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: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

•

•

�'
Friday, May 3, 1996

:Commentary

•
•

The Daily Sentinel GOP. cries: Stop.us-before run again!
'

'E.sttiDfislid in 1348
P~y,

111 Court St.,

Ohio
·814-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

.2.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl1her

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Gen11111l Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

One-upmanship
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corr..pondent
.
WASHINGTON (AP)- But for the certainty that President Clinton ts
going to veto the bill, Republicans wouldn't have siaged their sendoff_show
· for a legal overhaul measure. They did it to get the first word on the tssue.
. That's typical of the rival efforts at one-upmanship by Clinton and Sen.
Bob Dole, the·GOPchallengerto his bid for •.second term . Ea~h stde ts trying to rebut the ,other in advance, on issues hke _that one, JUdtctal appomtnients and the high price of gasoline.
.
. . .
.
Dole got in first on gas prices, challenging .C:lmton to JOin tn seeking to ·
repeal a 1993 tax increase as a way to offset nsmg co_sts.
. .
But in an earlier round - the day before Dole delivered what hts campaign billed as a major addre~s ~sailing Clinton'~ judicial appointments for
"liberal leniency" toward cnmmals- Vtce Prestdent AI Gore_went befo~e­
:the same Washington convention with an advance rebuttal wnuen Into his
remarks.
.
And the White House followed that with a simultaneous wntten comeback to _Dole: pointing out that h~ had voted for all bUt three of the 185 judges
the president has appointed and the Senate has confirmed, and recttmg Chn·
1im 's record and recommendations for strengthened law enfor~ment.
· In a presidential campaign now bl;ing wa~ed largely as an ·~·to:wn contest, Republican Capitol vs. Democratic Whtte House, each stde IS out to
·preempt the other.
.
.
. . .
That· was on display when Dole and House Speaker Newt Gtngnch
'presided at a speechmaking and signing ceremony Tuesday on the produ~t
liability bill the president won't sign. That normally ha~pens when a btjl
becomes law, not when the leaders of Congress attest that II has been passed
and is being sent to the White House.
. ..
.
. . This time, though, the Republicans were d~abztng_ an tssue they see
'as a difficult one for Clinton. There has been actd cntictsm from Oemoc:
rats who favor the measure. Clinton's political people know t~at the case
for the veto won't be as easily made as the Republican accusation that 11 ts
'a payback to trial lawyers and their lobbyists who have been major donors
.
.
.. .
·to his campaigns.
Dole said a veto would show that Clmton stdes With the s~ooth-talk-

~n:lgg~~~i~h~~~kor~~~~~~~;:s~~;!~t~medthepu~u:tOfJUStiC~anto
The bi.ll would limit punitive damages tnprodu~t ltabthty_lawsutts to

$250 000 or twice the amount of actual damages, ratse the evtdence stan.dard 'required for punitive damage claims, and tighten other rules on lawsutts.
·
.
.
Clinton contends the bill would not-adequately protect. consumers ~~nst :
damage and harm from faulty products. He also has satd he would stgn a
·
··
th' th
ld bed
·
tiiUwith relatively modest revtstons, some mg at cou · on~m 8 new
versiOn after the _veto.
.
. ;, · .
.
. "It's no quesllon that he wtll veto 11•• satd s~kesman ~Ike McCu~. _.
,
Nor is there any questton that ~epubhcans wtll stay on hts case about It,
they doli 't have the_ votes to ovemde a veto, but they do h~ve the ,um~nt
that Clinton ts cavmg m to the unpopular lot Dole descnbed as hts trtal
· lawyer frie~s in their Gucci loafers." · . .
.
·
, . On gasoline pnces, Dole got the open~ng h?es by urgmg repeal of the
4.3 cent-a-gallon tax that was. pan of Clmton s 1993 e~onomtc progr~
passed, as he noted, over unanimous R~pubhcan oppositiOn.
.
The White House had a ready response, pomtmg to two 5-ce~t mcreases passed 'under Dole's.leadershtp when Republicans held the Whtte House.
"The Dole dime." they called it. .
.
. ,
. When Dole went to lndtanapohs to campaign the day after he d called
for the gas tax reductio_n, George Stephanopoulos, semor C::oun_selor_ to Chn!on, gotthere ahead of him to hold a news conference challengmg his record
on gas taxes.
.
.
.
Clinton ordered oil sales from the strategic reserve, authonty he gotbm
the compromise budget as a revenue-raising step and is using, to Repu lican annoyance, as part of his answer to higher prices at the gas pump. There
are two administration investigations of the price rises.
For all the maneuvering o~ both sides, oil analysts see the increase as
temporary and due to assorted market pressures that all hit at once.
"11tis issue is not a market force question," Sen. Tom Daschle, the Democratic leader, said Wednesday. "This issue is presidential politics. That's what
it's all about."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mears, vice president and columnist
for The Associated Press, has reported,on Washington and aational politics for more than 30 years.

Berry's World

WASHINGTON •• The Republican leldership's call for term limits'
might be called the Larry Don
McQuay theory of political reform.
McQuay, who claims to 1\ave
molested children at least 240 times,
begged the state of Texas tQ castrate
him prior to his release from prison ·
last month. Re warned authorities to
stop him before he molested again.
Republicans. who made term limits a cornerstone of the&lt;:ontract With
America, have made a similar plea to
voters: Stop us before we run again!
Many elected officials apparently ·
feel like slaves to their legislative
libidos, an appetite so strong that it
can only be quelled by constitutional amendment. At the front of the
term-limits parade are four Republican leaders who have served a col-·
lective 88 years in Congress: House
Speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.), Majority Leader Dick Anney (Texas), Sen.
Majority Leader Robert Dole, (Kan.),
and Sen. Majority Whip Trent Lott,
(Miss.).
If the real goal is to keep lawmakers from languishing· in the
nation's capital, then Congress should
focus on ridding itself of the perks

and privileges that come wtUI tncurn-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln
Congress deserves some credit for
tackling some of these issues, ~
Republicans' revolutionary ardor
cools significantly when it comes to
cleaning ho~se ..
, Democrats prattice similar
hypocrisy by talking a good game on
campaign finance reform. The financial. disparity 'between incumbents
and challengers is now approaching
four-to-one, and re-election rates in
the House exceed 90 percent. In
1994, the average challenger who
beat a House incumbent had to spend
more than $700,000.
Reform-ininded
Democrats
impeach themselves by diving headfirst into the money chase, swapping
access and favors for campaign contributions. When they get caught,

c

&lt;iJa•
Af.,... ~ ,)
. ,... brNEA.Inc: . .
•... This was dpne ·by a mlnilnallst with an

an/tude.,.·

,-.

II

.

'

MY

c~ail~!

IToledo I 62" I
'

..
•ICoJumbusl7o•

•,.
Via l4uoclaled Press G10p/!9NIH

was

.

·

For at least the last .35 year!, the
media in this country -- hoth print and
electronic -· have been under attack
f be' b'ased . f
f l'he
or mg 1
m avor o 1 ra1ism. Why this bias should exist (if it
does) is a good question, but whatever the reason for the tilt, almost
nobody outside of the crackpot left
ever accuses the media of being
biased in favor of conservatism. ·
And though the Clinton administration (for example) is capable of
complaining, quite sincerely, that the
media are mistreating it on this or that
particular subject, this complaint is
absolutely never generalized into a
charge of anti-liberal bias as such.
Instead, libemls ·will proudly show
off whatever media scars they have
acquired as further proof of the
media's basic fairness -- as they see
it.
.
Ascertaining 'the facts of the matter is much harder than you may .
imagine. First, somebody reasonably
reputable has to go out and conduct
a comprehensive survey of reporters'
·political opinions. This has most
·recently , heen done by the distin-

.

·

. .

.

.. .

guished Roper Center on commission
from the Freedom Forum, a liberal
think tank on journalistic matters. It
transpired that 50 percent of the

tial election from 1964 to 1976 inclu- National Corilmittee. Yetthe defendsive (even though in. two of thos~ ers of the media would have you
years the Republican won tbe elec- believe that, between his jobs in
tion).
Kennedy's office and at the DNC,
But, as I pointed out in a book of Chalmers so managed to purify his.
my own on the subject in 1988, estal&gt;- soul that he could and did conduct
lishing that most Washington absolutely objective political research
Washington reporters questioned reporters are liberals gets you next to for GBS News.
described themselves as Democrats; nowhere, because you quickly run
Such anecdotal evidence is fine,
only 4 percent called themselves into their second line of defense. In but you need statistics to nail the bias
Republicans. (The rest were too can- the words of Elaine Povich, who down: So Edith Efron actually countny to reply.) What's more, 61 percent authored the study that included the ed the words of opinion for and
called themselves liberal, and only 9 Roper poll, "One ofthe things about · · against Nixon on the three networks'
percent conservative.
being a professional is that you prime-time news shows in the 60
Finally, a whopping 89 percent · attempt to leave your personal feel-- days just preceding the 1968election.
admitted to having voted for Clinton ings aside as you do your work.''
In the case of Nixon, there were 869
in 1992, versus 7 percent for Bush.
If you believe that, I have some for, and 7,493 against. On CBS it was
(That tells you something about the bridge properties in the New York 320 and 5,300. On NBC it was .431
ones who refused to classify them- area that I'd like to sell you.
and 4,234. (In the case of his Demoselves.)
Take for example (as I did in my cratic rival, Hubert Humplfty,,tbere
Why anybody should be _particu- book) Wally Chalmers, who Worked were more words for than against him
Jiirly surprised by these figures is a for C8S News as a "political on ABC ll)ld CI'\S; on NBC, the figmystery, since the liberal bias they researcher" in the mid-J980s. Previ- ures wore· 1,852. for and •2,655
demonstrate has been a mallet of · ously he had been a member of Ted against.)
public record at least since the Kennedy 's senatorial staff. And in
"Neutral reporting"? Bah,-humLichter-Rotbman study of 1980. That January 1986 it was announced by bug!
sul'Vey discovered that never !ess-than the New York Times that he was
William A. Rusher is 8 DJitln.
80 percent of the "media elite" had about leave CBS to become execu- guished Fellow of the Clareni~
voted Democratic in every presiden- · tive director of the Democratic Institute for the Study of Statesmanship aad Political PhUosophy.

William A. Rusher .

Is vegetarian ·diet linked to faith?
Vegetarian cookbooks are selling grains?
like hotcakes in England. Hotcakes
Vegetarians have · always been
too are going li.ke -- well, like hot- with us of course. Our earliest ancescakes (bul without the sausage) as tors were probably vegetarians.
Britons contemplate what a switch to
meatless meals would be like.
So far it is only beef that has
British meat eaters nervous in the
wake of the outbreak of the fatal
The Genesis account of creation
"mad cow disease" believed to be· suggests that God intended for all
linked to beef cattle.
mankind to be herbivorous: "And
Beef has disappeared ·from the God said, 'Behold, I have given you
diimer fare of England's top host- · every plant that yields seed that 'is
esses. According to one British news- upon the face of the earth, and every
paper account, "Lady Melchett said, tree whose fruit yields seed; it shall
'I wouldn't dream of giving beef to be to you for food.'" (Genesis I :29).
my guests.' She recenily served
Tl]ere have been. vegetarians
guinea fowl instead of beef."
throughout history who have refused
If British housewives are passing to eat meat on religious or moral
up steaks and roasts at the butcher grounds that 'tad their origins in these
shop, some people are beginning to verses from Genesis.
wonder whether lamb chops and
Others have cited economic reabaked ham will be next to get the cold sons, particularly in times of famine.
shoulder in view of the' possible It has been pointed out that when
harmful effects of the chemicals in grain is passed through the stomach
most animal diets.
of an animal and we eat the meat, it
The idyllic picture of cattle takes ahout eight acres to produce as ·
munching sweet, fresh grass in the much food as we could get from one
meadow is more like something 011t acre if we ate the food directly.
of pastoral poetry and song than a
Vegetariins have included
sight you will see motoring along1he Socrates, Plato, da Vinci, Einstein,
rural roads of Hereford or Iowa Mlhatma Gandhi, John Milton,
today.
'
Robert Cummings, Gloria S)Nanson
Might it not be the better part of and · George Bernard Shaw. Shaw,
wisdom, cautious cooks are asking, to ·who lived to be 94, beclllile a vqe- .
· move · to a diet of vegetables and ~~an a,t age 2S after rc:ading two
'
'
•

.

lines of Percy Shelley's poetry :
was able !O search out a theosophical
· Never again may blood of bird or basis for ·her melancholy. She .was
beast '! Stain with it$ venomous getting astral messages _, bad vibrastream a human feast!
.tions -- from the thousands of slaugh:
Shaw was no garden-variety veg- tered beasts in Chicago's slaughteretarian. He was particular about his houses."
·
vegetables.'He had his cook buy only
Mrs. · Blavatsky embraced vege~
·the best and frequently put his chauf- tarianism at that moment.
·
: feur-driven Rolls-Ro~ce at her disEllen White, a leading_Seventh~
ppsal so she copld go tnto London to day Adventist of the late 19th centu. get an eggplant or imported pineap- • ry, made vegetari,.nism a maj&lt;ir tenet
pie that the playwn~ht c~ved.
of her faith. It remains so today. One: ·
An early spmtuahst, He~en · of the reasons for her- rejection of:
Blavatsky, told how on-one occaston meat is that meat contains toxic subas she was coming into Chicago on · stances not found in vegetables and:
a train " a profound se~_e of desola- grains, she said.
. :
lion" oppressed her spmt.
This is the ·reason given for the·
"This of course has happened. to return to meatless (or at least beef-:
;
others as they . have approached less) meals today in Britain..
Chicago," wry!y obs~rved autllor
Georxe Pla1enz 11 11 s)'lldkated:
Gerald Carson m relatmg the story.. writer for NeWipllper Enterprise ·
· . · · :(
"But in this instance Mrs. Blavatsky Assoelailon.

Today in history .

:

By The AleoclatMI Prn1
.
:;
Today is Friday, May 3, the I 24th day of 1996. There are 242 days left
in the year. '
· Today's HiJhlight in History:
•
.
On May 3, 1802, Wubin&amp;ton D.C. was incqrporated as a city, with the
mayor aJIPolnted by the president, and the counC:il elected by property·owners.
On this datei ,
lri 1654, a bridse in Rowley; Mass., was permitted to charge a toll for
animals, while people crossed for free.
·
·• :
..
'
' I

•

Risk of rain will persist
.. :throughout the,·weekend
' : By The A&amp;~oclated Pre.. ·
.
.
•: Springlike weather will prevail across the state. .
Showers and thunderstorms will taper off dunng the mommg wtth clouds
· giving ·way to some sunshine by the ~fternoon. W~ air will push into the
, state allowing temperatures to re~ch mto the 7Gs wtth around 80 m the far
· south.
·
.
Another round of showers and thunderstorms will · push into the state
&lt;tonight ai; low pressure 'aild a fi;ontal system slide across the Ohio Valley.
'· Lows tonight will again be in -the 50s.
.
.
·
The risk of showers and thunderstorms will perstst over the weekend as
. the frontal system will be slow to move out of the region. Some moisture
will linger while a bit cooler air filters in behind the front.
•" Highs i)n Saturday will be in the 60s in the north with some 70s' across
· · the south. Sunday's highs will be similar with 60s across the north to the mid70s in the far south.
·
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 89 in 1959. The record low temperature was 30 in 1978.
Sunset today will be at8·:28 p.m: Sunrise on Saturday will·be at 6:28a.m.
·
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms. Lows from 50 north to the upper

------

Q

1 Do you favor or oppot1e raising the minimum wage over
I the next two years lrom $4.25 to $5.15 an hour?
REPUBUCAN

AU.
61%
STRONCllY FAVOA
SOMEWHAT FAVOR
• STRONGLY OPPOSE I 10%
SOMEWHAT OPPOSE
(Don't know oml1ted)

,.,.,
.,.,

I

39'11.
24%

22%
10%

I

81%

I

9%

19%

4%

9%

3%

9%

how you would vote in the November election?

Perceotage who answer •a great dear
or "qurte a 1or among:

•

Republicans:

minimum wage:

Word has been received here of the death of Ellen E. Sauer. 99, of Bucyrus,
who died Friday, April 26, 1996 at Heartland of Bucyrus.
She was born in Pomeroy _to the•late Jacob and Mary Schlaegel B.eckle
People will1 minimum wage eame&lt; in lamily:
and was -married on May 6, 1919, to the late William W. Sauer, who preceded her in death on Oct. 14, 1960.
She taught' in public schools in Pomeroy prior to her marriage and moved
Jo B~cyrus in 1919. She graduated from Pomeroy High School and attend•
ed Teacher's Training School at OhiO Umverstty.
.
SOURCE: I4P natiOnellelephone p~l of 1,014 adultS taken April 26·30 by ICA Survey
Researctl Group,of Media, Pa., pan of AUS Consultants. Margin ol sampling error is
She was a member of St. Paul's Lutheran Church since 1919 and was acttve
3 perCentage points, plus or minus.
in Sunday school work and several church organizations. She was a mem·
her of the American Legion Auxiliary, Order of the Eastern Star, Chapter 3 : L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - Fortnightly Club and was a life member of the Bucyrus Htstoncal Society.
Surviving are a nephe1o11, Roy E. Miller of Pomeroy; and four grandmeces.
She was also preceded in death by two sisters and a brother.
Services were held at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Apnl 30, 1996tn the Wise Funeral Home, with the Rev. Don Neumann officiating. Burial was m the Oakland Cemetery. Relatives attending were Roy and Maunta Mtller of Pomeroy,
and Eric and Jill Wilson of Hillsboro.
,

Lester N.- 'Sonny' _Sevy

Poll locates support~
concern over raising
-minimum wage rate

- --Hospital "~ews--

Meigs ·announcements

Adaline Wood

Stocks

Nearly as many think fewer jobs
for unskilled workers are very likely
(24 percent) or somewhat likely 04
percent).
Balancing out these concerns is a
belief by two-thirds o'f those polled
that if Congress acts, a meaning(wl
rise in the standard of living of people earning the minimum wage .is
very likely f25 percent) or somewhat
likely (41 percent).
The poll was taken 'Friday through
Tuesday by ICR Survey Researc~
Group of Media, Pa., part of Al)S
Consultants. A random national sample 'o r 1,014 adults was called, and
results have a margin of error of pips
or minus 3 percentage points..
Clinton ·and the Democrats have ·
seized on the minimum wage issue as

an election year bonanza. Of voters
in the poll who suppOrt the raise,
about three-quarters say it would
influence their· vote in November if
their member of Congress took a
posWon againsl the increase.

The poll indicates the issue wouid
heavily influence certain groups:
Democrats; blacks and people who
believe they have a minimum wage
earner in their family. But only 46
percent of all those who favor a higher minimum wage, and only 38 percent of all those against the raise
think it wou1d sway them a lot if theit
representative voted the other waY: .
House Majority Leader Di e~
Armey of Texas, who has prevented
a vote, conceded Wednesday that _it
was still possible if enough Republicans in Congress desert him on the
ISSUe .

Armey, a former economics professor, has taken every opportunity to
publicize his belief that Congress has
other ways, such as tax changes, to
. boost tak~ home pay and that raising
the minimum wage will kill jobs.

----Meigs EMS runs----

lf'G , JJI

'J:10,t; I O OIIILT

IIATIIII'U SAT &amp; Su•
1': 10 l : 10

f : Star liilelnk ......................,... ~ ...67'

(USPS ZJ).Mt.

Published every afltmoon , Monda~ throuiJh

Friday. Ill Coun SL, POIIIOIO)', Ollio, by die , :
Ohio Vi:lllty PubliihiaJ CompanyJOannctt Co., :
Pomemy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se&lt;:.. d
class posaage pAid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
·

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tHTit PRIDI

r

•

Member: The Auoci&amp;led Pft:u, and the Ohio
Newspaper Alsocllllion.

Wendv Jnl'l ..............................19
w~nh,ligton_!,~d. ;::::..........:.. 20'4

stock repon• are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advesl
·of Galllpoll•. •

POMEROY
9:57 a.m.. Maples Apartments,
Louise Bartels. VMH.
REEDSVILLE
6:56p.m., Reedsville, Martha Bailey, Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi-

POSTMASTBR: Send addreSI ootTeeli!)n~ to
The Daily stntinel, I II Court S1.• Pomeroy,

,..,Just Arrived-

Ollio 45769.SUBSCRIPTION BATES

ly Carritror- - ·

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

One Yeor .......... :.. .................................. SI04.00

.

SINGLE COPY PRICI!

Dally .................................... ..... ........... 35 c..u

New Shipment lOK Charms
and Nike Watches
Stop ·in while selection is good

Subo&lt;tiben not dairiog 10 pay file carrier may
rtm11 in lldvuce cli&lt;ecl-lo Th&lt; Dally, Senlinel
on 1 ....._ tllcw 12 monlil bulL Cmlit wil bo

~~------

.

No aubleripd~ by nilil permitted in areu
----lamUoble.

t.-... c-,

MAtLSVIISCRIPTIONS
I) - ..... ,.••:....................1......... ...... $27.30
26 ._........:_.,,!,•....:........,....................S.S3.12
52 !....................... .... ., .........$1115.56
-~MoW~
13 \lllelll. .....
$29.25
216~....................... ,......................... $56.68
52 ~ ......,....... - .....................1109.72

c....-............"....,......._.

