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I

~y,May6,1898

...... 10 • The o.lly Sa •llntl

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Don';t condemn system because of abusers

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Beat of. the Bend ...

. A bright spot on Sunday was a
surprise binhday party for Dick
Vaughan of Middleport held at the
Senior Citiuns Center in Pomeroy.
Dick was taken· to the center
undeo' the pretense of a business
nlceting by Bernard Fultz. Dick's
daughter, Beth, and her. husl!and,
1ohn Schneider, Staged the party with
other members of the family on hand
for the celebration as well as other
relatives and friends. 1lte food was
delicious and some interestins activities conducted by a disc jockey made
it a really fun party. And besides the
party, Dick's family presented him
with a Rollei watch.

alllhe lhenpy lltd medication, I will
have to struule with my Cllllllional
fngility the res1 of my d.lys. I would
give anything to lead a normal life
again, but I know this isn ' I possible..
•,._ .... MIIIII
I am unable to fill out a form or
srand in line in a pharmacy or a~
without fearing that I will suddenly
Dear Ann Landers: I want to go to pieces. Yesterday, I had a cryrespond to "Roanoke." who said peo- ing spell in the supermarket because
ple on disability would rather sit back I couldn't find the bouillon cubes,
and suck up the taxpayers· money Any little fruslrllion can set me off.
than work. A few years ago. I was
There' are many honorable, hardsinging that same ignorant tune. I had working people who used to earn
worked han! since I was 14 years old their own way but can no longer do
and had no respect for anyone on so because they are now mentally ill.
welfare. I put myself through college Most of us manage to make it back
and graduate school and always had into the workphu;e, but many do not,
jobs that paid wellllhought, " If I and we must rely on the generosity of
can do it, why can't they?" ! remem- the American taxpayer. Please ask
ber usins such words as " lazy·· and your readers not to condemn the
"freeloaders."
entire system because ·of a few perI am now disabled lly what,they ceived abuses. We really do hate
used to call a "nervous breakdown ." · being dependenl. but we have no
'Those l)().hour· work weeks eventu- choice. - S.H.J., Oakland, Calif.
ally caught up with me. I have
Dear Oakland: I' m sure you have
learned, to my sorrow, that in spite of

Friends are planning. a card shower for Bill Young on his 85th birthday
which will be on May 16. Young is
formerly a resident of Gilkey Ridge
but is now living i!f Rutland. Cards
will reach him at P.O. Box 56, Rutland, 45775.

Meanwhile Ollt Rutland way, the
date (If June I has been set for the
annual community yard sale.
Residents are invited to dig ou.t
their good stuff and take part in the
day's activity. You might just look
upon the event as one stop shOpping
since there will probably be many,
many residents of Rutland taking part
on tbe designated day offering about
anything you might want and at yard
sale prices.
Now I know it's a long time until
The Rutland EMS will be serving
the Fourth of July and the wealher food throughouttbe day al'lhe Civic
has been anything but suggestive that Center and will, for those who would
indeed, it will be rolling in.
like, offer rental spaces for residents
However, up Racine way tile com- who want to take part in the sale but
miuee which plans the annual July would prefer offering their wares at
4th celebntion of the fire department tbe Civic.Center.
is meeting and looking ahead. Right
Any qucs1ions• Just call Mayor
now the committee is concent.rating Joan Eads at 742-3078 or MarCia
on the parade portion of the cclebra- Elliott at 742-2231. ,
tion.
..••.•••
The committee wants the parade
Now isn't . that interesting?
to be bigger and better than ever and Remember when some of us were
is offerins cash prizes to the top three complaining about the hi~h price we
winners in a number of categories were paying fot gasoline m compar·
which include religious Doats; non, ison to areas relatively close to u.'?. If
religious Doats; walking units: dogs: you'll recall no one paid much atten,patriotic entries; decorated bicycles lion of our complaints or made much 1
and equestrian entries.
movement to auemp110 do anything
The parade. will fonn at the high . aooutthem.
school at 9 a.m. on July 4th and will
Suddenly. since the cost of gasobe moving by 10 a.m. II will open lhc line has increased across Ohio and
day 's activities with lhe popular Star ihe nation it has.become a matter of
Mill Park to be the scene of a lot of major coO:Cem. All of a sudden the
ihe action.
politicians and other officials are very .
Marilyn Powell, an active member interested. They even think"they can
of. the committee. .reports that it do something about it. They seem·
appears there will be widespread pat- ingly couldn't do that when itwas just
ticipation in all aspects of the celc- us who were affected. Guess it
bration this year. If you have any depends on who's wearing the mo.:questions, jusi direct them to her at casin IJuh? Oh well. You keep smil-"
.
ing.'

_.,.

.....

a

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says

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By JIM FllEEMAN .

A Butternut Avenue residef\1 mtt
with councif about the alleged junk•' Po!!J~f)&gt;Y. \ljllage &lt;;ouncil posH Ya!d· saY:i~g !he P1'9bl,~m ~as ~en
po'iied_ tmpletllCII)Iiiti~o of· •tt ·ue.• - go!ng on smce 1989. wnh..no..acuon
downtown parking policy ai its reg- bemg taken by the vtllage.
ular Monday night meeting. . . · . Mayor Fra~k Vaugha~ advocated
The new parking policy was post· · •,nstru~tmg V•llage Soltcttor Chns
poned until July I dOl' to construction Tenogh~ to "''medy the p~oblem m
of a new walkway on the river side court :- a notiOn shared liy the SIX
of the parking lot.
co~~~tl members.
. ., . .
Council ·issued a reminder that
Its gel\lng to the pomt•l s nd•cu• parking on the business blocks will lous," s~id Pol~ce Chief Geral~
be limited to two hours for 10 cents Rought. We can I go m and clean t\
per hour. while parking on the busi- without a court order."
ness side of the parking lot will 25
"Let'! take 'em to court,"·Vaughcents for 2- 1/2 hours up to 10 hours. an said.
.
Parking on the promenade side will
In other .matters, Clerk Kathy
be by permit only.
Hysell reported the following April
Also, council voted to pursue balances: general, $118,898.88; safelesal action again a property owner ty, $3,817.64; street, $53.62; Slate
on Butternut Avenue over an alleged highway,
$13 ,386.47; , fire,
junk yard there.
$2.6,296.28; cemetery, $13,729.32;
~tiiMII Newt Staff

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Voinovi~h

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·R

. ., Atheris
. New Lexington
119 N. Main St.
1100 E. State St.
342-9909
594-4800

E"

.
Pomeroy
204 W. Second St'. .
1992-7070

Athens
Fritz Electronics
592-2585

Logan
Middleport
Ingels Electronics · Seymour &amp; Assoc.
385,5954 . •
992-2825

Nelson.vtlle .
Blackburn Appliance
7,53-3525

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NelsonvHie
Bob Davi~ ·
591 -0095

[Z]
Offer expires May Ihh, 1996

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Authorized D!.'aler Locations

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•New activatiQtls, ltlQIIircs a •~ year """"ce "'l'•cment. t11hcr ~IOI)S and guidcH~ may be ~lied Please call andl!"))mc.

werepre...,-. •to the" eight Melge Junior High
School etudlnta In reeognltion of having
achieved all A'a during the yeer. Recognition
t~ plica It Monday rilaht'• e~lc bafl•
quet aponeorsd by the Mlddllport·Pomeroy

•·
•

erell, center, and Judy Jones
joined Rader as the cleanup
continued, at right.
A huge culvert on a roadway
just qff U.S. 33 near the Route
1 Intersection (top
washed out
the

rain, denying residents access
to their homes on the either
side. The culvert was replaced ·
after the 1995 Mother's Day
flood. (Sentinel photos by
Charlene Hoeflich)

, towns)Jips.
•
")he townships in the county are currently assessing the damage, and trying to see where they need help," said Robert Byer, director of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
"The Ohio Department ofTranspartation is trying to furnish some equipmen! for repairs in the townships and the entire county," he added. "Normally, a township has one grader and one backlioe, but with several road's
damaged they need help with additional equipment."
Much of the repair work on damaged county and township roads from
.
the January nood had not been completed due to bad weather, with road dam-

ages now compounded after this weekend's round of nooding, Byer said. ·
Officials with the Ohio Emergency Management Authority are eKpected
to arrive.in Pomeroy early this afternoon to assist with damage assessments,
Byer smd.
.
.
Officials with the American Red Cross were in the county Monday afternoon, assisting families affected by the flooding .
Meigs County is the only county currently under the governor's emergency
declaration . The Ohio State Highway Patrol is also assi&amp;ting in tbe response .
and recovery efforts, according to' Dale Shipley of the Ohio Emergency Management Agency.
·

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• 1 month free long distance anywhere
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in the U.S.
~·························:

CELLJ

Cleanup work Ia _progrell·
lng at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church, where Saturday's flllah flooding from the
creek behind brought eight
feet of water Into the basement
Sunday school rooms:
Damages were estimated at
more ftlan $5,000.
Pastor Keith. Rader uld It
waa the sec:Ond time In 8 hundred ydare that the church has
been flooded.
The first time was last year
water, $2,223:57; sewer. $42,126.56;
on
Mother's Day during a
guaranty meter, $19,138.81; utility,
atorm
which dumped five Inch$p,605.98; fite_,truck, nQ balance;
is
·
of
rain . ,In .less ,than two
- perpetual' care;-$'1;284.55; t:ernetery
hours. Saturday'a rain waa
endowment, $38,118.57; police pen· measured at three Inches on
sion, $2,672.50; building fund, ·
already . ,saturated ground.
$2,659.03; recreation, $5,287.89; perSince May 1, 6.4 Inches of rain
missive tax, $2,997.'~7; law enforcehave fallen.
ment, $3,397. 78; COPS FAST grant,
After last year's flood
$1,527.26; FEMA flood grant,
destroyed the plano used
$16,944; downtown revitalization,
downstairs, one was donated
$87,000; total, $425,146.74.
to the church. h wss ruined,
along with severe! pieces of
During open discussion, council
furniture and appliances lrt Sat·
members discussed Saturday's flo&lt;J!I- .
urday's flash flc;JOd.
ing on Mulberry and Union avenues,
Rader said men worked
noting that ·residents are aggravating
until 1 a.m. Sunday morning
the problem by throwing away limbs
pumping water from the baseand leaves thai clog storm ~rains and
ment.
Sunday services were
sewers.
'
canceled
so the cleanup work
In ot.her business, co~~cil:
.
could
begin.
•·Gave first reading on ordinances
. On Monday, Jeannie With·
(Continued on Pege 3)

Democrats concede GOP has
votes to repeal to gasoline tax

•

.

ees, and this practice be carried out
each year thereafter;
• Meetings with county employees
be held to compare benefits and
inform us of the extent our coverage
may be changed, and what limitations
we may exi*tience;
• That cdrrlmissioners make future
decisions on the insurance as though
they and their families depended on .
the coverage as do other county
employees.
"It's good insurance, really good
insuran~~·" Jenkins added.
The problem is not the insurance
fund, but rather in accountability,
Jenkins said.
"Find out who didn't pay," he said .
"There may be a lot of money hanging around out there ... maylie enough
so you don't have to raise the ·price."
Knight added that commissioners
did not answer a question about
$13,000 he claims is unaccounted for,
"They never really answered it,"
he said. "We are concerned about it."
Commission President Fred Hoff.
(Continued on Page 3)

declares Meigs in state of emergen~y ctue to flooding ·

· SentiMI Newa Staff
A state of emergency has been declared in Meigs County by Ohio Gov.
George Voinovich ~ue to heavy weekend nooding and storm damage in the
county.
·
The sovemor's emergency proclamation, issued late Monday, authorizes
state agencies to take whatever action necessary to assist local government
officials.
·
. .Flood damage was i.ndicated in several parts of Meigs County. including
the ·heavily hit areas of Salem, Salisbury, Rutland, Chester, Lebanon and Olive

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J

By TOM HUNTER

•••

• free activation

existing health insunince.
"We're real pleased with the heal\h
insunnce and would like it to stay the
same. We feel our insurance plan is
real good," Jenkins said.
The employe,es made rive
requests:
• A thorough audit of the insurance
fund encompassio1g the past five
yellfS, verifying both receipts and disbursements to assure all employees'
premiums' obligations · to the fund
were met, and the results of the audit
be.made av~lable to employees upon
request;
• Establish an insurance advisory
board to be made up of employees
and department heads from each
department included in the group ·
coverage. This board would discuss,
review and agree upon any changes
to take place in the county's health
plan as well as review, at a minimum
bimonthly, the financial status of the
fund;
• Beginning with January 1995 an
annual financial statement be prepared for distribution to all employ-

·pomero.y Council postpones ·date.
·. ~n implementing parkit:Jg policy·

· for just

-ATTENTION-

The Meigs Co. Humane Society is under
new management. New president is
Sharon McLead. New officers and
Board members haye been appainted.
Animal concerns, questions or persons
interested in donations or membership
should contact Ms. McLead at ..9~
2216.

: By JIM FREEMAN
: Sentl1111l Newt Staff
.
: . Not eno~gh money- or just b•d·
· bookkeeping? ·
That was the question posed to
Meigs County Commissioners at
their re'lular Monday afternoon meeting concerning an apparent shortfall
in the county employees health insurance ·fund .
Las1 week, comm•sstoners
requested a meeting with elected
officeholders and department heads
to discuss the status of the health
insurance reserve fund, from which
claims are paid, saying the account is
in need of additional funding.
·Currently, participating county
employees are covered under the
·county's self-insurance program,
·which is administered by a third par·ly, Medical Claims Service of
·
.Columbus:
: • Dave Jenkins and Neal Knight of
ibe Meigs County Department of
~uman Services Monday presented a
Jetter signed by 52 QHS 'employees
~ing commissioners to keep the

Cellular-Service
? •

A Gannett Co. Newepaper

·_A ccountability urged ,.....-Flash flood remnant
~in insurance coverage

.Lucy and Andrew Pearson built
this town with their bare hands.
!heY marriell when Lucy was 18 and

I month

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 7, 1996

1 s.etlon, 10,...

· (Peanut Butter Snacks)
at
Rejoicing Life Christian Sch~l
Middleport
Come and see an alternative to
Public School.

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VoL47, NO.I

p.m.

Also openings for grades 1-6

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a1

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·Peanut ·autter Brunch

stacking her trca.&lt;ures in neat rows

"Pamela had no fear, which was in a recent interview, retelling lhc stoYANK'ION. S.D. CAP) - Tom
Brokaw isn' t just a network news great because it allowed her io do ry of how the children's classic about
anchor to folks in Yankton. He IS the "many . of the stunts herself," Lock a naughty monkey came into being.
The seven·Curious George books
news in his home town and that said.
have sold 12.5 million copies. An
makes him a little uncomfortable.
TRlTilf OR CONSEQUENCES. anthology of the seven issued last
The city is considering a proposN.M.
(AP)- Ralph Edwards does- year, " Tile Complelc Adventures of
ar to rename Broadway Avenue to
let
anything stand .in the way of a Curious George." is in its second
n't
Tom Brokaw Boulevard.
printing.
· The "NBC Nightly News·· anchor good party .
Despite fragile health, the 82-yearAfter their marriage, she and her
he initially agreed to the idea but
. h4s been.surprised that the issue has old former host of the popular quiz . husband, Hans Augusto Rcy, settled
become a topic of debate around show "Truth or Consequences.. in Paris. where they collaborated on
returned for the city"s annual Fiesta the 1939 book "Rafi ct les Neuf
town.
: "It kind of puts everybody in an celebration. wh!ch he hasn "t missed Singes.' One of the "Nine Monkeys"
a\\'kward position," Brokaw said Ia." in 47.years.
of· the title was a prototype for
"If
I
wasn't
here,
rd
probably
be
George .
.
week in.a telephone interview.
· : "I'm very flattered. bul I don"t · falling dead somewhere." Edwards
They Oed France in 1940, just
. want this thing to be some kind or said Saturday.
ahead of Nazi forces, and moved to
embarrassment.! don 'l want anything
The celebration siarlcd after the United States.
to happen that will divide lhc Yank- Edward.•' quiz show issued a chal- · The Houghton Mifflin Co. bought .
ton community. Those arc still my lenge in 19SO for some town to "Curious George" during their first
rootS. It's still my hometown.··
~hange its name to Truth or Conse-. week in the United States. It was pubIf the street· renaming docsn"t quenccs.
lished in 1941 , and the Rcys wrote
work out. Brokaw joked. maybe
"In those days. nothing seemed seven Curious George books ovcrthe
something else could be·arranged:
imppssiblc.:· he said.
·next 25 years.
"They could name. the alley
Residents of what was then Hot
"He became very much a figure of
behind (a former pool hall) after me: Springs, N.M.. 140 miles south of his own. He knew what he could do
1 spent· mori: time there than any- Albuquerque. voted overwhelmingly and couldn't do. He became a perthing."
for the name change to puflhc town son, •· Margret Rey says.
·
on the map.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fran
There arc 13 incorporated towns .
Drescher: the stereotypical New and cities in the United States named
Yorker on "The Nanny:· will have to Hot Springs. but "there's only one
go back to the BigApplc to file a law- Truth. or Consequences.'' said resiSyracuse
dent Louise Walls.
suit against TV Guide.
Bedding&amp;
Edwards always brings someone
Drescher filed a negligence suit .
Plants..........$6.50 flat
along.
to share !he spotlight Back ill Vegetab(!l
against the magazine in Superior
10 in Hanging Baskets $5.75 &amp;
Court claiming she was burned by a the 1960s. ther!' wa.&lt; a 13-year-ok! $6.75
cup of coffee while posing for a TV Wayne Newton. and a younger 12 in Hanging Basket Fems
Kathie Lee Gifford. This year he. $10.95
Guide photo in New York.
brought
20-ycar-old Angela Watson Combination PoiS
Drescher is a California resident.
of
TV's
"Step
By Step...
................ r ............ $3.50-$9.95
her lawyer, Ralph Loeb, said in supGeraniums................ $1 .00 &amp; Up
port of the lawsuit.
•CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (AP) ~ ........................... 10 or more 85¢
That's nOI good enough. Superior
Before
Curious George. there Was Azaleas ................... $4.95-$8.95
Coun Judge U&gt;rcn Miller Jr. said FriZozo
1he
chimp. Or was it Coco? As Ahododendrons ............... $12.95
day. ruling the case should be filed in
&amp; Trees ..... $2.95-$10.95
she turns 90. Margrct Rcy can be Shrubs
New York City.
Open Dmly I e.m. - 5 p.m.
"Why should we try a case that excused for forgetting lhc.paniculars.
Sunday 12 Noon· 5 p.m.
992-577fi
happened in Central Park. Why · ··Jt was something very foolish.
shoukU·Ieam New York tort law?" One of those cutesy nameS.·' Rcy said
Miller said.
'•
TV Guide lawyer Mary Winh criticized the suit.
"She .had a cup of coffee in her
hand, she stood there and she spilled
it on herself.·· Wirth said. "Does TV
Guide have a duty ... to have one of
thiir own people dip !heir hand in the
coffee to make sure some sitcom
actress doesn't bum herself?"

May 7th 1

Tonight, showers •nd
storms likely. LoM In the
508. WedMsd•y. ahowers
•nd atorma likely. Hight
near 80.

6-8-1-8
Buckeye 5:
1-12-18-21-26

•

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 9004!!

p.m.

1-G-7
Plck4:

•

KINDERGARTEN
REGISTRATION
May 6th 7

Pick 3:

Sportt on Page 5

a new resident of Dayton, Ohio. She foot shack, lived without running
had crossed the .Ohio River two water and electricity for two years,
years before, Heeing the poverty of .scraping money together to buy more
her daddy's Kentucky farm and car- land.
They were going to build a steak
rying a twang that coats her voice
house. Since it was situated between
even today.
• The Pearsons and their two kids Lone Pine and Los. Angeles, just
drove west. Driving up 395 one about · the midpoint of nowhere,
bright day, they saw a sign and took stranded motorists kept coming for
help at all ho!Jrs of the day and night
it as such.
"Land for Sale," it read. They
Andrew, who was a mechanic,
bought 40 acres. Built a l:!cby-12- decided he might as ,tell go into bus1ne5s,as one.

Yan kton, S. .D. residents ·may· :::~~F~~h~~~~v~~:r~~~~~~z.
re. name stree't afte· r Bro·kaw ~~~~:!y~=~~~~ceiling.ofthe

LOS ANGELES (AP) - 1bat's
no stunt woman filling in for Pamela
Anderson Lee on a moton:ycle in
"Barb Wire."
\
"She iook to it like a duek to
water," Michael Lock. chiCf executive olfiCCF' of the Triumph motorcycle company, said Friday in dcscrib. ing the "Baywatch" star's skill on a
· 900 cc Triumph Thundetbird.

.

