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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

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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The panel will review an unpublished study by ·Swedish researchers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

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NO. 10

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

h!allane.te ......

AGannett. Co. Uewepap lr '" ,

Ohio leaders to act on

$1(.6 billion
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· 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.
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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-

.+. 59. M .
c·
ty .h l . h.
d .
i:·;, OP:. · . · .· elg$ · ·oun .· ··. sc · o ars onore · . ~~i!~~f::::knt~;·Hs:~~ei~~u~:~~~~:
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·
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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·· BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

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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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~·:officials
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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
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: ..:~ • 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.
.
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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 .· .·
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"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
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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

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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

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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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.Commentary

Pomll fl'l•llllldllport, Ohio

Pegi2•

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WldnlldiiJ, 11i1J I, 11,1

By Jeck AtHhrwon
ancllllicMM Blnateln

abu-ses continue to outrage
One particularly tenaciCll" pris- for libel as well. /IL number of cases
oner, Ronald T. Williams, whO 'is have cropped up across the country,
servina tWQ life sentences in New but .one of the QIOSI interesting is
York for murder. has been waging a also occurrinJ in New York. It began
o~-man product liability legal war when New York Attorney General
using fabricated charges. A yogun Dennis Vacco put out a press release
product Williams ate supposedly lut Ausust naming killer Herbert
had glass in it. cuttit!J and paralyz- Thomas in a David Leuerman-like
ing his lips, shaving cream exploded Top Ten list of !be most frivolous
in his face, a television caught fire prisoner lawsuits in the slate.
and burned his clothes, among other
The citation read as follows :
complaints.
"The Naked Truth: Serial killer HerIn a I 5-page opinion, New York bert Thomas sued for SSOO over a
Judge
John S. Martin said Williams nude photo of his wife thai was con.
made Joe Btfspk, the bad-luck char- fiscated by prison officials. The offiacter in "Li'l Abner," look like a cials judged the photo to he
lucky guy. "If the plaintiff were to obscene."
be believed -- and he is not -- every
Thomas was ,miffed and lodgt;d a
consumer product to which he has defamation lawsuit, against Vacco, to
been exposed' has caused him seri- which his offiCe tmd to spend con0115 bodily injury," Martin wrote. siderable time ·and 1money respond "The court cannot tolerate this type ing. " See." Vac~o told us. "it's
of cynical abuse or the judicial never-ending, these ridiculous lawprocess." In a rare move, he ·sanc- , suits." He added, however, that he
tioned Williams from further suits, was "actually pleased to. hear that he
fined him and took away his word was suing me, because it merely
· processor.
underscores the si lliness of ,. is
Incredibly. some felons are suing whole-process of allowing pris&lt;Jo

WASHINGTON - Most American• think thai when felons go to
111. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
prison, they lose most of their civil
1114-992·2151 • Fax: 812-2157
• rights. But that's not what prisoners
-- and some judges -- erroneously
seem to think.
Evidence gathered from numer'•
ous prisoner lawsuits filed around
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
the country suggests some state and
federal
judges are putting the rights
..
ROBERT L. WINGETT
of prisoners on a par with the rights
9ubhher
•
of their victims. ·using that presumption of equ~lityJ many prisoners
MARGARET LEHEW
' CHARLENE HOI!FLICH
have found ridiculous ways to clog
Controller
GeMraiM~
up the courts with silly complaints.
Most prisoner lawsuits involve
the Eighth Amendment right to be
free from "cruel and unusual punishment" While many s~rious abuses do occur in prisons, some inmates
have used Eighth Amendment to
protest the most minor slights. ·
Other inmates dip heavily into
the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech, to buttress
frivolous complaints -- particularly
the right to receive pornographic
material. Most of these suit's involve
fJf WALTER R. MEARS
sex
offenders, who often sue prisons
AP Specllll Corrupondent
· · WASHINGTON - As sen. Bob Dole struggles to pick his spots and set for the return of pornographic matehis agenda for the campaign against Preside~! Clinton, the Republican feud · rial . For instance, . an Idaho
o~er abortion has flared anew at the wrong t1me.
·
pedophile -- who compounded his
,. Not that there '·s really a right time for an intrapany argument unlikely to guilt by passing HIV to a juvenile
~atisfy either side. But this distraction changes the subject just as Dole set- boy-- sued to receive materials from
t~cis on targets that might offer an edge, notably the repeat. of the 4.3 ·cent+ an organizatjon that encourages se~
between men and boys.
gallon gasoline tax increase of 1993.
During a slack season, with his campaign money short. until his GOP
Some inmates have tried gendernomination is formally bestowed on Aug. 14, Dole needs sohdartty, not thts discrimination suits.. A Kansas
preview skirmish of a dispute that will be replayed at the Republican Nation- inmate believes male inmates should
be allowed to wear clastic hair ties
af'Convention.
·, .The dispute is over the abortion plank that has been in the last lour GOP and have access to other goods and
C'ampaign platforms, advocating " a human life amendment to the Constitu-· services that female inmates get A
Nebraska felon thinks he should be
· ttOn."
.
·" Dole has tried to make the abortion issue a fi~ht a~ainst Clinton for veto- allowed to nave an infant son live
illg a bill to ban late, term. partial-birth abortions. Clinton vetoed the bill on with him in his cell, since female
#tounds the procedure is sometimes needed to protect the health of the prisoners arc allowed to bond with ·
mother.
·
newborn infants in jail. Despite clear
_The veto drew an angry backlash from Roman Catholic leaders. Dole state ltiws against it , a male Nevada
Jailed it a big mistake.'~ 'He - is out there on the extremist edge." the Senate inmate is seeking the right to marrv
his male cellmatc ..
majority leader said.
.
' House Speaker Newt Gingrich repealed that description in saying there
Another Nevada inmate alleged a
would be fn attempt to override Clinton's veto early ncKI month. Titc ovcr- violation of "equal protection"
ndc vote would be a way to refocus the debate on Clinto,n's support for abor- under the law because he got two .
pieces of bacon at breakfast one day
t)on rights.
' Dole favors a constitutional amendment 10 ban abortion, with c•ccptions while another inmate got three. In
i~ cases involving rape or incest, or threatening the life of the mother. Only another example, a South Dakota
the la.uer c~ception would be covered by the prior GOP platform language. inmate inventively tried to use lhe
the nominee-to-be has said he would consider changes in the wording as' Sherman Anti-Trust Act to bust up
the prison store "monopoly. "
lpng as it reaffirms a clear ~nti -abortion stan~e.
.
, Gingrich, in a CBS-TV mtcrvrew, wouldn I say. defcrnng to Rep. Henry

~

Republicans feud on
abortion at wrong 1ime

Do'

MICH.

''

v-IAAT IF VIle GET ~JACK~
VACATION "wt:' FIN' OUT
Wf'V~ LO~T OUil JOBS "f
(.

Llny T. Bill!, New Hav•, W.Va., clied W1h s1oy, May 8, 1996 in the
Vttmns Adminislrllioa Medical ecm., HuntlnJ!On. W.Va.
, AmnJemea11 will be ._...aced by the Fo&amp;Jesona Funeral Home, MISOII,

W.VA.

rain 70 percent.
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms lilcely... Mainly this evening.
Low 60 to 65. Southwest wind S to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursday... Partly sunny with a
chance of a shower or thunderstorm

Deputies probe accidents
tJJee

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must 'come all·ve' as cand.ldate .j:

'l

Me•••·

1oday in history .

Fight 11:1arket's rudeness with convertible securities·j

a~ The Aaloeletad Ptell

By JiM LAWLESS

tificd Financial Pt'anners, convert- al 82 cents on the dollar last week, . mon stock. The ·lower the premium.:
•Today is Wednesday. May 8. the I29th day of 1996. There are 237 days The Des Moines Register
iblcs arc -particularly enticing ways he said. The pond ·was issued with a the closer the convertible wilt trac'k;
lc4 in the year.
·
. .
·
.
.
The stock market is not a polite to invest in riskier small artd mid- 6.25 percent yield, and at the dis- the stock and the sw.ectcr the deal. ; :
:On May 8. 1945. President Trurnan announced m a radto address that place. For one thing, it never says size cqmpanics, the heaviest issuers count price, today 's buyers arc
A convertible also should be eva!-'
World War II had ~nded in Europe.
where it 's going, and there is little of convertibles. The common stock receiving a return of 7.6 percent .
uated against the auractivcness of:
:On this date:
. . . : that investors can do to retaliate.
of these companies is apt to pay
And if Dain's anolysts arc a.• similar convertibles: II m~ st be •
;In 15'41 , Spanish explorer Hernando de Sotn reached the Mrsstsstppt
About the only way to deal with smaller or no dividends, and prices good as Myers claims they arc ("we checked foreall provisions Jhat res~'
Riter.
·.
.
'·
such rudeness, short of just staying usually are more· volatile than larger- · have a ~onvcrtible · bond deparl- .in early bond maturity, and Its c;eiin .
~n 1846, the first major battle or the Mex1can War was fought ,at Palo away. is to buy C&lt;Jnvertihle sccuri- size company stock. Thus. a co.n- ment''J, and Eagle common stock rating has to be checked llecau
Aile Texa.•. resulting in victory for Gen. Zachary Taylor's forces.
.
tics. according to some expeits.
. vertible may allow investors to cam moves up to $13 or $14 a share, then many coi;lvenibles are rated belo '
~~ 1884, the 33rd president of the United States. Harry S. Truman. was
Convertibles are a hybrid of income while waiting for the price Eagle convertibJc·• bond owners arc investment grade and arc riskier. l
bo(n near Lamar, Mo.
·
.
stocks and bonds. They're a fixed, of the stock lO rise:
looking at tola! retu11!·potential of 12 . If evaluating an indi ~iduut' co~ .
In 1886, Atlanta pharmacist John Styth Pemberton mvcnted the novor income investment allowing the pur.,_n example is Eagle Hardware &amp; perc~nt to 13 pei'CCltl, he estimates.
vcrtible'Sounds too complicated a
syrirp for Coca-Cola.
·
chaser the right to exchange - . or Garden Co. of Renton, Wash., a
Convertibles are ·not praised by time consuming, investors can cc&gt;
Jn 1958, Vice President N_ix~ w~ sliov_cd, stoned, booed and spat upon convert -the security for shares of whole_sale lumber · and building all. So111e ~rokcr~· said they never sidcr convcrtihlc bond mutual f~n
by'Bllti•Amcrican protest~ts m L1ma, Peru. .
the issuer's common stock.
materials company.
(ouch them. Toq complicali:d and whose managers do the pickirig a
·ln' t962, the musical comedy "A Funny Thmg Happened on the Way to
Their attraction is income that is
"I have used it (j;:agle convert- too hard to track, they say.
sorting.
·
.
the: Forum" opened on Broadway.
.
generally hjgher than the company's .ible) a lot," said stockbroker Oav.e
"I have a standard rule: No.conMyers said he uses Putnam.Co:·
Jn 1970, eonstruction workers broke up an anu-war protest on New common stock, and the potential to Myers or Cedar Rapids. Iowa, man- venibles," said We~t ' Des' Moines vcrtiblc Opportunit'y '&amp; lncom .
York's Wall Street.
have a greater gain in value than the aging director at Dain Bosworth financial planner and ·stockbroker Trust, a closcd; cnd fund that o\Yn~~
In 1973, militant American Indians who had held the South Dakota ham- 'company's bonds because of their · securities firm.
James C. Miller o( Dean Wi1ter.
portfolio 9f convcnibles a~ well
let :Of Wounded Knee for 10 weeks surrendered.
link to the stock. .
Eagle has a common stock that
Among other things, Miller said- non-convcniblc high·yield bc&gt;1rds . .:..-:
Jn t987, Gary Hart. doJpd ~ ques~ions about his persom~llife, inchldA conve':'ible can take the st~ng - at S9,SO a share last week he doesn 'tlike all of the cOildillons
Unli"ke the more poJl'IW opel{~
ins: his relationlllip with Donllll Rtee, wnhdrew from the race for ,the Demo- out of a maJor stock market decbne Dain· analysts rated a "slronj buy" attached to convertible securities.
end mutual funds that t~~ Ill' tie
craiic presidential QOmi~lliott.
.
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'
_ - because the i~,lerest- paying feature because the co~pany has _revived
Factors to con~~ include~ 'eon- value of thei~ net assets, cl~-cnd\1i
Ten years ago: The premier of Sov1e1 .Uitraine, Aluander Lyashko, &amp;old of.11he convertrble tends to blunt the profits, Myers sa1d.
.
vert1ble's "premium,·; wh1ch ,Is. lite funds trade on exchanges at a prel!ll;i
reP!Jrters that 84,000 people had been evacualed from seulemenls near the drop,
Eagle also has a convertible bond difference betwee~ the price of the urn or discount to their n~l asset val':]
C~ohyl nuclear plant
.
. ·
.
Accord ins to the Institute of Cer- that matures in 2001that was selling convertible and thi: price oftbe com· ues.
• ·-

Karen Hall Alexander

Wallace Houck

' Karen Hall Aleunder. Middlepon. formerly of Hartford, W.Va., died Tues-

· Soulbeasten Oblo
. Flash flood watch today and
, IQnight...
· · Today ... Warmer with-showers and
thunderstorms likely. Brief down,pi&gt;urs possible. High near 80. South_1!/Cst wind 5 to, 10 mph. Chance of

No injuries were reported following
accidents investigated
Tuesday by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Office.
,.
Tile first accident happened at I :20 p.m. on Rocksprings Road.
· Sharon K. Warner, Pomeroy, was southbound and struck an old utility pole lying alongside the road after meeting a truck on the road,
according to a sheriff's repon. Damage toh~ 1986 Chevrolet was listed as heavy.
'
The second accident occtDTed at I :30 p.m. on Salem Street, Rutland. Marty Spangler, 32, Rutland, backed from a pnvate drive into
the path of a Meals on Wheels truck driven by Franklin Imboden. Rutland. Imboden struck the rear of Spangler's 1984 Ford. Damage to
Spangler's vehicle was listed as moderate while th~ Imboden's vehicle sustained light dama11e.
.
.
·
Tile.third accident occUrred on stale Route 68 I at DeVenney Road
in Bedford Township around 6 p.m.
·
Odrey Reed, Pomeroy1 was eastbound in a 1987 Dodge and lost
con1r9l in a curve, according to the repofl. Tile vehicle went off the
right side -of the road, crossed the intersection S!'d knocked down a
stop sign before continuing on through the yard of Robert Blankenship and breaking off a pine tree. The truck veered to the right and
went over the hill to the edge of the roadway.
.
Reed was charged with driving under the innuence and driving
under suspension. . · ·

Prank_911 call investigated

· A youth making a prank call to !be Albeqs COunty 91 I system 1\aes. day evening didn't count on the system identifying the residence from
1
· which the call was made. .
·Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby and deputy Robert Bee- ·
gle responded to a Point Rock Road1'06iden_ce in Columbia Township
after the Athens County. 91 I operator received a call stating ''There's
been a murder!". The caller then hung up, Soulsby reponed. - .
'·
''The new 9 I I system in use in Alhl:ns County is an enhanced sys. · tern that gives the address of the caller even if they hang up." Souls. by explained.
· When contact was made lithe reside~ youngster there denied
· · making the false call, Soulsby said. Later, the mother informed the
sheriff's office that her son had made the call, he added.
·1
Soulsby said sbe was 10 tl!ke the youngslerto the Athens County
- Sheriff's Office. . ··
·
·
"Athens officials are filing charges on, persons making false 911
· calls and it is expectedfthe juvenile will be facing eoun action," he
. added.
.
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.-----------'i
·Announcement
The Daily Sentinel R~•mace pl~ned
Publilhed every h now, ,Monda,. Uwouah
friday, I I I Court St.,.,._, Otllo. by l)le
Ohio Valley ...,btltlliOJ Comp~~~JIG- Co..
Pomenly. Ohio 45769, I'll. m-21 l6. Sec:ood

~·

" " " - poid .. """""'Wo
M•bon Tile Aioocllled Preu. .,.. die Olllo

New4N4Jer Aslocllllon.
I'OSTMASTBR: send oddtOu ""'"""'"'" 10
The DtUY Sendnel, Ill Court S~.• PomeiO),

sale
A rummage sale will be held Friday·and Saturday at Grace Episcopal
Parish House, Pomeroy, from 9 lo 4
p.m. On Saturday a bake sale will
also be held. Tile Grace Episcopal
Women are sponsoring the sale.

The Pirates rallied from a 3-1
deficit in games in the 1925 World
Series to defeat the Washington Sen-

!Jiolo-45769.

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SPRING VALLE YCINEmA
446 452 4

SINGLE COp&gt; PtuCI
Daily ................................... ................ l5 ee...

Sutro&lt;rlben nco detlrins ro poy doe ..m.r moy
Nnit In 8dYanee tlirect 10 1be Dlily SeRtinel
IIi 1 - olx Ill I2 ..,11111 boll• credit wiR be
..... -

day, May 7, 1996 in the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
.
Arrangements will be announced by the Fogle~ng Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va.
"

Lloyd P. Hayden Jr.
Lloyd P. Hayden Jr.. 6 I, Hartford, W.Va., died Monday. May 6, 1996 from
injuries suffered in a construction t~C&lt;:ident in the Toledo area.
. Born Sept. I 0, I934 in Wyau, Mo.• son of the late Lloyd P. Sr. and 1llelma While Hayden, he was an ironworker; a member of Ironworkers Local
769,Ashland, Ky., and a member of Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107:
·
Surviving are his wife, Diane: Stewart Hayden, wbom he marned May 23,
1986 in Gallipolis; five sons, Deimis, Richard, Mark. Jerry and Russell Hat
deq: two stepsons, Brian and R~ll Edw~ of H~f11rd ; seven grandchildren; four sisters, Beverly Hams, Annte Elhs, Dons Rose and Sheila Hayden; and four brothers, Delbert, John, Charles and Lowell Hayden.
He was also preceded in death by a sister, Sue Vins_on. ·
Services · will be I p.m. Salurday m the McMtkle F~neral Home,
Charleston, Mo. Burial will be in the Dogwood Cemetery. Fnends may call
at the Willis Funeral Home. Gallipolis, from 5-9 p.m. Wednesday, and at the
McMikle Funeral Home, Charleston, from 5-9 p.m. Friday.

Wallace Houck, 79, Bluffton, died Monday, May 6, 1996 in Biuffton.::
Born June 27, 1917 in Gallia County, son of the late Mason and Vet:M
Houck, he was retired from the Gallipolis Developmental Center, and W.¥
a member of the First Church of God, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
:
Surviving are two daughters, Bonnie Jones of Westerville, and Beuy Walker of Columbus Grove: a son, Tommy Hawk of Reynoldsburs: seven ~
children and a great-grandchild; tWO brothers, Noah Dale Houck or Ceni.!l
nary, and Buford Houck of Ironton: and a sister, Beulah Belle Mill:hell .?!
Centenary. · ,
· ·
.·
He was also preceded in death by two sons, Roger Houck and Fred Houcil!:
and two brothers, Wendell Houck and Gradoil Houck.
.
. Services will be 2 p.m. Friday in the Willis Funeral Home, with Pasitir
Dale Vollmar officiating. Burial will be in t~e Centenary Cemetery. Frien4,s
may call at the funeral home from 4-8 p.m. Thursday.
•'

Showers w~ll continue across state ·: :~
By The Asaoclatld ';,...
a flash nood watch has been ISS~.

A warm front will stall over the
northern porti!'n of the state tonight
and will continue bringing showers
and thunderstorms. With the stalling
of the front and the already saturated
ground. nooding of low lying areas
and rivers will be P?~ibl~. As a_ resul!

..

Units of the Meigs County Em~r­
gency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance 1\tesday. Units
respOnding included:
POMEROY
I :25 a.m., Condor Street, Li•
Haggy, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RACINE

8:22 p.m., Broadway Street.. Torrey Wolfe, HolZer Medical Center. ·
RUTI.AND
5:05p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Charles
Adkins, HMC;
6:25p.m., Meigs Mine 3 I, Robert
Eblin, HMC.

..

SYRACUSE

. ..

10:08 .a.m., Locust Street, Toni
Quillen, VMH:
5:02 p.m., College Street, Carroll
Neigle~ ~li .
In the · 1929 World Series, the
Philadelphia Athletics scored 10
runs in the seventh inning of the
fourth game to beat the Cubs, 10-8.

'

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Happy
Mot...er's
Day
Small Electrics
for Mom
Coffee Makers
Toasters
Can openers

7

Slicer
Skillets
Hand Mixer
Radio ·

·.

About a century ago, our founders named us The Peoples
Banking and Trust Company, but why stand on ceremony?

No ..bocriptiCIO by moll permluocl In ..,.

- - - - tsovoiloble.
MAIL IIIJI8cRimONS

' · - Mtlpc-oq
13
..............................
,.................. $2'1.30
26 .. ,..............................:...............U3.82
5 2 -............................................... St05J6

Mtiii,C-'J

i

Our friends just call us Peoples Bank. We were built by people in southeaStern
Ohio for people of southeastern Ohio. And we've grown. In addition to our
Middleport office, Peoples Bank now senes you from Gallipolis, Pomeroy and
Rutland. We also have offices in Athens, The Plains, Newark, Belpre and Marietta.
And while you won't find any Peoples Bank offices in West Virginia, we d'o count
quite a few frien!ls among our neighbors. Maybe that's because we're people
people. We consider our customers and our people (including our new people!)
our greatest assets. If you're a people person, get acquainted with Peoples Bank.
'

Now serving Gallipolis, Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland. ·

;a .

I .

for the southeast portion for tonight.
With lhe warm front to our norJ,I).
on Thursday, warm air will surge i'l!q
the region. Weak areas of low pressure will periodically intrude into lht!
state and res~ll in numerous show~
and thunderstorms.
,,.,

Meigs EMS
logs 6 calls

-PICKENS
HARDWARE

eoclt week.

...... -

J

Bl~nders

SUUCRtmoN RATIS

., C.rrlo&lt;•- . . .
One -k. ................................................. $2.!10
One Monlll .~............................................. $8.70
OneYeat ... ........................................... $104.00

~

John A. Board, 72, Croobville, died Mondlry, May 6, I996 in the Good
Sll!lliitaa •Medical Cenler, Zanesville.
Born sepc. 2, I923 in Hutford, W.Va., son of the late Burley A. Sr. and
Ruby IWris Board, he wu a Proleslalll and a member or the Eagles Lodge,
Crooksville.
He was also preceded in death by IWO brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are a brolher, Bwley Board Jr. 'of Crooksville: two sisters, Thelma Filson or Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Mary MUJaret Roush of Letart.
W.Va.: and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Kirkland M~morial Gardens, Point Pleasant Friends may call a1 the Cannon-Lanning Funeral Home,
Crooksville, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.

~-·

John A. Board
,,,,,
'''''
·
• I. COIUI'TIIIua.I 114• I• '

Carolyn Sue Hamilton

c.rolyn Sue Hamilton, 49, Gral'ton died Sunday May .5, 1996 • '1'111(
ClevelaDd Clinil:, Cleveland.
•
;
Born Sept 20, 1946 in Boone County, W.Va., she~· the d-IJIW -~
Bulah Adkins and the late Vivian Maxey. She was a reJtstered nurse al Life:
c.re of Medina for I0 years.
;
She is survived by htr husband, Wayne Hamilton of Gral't011: dne lOIII ~ ·
Jon Adkins of Battle Creek, Mich., Norman Adkins of Grafloll, and Ricky;
Adkins of Palmer; Alasb; one daughter: Jenise Adkins oflimpa. Fla.: ~
er, Bulah Muey of St. Petersburg, Fla.; three sisters: Zcnola I:Wvey lftce:
Delores Maxey of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Cathy Denam ofZanelville; f~
brolhen: Vernon Muey of Tuppers Plains, Eugene Maxey of Jeffery, W.Va./•
Clyde Maxey of Bends, Oregon, and Norrnan Maxey of Winter Haven, Fla:
~ five grandchildren.
,
.
~
' Services will · be held Friday, I I a.m., at the Ewing Funeral H~
Pomeroy; with the Rev. Herbert Grate officiating. Burial will follow in S~
Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
~
Calling hours for family and friends will be Thursday, 3 lo 5 p.m. lltd 1,•
to 9 p.m., at the funeral home.
I

W.Va.