.
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INDEPENDENT&amp;
•
1!0%

1 Suppose your representative in Congress take~ a po~Hion
1 :(opposile your,;). How.much would thai matter 1n decid1ng

• hard L. s ml"th .
RIC

·

DEMOCRAT

·q

By HOWARD GOLDBERG
Lester N. "Sonny" Sevy, 60, Belpre, died Thursday, May 2, 1996 at his A•soclated Pre.. Writer
residence.
·
·
NEW YORK - Even though
Born Aug. 18, 1935 in Charleston , W.Va., son of the late Wesley A. and Americans strongly support raising
Mary M. Carner Child~l_he was a truck driver, a U.S. Marine Corps vet- the minimum wage, many give creeran, and member ofVI'W Wayne Post 8737 of ~ " Bernadino, Calif. , and dence to arguments that it would
the Tea,msters.Union.
.
harm small businesses and eliminate
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Deborah L. :·Debbte" and Charles jobs for unskilled workers, an AssoR. "Chuck" Petry of Mason, W.Va.;,a son and daughter-m-law, !effrey A. and • ciated Press poll fin~.
Sandy _H. Sevy of Hespena, C~hf. ; three grandchildren; two Sisters. Nadt~e
The proposal by President-Clinton
B. Justis and Lorame A. Bratcher, both of Hartford, W.Va. ; and two nephews. and congressional Democrats to raise
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday_in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, the current rate, $4.25 an hour, by 90
with. the Rev. James Hughes offictatmg. Bunal Will be 10 the Sunnse Memo- ceins oiler two years is favored by 78
D~~d .
,
.
.
nal Gardens, Letart, W.Va. Fnends may call al the funeral home from 6-9 percent, with only 17 percent
Saturday... Showers and thunderstorms likely ~orth in the morning ... Then
p.m. S~turdJy.
.
.
. .
. ·
,
.
opposed.
mostly cloudy in tl)e afternoon. Mostly cloudy wtth a cha~ce of showers and
Mtbtary{gravestde ntes wtll be held by the Smtih-Capehart Amencan
Support is intense, with 61 percent
thunderstorms south. Cooler.with highs mid 50s to around 60 far north to
Legiop Post 140 and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926.
_ saying they strongly favor the
' · the mid 70s far south.
fncrease and only 10 percent strongSaturday night...A chance of showers n9rth and a chance of showers and
ly opposed. Democrats are twice as
thund~rstorms south. Lows from the lowef 210s north to ~und 50,south.
. ·
.
.
likely as Republicans to be strong
Word
has
been
received
of
the
death
of
Rtchard
Lynn
Smtih,
77
•
of
backers, but 63 percent of Republi•
·Extended foreca5t:
•
Mogadore,
who
died
Monday.-Apnl
.29,
1996.
.
.
cans
in the poll .are at least somewhat
S_unday ...Chance o( showers and thun~rstonns ." Highs itl'th~ ·Jower 60s .
Born
in
Reedsville,
he
had
lived
in
the
Akron_
area
smce
194
I·
He
was
'
in
favor
of a proposal that their par: · north to the mid 70s south.
. :..._
,
~ . • ,.
.
employed 1·n the rim plant of the Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber Co. for 34 years, ty's leadels in Congress have thwartMonda{.:Fair:A ch&amp;_n'?f' of morning sh&lt;!~ers ~~stand sou~ast. Lows in
retiring
in 1980.
·
ed.
. .. the 40s. High~ in the mad 50s m;&gt;rth to the"!"d §OS soirth. ' •
.
A
veteran
of
the
U.S.
Army,
'he
also
served
in
the
CCC,
and
was
a
memDemocrats contenp an increase is
:.
Tuesday... Fair. Lows 35 to 4~. Highs "l!d D to ml_d 60s.
ber of Mogadore United Methodist Church and the Goodyear 25-Year Club. overdue because the wage floor has
He is survived by his wife of 36 years, Vera G. Smtth; a daughter and not been raised since 1989 and the
son-in-law Linda and Keith Hunsucker·of Norcross, Ga.; his stepmother,. buying power of the current miniLeona Ruth of l!.eedsville; a sister and brother-in-law, Vera and Don Lan- mum wage, adjusted for inflation, is
nearing a 40-year low.
. Veterans Memorial , .
Dye, Mrs.- Matthew Smith. and son, dow of Nashville, Tenn.; and several nieces and nephews.
He
was
preceded
in
death
by
brothers
Garth
and
Claude
Smith;
and
a
sisRepublican leaders who have
Thursday admissions - none.
Shanea long, Dell Caldwell-, MarThursday discharges- none.
gartt Stevens, Linda Henry, Mrs. ter, 1-letty Buckley.
,
.
,!Jiocked the increase argue 4 is a
Services were held Thursday, May 2, J996m the Hopkins-Lawver Funer-. poorly targeted way to try to help the
. Holzer Medical Center
Rich'ard Perkins and daughter.
al Home, Mogadore, with the 'Rev. Karen Graham officiating. Burial was in needy. The minimum wage goes to
" Discharges May 2 - Brandi
(Published with perml$slon)
the Hillside Memorial Park.
many kinds of people - teen-agers,
· · Memorials may be made to the Mogadore United MethOdist Church Build-. ·trainees, part-timers - who are not
ing Fund, 3828 Mogadore Road, Mogadore. Ohio 44260.
·
counting on 'it to support a family
long-term. Furthermore, opponents
Dance announCed
· Tours slated
say
businesses will raise prices aQd
Tiie
Belles
and
Beaus
Western
Public tours of the old Chester
cut
entry-level
jobs.
·Courthouse, schedulw {or rest~ration Square Dance Club will have a dance
Word
has
been
received
here
of
the
death
of
Adaline
Wood,
88,
Oxnard,
Two-thirds of those polled say
this summer, will bC c&lt;lnducted Sat- Satur~ay, May 6·, at 8 P,/11· at the
Calif
..
formerly
of
Syracuse,
who
died
March
31,
1996
in
Oxnard.
.
finlinciai
problems for small busiSenior
Citizens
Center.
Caller
will
be
urday. Those interested in taking a
Born
Oct.
15,
1907
in
Syracuse,
she
was
a
retired
schoolteacher,
havmg
Kent'
Hall.
The
public
is
invited.
nesses
are
likely to result from a high·tour are invited to meet at the Chester
taught
fifth
grade
in
Ohio
before
m?ving
to
Oxnard
in
1961,
and
contmuer minimum wage. That includes 25
-Courthouse any time between 1-3 Refreshments will be served.
itig her teaching career in California. She was a member of the WestmmiS- pe.rcent who think the problems are
'
... 'p.m. to be taken through the courtter Presbyteriah Church in Port Hueneme and the Eastern Star Chapter 283, very likely, and 43 percent who say
• ·' house to see t!te condition of the
Gallipolis.
.
,
•
.
,
"somewhat likely...
. -structure, and hear about plans for its
)
is
survived
by
a
daughter
and
son-tn-law,
Joe
Ann
and
Paul
Whtte
of
·She
• restoration apd use. Personalized
Am ,EJe Power .........................40
Oxnard; a daughter-in-law, June Wood of Oxnard ; six grandchildren; one
, courthouse mugs which have been
Akzo ..........;..... ~ ..................... 57711
adopted grandchild; six great-grandchildren and many meces and nep~ews .
Ashland 011 ...........................41\
;~ •ordered may be picked up during the
1
She was preceded in death by, her husband, Joe Wood; and a son, Wtlham
ATIT ..................................... 59 4
hours of touf11: ·
Wood.
&amp;erik One ..................~ ••••.....•.34~
Bob
Evens
............................
16\
Services were held April 4, 1996 in the Payton Mortuary Chapel. Burial
Rummage sale
BorgWemer .........................:311'1.
was
in the Ivy Lawn Memorial Park, Ventura, Calif.
·
The Grace Episcopal Church
Champion Ind.......................18'h
• :Women's Guild will hold a rummage
CheJ:I,'IIIng Shop .....................&amp;'!.
CftY Holdlng ............................24,
... , sale and bake sale at the Episcopal
Federal 'Mogul .........................19
~ ' Parish, next door to Pomeroy Village
GanneH .................................68~.
.., Hqll. The I:Ummage sale will he May
U11its of the Meigs County Emer- tal.
Goodyear
TaR
......................
S2'h
'", 10 and II starting at 9 a.m. Items 'K mart .•..•....•• ,........................ tO\
RUTLAND
gency Medical Service recorded sev!'0: 13 p.m., Meigs Mine 31 ,
:. donated for sale may he taken to the ' Lllnd• End .............................19'1., en calls for assistance Thursday,
. ' parish house on May 9. The bake sale
l.lmHed ·Inc ..............................20~•
including one transfer ·call. Units Robert Eblin. YMH.
1" will be Saturday, 9-4 p.m: Baked
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ptopl. . Bencorp................... 23
responding included:
Oh_lo
Valley
B•nk
.....
:
..............
40
4:27
p.m., volunteer fire departgoods should be tak~n to the parisq
MIDDLEPORT
One
V
..
llty
.............................
31\
house during the morn in~ .
-~ • ·
11 :36. a.m., 'Front Street, Hiarry ment and squad, brush fire on SumRockwell ..............................511\
ner Road, no injuries.
.
Robbin• &amp; Myer...........,.........3p Tipton, treated at the scene;
7:59 ·p.m., Beech Street, Randy
The Daily Sentinel Royei'Dut!)h/Shell ..............140,~
Shanty's Inc. ........................ 11
Lee, Veterans Memorial Hospital.

;2

Na.ll.lng do·,wn ·our 'unbl·ased' medl·a
.

I

Minimum wage Increase .

Ellen E. Sauer

A spokesman for Stockman complains that the freshman lawmaker
has been "attacked for the innovative
use of our money for contacting constituents."
Expect to hear echoes of Larry
Don ·McQuay as Stockman hits the
radio waves with ll!lk of teim limits
and the Republican agenda.
,
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are · writers for United
,Feature Syndicate, hie. ·

.

Russell E. Quillen , ~ . Letart Falls, died Wednesday, May I, 1996 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
Born May 28, 1905, in Point Pleasant, W.Va., .son of the late John Allen
and Florence Gaches Quillen, he was a farmer and storekeeper, and also a
deckhand on the river.
A Methodist, he was a member of the Racine Masonic Lodge 461 , American· Legion P1&gt;st 0602 and Soas and Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen.
He is survived by many friends in Letart Falls and a dear friend, Rebecca .G. Haley of Charleston, W.Va.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Velma Chapman Quillen, and
by a brother, Harold Quillen.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home•.Ravenswood, W.Va., with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will follow in the Letart Palls.Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from i -4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
.
Masonic services will be held in the funeral home at 8 tonight.

IMansfield 166• I•

, Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Texas, a
f'r!lshman who
honored as a
term! limits "hero" by one advocacy
group, recently raised self-preservation to.an art form by using $80,000
from his office account to advertise
and broadcast a radio '.'town meeting" in his congressional district.
Stockman got the green light for
his endeavor after the House Oversight Commiuee reversed a long-time
ban on the use of office funds for
radio ads. The committee made an
even more dramatic departure from
custom by granting Stockman per- ,
mission to use money from his office
account to buy time on a radio station
for a call-in show-- thus giving taxpayers the privilege of funding a slice
of Stockman's re-election campaign.

·

Russell E. Quillen

•

•

The Deily Sentinel• Page 3

----- ..

AccuWe11he... forecast for
MICH.

Congressional pensions are far
mote gene_rous than those offered by
most private sector companies. More
than 250 members of the 103rd&lt;::ongress will become "pension million:
. aires" -- should they reach a normal
life span, they 'II collect more than $1
million each in taxpayer-sponsored
pension money. It's also a huge
incentive for elected officials to stay
on past their usefulness.

See~ SIT1t~G

IN

OHIO Weather
Saturday, May 4

them out. It worked in IC)!U, wbea 73
new membCrs were elected even
though only 38 percent of Amel'icans
even bothered to show up at the polls.
The Supreme Court has alRidy
invalidated 22 state laws that impose
limits on federal office-holders, thus
necessitating last month's Vole on a
constitutional amendment. As a litmus test of populism, however, term
limits are far less telling than an array
of reform measures targeting everything from campaign finance to golden parachutes.

SoMeoNe's

George R. Plagenz

•

they plead for mercy on the grounds
that they were trapped by a flawed
and corrupt system.
Fonner Sen. Warren Rudman, RN.H., who retired after two terms,
recounts in his new memoir, "Combat: TWelve Years in the O.S. Sen·
ate," how one Democrat told him: "I
wish I had the guts to do what you've
done, but I'm afraid to leave. I don't
~now what I'd do with my life." Rudman, who opposes mandatory term
limits, writes of "the fear that haunted many of my colleagues. Was
there life after the Senate? Could they
endure being mere mortals again?"
Rudman's 'conclusion is "the
longer you stay in public office, the
more • distant · the outside · world
' .
becomes."
.But should the problems of political careerism be solved by tannpering with the ·Constitution? A vast
majority of voters certainly believe
so. Yet term limits are a false elixir, '
a patchwork solution that would
merely enshrine the voter apathy that
seemingly grows with each election.
For those . who really think· their
leaders have been in Washington too
long, there's a simple solution: Vote

bency. There is no better pl..:eto s!JII1
than by reforming the campaicn
finance system. Although tbe I 04th

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.9lcquisitions !Fine Jewe[rg
•

'

,

I

I

91 IIIII Street
Oh. 4&amp;710
114-~
•

Mlcld~

'

151 Second Ave.
OalllpoUt, Oh. 45831

6U 446-2842

�•
I

Sports

The

•

D~aily
.

\

Sentiye.I.·
...
Friday, 118Y 3, 1111

Indians lead Mariners 6-3 ·before earthquake halts play ,
By JIM COUR
seventh inning.
thing was goin~ on."
.
SEATTI.E (AP)- All of a sud·
" We were all gelling a liule
The geophysics center at the Uw
den, the Krngdome started shaking. upset because we thought the Moose vers_1ty of Washmgton reported the
And baseball had nothing to do with was jumping up and down on up on prehmmary magnitude of the quake .
iL
.the lop (of the dugout) because 1t was at 5.4. There. were no Immediate
A moderale earthquake rauled the shaking like crazy," _Mariners out- _re~ of maJor damage:
.
Kingdome duri ng Thursday night's fielder,Jay Buhner sa1~; referrmg ro
•.!"ought I w~ havmg_a d1zzy
game bel ween the Cleveland Indians Seattle s team mascot. You look up ~pell, S81d Seanle s Ken Gnffey Jr..
and Sealtle Mariners, causing at the other beACh, but he was on top m the Mariners' clubhouse when the
umpires 10 suspend the game in the or 1he1r dugout. So we knew some- quake struck.
Cleveland was on the fie~d when
the earthquake occu~ al9.04 p.m.
PDT. The Kmgdome s g1ant speak·
ers that hang from the roof swayed,
as did the ~ressbox.
. Players lmm~dtately lefr the field
and began looking up ar {be. speakers , Startled fans m I he: crowd of
.21
headed for the exits.
The.:-"hole speaker sys{em was
movmg Buhner sa1d "Everybody
· w ~ ' ki
·
.
as rea ng OU{ ou{, there ~~. the
m1ddle of lhepltchers mound.
. fifteen mmules after the earth!(Uake htt, the game ..w~ suspended
, because of the poss1bli1ty of aftershocks. It was scheduled to be conllnued ill( fore Fnd~y 's regularly

·?.ll

scheduled game.'
·
I~ said. ·.,! didn 't know what was
"In my mind there was no going on. It was weird. 1 guess the
doubt.~ ' home plate umpire Jim bench was moving preuy ood ..
McKean said. "I really didn 'I feel
It was 1he firsl time I! a ~ajor
we should play because I don 't league game was disrupred by an
think baseball is as important as as earthquake since Oct. 17, 1989. A 7.1
many liv~s ~ we _had in here."
temblor hil San Francisco about 30
A prehmrnary rnspection showed minutes before the scheduled slart of
no visible dama~e to the 20-year.-old Gam
. e 3 between Oakland and rhe
Krngdome, sard Frank Abe, a Gianrs at Candle~tick Park: The
spokesman for County Executive quake caused major damage and the ·
0~ Locke:
. .
Series didn 't resume unlil Oct. 27.
. I felt II m my knees and I felt It
Seattle reliever No1111 Charlrori
rn my back and I thought it was only had the same worries.
me," said Cleveland pitcher Julian
"I looked up at the ceiling' tiles
T~varez, who had just arrived al the and saw the speakers move quite a
m?und .!o replace starter Orel Her- bit," he said. "You start to think,
sh1ser. Then I saw those speakers 'What if one of rhosdalls?' Th~re ·s
moving up there. Golly, what's hap· not much you can do."
pening here? Then I ran like every- ·
Cleveland was playing Seattle for
bod d.d
"
1
Y
the first time si,nce lasl season's AL
·.
.. .
On July 19, 1994, Ceihpg hies fell championship series .
from the Kmgdome roof, causmg
Albert Belle 's lith homer. a twoexle~sive damage and forcing the run drive in rhe {bird off Bob WolManners on the road for the~r final colt, put the Indians ahead.
20 games.
Cleveland made ir 5-0 in the
"I though! the tiles were coming fourth on Sandy Alomar's RBI doudown again •." Seattle's Paul Sorren- ble, Kenny Loflon 's run-scoring sin-

In other maJorleague.action,

·__,

·

:

gle and Jul io Franco's RBI double
Jim Thome'doubled in a run in ~
fifth
B.uhner homered in the bottom
half off·Hershiser and Edgar Martinez hit a two-run homer in the sev.
enrh.
•
Alomar extended his hitting
streak to l~ames, the longest current streak the majors.
Hershiser gave up three runs and
five hits in 113 innings. Wolcott,
who beat the Indians in Game I of
last year's AL championship series
gave up six runs and nine hits in fiv~
innings.
•
1
Notes: The Indians met their first
AL West opponent of the season ....
Belle's homer was Cleveland's 33rd
in 26 games. ... Lofton who leads
'
rbe major leagues with 18 stolen
bases. was thrown out for lhe fifth
time this season when he tried to
steal second in the third inning.... In
Cleveland's1ast 19 games, the lndi·
ans have scored six or more runs 15
times.
·

'

"

'

.

:

,
·'
'
,

•
.:
.,

By The Associated Press
After missing a stan for the firsl
time in his career, David Cone came
back with his first complete game of
the season and gave the New York
Yankees' pi{ching staff a needed rest.
"That's probably as quick a game·
as I' ve had in a while," Cone said
Thursday night after his five-hitter
led lhe Yankees over the Chicago
White Sox 5·1 Thursday night jn just
2 hours, II minures..
.
The game was almost exactly half
the length of the Yankees' nine·
inning game with Ballimore on
Thesday night. They needed more
than five hours to beat the Orioles on
Wednesday night.
Cone (4-1) pilched for rhe first
time since April 22 afler being sidelined by a circulation problem in his
right right finger. He struck oul eighl
and walked one.
"I just didn't know what I'd have ·
until I wilrrned up," he said. "I
bQunced a few in the first inning.
You could tell people were holding
their breath, wondering if I'd make '
it."

WHAT'S GOING ON? - As he rounds the basepaths, Seattle's
Paul Sorrento looks· up to find out where the shaking's coming from
during Thursday night's game ageioat the Cleveland Indians. The
confest, suspended in the aeventh lnnin!l with the Indians ahead 63 b8cause of a mild earthquake, is expected to be completed tonight.
(AI')

.

Numbness caused Cone to have
trouble gripping the ball. He's still
hot sure what caused the circulation
problem. · -·
"Until I'm 100 percenr, it's still ·
a mystery as {0 what happened," he
said. "But I feel good about what
happened lonight.''

A's.

Abbott (1-4) allowed one run and
six hits in 7 113 innings, striking out
six. Troy Percival pitched the nillth
for his I Oth save.

'

. AL standings
ka.m

•

Eau&gt;lt'rlrivtonecl.
New York .............. J.S 10 .600
U11 ltimorr .............. 14

G.B.

13
14
19

.519
'7481
..145

2
3
7

B[luon ... . ...............8 19

.296

8

Thr omo .................. l:l

!Jetroit ....... ...... 10

•
Ctnlral DIYislon
CLE VELAN IJ ....... J7
8 .680
Ch ic :~go ................. IS
12 .556
Minncwm ............ ,14 12 .538
Milwauk.., .... ......... l l 14 .461
K;msas City ............. 9 19. .321

16
17

.429
.346

Houston 102, L.A. l..aktrs 94; Houston winli series 3-1 .
Seallle 101 , Sacramento 87; Seallle

Sunday's games .
~

2
. 4

. W"lern DiYbion

SaPOleao ......... .... l8

10

.64J

SanFrancisco ........ l4

13

.SI9

J~

Los Angcles....... :... t4

l~

.483

4'h

Colorndo ................ l2

14

.:J62

.'i

Thursday's score

· Philadelphiool Atlanla. I :10 p.m.
Los Angeles a1 Pinsburgh. I:35 p.m.
New York at Chicago. 2:20p.m.
MoRtreallll Houston. 2:35p.m.
Aorida al Colorado, J:O!i p.m
St. Louis ill San Diego, 4:0.5 p.m.
CINCINNATI at San Francisco, B:OS
p.m.

3

3~

5~

9~.

·~

lh

3~

Thursday's scores
Toromo 7, Milwaukee 5
C&lt;~ lifom t&lt;i ~- Oakb nd I

Dt.moit 5, Tellias 2
New York 5. C hk a~C&gt; I

ClEVELAND 6. Se:mle J. susp.. 6'1:
••ming§, cnrthlj uak.~

Tonight's games
t oronto (Quantri ll 0-3 1at Boston (Sele
1-2). 7 : 0~ p . lll .
.
Texn~ {Hill J-2) at Detroi t (Keasle J .

7:05 p.m
M i lwu uk ~e

(Bones 1-4) at Baltimore
(Erickson 1-2}, 7:15 p.m.
Chicago (Baldw in 2-0 ) :11 New York
(GOQden 0-JJ, 7:.15 p.m.
Oakland (R.e.ye_. J-J) at KansaJ City
(Appi er 2-J), 8:05 p.m.
'
MinnesOI&lt;I (Robet1son 0-4) at C~liror­
nitt (Fi nley J - ~ l . 10:05 p.m.
CLEVE LAN D at Sea ttle. comp. of

Today's gaines
. New York (Wilson 1- 1) at Chic ago
(NDYDtTO 1-3), 3:20p.m
L.os Angeleli (Park 2- 1) at Pinsburgh
(Dnrwin 2·2), 7:05p.m.
.
Philadelphia &lt;Mulholland 2•2) ;u Allanla { Mt.lddu~t 4-1). 7:40p.m.
Montreal (Cormier 1· 1). nt Houston
(Reynokts 4-1}. H:O:l p.m.
·
Florida (8urken 1-4) tH C o lo rado
(Rq-noso 1·2). 9:05p.m.
SI,Loois (Osborne 1-2) n1 Snn Diego
(Ashby J -1}, 10:05 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Schourek. 3-1) al San
FmnciJCo .(Fernandez J. t ), 10:05 p.m

Saturday's ga~mes
New York (J ones 1- lJ t~ l C hi ~ug o
(Ca51illo 1· 2), :!:20 p.m.
Florida (Hammond 1·4) at Colorado
(Fruman 2·2). 3:05p.m.
.
CI~CIN~ATI (Po~u,ol 0-~) ut Sa n
Franpsco (l...eller 2-J), 4.0." p.m.
L.os Anaelcs (Valdes 1-1) al Pitts·

bur.Jtl (Wqner 3·2), 7:05p.m.
f!tiladelphia (Mim6s 0-0) .0.1 Allanta
(Oiavtne 2-J), 7:10p.m. ·
adontreD.I (Ruc:ter 2- 1) at Homtoh
{Kile 3·2), 8o0) p.m.
S1. Louis !Stonlemyrl! 1-2) al Sa11

wins~•J· I

(TNl)

Stcond round: Hou11on a1 Scanle.
.

