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•

Wedn1atlay, May 1, 1881

PISfe 12 • The Dlllly SenUnel

.22 ANNIVERSARY SALE

RC·-----PRODUOS

O~o· Lottery

Reds off to
-worst start
.fn 1_o years

Pick 3:
7~

Pick 4:
1029

Super Lotto:

2· 12 PI 12 OL CANS

•••••,tins....,

8-14-17-33-45-46

Kicker:
832307

Sporta on Page 4

IAM-10 PM
298 SICOND ST. ·
POMEROY, OH.
Accepts Credit CarCis

WE

• •

•

'

&gt;

THE ·RIGHT TO L'MIT QUANTinES
PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 4, 1996.

PEPSI COLA
-PRODUOS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
• SEE

Partly 'cloudy tonlllht,
Iowa In the SOa. Friley,
pwtly cloudy. High In 10L

FOR DETAI

.

'

VOf.47,N0.8

31 CM!Ia ·
A Glnnett Co. NlllfiPIPIF

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 2,1996

2 Soctlone, 12 Pegee

2 UTERS

-19
Round Steak •••••••••~... 2 $
.
129
Chuc k Ruas I ••••••••••••••
$ _
39
.Saa! ~ge •••••••.••••~:;..... 1.
U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF !Orr,
'

-U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
J.. '

SPLIT CHICKEN .

__

99(

ARMOUR

·

_. .

HORMEL

$

lb.

159

18-18.5

oz

(

F NKS
PORKN
BEANS

7 UP, DR
PEPPER
PRODUCTS

.

2·12 PK 120Z.CANS

99

.Cantaloupe••••••••~•••••• 99c
- $ 1·

BOR~EN SKIM

'

99(
Potato Chips -··············
99(
6·7.5 oz• . -

ZESTA

_

·

_

Salt1nes••••••••••••••••••••••
•

·

lb. box

STAR
CANE SUGAR

s

MAXWE HOUSE
·CO.FFEE

s

5#.

49

6.

99

6 pk. 9 oz. Bottles·

..s1.49 -

r

VALLEY BELL ·

-

_

·

5 QT PAIL

•

·

•

1.49·

6 oz. 5

Buy One

•

ORA IDA REG. OR CRINKLE

Fries

$299·

.. _

'
Ice Cream••••••••••••••••••
21b. batJ

•••••••••••••••••••

Get One Free

2

,.---1
Ground

CHARMIN
PINK·SALMON

TISSUE

14.75 OL

4ROLL

(

(

390Z
UMIT 1 PLEASE
•

''

Yoo•H_oo
-Chocolate
Drink

Milk ••••••••••••••~~••~......
- Lay's.Potato _
KRAFT AMERICAN
$ 89
·s·1ng1es••••••••••••••
. ~····~·· . 1 .· Chips .
12oz

PRINGLE

89

Beef~
•

A 28-year old Pomeroy man is
being held in the Meigs County Jail
on various drug charges after law
enforcement_authorities seized nearly $35,00(J'in cocaine and cash in two
separate drug raids Tuesday.
Officials from the Southeast
Counties of Ohio (SECO) drug task
force, Meigs County Sheriffs Department, and Meigs County Prosec11tor's
Office raided two fomeroy resi--

s

10#

dences at Spring Street and Lincoln enough for 195doses,andacomerof
Hill, seizing one ounce of crack a brick of pressed cocaine were
cocaine and over three ounces of recovered in the raid, according to
pressec,l cocaine.
investigator Scott King of the SECO
Glascoe Fairoe, Spring Street, drug task force.
was taken into custody by authorities,
Fairoe's arrest was the result of
and appeared before Meigs County nearly two year investigation by .
Common Pleas Judge Fred W Crow SECO and county authorities.
III early this afternoon where he was
Meigs County Prosecuting Attarexpected to submit a plea.
·· ney John R. Lentes said the arrest
· Over 70 rocks of crack cocaine, shut down a major link in the drug
pipeline to Meigs County.

_Prayer popular in Meigs COunty

4 · 51

5ibox.

Officials seize nearly,$35,000 worth of
cocaine! cash in sepilrate raids Tuesday

National Day of Prayer

·15.5 oz

(

Bologna •••••••••••••••~.'!... 89
FLAVORITE fiSH
..
$299
•
k
.Sf IC $•••••••••••••••••••••••
.KAHN,.
$149
.
We1ners.................... .
lb. .

-MIXES

_

.
• Baeon •••••••••••••••••••••••

Breasts •••••••••••••••••~••~·

DUNCAN
HINES CAK~~

LB.

ECKRICH S~OKED

DISPLAY EVIDENCE Regional and local law olflcara
seized $35,000 In cocaine and
cash In two aeparate drug
raids In ·Pomeroy Tuesday.
More than 70 rocka of crack
cocaine, enough for 195 doses, and a comer of_a brick of
presaad cocaine ware recovered In the raid. Sheriff James
M. Soulaby, Proaecutlng Attorney John R. Lentea, Scolt King
·otl the SECO drug taak force
. and an unidentified SECO
· agent dlaplay cash and drugs
ulzed• .

Pomeroy man is nailed
on variou-s drug ch.a rges

. PRAYEFtoBsERVANCE • NallleParkir Of Alfred reada from the
bible dUrll\ll the Wednesday mornlng start of the annual Bible
Reeding M'anrthori, he'd In conjunction with National ~ay of
Prayer observances In Meigs ~ounty.

By JIM FREEMAN
local ministerial association prays
Sentinel news staff
before each village council meeting;
Middleport's village council mem- a practice recently adopted in
bers do it ... and so do Pomeroy's. Pomeroy.
Members of the Meigs Lbcal Board ·
When Pomeroy Mayor Frank ·
of Education do ... on occasion.
Vaughan took office in January he
· Pray, that is.
invited members of the local clergy
Today marks the 42n&lt;! national to .say a brief prayer before council
observance of the Day of Pra~er, rneeiings.established in 1952 by President
"Our prayer is our individual cornHarry Truman and celebrated local- munication
with
something
ly with Bible reading and culrninat- unknown," said Vaughan. a veteran of
ing with-a ceremony this morning in the Korean Conflict. "A prayer is
front of _the ~eigs Counry Coun wiili yo11 all the time. I prayed when .
House.
•-- .,-•,. ' -- . ;,
I-was. in cornbpt_.
'_
· Ill Meigs Cpunty:,·.a )ltief invoca"God gives us life... the dnly way
tion Is custornary -bi:fote many gov- ' we can give Him thanks is-by&gt;prayer.
· ernment and community meetings We pray not only in want or need, but
including village eouncil meetings, in the height .of-our glory in thanksschool board meetings and high giving."
school graduations.
Vaughan said he has received
In Middleport, a member of the - . many positive comments about the

reintroduction of prayer to village
council meetings, noting that the U.S.
House of Representatives, U.S. Senate and the Ohio House and. Senate
also have prayer before their Sessions.
The Meigs Local Boatd of Education usually observes a moment of
silent prayer before its meetings, with
one of the board members occ3$ionally saying a brief prayer out loud.
Prayer has a long history in this
country dating back to 1775 with the
Continental Congress.·
In 1863, responding to a Senate
resolution, - Presj~egt Abraham Lincoln·signed a prol:larltation that called
Americans to 'set aside April 30 as a
day for "national humiliation, fasting
and prayer... to confess national sins,
and to pray for clemency and forgiVeness."
·
Joint Resolution -Public
Law
.
. 324

&lt;

Environmentalists say

Man injured
in 3-vehicle

Pulp mill lost if Pritt wins
~lection in West Virginia
.

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Police moving toward _
~an arrest
in murder.
case
'
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: : CLIFFTOP, W.Va. (AP) -· Police
He declined to say wlio might be
-say they are moving toward a'n arrest arrested. but investigators have not
.:jl) the murder of a Kanawha County ruled out the Rev. Mike Flippo, 48,
minister's wife at a Fayette County as a suspect in the slaying of his wife,
:siate,patk and haVe yetto fUie OU!Ihe Cheryl Flippo, 46. "We're trying to
'minister.
maintain a pretty broad base and· an
• ; "We think our investigation is opel!·inind," ·rd said.
'
focused ... but there are details that · Sheriff's eputies interviewed
peed to be addressed," Fayette Coun- Flippo. then rele _ him, Laird said.
t:i Sheriff Bill Laird said Wednesday.
Police found Mrs. Flippo's body
: • "As we address those details, we shortly after 2 a.m. TUesday in an isomo'ving in the direction of an lated cabin at Babcock State Park,
tUt-est."
'
Laird said.

are

J;JAW, BorgWarner agree o_
n pact_
~~

The United ;\11to WOrkers and All members ~fUA~ LOcal. 1685
QorgWamer Corp. in Gallipolis have . are to attend a rauficltaon meeung .at
.ann011nccd .a tentative a~nt on 10 a.m: Sunday at the Col~ny The·
.:new ~bor conll'8Ct.
ater, 218 Second Ave .• Galhpohs.
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collision

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: CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - · ittens of millions of dollars in incenA proposed $1 . 1 billion, 600-)llorker tjves and a $200 million loan ,
pulp mill would be lost to the state if
Kenneth Goddard, a spokesman
c;:harlotte Pritt were elec)ed governor for Parsons .&amp; Whittemore, did not
because of her hostility to it, an en vi- -return a telephone call.
roninentalleader said.
Pritt said the state w.ould do bet: But Pritt said while she opposes ter to give $1 million to the 600
-the plant at Apple Grove, Mason workers the plant promtses to employ
GC)unty, she is unsure what she could so they could start their own business.
do about it, even if she were elected
Environmentalists oppose the progovernor.
ject because of concerns about dio&lt;. "My gut ft;eling is the company in, a cancer-causin~ chemical prowould look elsewhere for locating the duced by the bleaching process used
plant-if there was a Governor' Pritt," at the mil), They say a safer system
Nonn Sieenstra, director of the West . is available, but the plant refuses to
- Virginia-Citizens Action Group, said use it.
Wednesday.
The · Affiliated Construction
"I think an adm-inistration not Trades Foundation, a union group,
sympathetic to the pulp mill would opposes the plant without a promise
scare the company away," said Steen- it would be a union operation.
stra, who opposes the plant.
_
Underviood, Republican guberna"(Tbe,company) would welcome torial candidate David McKinley ~nd
a·Joe Manchin or Cecil Undelwood l)(:rnocrats Jim Lees. Larrie oBailey
victory," Steenstra said.
and Lyle .Sattes would support the
. : Manchin, Pritt's primary rival. mill if it meets federal and state en vic
has taken no position on the mill. ronrnental ~uirements.
llnderw'ood, the frontrunning Repub· Bailey said, however, that too
·lrcan, supports it.
much secrecy has surrounded the
: Parsons f!r. Wl'\iltemore Inc., of plant's negotiations.with state reguR_ye Brook, N.Y., is the developer. lators and economic developrnen.t
·The
state to give · officials.
. pulp mill wants the
,.

was ratified and passed by both
houses of Congress in 1952 stating
"that the President shall set aside and
proclaim a suitable -day each year, .
other. than a Sunday, as a National
Day of Prayer, on which the people
of the United States may tum to God
in prayer and meditation." President
Truman signed PL324 intQ law on
April17, 1952.
On May 5, 1988, President Ronald
Reagaro 'i&amp;ned an amended bill establishing tile first Thiii'Sday of each
May as a legal day to congregate and
· pray ·, !!,,"·
• ··
"Without qixl there is no p~Cmpt­
ing of the conselence ... without God
there is a coarsening of !he society;
without God dern'ocracy will not and
cannot long endure... If we forget that
we are One Nation Under God, then
we will be a Nation Gone Under,"
Reagan said in 198tf.

AFTERMATH- 83-year-old Cecil C. Hellman
wa• tranaported to Grant Medical Center In
Columbus following a three-vehicle wreck near Pomeroy Wednesday afternoon. Hell-

man's car was struck by a tractor and semitrailer•driven by Billy .W. Blackburn, 38, Live
Oak, Fla. Workers extricate Hellman from the wreck using the Jaws of _Life.

An 83-year-old Pomeroy man was
transponed by helicopter to Grant
Medical Center in Columbus follow. ing a three-vehicle accident on U.S.
33 near Pornetoy Wednesday around
1:30 p.m.
Billy W Blackburn, 38, Live Oak,
Fla., was southbound on U.S. 33 • when he lost control of the 1996
White Volvo tractor and serni-trailerhe was driving, acco~ing to a repon ·
from the Gallia-Meigs Ppst of the
Continued on ;~~..e:3 - · : lj

·Salvation Army-to continue operations in Meigs County
ment of Human Services, in meeting
with prospective volunteers to continue our operations. The process has
taken longer than we expected: but
The Salvation Anny is ·still very
much an active operation in Meigs
County,..-said Bauder.
Programs such as annual food and
clothing distribution, holiday food
and toy drives, and the annual Sal- ·
vati6n Army .kettle driv.e will continue, with other programs to be added
to _the organization's operations in
Meigs County, according to Bauder.
· The Salvation Anny began operA decline in attendance forced the ations in Pomeroy in 1937 in a
closing of The Salvation Army facil- building formerly located at the cority on 115 - Butternut Avenue, ner of Butternut Avenue and Second
Pomeroy. because it was not cost- Street.
In December, 196:/,, the Butternut
effective for the organization to conAvenue
location was purchased by
tinue operations, said Lt. James
Envoy
Ray
Wining. with the first
Bouder of the Salvation Anny.
floor
used
for
Salvation Army activThe organization also attributed
the closing of the Butternut facility to ities and second floor used as livin~
concern for the declining health of its• quarters for Mr. Wining and his wife,
··
owner, Mrs. Dora Wi~ing. Wining . Dora.
has volunt,eered her home and time to
The Salvation Army operations in
After Mr. Wining's death in 1983,
Pomeroy over the past several yeats, Mrs. Win ing, the Corps outpost
Bouder said.
sergeant. cqntinued day-to~day SalThe closing of the cente~ d~s not va,tion Army o~rations at the horne
mean the end for Salvation Anny pro- u'ntil the January closing. ,
grams in Meigs County, with operaThe· Salvation Anny, which
tions to be controlled from the Athens depends solely on donations to conoffiCes and volunteers in the Com- tinue . ~rations, traditionally held
munity slllled to carry on the family regular worship services · at the
assistance worlc.
·
Pomeroy fi!Cility, and has helped Iran· .
"We ffC currently working close- sients and families in need thrOIIghly wilh the Meigs County Depart- out the year.
·
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
With the January closing of The
Salvation Army's Pomeroy facility,
the days of operations for the organization in Meigs County appeared to
be numbered.
That will not be ihe case, as efforts
to•continue family service work and
operations in Meigs County will_
continue with communi!y vol~nteers
and expanded programs, according to
officials with The Salvation Ann¥'s
Athens hel!(lquarters.
·

Each Christmas, many local families and children 1Iave recei ved food
baskets arid toys, while gifts have
been distributed to area rest homes,
hospitals. institutions, and jails by the
organization.
Recognition services are being
planned to honor Mrs. Wining's long

service to the organization, Bouder ·
said, with an announC!lJllent to be
made sometime in the near future:
"She did an excellent job, and we
)lope to continue and expand upon, the
operations that she and her late husband worked tirelessly to build in
Meigs County," said Bouder.

...

. OPERATIONS TO CONTINUE· Deap!W the Jltnuary clollng ot
their POIMI'oy facility, The Salvdon Anny wHI contitMII ~ ..
tiona In Malgl County wl1h the usa of ~:J:naaata. The
lzltion hopat to axpafld ttMt fMIIIy
nee • vlcea
.
to the Meigs CountY CCiftiQIIIlllty In the- future.(~
tlnel {118 photo)
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·commentary

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Pege2
Thursday, May 2, 1996

,

•

Thuraclay, May 2, 1191

·.

'LJWfisftd in 1948

•

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

..2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Pumping political mileage
from gas price jumps ·

PKONING

0~
NON·P~ONif~?

By TOM RAUM •
Associated Press WrHer
WASHINGTON -Many ,nergy experts suggest gasoline prices, which
have climbed to their highest levels since the Persian Gulf War, may soon
start to ease on their own. But that hasn't stopped either President Clinton
or Sen. Bob Dole from rushing in with remedies. .
. Both the president and his presumptive fall rival are maneuvering for polit.ical gain in the recent surge in prices. But their efforts may have litthi significant impact on prices at the pump.
·
Dole's answer comes in the form qf a repeal of the 4.3 cent-a-gallon
increase .that Congress enacted in 1993 as part of Clinton 's overall deficit·
reduction package.
. .
.
. .
· "We believe with the skyrocketmg pnces of gasolme, Jet fuel and other
fuels that the most certain way to give consumers relief is to repeal the gas
tax," he said Tuesday in a Senate speech.
Both he and House Speaker Newt Gingrich -who went to a California
gas station last weekend to blame rising prices on that I 993 tax hike- have
promised a vote before Memorial Day, traditional start of the summer driving season. ·
·
Electoral-vote-rich California has been hardest hit by the increases, with
gas in some areas approaching $2 a 'gallon.
. .
Clinton, not to be outdone, announced he would sell 12 m1lhon barrels
of oil from the nation's strategic petroleum reserve to help stabilize the oil
market. "Action speaks louder than rhetoric;" White House spokesman Mike
(lofcCurry said Tuesday.
·
.
.
.
· At the same time, the Justice Department announced 1t would mvestlgate the causes of the increases - on ihe order of 20 cents a gallon since
the start of the.year - and determine whether there has been any illegal
~ollusion by oil companies. The Energy Department is undertaking a similar studY:
·
·
'
.. .
: Price gouging and oil-company greed are natural camprugn tssues because
Congressional Republicans are
everyone blames the oil companies for gas-price increases, suggests Demostriving
to shed the labels "extrem. ~ratic pollster Mark Mellman.
.
and
"do nothing," but they are
ist"
. But, he added, "I'm not sure that repealing part of the gas tax on the one
divided over whether to raise the
liand or selling oil from the. Strategic Petroleum Reserve on the other will
minimum. wage and, once again,
)le seen by people as solving the problem."
·
balanced-budget negotiations
enter
• Even if Dole and Gingrich can deliver on del:lucting4.3 cents from the.
with
President
Clinton.
·
ciurrent 18.3-cent·a-gallon gas tax, "they can't guaranteelhat consumers will ·
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga .. in
see any of this,." said Ed Rothschild, an energy analyst for the consumer
the process of recasting his own
group Citizen Action. . .
. ..
.
.
· "The companies could JUSt pocket It, - Rothschild srud. He called the GOP image from one of irresponsible revploy "a master political short-term stroke, but I think it will come back to olutionary to brotherly reformer, has
· riled other GOP leaders by advocatlii'te them." ·
·
ing a minimum-wage hike while
: As to Clinton's proposal, selling 12 million. barrels from the strategic
resisting budget talks.
~troleum reserve would account for less than what the .country consumes
Gingrich is coming out of a threein a single day (I 8 million barrels).
.
.
.
month period variously characterized
: The reserve was set up in 1975 to serve as a cush10n agrutlst od shortby fellow Republicans as "sulking"
ages but has been used more as a political reserve- for presidents to draw
or "reflective." He observed Earth
fipm mostly for symbolic purposes.
. .
.
Day at the Atlanta Zoo and is becom· President Bush in late 1990 sold 5 m1lhon barrels of ~rude 011 from the , ing a fixture on TV shows, including
reserve as a "signal" to warn oil companies from profiung from the Per-. Jay Leno's "Tonight" recently.
•G~~·
More important, he is now in the
· Furthermore, the oil Clinton would sell- actually authonzed m a recent
process ,.rr'ashioning a 1996 election
appropriations bill - would .come from ~ low-quality part of the reserve
strategy based on GOP accomplishand not generate much revenue or do much to hold down prices, Rothschild
ments, attacks on President Clinton,
and promises of a brighter future if
Bob Livings;on, R-La .. chairman of the House Appropriations Comthe GOP takes full control of the govn1ittee accused Clinton of "slippery rhetoric."
·
ernment.
. "I ~m doubtful. as are the experts, that the sales will have any real effect
Shorthand for the message,
on bringing down gas prices, .. Livingston said.
.
.
according to Gingrich press secretary
Republicans seized the gas-tax repeal as an attracllve pocketbook JSsue
Tony Blankley, is "look at all we got
a(ter being outmaneuvered by Democrats on legJSiallon to mcrease the mmdone in spite of Clinton," "is a libimum wage.
.
.
·
eral and a liar," and "here's what we
• "We've discussed ... maybe even couphng.these two Items .... Repeal the
can do if Bob Dole is president."
gP. tax and maybe (raise) the minimum ~age •." Dole sa1dTuesday.
In order to bolster the first part of
. Even with ·the recent increases, gasoh~e pnces m the Unned States are
the message, Congress is busy fashamong the lowest in 'the industrialized world.
. .
. .
ioning a positive record ·to repair
' lndustiy analysts bhime the increases on a combmabon of factors:,t1ght
damage inflicted by the budget wars
iqventories at refineries, uncertainties over whether 011 from Iraq would enter
of 1995, which Clinton won handsworld markets, more demand because of higher speeds under relaxed speed
down.
limits and popularity of low-gas-milea~e recreallon~l vehicles.
.
The recent passage of an omnibu~
·· ''I don't know if this issue has legs m the camprugn. It may go_awa~ m
fiscal 1996 appropriations bill was
a:week," said James Thurber, a political scientist at Amencan Umvers1ty. . key to the comeb~ck strategy. Republicans cut $23 billion ffoin 1995 disEDITOR'S NOT~: Tom Raum covers national politiesJor the Asso·
cretionary spending and at the same
clated Press and reported on the energy crises of the 1970s.
·
time relented on cul5 in education and
environmental spending that Clinton

Wage,

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Letters to the editor

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To whom it may concern
Dear Editor
· , I just wanted to thank the person
that ·sent us the anonymous Jetter
about the article I wrote, but didn't
h•vc the ne..Ve to sign it.
. But you did have the . gull t.o
irivade my in-laws by putung thetr
name and address on the return envelope ami that's really nerve. They
,.;.re both very UJISel over this _as they
didn't have anything to do w1th thiS
l~ller. As for us asking our church and
·family for help everybody knows our
situation and are a little more generou~ than you think. I want to thank
the people that have helped us so far.
We just didn't need finances, we also
need help in getting our borne back,
liying conditions.
·
.·
. So we had six men here. ~unday
ttiat worked at nine hours raiSing our

double-wide. You rnust know every·
body. on the river bank since you
knew it flooded here. But at the til!le
we all bought we didn't know this, as
of now we have four new homes built
and another one going up.
My . husband isn't quite well
enough. to work, he tries.but get~ very
tired and sick. Cancer IS nothmg to
joke about and I hope you or yours
never have to go through ·this. We ·
would appreciate it if you would let
us know who yo\' are aS we all are a
little concerned, especially my father·
in-law, Julius. We will get through
this with God's help so don't worry
yourself about us,obut find som~ne
else to write that doesn't please you.
Mr. ~nd Mn. Robert Wahlnlg,
Mr. and Mn. JuUus Waldni&amp;.
Radnt

)

