<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9186" 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/9186?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T05:22:09+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19615">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/14e96c955d799226e167a70bdd8428f3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>08cc9c7efe446b96da1a85a77e173f45</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29525">
                  <text>•
Pomet oy • Middleport • G8111polla,

PageDI• .. t , ..

••
Sunday, April28, 1 --

oH • Point Plelunt, WV

OFFERS NEW SERVICE - Lance Brown end Don Holcomb ere
offering e new service to the region. Located In Vinton, the high
pressure eteem cleaning firm ie celled, "Grime Bueters." Pictured
above Ia Brown.

New high pressure steam
cleaning service availa~le
VINTON - Lance Brown and
Don Holcomb are offering a new service to the region. 'The service, located in Vinton, is high pressure steam
cleaning.
·
The firm will be offering exterior
cleaning, specializing in: Mobile
homes. houses, par!Ong lots, heavy
equipment, !mi-tractor trailers, farm
equipment, decks and sidewalks
. around pools. For restaurant and fast
food owners, grill and range hood
vent filters will be removed; steamed
cleaned and re-installed. The firm
will respond to emergency clean-up
needs at any time.
·
Services will be concentrated in
Gallia and all surrounding counties.
The l!usiness is called Grime Busters.
The unit has hot, as well as, cold
water capabilities and delivers nozzle
pressure at 4,000 pounds per square
inch. This washer is the premier pressure washer on the market today and
will meet the needs of Grime Busters
target market.

Brown brings a year of pressure
cleaning experience to the business.
while Holcomb has three years expe·
rience and a bachelor's degree in
business management. Brown will be
responsible for all aspects of customer satisfaction and job bids. Holcomb will see to the bookkeeping.
insurance and ail other state. federal,
and local requirements.
Brown said, "Grime Busters will
offer quality cleaning and customer
satisfaction at reasonable prices.
Because the pressure washer utilizes
hot water. little. or no chemicals are
required. Any application where
· chemicals are needed, only environmentally safe ones are used ."
Operating 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, Grime Bust.ers will offer
frequent specials. As an opening
special offer from now through May
31, senior citizens will receive a 10
percent discount on all their power
washing needs.
·
lodividuals may call 388-0413 for
an appointment and free estimates.

- . Business
briefs·,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
growing popularity of sport utility
vehicles apparently extends to
crooks.
The two 1993-95 model vehicles
with' the highest theft losses are the
Toyota Land Cruiser and the Mitsubishi Montero, the Highway Loss
Data Institute reponed Friday.
It's the second year sports utility
vehicles have led the list. taking over
from high-priced sports cars that had
previously been most popular with
thieves, sai.d Institute Vice President
Kim Hazelbaker. ·
•

NEW YORK (AP) - A lawsuit
filed against the Food and Drug
Administration could delay introduction of a new drug for multiple

sclerosis.

Berlex Laboratories Inc., maker of
the MS drug Betaseron, said Friday
it sued the FDA to stop ii (rom
approving·acompeting drug, Avonex,
by IJiogen Inc. ·
The FDA is close to giving final
approval of Avonex. The suit said
such approval would v.iolate FDA's
own procedures and a federal law that
gives Beriex: the right to sell its drug
- without competition.

Dyer says farm bi/1..
about 64 petcent ofthe nation s grazing lands would benefit from conserllltion treatment.
There is also a new incentive program in the 1996 Fann Bill designed
to help states with farmland conservation programs purchase conservation easements. The Farmland Protection Program provides up to $35 .
million to help farmers preserve their
land in agriculture:
Another new proviSion the ·
' Wildlife Habitat incentives Program
provides $50 million over the life of
the fann Bill for Wtldhfe hab1tat
improvement on private lands.
Dyer said that the 1996 Fann Bill
makes several policy changes to the
Swamp buster and wetland conser'
vat ion provisions. "The changes will

-Record-breaking...
Continued from D·l
unprecedented trek above $7 a
bushel, while other contract months
retreated amid profit-taking and forecasts for some weekend rains that
• might relieve parched crops in winter growing areas.
"These guys made a bundle of
money. They're taking.some to enjoy
the weekend," said Jack Scoville of
The Price Group in Chicago.
Physical supplies in exchange .
warehouses have dwondled on recen1
weeks amid strong exports, and analysts said traders were bidding up
prices in the May contract as they
rushed to cover their positions ahead
of next week's first notice day, when
investors have to signal whether they
intend to actually deliver the product.
Many traders said supplies are insufficient, forcing them desperately to
seek sellers.
Agri~ulture Secretary Dan Glickman, meanwhile, toured parched
wheal fields in Texas and said the
drought situation is the second-worst
· this century. He expressed concern
about volatility in grain futures markets, but be reiteraled he would not
embargo exports.
Prices fell in other contract
months after be said spring plantings
appear to be going at a good pace.
Corn futures rose amid wonies ·
about the tightest 'supply situation in
22 years.
May wheat gained 20 cents to
$7.16 112 per bushel, while July ·
. wheat fell II 112 cents to $6.17 per .
bushel. May co~ just below :

•
WASHINGTON (AP) - Busi- concluded.
Nevettheless, total farm debl at the
ness-related farm debt this year is
likely to hit a tO-year record but end of 1996 still is expected to be 20
remain far under the peak set in 1984. percent below the 1984 record. In
Debt is expected to reach $154.(1 percentage terms, USDA added. debt
billion by yearend, according to the increases in the 1990s remain well
Agriculture Department. That would under levels of the 1970s, when debt
be the sixth increase in seven years grew by more than 10 percent each
.
following five straight years in which year.
Little
growth
is
expected
in borpayoffs exceeded new loans.
rowing
for
real
estate
this
year;
the
"Continued economic growth,
increase
will
be
caused
by
new
loans
high grain prices, e•panded acreage
for some crops and stable farm • for equipment and purposes other
incomes ar~ behind much of this than real estate. Even so, more and
year's expected expansion," USDA more of the demand for credit for

USDA updates 1996 farm bill
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Risk managemeBeginning with spring-planted 1996
crops (tobacco. corn. soybeans). a
prod ucer may choose. not to obtain
catastrophic risk protection insurance
coverage and still remain eligible for
price support on burley tobacco and
other program payments. In order to
obtain benefits without obtaining
crop insurance coverage, a producer
must agree in writing to waive eligibility for emergency crop disaster
· assistance. This waiver does not preelude a producer from obtaining an
emergency loan or a payment under
the Non, Insured Assistance Program.
These waivers should be filed by July
15. 1996.
,
Production Oexibility contracts
- Some program facts that may inter·est prollucers with crop bases on their
farm: Signup- May 20 through Juiy
12. This is a one time signup for a
seven year contract · producers may
withdraw at any time but this is the
9nly time during the seven years for
signup.
There is no set-aside or ground to
be idled in this program.

a new all-time high of$5Jl9 a bushel
at $5.07 112 per bushel, while July
corn was unchanged at $4.82 a
bushel ; July oats rose I cent to $2.83
a bushel: July soybeans fell 4 112
cents to $8.26 3/4 a bushel.

There is no planting restrictions
any crop, including hay, may be
planted on contract acreage; except
for fruits and vegetables where no
planting . history exists. (Contract
acreage equals the amount of crop
. bases on a fann.) ,There are no planting restrictions on non-contract
acreage; ie. Com, soybeans or any
other crop may be planted on noncontract acreage and/or contract
acreage. This is a big change from
prior years.
1be' Fann Service Agency currently h&lt;tS the capability of running
estimated panicipation worksheets
for persons interested in the Production Flexibility Program. USDA
anticipates 90-100 percent participation due to the nature of the program.
Contact the Gallia-Lawrence
Farm Service Agency for additioQai
information. Phone 446-8686 or 1888-211·1626.
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
are county executive cJirectors of
the Gallla·Lawrence Farm Servire
· Agency.

~o

,

Corn crops up
WASHING1UN (AP) - Acreage
planted in com should increase this
year by 12 percent, to 79.9 million
acres. the Agriculture Department
says.
The higher acreage is forecast in
response to unusually high corn
prices as well a5 the newly signed
fa[m law, which ·eliminated the
acreage reduction program. That
would be the highest corn acreage
since 1985.
Producers tell USDA they expect
to increase sorghum acreage by 12
percent and barley acreage by H per-

2·aaollone,11 l'llgee

Easy Pay Auto
Insurance
Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&lt; Di scoun t s &gt;
Computer Quolcs
(614 ) 992-7040
Pomeroy

tnke you- and all your ~earanywhere. Jus~
point it in lhe right directfnn.

ju~l ~bout

Take one out for-a
test ride tO&lt;Iay.

• Llquld-Coolod, 4-Sir- 311cc Engine

748 E. Main, Pomeroy
614-992.·2114

• Full-Time.__ Drive

.

c,,.._....._.Co.,_u.sA .._.._.T'h••+»• .....
riotr!Ytoon

Uie •

.

., ,.,._:~

~ - ~IIIIIIIAfV ndM laUI ..... COinl
tee)'OIIf . . .. or ClllltAlV S.W, b!Ne II t-a»&gt;81·2117

)'NISol ,.. or tllllt

WNWfHG ATVIcall lllllatlldous 1D Qlllfllllr

fG 111011

.u...,..-•~eyto prulldul ft~cdlrt - ,._,c.rr•
~- NMt noa iDIItl fit lf'llufiW ol ~ or llcdlol. ,..,.!iii ... ~
A-.ood IIICflWI__., .,.j Jlu'llcn_, lllllllltaCIIefuiM ~ll!ni\. .

r ... ,_...,

of economic hardship . .
There are a number of other
details in the new Farm Bill and any·
one with questions is encouraged to
visit the USDA Service Center district office in Gallipolis.
· Patty Dyer Is district
coniervatlonist, USDA.

Insects...
Continued from D·l
cation of one pound ol actual nilro·
gen (i.e. 10 pounds of 10-10-10)
every six to seven weeks per 1,000
square feet. i:&gt;o not apply fertilizer
past the end of August in order to
reduce winter damage to the plant. If
you are interested in more detailed
information on growing and preparing new rose beds, Jane Martin Ohio
State University Extension Franklin
County Agent has just written two
new fact sheets. Stop by our office to
pick up a copy.
Harold H. Kneen is the Meigs
County Agricultural Agent, Ohio
State University Extension.

'

'

'* 01......-.

EVERYDAY'$-A WEEKEND•••

Why Suffer? Find out if CHIROPRACTIC care is for yo~. ;.

Meigs Co~tnty Common Pleas
Coun Judge Fred W. Crow 01 has
been commended by Ohio Supreme
Court Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer for his work in the trial of one of
tiie Lucasville riot cases. ·
• Crow was assigned by Moyer to
preside in the trial of Keith Lamar,
wlio was charged in the deaths of five
fellow inmates during the Easter
Sunday riot at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in I 993.
Lamar was not charged in the
death of prison guard Roben Val-

,•

'

•'

(Offer expires May 3, 1996)

.
•

A private.cons~ltation with the doctor
...J Thorough spinal examination fncluding orthopedic and
neurological tests
..J A confidential report of our findings
..,J An explanatio11; of our treatment procedure if we determirie
chiropractic can help you.
..,J A referral to the proper specialist if we determine chiropractic
can't help you
...J X-rays if necessary
...J

Ready for summ~o ·charge for air conditioning, super
discounts, plus faifory rebates.

FreedonOs Yours 7 Days a Weeki
STARTING
AT

$18,900

,,•

.

•

trlicif=J::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;:::----1 MEIGS COUNTY CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC·
.

963 General Hartinger Parkw-.y

Middleport, Ohiq 45760

1:::::::::::..

'

''

par,:

.

Iandingham, which also occurred
during the riot.
Lamar's trial, and other trials
which resulted from the riot, were not
held in Scioto County because of the
prison's location in the county and the
resulting publicity from the disturbance.
The month-long Lamar trial, held
last summer in Lawrence County,
resulted in Lamar being found guilty
on all counts and being sentenced to
death by Judg~ Crow.
"On behalf of the Supreme Court

.

and judiciary of Ohio, I express our
appreciation ·to Judge Crow for his
· diligc:nt efforts at demonstrating
exemplary case management activity;" Moyer said in the commendation
letter.
"It was important for the criminal
justice system and for public perception that the Lucasville cases be managed in a manner that would be complemented by ali parties: Ju~ge Crow
did that, and for that we arc grateful,"
he added.

also have reported slowdowns due to
Combined AP Reports
· , Gasoline prices jumped nearly 5 · repairs and renovations.
. cents per galion in the past two weeks
Nationwide at self-serve pumps
but could be leveling after a wave of -where more than 95 percent of ali
hiies caused by· rising demand and gas is sold ~ the average per-gallon
crude oil costs•.an analyst said.
price was I 30.23 cents for regular
· , "There are signs of a possible unleaded, 139.79 for mid-grade and
price peaking," Trilby Lundberg said 148.23 for premium.
$)1nday.
At fuil~service pumps, the average
'. ."In 8ome MidweStern cities prices per-gallon price was I 59.34 for retlarc unchanged or already falling," uiarunleaded, 168.10 for mid-glr,lde
. she said, adding that the region often and 175.02 for premium.
lea&lt;ls the nation in price trends.
Meanwhile, exports of Alaska's
The average price of ·gasoline North Slope oil should lead to addinationwide; including all grades arid tiooai production and could begin in
taxes, was 136.34 cents a gallon as of May, a British Petroleum officiat
fpday, according to the Lundberg said.
~urvey of 10,000 gasoline stali!lns.
President Clinton gave clearance
that compares 10 I 3 1.39 cents on Sunday for exporting the oil, Cl)ding
Apnlt2andwas 14ccntshigherthan · a 23-year ban. The president also .
year earlier, Lundberg said.
imposed additional safety require·
California has been the hardest-hit ments·on tankers hauling the oil.
region, with self-serve gas prices
Alaska oil e•pons are permitted
increasing by 18 cents per gallon over under a law Congress passed last
th~ past two weeks, she said.
November, but the crude oil could not
By contrast, the average price for be sent abroad until the president
self-serve rose I cent in the Midwest, approved.
,
3.5 cents in the Southeast, 8 cents in
'The export authority is expected to
Ro,;:ky Mountain states and 4 cents on . boost a sagging oil industry ~y
the East Coast. ,
increasing demand.
ladustry officials have blamed
The Chinese Petroleum Authority
the sharper California increase on a ·has agreed to purchase 10,000 barrels·
varjety of flctors, including the inii'O- of crude oil a day from BP. The lint
duetion of cleaner-burning but more sut:h cargo is 'el!pccted in May. said
expensive gasoline required by s~ ·· Richard · Oliver, BP Exploration
~gulations. West Coast refinencs
deputy chief executive.

l

t=t:STiVAL COURT- Kelly Swisher, daughter of Michael and Cynthia Swisher of Syracuse
wes named queM~ at the 1996 Racine Flower Festival held Saturday et Star Mill Park. The tea:
tivel court included, from left, Miss Congeniality Jennifer Cummins, daughter of Todd end Peggy Cummine of Letart Felli; Swisher, shown being crowned by last year's queen, Courtney
Manuel of Recine .
Roush; end runnerup Jonne Manuel, daughter of John and

Large

turnout
•

attends
Flower-Eestiv.aJ~. ~
.

By JIM FR.EEMAN
Sentinel New• Stall
Food, fun ... and, of course,
·plenty of flowers was the recipe for
a successful third annual Racine .
Area Community Organization
Flower Festival Saturday. ·
EX.MiliNijiG ;~~~~:~.~-~·FI~owera -re the primary ettrecMore than 500 people were on
tion at the Recine Flower Festival Saturday and there _,e
hand throughout the day-long
plenty of them on hind. Here, 3-yeer-old Kolten Ritchie, son
event in Racine's Star Mill Park. A
· of Chuck en.d Kriaty Ritchie of Recine, examines some of the
brisk breeze cooled thitfgs off earofferings.
ly in the.day, but things warmed up
as the afternoon progressed. •
. Congeniality.
said.
The event officially kicked off
Other contestants were Jyl
Han commended Tonja Hunter
the 1996 festival season in Meigs and Dr. Mel Weese for their conMathews, daughter of Charlie and
County.
tributions and Sherry O'Brien for . Rita Mathe"'s of Racine, and
RACO President Kathryn Hart
Sammi Sisso~, daughter of Joyce
assisting in the queen contest.
estimated the largest crowd was in
and Ernie Sisson of Syracuse .
Named 1996 Flower Festival
attendance around 4:30-5 p.m.
Allendants were: freshman Jody
queen was Kelly Swisher, daugh"We had a big turnout," said
Hupp,
daughter of Steven Hupp of
ter of Michael and Cynthia SwishHan.
and Laura Hupp of
Cheshire,
er of Syracuse.
About a half-dozen local flower
Runnerup was Jomia Manuel, Racine; sophomore Jayme Miller,
farmers were there with their proddaughter of John and Megan daughter of James and Denise
uct and food and other vendors did
Manuel of Racine, while Jennifer Miller of Portland; and junior Keri
well with their sales, Hart said.
Cummins, daughter of Todd and Caldwell, daughter of H1&gt;wie Cald"Overall, it went pretty good.
Peggy Cummins, was named Miss well and Christy Lavender of Syra11tere were no problems," Han
cuse.

Youth unit
employee
assaulted
~by inmate

CARRIER COLLECTION - Pomeroy letter
cerrter. will be cerrylng ltNvler •tdlele IIIIey
11 .. pert or the NetlonerAaoctetron or LAllier
Cerrl8re ennuel food ilrM. Lest year, " - o y
letter cerrl.,. collected IIICJR then 1,700
~ndl o1 food which wee donllted
1M
Melg8 County Cooperative P8rl1h Food Blnk.
.,
'
'

to

Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan signed · if
proctemetlon recognizing the food drive. From
left ere letter carrier Carl Cermichul Sr., Post~
muter Ch8rlte Grim, Vaughan end letter i:errler Jim P!llllnl. People wanting to perticlpelll
ahould _ . non-perieheble bma- no gteu
.P..... ,..-next to their meilboxu on ~y 11.

'

'
,I

F

I

a

992-2168

-. ·I

A Gannett Co. Nc

Analyst points to leveling
off for u.s. gasoline prices

,

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WD.J. INCWDE:

'

State Supreme Court hai.l s Craw
for presiding .over riot trial in '95

$45. QO Regular $128 Program

1996 CHEROKEE SE

• POIIT ARI'HUR, Australia (AP) had not yet moved the bodies for fear restaurant and ·turned his rille .on
-A gunman who pulled a rille from of disturbing evidence.
tourists near a bus outside, killing
a tennis bag and slaughtered at least
"Some of the deceased were sit- four more people, including the· bus
, 34 people at a colonial prison was . ling there as if they were enjoying driver.
' arrested today as he fled burning their meals," police Superintendent
He picked off others as 1\ley
' from an inn that he set ablaze.
Jack JoHnston said. "Their meals arrived in cars and shotat people run·.. The man had barricaded himself were still on the table. Blood was ning from the scene.
He shot a mother and the 3-year· inside II!!: inn with three hostages, everywhere.
"Whatl saw inside the restaurant old daughter in her arms. The
· · and two bodies were found in the
- burned-oUt rubble on the island of · was exactly like the product of war. woman 's.6ryear-old daughter tried to
h1de behind a tree, bu! the gunman .
Thsmania. Police said the third It was·honifying."
About I :30 p.m. on Sunday, the . kiiled'her, too.
: hostage also likely perished, which
· Would raise the death toll to 35.
gunman drove up to the prison in a
He kidnapped an Australian man
Armed with a semiautomadc rille, mustard-colored Volvo hatchback at a gas station and stole a car to dri- .
· the 29-year-'Oid man methodically with a surfboard strapped on tpp and ve three miles to a bed-and-brelikfast
; 3,unned· down tourists Sunday after- talked casually with some of the 500 cottage owned by David and Sally·
Martin, a couple ill their 60s.
. noon at the Port Arthur historic site people outside, pOlice said.
1~fore barricading himself inside the
"He said, ''There's a lot of WASPs
By early today, more· than 200
'bed and breakfast, ~hich was owned around today, there's not many Japs local and special police units had surhere, are there?' and then started mut· rounded the inn.
•
l!y.friends of his late father's.
After a I 2-hour standoff, the gun- tering to bimself," a survivor, who
· Police tried 19 negotiiie by phone
. man set fire to the inn and was dri- was not identified, -told Australian with the gunman, who fired two
·ven out by the Dames. He threw his Broadcasting Corp.-radio.
heavy caliber ·military-type rifles at
rille aside.
The man then walked into the cafe them and at helicopters airlifting out
~ "His clothing was on fire, and he
and methodically started shooting.
the dead and wounded. He demandstarted taking his clothing off," police
"He wasn't going bang-bang· ed a helicopter for himself.
Superintendent Bob Fielding said. · bang-bang- it was 'bang' and then
When he set the cottage on ftre,
. , Police said the gunman was a local he'd piCk someone else out and line flames finally drove~· from the
· man with a history of psychological thein up and shoot them," witness building. He threw his · e aside.
problems. He is to be charged in coun Phillip Milburn told Australian
. "His clothing was fire, and he
&amp;fter he is treated for bums, but doc- Broadcasting Corp. radio.
started taking his clothi off,"_police ·
tors have not said when that will be.
Relatives of Jason Winter, a 29- Superintendent Bob Fi lding said.
He ~ill not be identified until the year-old New Zealand winemaker,
Exploding ammunition in the
charges arc made, and under Aus- said he threw himself in front of fam- burning house prevented officers
tralia's strict trial laws, the media may ily members at the cafe to shield them from immediately searching for the
not rcpon about his background until and c!ied instantly.
hostages.
the trial is under way. ·
"~re ~ere ~pie just sitti~g
Police said 25 of the people killed
Witnesses said lbe gunman had there m lhetr chwrs where they d in the shooting lspree were Ausmuuered ta¢iaJiy tinged remarks bee~ .ea~ng ::- ~." said a Mel- · traliiiiiS._Tw.p, l!blaysiaos and
-bC~aliing-~lnf..the-~Broed&lt;&gt; boume'Wonfan'who sun'ived by hidr ' Indiliii'llfo' diecJ: ..,. '• · •·
Arrow Cafe, where he pulled a high- ing under a table. ·
Not ali bodies had been accountpowered rille from a tennis bag and ~- ~ ','After it was over there was a 'ed for because many victims were not
beganhooting. •: · '
··
weird sOrt of calm, as if no one could carrying identification.
Today the bodies of 20 victims believe what they were seoing," she
One American and two Canadians
remained in thC cafe, some sitting in said.
were wounded along with at least 16
front of half-eaien lunches. Police
The killer than walked .out of the others ..

.

The only exception to our offer involves personal injury cases,
workers' compensation and auto accidents. in which case there is
no charge billed directly to the patient for the first visit.

lOa. Tuesday, br..zy,
highs In 1M 801.

._..,

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 29, 1996

'

We a;e often asked, "What's
the best way of finding out
whether or not a doctor of
chiropractic can help my
problem?"
We believe the answer can
be found iri a complete
chiropractic consultation and
examination, including x-rays.
And, to help you find out
for sure, we do a complete.
chiropractic examination,
including X-rays (procedures
that normally cost $128 or
more) for $45, ·

We will make .this special program available until May 3, 1996.

l h - • and thunder·
ltOnM tonlghl. low In ...

"'Down under' rampage
· leaves at least 34 dead

All Ohio

• 5-Speed Tranunllllon Plus Revill M
• Tough Ouad-Unk Reor " ' - " " " '

~

.IIJIL 17, NO.3

With full-lime four-wheel drive ami
a 242 -lb. payload capacity. the
Kawasaki Bayou' 4QO 4x4 will

SPORTS CENTER

0 4 4 1-1-0
Pick 3:
. ~2
Plck4:
2-G-8-2

•'

cent, although plantings of both will
be below levels of the early I 990s.
Durum wheal acreage should rise by
S percent and other wheat by 3 per:
cent.
In other times, the high prices
being paid for soybeans woold be luring wheat and com growers to switcli
some of their land to soybeans.
·

· • - -TypoAirCJunOr

Klck8r:

••

Field Specialist.

UWASAKI MOTOR

.:

1-3-5-18-31-40

&amp;porta on Page 5

hit 10-year high

equipment and machinery is being
met by dealers through a combination
or leasing and trade credit.
Most commercial farm -credit
lenders are expected to be strong.
financially this year, USDA said.

•
•
•
•

SUper Lotto:

Heat defeat
in N~A play

~

WEUNESS for AU GENERATIONS.