They call her the Hubcap Queen, but you .can call her Lucy
PEARSONVILLE, Calif. (AP)- block .wall fronting the highway.
When Lucy Pearson looks at hub.It even eamell her a spot iii the
caps, she sees be1uty. She doesn 't Smithsonian . Last year, Lucy's fine.
know why. They just speak to her.
weathered face was part of a Harvey
':They're just all so prelly," she Wang photography exhibit chronisays from behind the counter of cling elder Americans at work.
PearsonvilleAuto Pans in downtown
Magazines from all over send
Pearsonville.
writers here. She displays glossy pubThere is no traffic light here, no lications in French, Arabic and Gerschool, no supermarket and, as of two man. She can't read a word of any of
years ago, no post office. Heck, them, but that's her in the photos, ~o
there's barely a Pearsonville~ ..,....,,,..,bt about it, sporting her trademark
Surrounded by desert, riStrrg"'Up bOnnet and V-necked apron, smiling
from U.S. Hishway 395 about 100 sweetly surrounded by silver-colmiles nOrth of Los Angeles, is a parts ored discs.
store, a gas station, a Burger King and
Need a hubcap for a 1936 Dod,gc
about SO people, many of them Pear- · pickup? Lucy just found one for a
sons.
.
.
guy in Kansas. "It's not in the b.est
The govem"!ent closed the po_st shape." she said. "I like to send them
office a few years back. "They satd in good shape ...
we wasn't big enoush." sighs the 70How about a Rolls-Royce wheel
year-old great-grandmother. "When cover? Hard to come by and not
they took the post office, Rand cheap. She just sold a pair for $350
McNally took us off the map. " .,
·to a man in Aorida. "I'm going lo
That still rankles Lucy. She and specialize in those," she says.
her husband, Andrew, founded PearShe sells hubcaps for about what
sonvtlle 35 years ago.
.
they cost her.
·
Post office or no, people sttll flock
She likes helping people. She'll
here to see Lucy's hubcaps.
call all over God's green acre to find
She's got 140,000 ofthem;, "The a hubcap for a customer. Since she
Hub Cap Capttal of lhe World, reads started c~ecting 20 years ago, she
careful white printing on a cinder- hasbuilt'l'fuiteanetworkbuying, bar-

•

Sonics hand
Rockets loss
In playoffs

both or us. -- Dell'rived and BiUN
· Deu Biasd'our husband 's problem is not what he is eatina --it's
what's eating him . .Anyone wbo is
100 pounds overweight needs 110111e
serious counseling.
And you need professional help to
deal with your anger. Impotence
need not mean the end of sexual satisfaction. You have many options.
and I urge you to investigate them
"'ith a sex therapisl. If you really love
that man. you will give him the sup- .
port and help he needs at this crucial
time in your marriage. Plea5e•make
the effort.
Gem of the Day : When a man
says, " Honey, there arc only two
minutes left in the ( OOiball game," it
is the exact.amount1&gt;1-tiute as when
his wife says. "Honey, I'll be ready
in two minutes."

pie for whom you spoke today. Your
eloquent plea for cornpassiao toUCIIed
millions of readers. 'Thank you for a
lemr thai will make a difference.
Dear Ann Landers: l.must respond
to the 70-y--old widow who said if
sex is no longer a part of a DllrTied
woman's life, she should be willing
to accept SO percent of the blame.
l .say BULL. i guanntcc you I'm
not to blame for my husband l!eing
100 pounds overWeight. He chooses
to overeat even though the excess
weight causes his bloOd pressure to
skyrocket He chooses to overeat
even though it means he must take
medicine for his high blood pressure
that has made him impotent
Why should I accept SO percent of
the blall)e? None of this is of my
doing. It's my husband 's fault that
ours is now a sexless marriage. I love
this man, but I am angry about what
he has done to my life -- and to his.
His refusal to shape up has cheated

llinders

949-2676.
By the way, the theme for this
year's celebration is :'freedom, Family. Fun•. ·

"

the heartfelt zntitude of all the peo,

Ann

by Bob Hoeflich
. Wow! 'That wliS quite a weekend.
Again we experienced the heavy;
rains and again some residents
became too familiar with Dash Dooding. Somehow things have got to get
betiN.

Ohio Lottery

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate
Democrats are conceding they can't
block an election-year push by Senate Majonty Leader Bob Dole and
other Republicans to temporarily cut
the federal gasoline tax .
• "They're in the majority. They
have the votes," Senate Minority
Leader Tom Dasohle, D-S.D., said
Monday.
DeJ!Iocrats are forgoing a fight
even though many are criticizing the
reduction, saying it could amount to
a windfall for oil companies if they
don't pass along the cut to . con- .
sumers. And environmentalists maintain the tax cut would encourage
inore energy consumption and hurt
the environment.
Repu~licans were · hopins to
unveil details of the bill today-and, in
t~e Senate, possibly vote on il. Dole,
the presumplivc GO!' presidential
nominee, said he would discuss the
timing of the vote with Daschle as
well as the possibility of voting on lhe
minimum-wage increase long sought
by Democrats.
Rotary .Club and the MJHS Academic BOoet·
· ·While under heavy political presera Club.-ln the hOI)OI'Bd group wers, from 11ft,
sure
on the minimum wase, Dole, Rfront, J(yle Smlddle, Stephanie Wigal, Adem
Kan.,
propo~ on 1pril 26to repeal ·
Shank and Jentmlllh Smith; and back. R.,_
StewarJ, Sflvl ~. II, Joahua Souten ~ . · a 4.3 cent•urcharge added to the gas
. j tax· by President Clinton and ConWasleY TIIOinl.
.

gress, without a single GOP vote, in
1993
His call came amid increasing
annoyance from motorists over gasoline prices, which have jumped
around 20 cents a gallon since February. Republicans have sought
relentlessly to exploit the issue pqlitically, and Democrats defend against ·
it.
Action by Republicans was to
coincide with Tax Freedom Day,
also today. As calculated by 1he business-financed Tax Foundation, Tax
Freedom Day is the date the average
taxpayer has earned enough to pay
federal, state and local laKes for the
year.
. A rival sroup. tlie Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, CJlculates
the cut would shave less than hall a
day from Tax Freedom Day. B~t Dole
said Tax Freedom Day was "a great
day to send a message, a small message, but a message, to the American
taxpayer that relieves at least some of
their burden."
At the White House, spokesman
Mike McCurry said Clinton wanteli
the tax cut-considered as part of a balanced budget. But that doesn't mean
Clinlon had decided to veto j!.
.
"If it Comes (O US separately, we'll

look at it separately," McCurry said. :
"We would hope that the CoJlgress would give equal priority treatment to :
raising the minimum wage.'"
. The measure being prepared by
Republicans, according to aides who
spoke on condition of anonymity,
would start the repeal in mid-May or
June I and end it on Dec. 31. Republicans said they would make it .permanent in the 1997 budget due 10 be
sent to Clinton in September.
The leading proposal in both the
House and Senate for paying for the
temporary cut ~as ;e~arate legislation strcngthentnl( the government
fund insuring sa:vings and loan
deposits.
·
. That plan requires a one' time premmm payment from S&amp;Ls and
.
under budget rules, the money
can be'
used to offset the $2.8 billion cost of
the tax cut through December. House
GOP leaders also are looking at a cut
in Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary's
travel budget.
. ·
S&amp;Ls don 't mind their money
being used for the tax cut because the
deposit insurance measure would
require commercial tmnts to share
the cost of paying .off S&amp;L bailou~
bonds sold by the government in the
late 1980s and early 1990s.

�,

-Commentary

PageAa

· Tueeday,lllay 7, .1888

•

OHIO Weather
Wedn Jtby, May 8

111 ~ St, POIMI'Oy, Ohio
814-m-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEi=UCH
General Mllnager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Numbers gunpowder for' GOP
By JOHN CUNNIFF
.
AP Business Anelyst
NEW YORK - Bcrorc bestowing any sign of appreciation, the President might read the full analysis from the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing
think tank unac&lt;:ustomed to endorsing his policies.
' "President Clinton is right to point to the 1993 budget deal as creating
today's economic climate," the Heritage analysts said, referring to the President's claims that the economy is in good shape due to his policies.
In the Economic Repon of the President, for example, the administration
claims c~it for ha~ing helped create ·8 million jobs, reducing the deficit and
setting "the stage for this economic expansion and resurgence."
Yes, give him full credit, the Heritage people say, for casting "a dark .
shadow over the economy."
- From 1993 through 1996, they say, the cente,.Piece of Clinton's economic policy, the .Omnibus Budget and Reconciliation Act of 1993, has cost 1.2
million additional jobs and $208 billion in economic output.
The study's data, the authors suggest, may help explain the ill-defiQed
anxiety of so many workers and the widespread dissatisfaction with economic performance. despite low inflation, unemployment and interest rates . .
Had the big tax increase of 1993 been avoided, they say, we would have
benefited from 4(),600 new businesses, -$112 billion in wages and salaries,
$Z64 billion in disposable incpme and $138' billion in personal savings.
The numbers are gunpowder for Republi~ans - legislators already have
been briefed - but likely to be dismissed by the administration as mere
plllitical fodder. But they won't ·go away, says Scott Hodg~. one of the two
main authors.
'
· The attack .will be on a political rather than economic basis, he predicted,
maintaining that any analyst, even those at the White House, would obtain
life same results from the econometric model he and William Beach used,
That model, the Washington t,Jniversity Macro Model, is one of the most
respected and sophisticated devices used by economists, created by Lau·
renee Meyer, recently nominated by Clinton to the Federal Reserve Board.
. As l;lodge explained it, he and Beach essentially deleted from the model
the tax and spending changes contained in the Omnibus Act. allowing it to
simulate how the economy would have performed if factors had not
changed.
.
,
No other variables were changed, he said, and only mainstream economic· assumptions were made where necessary. The model, "a scientific economic tool," produced the results, leaving "not much to the imagination." ·
· Hodge, Beach and others who worked on the study concedJ: that there is
good news in. the economy, including the new jobs and lower federal
deficits. But such results, they say, are in spite of administration policy.
· Countenng administration claims that the 1993 budget plan triggered
Ct-onomic growth, they sity it gave Americans the "Clinton Crunch," the
dual effeet of declining real wages combined with higher taxes.
·
Blame it, they conclude, on the 1993 budget deal, which incfuded the
.~est tax increase in history. Give the President credit, they say.

World
•
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•

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•

dysfunctional.~

•

Today in history

•

-

President Clinton Mel conpessional RepublicMS ln now so Close
to agreement on Medicare fundina
that partisan bickering over it is
ridic ulous. But linger-pointing is
what we're in for as the system
lurches inexorably toward bankruptcy.
A new study by the Congressional Budget Office shows that the
Medicare trust fund will be unable
to pay all of its bills only five years
from now, but Democrats have made
•such political hay alleging that
Republicans plan to ." destroy" the
program that they seem unable to
quit.
President Clinton's new budget
calls for slowing the growth of
Medicare by $124 billion over the
next six years, so that per capita
spending would decrease from its
current growth rate of 7.8 pcn:ent to
5.9 percent. Republicans are proposing savings of $168 billion and a per
capita rate increase of 5.1 percent.
Both plans would only postpone
the date of Medicare's insolvency
for a few years, but agreement
would be a Sll!rt on the road to long_term reforms suc~ as means testing
or privatizing the system.
In spite of the n81T0wness of the
differences, Presid~nt Clinton, the
Democratic National Committee,
and the AFL-CIO are portraying the
1996 election as a choice between
"saving" Medicare and "savaging"
it. Polls show they have the public
largely convinced.
Republican leaders, with some
justice, charge that the news media
have allowed Democrats to get away
with rank demagoguery on
Medicare, but the truth is that ' the
.GOP also badly misplayed a danger, .
ous hand in .last year's budget battles.
·
According to an article in the current issue of the conservative journal, Forbes Media Critic, the key
GOP mistake was to decide on its
original Medicare cost saving ••
$270 billion over seven years •• after
it decided on its tax cut number, ·
$245 billion.
The sequence and the similarity
in the numbers opened the GOP to
Democratic charges ·that Medicare
"cuts" were intended to pay for "tax
cuts for the rich."
,
According to the article, by
Christopher C~ldwell of the conservative Weekly Standard magazine,
print reporters generally were careful to describe GOP proposal&amp; :as ,
"reductions in growth," while tele·

Lou Ellen Hutchinson

MICH.

percent of top journalists
Another 'mistake· occurred last
in Washington voted for August, aides say, when Republi -·
Bill Clinton in 1992 and cans planned for Gingrich to make a
ucuts:'
only 6 percent for nationally televised speech about
George Bush.
Except for the Washingplans to ·•save" Medicare through
"For an industry "reductions in arowth ... The speech
ton Post editorial page ,
which accused the Democthat'' so receptive to the never took place because Senate
idea
of affirmative action Republicans didn't want Gingrich to
rats of heing · " Medias the media is,': Blank- lake the lead on the issue.
gogucs," few media outlets
. ley said, "I'd say that a
sicked "truth squads" on
Des~ite GOP failures and Dem~
little ideological affirma- cratic political success, the GOP
the Democrats to expose
their misrepresentation of
tive action was in order. actually deserves-credit for forcing
the_GOP plan.
The media knew that ihe Clinton from a n~reduction stance
Under a barrage of
Democrats were telling on Medicare to his $1 24 billion final
Democratic criticism, support for outrageous lies about our Medicare position. And Democrats, in tum,
GOP efforts to trim Medicare plari. and they dido 't.lift a finger."
forced the GOP down from $270 bilgrowth collapsed in 1995, much as
According to a review of 1V lion to $168 billion.
Republican atlac~ helped sink sim· reporting done by the non-partisan
Closing the gap ought to be easy,
ilar support for Clinton's 1994 Center for Media and Public Affairs, but in an election year, of course, it
health care reform plan.
out of 63 Medicare stories on major isn't. 'And meantime, according to
~n NBC/Wall Street Journal poll
news programs in November 1995, the CBO, the threat of Medicine
showed that last July, a slight plural- II referred to GOP "cuts" and only bankruptcy continues to gr9w.
ity of voters over 65 years of age one referred to "reductions in
Last year, predictions wtre that
supported the GOP Medicln plan, growth. 1' Between January and April the· trust fund would be in cleficit by
but by this January, they opposed it 1996, out of 67 stories, 16 referred 2002. Now it's 2001 , Ten years from
by a margin of 26 ·pereent, and to GOP "cuts" and three to "reduc- now, according to the CBO, ·!he fund
younger Americans, ages 18 to 49, tions in growth."
will be $500 billion short of its
went from being evenly divided on
Despite evidence of skewed ·obligations. Under current law, the
the plan to opposed by a margin of · reporting, some GOP congressiona_l money can't be borrowedi Benefits
46 percent to 34 ·percent.
aides say, along with Caldwell, that simply will have to .be cut.·
Tony Blankley, House Speaker Republicans contributed to their · , This is an election year issue if
Newt Gingrich's, R-Ga., press secre· own do~nfall by failing to keep up there ever was one. And if voters
tary, charges that the media's perfor- pressure. on the media to be careful can't force an agreement,. ~~ l~ast
mance on Medicare was areflection in its reporting. "We got preoccu· they can punish demagoguery.
(Morton Kondracke It executive
of liberal bias, citirig a survey by the pied with negotiating and forgot
editor of Roll ·can, the newapiplr of·
Freedom Forum s~ing that 89 about message," one aide said.
Capitol Hill.)
·
'
vision allowed Democnu
to act away with charging
that the GOP was intent on

!Mansfield 174•

RAISE TIE

•

I•·

W.VA.

Margaret E.. Jones
.

..

Flurries
Vla Aslocialed P18SS Graph/csNet

Margare\ Ellan Jones, 49, of Nye Avenue, Pomeroy, died Monday, May
6, 1996 at the Holzer Medical Center.
Born Oct. 20, 1946 in Meigs County, she 'was the daughter of William R.
.and Helen Elizabeth Sprouse Holt. She was a homemaker. .
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudjl Cloutiy
She is survived by her husband, Charles Jones of Pomeroy; two sons, Timothy Jones of South Carolina, and Scott Taylor of Gallipolis; a daughter, Mary
Uribe ofWaverly;,seven grandchildren; and three sisters and brothers-in-law,
Karen and May ford Harris of Xenia. Jane and Tom Selbe of Columbus, and
. Sherry and Gene Goodwin of Long Bottom.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church,
Middleport. The Jtev. John Nev.ille will officiate and burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
storms likely south. Cloudy with a from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
chance of showers or thunderstorms
north. Lows in the 50s,
Wednesday ... Sho":'ers and thun- •
Word has been received of the death of former Meigs County resident Fred
derstorms likely~ Highs in the
A.
Morrow, 78, on Saturday, May 4, 1996 at Onnond Memorial Hospital,
70s ..,Except in the lower 80s far
south .
Ormond Beach, Aa.
.
.
Born May II, 1911 in Cambridge, he was the son of the late Wilmer and
Extended forecast:
Thursday... A chance of thunder- Daisy Morrow. He was a retired manager of Ohio Power Co., with 43 years .
storms. Lows 55 to 65 . Highs in the of service until his retiremenJ in 1981 . He was a member of the Meigs Coun. ty Planning Commission, and the Ohio Power Veterans Employees Associ·
70s.
Friday... A chance of thunder- ation .He was a past president of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, a past
storms. Lows in the upper 50s to lowpresident
of the Pomeroy Lions Club, chairman of the M·G·M Scouting Diser 60s and highs in_the 80s.
Saturday... A continued chance of trict, and a member of the Prince of Peace Catholic Church.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Mary E. Willis Morrow; three sons,
thunderstorms: Lows in the mid 50s
to lower 60s. Highs from the upper Gary E. of Pickerington, Mark A. of Syracuse, and Tod S. of New Smyrna
Beach, Aa.; two daughters, Robin A. Robertson of Gahanna, and Kim A,
60s north to the lower $Os south , ·
Catron of Orlando, Aa.; one brother, Arthur R. Morrow of Pompano Beach,
. ,
·Fla.; and eight grandchildren.
Services were held Monday, May ~. 1996 in the Prince of Peace Catholic
Church, Ormond Beach, with the Rev. Leo Hod2es officiating.
·
$5,837.50;
• Accepted the m1nutes of the
April 15 meeling.
Graveside rites for Mary Farmer Skinner of Middleport were held at 2:30
Prayer.bef&amp;re the meeting was by - p.m. today, Tuesday, May 7, .1996 at the Middleport Hill Cemetery. The Rev.
the Rev. Dawn Splllding of St. Paul's
Roland Wildman officiated.
Lutheran Church.
Among Mrs. Skinner's survivors are her husband, Arthur; a son and daughPresent · were Vaughan, Hysell, ter-in-law, Thomas and Glenda Skinner; and three grandchildren, all of GalCouncil President John Musser and lipcilis.
·
.
·
·
council members Geri Walton, Scott
Memorial donations may be made to the organ and choir fund at Trinity
Dillon, Bill Young, Larry Wehrung Church, P.O. Box 429, Pomeroy, 45769.
.
and George Wright, .and Sandee ;.. &lt;-'11te' Ohio'Xialley Publishing Co. apologizeS for the errors made.in Mon"
Mills, repre~ting the POmeroy Mer- day's obituary in The Daily Sentinel and Gallipolis Daily Tribune and for
chants Association.
any inconvenie.nce this may have caused the family.

·stalled warm front brings
.chance of storms ~to area
·By The Associated Press
A warm front stalled over Ohio
will continue io spread showers and
thunderstorms across much of the
state tonight and Wednesday, fore·
casters said.
Temperatures on Wednesday will
soar inta the upper 70s and low 80s,
the National Weather Service said.
The rain 'is likely to continue inter- .
mittently into the weekend.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 87 degrees in 1936 while
the record low was 31 in 1974. Sunsei tonight will be at 8:32 p.m. and
sunrise Wednesday at 6:23 "'m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Showers and thunder-

•,

MAXIMU.M WA6E.

Fred A. Morrow

Pomeroy Council delays
(Continued from Page i)
granting 3 percent pay raises forcertain hourly and salary employees;
• Approved the purchase of new
police uniforms for $1.637;
: • Tabled a request for $500 for a
new radio for a police car pending
discussioo on obtaining a used state
highway patrol car;
: • Gave a third and final reading to
an.. ordinance exchangina Prt~JM&lt;rties
.).r B~'H~iiltn;- • ·' ' " ' ' - '· -'·
, • Approved the mayor's report of

A Mother's Day salute to feminism

Unique fund needs ·close attention··

The b~dgun-related death of a James M. Soulsby said.
Robin RowleY: 39, was found
Langsville woman last weekend· has
been ruled a suicide by the Meigs dead early Saturday ·at her Folden
County Sheriffs Department, Sheriff Road residence, with an apparent

Meigs announcements
Dinner planned
A dinne• will he served at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, 5 to 6:15p.m. Cost is
$4 a person. Middlebranch Blue
Grass Band will entertain following
the dinner with a free will offering to
be taken for the musicians.
EHS senior trip
A meeting for al1 Eastern High
School seniors going on the ·senior
trip and their parents will he held ·
Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the high sch00 1
cafeteria. The student and at least one
parent must attend.
Banquet announced
The annual Wahama High Schqol
alumni banquet will be held on May
25. Graduating classes ending with
six will be honored with the 50th year
class of 1946to received special honor.
Reservation fonns are available at
Peoples Bank, Fruth Pharmacy,
Health Aid Pharmacy, or through J1m

.••!

..

The Daily Sentinel

!

1

•

(USPS Jl:l-1160)

Publid'led ~~ry afternoon. Monday lbrough

Fridny, Ill Coun St.· Pomeroy, Ohio. by. the
Ohio VaJicy PubliMiiag Compa:ny/Oanbeu Co.,
Pomeroj, Ohio 4!i769, Ph. 992-:2156. Second
CIIISS poliCDp paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member. The Auociated Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper A8110Cioti~rl .

POSTMASI'KA: Send llildren concctioM to
The D11ily Sen1inet. Ill Coun Sc.. Pomeroy.
Ohio 4'769.

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wheft: home wricr lervh:e is avll.ilable•

• MAtLSIJIIciUPTIONS ,

t-Mofpc_,.

an

.

Mary Farmer Skinner

Langsville woman's dea_
t h ruled suicide

·The New York Time.s Magazine recently ran a way to revive· my sagging
Thank you for our smart and sarcastic friends,
commentary on why subway riders are no longer spirits. Whenever the
with whom we discuss ' sex, business and that
giving their seats to pregnant women. The culprit, naysayers arc ·getting me
great sale at Macy's.
it turns out, is feminism.
down, I'. take a trip into the
Thank you· for our homes, which are not neeA few ~ears ago this story would have made belly of the supposed femi·
. essarily owned by our·husbands or our fathers. .
me furious. How dare an author who has so obvi- nist beas\. I attend a meet·
• Thank you for Liz Phair.
I
ously benefited from the women's movement •. ing sponsored by the Femi'Thank you for take-out food and drop-off laun•~
dry.
.
she is !I former White House speechwriter •• nist Majority or ·the Ms.
blame feminism for the rudeness of New York Foundation,
where I
Thank you for Pat Schroeder.
·City subway riders.
·
undoubtedly see a number
Thank you for the laws that forbid employers.
Bys.-a Eckel
But dopey anti-feminist attacks no longer have of bright-faced and cheer:
from .firing us if we have children.
· ·
the power to outrage me. By now, the blame-it- ful young women •· all of
Thank you for our economic independence, for,
on-feminism line is so pat that it is virtually tooth- whom are more ·than happy to call themselves the knowledge that we will never have to stay in _
less.
feminists.
a harmful relationship because of money .
Still, essays like this do succeed in making me
What's more, they do not think their feminist
Thank you for "Mary Tyler Moore."
'·
feel vaguely frustrated and lonely.
elders are harmful, irrelevant or out-of-touch.
Thank you for our ·parents, who cared as·mucl\~
I'll walk over to my window, pick a few dead Indeed these young wom~n are filled with deep, about our education as they did our brothers'. "
leaves off my plant and wonder: Doesn' t anyone · admiration and gratitude.
Thank you for our children, who will undoubt· .
else feel like ,feminism has done them some
So this Mother 's Day, I would like to speak on edly be even less shackled to stereotypes than we:
GOOD?
be_half of my cqntemporaries. We also have some- are.
·
I flick on the television and see yet. another thmg to say to the older generation of feminists .
In your fight to make our lives better, you were·
author talking about her 350-page book that
Thank you.
ridiculed, humiliated, scorned and despi!;ed. You :·
explains how feminism has hurt women. I go to
Thank you for giving us the chance to truly were called man-women, shrews and other names
choose
our destinies.
·
1
the bookstore and see a photo of an attractive
that can't be printed in a family newspaper.
.•
young author standing with her arms crossed defiThank you for the teachers who understood
But you prevailed and you made our lives
antly: "Women of my generation have not failed that we were seeking an education, not a husband. good. And if we are not always so grateful to you,'
feminism. Feminism has failed us," she declares.
Thank you for the caleers we complain about I ~upposc no one should be terribly surprised.
I open a newsmagazine and read a story about incessantly but actually love.
Mothers never do get the praise they deserve. ,
young women's feelings about feminism; it's pepThank you for our wonderful husbai.ds and
Sara Ectcelle a eyndlcattcl writer for_.,......: ·
pered with the usual put-downs •• "militant," boyfriends, who listen patiently to our c~plaints Enlerprlae Aaaoclatlon. Send comment• lo the·· ,
authar _In eare of thla newtplptr or iend her .e-mail
"strident," "hairy-legged! '
about work as they massage our necks and cook 11
nraaumaol.com.
'
It all makes me very tired. But I have found ·a us dinner.

