<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9174" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9174?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-26T11:54:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19603">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/4d79e819479a7a3279abd8d145fe4b7e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>11fd95505c733d70472a383e61857cb8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29489">
                  <text>•

•

.P9 12. The O.Dy Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

COCA
COlA

·2 2 ANNIVERSARY SALE

s

POMEIOY, OIL
.

ISOZ

s

..J//I..J//IELMAN
APPLESAUCE

SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN

.Chuck Bologna •••••~••••
O~CAR MAYER ..

,

.·

150Z.

s

$

159
Hot·· Dogs ••••••••••••~·..... . ·

P~RK COUNT~Y STYLE

.

.

Breast •••••••••••••••••••••~·

U.S.D.A. OIOKE BoNELESS BEEF
U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

169
Spare R1bs ••••••••••••••••
GROUND
$ ·199
'
. ·; $109

Beef ••••••••••••••••••••~~••• ·

WESSON
OIL
410Z.

'

$ 15 9

$ 129

Chuck Roast ••••••••••••~. ·

'

Sportt, Page4

ZESTA
··cRACKERS

,

HIUSHIRE:~::•••••••••••~••••• $ J39

VOL 46, NO. 247
21actlane, 12 ......

.

·.

Strawberries•••••a:;••••••
BLUE BONNO

3
Veget~bles •••••~~.-.tt:-: ·
2
or corn)

7·Up

'.

.·

Products ••~~.~.'!.":••
'

NOODLE SOUP

'
·

10.75 oz.

~

.

$

KRAFT MAC&amp;
CHEESE

s

,,

7.250Z

&amp;PLEASE

..
•

.

..

...

&gt;

•

99(

20QZ.CAN

$ 09

Jumbo Spread:.••••••••• 1
BORDEN AMERICAN CHEESE·
2
.
sa·
•
/
SlICes ••••••••••••••••••••
12oz.

LIBBY (Green

.

'

By TOM HUNTER

, Sentinel News Staff
. ·The Eastern Local Board of Edu.
cation approved changes to the
schoql calendar for tlie month of
·May, adding days io the end of the
· 1995-96 school year to compensate
for days lost to bad weather over the
~inter, during Wednesday's regular
:"meeting at Eastern High School . .
•
The board unanimously approved
a motion changing the calendar
according to recommendations frpm
the Eastern Local Education A$soci- ation, after teachers voiced concerns
su!Tounding the effectiveness of hold·
: ing school on SaiUrday's 10 make up

1

·

rhe lose days.
"The reachers feel thar witll, the
high number of absences, we cannot
construclively utilize Saturday's as
make up days. Adding days 10 the end
of rhe calendar ,would· be of more
educational benefit to both lbe stu·
dents and faculiy," said teacher Katy
_Peyton, in response to low attendance
at the first of lwo scheduled Saturday
sessions which was held April 13.
Under the revised calendar, slu·
dents will auend classes on May 28,
29, 30. 31 , and I une 3. Teachers will
report for their last day on Tuesday,
. June 4. The original dar,e for stu!lents
final day of classes was May 30, with

.$ ,
Pizza ••••••••~~.......... 2·· 4
.
/

11

~

/

oz

s

/ /TONY'S

MEADOW GOLD

Ice

•••••••••11.cr.•••••s)

TUNA

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

6.SOL

210LSQUEm

s

UMIT
6
PLEASE

c

'

· , Ohio stale legislalor Michael C. ficult slate issues. He is well respectShoemaker (D-Bourneville), who . ed by his fellow legislators, both
represents lhe 91 st House bislrict in democrars and republicans alike, for
Pickaway, Ross, and Vinton .coun- his willingness .to listen to all view·
\ies, will be the fealured guest poinrs before taking definitive ·
· speaker at Sarurday's annual Meigs stands on issues," said Sue Maison,
County ~moeratic Party Jefferson· · Meigs County Democraric Party
Jackson Day Dinner at the Meigs chairman .
County Sepior/Mullipurpose Build·
Anative of.Nipgen ip Ross Couning, Pomeroy.
ty, Shoemaker is the son of former
ShoerOOker, a 14, year veteran of Ohio Lieutenant Governor and longthe Ohio House, cu!Tently serves as time state legislalor, the late Myrl
the ranking minority member of the Shoemaker. Mike is a graduate of
House ethics and elections commit- Paint Valley High School, and Capitee, and plays an active r:ole on the tal University. He received a master
education, public.. urilities, vererans degree in education from Xavier
affairs, and local govemmenl and Universiry in 1973.
township committees in the House .
Before entering the legislature,
of Representatives.
·Shoemaker was an educator on the·
·He has active fo.Jghl for educa- high school level
tional legislation during his tenure in in the Chillithe statehouse, including his role as coth~ and
l\ past chairman and member of Waverly areas.
pupii tesling and competency select He is an active
commillees to review and study the member of his
state educational system.
community,
"Representalive Mik_y Sh9emaker lhrough his
has distinguished himself as a true involvemenl
leader in the General Assembly with in church
his sb'aight forward approach to difContinued on page 3

concrete--

99
COUPON GOOD
I FOR 5 TRIPLE
COUPONS.
I

May~ I scheduled as ateacher work
. day. The scheduled Saturday session ..
for April 27 will be elimi11ated under
rhe revisions.
•
•
The change in the calendar will
also mean extra school days for the
1996 graduating class . at Eastern
· High School. Seniors will be required
to atlend classes Friday May 24'and
Tuesday May 28, in order 10 meet the ·
required state minimum days of
attendance.
Graduarion is still scheduled for
Sunday, u 8 y 26, but dt'plomas wt'll
•••
not be awarded until the days are
studen~. according 'lo
completed
disrricl
Ron Minaicl.

.'

In other matters, the board:
- heard pare111 complaints conceming discipline problems on the
dislrict bus dnven by Nita Jean
Ritchie. The board directed trans·
ponation director Arch Rose, high
5chool principal Clayton Buder, and
Minard to review the situation and
further define policy for bus disci· ·
pline.
•
• bdard complaints from a parent
concerning . behavior and co. nduct
betwee.n a faculty member at the high
school and' a studenl, and questions
·
1
concerning the policy of personne
·review
evaluations.
• approved reaffirming the board

ana

action of April tO, and offering a one ley, Pat Shrivers, Debra Pratt, .Cynyear e~lem!cd limited conb'act to thia Chadwell.
teacher William Blaine for the 1996• approved classified two-year
97 school year, with a letter of reason cMtracts for the following P;rsonncl:
to be sent to the teacher.
Glen Easterling and Diana Buckley.
• approved the awarding of two- approved a continuing contracl.
year contracts to the following teach- · for bus driver Ed Holter.
ers: Casey Coff&lt;iy, Nancy Morrissey,
- approved lhe following lndivid- '
Ginger Siders, Deedrah Simmons, u.als he added co the substitu!e teac~r
John Taylor, Tony Deem, Lolita Mor- . list for the remainder of the 1995·96
row, Sandra Needs, Sheryl Roush, school year, 10 be use!! on an as ne¢·
Dan Thomas.
- approved the awarding of fitve- . ed
andbasis
Susanonly:
Wolf.James Ryan Lemley
year contracts to the following teachR' h d Ed d f
'
Ka Lo
d J · "' be
- approved tc ar
war s o
ers: Y. ng an antce ne r.
Ohio Universily as a srudentteacher
- approved continuing contracls
,_ror;.;..;t.;;.he:...;.;fo_n_o_w..in.::g:..r""ea""c""h-er_
·s:_J_oe_B_a_i·___·_c_o_n_tln_ued_o_n...;.p""lll:.
. e-3---i
'
••

''

..

BEFORE - Thlt piCture liken In 111M lhows the Crou Mill
building In P~ lhorlly before It wae dlementled end moved
back to Recine. It 18 evident In thla photo tMt yeel'lllind neglect
hava tekan their toll In the form of broken windows and faded,
r01t8n aiding.

. AFTER- Now loc:atad In Stir Mill Park In Racine, the Cross
· Mill/Racine Museum aporta a new roof, aiding and a new, shortened profile. Doora and windows will be replaced thla y..r, and
cleanup of the work alta will completa the tWo-year project.

Mill project almost done, but some work remains :
By

Jl"' FREEMAN
near the home of Gary Norris and his
Sentinel newa staff
wife, the former Donna Cross, who
Some thought i1 would never is a. descendanr of the original builder
become a reality.
who also established Cross' Grocery
But today the Cross Mill/Racine in 1840.
·
Museum slands just as strong -- or
The lhree'slory mill was moved to
perhaps even srronger •• than it did in Pomeroy in the 1920's where it sat for
1836, and Racine Councilman Dale years along Condor Street as part of
Hart slands poised to make the final the Meigs County Farm Bureau compush toward completion of the build- · plex. In the summer of 1994, working project.
ers dismantled the .160-year-old
The mililmuseum, which now building and IJ'ansported its pieces to
stands in Racine's Star Mill Park, was Racine's Star Mill Park.
originally built. by Lucius Cross in
During the first year of recon1836 and sat for years near the june- struction, workers poured a concrete
tion of Oak Grove Road and Bow· base and set in foundation stones
man's Run Road ~ear Racine. · (some from lhe original mill site).
Relnainsoflheoriginalsirestill stand ·Last year, workers of the Haynes

Consrructi~n

Company of Middle·

port began reassembling the building,

pulling down support beams, footers
and installing lhe walls and roof.
"It was a job, but it all carne into
place;· Hart said.
Some of the original chesrnul
beams had rotted and were replaced
with new oaken beams (~hesrnur has
not been available now for abour a
hundred years) and new wood siding
was cut 10 replace lhe old, splinlered
siding.
The building sports a new profile.
shortened by 10 feet, but srill retains
three noors and the heavy oaken flOQr
. joists 3!'e located Close together, just
as in year's past, testimony to the

.,

slruclure's slrength.
•
"It's 90 percent done," said Hart.
Most of. the original windows·
have been reglazed while other panes ·
require some woodwork. Sealant for the wood siding has been delivered
and is awaiting application.
.
In addition, some outside work
remains to be done including cleanup ·
and landscaping. Hart said lhe Racine
FFA Chapler is helping on the land.. scaping rhrou gh a grant it has
received.
Whereas it was once used as grisi
mill, and later to house items and
records at the farm bureau, the edifice
• will now house memorabilia from the
Continued on page 3

House tells officials to respect property rights
divisions ought to do."
COLUMBUS (AP) Rep . .stitution provide that people who whole, " Long said.
William Batchelder's interprelation hold property·hold it inviolate except
The concept was included in the
Long said the bill is unnecessary
of the Constilulion won over the under certain restrictive takings pro- because property rights are protecrcd "Contract Wilh America" issued by
House as lawmakers voted lo make ccdures," said Batchelder, R-Medina. in borh lhe federal and srate consti- the Republican congressional candi·
dares in 1994. So far, 23 slates hav~
local and Sl1lte govemmeniS consid- the bill's sponsor.
tutions.
er hdw their acrions affect property
"What has happened as a result of
Backers of lhe bill point to envi - enacled some form of property rights ·
owners,
the growth · in governmenl and ronmenlal rules. restrictive zoning legislation. Bills are pending in mosi ·
The House voted 87·9 on Wednes· increased emphasis in government on · · and wetlands protection efforts as of the resl of ihe states.
.Ohio's version is less severe than
day ,to require the Ohio attorney gen- land use ... property rig~ls may . be examples of government actions that
property rights bills in many other ·
eral to develop guidelines based on taken away under the gutse of domg diminish the value of property. ··.
states, some of which require com.
current laws and court decisions to 'something quite different."
The bill would not affect. most pensation for any law or regularion
Larry J.,ong, execurive director of
determine what governmenlal actions
could diminish the value of a prop- thC Ohio §t!unty Commissioners . routin.e local zoning.jssues or prop- lhatlimits uses of property.
Backers in Ohi.o include the Ohio
erty. Local governments would then Associalion of Ohio, had a different erty taken through eminent domain,
which requires fair compensation to Farm Bureau Federation, the Ohio
have to review those guidelines to view.
Chamber of Commerce and the Ohio
make ~ure they are not violaling · "We have to balance the interests the owner, Batchelder said.
"II requires lhem to take a look Association of Realtors.
·
of the property titleholder with the
property rights.
before
they
proceed."
he
said.
"This
the
adjacent
property
·
interests
of
The bill now goes to the Senate . .
"The Fifth Amendment of the
United St;~tes .and ... the Ohio Con- owners and the communiry as a is lhe very sort of rhing that local sub-

EPA withdraws proposed change for,pulp mill water-pollution permit

GOOD
SAT. 4/20
NOT GOOD ON

.

/

: COLUMBUS (AP)- Joseph Daly ven by a 16-year-old girl with a sus: says he almost always carries a pho- pended license.
· to of his unborn son . lt's the only one
Prosecutors were unable to charge
: he has.
·
the girl .with the dearh of the fetus
. Daly's · wife, who was eight Mts. Dah was c;mying because
: months pregnanr, was killed in a traf· Ohio law does nor reeogllize ~ fetus ·
- lie accidenl eight months ago. The as a person.
: f~us did not survive.
Sen. Scott Nein, R-Middletown.
Daly bas since fought for a law held up the photo of Daly's son dur·
chat would allow the prosecution of ing the debate about lhe bill. The
people who kill or injure a viable baby was stillborn, and the piclure
· felus.-He got his wish on Wednesday w.S taken a \lay before his funeral.
. as the Senate overwhelmingly
Nein, who .co-sponsored tl)e bill,
: approved !he measure. ~similar bill · said the measure does not protect all .
js J!!'Jidin_g ill the House.
feruses, but only those rtJaatt:~~~ -..,
"What a trfllu1ilo'ln'fson'."''Da y ""alile to live outside the w
said uter the 30-1 vote.
bill would leave that determination
His wife, Suzainne Daly of Mid- up to a docior.
llletown. was killed Aug. IS on InterUnder the hill, those who injure'a
state 27S in suburban Cincinnati. .• f~rus could be charged with the same
Hamilton County prosecutors said crimes- they would face for harming
her car was hit by a stolen vehicle dri- a person.
·

..

·

A Gennett Co. PI IA I Pill*

Oks fetus ,b ill

.

CALIFORNIA

•

Eastern board announces change -in calendar

Shoemaker.will address
Meigs Democrats Saturday. .

HOUSE BEEF
STEW

70..

35centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll18, 1996

.

MORTON

ctwnce of rllln, high In mrd

h

lB.

•

Cloudy tonight. Low In

so.. Frl4tly partly cloUd¥,

•

.

.

•

Super Lotto:
18-35-36-37-38-41
Kicker:
845975

:State Senate .

.$

•· ,

lJ.

Chuck Steak ••••••••••••••
;.

471 .
Plck4:
8320

over Reds

99

LUCK'S
PINTO
BEANS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

~

•
Plck3:

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESEIYE TIE RIGII 10 LIMIT QUAIIIIIES
PRICES GOOD IIRU APRIL 13, 1996.

BONELESS CHICKEN

Cubs rally In
9th for 8-6 win ·

· 12 Pl12 OL CAN

••••., tin 5•••111'
IAM-IOPII
291 SKOID ST.

Ohio Lottery

.Wldnlldly
Cone•• morning
work I'ISUIMd on the Pomero, G111nd Prclnterulde
with the .tvwlt of 11111R 111._1 ...,ltl&amp;f.
Wdkilra CCNibwctM by Eldon W.lbum Conlb'U~ of,-.lddlepart WCII'It on the elllew.lk which wllleiiWnd along the river tide
of the
,_Icing Lot.
·

•

PoiMrov

the $1 .1 billion project They contend
it would further pollute the river with
dioxin.
·
Gov. Gaston Caperton and other
s~ officials have backed the Jiroject
jlropo~ by Parsons &amp; Whittemore
of Rye Brook, N.Y., saying it would
create more jobs.
McCoy informed the Environmental Protection Asency about the
withdrawal of his proposal in letter
llated March 14. McCoy said tbe EPA
had refused his propOsal for the perprocess.
Environmentalists have appealed mit.
the permit as p8rt of its opposition tq • Opponents of the pulp mill say
'
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. {AP) The state Division of Environmenlal.
· Prolectlon has wilhdrawn a propOsed
change for a water-pollution pennit
for a pulp mill that would be built
· along the Ohio River ·in Mason
County.
The division's director, Eli
McCoy, had said the change would
make illegal any detectable dipxin
emitted by the pulp milL Dioxin is a
toxic byproduct of the bleaching

''

I

.
i1

'

'

'

'

&gt;

they are oulfaged over not being
informed sooner, where.as one of parsons &amp; Whillembre's auomey, David
Flannery of Charleston, received a
copy of the letter when it was sent to
· the EPA.
·
"As far as I'm concerned, it's
more inside deals," said Steve White,
director of the Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundarion. "Unless you're
an inside player ... you're ·not·
'allowed." •·
Envi(Onmentalists said they have
repeatedly ¥ked aboul lhe slatus of
th~ water permil over the last few
'

months and were told there has bee~ '
. '
no acuon.
.
"They never cell us about what's
going on,'' said Janet Fout, project ·
coordi~aror for the Ohio Valley Envi~ '
ronmental Coalition. '
Aannery said he had not seen a
copy of the letter sent to the EPA until
Wednesday.
• "It may. have been a mix-up ill my
office, but that's the trsl timer saw .
it," he said.
· Panons &amp; Whittemore has large.
ly.declined comment on the pulp miD '
project.
'

'
•-I,... __ J!. .

.: ·

''

...

•

�•

•

~

.......,.-~:::

,Commentary

. ~~~~~--~~~--~------~----~~--~~~~~----~~~--------------

Thurmay, Aprll18, 1881

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

.....-:---Local briefs----.. . . . .

OHIO Wciltlwr

•

'

Fricb!y,Aprlll.9

•

AccuWeaaher• forecast for

'£St#56slitl in 1948

MICH.

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
!114-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

.2r
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

~

'--""' to,. «&lt;ito&lt;,,._,;.,..,.. They •-ril:fl wo 111M!~- AH ,.,_
.,..~to Hltfnt and nHMr bl MfMd lnd IMIUlfe MldNsa Mid ttf. .hoM num-

l»r. No unlifiMd ,.,_ ""'' t.. pul&gt;lloMG. Lon.,. •'-ld
aM; allnf luue., not ,.,.onalltlea.

t.. In e-d ,.,,.,

GOP argument elusive
on Clinton and Bosnia

view a most impilrtant caveat.
"Experience may well compensate,
or more than compensate, for lost
cognitive powers," he told me.
Quite so. Winston Churchill
served as England's prime minister
until be was 81; Charles De Gaulle
was the president of France until age
80; KonradAdenauerwasGcrmany's
president at age 87. Ronald Reagan
was president at age 77-. Bob Dole
will be 73 this July. (If re-elected,
won't Bi!I.Ciinton be a better president at 51 than at.477)
We should alsb ask whether we
want a grumpy president or a sweet
one: I think we need one who kicks
ass, early and often. (And by the way,
wasn't Andy Rooney grumpy wben
be was 30?)
A recent "Think Tank" program
on public television (which I moderate) dealt with this quesdon: "Are
older people getting younger?"

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Republicans are aiming at an eltisive·issue in prqtesting President Clinton's tacit OK Co 1994 Iranian anns smuggling to the Bosnians; since the embargo those shipments evaded was one they opposed.
That leaves Republicans the argument that Clinton was duplicitous and
misleading when he let it he known, without telling, that the United States
would do nothing to ·bar the shipments through Croatia to the outgunned
Bosnian.Muslims, who were being driven into retreat by the Serbs.
· In addition, GOP leaders contend the result was an Iranian foothold in
Bosnia. lbey also have suggested it may have been a coven operation, which
Congress should by law· have known at the time.
All of which the administration denies.
· "There was absolutely nothing improper done," Clinton replied, and said
he wasn't concerned about Republican calls for congressional investigations.
• They'd have to be narrowly focussed, since Congress forbade U.S. enforcement against breaches of the United Nations arms embargo by. third countries, a ban effective in November 1994.
:: Sen. Bob Dole, who will be the Republican nominee against Clinton,
: c&amp;lled his course duplicitous: telling Congress one thing while covertly doing
: 8!Jother. The Republican position, shared by a substantial bloc of Democ• rats, had been that the United States should help arm the Bosnians so they
: ~uld better defend themselves against Serb.forces equipped with weapons
:of the old Yugoslav army. .
.
·: ' "While he was fighting lifting the arms embargo he looked the other way
: iYhile Iran sold arms ... and never told the Congress, which he had an oblig~·
:alion to do," Dole said.
: : : Dole, the GOP majority leader, plans to confer this week with the chair. inen of four Senate committees he has asked to investigate the affair. lbere's
: ~lso talk of House investigations.
: : House Speaker Newt Gingrich said the president's credibility was at issue.
: Gingrich asked how congressional Republicans were supposed to believe
·Clinton next time.
.
:: : But Secretary of State Warren Christopher said the administration always
As Congress returns from spring Congress has dropped from 52 to 28
:opposed the U.N. embargo and wanted it lifted. The dispute with Congress
:\vas over Clinton's refusal io do so unilaterally, in part on grounds that to recess, both parties are faced with percent positive in December 1994 to
· a~ so would undermine other international sanctions imposed by the Unit- politi.cal dilemmas. Republicans have 51 to 35 percent negative now.
to figure out how to tum around their · At the same time. thoush. a
:eii Nations and supported by the United States.
: · : Clinton vetoed a bill to lift the arms embargo eight months ago. He said negative public image, while Democ:at the time that allies with peacekeeping forces then in Bosnia had said they rats have to devise ways of creating
·
·ioould withdraw their troops if the Urilled Stattry acted unilaterally on anns a positive impression.
•
So
far,
judging
by'TV
ads
the
par- CBS/New York Times poll indicated
·
:ror the Bosnians.
·: The bill had passed by veto-proof margins, but there never wai an over- ties have run during this recess, both that the image of Democrats has
'ii!ie attempt because of the U.S.-sponsored negotiations and peace settle- intend to solve their problem by the improved only marginally -- from 52
old-fashioned method of attacking to 40 percent 1Jegative in 1994 to 46
inent now in effect in what was Yugoslavia.
percent positive, 45 percent negative
.:: That's the accord under which Clinton sent American troops, now num- the enemy.
Democrats, however, insist they're now.
~ring more than 18,000, to join a NATO force of 60,000enforcing the pact.
preparing a "proactive·" agenda for
On the generic question of "which
sent them late last year, and sl!id they would be withdrawn before the the fall campaign.
'
candidate will yol! vote for?''.
party's
end of 1996.
•
· A draft plan prepared by Senate Pew indicates that Democrats now
: • Republicans grudgingly accepted the mission. Dole said he was sup- Democrats, titled "Expanqing Amerp;,ning the troops, not the Clinton policy. He and other GOP leaders car.e- ica's Greatness;" suggests that they lead Republicans by 49 to 44 perceni.
fully drew that distinction on what had appeared .a high-risk operation most will stress raising the minimum wage, .CBS shows Democrats up, 44 to 39
percent. In November 1994, Repubrunericans opposed.
.
reforming health care and pensions, licans scored their 52-seat House
: · In a public opinion poll conducted at the time the first Americans were · and inducing corporations to treat
landslide by winning the popular
s~nt to Bosnia, only 36 percent said they supported Clinton's use of U.S.
their workers well as means of gain: vote, 53 to 47 percent.
troops there. But lhe mission so far has gone relatively smoothly, and atti· ing ground on the economy -- an
One top House GOP leadership
tudes seem to have turne4_. A poll sponsored by Thfts University indicated issue that Democratic pollsters tell staffer
said that, despite the generic
~ percent suppon the missiol\ now.
.
them is a weak spot for the party.
numbers, "our sense is that it's tech: . Another survey, this one by the Pew Research Center, showed wamng
In a memo to Democratic leaders nically impossible for us to lose conpublic concern about
operation. According to that poll, 18 percent were last month, pollsters Geoff Garin and
trol of the House" on the basis of
following the situation closely; half as many as two months ago.
Stan Greenberg reponed that a vot- retirements, fund raising and candi:
That could change abruptly, of course, were a crisis to erupt. And what er~s view of the economy "is tbe
date matchups. Still, he did not echo
now seems relatively rouiine could become a central campaign issue. The strongest predictor of the congresearlier GOP forecasts of a 20- or 30narrow argument about anns shipments isn't going to reach that level.
sional vote" and while Democrats seat gain in November. .
Whatever that did to let the Iranians into the region, the administration have made striking gains on tbe
To regain momentum, the Repubis .withholding nearly $100million in U.S. military aid until all foreign forces, issbe during the past six months, they lican National Committee bought
save the NATO peacekeepers·, have been expelled. It also has said that an remain "significantly behind t~ nearly $1 .5 million worth ofads durIranian offer of economic aid to Bosnia cannot be accepted under the peace Republicans."
·
ing the recess to blast President Clinaccord.
Overall, the Garin-Greenberg ton for vetoing a budget that would
memo tracks data in recent public have cut taxes $1,000 for a family
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vic~ pi-e51don! and colum- polls showing high dissatisfaction with two children.
nist for Tl!e Associated Pn:ss, has reported on Washington and nation· with Republicans, but no great
In the House, ~epublicllflS
a! politics for more_th_an_JO_y::_ea_rs._ _ _ _ _ _-----:-----,
increase· in loyalty to Democrats.
planned to use the tax-filing deadline
Ac~ording to the Pew Research of April 15 to "whack the Internal
•
Center's latest poll, released April 3, Revenue Service" and pass a consti·
public approval of GOP policies in tutiolial amendment req~lring a two'

tfe

me

Carl B. Jennings. 81, Pomeroy, died Wednesday, April 17, 1996, at his
residenc~ .

ShqwBrS T-storms Rain

Berry's World

-

•

q;._~
0 ttM by NEA. 1110.

JT JUST KEEPS GOING - AND
•
·.GOING - AND ••• _.

.

.

latest year for which there are comBy MICHAEL GARTNER
AMES, Iowa· If last week was plete statistics, 35,548 Americans
typical, about 200 young people between 15 and 24 died. Of those,
between the ages of I 5 and 24 died 13,662 died in accidents, an&lt;\ most of
in car crashes. Another I 55 were those - 10,305 - died in motormurdered. And 90 killed themselves. vehicle accidents. Another 8,019
Apan from a murder of a student were murdered. And 4,693 kilied
by another at Johns Hopkins Univer- tbenftelves . That's the real news.
Very few died "natural deaths."
sity, those deaths weren't in the
The
biggest killer among diseases
news. The news of young people was
the sad story of the death of that 7- was cancer, and· that took just I ,809
year-old girl in the plane in young lives. Hean disease .killed
fewer than a thousand, AIDS fewer
Wyoming.
That's understandable. The story than 600. Indeed, more men IS to 24
was so unusual, the situation so stu- are murdered every month than die of
pid, the cnish sq sad that it was all we AIDS in an entire year. For every
young man who dies of cancer, four
were talking about: ·
'
kill
themselves.
But the car crashes, the murders,
Put it in another light. From 196S
the suicides? Hardly a word outside.
the loc•l press, and barely a word to 1972, the height of the Vietnam
there. Why?
War, 45,969 Americans died in bat·
Because they are so common- tie - ar&gt; average of about S,7SO
place. That's sadder than the death of deathu year. America was outraged.
little Jessica Dubroff, more· outra- · That war and those deaths beCame the
geous than the debate over little airls issue of the decade. A national debate
tlfing airplanes, more pelJ)lcxing ensued.
than the questions surrounding that
Yet we routinely murder Qlllle
crash.
·. young me~. than we were killing
Look at the figures: In 1992, the every year in Vietn!UD; Where is the
.

'

.

.I

.

.