-c=-on-ttn-ued-rro_m_D_-t_ _ _ _ __

provide us with the flexibility to work
with farmers for common sense solutions that still protect natural
resources," she said.
"We expect that over time these
changes will make this program more
successful with productive farmland
made more productive anile achieving a new gain in the functions and ·
values of these valuable ,resources."
Regarding Conservation Compii·
.ance, the 1996 Farm Bill was also
changed to allow USDA employees
who arc providing on\site technical
assistance to notify landowners if
they observe potential compliance
problems, landowners will have up to
one year to take corrective action. In
addition County Committees are
authorized to provide relief in cases

•

•

ing recording devices in huge shipping containers to track the gas mix·
ture and temperature over time .
Inspectors at tbe receiving port could
determine the treatment's integrity.
The specifiC mixtures of oxygen,
nitrogen and carbon dioxide are confidential information of lk project's
industry partner, TransFresh Corp. of
Salinas, Calif.
Methyl bromide has many uses,
including to protecrcrops from soil·
borne disease and to protect stored,
harvested crops from"i~sects.

Farm debt expected

Ohio Lottery

Bulls hand

one thai is new lD the Bluegrass SIJ*t
Walt Rybka is using tii8Sh left .U'«f
from the distillation of Kcntuekr
bourbon to feed freshwater shrimp il
well."'
a
small pond on his' woodland Jli'OI&gt;
The unlikely combination is being
crty
in Rowan County.
viewed as an alternadve to methyl
Although
he has experienced
bromide, a widely used fumigant and
some
problems
with his pond, Ryli.
pesticide whose safety is being chalka encouraged other flllllll'rs to putlenged.
sue
shrimp farming. "It can be a
Even if the new approach suc.
potential
alternative to tobacco or J~
ceeds, it would be only one of many
'
something
else to do," he said.
kinds of methyl bromide alternatives
•
'The
prime
growing season is from
needed. "We would expect this
Jurie I to Sept. 30. Rybka said t~
. approach to be applicable only to a
I
conditions
for growing freshwater
specific use," Mangan said. "That is,
shrimp
are
better
in Kentucky than in
as a treatment against Mexican fruit
New
use
for
by-product
Mississippi
and
Delaware, where
fly in citrus that takes more than 10
MOREHEAD. Ky. (AP) - A other such projects e•ist.
days to be transported to market."
byproduct of a well-established KenThe approach would include piac- tucky industry could open the door to
nations appear very ~ffective at
killing Mexican fruit flies. Plus, the
grapefru\t quality holds up very

•

•

· Mix of _gases could_control fruit
WASHINGTON (AP) - A mix of
oxygen, nitrogen and carbon dio~de
under controlled temperalurcs could
become the newest nontraditional
insecticide in growers' arsenals.
Scientists at the Agriculture
Department's Agricultural Research
Service station in Weslaco, Texas, arc
testing whether such a mixture will
keep citrus free of Mexican fruit flies.
Although the tests have concentrated
on Texas grapefruit, the aim is intransit treatments against the threat
the fruit fly poses for any citrus crop
grown in California or Texas .
" We are testing lots.of combina·
tions of the gases," said Robert Mangan of the research team .. "Results
are not conclusive, but some combi-

•

•
•
•

.

PEDRO (AP)- Local authorities : ;
and an agency that operates.a center : • .
for emo~ionally troubled youths are · •
try.ing to determine what caused an ·
. attack against an employee at the cen- ·
ter.
An Ohio Center for Youth
employee was hit with a fist in Saturday night's attack by several
youths. He was treated at a local hos- •·
pital· and released, said Liz Rider, a
spokeswoman for Youth Development Corp. of America. The company operates the center, about 19
miles northwest of Huntin&amp;!on, W.Va.
Rider would not identify the
employee or the hospital where the
· worker was treated.
The employee was esconi'l_g a
·youth back to her cabin from a recre- •
arion center around 9 p.m. when the
youth assauJted the worker. About ;
, five to s~ven other youths soon •
joined in, Rider said.
Workers quickly controlled the situation :and notified tbe Lawrence
Count)' Sheriff's Department.
Rider said coun ~gs will be
held in the next few days. Those
involved in the assa1111 will · be
Iremoved from the center.
•

�•

0

•

'

••

:Commentary
.

'

.

•

General--·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

noo,------AI-

•

'

w~...l'tw?J« lbaa;

Spatbr Jun Wript IS haVJII( ~
thoiJihtubout the way be JaJpcd

the

ROBERT L WINGETT
f!Jubllther .
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

..

&amp;:ven yars.aao ':"'~'. month, a
miSSIVe ethics lnYeSbgllllOn fortld
thc Te-; Democnl.out of
Job
!'W put hi~ tbinJ1n.hne for the.~ldency. Wnght il:"liv~ a snmng
f~well speech '?. which he ~
hi,s· C?'leagues to. bri!lg this penod
.of mmdl.ess canmbahsm to.an end."
long mterview
. But 1n. an hour·
L w· h
WIth us Ii1s1 w~o. , ng t e~prcs~
regrct that_ !Us words have gone

£
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

unheeded, Willi the f~ ~-cr
~ rcfe~ to ~ the "mean sea·
soa on Capitol Hill bas QOiy aotten
meaner since biJ departure in 1989.
. '.'I ~ a strong miscalcula·
non," Wnghl told us. "I believed
· th~t my rcsi~ning wu a propitiation
•• ID the.btbhcaJ sense·: for this season of Ill Will. ('That It) would so
thoroughl_yshame Jle?Ple into rcslol'·
mg the ~Jvtbty that ••
glue that
holds thmgs together."
If he had it to do all over again,
would Wright resign when and how
he did? "I'm not sure," he told us.

the

Today in history

~lrltlte-J •!'!
~ *!:t::.,_,._.,_MdliW:Iulleadt
,...,.,, r; ....,.,.....

M1""-n. 1" mUm wage becomes
.
.
an election-year issue

•oac~ar.

· '···~

..._ camp tn Dachau, Gennany, wherc tens of thousands of people ha(t.perished.
lbat same !fay, in a Berlin bunker, Adolf Hitler married Eva Braun and, des-

ign~:'th~;;;:~ Karl Doenitz his successor.

./
In 1'429, Joan of Arc entered the besieged French city of Orleans to lead
a victory over the English.. .
·
. In 1861. Maryland's House of Delegates voted against seceding from the
. .
Umon.
'
In 1862, New Orleans fell to Union forces during the Civil War. .
In 1863, newspaper publisher Will iam Randolpz:st was born in San
Franc1sco.
·
·
In 1913, Swedish-born engineer Gideon Sun back of Hoboken, N.J.,
patented the zipper.
·

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Specl•l Corretpondent ,
WASHINOTON - To dramatize the Democratic drive ~or an ,·ncrease
in the minimum wage, President Clinton noted that congrcssmen were paid
more during a month of' government shutdowns than workers at the bottom
of the pay scale make in a year.
·
Millionaire corporate chiefs got an average 23 percent raise in 1995, Labor
Secretary Robert Reich said, and ·the minimum wage hasn't budged in five
years.
.
.
A House Democrat held out a begging bowl to plead that Republican leaders put the minimum wage increase to a vote.
They say they don't intend to; the White House calls that cruel.
"This is theater,'' Republican :sen. Alan Simppon complained as Senate
Democrats maneuvered on the issue .the other day. He's right. The trouble
for Republicans is that the drama, the rhetori,c and the emotional arguments
work to the Democrats' advantage.
They can stir sympathy for the working poor. The polls report over·
whelming public support for an increase. Economists on the other side Of
the issue don't get sympathy votes.
·
The federal minimum wage has been at $4.25 an hour since 1991. That
was passed with bipartisan backing in 198~. after.President Bush vetoed a
higher rate.
The Democrats' tlroposal now is a two-step increase to $S.!S an hour,
and they say they will keep pushing it in Senate amendments to other bills
every chance they get. .
·
The tactic already has forced Sen. Bob Dole, the Republican leader and
presidential nominee-to-be, into retreats on two major bills, shcilved tern·
porarily to avoid minimum wage amendment votes.
AI the same time, the.minimum.wage dispute has rcinforced the sometimes shaky alliance between Clinton and congressional Democrats.
It is an issue that has snagged Republicans bc;fore. They can, and do,
advance reasoned economic theories againsi the incrcase, saying it hu~ lowincome workers more than it helps, because it costs jobs.
·
. It hits small businesses hardest, they argue, and one worker's pay raise
is another's lost opportunity. 'They call it a payoff to labor, which wants the
mi~i~um upped to raise the floor in negotiations with industry. The AFLCIO is plaftning to invest $35 million in the 1996 congrcssional campaign
to boost Democratjc candidates.
·
· ·
. 'The trouble is tbat a 4S-cenl hourly pay raise for each of the next two ,
years sounds like a pittance. Denying even that sounds harsh. 'The economic
theories are abstract. A 90-cent raise inuJI. _
The conservative Heritage Foundation has just issued a study holding tlfat
an increase to a $5.15 federal minimum wage ·would reduce the nuinber of
new entry -leveljob~ by 200,000 in the next three years, and so !lurt the very By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannen News Service
people it is supposed to help.
.
WASHINGTON ~ Shortly' after
. But that appraisal acknowledges that the arguments for an increase are
a
Bronx
jury ordered Bernhard Goetz
emotionally appealing.
·
.
to
pay
$43
million to Darrell Cabey,
And the Democrats arc going to keep playing on them. II is a renewal of
a political trap that has snapped at the GOP ever since the first, New Deal ·the young man's lawyer tried to put
into pers~tive the largely unenrrjinimuin wage was set at40 cents an hotir 58 years ago.
forceable
decision.
In this campaign year, it has put Dole in the middle, leading to Repub·
"This sends a clear message to all
Iican rifts. and displaying the problems that go with managing the Senate
the racists with guns out there who
and running for prcsidml attlje same time.
think the lives of young black men
. 'The Democrats seized on the issue this spring, with the simple strategy
are
worthless," Ronald Kuby said.
of demanding a straight, yes-o~-no vote on the mihimum wage, and tryil)g
I
don't think so.
to force one at every opportunity. 'The majority Republicans haven't proTruSt me, nothing so profound will
dPced a clear comeback.
come
from the verdict handed down
; Top House Republicans arc trying, with Speaker Newt Gingrich and Rep.
by
the
jury of four blacks and two ·
Dick Artney, the majority leader, saying they'll have an alternative plan that
Hispanics.
No sage lessons will be
niay inc lode~ credits and govemmeiJI subsidies for minimum wage work·
learned. And no one who reached a
ets with families to support.
decision before the trial about what
.· But Arrney said he had no intention of putting the minimum wage increase
actually happened the.night Goetz
to a vote.
·
encountered
Cabey and three .other
When Democrats tried a parliamentary maneuver on Thursday to force black teen-agers
on a New York subaction, the Republican House blocked .the move by a vote of 220-200.
way train 12 years ago is likely to
Dole had conceded earlier that tlierc probably would be a Senate vote,
change their mind as a result ofTues·
but with Republican amendments the Democrats wouldn'tlike. 11lat was day's civil case verdict.
after a bloc of House GOP moderates broke ra~~lo back an increase.
In ruling that Goetz .acted " reck Dole said he had been blindsided.
./
·
lessly" when he shot Calley, who is
That's awkward
. for a presidential nominee. But it's that kind of issue.
now 30, after he and ttiree· companions approached him and asked for
EDITOR'S NOTE -Walter R. Mean, vic:e president and colum· . $5, the jury faulted the _petulant
nist for Tbe Associated Pnsa, bas reported on WI!Shington and nation·
defendant for his quick reson to
al politics for more than 30 yean•.
force. Goetz claims the people he

:

By Jack Anderson
and
•••chsel Blns•·•n

m1•

'""''

sit around counting them up and
brooding over them and saying,
·woe is me ."'

The 73·year·old Wn)ht knows,
however, that the resignation
improved his physical health. If he
had stayed on as Speaker, be believes
he would have been 100 busy 10
check out the bump on his tongue
that was found · to be cancerous in
1991.
"I wouldn ' I have ,gone to see a
doctor," said Wright, who was in
town to promote his .memoirs, "I
would have put ft off becauk I nev·
er had time (ail Speaker). My blood
pressure is much lower than 11 was
then, (and) I slee~uer than 'I did.
I'm bcller off in e ry way."
·
One thing that does raise Wright's
blood pressure, however, is the lack
of civility in today's Congress. It.'s
not surprising that he heaps special
scorn on the man who engineercd his
fall from grace, House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga. Wright says he was

.

,,I Toledo!~ I

"This prcJIWII woman wu nped
Uld 10 brulllly usau.lled. and (Gin.
gridi)saidthal'stheflultoflhewelfarc system," Wright told our 11150Ciate Ed Henry. "Thill's a b8gic thing
to say. No Olle ·should say that. Each
'thing tha1 occurs in
he
.wants to seize upon it and
it for
panisan purposes: 'The
lillie
-=s who•• mother (Susan Smith)
.,... into the water ••.(Gin·
dr ve them
ell) blamed it on the Democ:rlll! "
But Wright knows he's walldnc a
fine line when he discusses Ginarich.
As much as he would like to e~prcss
glee over the fact that the war of
words has turned on his tormelll()r,
Wright doesn't want to be a hyp·
ocrite by bashing Gingrich .JRd
rekindling the firc that he claims 10
want to extinguish.
~
,
When we asked Wright if be's
gotten any satisfaction 001 ofthe fact
that dozens of ethics charges have
be fil'
d
· G'1 · h ·
he •
en 1 eSpeaker,
agamst Wn.ht
~l!fiC answem{.
s1,11ce 4
became
cautiously. He told an anecdote 6
abo.ut form~r Rep. (ilarc Hollman. 4 ~
crilsty Republican who served in dMi : ·
1940s and ''SOs.
,., . ·. ,
"Speaker John McCOI'Jliic:k.·gilt .:0
real mad at Hoffman one day and ,
said, 'The gentleman from Micltigan•"·
knows I hold all of my colleagues in .. ,
high regard, but! hold my colleague ·~·
from Michigan in "minimal" high !'
regard," ' Wright recalled with a
laugh. "That's about whatl ihink of'''·

'' ' ' '

W.VA.
~

I

$ystem· promises rainy

••

a7

-

4~
. •••~or NEA, ....

••

'
'

'

-

....

.I

Robert E. Autherson

'

"

'

l

.

Riverview Garden Oub
Riverview Garden Club wi II mc.ct ,
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the home orJan- ' ·
ice Young; PrograiJl on state parks by
Nancy and Randy Wachter.
·

6'-

.

&lt;

Nell E. Wilson

1

Rt•l.

u • • •• • •

•

I_.:_.._

o

ONE

'

The ·Daily Sentinel

FOR YOU

FLOOR COVERING YOU DON'T
. HAVE TO PAY FOR TILL JANUARY •1997•
NO PAYMENTS! trO INTERESn

(IJSI'S 213-M)

It could thus be argued that Newt's
touting of the book amounts ' to
l_ogrolling and ideological incest, and
that brings me to a salient point.

: Putililbed eo."ery afternoon, Moftday darouJb
· Fri~. Ill Coun St., Pommoy, Ohio, by the
·Ohio Valley PubUshioa co...,..y/GIMttt Co.,
' Po .....y. OhiO
PI!. 992-2156. S..Ond
:cloM .,..,... poid at,llomeroy, Ohio.

• TO
JUGGLE

.,769.

. You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add this worry
·
to your list.

· M ' r~·The AUOciued Preu, and the Ohio
. Ne'l'IPIIFt' Auoclllllon.
P081MASTI!R: 5et)d oddttlo comctl'"'110

·ssss

The paily S.adne~ ) ll Coun St., Pomeroy,
,Ohio 41769.

-k.. ... . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
SUIISCIIIPI'ION IIATU

0..
$2.00
0.. 1-fondl ........,.......................................$8.70
Otit\'w............................................... $UM.OO

'

Subicribers "'" d&lt;oiri .. 10 JIIY the c:mi&lt;rllll)'
'"""''•"".....,- 10 Tho Doily Sealinel
on a doe, llx or 12 month billa. Oedll will be

ii---wett.
.

MAIL lltJIIICIII'I'I
J~)lolpa..t,

.'

ll'Aiiob................................................ $'Z7.30 •
l6 ~-. 1 -•• L ................... ~................IS3.82 :

'2 - - ..... _..............:-... ..............:...SI05.s6 . '

..,

13 'WIIilrl,..............,....................;.. ,, . ...... 129.25
:16 w,.a.....t..............:. ...............:.....I56AI
'2 - -··········' ······.. ········· ..·•··· ..···..$10J.72

."

-·

'

Mannington Silver Sel1es • 12 ft.
Wide- Never Wax

Self·Stlk VInyl Tile

Your lruleperulem A.fa,., ··
Se""'w Meip CoMfy Slru:e 1868

Be8UIHul Styles • Never Wax! Reg.
$1.49l2"x12" , .

O.W.r.a Qlls 1,11•• Mlsstr.luu:••
Panwoy

111 81COi1d'lt.

I

l

&lt;10 Yr. Wear • 5 Yr.
· Slalri • Expert ·
In8tahlion evaHIIble

®

'1()'11 SQIYD

.......

.

·

·

111N311 .

una lhe

·

The Ohio Casualty Group
of,. ._,_ C0111p111t1a

WliERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR .,OLICV '

...

'

'

.,,

·

69• sq. ft.

sq. yd.

Great Seteclion
:

. .... a,-.Molpc..,

..

$1295

.55 .OZ. NYLON

No oabo&lt;ripdCMI by 111111 penniaod lo . . .

'
~
-- -ltavoillblo.

from

Talk to '(Ou~ independent agent. Insist Qn long·
term expenence, community presence, ahd
someone who is with you b9th before and
after things happen. Just do this one1hing,
M1d INve th• juggling 'lk:t to us.

Reg. $1.69 12"x1 ?'

50% Off some!

$6.95

from
sq. yd.
Trackless Cal]llll ,
• Saxonya • Sculptured • H~Low
• Good Selection In StOck

.
SINGLIICOPYPRICB
Ooily......:.............................................3i c..a

89¢ sq.~·
Commercial tile

!rom ·
sq. yd.
. ' VInyl Linoleum .
·Mtlnmngton
• Never Wax

. Berber Carpet
v
Perfect for any r00111.
• Patterns • Solids • Tweeds
1oYear Wear·Staln Prooll

•, ComortrNolw-

-/f

•

.

,.....

••

..

••

'

•

0

'.
.

Stacks

:1

drinking aad addictive gambling? Are leads to gui.lt and suppressed anger :
opt out of the shame game. The
these things over which people ~d self-loathing and even patholog- .: : ·
wbole thing mal\es me uncomfortable
always have control? What of wei- 1cal emotional ill~ess .
- :..; :·
and I'm not sure I really believe in it,
fare? Should all people on public
And that btings us back to the .•.,;
so I'm going to pass, thank you.
~sistance be. made to feel a sense of judges and juries. Among .all the-.,. &lt;·::
The politicians make it sound so
d
?
.
r~- ' I
easy. Fonner drug czar William Ben·
I"
• •.s~ace.
.
pie you know, and know of, whom . ;:
en we get mto are'1!' that ~orne wo~ld you trust and respect enough .: ·.:
nett sold a quadrillion copies of his Politicians arc out of their field when morahsts vtew ,I!S matters .o f v1rtue, • ;to sn mJudgment lln you?Your min, . ,.
"Book of Virtues." Gen. Colin Pow· · they lljlk about shame. They ought to and here r don t agree at all. These ister or priest perhaps p .1 . " •·
ell talks constantly aboutllie need to be discussing shameles~ness.
include' ll)any of the seven deadly friends A teach~r maybe · ~~~· y, • ::
"restore a sense of shiune in our soci·
But let me rctum for a momenllo sins. Wrathll It's as fundamental an · Did· anybody' tist ~·~·~ or.? ·' ::
ety." House Speaker Newt Gingnch my earlier ~gument: This is ~ com· emotion as love. Greed? Make this a That's the trouble with J::~ ~~=~
preaches shame as a cure for what' phcated bustness, shame, and 11 most pumshable offense and 97 percent of ·ter crusades 111e
1 d · th ~ :·
ails,us. ·~1 think moral force.mauers," assuredly does not lend itselfto hon- . Newt's revolutionaries would go to J'udgina ·- ·o""en thpeeop e tomhg ~ : ::
New
"ork 11m
' es a year· est ""
"·bate ·m
· a sound•bi te wor'ld.
·
Lust.? ......
·
., my
-~ personal
"
wors
c arac· " :.·
he !old ....
uac
. •·
pnson.
""' most p10us
pres•·· ters. On
list
of.shameful
:f~·~~~!~:m~k~~derstand.
We c~ all agree that some ~orms dent of the. current century, Itmmy be~avior is pork·barrcl 5 ndin ... ::
g, ·' ' •·
of behavtor arc absolutely ev1l and Carter, admitted he lusted in his heart. laking favors from spe ·al ~
He was talking about Gertrude worthy of stigma and punishment: How are mere mortals supJiosed to and laK '
fu ded · :_ mtere~ _ ~
Himmelfarb, a historian who spe· murder rape, incest, theft ·infidelity cope?
.,
·
thi k tbat~yer·hatn"'ol
. .JUPo ets. ~ don ~""' :•
·a1·
·
19th
E
1
d
d
'
·
'
·
·
bri
n
s
w
.:.
talk• :'' ~•
c1 1zes m
-century ng an an ·The wmt transgrcs10rs of all to my · Th1s ngs us to ariother very iffy · abo
he he 10 · wellls
·
·
h
bl' hecl-a book 1 1
.
• .
· thi · h
.
·
.mg
ut w n says we need to •
w o pu 1s
as year enb· . rrund, arc those who wrcak emobon· .arca m s s arne busmess -- thought jrcstore a sense f hame
. b ·• ~
II~ "The De·M?ralization of Soci· al and physical abuse on children; ys ..behavior. Ii s?unds so simple yet Newt means wh~il ~1.% w 111
ely. From Victonan Virtues to Mod· werc their fates left to me they would .If 1s. so mcred•bly compleK· We
.
s that ·• ~
1 ~.orce
em
Values"
and
who
h
d
'sed
the
th
.
·
'
h
ld
,
·
mora
matters.
•.
.. . .
. ..a pnu .
see e1r last ray of natural sunshine s o~ not, not ever, •eel guilty about
Politicians should write the 1 ·
~
Gmgnch
revolubon
as
a
posstble
the
day
•h•y
were
convicted.
havmg
thoughts
thlll
arc
fundamen·
and
le
.L. d
and
aws,
·
barb.
·f
f orali
·
..·h
ave u"' unce caps
sculct ·.. ,~
1
. mger o a new ~ge o m
ty. ·
But then we get into those murky ·ta ly ilmllll,. Yet too many virtue letters to teac!Jcrs and prcachen
•""' '
H1mmelfarb •s ~ed ~o neoco~- · areas. Is albtion atw11ys bad? Should . freaks are prigs, puritans and
Jlllepb Spear Ia 8 ndh:~t . :1, ~
servab~e gurulrvmg Kristol and IS · rujnous· marriages be endured? 1s ,:·wowsers who , teach that to think 'Write fi N ·
:.
Ad!;,:,.
th~ _mothe~ of · Republican sace : homosexuality voiitional, ahd any ; wicked js to bC wicked. It is preciSe- · .~ :!.. e~ terprlae., .):'. ~
W1lham.Kristol.
case, is it diabolic? What of chronic .Jy that sort ofsanctimoniotis ~nt that
·~

·:-'··

I

•

'

Craft fa1r planned
'
The Chester Volunieer Fire
Department will be · sponsoring a .
craft fair at the fire house Saturday, ·: .
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tables will be $10
each. Anyone interested in renting a .
table may contact Roger Smith, 9922502. Donation of pies ~nd cakes are :
needed for the. craft show.
'· '
• .-·
'

Landon W. Smith ·

..

...

~ .

