.60 acres;
Malden, W.Va., and from noon [until time of services Friday at the ceme- Jacqueline Han to TPCWD, Bedford,
Deed, Roland Eugene and Anna
tery.
.81 ~re;
Margaret Will ·to Roland Eugene
Riaht of way, Mark A. Grucser Will, Rulland!Scipio parcels;
Trust Agreement . and Nancy S.
Deed, Eugene E. Hawkins . to
W.VA.
GrueserTrustAgrecmentloTPCWD, Eugene S. Morrison Jr., Pomeroy; .
Deed, Harry and Patricia L.
Units of the Meigs County Emer6:22 p.m., slate Route 325. Bedf~rd, 77.17 acres;
Right
of
way,
Roger
W.
and
BarDavidson
to same, Salisbury/Sutton
gency Medical Center recorded sev- O'lflville, Marjorie Qwiazdowski,
bara
F.
Hysell
to
TPCWD,
Sutton,
parcel;
.
. .
.
'
en · calls for assistance Wednesday. O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, RutI
09.55
acres;
.
.
Deed,
Renee
1.
Richard,
Renee
Units respotllling included:
·land $(lUnd assi~ted;
Right of way, Lawrence Randall Richard to ·Lelctta K. and 'Terry L.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
. 8:23 p.m., Overbrook Nursing and Jill L. Lipscomb to TPCWD. ·Ottman Lebanon · ·
·
· 3:05 a.m., Locust Grove Road, Center, Mlddlepon, Mildred Hamm,
Bedford, 1.69 acres;
. Deed, Peter I. ~nd Edna S. White
·Reedsville, Marvin Glasao. O'Ble- Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Right of way, Harlan E. and Karen to Edna Mac Moore, Columbia;
9:25 p.m., Village Green Apart- M. West to TPCWD, Orange, 3.925
ne~ Memorial Hospital;
'
' I
Deed, Charles E. and Marilyn W.
12:31 p.m., Lincoln Heights, ments, Oliver Young, treated at the
acres; ·
. Grim to Richard L. and Sandra K.
Ponieroy, Mary · Carpenter, Holzer scene.
Right of way, Norman 0. and Vera Butcher, Sutton, 2 acres;
Medical' Center;.
POMEROY
·
.
A . .Weber to TPCWD, Orange,
Deed. Richard Lee. Debbie, Kevin
ByTheAaDC ..tlll P11..
netir40.
3:09p.m., North Second Avenue,
6:41
p.m
..
Page
Street,
Middle·
94.6038
acres;
·
·
Dwayne
and Mattie Teaford to Mat. S..tbll'le... 0111o
· SIIUrday...Mostly clear. High in Middlcpon, Charles Atkins, refused
Right of way. Hickory Hills tic Teaford, Lebanon parcels;
port, Jean Null, HMC.
. · Tonigiii ... Partly cloudy with fog the mid and upper 60s .. · ·
treatment;
Church
ofChristto TPCWD, Orange,
Oeed, Mattie T~aford to Kenneth
developing. Low near 40. Light west
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a
I acre;
'
··
F. and Gladys L. Montgomery.
· wind.
chance of showers. Morning low in
Point
Mason
Auto
Class
Lebanon.
·
·Deed,
Friday... Fog until .mid-mom- the lower 40s and high from the
Inc.
to
Mark
D.
and
Cathy
A.
Hudi_ng ...Thcn panly cloudy. High in the upper ~ to the lower 70s.
Smorpsbonl dinner set
Freedom Gospel Mission, County
j:..ower 60s. .
.
Monday...Chtlnce of showers an!l · A smorgasbord dinner will be held · Road, 31, Lons Bottom •.May 7-10-.
· Extended 101-L.
·
lhunderstorms.lMornins
·' ,
continued from page 1
Sllurday at the Long Bottom Com- Evangelist will be Clyde Ferrell;
Friday night...Mostly clear. Low · low in the uPJ)I!r 40s and high _in the munity building with serving to begin special singing nightly.
.
. mid and upper 608:
children, frantic· piu-ents and throngs and injured more than 500. Nineteen
at S p.m. Several entrees including ·
of people fleeing in terror as car children were among the dead.
scatloped oysters, salads, vegetables, ' Skin ll:stias scheduled
alarms
blared and thick, black smoke
beverages and dessens. Adults, $5;
A free skin testing clinic will be
billowed
from what only moments
children $2.50.
conducted by Connie Karschnik, R.
before
was
the federal' building. ·
N., Meigs .Tuberculosis Nurse, at
Rescue workers carried stretchers '
COLUMBUS (AP) - A law- pie, one--pqe form available to apply Revival set
,Racine Fire Station, Monday, 4:30 to
covered
with bloody sheets. A little
maker says thousands of Ohioans are for!_taxter breakLa
. wson'
· . J·ones. D-Shakcr ·
Revival services will beheld 11 the 6:30p.m. ·
boy
sat
dazed
and shivering as he was
paying too much in property taxes
....,
-:':'::--:-..;··~-::----:--comforted by a rescuer.
because they are unawire of. •impage.
Sources close to the case said
et's to enroll for a 2.5 percent propprosecutors plan to present victims to
.
es, 30 pen:ent of the total'for the 50 give jlirors''a firsthand account of the
· erty tax rollb!K;k at the time they buy solved environmental problems.''
·B eller Medal C.'le'l' ,
their house. . .
·
But the Edison Electric Institute, utilities.
·
tragedy.
~
Dllc-~ Aprl 23 - Linda
the UtiUties trade group, 'said nearly
Spokesmen fQr.Southem and AEP
Marsha Kight, whose 23-year-old
Kinnison, Mrs. Paul Clay arid claugh- . The annual tax break. is available half of all nitrogen oxide still comes said they weren't surprised at that daughter died in the bombing, said :uMU ihiJW
ier, Edna Parsons, Pamela Markin.
from cars and ttucks - 49· percent because of the size of the companies victims and their families were told
Shirley Lambert, Charloae Walta:s. y.ly in Fcbnaary on the owner's pri- compared with 29 percent from elec- and the fact that they rely heavily .on
Charles Holzer. Mn.I..Mry McPalnel mary residence. Counties reduce trlc power platlts.
coal-burning power plants. Southern. about the prosecution's plans in
and son, Melinda R!Chln!s, ~1\ ptoperty taxes. by 2·5 .percent for
. The study examined pollution which Sel'\'es customers from Gear- advanc~ . Some relatives went to the
office to see photos of their
Swanson.
~n:·.:: '!'"ov:"n!:~~ the ftom.,Owcrplantsbelongingto.50of gia to Mississippi, is the nation's · coroner's
loved ones so they wouldn't be
llktlll - Mr. and Mn. James
the largest utilities in a 37-state area. largest electricity generator, followed shocked during the trial, she said.
'Hannon, claughler, Cbillicothe;"·Mt.
. the It found that while the largest.clcc- byTVAandAEP. .
Some of the victims and their fam·-and Mrs. ·Tom my Lon g, claughter, .. · Officials 13J:'1'C th8l, a.chanae· tn ·
trlcity
ucers account for the mos_t
ily
members, many of whom are
property conveyance .orma two yean
Gal rpot•
1 11 Ferry, w.va.
AEP officials said they have spent watching a closed-cireuit telecast in
•
, •o, created, • •.problet!l- Old forms sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and
, ~ . . ~ , A,.... .,19 .. Slephen .allowcda~buyeriOapply·forthe carbondiottidereleascs,smallercorn- nearly $1 billion to cut nitrogen Qklalloma City, said they were excit- ·
Sokoloski' and Amy Cedargren, tall malt 011 ~ lillltiC form that trans- panics sometimes pollute at an even ' oxide and sulfur dioxide releases and ed about the first day of testimony.
-c!aughter, Gallipolis. ·
·
fened the propeny.
higher rate.
expect to reduce nitrogen releases by
"I think il is wonderful that the tri· (Publillled willa pennlllloo)
For example. according to the 40 percent by the year 2000, com\ al is starting;" said Tina Tomlin,
pared with the early 1990s..
whose hUsband died that day. "I have
been waiting two years for this."
"These emissions have gone
·Associlllion: .
· oxide per unil of power produced.
Me Veigh, who tum~d 29 Wednes.. ·. COLUMBUS (AP) - lnd~­
down
and the uendline shows con- day, faces the death penalty if con. Hoi mutet nnd for Thlli'SCI8y: Another small company, Illinois
Ohio direct hog prices at selected 50 cents higher.
'
. Power, produced the most sul£ur tinued movement downward," said victed of .murder and conspiracy in
buyina points Thursday' tis provided
Dale Heydlauff, vice presideni for the ·bombing that killed 168 people .
Summary of Wednesday's auc- dioxide per unit of electricity.
by the U.S. Dcplrtrncnt of Apiculenvironmental
affairs at AEP. He also
lions at Gallipolis and 'Mt. Vernon:
BUI the three largest makers of
ture Marlcet News:
said
there
was
little evidence tha!
Hogs: steady to I.OO·higher.
electricity - . the Atlanta-based
. Barrows llltd gilts: fuUy 50 celiiS
...... 43 ()().C7 s•
Southern Co:,the government-owned emissions from AEP plants have sigButcher -~
-&gt; • -'·
higher; demand mocleraki to aood on
Tennessee
Valley Authority and thc nificant impact on the Nonheast's
. ClltIc: ste.... y.
.
·
El · p
.a light to rnoc1cratc movement.
Slaughter steers: . choice 63.00- Ohio-based Amencan ectnc ow- smog problem; something util!ties
. U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. .c:ounay
er Co. - acco.u~~ for nearly 1.35 'and state officials in the Northeast
; se Iect S6 .00-63.00·
points S4.50-56.00, few S4.00 and 70.7Slitughter
'
heifers: c:hoice 62.00- milli~n tons of nitrogen oxide re1eas- insist is t~ case.
56.50; plants 55.~57.00.
select 55.00-62.00.
u.s. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 50.50- 69.00;
Cows:
steady 'to 1.00 lower; all
S4.50; 210.230 lbs: 45.50-50.50, .
cows 44.75 ~down .
Sows: steady to firll!.
Bulls: 2.00 lower; all bl!lls 45.00
U.S. 1-3 300-450 Ibs. 40.00and
down.
43.00; 450,500 lbs. 43.00-44-~;
.
·Sheep
and lambs: · 5.00 to 6.00
S00-600 lbs.' 44.~46.50, few over
lower;
choice
wools '05.00-111.50;
·600 lbs. 47.00-48:50.
choice clips· 98.00-104.00; feeder
Soan: 38.00-40.00.
lambs 1"15.00 and doWII; agcid sheep
Estimated receipts: 27,000.
1.00 and dow".
.
· Prices from Producers Li~ock

""*~ falecaill'ar

Stop. glorifying the acts, actbrs of Confede.raey

The Diilly Sentinel
I

Meigs land.transfers

rau,..APr~u

.

The Dally Sentinel • Pllgl 3

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t

Arthur Ray Martin

'

'

K.

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls .

Today's weather forecast

Meigs announcements

Me Veigh trial...