'
Sunday's games

Thursday's semifinal scores

First roMnd : A.tlanla al Indiana.
• TBA , (NBC); Phocnia al San Antonio,
TBA, if necessary: Portland II Utah, TBA
Sttond raund: New York a1 Ch.K:a-.
go, TBA, (NBC)

Florida 2. Philadelphia 0: Florida
leads series 1·0
.
OJ i~g o 3. Colorado 2 (OT): Chicago

Transactions

NHL playoffs

»:

Mqntreul ....... ,,, ...... l8
Philadelphio ......,.... l S
Allanla .... ,.............. 16
New Yorl&lt;............. .l2
Florida ,,..,....... ,., .... II
•

f&lt;L

10 .643
II •.577
12 S7t
14

.461

18 .:179

•

V-6. auto, all power. 7
pass, very clean

Tonipt's gomes

2
~

1~

1.9?3 NISSAH

1996 DODGE

DAKOTA

V-6, auto, air. tin. cruise.
cassette. 7 passenger

4 door. air, cass, ti~.
cruise , low miles, fac1ory

C/cab, V-8, auto. SLT pkg,
·tilt, cruise. air, factory

1995 NISSAN 4X4

KINGCABXE

INTREPID

5 spd, air. cass, p, mirrors.
cllrome pkg. low miles, 1-

V·6, power loct&lt;s, factory
warranty.

·-.
'

CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER
V-6. auto, 1 -. all
power laeiOry warranty.

N.Y. Rangers ttl Pinsburgh. 7:30 p.m.
Sl. Louis al Dtlroil, 7:30p.m.

8A~TIMORE ORIQLE~ :

RHP Toni Edens

10

Signt!d
a minOf· leaguc con·

uw,:t.

Saturday's games

Natkwaall..el&amp;ue
PHILADELPHIA PH {LLIESo A cquirt:d I B J.R. Phillips from tht: San Franci5~:0 Giahl5 for a player tD be named and
cash. Optioned INF Jon ZLiber to Scran ton· Wilk.cs-B!U"Te oC the Amcritan Assod ation.
SAN DI EGO f'ADRES: Ac1iv:ued
OF Chris Gw~nn from the IS-day dis abled lis1. Placed INF-OF Crnig Shipley
(In the 1~-d:ly d.isobkd list, retro~Ciive: to

Floridil at PhiiOOelphia.. 1 p.m.
Chh::ugo at Colorado, 10 p.m.

Sunday's games
N.Y. Rangers nr Pithburgh, J p.m.
St. Loui s a1 De1roi1, J p.m.

Basketball

April23.

NBA phiyoffs
Thursday's seores
Indiana 83, Atlama 75: series tied 2·2

1990

·

rNTREPID ES

GRAND PRIX SE

auto, 3.51i1er, V-6, air,
leather, all powQt, factory

2 door, automatic, V-6, 1111

,.
'

...
''

QLICAGT

OIILY

l994

.

SAN fRANCISCO 61ANTS: ACiit
va1ed RHP Rich Delucia ud INF K~ .
Balit te from the 15·clay disabled list. op..
1ioncd INF Jay Caniwolo Phoenix oflhe
PCL.
'

po-

1917
auto, aw, tin, auise, all
power, 1 owner.

· DUSTER ·I....

V-6. auto, u, all power,
factory warranty.

- ..

..•

1987 DODGE

CARAVANLE

SE· S PIG

auto, air, tin, cruise, all
power-;"7 pass, local trade.

5 spd, air, cassette, 1·
owner, low

r;tes.

..
·-•

:"f-1
.J I·I

''
..."··
.......
-·.,

OIILY

1995

CIRRUS

Appearing
Saturday,

1500

SONOMA
! It+

..

.......

4
. 1994.JWDA
MIWN!j
V6, IIIIo,

helll!td lea1her

3
21111

spinning your favortte tunes!
Get taiiOOed by Doc .lohnao!l of

1992 DODGE

,· DAKOTA
C/CIIb, auto, I.e. V8••air,
cruise, till, low miles

1H4FORD
RANGEl

opener

•

· net," Roenick said. "Krupp took a
By JOHN MOSSMAN
the task.
DENVER (AP) - Jeremy
"They hadn't forechecked in the look behind him to see where I was.
Roenick's overtime goal won it. Ed
first perind, but tbey really stepped As soon as he . turned around, I
it up in the seeond period," he said. stepped our where Tony could see .
Belfour's play in goal made it all
possible.
"They came ill me in waves."
me. He zipped one on my ~tick, and
Roenick's power-play goal al
With Belfour playing a key role. I let it go."
Hartsburg said the power play
6:29 of ovenime Thursday night .the Blackhawks remained flawless in
"came through big for us. It didn't
gave the Chicago Blackhawks a 3-2 stopping opponents' power plays.
win over the Colorado Avalanche in
Chicago managed to kill the look sharp at times, bul it got us two
the opening game of their NHL remaining I :38 of Chris Chelios' huge goals." .
Roy had 23 saves.
.
Western Conference semifinal series. penalty to start the overtime. The
"I
wasn
'I
thinking
aboul
the
Game 2 is scheduled here Saturday Blackhawks killed all six Colorado
niglit
power plays and now have killed all streak. I. was only wonied about
Blackhawks goalie Belfour had 27 opposition power plays in the making the saves," Roy said. "It was
a nice pass from Amante.to Roenick.
28 saves, several of the spectacular playoffs.
"Now they 're one-up and il will
variety. None was more important
"Any time Colorado gets a powbe important for us to bounce back
than his stop on Valeri Kamensky's er play, you are playing with fire,"
breakaway earlier in overtime.
coach Craig Hartsburg sald. · the next game, try to even up the
series and rhen take one over there."
"I was fortunate on getting
"Tonight, we killed well, and Ed
·Colorado coach Marc Crawford
enough of a piece of it to keep it our · ·Belfounnade some huge saves for us·
of the net," Bel four said.
wben we were killing. I can't say felt the penalty on Si.mon was a ·
Belfour outplayed Colorado's enough a:hout the job our penally-. make-up call ..
Patrick Roy, which must have given killers did."
"They're going to call it when
him special satisfaction since ·he has
Tonight, it's the New York · players abuse other.players after lhe
played most.of his career in Roy's Rangers at Pittsburgh and. St. Louis whistl~,'' he said. "They called one
shadow.
·
at Detroit
• . ·· on Cheiios at the end of regulation,
Belfour has. won two Vezina troThe Blaclthawks' winning goal so he called one on Chris (Simon) in
phies, but Roy has three.' Belfour has .came after Colorado's Chris Simon overtime."
three Jennings trophi~s (for lowest went Off a14:39 of.overtime for highChicago's Enrico Ciccone had the
.""ly goal in li tight-checking first
go'l.!t.Yai"!t •!E!M~·- ~~ Ro~Jw , sti~.lr.ing.
•
_ __ ·
foot: ·&amp;ei/our lias' no Stanley Cup
. Colorado's Uwe Krupp fell and period lhat saw Colorado manage
rings, 8lld Roy lw; twp.
lost control of the puck behind th~ just two shots on goal compared to
-"I've ' 'always enjoyed playing nei. Tile Blaclthawks seC up a play, the Blackhawb' 10: The two shors
against Patrick, because he brings and Amonte sent a pass to Roenick - one of which was Claude
out the bl:st.in me," Belfour said.
inside·the left circle. His IS·foot shot Lemieux's carom off the right 'gOlllAfter a slow stan, Colorado beat Patrick Roy, ending R.o}o:s 12- post- marked the fewest in a pericranked up its offense, puning con- - game winning streak in overtime od by the Avalanche all season.
•
·
sistent 'pressure on Belfour from the playoff games.
Colorado h'l'l back-lo·back powsecond period bn. He was equal to
"I wa's standing at the side of the er-play opportunities in the period,
bur could nol get a shot on eilber
chance.
After killing a penally early in the
second period, Colorado stepped up
its offensive pressure and· struck
twice in a span of 1S seconds.
Lemieux got his third goal of the
NEW YORK (AP)- The 1996 kets 300, Sonoma, Calif.
NASCAR Winston Cup s~k car
' May 26 -Coca-Cola 600, Con· playoffs al 3:10, taking a p1s ; from
·. Kamensky 10 the righr of lhe goal
racing schedule. wilh winners in cord, N.C.
parentheses and driver point standJune 2 - Miller 500, Dover, Del. and, while falling backward, sending
.mgs:
'
June 16- UAW-GMTeamwork the puck between Bel four's legs.
Joe Sakic , the leading scorer in
Feb. 18 - Daytona 500 (Dale SOO, J.qng Pond •. Pa.
lhe
playoffs, gave Colorado a 2-1
Jarren).
, Juli~3- M1ller 400, Brooklyn,
with his eighrh goaL
lead
Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400• Mich.
·
The
Blackhawks' Murray Craven
Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt). . · July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
had rhe lone goal of the third period,
· Mar. 3 - Pontiac Excitement Beach,.Fia.
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
July.14- Slick 50 300, Loudon.
March I 0 -· Purolator SOO, N.H.
. GRAVELY TRACTOR
. Hiunpton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
July 21 -· Miller 500, Long
SALES &amp; SERVICE
March 24- TranSouth Financial Pond, Pa.
•
204 Condor St
Pomeroy, OH.
400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon.).
July 28 - DieHard 500, TalSPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
March 31 ·~ Food City 500, Bris· ladega, Ala.
tol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
.
Aug:' 3 - Brichard 400, IndiOpen Monday·frlday 9:110-5:00
April ' 14 - · First Union 400, anapolis.
.
Saturday 9:00-3:00
North Wilkesboro, . N.C. (Terry
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
Labonte).
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
April 21 - Goody's Headache
Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Powders 500. Martinsville, Va. Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
(Rusty Wallace).
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
April 28 - Winston Select 500, Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Talladega, Ala. fSterling Marlin).
Sept I - Mountain Dew South,MayS ·- Save Mart Supennar· em 500, Darlington, S.C .

Winston Cup slate
and standings posted

...

American W.Jue

9pm

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auto , air, titl .l . _::~:'l
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SENTRA XE

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1988 PLYMOUTH
1993 CHEVY
GRAND VOYAGER LE LUMINA EURO PKG

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)~

Sunday's games

NL standings

,,

/•

·

C, LlV ELA ND ( Nagy ] - I) at Se:1Uie
10:05 p.m.

Toronto at Boston. I :O;Ii p.m.
Te.w.s 111Detroil, 1: 15 p.m. · '
M i lwa u k ~ at Baltimore, I J 5 p.m.
Olicagoul New York, 1 : :1 ~ p.m.
Oaklatld 111 KMW Cily, 2::\!i p.m.
Min ne5ota at Culifornia. 4:0.,. p.m.
CLEV IiLA ND at Startle. 4::1:'1 p.m.

·-:;

••..

OIILY

( H i tt: h.:o~ k ~ - 0) .

1\lfonto (Viola 0-1) at Bosron (Gonion
.
1-l). I:O:'i p m.
TeJ~. a s (f1iwhl:. J-0) ot Detroit (Gohr I·
31. l ol l p.m.
Milwuukl-'t (Sparks 1·3) o.t Baltimore
(Mussinn J-2). I :35 p.m.
Chicago (Ah•arez 1-2 ) at Ntw Yo~k.
{Key i-J). Ul p.m.
Oa kland ( W ojcicc h o w s k ~ 2-0) at
Kansas,City (GubicUI2-3 ), 8:0S p.m.
Minnesota (Rodriguez 2· 2) tlt Cnliforni.a (Grimslty 1-1), 10:~ p.m.
' CLEVELAND (Lopez 1-0) at Seattle
(Menhart 0- 2); 10:05 p.m.

.,

,.,

Salurd•y's game

suSJ1. game. ~:.15 p.m. · ·

Sarurday's games

··'
..
···

Tonight's game

Hockey

leads 5eri es 1-0

"

San Antonio ar Phoenh , 9 p.m.

TBA. {NBC)

PhiladclphiEI2. Florida 0

Western Division
Tl!' ll.as ..................... J7 II .607
St!:ntle .................... l6 11 .593
C:llifor nia ............... JS 12 .555
OJkland ...
___ ___ 13 14 .481

1),

14· .SOO
14 .:'100
14 .481

·'
'.·.

,,

1994 DODGE

Diego (Bergmnn 2-2), 10:05 p.m

Ctntral Dhlsion

Chicago................. 14
Hou51on ........... ...... 14
Plllsbur,gh .............. 1J
St. Louis ................ 12
CINCINNATl. ......... 9

·'

OIILY

Scoreboard
Baseball

••

Angels 3, Athletics I

down the streU:h, u the Rockets I!Uid at Utah in the deciding game of
eliminated the Laken in HOUSion.
their frrst-round series, and New
"We had the mental preparation York at Chicago in the
of,
that helped us close out the other their second-round mat~:hup. The
team," said KeMy Smith, who was Bulls and Knicb swept their first6-for-6 from the field and scored 17 round series.
poinrs. "We were able to stop them
Tonight, San Antonio visits
on key possessions."
Phoenix in Game 4 of their openingThe Lakers cut Houston's lead to round series. The Spurs lead the Suns
9J -86onajumperby Anthony Peel· 2-1.
er with 4:28 lefl, but Olajuwon then
The Atlanta-Indiana winner will
made a baseline jumper and a hook advance against . Orlando, which
shono put the Rockets up 95-86 with swept Detroit in the opening round.
S7 seconds remaining.
Pacen 83, 1Uwb 75
"Houslon beal us by putting itall
At Atlanta. the Pacers held· the
out on the line," said Magic Johnson, Hawks scoreless for more than sevwho had only eight poi!lts and five en· minutes in the fourth quaner to
assisu for the Lakers. ''1bey came in stay alive in the playoffs. The Hawks
as a unit and shut us down for four- missed 13 shors in a row after Grant
five minutes. Thai's the difference Long's tip-in with 8;32 remaining
between a Laker team and the worhj ·cut the Pacers' lead to 73-71 . By the
champions."
lime Long broke tbe streak with
Cedric Ceballos led the Lakers another tip-in, there -was only I :09
with 25 points, While Robert Harry lefr and the Pacers led by 10 points.
had 17 for the Rockets.
Rik Smits scored 15 of his 17 points
Also Thursday night, Indiana beat in the first half for lhe Pacers, who
Atlanta 83-7S to force a fifth and once again played wilhoul Reggie
deciding game Sunday in Indi· Miller. slill recovering from eye
socket surgery. Steve Smith led
anapolis.
In other garries Sunday, it's Port- Atlanta with 19 points.

Blackhawks and Panthers notch w1ns

•

~

completed .a three-game sweep at
Sky Dome.
After Jose Valentin hit his fourth
Paul 0 Ne1ll also homered oft' Alex
Tigers 5, Rangers 2
home run of the season for a4-3 Mil·
Fernandez (4-2), who gave up all
Detroit won for just the second waukee lead in the sixth, Carter doufive runs and seven hits in 7 1/3 time in 15 ~ames; getting a three-run bled in ~he bottom half and scored on
mm~gs. .
homer from John Aaherty at Tiger Juan Samuel 's two-out triple.
Srerra, m a 4-for-25 slump, wore· Stadium.
Robert Perez f6llowed with a soft
contact lenses for the firsr time.
Felipe Lira (2-3) allowed four hits single lhat . scored Samuel, and
"I wasr'r seeing the ball loo in seven innings, including Rusty O'Brien walked, chasing Scott Karl
good." Sierra said. "I said to myself Greer's two-run homer. Lira struck (2-2). Alex Gonzalez singled off
that when I got home, I'd wear con- out five and walked two.
Marshall Boze for a 6-4 lead.
tacts. I saw the ball well tonight."
Brian Williams pitched lhe ninth
Erik Hanson (3-4) gave up five
In other AL games, California for his second save, finishing the . runs and four hits in 6 2/3 innings,
beat Oakland 3-1, Detroit beat Texas four-hitter.
struck out eight and walked five.
5-2 and Toronto beat Miiwaukee 7Bobby Witt (3-2), seeking his Mike Timlin gol three outs for his
5. Cleveland's game at Seattle was IOOth career win, gave up all four fourth save.
suspended after an earthquake struck runs and four hits in six-plus innings.
Phillies 2, Marlins 0
with the Indians leading 6·3 in the
Blue Jays 7, Brewers 5
At Miami, unbeaten rookie Mike
seventh. It is scheduled to be comCharlie O'Brien hit a two-run Grace allowed five hits over eight
pleted tonight .
homer, and Joe Carter tripled. dou(See MAJOR LEAGUE
In the only National League bled and drove in a run as Toronto
on PageS)
game, Philadelphia blanked A'orida
2-0:
Rex Hudler's leadoff homer in the ·
eighth gave Jim Abbott his frrst victory this season as California completed a three-game sweep a1 Oakland.
The Angels have won 10 of 14
overall and seven straight over the

•

....

. At Yankee Stadium, Ruben Sier·
Doug Johns (2-3) lost his thi~
~homered 1w1ce as New York wollllff straight decision, allowing three runs
1ts fou~h ~{rarght. J1m Leyntz and"" and six hits in 8 1/3 innings. .

light...
Gary hyton scored 29 points and
Shawn Kemp 23 as the Son~cs
advanced to the second round for the
frrst time since 1993. They won two
straight in SacrameniO after splitting
the first two in Seattle.
"Ir's more of a sense of relief,"
said Kemp, who also had eight
rebounds, six steals ·and three blocks.
"Now we can relax and play our
style of !lasketball. We don't have to
worry about the first-round e•it"
· The Kings, the only team in the
playoffs wid! a losing regular-season
record, lost leading scorer Mitch
Richmond with a sprained righi'
ankle in' the second quarter. Richmond, 1w~o didn't play in the second
balf. also was the Kings' best defender agaii)SI Payton.
"It was very hard to wau:h and
know thai Jcwldn't help. It was very
frustrating," said Richmond, who
scored just five points alier averaging 26 in the first three games or rhe
series.
Hakeem Olajuwon scored 25
points, including two key ~k.ets

In 'he NlfL playoffs,

..

Yankees artd-Phillies among victors

By The Al.acl l d " ' The HOUSion Rockets love chal!e'nges, so the two-time defending
NBA champions should' be thrilled
with their next opponent in the playoft's.
.The Rockets, who beat the Los
Angeles Lakers 102-94 Thursday
nighl to win their opening-round
· series 3· 1, will play ~cattle in the
second round. The SuperSonics, who
do\fned Sacramento 101 -87 10 win
that series 3- 1. have beaten the
Rockets nine straight times and were
the last teain to oust Houston from
the playoffs - three years ago in the
Western Conference semifinals.
Their best-of-seven series opens
Saturday in Seattle. But before the
Sanies Slllrt focusing on the Rockers,
they're going to savor their vicrory
over the Kings, which ended two
years or first-round playoff failure.
" I am so thrilled that we've gotten past the first round, it's relief and
elation combined." Seanle forward
Sam Perkins said. "It took two years
to climb over this. Now that we'-re
near the top, we can 'see some d·ay-

ftll

aumv
SYSftli

Major league action...
innings for his fiflh .victory lo lead
the Philadelphia Phillies pasl the
Florida Marlins 2·0 Thursday night.
Grace1 25, h115 the best reconj in
· the majors. Atlanta's John Sinoltz
and San Diego's Joey Hamilton are
S-1.

a

.

Ricky Bottalico pitched hitless
ninth for his league-ieadiilg lOth
save. The game was delayed by rain
for one hoor, 35 minutes with no outs
in the bottom of the ninth, and only
about 200 fans remained allhe end.
Jim·Eisenreich drove in the first
run with a two-out infield single in

(Co.ntinued from Page 4)

the sixth inning. Benito .Santiago
tripled in the ninth and scored on
Kevin Jordan 's sacrifice fly .
Grace, a 6-foot-4 right-hander,
got stronger as the game went on.
Seven of his eight strikeouts came in
his final 3 113 innings. He walked
two, one intentionally, and extended
his streak of consecurive scoreless
innings to 16 213 as the Phillies won
for the seventh time in their last eight
games.
Grace outpitched Kevin Brown
(2-4), who allowed one run and four
hits in seven innings, lowering his
ERAto2.26.

a power play at I :58.
In the other NHL playoff game
Thursday night, the visitor·also won,
with Florida taking Philadelphia 2-0.
Panthen l, Flyers 0
John Vanbiesbrouck made 18
saves in earning his third career playoff shutoul, while a stiflin~ defense
in which.the Pantllers sent the puck
out of their zone at the hint of any
danger was too much for lhe host
Ayers 10 break.
"We just want 10 play in-yourface hockey," Vanbiesbrouc~ said.
"Most of all, when we got the puck
deep in our zone, we didn't try any
fancy breakout plays that they could
pick off and tum into a goal. "
'!'he Panthers picked up on two
enors by Phi !adelphia to get both of
their goals.
The first came on a bad line
change by the Ayers, which re~ult·
ed in Stu Barnes and Dave Lowry
breaking in on 2-on-1 against
deferiseman Kerry Huffman. Barnes,
skating dow.-. the left side, us'
Lowry as a decoy and kepi the puc~
before beating Ayers goalie .Ron
Hextall with a shon backhander.
Barnes and Lowry combined for
the clinching goal, which came on a
power play with 4: 10 left in the
game.
Rod Brind' Amour turned rhe
puck over just inside the Ayers blue
line to Barnes, who threaded a pass
down the slot to Lowry streaking out
-from rhe comer. Lowry wailed until
Hextall went down, then lifted a shot
over rhe fallen goalie.

The 1996 Meigs Invitational track meet will rake place Saturday
al Meigs High School at I 0 a.m.
Eighteen teams will be taking part in the event. Boys' and girls'
teams from Jackson, Federal Hocking. M~ i g s, Waterford. Vinton
County, Alexander, Ne lsonville-York, Eastern and River Valley will
be taking pan.
'
Jackson is the defending champion in the boys' division and is
one of the favori tes for this year. along wi rh Federal Hocking.
Federal Hocking won rhe girls' division and once again is one or the
favorites
to win it this year along. wi th Jackson, last year' s runner•
..
up.

Team champions' list
1m

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1983......................... ......... ..Nelsonville-York ...........................Me1gs
J984 ........................................... ........Trimble ...............Warren Local
J985 ........... ,............... ...................... .. Trimble .. ... .. ...... .............. Meigs
1986 ................ ........ ...... ,.......... Warren Locai ............. .............. Meigs
1987 ..................... ............... Nelsonville-York! ....... ................ .Trimble
1988 .................................... Nelsonville' York ...... ............ ......... Meigs
1989 ............... ............ ....................... .Jackson ............. Vinlon County
1990 .......... .v··········.-............ ..... ,........ .Jackson ....................... Jackson
199l .c.................................. .Federal Hocking ....................... Jackson
199! ........... .... ...... ............................ ..... .Meigs .......................Jackson
1993 ..... .................................. Fairfield Union ..... ·..... Federal Hocking
1994 ............. ........................ Federal Hocking ...... ... Nelsonville-York
J995 ....................... .......... :................ .Jackson ... ...... F ederal Hocking

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�"Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frldey, May 3, 1996

Friday, lilly 3, 1996

'

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally sentinel • P~ge 7

When por_~~~~~.Y. _2~~..~~!.~n-~eCom~s .eJ!'!lJ~Y. P!9!&gt;!em~Ann
Landers
1991• Loo -

r - s - . . c...

