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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Astros
edge Reds
in 14th 4-3

Pick 3:

874
Plck4:
2212

Super Lotto:

15-2~~32-38-44

Cle•r ·tonltl'lt, low In
40e. Frldtly, IUMy,

Kicker:

Sporta on Page $
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24$736

l'llgflln upper 70e•

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,..1.41, NO. 211
01117, Ohio 'Valley Pulllllhlng Compeny

2 81111111111, 12 P~~g~~, 3 1 .A Olnnttl Co. NIWI!MPW :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlci, Thursday, May 22, 1997

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Barney found guilty on 16 sex counts !
of Pic~away County asked each .the incidents to ~is wife. but l~cr.
By JIM 'FREEMAN
juror,
"Is this .your verdict?" with under cross eumination by Lentes,
Sentinel Newa Steff
A Meigs County jury deliberated each jurqr responding "Yes".
said that he was never asked by his
approximately three hours ·Wednes- . The verdict followed se~eral days wife if he had molested the child.
Lentes, in his cross examination,
day afternoon before returning with of testimony in the trial which began .
M.onday.
Testifying
Were
the
victim.
16 guilty verdicts in the case of a man
at!empted lo pottray Barney as a'perthe victim's stepmother, a teacher and son who could not keep a job for any
charged with numerous sex crimes.
· Darrell Barney, 42, formerly of principal~ and two character witness: but a shari period of time -- giving
him plenty or oppoitunity to have se~
Shade, repeatedly had sex, including es for Barney.
Barney took the stand for approx- with the alleged victim. He also spotintercourse and oral sex, wilh a
minor female relative frorn 1993 to imately two hours Tuesday in his own lighted Barney's use of niarijuana and
1996. He was found guilty of four defense, fielding questions from his alcohol in the home.
· During closing arguments, Lentes
counts of rape, eight counts of sexu- attorney and Prosecuting Attorney
told jurors that the alleged crimes
al bat\cry and four counts of felo- John R. Lcntes.
When questioned by the attorneys, were done by force and the threat of
nious sexual peneLration stemming
Barney
repeatedly denied raping .or force, at1d again showed school phofrom the incid&lt;:I\IS.
.
Barney sat expressionless as the having any sexual cQntact with the tographs of the alleged victim taken
verdicts Were announced and-defense alleged victim.
during the years in question.
attorney Steve Story r&lt;;qucsicd· the
At one point, during questioning
Story reminded jurors again that
jury be polled. Judge Randall Kncce hy Story. Barney said that he denied Barney was innocent until proven
guilty · and indicated that al.though

Barney did testify. he did not have to. Testimony not allowed
of Meigs County."
•'
·"You are the objective finders or
Afterwards. Lentes said another ·
Lentes added that he has been •
fact, he told the jury.' Don't be tricked, minor female·relative of Barney's had . cooperating with the Athens County •
don't let it slide by that the burden is complained of similar se•ual abuse Prosecuting Attorney's office regard-.:
on the government," he said.
several years ago in the Dayton area. ing incidents of sexual ahusc hy Bar- '
Story hammered on areas he said
"We have sjJokcn to this young . ney when they lived the.rc.
•
produced reasonable doubt including woman 'and the story she tells is very
"It took a lot of courage for this :
an incident in which the victim called similar to what happened here in girl to come down and tell her story," ;
the defendant after she had moved · Meigs County. We were not allowed said Meigs County Victims' Advocate •
from the home to take her to pick up to usc that earlier episode in our ca.•e. Connie J. DQdson, who sat with.the :
.a job application. ·
so the jury never knew about it," he victim during the trial.
.,
. •
"Common sense doesn't dictate SUI
· 'd.
Lcntes
commended
Dodson
and
:
,
that the victim wo,uld subject herself
:Jurors also . did not hear about the Meigs County Children's Service:
to that horrible fear for a job appli- how long this abuse had been going office for their a•sistancc in the citsc.:
cation," Story .said. "Wouldn't you on," h¢ said.
Sentencing has been , postponed !
avoid him like the plague'!"
"We believe it' began when our pending n pre-sentence invcstiga• :
In a brief rcbuual, Lcntes said peo- victim was in the fourth grade . Bar- lton.
•
ple that have rapes commiucd against · ncy did not live in Meigs County
Judge Kncce ordered that the ~
them don't always &lt;io the smart thing. until about lour years ago. and we hond previously ordered he revoked :
"This happened for years and she . were not allowed to tell the jury about and Barney held without bnnd until ;
always came back,'' he said.
the sexual abuse that occurred outside sentencing.
•
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SEQ's area phone Middleport Memori,al Day services announced
codt;Js will change .
to·. 740 in November

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·. Ac'crcinony to name ihe American Feeney-Bennett Pnst 128, American enabling reinforcements ' to arrive· 'hnlds services at sevcral lnc~l ccmc· :
Legion Park ni:Kt door to the Mid- Legion. After the war. he resi~ed in and hold their position. His body wa.• ·terics thruughnutthc day.
.:
dlcport Post Office on Mill Street will California until his death in 1983. He found in a shallow enemy hole from
The leginn will meet at 8: 15 u.m. •
be held Monday at II: 15 p.m.
is buried at San Bruno. National . which he · had helped his platoon at the legion hull nn Fnurth Street fol'l" ·
The park's official name will be Cemetery.
.launch the counterattack. ' .
lowed by ,erviccs atl!:45 a.m. at the · ·
the Stewart-Bennett Memorial Park
The Legion Post has no record of
He had killed 23 enemy solders •Middlcpurt Boat Launch prior u, .,.
By AARON MARSHALL
guess we ' ll just have to adapt to it," in honor of Staff Sergeant Jimmy C. an address through which to notify and his actions were in the highest whfch the chaplain will place one ~in- :
Gannett Newa Service
she said. "There will be alot offll!\l· · Stewart and Major EdWard A. Ben- · his family of the upcoming ccremo- traditions of the United States Army. . glc rose in the Ohio River.
•·
COLUMBUS • Dialing Galli a pie· crossing out numbers in their · nett. both local recipients of the' ny. Anyone knowing how to contact
Stewart was horn in West ColumThe group will visit the Riyerview :
and Meigs Counties will be as easy address books I guess ....She said·she Medal of Honor.
the.m should contact Post Comm·an- bia, W.Va., on 'Christmas Day, 1'142. Cemetery and Bmdhury Cemetery at :
as 7-4-0 starting this November as thinks problems for businesses will
Bennett received the medal during dcr Ron Sinith at 992-2621 .
His mother. Ethel Stitt. and hissister, 9 a.m. and 9:15a.m.. respectively. •
phone indus!ry executives rolled out be minimal "if Ameritech runs a . World War ii when. on Feb. I, .1945.
Stewart received his Medal of Josephine Donahue. still reside as do
At 10: i:\ a.m .. the post will visit :
as an Army private at Heckhuscheid. Honor on May 1.8. 1966, in the other relatives in the h"al area.
the Addison Cemetery and the •·
'their plans to swap area residents to good public awareness campaign.' '
the new area code by next fall,
Indeed, long-distance phone com- · Ge~aily, he exhibited "fea~l.ess ini- Republic of Vietnam, for. "c?n.spi~u'The ceremony will consist of :in Cheshire Gravel Hill· Cemetery att
Sportipg promotional materials panics will, ~ responsible for edu- · ltallve. s.talwan com~at a~thty, and OU$ galla~try and t.ntrcptdtty 10 acuon ~nvcilin~:'of the ft:e~hly. pu,intcd sign. · - I0:30 a.m . ~~ ll ·a,l" .. the gwup w~11•
enibla~o.ne~ -~ilfl:lh!a!o&amp;!Ml,_,::a~~JP. cal ng~ir.cust!?m~rubouttbe·~ ·'"OIIUialldi.llwgallaRtcy-•n ~liiDI.natill_~·..- a~ ·l!!"~rts~ , ~ ~to-&lt;llf~.- !,'!mvOrilll!. ano· Al'nl!l'ii!air ' Lcg'iilti'"'Ci'iihlcm, :r visit the Middleport Gravel Htll.
~ow 740' 1', Ohio phone tndUstJ:y mg swtlch over. ~ -Jll.n1enlech en~my fire wh1ch w,as dc~tmatmg hts , beyond the ~all&gt; of duty, . ~
.
· hrief addf~ss hy Middleport May~r Cemct~ry across :fr'&lt;&gt;Ql Overbrook:
executives announced Wedhesday spokesperson Dave Robinson said liis company's ranks ..He . killed. seven · . !ie held ofl a platoo~-Sizcd all~ck Dewey Hortnn. and a 21-gun salute Nur~ing Center prior to the cercmoth~ir long-range details of southern company will be sending out direct enemy \(oops. fllakmg 11 posstble for . smgle-handedly cmptymg magazmc hy the Post 12M American Legion ny at the park.
,
: ·
Lunch will he held at the Amcri-~
Ohio's new 740area code. "Regions ' mail and doing som·e paid advertise- .the Americans to sweep all resistance after ma~azine allhe charging enemy. Color Guard. The event will end with
that arc growing and dcvclopiqg - ment• to try and get the word out from the town, savmg the hves of He then ptcked up.and hurled hand prayer hy the post chapiain.
·can Legion Annex.•it II :30 a..;... wit~ ·
need area code relief," . said Lisa about ihc new 740 area code.
many of his fellow soldiers.
grenades .thrown at him back into
ll&gt;e ceremony is part of several visits to Howell Hill Cemetery, 1:
Robertson, Number ~dministrator
The change in area codei will noi . He was born and _raised in Mid- their midst, decimating the attackers. Memorial Day activities planned hy p.m.,and Burlingham Cemetery. I :30~
for the Central and Southeastern hring any changes as to what is con- dleport and was a hfe member of · He held them orr for four hours. the American Legion ·Post . ·which · p.m .• ~oncluding the events.
•
Ohio Industry Team. "Ou.r goal is to sidercd a long-distance call, Robert·
·•
: makethetrarisiiionaseasyaspossi - son said. "Phone companies don't