. Thought for Today: "What experience and history teach is th~~; that peo1 d vemmenl5 have never learned anythmg from history. -Georg
~~~~r:~riedrich Hegel. German philosopher ( 1770-183 1). .
.,

.

'

bolcause it takes the ideas directly Fund, from Feb. 29. 1992, through
from ~ analysts. And the analyJI5 April II, 1996. was 17.40 percent.
are actually the ponfolio managers. That places it ninth our of the 221
So it is directly managed by the peo- growth and income funds that Lipper
Analytical Services ranks. The averDian Vujovlch
age total return for all growth and
income funds over that same time
pie who generate the ideas." .
Period was 12,25 percent. And dur·
This type of management style ing the first quarter of 1996, total
was adopted for the fund in the ear- return for the fund was 6.93 percent,
ly 1990s. Before that, it was managed ouipacing both the total return for the
in a traditional fashion, often had less average like fund and that of the S&amp;P
than mediocre performance results, SOO index.
and was named the Massachusetts
If you ' re wondet_3ng how so many
Financial bevelopffient Fund .. But · people can manage one fund •s mon·
since the fund has changed its name ey, the answer is simple; things get
and looked to a host of experts for its (,livvied up. ·
·
investment ide~s . it has been a top
Generally
the
MFS
Research
Fund
performer:
keeps between I 10-120 different
For example, the average annual stocks in its portfolio. There are 20 to
total return for.,.!he MFS Research 24 different analysts managing it,

'

fights slow GOP
-

MICH.

another shifty ploy to embarrass the
GOP.
' Blankley said he suspects Clinton
will present more "phony" deficit
proposals, which Republicans will.
have to rsject, and th~n he w11l
accuse the GOP of favonng extrem•
ist "cuts" in Medicare and other enti·
dements.
Clinton, said Blankley, '' will
resort to everything from bald-faced
lies to subtle distortions"to win political points. The statement is ·both a
reflection of continuing chagrin in the
Gingrich camp at having been flummoxed in last year's budget talks and
a determination to expose Clinton as
part of the GOP 1996 election strategy.
.
Gingrich's plan calls for Republi;
cans to remind voters of Clinton's
·unfulfilled 1992 promises to cut taxes for the middle class and reform
welfare and say, according to Blankley, '·'this is how Clinton's character
flaws affect you." .
.
It's not clear what vision Republicans will propose to make the
future brighter. Two years ago, they
promised a "revolution" and scare&lt;! ·
the daylights out of people. It may be
that incremental conservatism is what
people want, but it sure sounds dull.
(Morton Kondraeke is executive
editor of'Roll Call, the new~paper ·
of Capitol Hill.)

.

'

.---Local briefs---.....,

•

•lcolumbus!74"
I

.

Theft of dog probed

I

A 3 112-year-old Rottweiler was stolen from a Reedsville-area residence Wednesday, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
.
· Donna Dalton, Number 9 Road, reported the female dog was stolen
from her residence. Soulsby said. A light-colored Chevrolet Camaro
was seen at the residence around 8 a.m.
In addition. Joan Pickens, Portland, reported a videocassettco
recorder was stolen from home sometime afler April If

W. V4.

Deerlveh.icle accident reponed

-. ~

.

No injuriEs Jere reported following a deer/vehicle accident Wednesday evening on state Route 124 near Rutland.
Deborah Hatfield, Rutland, reported she was eastbound on state
Route 124 when she struck and killed a deer that ran into the path of
her I990 Ford, causing moderate damage.

I

Yout~ited on

J'oday's weather forecast

domestic charge

A 14-y -old Pomeroy girl ·was charged with domestic violence ·
after alleged y assaultjng her mqther Wednesday evening.
The youth was trat\sported to Gallia County pending a hearing in
Meigs County Juvenile CoUrt.

Extended forecast ··
Southeastern Ohio
Friday night...A chance of rain.
Today... Partly cloudy. High in the
lower 70s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 Lows in the 40s and the lower 50s
south.
mph.
.
Tonight...Showers likely...Mainly · Saturday... A chance of morning
aft-.r midnight. A chance of thunder- ·rain ...Then fair.. Highs lower 60s
(rom page
1 _
'I
••• _Continued
__;__.:.....;;
_
. storms.' Low in the lower SOs. Light n.orlheast to the mid 70s south.
Sunday...Chance of showers main- State Highway Patrof .
another northbound car driven by
. and variable wind. Chance of rain 60
.
lY
south and east. Lows 45 to 55.
percent.
The truck, owned by Highway RobertS. Crawford, 45, Nelso!'ville,
Friday ... Partly cloudy with a ·, Highs in the lower 60s north to ,the Express of Fort Smith, Ark., rolled the patrol reported. Crawford's .1993
chance of showers and ·thunderstorms mid 70s south.
over in a right curve striking a north- Ford Thunderbird sustained moderate
M'onday... Fair. Lows in .the 40s. bound car driven by Cecil C. Heil- and disabling damage.
in the afternoon. High in the mid to
Blackburn and a paSsenger,
upper 70s. Ch"llce of rain 40 percent. Highs in the lower 50s porth to the man. Heilman's 1994 Mercury Marlower 69s south.
quis went off the right side of .the Christina K. Blackburn, 37, of Live
road, down mall embankment and Oak, and Crawford escaped injury in
rolled ont Its side.
the accident, the patrol reported. All
Res e workers using the Jaws of involved were wearing seat belts, the
Life extricated Heilman from the report indicated.
wrecked car prior to his being transThe Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
paned to Grant via MedFJight heli- Department and Pomeroy and Syracopter.
across
the
south
and
the
lows
will
be
cuse squads of the ¥eigs County
Ely The Associated Press
H~ilman
is
listed
in
.
serious
con.
. Ohio. will have a very brief break cool with readings in the 40s.
Emergency Medical S~..Vice respondThe 'recor4 high temperature for dition: a Grant spokeswoman said ed to the scene.
'from the rain today with generally
this date·'at the Colombus weather this morning.
partly cloudy-skies.
Blackburn was cited by the patrol
Blackburn's truck theq struck for f)lilure to control.
7onight, a new low pressure sys- station was 88 ·iri I 959. The. record
tem getting organized over the south· low was 30 in ·1963.'
Sunset today wiU be at8:27 p.m.
em Plains will push a warm front into
the region. It will 'slowly push across Sunrise en Friday will be at 6:29 a.m.
the area into Friday and cause numer- Across the nation
UnitS 'of the Meigs County Emer- Rehabilitation Center, Russell
. The temperature hovered at 79
. ous showers and thunderstorms.
gency
Medical Service recorded I 9 Quillen, VMH.
degrees
at
Key
West,
Aa.,
early
Skies may clear out briefly on Fri·
TUPPERS PLAINS
day but thunderstorms ·will 'devtlop today while Marquette, Mich., was a calls for assistance inclul:ling eight
4:14p.m., Rice Run Road,
as a cold front approaches from the bone-chilling 15 and partly cloudy. transfer calls. Units responding
Bessie Brawley, Camden-Clark
Las Vegas inched up to 77 just included:
west.
Memorial Hospital;'
MIDDLEPORT
·· .
'. The outlook for the weekend is for . before daybreak.
9:05 p.m., volunteer fire
5: 17 p.m., North Second
In the Pacific Northwest, it should
this system to move yery siowly and
be breezy with areas ofrain and high- Avenue, Robin Wood, Pleasant Val- department and squad to state Rou~e
result in continued wet weather.
7, motor-vehicle accident; Kevil)
High tempera1ures today will rise er-elevation snow, and a few thun- ley Hospital.
POMEROY
.
Goff, CCMH.
into the 65-to-75-degree range with ._derstorms from Washington and Ore8:47
·
a
.m
.•
Custer
Street,
lows dropping iqto the 45-to-55- . gon t6 the northern Rockies. The
.degree range for tonight. Friday's Southwest Cll/l expect another dry and Malinda Christy, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
.
.
highs will range from the lower 60s unseasonably warm day.
10:16 a.m., Rocksprings
&lt;lcross the north to the lower 70s
ROBIN WIWAMS IN
Rehabilitation Center, Elizabeth FosTHE
BIRD CAGE ,
ter, VMH;
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
~
I :20 p.m.,' South Second
STARTING FRIDAY
Street, Cynthia Large, VMH;
STEVE MARTIN,
Ten cases were resolved recently plus costs, $400 forfeiture;
I :35 p.m:, volunteer fire ·
DAN AYKROYD IN ·
Robert H, Workman, Rutland, , department and squad, motor-vehicle
in the' Meigs.County Court of Judge
SGT~BILKO,.
failure to control. $30 plus costs; · accident pn U.S. 33, Cecil Heilman;
Patrick H. O'Brien.
'
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
· Fined were; Keith Myers Jr., Long . Ph,yllis ,J. Clark, Rutland, littering, Medflighi to Grant Medical Center,
~3
$100
suspended
to
$25,
costs,
two
Bottom, passing bad checks, $25 plus
. Virginia Heilman, VMH. Syracuse
costs; Connie S. Newell, Cheshire, years p(obation; Lisa Vance, Colum- squad assisted;
.
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Louie A. bus, passing bad checks. $25 sus5:25 p.m., Landfill Road,
Louden, Cheshire, seat belt, $25 plus pended, cosl5, restitution; William ; Ladonna Mintz, VMH.
costs; Jason M. Cook, Jackson, Hinds, Clark, no muffler, $100 plus
· RACINE
' ·
speed, $30 plus costs; Bobby J. Stan· costs; Ch~les Willard, Chillicothe, .
2:23 p.m., motor•vehicle
ley, Racine, reckless operation, $100 speed, $23 suspended, costs.
accident at Pearl and Elm streets, Sally and David Gloeckner, VMH.
RUTLAND
II :27 a.m., state Route 124
and
Hysell
Run Road, Nora Vicker,
• COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSows: mostly steady.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs . 31.00- VMH;
I :56 p.m.. Rocksprings
buying points Thursday by the U,s: 35.00; 500-650 lb~. 35.00-38.0Q, few
\..
Department of Agric~lture Market 39.00. .
. News:
Boars: 28 .00-~0.00.
'· Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to
Estimated receipts: 40,000.
. Announcements
mostly 1.00 higher; demand moderPrices from The Producers Special lodge meeting
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM,
ate to good on a moderate run.
Livestock Association:
Chester,
will meet Saturday, 7:30
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 49.50Cattle: steady to 1.00 higher.
. 52.00, few 49.00; plants 51.50-53.00,
Slaughter steers: choice S 1.00- p.m, at the lodge. Work in Master
Mason degree.
few 53.:Z5.
56.00; select 47.00-51.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 43.00. Stauf!hrer heifers: choice 50.00Pomona Grange
49.00.
54.00: select46.00-50.00.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
Cows; steady to 1.50 higher; all
·· ~·- · - · ~ will.hold its regular JTJeeting Friday,.
COWS 37.25 and down.
Bulls: steady to higher; all bulls 7:30p.m. at the Roclc Springs Grange.
The Daily Sentinel 56.00
Hall. Racine Gr~nge will host. Bring
and down.
•
(liSPS m-~l
. Veal calves: steady; choice 85.00 items for baking contest.
A
.
.
and
down. I •
. '
.,
·Published evccy aflemoon, Monday daroucb
RJ\Iay. Ill Co,.. Sl·• Pomeroy, '()!lio, by 1he ,
Sheep 'aad lambs: 2.00 to 3.00 Appointments available
Ollto YoJio)o PubliShing ~lOan""' eo.. ! lower; choice wools 89.00-94.25;
Six mammogram appointmen_ts
Po"""'Y· Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Socood
ttJkeMoml
.\'}1Pi~F _clips' 11(00-93.50; feeder are available 111 the Meigs County
.class posCqe.-~at PomeroY. Ohi9: , . ... ~ '~
I'., lam;bs· 98.00 lind down; aged sheep Health Department ror May 10. The
Mtlllber.lbe Auociaccd Prtu, lnd d!O.ONo
appointments are for late morning
40.00 and down.
Newlplper Auocildon.
'
:
Day
· and early afternoon. For more mforPOSI'MASTI!R: Scncliiddnolo c:omai0111 lo
mation, call .the health department at
The Daily Sentiocl, Ill C..Urt Si., ro-oy,
' '
,
992-6626.
Olllo 4$769.
'
1
' 1be name ·or the late father of
:=~:=.
·Robert Earl Autherson was incor· Sutton Trustees to meet
0ne-.~ ...........................:..........,...... rz,oo reedy listed as~aywood Autherson
· Sutton Township Trustees will
OneMoolll.,...;.................................,... -.st.10 1· in Wcdne~day's' Daily Sentinel. The meet Monday, 7:30p.m. at the SyraCOfTI!Ct name is Ma)lw?od.
••• OneY~ .. :....~..................,...... ............. SI~¥1
cuse Municipal Building.

. iiUiie
. d
Man ,n

Stocks

'
Am Ele POMr .......................39·Akzo •. ~................................... 51\
~·rtd 011 .......................- ••40'..

ATAT ............................,..........60
Bank OM ................................34\
Bob EV8RI ouoo-•oo•ooooooooooonoooo16'/.
~wa

...................................38\

Champion lnd....................... 18~

Charml1111 Shop ......................&amp;~

City Holding ...................:........24

Fedll'lll Mogu1 ••...••.••••.•.•••••••• 1a;.

Ganrlltt ................................. 68:1
GoodyHr TI:R ...................... 52\
K-cnart·...................................10}.
Landa End .............................1H
Limited Inc............................ 21».
Peoples Bancorp...................23

Ohio Valley Bank .................... 40
One Vsllay ............................. 31 fo
RockWell ..........................,... 581.
Robbin• • Myers ..................... ~
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 140~
Shoney'alnc......................... 11'!.
Star Barllt .............................. 66'1.
Wendy lnt'l. .......................... ,.. 19
Worthington Ind................... 20'1.

-·-·-

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Noca
Vickers, Elkview, W.Va.
•
Wednesday discharge~ - none.
Holzer Medical l.. ~r
:
Discha111es May 1 - . Amanda
Harder, Zachary Payne, James Harmon, Jim Compton, Eric GoheeR,
Howard Meade. Eva McTarsney,
James Stewart, Mrs. Billie Holley ·
and daughter, James Jones. Lawrence
Babbitt.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Perkins, daughter, Coalton; Mr. and
Mrs. Matthew Smith, son , Crown
City. .
.
(Published with permission)

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.
.

Who say~ you
can't take it
with you?

Let us create
a memorial
just for you.

1110

POMEROY

.,._. Pam.oy "rton.Brldgl

•

9112·2588
VINTON
Gallll County Dlepllly Yn
155MIInSl

3818803

10:00 ~m to 9 pm

. ,.,,

.~ ? · 'IL

.

great
place to

•

Mother's

•

~.~~..~-~.~-~.,.35 Ceall, I:.

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

.Sef"!Jina Starts at

:::::,:::::~,_nod......

.............. c.,,."''-•"Yllilabl•.
MAIL SUBSCIIIPTIONS

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'.~-~-.~~.........m.JO

...................... ............... ...:.....U3.1l

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1 3 -............................ .................... !!·~

.

'lluttern.ut jive, Pome.rou

; 1 6 -........................... ..........................

»-

11 ;00

Pomeroy :Fire Stawn:

1 3 -.....

211 -

lii!!!ii!l!i'!!liil!liil!ii!!!liil!iiil!!ii!liil!!!ii!liz!liil'!lili!~~

cliicfQ.en&amp;,·.:!l{i6'1lar-fJ3-Qpe .
Sunliay, May 5tli

011a dnO.Ii• or 12 . - loaolt. o..lil wiD lie

'

Gift Idea$!

.

.

olily ........

• ARTFUL ·oODGER

'

4-H or FFA members pWWIII io
show market hogs at the 1996 t.\JIIp
County Fair must register iheir ~­
ket project (maxjmum of two pi!J ..,
and two barrows) and pay pieunoe money in the amount of $10 per lUll·
mal (maumum two, one gilt and~·
bartow) at the'above date and time;
For more information, please COli·
tact Chip Haggerty, Meigs County
Extension Agent, 4-H , at 614-99~6696.

Today's livestock rep~rt

Correction

·~

.

County court fines· issued .

l

~896 by NEA, Inc.

Market Hoa regiJtration for I 996
4-H and FFA market hoJ exhibitors
· has been set for Saturday from 9 a.m.
to ' II a.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Office.

Partly cloudy skies
forecast for weekend

.

In 18~5. Good Housekeeping magazine was first published in Holyoke,
Mass. ·
.
.
In 1890, the Oklahoma Territory was organized.
•·
In 1895, lyricist Lorenz Hart, who collaborated with composer Richard
Rodgers on songs like "Thou Swell" and "My Funny Valentine," was born
in New York.
In 1932, Jack Benny's first radio show made its debut on the NBC Blue
Network.
•,
In 1936, "Peter and the Wolf," a sympho~ic tale for children by Sergei
Prokofiev, had its world premiere in Moscow.
In 1945, the Soviet Union annouqced the fall of Berlin, and the Allies
announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy a11d parts of Austria.
In 1957, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, the controversial Republican senator
from Wisconsin, died at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland.
In 1960, convicted sex offender and best-selling author Caryl Chessman
was executed at San Quentin Prison in California.

.

Mar.ket hog registration to be held Saturdey

rday,Ma

Berryls World

By The Associated Preas .
.
Today is Thursday, May 2. the 123rd day of 1996. There are 243 days
left in the year.
Tnday ~s Highlight in History;
On May 2, 1863, Confederate General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson was
accidentally wounded by his own men at Chancellorsville, Va., and died eight
days later.
On this date:
In 1519, artist Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, France.
In 1670, the Hudson Bay Co. was chartered by England's King Charles

.

Russell E. Quillen, 90, of Letart Falls died Wednesday, May I. J996at
Veterans Memorial Hospitai.,.Pomeroy.
.
Anangcmcnts 1n pending at the Straight, 1\Jcker &amp;: Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood, W.Va.

· The followinc deeds were record-' ~=~~ Bank 10 MidiiiCI
ed recendy in the office. of Meias and Betty Meidau, Sllltoo PIJCCI; :
~Recorder ElnmopDe llamilCatherine Colwell to l't1lnlt ....
Mid Swe Trust U .to Jim Walter Pamela Sue Colwell, Salem;
:
Homes I~~~:orporaled, ~alisbury
.Dennis and Susan ROUih 10
~Is; ,
Pamela King. Lebanon;
;
Jila Walter Homes Inc., Mid State
Grant L. and Erika H. Borilll tl
Trust n to Laveda E. Whet:iler, Salis- Patricia Martin and Michael Borinf•
•
,
Reedsville parcels;
,

·Meigs EMS log~ 19 calls

Today in· history

u.

Russell E. Quillen .
A

which means each analyst gets five or
six stock ideas to play with and control. (Portfolio turnover for this fund ;"
runs between 70-80 percent per year,
and it's a little more volatile than
most.)
Parke said that the size of the analyst team can change dependjng upon
market conditions. "If you fooked at
us a few years ago we had just two
experts on technology; today we.
have four. We had one expert on
health care; today we have three. So
as we see moi'C opportunities and a5
industries become more interesting,
we add resources."
Currently the fund is overweighted in technology stocks witli roughly 15 percent of its asseu invested in
those issues (9 percent of the total is
invested in computer software companies like Or...~ e Systems and
Cadence Design System, and the
remaining 6 percent is spread out
among computer hardware and networking stocks). After technology
issues come health care (13 percent),
financial services (13 percent), and
consumer staples ( 12 percent). The
rest of the assel5 are invested across
the board.
The management style of the
MFS Research Fund has provided
shareholders : with a diversified
investment vehicle that's managed by
professionals within certain industries. That leads to a naturally balanced system that cross-checks stock
picking ideas in 101 different wars.
But the real test of a good portfolio manager -- or management team
-·· happens during extended ' bear
markets. Sometime in the future
we 'II be ~ble to gauge whether tOQ
many cooks spoiled the pot or kept ii
perking right along.
Dian Vuj 0vich is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutua!
Funds" and "Straight Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement,'~
both of which are published by .
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
her in care of this newspaper.

'c,o~eb~ck'

.
was characterizing
as "extremist."
Northeastern R-epublicans who
Other parts ·of the done-a-lot si'de favor a minimum-wage hike say that
of GOP electior ·ategy include pas· the . package would certainly be
sage of telecommunications, farm attacked by Democrats as a cynical
ploy to kill the increase, and Ginwich
- - - - - - - - ' - - - - :.- - . is. said to believe that Republicans
Morton Kondracke may have to allow a vote on the wage
hike -- which the Democrats ·will
and terrorism legislation, work on pro~ably win. Other leaders are dishealth care reforin, and timely con- mayed at his fatalism and reluctance
sideration of fiscal 1997 money bills. to wage war on the issue.
· "Incrementalism" is the order of the
GOP policy on the minimum·
day.
wage issue is scheduled to be hashed
But, in the effort to appear rea- out soon by the full House Republisonable, should the GOP yield to can Conference, though floor action
Democrats by agrJII'ing to a mini- isn't expected for several weeks.
mum-wage hike and try to work out
Not only have Democrats seized
a seven-year balanced budget deal the initiative from Republicans on the
with Clint n?
minimum wage, but recently Clinton
In recent leadership meetings, challenged them to re-open balane&amp;d
sources say, Gingrich argued that budget talks. Republicans demurred,
there was no use fighting polls indi- with Dole saying he'd wait until Concating that the public favors a wage · gress had passed its own budget. ·
hike by 80 percent to 20 percent and
To get a balanced budget deal
that Republicans were best off dis- including restraints on entitlements
posing of the issue as quickly as pos- clearly would I:Je a coup for the
sible.
Republican Congress, but GOP l~ad­
Gingrich was confronted, howev. ers are divided on whether to get mto
er, by a full phalanx of opposition that 'the talks.
included Majority L'eader Dick
Boehner and House Budget Com·
Armey (Texas), Whip T9m DeLay mittee Chairman John Kasich (Ohio)
(Texas), and-Conference Chainnan favor 1he talks, especially because
John Boehner (Ohio), who argued differences between GOP and Clinton
that Republicans had to oppose the plans have narrowed to just $1.10 bilhike on the principle that it would lion over seven years, but Gmgr1ch
cost jobs.
seems to think that Clinton is up to
Gingrich . is now fashioning apackage that would counter the
Democrats' minim~m-wage increase
with items Republicans favor, includ- ·
ing tax breaks for families and small
businesses and a measure requiring
unions to give their members an
accpunting of how their dues are used
for politics and other non-representational purposes and permitting them
to cancel such deductions.

Meigs lands transfers .

t'~1 May3
.. Aa:11W~ forecut

·T he Daily Sentinel 'The.' more managers.the merrier'
Some mutual funds are managed
by one pellQn, others by a couple of
individuals. The~ are even tbosc that
take a team approach to their portfolio management. One fund, however,
takes a " the-more-the-merrier" point
of view and(has a couple of dozen
people invol'ved in its management.
The MFS -Research Fund, a fund
managed for growth and income, has
24 different analysts deciding which
stocks to buy -- and sell -- in its port·
folio.
" It's unique in that every other
mutual fund out there is managed by
a portfolio man_ager or committee of
managers who take recommendations
from analysts either in house or on
Wall Street," says Kevin Parke, director of research for the MFS Research
Fund. " This product IS different

Pomaroj • Mlcldlaport, Ohio

............~:~........................1109.72
.,,

•

•Decorative wood, slate and floral
•Solid hardwood chests and
display cases
•Ceramics
•Fabric crafts &amp; dolls
•Candles

...

�···--- ..__

-

..

.... .. . .....
•

•

~ .. -

-~---

• • ,..

• 1.. .

oo;f •

' -

~ ·~

~

--

• • - - - i • ••r n

...

•

·llHndey, M.y 2, 1M

-~ lnd·ians

.

down White Sox·9-5

~ .. By CHUCK MELVIN .

R~ds

...... ..
.• ..•
; : · GARCIA SCORES- Pittsburgh's Carlos Garcia (left) slides ..t.
• .1y Into the plate behind Cincinnati backstop Eddie Taubensile....,
: · Dave Clerk's single In the first lnnlng.ol Wednesday night's Nation·
. · : al League game In Cincinnati, where the Pirates' 4-3 win earned them
: . a sweep of the two-game series. (AP)
,

.:~:southern

~~:hand

•

diamondmen
Eastern 7-4 loss
.

The Southern Tornado baseball to age like an old wine, getting
team overcame a 2-4 deficit and sharper and finer as the night pro:: went on to claim a 7-4 victory over gressed. He retired seven · men in
: : !he Eastern Eagles Wednesday night order, twice retiring the side over the
-: at Wickline Field in Racine.
last three innings. The only blunder
.
Southern took a 2-0 lead in the was a harmless one-out walk to
:: third inning when Michael Ash sin- Smith in the seventh.
Southern added two insurance
: : gled, Kevin Deemer ~ ingled ~nd
. : Travis Lisle advanced the .runners runs in the sixth when Ash singled,
: · with a sacrifice. Jesse Maynard had Deemer grounded out to advance the
; : ~ single and Jay McKelvey brought runner and Lisle doubled. May,
·: home a run with a 6-3 ground out.
nand's ground out advanced Lisle to
·. In the founh inning, Eastern went third. He-came home on a hard-hit
: · up 4-2 when . leading hitter Don ball by McKelvey that went in the
: · Goheen began a strong of five books as an error to make the score
· : straight Eastern singles (Chris Bai- 7-5.
Blount fanned nine and walked
&gt;ley, Jason Sheets. Eric Hill and
two in picking up the win and going
: Travis Curtisl.
Mike Smith later slammed a sin- the distance. pric Hill suffered the
: : ~le in the inning as Eastern pushed loss, fanning none and walking one.
;. across four runs. Bailey continued
Southern hillers were Ash with a
:: his dominance of area pitching,. · 3-4 night, two singles and a double;
• :maintaining an on-base and slugging Deemer two singles,Lishi a double,
: . percentage of over .900.
Maynard a single, Dill two singles
: • : In the bottom of the fourth, Matt and Blount a single. Eastern hitters
: : pill reached on an error. He was were Smith, Goheen , Bailey (two·
·:forced out o.n a frelder's chdi&lt;;e by singles), Sheets,·Hill and Cunis.
::Joe Kirby. Chad Blount singled and
· Eastern hosts Miller Friday and
: : lioth came home on an Ash double Southern hosts A.leKander.
. : -ro tie the score. Soutllern ~~ up 5- IDnins t!lllll
, ;4 when Lisle continued the inning Eastern.: ... :....... .....000-400-0=4-7-2
:;with a run-scoring 4-lground ou1. Southern,.... .... .....002-302-x= 7- I 0-1
: :: Blount, Southern's hurler, seemed
WP. Blount
LP- Hill

By BEN WALKER
AP Ba1eball Wtllw
,