(i

EMS units answer 19·calls
•

I'

Revival ·set
Revival services will be held at the ,
Zion United Brethren Church, Zion
Road, Athens, through Satunlay. John
Elswick will be the evangelist for the '
services to begin at 7 p.m e~ch ·
eve~ing. There will be special ,
smg1'!8 .

a

·shot were about to rob him, while the · another," he said before firing the course, Calley's attorney knew this.',
four teens say' they were just pan· shot that left Calley paralyzed from · when he filed suit against Goeti,;·;
handling.
the chest down.
which brings.us back to (he messag~.~~
In a 1987 criminal trial, Goetz was
In the criminal case, Goetz's he thinks the jury's decision reflects ... ;.
acquitted of assault and attempted lawyerarguedthathisdienlhadbeen
1. don't think an - unenfop:eable, :
murder charges - but was found traumati;zed by his own fear when he multimillioiHiollar judgment will put :
guilty of illegally carrying a gun. He . spoke those chilling words. Prosei'U- the fear of God in the racists among' ·•
served 8 1/2 months in jail for that tors said such swagger was proof of us. More likely they will 5coff at'::
offense. But nothing that happened in his murderous intent. And as with Cabey's "till hell freezes over;' ::
the criminal, case seemed to change many high-profile cases in which chance of collecting more than a few::•!
the minds of the mil,lions of Ameri· race appear$ to be a factor, public bucks from the man who put him in::
cans who split over the question of . opinion in this one split largely along . a wheelchair for tbe rest of his life. : :1
whethel Goetz was a hero or villain. racial lines.
. N?, I think the rcal mes..:ge in lhi$::•
To his supporters, Goetz was the
So not surprisingly, Goetz was case IS far morc subtle. :
· .:.1
'"subway vigilante," a frail , nerdy- acquitted in the criminal trial by a
It is that both Bernhard Goetz anit;~!
lookin~ white ~uv who was set uoon majority-white jury and then was Darrell Cahey have been rcduced td::: .
by· four young black thugs in search found to have acted without justifi- spent symbols by the warring factions'•:;
of an ~asy l)lark.' What he did when cation in the ci.vil case by an .all- in this .nation's ongoing r!lCial coJ!:.: ::
he started shooting, they believe, was minority jury.
nicl. Few of us carc as much a~ :1
to strike a blow for victims every·
The physical evidence in both etther man as much as we cafe abouc. :t:
where. His detractors argue that legal proceedings was clear-cut. But the causes we champion through•::·
Goetz went into the subway thai day in each case the question of what them.
. . '." ;(.
looking for trouble - searching for motivated the black teen-ag~rs and
Both are now broken men. Neither\::,
someone against whom he C!JUid the white gunman was left to the jury can claim a personal victory of any!::
unleash his pent-up rage. What's to decide..
.lasting importance. Now . that lht: ::·
clear is that once he started shooting,
Under New York law, Goetz legal process has played itself out, the; :1
Bernhard Goetz became ihe hunter who is said to earn less than $20,000 s~bway.shoOting incid!lnt -'- and the ', :t
and Darrell Cabey, the game .
a ~ear as an electronics consultant- people mvolved - w11l be quickly' " '
•
.
::;
" You don't look so bad," Goetz can be made to pay Cabey no more forgotten.
admits saying to Calley I§ the wound- , than 10 pj:ri:ent of his wages for lhe
And the chilling · message this':::
ed tpteri huddled on the subway floor next 20 years. He has no way of pay- reality sends says more about us than; ::•
:::
after'\he fi.rst round of shots. "Here's ing a multimillion-dollar award. Of it does about them.·

.

loblolly pine tree seedlings left after .
distribution to element'!TY schools.
They may be,obtained by call ing 9926360 gr stopping at the office, Union ·
Avenue ·and State Route 7 near ·'
Pomehly. The trees were donated by
· th~ Ohio Free Tree Program and West ·
Vargtma Pulp &amp; Paper Co. There is .
no charge.
·
,

Glenn T. Marr

. .,

18

n.

·Meigs announcements

" I.

in

releliled for their lnjurlea. The Gallla-Melg1:
Poat of the Stale Highway Patrol ..ld Bttttan
waa northbound at 9:15 p.m. when .tlla c.t~
.atruck 1 concrete barrier posted to j)rotect the"
conltructlon alta, continued on and atruck the
trailer•.The car was 11veraty d8maged and Bat·.
len waa cltfd for drivl.n g under the Influence, '
driving under ~uapenalon, fictitious plltn
...urad clear dialence and no sealbell. ($en: "
linel photo by Dave Harris)
''

CRASH INJURES THREE - Emergency
Pllraonntlexamlned the wrec:tc.ge of • car th•t
creehed Into • conttructlon tlte lrttller on Stale
Route 7 near Tupper• Plalna lata Friday.
driver of lhe car, Daniel R. Batten, 36, 33825
Sml!h R ! Road, Long Bottom, and paiHil·
gers Will
R. Adams, 20, 35485 Balhan Road,
Long B
m, and Jason L. Bartlmua, 20, Bel·
pre, wera ken to Veteran• Memorial Hoepltlll
by the Malge EMS. They were treated and

The ·following couples were
issued maniage licenses recently in
the Meigs Co.uniy Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Stanley Russell Starcher, 37, and
By The.Associated Pre..
stretched up into Kentucky was LauraR. Lee, 33, both of Middleport;
'The National Weather Service responsible fo{ the rain across Ohio. and J~rrj Dwayne Dean, 20, Salissays rai~ and possible thunderstonns The low was pulling warm, moist air • bury, N.C., and Amanda Dawn
will .continue over the state as a low · from the south as it moved slowly to Roush, 19, Pome~oy.
P,ressure system moves into Ohio on ihe northeast.
Thesday.
The record high temperature for
No rehearsal tonight
Flooding remains a threat over this date at the Columbus weather
The Big Bend Community Band
mljch of the state with saturated station was 86 degrees in 1899. The
will
not . rehearse tonight, To~ey
ground unable to absorb additional record low Was 28 degrees.in 1977. .
Dingess ·announced. Next rehearsal
rainfalL
,
Sunset will be at 8:24 p.m. Sunrise
will be held Monday, May 13, 7 p.m.
'Rain ah'd thunderstorms persisted Tuesday will be at 6:33 a.m.
in
the Meigs High School band
over much of Ohio overnight, with
Weather forecllSl:
room.
.,
heavy rain in southwest Ohio and the
Tonight...Showers and thunder·
Miami Valley. The rain pattern cov- stol11ls. Lows.45, to 50 northwest and
Robert E. Autherson, 45, Shade, died Sunday, April 28, 1996 at his resMerger to be considered
ered the·state early today from north- 60 to 65 southeast.
idence.
'
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F &amp; AM;
east to southwest. Rainfall aniounts
Tuesday...Rain and thunderstorms
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funel1).1. Home, Pomeroy..
will
hold its regular meeting Wednes· ·
were estimated at aro~nd 2 inches hi tapering to a few lingering showers
day,
7:30 p.m., at the Mid&lt;!leport
the west and southwest and 1.5 inch· from west to east. Becoming breezy
Masonic
Temple. At that time, memes in central Ohio.
and cooler. Highs in'the 50s west with
bers will vote on ·the request of
I
. Cities_acr~ss no~west and south· the temperature falling into the 40s.
Racine
Lodge 461 to merge with
Glenn T. Marr, 64, Letart, W.Va., died Satur.day, April 27, 1996 in St.
east Oh10, mcludmg Toledo and Highs in the 60s east then the tern·
Pomeroy
and an amendment JO the
Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
·
Portsl!louth, rcported cloudy skies · perature falling into the 50s.
by-laws
to
change the meeting place.
· Born Oct. IS, 1931 in Letart; son of the late Dale and Dora Lucinda Johnovernight.
. .
.
~tended forecast:
Temperatures were generally m
Wednesday... Dry. Lows in the son Marr, he was a truck driver and a member of the iJnienUnited Methodist
Youth Football
the upper 40s to low SOs across the 30s. Highs in the 50s.
Church. He was also a member of the Teamsters Union.
The Big Bend Youth Football
state with gusty easterly winds.of 10
Thursday... A chance of showers.
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Gerald LMarr.
League
will hold its 1996 season
Surviving are his wife, Chloris A. Bland Marr; son, Danny L. (Darlene)
to 20 mph.
.
Lows in the 30s. Highs 55 to 6S .
Lew ))Tessure m the Tennes~ee
Friday...Fair. Lows 40 to 45. Highs Marr; three daughters, Brenda K. (Robert) L. Roush of Letart, Bonnie S. organizational meeting for all players,
VaUey With a warm front whiCh 55 to 65 .
(Donald E.) Gillispie of Apple Grove. W.Va., and Sherry R. (Pete) Oliver of parents, and supporters Thursday
Burlington, N,C.; six grandchilljren; a sister, Martha Erwin or Southside, evening, 7:30 p.m., at the Meigs
Junior High School auditorium in
W.Va.; .and·a sister·in·law, Helen Marr of Letart.
. Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, Middleport.
~nits ofthe Meigs County Emer·
10:01 a.m. SIIIUrday, West Maln W.Va., with the'.Rev. Bobby WI&gt;&lt;$ offiCiating. Burial will be in the Union
gency. Me4ical Ser~ice recorded 19 . Str!:et, Tara :Wolfe~ VMH; · ·
C~metery.Hi~_.may call ~t the £p11erill home from 6-9'1onigh\. · • · -" ~· Rumm&amp;~e sale
Heath United Methodist Church,
calls for assistailce" Satutdll}"' ar\1:1 • ·9:08 '·p:m. 'saturday, Ch'ild~M­
Middleport,
will .have a rummage
Sunday, including three transfer calls. Home Road, DQrothy Thurston,
sale
Thursday,
9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Units responding included:
·-VMH;
Thursday,
and
9:30a.m.
to I p.m on
MIDDLEPORT
. 1:34 a.m. Sun~ay, Lincoln
. Landon Walter Smith, 89, Mason, W.Va., died Saturday, April 27, 1996 Friday.
I :39 a.m. Sunday, Ann Street, Heights, Terry Day, VMH;·
m
the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
.
.
Michael .Remy, Veterans Memorial
7:44 a.m. Sunday, Robert Earl
Born
Oct.
30,
1906
in
Leon,
W.Va.,
son
of
the
late
Burwell
Spurlock
and Spring carnival
Hunter.
Autherson, dead upon arrival:
The Fellows~ip Christian Acade·Margaret
Jane
Riffie
Smith,
he
was
a
member
of
the
Clifton
(W.Va.)
Unit·
POMJ&gt;ROY
10:22 a.m. Sunday,· Mulberry
ed MethodiSt Church, the Mason Seniors Center, a charter member of the . my of Reedsville will have a spring
Avenue, Ellie Lemley, VMH; ·
II :07 p.m. Sunday, ' Union Mason County Historical Society and a member of the Pl~mbers and Pip- carnival Saturday. Aspaghetti dinner
will be served, 4to 6 p.m ., and games
·
·
Avenue, Ionian &lt;:leland, treated at the elitters Union Local 521 , Huntington, W Va.
'
'
conducted
6 to 8 p.m. There will be
He was a graduate of Point Pleasant (W.Va.) Senior High School, where
~m lit Power .......................411\
scene.
Akzo ...................... ,,,_.:.........51\
he,served on the 1928 state champion football team, and he was an avid hunter auction following the ganies.
REEDSVILLE
A:lhl•nct 011 ........................... 41~ ,
and
fishennan.
. ·
·
.
II :48 a.m. Sunday, Long Bottom,
ATAT .....................................11 :4
Garden clubs to tour
Surviving
arc
his
wife,
Caiherine
Smith;
two
daughters,
Barbara(William)
Bank o....................................34\. Nora Ladd, Marietta Memori'al Hos· Stamer of Starke, Fla., and JoAnn (John) Gotharq of r.falvem, Pa.; six grand·
Chester ~nd Shade Valley Garden
Bob Evant ............................ 15'1. pi tal.
Clubs will tour Bob's Greenhou&amp;e
children ; and a brother, Durward (Phyllis) Smith of Point Pleasant.
RUTLAND
&amp;~Warner .•....... l ..............38'!.
and market at Mason Wetjnesday.
·
,Graveside
services
will
be
I
p.m.
Wednesday
in
·the
Kirkland
Memorial
II
:02
a.m.
Satunlay,
Meigs
Mine
C!Jt!mplon lnd...... f... .............18'1.
Members are to meet at the market at
Gardens,
P?int
Pleasant,
wiih
the
Rev.
Terry
Alvarez
officiaiing.
Clilrmlng Shop .....................
31 , Ron Vance, O'B leness Memori.al
City Holdtng ....'......................25~
There
wtll
be
no
vtsttatwn.
Arrangements
are
by
the
Crow-Hussell
Funer·
6:30p.m.
A meeting will follow at the
Hospital;
Ftderal Mogul....................... 1&amp;1,c.
al
Home,
Point
Pleasant.
·
·
home of Jean Frederick, Chester.
12:56 p.m. Saturday, Carpenter,
Glnrwtt ..................................6814
Joe
Burky,
OBMH;
G~r TaR ...;.:................ 51\
Available free
I; 13 p:m. Satunlay, Main ·Street,
K~~~~rt ~ooooooooooooooooooooooooo:oooo1 ~
The Meigs County Recycling and
Zacharia Conkle, treated at the scene;
~nd1 EnCI.;........................... 19~
.
Litter
Prevention Program have a
P~• B8ncof11 . ..................23
2:01 p.m. Satunlay, volunteer fire
Nell E. Wilson, 85, Reedsville, died Sunday, April 28, 1996 at the Area·
o~1o valley Bank ................... AO
limited
qUantity of white pine and
department and squad, brush fire at dia Nursing Center, Coolville.
.
Oile Valley:............................30'4
Parkinson aDd Swick rollds.
Born in Reedsville, daughter of the late Charles and Bertha Lemaster Kll&gt;RoCkwall ......~oooouinoaoooooooo oooo58 /.
SYRACUSE
Robblnl &amp; Myar~ ...................:.38
ble, she was a homemaker and a member of the Reedsville Church of Christ.
I :53 a.m. Satunlay, Dusky Alley,
Dutch/Shell ............:143''
Surviving are two daughters, Peggy Sams 1if Weston, and Ramona Cons IMPY'alnc........................ 11~ Clifford Smith, VMH; .
grove of Zanesville; and four grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and
S r Bank ......................
18'
4:50 p.m. Satunlay, East Main
·
Wandrtnt'l ............................18'4 Street, Po111eroy, Patty Shane, VMH; (our great-great-grandchildren.
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
by
her
hus~and, Eugene Wilson; and by
Mrthlngtori lnd. ·.................. 19'1.
8:19 p.m. Sunday, VFD to Pine one great-great-grandson.
.
•
·
Stock report• are lht 10.:30 Grove Road, brush fire on Bob Fry · Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
BJ?I. quota• provided by AdVHI property.
with the Rev. P!\illip Sturm officiating. Burial will be in the Reedsville Ceme. T{)PPERS PLAINS
~. Galllpollt.
tery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today..
LESS
2:31 'p.lll. Sunday, Mount Olive
·Road, Anna Baride, Selby General
THING

Newt. "
,
~;,
We go~ a better serise ofWripf; ,.•·
private feelings about Ginarich when . ·
we asked him to size up the currcnt ",
Democratic congressional leader,&lt;
ship. Wright gave high marks to Sen- ' ~
ate Minority Leader Thomas A; '."·
Daschle, D·S ;D., and House Minor· ':•.
ity Leader Richard Gephardt, D·Mo. '~' .
But the revealing moment came '!'·
when Wright said he Is closest to House Minority Whip David Bonior, · .
!)..Mich., the pit buU who holds the .'', post that Gingrich held when he ·"
brough! Wright down. Wright says "'
he chats on the phone with Bonior, .
who has been vicious in his criticism '."
of Gingrich and has filed many of the ;:
ethics charges against him.
. ..
A few hours aftct our interview ' . •
Wright was headed to dinner with ~ :'
few close former colleagues,'includ· '0,
ing Bonior.
•::
Jack Andenon and Michael
. Blostein are writeri for · United .
Feature Syndicate, Inc. · • ' · ·;:_

he

. Marriage licenses

·n•ght throughout Ohio

:

•

Velet " Meno.."ial
Satunlay admissioJt~ - none.
SIIIW'day discharges - none.
Sunday a.jmissions - none .
Sunday discharges - none.
·Holzer Mtlllell Center
DilchJu'ael AprU 26 - William ·
Musser, Teresa Van Cooney, Donna
Oiler, Patrick Riley, Dallas Weather·
holt, .William Powell, Mrs. Hobert
Cundiff and 10n, Tonja Stapleton,
Nancy Frazier: Madge Eachus, Rubi·
naHameed.
·
DIKbarges AprU 27 - Ernest
Hurt. Kelsey Stewart.
Dlscbal'les AprU 28 -· Lionel
Biggs, Harry Hill, Roger Thornton,
Letha Henthorn, Charles Parks.
(Published with permission)

•

Josenh .Spear

.!

Pill)' Goegleia Pickeas, $4,637.42;
Ed Durst. $1,914.78; Gerald Rought,
$786.83.
.

Hospital news

the&amp;\,

Shamelessly, the pols preach morals
If you.' II excuse me, I'm going to

' In the story on Meias County pri·
iillrY c:wnpaip expenditures in the
Sunday 'fimes-Sentinel, the Meia•
County Electioa 8olrd miJcalculal·
ed fi1ura for the following candi·
dates, with the comcted figures berc:

•

"I don'tlcnow. It's idle 10 specullre ·oppalled wbell Oinaricb tried tO
-.it's done.... J made a wbo!e lot of ~ political poiliiS over the mur~.
nustakes. Uld all of us have if we'rc 'der oh Chicaao wOIIUill lilt yem:. ·
honest (with qurselves). Bull don't

Correction

nnsmhy,Apri,JO
Al:euWCI!lhei-- ~ fot

Real message in Goetz verdict says a lot about us

Berry's Wo.rld

:p

•
Aprta, ,,.,

•

By The Auoclated Prea
--...
Today is Monday, April29, the I 20th day of 1996. There are 246 days
left
in the year.
.
- · I"' .. ,...,.
••
.
.
""
pullll-.
...
,
JfXIfl
nof , .. .uret a
.
Today's Highlight in History:
'
Lo,...;,...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _ _ _ _ _ __.,
OnApril 29, 1945, American soldiers liberated the Nazi c~centration
'

•

Pomeroy •llddl1port, Ohio

•

Wright laments. Wa~hington's loss of c~vil.ity
from eoa,reu.

111 Court St, POfiiii'OY, Ohio
814-tt2-21H• Fax: 91:2-2157

•

'

-

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

•

�•

•

.

S1 ~orts

.

The Daily Sentin~l

·

.

Monday, Api1121, 1188

Inc. Jns hand Blue· Jays 17-3 loss in-weekend seri.e s closer
TORONTO (AP)- If the sound
of ball against bat is sweet music to
Ole ears, Frank Violapit'hed a sym·
phony Sunday aftenioon- an unfin·
ished symphony.
· Sandy Alomar hit a three-run
flomc run and drove in four runs, and
Albert Belle homered and 'drove in
four runs as the Clevelana Indians
spoiled Viola's Toronto debut with a
17-3 victory over the Blue Jays.
Cleveland, which took the rubber

game of the dvu-game set and has
now won 13 of its last 16 games, col·
lected season highs in hits, with 20, •
and runs. The 17 runs is also the
most tllcy have scored against the
Blue Jays.
" I figwed I'd give up a lot of runs
today so I' ve got plenty of room for
improvement next time," Viola
joked. "But seriously, for me 10 survive, even wh.en I was healthy
befqre, I need location. And my loca-

'

tion wu horrible today."
Indians manager Mike HllJIOve
agreed.

Smokies. However, he hasn't pitched

S, 1995, and hasn't won since April
"The thing with Frank today was 27, 1994.
that all of his pitches wcnc up," said
It took less than an iMing for Vio.
HlU}Irove. " It doesn't matter who Ia to discover the difference between
you arc. If you leave balls up in the pitching in tlje minor leagues and
strike zone, you're going to pay."
facing the powerful Indians.
)Viola (0-1 ), who had surgery last • Kenny Lofton ;md Julio Franco,
May to,repair a tom elbow ligament, who had four hits, started the fi rst
Wl!S coming off. seven shutout
with singles. One out later, Belle sininnings for the !{noxville (AA) gled to score Lofton. Eddie Murray

Scoreboard
Nrw York 84, CLEVELAND 80:
New Yori leads stries 2-0

AL standings

l A L.aken 104 , Hous10n 94: serie1

East"" Divillon
.w " &amp;1.
New YO&lt;t ............., l2 10 -"5

r..

B alli~ .............. 1J
Toronto ....... ,........ JO
Detroit ...................... 9

II
14
17

.542
.411
.346

8 osron ......................6

19

.240

tied I · I
Utah 105. Port land 90; Ulah leads
nes 2.0

lill
J
5

8

.652

Oticqo.................. l4 9
Milwaukee ............. 12 II
Mia neaota ............. II 12
Katu.u City ........... 9 16

.609
..5U;
478
.360

Oaklond
Cali fonlia

f:LJ7

10
II
.. t2 11

.542

Jeuds senes 2-0

Sacramento 90. Seaule 81 : series tied
1-1

· J~

.600

.m

Toni&amp;hl
lnd111na at At lanra. H p.m. {lNT)
Uulh at Pon land, IO·JO p.m (TNT)

.\h

Saturday's J&lt;ores

Wtdnesd ay
CLEVELAN D at New York, 7 p.m.

iTBSi

.

Chicago at Minmi, 8 p.m. {TNT~
Utah ar Pen land, 9:30p.m., if llecell:lt)'

Kansas City 9, Boston 7
CLEVELAND 17, Toronto J
Oakbnd 6, Dmoil J
New York 6. Minnesora J
Texas 5, UaJtimore 4 '( 10)
O!icaao 10, California I
Milwaukee 16, Seanle 9

Thull'(fay

Orlando m Detroi r, TBA, ir necess ary
Indiana at Atlanta, TBA
L.A. Lakers nl Hou5 ton, TBA
Seattle at Sacraft"ltniO, TBA

Hockey
Saturday's first-rm\nd scores

.

Aorida 4, Boston .l; Florid01 wi n• st:·
ries 4· 1
Phtladcl ph ia 6. Ta mp u Bay I :
Phililde lphm wms S~::ries 4·2
St. Loui s 2, Toronto I; St. Louis wi 11s
~ie s 4-2
Colorado J, Vancouver 2; Colorado
wms series 4-2

Chi cn a o,1(Tap!lni 2· 0) a t CLEVE LAND (Marunez 3-2), 7:m p.m.
Detroit (Lima 0-0) at Boston (Wakefield J. ]J, 7:05p .m
Milwauktt (Miranda 1-0) at Toromo
(Hent&amp;en 3-2). 7:3S p.m.
New York (Peniue 3- 1) at Balt imort
(Rhodes 3-0), 7:35p.m.
Kansas City (V&lt;1lern 0- 1) 011 Minnesot01
(Hawk.in_s 1..0), 8:05,p.m.
Seanle (W olciMt 1-31 at Texas (Gross

Sunday's li...._round ~&lt;ores

Pi nsburgh 3. Washirig ton 2; Piusburgh wi ns stries 4-2
N.Y. R ;~nger1 S, Monl rea l J ; N.Y.
Rangm wi n series 4-2
Df:lroit 4, Wi nnipeg I; Detroit wins
series 4-2 •

J-2), R'Jl p.m.
California (Lai!J Sion I· 1) nl OaU and
(Prieto 1-I), IO:OS p.m.

Conference semifinals

NL standings

Thursday
flo rida at Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
~hicago ut c;~:q· 9 p.m ·

Eadem Division
Iattt
.w "8 .680
&amp;1.
Montreal ............... 17
Phillldelphia ........... o 10 5 65

N.Y. Rangers at . Pi;~burgh, 1:JO p.m
SL Louis at Detroi t. 7::\0 p.m.

.560
435

.:\85

Central Division
Houllon ............ ....1] 12 .520
Oaicaao ..,. .. ...... ... .1 2 IJ .41W
StLouis ................ 12 13 .480
Pinsbw&amp;h ............. .11 14 .440
CINCINNATI .......... 9 15 .J75

SaturdaJ
flo rida at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Chic:ago at Colorndo. 10 p.m. ·

I
I
2

'

Sunday, M•y S
N.Y. Rangen at Piusburgh, .\ p.m
St. Louis :Jt De troi t , ~ p.m.

:l\

Wnlem Di¥Won
9 .640
San Francisco ....... .1 3 12 .SlO
1..9, AnseJet .......... .l 2 14 .462
Colorado ..........: ... II IJ .458

Transactions

Sim Dieso ............... J6

Baseball
American League
·
BOS TON RED SOX : Place d DH
"Kc:v in ~itchcll on the: disabled li St Re-

Saturday's scores

Philadelphia J. CINCINNATI 2
Atlanta 7, St. Louis 2
Colomdo 6, Montreal S (I J)
SliD Francicco 6, A orida 3
New York 7," Pinsburgh 4
Olicago 4, Los Angeles ] (1 0)
Houslon 6, San Djego 0

NERVOUS

Sunday's scores

.\BOl'TTIIE

New Y&lt;Wk 7_, PiUsburgh 5
Philadelphia a1 CINCINNATI: ppd ..
rain .
Montre:~l 21, Colorado 9
&lt;.lticago 3, l-os Angeles 0
Houaon 3, San Diego 2
San Francisco 10. Aorid01 4
Atlanta a1 Sl. Louis, ppd ., r01m

BO'iD \1\RI\.LT'.'
Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
Available

Today's games
Hc uslon (Brocail J. l) n1 San Diego
(Hamilton 4-1). 4:05p. m.
All anta (Gia wute I·J) at St' l ou is .
(Stonlcmy~ 1-1), 7:05p.m. .
Montreal (Fnssero 1-2) at New Yorl::
(Hamitth J.I), J :40p.m .
O li cago (Fol!er J · l ) ar Los Angeles
(Valdtsl · l)~ l0:0.5p. m.