1~ :~~s;?o~c;~·:~ooth
0

Ohio smog· .outlook good; Cincinnatt g
' ets.reprieve

~~~r~;J:'dt~a~~: ~~~~h~~~~~k

.. blc
.the transiBy KEVIN O'HANLON .
' lion to the new area code, those dial- said. "If it wa.•n't a long distance call
ed p ress w· r1ter
.
h · 614
od .
h
b 1.
h .
. he o
h'
As10c 1at
tn•
1
c
.
area
c
~
m
soul
em
e
ore
t
en
11
won
I
uoter
\
"
S
. "
ummer smog season ·IS underway
. Ohio fmm Novemhcr I. 19971o June either.'"
· h
,,
in Ohio, but one cny a.' gotten a
6_199Mwill sti.ll have their calls con:. nccted. But after that J.unc date
Unprecedented growth in the hrcak in dealing with its dirty air. ·
··
· 1·
·mdus 1ry ts
The U.S. Environmental Prolcc;·
. callersdialing614instcador740will tc Iec'CimmunJcnums
1
·
the
614
area
·ode
tion
A•ency
said Wednesday that
·
"bl
e or
·
~
"
. · receive a rc. cordin•" infohninJ1 thcin rcsponst
the number .they dialed as changed sp. ,.11. sa· id Rohert son. Relat'tvc 1Y new• Cindnnati ..:.. the only Ohio city to
area codes. The new area code or740. fanglcd,cmnmunication tools such as . inlss the No.vcmber 1996 deadline for
will encompass all of southern Ohio t.ax mac'·h'mcs. compu1er modcm••• mcctin•" standards set by the 1990
formcrly in 614. with the old '614 pagers•,a11 munc h num be rs rnak"mg Clean Air Act- has unlil November
number retained in cewal and north the arc11 code split imperat.ivc." We to clean up its air.
ccnlral Ohio.
· .
. arc looking at aU the a.•s 1gnable
"What this extension docs is rcc614)
be'
c
hau
·ted
by
o•nize
the improving air quality,"
.
mg ~ s
"
Kl·m Schucuc, director or the · cod es (m
"d
Sh
dd
d
h
said
EPA
spokesman Jay Bortzcr. "It
Ohio Valley Vistors Center, said the next year:· she sat . c a c t at
'
·
bl
740
be
·11
1
1
also
recognizes
that Cincinnati and .
: number chan'ge shouldn't pose a asstena
num rs WI as . northern Kentucky
• 1 c·
he
arc im.plcmcnting
.. problem once people get used to it. ·~ 1 "for at cast anot r ten years.
pollution control measures and that
o'. fficerr~ is nam~d
the area is moving in the right direc; .
,.,.
lion ... but more needs It&gt; he done."
.SUSpeCt
Ohio's big cities. like those across
':
·
•
·
the nation . .have learned to deal with
:: WELLSTON (AP) - A police himself: I,
Six-year officer has. ozone problems.
; ' officer who said he was shot while been placed on administrative leave
Things arc worst in summer. when·
;: trying to stop tree thieves at a ccme- and charge~· arc pending. Jacobs said.. heat and sun comhinc with airhurne
•: tcry is suspccted_of stealing the trees
Pendleton 1\;td. reported he was · pollutants such as car exhaust to
;· after two were found in his front yanj. shot in tbe&lt;Chest May 9 while cha.~- increase ozone levels.
:: his police chief ·said Wednesday,
ing two mcq at ·the Ridgewood
Omnc pollution also can he
· : Chief Mark Jacobs said he Cemetery where three trees had hcen formed ,frnl]1 emissions fmm other
: . believes Officer Rick Pendleton, 41, repnrted stolen. He said the bullet- sources such as industry. small htisi; . ofHamden, made up the story about proof ~esl h~ was wearing ·saved ,his ncsses. gas stations and hmitc barhc; the thieves to divert suspicion from life,
cue grills . It causes breathing proh·
lcms .l(&gt;r elderly people and those
with chronic respiratory ailments.

.W.ell'ston pollee
in tree Stealinl!ncldent

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CHEVROlfl • ·OlDSMOBilE • I.Eil.S •
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pmhl~ms

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the~ ·~

So what is the ozone outlook for · Cincinnati areas also were ordered l&gt;y .
with the comrumy dnin"
.
,..
e
·
Ohio this summer'!
the state to start auto-emissions test- tests.
&lt;
· The National Weather Service's in g. The E-check program was ,~\Uri•
Lo.:al "Overnment a"encics acruss ...
~
e
90-day t&lt;&gt;recast culls for average · ed in 191J5 in res[lqnse tn the Clean Ohio often ask residems .to help:
tempcmturcs and precipitation. which Air Act.
. .It
reduce high &lt;lzonc levels during .sum-;
would help hold oz&lt;&gt;ne levels doWn.
But · the l'r&lt;&gt;&lt;'ram
has
l&gt;c&lt;n
sus-.
mer
months hy canvJ&lt;&gt;Iin••.
•
.,..
" walking~
said Bill Spires. an Ohio EPA mcic- . pcn.dcd in Cincinnati hecaus~.. of . or usi'n".
public
transit.
.,
orolo•ist.
·
.,
"That's what we've had the past
couple of years wcatherwisc and we
haven'\ had too many nzone pmblcms." Spires said. ·"As it looks
right now. we·re bracing ourselves
for this summer."
When the new air standards came
out.
. Cleveland-Akron.
. the Cincinnati
Toledo
and Dayton areas were considercd to be moderate non-auain·
mcnt areas, which is three categories
bel\er than the extreme mting given .
1!&gt; Los Angeles.
.
. Youngstown, Cant()n. Columbus
and Steubenville were considered to
be marginal, which is the lowest nunattainment level .
All hut Cincinnati met the deadline. in part by tiSkinJ! citi;(ens and
industries to reduce activities that
••
cause pollution.
•
"But we arQ very optimislic that
Cincinnati will meet attainment this · . SMOG SEASON • Sllaa Jonn, a 11-yaar-old asthmatic, plays
year," said Heidi Griesmer of the
with 11 toy while waiting at the podium for a oawa conferenCe by
Ohio EPA. 1
the Regional Ozone Cotlltlon to begin on the obMrvatlon dick ' : :
The Cleveland-Akron. Day1nn and
of the 48-atory Carew Tower In downtown Clnclnntlll Wedne. .y. ~

.............__....J:
i

McVeigh defense begins in bombing trial
.

.

_ DENVER (APJ -Af'tcr a stream·
One juror wept intn a white tissue
.lined prosecution case c apped with and another appeared on the verge of'
wrenching testimony about the deaths tears a.&lt; Florence Rngers. president of
in the Oklahoma City bombing, Tim- t~e credit union in the Alfred P. Mur·
othy McVeigh's lawyers' take center rah Federal Building.tcstilied about
slllgc with a simple defense: He did- the bla~tthat killed IKcolleagues and
n't do 'it.
two customers.
The defense case is expected 10 be
"The whole huilding started to
even _leaner than the · prosecution's, hlow up. I was thrown against the
which crammed 137 witnesses in.to tlnor in a tornado·! ike rush ... said Ms.
18 days of fast-paced testimony:
Rogers. "'When I was able to stand
"It may lake l~ss than two ap, all the girls that was in the offic~.
weeks," McVeigh attorney Stephen with me had totally disaJlllllarcd. I
. Jones said Wednesday afler the pros- never sa~&lt;' them aaain."
ccution rested. "It'sjust hard 10 say.''
Prosecutors then.showcd slides of
Jones is expected to call30 10 4Q the rescue effort ll'hile Oklahoma
witnestca who will attack "every sin- City District Fire Ch.icf Mike Sh1111gle point !he aovcrnmcnt has made. " non described his search for sursources close to the ctiiC told The vivors.
Associated Press. '
Shannon said nine tloors of lhc
Proscc:utors wrapped up with build in&amp; pancaked. crushin&amp;the vic:imaps of the bomb's destruction and tims.
'
"We were .wipinJ body tluit~J off
· a .willleSs' llllCounl of .terror and lost
friends.
. our helmets and uniforms.'" he said.

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The final gnvermitcnt wit.ncss, a
state medical examiner, authcnticated un inch-high stack nl' death ccrtilicates fur the victims, many of
whom could he identified only
through dental records, fingerprints
or surgical scars.
McVeigh. 2':1. faces the death
penalty if convicted of murder and
conspiracy in the April IIJ, 1995,
c.xplosion that killed 16K people and
injqred 500.
·
·
Prosecutors used witnesses to portray McVeigh as a CQWardly .tcm&gt;rist, ·
driven by a warpod interpretation of
right-wing writinas a·nd a desire to
avenge toe FBI's deadly 1'.193 siege
on lhe Branch Davidian compound
ncar Waco. Tcxti.
· Eyewit~css and 'scientific tcstimony tied McVeigh to the 20-fdot .
Ryder truck !hal witnesses sa)' was
ptK:ked with ammonium nitrate fertili&amp;cr and ra&lt;:in&amp; fuel nnd detonated

.'

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at 9:02 a.m.. as ofl'ice workers were •
preparing their m&lt;&gt;ming cojTce. . " .
U.S. District Judge· Richard :
Mutsch has pn&gt;hihited the defense !
from introducing the '.!henry that .:
international tcm&gt;risls WQre hchind ::'
the hnmbing. the sources said. Bcf&lt;H'C ~
the trial, Jones had suggested the
hom bing was tbe combined ciTun of :
nco-Nazis, Iranian terrorists and oth· :
crs.
In his opening statelllent, Jones :
promised the jury th\11 his ca.'iC "will !'
cstahlish .., thai my client is innocent •
of the crime thtit (the ROYOmmcnt) :
has outlined to you."
Sources said the defense will u~~e :
an attack stratcay to poke holos in the •
prosecution's case.
:
For example, prosecutors c:alled ~
co-manaaer Brie McOown, who lllitl •
he saw McVeip in a R1dDr lnlck •
the Dreamlud MOiel hi Ju~ •
City, Kan., "pril 16 C1l' April 1'7 •

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COt!Jmentary
The Daily Sentinel

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Gingrich pressing lofty goals

HOW CAN A
PR06-fA80UT
HOTHIN6 _BE WORTH
MILL10t6?

lasted 60 years·'

Sen

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China~s human rig.hts _record major drawback

By TONY SNOW
Creators Syndlc.te ~
WASHINGTON •• It hal; become
impossible
a.~ a political matter to disBy The Associated PreP
Today is Thursday, May 22nd,the 142nd day of 1997. There are 223 days entangle China's human-rights record
from. its economic relatiQ!1s ~ilh the
left in the year. .
Unuted States. Not only 1s Chma the
Today's Highlight in History:
.
only
nation for which Congress annu·
On May 22, 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enaCted as Congress approally must re-authorize most-favoredpriated military and econoll}ic aid _for Greece and Turkey. ·
_nation trade status, the renewal date
On this date:
·
comes
on June _3 .. just three days
In 1761 , lhe first life insunnee policy in the l,lnited States was issued,
before
the anniversary of the 1991
in Philadelphia. ·
· _
musacre
at Tiananmen Square.
In 1813, composer Richard Waancr was born in Leipzig, Germany.
This coincidence works to China's
In 1819, the first steam-propeUed vea~elto attempt a trans-Atlantic crossEven thoush it_'boasts
disadvanlaJC.
inc, lhe Savannah, departed from Savannah, Oa.. May 26 and.arrivcd in Liv- '
the
world's
most
rapidly growing
erpool, EnaJand, Jnne 20.
In 1868. the Grelt Train Robbery took pl11ee near Marshrteld, Ind., as sev- economy, the Worker's Paradise'still
en members of the RenO png made oft' with $96,000 In cash, sold and bonds. -resembles Purgatory when it comes
In 1939, Adolf Hitler and Benito Muasolini siJRcd a "Pact of Steel" com- 10 basicliberties.
•· If dissidents speak lheir minds,
minilll Germany and Italy to a milir.y alliance.
for
instance, military authorities jail
In 1969. the ._module or Apollo IOsepll'lled frollltheconvnand module 1111 flew to within nine miles of the moon'ssurf- ia 1 dreu nt r Ill them _on trumped-up charges of jeopardizmg national security.
for die first 111M' landin11.
•• Populalion cops force 'mothcn
1n 1972, the Island 1lllion 9f Ceylon hearne the Npllbli&lt;: or Sri LMka
10 abort when they have conceived
will! the 8dopti. . of a new COIIIIiiUiion.
.. lffl, Cane
went 10 die polls in parliuu
electiolla lhll put "suuplus"childrell. Theaovemment
the l'foiNuive COIIIrVFiiva ill power, encliftt die ,,.,.. tellllft or PIUne serves Tlthuole llbller of "choice,''
decidinawho lives, who dies, who is
MipiiiM Picm Elliott Tnlduu.
"wanted."
'

Today in history

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, •• On matters of faith. the feudal
suJl!!rpm.,er ~rants sroradic and to~cn
perm1sston lor congrcgants 1&lt;1 praclice the religion nf their choice. and
it has been known to oppress Christi~ns and dev~1tces ~fthe Dalai Lama
wtth Herod-hkc natr.
.. Worker's rtghts arc fictional.
Chinese laborers in some industries
work slave hours for slave wages.
- And there's the·matter of adventurism. Otina has sold ballistic·missile technoloay to Iran, Syria -and
North Korea: ships and submarines to
Iran: and biochemical agents to Syr·
ia, Iran, North Korea and Pakistan.
And .it reportedly has exponed fissionable nucleat: material to North
Korea and Pakistan.
These unftauerinJ facts have
inspired a arowing movement to
strip China of its MFN status, which
•lets Chinese goods enter the country
saddled with the 1owtst possible Ia!'·
if&amp;.
Chinilhautill*lthiacruudeby
Jivinl it&amp; dellw:•npolilician~
friend: Jl'lll vllulls IIIIa ~of
· hart·tuglllf'ltori'OI' lfOriel. While
~

opponents' have at tliciqlisposal the
_ teslll'llllny of.Harry Wu ~pictures
of tbe ma&lt;sacrc at l'iananlhcn Square,
the president_ carries in111 his prnMFN battle httle more than the dull
cl~tm that_ comn~~ce helps l_urc
.mcdueval kmgdoms tnufmodernny,
. Oh. yes. He ha.• nne &lt;Mher thing on
hiS s1de: He's right. , '
111c real dehatc over MFN con. cems means. not _ends.- Both sides
want to see the ChuneliC ~mhrace liher~l dcmocratic·pdncip_les a!ld insti·
tuttnns. 111c questtn~ 1y whether one·
~an hcttqr ;u:htevc th.'s,goul hy applymg_thelashoradnrunranattitUdcol
patuence.
1_ ·
- Commnn sen~ suggests· forhetlr·
ance .. A5 a natuiiR , moves nut ol
~ranan backwanlnes\ , '' dcvelnJis ~
mtddlc cla.'llllhat ~fillies tlHore viiues IJid .,propel• II toward_I"*Cr
commercial heiJhts; The moment
members or that e~~ can take for
.1111111Dd thc IIOCCISII~ of life, thQy
beJintoc*wd-*iitiei-theftnt
ofwhidlls liberty. Prosperity 11111011
alwtys lftCOCies dtntft:x:ra:y.
China's ripe. h pnented a . . -

••
.•

i

domestic pmduct l1f$K 16 billion last :
year, and il• average urhan !lwcllcr :
earned ahout $.525. (Agricultural :
workers netted a "n!cord high" of :
$226.) But China's cc&lt;momy has .
been growing at an annual fi\IC of ·
about 10 percent in recent years,
meaning the nati&lt;m should, within a
decade or fwn, h8ve sc1mething akin
to a_middle class.
If we hike tariffs, we won't help
slrulllil!g workers. WC'II lencthen ·
their long mllh:h to affluence. WC'II
al5o offend the·Bcijing' government,
whiclh will express its displeasure by
buying goods rrom other tradina
panners -- and pelfllps,sellini even
more doomsday ·lluff to very bad
peoplurouJ1d-thc world.
_
Clinton 11M the ll'jumcnts 1111 his
side. His polilil:ll problem is .,..
· llboritc 0cmom11 ilnd opportunistic
Republicana· Willi· 10 stall MPN.
LaboriiCI t.vc n:pilod the piuiOI:tiolli~=IIT IJ ..., wed lllitllt
lilt
AIDIII'I PNe Tnltle
"'rll•twtallll .. Penenl ~IIi 1 .
0111'1rifft and 'l'nlde..'
~- ~
,I
,.,, •

OW.
· Extended forecut
Totliflht. ..Mostly·clear with scatSaturday... Partly cloudy with a
ti!NCI ftost northea,st. Lows ~m the · chance of showers and thunderstorms
mid 30s nortl!-.ut to lhe lower 40s late in !he day. Lows frOm the upper
!10\lthwest.
40no the mid SOs . Highs from the
· Friday... Partly to · mostly sunny.. upper 60s to the mid 70s.
Hiflhs from.the lower 60s far nonh- ·
Sunday... A chance of showers or
eastiO ncar 7S so_uthwest.
thunderstorms. Lows in the 50s.

•
•tt•
· A 31 -y..--oW fQI'tiW Pornemy

Maa ••

Dixie M. .Blevins

seas

--

The D•lly Sentinel •,..... 3

liocal brlefsl Today's weather forecast

:By Morton Konclnlclat
rupting the Medicare and Social
A politieal crunch 011 Social SecuAlso in 1998. the Senate will face
·
As
welcome
u
the
lll!n
bipaniSecurity
systems
when
lhe
,
b
aby'
ril)'
will
occur
in,
the
same
time
fnrne
the
question of whelher 10 Nlify a
'E.stll6liskiin.l.!N8
san bud8et deal is, it
up a polit- hoom generation begi.11s retirin1 if C011sress and the Cl.inton adminis- · new trelly expandinJ NATO into
ical train wreck prior to the 2000 around 2010.
!ration .. as they shoUld .. appoint a Eastem Europe, increasins U.S.
111 Court Street, PomMoy, Ohio
election
over
lorig-tenn
presidential
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - new entitlement comtnission this defense responsibilities and costs.
814-&amp;82-2158. Fu 112-2187
spending and policy priorities.
. year. It likely would deliver a repon
The 1997 budget deal calls for
Morton
Kondraclce
in 1999, in time for lin explosive defense spendinsto hold in lhe $270
No fewer than five trains are ru_nning toward a smash-up in .the next
The . budget deal pasipones debate prior to the 2000 election.
billion range for the next five years,
lhree years: Medicare, Sociai.Securi- Medicare's insolvency only until .
Previous commissions have dead· · but conservative Republicans insist it
· 1)', defense spending, domestic spend- _2007. The Social Security trllst.fund
IO¢ked over how much to pare bene- . should be increllsed and libero~~l
A Gannett Co •.Newapaper
) ng and taHcfotm.
is scheduled to be out of money in lit levels and how cxtei!Sively to pri- Democrats want it cut to prot~t
_vatize the national retirerrient_system. · Medicare and dome.stic spendins
Some of the converging issues, 2029. ·
ROBERT L WINGETT
Those issues eventuall:yi will have to programs.
Publ.....,
like Medicare, could be divened
Conceiv ~bly, Congress could stan
before they crash. Others, especially fixing-Medicare for the long term this tie faeed by politicians unless, as
Last month, Ill House Democ.Social Security and defense. are year·· if the House Ways and Means seems unlikely, the Bureau of Labor rats, mainly liberals, wrote Pn:sident
• CHARUN£ HOEFUCH
. almost cenain to be central themes of Col!'mittee goes beyond the budget Statistics makes a substantial down- Clinton assenins that a budget cornMARGARET LEHEW
' the .2000 presidential race.
formula of provider cuts and modest ward adjustment in its inflation esti· promise "must begin seriously the
Controller
·GIIIWIII"IIIIIgel'
It's hard to say who will benefit . premium increases to reform mates, reducing cosFof-living process of moving funds .from the
politically as this explosive mix Medicare sllUcturally by encouraging increases for seniors. J Pentagon .. . to the civilian side if we
Running
on
a
con.ve~ins
time
are
to ... (avoid) devastating cuts ...
T i l e - 11 ,.,. ttl JIIIIIC&amp;.
moves to the front of the agenda. Cut- seniors to joiri managed-care plans.
t'
d '
S . IS
'
M l'k I .~. UUcturalproble
1n,..
mg e.ense to save octa ecunty
ore 1 e y, u"' s
m track with entitlement dCirisions are in important non-military programs."
1 . . - , 1 1 11,
r.._.wy 1 _ , _. . . , , . . . , . . . . , , , . . , , . , . _
and Medicare could be a mantra for will be kicked into next year, eilher the issues of how to restructure the
ltep. Barney Frank, D-Mass .. a
Tile
Coun
01t1o
'· a liberal contender-in -2000, and rad- by the appointment of a bipanisan defense budget for the 2l sl century_ leader·of.the liberal movement, says
1:18::.,:""::.:•MX:=,.:•:.:•:.:1:;'1112
:::;:,.,:,:1l~._____..___-_ ....,,...-__,.......,_ ical tax reform and missile defense Medicare commission or, as White and how,much it will cost.
that House Minority Leader Dick
will be key themes for conservatives. House budget director Franklin
Those questions have· not been · Gephardt, D·Mo., is an ally of the
On the other hand. a moderate •• . Raines is said to favor. by setting up resolved in the Quadrennial Defense defense-cut group. .Ir Gephardt does
Democrat or Republican -· who· White
House-Congressional Review being issued by the Pentagon not make this the theme of a 2000
comes
up
with
farsighted
solutions
to
Medicare
talks
in 1998 on the mod- today. JCn independent National · presidential candidacy, -then Sen.
- ByTOMRAUM
avoid a political explosion might el ofthis year's budget negoiiations. Defense Panel and a ta* force Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., may.
Aseoclated Press Writer
jump ahead of the pack for 2000.
If Medicare gets pushed into next appointed by Oefense Secretary
At the same time, conservatives
WASHINGTON -With the controversy of a $300,000 ethics penalI)'
'the basic fact i$ that while the year, though, the chances are that it William Cohen arc scheduled to rec- contend that a $270 billion defense
mostly behind him and House work done on a balanced-budget blueprint, 1997 budget deal sets a course toward · will be ·caught up in election-year
ommend more fundamental'lnilitary· budget is too small to permit the
. Speaker Newt Gingrich ts turning to promoting lofty, but hard to achieve, a balanced budget in 2002, it says posturing and then become a major
reforms later this year. and 'a major United States to carry out tbe strateinitiatives.
nothing about how to avoid bank· subject of debate in 1999 and 2000. debate will ensue in 1998 and 1999. gy of lighting two wars •· say, in t_he
.,,
As pan of a continuins process of rehabilitation, the Georgia RepubliPersian Gulf and on the Korean
can isfechanneling his energies into a series of grandiose proposals. ones
Peninsula •• at the same time and also
that seem assured 10 keep him in the limelight but out of the range of parbuild a missile defense shield.
tisan fire and internal sniping. ·
·
_
·
Beyond defense and entitlements,
In many ways, Gingrich's strategy echoes one used to gretll effect by Prcssupply-side conservatives like Jack
id_ent Clinton in 1996 as he reai:hed out for middle-class suppon.
·
Kemp and Steve Forhes, along with
The "new" Gingrich agenda incfudes:
. '
' '
conllressional Rcpulilicans Dick
-A "national crusade" as intensive ai; the campaign for a balanced budArmey (Texas) and Bill Archer
get to eliminate illegal drugs in Ameri~a by 2001.
(Texas), intend·to pusll'laXJCfonn to
- Sharp reductions in teen pregnancy and a national campaign to pro- ·
a
decision in the 1999-2000 period.
mote the importance of two-parent households.
makinll
the policy mix still· more
- Wide-ranging improvements in education.
volatile.
-An appeal to broadcast networks to revive " family hour" programing
Some critics of the 1997 budget
in prime time and a proposal that -cable music television networks run more
deal.
like former Congressional Budfree anti-drug commercials.
·
get
Office
director Robert Reis-A constitutional amendment to permit prayer in public schools.
chauer. contend that it involved "no
'_' We took four ycai'S to get this balanced budget. It was a huge effort,"
heavy lifting" and .failed to address
he said in a recent interview. "The question now is what is wonh America
'I'
the
baby-hoom rctiremciu prohlem .
accomplishing that is comparable to this four-ycjlreffort."
That's
too harsh. The budget pact
The House approval of tbe balanced budget compromise negotiated
is a political and fiscal vi9tory for
between the White House and congressional Repllblicans came a couple of
.
h
ath panics, but only a shon-term
hours before dawn this morning after hours of debate.-Gingrich devoted much
one.
The big issues ahCad can he :
of his attention in his first term as speaker to a balanced budget plan, hut
allowed
to drift toward a smash-up. ·
did lillie of the day-to-day negotiating this·timc.
They can he dcmagogued. Or someEven as he spoke in favor ofthe measure's adoption late Thesday evening, ·
one c~n lead the way to their solution.
Gingrich, a former history teacher, couched his endorsement of the com(Morton Kondncke is executive
'I
promise in terms of a history lesson. '''The founding fathers would aiU think.
editor
of Roll Call, the newspaper
look down on us and be happy," Gingrich said.
·
He said that the framers of the Constitution had deliberately created con- "----------------~-,------------~---' of Capitol HOI.)
stitutional obstacles to easy solutions. "If this system could work quickly,
• it could become a dictatorship."
·
Gingrich has been sounding some of his new themes in recent speeches
here.
..
o,l
He had planned to put them all together in a new agenda-roll out speech
Tuesday evening to a college audience in Indianapolis, 'but the speech was . By Ben WatteniNfrg
second industrial revolution created .what might they have come up with'! nological change and the organi:f.aput off because of the balanced budget-debate on the House Ooor. His aides
1 talked recently with Professor factories, the rise of organized labor, Surely, an end to the Cold Waf: An · tional. product, and human resource ·
said it would be rescheduled.
•
Nancy Koehn of the Harvard Busi- the ·Federal .Reserve System and . acknowledgment that democracy'hesl innovations that can come nut of it
In many ways, Gingrich is following a process used successfully by Clin· ness 'School. She is a historian of antitrust and labpr legislation.
fosters the commercial and civil:'law can drive long-term sustained
ton last year.
·
business, writing a book about at least
intrinsic to modem business. A ~urge increa.'ICs in productivity'/ Yes, it is."
Clinton learned that proposing initiatives popular with the middle class three industrial revolutions. /&gt;t. founh ,
Wattenberg of international trade. A takeoff of She notes that politics, economics
- but that cost the federal government little or nothing- yielded maxi- which should interest you, may atrive
new technology, bio-tech~ for exam· and communications have ugain
mum political mileage while presenting little exposure to attacks.
by .the time she finishes dealing with
Comes npw il)c th(rd excla111ation pic. A global acceptance that trrcc ituertwined with icchnology. "For
The president spewed forth proposals for combatting teen pregnancy, for the first three.