--~·

Dear Ann Landers: When
"Shocked and Disillusioned in Los
Angeles" wrote to you about her
husband 's collection of pornography, you told her to see a therapist to
get over her obsession. _She is not the
. one with the problem. He is.
I grew up in a household filled
with my father's pornographic pictures, magazines and novelty

~...::~e=::y.Hi~!=. =w~:~.=t·

w.-ped his altiltllk toward women.
Whca you n baYJDg SCll wilh 1111
i"'•-. you doll' l have to be con--.~ widi what lhc imqe is feeling or what effect !he act will have
OD the iJna&amp;e'slife.
My r.d!er SCllu.olly abused my
sister and tried to iniliak: a sexual ·
relationship with me. My sister has
low self-esteem, and. I find it difficult to think of myself in positive
terms. I am manied now and have a
dauahter of my own. If I fourid out
that my husband had a secret stash
of pornography, I would malce swe
HE saw a lherapist. and the pornog-

-

One Who
Dear Minneapolis: Thanks for a
good letter. I should have recommcndcd joint ~ounseling, buttossi ng
out !he pornography is not the solulion. Some therapists have written to
me and said pornography . can be
" helpful " for couples with sexual
problems.
Dear Ann Landers: After reading
the English signs from foreign countries, I thought you might enjoy this
list of announcements from church
bulletins. It certainly gave everyone
in our offiGe a good laugh. I hope
you and your readers get one too. -•
Your Fans a1 First State Bank of

lau~a:~-:;~~:r1.':!~i :~~~ttou~o!OC:~ c.!.':!'ti.e~~ ~~ ~!~:.:r~~t1 ~~~d7.ft~;

too. Thanks from all or 11$ , Here an! please see the minister in his study. my $90 back." Wnmg. She said she
the announcements from the church
6. This being Easter Sunday, we won it and it was hers . .
bulletins:
askMrs. Lewistocomeforwardand
My female friends said all· the
I . Don't let wony kill you •• let lay an eag on the altar.
money she won belonaed to her. My
the church help.
7. A bean supper will be held on men friends said she should have
2. Remember in prayer the many Tuesday evening in the church hall. given me S90 since I paid for everywho are sick of our church and com- Music will follow.
thing. What do you say? .. Jimmy in
munity.
8. At the evening service tonight, Texas
3. The rosebud on the altar this the scnnon topic will be "What is
Dear JimiJiy: I'm with the guys.
morn ing is to announce the birth of Hell ?" Come early, and listen to our In the future;·when you take guests
David Alan Smith, the sin of Rev. choir practice.
to play bingo, establish the ground
and Mrs. Julius Smith.
Dear Ann Landers: 1 took a girl- rules in advance.
4. Wednesday, the Ladies Liturgy · friend, her daughter and a friend to a · Send questlous to Ann Landen,
. Society will meet. Mrs. Jones will bingo game. I paid for the cards, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cmsing "Put Me in My Linle Bed," food and drinks. Total cost, about
Suite 700, Los Angeles,
the

Fun, food and fitness
Breakfast is the fuel that gets your
body going. After a night of fasting,
your body needs fuel to get you going
on your day of activities. Breakfast
helps you do exactly as the name
says, it "breaks the fast."
Breakfast not only taste good, but
it is the best way for you and your
kids to start the day, Breakfast helps
everyone meet their nutritional needs,
it gives us important vitamins and
minerals and may even help us to
learn better.
Many experts agree, a low-fat
breakfast is the best kind of breakfast
An example of a low-fat breakfast
mighi include cereal, low-fat milk, a
muffin or toast with jam and fruit or
100 frui! juice. A high fat breakfast
might be fried eggs, sausage, toast
wilh butter and a glass of whole milk.
. Remember that there are many
nutritious choices to make using the
Food Guide Pyramid. Just because it
may not be labeled a "breakfast
food" doesn't not mean you can't cal
it for breakfast. It could be leftover
macaroni ·and cheese, milk, yogurt,
cottage cheese, custard or pudding,
fresh, canned, or frozen fruit and vegetable juices. Choose whole grain
breads such as muffins, rolls, etc. and
spread with low fal cream cheese or
just a little jelly. You might already
know that a low-fat diet is healthy.
ilut do you know why?
If there is too much fat in your
diet, the fat can cause high levels of
cholesterol in your bi~&lt;_HI· This

increases the chances ol having a
heart alllll:k. Your children, as well as
yourself, need to have their cholesterol checked by their doctor to sec
if it's too high. Our counlry's top
health eltpens agree that all children
(older lhan 2 year$ of age) should eat
a heart-healthy diet. That means a
diet low in fat. So jt is importarit to
do everything to keep healthy-.like
starting off with a low-fat brealcfast
everyday.
You can be smart the rest of the
day, too. Choose leaner foods at
lunch and a1 snack times. Eat a turkey
sandwich with mustard instead of
roast beef with mayonnaise. Pick
pretzels instead of potato chips.
When your kids get home from
school, why not · give them their
favorite cereal with low-fat milk
rather than coolcies.
We all need lots of exercise.
Please don't begin any eltercise routine withour a doctor's recommendation. Riding a bike or walking are
great ways to enjoy the outdoors plias
get the eltercise that our ix?dies need
to sl;ly healthy. A stationary bike may
be used when the weather is bad.
When your kids participate in
team activities or play on the playground at school, they are getting
exercise. Remember when your child
rides a bike, it is important to take
that extra precaution and have them·
wear a helmet.
And don't smoke. Not now, not
ever. All these things make you

healthier.
Hart-health recipe for the day
HONEY BRAN MUFFINS
A honey of a breakfast or snack
idea, these flavorful muffins are ch()lesterol free and packed with complex carbohydrates (long lasting energy source.)
. No stick cookin~ spray, I cup
whole wheat or all-pUqlOSe flour,
I cup whole bran cereal (like bran
Oakes), 21easpoons baking powder I
teaspoon salt, I cup raisins; 2 egg
whiles I cup skim milk, 114 cup margari.ne melted, 1/4 cup honey. Spray
12 muffin cups with cooking spray.
In large bowl, combine flour, bran
cereal, baking powder, salt and
raisins. In small bowl stir egg whites,
milk. margarine and honey until well .
blended.
Stir into flour mixture, just until
moistened. Let stand 3 minutes.
Spoon into prepared muffins cups.
Bakein400!Foven 15to20minutes
·or ·Until lightly browned. Makes 12
muffins.
Each muffin provides 140 calories, 3 g. protein, 24 g. calbohydrates,
4 g. fat, I g. polyunsaturated fat, I g.
saturated fat, 0 mg. cholesterol and
240 mg. sodium.
(Article provided through the
Melp eud"nty ·Health . Department's Preventive Health and
Health Services Grant, Jackie
Starcher, coordinator, and Linda
King, assistant coordinator.)

.

I

'

FRIDAY
- ANTIQUITY •• Marietta Bible
College Choir and · Dr. Myron K.
Guiler, 7 p.m. Friday, Antiquity Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT •• Big Bend
Youth Football League organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
. t. Meigs Junior High School auditoriurn.
RACINE •• Racine July Fourth
Committee meeting Thursday, 8 p.m.
at the fire department annex. All welcome.

RUTLAND •• Rose of Sharon
Holiness Church, Rutland, revival
services, Friday through May 12.
Evangelist and singers, Archie Atwell

and family.
ROCK SPRINGS ~- Meigs Coonty Pomona Orange will hold its regular meeting Friday, 7:30p.m. at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall. Racine
Grange will host. Bring items for
baking contest.
SATURDAY
RUTLAND ·
Ohio Gospel
Roundup, II a.m. Rutland Fire
Department Park. Goncession stand
open, public invited,
HARRISONVILLE
Har-·
risonville Lodge F&amp;AM 411, staled
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at temple ..Work
in the ' entered apprentice degree.
Refreshments.

RACINE - Inspection practice for
officers of Racine Chapter 134 OES
will be held Sund~y. 2 p.m.
MONDAY
CARPENTER
Board of
Trustees of Columbia Township,
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the fire station.
SYRACUSE-- Sutton T"wnship
Trustees will meet Monday, 7:30p.m.
at the Syracuse Municipal Building.
LETART FALLS ·· Letart Township Trustees will meet Monday, 1·
p.m. at the office building.
LETART FALLS •· Letart Falls
Elementary PTO meeting Monday, 7
p.m.
RACINE ·• Special meeting
Racine Chapter 134 Order of the
Eastern Star Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Ann.ual inspection. Refreshments.

CHESTER •• Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM will meet Saturday, 7:30 TUESDAY
RUTLAND·· A free tuberculosis
p.m. at the lndge. Work in Master
skin
testing clinic will be held TuesMason degree.
day, 4:30-6:30 p.m. at .the Rutland
SUNDAY
Fire Department by Connie
TIJPPERS PLAINS •• VFW Post Karschnik RN, Meigs County tuber9053 and au~iliary loyalty day pro- · culosis nurse. All individuals who are
gratn Sunday, I p.m. with dinner at in food service are required io obtain
2 p.m.
yearly skin tests. '

Contributions made ·by Health Club
Donations were made to the Jacob Gertrude Finlaw, Virginia Wears, and
Arthur Cancer Fund of Wellston and Phyllis Morris for holiday treats.
the March of Dimes by the the Rock Plans were made for Helen Blackston
Springs Better Health Club at a to take treats to the infirmary in April,
recent meeting.
and for Nancy Morris to take them in
Ph} liis Skinner presided at the May.
meeting which opened with repons
New officers will be elected at the
from officers, Nancy Morris and May meeting al which time plans will
Frances Goeglein.
also be made for the 60th anniversary
Louise Bearhs gave devotions of the club with a picnic a1 the home
.using scripture from II Cor. 12, and of Francis Goeglein. It was noted that
poems, "Life's Long Road," "God is William Gnieser received 120 cards
Our Guide" and "Patch of Blue."
&lt;in his I OOth birthday.
Thank you notes were read from
Helen Blackston had the program.

Readings included "Invisible Kitchen
Germs" by Agnes Dixon: "Symptom
Quiz" by Blackston; "New Tuberculosis Test". by Barbara Fry; Talcum
Powder, an Ovarial'! Cancer Risk" by
Nancy Morris; "Suspicious Spots ·
and Cancer" by Dorothy Jeffers.
The contest was conducted by Fry
with Goeglein as the winner.
•
Phyllis Skinner and Nancy
Grueser will host the May meeting at
the Skinnet home. Morris will have
the program.
,
Morris served refreshments.

Racine UMW discusses birds in the Bible
: Lucille Cardone presented a pto- Bogard hl!d .attended the Spring
entitled "Birds of the Bible" at ·Retreat recently held at Ca'!'p
the April meeting of the Racine Asbury, Rio Gr1111de.
.
lfnited Methodist Women.
The bathroom project has been .
She noted that many birds, espe- completed, it was noted. The· bake
cially the turtle dove and pigeons, are sale held a1 the Racine Flower Show
talked about in scriptures. As She dis- was a success and appreciation was
played pictures of birds to the group, eltprcssed to those who contributed.
slle read a brief story about eac~ one. .
A committee of Sally a.ld,..ell,
Her program concluded with a Marilyn Jlogard, Karen Walker and
humorous poem. "What
,, is a Grand- Melissa Harkness was appointed to
check on aJ1d buy shrubbery for the
rna ?"
.
· Lee Lee · conducted the business east side of the church.
meeting which opened with !he Lords
Plans were finalized for lhc moth·
Prayer and the.UMW
Chris er-daughler banquet to be (leld May
Hill read the secretary's rcpon and II at 6:30 p.m. in the church social
Clara Mae Sargent gave the treasur- room. For reservations members lll!lY
er's report. The penny fund collection contact Opal Diddle 949-2051 or Lee
was taken.
·
~ 949-2454. A western theme will
· ·
· It was reported that Melissa Hark· be.clrried out.
ness, Opal Diddle, Eua Mac Hill.
Karen Walker will check on inforMargie West, Lee.Lee, .00 M.-ilyn mation about he8d phones (Ol the .
g~am

purpose.

..

•

sanctuary and Melissa Harkness is to
check on a flag pole and stand for a
flag donated by Cardone.
·
It was reported that the Monday
morning group recently finished
·making a quilt which was donated to
a family whose home recently
burned. 'I,'he group. ':"ill not meet
again until September. ·:
,
Refreshments were served . by
Martha Dudding and Cll!tll Mae Sar·
gent.
Attending were Margie West,
Alice Wolfe, Margery Roush, Etta
Mae Hill, Sally Caldwell, Opal Diddle, Chris Hill, Lucille .Cardone, Jennifer Walker, Melissa Harkness,
Martha Dudding, Nadine Euler, Marilyn Bogard, Clara Mae Sargent,
Karen Walker and Lee Lee.
There will be no m~ting it~. May.
•The neltt one will be June 24 at 7:30
'
p,.m.
4'

Tuppen Plain Chu;..h,rChrlll
Pastor: Stanley MincO
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 9:45a.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

Flnt Soatllen Bapllat
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pas10r: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worobip • t0:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Flnt Baptist Clnon:b

Bndbury Cbun:b of Cbrlll
- · Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

UyatU Run liouooua Cbureb
Pastor: Robert Manley
.Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship'-10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday SciVice • 7•30 p.m.

Rutland Clown:b of Cluiol
P~tor : Eugene E: Underw~
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:3.0 a.m., 7 p.m.

Laurel Clllf FrH Mtlbodlol Cbun:h
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
·
Wednesday SciVice - 7:00p.m.

•

Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepon
• Sunilay School · 9:1S a.m. ,
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m. ·
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
lbdne Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Lair}' Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron·Young
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
W010hip-10:40i.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7:00p.m.

Bradfofod Cltorell or Cbrlst
Comer ofSI. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Minisler: Michael Teagarden ·
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W~dnesday Sel'\'1cts • 7 : ~ P· ~:

Uberty Cbri!llu Cbun:h
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service · 6:30p.m.

ML Union Bapll!l
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sun"ay"Schooi·9:4S a.m.

l.onpvlllo Cbrlsllan Cburob
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
... Wednesday Service. 7:3.0 p.m.

Evening-6:30p.m.

llelblehtm Baptist

Htmlock Grove Chureb
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday "'hoot· 10:30 a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

Raclne, OH

PaStor : Daniel Berdi~
Worship. 9:30,a.m. Sunday
Bible Study · 7:00p.m. Wednesday

;

Phone 555-1~

.

Seller's Inc.

Antlr Bros. Co.

Phont111JS.o2211

"-aU31
IEatlllllllld 11113'

Etll~llhltl1100

~1895 ·.

80 Years

78·Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Phone 555-6782
Establlalled 1915

Phoness5-a42
Eltablllhld 1917

70 Years

67 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

Rutload Fm Will Bllpliol
SOlem St
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
SundaySchooi·IOa.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
· Wqlneoday Service•- 7 P·~ ·

Years ·52 Years

Phone 555-9988
Estabtlahad 1935

Pltont 55&amp; 1515
Ettaltllahlll 1141

Catholic

Ball Security Bonds

Sacred Heart Catbolk Chureh
161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, 992-5898
· pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat Om. 4:45-5 :15p.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9. 1S a.m.,
.
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m. ·

Phone 555 15it7

Etllllllllhad 1843

44 Years

40 Years

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M L.and--.u
-~n.ll9

Pttont S55-4m
&amp;WIIIIhltl1t51

30 Years

Sulton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School : 9•30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:45 a.m. (hi &amp; 3rd Sun)

EutLttart
Putoi: Brian Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Trinity Church
' Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Rolalid Wildman
Sunday school •.nd worship 10: ~

Episcopal
•

• Holy Eucharisrand
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
Coffee h1our following

Joppa
Paslor: Bob Randnlph
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Lun1 Bollom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Reedsvlllt
Pastor; Rev. Charles Mash
Worship· 9:30 .a .m.
Sunday School - I0:30a.m. •
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Tuppen Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.
Ctnlral Cluoler
Albury (Syn-=-l
Pastor: Charles Neville
. Sundiy.School - 9:45a.m.

.,{

Raclnt .
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - I 0 a.m:
Worship · II a.m.

Coolville United Mtlbodlll Parish
PastOr: Helen Kline
Coolville Cbun:h
Main &amp; Fifth St
Sunday School - 10 a.in.
Worship. 9 a.m.
Tuesday SerVices - 7 p.m.

,! ~

Middleport Ptnlecoslal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Re\1 , Clark Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syrocuse Fl~l Unllod l'nsbylerlan .
· Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship .· 11 a.m.

Sy·r oc.,.. Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service(.• 7 p.m.
.... \
-4~
{
},
· Haul Commualty C.urdl
O!fRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday .School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Churob
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
.

Seventh -Day Adventist
Scvenlb-Day Adveollsl
Mulberry His. Rd ., Pom&lt;roy
· Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship · 3 p.m. · · ·

Mom Cboptl Cbun:b
Sunday school • I 0 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Htrmon Unhed Bretbrtu
Ia Christ Cbun:b
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor~ Robert Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen-ices· 7:30p.m.

Faith Gosptl Cburib
Long Bottom
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- I0:45a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

HocklniPOrt.Chun:h
Orand Streel
Sunday School • 10 a.in.
Worship . 11 a.m .
WedOesday Services - 8 p.m.

MI. Olive Community Cbun:b
PaSior: Lawrence ~ush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
WCdneday Service · 7 p.m.

Ton:h Cbureh
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship • I 0:30 a.m.

Eden United Brtlbren In ChrJSI
2 112 miles north of Reedsv ille
on State Route 124
Pastor : Re'v. Robert Markley .
Sunday School . II a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesdcty Services · 7:30p.m.
Wc~nesda y Youth Service-7:30p.m.'

Unlled Follb Chun:b
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·PA"
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
.wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Radnt Flnl Cbwrell oft.. NIZirene
Pastor: Scott Rose
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

.

' Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.ln .
Worship . 10 a.m.

D)'•••llle Community Cban:b
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

llelbtl Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 10 a.m.

7 p.m.

Full Gosptl Llghlbou"
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy

Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E"ening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday • 7:30p.m.

Middleport Chun:b of the Nazaront
·
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship . 10•30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Soulb
· '

llel~el

New Ttstament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Rftdsvllle Fello.,shlp
Cban:h oflbe Nazarene
Paslo~: Mark A. Duple•
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

·'

Pastor: Bill Stires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational ChuMh
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jdf Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship Sc:rvice 10:30 a.m.
Worship Service-1st and 3Jd Sunday, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evening Service

Pomeroy Chun:b or lilt Nororene
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School • g:30 'a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
. Wednescl;ly Services. 7 p.m.

. Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 7

Syn.cu.w Cburcb of the Nazarene

p.m.

•

25 Years ·20 Years ·

Med..Care Center Inc. Trlskett Party Center
Phone 555 8855
Eltllll1illttl1ies

•

Cbesltr
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

~Eve ning -

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Middleport Commually C.ur&lt;b
575 Pearl St, Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School I 0 a.m.
. Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7JO p.m.
'
Faith Taberna&lt;lt Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Mora1n1 Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9 :45 a.m.
· WOBhip. 10:30 a.m.
Thursd~y Services- 7:30p.m.

Alfred
Pastor : Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
wo.. hip. II a.m., 6:30 p.ni.

Pentecostal
Pealtc01lal Auomhly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
~astor: William Hoback
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Endllme House or Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship· 10 a._m.
Wednesday service - 6:30 p.m.

Carmol
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Scliool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship -I 0:45a .m. (2nd &amp; 41h Sun)

N~rtbeast .aosler

• ~

'.

Bet bony
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

..

New Uft Vlctury Centtr
·
3773 Georges Creek Road, Oallipolis;Otl
Paltor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services ~ 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m, · •
· Wednesday· 7 p.m ..&amp; Youth 7 p.m. :

HarrlsoavUie Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday -·7 p.m.

Snowvllle
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

y · 7 p.m.

Clift• Toberaaclo Chun:b
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Se rvice~ 7 p.m.

11le BeU..trs' Followsblp Mlnlltry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2'30 p.m.

Salem Ceater
'Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School- .9:" a.m ;
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

.

Cbureh or Jeous Cbrist,
Apostolic Fallb
1/4 mile-pasi Fort Meigs on New Uma Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00 p.m.

Fallb Full Gospel Cbun:b
LongBottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
· Wednesdar - 7 p.m.
.
Friday · fellowship service 7 p.m.

Rutload
Sunday School - 9•30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thutsday Services· 7 p.m.

Mel1• &lt;;oo~nll&gt;e Parish

Congregational

· Pastor: Neil PR&gt;U&lt;!fool ·
Sunday School- 9•30 •·II'·
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~dpesday SciYites • 7 p.ni.

..

MI. 011.. United Metbodl!l
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Past'or: Rev. Ralph .Spires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

·\ · CheS,ef Cbun:b or (iod
'S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chester
Pastor: Rev. William 'D. Hinds
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
.
Worship · 6 P.·m.;
·
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fam1ly Training Hour

f G111&lt;t EpiKopal C.•n:b .
-i 326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
~ctor: R.e\1. D. A. duPiantier

Sl. Paul Lulb"'"' Cbun:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Seco.nd St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday S&lt;hool ·9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Gr11bom United Mtlhodlll.
Worship-9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Churdl of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St Rt 160
Pastor: P.l . Chapman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship ~ II a.m.
• . Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

1

United Methodist

\ Syracuse First Chun:b or God
..;.
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
SUnday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
f Eveni,-.g Services- 7:30p.m.
' ~ednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

,_"'!'
Chr&lt;ll of C.riat
212 W. Moin St.

Eatabllahacl 1155

I '

Rullud Cbun:h or God
Pastor: Gregory L. Sears
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
~ednesday Se~ices· - 7 p.m.

Church of Chnst

Phone 555 5t5i4

'

Church of God

Dailey Mass-8:30a.m.

50

I

MI. Morlab Cbur&lt;b or God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Anllqully Baptl!l
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOIShip -10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Eallblllhtcl11!3t

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

I

,

Rock S!'!"!P
Pastor: Kellh Rader
. Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhif • 10 a.m.
.Youth Fellowsh1p, Sunday - 6 p.m.

~'

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David Mt;:Manis
Sunday School - tt· a.m.
·worship. 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craie. Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · .10:45 a.m.

l'hllnl555 ....

lfTo

0

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Bible Study Tuesday • 10 a .~ .

wo:z - 9a.m.

Rtjoiclag Urt Cbon:b
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: l.awren~ Foreman
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Serv ices •.7 p.m.

Hoboon Chrlstlon Fellows hip Chureh
ReV. Oyde Henderson
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30 p.m. ·
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7: ~0 p.m.

Pomeroy ·
Puror: Roben 1!. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.

Wed

Sllvtnvllle Word or Fallb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Scho0l 9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

CUtollao ........,p c.....
Salem St., Rutland
Puror: Robert E. Mumr
Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
Worship · II :IS ,a.m.• .7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

PloarlChapol
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship . tO a.m.