•

:•

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income

• High Safety'
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
All Kinds
Call for Information:

· Tuesday's games

,•

Philadelphiot (Williams 0. 1) a1 Aorida
j &lt;Rapp 0-J), 7:05 p.m.
'•
Pinsbur&amp;h {Neagle 2- 1) at C INCIN• NATI (Smiky 1·2), 7:]5 p.m.
,•
• Montreal (P. M01rtinez 2-1) 011 Ne:w

• Yort&lt;!Ciart&lt; 1·2), 7:40 p.tn.
•
Al la nt a (Sm o ltz 4- 1)

· • ( Dnlbek 0.2~ H:05 p.m.

iii

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698-4011 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710 ·

Houston

·:
St. Louis (Alan Benes J . J) lll Oticago
'. (Bullinger 1-2), 8:05p.m.
·.Colorado (Ritt 2-2) nt Los Angeks
' : (Nomo ~-2), 10:05 p.m.
•
San Francisco (Wa1son 1-J) at San
, • DieSO (rewksbury J-0). 10:05 p.m.

.

•
••
•
•'
•

r-""'

NHL pla9bffs

Tuesday'.s games

,
,•
,•
::

.

San Ant onio a1 Phoenix. 10:30 p.m.

Today's games

'

(18 5 )

(TNT)

Sellltle (Bosio 2-1) at Milwnukee ( M~:­
DonalcU-1), I:IS p.m.
California {Grimsley 1-0) at Chicato
(Alvarez 1-2), 7:05 p.m .
Te1as (Pavlik 3..0) a1 Baltilllln (Mercker 2-1), 7 : ~ 5 p.,n.
kansu City (HllDf'y 0-4 ) at Minnesota

Atlanta ............... .... l-4 II
New York ..... ...... 10 IJ
F'lof"ida ............... .:..10 16

.

Basketball

CINCINNATI REDS: AcUvarEd LHP
Chuck McFJroy from tN: 1 5-da~ disabled
lts1. Oplloncd RHP Kevin Jarv11 ilDd OF
C had Monola to Ind ia napoli s of rhe
Americ:m Anoc:ia.ion. Recalled 28 Eric
Owen! from indianapolis.
COLORADO ROCKIES: Optioned
RHP Bryan Raker to Colorado Sprinas of
I ~ Pacific Coas1 l..Eque.

(TNT)

Sunday's scores

• Annuities are issued by Insurance
and have substantial

Compani~s

penalties for early wilhdrawals.

r- ~

\

•

Basketball
N•ltonal 8-*etb.ll Aa odation
MILWAUK EE BUC~ : Fired Mike
Dunlea vy coact. but anoouDCCd he will n:·
main as geoer.~l manager. · .
WAS HINGTON BUllETS: Ex« t·
cised the option on the contract or G Tim
U!gkr.

Southern girls defeat
Beaver Eastern twice

Spurs, Magic,
Bulls and Kings
tally· victories

•

j

•

•

••

The Southem Tomllllo softball
Thomas picked ap the will. ~
Jtam posiCd two stunning victories suffered the lou.
Saturday doubleheader over the
In the sec:ond pme. Soudlenl
Beaver Eastern Eagles.
blasted to a 2-0 lead then wear u. 10
Scoring six runs in the first shut out the Eaales 9-&lt;l behind the
inning, coach Howie Caldwell's Tor- pitching of freshman Kim S.yrC.
nadoes (13-3) rolled to an easy 28- Southern took a 2-0 lead in the first
13 victory in the opener. Cynthia when Cynthia Caldwell sinJ)ed,
Caldwell walked to lead off the Tassie Cummi n walked, s.mmi
game, Tassie Cummins si ngled, Sisson walked and Keri Caldwell
Amber Thomas tripled, Sammi Sis- had a two-run single.
son, Keri Caldwell, Jennifer CumSouthern scored again in the secmins, Amy Northup and R. Manuel ond after Sayre held the Beavcritc$
each walked and Angie Carleton sin- ir. check. Northup and Carleton cacfl
gled.
walked. Cynthia Caldwell singled
The Eagles came back to lie it at and Thomas singled for a 5-0 lead.
6-6 as the fi reworks began on an
Southern plated four more in tJt
afternoon-long slugfcst. Southern fourth, then held Pike the res1 of lht
came back with seven runs in 11Je way. ~outhern hiuers were Cynthia
second, pushing the scone to 13-6, a Cald)"ell 3·4 with three singleS:
more common score for a football Thomas and K. Caldwell 2-4 will)
contest. The. big hits in thai inning Thomas slamming a triple, Sayre a
were Tassie Cummins' triple and a double and single and J. Cummins
hard hit ball by Jennifer Cummins single.
':
thai was misplayed in the field.
Scott, Roberts, Pence and Webb
Southern went up 20-9 in the led Pike with singles.
third inning and gfadually pulled
Southern goes to Trimble tonight.:
away for the big win.
Inning tnta's..fint am
•
Southem hillers were Amber Southem......•...607-702-6=28-13-2 :
Thomas, who was perfect al 4-4 with Beaver................61 0-2 13·x= 13-9-3 :
two triples and two doubles; and
WP - Thomas
Tassie Cummins, whio was 3-4 with
LP -Scou
a triple and two singles. Cynthia lnniDg tnt•lc-suood &amp;llllC
•
Caldwell was 2·5 , Keri Caldwell 2- Southem .............. 230-400-x=9-l 0-1 :
2, Angie Carleton had two hits and · Beaver..... , ........... 000-000-0=0-4-3 :
Sisson singled.
WP - ~ ayre
•
LP - ::.con
:

By The •sso clal d PNu
It wu • creat day for superstars and a lousy night for SuperSonics in the
NBA playoffs.
·
.
. M~hacl Jordan, .~vid Robinso~ and Shaquille O'Ncalled their lcamS to
YJc~s Sunday, gtvtng them 2-0 leads in their best-of-five opening-round
senes.
•
While Chicago, San Antonio and Orlando won, the other division winner •
lost in shocking fashion after easily winning the opener of its series.
• The Seattle SuperSonics, hauntc&lt;! by first-round playoff exits the past two
: y~. wet:e beaten 90-81 by the Sacramento Kings, the only playoff team
• wtth ~ lostng regular-season record. It was the Kings' first postseason vic: tory stnce 1981, when the franchise was based in Kansas City.
• "Everything changes in the playoffs," said Mitch Richmond, who scored
• 37 pomts for Sacramento. " It underlines what happens during the -regular
·

a

21 potnts, but tied a career high with nine turnovers.
"We're going to have to come up with son1e answers," Kemp said.
Robinson had 40 points and 2 I rebounds - both career playoff highs • as San Antonio beat Phoenilt 110-105. Was he answering critics who say he's
" too soft" to win a championship?
"I'm not out to prove anything' to anyone. The only thing on my mind is
. winning games," Robinson said.
'
O'Neal scored 29 points on 13-for-19 shooting and grabbed seven
rebounds despite playing ooly 36 minutes because of foul trouble in Orlan, do's 92-77 win civer DcJroit. He alSo ~~dill assists.
"Anytin.e I get double-teamed, I'm going to get the ball to ooe of the
shooters," he said. "lbaf s just smart, unselfish basketball."
Jordan scored 26 of his 29 points in the first half as Chicago ,routed MiaBLOCKS SHOT- Miami'• AlOnzo Moumlng (left) blocka the ahot
mi 106-75.
• '
of Ch1c8go'1 Michael Jordan In the 11co.'ld quertar of Sunday'• NBA
Jotdan hun his back when he drove to the basket and was fouled by Chris . first-round playoff game In Chicago, where the Bu111' 106-75 victoGatling with 2:39left in the first half. Arter making two free llirows, he went rY put them lhud 2-11 In their belt.of.flve aeries. (AP)
;
. to the locker room for treatment. Jonlan returned and played the entire third
way. Anfemee Hardaway and Nick Anderson scored I~ apiece tor the Mag·
: quarter before sitting out the final period.
1
" I'm all right," Jonlan said. "It was one of diOSe spasm things. I went ic, while Dennis Scott and Horace Grant each had 14. Allan Houston led
•
up for a shot and twisted my back. It won't be anything to keep me out of DetrOit with 23 points, and Otis Thorpe had 16 rebounds and I0 points. Grant
Nelson led Eastern at 4-4. Aeik-:
Eastern's softball team boosted its
the next game."
Hill scored 19 on 8-for-18 shooting.
record io 9-1 by defeating league foe er was 3-4, Sampson 2-3, White 2-:
Bulls 106, Heal 75-- At Chicago, Scottie Pippen .had 24 points, eight Trimble 16-0 behind a no-hit shutout 4, with singles from Kim Mayle,• .
The playoffs resume today, with Indiana visiting Atlanta, and Utah play. ing at Porjland. The Pacers and Hawks split their first two games, while the rebounds and eight assists aS .the Bulls humbled the Heat. Dennis Rodman from senior hurler Rehecca Evans. Martie Holter, and Milhoan.
:
: Jazz lead the 1Tail Blazers 2-0.
was ejected laic in the third q~r ;dter getting his second technical for slap- Trimble drops to 4-8.
Coffman was the losing pitche(.
In other first-round series; the New York Knicks lead Cleveland 2-0 and ping at Miami's Alonzo Mourning after a whistle. As he left the court, RodEvans was the defensi ve star in with one strike out and nine walks.:
· the Houston is tied 1- I with the Los Angeles Lakers.
man made an obscene gesture a1 referee Bill Oakes.
In earlier action last week, East-•
pitching the no-hitter, while junior
Spun 110, SIIDS lOS -At San Antonio, Robinson scored 13 points in
Mourning 1)ad another subpar game with 14 points and seven turnovers. Patsy Aeiker was the offensive star. . em defeated Vinton County 15-S:
· the final quarter as the Spurs held off the Suns. Phoenix had a chance to tie The Miami center, who &amp;'¢raged 23 points during the regular season. was Aeiker pounded out a two-run home with Evans picking up the win~
in the closing seconds, but A.C. Green shot an airball from three-point range held to I 0 points and two rebounds in Game I before fouling out.
run over the left field fence, becom- Evans fanned seven and walked'
•
• and San Antonio's Chuck Person made two free throws to clinch the win.
Kinp 90 SuperSonics 81 -At Seaule, the Kings went ahead to stay, ing the first girl ever to h.t the ball two.
'
Sean Elliott scored 19 points for the Spurs, and Avery Johnson had IS assists. . 74-72, on a jump hook by Michael Smith with 6:34 left. Olden Polynice, out of the park at Eastern Stadium.
· Eastern hillers were Kim Mayle;
, Charles Barldty led Phoenix with 30 points and 20 rebounds, while Kevin Sacramento's starting center, grabbed 16 rebounds, but sat out the fourth quar~ AI the time, the shot gave Eastem•an Tracy White and )uli Hayman with:
ter after bruising his right thigh: "They're going to have to shoot me to keep 8-0 lead.
Johnson added 21 points and 16 assists.
two hits each, following Pa,tsy Aeik-:
· . Mqie 92, Pistons 77 :.... At Orlando, the Magic took command with a me from playing Tuesday night," he said. Gary Payton, who scored 29 points .
Evans struck out eight and er with two doubles and a single.•
I 2-0 run in the third quarter after the Pistons had taken a 50-49 lead. Orlan- for Seattle in Game I , was plague,d by foul trouble in the second half and walked one in facing just one over Nelson, Evans and Holter each had:
do led by eight after three quarters, and Detroit got no_closer th_e rest of the finished with only I 0 points.
the minimum I 5 batters. Evans singles.
·
•
struck out two of three batters every
Eastern also held Federal Hock-·
inning except one.
ing winless by defeating the Lancers:
Eastern took a 3-0 lead when Kim · 14-0 with Evans picking up yet:
Mayle singled, Nicole Nelson sin- another win . •
:
gled and Mindy Sampson singled.
Eastern hitters were Mayle, Nel-,
Then Evans reached on an error to son, White. Meredith Crow, Aeiker,:
Sean Bergman (2-2) allowed two bring home another run .
By nie Asaoclated Preu
nine runs in one-plus innings.
Sampson, Jennifer Mora, Evans. •:
Cubs 3, Dodpn 0
Mon(fcal set a team record for
San Francisco st.arlllr . William runs and six hits in seven innings and
Tracy While knocked Nelson a. . Holter, Hayman and Milhoan. ~H
Frank Castillo (1-2) pitched
Awil wiRJ in style, with its highest- Chicago's first shutout ofthe'Season, VanLandin~ ct-4) limited visit- struck out nine, matching his career Amanda Milhoan home with a two· ern pounded out 10 hits in aiL
scoring game ever.
run double. Then Aeiker slammed
B.ond had the lone J.:ancer hit. :
outdueling Chan Ho Park with a six- ing Florida to one run and two hits high. .
Mels
7,
Pirates
S
in
seven
innings.
Darrin FleJcher and J?avid -~gui hitter. He struck out five and walked
her two-run shot for an 8-0 lead. Nel·
Eastern hosts Alexander toniglit. ·:
Bobby Jones ( 1-1) gave up five son also liad an RBI in the inning.
each hit grand slams Sunday, leading - t\1VO. •
Astros 3, Padres l ·
Inning~
-.
Darryl Kile (3-2) held San Diego runs ~nd seven hits in 8 113 innings
the Expos 10 a 21 -9 rout of the ColWhite had a giant three-run tripl Eastern .......... .......355-3x= 16-14-3
P3rk (2-1) allowed two runs and
orado Rockies.
dvu hits in 5even innings, ·including to five hits in eight innings and at Three Rivers Stadium, and John 'in the third inning to cap a 5 RBI Trimble...................000-00=0-0-4
"We' re cit fuego (on fire), " an RBI single by Scott Servais in the struck out a season-high nine. He Franco got two outs for his fourth night, while Aeiker ended the night
WP-Evans
Fletcher said .. "We're doing every- sillth. The visiting Cubs got an fanned Tony Gwynn twice; the save.
, with four RBI,
_
LP-Coffman
Rico Brogna's two-run single finthing right. We've got guys through- unearned run in the fourth without a defending NLbatting champion had'
not struck out in 69 previous plate ished off a three-run sixth inning as
our the lineup hitting .300 - guys hit.
.
.
.·
appearances this season.
the Mets, down Z-0, rallied against
that feel two hits (a game) is comGiants 10, Marlins 4
Derek Bell went · 2-for-4 and Pittsbwgh for the second consecutive
. monplace. We're just really banging
Matt Williams and Mark Carreon
the ball around."
had consecutive homers in a five-run drove in two runs for visiting Hous- game.
Montreal scored .19 runs six limes ftrsL San Francisco.added four runs ton, including an RBI doublf in the
Paul Wagner (3-2) gave up five
Wahama's baseball team swept Inning tota!s-ftnt 2llDK
eighth.
Todd
Jones
pitched
t~inth
previously. At17-8, the Eltpos have in the ~ond against Chris Hamruns and eight hits in 6 113 innings
visiting
River Valley in a double- River Valley.........000- 111 -0:3-7. 3 :
the best record in baseball.
and struck out nine.
\
mond ( lf4), tagged for nine hits and for his .£0urth sa.Je.
header
Saturday.
winning 7-3 and Wahama..... ......... .41 0-002·•=7-8-1
. "They"ve got a confidence going,
10-1.
WP - Cundiff
you can see it," Colorado's Dant.e
In the first game, Keitll Cundiff
LP - . Kelley
Bichette said.. "They have no fear
and an unknown reliever combined lnDjng tolals-sesond &amp;IIIK
s)Ninging th~ bat. It's good to sec. I ·
to strike out 12 and walk six to get · . RiyerValley.;..... .. I00-000-0=1 -~ - 1 : ..
like that team ."
the win. David Kelley, the Raiders'
Defending
Winston
Cup
champiSegui finished with a career-beS~KEN BERGER
lin's yellow Chevy fell back in the
Wahama...........024-301 -x= 10- 10-0 •
$tarting
pitcher, struck out three and
six RB!s and Fletcher's five matcheo;l .
LADEGA, Ala . .(AP) 43;car field , only to charge to the on Jeff Gonion was squeezed into
WP-Ord
:
walked four in a complete-game
the wall in tunl one, leaving Mark
LP- Stanley
:
his personal high. F.P. Santangelo . About
only ordinary thing about front again.
loss. ·
added career bests with four hits and this chaotic race day· at Talladega
"It ran great,·it handled great, and Martin nowhere to go.
•
.
Wahama' s hitters were Lane
Martin's car slammed into the
five RBJs.
Superspeedway was seeing Sterling Sterling drove his heart out," Glover
The NCAA
introduced
a
com•
.
wall and spun back across the track Young (3-3), Jeremy Tucker (2. 2), puter-ratmg
. "Somewhere down the line, I Marlin in victory lane.
.
said.
system to the post-sea- •
won't bave that kind of cushion,"
Marlin, who is becoming the
Marlin nosed into the lead for the into the path of several cars. Gabe Scott (1 ,2), Scott Yonker (1 -3), son basketball tournament in 1981. · :
Expos starter Kirk Rueter said. "I master of superspeedway racing, last time on lap 167, 'passing Terry Craven's car flipped several times and Dale Johnson (1 -4). River Val•
•
have to go into games with the iclea stayed away from two tumultuous Labonte. Marlin and Dale Jarrett and rolled against the fence above ley's hitters were Greg James, Don
·Jn 1994 Bill Clinton became the •
I won't have thai ·kind of run sup- wrecks and overcame setbacks on pit pulled away from the pack, and Jar- the retaining wall just before turn Wamsley (both 2·4), Jody Slone (I · first president in office to attend an :
.
.
road to win the Winston Select 500 rett's car was not strong enough to two, sheering much of the metal 2), Kevin Edwanls and Jamie Gru- NCAA basketball tournament game: :
. •· port~ "
ber (both 1· 3),
from the car.
At Coon Field. Rueter (2· 1) gave on Sunday. .
overtake Marlin alone.
••
In the second game, the White
Craven
was
the
only
driver
who
up two runs in six innings with four
In winning his second s_traight
Dale Earnhardt, held up in lapped
strikeouts and a walk.
race at Talladega after captunng the traffic on the final spin around the required hospitalization . A CAT- Falcons erased their guests' .J.o lead .
Montreal, which had 20 hits, DieHard 500 _last July, Mar/ in 2.66-mile ·oval , finished third, fol- · scan and X-rays proved negative, in the second inning and shut them
scored seven runs in the first ciff remamed the dnver to beat on these lowed by Labonte and Michael Wai- and Craven was listed in stable COR· out from that inning forward .
Wahama pitchers Chad Ord and
dition in intensive care. He was in a
Bryan Rekar ( 1-2). He was tagged long, fast tracks. The Chevrolet trip.
lason
King combined to strike out
neck
brace
and
complaining
of
a
sore
for 11 runs and 10 hits in 2 113 MonteCarlodriverhastwovictories
" It wasagood,competitiverace,
12,
walk
five and toss a two-hitter.
inning~.
. each at Daytonll and Talladega, the but it wasn't any fun, " said Earn- back.
Jake"Schuldt.
whose 1-for-3 hitting
In other games, Chicago beat Los biggest and fastcsl venues on lJle cir- ·hardt, who maintained his lead in the 1
Cars driven by Gordo_n, Martin, included a triple, and Chris Maynard,
Angeles 3-0; San Francisco beat cuit, among his five career victories. series points standings, 77 ahead of Ernie Irvan, Rusty Wallace and sev· who singled in three at-bats, were the
Crew _chief Tony Glover gor a Jarrett.
Florida 10-4. Houston beat San
1
eral others also were damaged heav- only Raiders to get hits. River ValDiego 3-2 and New York beat Pitts- Gatorade bath when it was all over.
Gond and competitive were per· ily. Gordon, who finished 33nl, saw
burgh 7-5. Two games were rained
"Tony had the car set up flaw- haps not tbe wonls to describe this his streak oftop-three finishes end at ley pitchers Nate Stanley and Mor·
gan Sullivan struck out one and
oitt: Philadelphia at Cincinnati and less," Marlin said. "It's probably the day of racing. Bill Elliott and Ricky
six
races.
walked four.
Atlanta at St. Louis.
.jlest race car I've el&gt;er had."
Craven were hospital ired after scp·
'
Wahama's hitters were Joey
Marlin's setup and his kn~ck for arate crashes on an afternoon that
Mayes (2-3), King (2-4), Yonker (I·
taming ,superspecdways again had _evoked memories of Talladega's
1), Scott (1 -2), Grant Huff, Johnson,
his competitors shalci ng their heads. most tragic days.
Tucker
(al l 1-3) and David Mitchell
Marlin, who has all his victories
On lap 78, Elliott's Ford Thun(1-4)
.
. since ·the 1994 season, has figured derbird spun on the backstret~h and
. (Continued from Page 4)
The Raiders are scheduled to
He struck out one and walked two. o~t a way to muimize horsepower sailed I 0-15 feet in the air with its
host
Jackson today. The White FalAlvaro ~noza even got into the without blowing up his epgine. He nose up. It landed on its rear, which
cons
are slated to play al Southern
act,.hitting his rtrst home run of the also kftows something about maneu- was swept over the nose as it went
Tuelday.
o
Meigs will play New Lexington
season, a two-run shot in the sixth ott vering through the dense - and hec- airborne again. The car slid back:
tic -. Talladega traffic, and when to ward to a stop after landing with a1 Rock Springs on Tuesday, May 7
Giovanni Carrara.
tremendous force on all four tires.
in the first round of Division II secAlbie Lopez, however, didn't talcc do it.
"If
you
get
the
lead
here
at
TalElliott
pulled
down
his
window
tional softball tournament aCtion.
· advantage of the run support the way
ladcga
with
about
20 to go, it's awful
flap
and
waved.
Team
memjlers
colThe Meigs-New Lexington winHargrove would have liked.
hprd
to
pass,"lliid
Mailiti,
who
averlccled
his
racing
uniform
and
helmet
'
ner
will play the winner of the con· "He looked like he was rushing
aged
149.998
mph;
and
collected
while
Elliott
was
transported
to
a
test Jx:twcen second•seeded Belpre
himself the whole game," flllrgrove
SIQ9,845.
.
'
Binilingham
laospital,
where
he
was
and
River Valley on Friday, May 10
said. '"I don 'I know how long I
It
looked
like
a
bleak
beginning
scheduled
to
have
surgery
oo
his
in
Belpre.
The winner will advance
would have gone with him if we hadfor
Marlin
when
he
had
to
steer
onto
fractured
thigh
today.
·
to
district
play
at· Waverly.
n't scored a lot of runs."
pit
road
on
lap
seven
because
his
car
With
drivers
and
fans
left
to
In
the
upper
bracket, Sheridan
•Lopez gave up three runs on nine :
hits, including solo homers,by Sandy was ovetfteating. With that problem 1 wonder about the fate of one of the .drew the top seed and will play the
Martinez, his first, Carlos Dclgllllo, fixed, Marlin had to pi,t out of circuit's mosl popu!ar drivers, a winner of the May 7 game between
36279
f}(j.
PottfUO!J,
tumultuous.l4-car wreck on lap 130 Alexander and· Nelsonville-York.
his sixth and iecond .in as . IIWiy sequence again during . a 1 caution
g..-, a.ld &amp;fSpr~~~~e. his aeventh. . period on lap 8S, ~ time for tires: again reminded everyone of how Sheridan and the · AleJtander/Nel992-2762
•
frightening a djly at the track can sonv)lle·York winner
play for
Lopez stnd: out five and walked A third time, Marlin pitted on lap
140 for a splash of fuel. Again, Marbecome.
lite sectional finals on May 10.
four over six plus inninp.

In NL action,

Expos, Cubs and Gia.n ts among victors.

lloc:key

Nation•! HockeJ ~ue
PITTSBURGH PENG IN S: Re called ~ Phillippe DeRouville, 0 Siefan
Be~ lvtsr &lt;~nd F Run y Fi ttgetald fro m
CL VELAND of the IHL.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS' R0&lt;3lled
D John Namestnikov fro m Syrac use of
!he! AHL

100 Years 95 Years .92 Years

ll•ydeath
oeeurred
to•orrow, I'd
expect my
funeral to cost...

·a Over $10,000
a $5,000to $10,000
a $2,500 to $5,000
.a $1,000 to $2,500
0 Under $1 ,000
a I have no idea

Forest Hill Cleaners

Safler'slnc.

, . _ 555-1022
Elllbllllllcl11115

Pllonl555-2211
Elllbhltld 1100

80 Years

78 Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Phone 55H782
Estlbllahld 1115

Ph- 555-8242
Eallblllhld 1917

70 Years

67 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

, . _ 5!15-9245

Phllnl555-4431
. Emllllhld 1103'

61 Ye•rs
Years
Ball-rity Bonds
Phona 555 6565

El1ablllhed 1941 .

so

Phone 555-4m
Elllllllllltd 1951 .