point. Koehn prefers to call• it the markets will heai the pants 'Uff!gov- much of the 20th century there has
The first business revolution, says third industrial rcvolution,but says it ernment·regulatcd markets aBf day been a five- or six-round bout waged
l)attling drug use. He proposed a program to make sure every child could
Koehn, lasted roughly from 1760 to could just as easily be called the of the decade.
•;
between state-planned econmnics
read by the third grade. He called for a cleanup of a third of the nation's
1820. lt was centered in nonhwest information revolution or the com- . In 19K6 most of that wouldchave and capitalism," Koehn says. "It endtoxic waste sites. And he also ordered Justice Depanment guidelines on teen
_England, the Silicon Valley of the munications revolution. (And that been regarded a.&lt; pie-in-the-sk)l ·non- ed in the late ' !10.. Capitalism won.
curfews and "moments of silence" in school.
J 8th century. The central new prod- . was before the· Netnik nudniks sense. An end to the CnldWar'!·Mur- Adum Smith can roll over and rest
More recently, Clinton has backed away from many of the vague promisuct was the old-kind of softwllfil, tex- arrived.) She says it began around ket-drive_n economics while tli: wei- easy in his grave. We're in the third
es of that camp~ign in favor of niorc specific, limited propOsals, befitting
tiles. mostly colton. The critical tech· 1970, not long after IBM put 'out its fare state was still riding hi!,!h'/ industrial revolution, and moving
his continued irn;umbency. while_Gingrich has gone for the big-vision items.
nological drivers were the spinning System 360 mainframe. By the mid . Ridiculous. Yet it happened .. In the into chapter two or chapter three of
Gingrich's apparent strategy is to turn attention away from his ethics and
jenny
and the steam engine.
, · '70s there was something called the last few years global GDPhas,grown - that ~vnlution. ~cuing close to a
leadership problems, and to put himself on a high road. He calls it prepar·
The second industrial revolution "home group computer club," meet· . at 4 percent, twice its previou~ r~ie. denouement. The threads of politics, ,
ing America for the miUennium.
·
But his GOP critics suggest that the pic-in-the-sky rbctoric may not help was centered in the United States ' ing in a classroom at Stanford Uni· I asked Koehn whether that might be scx:ial issues and communications un:
between 1870 and 1920. driven by versity. Apple was founded in the a. harbinger of a third-and-a-))alr interrelated in this very ri~'h quilt, this
him exercise contml of the more d'own-to-eanh agenda in lhe House.
·
the
railroad and the telegraph. linking '70s, Microsoft in 1975. Gordon industrial revolution.
"
chaotic weave uf the third industrial .
There, actual legislation must be drafted and debated to·carry fonh the
"It might well continue," she revolution. And they're going tn give
broad goals of the balanced-budget agreement. Many baules are expected. · people and places and goods and Moore, one of the founders of Intel,
A big fight also looms on Clinton's propo~lto extend most-favored· -businesses in new ways. A national predicted that _semiconductqr pro- -said. "Thei;c moments of..change way -- if history is any signpost .. to
nation trade status to China - which Gingrich supports but on which Repub- market formed. which birthed nation- cessing capacity would double about bring spikes in production. And over anotber very intercsting _quilt."
al advertising campaigns, like the one every 18 months. It did. It does.
the long term, those spikes seem to
So what'! The Dow Jones lnduslicans arc deeply divided. •
·
•
why
"You
Need
a
Bis·
Again.
Koehn
i~
careful
to
point
lead
to
a
rising
im:rcase
in
economic
trial
Average is at about 7,200, up
e•plaining
"I think Newt's performance in those debates will wind up being more
imponant than futuristic speeches," said conservative activist and publish· cui!" (Uneeda Biscuits). Some com· out that new technology is not the productivity and gmwth . •Bul dh ahout 2,KOO frnm this time in 1991).
or Bill Kristol. "I think at the end of the day, Republicans out in the coun- panics caught on quickly. like Coca- whole story. Economis_t~ and histori· -chose spikes lead to a smooth . I would guess that a li&gt;tlnh industri•
try want a real agenda pushed in Congress, not simply speeches ahout how Cola. Scars-Roe huck and · Mont· ans, she says. don 't fully understand (upward) path'/ No. In thei.Dtc ·19th al revolution tokes it to 11,000 by the
things cold he improved in America. "
gomcry Ward. Of last year's Fortune what kindles the sparks ihat .lightthe , century, the second industrial revo- end of the Y.ll!IL 2000, making m1ust
500 companies. 247 were founded fires of capitalism, w))ich produce lution wa.• fraught with Jlljpks and Americans nlYIEh richer.
But Charles Black. a longtime GOP operative. said Gingrich's new emphoBen Wattenberg, asenior fellow
,.,is "is a function of the fact that Congress and Washington were preoccu- between I K80 and 1920. It wa.• an and exploittho 'explosive technology. valleys, a.• 4 percent growth'br 6 per·
exclamation point in the history of ) asked Professor Koehn if pcrbaps cent growth gave way to 2 percent, at the ·American E!!terprlte lnsti·
pied with the budget."
With the basic balanced-budget blueprint now in place. "he wanted to capitalism. says Koehn.
.
we ilin 'I seen nothing yet. If a group and to significant husine~s down· lute, is th, aulD or "Values Mat· •
move on to the big picture ... Block said. "He's trying to get us beyond the
Business revolUtions arc woven of of economic thinkers had come turns. Arc we on autopilot or cruise- ter Most" liDd is the halt of
technology. ~olitics. econo~ics and to~cthcr 10 years ago to form u live· control with 4 percel)t gRJw_th'1 I think weekly pubHc teJeYillon
ram :
budget and get us over the hori1.1ln."
psychology. ·Koehn cxplatns. The potnl plan to boost economic growth. not. Is it likely that this kiftd of tC~=h·. "Think Tllllk."
PJ'OI
\
.
EDitOR'S NOTE- Tom Rauni conn politics and national affairs
for The Asl«lated Press.
·

business .:~f!VQIUtion

Pomeroy • lllddlapott, Ohio

:Thuracllly. lily 22.1887

Budget deal aLigurs 'train wreck' in 2000

First

•

111111

. Dixie M. Blevins, 8,, of New Haven, W.Va., died. on WodMsday, May
21, 1997 at Pleuant Valley Hospital in Point Pleu8nl. W.Va.
, She WIJ born on October 23, 1911 in Knott County, Ky., dat~ler of.the
late Ballard and Martha Wiremiln Hopkins Blevins. She was a retired cafe·
lena manager for the Philip Sporn Plant. She wu a member of the Provi.dence Bap_tisl Oturch in Topmost, Ky. .
'· •
Surviving are a-daughter and son-in-law, FloraL. and William K. Mershall, Sr., New Haven, W.V~. ; a sister in·la'f', Bonnie Hopkins of Waverly;
:three grandchildren;· seven great-grandchildren; tw~cre•t·great-grandchil·
.dren and several nieces and nephews.
'
.·
. ·
, Besides her parents, she wu preceded in de11th .~ her husband, Bennie
Bleviqs; a sun, James Randall Blevins; and a brdlher, Maynard Hopkins.
· Funeral services will be held at Fogelsong Funer,t.Home jn Mason, W.Va.
oil Saturday, May 24, 1997, at ·JO:JO a.m. with Bennie Stevens officiating.
. Friends may call at the Fogelsong Funeral Home from 610 9 p.m, on Fri·
day.
•
· . ' Additional .services will be held lithe Providence Baptist Church in Topmost, Ky. on Sunday atlO a.m. Calling hours will&lt;\le observed at the church
in Topmost from 6 to 9 p.m. Burial will follow in Drv Creek Cemeterv.

was

~nated

Tuesday evenina

ouuide of Wilkesville by Meias
County Deputy Robert Beoale and

Vinton County deputies-on 1 charge
of felony theft by deception. •
Arrested !VIS Randall Collins who
allepdly did contract workina, col·
. lecting pjiymein in advance bui not
finishing the project, accordilll 10
The fcillowiniJ cases we~ settled $56; Amy Triplett. Ponland. speed.
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
_
Monday
night in the Synltuse Coun $55; Ricky Cast 0, Point Pleasant,
Soulsby.
.
Qf
Mayor
George Connolly.
W.Va .. no taillights, $80; John Phil·
fo.nyone that wu a victim is asked ·
Appearing
in
court
were:
Berry
son,
Syracuse. speed. $53.
to contact the sheriffs office Qr the
Theiss,
Uber
Heights,
speed,
$51
;
Forfeiting bonds were: Kirk Tur·
prosecuting attorney's office.
reCkless operation, S140; Kenny ley. Racine~ speed, $57; Michael
Lunsford. Pomeroy. old fines. S 166; Edinger, Mineral Wells. W.Va.. speed.
Court to convellt
.
The . Founh District Court of Lori Hill, · Syracus~ . speed, SS2 ; $61.
Joshua
Roberts,
Pomeroy,
speed,
Appeals will convene on May 29 at
9:30 at the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas to consider cases
ANACONDA,.,
from Gallia and Meigs Counties. The
1'111, IAT, SUN
ONE
EVENING SHOW
- court is comprised of Presiding Judge
TIM ALLEN IN
STAIITING
FRIDAY
JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE "
Earl E. Stephenson of Portsmouth;
TOMMY
LEE
JONES
IN
AND
· Raymond E. Cunningham, Syracuse, died mi:)'Vednesday, May 21, 1997. Administralive Judge Roger Kline of
VOLCANO,."
MARLON WAYAN81N
Circleville;· Judge Peter B. Abele of
at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
. ,
.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
·
THE
SIXTH MAN""
·Athens and Judge Willliam H. Har- .Arrangements will be announced by the -f,l)gelsong Funeral Home-in
441-1088
sho or Circleville.
Mason, W.Va.
,
· The court directly reviews .all cas,
'I
cs heard or tried in lower courts in
which a decision is being appealed.
Ruth Martin, 77;of Pleasant Hill Road in At~ns,. died on Thursday, May It serves 14 counties in Southern
Ohio.
22, 1997, at Kimes Convalescent Center in Athens.
·
She was born on November 13, 1919, daughter of the late Harry and
; Goldie Pierce Tribe. She was retired from Ohio University, after 28 years · Accident reported
No injuries were re~ followin the Office of Admissions.
,,
ing
a deerfpickup ac:cidcnt' Monday
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Bill and Linda Martin of
night
around I0:20 on state Route
, Athens; a brother, Carl Tribe of Youngstown; two granddaughters and one
124 2 112 miles west of Langsville.
· great-granddaughter.
.
'James C. Barker, 2S, Rutland, was ·
' B~sides her parents, she was preceded in t ath by her hu.sband, Leo W.
westbound in his ·1996 Toyota pickMantn.
.
'i
. .
Funeral services will be held on Friday, Maf•23, 1997 at I p.m. at Bigony- up when he struck and killed a doc
deer that ran into the left-front wheel
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany, with Rev. Charles McVey officiating.
of his truck, causins light damage,
Burial will follow at Alexander Cemetery.
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m.
Depanment. repen.

Syracuse Mayor's Court news

Raymond Cunningham •

Ruth Martin

Summer -Time Means
Party nme at Taz's
• Large Meat &amp; Cheese Tray

$2999 Features 4 meats, 3 cheeses &amp; pickles

.Reva J. Smith

• Sandwich tray$2499

,.

Vanclalilm probed
Monday mornina. the Meigs
Rcva J. Smith, 69, of Railroad Street in f-1iddlepon, died on Thursday,
County Sheriffs Department was
May 22, 1997 at her residence.
\. ·
·
notified that IS window panes were
She was the daughter of the late George and Hazel Butcher McHaffie.
damaged
by rocks at Letan Falls EleShe is survived by five sisters, two brothers, and several nieces and
mentary
School.
,6,n investigation is
nephews.
'
Graveside services will be held at3 p.m. on Friday, May 23, 1997 at Grav- con\inuing.
In
addition,
the
Meigs
County
el Hill Cemetery in Middlepon. There will be ~o calling hoUrs.
_
_ Arrangements are undcrthe direction of Ewing Funeral Holne in Pomeroy. Highway Department reponedMon·
day that the window glass on the .
loader at the gravel pit ncar l..etan
Falls was smashed out A four-wheeler was rep_ortedly in the area . .

:. Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
I •

.

Units of the Meigs County Emer, gency Medical Service recorded sev~ en calls for assistance Wednesday.
" Units responding included:

PVH, Middleport squad assisted.
Items recovered
POMEROY
Thiev~s who stole a tractor and
. I0:43 p.m.. West Main Street. riding mower from the Letan Falls
Pomeroy. Jancua White, Veterans Cemetery apparently did not get far
-~·cENTRAL ~ISPATCH
Memorial Hospital, Central Dispatch with their stash, aecordinsto a Meigs
:
1:13,p.lp,. ~,_te I.toutc 7, Chester, ~aCJNd
as
_. ·Esistcd.
•
· Coumy Sheriff's Department report.
: Hellther Mora, Holzer Medical Ccn· ...,.
Monday, the ~I)Crifrs depanmcnt
ter;
'
._.
·
'4' 08 ,p.m .. volunteer lire depart- wa.• notified thattbe storage buildi.ng
3:36 p.m., South Third Avenue, ment to Third Street, automobile had been entered and a 1989 MasseyMiddleport, Ray Foster, Pleasant , lire.
Ferguson 4-whcel..drive tractor and a
Valley Hospital;
- SYRACUSE
1995 TroyBill riding mower stolen. A
,. 7:03p.m., Powell Street, Middle6·:58 p.m.. East 'Main Street, backhoe was puiled to the .doorway,
~ pon, Shirley Hennon, HMC;
· Pornproy, Fred Beaver, t~ted at the but the hucket caught on the-dnor
,
8:05 p.m:, Overbrook Nursing SCCJ.\C, Pomeroy squad assisted.
jamb and the backhoe wa.• not taken.
The tractor and mower were found
· Center, Middleport, Marvin Roach,
behind the c~nlCle,ry along with a
Aonouncem~mts · Jeep that was reponcdly taken from
the B&amp; W Ganige around 3: 18 a.m.
Auction results from the May 21 Burllqltam servicel set
Monday~- the report stated. It is
The
I
07th
annual
Memorial
Day
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Assobelieved
the Jeep was used to pull the
service at the Burlingham Church
ciation:
-....;'j
cemetery will bC held at I :30 p.m. tractor and mower from the building.
HOGS: Butcher..ftogs. 553-54.
·
COWS: -Standard, $41J.$54; ; Util- Monday.
· S~aker will be the Rev. Keith Nolle~ to property buyrn.
ity. $30.39; Butchers. $41-54.
FEDDER CATILE: Steers. Kapple. Special instrumental and · The Meigs County Health Dcpan,
· 572-8.1 Heifers. $60-68; Calves. vocal music will be provided . by · men! reminds people planning to·pur,
Steers, $78-91; Heifers. $66-75: Back Fran!! O'Brien, Joe and Kathrcn ,Col- chase real estate on which io place a
hum, •Joseph and Ri Ia White. and Dr. mobile home to check with !he health
to the farm babes,$100 and down .
depanment to sec if the propeny is
'
Feeder cattle and hood cow sale Bill Cucklcr.
. feeney-Bennett Post 128. Ameri· served by a sanitary sewer system or
Wednesday, May 28, 12 n~n.
can Ldgion. will provide .the honor if it can be approved for the installation of a private home sewage disguard for the service.
posal system.
Veterans Memorial
f,•: :...r~"~-'
Wednesday admissions - none. FellowshiP to meet
'
,, ., ' '
Mcii!S
County
Churches
of
Christ
Wednesday discharges- Phyllis
·-.
Women's Fellowship. Middlepon, 7 ,."
'
Turner.
•
&lt;
p.m. tonight. Dexter Church has
'I
·Holzer Medical Center
I
' 1 1
~
~';,'·' ' ' I
devmioos.
'
...f.
ti;,.,
DI.Cbar&amp;es May
Sylvia
···•· '·
Porter, Samuel Will. Justin Roush,
, Shelby Rdlisci'll. Ross King. James
:11
: Burton, Eleanor .Law~on; Lave111e
Peck. Gail Mount. Bcnha Joh11son.
(Publuhed with permllsion)

with ·Ham Salad, Chicken Salad, Pimento Spreads
We can custommake any party tray
Call 992·7339 12 hours In advance

Check out our Pop,
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specials

TAz·s.MARATHO"
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State Route 7 at Five Points 992-7339

GPLA results

OPEN HOUSE

Hospital news

• Tours
• Refreshments
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May 25th, 1·5

·If you are unable to attend
·teel,'free to come by another day.

.:.~-

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER'S

ellso

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSJIUMI
..&lt;

)

Ohio

Pomeroy,

~;lou poMIIJC paid at Po~y. Ohio.

MMberl The Ab~iated Preu. nnd tht Ohio

Nc , PIPi r Auodnrion.

-"Walk For·Wellness" - ·

fOITMASTIRI Settd addml t&lt;'ll'l'fCI:IOM to
The Dai,ly Searinet, Ill Coun St .. Poritero~. ,

'

Ohio45769.
SUBSCIIIPTION IIATI!S

IJCm!Her--•

Tuesday,
May 27
'
t 1·2 and 4·6
Hike,:a Bike Trail
.

'

.
SIN!lLI COPY PIICE .
.
DIIIJ ..............:.................................... 35 Co1ll1

• ·=:::;:~~,.,.::-rina

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poy 111e &lt;l!ri« m.y
iliN&lt;IIO Tho Dolly Seiolotl
• 12 moiiiiiiiiiiL Cledll will be

_. __

•-..mer--k.
..............
No ,_,.... by

lOIII!

pOIII~IIN

to ....0

.

, .. , ......... ,.....10 ..... - ..... t lfdU pll'IDd. SUbwalp I a ,_

"'-.., ... ,.,., ·

........ .,..... 1$11

Sbf

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•

'

1lrt

.

cr iz~cr cr Utttretl ~llttte

,.

A Ngi•tratiori table wiD
/x, locat.l at tke Nar
o/ the Big Lot# parleing

lot o'n Pine Stnx~t. ·
Public: Is lnvkecll

A.•pecial prifiG tO liN first 50
M~WJ/50 ,..,.J,.,..-to Nfli•t.w.

·J ,... &lt;••-...................,..

... Jl ; ••

' .

Jnnttr~ (tt~ap£1

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...

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590

James' R. Aoree1 Jr

Dt..-ctor/MIMgtr

t~uin~t.
'

.nttttr~

992-5444
..

Bruce R. Fl8her
DlrMtor

•

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1)le Daily Sentin~1

Sports

·

Thome steals home

Indians notch 1-0
.victory over Ro.yals _

Thured8y, ..., 22, 1187

Jan lead 2-D In NBA Westem Conference finals

Rockets blame refs in 104-92 defeat

-.

By KEN BERGER

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - They

enti"' team - and with good rcuon . . the re£erees that the Jazz are setting and what he said - whatever."
· Stockton had 26 points, 12 assists illegal moving picks.
·
. Hakeem O!ajuwon led the Rock·
couldn 'tstop the pick-and-roll, they and eight rebounds; Malone had i4
"We addressed it in a profession- ets with 30 points, bu! almost half of
couldn't grab any rebounds, they point5 and IS rebounds, Jeff Her- al manner, but it was like talking to them came in the fourth .quarter
nacek scored 17 points and Bryon a wall,'' coach Rudy 'Tomjanovich when Houston was already out of it
couldn 't mount a comeback.
When everything h'ad alreadl' Russell added 12.
'
said. "I'm not trying to be a whiner. Barl&lt;ley, who fouled out, added 16
Utah's bench pitched in, too, just but it's a factor in the game."
failed for the Rockets, including a
points and .clyde Drexler had IS.
pre-game gripe session with the ref- as-it did in tile Jazz's 101-86 victo- · · The officials did not call Utah £or
The Jazz took control by ending
erees, Charles Barkley resorted to ry in Game. l. Led by reserve center a single moving pick ~iolation, and the third quarter with a I 5-2 run, getthuggery nearthe end of Utah's I04- Greg Foster and backup point guard . the Rockets' collective temper boiled ling strong contributions from their
92 victory Tuesday night.
Howard Eisley, Utah's bench ·over when Barkley flattened Stock- lesser-known plar,ers while Hous- ·
"I was trying to separate his outscored Houston's 23-11.
ton underneath the Jazz's basket.
ton's attack deteriorated·into·a series
shoulder or break his ,rib," Barkley
"They've been giving us a lift,"
"Next time I'll break him in ·of isolation plays, most of them
said of a flagrant foul he committed
Stockton said of Utah's bench. half,'' Barkley said to referee Jack unsu.ccessful, for its three superstars.
on John Stockton midway through
"They come in and score and get us Nics.
Hornacek hit a comer jumper,
the fina! period. "I was serious."
a little bit of a lead, and I think that
"They're going to keep setting Eisley made a three-pointer, Foster
That s how frustrated Utah has _ . gives everybody a sense of confi- their moving picks, an!! obviously made a comer jumper. Russell stole
made Houston, whoch returns home . dence. You can use any edge you get the refs aren 't goin! to do their the ball from Drexler and went iil.for
to The Sum mot for Oames 3 and 4 in the playoffs."
jobs." Barkley Said before mention~ a fastbreak dunk,
The Jazz also outrebounded
Fnday and Sunday.
ing that he was deliberately trying to
Eisley made another jumper, EosAnd unless t~e Rockets find a Houston 56_37 _
hurt Stockton.
tcr scored on a drive and Eisley
way to stop Utah s well-mled, mulThe Rockets tried to'gain an edge
"Whatever." Stockton replied. closed the period with two free
to-faceted attack. they are on danger prior to Game 2 by complaining tn
"That 's my comment on what he did . . throws
of bemg swept out of the Western
Conference finals.
·
"We' vc got to win Friday, we've
got to win Friday,' Barkley said.
•MEMORIAL WEEK•EHD•
"You can come back from 3- I. but
ttot from 3-0."
.
Utah had such a well-rounded
attack that the fans, for the first time
in at least a month, didn't even chant
"M-V-P" at Karl Malone. Instead .
they were on their feet cheering the

Kanawha Valley .

Dri!WifPar~ Inc,

I DON'T THINK SOl - Utah's
Antoine Carr (55) blocks the
shot of the Houston Rockets'
Charles Barkley during Wednesday night's NBA Western Con. terence finals game in Salt Lake
City, where the Jazz's 104-92 win
gave them a 2-0 lead In the bestof-seven aeries. (AP)

Scoreboard
Baseball
AL standings
Eutem Dl•ision

11: .1. &amp;i.

1utD

Ballimote ............... 30

!&lt;II

13

.69"

Nrw York .............. 2~ 10
Toron1o : ....... .,........ 2J 19
Oelroit. .................. l9 2 ~
Bosmn ................... l 6 26

.S4R

6'~

.4J2

II ':

. ~S 6

. ~K I

S ~m

Minnt:solo .............. l~

27

.400

Colorado (lhom!&gt;Qn 0-2) at San Fran:\ : ~ 5 p.m.
. Lo!ii An.&amp;e les {Nomo ~ - 2 ) at San
Ol(go CHanulton 2-1). ~ : 0~ p.m.
N.Y. Mets (8 . JconeJ 7-2) ill Phil:it.lcl phi n (Schilling 6-.11. 7:0!'i p.m.
, Pittsbur g~ (Lieber 1-~1 :-.1 Mon1real-

cisco CG:udnei' ~ - I).

1 ~ ':

I'·;
2
2
S':

l\nohcim ................ 2J 20
.5eurlle .................... 24 21

. ~:\~
. ~:n

t '·;

(Pt:rez 4-:\), 7J .~ p.m.

OnklanJ ............... 1~

.J91

. M

Wednesday's scores

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS : Sip.n 11:
N.Y. Mets (Miid.i O-J) al PhilaJdFreddie Jonc111o tll~·yt:ar ~,;umnn:l ant.! T
phi:~ (Siephensiln 1-0), 73 S.p.m.
Mike Withycoml'tc:.
·
Pirt ~ burgh (Coo ke J- ~1 m Mnnm:ul • .--...;.,....,;....;,_ _ _ _ _ _ __,
IMurtincz 7-0). 7JS r:m.
Chi_c.-go C11hl; (Mulholl and J . ~) 111
CINCINNATI (M c r ~ h·r 1·4), 7 : ~S p.m.
Hous1o n (Wa ll 1- 1) a1 Colomtln
CB.M. Jones Q.Ol. 9:05p.m.
•
All:mla (Smoll z ~ - JI :11 Lo.s Angeles
' (A 51 :t~.:i o J -2). IO:JS p.n1.
Florida (fernanlkz. ~- 4l m S:.m Dicgu
(Valenzueln 1·61. 10: ~~ p.m.
S1. Louis (Morris 1'-2) ut San Fra111:is·
co (E.,Ic.~ ~-2). -I OJ~ p.m.
.

-

Minne501:14
Balti more 2. (&gt;etroit 0
, ClLVELAND I. Kamms Cil) 0
• Tornnto :'1 . N.Y. Y;~nkees I
Chi4:itJ;:n White Sox 10. Brno:ton ~
03kland 7, Te11a~ 3
An:.heim IK. Seaule ~

Today's games

NBA .playotTs
Wednesday's score

ken 2 -.~1 - LU p.m..

Utah I H4, H11U ~1un 92 :· Utah IIiads sc-

ricN 2-0 .

Friday's games
Tl!xas (Oliver 2-41 nt Dt-rroit (Mnehlt...-

p.m.·

.

Tonight's game

m CLEVELAND

Miami 111 Chic:1gu. KJ Op.m.

.
Roston (Sele 4-.l ) ar N.Y. Ynnkec s
(Mendoza ~ - I ), 7 : J~ r .m
Annheim (Springer 2-1) :11 Toronto
(Guzmnn ~ -.1 ). 7 : J~ p.m.
M il w&amp;~uk ec (Karl 1 · ~1 at Chi cnJ n
While: Sox (Aiv;vez J.41). K:OS p.m.
Seanlc (Jnhnson $-I I ~•• Kansas Cily
!Bclc~T $-4 ) , M : O~ p.m.
. Dilklnnd (Karsay 0-5) al Mitme!iula
(RmJk~

J -ft l.

H :2 ~

Friday's ~tame
Utah at Hmwtm. K : ~op . m.
Saturday's ~arne
Chk:tlf,U ~• Minmi . .\: .~0 p.m.

Transactions

p.111.

Baseball

NL standi~:~gs
11: L &amp;1.

IW1

Amtrlr11n l.ta)lut
CHICAGO WHrll ~ SOX: Pu rdut~o.·tl
th11 o:t\ ftll':tO:I uf INF Sl· olll ).,.'ius frnm St
l1mtl nf the Nl-.nhcrn l.c:tguc and &lt;ts~ i~1\l'd
him au Nmoll\·illt: nf 1hc 1\mcrictm A ~m1: i -

!&lt;II

Ati:LDIIL ................. J 2 1,1

.71 f

H1ridL

17

M-1

.f _.

... ... - ~ -' I~
Ncw'f'nrL .... .:...... U 21
Pllihldi:lphi a ... ........ l7 27

~~M

1

.53.\
..\Mf\

'J-'':

. .. ... 27

M l~t~l fl'i tl.. .. ..

'
Crntraf IJft-iskNI
Ho1.u1nn ....... .........24 :!.!
~2Z
Pin ~burp.h ..............21 12 - ~
S1. Looi ~ .... ............ IK lh ,--1()1,1
C'ltk:tfn ...... : .......... 16 2" ..\64
· CINC NNhTI ....... I4 .10

--" M

If.

l.&lt;ll' A!lllelctJ ...........2~

Snn ,{)iCJ!Il ........ :..;:... IH

Itt

. ~It I

20
20

..'H ~

2~

Nlllunaii AiiKut'

ATLANTA IJI{AVES : Agr' rcJ I t•
1 ~' nl l~ with LHI1 Tnm Gl:lvinc 11• 11 1'•1Lif·
y~· nr ~·unlf:t~.1 .

C'HICAGO CU US : Opl ionl.'tl OF
11 rnnk~ Kil.'~chnidi. Ill luw:1 uf Ilk.' Ank'ni.'illl A~ lloc iali oll . l':.lk~l up INF-01-' Ut~ l ll
flrnwn rrum lnw:a.
1 I~ .OIUf)A MARtiNS : Optiont.'tl iNr
R:tljltl Milliun.l lu C'h:irluu~· 1'1' Ilk.' ltlll'fllil·

I
~

7

•

Wnttfn Ol.-Won
Snn FmnL'i~t~ ........2~
Clllumdo .... ...... .... .. ::!-1

c.

~.

=Mereudef:s'

.

\

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ

HOUSTON (AP} ,..-- If Je££ Bagwell-can't beat you one way, he'll do
it another.
Cincinnati intentionally walked
Bagwell three times, but he stole sec6nd.in the 14th inning and scored the
winning on Luis Gonzalez's single as
the Houston Astros beat the Reds 43 Wednesday night.
· "I wanted to hit a gaJ~Wr, just get
the ball in play," Gonzalez said.