·.Lawmaker wants· homeowners
to _know about prOperty' ~x break .

~~~hie~ ,::::,':,1~= t!~~ .

HOSPital news'

Study reveals..

·eo.~ue!!Jrom

·.·

' 'r .'\

T &lt;

1

p
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r o d

~~':."~ ~: ;.:~.:·~: ~~~o;:!

Today's Uvestoc_k report

·-•= .

s

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAIJJEY .

s

.Wednesday's GPLA ~esults
· Auc:tion rcs~lts from ·Wednesay's
Gallipolis Productrs Livesloelt Assoc.iation:
·
HOGS: • Butcher iloPI SJW.S642.50.
'
CA'ITLE: Sccond ,Wednesday of

Prints and Enlargements in S Minutes

Standard, $40-.43.50.
fBDDER CA'ITLE. ·Price
trend~ steady. Yearlings, steers, $63-

No negatives needed,
bring·in your

70; Hcifen. $¥-67; Calves; ~tcep.
S6fl:lJO; Heifi4 S(i0-7S; B~~:k to.the
fann babes,saO and down. Feeder
each month.
btmbl - $11 S; Aaed slaughter sa-p,
" COWS: Price trcncl.$1, lowcrr.. $29"37.
'
,.._;.;;...;.;...---~ '
Special feeder cattle ~ brood
sale Wednesday, April 30, 12
Sentinel k:ow
noon. · Horse stock sale Saturday,
ftM2u..tiJI
May 3. II \1-ffi-

favorite .photos

. Daily

You·it be aiTkiZed otthe' gre&lt;!t Q\ l&lt;llity pnrris and
enklrgement~· we can rrntke from your 3 1/2 x 5,
4 x 6, or~" wallet-size P[INS. Up to 8 x ·1 0

enlargenlenls with d8ZZh!'l9 color ~nd
snetPntss from O&lt;ll' KODAK IMAGE ,\-IAGIC

the

Wicker Buggy
. IIIDI.i COPY I'IIICII

c-

_
:..:o..::.::.:.-::r. :,;•-

'•• .................
-=-=
_._
DIIIr .....................- -------··- ·"'" ___ ,

door prizes!
refreshments!
balloons!

111a
DoiiJ
• •·
-•
•t z.
-'1..••

..

:.--:j~:tsw,.~=ljd
II t7,'C

.... I

:::.~~~ .

...... ·==

10 ,, off '

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eeyttMI9 rl k

........ Co&amp;Jr .

··-:::1
:r% c :r rs:•ut••• "'"
.... ,.,. Ill . .

•

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.10- S Tues tbm Sat

Sysiem
For a specitll keeesoke, ZOOfT', crOP.

reouce ·reo-e-te." CIICrHidd a ~ Fun frame·
bOftler 1ikt the one pictured ilbove. We can a;so •estore old and iddt.d
prints to new glory. Stop tn t&lt;xl4y and be ornazl:d!

·-••
••....•
•
:
• lur 1Enlaraemen~, =
•••
•••
••
• le~One
••
:• ••
Kv' It I
lxplt•II1M
. . ..
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , . . . _ _ _ _ llllilllll _ _

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Spo:rts

The Dilily SentD,l,t.\

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nunday, Apr1124, 1187
~

::·Indians
:· . beat Red
•.. Sox ·11-7 .

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'Thlnday, April 24, 1117

•

•

Davenport's two-hit
effort .helps Meigs
down. Waterford 8-3

Jeuica J~nson · was overlooked
recently when the Tri-Valley Cooterence's all-academic team was
announced.
. Johnson is a SOpholilore at Meiss
,HiBh School and takes part in cross
country and basketball. Th be named
to the all-academic team, students
must ~I least be a sophomore, have ·
received at least &lt;inc varsity leuer
and have·a grade pomt average of 3.5
or beller.

By DAVE HARRIS

being kept at bay by Davenport.
Sentinel Corr11po.'ldent
Waterford had base runners .in the
. By KEN BERGER
Junior Brad Dave~port fired· a second-and lhird · i~nings on ·wallis
,., . .CLEVELAND (AP) -· It would
two-hitter' as the Meigs Marauders but.never really threatened ~ntilthe
.. . .seem lhat a few days ofsiuing iillhe
defeated
Waterfon18-3 in Th -Valley sixth inning. '
c." bUllpen did Jack McDowell some
. Conference !Jaseball action WednesThe first two Wildcats walked
good .
day evening at Meigs High School . and Lang reached on a Meigs error.
Despite having his best outing of
Davenport, whose only other With one out Greene singled just out
the sel!SOn as a reliever, McDowell
mound
appearance was a two inning of the reach on Marauders thir4 basestill thinks he never should have ·
stint
in
an earlier non conference man Chris Roush for Waterford's ·
been taken out of the Cleveland lndigalne at.Jackson didn't allow a hit firsthitscoringtworuns. Waterford's
_ans' sl.8rting rotation to begin with.
until lhe sixth inning. While Brad · third run came on a ground out.
" You know, I felt like I was
was k~eping the Waterford bats
The only other hit for lhe Wildthrowing well before. but I was get·
silent,
the
Marauders
were
building
...
cats
was a one out single in the sevting hit," said McDowell, who was
up
an
8-0
lead
after
four
innings.
enth
inning off the bat of Valentine,'
brilliant in four scoreless innings in
The win gives lhe Marauders a
'Davenport in pic~ing up the win
lhe firs\ regular season relief appearI
0-4
mark
overall
and
a
8-2
mark
in
struck
out seven and walked four.
ance of his career as the Indians beat
the
Ohio
Division
of
the
TVC.
Chris
Roush
led Meigs at the plate ,
the Boston Red Sox II · 7 Wednes;
Meigs
scored
two
runs
in
the
with
three
singles
,'and' three RBis.
· day.
. ~ ... ~: -:At: · .. """;Mo.:..
-·~home half ofthe first inning to take Whitlatch added~ pair of sinsles and
· "You can look at the game film
·
the early lead. Scott George and Brad two RBis, and George, Hoover and
and see lhat I was doing the same
fleldt! the throw In the third Inning of W8dnaa
HUNDLEY SCORES -:- The New York Mels'
Whitlatch
both singled to lead off the Vaughan all added sincles. .
thing," he said.
.
Todd Hundley (right) acores on Bernard .Gilkey's day's National Laque game In New York, where
·game
for
Meigs.•Thny
Dugan hit il
Skinner was the slllrter and ltiscr
Manager Mike Hargrove demottriple as Cincinnati catcher Eddie Tauben- the·Mets won 10.2. (AP).
sacrifice Oy .to plate George witb the for the Wildcats, striking out three,
ed McDowell to the bullpen fast Fri'
games first run. Chris Roush plated walking two.and giving up eight hits.
day after a lhird straight poor sl.8rt
the second run for the Marauders Greene and. Valentine had the two
lhat raised the 1993 AL Cy Young
with u two out single.
hits. both singles.
.
Award winner's ERA to 1'2.51 . HarIn the bottom of the second, A.J.
· Manuder notes: Meigs will
grove wanted McDowell to work on
Vaughan . walked with two outs. host Belpre on Thursday in a makechanging speeds, keeping the ball
George was hit by a pitch to put run: up contest and will play Vinton
. low and . lhrowing his curveball .
ners on first and second. Both run- County at home.Friday.
·
more.
. ,. .
"I
went
after
him
and
got
my
hard
er
in
spring
training.
NEW
YORJ&lt;
(AP)
Todd
ners
advanced
to
liecond
and
third
On
Saturday
Meigs
will
travel
to
·
·"I threw the curveball three times
·
"It
was
like
a
wake-up
call
that
Hundley
was
trying
so
hard
to
hit
line
llrives.
an~ scored on Whitlatch's base hit,
Marietta to play two games.
in four innings," said McDowell,
"That's what! have to .do. Thai giving the maroon and gold a 4-0
At2:30 p.m., the Mamudcrs will
whose only previous relief appear- homers that he couldn't hit any. Once fi~ally reached me,'' said Hundley,
who
now
has
five
home
runs
and
is
a.nd
pay
!lltenlion
10
the
wake-up
call.
.
he
relaxed,
the
home
runs
staned
lead.
play
Sugar (:reek and ihen willianance came in the 1995 AL division
You
doii't
get
too
many
of
them."
coming
in
bunches.
hitting
.600
(
12-for-20)
over
the
last
Meigs
plated
two
more
runs
in
the
gle
with
the Marietta Tigers at5 'p.m.
series for the New York Yankees
Mark
Clark
(2·
I),
who
yielded
The
New
York
Mets
catcher
had
six
games.
to
boost
his
average
to
third
inning
on
singles
by
Rick
When
Marauder senior Scoll
against Seaule. "That's not much of
.242.
.
the
two
Cincinalli
runs,
allowed
a
pair
of
two-run
blasts
in
WednesHoover and Chris Roush and a.sac- .George was hit by a pitch in the scca difference."
seven
hits
through
seven
innings,
day's
10-2
rout
pf
the
Cincinnati
"Tom
told
me
that
my
back
side
rifice fly off the bat of Col.lin Roush ond inning, it marked the 12th time
One very important thing was difReds.
a
loss
that
left
manager
Ray
was
collapsing
on
me
and
that!
waswhile·striking
out
four
and
walking
and
a single by Vaughan.'
·
in. 1.4 games that he has hcen hit by
ferent about McDowell, who had
n't
keeping
my
back
shoulder
level.
Knight
so
upset
that
he
planned
a
one.
The
Marauders
then
clpsed
out
a
pitch . .
made 2S4 .big league starts withOut
mandatory
workout
for
the
entire
"II
was
a
great
feeling
to
get
that
·
As
a
result.
I
was
hilling
up
on
the
the
scPring
i'n
.
t
he
fourth
inning,
lpplpr
l!!laJa
a relief appearance before trolling in
team
today
inCincinnatL
ball
and
gelling
nothing
but
prelly
many runs," Clark said. "My job Dugan rell!=l1ed on a Waterford error · Waterford
000-003-0=3-2-3
from the bullpen against Boston: He
Hundley
also
had
an
RBI
single
OUIS.
was
a
lot
easier
with
that
kind
of
sup.
and
Hoover
on
a
fielders
,
choice.
Meigs
222-200-x=S-8-2
was gelling people out.
to
go
3,
for-5
with
five
RB!s
as
&lt;he
.
"Now
I'm
keeping
my
back
port.
The
breaking
ball
was
working
They
ca~
iii
to
score
on
a
Chris
Skinner
(LP)
an!l
Wagner
.
·" It's all about trusting your stuff,
'Reds
lost
their
fourth
in
a
row
and
shoulder
level
and
I'm
not
lifting
the
for
strikes.
·
Roush
single.
Brad
Davenport
(WP)
11ild Tony
f period," said McDowell (1-2), who · concluded a nine-game roild trip With
ball.
Instead,
I'
in
swinging
down
and
While
Meigs
.
was
building
up
·
Dugan
''I also was able to get ground ·
: allowed two hits, · two walks and
a
I
-8
record.
getting
hard
shots
and
line
drives."
balls
when I needed them. The dou- their 8-0 lead, the ·Wildcats were
struck out four.
Hundley,
who
set
a
major
league
That's
exactly
what
happened
in
ble
plays
(2) are a pitcher's best
Hargrove stopped 'short of saying
record
for
home
runs
by
a
catcher
·
the
first
two
at-bats
against
loser
friend
..
"
McDowell's stint in the bullpen was
with 41 last year, admitted that he Mike Morgan (0-2), who yielded six
Morpn didn't have too many
over.
was
overanxious
this
season.
runs
while
lasting
only
three
innings.
friends, especially when it came to
"We ceitainly don't want to jump
"I
had
been
pressing
so
much
that
Hundley
connected
for
his
first
Knight, who explained, ''It's been
the gun." Hargrove said. "But if Jack
I
told
Bobby
Valentine
(the
Mets'
two-run
homer
in
the
opening
inning
the
same old story the entire road
is back, we certainly don't want to
The University of Rio Grande gave the Redmen consecu.tive long
lust
week
&lt;hat
I
was
trying
manager)
after
.Lance
Johnson
Jed
off
with
a
,trip.
The pitching has been horrible
leave him in the bullpen."
and we're down four or five runs baseball squad gained a split with shots in a four-run seventh.
Jim Thome. went 3-for-4, scored to ~it -a three-run homer with no one single.
Derrick Patrick and Tom
Tiffin Tuesday in Tiffin .
Hundley followed with .an RBI . after two innings.
four runs and hit his fourth homer. a on base every time I stepped up to
The
Redmen
(9.
20
overall
&amp;.
5-9
.
~cqrath
held Tiffin scor~.less in the
the
plate,"
Hundley
said.
single in the four-run third inning
"MOIJfD hJI!I bad stuff jod,y. As
two-run shot in the fourth off Boston
bottom
of
the seventh to· secure the
in
the
Mid;Ottio'
eonfci-ence)
used
"Part of the problem was my suc- that also saw John Olerud and
much asThate'to do it on an off day,
starter John Wasdin. The Indians
win
for
Rio.
three
homers
to
outlast
the
Dragons
I have to h&amp;ve the mandatory workcame back from a 5-0 deficit for their cess last year. I thought I could pick Bernard Gilkey.hit run-scoring douIn the second game, Tiffin scored
14-1 .2 in the first game. Randy
up
where
I
left
off,
but
.
itjust
didn't
bles;
and
Carl
Everett
single
.
in
out
when we get back to Cincinnati.
first victory of the season when trailhappen . . Then we had ·this long another run. The Mets catcher hit his
No one !las the answer as to what we Kistemaker led the charge with two six runs in the second to mercy-rule
ing after six innings. .
-homestand
(II
games)
and
I
staned
second two-run blast in the three-run · need to do. For staners, pitching and two-run homers, Kistemaker .fin· the Redmen 10-0 in a five-inning
It was Cleveland's 80th come-.
ished with a 4-for-5 effort and four contest.
hitting will help."
from-behind victory in three-plus pressing all over again trying to do sixth inning, boosting thei{ lead to
Rio Grande will head to Findlay
10-1.
.
\
Deion Sanders was the lone RBis.
seasons at Jacobs Field,and a much- too much."
Jason King added a solo shot in to take on the Oilers Friday. On SatEnter- Tom Robsom, the Mets'
· "Morgan works low in the strike Cincinnati bright.spot; willi tWo sinneeded one. The Indians have strugthe
seventh. His homer, which fol - urday, the Redmcn will host Walsh
balling
coach,
who
reminded
Hundzone, and that is perfect for me since gles to go with a triple in four at-bats
gled to a 9-10 start, and could point
lowed
Kistemakcr's second homer. in the regular-season finale.
·
to this game if they tum things ley of advice that he gave the catch· I'm a low-ball hiller," Hundley said. to raise his average to .400.
around. ,
"That has always been the case in
my care~r: When you're down ond
you can get a win, suddenly everyThe University of Rio Grande left a runner on at the conclilsion of had two RBI off ofa double whiie 'university on Friday to challenge the end, hoping to seta four game sweep
, · 'body· sl.8rts to wake up," said Tony
: Fernandez, who was 3-for-4 in a rare Redwomen fell to the College of Mt. the game. The Redwomen were Brandy VIlli Brimmer added a triple. Lady Dragons in MOC action. The and then wait and see,~ow the rest of
Mt. St. Joseph scored twice iri the Redwomen will take on the Univer- the MOC teams ~ of them .end
St. .Joseph Wednesday in their final defeated' 4-l
.. ~ start at second base.
first and the sixth innings to claim sity of Findlay $aturday to end the their -seasons. The.twference tour·
home
softball
matchup
ofthe
season
.
·
Robin
Cordle
and
.
Jen
Diedrich
"· McDowell was called upon to
victory. .
·.
,
regular season.
nament will be held May 1·2 on the
In
game
one,
the
Redwomen
.
an
RBI.
Je~
Mut·
each
contributed
-~ • rescue . sl.8rter Albie Lopez from a ·
Billi
McGhee
(2-2)
received
the
The
&amp;&lt;!women
will
be
fighting
·
home field of the regultr !IC&amp;-'1011 conphy
(7-13)
suffered
the
defeat.
· second-and-third, none-out jam in went ta the seventh trailing the ColJoss
in
game
two.
for
their
post-season
Jives
this
weekrerence champion. \
Rio Grande was knocked off 5·2
: the fo~&amp;rth. He struck out John lege of Mt. St. Joseph by three runs.
Rio Grande will travel to ·Ttffin
'· ·' Valentin. then intentionally walked . Rio Grande (21-23, MOC 4-10) in game number two. Billi McGhee
scored
twice
in
the
final
inning,
but
, Mo Vaughn to load the bases.

Gloeckner wins ·'Toughman' women'~ lightweight belt

Athlete omitted
: : ·from TVC's
.-. all-academic list

JESSICA.JOHNSON .

A Pomeroy woman hu been
active in ttea "tou&amp;hman". welllers
say "tou1h people" contests, claimin&amp; the ~oveted first place in a PartersbwJ. W.Va. compotition.
She is 31 -year old Belh Gloeckner, who has also placed in other
competitions in Dayton and Parkersburg u a result of her recem win.
'Mike ·Sheppard. Dennis Savellieve. Be)h Gloeckner and Rusty Lee
captured the coveted Toughman
Contest titles during the 12th annual Mid-Ohio Valley event recently at
Memorial Fieldhouse.
Lee of Parkersbul)! tllllk her till~
ques to fruition this year·after fill:
" ' ' ishing af the MO:V
.. - - ·Women's
-·---'--·· heavy'·

-i&amp;hl runner-up in 1996.

Walther in the last third of the 'first
round. Walther elected not to come
out for any more punishment in the
second round.
'
Sheppard is expected to rum pro.
accordina to Toughman promoter
Jerry Thomas.
The most unique aspect of this
year's Tooghman Contesl wa.' heavy- .

weight competitor "M001t" Gilbert,
the fint-ever deaf lipr in Toushman conteat in West Vir1inia.
Gilbert. from West Milford. woli a
split deci ~ion Friday night with his
wife Jennirer standin1 on the ring
apron using sign IIIJIIIIBBII to communicute with her husband.

Aad i• the women's Ji&amp;htweipt
division, Gloeckner, the "Battling
BMender," roacp w~ Anpla Brit'Dn
of Parkenlllq in the finals .
· Sheppu'd. 21 . or · Elizabeth
claimed his second MOV heavyweilht. TouJiunan crown in lhree
yeti's with a first-round 'TKO over
Sam Walther, 38, of V~enna.
Elich went after the other right ------Sports
from the openins bell. Sheppard, ·
. 'i'enals
hQwever, ltarted to really . get to
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.
Walther in the last third of the first
(AP)- Fourth-seeded Alex O'Brien
round.
.
beat Denmark's Kenneth Carlsen 2~h went .after the other risht
6,6-3.6-2 in the second round of the
from the ope~ing ~II. Sheppard,
U.S, . Men's Clay Court Champihoweve~. sta'tt~ to really ~~ to
. onship~.

briefs----1'eaals
BUDAPEST. Hunsary CAP) Eighth-seeded Alexandm Fusai of
France beat Romania's Catalina
Cristea 3:6. 6-2. 6-4 in the second
round of the Budapest La~ies Open. ·

'

·Hundley's homers propel
Mets to 10-2 win over Reds

·"

III

·Aedmen split twin bill
with MOC foe Tiffin

Dodge Conversion Trucks
Regular or Oub Cabs, long or Short Wheel Base
., .

.lor a ·chance

•

Scoreboard
•

Baseball

•

•

AL standings

•

.

.706

!II

Bocton ................... 10

9

. ~2 6

' •

New Yort .............. IO

II

.476

4

Toronl0 ....................9 . 9 - ~

D&lt;tn&gt;it. .. .. .. ...... ..9 12 .429

~ i..

s.

I
lh

K.- Cioy ........... .. 8 10 .4+1
CllleoJo ................... 6 14 .lOO

2
5

I .619
I . ~29
.10 10 - ~

.l
•

.474

Olll.land6. Mi....eto~a l
Aflllhe;ra5. T.....,4(10)

Todll)''•..-

Detroil ('TMmpaon 1· 1) 11 Tu u
( l'lowl;t 1-2~ 2:15~m.

.a. 1~2 ) 11 Oll.IMd
p.a
ClEVELAND (HillY 2·1 I • M - .
Min

lifo (It

·

!T-0.1~3 : (

( EI«ed 2-~~~:rm.
· . ...Botton
(H
· 0.0) 1111 BaltilnOt'C ·
(Ka · · ykll-01, 7:3! p.m.

cLEVELANo (lleulwr 1.0) 01

-(Kioi0-31, 7:11.1 p.oo.

Mi~

-It co. Monioa 1· 11 01 T...co,.ao 3-01. 7:15 , _.._
IOJIOII (0ordo• 1 ~2 ) al BallintOr~
(~),7
:3lp.nl.

Whi .. So11 (Ail'lra 0-l) •

..,1·2~1G5p.a

.

~· :

Chil.:asu .......... ....... .. 2

10 ·

CINCINNATI ... .... o 14 JOO

7

16 ... Ill ·

5 .122

Los Anaeles ........... l l

1

San Diego ............... '-'

9

Mo.lm~l

to Ierma wllh G Mike Zudof&amp;ky.
·
SAN DlEflO CHARGERS: Sil..d
RB S"'rlina Boyd Mil LB joe Dlllemodo.

Hock

~..:.._

Sarunllly's p11101

Mon~~raht

New Jmey. 7::40 'p.m..

lk!\'fliGI'Y

1t1 PIUID&amp;Ielphill 1::\0
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p.m..

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Cotomdo Ill Chica,o. IDO p.m.

I
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.611

.~

Transactions

a~

BOSTON RED SOX: Ph"'"" RHP
Tim Wakefield on •he: IS·•11y tlinbl-.'1.1
lis!. mroo;~ivc to April I~ . Ra:alt.J UiP
VIIIIJ.hn Eahelrmn rmm Pawluckcl ur 1~
lhr....,norionlalL.cmau.:.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS: 11«4!1cd
INF Tim Unrue from T•sun oft~ PCL.'

Tonlpt's pme
PinsbutJh '(Cordova 1·2) 111 Chh:-uao
Cubs rTiiiCh$el O.J). 8:0!'i r .m.

·

Pinaburah (Schmidt 0.1 ~ ar ChtCD.Jl)
.. Cubo &lt;Fottei 1-11. 3:20p.m.
.
. Lot AIIIJI!kt (Nclmo 2· 1) 1U FJc)riJa
(A. t.a"' 2·1t, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. IIIect (Jon., l-IIM Moooreol !C.
.....,, 2-1~ 7:15p.m.
Phiia&lt;lo:lphia (l.aler 2- t) 11 CINCIN·
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· . Sa11 Oicao (Ashby 1· 1) "' Arhuu a
(N&lt;•Ie 2-01. 1:&lt;10 p.m.
San F-nco CO... I -ll • How,.
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..... 2· 1), 8j)Sp,m.

cot..OIIA!Jil ROCKIES: Trudod INF
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• pi10 bo -ASTIIOS;
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• LHP
HOUSTON
Sid fuMndet Ofl the IS-day di....... lill .
Rc&lt;ollod RHP ""- Wollm.o N&lt;w 0.·
ltaJal ollhe AlMfiQn Auo..:ill-..

parad!H. .
PEJIENNW. Sl!lltWI

..., ~. 8:3N p.m.
Dave Lane, a leading

SAN DIEOO' PADRES: """"' lHP
D.-io v~ on'"· 15-day 4i..w.d ••·
Re&lt;allod LHP Joe, Loq r,., !.a V'l"

ollhe PocillcCCllll._.

rwpe~llniltilrvwllal

QiOuer In 1he MidOhio Vall8y, will give you ilpe
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May 20, 8:~ p.m.
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Softball Redwomen lose two .g ames to Mt. St.·Joseph

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~ 11Mndlly, Aprll24, · -

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withdraws
•
from
linkfest ·

.Softball Tornadoes
.rPound'Spartans 21-3
.

11ic Southern softball lam, unde-

•

lhia Caldwell.
r feated ia 10 Tri-Valley Conference Soulhcm ICOI'IId three in lhc IIIII:·
t HockinJ Division pane~, defeated ond and nine in lhe lhird, the Ilia
1 Alexander 21 ·3 Wednesday night II blows beina a ICeri Caldwell double
: AleJtander.
· ·
· and M"'uel triple. Turley, Sayre aod
! Southern is now 11 -3 overall .
1m:ia Holman also sinaled in the
:
Southern hurler Kim · SayfC blasuo make the score 17.0.
• fanned at least one bauer an inning.
Southern hinera were led by Kim
: fanning two the fir:st and two in the Say~·s perfect 4.4 niaht. Other hit·
fifth. en route to the win. Overall, ters wen~ Kin! l&lt;in1. 1\lrley, Amber
.·I Sayre chalked up seven .strikeouts. Thomas, K. ·Caldwell 2-3, McKinthree walks, gave up three hits and ney 2-3, Jenni Bird Sellen 1·2,
• three 111ns. Southern made·one error. Manuell-2 and Holman 1-3.
I Kristi King went the distance for . Misty Wolfe, Brandy Brown and
1i Alex, fanning none, walking 13, Mary Blair' were the lone Alex hit· ,
l allowing 21 runs on 14 hits. Aln ters.
.
made just three errors.
Southern hosts. South Gallia
Southern scored first, plating five tonight.
on a Cynthia Caldwell walk to open lppi"' l1lllll
the game, followed by a Sayre triple, Southern
539-13=24-14-1
awalk to Keri Caldwell, an error on Alexander
()()(). 30=3-3· 3
Ashli Davis's ball, an Ashley McKLP-King
' 'iriney single and walks to Regina
WP-Sayre
I Manuel, Jennifer Yeauger and Cyn-

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'

i Evans' one-hitter
l prives Eagles.to 24-0

(L-R) Adllift Bill, Mlch811 Dlvll, Jordln WIIUIIms,
8randyn Bul'llglrd111tr ~ Pllul Will. II) JM.blck
row 8ra COKh Chrla SMnk, Zlc._ry Shullr,
Corey Woods, R)'lll'l Hannan and 'IV ~It,

·• win over South ·Gallia

NBA Eastern Conference playoffs reviewed

!.r - Eastern sophomore Stephanie and 11 in the third inning en route to
. .
hurled a one-hiller and the the bliu.
Evans fanned live batters. walked
pounded out II hits as the
rolled to a 24-0 victory over live, and gave up just one hil East·
;,oum Gallia Rebels. Eastern is em played errorlel!s ball, while. the
10-2 overalL
~liels made founniscues. . .. ,,:
Eastern scored 12 runs in the first
Barry did not fan any Eastern b'atnning as Patsy Aeiker hit a bases . Jers, ll&amp;ve up ,12 .walks, eleven hits
oaded double. Martie Holter sin· and 24 runs. ·
gled, Amanda Milhoan tripled,
Eastern hitters were led by Aeik·
Meredith Crow singled, and Valerie er's 3-4 night, with two-hit nights
Karr had a three-run double. In her from Holter and Crow. Other hillers
second at·bat of the inninc, Aeikcr hit were Tracy . White, Kim Mayle,
a home run. The Rebels' J. Berry Amanda Milhoan, and Valerie Karr.
walked nine baiters in the frame in
Eastern gcies to Trimble tonight.
lplpr &amp;sdlla ; "
·
between Eastern hits.
The only Sooth Gallia hit of the Enstern . ( 12) 1(II )-00=24-11-0
000.00=0· 1·4
came after a lead-off strike qut South Gallia
n N. Mills singl.ed to right field:
· LP.Barry
Eastern scored one in the second
WP-Evans

Morning line says Bulls. move
on while Knicks exit in. four
.

Lauderm itt's c/utch'
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Strickland. Washington :...... Strickland. As he has shown in the three
previous meetinss. he hlis the ability to penetrate and break down the
Bulls' defense.
Minutiae: The Bulls' two victories were by one and four points..
Bullets won 16 of last 21 games.
. Outlook: WashinBton, with a .
speedy point guard (Strickland) and
a big center (Gheorghe Muresan),
giyes Claicagu fi,ts.. Siill, the li1,1llets
have no one who can slow down Jordan. And look for Rodman to fluster
Webber.
Prediction: Bulls in four.

·.

jty DAVE HARRIS

~ing

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lane from Hill. !he Pistons'
Detroit News
olrense dies. Detroit- Terry Mill&amp;.
'Here are first-round NBA Eastern .If hC 's getting and hilling his shots,
!hen the Hawks will be forced to
Conference capsule previews:
No. 1 Chica11o (69-13) vs. Nci. 8 come away from the basket and the
Washington (44-38). ·
.
lanes will re-operi.
. .
Season series: Chicago 2· 1.
Minutiae: SixofDougCollins' 13
Key matchups: Small ,forwards playoff wins as a coach came against
Scouie Pippen. vs. Juwan Howard, Lenny Wilkins-coached teams
power forwards Dennis Rodman vs. . (Cleveland). ·
·
Chris Webber, shootinl! g~ards
Oudook: In a matchup as even !15.
Michael Jordan vs. Calbe.rt Cheaney. this, intangibles become &amp; separating
X-factor: Chicago - Ron Harp- factor. Atlania's 36-5 home record
cr. He's been a non-factor most of could be pivotal As could·these three
5

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By CHRIS MCCpSKY

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103, won the first quaner and die·