" ' - 555-5134

EtilbJind 1948

25 Years

led-eire Center Inc. Trlskett PartY Center

'IIie (janfen Spot · ·. ·

·Ball Security Bondi
Pttont 555·•u
ESIIIIIIIhld Ita

S&amp;MLandlca;ing
" ' - 555.51511
Elllblllhld 1155
..

.30 Years

· --- ·-- ·

52 Years

44 Years ·40 Years
Kramer &amp;Sons

949-3210

.

EIWblllllltl1.a.

Phone 555 9988
Ettllllllhtcl1135

.on

.

Pllone555 ....

Coin &amp;Stamp Center

Funeral Dome

Wahama diamondmen
sweep RVHS in twinbill

Marlin wins Winston Select 500

60 Years

£re10eeias ·

89

Anter Bros. Co. .

Ellllllllhecl1925

Funeral planning
makes good sense.
Call us for your FREE
copy of the 20-page
booklet, "A Guide to •
Planning Ahead".
There is no obligation.

PlloneSSS 1855
Elllblllhld 1115

Phllni5SH267
Elfllllllhlcl1170

20 Years

..

Crystal Glass Co.
Phone

555-.,.,..

&amp;llblllhld.11ft
.'

The "Honor Roll" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
The· Daily Sentinel.
The ·Cost Is Only $12

Located just North of the State Highway
Garage on Route 7
Evenings: 5:30- 9:00.Sat. 9-9
Sunday 1-9

Monday April 29th

'l(OCXSP1{19{{jS fj~/£9{.T!J{IPS
!l{pck!prings

CALL DAVE OR BOB AT 992·2155
TO LIST YOUR BUSINESS.
'

Meigs to face
New Lexington
in D-11 sectional

fjran4 Op~nintl

DON'T BE LEFT OUT•••

•

.

Indians win ••.

DAVE·YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!

'

•

The Dilly Sentlnill• Pagel

Eastern softball crew· ·:.
hammers Trimble 16-0 :

Football

w:n-.mm-.

,

---------

IND IANAPOL.lS "COl TS': Re-iigned
DE Fredd&amp;e Joe Nunn to a one-year contrat: l Annou ncc:d the retirement of WR
Wendell Davis. Signed WR Avery Anderson.
· NEW YO RK G IANTS : Sig ned K
Daron Alcotfl , WR Kevi n Aleunder, S
Percy Ellsworth, DT Darnell Gilliard, l B
Moses Reg ular, C B T im Sensley, RB ·
Raben Walker, and C B Mark Washin&amp;·
ton. "
NEW YORK JETS ' S;pe&lt;~ DE Jeff
Faul Jsper :J nd FB. Malcolm Marshall 10
one- year coatrocls.

Racine~

In ·the NBA Playoffs,

~e star Shawn Kemp returned from a one-game suspcnsioo and scored

-

---

Varieties of Tomatoes, Peppers, Cucumbers,
Squash, Cantaloupe,.Brussel Sprouts ana
Watennelon: 6 colors of S,latice

I.

/

tO\.\.
-Of
-·-

MONTR EA L EXPOS' Placed OF

Ronde II White on the I 5-day di sab~ lill
NEW YORK METS : Acth•ated OF
Cnrl Evt"mt from dw: IS-day di sibled liS!.
~b oned RHP Robert Person lo Norfolk
the lnrem!lfionall..eAgue.
.
PJTISBURGH PIRATES: Purchased
the COfll ract of RHP Joe: Boevcr from Carol i~ of the Sou thern l..eague. Placed LHP
Zane: Smith on the I S-d6 disabled list.
T ra n lf~: rred LHP Ste:we. ooke from 1be
15-day diubJed list to the 60-day disabled
liSI ,

.: NBA playoffs
:Jligfi Q}ulfity Pfants
Competitive Prices
~----- R .ANNUALS** HANGING BASKETS
I
*~ VEGETABLES

•;

--------

N•lionaiLcapc

Tu6Ciay
Orlnndo at Detrmt. 8 p.m. nwn
L.A lak.en aJ Houston, 9 p.m. {TBS)
Se01ttle at Sacramenlo, IO:JO p.m.

Kansas City 10. Bosii1A 0
Toronto I I , CLEVEl AND 6
Oaklaml"4, Dct roil I
Te11.as 41 Ballimore 2
Seank: 6, Milwaukee 5, ·
Minne10ta 8, New York 6 ( 10)
O.iCago 2, Clllifornia I

!Pom 0-0). 3'0l p.m.

RH P Jim Corsi o n~ IS-da)' disabled
, list Recalled RHP Bill Taylor and RHP
Mwk Am from Edmomoa of the Plcific
Coas t League. Oesi anated RHP Aaron
Small fot as~nmenl.
TORO 0 DLUE "JAYS: Sent RHP
Je(f Wift 10 S~ of die lnlemalional
Uaaue. Purchased the co ntract of LHP
Frank Vioi:J from Knoxvi lle of the Southem LcaJUC.

. Pam• roy. 'lddllport, Ohio

: season doesn't matter. u

·---

OAKLAN DATHLETICS' Plat:ed

San Antonio 110. Pfl oel)n fOS; San
Antonio leads Rrit'S 2.()
Ch1cago 106 , Miami 75 ; Chic ogo

FutUre games

8

IS
.. IJ

aad' RHP Cbna
Ciu"penter for ;anianmeat. Pwdaued the
contract of RHP ManbaJl.Boze from New
Orlearu of the American·Associarion. Recalled RHP Ramon Garcia from ~ Or·
leans

Orlu.ndo 92. Detrou 77 ; Orlando luds

Westem DMsion
...... 16

BREWERS' Deli4·

5COCS l -0

I
J
4
7

1

MILWA~ KEE
Ml£d RHP M.-k l{jefer

&amp;e•

Sunday's first-round J&lt;ores

7~

Central Division

CLEVELAND....... 15

Texas . ~..
Sean~ ..... .

1· 1
.
Indiana 102. Atlama 94 (OTI; lt!ries

lied

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

&lt;ailed OF Phil Clrl from Prii..W. of
the 1.,-narionaJ t..ea,LC.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS' R&lt;!ldood
Of Patrick Lennon. Purchased the c::oa·
1ract of l NF Crail Pa!Juene hom Omaha
or thr American AssottllioD
.

Saturday's nrst-round ~&lt;ora

Baseball

thought he wasn' t bad. For a guy to
give up that many hits, he has to
throw a Jot of slrikcs." , ,
Belle's RBI single and $acrifice
flies by Ramirez and Al01118' put the
Indians up 9-0 in the secOnd before
Belle hit his ninth home run of the
season, a solo shot to left for a 10-0
lead in the fourth.
Viola gave up 10 runs, nine
earned on I 0 ~er four innings.
(See INDIANS oo Page S)

foilowed witli a run-scoring single
before Manny Ramirez hit a hard
grounder 10 second. The ball deflect·
ed o!f Domingo Cedeno's glove for
an error, allowing Belle to score.
Alomar hit Viola's next pitch to
left for a three-run home run. his sec:·
ond of the season, and a 6-0 Indians
lead.
" I thought (Viola's) velocity was
good," Aiomar said. " But it looked
like he doesn't have his curve yet. I

at the major league level since Sept.

,

lloncllly, April 21, , _

will

'

'·

•

'

'

Oliio

�'

-

.

..

'

---

•

~..-

•

.

-he Bend
.:~Beta

Sigma Phi observes

.
.

The l)aily Sentinel
-

Pa:ge.t
M()f1$Jy, Aprll21, 1111

''

.Pe..op.le who .outlive their retrrement income

. q5th anniversary in Athens

BY 1!0 PETERSON,
Social SecUrity

- Tbe fastest growing seiment of
the population today is the age 85
plus. Your cbanfes of being amons
that number are dramatically
increa~ as medical science slelldily advances. From a planning perspective, you need to be thinking

abOOt retirement income that will
grow with you no inaner how long it
~NN~ger,Athens
takes.
.
There was a time wllen the worst
Social Security retirelnent benefits
thing thai could happen in old age
are paid as early as age 62 and conwas a calaSirophic illness thai deplettinue for life. The benefits are
ed your savings and left you unable
designed to be a ~ of income in
to support yourself. One o.f the facts ·
retirement, something you can build
•
of life I've become aware of recenton to meet your lifestyle needs. The
ly is the very real possibility many
·benefits replace about 42 percent of
people face in retirement--aod that is
prior earnings for workers with average lifetime earnings; they in~rease
the risk -of outliving thCir relirCrneni
Mic!Jie Byers of Portland has ann~ally with increases in the cost of
income. People are living longer, and
in some• cases, their income is not enrolled m the Electronics Engineer· living. However, you have other
lasting asrlong as necessary to cover ing Technology program at ILTI option.s as to how much those beneTechnical Institute, Dayton.
the needs of the later years.
tits will be depending on the age at
The local .campus is one of a which you retire.
nationwide network of 58 mTechIf you retire at age 62. your bennical Institutes . operated by lndi- efit will be reduced for every month
adapolis-based m Educational Ser- before age 65 and the month_ you
vices, Inc.
retire, to a maximum of 20 percent
The eight-quarter program which
If you retire after 65, your benefit
begins June 17 qua~lies enrollees for will increase for every month after 65
an entry level position in the elec- aitd the month you retire. In 1996the
'Ironies engineering field.
. increase is 5 percent a year, gradual-

: The 6Sth annivenary ofB~ Sig- Logan of Xi Gamma Mu; and coma Phi was observed with a winners Ruth Ann Riffle and Ann
,ilQUnder's Day banquet stage at the Rupe of Preceptor Beta Beta.
Sportsman in Athem Thursday night
Custer ant! Jane Ann Aanestad
: Alk:nding were 6S members of the were winners of the door prizes. The
four Meigs County chapters, Xi floral arrangements on the tables
Gamma Mu, Xi Gamma Epsilon, were also awarded in a drawing.
Ohio Eta Phi and Preceptor Beta•
Xi Gamma Epsilon sponsor
Beta, host for the observance chaired Phyliss Hackeu was introduced and
byAnnRupe.
given a gift to honor her retirement
The welcome and opening ritual after I 0 years of service 10 the chapwas followed by the dinner ~rved at ter.
tables decorated with pink floral
arrangements, royal blue accessories,
Rupe extended appreciation to
.aiKI hurricane lamps
the social commiuee headed by Ruth
· ·The speaker's table, seating soror- Ann Riffle. She announced next
ity officers and sponsors, was deco- year's Sigma Beta Phi theme would
rated with Beta Sigma Phi's symbol be "Reflections of Love."
.Yellow roses. in addition !o the pink
Attending were Carol McCulflowers.
lough, Jean Powell, Ruth Ann Riffle,
· · Theme for l99S-1996 was "The ' Dorothy Sayre, fl!orma Custer,
Dreamcafcher" and that was carried Clarice Krautter, Charlotte Elberout at the banquet with seals on the feld, Ann Rupe, Debbie Toundas, Patname tags. Pany favors of yellow 'ty Pickens, Julia Houdashell, Eleanor
rose key chains were given to those McKelvey, Linda Faulk, Joan Corder,
auetiding.
Jane Walton, Rose Sisson, 'Mary
Officers of the chapters were Woods, Lynn Wright, Jeanette
introduced and Norma Custer read Thomas, Jackie Hoover, Jean Werry,
.tite message from the International Kay Logan.
_
Office of Beta Sigma Phi.
Maurisha Nelson, Terri Fife,
~ . Recognized were the Valentine .Christy Lyn9h, Sharon Stewan, Judy
Girls from Xi Gamma Epsilon, Ohio Williams, Cindy Facemyer, Karin
·E!ta Phi and Xi Gamma Mu, Sharon Johnson, Paige Cleek, Jane Ann Hospitalized
Robert E. Waldnig of Racine has
'srewart, Cynthia Facemyer, and Mar- Aanestad, Debbie Hauber, Cheryl
been
readmitted 10 the hospital for
jorie Blake, respectively.
Facemyer, Debbie Miller, Donna
continued
treatment of cancer. Cards
Judy Williams introduced Xi Byer, Julie Hubl)ard. Deborah Lowmay be sent to him at Camden-Clark
Gamma Epsilon's new sorority ery, Beth Stivers.
pledges, Julia Houdashelt and Terri
Kay Adkins, Margie Blake. Bar- Memorial Hospital, Room 514, 800
Fife. Another pledge, Susie Casto. bara Black, Marilyn Poulin, Charlotk: Garfield Ave., Parkersburg, W. Va.
\.Vas unable to attend. Houdashelt was Hanning, Sandy Hanning, Sheila 26101 .
named Xi Gamma Epsilon's Pledge Harris, Pat Arnold, Paula Haynes,
o'f·the Year and presented with a gift. Linda Bates, Bethany Gaul, Kathy
Darry I Sittler of Toronto scored
Ohio Eta Phi introduced their two Cummings, Vicki Ault, Darla Staats, 10 points in one NHL game against
new pledges Misty Ring and Karin Sharon Prau, Barbara Welsh, Debbie Boston in 1976, six goals and four
Johnson.
· Finlaw, Becky Triplett, Tamara Bach- assists ..
· Girl of the Year Awards were pre- ner, Betsy Jones, Mary Leach, Misty
sented by I&amp;St year's winners 10 Vic- Ring, Mary Butcher, Sue Maison,
ki Ault of Xi Gamma Epsilon, Rebec- Sandy Butcher, Phyliss Hackett, and
ca,Edwards of Ohio Eta Phi ; Kay Lesley
Michigan.
.
'
Syracuse
Bedding&amp;
Vegetlble Plants ....... $8.~ flat
Hanging
Baskets $5.75-$10.95
· The Community Calendar is pub- oq the request of Racine Lodge 461 .
Combination Pots
·
lished as a free service to non-profit to merge with Pomeroy and amendgroups wishing 10 announce meetin.g ment to by-laws on proposed meet$3.50-$9.95
and .special events. The calendar IS ing place change.
Geran.iums .............. $1.00 &amp; up
nqt designed to promote sales or fund
Azalaas .................. $2.75-$8.95
raisers of any type. Items are printed THURSDAY
Rhododindrons ............ $12.95
RACINE-- Southern Local Build· ~Npace permits and cannot be guarShrubs &amp; Trees ... $2.95-$10.95
ing Committee meeting Thursday,
anteed 10 run a speci lie number of 7:30
p.m.
in
the
high
school
cafeteOpen Daily 9Lm.-6 p.m.
days.
ria. All district residents welcome.
"sunday 1 p.m.-5 p.m.
MONDAY '
B
l
ing
guests.
·
992-am •
POMEROY-- Meigs County Vet~r.ins Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday. Veterans Se.Vice Office,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
~ PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township irustees. Monday, 7 p.m .. at the
township building.
· RUTLAND -- Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home
of Dorothy Woodard, Langsville,

Byers to attend
Technical Institute

News--Hotline
News·Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

, c..ans,u

-Roollng

I ·,

· ;•.I!
..,

FRII! ESTIMATES

'

Public Notice

ftiY

Outten·
Downepouta

3 Ill SlOCK IIO,Vl

Gutter CIMnlng
Pltlntlng
FREE ESTJM.•,.,...,S
"'

849-2188

..

.,,"" m1

.. . . . . 'IIIII

na•••

With Baautlful Ultrasoft Leather. .
'

:~:a

1

· WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWID LUMBER.
1d,1x8,2x4,2X6
8'·10' :to. a ft.
· 14'·18' 35¢ a tt.
Alilo avllllabla

t

'

NOW$27,500

2 Ill SfOCK 110~
•

'96 GMC 414

~

•350 Vortec Eng. V--8,1
•Power Doors
•Sliding Rear Window

-.

TON SIERRA w/Short ••d
.

.

.,

'

•Tilt &amp; Speed Control
•AM/FM with Cassette
•Engine Oil Cooler

•4 Speed Auto. Trans.
•Air e6nditioning

1141111-4107
114-742-3337

••• '

..

0

,.....a,e~oow .

aYaueble for alllypett of

I . ,

New Bomes,l&gt;IU'IIIes.
Addltlonl, Bellas,
' b. Kltcb-, Deckl, SldiJII,
: . .. . Rnalj ete.
'

I. .
...

.. . """ . . . ., 10 ..... .
: 1Celllllld RodDey Howery
'· '·sN-.1'710 daJI, 698-7231
•
eft.QIDp or
, .1....264o63!10 anytime)
;;..,._

_____

.

•::.

'

PU.TRUCKS·

•2 Wheel Drive
•H.D. Transmission Oil Cooler
•Air Conditioning

.,

•Heavy Duty w/8600 GVW
•Locking Rear Differential
. . •
•350 VOrtec VB engine
•4 Speed Auto. Trans. w/Overdrive .
•Tilt Wheel &amp; Speed Control ·AM/FM/Stereo Cassette
1-Emerald Green
Red • ·

Public Notice

·- .. -- . - ......... --

~ _

YOUNG~S

CARPENTER S~RYICE

1 •Room Addlllor~~~
i ·New aeragea

Llmeatone • Gravel

Frea Eatlmetw

Dirt • Sand
985-4422

IWVOtil212

Public Notice

Ofllce lfoln: llon•.frt.
8:00 Lm. - 3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
VInyl Repl-t,
Wll'III.OWII, Blown
lnt~~la1i0ri, Storm
Doora, Storm

..,.

Also, Check Out Our Other '96 Ext. Cabs Now In St•ck. .
. YOU'LL If.GLIJ YOU DIDII
.
· economic
p!olecta, atreet, water
eutPY, drainage and
el[l,nltary
eewer
trilprnvemente,
por.k

I

ranch &amp;lyle ~.with 2 bedlooms, bath,
room' thai could easily be used lor a third
a118ched one car garage, aluminum siding, a111c
tans. birch cablnels, walk-In Closets, F.A.N.G.
street, close to Hospital. Excellent
Nice tot with qulbuild[ngs and parllalty tenced.

ALL ,,-, .SO'NOMAS IN STOCK
•

I

•

'

•'

t floor

WANTS TO SELL.

6.9%
.

•

;

~

'

1/1Mfn

. SERVICE
Ranindellng
Kitchen I Bath
Rtmodellng
Room Alldltlnne
Siding, Ronttng, Petloe
R-nable
lneurere - Exparlericed
Coli Wayne N.,.

. . ....

...

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER :INCt

EXECUTIVE HOllE ON THE EDGE OF TUPPERS PLAINSThis newly remodaied 1 1/2 story homa .....,. 4 bedouoitll,
2 bll1hs, skyliglita, r:ellng ' -· Spaeloua ~ woodbtfner
· - etec. B.B. heal. Deddng, llhed, 2 ear garage, garden 8188.
Excallanl tocafton just minutes from Pomeroy, · Athans or
Parkersbu!Q. You Must See This Home 10 Ailtlreclete Whalll

135 PINE 51./ST. RTE. 160

IOOIIe~

, ..

'

.

.

.

I
. "''·
.
GILLI,OLIS,
'
'

'

(614) 446·2532

CHECK US OUTIIIF YOUR LOOIONO FOR ANEW
WE MAY HAVE WHAT YOUR LOOKING FOR.
·
HENRY E. CLELAND JR........:.............................. . .

PubHc N.Ptlce

.
·~

'

~,J;=-200

Nntlae le hereby giYOn
that· Temro a. Lyone, C...
No. 21aC10 of P.O. lox 810,
•roadway It-, Racine, Ott
41771, .hoe applied \O the
Common Plete Court,,
Prollale DIVIelnn of llelge
1Cnunty, Ohio, lor en order
tn chong• Iter t~eme tn
Tatnre s. Clark.
laid •pptloetlon will be
IIMfd In Mid Court, .. t :30
on tilt 2tlh dar nl
I
1-. Ill Rlelge Cnuntr
tPt b COUrt.
•

SPORTS/
ENTERTAIN .. ENT
PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE~ SOAP
RESU(TS '
1-900-ns-2525 EXT.
5961
$2.~ pet: min
Mutt be 18 yra.

1=,

SHERAI L HART.."""""""................, .....~...........'1llz.al7

0

KA'Tti.EEN II. CLELAfiD.-.............- ..-·.........112-1111

,(4} II; tTC

QFFICE.,.....;.._.............................- ..................... 112-22111

'

.
'·

I

~U(618)~

.

••

- L&amp;E
ADVERnSING
THE HIT MAN
Imprinting
•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms

1·900-446-1414
Ext. 6445
$3.99 per mih.
Must be. 1e ym old.
Service U .

3rd St., Racine, Oh.
' it&amp;-3321 112111 mo.

(6, 9) 654-11434

(Lime StoneLow Ratea)

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC

WICKS·
'

-

HAULING

I

limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
· Top Soli, FlU Dirt .

'

614-992-3470

Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL
needs
Ph.one

Perry's GrHn HiluM How Open,
Monday Through ~llrdoy 10;TIII

8. Floto, Baoketl, large Forno,
Vegteble Planll, 1 Mile Wtol 91
Rodney. Nut To Jonlono Goa. ' •

··

· Middleport " •
&amp; VIcinity · , : .

;

I

', ' .

All Yard Salas Mutt Be Paid ~

Advance . .Deadline ; 1:OOpm 11ie
day before the ad il to tun, · ~

0

.}

day edition- 1:OOpm Fridt~r. Mv~L
~

Garage Sale, 5 lamoy sale. loll ~I
nic:e Items, May 3, May .c, ha.-ri
9·5, Addren:· 1381 Ouakey

Racine, Oh; 45n1 ·
Jamea E. Diddle .
~rackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
JaCkhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig baeementa, put In septic •
ayatems, lay lines, underground bores.
.
For Free estimate call949-2512
••
fti~ABII

Garage sale- -May ,.2,

·"'ba'ftf1

Addition, Tuppers Ptaina. S.COnct
llouoe !rom ballfield. ClothO&amp;, microwave and can, furniture, awn.
1~.

moe. 9am-5pm

May 1·3, RL 124, Syracu...

npxt

to dver beside new Nazaren'e

Cl'llrch. cai81H92-38e0.

··" ·

Yard sale· May 2·3, Robett Hi\1 1
Fifth &amp; Elm, Racin•. Ohio. t!crg
· c:hains, chain binder, lawn mow·

ladle lllaeK Dealer
Your favorite artist .
on Tape ot" CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

•

·Huge garage: sale, May 2·3, Alii"~
et residence, Tackerville Rd ~.
Racine, off SR. 1 24, tools, an ·
liquet, fumiture, misc.

~

New At Ingles lledronies

Allr:

Syracuae, need directions 'call
614--092· 7769.

· · P.O. Box 587

era, lata of tools, clothes, dishei.

moo. Rain or lli.ne. 9om-llprn. · ·
Wednaad•r &amp; Thursday, j~~-.
4pm: End o Bar 30 Rd., traifir 61'\.
right, girlalizes irlant lhru 4T.

..

•. ' •

. '

24x24 Garage and 41amily y;J;rd·
sale, antiques, lurnllure, dishes,
tool&amp;, lawn mowers, paris, 0·4,1 ~
Martin guitar, ton'lpulers, Indian
artilacts, and. more. 4574 AstKoh : ·
rd. 1mi. off Rt '2 May 1sr...

992·2825
1131/lfn

I

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •.

'

' 304-578-2285.

Sale
and Auction

•

' '.

Auction
auctioneer.

se;vic::e.
i I

Wa!!lt IJ1rg1nla,
' 773-5447. '

Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Clean La1e Model Cars Or

614•992•7643

Smith .Buk:k Pontiac, 1900 East·

Trucks, t990 Models Or Newer. ~

em Av&amp;I'VJ&amp;, _G a Oi po li~.

.-.

Portable

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S . Coi.it: :
Silver, Gold. Diamonds, All Old ••

Bllllflsaw Mill

Collectibles, Paperweighla, En:. :.

32t24 Happy HolloW Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742·2193

ANNOUNCEMENT S

30 Announcements
Please Beware: Do To The In · .

M .T. S . Coin Shop, 151• S&amp;COQd -

.

Gallipolis, 81~·446-2!142.•• ;

furniture·
or c:omplete .eatates, also
·
Osby Martin, 61'\. ~

.•.

TFN

Howard ~xcavalin
Trucking·
• Umestone
Bulldozing and
·aackhoe
Service• .
Houae Sltea and
Utllitlee

Reward $500. For information

leading to the arrest or corMclion

ol pe,aon who done damage to
n, at Za.1p1n1 trailer p1rlc on
Tl'llrodlly April 18, 18M. 304-7735328.

-

All Kinds of Earlh Work
992-3838

40

Giveaway

· lillie Tikta To)W., ..

..
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR

614· 992-5048
'
Free Estimates

REPAIR
9924507

Date-Line

DATE

No argumentst·
Nci Nagging! .
Just the t:nate of
your choice.