"But the key was Baggy stealing'
second base so easily. He got in scoring position and that helped us
win."

Admltllilcm $15 Per Person- Children under 12$1.00
.
12 miles South of
US Rt. 35
.

.

got Thomru; Howard and Tim Bogar to pop up to end the threat.
The Astros escaped a basesloaded jam in the ninth.
Pinch-hitter Eduardo Perez do~­
bled off reliever Billy Wagner and
Deion Sanders followed with an
infield single that Biggio stopped
with a dive, holding Perez at third.
After Sanders stole · second, his
Yau'U .. IIIICilllllllhe
prints and
major-league leading 27th theft,
enlargemenls W. a111 make from yau 31/2 x5,
Wagner walked Goodwin to load the
bases. Center fielder Thomas
4 x6, or even -.-size prints. Up to 8xI0
Howard then chased down Reggie
enlargements wllh dazzling • and
Sanders' Oy at the warning track for
the final out.
sharpness fram \lllr KODAK IMAGE MAGIC
Tony Eusebio hit into a double
System.
play in the seventh innin~. scoring
Sean Berry from third for a 3-2
Houston lead;
For aspecial keepsake, zaom, Crop, ·
The Reds tied it in the eighth after
red1Kt •red-Ip•, IYtll add a "Fun Fnime•·
.
· Reggie Sanders and Hal Morris hit
border like lhe one pldured above. We can also restore old and laded
one-out singles oil'. John Hudek.
Reggie Sanders scored the tying run
prints lo new glory. Stop In today and be amazadl
'when Houston failed to turn a double play on a grounder by pinch hitter Terry Pendleton. _
r .'' We came clnsc tn sweeping this
Fruth Coupon
1
series,'' Reggie Sanders said. "We
I
just couldn't get over the hump. hut
that's happened to us a lot this year."
Eaglarge•P~t,
Shane Reynolds pitched seven
innings for the Astros , striking out
six and walking one.
Houston took a 3-2 lead in lhc
seventh when Berry singled, went to
third on Bob Abreu's single and
scored when l::usehio grounded i~to
a double play.
.. y,.r ,_,.,..,,._
1'/M,..,...y"
Bagwell hit his 15th homer in the
third to give the Aslros a 2- 1 lead .
Morris' infield hit oil' pitcher
Shane Reyn_olds' glove scored Cur' Gallipolis, OH
tis Goodwin with the Reds' first run in
the
openin~
inning.
In the flret Inning of Wedneeday night's NL Cen(2nd Ave. Store Only)
\
tral encounter In Houaton, where the Astroa won
4-3 In 14 innings. (AP)

Bagwell took the NL lead in Gonzalez, who was hitless in his five
home runs with a two-run sliot in the previous at-bats.
third inning after he had singled in
Gonzalez lined a hit to left field
the first inning.
but Curtis Goodwin's throw to tbe
Reds interim manager Denis plate was wide to the right, allowing
Menke had a strategy to stop Bag- Bagwell to slide in safely.
. well once the game entered extra
Tom Martin (2- 1) pitched the ·
innings.
·14th for. the victory.
.·
··
"I knew Mr. Bagwell wasn't
Houston loaded the bases with
going to beat me with his bat,'' one out in the 12th, but couldn't
Menke saicj. "He didn't. It just did· score.
n't work out like I hoped it would ."
Craig Biggio Jed off the inning
Scott Sullivan (0-1) got Craig "(ith a double off Sullivan and. wus
Biggio and Bill Spiers on ·fly balls to sacri !iced to third by Spiers: After
start the 14th and then.intentionally intentional walks to Bagwell and
walked Bagwell in order to pitch to _ Gonzalez loaded the bases, Sullivan

·

,

-~~

l ':

.41~

7

t i utmll..c:\ftll~.

rl'rt'SI\URGH PJRft.'h~S :

DFUR
IS CLOSI GI 'S DOORS,
PER
E r! ·
Once Our Stock Mer~handise Is Gone, So
·_Are We. So Hurry In For Best-Selectio~l!
- · · Still A Great Selection Of: ·
~

Everythilig Sold "As·ls"
Cash &amp;Carry, Delivery Available

Air Conditioners

·a-at rile Heat!!

C&gt;ili UI Il\.'11

RHP R:unlln Mttrd •• ,, (';lltr.:try ul' tlw
PG.' L, 1\.:ll\'atl•d I.HI1 M:m Rul.'"'-.•1 from

tlk· I ~-dol)' Ui~l'tlcd li111.

--~

a BUICK SELLABRATI
Stop In Today And
·Test Drive
The
All

· 5,000 BTU 110 Volt... ........ $299
8,000BTU 110 Volt... ........ $399
9,000BTU 110 Volt.. ......... $469
12,000 BTU 110 Volt... ..... .'.. $539
~5.000 BTU --110 Volt. .......,.$619 .
18,000 BTU 220 Vott .........:$599
22,000 BTU 220 Vo~.~ ........ $739
25,000 BTU 200 Vott .......... $829

1

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•

•

Recliners ·
Glider Rockers
.Bean iags
Coffee &amp; End
.Tables
Televisions
Mirrors
Curios
La•ps
Appliances
•••n the Plctllires
on ihe Wall

grill!...,

1 Buy I

Get One

C§8FREE-

wv

TIME IS
RUNNING OUT

Prints and Enlargements in 5 Minutes

No negatives needed,
bring in your · .
,.
favorite ·hoto~

Astros beat Reds
4-3 in 14 innings
-

SATURDAY NIGHT ~
Quick 8 Top Sportsman
Quick 8 Top Dragster
Heads Up - Pro Tree
$1950 Purse
SUNPAY Final Elimination 2:00 pm

I

Basketball

Boston (Gordon 2 - ~ ) at N.Y. Y:mkL"\'S
{Well~ 4-l). I :~ p.m.
·
K11n~ns Cily C Rrn~udo ~ - 21 at CLEVELAND (lopel. 1-2). I: IJ~ r .m.
.
Oal.lotnd (Ad:tms 2 -.~) at T!! X iL~ (Bur-

B~lt i i'I'K'ltC IKey 8...())
(Or,ca 4-~). 7:Q"i p.m.

·,,

FRIDAY·
Tech • Test• Tune &amp; Parking ....... , .... ........ ........... ..... 12 Noon-7:00pm
SATURDAY- Gate Open ....... ....... :........ ..... :.... .. ..... .. :.. .... ........ .......... :.. ......... 9~00 am
lime Trials .......... .. ..... ........ .:.. ................ .. .... ..... :.............. 11 am- 6 pm
Record Runs ... ............... .... .. ...... ...... ............ :...... :... 12 Noon - 4:00pm
Bracket Race .............. .... ............... ..... ........ ...... ... ............... .. ... 6:30 PM
TIS • T/0 QUICK 8 ........ ........ ,,. .. .;........................................... 6:30 PM
SUNDAY·
Gates Open ......... :....................... .. ..... .......... .... ... ...... ... ......... 10:00 PM
lime Trials -(1 ) ... ......... ...... .. ......... :......... .............. .... ........ ........ 12 Noon
Final Eliminations ........................:.......... .............. .... .... ........... 2:00 pm,_

' FontbaD

year cnnlnll:l .

•

~

Tile Rumors·Are True••.After so Years of Serviee to the Area

Mi l waukee~ -

2. )), J , o~

,

Friday's games

1'·:

SCHEDOLE

~- . ,

.'
THAT'S MORE LIKE ITI - After
e foul on her flr1t
WAmNG ON A TEAMMATE- The Meigs MarauderS' T.J. Di¥11
weltl
for the baton from teammate Adam Ja1011 Thomes to beglf!
lllllh1lpt, the
BrkiQet John1011 tekH e Jeep more
to her liking du
Wedn11dey'a flnela of fl1e glrle' long jump In · the MCond leg of the boys' 4 x 80().meter relay finals In-the Divithe Dlvlelon I dletr rMet at Ironton High School'• track end field
sion II district n.et Wednesdlly at Ironton High School's track end
compltx. In her MCond try, JohniOIJ hecfe 12-foot; 3.75--lnch effort. · field complex. The l,tereuclers took '11nth with e 9:09.2 flnleh In e
(OVP photo bY, G. Spencer Oabome)
· ·
· .·
race wOn by Gallle Acedamy. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Oebome)

.,

WORLD CUIIPIOIIBIP IDa Nll,.l RICI

..... .....~··"' "'

~~

SATURDA'tMAY 24 SUMDAY. MAY 25

IRBA SliP-ON DBAG RACIIG

Nalionall H•kelbaU Aaoclatkm
W A.SHINGTON WIZARDS : l:irct.l
ClillorJ Rny a~ ~ i~l:ml ~ rmch .
Natkm1l Foothlllll LcaJUt
GREEN BAY PACKERS: AgTL"t:d tu
lerm ~ with LB Wnynt Simmons on n ~~~~­

r' .

~

Basketball

Today's ga_mes

Wtsltm Dh·ision
Tc,;as ....................24 JR . ~m ·
2H

!IIC

Dit:(!O~ - Los An(!.e h::~ 4 ( II )

t.

Cmtnl [);vision
CLEVELAND ........22 20 - ~ 14

Milwaukee .............20 21 .4KK
ChiCDJO ................. 20 22 .476
KDIWI Ciry ........... 20 22 .476

ST. I.OUIS (' ARlJINAU~ : Purd•:• ~ d
..: nn1m~· 1 11f I.HP Ri~u BL"Imm fmm
Lnui~\· i lk· nf the Amcrit!un As~udnti nu .
Optiunt!tl RHP Orat.ly· R"'-~i11 w
Loui ~ villc .
·
SAN DIEGO PADR~S : Rea s~ i~nc•l
RHP Bill Ant.lc n on 10 Mnltile Ill' the
Snuthtrn Le.-tl!-111!.

Wednesday's scores
Atlnntu J, Montreal 2
Pinsburgh ~-St. ·Louis 2
Chkngo Cull~ 7, Phihidd phia 0
Color.1t.lu 10. Sun Frund ~w 7
N.Y. Mets 2. Florida I
Houston 4, CINCINNATI J C141

;-,

CLEVELAND (AP) ~ This is
how tough Kevin Appier was: 1bc
Cleveland Indilins' only chtiiiCC to
beat him was to have one of their
slowest players steal home.
And it worked.
·
Jim ·Thome scoi'ed the game's
only run on the front end of a double-steal and Cleveland won without
hitting a home run for the lirst-time
this season ·by heating the Kansa.'
City Royals 1-0 Wednesday night.
Again, Appier was a tough-luck
pitcher. He allowed only two hits in
eight innings and suffered his second
1·0 defeat of the season in a third

• STEALS THIRD -The Cincinnati Reds' Cur·
: tis Goodwin (left) alleles Into thljci beae aa Houston third beeemen ~n Berry applies the leta tag

Meigs Band Boo-sters to hold linkfest Saturday
•
: The Meigs Band Boosters Club
will host the seventh annual Memorial Weekend golf scramb.le on Saturday at 9 a.m at tHe Meigs County
.
·
Goi£Ciuh.
, Each year the Band Jfoosters rec. 'ognize and honor prominent eduua- .

tors from area schools. Past honorees
at this event arc James Diehl, Nolan
Swackhamer, James Venn uri, Lee
McComas, Howard Knight and Rita
Slavin.
The 1997 tournament wi II be in
honor of Preston Gihbs, a teacher at

' CLEVELAND (AP) - Marietta
hc!ld ba.'ICball coach Don Schaly has
hcen chosen as the 1997 Ohio Conference baseball couch of the year.
• ·Schaly led the Pioneers to their
~6th appearance in the NCAA Divi-

sion Ill Mideast Regional Tourna- 1, 189-273-14 after 34 years as the
ment this past season. finishing Pioneers' head coach. He has Jed
Marietta to thrc_e NCAA Division Ill
fourth in the tournament.
titles;
15 Mideast Regional titles and
Marietta claimL-d the OAC tournament title and had a 43-7-1 record. 22 OAC titles , including eight
Schaly has a career record &lt;;f -straight.

CWl!/lC/Oiml!/

TWIN, FULL,
BEDDING AVAILABLE

~1'11/l!/

&amp;ll levmrvb I _

· Farmers Bank Is Having A Reunion
Stop In On Friday, May 23rd
Fromll:OO a.m. until3:00 p.m.
· For Cake and Punch
See old friends and classmates
c;;Otbtv bw· ~~ 9Utw.

Cood Selection

. . ume On Over To Bob's

Pomeroy .and Meigs High Schools
for 3 I years.
· To enter a team or for more info~­
. mation, contact tournament chairman John Krawsczyn at MHS (9922158) or at home (992-6394).

OAC.names Marietta's Schaly coach of the year

RECLINERS DRASTICALLY
REt,CED. KITCHEN AIID DIIIINO
Roo• SETS
AVAILABLE.

This Memorial Weekend
Bob's Delicious Produce Will Make
Your First Picnic of the Season Great!
Florida
Vine
Ripened
Tomatoes
· . "Taste Like-·
Homegrown"

Fa

Century &amp; Regal
Now In Stock

•

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Farnten
Bank
a Savtngs company

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

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.

lb.

8 1/2"

Combination
Planters

POtted
Geraniums v.rloua81ulpea
and New
a
Guinea
Impatiens ·
Now Just

...........
,.....
.. Ht

........

49'

....... .

. c. ..........

' - lb.

Still a large
•election of
trees and
evergreen .

• W.lliilllll...

• eu.u.......

"Area• Best
Selections"

2400 Ee1tem Avenue,~. OH
Phone (814) 448-1711
· Open: Mondey-Seturdly, 8 e.m.-9 p.m. ;
Suncley 10 Lm.-8 p.m.

Open:

.

World
Famous
Sweet" ·.

1\vo Convenient LoCations:

='-=~ ·Q

.

11

. Tomeeoel•• l'ePf81'11

.

"

Onions

·Vegetable
Plante

1/4 ... North of

•

-Vidalia

Fresh
-Georgia
White Half
Runner .
Green Beans

I

'3''

New

J

failed quest roc' hls tOOth career won.
••Appier pitched a very Appi erlike same," said Royals manager
Bob Boone, u1111perated arter his
team's lifth straight loss and third by _
one run.
The Indians won their fourth
straighl.. a season high, and improved
to J-6 when they do not hit a home
run. They have a chance to move
three games above .SOO for the li rst
time this season with a viclory over
the Royals today.
· Cleveland, which leads the
majors with 72 homers, usually
doesn't hav.e to steal_home. They did
against Appier.

' I

Brtdgt, ~. wv

~1

I Lm.-8 p.m.;

.

.

�•

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio·

I • The Dally Sentinel

.
'

.

--Community calendar-

•

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

via the lobby or you can motor 10 the
lower end of the hospital and follow
this weekend and I wanted 1.0 men- a 1'1\lh past the Meigs Emergency
tion a special get-together that is Medical Service to the parking lot at
heing planned for the Middlepon the rear of the nospital. Entrance -to
High School graduating class of the emergency tacility is nearby and
1962.
you should have 'no problem with
·
A special reunion will be held · that.
from noon to 3 p.m.-Saturday at the
Riverbend Arts Council building on
Thanks to the PTO, Friday will
Nonh Second Ave., Middleport.
be a very special day at the Letart
A luncheon will be held and Falls EleiTlcntary School in the
friends of the class are invited to Southern Local School District.
drop by during the designated time
· The PTO members under presislot. In the evening, of course. class dent, Lou Arthurs, have worked hard
members will be at the full alumni during the school year to pay bills
association 'reunion at the Meigs and raise money to help with the FriJunior High School.
day observance. On Friday under the
. Planning Saturday's special get- PTO sponsorship will pay appreciatoJether arc Texanna White · tion not' only to.the school's teachers
Wehrung and Bev Perrin Dixon. but to all other members of the staff
Tltose of you having any questions as . well. Brinagers' have provided
should contact Tcxanna at985-4227. potted pl~nts for the honorees and
there'll be certificates of appreciaA number of you will· remember tion and blue ribbons. A plaque will
former Meigs County resident, tal- be presented for the school. And best
cnted Victor Genheimer.
· of all refreshments including ice
Victor will be observing his I 0 I st cream, ca~e and other goodies. pro- .
birthday on May 28 and I'm sure vidcd by the PTO, will be served to
would love to hear from Meigs. everyone on hand to round out the
· County friends. He is able to get final day of school.
arpund some and is doing well conRemember Ivan Carman who forsidering.
Cards may be scnt'to him at Box merly resided in Meigs County?
3075 Wcstwick, Columbus, Ohio
Ivan is confined to a nursing
43232. Victor these days makes his home in Columbus these days but
home with a·daughter.
would appreciate hearing from his
many Meigs County friends and
The route you've been following associates from years gone by.
to get to the emergency facility at
A cll)'d or note will reach him at
Veterans Memorial Hospital is tem - Arbors East, 5500 E. Broad Sl.,
porarily closed.
Room 219A, Columbus, Ohio
Due to construction of the new 43213.
Meigs Medical Building, the road on
the uj)Jler side of the county infirThe only ones I know of who
mary--the route you always took--, could possibly 00 pleased with the
has been closed u.ntil abqut Septem- insistent cold weather are the heat
ber.
providing companies. Oh well. We
To reach the emergency facility do keep smiling.
now, you can still enter the hospital
The alumni reunions for the most

part in Meigs County are coming up

- The CommUDity Calendar Ia ing day will be held at the Hazel
publllbed as a tree servke Ill noa-· Community Church DeWias Run
profti&amp;I"'UJJI,..illala&amp; to a a - e Road, 9 a.m. Saturdlly.
m«ttn1 and special evmts. The
calendar Is not desi]pted to proRACINE - _Racine/Soutbet:n
mote sales or fuDd railers of1111y · Alumni Banquet. Saturday, 6:30
type. Items an prin~ as spliCe p.m.. Southern HiP,~ School in
permits and cannot be guaranteed Racinc.Special musicil •progr1111 to
1o run a specific number of days.
follow. Tickets are $10 at Racine ·
mURSDAY
•
Home National Bank or bY tMiina
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta . Shirley Johnson at 843-5279.
Bela Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:'30 p.m Thursday potluck picMIDDLEPORT -- Class of 1%2
nic, home of Ruth Ann Riffle.
will have a luncheon Saturda)' at' 3·
. p.m. at tlie Rivcrbend Aris Council
TUPPERS PLAINS -- VFW building, 239 North Second Ave.,
9053, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. and Middleport. Classmates and friends
refreshments, 6:30p.m. .
are invited.

· 1996 MERC.URY

COUGAR LS
V&amp;, auto, air cond,
AMJFM caa, tilt, crulae,
PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr
Mit.

o
nap o
MEI:,:G S· MARAUb·E RS

4 cyl, air cond, AMIFM
i:111, . PS, PB,
dtfroater, more, .
1 STANDARD, 1 AUTO

· • PB1 PW, POL, Pwr'eeat.

1996 ·
CHEVRO'LET
MONTE CARLO

3~11

V&amp;, auto, air cond,
AM!FM can, tilt, crulae,
PS, PB, PW, POL. -

$

1996 CHEV
CORSICA
V&amp;, auto, air cond, AM/FM .· .
CUI, · PS, PB, PDL, tilt,
LOTS OF EXTRAS.
The Meigs Marauder Bueball Tum wlll .be ahootlng for their aecond straight Dl.,rlct Crown Flrday when they play Waverly at
Lucawllle Valley High School. Pictured In the front rciw .,.·(L·R) Pat Martin, Ryan Ramaburg, Brad Davenport, Robert Qualls,
.Nathan Halfhill, Btad Whmatch, Rick Hoover and Scott George. Behind them are Collin Roush, Steve Rice, A.J_ Vaughan,
· Steve McCullough, Ja~n MuUen, Chrla ·Rouah, Tony Dugana and Jeremiah Bentley. Not pictured Ia CCiach Scot Gheen &amp;
Aulatant Coach Pete WOods.
·

· WHITE
1996 CHE~

CAVALIER &lt;
•

2 Dr, 4 cyl. auto, a_lr
. cond·, PS, PB, PQ.L,
' AM/FM can, POWER
. MOONROOF.

. 1995 PONTIAC
TUNS. AM
'

GOOD
.
L
UC
IN·
.
THE
;DISTRICT
CHAMPIONSHIP
.
MEIGS: 19·7 VRS WAVERLY 21•5

''
.

.

350 V8, 8 apcl, PS, PB, •
PW, POL, air cond,
AM/FM casa, LOADED.

~

·~

.

'
'

.. r

Kenneth llotc(:ullough, R. Ph. Chlflel Rlfllt, II. Ph.
Ronold Honnlng, R. Ph.

SONJA YOUNG

scrviccs for 1hc cilizcns in nine

viccs .lo more than 260,lX&gt;O residents

counties in Southern Ohio.
Anderson discussed the ahility of
the organization io change to meet
the needs of the member libraries .
and unveiled plans ·fi&gt;r a new tech· ·nology learning space to provide
computer training for the staff'in the

i·n Athens. Hoc~ing . Jackson.
Lawrcnc_c. Meigs. Pike, Ross. Scioto
and Vinton counties.
Wanda Ehlin serves on the
OVAL Board as a representative of
the Meigs Ct&gt;Unty Puhlic u'brary.

.

'

.

'

'

.

PRESCRIPTION ·

· E. Moln

.

,.

.

$13999
30cc ensine, large easy access air filter,
adjustable loop handle, two year

K&amp; CJeV(alers

1996 FOitD Fl50

,.lddl~port

1995
RAM CLUB CAB

'

aj~ta,

air
cond, AM/FM caaa, tilt,,
crultH, PS, PB, PW, PDL

1992 FORD
EXPLORER. ·.

. . . . . . . . . llliiWIIIY- .

4x4, VI, s apd, air cond,

w~rranty51536

AM!FM ciu,
ALL POWER.

: MODEL021
CHAIN SAW

tift, crulae,

-·

'

EDDIE BidER

: . 742·2t33 ·

1989 FORD
E150 .
'COINVI!RSION VAN, Y8,
auto; air cond, AMJFM
. CIU, tilt, CruiH, PS, P.,
PDL, LOADED,
'

Adolph's Dairy Va_
lley

'

SYUCUSE .
992·6533

992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2432

'

MUCH MORE.

Insurance

'I

992•6491

154 f lfN, ST 114 IN-5500 .
I'OHfiiOV, OHIO .
. ·

t9M233

CHESTER, OHIO

Sugar Run :Mills
.

99,·5444

992"5144
Mlddlepor,f

POilulOY

POMEROY,
OHIO
.

992·2115 ·

.King Hardware
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5020

'

'

Brogan Warner Insurance
Swisher &amp; Loshe
Pharmacy
.
992·6687
POMEROY, OHIO
'

POMEROY, OHIO

992~2955

POMEROY, OHIO

row a

row
Attor~ey's at Law

.• DDLEPOU; OHIO

POIIEIOY,.OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3301

Fisher Funeral Home

Fruth··.Pharmacy

16" bar 102116

Lumber

Ia

Hospi

915·3307

CHESTER,' OHIO

915·3308

---+----------~----~--_.--~----~

eterans··.

. RUTLAID, OHIO .

Farmers Bank

Ridenour Supply -

MID.DLEPORT, OHIO

992·3345

POMEROY, OHIO

-POMEROY •rOUIIAIII '01 ,,,.TUPPERS r-~J-un;
949~2136
985-3181

.Quality Print ·Sh~p

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·

992·2342 ,

JZLCQUISfflO?{S :

'

MIDDLEPORI
OHIO
.
.
I

992·5627

$239

O'DELL LUMBER
COHPAHY

'

'The Shoe,Piace and· Locker 219

99

•

.

·Birchfield.Funeral Ho111e Ridenour RV &amp; Appliance

XLT .4x4
1989 FORD
BRONCO II

..

949·2210

'POMEROY,
. . OHIO .

. 992·2121

'

·out why you are wro•1l

~·

'

.

.

UCINE

E.Wing Funeral Ho111e

Dr, V&amp;, auto, :air cond,
AM,If'M Clll, tilt, Cl'uiU,
PB, PW, PD.L, ExTRA

. Sto~t ICQUISRIOIS .
UNE ~EWELIY' and find

~

Valley·Lu.lllber &amp;· Supply
. , 992·6611

'

..

Trohp,ies &amp; Tees Crow's Family Restaurant·
'

.

LARAMIE

.

- MIDDU:PORT, OHIO

99J·6121 J

V&amp;, auto, air cond, .' VI, auto, air ·cond,
•: AM/FM call, PS, PB, -·• AMJFM ca•, tilt, crulu,
PS, PB, . PW, POL,
·.· alum wheels, excellent
', LOADED.
cond.

.
H.o·me·Nat1onal Bank
.

, POMEROY, OHIO

992·3715 .

1996 FORD
UNGER XLT.

'
'

.lUCASVILLE·VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL

P-'Oy, Oh,

,,

. MODEL FS3
GRASS
TRIMMER

I

.

.,

PH. 112-2111

. If you really believe .
Cable's Shopping Channel
has ihe lowest prices on
iewelry••• .

, I

-'

. ·

, I.

4.3L V&amp;,

MODEL FS44
GRASS TRIMMER

f;~... •

. ''

Mon. thru SeL 1:00 o.m. to 1:00 p.m.
· Sundoy 10:00 o.m. to 4:00 p.m.

· 1993 CHJV
.5·1 0 BLAZER

-·

'

,,'

. Eric Anderson. director of Ohio ·member libraries.
Valley Area Libraries headquarters
. Tricia · Ramey. the new Access
in Wellston. provided an overview . Services Coordinator. provided. a
of the success of OVALs programs brkf demonstration of the OVAL
at the annual trustees' meeting held · Home Page, which will also serve as
May 15.
the interne,t presence for the member
Forty-six ' member
library libraries. This served as an appropritrustees, stafT and guests gathered at ate introduction for the trustees into
the headquarters for the meeting.
this new arena of library ~crvicc.
'Board President Harold Felton
Founded in 1973, OVAL is
welcomed Congressman '(cd Stick- Ohio's oldest chartered regional ·
land's representative, Greg Hargett. library system. In cooperation with
and Deputy State .Librarian Roger member public libraries, OVAL proVerny to' the gathcting, recognizing vidcs resources sharing, library
th~ir support for OVAL and. library
development and books by mail scr-

J():2cc eosine, large
easy access air filler,
adjustable loop
handle, two year
wa"anty51544 '

.e ...

.. .

· V6, auto, air cond, AM/FM caas, tilt, cruise,

Library director gives overview of program

$22999 ·

1996 FORD
ESCORT 3.DR

-

To

1996 FORD EXPLORER 4 DR XLI

Tr_v. Us Out For All .
· Your ·Photofinlshlng Need• ·

Jessy ·and Christina Young
announce the birth of a daughter,
Sonja Belli Young. April 30 at the
Holzer Medic~l Center. ., .
.
Grandparents are Cathy · Cox of
Middleport, Gayle Young of
Pageville, and Dennis and Margaret .
'Eynon, Racine.

••

..

'il.

--

•

ft
\,.

FRIDAY
SUNDAY
·CHESTER -- Michael Vance ,
SYRACUSE -- The Southern
Columbus, speaker at revival ser- 'High. School ' Class of 1977 will ·
vices, Friday arid Saturday, Harvest reuni'te Sunday; I p.m. at Carleton
Outreach Church, Riebel Road , School in Syracuse. All welcome, no
Chester. 7 p.m.
. reservations needed. Bring covered
dish. For more inform~tion, call
SATURDAY
247-4681. LONG BOTTOM -- Free cloth-

From orlglnal110 or 135 C-41 process rolls.

.Young birth
announced

'

''-

-

The Dally Sentinel• Pege 7':

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

22,1997

•

Meigs
A
_
t
hleti·
c
.
'

•

Chancey's Food Marl The .Daily Sentinel
992·6542

.

SYUCUSI, OHIO
'

.992·2155

OliO
•..
~

IJ

•

. I

1

,.

•

,.
•

\l

\,('

•

'

~~

•• t

�.,.......,, lily 22, 1117

Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

Musical program ~ighlights banque~

'

The facts on child abuse
·11y BECKY BAIR

..... County Eldlltlllln•lllcallln ._...

Femlty IIIII Cons ScMncu:l
Community De'IIIOpmsil
Research suggests dial a million
children are misueated or abused
each year in the United States.
According to Dr. W.R. Spence, four
children die each day in this counlry
from child abuse or neglect. Why do
adults commil these crimes against
youngsters? Why is it so prevalent?
What constitutes abuse?
There are different types of child
abuse and neglect. Abuse occurs
when something is done to the child
• an act of commission. Neglect
occurs when something is not done
for the child that should have been
doilc and act of omission.
Following are the types of child
abuse and neglect: Physical abuse is
the hitting, beating or burning of a
child. Physical neglect is the lack of
proper food, clothing, shelter, medical
Emotional abuse is the constant
11elittling of a child a£ways telling
him that he is no good • destroying
his self-image. 'Emotiqnal neglect is
not providing the love and attention
.that all children need. In fact, children must get this love and attention
regularly or they will not grow properly.
·(
Sexual abuse is engaging in sex
. acts with a child.
Parents, l!l&amp;ny times, do not wish
:to hurt their · children, but they

.

'

beciiiM rn.u.ted (usually by other children, an

lhinp) and lflh out at their child.
Many abusive pll'Cnts wae abused
themselves while they JfOWing
up. We tend to J*ent the way we
were p~Rnted, so tldtdts may regress
back to the rough way that they were
brouaht up. Professional help may
be required to stop this cyCle of
abuse.
Sometimes pll'Cnts do not understand how children devcltip. They
expect too much too soon from their
~oungsters . A parent who is uying to
teach her nine-month-old to be
potty-trained is trying to be a "good"
. parent by having a "good" child.
However, babies are just beginning
to sit by themselves at this age able
to walk. They do not have the capa·