The rosary didn't wort, and nei_ther did the religious statue that
Marge Schott gave manager Ray
Knight.
The previous night, putting dog
hair in her players' pockets didn't
work either. At this point; nothing is
helping the Cincinnati Reds;--~
The defending NL Central champions lost their ninth in a row
Wednesday night, falling to Pittsburgh 4-3. The Reds have the worst
record in the league at 9· 17 and are
off to their poorest start since 1986,
when they opened 7-19 under manager Pete Rose.
·
·"I don 't know what it is, but it's
not any fun, " losing pitcher Dave
Burba said. "I don't know what
we've .got to ilo differently, but
something's got to change."
The Reds' luck seemed ready to
change when they loaded the bases
with two outs in the ninth inning at
Ri'verfront Stadium. The Pirates
brought in reliever Dan Ple§lic to
face Hal Morris, who had homered
off Plesac a day earlier.
·This time,' though, Morris hit a
hard grounder the other way that
third' baseman Charlie Hayes fielded for the final out.
· "Typical, I guess, right now,"
Morris said. "I can't relay the frus!ration right now. There's no way we
can be doing this."
In other NL games, San Diego
stopped San Francisco 9-4. Colorado
defeated Los Angeles 4-l, Houst~n
~at Atlanta 3-0, Phtladelphta
downed Flonda 6-5, Chtcago defeat-

4-3; Braves al-s o fall

ed St. LOu'is 9-3 and Montteal split
a doubleheader with New York,
winning 4-0 and then losing 6-0. ·
- Padres 9, Gluts 4 ·
Steve Finley, Rickey Henderson,
Andujar Cedeno and Ken Caminiti
. homered as San Diego put on. a rare
power show.
- The Padri:s began'lhe game last in
the majors with 13 holl)ers. Henderson, 7-for-ll in his lastthree games,
hit a two-run drive in the fifth inning
that made itS-3. He stood at the plate
for several seconds to see if his shot
to left field would stay fair.
Barry Bonds, who tied a major
league record with II home runs in
April, and Rich Aurilia connected for
visiting San Francisco.
Rockies 4, Dodgen 1
MarkThompsongaveColorado's
beleaguered staff a break, pitching 8
. 213 innings at Dodger Stadium.
. Thompson (2-1) barely missed \
his first complete game in the
majors; leaving after a two-out single aitd a walk in the ninth. Bruce
Ruffin threw one pitch for 'a save.
The Rockies had only one complete game last year, by Bryan
' Rekar, and began the game. with a
. league-worst 6:3.3 ERA.
Colorado scored four times in the ·
fifth inning, taking advantage of a
pair of bases-loaded walks by Pedro
Astacio (2-3).
Los Angeles leadoff hitter Brett
Butler played his last game before
having his ton si ls removed. He is
expected to miss most of May.
Cubs 9, Cardinals 3
Ryne' Sandberg. back in the line-

up after missing six games because New York in the second game at
of an inner ear infectiqn, homered Shea Sllldium.
twice at Wrigley Field.
The doubleheader, caused by
Sandberg's homers gave him 247 Tuesday night's rainout, was the first
as a second baseman , mo~ing him for Montreal since July 8, 1992.
_ Martinez (3-1) did not allow a hit
past Joe Gondon for tho; third-highest total in big league history at that until Kevin RobersQn single&lt;;! with
position -Joe Morgan leads with one out in the seventh inning. Mar266 and Rogers Hornsby had 263. · tinez improved to 8-0 with an 0.94
Mark Grace and Scon Servais -ERA lifetime against the Mets. Henalso homered as the Cubs sent St. • ry Rodriguez hit a three-run homer
Louis to its sixth straight loss.
for the Expos.~
,
·Astros J, Braves 0
lsringhausen (2-2) gave up four
Mike Hampton held ~tlanta to hits in eight innings to salvage the
three singles at the Astrodpme in his split.
,
first career complete game. ·
· ·Phillies fi, Marlins S
Hampton (3-2) retired the first
Pete Incaviglia hit a 482-foot
eight batters, then set down I0 in a shot, tlie longest home run in the hisrow in ¢e middle innings.
tory of Joe Robbie Stadium, that led
Jeff Bagwell put Houston ahead Philadelphia over Florida.
withasolohomerunoffSteveAvery
Incaviglia's three·run homer put
in the fourth inning. He hGiped pre- ~ the Phillies aJwad 5·2 in the sixth
serve lhe 1·0 lead with two neat inning. This is the founh year .the
fielding plays at first base in the sev-_ park has been used for baseball .
enth.
._
Gary Sheffield, who tied the
Expos 4, Mets 0
major league recond with II homers ·
Mets 6, Expos 0
i.n April, hit a two-run drive for the
Pedro Martinez pitched a two-hit- Marlins. Andre Dawson hit his 437th
ter for Montreal in the opener; then career h~: and moved into ninth
Jason lsringhausen and. Bob Mac- place on the NL career list with 408,
Donald combined on a shutout for passing Duke Snider.

.

~

By

JOHN NELSON ··· · ·
there '!We.re doubts ~hat he ·even
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - · First wottld start. -r:t'e fcillowing day; he
, it was the curse on Breeders' Cup was reshod t_wtce, finally. getbng fit• ·Juvenile winners and the favorite's ted for a pa1r of-protective egg-bar
•;jinx. Then it was the bad foot, and shoe~ to ~eep his tender foot from
-now, .the No. 20 post position.
bangmg mto the ground when he
• Unbridled's Song is the 8-S ear- runs.
_ .. ,.
l:;ly favorite to win .the Kentucky OcrNow, he 'draws the No. 20 post
:· by on Saturday, ye't how can he?
.position, from which only one horse
..: "He's a great horse, and we have in Derby history ever has ·won,
: :a lot of confidence in him," trainer Clyde Van Dusen in 1929. Does it
:··Jim Ryerson said. "I take the attitude really matt~;r?
;,.that I've taken all along: Nobody is • "History says it does," Ryerson
f:going to give this to us, and it seems said. "History maybe, but maybe the
t that's how it's been going. '
nature of the field says it's less
\ • ·'Maybe we have the kind of important !his year."
. ·
::horse - I hope we do - that can
And then, as red lights and warn• :overcome this."
ing buzurs were going off all around
~: Tweniy horses were'entered in the . Ryerson and the Unbridled's Song
:'-first prime-time televised Derby camp all week,lhere was a shining
: :cJraw Wednesday. nigl)t. ·It's the · beacon of hope Wednesday morning
' .. largest field currently allowed and in dark and the rain.
;the biggest sinc.e 1984. And Unbri;
Jockey Mike Smith, who will ride
!. died's Song will have each and Uab{idled's Song in the -Derby, took
t,:Cvery one of hisrivals-to his left.
the horse out for a work that was
! ~"';No Breeder's Cup Juvenile win- timed ill'46 seconds flat over a hair
, )ler'ever has won the Derby lhe next mill. More than 40 horses worked
Iyear and the favorite hasn't won that disiance at Churchill Downs on
:- si~SpectacularB!d. in I979: Iftllat Wednesday, and Unbridled's Song
~-wasn'tenoughforUnbridled'sSong --was lhe fastest.
'
· With his new egg-bar shoes,
: to carry, he hun his left front foot on
~;Aprill3 when-he won the WoOd and. Smith figures the race is over easy.
&lt;!has been wearing protective bar
"The way he went was very big/'
r.·hoes Q'er since.
,
Smith said. ·:It was a relief. There
::: On Monday, Ry~rson and the vets was a lot of concern yesterday. I'm
:Jound a sore spot on lhe foot, and so excited that right now, I feel I've

~

·Yankees ·top Orioles
1·1-6; Brewers lose

. v

.

. .

1-100-117-10t4
.
'

or

1-614-ttl-6614
FOR A.
~£~I

, CAMARO Z·2·

LESABRE

win over Southern

a

·.u nbridled's Song ·s elected
'

~~Eastern ·softballers get

I

arrived at the put just 40 minutes red, his third, off Bill Simas' in the
before gametimc because his one- eiglith.
Dave Martinez homered, his secyear-old son was ill, gave up five
runs -and 10 hits in seven-plus ond, for Chic..o's first run in the
innings. 1lfee of those runs came on first, and Jose Munoz got his fint
adouble'by Frank 'l'homu off Julian career RBI wilh a single in the secTavarez liter McDowell left because ond. Munoz. however, was thrown
of a stiff bKk in the eighth.
ool try ins to stretch a single into a
Eric: Plunk walked three of the double in the fifth inning, and he
seven batters he f!K:ed. but he got the grounded out to leave the bases
other four out to earn his first save loaded after the White Sox had
of the year.
.wady scored three runs in the
Kirk McCaskill (0-2) toclk the eighth. ·
loss, allowing six runs and ~ight hits
"We'd like to win these, 'but it's
in 3 1/3 innings in relief of Joe nothing to get upset about," ·MarMagrUe. who got his first slart~ince !inez said. "We' ve got a lot of games
1994. Sidelined much oflast year l?Y to play. They are a solid team .
an elbow injury sustained in a car You've got guys like (Jim) Thome
accident. Magrane made his first and IMannv) Ramire1. hittin" ..,v.
start in 10 appearances this season enthandeighth,andbeck,even.their
and allowed Belle's IOih home run, ninth hitter (Vizquel) hits one out.
a two-run shot in the fourth.
They can play."
"Magrane did a·goodjob, " manNotes: Belle is 11-for-22 with
agerTerryBevingtonsaid. "He'll get four home runs and nine RBis
another start somewhere down the against left-handed pitchers this sealine. I like what he showed."
son.... Cleveland reliever Paul
McCaskill walked Julio Franco Asscnmaeher f!K:ed.two batters, Lyle
with the bases loaded to force home Mouton and Robin Ventura, and
the go-ahead run in the fifth, and struck them both out after Thomas
Carlos Baerga's sacrifice fly made it hit his three-run double off Tavarez
4-2.
in the eighth. ·... The White Sox are
The Indians added four in lhe 8-8 on the road and 7-3 at home ....
sixth on Alornar's two-run double, Alomar hail hit safely in 19 o(the 20
an RBI sinale by Kenny Lofton and . games he has played in .... The lndiFranco's RBI dooble. Vizquel home- ans have scored seven or more runs
•
II times in their last 17 games.

._/1, 1(.\ }.
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June 8-10, 1987.
Becker homered ror Minnesota,
while Bob Hamelin and Tom Gdbdwin hit home runs for tile Royals.
Blue Jays 9, Brewers 3
At Toronto, Juan Guzman (4-1)
pitched four-hit ball for eight innings
and didn't allow a Milwaukee runner
past first base until the sixth inning,
when Jeff Cirillo hit a two-run
homer. Guzman struck out eight and
walked four before Bill Risley
pitched the ninth,

Red Sox 5, Tigers 1
At Boston, Roger Clemens (1-4) ·
struck out 13 and the Red Sox handed Detroit its 12th loss in 13 games.
It was his 62nd game with I0 or
more strikeouts and second in a row.
Clemens gave up six hits and
walked none in pitching his first
complete game since July 14, 1994.
He lost his shutout with two outs in
the ninth inning on Bobby Higginson's RBI double.
Scoti Aldred (0-3) took the loss.

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle
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. DALlAS MAVERICKS: Annciun&lt;ed
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'toKhial job but maaia wllh the ~i­

TonlcJtt'sgames

(~n

I

list

Indiana 1111 AfiDDI•. 7 p.m (TNT)
L.A . Lakt:ra at Hoanlon, 9:30p.m.
.

ing in his hometown of Hampton,
Va., and said his 4-year-old sister,
Iiesha, had been having s~izures .
"My baby sister was having some
medtcal problems, and I thmk that
really pushed me out .the door,"lverson said. "Now I can get a specialist for her, and help my mom along . .
She raisei:t me for 20 years, did the
best she could, and I just want the
opportunity to do the best for her."
Thompson · sympathized with
Iversop's plight, and blmned the
NCAA's "antiquated" rules for not
being able to help his player while
keeping him in college.
"It's a frustrating thing. Even
though we might have the best hospi tal around, you can't do anything
about that, " Thompson said. "Pure!y from a competitive and a seltlsh ·
standpoint, we had better look very
closely at what's going on now, and
make certain that we adjust the rules
to modem-day times."
Speculation had been .rife for
weeks that Iverson would leave. He
has recently been driving a $130,000
Mercedes on loan from a local dealer, an apparent violation of NCAA
rules. He said Wednesday he needed the car to visit his sister, and he
"kept it a little longer."

HeU'!IO

'

(TNT)

" /

By JOSEPH WHITE
WA'SHINGTON (AP) - John
Thompson didn' t want to let Allen
Iverson go. In the end, thete wasn't
much the Georgetown coach could
do about it.
Thompson tried to stay in charge
at Iverson's farewell press conference Wednesday. The coach handed
his player the script announcing the
sophomore's entry into the NBA,
and several times told Iverson or his
mother not io answer questions he
felt were too persoual.
But the 'decision to enter the June
26 draft was made by Iverson and
Iverson alone, marking the first time
in 24 year.; as coach at Georgetown
lhat Thompson has lost a player early to the pros.
") think it would be a little bit stupid of me to try to change a man who
can think and make judgments,"
Thompson said, "or far me to try to
persuade him or try to con him from
doing something that he feels in his
heart he, must do."
- An all-American guard ·and one
of_ the game's quickest players, lverson said his decision boiled down to
one factor: money. He revealed that
he liad a one-year-old daughter liv·

~'xAS

,
· New York 81, CLEVELAND 76;
New )'ork winl Nrica 3--0
·
&lt;hlcalo It 2, Miomi 91 ; Chicaao
win• tcria ~.0
~
· PonlaniJ 98. Ulah 90; aeries tied 2·2
Phocnia. 94, San Anlonio 9;\; SIUI Antonio lcada series 2·1

1-2), 7:05p.m.
Texas (Hill 3·2} 11 Detroit !Keagl&lt; 3·
1), 7'05p.m. .
Mi~waukee (Bona 1-t) at 'Ba{rilllOft
(&amp;icklo!ll -2}. 7:35p.m.
CbiCIJO (Baldwin 2-0} 11 New York

Iverson leaves Georgetown
to try chances in NBA draft

RANGERS : .Purchased the
conrract of RHP Jeff Rwsell from Okln·
homa Ciry of lhe Arr.rirwan A11iociatio•.
Qptioned RHP Rick
OklahomA
Cuy. Tranderred RHP
ris Nichting
from rhe I~-day to rhe
day ditablcd

WWnesclay's ICOrel

Friday's games

.

BELLE HOMERS:- Cleveland's Albert Belle cracks a shot beyond
the fence for a two-run tJomer: In the fourttllnnlng of ~indiana' 95 victory over the Chicago Whl~. Alao watching Is White Sox
catcher Ron Karkovlce. (AP)
.

NEW YORK YANKEES: Released
OF Dlon lomes. Recalled RHP Jim Mecir
from ·columbus of the lnternatioanl

NBA playoffs

(!ohns2-2}. ~ : 15 p.m.
.
Toiu.(Witt 3-1) at Detroit (Ura 1-3).
7:0l p.m. ·
,
·
Cbicaao (Fernandez 4-ll at New York
(C_o nel· l), 7:3l_p.m. •
.
CLEVELAND tltcrihiocr 2·2) ot Seat·
· tle(Wolcou i-J&gt;IO:Olp.m.

'.

Midland.

Baske tb all

Milwaukee (Karl 2· 1) 111 Toronto
(Hilnsoa 2·4), 112:3S'"p.m.
. CallforniQj (Abboy 0-4) at Oaklaqd

·

Ne'w·YOrk (Wilaon 1·1) at"Chicaao
(NaY....,I·J). 3:20p.m
Lal Anplel (Ptukl 2-1} at Pittlburgh
(Darwin 2·2). 7:05p.m.
Philacklphia (Mulholland 2·2) al A.l·
lanta (Maddux 4·1). 7:40
Monrreal (Cormier · I) nt HoUJron
(Reynolda4-l). 8;05 p.m.
Florida (Burkett 1·4) 11 (()lorado,
(Reyn""" 1·2),'J:D:! p.m.
"
' St l.ouil (Oibome 1-l) 1111 San Die&amp;O
(Aohby 3, 1), 10:05 p.IIL
CINC!NNAT) (Sdloo,.~ J.l) at SoA
FtllllCioco (FerttiUtdtl 3-1), tO:Ol p.m.

Toronto 9, Milwuukee 3
Minnesotll6, Ktuiw CiTy :'i (I 0)
Tuu 5. SConlt: 4
'New VOJk II, Balrimoo: 6 (I~)
Cali'fornia 6. OUiand 4

'

Amertana..pe
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Sianed
RHP Tom Edena 10 a r;onrract with
Rochesrer of rhc lnrcmaalonal Leaaue and·
placed him on the IS·day dilnbled list,
I'Cb'olll;:live ro April lB.
CAUFORNIA ANGI;LS: Rt"'!ipred
C Todd Takayoshi from Vucouver of the
h&amp;:ific Coasr League to Lake Ehinore or
!Itt CaliforniA Leque: INF Tony Motdet'
and RHP Kyle Sebacb from Midland of
· rhC Texas Leaaue to Lake Ellinore; and
OF Eddie Orislian from l..ake Elsinore 10

r.m.

I

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Bo11on S. Derroir l

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NATIONAL BASEBAU HAU OF
FAME AND MUSEUM: Named John
Rlllph utistaar direcror of public relations
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CAVALIER

alrendy won."
UnQ.ridled's Song is considered
one o~ the fastest horses m the field
and wtll go out for the lead early. If
there is a ~ilve~ !ini ng to th.e hiirrible ·
post posttton, tt s that the rest of the
real speed bumers ,in the race are outside.with him.
Skip Away, lhe B~ue Grass winner and second favonte at7-2, drew
the No. 17 post position. Matty G, a
12-1 outsider . trained by Ror
McAnally, will stan from No .. 19,,
and he's another speed balL Lexmg·
toil winner Ctty by ~~~ht hkes to he
. near the lead, and he s m No. 15, the
first spot in the auxiliary gate, and
frontrunner Honour and Glory, one ,
of D. Wayne Lukas' recond five
starters, is in .No. 13.
"If the rest of the speed was way
inside, _maybe they would be gone,
but they're out there wtlh u~: so ~e .
'can follow them nght along, Sm11h
said. _
,
_
.
S~tpAway s !ramer, Sonny _H~ne,
wasn t._lookmg for the. stlver hmng.•
He cnttct-zed the quahty of a lot of
the h~rses_ start!ng inside his a~d
satd, I thmk tl sa lousy post. I m
amazed that the three best ho~es
have to s~art f~~m the four outstde
post pos1Uons. .
.
.
;
Hme was·refemng to Unbndled s
Song, Skip Away and Editor's Note,
(See DERBY on Page 6)

"

Toronto (QomMill 0-3) ot BootM (Selc

'

~

:a:s favorite in Kentucky Derby

in otherAL action,

By BOB GREENE
inlentional walks. tying anAL recond
AP Sporta Writer
set in 1972 during a 22-inning game
Tino Martinez finally came up "between Minnesota and Milwauwith an ending.
·
kee. Sierra got three of then\.
One day after New York and BalBrady Anderson holl)ered for the
timore ·played the longest nine- Orioles, his AL-best 12th of the seainning game in major leagu~ histo- son and fifth when leading off the
ry, the two teams battle&lt;! for anoth- game.
er 5 hours, 34 minutes before Mar· In other AL gafjleS, Boston
tinez hit a grand .slam in the 15th stopped Detroit 5-1, Torqnto defeatinning, giving the Yankees an 11~6 ed Milwaukee 9-3, Texas nipped
victory and a sweep of the Orioles.
Seattle S-4, California defeated Oak"I've never seen anything like land 6-4 and ' Minnesota edged
it," Baltimore catc.her Gregg Zaun Kansas City 5-4 in 10 inni11gs.
said. "I've played in long games
Angels 6, Athletits 4
before, some that went a lot of
Visiting Californi11 got two-run
"innings, but never two like this homers by Rex Hudler and , J.T.
back-to-back."
Snow, and a solo shot· by Jim
Tuesday night, the teams-battled . Edwards as the Angels. withstood
for 4 hours, 21 minutes before the Mark McGwire 's grand slam.
Yankees pulled out a 13-10 victory.
Edwards also pulled off a fielding
. " It gotto.the pointthat you don't gem, robbing Geronimo Berroa extra
know how you ' re going to win, but bases with a leaping catch againitthe
you know you will," New York man- center field wall in the· eighth innin~ .
• In a battle for the· Tri-Valley 'ted. off with a ~ingle. After a 4•3
ager Joe Torre said. "I didn 't want. . The Angels won consecutive road
: :(;o~ference Hocking division cham- ground out, Evans fanned the last .
one run. I've been trying to get one games for' the first time this season.
• eionJhip and likewise bragging tWO batters of the frame IO secure the
run for a week.,
Rangers 5, Mariner$ 4
: rlghts- to the ficticious county title, Eastern leall.
.
Martinez could have ended the
At Arlington. Will Clark's sev: £astgm's softball defeated Southern
In the fifth inning,&lt;after Lawrence
game in the 13th inning, but instead enth-inning homer powered 'Texas
• 4-0 Wednesday night in Racine.
and Evans sparred with two d~zling
hit i~to a bases-loaded double play. over Seattle as Mariners starter
:: · Elu-lier, Soulhern had defeated performances on the n\ound, Eastern -He got another chance in the 15th
Randy Johnson had his shortest out: ltistern at Eastern and had held a · struck for two more runs. Jennifer
after Wade Boggs opened the inning
ing since 1993.
; -slill) lead over the Eagles for much ' Mora led off with a walk, then after with single, Derek Jeter was hit by .
Botbered by tightness in his right
• :df lbe season. Bolh clubs are enjoy- ' two ground outs advanced her, :rra- a pitch and Ruben Sierra was walked calf, Johnson lasted O!llY two
: Jng banner years.
·
cy White slammed a two-run home intentionally after both runners
innings, allowing six hits and four
: ·: -Eastern now moves .into first in run. The junior center fielder used
· runs. Johnson, who complained of
moved up on a groundout.
: the league at 10-1, Il-l oveull and her same defensive speed to rond the
lower back problems in his last start
Martinez hit the first pitch from
- :Southern is 13-3 and 10-2.
bases for a mon~menl)ll momentum
Jimmy Myers int&lt;:&gt; the left-field at Milwaukee, planned.to be exam: •. R~a Evans hurled yetanoth- , builder and a 3-0 Eastern lea&lt;;!.
i.ned today when the team returns to
seats.
: :!_ir v.ictory for the Eagles. The East- ·
·Sou them threatened in the fourth,
"I just wanted to get the sacrifi~e · Seattle.
• {tn ace fired a two-hiller and wal~ed
fifth. stxth and seventh mmngs, but
Jeff Russell (1-0), signed to a
: just three en route to strikjng out four each time left at least oite runner fly. I was disappointed that I didn't
get it done earlier," Martinez said. major league contract by the Rangers
: ')ind picking up th,e win. One of the stranded,
.
.
_
"We had so many chances, but I was · earlier in the day, picked up.the win
: SHS hits, bobbled ball at first, was
Easte"l added an msurance run m
too tired to be mad."
with two innings of two-hit relief,
: :reconded as an error in the Easte~n the seventh .when Kim Mayle singled
Gerald Willia{lls had a car~er­
while Mike Jackson ( 1-1 ), the !hind
· .book but in the official home book and scored on a Patsy Aeiker double. high six hits, including a homer. of six Seattle pitchers, ( 1-1) gave up
: ji we~! as a hit.
Eastern had six hits-a two for four
Myril Hoag, in 1934, is the only oth- Clark's ~omer and ':"as charged Y(ith
:. : Jennifer Lawrence, another area . night from Mayle, a two for three
er Yankee to get six hits in a game.
the loss.
· pitching ace, pitched well but suf- night by Aeiker, a White home run
Twins 6, Royals 5 (10)
. Bernie Williams matched his
: Jered the loss. She fanned three and and a Martie' Holter double.
,
. At Minneapolis, Kansas City
career high with five hits, ·and also
walked three.
Southern hillers were Cynthia
homered for New York, which had a reliever Jeff Montgom.ery ( 1-0) hit
: Eastern struck for one in the first Caldwell and Bea,Lisle. .•
Paul Molitor with a pitch with the
·· inning when Nicole Nelson reached
· Southern hosts Alexander Friday . ~eason - high 20 hits, b~t blew a four- . bases loaded in the lOth inning to
run lead and survived four errors.
: )lfl an error, Tracy Wt\ite walked and and Eastern hosts Miller.
Andy Pettitte (4-1), who started give Minnesota its !hind straight vic•
: ~atsy Aeiker singled. Rebecca !pnjng lRlllb
·
·
Tuesday's game, giving up eight runs tory.
· Bvans sacrificed to keep the inning Eastern .. ...... .... ...... I00-020-1=4-6-2 before leaving in the second inning,
The victory gave the Twins a
alive, but a 1-3 ground out ended the Southern ...............000-000-0=0-2-2 pitched three innings of scoreless .sweep of the Royals at the
liming.
WP - Evans
relief Wednesday to get the victory. · Metrodome fdr the first time since
· Trailing 1-0, Southern threatened
LP - Lawrence
The teams combined for ·seven
(See AIJ on P~~~C 5)
io the first when Cynthia Caldwell

~:4-0

. CLEVELAND (AP) - In early
May, a two-game sweep of yoor
,closest rival means nolhing more
than tha~ says Cleveland m-aer
Mike Hargrove.
, " No messages. It's too early for
messages," Hargrove said Wednes·
day night after the Indians beat the
.Chicago While Sox 9-S, improving
baseball 's best record to 17-8.
Chicago arrived Tuesday with a
seven-game winning stn:alt that had
pulled it w,ithin a half game of the
Indians in the AL Central. The White
·Spx also had annoyed the Indians
during spring training by boasting
that the two teams - separated by
32 games a' year ago - were really
·equals.
·
So the Indians quietly took a little extra satisfaction in sending them
away with two losses.
"They can say whatever they
want," Cleveland's Omar Vizquel
said. "We just want to go out on lhe
field and do it. We won two games,
and we know they were playing real·
ly well. It's nice to beat anybody."
Vizquel and Albert Belle homered, and Sandy Alomar had two
RBis and t~o hits that extended his
hilling streak to a career-high IS
games.
·
Jack McDowell (3-1 ), who

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•

�, . 8. The Deity Sentinel

Thursdey, May 2, 1SMMI

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy •lllddlepoi"'., Ohio

In the NBA.plsyotfs,

LQCJ.king Wa~shington in the face at ~
presidential ~action (sov_
nd familiar?)

Bulls and Knicks end first-round series
By The AIIOCIMecl Preu
The Chicago Bulls and New York
Knicks will bring perfect playoff
records into their second-round
series.
They completed 3-0 sweeps in
their best-of-five opening-round
series Wednesday night, with the
Bulls routing the Miami Heat 112-91
and the Knicks defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers 81-76.
Their best-of-seven second-round
series opens Sunday in Chicago,
where the Bulls are 41·2 this season.
"We can't celel!rate because I
think everybody has already forgotten about the game we just played,"
said Patrick Ewing, who had 16
points and 10 rebounds for the
Knicks. "All anybody will talk about
is the Bulls."
Jordan, playing with a painful
back injury, scored 26 points, and
Scottie Pippen had a triple-double as
the Bulls manhandled the Heat in
Miami .
"I can't see anybody getting in
their way, " said Heat coach Pat ~
Riley, who failed to reach the second
round for the first time in his 14-year
coaching year.
~
Jordan strained his back for he
second straight game, but said ,e
expects to be ready for the Knicks.
"It was tough getting loose," he
said. "Once I got loose, I felt pretty
good. Every now and then when I
twisted, I could 'feel the pull."
Pippen had 22 points, !8
rebounds and I0 assists. His rebound
total tied a career high.
"Scottie picked it up a notch,"
Bulls coach Phil Jackson said. "He ·
knew he had to be an initiator

',.tt ~ p ;?',., .
"'·..L'J:'' '&lt; ·-./'
~,.J:,
"' ~~
m l·

• SULTAN OF SWAT- The New York Knlcks' Patrick Ewing blocks
: • shot by Clevelllnd~a Chris Milia (24) during Wednesday night's NBA
: first-rOund playoff gaine In New York, where the Knlcks won 81·76
; lo sweep the series 3-0. {AP)

.

~ ~entuclcy

•

--

,_.

ST/Hl.: ::,:'

'

Derby...--:-:(C:-on"'":'tin-u-:ed"":'fr-om-=-Pa-ge-=5':"")-

:half of a Lukas-trained, W.T. Youngwith jockeys and odds: Blow Out,
;owned entry along with Grindstone.
Patrick Johnson, 12·1; Victory