,---Local ·briefs__,_;.--.

.

'Amllp,:.

Larry.T.·Ball

•

unrestrained access o oUr coum.
Thomas handed me this proof o~ a
golden pi alter."
•
One or the most reprehensible litigants has been John Jay McKib~n .
a Colorado prisoner convie!ed :nr
'Sexual ~:j&amp;Uh on a 16-year -old boy
who was working for him selling
advertisin·c . Tile unrepentant inm.lc .
wrote a rambling, 24-page COJTI·
· plaint against the victim. hi~ ,parents
and 15 other defendantS': Am&lt;Vlg
other things. he alle'ed ··~torti~n.
abuse nf the legal process and ,fa!S&lt;:
tmpnsonmcnt.
.,
Several weeks after heing nqtified of the complaint -- and a wt;ek
before Christmas -- the young victim put a .357 magnum ''' his he'.ad
and killed himself. That M c Kibl~n
could reach out. from prisou and farther traumatize him in uncon-·
scionable. and more proof that the
law has gone 100 far in allowing
prisoners almost unlimited access to
the courts. .
Jack Andereon Md . Mk:IIHI 8Jn·
oteln ore wrHer1 for United I'Ntllre
Syndicate, Inc.

·~

Audrey Hayman Han. 63, Racine died early Ibis morniftl Ill "Vel•rt- .
Memorial H 'Ill
'
will be annotmced Iller by die Ewiftl . , _ . Hanle,
~~·
:

AceuWalher" foreeut ror

l1yde oflllinois, whnwill bethcRcpublicanplatformcommittcechairman.
le~
Qyde opposes abortion, and has said he didn't take the platform job to
.
' .:, ~ ' ' . '
.
.
.
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·,
• _1
~treat.
k
'd'h . ·
' h ' 1·.,
' "sh I' '
1 The spca cr sa1 't e entrre ng 1-lO· he movement
ou d .ocus on • By Morton Kondracke
die-class income stagnation might be flot only ity Leader-and presidential candidate-- partly. sa~
Clinton.'s veto, and on the issue of using public money for abonions. " I
Jt used to be called "gridlock." but divided Clintonian centrist proposals like job-training Senatorial allies. because he docs not trust Majo(
!Oink we'll remain a pro-life party, but we' ll also recqgni 7.e that we hove a . govcrnmcqt may not lie so bad allcr all. For it to vouchers and tuition credits, but also big govern- ity Whip Trent Loll, R-Miss ., citou~h to delegat!·
'f"Y large pro-choice wing." he said.
·
·
continue; though, Sen. Bob Dole,. R-Kan., has to mcnt effnl'ls to induce corporations to close gaps day-to-day management of the Senate to him . ,
between executive and worker pay, guarantee
Loll damaged chances of a close working rcllt
• Meanwhile, Christian Coalition executive director Ralph Reed caused an come alive as a presidential candidate.
~oar among fellow social conservatives by proposing new lanlluagc for
At the rate things are going, Dole will lose the · · health and pension benefits, and invest strictly in tionship, other .Senators say, when he decided t~•
tOe platform. Reed quickly added .that he was not retreatmg from advocatmg presidential election so badly that Democrats will the United States.
.
oppose Dole on the issue of U.S. troops in Bosnil,l
•a• constitutional ban, and said, if anything, a sentence might he added con- win back the House and !'resident Clinton will be
' If Republicans control Congress, though, Clin- and Dole was informed about it by rcriorters, no~
&amp;mning the Clinion- ~clo.
·
pulled to the left in his second term as he was in ton can continue ·to act as a break on their excess- Loll himself.
. 1
: But no one has yet found a way to reconcile those connicting positions. the first two years of his prcsidcn&lt;:y ·- a bad thing es -- such as their plan to deny education benefits
Dole will, his allies say, delegate floor murfi
~Dole wants to focus the abortion ar~ument on Clinton . knowing, as Gin- for him and the Democratic Party.
to children of ille~al aliens -- while possibly cut- agcment of certain issues to others, as he did
ll!'ich said, that the issue will he back in August at GOP platform hearings,
Clinton fought his party to get the NAITA ting deals to balance the budget. control entitle- recently with Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo.. u~aiKI possibly for a seulcment on the convention floor.
·
trade deal approved and to begin deficit reduction. ment growth, and reform affirmative action and immigration, but he's still worried about heing out
: It ·also has energized Dole's defeated rival, Pat Buchanon, who remains~ but congressional Democrats ~xertcd no pressure welfare.
of town when Democrats call up a signif1canl
c.ndidate. although without a real campaign. B~chanan has conceded the on hiin 10 fulfill his pledges pn welfare or camPresumably. a re-clceted Clinton will want a amendment.
·
nbmination but voYo~s a fight to preserve the anu-abortton plank as .ts. He paign finance reform and aetually encouraged ·solid record of ac. ccimplishmcnt to sho: for his
In the absence of heing able to travel the coun
d~mands that Dole make a clear stall:menl supporting the plank without him to push for the eomprehen~ive health care presidency. Republicans, tcx&gt;. will want to show try freely. Dole needs to start making majn
c~angc.
'
· ·
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reforn\ plan whose failure led to the 1994 GOP they are not irresponsible extremists. So ncgotia· speeches setting forth if not a "vision." a term I~
; Buchanan doesn 't have the delegate strength to enforce hts demands. But landslide.
tions could produce a raf! of creative centrist s()lu- despises, then at least a "game plan. " _
• ·•
h~ does hav~ a_following and 11 tough-talking style that can kecr the GOP
Divided government in ·1995 and 1996 hasn't tions to national problems..
·
·~
It's ~ good sign that ·he 's assembling an c,:,,.
argumentgom~.
. . ·
.• . ·
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produced agreement on welfare, ·campaign
But divided government requires a hettcr cam- nomic team to ~ork up a major tax -cut proposal ~
~ Actually. this round began m_mrd-Apnl, just after the Clmton veto: when finance, health care. or a balanced budge t, but a paign than the di smal one Dole. is prcsenily run - -possibly for deli very ·this month at the Detro~
Gov. George Pataki of New York said he would seck 10 have the anll-abor- good argument can be made that Clinton and a ning. In fact , Dole needs to come alive just to give Economic Club. where President George Bus~
ti~n plank dropped front the. 1996 platfon.n. Gov. Christie Whitman of New Republican Congress could make beautiful music proper voice to Repuhlican principles, which delivered his major economic testament in Sql,
Jqrscy advocates that change. as do Gov. Pete Wilson of C'ahfornra and Gov. together in 1997 and 1998.
close to half the -electorate support.
tcmhcr 1992, too late l'nr it to do him any good: j
~.·iWIIia1.1msoFn. :•dl~~: p~~~f.~~~~~iistic, beeau_sc there won •1 be a conslituClinton, it seems pretty clear m&gt;w, is a blend of
Not only is Clinton 15 to 20-points ahead in the
Dole needs w heed Ri chard Nixon's ad viet
old liberalnnd new Democrat tendencies. After he polls arid $10 million aheao in spending money . and move to the political center rather tha
tihnal
to sta. rt won in 1992, he became a champron
· of "ac,t1vr
· ·st between now an d lhe conventiOns,
·
he·sa1so usmg
·
· I he ng
· hl on ·lmmtgratton
· · an d healt!t
r am_cndmcnt -. not with two-third__s v_ otes rcqui_red_in Congress
f
appeasmg
an att~mpt- on on rssuc where polls rndtcatc a maJonly " voters opposes · governme11 t." In this year', State of the Union . the .mid-phase of this election year to maxim~m · care reform. and he needs to submit himself "to
a~ oDoutlrcigs~i~~~~~:yb~~~re will be more discussion nf the issue. and ample message, he declared that "the era of big govern- advantage -- and Dole is not.
retraining on TV interview .and speechmakin¥
' •
ment is .over."
Mystified White House aides pi&gt;int out that techniques.
. .• ,
ti~c for it, with the convention abo~t th~ m~nths a_way. But he 'd surely
Which will it be if Clinton gets re-elected in Dole had the GOP nomination in hand more than
The way he's heen performing on TV and ;&gt;h
· pt;~:fcr that Republicans spend that ttmc d1spuung Clrntnn ruther than one 1996? A lot will depend on who runs the White a month ago and ba.&lt;ically has come up with•only . the stump, he 'll he clobbered in debates with the
another.
House staff and what kind of pressure Clinton is two offensives since then ·: on " liberal' ' j~dg~s glib Clinton. .
·
_j
: Republican National Chairman Haley_ B_arbq~r said he docs not think the under from Congress.
and thegns tax -- whrlc C~mton has had the arr. Who knows! If Pole can rousc .himsclf out _nf
a~ortion issue will divide the party. But Ills a drstractton, and one he wrshJf Democrats hald a significant edge in the waves to himself.
his doldrums·· " Dulcdrums," they ' ll he called ;s·
c~ woulil go away. "There's less here than meets the eye," he said.
House and liberals dominate rnajor committees -Over the coming month, Clinton plans to make things don 't chan ge-- he might even win the 199it
; Perhaps. But not less than meets the ear.
a certainty. given the decimation of' Democratic at least three commencement speeches -- al Penn elec tion and Republicans might gain full cnnw~
•
•
moderates in .1994 -- the pt·cssure will be on to State, the Coast Guard Academy and Princeton -- of the ·government. Now that's something td
, EDITOR'S NOTE _Waller R.
vk:l preaklont and columnlll for The
.
f
· ·
bo
,. ·
Aieoclllled Pret!l, hill reported on Wethington and nlllonal potltlce for more abandon entitlement reform and budget balancing setting forth his vismn o Amcnca m 2001 .
worry a ut.
,
tto•n 30 yeoro.
·
in fav.or of "public investment "
Meanwhile , Dole still has not made up his
(Morton Kondre&lt;:ke Is exe~ulivo editor of RoQ
r
The Democrats' answer tn the problem of mid- mind how·to juggle his twin jobs of Senate Major- Call, lhe newspaper of Capitol Hill.)
• )

·

Audrey Hayman Hart ·

OHI&lt; l •.\'r:•:ttlwt
Thl hy,May9

•

The Daily Sentinel ~risoner
'£stilMWtd in 1948

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'ftidttfr1&amp;y, Mly I, 1~

Sports
,

• gets congratula• WHAT A SHOT! .,...Cincinnati's Eric Davis (left)
:tlons fron teammate Barry Larkin after Davis' homer in the 12th
·: inning of Tuesay night's National League game in Cincinnati, where
·:the Rreds won 3-2. (AP)

!Qhio State's Stobart
~listed in critical condition

.'

·: COLUMBUS, Ohio {!t.P) Stoban was I i~tcd in ·crit1cal hut
:· Qlllo State wide rceci vcrs coach . 'sta~le condition Tuesday night, said
:·C~ck Stobart is hospitalized in an Bob
Fitzsimmons .
hospital
.; intensive-care unit after open-heart spokesman .
: su;gery to correct blockages. .
Stohart is in his second sca.&lt;un mi
.• · Doctors at Ohio State University the Buckeye staff A native nf Bmd;: Medical Center performed quadru- bury. he has hcen a head coach at
·: ptecbypass surgery Tuesday on the . Toledo (1977-81). Utah (I'IR2-H4J
:; 61-year-old coach. Blockages were and Memphis ( 198'1-94). He joined
··discovered last week during a routine the Ohio State staff in March of
1995.
.
;:phystcal exammauon.

:Reds say they're not worried
~ about Schott's videotapes
·, CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati to spy on the road lor her ,.
:Reds players were not conccmed.
Morris said it w0sn 't an issue lor
·.·Tuesday about owner Marge Schott's players.
.:statement that she has them video".J haven't sccn.gtrlfricnds on the
:iaped as they board and exit team planes,'' he said. "She's ioliking to
' flight to make sure they don't bring ~ecp an eye out for the wives. In her
&gt;girlfriends along. · · .
own way. she's trying to do some: "I don't think it's actually hap- thing constructi~e."
·
:. pening," said first baseman Hal
. In an interview With ESPN aired
··Morris,
the
team's
union
representa•
Sunday,
Schott said she was con.
.~ ti'IC.
cerned about the wives. She suid she
:: · :pnce source, speaking on condi- !old the traveling secretary he would
: tid; of anonymity, confirmed ihat the be tired if she found out girlfriends
·:te*in does n&lt;&gt;t videotape the players. were on the plane, "becau..c I think
:· · However. one former employee you have 10 protect the family issues
:snid Sc.hott · asked employees to and stuff."
:watch players on the road to. sec if
When the ESPN interviewer
;th~ married ones were cheating on
asked if she used ;i video camera to
•their wives.
monitor the players on the road, she
~ ·: "She tried to get employees to said, "God, you're smart , aren't·
~sp¥ on them on the road," the former
you'! No ... lc&lt;mng · and arriving .
:en\ployec suid, speaking on condi- We've done that to he sure."
•ti&lt;in
of anonymity. "I was not gmnl!
'
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I,J u~bUl~!!h ............ .. l.~
S1. Lmi&gt;. ............ . 14

In
10

.4K4
,4,_

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1

CIN&lt;"INNATI ... _, D

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.4,1.\

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AL standings

,

Coluradtl ....

F.usltrn Olvl.'ilon

IwD

-

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-.... .. JIJ

L l&lt;l.

· ·Nc•Yorl ..
11 l1.n
UJ1ltitnnn: ... , ...... ..~ .. l6 1.~ .516
'Tuwmu .......... ... ...·.. l4 17 4~2
• lkl~tlll\ ....... ;........... 11 20 ..l!!~
: lkrr~it.. ................ , IO 24 .21U

!.ill

Olica~o

1

................. 17

Mln~suln .. ............ l.~
MilwiJukL-c .. _ ....... n

I.J .~41'1
16 AK-1
11 · 4.1.1 •

: K;m~as Ciiy :.......... 1:\ 20

II

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Wr!dtm Dl¥l!llun
• ·rc1n~ .................... 21 11 . 6.~
.. • C.1lifomi:J....
.. IK 14 ."i6J
• Sc:tlllc.... . ......... IK I~ .."i4~
, , OuklanU ..
. .16 Ill :"tt()

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Tuesday's scores
Ut1kh11td K. CLI'i Vf.LAND 4
N~w Ymk 12. Lk.'lmit .IIi
, . Bo~run4, Milwauk~..~ 1
Chicnptl :l. BaltirnlJR: 2
r.:~us ,'i. TLK"nniU I
KatuUL'I (' iry ~. Cnlilhmij1 .\
Minnt:JIOfll 2. Sc.-nulo.: 0

1Hilchcnck .l - 1 ), td!! p.m.

IJctrnit JKca~ .lt.-. .1-21 at N~..· w Yml;
· 'IKirlllti:tJO..l ). 7 :.\~~~m . ·
Du51nn (~k: I-_,) at M1lwa11k\.'C (K:1rl
:'""2· 2J. It0.'i 11.111.
.
Htllthnoh.' 1End:su11 l-.!1 at Ch r ~..· up.L •
(8ai•IWill :!·0). K : ()~ fUll..

Torun11• (Han11on .l--1 1 ;u To.: x.a$ ! Will
.l -2). X:.\5ji.IU.
.
·:
Kartsus C'iw IAI'i•kr .'-.1 ' m. C:tlifurni:•
• 1 (Ftnlt':y 4-21. 10 :.\~ Jl.lll.

4M4
.471

4~

A1lanw6. Coll.)fodn
Fr:uu.i~ ~o:u

San

•
fRL:
dri ve fur
Cvrm:td

~~

..

IOJ

4. St Luuis 2

'

(Alvarez 2-2), ~ :0~ r..m.

..

Tortlnlo (Qu;lntnll

Billirnurc ( Mussina :.f-2) m

:.,

(}.4)

Ch ic; 1~o

at. Tc1w~ {Hill

' 4-l), IU.'i p.m.
..,
Kunsns City cGubic1.:1 l -4) m CalirtJr·
nin (Grimdcy 2- 1I. 10:0:'1 p.m.

San Oit'~l) (Tt'wlubury .1. 1 anJ V ;1ll!ll·
1.ucla I - I 1 at Pittsburgh {.May 0 -0 :md
IJarwin 2 -.~ ) . 2. ~ : 0~ Jl.nl.
N~·w Yvrl\ [Wilson 1·2) at Flnritb
!BurkL'It i- ~) .? : O~pm

Chi..:ilj!.LI (N:1v;•rro 2-J) at Mun1rcul
(Cnnni cr 1-21. ?J .~ p.m
Hnu sto n (Rt)'nolds ~ - I I al Phil:lllclphin tl~llnnt.lcz 2-21. 7 : .'~ p.m.
Los An~clt's {Park .l . l) at CINCIN NATI tSch1111rd. J-1 ), 7 J~ p.m.
C1•lonnlu (Reyman 2-21 :II Atl:mt:l
rGiavmc 2-.l), 1AO p.m.
. S:ltl Francisl'll IGiUt.IJh:r 2 - llnt Sl
l.uui ~ (1\ndy Bctk'S 1-•Jl. K:b) p m

Thursday's games
S:m 1-'raucl scu (0. Fcrn:uttkz .\ -1) ;II
St Loui l'l !Osborne 2-21. 1"J~ p.m.
t'•Jiunul u ll-'rccman \ -21 "' Florida
Hi. Mil lo-r 0-UJ. 7:05p.m.
.S:tn Di c ~o (Ashby .1· 21 Ul l•im;hu rl!h

(W;•)mcr -'-2). 7:0:'i p.m.
Hututun !Kilc 1-2 1 at Mo nlrcul"
IR\'Ut.cr :!~ II. 7 : 1~ 11 rn

an

,Ill!

'

;sc~!ns like somelhing bad hiD; ha~­
; P.e~d in the llll\t three ypar.~. Its
!mHelievable," said California third
•h"""'man Tim Wallach, a former
t rtilT'
•tea mate.
: : : ormer Dodgers pitcher Tim
:Ci · · s died in a boating accident dur' · · spring training ·with the Clevclndians in 1993. RC?Y Camlla and Don Drysdale died a
k apart later that summer.
•• r
news uhou~ Butler tell the
• tea shaken agmn.
,~r kind of puts the ganl'c in per: s " •tivc, docsn 't it'!" pitd1cr Tom
: Ciitldiotti said. ·'It's scary when
' sli~ething like itiat happens and
; th~fre talking about .survival per~ cc.l\tagcs, malignancy. cancer. That's
! ~r(See BUTLER on Page II)

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•, ~lunt;L. , .. ........... :.20 . J.l

.606

2

..: -

18

516
,419

5

' FJoridu .................. IJ 21

JU

YorL .......... .. I:\

•
Cll'ft(nl f)lvlllon
• HtK15MI ................. t7 1,6 ..~IS
: ('hi~:n~;ll ..
.. ... 16 17 .4H5

Amtricun Leanur
UI\LTIMIJH..E OR IOLES : A~si~ncll
kHP Jimml Myi.! r!l llulrit.du tu R1M.'hcstcr ·
nl the lnlnnatinn:tl lc:tp.Ut!. R l.' ~·nlh,•ll LHP
Rid: Krivda frum Rc~ht!SlCr .
( ' /\LIFORNIA ANG[tS : Pla..:eJ
I.HJ• Mark l.:tn)!~lnu un the l .~ · lhty di satll~ll h~t . Hl!&lt;.:allcJ l.HP Den VunRyn ;m.,J
RHP Todd Fn•liwinll fmm Vanc~IUYL!r of
the PCL. Optiuncd RHP Phil Leftwich In
Vancuuv ~r .
'

fltlblh: relations director.
. TORONTO Bl.UE JA.YS:"CiuiiTIC!cl
RHP· Ken R.obin~on off waivers from the
K:m!ns Ciry RoY'•b and desi ~nt11ed ~lm

Football

Ant()nio1 8 p._m. (TNT)

K
IJ':

·

DETROIT LIONS : Signtd TE Pe0&lt;

Metulnars.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Si3ned
QB Kerwin Bell

Tu...cla;(s1100res
.i· ·

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'·:',!'' ' ' . . ***1ft*' . ' " ·'' . ' . .'

Nat:loilal Hockey IA•J•t

''
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.,.,•.
,,
('

'.

Lud'!"ia to " om:-year contract

t

an

Reds

win~ ..

"''\
! "'(-Continued from Page 4) ·
to ~k games. .. . Los Angele~' Eric
K.:{Os went 0-for-6, extending his
sltfjnp to 0-for-15 . ... It was the.first
g&amp;Jile between the teams since
Cincinnati's sweep in the first round
of(Jie playoffs last fall .... Reds right
fio'llfcr Rcgaic Sand~ wp , given
clllari~e to beain swin&amp;ing a bill.
jj rccoV..ring (rom' a tear
~ a disk in his I~ ''*=k. ...
n Jl)lni Smiley and
hid ponitone ........ In
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: ..... .

s.,rs

' '

.E "·who

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allouklerl--a. n~Diirllld

: II !' ,
·~

his single. '
" If 1 could •~·c .,.._ ...,.
(Mc&lt;lwire) to btl it on tbe ~ k
would have been a diffeteiiiiJIIIIC.- ~· ·
Hershiser said. "'I thouaht it wa ·.:
warnins trade. high fly ..II. but~.'
it kept carrying. I was folloWI'lJ. .
Kenny (l,of'lon) and I thoulhl he
going to leap up. But then he woulil •
have had to leap ~tty high."

The~~ Jot II hits off Orel Her·

shiser (3-3), who allowed four runs
in 4213 innings. Hershiser had won
his previous three decisions.
The A's added four runs in the
eighth agQinsl reliever Julian
Tavqrez. Young hit his first homer of
the setiSQII,'Phil Plan tier had a tworun doub!. and Terry Steinbach hac!
an RBI single.
Cleveland center fielder Kenny
• straight
··
Lofton, who has won three
gold gloves, made two errors in the

Bl

Carlos Baerga had a pair of R · 5
for the Indians. He douhled in a run
in
first Julio
and had
an RBI
thetbe
third.
Fran~o
hadsingle
a in

do~:r:v~~!i~~~~~~ as far as. any- ~0~~~~~ t~ .~7rd·e·~~h.~c~w.'"S'e~~ ~~~~base~=~~~~a:~~~~:~i~~~s~~:n~
It was the fourth homer of the sea-

homer and drove

10

a run m the

l ,.
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:I

~~.·
==~:;~~==~~·
to:tlttn
.,. todly .~.......
• ••

''
l

scoring groundout in the fifth
Manny Ramirez had a sncrifice ny
the ninth.·

bach to r.eoch third by overrunning

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•~'J~n.v
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Boneles's ·
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rl}la n.t s

'

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BUF

I

was' :

1

' -:there will be
organizational
m'C~ting 'of the Monday Ev~ning
L9c!ics League at the Meigs County
Goll"Coursc on Monday. May 13. at
5
•r&gt; short t)usiness ·meeting will, he
hdl!l first, followed hy a nmc-holc
scr.imhle.
.
. .
.
: (;caguc play will oi'Oc,ially hcgi_n
~~onday. May 20. 1'hC format ts .
•li play with two-player teams. ·
• &lt;. cams whb want to JN!rlicipatc in
•. ~cague or anyone Who wants• to
thij
pi~ on a substitute basis may sign
up:tpt the club house or call 9923710. 992-5485· or 9~9- 2530 by '.
'Wfdncsday,,May 15:
· '

,,

.. .. Call 992-21·~6.