bilities of their bodies' sensations
that prompt the use of the potty. parent is Cltpecting toO much. too soon.
Many times the abusive parents
are immature as well. They want a
baby to love them, but infants don't
know how to love. Most children are
over a year old before they can actually sllow they are not getting their
own emotional needs met, and may
take it out on the baby. Since they
·have such low self-esteem where
their own needs are not being met,
how can they provide for .their
babies? ·
·
Often a chiid abuser is involved
in drug and alcohol abuse, is in poor
health or is unable to cope with
stress. Within a family of several

abuser mJy
only pick on
one child.
The
child
may appear
1o be "different" from the others or require special care. The family may be isolated geographically or socially. .
What can parents do to prevc;nt
ab.use? As they feel pressure begin
to mount they can STOP and take a
deep breath and count to twenty.
They need to think .• is the anger
with the child or some outside frus;
.tration? They can leave the cliild
with someone responsible and go for
a walk or get away from the siulation for awhile ..They should not yell
· at the child, but explain why they
feel the way they do.
If a parent feels that they may

ApprolliiDIICiy 100 wOIIICtl and
childrotllllellded the annual motherdaiathler banquet spottJOred by the
Racine United Methodist Women,
held Saturday evening at the church.
1be dinner was catered by
Tammy Ervin Hupp (Mom's Smor-'
· gasbord.) Dccomtions were pictures,
figurines and animals placed around
the room tlepicling "Noah's Ark"
which wu-the theme. A large and
long arched rainbOw, mtlde up of
colorful balloons. was on one wall
of.li the room. Tables ·were covered
wtth various pastel colored table·
cloths and napkins to match. Favors
were miniature clay flower pols with
Noah's Ark painted on ·one side and
a printed verse on cardboard con·
.taining seeds placed inside the pot.
A pot of colorful flowers was center. piece on each table and given away

::~;~~w~~~e~:~e:~~~~~~ ;~f!:~ -. Lewis-Manley

sional help or. contact a group such
·as Parents Anonymous ( I-800-42103S3). This is a self-help program
for parents who are stressed and for
abused children.
If you think someone is abusing a
· chill;!. contact the police or Children'• Services. You do not have to
give your name and all repons arc
confidential. Agencies If)' to keep
families together, if at all possible.
Don't be afraid that !Daking a report
could bring fuhher harm to the child
- you may actually be saving a life.

as priZC5.
.,
·
UMW Presidoli· Lee Lee pw
the welcome and 11M pace. Sharoa
Hall was mistress ~'f ceremollies. A .
band composed o't •Fred MilSon,
Brian Hartness, ~an Matson.
Mike Matson, Doitnie Rime and
Lee Lee played' "Wipe Qut" and
':Don't Run" to ope11 the · program.
Karen Walker gave l reldina llbout
the legendary American, Fannie
Farmer. ''The Rainbow Connection"
.was sul)g by Jennifer Walker.
"Through M)' Windol""• an amusing
take-off on the perfect mother. was
. read by Alice Wolfe,. ,
· "Rock Around tht '.'Ciock" was ·
'chen J)layed by the ba9d with vocal·
iSis, Sharon Hall, RHOnda Dailey
and Judy Pape singingfrhe trio dian
sang "Mr. Sandman" ~ and Sugar· time." Etta Mae Hiil read ' the

' By RICHARD PETERSON
.
USATODAY
Heart attack patients in the United States are just as likely to be dead
a year after treatment as Canadian
patients, even though U.S. patients
are treated more aggressively, a
comparison study ·Shows.
·
The research, in Thursday's New
, England Journal of Medicine. adds
: to the debate over the number of
medical treatments U:S. patients
, receive compared with their Canadian counterparts. The .new data seem
to favor the more consetvative
Canadian practices, say the
researchers at Harvard Medical
School and the Institute for Clinical
Evaluative Sciences in Ontario,

Canada.
"We're not saying we should
migrate to Canada qr adopt their
strategies," says Harvard researcher
Barbara McNeil. "But we should
look to see the differences between
the two countries and look for subgroups that benefit from America's
aggressive interventions."
The team compared the treatments and death rates for nearly
225,d00 U.S. - Medicare recipients
and 9,444 Ontario patients. all of
whom had heart attacks in 1991.
They found U.S ..patients were eight
times more .likely to get balloon
angioplasty treatments or coronary
bypass surgery.
·
When death rates were measured

for 30 days, U.S. patients did slightly better - 21.4 percent compared
with 22.3 percent for the CaJ)adians.
But after a year, U.S. patients had a
34.3 percent death rate, the Canadians 34.4 percent.
U.S. patients may recover more
quickly because of the fast, aggressive treatmtnt, the researchers say.
But Canadians may do better in the .
long-term because they have greater
access tG 'primary and long-tenn
care; which are universally provided
to the,elderly at little or no cost.
Other studies also have suggested
that U.S. heart-attack survivors have
a better quality of life than Canadians, who have more angina (chest
pain). ·

schedule for the summer of three
tines a week.
.• .
M.ike. said the team will be compeunve m 1997 and noted that football camp will be held June 20. Proview is Aug. 17 and the lirsl home
game is against Gallia Academy on
Aug. 29.
In addition, Rotary exchange student Alma Loaiza was presented
farewell girts from Meigs County
including a Batilc of .Buffington
Island Historical Coverlet, a colorcd. framed picture of the Pomeroy
Riverfront and the 1884 panoramic
view of Middleport.
The club wished Miss Loaiza
well in her future endeavors and
expressed hope- that she would
return to Meigs County in the future .

·Darst named TOPS best loser
• Brenda Darst was recently presented a L"Crtificatc and trophy by TOPS
· OH 570, Pomeroy for having a~:.hicvcd the most weight loss during 1996.
Weekly meetings of the group arc held at the Carpenter's Union Hall in Pomeroy. At meetings the top losers in lUPS (take of£ pounds sensibly) and
'KOPS (keep off pounds sensibly) are recognized, and several gifts arc
awarded.
·
New ·officers were installed at a recent meeting by Maida Lung. The new
.officers arc Shirley Van Meter, weight recorder; Margaret Hendcr5on, secre" tary;' Virginia Dean. treasurer; Janice Curry. co-leader: and Tina Geary,
leader. The officers lighted candles in colors symbolic of their respective
.. oiTices. Long and Mary Roush presented members gold leaf pins. · ·
Special· activities in which members have been involved over the pruot ·
month have been attendance at Area RccognitioJt Day in Lanca,tcr. a funny- ·
, ;money auction; rccognition of Mis.' Springtime, Donna Jacks, who was presented a trophy and roses in recognition of having lost 36. pounds in three
months.

BRENDA D~RST

Reedsville UMW forms shower committee
The Reedsville United Methodist sent. New can&lt;!elabra for the church given.
•Women met rcccn!ly in the church have been received, it wa' noted.
Refreshments were Served to the
·basement with Rose Nidy as hostess. . Grace Weber. Gladys Thomas; above named and , w. Rosemary
Nina ~aston. vice rresidenl. con- Frances Reed and Delores Frank Reed, Pearl Osborne, Ann Lacomb,
ducted the meeting liy reading the were named to the shower cumm it- Frances Reed. Lillian Pickens, and
purrose of the U.M.W. Devotions tee, ~!fed thanked the group for gift Nancy Buckley. Buckley gave the
closing prayer and Frank received
were given hy Emma Durst: She . tccei ~
die door pri1.c. The nc!ll-meeting will
read "Flowers In time." Fifty Shutin ·
A
game
was
played
and
prizes
·
be with Pickens.
calls were tcPjfcd and cards were

----,society scrapbook-------'-kindergarten in the fall. Each regisMEMORIAL SERVICES
MCI!lorial Day services will be tered girl would received three packheld 81 the Syracuse Nazarene ets of I!Ctivitics made especially for'
Church Sunday at the I0:30 a.m. . them. The girls would also be invitservice to honor deceased members. ed to a special end of the summer
.Family meniben and frienda l!fe event. Anyone interested in more
invited to attend tile .services. Thole · information should call the Girl
-10 be honored are Leonard Bass, Scout Field Cenrer, 614-797-480 I,or .
June Aoyd. oHarold Davis•. Zelma Shirley Coger at 992-2668.
Hawley, Helen Kimes. TOiit LavenSPAUNBIRTH
.,, Clara Lavender, Ella Quillen, .
Pelty Officers Second Class
Claude Quillen, Jim Miller, Thelma
Kevin R. Sp111ti' and Lauric Landry
MUIIr, and Elladene Wltllon.
Sp11111
announce the birth of their
GlaLiiCOUI' PROGUM '
Jilek Diamond Oir1 Scout Coun- third child, Kristina Rac:hall Spaun,
cil Ia offering a 'SJ*i81 piOII'IIIl for May 14 al'the Naval Air Station,
girls Jelli•l .ready to enter JttCksonville Hospital . in Jack-

, •U

sonvilie, Aa. She weighed eight
pounds, three ounces and was 20
inches long.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Spauri who reside at
Baldwin, Aa..
ihe parents of
twin daullhters, Leah Lorraine 11nd
Sharron Stacie, three ..
·Paternal grandparents are Charles
and Betty Spaun, Racine, and maternal grandparents arc James and
Pltricia Landry, Slidell, La. Putemal
great-grandparents are Junior 'and
Marie Spau~. Racine, and maternal
areat·arandparents ~ Mavis Johnlion, Franklinton, La., and. Marion
Johnston, New Orleans, La.

are ,

.

.Chester Fire Dept
Annual Memorial
DayBBO .

"flhe
c·'assil'ieds
·
II
fJI

·
- -,C~a-rd':"'o_f_Thl
__l)lc_l_
.-

A Very Cold Night In J11nuary
A cold night,
January· 18th, . I had a very
r
serious acclcfent on the real Sumner Road. - ·
1 stoppecHo get mail, l.vhen the cat started to
move, I tried to stop it but f~lled. The car door
knocked me down and dragged me into the
road. The car stOPP.ed with the left front wheel
on bottl my legs. I was trapped at least (1/2)
one-haH hour.
AN. ANGEL found me, It was. Jean Weeks
from Alfred WHO SAVED MY LIFE. Jean had
a phone with her and called for help. At that
· time Robbie Reeves came along then Chloris
Gaul came with blankets. By that time friends,
neighbors, Tuppers Plains E.M.S., Lowell
Ridenour, Jim Watson. Debbie Osborne,
. Fire
'
'
Chester
Department
~tnd many, many
more. Along with my very special friend, .Betty
Farrar. THANKS TO ALL OF YOUIII
We were ·well on the way lo St. Joseph
Hospital when the Deputy. Sheriff came alive
and found cut he wBs on a. road . off of St. Rt.
248 In Chester (everyOJJ.e calls this road Old
RoUte 7) not (2 1/2) two and one-haH miles off ·
of. State Route '7 up the real Sumner Road. He
.could not find the accident - of course not - he ·
was otia the wrong roadl
I did not see the Deputy Sheriff or the State
Highway Patrol. 1. guess they were bOth .t here
late, as the State Patrol caUed me at the ·
hospital questioning me the next day. I was In
. so much pain 1. hardly knew · what he .was
saying. SO ·NO THANKS to either of them.
I want to thank my family and especially Rev.
stlaron Housman and her friend, Jim Huff. that
'
were at my side; the doctors and nurses at the
emergency room; many thanks to all my
frlendl, churchea, prayera, carda, phone calls,
visits and flowers the (3) three weeks I waa in
the hospital. Alao, thanks to Gary Smith who
moved my car .after the ~uad took me to the
.

.hospital.
I am home alowly recovering with the aid of
my Home Health Nurses, Candy C8rleton and
Paula Gaul (my own dlughter-ln-law) and the
other glrll that helped. Thanka to all that hal
,helped In anyway. MAY GOD BLESS YOUI
YOur ldlldiTUJU wll I!8WI' be futgutlil1;
·Barball 81 gent

Chicken &amp; RII)S, Homemade
Ice Cream.
Dinner $4.50 ·
Chicken &amp; Ribs only $4.00
Pie &amp; Cake donations
~ated, ·SerVJng ·tlme
11:30 Parade at 1:30 meet at
school at 1:00 for lineup.
Everyone welcome to march
in parade: Also there will be a
Flea Market/Craft Fair for
.anyone Wishing to set up.

304-773-5822
u............. CDP,JIA

WJudow Systems
.

Ohio

W,IICIDe71

THE MAPLES

Hom••

in Pomeroy, Ohio

AI. 1, Box &lt;14-C

. Maaon,WV
215210

· Remodeling

II

3351 Happv Hollow Road
Middlepor1, Ohio 457811
New~. Additloi•,
AoOIIng, Siding, POit
Bamli, Dtcl&lt;a, Painting, .
G&amp;rag.., Pon:hM.

:...:.J.:..;

•

Gall Ul F01 A F'" fllllnwr.

~

&gt;j Jj

•

'

· 110 Yno. Exp. • tl'&amp; Ownor. Filclc _ ,

Free .Eatimatea

t:
,::~
WICKS

11181 Martin Street

Joe Wilton
(114) 892-42n

Big @:..;d· Fab~icatfOn;
Machine &amp;~elding Shop

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
G
· R 1
WI d
· arages • ep acemen . n ows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTJMATES

250CondorStreat
Pomeroy,Ohlo45789
A Division on Nichola Metal, INc.
Phone: 814:992-2408
Fax: 304-n3-5881

(No Sunday Calls)

8·oo am · 12 no0n ·

'

-.Iorin

Meeting Thur. May 22 7

Mlddlepor;t, OH

: •Riflloc....t WWows
: •IIIIWGorll'•

614-992·5479

992·2825

R. L. HOLLON

oftooon~

~ .

Plumbing

oRooflng

a Exterior

oPIIInUng ..

Al8o Concrete Work
(FREI! ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
982-8215

Pomeroy, Ohio
.

Wayne's .Place
presents

Blitzkreig
Live
Saturday,
M~y 24th ·

In Lo~ng ·
Memory f Edith
E. King; unday,
. May 18.lt has
been five years
since you
passed away.
Sadly missed by
your Family.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.

PubliC Notice
~: . PUBLIC NOilCE
!·The annu.. reporl Form
ItO PF tor the Klllllle
l'ouncietton l•rnard V.
flillz, Tru"", 11 available
fpr .pullllc lna.,.cllon 11
e.mitrd V. I'UIIZ lAW Olltce,
111 1/2 W. •S.COncl Blr•t,,
~y, Ohio 45711,
•prlng regular llualneea
lloura tor a ·parlod at 110
hv• aullaaquent to
illllcltlon otlltle nollol.
12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 18, 18,
·' 21, 22, :a. 21112111

.

.

Public Notice

•Garage•
•Complete
Remodeling·
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

.

985-447~

..... .•.

Racine Fire
Auxiliary

Public Notice
ot Melge County Court,
Third Floor, Melgl County

e

~Citnplllll
IIOird ot
s--lY
(5) 221111

New Construction

a

Ramoclell~ . Kitchen Cabinet~

Public Notice

Chicken BBQ
Sunday, May 25th·

NOncE

RI!IIDI!NTI Oli

Free E.UmlltH
614-742-3411

MIDDUPORT

. The deadline lor 1111ng

1118 village Income lax
raturna hla paaeed. " you
ara requiNCI lo tile 1 tax

l

1

Chicken half $4.cil ·
Dinner $4.50
Homemade Ice Cream
Pint $1.25 Quart $2.50

-R~r

trees &amp;elephant

eaiS $5.50 ,.
- ·
oCannas $2.00 ea.
oShnJbbely
We honor Golden
Buclleye Cerda
Open Dally 9-5 Soo 12-5

~

,,
••

J

...,.

.'

12th Annual Memo~ Day.
. Run Starts at
Pomeroy Parking Lot
Run leaVeS at 1 :00 o'clock
-

..•.

."....
'·

311710 SUmlllr " " '
Pometoy, Ohio 45711

CLASSIFIEDS
•

...L

•

~7,1ter

I P.M.
M1lg1 Ca.

Fllrgrouncla
lptiiiiQIId ., '
....... c..·4-tf Holw .
· Callllllllln

l

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

Tltll

arU.IIU

I

I

. : {t. '

.Sayre hdlng Co•

, ...

614-742·2138

4011 .

PAINTING
A pod painl job ""

' ""Y r.lot~tly rltry,

'••

II

t ,

. . . . IMt

.

005

Pllnlonall

TAKE~EOF
YOUR LIFE NOWI

eo

Public Sale
and Auction

Auction S11vlce, Lealie

Lorruey, Auctioneer. Hou11hold.
Estate, Farm Sales. Phone 614·
388-8443.

Rick Pearson Aucdon Campan~.
tull lime auclloneer, complete
auction
aervlc:e. Licenud
I86,0hi9 &amp; West Vi{ginla, 30A·
773-5765 0. 304· 773-5447.

90 · Wanted to Buy
Absoluoo Top Dollar: All u:s. Sil·
Ver And Gold C,olna, Ptootseta,
Diamonds, Antiquo Jtwelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1030 'U.S. Currency,
Slorllng, Eoc. Acqvloltiona J-,
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Aveoue, Galllpoil, 814-400--.
Antiques, lurnllure, glass, china,
I
tools,

I~~~~~~~~I~O~o~~
:

Caring Paythlca Will Answer

Antiques,

40

Clean late Model Cara Or

lop prices paid, River-

Your Oueatlona About Love,
Money, succesa, HaallhJ 1•900 . ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
58~·1000 Ext 1122, $3,11 Plf Russ Moore owner, 614-902Min. Mull Be 18 Yrs. Strv·U 81g. 25211.
6~5·8434, Touchlone Required,
Standing Pine, t Acre.
24 Hra.l7 Dayt.
.
6t4-251!-li038.

Giveaway
t ll:!vr pld, maie, pari Lab. &amp;moo
old female, part whit• Garman
Shephard, good wlchlldren. 304·
67S-58llll.
2 Klttona To Good Homes, 614·

Trucks. t990 ·Modols Or Newer,
Smith Buick P!lnliilc. 1800 Eastam Averue, Gallipo~~
J &amp; D'o Auto Parts. Burlng·oat··
;~~:cles. Selling porto. 31M·

446-7730 • .

===------2 puppies. fam111... 1/2 Pit Bul!,
good wldlildfen. 304-88!&lt;-3285.

Wanted To Bur: Standing Timber

Or Vacant· Property With Timber,

814 -3118-9906.

2 Whhe Klttono To Good Homo, -( Wanted- Glued lllddlopofl
_61_4-"_1_.()40...;._1·- . , . . - . - - - bric*. call&amp;t4-52H517 eolloct.
39x2S House NMds To Be Torn
Down. 81 ..-448-7021..
Wanled- nice uaad gas range,
~;;:.;;.~~;;.;;:;~-:--=:-:- 304-882·2500.

...,,...,,
FRR ESTMfATES

SIIVICIS·.
Foundltlont,
l)r!veWayl,
Sldl ...kt, Pltfol,.
o.,.aild
a.aement Floore.

Free Ettllllltla.

lnsuNd

SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES

GOODNm'S

Ch!a'lty Work at

304-882-3541
Free Estimates

-

014-992-3120

o-

.........

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!
Sensatiolal Res1lts

LIVE!!!
1·9G0-(414)·1 020
Ext. 1482

Air~ ••., IW

,

lr• '2r a·fllllllih

lt.t Puraps Lalllai . . a-'

~-Oft--cr.llll
•FrM 5 Year Parts W8rranty

' HARTWELL
HOUSE .

•Free Digital Thermolltat

HOME
HEA11NG 4 COOUNG ·

Washer, refrigeraror and Amana Position now open· Prote..lonaJ
frea;rer to glreaway, may need Groomer needed, verification or
worked an, must pick up, 514· experience required. Application
pickup Monday 2Gih &amp; Tuesday
V40·2441.
27111,

60 Lost and Found

....,..

If..., AN.....•

IOam.ljpm. No callS please.

Cosme1ologlst1 Needed full And

Found- ~oung female Doberman, Part· Time Guaranleed Wages
lHding Creek Rd area, 814~ 742- Paid Vaca.tio.ns, 614.'"6-7267.

Gallipolis

Earn $1,000 Weekly Stufting Envelopes AI Home. Start Now. No
E~eparience .

Free Suppliak, Info.

No Obllgalion. Send lSASE To:
ACE, Dapo: 135t, Box 5137, Dll·
mond Bar, CA 9t765.
HOME TYPISTS,
PC users needed. $45,000 in·

come polonllal. Call 1·800·513·
&lt;3&lt;13 En IJ.9368,
Ubrar~ aides At Bossard library
(Gallipolis) needed to shelve
books and mainlain ahelves: B
hrs. per waek 11 14.75 an hour.·
All ages can '!Pply at cirulatlon
desk. Evening and weekend
hours required.

&amp; .VIcinity

NEED INSTRUCTORS

3 Fomllr Gorage Sala: May 23rd
I 24th, 8:30 lo 4 P.M. Rain Or
Shine, Subdlvloion Behind Old
Bidwolt School t8 Spd. Mounlaln
Bike, Roller Blade• &amp; Salety
Equip.. Elec. Trpewnoer, 350 Cflo.
vy Block, Curtains, Cloll1eo. Tors
I llfhli·Nots.
3 Famly Garage Sa!O: 8:30 A.M. •
4P.M. Salurday, 5/24, Mitchell
·Road, 2nd House From 588, See
BallooMI
8 Fomllr Yard· Sale: Mar
·
24111, 28111, t A.M. 2 t12 Mlos Ou1
Routa 2111, ~llcw Troilor On laiL
Hamo Brand Ctolhet, lnfano Thru
AdUlt, Furniture, Mitt. 11em1. Ad·

dod Dolly!

Accouning, EcOnomics, Butl""'
Management. Social Science,
Send R•sume To: P.O. Box 542,
Kerr, OH 45643.

Now Taking Appllcadona At Dom·
ina's Pizza In the Gallipolll and
Fomeror Areas only for : 0n'l8ro•
Overbr.ook Cen1er, 333 Page

Slteol, Middleport has part dmo
RN posll!ana available lor all
shifll,· expertence preferred. H lnlerested please come In and ftll

out an &amp;Pfll~oon, ro phone cah,
pl......

Pan-Time PO ailion Avaltable Now.
Stwl~

Knowledge

Roq"lrtd, Ap-

ply In Person At: JoAnn Fabrics .

and Cralls: Silver Bride- Plaza,

.ALl. Yonl-llull
hPold ill Advonco.

"&amp;N

M; 1:00 p.m.

tlooNyMloNthood ,
lotoMI.Iunder
odltlon. 2:00p.m.
Frldoy. ......, "'!Ilion
• 10:00 . .... Sot!lftl.,.

GaliipoiiL

.

PleaSant Valley Hospllal 11 look·
ing

lor PoMmo Par Dlom C.rdkJ.

Respiratory Technicians. Must
have Acute cart and•long term
care eJiperlenc:t. Muat have WV

llctnoe and oble to work oil
shifts. Send rteume to .Sua Hutsell
.. 2520 Volley 0.., Pt. Ptoao·
Sotur~ay, 5124, •·$. AI: 3843 an~ VN 25550. AMOE.
Stala Route ICt, Firot Houle On
Foolllon ...,oltoblo: Mo&lt;IOII Clinic
Lall .MI 9orond LlniXIIn PIU.
Group Procllco 11 Looking For
Thrao - l y a.._ Sole: Salin· Cor.nputer Professionals -With
doy, lloy 24, 1:00 To 5:00 721 Skills In At l.Mit 0no Of Tho fol.

low,ing Areas: NDvtll Nttworlt

McComii:IIRood.

102 E. Mlln. Pon•or

OYME~JT

2112 lincoln Ave. :JIM.67S.1365.
SERVICES
Klllono, 814·448- 4737 Aller 5
P.M.
Pupptoo, very cute. eu.ua. 110 Help Wanted
4538, Aller 4 P.M.
.
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
School~• to give""" lor jun~ Spears. 304·675-1429. -·_\ .
304-578'40111.
AVON Siolos $8 ·$15 /Hr. No
:-Sc-ra_p_pl-:-ec-o_s_o-:-1wo-o-:-d.-:3:-04-..8-:7:-5. Door To Door, ·eonusaa• Fun &amp;
Easrll
1-800·827-4640 lnd/SIII
5381 .
Ro
~~-:--~---:----~ -~~--~-:--~----To good home- female lawn col·
Ctvisty'1 Pets
ortd banHype dog, e.7 mon&lt;tto
271 N!Wih Second Avenue
old, playful and ~lendly, 614-992,
Mlddtepor~ Ohio
2475.
.-614-902·45t4

13." per min.
Muatbetly,.._

Et!sY W fllrldlf

EMPL

Hause to lear down &amp; remove.

114-849-2958

.QUALITY ROOFING

Don Gei\'Y,

614·245-5910.

114-742-2707

D. CUo1")''s

1 Fllr Prlc:el
~PIIieSt. ·
Middleport, Oh. 45780
Homa Ph.

.5

23111 ahor Spm.
nuake• il aeellt
briB/•IP.r.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
Found: Block Do~ largo lab
leave message.
Type, Vory Frltn If, 814·446·
881Hl.
After 6 p.m.
FOUND: money dropped ol a yard
614-985-41111!0..,. --. oaleln PI Pleoaanl during Man:h.
1,-----.:.:::w::.:;:
•::;.•·~::;~'"'
· . · Mall nama, phone number &amp; de· ocrlpllon of money to Bo• G·20,
.-~~~~'='==-"I 'II.Pt Pleaoant Rogiller, 200 Uain
RICi WALKER
SL. Pt PIHSMI wv 25SSO.
.
PAIIIniiG
Found: red lono lor lail lighl oil
Auto, Truck, Rtlldtntlol,
""""' boat trailer, can lD tO. 614·
992-3129·
Commorclol
Mlddloport, OH.
70
Yard .Sale
Racine

...

21D·AJI·AL
TIC:IIUCIIOJI
Sat.,

.....

I.D. Cell.rl ·
Cont.O.- Ron Mtlt.r

LINDA'S ·

lerv-U(Ill) 1411 1434

·~

'25th

at•ellnt a prepertJt

...

85e. $1.25

~

~

Septic' Syatenla
Trliler I
House Site$
IIMMHIIIble Rl/tet
Joe N. Sayre .

••rone lmro'tV.IIn

H····~·•••••

.ltllmldlallly.
YOU MUST

·=\:

Llmeatone &amp; Gravel

a., IIMtne;o

1/11171-

ratum lltd , _ nol ~ 10

.

uc•taftal

Vinyl Siding- Roofa · , tine fenoi 811 1111
Decka • GaraQee
c. ou

'

•

MDLIII.

....._to the
•==~::-ot

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10125/96/tln

Aeration Motor oSalet I Repalra
Cleaning Septic Syitema ·
Port·A.John • Rintal1 • Serviced Weekly
No Extra Charge for EY&amp;ningi or Weekenda
24 Hr. Prompt Servicl
. 7 Days A .Week

St,ooo _..AIIDII

Cenatruetltn.

COU1'111ouM.

•

614·992·7119

:;=:==::::::
.-· :::· ' ~~~!!""'~
tH
,.............._

.

will spcmsor a

POMEROY, OHIO

.7J:12111n

FILE
. • PUILIC •NOTICE
Syracuse 1192-5778 ·
The
. ' In complllftC!e Wllh IPfi'IIINIII* fii'IIIIIJ, 1-.111
IV01ir 0~" For Spring'
lnUon 17111.111 ollhe Ottto lncl lite 11M wlll ':t!t,!:
Season
.
llevleed .Coda, 1M M•lll ttnY raiUme ncllllled
C)lunty IOird at Revtaton the dndllnl which waa • Pansies $6.50 flat
.
will 1111111111 .June a. 11187, • APRIL 311, 1187.
• All vegetable &amp; bedding
2;30 P.M. In 1M Colilrb- ' (II) 22, 28; 2TC.
'
plants $6.50 ~I ·,
.
• Bloorttlng &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
\
o4 ln. Assort. Pots
·

10:00 pm - 2:00

IIRVICI

•New Horries

~-

.
'

"•

ROI,E it IISSE~L
C:ONSTRUCTION

'

Yard Sale. Thur, Fri , Sat, Sun.
lata antiques. Rl. 2 North 8

Grar Klttono, 8 Weeks Old, -W.-n-te_d_
: U_se_d_Ha_rdwoo--d.,-flo_or_i-ng
In Good Condition, Call 814·245·
111111 mo.
Grer &amp; Orange Kitten Bob Tailed, 5887.
..----------.., 8t4·4&lt;1e-3648.
.

TRUCKING

YOWG'S
(AIPQITER SERVIa

"'nlllthw

992·7074

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

• •Siontt Doors &amp;

. pm Din,ing Room Topic- .
.EJli\1i1'~~·· 1 · "Physical Therapy" Last
Chance to Bring .Money
for Ced~r Point Trip
($60 per person)

JUI,. C"·L.

' 742·2925

: Wlntlni
·
: •R... A.Witloiis

' oEiectrlcll

'

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eatera
2 mi. off Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd.

lllaeR Dealer'

•

.8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

.....

992-5583

Gravel, Limestone,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mininum.

'ELECTRONICS

MIDDLEPORT

'

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

JEFF WARIER INSUUICE BRIBILI
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH;

• Top • TriiTJ • Removal .··
• Stump Grinding

537 BRYAN PLACI!

.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

. .,......, ·

1

PVH
Medical
.
Explorer

New Location: 2 milea off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124

ANNOUNCEME NTS

3&amp;cr' Communications

(614) 367-0266
1-800-95 0-3359

J&amp;L SIDIIG &amp;
IISULATIOI
,

~

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AIC Condensers/Hose Auemblles

614-:-992·7643

Galllpolle, Ohio 45831 ·

9 ani - 9 pm Mon-Sun

·,~,·,("I

t.

·CELLULAR PHONES

614-74Z·3513

~171t

..........

111WJ' 11M.

WILLUUL-

Buyers of vintage toys,
sportacards, sports
.'inCI!lorabilla, tabacco
: tins, cigar boxes, and
~:
tabacco memorabilia.
Specializing in
matcboox.cars.

••

BISSELL BUILDE~S, INC~

··Monday-Frlday.-e:ooa.m.-4:30p.m.
Red.._ Repair a: Repl~~e•nt

........
.•••.••.,.,.

Strurday.

'CE:t

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

"8111W Your DN•m"
Pomeroy; Ohio 487•

·