Our Sa&gt;lour Lullatr11a Cbun:b
. Wal(lut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
'"'··"" .,.lnlrimtpasiQO:"'George C. Weinck
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Chnstian Union

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. "

Phone 555-9245
Elllblllhed 1925

60 Years

'

Faltb Baptist Chureh
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I 1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

75

Sl. Jollo Lutbena Chwrdl
Pine Grove
Pas1or: Dawn Spalding
Worship · 9;00 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

I

Hlllllldt BaJ,Miol Chuldo
., St. Rl. 143Jusr·off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rtv. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- lla.IJ!., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

FOrest Hill Clepners

Lutheran

Reedsillio Chon:b of Cbrlst
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
W•lnhipScrvice: 10:30 a.m.

Old llethtl FrH Will Baptlot C.ureh
2860t Sr. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
.
Evening - 7:.30 p.m.
1
·~ J&lt;J Thursday ServiQCIS - -9~» r .

100 Years 95 Years · 92 Years

Tbe Cbun:b of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Salnll
S1. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10•20-ll a.m.
Relief Sociely/Prl.esrhQQ\1 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-JO:lS a.m.
Ho~emaking meeting, ht Thurs. ~ 7 p.m.

.'

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

VIctory Bapllslllldependanl
525 N. 2nd St Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - IOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rtorpnlzed Cltarcb or JHUJ Cbrlst
of Latter Da7 S.IDII ·
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W010hip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Calvaf1 Bll&gt;lo Oon:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7•30 p.m.

Other Chu rches

Mboen&gt;lllt

Latter-Day Saints

Fallb Ftllowoblp Cnuacle tor 0r111 ·
Paslor: Rev. Frankl in Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

New Hnfa Chlli'C.. of the Nau"ae .
p......, Olendon Stroud
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Wonllip . 10: 30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday·Scrvicea . 7 p.m.

Pastor. Ch.ules Neville
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worobip • to a.m.

Rutland Communll!' Churell
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCArty
·--sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Eveni"' - 7 p.m.
Wedne;day Scf)lices • 7 p.m.

Hldrory Hills Cburdl of Chrlsl
Evangtlist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10a.m., ·7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'ices - 7 p.m.

Sll..r Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill .Lillle
Sunday School • IOa.m.
Worship· lla.m., 7:30p.m.
· Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

o.,

Weoleyaa Bible H - Clnn:h
75 Pearl Sr., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school • 9:30 o.m.
Woiihip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

l'ortlud flnt Cbun:b of lbe NIIUftae
Putor: Mark Matson
Worship · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday SciVices. 7 p.m.

""' ·

Dado (Middleport)
Putor: Vemapye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip - 1~: 30 a.m.

1/2 mile o!f Rl. 325
PISior: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9•30 a.m.
WOBhip - t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

' . Zloll C.wn:b ofCbrlll
Pomeroy, Harrioonville Rd. {RI.I43)
Pas1or: Roger w,tson
Sunday School • 9::)0 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

•

Pulor: Charles Neville
Sunday School • tO i.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
11nndaf Scrvicea • 6:30 p.m.

Fairview lllblt Cborcll
Letart, W.Va. Rl. I
Puror: Rankin Roach
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
• Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servico • 7:00 p.m.

•holor: Samuel Balye
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea- 7 p.m.

Pallor: Ktilh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WOBhip • II a.m.

w..,_

Coolville lload •
Puror: Rev. Phillip Rio:Jeoour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Wt dne.day Service • 1 p.m.

~OiftllelllatNa• ••

Flatwoods

• ForntR••

Willie's CUpol

, _ , Rev. !Iemen Grote
Sunday School ' 9:30 aJII.
Wonhip -II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedrieoday Service• - 7 p.m.

ra-: Kt!ih Radel
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WO!'hip • 9 a.m.

Plae Gron Bible HoU.... C.orcb

~.

Pvmeny Flnt Baptlot
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip.• I0:30a.m&gt;

- 4-- -Community calend.ar--The Community Calendar Is
published 115 a free service to nonprofit groups wisbin&amp; to unounce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to promote ·
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed 115 space permits . and cannot he paranteed to run a
specific number of days.

Wonhip • 10::)0 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 p.m.

P.utor: Les Hayman

----------

--

PasiOr: Jack Colegrove

Sunday School -9::l()' a.m.

1

Sundoy Service· 7:30p.m.
Sunday School·· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvice-7:30 p.m.

---

ors..,..

R...
Hoi!MuCDreb
l.codina Cleek Rd., Rullond
Putor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday lcllool- 9 :30 a.m.
Sunday wonhip •7 p.m.
Wednesday payer rneetina- 7 p.m.

Jlearwollow Rldtlt Ckortb ofCiortal

F.... WW Baptist Chn:b
Ash Street, Middleport

Jl,utlud FirSt Baptist Cb.,..b
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

-------

Col&gt;ary l'llpta CUptl
Han-ville Road
Pallor: Rev . Victor Rouoh
Sunday School9•30 a.m.
Worobip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc:noice • 7:30 p.m.

· : Ktao Cban:b ofCIIrlat
Worship - 9:30a.m.
· Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Ill and 3rd Sunday

.

-----

IJ • • • •
a..nt
31057 StaleR- 325, Lanpvlle
Pallot: Rev. Rid&lt; Maloy&lt;d
Swlday ldlool - 9:30a.m. ·
Sunday wonllip - 10:35 Lm. It ?p.m.
Chikll&lt;n'a churdl • 10:3' a.m. Youlll6 p.m.
Wednelday payer aervice . 7 p.m,

1

Hope Ball!lll C.~~~=-n)
570 Grant St,
a.m:
Sunday school •
Worship · I I o.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

C....:.. a-da of !lot N -

Worship . II a.m. ·
Wednnday Service• ·7:30 p.m.

33226 Clilldnon'a Home Rd,
Sunctoy Schdlol • I I a.m.
Wonllip • IOLm., 6 p.m. .
Wednesday Sc:noica. 7 p.m.

M'dd' port C'Hrdl Dl Drill
51h and Main
PallO&lt;: AI Hartson
Youth Ministtr: Bill Frazie r
Sunday Sdlodl-&lt;'9:30 a.m.
Wollhip- 8:15, I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

. Be A Part Of
The Daily Se,.tinel's

Get yourself going with breakfast

,_.,•.,., w - oorc~~ ofCiu1ot

Apostol,c

P. J..PAULEY1 AGENT

Crystal Glass Co.

Phoni 555 Da7
Ellllllllhld 1170

•.'" "" ... ...

Nationwide Ins. Co. . ~
of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
·
992-2318 Pomeroy
.'i!. )

.Pitont 555-~
Ettallllehtd.1fll

HAVE YOUR BUSINESS LISTED%
The '~Honor RoU" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th~dition ~f
'
The Daily Sentinel.
The Cos~ Is Only·$12

......

:•··~',\•

•

.•'
'
808EAST

CLASSifiED ADS
' a supermarket
for evefYthlng

SNOUFFER
FIRE 6 SAFETY
SAl ES 6 SERVICE
. . .7075
172 Nottll Stcond Avt.
llkltlll;olt, Ohio

GRAVELY TRACTQR SALES

·204 Condor st.

~

We Fill Doctors'

992-2975

. .
Presc~ptlons
,
992·2955
. Pomeroy

RAwUNGS ·COATS

FISH~R

FUNERAL HOME
992-5141 ..
214 South 2nd

Mlcldl"*'

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-$i677
BILL QUICKEL

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
. . P.~ARMACY •

Pomeroy, OH

YGu.'U be floating on a

'

.,

'

•

Homelite Sf~Ws

Craw's Family
Restaurant
"FtatNring Kenrucky Fritd Chicktn"
228W. Main St, Pomeroy

992-5432
EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"

ck?ud with the buys ·

you'll find in the ·
classifieds.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

·

Establisbed.1913
992~2121

106 Mullieriy Ave,

•

,,

Pqmeroy

214 E.
992-5130

Main

Pomeroy

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
11 ~ E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
.
992-2104

..

�•

Page 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

.

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 3, 1 -

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The o.lly Sentinel• P~~ge I

San Francisco's·new $134 million library signals national renaissance
By ELLEN HALE

, . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . _ - , debale.

Lcs$ than a c~etlde
When !he
_ _ _ ........ ....,..
ago, !hese public facilities
New Main Library opens on the 90th
were huning bldly as local
anniversary · Gf the earthquake !hat New llbrw'- In big cit••
.-. •..• _ .. ~.-governments eunailed hours
. the most l1t ·- ... ·...' ·-·- I IJ" .., ___... I -· - · , . and cut back on pun:hasing
nearly destroyed t his c1ty,
'"
whiz-bang (ibrary in !he country will
books and materials. Experts
feared libraries would fall
signal a nationwide renaissance in
public libraries.
1-t
hopeles$ly behind in !he rapidAt a time cities are stretched for
,..:.,..
.... ~
ly moving infonnalion age.
dollars and when some prize the
1~
jr
Nowhere was the
001
0
virtues of a virtual world more !han
- - ....
impact more painful !han in
those of the real, a flood of new con·
California, where recession hit
Slruction and renovations has .put to Ub&lt;ery •e - e ~'"""'-~:;:,;, .J--..,;
so bitterly. Since !hen, howevrest predictions !he public library is ::zr~':lf,~"'
er, new libraries have opened
becoming extinct.
,,._ ..in Los Angeles and Sacramen. Last year, new ~ntral libraries
,... -~-•tletmto, and have been approved in
:::,O~.r.' ,_._ '...smaller towns like Santa Cruz.
opened in San Antonio, Phoenix and
Denver, among olher cities, and wi!h
"People are .realizing
overwhelming voter support new ones
!hal libraries are one of the
are being built or planned in Clevefew commu~ity gathering
land, Portland.. Oklahoma City and
places left in !his country elsewhere.
and the only place left where
· Smaller communities, too, are raisno money changes hands,"
ing money for new suburban libraries,
said 'Linda Wallace, director of
and branches are being spruced up. A
public infonnation ·for the
year ago, voters here passed a resolu,._
library association .in Chicago,
tion !hal prohibils closing any branch· :--::,. :ti'Z:."Z.:::-·~
~:'
where a new library opened
=--~---·
five years ago.
es - or even cutting their hours.
"Renaissance is the word I use to L----------:-----.,......,.-_..__...,:•:-:.:-:=.;•:::'"="~::.:-==-'"::-1
A uniquely .American
describe it," said Betty Turock, presi·
.
institution- conceived when Benjamin Franklin began a system of sharing
dent of !he American Library Association and professor at Rutgers Uni'Ver- .books with friends -!he public library always has been enonnously valued.
sity. "It's !he most exciting lime I can remember."
·
Unlike o!her countries, where libraries either are attached to schools or'
Why the country is re-embracing public libraries is a topic .of some charge admission, the American public library is free and available to all. In

-SAN FRANCISCO -

A renaissance in Hbraries '

r·

u..-

.

.

Ponchot to speak
Bob Ponchot of Vineland, N.J.
will · be the guest spea)&lt;er during a
revival at the Gallipolis Christian
Church, SR 588. The will revival
will be May 5 lhrough 9 wi!h ser·
vices 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m., Sunday
and 7 p.m., Monday through Thursday. A nursery will be provided for
eqch service.
·· Ponchot is the director of evangelism for Sou!h Jersey Evangelism.
The organization has established

DeForest of NASA and Stanford
University.
The bases of the plumes are 1.5
times as wide ~ the ~h's dia~eh
ter. Understandmg the p umes, w c
flic(cer 93,()()() miles OUI from the
sun's surface, also may offer clues to
another puzzle: why the sun's corona is I million to 10 million degrees
centigrade while the sun i!self is only
6,000 degrees centigrade. ·

at week-long revival

Constant changes in the magnetic

three churches in New Jersey in the
past ten years. They ·lllso established
the Smyrna Church of Christ in
Smyrna, Del. in 1977.
Ponchot has written and recorded
several songs and has published two
books of scripture songs entitled,
"Sing His Word.'' Ponchot and his .
wife live in Vineland and have three
children. Their oldest son is an evangelist for Sou!h Jersey.
Special music will be presented

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

To Be Published
Friday, May 10

1x3 Greeting • S1 o.oo

fields atthe base ofthe plumes probably contribute to the greater ternperature, Deporest sa1'd.
Meas~n:menls made ~ adwi~e
range o anstruments a oar · t e
spacecraft are expected tO help SCi·
entisiS solve many of Sol's mysteries.
"By being able to combine so
many instrumenls and make movies
of !he sun, we can understand ils features in entirely new ways," DeFor-

1x5 GI'Htlng
with Picture • $13.00

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)'

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

I

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)
LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND
SUSAN

Deadline For Thi&amp; Special
Mother'l Day Tribute Ia ·
Monday, May 6, 12 Noon.

(PLEASE PRINT oi' TYPE)

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
f

YOUR NAME(S)

YOUR ADDRESS:

CITY, STATE:

.

.

.

FREE ES"nMATES

•Siding
·Roofing .
•PIIfntlng
I'RI!I UTIIIATES

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs old..
SerVice U
(619) 654-8434

Public Notice

mey-Rlil a complaint .. aitll,
lime ell8r lha expiration ot
lhe 10 deya wllh DCA (••
Partn~rahlp Act (JTI'A) In llddreaa ebow). If you 111
admlaelon or accaae to, dlautlal.lad with the
opportunity or II'Himanlln, I'ICiplenl'e rllolutlon of
or employment In lhe your complaint, you may
edinlnletretlon of or In lila • complelnt ·wttt~ DCA.
aoniiiGtlcn wllh, any JTPA • Such complelnt muet be
funded program. II you 1111111 wttllln 30 .deya of tha
think you · heve b11n data you IICIIvad notice of
eubjiiCIIId lo dlacrtmlnlllon the reclplenl'e propoaed
In a progrem operatlld by IIIOiullon.
tlllai'ICipianl, you may lilt a (S) 3; 1TC
complaint wllhln 180 daye
from lhe dill of the aiiiiQIId
vlolllllon wllh the reclplent"a
In Memory
Equal Opportunity Otllcar
or tha pareon. dHign~tlld
lor lhla' propoaa, or you
SHEWJO.tND
may Ill a eomplllnt directly
BRIANNAHIU
wllh the · Director,
Dlrectoreta of Civil Rlghtl
It~ beimfive year•
(DCR), u.s. Department ot
tince you were . ·
1.8bor, 200 Conatltutlon
AVenue NW, Room N-4123,
taken away.
W.hlngton, D.C. 2021 o. II
you elect· 10 1111 your Oh oo~ we w~h ·
complaint wllh the
could've atayed
raclrlant, you muet well
You meant so much ·
==~~~ ~~t'l: :;u;:,.:
to everyone you
have ,....,., whichever Ia
knew We love you
-""· before llllnO with
Slu!Ui and the lime.
DCR.IIIhe recipient haa not
provldld JOU with • written
we spent with you.
declelon within 80 dap of
the tiling of the complaint, Oh how we were
bkssedbyyou
-----=========~---., 1daclelon
you nelldlo not
welt forb..r•
be letued,
AUCTION
. everyday
SATURDAY MAY 4TH 10:30 AM
But you were taken
From Ripley WV, take 33 west to 87 . Go west thru
away that one day
Evans to Donaghue Rd. Signs posted.
in May.
Engines- Tractor- Antlquea- Toole· Mowen·
Sadly lnved and
Collectlblee &amp; Household.
mi.ued by your
ENGINES: 8·Maytag Kickstart &amp; 2 double cylinder
specialfrienm.
engines, 3· .J to 5 HP engines, 2- 1 11:1 to 2 1/2 Hp
engines, lawn mowers, tillers, motors, new 8 HP
4400 generators.
TRACTOR: 1952 Farmall (w/reserve), Gravely 816
T mower, w/rotary plow &amp; cultivator (w/reservef
''
ANTIQUES - HOUSEHOLD I COLLECTIBLES
.Oak 5 legged rope twist Harvest table, wal grand
Conlnldor with over 30
VCR Sick?
lather clock, Emporer double dial w/moon. lace,
years experience now
fancy deprassion stand, 4 stone jars, cheese
. ca11 Qulck
available for aU ljpes of
barrell, cream separator, doma top trunk, gas
COY'S VCR
New Homn, Garages,
heatars, records, green glass jar w/2 holas, lantern,
REPAIR
Additions, Baths,
good Whirlpool refrigerator, good upright fraazar,
992-4SC)7
Klldlens, Decks, Siding,
haaters, sewing machine, hot plate, ,Coleman
ROors elc.
stove, 90,000 gas furnace &amp; air cond, dishes, dolls,
Ill jell to_. or to large.
bilsk~3t, cream pale, Avon, stareo, saddle, glider,
Conlad }lodney Howery
box's mise items. more c:OIIectiblas &amp; · othar
594-3780 days, 698-7231
furniture.
· evenlnpor
TOOLS· Tractor &amp; tire chains, 3· Skill saws, Benet!
grindar, Craftsman belt sander, bloc;k plane, waed
eater, drill bites, big drill, hatchats, tool box,
hammers, drills, levels, hand saws, chain binders, 1
SPARKlES
112 ton chain holst, cen hook, shovels, rakas,
matticks, axe, 3-log chains, 12x12 anny tent, mise
ELECTRIC
hand tools, pipe fittings, lots &amp; lots mora mise tools
'
&amp; items;
Serving all Your
Paul King Owner
ELE&lt;;:TRICAL
· AUCTIONEER· Patrick Blosaer #599
needs
1·900..990..3737
Tarms: Cash or chack
Phone
b:t. 2261
304·863-~95 FAX 304-428·7245

.

MAXECIIEcKPAYABLETC&gt;1HEDAO.YSENITNEL

614-992-5048

.

L-----~------------------••

....
...

Free Bstimales

lr~~~,1~o~~~~~w=m=t=~~~----,l~~~~~~~::==~==~~. :

•

FIND
SATISFACTION!

Through·a uve
Personal Psychic!
1·900-255-osoo
Ext. 4009
$3. 99 per min.
~ust be 1s Yfl·

Sa~~S:9J.
\

.IWV010212

40

GlveawiiY

70

Yard Sale

.liNN

I

Mobile Home Heating•&amp; Cooling
Slrvlng S.E. Ohio a WMt Vlrglnl8
FrM 1-ICJ0.872-5867
ue

LIVE!

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Weklng Supplies• Industrial Gases • Madlihe Shop
ServiCes • Steel Sales &amp; FabriceUon • Repair Welding
· • Alumlnuril/Stalnle8s • Tool D~g • 0!!1\!rnental
Stepa -Stairs, Raltings, Patio·Fumnura, Fli'eplace
nams, Plantar hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of othai stutfll

- Ext. 644s

.................. :.............$3.50-$9.95
Garanlums ..., ......... ...$1.00 &amp; Up
........................... 10 Of l1'lQr8 ~
Azalaas ................... $4.95-$6:95
Rh!)dodendrons ...............$12.95
Shlubs &amp; Trees ..... $2.96-$10.95
Open Dally 9 a.m.' 5 p.m.
Sunda~~B 5 p.m.

HELP!!! We need a few
,
good people to assist
persons with MRIDD with
dally Jiving skills. Various
positions.available.
·Call1-800.:531·2302.