. Ask for·D,ve or' ..o~

DALLAS STARS: Slarie:d 0 C1'ai1

'

p:m. · ·

'

fourth.

•

w .

An~..' ~~o(~~s~~·n.•I; i)usi~~ss," f~«J~viduaU or Civic;
•

Hockey

•

J,

.

· ·...·Org~z~tiolis who woUld ·~e- to 'ha~e ~n . ..'·
advertisement in, this specJal ~«&lt;ition , pl~~e -.. "

P Tommy Bnrnhill'dt.
CINC INNA. TJ BEN GALS: Wo1ivC:d

NUL playoffs '
Piusburgh :\,,N.Y. RMpn2; Piusbureh teadueries ~· I
Plliladelphllll ], Florida I: Philod~l phi&lt;• leud5 series 2· '

.

N~&lt;~~IUnal Football Lta&amp;ut
CAROLINA PANTHERS· Released

.

'

On Thursday, May 23rd, The Daily Sentinel will
have a special editio~ With photograph~ of big~
· school seniors graduating this year. Now
through Friday, May 17th, Drop Your Phcno
Off At ~he Da~y Sen~inel ·orAt You~ H~gh .
· ,' Sch~ol Offle,e To ·B,e Included 'In This · ··
. . _.· ~peciai Edition, At No Chafge~·
~(Attach Y~~~ ·Nam~ ~nd 'Hig~ Stho~fto Photo)

Gn~en as.~i s tan1

Thursday's game

'

'

DETROIT TIOERS· Re..:allcJ INF
Fau~w Cru t from-TolL"llo nf the lnrcrn:.tinilal Uo&lt;t.!(UC . 0p1inned INF Tim Hyers
h• Tolo.:dn.
SEI\'11'L~ MARINERS: Re~.-~tllcd SS
Alo.:.11. Rodri~UL"Z from :a rt.&gt;hahilitatlon ~~·
siJ!:nmcntnl Tacoma ofrhc PCL. Opiiom.otJ
INF Andy Sheet~ ro Tncomu.
,
TEXAS RANGERS: Named Chnrley

QO John Wal.th.

11.11

.A'tT)3NTIONI
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1996 .

Baseball ·

!t

i ~dies' golf
-.
: l..gue to hold ,
. meeting Monday

'

. Basketball

Tonight's game

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the '"ootroo:r of C' Jerry GotT rrum
Tuc son of 1hc: PCL. Movc:d RHP John
Hudek fmm till.' 15-day diJnbl~d list t(lthe
60- d&lt;~y di~ablc:d list.

Hockey

:·• r.
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Molti'L-ol.. .............. l2 II ' .667
'"""lt&gt;hh• ........... l6 15 '

'

1\llauta :11 Orlando. Hp.m. &lt;TNT I

Ellstrrn Olt~lsktn

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lnd,, R•dll• LtoaRue
Anntmncl!d Lyn S1. hmcs will
Zum1e Gruup Ra\:in'- und McMutur~ p!)rl ~ in .lhe lndian&lt;lf~C.l li~

· NaliOOlllllaskctblll Association
UTAH JAU..: Signed F A.di!nt K.xfc
It! u li w-)'c:~r contmcl. .
·

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chiL~I.I

Tuesday 's scores

-

:d~~.

'· -

: • F'' As far as the Dodgers go, itjust

.
NarioaaiiAalut
HOUSTON ASTROS : Pla~;c:d C Tony
Eusebio on the 1$-day disabled lisl. Pur·

Ulah 9~ . Snn Antonio 75: l.ltnh leads
Sl!:ril!s 1-0
,
Chicaso 91. N.:w Yllrk t!O; O•icago
leads series 2-0

: NL standings
•

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li~r as ~&gt;ip.nmcnt .

Basketball

Utah

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lrdiagnose a form of cancer that has
11:30 percent survival rate. Butler's
lammates were told about it before
M-2, 12-inning loss to the Cincinlili!i Reds.
"He'll do with it the same thing.
t!l;lt he's done with pitchers over the ·
years: battle it real hard," manager
tom Lasorda said.
: · "Of the guys I've played with in
my career. if I could pick live or six
k.uys who could handle something
li~c this, he'd have to be one ofthosc
fl~e or six, no question about it,"
said Kansas City pitcher Tim Belch· ~ka former teammate. "I just hope
'IIICy got to it in a hurry."
: , Butler, 38, Wl!S placed on the disllliled list May 2to have a tonsillcc:StlnY in Atlanta, his homet?wn. Dur'lll!'the operation, a cancerous tumor
size of a plum WIIS found.
• ' Butler told his doctors that he
~wed tobucco l'or a couple of
~cars, but gave it up 15 years ago,
· O!Ccordin~,to media repons ..He d~d
)lbl smoke.or chew tobacco with the
podgers, according to the publicity
):lepartment. . ,
' The Dodgers said Butler will
miss the rest of the season. Butler's
~:l'c, Eveline, told reporiers she
· Oloesn't expect him to·ptay again .
: ,; "We have many friends in and
:Qilt of baseball and this will come as
)\ :1,11aj9r s!Jpck," Butler said in .a
NW.erneilt.· "It is imP&lt;l'!sible to speak
,\l.il!l llf.;lh9tn per~nat_ly. M~ wife
•OI)d I wouldJISk for your prayers fet
:US.and our'l:hildren at this difficult
:time; we:re not s~rc .,.here this road
:'IIi II ledd t!s, but we willlry. our best
:tQ.kcep you informed.'' ·
: . :• Butted~ at least the eighth major
•leaiue ooscball prayer to develop
:cancer in recent years. &lt;John Kruk,
:Jeriy !li&gt;oto, Darren Daulton and
:o)iilny Jackson also developed the _

innings. Robb Nen pit.ch two score- two-out single.
·
less innings for his sixth save.
Bagwell hit
RBI single in the ::
Jason lsringha~tsen (2-3) gave up third. tied the score 5-5 .with a two- · ·
three runs and II hits in seven run homer in the seventh off Russ · ' ·
innings.
Springer (2-2) and added a solo shot :
· Expos 8, Cubs 3
in the ninth off Ken Ryan. He has 12 ' ! ·
Moises Alou an~ F.P. Santangelo homers this season, including three ' : :
hit two-run doubles in a five-run scv- . in the last two games.
.. • ·
enth as Monireal · won its fourth
Antho~y Youlll! .(1-1) pitched a ·~ :
straight.
scoreless seventh and Todd Jones, '
With the Expos trailing 3-2 at Houston's fourth reliever, pitched 1· :Olympic Stadium, Terry Adams ( 1- 1/3 hitless innings for his sixth save. .
I) walked Andy Stankiewicz and
Giaats 4, Cardinals 2 . :
Mark· Grudziclanek. Mike Lansing
Man Williams and Barry Bonds
sacrificed against Doug Jones, Hen- - homered as visiting San Francisco
ry Rodriguez wa5 walked intention- &gt;topped a four-game losing streak.
ally and Alou doubled for a 4-3 lead.
With the score 2-2 in the seventh
·David Segui watked and, one out Stan Javier singled off Tony Fos;a~ ; ; ·
later, Santangelo doubled to make il· (0-3) with one out and Bonds fol;
6-3. Dave Silvestri followed with an lowe~ with his teague-leading 14th
RBI single. Rodriguez singled home homer.
.
a run in the eigbth.
Allen WaL~on, (3-3) making his '
Dave Veres (4-0) allowed two first start against the Cardinals since·
runs and three hits i~ two innings.
bcinB traded for Royce Clayton, · ·
Astros 7, PliUIIes 5
·
~II owed two runs and seven 'hits in ·
Jeff Bagwell wcrii 4-for-5 ..home- s1x
· ·mnmgs.
·
· · · ··
red twice and drove In four. runs for
Rod Beck pitched 1 113 scoreless· ·
the visiting Astros. Orlando Miller innings for his sixth save, sending St. ;
broke a 5-5. eighth-inning tic with a Louis to its lith loss in 14 games.

Transactions

. NBA playoffs

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500.

Today's games

r:II O;lkl illlll

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1'"'__;..__.,;.___.,.____..,.______"""_______.;..~--------:-~~~~==:;;';~~=~;::~~~~;:~~~~~~~~~n

.
:.,._A CAT scan Tuesday led doctors

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tom right arch, relilsed to Cltscuss the son for Mc&lt;Jwire, Who singled in the
homer. He has nOI spoken to .so-ahead run Monday nigh! as the
reporters in.recenl days, saying he' s A's rallied for a 5-3 victory over the
angry over coverage of his retuni Indians.
from the injury.
"Just the way he hits home runs,
But just about everyone else wa.; it pumps up our team. II awes me,"
talking about the shot.
said Doug Johns (3-3), who allowed
''I ~on' t think I've ever seen a three runs on five hits in eight
home run hit that far, anywhere," inninp. "Every time he's up there
Hargrove said.
it's fun, because you know he's
''When il went off the bat every- going to swing the bat so hurd.''
body knew it was a bomb," sa1.'d A's
Oiambi singled in the lirst, third,
manager Art Howe, "it was JUSt a fourth .and sixth innings to raise h'"
matter of where it was going to come average to .342. He ~as mten!~ona 1:

8
;_;,Doctorsperfo
.. .,. in Atlanta 1rmin
ound ·atonsinectoa cancerous
l~or in Butler's throat. The Los
~geles .Dodgers· outfielder Will
11eild rnore surgery 10 remove lymph
podes and six weeks of radiation .

Auto racing

H11u~1n~ 1. Pbihuklrhiu ~
· ·
CINCINNATI J. L:ls AnMdc!i 2 I 12)

Thursday'• R•me•

t

p&amp;hltter, Brett Builernever save in.

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t';i~ friends and team!llates expect
n"" to face cancer the same way.

Thursday's gam..

4

('Ll:VEU\NI) (Nal!Y ..J-1

Bo:ilon {(imUnn 2-21 at Milwnukcc
(lJono!Jtl·~l. 1: l.'i tit
~n1i1 (Gohr -4)111 N.. w Vorl: (K~.,•y
J• .l). 7 : .\~ p .m.

~

Ib
IK

1

I (RCJl'!i J-4). HJ::\5tl AI

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

~ ciNCINNATI(AP)-Asalead - .

PiusburJ.th ;11 N.Y. Rnngcu. 7:_\0 p.m
Phil:klclphia nl Florida, 7: JO p.m.

·Tuesday's scores

ToniRhl'• RBmes
MinncJLif:l (Rob\.'ftsun 0-:'i) :n S..;o:mlo.:

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.: ..

Tonight's gam..

-t

I.'J1lri..Ji1 :\,New York 2
.S:1n Oi~~o m Piusber)!h. ppJ .. rnin
MliRircal II. Chicn~o )

K

:

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less lOth as Atlanta won its founh
. .
,
..
It was a .. . dtsgrac~, Rock1es
manager Don Baylor satd during a
profanuy-filled tirade. "We ge! two
stnkes on eve~. batter and can t put
anybody away.
. .
In other games, Ronda beat New
York 3-2, Montreal beat Chicago 83. Houston beat Phlladclph1a 7-5 and
San F~anctsco beat StLouis 4-2..San
D~ego s game at Pmsburgh was
ramcd out and rescheduled as part of
a doublchead~r tomght
Madms 3, Mets 2
.
.Host Flonda overcame the ~arty
departure ,of InJured ace Kevm
Brown and won despite stranding 14
runners.
.. .
.
. .
. Brown brUised a leg JUSt below
hts nght knee when he was hit ~y
Jeff Kent's sharp grounder in the second mmng. He. left after pttchtng
three scor~lcss mnmgs, b~t X!rays
were .negat1ve, and Brown 1s expected to make his next stan Sunda~, .
against Colorado.
Chris Hammond (2-5) followed
Brown and allowed one run in three

str~~ght. . .

L A D0 drners J 8 Utt.er
·~·,··ghtr·ng th(!'o'at c
. a'ncer

"•

Detroit ur Sr. Loui!'l. Xp.m.
Cnlor:.do1tl Chicas;o. H:JO p.m.

'.

Division
.. 19 I~ .6 1.\
.. .. 1~ 16 .-IX~.

S:m l;r.llldll.:u ...... 15
l . n:;f\n~dc s .... . ... IO

~· .
{

(.'conlraiiM•i!lkm

t,

At Atlanta, RBI singles in the
ninth by Ryan Klesko, pinch-hitter
Dwight Smith and Marquis Grisson
tied the score.
Curtis Leskanic (2-1) retired the
first two batters in the lOth before
David Justice walked and Javy
Lopez hit a 3-2 pitch to deep center.
Larry Walker leaped against the
wall. but ~1isseo the ball by inches,
allowing Justice to score from first. ··
Brad Clontz ( 1-2) pitched a score-

l' ,

''ltiVEt.AND ...... 20 II · .l&gt;ll

:

''I fceJ .good about the way I'm
throwing," Maddux said. "I'm no1
happy ahout the amount of runs I'm
giving u'p. but I'm not too worried. "
Vinny Castilla 's three-run homer
in the ninth put the Rockies ahead.
Maddux allowed four runs and seven hits in eight innings as his ERA
rose to 3.05. He struck out six and
walked none.
M~ddux, 19-21ast season, but just
4-2 after eight Starts, .lost to Philadelphia 6-3 last Friday.
''I feel like I'm pitching pretty
gOod." said Maddux; winner of an
unprecedented four consecutive NL
Cy Young Awards.

1

W~~tem

S;1111Jio.:~11

11

Now. he 's the team's best power
hitter and the main reason it has won
four consecutive games after emerging !tom a nine-game losing streak.
Davis hit grand slams in each of his
last two games i:n San Francisco,
then flit homer No. 7 to win it Tuesday.
"He was always a very talented
player with us::• Lasorda said. "He
had injury,problems.lt's good to 5ee
him healthy. I'm sorry to see him do

when they loaded tbe bases Willi :
none out aJainst Moore. All they
could manage was Mondesi 's sacri• :
fice fly. .
"We had a g,reat opportunity. We •
should have scored a .101 more runs." )
Lasorda said.
_:
It was clear right away that Wor;
rell was off. He went to a 3-0 counl ;
on Anthony, threw a strike, then left ~
a pitch over the 'plate. Anthon)'
pulled it just inside the right-ficl4 .
foul screen for his fifth homer.
·
Then came Davis, who h!t a 2- ~ ·
pitch over the wall in right-center. ·
"I don 't know if hc"s doing any. ,
thing different." manager Ra~ ·
Knight said. · "I saw him hit 37 '
homers one year (1987). That's th~
Eric Davis I remember, hitting the ·
ball to right field wilh authority. : ~,
"He's not old by any stretch. He's ·
starting to work himself inio an 01i1• :
standing player. I just hope he stayi
healthy."
. ·' •..·
l .
Notes: Astacto has never lost ·in. ·:.
seven career appearances at River- ·
front Stadium . ... Greg Gagne of the' '
Dodgers extended his hitting streak. .
"
(See REOS otrPage S)

Scoreboard
Bas eball

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it against WI . He's a good guy. He
was a great guy t.o have on our
team.··
Davis, 33, is not J!l'Uing caught up
in his personal revival.
"I'm making gradual progress."
he said. "I'm just trying to gel better. I'm not trying to hi! the ball out
of the park, but I'm strong enough to
do it. I'm just trying to get a pitch I
can handle, and when I get it, I'm
trying not to miss it."
There were more misses than hits
Tuesday night in a game dominated
by pitching until the last inning.
Pedro Astacio retired the first IS
batters and allowed just two hits over
seven innings, but left the game
down 1-0. Hal Morris doubled in the
seventh and eventually scored · on
Davis' sacrifice Oy.
Pave Burba held Los Angeles
scoreless on four hits through 7 2/3 .
innings before yielding to Jeff Brantley. The closer gave up a leadoff
homer to Mike Piazza in the ninth.
the catcher's eighth overall and his
fifth in eight games.
The DQdgers had a chance to
~low the game open in the 12th.

.

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Worrell (0- I) had not given up a '
horner and had allowed just one run.
"The job I do is all or nothing; ·
Worrell said. "'Today was nothing. It
was one of those games where I just
didn 't have good stuff and ,didn't get
the ball in good locations. It's as simple as that. "
Davis is in the midst of a remarkable comeback.
He played for Lasorda in 199293, but injuries reduced him to an
average player at best. A neck injury
that required surgery put him out of
the game last year, and he was a
longshot to make the Reds' roster as
a backup outfielder in spring train-

In other ~L action,
By The Associated Press
Even though he didn't lose. Greg
Maddux ts sun strugglmg.
Maddux nearly lost consecutive
starts for the. first time in two y~ars.
He lett trmhng 4-2 Tuesda.y mght.
but the Atlanta Braves rall1ed with .
three m the mnth and one m the IOth
10 heat the Colorado Rockies 6-5. ·

4ays. He's letting his awe-slrllck
o:.mmitcs do that for him.
_
: MeOw ire hit a three-rim homer
j:nto the scaffoldina in left-center and
Jason Giambi had four sintles as tbe
f&gt;,tkland Athletics won their second
itraighl against Cleveland, defeating
lhe Indians 8-4 'tuesday.
: MeOw ire's blast, which laJ¥1ed in
~~nstruction area far above the out•
•
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Braves beat Rockies 6-5 in 10 innings

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By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) ~E ven Tom
Lasorda is enjoying Eric Davis'
revival .
Davis h~d a sacrifice fly and a
game-winning homer in the 12th
inning Tuesday night, leading the
Cincinnati Reds t o ~ 3-2 victory over
Lasorda's Los Angeles Dodgers.
The Dodgers were subdued
before the game when they learlJCd ·
that outfielderBrett B~tlcr has t!!£.at
cancer. But 11 was Davts, not the~­
traction. that did them in.
"That was a sad way to Start our
day,' but I don't think it was a factor
in the game," third .baseman Mike
Blowers said.
The Dodgers took a 2- I lead into
the bottom of the I 2th on·Raul Mondesi 's sacrifice Oy off Marcus Moore
(3-2), but closer Todd Worrell gave
it away with his first bad outing of
the season.
,
·
Worrell gave lip a leadoff homer
to Eric Anthony that ·landed in the
upper deck in nght field, the 20th
ball to reach Riverfront Stadium's
upper leveL Davis followed with his
h,omer to right-center. '-

f~eld fence, offJCially was estimated
at 428 feet. But ttaml'llAtes and
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
said it sec:nied much farther.
"It was a monster blast. I've never SCC:I) a ball JIO that far. It was lmbelievable," said A's center fielder
Ernie Young. "People will be talking
about that one for a long time."
· McGwire, who was on the disabled list until A~il2~ ~ausc of a

: OAKUND. Calif. (AJ')- Mlrk

MI;Gw~ isn't talk ins much these

••

Reds edge
Dodgers 3-2 'in 12 fra~es
.

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The·o.lly S•l.tllnrl • P111 f

"cGwire and Giambi help Athletics defeat Indians 8·4
· Because of Davis' cfutch homer,

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lb. $1.99

11,

,•

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·;HARDWORKING.LOW PRICES
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...

L~ys, 6 ·oz• •, ' .
. ,~

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fotato Chlps

p'rlces Effective· ..

Sunday

. May s.. n,
1996

BUYOIE GEl
•

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'FREEl!.·

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Pomeroy•

U.y8,1998

Wtdnee:tey,

Ohto

In -the NBA Eastern Conference semN/nals,

••

Bulls notch 91-80 victory over Knicks
By MIKE NADEL

-

CHICAGO (AP) - After seven
quarters of missed dunks, long-distance airballs and bunsled fast
breaks, after seven quarters of
Michael Jordan senina no suppOrt
from his supponing cast, the Chicago Bulls finally played offense like
the NBA champions they expect to
be.
The ball zipped from one Chicago player to another, players were
open in prime scoring positions, and
shou began falling for Scottie Pippen
and Jordan's other helpers.
The resul!? A fourth-quarter TKO
of the New York Knicks, a 91 -80
Bulls victOry Tuesday night and a 20 lead in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference semifinals.
''You're not going to hold a team
like Chicago down, a guy like Scottie down," said New York's Derek
Harper, whose team plays host to
dames 3 and 4 on Saturday and Sun'\.day.
·
"They rely on you to tum the basketball over and they push the ball up
the court to get their easy baskets.
That's what happened in the fourlh
quarter. They got a lot of comfortable
'
baskets and everything came
extremely tough for us."
.=.---vtThe Bulls, who shot 38 percent in·
••
Game I and won only because Jor•
!~
'• ~M
dan scored 44 points, were at 36 per: : ATTEMPTS STEAL- The New York Knlcb' Patrick Ewing (right) centthrough three quarters Tuesday.
oilt&amp;ti"la to take the blllketbllll from Chlcago'a Michael Jordan In the Pippen, 4-for-15 in the opener, was
fPUrth qu1rter of Glint 2 of their NBA Ealtem Co;.ferenCI aemHI- 3-for-16 entering the fourth quarter
DeiiMI'Ies In Chlclgo, ~the Bulla won 91-80 to lead 2.0 In th..r of Game 2.
Chicago certainly didn 'I look like
lfeat-of·aeven lltlell. (AP)
the team that won an NBA-record 72
games this season, and Pippen was·
the NBA Western Conference semis,
n't playing like the all-star he is.
Then, in the fourth quarter, the
Bulls shot 58 percent, Pippen was 4for-5, and the Knicks were finished.
Pippen had seven points during a
12-0 run that turned a one-POint
game into a 76-63 Chicago lead.
KELLEY SHANNON
Benoit - had 13.
That spurt was part of a 24-6 surge
: ::.SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The
After holding P~la~d to an NBA over 7 112 minutes, during which the
; S{n Antonio Spurs were well rested plaroff-low 64 pomts m Game 5 of Bulls were 10-for-14 from the floor .
, alld had the homecourt advantage. their openmg-round scnes on Sun- ·and the KnickS were 0-for-4 with
the ,last thing they expected was day, th~ Jazz came up With another five turnovers.
l a-blowout loss in the opener of their defens1ve gem agamst San Antomo.
"We went in determined -to move
l Western Conference semifinal series
"Our defense stepped up again," the ball around and take good shots,
: atainst Utah.
s~id Horn~ek •. who sco~ed nine of
but it didn't really kick in until the
• • "But that's what happened Tues- h1s 17 pomts m the third quarter. fourth quarter," Bulls guard Steve
: din- night, when the Jazz routed the ."We made them take tough shots." Kerr said. "Then we finally broke
. • Si!!Jrs 95-75.
. The Jazz, who led the Spurs by them. We got some easy shots and
:. "This one hurt us.~· said Spurs five pomts at halftime, built a com- · made them."
) forward Sean Elliott. "We knew this fortable lead in the third quarter and
Said Pippen, whose 19 points
: series wasn't going to be easy. Utah maintained it the rest of the way. complemented Jordan's 28: "I was• is an experienced group of playoff- Utah led 74-61 .at the slart of the final n't going to back away from my shot.
: seasoned veteralls wl\o know how to period, and held a double-digit · I still thought I had good rhythm, and
: play."
advantage throughout the fourth (usistant coach) Tex Win1er told me
. .
_
.
: The Spurs. playing for the fin;t quarter.
to just catch the. ball, pull up iuid
: time since closing out their first"I was shocked," sa1d Dav1d shoot.
j,round series against Phoenix last 'Fri- Ro.binso~, who l~d th~ Spurs w_ith 29
The Bulls also got 19 rebounds
l,cli\Y, were biJOild by their owri Alam- pomt~. The thmg, In mr mmd IS from Dennis Rodman, ! 5 points
I uilome fans as they lost the home- 1hcrc s no way w~ rc gomg to get from Ron Harper and solid play off
'~:ourt advantage in the best-of-seven
blown out. We m1ght blow some- the bench from Kerr and Bill Wcn"'J!I'~ries. The Spurs never have won a body eIse out. B ut we wcrcn
. ' I gmng
.
nington;
:playoff series after losing the first to get blown out."
Meanwhile, it was another for;;arne.
·
'
The Jazz outrebounded the Spurs gettable founh quarter for Knicks
,., , "The Spurs didn't have a good 45-30, including an 18-7 edge on the center Patrick Ewing. After getting
ling night and that threw"them oncnsivc ~ards. And Utah's bac.k- two points in the final period of
ilut of sync,'' Utah coach Jerry Sloan court dommated San Antonoo s, Game I, he managed only one of his
~d. "We played hard and all of the whose guards were a key to the 23 points Tuesday in the fourth
~ys off the bench gave a good Spurs' first-round victo~y over quarter.
:ff!ort."
· Phucni..FruS!ratcd, he got into a shouting
.
.T . ·Game 2 ·is·Thursday in San AntoStockton and Hornacek were a
combined 12-for-22"from the field, --Sports briefs-~Karl Malone scored 23 points and
compared to 4-for-19 for Vinny Del
Tennis
~n Stockton had 13 points and 19
Negro and Avery Johnson of San
WHEATON, Ill. (API - Tim
J[tilsts for the Jazz, which was 1-3 An~onio. Johnson ~I so had only five Gullikson, the coach who helped
~inst San Antonio in the regular
ass1sts, about half h1s regular-season
mold Pete Sampras into a champion,
. )ICII.~on.
average.
was remembered as a consummate
• "It was ~linitely good to win the
Sean Elliott scored 14 points for teacher, fierce competitor and ordijJamc, but most important is that we the Spurs, who shot42 percent from nary guy. who loved to chat with any£_1a~cd good d~fensc and reboundthe field.
one who'd listen.
·
~d. ' Malone smd.
"Utah beat us in every pha.o;c of
Sampras, who credited Gullikson
the game," Spurs coach Bob Hill
1 JeiTHornacek added 17 points for
lllf his seven Grand Slum titles an~
ihe Jazz and Chris Morris - start- said. "We have no excuses. Give
Nu. I ranking. was one uf.thc palljng: jl) place of the injured David Utah credit-they outhustlcd, out- bearers at · Gullikson's funeral St.
'
shot us and just tla1 ou1played us."
Michael's Catholic Church.
--,-=c-on-ti~nuc-:d~fr-o,-n~P-ug-c-:5).;__ _..:...,.;__ _
ilulrllards Grllilhouse
tough one."
my Ji(c and Jrways .will be ...
Syracuse .
! lasorda and general manager
Dr. Bob Gatllegc, who removed
Bedding&amp;
iF~d Claire broke the news to the the tumor, will perform surgery May
Vegetable Plants.......... $6.50tlat
;players in a meeting before the 21 to remove a cancerous lymph
10 in Hanging Baskets $5.75 &amp;
$6.75
;game.
node on. the right side of Butler's
12 in Hanging Basket Ferns
;· "I would say it was very quiet yet neck and other nodes. He also will
$10.95
'vllf¥ emotional," Claire said. "Brett remove some muscle tissue where
Combination Pots
\ nocjust a member of the team. he's the 1onsil was. Butler will have radi·
................................ $3.50·$9.95
~en a leader of the team. It's an ation treatments for six weeks.
Geraniums .. .............. $1.00 &amp; Up
'emotional thing we're all going
"That's a very sad story," acting
........................... 10 or more 65¢
ihrough."
.
commissioner Bud Selig said. ''J.was
Azaleas ................... $4.95-$8.95
!- ·")played against him. That's dcv- terribly saddened to hear about it. I
Rhododendrons ............... $12.95
~stating news,'' Reds manager Ray pray for him and his family that they
Shrubs &amp; Traes ..... $2.95-$10.95
Open Dally 9 Lm. - 5 p.m. ·
Knight said. "He's a great competi- get through this."
Sundllr.12 Noon - 5 p.m.
1or.: It just blows you away how
892-5778
fOillething like that can happen to
~OOd, wonderful people."
.
1 Butler's mother died of brain can- ·
lcr :Jast August. Butler also had a
loush time on the field, starting the
ason with the New Y:.Ork MeL~ after
.
'
Dodgers declined to offer a con-