~~~M:!:gS::;...S::=!:
aanmav

Yard Salt. 11

'

~------~~--------------------,r-----------------~~·

.

1·614·992~7022

C · famil~ Garage &amp;

2mllo off Rt 2 on 87. Friday.&amp;

miles.

.,

:
•

Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibilitY requirements
&lt;=:)For further dela!ls tail today

..........

•

,, • Top • Trim • Removal · .
.1
• Stump Grinding .

814-742-3090
814-742·3324
814-742-3078

'

Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID ·

(61 4) 446-4759

Limestone,
, Qravel, sand, ·
: . Top Soli, fill Dirt
614-992·3470

.

Plii£ES~'

Custom

.HAULING

fOJil YOUR

May28th

,...,c

Quality

110 Court...

Ccmslder:

FAMILY DENTISTRY

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

l.

~,..,,,... ~- J~. ,. _
~ . ,, ., _

~:·

.949-2188

:

• ,.. ..
.

·DIREcr

FREE ESnMATES

;

.

"I'AcrGBY

Painting

Will Your Utllltle• Put You
In The Poor House?

.......,.&amp;........, D.D.I.

-~·..,.....

DoWMpouta
Outler C'-'ting

.~

\I(HICITII

"

Oultwa

,.

Plans for the observance of nower for the American war dcllll. Athens. and the slate convention to
poppy days in Middleport Friday The tradition began in the years fol- be held in July in Cincinnati.
and Saturday were made when lowing the first World War. She
, Hampton alSO' spoke on the pmise
Lewis-Manley Auxiliary Unit 263, handed out lcancts on the Poppy ' received from the district chairman
met recently at Dale's Restaurant.
Day observance.
on the publicity which the local
Lorene Goggins presided at the
Goggins read a newsfcltcr fwm pres.&lt; ~rives to the unit. The Closing
meting during _ which time Lula the Eighth District president. Nancy ceremonies of prayer .for peace nnll
Hampton. poppy chairman, made a Brown, announcing the '·Junc con· singing nf America and closing
report on the poppy as the memorial ·' vention to be held otl J.uilc 12 in remarks by thC president.

~11101

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

ROOfiNG .
. NEW-REPAIR

Auxiliary .,lans poppy days

..M~S football coach .addresses .Mei'gs Rotary You•/1 Come·.u ,,A,es .With
Me1gs Local H1gh School footM1ke satd he was very fortunate
ball .coach Mike Chancey addressed to be able to come back to MHS
.. Middlepori·Pome~oy Rotarians at where he.has been football coach for
the or Monday ntght mecttng at the f!ast four years.
Heath United Methodist Church in
He was lavish in his praise of the
" Middleport.
_(tedication of the football players he
Chancey recounted . several ha~ cO'ached. His teams have always
humorous incidents when he. was - worked hard and haye .given the
" growing up and while he was foot- team the greatest possible eiTort, he
ball manager under his father, said, adding that on several occa_ Charles Chancey, who was football sions· game otTicials have complicqach at Meigs fur 21 years from mentcd him and his players for their
1967 to 1987.
excellent hchaviur.
Following ·Mike's graduation
One of the factors in preventing
from MHS. where he was a football injury, according to Mike . .is condistar, he attended Ohio State Univcr- ti1ining under the supervisio·n of the
sity where he played football and. coach and assistant coaches. Memgraduated. He then attended Ohio hers of the team work on condition·
University \"here he· received a. ing ~nd weight .lifting hcfnre and
graduate degree.
after school .and there is ·a rigorous .

Hulnl L WtM • 11

·

.

-

Potnlroy,
lllddllport
&amp; VIcinity

poem,"Onndma's Quilt". Olivia,
Ellie IIIII Don Duddin1 sane twa
orisinal -.a written by Don, widl
pitar accompaniment. The"Lepnd
of the ~ndrop' was pmented by
Manha ,Dudding. Judy Pape IMI
"Over tlie Rainbow" and Ouis Hill
retld the poem "A Molhet's Way is
Love
Presenlation of priZC5 was mldc
by Margie West 11\d the program
ended with Everyone ,insing "NOih
Found Grace in the Eyes of the
Lord" and. "Hello Dolly" accompanied by the band who also provided
the dinner music.
Melissa Harkness, Margie West,
Alice Wolfe, Lee Lee, Karen Walker. Gary Walker and Opal Diddfe
were instrumental in providing the
programs. tickets and decorations.

·u.$. heart care: Too aggressive?
.

The o.lly sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy,
lllddllpon
I VIcinity

Iff:t -. I
ffkiiW

IIMir·
........

Monagomtnl, Uoor Trolnlng.OI
PC Applications ~Eopeclolly MS
Ottlco), Datobeao PtOr,ommt~.
Foohion Roqul,.l A ochotar 1
O.gr" Or Com_... b~&gt;«l·
onco. A~pllcolllo WOt- E•~rl·
tnce .. ~

p,.,.. lind

Roaumo To H""'"'l Aolalllo.....
onil ••• at mlac., rain oancota, Jookson
PI~. Oolllpolla, Ollie
- . ...u -.ant a,....,.,

..

dafllng, -

48111 .