lor lmmw't ' ln.arHrllon•
I'NI l!ltlmiiiM

•Aemodtll~

Alre~~ !f~talr

1·900-446-1414

~pl:rtl~c~lpal;l:on~
II~~=~~o~r
i
funded under
b
T1'111nlng

FUI'IIIDII All lq'ljlnr.ntln IIOok

•Newcaar....-

. with , . ,.,. • UfVIce to backlt up

Talk to Beautiful
Girls

Public Notice

~~~a~nd~Menur.cturecl
Hou•lng
--Air COtdb ..... Heel Pumpe, :

-Hiwllo!Me
•AdclldOIII

" Must be 18 'yrs
Serv-U 619 645-8434

. 985 4473

Live 24 Hrs a ci8y

12 in Hanging Basket Ferns
$10.95
.
Combination
Pots !

'

MOTH6R'S NAME:

.

Stop a Compare

'
CHAT LINE

TO·TILKIII ·

r----------------------~--,
CIRCLE ONE A. IX3 GREETING -· $10.00
B. 1X5 GREETING w/PICTURE••.$13.00 I

~~

Re~lng

eu..•·:··· ,,,
COinaucTIOI

_

oue

(6 14) 441-119 1
1-800-508-8887
. • Top • Trim • Rep~oval

CARPENTER SERVICE

•Rooin Addition•
•NawGeragas
•Eiactrtcal 6 Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior a Exterior
·Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

SPORTS/
::
ENTERTAINMEtn
PICKS, SPREADS,
'
l '
,FINANCE
HOROSCOPE,,SOAP •·:
RESULTS
••
1·900-7711-2526 EXT.
. 5861
$2.911 par min
Must be 18 yra. '
Serv-U (819J 854 8434

15 VIS. Exp. UC. • Ins. Dwnef: Rick Johnson

Free E1timates

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Ohio

Cheater, Ohio '
21563 BAIHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
949-3013 Phone
949-201 I FAX

,••.•

POGLIRftiD

Talk llna to oui gifted
psychics on quaslions of

WHITE PINE.ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x8,1x8,2x4,2x8
8'·10' 30h ft.
14'·18' 35¢. ft.
. Alao available
4x4'a-4x6'a
811-985-4107 .
614-742-3337

love, success, care, soul

males, seH-help and
more. ·
. 1·900-255-0500
Ext. 3505
' $3.99 per min.
Muat be 1B yrs.
SeiY·U (619) 645-6434

G &amp; W PWnCS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Tuppel'll Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 61.w&amp;7-MB4
Plastic Culven' Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D . perf. . solid pipe
4" &amp; 6"' Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2"' &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4:' &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. wa~rpipe (100' roll's thru 1,000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I"' thru 2". 11itrings ·Regulators- Risers
Full assonrrient orP.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water linings
tine or Cistern, Septic &amp; Wat.er storage tanks.

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

. LA'l'N (;ARE
• Traa Trimming
• Mowing (Residential .
~ comrnarclal)
4!. Shrubbery~""'-~~.,.......

., '""'

: Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request
: No Lawn Too Large or
·
TooSma/1

;plan Ahead, Call Todayl
. 742-2803 .

Howard Excavatin
Trucking ~

All Kinds of Earth Work

-

LIIID#'S
PAIII'IlNG

DATE
LINE

,. . .

JlmiiOI·EiTIIIOI

..................••llo...It

.'(ou; S.•theart as

FREE ESTI""TES
~~

-

H&amp;H

992·3838

I

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
· Top Soil, Fill Dirt

.:-----.. . . .,. !::::::::::~::.
N;
, Howard L Wrlteael

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
~utter•

t ,DoWr!apauta
Guttar Cleaning
~
· Palming
FRE;E E~'i'IMATE$
949-2168

5/1&amp;'94 TFN

New At lnetes llemonies
'

ladle lllaeli Deai~r
Your favorite artist
·on Tape or CD

614·992-3470

.. .

IEAUnFUL WOMEN :
AlE WAmNG TO
IlEAl FROM
YOU NoWJU

Da:te-Line

'

1as·N. 2ncl Ave., Middleport

No argum~ntsl
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
.your choice.

1-900-448-1414

Ext. 43.oa:

:112&amp;'1ntO.pd

992·2825
113111fn

BIB ROOniD and ·
' COIS,RUC7101

1-90()-988-6988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.

$3.99 per min.
Muetbe18 yrs•
Serv.IJ (619.) 645-8434

Residential

~

commercial

Roofing ~ · Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complata Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms -Kitchens - Siding

Must be 1Byrs.
Se~U(619)645-8434

New24 hr.
Dateline
Meet 1he Man or Wom!ln
ot your Dreams Never
• be lonely again.

35 Years Experilmce

(614) 992·2364

1·800·889·3943

· CALL NOW
- 1-9&lt;10·988-6003
~ Ext. 1021
$2.~ par min.
~ust be 1Byrs.
Serv-u (614) 645-8434 .

Ham

&amp; Turkey Dinner

na
Pick-up dlec:arded

Sunday, May 5th
at Southam High Sqhoot
from 11 :00 am-2:00 pm
Take-out ordars available.
' Sponsored by Southern Jr. High
.
Adults - $4.75 , •· . ..
;.
Chlldran - $3.50
Manu: Ham, Turkay, Noodlas,
r,4aahad P9tatoes, Green Baaf1S •.
Slaw, Rolls, Dessert, Tea. Cotrea.

GARAGE SALE
4 mi. aaet ot Racine on SR 124.

Saturday 8-5
Clothes, pOrch S\ylng,
~¥~t~que water pump, m.lsc.

batlertee, appltance!J '&amp; ·
'

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal- Commercial or Residential
Saptlc Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollats Rented.
Daily, wHidy &amp; monthly rental rates.

wr OFFER GENERAL HAULING
.

· Llmaatone, Sand, Graval, Coal &amp; Water

meny metlla.
614-992-4025 '
aam-apm

·: NEFF REMODELING
' '

,. ·-,

'

'I

I

•

S~RVICE

-

· · HouuRa;elr•
Ramodellrig
I
KitChen &amp; &amp;lh
Rtmodellng
Room AddHione
Siding, ROoting, Pall01 .
RIIAOIIIbll
lnalnl't ·EIIparllnaad

,.,,.,....,.....
Clll Weyl,illllllf

812 4408

Something For Everyone!

Thu". Fri. Sat,

(On Back Porch) May 3rd, 41h.
Carmichael Drive 011 Of Jackson
Pk ., Acrou From John Deere

Bldg. lota Of Ewrythlngl
13'1 -~yrtle Avenue, Route_ 1

Norlh, Fr' Sat, Sun. Clothe~ K•d•
Some Largo And Misc.

~un,

10·3, 8·40

Clean Late Uodel Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer;
Sini1h Bu ick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern All'enue, Gallipolis.

.'

Seccmd Avenue , Acron library.
Many Items, Clothing, Household
Items.
Two Family: Toys, Clolhea, What·

J &amp; D's Auto Parrs. Buying sal -·
wge vehicles. Selling parts. 304713-5033.
•

Saturday, 9-? 24 Central Averue.

Non-Working Washers, Dryers..-;
Ranges, Refrlgeratora, Freezeri,
Air Cond itio.ners, Calor T.V: a,·
VCR"s, Also Junk Cari, 814-256-

~o!S , loll Of Good loa, Friday,

Pomeroy,

1238.

•

Top Prices Paid; Old U.S. Col~•. ·
Silver, Gold , Diamonds, All Old
Collectibles. Paperwalghls; Etc.
, .T.S. Coi n Shop , 151 Second

&lt;

Used furn.i ture- antiqUes. o ne :
piece or c;omplete esta tes, al so •
do appraisals. Osby Martin,
992-7441.
•

eu. ·
'

.

•

HAULING

'
32124 Happy HOllow
Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Pegg~larickles
614-7~2·:r,!93 TFN

nu Dark,

EMPLOYMENT

'

BfiiHisaw'MIR

Road, 9:00

(No Sunday Calls)

WICKS

' .Portlllile

H~ l s

614~92-7643

(Lima StoneLow Ratee)

SAWMILL

Gallipolis
&amp;Vl.clnlty

.,.ew Jiomes • Vlny! Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

$2.99 par minute
Muat be 1B yrs old
SarvicaU
619 645-8434

- 61~9854110
'
'

Buckeye

BISSElL BUILDERS, INC.

1·900-988·8988
Ext. 6733

VERY IUSOIAILE
'
HAVE IIFIIEIICES

Thu 's 1st. ·Monday 5th, 2082

A"VJPJe, Galipolis, 61.w46·2tl42 . ..

close as your phone

'

Llmaston•
Bulldozing and
Backi'\Oe ,
Service•
Housa Sitae and.
Utilities

949-2512

985 4422

Psychic-lin.e

IAIUl~ .,

•

UCINE HYDUULIC ·REPAIR
&amp; (OCHINE ·sHOP, INC.

Llmeatone • Gravel
·D irt•Sand

11112.ft1s

Pomero~

• Stump Grinding

ReL. HOLLON
TRUCKING

.YOUNGf$

&amp; WILLIIIG · ·

and

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
'

•

•Complete

$6.75~

Public Notice

•

SMI'III'S

AnRACTIVE

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

·

•GarllgM

'

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND
SUSAN

•NtwHomn

Chat-Una
Hey Guyslll Your
special girl is waiting
to hear from you !I
24 Hours A Oayll
Call now
1-900-446·1414
Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min.

,
We will work w~hln your budgat ·
Ph. 773:8173
FAlC 773-5881
108 Pomaro Street
MasOn, WV

H.....ds Gret..DIIt.

NOTICE OF PUIUC
• c q u I • tl 0 'n
• nd
HEARING
Improvement•, damolllton
Metge County lntenda to of uneell atructurn, end
apply to .the Ohio reheblllte·tton
of
o.pertment.ol Development neighborhood taciHIIea. T1le
lor funding under lht. ectlvlll••·mu•l bt lllllgnlld
Community Development to primarily benllllllow end
Block Grent (CDBG) Small moderel•lncome peraone,
Cltl" Proorem, a llldlralty· · tid ln lha prevention or
1u n d a d
p r o 0 ra m tllmlnellon of aluma and
admlntalraled by the atilt. blight, or meet an urgent
llelge County le eligible lor nHd ollha community. ,
Flecel Y11r U CDIG
Cltlzana are eneouregtd
Fcrlllule funding, providing lo attend thla mMtlng on
lha county meate eppllceble May 14, 11U to provide
requlremenla.
· their Input on the County
The II rei of two public CDIG program.
hearing• wtll be jlald . lley
Frlld Hollman, Pl'ftldtnt
14, , ... at 7:00p.m. et lha
lllalp County
Malga County Courthouaa .
c - t..loiW'a
lo prolllde clllzena .wfth the (4) 21; (S) 3; 2TC
pertinent tnlormatlon ebout
lhe CDBG progrem
Including en axplenatton of
Public Notice
eligible ecllvltlea end EQUAL OPPORTUNITY IS
progrem raqulremente. The
THE LAW
CDBG Formula prooram aan
lund • broejl · renga of 'thla recipient 11
prohibited
•c tl vIll •• an d Progr.m
.
dlacrlmlnatlng
onfrom
lht
raqulrementa, Including: ground of race, color,
· aco1nomt lc d1eva1topme1nt religion, eax, national
pro tc •· • rea ' wa ar origin, ega, dlllblllty,
aupply, dreln•o• end pollt'--l --llatlon or bella!,
•• n I t • r Y · • • w • r
end ....,
for .,.,
benalleterlaa only,
Improvement.,.•:-....!:-=::.:~~~~-::
80
Public Sale
and Auction

(PICTURE)

The Daily Sentinel

-IITIISSIU
COISTIUCIIOI

"(fo Job Too Large or Too Small"

r.=~~======-r:========~===;;:;~;:~~~1=~;~~~~;;
Public Notice

by Scott Blount,
Song Evangelisl
from Ashland,
Ky. He will also
lead !he congregation in song.
For
more
infonnalion
contact Denny
Coburn, Minister Bob Po,nchot
or Jeff Patrick,
Associate Minister at 446-1863.

Two teams from the same conference first played for the NCAA
basketball title in 1976, Indiana topping Michigan in a Big Ten finale .'

Syracuse
Bedding&amp;,
·
Vegetebla Plant~ ..........$6.50 flat
10 in Hanging Baskets $5.75 &amp;

NASA images shine light on sun's activity.
By TIM FRIEND
said Joseph B. Gunnan of NASA's
USA TODAY
Goddard Space Flight Center in
The sun - supposedly taking a Greenbelt, Md.
nap after II years of sunspols, Oares
The primary purpose of the two-and olher solar activity - is instead year SOHO mission is to study solar
:a restless ball of constant turbulence, plumes and detennine whether they
according to dramatic new images are !he sources of high-speed solar
winds. Ultraviolet movies of the
from !he NASA spacecraft SOHO.
plumes
reveal !heir bases for the first
The Solar and Heliospheric
Obse!Vatm'y, launched in December, time, showing "seething regions of
has begun sending the most higbly wildly gyrating magnetic fields and
detailed images of !he sun ever seen, tutbulent solar gases," said Craig

most places, late book fines still fetch only a nickel or dime a day.
When San FraDCisco's.$134 millioe centrallilnry opens April IS -&lt;luring National Lilnry Week - it will be one of the laraea providers in the
country of free access to !he Internet. With 300 'lecttonic w~ (IIIII
capaeily for 700 more), multi!media desks .and .• center for busi~ IIIII
teChnology, !he New Main is being called the nllllon's most tcchnolopcally
advanced poblic library.
. .
·
Designed by architect James lngo Freed, whose crediiS 1ncl~ the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., the 376,000 square-foot fac11i1y already,
has been called a "palace of democracy" by architecture critics. With a sixstory sky-lighted 31rium, windows, ope~ spao;e and commissioned works of
art throughout, it belies !he notion of libraries as dark and stuffy.
It also features special cllhural research and study 'centers for gay men
and lesbians, blacks, Chinese, the deaf, teens, children and !hose interested
in !he environment and art and music. At !he mulli' media workslalion in the
children's center, a visitor can "hop" a streetcar and ride down Markel
Street as it exist~ tOO years ago.
.
.
(In California style, a cafe wilt serve lalte and espresso; 150 pounds of
dark French roast coffee grounds were used to produce !he Venetian finis~
on !he atrium walls.)
·
Pacing increasing costs and the need to keep up wi!h technological
change, !he new libraries now recognize they need mol)ey beyond taxpayet
support. Aggressive fund-raising fumistied !he Sail Francisco library, whic~
will feature a gift store modeled after one in New York
public library!
which sells everylhing fn/m 50-cent pencils to

JONES'. TREE SERVICE
•'

'

Top, Trim, Removal .
&amp; Stump ~rinding
20 Yeal1 Experience •.lnsu~ed
'

'

Owner:- Ronnie Jones
'•
387-G216 - 1 80CU50.3359

,. ...;._.:.~~-- ~.....:...!.:!!!!~!!!!!~!1!.;........:..:~-~L...J

SERVICES
All Yard Sales Must Be-Paid
Advance. DEADliNE ; 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad is

.run.

Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.

1

Monda~ adhion · 10:00 a.m.

urqay,

�••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frtd8y,lllly 3, 1991

.-,..

ALLEYOOP
UliDOI

'•

-

Home TyptiiS. PC users needed.
$45,000 •nc:ome potenlial. CaH 1-

600·513-434 EXI. B-9368.
Honest dependable pan-lime bar·
1end6r. call 61-t -992· 3679 bAI·
ween:8pm.10pm.

Local Tul Service looking For
DmttrS Male Or Female, 61 • -

446·1091.
No E•perience NecenaryiiSOO
To $900 Weeklr /Potential PIO·
ceu•no t.tongage Refunds. Own
Hou"· Call (90g) 7t5·2300, E ...
1351 , (24 Houts~.

On Dutr Moclocai
Is Act1vely Seek1ng To Recruit
CNAs Who Afe look1ng To Work
Lo ng Term Home Care Cues
Wt,ere You L 1ve -ln And Stay
O'.lermghl In Either 24 Hour. 48
I~ our, Or 72 Hour Shifts . It Pa~s
16 H$Hir! A Day, But An Over night Stay Is Requtred. If lnteresled Please Ca ll Usa Kerson At
1· 000 -ON -DUTY· 2.
Pat1 ·T1me E mploymen1 5 To 9
Telephone Sales Call Between 1 -

Al----~~~in
lllilr•
I par II aubjlclto

"'*"' ,_

. . -F·~~N:J
ol 1988

Mllogoi

Ofl ...... oolor,IOI!glon,
... -alltuOornetlonol
origin, Of any ln1onllon ..
llllkll ony IUCII prt'-ICI.
-llonordlscttmlnoiiOfl;

.......

Thil I 4

45631

The Me 1gs County Counctl on
Agmg , Inc . 1s seeking an RN.
Bac helor Degree preferr(td, fQr
the posi tion o f Long Term· Care
Ass1stan1 Coordinator. Job responsibilities Will include personnet su pervisi on, client assessment and monitoring, health. train-Ing and aging network reports. ~ ·
terested indivtduals should submi t a resume with salary require ·
menls to . C. Susan Oliver, Execu111/C D1rec tor, P.O. Bo• 722, Po meroy, OH 45769 by May 12,
1996 EOEiprovider of servk:es.
Trac to r Tra11er Or~vet E•perience
Necess ary, 614-753-4864, 614·
662-4979.

wlliclllo in violation altho law.
OUr 188detaate herObr
inlotmclcl llroiiM -IIIIIQI
adYertt5ed In this new pspar
are aval&amp;lbfe on an equal
oppc!lunlly 1!9sla..

Uonthly Flea Program Nead
Help? All&lt; JO NORTH PRODUCE

2 Aetet Off 160 AI Port« Nice 1
Bedroom, 2.tb:32 10.110 Shed,

Gran, $36,500, 941 ·5.C3 ...7612,

Ellta Lg. L.A. Eat·ln Kitchen, Locata&lt;l: Gallo, W..r&gt; A1011nd Dod&lt;,
Free Gas With Gallia Water, 614-

gator. 304-675-7783.
..1

DOgs I Catsl ·
Poodle pupp 111 , adull toy, tea ·

1991 Old I Cutlast Cataia, AC,
sun rool, rear defrost, runs &amp;

lookt good, $4,000. 304-87529491991 Conioa Aulomatic,' AC,
1988 Ni11an S.ntra Automatic,
AC, 61 ~ Financing Available,

304-862-fno.

523-11985.

367-7422.

Reg 10mo. old - ·· Chihuahua .1992 Toyota Celicto GT. SO,OOOml.

black &amp; tan. appte ~ type, very
iowble. 30.... 75-1834.

HOUSE FOR SALE

BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good
Condition, New Vinyl Siding, Car·
para Unauached 2 Car Garage
With New Apartment Above. 814·

Unregistered Siberian Husky, 5
month old remate with brown eyes,
lovmo disposition . serious tn qwes ont~. 614-949-2957.

Fuml~hed

450

Rooms

360

House lor sale in Syracu1e, two
bedroom, one bath, on rwo lots,
separate 24JC30 one &amp; 112 story
combination shop and garag_e

570

Mclng. $22,500. Call Butch, 6,_·
992·3994.

lent condition. *1000, S14 -9925276.
Sleepmg rooms Wtlh cookmg
Also tr811er space on t1ver . All
hook -ups. Call aher 2 00 p.m. ,

RENTALS

large famtly room. dOuble Qlf'IOI',

410 Houses for Rent
modeled, includes stove a trash.
Construction workers welcomv.

yard, out of flood area, aakJng

:~&lt;&gt;~ - m-5764

Three bedroom home i,n country,
Whites Hill Rd., Audand, one bath,

Consolo Piano. Rloponaible pony
wanted ID make ~ monthly pay·
piano. See l~lly. Call

men11 on

30&lt;1-773-5651, Mason wv.

1-800-2118-6218.

:t;:.:...
tillDue
...A o..·.
;;
Toalt

"*'

1

.'
. •'

•
•

...

Mason area, 3

Plastics and Supply, SA 7,
Plains, Ohio 45783-

bedroom. large lot

s· rhru 36·.
pipe. SID piJI!II,

MERCHANDISE

304-675-7783-Call"""'ngs.

814 ·9S5-3St3 01

il'lilround pool, 614·992-5087.

FARM SUPPLIES
B. LIVESTOCK

for Sale
he&gt;. Johnson bOol molal, t210.

"'

Gehl Round Balers, MDWBr Con-

51

19i8 Elc:onna 14x70 Mobile

~

Model 308 two-row Ford planter

Home, 2 Bedroom., $7,000 Nego-

with addttlonal bean and cotn
•sso e14
pi 101 """" --~
7~---- ~~loon, • · -

tiable With Out .Appliance&amp;, 814·
379-2S23.
1979 Baron 14M70 With 7x14 Ex·
panda 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Total
Electric Wtth Backup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porthes On 3 H2 Acre
Wooded LDt Close fo Gallipolis
(W1H Sell Separate) 614· 446-

630
Sale : 2 living Room
SWivel Roc~ng Chair, •2
I Round table Willi
1 Round Black Table
Call 81ii·44G·05eO

Country Furniture
Rt 2 N, 6m11es. Pr Pleasant,
Tue~Sat 9-6. Sun 11 5.

9543.

GOOD

1885 Ux70 Schultz 2 bedroom,
cttling llns. new
vinyl skirting, eacellenr condition

USED APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,

ealhedtal ceiling.

ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 76

PAI NT PLUS 511 Butdeue St .. $13,500. 304-77.J-8082.
' Now th ro ugh Sal Ua~ 11 PiUS·
3 Bed·
burgh Paint Sale, Ceiling Paint 19S8 Rodman
$9.99 Gal. Interior flat Wall Paint rooms. 2 Balhs, On 1.2 Acre Wllh
$9 99 Gal. Late• ·saa!er fat Dry- 30160 Garage With 2 Bedrooms
wall $8.99 Gal. Alurpinum Fiberat·. Aparrmanc, In Gallipolis Cuy
ed Roo f Coating 5Gal $24.99 Schools, j!14-446-2072.
Sprmg Flo wer Bulbs $2 99
Bu lK Seeds &amp; Bedding Plants
Sale

Vine Street, Call 814-448-7398,

•••80.

1.aoo.4llll-3499.

Livestock

2 ~ear, registered, quarter horse
lilly, $800, 614·.742·2552 alllr

..

U182 15' Challenger base boal
with molor, loaded, loti of uw.a,

_,

4418.

19D4 Mercury Cougar XR7, V8,
32,000mi., loaded, axe. cand. :JCW-

895-3287.
1984 Nlssan Sentra, • d~.• auto,

92,0!lq Oligi,.., VOir good lralltpoltalion, $1,a7S, 81 ...742·1400.
1995 Ford ·Eocort lX Aulomolic,
AC: ~ Door, 18,000 Mtles: HK12
Ford RlngOf XLT 55,000 IAilft, 5
Speed, Caueue. AC, Ahet 4 P.M.

81·H~92--6407.

Dealer will arrange

n.

even il rou have been
elsewhele. Upton
Equipment Used Care. 304·458·
1089.
·
.

Mere Cruiser, With
tiaa, 81 ...256-8180.

' •

760

Skl Accftto·

Auto Parts &amp;

.Fo1 Sale: 19i!ll -1972 Nova Alrto
Fiwt:.,~ood, T1ynk Lid, And
F10111
• 814-441-oa!O.

18' 1D84 Camper Resort, Sell
Con1a1tnAd Dual Axle, Gae And
Electric, Refrigerator, Excellenl

Coodinon, 61 ... 245:-542•.
1971 La1k 1111. trivet 1n111er ..u
contained , good cond. 304-IGS-

3427.

Holdin~ ~ Tanks,
Air, Fully
Equippedl$8,100, 814-446-:w&amp;S.

1983 Sheila ca..,.., roooonobie
price, 27 loot long. luliy - ·

E•pect The Bestl S5.SOO, 614· C And Cat Dolly; .SO Fold 010,
24S.5391.
Cruise. Anir-lock Brakea. Gan.
And Ai1, NIS, NIP, 21,500 Mi.,

1989 Chevy Silverado, extended
cab, 8' bed, 350 auto, tow lg

Mini:ConcliDft.~1......,1877.

Lamb Fot Sale: Bl ...«t-111&lt;47.

package, topper,

19114 innabnJGk, lully IOida&lt;l, loll

~

REGISTERED-ANGUS
And Chi-Angua Buill-, 0Aj~n d dHii~et'1 •
ont $700 Up. Excellent •
And Law Bi11h Weight&amp;.
Fanns. 814-288·5395 Jackson.

00 01

Riding &amp; Trail Horses, Different
~

614-446-4110.

1990 Fo{.d F-250 h4 7.3 tiler diseaJ moJ,. 304-675-5490.

Miles, Bedline, Step Bumper
Spe~d .

Duel Tanka,

245-9179.

TRANSPORTATION

1992 lsuzu pockup, 4 , cyl
speed. nice, 10.000 milea, sssoo.

710 Autos for Sale

may consider parriat trade for a
.otll4 ·or pontoon boat, 8U·9D2·

'79 Mercu1r Caprice, S30o OBO,

2594 aftll 6pm

814-992·3219.

730 Vans &amp; 4.WDS

'84 Ford Tempo, ·4 door au10mat·
lc, lefl rear tail light damage,
97,000 miles, $850, 814-049-2311

days 01 814-IM9·2644-IMinings. .

'82 Ford 250, 411:4, 302, new tires,
batter~ and Drakes, Iota ot new
pans in the lmnt end, $3800, 61.4-

Improvements

l-.;..--,;.,.,==,---BASEMENT
WATEAPACXlFNG
Uncondolionol litotimo guo111'1IM.

Local releranc:ea turnilhed. Call

(SI4) 448-0870 Or f814j 2370488 Rooers Waterprooling. Es·

llblishocii97S.

367-0323.

And 5etvice: All

25 Yeare Ex·
Work GuatantHd,
IAaytag, 814-448· •

SPRING SPECIAL : Central Ai1

Home Main·

Conditioners· 2 Ton $1, 195; 2 112

Painting, vlnylsidlno.
doors. windows, beets,

Ton $1.295: 3 Ton $1,395: 3 112
Ton S1 ,59S: ~Ton $1 ,695; Prices
Above Include Normal Installation. Full 5 Year Warranty, Free

tepair Md more. For
call Chet, Sl4·992·

Estimate&amp;, 1·800·291.QOg8; 814·
&lt;1&lt;6-6308.

. Sporting

laltltful

10ConeMir

• Anii...,UC
0 ConltiUCIIOn

ue
..· · UI~.,r*"'

bllm

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23 Chlrged
14

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FRANK-&amp; EARNEST

; b'

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41 O l a - t
. 42 w.tem roptl
43 Gloaay
fabric

-

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45 lmporl8d ar· ··

41 Inflict on

l

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,

THE BORN LOSER
P'

IT DC:e I-lOT!
Tj\J{C_ IT IIK.K.

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ri.L Kl«&lt;(

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YOUIt

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~TOP iT TI\1~ I~Ti\t-~T!TI\~1'!&gt; t-10
1--»1.'1' FOrt

()-{ YOO~WEU.,

ew:.K.

FRIE:N~TO

MI(:,IJ.T
MVE:

T~WAAT

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~

ct-1 TV AAS
At-\ W&gt;IERSE.

€ffi'!.T().l
CI\ILDW-1!

~'100

KJC.K

OFF

The finite number Of play lechniques
47 II~WUye
is a drawback for the columnlsl True, !n+~f-+­
s41 God of love
,_
the number is large, but InevitablY one
4fl DoelaS.rm
must repeat oneself. However, it is l=r+-t--+sometimea possible to dress up a situ· lo.....I.__
51
(comb.
atlon in fresh .attire, making it harder
form)
for the reader to recognize the theme.
In today's deal, the declarer must
avoid losing three heart tricks, This
CELEBRITY CIPHER
.
problem was in my column of March
by Luis Campos
12, but that deal had a .- different solu~ Cipher~ ate ctHtild from quota~ bJ f.nous peop., paa and Pf-.nt
EttdiNihiirt lhe cipher~for al'dhef TocMy's cb P.quM U
tion because the declarer could force
'
· the defenders tC! open up the suit.
XBBV
T
J
'JWITACB,
L
LX
ME
Here, that is impossible. How should
·South play in four spades? West led
•
STZ
DII,WWBR
AND
L
AN
the diamond jack and continued the WN
'
suit, declarer rulfing.
RNWBJ.
P N ·I B
W S T R
T
XBD
South was .Martin Hoffman. a light·
nlng-fast player from England who .
now lives in norida.
HTR
ABBWSNHB!I
N R
YMZDLC
Normally, playjng this heart auit for
only two losers requires finding one
SLJ
ZBTWSABZ .
. .,. .
opponent or the other with both top
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I hate Imitation. I've a reverence lor individuality.
,
honors. But Hoffman knew this was
.
got whare 1am by coming oil the wall." - Clint Eastwood .
·
.
. '. '
impossible. west would have led a
heart holding the ace-king. And East.
ntAT DAILY
wbo was marked with 'the ace-queen of
fiiiLII
diamonds, woUld have opened the bid- .
din if also holding both key heartl.
Rearrar.ge lenen ol tho
" '
If eitl)er defen~ llad a .doubleton
four omrmblod wordo bohonor and declareJ' Clllllti81JH11 who, Ute'
low to form four word&amp;
'.
contract could be made. But Hoffman
followed a better plan. He drew two
MU ME.N I
rounds of ll'w1IJl8 endipg in the dummy
.'
1
2
and called for the heart jack.
I
I
I
1
.
I
Thinking declarer might be faced'
with a guess holding the king-io, East
T R YAP
played loW smoothly. With thiJ layout,
..
be was wrong. In a morneot, Hoffman
led a second heart toward his queen ·
for his lOth trick.
. "....
. Declarer had pushed East into an
easy mistake to make.
1-_,..u__,r_S'-"To,.......,J
5 I
My old granny told me \hat
. ''
__1 .
the right train of thought can

__,1 ..::,

~IN6

.,...,-..,..-,.~~,..-:---. lead you to a better -- - - -- - In

T I

!life

t._ j__J.L-...1.._J__..J.__J

e

~

BIG NATE

J.
,. '
.'

$Tit:.O.NGER '~ !

.

. ....

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f.ll,ng in fhe missing words

vou deve!op from step No. 3 below
'' nl,

P~INI NUMBERfD LETTERS I

IN THESE SQUARES

·

II II IIII
,,

SCIAIMETS ANSWERS

-·
",.

The Treosure You
Scwlnrs You'll Find In r~e
Clossl(led Secrlon.

l ~

._,

.....
,..,

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,

IFRIDAY
:

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:." !If'

.

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,Bisque -Award- Label- Vortex - DOUBTS
Quote from a past president: "The only ktnd of limits
we have on our tomorrow may .well be our DOUBTS of
today •

MAY31

.

"

·-

ROBOTMAN

/I r

........

e

f) .g~ic!~~~E~ LETTERS ro

Mil. . GltANfeEil ~ ~
• GRNIGf.ll. THE

.IN

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!:me

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25 Shoe
25 MQ;ve
luddln!Y
27 lal'tll VOlUme
28 Ridicule
•·
.••
28 Flnll""
31 Crunc""

TAlKS ~1W~N IIOI!OTM~ ~N'I1

WII~'N ST~tl, ~~~~~ t:l\~TQN

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Utility Trailer 5'WB'l4'H Rack

614-446-1319.

Goods

50---

• Tttalllnd,7 Word to call

L.....__

•
•
•

'

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Even• Ente1pri11i',
Jackson, OhiO, 1-8QO..S37-0528.

520

•

'

-~

SE RV ICES
1----...;._____ ,,•
5 810
Home
"•

Cassene, PS, PB. like New, 61.C·

'

T'f.IAT'5 A NICE
S~IRT VOU 1RE ~
WEARIN6, RERUN ..

any. 30«7&amp;-eaO:I.

Go carr 3.5 hp. Uf77 Apach•
camper, good c:ond. 304-882·
1991 Ford Ranger Pick· Up, .c 2203.
Speed, Bedline1, 80,000 Miles. ::::::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
$5,000 614-448·2056.
Midu Motor Home ~~ Fl. GOOd
.:....:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ICor1dil' ;ion. Fullr Equippocl, 814·
1992 Fo1d F-150 Under 35,000 2511-1474.

300SX, 5

. ..,
'

of ••tras, 11ft Serious inqulriea

,S11 ,900. :pt-576·2383.

3 Nowlllt Urll
4 Horae gukiM

31 Cit,
39Joll

PEANUTS

UIH 21' Claaa

5672 Aller 4:00 On Weelodoy&amp;.

_,

1~,
a ladly

Back in a fresh
disguise

••

refrtgefator &amp; freezet' used 4
w..kl, air conditiOning, awning,
lWD dDora, hal surface hail dam-

FoUr Winda

31 Meltllllc MUtld

Opening lead: • J

YORE
FINIER II

;!'!'

new

1&amp;; 1

==·=-bid

DOWN .

(2wda.)

mo-.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

•

. By Pltllllp Alder

New 1111 lanka, ana ran truck
- · · tadiaDI, 1oor
otc.
D &amp; R Auto. Riplor, WV. 304-37239:13"' 1-801).273-83211.

Fair Pigs For Sale: Born Earty f•
bruary And Early March 614-245-

~-

..•

Jeep CJ-7 libe'llluo ha1d top
wllh dooro, tSOO, caii114·MS.
3111.

3pm.

Purllrtocl Angul Bull 3 'fc!ll,l Old,

!

STICK OUT

OVer 10,000 Transmission, Alao

age, no lniOtlor damage lnlm lhe
19SB.Chevy 112 Ton V·S Engine, hail, .call 304-882-21148 1ta"ing sPS. PB, Air, Auto T1an1, 85,895, 8-98.
614-448-4225 Can Aile&lt; 4 P.M.
-'-:-------1914 Ni11an IAitago mbtor homo,
19S8 Fo1d F·150 8 Cylinde1, 5 4trl. Sapd, Q18BI gao mileage,
Spot&gt;d, 3. 55 Re~1 ~xle, PS, PB. 70,00ni, $4,200. 304-875-2949.

52 ,000ml.,

I

Budge! Ttanamilllions, Uaocl tR.
built,_.&amp;,tl Trpeo, Accouible To

rg73 Winnebago like Now
u ·1
N
Pt n
01
1985 Ford FISO 4WD, 300 8 cyl., 4N0,000 ak' '11.&amp;BW~-} Cr-,.-"
$3500 firm, call 614-992·8273
ew 8 r 11
·-•· Y '· r
evening$ or leave message.
Generator, 2 Water Tanka, 2

t987 Dodge Ram tJud. Good
condition. 304-576-2545. leave
message

HOW'S YORE
NEW TEETH
WORKIN' LONZO ~

Accessories

720 lhlcks for Sile

87!&gt;62811.

1

•
~

.

69 Camara drag car.' 406 cu. in. :
power glide, b,ake, electronics,

BARNEY

•

or::n 'Bow
With Sun Deck. 4.3 L tor, V-1,

Bedliner 1 Owner, Driven And
Maintained By A Ford Fanatic.

Railed By Alan Bolter1 81.4·367-

1so Wanted To Do

81 ....w&amp;-2072.

Fibetglau tluck topper lor For•
Ranger short bod, S7S, 814·11112·
2596.

dllioners, Disc Mowers, D isc
Mower Conditioners. Forage •1985 Ford short ptck -up bed .
Equipment Sales And Service. 1088 5-10 shof'l bed no ru$1. 304·

Altizer Falm Supply, 814-245·

HP, ·AUIFM Marine Radio, Tan-

.Ft.

13 1tent1r1t•

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
West North EMI .
Pass
Pass 2•
J;'ass
Paaa Pus
Pass

dum Aale, Eagle, Driwl On Trllloi,

1994 Marada 18

12W.v'

..

Harte ......,.

12 Cltlblll, \t-fl.

11189 21 FL WoN Ctaft C.C., 2eO

814-949-2872.

=.

..
17 lira. Chelllln

35 Loug eared
llltllllill
31 Among

'

J

1994 ford Crown V1clor1a, load-

ad, dual air bag&amp;, Jore&amp;t green,
like new, garage kept, 6U-985-

..,..---------1~::,~~~:~
610 Farm Equipment I•
Ford tractor, gas. 4000. exc.
COnd. $e,OOO 111m. 304-1182·3273.

l14-!i02-250e.

o.t.J• Kill. 81 ...245-511n

Auto LoanL

AC 333 No Trl Corn Planter, D1y
Fo&lt;tilze, 814-448-8710.

320 Moblla Homes
tor Sale