tilted tempo and kept Blaylock below .
his averages in points lind assists.
They did none of the above in their
only loss. '
Prediction: Hawks in live.

went on · to win that series. Three

ti~ they. ve lost game one and

been swept all three times.
Outlook: Orlando is a grtat.front·
running team. If they get ahead. they
generally roll . Which expln,i~s their
two 12-point winsovertheffe8t. But ·
when they get down. they tend to
crumble, thus iheir 14- and 20-point
losses to Miami: The Heal's physi·
cal and mental toughness figures to
be the difference.
·
·Prediction: Heat swaep.'
6

~~.!t~e(~i~~ (57' 25 ) vs. No.

Season series: Charlotte 3-1 .
Key matchups: Centers Patrick
Ewing vs. Vlade Divac, powerfor- ·
wards Charles Oakley or Larry John- .
son vs. Anthony Mason, point guards .
Chris Childs vs. Muggsy Bogues.
X-factor: New York - Joh.n
No. 2 .Miami (61-21) vs. No. 7 Starks, fiery guard was No. 3 team
Orlando (4S-37)
scorer ns sixth man. Charlotte Season series; Tied 2-2.. ., ··
,Qien -Rke, T.he middle w{Jll)e con·
Key matchups: Point guards nm gested. The P,Crimeter, where Rice
. Hardaway vs. Penny Hardaway, cen- roams, should be open.
ters Alonzo Mourning vs. Rony
Minutiae:, The . Hornets set an
Seikaly, power forwards PJ. Brown NBA record for 3-point shooting
vs. Horace Grant (both nursing accuracy, hitting 42.8 percent, with
minor injuries).
sill players over 40 percent. In a4di.
X·factor: Miami- Jamal Mash· iion, tliey were 50.8 percent again~t
b\!m . His presence may force Mag- the Knicks .... Mason and•Johnson
ic to sit Dennis Scott and start Derek switched teams in a pre-season trade.
Strong, which.weakens them offenOutlook : Some say Charlotte
sively. Orlando- Nick Anderson.lf gave less than full effort. the' final
he's not scoring, the Magic have no game of the season at Milwaukee. so
chance.
it would be paired against New York.
Minutiae: Orlando is 19-22 on the The .Knicks have nobody to match
road; the Heat are 32-9 on the road. up with Rice. He's scored 74 in the
Game One has proven pivotal to . last two games against the Kriicks,
Magic. Six times ttiey've won the
who tried Allan Holl6ton, Johnson
first game of a playoff setics and
and Starks on him. ·
'
Prediction: Hornets in four.

· plated a run in the lith to post the
l "'Sentinel Correapond8nt
win. Fackler walked, stole second
Tan11y Laudermilt's single .in the and g~~ anto score on a Tangy Laulith inning scored Emily Fackler, as derm~lt smBie.
.
·
Meigs Marauders posted a come· . Tnmb~e threat~ned m the bollom
' ,_(rpm-behind 5-4 win ovc:r Trimble fn of the mnt~, p~tltng runners 011 secrecent TVC softball actmn. ·
ond and thtrd wath only one out The
Meigs had rallied from a 3-1 sev- -Trimble baUer laid down a bunt,
enth inning deficit to tie lhe game which Fackler fielded and checked
• lllld after trnding runs with the Lady the runner on !hard and threw to first
Uts in the eighth finally puiiC\1 out to record lhe second out. Fackler .
No. 4 Atlanta (56-26) vs. No. 5
!Ttb win in the lith. ·
then induced the next bauer top pop Detroit (54-28)
"' After Trimble scored !in the .bot· out to second to end the game.
Season series: Detroit 3- j .
tom of the first, the,Lady Marauders
Laudermilt led Meigs at the plate
Key matchups: Point 11 uards
tied it in the top of the second. with three singles. Faekler added two M9Qkie Blaylock vs Lindsey Hunter,
Brooke Williams walked and then doubles and Gilkey her biB triple. power forwards Christian Laetlner
--stole ,second, third and home to tie Fackler picked up the win giving up vs. Otis Thorpe, · small forwards
: t~e· game at one.
..eight hits, striking out 14 and walk- Tyrone Corbin or Allen Henderson
Trimble scored two runs in the ing only two.
~
vs. Grant Hill.
bottom of the tlaird inning to take a ·
Coffman had three smgles to
X-factor: Atlanta _ Dikembe
3-1 odvantagc and held the lead until lead Tramble. Dallon· was the starer Mutombo. If he takes away the dri-.
the seventh inning when Meigs bat- and loser for the Lady Cats. She
tied back to force extra innings. . stnK:k out 17 • walked 10 and gave up
AlB' A U~esfe•'(J c·~n#-.re
' nee p/avolfs reV~ewed
; .. .. Jessica McElroy walked, Emily six hits.
IY. " ' l'l't
••
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1 ·
• FQckler doubled and Kelly Gilkey lgWu ·l ldlll
; tripled to tie the game at three and Meigs .
010-000-210-01=5-6-2
!.. .force the extra frames.
Trimble
102-000.010-00=4-8·5
Both teams scored single runs in . Fackler (WP) and Sanford .
dfoeightinninBbUtlh~··M~~tJeiS'·. '·· Diflon(LP)andLent
.·

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J azz
. . &amp; .s u·pe r s·on•cs·
I ' get nod
t 0 sweep·
'
c. I.1ppers·.an d sun·.s

fledwomen split .
~=r:::cosKv
.: •~rl
•,·th. Oh10
. DOmlniCBn
. . . · ernconferencecapsulepre:vie~s:
are
W~stHere

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·. 'Rio G~'s softball team pcked ·~4· aai!W·~~ her~ .a,.doubje and ;• ·
up ground in the race fot tile Mid·· stolen,baile.
~: 1 • • ' ' •
9'!io Conference playoffs with a ...~ lnlhe .econd game, R.~o won 10split against Ohio Dominican Tues~ 3 because-of homers by Sasson (~·3,
day in Columbus.
· ·
two RBls IE two steals) and Weaner
· The Redwomen (21-21 overall &amp; (2·3 &amp;: two RBls).
4-IO,in the MOC) lost4-3 in the lin;t
Teammate Billi M"-Ghee scored
P.me because of Krista Trapp's RBI · twice and went 2 for 4. Robin Corsingle. Jenny Murphy (6-12) took the' dlc went 3 for 3, stole a base and had
~s,
an RBI in support of Rebecca Evans
,; Rio w"l' led by Shellie Weiner's (7·3).
.
2•for-4 (she double). two-stcal, one·
The Redwomen wall play at1if·
.'olo effort. Mclisa Sisson's 2-for-·3 .lin Friday before ending regular-sen·
•~'~?wing included two RBis .and
son. plat Saturday wath games
two steals~ Michelle Ulmer's 2-for· agamsl Fmdlay.

·

fusHound NBA

No. I Utah (64-18) Y$. No.8 Los
Angeles Clippers (36-46). · •. . 1
S~~son se_
ries: !Jtah 3· 1.
Key matchups: Power forward
Karl Malone vs. l-oy. Vaught. point
guard John Stockton vs. Darrick
Martin, small forward Bryon Russell
vs. Rodney Rogers.
X-factor; Utah- Jeff Hornacek ..
Who is soin11 to stop him, Malik
Sealey, Brent Barry? Clippers Rogers. He can do some damage,
postin1 up on Russell. . .
Minutiae: Utah players have 324
games. of playoff experience. The
Clippers: 23. ·

o.uthern ·dro. ps 7.-1
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Southern baseball teiun fell with only three walks, five hits {four
'1~ 1 at the ·hands of league toe of which came in the oa:ond inning)
A&lt;Jcxandcr Wednesday· . .
·awd'lcven runs. Soulhem made four
;, ;Aiexnndcrtook a 1-0 lead in the emn.
·
·
tit- on a l.elldoff home run by Mall ,
Southern !t&lt;&gt;•ts South Oallia ·
ltj~lston. Alexander scored live more toniaht .in IUctne.
iiiolhe second, H.udnall and Ross sin· lgeiN tallltl
000.0 I().()= 1-3-4
6!1. )ones dollb.,d and Wilson · Southern . ·
·
150-00I·x=7-S,O
sllinmcd another home run for ._,'6- Alexander
d)llly in tl)e early jOin;. .
LP-Willi111111
:· Southern's lone bitt were aJiftli
WP-Ms
•
i~!nJ home run ~ J• Kitby, WhO
\
Sporta brllfa~
. altft pic:ked up a "nJie and llaMy
~·~ •inale..
.
BOSTON (AI') - Pbillttlelpdlla
:"l'•rb picked up lhe win for· Flyers exec:utive lobi!J ClarM
Alaundlr, fannin&amp; 10. walkinJ none "111UIIId" the NIU.Ihll he will liCit
Iiiii allowinJ just one run on three meet with Conner playen' IMion
hli. The SpMIIl•lll!lllc no emn. chiefAlan~ aller...,....lhll
·-~S-"'"''• Ccny Will~ ...... • 11te fBI•is reriewin1 their rellllionviYed a rocky -.t 10 tinilh die game ship. ·
'
•·
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Clippers Jl")bably Wtll leave Greg
Ostenag alone and double-team

·unsettle Stockton. He IQOted 38 in
the Clippers' only win. But Martin
·has scared four poinll total in his last
th~ ~~··

Prediction: Utah sweep.

No. 4 Los Angeles Lakers (56-26)
vs. No. 5 Portland (49-33)
Season series: Portland 3-1 .
Key matchups: Centers Shaquille
. O'Neal vs. Arvydas Sabonis, point
guards Nick Van Exel vs. Kenny
Anderson, power forwan!s Elden
Campbell vs. Rasheed Wallace .
X-factor: Lakers- Eddie Jones.
He was outplayed by J.R. Rider in
the season-endin&amp;loss, but his offensive production will be vital to take
the load off Van E11el. Portland Cliff Robinson. He poses a bad
matchup problem for the Lukers
(Robert Harry).
.
Minutiae: O'Neal has averaged
31 point¥ in the. fwr games. but
missed critic.al free throwulown the
stretch in each loss. The two
yaungest teams in the league- Lak·
en' average ap is 25.S, Trailbl.-.,
26.2.
.
Outlook: O'Neal WIIS manhan·
· died by Sabonis on Sunday, and IMt
didn 'tlike it,uyina, "Next time. I'm
takina a flasranr(fwl). He won ~t get
· away with that aaain." Bottom line,
Sabonis is one of .the few centers
strona enoulh to even think about

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*

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Aae,_ latleft1111 atl sc.d ~ 1Jt• t ,., I

· pushing Shaq around. And Anderson
should domina!~ Van Exel . . Big
plusses for Portland.
.
Prediction: Blazers in four.

Brooks_&amp; DunR -top entertainers; Big night for leAnn Rimes, George Strait
~By JEFF WII..80N

Asraclltld Pnll Wrbr

By DAVID I)ROSCHAK
.
GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP) Fuuy Zoeller withdrew fron) the
Greater Greensboro Cluysler Classic
Wecjnesday. saying he. cw~n't con• tinue playing golf unttl talkinl! with
Masters chnmpion nger.Woods.
Fighting back rears, Zoeller read
a brief statement in which he again
apologized for callins Woods "that
little boy" and urging him not to ·
request fried chicken and collard
11reens at the Champions Dinner
when he returns to Augusta National next year.
He then shocked a crowd of
reporters by withdrawing from a
tournament he has played in for 21
. stnlightseasons. ·
, / ..
"I started this, and I feel strongly that I 'have to make things right
with nger first before al'lythina
else." Zoeller said.
.
"I also resret the distraction this ·
has caused the world of golf. What
I sa_id is distracting people at this.
tournament And that's not fair to the
other people on this course trying to
play this toul'llament."
Zoeller said he was told not to
answer any questions about the controversy and left Forest Oaks Coun·
try Club with reporters trailing.
On Tue.'lday, Kmart dropped its
longtiine.sponsorship of the popular
golfer.
The Troy, Mich.-bascd company
said the ·comments were inappropri' ate and offensive, even though
Zoeller said he was only joking dur,, ing an interview with CNN shortly
. after the final round at the Masters
on April 13.
' "Regardless of the context, they
are contrary to Kmart's lon1standing
policies that ensure our wol'l!s and
deeds.are without bias," Kman said
in a stateinent.
Zoeller, who issued a public apology in a statement Monday, apillogized again Tuesday to the acting
president of the North Carolina
.chapter of the NAACP while in
' Greensboro for -this week's PGA
Tour event.
.,
"People who know me know I'm
a jokester. I just didn 'I deliver the
line-well," Zoeller ~aid. "I'm in a nowin situation. AcCept my apology.
plew;e. I apologized \O nger. I,aP,OI·
ogize to any 0ne I might bave offend~
ed.''
Skip Alston of the Nillional Asso. ciation forthe Advancement of Colored People accepted Zoeller's apol- ·
ogy, but also threatened a boycott of
the tournament.
"He didn't insult only nger
Woods, but ihc entire Afrii:an-American community nationwide," Alston
said, adding that Zoeller ~ s com·
mcnts weren't . "funny to us. You
don't pick at our culture and expect
us to laugh."
·
"It's a tough situation and I feel
bad for Fuzzy very m~ch," ·fellow
·golfer Mark O'Mcanuaid today. "I
know he feels bad. He is taking it
very well. but he's hurting pretty
'hard because he feels he's always
been up front with the media and the
media has always been good to
Fuzzy and then all of the sudden boom - this happens."
The Greensboro Jaycees, who
run the PGA tournament, issued a
suucment dissociating the OI'Janization .from Zoeller's comments. But
they went ahead with a long-planned
· tribute to the golfer Tuesday nighi
because he played in the tournament
22 years in a row.

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UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. vtK:alist O~y A...nlllllrlia this
(AP) - The Academy of year.
MW WillaiDJ her secotld c:OnlecCountry Music's entertainer
of the year is a duo- apin. Uiive belt female sinpr award, Patty
Kix Brooll:s and Ronnie Lo¥elm .aid she fell sure Rimes
Dunn, who won the top honor "was 1oin1 ui take it this ye.. I'm
' Jut year, also were awarded shocked."
Garth Brooks, who had two nomthe prize for top .duet at the
inations
but , left empty-handed,
academy's 32nd awards
kicked off the show with his hit
show.
"We're two Qf the l~~~;kiest "Fever."
· "Welcorne to the ni1ht MQIIyguys · in country . music,"
wood ·turns country •nd yOil all
Dunn said Wednesday night
· Brooks&amp;: Dunn may have come alon1.'-' said "Winp" 11!11'
. won .two awards, but Teus Ct'ystal Bernard. who shared hostin1
teen-age · sensation LeAnn · chores with Strait and Jeff Fo~twor­
Rimes hauled away lhe most thy. .
Roy Clark 101 · the academy's
hardware. The l4-year-old
was- crowned country's best prestigious Pioneer Award in recog.new singer and her rendit,ion nition of outstandinl! IChievements
of "Blue" was picked top sin- in country music.
''That puts you in pretty tall comgle and best song.
Up to the end of the three· pany. It's hard for me 10 belie¥e that
hour show, which aired on anyone looks up at me the way I
NBC~ it appeared ·that fellow looked up to my .'idols," Clark said.
T~xan G~orge Strait might Past recipients 'inclucle' Johnny Cash,
emerge the big winner. He Roser Miller. Minnie Pwl, Roy
had already won the mal~ Acuff and Roy Rogen.
Winned&gt;in top categories were
singer and album (" Blue
selected
by the 4,000.member aead·
Clear Sky") prizes and was a
nominee for entenainer of the emy.
Cwntry.'s elite ;arrived for the
year.
" It was kind of feelinl! like show at the Universal Amphitheatre
a George Strai\ nicht to me," in boots, denim, rl!ineSiones and
cowboy hats. Tourists clulchinl!
Brooks said.
But · the night clearly cameras hooted an4 hollered, espebelonged· ~ Rimes, the cially for Rimes :~~~d Ocne Atltry,
blonde wearing a white gown who was wearina a white hat and
·
with plunging neckline and using a cane. ·
.
who spoke with poise far · ."I'm doinl! all riihf," Autry, who
turns 90. in September,· told .Jhe
'
;. .
'
.
.
Tr
Alk
d Naomi Judd beyond her years. .
CMA. AWARDS • Ashley Judd, left, . f1'/
men an
".I guess I've had to grow crowd.
·
announce Qeorga Strait for Album of the YNr It lha County f!tualc Awardl up in an adult world all my
held Wldneadly night.
life," said .the Patsy Cline-

• Plumbing and venting of water healer is
• ·the obligation of the property owner.

'

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n.11.

-'

NEW GROUP OR DUET: RJcodoeL

••

VIDEO: "l'l'lllak Aboat Y011," Colla Raye.
PIONEERAW,UO: Roy Clark.
RADIO STATION: WSIX Nllbvllle, Tna.
I '
DISC JOCKEY: Gent Ht~~~~e, WSIX Nllhvllle, 1Un.
-,1
NIGHTCLUB: Cruy a - Steak House IE S.._, S11111a A~,

"

Calif.

.

•

TALENT BUYER/PROMOTER: Bob Romero, Don R .
· Aaeaey, ·o-fth•, Nett.
INSTRUMENTALISTS: .

..",

BASS: Glena Worf.

:
1;.
·DRUMS: ~ Bayen.
FIDDLE: Stuart Dtmcaa.
GUf[AR: Bftllt ~ .
KEYBOARD: Matt Rollla...
, i•
SPECIALTY INSTRUMENT: Terry McMillan (hai'DIOI1ica, per·
ml!llon, cow belli).
.
~
STEEL GUITAR: Paul Fnmldin.
:.

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• I'IC' 1·1 Is · _.,

•

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DoCtors: New mom, 63, shows
what people wilr_do to. have a child
'

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.

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Mr\El'e!

#1 Qu•lity
JACKSON-PERKI
HARDY ROSES.

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pregnancy, including elevated biood
pressure and gestational diabetes.
ThC problems were controlled by
bed rest and diet·, said Dr. Hermina
S. Salvador, an obstetricia~ at Loma
Linda University Medical Center.
The baby was delivered by Caesarean section and weighed 6
pounds, 4 oum:cs. The woman and
husband of 16. years have no other
children.
Doctors did not learn the
woman's true age until the end of
her first trimester. said Paulson, .
chief of the medical .S~:hool's infertility division.
.
At the time she pve binh. she
was 63 years and nine months. A
pn:vious case from Italy reported a
I!IICCCSSful pregnancy for a 62-year·
old woman.
An article on ·the pre1 nancy and
birth, to be published in the medical
al Fenility and Sterility. contha1 he arb·
c:luded in . part
w n
llrary
qe limits aie.imposed. ~ople will
devise a rJ1SC to pt a scrvace.
produced credible
the
ld 'nd'
clocumeftlalion lhlt WOU t ICIIC
· the wu 10 yean . ywnF and
pn ~. npous physical tests, Paul- .aid.
"II tu~ ~t '!"'•he sailed riJII!t
tlltouP it, hi .aid.

·Gold· .

b.
duR GREENHOUSEs ARE .
BuRsTING Wt,.H E:qLoa! ·.
ON OVER

w-

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'

DUET: Brookl A DIIIIIL
NEW MALE VOCALIST: TrMe AdkW
NEW FEMALE VOCALIST: LeA• A.._

.Stilrtin9

.or ~ - ,....

• 742-2.11

·d

::Mothers 1{ing· Black Bill~

statOmelll.
Propam llir.:tor Richard Plul· ,
sm lllld his cOil 1 '" llelieve their
pMient is the oklelt 1111 record to
have a successful prea-Y·
, The
a Philippi-Aiwi·

I·IG0-~27..217

.·

SONG: "m.e,"Leluull'=••
MAL~ VOCALIST: Geolae Strait.
FEMALE VOCALIST: Patty LoYel•
GROUP: SMryer Bro-

......

11

124

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. (AP) -The complete list of winnen ..
the 32nd Acwlerny of Country Music Awlrds Wednesday night II ~
Universal Amphilhealrc:
;.
ENTERTAINER: lroeb IE 0....
ALBUM: "lliae o-r Sky," Georp StraiL
SINGLE RECORD: "Blue," LaAu Rimes.

By MINDY KEARNS .
Her quilts have won the Peoples
Choic~ Award at the West Virginia
State Farm Museum several times;
placed in shows at the West Virginia
Cultural Center ·and even won the
Mary Krickbaum Award. but noth·
irig pr;epared .Marjorie Rogers of
M8J!on County for being chosen a.
•
nati'on&lt;!l finalist in the American
· Quilters Society (AQS) Show and
Contest.
The show, held in Paducah, Ky.
April 24-27, is ·the nation's largest
and most prestigious quilt cornpeti7
iion. "It's an 'honor just to get a quilt
,!n .~er~:'' Rogers .~a~d. "It's known as
.Quail C1ty, USA.
. ·
Her quilt. titled ·"Fan·Thstic Challenge," will compete with quilts
'Rings availilblt witli uumbtr
· from 46 states and eight foreign ·
.of.color stones for Motlier 'and
'countries for more than $85,000 in
cash pwards. ·.But Rogers -definitely :C6ild 'Birtlislllire 2-7 .Stonts
isn't in it for the money. In fact, she ,
has never sold. a single, quilt'. and she
~t
bas' ·bCen making her masterpieces
since 1949.
Marjorie Rogara
. The quilts that Rogers hasn't kept
\
ing
down
requests for interviews and $S.OOO for thfJ Best Wall Quill ·. ·
have gone to her daughters, P~tty
·"Mom taught me to sew 111 lin ·
Fin law of Patriot, Ohiil, and Jenmfer . early age. I was _prObably just seven and stories: She. would rather talk Awird, liS well u cash awards for :
Teague of Tennessee. Even the ones or eight and could barely reach the about her husband Leo who recently first, second and third place in each
she has kept have already been des- treadle on the sewing machine," retired from Shell Chemical, or the category.
ignated to a specific daughter.
Rogers said. "We made a lot of tied latest goings on with her quilting
If selected for a purchase award,
Rogers speaks lovingly of each · comforters then and · I sewed doll guild. "Quilts 'N' Thing~." Some
lhe
quilt will become part of the permembers of that guild wall follow
quilt she pulls from their prote.ctive clothes from scraps of feed sacks."
maneitl collection of the Muteum of
pillow cases. :·nus one as pteced
"My mom always told mc.ifl was Rogers to the show in Kentucky.
lhe
American Quilter's Society. This
And soon after competing in the
from dresses that belonged to my going to do something, do it right,"
30,000
SqUire'. foot. climate-c,on. gra!ldmother," she said as s_he Rogers said. And right · she tloes. "traditional pieced. amateur". categoirolled
facility
was built exclusively
. unfolded ·a brightly colored quilt. Rogers prefers hand stitches to ry of the show, she will have a quilt
She tells of others made for her machines althOugh her stitche.s are on display at tl)e cultural center from for the showcasinJ and preservation
brother. from shirts he wore as a so tiny · and eYen, sometime$ it is .May 9 through September I. ~ of quilts.
•
This year;'s AQS Show and
•.
. youngster and a bow-tie pallem quilt bard to tell the difference.
·•
she made for her 'grandson Scan . .
That is what won her· the 1994 · test features 414 quilters in 13
1gories. Prizes _include
Rogers adm its she likes traditipn- Best Hand Quilti.ng Award at the
al patterns, with "Qrandmothers 25th Annual National Quilters Asso- awards of $1~.00(1 for Best of ;,now.•
'-''-"IV,E .
Fan" being her favorite . 'The one ciation's Silver Jubilee Show. '
$10000 each for the Gingher· ~:~111
chosen for the Kentucky show is a
Rpgers is very modest ,when · Wo.:tmanship Award and the B·
' fan pattern on a bla~k background .. speaking of her talents, usually tum- . na Machine .Workmanship Award.

.

·

•

Wlnnets of 32rid Academy of Countty Music:
Awants
,,

Rodgers' quilts selected for national competition

By DENNIS ANDERSON
, Aaaocletltd Prau Writer
LOS ANGELES (APl - . The
world's oltlest klfown ne'w mom is a
63-year-old woman who lied about
her age to get into an in vitro fettil·
ization program, ddetors .sa•~· She .
delivered
a healthy
bu.by garl last
'
.
year.
Her case iUustrates the lengths
people will go to have.children, doc- .
. tors at the University of Sout!aem
California said Wednesday.
111e wom&amp;ll,whose name was not
released, said she was SO .when she
approached the doctors for the treat·
ment. She was actually 60.
lttook her three. years 10 get preg·
nani through a donated egg and her
husband's sperm.
"Had the individual disclosed her
actllll ase ... she would not 111"
qualified for treatment M USC, •iDee
the prosram uses an tabiltii'Y upper
aae limit of SS for women Mlkilll
f&lt; T
the
,, USC's l'roltlftl
,en',.,'~. ,..}!!:.....uction said in 1

Water Heater ..

Brenda Lee IOUIId-allb who WOII
belt new 111111 and r-1e COUDtry

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Pomeroy • Mlclcllport. Ohio

1'lnndly, April M, 1117

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott, Ohio

:Parents should salvage a son rather thah puni'sh·him··
•

ears and a nose ring, and a' ~eraggly
~- My wife and I aie embar·

Ann

rassed to be seen with him in public.
Luke still lives at home but ~ver
tells
us where he is going or whelt he
IW~ . Lu~ Alltcars
1'l!.ci S)'llldicllle Wid C•
will be back. Last night, he didn't
..-. S)'lllfic•.
.
come home at ·all. He is enrolled in
=-..-----~"'··tthe local junior college but rarely
·shows up for his morning ·classes.
By ANN LANDERS
·
Dear Ann Landers: Our 19-year: His grades are terrible.
My wife !lnd I are seriously conold son, . "Luke," a classic under·
sideril1g
t)Jrowing him out. Our main .
achiever, has been a source of grief
concern is the message he is sending
to !DY wife and me for most of his
life. He was .into d111gs in high to -our other children, ages 14 and
school, his grades were terrible and 10. ' We are IOially frustrated and
he barely graduated. He wrecked wonder if you have any recommen·
two cars we had given him and has dations. ·., Miserable in Texas
Dear Miserable: Your son could
been fired from just about every job
he's· ever had. He now sports the still be on drugs. He has all the clas"grunge" look -- dyed .hair, pierced sic symptoms. If he is still taking

landers

drugs. you must get him into a treat- phone."
ment center immediately. It is
I realize these people have. a ;oti
·important that' you salvage your4on to do, but I would lib to offer a sua·
rather thi,IIJ punish him.
gestion. The telemarbten lhould
If he is drug-free, and the prob- Start the conversation by sayinJ,
lem is disobedience and lack of ·" Hello, my name is Sue. Do you·
ambition, he might benefit from have a few minutes?'' This way, if
vocational instead of academic the person called is busy, or alleqic
courses, or he might find a career i., to telemarketers, be or ~ might
the military more to his liking. I sug- say, ,"Sorry, I don't have time to lisgest counseling for the whole fami· ten right now" or "Thanks for call·
ly.
ing bill I am not interested," and
Dear Ann·Landers: How do tetec hang up politely. .
·
marketers kno,w when I sit down to
Please do a great service to the
. dinner? As soon as we start our people who receive these calls, and
evening meal, the phone rings. The print my letter. Thanks, Ann. ••
first thing I hear is "How are you Larry in Spokane, Wash.
tonight?" The h'onest answer is " I
Dear Larry: Telemarketers phone
have a mouthful of food, and I felt a at dinner time because that is when
lot better before I answered the people are most likely to .be at hoffi!:.

•

expenence ·

.J"'