4'

Lou Ellen Hutchison, 57, Cheshire, died Monday, May 6, I996at Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 30, 1939 in Drift, Ky.. she was the daughter of the late Perry
and !;lien Casebolt Sexton. She worked for the Mason County Action Group
as a case worker. She was a homemaker, and a member of the Pull £lospel
Lighthouse Church in Pomeroy.
She is survived by her husband, Leon Hutchison of Cheshire; two sisters,
Bernice Meade of Pikeville, Ky., and Emily A. Beck of Northeast Maryland;
four brothers, Wheeler Sexton of Bowling Green, Ky.• Thomas Sexton of
Cleveland, Ivan Sexton of Alloway, N.J., and Arthur Sexton of Drift; and
several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by three sisters, Goldie Castle, Su5an
Bridenbach and Martha Sexton; and three-brothers, Grover, Marvin and Lee
Arnold Sexton.
Services will be I :30 p.m. Thursday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, with the Rev. Roger Hun'ter officiating. Burial will follow in the
Ravenswood Cemetery, Ravenswood, W.Va. Friends may cal;l at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

• IColumbus!1e• I

...THEN. I JMI4E
THAl WE

'

IND.

By Dian Vujovlch .
equity analyst.
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If you like the idea of investing in
Currently, there arc 63 stocks in• who want some of the opportunity global funds. Through April 18,,
the Americas, one ,fund invests its the portfolio, which inclutkls asmat- ' of Latin America but who don't Pund qf the Americas had a total+1
By The Aasoclated Press
1
Today is Tuesday, May 7, the !·28th day of 1996. There are 238 days left assets everywhere from North to tering of large U.S. multinational want to. take the risk of all that ret11rn of slightly over 4 percent. ' (
South America.
. in the year.
Rekenthaler has a c011cem for: •
companies along wil)l small-compa- volatility."
Keystone's Fund ~f the Americas ny growth stocks from Latin AmeriOn May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Allied
During 1994 and 1995, Gunn was t~is fund related to its 1996 perfor-. i
headquarters in Rheims; France, to take effect the following day, ending the has been around since November - ca. ~orne of the large U.S and Cana- reluctant to invest in Mexican stocks mance. _
, . ;
1993. The concept of the fund is dian holdings include Motorola, because he thought that country's
European conflict of World War II .
"My concern isn't in the perfor· •
unique: Assets are invested in stOcks Gillette; Bahk of Boston, Dolo! economic problems were too risky. manee during the past two~ years,''' ~
On this dat.e:
In 1789, the first inaugural ball was held in New York in honor of Presi- as well as bonds from countries cov- Chemicals and Hudson's Bay. I~ Today, he's still not hot on investing he says. "It's just \hat they haven't~ 1.
ering half of the giohe. from Canada Latin America, three. of the fund's there even though the Mexican mar- made muctrmoney-in this yel\f's bull· l
dent and Mrs. George Washington.
·
to South ,America, including the equity positions are Telefonica de ket has rallied this year.
In 1812, poet Robert Browning was born in London.
"'arket. I'ro just looking at a short 1
United States and Mexico.
In 1825, Italian composer Antonio Salieri died in Vienna, Austria.
Peru, Brahma (Brazit's largest beer·
"I think it's going to take the period of time, but nevertheless, it's.-!
"I don't think there is another company) and Bradesco -(one of Mexican economy much longer to the only evidence I have."
In 1833, composer Johannes Brahms was born in ·Hamburg, Germany.
' !
In 1840, composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in the Ural region fund of its ilk around." says John Brazil's largest banks).
turn around than the marketplace
Shareholders interested in whaf •
Rekcnthaler, publisher of Mom_There are 13 ~ds in the portf~ would suggest at this moment," looks to be a·. one-of-a-kind fund •
of Russia.
.
'ingstar
Mutual
Funds.
"If
you
think
In 1847, the American Medical Association was founded in Philadelphia.
lio. One of the largeSt holdings is Gunn says.
.
.
may have some difficulty bench·· I
In 191.5, nearly 1,200 people died when a Oenilan torpedo sank the about it, it's kind of a straightfor- CVRD, the third-largest mining
'll)at point of view appears to be marking the Fund of the Americas' , l
ward concept. Ir's a continental con- company in the world. "We have ~ig costing him. But, it's still early in the perfonnance against other funds. "
British liner Lusitania off the coast of Ireland.
.
In 1939, Germany and Italy announced a military and political alliance cept."
positions in a small number Of. bond year.
Copscquently, COI"paring it , with ' I
Gilman
Gunn
has
been
portfolio
issues,," says Gunn.
·· So, there is no doubt that the con- oth'er U.S. stock funds, global· funds · 1
known as the Rome-Berlin Axis.
In 19S4, the 55-day Battle ofDien Bien Phu in vletnam ended with·Viet· manager of the Keystone Fund of
The Fund of the Americas is' cept of this fund is solid, and its per- or Latin American furids isn'tappro&lt; ~
the Americas since its inception. . geared for the investor with long· fonnance over the past' two years . priate because the fund is a hylirid. ~
namese insurgents overrunning French force"
·
Working with him are five analysts. term investment needs who wants to comforting •· at year-end 1995, for It's ·a special opportunity fun(! .00 ! ,
In 1963, the U.S. launched the Telstar 2 communications satellite.
In 1975, President Ford formally declared end to the "Vietnam era." To research the fixed income side of be invested in the Americas but · instance, it was up 9.75 percent; . will need individual attention.
Dl•n Vulovloh It the •uthar at ' ·
In Ho Chi Minh City - formerly Saigon -the VietCong staged a rally to the portfolio are -a domestic fixed without the volatility of being exclu- while the average Latin American
incc;~me analyst and an international sively in Latin America. •
fund,wi!S do'n ovtr 20 percenl. •
"811~~Tllk About MU1u81 FunoM'' ,. · :
celebrate their takeover.
.
'
"Latin America, as a region, is
But this year's perfonnance is 11111 "
ghl T•"5 Alloullmlwllna tor 'l
In 1984, a $180 million out-of-court settlement was a•mounced in the fixed income an~lysL On the equity
·1
_..._
·
·
I
·
.
.
.
VOW ReiiiiiMIII, bolh at Whloh babl
the
I
side,
there
are
two
Spanish-speaking
pro
y most vo all e m...et•n aggms bebtnd the Lalln Amepcan publlelltd bJ MoQr.w Hm. IIMd . - ." ,,
Agent Orange class-action suit brought by Vietnam veterans who ch~ed
equity analysts and a seasoned U.S the world,'' says Gunn. "We've tri~ funds' performances as well as tho~ 11oM to htt In..,. at IIIII ntall!lf:ll\. ! ••·
they had suffered injury from exposure to the defoliant.
.•

'

AceuWe~ forecast

The Daily Sentinel .Partis.an bickering stalls Medicare reform
T.sttJDfisnd i111!148

..

13 - .. ................... ........................ $77.30
26 Woob................. .....................:....... $!3.12
~2 ..,...,•.. :....•...!,...........~...................... SIOS.!56

--Mofpc-KJ

"-....;--............................ .....,.... ,.m.25 ·

26 -

.. ,.. ............:..........................:... $!6.68

,, -

•. :.. ,...................... .... ..........SIOP.72

Proffitt, 304· 773-5505 . Reservation
deadline is May 18.
Barbecue set ·
The Syr~cuse Fire Department
will stage a chicken barbecue Satur·
day with serving to star at II a.m. at
the fire house, Cost is $4.50, to eal in
or carryout.

gunshot wound to the head.
· Rowley's body was discovered by
the owner of the home around 6:30
a.m., who then alerted the Rutland
Squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services and the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
Meigs County Coroner Douglas
Hunter pronounced Rowley dead at
the scene. Officials with the Meigs
County PrOS\lCUting Attorney's Office
and Ohio Bureau of Criminal .Investigations also responded to the scene.
The body was sent to the Franklin
County Coroner's Office, Columbus,
where an autopsy is pending.

EMS units answer 13 calls

Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded 13
calls for assistance Monday, including three calls for assistance. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
. II :2:i a.m., Sotith Fourth Avenue,
Glada Davis, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
POMEROY
8:29· a.m., Ann Street, Michael
Remy, VMfl;
I :04 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, Sara
McDowell, VMH ;
4:22 'p.m., Oak Street, Dorothy
Hendricks, VMH.
.
RACINE
2:26 p.m., Blind Hollow, Mary
Smith, VMH;
5:09 p.m., Sellers Ridge, Ruth
Sellers, VMH.
REEDSVILLE

4:12p.m., State Route 124, James
Barber, VMH.
RUTLAND
2:14 a.m., South Third Avenue.
Middleport, William Cadle, Pleasant
Valley Hoii!)tal;
.
7:13 p.Jlr., Salem Street, Marjorie
Rice, VMH.
SVRAl:;USE
2:36 p.m., Fourth Street, Racine,
Fred Sayre, Holzer Medi_c~l &lt;;:enter.

!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!S~t~o~ck.~s!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Am Ele Power ....................... 39 1/z
Akzo ......................................58~

Ashland 011 ...........................40'~
AT&amp;T ..................................... 59~,
Bank One ..............................33'1.
Bob Evans ............................ 15'1.
Borg-Warner ......................... 38'1.
Champion lnd .........................18

&amp;-,.

Charming Shop:....................
City Holding ............................25
F~tderal Mogul ....................... 18'1.

Gannett .................................677.4

Goody~tar T&amp;R ......................52'4

K-mart .....................................9'-.

Lands End .............................13'4
Llmlt~d

Inc..............................23

Peoples Bancorp..............:.... 40
One Valley ....... :.....................31'1.

Rockwell ..............................56~
Robbins &amp; Myers .................... 38

Royal Dutch/Shell ..............140'1.
Shoney's lnc.........................11 '1.
Star Bank ..............................66-,.
Wendy lnt'l. ........................... 19~
Worlhlngton Ind. ..................20'.1

-·-·-

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

'I

•

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·(Continued from Page 1)
About 25 homes were damage4•
man said that in 1995, the county and five families were displaced,
took in $650,766 into the insurance Byer said.
•·
fund while paying out $681 ,099,
Dyer said he is in the process ofwhich incloded claims, administra- assessing storm damage.
tion costs and life insurance premiIn addition . Salisbury Township,
·
resident
Oscar Smith discussed flood
urns.
However, the figures do not .lake damage on Laurel Cliff Road.
into account an 18 percent increaSe::lh
The new portion of th,.
departmental health insurance "user Ravenswood connector road is caus- '
fees" enacted in August 1995.
. ing drainage problems, he explained,
Department heads raised the pos· asking the board to assist with worlc,~­
sibility of increasing deductibles or ers to help clean creeks in the area.
premiums to increase the reserve
"Everybody agrees the creek' .
need cleaned
out all over the county.~
fund ..
DHS Director Michael Swisher Hoffman concurred.
polnted out he would rather see a
The board also met with Lentes.
modest increase in premiums as and Engineer Robert Eason over the'
opposed to raising deductibles. DHS proposed closing of an alley in Letart ..
cqrrently pays the employees' share- Falls.
_, •
of the insurance premium.
Eason pointed .out the alley in ,
"You're getting into the employ- question was never dedicated as iJ ·
ees' pockets when you do that," he township road or right-of-way and"
said.
therefore could not he vacated.
•
Hoffman said the last two increas- . '.'There is no record of it being
es in premi11ms were paid by the right of way," Eason said.
·
county, not passed along to employLentes said the adjacent property
ees.
owners would have to resolve the ;
"Nobody wants to change the issue between themselves and said he
insurance, yo\l've got good insurance would write the township trustees and·
and you are all happy with it," Hoff. the parties involved.
, ..
man said. "The problem is we want
On the Middleport Marina.paving .
to keep it solvent."
project, commissioners approved the
County Schools Superintendent lowest bid of $20,780 submitteq by ;
John Riebei asked Hoffman why the Shelly Co. of Thornville, Othe~ .
$14,000 in county general fund s contractors submitting bids ":'ere
were not transferred into the insur- D.V. . Webe,r · Construction of.
ance reserve fund after the August Reedsville, $24,287 .50, and Tri, •
price increase. ·
County Asphalt of Zaleski, $23,140,'
Hoffman said the money would
In other.business, the board paid come from this year's appropria- weekly bills of $149,S40.52, . con- :
lions.
sisting of 171 entries.
"What if all offices did that?"
'Present were Hoffman , Vice Pres•.
Riebel asked.
ident Janet Howard, Commissione~
Hoffman repeated that the goal of Robert Hartcnbach and Clerk Gloria
the meeting was not to change the Kloes.
.county's health insurance.
"If we ever do change insurance,
y·ou'll be the first to know," he said .
Hoffman agreed with the consensus that conflicting cost figures need
to be resolved.
Also present were Probate/Juve,nile Judge Robert Buck, Prosecuting
-Attorney John R Lentes, Opal Dyer
representing the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, Eme~­
gency Services Director Robert Byer,
Health Department Director Jon
Jacobs, County Court Judge Patrick
H. O'Brien and Common Pleas Judge
Fred W. Crow III.
·
In other business, the board
approved an emergency proclamation
following weekend thunderstorms,
.
-

-~irrMimi•Av- ·

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Glada
Davis, Middleport; Ruth Ann Sellers,
Portland.
Monday diseharges- none .
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges May 6 - Kimberly
Rhodes.
(Published with permission)

MOST IMPROVED - Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Pres!- •
dent Lloyd Blackwood preHnted a trophy to Brandy Stevena, : ·
. most Improved eighth grade atudent. at Monday night's a()!lde- :
mlc banquet at Meigs Junior High School. The seventh grade win- • •
ner of the trophy wu Trlsh Walker, who was unable to attand. The~:
banquet. to recognize outstanding students, Ia annually apon· ·
aorecl by the Rotary and the MJHS Academic Boosters Club.
:.

�orts

The Daily Sentin~.l
.

.Seattle outlasts Houston 105-101

Tuesday, May 7, 1986:

'

SEATILE (AP) - The Selttle
SuperSonics hit a playoff-record 20
3-poinla's, includi11g 13 in a row, to
beat the Houston Rockets 105-101
Monday night and lake a 2-0 series
lelld over the two-time defcndins
NBA c;hampions.
II was Seattle's II th conse&lt;:utive
victory over the Rockets, includinc
six this season.
The teams combined for 33 3pointers, also a playoff record.
Detlef Schrempf led the Sonics
with 21 points and Gary Payton,
selected the league's Defensive Player of the Year earlier in the day, had
18 points and made a key steal from

Eastern softballers rack uP two more triumphs'.
'

The Eastern Eagles scored to big
wins in pursuit of the Tri-Valley Conference · Hocking Division Crown,
defeating Belpre 8-7 in a suspened
game from earlier in the season and
span king Miller 3-0. Eastern senior
Rebecca Evans picked up bQ!h pitching victories and broke the school
record for pitching her third no hitter.
Eastern is now 14-1 overall.
Against Belpre, Rebecca Evans
picked up another win, yielding just
five hits, slriking out five, and walkin!) five. Kim Arnold suffered the
loss in a great effort of her own.
Eastern took a 4-0 lead in the first
inning when Patsy Aeiker and Kim
Mayle reached on errors, Nicole Nel-

son walked, Mindy Sampson doubled, and Evans had a sacrifice fly.
Belpre came back in the second to
tie the game 4-4 when three walks, a
Cooper single, and two-run error on
Mays mishandled ball brought home
the runs.
Eastern went ahead 5-4 in the third
when Tracy White led off with a double and scored on a sacrifice fly by
Sampson . Evans and Holter singled
to load the bases, but were left
stranded.
Belpre tied later in the inning
when Foraker singled and scored on
a Shindledecker single.
Belpre.took a 7-5 advantage in the
fourth.
It was at this .point the game was

susj)ended. Eastern came back in the
· sixth inning when with one out
MAylo singled, Nelson walked,
White singled and Sampson and
Evans each had RBI walks.
Tied at 7-7, Eastern won it in the
seventh when Crystal Holsinger
walked, Nelson walked and Tracy
White smacked a game-winning double.
Eastern hitters were White 3-5,
Sampson a double, and singles by
Mayle, Holter, and Evans.
Belpre hitters were Arnold, 2-4,
and singles by Foraker, Shindledecker, and Cooper.
The Miller game was a real showdown for the two TVC clubs. Rebec -

ca Evans and Angie Hughes battled

lied• for two more runs as Martie
furiously on the mound for the game's Holter singled, Juli HAyman sacritop honors. Finally. in the thiril, the ficed her to third, Amanda Milhoan
Eagles broke the scoreless game singled and Sampson walked. Kim
with a walk to Sampson, a walk to Mayle had the final RBI (single) as
Mayle and a single by Nelson that Eastern pushed ahead 3-0.
loaded the bases. White then walked
·Evans, in pitching the win, broke
to bring home the go-ahead run. the Eastern High School· school
Evans struck out two of the three bat- record in two categories. This was
ters she faced in the third.
her sixth shut out and her third
In the fourth inning, Eastern ral- career no-hitter. She fanned nine and

walked just one in a dazzling perfor~
mance.
_
Hughes suffered the loss with foup
strikeouts and five walks.
:
Eastern hitters were Mayle. Nel-:
son, Holter, Milhoan, and Sampson.;
Linescorc:

Miller 000 000 0-0 0 2
Eastern 00 I 200 0-3 5 0 ;
·wP-Evans
LP-Hughcs

Be-A·Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's.

Stobart to undergo
multiple byp.ass

Avery stops Rockies

•

row, L-R) Jordan Stotts .Derek Randolph, Jeremy.
Banks, Wesley Fields and Ben Collins_ Behind
them are Brandon Kessell, Bradley Whaley,
Jamie Higham,. Lester Aelker, Johnathon Bobb
and coach Greg Vining. Absent were assistant
coaches Brian Whaley and Jennifer Vining.

Groups call fqr
Schott's -o uster

Reds, to the town. to ma)or league
baseball."
·
Cone pitched a five- hitter against
Unlike 1993, when a solid per. Chicago on Thursday night after
ccntage of Reds fans backed Schott · missing hi s scheduled start April 28, .
through the suspension, her support the first .missed start of his career.
has been eroded this year by her Cone. 33. is 4-1 with· a 2.03 ERA
numerous missteps.
after re-signing with the Yankees for'
She underc ut a ta• campaign to $19.5 million over three years. the
build a stadium, eliminated updates hi ghest average salary ever for a
on the scoreboard to save money, and pitcher. BASKETBALL
said she felt cheated when the season ·
opener was postponed by the death of
umpire John McS herry.
Local newspapers have called on
her to give up control of the team .
saying she is an embarrassment to the
city.
"There's an incredible·feeling of
frustration probably by 99 percent of
By
Cincinnati ." said · Michael Rapp,
Dave
director of the Jewish Community
Relations Council in Cincinnati.
Grate
Schott did not return a telephone
of
mt·agc see king comment. The Reds ·
h · o on statement Monday.
Rutland
In her ESPN interview taped Friday, Schott - who is of German
descent - said of Adolf Hitler.'s term
II you cross your bridges
as the German chancellor:
before you come to them, you
"Everything you read, when he
have to pay the toll twice.
came 'in he was good . They built
***
tremendous highways and got all the
Anyone who
thin ks TV has
de stroye d c nve rsation in the
factorie s going. He went nuts, he
the phone
went berserk . I think his ow n gener- . home doesn'
bill.
ais tried to kill him, didn 't they?
Everybody knows he was good at the
When buying* *a *I wn mower,
beginning, but he just went too far.''
you should choo one that will
When contacted by The Associatlast
your kids se .eral years.
ed Press after the interview, Schou
said, "He as ked me some questions
Then there was the psychoduring the interview that I really didtherapist with a portable couch
n't care for."
for house calls.
Jacobson noted that Hitler wrote
"Mein Kampf,'' which outlined his
* * corn is so
Sign at fium*: "Our
beliefs, nine years before he rose to
fresh. the ears still wiggfe."
power. He said Schott's assenions
"arc profoundly ignorant, offensive,
and taint America's beloved national pastime.·:

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI- · In a year of
renewal, major-league baseball finds
itself confronting an old problem: .
What to do about Marge Schott. ·
The Cinc innati Reds owner has
created another uproar by dusting off
her assertion that Hitler staned out
good and merely " went to far." She
first used the line in a newspaper
interview four years ago, and it created a stir then.
Her decisio n to repeat the line during an interview with ESPN that aired
Sunday night prompted Jewish organizations'to call for her ouster and left
baseball's top officials occupied with
an unwanted problem.
Acting commissioner Bud Selig
said Monday that he and National
League president Len Col~m:ln were
considering the matter.
"Len and I are looking into this
together," Selig said. "Len and I have
spent a lot of the day .on thi s. "
While Selig and Coleman talked
privately, the Anti -Defamati on
League and the American Jewish
Congress asked ·baseball to either
punish Schott again or forc e her to
' give up control of the team .
Schott was suspended for the
1993 season for using racial and cth·

The Light.
Toac!)

nic slurs. She took se nsitivity training before being reinstated as con-

trolling partner of the Reds.
"Another suspe nsion would be
pointless, since she will return as
unrepentant as ever." said Phil Baum,
executive direct'or of the American
Jewish Congre ss.
Baum urged Selig 10 put together
a committee to find someone who
could buy Schott's controlling share
of the Reds.
"In retirement, Schott can proceed
with her ravings without defacing the
game." Baum said. "The fans . in
Cincimlati and throughout the maJor
leagues. as a matter of fact , deserve
better than this sad e.xcusc for an .
American
,., magnate and sportswoman.
The Anti-Defamation ·League
urged baseball to discipline Schon as
a way of pressuring her to get out.
"I think the combination of ccnain
sanctions hy ml\i ~r le~gue baseball
together with th~ gQ9d people of
Cincinnati - I thmk there are pressures that can be brought 10 bear, "
said Ken Jacobson, assistant national director. "At least public opinion
can be brought to bear..
"It's an embarrassment 10 the

•

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I

100 Years 95 Years .92 Years
Saffer's Inc.
pllonf 555-2211

Phone .555-1022
Ealllbll&amp;hed 1815

Elllbllhed 1100

80 Years

78 Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Phone 555-8782
Establlshecl1915

Phone .555-8242
Established 1917

7o·vears

6'7 Years

·The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

Anter Bros. Co.
Phont 555 113.1
Elllblllhed 1903'

Zelco eo.
555-1342

Eltlbllshecl11123

61 Years
•

Woodlow's Diamonds

Phone 555-~45

Phone 5554468 ·
Eatlbllshad

1.a.