Ssp, sun rool, eJCc. cond, asktng

II

•
•

Ht
9
K 10 t ,
J 10 9 7 3
J 863

20 lllllllclel lilnt
11 Qnvtl

•ar-rt
Anlblen noble

33 PC IIIII
34 Nlw(pNI.)

'"'
,.

.

........... aold

~

SI0.500. 304-882.37n.

814-441-0179.

2 Bedroom house. new carper, re-

Nice home in Racine, large build·
lng will house small business,
also a one car garage, fencitd

$47,000 814-949-280-4.

Musical
Instruments

35 ~ear old console plano, e•cel·

1975 t•X70 Fellival. 3 bedroom,
2 lull balha. 1992 Suzuki Bandit
9:15P.M., Sun: 3:45 · 11 :15 P.M., •oocc . can evenings. 304·875·
Mon ffues !Wed JThura; 2 -Hour 2382 0( 30«75-2926.

May tag washer &amp; dryer, GE refri-

, .-

Cool! Mototo. Bt...,.-48-0103
19111 Z28 CarnatU 5.7 tutlocl pilrt
0;421.
fuel tnj. rill wheel, cruise, llir,. pw,
pel, loocled, cd playe1, ground 81Pure Whi le Garman S hep h erd facts,
bi'""' raised, tpot'ler, ~ue.
Pups, AKC, 814·286-8753, 814·

ti on Availa ble AI A Community
Group Home For Persons With
MR/00 In Bidwe ll. Hours: 1:15 -

110 Mlscellaneous

89,000 Mites, L;oadedl Excelltnt
Conciion. S7,50d, 114-448-8385.

1991 Escott '-" Wtlaan. Oillo, IC.
cruise control,rear d.trOsr.,., ••·
.. cl..,n, $3,~.304-1175-7324.

s.,.;

20•22 Ga1age, Lars Good All In

8y11 old. $107 ,000. 304-6754048.

..•

1990 Gntnd Prix SE, Eno Claon,

Bt4-4&lt;8-1933 Abotrl The HAPPY
JACK 3-X FLEA COllAR. "KIIII
Male &amp; FofTiale Adult Fleas. Fo1

cupa, also miniature Schnauztlf'l,
AKC, champion bloodlln41, shots
&amp; wormed. 81••7-3404.
PupP'f Palace Kennett, Boarding,
Swd
;e I'UP!&gt;ies. Grooming.
Buy, Sell &amp; T11da, All Breado.
Paymon11 Welcome, 814·388·

310 Homes for Sale

Ma-l Ave., 30eclroom, LA, OR,

1113 Ho- 300 :zwo. ~
concUon, t3400. 114-742--

750 Boats &amp; Motors
Cockojallat IIIIo, Bl4-742-350e.

WANT ED· COMMUNITY SEV- 1973 CametOn. 12xe0. good conICE WORKER (Full-Time) Pooi· cltlon. 304-518-41110.

Weekly Staff Meeting; · Or Aa
Other wise Scheduled. High
School Degree. Valid Onver's License, Three Years licensed
Dr1 11 1ng Expenence And O:ood
Dn vmg Reco rd Required . Salary:
$5 '00 tHr. To Start Se'"!d Resume
To · PO Bo• 604, Jackson. OH
45640. ATTN · CeCilia. Deadline
For Apphcailts Sf8f96. Equal OpportuMy Employer.

-~--

~':":':"'~~-Yit25 Yamaha Uotorcra" dirt ~
bike, good condition, call 814· •
11112·11113.
'

~_. .

446· 1774 Home: 814· 446-037•
WO&lt;k Ask Fot Mark Palmtl.

.:&amp;

t~ .

- l o r Illi-te

2 Bedraama IMore 1 112 BBths,

l\lneOoad,teD0.8t ..._

1815 Hondo XRIOO. 304-175-

10 pepet wl 1"101

Postal &amp; Gov't Job&amp; $21 IHr +
Bene1t1s. No E•p. Will Train, For

Southeastern Ohio Community
Bank Seektng an AggresSive Retail Loa n Officer. Must Have Mini·
mu m Of Two Years E•per~ence
W1th Good Organizarionjil And
Com munication Skills. Resume
And Salary HISiory To : CLA 385,
clo Gallipol iS Dally Tribune, 825
Th~r d Ave nue, Gallipolis, OH

41~

.'

18t4 H.- XR ISO onlollblko. 2300ml. 14,000. 304-875·
31110.

10-'lnyproleo•"*·
llmilltlon Of &lt;leo-

61-4-388-9411.

Soc1al Workers, Now Hiring S23 I
Hr • Benefits. On The Job Train·
mg To Apply In Your Area, 1-800·
339·6150.

IOiebellaltllltto

18!!11Wo~
01&lt;1 Bihe Aobuit Engine,
LMioo. ;:!;

6 P. M 614- 44 1·1634

Appl Aod Into HI00-536-3040.

..... _

..

'

1---m;

Needed. Fulltrmt And B.- The
Job Mull Have E•perience. Appl~ 'Al: Tope Furnrture, lS i Sec·
ond Avenue, Gattipolil. No Phone

Ca"sPiease.

....,._.

...........

....

»Niw'Yark

ALDER

1111 4 Wheeler Front 1 llaar · "
Rook1 -k 0.;.., 12, ICIII, 11.. ~ ~
317· ~
.·•

,Hrgh ,Quality ClrP*I Installer•

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

.., Dltlllloft

PHILLIP

'
. ''

•

NIA Cro11word Punle

hI

Vo I

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

..'

;.

FINANCIAL

21 o

Buslnass
Opportunhy

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUQLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business with people ·you know, and
NOT to send monev throu$Jh rhe
· mtul unlit you ha¥e investigated
the offering.

local Vending ~oute. $2,500 A I
Wk . Potential. IAUSI Sell. 1-800·
840-3826.

REAL ESTATE

U!..l.ll..l.l:::-...:......__---=:::~LLJJ \
Graph Matchmaker can help you under·
stand wl1jlllo dolo make the relationship
work. MaD $2.75 10 Matchmaker, c/o lhis
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY 10156.
GEMINI (M•Y 21·Jytt• 20) Several

passing outlook wil hetp you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Some
·unusual developmenls could enable rou
to reap greaser personal rewards 1rom a
·.
cutten! project. Keep an' eye peeled lor
signals.
reatralnts lhat have impeded your SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·08c. 211 An
prograaa regarding a potential achieve- interesting endeavor might be in stom lor
ment mighiiUddenly and unexpecledly you now. II mighl take you 011 in a new
be Hfted toda{
.·
direction. You will explore a-new area,CANCEA (June 21.July 12) H you &amp;1811 CAPRICORN (O.C. 22.Jan. 111) Today,
an exen:ltle program tod8y, the odda ·art\ . do not regrer discarding an encumbnlnca
In your Javor lhlt you Wilt Jtidllo ~ u~HI lhal yoti leamild lrom experienCe 11 not
· vaiUIIble to you or 1o the person you've
you achieVe the retulta you dealre.
LI!O (July 23-'Aug. 22) Today you might beel1 trying to help.
mHI aomeone new WhO II an ac:qualn- ' AQUARIUS .(Jan. 2Q.Feb. 111) An Old
lance
ol an old friend. This may be friend might Invite you lo perticipeta in an
Seturdly, May 4, 1801
more than just 1 eolncidtlt&lt;:o. A strong evenl thai could provide you wllh an
In tha year ahead, you· could beCome ,...lionahlp coUld develop.
DPJ)OfiUtiily 1o meet new people today . .
irNOived Willi • , _ Nl ol c:itl:umltancll VIRGO (Aug. 13 llllt 22) Today, Kwill PISCES (Feb. 20olilttrcll 20) You will
people. Cotdlluna look good. and I be benefic:iallo r..ofve an lllue lhet Ia move into a hlflh,achiavament cycle;
yOu ... your tallntllltd ....... ' lmport•nt to you . The advantages cur· before 1 runa out, you will hive the llbiflly
ly, you wllpwall.
.
. lllllly ~~~by bo4h Ptrlill may not be lo achle\141~ ~ objecllve.
tAURUI (ApltiiO ll!iJIO) This wllf be a Jlllllll'lllll.
ARia (M8roh 211Aprtt 11) Your Q!Mt·
t.JeiiA (lejiL IJ.Oot. 23) AI Of today, ell •aNt today will be your ablllfr to
good .., ... ClllllltellndiiiiiMIIIlftO you
You C8ll -'tlltllan MIIIJI" your.petlpUIM wll btOidln lltd you w11 lnlplre eillhullum 1n compen1ona lbtiut
rMntiD • I 101 your - - . Trying lo not IIIIW 1111uauor. 1n lhe aame
u lite ...... 01 lllulllllat .,. - • qut
pMCit up 8 ~ IGIIWIOI? Till N/lro- you clfd In the p881. Ypur more.encom-. 1o you.
·

ASJRO-ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

...s

3 Bedro oms, 2 Bath Ranch, 2 car
Garage, Spring Valley Area, After

\ t .. ..1

6 00 P.M. 614-446-7940.

"":".:

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•' "~

..........,.;.

....
•

'
•

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...

.

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,..

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.

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"

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. .. .....
~

�•

Page 12 • The O.lly SIIJtlnel

Friday, M8y 3, 1988-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Vaughan shares trip tQ
Upsurge in interest in Christian music Africa with Ro.tary
~
By DAVID RAUDER

.,.......on,..c1

souvenin of his recent mission trip to

Alsoca.ted Pna Wrtw
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- With a Jo.lee,
glares and shabby shins, members of DC
Talk look the pan of a typical alternative
rock band on the back cover of their new
COmpll\'t disc.
,
The music, which opens with a
screeching guitar and distorted vocals,
also sounds like the genuine article.
Only the lyrics reveal sornctllin1 else is
going on. The single "Jesus Freak,"
which has received MTV airplay, concludes: "There ain't no disguising the
truth - Jesus is the way."
Christian music, a nearly hidden genre
with questionable quality for many yean,
recently has come into its own as a creative and commercial force. It's not
\. always preaching to the convened anymore.
When new albums by DC Talk and
singer-songwriter Michael W. Smith both
debuted at No. 16 in the Billboard chans
. late last year, it awakened the music
industry to Christian music's new power
as a sales force.
"There is a huge diversity in the
mus!s," said B11,1ce Koblish, president of
the Nashville-based Gospel Music Ass~&gt;­
ciation. "Christian music is the only
music defined by the lyriqd content rather
than the style of music."
Once largely the province of bland pop
anists such as Amy Grant, Christian
music also includes rappers, country
singers, heavy metal artists and DC Talk
who, like alternative rockers everywhere,
worship the music of R.E.M.
The Recording Industry Association of
America estimated Christian and gospel
music accounted for 3.3 percent of all
music sales in 1994, up from 2.5 percent
in 1990, and on .a par with such genres as
jazz ·and classical. .
Slowly. the Christian music industry's
"'--,- - - - - - - - ' biggest stars are seeing their albums sold
DECENT CHRISTIANS· Toby McKeehan, Kevin Smith and Michael Tail were colltlge buddlee
in big chain stores.
at Jerry Falwell'l Liberty Unlvefllty when ·they formed DC Talk, above. Although McKeehan
, The six biggest gospel music l~ls, and Jalt are from the Walhlngton, D.C. area, the "DC" In their name stands for "Decent Chrllmclu&lt;lmg ~parrow. ~tar~ong ana Keumon, 111n.
.
all have been bought by major music and publishing companies over t!te
past three years. This brings a new muscle to distribution and improves the
quality of recordings, experts say.
Pan of the reason for the new attention is, technical. Soundscan, the
company that measures sales of COs and tapes, last year for the first time
began including Christian bookstores in their surveys. That's where about
80 percent of Christian music is purchased.
The result was the splashy chan debuts by
'There /a a Smith and DC Talk.
huge dlverslly In
The genre really hasn't had a major breakthe music," Hid· through artist in the secular world since Grant.
Bruce Kobllsh, And even the music of DC Talk, for all the referpresident of the ences to them as ~ing Christian music's Beatles,
Nashville-baaed has made some critics wince.
Gos,nl Music
Tohy McKeehan, Kevin Smith and Michael
Association.
Tait were college ~uddies at Jerry Falwell's Liber-.
"Christian music ty University when they formed DC Talk.
Is the only music Althqugh McKeehan and 'I!Ut are from the Washdefined by the ington, D.C. area, the "DC" in their name stands •
lyrical content for "Deccnt.CJvistian."
rather than the
The album "Jesus Freak" is their founh and
· style of music." marks
a stylistic shift toward rock from rap.
- - - - - - • · Although they have won a Grammy Award and
have a v.latinum album under their belt, the airtime "Jesus Freak" received on MTV represented an imponant step into
the mainstream for DC Talk. They hired Simon Maxwell, who has shot
GAINING POPULARITY· The Recording Industry Association .
videos for Nine Inch Nails, to direct.
of
America
estimated Christian ,and gospel music accounted for
" We've never made a video that wasn't for MTV," McKeehan said.
3.3
percent
of all music sales In 1994, up from 2.5 percent In
. "That's how we've always seen it. We've always shot for that, and we've
1990,
and
on
a per with such genres as jazz and classical.
always shot for mainstream radio, and an album that anyone can listen to,
· not just someone who follows this genre.
" When the door finally opened, we"were quite pleased," he said. "It's all. but. it does exp&lt;)se your music to lots of people."
They also face pressure to dilut~ their message if they want to get their
: been one of our goals for a long time. Not that MTV is the end-all and ~· music heard more outside of the Christian world.
.

Africa when the MiildleponPomeroy llowy Club met Monday at
the Heath,Methodist Church in Middlepon.
•
Vaugt.n made the trip with several other people to visit misSionaries Oeqrge and Debbie Pic~s. Pickens is a teacher at the University in
Nairobi and spends tjme teaching rural ministers so that they can go out
into the countryside and ~¥Cr minister to their congregations.
Vaugt.n also visi~en Okella,
a mem~r of the Luo Tri who started the Mitonyo Christi Clinic to
provide. medical care to the children
of Kenya. In Kenya, children can die
of illness that we in the .Onited
States think of as minor, such j!S diarrhea, Vaughan said. They do not have
the medicines or the refrigeration
necessary to keep the medication
needed to treat these illnesses, he noted. Qkella also operates a children's
home which house$ ' 20-30 children.
Vaughan .said that when he asked
what the children would most like to
have,
their reply was "paper and pencils."
About Kenya, Vaughan noted
there there are over 60 different
tri~s in Kenya, many &lt;)f ·which
speak different languages. Mest of
them speak their native language as
well as a common Swahili. 1\~ capitalistic economy means that "if you
don't work, you dqn'l eat", hPsaid,
and reported that Kenyans work at
·diverse occupations from busjness
people. in the city to nomads and ·
farmers in the rural countryside( Life
expectancy in . Kenya is only in the
50's and families are ·not considered
· blessed unless, they haye several chi I-

·.

-----. -4-H news--------Dustin reported on healthy snacks,
Peggy lind Stacey Ervin served
refreshments . At the April 13 meeting Robie will give a demonstration.
Atthe April27 meeting held at the
home of Mona Ervin, getting tee
shirts, making money and project
judging were the topics of discussion:
Stacey served cookies which she had
made. A demonstration was given ori
the life cycle of chickens. Stacey
Ervin served refreshments. Next
meeting will~ on May 11 at Ervins.
At that meeting a vote will be taken
off.ways to raise money for the club.
Jamie Smith, reporter.

•

Cou~ritters

The Cou~ Critters met on M!!f.
16 at the rvin residence with six
members an two advisors present.
Items of~ s discussed were offi~ers. s~i_ng .candy and enrollment
cards. Refreshments were served by
Kelly Ervin. Candy bar sales were
discussed.
At the March 30 meeting also held
at the Ervin residence, judging,
camps and fair dates were discussed.

.

.

Country Cloven
The Country Clovers met Mar. 24
at the Justice residence with II mem~rs and two advisors anending.
Officers were elected and new
members were welcomed. Work·shops and camps were a~nounced.
The Justices served refreshments.
The April 14 meeting was also held
at the Justice home at which time
more information was given on
camps and contests.
Kerry Allen,reponer
Tbe Coualry Club

The Country Club 4-H'ers met on
April 28 at Hagers house. There were
seven members and two advisors present Items of business disc~·
were a car wash and bake sale; whm:
the next meeting will.be held; and if
any help was needed. ,
The. mem~rs learned how to
bathe and groom a cow for show.
Advisor, Alan Brown save a demon- .

·...:..News policyIn an effon to provide our ~er- ·
ship with current news, the &lt;?alhpolis Daily Tribune and
Dally Sentinel will not accept
ings after
60 days from the dare the event.
All club meetings
other news

articles in the society section must
be submitted within 30 days of
occurrence. All binhdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
.
All material submitted for publication is subject 10 editing.

stration on how to bathe and brush a
cow properly. Recreation was football and basketball: Eilstmans ·and .
Browns served refreshments. The
next meeting will be on May 18 a!
Cliffords at 4 p.m. Sarah Clifford is
going to show how to bathe, brush,
and walk a steer and heifer.
At an earlier meeting at the Brown
horne, the Gallia Beef Expo, name for
the club, and the Columbus Beef
Show were discussed. Games were
played and the Brown family served
refreshments.
Sarah Clifford, reponer

Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers 4- H · Club met on
April9, 1996 at Drake's house. There
were seven members and one advisor
present. Business discussed was picking officers, set $5 dues for year;:and
dates for the rest of the year.
Elected officers were Jamie
Drake, president; Joey Dillon, vice
president; Summer Johnson. secretary.!. '?hrl\ty Drake, treasurer; Jessi- ·
ca J!Nion, reponer; Nancy Pickens,
historian; Aaron Will, safety; an~
Matthew King, beahh.
Christy Drake served refreshments.
Jessica Dillon, reponer.
Meigs Dairy Club
The Meigs Dairy Club met ·at

Alyssa Holter's home on April 20
with nine members and three advisors
present. New members were welcomed, projects were selected and
officers were elected. Refreshments·
were served by Alyssa's mother. Next
meting will at the home of Adam and
Abby Chevalier ott May 5'
Alyssa Holter, reponer.
Klassy Kovers
The Klassy Klovers met April 15
at the home of Dave and Mary
Sheets. Thiny-seven members and t 5
advisors allended. New officers were
named, fund raising was dis~uss,ed
and approval given to projects. Tim
Dillon .talked to the club about pi§
.feed. Leslie Parker gave officers
· reports. Lester and Pam Parker served
refreshments. Next meeting was held .
on April 28 at the home of Jerry and
Joyce Burke.
Stacie Watson and Jennifer Goeglein, reponers.
Rudand Raiders
The Rutland Raiders met April 9
at the Rutland school with 30 members and three advisors attending.
Selling cosmetics as a fund raiser was
discussed and officers were named.
Donna Jenlcins served refreshments.
The next meeting was held on April
25 at the Rutland Park.
Christina Miller, reponer.
.

'

Cliic~n &amp; !l(j6 r.Bar-'13-QJie

Sutufay, May 5tli
·Serving,Starts at 11:m
Pomeroy :Fire Station
'Buttern.ut Jive. Pomrer011

..

..'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

SPEAKER - Don Vaughan
who lolned a group of Church

of Christ membera from Melga

'By TOM HUNTER

to Kenya, Africa, we1 1peaklf
at Monday night'• meeting of
the Middleport R"tary Club•.

Tlmea-Sendnll Staff
. PO~OY - While most seniors ~ planning
graduation activities and summer vacation time; some
area seniors are studying for their finai chance to join
their classmates on high school stages 'during commencement exercises later this month.
.
As of Friday, II seniors at Meigs County's three high
schools still must pass at least one part of the Ohio ninthgrade proficiency test in order to graduate, wjth the final
round of testing scheduled for this week, according to
county superintendent of schools Jol)n Riebel.
· The state requires public school stUdents to pass this
four-part test in reading, writing, math and citizenship,
which state education officials term as a test designed to
make sure students meet minimum standards, tp receive
their high school diplomas:
·
"Most of these kids are only missing a passing grade

dren, which is the reason ·Ke~ya has
one of the world's fastest growing
population rates at 4% per year. the
speaker explained.
Following his talk, · Vaughan
answered questions from the jtotarians.
Dinner was served by the women
of the church. President Lloyd Blackwood informed members ofseveral
awards the club earned· in the previous year. These were presented at the
recent Governor's Banquet in Athens.
It was announced that the next
meeting will ~ held at Middlepon
Junior High School i11 conjunctiori
with the academic achievement ban-.
quet.

own merits. Everybody said that
they were both great candidates and
that you couldn't tell them apan. And
they were right,"
Parents Richard and Patricia Kelly of Flagler Bench say NASA can
thank Neil Armstrong for propelling
the 32-year-old look-alikes toward
astronaut careers.
1
"Well, I think it ·"'as a Sunday,
1969. They were little kids, and they .
were watching Neil Armstrong take
that first step on the moon," Richard
Kelly said. "I guess that stirred their
excitement."
Don't look for the pair to fly
aboard the same shuttle mission,
however. Shuttle crews are comprised of a commander, a pilot and
several mission specialists, and the
coml)lander normally is older and has
logged more time. in space than a
flight's pilot.
.
"It could happen, but it would be
unlikely," said Ross.

Dallas &amp; Dee
appearing-Saturday, May 4th
9:00 pin
f·' .
.
at the ,Mizway Tavern
Corner of
.'1 SR 7 &amp; SR 143
.
No (;over Charge

tbat over ·
the past six weeks fiftlt
graders from l!fOU)Id the
county participated in il
variety of pioneer skills
ranging from dipping
candles .to making dinner from "scraich."
•PageC5
&lt;•

Rio Grande exceeds capital campaign goal
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College's capital
campaign 'has surpassed its $6.S million goal, Rio
Grande President Barry M. Dors~y announced.One
~ear ahead of the projected 1997 completion of the
campaign, Rio Grande has raised more than $6.7 miliion • Page AS

Scout troop beautifies Gallla forest
· IRONTON - Boy Scout Troop 11 S from South
Point planted I,400 trees on Wayne National Forest
propeny in Gallia County, part of a project to
improve the forest's fish and wildlife habitit, the U.S.
Forest Service announced. The scouts. planted pin
oak, black walnut, sweetgum and silver maple along
Trace Creek in the nonhem section of the Ironton
~anger District • Page AS

Liquid
plant food

14 Sections -164 ra;es

c:z

Ca!epcWn

Cfassukds '
ComkJ

your own

''

EdHori••s
'

SouthernHigfl.lkhOol
St. Rt, 124
Ritctne, 011

814-MII-2882
Hl'l.: Mon•.frt. 9-5, Sat.ll-4,

·aun.1-4

F01'111811y Hanla Fa11111
St Rt. 124 Pot11and; Oh.
1114-843-5211

Hr1.: 111011.-sat. M,
• Sun.12-11

Insert
A4
Bl-8
A3

Wealher

Over 4,000 to choose from
oQver 8Q varieties of Herbs
'28 Varieties of Tomatoes

DJ-8

Afj

Obituaries
Soorts

.Jaeltson Perltins Roses
.

COUNTRY MARKET •

•

(

Vol. 31. No. 13

passing it. They know it's their last time to take ·it, and
they know if they don't pass it they wiU not ~ walking
in graduation exercises," · said Meigs Local Schools
superintendent Bill Buckley,
Officials at each county high school have offered
tutoring sessions dunng school hours and evenings to
students in need of help .on the test subjects. Some
changes have also been made in school curriculums to
coincide with the testing, since the state implemented
proficiency testin" in the 1990-91 school year.
"We've worked with every student that has had problems. We've tried many different things to help our students pass .the testing. Our reading passage rate has ..
improved greatly from when we first ~gan taking the
test. Writing is still a bit of a problem area, but math is
our biggest problem area," said Buckley.
Beginning this f)lll, the tim will be expanded ,to a
Continued on page .U

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A coun decision
on a nonhem Ohio election dispute
will be reviewed by the Gallia County Board of Elections as it again considers the candidacy of Glenn A.
Smith for county engineer.
A summary of the coun's opinion
issued to . local elections
of State-Roben

a

·

Located 3% mlw peat

C'

appears to validate
Smith's c·a ndidacy .·

POMEROY~ Por those who yearn for ':the good
,old days" when the
leisurelly pace provided
domestic

Today's ttiuu...!l.embul

GREENHOUSE

. County officials, along with education officials
statewide, agree thar the math section of the test ·
the biggest obstacle for students to ....,.~~~
overcome in passing the exam.
"At the beginning of this school year, we had
six seniors that needed to pass the math section of
the test. That section has really been .the biggest hangup
for students having difficulties. Some of the questions
are two-step. questions, which students get tied up with.
Tutorshave ~en working with our remaining three students, and we're hopeful that they will pass the math section this time," said Southern High School principal

Statewide, around 3,000 seniors do not pass the test,
which is three percent of the nearly 100,000 seniors
statewide, Fisher stated .
~tuide•1ts begin taking the proficiency exams
a year during the ninth grade
school year, and continue to take the
test until a passing grade is scored in
all four categories.
In the Meigs Local district, six seniors are taking the
test for their ninth time in an effon to pass the exam and
earn their diploma$.
"This year's class had more seniors still allemptitig to
pass the test than last year's class. All the students that
are still attempting to pass the test are within reach of

'

DOOR PRIZES DAILY

KAREN'S .GREENHOUSE &amp;COUNTRY MARKET

Rie~l.

Got 'a yeamlng for 'the good old daya'? .

Go d Morning

area.

one or two pi.~fbt:s .
will pass during this

POMEROY- A $100,000 grant for emergency ·
home repair has been awarded to the Buckeye Hills-Hoc Icing Valley Regional Development District,
Area Agency on Aging, for use in eight Southeastern
'Ohio
counties - Meigs, Athens,• Hoelting, Monroe, ·
'
I
-Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington • Page A5

May4&amp;5

Hanging Baskets
Over 15,000 to choose
•Ferns oGera111ums •Impatiens
· •22 Vaiieties

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 5, '996

,Development district gets $100,000 grant

: GALLIPOLIS - Plans for "Business Appreeia(ion Week," May 13-17, sponsored by the Galli a
(:ounty Chamber of Commerce, have ~en. completed, according to Shelley Haskins, chair of the cham'
ber's economic development committee • Page 01

Largeat
variety of
plants In the

o.talls on
pllg8A2

Prior court ruling

Chamber prepares to honor businesses

every
purchase

lOa :

last chance to wear a cap

;.i1y
County on a recilnt mll'lion Qlp

HI: 70s
Low:

•

tmes

Identical twins chosen
to become astronauts
By TODD HALVORSON
FLORIDA TODAY
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
Talk about a potential double-take in
space. NASA this week picked a set
of identical twins to become astronauts.
. Navy pilots Mark and Scott Kelly were among the 35 test pilots,
engineers and scientists picked by
j NA$A ·this week to be part of the
. astronaut class of 199,6. .
~
Pity the poor selectior. committee.
"We may have interviewed the
·same guy twice for all we know,"
joked Duane Ross, chief of NASA's
Astronau\ Selection Office at Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Born Feb. 21, 1964, in Orange,
N.J., the twins now are jet pilots at
Patuxent River Naval Air Station near
Lexington Park, Md.
"First time we've selected siblings
of any kind that'I'm aware of," said
Ross. "But they both made it on their

books

Kentucky
.
.,
...
81
Derby
•
wtnner

go hlgh·t~clt

Don Vaqhan showed slides and

.

The New Horizons
The February and March meetings
of The New Horizons 4-H Club
were held at the home of the advisor,
Donna Neece.
Items of business at the February
meeting included the election of officers. and discussions on candy bar
sales and the 4-H commiuee rules.
The members played with the
computer for recreation. Pop and
popcorn were served. Pfans for celebrating 4-H Awareness Week were
discussed along ·with project selec~
tion.
Discussion on group projects and
camps highlighted the March meeting. Rabbit and book judging in
preparation for the fair were discussed.
· Mariana Staats and Pamela Neece
ialked to members who want to be
camp counselors. Card playing was
recreation and Marlana and J.P. Staats
served refreshments. The next meeting will be at Louise Staats on March
24, 1996. Members are to have their
. projects chosen.
Amanda Neece, News Reponer

S~OI'fl

The Run for
the Roses

Ohio VAlley PublilhiiiJ Co.

· "Issues," the certified
financial planner said,
"... that are very confusing
for till average person ... and for econl&gt;mists."
"Quite simply,'.' Morrison says, "there
are no easy answers."
·
Since the end of World War II, the conventional national goal has been simultaneous: sustainable low rates of unemployment and inflation.
Nationally, the jobless rate is at a low L;.;;..:.:...-"""-....:...-....:..._ _ _ _.::__ ___._....:.......:...::...,;.....:...~c.:..~
5.~ percent. Regionally, the unemployment rate has
• A congressional panel heard disparate testimony
continued to hover between 8 and 10 percent in ·most from expens asked whether the economy is in its ~st
so.uth~tem Ohio counties in recent years.
shape in 30 years .
•Consumer inflation . has lleen running 2.8 percent
• Polls continue to show pessimism about the econover the past year.
omy, although most do not feel insecure about their
These two measures (unemployment and inflation) •own jqbs and consumer confidence is relatively high.
-known collectively as the "misery index"- are at
Politics and economics
So, the question remains: Can politicians, for all
a 30-year low.
So why the general discontent? What's missing? . their rhetoric, have an impact on the economy?
,F&amp;Ster growth. Jf the pie were bigger, fighting over
Morrison, who holds a degree in economics from
thil pieces would not ~ so harsh. So say most econo- _ Ohio University, describes himself as a "big ~liever in
mists -liberal and conservative.
the marketplace."
, In just the past month:
While accepting the need for regulation of some
• President Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers economic· activity, he said, "... in general', the governconcluded that fears of corporate shrinkage may have ment should stand aside and let the economy -find its
been exaggerated, contradicting -statements by his own own way."
Continued on page A2
labor secretary.