,~re elected Whel\ CheSter Garden
Club met ,ecendy at the . home of

.Maurila MJII'er. .

Maye Mop presented the le!Vice
.fop: her daual!tei-in-law. It was noted
thaf 'si~ die club organized, 13
. '.IJICmbCri !lave died.
·
· · New •officers elected were Lula
,TQban.' praident; Eleanor Knight,
lmt vice president;' Judy Bunger,
~on~! vice' jlresident; Edna Wood,
:Siii:retarY; Katlu:yn Mor&amp;, assistant
.se~~tary; K4th9'~ ,MD!'a•. treasure~.
• . It 'was'tlbied that this IS Chester's
'year .to'd9 the fair flower show. and
.n~ to the ·committee were Pat
·Holter, Betty Dean, Judy Bunger,
,O~bbie Miller, ·and Dorothy Karr.

Main. .

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reaction to the !hought o( organ and
tissue donation probably ·brought to
mind one thing: death. In reality,
donation is life; life that only you
can give to help thousands of pepple
awaiting an organ or tissue trans·
plant," said Huffman.
She. said that everybody is ·a
palential donor and that signing a
dono~ card does not mean that the
medical team · will do any less to
•., •• ' ';,

4

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

-It__

sa~e a life. She said that there are
tests to ·ensure that the brain has
stopped working before any consideration is given to harvesting organs.
She pointed out that brain dead is
not the same as a coma because
patients in a coma may still have .
. brai~'stem activlly and can awaken ·
from the coma.
_ ...
She explained thatliean, kidneys,
pancreas, lungs, ..iller, intestines, and
. n,
~ ~..,..,.,

~.·

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t!flit';l~ t.~t~!f·•ll&gt;ln"

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1995 FORD

',, .

TAURUS•

:/u~~BLAINS· t VFW~t
1nee11 at 7:30p.m. at

hall.

. POMEROY·· Town and Country

J3XPO committee, 7:30 p.m. Thurs-

day, . Meigs County Fairgrounds.
More information, call 992-2924.

·, ' JU!EDSVILLE ~- Riverview Gar~e~ Club,•Thursday, 8 .p.m. home of
~Ia Osborne. ''

VI, auto, A/C, tilt, cruiM,

'

SCIENCE CONFERENCE· Two S!Mflhem High School.llacMI'I were MnOng141n Southeutem Ohio
who attendecUhe Exploration IIi Mllerlal1
Worlclhop It Hoelting College funded through ""
Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher Education Accen to Technology gt'lnl They _,. Koete' El DaiMIja, right, and Aqn Sl11on, pictured ~ with Waynt White, eucutlft dl~ of the fun=l ~g~ncy.
Emph81ll wae on lntrodu.clng materials ~line. Into clslll'ootnl 11 they took part In •
menta It
five work •tatlone. They received explirlmenlll kill uled to demonatrate how to crate, chara~. and
.teat ceramic, polymer and metal 811'f!PJU·Into ctsaaroom projeCII.
·

Scr.nc.

.Li

For48 ..

Mol'ltha

MOON ROOf.

27,000

I eue RETURN.

on1y

mllea.

614-992-6614

308 E. Main Pomeroy, Oh

1995 PONTI
GRAND PRIX
4 Dr, VI, auto, Air concl,

, AMIFII cua, tilt, oru!M, ·
. PI, PB, PW, PDL, LOCAL
. TRADE.

$1

·1994 BUICK ·
SKYLARK

1-800-837·1094 .

1994 EAGLE

VISION TSI
4 Dr, VI, auto, air cond,
AM/I'M CUI, tilt, cruiM, _.,.
PS, PB, PW, PDL, MUCH ..
MORE.

Hottest beals on the Hottest WheelS!!!

!

•I

I••

'·'"

t~ ,&gt;-; l"i ' j li

.

'MPONTit\.1:
GRAND PRIX

•

FRIDAY
· CHESTER •• Kindergarten registration at... .Chester Element~ry
School will be held from 8 a.m. to 3
p.m. Call 985-3304 to make an
appoilttment.

s~nlRDAY

,,.

1993.FORD
'

TAURUS STATION
WAGON

1

~RSVILLE '·A youth

rally
will b,e held Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at
the S~versville Community :Church
featut\ing speaker David Dailey and
the s~spel group ,pel\~er~~~~Ce. ~
pic o~ all ages welcO.me.
·

.

10

Only

4 Dr, 4 oYJ, auto, A/C, tilt,
crulu, AIIJFii cau, PS,
PB, PW, POL, MORE.

eval~ti~ and ·~&amp;\th ~linic .

ro~RqY :·.' ~- Leqpold Liss,
M.D. to present program on
Althiliiners Disease, Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center, Thursda~, 7 p.m, 1Pul!lic meal; ~:3Q to 6 .
p.m-:'~H:i!&amp;ilbs't'Dfi\:tifs ·Is ~~iclll'"
director
of
the
Columbus
Alzheimer's Care Center.

all power equip;

CIIU,

· : 'MASON ·c "Strand Down for
Vets ~d ·Sel)jm: Cltizllns'l Thur~ay,
9 .a.nil'lo s·p.m! it the VFW Post,
Mason, W. Va..Medical services and

-~MEROY

Months

all po•er lnctutllng ....,

ONLY 3,000 MILES

~~=~
~J~;;.,~at~:tbc·
centi
· . to s~rvice
discuss per.-

'!tC time of the Aptct;i~ Revo!ll" :.
uon, the &lt;:ordage tildusfry was 11.te .
country's largest ipdus!IY,.. ~ntirely ·
dependent upon bemp. Every cl~..
had its rope walk. and every' 'saiUi!J .
ship needed hemp for its Oal\uili: , .
ropes and sails.
·
· .. ,
At his pre~~Cntatiori, WJrtshafter
will show a number of items 9L
clothing made froll) · help , and wiH. .
also introduce his Hemp Seed Cook·
book which he wrote:in ..l991 : · · ,..

"·

For24

2 Dr, VI, IUtO, .... oOncl,
·. AIIJPII - · tit, ~

THURSDAY ,. •·
· POMEROY -- Meigs Education. . Service
special meeting,

..

., 0/
. .• ' /0

VI, I apd, A/C, tlh,
ctuiN,·AMifM cau, PS,
PB, PW, POL, Pwr Mat.
LOADED.

.mOte lllllel or fund nillen of aay
,type. ltan are printed. as apace
pen.ita - ......... be paranteed
*!I nan a !!Ill lftc.•••lber or days.

.,

' '

MUSTANG GT

ucl lpeCill eveatl. The
la-..ed .to pro-

POMEROY •• Don Writshafter,
speaker, Sons of the American Revolution, Thursday, 6:30 p.m at the
Meigs Museum, Pomeroy.

·"SPECIAL FINANCING"
All
Deere Lawn Tr.actors

1996 FORD
EXPLORER.

.:.leadar. 11 not d

"+

'

1997 FORD

:p.:oat p-OuplnlliDI to alUIOunce

!'On Wirtshafter. ?~ner o~ ~
Oh1o Hempery, Gu~svtlle, w1ll be
the speaker at the m~tins tonight of
the Sons of the American Revolution at the Meigs Museum, 6:30p.m.
His presentation will focus on the
history of hemp in the Ohio Territories. Hemp uiled to be a vecy impor• &lt;
tant crop on almost every farrit and
Jl!e ,&lt;:ltlti.valion!Df hentjJ peodw:ed the."
area's leading cash crop for many .
yeas. According to '1'/irtshafter, at

at times, stomach, are the organs that
can be donated ..Corneas, skin, bone,
heart valves, ligaments .and tendons
are the .tissues that can be donated.
Organs are minched to the lisi of
people waiting for a transplant, she
sai4, !l111Phasizing· that the donor's
family· does not pay for anything
.associated with the donation.
' '". ·
• "· - •
4"''\.;

.

gifts or produce, it was noted, and
sometimes can handle them better-if
they know they are coming. ·
· The hint of. the month was for
Jerry Baker's green ·up tonic·· a cup
of beer, 1/2 cup of molasses, I &lt;:up
ammonia.: I ·cup baby shampoo, I
cup mira~;le grow, I golf ball to 20
gallons of water. Stir well and water
plants.
Sunshine for the month will be by
Eleanor Knight. Next month will be
a tour of Karen's Green house, May
7, 7 p.m.
The club. did a project with
Chester school. Holter, Kathryn
Mora, and Eleanor Knight worked
with the children. and Debbie Miller
helped with refreshments.

: : lbe CommoDity Calendar ill

·SAR to ·hear history. of,.h.e.mp ·
\C.:;· .

peels help roses, and that· com and
·sunflowers go well together.
She said earth worms are· very
beneficial and that adding listerene
inn the water keep cut Rowe~ fresh .
To kill weed seeds and fungus, soil
must be heated to 1808 degrees.
Bunger had samples of spring
flower honey and fall flower honey,
horehound candy and rose Jictal
beads.
·
For roll call members named new
. vegetables to 'try including scarlet
beans, patty pan squash, bush
cucumbers and flowering kale.
.
In green thumb notes the sugges·
tion was' to plant a ,row for the hungry since soup kitchens rely on sur·
. plus food. Local churches and charity groups_are at ways happy to accept

{l.abllehecl u a free ~rvke to non·

, He will present "The Vision
Thing" Ill 7 p.m. friday, "Seasons of
a Couple's Life" on Saturday-at 7
a:nd "I Walked Today Where Jeslls
Wlilked" on Sunday, 8:1S apd 10:30
a.m. services.
A native Canadian, Dunbar's cur· ,
rent ministry as a eollege president
follows a pastorlil , ministry of 22
years with the Bow Valley Christian
Church in Calgary.
· He was founder and speaker for
DR. R. ALLAN DUNBAR .
a, television ministry in Canada,
'
taught courses iii person evanselism, Puget Sound Christian College . .
He has served a variety of capac·
Christian worship, Archaeology and
ities
with the Billy Graham Evange·
Bible, was an adjunct professor for ·
listic
Association, and has been a
the master of ministry program at
Kentucky Christian College in the school of evangelism faculty memfield of pastoral leadership and inter- ber for many years and often serves·
penonal relations~ips, and currently ·as the host dean for both the Canadj;."
teaches classes in traditional Bible at an and American Schools.

DONOR AWARENESS - Steve. Burrla, hurt tranaplant recipient, apoke to atudttntS 8t Melga High
Schopl Wedneaday morning aboutthelmportance _ol the organ ..end tlaiue donor program. · · · ..

The regional spnng meeting was
announced for . Saturday at
McArthur.
A repon w,as given on the
Chester-Shade di11ner by HQiter who
noted that $3,5® was cleared. She
thanked the gar~ club for dessert
and help.
'
· The program consisted of a book
report on "Roses Love Garl.ic": by
Bunger. The book is on companion
planting which was started by the
Indians planting com and pumpkins
together. She also said th~t hemp can
be planted with,.cabbage to prevent
callbage flies, that clover and alfalfa
provide nitrogen; that ll!fgc plants
protect small pla,nts, the onions repel
cabbage flies, tli;t.t cucumbef slices
repel ants in the house, that banana

:Co,mmunity
· calendar

. R. Allan Dunbar, president qf
. Puget Sound Christian Colleje, will
be in Middlcpon this weekend' ,to
conduct "Renewal ,'97" at the Mid·
dleport Church of C~st; Fifth at

talks of his

,.

'

.

Dundar brings 'Renewal
'97' to_::Mi_
ddleport
·.

recipient

I

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A llle1IIC!rial le!Vice for Maida
.Mora held and new ·officers

~ I !loft't
think It's my place to blby.:Ut all~
time. What do you dUnk? ··Mike :
Dear Mike: Tall diis over with
your dad at once, I think JOU haw ~
legitimate complai1,11: If Ifill doe111't
work, 4i&amp;euss the p!\1~ with u
adult •• perhaps your .mooi coun~
selor Ql' .. neighl\or ,., who coulcl
intervene on your' behalf, and mate
your f•ther '.undpnllad thil he i'
being unfllir to you. In ..the m~~
ti~, 'JSUg&amp;t!St that yOu ~~&amp;Jt ~
and·see if you have a dusma&amp;e ~
might be· il!teteSted ''~~~ a 'res~
baby·sittins job. .
.
.:.,..:;
SeDCI q~ to Au•~.
Creaton s;rDdleate, 5777 w. C.·
wry Bh·d., Suite 7GO, LOI A•1el11,
Calli. 90045
. &lt; • • ...

They are not about ·Ill
lime to call and give you the
opponualty to uy "no."
People Who don't wish to be
interrupted durina dinner should
invCII ia e answerins machine and
IICI1letl the calls.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a IS. year-old boy. 1\vo years ago. my dad
· married a wqman .with two girls,
ages 3 and 5. Now, all I do i$ baby.. ,_,_ ,
. .s1'ther~.
,
~
I get stuck watching them all d8y
on weekends and after school ·on
weekdays. I cannot so out with my
friends or have any after-school
activities. If I don't show up at home
on time, I have privileges taken
away.
.
These kids are OK, and I don't

aood

Qrgan

. ~teve Burris of Point Pleasant,
W.Va. gave a personal account of his
life as a heart transplant recipient
Wedne'sday to students at Meigs
Hish School.
·
Burris suffered a massive heart
attack 5everal years ago whii:h
I'CS)IIIed in the need for a transplant.
The program was a part of the
National Organ and Tissue Donor
Awareness Week, April 20.26. He
was assisted in the program by
members of the Meigs unit of the
Point Pleasant Medical Explorers, a
group of about 30 students who are
planning to pursue health care professions. ·
·.
·
After Burris' talk to the students
abOut his personal experience and
stressing the need for organ donors,
he passed out donor cards and·asked
the students to take them home and
talk to their parents about the program . .
Pat Huffman. R.N. of Pleasant
Valley Hospital who heads up the
Donor Awareness Week program
said that the main goal of the week is
to highlight the importance of organ
· . and tissue donations.
"On average, one donor can help
save more than 200 people, depend·
ing on what is donated and how it is
used," she explained.
. "Like most people, your first ·

'
ult if it is a mind beiiiJ with ihctn,

.e. bester Garden Club seats new officers

.

~~iss ~~i;~d '

:
-'f.~lj:rs, Saturday, noon, luncheO..r
ar Trinity Church, Pomeroy. John
MilhOan, district · director of the
~o ~etired ·Teachers Assoeiation;
to spe'ak. Ft;jt1ulli:heon reserVations ·
Call 247·2723, OF 985•3580.
.'"

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.:r

sUNDAY ' t~l' , \'!~ .
; - ~RD·n· .Rey1v~ Cburch
of_: Chr~st~lr l:~*ist!llll _union,
. tlifoug~ M~)'_, :4; . S)IJ1ert. Salley,
. ipeaket\ ..&lt;jin~· 21: ' iOb Wiseman,

A¢128, Bvlll!liililllluljjft&lt;J',6,11man,
Qitcinnaii, Ajlii~ 29 to 'May 4. All
ices, 7' p.t,tl.

•

'!o,.~ .•

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1• •
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'199.1

1•96

CUTLASS SU~REME 2 Dr; Y6, wit, air PW, P
DELTA 88 LS '"'~s, l•••d ...
.. i:·..

$6;996

'~.· :· ,. , ·~ 5 ~7,995 .
.5-:10 BLAZ' 4!',.&amp;xt.IMINr,-. •~ t.ad•.,tl, tn1
S20,595 ,

1991 OIM C1500 ~x..-.wt.. Slvtr.-, YI,Aito,IIIOI't............. .-............SII,999
JI~Y
, 4x4, laaW ...........................·..................59,999
air, s,...:., PW, loW lilts.......................

12,995
Yl,lealller,.-1101----· 517,900
5
VI, lwlller, txlnlda
6,995
--o..-"--~- 5 12,995
-,........,.......... .. ,,___'9,800

.......
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1991 .
TEMPO

5

•,

56,949
1989 MERCURY
GRAND MARQ.UIS

•.

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t99l.FORD•
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EXPLORER
XLT .
' .

• . POMEROY : Unity .Singers to
· ~sent "Heaven Bound" 7 p.m.
Suilday, Zion Church of Christ.

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··

' ·&lt;'1-..

POM~OY

- Evangelist Charlie
speaker Sunday, 6 p.m.
~ ~ « t est Outreath Church. . .
~argravei,

~ONDA~ .

·'
· · POMSROY .. Meias CquntY·; ·
Veterans ~rvice Commissjqtj, 'PQ .
p.in. Monday a1 the Veterllll Serv~ ·
Office, MUlberry Ave.• Pome,oy. , •

'

Come Jola Us.ler A I••
••••••., b • ., • •,.,. ~
Very Suitestlrll 2,.., , • .,,
•

••

{

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•

. : EAST MEIOS •• Eastern BOII"d
of Edu&lt;:atloa, special seuion. Mon·
uy, 6 p.m. hip S&lt;:hOollibrary. .

. . 1.~/

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r·'-j-~~~-·1_o_•_11__•.o_·~_-_r_e_•~~·-~_n_il~:~·--~__,·· ~~-~-:~:~~~-~~-~-~-~- ~~- ~-~~-~~P~.a~m~~·r~ar~.~·~~~~~~!~~·!~~~~Oh~~~~~~~~;:,
. .
1ieortlii. MUFFLER SHOP ·
'

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·.••..,..;.i '

sM BdbHQea .

.a.111¥tll1111a• .··

Carmichael's Farm &amp; L8wn

.

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(614) 446-2412 orToU Free HI00-594-111

Guaranteect Service

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ologlnt--

.,,

1111 _ , . . ,
l&gt;cliocsln~-·s--

' QThl ........

11111--

.

·-·-

I p.m. Friday • .._.,.. • TNII

1 p.m. -..oy • ESPN

w.

• WlniiiOft CUp,
11100
1p.m. ~·T~•EsPN

-

lllSUI:li1Ce

.

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... ..., s.uw. 4131.

. .. . . ~1.1.

to.u... s 1r1,1•

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WIIITOH CIJIII': Jeff Gonion . ,

o..;-

. fo&lt;lho23nltimlclllil--in

"'
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Pox:., .... ..,,

. woy. ...............

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tht ~~ 500 II MIJMIYIII$pel0-

Jimmy...,_.

But-

IOiy
s~

driYtt ~ e.nn.dl't

mltlculoully- up

•

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ond...........

~

_had_;

••
•

1

No. 3 . . .

.

.-...
;..

1. J.tf Gordon (2)
4 up, 4 dQwn . ·
2. Dale olinett (1)
Polni 1e1c1 l\alv8d
3. Tony.._.. (3)
Nwrqa lhere
4. Rlllly Will- (4)

. . .... ...,.. (1)

Dottn, dig 18118 .. Jeff
1'1

DrlMI hll'-1 out
10. -llllott (10)
Rettdy for lho big tnock

Great Ford ~ope

.....

--

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~

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,.-

~I

Bobby Hem IliOn will to

.,

- I n hlotory oolltO man
n-,tlyflllocllltO Klnf'O

-

-RiclltrdPtllyrotlnd
llbr the 1112 NHOI'I, the
•••rt~~M IDMinplan from

La_ I')

BcundiO win

•• . _ , - - (llntranlled)

""*'

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"1ton
Bobby Haml

39th 10 lhid
7. II* !amharclll')
R'a been 10 long

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.... 17
flAir B

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• IPOUIII: Do1&gt;b11
• CAll: No. 43 STP Pcinlioo
Grand Prix, bf
R-d Ptlly.
.HOMETOWN:
In
N o -. T.,n., now llva in
Ml . .Miot. -.:oonn.

CDC. COIIIOO. Ctwlalt, N.C. 1
M11r 100. Oclww, OIL

............ ""'.

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.,.,., 20
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tOO,nea~yS&lt;Imllllcinlneam·
.

'lllon finllltlduconrllnlhoGoody'a
50011MarllnaVIIIo.Vo.
• RI!CeiiTLV YOU TMRU IIAC
. El'll A ROW
GElTING CAUQIIT IN A
WRECK BEFORE ta LAPt1
H
.
am

•

wtlland-H--11
good, and my P1XIIloc ,_
_,""""
0111
,..... ' - · tton
.
ollord lo run quick• to millie
- " "· 8ul...,.. "

you

or

~lnlo-aco:::::-you·

HAD'IEEN RUN. QETTIIIQ
FRUSTRATED?
-veart n•a real truMrat.......
,. lt

...
,
ceruAady lloW down.• .

'.

:TriVIA..

--~~~-- , . , II 1111 !Ocldn1l

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NO FURNITURE

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mrs ' . ".

recoivl polnui!&gt;IMdon~lifY•·"'! .''·'•' '
"
'
• ' t
in&amp;~otca..-rpolltll. c
· ·
· p~d!&lt;y a(e ln~,.P35lp .
lhe~'oWMr polnlltlltdlnp:
· .
. 28, 25,
' eu:.
.
34, ,I,
l'fii)Ulelcletoribed in 1he (1!0·
.....,. porqrapb weoudded 11
the·~ ofthoament lfuoO·
y
l ·,~,...
d
_
1
u !!:-..-I •nun""
--ti,-:NAICM
TIIIIWitll 'lburlllnl, C/0 Tilt

'fhil Week

..1

MAtmNSVIUJ!, VI. - The

Mlltinsvill&amp; Spc atny inf'Jekl
(lito,. beiltsno- llore) Is
· lull of ..-a ......... Ernio
trvaa'a fuiUR. Some llllillthttt
.lhe - - drivor will not
moke lllhr&lt;lvP t h e - u
driver of Rol&gt;otl YIIOI' Mo. 28
Ford
trv~n made 11,.
"''""""·
bock 10 the aorioo llit yw, winnina tw:o rtee~afte, be.iftl c:riti·
cally JftJunod In a.,... 01 Mlchipn in 1994. But~ recent
'lncidenli. off' VICk IIIII on. havt

·:o

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Inadequate staffing center of
:· latest GM ·labor·problems · · ·

-~111111:

. . . . of 33td, znh,

21111and401h.

-.

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-~

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N:c~k,

the blame for 1he Texao c:ruh 011

""cond t:ar," Joe
,
WiiiiWi~ ICIMI. e
ive for.
Pope: Yaltl hired Butch Stev,ns neal wee~ s nee II TalllllleP
to assist Pope.
Supenpeedw•)'·
WHAT ROllY WAin'S:
AUTON'S fOLLY: The
A W.ek aJO 11 Briltol, Robby· ·
ltod&lt; of Sj&gt;eedway Motorspons
Gordon wu quoted u hinlilll
Inc. dropp:d In value by $26.3
thlt bis Felix SaloaiU-OWned
million aflcrthe to1er1tlll. 500 II
Chevrolet
of winTe- acounlioa to aa artode in
oin&amp; races buttllil ,a ,ilmw
the Doll as Mom ina News.
ff
.
ho. tlod ..._
wasn'l perfomtln&amp;•IO uu ·
RUIIy Wallaco, w co
. \bllal Saloateu- a
lhe fiOIOI """"'*""'"of the .
vuu• response last week at
p1 1n to fix the prOblem on Fridly. eanbanled 1.5•mllc u;ack, W
Briatolaloo railed eyebrow•.- The
Saholel aonou- lltat Oor·
publicly apolotiood for ltilo pw
1
'car owner iuued a series of
don 1nd the driver of S.b1tes'
'ttl~ rul~ ill the st,OCk's 4'P:
CfKM• thllllso seemed to piKe
·

Jbe lhouaden of lpUUCr n11

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t;Fi~~k ~.:.:,10.,...
of,...,.,,,-....
allljor
~ton, W~~ lJ ~the
I

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tn•""P OYer

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year,

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' .t •' AipleV, Wv 26271
,.

Bul.
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Phone (304) 372,~73
1~964-fORD . "'' .
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Rt. 2,11t 1M .....~a:~ .,...., 1132 ,•.:

Come See,Ua.!=or All YG.ur ·
'

DETROIT (AP) - .Cfwaes of .
Neaotiations in Pon1iac we~ to
Inadequate staffing an: at the center · resum~ today. Talks continued,
· of the latest lab,or problems at Gen- Wodnesdav iii Oklahcm!a Cilv. wile"' .
eral Moton Corp. · •
3,500 workers IIJ1l on strike.
.Two OM assembly • plants ar.e .
OM agreed .i!l its national UAW
idled 6y strikeS. lllld more walkouts contract, signed in December, · to
may he cci~plas as GM i:qntinues to maintain at lease 9S percent of iiS
trim its w&lt;llk fernie throu8h attrition. uni011 jobs over the next th~ years.
The tailor·problems come in lhc But the contract allows OM to
. \midstofOM'sbigestomt.Jiofits · exclude jobs lost ·to productivity
·
· 'model lineup in decides. which pins.
: ;involves R:-enjincerina iiS cars and
I(!Sues of staflinl! .nd hirinJ! at
: 'liucka so they ~uire fewer workers individual plants are. nesotialed in '
' 'ijliil ~auto asiiCmlilc.
. local contractJ. OM still has 26.!oc:al .
: : • OM etimiut~l'about IO.OOOjobs contraCIS under neaotiation. ·
llltely~dlrouih ~iire~nts.
More GM strikes are probllble if
: :Jist
; •8 has cut 62.000 hourly jobs since Oklahoma City and Pontiac Easi 'are
•; t99t. But the attrition has ()il IIOIIMi . nor settled soon. said one UAW offi.
: :elanti wone lb1in odlen.
'.
cial, . speaking on . condition of
: · i In the casc:or OM'a Pontiac East anonymil)'. Likely wp11 11e peru
;~t!J!..alli OUIII~:DctrOit, the planis whose c l - 1\'0IIId lead to .
:~
does not..- to be '*~Pt the llhuldown of OM -.bly plants.
O:with 100 IIIIIIIY WOibn after lhe fc· That hlppenod lUI year when the
' 10ry is r'FiOOicd next year for ita UAW.uiick two OM lrrille plant$ in
-redesianed 1999 pickups. 11 hit Dll)'ton. Oliio.
·
:offered to hire nae tempO! A') worlt·
Additiollllllrika . . ·unlikely II
:crs to act dirou&amp;h the cum:nt silflina OM's Bia Three competitors.
•sllonaae. llullhe UAW W&amp;llts .per·
FoniMOIIII'CO.hllsealcdallbut
:manelll jobs.
· ·
one IIMII local contract. Chrysler
: "lt'se..eati8lly fllllnjobi venu Corp. has only one ~~~~n:solvod COII;competitiw-." said O.vid Cole. 1I'ICt at a Detroit CIIJine plltnt, where
4ileclor of the University of Michi· 1.156 WOibn hiWI ' - ' on llrike
:,.. 's Ofllce·f(ir 1111 Sludy of Aulo- •1- April 9 over COIIIpiiiY plw to
;mcrtiW 'I'NitlpoitMio1. Mtr lhe IUiion , _ - ,lbou&amp; 300 jobs,
'WOUld IICCIP'•IIjiCIWY joblto aliaThllllrike hll fan:ed Chty* to
:v~~~c IIEihon·llml j o b - · thia shut doln or reduce opulliow IIIII
&amp;:ouwlle ..... - , . _, Qllickly... oc11er
Ned America. idli..
: ,.._ s.; 111111 third OM plant 23.942 WOibn .ac1 haiti"' mos~ or
illldlirJ a UAW Mr1rie ill twO 110111ha. its li&amp;hl lnl:k prodr'Ciio-. ·
The..._ ......... Tueldly. Wolk·
The 111111 OM 11rike lll'fecll abou1
en · 11 OM'• Oklllloml City ear '·~ w01ke1S: '11111 iacludel ~ .
. liiiiJ ............ Ill 'strike ~ .............

time

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--G~INC.

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Oave
Harris Ext. 104
or Bob Atwood Ext. 105 ··
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For More InformaticA
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nJI)IIlhtltltO uy, &amp;1i4 Wal'-,
; A lot of novicea lilt/ cion~ , ,,
underlllnd whlll l.U toi~IO&amp;
aboul - a lot of people in W.U '
Stree! -toot itlllca 1,_ ,
•
llley'l" JOina •• have to tnoclo . .
-ld•uds down,l'ldal- lhe
....
~
r·
~""". '-dllly,and all dtii.1Mo•t
Umt Ill_be a hnle IIDII1tr lboul
1
llto,o.~ - I ""lathe
P'W'
.t ) t.
,

~IIOCt-.rM•.Pcw""-WI!Ikot ,...._, ..

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... Apri14.

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WALL.TO WA.LL SAVINGS

. ·~Wf PICKE I liNt! •.Dlnnll Jlllldiil, ld, lilcl .Cliff Bowling
111111 thl plcklt line outlkle 1M Oldllloiu City Geneill llotuia
plantl\Medly .. tllbconllnuld blhe11il tile UilltlciAulo Vfcirk·
: . . and Gil. (AP)
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ricoo-..-

.Kjll Polly'O . . . . .

'IM~(N.C.JGIIIIII•D' 'A DdbyuniMIII,_.I»nf

.

992-6611

. . who anlil!ll!ll, ·

Tlladagotlll1111/1?

uiocn thll put in question lrvan's
future with, Yates and sponsor
Texac:o-Havuline.
Fint, IJ\Ian and wife Kim were
invoiYad in a rt~~tt outside a Cor·
oelius niJlttdub, lWi~~e~&gt;, early
on llle momln&amp; of Much 30.
Tltenan .,.,,..._....,.._lrvaj
rammed the mcMionleiJ car 0
.
~~ Slckln whlleTerac•na ~~ -~
I CIUllon aaan JI.U on ,..n
·6. trvan 1ricd 10 place the blame
011 his radio apouer afterward. ·

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:,::,::, Park St.
Middleport

pol~'"mlybypaul~l~'i''•'': "."

,__ ___ o-v...,•.

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Evenihdriverdoes1191~ 1 . ,:_,,,JJ,

liotl-'\"•mioaattiiJ11~ ~-ol .

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. 11 ·f~r'f~.O:!.ri.c.

!-lin..,....

:L Will _

- ...... - ·
ltiiO'INO'I!

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llljtortaAw--lam1!fi-M.•