:Editor's Note drew No. 18 and
Speech, Jose Santos, 15-1; Dili·
gence, Kent Desormeaux, 15-1; ·
·Grindstone No. 16. Track oddsmak·
:l!r Mike Battaglia made the entry the
Cavonnier, Chris McCarron, 10-1;
:6-1 third choice.
.
Halo Sunshine, Crail Perret, 20-1;
. "We'U have to look at the post
Semoran, Russell. Daze, 10-1; Zarb:s
. positions a little more and figure out
Magic, Ronald Ardoin, . 20-1 ; In
\vbat we're going to do;" Lukas said.
Contention, Tony Black, 20-1; Cork:. "Our biggest blow was Editor's
er, Corey Black, 12-1; Prince of
·: Note, but of course with all that
Thieves, Pat D11y. 15-1: Louis 'Qua'
. Speed around ltim out there. · he
torze, Chris Antley, 15-1 ; Al,yrob,
: 111ight have lhe outside allto himself Corey Nakatani, 12-1; Honour and
: going 10 the firstturn."
·
Glory, Jose Santos, 15- 1; Built for
~ The MichaelTabor-ow'l"d,Lukas
Pleasure, John Velazquez, 12-1; City
·entry of Honour and Glory and V1c- .by Night. Robbie Davis, 12-1 ;
Grindstone, Jerry Bailey, 6-1; Skip
:tory Speech fared little better. Hon:our ancl"Glory, questionable at the Away, Shane SeUers, 7-2; Editor's
•Derby distance of I 114 miles, is farNote, Gary Stevens:· 6-1; Matty G,
:tlleroutthanLukaswouldlikeinNo,- Alex Solis, 12-1, and Unbridled's ·
13, and Victory Speech will start Song; Mike Smith, 8-5.
from the No. 2 spot, where he easiThe race wiU be worth
ly coul~ get pinned against the rail.
$1,184,800if20start, with·$884,800
, Lukas' best draw was Prince ?f going to the winner. Each starter will
Thieves, owned by Peter Mitchell, 10 carry 126 pounds.
ihe No. I0 spot. Ridden by Pat Day,
"The last few days hav~ be~n
Prince of Thieves will be coming kind of hectic," Ryerson said. "All
from well off the pace.
I know is that I'd rather be outside
The full field from the rail out, than inside."

because of Michael's back."
Chicago dominated the series,
winning the tluu games by an aver·
age of 23 points.
"It was thorough," Riley said. "I
know how bad we feel and how bad
a lot of people in this town feel about
the sbow we put on tonight.,"
Miami center AJonzo Mourning,
who struggled in the first two games,
scored 30 points in Game 3, but wasn't satisfied.
· "It's not a good feeling at all," he
said.
The Knicks survived a terrible
founh quarter and a premature celebration at Madison Square Garden to
gain their first playoff sweep since
1989.
" In order to ·beat Chicago, we 're
going to have to play very consistent
basketball for 48 minutes, but I do
like the way we held together and
made bis shots down the stretch,"
Knicks guard Derek Harper said. ,
John Starks, who finished with 22
points, grinned and waved five fingers in the face of Cavs coach Mike
Fratello after Cleveland's Terrell
Brandon picked up his fifth foul near
the end of the third quarter.
The Knicks led by· J3 at the time,
but Cleveland rallied to tie it at 70
with 4:5 I left in the game. New York
came back to take a five-point lead
on Starks' fifth three-pointer, and
held on for the win.
"We were up against a very desperate team trying to get back in the
game," Knicks coach Jeff Van
Gundy said.
.. ,
Brandon had 19 points and Dan
Majerle 16 for the Cavaliers.
Elsewhere Wednesday night,

FACTORY REP SALE
FRIDAY, MAY 3rd 9 a.m. 1ill3 p.m.
CHAINSAWS
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IAnntDAY 8tOOAM-5aOOPM
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4-for-4 from ~-point range. But
Malone wu 4-for-16 from the field
and scored only IS poinU,IImost 18
below his series average. Stoelctqn
had II points and 11assists, and was
just 3-for-13 from the field.
. s- ~. Spurs t3
At PhoeniK, Kevin Johnson made
a key layup with 1:48 left and the
Suns survived two last-second shots
by San Antonio to stay alive in the
series. Johnson's driving layup gave,
the Sunn 94-91 lead. David Robin"
son, who scored 13 of his 22 poin~
in the last quarter, made a layup witli
I:30 remaining to p)lll the SpuB
within ilne. John Williams fouled.
Robinson with 8.8 seconds left, but
the Suns weren't over the foul limit.
After the ensuing inbounds pass;
Vinny Del Negro missed a Ion~
jumper for the Spurs and Charle~
Barkley hatted the rebound outside
to Sean Elliott, who missed another
jumper that could have won it fot
San Antonio. Barkley led Phoenix.
· with 2S points, while Elliott scored
20 for San Antonio.

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MODELBG78

.

Family
Medicine

If you were outbid on Ftnt Family memora.
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
bilia at last week's auction of the Jacqueline
of Family Medicine
Kennedy On as sis estate, you can sti II pick up
something presidential at auction in New York
Saturday (May 4).
Question; My doctor tells me I becomes filled and swollen wiljj
· JFK's brief Camelot in the 1960s would
have Peyrpnie's disease. How did I blOod dwing an erection. This is whit
never have happened without tbe fanner and
get
~is disease and is there a chance causes the penis to elongl!le and
revolutionary leader who declined to be king
of
my
IJ(:nis going back io normal?
become flllll. The plaque of Pey170 years before. -Three suits of George WashAnswer:
Because
researchers
have
ronie's
disease forms within one qr
ington's clothes (about a 44-long, narrow
not yet discovered the cause o.f Pey- both of the corpora cavemosa. 'J'ha
shoulders), a chair, a silver plate,libllll')' books
·rorue's
disease, I can't tell you why ·· plaque, being tough and fibrous,
and papers will be auctioned by the·Charles·G.
you
are
one of the unlucky men who doesn't e~pand with erection. This
Moore Americana gallery at Manhattan's St.
have
this
condition. So far, advanc' causes the involved side to expand
Regis Hotel.
ing age is the only risk factor that has less than the opposite normal s~,
The clothing and most of the other artifacts
been identified. While this malady is thereby resulting in a dramatic curv,
in the auction were acquired by artist Junius
more
common in those over SO, ing of the penis during erection. This
Brutus Steams in 1850 from Washington's
males
of
any age can develop it. . curving, in addition to making interfamily. Stearns's only descendants - both .
Peyronie's disease is characterized course impossible, is often quite
elderly - have submined ~m to Moore for.
'by the formation in the penis of a painful.
·
aucli'on.
,
·
· fibrous sc3rlike area - called a
The gem of the sale is ·a plaster .mask &lt;;Jf•
"P,laque" by physicians. Usually only
Although we don't know the causl!
Washington, made by Fre.nch sculptor
,
,
one
side
of
the
penis
is
affected,
but
of
Peyronie's
disease, there is effecAntoine Houdon in 1785 at the
·
'
,
pl~ques
can
form
on
both
sides.
This
live
treatmertt
for it. Unfonunately,
War lea4er's estate at Mt. Vernon, Va.
type of pllkjue can be felt as a fllJD no medications provide ~lief froril
· · "Wheilllook iu this and touch it, it gives·
•
!llld
non-compressible area inside the condition., Today, surgery offers
.
• - - - - - - ( m e ) chills," says
the
penis.
the best chance for the relief of pai~
Charles Moore, oWJiel'l''
I
need
to
review
1he
way
the
penis
and
the return of a normal sex life.:
"It Is consld- of the gallery and
is
consU'ucted
in
order
to
help
you
There
are several different surgtered the closest tion house. Moore says
understand the problems caused by cal treatments that have been shown
· //keneu
of he has put no estimated
.
Peyronie's
disease. The penis can be to be effective. Some use "high-tech--.
Wuhl,.mon,"
••.,..
value on the mask or
•• Charles
thought
of
as being made from three tools like lasers and artificial ,
.Moore, the Washington cloth•
different
structures
that are wrapped implants, while others just utilize thj:
•
owner of the ing, prefen:ing to Ie~
together
with
connective
tissue and skillful application of more tradi·
'gallery and sue- the bidd.ers establish
.,
~kin. Looking at the penis in cross tiona! surgical methods. UnfortU. ·
tlon house says, their value.
•
section
shows a left and a right spon-, nately, no one surgical pnll;edure {s'
talcen·
from
"the
•
We
know,
gelike
tissue
called .the left and right always successful, but most modem
•" exact 'measure· course, exactly what
corpus
·
c
avernosum
and the third. techniques 'provide rc!lieffor 80 pe;.
"
menta against ~ohn Kennedy Ioo~tfd
structure,
located
in
cent or more .of patients. Talk with
his skin/ '
,like, and Franklin ROO.
the bottom center of the penis, called your urologist. He or she can advi~
sevelt, Abraham Lin:
the corpus urethiae. These three pans you best.
" coin, even John Quincy Adams. All lived after
.
are
wrapped with several layers of
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
~ the invention of photography in 1816.
_
connective tissue, which is then column. To submit questions, wrllil
~"
But not George Washington, who died at 67
enveloped by skin.
to Joh n C• '"
noIf, D•0 ., Obi0 UnJ.
in 1799. Most of us know the first U.S. presiThe corpora ca~ernosa are impor- versity CoUege of O.'t eopatbk
dent only from paintings, dollar bill engravings
tant
for the normal functioning of the Medicine, Grosvenor HaU,Athens,
~ and the 25-cent coins we handle every day.
penis.
Their sponge-like tissue' Ohio 45701.
•· Looking at the plaster mask - life size and
:~ weighing under three pounds - is almost like
loo.king into the eyes of the man .
· "It .is ,. considered the closest likeness!&lt;,of
W!!Shington," Moore says, , taken . f.rom "the
the Washington State COmmunity
STATE CONFERENCE
exact measurements against his skin. " ·
Several women ·from the Laurel College Practical Nursi11g Education
Houdoit was commissioned by the Virginia
Cliff Free Methodist Church attend- Program will be given May 20, at
·legislature to sculpt a heroic likeness of Washed a missionary conferenc~ held in · 1:30 p.m. in Room H209 at Washington, a marble statue that still stands in Richington State Community College.
Columbus'recently.
mond. ,l'b,P\Igh a great war leader, the 53-year•
,.
Th.ere is a·$24 fee payable before
In the group were Pam Trembley,
:old Vrr,ginian was four years away from· the
THE FACE OF WASHINGTON • A presidential auction In New York Saturday (May 4) will Sharon Smith, Jean Wright, Donna administration of ihe examination.
p~~idency and was occupied running his ,Vir- Include three suits of George Washington's clothes (about _a 44-long, narrow shoulders), a
Gilmore, Wanda Eblin, Shirley Men and women who have a high
gm1a plantation op the Potomac.
. '"
chair, a sliver plate, library books and papers will bl auctioned by the Charles G. Moore Friend, Janice Haggy, Kay Clark, school diploma or GED equivalency
Houdon spent two weeks at Mt. Vernon, Americana gallery at Manhattan's Sl Reglil Hotel. The gem of the sale Ia a plaster mask of Dora Surface, Ida Martin and Bren' are eligible to take the test.
watching · and sL-etching, Washington. He 11lso Waahlngt01:1, made !lY French sculptor ,Jean Antqlna HoudonJn. '785.
To.make arrangements to take ihe
da Haggy.
·
~"~~~li' lllll' :ti .,, _.
' .
~..
-\,;c..
.
·"¥&gt;~
test, residents may call 374-8716 or
ing~~~~v~§;\jJtin \\lhil~o~e .raY.'1i1;,~;JJ~eaiillng'lhinu~IJ.~eeds o~l~ one .ever to this. It now is probably,Jhe best likeness of WashingPRE,ENTRANCE
EXAM
stop by the Practice Nursing office at
10 his noslnls. A ma~k lliken from tiial mo 11s m storage at the J. P1erpont
ton 10 eXIstence.
.
.
The pre-entran,ce examination for the college.
Morgan bi!&gt;rary in New York City. The 0'!
offered at auction this week .
But·not the only ~ne. The Corcoran.Gallery m Washmgton, D.C., has a
was made from a clay' b~st HoudotN:imtpleted at ¥t. Vernon.
mask that G.1mels~n and Moore thmk ts a tw1~ of the one to be auct10ned
"We determined this was the best that Houdon was able to fashion," Saturday. Lmda S1mmons, curator for Ame~ean art and research at the
says ijruce Giinelson, a collector, dealer .allll authenticator of Washingion Corcoran, says only !hat the galle.ry would hke ~orne day to compare the
memorabilia who worked with Moore on the auction catalogue. Gimelson two masks Side by Side, along With o~er Washmgton hkenesses around
The Community Calendar is · of Di~ie Wolfe, Racine. to plan class
lives in Garri$0n, N.Y. '.'From the original~mask that he had, he was the the country thought to be connected wnh Houdon.
published as a free service to non· reunion.
profit groups wishing to announce
lneeting and special events. The FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY -- Marietta Bible
calendar is not designed 1o promote
College Choir and Dr. Myron K:
Guiler, 7 p.m. Friday, Antiquity BapEquity in school funding was the • Retired Teachers Association. John industry, he told the group. He did Funds will also be allocated for an and cannot be guaranteed to run a tist Church.
discussion topic when about 40 edu- Carey, state · representative of the note tha~ Eastern and Meigs Local interactive computer in every K-4 specific number of days.
MIDDLEPORT -- Big Bend
c;.tors, administrators arid board 94th distrjct, was guest speaker.
School District received $200,000 classroom in Ohio making the state THURSDAY
Youth
Football League organizationmemhers attending a rece~t dinner
Carey talked about t)le importance and $500,000 respectively this year · a leader in elementary classroom
RACINE -- Southern Local Buildal
meeting,
7:~0 p.m. Thursday,
~eeting at t~ Stilisbury School.
of econ~mic d~velopment .in rural through state equity fundirtg to help technology. During 1997, .there ing Committee meeting Thursday,
. The meeting WIIS hosted by Jo.hn areas nolfng that locatiOn of mdustry compensate for low propeny values. should be one computer for every 7:30p.m. in the high school cafete- Me1gs Jumor H1gh School auditoriRiebel, Sr., county Sl!perintendent of •. in Southe.¥ tern Ohio would provide
Carey also discussed the state's five students in ~lassrooms in target- ria. All district residents welcome. um.
s~hools, and the Meigs County II)Ore money for schools.
·
plan to assist financially in Meigs ed school districts, according 10 the Bring guests.
RACINE -- Racine July Fourth
mer m1e to lack of County school construction as anoth- speaker.
.
.
.
er way of equalizing funds . That
Carey cited the House-Senate
REEDSVILLE -- Riverv~ew Gar- Comminee meeting Thursday, 8 p.m.
money will come from the state Conference Committee. recommen- den Club, Thursday, ~ p.m . ~t the at the fire department annex. All weibond issue, according to the repre- dation for increasing funding levels ' home of Jamce Young. Program O!J carne.
sen.tative.
for school foundation ba5ic aid . That state parks by Nancy and Randy
RU11.AND -- Rose of Sharon
Briefly reviewing highlights of the could result in an increase in per pupil Wachter.
Holiness Church, Rutland, revival
..
services, Friday through May 12.
education portion of House Bill 117, funding level from $3,315 in fiscal
PORTLAND
-Lebanon
TownEvangelist and singeB, Archie Atwell
Ohio's biennial budget, Carey stated year 1996 to $3,500 in fJ.Scal year
ship trustees, 7 p.m. Thursday at the and family.
that the passing of the bill y;ould pro- 1997.
.
vide over the·biennium a $1.1 million
Carey also discussed other house township .building. Special meeting. .MONDAY
increase. over ,present funding levels bills on education and answered
•
CARPENTER
Board of
RACINE -- Southern High School
for primary and secondary schools. questions from the audience.
Trustees
of
Columbia
Township;
Class of 1986, 7 p.m. Thursday, home
,,., ,,.,.
_.. , ,.
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the fire station.

..

$17!J95

O'DELL LUMBER COHPAHV

College of Osteopathic MediciM .

Gannett tttwa Service

GAS BLOWER

PRODUCT DEMOS, SPECIAL OFFERS, FULL-LINE
INFO, ASK THE EXPERTI/I

Ohio University

.By HOWS L. ENGLEY

•

DallY Santlnal• hge7

.

uua

VISA

Sl:ored 30 points for Utah, includinj

MODELFS36

..

FR£1SE1UP

Ponland but Utah 98-90 to even
their series 2-2, and Phoenix edged
San Antonio 94-93 to cut the Spun'
lead to 2-1.
•
The d«idins gadle in the Portland-Utah series will be Sunday in
Salt Lake City. Game 4 of ihe SpunSuns series will be Friday in
Phoenix.
In other fiBt-round series, Atlanta
leads Indiana 2-1, Houston leads the
Los Angeles Lakm 2-1, and Seattle
leads Sacramento 2-1. Orlando swept
Detroit in the opening rpund.
~ Tonight, it's Indiana at Atlanta,
the LakeB at Houston. and Seattle at
Sacramento.
Trail Blazen 98, Jazz !10
At Portland, the Blazers got big ·
offensive games from Rod Strickland and Arvydas Sabonis and shut
down Utah .stars Karl Malone and
John Stockton. Strickland had 27
points, seven assists and siK
rebounds as Ponland won its second ·
straight at home after losing two at
Utah. Sabonis scored 25, hit all three
of his · three-point attempts and
grabbed ll rebOunds. Jeff Hornacek

The

1993
.·626
4 dr, auto, V-6, air cond,
PS, PB; POL, tilt, CI'IIIH,
AMIFM case, More

-

'"'

'

'

- (

.·

•

1988 FORQ
T·BIRD
11r cond,

1988 CHEV
ASTROVAN ' ·,

•

V-8, auto, air cond,
·
.
.
AM/FM C:1ai, PS, PB,
AMIFf!l ~~~. PS, PB,
PW, POL, tilt, crulee,
PW, POL, pwr nat, tilt,
conversion Pkg.
CNIH

V-6,

a~,

ALL LADIES BLOUSES

1 RACK DRESSES

Long &amp; Short Sleeve

.$1995

p
•
.
12 r1ce

. 1/

,.

•
- Rep. John ·
catlonal and' funding
recent
County Retired Teachers
and
Jabury El11111811tary School. Pictured aeated is

-

YaiHs to ~0"

See·Our Sefection J'or 9'0ur Special Mom
• Jantzen Sportswear
Outstanding ·colors and .styles
• Koret of California
'
• Ladies•
Levi Bendover'Slacks
···. ·
. .
.
• Beautiful New Jackets,for·sRring .
• Spring and Summer Coats
.

•.

'

,____... .. :614l44rl405
' 84~ S£Cdifi AVE.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

..••

145 N. 2ND

I

'·

. 992·2351

'

.

' .''

MIDDLEPORT

..

�_Page 8 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 2, 1811

Pomeroy • lllddllport, Ohio

•

~~woman should simmer down about reappearance ·of 'other woman'
.

Ann
LanderS
'"'· .... ..,._
!:;'S:~ c...
4,!!::;;~~~~-----J

..

!IY :ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Twenty years
ago, my husband had an affair with a
lil.e clerk in his office. 'They were
both fired because of it. D11ring the
affair. "Tom" covered his tracks
.beaUiifully. He was always at home
oil time and took no chances 'that I
would find out. He w~ however,
moody, depressed and tyrannical to

:'Granger of
the Year'
named
Roy Grueser was named "Granger
of the Year" at a recent meeting of~
· R_ock Springs Grange held at the hall.
· : Master William Radford presented Grue.ser with a plaque and thanked
him for the service he does for the
grange and the community.
·
It was noted that a new flag will
be placed at the mini park at Rock
Springs by Harold Blackston and
Orueser. On behalf of the granges and
churches, Holter wrote a letter to the
Ohio Legislature opposing casino
gambling.
:. The legislative report was given
by Opal Grueser. Barbara Fry
81jnounced that this is the last year for
the quilt contest. She also reported ·on
t~e baking contest noting that Opal
Grueser received first and Frances
G!)eglein, second.
: Election of delegates to the Ohio
State grange was held. Two' appeals
for aid&gt;were made and contributions
were made to each one.
"Our Woodland Friends" was the
theme for the program by Pat Holter.
T\lere was a contest on {oot prints of
animals, readings, "Immigrant Trails"
by Pat Holter, "Foot Prints" by Roy
Holter and :'In His Footsteps" by
Opal Grueser.
· Refreshments were served by
Rollin and Nancy Radford.

Tai chi can
help seniors'
balance

me and our chilciRn.
. become infuriated every Sunday just
Dear Ann ;Landen: I =ently ~ all said ~ stan: policy was kept the pennies as collateral. until
Tom got anodler job, and wo looking al ~r and act very little out read your second column about not to accept more than .SO cents in you n:tumed with paper money. I
moved SOO miles away. He contin- of the service. My husband seems accepting pennies for payment. pennies. I even went to the service hope those meanies sec this column.
ued to mab "business trips" to our unconcerned. I feel like telling lhe , liere's my experience:
desks and pleaded with lhe man- They c:ould use a c:oursc in customer
former hometown, until! got sic:k of world 'about this tramp who tried to
About a year ago, I ran out of agers, but it did no good. My c:hil~ relations.
it and issued an ultimatum. Although wreck my malriage. I nee(! some milk and bread and also money. It dnm w.ent without bl:ead and milk
Next time, you'll have beuar
lhe trips stopped, he was still cold advice. Ann. •• Boiling in the Mid- was a couple of days until pay day, 1 for two days.
and withdrawn. I put up with it west
.
couldn't write a check and 1 don't
The ston: owncrsp!ilst know thai luck if you take the pennies to a
because our sons were about to enter . Dear Boiling: Simmer dOwn, and have any charge cards. 1 went sometimes rules neid to be bent 8 bank first.
colle.e and I had been out of the get a grip. "Telling lhe world about around the house and found aboUI liute, and lhey should give their
Gem of the Day: If this worl~
working world for IS years.
the tramp" would accomplish noth- $S in pennies in the various piggy managers permission to do just that.
were
logical, men would ride sideEventually, we patched up our ing except embarrass your. hustiand. banks. I put them into 50-cent rolls I went home in tears. and my faith in
saddle.
·
marriage and our lives seemed to be The tramp would probably love it.
and took my kids out to get bRad human compassion dropped 10 zero
going smoothly. Now, after 20 years,
Since your major annoyance and milk.
that day. Comment, please. •• Let
this woman has reappeared. She sits seems to be sitting behind her in
I went 10 three well-known super- Down in Wyanskill, N.Y.
directly in , front of up at church church, my advice is to poke around markets and 1wo convenience stores.
Dear Wyanskill: A pox on those
Send questions to Alln Lan~
every Sunday.
on Sunday, arrive just before the I have lived in the same areajl&gt;r over stone-beaned fo!ks· who refused to den, Craton Syndicate, 5777 W~
My husband is 7S, and I am 65. church door closes, and sit behind a 20 years and couldn'·t get anyone.t.o
for bread Century Blvd., Suite· ·?OO, Los;
This woman is in her mid-SOs. I
p~~th~e~=~~fo~r~~:::i::i..:::.i:~~~:::~
~~:.£:!:~C!a12if~.!9G04!2~5~---·

19U PlYMoutH
199301M
GRAND VOYAGER lE LUMINA EURO PKG
V-6, auto, all power, 7
pass, very dean

Public Notice

1993 NISSAN

CARAVAN

SENTRA XE

V-6, power locks, factory

all
po- factoly warranty.
V·&amp;,

warranty.

ohrome pkg, low miles, 1·

I

1990

INTREPID ES

GRAND PRIX SE

auto, 3.5 liter. V-6, air,
leather, all power, factory

NEW YORKER

2

auto.~eather.

door, automatic, V·&amp;, all
po-

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(614) 892-5535
' 614 9$2.2753

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CONSTRUCTION
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CARAVAN LE

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!?Ower, 7 pass, local trade.

factory warranty.

•Garages
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FREE ESTIMATES

•

985-4473

I

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SONOMA

V-6, LX, auto, all power,
cass .. ABS,

4x4,

SLT, V6, auto, all

V-6, 5 spd, air, cess. tiH,

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ONLY

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1992 DODGE

MILLENIA
V6, auto, heated leather

seals. all power, 1-owrier:
like

DAKOTA
C/cab, auto, LE, V6, air.
cruise, tiH. low miles

5 spd, stereo, 1 owner

Phont555-1022

Pllallt 5$5-2211
Etllblllhld 1IGO

80 Years

78 Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Phone 555-6782EIIablllhtd'1915

Phone 555-8242
J;stablllhad 1917

$3.99. pednin:
Must be 18 yrs old.
Service U
(619) 654-8434

70 Years

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SA~ED LUMBER.
1x6,1x8,2x4,2x6
8'·10'~ aft.
14'·16' 35f: • ft.
Ale,o available
4x4'a~4x8'a

Chat-Line
Hey Guys!!! Your
special girl 'is waiting
to hear from youll
• 24·Hours A Dayll ':
CallnQw
:' 1·900~446-1414
' Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min.
Must be 18 yrs
Serv·U 619 645-8434

The Geist
Phone 555-9245
Ellllllllhed 1925

•

. 110
•

HELP!!! We need a few
gpod people to assist .
persons with MRIDD with
daily living skills. Various ,
positions available.
Call1·800·531·2302.

VCR Sick?
Call Quick

COY'S VCR
REPAIR
992-4507
Contractor with onr 30
yean experience now
available for all types of
New Homes, Ganges,
Addidons, Balll,tJ,
Kllcl!ens, Declui, Siding,
Roofuk. ·

Nt""
to ... ., to ....
Conlllet Rodney Howery

·. SPARKlES
'
ELECTRIC
Serving all Your

·Years · 52 Years

· Coin &amp;Stamp Center

Ball Security Bonds
. Phone 555 11181
Eltlbllshlci1M1

Phone 555-9988
Elllblllhtd 1935

Ball Security BOridl
P-5111M7
Ellablllhld 1143'

Phoni55H134
~lflblllhtd

1941 -

30 Years
'

kramer I 'Sons

Slll.andsclf)lng

PhontSSHm
Elllblllhld 1151

Phone555 St54
Elltbllhld1155

25.Years
.

Med.Care Center Inc. Trtskett Pllty Center
.Phont 5 55 M55
Elltlllllhed 1t8S

Crystal Clan :CO.

Eltlbllhltl1t10

$2.99 per min.

•

Mu1tbe 18 yra.
Serv-U (619) 645 8434

HAVE YOUR BtJSJDSS,-

.

'·t

411-1-

Howard Excavatin
1

$12

Free Estimates

trucking •

Limestone
Bulldozing and

614-742·2193
·.

448-11418

-============:::====~
, Lo·&amp;t : Che1ter area, Akita, black
face, white~. child's pet. lowd
1
••D SUPPLY
• &amp; W PW11cs All

.

n ·opera Plaine, Ohio 45783
·
·
614-985-3813or614-667-6484
Plastic Culven- Du~l wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
·
4" S&amp;D -·perf, •. solid pipe
· ·4'.' &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 3S' pipe
1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C: pipe
1 1f2"thru 4 ~· Sch 40 pipe
· {100' II' th 1 ()()()' II')
.
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water P•pe
·ro s ru '
r') s
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" thru 2" . Fittings· !l-egu1ators- Risers
Full assonment of P.V.C. &amp; FleX fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Cistem; Septic &amp; Wa~r storage tanks.

Houn,SI~es

and

UtllltiH

992-3838
1111 Kind1 of Enrth Work

845~8434

~

1·8011-446-1414
Ed. 4308
$3.88 per min.
Mult be 18,yra.
Serv-U (8111) 845 8434

SPORTS/
ENTERTAIN~Ef4T
PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1-900-778-2525 EXT.

5961

I

Pk., ACJoss From John Deere
llklg. Loll Of EW&lt;ythif19!

131 ~~~rile . Avenue, Roulo 1
Nollh, Fri. Sal, Sun. Clolhos, Kids
Some Large Md Misc.
1554 Bucllri""- Road, Off 01160.
......Frl, Sat

Table /Chairs, Cat Sear, Walker