-

Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Mostly sunny with
increasing high cloudiness ·by late
afternoon. Sreezy and warm. High
upper 70s. Southwest wind 5 to 15
mph and gusty late this afternoon.
Tonight.. .Cioudy with a chance of
showers anq thunderstorms. Low in
the upper 50s. Southwest wind 5 to
15 mph and gusty until midnight.
Chance ·ofrain 40 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers anq thunde~storms

Mill project...

. Eastern board...

rrom

. Shoemak~r

' working with lead teacher Susan
Climer in music education until the
, end-of the195-96 school year.
- approved thp resignation of Don
P. Smith as a substitute bus driver,
effective March t 8, 1996, due to full
time employment. ·
- apprqved the employment of
Katy Peyton ' as. tutor for home
··• '· ,,,

Today's livestock report
Prices from T~
Llvestoc~ Association:

cootinuedrromp~ge1

Producers

Canle;"4.00 lower.
Sla~ghttit steers: choice 54.00-

Rep. Cremeans among _those·
calling for hike in minimum wage

Mejgs,.aoriouncenients
Literary Club meeting
The Miildlepon Literary Club will
' meet Wednesday, 2,p.m. at the home
of_Mrs. Qaniel Thomas. Mrs. Cnester
Erwin will review 'Bernstein' by
Humphrey Burton.
•'

\

,-

Special eel meetings set
·
Karen Smith, parent mentor, will
be in the speech room at Riverview
Elementary Wednesday, from 12:303:30. ..p.m. and in the cafeteria at
Chester Elementary Thursday, from
li:3()-3:30p.m. to meet with parents
about new policies and procedures
for special education.

Garden club to meet
The Meigs County ·Garden Club
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the ptlblic library in Pomeroy to finalize
plans for hosting the,spring regional
OAGC meeting wl!ich will- be held
April 27 at Carleton SGhool in Syracuse. Ac'credited judges Janet Bolin,
Sheila Cunis, Betty Dean, Susie Cl!f"penter will present the program, fea;
• turing modem design to be demmr·
strated for the Meigs County Fair
·flower show schedule and the Chester
Garden C}ub w)ll _host tile meeting. .
"

,

' •.

Stocks .

Aahtaw · 011 ........................... 40\

ATirT

oooooooooooooooooooooooo,aaooooo""'60~

Bank One ................................34
Bob Evans ............................ 15).
Borg-Warner .........................35').
Champion Ind ....................... 20~
Charming Shop .....................

5.,_

City Holding ................... ~........23
Federal Mogul....................... 18'h

G8nnett .................................65'
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... soll
K-mart .....................................9~

Lendll End............................. 17'4
Umltecllnc ............................·18'1.1
Peoples Bancorp................... 23
Olllo Vai!ey Bank .................... 4JI
One Valley................ ~ ............ 30~

Rockwell ..............................57\
Robbins &amp; ~yera ...... ............. 3e·
Royel Dutch/Shell ....1,.........142'1.

Shoney'a Inc.............:...........1aa,.

Star Bank '""'' '''''"''''"''"'"'''""''64'1i

wendy lnt'J....................., ......19r,
Worthington Ind ............., .....19,

· -*-*-

\

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

· Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded II
calls for assistance Wednesday
including three transfer calls. Units
responding included: ·
.
MII)DLEPORT
8:52 a.m., Hysell Street, Wayne
Jarvis, treated at the _scene;
12:30 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Alma Goodnight, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
·
POMEROY
9:05 a.m., Union Avenue, . John
Laudermilt,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
· II :39 a.m., U.S. 33,-Carllenilings,
dead upon arrival;
I:21 p.m.. South Third Street, Lee
Fitzpatrick, Holzer Medical Center;
3:30 p.m., volunteer fire department to Forest Run Road, auto fire,
no injuries, Syracuse squad assisted.

DIStrict ~ling . .
.
Stock reports. are the 10:30
Veierans of Foreign Wars Stewan a.m. quotes provided by Adveat
Johnson Post 9926, Mason, W.Va., of Gallipolis.
'
and ladies auxiliary will host the
VFW District 8 meeting Sunday. l!.;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\1
Dinner will be at I p.m. with meet- ' ..---------.,----~--.,.----'1
ing_following at 2 p.m. District Com·
mander Gene Imboden and President
· ·- '
-..-...-.

RACINE
12:48 p.m., Bashan Road, Hilda
Carnahan, VMH .
SYR!\CUSE
10:23 a.m., Second Street, Alberta Hubbard, HMC.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admissions: None
Discharges: Larry Spencer,
Racine; Ferrell Day, Rutland

Who says you
can't take it
with you?

The,Daily Sentinel .
'

.

I

\

M.._ ttea. .

Published every artcrnoon, ,Monday through
Friday, Ill Court St. Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohio Vu.llcy Publishing CompanyiOannett Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio ~l769. PI&gt;. 992-2156. S«:ood
class postage paid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.

Mnnbtr: The Associated Pm~ . and the Ohio
NeWSJKipef Associution.

.,.,,.,,

Bert's 6ow to solve yorr

POSTMAmR: Send llddreu co~tiOM to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,

Ohio45769.
.

SOBSCIIIPTION RATES
By CarrlerorMolor Roo1t
One Weeto.... .'.................. .......................... SlOO
One Mcmd&gt;~......:................., ...................... $8.70·
' · One Year....•..... ,N ....................... : .......... SI04.00

,. WNte? .

Let us create
a memorial
just for you.

'

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dally ....... :........... ............................. .... 35 c..u. .

SubKriben 1t01 delirina tO pay the.eanier may
remit itl advance direc~ to 1be Daily Sentinel
on t ~. d.1 or 12 moath bUs. Credit will be
ai~ ..mcreooh -k.

·-....

No aubtmpdon by maU pumilted in .awu
where home airier IC!I\'iCe 111VIillble.

POMEROY

MliiL SlliSCRIPI'IONS

..

~

Ne.- Pomen1y-Ma1on Bridge

13 --- ~..........................................127.30

11112·2581

2iS - ......,-~ •...•, .........., ................"Ul
..,._Mollo~

~....................
•
-··wo (,
''"l'"'J,
,......... ..,.,,.
3 -"'" "'•...

I

26\\leekt.,,,,IJ~'I'&lt;/),;O&gt;ooo"o"")I,,,, .. ,,,.,,, ,,,M,o$56.68
52 Vielltl......................1•••,.~....... : ... ~. ..... $109.n

'

'
'

\

1

'
,: \',

. '

,

VINTON
.Qlllll Cou1!tY QIIPIIY Yll'd
115 Iiiii St. 388 H03

n \¥1el[a..•~...............,.....,"'..................$10:5.$6

..

EXECUTIVE
DECISION •

Hospital news

~

, • (USPS 113-960)

HAPPY GILMORE "'"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
KURT RUSSELL IN

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

'

outrage? Where is the debate?
our daughters and sons have stresses
Look at it still another way. The and worries that need to be heard out
Unabomber killed three people in I8 and talked out and worked out. And
years of terrorism. That's awful, and we can ban the devices most people
the man is despicable, and the use to kill themselves- guns. Twoimmense news coverage of the sus- thirds of men and two-fifths of
peel is defensible. 1be circumstances women who kill themselves do it
are fascinating. 1be story is chilling. with guns.
,
Yet we murder three young people
We can cut murders by geiting rid :
every four hours. In the 18 years that of handguns. Guns are used in more ·
the Unabomber has killed three per- than tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of murders, handguns :
sons, we've probably'murdered close in more thao half. Guns killed 37,776 :
to 100,000 of our young people an&lt;! Americans in 1992.
·
seen anpther ISO,OOO die in .wrecks.
But we can't do anything until we ;
· Where is the news coverage, tbe acknowledge the numbers· a~d tieat' ;
outraae. the demand that we stop this them will) the same ouirage we·find· :
craziness?
in war, the same revulsion we find in . :
And we can stop it-·or at least a Unabomber, the same fascination : ·
slow it.
we find in a 7-ycar-old pilot.
•
We can cut traffic deaths by
Until then, notbins will llappen. .
. enforcing laws against tee,n·age · And our sons and daughters will go: :
drinking and toughening laws against on dying_,
.
:
drunken driving. Many Slates are
doing this. and it is worlc.ing. (Still, in
Garmer, editor f1l tile Aloes '
1993, 86,570 pel'$ons under 21 were (Iowa) DtUiy · Trllluae, II fOI'IDer · :
arrested for drunken driving editor ot 'l1le Lotall'rille Coqrler- :
including 103 drunken drivers under Joul'lllll aad Tile Des
f
10.)
.
liter ud l'onner preslltent of NBC 1
We can cut sui,cides by realizing Newa.\ '
'
''
' '

Dortha Jenkinson

Born in Pomeroy on Oct. 13, 1914, son of the late Peter-and Elizabeth
Doriha Jenkinson, 74, Midqlepon, died Wednesday, April 17,.1996, at·
Bohn Jennings, he was a former funeral director with-the Finsterwald FunerVeterans
Memorial Hospital Extended'Care Umt m Pomeroy.
.
al Hollie in Pomeroy.
Bom.Oct.
8,
1921,
in
Meigs
Ct;Junty,
the
daughter
of
the
late
Roscoe
an~i"
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloud)'
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School and the Cleveland School
of Embalming. He w'lis an Air Force veteran of World War II and a 50-year Jennie Pierce Satterfield, she was a bel!utician and seamstress. She was a
member' of the Drew Webster Post 39 of the American Legion in Pomeroy. graduate ofMiddlep.on High School and Bustin Beautician School in &lt;;olum-;
bus, a member of the Middleport Church of Christ and the church quilting
He retired as a state meat inspector.
group.
She and her husband were avid campers.
·.
He is survived by his wife, Rachel Batey Jennings of Pomeroy; a daughShe
is
survived
by
her
husband
of
54
years,
Curtis
Leo
Jenkinson
of
MiG.,
·
early: High in the mid 70s. C::hance of ter, Judith Clark of Alexandria, Va.; several nieces and nephews.
dleport; a daughter, Mary Jane Jenkinson of Lakeland, fla. ; a daughter .and
He
was
preceded
In
death
by
a
brother,
DouglaS
Jennings.
.rain 40 percent.
son-in-law, Korena Kay and Charles Williams of Burlingham ; two grandServices
will
be
held
Saturday,
2
p.m.
at
Fisher
Funeral
Home
in
MidExtended forecast
children,
James Hoyt of Pomeroy and Sandra Hoyt of Oxford; two stel'-.
Saturday... A chance of showers or dleport with th~ Rev. Keith Rader officiating. Burial will follow in Rock . grandchildren, Michael Williams of Lancaster and Linda Schoepp~er of
·
thunder-storms. Lows in the 50s. Springs Cemetery.
Burlingham; a great-granddaughter, Amanda Hoyt of Pomeroy ; five step;-_
Friends
may
call
Friday,
7-9
p.m.
at
the
funeral
home.
Highs in the.60s to lower 70s.
great-grandchildren, Angela and Joshua Williams of Athens; Valarie, Alii_-.
Sunday... Fair. Lows in th~ 40s.
· son and Elizabeth Schoeppner of Burlinghan;~; two half-brothers, Jack Sat-.
Highs in the lower 50s nonh to the
terfield of Middleport and Dan Satterfield of Toledo; several nieces and
lower 60s south.
nephews.
.
· Monday ...Fair. Lows in "the upper · Racine!area, including a skiff built in
"We're too far along to quit now."
She was preceded in death by her parents.
30s to the mid 40s. Highs in the low- Racine at tile Weaver Skiff WorkS and
Need more money to finish it ·
Services will be held II a.m. Saturday, April20, 1996, at Fisher Funerer 50s north to the lower 60s south. donated to the museum by Carl
Not a cent of taxpayers' money is al Home in Middleport with AI Hanson officiating. Burial will follow in
Wright of Cottageville, W.Va.
being used to fund the project, Han Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
The museum will be housed on said. Funding is coming solely from
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
continued
page 1
the first floor and will be handi- supppners of the project.
capped-accessible while the second
Donations can be made to the
instruction student.
·
·and
third
floors
will
be
used
for
storRacine
Museum/Cross Mill Fund at
-approved supplemental contracts
.
age.
the
Racine
Home National Bank .
for the remainder of the 95-96 school
Continued from page 1
Meanwhile,
more
money
is
needDonors
of
$100
or more will have
year for the following: Casey Coffey,
their names placed on a plaque that activir
paid assistant baseball coaciJ; Thny ed tp fi~ish the project, Han said.
:·u
you
want
to
see
the
project
fin·
will be installed upon completion of
Deem, junior class advisor. · '
ties, school booster groups, town:
ished,
we
need
some
financial
supthe
pr9ject.
The next regular meeting of the
· ship government, lhe Bainbridge
Eastern Local Board of Education is port .. .' and volunteer help," he said.
Historical Society, and ·the Scioto
scheduled for May IS, 6, p.ni,;, at
Valley Habitat for Humanity.
Eastern High School.
·
Mike and his wife, Vicki, reside
· in Bourneville with their two children, Angela Lynn and Michael
WASHINGTON (AP) -Moder- opposition from Senate Majority Todd.
'
59.00; select 50.00-54.00.
.
ate House Republicans are calling fot Leader Bob Dole, the party ~s pre"Through his experience as im
Slaughter heifers : choice 53.00- an increase in the minimum wage, sumptive presidential nominee, and .
educator
and parent, Mike is not
57 .00; select 49.00-53.00.
aligning themselves with President other GOP leaders.
only
very
knowledgeable on the staCows: steady to 2.00 lower·
The Republicans' bill would tus of education in· our state, but is
Clinton and the Democrats on the
issue but exposing election-year divi- raise the federal- minimum hourly also candid in accepting the respon"!age from $4.25 to.$5.25 an hour- sibilities of being a real Jeader ·of
sions withil! their own pany.
'·
10 cents more than the Democrats' Ohio," said Maison.
Sixth
District
Cong.
Frank
CreYvonne Crawford will conduct,,the
version
- in two steps. 1be first 50Activities will get under way Sat·
meetings. State Chief of Staff Ralph means, aRepublican from Gallipolis, cent increase would talce effect 90
Honaker · ~tnd State President Caro' said today he supports the increase. days after President Clinton signed urday with a social hour at 5 p.m.,
"We want to guarantee that
with dinner to be served at 6 p.m.
_'J'tooma:s are the state representatives.
the bill. The second increase would Several local and state candidates
a
minimum
wage
at
40
hours
plus
is
All members urged to attend for
enough to . support a family," said come a year later.
1996-97 elections for district 8.
House Speaker Newt Gin- and officials will be on hand for the
Rep. Chris Shays of Connecticut. one
·dinner. Tickets can be purchased
of 20 GOP lawmakers who signed on grich sidestepped the question of from any Democratic central COlO·
Wednesday to an increase despite whether the bill would be scheduled mitteenian , or at the door for $10.
for a floor vote.
Children under 12 will be admitted
Am Ele Power ......................:4o;.
at no charge.
Akzo ......................................56:t

Today's weather forecast

"The problem," the pollsters
write, "i~ that the optimistic portion
of the electorate is too small to carry
tl)e day.... Democrats have to reach
the swing bloc, which is more pes·
simistic about the future economy and deeply negative (59 to 28 percent) about the direction of the country._" .

Everyday violence deserves our outrage too

Flurries

Via A:isoclaled Pross Graph/csN61

you' and 'on your side,"',the pollsters
said.
"The Republicans are emerging as
a dangerous pany that may do harm
to people," the memo says, but "the
Democrats have not c!)me away from
the battles of last year with any sig,
nificant gains on values," which are
"still dominated by .the Republicans."
On the economy, the pollsters
a,dvise that Democrats have to sound
optimistic since President Clinton .
leads by 38.points (and Democratic
congressional capdidates, by 15)
among voters who have a positive
view of the future.

Surprisingly, they say, swing voters will be swayed more by candi·
.
dates who ·promise to work for a :· "better life" for the middle class -·
through ed11cation and Medicare -- ·
rather than those who promise a bal- .
anced budget, tax cuts and lower gov- ·
ernment spending.
In spite of widespread cynicism, it
sounds as though voters are yearning :
for a positive message this year. By
all mea.,s,let's bear it.
(Morton Kondracke ls ext.."ll!!ve
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)
·

:
•
•
:
•
••
:

Carl B. Jennings

GOP, .Dems make public image priority
.
thirds vote in Congress to raise tax·
es.
. .
.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole,
R·Kan., has told colleagues he may
call up that amendment this month
and also the amendment calling for a
b~lanced budget, which failed last
year by one vote. He doesn' t expect
it to pass, but wants 19 force Democrats to cast an embarrassing vote.
Meantime, the Democratic
National Committee has been running ads saying that President Clinton and Democrats want "access to
health insurance for all ... education,
job training, and more police," but
"Republicans will stop at nothing to
stop President Clinton."
Besides the DNC, the AFL-CIO
launched a $400,000 ad campaign in
28 Republican and two Democratic
districts attacking incumbeniS for
opposing an increase in the minimum
wage and voting to "cut" Medicare
and Medicaid.
Judging by the Garin-Greenberg
memo to Democratic leaders, though,
it's hard to see how attack ads will
help solve the basic Democratic
problem: People don't know.what the
party stands for.
· At the moment, according to the
pollsters, the political playing field is
"level" because voters are angry with
ReJ1ublicans, but "the Democratic
Pany's overall image has not changed
very much" since 1994. "Indeed, it
remains relatively undefined."
On a "temperature" scale measuring "warm'' or "coid"' feelings
toward the parties, Democrats score
in the tepid ~id-~ even on "key
advoc81:y attributes hke 'cares about

•

•:

Dorlha Jenkinson, 74, Middleport. died Wednesday, April 17, 1996,,al
Veterans Memorial Hospital Eltended Care Unit in Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 8 1921, in Meigs County, the daughter of the late Roscoe and
Jennie Pierce Satterfteld, she was a beautician and se8111Stress. She was a
graduate of MiddlepOrt High School and Bustin Beautician School in~~ ­
' bus, a member of the Middleport Church'of Clvist and the church qudung
••
group. She and her husband were avid campers. .
.
.
J,ury ~-~canceled
•
Sbe is survived by ber husband of 54 y~ars. Curtis Leo JenkiJISOn ofMtd"''"
'
dleport; a daughter, Mary Jane Jenkinson of Lakeland, fla.; a daughter and
, A trial set for Friday in the Meigs County Coun of Judge Patrick •
son-in-law, Korena Kay and C~arles Withams of Burlingham; two grand.H. O'Brien has been canceled, Jurors need not report.
•
children; two stepgrandchildren; a great-granddaughter; fi.ve stepgreat-grand- . ._..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....,_ _..,..
childre.n; two half' brothers and several nieces !l"d nephews.
.
.
Services will be held Saturday, ll a.m. at F1sher Funeral Home tn Middleport with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

The panel consistod of Dr. Richlrd

Sprott, dira:tor, Bioloay of Aain~o
National Institute on Aging; Dr. Eliz·
· abeth Cobl\6, director, Division of
Aging St~s and Services, George
Washington University Medical Center; Dr. David Gutmann, professor of
psychiatry and education, Nonhwes.tern University, author of
"Reclaimed Powers: Men and
Women . in· Later Life"; Betty
Friedan, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, author of
"The Fountain of Age."
lbere was heartening unanimity
among the panel. More of us are living longer, with ' fewer disabilities,
with better medicines on the way,
with more active and successful
elderly people as role models and
with society slowly catchirlg on to the
idea that age is not a sickness. Elderly people are lifting weights, making ·
love and making policy. Betty
Friedan says the AARP ought to
change its name to the "American
Society of Resurgent Persons."
Gutmann says: "Young people are
good at the quick processing of
information -- they recognize trees
instantaneously. In later life, the
brain works more slowly, but. can
construct forests from the clumping
of trees."
I'm not saying this is the choice
this year, but if it were, would America be beite~ served by a president
more likely to see forests or trees? Do
we want a president with knowledge
or wisdom?
Anyway, there's another reason to
cut outthe ageismJ There are 31 million eligible voters over age 65 and
they are niore likely to vote than the
rest of the population. Accordingly,
it's not a great idea to describe them
as shuffling off to the polls with their
shrunken brains, trying to remember
why tbey are going there. They
might get grumpy and elect Andy
Rooney.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
Ill the American Enterprise lnstl•
tute, ls the author of a new book,
"Values Matter Most," and is the
host or the weekly public televisio&amp;
L--=====:::::.-=~---------,-----------------.....1 · program, "Think Tank."
·

No injories were reponed following a two-vehicle accident in
Pomeroy on Mulberry Avenue Wedensday around 3:16p.m.
- According to a Pomet'Qy Police report, Glenda Matthews, 64, of
Rutland wu traveling along Mulberry Avenue when a second vehicle, driven by Ruth S. Bwdette, 46, of Pomeroy. made a wide tum
into a parking space, striking her vehicle.
Damage to Matthew~· 1996 Ford Ranger and Burdene's 1993 Dodge
Dakota was listed as light.

-Dortha Jenkinson

•

$ec&amp;use Bob Dole is no kid, age . .conccn~ or ICISO!I u well, and
is going to be a serious issue in this they tend to forget simple things.
election. Accordinaly. we ought to try
DR. OUR: This may explain the
to talk about it seriously, at least some .belief that older men get grumpy:...
ofthe time. We've already heard that
the "Dole 96" campaign button does
Ben Wattenberg
not refer to his age.
~
Last week, CBS News correspon- Men are still at the heads of governdent Jacqueline Adams reported, ments throughout tlie worlq. And
semi-humorously, on a study by neu- these are aging men, and that's someropsychologists' at the University of thing we may want to keep in mind. ·
Pennsylvania. The team, beaded by
ANDY ROONEY: Testing things
Dr: Ruben Our, reports that as we can prove anything they want....
age, brain cells shrink almost three They can prove that old men are
times faster among men than among grumpier if they want to, or they can
women.
prove that _they're sweeter if they
Here's how pan of the conversa- want to.
tion went:
.
ADAMS: At 72, presidential canDR. RUBEN OUR: Men, as they didate Bob Dole hopes to defy limits
age, make m()re mistalces. .
on old age.
JACQUELINE ADAMS: Gur's
DOLE: There must be exceptests show that as tbey age, men lose tions...
brain cells in their frontal and temThere are. I called Dr. Gur, who
poral lobes, and as a result, they can 'I · said that CBS excised from the inter·.

Pomeroy accident probed

.

I

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally SenUnel• P • 3

' .

NOTICE
Members of:
Public Employees Retirement System
School Employees Retirement System
State Teachers Aetirement System
The Ohio State Highway Patrol
Retirement System
'

Paid prescriptions will administer
your ·prescriP.tion____benefit program
starting April 1, . 1996 . . Swisher ~&amp;
Lohse Pharmacy -can fill your
prescriptions with your PAID card. You
only pay the co-pay. If you have any
questions please see Chuck, Ken or
Ron, Your Swisher &amp; . Lohse
Pharmaci~t~. We welco'me your
prescription business.

•

�•

Sports .

'

..

The DWly Sentin~.lf

,
•

'

.•

In other NL action,

PoiMroy. lllddllport, Ohio

ns erase deficit to edge Indian, ,9-8

:Th"~· Aprll18, 1 - :

-

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -

•,'

,

At 33, Dykstra limped into the
season on bad knees. Some thought

Dykstra went . 4-for-5 with two
triples, a double, two runs scored and
llla.ils is playing hard as ever, two RBis Wednesday night to lead
dUde.
'
the P;hiladelphia Phillies to a 9-2 win
After two straight injury-marred over the Montreal Expos.
seasons, Lenny Dykstra is again runThe three-time all -star center
ning the bases and fielding with the fielder, limited to 146 games 11M! pasi
wreckless abandon that made him . two years because of a variety of
one of the National League's most injuries, raised his balling average to
complete player.s.
.391.

his career might be over. But so far. ·
he has looked like the Dyk.itra of old:
"We all know that the only way ~
we ' ve got a chance is forme to play ~ ·
the way J'mplaying-,'' Dykstra said. •
"I'm going at it hard every day, try·
ing to do what! can 'to help the team
(See NL OD Page 5)

By DAVE HARRI$

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

--------

--

,..-

National League game at Chk:ilgo's Wrigley Field,
where the Cubs won U In 10 Innings•.Boone,
who tried to score from second on Eddie.
Tau~I)Siee's hit, wa11 out on this plaY,. (AP)
.
.

OUT AT THE PLATE- Chicago catcller Scott
Servais (left) holds onto the baseball after
Cincll)natl'a Bret Boone hits him In front of the
plate In the seventh Inning
of Wednesday's
.

Cubs t~p · Reds 8-6 .in 10 frames
. By RICK GANO

threw my pitch , I hit it ."
CHICAGO (AP) - The bi11ting
Sosa's game-winner off Johnny
cage beckoned for Sammy Sosa Ruffin , ~is fourth of the season,
after a five-strikeout game. And the came afler Mark Grace led .off the
therapy sessions with hilling coach I Oth with a walk.
Bi!ly Williams wer~ productive.
''I had to go·after him and I did·"When you play every day and . n'tdo my job," said Ruffin (0-1).
yoil're not swinging good, I go to the
Sosa 's first homer came in the
caae and work with Billy Williams, " . third off Kevin Jarvis and carried
Sosa said. "I go there and work on well out of Wrigley Field.
keeping my head down and .on the
"!thought it had a chance to hit
ball."
'
' the building (across the street),"
· ~osa didn't look like the guy Cubs manager Jim Riggleman said.
who'd fanned ·five times Monday
"In this series, Sammy made
ni&amp;ht. On Wednesday he hit two adjustments and remained unprehoine runs- including a game-win, dictable at the plate," said Jarvis, just
nir(g two-run shot in the 1Oth inning · called up from the minors and mak-•as Jhe Chicago Cubs beat the ing his firSt start since June. "The
Cincinnati Reds 8-6.
home-run pitch was a stupid pitch.
''Monday night was tough for me, .. I'm smarter than that."
bu( people who play every day are
And the Reds are a better team in .
going to strike out. I just went out the field than they showed WednesuxJ:ay with a different attitude," day. They made three errors, two by
So4a said. " I kept my head down, third baseman .Jeff Branson, who
-~
laifoff !he bad pitches and when he

·-

'

~~
' '
'

r

. •.

lY lo lsi.

2
8
New Yorl&lt; ................ 6 6
Toronio .................... 6 8
Bo!lon ..................... 2 12

.846
.lOll
.lOll
.429
.14J

p;;;;;j, :....................8

'
CLEVELAND ....... .. 7
'

San Francist:o (VanLandinJhom 0-2)
or ChicaJa (Caa:lillo 0.1), 2:20p.m.
Philadelphia (M . Williams 0-1) at
Montreal (Reuter 1-1), 7:35p.m.
FloridA {Hammond 0·2) nt Al/ama

Eultm Dl,.-lilon

tdilwaukee ..... :.........6
MiMCSotD-................6
· Olicago .......... ., ...6
~u City ............ ,

8 .429
9 J~7

. Weslerit 01Wt.n
Scaule ........ .... :...... .l I 4 .733
~

'

Tcus .................... 10
California ................ 6

8

.714
.429

4l;'

Oakland

8

.429

4~

....... 6

Wednesday's score! ·
MHw.-.ukee 8, New York 4
Mill{lCIOIII 9, O.EVELAND 8
Chicago 3, Kansas Cily l
Tc11ns 12. Oakland I
Baltimore 6. Boston 5 (121
Clllifornin. S. Toronto I
Scalt~ 8, Delroit :\

'

. ,.(Kinndo ..............l 7 22
11-NeW York ........... 46 33

Miami ........... ...... ,..41
Wlllflington ........... J9
8oslun .................... 32
New Jersey ............ 30
Pt.iladelphi~ ........... l7

'

Friday's games

z.-ChieaJO .... :......... 70
1-lndilma ................ so
a-Delroi~; -- r·-- .......45
a.CLEV&lt;~.~~ND ....4S
x·AII3nta ................ 44
Cbarloue ................-40
Milwauket .... ,.... ,... 24
Turonto ........... ....... 20 .

r.am .