..

•.

malch with Bulls assiSWit c011eh Jim have aone aalinst the rambunctious
Cleamo...,. Each was assessed a · Rodman, who had his best playoff
technical foul.
same with the Bulls.
- - Their bench was just talking a
"Dennis (Dntrolled the pme with
lot of tiash," Ewing said. "We're ltis defense and reboundina,'' Kerr
sick of hearing them. They talk to the said. "Finally, in the fourth quarter,
refs and then we don 't get a call."
we made some shots and .cauaht up
Cleamons said he responded to with him."
something Ewina said, but wouldn't
Rodman completed his n i8ht by
elaborate. "There are going to be takina off his uniform top and givtimes when the competitiveness ing it to a fan. Rather than toss it to
comes out,'' he said.
a kid as lie usually does, he handed
There were five technical fouls in it to Oprah Winfrey, who squealed
the fourth quarter, making for 10 in witlt 'delight as she hugged the
series. Amazingly, none of them sweaty gannent During an emotion-

•••

A:latm ·

fiiJed interview with Winfrey earlif-•

Fa~ily

er this week, Dennis the Menq
actually cried.
:·
Now, only the Knicks and their
fans are cryinJ as the Bulls lhreatel
to knock New York out of the play!'
olfs for lhe fifth time in eight years;·
"We' re playina not to Jose an4
you &lt;IJII'I play like that. You just"
have to seize the moment and 10 for
it," Den:k Harper said. "It puts a di(.·.
ferent spin on the whole series If
we're able to win Saturday. We'.f'
confident that we can win agains'!
this team. Doing It is another thins."' ·

Medicine
, , Question: I had a bad ear infection

been spread by the "black cone" of
the doctor's otoscope, the medical
term for the "searchlight."
searchlight with the black cone on it.
From my per1pective, the most
When he moved over to check my important part of your question is
good ear, he wa.~ going to use 1he "about patients' rights. You have the
same black cone. I mentioned that! , right
question your physi,cian
.fldn't want the infection transferred about your care. Certainly you can
:l&lt;' my good ear, .so he replaced the ask him or her to 1change the dispos3:one. Needless to say. his attitude able tip of 1he moscope! You should
:fhanged after this, and he brusquely . be an active participant in all of your
:a:onchided my exam.
health care. You aren·'t lhe sore ear in
il Wi\Sn't I right in correcting him? exam room 3, are you? or course not.
~ouldn't using the same black cone · You arc an individual with a complex
$pread the infection to my good ear? group of symptpms -- including a
: Answer: Your question brings up . sore car · - interwoven with ·your
atJree very good t~pics. One is the hopes, -your fears, and your personal
tbvious part about Spreading infec- and cultural values. Interact with your
zion, the second is about patient physician, don't just be a sore ear. It
&lt;lights, and the third is about inter- is your right!
ersonal communication styles. I'll
Another importanl issue is inlerddress each of these separately, and personal communication styles.
II ladle the "spreading infection"
We don't all communicate in the
~uestion first,
same way. Using the same words, but
: Ear infections arc c'assified. as with diff!'rent vocal inflection, facial
teing one of three 1ypcs: Outer. mid· expressions and body gestun:s ,can
jle or inner. .
.
..
have dramatically differenl meanings.
o Outer ear mfccloO'lS occur wnh- Your simple request to change the
11 the skin 'covering of the ear and car otoScope speculum may have been
lanai down to the eardrum. This type interpreled by 1he .:!octor as implying
6r infec1ion is quite common and that you know more about ears than
l)ften is identified by the more famil- he .does and you' .know how self~r term "swimmer's car." hi theory. ;mportant we physicians c.an be at
~ would be possible 1o spread this
times. He responded by "being abrupt
pe of infection from one car to the and unfriendly. 1
ther, although it isn't very likely. .
You experience(! a failure to clearIf the region from the eardrum to ly communicate. Your rcqu'csi was
e deeper area called the "inner ear" ·based on a .legitimate concern abom
affected, it's called l\ middle car, transferring infection to your good
itlfection. This 1ype is also qui1c com- ear. The doctor interpreted it as an
lflon, particularly in children: When assault against his integrity. Comt'meone says "I have an car infec- munication with othelll is never easy,
on," they usually have a middle ear is it11f you continue to have the same
illfection. Inner car infections involve kinds of problems with this doctor,
lnly the deepest structures in the ear it's probably lime Ill find a new doclnd are associated with dizziness and for - one whose style of communica.caring loss. Fortunately. ric.ither tion more closely fits yours.' .
I!Jiddle or inner ear infections can be
'·'Family Medicine" is a weekly
rcad from one car to the other by . column. To submit questions, write
ear.exam.
.
to John C. Wolr, D(O., Ohio UniIt is quite likely that the ear prob- versity College of Osteopathic
m you had was a middle ear infec- Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
llon and, therefore, could not have Ohio 45701.

tq

in

r~azz hand Spurs

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$5-75 loss in opener

1
: By

'•

'

:;u;.

jButler'.•.

:a

• ••••••••••
••
COUPOI ·

E

FREE HEARING TESTS

................./ ...... c....... .,

I.

. • Butlor was traded back to the
f,odgers on Aug. 18, lind was booed
when he critici~ed the club for callDig up former replacement player
tfikc Busc~ . Butler was a leader of
~ players un1on.
!I· 'fhrough all of the chaos last sea~n· Buder hit .300 or bett:cr for the
time in his career and stole 32 ·
lio.ws. He hit .345 after the All-Star
6rc4k and had 19 bunt hits.
' "My aoal was always to piny
"' ·• JeapC baleball," $aid Butler,
~Also has. played for Allanta,.
tellllld and s.. .1-i'anCISCO. "I've
n fortulllle to agcomplilh lhDI
iOai for 16 yean at the major-leaJue
r.ivel. Baieball is the foundalion of
•..

lnh

E

......_.IEARING AID CENTER

•
••
••

Friday, May 10, 1996 .
In Dr. A. i•cki. hiles' Office

.........

224 lost Mal11, •••roy

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Fortst HID Cleaners

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Acme Rentals

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The Geist

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Phont 555-12~
Eltlbllalltd 1125

61 Years
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Ripe
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Phone 555-91188
Ealibtlahtd 11135

1"-5518185
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Ball Security BOnds
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Kramer &amp;Sons

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Lettuce,·

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Boldly scaled and
incredibly comfortable,
!his deeply padded
relaxer fealu"es
channel-stitched
details, padded pillow
arms. Covered in
rugged Herct.ilon.

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Phone 555 D2t7
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Etllill bid.1t71
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Pub-inspired styling
in a caSt tal recliner
with deep vertical
tufling, softly shirred
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details and deeply
cushioned seat and

•"
"••
I

Friday, May l7•h Edition of
The Daily Sentinel•
The ·Cost Is Only $12

·

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
,'

Civic plantings were discussed at · 22 attended by her, Pauline Atkins, ties. The WIU!h comes to life, she
a recent meeting of the Rutland Gar- and Chelsie Bratton. Suzy Carpenter, . said, with petite bouquets of free
den Pub held at the home of Dorothy chairman, distributed sunflower seeds flowers , arranged in tiny water filled
Woodard with her niece, Lynn Ben- for members to grow for use in the vases. small glass bottles. The vases
sehoter as assisting hostess.
flower show at the Meigs County can be nestled into the vines, then
It was noted that some tulips have Fair.
wires and glue in place and seasonal
been planted at the mini-park in RutA repon was given on 1he spring flowen; can be used in the bottle vasland and more plantings will be regional meeting held at the Carleton
made tfiis month. For roll call mem- School. Robso11 and Atkins presided ~· Clotine Blackwood p;resented "A
bers exchanged plants . Janet Bolin, at the coffee hour. Atkins al.so had 50 cent plant in a $5 hole." She said
an honorary member, attended along devoti ons and Robson served at the the philosophy refers to the imporwith 10 others.
sales !able. Neva Nicholson was tance of proper preparation of the site
Devotions included a section of among those aitending. Bolin talked and environment before planting.
The Song of Solomon and pictures of to the group pn raccoons and their She suggesting choosing a plant that
spring flowers of the holy land. li_kc propensity for· spreading rabies.
is suited to the location in relation to
coin flag, white mu~tard , pink 'fl ~x,
- Atkins announ~ ed a bus trip sun or shade, consider the drainage
and garland chrysanthemums.
planned for September noting that and moisture level ·of the soil.
Betty Lowery was the winner of deposits arc due on Max 15.. lnforShe discussed the size of the hole
the door prize, and the traveling prize mation is in the Garden Pat, she said. needed, the use of peat moss or comwas won by Benschoter.
. She also talked abom the Ohio Asso- post with the soil, and the appropriA report was given on the region - ci"ation of Garden Clubs' convention ate way to planl for successful
al board meeting held at Chester. Eva in July at Worthington.
growth.
Robson talked about the Meigs . For the·program. Margan:! Weber
Bolin reported that a tulip bloom
County Garden Clubs Association gave an article on how, to tum a opens and closes·seven times before
meeting held at the library on April grapevine wreath into blooming botoff the stem . .

eeti"ng of the Wildwood Garden using t.he violets and-gave each memlub held at the Racine Kountry her a start of the pl~nt.' Evelyn Holitchen. ·She was hostess for the Jon read -an article, ,':How to Grow
oleeting.
. (:arnations."
= Theiss said the first sign" of · · Evelyri Hollon read "The King!Jiring are the wild violets pale !aven- dom of (lod" followed by .a prayer.
. &lt;Jr blooms carpeting the woods and For roll cal~members named a mothliimlc,s of streams. The flowers can be . er's favorite flower.
O¥ed.to fill vases, adorn cakes, salads,
Beuy Milhoan gave the history of
;td other dishes prepared in kitchens. the Mother's Day Shrine in _Qrafton,
in home gardens many hybrid vio- W.Va. The first Mother's Day was
s arc replacing the old-fashi?ncd celebrated on May 10, _1908.
glc 7pc1alcd types. One hybrod 1s
They can be grown 10 grcenhou~·
~rma, a vjolctlhat displays twice as
es or started from cunirigs. The soil
111any flower pe!als as ordinary v~ri - preparation aQd the many different
Jies.
.
colors you can grow were d•scusscd.
: Wild violets and hybrid varieties She also had a bo~quet of several
~ould not be confused with the inedvarieties of daffo~ils on display.
i le African violets or Gcnnan vio·

• Anyone wtio ,_ 1nMIIe ha ~ 11J or undltlltndlng eonvtl'llllon Ia Invited to •
• hllve a FREE • r ..ng 111110 111 • lhll piOblem • be ~- Bril\g lhll • .
coupon will ,ou fot ~FA&amp; HEMNlTEST.-a $75.00 Vllut.
·•

•

·Rutland Garden Club plan _civic planting projects ~;

~ J&amp;net Theiss presented "Ways with leis• both of which lu-t house.pl~~ts ..
fio~. f91' the program at the h!cent• 'Mrs. Theiss then rea#~evcral re~i'pcs '

ii

••

you can •I!=·

bardeners learn about violets

HAVE
YOUR
BUSINESS
•
The "Honor Roll" will appear in the
•

true

It is · following Satan and the . passion is the celebration:
,; ..
Yes mothers are the ble~d . ow·
unwanted eternity
ina ones,
"
With the use of murder. druJs.
·
• dau.t.
abortion, you can see.
To corTCCt the loves or !heir ,.,.•
ters ""d sons.
·•;
God bless mothers that live the
If you 1ru sl in our loving Sav~r
· Lord's way,
above,
·
~.
By obe"ing the scriptures of the
H "II
h"
· ·
B"bl __ _. '
, e WI grant you os apprcc1a1Jon
1 e •nu pray.
and his love.
Children you should love to
This goes for the Chris1ian fanilrespect her command,
lies you will sec,
"::
And help her through her ~ing
To .have a brighter fuourc horne
years with a helping hand.
through life's eternity.
"
The cause throughout our great
Caryl Tyler
nation,
Dexter
:

f

.

l
I fiJ
O
.
O

If mothers' love for children was

.a

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The_gist-of-lo-ve. fa-ilh-.-nd-tom-:. -

l

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: s?

f

Poet•s corner .;;._____

Is s"et aside for celebration of
Ye\. my mother meant"" much 10
Mother's Day.
me.
Some may ask how far in the past
With her love and compassion to
and when.
make me free .
It started near the beginning of the
All Christian mothelll should teach
twentieth century, near 1910.
and
pray,
.
And
Mosl mothers love their children · 1 ddiscipline their children every
smg e ay.
.
you can see.
·
Others own Satan's misuse and arc
America is sliding back in many
not free.
ways.
How much better this old world
lhroqghout the nights and the sin-.
would be.
.
ful days._

~nd had to go to an ear specialist. He
~ xamined the sick ear with the

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

.

The second Sunday each year in
May,

I

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- · -,...,...--Lo-viiii-Mc-.,.bt-n_of____

Ohio Univenily
. College of Osteopathic Medicine

~

The Dally SentJnel • P~~g~~:i

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohto

••

'

'

Contemporary
comfort enhanced
a plushly padded
channel-stitched back.
and softly shirred '
details. Covered in ..
resilient Herculon. ·

�,
•

•

: Wedl urtar,118ya, 19M

... -her

Ann

•llh

Landers

--

'"'·....

~
_.,.._ ...
a..

d,....,.,

•w

••
~ANN LANDERS

Dear Ann Landers: I recently
ound a copy of one of your columu
~is almost 10 ~old. I !hint
~advice is as ijljJillp'iale now u it
.Was then. Please reprint it. -- Jack in
. cw Buffalo, Mich.
~ Dear Jack: With pleasure. Here it
•

"'
•s:

.......
~ ,,.~0 !!.'!E!.!!e..to !.~L!~~~i,5&gt;,ns_.
:::::-:;. ~.!'I!C:;, 0: . ~.:U:.,~"':1'M'~ ! . '!i;."S.~*:" .'i~.~ ~~·.:::·C:or~

llaer , _ a .... wlio clida't . .
ll·yar.-t .........
Your adYicc liM, but ir'a ~
:Mmn'a
wity or die
her, We eajoyecJ eG. c-. We U. ptopbecy Nc:
he will belltvt it
bebavia' dill cwwed the pioblem. ICIIed IIIII talbd to 011eiiii0Cher.
..S aet -.ell i111illt mold.
It's tbo way IIIey ill•..:t
She is.•hno« 15- iiTd .aD lila
Love is the IO'OIIaat forte in lhe
I
our family in dull woman's ~ my lip IIIII ~ I hua. l110wr · wcrld, and .it's - of the few thinJS
Jeaer. I Jowd my cJaushtet, but I w• nua a apportuauty to lel '*'Dow you c.n Jl.. away · and still have
beJinai"' to dislike ber. I alao had I love her.
mae than ever.
become biJbly crital.
If Ibis worked ru 111, it ca worlt
Deir Alln Landers: I took my
I decidecl to 11)1 a one-month for ~-..PI- ~II . your iUden mocbar to a liaht Iundt today. The
experiment. Dllrina that time I ~ ~· ~le. -It Howeued !-" wu :D"lY $1.61.1 puu S20 bill
would refrain from all neJative 1n lndiaMpoha
m the bill ~ (I don't know the
comments. I woald offer only com·
Dear Indy: Brilliant -wroacb. pupil name·for the small, UIU8lly
pliments and praise IIIII point out And the rewm can be enormous. I leadler envelope). The waiter picked
her goocJ qualities. I forced myself to have llways believed lhll children up the bill jacket, williout even look- ·

•

: · Dear Ann Landen: You printed a

~aaptist

hill her II every opportunity. It wasn't easy. I was Dever a huger. At
lint. abe reacted lliftlv. but hv the

will live up (or down) to your eq~eelations. If you treat them as if they
'""lnvohlu..., """""""" thr.v will

10111

you -d JOIIr c:t.p t.lr.?" - W.M.,I'Irllvillt. Md.
l'lell!e. AU. tell • if 100 1old
W.M.. YW Ml .....
fQr tile
(I'm Gilly lf) or if ia 1efl field _;.'0111 of die
lhiftiiJ, ha.. t q • 811 DICil dill I IIJ'IIIOPI'iMe tip iD 1 1 t . .
ba- I bpi up?
daft is 20 I* 1 Accoi !I 1 TOJII•
I wortr.ed u a a1ibu1 - - - JC8 David. 1 hair atylill ol-11
mer 10 y... ..,, . . . - * ! - ~ the
for a bait
haw OllCUIIed to • 10 alit a _. lllould 11e 15 pw~ to 20 PIIC.
IOJJier, "Do you ,... your c" 1• d
tina 1111 bow Fl
blt:kt" U 1 "II' n .., ,,..., me to
lhe wort.
·
·teep die ebMae, he or lba woald
have aaid 110. Ana. tbU is not • .,erelated re&amp;pc!iiiO of tbole w11o perUaJ inside, and uked if I wanted the fOrmed the leJ'i-. .Qne
a teencbanp blclc. .I did leave a propor- apr, and the 011\er was llbout my
tiomlle till. but it wasn't $11.39.
ue. $iacelbli 11111-...c
oa sav-

m-

r.

o;_

0

.

j·Meigs County Senior

ir:Utr

.Jh

1

·1

,_

• Aging, Inc., Ia open Monday screenings from 1Q to 12. No
: !"rough Friday from 8:00 to appointment Is necessary - first
: 4:30. Reg~larly scheduled , coma- first served. •
; ~lvitles are quilting, sewing,
Thursday, · May 30 - tha '
: card1, games, pool . Weekly monthly birthday party will be
. aotlvitles are Chorus Practice on held with seniors celebrating
: TI,M!Iday at 12:45, Knlltll)g Circle birthdays In May honored.
: on Wldn~day from 10 to . 12, t;ntertainlng at 11:00 will be
: with Phys1ca1 Fitness held on Rev. Bob and .Jpn Robinson
·Tuesdays and Thursdays at with a Memorial pay Program.
11 :15 to keep participants "Fit
una Dancing ~lasses will. be
and Umber".
held for a six week period on .
: A representative from the May 13 and 20 and June 3 1o
Athens Social Security Offic~ 17, at 1:00 p.m . )here wt(l ,b~
wtll be at the Center on instruction for . simple line
. W,ednesdays, May 8 and 22, dances and group dancing, no
'~ 10 to 11 a.m.
partner is needed. Paulette
·;~ednesday, May 15 • the
Harrison will be the InstruCtor,
ll)unthly BI9Qd Pressure Clinic with a $1c00 charge for each
. ~ be held from 9:30 to 11 :30.
class attended. O.ancing is also
:·Wednesday, . May ·15 - the good exercise to·k~ fit.
~~elmer's Support Group Y(ill
Trips scheduled by the Senior
Jlleet from f to 3 p.m. with Dr. Center for summer are:
tlli:k Robinson as speaker.
Wednesday, June 5 - Athens
· .. Thursday, May 16 · · Dr. Nick Dairy Barn Quilt Show ·
Rob!nson will speak at 11:00 for
Tuesday, Jur:"J 11 - to
borrect · Posture Month al;lout Steubenville to vi8)N the murals
• Osteoporosis Prevention.
Late June - ·Ohio Valley
:-:::.:~rlday; May 17 - The Arthritis · Summer Theater, , Athens, for
;: S:tJpport Group meets from
"Ha~y"
·:1,
od0:30 to noon.
.
Wednesday, July ;tO. - Bob
·~ · 'Tuesday, May 21 - Senior Evans J-tomesteaf# 011ilt Show,
; ; Citizens Day, a stalewide Rlo.(lrande
·:.•
:~ ceiebrallon honoring the elderly
Late July - Ohio Valley
:. fn ~hio. Program beginning at summer Theater Athens for
" 11 with readings and music, "The Music Man" '
'
: : WHh selecti?n of Ring an~ queen
Thursday, Auguljt 6 - Ohio
, -foltowlng dmner, entertainment State Fair ColumbUs
:; by;the Meigs High Jazz Band
Call the' Center, 992-2161, for
p and .al'l original skit by lhe · further information or lo make
· ·Center staff.
.
reservations for a trip.
·
23 - Usa KoCh

w•
1

'·
• · A love gift prognm presented by
'

:2- ~artha Lou Beegle .featured the

! theme •son Shine Salad" when the

• llenha M. Sayre Missionary Society

! tnct at the Racine f:irst Baptist
: Churi:h; Friday.
: · , Using different fruits to represent
: ihe different areas of our Chrisliln
:· Life and mixing them all together fOI'
: unity as we should . have in our
: ~hristi_an Life. The salad alonl! with
•· S4r)dwtches and cake were served to
: the ladies present -after prayer by
: Marjorie Grimm.
~
Mary Kay Yost, president, opened
~ the meeting with prayer and a read. • in g. Those attending from the Est))er
''Circle were Dorothy Badgely, Mil;;dted Hart, Lillian Hayman, Erma
' Ncitris and Mildred Spencer. Those
;.~itending from ·the Ruth Circle were
'::Martha Lou Beegle, Geraldine Cle';: ~. Mary Curtis, Barbara Gheen,
'•Linda Grimm, Marjorie Grimm,
q~londus Hendricks, Naomi Stobart
..':and Mary Kay Yost. Guests included
,:Joy Young, youth pastor's wife and
children, AbigaU and Andrew. .