Eatlbllahed 1925

60 Years ·

Years
Bail Security Bonds

Phones~

Phone 555 6565

Established 1935

Eatabllahecl1941

7 SltOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSES

..

' ''
' •'

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M LandscaPing

Phone SSH134

PhoneSSHm

Eatabllahed 1941

Eltlblllhtd 1951

PIQM5555454
Eatabllahtd 1155

'

20 Years

25 Yea.rs

Med..Care Center Inc. Trlskett Party Center
Phone sss 6155
Phone 55H267
El1ablllhtd 1870

Cleveland (Hershiser J-2) 111
Oo.kland (John s 2-3i. 3:15p.m.
Detroit (Lira 2-3) at New York
·(Kamifniecki 1-0). 7:.'5 p.m.
•
BJ.io n (Clemens 1·4) at Mil·
waukee (Miranda 1-1). 8:05p.m.
Baltimorr (Wells 2·2) at
Chicaeo fFe~ -4-2). 8:05 p.m.
Toronto (Guzman 4-1) at
Telas (Oliva 1-0), 8:lS p.m.
Kanw Oly (Unton 0-0) M
·California (Abbott-1-4'), 1~: 05 p.m.
.
Minnesota (Pan-a 0.0) at &amp;til·
tie (Wokotl 1-4), IO:OS p.m.
Wednnii.IJ'I GU!In
Minncsou' (Roben•oa 0-5) at
Seattle: (Hitcl\eatlt 1-1), 6:35p.m.
Detroit (Keaale J-2} at New
York (Gooden 0.3), Ul p.m.
Bollon (Sc-le 1·2) at Milw&amp;ukoe (Karl 2· 2). !,Ol p.m.
Baltimore (Eric bon ·2·1) Ill
· Chicl!O (Baldwin 2-0). 8:05 p.m.
' Toronto (Hansonl-4)at Tc:JW
(Win 3-2). 8:35· p.m.
Kanw q1y (Appitr l-l ) 11
California (Finley 4-2). 10:35 p.m.

cooch Ramon Aviles to mana1er of Scrnn·
ton-Wilket-B:vn:.
PmS~,JURGH PIRATES-Rc:called
UfPDamll May from CalJaryofthe Pacific Coast Leap. Sent RHP Don Mice li to
Car Un:a of the Sou1bem Uogue .
ALL

Nati

1 Football League
TLANTA FALCONS-Re-sicr~td
by Hebm to a oM-ye11r t dntratt ,
UFFALO BIU.S- AJreed to 1erms
wi WR Andre Reed.
. JNCINNATI BENGALS-Signd
• LB
WaUentedtiO a ofir:..year contnx:t.
ANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Re-siptd
an Huahes aDd 0 Danny Villa to

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National l..eafut

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Aorida 4, New York I
Montreal6. Chicaao 2
Houston II . Philadelphia S
Allanla4. Colorado I
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Piutburah (May 0.0) , 7'&lt;1' P·01·
'Chieago (Trachtel 2-2) 41
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Bucks sweep Michigan

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

-Sports briefs-PATERsoN. N.J. (AP) - Tim
Thomas, a 6-foot-10 forward at Paterson Catholic High, said he plans to
attend Villanova. Paterson Catholic
coach Jim, Salmon said Thomas, who
announced his decision Sunday nigh~
faxed his.letter of intent to Villanova
· and also sent it via overnight delivery.
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -Texas
Tech coach lames Dickey agreed to
a new five -year contract for $1 million. 'Dickey guided the Red Raiders
to a 30-2 record and a spot in third
round of the NCAA tournament

1

Forest HIIICieaneri

of:·

ing has become an importllll plrt
Seattle's offense.
.;
"Teams have been double·lellll-: •
ing us big-time," he said. "So when
our big guys get it down in 1M poat,
they kick it outside for the 3."
In the final quarter. Seattle made. ·
live 3-pointers. includina one by Sam ,
Perkins that gave the Sonics a I 03- . ,
99 lead with 2: II left.
.
Elie cut it to 103-101 with a dri- •
ving layup with I :S I remaining, but . .
those were Houston's final points. • ,
Trailing 88-82 early in the fourth ..
quarter, Seattle went on 15-2 run for
~in.
a 97-90 lead with 5:18 left Hersey
"I knew Hakeem was going to get
Hawkins sank two 3-pointers and . .
the ball and uy to do· something,"
Payton one in the run.
. ,,
When Payton hit a long shot with ,
28 seconds left in the third quarter. it ..
was Seattle 's 13th c,onsecutive 3pointer. Drexler's two free thrOws .
Elsewhere in the AL. Seattle over, and R,ich Amaral singled off with IS seconds left in the period ·;
edged Minnesota .S-4, Kansas City reliever Eddie Guardado, giving the gave Houston an 82-80 lead.
'
beat California 9-4 and New York · host Mariners a 5-4 lead.
Royals 9, Angels 4
defeated DelrOil 10-5.
Kansas City snapped California's
Cleveland's loss was just its fifth
H•llllw•Gftt.. DIIt
•
I
0-game
home winning streak with a
in 23 games.
Syracuse
•"•
Bedding&amp;
. "lt'sjusllough when you come in season-high 16 hits.
Johnny Damon had three hits and
Vegetable Plants .......... $6.50 flat :
and throw a couple of pitches and
10
in Hanging Baskets $5.75&amp;
three
RBis
and
Tim
Belcher
won
his
blow the game for the staner," Assen- ·
•
$6.75
•
third
straight
decision
for
the
Royals,
· macher said. "It's the hardest thing
12 In Hanging Basket Ferns
•
who also ended the Angels' six-game
for a reliever, but it's my job."
•
$10.95
••
Albert Belle hit his 12th homer for overall winning streak.
Combination Pots
Yankees
10,
Tigen
S
the Indian$. Julio Franco had an RBI
.. .. ....... :.................... $3.5()..$9.95
New York won for the seventh
double and Carlos aaerga added a
Geranlums................ $1 .0!J &amp; Up
time in eight games, in front of tl\e
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Kenny LOfton stole.three bases for smallest crowd at Yankee Stadium
Azaleas ................... $4.95-$8.95
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Cleveland and leads the majors,with since the second game of the 1994
season.
Shrubs &amp; Trees ..... $2.95-$10.95
22 steals.
•
Open Deity 9 •.m. - 5 p.m.
Just 12,383 attended the game,
Terry Steinbach gave Oakland a 1•
Sunday
12
Noon - 5 p.m•.
•
0 lead in the second with his sixth which started with the temperature at
992-5776
44degrees.
homer, and Giambi's first RBI dou'
ble in the third made it 2-0.
Mariners 5, Twins 4
Seattle got five shutout innings
from three relievers, holding Minnesota in check before the Mariners ·
scored four runs in the seventh
•
mnmg.
••
Bob Wells (2-0) was the main ben,
eficiary of the rally, winning the
•
game with 3 2-3 innings of two-hit
•
relief. Norm Charlton pitched a per•
fect ninth for his fourth save after Tim
soNY
•
•
..Davis got the. last out in the eighth.
••
With Seattle trailing 4-1, Jay Buhner ahd Paul Sonento opened the seventh with consecutive homers off
-Brad Radke (3-4). Dan Wilson
walked and Luis Sojo singled to
chase Radke.
FREE· ~
Russ Davis bunted the runners

Jackson, Gal'lia Counties
lead state in turkey kills ·

-Sports briefs~
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
Yankees stat · David Cone was
scratch ed from his start tonight
against Detroit because of numbness
in his pitching hand.

Payton said of his cruc:ial steal. "I
stuck my hand in there and knocked
it I001e. Fortunately, Shawn was
lble to pick it up."
Gllllel 3 and 4 will be played in
Houston on Friday night and Sun&lt;lay.
Seattle made 20 of 27 3-pointers
(74 percent), while the Rockets were
13 of37 from behind the arc (48 percent),
The Sonics broke Houston's playoff record of 19 3-pointers, set against
Utah onApril29, 1995. Houston and
Utah combined for 28 3s in that
game.
Nate McMillan, who was 5-for-S
from long range, said 3-point shoot-

By The ·A•a~ed Praaa
The Oakland Athletics needed 14
DOUBLE TEAMED • Seattle's Ervin Johnaon, left, and Detlef
tries
to play to the level of the CleveSchrempf, right, doubl•taam Houston's Hakeem Olajuwon dur·
land
Indians.
lng flrat period action of Monday's NBA playoff game In Seattle.
The Indians have the best record
Tha Sonlcs won, 105-101, going up 2-0 In the beat-of-aeven
in
baseball
again after a rocky start,
nrlet. (AP)
and they had Jack McDowell on the
mound Monday night to protect a 13game wim\ing streak against Oakland
dating back to July 21, 1993.
But the A's got timely hitting,
s1r0ng fielding and solid relief pitching to beat C,level~d 5-3.
. "It's a funny thmg about· sports.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State wide receivers coach Chuck StoSometimes you play up to the level
bart will undergo multiple bypass open-heart surgery Tuesday to cor·
of your competition, and I think we
rect blockages discovered last week during a routine physical exam!·
did . that tonight," A's manager Art
nation.
_
·
~
_
Howe said. " We played about lis well
Stobart, 61, is in his second season on the Buckeye staft'.
·
as we can play."
A native of Bradbury in Meigs County, and coach of the 1960 Soulb·
McDowell allowed just one. hit
eastern Ohio League champion Gallipolis Blue Devils, the former Mid·
from the third through the seventh
dleport and Ohio University grid star has been ·a bead coach at Toledo
innings, and led 3-2 going into the
(1977-81), Utah (1982-84) and Memphis (1989-94). He joined lbe Ohio
eighth. But a single by Ernie Young
and a sacrifice in the eighth got
State staff in March of 1995.
The procedure will be perfonned at Ohio State University Medical
McDowell out of the game.
·
Center.
Three Cleveland relievers then
gave •Up five straight hits, including
an RBI double by Jason Giambi off
Paul Assenmacher (0-1), an RBI single by Mark McGwire off Eric Plunk
a two-run shot off John Hope (1 -2) and an RBI single by Geronimo
By Tha ~asoclated Preas
Steve Avery just turned 26 and and Greg Gagne had a three-run shot . Berroa off Jim Poole.
·
people are already talking about the in the ninth as homers accounted for
"It was exciting. If you can't get
old Steve Avery. ·
all the Dodgers' runs.
up for .a game like this. especially
Nomo (5-2) allowed four runs and against Jack McDowell, you shouldThe Atlanta Braves left-hander
threw a six-hitter in a 4-1 victory over eight hits in 'seven-plus innings, strik- " 't be playing," said Giambi, who
the Colorado Rockies on Monday ing out five. He left after Mark John- also made several outstanding plays
night.
son's two-run homer in the eighth at third base. "I played a good game.
That was a lot like that old Steve made it 5-4. Nomo is 4:0 at Dodger The whole team played a. good
Avery who won 18 games in 1991 Stadium, but was 0-2 with an 8.64 game."
and I993. and a far cry from last sea- ERA in two prior road starts.
son, when he went 7-13 with a 4.67 Marlins 4, Mets 1
ERA.
The Marlins didn't exactly sting
" Obviously, I'm a lot stronger the ball, but consecutive RBI infield
upstairs than I was last year," said singles, a w)ld pitch · and Gary ·
Avery, who turned 26 last month. Sheffield's RBI single were enough
~..
"S~fC~=ss b~ confidl:nc~;· · · ,
lo break a five-game losing streak. AI
COLUMBUS
(AP)- The Divbion of Wildlife says 9,623 wild turkeys
Avery (3-2) has allowed more than Leiter (5-2), who has almost half of
have
been
taken
in the first two weeks of the 1996 spring seaso •
two runs. in only one of his seven Florida's 12 wins this season, allowed
The season is open in 46 ~ountles until noon Saturday, lbe d lsion
starts. Against the Rockies he ~lowed ._one run on eight hits, walked two and
•
·
.
said Monday.
five singles and a double and only st{uck out nine in 6 2-3 innings.
Ja~kson
County
leads
the
way
wllb
454
birds
harvesled,
~
lowed by
once did he allow more than one hi r Expos 6, Cubs 2
·
G8Uia
with
445,
Meigs
with
436,
Vinton
with
412
and
Mus
·
cum
wilb
in' an inning.
Pedro Martinez allowed two runs
359"Avery was about as good as it on six hits in seven-plus inning~ and
Hunten who bought a bonus turkey permit'tbis year
gets," Braves manager Bobby Cox matched his career-high with I 0
'
t
ake
two birds during the spring season.
said. "That was a good-hitting ball strikeouts. Martinez (4-1) won his
club he beat out there, I'll'tell you fourth straight start and has allowed
. that."
five runs in 32 innings over that span.
In other NL games Monday it "'as The Expos scored four runs in the
. Los Angeles 8, Pittsburgh 4; Florida first inning off Jim Bullinger (1-3) in
·
·
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State pleted on Monday.
4, New York I ; Montreal 6, Chicago winning their eighth straight at beat Michigan by identical 3-2 scores
Michigan, whi~h came into the
2; and Houston I I, Philadelphia S.
Olympic Stadium.
to finish a suspended game and com- series in second place, dropped 10
Dodgers 8, Pirates 4
Aslros II, Phillies S
plete a four~game sweep at Trautman . fifth ( 13-11. 20-27).
Hideo. Nomo won for the first time
James Mouton had a two-run Field.
Ohio State trailed 2-0 entering the
in three road starts this season and homer and a two-run double and
The Buckeyes now are alone in founh inning of the game suspended
Raul Mondesi hit one of three Los Doug Drahek allowed three hits over founh place in the Big Ten (14-10, because of rain on Sunday. Chris Ellis
Angeles homers. Mike Piazza added· seven innings for his first victory over 33-16 overall) and have won nine in extended his hitting streak to eight
the season.
a row. The doubleheader was coni- games with a three-run homer, his
eighth, to put the Buckeyes ahead.
Bob Spears (7-3) picked up the
win and Ron Nelson got his eighth
save. Tyler Steketee (0-2) was·the losWtdnetdlly's Gamet
er.
RBI- Boads. San Fmncisc0. 36; HRoMonday's Sport• Tr•m•ctions
New York (Wilson 1-1) at
dri guez.. Montreal , 34; McGriff, Atlanta, 30;
In the second game, Alex EckelBy The AISOCilltd Prus
Florida (Burken 1-4). 7 : 0~ p.m.
Kins. Pitlsbur@h. 29: ODell . Hotmon. 28: ·
BASEBALL
man
drove in the winning run with a
Bagwell,
Houston.
27
;
Santiago,
PhiladelSan Diqo (Valenzuela 1- l)at
· Amtrkan LtiiUt
phia.
27.
·
Pinsburgh
(Darwin
2·3).
7
:0~
p.m.
ninth-inning
single.
BALTIMORE. ORtOLES-R&lt;eolled
HITS-GrudzitlllllC'k. Mon1Kal. 49;
Chicago (Na~ arro 3-I J a1
LHP Rick Kri'lda from RocMster of the
Mark
Chonko
had a two-run
Grace. tbicago. 46; Lansing. Montreal. 45 :·
Montreal (Cormier 1·2). 7:35p.m.
lntemationall.ea)!:ut.
.
homer,
his
·14th,
in
the first inning,
Piuz.o, Los An&amp;eles. 45 : BUiumer. HbusHouston (Reynolds S-1) at
KANSAS CITY ROYAIS-Pioa:&lt;l JB
ton.
44;
DBell,
Hou&amp;
ton,
43;
McGriff.
,
Philadelphia
tFemandez.l-2).
7
'
S
p.m.
but Michigan tied it 2-2 in the sev''Joe Randa on the IS-day disatiled lis1.
Atlanta. 4] .
·
los Angeles (P&lt;~rk 3-1) at
rrtroactive to May 5. Rec.a.llm IF-OF Chris
on an RBI double by Kirk Beerenth
DOUBLES-La;sing, Montreal, IS;
Cinci nnati (Schou~k 3- 1). 7 : .\~ p.m.
Styqes from Omaha of the American Asso·
Caminiti,
San
Diego.
13:
OBell.
Houston.
Colomdo
(Reynoso
2-2)
at
man
and
a run-scoring sacrifice fly by
ciation. Ani\Ouncrd the resignauon of Den·
i2; Bmy. Houslon, 12; Jo)'I'ICI'. San Diego.
lulanta (Gio~i n e 2-.\), 7:40p.m.
ny Tre:.se, director of communia11ion~ :md
Derek
Besco.
Snt1 Frnncisco (Gnrdnr:r 2- 1) at
12: Groce. Ghicago. 10: HRodriaue~:. Moncommunity relations .
Nelson (2-1) got the victory. John
treal. 9; Hundley. New York, 9:,McGriff.
St . Louis (Andy Benes 1-4). 8:05p.m.
N11lonal Uacue
Anterkan IAape
Atlanla. 9.
Avrai
(2-2) was the loser.
PHILADELPHIAPHILLIES-Piaced
TRIPLES- Uohnson, New York, 7:
Mondty 's GamtS
OF Let Tinsley on 1be 15-day disabled list.
Ohio
State travels to first-place
DtShields, Los An at ln . 4;, RWhite, Mon New York 10. Detroit~
$;r,ned OF Ruben Amaro Jr. Trnnsfmed
treal.
]
;
Vizcaino.
New
York,
)
;
.Dykstra.
·
Seaule.
5.
M.
i
nnesota
4
Penn
State
next weekend, the last
RHP Bobby Munoz from the 15-dny 10 the
Oakland ,!;, C'Jcveland 3
Philadelphia. J; II are tied with 2.
60-day disabled list Granted a lea~ of
series of the regular season, while .
Kansas City 9. California 4
HOME RUN5-Bonds' San Francisco.
abstnce .1o Butch Hobson. m:m::~ger of
Michigan visits last-place Michigan
Only
games
sCheduled
I
J;
Kksko,
Atlanta,
12;
HRodriptl.
MonScmnlon-Wilkts-Bam of the lnlt'rnntional
ueal. 12: Shefrlelcl. ·Florida, 12: Bqwetl,
Tuesday'a c...ts
State.
'
.
League. Promoled minor-leque infield

-

•

Hakeem Olajuwon iD the cl011ina seoonds.
aydc Dn:xlcl' scomtl9 points for
Houston. Olajuwon, held tom points
in Seattle's 33-point victory in Game
I, had 17 poinlund 16 rebounds.
Payton knocked the ball loose
from Olajuwon in the comer with
10.1 seconds left after the Houston
center rebounded Mario Elie's missed
3-pointer with the Rockets trailing by
two.
Shawn ~mp got the ball and was
fouled by Olajuwon. Kemp then
made two free throws to seal Seattle's

Oakland snaps Cleveland jinx with 5-3 win

·--_..
---·
--- tO\.\. -·----·
---Of --.-.
--SALISBURY FOURTH-GRADERS- The fourth
grade boys from -salisbury Elementary completed a flna season In March with an overall record
of til-5. Salisbury was 5-tln league play and captured three runner-up trophies In the Rutland Elementary, Pomeroy Youth League and Meigs Athlatic Boosters Tournaments. Pictured are (front

The Datly Stnllnel• Pege 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
•
•
•

•

•

Cola&lt;ado (f.,.,.. 0.0) M

Atlallra (Moddu• 4-2). 7:40p.m. ·

S• Fruci~c:o (WMson 2-l) at

Sr. lAlla (Peltcmclt 1.0). 1:05 p.m.

•

M.,., ..._

Loodtn
NATIONAL Lf:)GUE

BAmNG-Joyll&lt;l'; S111 l);ei•· .376:
Or.ce, Chicqo . .374: Piuia, l.ol Ansela.
.JS4: LwiP!J. MOIIIUI ••3$%: MaWilliamo,
San Franciaco• .~Sl ; McGriff. Atlanu.
Jl.O: S.pl. Monnal . .343.
RUNs-c;Ndzletanek, 1'1....... 30;
BoNis. SM Frwloco. !lO: Burb. Colonlllo.
27; t..lii"" Moo ..al, 26: Bqwell,ltou~
ton. 26: Slitllleld, Florida. 26: Weiu. Col·
mdo, 2l: MaWilliams, San ~IKO, 25 .

Prlc:iea Good Until
May 12th

Jewelry

Women's L.OI'.0111'leSI

1/2Price

200/o.n-#+

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1 pouruf

$4.49

300/oofj

Co{d']Jop .
27¢ can
Candy 'Bars

Sungfasses

'%g. $5.75 O'J/..Lg

Houston. 10; Sosa. O.icBgO, 9; Kina, Pitts·
bu!lh. 9; Sanliago. Philadelphit, 9: Galar-

{aga,

Colorado, 9.

STOLEN BASES- M&lt;Rao. Chicogo,
15; DeShielch, l...osAnseles. 10; Boncb. San
Franci sco. 10: BLHumer. Houston. 9;
Morandini, Philadelphia, 9; O.yton, St.
Louis. 8; Whiten. Philadelphia. 8: UohnIQR, New Yort. 8; Coleman. Oncinuti. 8.
PITCHING (5 DeCisions)-Orace,
Philadelphia. 5.0. J.000. 2.53; Hamilton,

San Dieao.6-l . .8S7. J.66,; Smoltz.Atlllll~
6-1. .857, 2.53; Reynolds, Hooston, !1·1 ,
.833,3.!0; PJMII!inez, Monaoat..H . .800,
3.00; NeaJie, Pin1bui'Jh, .t-1, .800. 2.62;
Nomo. IASAnaeles,l-1, .714, 3.54: Al.cit·
er, Florida. 5·2, .714, 2.11).
STRIKEOUTS-Smohz, Ad- 60:
Wasoer. Pittsburgh. 52; PJMartinez, ~o~­
m:al.ll; Nomo,l.oo An&amp;eles. 46; Al.ci...-,
Aoridll, 46: Avery, Atlanta, 44: GMidduA.
Atlant .. 42..
SAVES-Bollatico, Phi !adelphi~ II :
JBm~tley, · Cincinntti, 7; TdWomll, Los
Anaolcs, J : Etkmley, S.. Loois. 7: Lcsltanic, Colorado, 6; Wohlers, Atlanta. 6; S are
tied with$.
lfl/96 Bl AM tnc:he" 8.8 REGU·
LAR PM·BBA·Lcadm 05.Q7
.
AMERICAN LIIAGUB
BA'ITING-O'Neitl, New Ycxt. .376:
'RAiorrw, Baltimore •. .369i Fl'homas,
Chitqo, .3S4; Brvsiu1, Oakland, :351;

EMartinet, Se.attk!, .348; Knablaucb..Min,_., ,339; c-. r....... .339; Moti,...,
MI_..., .Jl9.
RUN5-8yAadenoa. Balli..... lt;
EManinu. Seattle. 30: Belle, Clewland.
28: Sprque, ,..,_, 26; QVauafm, Mit- b e, 25: bValeacln. Mltw- 24;
T1tome. Clo.. ltood. 24; aewuu-. New
Ycxt, 24: Molitor, llli--. 24.