•

1

.571

.5 0 ,
.462
.308
.267

•-Uti11\ .................... SJ
l -Houston .. ·............ 46
Denver ........ ,.......... 34
Minneso1a ............. 26

JC

4il!

em.nt 01.-ision
St. Louis .................. 9 6 .600
ChicaJO ................... I ' 6 ,571.
CtNCINNATI ......... S 1 .lJl
Pitu~rgh ........... ~: ... 7, 7 ..m

Houaoo ................... 7

8

.466

W~DI•Islon

s.. Dleao ..............IO

S111Fraaci1&lt;0 .......... 8
LoS.::t:ltl ............ 8
Co
,.................6

l J&gt;l&gt;7
6 .l)l
8 .soo
8 .428

Wedaaclay's scores
Hou1con7, New YM 5
ou..,o·S, CINCINNATI 6 (10)
SonDieJOII,Colondo6
LtMAo~ li.S..Fno&lt;ioco2

.......... . Ronda 2

Phllatlelfllii• 9, M~ l

.15
39

.551
.506

55

J04

60

22

27

,

.ns
. 66~

S4

.:\2S
J04

.165

Pocilk D l - .
17 .788

y-Sean~ .................6J
. x•L.A. Wer ~ ........51

&amp;·PMinnd. ..... ... .d
1-Photni11 ......... .....40
Sncnl1t1Cnto ........... .38
Golden State .......... 36
LA Oippen ., ...... :29
~-cll pchecJ playofr I J'OI
y-clillched division
l.• WOil conference title

.

B~U

~

40
42
44

.500
.475
.4$0

20

ll

.)6)

J~

61 Years

67 Years

..

'

•••

·..,..
".

can Auoctarioll.

~·

FLORIDA MARUNS: Placed RHP
Alejandro Ptu on the 1.5-dlly diaabled

Ball Security ~nds
-Phone 555 1515
Eltllbiii!Md lt41

Elllblllllld 1135

50 Yea

52 Years

I
~

-II Security BOnds

'~;j

i ::

..•t,.'

PhOn. 555-4777

Eslllblslfcd , ....

EIIIIIUI!Md 1151

".

''

.

t O

SlM Llndseif)lng

"

' Phone 5511t5t

~

Elt1Mthtd11115

lltd-Care Center Inc. Triskett'Party Center
Phone 555 1155

~1-

PIIO!II I D2e7
Etllilllllld 1t70

Crylflll Glass Co.

I ,1

,.,.t

•I 0

PIIO!IISSS.~

~~ j

Esiiiiiii!Md lf7S I

.

.

r.!

'

,,...,

-·

HAVE-YOUR BIJSINESS .LISTED!
The '~Honor Roll". ~ appear in the
Friday, May 1 7~ Edition of
· The Daily Sentinel.
The Cost Is 9nly $12

A "IA

.'
•

.

I; ;,_J

..
·•

•

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Plocod
ss Kim Batl;te· on the 15-aay di1abled
lite. Recalled SS Bill Mueller from
Phoeai~ of the hcifiCCoa~tbuue.

I

'"

....

LHP Donovan Osborne from lht lS-doy
Aasoc jation.

25 Years .20 Years '

•IW

....
I! ..

...~ l

~"''
:."!'

Football

~ :ti

· NodoMI F - " -

'' '

\,,. ...

BUFFALO BILLS; Ao.O.IIOOd lht)l
will""' rnalch lhcl&lt;lew wllnd l'llrl... •
COIIttld offer tO LB MontY flrowa.
-

ripped a thre- run triple for an 8· 2
their record to 10-6 overall with a score.
12·2 Tri-Valley Confen:nce win over
Southeni hitters were Sammi SisAlexander Wednesday night. ·
son and Tassie Cummins, who went
A comedy of walks and em&gt;rs led 2-3 with a triple.
to the lop-sided win as Southern only
Alexander had five hits led by
had · three hits overall despite an Mary Blair with a single and two sinaggressive effort at the plate.
gles each from Dixon and Lovsey.
Southern scored three runs in the
picked
the win
first inning, and also left the bases fourLawrence
strikeouts,
four up
.walks
and with
two ·
loaded Ol! what could have been an runs.
,
even bigger inni 0g. Alex came back
Dixon suffered the loss in just two
to pull the tally to 3-2 in the bottom innings of work, while.Lovsey came
of the frame, but that was the end of on in relief.
its offense as Jennifer LaWrence
Southern has a make-up game
clamped down with a great effort with Meigs today in Racine. ·
from the SHS mound.
Jnmpl WJ11i
Southern plated five runs in the Southern ............ .JS0-021·1 =12·3·4
second when Jonna Manuel walked, Alexander...... ...... 200-()1)0.0=2-5-3
foil wed by walks to Amber Thomas,
WP- Lawrence
LaWn:nce, Jednifer Cummins and ·
LP-Di~on
Bea Lisle. Tassie Cummins then
.
--~~~~------~~
(Continued from Page 4)
ltl,
II
•••·----:.----=-..:---...;;;..
.. ,,
.
. Dodpn 11, Gl!lnts ~·
·• ,
Wllfc~~~lhOiiand ~jio"'caml into
At San Francisco, Delino
the seaSon eager to prove he still had DeShields homered leading off the
something in his 33-year-old left game, and doubled and singled in a ·
arm.
seven-run fourth for Los Angeles.
Following two awful seas.ons _ Dodgers starter Chan Ho Park,
with the New York Yankees and San who struek out the side 'in the first
Francisco Giants, the Phillies signed and second innings, combined with
Mulholland as a free agent. After the three relievers on a three-hitter.
Phillies' pitching staff was decimatAntonio Osuna (1-2) and Joey
ed by injuries, he got a chance to res- Eischen both pitched threep;coreless
urrec.t his career.
innings, and Todd Worrell worked
Relying on a sinking fastball , the ninth. The four combined for 14
lhioughout the game, MulhOlland (2- strikeouts.
1) retired 21 batters on grounders
Park's second career start was
and scattered I 0 hits to improve his broadcast back io his native South
lifetime recOJ'!I to 10-2 against the Korea.
·
Padres 11, Rockies 6
Exws.
"I had the intent of going out
At Denver, Marc Newfield had
there and saying, 'If I have a good four hits and four RBis, both career
sinking fastball I'm going to use it highs, to power the Padres' 17-llit
against these guys,' " Mulholland attack.
Newfield's three-run homer in the
said. "Tmlight was the first time I
used it predominantly. I wanted to fourth off Marvin Freeman (1·2)
keep the ball down against these helped the Padres take an 8-2 lead.
guys. If they're going to swing. Starting all three games of the series
hopefully they're going to beat it into in left field in place of the injured
the ground."
Rickey Henderson, Newf.eld went 8The Phillies blew 5-0 leads in for- 13 with two homers and seven
..,
their last two losses, but Mulholland . RBis.
made sure they closed this one out.
Padres reliever Bryce Florie ( 1-0)
' "It's satisfying in the fact that we went three innings for the win.
lost two close ballgames lately,"
Mulholland said. "We needed to
come out and win a game 'just for the
•
good of the team, just to get back on
a 'positive note. It was my tum to
pitch tonight and I wanted to ~ the
guy to go out and get a win for us."
Elsewhere in the National League
it was Atlanta 4, Florida 2; St. Louis
6, Pittsburgh I ; Los Angeles II , San
Francisco 2; San Diego II, Colorado
6; and Houstog 7' New York 5.
· Braves 4, Marlias 2
At Atlanta, Chipper Jones doubled in two runs during a four-run
eighth inning to .give an unusually
wild Greg Maddu~ the win. .
the Braves' rally gave the victory to Maddux (2-1 ), who allowed six
hits walked three and struck out five·
bef~ bjjil)g lifted for a pi~h hiner
in the eijlhth. The four-tim." f'v
Young winner had walked ~wo m h1s
previous 20 2/3 innings th1s season.
John Burketi ( 1' 2) took the loss.

I

.·

..

•

tbe.:

single to drvie in Cleland.
In the seventh inning, Mall Ault,
Scott George and Cleland singled to
!Cad off the inning. Stanley followed
with a sacrifice fly. Burton then
added another single, but Lamben
was able 1.1 retire the neJ&lt;t two
Marauders to post the 8-4 win.
•
Lambert picked up the win scattering seven hits, walking three and
striking out ni.ne. R. Stevens led
Wellston at the plate with two singles
and a double.
Gary Stanley, who- has batt\ed
arm woes all season was the starter
and loser for Meigs. The senior went
the first three innings giving up five

hits. walking nine and striking out
one: Brad Whillatch went the final; • .
three innings giving up three hits.;: :
walking three and strikng outthmo. : ·
Cleland and Burton each had a ·
pair of singles to lead Meigs. ·
George, Brent Hanson and Ault each
addded a si.ngle.
Meigs (5·4 overall &amp; 3· 3 in the
TVC's Ohio Divison) will travel to
Southern today and return home Fri· : •
day to hOst Trimble.
.; :

lgeJ• m&amp;ab

Visiting Southern took a l-0 lead
in the first inning, but later fell to an
8-2 Tri-Valley Conference .baseball
defeat at the hands of Alexander
Wednesday night in Albany.
In the first inning, Southern took
a 1·0 lead when Kevin Deemer singled and scored on a Travis Lisle
double. From that point on, South·
em's bats were idled by Alexander
pitcher Parkis. Alexander tied it at II in the second when Jones doubled

and came home on a fielder's·choice.
Alex went up 2·1 as the pitching
of Chad Blount sustained several
good innings of work for Southern.
In that frame Josh Mace walked and
came home on anoverthrow.
Southern tied it in the fifth when
Michael Ash reached on an error,
s5ole second and third and came
Home on Kevin Deemer's sacrifice.
-Alex plated two runs in the fifth

?'"~-------------------~~~-..,

I

t

t

••'r •

: :

Meigs ....................000-001 -3=4-7-0; : :
Wellston .............. 312-020-x=8-8- l · :WP-Lambert
'•'
LP- Oary Stanley
•. . •

....

•

.• .'

'

on a Merckle single and back-to· had two errors. Parkis had nine
back doubles by Mace and Jordan, · strike outs, one walk and gave up
the score 4-2. Ale~ then broke it seven Southern hits.
open with four runs in the sixth for
Southern hitters were led by :
an 8-2 finale.
Blount with two singles, a double by .•
Blount went 5 113 innings, giving Lisle, and singles by Deemer, May- :
up seven runs on just four hits, eight nard, Shawn Dailey and Joe; Kirby. . •• .
walks, and three strike outs.· Matt
Southern will play Meigs today in
Dill went two-thirds of an inning; a make-up contest.
giving up one run, three hits; no lnnlnc tl!llll
.
strikeouts and one w~lk. Southern Southern ......... ... .... ! 00-01 0-0=2-7-2
Alexander... ........... 0 11-024-x=8-7-2

1·811-817-1194

or
1·11.4 -991·1114
OlUISE ON IN FOR A GREAT BEAU

1995 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVIlLE

V-8, Loaded, Leather

1996 OLD.S
CIEU

V-6, auto, air, more ,

$13,995'

$20 995

retired 16 straight ,batten and Ray
Lankford hit a 468-foot homer.
Osborne (1-0) madci his ~rst start
of tlie season after ~ing .sldehned
with a broken rib s~~~_~a~ned ~n.an auto .
accident during spnng ~m?g. He
allowed two hits in 6 213 mnmgs.
. Cory Bailey, Rick Honeycull and
. Dennis Eckersley ~ompleied· the
three-hitter. SL LouiS, wh~e~ leads
the NL Central, bun't been 1n ~111
piJtCC 'this late in the SCISOD SIIICC
1987
' .
· oMny Darwin (1-2) will the loa·
er.
•

•
I

I

l

I•
••
••
•

!
••

1995 OLDS

.••
•

AURO._

'

I

•

t•

..•
'

992·5627

N.2nd

••

•••;

·----------------,

I

·~

!''
•

•••
I
••

'
i

•;'

•'

'
•••
•
I

:•
l~

•;

'

••'
•
•
•'

Cardinals 6, Pi~tes 1 .
AI sl. Louis, ponovan Osborne

•

'

.'

in as· inmy startS, lhe Twins ~Cored ,
three runs ia the fifth 10 Jld ~ inecr
the game.
••
Naay was repli!Cell to 11111
sixth by Paul Shuey (0-1 ), "!1100 •
promptly served up a leadoff homer
u) Marty Cordov~ and two walks~.
then yielded Pat Meares' three-11111,:
homer to left field . That gave the:; •
Twins tbcir first lead of the two-- : ·
game series and put them ahead tO: ::
stay, 9-7.
• f
•.
Pat Mahomcs worked out o troUble in his one inning of n:Iief, thanks
to Chuck Knoblauch

Alexander diamondmen hand Southern 8-2· loss

Rental

r

l• •J

"'-A585fl
Elllbiii!Md 1tt3

Kramer &amp;Sons

Phont ..-sl3t .

'· 30 Years

'

dllablcd lisl. Oplioned RHP Richtrd
Ba.tehelot to Louisville. of· the American

.

r

44 Years 40 Years
Ills Slife &amp; Lock

1111, relroactive 10 April· 14. Activated
RHP Tmy Mathtws from lhe IS-day dia·
.abled 1111.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Aclivued ·

'Toallflt's pmes

.;

••

. Phanl5558111

11182

2S

21

'j'

''!'

· E.Z Motor Service

Coin aS~mp Center

ret:r03CrivetoAprill4.
· ; CHICAGO CUBS: Placed INF Dave
M1Jr8adan on the 15-daf di.sabl~ list. Re· ·•
called OF Rob\n Jennmgs from Iowa of
the Ameri.can AssociatiQil.
CINCINNA11 REDS: S.01 RHP Hector Cartuco 10 hxHanapo1i1 of the Arnni-

NewJme)' 107, T«onto, 95
Pllllllllelohio 90. Mioml86
Bos1on 121 , Wuhinaton 106
· Detmit 102, Indiana 93
Goldetl State 109: Mln~;~a 103
Scottie 96, Pordaod 90
Sacnune1110 10), Phoeni11 102

· Allanllll Orlando, 7:JO p.m.
r Milwt~~kee at Chaiiotle.; .,,lO p.m.

'···
....

60 Years

Nathmat Leaa"'

2J

'

•

A1UNTA BRAVES: PIO«d SS Jell
Blauser on 1he IS-day disabled list .

.

_, .

'

Phone 555-1245
Eslllblllhld 1125

future considerations.

. "Wednesday's scores
I~
' 2~

The qelst

All'lttkan
111f
·
TEXAS RANGE . : Acquired OF
lm-ek Lee from the Oaklind Athletic$ for

44 ~

II ~

75

Il l.

Vruaeouver. 7:30p.m.

--..'

JJ~

-~

Pllont 155H24Z
Elllblllllld1917

Transactions

23
32

.5J8

,

C~lorado·;u

!~

)1

Ph- 555-S782

Saturday's pme

~9'1:1

'28

Vlrcap Services

Washinglon at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
Winnipeg at Detroit, 7:.30 p..m.
Calgary at Cbi&lt;:ago, 8:.30 p.m.

26
JO
46

S

Acme R•ntals

70YHrs

Friday's gallltS

2l

-

Pllont Ill t431
Elllbiii!M 1803"

Tonight's games

· 20~
25

:2.~0

Pllont 111-2211 .
htiiiii!Md 1100

.. '

II

Tampa Ba~ 111 Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Montt~l 01 N.Y. Rangers, 7 :~0 p.m.
St. Louis al Toronlo, 7 :30p.m.
Vancouver nt Colorado, 9 p.m.

21 ~
40~

34 .515
45 · .430

D311"···· ............... 24 SS
Vancouver ............ .J.l 66

llll
}.
l 'h

l4

Phont551-1D22
Ettlblllllld 1115

cont.~ In Mlnneepolll, wtiere

after five innings and held of a Meigs
~:comeback atttmpt in defeating the
Marauders 8-4 in Tri-Valley Confer·
ence baseball action Wednesday
afternoon at Wellston. The g~ was
orignally scheduled to be played at
Meigs but was moved on Wednesday
afternoon because of a wet field at
Meigs.
.
Wellston jumped out on top 3-0 in
the first inning off of losing pitcher
Gary Stanley. Wellston hail three sin·
gles and three walks to plate the runs.
The Golden Rockets increased the

lead to 4-0 in the Sec:ond inning without the benefit of a base hit taking
advantage of four Meigs walks.
The host increased the lead to 60 in the third innings on a pair of
walks and singles off the bats of
Pugh and Stevens. Wellston added
two more runs in ·the fifth inning on
a single by Mrecer a walk and a sin·
·gle by Patton and R. Ste-:ens d()u·
bled.
Meigs scored a run in the sixth
inning when Cass Cleland led off the
. inning with a single, only the
MarauderS second hit of the contest.
· Gary Stanley was then hit by a pitch
and Chad Burton followed with a

'.'

l&lt;t

AD 8rOL Co. ·

Minnesota manager Tom Kelly
liked the way Hansell went after the
hitters - and the way he went after
the game ball.
" Did you see him come runnina
on the field to get the game ball at
the end of the game? I'm sure it was
special to him," Kelly said.
"I've been playing this game for
a long time and you look forward to
getting your first win," Hansell said.
"I' II probably give the ball to my
dad, liecause ho_'s been my biggest

fan. but I think I'll hold onto it for
.
I wh 'le
I •..
.
The 3 213 innings marked the
lonpst stinc of Hansell's brief major
league C81'Cer. Acquired last July in
the Kevin Tapani-Mark Guthrie
trade, he was '0-1 with a 7.43 ERA
in 20 appearances with the Dodgers,
and spent the mt of the year in
Triple-A for the Twins.
Manny Ramirez's three-run
homer in the third otT Robertson
helped stake Charles Nagy to a 7-2
lead. But when the Indians right-hander appeared headed for his third win

•

AIL ac"l"on

.."I'

Chicago 4. Calgary I ; Olitago leada
series 1-0
'

18 ~

.11: lo lsi. . lil

y-Sa.n Antonto ....... S8

Elutem Dl.-llioft

lY lo f.cl.

:iO
J4

.886
.625
.570
.l70

...

'

ries 1.0

25 'h

WESTEJlN ;±NFERENCE
Mld..~•lskla

I'lL standiJJgs
Monlrt.11 .................. 8 6
A1lan11 ..................... 8 1
Phlladelphia ........... .. 6 7
New York ................ 4 Y
Floridn .. .. ..... .,. ............ II

9

I '!

Sitler's Inc.

Elllblllhed 1815

Wednesday's
lirst•round scores

Cenlnl Db·islon

Bos1001 (Gordoo 1·1) ol CLEVELAND
(O.Maninez 2- 1). 7!Q"i p.m.
,
New YOrk (Gooden 0· 2) at Min~so1a
(RodriJueZ 1-1 ). 8 :0~ p.m.
Milwaukee (McDonald 2-0) 01 Kan w
City (H"""Y 0-21. 8:05p.m
~a ltimore (Mercker 1 ~ 0) at Teua
(Pavlik J.O), IV\~ p.mDel roil (Aldred 0-1) at Cnlifornia
(l..an&amp;Jton 0.1 ), lO•Ol p.m.
Cfi.icaJO (Prieto 0-1) at Oaklund (AIM
varez 0-2), 10:05 p.m.
Toronro (Hentaen 2- 1) IH Seal tie (Wolc:on 1-1), 10:~ p.m.

Illll

.51 3
.488
400
$0 J 1S
6l . .2n

••
·'

80 Years · 78•Years

.

NHL playoffs

II
t6 :r,

39
41
48

' ,,

11'

Hockey

!lJI

722
..182

-

· ~,h

Wa.shinglon 6. Pinsburlh 4: Wuhington le:.ds 5eries 1-0
Oetroit-4. Winnipeg 1: Detroit ilfads
series 1-0
.
Florida 6, Doston 1; Aorida lends se-

.11: lo f.cl.

I

.,..,,

Ponl:md :u Golderi Suue, I0:30p.m.

~STERN CONFERENCE
Atllntk Division

Ium

·''

•
••
•

Da:IJw; at Phoeni~ . I0 p.m.
Minneaoca w Seattle, 10 p.m.

NBA standings

Boston (Moyu 1- 1) at Ballimoro
(Muilina :1.0). 3:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Sp nrks 0-2) at K3Mas .,-..
Cily (Gubic.r.a 1-2). 8:OS p.m.
1 Toronlo {Wore OMI) at C.allfornia
(Sandenon 0.1 ). IO:OS p.m.
Detroit (Sodowsky 1·0) at Seanle (Bosio 1.0), JO: O.~ · p .m .

The Southern softball team raised

!· I

Friday's11alnes

Basketball

Today'sgames

-------

Forest Hill Cleaners

L••u•

Southern softball team
downs Alexander 12-2.

"'

W;uhinglon at T?ronlo, 7 p.m.
Boston at New Jersey. 7:10p.m.
, Orlando at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
~llll'?fiC III _New York, 8 p.m.
MtaJTII at Mtlwaukee, 8JO p.m.
Vtlfleouver at Denver, 9 p.m.

Friday 'sgllllll!s

6 ,3J8
6 .500
7 .461

'

'.

Utnh~KVtv~eouvtr,IOp.m .

San Fnmci5eo (Wafson 1·1 ) nt Chicago
(foster 2-0), J:20 p.m.
loJ Ang~lcs (Valde; 0-1 ) at Florida
(Ropp 0.2), 7:05p.m.
.
. Piusburgh &lt;_Neaale 1-1) nl M,omreol
(F¥uero 1-2), 7 . ~S p.m.
St. Louis (Urbani 1-0) at Phillldelphi"o
(R.Huma 1-1). 7:.U p.m.
Color-ddO (Ritz 1·2) nt New YQI'k (HUl·
nisch l -0). 7:40p.m. .
San Diego (Hamihon 3-0) a( Atlanta
(Smoltz 2-1), 7:40p.m.
CINCINNATI (Sl.!hourck 3-0) al
Houston (Swindeii·0-1 ). 8:05p.m.

Wedneldly night's Americln
1he Twlna .,n H. (AP)

·I

New York at CLEVELAND, 7:30

p.m.

(Ghwine 1·2), 7:40p.m.

Ctnlril DMIIon

....

'.

·-' -

Detroit 41 Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Denver at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers ut Houston, 8:JO p.m.
L.A. Lakers al San Anronio, 8:30

Pittsburah (Wagner 2.0) at St. Louis
(Stoultmyre 1·0), I:3S p.m.
·

~
..................... 11

.

p.m.

Today's games

standings

r

r.

1·00 Years 95 Years -92 Years

. . Sl. Loui; 6, Pittsburch I

DESPITE DIFRCULnES off11ecl by MlnnttDfll't PMII Molltar (alldlng) In trying to brwJI up U.. clquble play 8tllmpt, Clevellncllhort·
ltop Alvaro EtpiiiOZII mikft 1he IMp end 1he llrow to first to neU
Dave Hollin• end completa lhe double play In 1he flm Inning 91

I'

----

Of

;....

Scoreboard
Baseball

ttO\.\

----

also had two triples. The Cubs
scored three unearned runs in the
• first.
"We played horrible defense,"
Reds manager Ray Knight said.
"We missed grounders at second and
short. This is a major league team
and we shouldn't make those kind of
errors. In the future we won't."
Turk Wendell-( 1-0) pitched two
hitless innings of J'elief.for the win.
Cincinnati tied it 6-6 in the sev~ .
enth inning when Hal Morris greeted reliever Doug Jones with a RBI
double. The hit came' immediately
after Luis Gonzalez made a pe~t
one-hop throw from left field to cut
down Brei Boone lrying to score
from second on Eddie Taubensee's
single.
· Chic'ago starter Jaime Navarro
failed for the fourth straight start to
gel his first .victory, going 6 2/3
mnmgs.

Sentinel ConMpondent
Wellston jumped off to a 8-0 lead

'

'

The Indians outhit Minnesota IS.
g, but couldn •t get the kaockout hit.

.

•,

We,lston outlasts Meigs challenge to.get 8-4 win

•

..
.

The

maliaoed Minnesoll Twina bullpen
redeemed itself apiDSt the Amr:riwt
Laauc 's top-hillina team.
After Twina starter Rich Robertson fell behind 6-2 and left in the
third inning, five Minnesota relievers combined to hold powerful
Cleveland to a pair of runs over the
final 6 2/3 innings in a 9-8 victory
Wednesday night.
Greg Hansell (1-0) bailed out the
'!Wins, allowed j\Jsl one run, four hits
and two walks to earn his first major
.league viciory.

Phillies down Expos; Braves and Cardinals also get' wins
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer

The Deily Sanllnel• ...... a::

•

Thurad.ly, . . . 18, 1 -

••

••

•

9
0
.-:».nvs

!

IJ

••
'
,' .

, d /111'

I'

' ,I '.

Oftfr iJood only with Mf.

. OffBr 1xpim 4-30-96.

'
•'

-

I

•,•I .
!
••
•'

GA_LLIPOUS J
•

, ' Olilo ft!Ver Plaza

Sllyer

Bri9111Z1 .

3

441·0015· 446· ·00

l

. .•

'

'

,.

'

'

•

I

l

I

�•

Page 6 • The Deily s. 1111111

Widow recalls
By TOM CANAVAN
. NEWARK, NJ. (AP) ~ fifty
yean; 11110, Rachel Robinson Willi like
any other· young wife h3ving
ptegame bunerflics as her hUsband
took lhe field for his f"" game in lhe
minor leagues.
Her nerves were on edge, hoping
he would get a couple of hilS, s1eal
a few bases and not make any errors. ·
It would be Day I on the way to lhe
major leagues.
But Rachel Robinson had more'
on her mind than hilS and errors on
April 18, 1946, in Je"ey City when
the Montreal Royals played lhe Jet·
sey City Little Giants.
The man playing second base f~
the Royals 50 years ago was doing
more than making his minor league
debut Jackie Robinson was breaking
the color barrier, becoming the first
black to play in organize1fb&amp;seball in
the modem era, and enjoying the
moment was near impossible for.his
wife.
Rachel RobinsOn simply didn't
know what to expect from lhe fans,
the players or even the authorities.

'

i

Pomet O'f • lllddl1port, Ohio

Robins~n's

"We had come from

I

historic entry into majors

lflli..l. train-

down until the third inning. when he
"He jUJt had a great game," Shu·
ing in Ploridulld it was ki~f hor- got his first hit I kind of walked ba Slid from Mobile, Ala., where .he
rendous with all the rail( racial through lhe aisles, clutching my bag was on 1 trip. "I was the fortunate
attleks Jack ·) lid to take," she said. and worrying.
one. He batted second and I batted
Robinson and his le8IIIJIIalcs had
"We needed a job. We had just third, and when he hit the home run
beenlocbdoutofthegameinJack- gotlen married on Feb. 10 llld we everybody was looking to see if a
sonville llld he had been taken off had no savings. There weren' t a lot while guy was goinc to shake his
the f~eld by authorities in Sanford of options for black professional hand. Hell, he was on our side, Was·
because local ordinances proiJibiled ballplayers in those days."
n't he? No problem."
Shuba said Robinson never
mixed fliCC games. There were also
Jackie Robinson, who was then
lhe rides in the backs of buses, sep- 27, needed only nne game to erase stopped hitting that season and won
u.cc lodgings and the racial slurs. his wife's worries.
·
the In1emalional League batting title.
Compounding the situation was
According to reporiS of lhe game,
At the same time, Rachel Robin·
his batting slump that spring.
he received polite applause in his son said her husband was also com"I was concern~ about wh.at ~ first at bat and then grounded out ing to 'grips with being more than a
atmosphere was g01ng to be hke tn· . against left-hander Warren Sandell; ballplayer on his way to the bigs.
New Jersey and that Jack would
Two innings later, Robinson hit
"As we went from ballpark to
have a good day," Rachel Robinson Sandell's first pitch oyer the left-field ballpark and black fans began to fill
said Tuesday. "It was very important wall for a three-run homer, starting the stands in unprecedented ways
for him to do that."
what" would be a great day. He sin- .._and reacted very vocally to anything
Arriving from New York City, gled in his final three at-baiS, stole he did, it became clear to us thst he
Rachel Robinson recalled finding a two bases, drove in four runs and was carrying the aspil'l!tions of our
festive mood. Schools had been let scored three more times, twice by race on l)is shoulders," she said. "He
out by then Mayor Frank Hague, the inducing balks while on third base. · began to feel thst keenly, and he
ballpark was packed and several
George Shuba, the Royals left knew if he failed that it would set
bands were playing.
.
fielder that day and laler Robinson's back social progress for God knows
"Somehow, I couldn:tjoin in the teammate in Brooklyn, remembers
how long. If he was simply doing it
fun of thai, emotionally," she said. "I the performance well. He batted for himself, the pressure would have
was just very nervous. I didn't sit beliind ·Robinson.
been muc!J different."