'

�•

: Paae10•The o.lly Sentinel

n.nc..,. ..., 22. 1111

Pomeroy • llllddleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tile o.lly Sentinel• , . . 11
••

NBA Cro••word Pu:ble
. PHJLLIP

ALDBR

520
•Able

Avan

540 Mllcelllneoua
MerchandiN ·

Rapt... ntadv.a

._ . .. Eom lor Clwlo~
,.. blllo 11 homolill-. ,.-.
or 304-e82·2145, Ind.

~

~;O,.t:~-,

N

¢

.....·

6 5
•AKQ ' as ··
t A 6
• A J 10 7 t r

,...., ~ -

::::13511
·,

Weal
RENT-WA~

•AKQJ964
•J7
.• 10 8 2.

The Alihl Woy
ololn U. ill Tho Wlnllll'a Clnllt

•K

1g85 Dodge 150 4 WD. Looka
Like Now Truck, 814·448-4737
Aller 5 P.M. Ask For Tom.
1985 Ford Van. Equip lor lhl
hendcappod. (814)44&amp;--2574

South

3•

5•

LIT Mil
Sll THAT
THlN41'11

1GGO Chevy 5-10 Blazer, air con·
dilioner, newly rabulll en~l ne and
new parts. excellent conc111ion. u~
tra aet of liras and wheels, 814·

1192-6548.

BALLS 0' FtRE.II
GOTTO DO

yOU

·s an&amp;l'N THIS It

YOU GOT IT

• .10 • 4

'i7 UmPire

• 4

s
6aa il u

32YIWn

OOWN II

neat $11,500 Firm. Call Even -

Ings. 614'388-9770.
1995 Ford Windatar GL, pw, pcfi,
tih, cruise, keyless remotei lockt,
44,500mllos, $13,000. 304·882·
2347.

Motorcyctes

1911&lt;4 Honda CRBO Good Condltlon.- $500, 814-38Nl166.
1ga7 Honda CRX, PS, PB, •
122,000 Miles, Air Cond.,IN'allMainlalned, Excellent Condition,
614-388-9809.

G,eAT MOMfN..S

1

lftl 6GiiNCf•

'

THE BORN LOSER
~

'

~

.

· 'NQI.X..D YOJ 1-\ElP ("£ WlllH\Y
~(No.I ~I!&gt;'!OitY

.

.

~- ·

,.

.

~

Wllt-.T YEN{ DID TI\t-.T FN'OJ~ ·
lt\OONWN-1(. ThJl.E. Pt.Jo(£. ?' .

NE.H.. ~Tttotl6~ Olit
MIU\I'.EJ.. J~C.K.~~ '?

)1.01'1£\ol~?

)

.

Ceramic kiln with several molds ' Himalayan Kittens Far Sale, $150,
1260. 304-882-2189.
:8.:.14;.;·38:.:7:..'-0.:.539:.::;._ _ _ __
Collectible ~olio • Effanb0 o, , Long haired Roglatored mini
Horamon, Vogue, ldHI, Ell:. 304· Dachshund, smot,· tamale, shots
&amp; -mad, $200. 304-875-1g78.
871i-681 U.lr~ Allllin.
Poll Plus, Silver Bridge PI ina.
614,.4·1.0770.
.

"' ·Top of the Hill Dog Gfoomlng.

448·7283

For Sale: A Toilet, Orop·ln Sink
For Vanity And II Cau Iron Tub,
RHdY For Pick·UP, Cal 614 ..48·
0747 Anytime. .

Charyl Riley, 131 Howard SL
- Haven, wv. 304-1182·3214.

570

Musical
Instruments

Star Gullar,

Chelhire, Ohio· lessons and instruments· pianQ, gui·
tar and druma, 614-387.0302.

580 .

Grubb'&amp; Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.

Problomo? N"d Tuned? Call tho

450

Furnished
Rooms

RENTALS

Sieeplng ro'oms with cooking.

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house in Hartford,
plus uriliDea. 304-882-3888.

2 Bedrooms, 2 B.a th Houle, On

Stumbo is: lawm Uowni""' &amp; Trim 1"'170 3 Bedroom, Nicely Fur·
··•
niahtd, On One At;:rt Lot, New
Sifvic:e. (8U)·388-8578
Drilled Well, 128,000. (614)2511-

8218

FINANCIAL

210

..

H~7"'

Cameron mobUe home with
14JC80 add-on room, back porch
awning, email ltorage building,

Business

Alao lraller apace on river. All
hook·ups. Call allar 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5851, Maaon wv. ·

460 Space tor Rent
DownMtii ftt11t noor office·~··

condi-

18 Acrtt located AI Sowards
Ridge Road, Crown City, Available
To Buy June 151, Inquiries Call
814-258-1558.

air
N- carper. Call
(114)-4383 8, a.m.-5p.m. moo·
day llwrfridly. ,

4 Bedroom house on North Main

r;ailer

tor for Rent, Addison

St. Pl. Pleasant UOOimo. + do· · PliO. 814-4*-,7834.
posit 304-675-11349.
:...::::..::..:...:.:.:.::.;::,;;,.,_ _ _ _

plano Dr.61&lt;1-4&lt;18..525

Hot tuba- ask about scfatch &amp;
dent and factDry IOCOndL AI low

.. s111911, 304-2115-8985.

.

Fruhs &amp;
Vegetables

790

, MM~Qpll
2 A ChaDIIn
_

.......,...

'"'*

'·

3 - and
4 A'VO!dlng
, (airline)
MC.II--day . adroitly
35 New York
foolbelltum
35 Actor Smith
37 $wOrd ftghtera

T Genetic

10 Protactlan '

• c.ptlatl at

ROlolle
11 Printer'•

m_.l (111111.) 11 Footliall'a
New MexiCo

hOkllr
e Remo&gt;oa from

(2wdt.J
t %DiaherDine

office

21

Pass

.6 •

-

Neldle hole
23 Aaenta (abbr.)
24 W'lllkencl...k:oinlng
abbr~

' &gt;I

25 Art doco
Uluatrator
26 Of the dawn•

Pass
Pass
· All pus

27
28
29
30

Rodenla . ,
Preolpltetlon
Skinny flahe·~
Aulhor Stenloy
a.dner
32 Actor

•

RICherd-

35 Aclrooa
Tandy
3f UnHing

· •
'

aa~'::'*"!

·. saturday, May 24,
By Phillip Alder
David Bird ha&amp; writien many
excellent bridge articles and books.
He is the columnist for The Mail on
Sunday, a newspaper in England. An
anicle about this deal appel)I'Cd in that
publication,
·
David's wife, Thelma, was going
to. play some bridge on their com. puter. But David asked to declare the
first deal. Looking only at the South
cards, David reached fourspades by
the given auction'. ·
The comp.uter playing the West·
cards led a devilish club two. After .
' seeing the dummy, David clicked on
the club seven. The even niorc dev·
ilish computer playing the Easi hand
covered with the jack. After winning .
with lhe king, David decided to
show Thelma what top-class card·
reading was all about. He drew
trumps in three rounds .. good! Then
he led a club to dummy's njnc .. bad!
East won with the 10 and played ·a
hean 10 West's ace. A diamond
through the dummy gave the defen4·
· ers four tricks. David had gone down
in-a cold contract.
"I would have won 12 tricks."
observed Thelma.'
"How was I meanl to know thai
they lead low from thre~ . rags?''
protested David. "And why did East
play ·the club jack at trick orie? Even
a beginner knows he shouid ·have
played the eight."
,
"Perhaps the prog111m did it deli~
erately to fool yoo," suggested Thelma.
'·
"Of course not. I'll do better on
the next deal."
"No, you .:on't. I'm taking over
from here ."
David Was forced to console himself with aglass of Silverado metlot
from the Napa Valley.
Try a falsccard . when defensive
prospects look negligible .

..

Campers&amp;

ITHURSDAY

!...-+-4.,.-+---t

3G SDanleh aunt
· 41 O b - •
42 8erk cloth •
43 - - Rtiylhm
~

44?b-.n

heroine

45 Actrete Gag.

48 Actor NovellO
47 Aaof~ \

~~.riO -•..
.

KURGP

'CZIIVJVX

110

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T .IIOJVXPROW

CLWZ

PLOFLOF.'

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.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The struclu18 or a play is alwayi the story of how !he ~
birds came home to roost." - Anhur Mlltet.
·
· .
,,

,,

••

'=~~, '0©\\cl\~-~t.~s· ••••
••••

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•••

•.

- - - - - - 14ilo4 ~y CLAY I . POllAN
letters of
0 Rearrange
tour sCrambled words

'~

the·

be·
low to form four Simple wards.

I~

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2

3

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1 1 17 · 1

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Granny always told me tp, .
·ren your enemies that you
have forgiven lhem because·it
win •• • • •. them •••• t"

·~
~

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_o_R_v_u_E_L_...,.I

,....s. -

l

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k-..,.~~:.;~,.g.:,·.,~~.!:~;-!"-TI--1

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Co..,piore !he chuckle ovoted

~Y f• llmg in the miS$1n g words

1.

L.....I-..L-L-....L--4--' you develop fr om step No. 3 below.

,
~

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I I I I' I I THE~! I I I I I'

•
·~

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MAY 22( ::.

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.

.:

.

,

•

,...
·..•

''"'

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.......,..

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SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

'·
..
"' .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
uation, the ri~ks could he even furtllr,:r
·. ASftO·ORUB
reduced. ·' ,
· - Subdue inclinations today to create
LEO {11\IY 23·Aug. 22) If you complications for yourself where
have a linle lurplus cash on hand 110ne need to exist. Stayloosc and let
BERNICE
today, don'tlet it bum a hole in your . events run their own courSe.
BEDEOSOL pocket. Put it' somewhere out of reach.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19J
Just 'becnuse something did not work
and pretend it doesn' t exist.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Do not out well for a friend doesn't mean
suffer in silence today if you have a you should also toss in the towel. In
difficult task to perform: The help ,fact, you may he quite lucky today.
Friclay, May 23, 1997
you need is available, but it will be
I'ISCES .(Feb. 20-March 20)
Dipl&lt;!macy and tact will produce the
· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be on up to you to ask.
guard today so that a clole as~ilte LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 23) Face types·of results you desire today. Do
dQCJn 't jeopardize another relatton· your challeng"s today instead of not clench your fists when you should
ship with a person who is equally wastina time tryina,to slip put them. be extendipg 1 friendly, open hand. ·
important to you. Gctajump olf life ..You will discover that its· bark is . ,ARIES (Marclr21 -Apri119) Early in the day you might have to conby underatandiq the influences that worse than its bile.
,
govern you in the year ahead. Send
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your tend with some unex~JC'ted frustra·
for, your Asuo-Oraph predictions p:nei'OIQ impubes today should be tions. Mana;e them, ai!d you ' II be
. loday by milina S2 IIIII SASE to · directed toward funily members and able to mold them into something
. Asuo-Oraph, c/o this MWIJII!IC"• relatives fint and not outsiders. opportune.
P.O. Boll 1758, Mumy Hill StaUon, -Blood is lhickM than water. .
. . TAURUS (April 2().May 20) lndi·
New YOlk, NY 10156: Be IIR to
SAOmAJUUS (Nov. · 23-Dic:. vidual endelvon miahl fiule out
.._ your zocll~e lip.
21) The belt coune ohction for you today, but anDpmenll whllre you're
CANCSil (June 21.JIIIy 22) If IOday will be the OM you let for slrivina with Olhen for a common
·~ continue 10 utilize your sound ycunelf. Be 1 ._..lllllald of beina purpose could produce Mtractive
. JUdi!Mftl rep-dina 1IJ*IIIItivo sit· led by peoplllll-eqllipped to do 10. re1nllts . .

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DOWN

Eut

Motor Homes

'*·
.,.,,.

J

57~.....-

11 Gilt IIIIer

Scribe· Chess· Nomad · Mystic : MEMORIES
Sign posted in my psychiatrist office: "Every Day Gives
You a Chance To Make New MEMORIES ."
.

110

'.

11 - - toet

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

w-..

.

WE'~e ALL OUT
OF 6RAPE JEW!'!

VALLEI{ FOR6E ..

o,.,._

..,.. ..,..lar

,•

MoRALE IS LOW AT

130

Y"" ••·

West Norlb
16 . 26
46
Dbl.

FARr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

10•22 dook wllh ueatod lumber. ,for Rent or Sale- 3 Bedroom, 2 Twct river camPsttea with lull
n&amp;w furnace Installed In Oecem- balhs. cenlral air, no Inside palo· hookup, patio I docka, 814-llg2.
!liM.
.
INOTICEI
ber, central air, some ,_ carpel, depo~l-$350/mo 304-675-1 ssa
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. , xcollonl condition, mull~~:: Four bedroom house with larg• 470 Wanted to Renl
reCommends that you do bullII8Yenings •nd weekends.
yard, no appliances , $225 per 2·3 bedroom homo wllh oorago
noll wilh people you know, and 1=:.2.:
393::.::1 ·~----_.:­ monrh, $100 deposit. Call eu- ~
wrtcahop In llelga County,
NOT to Nnd money lhrou~h lha 1884 14x70 Schultz, two bed· 742·3081, located in Dexter.
814-992-3498.
man until you have investigated room, ttoYA and refrigerator, "'ir,
Pomeroy Ohio Witzgal Slreel 3
lilt olllring.
.~ng $9000, 814-593-8181.
r.1E RCHANDISE
Bedroom• • .$350 Month Depolit.
Bu~riell Opportunity ; Plua Cafe 1887 Sllyllno 14x72, 3bf, 2ba1h, ,(5;;.13;:15;:;7~4-~25:~39~~---~ ~~-=--:"'!"'--:'-:'"':"'"-,...
for ulo. Bu; jual 1ho Bualnoll building, porch, awning, aklrtlng, ::
and 11110 lho property or pur- on ronted lot, can 11ay, a.c . SmaU 2 Bedroom Houot North .ol 510
Household.
c~oao oil . 404 Ridge Avl. Rio cond. Call JO 814·446·8340 or
Addison $200 Month, Plua Dl·
304-671&gt;-l!f43-mnaage.
poait, Uti iitloa, Rolorancoa ReGrandi, Ohio
quired614'3117.0156 ,
1888 Oakwood 14•70 21&gt;&lt;, 2 1!&amp;111, '
230 Professional
Se 1
8•12 deck. on rented lo1,, oplional .small houte in CUlton, clean,
1g77 GMC Serle a alngle axlti
P•o Form 510 C1011 Tranlng E•·
rv ces
10x12 otorage building. 304·67S· quiet, no pall, S2751mo. $200
dump truck wtnfiiW bed, new dres
orclat
Syatim,
US.
&amp;14·
25B·
Hf•RTS MASONARY • Bloi:k, (:80=:51;_;L
=•='"..::moa
= aa=ge
::;.,- - -cfepo~t 304·773-g1g2.
and re:cent engine overhaul.
1313.
Good condidon. 19,000. Call 304·
brick &amp; ttone work, 30
18D3 Sabre, 14x70. thrte bed· Two Bedroom HoUM RerriglfaiOI, 2 SIMII Blue Recliner ·c hairS: ,
1137-:11164.
peritnct, tHaonable ratel. 304· roomt, two bath i, front porch, Stove, Furni1had, Washer, Or~,ar EndTII:IIe. 114 Ht 0343
Queen alu watei'bed wlheadD · l.tonlh ·Old Bora. While,
8115-3581
allot 8:00pm, no job 1D beck dock, hoot pump, outbuild· Hook-Up 733 Third Avo. $275. ¢:pllonc•a:
Rocondl!lonod board 11s ceo. 30f-675-8030.
Yi&gt;rkallirt a Hampohlro Mix, Coil lt78 Chovy Truck; 1880 Mod1l
- o r.IOBIG· ~•021nr
1-· ~ oix ..,.., can b l - at1g month S15.0.·Dopoait. 114·448·
1110t1,
Rongea, Rolrl· SPRING SPECIAL:' C1nuo1 Air Beforo 8 A.M. Cilr Allor 7 P.M. Ford Call Alter 7 P.M. 814·448Llvlngaton'l baumonl water- Ann• Slroet, $20,000, call 614· :311
_70
_ _ _ _ _ __:~:...: .,...... eo o.,. Guo•entHI Condltionoro: 2 Ton 11,185; 2 112 814·258-8018.
3243.
proofing, all beHment rtpalrt 17::5::
6..
.=.
56:;:4:..·-~"::--:--:-::-::--:: Two bedroom house, nice and French Cltr Uaytag, 114-448· Ton S1,295; 3 ton S1 ,311S: 3 112
A'rabl•n Haraet for Sale, Call tt78 Ford F800 with 18' dump
don•. lrtt tatlmaroa, Ill• time 1Vt4 Clayton 18XBO, 3 BR, 2 dean, no inoide pall, cfepoll1 oneS 1;.7785.;;:.:;:~---'-----­ Ton $1,595; 4 Ton $1,685; Prien .14·+18Aller. pm
bod, 5000 mliea on robuik onglnl,
Above
Include
HOfmll
insraH1·
auaraniH. 10yrl on job uperl· Batha, $23, 500.00 (114)· 36 7· rofor•nceo requlrod, &amp;14·gt2· o.- WI., Mirror , 75 ; Chlot
.
$4500,
814-812·3194. ,
anca. 304-875·2145.
ns1 All« 5: pm. .,
~3090:::;·:;.·":":'-:"'~":":"01 o.-..m: Chait' ,_. S31: lion. FuU V.or ·\'ilrrtnty, 'II Vou llrod bey mare, 5yra old, blaze
Don"!
Call
Ua
Wo
Both
Lolei'
~
Mobile Hom·- End Tobll .15: Smaiii!IW T.V. .Frn Ea1111\111UI Add-On Heal lllcl, 2 - 10cl11, ~ l
-11197 14 Wide-1 beth , I 6991 420
GS
120, 814·441·4141 Aftor e .I
child aale. $700 firm . 304·675·
n!-Al f ',TATL
dawn, 1138/mo. wilh approved
for Rent
wr , Jndl.. .•
· Pumpa Only Sllghty Hlghor. Call 2741 .
crtdLcal1-800-89Hin7.
Ua Todoy. 1gg7 Ia T ~• Twenty
Sevtnlh Year In The He1dng &amp;. Breedlno age bulls lor aale. 2
14X70
Mobile
home
lor
Rent.
2
N- 11197 14 Wide· I bllh, SOQQI
ttomeatorSale
Coollnti Buslnellll1 4,448-«108, Anguo and 1 HeroiOrd . Cerlllled 1986 Ford F-250, automallc. PS,
down, •138/mo, with approved BR. -1.(614)-4411-,._291·0098.
.
. and .Accrodltad herd. ~04·1711· air,. Glal •ni&lt;L cruiH, ~ pair)l,
, 112 ..., Home wilh TlwM Bed- Clodll Cal 1-8011-891-6777.
14x70 Two Be~ r oom, Two Balli
1181.
•
~. 814·1192·2178 or 814-1192STORAQE TANKS 8,000 Gallon •
TWo aa111a, ·a a-. ss 1U7 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom, Trailer, Two Acru •17,ol00, 10
I.e'" orlth Barna and Fonce. $gg5 down, •185/mo. Only at ACrtl $20,000, 3 Aero lOll
Uprletn, Ron Evona Entonwlaoa, . Unioualn cattla tor aoJe. al •IIIIJI.· 11304·
. , _ Ql&amp; Coli. (1114) 3117- 7784
JilltiOft,
Ot'ID. 1 - 5 3 7 buill, COWl, yealllnga. R..,..
$7,00.0
Eooh
8U·3f7·1SSS
- s.ro • MIIJiirv '-- Soi~
Oakwood Homos. Nitro, WV. 304or ollgllile 10 roglllor, 8f4·HI81&lt;1-31H1+1.
12J Hl8llllnd Ave. 3hdroom, 2 755-5816.
Chltlll"' , "''
2715.
.
•
IIIII. ...... ttlr goo ....... ...,.
Thr11 plica LR.-auill- 5 r•
2
Ballroom
Trailer
For
Ren~ loWolff 'lltMIIII ?IMI
Flogla- 8ladt ~· Bulla For
1r11
lui -mon1. ·ta8,SOO. Ut7 14•80 3 or 4 B•droom, cated lin 5118, Balore 5 P.ll. 114- cllnora, 111 mont11a ol~. coat
11,3!18 · •229/mo. FrH air,
TAN AT HOllE
Balii,114:1M S'~llllarSio.
ta:IQO. ....,800, 114 11112 1111.,
aklrlinO. &amp; dlllvtry. Only at Oak- 2&gt;15-51122, Allor 5, 614-ZII&gt;-15880.
.
•
bur
OIECT
end
BA¥11
"'D
IJl110Ualn WI, Aoch, .....
hOlM on permo· wood Homoa Nllro,WV. 304·755- Glen-~. Sbedroom mobile Ueld Air Conditioner 1 Htat
1115.
.
fnlm
Polled. e14-3f7·7800. e14417·
- - 2 1 1on 1/21Ctafolln
ndme In 1llo counur. 'lefl' nice, Unlla 1110 8IDrm 0... 110 ., ...
Dal7. ·
dtW wetor. 30ri*1. hm PI Pleat- ...._1,11~ •• J I
r &amp; r fenr. ""' pump, • . 1U7 doublowldt •IUS down, em
111_ . .
oe- Huntlngton. WIN acoopt
1 W ...... DR, fnlnl I .,..... -Cal ...:....,. 1HI JHP Wrangler ,.,. llodJ,
.............. """"'
. . ng. 104· .229/mo. FrH - r y I .I I!UP. HUQ . . . :10+- ...
clef, lll1f ...... I P.ltl. A5l C... lllack lOp, low - · · · IUIO,
.,... . . !'saN.
· 1 - . .1-em.
Yillctmel Callie Acoaplli Allor - " - a ' ........ oond,
• P.ltl. Frltlar. All C.•l••- Clldorlpi1.1014JI.-.
Wtfae- lla•tlnt AMtlallle, ' • s. 1
laiN,
flo· · _.,_,_,_
' •.._1142.
_
._
NC._$4,100,
0_
-·
-LlveaiHk
. _,, . . .
,.
_,_
__

Opportunity

PEANUTS

Sweet potato P'ants for sale, call
.81H42·2m..-114-742·2220. ·

1 hav&lt;l a large Nlac:lion or Q&amp;mlrig
cards, 'Magic" tho Gatharlng 10.
eluded, thousands' of comic
booka and a huge collo~lion or -610 .Farm Equipment .
1ports cards. Old and nN Start
Wara tovt al1o lnchided . .Let's
deall No reeaonal!lit olfor reluaed. 10% OFF all farm traC10f pario.
·81dor'a Equlpm•nt. 304·175·
Callovor1inga, 8_14:~. .
7421 .
JET
5.438
Tobloco Buo. WIIIIIBII
AERiiTION MotoRs
AI
tit
Pail
(114~258 illllll
~paired, Now &amp; Flebuilt,Jn tftock.
Cali Ron e..... _1-100·537-9528. · Gardena plowed, 1ny size, Flat·
waodt, Peach Fork &amp; Rock·
Klichen cupboarda for aalo, 614· ..,~nga .,.. 814-992-8531 .
742·2331.
Wanled- '2 raw' corn planter, good
Lowo'a riding mower 12hp, 421n condition, any make &amp; model,
81.·1192-8531 .
cut $400. 30oi·B75-5137.
Nordic Trak (Pro·Modolt groat W• mok• hydreullc hoN aaamconditio" wtelectronlc' monitor. blloo. Sidor'a Equlpmonl 304·
S150. 56Qal aquarium. wlhoods, 87!;.7421 .
lights ancl stand ii1Ciudtd, bfand· Your Now Bull! Hog Oeiier For
~- $150. ~-875-281 ~. ' '
Bledls, - a , Cu111111. Flnlah
Pomeroy Ttrin 'Shop, now buying Mawtr·l , loadtrt, Etc. Ia Car·
, furnl.ture , children'•· summer · mlchura Farm l Lawn. 814-+18clotho•, malornlty clothoo, billy 2412, Or4-800-\184-1111.
homo and large toys. Call 814·
LIVOtock
·1192-37211.
• '

33.,..Ungu~

lAndi

53 For (lp.J
54Remedy
.
5I De- (opln)

tm

PA~~I&gt;O)C

Electric Scooter and Wheaichaila, Now/ Uaod. Scooter ).ihs,
Porllbla Romps, Stairway Elevalora, Bowman's Homecart 814·

31 Hot rum drink

J2Tinnle ......