~~~

106 N. 2nd Ava., Middleport

1131/lfn

.

Mens. Womens, Toddler Clorhes,
L

•• I

ots-ac

Serv-U (61~) 654-8434

,.

.
'..

On

Su n.. ~~-~Nro, 4 M'1., 0u I
on Right Childrens &amp; Adult
D ••• ~,~

~

· Clolllng, Houoohold Items, EIC.

Umesto,e, ·
Gravel, Sand,

.ToP Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992-3470
ANNOUNCEMENTS

No arguments!
No Nagging!
J1,1st the mate of
your choice.
1·900·988-6988
Ext. 1449
.- Must be 18 yra.
Strv·U (6111) 645. 8434

.

Pleut Beware: Do To The In·

Spray ltamo AI Well AI Many
Other Slle1)' ProduCtl. Do Not
llllmllle With 'l'olir SalaiY Or Till
OnU You Lon. Caft Now for
FrH Dollvory To Your Doo(l 1•
: IOO.a:ID·25111, 213-t50·73a0. Nil
Ponnlt ~AI
-.
. Of 11M.

~I

Baskets

Throe lamily- Friday, May :ltd' at

th&amp; home ot Roderick Grim'm.'

.~Street Racine.
•. '
. •
· Ya1d salo, 931 Hysell 51 .. Middle-·
PQ'l Oh., May 1-2·3. 0 ~I 7
Yard sale· Mar 3rd , 4th , 5\,. ,:
39882 Sumner Rd., Pomeror ••

Ohio.

.

pt, Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Curtains ...,

lamps, CkHhing, Couch,.Queen 4
p
B F
B
G. l
aster ed rame. oys, 1r s

Ckllhif19.

Advance. DEADLINE; 2:00 p.m.
the day beloro 1ho ad II 10 run.
Sunday oclitkln · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday odlllon - 10~0 o.m. Sa1·

umav.

Two Family : Toys, Clothes, What·
Oil, lots 01

Pome'rOY,,

'

M~.:J.4th.

yaid

lllile.

CHiton.

May•2··

3td. 9am-? Nice clothing, Iota oJ·

· '

6-Famaly yard sate. Sat Uay •th, ,
9-? Brown lane, Apple Grove,
WV. Canc8h&gt;d il rain.
Yard Sale. Fri· Sat May 3-.(tti ·
2517 Jefferson Ave. PL Piea.sa"nt •

.

9·5

.

'

. FRI·SAT Mav 3·4th 46 Bu•douo •

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

'

,

Goodies, Friday,

rumay, 9-? 24 Cenuai Alleruo.

'

2814 Birch Ave Yard aale, baby '
clothes and girls up to 5. Fri·Sal·

misc. Rain canc;ela.

Second Avenue. Across Library,
8 FamH~ : 511, 512. 513, 9,5, Rod· Manylllomo, Clolhing, Household
noy VDiage II, Mamorlal Flowlf'l, 1111111~
Home Inti Too Much To Montionl

Addillon.

3 family garage sale- May 3, 9-3 ,
Co . Rd. 19, Eblin' s, ralnlsh•ne .

girls. ladies, men's domes, Barbie
nouse . cordless phone, misc .
items.

Fri-Sal, ra in cancela. 3-Fami11i
lower Five Mile rd. John Robi,.....
son &amp; Roy Williams .residence,

lollow signs.

3 lamlly •yard sate, acroas from

Thurs-Fri -Sat 8mi. on R12 north .
Wuher, maple bed, FishQr Pric.
toys, lOts antiques, lots morQ, ..

Family Dollar, Micldlojlo•t. Satur-

::304:.:.·.:.675-=20:.:.7.::5·= ...,.......,....-,...;.· '

3 lamily yard ialo, 2nd 5 3rd of
May, 299 WriOhl Si•eet, Pomeroy,
Otlio.
4 lamily, Thurldav. Friday, behind

May 3-4. ll-3pm.

.::da::;Y·.;;
M;::oY:...•.;..tn,:.;9...,·4~
. ----

Muonic Lodge In Racine, Hilf1
reaidence. clothing. household
ilema, ax.,clae machine, couch,
d\oir, W01&lt;11H,Iol"l of mite. .

810 South Second, Middleport,
Uay 1 through 7, workbench &amp;

Crib. Boyo Clolhes NB ·2T, Shell, wolghiS, -inti. spreads, linens,
loliac. 963 Mill Creek Rd. Sat 9-5.
drapes, clothe&amp;, dlahes, pota,

Yard sale . 3205 Jackson AV~ "" ·,
. •

80

Public Sale

1

• •:

and Auction
:::
..:-,7-AI~Io-A:-u~c:-tio~n. -;-Ev-e-rv-F;:-r,..,
iday • .
7prn. Ewry Sawrclay 6pm. At 2·33 .
'"Crouroads". Groceries,·' ntiw ·:
merct.ndioo. Ed Fnuier 930.

Rick Pearson Auction Company, .. ·
full time auctioneer, complete .
survi~e.
Ucensee .
auction
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, ~0~ - ..

773-57850r 30H73-5447
. .
lurrillro,
Iota
mloc.
•
90
·curlalns. Small Appliances, 828
Wanted to Buy · . · ·
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, St1, 5I All Yard Salu Mull Be Pald..ln
2. 513, 11-eP.M.
Advance. Doadllno: 1:OOpm the 73-81 Chevy 1ruck bed. 8~. Fl~t· •
side. 304·882·2190.
,· •·
da~
before lhe ~d 11 10 run, Sunestate Sale: Thurs: Fri, Sat, 3.8
day
edition·
1:OOpm
Friday,
MonMiles sO. 01 Rkl Grande On (325 do~ Odilion 10:00am. Sotuldey.
Clean Late Model Cars 13( :
S.) 3079 LoiS Of Antiquo Diohes,
Trucks, Hl90 Models Or Newer,.·.
Bedspreads, Pots, Pans, Misc . ·April 111·4111, llom-!!pm, Sycamore , Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 Ea~t.. : •
Of Houooholcl.
~ •
Sl., Middleport, largo ~ard oalo. ern Awlnue, Gallipolis.
loll
of
mite.
tom
old
.,
new.
Everyll"e Bat&gt;v: Furni!ure, ClolhJ &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal~ -:
ing, All Ki.nds Household, 513td • Booamen1 Sal• Thursday, Friday wage vehicles. Selling pa;ta. 30•·· • •
41h, Rl325. 3 Mi. So. Rio.
. l Saturdar, May 3·5, old plano, 773-5033.
pans, small appliances, jewelry,

Dolls, Doll Furniture, Bedspreads,

Frl &amp; Sat , 8·• . 2404 Neighbor· .
hood Road., Prom Dresses. All
Sizes, Men, Womens Clolhing."

Misc.

Fri &amp; Sat, Ma~ 3rd, 4th, All Dawl
Announce""'nts
138 Firlt Avenue , Clothing.
Houoohold
Good~
Looking For Old Pomeroy High
School Annuals: 1018, 1021, Fridar 3rd, 11-5. 2al Dabblt Drive,
1823. E. Klleler, 11.12 Sprlf19 Val· Furnlllro, Tool' Clolhif19,,
ley Drive. H.undngmn, WV 25104,
Fildey 9-B, 2 112 Mileo.Out Routt
Or :J0.4.ol29· I 278.
218, Top 01 Hill On Righl Cloihes

create In· Crimt We Offer' Tht
Very Bett In Unique Pllppet

gaberger

OH.

Thurs. Fri,· Sat, Sun, 10-3, 640

30

Date-Line

tur Y
•t. ;;nrv l81e oute
141, 8· 3, 8 Family, Color T.V.,
Home Interior, Tins, Dishes, Lon·

dav. Fridav &amp; sarurday, oam,1o
4pm. 782 Hlo"· Stroe~ loliddlepo•f.

lttma, Aduh Ctothea, ~Dr., Rt.

Crafts &amp; Goodies: 305 Ambleside
OrMI, St Rt. 160, K8tT, Fri &amp; Sat

1-900·988·8988
Ext. a·. 33

,...,L

Three family garage sale· ThUt•

3-Family

Mo&amp; Rain IShir,e.

Your Sweetheart as
close as your-phone

seues, Speakers, 'Typewriter, Fax

Machine, Desk , Other Misc.

Somelhlng Fof Everyone! _

~ N. Bolofll Bowling AI.,.

·

available, 114·948· 2071 or 614··.:.941-....:.:211.:.:511_._ _ _ _ _.....;.

Pen, Swing, Carrier, Household

Circle Drive Plantz Subd. May
3rd, 4th, 10· 5, lntanl Girls 0· 12

WICKS
HAULING

pliances, dishes, pana. clothiOI.~~
Donations appretiated, 'pic~-U'p

Thurs 1st. · Monday Sth, 2082

Guiding Hands SChool. .
Aeru 29th, .Thru May 3rd, 1.2
M•Ies Out Rou10 218.
.
Big: Friday Uay 3rd, 9c4, Roi&gt;to 7
South, To Raccoon Road, 1 Milo
On Leh, LoiS ,01 Stuff For Every-

Low Rates) ·

South, 11 Mites Pasl 218, Clolhes
All Sllat, VCRs, Stereos, Knick

it•

·
Ma~ 3·4, 716 Broadway 's1,
Racine, nice clothoo, lurnllura,
mioc. Mlllll'o-. lllm-!!pm.'
May 3-4: second house bohlhd
Laufll Cl\11 Church In P11mer~y.
cer~.U-RivO&lt;Rd,Rt7.
forgewomonclothlng, lomolmioc.
r
Monda~. !116111, 8 To •. On Chris
Mulli lamily, Fridayc&amp;SaiUrdat,
lane OffKrauseBeck Rd . Signs
Ua~ 3·•. 9am-~pm , Eblin rnlPoatod. Antiqueo, Waohotando, - ·Wolfe Pen, ""'' ""'Y·
Spool Cabine1, Couc", C"oirs, T Ra .
. tl
Toolo, Glus. Household 11emo,. he . cone "srea f.olmmpunki'Y_, ~
L.ampa, Glasa, A~t Morel
ganazation , tar ""' I at , ... ~
3rd-41h. 9am. Chns11118s uee. pa•k
llu11i-Family: llay 3rd, 4111; SR i bene". lu'"iblre, •ugs, kilchtn op-' ·

Boyo 0·4-Yrs. Bedspread. Plov 'Buckoje Hillo Road, 9:00 Til Dall&lt;,

HUGE . Ylfd Sale A1 Guiding

(Lime Stone-

collecliblel, mioc.

513. 514, Clothes. Gilrs 0·24 Moa,

Hands School. \0-to-4 Sat. May
4th. Clathinq S1.()() or Less. loiS
ol Ever~ Thmg. Great Buwalll it
rains -Mil be inside follow signs. All
Proceeds go to· Help Children at ,

DATE
LINE

Microwave, Gun Cabinel. Clocks.
ClorhinQ , Something For Every·
tone, 71h House Out 775,. May
2nd, 3rd, 41h, 9-3. .
Missy Shoo IS, Gallia Co. Cheer
loam, Ya•d Sale tBake Sale: Fri·
day, Solu•day, 11-5. 8-? G&amp;G G•o·

MiiiC. ,..,., T.v.
2 112 Milos From LJF In con••· Porch sale: 9-4, F•i. sa•. Rain '
nary, ott. Lincoln Pike, On YeiiOW·N Shine, 2378 Jackson Pike, Turn
II!Wn Rci!ld· Friday, Sot
.In At Caldwells Trucking, Last
4 Family Garage Moving Sale : Houae, Green Sh uners.
May 3rd, 4th, 9·5. 196 Hilltop
D . Ofl.......,hborhood Road
$8L, 8:00 A.M. 991 Mill Creek Ad.,
r... ''""'
·
Clothes, Lincoln Logs, Tents. '
512, 513rd, 11-4, 1061 &amp;ear Run Rd. "Sleds, lagos, Area Rugs, School
Rt.7S. Jull Post Raccoon B•idgo .:.Coo=ll·- - - - - - - ' - 1 Milt Out On L. Jenny Lind Crib, Sa c1a 5141• 2•~ S R

All Yard Sa~s Uust 8a Paid In

992·2825

May 2-llt, 9am-4pm, SR 7,

•'ust Green Terrace, Centenary, 8- ~necks, Lamps, Dishes, Elec 5 , 5/4, 5!5, Lots Bo•s Clothes, uonln, Tools. Saga Tapas, Cas- .
7

..

$2.99 per min.

Per

$2.99
min
Must be 18 yra.
.

.•..

"J

(On Back Porch) . May 3rd, 41 "·
Ca•micNol Drive Olf 01. Jackson

one I

'

FINDTG&gt;TAL
. SATISFACTION! .
Through a Uve
PersoAal Psychic!.
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
' Serv•U (619)

GallipOliS

&amp; VICin""

E'

0

Yafd Sale

70

···s·s· L'LI.UILD,~ERS,· INC.
t.tew Homes • Vlny! 'S.Iding New
Garages • Re.p·lacement Windows
Roqn'! Additions • Roo'flng
••
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIA'L
FREE ESTIMAJE.S
"'

.

May 3rd , •th, Begin 9·? 753
Neighborhood
Road, ·Gallipolis,

· 111
family, reword oHored, 614-IBS. Otlio.
mlos oou1~ Ea11ern HS, men ond
4235.
·
.:...;.:;________ large ladiea clothing, ahliquq&amp;,

St. Rl. 7

Bam.apm

L.--""!"_ _ _ _...

1-900-255-0500

eackhoe
$ervices

Phone

eveninasor

•

na

312111 mo.

needs

614-992-594.8

1-800-872-5987

. 614·992-4025

'

The "Honor Roll" w:ill appeQr,in Lnc
•
Friday, May l 7th Edition of . .
The Dally Sentinel.

U.e Cost Is

,

Blue-Point (Grey Tips) Siamase May 1SL 2nd, 3rd, 7:30A.M. ·3:30 olhlll.
Church Of God Area. Fomily Pol, Some Adull&amp;. Misc.
May t-3. 169 Beech Stroat MidChildren Ver~ Upsel. R-nl 01· May 2nd·41h 1St house below dlepor t behind SUper America,
loredl Please Call &amp;14·446·2125 Swan Creek Bridge S1a1e Roole 7: loiS of new items, girl's clollel.
IO.yol Or 614- 446·2782 (Aller 5, Tilloro. Wood craiiS, Babv. Kids
2·3. 2 112 miles oul H~HII
_F~M.).
.:.Cio~lhos..:.::.,_Mi~se.-·_ _· _ _ May
Run Ad. ~am-?
.

wlfh the parla It lervft:e to b/Jclr it up
Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; West VIrginia

Serv-U (614) 645-8434 .

MEN.
Port11ble . . IEAUIIFUL
WOMEN ·
:Bntlsaw U
ARE WAITING 10
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
HEAR FROM
Middleport, Ohio 46760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles
YOU NOWIII
0

Uaw t -2, 1urn at Five Poinl E•.press, past Royal Oak .resort., firtt·
road 10 "righl 11~ rRie, left on Vinego• 51. Ad., omv houoe on leh top

Cat, lower Garfield Avenue 1 P.M. Te•as Road , Kids Clolhing,

Ext. 1021
. $2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

H&amp;H '
SAWMILL

1•.900·990·3737
Ext. 2261

Phont 1155-~
El'abllehld 1t11

Phone 555 IH7

some girl's clothlng, many olher
thing9.

. PICk·UP diiCirdad
bettarlel, tppllances 6
many metals.

20 Years ·

1iquea, furniture, ·misc.

'
May 1-2, 458 Beech. Middlepor}.

94.2188

AnRACTIYE
&amp; WILLING
TO TALK!!!

Ral1\o

and Friday, 614-082-5275.

1-900-988-6003

40 Years

2-3,

Inside· 1 112 miles H~ ••II Run.
various itema, cneap, Thurada~

CALL NOW

5/16/IM TFN

44 .Years

'

-nl05.

on Tape or CD .

Meet the Man or Woman
of your Dreams Never
be lonely again.

FREE ,ESTIMATES ·

*• fu-

41h, Gam 111 5pm, II 485 S. Tl\lfcl

Your favorite artist
.New24 hr.
Dateline

Gunere
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting_

Garalit ull· Mey 4, a.u.. Mdl-

Middleporl, across from Trl·Counry Ford, boys clo1t'IS &amp; 1oya, liU

Radle lllaeli Dealer

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Elllbllllled 1. .

ELECTRICAL

94-3780 days, 6911-7231
1-800oU4-6390 anydme!

"'-liSt ...

60 Years

Help Wanted

UC. • Ins. 0wn0r. Rick JohnaQn

New At Jneles Eleettonies

Howard L. Wri'~MI

o.....,

er residen·ce, Tackerville Rd..
Racine, off SR. 124. tools, en·

~

Umestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

E·Z Motor Service

GMiae Sole. 5 lllltily lilt. IIIII qt
..... ltomo, May 3, .... 4, - -

Huge garigo sale. May

513, 514, &amp;5, 9-6 (:Jfd, 41h) 1-6

W~ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

'

.

Hysell Run, household ltemJ,
knickknackS, jeans, goldfish, wa1ef' Hlies. misc.

614·992•7643
(N o Sunday Calls)
'-----..;...;,·~--..;·~-....;,--....;;21•1........,=;;;;A

61 YtJrS

2015.