Thur8Ciay, Aprtl18, 1118

Thursday, Aprll11, 1

:Woman doesn't take any of blame for ·unfaithful husband

••

••'

differen\. The ~Mionohip with ~~a•
Shltba marvels 11 Robinson's
,
fus
is different. It
a YflfY ridt
I!M6 season.
period
in
baseball
and
I'm
gl.J we'
"Most of us players could 1101
had thll experience."
comprehend thll he was able to per·
Robinson encountered discrimiform so 11111nificently under such
nation
and was' angered and frus~rncndoua ~s.sure ," Shuba said.
.lrlted
by
it. He never spoke
"He certainly had a great first year
ly in his career because of an agree·
in Monlrelll and I think it was almost
ment he had with Dodgers executi~!:.
more important than the one in '47,
Branch
Rickey.
his first in lhe majors. He could have
_He
did
just befo1e he died, but,
hit .220or 101 ~ed or got injured
Rachel Robinson said he was more •
and not played a lot of games. But
frustraled than bitter.
everything went right. If he had hit
"He ,;..as disappointed he didn't&gt;
.210 with Montreal, who knows?"
see
more progress," said Rachel,
The first year paved the way for
who
runs the Jackie Robinson Foun- '
a Hall of Fame career that included
dation, a not-for-profit national eduRookie of the Year honors in 1947
cational foundation thai has provid- •
and a National League MVP award
ed
college scholan;hips to more than!
in 1949, when Robinson led the
400
students since its inception in .
league with a .342 average.
1973.
:
Robinson retired after the 1956
When asked about Robinson's •
season. A severe diabetic, he died of
a heart attack in 1972, a year after hi~ legacy, Rachel Robinson recalled,
something he once said.
son died in an automobile accident.
"Life is not imponant except in,
Rachel Robinson doesn't tonure ·
its impact on the lives of others," she•
herself wondering how much money her husband would have made said. "The feeling thst an individual;
who is committed and will pe~vere~
playing today.
. 'I'm glad he played in the erahe can make a difference is part of his:
did," she said. "I think the game is legacy."

Tht o.uy Senlfl:tel • Pllge 7

.

w•

Ann
Landers
__:~:,:~
.... · -

~:::;:;::==:..-----J

0111..--

By ANN LANDERS
: Dear Ann Landers: I was infuriated by your response to "W.G." You
'told her that husbands who are satisfied at home are less likely to stray.
,What a lot of rubbish! There are any
number of relationships out there
between controlling men and compliant women. Ydu've prinled letters
from them. It is too easy to blame it
on the woman if the man isn't get-

art,

any of their teacbcn.
"Romeo" got his just dues. but you
1 suJICSied lllllri.aae c:ounselinc, are enjoying hia misery 1 bit too
but he Slid he did!t't believe in iL much. If Possible, tone down the
The next thing I knew, he left me for intensity of satisfaction. Granled he
a 22-year-old tramp he worked with. wu less than a model huiband and
Three days after he moved in with behaved like_,a heel. but still, he is
her, he called me on the phone and the father Of your two children. I
cried. He said he 'd made a big mis- would hope you could maintain 1
take and asked if he COI!Id come civil relationship for the sake of lhe
back home. I told him he'd made his kids. Be a lady, and make an.effon.
bed and now he could lie in it
Dear Ann Landers: I saw this in
By the way, my ex-husband's the Louisville, Ky., Courier-Journal.
tramp is now suing hiin for sexual What kind of animal lover could
harassment in' the workplace. ftc ~ condone this son of thing? Here's
said he wanted more e~tcitement in the story: .
his life, and he suie is getting it.
"It's an animal lover's ultimare
What do you say, Miss Landers? - fantasy. For those into amorous
Feeling Better in Michigan
iguanas or hot two-toed sloths, the
Dear Feeling Better: I say Santa Ana Zoo in Califorriia is hold-

' ting enough sex. Chances
the
wom1111 isn't getting her needs met
either.
My busband l1lrDI:d 40 and decided he needed to. "get more out of
life." He said that he wanted more
excitement i.nd he wasn't getting
enou1h sex. Well, I would have
liked more excitement, too (translate
that into more sex), but he was the
one who chose to work 60 hours a
week on the night shift. When he
came home at 8 a.m., I had to pac!l; a
couple of lunches, get two kids off to
school and go to my own job, Did
the big stiff make an effon to help
out? Arc you kidding? He can't tell
you how much money the kids need
to buy milk at school or the·names of
•

'

I

At this point, the most likely scenario
By DAVE GOLDBERG
is the Baltimore Ravens, the former
AP Football Writer.
Cleveland
Browns, trading from No.
Only someone as daring as Bob·
4
to
No.
2
to
take Phillips with Jackby Beatharo could get away with
sonville's pick, and the Jaguars using
trading a No. I draft pick even up for
the fourth on Si.meon Rice, the Illi.
a No. 2,
nois defensive end.
Yet the San Diego general manBut it could iniensify toward the
ager did it last year, moving up in lhe .
second round by trading away this .middle of the first round.
"We could go down as far as 12,"
year's No. I..He ended up with Ter:d id New England coach Bill Parrell Pletcher, the running back ·who
cells, who picks seventh. "After the
allowed him to dump Ronnie Harfirst two, we figure there are about
mon and his big salary. He's liable to
13 players who . grade out about
do be doing strange things in the
draft again this year.
·
eq11ally."
Trading choices up and down is
now an accepted pan of the draft.
Watch Johnson enter the fray.
This year promises to be no differ"Any time we have an opponuent.
nity to get a special player, we're
In fact, it starled on Wednesday, going to do it," said the man who
when Oakland and San Francisco moved up just three picks at Dallas
swapped second-round picks, the in f990 and managed to come up
49ers moving up from 57th to 46th with a special player named Emmitt
by giving the Raiders their fourth- Smith.
·
rounder, and the Raiders sending thst
Then watch Johnson's old team,
second~rounder along,to New Engthe Cowboys, make moves for no
land for offensive lineman Pat Har- other reason than to save salary cap
low.
money. They traded out of the lale,
And with the return of Jimmy first round last year into the secofl4
Johnson tote NFL to join Beathard so they wouldn'i have to pay a firstand olher trade-happy general man- round saliuy and carne up with Sheragers, it's likely to be the kind of man Williams, who proved a useful
draft when, after a long wait between backup at running back to Smith.
picks, the announcemen\ ~omes thai:
Bill Walsh loved 'to do it at San
· "The Miami Dolphin.s have trad- Francisco and llad his most successed their third, fifth and seventh ful draft in 1986, when he traded out
·round picks to (pick 'a·leam) for this of the first round twice and ended up
year's second and sixth-rounder and with seven players in. Rounds 3-6
a third-rounder in 2002."
• ·- who sjarted on two Super Bowl winThe machinations will start at the. ners - including John Taylor, Tom
top this year because of the appeal Rathman, Steve Wallace alld Charles
that Lawrence Phillips, the Nebras- Haley.
ka running back, has for some teams.
But the master is Beathard, who

Winston Cup slate.
.a. nd . st~ndings posted

.

Sept. 29 - Tyson Ho!ly Farms
NEW YORK (AP) -The 19%
NASCAR Wi·nston Cup stock car 400, North Wilkesboro, N.C.
racing schedule, with winners in . Oct. 6- UAW-GM Quality 500,
. .
parentheses and driver point stand- ·Concord, N.C. .
Oct. 20- AC-Delco 400, Rockings: . ·
. Feb. 18 .-,- Daytona 500 (Dale ingham, N.C.
Jarrett).
Oct. 27 - Dura Lube 500,
Feb. 25 - · Goodwrench 400, Phoenix
Rockingham. N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
Nov. 10- NAPA 500, Hampton,
. · Mar. 3 '- Pontiac Excitement Ga. ·
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
March I 0 - Purolator 500,
Driver standings
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
I. Dale Jairett, 1,063.
March 24- TranSouth Financial
2. Dale Earnhardt, 1,061.
400, Darlington, S.C. aeffGordon).
3. Terry Labonte, 1,004.
March 31 - Food City 50(), Bt:is4. Ricky Craven, 987.
tol, Tenn: (Jeff Gordon). ·
5. Jeff Gordon, 97().
April 14 .:.:... First Union 400,
(tie) Ricky Rudd, 970.
North Wilkesboro, N.C. (Terry
7. Ted Mus~rave, 856.
Labonte).
(tie) Sterling Marlin, 856.
April 21 - Goody's Headache
9. Bill Elliott, 85 I.
Powders 500, Mart:nsville. Va.
10. Mark Martin, 839.
April 28 -Winston Select SOO,
II. Ken Schrader, 815.
Talladega, Ala.
' J2.·Rusty Wallace, 812.
May s·- Save Mart Supermar13. Bobby Labonte, 805.
ketS 300, Sonoma, Calif.
·
14. Bobby Hamilton, 7.98:
May 26 :_ Coca-Cola 600, ConIS. Jeremy Mayfield, '768.
cord, N.C.
.
. !~.Kyle Petty, 757.,
June 2- Miller 500, Dover, Del.
.. 17. Jeff Burton, 753.
· June 16 .,-UAW-GMTeamwork
18. Rjck,Mast. 734.
500, Long Pond, Pa.
19. Ernie lrvan,•732.
June 23- Miller 400, Brooklyn,
· 20. Michael Waltrip, 717.
Mich.
21. Jimmy Spencer, 71 0.
July 6 ·-'- Pepsi 400, Daytona
22. Raben Pressley, 702.
Beach, Fla.
23. Kenny
698. ' .
July 14 -Slick 50 300, Loudon,
24. Hut
7.

.

•

•

'
;

•
•

'

July
Long
Pond. Pa.
July 28 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis
Aug.. II - Bud at the G~n,
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
"
·
'Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
Powders .500, Bristol, Tenn .
Sept. I -Mountain Dew Southem 500, Darlington. S.C.
Sept 7 - Miller 400, Richmond, Va. ·
Sept. 15- MBNA 500, Dover,
Del.
Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Martinsville. Va.
·
' ,

't l

26. Wally Dallenbach Jr.. 612.
27. Brett Bodine, 609.
28. Derrike Cope, 6()4_
29. Geoff Bodine, 579.
30. Darrell Walttip, 574.
, . 31. Morgan She~. ~.

32. Lake Spee4. ~2.

·

I•

33. Joe Nemeehek, 5.52.
34. Ward Bunon, 48~.
35.' Johnny Benson, 480,
36. Elton Sawyer, 459.
37. Dave Marcis, 456.
38. Dick Trickle. 452 .
39. John Andretti, 439.
40. Mike Wallace, 424.
41. Bobby Hillin Jr., 313.
42. Mike Skinner, 187.
43. Jeff Purvis, 127.
44. Loy,Allen, 110. ·
45. Chad Liltlc, 64.

·'I

.

•

·reachers.
VAN
M•rk Ill Conversion Pkg,
•uto, elr cond, AM/FM
C1188, tilt, crul18, PS, PB,
PW, .PDL

1993 MERCURY
VILLAGER
LS, V 6, auto, •lr cond,
AM/FM c ..a, tilt, crull8,
PS, PB, PW, POL

Wellston softball
crew
•
hands Meigs 15-71oss
Wellston ouiScored Meigs 12-7 in
·But Wellston came storming back
the first two innings and ~ld on to to get eight big runs on seven hits in
post a I 5-7 win over Meigs in Tri- the bottom of the inning to take the
Valley Conf.erence softball · action lead for good.
Wednesday at Wellston.
The Golden ·Rockets closed out
The loss was the fourth in a row ·tile scoring in ~fifth inning by platfor Meigs and gives the · Lad~ ing three more runs, after the second
Marauders a ~4 mark overall and a inning winning pitcher Wyatt gave
4-2 record in tlie TVC's Ohio Divi· . up only one hit •. a sixth inning dOu·
simi. Meigs will travel to Southern ble by Julie King.
today.
Fackler was the losing pitcher
Meigs jumped out on top 1-0 in with relief help from CYnthia Cotthe first on a single by Jessica McEl- terill. The two gave up 14 hits,
roy. Srephanie Stewart followed with walked seven and struck out four.
a walk before Emily Fackler dou- Fackler, Cotterill and IGng had doubled.
bles to lead Meigs.
Wellston came back in the bottom
McElroy, Stewart and Roach
of the firstto.take a 4-1 lead on three added singles .
walks and three hits. The big hit of
Winning pitcher Wyatt led Meigs
the evening was Parsons' triple.
with three singles.
Meigs battled baek in the top of lpgln&amp; l!!llla
the first to take a 7-4 lead by scor- Meigs ........... ,...... J60-00()..0=:7-6-3
in!l six big runs, aU six runs came Wellston...........480-030-x= 15-14-3
with two outs. Meigs took advantage . WP-Wyatt
of four walks and a Cotterill double
LP- Fackler
and singles by Roach and Stewart.

FLOOR
CLO·SE·OUT!

.~A:·II!"'~~!:n.-.ao.an..
32" Culle Color TV.............. ""'" . 1049"

1995 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

c ·o untry Edition, V-6,
•uto, •lr cond, tilt,
crulee, PS, PB, PW, POL,

V-8, auto, air cond.,
AMIFM c•••· tilt, crul88,
PS, PB; PW, POL, Pwr

1993

Listed are just a few examples. This is a
100% storewide sale on every product in
stock. Hundreds of lteina In the Jewelry
Department are up to 50% off. If you miss
this sale, we both lose!

1

1995 JEEP
CHEROKEE

.....

,

•

LOCAL TRADE

We are ••rrentlr I• the middle of a
new store lar-out. We do•'t waa.t to
move It so we've slashed prices oa
everrthlng o• the floor!

,WAS

1994 FORD AEROSTAR "SPORT PKG"

V-8, 11110, 1lr cond, AM!FM ca1a, tilt, crulH, PS, PB, PW, POL

NOW

5899"

, GRAND PRIX .

1992 MERCURY
TOPAZ

V-6, •uto, •lr cond,
AM/FM c . .a, tilt, crulee,
PS, PB, PW, POL, 4 dr.

dr, 4 cyl, auto, •lr cond,
c•11, tilt, crul18,
PS, PB, PW, POL

CLEAN CAR

LOCAL.TRADE

.

.

.1992 PONTIAC

. BONNEVILLE
aupe~hergld

199.1 FORD
ESCORT

V-6,

4 dr• . 4 cyl, •uto,, •II'

•uta, A/C, AM/FM cli88,
tilt, crulee, •II power,
aunroof. ·

cond, AM/FM ce•a, PS,
PB, etc, clAn low milA:

SSEI,

..

.'

.·

..

52"11gScrMColwTY ............. ;.'2199"

$'

Karen Walker, Sharon Birch, Twlle Chllda, Mar·
garet Bentz, Grace Ch•ney, •nc:t Becky Triplett;
·and back, Jo Ann Hayee, Ther-.. Cerr, Emme
Ashley, P•ul• Whm and Kend• Wlllleme.

~

:recogni~ed
: . A recognition dinner honoring
: leachers for years of service was host- ·
by the Meigs Local Teachers'
·: i\ssociation recently in the Meigs
;. ~ounty Senior Citizens' Center.
·: · A decorated cake inscribed "1;462
' years of dedication to education ·• was
: served.. Kenda·Williams, president,
: presided at the. evening's festivities:
: · Teac~ers recognized for 20 to 24
· years of service were Emma Ashley,
: Margaret Bentz, Sharon Birch, Tere.'1/1 '
sa Carr, Grace Chaney, 1\vila Childs,
YEARS OF TEACHING - Pennee Kn•pp. G1ry W•lker, Roger
· JoAn~ Hays, Becky Triplett, ~I)
Birch,
and Linda McMIIn~•· left to right, were recognized for 25
- :Walker, Paula Whitt, and Kenda
to 29 yeare of tMchlng by the Meigs LOCIII Teachera AIIOCietlon
: Williams.
'
1t a recent dinner.
·
·
- Recognized for. 25 to 29 years
wero ·~ , B~h.,.,~app, · Li~da~
McMW!s an~ Gary Walker and fot
30 or more years, Ed Bartels, Marge
Fetty,and Barbara Logan.
'
'
Other teacher$ attending includ~d
Mary Sue Brauer, Marsha ·Radabaugh, Sheila Bevan, Liz Story,
Mick.Childs, Debbie Lowery, Donna
Jenkins, and Ralph Werry.
Guests were Tom Lowery.
Richard Knapp, Randy Hays, Chuck
McManus. Gene Chaney, Diane Bartels, Steve Jenkins, and Steve
Williams.
Teachers recognized, but not
attending were, 20 to 24 years, Marge
Barr, Mike Barr, Linda Carpenler,
Jim Crow, Pam Crow, Roger Foster,
LONG-TIME
Logan, Ed Bartela, and .
Mike Gerlach, Vicki Hughes, John
Krawsczyn, Debra McCall, Celia . Merge Fetty were honored for bttlng in the tNchlng profeaalon
McCoy, Gay Perrin. Jeannie Taylor, for more then 30 years et • recognition dinner held by the Melga
Local Teacher• Aaaocletlon.
.
Jesse Vail, Mike Wilfong, Linda
Yonker, and Becky Zurcher; 25to 29 Kaye Fick, Charles Frecker, Bev Bob Ashley, John Bentley, David
years, John Arnot!, Fred Baloy, Joy Gaul, Dale Harrison, Linda Lear, Ron Bowen; Marjorie Gibbs, Preston
Bentley, Eleanor Blaettnar, Dave Logan, Greg McCall , Jim Sheets, and Qibbs, Bob Oliver and Carolyn
Chadwell, Don Dixon, Kenny Eblin, Ben Slawter; and 30 years or more, Smith.

: eel

The following students were
recently recognized for academic
distinction during the Third Nine
Weeks Grading Period. Please note
those students achieving "All A's",
those making the Overall Honor Roll
(StudeniS achieving a grade of "B'' or
better in all subjects", and those making the Academic Honor Roll (Students achieving a grade of"B" or better in all academic subjects and a
grade no lower than "C" in art, handwriting, music arid physical education).
'
Riverview FJementary
Third Grade: J'!ime Reel, Cilsey
Smith, Morgan Weber, AliA's; Krista
White, overall.
Fourth Grade: Emily Brock, Sandra Powell, Hollie Rose, overall. ·
Fifth · Grade: Krystal ~aker,
Miranda Buckley, Cyrus Knotts, Abbi
Thompson, Ryan .Wachler, Chris Wilson, overall.
Sixth· Grade: no students recognized.
.
Thppers Plains Elementary
Third Grade: Brittany Barnett,
. All A's; A~am Dillard, Jennifer Hayman, JoshUa,Hayman, Katie Hoxsie,
Jessica Kehl, Bryan Minear, Dusty
Murphy, Darren Scarbrough, Sarah
Yost, overall.
· Founli Grade: Jessica Boyles,
Bailee (:line, Chrissie Gregory,
Steven Hollis, Nick Weeks, overall.
Fifth Grade: Erica Lemons, All
A's; Amanda Boso, Nichol Honaker,
LeAnn Martinko, Thomas Simmons,
Tyler Simmons, Carrie Wiggins,
Aaron Yost, overall. ·
··

Sixth Grad~: Tammy, Bissell, Matthew King, Jessica Marcum, ,
. Bradley Brannon, Lindsey Cross, Heath Proffiti, Michael Sobieski,
Tiffany Kidder, Chris .Lyons, Kim- . Jennifer Starcher, overall.
,
berly Marcinko, All• A's; Theresa
'Tenth Grade: Kelli Bailey, ·
Baker, Darlene Connolly. Jeremy 'Stephanie Bearhs, Michelle Caldwell,
Connolly, Jared 'Marcinko, Tim Billee Pooler, All A's· Amanda
Moreland, Stacie Watson, Billie Joe Buchanan.' Christopher 'B uchanan,
Welsh, overall.
Brandon Buckley, Jeanie ConkliR,
Chester Elementary
Jamie Drake, Joanna Gumpf, Jere- ·
Third Grade: Derek Baum, Cody miah Kehl, Heather Naylor, Rachael
Diii,.AII A's; KennethAmsbury, Car- Seth, Joshua Starcher, Michael
rie Elberfeld, And,ew Grueser, Ross Weeks, Nicole White, overall.
Holter, Sara Pore, Mike Sayre, WesEleventh Orade: Meredith CroW,
ley Simpson, Chelsea Young, overall. Marja Frecker, Traci Heines, Manha
Fourth Grade: Alyssa Holter, Holter, A]l A's; Patsy Aeiker, La!lra
Jonathan Owen, All A's; Brittany Ari~. David Bliker, Angela Bissell,
Hauber, Becky Taylor, overall; Candace Bunting, Sherry Burke,
William Woods, academic .
Angela Chaney, Eric Dillard, Christy
Fifth Graile: Carrie Crow, Mathew .Grossnickle, Sean Maxey, Amanda
O'Brien, All A's; Josh Basham, Adam Milhoan, Christina Moore, Daniel
Chevalier, Cacy Faulk, Sonya Fred- Otto, Leslie Parker, . Erin Sexton,
erick; Jason Kimes, Jennifer Thoma. Lisa Stethem, Tracy White, Debbie
Brandon Werry, Chelsey Wood, over- Zeigler, overall.
all; Brent Buckley, academic.
Twelvth Grade: Brian Bowen
SiXth Grade:' Ben Holter, Garrett Melissa Dempsey, · Rebecca J:lvans: .
Katr, All A's; Holly Broderick; Jessica Karr, Roben Murphy, Brandi
Jonathan Duffy, Erin Gerard, Sara Reeves, All A's; Michael Barnett, resMansfield, Janet Ridenour, Neil . sica Frederick, Renee Gray, . Eric
Simpson, Jonathan Will, overall,
Hill, Brian Hoffman, Robert Hoff- ·
Eastern Junior/Senior High
man, Lena Knotts, Roben Laughery, ·
School
Candy Mays, Jennifer Mora, Sabrina
Eighth Grade: Maureen Heines, Morris, Ginger Nutler, Nicole NeiJessica Pore, Cassie Rose, All A's; son, "Micah Otto, Kyle Ord, Connie
Matthew Bissell, Joshua Broderick, Pooler, Jason Sheets, Crystal SumMatthew Caldwell, Kimberly God- merfield, Heather Well, overall .
win, Chasalie Hollon, Scott Needs,
Brooke Nichols, Leah Sanders, Aaron
The oosaumcs for the czarina llld her
Schaekel, ·s1eve9 Weeks, Heather
daughters in HBO's recent original
Westfall, Joshua Will, overall.
film ··~pulift , were all made by
Ninth Grade: S~plJanieJl:tans.AII
han4. " ~
_A's; Jessica Brannon, Valerie ,

..

2 GI'Ht Racli!Mn.
One Low Price of

'499

'The r_.-_Put IOU' feet up and lean way
&gt;acl&lt;. Actually, lhore's no bettor way to rein
.
::omtonounound IOU from cuiVOd tufted bactc to t
hlcl&lt; SOB! susbOn and tho soft Pillow anna. . '

2 Great Racllnere.
. One Low Price of

'599

----~~Cqmrnunity cal~ndar---The '. Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to annou~~~:e
meeting and special events.' The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specifte number or days.
'THURSDAY
SYRACUSE-- The Meigs Coun-ty Board of MRIDD will meet at Car.leion School, Thursday, 7:30p.m,
RUTLAND -- Rutland Village
· Cou.ncil will meet in special session· .
Thursday, 7 p.m. to discuss persOn·
nel matters.
RACINE -- Racine "Grange 2606
Jrieetitig Thursday, 7 p.m. Inspection,
refreshments. Members urged to
:attend.

Child Conservation League meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. at RQCk Spring$
United Methodist Church with brown
bag·sale.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM -- Faith Full
Gospel Church will feature guest.
speaker Dean Snider Friday, 7 p.m.

POMEROY-- Pcfmeroy Group of
Alcoholics Anonymous open discussion meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in the
basement of the Sacred, Heart
Catholic Church.

.

SATURDAY
.
SALEM CENTER ·- Star Grange
778 and Star Junior Grange 878,
potluck supper and fun night Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the Grange hall.

.

ROCK SPRINGS -- Middleport

2 Great Recliners.

2 Great Recliners.

One Low Price of

Low Price of

$699

.

Show Her You Love
'Her With A
Diamond &amp; Precious
Stone Tennis·Bracelet

$799

'Ch8mplon' Till&amp; deeply Plddld contentpO&lt;Bty will ptJt IOU at'eose iO an .
Instant h 1..1u101 • t.alllly paddod wing, a plush cllannel-- back and
soft support from Its fully Plddld ottoman.
·

20% Off

25" C01solt Colw 1V - - -1599" 5499"
35" COisole Colw TV
'1999" 51649'?

'.

.
.

•

RECOGNIZED- These Melge LOCIII tMChere ·
were honored for 20 to '24 yn"' of teachlng.•t
• r~t epprecletlon dinner held" the senior
Clllzena center. They are from the left, front,

1994.FORD E150

.

.

.

at both Washington and San Diego choice to the Rams for San Francisseems to get better the lower he gets co's pick in the second round and got
in the draft. In fact, thst's whei:e he Natrone Means, the equivalent of a
prefers to be.
first-rounder and the key to the
In 1990, when he took over the Chargers' Super Bowl run in 1994.
Chargers, he found himself with the That deal involved seven other draft
fifth overall pick after having trad- choices and was repeated the nc.xt
ing'away all but two of II firsHound year, in the second rouod, in a mindboggling deal involving six draft
picks he had in Washington.
"I don't know wha1 !o do picking . picks and three different teams.
this high," he said at the time.
Beathard also traded away his
Yes he did.
first-round pick in 1992 to move up
Just as he used his two first-· in 1991's second round and get Ef\c
rounders in Washington on An Monk Molen, a (ixture on the offensive line
and Darrell Green, he used this one
when healthy.
well, too, takiog Junior Seau.
·
But not everyone can do it. Nor
Since th,en.'he's tried to get as far
is everyone willing to.
away from the first round as possi"Bobby has it down to a gcible. Not only did he trade away his ence," said his friend George Young,
1996 No. I last year for the second- the general manager of the New York
rounder to get Pletcher, but he's done
Giants. "But he keeps the rest of us
it before....
just trying to keep track of what he's
In 1993, he traded a first-round
doing and when."

Sex Tour io and ready Romeo. His ~ oftea
boQor ofValentioe's Day.
ends up scratchi!d and bitten.
"The adults-only tour brings peo" The tOur 'costs SIS, which
pte into the boudoin of their furry
includes
champagne and a conDIICIIand feathered friends. To set the
tal breakfast." Just SiJn me. -- Flabmood, c:Nmpegne is served.
bergasted Out-Of-State Observer
"The curator and veterinarian
Dear Aabbergastcd: Animals in
who guide lhe tour offer no guaranthe
zoo do n!)t read calendars. Tbey
tees that the animals will be
amorous, but if they are, visitors are know nothing about Valentine's
Day. Animals only do what comes
in for an eyefuL
"Take the two-toed sloths, for naturally. I think maybe the publlc
instance. Their foreplay involves relations person in Santa Ana gOt·
.
rubbing ~mps and dancing cheek to carried away.
clleek. so to speak. Soon the sloths
are anything but lethargic. They're
Send quesli,ons to Aaa Lu·
airborne, banging face to face from ders, Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W.
their front legs. ·
,
Century Blvd., Suite 700, L6l
"And the green iguana is a rough Angeles, Calif. 90045

Eastern·Local Schools honor~.
.roll students announced

Beathard among NFL draft gamblers
.

ina its Second Ann~

~-·

...