..LINE

Muei·be 18 yl8.
Serv-U (8111) 645 8434 ·

&lt;'

Mi4e&amp;OutRoult218.

J.D. Drilling Company

•

1-900-988-6988
Ext. 1449
· $2.99 ~r min.

April 28th, Thru May Srd, : 11.2

SAWMILL

. Girls.

1~1414

•

All Procoeoo ·go 10 Help. Cnildr~~n
at~ Handl Scllool.
,•

H&amp;H

Live 24 .Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful

HEI._ fiOII
YOUIOWIU

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

Lront
.
c.. Ho..21100

School. 10-to-4 Sat. May ·~th .

Clothing $·1 .00 Qr leas. loiJI •ql
Every Th~ng . Grea1 B~yt ! j! 1t
rain&amp; will be inaide follow sigHs.

~·w Homes • Vlny! Siding New
Garages • Replac~ment Windows

CHAT LINE

'Eiit. 43011
$3.111 per min •
Muat be 18 yre..
s.rv.u (61tl 845 ~434

PROISATE COI.!RT OF
MEIGS COONlY, OHIO
In Tile lletlei' of T81DN S.

Approprialely 20· To-30 Famll~s
Yard Sale At GuldlnQ Han~a

day edirion 10:00a.m. Saturday.

Also some paints and
bruahea.
Set., March 30, April 6
Noon-5:00P.M.
3 miiM north at Cheeler
.. off Rt. 7
Check It Oulll _,.,.,

. 8J2-4405

•

.

CASH BACKI

acraa. Call for your lojlj&gt;OittbtWMI.

..

'.

..

conalrucled Home Is localed just oil 68t, approx.
1n"""Y ott
SR 33. Home conlalna .kitchen, living room,
badrooms. Master bedroom w/lull bath &amp; walk-In cloaata,
utility room, drywaiVcarpel Interior, wood decking. Tolal
e1ac:1r1c with r.w heat pump/C.A. l1aal doors, lherma payne
windows, fully lnsulaled. Salting on approx. 2.5 wooded

Y.OUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
, FOR A TOT~L OF
$7
PER DAY.

'

ulday.

Pomeroy,

.

25·50%0ffl

••

..

!;

, ..0Hit·3943

992-3954 or 985-3418 , .

Greenware Sale!

For Free Eatlmatea

~ ~'MY·

AdYonco. DEAOLIHE: 2:00
the diiJ before the ad 11 to n .
S.ndlly odllion - 2:00 p.m. F
.
Mondoy ocilllon - 10:00 1 .111. Sat·

POMEROY, OHIO •
Traah Removal • Commerclel or Reeldentlal
. stptlc Tanka Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, weaitly &amp; monthly rentll ratea.

DOWIUIDEI
CERAMICS
AND liFTS

HauH Repelr &amp;

.

I cc•UNIFRY, PRIVACY, PEACE OF MIN)). lfs All Here I

No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small

Plan Ahead, Call Todayl
742-2803

.anRACTIVE
&amp;WILLING
TO TALKUI

APR '

41Months·

• Tree Trimming
• 'Mowing (Residential
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
Maintenance ·
• Odd jobs per request

L_.______.,.

., l

Fl•••clng

IAWN«:AU

Public Notice
and/or award to the lnwut
and beet BIDDER. Each
New 24 hr.
propoeal muet conlaln the
Dateline
full oame of every peNnn·nr
company lntereeted In the . Meet the Man or Woman
eema. Each Bid ehatl ·be
of your Dreams Never
delivered In • •••led
be lonelragaln.
CALL
NOW
envelope marked "Bid for
Laadlng Creek Conservancy
Dltltrlct ' Wat(r Main
Replacemenl along Red Hill
1-900-988-6003 •
Road." lhe Laadlng CrMk
Ext. 1021
Conearvancy Dletrlct
• $2.99perntln.
-•rvll, the right to waive
any Jnlormallliae or
Must.be 18 yrs.
lrnguterhlea In the Bidding.
Serv-tJ (614) 645-8434
· The Succaaaful Blddera ·
ehall INt requlr.d tn .comply
with all lawe penalnlng ,tn
mlnlmuni wage and
dlecrlmlnetlcin of per8Dnll.
by: J. Fenton Taylor,
'
P-ldanl
taedlng C-k Caneervanoy IEIUIIFUl WOMEN
·
Dletrlct
All WlmNG TO '
(4) ;!2, 29, (5) 6, 3 tc

'

I

:rs .

Setv-U 16191645-8434

·Ext. 2261

'96 GMC %.TON 414 EXT. CAB w/8 Ft. Bed ·,·

ONE ONLY- PBICED.TO $£11 rr

TUpper. Pllllna, Ohln 45783
614-885-3813 or 614-6117-6484
·
Plastic Culvert-Dual walland Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D- perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp;: 6" Acx pipe
4" &amp;: 6". Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp;: 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112"thni·4" Sch'40 pipe
·.
·
314" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.l. water pipe{IOO' roll's•thru 1,000' roll's)
'314" U.L. approved Conduii
8;' Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe l" thru 2" - Fittings- Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Aex fittings&amp;: Water fittings
Full line of Cistern, Seplic &amp; Water storage ianks.
I

Must be t8 yrs

,

411-ma.

.,

St. Rt. 7

Sovlh RL 21e From Rt 7

ALL Yard SaiH Mull h .... In

Gutters and Downapouta
Complete Remodeling
Deckl .- Bathrooms .- J(ltc:hena .; Siding ·
35 Yasra Experience

(614) 992·2364

• ...

511 . 512, 513. ~-s. 4
thing! •
'

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

I

· ~ can"now ·
1-900·446-1414
Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min.

Wln~,Gifllll08.

5 Miln

Llmeato!le, -Sand,.Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

. &amp;&amp;W PWnCS AND SUPPLY

Chat-line .
. Hey Guyslll Your
special girl is waiting
to hear from yt~ull
24 Ho rs A .Dayll

537BRYAN PLACE ,
MIDDLEPORT 8124772

..... MiciOIIfllfiiWe.

Wt OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Serving S.E.-Ohlo a Weat Vlrglnlll .
Toll Free1.;aoo.a72-5867
446 9418
'

30391 Roy Jonea Rd., .
P.O. Box539
Syracuae, Ohio 45779
. Tei'I1C_,
.. (614) 9t2-21io0
Horea a Tick Sales'

J&amp;L INSULATION•

11138 Chtli'em S•HI, "'· 512. 5I
3, Furnitu1e, Wl\ai·Nota. Oith_!s.
Caueue Tlptl, Cu1ana flt&amp;y ..

Rnldentlal. - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shlngln - ~lnor Repan

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
rrlth,.,.,. a NI'YIU 10 bilck 1t up

LONE OA'I 'F Ull

Setv-U (619) 645-11434

I

We will wodt wllllln your ·budget
Pll. i?M173
FAX 773-5111:1
108
StrMt
WV

BENNE

•Leaaons

Muat be 18 yra.
s.rv-u (811i) 845 8434

.

Air Conditioner., Heat Pumpa,
FU'"-. All equlpmont In elock
for lmrnedlats lndllaflon.

• Tralnlng
• Boarding /

$2.99 per min.

•Auto.Trans, 4 spd.
-60/40 Seat
•H.O. Chassis EqUip. &amp; Front Springs
'locking Rear Differential •H.O. Trans. Oil Cooler
•Air
•lilt Wheel &amp; Speed Control
•AM/FM Stereq

and Manufactured Housing

• Trell Rides

more.

70

surraftol

Cheatar, Ohio

, -900-255-0500
Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Must tie 18 yrs.

I

'

. Owner: Rlclc Jold«&lt;

''

Talk line to our glfted
psychics on questions ot
love, success, care, soul
mates, seff-help and

Free Eatlmatoe . •

Tool Drw11' Ill" Orn4rnenlltl
s.p. -st.n, Rellt9, Pallo Fumltunt, ~
bml, PW4er twtgera, T~elh 11 &amp;. lola of Oilier etutlll
.·"No Job Too ,_.,. or Too Stn111t"

1-800-508-8887
• Top • Trim • Removal
"'n 11mn Grinding

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Psychic-Line

Rll81 Estate General

•350 Vortex Engine, V8

(614) 441-1191

·R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

•Eitctrlc:ell Plumbing
•Raonng
•Interior lo Exterior
Palnti!'IG
Alao Concrete Work
(FFIEE~IMATE~
V.C. OUNG Ill
.
2-8215
Pome;oy, Ohio

Dllbtbulor

_BIIIOinll and
·cOIIftiDCftll

'--....;·;·. _____,

1·900.990·3737

•r

141-3013 PhCint
I'AX

•

, t.oullaetor with over 30 ·

•Heavy Front Springs

'96 GMC % ION REG. CAB SIE

.,__~
·c""
· ---·~;,.~).

• . , . · ..__ _ _...;::ll;::illl:.;.n;;;-~ ..__ _ _ _ ___,

~

.

985-4473

4x4'e-4x8'a

• : .·'·

21M3 IIASHAN RD.
Rlclno, Ohio 41171

$3.99 per min:
Must be 1e yrs:
Serv-U (619) 645-11434

'""""

'96 SLT Four Wheel Dri_
ve:
'

Remobellng
Stop &amp; Compllre
FREE ESTIMATES

I

Autho.lled AQA

• Weklng s. ... II II •lni;UIMI 0 . . • Machine Shop
Servlcee • Steel Selel-4 Fllbrlclllon • Repelr Weklng
o~•

ONE'· ON • ONEI
CALLNOWI
1·900-446-1414
. EXT.3694

•

i •Complete

. UYI UHIIIIICII
. 614-HHIIO

'.

'

tf;,J,&amp; tlfet«&amp;

LIVE/ .