-Sports briefsFooTBALL
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) Andre Reed, Buffalo's career receiving leader, agreed to tenns with the
Bills and was to sign today.
Reed was seeking a three-year
contract that would pay him about
$1.2 million · annually. He had 24
catches for 312 yards and three
touchdowns last season, but missed
10 games with a severe hainstring
injury.
ATI..ANTA (AP) - The Atlanta
Falcons re-signed quarterback Bobby
Hebert. the backup 10 as-yet-unsigned
Jeff George, to a one-year contract.
Heben completed 28 of 45 pas$Cs for
313 yards in four games last season.
TENNIS
.
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) Andrei Medvedcv began the quest for
his third straight German Open, beatIng Tomas Caroonoll 6-2, 7-S.
· In other .first-round .matches,
Albeno Costa beat Palrik Kuelmcn 63, 6-0 and MaliVai Washington
defeated Francisco Clavet 7-S, 6-2.

'"

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.!R..eo· so¢

•

0.

0

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112Price
Prince !MatcfuWeUi
'lJoag Lotions .
12 oz.
'%!· $5.95

Pharmacy

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Pomeroy, Oh.
'tiN 9

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Ronald Hanning, R. Ph. ·
Mon. thnJ Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. lo -4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955

\

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O'J/..L'Y $4.19
SWISHER LOHSE

E. Main

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�,

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Pomet:OY e Middleport, Ohio

.~~~Truth

Tunday, lley 7, 1891S

.eventually triumphs when victim
confronts molestot
.

Ann
landers
1995. .... Aaldel

, n..:.

s,.-.,. •

*'JS,...It'.

c.

'

Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
to help olhers heal from the effects'
of being touched inapprwriately.' I
. know a lot about the subject --first. hand.
When I was about 11 years of
age, a relative who was five years
older asked me if he could scratch
my back. I had younger' brothers
who wodld often play " What letter
·am I writing on your back?" so I

-

.

never thoughr twiu about the offer. been sexually abused. I am now getAfter some playful lauahter. he ling counseling and beginning to
touched more thin my back.
heal because I finally realize I did
I was so uhamed, 1 never told nothing wrana.
anyone, but I never could put it out
My message to your readers is
of my mind. A ye~r ago, I wrote that this: Don't keep it locked inside, as I
relative telling him whaL I rernem- did. Confront it, and get it out in the
bered and confronting him about the open, even if nobody believes you.
repercussions I have suffered since. Eventually the truth will triumph
·
He phoned me severaJ mghts
later and set you free . ·- p hilade1phia
' ' ed th I had L . . •Lnd
a
lnSIS!
at
"""n u"' .
Dear Ph.ilallelphia: 1 want 10
aggressor. What's worse, when I told lhank you for urging readers who
my family, they believed his denial have been sexually abused 10 speak
and insisted I had made up the story out. 11 doesn 't mauer how long ago
'because m~ blood sugar was off. (I the abuse took place. II is extremely
am a diabetic.)
imponant lhat ~ou tell someone.
I am now in graduate school and And don't be secretive about it. The
a candidate for a medical (ellowship. perpetrator deserves to be exposed,
I hope to help women who have and telling the story will help you

'
II'Y \0 do too llllll:y lhiDJIIl ODCe. Lo!lltillle Follo'Mir in Memphis

heal.

De11r Ann Landers: I iead with
interest · your column about the
Dear Nemphis: How rip you
woman who was havinJ a face lift: are. People who tty to do 100 many
done and wondered if she could lhiRJS at once invarilbly end up
have a hysterectomy and some vari- doine soine lhinp.pver. No time is
cose 'veins removed at the same saved, and · the results are often
time. The doctor you consulted said unsatisfactory. I
.
it was indeed possible and that he, in
Dear Ann Landers: This may
~
'.ac1• had done It,
·
De11r
Mrs.
Lockjaw:
Tonie
t
seem peny, but I am married to one
when your hwband comes home fOr
I am a retired dentist. Many years of the most insensitive slobs around. dinner, serve him 8 can 'Of bea..,,
ago, I had a patient who needed sev- The thing that bugs me. more than and place Ibis column next io it
eral 111isdom teeth elltractcd. He an~lhing is his lack of appreciation: That shou)d do it.
.
asked, "As long as I'm out, would it
I have job that pays well, and I
be all right if a surgeon did a cir- pick up the bills for more than half
cumcision at the same time?" Of of the household expenses. I'm a
Sead questions to Ann .r ...t
course, the surgeon refused.
good cook and tty h&amp;ld to prepare .den, Creaton Syndicate,
Please tell your readers, Ann, that ' meals my husband will ~njoy. I keep Ceatury Blvd., Suite 700, LfC
for the best results, one should not hoping lhat I will live long enough · Anceles. Calif. !10045

!

for Seniors!" slogan. In tum, seniors
feel a spe(:ial affinity for lhe big horses, often harking back to the days
when they or their family w,orked the
land with draft horse teams.
'Jypically, Helmuth gives away a
number of prizes at each performance--to the oldest person attending, to the person who traveled the
fanhest, etc.' He also answers questions from the crowd and reminisces
about the te;un's unhurried walk from
Kennebunkpon, Maine to San Diego,
Calif.
•
In all, the I 6-month trip th.rough
I 8 states covered more than 3,800
miles, and the horses walked every
step of the way. The tjtl[m and crew
averaged ahout iO miles a day, 6 days
a week, resting on Sundays . They
made 'special stops at senior centers
all along the route. ·
Since that histori11. trip, the hitch
has·traveled even fartll~n their colorful semi-trailer. Last ~ear their
travels around the United States covered 23,000 miles, almost equaling
the distance around the eanh.

a

are in food service are required to
obtain yearly skin tests.

1Wo Eastern High School students
have been selec1ed for the 1996 AllOhio State Fair Band directed by
Omar P. Blackman.
Selected were Chrisline M. Grossnickle, euphonium B.C., and Anna C.
Wolf, trumpet. Students were recommended by their school's instru·
mental music teacher.
~ After live days of rehear~al, the
All-Ohio State Fair Band Will perform adt the 1996 Oh.io State Fair to
be held Aug. 2 through 18 in ·columbus. The band has been a featured
attraction at the Ohio State Fair since

hitch of champion Belgian draft horeea walked
from Maine to C&amp;IHomla In 1993-IM and now·
appeara around the country.

will

cal~ndar ____;,_....__ __,_....,.__

Alzheimers kits.

New legislation prohibits the payment of disability benefits under
Social Security and Supplemental
Security Income (SSJ) to individuals
whose disability is based on drug
addiction and/or alcoholism.
The new law affects current disability beneficiaries well as those
who file new applications for disability benefits under Social Security and/or SSI, said Ed Peterson,
Society Security manager, Athens
office.
•
For individuals who are currently
receiving disability benefits based on
drug ·addiction · and/or alcoholism,
cash benefits, as well as Medicare
and/or Medicaid coverage, wiJI ter-

as

--....__Soc•ety scrapbook--ALL OHIO BAND

$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yrs old.
' Service u
654-8434

Hackett. Mrs. David DuPlantier to
review "No Ordinary lime; Franklin,
and Eleanor Roosevelt, The Home
Front in World War II" by Doris
Kearns Goodwin. Beth Kloes to
present piano selecti.ons.

POMEROY .. Rock Springs
Grange, Thursday, 7:45 p.m. Annual inspection to be held. All members
urged to auend.

'
The dinner will be served at 6:30
To make reservations, graduates
p.m. and a dance .will follow with are asked to call Joy Clark, 992-3690;
music by the Alvin Chutes Band.
Harold Graham, 7420-3033, or
Classes to be honored are 1926, Gladys Cumings, 992-7131.
1936, 1946, and Mi!§fi. f&gt;I)J~for
GRADUATE
adults, and $6 for children:~itl1the
Nancy Smith Prather graduated
dance only, $4.
from Franklin Universit~ in ColumReservations are to be made by bus with a bach.elor of science degree.
May 20. A scholarship will be award- She maintained a perfect 4. grade
ed to a child or grandch.ild of a grad- point average. She is the daughter of
uate.
Freda Smith of Meigs County.

COIISTIUCTio-..

• TIW Trtmming
• Mowing (Rallltl«itiaa
and comriMIIdal)
•Shrubbery
Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request
No Lawn Too Urge or
Too Small
Plan Ahead, can Today!

·~Home•
•Gar~~gM

said.

,

tnRACTIVE
&amp;.WILLING
TO TALKII!

These individuals will be notified
by June 28, 1996, about the change
in the law. They will have until July
28 to request a review of their claim
on the basis th.at they will still be
found disabled without consideration
of their drug addiction or alcoholism.
Their case will be·reviewed by January I, 1997, and if drug addiction or
alcoholism is still found to be the
basis for their disability, benefits will

Serv-U (118) 645 8434

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

FIND TOTAL
• . SATISFACTION!
Th'rough a Uve

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC

Personal Psychlcl
1-900·255-0500

Serving all Your

. Ext. 4009

SIIITII~S

COISTIUCnOI

cu-•nr•••'•
Hom••
•New

' ii

•Adclltlonl

·New~

•Remodttli16
•Siding
•Roofing·
•Palntlng

'

645-8434

.

SS.It ,.. Minute,
Mutt be ,, .,.,
Toueii-Tone Atqund.
Strv-u (S19It1tl ..,.

with , . ,.,. ..,,a to beet 11 up
Sll'vlng S.E. Ohio &amp; Wnt Vlrglnle
.Toll F1W1:.00..72-Iltl7
448 1411

How.rd L.W1Iki.ll
ROOFING ~

NEW-REPAIR
GutteraDownsiJCIUW

EXT. 3694

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•Room Acldtttona
•New 01111111•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•ROOfing
•Interior &amp; ExJerlQr
Piotntlng
:

ELECI'RICAL

~:~~n;,~~:~~

Phone ·

614-992-5048'

V.C. YOUNG lll

Free Estimates

. Umaatone • Gravel

_____ ,,,

985-4422

Pomtray, Ohio

Chester, Ohio

H&amp;H

Free Estimates

SAWMILL ·

.;.;_. ~

:· J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER .

8411-21112

·RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
.&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC •

Dirt • Sand

812-6215

51'1MWlnl

'15 Yrs. El(p. lie. ·Ins.
Owner: Rli:k Johnson

ReLHOLLON
TRUCKING
............................_
.
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

FREE ES'nMATES
949-2188

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
• Masonery n3-5124

Must be 18 yrs.
Selv·U (618) 645-8434

BIIIHISIW -~

32124 Happy HoiiQW Rd:
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy B!iel&lt;les · '

CHEAPER RATES ·

WELDING &amp; FDRICAIION

.$20.00/HR.

614-742·2193
TFN

All Ohio
I "
'
i.,

••

1r

1· ~ , • •
~

l ,· '- ' l !

1\r·v

~

1•

U1 1'/t ·1

r't'l ,.., s11 · .,

!

. i'l''''rJirr.t·,
(',-,,.'11'
,1,.,,. f~ ) I,' I ·' ·, '
. ·' . · ' I
" l
t.i") 1 .lt ~) q 2

f)! Jll 't

:,

/t'J. lO
!\'

$32.00/HR.

1·900·988·8988
Ext. 6733· .
$2.99 per minute
Mtist be 18 yrs old
Service U •
619 645-8434

tPPIIa.ll- and/or vorlfltd
!omplelnta wo...
fnd til• following
J!ropoltd, or llnal actlona
t-'ued, by the Ohio
nvlronmental Protection
iiiiCY (OEPA) Latt Wnk.
ACTIONS" Include the
4clopllon, '"odlllcal\o!l, or
ocetton ol order• (other
en .emergency o"'ere);
e lteuanoe, dtntel, '
oelllleellon or revocation
tlctMte, pennlta, te.....
erleneH, or c~rtlllcat11;
tnd the epprovel or ·
dleepproval of plane .and
epecllleatlona. "Oralt
etlone"· ere wrltton
tatemenle af the Olreclor
I
Envlronmontal
Rfa111C11;0..'e (Oirector'o)
tent with reeptct to the
· euanco, denlel, etc. of a
"'"""· Uetrlll, order, ate.
Qlterllttd pereone may
l!llbinlt wrtttan commonta or
. l!lqueot • P!lbllo moetlng
.;gerdlng drelt aollone.
cjpmmente or public ·

t

'

••
' .

i

t5 Yrs.

Public Notice
mutt:bt
~ daya ol
· draft licll,n.
Aetlona" , ...
Ol tilt
Intent wltll
to tilt ltauance,
modification,
or ...newat of a
or varltnce.
comment* and
lor • public
regarding a
action mey bt
within 30 dap of
ol the propoaed
An adJudication.
may bt held on 1
action If a lllerllll
tctiC1n le
IUUIIICI

t;Jc. ·Int. Owner: Rict&lt; Johnson

. Houoe Ropllr I
· Remodeling
Kitchen I Beth
Remodeling
Room Addhl11n•
Siding, Roofing, Patloa
.R1110n1bte.
.tnaurere - Expertencod
Call Weyne Nen

.....

For FtH Eellmatee

,.......

POOLIIftll
· Public Notice

MEN
IEAUTIFUL WO.N
AlE WAITING 10
HEAR FROM
YOU NOWIJi
'1-90cJ.44&amp;..1414

Ext. 43011
$3.118 per min.
Muat be 18 yra.
Serv•U (8111) 845 1434

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

within
of lht

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1x8, 2x4, 2x8
8'·10' 3De a ft.
. 14'·16' 35e a tt.
AIIO avaHIIble
4x4's-4x8'a
814-985-4107
814-742-3337

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

LINDA'S .
PAINTING

614 594-2001 NIGHT
•,

Your Sweethesttss
clos~ as yaur phone

812-4405 ..

Racln,, Ohio 45771
(114) 9411-3013 Phone
(81419411-2011 FAX

' HYDUULIC IEP,IR

DATE
LINE ·

lmiiOI·EmltOI _
FREE ESTIMATES
'rrlko •••
0t1t ,r

I &amp; W PWnCS AND SUPPLY

filii•
filii••••·forj•.
........ h

Tuppera Pfelna, Ohio 45713
614,985-3813 Qr 614-667-11484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Reg~lar 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D : perf. · solid pipe
. 4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4'' Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp;' I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (I 00~ roll's thru I,000' roll's)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Gravel~ss Leach pipe
.
Gas pipe I" thru 2" · Fittings - Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P. V.C. &amp; Flex fillings &amp; Water fittings
Full'line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks,,

St. Rt. 7

YiiY IIUOIAILI

11¥1 llfiiiiiCIS
114-915-4110 ·.
4/31mo.

Howard hcavatin
Truckll'lg •

New At I niles lleetronfes ·,
.

.

I

ladle lhaeli Dealer
Yonl" favorite artist
on· Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

I

MDDaiSANrrA,IDN·
POMEROY, OHIO .
TrNh Removal· Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanka Clnnld a Portable Tolltll Rented.
Delly, .-idy &amp; monthly rental rataa.

AN

UNCEM!::NT S

30 Announcements • ·
CHILD CARE SURVEY FOR MA-

SON COUNTY: ll,rou ntecf &lt;hilfl

Wt OFFER GENERAL HAULING

care, please ~nswer these ques.
lions. Mail in' by Uay 12th. Ages

ol children? ~hat days ol thlt

week care needed? What hourt3
Uost convelnt location for child
care? ReasonaiiMI leo? If we may
contacl ~au, include your name
addfess and phone number. ~
1
.)

JONES' TREE SERVICE

many metals.
614-992-4025

'

992·3838

VCRSiclc?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REPAIR
9924507

tl31111n

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

batterlel, appliance~ &amp;

-

Utllltlea

All Kinds of Earth Work

992·2825

992-3954 or 985-3418 ,.,

na
Pick-up dl1C8rded

Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Servlc11
House Sites and

' ·---- ·~

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Public Notice

·

Umt~stone

Umea.t one, Sand, 'Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

action. W~
requeete lor
meitlnge, enil
ton htarlng
·be 11111 to!
Ohio

'

Gutter Clelnlng
Pllntlng

(614) ·1·11- 11 91

$3.99 per min.

. i . '&lt;;' r ) : ·~ :\

t.,,

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEf:tOY
992-6687
Auto-Ownen
Iruuronee
.
'
Life Horne Car Business

.
'
Carleton School wishes to thank its lnstructiQpal Team during teacher appreciation
week. The Instructional Team consists df11 group of trained and dedicated'
personnel consisting of teachers, instructor assistants, a physical therapist,
speech therapist, and an adapted physical education specialist.

AlllstYou .

1·100 •• , 1100
l!xl1277

ONE • ON " ONE!
CALL NOW!
1·900-446-1414

,KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

NER ........

'

Your
P\,.__Allow
111',.. Psychic
tA

21563 BASHAN RD.

AN~

DEDICATED TO THE PROVISION. OF QUAUTY ..
SERVICES FOR CHILDREN IN MEIGS COUNTY WITH
DEVELOPMENTAL
DISABIUTIESI
.
'

FemllyM1n.r.

BENNETTS

812-6531

LIVE!

•

(614) 441-1191
M:~son (304) 773-5124
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

.

•nd Manufactured Houelng

Air Colidllfonera, HIM~
F~ Alequlp-t lnltOck
for lmlllldllllln iidi!IM
Fl'llhlltl•lll
,w¥010212 ..

FAEEES~'(II

· . NEFF REMODElltiG
SERVKE

Tl.lf.

Need DIN:Iart?
&amp;.ow.
•
lluelneee

Mobile Home Heating &amp;C90IIng

needs

$3,99 ppr min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619)

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and horne owners have,
fewer and less cosUy losses than
other age groups. So h's only fair
to charge you less ·for youf:
Insurance. Insure your home a~
car with .us and save even more.
wllh our special mu~i-policY.
discounts.
1

'

'

1-900-446-1414
Ext.14n
$3.99 Per Min.
Must be 18

talk line to our gifted

$2.118permin.
IIJ.uat be 11 yra.

1·900.990..3737
'
. Ext. 2261

i• T h:UBUCf~~~ I ng

For more information about the ·
new law, individuals ma~ call Social
Security's toll-free number, 1-8()()..
772-1213, 24 .hours a day, seven days
a week and on weekends and holidays.

can now

985 4473

Psychic-Line
psychics on questions of
love, sUCC8SII, care, eoul
mates, seH-llelp and
more.
' 1-90().255'05110
Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

Notice

be terminated as of January I. 1997.
On all new applications individu. als m~st meet the disability requirements on the basis of an impairment
.other than drug addiction or alcoholism.

·

AemocreiiQg
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE ESnMATES

SATURDAY
RACINE •• Racine United
THURSDAY
Methodist Women mother-daughter
. POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Beta meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. ~t the · church. Reservations to be made
Episcopal Parish House. Installation with Opal Diddle, 949-2051 or Lee
of officers will take place.
Lee; 949-1454. •·
POMEROY -- Burlingham ModCHESTER -- Shade River Lodge ern Woodmen, potluck dinner, 6:30
453 meeting Thursday, 8 p.m. at the p.m, Saturday. Meat, rolls, beverages
lodge.
provided. Mothers to be presented
llowers. Guests welcome.

minate on January I, 1997, 'Peterson

to hear from youll
24 Hours A Dayll

•Complet•

742·2803

Hey'Guyslll Your
I~!Cia I girl is waiting

a

·Ashley electe~

Addicts, alcoholics denied SS benefits

NOELLE PICKENS
School of Administration. In addition, there are Adult Degree Program
centers in Cleveland, Dayton and
Columbus.

' 1-900·446·1414
Ext. 6445

••

'

COMING TO WELLSTON - The Country's
Reminisce Hitch, driven by David Helmuth,
be coming to Wellston on May 16. The six-horn

a

Noelle R. Pickens, a senior at
Eastern Local High School, was
awarded a University Challenge
Grant from Capital University.
These grants are awarded to
incoming freshmen and transfer stuclenis on the basis of standardized test
scores and/or scholastic achievement.
Pickens is the daughter of Pauy
and Ray Pickens.
: Capital University prepares students for lifelong learning in today's
global environment through live colll:ges: College of Artland Sciences,
Conservatory of Music, School of
Nursing,
Law School and
.
. Graduate

Uve 24 Hrs a day
Tslk to Beautiful
Girls

We Give Matun
Drivers, Ho.Ownerslnd
Mobile Ho••
Owners Special
Savings.

profit aroups wishing to announce
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport
meeting
special events. The
PAGflVILLE .. Scipio Township . Masonic Lodge 363 meeting Tuescalendar tr not deslped to pro- Trustees will meet Tuesday, 6:30 ·day, 7:30p.m. with work in the Fel·
' mote lales or ltind raisers of any p.m. at Pageville.
lowcraft Degree.
tYpe. Items are printed as space
pennits and cannot be guaranteed
ROCK SPRINGS .. Salisbury WEDNESDAY
to nm a specific number of days. Township Trustees meeting Tuesda~.
POMEROY .. Administrative
. TUESDAY
·6 p.m. at the township building at Council, Rock Springs United
RUTLAND-- A free tuberculosis Rock Springs.
Methodist Church, 8 p.m., Wednesskin testing clinic will be held Tuesday.
day, 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Rutland
POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary
Fire Depanment by Connie 2171 meeting Tuesday. Potluck, 7
MIDDLEPORT .. The MiddleKarschnik RN, Meigs County tuber- ·p .m. fQllowed b~ meeting at 7:30 pon Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesculosis nurse. All individuals who p.m. Bring contributions for day at the home ·of Mrs. George

Local student
receives grant ·

..lllfiiSSIU

Keith D. Ashley of PomeroY is th\,
new secretary-treasurer of &lt;;Jhio~
Society of the War of I 812. ~
:
Ashley is a teacher of business anjl
commtrcial subjects at Galli a Ac~
emy High School and was instnt .
mental in reactivating a long dormllf
state chapter of the 1812 Sc)ciety. •
Ashley and other .officers werl
installed ,by Herben K. Zearfos'
president-general of the Nationdl
Society of the War of 1812.
~
Memben;hip is open to an~ adu~
male whp can document a d!rect lint
of descent back to an 1812 soldier oc
sailor. Readers may contact Ashley II\
34465 Crew Road, Pomeroy :

Community
The Community ·Calendar Is
pabluhed as a free servke to non-

.