1899 .

..

.......

., nt,Oh.••m••.

ll!dSII
' .
; 11tlllll I.' ..: ..

;

'

!..

IJ

....;·

..
:.-.··,·;.

�•
•

, . •• The Dlllty Sentinel

Pomlroy •llllkllporl, Ohio

Sllltlnele

Thlnday, Aprll11, 1 -

Study: Adults, not classmates, fathering more teen· moms' babies
BY. LAURAN NEERGAARD

AaeoclftMI PI'MI W'ollw

1

WASHING'ION (AP) - Public
health workers say they'll have to
rework programs aiming to cut teen
pregnancies because of new research
showing the fathers aren ' I fellow
classmates - they're usually adult
men.
A study in today'sAmerican Journal of Public ,Health found twothirds of the babies born to teen-age
mothers in California in 1993 wqe
fathered by adult m~n who were, on
average, four to six years older than
the girls.
"This is important new informa·

lion about the fllhen bec•use it tells
us we can't jlllt foeus on llloJes.
cents," said KriRia Moore of the
National Campaip to Prevent Teen
Prepancy.
Preanancy JRvention education
will have to larJet the military, job
trainlna proarams, "places we
haven't thouaht would need to
address the teen pregnancy problem," she said.
U.S. teen-agers give birth to more
than half a million babies every year.
Leuning about the fathers has been
a problem. Some 41 percent of the
government-collected birth records of
teen mothers omit the father 's age.

But .last summer, the Alan
Guttmacher Institute combined birth

certificates with an overlooked 1988
fedenl survey of 10,000 women to
estimate fathers' ages. That study
concluded that while 12 percent of
the new mothers in 1988 were ages
IS-19, just S percent of the new
fathers were that young.
The.new study by Mike Males of
the University of California, Irvine,
proves those estimates were on wget.
He used California birth certificates,
because 86 percent of that state's
records do list the father's ages, and
he looked at new m!&gt;thers as young
as 10.

Just 34.S ·percent of the infantS
hom to California mothers ages I 0 to
19 in 1993 were falheted by school·
age peers.
Among the rest, 13 percent were
at lea'st 25 years old - UKI the
younger the mother, the greater the
age gap. GirlS in high scbool had
babies with men on average 4.2
years older, while junior-high girls
bore children to men on average 6.7
years older.
Among 10: to 14-year-old girls,
some 27 percent of the fathers were
age 20 to 24.
"Most people always assumed a
couple· of teens fooling around, just

idiotic 16-year-olc:ls" were to blllllt line Forest.
for teen Jftpancies, Males said.
"We're askina some teal QUill"But these are adult men 1101 in lions about who these JIIYS a" so
scbool, not pmtof the progr11115 UKI they C8d be taraetcd. she said. For :
counliermeasun:s tMllfOUPS have set example, aduk men i.n relaliotllhipt
up to fight teen jlRgnancy.... It's a with teen-age aids llj)peM' ~ have :
real complicating factor."
lowertducation and be leu likely to ·.
The study also raises qQestions hold a job, "able to look ~live to ·
about whether 8irls' early sexual somebody younger whtle they :
experiences are truly consentual, wouldn't to somebody more their :
Moore said. "To be 30 and 24 isn 'I peer," she explained.
.
all that different. but to be 20 UKI 14
Already, California is airing pub- :
is really different in tenns of power lie service announcements to ~et
and experience and stalus:' she said. such men and has begun an effort to
It's hard for ayouns &amp;irl to insist prosecute more men for having sex
8n older man use birth conlrOI, agreed .with minors, Males said.
Guttmacher Vice President Jacque-

Freaknlk
won't
be
Birthday girl: 110 years,. and who can say why?
t.he five-ring circus

'!

By JEFF DONN
Aaaoclated Prall Writer
. · WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.
(AP) - Miss Mary Ambrose
O'Hern was celebrating yet
another birthday and contemplat- · '
iilg the joys and frustrations of
her II 0 years on this earth.
"I didn 't·think I'd live to be
that age. I didn' t want to live to
be that age," she mused on her
birthday, her frail form coveredby a colorful blanket.
Want to or not, she has out·
laste4 the .presidency of Grover
l:;leveland, the ~ra of horse and
buggy, the invention and demise
of the telegraph, the incorporation of several new U.S. states,
the deaths of her four brothers
and sisters, the popularity of
radio shows and vinyl records
and 13. years in a Williamstown
nursing home where death is a
facrof life.
• She is among the oldest of
Americans. The oldest known
person with an authenticated
birth date is Jeanne Calmet, 121.
who lives in France. At 11 4 ' cars
old, Mary EJecta Bidwell, of
Hamden·, Conn., is considered·to
be the oldest living American,
according to the Guinness Book
of Records. ·
· At a mere 110, O'Hem is left .
with·her memories of joys past: a
.half century of working with
children as an elementary school·
teacher and principal, reminisc·
ing about family ·and playing
softball with her long-dead but
siill beloved father.

lems."

·

Those problems have to do with
what has become the principal attraction of Freaknik: the slow-moving
street party created by thoosands and
thousands of kids cruising bumper to
bumper along streets leading in and
out of Atlanta's downtown and mid. town areas. The point is to not ger
s0111ewhere, rather to talk, dance and
tease car-to-car.
That, says Maj. John Woodward,
commander of the downtown zone
most affei:ted liy expected Olympic
and Freaknik congestion, is the oppo·
siie of what officials expect July 19
thrmigh Aug. 4 when 3 million Summer Games fans will be irying to get
from Point A to B.
Woodward's people and those
from stale and federal agencies will
· test aspects of their Olympic traffic
· She also recalled. her birthday
WHO'.S COUNTING -.At • mara 110, Mlaa M•ry Ambrose O'Hern I• left with her mamorln of jor.• paat:
management organization this week·
P~ and aMass wtth dbzens ~f a helf century of working with children aa an elementary achool teacher and principal; rem nlaclng end. They will tesi staffing and comrelatives, friends and fellow rest· about family and playing aoftbllll with her long-dead but ltlll beloved tether. Known to thoae cloae.to
mand posts to check their ·ability to
dents of her nursmg home. But her u Mae 1he wa• born-the daughter of an lrllh·Amerk:an •hoamaker In 1886.
work together.
.
they didn't put any candles on
'
But "this is not a test of whether
the cake - much less 100 of
in that gritty little mill city in the northwestern Berkshire Mountains. She · or noi you can move Olympic ttaf·
them.
:._ _
never married and abandoned driving a car after two weeks of back-seat · fie." Woodward says. "You can han·
·
· There are also her joys present: her neat flowered dress with gold ear- harping from her sisters.
die a lot more people if they're try·
rings and birthday corsage from the staff of her nursing home, her rosary
"My two sisters were very good drivers, and there was so much com·
ing to get somewhere."
beads, reciting poetry committed forever to memory and greeting one of plaining, I said, 'The heck wit~ it!'" she recalls. She got rides from her sisNonetheless, the world is watch·
her former elementary pupils who has come to
ters or walked the ·hilly streets of
c811forherbirthday.He's81 butstillmindshis
Asked about her formula for long life, she hu NorthJ\dams,whichnodoubtdidher
m~ners around her.
..
. ..
..
suggested luJr commitment to her work and her heart good. .
• She was very stem, Juhus Pete L&lt;; strong bella( In God. But iJ birthday also calls for
. Heredny also seems to
In an effort to provide our readerPage says slowly, emphas1zmg . each word. honesty; "I guess 1 never thought about It," she explam som_e ~easu.re ·.of her longevt·
"But .we all respect her. She sllllts very much finally admits.
· ·
ty. All her s1bhngs hved to be at least
ship with current news, the Gallipo·
the boss."
89.
lis Daily Tri.bune and The Daily Sen•
tinel will n,ot accept weddings after
" By all accounts: Miss O'Hem; as she is still - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - She also lived an active life,
known to her former pupils, had a passion for
.
keep her home in exemplary .order
60 days from the date of the event.
rectitude, order and hard work. She once stuck an unruly student in a clos- while riding ·herd over a schoolhouse of teachers and pupils.
....
All club meetings and other news
et to calm him down.
· · Her diet was and remains unremarkable. She never paid much attention · articles in the society section must
"She has always been very professional, very staid," said Helena Bea- to it. A trim woman, she ·ate and still eats meat and dairy products. She has
be submitted within 30 days of
mon, of Livingston, N.J., her niece and closest surviving relative. "She attributed her longevity to eating lots of chocolate.
occurrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the
always worked hard." ·
.
Asked about her formula for long life, she has suggested her commit·
Known to thos~ close t~ her as Mae, she was born the daughter of an ment to her work and her strong belief in God. But a birthday also calls for
occurrence.
Iiish-American shoemaker in 1886 ...l and her birth certificate still on file honesty: "I guess 1 never thought about. it," she finally admits.
All material submitted for publi·
ai North Adams City Hal!' proves it. She grew up and lived ·most of her life
cation is subject to editing.

I

•

News policy

ing.
French TV journalist Jean· Pierre
Metivet, in town working on a documentary alxMjt Olympic security, is
thinking about hiring a helicopter to
film Freaknik revelers. " Maybe it is
, a big test, maybe not," Metivet says.
"Bpt the traffic problem will be inter·
.
?"
~bng, no.
Ralph Gladitz, a reporter with
Bavarian TV, says Freaknik wiD
probab(y earn about eight minutes of .
fQOtage in the program he's' shooting.
"Because of the Olympics, everyone
is interested in Atlanta," Gladitz
says.
As resistant as he is to analogies, .
Camphell knows he' II be explaining
Freaknik well into July if thinas get
messy thi~ weekend.
The Rev. Gerald Durley. pastor of
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church, said earlier this week that he ·
and many others will be "waiting .to
exhale" on Sunday when Freaknik
.ends.
But the mayor stands to gain
political points for his city's Olympic
preparations if Freaknik '96 passes
into history without serious incident.
Campbell took hard hits last year tor · :
what many said were heavy-handed '
tactics against student cruisers inten~
ed to discourage them from returning.
Police made more than 700 arrests~ ·
mostly for blocking traffic .
Last year's crush was half the .
.200,00Q.student estimate from the
year before, which produced ,
·marathon traffic jams. Expectations
are that crowds may be even smaller
this year.
Freaknik, which city leaders tried
unsuccessfully to rename as Freedomfest, has descended on Atlanta
for more than 10 years. It gtew out of •
loosely organized student gatherings ·
at the Atlanta University Center, a ·
hub of black cultural life including :
Morehouse and Spelman college~ . .
Now Open for the Spring Season :
CA..mplete Une Of Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Plants
Hanging Baskets
(Blooming &amp; Foliage)
Geraniums
Shrubs Trees Azaleas
Ro.se Bushes
Open Daily 9·5. Sun 1-5
We honor the
Golden Buckeye Card

Hubbard
Greenhouse

Syracuse, OH

Changing your diet not dieting
is key to looking, feeling better

l.w_,

.

is!'

Within about five months, she
had lost 20 pounds and ·Was near her
goal weight, "just by cutting back
on fats and watching portion control.
(Patter&amp;on) wants yqu to lose about a
pound, pound-and-i,half f week. If
you lose any more than that, you're
dieting." ·
'

' .~

IT TAKES I COMMUNITY .TO
PROTECT ACHILD

-Foster Homes are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 9~2-2117 for Information and
to be part of the effort.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
~odel HOlDe Located ld '
Inteneet~on

or Rta. 7 a 33

Pomeroy, OB 614-992-2478
M«JJiel.lfoml Viewlq Hours I:CJO.S:OO p.m.
'llle.. Sit cir by II(JJ .......

Q• • •

•Addition a

•NewGar~~ge•

•Remodeling
•Siding
•Rooting
•Palnllflll
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 182-5535
614 992·2753

......,..
WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6,11!8,2x4,2X8
8'-10' 30h ft. .
14'·16' 35¢. fl:
Also availllbla
·4x4'• - 4ldi's
614-885-4107
614-742-3337

.,..,_

AnRACTIVE
&amp; WILLING
TO TALK!!! ,
1·900..990.3737

Ext. 2261
$2.99 per min.
·Mult be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
'4'tllltft mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIOIRIOR•EITER!OR·
FREE ESTIMATES .
Teke ... pela out at

pel1tl•• Lit us do I' .
for. yoa.
VERY RWOIIIIU
IAVI llfEIIIKIS
614-915·4110

...

(UtMStot•
Low ......)

JONES~

WICKS

HAUliNG
Limestone,
Gravel, .Sand,
· •Top Soli, .Fill Dirt '

614-992-3470

TREE SERVICE

P.ubllc Notice
NOTICE FOR APPUCATION
UNDER THE UNIFORM
li£POSITORY ACT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Notice Ia h'ereby given
that appllca11ona will be
received . by
the
undersigned at \he office of
the Boerd of Malge County
Cammlaaloner.,..
CourthouH, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 12· noon on the
29th dey of April, 1996, and.
opened and 1'411d aloud 11 t
p.m. on thaf date from any
financial lnillltutlon lagelly
eligible which may deillre to
eubmlt a written application
to be a Publfc
the Actl've,
and
Interim deposita ol public
money• of oald Boerd a~
.provided by the Unllofm
Depository Act, Section 135
of the Ohio Reviled Code.
Said application ehall be
inede In conlorinlty witt. the
following ruotutlon
adopted at a regular
meeting of the .Melga
County
Boaril
of
Commlaajonera held April
.

.

•

Hilt Pulltpe,
Furnact~. Allfll'lllll-llt In lltoclt
for llllnnG ' II..U" II Clll,
FneEallm...,.

a Stump Grinding'

20 Years Eiperience.• IJUured
Owner: Ronnie Jones

MEN
IUU'i'IFUL WOMEN
DE WAITING 10
lEAR FROM
YOU IIOWUI

Office HoUri; Mbn.~rl.
8:00 a.m. • 3:30 p.M.
VInyl &amp; AlUm. Siding,
VInyl Raplacement,
. Windows, Blown
lnau.latlon, Storm.
Doors, Storm
Windows, Gal'llgee.
Free EBtlnudes

Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL
needs ·
Phone

614-992-5048

u,., 698-7231

evenlnp or
J..-.~IDytl ....!

55 Gotfleld A.. llll•.

WOOdburrwr,

Di••· RediMt•

1

'
Pomeroy,
Mklcltapor1
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Soleo Mull lie Ptid lo

Advance. O.. dline: 1:OOpm ltday before lite ad io 11&gt; run, Sun'

dar

tdlliOn· t :OOpm

Foldar. Won·
•

tCI:OOaJn. SaJurdar.

day -

PubliC Sale
and AUction

80

Ul M16

•

Auct ion Fridaf Apr/1 .12, 1111, "
7pm at Bidwal Auction, EUdweft. •

J . E. DIDDLE, OWHER

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; IUCHINE.SHOP, INC.

Olio: ope&lt;lal conlignmonl of 1QO :
pluo
or colleclible &amp; mloc.•

bo•••
bo- of boob &amp; poper •
items. One large box of old leiWI '

•-•· 50

plus other consignments, Carl :
Stanley AuCtioneer.

. CHEAPER RATES
15 Yrs.

• Stump Grinding
·uc.•Ina. Owner. Riel&lt; Jc&gt;lnOO

Ut Alto Auclion . Every Fridily •
7pm. Eve&lt;y Sarurdoy 6pm. AI 2-33 •

$20.00/HR.

" Cronr oads~ .

R.Ctne, Ohio 45n1 ·
11490013 Pllqne
84e-201SFAX

Howard hcavatin
Trucking·
Uniestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services ·
Houea Sites and
Utilities

SAWMILL.
Portable
BIINStiW Mil.
32 I 24 Happy Hollow Rd.

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

·-

-

YOUNG'S

ROOFING

Hc1ncl 1Cdpped

NEW-REPAIR

Ill f::ti'1 11y CHC

Downepouta
"Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESllMATES

POMEROY, OHIO
. Tresh Removll· Comniarclal or Rasldantlat
Septic Tank• Cleaned 6 Portablt TOIIata Rented.
Dally, weeilly &amp; monthly rtntal rales.

949-2188

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

MODEll SAirrAtiOI

992-5042

5f1~TFN

Umeetone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

ROBERT BISSELL ' :
CONSTRUCTION ··

Public Notice

992-3954 or 985-3418 ,,,,

· PUBLIC NOTICE
•New Homes
The RACINE, VILLAGE OF
did not monitor and rl!flort •Garages
analytical reaulta of- their •Complete
drinking wa1er for the
preaenoe of eullate from the
Remodeling
;1
enlry point dealgneled 001
Stop &amp; Compare 1.
during the timet period of
July 1 to Decamllilr 31, 11196
FREE ESTIMATES
•• required by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
985-4473
Agency (Ohio EPA).
..__...,.__.....,:7=:;--..:
Upon being notified of
thla violation by 'the Ohio · .---~~~~--.
EllA, the RACINE, VILLAGE
IAIIR.'l"S
OF hae hed lht drinking
MWN f:ARE
w...r analyze!J for eulfate.
The RACINE, VILLAGE OF • Tree Trimming
will teke elepe to ene11re • Mowing (Residential
thll adequate "'onltorlng
and commercial)
will be perform,ed In ilia
future
• Shrubbery
131 29 . 1TC •
Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request
To ploce • ad, coli
No Lawn Too Large or

•

992·2156

BISSELl B.UILDERS, IN·c.
J4ew Homes • Vlny! Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Too SmaH

Greenware Salel

Plan Ahead, Call Todayl
742·2803

In Memory

25-SOo/o Ofll
Also 10111• palnt11nd
bru1hel.
Sal., March 30, Apr118
Noon-5:00 P.M.
3 mites north.of Cheettr

···~·

In loving memory of
Rose Douglas Carr
who departed this
life one year

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

April 18,
Its hard to.._b,elieve 1
a year has past
since you , were
called home, to
suffer no more &amp; to
be reuniteJ;I with
Gram my &amp; Kim.· We
were so blessed to
have had yQu for a
Mo th e r
&amp;
Grandmother. We
loved YCI!J so, but
we hact to .let you
.
go . Your mf!mory
will last forever in
our hearts. '\
Sadly missed by
Children : ·Doug,
!'

" " " ' ' ··

HouuRep..r&amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Beth
Remodeling
Room AddiUono
Siding, Roofing, Pelloo
Reaeonebte
lnourere • Experienced
Call Wayne Nell

off At. 7

l:l!eck II OUIII

~- -'-

FIND TOTAL .
SATISFACTION I
Through a Uve .
PerSonal Psychic!

l-OST OR STOLEN
4115196 ·Portland
Aree.llal;
Rottwelltr dog.
Black with t.n on
head &amp; chelt. Very
friendly. An•~· to

P:o. Box 587

name "Damlon"
Rewn tor llnY

Information INtllng
to his return.
Call 843.fi388

1

!===7::7:""::::::::::
ONE· ON • ONEI
CALLNOWI

1-900-446-1414

EXT. 3694
$3.99 per min.
Mull be 18 yr..
Selv:U (819) ~ 8434

Imprinting
•Shirts •HaJs
· •Sportswear
•Ball Unlfo·rms
3rd St., Racine, Oh.
. 949-3321 a12111 mo.

Personals
Hio Mid 30's Likes Culel

In
Evening! At Home, MovieS,
Church And Tho Ou tdOOrs. Seeking SWF Age 25·•0 With Some

01 The Same In te re st. Please
Ma~ l Response TO :

P.O. Bolli 262.

GaHipolis, OH 45631.
30 Announcements
Now open

Rocksprings Greeneries, 36279

Rvcksprings Rd .. Pomeroy..Hang·
ing baskets, bedding, vegetable
pfonll. 6t4·992·2762.
40
Giveaway

~t~~-a~rO~I~d~~~~~rt~L~ab-&amp;~Ge-r·

6t4·446·3623 After SliM.

.14" Snow Treads Good Condilian.

304·882·2024.

3 month old Huskr pupa , 614·-

949·2510.

Racine, Oh. 45n1

_J!~~;;~~::

Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic

db

systems, lay lln~s. undergroun
ores.
For Free estimate call 949·2512

Avenue. Gallipolis, 61&lt;~2842. ·

Used furnitu1e - antiques, one
piece or complete estates, alsO
do appraisals. Osby Uarlin, 614·
992·7441 .

Used Mens levis , lee &amp; Wran ~
gler Jeans &amp; Denim Jackets, Nik~
Shoes, 61-'-446·2468.
Wa nted To B uy : Auto' s &amp; Trucks
Any CondiTion. 614~ 388-9062 , dr

614-446-PART.

Wanted To BuY : J unk Autos Wi tt\
Or Wit hout Motors. Call larry.
live~.

•

773-5166. -

Cnlhuanua Small
~~:.'~7~:.~~erW~ilhPMC.ih lldroon,
.

2798.