Gar•a• Sal• May 3, 01"11 milt IJP

• Top • Trim • Removal .
• Stump Grinding ·

Toll

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal ·Commercial or Residential
.Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toll•tt Rented.
Dai!y, weeidy &amp; monlhly rental rates.

67 Years
.

~. 2nd HDUH, left. Clothes,

.Hou-•.

(614) 441-1191
1 -800-508-!:l887

H tl &amp; C IJ g
. bll H.
M
0 8 Om8 ·~ ng
00 n

Phone 555 4431
Elllblltllld 1103' .

75

c-.

lltlor

Lost: 1 Year Old Neutered Male,

312111 mo..

1·900-446~ 141_4
E~t. 6445

---.--....
Frldar· sawr...;, , _ . , ..
...... Aiolgo Ad. off 124, . . . .
ftrll · AIIIMIII.,, clo1hH, ml.oc. lftiD. ato.Jd-

ton, cloll!lng, etc.

•

985-4422
Cheiter, Ohio

614-885-4107
614-742-3337

Live 24 Hrs a day
,Talk,to BJjautiful:
· Girls

1 0•

Addr... : 1:111
Ally,
411, 7V Solar Oo~e. Off Bula- 1-5,
SyracuM,
need
ditHdonl
~II
Traifled, To Good 31d,
llillei'!M.
114·1112-nal.
' •
~.814~11.
.
G1rago Sole: Fri, May 3rd, 0·3, 1/ Garogo · oalo, 512·~., tam,
4 Klneno, N1or 118lned, reedy "' 4 Milo OUIBulovillo Road.
tntures .large wo'rne" a kfira
... 30&lt;0-41~1-CIOtllOI, 2 ... lol pall forHI fbi
5 Ml•ed lrHCio, Lo.. oble • Garage Solo: Friday, 2·112 Mllto Chu&gt;ch. oigno at drlv-. 114·
Adorable Pupplea, Will Bo Mod. Out Georgol Crook, Johnson• 11411-2430.

Ki,_,

2

Plrt.• Sand

1'

Business Services

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PEA DAY.

Anter Bros. Co.

Safltr's Inc.

Etllblllhld 1815

'

·Public Notice

. INVITATION TO BID
8yr8CUII, Munlclptl Bldg.,
The Vlll1g1 of Syracu11 SyriCUII, Ohio 41771. The
will accept bld1 until 12 Vlllllat of SyracuH ..._.
- n on M1y 20, 1111, lrom 11M rltlht to NliCt •ny or 111
18illly llcenled lneur1nce bldL
comp1n1.., or their qenll,
J1n1c1 Zwilling, Clerk·
to·provtdo to the Vlllllg~qf
,._urer, VILLAGE OF
Syr•cuu lor th• torm of
SYRACUSE
one (1) p•r, oomiMftolng (5) 2, t, 11; ~c
M8)' 21, 1111, aomm...,l•l 1----::=:::=---ptoptlty,
commercl•l
g-lllllblltly, DDIIIIMI Dill
••ito conr•t• •nd
commerclll lnl•nd m1rln1
·lnHNnct. Bldt IN to be In
• MiliCI lnWiope .mlrkld
"lnlur•nce Bid" •nd
eubmiHtd or mailed to
J1n1c1 Zwilling, Clerk·
TNI&amp;Urtr,
VIII•!!• . of.

mates, seJf·help and ·
more.
1-9()()o255-0Soo
Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min,
ly1ust be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645·8434

92 Years

Garage Salt : Fn And Sat. May

Umestone • Gravel

Authorized AGA Distributor
··
: • Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
: Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabricallon • Repair Welding
: • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps •Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
hems. Planter hangers •.Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

J,OA» Years 95 Years

0

DUMP TRUCK
. SERVICE
.I

FUMIII

lWmJ:'!,S.::?JI··-·1
1500

lipoNo.

R•L. HOLLON
TRUCKING .

•Room Add1Uon1
•New Garage•
•Eiactrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing.
•Interior &amp; Exterior
PalnJing .
A110 Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATESr
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio .
1/lllfn

GHAT LINE

---.::t..

.

Huge yard sale· Thurlday ·ul1: ~ •
Friday Ma~ 3rd &amp; Saturday Mar

CARPENTER SERVICE

Psychic-Line

•

stock plpeo. ooddle bego, 1ool

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U .(619):645-8434

YOUNG'S...

Talk line to our

_ORRUS

5

••

tal 7111

pouch, mlrrata. Me., fuH

PIIJLII ftlll

I

Glveewly

0

tion, Eblin residence, ilm-4pm.
Jenny lind bab~ ~d. woodt.n
high chtir, changing tabfi,
!limes. IOJI, colloctillle bO~
Ilea, old collector tools, Harter
Davidson Spout.., 11ulf. 1110:,

exr.

.

SE· 5 PKG

1995

urdly. May :Ito, ••"· Now, Uoad
llems, Spread JCunalns, Ad11h
Clc&gt;NI, 130 Mognolill Dffle, Gol-

..

742·2803

owner, low miles.

'

112 Spaniel &amp; 112 BooOI•
Man1nt Old. IU 111 D1t~

WILDIII &amp; FDIICinOI
UO.OOIHR.

1·900-446-1414
3&amp;94

. .JJftlM .•

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
· Maintenance
.• Odd jobs·per request
No Lawn Too La;gs or
Too Small ·
. Plan Ahead, Call Todayl

s spd, air. cassette. 1.

40

CHEAPER RATES

ONE • ON • ONEI
CALLNOWI

We wm 'work whhln your budgei
Ph. 77:J&gt;.9173
'
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy Street
Mas6n, WV

DUSTER

Holv131M-4175-:M51.

~ Sale: F~So..::':""· t5. 212 Kolle! Drioo.
GaNge Sole: t-5 Fridaw, t-2 Sat·

LIVE!

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

1987 DODGE

1111,

"'""::%

••

.....
e-. Somotli&gt;11 f1l' Fridov.
~II
~~-.. giiJ_I.,

I~~-~-~~~~~~~=;=-=-~
~

SiZed, IU 111 0142.. ·

LAWNt:ARE

ONLY

1994 PLYMOUTH

HYDUUUC IEPAII
&amp; JIACHINE SHOP, INC.

S...a.ut• 11..

... 1111, 1 - w
ilo. 1:00 To 5:00

...._ ""'"""-

-on Cllnl
• - . . .or·
_;on
a!Ia"'
FMy,

Owner: Ronnie ~oneJ
367-()268 -1-800-eso-3359

IAIIB~S

auto, air, tilt, cruise, all
power, 1 owner.

penon- cluonpe;i o

1141-21112

Friday, lhlr I, H,

" - · ....... 1100 ..... flo-

,tothe_er_lion.J:.,.I·
., . . . , ,.,. •-.. ,-·

~CINE

20 Yea11 Experience • Iruured

4131 mo. pd. .

-

CELICAGT .

I

J. E.IJIDDLE, OWNER

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; S~ump Grinding

614·915·4110

--

1987 TOYOTA

: Newttome.

r.

Toke tlte palo out of
palalllll• Lit u1 do It
for you.
VERY RUSOIIIU
HIVE IEFIIEICIS

"r

INTREPID

$

FREE ESTIMATES

·------------ tO\.\ ----Of
--

. 1996 CHRYSLER

eu.om lulldll:lt~. .....

JONES' TR~EE SERVICE

11111110R·Im1101

tilt cruise, power

air, CIISS, titt,
cruise, low miles, factory

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

LINDA'S .
PAINTING

windows, 4 dr, very clean

4 door,

1995 NISSAN 414
KING CAB XE
spd, air, cass; p. mirrors,

auto, air,

powet, 1·owner, low miles

1994 DODGE
V-6, auto, air, tiH, cruise.
cassette. 7 passenger

By DOUG LEVY
USA TODAY
· .The Chinese martial art tai chi ·
cuts the risk of dangerous . falls
among the elderly by almost half,
.i study finds.
' Tai chi .is an ancient system of
meditation and physical exercise,
fiequently seen being perfilrmed in
parks early in the morning. It c!!n·
sists of carefully coordinated exercises that follow a natural, relaxed
Jiattem of gmdual movements and
body rotation.
. A report in the May Journal of
the American Geriatrics Society
follows earlier research showing
~e .technique's promise. Emory
. University's Steven Wolf divided a
• gr!JUP of 162 women and 38 men,
average age 76, into three groups:
Each group got IS weeks of tai chi,
computerized balance training or
billance education.
.
'Results four months after training: Tai chi reduced the risk of
multiple falls by 48 percent; computerized balance training and other · education weren't nearly as
effective.

V-8, outo, air, cass, all

I Ylclnlly

_.
1

W"IIpOtt
I Ylclnlly

Ct.. D. .

II ?:JQIIm, Dlnnlr II . . . . Ill

~·- ~ ·-

~.

Ylrcllltl

70

AnnaunaUIII ....

~L................. _

,

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

...................
,.............
..-.. ......., .. ......
to

· Aduh, MaHtrnity And Childrens,
Household Items,
Books, Double)S,rorler, Toys In·
Furnit~o~re ,

diAling

'f"' Tikel. Mi0&lt;.

fliclay, ~. S~t. 51.0: 8:30-5:00,
.454 LeGrande Blvd, •· Family,
Rlin/Shine, Air Conditioner, Ml·
cr-••· 71 Lt8aron, WeedNt·
"'·Etc:.
.

..
''.

j,.o

waaher, TYa, VCR'S, furniture,

mlac. $1.00 bcixeo, 10am-4pm,
307 Spring .... """"""'"
Big oal• May 2·3, 1WO mNeo ou1
1•3. chlldrtn'l clothea, furniture,
gunt, exercls• equipment, baby

items, molt, ere.
Carpol1 1011- 311 WriQht

81tH~

Pomeroy. Thurada~l Frtday, Ma~

2·3, gam-4pm. Barblo dolll,

child-

ren's dolhing.

Top Pfices Paid : Old U.S. Colna.~ ."
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, Al l G&gt;k(-:
COllectibles, Paperweights, Ett .... • ~

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Secooi.cl- · ·
Averue, Galipoli' 614-446·2642 .• :.:

Used furniture- anliques, .one: &lt;
place or Cl)mplete estates, al• : .
do IPPfliHIS, Oaby Uartin, 81~"'- •

992-74.1 .

·&lt; . :

Used Men&amp; lev!a, Lee &amp; Wran-: -:

glor Jeont &amp; DenimJackel,· Ni~ .;.
c ..h ..... May 3·&amp;•. 63 Ru1lan&lt;l Shoos, 614-448-2468.
• -- •
SL lliddleporL otio.
Wonted To Buv: Aulo"s &amp;Truc~oo: :;
Frldly and Saturday- 870 Aoh Any Condition, 814·38&amp;-8062. Qr,- ,
StrHI. Mkldlopor~ hlrni1U,., ellf'· 11-4·441-PAR'T.
• .. .. .

.

.

else bike, clothing, mite. 8am4jlm.

~

~W:.:.om~~~To~&amp;:.;.y_:~:--~-~--to_o_W~I~~;

~~ Wllho~o~t Mota~• · Cell lar~y:~ !

Friday Ma1 :1. t-1, Elltdtne Wit· livoiy,614-388oll303.
. ' .-. '
aon·a Mlnerllllllt, 101M lur·
Won1ocl To Bu~ : Lit11o likes TCII'O: "
"nituni:
114-24~7
'
.
~

.

�•

•
~ 10 • The Dally

Sentinel

Thendly,..., 2, 1111
OOP

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•'

ALDER

.,.......
--

~~!H·./IC.S

110

..WAHTe!H

woigllc.--· .. . . , -

,_tentH weighl·loat product.
3104-713-5013 24tnlcloJ.

11 .000 Wttklr Proce&amp;a1no Mtil
Fftt lnlo Stncl S.ti· Acldrtned

Scamped En.,•tope:' · Exprett
Dept131 , 100 East Whlt..lono
Blwl., SullO 141-1145, Cldlr Patte
Tj( 111113.

AVON 1 Ali Areaa 1 Shirley
Spen. 3114.e~,4a
Avon Reprtltntativtl
nHded . Earn money lor Christ·

Able

moo bil a 11 hornolot-k. 1·800·
aa2-1351 or 30•· 682·2645, Ind.
Flop.

AREA SUPERVISOR

Chriatmta Around The

World 1
Houae Of lloyd Now Hiring Su·
ptrvi&amp;Oil tn Area . FrM Sample
Kit. Free Training. No Investment,

No Coiieetino, No Delivorina. For
Dtlalla, Call Collect, 814 ·654·
6815.
AVON 18 ·SIS' /Hr, No Minimum
Order, No Ooor To Door, No In·
voniDry, 1·800-738·0188 tndlsial

.....

llllbwlinor 2 Children 7 &amp;
8, E'voninto 2 Pll. To 11:30 PM.
Bidwell !Porter Area, 814·388·
11902.

Bollard library ·II Accepting
Apptic:ationa For The Posiuon 01
BOOKMOBILE Clerk · Oliver.
Port lime (22 112 Hrs Per Week).

L•cen se
Clean Driving
Record, H.S. Diploma Or Equl..i·
ont. Goo4 Ortl And Written Communicarlon Skills: Flax•ble SChed·
ulo; Ability :ro Work Alone And
Fallow Written And Oral Oirec ·
tiona; Two Veara Library Or Com·
parable Cltr1cat Ekperienee. Job
Entaill lifting, Climbing, Drivmg,
Typing And Work1ng With People
Of Ail Agoo. Includes Evening
And Weekend Hours. Preferred
Applicant W!i Bo An Avid Reader
Requ~rements · Or~ver·s

And

And

LM The

0..

I.....

Help Wllltld

10 ·people who n.... 10 loae

.

25"11•9Jl::•

+

P-•

EnthusiastiC

About

L-n•no. Salary $1.64 IHr, Appli·
cationa Available At Bastard li·
brary, 1 Spruce Street, GallipoliS,

Olio.

eru-. Rp posilians. Trawt110

"'CoM
"tie1placoa.&gt;107-875-2022
'Z00.$1100 weekly.
ext.
dey~

0598C16.

· D9mino'a Pizza Pt
htrino, ail poilions.

Pleasant Now

Driven needed, retiiees wei·
come. DMV report, clasa 0 heenae. 304-675-5113

EARN ,1,000 W~ Stunong En.
velopes AI Home Start Now. No
E•perience. Free Supplies, Info.
No Obligation. Send SASE To :

Fairway, Dept. 1351, Bo• 4399,
Wool Covina, CADI191 .'
E•perienc:ed People Needed In
Timbef Operatlont, Sk1dder Op·
erator, Boon Loader Operator,

1

·I

1·800·~~aa~tup~o~n~~~"'~'"~t~304~-7~5~S.~5~58~6~.
330 Farms tor Sale

Ac:tive.

Be

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom aparlmGnt in Couch Qhair, $100; Wuhtr

Mlddreport, no peta , 614·1192· $125; Bo• Springa /Mattreal,
$35; Louoseat $85; Gas GrNI $35;
5858.
814·448-3224.
One bedroom apartmentm Pt. Dinette 581 With 8 .Chair• 11 0o,·
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Pleasan~ no poll, 814·1D2·5858.
DrjOr $1 00; 1012 Suzuki 125RII
3.9 acres b sale within Pomeroy
Twin Rwert Tower, now accepting Water Cooled Bike, Compfetetr
MUnactpal limits, located in new
applications tor tbr. HUO subaid· Gone Through, $850, 080, 81.C·
subdiv11ton, ready to bJild, beau·
lilul•riow on h* top, $17,500, most ized apt. far elderly and handl· -448-8e05, After 4 P.M.
capped. EOH 304-87~79:
Electric
Scooters
And
see 10 appreciate, 614-992·7851 .
Leon Ba4en rd. I Mason Co. I 23 Valley Apanments, Mason, wv Wheelchairs, Haw /Uaed, Van I
accept1ng appl1cationa for 2 Car lift ln1talled, SrairglldH, Uft
acrao. R14uced. Call Somorvlllo now
Rfafty. 304-675-3030 or 304-875-• &amp; 3 bedPaom apartments. HUO ChairS, Call For Brochure, 8U·
Subsidized. 304·675·5548, ERA 1;:4oi8::,:·12::83:::..- - - ' - - - - 3431 .
Town and Country Real Estate.
G&amp;W Plastic&amp; aM Supply, SR 7,
Parcels available tor new home
Vefy
clean
one
bedroom
fur
·
Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45783·
conalruction on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels rang1ng tram 1.tuac to mshed apanment 1n Middlepa,t, Spec1al April 29· May 4 : tOO' ,..
5.32ac. Paved road. c:ounty wat8f, call 814·448·3091 preierallly ba· Fl.ex pipe · St9.00, 250' 4' Flu
pipe·, $47.50, 8U·985· 3813 or
reaaanable reatricuons. Map and fora 10:30am or aher ":00pm.
614-117..414.
1nkJ available on request. No single wide Inquiries please. 30"~
450
Furnished
875-52S3.
Rooms
Sc:enic Valle~. Apple Grove,
beaulilul 2ac lots, pubhc water,
Clyde Bowen Jr.. 304-57S.Z!36.

All real estate advertising In

thts newspaper Is 8ubjacl to
the Federal Fair Hou5tng Act
011968 whk:fl makes ft Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
llmitatoon or discrimination
l&gt;asod on lice, c:olor, religion,
se• iamlllalstotus ornalionol
orlg1n, or any Intention to
make any such pralerence,
11mlt8tlo!l or discrtmlnaUOn.•
This newspaper will nol
tmowllngly accept

advertisements tor real esrate
In violation of lhe law.
OUr readers am hereby

Which is

Informed tnatal dweH!ngs
advenlsed In this newspaper

are available on an equal

left,
1~-lloppo!!fll•nio•nllilyll'll&gt;as.ls•. -""!!! ~~~~; Co, $1,500
10% Do... $100
One 32
Acre Tracts

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2 Acres 011 teo At Porter Nice 1

Soulhern

360 Real Estate
20•22 Garoge, Loya Gco4 All In
Wanted .
Or 814.el2-4919.
Gran, $36,500, 94,·54:..7et2,
814·388-ll411.
Disabled veteran ~:~rgef'd~ l~klng
HELPIII We Nood A Few Good
People To Allill Per1ona Wllh 2 Bedrooms /More 1 112 Balh1, for 30·100 ac:re1, PJivata, wnh or
MR/00 With Daily Living Skitla. Elllrl Lg. t1l. -Eat·ln. Klto:hen, Lo- witl:lout bulldlnga; land contract,
.
Vanoua Positions Available. Call eatod: Gailio, Wrap Aroun4 Doell, 514· 742·2182.
HI00·531·Zl02.
Froo Goa Wifl Oallla Water, 814RENTAL S
387-7422
High Quality Carpet Installers
Needed, Fulltime And By The

Job, ..-ust Have E•Pifience, Ap·

Calls Plol9e.

Furmture, 151 Sec·
Gal1polis. No Phone

Home Typ1sts, PC userS

needed.

· ,$45,000 income potent.al. Call 1800-513c-4343 E1t 0.9368.

Ho-I deponcfatllt part· time bar·
tender, call 614-992·3879 bat·
-llpm-IOpm.

Needed· someone to care tar elderly in priYate care home, days
1 n1ght1, 8U·992·3324 or work

614-1192·5023,

Pupa, AKC, 814·28L·8753, 814·
523-8965.
Reg 10mo. old female, Chihuahua
blad&lt; .&amp; IBn,, apple hllocl l)'pe, very

3 llodrooma, 2 Bolh Rench, 2 Cor
Gorogo, Spring YaNor Aroo. ""-r
6:00P.M. 814-448·19.0.

41 0 Houses lor Rent

510

Household
Goods

JET
AERATIQN MOTORS
12 Living Room Sultea, 2 Pieee RepairH,
Now &amp; Rebult In Stack.
Not $498 Eoch, Only 1275 Each,
Call
Ron
Evans,
1-1100·537·9526.
Call 614-868·6373, Rt. 1 Allove

Proctorville, Ohio,
ni's Pizza.

Beside

Giovan-

Ho'u H + 29 Acres, 3 Bedrooml, t Bedroom house. 30o4~7S.2722.
4 p1ace twin bedroom suite, ln·
2 Bllha, Boaomon~ :z 112 Cor Go· 2 Bedroom houl8, new carpet, re- etudes Sealy deluxe mattress &amp;
,age, Pool. lg. Deck, Phil Extra modeled, includea alove &amp; tr11h. bu sprmgs, $2 2 s ; couch teo:
Speco, S14·24S.5378.
Conatruction workers ·welcome. Club cha~r "makea single bed",
304·173-5764.
1•.:50:.;':;".:.4.:·9:.:8:;5-:.:3=59:.:5:.;
. -----I
•
HOUSE FOR SALE
•
BY OWNER
3 Bedro.o m Home In Centenarw-. Appliances :
Reconditioned
Small 3 Bodrooma, Very Good $4501Mo. Plus Sec:urity Deposit, Washen, Dryera, Ranges, Rafri·
CGndilion, New Vinyl Sklno, Cor· 814-441Hl566.
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
.
French City Maytag, IH-446·
port Unattached 2 Car Garage
7195.
With Now Afl'rtmant Abowt.l14- House lor rent 304-875-8720.
448·1774 Hoine: eu-448.0374
·
304175 ••20
Nic:a three bedroom home in Pt Cauntry Furnlture.
WOrk Alk For lolork Plllmor.
• ·vv '
Pteeoan~ no fOil, 614-ID2-5858.
Rt 2 N, 6n&gt;ies, Pt Pleasant, WV.
1
Two bedroom house, carpeted, Tuo1-Sot 9.e, ~n l·!i
nice and clean, depoSit reqUired, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
no inside pets ; three bedroom Washers, dr~ers, refrigerators,
hoiJit, d&amp;po11t required, no 1naide tanges. Skaggs Appllartcea, 76
Vine Street, Call 614 ·446·7398,
pets; 814·1D2-3090.
1·800·499·3ol99.

420 Mobile HOmes
tor Rent

Marris Garage Door Ca. Ia Hav·
lng B Dent &amp; Sciatdt Salel OYer

Stacked On Various Slzea Ga·
rage Doorl, Call And Savel '814·
4.48·4514.
Moving Sale: 2 living Room
Suites, 1 Swivel Rocking Choir, 2
End Tables, 1 Round Table With
leal Maple·, 1 Round Black Table
With Chairs, CaiiiU4-448-0510
..~ 2·4.

Mull Sell: 22 Meg. - r ISO:
lver Johnion 22 RevolVer $50;
Arminiu I 22 Revolver te5; H&amp;R
22 RIWoiver $65; 870 RerningiDn
Wingmaster, $225: Winchoator
20 Ga. Semi-Auto $170; H&amp;R 32
Revolver 169; 12 Ga. SIFlQie $46:
S1ar 9 MM Semi·Auto Platol
$225; Wonehelter Single $59; 6'
Bench Grinder S25: No Vont Gao
Green sofa, $100. Crahsman Heater $1 15; Dave's Swap Shop,
eleclrlc bod, n"er used. $700. 8129 S.R. 7N. Cheshire, 614-387·
304.e7S.1832.
7108.
•

SouUt

BARNEY

morar, $250, ~

MAW'S

· A TIR,! 1
ELVINt:7

..... ble. 304.,15-1834,

Sel Point Siemne Kinens, Father

Registered, ' Wormed
Trained, 81C-31H70!i

/Utter

Siberian Huslcy. 5
montto old lomale woth brown eyeil,
loving disposition, serious In·
quires only, 814·949·2857.
Unregistered

...

1884 Marada 18Ft. Open Bow' J
Willi Sun Dock, 4.3 Liter, V-6, l
Mere: Cruia,(. Whh Ski Accas10· ~
riel, 814-2Sioe180.
....

. '

.A

-~

TELL I-IlM ITS TJ.IE MONTW
OF MA'&lt;.AND IT'S TlME
TO STOP I-IIBERNATIN6,
...AND COME OUT AND
ENJO'( LIVIN6 ..

Musical
Instruments

610 Farm Equipment
AC 333 No Til Corn Plantet, Dry
Flftilze, 614-448-8710.

GeMI Round Balers: Mower Con.

ditionets, Disc Mowers, Disc
Mower

44,8

flberglua hard
with doors. $500, c:aU 11•·985- ,

MA'&lt;6E '(OU' D
BETTER WRITE ALL
Tf.IAT DOWN ..

Alt1zer Parm Suppl~. 61,.· 245·

5193.

,,

Uodel 309 two-ro!N

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

BOY! AT

l

..

,,

614·441·0179!