·Bridge with
his wife and
computer

1894 . Ford Truck F-1 SO· 4x4
Sports Mo~al, All Now Tiru,
31,000 Milos, Selling Duo To Ill ·

Of- Z.iNO'S

1-800-537-Q528.

.

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

Opening lead: • A

UPSIDI

T~f O~IGIN

Concrete &amp; Plaallc Septic Tanks.
300 Thru 2,000 ' Gallo no Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

,

~ .=holding

••

.ln .. ...
- eo flllll 1nix

Vulnerable: Neither
De'aler: West

19811 F-160 Ford 4•4. 88,000mJ ..
ss.aoo. 304-875-53711.

740

20 Teunt

U llurW1ine unit
24 Adalncenll

6 8 2
• 9'3 2
'.
•KQJ975
• Q5

ncJ Vans &amp; 4·WDI

-

171nMCtegg
18 Gkiam!MI •

I:Ma j
6 10 1 3

South

Block, ..,lck, _ . , plpao, wind·
· - . Nnllla, 110. Claude Wlnlera,
Rio Grande, OH Call .,4·245· 1878 Ford F·150 V·8, Auto,
5121 .
Cruite, Garage Kept, Mull Set
New Anderton window. In box, To .A~I:Ioto, Aaklng $3,500,
81453.
apt&gt;~ox . $10,000. Will Nil lar 1/2
.Price. 304-87~16.
Olda Cutlaoa, OortDna tirtl
now tngln•. 30 4•875•
Two Sl8tl Buildngs,
Pllllllc Llquldollon, 401128 Woo
14,880 Now 12.980; 40•57 waa
1982 Park Avenue, Good Uotor
..V18Now I5818Mua1Sofi, Con &amp; Trona, Haa Window Problomo,
.Deliver, BIU4ptin1llncluded 1·
Make Good Demo Cor 1400;
· 800-292'C111.
1981 Olda Cutiua Y·8, Auto,
Auna Fair, 1350; Call 814·448·
580 Pets for Sale
9853.
.
A Groom Shop ~Pal Grooming. 1913 Honda Accord, 4 cylinder, 4
Faalurlng Hydro Bath. Don door, 4 goad tira1, 5 speed,
ShHII. 373 GIOrgea Creek Rd . . 35,000 on rebuilt motor, new
614..48'-0231 .
braket, runt good, body good,
AKC !lalmallan pupa. Wormed tinted wln'dowt, prlcld to tell,
and flrtl tholl, vary genrle and $59S, 614-982·2904.
good with children. $75. 304· t9S.. Mercury Topaz. new paint,
675-3736.
ps. pb, cc, ac, runt .great, nice
AKC German Shorthaired Pllinlei work tilt. 300-675-6S1s.
puppleo, graaLlor both II old &amp; 1985 Ford Muotang LX 2 Doora,
lamily, $175, 814-742-3177.
4 Speed. S11ndlrd, Cruise Con·
AK,C Golden Relrl.ver Pupplea, trol, Air Condl!lonlng, Saw Blade
Malao $200, Fomolao $250, Pluo Wheela, &amp; Rear Wheel Orl•e,
Stud Service Available, 614-379· Serious lnquirlaa Only, $2,000,
614·256-13711.
2839.
AKC Golden Retrievers Pupploa 1986 Ford TaurUs,. tJIC. running
$200 each, Vet Checked, Sholl, oond., $1,500 080. 304·67S·
5320.
.Wormed 814-3711·2981
1986 Olds Cullau Clara, runs
good, $3.000. 304-675-8518.

.....
==
....._ ........
........
·=1 AI IIIII

12Ctlllbcw
1' Kind oiiiiOIII
14 a.t aldlr
11lw01Ud ....
11 "'light--

THANSPORIAIICHJ

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

•ld!W .

ACAOSI

••

'

�Ohio·Lottery

lis up
•
•
1n ser1es

Pick 3:

·Heat

626

Pick 4:
2384

Buckeye 5:
7-9·14-20.32

•

•

en1ne

..
. .' .'. N0.27

11'1!*· Olllo Vlllley Publllhlng ComjMny

Cleer tonight, low In
upper 401. S.turdlly, pertly cloudy, high In 80s .

2 s.ctlona, 11 PIOM. 35 Mnta
A Gannett Ca. He a 81MI*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 23, 1997 .

·McVeigh's·defense:

Real bomber died jn bll ast

.
NEW MONUMENT· Workerl from the Logan Monument Com. : peny -re buey ThlfldiY afternoon putting the finishing touch·
. -.. on the new Reclrl V.tarana Monument which will be dedicated
. at 1 p.m. Sllturdey at Ita locltlon eiljacant the Amerlcen Legion
•· ·Poet 802 In Racine. Bill Boone of Logan c:leena the new monument which reet. on a 30-by-30-foot concrete allb holding atone
, .markers bellrlng the name, rank, branch of servrceand aervlce
detea of erN vtteram1. Guest 11p111ker at the l!edlcatlon will be
the Rev. ChariH 'Kirech, who began his mlnle~lal carHr In the
Racine at'lllln thalat. 19401.
·

DENVER (AP) ;_ Timothy
McVeigh's attorneys are trying to
shift blame to an unknown culprit,
suggesting thill a mystery man
bombed the Oklaboma City federal
building and died in the blast, leaving only a severed leg behind.
Hoping to counter the prosecution's circumstantial evidence and
· powerful testimony ·from bombing
survivors, the defense used its first
day to offer jurors the possibility of
another suspect.
A food delivery man testified that
it wasn't McVeigh who answered the
door at a Kansas motel where
McVeigh was checked in under his ·
own name. And two other witnesses
· said they saw a Ryder truck at that
same motel on Easter Sunday 1995
- a day before prosecutors say
McVeigh rented a Ryder truck at
· Elliott's Body Shop in Junction City,

Kan.

Shop employee Vicki Beemer was
expected to be back on the stand
today. ,
On Thursday. she said ·two men
picked liP die truck but couldn't say
if either was McVeigh. She said one
man used the ·name Robert Kling.
which prosecutors contend ·was an
ali~ used by the suspect.
McVeigh, a 29-year-ol!l Gulf War
veteran, could get the death penalty
if convicted on murder·and conspiracy charges in the 1.995 blast, which
killed 168 and injured SOO others .
The defense k~y on its opening
day was the leg, which didn' t belong
to any of the reported victims.
·"We l)ave one left leg which we
don '.t know where it belongs." Oklahoma Siatc Medical Examiner Fred
Jordan said under questioning from
defense attorney Stephen Jones. ,
With Jordan on the stan.d, Jones
said: "As a physician, you know
there are no people who are born with

two left feel, except in dancing."
There was no laughter' in the
courtroom,
While Jones never said the leg
could have belonged to the real
bomber, his implication was clear.
And he did it quickly- after calling .
nine witnesses on his first day. Jones
said he could finish his case next
week.
.
Thomas ·Marshall ; the former
chief pathologist for violence-torn
Northern Ireland. testified that the leg
likely belonged to someone who was
near the bomb when il went off, a
"I 69th victim" .of the deadliest act of
terrorism within the United States.
He said the rest of the body may
hove been disintegrated .
Marshall also said it was telling
that no missing person's repo·n was
filed about .someone ncar' or in the
bombed building : "If nobody misses them, then il reinforces the sug,
gestion that the deceased is invol vcd

in .the bombing." ·
Under cross-examination, Marshall said he didn't •know where the
leg was found. The limb was mis- ·
takenly interred with bombing victim
Lake~hn Levy, but was recovered
after another lefi leg was matched to
her footprints .
Because the leg was embalmed,
, DNA samples could not he taken ,
from it, Jordan said. One bombing .
victim was buried without a leg, but
Jordan said that woman was missing
her right leg.
As for the food order, the owner
of the restaurant testified for the prosecution that the moo goo gai pan had
heen ordered by a man named Kling.
Yet delivery man Jeff Davis tnld •
jurors that someone other than .:
. McVeigh g~eted him at Room 25 of
the Dreamland Motel in Junction
City, where McVeigh was registered
under his own name.

Ambrose Bierce plaque planned

Pomeroy Memorial
··Bay.para. _
de sl.a.,~~d , ·~:~~~:~::~re:d!~e:~:a::

I

By BRIAN J; REED
Sentinel Ne-.sta.lf
''A group of juniors ai Meigs High

~·

•

•'

'

conlribution toward a historic mark- •
w:;~~~~ Po~~-39 oi
;;;;er~;·p-;~ing Lot :;..,here ser- ·-·er·in ·Breice's"lionor. ~·~..._..... · " '
American Legion, Pomeroy, ~ill · vices ' ill be held at II a.m.
•.
• Bierc~. '19th ~entUiy•shOrl Slorf~
hold its annual Memorial Day,Parade
, lhe Amen can. .Leg ton Post ~·11 writer and newspaper columnist. was
in Pomeroy Monday morning.
~tstt area cemetenes at the fo~lowmg hom near Chester. He disappeared in .
• Theparadewillfonnat JOa.m.at' wnes: Rock Sprmgs. 9 a:m., Beech Mexico in 1913, presumably killed
the ball field and move out at 10:15 _ ,f)wve, 9:15a.m.: Memonal Garden, by Mexican General Francisco Villa.
a.m., hea&lt;ling west on Main Street to I: 15 p.m,: Chester Commo~ for ser~ His best known short ·siory, "An
ButteniutAvcnuc onto Second Street vtces at Chester Cemetery, l.30 p.m., Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," is
••
to Ly~n Street.' and then to the Hemlock Grove, 3 p.m.
de rigdur reading in anthology liter'
ature courses, and tells the tale of a
soldier who is hanged from a bridge.
Bierce was also a writer for news••
papers in California and Washington,
•••
D.C., and is known for an acerbic
•
writing style characterized by his
••
The Meigs County Board of Men- . ers who 'h~ve moved but not ~hanged satirical ."Dcvil's Diclionary," pub'
.
lished in 1906.
tal Retardation and Developmental their addresses prior to election day.
Hlstorlcel Aaeoclatlonare'front, 1-r, Amy Smith;
DONATION MADE • Th-lunlora It Meigs
According
to
Joy
Bentley,
the
Michelle Ramsburg, Jill Lemley, Collin Roush,
Disabilities'levy proposal gained 10 At one time. those voters were inel·High School preaented $304 tOWllrd a historic
class
teacher,
tl]e
students
decided
to
Mrs. Holter, and Engllah Teacher Joy B.entley.
votes during the official count ofbal· igihlc to vote unfcss their address ·
marker 'hono~lng famoua writer Ambroae
Back, l·r, Sabrina Smith, Scott Sellers, Jan
Jots on Wed.nesday.
· ,
ch;lngc 111as filed with t~e ~oard at hold a car wash at the school on Tues- .. Bierce, a Malga County .native. Preeentlng the
•
•
Mcaey,
Steve
Rice
and
88\h
Farley.
·
The 1.8 mill additional continuing least 30 days pnor to election day: day to raise 'money for the marker
•
donation· to Pat Holter of the Chaat.r/Shade
project,
which
was
begun
three
years
levy, which was defeated, received a Now, h{lwcvcr. those voters may
total of 1,293 votes. while 1,SS9 bal· vote citheUttheir·n.ew polling place, ago by Kristy Woodall, a student at
·
h
ed b th Oh' H' t · 1 · Othcrorgani1.ations haveJ'oincd in
Ri'ver Valley High School in Gallia it was during this process that -t e approv
Y e · to ts onca
lots were cast against the levy, ~rat the·t&gt;oard oOicc .
.
class learned of Ambrose's Chester Society and the Ohio Department of the effort to memoriali7.e Bierce's . ·
County
according to Rita Smith, director of
While, meeting_ on Wed~esday.
Transportatl·on • but the locatt'on has· Meigs County ro&lt;)ts. The Middlepor.t '.·
The students · learned about roots.
et'gs
County
Board
.
of
Elections.
.
the
bonrq of elccttons ccrttfted the
the M
·
The
car
w
·
ash
netted
$304
.toward
not been determined.
Literary Club has pledged· '$100
··
cand•• Bierce's local tics during their read0 f. th ree 1 ~ dependent
H
1
d
· t, and the Fncn
· dsof
The oOicial count included II provi- · peuupns
••
•
H
the plaque, which will cosr a ,total of
o ter sai she would likc·to sec toward thc.rrnJec
sional ballots which were not includ- dat~s for vtllag~ counctl races. Th_e ing of Bierce's short . story." orse· $I,500.
the marker placed at the Chester the Library have donated $100. A ·
· since Bierce wa.• tota1 of$"00
· 1 d' r d · d :
cd in the' election day tabulation.
peutlon of Davtd .Ballard was ~ertt· man in the Sky." another Civil War
·
Pat Holt'cr of the Chester/Shade courthouse site.
7
• tnc u t~g un s rmsc
b
H
c
·
Ch
by Woodall, has been raised for the ,
Ten-of those 11 provisional ballots fled for the race for Pomeroy Village work. Students in Bentley's college
om near orsc nvc tn
ester plaque.
:
were in favor of the election, while 1 Counctl, as were pellttons for Roben preparatory class regularly give Historical Association. said that the
reports
about
the
authors
studied,
and
·
.
placement
of
the
marker
has
been
Townshtp.
.
.
was ca~t .againsl the levy..
Pooler and Roger.~ .. Manley, Sr. for
Provisional ballots are cast b)i vot- MJddlcpori Counctl.

·. Th:i:Jte":

•

1

!he

o

·.

MM/RD levy gains 10 .
votes in official count

"

.

Paper wants .investigation records released

·Flinn receives general
.discharge .from~ USAF
MINOT AIR FORCE BASE, point to other otlicers of the same
N.D. (AP) - Kelly A inn says she rank. stationed at'the same base, who
lost her heart and then her dream.
have gone to prison for similar
The dazzling young "bomber offenses. Flinn faced up to nine
baron," a rising star proudly featured years and six months in prison.
in Air Force promOtional films, won't
annou~cing her decision to
fly .bo111ber jets again. The nation's deny an honorable discharge and give
. first and only female B-52 pilot will !"linn a gc~ral discharge, Air Force ·
l~live the Air Force in a general dis·
Secretary Sheila Widnall said Flinn's
charge rather than face a court-mar- "lack of integrity," and her "disobe'
!i&amp;l on charges of adultery, lying Jnd . dicncc to orders" were more serious
disobedience.
,
than the ad~ltery charges.
- --JOINS STAFF ~ Doneld A•.
But the future for the 26-year-old
"It is primarily those allegatiO'ns . Riffle of Recine h1s been
first lieutenant is far from bleak. Her th;lt' made an honorable discharge employed by The Dilly Sencelebrity status is already attracting unacceptablc,"'Widnall said.
tlnel • en edvertlelng repre- ·
ttilk of book deals and movies. Her
Widnall's announcement capped a eent.tlve; filling 1 poaltlon
htwyer says Flinn has teeeived offers week of political posturing and nego- viCIIhld by Bob Atwood who
to fly for commercial airlines.
tiations aimed at allowing both sides retired lilt month. Riffle geed: Flinn has been a "baron" - the to avoid the embarrassing spectacle uetecl from Southern High
nickname of the 23rd bomb squadron . of a court-mii[Jiialthat could take on ·School, lttendld Ohio Unlverp(Oudly embossed in yellow on the the qualities of a soap ope,..
· elty'e College of Arte itnd SCItips of the B-S2 jets. She said it was ·
. tli'loe three y.are end gr11duall she ever wanted to be.
In tearful television interviews,' lteCI from the Law ·EnforceAfter the decision Thursday, she Flinn had insisted she would go ment Ac-.ny It Hoc:klng Colwasn't talkina.
throuah with a court-martial if she lege. Hll employ!Mnt hll
"She's physically and e11101ional- was offered anythina less than an been .In the fleldl of graphic
'ty;eM~uSied." herbl'other. Don Flinn honorable discharge. It was her 1111 eiiCI public l'llallonl.
Jr,, Slid at a Thu!'lday niaht news . c1ream to ny bomber jers, she said..
conference at the baae. "She's been and she would fight fix 00, dream.
In order IQ permit employees to
atiused in her relationship. She's
But !he prcuure mounted as inti· · observe .ihc Memorilli Day holiday,
been lbulled in 1M system."
While blr fllllily luhod.OUt lithe m,re. details about her pqvate life . The Daily Sentitiel will not be pubmilillr)' and • the rna they aay lOOk - . nvealed, particul~rly her affair lished Monday, May -28. Normal
tldvancap of Flinn, Air Pon:e brus with MII'C ZiJO, a civilian soccer office hours and publication will
res~me Tuo~y.
·
~"*'&gt;' llid she JOt oft" !ipldy. They coeeluhe called her first love.

in

. IRONiON (AP) - A newspaper
is seeking a court order to force
· Lawrence County officials to release
rccords of the investigation into the
Scottown fireworks store fire that
killed nine people· last July.
• The Huntington, W.Va., HeraldDispatch asked the·4th Ohio District
Coun of Appeals on Thursday to
order the release of witness statemcnts, inventory sheets. photographs
' and the results of polygraph tests. .
The lie detector tests were given
to three young men who accomp0nicd Todd Hall to the Ohio River

· Fireworks store on July 3.
Hall, 25, of Proctorville, was
charged with nine counts of involuntary manslaughter and four counts of
aggravated arson for allegedly ·starting the lire with a cigarette.
In September, Hall , who is brain
damaged, was declared incompetent
to stand trial and was committed to a
psychiatric hospital. in Columbus.
The newspaper's request for a writ
of mandamus, filed against Lawrence
County Pms.ccutor J.B. Collier Jr. and
Shcrill' Roy Smith, is the first legal
action
in the matter and fol-

lows several requests hy the news- ,.'
paper.
. After allirst denying access to any :
records, 'Collier released statements •.
hy Hall and two witnesses to the lire
and the sU)tlmori7.cd results of poly·
graph. tests taken by Hall's com pan· .
ions.
Smith, who has not produced any
records, said Thursday the decision •
on releasing records is up to the pros- •
·ecutor, who has more of the case '
records than the sheriff's office docs
and is his legal counsel.
•

•

•

•
••

••
•
•

No pape
' ·r Monday

• OLDSMOBilE·• lEIIUS • IDY8TA
'
'

•

INCREASED
- T11e QaUlaMelp PCIIt Gf the 8tlltl H!FtnY Pltrollllltlmlng up with looll polloe end llieilfrl' lflplrtftlelltlthlt holiday Wlllland In I major ..U0.C.
mant pueh on the lfM'I I'OICII. Eldlmll)lng •
map are, from left, Pabol. ¥-Pet ~Donald,
'

'

.

,

M11ge County Sheriff , . , _ loullby, Patrol LL
Weyhe McGlone, Gallie County 8Mrlfl'1 Sgt.
o.ve Mlrtln, Gelllpolle Pollee Chief Rogier ·
Brendaberry, ~•letant Pomeroy Pollee Chlaf
Jim StiCy end Middleport Pollee Officer Ill
Gilkey.
; .

•

•••
••
•

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