Furnace Needs A Little Re614· 388-

~~~~· ~~~:;:'g MJ~~o~~o~~

304 .882. 2024

Puppy. Appro x. 8 Week a Old,

Part Elk Hound &amp;Par~
256-62t:i.

Chow,

&amp;t4·

Six month short-haited mpced

bf'own,
68t5.

lbs.: 6U.·992·

:1:

New At lnat.s Ea.etr011ies · ~:~~~-n:.;.~~~~n ,

. . d.l .lllaeli.Dealer

Your favorite artist
. or CD
On ,..,ape
.I'
992·2825
106 N. 2nd Ave., Mldclreport
'

1101/IOn

6t4· 388·9303.

Wanted To Buy : LiUie Tikes Toys,·
614·245--5887

'

. .

110

Help Wanted
S·W~NTED·S ·

.

t 0 pep pte who need to lose

we ight &amp; make money, to try new
patented weight-loss product:
304-713-5083 241wslday.
$1 ,000 Weekly Processi ng Mail.
Free lnlo . Send Selt- Addr~ssed·
siamped Envelope : Expres"s·
Oapr.t31 , 100 East W.hites tone·
Bl.;,d,. Suite 148-345, Cedar Park

78613.

.

AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
Spea_rs, 304·6 75-1429.
Able AVon Repre sen tat i\lel
needed. Earn money lor ChriSI·
mas bills at home/at work. 1-800- 1
992-6356 or 304 ·882 -2645, Ind.

J

Rep.
Babysiuer Wanted In Our Home •

For · 2 Children, Ages 6 And Q~
61 4-367·0674 Aller 3:00.

1

'

Certified Home Health Aides..
Needed For Home Health Carp
Callt-800·506 ·8773 8 A.M. · 4 ·
~M. On Duly M od~al.

Cook, part lime, one or IWo· wee- ~
kends during summer and faV ·
months, WV State Farm Museum. Call 304-67S.Sn7 lor inku. • •
ma~on .

Cruise ¥liP PCisi~ons. Travel to • .. - :
e•olil; pia~ $200-$900 weeldy. ·
Call7 day' 407-875-2022 ••t .
~

Cruise Ship Positions, Trave~ Tb •

E •otic Places, $200 ·$900 Week: •
ly, can 7 Days. 407-875-2022 en·
OS211C14.
·

Oentai ·H~gieni st Needed To Join ·
• yr. old malo Basson Hound to Our
Oe'ntal Practice, On A Pan~ ·
good home. 6t4.98 s. 4347 ·
Time Bas1s, Must Be licensed 1~ ·
Tho State. Of Ohio. Send Aesumo . · ;
Adorable black &amp; white, declawed
&amp;n~utarad, mala Cal. Raised by . To.: ClA 382, r.IO Gallipo li s Daily .
elderly couple. e&gt;&lt;. house and Tribune, a2s Th1rd Avenu e, Galli·
polis, OH 4563t.
lap per. 304-882-230 2 or 304-

..:-::.J breed, lemale,
Weight beautiful
•o reddish·

1

:1-----·~~~~~~IO::H.~:A~B~I~I~.RAD.I~~~.....
~

5elllng parts. 304·

0598C16,

Oroppeo Small Dog &amp; 8 Wk Old
Pups . To Giveaway, 814 -379 -

Serv· U (619)

'

1814) 992-28011
Ho1118 &amp; Tack Sales

pie' 6t4-446·4832.

$3.99 pe.r min.
Must be 18 yrs.

LIVE!

30391 Roy Jones Rd.,
P.O. Box 539 .
Syrecuae, Ohio 45779
Terri Caraey

Collie &amp; Gorman Shepher d P,Lip·

Ext. 4009

""2 "'SfYT ,

LONE OAI FIRM

005
SWM

vehicles ~

EM PLOYMENT
SE RVICE S

======
·
====--:::;·- J.D. Drilling Company

1-900·255-05oo

&amp;Don
Tere~;a~,~l~=;.64;~5-~8434~~
· ~~

Father • R.E .
Douglas

ADVERTISING
THE HAT MAN

Residential ~ Commercial
Roofing ~ Rubber~ Shingles ~ Minor Rapeirs'
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Deckl ~ Bathrooms " Kitchens ~ Siding
· · 35 Yesnr Experience
(614) 992•2364
1•1~119•3943

--~- ··· ·· · · ··

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
Ri;PAIR

L&amp;E

CIIIftiCftOI

......

·sonia
Marcia.

• Trail Rides
• Training
•Boarding
• Lessons

ANNOUNCEM ENTS

BIB RllniG and .-

Eatlmatas

·· --

______,,
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

man Shephard House Broken

992-4405
f.or Frae

_,""

Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, :.
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 Eas.sem Jwerue, Gallipolis.

TX

(No Sunday Calls)

.

Top Prices· Paid: Old U.S. Coins;
Silver, Gold, Diamond•. AI\ Ol.d
Collectibles, PaperweiQhts, Etc.
M.f .S . Coin Shop, 151 Second

614-992-7643

DOWIIUNDER
CEUIIICS
· AIID GIFTt

1 good used .cheap saddle. Allo :
blooded .

.1 KHihond puppy, lull
304-e74-o4632.

773-5033.

•Room Addi11onf
•NewGaragea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

FREE ESTIMATES

'
:

773-578S Or 3Q4. J73.S...7.
90 Wanted to Buy

vag&amp;

l/2111n

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

·
•

J I ~·s Auto Part s. Buying sal ;

CARPENTER SERVICE

Gutters

011

Dirt • Sand

We will work wHhln your budget
Ph. 773-11173
FA)( 773-5861
108 Pomero Streei
Mason, WV

E IcJ ul y :m \1

Rick Pearson Auction Companr.
full time auctioneer, comple:te
auclion
service.
Ucenud
•08.0hiD &amp; Weal Virginia, 30.t·

Clean Lale Model Cars Or •

Umestone.• Gravel

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

Howard L Wrlteael

rv11ddlepCJ1'1

SERVICE

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Cme fm

HGnl('

HOllON

DUMP TRUCK

All Ki"ds of Earth Work
992-3838

614-742·2193

R~L

TRUC:IING
Authorized AGA Distributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Seniices • Steel Sales &amp; Fab11ca11on • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omatnental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumhure, Fireplace
hams, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stuff!!

Groceries, netr :

merChandise. Ed Frazier 830.

28513 BASHAN RD.

-H&amp;H

.

=.:.....:.:=~~,...,..,.....

WELDING lr FABRICATION

Free Estimates
Public Notice
concerrung the following:
1I ChMge for checke; 2)
Service char911; 3) Minimum
belen~ requlreCI; 41 Til~
MDOunt of II!• $2,000,000.00
qualified for under 30% of
total non•publlc uea1a,
(10% Savlnge &amp; Loene, non· ·
public aneta). Said Board
of Count;,· Commlaalonera
rasa"'" the right to reject
any or all bids. Awerdofor
the Aotlve, Inactive, and
Interim ,deposita of public
Iunde subject to the control
said Board will be mede
on April 29, 1996, lor a
periOd of time commencing
on 11\e 111 day of May, 1996.
Each applicant ehell furnish
copy of Ito moat ,.cent
statement of condlllon
algnad by Ita Caehlar or
other authorized officer.
Applications should' be
sealed. ·and ' marked
''Application under the
Uniform Depository Act"
Gloria Kloss, Clerk
Meigs County
Commleelonera
(4) 11,18 2TC

594-3780

P.W.

·4

~=.;.:.;;..;.::::::;.:.::.;__

111Mfn

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC

Contact Rodney Howery

-·-·

.....y, Fridoy, F""" t A.llf-

-

beck, up

3/WI mo.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2

Roolsttc.

Serving S.E. Ohio 6 Weet
Toll Free 1-81J0..872.H117

1-901J.446.1414
Ext. 4309
$3.98 per min.
Must be 18 yr~ .
Serv.tJ (619) 645 8434

J&amp;L INSUl,AnON ·

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

BE
Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
the,.,. •..,-.nee to V'•Ftla

367..()266 -1-800-950-3359
FrH E•tltnlltU

Coatrar:tor with over 31
1ftJft uperleace liOW
evallable rcr .u IJpel o1
NtwHorl.ea,Ga...,..,
Addillona, Baths,
Ki'*-, DeW, SidiDC,

IW¥010212

wffh

BE rr RESOLVED, that the
estimated aggregate
Public Notice
• rt111xlmum amount of public
lunda eubjeet to !he contro! .
PUBLIC NOTICE
pf aald bo~rd .tcl··lle Active ; Saturday, April 20. 1VK,.
depoehe 11 any one time at
a.m. the Home
during the naxt two yure II
lank will oHer lor
!two Million Dollars
public auction on the
(S2,000,000.00).
The.
Parking lot · the
eellmated aggtegale ·
~mount of lnectlva fu'nda for
C•m•ro
tlo-66-eo daye, 6 months or I .,.,...,
1 year le Th.ree Million 1.1G1AP17111DN1450113
Dollera (~,odO,bOO.OO). The • 1181 Ford Temp GL Sarlal
11tlmated aggreg,'lle l2FAPP38XOJB137249
amount If Interim funda lor '1 911 Mercury Cougar!
~time 10 be deillgnaled by Sarlal
·1
the County T1'411S\I!W during 11111EBM1041 IHIIII4t
the next two
le One
The term• of tha Mia are
Hundred ThouaanCI Oollln cash. Home National Bank
(S1Bclo,EOOOI.OOTI· F•URT HER I'BMf'YH· the right,to bid at
the uta end or to remove
RESOLVEO, lltat notice be any or all ltema from the
@Ivan to ell banks In oald aa1e ·a uny time.
·
ounty and euch ~.~ (31 :zs, 21:
flnanclallnetltutlone •~·.... (41 1, 4, 11, 15, 11; lTC
be neee•••rv •• provided ~,_..,...,__~--:..,...:--1
by lew. ·All appllcantt .ahall
submit, In writing, their
lnlllllutlon'• .
p o II c y

Y-•

and Manufactured Houelng

Top, Trim, Removal

413t mo. pd.

8,1996. • . •

992.5776

By HEIDI KNAPP RINELLA
Johnson said she has not changed ing."
FQrt Myera Newa-PreSI
a lot of what she eats. "What I have
When you're on a diet, Allen
To Annie Allen and Nanna John· changed is looking for leaner por- said, every backslide can prompt a
son, "diet" is a dirty word.
tions of meat and trying to stay away deep feeling of guilt. Her change in
They have not avoided changing from fried ihings. If I do fry chicken, attitude "took that guilt away, which
what they eat, bu\ have learned that I take \he skin off. Things that I used really helps a lot. That was a big
. although diets don 'I always work, a to eat, 1 take a paper towel and thing with me ...
change in their overall diet can make squeeze the fat out. "
Today, she said, "I very rarely
them look and feel better.
For exercise, she walks. She have anything fried. I've cut out fast
As the American Heart Associa· would like to lose 25 mote pounds, foods. " An admitted lover of fastlion bluntly stales, "Hundreds of but she feels a real· improvement.
food fish sandwiches, she says that
"I feel great," she said. "1 feel since October, sbe 's had only two.
scientific studies show that a diet
high in total .fat, saturated fat and good about myself. Certain of my And recently, she had a new tri·
cholesterol can load the blood with clothes fit ~Iter. "
umph.
A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
fat. People wht\ have high levels of
Allen, 64. said an acquaintance •. "I tried on an outfit this morning
fat in their blood are more likely to had successfully completed a pro- that I haven 't been able to wear for
• Andenell11k Windo'!"l
~
• Stanley Doors
ha~e a heart attack."
gram at the Wellness Center, and "1 thrte years," she said. "Pants really
Johnson, 47, is a licensed practi· thought, well.l'lljustcallthem and show all the faults . 1 was · really '
• :b6 Exterior Walls, 16 ln. On Center .
happy when 1 tried that on."
cal nurse. After she injured her back see."
• ArmstronJIOlarian Floor 11le
.
while performing CPR and needed
She found that ''they don't talk
Allen feels more healthy, more
• Marillate CabinetS
surgery, she went to the Wellness diet. They talk about changing the energetic. "I felt so good,! went out
• 8 Foot Ceililll
/
Center at Lee Memoriil Hospital in way you're eatin_g. I ,had heen and cleaned every window in the
• 2110 Floor Joint. I~ On Center
Fo~ Myers, Aa.
watchmg my fat ,mtake for some house and all the blinds and got ten• Sl Oallon Ylltey Healcr
As part of .my ·~~overy. I need· lime_, but I learned ~ough the group nis elbow. It affects youLitlentai-OUt· ~ l.tillill • Shaw c.peu .
ed to lose we1ght, Johnson satd. ses..ons that my matn problem was . tookrloo:-You feel so much better
• Della Pliucda
,
"A5 you knoYL.We!l,-i~e--the size of llie portions I was ear--men;ally 'about yourself."
•
Muter
T·loclt
YJnyl
Sidllll
With
Uferimo
Wlrrii!(Y
lose weight just by dieting. It's not
'
'
• 2S Year Wan:Mty Atphllt Shinalea .
easy to diet." .
•
10 Year StNctuml Wwranty On The Morrie
· Sh.e worked with registered
· Oar Prk:el Are~ Lowest Ill The'Ara.
dietitian Ginger Patterson, who
"tausht us how to read labels and
know what the fat content of foods .•

...........

eu.- ...11 .......

FUIIIIil

,,.

By BEN BROWN
.
USATODAY
AlLANtA-Ifthecity has trouble With 100.000 partying college students, how can it deal with the mil·
lions on their way here fot this summer's Olympic Games?
That was the question driving city
officials up the wall as they prepared
for Freaknik, Adanta's annual spring
break visitation of black college stu·
dents, beginning Thursday.
Logistics are similar: Too many
peOple and too many cars in too small
a place. But comparing Freaknik to
the (}.ames is "ridiculous," says
Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell. "It's
an unfair and inappropriate analogy.
This event has its own unique prob-

Ulltii'S
COiniUCTIH

White long Ha ired Puppy, Has

An 10 Tag On Collar, Name Cll.l·
mo. Milling FfOI!I Eurolut Area. If

FOund Or S..n, Reward, Vernon
&amp; Ellen Houck, 6U·266·t967 t

::.t~:Z:.~v:'.::JIHelpWoula

Loll: long·ltolrod white dog with
bla•• lac• •n• r•a•. curly .. u.
"Smoltie·. 6t4·985·4235..
lost man's leather wallet, contains important paper-s, keep

s,.o.:re:amida

vicinity, ~obart

,6t4-7ol2-3051 .

EAR~ St,OOO Weekly Stuffing En: •
veiOpes AI Home. Srart Now. No
Experience. Free Supplies, Info.

No Obfigalfon. Send SASE To: •

Fairway, Dept. 1351 , Box 4399
West Ccwina, CA 91191.
'
Earn $1000s weekly stulling en .. ~
velopes at home. Be Your boas .
Stan now. No ·experience. Free
supplies, info. No obl igation. Send. ·
S.A.S.E. to Prestige Unit ll , P.O.Bolli 19560 9, Winter Springs, Fl

32719.

• Apply
za, 936 Stale Route 160,
plis, Between Monday Thru Fri·

day.
Experienced Uotorcycle ATV &amp; ~ ·
Personal Waterc:rart Mechanics.
,
Full And Part- Time. Immedi a te
t
Openings.. Send Re:sume I let· • . ·
1
era Of Reference To: 88381, cia

Gallipolis Dally Tribtlne, 825 Third
A\lerue, Gatlipo!ia, OH 45631 .

Home Typists, PC uaera naaded .
$45,000 income potential. Call 1·
IOO·St:l-4343 Ext 11-9388.
Houtt~ee,.rl

Needed, Male Or
Female, Some Wptkend Wor k,
$4.7S To Start. lleilofiiS ·Available

.

Allot 90 Days, send Resume To
CLA 360 r.Jo Gaffipolio Daily Tribune, 625 Third Av...,o, Gallipolis,
01145631.
. ..

.

It You Art lnttrtlled In A Cook- 1 , ,:'
ing Poaillon: Pleue Contact • .

Holzer Stnior Care Ceniet 8:00 .' "' "
4 :00~ E•perienco Preferred. Ap·. · • •
piJ In Person. Or Call 814·~48 ~ .

SOOt .

•

..'

�11

Sentinel•

Pomeroy •llddleport, Ohio

MEA Cro••word Puzzle'
PHILLIP

Proloaslonll Tree s.Mce, Stu. .
Removal , Free Eatitnateel tn-ourance. BidwoQ, Ohio. 814--

- . 8t..:le7·10t0.

lowno Jn Pt l'teeMn!,

NEEDED MIEDIATLY
APf'T. SECRETAR'I'
ITELEMARI&lt;ETER

~-atFINAIKIAl

Local Ca. Noeda • Tele. . rtcotora
To Sit Appto .. Part•Ttme &amp; Full·
"Time Call 814-44-1-1875 Ask For
Dowt.

210

Oppottunlty

No Experience Neceeaaryl 1500
To 1900 Weekly /Potential Processing Mortgage Refunds, Own

Bullneu

INOI'ICE!
OHIO VALLEY PIJBUSHING CO.

Hours, Call (gQ91 715-2300, Ext. fiCOMm•ndl
1351, (2• Houra1.
nna wlrh
NOT to
NOW HIRING
Wanted Prior Ullilary With leu
Than 3 Years Broken Ser\llca
And Honorable 011charge Cede

mail

do bU&amp;I •
know, and

through thO
jnvesttgated

AKC pupploa. !Uttono, llirdo, lillh
Out, 2 8edroomt, 1 112 Baths,
FiropiOCt, 614-3117-7524.

Unlurnilhed 2 br., cout:llfY Mtlng.
ptiVItt, atove &amp; refrigeretor, no
utility dopo~L . ..., &amp; tr1.1h pold.
ftferencet l depo1l t. no ptta,

1985 Schult t•x70, 2bedroom,

8t•.002·5alol.

ibat

Govornor tox70 Will1 TiP·

tboth, tatoo iju:hon. vlnyisijrlinQ,
eo c. cond . I t 3, 500. 30•· 713·
1987 Redman 14170, 3bedroom,
2bath, new carpet, heat pump.
3iJ.t-175-5137 or 31).t..G15-3811
H~80 Breezewood by Redman,
3bedroom, 1bath, garden lUb,
central 11r/ heat, covered lront

porch &amp; aun porch, lott at extras.
Good cond , Ask1no tte ,ooo
000. 30C-67S-!!'21aftot epm
1991 Brookwood II 1••71 3 Bed·
rDOmt. 2 Ba1h1, Olshwashar, CA,

Deck. 15 Ft

~bove

Ground Fool,

Call 81C· U8·06•6 130•·523·
2105.

Primestar Satellite Dish, New Outbuilding On 1f2 ~re lot. located
20 Mrnutta South On SR 7,

Pampered Pawl

Pa•ed Road, 132,000 080, Mo·
bile Homo Can Be Sold Separate-

11

now accepting

appllc:atlons ror
positions·
i
an1mal care, 27
behind Mitch's

&amp;

tlmt

ly, But Must Be Moved For
$11,000 Firm. No land Canll'act
Serious lnqu~r1es Only Pfease,

81-4-258-839 1 le8118 MHsage.

992&lt;12«.

1993 U•60 Brookwood Mobile
Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs S21 IHr +
Beoetns, No E:.p. Will Train. For
Appl And lnb 1·800-536-3040

HELPER
Work 1nvotves ass111Jng WJih the
InStallation of Vettica~IUbmerllble
turbine pumps. POailion requires
fflquent heavy lifting. Must have
valid Oh10 dtiver's license. COl

Clase 8 will be raqulred with Haz ·
ardous Material C8ftjfication upon
completion or probation pertod .
Send rllumeJietter or applv at.

AU real estate advertiSing In

this newspaper rs subled to
lhe Federal Fair Housing ACt
of t968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise ~any prelerencQ,
limitation or discrimination
based on race. color, religiOn,

58)1 famiial status. or natlon81
origin, or any IntentiOn to
make any such pl'ff&amp;rence,

EOE

Ravenwood, WV based carrier
now M~ring truck duvers to pull
van and Uat-bed trailen. 19941995 conVentional Peterbilt trac- ·
tors. Employee paid naalth ln·
surance, patd vacation after
1year. Three vears &amp;kperience,
clean MVR record, pre-employment 1creemng and at least

Sales Person Comm•ssion Agenc
W1th leads Benef1ts, Apply At
French City Preu, 423 Second
Awenue, Galipol1s.

Saln Rep For Snap On Tools,

EOE. 606-928-11128.
Screen Printer, E,xperlence Necessary, Ser1oua Inquiries Only,
81ol-.wl·2388. Alit For Chris.

from certilted applicants tDr 7111 I
9th Grade BasketbJlll Co11.~:h,

adVerttS«nents for real estate
wttiCh IS tn violation of the iaw
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In th1s newspaper
are available on an equal

opportunHy basis. '

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3 Acre Panoramtc Vtew 1993
Trailer, New 24x28 Garage, 8)112
Shecl. 12)1'6 Bu11ding, 24x40 Barn,

$47,500 , 17,500 Down, $400

Ooub4e w1de, new, S27,900. 2 left
atlhis prM:e Call H00-691-8n7

3br, 2bath, It 7g9 down, 1275/

New 14x80, 2 or 3bedroom. Only
make 2 payments to move in. No
payments after 4years 30o4· 755·
5566

Now Bank Repo• Only 4 left Still

'"wananry 304-755-7191 .

3br Only $995 down, $195/monlh.
Free dellver.y &amp; setup Onlv at

125,000 304 675·5076

Separate UtilitY Room, All In Ex·
cellent Cond1qon On 113 Acre,located In Green Township, Over·
SIZed Garage, 8'x20' Porch, Sa·
tetile Sys1em Included, $52,000
Ca~ 814-441-1908 After 4 P.M Or

Po-.

OS.7

House on Ra1lroad sueer, nver
lol, 3 bedroom. $35,000, 614-992-

5532

1 and 2 Mdloom apartmtnta, furr'll ahed and unfurnilhed, 1ecurtty
dep01 1t requlfed , no pets . 614-

ggz.22tS.

1 Bedroom New Extra ·Nice !
Range, RefrJgerator Furnished,
Gas Heat, $266/Mo., Plit! Ulllides,
DepOSit Raquored, 81H•6-2957.

2 bedrOOm apartment 1M Pomeroy,

no pets. e,.-992·51158 .

Sporting

2C82

•

Turl(ty Guns: Remington 870 12 1Ogal lank aet up opoclolo. FisH
Ga 3 lftch Magnum, Goad Condl· Tank &amp; Pat ShOp, 2•13 Jackson
~on. I tiiO. ~lao. Ramngton ttOO Ave. Polnc Pleaaanr, 30.a-075·
12 Ga 3 tncn Magnum Good 20«1.
Conclitior). 1310, 8tc~tt7.
Turliley, Ar~hery, G\J ns , Ammo,
Reloadmg &amp; Fiahmg Supplle1.
L1¥B Ba11 &amp; L1cenae . Craw ford's,

Dog Obedience CIIUAI The

1\ght Paw Training Co-. Sherry

Hender1Dn, wv. ,

530 ·

Roberta,. Certified Trainer lln-

oiiUCIOfCall 81~· 11114.

Anllques

2bdrm. apta , total ~ectnc, appliances turn1shed, laundry roam
lac1lllles, clase lo .chao! in towt'l.
Appt1cat•ons avatlable at. V•llage
Green Apts. 149 or call 614-992-

3711 EOH.
1 Bedroom /3 Room Apartment.

Trash Paid, NO PETS, On 554
Near Porter, 814-388-1100.
3ii'Wnt 2 Bedroom Brick Town·
house1, 1261 Jackaon Pike, GaJIIpolia, Acrou From Cinema,
Depoal~ Rental lnl&gt;r·
matton, 614-4-41!1-ooos, Or Write,

1295/Mo. •

P.O. Bo• 99•. Galllpolla, OH
45631 .

ne-

posit &amp; references. 304-8822566
Efl1clency Aparlment, 510 Third

540 Miscellaneous

2tl'i.

••
•

,_.lliPel!leOII'- , _

•

'89 utthty trl1 !8f, 48'x102', excel·
~tcondloon, 614-985·.,.20

Monthly flea. Program Need
Help? Ask JO NORTH PRODUCE

1 Used Coleman Down Flow Gas 8t4-«&lt;l·t933 ~ut The H~PPY
Furnace, 70,000 BTU"o, Col1'jltete JACK 3·X FLEA COLL~R. KINe
$250; l Used Johnson Gas Fur-

1

Male &amp; Female ~dull Fleae For

nace, 180,000 BTU'I, ·Upllow Dogo&amp;Catsl

·

$250: 3 Used Eleevlc Furnaces

matt A Tractor 614-256-6325

36• ele"nc ranQe. good cond. ~
$CO

570

304-675-6676

Musical
Instruments

For Leaoe: 2 Bedroom Aportmonl

Babv bed, stroller,
:-:
seat. high chair, walker 30•·67!;. K1mball SIUdio Piano ; Beauutul'
-4548.
Walnut Flnist1.· looks &amp; Sounds
Ueke New. ,Must 1ee to AppreclBaby bed, white wJMicM.ey Mouse ate Call 61•·4'\6-6072 leave A
$50 Prom gown, ted saqwn, stze Message PSease.,
11 -12 (altered), worn once, $100

menta on piano. See locally. Call

~~=-----------~1~··=~~·=29~8~=2~1~8·~--~---.

304·67S-6046

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Boors By Redw~ng, Ct'uppewa.
Tonv lama Guarameed lowest
PriCes At Shoe Cafe. Gall1pohs

Brown ""Y' couch &amp; chatr, good
&lt;Ond., 1100 304.J!7S-1972

610 Farm Equipment

Camper &amp; Lo1. Holiday Htlls, Outbuilding, Excel~l CondJtiont AJC,
Sewer, Fishing , ' Ho.ating, Etc

One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Pteasant, no pets, 614·992-5858.

hall down, 61 H49-202S.
lots on Mtdway Or. 1n New Ha ·
t.~en.

304-882-2904.

Parcell available lOr new home
construction on Ravburn Road. 5
parcels ranQ1ng from 1.84ac 1.0
5.32ac. PavEid road, coun1)' water,
reasonable restnctions. Map and
mfo avaHable on request No single wtde inqu~ries pleaae. 304-

675-5253

Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots, public water,

Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-578-2336

Two horses !2acres of land. For
more into. caH after dark 304-578-

3150.

WANTED TO BUY
1-5 acres 1n Meigs COunty, 81•·

949-2883

360

Reai .Estate
Wanted

Look1ng lor a home &amp; lot to buy
on land conuact 6 rooms &amp; bath

304-675-7512.

RENTALS

2bedroom house. 3bedroom
holt se. 304-6 75-2722.

3bedroom, bath &amp; half. cer'llral alf,
lenced yard, 1 car .garage, Camp
Conley area. $400/mo. References. 304-882·2991 leave mea-

N

-

'!

!'lfl!!lnc:l' llroughom

11100 000 614-379-21C5.

111811 Oldl Calli For 1'1111 2.S Engine, Uost Olher Par11. 814-388·
9833
1988 Mercury Cougar XL, loaded,
PS, PO, AC, PW, 302, now tireo.
automatic, 13500, 8H·9•9·20•s
or 6 I 4-11411-28'111.
1989 blue Ponuac Sunbird, 814-

992·6319.
1989 Escort GT, am-tm cassette,
rilt, ctulse, ait, 12,000. 1987 Toyota Camrv. loaded, 12,500. 304675-2714 or 304-675-1577.
1989 Grand Am,. -4dr, auto, 4&lt;:yl,
ac, ps, pb, am-lm cassette,
70,000rni., good cond ,t$3,800.
304-882·2529.
1ggo Dodge Daytona, $ 3•000
080, or trade lor Ford Ranger or
F150 4x4, 814·742-2373.
1gg 1 Ford Escort LX, 2 dr, auto,
SOK
I
silver wlgrar Interior,
passenger side,

!

~~~:;~::.::da~y:s,~8~1:•:~·

1991 Mercury Sable V-8, ~oaded,
L1ke New, $4,900 OBO, 614-2455592.

1992 Pl~moulh Sundance 4 Door,
A"utomattc, ,._ir Cond1t1omng, AMI
FM Cassane, New Tites, 59,000

M1!es. 14,500 OBO, 8t4 ·2566169.
.

67S-56C3.

:

lloo6

HARNEY

ertglnlt WOfk.

$2.00 IN A

CARD GAME
TONIGHT!!

I

Honda 200X 3-wheeler, needs

A

~OH.

L. E
subsidized apanmenta lderlv
(62 years of age) &amp; Handicapped
who meet all HUD guidelines. all
utilities paid Conven1ently localed
near Samar Cthzens Center Call
614 ·992'- 7022, Equal Housing

·l
~0p:po~rt~un;lty;:;:r;;;;:-;;;;;;;~;,;jj
Twin Atvets Tower, now
appllcatJons for 1br. HUD
•zed apt lor elderly and hand•capped EOH 304-67S-a619
Ver'J clean one bedroom turn1shed apartment in Uiddieport,
call 614 _446 _3091 preferablu beloret0 :30am Ot aher 4:oorvn '
,......

FUrnS
I hI d
Rooms

'

'

TAX!!

TELLIN

750 Boats &amp; Morors
,
for~le

l

:

1

PEANUTS

A

1979 Galaxy 19 F1 Open Bow, ,
170 HP. 110, Mere Cru1ser, Ga-u

'

I

I

ragel&lt;ep~ 14.000. 6t4·3SIH744. '

1987 Citation Open Bow 19Ft.'
:
long, Inboard tOutboatd Molor,....--•
160 HP. Good Shape, Price Rea·
!I
sonat.~t, 614-388--9946·
1889 19Ft. Well Crafl165 HP ~
Anyttme Aller 4 P:M . 61-4·446- ~
7843.
,
19189 Muum 23', cuddy cabm,
•
low hrs, sleeps 2. 11nk, 1tove, 2f'.,~:
coolers, em-fm cauene, 454 ··· 1
Mercru11er, custom trader · 1
114,500. 30•-1175-•297 aHer 5pm ,.__.

l

rI

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'Ft Checkmate 250 HP
son low Hrs Showroom Candl- ~

110n, $10,500, 614·4~8: 1032. 614-

1

441-0200.

.

•

•

I

24 Fl Pontoon Boat SO HP Motor,
Excellent Condition! 614-446-

wtteN

I

El&gt;IT1ftl6

..

Sleep•ng rooms wnh cookmg
Also tra •l er space on nver. All
hook- ups Call after 2 ·oo p m,
304 773-5651 , Mason WV.

MERCHANDISE

r

lhtng Must Gal Ruger Sinote Sur
22 and 22 Ma'gnum $169: Ruger
Statnless 9 MM H•gh Capacity
$279, Heritage 22 Revolver 8..
Barrel $65, Mouberg 12 Ga
Pump $120; Maveuck 12 Ga,
Pump $13S , Stevens 12 Ga
Pump $85, Western F1eld 20
Gage Pump $115 , Steven! 20
Ga. Pump 1120: Armmius 22 Revolver $65, H&amp;R 22 Revolver
$65; Mac Rollawa~ Tool Cab~net
D10aDrawer4sO. CMhac ooiiCCBhe~t 10
r wers,
anne · · aase
Rad1o SS9: Dave's Swap Shop
8129 St. AI. 7 N Chesh~re, 614367-7106

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1n1d, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron evans. 1·800·537-9528
l1ke new elecii'IC range, 2 relng erators, 2 autornat•c washers, all
in good condition, 614-949-2700

$500 W&gt;ll Take $300, 6t4·446g465.

t2 ll\ltng Room Sulles, 2 Ptece
Not $498 Each, Only $275 Each,
Call614-886·6373, Rt. 7 Above
Procrorvtlle1 Ohio, BeJide Gtovan·
nl·s p1zza.