1973 Winnebago L1ke t:tew ~~
40,000 lloloa, 6 New 8 Plj. Ti(Ol.•l
nanclng even It
New Brakes &amp;Wheels, Cylln4or,.
turned down els,owhe•·o. Upto~ Generatar, 2 Watir Tanka, 2 ,
Equipment Uitd Cars. 304·458· Holding Tanka, Air, Fully •
1089.
•
Equippei$1,100,814 448 3485. .,. •
Auto Loans. Dealer

1
•

1-----':.:.....,.-:---1 '''*' Niuin ~r8gif minOr hOme;:,!
720

TrUckS

fOr 5ale

1978 Chevy Pitk·Up ,Runs Goo4,
Sell Aa Is, $650, 614·38 7·1034.
1985 Ford F.150 4WO, 300 e cyl.,
$3500 lirm.-eall 614·DD2·8273
or teove message .

""""ng•
1985

FQrd

short 'plCk·UP

bed.

1986 5·10 short bed no rust 304·

' , 0 IH!I ~ NEA. Inc

4&lt;yl, Sapd, great goa mileage, •
10,00ori, $4,200. 304.e7S.2D49. --·
1901 ~our Vo(i"d•MIH zg· Clasf ;._
c And Car.Dottr; ho Fprd OlD,
Cruise, Anit·Loc:k Brakes, Gen .
And Aor, ·NrS, NIP, 21,500 ll1 .',
"'iniClorolitioo&gt;, II 4·441-la77.
orly. 304-675-8003.

1.988 Chuvy 112 Ton V·G~ Engtne,

Go cart 3.5 hp. 1977 "pache' :

\ilt"\AV~ $

,.~.SILLY, 1'/t\ !££!~
~ Ft../OTIC. ~
."-MJT ~ UTit£
~IPN&lt;IPTtJa.!

1814 lnnsbrook, fully loaded, lOll ~
of extras, 18h. S.rioua\flquiriea" ·:

675·8286.

"

Now.I\Jtlld
304-a 7S. I450
Save Big On Corpet &amp; Vinyl In
Stock $8.00 Cash rCarry Mollo·
han Carpets, R•7N. 114·448·

Ford planter

platoa, 0004 condition, $150, 814·
742·2088.

Blaise Pascal, the French scientist
and philosopher, said, "The eternal silence of those infinite spaces terrifies
me ." At tbe bridge table, though,
knowing about spaces can point toward the winning line.
Today's deal was declared by Lars
~ellberg l'rom Sweden. The bidding
isn't on recard. so I have guessed al
an auction. South's two-diamond response is, of course, a slrong jump
shill. As South wouldn't make lhis bid
with four hearts, North knew lhere
was no point in &amp;bowing that suit.
Instead, with his two diamond honors
being equivalent to three,card sup·
port, he raised the suil Then two doses or Blackwood led to six diamonds.
Maybe at the table East had bid
spades, or perhaps West, l!ecause he
selected the spade seven, · believes in
agressive leads against smaU slams.
After winning the first trick with the
spade ace, ~ellberg played a tnunp tp
dummy's jack. When East discarded a
spade, South continued with a heart to
his jack - whew! Declarer played a ·
diamond to dummy's ace, finessed his
heart 10 and drew trumps. Then came
the heart ace, a club to dummy's ace
and the heart king, on which South
discarded one his black·suit losers.
Why did South play the hearts like
that?' Well, after trick two, declarer
knew six or West's cards &lt;one spade
and five diamonds) wherea• he knew
only 1wo or East's (two spades). That
left 11 emply spaces for the heart
queen in the East liand to only seven
spaces U. West's hand. So, the odds favored playing East for the heart
quee~ .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull

Good Fa1r Pigs, Hamp &amp; Du,oc

···o • UHKT

DRDKHKOSY .

FTZTFTYPT

D

.

asF

U UT FT

JBK

SBB

KUT

0 'Z T

H

D Y L 0 ·Z D L 0 H C D K W
1
HR

0

IW

PSROVJ

PCOYK

UHCC

THEKUS.$L .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Retired Is being tired twice, I've lhoughl, I Firs! tired :
or working, I Then tired of not."-'- Richa!d Armour.
.

....

-·

SCC~.t\lA -/iJ ~~s·
- - - - - - - 141to4 loy C:LAY I , ·POU~N
PUll Ill

Ofour
Roorronoe lonort of
""'mblod words
low 1o form four wordt.

WOIO
tAM I

.......

QIBUSE

.,

·.
'

.

I

DRA AW

I I I'
•._,-.-B_E-r-L
•_· I_ .~~ ,_A_L...--41
I. I. ..=,..,'

Quote tram a past president:
"The only kind of limits we have
on our tomorrow may well be
our ---.- .- of Ieday." '
.

. LI-.,~R_E,_r....o_v,--x.,.-jl
,. . Is I 16 I I G Complete
-.J._.J_L...;...L._.J.-.J.:._..l

the chuckle quoted
bv f111ing in the missing words
vou develop from step Nt;). 3 below.

L

8

SERVI CES

114·310·2110&amp;

Campos

c.liiDrly ~ etypiOQIIInln OJHIId lrnm quM.atiOI'III by temoua ptOf)le, past aod prn.nt
EliCh liner In ... cfpher lllndiiOr lriOltler Toctay's t:lu4f• 0 ~ts U

, .

'(OU OION'T 1'\I'IKE THE
101' TEN Of' • M05T
LIKE I&gt;• 51)(TH- GAAOE
TEACHER.::&gt;. ·

Larrb Far Sale: 614-4-'8·1947.

Purebred Angus BUll 3 Years Old,
Raise4 By Alan Bolllf, 614·367·
7224.

PRINT NUMBERED LETIERS IN
THESE SQUARES

• .. UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lEITERS
10 GEl ANSWER
·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'

Pucker- Usher- Graft - Hermit- TRUTH

' '·

Whtle growing up in \1 btg family we were given some
sage adlitce. My favorite was, "When in doubt, tell the
TRUTH I"

!THURSDAY

And Up,

TRAN SPORTATION
.'

DR'I'WALL

~; llnllil, . . ..
CeUtng• textur~.

•

plaster repair.
1888 1 Ford-Car\veraon Van by Clli Tom :104-675-41 ea. 20 yoors
ic, left rear tall light damage, "ACT!PN', tully oqulppod·olao OKporionco,
87,000 m1ies, 1850, 814·949·231 1 new •••• &amp; wltMis, ameli v.e
days or 614-9.-9-2644 even1ngs.
71 ,000ml. Vary clean, mu1t Ht,
$7,50«f304.a75-3841 .

;
•

19119' Full Sift XL'r 4x4 Bronco,
86,000 ·Milos, Mint Condition,
$8,500, et4-387-7755.
. '

===~~~~~=~::=:-~·Qtitlter;;:inftuencea that govem you In

1900
,'89 Thunderbird SC, 1\00 door, 3.8
litre, V.e. elltt model turbo, PS,
PB, AC, 5' apetd, power 1eacs
'and lockl •. •Great Car, • S520D
neg., e14·9a~·7478 or 614·949·
2810.
1g10 Comoro Z·28 400 SB Auto,
T· Topo, N.,. Rima And Tires,
Very S,arp, Lata Or New Parts,

13.000 080, 814·388·9881 , 614·
386·83311.

1080 Piyrr)Outh, 1971 Bu~. 1973
Buldt,.61 ot!25H075. .

ASTRO-GRAPH
·,

Roofiflll a gunor1 c·['ho~ •
remodeling doch 'l\'ildlildil31' ··
:r•ra,erporltnc:o, B 11\BRDO.flno· '
on4 Conauucdon, 61~ ·102·2364
1tDI Ford Eooptorer SpOrt414, 4.0 or 1-800 889 3114:1
• . :o:..·
· ~· y
V-1,1 atandard 1 loaded, 1un roof,
Mp\ 614-l4t-248t.
• 820 · Plumbing &amp; · ...

740

1D78 Horioy Oovidaon Spirta~r
J4,000, 61of.!l57•7$!(1. . ' ' "
1077. RM80 Suzuki, with choat
protoctpr ond lloota, rool oood
fndltlon, 1800,114-742-2011.

' year ahead. Send lor your Altro-Graph
predictions today by mailing $2 and
SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o this niiWIIpaJMir, P .O. BOx 17Se, M,urray Hill Stallon,
New Vorl&lt;, NV 10156. Make !lUre to alate
your zodiac sign.
GEMINI (MIY 21.June 20) Today, you
may find more money in your pocket after
a fortuitoUS sNit of conditiOnS at wortc. It
may be triggered by an associate who
likes you.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 Good things
could happen for you today lhrough
SOCial contaCIS. Kyou are In a poattion to
aperid ~ma with friencli, take time to do
IQ,

840

Ellctrlcal Pnd

Friday, May 3, 1998

l

A prom1a1ng endllvor In wiriclt you went
invoiYecliUI year wal derailed by poor
timing. In the year ahead, thl1 eitu81ion
could change and the !allure may be

for..,,-

·1,80 Yahl!ftl 1·100 GS, GX,
11,800 080 or tnlde
8~5113.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

HeatlnQ

MOtOI'CY..c;les .

.

·

f

•

I

•t.t:O (JulyJUug, 221 Today, you could
do rpmelhlng peiiOII8IIy to ccntrlbule to
your mater181
NJ. promptly u
110011 u you
tha opponunlly.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-fl!.pt. 221 Today you
mrgm be luckier than UIUIIin ven!Uree or

"'M ,_'II·
.-gntze

lndlaVO&lt;&amp; that have · · - ol chance.

201 Diplomacy · Keep thla In mind, bill den'! do anytltlng
.
·
and llltt Will w h80Urll 10011 for you todaY outlendilh orloofllh.
and you will wield !ham ellecitvtiY. You , U1RA (....,_ :DoOot. 23) ~who
will have 1118 ttbiUty to put everyone 11 11M ~!d81!1N to-you might do

raplaold wt1h
-20-lllly
·
TAUIIUS
!April

- · Get a
\.

All pass

''

.a..e. ·

Livestock'

710 Autos for Sale
·a. Ford Tempo, 4 doof aulomal·

.

Eut

. Pass
Pua
Pass

camper. good cond. 304·682&lt; ,
2203.
'
1988 Ford F·ISO 8 Cyhnder, 5 11148• Moll&gt;r Home 21 Ft. Good
Speed, 3.55 Rear A•lo, PS, PB, Condition, fu!ly EquippH, 614·
Bedllner ~ 'Owner, Driven And 251-1474 .. ;
llalntalneci-By. A Ford Fanatic. Nice Clean Otdllr 24 Ft Sell-Con•
Expect The Bestl $5,800, 114- tainH Camper ,1,650, f14·245o;
245-5391 . • .

74•U.

.

6t

.

PS, PB, Air, Auto Trans, $5,695,
614·4-&lt;6-4225 can Ahar 4 P.M.

Moving Mull Sell: Sola And Orlinda, 4 hotel nighll n•r OiaLoveaeat Oni1 4 Mo.ntha Old Col· '"'I· uao lftJiiml. $300 Vlfue, 1011
oro . Burgundy, Navy Blue And $100. 304~781
Hunter Groan Aoklno: $500, 080
614·441-8154.
PICKENS FURNITURE

3t

s.

IIU1b8ncl
8 $iilall rug
t ABA member

.

or

.

with additional bean and earn

630

I

1995 Ford Escort LX Automatic,
AC , 4 Door, 18•,000 Miles; 19D2 .97, Lark Hft travel trailer aett A
Ford Ranger XLT 55,000 U1les, 5 conra.ned, good conct 304-896- n
~ .
' ~
5peod, Cas~te, AC, Mer 4 P.M. 3427.

Conditioners, · Forage

Equ1pment Sales And Ser'tllce.

t.9p... i'

1994 Mercury Cougar XR7, VB,
32,000mi., ioadod, e•c. cond. 304· NN gu tanka, one ton tfuck ~ '
- . , - ..... - f!llla, ate. ',
1195-3287.
0 '1 R Auto, Ripley, ,'NY. 304-372- '
199-4 Ninan Senlra. 4 dy., auto, :393=3~or:..:,I-81J0.=;,;2:;;73.:.:132D;::;::;,·- - - ;
92,000 orig~al , very goad trans790 Gampers &amp;
portation, $1;075, 614·742·1400.

I.

4 ExtratlniOry
5 Stayo
Oipeclanlly

By Pllllllp Alder

.

Motor Homes

35 Long limN
31Prwi)''O
HtlaWII
37 Made u•nqull

. Cronyn
7 J.cldo'o 2nd

The empty spaces

•
1992 15' ChaliMgor
l&gt;anllo•t,
With ..,..,, lcadod, .Iota of ertrao. :
614,-949·2872.

Fib&lt;lrgian ~ood. Trunk Lid, Aoo ,
Front Fondorl, 614-141.02110.
'

Nortb

e Actor-

1 Alyou2 Fart3 ltallen city

:w ~~w::lv\...

~~glead: •7

CHAN~IN'

•

Welt
Pass
Pass
Pass

· OUT BACK

1989 21 Ft. Well Craft C.C., 2110 '
HP. A~IFM Martno ·Radlo, Tori-:
Alto, Eagle, IJrivt On Trailer, •
114-4411·2012.
;

C

331Cecl-

• 9 7 5

Vuinerable: Both
. Dealer: North

750 Boats &amp; Motors. 1
for Sale .
•

DOWN

32 Declllll

• A3
A J 10
t K Q 10 8 6 4
• Qs

YZ125 Yamaha Yo~ercroaa dirt f
bt•t, •o•d con"itlon, cell eu- ,'
" • ""
u
992·7913. '
'•

-

A!Mr- """

31

•

3180.,

3818.

27Loclglng

s

8ol!tll

1994 Ford Crown V1ctot1a, load·

.

---

• KJ 2

11194 HenU XR e50 on/oft roM :
bo'•t. 2300 mi. 14,000 . 304..75. ',
•

CJ. 7

• Q 7.

• • 7 53 2

For Sale: 18U · 1872 Nova Pans :

FARM SUP PLIE S
&amp; LI VES TOCK
Gravely Walk Bohlnd Mower,
614-388-ll237.

"'

• s4

2586.

ed, dual air bags. forest green,
like new, ga,age kept, 614·985·

.

Eut

•Q8654Z

• KJ 7

Fiberglass lruck topper lor Ford '
Ranger shon bad, $75, 6U·992· :

Bedroom, 20:32 10110 Shed,

MERCHANDISE

Runa GOOd, Noe4a Cholna &amp; \
Sprockota. $1,200, 114·38~- 1
~7._753:::.·-----~-:--:-;
liDO Yamoho RT, 1110 Two StroM '
Dill Bikt RebuUt Enoino, lookll. ~
Runo Good. 1800, 614-245-5755. • •
11193 Hon4a 300 2W0. o•ctlltnt :
con4tlon, 13400,814-742·2011.
•

Owtrl'llal Kill, 81 ..·2"5-5677

Conooto Piano. Rooponsible party
wanted 10 make low ·monthlv pay.
menlo on plano. See locollj. CaR
1-800·2flll.8218.

3482.

EEKAMEEK

tilt Vomoho Worrlor LOOkl l1

14 ...,......
11 ~-

05-02-DI
Nortb
• 10 0
• Kt I 2
tAJ
• A 10 8 6 4

lluclgel TranamiiJions. Ull4 /Rebuilt, All Types, Acceaaible T9 '
Over 10,000 Transmission, Also :

Pure While German Shepherd

bualng
......
41 Oh
plitwl'o

Porto:
52 Undorground
Sci!Mider
.._
18 T........ .tiM? 53 C8gent' arg.
11 PullniO lfloc1 M I
~ 1 WI 20 ltMII clllkl
Sp 111..,
21 ,..... .....,.
55 LAnded
flllttr,
5I Nil ,,.,. prwlb
22 Populltr ertlclll 57 lmpudot- (II.)
.24 C111M
51 Locfi-

-

3i'7.i~h_
~~•
&lt;
I=:..:.:;;:_
_ _., _•-:-'::

Auto~&amp;

v.w.. .......

IIIIWICIIOn
pltlll
.
...__ _ 13 DIMinctlw ... .. - Nlllonel

liN 4 Wll-r
Rent l RMt
ft.~
, _ . _ _ 1•100 ., ...

AccHsorles

570

Per Month ;
Acre Tract;
One 34 Ac;:re Tract: Eight 5 Acre
Tracts South 01 Wllkeaville On
180. County Water Will land
Con1ract ; Two 40 Acre Tracts
Will Land Co.ntrac:t, 814 -889·

··~

.... ·
""""'zoo ....... nn
-· briiM - llrOI.
a- 1ooo.tt4aHI!f1-8prn.
'

18 tp. John10n bott
814·992·2586.
'

41

12 AdMI'I

1111 Sululli 500 CuM- 4·'
whooior, frooh rtbul~. 11500;

760

34 aetas. 2 bedroom mobile home
&amp; 2 outbu&lt;ldino~ 614-DD2-2822.

Timber Cutter, Call 6, 4·753·4864,

ply At: Tope
ond Avenue,

blow

turlno ljy4ro Bath. Julio ~.1111. 1818 llontt Ctrlo LX luxtury,
VIIOI"''I MOW Yow'rt Yatd l C1ll: 10/11 Baton 14170 Wifl 7114 El- BEAUTIFUL APilATMENTS AT 12.5 :W Cut Rider- 1300: CIIIU •• 0211.
looolooi.IUIO. ~.
40 Clot. Hot Wat.,. Tonk Uae4 I
114-441-7413
palldo 3 .. I Bath. Tolli BUDGET PRICES AT JACKION Yoor t70 ; Puah Mo111or $50 All
EitCIIIC With Backup Gu Hilt, ESTATES, 52 Wnt1110ad Orivo
2 - 0111 " " " " - liM Pondaci Firollird. Y-e, aulD,
lollln .-.g ~ !IO,C.e75-aT.III.
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acre lrom 1244 ID 1315. Wall! to •hot&gt; PriCtl f irm, Phone : 1 14· 441· • -. been -m&lt;id. hevo po- ~&lt;~nroot, now tiro• l whoola.
poro.
304.e7SC727.
12.;1110.
--21D!i.
1123.
Lot Cloll To Clollipolla &amp; movl... Call 114· 441 ·2511 .
Protoallonoi Troo SorYiu, Slump Wooded
(Will Sell Soporott) 114-4,..· Equal-.g Opporu&gt;ty.
1111 Bon 12111 nic:o condition. AKC Gormon Shophord pupa. 1H7 Ford Aoroa•r ttoo: IOU
Removal, Fret E1lim•ttal ln.... 14,100. tiM Plymau., Tut· . :30ol~.e:.:.75:.=1838=·--:-:--:-~--i Toyoto Corola SSOO, 114 ·370·
auranee, Bidftll, Ohio. 11 ~~&amp;- 388- D543.
2150.
Furnilhod 3 Aooma &amp; Bath, Up. - .114-381-7010.
100,-. :!yr. old Olllon
1D85 14x70 Schultz 2 bedroom, ••tro.
Utiltiel Furniohecl, Ctoan. .......... white ' blacll oloao AKc Lob P.Upa, lllack &amp; brown,
ctiint. ooilng ..... Sun Vau,y Hur .. ry School. ........
tront Sl1 . , 3031.
rtady llay 10, tate. 304·805- 1017 Pontioc Bonneville, $3,000
vinyl aklrUng, tkctollent condillon No ,..,, ~=-•· Dopoait Roquiro&lt;l, 81
1518.
Chiidcaro M·F Bam-5:30pm A9"&amp; $13,500. 304-713-1082.
- ·
~30ol.a7s.M.
2:·k , Young School Age Our1ng
Color Conaolo 'IV,
: 171.00. BSR Equol- AKC Mole Gotdtn Rttrlovoia 1Jel Mor&lt;ury Cougar XL,-·
Summer. 3 Otyl pei Week M ini~ 1968 Radmtn 14180, 3 Be4- FurnlahM Ellicltner 2 Rooma, ~
llor 14 Bon4 121.00. ()p*nua 21 Rtody 5/3181. 1150 Each, Wijl PS, PB.IIC1 PW, 3o2. """'droo,
m..~me,4-.we~57.
roomo. 2 llothl, On 1.2 Aao- Share Bath, $105/Mo, Ulilltlea Won
" - ' _ . . , 115.00. Coli Hold -Otpollll, t1o-318-11243.
automotlc, o3500, 114-1148·2045
30180 Garooo With 2 Be4rooma Pood, eo1 5ocon4 Avtnuo, Goll·
WI Will Haul Saw OUst, Slane Apartment, In Galllpolia City poll, 814-441-4418 Allar 7 P.M.
Hon!y -1:00 304-t~ 1433
moloa, or 81 14" 2810·
For Drivowoys &amp; Son4, 814·310· School. 814'411-2012.
Go- Af"rtmonl: 2D Roor Neal 250 Kownokl 3-whHior i1oo.
15e~~~-. IWP!~omolh Horizon, 4·clr. 1750.
Avenue, Gallipolis, Furnished IVr concl. 18,000 BTU $250. z.e
304.e7S.1118.
Will Do ln11rior Or E1terior Paint- In W11on, 1872 mobile home. SZ75IIilo. Utiiitioa Peid, 814-'148·
18118 Comoro RS, V·8 I&lt;IIDmotlc;
or9r)o - ·· -571-2718.
Ing, Reasonable Ratti, Experl· 14KIII, 3 -oorn, 1 both, l.p. gil, 3144, A'-'7P.II.
~iatorH Blac:k
,_.~. good con41ion, allfclng
3 Ton lOMOI Hilt Pump, Com- A~C
oncod, Reioron- For Free Ell• new water hHIIr, G/a. rwpty car·
RetriOYtr
Pupa,
Chompion
Bioo4·
,$4000,
814-742-3142.
Gnocioua llvino. 1 aoo 2 bodr....,
' Ercallenl Condltlonll310, line, Sholl, Wormed, 814-698·
motoa, 614-245-5755
peted. mauye l blue, hal Qttlt apartmantl at V1llage Manor and
Yllllnce, n•..e-tozt
deoonofina potontlol. on rortc ioL River1ida Apanmenra In Middle·
242.
1881 Jt,~~etallic blue Mualang LX
Will haul gravel, Slone, fill dirt,
call :io4.17:.-5427, Atthur Rouah,
_ _ _ _ _ __.__ , hatch ~~ck. Wllun rpof, p,a, pb,
port. From $232·$355 . Call 114· 30" ridinG mowtr, $300: 44 moo ::..:;:::.
Urd GIC ... 304..a82·2141 .
auto; ..,;OYtrdrille, am·fm c:a1·
P.O. Box !1&amp;1, MMOn. 'NY. 25210.
992·5064. Equal Houaing Oppor·
ooglo plotDI, ss. 11400: AKC Reg1aterad Poodles ,
IM:.::;tomolo::::=
·.:8.:_1&lt;-ID2:.:;.:·.;1144:.:.;;_
·
-::-~I
solto,
exe, cond. $3,200&lt;OBO.
tunitiel.
Remlnoton HOO LT. new. 1525. :
limited Ott•rl 1Die daublewida,
FINANCIA L
30...7s.433&amp;.
114-1102.etM.
tOgal
tank
aet
up
apeeiala.
Filh
3br, 21&gt;11h, $11DD down, 1275/ Modern 2 Bedroom Aparrmanl,
l Pel ShOp, 2413 Jackson 1990 Grand Prix SE, E"'e Ctoon,
mon1h . Free delivery &amp; setup. 814 ue 0390.
50 Eoo Incubator Auto Turnlna Tonk
Alia . Point Plenant, ' 304·875· 89,000 Milea, loadedf Excellent
210
Business
Only at Ookwood Homos, Nitro
•eo: 30' Cook Stove llaaic Chol 2063.
~ti""' $7,500, 614-441-«115. '
N 3rd Avo .. Middleport. 1btd· Like N0111 $100; N0111 R.o&lt;l Sunvl·
Opportunity
WV. 3104-75s.S885.
rDDm, furn1shed. Oeposil I refer· aor For Pick·Up Truck &amp; Black --~------:-:-'-11991 Eo*&gt;rt LX Waoon. auto, ac.
Now Bonk Ropo~ Only 4 lell S!Oi once~304-682· 2568 .
Compertop Flta I Ft. BM, 814- ·Brittany Spaniels a·w ..~s Old, cruise c; ntrol,r,ar delroster, e•·
INOTICEI
11 """"""· 304·75S.71a1 .
245-5622.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Nice 1 Bac:lroom In Country Set·
Aegiaterttd, E•c:ellent.~B:~Io~o~d~li'ns e~~ tra clean, 300. 30~-87§..7324.
recommends 1h11 you do bull· Price Butter. 18M 3bedroam.
0tw Claws, Tails Cut,
tlng, Washer /Dryer,
At· Boot• B~ Aedwlng, Chipptwa,
Females Loft StSO,
nell wllh people you know, and te25 down, $15Q/mo. FrH dellv·
No Pets, No s&gt;;:,~~: Tony lama. Guaranteed LDW81t 8340.
NOT lo send money through th• ery &amp;, setup. Only 11 Oakwood trlgeratar,
Available 511195, 1300 I
Pric:oa At St)oo Colo, Gailipolll.
mait until you have innlligated Homes. Nln WV 3).4..755-5885.
$350/Mo., Applications At 1
..
..., ottorono.
2000. bolh 'lpndrl, up·
S&amp;\laS$. 1ggs double wide repa. Centenary Road , Gallipolis, 81 4· Cobfa
para on4 towono, oJCtitom condl·
Local Vendong'Routo. $2,500 &lt;A 1 3bl4room, 2balh. Will deliver &amp; 448- 2205 ·
lion; etHt:l-4501•
N1c1 2 Bedroom Centenary Area,
1i
4 ~ 12 Miles From Gallipolis. Re· Concrete &amp; Pf11tlc Septic anks,
140·38211.
Wk . Pottntial. Mull Sell
David
:
frigerator, Stove, W•1er fur· 300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron
wv nished,
No Pets, $250/Ma., 61"· Evant EntetpriHI, Jackson, OH
448 8038.
.:.'-800-:;~53::;7...:·D:;52S:.:..:._ _ _ __

Kil:ll Bodo and Allor

•

1 - In CIMinnlll 40 ICind all I' I loundal8
41 M1111111C41

I

a-n litllp ~ ClroomOia Fot-

•
••
••

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
PHILLIP

I '.'f'c0Yi.1HH

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1J

.