.
1
57"'J'.

:Famous Belgian horse
.~team to visit ·area
: '"Country's Reminisce Hitch", the
forst six-horse hitch ever to walk the
~ntire distance. across the United
:;wes, from Maine to California, is
coming to Southeastern Ohio.
: The hitch wiU be at the Jackson
J:;ounty Fairgrounds in Wellston on
'lbursday, May I 6. During the
appearance, the six champion Belgians will be harnessed and driven by
David Helmuth, allowing him and his
wife, Vikki, to show local folks first
hand wh~ Ibis team waS named lhe
''No. 1 Six-Horse Hitch in America".
The horses will be on display from
2-7 p.m. At about 5 p.m., Helmuth
will present a shon program and,
weather pennitting, the; horses will be
in harness for driving. around 6 p.m.
The hitch is owned by Country
and Reminisce; two of nine magazines published by Reiman Publications of Greendale, Wise.
; Throughout its travels, the hitch
has always recognized and honored
Senior citizens--even its ·bright red
wagon exhibits a bold "We're Pulling

to be.- him say, "Honey, Ibis clillllll'
is deliciOIIS." The biJ od loadl 4
his pllle IDd takes second he~
but never says a word.
1 1111 gelling to the pbiDt ~
jlllt want .to open a can of beans
foreet it. Any advice? - Wife of .
Lockjaw in NJ:
·
t

response to : Box W·B CID

Point

Pleaaant Register 200 Main
Street, Point Pleallll! W. 25551;1 •.
looking FOJ Old Pomeroy ~llgh .

School Annuals : ' 1918, 1921, •
1823. E. Keoler, t 112 Spring Val·
ley Drive, Huntington, WV 25704,
Or 304-429- t 279.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • IJJSured

Ohio River Campgrounds ir\
.Raci,... ~ open, 81 ~949-2526. J

· 40

Giveaway

2 Year Old Malo !log, Par! Coilo (
Parr German Shepherd With oog

Owner: Ronnie Jones

House, Good With Children, 304,
SlS-7858.

367..()266 - 1-800..950..3359

Shepherd Femal•
All Shall, 3 Yeara Old,'
Goad With Children, Give To
GGild Home, 614..t46· 1574.
~
Auatralian

Free Estimates

Spa~ed

8 am-8 pm

Callit·Beagle milt pups, 2. 1'~

'

(LimeStoneLow Rates)

WICKS

i925.
QUILT DISPLAY
Quilts were displayed at a recent
meeting of the .Meigs County
Churches of Christ held at the
Pomeroy. Church.
Eileen Bowers also showed samGIVE TD GIFT OF I.OVI
ple quilt blocks. A demonstration on
Host a forelgri exchange student! When you open your home
h!IW to make moss hanging baskets
with flowers was given by Janet
to a high school exchange student, you open your doore to
Venoy.
. .
the world. Learn more about the diverse cultures of the
· Devotions by Mildred Phillips of
world. Share In the Uvea of young people from over 40
Rutland included "Message of the
countries. Introduce some International flair Into your
Cross" and ''The Redeeming Blood."
There was song by Venoy and
community by hosting. Students have own spending money
CIJarldcne Alkire, and prayer by Ann · and Insurance. For more Information Call AISE at 1·800.
Lamben. Revivals were announced.
SIBLING, or Internet at http://iaawww.com/alselhtml and E·
mall AISEinfoOaol.com
ALUMNI REUNION
The H~rrisonvili~-Scipio Alumni
'
.
Association will . hold its annual
American Intercultural Student Exchange Non-profit tax
reunion May 25 at the grade school
axernpt educatlolllll foundation.
gymnasium.

HAULING

Mother's Day
Chiokeri/Rib Bar-B-Que
.i
I '

Front row: Sandy Cobb · Early Intervention Specialist; Betty Smith •
lnt.ermeqiate Assistant; ~ally · Holman - Prescho~l Assistant; Kathy Stamm Pnmary Instructor; Knst1n Acree • Preschool Instructor; Sherry McCleary •.
Intermediate Instructor; Jo Tahyi • Physical Therapist; Tricia Baar - Intermediate
Reader - Guide.
·
·
Back row: June Radcliffe • Transition Instructor; Teresa Porter • Preschool
Instructor; Pat Carson • Transitiqn Assistant, Kristen Pernestti, Preschool
A.ssistant; Valerie Hanstine • Preschool Instructor; Oiana Ash • Prim~.ry
Assistant, Bonnie Shea • Preschool ' Assistant; Ed Cqzart • . lnterm~late
Personal Care Assistant.
·
·
. .
,
·. Not pictured: Larry North -Adapted Physical Education Specialist; Valene ··
Jacoby - Speech Therapist; Josle Morton • Pre&amp;;Chool Reader - Guide.
. ,

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

"

Feeney-Bennett Post 128
• American Leg[on and
. Auxiliary at Annex, Mill St.
Sunday, May 12
12:00 til gone ..
Dinner $4.00~ ·
Meat Only $2.00
' Call-In Order 992-2749 Sun ..

Feeney-Bennett Post 128
Meedng Wed, May 8, 7:30·
p.m. Nominations of ·
Officers·for. 96-97 year. All ·
'inembers
to itH••nd..

'

'

'.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

'

i I

'

CALL NOW
1-1100-988-6003
. Ext. 1021
$2.911 per mlli.
MUst be 18 yia.
Se!v-U (61-4) 645-8434

Muollllke All814·256-6038.
Kin..,. 3 adooablo, M okl, black
&amp; white, part Siameae, liner
..\ned. 30+773·5340.
.
Kittens 10 goOd home. 304· 773:)
~.

1.-mo-..

(~o Sunday Calls)

••••••n••
CDIIftiCftOI

141~

Lost Cheater area, Akita blac('

·

Kftchena - Skiing

Hr..,.~

. I-IOHn.J941
'

bodr. chilcro po~. ~
br llm!r. r-m olloted, et~ ·lltlS. &gt;
4235.
.
..
ltce, whit.

Roofing - Rubber - Shlngleli - Minor RepaJrj

~614) 992·21..

•

loll· whl• milo Chow in ct\olb;,
ll!&lt;ewoe,caU14·;e/;.3558. . ..;

Residential - Commerc;lal

Gutters and DownepOuta
Aemoclellng

'

60 Lost and Found

.'

.

Deckl -

-·

Two pot-bellied· pigs, 614· 142...

and

eom.,_
a.throornt -

~

Ono hom11ar. Call 304.-2·3477.

614-992-7643

··

·r

House To Tear Down Or Movet

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEN,TIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

New24hr.
Dateline
Meet !he Man or Woman
of your Dreams Never .
be lonely again.

frM Puppieo, 81+388·8532.

~ew Homes • Vlny• Siding New

614·992•3470
W• want to th1nk everyone for the
pl'l)rere, carde, vltltl.and flowere before and
• "''•• Tommy'i' eurgery. Special thanki' to
Rev. Brian Hlrlme~ and Don Hill for being
·
. · .
1wlih.ut lrrCollimbut.
Thankt, aleo, to Southern Loc11 O.P.S.E.
lind lellrt Elemenllty. To Scott Hlllllild Jerry
Po9wtll, who.llept the finn going for Tommy
lriCI Roger. Wt wlll11wayt be g!l!'ful••

mos. old, been wormed , 614·085-4318.
. ~

lost: gray and whlit male cat
..,., on hoed, lnju...a 18, 'M i6
·pori vlciniiJ', reward e'u -Dflo2·
3748.
'
•

'

Lool: Little - . . 111"" cilta!&lt;·
Lo• i
an JoMo c- Road o. Rocl1

...... Dlcllllhund """• Dog

Forti Road In 'The Yl!ctrvll~
AIH II Found Pleooe Cell iu.

ii!HIIIO.
~

�t

,.

•

•

'

TUMday, May 7,1988

Ponwov • MidcllePort. Ohio

OOP

•

DIDO&amp;
PHILlJp

ALDER
•
-

...... -·Husky. 3114·

E•cenent Pay! As·
Products •r Horne. Call
Toll Free 1·100· 417·5511 EXT.
12110

70
Gallipolis

"tocal Tui Service Looking For
Orivera Mal• Or Female, 1 ,4-

&amp; VICinity

441·"*'·

~LL

Yord Silo
Ull Bo Poid In
Advance. DEAD INE: 2:00p.m.
the day betore the ad is 10 run.
Sunday ediilon • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Uondlly adition · 10:00 a.m. Sal·

~

~~~~::~~~~~
7th, 8th, gth,

Ma~

Road, 1 1/2 OH' 218,
For Everybody'

Pomeroy,

Succou 1241.

All Yard Salea Muar Be Paid In
Ad'llnce. Dudllne: I :OOpm lhe
d111 before h od It 10 run, Sun·
di11 edition- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon·
dai' edilion 10:00e.m. SaiUfday.

Garage ule, Wednesday. 9·3,
rainltillne, olf 33 -Ids Atllens,
CR. 19, Eblin' s, clothes 4 &amp; up,

Barbie haute, console TV, to., a,
1111SC.

Public sale
and Auction

Rick Pearaon Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, c:omplete

auction

service.

licensed

1.88,0hio &amp; Weat Virginia, 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean Lata Madel Cara Or
Truckl. 1990 Modell Or Newer,
Smfth Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eliist·
orn - . ... Galipoli1.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying aal·
vage vehicles. Selling ,PartI. 304·

773-5033.
Non-wo-rking Washers. Dryers,
· Ran~t. Refrigerators, FrHztrs,
Air Conditioners, Color ·T.V.'s·,
'v'CR'a, Also Junk Care, 614·256·
1Zl8.

Top PriGes Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, D:iamo.nds, All Old
Collectiblea, Paperweights;· Etc.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A..,..., GolipoNs, 814..48-2&amp;12.

Uud furniture· antl~us, one
·piece or complete esta s, also
do appraiaala, Oa~ M rrin, 614·
992-7401,.
.
Used 'Mena Levis. lee &amp; Wran·
gllf Jeans &amp; Denim JaCkets, Nike
ShoeS. 814...S·2'!88.
Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Home~ call: 814-441-0175
Wanted lO Buy : Au10's &amp; Trucks
( Any Condition, 614-388-9062, Or
814-441-1'1\RT.

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos Wlrn
Or Without MOtors. Call Larr~
~,!voir. 81 ... 36811303.

.

Win1ed To Buy: Lillie Tlkea Tort.
814-245-58e7

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

All.- ...... II!Nw-.g In

lo-

Help Wanted

$-WANTED-$
tO· people who need to lose
weight &amp; make man~. ta try new
patented weight -lou product.
304-773-5083 241Yslday.
AVON I All Areea I Shiiloy
Spoaia. 30+675-1429.
Able Avon Reprasentativea
needed. Earn money tor Chrill·
· maa bi•a at home/at work. t-800992-8358 or 304-882· 2145, Ind.

Rop.

Teled~ne

Laar1 gaa pool hnttr.
Exce llent condition, uHd 72hra.
Reedy 11 lnsl811. 304-875-50e7.al·
.tOf 5:00prn

Used bam tub, will accep1 rea- · Ollar. CaJ3CJ.4-1175-2811.

Ci'uiaethlp nntftions. TraveiiD
,...,
e•olic:
$200-$900
Calt 7plac:ol
.mus. 407
_ 5- woekly.
e•t
_., D!i9BC87 _ 2022
18

General Maintenance, 'Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Gullefl Cleaned Lighl Hauling,
Commerlcal, Rasldenlial, Slewa:
814·388-0428.

180

.WantadTo

Do

Oomino'l PiZza Pt Pleasant Now Georges Portabl8 Sawmill, don'r'
hiring, all polijono.
haul your logo 10 lho miljull coil
EARN $1,000 Weekly SiuHing En- 304-675-1957.
vetopea AI Home. Stan Now. No 1 Do Ch!ld Care In My Home All
Elperlence. Free Suppli'es, Info. Hours, Cheshire Area, 614·387·
No Obligation. Send SASE To : J849.
Fairway, Dept. 1351 , 8o1t c399,
West Covina. CA 91791 .
Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Eatlmatesl In·
E•perlenced LPN Appty In Per· surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-388·
son To The Medic al Plaza 936 9648, 614·387·7010.
Stare Roure 160, Weekday5 Only.
Sun Valle~ Nunery SchooL
Full or pari lime poslttons ava il· Childcare M·F 8am-5;30pm AgH
able. Pliny Truek Stop. 30C-937- 2 -K, Voung School Agit During
2456 or 304-937-2766,
Summer. 3 Da1s per Week Miniroom 6, 4...46-3657.
Hair dre11er woOled. FuJI or pari 1. ~~~-----.....- time wilh ciOn lola 30•-al'S-3040. .
cloen homes, reasonable
price. 304·675· 7183. Callattt'r
Horhi lYpit11, PC users needed. 7 :~pm_
'
$•5,000 income poiBnlial. Call f .
100-513-4343 E•l. B-9388.
Will Do lnlerior Or Exlerior Polnl·
ing, Reasonable Rates, ExperiHonest deperldable part-time bar- enced, Reilerencea, For Free Etd·
lender. cell 814·992· 3679 bel· f!1810s, 814-24&amp;-5755.
ween apm.,Opm.
Wilt haul gravel, stone, till dirt,
Local Air Freight Company Need· sand etc ... 304-882·2141 .
ing A Driver Over 21 · Good Oriv- Will Mow Gratt-.And Trim In Tht
ing Record In Good Physical Gallipolla &amp; Rio Grande Area,
Co~n. Send Resume To: WV
.
Air Fretghc, 4210 Fint Avenut, 614-441·1821 .
'
Suill305, ~ ... wv 25143. .

FINANCIAL

LOCAL FN;TORY

Business

"Lumber Price Up?" Sleel Build·
ings Dea!Of' Profi!l All UPIII Coal
Ao Low Ao $3.00 Sq Fool. Na·
tional Manufacturer Awarding La·
cal DEALERSHIP. 303-7511-3200
Eid. 2200.

ME~.

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CD.
recommends that you c:to buai, ... with people you know, and
NOT 10 tond money lhrough tile
~M unlli you havt lnvetllgolld
.
.•
lheofllrlng.. .
ABSOlUTElY THE BEST BUSI·
NESS OPPORTUNITY AVAIL•

~. 00,-87HI11.

•

\

... -llla!Uiornallonol
Oltgln, 01
IntentiOn 10

aAv

llmiUitlon or'd11Cr1mino11on.•

.

• r\ 5

S..lh
.. 8

O u r - oro hir.by
lnlormodlhal alldwelingo

8oulh

I

Oiaabled vettf'an urgently IOOk1ng
lor 30-100 acres. privale, with or
without buildings, land c·onttact,
814· 742-21112.

RENTALS

410

3' End points

4 Aclor Wallech
·5 PerctPiive
6 Chergecl

2t AmerlcOrno (II.) 1 Sor:leiAI
2 Dublin'•
31 Take owey by.
coun1ry

Ioree

limiltd Offetl 1996 doubtewide.
3br, 2b-.rh, $H99 down, $2751
month.· Free delivery &amp; s11up.
Only at O~kwood Homes. Nitro
WV.- 304-755-5885.
for ule, needs re-

Sam Somerv1!1e's Army ,camou ·
flage by Sandy~t i lle Post Office.
Fri -Sun, noon-5pm. (Turkey aea·
.1011 All' 22). 304-273-5855.

Saara Brand Elacoonic Traod Mill 1980 Ply,_lh, 1g18 Buid&lt;. 1013
=.'500 AlieN $300, 814-388- Buid&lt;, 81•·251H!075.
Small

D•-·
-·hlr,
•-..-. ... _

u·~ 5 or 8 1985 Dodg_e .Aries K, ru~o go~d.
._,
needs linte worlc. t•oo.oo. · 304-

~ ...., 1150; Kenmore dryer, $50: 675-1575.

814·114Uo2001..

.

-·

Nl!fll Bonk Repo~ Only 4 lelt Still

In waflln!Y, 304-755-7191 .

Price Busler. 1• 98 3be"room.
•
•
S825 down. $1511/mo. Fr.. dell•·
err &amp; setup. Only · at Oakwood
Homn, Nin V(\1 304--755--5885.
Sevo$S . 1g95 dOuble wide repo.
3bedroom, 2bath. WUI deliver &amp;
aetup on your lol304-755-.55el.
Thfee bedroom 1g74 mobile
homo, 12x70, 11900, 814 ·94g.
2&amp;:!11.
Oak Wood Homos. 5875 David
Creek Rood, Borbeu 11vllle, wv
25504, 304-'138-3408.

DO

WORRif A&amp;OUT EVER'ffiiiN6
TI-IAT'S

EVER HAPPENED

AND EVEK'r'THIN6 '1'911
THINK MI6HT IIAPPEN ..

24 Ft PoniOOn llool 50 HI'
Excellonl Condilionl $5,500,
441·0150 .

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorl!ts

!

z•

Pus ••

•

I FonMt

10 Merchant .
11

w.-

17 Future tiM.
II Poor . . .

22Sw•ve

23AI~.

Eul

25 EI-,Tel. . ..

Paas

H 811111 ,

r\11 pass

mo-nt

u.c.llan,
.,.,r+-+-1 ' 30
32 lleced

341'1111oteum

Openillg lead: • A

For Sale: 1111111 ·lgi2 Pori'
Fibtf~:.,~oed, Tflfnk Lid, An\(
Front
. _81 ...4U0210.
,,

•-ce(2

wdl.l
.
35 smaflledp :
In cliff

.,_..., radlaiDrs, loor

mo-. tiC.

0 &amp; R Au1o, Rllllw, WV.
31133 .. 1-8CJ0.273-IIi328.

'

~

· • '

:;
~

Motbi".Hc:iinta

' 1073 Winnollago Li~o No•
40,000 Mlln. e e Ply. Tltn
New Brakoa I W-It • Cyllnde7.
Generator, 2 Water 'ranka,
Holding Tanka, Air, Full,.
Equipped! lla,700, 114-4«1-3015. '•

11111o1 lnnallrook,

r..rry loaded,

rI I I I

THE BOJ\N LOSER

2:

C:i..N&gt;Y5.•

-.

I'VE.~~T

/

Ioiii'
ol exlrea, 1811. Striout inquirft'
only, 304-e75-MO:;t. ·
:~

BEDI

I

I

'

~~~

111115 OuiCivnon Pbp-Up Compoi,,
Sloopt .. N;, 3 Way Re!rigonllllr; '
...300, 11-1294.
'

~

.

.

.

I

"The best auto ~fety advice

I

L -l.._.L._,L__,l__,l__.J_

Small Pull Type Camper Com-• ·
p10101y Reconditioned, Excouomr
Condrllon, Sloeps •. S10ve, Furnaoa And Ice Box $800, Or Beat
Ollar, 114-318-11354.
.l

I can think of;' says an old
timer, "is to recall all the defec.

·:••

quo1td
by filling In tho inllllnog watds
you d"olop lrom .llop No. :1 below.

1'\EET IS (,()loiN A I!E COOL,

• ~~~~L~ci~~~~mus r
6 ~r==~LETTERS TQ I

'(ORK C.IT"'' .....THA.T I~

SC~S

ISNI THI~ AWE!IOI'\1! t
l: I'IENI, THE CHE5S

SEf1VICES

euT &amp;EINGo IN NEW

RUI.E! WHAT
&amp;LAST!

GOING. 10

A

~

r r r r_r I' I

I· I I I 'I I I

ANSWERS

Adagio - Erase- Notch· C~;Jimly • TRY AGAIN
A colleg~ professor was always giving. me encour·
,agement. He said that, "The only thing to do whel) all
else fails is TRY AGAIN."

I

3 . Bedrooms, 10x60 Faiiland
S&lt;:hool District, S2751Mo. + Damage Deposi~ 614-256-1426 . •

:·

UR I D A S
tive ••• • • • • ·!"
1--~r-_;,11:6.:..,1,::.._;,1.,.:..,1.,7-1 Q Complela lha . chuckle

ueoa

2bedroom in MJddlepot't, OH. Reference• &amp; deposil required. 304882-3217.

.

'..

..

'r--:':"-::-,...,,......,,.....,.-..,
~1

...

.,.

.

\

I

-..-R_E,...B~D_I.,.....ll
4 I
I 15 :~•

~~(£

1

ITUESDAY

Groom Shop
t~ ring Hydro
Caii,811·'WJ.0231 .

Goods

::::

....

,

304-371:)
. . .,

790 . Ca!IIRfi'SI,

.

_·Sporting

•

36 Aclor
•
Blndltlll
37Bon~ •
38 Ru
oul .
39 TYPII al11y ·

'=~=·· S&lt;r:\\oUlA-4£tfis·

32' campef·wlth air. wry good~
condllion.
OBQ, .........
2398
''
'1
.
\

520

bdll'llutll
!Jneoll (II.)

..

Budge! Tranamlolions, Uud I
buill, All Typee, Acceulblo l
Over 10,000 Tr~nsmialion, -AI
&lt;Mrhlal KiiB. 814-245-58n
:'

2 Bedroom, a~ etectric. washer &amp;
dryer, ac, dishwasher. in Mason.
No polS. 304-773-5751 .

Beautiful River View, 2 Bediooms
In Kanauga, No Pets, References,
Deposit, foster's Mobile J-lomes,
614-441-0181 .

DON'T

AN'r'THIN&amp;..
JUST LIE THERE.
AND WORRI{.

·:N.W 'g as tanka, one ron 1rul!l;

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

MAY71

Crown Victoria, loaddual air bag,, forest green,
. new, garage kept, 6t&lt;4-985-

Trailer. 1 Bedroom, No Pets, Rent
&amp; Deposil Each, $250, 614-446·
... 21.

AuiO Loans.,Dealer Will arrange fi.nahcing evan II you have b.tan '
~umed dOwn elaewhert. Upton

440

AKC mini .Pinachort, IWo malet, Equipment,Uaod Cars. 30•·458-·
.
two female, .'ready June 15.... ' 1069.
cepllng depooill, $300 each,

Apartments
tor Rent

erh

And Dryoro, All .
And Gauron-1
And Up
WiR Delivar. 814-IMIII-&lt;1441.
'

682-75,2 . .' · ··
191g Cadillac $400 .
8286
- -·- - - - - - ' - - 1979 Camero Z·28 400 SB Aulir.
T·Tops. New Riry,s And Tlrts,
.Very Sharp, lots Of New Pa'rts,
$3,000 OBO. 114·388-9881, 814·
388 8'1'19 ..