;.:: calendar '
.

•

~;:'The Community Calendar Is
~ubllshed as a free service to non;J!i:'!lftt groups wlsblq to 8llllOIIllce
...neetma and ·special eventa. The
~· notdeslped to promote
.)ales or lUnd nlsen of any type.
items are printed as space permlta
tilnd eannot be gulll'llllteed to J'UD a

Sehior Week
, ·. May 20-24
For individuals SO,and older

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(Aegistrallon) 9:30a.m.
Riverside Gon Club. Mason, WV
.Total,~U¢.111eWalk
. , 1o ..m,
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Ganla Co. Sr. Cenlerlflalls to Tralls ·
MlnlalurD.Gol; P1. Pleasant
1 p.m.
Krodel Park

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DNBSDAY
, POMEROY . ·- Administrative
~ouncil, Rock Springs Onited
~ethodist Church, 8 p.m., Wednes·
~ay.
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NatkJIJIII Senior Cii/Zilll Day
Bowing Toumamant
.
1:30 p.m.
Skyline lanes. Gallipolis

~iterary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at

Pool Tournament

~e

borne of Mrs. George Hackett.
~n. David DuPlantier to review "No
~idinary "Time: Franklin and Eleanor
~oosevelt, The Home Front in World
'War U" by Doris Keams Goodwin.
~th Kloes to preSent piano selec·
'(ions.
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Thuraday, May 23
, Fishing Tournament
·~
• • Geri-Oiympics

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: ~MEROY -- Rock Springs
jprange, Thursday, 7:45p.m. Annual
-inst&gt;ection to be beld. All members
,. rged to attelid.

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~ATVRDAY

.. ,., •9'',, .

GP 5oreneon ·
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i.;!lon Cap.e .................. . ,;:

RACINE -- Racine United
:Methodist Women mother-daughter
~anquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the
~church.- Reservations to be made
!With Opal Diddle, 949-205 I or Lee
'Lee, 949-2454.

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~. POMEROY ,_ Burlingham Mod.~m Woodmen, pOtluck dinner, 6:30

~.m. S!llurday. Meat, rolls, beverages

~rovided. Mothers to _be presented
· RJowen: Guests welcome.

~arey

to hold
bpen door
·ilieeting

Friday, May 24
9am
. · 11 am:
·
1 p.m.
(All at Gallla co. sr. center)

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49
6
;,~(i~D"P
·19''f0 49'9
................. .
· IJ99
Code 5oannere ,............................. . , .
99
,Yvanaed
. · . . . 69
Timlne Light ...................................
.
3~1199
lnduGtlve h
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Tlmlne Llg t.............................
· 8"

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shoe Tournament
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Class

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·: POMEROY -- Hemlock Grange
049, open 'house, Friday, 7 p.m. at
~lhe grange hall. Speaker, Patty Dyer,
~tate ' deputy. Entertainment by Mid~lebranch. Refreshments.

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9 a.m.
Bob·Evans Sheltemonse
9 a.m.
Galllpol~ Developmental center

: Seniors from Gania, Mlllgi, Mason. and Jackson Counties are
InVited to participate In scheduled activities. Registration forms
)rD ovaMable at the Santor Canters. Prizes and participation
aw- wtl be presented.
·
The Senior Week Activities a"' coordinated by Holzer Medical
· Cenler Rehab UnH, o.o. Mcintyre Park District, Gallipolis City ,
Parks afl\1 1\lecreatlon. Holzer MediCal center MaxWell so and
Oallla, Maaon and Meigs Senior Citizen Centers. local
and organizations will be sponsoring the various

_O&lt;fge.

.....,

9 a.m.
Gallia Co. Sr. Center
10a.m.
, Gallipolis CHy Park
10:30a.m.
Galli&amp; Co. Sr. Center

ExerotseCiass .

:f. CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
.!'453 meeting Thursday, 8 p.m. at the

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WecJneldty, May 22

Track &amp; Flak!

9:-HURSDAY
.
f;:_ POMEROY•- Preceptor Beta Beta
•.meeting Thursday, 6 p.m.. at the
~iscopal Parish House. Installation
iQf officers will take place.

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ou•••••••t•"

~5eneore

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CENTER CLOSED
loiEMORIA:L DAY

21
Turkey Roll &amp; Gravy
with Dress1or
Mashed Potatoes
.Succotash
Roll
Fruit Cup
1

28
Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Broccoli/Cheese
Bread
Apricots

15
Hunrarit.n Style
Pork Chop
ParaliedBoiled
Potatoes
Bread
Pear Halves '
22
BBQ Cblckeo Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Waldorf Salad

16
Oven Baked Fish
"S kin on Potato
Wedres
Carrots
.
Bread
Strawberries
23
Meatloaf
Mashed Pott. toes
Lima Beans
Breo.d
Peach Slices withOrange Sauce

17
Sparhetti with
Xeat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Dark Red Cherries
in Red Ge la ti.n
24
Pinto Beans &amp; Uam
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Pineapple With
Cottage Cheese
Cookie

29
•
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30
Weiner with
Hamloaf
Meat Sauce on Bun Sweet Potatoes
French Fries
Cauliflower
Baked Beans
Bread
Watermelon
Ap~lesauce
Ca e

31
Salisbury Steak
Mashed Potatoes
Spinach
Bread •
Cai'rifr.u it Salad

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Jeffrey McAdoo, from Athent,
w11 a recant tpeaker on
cattractt at the Melgt Senior
Center. He pr..ented a allde
thOVI! about cataract• and
epoke about the trettment for The Retired and Sentor'VoluntMr Program It Jnvollfed In a project called "W1r1n Up America". :: ·
them. Dr. McAdoo stated that Tht program which began In 1991, Jnvlt.. you to contribute knitted or cnachetld tectiont to be·:
thtre li a 90% tucc..e rate · Joined together to crette warm lfghan• to be dlttrlbuted to needy famlllet. If you would like to:~
with cataract turgery. The help, contact Allee Wolfe or· Diane Coatn at 892~2181 for free knlt11ng and crocheting :: ·
Retired and ·Senior Volunteer Instructions. Pictured are 11ve~al voluntMrt who have contrl~ed many. hourt to thlt:
'Program tpontqred the wortlfwhlle proJect. From-left to right: Dorothy Downie, ArdltWaggoner, Kathryn Lambert, Mary:'
program.
Loudner, B1tty Spencer, Ruth Moore, Margaret Murray and Leona Cleland.

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...... ·... 51lak 60
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Fue.l Syetem Treatment ...... ~ ..;..........

Alzheimer's disease Is the most
frequent cause of Irreversible
dementia In adults. AD, as it is
often referred to, is a
,progressive disease wilh ilo
known cure.. The person
progresses from forgetfulness to
total disability. Alzheimer's has
no cure, the cause is not known
and even wilh all the modern
medicine and technology there
is still no true and easy. way to
diagnose this devaslating

,

T h e
.
Alzheimer's
.Disease/Related Disorders
: Support Group continues to
meet the thir~ Wednesday_ of
every month at lhe Me1gs
Multipurpose- Senior Cenler
from 1 P.M. to 3 P.M. Not only
. caregivers bul anyone who
would like to learn ·more about
a care giving and the various
· In
disease processes of which
dementia
is one of the
(lett) end
symptoms are welcome to
Mildred

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Senior Citizen• celebrating their birthday• In March were honored at the birthday party on
March 28. Pictured ere front row; Mary Shamblin, Darwin; Alta Ferrell, Darwin; Ora Caraey,
Pagatown; Margaret Woodl, Recine; Mary Rinehart, Pomeroy; Gledyt Barrett, Pomaroy;
Gladyt .Dillon, Joppa. Back Row: Jim Gilmore, Pomeroy; Mildrid Jacobt, Pomeroy; Don Young,
New Havtn; Don Maurer, Pomeroy; Alta Dill, Reecltvllle; Freda Edwardt, Middleport; lnbella
Wolfe,
Pomeroy; Roaelle Story, Darwin.
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Senior Week May 20~24
anend this support group.
WE HONOR
In May we will meet the 15th
and Dr. Nick Robinson from the
Meigs County Chiropractic
Clinic will speak on Wellness.
Remember you the caregiver POMEROY, OH.
992·3785
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS
must take care of yourself so
you can continue to care for
your family member.
June the 19th, Brenda Roush
from Leo's Travel in ·Pomeroy
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO ALL
will speak on Yes, You Can Still
SENIOR CITIZENS
Travel. Come and join us and
find out how you can still travel
Watche,.s • Diamonds • Jewelry ...
even with various problems. • '
Cameru • Photo Finishing.• Old Photos Copied
If you· have any questions or
422 2nd Ave. · 446·1615 Gallipolis, Ohio
ne6d more informatiOn. you can
contact Lenora Leifheit R.N. at
992-2161.
Lenora Leifheit, AN

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.TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO

Wednes~ays

.
· Senior Citi~m Day
Storewide

OR
Ever.y Wedne~rtay Storewide Saving$

15o/o off

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Several people have asked
me to explain the difference
between
dementia and
Alzheimer's Disease. Dementia,
according to the book THE 36HOUR D A'Y b N
1 M
,..
Y ancy · ace
and Peter V. Rabins, means a
Joss or Impairment of mental
powers. In . Latin dementia
comes from two words meaning
AWAY and MIND. Dementia
d
D
·
oes not mean crazy. ement1a
descri.bes a group of symptoms
and is not the name of a
· disease or diseases that cause
the symptoms. Dementia Is a
b dt
f
1o
roa arm or memory ss.
Alzheimer's disease 1s just
one of many diseases wilh the
symptom
of dementia . .

disease.

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·Rep. John Carey (R-Wellston) .
::Will be having an open door meeting
!at the Meigs County Court House
~9nday afternoon.
· ~ I'The .open door forum provides
~ltizens with a great opportunity to
:ltoice their concerns and become an
:.ctive part of the governmental
~s. I encoura£e people to take
iidvantage of this opportunity, as it
:tida me in keepiiiJ a closer contact
~ith both indlvidUII and community
ijil:onccms," said Carey.
·
~- . Constituents are invited to aucnd
o .ask questions or eKpress cl)ncems.

27

14
Chicken Pa.tty
A~rrat1D Potatoes
Brusael Spr-outs
Bun
Apple Slices

SuppoFt
group
meets
.

Tueeday, May 21

!~ .MIDDLEPORT-- The Middlefxnt

'f:,

Monday, May 20

:Golf Toumamentoa holoa

~number of days.

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13
Beef Tips in Gravy
Oil Noodles
llaebed Potatoas
Buttered Corn
Bread
Pineannle Chunks
20
Baked Steak
in Mushrooai Gravy
Mashed Potatoes ..
Green Beane
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salo.d

:oo

~9ommunity
..

MAY MENUS

.

Center May Activiti-es

~ The Meigs County Council on will conduct ,free heailng

~Missionary
-~Society meets

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MEIGS SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER

Save

15~

off everything in our store.
S.le
Merchandise
Not lnctudad

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The o.lly Senb!SJI• P ··1 t

Pomlroy • lllddllpof1, Ohio

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;Shock treatment: Final defense
~ against severe depression
~ By

BILL BASKEAVIU.
: MIGCIIIUI P1eu WIIIW
~

RICHMOND,, Va. {AP)
~ ~Jcsieged by inlraetable depression,
~ D~?n Loving cinched a bed sheet
• around his neck and tied the other end
: to,a mirror mount on the ceiling of his
: hospital room.
~ . Then he stepped off his bed.
~
, As the crude noose jerked tisht
~ ar.ound his tlvoal, Loving believed
: nothing could save him. He was
: wrong.
.
•
Rescue came not only from his
: psychiatrist, who happened to walk
~ i"'o the room at that very moment,
~ but from the most controversial and
\ feared procedure in psychiatry ~ electroconvulsive therapy, or shock
• rrealment.
:
Medication and psychotherapy
~ had failed to remove the shadow of
' · overwhelming despair ttill had
~ stalked Loving most of his adu.ltlife.
; • "In the spring of '94, I remember
: a -desperate feeling of despair, not
: feeling like I could ever get away
: from this hurt, this pain," Loving said
' in an . inle!&gt;'iew. He rememl&gt;ered
: standing on the porch of his home as
~ the sun rose and saying to himself,
~ "It's a good day to die."
: · He wrote suicide notes that mom: ing and planned to leap from a
: bridge over the Rappahannock Riv: cr, figuring that during ~e_plunge "I

hlld a few seconds to ask {jQd to forgive me." But his oldest da,ughter
found him writin1 the notes, and she
alened police after he ran .into the
woods nearby. He was rushed to the
hospital, where he tried to hang himself.
.
After the suicide auempl, Dr. .
Mariano M. Piedra recommended
ECT, a lrealmenl of last reson generally used for the desperately
depressed.
Shock therapy "gave me an
opportunity to feel strong ~ good
enough to get my life turned around
in a really proactive, roll-up-my
sleeves sort of way. I have almost a
w!lfrior's auilude" to defeat depression, Loving said.
Many view shock treaunenl as
something srraight out of the Dark
Ages, a perception abetted by the
191S movie "One Flew Over The
Cuckoo' s Nest," in which troublemaking patients in a mental hospital
were dragged. shackled and scream·
ing, 10 receive the therapy. Jack
Nichol6on's character, R.P. McMurphy, is held down by attendants as he
convulses, grunts and slams his head
,against the pillow.
In reality, ECT is not used io punish rowdy patients. A muscle-relaxing
drug keeps patients from nailing
about.
.Psychiatrists who administer ECT

A look at .the crowCied lonely journey of·sperm

•

consider it safe. They say the only
side effect is temporary memory loss
during the time of the treatment
Bw dissatisfied former patients
have picketed hospitals and American
Psychiatric Association conventions
while pressuring legislatures to limit access to ECT. Some b!arne their
lreaunents for permanent gaps in
tjleir memories.
In ECT's comer are the National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill, the
American Psychiatric Association.
doctors who study and administer
ECT and patients like Loving whose
lives were turned around- bv the
treatment
An ECT session begins. with an
anesthesiologist injecting the patient ·
with a short-acting general anesthe·
sia, then a muscle relaxant.
The psychiatrist presses a button
on a machine that releases a tiny blirsl
of .electricity to the brain through
electrodes altached to the temples.
The amount of power ·required
depends on the thickness of the skull
and the electrical properties of the
brain. But even the machine's high·
est setting is barely enough lo cau~e
a 100-wau light bulb to nicker.
The electrical impulses ,to the
brain trigger epileptic-like seizures;
the spasms and contractions are suppressed by the drugs and virtually
impossible to detect.

· llllbryo fa.ils.

8Y KARL LEF BATEI
The Del olt Heile

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SHOCKING DEPRESSION - Psychllltrlst Dr.
Marltmo Piedra poses with the equipment he
uaes for electroconvulsive therapy, or shock

treatment, -at St. Mary's Hospital In·Richmond,
Va. (AP Photo)

The cholen sperm must lllrvive •
Mstede COIII1C lhll would daunt
Indiui Jonea.
·
h• plied in t • • • fll SO miDion
e~ at a speed eqtliYIIent to
34,000 mph for alluma., he quickly
finds
_._,,_
'""""'
environment
0111 90
pereentofhis
flflthalfhour.
His miss.iol): 'to swim put ~
mUCOIIs bal:rier before il kills him,
grope blindly for another 2,500 body
lenllfts to find his lreasure, .00 then
produce the right combinalion of
miiSCie and sm.u 1!&gt; crack the egg's

defe~s.
With I ballefing-ram head, ltoeilbox full of chemicals, a battery peck
for energy and a tough, cable-like tail,
the tiny, slrearnlined sperm is beaU·
lifully designed to deliver half of a
man's chromosomes and s..-t a new
life.
But odds against him are enormous.
Only a few thousand of the 50
million sperm will survive the gantlet to get anywhere near the egg.
Even then, the dozen or so thai reach
the egg may not be able to penttrate
its tough outer membrane and fertilize:
. .
As the final test, the winner mu5t
produce the proper enzymes and
enough wiggling force to persuade
the egg to let him enter. And then the
egg must quickly shut out·his competilors.lf 11_1ultiple sperm get in, the

N~t~n, it - . . is Y«'J .,.ua..
l.r about whll sperm Jell to pau oe
the -!lei.
.:Ofi•s a ntllllben 1ame," said
Michael Suhlcr, a NjJrodKtlve billiope at William B ' 'llllilll HospiUI
in Royal o.k, Mic:h. "We preaume it
ia tbB bell sperm Cballlllka it, but we
cloa'tlcnow."
• .Fwlherditniniahinaoddsformen are low sperm counts, lisdeu
and deformed spenit 'or no sj,erm 81
all. These problems might be c _ .
by infection, substance abuse, tiJht
underwear and hot balhs, or even some believe - a mysterious environmenlll factor de-masculinizing
men worldwide.
ultell' my patientS the speim is a
real complicated m~ehine, u said Dr.
Dana Ohl of the University of Michi·
gan Hospitals. "If it'~ not complerely intael, it's just not going to work
at all."
·
In about one-third of the couples
seeking treaunent for infertility, the
problem tums out to be the sperm,
Oltl said. About 20 percent have
some problem in the · man and the
woman.
During the last 30 years, the percentage of infertile couples seekina
treaunent in the United Slates has
risen from 14 percent to 18 percent,
BtCCording to the Nllional Center for
Health Statistics. But this isn't neeessarily a measure of dropping sperm ·
counts.
Ohl attributes the statistic to cou' pies generally waiimg longer to start

•

Ewings SAR -supports
battlefield preservation

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich ·
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As you probably. are well ' aware,
Mary is ·currently residing at a
Memorial Hospital is now a retirement home in North Dakota.
. ·' .·
·(part of the Holzer Health Care Sys- The home is loclled close to where
'~tem and several new services have her daughter, Dianne. lives .and they
;been brought to the Pomeroy hospi- do things together frequently.
jtal as a result.
··
·Hearing reports of weather COJ1dii · One of the new services is the lions in the Ohio Valley, Mary
~establishment of hospice which has ·phoned friends ovellhe weekend to
lbccn operating in Gallia County for check .on how Meigs_ 1Counly was
\some time. Hospice is an all-around handling the nood proJj)em.
;,upport system for terminally ill
In case you'&lt;l like to make a contact
with Mary her address is 5220
f;j{ients and it takes a heap of people
'&lt;i.Provide the various services some- 12th St., S., Apartment 105, Fargo,
tidies needed no.t bnly by the palient North Dakota, 58104. · ·
~ut by \he patient's family.
·
A nice treat for Mr. and Mrs. Ahin
; Establishment of hospice in Meigs
tounty by the Holzer Medical Cen- Downie and Alan's mother, Mrs.
ter is just gelling off the ground. Dorothy Downie Sunday.
The trio went to Columbus to
:There is 'a local office located in the
Meigs Medical Building ndjacent to attend worship serVices at the King
!veterans Memoridl an4 t understand Avenue Methodist Church.
Providing music was the Kings'
lhe service is currently serving sev. _Way Choir composed of 40 college
~al patients and their families.
• Volunteers are needed, of course, students. Elizabeth Downie, daughter
IP run· the program successfully and of Alan and Janet Downie apd grandpebra Cox Adkins. who serves as daughter of Dorothy, is a member of
olunteer coordinator, is organizing a the choir. Elizabeth is a junior at Ohio
aining program for them in Meigs State University these days. Just
ounty. The sessions are open to both proves that time really nies doesn't it?
in and women of any age who
Thanks to Harold and Etta Will for
ttlink they would like to give the very
6elpful program a try. Sessions will the lift.
held from I 0 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
I returned home from a two day
onday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, . "medi~allrip" 10 ~olumbus last weell
to find that Harl}ld and Etta had
ay 20.21 and 22.
: Advance enrollment will be nec- thoughtfully dropped by avideo fca-·
turing the big bands of the 4Q'~ along, '
~ssary so if you think you'd li!&lt;c to
take part, please call the local office with their vocalists and concluding
~t 994-7463. Since the local service . with Natalie Cole with songs of her
father an!! through the magic of elt.ci~ helping several patients, it may be
lronic.&lt; with her father. Really ~
~ifficult to reach. However, you can
call 446"5074 to register or 10 talk to enjoyable tape to someone who looks
Mrs. Adkins. Certainly, you probably for yesterday. And I do that.
ha~~ questions and those will be
· If you're one of those people who .
an~'Wered.
'
gets
the "blues when it rains", you've
'
: Many of you will remember Mary got all you can handle these days. Oh
\Ycbsttr, formerly of both Middleport well. you know what they say. Let a
arid Pomeroy.
· smile he your umbrella.

i

~Er PEf~

-Genuine
Diet Pepsi·or Golden
·
Grou'!£ leef Peps/Cola
Bananas
cans
DOLE

12-Pac* 12-oz..

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H

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lCellular
Service
..
for just

The Sootheastem Ohio Foodba~k.