~~~~~~dl~~~case,
the coun
an "
candidate for
seat,
even though. he had ~en disqualified to rlln in the primary- a situation similar to that of Smith.
The Gallia bOard decided April 26 to delay cenifica..,. ,, vn lion of all independent
candidate petitions in the
Nov. 5 general election
until it researches concerns over Smi!h's bid
aired by Harlan and
James Nonhup of Gal,
lipolis.
The board was informed ·
of the 1993 Sweet vs. tho
Hancock County· Board ·
of Elections decision ·
. . from the Third Districi :
. . .. .
·
. · . · .. . ·
. Coun of Appeals on
challenge to an ind~pendent candidacy and has request~ :
ed that Prosecuting Attorney Brent A. Saunders obtain 8' : .
copy, Board -Chairman Elaine Rouse said.
·.
Smith, a fonner Gallia engineer, filed petitions iO: •
January as a Republican candidate in the March 19 pri::
mary. His bid to oppose Democratic incumbent Josep!t :
L. Leach was challenged by the Nonhups, who said •
Smith - who had not yet resigned his position as :
Guernsey County engineer - had not established resi- :
dency in Gallia.
.
The board of elections, on a split vote, agreed with
the Nonhups and threw out Smith's petition in February.
Smith subsequently filed liS an..iodependent with the
endorsement of the local GOP.
But the Northups, citing Ohio Revised Code Section
Continued on page A2
·

a·

Philip Sporn workers vote to join United Mine Workers
By JON TROYER
Times-Sentinel Staff
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -. In a 100-85
vote, employees of the Philip Sporn plant
agreed to organize with the United Mine
Workers of America.
The decision was met with cheers
from C!Dployees who had gathered at 8
p.m. vote.eounting session Friday.
Employee !ack Thoy summed up the
need to go union by saying, "We went
from a secure environrgentto a very insecure environment."
In January, Sporn's management
~gan restruc1uring and severance pack-.
ages were offered to some .workers who
would be laid off.
A severance package for each employee is built up over a number of years,

Lead organizer Bernard Evans spoke
based on a cenaio percentage
of the vot~. Humphreys 1aid that
of yearly income that can· be
"we will meet our. obligation to to the gatheri/lg shonly afiCr a prayer was
used in case of a layoff. This
bargain while continuing to gen-. said.
year. ·according to employerate low-cost electricity tor our
"We are now Mine Worlcers,'' Evans
ees, those who refuSed their
residential, commercial and said, ~fore addressing the timetable of
severance package were
industrial customers."
organizing that will take place in the next
given no option but to be
The National Labor Relations two weeks to a month.
fired.
·
l!oard conducted the vote after
High fives were exchanged as the'
· Late Friday, plant rnanagemployees successfully petitioned
union
members completed their first
er Randy Humphreys was in
the board for elections.
meeting
I 0 minutes around a cooler of
a conciliatory mood.
A lener from the NLRB is
pop
that
had
been brought in.
"We are disappointed
expected soon that will certify the
When asked what led to the approval
with the outcome (of the vote Bernard Evens election, and negotiations will
to have repreSentation by UMWA). Over begin after local officers are nominated . of the UMWA representation, employee
Steve Mace said, "It was the way the
the years, every effon has been taken to and voted on.
restructuring
was handled."
provide a safe, productive wonk environAfter Friday's vote, employees who
ment .. , (and to give) fair and proper had ~en union members for less than an
He then simply used what has become
treatment to all employees,'' he said.
hour gathered at the Hanford Communi- a buzzword in so many places: "'The
In a statemeni addressing the impact ty Center.
downsizing."

Southern Local building committ~e again seeks backing for new K-8
'

By JIM FREEM~

vo.ters approved a similar issue by an even slimmer marTII)III-Sintlnel Staff
.
gin.
.
·RACINE -&gt;With' only 93 days 'left to go before a
Members of the building committee hammered out a
special Aug. 6 eleclion, mem~rs of the Southbn Local rough strlltegy to promote the issue at a meeting ThursBuilding Committee are attempting to'drum up su~· day night at SoutJ:tem High School.
for a proposed K-8 !elementary &amp;&lt;:hool for the aillnct's
Plans call for appointing precinct leaderS who will
children.
canvass their ~incts, dQOr-to.door, and .make tele. on Ailg. 6; district voters will settle a 6.1 mill ~?and phone calls seeking backing for the issue. Other comis~ue for construction of a new K-8 elementary school to mlttee members will seek endorsements from officials
be· located near the existing Southern· Local High and businesses in the district.
s~hool. Total cost of the project is $7,370,800 with the
Racine Mayor Jeff Th0f11lon staled his suppof1 for lhe,
sttile picking up $3,190,800 of the tab.
issue 11 the meetins.
,
. Volers in the district ~jected tl\e new school by Ill
"I believe in it, • Thorrton said. "I think it's something
vbtes on March 19 while Easiern Local SchoolJ)istricl sood for the kids.
·
.

.

"The construction would ~ good .for the village's state-of-the-art K-8 elemenlliry school there.
."There is a lot of pride in Racine for our school diseconomy and the new school would make Racine one of
trict;
a lot of pride in the Purple Tornadoes.,
the most desired areas to live in.
"Do
we want to risk losing our district?
"Racine is growing right tiow," Thornton said, citing
"People should think twice about this (bond issue)numerous village projects. "This will draw people into
think about the future ... our kids.
our area.
"As mayor I endorse (the bond issue)."
:'Racine will grow more with good scbools and housAlso
discussed was an issue haunted building suping," he said. "We have a beautiful area."
·
Thornton said he Willi a "little·di!lllppointed" that the poncrs: the decision of the board of education to sell the
issue failed in the village by two ·votes, according to old Racine Elementary Scbool to the village of Racine
for one dollar.
,,
unofficial reports.
Supcrintendenl
James
Lawrence pointed out the vit, He ~ked, "Willjout a good education, how can our
stud~nts compete?" He ciled the success of the Eastern l~ge alone paid for the building's construction in 1911
Continued on pega A2
Local bond issue whicl! will fund construc:tion of a new,

1.

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