Retngerators, Stoves,' Washers
And Dryers., All Recondutoned

2 Piece l1vmgroom Suite, like
New, 61...:!56-6718 ~Iter HM.

And Gauranteed! $100 And Up.
w,u Delt~~er 614·669-6 44 1
S
S
• II
,
am omervl e's ,.,rmy camou flage by Sandyv•lle Post Qll,ce.
Fu-SAun. noo n·,5P"J, (Tu rkey season pr 221 30 27~ 56 55

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers. Oryera, Ranges, Refn·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Uaylag, 1!114-4467195

S•ngle size Craftmallt electnc
bed. 304· 576-2321 aher 4pm.
Snap-On torquEt wrench, 43 •
overall, lenGth, 60011. lbs torque,
like M'fl, $300. 304-372-8480

Country Furmture, 304-675·6820.
Rt2 N, Smiles, Pt PleesanL WV.

lii.,-Satll-8, Sun 11·5.
GOOO USED APp li-'N CE S
Washers, dryers, relngeriltors,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 78

~~~:.~all 614·446·739S,

Halpoinl Waaher Harvest Gold
$95, Kenmore Dryer Harvest
Gold $9S; Mag1c Char 30 Inch
Gas Range, Afmond $185, Hot·

SPRING SPECIAL : Central A1r

Condl!toners 2 Ton $1,195:2112
Ton 11.295. 3 Ton 11 ,395:3 t/2
T
•
T
•
p
;On .t,5g5; . &gt;DR .t.6g5, rtCes
Above Include Normal lnstalla·
uon . Ful 1 5 vrear Wauanty, Free

Esomatea. 1·800-291 -0098: 614-

446·6306
STORAclE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
JaCkson, Ohio, 1-81J0.537-9528.
Used Waaher &amp; Orrer, Runs

potnt Rotrptor 11 50; Whorlpool

Good, Call ~fter 5 P.M. Or Le..,.

ront~205:
30 Inch Elec·
•
•Caloric
1 •• • 50 ••

550

Washer ltke New, 1 Year War·

nge "rna ...... .,1

; .;JO\aggs

Message, 814-367-7325. .

Appltancoa, 6U·44S-739S , 76
Vtne StreeL Gall1poio. t ·~··g9.
341111
. ..;:.;;..
· -------..,--

ol
Old wooden werdrobe: d above

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, "wer pipes, w1nd·

ows, lintels, etc. Claude Wlntera.

R1o Grande, OH Call 8t4 ·245·

mantle mirror, 2 roHback chairs; 51 21.
overstultld Chair I onaman: rable
aaw; complete wlnemaking sup- Metal Roofmg And S•dmg Galpllta. French Provincial desk; · vaniz:ed, Galvalume Arid Parnted,
btaaa lamp•: 38 .. r,!•ctwo
.~:!0·~~·~1•rn,~ca;l614·245-5193
w1posta; large
mora miac.. cal 61
Po~ Bldg Spl:
t

Slid~ng Door. 1
·;:.;;,ii,~;;;.;,
Painted Stool Siding,~

appolnlmOnl
PICKENS FURNITURE

Steel Root 16,444 Erected: lton

1450

• •
. :S/'~
Horae Bldri1-8Q0.362·t045.
_1_ _.;..;....;..;..;...;...-;._ _ 1 560
Pets for Sale

YrRA FURNITURE
S1H48-3t58

,

OuaNty Household Furntaue And
Appli.,.... Gr.at Doola On
Calli And Carry I RENT-2-owN
And Lay- Alia
Free Dei!IIOr)' Within l!5 Mllea.

-bit.

~

dllloners:, o 1sc Mowers, D•sc
·
Mower CondttiOners, Forage
Equiprpent Sales And Service
Aluz~r Farm Supply, 614-2455 93
:-' -;:--:;----:---:7
John Deere t.tanure Spreader,
614·446-4344
1~--::--:=--=-~:----::--Uassey Ferguson Tractor,
Condltton, Runs ExNew Idea 706 Diesel Ums•stem
'
W11h Combine &amp; Gnun Table, New
idea 2 Row Corn Ptcker, John
Deere 4 Raw Corn Plantar, Fernlizer Spreader, 3 Pt. Htlch. 300

Groom Shop ·Pat GJl)oming, Fta·
turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
Call814-.wi.023t.

'*''

Pug puppos,
I Pllfl111'on
Chi
piOmlias, $250, 814·992-6075

NH T hay bine. Gehl grindef mucer Ford 532 square baler All
good cond 304·273·4215
Tr actor hydraultc llu1d $16 99 /
5gat Sider's Equ,pmenl 304 6 75·
7421 01 1-000 -2 77-3917

Two Transporl D1sks- lnl ernal&gt;onal, 11 It, JohQ Deere. 6 h.. 7 h
hayb1ne, v,con D1sk mower, 9 It
gratn and seed gr1ll; Massey Ferguson 3 set ol plows, Massey
Ferguson work horse tractor ,

614-388-9199

.

Wanted To Buy : 400 -600 sUlk
Mflk Trank In Good ConditiOn,
614·965-1922.

::7"..:.;.~::.:::-:-~....;-,-Wanted To Aenr 30 -60 Acres
ForPaslur.e. 6!4-4 46·2158.

630

Livestock

24th Annual Bendey' Pig Sale, Frlday April 26th, 7;30 P.M. Fayette
County Fatrgrounda, Waahlngton
Courthouse, Selling 200 Head Of
Hampe Duro ca. Hamp DutOCI
Crossbreds, Consign.,• Roget
Bentley 513- 584-2398, Leror

773-5171.

lli84 S·10 Extended Cab, V·6, 5

199'4 lnnsbrootc., lully loaded, lots
of e11ras, 18ft Serious inqwries
only. 304-67$-81103. ••

Door, $3,195. Cook Motors. 614·
446·0103 . .

SERVICES

Speed. 1991 S.tO: 19SS Regal 2

--~--~~~~~:_--:.--1

rt.t ,Or Days

:114·576·•583.

lg93 GMC Sierra Black , Auto,

A1r, Cru1se, Very Sharp. law
M11eage. lots Of Extras! $1~.800,

814·245·9460, 6t4·384·'28C
88 Uercuty Grand Mark, $5,000,

6tU!I2·5532
Chevy Tow Truck 440 Holmea
W1th Wheel lift, 614·448-4798,

6tc·«I.Q869

730

.

vans &amp; 4·WDs

1979 Chewolet step std8,.4Ct0 cu
1n., 41P,d, a• lift,. all
35• \lrBS,
American r~elng
new
dnve 1ram. $4,200
after 5prn.

1979 Ford 1121on 4wd, 4spd,
good shape, 12,495. 304-675·
5007 or 304-874-4684, 1f no anIM9f' leave message

k::::-:-:-:-::-....;_____

Bronco.,4wd, auto, ac,
. Rancho lift 1uspens1on,
35" ares, too many extras to list

·

446-1008.
·
1990 Dodge Ram Van 8-250 ,

un
1991 ford Explorer Spof'l 414, 4.0
v-Is, s~andard , loaded, garage
lwp~ 8i4-949-2C8t
,

laeded, • captain sea 11 W/bench,
n"''' 11101, garoue kept, 110,900,

I :::~..:.:--"':"-::--:--·1
Stga. VCR, AJ! Condlllomng. Anci
710 AutOS for
Tape Dock tlladlo With Ptt•ato
liiJening

Station• . Captains

189t Olds Curtus Calais: oun·

Ct&gt;alra, Co~r..,sy Lights, Rlcll Pol·
!shod Ook Interior, Sky Lighto,

rool, Sapd , 4cyl, high

Power Ooara /lotk1/Window1,

1891 Ponliac Flroblrd V-8, f.
Tops, Loaded, Alarm, 44 ,000
"II
ta ooo N
25,~~·
og. 8~ 4 ·378·

· ,·

AAVE. m

~(,J{I'ID

~Tt-..Y

OIEmll£

U'{f. ...

.....

e_lllilnd ..

32 Altiiltlorr

~

cruloa Conu•l,
• 5.0
1 Litre
' V·B En·
gino, Roar Ant ·Loco Braka1,
Power Steering , Pow~r Brakes,
Automatic, 5 · Wire Towing Pack·
ago. Perltct For Kids And Suminor Travol. Caii8U·•0·2055
Altar 8:00. WI Be Gone Soon I

I

'

·=="' -,
41 Nonmlllllc

.•

44Snoutlt
48 Fiber plant
47 lombe (II.)

I
,. II :I

=~
knowledge . •

.

51 Ul*rlng
52 Clique

53 Gumbo

.,...._..

I

Ingredient

(abbr.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula campoa
c.ltlbrity CipMrL

, ~,.,..,.

CNeledtram cpadanlbyfamow people, pat:.nd'"""'

Eattl ••'" ur r. b C1J111ef IW!dllor •naDW. TOIM,V't cAM: V ~ G

' W

E W II V
Til

T E

WB '

LAXXJRAAU,

II

AS , UTIIYP,

JAG

TBIPS·UWIIIIPS

SAIITXU

JAG

YTII'I
GZ

RWIIU

EZP "TNPS.'

SPTVTII.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm nor a roslman. I don't deliver
Brendan Behan, about the meaning o his plays

messages." -

....
\

lAIII

I
,

I

NIVOSI

1 1

r1

RUMON

I
.

.

..
..
.' .

.'

' ''
Th

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

'-. {
.,......,

\olki6H

t~.J

A
V

ELLEN
'

Uncondillonal lllellme guaranuie. ~...SJ
local references furmahed. C&amp;ll · -~

Seel the
Sovlnfs You'll Find In the
Closslfied Stc1i011.

(61•1 446·0S70 Or (6141 237· t
0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Es- ..:~
ratllshed 1975.

-:------------'"
'
Appliance Parts Al)d Sttrvice: Alt j-'
1

Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex- 1
penance All Work Gu•ranleed

French City Maylag, et 4·448: .
-

ITHURSDAY

:

~

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I I

SCUM LETS ANSWERS

Motion • Beefy· Sheer· Merger- FORGET
1have a poor memory for keeping events in my head.
but 1remember v1vidly what I would ralher FORGET.
/
'.

APRIL 181

.

'

. .
'

..

C&amp;C General l(ome l.ialn:~ft
tenanca· Painting,. Y11\YII1411\0.,..,

carpentry, doors, Windows, .bi~Jt..tl! 1
rnopile home r~tand mot'if:~t.'

free estlmata colt CheL Bt4-9g2. '!;') 1
6323. '
1't1 I
.v I
DRYWALL
' )I
Ha~g. finish, rep,alr

..

--r I

Cetltnga tex•ured, plaster repn. ~

I

il
Pat's Home Improvement- remo. ~ \ ,..1
dellng, root1ng, sldmg, call t!l14,
Call Tom 30C·67S-ctS6. 20 years
exper1811Ce
·

4

.

l •

992-311111.
•

Patio Decks, Carport&amp;, Siding, (
Free Eat1mate~. CaU Steve, 6t4- ·•

24S-9579.

.

.

:

,• ..I•

~~~~~~=~=~-

Ron's TV Service, speCializing In ..
Zenuh also servicing molt o1h8r ~

brand• Hou .. c'ans, 1·S00·797·
DOt5, wv 3o4-57&amp;-i39s.
'

ASTRO-GRAPH

hDmt.

And Consti)Jcllon, e1••·.1102·~·0 1 1 · - 3.
,.
~

BERNiCE
BEDEOSOL

Need
Coli

Plumbing ·&amp;
..,atlng ••
•
~F:,":-:m-:-an:;.,~He':"a~t:-ln-g":A~nd~C'"oo""""nng.;_ :-_
820

®=-

!f'stallatlon And Service: EFtA !//

....dw ~dantlal. ccimlnoicial.,
r.

.

840 Electrlf;al aild
RefriQeratiOn
RSESCERTFIEO.DEAI.ER

'

"&lt;':::!;

~WRENCE ENTEFIPAISES • '' "'''

. I

You flqn'l Call Us W. Both l.olol ~ J!l!
Froe .Eatimatoa. 1·800·211-., l't!!l'ff

.:.••;..•~·~•s;.;8::308;::.;,
wv~-==-.:..: l l\~1
:;:,:

Rasldenti~ or co,.,..clll JOlting, I. J!.
~lot or repolra. Moato11J.' f• 1: ~

cooud tfocrrlolao. Ridenour
·•
Efoctrl"''· wvooo30e, 30.-.875- ,' 1e~•
1788,

.

r..y ,~~

I

ii

!lASE iD Aslro-Graph, c/o
lhls ne,wspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray

U8RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Achlevarnenls
Will come eaaler tor you today wyou are
lell fon:etul and mont logical. IJie your
head, 1101 your muacle or your mouth, to
lry to make points.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) A joint

mailing $2 and

Hll S18tion, New YOIIt, NY 10158. Mike

TAURUS (April 211-llay 20) You can
advance your pe1'801181 goafl today. bUt
do nor lei others mali• unreasonable
demands on your Hme. You muat lry to
opeiabllndapendaully.
GEMINI (llalf 2t..,una 201 You will
notice thai a current project haa many
mora fringe benellle Qlan you originally
thoughl. Today 'you could IIIQklto ""
lhlngl in a -

~---·. . ol
ylald-·in
the
ywr a1MtaCi. A iTINik
godd ludt wll

help to . . . dl r'l ... fronl your path.
. . . (lllnlll 21-Aprlltl) II 'I!!I!Jf
ftll!IIIOIIH!IIInclalodly, tlf*llly • ·you
..... II I a d(II- iiiJIIIIr, Your .....

....... you • dlllnlll edge. Gil

a-

on life ~ urtdoitlll ldlttglhe Inti~

..
...

heve ptobllmlllarldlfno Ullgnmente thai
....... lmrtglnation and 001-tbllion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Nan. \11 F~
' mighllllk you

LIO (July U•Aug. II) In ortltr to
aehle~ the ·bell reaulla IOday. pu,.,.
your objecttvN t1 qultilly U POIIIble
You w11 be -lllllctt• 1 ~ hllll your .
!ltOIIWI fronl Olllltl.
..
YlltQO (Aut. l ..lapl. II) You can
ktct
I the pt )t IS) Ole I IDdily
K you your IdeM u t'llpldly u you
cOnceive lhtlll. Wdlng Will dilute their

IIIII gDIIIIIII you In . . year llteld. Send
' ' foryour~PI I 1• •IDdlly~ lmpltc:t. .
• &gt;

endeevor can succeed today, pi'Ovldecl
lha worl&lt;foad Is distributed ~fly and
each contributor locuMI on what he or
aile II IIIPPOaed to do.
,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) You
will be sharp today and you lhouldn't

flghl.

CANCER (June ~t ... uly 21) You will
man a favorable 1mpr11110n on Othlrt
today. In fat:t, you may drlw lhlir A\111'1tiQn to qualltle8 that . _ golle uoinotlold

FridaY. April 1,0, 1098
A 111ua11on you have -rkad herd to ~-

1'• .:.

H~t PUI!IPI, Air Conditioning, If I ..;..1

4·fl

_...:._ _ _...;..;_ _ _ 801'8 to slal8 your zodiac sign.

Roaltng I gutters co,.ete
remodeling decks &amp;•tiding; 35e_
year• ••P"rtll!'ct. ~ &amp; B Roqllng:&amp;

81~·25e-tst

.

••

...

to anwtQe IOCiaiiii:IIYitiU

today. They will see you aa catalyst
beCause you know hOw to combine the

rwtt people lOr a good time.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l'ell.

11)

Evan

K

you t.w to wwtc longlt houra _.,, you
llhoukl ftnllll M ~ ~rather
then 11111n0 •
on. Bill the bulllt llld
galft doni!.
'
'

cno

PIICII 1M: Ill "

01110) ~ aorr!IOo•

In PlfiiQIIIrll on~ mind IDdlly. make

IDUI:h-...,

'*·

111o1t to 1111111
him or
Thla PMOft inlghlltave goad fOr

111

you.

,,

I
'

activitY

•- .•

•· '

1gg2 Ch evy ~•tro
•
Converslon
Van. 41,000 'miles, 4.3 V·6, auto,

"nd

::

yOO Def-.I'T

Improvements

7195.

~·•·94g·2~1 .
'--_..;;-'--'-'--..,--;.__
REGIST~RED ~GUS
1993 For!L~eroorar X'LT extend·
And Chi·Anout Bulls, And H~f- ed \lin. 1112 Yamaha 350 Wartiera 1700 Up. E.11cellent ~oodtlnn Or. 9oth exc. conct. 304-e75-2l11.
Low Birlti Weights. Slate' Run
Farms. 614-286-531Hj JackiOn.
luxury Van • Pac~ed With
Goodiea For Kld1.~ 1'iO. Ford
Econollne, 71,000 Milea, Color
T.V. Wired For Nlrttendo ~nd

l' ~~&amp;~loo~k=o~go~od.~·=·~·ooo:::~·

~~

BIG NATE

1993 Ford Ranger X(T AMIFM
Casserre, AC, New T1res, Prrce .
IS ,SOO, 614· 388-0406. Alter 5

HI Piu~ AI Sired R;Uht
For 72.000 Mlleo, U.ooo , Can Be
Gallla, Mtlgo, Mason &amp; LOY•enct.l Soon ~t: Gelllpohs Dally TrJbune,
Counies/814-256·1380.
~~5... T~~rd Avenue, Gall1pohB

mila;&amp;:·

Sue27 one• ' ot
of Jacob

'

,.

~----------------·
~
81 0
Home ,
; ·--:

1979 VW Bus BfueiWhita Looks
Good, Runs Great! 13,200, 6t4·

County Grand Champlonl, aeltol
~~ AJri 20tt), 8am 10 8pm. Scon:
p10n, 614-378-6102.
Fort Donally Club Lamb Sale, Fri·
day April 26th, 7:30P.M. Galtia
Ca. Fairg(Ounds.
•

Paaa
Pus

PNI

'
'

1991 Ford Ranger 2 3 5 Speed,
70K, 15,000, 6tc-245-5609

•·H Club La- For Sale, Qom 'lJ
15 ·3119/~ ••-at S'•e ~Galli&amp;.

Fair pigs, 95 Athens &amp; Melg1

2•
Pals

1971 Ford Feoo wuh gram bed,
new brakes &amp; rebu1ll motor. 304·

304-elS-5855

Boars tor sale. 61 -4-i4D-2806.

Pus
Pus

peNiola

21 Acb It

ft\'(!

Larrl&lt;i&lt;5t3-780-4802.
~n~ ""'
... r""VJ
Meifts,
·• Mason, Lawrence I Jack·
aonco. Falra. 814-448-t947.

r-=---:a:?~lo.W.~

~,lAAVE.f...