' •New Homes

· :i ·Garage•

1 Hun L WrliHel
. . ROOFING .
'
·
NEW-REPAIR

'96 .SLE Four Wheel Drive
~~~9 Now 526,300

Foster Ho.mes ·are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Cali 9~2-2117 for ihformation and
to be part of the effort.

101111 BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON

---=~;;i) ~-..

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

: POMEROY -- Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, regular meeting
W~nesday, 7:30 p.m., Middleport
Masonic Temple. Members to vole

.................
· Ill "'I 1 Let • H It

· ..

'

•

···-IDiiiOI
.•:;.-.

..

r.

Owner: Ronnie Jorin
387-o268- 1-800-950-3359

UIDI'S
PAIITIIG

&amp;BOP NOW FOR YOUR BEST BUY!

•6100 GVW '

-

(1111) 112-M35
4 1124753

'

UCIII mUULIC UPAIR
&amp; lUCHlNI SHOP, INC.

· Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean Etperiellte • lftllll'td

-Niwllocuw
•Adii8JII6

•.

.

'

Community calendar

1n;

' ttl 2111

ol,l. DIDDLI, OwtCA

JONES' TREE SERVICE
.

. COISI HCTIOtl

YS IN STOC

Hubbards Greenho1se

· WEDNESDAY

.....
=::r
...,.
·:=..Tit

01 mO. pd.

~"~'
. G01 Jl

'992-2156.'

ly increasing to 8 percent a year in
2007.
• '
I
If you wait until 70 10 retire) your
benefit will increase by as much as 2P
percent. On the. other hand. if )'~U
stan drawing bettefits at 62, you wtll
be receiving benefits over a longer
period of time ~nd will proball.ly end
up getting about the ,same in totalbenefits.
"::
It's true that most people do not
ba;e their retirement decision on,
how much their Social Securitylie'n-·
·elit will be. Such issues as he'Bllh,
other income, and family responsf·
biliti~ay outweigh this factor, ~~~
they s uld.
· . •'
But or planning ' purposes. you
would· probably do well - 10 !hlnk
about when you want yo~r b$e; of
income to be the highest, whel) yo~
can rely on earnings and other
income, and when you are mos.A likct
Iy to need an iricome that just l&gt;eeps
•
••·•
!
·.'
commg.
..
.
·.

Your Swesthesrt ss
close as your phone

1-90().988-8988
Ext. 6733
$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yra old
SetvtceU
619 645 8434

--·

'

...

FIND TOTAL
· SATISFACTION!
, Through a Uve
Personal Psychicl
''
1·900-255-0500
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
'

60 -Lost and Found
Found- 101 ot koyo, In !(Om ol

____

.....,

Serv-U (619)
~

acuae fire ltllion, call to 10,

882'2155.

~1: 2 8eogteo, 1rno1e, 11trnole,

- I I ._,,Tick, ._.....,_
~-1511.

..,. ,_

•

•

�Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

PRJU.IP

...
SKILLED
UNSKII.l£0
...

·.
~

NEEDED IMioiEDIAlELY

-..m

. 22~

•

·~Trliri~

• ~C1ion BonuHt
Posilio&lt;1o

'*"'"'",_
·--In

90 lloyl
-for lmmediale Interview• Call
Monday - Tue1day, 114-441 ·

19711.

Local Vending Roult. $2,500 A I
Wk. Polentiar. Muot Sell. 1·100·

840-3828.

CruiM oNp po~tion• T - 1o

erolle piaceo. $200-$900 - , ..
·' Call 7 dayl, 407·a7S.2!l22 ext.
0598C18.
Odvefl needed. retirees wei·

Bayview, Appro•. 314 01 Aere, 2
24x30 .Garage, Gallia wa-

•

Stu!ling En-

3 Bedroom Mobile Home, Must

velopes ~~ Home. Starr Now. No
Experience. Fr" Suppliea, Info.

No

Obll~ation.

Selll304-736·7295.

Send SASE To:

1981 Model Set Up On Lol, lllr·
bouraville, wv 304-736· 7295.

An roar es1a1e adYertllllng In
1111s
tsllUb{eq1IO
!he Fedeml Fair HouSing ACI
ol 1968 whlcll maltao Hlllogal
to •any pralerence,
llmltallon or dscnmlnollon
besl!d on mce, color, religion,

_.r

Fairway, Oepl. t351, Bo ll ,.399,

West Covina. CA 91 791 ,

limited Offer! 1896 doublewide,

3bt, 2balh , $1 799 down, $2751
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nnro

wv.304·755-5885.

New Bani&lt; Repoo. Only 4 lelt Still
in warranty. lCM-755-7191.

sex lamlllal status or nattonel

origin, or any lnteniiDn 10
mak' any such ~-.
llml1allon or dlscrlmlnalion.'

E•p. In

Roofin~.

5

Prtc:e Bu11er 1996 3bed room.
$825 down, $159/mo. Free detiv·
ery I selup. Only at Oakwood
Hornet. Nltr'CI WV 304· 155-5885.

Thlo .._ w i t t nol
tcnowllngly fii'COPI

81~ &lt;448~514.

Full'· Time RN Posltton Ava ilable
In A 70 Bed SNF. Supervisory

Our !Uders are herelly
lnlormed lhat all dwel......

Holzer. Senior Care Cenler. 380
ColoniSt Drive, Bidwell, OH.

.. ""'
advertised in thla newspaper
are available on an equal •

Gallipolis C1ty Pool Now ltl.ifing

opportunity basis. ,. ,

25504, :114-7311-3«19.

REAL ESTATE

w

High OualitJ' Carpel Installer&amp;
Needed, Fulllime And By The
Job, Must Have Experience, Ap·
ply At Tope Furriture, 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, No Phone

Oak Wood Hames, 5875 David
Creek Road, Barboursville. WV

11••••••-••1.'

LtfeQaurd IConcenion Stand
Workers. Apply Cit~ Parks &amp; Re- 1'
creallon Dept, 518 Second AYB·
ll.le, Gallipolis

Maoon, WY 25260.

SaveS$. 1996 double Wide repo
3bedroom, 2balh. Wtll deliver I
setup an your lot 304- 75~5566 .

advertisements for real estale
which Is In violation ol1he law.

Experience Prelerred. Applr AI

General automotive experience
wanted. Send resume 10· Box 437,

31 o Homes tor Sale
2 Ac:res Ofl ,160 At Potter Nice 1
Bedroom, 24r32 10r10 Shad.
20x22 Garage, lays Good AU In

Grass, $36,500, 941·543·7612,
6t4-388-941'1 .

'

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
3.9 acres for sale wilhin Pomeroy
Muntclpai limitS, located in new
subdiviston, ready to build, beaullful view on hill top. $17,500, must
see to apprec~ate, 614·902· 7851 .
40X 139 Lot, Beall s Sub 'Neal
Ave. $3,500. Boat 16 Ft Ouachlla
Bass Boat . $850 00 614 -44t ·

0325
5 Acres Loc:a1ed Sailor Road.
South 01 V1n1on, $10,500 , 814388-8521

Calls P1eaee.

2 Bedrooms/More 1 112 Baths,

Home Typists. PC users needed.
$45,000 income potent1af. Call I·

Exira Lg. l.R. Ear-In Kilt:han, loBRUNER LAND
carad: Gallia, Wrap Arouncll)aclc,
.61 .,. 775-9173
Frea Gas Wllh Gallia Walor, 614·
387-7422.
GALLIA COUNTY;. 30 Minutes
3 Badrooml. 2 llllh Rench, 2 tar Norlh 01 Hunlington · 011 Teens
Garaoe. Spring Valley Area, Aher Run+ Chambers Roads, Many 10

aoo-513-4343 e... B-9368

Needed- someo0e 10 care lor el'derly•irr·prwate cate home •. days

faci~ liel , doH to tchool in town.

&amp; nighls, 814·992·3324 or work o:OOPM_fi,4-44&amp;-7940.
61.·992-5023,

---- - -- ----1

No Experience Necessary! $500 78 acres ITIII wid'llhree bedroom,
To sgpo Weekly IPorenrlal Pro· rwo bath brick home, ttwee ponds,
ceasing Mortgage Refunds, Own pole barn building, IWO car garage,l!l14·7•2-1902.

CNAI WHo Are looking To Work

I

L

Long Term Ho'me Care Cases
Where You Uva; tn And Stal
o~ernight In Either 24 ~ f:lour, •
Hour. Or 72 Hour Shilts. II Payo
16 Hours' A Day, Bul An Over·
: ht Stay Ia Required. U Interest·
~

Un&amp;ll•ched Garage. Satelna
System. Greten Townah1p, Ow-

li"'trdMustSe/1. 1!114·441·1908
HouH + 28 A.c:re1. 3 Bedrooms,

HOUSE FOR SALE

BV OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very ~ood
"'ostal &amp; Gov'l Jobs $21 IHr +
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train. Far Condibon, New Vinyl Siding, Car·
port Unattached 2 Car Garage
Ail!&gt; Ancllnlo 1-800·536-3040.
With New Apartment Above. 614-

1·800·0N·OUTY-2,

Acre Lots To Choose
W1tl'l Pond . $14 ,000 Your
Horses Will Love ThiS 8 Acres
With Stream
$11,900, N•ce
Bu1ld1ng 5 Acres $12,000 Or .,
Acres · $11 ,900 In Galllpohs On

MEIGS COUNTV: Minutet To

1 Bedroom 13 Room Apartment.

Trash Plid, NO PETS. On 554
250 Kawasak i 3·wheeler $700
Near POr.,, 814·38&amp;·1100.
Atr cond. 18,000 BTU $250. 2.8
BEAUTIFUL AP~RTMENTS AT . ~block. 150. 304·576-2753.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wellwood DriYt 27 Ft. Round x4 Ft. High Swim·
~om $244 to $315. Walk 1o shop
ming Pool. 11,200, V.G.C. 614·
&amp; movies. Call 814·448·2568 . 245-5878.
E"'al Housing Opponunity.
Elllcloncy Aparrmenr, 510 Third

Calt For Owner flnanc•ng lnlor"latiOn + Maps. 1OY. OFF Cash

Pun:ha181.

Parcels available for naw home
consttuct1on on Rayburn Road. 5
parc:els rangmg trom 1 84ac 10
5.32ac Paved road. county water,
reasonable restr~c:uons. Map and
1nfD av.a1lable on reques1 No Stn·
gle w•de mnu1nes please. 304• ·~". "'

euary, Senous Inquiries Only,

Awnue, Gallipolis, $205/Mo., In·
elude• Alt Utilitie1, 814-318'1708.

814·446~ 2388.

Ask ForChria.

• ..
Max well ~ve

·~

~room,

LR. on
A ,

Soctal Worl&lt;orl, Now Hiring S23 I large tamll,- room, dOuble garage,

Hr + Benetlrs, On The Job Train·
lng Tb Apply In Your Aree, 1·800-

33!1·6150.

someone to mow 1awn1 in Camp

~nley

The

anra. 304·67s.ee311.

Mol~s

County· Public Library

8yrs
4048 old, $101 ,000 304 ·675 -

Na hOme tn Ractne, targa butld·
'"9 wtll house amall busmeas,
a11o a one car garage, fenced
yard, out Of rlood area, lllking
$47-.000 614-949-2804

is acceptlno app/lcarlons ror the

parr lime pollirlon or Library Clerk Si1 room l'touae and bath, utility
al lhe rare or 14.50 par hour. Tho room, big red barn, 2 112 acres on
houri will include some evening•
and weekends. Appllc:adona can
be pteked Up ar !he Molal Counry

New ltma Rd., Rutland, 614·742·

Stree' Porneioy, OH.

neighborhood ,
3bedrooma.
2baths. fam1fy room, 21ireplaces,
covered pat1o, 1car 1n1egral ga rage. Cal,l 304-675-3262 for appt.,
teave messag&amp;.

2757

Public library, 218 W. Main State11 2story bnck m established

,I

170 Miscellaneous
•• 1W1mming pool, no liner.
135.00.304..075- 1484.
Item for '••••· c.-.nnon camera

outfit. 35ntt!I-AE1. 304-875-3423.

180 wanted To Do

Three bedroom home in 'counlfy,

~~Wh~tes~H~il~l~Rd.!;!
. Ru!!::t~la~nd;!!,!!ona!!;.b&lt;l_lh,
. 814-992·50117.

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony lama. Guaran1Hd Lowelt
Prao At Shoe Cale, Gallipoltl.

Furniahed 3 Rooms I Bath, Up·
Jtairs. Utilities Furnished, Clean,
No Pets. Ralerence, Deposit Re--

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

Furn•shad Efficiency 2 Rooms,

Dinette Set With 8 Chalfl$100;

qutred, 614-446-1519.

1·800-537·9528.

Share Barh, $195/MO. Utililitl Dryer $100; 1882 Suzuki 125FIM
Patd, 607 Second Avenue, Galli- Water Cooled Bike, Completely
poh' 814-ji&lt;46·4418Aft"': 7PM.
Gone Through, $850, OBO, 814·
446 8805, After 4 P.M.
.

Furnished, 1 bedroom, all utilities
paid, $300 per month, 614-949·
2526.

Etectnc
wneelcha~rs,

for Sale

Don'a Lawn care. Rea1onabla
Rates I Will Do Churchee, I Ce·
melllries. 814-379·2847.

lw;70'&amp;hui':Z:!b;;dr;;;_;;;;"baih
1 bath

Etloen·• Personol Cart. s-iallz·
~•

Ferry area . $17,500. 304·675·
16t7.

ing in Alzheimer'&amp; cart giving.
Call us - We can help. 304-71!12-

2544.

on approx 1 acre in Gallipolis

141170 Schultz w1e11pando. 3nlc&amp;
level lOIS w1garage. water and

-$12,000.
General Maintenance, Painting,
141170 mobile nome wtaddlllon.

Yard Work Wmdows Washed
Guners Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commertcal, Residenlial, Sreve:
614-388-0-429.

GeorgeS Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the miH JUtt Clil

In-

cludes lot publte ut11111es
87acre. 3bedroom wtadclmon. water and sewer, puced upper

.....

Homeatead Bend, Braker. 30,;

882·2405.

Neal

Apartment

8t4 -

Awenue, Gall ipolis, Furn1shed
S2751Mo. Ut11i11es Patd, 614· 446·
3844. After 7 P.M.

a"::t....·tmentlat Villa,.. Manor and
·~
...
Riverside Apartments in Middle-

1D74 121"70, 3 bedroom, need

w•son·s Mow You're Yard! Call:

oome noor, $1,900; 12x50 2 bed·

61 ...411-7413

room furn ished,

(elderly! while

~au ·work

Wtl Mlf'k

1879 Baron 14x70 With 71114

town
clote to
area. Call

ences.304--B82·256e.

Nice 1 Be~room tn ·Country Set·
tmg, Wa~her /Dryer, Stowt, Re·
lrigerator. No Pets, No Smokers,

TrM Service,
Removal, Free Eetlmattll

Ex·

2bedroom house, carpeted, car·
port. Oepoa11 &amp; lease required. No
pets. $350mo. 304-875-!i904. '
2bedroom 1n Hartford. S250mo.

No pets. Call aher 4pm. 304·8&amp;2·
2016.
3 Bedroom Home In Cemenary,
$450/Mo. Plus Security Deposit,
614·448-8566

In Mtddleport, available May 1st,
3 bedroom, 2 balh, basemem. riwer wiew, $400 per month plus utii--

lle' 814-992-7t311alttr8pm.

Two bedroom hau1e, carpetetl,
n1ce and clean, deposH required,
no inside pe1a; three bedroom
house, deposit required, no inside

pets; 61 4·992·3090.
Twa bedroom, remodeled, new
carpet, located near Mason Park,
lrash 1ncluded, construction work·
era welc:ome, no pets, 304· 773~
570..
'

Twin RIY8rs Tower, now ap:epting
applications for 1br. HUD aubsid1zed apt for elderly and handicappe(t EOH 304 -8 75-6879.
Wanted . Someone To SHare 2
B
•
&amp;E
edroom ""partment
S200I..
u
p
Cl•penns
r~~o. •Our an,
on T10
Gatllpalls. If lntar_asted Wright:
R s PO Box 558 Ke
OH
· ·

451543.

· ·

'

rr,

Furnished

ROOmS

Tuppers Ptatns, Ohio 45783· Water pipe 3/4~ &amp; 1" 200 p.s.i. (100'
rolls tl'tru 1,000' rol)l) all fittings,
Sc:h 35 pipe, gas p1pe (1~ rtvu 2'}
Regulators. 614·985·:,&amp;1,3 or 614·
66 7 84

·Soultl

BARNEY .
TATER 'II
COM.E

367·7750.

2 BadrQom Naar N.G.H.S Slave,
Relngerator, Water, Trash Patd,

2 Bedrooms, a Mtles Our SR 218,
$210/Mo., Plus Deposit, Reier·
onces, 814;448·8172, 814·258·
8251 .

Bedrooms, Kemper Hollow
Road, $275/Mo. + Deposit, 614·
448-7321 .

:S::u.::n::.:;:v~a~lle:.:.;y_;N:7u..:r:..a-.r-ry--:~s:-,.:-ho-o-:'1. ' 1t88 Cjlyt11n, - -..m, 1 112
balh, kliehen. lioing room. laundry
Childcaro M·F &amp;am-5:30pm A~OI room,
new carpal, dock tnclutltd, 2bedroom in Mlddopor~ . OH. Rtf·
2·K, Young School ~go During VGC, S tO,OOO. Roger ~bbotl, erencoo &amp; depoall roqulrad. 30\1Sum""". 3 Olyt par WHit Mini· 614·1182-11114.
111!2-32157.
""m 814~48-31157.
1988 14X70, 2bedroom, eiBGtrtc:
Beautiful Riwer View. 2 Bedroomi
Wt WiU Haul Saw Dust, Slone ~
28
·In l&lt;aneu~. No 1'911. Reltron&lt;jl.
1
1
21
1
18
For OriiiM11 &amp; S.nd, 1!114•378- :'." 'crJ."."!'~ 22
1oc4a4 .ed on
Oepollir, Fo11er'a Mobile HC!IIf'H,
11
2n7.
-~
614·441 ·0181 .
-

°

Two and throt ~dr
~omoa , 111r1ing ar $2 ·1300,
s_r, walt&lt; an9 trash In udtd,
814-092·2167.
. '

3.
Pass

BACK·

3537.

j~·:.0.:.~·~~;dj~fr:]~:
and Supply, SR .

7
Platns, Ohto 457 a3.
~~!~~~~~Culvert 8" thru 36",

JET
.t.rc&amp;TII"W.

In

IU'\TORS ,

~'"''
'"'"
Repllired,
New~·
&amp; Rebulll

Stock.

Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537-9528.

Load Locka For Box Semi $80:

T.V. Stand Wltt't Glasa Doors, 35

!;ic;&gt;METIMES

I

&amp;: EARNEST
1H2 ClloYy Z·34, Rad 3.4 Litre,
Loaded, Garage Kopr, Excollonr

304·875-10n.

Matchmg Jenny lind baby bed,
mattress,
changmg
.tab~e
&amp;
dreaser, uaed
little, ex~
. c:ond.
$300 . New Lulie Tykes rac:e car
bod St 15. New Brorher sewing
machtne wtcase \ S1 10. Stroller
$40. 304-675-1077.

Household
Goods

12 livtng Room Suites, 2 Plec:e

Ptng

'

t992 Ford Ranger ext tab. V-8,
spd, sparta seats, ps, new tftt.

Over 10.000 Transmts5ion. Also •
Overttuat Ki1$, 614; 245--5677

Pon~

$8,500. 304-815-22154.

Not $498 Each, Only $275 Each, Pioneet" recewer, BSR tumtable.
Call6t4·886·6373, Rt. 7 ~bove Utah speskers, 614-992·7207.
Proctorville. Ohio, Beside Gtowan·
m'a Pizza.
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Rangea, Refri·
grators, 90 Day Gulr&amp;l"'teel
French Ctty Maytag, 614-448-

7795.

2

Portable
sew1ng
machine,
125.000: combination s1ereo, $10:
dresser Wtll't mwtor match1ng bed,

125. 614·992·3079 IT'Orntngs.
Prom Dress. New S•ze 4 Matc:h·
•no Shoes 6 112. $150, 6,.·446·

2350.

Country Furniture. 304-175-f820.

Rt 2 N, ilmllea, PI Plollunt WV.
Tues-Satll-8, Sun 11-5. ·

Refflgeratora, Stove1, ~a1hera
And Dryers, All Reconditioned

APPLI~NCES

And Gauranloodl $100 And Up,
Will Deliver. 814-869-6441

Waahera, dryers, refrig'aratara,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78

Riding , _ , 38" cu' 12 hp., ••·

GOOD USED

Vine Srreer. CaM 61 ... 48·7398,
1·110tl-499·3499.
PICKENS F~ITURE
NewiiJsed

304·875-1450
Refrtgeralor Microwave,

VIRA FURNITURE
614-4411-3158
Oualily HouHIJold Furritura And
Appliances. Grear Deal aOn
Cllh And C•ryl RENT·2-owN
And Lay- Also fwailoblo.
Free Deliwtry Wllhlr125'Miloa.

c:ei18nt condition, call 614 ·992·

630

Livestock

son Apr 22,. 304-273-5855.

.

. STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
, Uprlghl, Ron Evana Enrerprlooa,
Jackson, otio. 1-80().537-8528.

-~

l

790

l

1811 Coratc:a Auroma11C, AC,
1988 Nlnan Sentra Automatic,
AC, 81 K Finen&lt;ln~ AYallabla,
Cook Motan, 814-&lt;14lHJ1113.
•

conaider partial trade for a
4x4 or ,pontoon boat, B14·992·
25114afltr8pm ·

1896 F-150 4x4 XLT, Shorlbed,
614 ·448- 3050 , Alter 5 PM Or

.... bull' ....... 304-895-3514.

leave Me1sage. ·

Performance Tested, black An-

87 J"p Camache. 4 ely.. stan dard. new 11rts. runs great,

gbs yearling bulls. Birlh ·.1, ....,.
ing +25, 'milk •12, yearling +40.

304-875-62,18.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

CarSP11 seed corn 8527A. No. 1 In
produc:lion &amp; dry down Mlaon Co.
1995 MOM' trl81s. F15 I R23 t82

Weat

1.
·4.

I laullaa
In dill ...

II

North

Dbl.

5.

Pus _ Pus
Opening lead:

•·2

·. . ..,..

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.

~

~

OON\T~YTO

Generator, 2 ,Water Tanks, 2 •
Holchng ·Tanka, Atr, Fully '
Equipped! $6,700, 614":"46·3485

AATCJ1 WI~ WIT~
11£, &amp;...N&gt;'6.'..

?

.

-

'

.

~rWE: YOlJ F~oom::t-~1 w~~

~

1l\t CAA/.\Pict-1 OF mE '

DE.8.'.TE WJB IN
HlbH 5CHOCX.:.?

l

1

------.,

'12 Font 250, 4l4, 302, -

.....

blttllfy and brakea, loti ol new
pariS in ... Iron! tncl, $3800, a14-

387.o:J23.

:'~ir·~~yJ~:.t~~;: ~~~-~

I8

- -- -!

I

Mtndas Motor Home 21 F"t- Go0
Condnion, Fully Equipped, 8 )4,_
245·1474
. ,.
. 't

Complete the chuckla quoted
~Y filling in the miss1ng words
you develop lram stop No. 3 below.

I
I

SERVIC ES

l.

--------------------~M~I,
~·
810
Home .
• l'

-.-11

Improvements
BASEMENT

' SCII.t.M LETS ANSWERS

• •
. 1'

WATER~ING

l..i.

e.

Unconctirional lifetime guarantee~~ ;
Lor:al references furnished. Call-- 11

(814, 44B ·Oa7o Or (614,

""'

tablished 1975.

237~·

a· ;

eS

OVH .

The Treasure
Sovlnes You'll

In the

.CIOsslfled Stc!lon.

You re. ~
11 ll't £IE P

• ~~

.

c. io1

~- 8d

0488 Rogers W&amp;lterprool~n9 . Es ~·

-----,----~': ;
Appltanca Parts 'And ServK::e: 'A~;j1

Unpack - Gourd - Sheen - Placid - LEARNING
"How much education do you have?' Ihe agent asked
the old timer · "Well." he replied, "six years of schooling
and 72 year$ of LEARNING!"

IMONDAY

~ama Brands Over 25 Yea(s Erl - ~
perienee All ' W~rk Guaranteed!
French C1i y .,.Maytag,l 614 ·4461!
7795
{ .rt

APRIL 291

C&amp;C General Home Main$ : .
ltnence- Pai!''Uing, vinyl stdlng}1
carpan1ry, dOOrs, w1ndow4, bath ~ 1·
mobile home repair and more. FO'i-t• ·
free esrtmale call Chet,' 614·992;. ~ ;

f

83ZJ.

'

~~ ;

•

DRYWALL

·

·

oflhe 010gon Trail (CCI

'l :

~. finish, repair
Cethngatexlured, plaster repair:,J.

Call Tom 304-675-4166. 20 yelor' '1:
&amp;XJ»enence.

730 Vlns &amp; 4-WDs

I
I
..
~~
It---,1"'5--.1",.--TI-TI~~

SUJNUT
1-!7--rl-1-1.;_,:..1--;..1·~~8--l
r..-~--..1.--..J.L--L.-.J..:.;;.J

ol txlraa. 1811. Seriou ~ ~utrie
Gnly. 304-875-8903
. ·• '

'

11,800, 814-742·2303.

.

. I I' I

THE BO~ LOSER

40,000 lltlos, 6 New 8 Rly, TirotNew Brakes &amp; Wheels, Cylindtir-j '

..

· 11-...,;.U_N~,;;,OT~:....;;,.I..;;.F--4·\

1

ma~

Jackson Co. Polled Heretora A1·
soc. 23rd Annual sa ~ e. Ft~day
Ma~ 3rd, 1996 7:30pm. Jackson
Co. FBifgrounds. 7mi. west of Ripley. 401ota. cows wJcalves, he1f·

'·

~

5188.
·'
1994 lnnsbrook, lully loalled, lol

•

'

I'
New gas tanks, one ton truck 11
wheels, radiators, tlool' mats. e1c.
r·
0 &amp; R AulD, RII&gt;I'!Y. WV. 304-372· :
3933 01' 1-800-?73-9~·¢1::!~

1995 Metallic Blue Ponllac
ltre, 5 Speed, 4 Cjl....,, AC. Ail·
bago, AMIFM Cuaerro, 81 ._

446-1058

.

~

I•

::

1069.

SPRING SPECIAL; Cenrrat
80,000 counr beg. K,.ler's S..· 1178 Brtln&lt;O XLT, 35t Mauro, 8"
Conditioners 2 Ton $1 ,195: 2
ke Center, Pt P1easan1 &amp; Ripley ilfl. 31• tlru on ~lean racing
whMia, moan vieor, nerf ban, 100
Ton $1,295: 3 T~n $1,395:3
Ro. 304·895-3874.
many e111r11 10 1111. $3,000. 304·
Ton $1,595; 4 Ton $1 ,695, Prices
773-5078.
Above Include Normal Install&amp;·
TRAN SPORTA fiON
lion. Full 5 Vear Warranty, Free
Esomarea, 1·800·291 -0098: 814·

448-830a.

~14-441.0260.

1985 Coachman 5th wheel, hke 1
new, must see 'o appreciate. !
Priced on 1nspec\ion ~04 · 773 ~

1~82 Ford F·150 Under 35,000
English Saddlt &amp; Bridle. Alao M11ea, Bedline, Step Bumper
Other Horse Related lrema. 814· 300SX, 5 Spood. Duel Tanka,
Cauerre, PS. PB, Ltke Now, 614·
28&amp;-24116.
24S.II1N.
Fair Pigs For Sale; Born Earlr Fe1g112 lsuzu pickup, 4 cyl. 5
bruar~ And Earl~ March 814-245·
lpaad, mce, 70,000 mllea. $5500,
5672 Alter 4;00 On Weekday&amp;

2941
Sam Somerwtlle's Army camouflage by Sand~vllle Post Office.
Fri-Sun, no_on-Spm. (Turkey sea-

~BANI&lt;

•

!1

1968 · t972 Nova Parts . ~
Hood, Trunk lid, And "

t992 Lincoln Contlnerillll Llaadedl 113,200.614-441.0738.

Seiii11H48-

Table: Folda aga.inslls

=r;r;;.

your·..,.

!·
. ,.

Auto, High Mileage, Priced To

~•. 814·387-7021

:

I

Condition, Law Mileage, 11-4-448·

New Idea 706 Diesel Unisystam

446·4514.

51 o

AutO PllrtS &amp;
Accessories

1973' Wi'l!lebago Like New
ie,~=~~1~~,~N~.~~~~~~~ ~~~--~~~~~~-

$2.000. 304-875-1925.

·

760

_700":':'2:".:--:-:::--------,;-~ Budget TransmiSSioris, Used JBe~
.
butll, All Types, Acc.ess1ble To

1993 Ford Tempo Sliver, Loaded.
t Row Jobacco Setter, Excellenl 36000 · -900 6 •2 •53.2
Conclllon, 61':245-0810.
• """ ... · 1~ 4~ 1
1M~ Ford Etcorr LX Aummotic,
eulipacker; tongu4 needs minor AC.,t Door; 1a,ooo Mlloa; 1882
repair. 1100. 304-87&amp;5253.
Ford Ran~ XLT 55,000 Milts. 5
For renr: 30acrea ground for field Speed, ca..ellt, AC, Aher 4 P.M.
corn. 304-882·21562.
.. 'Oids· Curlaas
Gehl Round Baiera. Mower Con· 87
ditioners, Disc Mowers, Dtac Brougham, 2 - r. V·8,
Mower Conditioners, Forage conclllion, 814·M2·2358 anylime.

John DeBJe 1280 8-row conv.ntional corn planter, plate less.

s

3

.

If

Musical
lnstNmants

Or.ll, E11cellen1 ConditiOn! 1!11 4·

33HIIrll
311 Com~ lin

4 Dine
I Dock

.

I

Mtn Lop,$5.00 To $20.00 814·
388-85n.

basket
. !large peg 50 8
muffin $40 H small purse $60

w

i

Rabbit llelgle Full Stalk a Monlho

Salas And Serv•ce.
MM tamora, GM Sida Pipn New Equipment
Aluzer Farm Supply, 814 · 245· Aulo Loana. Dealer wHI arrange ft.
lawnmowars $175, Plus Morel
nanctng even 11 you hawe been
5193.
614·388-8835.
turned down elsewhere. Upton
J .D 12Ft DISC, J.O 8Ft Gra1n Equtpment Used Cara. 304·'51-

135

SOMETIMES
lliE D006HNUT
DUNKS TJ.IE 81lD..

•j

•

25jHI011 .

32C'=·DW

1 1'ea
Wol ,, "" Uftl
Clloeotor
2 Clll
•-

ln-+-+-+-

TME 81RD DONKS
THE DOIJ61-1NOT..

814·28&amp;·8783, a14.

Longaberger baskets w/all ac·
·
cessortes, magaz•ne S120. Re 111ed large hamper $300 Wt tea

301:o.""L••
31 South of MICh.

Do you know the basics of mateb·
pointed pairs but would like to learn
more? If so, you could do a lot worBe ; ..,_-+-+--+__,
t1um to read "Mateh·Point Bridge" by
Hugh Kelrrey IGollancz; $2o.65 pp from·
The Bridge World, 39 West 94th L...I......&amp;-..1....Street, New York, NY 10025-7124). It
was originally published in 1970, but
was repriDied last year. .
Aner starting with the fundamim·
tala, Kelsey gives comprehe11sive ad·
vice on four aspects of pairs bridge;
contesting the partscore, thJ! opening
lead, sacrificing atld deception.
'
'N U
N'O
X 8 LIB
N
IZ 0
ELBIZ
In 'pair events, where you try. to
outscore the other partnerships hold·
CNRGP
z BL·PNRRHA RLOZW N
ing your cards, sometimes you must
..
make your play only after detennining
I L F.J 0
PZSH
ELRRHI
the fate of a contract different from
z PZNAGFR.'
the one being declared - es in Ibis
VHJNBDXW.
deal from the book.
, Against five ,hearts doubled, West
· fed his singleton diamond: three, ace,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Leave your reason at home ani t8ke only
~:
live. Back came the diamond seven:
with you when you go to an opera houle.' - J.C. Gollchad.
:
jack, heart four, diamond eight. What
I .
should West dO now?
•
\Vest can cash the spade ace for one
•
down: plus 200. Yet if East has the
spade queen, West can underlead his
ace· king for a second ruff and plus
500. To decide which is correct, West
must analyze four spades. If that eon·
tract would have made, .for plus 420,
West must go for 500 to get a good result. Yet, dummy's club ·holdlng tens ·
2
~est that unless partner bas an un·
1 I _
likely heart void, presumably the defenders have one heart and three
clubs to tate against four spades. It
LYCCE
..
appears that the opponents have tak·
en ·a phantom sacrifice. So, West
should settle for plus 200 by cashing
.-----,,...,---,---,,.-., '.
the spade ace. He mustn't risk the
V0 RE
'':'
'"You won 't become well .
spade underlead.

PEANUTS

·· - -·- ·
While Germll} Shepherd

610 Farm Equipment ·

' DOWN

By Phillip Alder

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Stud S.vtce Puppes, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome, 614-388-

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

.

'

wormed, 614·667·3404.

I

21 .......

21Mal -

toumament skills

Poodle puppies, toylleac:upi, also
mmtature Schnauzers. ' AKC,
champton bloodline, shots 1

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIV ES l OC K

II
24 l'lllnl
II A!IIIII- II II
2t ~IMIC antmal

Hom~ your

H

Monthly Flea Program Need

HICXJ·2158-8218.

' ?J

, Dealer: West

Copper nose Beagle pups, hrst
ohors and W.rmed, $40, 814-9t2·

570

Will.)

'

pups, 6wk1 old, S60oa. 304-773·
5076.

Allbbil!": Min Re• Full Blooded

e

'

Vulnerable: North-South

Black &amp; wlute Cocker Spaniel

~KC,

z

•Kt0753 "Z
• QJ 5
• 7 2

with black maak, w11ned and
ready to go, only two mala&amp; leh,
$200, 814·11115-31107.

Pupa,

u....,.__,

· 21 o-- - IIIII
22 Aaaanlol

Soatla
• Q

o-11111

"CI'Mir

eAI7 6 4
• 10 8 53

• Ke4

2482.

523-8985.

10 - - lliapaloa
11 Aoll'tan ~ 11
t7 Rc ' nta
12='ooiiN ~

•Q

champion bloodline. tecond
sho1s and wormed, 8U-Bi8·

·Pure

Eel&amp;

• J 10

•• '4
2

814·1148·30215.
AKC Rogtllored Black Lob pups,