2 Bedroom ·
, On Clay
Chaps! Road, S25011.te&gt; $250 Doposil. 6t~~718, After 4 PM.

1992 Norris Hb:BO 3 Bedroom. 2
Baths, Central Air, LP Gas Fur·
nace And Stove, Underpinning &amp;
Many Elltrasl '1/ery Spacious .
Pr iced To Sell! Easy financmg
Available! 614 ·247·2032 Aller 6
P.M. Or Leave Message,

Ooublo wide S1495 down ,
l224mo . Free a1r. 1-800-691 -

Nonll

·=.......
7

n .

Refrigeratora,

387-7750.

1891 Fairmonl, all electric, 6.
houae walls, 3 bedroom~ 21 baths,
hear pump, preasur.e rreated
wood 400 sq. ft. deck included,
cal814-992-5044.

1981 Model Sal Up On Lol, BarbOuriYille, WJ 304-736-7295.

I DO'?

2 Bedroom $3001Mo., • Utilities,
Deposit, Addison Pike Road. 614-

or

Sal11304·738·'7295.

CA~'T SLEEP.
e16 8R0111ER ..
WHAT SHOULD

18170 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Cenlral Air, Green Terrace, 6t4 -3888903.

1990 Clayton t•h70 c.encral air,
total elecll'ic, SlOY&amp;, refrig, waaner.

,

DOWN

.....

Houses tor Ren1

420 ..

1987 Clayton t41170, 3 bedroom,
1112 balh, newly remolded bath WI
6 jer whirlpool, vinyl underpin'ning,
10•32 porch. $12,000. Call 304·
518-3190 or 304-518-2984.

;

21 911111" .:_

.Wha·t, according to··washington h.r+-----&lt;&gt;--1-4tl'ollllve
:
lrving, is "the only edge .tool that
43 00111 !liP-)
grows keener with constant use"?
~.-!~+46 C8tro. rMr
/
At the bridge table, when you are de·
47- of Wight ;
clarer, finding a line that baa an edge lr.+-450 Bird'•
over every other Ia desirable. In to·
. belli
Ill Drlvert' Clf1l.
day's deal from last year's Cavendish
Invitational Pairs, how would you plan ·
tbe play In four hearts after Weal be,
gins with the top two spades?
CELEBRITY CIPHER
As a secondary mat~r, how do you
" treat South's reraise to three hearts?
by Lula Campos
. ·'
Celll:wily ~ g~ ... ~ fforn ~tiona by famous ptaplt, pul Wid.,.......
Most aasume it is pre-emptive, try·
ED
lfl 1M~ t~Mdtlor another. Todly't clue: V ilqUM U
,
ing to silence the opponents. My partner and lllse .lt a8 asking for _good
y
trur
aut this wife-and-husband 'R '0 H
CNYC
P R IT
TYXH
SHOHM
pair, uda and RDbb Gordon, play' that
it is mtldly invitational with no p8rticil· LFVIi
LFSKRXHMHX
U.H
MHTFCHID
lar side-suit ·weakness. Here, Linda,
wh~ was super-maximum for her ini·
HOHS
y
S F. C
TYKCHMGRHLH.
tial single raise, rushed on to game,
not knowing Robb didn't have his bid.
YIIHS.
After Mling the spade king at trick MHTFCHID . ' - JFFXO
two, declarer played a trump to dumPREVIOUS SOLUTION : "There have been only 1wO aulhenllc geniua&amp;l In lhe
my's king and East's ace. Back came a
world; Willie Mays and Willie ShakespeBte .• - '1'8lilllah Bankhead.
.
"
trump. Robb won in the dummy, ruffed
•
the spade jack in his hand, played a
.
club to dummy's king 11nd led a club
,..
back to his 10.
· - ~r CU.Y I. POUIJI....;;__ _ __
Th=vedeclarer three chances for
his contra . The clubs might be 3·3,
Oharranoo ltl1o11 al lhe
allowing eventual diamond discard
"
four ocromblecl - " '
from hand. The diamond finesse might
low 10 form lour -d•
work. Or, as here, West mighl have
slarted with honor-doubleton in clubs.
LOVVEE
· Now West could either lead a diamond
J .
away from his queen or return a
epade, which declarer would ruff in the
,.
dummy while discarding a diamond
.'
fromhand.
·
KHE R I
. Irving thought that a sharp tongue is
the only edge tool that grows keener
wilh, constant use. There W98 no edge
•
to Linda's voice after this deal, though.

One bedroom apartment in Pt
Pleasant no pels, 814·992·5858.

Twin RiYefa Tower. now acctpling
applicaliDns far 1br. Hub IUbaid·
ized apt. for elderly end handl·
•
Cons1ruc1ian workers welcome.· copped. EOH 304; 875-118n.
304-773-5764.
Ver~ clean one bedroom rur·
nished apartment in Middleport,
2 Bedrooms, Basemenr. Gallipolis call
814·448-3091 prelorably beC1ty Limits, $3751Mo., + Deposi t 1
lore
10:301in
or after 4:00pm
Rerarence, No Pets, 81ol -4460796. lillve Ueaaage.
450 · Furnished ·
2bedroom on Lincoln Ave, ac
Rooms
high efficiency heal, low utilities:
srove, refrigerator. No smoking, Cir&lt;lo Molol, Galllpolla; OH 114no pets~ 304-675 -1244 &amp;am- «6·2501 Of 814-387·0112. Ello·
ciency Rooma. Cable, Air, Phone,
4 :30pm onlj.
Micn&gt;waw &amp; Rofrigonr11r.
3 Bedroom Mobile Home On McRooms tor rani • week or monfl.
Corff'klc Road, 61 4·441·9169.
Sl8r~ng a1 S120/mo. Gelllo Holel.
-4 Miles From Gallipoli·a. St. Rt. 814·448·9580.
141, 5 Rooms, Front Porch, AC
Handicap Accessible, $400/Mo: Sleeping roams with cooking.
Deposit, 6t4-446-0231 , 614-446- Also trailer space on river. Alt
0205.
hook-ups . Call allor .2:00 p.m.,
304·773-5851, Ma•nWV..
Home for rent in Midctleport. 614992-11939 . .
460 Space tor Rent

1985 14x70 Schulll 2 bedroom,
cathedral ceiling, ceiling fans, new
vinyl skirting; ••cet1ent condition
$13,500. 30... 773-6062.

3 Bedroom Mobile Ham&amp;, Mus!

1

By Phillip Alder

2 Bedroom house. nwt carpet. r&amp;moclelt~. includes srove &amp; trasn.

.

~ome

57 ACIOI - R-r

Just a little more

1979 Baron 14~~:70 With 711t4 h pandO 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Total
EleG.tric With Backup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acre
Wooded lot Cloae To Gallipolis
(Will Soli Soporalo) ~14 - 448 -

ler, $28,000 Hog., &amp;14-387-7588,
814-:167·7422.

Pill

I WOULDN'T TOUCH TfUiftT
WITH A TEN FOOT 1'\JL.c

1973 Cameron, 121160, good cond ition. :rl•·576-4190.

.- Bedrooms, 14•70 With Expando 12x14 Added On Room, t 980
Bayview, Appro•. 314 Of Acre, 2
Dackl, 2•x30 Garage, Gallia Wa·

Wea

1•
s•

lRArJSPORTATION

14.-70 Freedom Mobile Home ,
61•·388-9261' 614·388-0107.

Moblle

24 Hotel27 1111 ctlcu.,..

• Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

advtrtlaod In lhla , . _ ,
are available on an equal
opportunily baBIB.

304·895 · 3~38

511 Red 11101

• r\ J 3
.. r\ 10 4

IDIO""''IIIV occopl

advlfiiHmonla for real oslllt
whiCIII$ In Ylolallon or tile law.

$15,500. Call
304-895-3243.

tU

•QJB4 32

TN&amp; Mdptper wll not

95-13.

..J

s

.

-La- . . . . . .
·-·

21 Ono
•23 Bual,...

•• 6
Q 2

Cllliltlll8t
55 £llliiOr1lle

coinplnlon

Eaa&amp;
• 1

!
1
4---wllo- .,_,
113llinglr

• f1lller8ld

118har120 ,..,..,..

•QIOV7A

•

.saso.

- . anr oucn prelei.,,..,

-

·
• "*
r\K54
• Q 10 •• 2

1 and 2 bedrOam aparlments, furnished and unfurnished, se~urlly
dePosit reQ uired. no pets, 614992·2218.

.j

I ~~2;!!!;!!~~~!:~:..:
I'
540 Mlscellaneoua

814~30~

AKC Ragis!ored 'Black Labrodor
Roolover, l!upo; 'Chlf11pion B~od ,
Merchandise
. )lne, Shole, worff\od, 81•·e98:
- - - - " - ' - - ' - - - 2482.
'
1 Bedr'oom. 3 Rooms Furnished 25· Magnavox c'o lor TV, leiS
Apartmenf, Utilittet Paid, '9.( La· !han one ,_ old, adi undaf
CUSI, Gallipolis, $265/Mo, $100 la~IY. $135, 814-N8·252e.
Dopo~l. 614-441· 1340.
- .
25•MagnMO)I CDtor Con_... TV,
1 ~malt bedroom apt, furnished, Noedt Wof1!; $75.00. BSR Equal14 Bond $25.00. Optimut' 25
· urdlllas paid. $100 deposit, izer
Wan Pow01 Booa1ar $15.00. Coli • - ~-···• _,, • .,.,
$200mo. 304-675-11512.
Honf'/ OhOI 5:0&lt;)304-1175-14:Jil
2bdrm. apts., total electric , appliances furnished, laundry room 30~ rklin6 mower, S300; 44 mag
facil ities, close co school in town. Daoen Eaglt plo,lol, SS. $1400:
Appllcationa available at: Village Rom1ng1on 1100 LT. new, •szs.
'
.
Green Aptl. 149 or call &amp;14-992~ 614-992-8154 .
3711 . EOH.
·
4•15ft. Above ground pool, plus
2bedroom apartment in New Ha~ acceiiOriOL $300 3().4.875-3358
ven ate&amp;, refrigerator &amp; stove.
1 Used Colemon Down Flow Gu ·
$265/mo.
pluS depositleave
, includes
watet'. 304-773-g171
mes· Furnace, 70,000 BTII~ Co!rfllor.
$250: 1 Used Johnooo Gaa Fill· .
aage.
nace, 180,000 BTU'o, Upllqw
1 Bedroom 13 . ~oom Apartment, $250; 3 Used Elocolc Furnecot
Trash Paid, NO PETS, On 55• 15kW, 20KW, 25KW, \ UIOd 3
Near l'bner, 814-388-1100.
Ton Rhaem Heel Pump, 1·800287·8308, 814·44&amp;·8308, 1·800-.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 2111·0098.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wes1wood Drive 1g71 Ban 12x85 nice cOndi!lon,
lrom $244 to $315. Walk 10 shop gat. $4,500. 1981 Plymoulh.Tur·
&amp; movies. Call 61•-us -2568 . izmo 100,000+mi. 2yr. old GlI .:E:;:qu::.;a::.;l::.;Ho::.;~:.:~::.;"'i::,Oppo;:;:::.:;.:'":;n;.:ilY!:·---' gal atave, whit• &amp; black glau
lronL 304-11115-3038.
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up·
staira, Utilities Furnished, Clean, 2 Cryplt In Oillo VoaoY llemoriol
No Pets, Aeterence. Oepo1it Re- Gardena Fot . Sale Front Wall
814·245-5005.
quirod, 814·441H,519.

..
you

I

i

lions lor 1he year ahead by mailing S2
and SASE 1o Astro-Graph, c/o lhis news·
_ _ _ _ _,;,;,._ _ paper, P .O . Bo• 1758, Murray tiill

ASTRO-GRAPH

SlatiOn, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156. Make sure
10 sta1e your zo'diac sign.
BERNICE
· GEIIINI (._ 21..JUiil20) Your populari·
· 1y wll rtse 1oday because you ;will have a
BEDE OSO~ remafl!able ability to make eaCh person
you rooel 1ee1 s1gnn1can1 and lnleresling.
.__ _ _ _._,.. C~CER (June 21..July 22) Your pr&lt;!blem·solving abiiHiee COUld be mucll keef1,
er lhan usual 1oday. II you loc:us .your

·.

pel~,.~·$2000~~·~8~14~-!19~2~-58~58~.~~
$&amp;OQ . I

Opportunity .

l'lllnt f'tlualll Aoa- .200 lllln
S(, Pt. PIN_. WV 25550. E£01

J 3 I
• K \0 7
• KI I
6 K 76 s

IIO&lt;MI 309 .... ,.. Ford l)lanlor
with additional bean end corn
,...... uood condition,
114742·201!11.
•
-

New

OUTLET

210

-101

1llilullcll
11 ........ -

e

10M Fotd
VM 11,2&amp;1.
Call 30•·175-2311 or 30•·•111-

oooo.

HOUSE FOR SALE

Don's Lawn Cart. Reasonablt
Rareel Will Do Churches, &amp; Cemolarie8. 8l4-3'711·2847.

Local firm Heks 011111 Enlt~ ,.,.
son lor occoun11 payobla depart·
ment. SpHd &amp; accur1cy importt
ant Sand raauf1)t and 11111y rt·
quiroff)4tnll 10 :p o, Box .W·4' cto

'.

. BY OWNER
Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs S21 /Hr. ·
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train, For Small 3 Bedrooms. \!erw Good
.Condition, New Vi~ Siding, Car~ Afid lnlo 1-1100-536-3040.
port Unattached 2 Car Garage
Social Work&amp;ra, Now Hiring $23 1 With New Apartment Above. 61•Hr + Benefits, On The Job Train- 448·1774 Home; 814·448·0374
Ing To Apply In Vour Area, 1·100- Wor1l Allk For Mark Pamet.
339-11150.
House for aala in Syracuse, twa
Southeastern Ohio Communlt~ bedroom, one bath, on two lots: Mason area, 3 bedroom, large lot Buaine11 Locallon, 1,000 Sq. FL
Bank Seeking 8:" Aggreuiv- Reaeparare 24~~:30 one &amp; 112 srory ·304-675-7783. Call awning•
Largo Parking, SR 141, CO.• lily
IBil loan Ofticer. Must Have Mini- combination shop and garage
Am, 114-2511-833eAfiBfl P.M.
mum Of Two Years Ell:perience tllllding, $22,500. Can Bu!Ch, 614- Nice '(bedroom, 2btlh homo in Pl.
With Goo,d Organizational And 992-3994.
Pleasant, furnia.~ed. except perMERCHANDISE
Cgmmunlcation Skills. Resume
sonal Items. If sold $20,000 cash
And Sllary Hislory To:· CLA 385, M8xwell Ave., 3bedroom. LR. OR, ,down lake over pavm8nr1. For
large family room, double garage, rani S350tmo. plus utilities, deCJO Gallipolis Oaily Tribtrne, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 8y11 old, $107,000. 304 -875· posit &amp; references a mu.JI. Now
4048. ·
45831.
accepting applica1ions. 'Serious
Inquires only. 304·675·4001 ln~e
Start development and InJection· Nice home in Racine, large build- massage.
ing
will
house
smatl
buslnesa,
control
tong
also a one car garage, fenced N1ce thre~ bedroom home in Pt.
term
must
or be yard, ou1 ol flood area , asking Pleuan ~ no pets. 614-992-5858.
$47,000 814-949·2804.
.
Sm. house Be&amp;ch hill area. Must
Three bedroom home m country, have references . W1ll require a
WliiOS HIU Rd., Rulland, ono ba\11, deposit 304-675- t900. ,
~fDifnd pool, 81 4-992·5067.
T~o bedroom hOl!S&amp;, carpeted,
mce and clean, deposit reqUired,
170 Miscellaneous
no maida pets; three bedroom
320 Mobile Homes
house, deposit required, no inside
Dog keMel chain Nnk, en.xre, 4ft
tor Sale
pels: 614-992-3090.
high. S.125. 304-773-524fallar
PAINT PLUS ,51.1 Burdana St .
Now .through Sal May 11 Pilll·
burgh Painl Sale, Ceiling Poinl .
S9.98 Gel. lnlerior Flat Wail Point
$9.99 Gal. Latex Sesler for Dry·
wall $8.99 Gal. Alumilllm Fibtfll·
ed Rool Coating ·5Gol $24.88
Spting Flower !)ulbl $2.99 pkg.
Bulk Saetls &amp; Bedding Plenlo on
Sale.

M Clleofy Fwlllllzo """'~~~~';
C - V M . 17,000
Excollonl Cor- 114- 411'1121.

"'ny,_.,..,
llmilallon or ciOcrlmlni!!On
on flee, COlor, reliGion.

Hocking Valley Communlry Resi~
denliaf Center Seeks EMKUtlve
Director. Raspon1ibilitiea 01 Total
Managemenl And Admlnislfation
REAL ESTATE
01 A 22 Bed JuvenHo Rehll&gt;lila·
tion Focifily For Main Adiu~cal·
ed For Felon~ Otfenaes. Other
Dulin Include: Work With Citizen 31 o Homes lor sale
Advisory Board And Governing
Board: All Aspects ot Planning, 2 Bedrooms /More 1 112· Bath I,
Oevf!lopman t, Implementation, E•tra lg. L.R. Eat-In ~i~hen, to-0
And Monitoring: Asauring Pro· cared: Gallia, Wrap Around Dedc.
gram Complience Wilh Legal Free Gaa With .Gallia Water, 81•·
Mandate&amp;: Interagency' Coordi- 387·7422.
nation; Budget Proceu And FIS2 Minutes ~om tDWn, 4 bedroom,
cal Management; Personnel Activitn ; Developing Community 2 balh, 3,000sq. II. Bricic Ranch on'
Support; Public Relations. Mini· 3.2acres, Home was cotTiple,ely
mum Requiremenls: Mastei's 0. remcllded in 1992. For more lniDtgree And ApproPriate Ad minis-· mation call 304·675-3121 . H no
tratlve Experience. Background answ&amp;r,leawe.me111ge.
Chock Roquired. Salary Conwnonsurate .With E~~:perience And
Training. Resume And Throe' lol- 3 Bedrooma,'2 Bo\11 Ranch, 2 Car
tere Of Reference May Be For- Garage, Spring VaHey Area, Alter
e:oo ~M. 814-441·71140.
warded To:
'
Interview Comninee
4 lledfoome, 2· 112 Bolhs, Briel&lt;. 3
Hoclling Yalley CommuniJy
Milo&amp; From Gallipollt Oil 141, InResidential Center
Ground f'l&gt;ol, 81H48-1lll38, 814·
&lt;10 HoMible S!ephen D. Michaol
441·0514.
Jacltson Courlly ProbeiO And
Juvenile Coun
·Green Bottom W.VA. Rt. 2,
Courlhou,.., 221 E. Main St
Rancher With Fun Baaemanr. GaJackson, OH •5640
rage, Garden &amp; Trailer Space,
See To Appracla181 $89,500, 304Applications Must Be Received 525-5185.
By May~. 1996, Al4:00 PM. ,

Conservadon Jobs: Wildlife posilions $1t,OOO·S3S.OOOtyr. Cieri eel.
Security. Game Warden, etc. No
e~~:perience . For inlo call 2t9-789830 1 e&gt;l WWV 548, 9am-9pm

SUn-Fn.

38&lt;44, AllOr 7 ~M.

lho Fedarol Falr Housing Ac1
d 19118 mt1010" llltgll

EUJC:utiva DlrecDr

Joola , lola of misc., Intersection

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

.1 •-::1...
u- ...........

•

Garage Aponmem: 29 Roll Nul
Avenue·, Gallipolis, Furnished
S2751Mo. Ulillties Pa id 8U·UI·

11111- I&amp;IUIJI8c110

PDSOJQN AYAH '81 E

9 &amp; 10, cNidfln.&amp; adulr eiOrhing,

80

2521.

Hour,
Or 72
Shihs.
Pays
t6 Hours
A Hour
Day, Bu
t AnIIOver·
nigh! S1a1 II Required. H lniOfOSI·
ed PINtO Call Lila Karson AI
1·800·0N·DUTY·2.

&amp;VICinity

... . . . . .
41A*r .....

14.,. .._ . . . 11 .... ,.,..

Onllu!ylo Acliwoly Seeking To Rocruil
CNAo Wl1o Aro Looking To Work
Long Term Home Care Casea
Where You Live-In· Md Stay
0\'ernlgl'lt In Elrhar 24 Hour, •a

Middleport

...................
_..
·- - ..........._10..••
......,

11 ......... -

Furf'lllhed ont t..droom apartmen!, S250 par monm 814-940-

NEEDED: Pllinlofl &amp; rrlm car·
penrers to give bidl on apts. Call
304-&amp;&amp;2·3151 bo1woen Bam4:30pm. Mon-Frl.

6110, &amp;11/lle, 3 , _ ,, Homo In~
Curlalna, Clothing, 8ikt, Knick·
)&lt;nocko, t 1 Mal&gt;llent Dr I..,
1114--.:1471 111717.

AI._..............._

lll . , _ - 17 .... (IIIII)

.,, ..........
... Willi,.._,,
.......... - • Colllllund

~ork l

5,.2114.

ACROI1 .

Furnished Efficiency 2 Rooms,
Shirt Balh, $1g51Mo. Ulilltito
Pold, 807 Second Avenue, Galli·
po~a, 814-4411-4418 Ah01 7 P.M.

24x4 above grOund

pool,

mind on a dilemma that seems confualng,
you can find lhe solutiOn.