1·

~~~~~7~4~2-~24~5~7~. ...,.....,.._:_

~---,

If YOO'f:E GCit&gt;i&gt;lO ~iK _.&lt;~
N:. m~ottJC:.. ~

Bus~ness, Every · 1:::;~::--:-::--:-...,..---:-Round Balers,

Never Used. New Home Professionel Sewmg Machme Reta1ls

Household
Goods

. .. ::-:--..

THE BORN LOSER
Go1ng Out Of

Eaat

What do you thiDit about hypiloala? I
have alwa)'ll been somewhat steptlcal,
but I suspect there are people wbo are
susceptible to this form of control.
In bridge, 'control" usually means
keeping trumps in check. Many play·
era would lose trump control in this
1
I MAN 5 BEST FRIEND.''
deal. But, as often happens, the key
play occurs outside the trump suit.
8\JT WE NEVER 6ET
What do you think about the bid·
INVITED AN'f'Pl.ACE
ding? How would you try to make four
hearts after a spade lead?
Four hearts isn't a !lad spot, but
three no-trump will often be easier.
North was correct to raise to two
hearts with his minimum hand. South
should rebid two spades or three notrump. In the latter case, If North has
four trumpe,.he will go bact to four
hearts.
South appearBto have 10 tricks via
one spade, three hearts, five dla·
moodS 111d oae club. However, if the
trumps are breaking 4-2, as South has
to expect, the timing needi to be per·
feet.
Suppoee. Sout'li wins the first Irick,
ruffs a spade in the dummy, playa a
club to his ace and ruffs another
spade. Whatever South does now, the
defenders have an answer. Let's as·
aume South plays a club to his queen.
West )l'ins with the ldQg, ~a heart
to his partrrer's ace, reJlains the lead
with the spade queen and forces de·
darer with the club 10. East must
make a long trump.Cor one doWn.
The best play is to duct tbe first
"" Irick. U the defeaders continue with a
(f)M£ Il-l f.H.L'(
second spade, declarer ruffs in the
dummy
and drives out the heart ace.
TOtYDIIl!'D'ollo'llr.NI~
When baclr on play, perhaps with the
I~TEAD!
apade ace, declarer draws trumps and
runs dummy's diamonds.

1

&lt;

Norill

By Pllllilp Alder

'89 Bavhner and trarler, tT, cov..,..,..JI
era inboardtoutb!)ard, 128 hp,H "

614·992·3t32.

231!..-ct
211Fem ...

element

Ii

'87 Star bass boat wilh 11111/er, fl·l
borg~so. 14', 451'4&gt;. Mercury mo-1
tor and lrOIIing motor, $4000, G1 4·
985-3472 awnings.
"

......

You are
. feeling sleepy

??

.
. .

21 EJIM'IOr

Openinglead:e K

PLUS

FORTUNE
1

BeGAN

Hld ·a-bed couch 185. 30• ·882· Ga, Sprayer Wllh Booms, 6t4 ·
3186.
24S-S5t5

Rooms lor rent - woek or month.
Starting at $120Jmo. Gallta Hotel.
614-446-958)

tnc

FER THAT BODACIOUS

$300. 304-875-5253. .,.,:- :

304-882·

Secure &amp; air conditioned HUO

$2.50

HOW MUCH DO l OWE

'·

and hand1cepped.
312t

450

GRANNY ll YOU JEST
SAVED ME $ 2.00 II

l SEE YOU LOSIN'

to=:..

ol playing 11~
marble
11 Poeltlw
I Adal11 Clllla

2 -·--dub
3 Ora

West

u

I~Cit~18t=~I~C~II=I1~~: :

T

De'aler: North

l1

•

.,_
1'ypt!

Vulnerable: Ealt-Weat

I

S3,roo. et4·31H384.

4 Knuclde under
5 JFK light

DOWN
1 Dec. hall t11r

•A Q

1994 Vamaha YZ125, axe. cond .~
helmet, extras $2,200. 304-576-j' 1
1

08 54

eJ t

•7 6 2

.1 ~

1995 Vemaha Timberwalf 411:4 ,

a At a 5

aQ J 10 s

~I

2&gt;100. .

But
eJ a as

·eA 7 3 2

t094 Yamaha Blaster 4 Wheelei ,..J
Excellent Condilton, $2,000, Cal.t:;::::l
Between 8:00 A.U · 2'00 PM ••

6tC-882·3t52.

4 2

+AKQ, JlO
e7 a 4 s

eK 10 a s 2
lloo6

t1. 1

I

04-JHI

us

~:

1993 Kawasaki bayou 220 4 l
wheeler, exc. etond., $2,350. 30-4-

e4
ax

eK Q 10 o
aT I

R1verbend Place Apartments,
New Haven, WV now a~:cepting
appllcattofls for 1 bedroom HUO
Subs1d1z&amp;d apanmenta tar e&amp;deltyt

510

pets, call6t4-742·2661 .

·.;"

,.,740~=M_ot:::-;:orc:;-:;.yc:;:-lel-:-::-::~=,,~

5858.

410 Houses for Rent

2-3 bedroOm house in Rutland~
deposit &amp; references required, no

~

0150.

614·756-4564

F1ve acret~
aerator, near
Racina,$16,000 Cl\,n finance with

0

l

ed 304· 773·6244 or 304· 773·
5974.

NIC8 2 or 3 bedroom apartnwnt in
Middleport, no pets, 614-892-

15.900, Gtol-894-3101.

"

' I •

I

South 01 Vinton, 110,500, 614 ·
388·8521
6 acres with 3 bedroom house
tra1ler, on Ann Sl, Pomeroy, Oh ,

ie2·5532.

::::::;;;;;;;;:;;;::;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:; I ,

ID72 750cc BMW V.G.C. 11.850" ,;::

1993 Ford Probe, 3, ,OOOm1 , load-

5 Acres Located Satlor Road,

94 Ford Ranger, t .OOO miles,;
$t5,000. kl."ded· '-Y dill)', 61 4j, }

1850 Cl'levtaltt 2 Door Sedan, 1t-73 SOOcc Hof\da V.G.C. e14~
.
Priced To. Still Call· AAytlmo, WNo +&lt;6·31141 ,
,310--m-la~l~
Answe' l ..ve Mt11age, eu- .;,tG..:7:.:7::H;_a.;.lloy_O_a_v_ld_IIOI\_:44&amp;-1154.
on complete ret1Dralion, f11,~ .
1178 Camaro Z-28 400 SB, T· 114-992•3871.
Tapa, Auto, POSL R&amp;ar-End,
Many ~ew Partt, Very Sharp, 1988 Honda, NX t25 an and off :
road matorcycle. exc. cond., runa' I"_
~200. OBOe 14-388-118111 .
900d 30"'· 1!175-5535 or 304-875- :
UJ80 Cadillac Sedan Deville, 4 4•27
I
door, 07,000 actual mlles,_good
I
shape, mu1t be attn, 12400; 1gg3 Honda 300EX 4·whoolor,
1883 Bu1ck leSabre, 4 door, l t ,SOO.. 1ges Coacl'mlt! cemper,
58,000 miles an mDIDr, new ~nL 3411 $5,000. t988 Four Winna
good ohape, '1500 : •t• ·lii2· boat. run1 e1c. ,3,&amp;00. 304-882- :
241;1.
3143.
·~t

1986 Merc:ury lln.11 4 Speed, 3
Door. AMIFM Cusette, 2 Tone
Blue, Clean, Runa I Onws Great!

Merchandise

3n-8480.

CII!dy Realty Co. 30...28-1188

and locka, ·oteat Car: $5200
nog .. 6tc·11112· 7471 or etHel·

81•·258-1631.

1708

717•

5 speed, power 10111

1985 lAercury Topaz, S1,200,

Gallipolis. $20!i1Mo., In· .8' pool tatje, slate, e 1 c. cond, wf Conaole Piano. Responsible party
eludes All Utilities, 61•·388- all accessorJes. $900 firm. 30o4· wanted to make ,tow monthly payw

Ntca Area, Galllpollo, Contra! Alr,

~c.

1800 304·576-3tg7,

~venue,

Parrially Furnished Or You Furn·
1sh Yourself, Very Nl~:e Rooms In

PB,

1982 Olds 98

t5KW, 20KW, 25KW, 1 Ulod 3 Puppy Palace Kannel' Boarding,
3bedroom apartment $2851mo., Ton Rheem Heat Purrip, ~ ·800· Stud Servic:e Pu'ppie1. Grooming,
287·8308, 6t•·••e-e308. t-800· Buy, Sell I Trade, All Breeds.
Broadrun ar-. 304-882·2221.
291 ·0098.
Payments Welcome, 814-388BEAUTIF.UL APARTMENTS AT 15hp Seara rtding mower, '95 0C29.
BUDGET PRICES ~T J~KSON
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood Or!YO steenng machme modet, 43• cut, Rabt&gt;ll Utile &amp; 8ig $5 Each Lop
6spd, new banlfy, l•ke new $900. Ear, NetHerland Dwarf et4·388lrom 12•• to $31 5. W.lk to ohop 304-372·6C80
8577 Babre 2 PM..
&amp; movtes Call 614-448- 2568.
Equal Hauling Oppor!PJnily.
1977 Ford Tn·Axle 19 Ft. ~lum Ronwellar And Wolf Hyblrd At
Oump Bed, S1de Oress8f' For Far· Puppy Palace, 81..:188-0429.
Beec::h St. 1 room apartment

Furntshed 3 Rooms I Bath, Upstairs, Utilities Furneahed, Clean,
No Pets, Reference, Depotil Requtred,614-4o\8-1519 ·

1 Acre Water, Sewer, Garage,
Footers, On Blacktop Road, Addi·
aon Area, e14-388 - ~78.

520

AKC Registered Btaelil Labrador
Roriov.. Pups, ~mptOn Bbod·
hne-, Shots, Wormed , 8 t 4-e91 -

Goods

Pnce reduced $18,500 14x65
Uanston, 3bedroom, attached garage, screened porch, on level lot,
Htcllory lane, Mason Call Mc-

3 Bedrooms, 2 Balh Ranch, 2 Car
Garage, Sprmg Valley Area, Aher
6 '00 PM 6H·· ..6·7940
3.8 acres on S! Rt 2 N, livable
3bedroom ,
needs
repa1rs

Apartments.
for Rent ·

Fan In Every Roam, 614- 886-

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

•nd att " ' tuPOiiet. Hava yaur
puppy's lkln rejuVl nated with a
"'' oil ••tmenl Pamporocl Pawl,
&amp;14-ft2·e2.. 4,

J

Oakwood Homes:, N1tro WV• 304·
75S-5885.

Monthly 7% Interest, e29 Blazer.
6;14·367-5022.

From HuntingiOn Plus 2 AdJ lots,
2 Large Bedrooms, 1 112 Baths,
Screeried Porch, Patto, Full Base~ ment, Garage New Carpet, Windows, Plastered Walls Cathedral
C&amp;~bngs, Heal Pump. AC, Add·On
Local Sc~ool Dlllrlct. P.O . Box Wood Furnace, $89,500, 304 272.
Ohio.
52S-5tS5
Truck dt~vtrs neecl.cf, April, May
House ror Sale E~ecellentloca ­
&amp; June, start dally trlpo. attalght
uon. 128 Bastian1 Dr Galhpohs.
truck, COL IICOil ... medical Clld, Oh, $55,000 00 Phone 614-446·
clean driving record, 81.6-247-

MAN~R

614-863-5!166.

'

teaching certlttcaae &amp; for coldting pa1fnana muat meet cerrincat•on r•quiremenll of Ohio
sporll medk:lne &amp; CPR. Per10n1
1nlere11ed ahould contact Bill
Buckl.,., Superlnrendenr. Meigs

WANTED IMMEDIATELY
SECRETARY .()FFICE

$5,500 Move 11 Or Rent Existing
314 Acre lot 814·2-45·9693 Or

Price Buaterl New ux70, 2 or

boys' 8th Grade Baakatball
Coach, boys' 7th Grade Bolktt·
ball Coach, girls' Rtaerve Bas·
ketbell Coach, glris' Aaslslanl Ju· A~tim&amp; WeikQnds.
nlar Hlah Volleyball Coach, glrll'
Junior High Be1ketl&gt;all Coach (2 By Owner. 7 Rooms &amp; Beth, Front
pOiitlonsl, High S.hool Chetr· Porch, Screened Back Porch, Pi\·
Setaar. Car Port, 3 Lots In
r..dar Advisor, . Junior High lia
Vinton,
128,500, 6t4·388·9973 72
r hoer!uder Allvloor Quiz Toem
Allvlaor &amp; ualotant Band Dlrec· So. Ma.n Street, Vmton
tor tal the 111118·g7 ochool year. Green Bottom W VA At 2, ConAppllcanll ""'"' hokl a Yalld Clhb vement To Shell. Akzo. 13 M1lea

2116•. .

2 Bedrooms. t2x6S Mo!Jjle Home,

This newspaPer will nol
knov,llng!Y accept

Social Workers, Now Hiring $23 •/ 78 acres mil wttl'l three bedroom,
Hr • IWr\eflta. On The Job Train· !WO bath brick home, three ponds,
ing To Apply In Your Aroe, 1-eoo. pole barn buildtn.g, two car garage. 614·742-1902
3311-8150.
The Meigs .Local School District 4ir ConditiOned 3 Bedroom. 2 Full
1d currently seeldng appllcation1 &amp;th~. 24' x18' LA. bR. K1tchen,
8th Grade Footboll Coach, boy&amp;'

~753.

month Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes. Nttro
WV. 30H5S-5885

24ytl old. t-1100·2211:6658.
. Red Hot Fat loss Product, Dyna·
mlc Marketing Plan, lose Weight
&amp; Make Money! 614·446-1236,
614·441-()167

8,,._

l1mi1ed Offer' 1996 doublewtde,

sad Street, Columbus, OH
~207

Home, L1ke New, CA. Sets On
large lot 80x150 With Oeluxe
Porches &amp; NICe Outbtnld1ng,

llmliatlon or d~rlmlnatlon."

G.M. Saker I Son Co . 335 Ho·

440

6062.

sa.,. Bi g On Carpel I Viny l In
Stack U .oo Cath ~any Mollohan Carpers. A• 7tll e u .ue7...

lie, two - · U
tlvo, \I.e, 01110 rnot!tl turbo, PS,

'118 Thundort&gt;ird

•

•

ALDER
lliddltpott Parte• &amp; ~...~~on il
now ll.kino applk:ationa fDr Iii•
!!"•rd• &amp; poql rnonagor. Applict·
tiona moy bo picked up 01 Vilaoo
Hal, ..._,~ lli&gt;n..frl.

·.

�•

'••

Pllge 12 • The Dally Sanllnel

•

••

Pomeroy • Mlddllpoft, Ohio

Magazine publishing spiked tobacco show
By SCOTT WI' ! tAMS
AP TllleYI8Ion Wrlt!tr

Ilion&amp; with a C&lt;14'1Me tranacripl on
its World W'tde YWob lite, and airing
NEWYORK(AP)-A "TIIming the catirc lbow by satellite today for
Poin!'' expose of the tobacco indus- retrieval by toc.l1V I!JIIions.
"We're jill&amp; plll!lns out a video
try thl! ABC News spiked in 1994
fact p!ICk," BdiJOr in Chief Jeffrey
will finally see the lighl of day thanks to Mother Jones, the muck- Klein said 1\lelday. "I'm making it
raking magazine with its roocs in the available IQ any news show thl!
wants to view it for themselves."
'60s.
Klein and his editors wouldn't say
The bimonthly magazine is publishing excerpts in its May/June whetc they sot their copy of the
issue, part of a 4G-page spread titled "Tumin1 Point" hour. titled "Toblc"l'obacco Strikes Back," on the co Under Fire." but said it did not
. industry's efforts to curb sovemment come from free-lance co-producers
Millin and Frank Koughan.
and social anti-smoking pressures.
ABC contends the "Turning
The magazine also is putting three
30-second video clips from the show, Point" episode was not spiked

bee:awe of tbe $10 billion lawsuits
filed by Philip Morris Cos. and RJ.
Reynolds Tobecco over an earlia' sto-·
ry on ABC's "Day One," which
llllcged that toblcco c:omplllies lidded
nicotine from oulsiclc sources to their
products.
ABC settled those lawsuits in
August 1995 with an on-air apology
and admission of error, and by paying undisdosed court costs and legal
fees.
"We did not suppress this piece,"
ABC News Executive Vice President
Paul Friedman insisted. "We killed it
because it would not make a good
hour of television, and that was

based 011 our editorial judjmetll"
FriediiWI said tbe epiiOde wa "a
borina rdiUh of malailll we bad

done before ... and thl! toes of media
bad dODe before." .
Friedman and ABC contend thlll
Mother Jones has no riabt to t1te the
piece, but the network plans no lepl
action; Klein said his magazine's
lawyers believe their plans conform
to "fair use'" of the program. .
Mother Jones contends that ABC's
decision to kill the hour was a reaction to the toblcco industry's pressure; and Klein said he doesn 't buy
the network's "interesting logic" in
spiking the entire hour.

BY CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
1be year 1993 brought Edith
Wharton revival. In 1995, it was all
things lane Austen. In 1996, prepare for Picasso-mania.
'!Wenty-thrce years after Picasso's death, a series of blockbuster ·
museum exhibits, a book and a
biographigal film are about to reignite- America's interest in the
Spanish-born enfant terrible of the
art world.
. What's. behind this Picasso
renaissance? Biographer and FOP
· (friend of Pablo) John Richardson
believes it's the myths and legends
about Picasso the artist and the
man that keep his legend alive.
"Picasso saw art as having a .
magic
function. He saw everything
LAMP PRESENTED- A mus!clan'sllinp was TWlla Chlkli In memory of Betty Fultz at Monhe
did
as having a magic function.
presented by Charles Blakeslee to memberS of (tay night's rn.tlng of lha Middleport-Pomeroy
He
was
a shaman in mary ways.
the Heath Methodist Church Choir ~lckl Rotary Club.
How he seduced people, insulted
Houchens, Paulina Horton, Nancy Cele 1nd
people, made love to people
through his work, that is what is so
fascinating about him."
Among the events forming
Picasso-mania:
-. Picasso and Portraiture, at
New York's Museum of Modem
.This may be affected by the fact
Rotary Exchange Student CaroArt April 28-Sept. 17, will be the .
that
things are much more expensive .
line Magne from France was the
first exhibit to study his earcer
guest speaker at the Monday night in France. she explaine4._ For
solely from the perspective of his
meeting of the MiddleportcPomeroy instance, a gallon of gasolinei,Wbald
portraits. The show has more lhan
·
Rotary Club at the ,Heath Methodist cost about $5.
200 painti~gs and works on paper
Magne has become acquainted
Church in Middleport.
from his blue, rose and cubist periShe has stayed wilh three families with 5everal olher students from
ods.
around the world through lhe Rotary
since. her arrival here last summer.
- Surviving Picasso, a bio-pic
She has attended Meigs High Exchange p'rogram and meets with
due out this fall from the MerSchool which she says is quite dif- other students in the program once a
chant-Ivory team, is loosely based
ferent from her high school in France. monlh for fun ancj support. The stuon Arianna Stassinopoulos Buffindents will take a bus trip across lhe
gton's 1988 biography Picasso:
In France, students attend .school country which will cover 7,000 miles
Creator
and Destroyer. Anthony
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a one-to- in three weeks after which they will
Hopkins stars .as the painter;
two ·hour . break for lunch, a 15 return to their homes.
DISCUSSES FRANCE Julianne
Moore and newcomer
minute break in the morning and
Upon returning to France, she Rotary Exchinge'Stuclent carNatascha
McElhone star !IS his
afternoon and an open campus, she ·- plans to attend college and study ceo- · olina Magne from France dlsmistresses Dora Maar and Franpointed out.
·
nomic or international relations, or cusHd her county and her
coise
Gilot.
She talked about other differences bOth.
time spent with f1mllles In
-Volume
2 ofRichardson'sA
between the countries including
I'Jesident Lloyd BlackWood called Meigs County at Monday
Life
of
Picasso
(Random House,
Americans' tendencies to be more the meeting to order. A musician's night's meeting.of the Middle$50), the definitive Picasso biog:"'I!Sieful as f&lt;~r as food and other lamp was then presented to the Heath port-Pomeroy Rotary Club. ·
raphy, is due out in late October. It
ttems than people m her native coun- Methodist Church Choir in memory
The meeting winner was served covers the years 1907-1917 and'
try.
of Betty Fultz by Charles Blakeslee. by the women of the church.
includes the birth of cubism.
- Picasso: 1be Early Years,
1892-1906. at the National Gallery
· of Art in Washington, D.C., will
feature an exhibit of Picasso's
By ~ARL HARTMAI\I
art museum, a classical concert or a for several years before it provides a
outhful works next March.
Associated Press Writer
ballet performance at least once dur- comparable income.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A new ing lhe year before, while only 68.7
cable channel devoted to art, plays million had gone to a sports event.
Investors who contributed to the
and classical and jazz music is com"&gt;nd, adds Tom Bradshaw, the $20 million financing include the
ing soon 10 television sets across lhe endowment's researcher, "1be price New York Times Co., Time Warner
country, with programs from all over of a museum ticket doesn't go up Cable and Agnes Gund, president of
the world.
nearly as fast as sports tickets do."
the Museum of Modem Art in New
Ovation, which begins operations
Like other cable channels, Ova- York. Their money is expected to
Sunday and will be. on the air seven tioit will collect both from advenis- . keep the channel going for·another 2
days a week, 20 houri a day, is head- ers and local distributors of its pro- 112 years until advertising revenue
ed by J. Carter Brown, who President grams.Distributors will pay an aver- builds up.
Clinton recently reappointed as chair- age of S.S .cents per subscriber.
The channel has no government
_
·
man ·of the U.S. Commission II" Fine Advertising would have to build up , subsidy.
Arts.
"It's going m be all arts, just as
other channels are all news or all
sports or 'all weather," said Brown,
who directed the National Gallery of
Art in Washington for 23 years.
Brown ·is convinced the potential
audience is there and that the competition is meager.
He noted that Bravo, which also
does arts ptogramming, has been
devoting more iime lately to films
and that the Arts and.Entertainmenl
network runs to mysteries, adventure
and documentaries.
In April, about 400,000 households will be able to sec Ovation's
shows in local areas from Connecticut to California, including Fairfa~
County, Va. and Indianapolis.
Ovation's first program Sunday
50 Varletlea To Choose From
evening will be a documentary on
cellist Yo-Yo Ma and his contacts
with the Bushmen who live in .tpe
Kalahari Desert of southern Africa.
All Your Favorite Bedding Annuals lnci)Jding:
Next is a session of Irish music and
a profile of James McNeill Whistler,
• Marigolds • Begonias • lmpatiehs ·
who lived in London wheq he did the
• Salvia • Petuniq • Portulaca • Ageratum
famous portrait of his mother.
'
The first week of programming
also includes profiles on two Ameri~
cans ..:__ Fats Waller, the jazz pianist,
and Jackson Pollack, the abstract
painter sometimes ~ailed "Jack the
.
Dripper."
·
.
More Americans go to arts events '
and museums lhan to sports contests,
the National Endowment for the Arts
V. ~·North of Po-roy"- Maooa·Bridto,
calculates.
M,._,wv
It sponsored a 1993 survey: b~
on Census Bureau figures, tndi.caang
Phone (304) 773-5721
thai 76.2 million adults had vtStted an

;Exchangf? student
addresses Rotarians

I
•

New cable TV channel to offer all arts

News Hotline
News Hotline
News'Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

rnm~morn

URGREEN DOUSES ARE
B
STING WITH ~OLOR
Hardy Hybrid Tea Roses
(3 CaUon Pots) .

·

(Floribunda, Climbing and Miniatures)

.....A.- Area's Finest QualitY And ~est Sel

.,

'

'

·• Over a Dozen Varieties of TOJDato PI-ta
• Over Six Varledes of Pe11t1M~""

'

•
•

)'

'
'

•

• And So Mueh Morel

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
7-3-5
Plck4:
4-7-8-6
Buckeye 5:
1-17-19-20.23

Sportt on Page 5

C"*- of showers 8lld
thunderstorms tonight,
low In the S01. S.turdlity,
ch1nce of 1howera, high

-eo.

•
1996 PLYMOUTH NEON
4-door. air, caaella. ,.. delroal, hl-llinal

'MSRP
""' -.$13,284"

1995 NISSAN 412 TRUCK

aport pl&lt;g. air, V6, ca.s,
aport !'heels

.1994CHM
CORSICA

4 Door, air, cau, titt, ·
cniaa, low miles, factory

1995 CHRYSLER
ORR US
· V-6, LX, auto, all power,
cassette. ASS. factory

4 door,.automatic, air, an
power, local trade.

1993 BUICK
CENTURY WAGON
V-B, air, tiH. cruise. all
power, 1-owner, like new.

.

.

SE-5 PKG.
5 speed, air, caos81te. 1,
owner, '""' miles.

•

••

Eastern
activities :
contracts
are not
renewed

.Nation pauses to reflect, relive ·
:Oklahoma City bomb disaster

· By KELLY KURT
year."
Marie Young, co-owner of Okla· Alsoclalecl Press Writer.
OKLAHOMA CITY - Families homa City Florist, ha!lded out roses,
:clutching flowers and pictures of their tears welling as she talked about how
' loved ones paused this morning in sweet the roses smelled.
•front of the grassy e~panse where one
"They were just so precious, those
·year ago a bomb ripped through the ' people, and the rose is so delicate,"
·Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. she said.
The Eastern Local Board of EduSome wiped away tears, others
Motorists turned on their headcation
approved non-renewal of sevshared timid smiles as they gathe(ed lights in memory of the victims. The
eral
extracurricular,
advisory and
to pause for 168 seconds of silence, stream of lights also served as a
·coaching
supplemental
contracts dtlr·a remembrance of the 168 people reminder of the seemingly endless
ing its regular meeting Wednesday
killed in the blast.
procession of funerals that followed
night at Eastern High School.
They laid wreaths and flowers at the blast
The following supplemental conthe fence surrounding . the site that
Rescuer.&gt; from around the ~ation
tracts
were approved for non-renctbears lillie resemblance to the rubble were reunited Thursday on the eve of
al
by
the
board, effective the end of
·heap left by lhe bomb that e~ploded the anniversary. ·
City. The .Meigs County Boa~d of Commis- the 1995-96 school year:
· •·
at 9:02 a.m.
"The whole thing is not over with
sioners earlier this week signed a resolution
Pam
Douthin,
athletlc
Wilh security concerns heightened yet," said Skip Fernandez of the
authorizing the minute of rellec:tion In honor of . director/head softball coach; Don
on the anniversary. sharpshooters Metro Dade, Fla., rescue team. "We
the 168 people killed·and 460 others wh() were Jackson, head volleyball coach, assisperched on nearby rooftops. A man didn't accomplish our mission 100
Injured. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freemen)
tant softball coach; Susan Climer,
wearing a Drug Enforcement Admin- percent. We wanted to bring back
marching band di~tor ; Tony Deem,
·isf!lltionjackei was an eerie reminder someone alive:"
Clinton was visiting St. Peters"
;,1 was there last year at9:02, and were killed in the blast.
of the crime Scene a year ago as
Fernandez and more than 500 oth- burg, Russia, · today, wl)ere he I don't want to bC there this year,"
State and business leaders orga- head boys basketball coach/volunteer
:investigators Searched for clues in the er rescuers and their families were 10 observed.a minute Of silence in mem- said Diana McDonnell, who was nized the recel'lion for the resc uers 10 assistant reserve softball coach/junior
wreckage of the bombing.
attend a public memorial service at ory of the bombing victims after lay- standing next to a friend's desk in lhe show gratitude to those who searched class advisor; Scon Wolfe. head girls
· Tammie Clemmons, who works at lhe Myriad Convention Center, five itig a wreath in honor of the more building when the bomb ripped tirelessly under the teetering chunks basketball coach; Paul Brannojl,
Boatmen's Bank downtown, stood blocks from lhe bombing site.
lhan half a million victims oflhe 900- through her eighth-floor office. ''I'm of concrete, called "widow-mak- assistant volleyball coach/volunteer
assistant reserve softball coach/assis:Outside the bank building watching
Bagpipers will lead' a procession .day Nazi siege of Leningrad .
~taying horne tomorrow. I could not ers. "
tant girls basketball coach;
what was going on. She remembered of survivors and families from a pri"The loss we suffered in Okla- go to work yesterday. And I could not
Casey
Coffey,
head
football
·that a year ago when she arrived at vate service at the bombing site 10 the homa City reminds us all that when go 'today. I've kind of reached the · "We were very an~ious to come
coach/assistant baseball coach; Arch
work, there was glass everywhere center, where Mayor Ron Norick, peace is broken, life itself becomes-, ~ P.oiill whe.re l could not go any fur- back," said Bill Lake, a fircfight
1
·
·Bnd pancjemonium.
. Gov. Frank Keating and Vice Presifragile," he said.
. ~r....
with New York City's Rescue Com- Rose, head track coach/student coui.·.·~~. a way, t~is, is reliving it dent AI Gore will give speeches, and .
Soroe survivors .planned to stay ':-;TI!!!ty,-five of ~t's. McDonnell's pany No. 2. "The impression the peo- cil advisor; Ron Hill, assistant foot~«i~k.sat.d..;_:!q!."l\!~YJwrd:!2 a videotaped'-5tl~MIIt~ll!ft&gt;m Ptesi• away from thc-'Sel'vices lteclluse oe&gt;:::e~rs..: ill' the 'J JeJfartment of ple of Qklahoma left on us, you can ball coach/drug free ·schools ·grant
coordinator; Bryan Durst, assistant
cope and know that today IS one dent Clinton will~ played.
painfulll)etnories.
Housil)g· and 'Urbllb, · l'levt~IOplnent ' only usc supe{latives to describe."
~ . . . - r: 1 .l
'.
'
't):$' •
: (
football coach; Dan Thomas, assistant football coach/head baseball
coach; Richard Rupc, volunteer var- .'
sity golf coach; Susan Wolf, flag
corps advisor; Monica Chadwell,
varsity cheerleading advisor; lisa
Sheets, junior high checrlcading adviBy JIM FREJ:MAN
·sor; Sheryl Roush, national honor
Bryant from being apprehended on
Sentinel News Staff
society advisor/freshman class advi: ·
Law enforcement officials are Sept 15, 1995.
·s-or;
·
:
In the block plant burglary,thieves
!loping a 41-ycl!f·Oid West Virginia
Kirk Reed, se nior class advisori,
man will provide the pieces needed used a fork truck to hoist the compa.Susie Francis, senior class play advi:
to solve a number of puzzling bur- ny safe through an office window.
sor; Jim Huff, volunteer senior clas ·
glaries in Meigs and Athens counties. The safe was then taken into a large, .
advisor; Wayne Siders. volunteer
James Edward Bryant is expected open garage at the site where it was
assistant football coach; Shawn Busbt
to be sentenced next Friday on two loaded onto a truck.
volunteer
assistant
footbal (
1be 2-ton safe was recovered latcharg~s of breaking and enterilg and .
coachl,voluntcer assistant basebalt
may plead guilty to two additional er at a farm in Athens County where
cpach; Lolita Morrow, volunteer
Meigs County burglaries.
it had been buried. according to
national art honor society advisor;
He pleaded guilty earlier in Meigs Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Bill Blaine, high school yearbook,
County 10 burglarizing two Pomeroy Soulsby. Subjects used a saw aod cutadvisor: Ci ndy Mayle, sophomoie
area businesses, S &amp; W Guns and the ting torch to gain access to safe's conclass adviso r; Mandi Sheets, volunWatering Hole. However, prior to tents, which included business and
teer junior high checrleading advisor;
r&gt;&lt;ntencing, he was transferred to personal records in addition to an
Tim Bissell. volunteer junior high_
· West Virginia authorities, reportedly undisclosed amount of.cash. · '
boys basketball coach;
..
to assist them. He was not jailed and
Bryant is currently being held in
Chris
Stout,
assistant
boys
bas:
tci
prices of products used to make steel and
later disappeared, making him a fugi- the Franklin County Jail by federal
cast iron, the U.S. Justice Department report- ketball coach; Brian Weaver, assistaill
tive.
authorities investigating an earlier
boys basketball coach; Joe Bailey,
ed.
According to the Meigs County riding lawnmower lhefl ring in Galassistant boys basketball coach; Pam.
prosecutor's office, Bryant may also lia County and other counties. He
Coffey, assistant girls basketbalf
plead guilty to the Oct. I theft of a · was sentenced on federal interstate
coach ; Di~ie Sayre, elementary choir .
safe from the Forest Run Block commerce charges. according to Galdirector (half,time); Mike Roush,"
Plant, Racine, and the theft of items lia sheriffs investigator Jim Spears.
volunteer assistant track coach.
•
from Ridenour's TV and Appliance,
Bryant was arrested at a campIn 01her matters, lhe board:
•
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -A Mason department's antitrust division in
Chester.
ground in Vinton County by underCommodity ferrosilicon products
• Approved the non-renewal of the;
County
metals producer. pleaded U.S. District Court in Buffalo, N.Y. , are alloys· of iron and silicon, used following contracts, due to the uncet-'
An accomplice in the Forest Run cover investigators posing as
Block Plant theft, Mark Schall, 19, campers.Achargeofobstructingjus- guilty and agreed to pay a $100,000 charged American Alloys Inc. of primarily as alloying agents in the tainty of · federal regul'ations -nd:
Guysville. is serving an IS-month tice is pending against Etta Noble, 52, criminal fine Thursday for conspiring New Haven, with .participating in a production of steel and. cast iron to finances , effective date at the end of..
prison sentence for .receiving stolen who allegedly allowed Bryant on her to fix prices of products used to make conspiracy between late 1989 and improve lhe properties of the finished 95-96 school year: Marsaret Cau'property. He also pleaded guilty in property arid then falsely told officer.~ steel and cast iron, according to the mid- 199t.to fix prices of commodi- product, such as its strength and cor- thom, reader guide; Carissa Bailej,U.S. Justice Department.
ty ferrosillcon products sold in the rosion resistance.
Athens County Common Pleas Court she had not seen him.
·
(Contlnuecl on Page 3}:
The
criminal
case,
filed
by
the
u.s.
..
to obstruction of justice for aiding
!&lt;,

·A:u·thorities expect .
pleas ·in burglaries

1987 NISSAN.
SENTRAXE

1993DODGE
INTREPID ES

4 door, ado, air, AM/FM
stereo, local trade.

1987 DODGE
CARAVAN

Auto, 3.511ter, V-6, air,
leather. all PQMr, factory

L£, auto, air. cass. powe(,
locks, windows, 7-pass,

local

1981CHEVY
ASTRO

1991 FORD .
AEROSTAI

1994
CARAVAN

1989
CAVAUER

V-8, air, AMJFM cass. 7-

2-door. auto, alt. AM/FM
clean. local

passenger. tiH, cruise,
cassene,
factory
miles

1986
SOMERSET
2-door, auto, air,
ti~. cruise, local trade.

OILY

1500, 4x4,·SLTpkg, V-8,
auto, IIi(, al.power. , owner, low miles; factory
w..anty.

. 1995 NISSAN 414
KING CAlX!

5 spd, air, ~. p. mirr0f8,
ctwome pkg., lOw miles. 1-

1995DODGE
RAM
2500, SLT pl&lt;g, V-t 0, auto,
air, al~power. t ·Owner, low

Scottsdale pkg,
air, cassette, tong bed.
local trade.

mHes.

1992DODGE
DAKOTA

&lt;fCab. ado, L£, V-$, air,
crul8e. ti~. low miles.

35_..
A Gannett Co. N__,....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Apr1119, 1996

2 SectiCIIMI, 12 PegM

One ·year later

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

1993 NISSAN
SENTRAXE

' Vol. 46, NO. 246 .

.

an

. i

•

Local high
school teams
post victories

Picasso
renaissance
on horizon

•

....

•

1994
RANGER
5 speed, stereo, t·ownar

American Alloys pleads guilty, fined ·
on charge of price fixing conspir~cy

.

Peoples Bank to assume control .over
Meigs, Gallia operations on April 26
The Peoples Banking &amp; lhtst Co.
will assume operations of offices and
motor b'anks at three locations in Gallia and Meigs Counties at 3 p.m. Friday, April 26, with no disll!ptlon of
service to customers.
This information follows an earlier announcement made by Robert
Evans, president and chief executive
officer of Peoples Bank, of plans for
{'copies Bank to pu~hasc banking
· .offices in Gallipolis, ~omcroy and
Rutland beipg sold by Bank One.
"We feel nothing but excitement
about the economic development ·
possibilities that exist in this region
of Ohio," Evans said.
"Through our pm:hasc of these ·
~ ojlices, we arc committing the
resources n~sary to sUpport d)at
.velopment
as well as serve busi1
IICSS1individual and faniily financilll
needs,'~ he, added.
, Llny Hpldrcn, execll(ive vice
~ident for Peoples Bank. said the
b,tnk is cumndy worlcing with, Btlnk
,.

One on communicating infonnation
to current Bank One customers about
the transition.
"Our hope is that there will be no
apprehension about upcoming
changes," he said. "In fact, we
believe that planned changes- such
as e~panded office hours - will be
met with nothing but approval."
Holdren also noted that staffing
will not change in any of the three
offices.
"You will still sec the same familiar faces when you walk through the
~... he assured.
.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co. was
founded in Marlena in 1902. Begun
to serve the burgeoning oil industry
in 'the region, it has evolved into a
true community . bank, supporting
education, business and industry, the
arts 111111 die people of its service area.
Peoplcs Bank currently has offices
in the Ohio communities of Marietta, Athens, Belpre, Lowell, .Middleport, Nelsonville, Newadt, Reno and

The Plains.
Each of these locations, eltcept for
Newark. which is a lending facility,
is a full service financial operation
offering a variety of deposit accounts;
TeleBank, ATM and motor bank
options; investment and trust services; discount brokerage; Vi~ cards; ·
, and other services.
Comniitted to progress in banking,
Peoples Bank also offers retirement
products such as individual "retire•
ment accounts and mutual funds
through Northwest Territory Life
Insurance Agency, a subsidiary of its
sister banlc, The rli'St National Bank
of Southeastern Ohio.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co. is a
suj:&gt;sidiary of Peoples Bincotp, a publicly-held company traded on the
ROAD
TO COMPLETioN- Kok~­
NASDAQ stock exchange under the
.lng Conatruclldn c•-.,. busy Pf'8PII'Inafor
symbol PEBO. A bank known for stac0mp1at1on of two t.Ma on the 2.2klllaU.S. . ·
33o'l-77 four-lena connector projeCt between
bility and profitability, I ~S saw PeoRock Springs and
Polnta.
pies Bancorp complete tts 22nd conshown
performing
dirt
IWI01IM
and grade work
secutive year of profitability.

CLOSE

..w.

c,_.

a.-

on whit will 10011 be the on r~~mp tor eoutft. • _·
boUnd tl'lfflc at Five Points. Ofllcllla .,. hop- ::!
lng to resume full work on the proJioto u •llr .: • :
er permitting, within the next weal!. (81 illllat •
pholo·by Tom Hunter)

•

•'

---~---.~~------~----~~~--~~_!
t~--~~~•L..~~--~~--~~~---~~----,~·--~·---~·~,~~~~~~.
...
t'
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="386">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9758">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29491">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29490">
              <text>April 18, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2135">
      <name>jenkinson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2528">
      <name>jennings</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3168">
      <name>satterfield</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