~~~.........

LIQUIDATION --SALE!!!

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·--..-ftnlottocl
-lUll-? · •· '

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a

wlllhonlcll- cllttlw- NASCitA

1. -

Call992-2155

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42 Clll,llle mnalai..

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l..uJlo Central Elementary School on Cban~l refused, and pohce say she
G1llette sa1d he doesn I expect the
Monday because. they didn't know thn:w a fit.
state attorney to prosecute the case.
: • ;pcevention class, was amsled on a what else to do w1th.l!cr and the par~: :felony battery cbtup.lwndcuffed and . ents could not be located.
.
, • whisked to' a juvenile c:enter where
"The whole 1dea was to &amp;ct the .
: • ~ she ~mained for hours until her child some help," said Largo police
:: : father took het hodlc.
· Capt. Joe Gillette.
·· •• • Authorities 5ay Chantel Woodard,
Largo police ofTacer Paula Cro!by
: : 6, kicked, hitlllld spill! a JChilol prin- .salcJ tlaC gid '!loved ~ chair clos_cr
:-- cipal and a police offiCer, who . to ,the televiSion dJ111ng the ~v1c.
•~ · showing a crime pcevention movie in · Others ·followed. When the chdd~n
:::class.
·
were told to return to their desks.
.. Police said they arrested tile iirl at