,

Jump on lila by u~nclo

••lllhlo'og .

io mllke your lilt a little •alter .tod•y.

,,

benefactor may be a ietiittve
lly member.
SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22111 you have
a chance to wcirtc with an a98ociate's farfetched idea today, take a crack at it.
Your version could tum ou1 to be far more
fNiible and functiOnal.
IAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
conceal an Inner strength today. If
you are confronted by challenges, you
can bring this skiH to tha surface.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) H you
are Involved In negotiations with large
Dfllltnlzations today; den, hold back any
Ideas. You could have something they

will

want.
AQUARIUS (J8n. 20-Feb. 11) Ju11,1
beCauae something didn't wortc ou1 t~
fDIIunalaly lor a friend, doesn't niean that
K won't work out well lor you. In fact, tha
oppoelte might be true.
PISCES (Feb. ...._011 201 Today, concentrate on sltuatton8 or lhlnga about
wtllclf you 1M! lucky. Myour percepttona
are QDrrect, you may fuHIII eome ambiIIOUI objeCIMI,
.
AJIIIS (li8nl1t 21-Aprll 11) CoqJe1ltion
could~ belorlt your ey.lod8y w
you ..,.,_ unaqld a1 eh8lillngll. K you
act· W.you t.nH)H, you won,, · '

.

u

.

(

MAY2j

.'.

'

�•

:Pege12. The Dally Sentinel

ThuiMIIy,u.y2,1111

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Me;gs Local School District to

,

Earthquake ·
Jolts ·IndiansSeattle game

observe Right to Read, Math Week
. Righi to Read and Math Week will
be observed in schollls of lbc Meics
Local School Dislrict, May 6 to 10.
In charge of activities in their
respective schools ue tJle Title I
teachen under the direction ofWendy
Halar, director. Schools and the
teachers involved arc: Bradbury,
Tammy Chapman; Harrisonville, Vicki Haley and Paula Chanoey; Mid·
dlepon, Roger Birch, Teresa Carr,
.and Elizabeth Story; Pomeroy, Janet
Hoffman, Becky Triplett; and Bryan
Zirlc;le; Rutland, Paula Chancey, and
Linda McManus; Salem Center,
Shirley Vanbfetcr and Julia Vaughan;
Salisbury, Ed Bartels and Barb Mathews Crow: Meigs Junior High, Tilll
lawson, Ron Drexler, and Krista
Johnson; and Meigs High,· !udy
McCanhy and Tara Woods.
Each of the schools will be carrying out a theme during the week.
Bradbury's theme is "Bradbury is
going "LOCO" over Reading, Math
and COCOA." Activities for the
.week will have a chocolate theme and
will include wear a word shin day,
classroom door judging, problem of
the day, M &amp; M guess, badge day,
cook a recipe, math facts speed drill.
movie, and a pie eating contest.
Harrisonville's theme is "Let's
Camp-Out )With Reading and Math."
Activities for the week will focus on
various reading and math skills and
how they are relatCd to camping and
Mture.
.
S.ome of the activities ·inCluded
are adopt-a-tree, handwriting contest,
coloring contest, name the camp
mascot, decorate a door, D.E.E.R.
(Drop Everything and E~perience ,
Reading) program,. backpack guess,

marshmallow estimate, and a camp- (or with) younger ' tudents; planet
fire mystery reader.
scramble, making as many words
Middleport's theme is "Rainbow from a given word as the studtnts
Adventure." Some of the activities can; and makina in astronaut shape
are daily lrivia questions, hat day, book.
library card day. dress up day, scavSalisbury's overall theme is Native
enger hunt, book fair, math games. American Indians. Students will learn
paper airplane contest. movie day. the. culture of the Native American
and guess number of coins in pot of Indians through a native story teller.
gold at the end of the rainbow.
Students will hav_e book repons ,
Pomeroy's theme is "Go For the papers on famous native Americans,
.Gold· Reading and Math." Activities puzzles, and crafts' to complete durfor the week will have an Olympic ing the week. _Activities will include
theme. Some of the activiti~ will · a slogan contest, book IJiarks, decoinclude an opening ceremony with rate a door contest, silent reading.
parade of flags, academic fair, P.E. reading and math student of the
olympic events, door decorating con-. week, blue and white day, reading
test, olympic trivia and challenges, and count button day and math estiball throwing contest, reading chal· mate day. Students are invited to par·
lenge, and closing ceremonies with ticipate in the St. Judes Math-A·
presentation of awards.
Thon.
Rutland's theme is "Reading and
Meigs Junic1r High's theme is
Math Around Jbe Worldc" Some of "Going for the Gold." Activities will
the activities will include decorate A be based around the olympic games.
door, estimation jars. quiet reading, Some of the activities include milk·
choosing a country to learn about, ing collages with olympic slogans,
tasting of foods of different countries, book reports, book cover contests,
create a continent writing activities, silent reading, and a book fair. Math,
handwriting contests, creating a flag ematics activities will include meafor class country, and celebrate your suring, computer games. word probcountry day.
· lem games and writing word probSalem Center's theme is "Blast Off !ems, estimating, making graphs and
with Books! (Reading and Math)." statistics.
Their activities include: poetry and/or
Meigs,High School will have varbookmark day, students will create an ious guest speakers. Professions to be
original poem or bookmark relating represented are State Highway Patrol,
to the theme; alphabet (Alpha-Blast) nurse, lawyer, banker, restaurant
cereal day, students will spell as manager and military. Students will
many words as they can with a giv- be able to learn about careers they llfe
en amount of cereal; dress as an orig- interested in using books and coin. ina! space-related character contest; I· puters (OCIS). Students will be doing
shin day, wear 1-shii'\S with appro- activities from Scholastic Math Magpriate words on them; reading azine.
exchange day; older students read to

•

RIGHT TO READ PROCLAMATION - Melga
Local Title I t.ec:henl met Tueaclay wllh Wendy
•Haler, administrative esslstant and Supt.
William L. Buckley, for. algnlng of a proclametlon dnlgnatlng next week 11 Right to RtiiCI
and Math Wtek. Plcturtd, left to right, stlltlld,
Btcky Triplett, Shirley Van Mtttr, Liz Story,
Supt. Buckley, Adm. Aiel Haler, Julia Vaugh-

•

z:ns

an, and Potnti'OY Mayor Frank Vaughan, , . .
dlatrlct offlclala; and standing, Barb
we Crow, Janet Hoffman, T_. Carr,
Bryan Zlrldt, Ron DNxltr, Roger Birch, Tim
· laWson, Yield Haley, Paula Chancey, Tammy
ChfP11111n, and Unda McManus. Abient _,.
Judy McCarthy, Tllra Woods, Krista Johnson
and Ed Bartell.
·

Vol. 47, NO.7

21Mtiona, 12 l'llgM

. (jive a (jift of1.ovefrom 9(. &amp; · C Jewelers
!Margaret lfurforig and tJJavUf Winter CotJOBe Coffeti6fe5 at 50% Sauings

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer groups are cheering President
Clinton while Sen . Bob Dole and
business leaders denounce him for
vetoing a bill to limit big-money
awards in product-liability lawsuits.
1be veto- the 15th in Clinton's
presidency - is likely to stick. In .
voting to pass the bill, the House and '
Senate fell shon of the two-thirds
margins needed to override.
"This bill would hurt families
· ·without truly improving our legal
sy'stem," Clinton said in an Oval
Office ceremon,y Thursday. "It would
mean more unsafe products in our
homes. It would let wrongdoers off ·
the hook."
Dole, Clinton's Republican presidential rival, shot back that the veto
proves "it is the trial lawyers who are
calling the shots at the White House."
The measure would have limited
punitive damages in product liabili·
ty cases to $250,000, or twic~ the
amount of compensatory awards 10
people who win lawsuits for injuries.
economic losses or other damages.
. Supponers of the bill said frivolous lawsuits and huge awatds are
driving up consumer prices and undo:

1

.
1
1

Also stop in and seeou~ storewide
selection of Savings

I

·212 East·Main Street
Po•eroy·

j

Come On Over To Bob's

BOB'S

And Help Us Celebrat~ The
· · · Opening Of Our:· : : ,,
Gallipolis Garden Center
.Featuring State-of-the-Att
Greenhouses, Expanded Parking,
and Air-conditioned market.
'

'

Area's Best-=se·lection of
the ·finest Quality Beltding
Plants~ H,anging Baske~s,
Trees an..d Shrubs!
.
''

''.IJIB

\'

Jackson-Perkins Roses
"The Cadillac of
Roses"
'

NOW JUST

(l.eQu\a' 8
8. ,,z.9

,,, .9

We
• Bulk Garden Seed
• Potting Soils &amp; Mulches
Cia Planters

hav~

• Floribunda
• Miniature

•

$1~ 0.98

• Pat10 Stepp1~g Stones
• ~~~oor Foliage Plants
• Fert1hzer

• Need Not Be Pre~nt To Win)

Sale Prices In Effect Saturday, May4, 1996

l

Hardy 2 year old bush

'*'

'

'

&amp;utn•

.G::'~u'"•• • Many Vibrant
~ \G\9-'\8" Colors To Choose
1

r.flll'af

NOW JUST

61/2 Inch

•6.49 ·

$5.49

Lat.ge Plant

·:·Pot .

JUST

$3.99

a ~llline of all your planting reeds includirg:

Bob yvill be giving away a potted flower every hour
all daY. Saturday. And two $1 oo.-oo Gift
Certificates at the close of business.
No Purchase

Azaleas

~.

• Garden. Sprays &amp; Ousts
·.Rustic Ba~kets
.• Le1su~e furniture

2400. Eastern Avenue
(Across From K-mart)'
Gallipolis, OH 45~31
'

Hqurs:
•

''

· • Red Lava:Rock' --.. :· ~ .
?:r.
• Flowenng Trees
. •.And ~o Much.·More! .
~

l

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 3, 1996

AGannett Co. Newapel*' ·

Liability llill veto draws ---A day for prayer-----____.
ch.eers from consumers

'l!iis !Jl{otfzet's fJJag, .

I

Tonight, ahowers and
thunderetorme. Lowe In
the 501. s.turday. chMce
of rain. Highs In the 701.

•

•

AI • part of the lntagnatlon
of 11rvlces between the ·Holzer Medical Ctrlter and Veterans
Memorial Hoapltal, EMG studIll are taking place It Veteran•
· Memorial In · Pomeroy- twice
monthly. An EMG Is a study
ultd to evaluate the muscles
tnd nerves Of the body. In the
; photo, Dr. Dan Black,· D.O.,
• and Freda Wright, R, EEG. T,
director of neurology, both of
. the Holzer Mldlcal Center, are
shown working with petlent,
SUsie Le11111ster, at VMH.

.·'fi Hybrid Tea Roses
• Climbing

Pick 3:
7-8-8
Pick 4:
4-5-3-7
Buckeye 5:
4-10.30.31-37

Sports on Page 4

New testing

· /

Ohio Lottery

Dole earlier this week cited a
study by the Center for Responsive
Politics showing IJ1wyers and law
firms. contributed $2.5 million to
Clinton's re-ele'ction campaign during the first nine months of 1995.
However, the consumer group
Citizen Action said corporations and
organizations favoring the bill gave
.$5.9 million to members of Congress
last year.
While Clipton said he favors legal
reform, the White House said Con- .
gress appeared unlikely to pass a bill
that he could sign this year.
"This bill" would hun families
President Clinton
without truly improving our legal
ly rewarding trial lawyers. Clinton's · system," the president said. "It would
veto was "an obvious election-year mean .more unsafe products in our
payoff to the wealthy trial lawyers borne$. 'It would let wrongdoers off
who have funded his re-election the hook. I cannot allow it to become
campaign," said Paul Huard of the law."
· He was flanked at the cerempny
National Association ofManufactur·
by
a handful of supporters of the
ers.
veto:
Mississippi Attorney General
Yet Joan Claybrook, prdident of
the consumer advocacy group Public Mike Moore, Handgun Control chairCitizen, said the bill was "a bailout woman Sarah Brady and three
for co~rations that make bad prod- women who!D the · president said
ucts." Consumer advocate Ralph would be prevented by the bill from
Nader called the measure the "cor- fully recovering losses from an injllf)'
porate wrongdoers protection" bill. or the death of a relative.

----==--..;...___

HONORING GOD - Approximately 475 eree resldants, Including those shown here gathered for the Meigs County observance of the National Day of Prayer Thursday mornlrlg II!
Pomeroy.
·
·~ .

...

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

·-

..

Syracuse ' ~:earns ) curbside
r~~.ycJi:ng ~~-~~eg i_
n M~y . 16
·
work·o~ the new concession stand is
Police Chief Tim Gillilan reponBy KA.THRYN CROW
going great, with electric power yet ed youngsters are using BB guns· in
Sentinel Correapondent
·
the village and· that this is not
: The target date fo residerttia! to be installed.
··
A
water
leak
from
the
old
concesallowed.
curbside recycling in Syracuse is
If a child is caught carrying a BB
May 16, according to Kenny Wig- sion stand to the village house has yet
·gun without a parent present, the gun
gins. Meigs County Litter Prevention to be repaired, he added. ·
The
concession
stand
will
have
will be confiscatCd, he said. In'~ddi­
and •Recycling dire9tor, who met
two
handicapped-accessible
..
lion,
youngsters riding four-wbe lers,
with Syracuse Village Council Thursrestrooms.
a
press
box
on
top
and
will
din
bikes and go-caf\S on vii age
day night.
Wiggins explained that boxes for be surrounded by a concrete walk- streets will find their vehicles towCd
and be citCd along with their parents.
residents will be distributed next way. "
also
reported
he
will
If youngsters ride on private propConnolly
week, along with instructions as to
attend
a
meeting
May
14
with
counerty,
they must have permission, if
what is to be recycled.
ty
commissioners
to
discuss
grants
not
they
can be charged with crimiHe said he now has tbe trailer and .
truck to be.used willl the program and a~ail~ble to villages for roads, streets, • naltrespassing, it was noted.
· Gillilan also reponed a problem
wants it to be ari ongoing program for su!ewalks and houses.
Trash
col1aplaints
with
skunks and raccoons and said
Syracuse, Racine and Rutland. WigIn
,
bther
business,
Councilman
that
Meigs
County Game Protector
gins added that he hopes to receive
annual grant.s for this voluntary pro- Larry Lavender is to purchase paint Keith Wood is going to bring in a trap ·
for the pool and Councilman Bill to help resolve the problem.
gram.
Roush
reported that street signs are ·
During March and April, Gillilan
The program comes at charge to
needed.
issuCd
36 citations and investigated
the village or any resident, it was not;
Complaints
on
trash
pickup
were
seven
complaints.
ed.
Department activities
. Wiggins also announced tliat the lodged with some residents com- ·
1
plaining
about
being
missed
and
Also
during April, the fire depanannual Ohio River Sweep will be
workers
damaging
containers.
ment
was
called to three structure
held June 15.
·
Also,
Councilwoman
Donna
.
fires,
two
rekindltd
fires, one mutuPool manager dulles
At the April meeting, council Peterson• repo,rted a d1tch near the al aid, one false ' alarm and one con.
hired Chris Weaver as Lon!lon Pool Gene · Imboden ,. property needs . trolled bum.
cleaned,
and
that
people
are
violating
The
mayor's
report
for
March
and
manager assistCd by his father, Tom
stop
signs.
She
suggestedmore
patrol
April
showing
receipts
of
S
1,812
was
Weaver. Toin Weaver met with counapproved.
cil and was given inslructions as to on vi IIage streets.
On
.vacating
a
portion
of
Ash
·
· Councilwoman Kathryn ·Crow
what is expected of !he pool managAlley,
council
is
waiting
on
an
ordimentioned
tearing down the old coner. Weaver will begin his duties Sat·
~ance
from
Solicitor
I.
Carson
Crow,
cession
stand.
It was pointed out the
urduy at the pool.
.
building would be used for storage
It was also reported in April that 11 was notCd.
Jeff
Bable,
v1llage
employee.
until another building could be
the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Depanreported
the
mower
for
the
back
of
acquired.
.
menl had purchased a used fire truck,
the tractor has ?ten repa1red.
· She also pointed out that Sixth
a 1975 American La France :
People holdrng yard sales at the Street is badly in need of repair.
Councilman Eber Pickens Jr.
Councilman Mony Wood said he
reported the truck had been paintCd old state park must first obtam a perand repairs made, and asked that the mit by c~lling Peterson at 992-6955. was interested in a pole building for
Firefighter Doug Lavender met storage for the village.
.
fire depanll)enl be allowed to cash in
Clerk/treasurer Janice Zwilling
one of its cenificates of deposit to with council regarding a compensa·purchase new hose for the truck. the lion claim, and reported the county reported the following balances: genbas obtained a grant for training era!, $31 ,645.45; street construction,
request was granted. ·
$25.209.28; highway, $8,700.85; fire
. Mayor George Connolly reponed county firefighters.
.-;,;,.-------~-----------..:·--_, department, $7,794.53; water,
$5.207 .17: pool. $1.04; guaranty
meter, $3,379.14; cemetery, $89.21;
Bond was set at $400,000 for a Pomeroy man during an arraigntotal all funds, $82,026.67.

fiNALE -A balloon Jaunch concluded events at the Meigs County National Day of Pnayer
.observance. Participants releasl!(l hundreds of white balloons Into the air In front of the Meigs
County Courtho.use•.

Meigs joins in national observation
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Approximately 475 people
gathered Thursday to "honor God"
in the Meigs County observance of
the National Day of Prayer.
The 1-112 hour ceremony was
held in Pomeroy at lfle junction of
Second and Coun streets in front of
the Meigs County Courthouse
under warm, sunny sky.
,
After a welcome and opening
prayer by Steve Beha, followed by
presentation of flags by the American Legion Drew Webster Post of
Pomeroy, State Rep. John Carey,
R-WellstQn, read a proclamation
froin Gov. George V. Voinovich..
The proclamation read in pan:
~ ' ... Throughout . the pages of
Aloerican Wstory, the great leaders
of this nation, along with the people in every field of human endeavor, have turned to prayer to discern
right from wrong. Prayer has been
the companion cif ar'mies marching
inl~ battle, it has been the solace
and the energy from which we
draw our utmost strength.
"Ohio is home til brothers and
sisters who . share many faiths
under the Fatherhood of God.
Prayer has long been a positive
force which unites our citizens and
is a source of inspiration and hope .
tb countless individuals.
"It is fitting and proper to give
thanks 10 the Lord by -observing
this day in Ohio when all may
acknowledge our blessings and
express gratitude for them, while
recognizing the need for strength-. ·

Bond set for·raid su.spect

:;ni~h~a::;~~~~~:i~~:~session~ndtrafficllingchargesthismor~-

Glassco "Buddy" Fairrow III, 28, was arraigned on rwo first-degree
felony counts of trafficking in drugs, stemming from his arrest earli·
er this week during two separate Po111eroy dru~ raids that netted more
than $3.5,000 in cocaine and cash.
•
.
.
One ounce of crack cocaine a'nd.more than three ounces of pressed
cocaine w,ere seized by officials ftom .the Southeast Counties of Ohi~
(SECO) drug task force, the Meigs County S))eriffs Department, and
the Meigs prosecutor's office in the Tuesday, raids of n!$idences at
Spring Street and Lincoln Hill.
·
·
Fairrow, who appeared without counsel at the hearing, declined use
of a coon-appointed anomey and will11ppear before Judge.Patrick H.
O'Brien for a preliminary bearing Thursday at 8:30a.m.
PrOsecuting Attorney John Lentes cited a prior drug conviction and
the 1J18111ilude of Fairrow's alleged trafficking agtivities in his ~ues~
for setting of a $.500,000 bond.
·
O'Brien 'answered the request with lhe placement of consecutive
$200,000 cash bonds on each charge.
~ntcs said additiQnal char$es could be filed l~ter.
'
'••

'·I,

I

,.tl_

•

MESSAGE OF REPENTANCE - AI Hartson, pastor of the
Middleport Church of Christ, delivered a mesliaga of napentance during the National Day of Prayer Thursday. Hartson
joined approximately three dozen speakers and performers at
the event.
f'ublic prayers were by Scou
ening religious and moral v~lues in
Dillon. Nonna Torres, Bert Chrisour state and nation.
"... As I am reminded daily, and tian, James Acree, Emalene Pratt,
the Rev. Father Walter Heinz, Wes~s so appropriately stated in our
ley Thoene, David Gaul, Amy
stale motto, 'With God all things
Schrock
and Jessica Haggy.
are possible'."
B.J. Smith performed "Stand ."
The prelude was ~iformed by
praying . were Mike
Olhers
JoAnn Robinson, Amy Sci)rock,
King,
Evan
Struble, Frank Vaughand Joe anq Jamie Humphreys.
an,
Krisana
Robinson, David
The Pledge of Allegiance and Star
Spencer, Mary Jane Curry, Alison
Spangled Hanner were led by Fritz
Gerlach, · Dr. Douglas Hunter,
Goeble and Jamie Humphrey,
Matthew Bradford and Steve Dunrespectively.
fee.
.
, AI H1111son, pastor of the Mid·
Robert Robinson recited the
dleport Chuti:h of Christ, delivered
"Ragged Old Flag" followed by
the call to repentance, followed by
Sheriff Jam~s Soulsby's singing of
Hartson, Gerald Powell, Denver · "If This Isn't Love."
Rice and Mike Wilfong singing
The event was closed by a bal"Precious Lord, Take My Hand."
loon launch.

Report targets. substandard regional ·roads

By AARON MARSHALL
to OOOT's first "State of the TransGannttt .Niws Service
portatlon System" released this week.
COLUMBUS -Are the :roids
But the reJjon also noted thalihe
you ·drive on ·bumpy~ Traveling i~ souiheastern OOOT district drops to
southt\astem Ohio is more likely to be ninth in the siafe when the amount of
bone-jru:ring than elsewhere in Ohio; · vehicle miles ~raveled on poor roads
said an Ohio Department of Trans- is calculated. That ineans the district
poi'tation repon releasCd this week.
doesn't get as much funding to fix
The southeast comer of the state roads. ,
. .
including Marieua, Morgan, Monroe ·
"If you have a road that has
and Noble counties, ·bas the most 50,000 cars on it and a road that has
miles of road at 01: below OOOT's 300 cars on it like we have, and you
minimum·acceptable standards.
can onl¥ make orie of them nice, then
Southeast Ohio's Dist~ict 10 you know which one is going to get
topped OOOT's 12 Ohio districts done," OOOT Distri~t 10 Deputy
with approximately 1,200 total lane . Director ~ohn Dowler s&amp;id. .
.
miles of substandard road, according . The htlly topography .,of the area

il,

'

and gravel base under many of the .
old cou111y roads also slow the district
agency's efforts to improve . roads,
,Dowler said.
The report also illustrates s~veral
spending trends dotting the horizon
that. are poised . to · further stre.in
ODOT's future revenue pool.
Bridges built during the 1950s and
1960s are aging arid in nee~ of
repairs. Bridge repair and replacemen! will have to rise by hundreds of
millions of dollars over the next 25
years, just to maintain the eight percent of state bridges at or below fllir
quality, reveals the report.

Also, the percentage of state high. ways at or below minimum pavement
standards is increasing. Currently, 23- :
perc~nt of multilane road and i 7 per~· •
. c~nt of undivided highway meets or
. is below ODOT's minimum accept·
[able standard. If that percentage is to
I fall, spending will have to increase .
I somewhat.
ODOT officials ~dmit they don 'I
' have any easy answers to the looming funding problems. They are con- .
~id.ering options such as trying to get
mcreased federal funding, cuiting
operations costs and creative project; •
financing involving local govem- ''
men is.

I

•

•

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