Wheels and the Southeastern Ohio established tn 1984, recctvcs and dts·
. · hank which ser~es pantries in tributes ~ood to nearly 100 _pantries,
qigs and Gall~a &lt;:ounties ·will be soup kitchens, ilnd shelter:; tn Hock- .
p nted by Phtl Om and the Doz- tng. Athens, Perry, Jackson. Vtnton.
etj&lt;1at the Peabody .Coliseum on the Gallia, Meig~, Morgan. and Wash- 1
·p~&amp;y County Fangrounds. June .2.
tngton Counues.
.
, poors will open al 3 p.m. and the
The food comes from maJor man- .
o!ICning act will feature John Schwall ufacturcrs; local retatlers and pro·
~. ~d Jimmy Lynch at 3:30 p.m. Phil
duccrs, Often the donated product is
D!* will take the stage at 5 p.m. · a factory overstock of cans and box' jl.ll
will go·toward the es that were damaged in shipping .
Tickets for the concert arc now on
costs ofTri-County Com: · Action Prograrns,'thc South- sale at several area Kro~cr stores or
Ohio Foodbank and the may be purchased at the door on the
~als-on -Wheels Program.
day of the concert.

reduced fertility. Sllhllr ays dranwic iDtpo¥elnCIIts ia illfenility
IIUIIIIenll- briap.. itl ~ couples who Olba wise would have iimplylivew ...
Bill oo-s thillk lhe
iller me in infatilil)' poitlfa to some·
thln1 more sillister: an eppii'CDt
W«&lt;dwide decline in sperm COWits
durin1 die list ~ JCIIiiillllioros.
A 199.2 O.Oish · study that
reviewed more IMn 60 papers on
sperm counts datill{ to 1938 concluded that spenn counts today are
about half wh1ll dley hlld been. AI0111
with that, they noted i..m..ed rates
of testicull!f cancen, undescended
tesw aild penile defects in newborn
boys.
AlthouJh the findings on sperm
counts still are being debated, the
World Health Oraanization has
revised its $tandard for what is considered a normal sperm count, from
I00 million per ejaeulation I«? SO millillfl.
Even if sperm counts are indeed
dropping, fertility specialists are
becoming mote sophisticllkd in their
understanding of how conception
occurs - and in their abilil)' to make
it happen against all odds.
"We're actually gelling to the
point that you don't even need one
sperm, you just need a sperm pre·
curior," Ohl said.
A Cornell University researcher
has successfully fertilized an egg
using a cell from the testes called a
spermatid. II lacks a tail and hasn't
gone through the 72-day maturation
process sperm cells go through to
acquire their protec~\le coating and

stitution, for .the preservation· group
over this projec!. There will be a golf
scramble at the Pomero)' Golf Course
on June 20 with June 27 as a rain
dale. Forty participants are needed.
.Registrar Ashley reported the
acceptance of two other members in
the chapter. Jeffrey 'Thornton joined
pn,bis ~ncestor, David Sayre. who is
buried In Letart Falls Cemetery. Also,
Gen. James V. Hartinger of Colorado
Springs joined on Lt. James Smith,
who is buried in ·the Gravel Hill
Celiletery in Middieport.
The chapter mel its membership
goal for 1996 and now boasts ~
members, i.ts largest membership
ever.
Preparations are being made for
ceretnonies later this summer,toded-'
icate new grave markers for ~(evolu­
tionary War soldiers Henry Roush,
David Sayre and Seth Jones. The
markers will be set this monlh. · ·
·- · The program for the evening was
in two parts. The first part was a
show-and-tell by memllers and.
guests. Some of the unusual items
shown were an 1868 alphabet toy, a
replica of Gen. Lafayeuc's swOrd, a
watch dated 1691, early 19th centu· ·
ry deeds, a Civil War nne, a wood·
en peg from a local farm buildinJ!, a
1901 family history .and a Pennsylvania coverlet.
Roy and Patricia Holter then
played a tape made in l99S of Meigs
County World War II veterans, who
told of their experiences in that war.
This was "followed by a round robin
or the members Who then told of their
own militarv experiences.
Kauff and Ashley will represent
the chapter at the upcoming state con·
vention .o f the Ohio SAR in Cincinnati. The next chapter meeting will be
held May .23 and will feature presentation of community awards.

•

Concert.to .benefit ·Meals¢&gt;n Wheels, ·food bank
i ~ benefit concert for Meals-On- .

IIOUNTAM DfW,

: The Ewings Chapter Sons of the
American Revolution voted unanimously to supp(xt preservation of the
Buffin_gton Island baulef~eld.
: At the groups recent meeting, a
letter was read concerning the pending destruction or the baulcfield by a
lOcal gravel company. II was deeidC!I to send an eme!JCRCY mailing to
llll members asking them to senll persO.talleuers of support.
•
; Legislative chairman Keith Ashley
.~ported the city of Maumee hlld lost
the gral\l netessary to purchase the
biutlefiekl l;tf the Battle of Fallen Timbers, a major American lndianlseuler
bailie in Ohio history.
:
• Like the Civil War, the state of
Qhio haS 110 interest in saving these
l}'o sites despite the upcoming bicen-·
to!lnial of the state, Ashley com'n\ented.
·
• Ashley also reported he has
learned that legislation has passed for
tiJe formation of the Ohio Bicentennial Commission, which will be composed of IS eJt-officio "members and
35 appointed . members. Governor
George Voinovich will l!PJIOinl the
c(lmmission Iller this re-. he added.
, Chapter president ilhri Kauff
inducted two new me. .rs, W. Tad
Cuckler of Shade and his grandfather,
Qrennen Goldsberry of Athens. Both
arc descendants of RevPiutionary
War soldier, Daniel Gilliland, buried
i~ Bentz Cemetery in Meigs Coonty.
'l}te two are the first descendanL• of
that ancestor to belong to the Ewings
cLapter. 1he two were each present~ an SAR roseuc. 1
• Dale Colburn reported on the
prog!l"ss of the Chester Courthouse
restoration. He first presented Mrs.
J;tricia Holter with a Chester Cour•
thouse mug inscribed with her name
iri appreciation for her leadership.
ICeith Ashley is working on the con-

their fllllil~ tutti lhua experiencin.J

4.95

~

I month

?"

! Mother's

Motllet's Day cate
•MotfteiJ:s Day ~tches
•20%0FF
&amp;

:c ELLUlAR

.

Speilll

.

.
Athens
:: 1100 E. State St.
594-4800

~

.

.

New Lexln&amp;ton
119 N. Main St.
342-9909

ncr

ca r ..J
,..,

by

the ·numbers
A feW facts :

=

i '~

I

men:~·

10 million to 50

23 diromoeom&amp;I1 J
Half·of lhe geneliQ i.
bkleprinl foi a new~

Coii7111118 of 1111. . . .

pel lOlL .~
•.:.-

st•c•IIIIIIon:

SO million sperm;
moving; 20 million

aagy
for swlmmilg. r

Maluiatlon:
72 days.

·~··

AVII'IIg8

•lllliilng speed
ofesperm:
8 inches per

Science still has a long way to go
before it fully undentands the chemical signals that are exchanged on the
surface of the egg when the sperm
arrives. But a team of Duke Universil)'· researchers who are looking at
this problem think it might lead to an
effective male contraceptive.

Survlvlll time In

a women:

21o7days.
Cibia Coltection of Medicalllluslrations

"We're just beginning to crack the
secrets,"' Ohl said.

eWB Tum Orumeand ~

• Tht1 GUIIran~ LoWtlflt Pric.-

.at most ~r.orU. Cheek your 6tore for

.,..,, mllteh any .odwrtl..,. prico

eThe8elft NamB8ranJ•

• LffetimtJ Warr.~nU.-. ,

.lit the boe!5t priCe&amp;

on m~t. ,......, •

• Fn~e

• ParttJ Expre••

r.-tlng.,_

D.lltU:nM, !5Ur"t.er'!o, lltternat.oP.t, .
COf1U'OI mo4ule&amp;, M~ J'

:f we t.Jon't h~ it., ~1:

¥t it fo~ you f~t

2 for

$1.09 eale priee (\1'.

-304

mfr'e rebate
·20f bonue n~bate

Va!vollne 10W30,
10W40 or 5W30
Motor on

your c;o,t .after m.all· in

==:::... Havoline 10W30,
k
10W40 or 5W30

H, .. oi1 '1C

s2.40 BONUS
Limit 12

Motor Oil

j

Oil Filter

j

Umit2

Limit 12

AC Delco

Body R e a ir

699

268
·Plaetikote Car
Colorn Touch
Up Paint or All
Purpoee Primer

99

n~erHair

4

ACDeloo
Reeietor

AC Delco
Oil Filtere

'\U.Irt

T234, 21!5, 236;2:37

62 ..•1
-

Fram Oil
Filter5

t'i•.llll»...

~RAM

and bonu&amp; rebate per (\'t.

.

5.

--,r, r'MI, r'YI~ ,

--..,;;~

~---

your GO&amp;t .-fter
relr•U per 'lt.

Spark

PILU,~e

limit 2-

Limit. 16

l!E

I!EJ

11269

I

Tune - U /Accessories

247

397
14 az.

1497

Turtle Wax
2001 Tire
Foam

Armor
Plate Wax

-89?

39J
1eP'

Chilton Repair

Welle Cap
and Rotor
Set!&gt;

dom~ tiG .

IT·49

fore:!4n o,. trod

~

•

from

Manuale

11140/l

~

~

••

A

~uia,-,.

Cryetal Car
Waeh Gel

~

3299

1-"2516

from

GTStyting
Headli~ht

ca.......

159 .

Grant
Steering
Wheele

Brak es

Ba t te ri es

from

, DOminator

LMYn•nd

G.anlen
"-tteorlee

•Mothel"s Day Balklons
• Personally D«&lt;Oated

PI 2

'

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

oay cards

·0

tiny peckag. i8 loaded
"gear" for its Important
joumey.

140016

..

lif~•

cnNite a humarllfe. So

So far, the more than 700 babies
produced by I ,SOO ICLE procedures
worldwide show no significant differences in birth defect rates, blit
researchers are being ·very careful
about measuring results "to make
sure we're not doing anything stupid," Ohl said.

~
• Fresh cut Bouquets
•camatJon cofwsJes

A sperm Is a 1iny package
with a big reeponalllltyto fertilize the egg and

- ••t-

Cla!&gt;eic
Liquid
Wax

"

Swimming for your

tbe _ , _ they'll noett 10 break
Oilier _......__
All it hM..IWIIy, is the recp1i1ite 13
~ -- half the 1101'11111
thM a •x cell c.ries.
Sperm or spermMids can be !attn
directly f'rom the an's body 111ia• a
fine needle. BtU Ohl alto hu developed • elr: aooteduwlieal dlvice to
make ~ and even bnin·
.te.d J*ients ejiCullte. He's cumntly worki111 on a paper about the
ethics of such procedures.
A llrger ethical debate focuses on
1 relllively new teChnique called
[Cl.E, inbacytoplumic single-sperm
injection, which removes that last
touJh hurdlti of the eRil's DfOtective
membrane by pulling a single, handpicked sperm inside the egs with a
very fine needle. The question is, who
picks the lucky sperm, and how -do.
they know it's the best candidate?

lllrauah the .....

Gallipolis ·

Bendix
6ra~eo Shoe!&gt;

1097to

5197

209 Upper River Road

446-3807
Pomeroy
204 W. Second St.
992-7070

: : ' '

'

' '

•

,'. t f_ ~

. MONI!Iy- F~ lhm - &amp; pm
S.Wnl~. &amp;1m - 7 pm
WelleD&amp;S
T....,OUp

~9itm-5pm
""ln-.1&lt;&gt;&lt;1&lt;- ..-.ty.
may
co

5ato,...,..,.... ""Y ..... local.....,._ .
l1:ltular price
w. - " " ' o1tlhi to lloi!lt ........-

•
~

'

....

....

\e '

...

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�••

Page 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

•

•

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Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

,

n

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Wednllday,lllly I. 1~
I

::
.,

.•

••
A'
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••
••
••
••'

;.

:

I'

CHAT LINE '
•· Uve 24 Hrs a day.
Talk to Beautiful
· . Girls

Tree Triuwni•.g
Mowing (Anltlenlial
lind commerdal)

Odd )Obi per requett
No LIIWII Too Ltf!1' or
Too Small
Plan Ahead, Call Todlyl

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs old.
SeMceU
~~ 19) 654-8434

EASTERN ACHIEVERS - These Eastern
• Local School District students -re presented
trophies at Tuesday night's annual Meigs
County Academic Banquet held at Meigs High
Scflool. Honored, ~o right, seated, were
Jonathan Owen and
Holter, Chester Elementary; Sandra P · l ·and Danlelle Rucker,

Riverview; Nicholas Weeki and Christopher
Lyons, Tuppers Plains; and standing, Maureen
Heines and Jessica Pore, Eaatem Junior High;
and Kalil Bailey, Bille Pooler, Rebecca Evans,
Connie Pooler, and Brandl Reeves, Eastern
High School.

. SOUTHERN SCHOLARS - Pt osent8d trophies In 111C0gnltlon of their academic achievement at Tuesday nlght'a county-wide banquet
held In the Meigs High School caf.....la _ .
theM Southern School Dlsb let scholen. Pictured, left to right, anted, Michael Roush,
Letart; Andree Tedford and Amanda Huddle-

NEw

YORK (AP) - Baseball
Acting commissioner Bud Selig
isn't disciplining Marge Schott - for didn't take action. But he left open
now.
the possibility he would at a later
1be Cincinnati Reds owner, at the date, said a top baseball official,
urging of baseball officials, issued an speaking on the condition he not be
apology Tuesday for her latest . identified.
r.emarks about Adolf Hitler beCause
Selig issued a statement saying he
t!'ey "offended many people."
was " saddened and disappointed" by

Top 59 M~igs County...
Contin,ued from page I
SchooL
The winner of the outstanding
scholar plaque was Gerlach. She
will accompany the superintendent to
Columbus Tuesday where she will
· join other winners from around the
state at a recognition ceremony.

John Costanzo, elementary supervisor, gave the welcome and introc
duced governing board and Service
Center staff members who assisted
with the program. The invocation
before the &lt;!inner served by the cafeteria staff was given by Roben Barton, board member. .

Talk line to our gfted
.psychics on questions of
love, so 'CC888, care.-IIOUI
mates, sal-help and

&amp; WILLING

TO TILKI!I

more.

·910-990.3737

t -900-255-0500 .
Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

SUI per min.
MUst be 18 yrs.

.

Schott's initial cotnments, but he saicj
he was "gratified" by her apology.:
During an interview broadcast
Sunday, Schott repeated previoul
assertions that Hider was " good at
the beginning" but then "went too
·far." The remarks prompled l'!'newed
criticism from Jewish groups.

.serv.u (111) 145.8434
FINO TOTAL
• SATISFACTION!
· Through a Uve
Personal PsychiC!

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC

'1 -900-255-0500

ELECTRICAL

Ext. 4009
$3.99 per rnin.

needs
Phone

Must be 18 yrs.

614-992-5048

•

LOSE : 10 LIS.
IN 3 DAYS

Serving all Your

Serv· U (619)

All Natunll T·Lite..

· Free Estimates

645-8434

With ChrOmium Plcollnale

I

,, '

'.,".il-.•.' ,.

• ..,

'..!

;:~

.REPLACEMENT

SJ9 5°

na R - Mliler and Amber NlcoWSnowden, Rut·
ll!nd, and Joshua Ray, Salem Center; and stllndlng, ICristy D. Puckett, Sal~ Center; Ben
Collins and Mindy O'Dell, Salisbury; Steve
Beha, Stacey Brewer, Marjorie Hillar, Kyle
Smlddle, Jeremiah Smith, Josh Sorden and
.WI!slav Thoene. Melos Junior Hlah School.

~;, ~~~·:

•

••

.

Cell today with your
window size" tor a.tree
quoteI

'

•

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

•

llomeroy,

-~ ~

•

Installed

Limited Time OWer

-

· ~ ~· :-

0

•TIIt·ln
•Double Hung
•Insulated

.

'
.

&lt;

'•

Ohio

1·800·291·5609..

'

-E-STATE

...

MEIGS TOP STUDENTS- These Meigs High
i School studenta are high achievers In their
: respective classn at Meigs High School. They
• - e presented trophies at Tuesday night's
: annual academic banquet. They are, left to
•right, uated, Elizabeth Fartay, Dl!nielle Grueser,

•

~Amy

Sm.

Sandra
Young, sophomores; and standing,
Amber Bennett, Anne Brown, Thomas Gannaway, Alison Gerlach, Dorothy Leifheit, Lori
Russell, Adam Sheets, and. Cynthia Stewart,
seniors.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ct by Larry Wrighl
•.

r

•

•••with the

Jold.

f

:· In loving memory of husband, fathet
and friend to many, who passed away
April ~. 1996.

RAY E. JUSTIS
The one we love remains with us,
For love Itself lives on
.And c"-rlshed mamorles never fade
because a loved one's gone...
11le one we love can never be
mOI'e than a thought apart,
For as long as there Is-memory,
Ray Uvea within our hearts.
. His strength continues through,ua KathY ancf family

SYRACUSE FIRE DEPT.
CHICKEN BARBECUE SAT.
Serving ~tarts 2 a.m.
Y, chk:ken, baked beans,
. macaroni salad, roll $4.50
Desserts extra. Eat-In or car,rv-out.
EVENING DINNER
THURSDAY, MAY 9 .
SERVING 5-6:15 AT SENIOR
CITIZENS CENTER.
Music by Middlebranch Bluegl'll88

'I

.• .I

con~ects

I

ch~king

I'

'
'

.'

'•

..
. ..
..•

'

When you hold tht Peoples Bank Connect Card you have immediate access to over
170,000 ATM's in more than 60 countries aroun~ the world. Not'baa for a card with no
interest rate and no·yearly fee!

'

GaWpoUs Mkldlepon Pomeroy. Rutland
. 446.0902 992-«iil . 992·2133 742-2888

.

VEHICLES WILL BE SOLD AT 12 NOON

·;: RICK PEARSON AUOION CO..
'', t':'eaidence:
. LUNCH
MASON, WV
(304) 773·5785 or Auction C$nter

·.
'

.
I
I

I

!Vteu~ !leta~ ·.·
Authorized AGA DistribUtor
• Welding Suppliel • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Sar.oices • Steei Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding.
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Orasaing • Ornamental
Stepe ·Stairs, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
~ems. Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuftl!

"No Job Too

La~

or Too

s,.,.

We will work w~hin your budget

Ph. nM173

FAX 773-5811

108 Pomero Slreet

SPORTS!

ENTERTAINMENT
PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1-90o-ns-2525 EXT.
5961

$2.99 per min
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 654-8434
Conira(tOr with .o..r JO
, )'eln txperience DOW
...liable ror all types or
New Homts, Gsrat~&lt;S,
Additions, Baths,
Kltdlens,.De&lt;ks, Sldinf!,
Roors etc. .
No IN to , ... • 1e larp•
Contact Rodney Howery ·
594-3780 days, 6911.·12:11
.

'

I

•

.- -·

, :1 .

. .;

(304) 773-5447

...

EXECUTOR: ELBERT HALL

'

, farma: C81h or Check wllh 10. Out of state buyers
current bank,letter of credn gutvanteelng
· ~of ohed&lt;, unlesl knoWn bY auction comP..,Y.
' NO\ rea lble for I'CCldenta or loss of
.

·•I\BVII•
•

•

SIIITII'S
COIRIUCTIOI
c....• rr •• ._,

a~allng

•New"-•
•Addition•

-~---:-"1
Need [)hctlon? ...•

..........

~AIIr~C~D~ndl~·::ct~
..~~-~~.==.red Houaing

FM!IIy MatterS'

AUowYour
Pertonal Psychic to

Furnacee. Alaqulflment In IIOclc

•NewGttregat

•AamocltllnO
•Skiing
•Roofing
·Painting
FltEI IITIMATEI'
1112-A35

Maaon, WV

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•Room Additions

•New Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting ·
Also Concrete WOrtc
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG .Ill
992-1215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1/l/lfn

eYeninp~

1·800-26-U390 anytime!

·LIVE!

for lmmt. II II alallation.

. ..

~1 ·'.

·. ·:-- -- -~:
'

'

AaalatYou ·.

f'fM l!stlmatos
' IWV010212

DUMP TRUCK
. SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

.,..,_ .••
r------, :

In Loving Memory
A year has
passed since our
Mom was taken
from us. It's hard to
believe that so
much time hae
passed; for the pain
of mleslng . her
stands still as If to ·
never go away. We
feel llka we have
b~n robbed, only
what was taken
was too valuable to
ever be replaced.
Mom always said
that In every exper·
ieni:e there Ia a
lesson
to
be
learned. I guess the
Ieason here Ia to
treasure every day
tor you never know
what tomorrow will
bring. Sadly missed
and forever loved
by family.
Dimple Eakins

Real Estate Generai

AnENTJON HOME OWNERSII WE NEED~SITNGSII
WE HAVE BUYERSWAmNG FOR THE "RIGHT
PROPERTY" SHOULD YOU NOT BE LISTED WITH US??
THE CLELAND CLAN Wil-L UST YOUR PROPERTY AND
SELL IT FOR YOU WITHOUT 'THE HASSELl
GIVE US A CALL TODAYI
HENRY Ia Cl" •ND JR.......................- ......-.111 2119
1 . . .RFII L HAAT.........~ .............................. ;.........7&amp;2117
KATHt.aiN M. CLELAND....................................IIfl2.61111
OPFICI.........................- ................:...................... IIil-229

Howrd L WrlteMI;

Ext. 6733

NEFF ftEMODELING
SERVIa
Houoe Rtpolr 6
· R•modtllng
Kitchen • ·Balli
Remodeling
Room Addltlono
Siding, Roofing, Petlo1
R. .110na~lt

lnourart - Exp•rl•nced
C•ll W•rne Nell
9$2-4405

......

For F••• Eotlmlltaa

· POGLII !liD
FUMIII
WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1xB,2x4,2x6
8'·10' 30e a ft.
14'·16' 35f; a ft.
Also available
4x4'8 -4x&amp;'s
614-985-4107
.614-742-3337

114•2512

--

Date·-une

No argumenls!
No Nagging!
Just lhe male of
your choice.

1·900·988·6988
Ext 1449
$2.99 per min.
Must be t 8 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645·6434

Fill
. ~~-up discarded
~·appliances &amp;
many metals•

614-992-4025
a-aprn

.••

•

Portable

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

•,

.BIIIfls•wM
.
•.'

•...

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.:
Middleport Ohio 45760 · •
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles: · :

28563 BASHAM AD.
Racine; Ohio 45771
(&amp;14) 114•3013 Phone
(614) 114•2018 FAX
614 594--2001 NIGHT

.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.

:
•••

.

.•
.:

• •
••'" •
•
.•

..

IMTIIIOI•EI'iiiiOI :

I &amp; W PWnCS AID SIPPLY

FREE ESTIMATES '

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-661-41484
:Plastic Culvert- Dual walland Regular 8'"thru 36"
4" S&amp;D. perf.. solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. J&gt;V.C. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
.
314" &amp; I" 200 p,s.i . water pipe { 100' roll's thru 1,000' roll's)
314" U.L approved Conduit
8" Grave less Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings - RegulatO"· Rise"
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittin~ s &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water stomgc tanks.

IIAVIIIFIIIICES
614-915-4110

Howard Excavatin

•

Trucking.
Limestone
Bulldozing ·and
Backhoe .
Services
House Sites and ·
Utililie.s

•
•.

.••

....•
•

•
••"

of Earth Work
•
•
992-3838
•
. -- .
•
•
VCR Sick'!
· ~ •..
:r;:
Call Quick

All Kinds

----..;.;.

..

992-2825

+t:

COY'S VCR
REPAIR

tl311tfn

MODERI SANI7ATION

992-4507

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
.Dally, waeidy &amp; monthly rental rates:.

MEN

"

•"

..
'

'
•
•
•
•

IEAUTIFUL WOllEN
. ARE WAITING TO
HEIR FiOM .

Wl OFFER GENERAL HAULING

YOU NOWI!!

Llmntone, Sanlt, Gravel, Coal 6 Water

•

••

1-90D-446·1414
Ext. 4309
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Serv-U (618) 645 8434

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418 ,, '·

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-CJ266 -1-800-950..3359
Free Estlm•tes

•
•
•
•
•
,•
••

~1 triO. pd.

lladl~ lllaeli Dealer
Your .favorite artist
on Tape or CD ·

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

:
·:

far JCMt.
:
VIIY IUSOIIIILI ' :

New At ln1les lledronfes

JONES' TREE SERVI~E

•

·,.T•k•
••• ,.1. "' of
..,1... let ills do It

St. Rt. 7

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

•

•••
•••

614·742-2193

. $2.99 per mlnflle
· Must be 18 yrs old
ServiceU
61 645-8434

:

SAW.LL . ..•••

Chester, Ohio

1·900·988·8988

•

•
••

H&amp;H

985-4422

Your Sw~etheart as
close as your phone

•
•
•
•

~1Mc. ffftt

....--------------'-·

.