LEO (July 2:)·AU(I. 22) Partner~hip
~~~~ or

situatiOnS 'lhat require a
coliecttYa ellort ihould tie your cup ol tea
loday. You are an e•cellenllaam player.

·'
ln' lhe, yMI' aiJ8Iid yoo·CIIT achieve your•
go11a 1-.:.1 • ·,you will no1 lOok lor eaay
outa. You wtll ellp&amp;CI llfVe ..-nla, but
you w11 ~be fl!"PP"d 10 eam lhem.

1111100 (Aug, •23·1!•pt. 22) t,lajor
c11anQes In lhe worl&lt;place could tum out

TAIIRII* (.,.. 2C).IIey 20) Today, propII' OM-OiliOU' • 1Eiigellll8 and dllelniiiA·

~n.

'enablt you lo IICC!Iftlpllah •

lo be a blee8lng In dlaguiM. Give lhe new

lllualion a chance lo develop before you
LIBRA

(Sept.

23·0ot. 23) S.c hedllle

8IT1II1dl •rtv 1n 111e day ao 111et you w11
r.1 th11Maocl_111oiq11_ ~'Ill 0111 . have eome "" ttme·llter to eo1oY your·
ble. T.U.U.; Inial ~- to, a bltlllday .... An orginlzed egllndll will-* you
gill. s.rid .lor your ""'o·Gnptl'predlc- 10 ma1u1 ttme lor liiOik IIIII play.

tlon mlghi

u'llll

ont •••son, .t~~celltnt condition
S1 ,200, 8U·G•G ·3028, loa..

'

I

')!· ·
~.

.

•'v

J

,.

'

\'

.

1'

will have lhe abiiHy lo make nega1ive
developments con&amp;lructive and profitable.
Even small transactions might provide ·
tremendous benefits.
·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) H-lhere
is someone 1ou've mel recently and you
would Nke to gei 1o know them beUer, this
will be a goOd ilay lo strengthen ·

,,

.,

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jiln. 18) Oevetop.

•

1!)8n1s lhal eflecl you1 malarial well-being
oould take a tum lor lhe belle! this. after·
noon. You may receive aomethlng you
never lhoughl you'd gel. · •

'• '

AQUAtUul (....., 20-f'ell. )t) The MC181
10 your auceese 1oday ie to be properly
motivated . lf'lhere is something you
desire, keep telling yourMtllhat you can

do it.

..

"

...
·~

.....

PISCES (Feb. »M..n:h 20) Vou1 modjll
operandi will win you lhe lilmir~lon of • •
olhera loday. They wiD be impl8Sied by
!1!e 'lfBY you handle multiple reeponaiblll·

•

•

." .
•,

tiel.
•
.
ARIES (Min:h 21·Afllll 18) Todly, you,
will -be 111e ilrong, hldlp•udll~ pillar on
whiCh flleilclll*1.leln. YOII wtl *your

1 ... •

l.Nt(CCI

•
...
.~ -··

Todly

"~
'

~IO~IhelfheYwllhot
l8el cAJIIgaiEd.

...........

•

0 I

;

•

.'·

' ·~.
I

'

\

•·

�•
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueedly, May 7, 1998:

Ohio Lottery

Cancer institute to reconsider
mammograms for women unae( so;
•

·glvea
afth win
row, 3·2

•

•

FtoNO·RED-'I'II~H members or the nursing
staff at Veterans Memorlel Hoepltal were aelee1·
eel •• "nurtes of 1he yeer• and honored at the
hospital Monday 11 • part of National NuriH
Wesk, May 5-11 . Plaques were presented to the
three In ceremonies durln!f a reception held In
the hospital cafeteria. From the left are Rhon·
de Dailey, RN, BSN, director of nur~lng; Hospl•

tal Administrator Scott L.uc.a..Md honoress
Tereaa Stewart, registered nurn of the yHf.
John Arnold, llcenMCI practical nurae of the
year, and Jane Hoffnum, nursing. enlatant of
the yHr. Selactlon waa by popular vole among
hospital emptoywa. Dailey presented an article
on nursing, and Luca• spoke briefly commending the hospltal'a nursing Iliff.

BOSTON (AP) - The National
Canter Institute, criticized t1we years
ago for revemna its position llld saying women in their 40s dOn't need
mammograms, is taking yet another
look at the issue, the Boston Globe
reported today.
.
The institute will convene a panel of expens this fall to review
whether women should start having
mammograms at aae 40 to screen for
breast cancer, the newspaper said..
The panel will review an unpublished study by ·Swedish researchers
that found a 24 percent lower death
rate among women who stan(d getling mammograms in their 40s, the

paper said.
In 1989, the National Cancer
Institute beaan reCommending that
women aet mammograms every one
to two years after age 40, a standard
that still has the support of the Amer1can Cancer Society and the American College of Radiology.
In 1993, the institute angered doc·
lOr$ by reversing itself, saying there
was not enough scientific evidence to
, justify regular screenings until age
50, ~ausc of the difficulty &lt;!f inter·
preung mammogr~ms on younger
women, whose breast tissue is denser.
Recent research suggests breast
cancer spreads faster in younger

women.
" Breast cancer is not foraiving in
the aae group of 40 to 49," said Dr.
Laszlo nm.,., directOr of mammoa·
raphy ar Falun Central Hospital in
Sweden.
"If you miss once, there's not
another chance," hC said.
Dr. Daniel B. Kopans,"director of
breast imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital, has strongly criticized
the National Cancer lnstitote's about·
face.
"We argued with NCI not to
change the screening guidelines when
they did it. It was inappropriate
analysis," said Kopans.

I

Pick 3:
718
Pick 4:
3122
Buckeye 5:
3-16-18-23-35

lpCIIta on ' • 4

Low tonight In lOs. ·

'

Showers 11"-'Y.

~.

showers, high In mid lOa.

•
•

-.

. ,.'.'

.

.

.vat.~.

NO. 10

·-·.·
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o, Wednesday, May 8, 1996

h!allane.te ......

AGannett. Co. Uewepap lr '" ,

Ohio leaders to act on

$1(.6 billion
con·s truction
budget
.

.

.

•

€lark's Jewelry Jtore
HANDPAINTED PORCELAIN JEwELRY
6
YOUR CHOICE $12.00
.

I

:M.otlier's 'lJau Svecia[/ ·

$300
OFF

~~~~· ~/
113 EA9T COURt 81REO •

Free Local Delivery
271 North Second Avenue

COUPON

. TROPHI!S

PRESENTED ... F,_·nlne of Me"'a Cou.nty'a
"''
.,.
· IM'IghtWt ltlldwlts were recognized for their acholaatlc accompllahmenta II the 12th Annual Academic Excellence banquet
. , Staged·1\leaday night at Meigs High School. Jonathan Owen, a
Cheeter Elementary School fourth grader, eccepta a trophy from
\ Jeff Harris, prtialdent·of the governing board of the Meigs Coun· ·ty Educational Service C!!nter.
,.
' 1

I
I
I

PULSAR WATCHES
For

5tcquisitions ·
!fine Je7pelrg .

. 91 Mill Street, Middleport
992·6250

----------EXPIRES 5/15/96

Save On Carpet Padding
With Purchase Of C~rpet

INGELS CARPET
'

COUPON

But the dale for Gov. George
Voinovich to introduce the plan for
college, prison, parks and spons stadium construction across the state has
not been set.
" . . h
T d
. hs ·
vomovlc met ues ay Wit enate President Stanley Aronoff, RCincinnati, and House Speaker Jo
Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg.
"Speaker Davidson and Senator
Aronoff left with the idea that they
would try to get a capital bill adopl-

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Check Out
Our large
Selection

·
OUTSTANDING STUDENT·· Allton Gerlach, a nnlor at Meigs
High School waa awarded the Franklin B. Waller Award as the
county's moat outatandlng academic achiever. A plaque was pr•
nnted to her by Jeff Harris, Melga County Educational Service
Center governlng .board p~:~sldent. (See addlllonal photos 011
page 12).
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trict, congratulated the students ori
Those seven steps were deter'
• a..ntlnel newt staff
their achievements and the parents mining what you enjoy, setting goals,
~ • Academic . excellence
was for thelx tole'in guiding their children bei!'g persistent, working h~. mak·
appl~ 1\Jesd~y night as 59 of to success in school. ije said parents . ing the right associations with others,
. : ~eigs COuno/'5 top_s~hol~ gathe~ have a restmnsibilit~ t!J i~still_values, ~etting an education, and being flex· ln.the cafete!'UI of,Metgs High-School help set ~oats and gtve dtrecuon and 'tble enough to make chang~.
: (qr lf!e 1~. ~:nual:t\~inic Expel·
!)ave a responsi~ility t~ . , Jeff Hain
. ·s, governing;boflrd pre~·
'' nee Bnkll'. 'i\ · ' · it~' ,. Y
. . lt!.Qill!Qlbem fOI' ptellBf· . i(len!.for tli~ Se.n&lt;lce CJ:nter,presell(&gt;ol
. :Aiio\ii'lQO :~t~~/~.nj\~ ing the war"' • ; .
1:! ~ ,; ', ' C\4c·lf0,p~j~~· to the; . s~jlolliiS as the
, ,qlfj at~naed the.ie(:ogmllon·jh'o- 1.
He· fcvtewcd the s' .en · t~ps to natttes Qf the hono~es 1 [rom the
:, ,irltli~11td ~~ ~.:1Me~-5 .C()unty ' syccess _as Outlined in' a book~ I)ave foli)'th, sixth; eighth,· lOth and 12th
EclucattQI)aL~ervtee Ctnter. •
.. Tllomas. founder llf Wendy _s, sug~ grades were announced' by district
1· ~peltkcr ~on Minard, superintcn· ·· gesting they are guidelines wonh fol: superintendents, Minard of Eastern
, ilent of the Eastern Local School pjs. lowing.
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praise
ne~
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"There was no lime frame estab·
James ,.Lawrence of Southern, and lished .because it's unclear at this
Bill. Buckley of Meigs.
·
. · . point as io when a 'bill will be .preRecognized by Superintendent of pared for introduction. While there
Schools John Riebel •vere the nomi- were no hard and fast agreements
nees for the Fran" "" B. 'walter there was understanding that they
Award, a. program ilonoring the state's would try to get a bill,'' Steiner said.
' lop seniors.
'
Scott Borgemenke, chie~ of staff
. • Nominated ·(or the ,,~~ward fr~W-~ f2[. !i.J'n~~e ~ep~b.Hc~nsi. said l~e
their resp'&amp;:titc·~ oootll'tlisfrlets'Wbrcf:. ~ei\O~~s ag~··~o try to co~plete
Rebecca Evans, EastemHtgh School;
work on a bih .ltus month .
{Uiyan Young, Southern High School;
. Voinovich was _mum about a
and Alison Gerlach, Meigs High .timetable for the leg1slat10n.
. Continued on 8 e 12
"I think we' re just ~ontinuing m
P g
work the Issues that are mvolved wuh
the capital bill," Voinovich told

child-support system

~ JJy JAMES HANNAH
' J'nqciated Pren WrJtar

by dsing the new ~y~tem, slate offi·
cia!s said.
·,
• Ohio officials are hoping ,thal a · '1It's an'other tool in the arsenal to
-~ew system that rilqui~mpanies collect incre"'!ed child suppon," said
:· ~o tell !lie .state about newly hired Ron·Rhodes,spokesman'fortheOhio
-employees helps to fix the child-sup- Department of Human Services. "If
.Port problem." Critics say lhey·still we get 2,000·malches every month,
, l!iive a long way to go.
!
it will make a dent.''
, ·• • 'Gcral~in~ ~ensen, president of the
However, Jensen said there are
• !{oledo-l!Jsed Association for Chil· ·about 600,000 child-suppon cases jn
: l;lren for Enforcement of Suppon,' said Ohio and only a 20 J)ercen\collection
· Tuesday tliat similar programs work rate. She called the new program a
jir other sllltes.
"feeble attempt" at collection.
: .: ,. "It would be so wonderful if it · "This is very latior~intensive and
: worked in Ohio," Jensen said. ·
time.,consuming," she said. "II does·
: ~ The state has , found more than n't help the childre~. "
. .
· ~.000 people who.owe chtld support . The ne": Sj'Ste~? ts pan of legtsla-

tion signed mto law m August. It
went into effect in Jaritary. As of last
month, the names of more than
205,000 new employees had been
collectedand 2,087ofthemidentified
as d~linquerit ir, child suppon.
Under the system, most employ. ers are required to send infonnalion
on .new br rehired employees to
state-hired contractors, which see if
any of the employees are on lists of
deadbeat parents supplied by the
counties.
•
If a .match is found , the counties
then have a way to find the parents,
and pan of the\r wages can be withheld.

Rhodes said that under the old systern, the infonnation on new employees· was collected through the state
- tax and employment-services depart·
ments and was often six months old
by the till)e it was relayed 10 counties.
Now, it can be-done in 30 days.
"A lot of times the parent paying
·child suppcin jumps from job to job
and are difficult to track clown,"
Rhodes said. "'This way, they ' re
going to have to change jobs every 30
'days,"
But Jensen said many counties do
not send the state a complete list of
their deadbeat parents, panly because
it is time-consuming .

L,

Jessica McClintock
Ckl
Pleasures

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MEIGS CARPET &amp;DECORATING CENTER

: ..:~ • COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohi,o ti]ey ~auld join the retjuest fur a
•· S)lprern!l G,oui'l has sCheduled argu· · . speedit~ bearing or .oppose it.
. inents for Sept 10 in a case that will
Mark Weaver, deputy attorney
decide if the state system of paying geno:ral, said a response was still
' for schools is constitutional despite under discussion when lawyers
"'rl)nding disparities among 611 dis." learned about the Sej,t. 10 daie.
·
, !rielS. ·
. "We see no n~ for ,a response.
I • • Chief
Justice Thomas Moyer We think the court has chosen an
, in'cluded the date in a memo 1\Jesday &lt;!'PPI;OJiriate date,'! Weaver said in an ·
· ' )0 associate justice~ and otJ;ler coun - mterview.
.
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,
•.employees.
.
· .
Moyer's memo may not preclude
.'. • • Still ,pending bCfore the court is 'a 1111 earlier pj'oceeding. The coun still
:• motiolrt'iom the 0hib Cealition for inust rul~ on tl)~;, ,coalitiol''s request
; , ·'equity &amp; i\llequacy of School ,Fund- '' ~or expedj!ed consideration.
:' , i!Jii tliat asked justices f&lt;?r expedited · SU$an Greenberger, a coqlition
'\ ~ bral arguments in the case.
lawyer, looked forward .to arguments
; ; ' : Lawyers for the state 'have until In the
whether on Sept. 10 ·or
; ~ . ~xt wes:tl: to file a response in which sooner. ' ·

case

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~ But so far, Democrats don't seem · sign the biil in its original, narrower

willing to l)udge from their qpposition t9the accounts. As the ~ill heads
to ,a·House-Senale negotlatmg com·
mittee in the next few weeks, DeploC·
rats·. have in turn organized t~ejr own
·lbb~ing effons.
·
: ·
On the day'Blagg was in town, for
·example,' Consumers Union held a
news confet"Cnce with Kennedy and
groups oppose!~ to medical savings
accounts.
'·
Democrats argue the accounts are
for the healthy and wealthy, would
· increase premiums. lack consumer
protections a~~ would cost taxparers
about $I.'S b1lhon a year.
Pres!denl Clinton promised to

fonn but ·opposes MSAs. Yet, prediets House Majority Leader Dick
Armey.R-Texas: '.'He's- too good a
pqlitician to veto the bill over med·
ical savings accounts."
Consumers could put into MSAs ·
tax-deductible contributions of up to
$2,000 a year for an individual or
$4,000 annually for a family, and
employers could contribute some or.
all of that. Their insllrance company
would provide a cala.~lrophic health
plan for big medical expenSeS&gt;. Money from the account would be used to
pay for routine medical expenses, .and ·
unspent money wnvld roll over mto.
the nellt ~ar.

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"Ohio citizens are clearly over·
taxed and deserve some relief," said
Scott Pullins, the group's executive
director.
·
·· .Money for tax cuts would com,e
from a state budget surplus that rna~
approach $1 billion at the end oft~
budget year on June 30.
:.

~:~~~~~·~~~::~t~!~~:t~~~:~~
islalive body. They'll decide when

they want to introduce that legisla·
tion."
··He remained steadfast in his opinipn that state money for construction

GOP Increases
•
pressure .· .·
.
"or
4
3
cent
gas
tax
cut
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WAS,HINGTON (AP)- Re~Wb­
licans intent on forcing an electionyear cut in the gasoline tax are exenin'g increasing political pressure un
Democrats standing in their way.
The House Ways and Means
Committee was scheduled today to
hear from a parade of conservative
economists and industry groups push·
ing for a 4.3-cent cut in the gas tax
throug~ Dec. 31.
·
That was the amount added to the
Court. of Appeals in \!anton over- ·
turned Lewis' decision, handing the tax i~ - 1993, witho11t a single GOP
state a victory with a ruling that the vote, by President Clinton and Conschool funding system was constitu· gress. Senate Majority Leader Bob
Dole, the . presumptive GOP presi·
tiona!.
' ·
dential
nominee, began pushing the
Attorney General Betty Montcut
two
weeks ago, seizing on
gomery a~k~d the high court in
motorists'
discontent
over sharpIy risNovembeljt\iirefuse to hear the coali' tion 's appeal because taxpayers ing gasoline prices.
. Senate, Minority Leader Tom
already had spent more than $2 milDaschle,
D-S.D., has conceded the
lion on the case. ·
inevitability
of the cut passing Con·
· "The attorney generalis prepared
gress,
bu\
he
blocked Senaie considto vigorously defend the constitutionality ofihe current funding sys- eration of it on Tuesday, demanding
Dole penn it a vote on raising the
· tem ," Weaver said.
" She believes the legislature has minimum wage.
Dole, R-Kan., said he would perthe right to set up a school funding
system that they· believe is most mit that vote if Democrats would
appropriate for Ohio," he said.

hard for medical .savings ac~ounts
'

WASHINGTON (~)-Cindy income tax exemption for medical
, t :~tagg, .wife, mother. of two !pld .savings accounlli in the bipartisan
•\ ~':tiookkcep.e~ l\11 Co~umbus, _Ohio, car !nSllt'lUICt bill, noW·~nde~ negotiation
, .• ;dealerslltp,found nerself 10 . a ~w . m Con~ss. The btll woulll guaran.~ ~lc [!:eendy: ,advocate for tnedtcal . -tee that workers wh9 change 0r lose
• •1
•
account$.
·
jobs keep access to health insurance.
1.
Brou . &lt;! Washingaon with· cO·
'"If we j~st h~ng in there, we can
'' i'1iotker Angte ~eeve• as examples .of jet·what we want\" said Keilh'Appell
. ·~ . "1!:81 working people who have and cf Creative Response Concepts,
:: .UIC J\II~As, •·Blagg ~ame pan of an ,which arranj!ed the news conference.
~r· :'!'tense lobby!rtg effort I~ Conaress P~sident Clinton needs a. health ~are
, . ;ovcit a health msurance·btll.
btll, Appell said, and medtcal savmgs
, r
"I don't undet1tand why JlCople. .acco~nts 11\ust llc in the bill to stamp
. :._;'l,ave a pl'(!blem wilh the MSA pro- it witl:l Republiclll free-marker ide·
. ·; ,81'am beiiiJIIX free," Blau Mid at a oiOIY·
.
.~,.: newsc~t'erllqce lut week by Senate
"Oih~rWile,~ Clinton and (Sen:
:· , .Republicans.
·. ,
• •
Edward) Kennedy will ·get all the
· :~
_Republlcans want to in~luc)e an • credit," Apl,ICll said. '
, .
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50% oFF

.

1:-~-:~.0P pushing
• •

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"In our opinion it's one of the
most important cases the coun will
confront and the issue's a pressing
one. Many students are suffering and
will continue to suffer," Greenberg·
er said.
,
Most of the state's school districts
are' members of the coalition.
Judge Lil)ton .Lewis Jr. of Perry
County Common Pleas Coun ruled
on July I, 1994 'hat the funding systern was inequitable, inadequate and
unc6t;tsti1Utional. • ·
Tht Slate appealed at the request
of Gov. George Voinovich, despite
opposition frolli the State ·Board of
Education.
In August, the 5th Ohio District

. .'

income lax cut.

allow Republicans to add a third measure, opposed by labor unions, permitting management and employees
to discuss safety and other workplaee ,
issues outside the collective bargaioing framework. Daschle turned him
· down.
· '
"We're not going to get anything
done .. . until we can resolve this .
impasse," he said.. .
For the .second · straight dqy,
Democrats used the minimum·wage
issue to block action on legislation to
provide reimbursement for legal fees
for seven people fired from the White
House travel office in 1993. The Senate today fell seven votes shon of the
60 votes needed to cut off debate ·on
the travel office measure.
.•

.::Arguments on school -funding case set Sept. ·10
I

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of professional sports stadiuirts
shoul,d come out of about $100 n\i};
lion set aside for community projects
that include theaters and museum!:·'
"There's no other alternative,",
Voinovich said.
Cleveland was expected to ask for
another $10 million in stale aid as a
result of cost overruns for the Gate·
way spons complex, and $33 millio.n
in initial funding for a new footHilll .
stadium.
·
Voinovich has pegged the statti
share of stad!um costs at 15 percen_t.
That could 11111ount to $81 millioti in·
the case of proposed baseball ~.ri~
football stadiums in Cincinnati. :
Does he expect a bill this month
'
or in the fall?
"At this stage of the game r·~
rather not comment on that_/:..
Voinovich said. "When the time,
when it's right, it'll happen. The issue
is when it will be right. "
.
Possibly complicating action on ·
the bill: a move for a tax cut.
House Minority Leader Patrick ·
Sweeney, D-Cleveland, ha...said he i~
yonsidering a.lax·relief proposaLthat
w()uld 'it\cliide cut~ in personal
income and property taxes. · .
The National Taxpayers Union of
Ohio has said it will campaign for a
I0 percent across-the-board state

election.

Fr~sh Cut Mot,r's 6ay Arrangements

IN NIOTORIC DOWNTOWN POMEROY

I

COI,UMBUS(AP) - Top legislative leaders have decided to try to
act this spring on a $1.6 billion state
construction budget instead of putting
the package off until after the Nov. 5

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Save $3.00 on

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•
Democrats are refusing to let the
bill come to a final vote, protesting
that Dole won 't penilit them a vote
on the minimum wage.
:
In the meantime, Dole pressed ))is '
case for a cut in the gas tax with some
election-year theater in front of the
Internal Revenue Service Buildhig.

Preston Wolfe, 90, retired
Dispatch president dies
COLUMBUS (AP) - Preston
Wolfe, retired president of The Dis. patch Printing Co., has died'. at 90.
Wolfe, whose son John F. Wolfe
is publisher, president and chief
executive officer of The Columbus
Dispatch, ,died 1\Jesday of heart failure at Riverside Methodist Hospital s.
He was boni Au g. II. Ii05, in
Colut)lbus,lhc year his father, the late
H.P. Wolfe. and his father's brother,
the late Robert F. Wolfe, bought the
Dispatch.
Wolfe staned his Columbus newspaper career in 1929 as a reporter for
the Ohio Slate Journal. He lalcr
_switched to reponing at the Dispatch,

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then to writing editorials for the
paper.
Wolfe became president of the
Dispatch in 1947.
Two years later, WBNS-TV,
licensed to The Dispatch Printing'.
Co., went on the air at its cuirent
location on 1he city's northwest si&lt;je •
Dispatch interests had been' involved
in broadcasting since 1933 w!\en
radio station WBNS was acquired.
Wolfe serve'd as a director of bqth
broadcast properties until his retire·
ment in 1973.
~
Besides newspapering, Wolfe also
worked in banki ng, investment bank-•
ing nnd farmin g.

.

'··-':

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