MERCHMJDISE

T.V., Washer, Dryer, VCR, 114·
12xB5 Wllh E•pando 2 Bed- 256-1238.
rooms, 2 Baths, AC, EC::, P(ivate Save Big On Carper &amp; Vinyl In
Lo' In Chelhlre, a14-387- 761l . · Srock $8.00 Ctioh /Carry Iloilo·
2 Bedroom 1300/Mo., • Ulilitiaa, han Carper&amp;, ~7N. ,614·448·
7444.
Oepo~' Addison Pilte Road, a14·

windoW 1,,-,--'-------"-

10x1.2-. 304·5111-2411.

One bedroom apartment In Pt.
Pleesanr, no pa•. 814.1&gt;0?·5858.
.
• ..,.

pets,call&amp;14-742·2661

388 9886

~ir.

AKC mmt P1nte:hers. two males
two ltmales. ready June tS. ac:·
cepting deposita, 1300 each ,

0429.

A Q J6

WeR
eAK975 43

Willr C""""ne &amp; Grain Tablo, New
Idea 2 Row Corn Picker. John 1873 250
,
Deere 4 Row Corn Planter, Fertil- Speed, New Wood
410 Houses for Rent
,Rooms lor •enr . weak ,Dr monlh.
izer Spreader, 3 Pl. Hilch, 300 Good. 58,000 Ac:tual Miles,
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.
Ga., Sprayer With Booms, 8U· $1,250, 8JH48-1038.
2 Bedroom Home, located· 6693 614·446-9580.
245-5515.
1888 Chevy 112 Ton V-6 Engine,
St R1 588, No Pels. 6 t4 ·446 - :_.:.;;.:...;.:.:,:;;__ _ _ _ _ _ 1
2266.
Sleeping room a with c:ooking . Morns Garage Door Co. Is HaY- NH T ha~ bine. Gehl gnnder mix· PS, PB, Air, Aulo Trano, S5,895,
Also tratler apace on river. All 1ng a Dent &amp; Scratct~ Salel Over er. Ford 532 square baler. All 814-448~225 taN Aller 4 P.M.
2·3 bedroom l'touse tn Rutland, hook-ups. Call ' Iter 2:00 p.m., Sto~ked On Var1oui Stzes Ga - ~od cond 304·273·4215.
tll89 Dodge 0 -260 P!Ck·Up, V-a.
depos1l &amp; relerencea required. no 304-773-5151, MaaonWV.
rage Doors, Call And Savel614·

Elec:trtc W1th Backup Gas Heat,

1 1982 mot&gt;11o tl&gt;mt, 14x52,

ourance, Bidwell, Ohio, 814-388.:
- · 81f-361-7010.

a

Ready 513198. S150 Ea&lt;h, Will
Hold Wilh llepoait 614-3IS-t24

F1rewood, alread~ cut, you !'taut,
$25 per load, Laur81 Cliff area,

1

;~;;~~;;!A:Ir~Ph::.
• one, l

$250/Mo .. S25o Oepooll, e14·

1

448·2205.
-----------

448·2501 or 814-387-0812. EKe-

pandO 3 Badrooms, 1 Batn, Torel

AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acre
Wooded Lor croae To Gallipolis
(Will Sell Separate, 814·448·
9543.
·

I ohall
ProlessJ~I

move,

$2.700, 814-949·2526

Personal Care Provider : Will care

lor your

read~ ~o

~ J 8 6
eK r oa s

•

AKC Male Golden Retrtavers

Old, 3 Roll Terriers, 814·2561902.
'

G&amp;W Plasr• ~;s and Supply, sil 7,
Tuppers Pram~. Ohio 45783·
Spectal Aprtl 29· May 4: 100' 4•

port From $232·$355 . Call 814·
992·50e4. Equal Housing Oppor·
turities
-------------Modarn 2 Bedroom Aparrmenr,

··
Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 814·

198a Riohardoon mobile homo, 420 Mobile Homes
fOr Rant
Give rlano lessons In my homa; 12•aO $3,500. price neg. 304·

Kick Back onc1 Relax ltllhe Da·

• 8

38l!J.

446· 7283,

614-949-2503

Gracious hvlng. 1 end 2 badroom

beaulilul 2ac oil,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-5711-2336.

304·675-1957.

Ia ai ag' groups, also te8ch,
c:hOrding &amp; transposing, if Inter-. 1873 Libert-, 1 Bedroom, Go'od
esred, call 014-992·5403.
Conclioon. ~1 4-446-

Sco'aters
And
New JUaed. Van 1

=::..------- -.1Cha1rs,
CarLi« lnoiSIIM, Slatrglidef , Lill
Garage
29 Rear
Call For Btochure.

450

House tor rent. 304-875-6720

320 Mobile Homes

AKC Lob pupa, black &amp; brown,
rudy lloy 10, 11JI . 304·815·

Help? Aok JO NORTH PRODUCE
814-448·1933 About The HAPPY
Furrvshed 2 Bedroom Apartment, Brand New 5x10 Utility Tra•ler JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR. Kills
~cross From Park. AC, No Pets.
Wll h 1 111 Bed. 15 -lnch Wheeia. Male &amp; Female Adull FINs. For
References, Deposit, $350/Mo .• $650, 614·446- 7252. Call After 4 Dogs&amp; Cltsl
G1444S.8235, 614..48-0577.
PM.

Scenic Valier,, Apnte 'Grove,

•
public waler,

14 Awry
15 Ool(. .

,fJ

A;.~~:~.;P·
~urt:,e Counlry
lots. Prls- ~· · ~~~o:r:3~11odroo_:
~m::o~pa~r~un~IOI~nl!ln 9
leacn PJP&amp;, S&amp;O,pipe,
~
Pine&amp; , ' • Acrea •
no peta, 814·992· .!i~~~~~61~4~·~
118=5~-~~1~3~o:::r
~ "•
• $7,500 Ot 5 + •
.. ""- ~ •
·:

· 1774 Home ·, •14.
44 •v .037 4
u
Red Hoi Far lo .. Product, Dyna· 448
Work Alk For Mark Palmer.
mtc Markellng Plan, Lou Welghl
.
.
&amp; Make Money I 814·448·1 238, LEON ,_
: ...ry ntce, w811 matnta•ned
614-441 -0167
3 bedroom, 12r12 storage barn,
. 67a-OJGh.l
314 acre. caII VI rg Inta Leo Lewts
Screen Pnnler, Experience Nee·
304· 586·1AOO Old Colony Com·
pany.

, 7,000, 114-448-ZIDO.

304-41-.

Flex ptpe· $19.00, 250' 4' Flex
PIPO· $47 50, 614·985-3813 or Brand new 5 piece Pearl drum
614-667-6484.
.. ~ $900, 614-742·2303.
6 14 4 4 6
.:..:.:...:..:.~.:..:.390;;.:_;..- - - - - - Conaole Pia,.,. Roaponliblo perty
N 3rd Avo., 'Middleport 1bed·
Wllnlad to ~lte low monrh~ peyFrom . One room, furnished. Depaait 1 refer· G&amp;W Plasltcs and SUpply, SA 7, menll on plano. See locally. Call

~Baths, Bal10("811t 2 1~ Clr Ga· U"····~U . 1
Be Purchased
rage, Pool, Lg. Dec:~, Plus Extra
1 $1,ooooawn.
~--·
_ . ,, 814.24"5378
~
·

t'lease Call lisa Kersan Ai

AKC Otrman Shophard pups.

•c..::.
'"'
1 AnMid

12._......_ ,
t3 •c• ultegen

AKC Rttllltrod Bla&lt;k labrador
Ro~iollor Pupa, Champion Blood·
Needs Wortt; $75.00. BSR Equal· lino,. Sholl, Wormod, 814·8g8.
tzet 14 Bind S25.oo. ;Oparnus 25 2482.
Wan- Boooter $15.00.
AKC Rogisltrod Bo11r pupa, lown
l*wv ah• S:oo 304-li7S.t433

Houri, Call (909) 715·2300, Ext
1351, (24 Houro).
Netghborhood Rd . . 22 Acres Available 511/IUS, 1300 Dep0ait, ,
Air Condillonod 3 Bedroom, 2 $26,000, 5 A&lt;res ·- $10,900 Or 10 , $350/Mo., Application• AI 1743
llalho, DR, Large LtYing Room, AcrH · $12,000.
Centenary Rood, Gallipolis, 614·
On Duty Medical
Ia Aotive1y. Seeking To Recruit

1111 Fjlld _ . . , ....
lion Yin. Fullr Ulded, 77,000
Wl..a, E1cel-.nt Condlli01'1 1

2S*Magnavor Color Consale TV,

Applica1ionf IYIIilble 11: Vlll1ge

lor, $28,000 Nag , 614·367- 7566, Green Aprs. t4t or caH814·992·
814·3117-7422.
3711 :EOH.

C0!118. 30HI7S.5113.
Week~

-on&lt;e

•"""-••••lllir•••·. l Oacka,

come. DMV report, c1111 QJI·

EARN $1,000

-oy.

Corwi·

G""'"' Shop ·""' Gruamirig. Foa·
ruring Hydro aa... Julio Wtbb.
CIII I14-....QZ31,

·--~
ftft
1. . . . .
!lliilitrllfiHIII. *'·

., t . . . .

..... ............
.........
==..._
,.... M!ialc
.......

ALDER
Bur or ooll. Rlvtflne An(!quoa.
1 and 2 blllDDin .,...,..,_ fur~ 1124 E. llaln -~ on Ai. 124,
1M2 14l70 Dakwood 2 lltdrvom Jlilhed atld unlurnlohed, secilriry PoiRtror. Houra: II .T.W. 10:00
a.m. 11 1 :00 p.m , Sunday 1 :00 11
2 Ful 1111111, Groat Storltt c:t.pg1it requtred, na pall. 114· 8:00 p.m. 814-882·2S31.
Locatod Rt 2 WV, 814·25e·8NO 1182·2211.
Allor !IP.M.
t Bedroom New E•tra Nic e!
Range. Refri gerator Furni1bell, 540 llllcellanaous
Gao Hoar, 1~ . Aua Uai11..
Merchandise
l)epostt R"""•ld. 814 ..48-2e57.
·eg Rooltf udltty &lt;railer, 48'1102',
2
apertment ln
excellent condnlon, 814·885·
"' ptlf.. 614-092-5158..
4422.
2 Bldtaom Apwtnenta. 1111' -4461gas Brt t z -. 3badroorn, 111 ;822
::.:.':..
· ----------,----..;..
oleclrlc. ' 1S.OOO. 304-8 75-53~.
2 Bodrpom Upl tliro Aparrmen1
1995 Clayton 1..70 2.Bedrooma, 300 Four.rh ~YOnuo, Golllpella,
2 llllhs, Gorden Tub. 6•1 o Build- Utillltl l'llld, No f'tll.
I
Call Alltr4:00 81 4-4U01~.
llepoai' 814-4&lt;f!l-3437.
-4.::.Bad
_ r_oo
_ mo
_,_1_4_x7_0_W
_IIh
- - -·l 2bdrm. opla., tolal tla&lt;lric, ap·
do 1.h14 Added On Room.
plianc" furnished, laundry room

,.,._. . . ,

.

, .,

Pauo Decks, Carports, Sidmg , _: ;
Esumates. Call Ste.,., 6t4\ : ·

245-9579

• ,·

Ran's TV Serv1ce, specaatjZiftO u1J:
Zanltn ailto aetv•cing mQ.I t othe,:-:

brondo. Houoe•ca,lla, t·800· 7,g7.
00!5, WV 304-5711·2398.'
,
Roofing &amp; gullerl coq1pioto home romocfelin~ docks I ald)ng,',35
yearo oxparionce, B·&amp; B Roqfint
aod Conllruclion, 6t4 ·992-238~
or 1 ·JI00.880.3943.~·
- .

. .,

·

broken romance?
on your
The,
can help reaources.
..ASTRO·GRAPH
You 1undersland whal lo do to make lhe SCORPIO (~. 24-Nov. 22). Today you
'•
relalion8hip work . Mail 52.75 lo. may lry 1o shift your responsibilities to
Matchmaker, c/o this newapaper; P.o .: · others lnsteatl ollantling ·lor yoursell:
Box 1758, Murray HIU Slalion, "l8W York, . Unlortunalely, these laclics will not be
NV t0158. .
· .
· e11ec11ve.
BERNICE
GEMINI (Mill' 21-oJune 20) Strive lor SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) SubBEDEOSOL .· Independence lotlay anti do not depart. , due your inclina,lion ' lo run tha ·show in
lrom your high standards. II you yteld to your involvements wilh lrientls today.
peer pressure, you could regret ftlaler. · Your friends wll no1 elacl yo,u to be lhe
CANCER (June 21.Jullf 22) You should boss.
nol allow oulslders, such as in·lawa or CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.....,, tt) WithOut
. lriends, to get involv~ . in your domestic lhe nect!Silary forti1uda and drive,
will
- problems tOday. Thatr tnput could make not achieve your objeetiYft tOday. Once
maH8rs worse.
you commn youreell, go lor broiUI.
LEO (Jullf 23-Aug. 22) If you feel enlhu· AQUARIUS (Jan. :10-~: 1t) Usually,
eiasUc about C811ain ide88, t1o not dlacuss ~ou are an !:IPtimlstie peraon. Today,
them with a negallve· minded lriend l\owever, you mighl overtook opportuniTry 10 flniah current~ balore laking today. You might reject your thoughts Ilea&amp; ora negative attl1ude.
on new ona8 .in ,the fl!lr .ahe,d. Your , llndatlopthilorhars.
PIIJC
lb. zo.MIIChZO)Protectyour
cllart indleatlll that your ~ retu~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) If you are IIlia
In a realistic fashion today, bid
mighl come from endeavors you ve Involved In a coatly, unproductive flo not be overly materlallatie.' GPing 1o
begun alielldY.
'
,
errangemanl lotlay, 1! mighl be wise lri ellher axlreme could lead to your downTAUIIUI .(APrft 20-MIY aG) Today, mil· : lake your loue8 and get out ralher !"-" 1811
~ng youo: ~taliOtl could lead you 10 ! contrllutlt lrallt capilal. '
.
~ (lllrCh 21-Aprll 1t)" you ln8iet
belltvt· that yo.ur ualgnllid duliel are LIMA (lllpl. u.o.:L 23) You may !Jaw on ·llavlng everything your way today
.- clllftl:lllllhan t!1lilt Ullgn8d to IJih. - Cll!lcuily ·funcllonl~ .. I~.. your mall may be relt!clant 10 cooperate:
era. In I.e!, youq might ~ lhl Nlltll. you WI!,Uid like tOO.y. PNf118N for many You muat make an e11or1 to

·.

yoo

i

I

,•

'

·'

·"

'

·

,

.•

I '

'

ccirriP!omlla.

,,

•

''

.

.'

�•

.
Monday, Aprll29, 1 -.

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

:Communications Week being
~ observed at Ohio Univer$ity
'.

Ohio University alllllllli and com- resented in ~ college. Each of~ will discuss "How the New Telecom. munication professionals will visit schools will be fesrured with a day~ications Aet Will Chance Everytbe Athen$ campus this week to par- activities during the week. Among the thing" a1 II a.m. Both evenrs will
ticipate in .,-1- discussions and highlighrs are:
take place in Ill Scripps Hall. Mock
..arbhop$ durinJ Ohio Univenity's
Monday, Visual Communication interview sessions with working jour28th .anual Communication Week. Day: The sroup of participanrs today nalism professionals, including sevApril29 to May 3.
included Plllitzer Prize-winner Art eral Ohio University alumni, will take
. He.nt Magazines Enterprises Krumwell Jr. of the Akron Beacon place throughout the day.
President John Maclr Carter will Journal discussing informational
Friday, Interpersonal Communideliver the week's keynote sj,ecch, graphics reporting at 1:15 p.m. in 306 cation Day: President .Robert Glidtitled "New Media. Old Journalism; . Seigfred Hall, and Robert Madden of den. School of Interpersonal Comat 8 p.m. tonight in Baker Center • the National Geographic Society dis- munication Director Sue De Wine
Ballroom. The spcCc:h is free and · cussing "Changing Media Delivery and Associate Provost for Infof!lla·
Systems" at 3:30 p.m. in Anderson tion and Instructional Technology
open to the public.
• Carter, fonner long-time editor of . Auditorium in Scripps Hall.
Paul Gandel will participate in a panOoocj Housekeeping magazine, also
Tuesday. Communication Systems el discu~sion titled ~'Technology and
has served as editor in chief of Management Day: GTE awarded the the University as the 21st Century
McCall 'sand Ladies Home Journal. ·McClure School of Communication Approaches" at 10:4S a.m. in Baker
and as associate editor of Better SyStems Management $4,000 in irs Center Ballroom.
Homes and Gardens. Country Living fourth year of supporting McClure
Julia Wood, Nelson Hairson Disand SmartMoney magazines were School eveniS, which include a pre- tinguished Tenn Professor at the
created while Carter worked asdirec- sentation on intematiortal telecom- University of North Carolina at
ior of magazine development for munications featuring Joan Griffin, Chapel Hill and editor of the Journal
chief U.S. regulatory counsel for of Applied Communication Research,
Hearst Magazines.
· The E.W. Scripps School of Jour- British Telecom, and international will be awarded the 1996 Andersch
nalism will present Caner with the telecommunications
consultant Award and give a presentation at I:15
Carr Van Anda Award, recognizing Richard Juday at 10: f5 a.m:, and a p.m. in Baker Center Ballroom.
tllduring contributions to journalism, presentation titled "Information Age
in a ceremony before his speech. Carr Technology and Educ1ttion (Distance
Van Anda, the former managing edi- Learning)" by Gary Segreto, GTE
tor credited with shaping The New · Network Applications senior sales
Ym Times' reputation as ihe most engineer. at 4:30 p.m. Events are in
respected newspaper in the nation, Baker Center Ballroom. Cellular One
attended Ohio · University for two of Athens is sponsoring a luncheon in
)'ears before pursuing his journalism Baker Center's Elizabeth Baker
career.
.Room.
·• "John Mack Carter is among the
Wednesday, Telecommunications
significant figures in magazine jour- Day: Events include a "Digital Audio
nalism. He knows more about Amer- Mixing Technology" demonstration
ican cultu~e than most media com- of a Yamaha 02R mixing cons~le by
mentators or even some sociologists Martin Dombey of the Yamaha Corp.
llo," said Ralph Lard, director of the at 9 a.m. in Room 329 of the RTVC
School of Journalism. "He's known Building, and a panel of recent grad. for inspiring good, basic journalism uates discussing "What's It Like Out
· and clear. accessible writing during There?" at I p.m. in Studio A on the
: his nearly 20 years as editor of Good fifth floor of the RTVC Building.
· Housekeeping. We're excited that
Thursday, Journalism Day: Time
l)e:s visiting Ohio University to magazine Webmaster Marcus Bales
•
accept the School of Journalism's and Derek Lundquist of WCBS
Carr Van Anda Award."
NewsRadio will be among panelists
ASHLEIGH DUFFY
: The week of events annually discussing "The Impact of tl)e Web
4raws dozens of hig~-profile practi· on Journalism" at 9 ·a.m., and P.J.
rioners
in each of the five fields rep- Bednarski. editor ofEiectronicMedia,
•

Duffy celebrates
third birthday · · ·.

'

II

Continuously barking dogs
should be reported to authorities
, Dear Ann Landers: I just read your
response to the man in Colorado
Springs who wrote .about his neighbor's barking dog. You suggested
earplugs. Are you out of your mind.
woman? Who ever heard of usinjl
earplugs in the comfort of one's own
;10me, while trying to watch TV? My
wife had a friend whose dog barked
a lot and annoyed the neighbors. She
had a choice -- either get the hound's
vocal chords snipped or surrender
him to animal control. Maybe this is
wbat your correspondent should consider. -- Terry S.. Chester. Va. ·
Dear Terry: Thanks for the
response. There were hundreds .. and
many asked, as you did, if I was out
of my mind. Keep reading for more
commenrs:
From Spokane. Wash.: If I played
the radio for as long and as loud as
my neighbors • dogs barked, would
they tolerate it? And what if I sat in
my car and honked the hom for hours
on end? Your response to Colorado
reminded me of the time my husband
tried to approach our next-door
neighbor to complain about her
Airedale that barlced nonstop for
hours. The woman said, "I can't hear
you. My dog is barking." Then she
turned around and walked into the
house. I clll it .dog owner's mentality, Those people an: hopeless.
Charleston, S.C.: Earplugs? Was
that the best you could do? You
should have suggested the writer confront.the offending neighbor, but not
to .expect much cooperation. These
are the same insufferable, unsocialized boors who inflict wrapper-~at­
tling and loud conversation on the
rest of us in the theater.
Canada: It is appropriate for a dog
to·bark when an intruder steps onto
irs property. But a dog .l)lat barks
incessantly is telling you he i~ lonely. distressed and ·neglected. The
dog's owner should be reported to the
authorities. His animal is being mistreated, as well as disturbing the
peace.
· Redding, Calif.: Did you say

·

Ashleigh Noelle Duffy celebrated
her third birthday recently, with separate parties held at the home of h~r
parents, David and Lori Duffy.
Attending the parties were her
brother; Jonathan Duffy; maternal
grandparents, Jim and Sharon
Louks; paternal grandparentS, Jack
and Jeannette Duffy; paternal greatgrandmothers, Icy Miller and
Gertrude Neigler; John and Amy
Rice; Jack. and Lois Duffy; Michael
and Tyler; Eddie and Kris Duffy,
earplugs? Are you off your trolley? Amber, Heather, and Holly;aich
d
·-What if the smoke detector went off! and Marlene Radford, Courtney a d
That neighbor should call tile humane Nikki; and Kevin and
n ·
society: The animal is being abused. Grueser. · ·
East Grec;nbush, N.Y.: VeterinariSending· gifts were. maternal
·ans and dog trainers will teU you that great-grandmother, Elma Louks;
dogs can and should be trained not to Jim and Gertrude Roush; Shelly and
baric incessantly. The man who wrote Scou Woodward, Raeni and Jessica;
to complain should present a petition Kenny and Julie Mankin and Carlie;
to his local government asking for Kevin and Ann Van Matre and Ryan;
legislation to deal with the problem. Mary and Kelsey Myers. and Sheryl
Salem, Ore.: In our city, there are and Mandy Roush.
noise laws. This includes barking
dogs. I'm sure these .Jaws exist elsewhere. Call the city or county police.
Indianapolis: I had the barkingdog problem 12 years ago. and it
nearly drove me 'round the bend. The
solution was-suggested by my physician . It is a machine that you plug in,
and it screens out all intrusive noises. That machine didn't cost much
and saved me from a nervous breakdown.
Windsor, Ontario: Your barkingdog letter brought back some
unpleasant inemories: When we lived
in Toronto, · we had' neighbors who
were most unfriendly from the day
we moved in.•They had a .dog that
barked day and night. When we
asked them to please do something
about the harking, they bccanie even
more hostile. Finally, in desperation,
we called the police. They discovered
KAYLA HAWTHORNE
that the dog had died weeks before
and our neighbors were playing a
recording ju~t to annoy us. TIJeir
.mean llule prank cost them a big fine,
and finally, we were able to get some
Kayla Hawthorne celebrated her ,
sleep. Goodnight, all!
first birthday recently. with a picnic
held at the home of her parents, Jim
Send qucatious to ADD Landen, and Alice Hawthorne.
Creators Sya~te, 5777 W. Ceo· ·
Attending the picnic were her sis.tury Blvd., ~ite 7QO, Los Angeles, ter, Kimberly Hawthorne; maternal
Calif. 90045
grandparents, Roger and Carolyn
Ritchie; paternal grandparents, Darrell and Norma Hawthorne; Paul and
Amy Hendrix; Troy, Laura, Mallory,
and Seth Guthrie; David Hawthorne,
Joy Swain, Deny Stivers, Janet and.
Mary Beth•Tignor. Dorothy Hawlr,
Carl and Maxine HunnelL
Sending gifiS were Tim. Betsy,
Ryan, and Dyana Hawthorne.

Ann

,
left to right, wtre Kendra Snouffer en~
S.rah WllkH, first place; Aaron Ohlinger end ·
Ashley Johnson, I8CCHid plectt, and Bethany
Vance end J01hue RathbUrn, lhlrd place. They
ere pictured with Dlvld Herrla of The Dally Sentinel tldvertislng •rtment.

n.-.,

. COLORING CONTEST WINNERS - TheM
youngsters were thi winners In the .nnual
ElSter COloring conteet eponaorecl by The Dally Sentinel Mel erea merd~o~nt.. Firat place wl,..
ners _,. preHntecl $15, HCOnd place win$10, encllhlrd place.wlnnilrs, $5. The win-

ners,

Songwriter mystery bidder for JFK chair
. LOS ANGELES ~) - Songwriter Carole Bayer Sager is best
known for easy listening love songs.
Now her claim to fame is a rocker.
Sager was identified as the mystery bidder who shelled out $453,500
for President Kennedy's oak rocking
chair at the auction of Jacqueline
Kennedy On ass is· estate. .
Sager, who penned .the lyrics to
hits such as "Arthur's Theme" and .
"That's What Friends Are For," with
ex-husband Burt Bacharach, said she
bought the chair as a wedding present
for her future husband, Time-Warner co-chainnan Bob Daly.
"I never felt in I!)Y lifetime about
a present the way I feel about.this present," Sager said. " Bo~ is Irish and
Catholic- I thinlr it firs him. I think
he'll be a good custodian of it. "
Sager and Daly plan to wed June
8 at their home in Bel Air, Calif.

films as "Tommy Boy" and "Black
Sheep."
Michael Price, associate dean of
the college, 91tid he counseled Farley
to complete his degree before pursuing his dream to be a comic. He
recalled Farley as "the man who
made me work for my salary."

.

tributed. appeared in The Boston
Globe.
·
Umpire John McSherry collapsed .
behind home plate and died April I
during the Reds game against Montreal.
,
Schou was criticized for ~aying,
she felt cheated because the game had·
to he postponed ..

CINCINNATI (AP) - When an
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - It
umpire collapsed and died on baseball's opening day, Cincinnati Reds wasn't just Hootie and the ~lowfish
owner Marge Schou sent other that were unplugged at two concerts
umpires a sympathy basket - of in their hometown last week. A thief
recycled flowers. the Dayton Daily walked off with two of the band's,
favorite guitars.
. . '·
News rep&lt;&gt;rted.
·
1
The
guitars
of
le)l(l
singer
Darius
Schou scribbled a sympathy note,
auached it to flowers that had been Rucker and bassist Dean Felber were
given to her by the team's television taken after the band's MTV
affiliate, and had them sent to the "Unplugged'' concerl at theUniverumpires' dressing room, the paP_Cr sity of South Carolina on April 19. ·
A university student, 20-year-old .
reported. ·
,
.
A
nthony
Magnarini, was charged
The newspaper cited two. uniden•
tified sources for its report. A phone with grand theft. Another student,
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Chris Far- call to · Schou home Sunday went Nicholos Branchak, was charged
ley accepted an honor at his alma unanswered. A similar report, unat- with teceiving stolen goods. They
mater with a speech that showed
were released on $5,000 bail.
ev Qne just how much he learned.
his is the puf\iest dum award I
done seen," th~ husky comic joked
Saturday as he accep,ted Marquette
University's College of Communication Young Alumnus Award.
Of GAI.IJPOUS, OIL
But Farley, class of 1986, quickly
turned serious, calling the Jesuit uni1~5
versity's spiritual emphasis "the
biggest asset I took from Marquc:ue
into the other side."
Pat Hill
"It makes us stronger and better,"
said Farley, who lefi television's ·
Sales
"Saturday Night Live" to star in such L...;~El!!!!!

Upper
River Rd.

I

Landers

..

lburMom
..
.
. ~

.

This Mother's Day,.a heartfelt "thank you" could be
the best gift you could ever give your mother.
.Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

To Be Published
Friday, May 10

1x3 Greeting -.$10.00

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

The Daily Sentinel

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND
SUSAN

Lany Lavender

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY
(YOUR MOTHER'S .
NAME)
•

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND
SUSAN

Deadline For Thu Special
Mother'&amp;
Day Tribute I•
•

Monday, May 6, 12 Noon.
'

Fill Out The Form
Below and
Drop Off With
Payment To
•
j
•
The Daily Senllnel "Mother's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OHio 45769

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

I ORCLE ONE A. lX3 GREETING ·- $10.00 orB.IXS GREETING w/PICTURE...$13.00 .1
I MOJ'HER'S· NA~:
I
1.
I
I
I.
I
I
I
I
I CITY, STATE:
I'
.,
~
I
I PRO~-----------------------------------------------~~-----MAKE
PAYABLE
'I'HI! DAILY SIINITNEL
•

'

(PLEASE PRINT

YOUR NAME(S)

Pomeroy. Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will hold Its regu!ar stated
meeting Wednesday, May· 1, 1996, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple. At that time all members present
will be asked to vote on the request by Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, to merge with Pomeroy. ·
.
All Pomeroy.members are requested to atnd and cast their
votes on the proposed merger aloog with an niendment to the
by-laws lor a change of meeting place.
·· ·
.

1x5 Greeting
with Picture • $13.00

(PICTURE)

Kayla Hawthorne
celebrates birthday

POMEROY LODGE

•

YOUR ADDUSS:

CIIECII:

11)

'I'YPE)

.

..•
"

'
~·
••••••

·:
:;

'

:
::

L----------------•--------~ .,?
~~~~~~~~~~~ ~L--~--------------------~--~~
TIUIIHIPast Master

•

•

Special Supplement to:
-.The Daily·sentinel
v-ontlay,
April..... ·29,.1996
.
. .,

'

�</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="29527">
            <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="29526">
              <text>April 29, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2919">
      <name>autherson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3013">
      <name>kibble</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1329">
      <name>marr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