•

Downapoutt
Gutter c~eanino
Painting
FREE ESllMATES
94.2168

Free Estimates

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

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ROOFING
.
. ~
NEW-REPAIR

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
• Ma!\d'nery 773-!? 124
15 Yrs. Exp. Lie. ·Ins.
Owner: Rick Johnson

IYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HI.

•

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Dlrt .. Sand

DATE
LINE
In Memory

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;.
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........ (818) 145 8434 .

(6q) 441-1191

. $3.99 per min.
Must be 18YJS:
Serv·U (619) 845-8434

•

Ext.1277
Ml-

ToucJ&gt;.T- Aequfttl

. . , , . ,.,_ • Hf'VIel klllaclr It up
8arllltla (.E. Ohio I Waat VIrginia
441M11

CALLNOWI
1·900-446-1414
EXT.3694

1..Q00.181 8100 ..:

*'·"Per
.....,... ,.,..

BENII

ONE ·ON· ONEI

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

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Low

·Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

i

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Your worldWide cash connection.

985 4473

OFFICE 992·2259

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The Peoples Bank Corinect Card
your purchases directly with your
account. The.a111ount of your purchase is then automatically deducted from your accOunt.
No cumber.;ome chec\book. No monthly payment or interest to worry about. A detailed
monthly statement is provided with your Connect card/checking account, now making
it simple to balance youraccount.
.

Must be 18

.. \.1987 lsuzu automobile, Mark I
· . !~977 Buick Landau automobile, 2 doors
"':1973 Single axle 16 ft. Duke camper
,!.
OUT OF ANOTHER ESTATE
, . ~986 Nissen Pickup Truck, 61,000 actual miles, 4
. ~Iinder 4 speed. Nice truck.
1..
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EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS
' ? High Pressure Washers • M1 -TM Corporalion ·
, 1:40.gal. per min. PSI • 2400 Nbzzte Size 6.Q • 11
· laP Briggs &amp; Stratton engine • Simpson Contractors
, JDpde) SW 3000 with Wisconsin Robin air cooled 15
t;' engine • Landa P15 1200 w/Honda Gx140 5 HP
' ine • Sandstorm 300 lb. sand blaster • 100' 1
'
' e w/auto. nozzle • 90 lb. afr hammer • dirt
1 mper • 300' 3/4" air hose • 200' high pressure
asher hose • 6·9x12 drop clolhes • hand pump
'rrel for 55 gal. drum • 1-40 ft. alum. ladder • 2-2.0
H!•alum.- ladders • 2 Greer:~ Rubber Tire dolly carts
•
laddftr jacks • paint pot15 gal. • paint pot 1 gal.
•12-100 lb. LP tanks • 3 Little Red. dollies • 3 Red
POMEROY- Mobile Home 14'x7o:- Living· room. kitchen, 3
vtftshers • weed eater • dolly for airless spray • tool
bedrooms. 2 baths, all the curtains &amp; furniture stay plus the
bOx • 4 -20 gal. drum marble poultice
washer and dryer. Electric heal, underpinned, 5 yrs. old,
deaning/polish • 6-garden type sprays • 3 Rubbler
silting on a dOuble lot. ASKfNQ $24,500
Nald water coolers • electric chain saw • line painter
POMEROY· One ff91:!• lrame home with 3 bedrooms, gas
~ Jbrick layers tool bag and tools • mattock • sledge
heat. appllanc~z. Including washer and dryer. Appro•. 112
hlammer • small vise • hand picks • small hand tools
acllt!'!itl\ iericed y111d. Full basement. Nice affordable home.
• ~ Rubber Maid parts cabinets, 6 drawer 23x23x24
ASKING $18,500
•. arts washers • 15" crescent ""'e.n.ch • ·pint hook
-mo;.;;;l • 5 ·HP Southern Stales rototiller • 2
POMEROY· 2 sto,.Y frame home situated on two lots,
ss paint sprays • Camp House Field 5 gal. • Big Includes 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. N. G. floor flrmace, Columbia
p ~ot~ry 5 gal. • 2 telescoping vv~n!ls • · gas, most wood fto9rsand cable. ASKING '$11,500
. .
'
/flOOr scraper • safety belts • 2 seat harness • 3
POMEROY·
2
story
older
home with ornate woOdwork, some
bits • 3 rope slides • slap roof stapler Arrow • 3·5"
stained glass windows, 3 bedrOoms. kitchen, living room,
siJI&amp;II hand grinders • 4 blast hOOds • 2 water traps •
dining room, fireplace, bath, H.W. gas heat. Carpet and
hftvy duty right angle i" &lt;lise grinder • 8-50'
hardwood flooring, Small out building, lront and Bide porch .
Alvei View. A little TLC this home could be a 1eal baauty.
Q$den hose • 2·cable electric wenches with cables
ASKING $22,11011
·r:rlc 400/500' heavy duty cables 3/4", 200' 1/2"
•
• 1/'Z' air hose • 50' 1" air hose • 300~ 3/4" /300'
Jullt out of l&gt;omtror • 1 112 stOry home with 4 bedroo!lll!, 1
· t air hose • 200/300 feet of 3/8" metal cable plus
bath, living robm with fireplace. kitchen. Home has apprqx.
~ '!OOsehold miscell!lneous will be sold,
1+ acres, nioe big Iron! yard partially fenced. 1 car gartlge.
Home
needl IIOm8 work but has lots of potential for only
'!·
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
. .
$24,900 MAKE OFFEBII . • ..

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{~ 986 Chevrolet Cuslom Deluxe lruck with rack,
•step bumper and ,bed li11,er.
• 1969 C-50 Chevrolet truck with 15 ft. stake bed

..

12:00 til gone
Dinner $4.00,

Feeney-Bennett Post 128
Meeting Wed, May 8, 7:30
p.m. Nominations of
officers for 96~97 year. All
members
to attend.

•

. .located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In
, ;Macon, WV. Due to parking, tha estate of Carl
lick has been movefl from Hunth'igton, WV, to
· . . auction centsr In Mason, WV, and will be

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Chicken/Rib Bar-B-Que
Feeney-Bennett Post 128
American Legion and
Auxiliary at Annex, Mill St.
Sunday, May 12

In Memory

•

boi.S CONTRAOOR'S EQUIPMENTr CARs
· ·f:
SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1996 RucKs

I

Mother's Day

Meal Only $2.00
Call-In Order 992·2749 Sun.

AUCTION
.

1-900-446·1414
Ext. t4n .
$3.99 Per Min .

•

WINDOWS ·
;
MEIGS HONOREES - Meigs Local School
" • District students honored at Tuesday night's
. l 'county·Wide academic excellence banquet
: were left to right, seated, Tare Wyatt, Bradbury;
: 1 Meegan Dodson and Jennifer Reeves, H•"i·
: sionville; Ashley Payne, Middleport; Jaynee
, ~ P,v{l and Nichola Runvon. Pomerov: Chri!dl·

Hey Guys!!! Your
IS(Jteeial girt is waiting
to hear from you!!
24 Hours A Dayll
Call now

Stop 6 Compt~re
FREE ESTIMATES

Psychic-Line

Ext.2261

Schott issues apology for latest remarks

RemOdeling·

742·2803

-anucTIYE .

ston, Portl8nd; Bethany Dlilna Alnlletger ana •
Austin TYler Little, SyrecuM; 8lld J.mle lift·
er, Southern Junior High;
and standing, Kyle Norris, Junior High; 8fld
Cynthia CaldweH, Crystal Coleman, E¥1111 8tnl- .
ble, C. J. Hllrrla, Jennifer u - l n d Rayan
Young, Southern _High School.

•

-complete

Mllinl~

l:xt. 6445

•New Homes
·Oen~gea

•Shrubbery

1-900-446·1414

-IITIISSEU
COiniUCTIOI

3121/t -

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&gt;

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ANNOUtlCEMENTS

I:

I' 30

,• •:

Announcements
' =~=::-:::~-::,.,-=;__ ' .
CHILO CARE SURVEV FOR MA· '
SON COUNTY: H you need chikt ,' :

! care, please answer lhese qu&amp;s·

.
: tions. Mail In by May 12th. Ages 1 •
. ol ch ildren? What days of lhe ~ :
: week care needed? What hours? 1""
i Moat conveintlocallon for child 1
+o

I

care? Reasonable tee? 11

we map !

contacl you , include your name ... ;

. address and phone number. Send ,
respon·se 10 : Box W-6 clo Poinr •

Pleasant Regi1 ter .200 Main 1
S!reet. Point Plea,ant Wv 25550
:
I

BISSELL B:UILDERS, INC •

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING .
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, F_
lll Dirt

614-992-3470

~ew

Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614-992~7643
(No Sunda~

Calls)

,Ohio R1ver Campgrounds '" t
Racine- now open, 814-949·2528 r
This I&amp; A Public Not ice That 1
Wade Thomas Young Am ·Not ·
Responsible For An"t Deb1s Or
Billa lncurr.ed By Naom1 (Jean te)

e.'Ft&gt;ung "' 01 1112186.
40
Giveaway

.

1983 'Schultz Mobile Homo - · ;
141170 w111x10 e•pando. Fire - ~
damagod. 304-87s.G183.
'

2 Vur Old Malo Dog, Part COllie 1
Part German Shepherd Will! Dog
Hou11. Good Wilh ChUdren, 304875-7858.

9 Month Old German Shepherd

Mate, Needs To Uve In Cily, 4

P.M.-8P.M. 814-2!i6-686t.

New 24hr.

Australian Shepherd Female
Spared All Shots. 3 Vears Old.

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

CALL NOW
1-900-~

. Ext. 1021

.

12.90 par min.
MUll be 18 yrs.
Se~·U(814)~

(614) 441-1191
Milson (304) 773-512,1
· • Top • Tri_m • Removal
• Stump Grinding
15

: Lie ..-

. ,.

. Ownor: Aiclt~

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Good With Children , Give To
~Homo, 81•-&lt;ote-15'14.

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F'" """"""814-388-11532.

_,''

Houae To Tear Dawn Or MoYe,
. Muot ,..,. All, 81~-aM 8038.

. Nlct Cillco Ca1 D•clawod An4

.•

House Broken To Oiv.away To
Good Homo. ··~5-4238.

•

One r.maltr. c.ll 304·882·34 77:
L-mtiiOgO.

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To good too .. only· AKC Chow, • •• •
,... ""1*11· 32300 SR t 43, 5 ~ . •
IIOIIHII(~.

.

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"

�jo

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• ......,,..., .. 1
OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

17n-.
. . . . . . . . Ill

PHILLIP

ALDER

4lldroom&amp;, 14170 Wllh Expando 12111 .......... On-. 1111D

&amp;.M_
__
!.iool- ....
- 1a-.
;, a.-

a.,.iow, A~~Ptoo.

31~

01 Aero, 2
Golia Wtt·

o-oo.
... $21,000 Hog., 814-317- 7588.

.....

Dockl, 24113D

trit and While n'llllt cat ,
-.~-.
­
iW)rt wlcinlty,
rewatd, a14·112·
LOl L

814·3117-7422.
Double ~~t~ide •••&amp;5 down,
$224ma. FrH aor. 1·1100·8D1 ·

G?4D.

em.

ta11: Little Blown MINd Chlhua·
h.o, Dodlnnd HauM Doa Lo1t
On Johna Creek Rood, Or Aoc:kr
'Fork Road In Tttt Mtrctrv iUt
Area II Found Pleaaa Call 114·
2511·87110.

5 Family: 111 Tlmt Sole Fri &amp; SaL
InC-. City.
All Yard Saito Muot Bt Paid In
Advance. DEADliNE : 2:00 p.m,
rhe day bttort the ad is to run.
Sundllj oelldan • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday editkm - 10;00 a .m. Sat-

uidaJ.
Big Sale: Rain IShlnt. a1a

Full or part lime posillons avail·
abte. Pti~ Truck Stop. 304·8372458 or 30ol·ll37-2166.

Ga-I'!Wd Sale:
Thursda~.

Friday, 511, 5110. 8·4,

Rain IShlnt. Loll 01 Nlct Baby
Clothes, Marernhy Clothes, Ladles Clothea, Highchair, Walker,
BaD1 Swing Etc. Su.ptr Single
Watetbed, Couch, Recliner, Loti
Other Household Items! 3
FamUj Sak&gt;l 112 Milo Up lngallo
Rood Off St Rt 218, Log House On
Right, Terri Jividen Reai~nce,
Wa'!' for Signal

o•

May 9th, 10th, Thurs. Fri, Q A.M. •
1 P.M. Mitchell Road, 2 Family,
Mloc.lttml.
Parry's Gr- HauM Opon 10 Til
8 Dally, 1 Milo Wtll 01 Rodney,
Molhe(a Day Special II Alto Yatd
Salol
'
Thurs. 519, 9· 5, 2 112 Miles Out
Rt. 218, Tap Of Hill On Right
Children &amp; Adull Clothing, Toys,

Bo,aka, Chaira, Tabkta, Gla11 Top
CoHee Table, Houi8Wites, Miac.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
9 &amp; 10. children &amp; adult clothlflll,
tools, Iota or misc., intersection
Succeas &amp; 248.
All Yard Sollo Mull Bo. Paid In
Ad'lllnce. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
da'f' belore the ad is to run, Sunday editiOn- 1:OOprn FrldflY, Monday tcltian IOllOa.m. Saturday.
Friday, ~l'f' 10. 12-7, Slturda'f',
May 11 . 10-5, 918 S. lrd, Mlddl..

port, new Jused iltms.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

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()oraoo aalo·2 lamlly ot 2D25 I
2923 Maple .Avo. Thuro·Fri-Sat.
Pana, lampa, adding machine,
·typewriter, good ctoihing, misc.
3Qol-6 75-14&amp;4.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

the Meigs County Commltsion·
era, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45789.

Appltcants snoutd poSiess
knowledge ot Federal and Slate
Granls and the requ~tementa tO
implement such grants. Applicants should have experience in
1he preparation al granta. repon·
ing requlrementt, enylronmen1al
review pracaelures, drawdown
proc;edurn. bidding praceu and
paymenr procedures. Clet'ical and
computer skills are etsential to
tho ~lion.

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean Late Model Can Ot
Trucks, 19i0 Modelt Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern AIHIAAI, Gatllpalil.

J &amp; D't Auto Parts. Buwing salvage vehlctea. Selling partti. 304·
773-5033.
Non-Working Washers, Dryers.
Ranges, Refrigera1ors, Freezera,
Air Conditionen, Color T.V.'s,
VCR's, Alao Junk Cars, 6U·2S6·
1238.

Top Prtcea Patd: Old U.S. Cotns,
Silva~. Gold, Otamonda, All Old

Colleclibles. Paperr-Eughta, Et'.'
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GaHipais, 614-448-2842.

Uaed furniture· antiques, one
pi~ce or 'omplete estates. also
do appraisals, Osby Martin, 614·
1192·7.. 1.

Used Mens Levis, Lee I Wran ·
gler Jeans &amp; _06nim Jackets, Nike
Shatl, ~ 14-448·2488.
Wanted To Bu~ Used Mobile
Hamn Cal: 81 ... 411·0175
Wanted To Bu~ : Aulo's &amp; Truclls
An'f' Condition, 614-388-9062, Or
614-&lt;ole·PART.

110

Help Wanted

I ·WANTED·S
tO peapte who need to lose
weight &amp; make money, to try new
patented we•ght· lou product.
30•· 773-5013 241YSiday.

~

Upr SIMI Build·
ings Deater Prafitl Art UP Ill Call
As Law As $3.00 Sq Foot. No·
\tional Manufacturer AwardinQ Lo·
cal DEALERSHIP 303·759-3200

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

advertisements lor real estate
which Is in vlalatlon at llle low.
OUr readers are hereby
lnfonned that all dwellings

NEEDED : Painters &amp; tnm car ·
penters to give bids on apts. Call
304· 882·3151 betw&amp;en 8am·
4:30pm. Man-Fn.

advertised In this newspaper

are available on an equal
opportunity baols.

On Duty Medical
Is Actively Seeking To Recruil
-CNAs Who Are Looking To Work
long Term Home C.are Casu
Where You Live-In And Stay

Southeasrern Ohio Communlt~
Bank Stoking an AgllfHIIvo Ratail Loan Ofttcer. Mutt Have Mini-mum Of T~o Years E1perlence
With Good Organizational And
Communication .Skillt. Retume
And Salary Hiatory To: CLA 385,
cto Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third A•enoe, Galllpolio, OH
45631 ..

Stall deVelopment ,and lnf•ctlon
control nurse for 136-bed long
term cere "cillty. Appllctnll must
po11"1 Bachelora D19rM Of be
certified 11 geron•tog1cal 11.1rse.
Plaut respond by 51171t8 to
Denno Northup, AN, DON, lakin
Hoapltai.3DH75-0880. EEOIAA

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WILDLIFE .CONSERVATION

JOBS
Now Hiring Game Wardens, S.cunty, Maintenance, Park Rang·
ers. Ere . No Elperience Necessary. For Application &amp; lntorma·
tion Call t -800 -299·2470 Ex1.
OH318C 8 A.M. Ta 9 P.M. 7
Days.
WIUlliFEICONSERVATIOH

JOBS
Now hiring Game Wardena, S.·
curll'f", -..aifttenance. Park Ranglfl. etc, No tJperienc::e nec;ee ~
sary. FOr applic'atlon and into call
~ -800 -299 -2470, ext WV13Sc,

170 Mlscelleneous

330 Farms for Sale
3C acres, 2 bedroom mobile home
&amp; 2 aulbuidlng~ 814.a92·2822.

Parcels available 1ot new home
canstructian on RIY.burn Road. 5
parcels ranging frOm 1 .84Ac to
5.32ac. Paved road, ·&lt;:Ounty water,
reasonable res trlctiOt'IS Map and
info available on request. No single wide InQuiries please. 30&lt;4·
875-5253.

Thlo n e - r wtl nat
knowllngly ac:c:opt

Social Workers, Now Hiring S23 I
Hr + Benelitt, On The Job Traintng To Apply In Your Area, 1-800339·8150 . .

2526.

ABSOLUTELY THE BEST BUSI·
NESS OPPORTUNITY AVAILAlii.E. 3Qol-67$-4318.

Local Tui Strvice Looking For
Drivers Uale Or Female, 614 ·
448·7088.

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs $21 1Hr •
B,nefits, No E1p. Will Train, For
Appl Ana Info Hl00·538-3040.

ery I setup. Only a1 Oakwood

Homes. Nioov WV 304-755-5885.

home,
$1900, 814·949·
2528. 12x70,
•

Condition, Send Resume To ; WV
Air Freight, &lt;4210 First Avenue,
Suiw 305, Nl•~ wv 25143.

Awson to rnlk on dairy tarm, 614949·2578.

Furnished one bed room apartment, $250 per month, 814·141-

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING co:
recommenda. that you do buti·
na11 with peoPle you know, ond
NOT to aend mona~ through lhe
mail until you have invelligated
tho afloring.

Local Air Freight Company Needing A Orlv8f Over 21, Good Oriv·
i~g Record In Good Physical

REAL ESTATE

31 o HOmei tor Sale
2 Bedrooms /Wore 1 112 Batha,
E•tra Lg. L.R. Eat· In Kitchen, Located: Gallla, Wrap Around Deck,
Free G•a With Gallia Water. 614·
387·7422.
2 Mlnu1n from tcnyn, 4 bedroom,
2 both, 3,000sq. It Bric:ll Ranch on
3.2acres. t:lom&amp; was completely
remolded in 1992. For more inlor·
matlon call 304-875-3121. If no
answer, leave manege.

3 Badroami, 2 Bath Ranch, 2 Car
Garage, Spring Valey Area, A~er
8:00P.M. 814-448-7940.
~

Badraoms, 2· 112 Baths, Brick, 3
Mile a From GatUpoU1 On 141, In·
Ground Pool, 614~446-0038, 814 441·0564.
GOV 'T FORECLOSED Hames
For P•nnies On Sl Dehnquent
Tax, Repo's. REO's. Yo'ur Area .
Tall Free ( t) 800· 898· 9718 E.,.
H·281,t For Currenr Uttings.
Bonom W.VA . Rl. 2.
Ranei'MW Wif\ Full Basement, Garage, Garden 1 ' Trailer Space,
See To Appreclalel $89,500, 304·
525-5185.

Green

HOUS( FOR SALE

Furnished Efficiency 2 Rooms,
Share Bath, , , 95/Mo. Ulilitiet
Paid, 807 Sacand A•enuo, GaMI·
pok~ 814· ..6·.. 18 Altar 7 P.M.

Price Buster. 199&amp; 3t&gt;edroom .

1825 down, St591mo. Free deliv·

e...

Home Typists, PC users needed.
$45,000 Income porenti . Call 1·
800·513-4343 En 8-9

Overnight In Either 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Dr 72 Hour Shift&amp;. It Pays
18 Hourt A Da~. But An Over·
nig'l'1l Stay Is Required. H Interest·
ed PleaM Cllll Usa Kor"'" At
1.JlOO.ON·DUTY· 2.

"'"'Conditian,.8t4-3111-2882.

SaveS$ . 1996 double wid&amp; repo.
3bedraam, 2bath . Will deliver I
2200.
setup an your lal30ol·755-5588.
:::::..::=:_IN_OT_IC_E_I_ _ _ _ I Throe bodraom 1Q74 mobile

All real estate advoltlslng In
this nawspaperla subjecllo
tho FedaiBI Fair Hooslf9 Act
at 1968 wl'icll makes It Illegal
ro adventse "any preference,
lfmltanon or discrimination
based an """'· cobr, relfglan,
sex familial stalus or natiOnal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference, ·
Hmltation or discrimination:

Scenic Va llt
'pple Grove,
•· public water.
beautiful 2ac
Clyde Bowen Jr., :104·578·2336.
Si• 5 Acre Tracta Left. Southern
Ga!ia ca. sa.soo 10"' Down 1100

Per
32EAcre
Traer:
One Monrh;
34 AcreOne
Tract;
tQhl 5 Acre
Tracts South Of Wtlkesviile On
160. County Waler Wtll Land
Contract; Two .. a Acre Tracts
WIIt' Land Contract , &amp;U -669·

3462 ·

360

Estate
nted
Wa

~ell

Disabled veteran urgently looking
fo' 30·100 acres, private, with o,
without buildings, land contract,
614·742·218l

RENTALS

41 o Houses tor Rent
2 Bedroom Ho ~ se, 21Jedroom
Trailer AC , In Gallipolis, e 14·4146·
8849 For Information.
2 Bedrooms, BaAment. Gallipohs
City Limits, 1375/Mo., + Deposit I
Reference, No Pets, 814 -448·
0198.L111ve Me11age.
2bedroam on lincoln Ave, ac ,
high efficiency heat, low utilities,
stove, refrigeratOr . No smoking,
no pets. 304· 675· 1244 Sam ·
4:30pm only.

3 Bedroom Mobile Home On Me·
Cormick Road, 614·•48·9669.
4 Miles From Gallipolis, St. Rt ..
14 t, 5 Rooms, Front Porch, AC,
Handicap Accessible, $400tMo.
Oepostt, 614·4146·0231 , 614·446·
0205

Garage Apartment, 2 B&amp;drooms,
Washe.r tOryer Hook -Up, Refrig·
erator, Stove, Water Furnished
S250tMa. S150 Deposit, 108 LO ·
cuSI St, Gallipolis, 814·448--3870.
Graoous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmentt a1 Village Manor and
Riversrde Apartmenll in Middlepart. From S232-S355 . Call 8 14·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·

tuniritf.s.
Large 2btdroom, pa,ttalty lur·
nished, vefy nice. S350Jmo. watef
inch:~ded . 304· 773·913EI.
N. 3rd Ave., Middleport. 1bed·
room , furnished Oeposil I rarer·
ences. 3J4-882-2S66.
Nice 1 Bec:uoom In Counlry Set·
ting, Washer IOr~er , Stove, Re·
frigerator, No Pets, No Smoketl.
E"ra C!eanl $300 Deposit, $3501
Mo., Appli,ation&amp; At 1743 Cenle·

nary Road, Gallipohs,

2205.