Mo!iJnovllo Ia. • you ...... the
coriDOhlrd, you '*'octuolly
~~~~-. Voutuot-to

w••

'J.:ARQO, Fla. (AP) - A flnt·
~: : grac~e girl, distuptive during criape

·:.

the sianln&amp; field. he ,.~~ ·.', : .' _ , .•,~

.Advertise on this p~ge

~

, • ,I

THAT OTHER DRIVER8
DONTP
'Witti'-IOitiOI!tu"ll

ATTENTION ADVERTISERSt!

•

•
••
•••

2polet , 810Pilveto;311op

Reicue Coordinlllon c.m.r at Lllngley Air Force Base In Virginia,
. returns efter dropping .off two para rescue team membere to
apend the night on 13,CJOOl.foot Gold Duet Peak Tueadlly et the
Coloraro Anny National Guard Base in Eagle, Colo. Pletcher ulcl
the mlaelon of the IMm
to ...rch.tor remalna. (AP)

;::~year-old girl charged _with felony, .led from scho.o lln cu~s

.,

30.For•he .. stoftllefi•ld,the
polnti fall off in incrementl of
·three: 127, 124, 121, 118. e1&lt;:
In lddition, 1 five-poini bonus
is awarded each driver who leads
al i0111 one lap, and anolher five·
bonU5Is awarded 1he ono driver
wholeadllhemo&amp;llaps. Bya
,
_ beii&lt;Ut scenario, lhe winni•
•• .
dri"'f.:
~' could receive alilaay 'u_.(.:~~"'·
tB'" - ilince'hewould~-.J~, ...~·
·
.
- ;""'
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lol a lap ,IO wtn the rac:o, ~ • t,;. &lt;
he would -lve five~
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RETURN FROM MISSION - Air Force Mej. Gen. Nele Running,
tight, tooke et hie w.tch after CoL Denver Pletcher, from Air .Force

been

•614-992-6520
.
'

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lnp

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mUClh yoa .., do lboul II'

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FROM THE ARCHIVES:

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... ftO.Q!XIInO- agolnal

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wu 1 lOt euler 10 awallow
after we mode the lop up (II
Brlllol) ond finl0hedt31h. Thai
wu u good u o llfllllo.me
ofterwhllwewtnllhrough.l
dOn't know whit 1t ·11. We uaull·
ly don't OM lntO ::'~

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fEUD Of THE UK
(laolf Bodine vs. NASCAR

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~401J. ....... ~,· ,
Budlt . . Qien.--GIIn,N.V.
f1'W DtiiiiMII400, lroli*lyn, Mictl.
Goocly'II00,.,_\01. ·

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....

Aug. 10
Aug. 17
Aug. ZI

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Food Clf' 1500. ..... Twwt.
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TOP I 0

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HamiltOn~ UIUITIICI1hltead
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Dto1 AASCAR tan,
Rec!ody NASCAilTltls ~k
hu rec;eived seqeralle11en from r
new llld veteran 111oe fans across
lhe counuy about an ,c~~:planation
for llJe J&gt;Oinl5 ll)'llem. He,. goes:
Alt!l&lt; efld of ..cb.Winstoti
Cup race, the winner receives .
17~ puinll. The num,ber of po~nts
· each' diiver receives falls off.ln
five.pOint incrementt for poli·
tioosl-6: 17S, 170, 16S, 160,
155, 150. The poinlllhen falloff
. 1n"four.point incremeatal~ posl·
lions 7-il : 146,142, 1:18,134,

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i'llld been -.cling ftw 307 . . . In I rt:IN.

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' · Qluollllrl'frln, .qo,

. FROM LAST WEEK

-

Jam a !lASCAR r.n and I
enjo~ llle lpCI1 very much, bull
have "'"nWO!Idori~J .a_IIOut how ,
Jhey
lhe poiotl. I would
approciale V&lt;ry much If you
~,,aP,lail\ all,aboul ~-~~~'""1.-,
and'liahdinlf.
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s. KIMr ... Jt., 447.

7. 'Dft~ 1,2141.
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4. 111*1W' ......... 1,011 . .
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7. Alctly Rudel Sill .

CIIIJEFF
. . WARNERU

2. Todlf...._ 1,4tl4.

I. ~LA.f011, 1 ,.1 .

s..... GardDn, 1.171.

,, ,,, Guaranteed:',

Dear·YOUJ Tum,

-

WMIOIIOUP
1.0. ...... 1.2!1.
1. 1'My~U14 .

-~P.r:o~iprlal ~rvice

2

1997 POINT\ I TANDING\ •
For Hom eow ner s

~Qat~·NElw 8,. U?!Jd

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'""'"'""
a.,lltlpppI p.m. 8oUdly
•'lllllldoga • ESPN2

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101:0

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• Million C. W'll 11 UI llillat 0 Fl'fj:i.
4 p.ni. Friday, • ESPN2

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_They pl.nnCd to blow I!P the an info~ant.
·
. ,
that Taylor and the Adams couple
Mitchell E~raY~- &amp;: Development
;!lha~n Dec Adams, 37; h1s w1fe, , were high-ranking members of the
DALLAS~ Pedeallaa~ts fOiled Corp.,.plant m Bridpport. abOul 55 Catherine Dec ;\dams, 35; Edward white. supremacist group.
·
a plot by four ~ t~ lilow II!' a .· mi~ nonhwes\_of P~ W~~- .
r.ytor Jr., 34; and Carl Jay W~om
Asked about the possible Klan
IWIJ!aiPIRI&amp;IIt, diverting llltenbOII . , T1)e ·affidavits .said !till! JI'OUP .Jr.. 34, we~ arrested Tuesday· and ties. Garrity said: "I dOn' t know
• &amp;om an armored car robbery ·that :hoped lhe ejtplosions lllld ~lease of · charged with federal conspiracy to about that ... Belonging to the KKK
could helf! .liand_futu~ tenori~t acts, toxic sal would tri&amp;ser acatlstroplie . commit robbery. U.S. Attorney Paul . is not against the taw...
an FBI~Jenl wd.
. .
on May I. w~n they· thought .lbe ·· Coggins said he would seek further
While making the arrests, agents
The suspects, ,who were ordered armored car would l!ave . the most charges from a grand jury.
also searched three homes and seized
held without bail Wednesday, D!oney.
. •
.
At least one suspect, Tavlor. was assault riHes, bomb fuses, frag~n­
P!anned f~ or five seconc!My ex~ · . "They MUj:tpated they m1ght a known member of a North Texas tation grenades, gas masks and pbocslons to !dlll.aw~f~ment oftic:ials w1p,e out,hllf ~f (rural) Wise Coun- .faction of the ~u Klux Klan known. tographs of the Mitchell gas stomge
.
' u the True Kmghts. Taylor wore a tanks, a Loomis armored car and two
. responding to 1111n111al bomb tlueat,· · ty, Ororlily·wd:
· , FBI~~F,nt Rober!.Oarrity, said.
· ·The money WMIO be used to (lind '' Klan robe during a 199A demonstra- banks.
.
l_n the ensuin1 chaos, the group future terrori~t IICIS, he said.
lion in Stephenville and identified
The FBI said the suspects had
planned 'to~ &amp;II .,moiCd c.._-ouiSide
~_uthpritil!s ~fused tc!'~be lhe· himselfio reporters. . .
·
exploded trial bombs and were wellthe First Nlllonal Bank ofBridseport pohtical bent of the JfOup, wh1ch had
One fonnerTNe J(mghts member prepared to carry out their plan.
· w\th'hopes of collecting $2 'l'illion;
under su~llance for about six told .JOCAS-TV in Dallas-Fort Worth .
~. ,acoonling to FBI iffidavits.
' weekS. lifter poli~ received a _tip from.
.

· By CHRII NIWTON
A..aa.lr,lll P; II~ W;lllf

. · ·st.'ppl'y
•.' • . ·.'

die .ua.ft 10 l CIIIIIOIIalt about ·stonri dumps heavy snow. Bad about IS miles southwest of Vail, he
.....-~~~," Air Fon-:e Maj. 0.. H.ls wi:llhca lllteldy had delayed recovery tried 10 ~trieve the bigest piece of
RumtiDJ said WJct 1 IY ni&amp;hL "The attempU until Wednesday.
wreckaJe'. The piece seen in aerial
lelldl conli-."
The operllion required prec;ision photos tumod out to be biger !han he
Alw lhe ~ w¥ retrieved, from lhe six people on board them- was. The rescue specialist had to settwo Amy N!llioilel 0111111 dwlpplla '3 helicopter and Antonio, dangling tle for ~wo smaller pieces.
cllopped four climbers Ill the pea's 100 feet below. ·
·
· Runni!)l said maintenance recoros
I l~footleveiiO tellth overniJht, '
Antonio, who is trained'to iescue identified the two pieces as pans of
The sct~ttlen taave cellular dowMd. pilots bebind enemy lines lhe plane that disappeared from a rouJ11!oi1os lllld all an: experienced hi1h-• and has climbed Mount McKinley. tine tniining mission over Ari z~na on
altlt. . climbers. said Col. Denver fined·.~ the operatiqn with com- April 2. One piece is plastic-insulat~tchet. 1be ~on lhe !"oun· . ~to move the TII·S3 helicopter ed tubing aile! wires, descrilicd as part
llln .a lso- be1ter 1111:1' anlictpaled. "a little bi~ to the right *little bit to of a d~vice used to -control flaps. The
The puii'CSCue tean~•ls tryin1 to ••the left."
.'
olher is metal with the markings of
. recover more' of the jet's ;.,.,t~. . Once he·reached the snowy terrain ·turbine parts made by General Elec· ·
discovered Sunday, before • spring in the Holy Cross Wilderness Area. tric.

·- FBI agents foil . plan. ~~ ·b·l ow up gas plant

'

~ :·Ridenour

,.

St. Rt. 248
CJ!H!•r
885-3301

t

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IAUM LIMIER
'"

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'',ol.'· t It

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THI8
WEEK

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1'llldlgiS.J $
llldlo ........ -

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;
BAOLE.Colo..(AP)-AIIpiiCill
. opaQona Clplll ...,... by Clble
; •xt 10 a .awy, 13,000.foot Rocky
: ~ peak to retrieve pieces of
&amp;II Air Pon:e wllpl&amp;lle lhlt v.Ushed
• line W~~Cka 110.
-. " · HOVt:rin1over Gold~ !'elk, a
! helicopter lowaal 'lllc:h. St!- ~
' Antonio, who was alile tci ·~vc
. two small pieces .of the -ltod A·
10 Thllllderbolt'from.dle ruQod ter·
:rain Wednesda~.
·
··Then: w~ 110 lip ofmiuinJ pil&lt;it
C..,t. Craie Button.
' .
· "I don't ~now if Capi.in Button
wu wid! the aircraft Ill' wu,not wit~~:

1011 Noi.th S1toi1d Ave. • MlddlwpjSII t, OH

~

..

•

[Air ·Forc8 re~rleves warplane wreckage

.r,;;;;;;Po;:-;~

Starting at $79.95 .

The Deily Sentinel • Page11

:· No •lfln of mlulng pilot

.·. -~
_·. ··titl'\..._ 2!:~_
t:t
• ). J.
~
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Mu.ffkr &amp;. Tail Pipe

888 Pinecrwt Drive
G1Wpvlia.
AcroM lr,om GllllaAulo Salle on old Rte. 35 WWt
NeW Summer Helin Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

~ e Middleport, Ohio

.

'

U:s9-'· - ..

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

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.

INCLUDES:
LIVING ROOM SUITES
DINING ROOM SUITES
·COFFEE '&amp; END TABLES
BEDROOM SUITES
GLIDEa ROCKERS
· GUN CABINETS
TELEVISIONS
BOOKCASES
RECUNERS
MIRRORS
BEDDING
·cURIOS
LAMPS
DESKS
••.AND MUCH, MUCH
MOREl
'

FIRST COME
FIRST SERVED
WHILE
QUANTITIES

LA Sri

�.

r · Pllge

'

12 •l!le O.I.IY Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mllklllp Drt, Ohio

Fun food and fitness

· ~ -·

Publolll"n

Using vegetables for variety in a-diet

,:J.

(TWI udde .. brooopt to you actually may have started to plan
lly die Meip C.U.ty l'nYeDIIve . your own vegelable garden. Nothing

MOnCI10 COihl ' 10M
IIIII~ IJifll
I lllrlll

.......................
JIIIUIIIII fl 1111111 ......
ntillt/llllll PUMHt fer

Pulllo tllllae

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

...........
-···~

c a - l a t i or

be

ti;ronalllti(IMMI'*Inlle
. . .unt ., liCit .... .....

to purdtase them from a loclll grocery store.
raoalved . , till ...... 1ft ., ... _... ...... 1n
Coulltl Cawwlnlllllfl • fiMirlftlw I
t;:~ Healtll Se"lces Grant, Jackie laSies bener lhan home-grown veg.. ......
their effl.. 11 the CDunlrCt s' 'a,__ . . ,
,~ . . Studler, CoonliMtor and Linda etables sttaight from the -garden.
GARDEN RICE SALAD
Courtln -.'a ..,. 0111o
h
: . Killa. A....-~ Coordinator.)
Some of you may have already
I cup long-grain rice, uncooked ..,.. untii10:W - . . - Bon41'1 . lhall
~" • 1 Here in Southeastern Ohio there planted some green onions, early
112 cup peas (fresh or frozen)
II, 1M7 111111 tiMn It 1:00
p.m. Ill -'d ofliGI opined llplt 411111111 tlllllond.
L1' ' : is an abundance of vegelables. The
peas,
radishes,
or
lenuce
..
Hopefully,
112
cup
chopped
cucumber
1
IHd alauncl lor tile
. . . . . . beMIIalland
' · ~ep!tablcs may be grown in your
lhese crops have not been deslroyed
112 cup chopped sweet red - ~p- IIIII
1 r at4;
. marbll • lllcl lor lolplo
- : own &amp;arden, perhaps in the garden by the recent cold weather.
per
. A liNd llriMh TniOLIIIItl
-::.;. of a neighbor or a friend, perhaps
Workins outside in a garden can
112 cup chopped celery
l'ulllfMI'&gt;
or newer
model;, r •• ., ... ....,. lftd l'lllllld or dallvliMI Ia:
J-:. you purchased them at a local groprovide fresh air and exercise.
114 cup chopped green onions
10,1110 mi...; Y-1 Gaaollne
llelga, ' Cou.nty.
::~ : eery store or farmer's market, or may Maybe you are just in the early
114 cup chopped fresh parsley
• .,.lne; Mavy duty 4 ..,.,, Col• 'rr',IIW!I C.Zr" a w
• be you found them in a nearby field stages and all you may be doing is
3 tablespoons sliced ripe olives l'liilnual 1Nnemla,lon; all
"-o*'
0111'. 41711·. ·
•'"- or woods. Whatever the source of cleaning up some debrjs leftover
112 cup nonfat sour cream
wlllel drive; ··ower
Attention tit llk!den Ia
:~.-: your ~upply. V.egetables are a good .from the winter such as sticks or
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice atHrlng; pol[ller brakta; called to all .or ·· tho
tlrn ·on front; nqul......da OCMIIIIMd In
•· ·· choice for a healthy diet.
· · . leaves. Perhaps you· have plowed
I 112 teaspoon dried Italian sea- 77.10x11
.111x11 UrM on _ , (dual thll bid ....... PlflloulariY
·
The Food Guide Pyramid IeCQill· your garden and need to use a rake sonings
.: .
WMIII); 11 ,aciD GYW; 110 to tho . federal l.ttllor
'•
mends 3 to S servings of vesetables to get rid ·of some hard clumps of
114 teaspoon salt
GPII pump (PTO Driven); ltlndarlla Prov.tal- 11111
~~~ ~ every day. Eating vegetables pro- · soil. Shoveling th~ soil is good exerCook rice according to package 200 to 210 gallon . tank; Dnlt•llaoon .:W..-.
vides us with vitamin A, vitamin C, cise, too.
lneurenot
directions, omitting salt and fat. booeter I'HI ll!l'lth hole · varloue
Quartz work requl~llllilll, vartoue lqllll .
fiber and more. 'l{egc!ables are low
If sardening is not your thing, Rinse in cold water; drain ..Arrange .11"X110");
.MI (lx1100W or tiX' 100 OfiiMNiunlty provlalonl, IIIII
•• · in fat, low in calories and can be how about mush~m hunt.ing? Be peas in a vegetable steamer over W). l'uriiMI( epeclllelltlana the,
requirement l~r a
• · · found at a reasonable price. So why sure you know which ones are safe ' boiling waler. Cover and steam 2 provadtd In the blcl pfllll payment· bond · 1nd
don't we eat our "veggies"?
to eat! Here in Southeastern Ohio. minutes or until ~nder. Drain. Com- 1111111111 Dllloaaone.
parlorrniiiOI bOnd lor 10Q!I.
·" "; · A survey conducted by the Ohio .there are many hunters of the morel bine rice, peas, cucumber, and next 5 . ........ lpiDIIloltiOnl, 111111 .OitiMOCNIIIIUt~. .,
lillY b e - · . . . . . . COl
_ mmtnlo.._
r . Department of Health in Ohio's ·variety. Morels -are su~h a delicacy, ingredients in a medium bowl; toss bid,_
It the office at llelge
llcljllo llrUih 'lnloll
. • Appalachian region of 29 counties that a lrUe morel lover will not tell gently. Cover and chilL
No bllltler mey wlthdmil
Commllllontre. A
01 0 dOIIa,. will be hla bid within thirtY (30)
.. , ' ,. showed that our diets are low in veg- where their favorile patch is located.
" ' eiJibles. On the average, We aren't Some morel hunters have to com- Combine sour cream, lemon juice; required tor· Hah HI of cllye lllar tiM lloluel dlda of
pllne 1nd apeclfiOtttlene, the op•rill• theNot.
::;. even eating 3 $Crvings
·
pete with wild turkeys as well as Italian seasonings, and salt in a ch
..k mede poy11111 to-.
llolgl
County
The .Dietary Guidelines for other morel lovers to find this spring bowl;slir well. Cover and chill. Just
full . amount will Commtaalonora ~urwoa
Americans recOmmend that we need morsel.
·
before serving, combine rice mix- rlltUrnecl within thirty (30) tha Jl!ht 'o wa~• any
I; 3 to 5 servings ofvegelables and 2 to
If mushrooms are not to your lik· ture and sour cream mi~ture; toss . , . .,.., ,.... of'b ldl.
h1lonnalltln or to NlliUt any ,
boh
bid
mutt
bl
or
ell bldL
" .. 4 servings of fruit each day. For in~ and you are not sure which
gently. Yield: 10 servings ( 92 calc,
-panllfl
by
elthlr
,I bid
Janel Howanl, P1teldlnt
l; most of us, we can say that we need ones to eat maybe y,ou would enjoy ries per I cup serving.) Per Serving bonclln·an iinaunt of 10D!Io
.
.......County
l&gt;
at least "S a: day" total servings of some wild ramps. These grow wild Protein 2 . 8 g; Fat 0 . 6 g.; (Satu- al the bid amount with ·a
CommiiiiOfllf'a
;:: .. fruits and vegetables for good in most wooded areas but have been rated fat 0 . I g), Carbohydrate 18.4 aul'l,ty ntltlltctory to tiM (4121, 24, (I) q .Tc ·
·• health.
affected somewhat by the recent g; Fiber 1.1 g; Cholesterol 0 mg; alorlaald lle!ga County
1
;~ , .
Research conducted by the Amer- . frost. Ramps are another spring del· Iron 1.6 mg; Sodium 116 mg; and
·
KIT 'N' CARLYLE GD by Larry Wrtpt ·
.,, .. · ican Cancer Spciety has suggested icacy to many people. When it calci1,1m 26 mg.
that Americans who eat diets with comes to ramps ·you are either a
~~ - ..~ lots of fruits and vegetables may ramp lover or ramp hater, there
TOSSED GREENS WITH
. STRAWBERRIES .
, •.' "' have lower risks for some cancers seems to be no in between. Most
··,; '. than people who eat few of these . people like ramps fried with pota3 tablespoons unsweetened
:·t ' . foods.
·
toes; but there are a variety t.o ways orange juice
_ __
Many of us know tha.t by eating to prepare ramps. In fact there is _a
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
" _,. fruits and vegetables we increase ramp cookbook. If you are· a real
I teaspoon vegetable oil
f.· ·• 1 our supply of vitamin C and vitamin
ramp enthusiast, yo,u know about the
2 112 cups tom leaf leuuce
. ~ . ; A. We need to eat a least I vitamin A annual Ramp Festival held in Rich2 cups tom Bibb lettuce
,.. "' rich food every day such .as lorna- wood, West Virginia every Spring.
I cup sliced fresh slrawberries
l· . J toes, tangerines, winter squash; canMaybe you appreciate the beauty
2 tablespoons thinly sliced green
· · - · taloupe, peaches, sweet potatoes, of wild Howers. Visit the library and onions
• , . 1 carrots and greens. We need to eat a
check out a book on wildHowers.
I tal,llespoons plus I ·teaspoon
-~ ,. least I vitamin C rich fru!t or vegSpending the afternoon walking sesame seeds
.• .. etable such as kiwi, orange, broc- through the woods lrying to identify
coli, cabbage, asparaJ!US, green peP": the many wild Howers is a great
Combine first 3 ingredients in a
,,, · pers. or strawberries. We also need family activity. Your children could small bowl; stir well. Combine let·
;·n. to eat at least I high fiber fruit or · possibly use the information for a
tuces, strawberries, green onions
::, :. vegetable every day such as oranges, science project or as an assignment and sesame seeds in a large bowl: ·
' • · or broccoli. Get into the healthy in biology.
toss well. Pour orange juice mixture
: ~ ' 1:; habit of · preparing your families
Regardless of the reason walking over lettuce mixture, imd toss gently.
•· · fruits and vegetables with little through the woods, . up hills and Serve immediately. Yield: 6 servings
'· · ·• added ingredients such as bacon, down valleys is a great way to get 936 calories per I cup serviing. Per
. ·. ham, butter, salad dressings, salt or eitercise. After enjoying a day in 'the serving: Protein 1.1 g: Fat 2.2 g;
-~: : :~ added sugar. · On that next baked woods 'or working in your garden, (Saturated fat 0.3 g); Cl!fbohydrate
." potato, lry a low fat ranch dressing here are some vegetable recipes you 3.6 g; Fiber I. 0 g; Cholesterol 0
. ·~" · rather than butter &lt;1f sour cream.
may want to enjoy. The , vegetables mg; Iron 0 . 5 mg; SiXIium ~ mg aild
·' .,
With the coming of spring maybe used in these recipes might be grow- Calcium 12 mg.
..·' !·-,4 some of you have begun to think
or• ing in your garden or you may need
•
.,.

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.... -:"''M !'allot Will
...,_ 111 ooalltniolloll Of
; pt0Jdi'I4-'Y four 1111 "'

,. loot wtcltll tit
till roidl. Tine on T·
11t (loout C1mp Road),
- 14111111 In llnltll. 4100 fMt In lfnllh, 111111 11!1
lalt,IOOfMtlnllilgtltWIU
llo filled, One ar" T·t•
(Wilt lhldl Rold) will
11'11111 nr oonltrUctlon on
1.1DDIIII'Oiil. 'l'liepropand
proJHII ara IOOIIId In tiM
100 year flood plain. Till
County It ,llltartattd In •
dleou~ng
'10
tllle P"IJICI IIICI Nourll'll
publlo porooptlont of
lid¥~ lmpacta
tMt OOIIkl I'HII!t 11om tiM
prele,a . and poaauble
mlnlmlzatlon m•. .u~•·
lllncl Willian OOIIIIMI'III t0
County

•l'llltiVII

··'

•

. .'

Pill 173, and
141. Pll• 111, to tiM ptaca
of lleglnnlng, oont.elnlng
:LOll faNii,- or-.
· !(,_; aa Rout• ' ' ·aox
4lli
ci!Am; Ohio 417~
Audltor'e Parcel No. 03·
01007,00
.

•
•

Lon•'

Ohlo41743
Common ...... Court
· Melga County, Ohio
No. te-C\1-0111 .

c-

Broedvlaw llortgaga
Camp nr, Pllllntlfl VL IAwl8
Pulver,
Jr.,
at
al,
~

In pu,._a 01 an Ordar
01 lalt from Mid Court to
me diNOted, I will offer lor
aale .. pullllo auction, .. tiM
front door .of til a llelge
County Court Hou11, In the
City ol · Pomeroy an
fmt.y, lley •• 1117 lit 10:00
a.m., tha fallowing
ct.crlbtd ..........,
Situated In the T-hlp

of Chaater, . County of
llalge, and ' State of Ohio,
enc1 In u.. Ohio
Purahaaa, and furth•r
bounded and d•..rtbed a1

eom...,.,·a

followe:
lhlng In Seeton 24,
3 North,
· 12

.

..,JI*alaadat121,711D.DD
1'lftnl 01 . ., To Ill aold
tor not Ina th8n'-thlrda
of the •ppralaed value •
.2,870.00 oaahllfl ChiCk
only .. U....OIIIIL hlanc.
oaahlara aback at;~ly :-'lhln
thirty
daya
alt•r

•
.

'

"

.

.......
CJM. ..
.........,

''

,...,..,.

rlfi:z, leaas us straig_lit

''.
'

'

•

'

·"

BOftLE GAS -.

. .

~~~lit

'

F• lame, Farm, Buslnas and Industry ·
Complete Line Of Atlanta Heaters In Stock!
All For The Low Price Of
• Normal LP. Gas Tank
Installation
{W'Ith 25 Feet of Copper Tubing) ·
• Rent Free Tank With Purchase of 400 Gallon
Per
Season

.

Dill • Lilt•• • lltOP at ltcaa cltaat I ,

.• .._-a••---=·

'

For IliON .Info cell 0.0....;1111
(JOlt) t1N107

•

1

•

.

. • ,4 --~378
Llltm Mowlittl•

Gutter Cllenlng
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

. u,...,g

·10" Off Ahy

W'l7~ '

,;

ROIERT IISSELl
CONStRUCTION

_HIUUII
ftlal.e,

""a71"

... nrro.

.c•••• .....
.........
,.;

(IDol!..

%.,.

'IIZIDit,OH
lUllS H
Dllr a Is a tlrl.••

Du, Sl&amp;eny, Juora &amp;Darin

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG CO.

VIrginia llcenN raqulrld. Jill
S.rngerdntr, . AH, DON, Point

Will IYul ':"' juat c.H.
RHionlble Rna

(614) 742·3100
IIIII'
. . . . . . . .,..1111
3311tfllppr Hollow llold
Middleport, Ohio 41'NO
N-.r Han•, Acfdllknla,
Roofing, 8lcllng,

Polls-, Daok8,

Patlnllng,Garagu,
Porcllll.
QriUtr,.. Afrat Eioll I

814-74NIIIO
814-742-3324
814-742-3078

II
II c:.u.. cllil)
•WUdtU111t
•TIM Tt kttmlng
(P

II

Shrubbory

llalneanaaPIIn Ahlld, Cell todly
lortraellllmatl.

742-2803

lrVIclnlt!f

. Safr•ek

(6·14) 592•5025
Athentt Ohio

'l'itOiar!ilaekL
;.riiiOIJIIt'f 1.11111 ',

Q@!!.. Sal• 2402 JollorHn WV 21110. (I Olenmirk-MYiil·
AM., l'l PIMNnt Thtllofrl April _-,.EOE.
24-21, -....... IIQmelnl., .....
lltnrlcl At Tile Uili-•I!J
11, comtortttt, lhMtt, dl'aptl. · Food
01
Rio
Olinde Now Accopting
plciiiiU, lllllo!•o I ntlllt - ,

baM cleall, wrttdlnt olrlglel I
- - · .... ani.. 2 _
....
tr-'*· tort. llundrM Clll'll,
lilltle aldrli, &amp; ... claN, ....... -

HElP WANTED-Men/Women
nun ••10 wnklr anombllng
much AUI 81. FWfJ,
circuli botnllloloclronlc com·
..,_at honw. E_.,.,. ""'
80
.N *SIIa
_,..,,, wtlllraln. lmmodlall
. and AuCtion
........ ln raur locll orn. Coli ·
1-.-.'lllt .... 01455.
Large Hand Tool lllte; Friday,
SawrdaL,:!;Itl. LHalld Stale · ..C.TfHill. ·.
Aotl• 7,
Clll Ol'tlo.
PC ""'" nttdtd. $45,000 Inco... pallildal. Coii1 ·800·513434S EJt .....

Alciii'MIMn Auction Companr,
fyfl · - IYCdO-. cornpMII
a•otlon 11rv1ce. liclflaed
HI,Ohlo &amp; Well V1fllnlt; 30411M18&amp; Dr 104-77S6147.

80

Wanted to IU!f .

AiiOIOtuta Top Dollar: All U.S. S!l·
•• And Gold Colno, PtOOI-

0-.o, An1ictti&lt;l ~. Qolct

u.s. C•rrancr,

::\~,.111111

Etc. A&lt;lll - · ~

' •New Ho1t1es
•Gai'IID•• .
•Complete '
Remodaii!1U
· SJop a Compel'll

992-7074

Septic sv-teml

Qrevel, Llmellono,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

.. _
'

lniltlllled

985-4473

(8:14) 992-3838

'!e.

'

:.J II I Ill! 111111111111111 I Ill I I ill Jill I II I 11111111111111 IIIII IIIL.:
.
--------------

'*'"'

II-

~lw_.. ....... .....
ctlnl, ..,•• ,..,.., ...... taoll,
olalla; 1110 appraiAII, Oalty
llllilft, 114olllo7+41.

lno'a Pfnj In 1111 Gattlpall• and

=-....
,.. And~···

Plld. - ·
Po...,.,. Ollla,

Anllqull, lap pricll

~. 114-111·

.. -....q......

AulD ,.,11. a.y/ng ul·
~~·· Salllnll )IIIII. :lfl4.

J I D'a

UMdlour-llntcaWnot.
114- II -1»4:30. .
W.nlad Tlmbtr I Or nrnlllr
land, Prol..llontt larYioM.
ltload Paper Woodland1, II 4·

1D~

Clleu •••n
-

1b Soil Atlon,

liJtlnl Al!lnloni Atllorn-

......... .., IDr; DrW&amp;

N•r• Aide Training Pr..ramlla cit p ~. Anblltatlan Cenltr
. . . . . . . . . a1lnlng - I n
1111 _., ofltlar. llppllcallon•
ara balno accepllll a1
:11711 . . . . . Rd.. - . , .
OH. Clu1 ala 11 llrnlllll. TllrM·

Ill ..,.,_ fllptil ... """""
iullh applloatlln. AppiJ in IMblli OI"'aaiftn !lam I 311111 M.f. Sllldtnla lltat au-ufunr complole
.,.'ICE 111'1111 ,.. 1M etlgllllo lor

:::;;;a..

II~IIIUtliW

no phoNt

~

NurMi; ....... Plr\·Time Rth
Anrlll'lh Ftr All llllllta AI Cal~
In• To - • Iii tong.Term Car•
laiil"'· Pttaaam Erwlronmtnl.
Pick Up AINIIIcaiiOn In Pwton AI

Hlii N•lllna C.nilr, 311
Bucllrldle 'fief., llldWall, OH NO

I!HGNIC.USIUAII.

.•r: ............
..• __
.,

SENIOR CrTIZENS
CENTER
Muiblny Hligh..,

HUPP'S

,

PWt11:M Dol Clerlt WMttd.
•
Hawn,

fUIJ thr'fr,'
'-·d I I\' I (, f ' ,

Part t . het .., ...,..lr, m•11
' - . . , _ - · • &amp; plumb-

Ing _ ...... ,., ....tlaltlo,

4ltPtlndlna on Clldtnllal•. •PI&gt;Ir .
a1 . . . _ ~ Chtlttr, Oh or
Box a7,

lind.- •

c,....,,

a.,...,.

.

"

Tebie.for$10

o-..fi&lt;•Mkl·
-•no

Pon-Titila (15-20 HOYII IWkl

...,_ Fer Llllnclrr

c.n

~hllhlfl. Alii

····2647

Tima Clll·lno For All Slill'lo In

La•""" And Hou•k• plug. •

.

MGA.Construction Services
.Efectncat ;:; Plumbing ~ Carpentry ·

Repairs - Conversions ~ ·R~pmOdel•

-~

·syracuse

Golf l.aiona
Repair, Custom
Orders, Awards,
Engraving
John 1'Nford
cheete~ :.c lhln

,,

992·2413

........

·-.am

N0111 Opera For Sprinl
S.a.ora

Golf Sales, Club

BULl fTIN BOARD O~ADLINE:
j,)Q PM DAY BEfORl PUBliUlTiotJ!

And - 1 1 I Ill

~~~a:~

IICIWALIR

'-=

Galla •
Agoncy

--a

~ ._,... EIICIIIlN

Nllin.

"I

Tr-.

Wrmor.COIMitlnlca·

!left lltJ!II.; !&gt;, WHMntntn To
Tranaporlallon
And A v.lkl Clrlwt11 Uco,.._,
Piiu'J 'I o.n.n.atld AMitl In
AdrrlrilN •• lcolll Samet fiR&gt;.

Auto, 'lnloll, R
rMel,
Conu;:a.W
MIIM p Drt. 011.
'116-74H7117

·~$6.50'-l

.....

I

• AI . . &amp;beddilg
. . .501(11

• Bloon*IU &amp; fo19

81111111 15.75-18.75
o41n. . . . Puls

• -sus

a

:flubberltlll e~ttN•

lhlllf
'"' Clali/W.
IUIUIIIf.,,.

1111$5.50 .
oCannu *Z.O&lt;rea.

NaNHA8MMSOC'.ATE
PIANO TUNER NlO
'

oSivuliblly .
We hoilor Golden

-REPAIRMAN

JOCJEPH WHITE, JR.

Buckeye C8rds
~ I)IIJy N Sill 12-5
ftl'll

'

"

Ac- ~1 .Ia SHidng An
E--llnoiw. Tltla lnriWI•al WI• lo 111-lblo For Adntlri . .tlt'l Coustlr. ... Dr,....
tral Anll·-11 Progroma In
Oallla And ltlalgo CouniiH. The
IYCCitllul Clnilldato WIH E.- ·
•• All Flaal, Fosoannol, Anti
Adrnlnl- ~llclll And ProcadYrft E1taltl- Through
· - And F-1 Rtquirlnltnlt

'

.

I, OH. NO PHONE

.. P'IT M orn'M
The GaiNa · IItie• ComnoaniiJ

Insured

.'

-

~

Ucensed • Bonded

-

'

114...2-11152, alii lor .
bat tr Rolla. Allor 2prn
1!8111+-1211t,
Ftan.
NlildliOIMOne .. ..., .........,
on - ·· Call altor Spm.
llll+t7HI07.
Frwl,,

Oo•INOOII Corlltr In Mlddl-~
Ia now •-dn' appllca·
dono lor part u... S NA'I, ·att
!!ltiiiL For ..,. kltar. .uon call

SERVICE

WILL

Bacld)oe, ·~.

'

ESTIMATEES

~~-a-pro4;1arn
an 1111 -'-· Clll lrorn

·11.T. Ct11t 8llop, 111 ......... GaJipola 814-4*2142.

Ptrloi,UIII

IPbmi!O!f

....,

Driveway Lllnntone
Compllle HouM
lnd Trailer Site
Work, Bull®zlng,

•'

.., -llF'reciC. ...........
In tMnl) ola llw-ln c.,...nloit
to ulllol me ahh minor - . L
Rem a deled hOine, prtval* bed·
. _ lV lnd ,....., non4nMik-

Olllo

Saturda!f, Mer 3
9:00·4:00

t: Food-·

. . . . . boo....

RUMMAGE SAU:
. FLEA MARJ(ET

Appllcadona For Kllchtrt Help.
lldlxho
lJniVeral..
lllo ....... 114-245-&amp;eeo

Jft*J, -aiHI ........

77NDI.

005

---.....
Hurling and
t1oo1 c
AouRthllllllta·
.. u, RoYle 1, lox 321, Polnr Ploa11nt

Rd., 8

I:&amp;.
' ,

\.

lllne
ahllla111ralng
far · ·
- ·Wool
long
torm cart
lacllllJ.

lllr ·In f'itroon AI Scenic Hgll
NYral~ur, Sl I BIICkrlllao

(UIIII Sloni-

WICU

Atto'rney

992·2181

'

Low .....,

. • Gravel
• Refuse• Etc.

CHAP1ER 7 a CIIIPTIR 13

SR 33 f)qmetoy, Ott•
992·1330
M·S 9-5

Service to New

.

"'"" .............. llalcl. Sotll-

lrig ,.,._ LPN'• and RN'a 10-

•Umeatone

many meta~~ a ·

33 AUTO CLINIC &amp;
24 HR. TOWING'

. 949-21&amp;e

•

E...u. .. _.,niiJ 10 loin the

HAULING.

~. baiiWI8I,

coat labor rllu?
Hook-up charg11?
.. We'll match or beat
any other
eompetltor's price?

Downspouts ·

FREE

lllddl•ll art
lrVIclnl!y

nred of perlng high

Gutters

•

Don GelfY, OWner

Pick . . clllcanlld

Ohio

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

I •
1

Services

-

110 Coutt St.

PonlerO!f,

Ctoan lalo Model Cart Ot
· Trudca. 1110 ltloclal1 Or"-·
Smltll llulcll ,..,...., 1800 Eul·

''FACI'OBY
DIBE£1'
J»RICES''
Quality Window Systems

.
Howllnl L W!IIUII

•..'

SENlOR CEitfi'EIR..

H .Vi!'A11S IN BUSINESS '

Brian AncMrson

••

1.1,

814-812-3120 ..

LAWN CUE

SOLID VINYL .
. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

EV.. Ph. f4&amp;.2&amp;34 .

E..,.,,

a Fllr Price!
&amp;SOPII!ie-Bt.
Mlclclleport, Oh. 45710

or446-3622

.......

.....

l?fi.OIIO EXT 102 or 1Ot
I:DOarno4:0CIINII. ltlon-Frl tor ltlcl
forM, Lakin Hoopllal Ia in EEO

.....

LillY'S

Pu6fic is invitd

.::,.
eo,•

._ttl.

~·contact

··~
Clwtllly Work II

·x..._•...; ....

Siding

Ml!:IG~ COUNTY

Day.Ph. 912-3871 . .

IIUS 11111111

742·2925

Roofing- Gutte,s·

-..,-periJ
..........

..,., ..... liltdlcakiiM- .

D. ••17''

at

;. .....,wrw..

•

.......,..

Leading CI'Mk Rd.

614/992-7274

~Ti''g

··!oi •

She's .. catt and she's " ftnt...
· .bid slit's no longlr 391

•WHCIEitars
2 mi. off At. 7,

Free Estimates

' "

.

• .

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Sliwa

Roan•a

'

I

Hfl'" BltmtDfiY
VICKI HOFFM.fl"

at laltlil Holflllll, lakin,
WV. IIlriiiMCIMn.ct-.pioL
Prevkle • vtou1 Mice a month
tt 11 ........ jappr0Jtiml•f1 II
'-'lmtnlhl. Mila -'&lt;It wslt.,. docuftllll•lktn or re-'danta
IOialllalatliiiNIIor Vt!lllillor COli
_ , . . - " paulllle,

liME E8l'lllfA7'!S

DRBJIII.I

'

.

-a

EVENING MEAL

·•lllwlll s.tcp Help

I

•Decks
•Rooting
•Siding

QDIUI'Y

'' .

L---:::~F.s""o-..,-J~ tliose we love
art touclied deatfis dar~ fiand,
'But it
ease our sorrow.
If we roulJ but understand . ·
rtliat dealli is just a;gale'!!'IY .
f11iat.all people must pass tlifoujli
a'nd on tlit otlier siile ofdeatli,
In a world dial's briglit and new,
Our lovtd ones wait to welcomr us . •
.'10 tliat land fret from all tears
'U)Iiere jay becomeutema/ ·
. .,
:And time is not ~ountetl by years.
·
Your
is still witfi us

• ,,•• ,. . . . . . . . ~ ....
RQI. ................ sr.p. ~

tp·lo·dale soap
results. Call nowl
1·900·263·2700
EXT. 6925.
$2.99 per miD.
Must be I8 yrs•
· Serv·U

·----....., !II.., Plf1r IIIMIIL

HolM Ph. ·

·

.April Serving froJD 4:30 • 5:15
Donation $4.00 for nleat ·

of

100\ Gil

...,_

IU'I .

Da!1y Horoscope;

'

In Memory

Gil ....

614-992-5479

...

. In

WJwlows
.._A.Iifl••.

1U~ysandThu~ysdurina

9randcliildren &lt;Tamra,
'Penny &amp;- Wendy

Mary Lou.
· ·'Proffitt ·

POMEROY, OH•

••

':'·

·

· Mulbel'l')! Heigh-., Pomeroy

.C.Orry &amp; Jay

Cia? ,
Coli

11:3 W. 2ND ST.

COMPUJER
. ·HELP!

,On , '. tlie' 'road · lo
Y£SierdaY_ friends may

•SinO..s&amp;

.1w1

•Remodeling
•Garaget
"Stop pullins off those much needed
home impr&amp;Hinenu." CaU Today!
992·2753 Free Estlmatll 992-5535

.'F.~~~~6F~4-;J·~W=20=2~~~-=~(·6·19~)6;;;;4~5-84;""~!4;­

.·

...U Gw•u••

•NewHomee
·Additions

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

.·

REPAIR OR NEW
CONSTRUCTION .·
·
Loafing llleel• to hoi'H ersne1.
.
Roof repelr jlnct.paint to structural repair.
·stHI bulld!rigs . . low II $4.00 sq. ft,
. delivered. F,.a ..Umates, prompt ancl
pi'O'IHJ~onill Hrvlce. C1ll today ·

'

.•

(No Sunday Calls)

Farm Buildings

.

1:00 1.111.-1:30 p.m.

....11•1111 WI

614·992·7643

.36()0 Communications

.

'

-:a_~

CELLULAR PHONES

Call
992-6342 (Diant)

'

INSULATION
5378RYAfl~
· I

...... 'l.\i''i: 1',!.:;::;:;

Conllllllng lpMclt 'lhlrap!al ...

J&amp;l 111111 1

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
, ·Gar11ges • Replacement Windows
·Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
·

Fu: 304-773-5881

992·7275 (BIWICII

to you art memories
of t~e liappy days
1Dget6er we once
Rr.ew and always
every rvening as we
sit quietly alone to our
~earts
comes a
lon.lli!!!J If fie onlv
coUld , . come bar~
liome~ !:t's time pasu.s
we 'tllways seem to
liaw· a 'rOY o
wandering bac~ to

BISSElL BUILDERS, UtC~

., IJJ'fllll

.

Aer......,Motar 411•• R•ll•lrs
Clelnlng Saptlc . ,• ...,.
Port·A-John • Aentllta • San.1cec1W.Idy
No Extn1 Chlrge for Even
l tnp o, 'Nell.• ldl

·

,

I ' .... Pf~M* . .

~

.-

u ..... ,..,

&lt;

'

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--

·

.· a ••.....,

forgotten wrren al
· times tliey see us smile
'But little do tliey
~now die fieartacfie
our smiles fiide all die
wliile.
'I'fiou,91it of often and
sadly misStil by son

cg~

i!i80S ttl

........

l?fi.OIIO UT. 101 or 101
1:00- 4:111Pm llon·Frl lor ltlcl
llrm. laltlil Ho..lll l1 an EEO

a

Sm.all SfHK!s • Chemicals
•liii.SIIr"ne
• rt
ll!eed • L1"m""
n •
v

aas

Phone: 614: 992-2406 ·

'

.'

i{i~

. a 8reat &amp;pring &amp;ale .
w. .................
180
11wl4cs, VCRI. Sciltc'"
•••a.
PIPII •••t114

•

250'Condor Street ·
Pomeroy. OhiO 45769
A DMslo!l on Nichols MB!al. lf\!c.
' 1

'

In .C.Oving :Memory_ 'Of
'Robert :N. CltJri,.
Wlio ptustd (!Way 17
yrs. ago today ·
. ~nL :L4tli
alonlnt tlie road to

mutyt!U.

ol

61:4-992·7119

Big,~nd F.abrkatlon,
Machine &amp; ~~~~~ Shop

v

ln.Memory

~.

• DeKalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds

Complet, Mil&lt;:hlne S1q1 S.. tlce Fabrk:atloa
Sleel Sahl, Weld!. Slippllea, W•tabol G..
~tor llepadr A Replacement '
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Salilrday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

' .

IIMrlfl'a Sale of iiHIIatata
Route 1,11ox 4f
··

.POMEROY, OHIO

,~=·~Che=s=ter~,=O~h~lo=!2====~=·==·;~;::"'=.==·
. ==~~24=H=r.=Pronlpt==~·=ll"=vloe:.~;::;;;;'7~Qa!;.;!f•~A=W~·a~al~t .....-."'.-!'..--...,:::~

JAMES II. SOULSBY,
''
lhlrtll
KENtmlf C. JOHNSON,
AttornliW. 114-227·2300
(4) 3, ~0. 17. 24; (S) 1; lTC

(4)241 tc '

• Fertilizer (8811 pr Bulk}

985 4422

Milllrmallall;

Am VIti Post. 23 In ClaUipolll.

-S

IJmntone • GI'IVtl
Dirt• Send

:'

~ ...

. . ~- flprll25. 1997
at 7:00P.M.

Of Dependable Ser•ic:e~.i;n.&amp;;lit~
• Heating and Water Heating
A-t
• Lift Trilck Gas Delivery
• Grain Drying and Cooking
• Construction Heating

,..

DUMP TRUCI&lt;
SERVICE

''

I &lt;1

.on ._. c.p .._. (r·

. l fiQOIOfi . .

O"r 50 Years

\

I

9 p.m. • 1 a.m.

'

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

::1..

..............
.........._

Oantllltllll... I I lt I I - •
-a......
• r..l•urnll.
~.
wv.
, ....
..

,.. "-'1 til I £ .. :tliWI. l'tl, • • •
~ 1&lt;1111. ..... I AJI. '4 P.ll. . .
MIOriiiM
.
I Fam*ar
"HHil ...: 4

t

I,.._

Moose Lodge 731
Friday &amp;·saturday Night
"Rahapsody"
with Lora Garrell

Early Bird Special!

R

araur

. ,.

TNt Melea County
COIIIIIItlonert
tre
llllpnlnt
I
4·
•ltfgetlon pre)tot · to
llll¥ltda fuhiN llaodllll
~ llllp 1111 In Olrlaln ChI II
'IDWIIIhlll lrlll. Tilt

11-.na 11•

111

11

.~
"' 000 III.UI

--.----News policy----

.• .,
In an effort to provide our· readership with current news, the Sunday
·: ·: Times-Sentinel will not acCept weddings after 60 days from the date of the
, .: event.
·' Weddings submitled after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
:; ~ :: week in The Daily Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
." ..
All rlub meetings and other news articles in the society section m•tst be
:' :' submitted within 60 days of occurrence. All -birthaays must be .submitted
.'.. , .within 60 days of the occurrence.'
. ·
.
· " · All material submitted for publication is subject to ~iting.

•

-'• -.

MilLY"" IC IIIOYICI

,....bit

Thl Daltf Ia II ill • P913

Pomeroy • llkldtepuri. Ohio

:·

~.April a4. 1117

/

....a-··
. ..

....,

LHt·
" - ,.. 111 lu 1 - . 1 lellll
,.,.
. . .1.........

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TIMndiY. April Jot,

.'

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...

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.. . .'
'

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, .1

.

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.. ..

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.

.....

.

f .• •

..

, ,·

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·,
.. . . . ..

;

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. ,;. .;:. . . .'""'·".-..-.·-.··..," -~·~.;. · ~'C.'·CIIII..· ~2~~~!!!~
·Pu~-~-~~·~··~;;...:. .. .... * . . •. . :; . U?
. ~-· ·. ·. :Uf-'"
. ···........
.;i ..'tt~:
.
.............
:

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.'D'Uft .. -

rn&amp;W.III""

. . . . . At~CCI..

.

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-....,. ..........

-~

1pplt-• lnctudH, 1225/mo.,
...... ulllillll, ' gd"'l ln-

-----m•CQS.

- lnetallatlon
"" I t t *
- ""......
....
Ul.
814-"11·

-:====;::===:
41112

1540

•

·~·
IIIIChlncllle
w

411 112

.._1ft. 1410

IR., /&gt;C, Apelttncea.

112 JoMo.or. ..... ,_;,
cut, rune toad. S70C 080, 114-

Golll1 olio 2

lion.

1225.00 daDolil. UUIIU11 Patel.
(814~1111
.

-..'1111.

12' oak and walnut church
bltiCIIM, 11-l\1117.

Apa,._,ta fOt Rent On Firat
"""""IU 1•1221.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IIUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON'
ESTATES, 52 W1e-d ·Orlv1
lnlm . . 10 . . . 10 11101&gt;
• - · · · · Call 114-441·2111.
Equll~~

.

.Downtown GaiHpolil: Modern 1
8edraom, All El-la, 'c :-ract,

~=-~not

--·-lcrntal-

_ _ ln.....,ol .....:

Our . . . . . . ....,

~IIDtnNid lhlloll duu••

- - I n 11111111 I'll ...
....

r

~-.,EitclllcliMt/

AlrCcwdlluc:i'lo 114 4411
Umlrad Ollar! 1•7 dou_,.,
t17tl down, t27tl
month. fr• -tl'}' I HIUp. ·
Onl' II Onwood Homtl, Ni1ro
WV, 304-711w5

3br, 2balh,

NeOitan . . .

'!IIIJOIIIIOIII-

11114 lrDIICo II I CJHndtr, Au·
IOmatlc. Good Shape! O.pendllllltll1 • •,1 1 111114 Flool, AI&amp;. t S!olod. 1SK on

Bu._ lljlldll - j e t -11oft

Bulliltng
SUpplltl

l•horl
Stock,
12.000 0110.
Cell
Evonlng,
Wukond
(114)317·
0333

32" .... - ....... rtml. doUIIIIII
chrome roll Mfl. ftft KC lllgll
IIQhll rww dut&lt;h. while, .......
aoking tUOO 080, 114· 742·
3142.

..•·

c...,

~ 'fH(;

.,.,

!$'~~~{'?
'

'· • I S. 4

24' Round

AlllifWI&amp;DO, 111

IOiimml"' pool, Hay·

Wild ftlllf I PYI!!Po Ill - -

... 1171.

.

1te3 Ford Ranger XLT, 4M4,
Auto, 4.ot.. NC, 50K 111111. ~
111,100,114-11112-2510.

CIIIOrill I EMirllf t100 080
Call :104-875-5227 Alttr 5 P.llc
Til P.ll.

740

_ L-L.UL.__

....

'

'

~:· BARNEY

7~21113.

3 or 4 llodtoom Houot Hill "*ll In Eurol!a, Apfnllod ati4S

-

PilcH For Quick Sill 114-251·

-1H7 141'118r

Wlo=ti'DI.I

-

... .

-mtiOO

~~::__ _:_____:__I

N..er .......,..., 24 flml"

•-•ecr

ctoao to
plng,ochoole, lllttarr.
-;~g;j~;jQ';;;i;t;;;;;~ 1 much mort. ElectriC heat, air
111117 t4xl0 thret bltlroorn, conditioning, laundl'}' lacllltJ.
tot ront.
&amp; n111
rndudlclin
-Ontr tll1.88
1perFREE
month
with rt!OL·
llalnptoaldltd,
. . .,.
t10!0 down. Call 1-100-137· mlnotlon done mom1111. tncomo
8231.
llmtt. do oooiY, HUD accepltd,
lor appllcatlcin ·ol'lnlotmtttlon cd
304·182·3711. lion I·S. Tun &amp;
Wtd 11-a, Ftl S-8. Old Alit Vlllgt
Apll 1111 &amp; Gtoret St. H. . He·
~

·-EHO.

ParfliiiJ lumiehH . 1....,room,
.._pald.304-l~

Concr.ll &amp; Plude S.llc Teftkl, AKC nny TOJ Poodle, born 3-t~·
:100 Thru 2,000 Galton• Ron 87, nwlt, ''-"""font color. 3114Evano Enlllptl- - - · OH 1711-1711.
1-.:17. . . .
10glll tank oat up -••••· Floh
Farm lumber IPfiiOI. 80011. PI' Tonk I Pat Shop, 2413 Jaci&lt;IDR
flllndlo. tua • fluncle, random Avo. Point Piaa ..nt, 304·875·
...... ' . . - - 304-773- 20113. .
. . . 011100 -liiS.

Fot 8111: 8 FL lltllr Grand Plano
IIJ Kiwi Apprallld At 110,000
Olllrl814-211-1114.
Good tin &amp; lumbar, r.Om old
latldlng. 304-112-2363.
Grubb'l Plana· blning 1 ropalra.
1'1'-..t -lUntcl? CaN . .
Pant Or. 114 4411 4125

THAT

AIN'T~

Motorcycles

1te1 Hondo 3110 4·-1 """;
- drt1, loa of 1111rn 304-773-

8146. .

.....

4 P'lllay--

...

5a

5•

~114388'?2',

Poll Piu1, Sliver Bridge Plaza.
814-441.0710.

110Un ••·

....

M Kind of

••

~"''' •.

AIIJIIII

%7 ~- Jt3oaut
f.-+-+~ '21 ........ VUIIII
11 Pal . ,,.

£220dtllll

~~=~~~;

..

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.,...,. :

1
.. Tltti
41 .... Lautll('

47'-wll!t

w?lllllfllll1

....,.

41Do•-~
10 Vllltor to &lt;

11M • •

atrlte YGQf

.. "-fy.llt .
• •u
~
Mr ••• ~j

u•

,

170ra7-lll'l.

·~

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'·
'

CELEBRITY,CIPHER
by Lula C..npoa

~llmoul~.
- a:-....
.......,.....,
__....
.., _.. _.r....,.._z_u.

~Of!!*

·s

VAZJAIPU

N A Pl.

I U A II W, ll .
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A~ V K :W N

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RiCht-" with till -~ ~ It Ia ,
Rlie to run the lint trlcll Ia,dummy
and draw iru~.,.lporl1!8 ilulllll)"a

diamonda, you play on eluba, loaint . .

=

,

I

7

Spruce Rtdgo t188, 14i52,
bdrm,-. ......,liOI, - . ;::tonal $1,700 080, calll147442.
.

F;\nf,1 SUPPL IE S
S. LIVESTOCK

t

a 111111o1 '

_o(

•.

.i

Q IMMY IIIII ,

'. iiK'yy 'AW &gt;il OWIG ,hiPVDHWN
8HU
Tlie recommended alllutlo!l·l• to
~- ,
I" ·~ ,· ' .,
take out inauranri by dlecerdlnl a
J
' '
'
club fi'Otn the dummy at hick·one. · _ Z'A Y P V II y ' P I 1 . - .c ·u I W r K I J ·~ I •
Thea, after winl!inl·tba Tetul'll in , ' PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I 1111 ncit -.er. :1find.•;- PllbiO'Pk•-·
liand, you cnb two '!"'mpa, nb!Qell · •A, hunCh II Cfeiii!YIIY 1rytng ID ~you~.'- F..... Capra.
the aee·kinll of clllllllladl, and piiJ a ·,
'
t.rwnP to ih•"W'• -· All ,.,.. cluba
'
dillll'f"'r' 011 .........,.. +z'Onda. Tbe
aolution alao aayil that if JOU run ill
the dumJn)o a&amp; trlclt one, :YOU will need
to flnd trumpa t ,t. Doea anythlnl

LOSER

.

.=:,)

Eall

meet wi~ uillvlraaJ· ~.

MuSical

:

&amp;:~~~~~~

. My wile l8d I hale beeli inwflpt•
· inll houH·bullding. One contract ef·
fediwJiy Nld that If tile- .........
vetops eracu in the noon .- nua,
even one HCOnd after COIIatruetiol.
the company is in no =Jt!:la.
Doean't that 1111 one with .
!
This deal was part ol a qui1 in a
.mqazlne, with priJea lor the beat an·
awen lrom readen. How would you.
·play in llw ....... after a beart leld?
Eaat'a la.u~rt openlnll ~lda't

~let.?

1 AC 1 2 1&gt;1: loti lor 1111 In
Scenic Valllf Subdivloion.
Waclgl Rlai!J, BrCII&amp;tr 304-e75·
2722.

I UMIPII

10 . . . .
Dli I I i ,, Dill delft '

37 .........

ltlataneou&amp;."

Wl\0'~ C,OINU 'TO

150 acrt form wllll remodeled
hOUit, n. . garage I Dthtr OUI
totUdlng, ,,110,1100 witlloptlon 10
""'
homt ' 2 lor 1711.000.
114-742·2157.

1 Zoll . . . . .
2Smlllaotn

By PIIIIHp Al•er
Al.n Coren, In "Tbe Lady lrom
Staliagrad llanaiona,• wrota - . .
thing that atruek a chord with me
abOut the Act ol God dealpatioll OD
inauranee pollclea. He wrota thaflt
·"meana roughly, that :YOU ean!IOI be
inaured for the accldenta tbal are : lnr+--1moat likely to happen to :YOU· II JIIIU'
ox klckl a hole in your nel1hbour'1
Maaeratl, however, Indemnity ia In·

~"(0$..~

350 LOlli Ac:re~ge .

.

K Q J 11 I I

·•

DOWN

·Takeout
some insu1'811C8

CHEST II

Instruments

330 FIITIII for Sale

Willi II-

'

CFA Himalayan klttono, flame
point matH w/blul .IJIL 1175.
::::
304-t7H:::,:::::,771:,::_·_ _:__-:Malo Pu~ .':; &amp; 1 Month Old
Fot Stud
Or Fot CMII

570

•

Opening leed: • 7

2881.

wl-.

14 ll'lonPc 1!11*

',,...,.,,, ....
S auJUI'I
..,..,.
'"""'Ill '
aeem'III:W-

~e· 'Na' tudlllolll

• .;-:.;. dltwn

..... · welt Nrit

10Be Hondo 200SX good cond,

310 Homes for Sale .

loft .

.

will

Dealer: Ealt

01 Ford F-210, 4M4 XLT Larle~
351, 5 opaecl, loldod. m..., ••
- · 74,000 mllal, .10.000 010.
81+742-l!Sr.l.

.

=ul·l

v~:Bolh
~.

21 Gallo~ AqultiUm Willi All Ac·

.

~PP n?le

a At 7 2
111113 C1lelr Colollflion Van Mark
Rl. Low lllln, t10~100 IIU·441-

rill lncludH. teOO. :104-11711-.

30 .llltyll'l

• A K

~daWillllrl,

.

•

11
a
II'Rir 3 • - I I

• ., 3
a .K J

.....
.,
a

now -riL 12.000 080, 304-812-

2.bldnlom houH, 2 oar garage.
terge dli:k, ·new
CNthie ..... dooln'lllood. 814-

• Q 10.

I

14 Coltlo!M ' ·

.
. . lldllr
21De-~

•AKJtUU

• Q II I 7

~

.....
II
11 eaotl "' iNtpl 10 l'lonuolaiMion
20 Onlaua' ltln
111111t

.....'

Well

Hro:.

.., :' . . . . . .

. . . . . nolllly

14 llu;•
11 CriW I pJL
11 Ftlllllill
17 lllnOIIIIP

• Q J •••• 2
615 u

t.;' EEif&amp; MEEK ..

.. ,

:=-.r~:t:v.~
Ra•an ......_
TV'a,.....

a AS 2

~lci'aliinie, OH Call 814-2411- 1111 Oldlrnoblil a.._ 4 Doan,

110 Thlrcl Avenue l205111o.,
lncludacl, 11 oo 0.
poelt. 01 .... PWtdrig, 11..-

1-

13.000 1C1111 - . •· ,llllild r',

1881' S-10 Blallf· TthOI U4 .
con1185 llorcur, Gnond llarqulo Alklntl ...800; 1111
Au.,..; 302, v.a; ~-... VOflion VM, AoklnQ 13,000, 114·
.
Approldma'-'J 410 Plwfno lkldl. lureit Englnl Hal Onl' 32,000 '245-6147.
Inch 1/2 MS 114MI lnchoo 1100. lllltl, . FuN - · · Aluminum
Approlllrnallly 70 L.F. ol !'Opular Whelll, VInyl Top, Sharp Clr, 1t10 lllyota 4 Runnlr, Four CJ·
Fencing Height S Foot I Inch W,l!OO; 1116 Dodge Artat Slollon Nndtr, Fivo apud. Four WhMI
Width Yarte1 1100. (114)448- Wagon, Aulomdr:, 2.14 Cflr*, Drive, /&gt;1:, TMI WIIHI, (114)24..
:o:a::.___-._____ Rune 'Gr•t Good Work Car, 1011
1
pipet, wind- 11,200, 11-72111.

E - . Atl•-ln Clalllpolil.
210 Fourtll Avonue, 11101110.;

E...,...,,.

...

1tiiH/21llfDia 4M4,1 1PM4.

•

'

......... .

540 "'t ceiiiiiOUI
Men:hlndiM

A

~

4q p,p

..

,....., ' only two trte111 there when tbe)' IPIII .
3·2. Perhaplihe 'problem

_.a baw

been better if Uie eluba were H. f
. ·wonder bow many 'tetlin ware re·
eelwd requeatinll repara~~oa.

Ktnoi

t' ·I

·
t
1• I I I:·

.
1

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llotol Lowell Ratto In
Town, - l r Rlmodtltd, HBO,
Clnem. ., Shollllma &amp; Dlonor.
Wetldr AI... Or llonlh" Ra111,
Conllrucllon Worltoro Wtlaomo
811 Ul I 22; 81&gt;H41-&amp;117.

I

lola lor .... In Hardord, wv. Hu St~~pina room• with cooking.
publiC Wlltr I 1 - r. 304· 773- .At1a tr•Uar a,.ce on river. All
hook-upa. Call atilt 2:00p.m.,
11144.
3114-773--1, . . _ wv.

460 Space lor Rem
Trailer loll In Qalllpolo Ferry, ..
- - 304-17H421.

SEE'? TIII51'1ME

I RAISEP MV

490

6EFT AANP..

For!-eau

2 Or 4 B ' - Apar1manll, Onlur"'altld~lhlr, Dryar

Hook-up.
lolt,lnG

'&gt;

ltUMUUAtiSWal

• --.;. '
lk11.._717&lt;4.

·. ap,qui -inlay- Nuag, ~ VetSJJs ·NONE to SPARE, .
Sign aeen In ltiCI'Itlrys olllca: "Thole Who Make
The Beet UM Of Theil' Time Have NONE to SPAREr

f.1lnl.IIMJDISf

510

·-

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

HouHhokt
Goods

110 Electric window air condl· ·
dontr, ucolt1nt candldon. 304·

~ _.......,.

uality'Uwn Ctro, Palntlna and
cN Jobl Call (11•)387..0011.

~·ncaa:

..

\

Will Sit With Sick &amp; Eldlttr In
Thtlr Homt. HI.. Rlleroncn,
IU •• t?"
Willing to lllil cano ot tldtriY In
homl. Cal ond Ilk lot J.in.
304-115-1173.

jump on lilt by urxJ1tt1.111111 .. In~·
.,.,.. tt.1 govern you In -, reer ~head.

1175 FIIMtllngo 12d5 In Zuepan
_
_,.,304-muiO.
.

E~

SASE

your

*"""·

'

..

....
,
CAHCIR (olutll 11~ Ill Try to be
,...., I ' II today , _ _ ... Oil a crftl.
"
,,
CIIIIIIU wt•~· nti lfM!I'Mip ihnluah
In ildUtrW bllcn p!GCII ....
'
L10 (olulr D ...... W V .....
. lng'today wll ......... of ,....In
SofniOtlt wtlll'l!lain-;.. lornllily had 1111 , _ lutln. o.nl a 011 ktdlo•
......._ t t;.,..mfFI..WJOIII . . IIOnllllyllildiOyourMe a ewlllml.
lltlltd. 1NI MID 3 7 N&lt; wll VIRGO (Alii. D a I I It) OIPWI - 1
'rnelunllltl! IDwlr • you d!ft ._, ID ..., 10 dD your ?oltldPnt today T Jlllllel
- • . - . 1w1 yuu- pdDJ... ,
to 111 • a til. . a1 ...., •• :rrao~
I'
1:M ....4CAIJri•M 3
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