.

I.Z~;;;;,e;t~~~~;
lbf'.

elderl~ and handi-

30-4-175-ee78.
Ver'f' clean one bedroom lurniahad apartment In Middleport,
call 814· 446·3091 preforablr be·
lore t0:30am Of after 4:00pm.

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH ., ...
446-2501 or 814·387·0812. Elfe·
ciency R.ooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
MicrowtMO &amp; Relrign.,r.
Rooma for rent • week or monlh,
Starling at S1201mo. Gallia Hotel.
614·~6·9580 . .

Sleeping rooma wllh cooking.
Alsa 1rallar apace on river. All
hook · ups, Call attar 2;00 p.m.,
304·773·5851 , ......

wv.

460 Space tor Rent
Butinesl Lo,ation, 1,000 Sq. Ft
Large Parking, SR 141, Cen.,.ry
Area, 614-258-8338 AllOr 8 P.M.

MERCHANDISE

Household
GOOds

12 Uving Roolfl Suites, 2 Pite•·
Not $498 Each, Only $275 Each,
Call 614·686·8373, Rl 1 Above
Proctorville, Ohio, Bnlde Glavan-

FOr sale or rent : 3 bedroom, 2 ni'a Pizza.
baths, lam tl y room , complete
kilchun . 304 ·675 -3030 or 304 875·3431 .

Mason area. 3 bedroom, large Jot.
304-875-n83. Call evenings.
Nice three bedroom home in Pl.
Pleasant no pets, 614·992·5858.
Two bedroom house, carpe1ed,
nice and clean, deposit requtted,
no. inside pets: three bed,room
house, deposil required. no inside
pets; 6 14-992·3090:

BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms. Vtr't Good
Condilion, New Vinyl Skiing, Car- 420 Mobile Homes
pori Unanached. 2 ·c ar Garage
for Rent
With New Apartment Above. 614·
-148- t77t4 Home; e t 4--446-0374 ux70 Trailer $2751Mo., 614·446·
l'lorll All&lt; Far Marti Palrrer.
6958.
House for sale in Syrac;use, two
bedroom, one bath, on two Iota , 16x70 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Censeparate 24•30 one I 1f2 story tral Atr, Green Terrace, 614·388·
combinal1on shop and gatage 8903.
building, $22.500. Call Butch, 614·
1192·3994.

,

'•t ''~

c:-1o TV,

Fortilzo, 114-"*'-6710.

Htftry ..... 5:oo 30Wl1o1433

Ford tractor,

wan -

........ 111.00. Call

4 FL Melli Brakt, 12 Ton Pr111, I Paita Power, 814·441 ·

1003.

co.-tio-

1&gt;1:.

:1$1

110 TU Corn Plantar, Dry
•

Jonn D11r • 31 7 Lawn Trac1or
With Mower, 81\lghman Farms.
114·258-8535.

AI;
12,500 BTU
Works Gaod, Loaka Bad, $50,
114·:115-44115.
Arc~ 11811 bulf&lt;llnga • Hu~ Sa¥·
lnga an - . Wllole II!Ppliaa 1111. Ca....aallon &amp; RtpOo.
20•211, 25oooM, 30~, 40•78. LOW
monthlY paymenrt. 1-100-341 .
7007.

Baa11 BJ Redwlng, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. GuerantNd Lowtat
Pric:ea AI Shoo Colo, Gotlipok
Concrete 1 Plaillc Saplc Tanka,
300 Thru 2.000 Gtillona Ron
EVans EnterpriMI, Jackton, OH
1-JIOD.S3NI821.
Electric
Sco.o tera
And
Wheelchairs, New lUted, Van 1
Cor Lilt lnllalled, S,.lrgl-. Llh
Chalra, Catl For Bro,hure. 814·

448-7283.

Hot Point Weiher, Dryer, Stove I
Rekigoratar, All 2 VHrs Old. 3Qo4.
675-7858.
IBM 388 Computer, 3 112 &amp; 20
Meg . Orivt, Mono VGA, &amp; Soft·
waro, $250, Or.With •Calor VGA
$375, 814·~18

lver Johnton 22 Revolver 135:
SKS Rine With Block Sjntholic
Stack $135: Niw Crol11onan Gu
Welding Ana· Culling OUtfit l15g:
Applauat F lanop Guitlr $148;
Gunt, Tools, fenton Glut .
D...., Swap SOOp, Cht&amp;hire, OH.
8t4·387-7tfl6.

Appl iancet :
Reconditioned
Washets, Orytra, Ranges, Relrl·
grators,. 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 814·448·
7795.

Counur Furniture. 304-$75-6820.
At 2 N, 6mileo, Pt PleloanL WV.
Tuot·Sat9-8, Sun t 1-5.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, relrigeratora,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Call 014-448· 7391,
1-80().499·34119.
PICKENS FURNITURE
New lUNd
304-875-1450

-·

1N1 Ford Aero111r ·~ •• •
Call 304·~5 ·2311 or

1QU Ford Ranger ICI.T, 2.1iual

gas, •ooo. exc . '1tclld. ............ riml, bod tlnor,

oantl. • .DDD-Iirm, 304-812-3273.

Fair Pip Far Sale: Barn Early Fe·
broolry And Early Mtrcll014·245·
5872 Art. 4:00 On -dayo.
Lall'i&gt; Far Saii0:81 ...... 1D47.

710 Autos for Salli
'84 FeNd Tempo, 4 door lutomat·
it, ltlt rear rail light damage,
D7,000 milol, $850, 814·9411-231 t
dayo ar814-D4D·28.. ....,;,g~
'87 Plymoutlo Roti&amp;nl lE statian·
wagon, bur9andy, front wheel
drive, auto, .atc, lront damage,

19QO Dotlao Rom Voo B-2\10,
72,000 Mlfaa, 18,000, Con J•
Saen At: Gallpalla QaiiJ T -.
825 Third Avenue: CaltipJIIII

sc.

'81 Thunderbifd
two door. 3.8
lttre, V·S, elite model rurbo , PS.
P8, AC. 5 spetd. power seatt
and locks, "Great Car," $5200
neg ., 814· 992· 7478 or 614·949·
2879.

t86D Nova SS 398 • 375, less
Motor, I Trans, $3.000, Needs
Rellored; tD89 Buick GS 350, 4
Speed, Factory""· Arizona Car
$3,500, Needs Restored, 814 -

•

e

Pole Bkjg Spt 30'K45'x9', 1 -tS'~:I'
Sliding Ooor, 1 -3' Man Door,
Pamled Steel Siding, Galwlume
SIHI Roof:'
4.e 4 Erected : Iron
Har11 Jlldro 1·800·352·1045.

se.

Pole Building, 30x4819 ceiling, 1·
3' en1ry door, 1·1-4.0 sliding door,
painred s1ee1 stdes roof, &amp; gut·
rert, erected pnce 16600, Preci sion Pasl Frame BICirs . Inc.• 614·
1192-8418 or 1·800·396·3026.

560
'

Pitts for Sale

1995 Firebird t.tust Sell Or Take
Over Paymenls. CO Player &amp;
Cellular Phqne, low Milage, 614·

446-81115.

Experience. FrH SUpplie•. lnlo.
No Obligation. Send SASE To:
Fairway, Dtpl. 1351, Ba• 43.119,
WOII C...... CA 111111.

Budget Transmissions. UHCI "'-·
built, All Typtt, Accesaiblt.....
Over 10,000 Tranamillion, Alae
Overhuil Kits, 814-245-5877
'

Euy Workl bcellanr Parr At·
Hmble PratiUCit II H...... CtQ
Tall Free 1·100· 487· 51588 EXT.
12170.
E•perienced LPN A~pty In Per· '
oan To Tho Mtdical Plaza t38
State Raule 1flO, _ . , . , Only.

•

I'M 5TARTIN6
TO GET A

Three Dadroom home m 'ountry,

Whites HiU Ad., Rudand; one bath,
ln-gn&gt;und pool, 614-992·5067.

2•

Pass

Simmons

20 Put up

3.

Pass

20 ~uture LL.O..•.

·•

the comics 1,_.

ui

31-istzon.

Miabehavin~!
31Hollsecoal .,
31 T...,s, org. ; ;

41 Doha's

'

;~

country

42 Ovurlum

'

.uv.-hero •l

44 lloulhwesl-!t

. Motor .~
'72 ChiOftan Wlnntloago pull; t;Pl
camper, 22 lang, good cOndition.
sakoing $2100 OliO, 614-98S:
418-'.
\-:1973 Winnebl;o .Like Now
40,000 Miles, 8 New 8 Ply. Tl~
New BIBktl &amp; Wlletla, Cyll~
Generator, 2 Water Tanka, t
Holding Tanks,
Air, Fultr
Eqotippedl$8,100, 114·4411·3485. 1
1994 lnnobraak, fully

'·

.'

'

-

l'JIE BORN LOSER
r .

.

~

1I.OOT ~I~ 1ro\Y, I'M. FIDJ~

'.m~u.OIIU'?'~

1\E.l':f ..,

5KKTO

em .
OCD!

loodod. loll

i

DO-IT~

~

fl(l.IIJE~

Dl D Wlll\OOT

Jr---..,.

D\,~YI

ol .. uaa, 181t Seriouslnquirl..

any. :JDI-67HaQ3.

I

..

WARMOR

I I I 12 I
S I FT0

I

~~~~~~·~----~--~

•
HEY,H£Y!
LET.S JUST

, \Nf&gt; I THE' 1'\U~UI'I OF

Home
Improvements ~

..

.h

'-/OW!
I&gt;111E~,

H/'11'1(, OUT

lll!.OOKLYN 8RtDCoE!
WHAT S OULt&gt; "'E 00

STREET

TWO
PE/I.NVTS

FOR 11.
"'HILE.!

RI'\151N!

ON THE

fiii.ST~

•

THREE

I'IOOERr-1 /'lilT! THE

BASEMENT
WATERPADOFIHG
' .'' '
Uncarrdiliantl Nfodma guaran~
' '
Local references lurnlahed. ~
(814) 448·0870 Or (814)' 2
0481 Rogers Waterproofing. e.,1
llblithed 1875.
I. t

.'

·-

I

...

.•·

~~

IPOWOS
I. I I'

1.......1-~-.L._;L......l-J

'

•
' . . ...

I

~~-,.;~~;. . :T:,.I.:N:. rf:. .;v:,.j6;:r.E::.,.l--11 ; -;~;.~~ :;.~h:,~~aq=d~

I

NEW 'fQIO.K CIT'(! TI\E
EttPIRE .STATE rAJILD-

•

•

e
.
My ne1ghbor was going fish.
:, rng: Wh~n I asked why 'he was
..------...;...--, laktng a camera he replied, "I'm

5

~

Small Pull T..-pe Camper "
pte1ety Recondiltoned, EKC
Condition, Sleep• 4 , Stove, un
naco Al)d Ice Box $800. Or lj.iil
Offor, 614·388-9354.
·,

....

law to form favr words.

~ I"='"'-.._

1

YGII develop from step No. J bei&lt;&gt;W.

. ~

..

' ·•
,•

..,

PRINT NUMBERED .
lETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMIILE fOR
ANSWER

..

'

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

f'.Nt&gt; f'.

The Trtosure
SctvlnJS You'll Find !n dtt
Clossl(led Secllon.

'· r

.

...

1-ooooe tenera ol 1ho
0 favr
ocmmbltd -.to be-

i

=

~

$4,300, 814-446-1294.

AI a few tables, three no-tnunp was
allowed to sneak home. Not here,
though: After winning the first trick
with dummy's club ace, declarer
calll:d for a low _spacle. He. didn't find
East napping. No second hand low for
Chang, who went in with the spade
king and returned a club. Now Soulh
could do no better than cash his eight
top tricks.
It is surprising that this was the
best defense during the event. This
second-hand-high play has been ·high·
lighted in the literature so often that It
is a slandard
or au experl's
repertoire.
out for it!

f

11195 Dutchman PoP.!!P.C~

Sleer&gt;S 8, M;, 3 Way

'::~::., SCC!~~\-,!Y-~S·

values.

7911 . campers &amp;

'

IWEDNESDAY

*

AppliOnco Pam And Service:
Name Brandt O\t8f 25 Years ft!
penence All War!!; Guaranteed
Frtnch Cily May lag, 81 o\ -4Ats:
71115.
•

Evolve - Hiker· Bride - Radius - DRIVERS
"The best auto safety advice I can think of," says an
ofd'timer. "is to recaU all the defetlive DRIVERS!"

'

,.
,

-.·

MAY al ·:
,·

~·

.,

C&amp;C

General

Home

MaiN

..... '

.

· :

. ..

...
·'

•

Parlo ·O~cka, Carporta, Sidiiij,
FrH Ettimatet, Cell Sreve 814·
245-115111.
'

";;~=~~~~!!!~====-:.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Ron"a TV Service, apeeializing in
Zenllh •Ito H,vlc;:ing moll 01~r
brands. Houu calla, 1·100· 717.

0015, wv 304-578·2396.

•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

'

Roofing I gunera r:amptete hama
remodeling dtcka &amp; tiding 35
yoaro •-ltnce, B I 8
and Co!lltruction, 814 -9a2-~

RoOfi

or 1·1100;888-3D4:l

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Electrical and
pickup, o\ C~l- 5

~.~.7'.;C:.':"::S:

:o.

4x4 or pontoon boat, 114·112·

F!etrlglfltlon ,

-

Thursday. May 9, 1996

S...ral objltclivea you've been an•ious
IIH!Chieva could be reached in lhe year
ahead. HoW!Iver, lry to temain pellent

. . . . .,... ~move ttlowfy in lhe

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDa

TAURUS (April ,211-loltr 10) In rour
..a.1 ~ rodaJ, don1 IMIIhel
ya11 ~ 'to be lhe ce11W ol -ttiou. II
yflli come on too irrong, you1 be ntlagal·
ioij'ID ...... Ill .. IJUe. Mljot ct• U

-..y~~ag~e,

c.......~on v.... e1.ooo
"""'"·
114· oMII-

EICollont Condition,

'

~

z4-Nov.

'T""

&lt;lea~

are
lhe coming
SCORPIO (OCt.
Z2) When
Send for your Aslro·Graph prediCiions ing with your family or in-laws today,
today. Mail $2 and SASE 1o Aslm·Graph, announcemeu)8 should be calmly "voiced
c/o .lhis newspaper. P .O . Bo• 1758, and welt·lhoughl-out. Do nor phrase your
Murray Hill Station. New YOlk, NY 10156. comments in an irritating manner,
Make sure lo stale your zodiac sign.
• SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0tc. 21) Today,
GEMINI (Mar 21·June 20) Do not let ·rake care nollo blame others for mis·
your curiosity getlhe boner o1 you today. lakes lluil are your fault . Trying to shift
Jtou might pol&lt;e your noee into a friend's .l he bl!lfll&amp; is a sure way to make a bad
private maner and the intrusion will nor situation - . ..
· ba wak:ome.
CAPRICORN (DIIc. Z2..Jitnt 19), You will
CANCER (June ZI·JUIJ 22) You will not lake higher risks than usual today
be11ave prudently today~ your purchases simply because rou feel l ucky. These
are restricted to items Yl'U need . impulses will be generatad br laully judgCotWersely, you ~ waote money fool· menr and carelessness.
·
ishly on nomssenlial ilema.
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 18) II anyol\8
LEO (July 23-AUO. 22) II could pt'0¥8 ro allempls to boas you around !dy. you
be an e•erciM In
todlor R you lty.ro _ , 101erere H lor one minute. llolllllo'8r,
conquer ellualiona 1n WhiCh lhe odds are l8ke care nor ro adopt litis behalliar per·
stadled against you. Let· your common manenlly.
aenie J1f8¥ai.
PISCES (Feb. 2t:-lolw.eh 20) You.;wn't
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se!!t. Z2) ·K - e•ag·
look good In Iron! ol your lrlendtl today if
get1111on to alflinimu!P today. You wil fin. you lilY unfllnertng '*1111 about •IOihet
itlh aecond II v.ou lry 10 compete with pal who wil nor be po_.tiD dlllend him·
eomaone who Is an e•pert at lelllng 111111.,
.
wfiOpjliriS.
.
""'"(lo!Mch.21--'Prll 1111111 '-your
uaRA (Sept.
23) In a.joint tftPOI1IIbilily ro hendle the o1
..,..vor lodloy, your counterpart mull
Olhef8 todloy, lrMI ~ u I IIICIWd tnllt.
' - 1118 qiiiiHiH you lllc:k. II boll! are Sltlve. ro live up 1o 1118 lllilh they ~..
weelc in the same ·area•. rou will not .,.._. in you.

~

.• •'

..,srro

' ' Awanan

.

.'

·'Bastelbal Playofls.. Teams 1

.•'

lutiiiY

25114-epm.

' 111:
18 ChtvJ Fun Size Mark

'

; rl

. --"'•

320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

71128.

c

{JIIctures) .,
V Blue-green •
pigment
.~

...

::FRANK &amp; EARNEST

o~e

erpenenca:.

Babysit In Your HOI!lO 15 IHr,
Plenty Of Elperitnce, e14·2...

8 , ....-D4211.

25 Actrus -

Hong, finilh, . . ..
•
Ceilings texrured, plaster riJtir;
Call Tarn 304·875-4)116 . "20 y~

IIUZU

.
. ..
•

.

Used balh tub, will accept rea-

Gonoral Malntarianco, Painting,
Yard Wark Wlridowa Wuhed
Guttara Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commerical, Roaidentlol, Stove:

23 - Wellet
24 -fiu

. --.put--

ANDWORRV..

LITTLE SLEEP'(..

New gat tanka,.
lon trucl
v.tlaels. radia1Drl. ftoor maa. a . '
D &amp; R Auta. Rltti&lt;!J, WV. 304-3~
3933 or 1-800·273-93211.
r

DRYWALL

,H2

...,

wi-.

Teledyne Laars gas pool lloater.
EKcellent condition, uted 72hrl.
Ready 10 install. 304 ·B75-5067.af·
l8f 5:00pm.
•

Dan's lown tore. AHaonable
Rotaaf WHI Do Churcltet, &amp; C.·
, . . . , . 814-3J'II.;!I47.

1 EiUESS I LL
JUST LIE HERE

Far Sale: 19811 · 1972 Hava ""''
Fiberglall Hood, Trunk Lid. Anti
From Fenders. 81U41-Q2150.
•

810

Z2 Prwik

tenence· ~lntlng, Yin'f'l lidiJ!II
carpentry, cloaro,
bail\~
~bile hOme raplir and more. 1i»
rrn e~1imasa c:itll Chet, B14-992t
8323.
•
I

PAINT PLUS 511 Burdette St .
Now through Sar May 11 Phil·
burgh f-'alnt Sale, Ceiling Paint
$9.911 Gal. Interior Flat WOll Palm
$9.99 Gal. latex Sealer far Dry·
wall $8.1111 Gal. Alumioum F - t ·
ed Roof Coating 5Gof $24.88
Spring Flower Bulbi $2.1111 pkg.
· Bulk Settdt &amp; Bedding Plaints on
Sale.
·

.

1

WELL.I TIIINK

Mo!t

tra•*·

8487.

Tlgiir, far .....

know

20~

5 PoelrY lOot .
• VollnO group
7 ........

t:!.

Auto Parts &amp; .._:
Accessories · :

180 Wanted To Do ·

EARN $1,000 .w.aklr Slilffing E1&gt;
••lapel At Homo. Start Now. No

•

ltAslar-- ·:

• ow n per1

lncllilne
his Second Annual Message to
45 - 8Vitl
..,
46 Wh8le
,,
Congress on December I , 186~ ,
47
loloor"d'9
Abraham Lincoln said, "The dogJnu
of the quiet past are inadequate to the
41
home ·:
stonny present. The occasion is piled . lr::t.+-1~+-­
411 Non-prolil •"
high with difficult,y, and we must rise
org.
. :.'
witll the occasion."
51 Oevolee
"
.· L
East and West in this deal, Fred
.r ..
Chang and Brian Glubok or New Yorlr
':'
City, were awarded the prize for the ·
·.'
CELEBRITY CIPHER
best defense at last year's Cavendish
by Lula Campos
' r.
Invitational Pairs. How do you think
E.m liihl'W .n h dphar slan!IIIDr, . . .. Toda)'• CU: P ~ L
,_.,~-----the play went in tllree no-trump?
It is dillicult to slop in three hearts
.I D
ABEL
KJ
on these North· South cards. After
YYSU
'KUOZD
ER
West had opened with a naiural two
VJZD
E K
clubs, showing at least six clubs and
E ·R
ABEPYZD .
AJZ
'
11-15 high -card points; North had a
••
.!''
RYSSDRR .
KUBO
normal overcall. East's three clubs
EOKDZDRKEDT
was lheo~~etically debatable, but lacti·
cally accurate. Now South couldn't ad·
I D D.Z I J U V •
VBC
vance with a bid of two spades or a
~ue-bid of three clubs. How could
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I 've never made a film thai could remotely be~
contidenld a~· Nor even remotely."- Woo4y Allen.
•South do less lhan take a shol at
game? Note South's sensible choice of
'
three no· trump rather than four
hearts with his nat band full of soft
WOlD

24 FL Pontaan 8aet 50 HP Mit&amp;,
hcellenl Condition! 15,500, jjii:
4ole·0150.
....

~~~I~Y~R~
. ~IN~C~O~M~E~Po~t~t~nt~io~l
Boakl.
Toll Free
800·.~sanaltla affor. Call 304-875-2811.
En R·2114Far

.34~::·
3S King.,

1 Camp .....
211oea.ly
a Of the dawn

By Phillip Alder

SERVICES

1992 Toyota Ctlica GT SO.OODmi.
Stp, sun roof, axe . cond, asking
$10.500. 304·882·3772.

....,...or .
Es1cllnlkir

Rising
to the occasion

1ggj Marada ,. Ft. Open 8~
With Sun Deck, 4.3 Liter, ~•••
Mere Cruitef, With Ski Accen•
ries, ~14-2~-6180.
~ ,·

- 5 8.

1991 Z28 Camara 5.7tuned port
fuellnj . till ~heel, c:ruisie, air, pw,
pd, loaded, cd pl&amp;'f'Bf, ground effeels, high raised. spoiler. blue.
304 -882· 2770·
1892 Olds Cullass Calais
92 ,000mi. very good cond. e~~:c .
rubbor. 13,300. 304-1195-3390.

a

32-

1988 Wellcrall21' cuny Cabin,
350 magnum Merctuise, excetlefr
condidan, $17,500, 814•94 .. 20~
ahaf 5pm.
1

388-8339.

1G91 Ford Mu1tang LX 5 .0. red
with gray inlerior, cruise, pdl, ••·
cetlentc:ondilion Asking S7.000.

z•

Pus

Opening lead: •

YOU DO
THAT?

OlD

,_
750 Boats &amp; Motors !1
for Sale

New lennox Furnacea. 75.000
BTU On Upl l54e. 814-37e-2720,
AFTER6P.M.

Block, br~k. sewer pipes, wind·
owa, linlett. etc. Claude Winters,
Ria Gr•nde, OH Call 14. 245.

31--colo••

DOWN

In

400 c. I. Small Block Chevrol•
"Black Only" 2 Freeze Plug
IN, $350.814·441· 1053.
.~ ·

1989 Ford Escort $1.200; 1961
Oldsmobile Omega $600 : 814 ·

s

flllll .. I

29MIS1Kellol&lt;'

387~ 7539.

19111 Camero Z·28 400 se Auto,
T· Topt, New Rims And Tire1,
Very Sharp, Lots Of New Par11,
$3.000 OBO, 814·388-9.. t , 814·

Building
SupplieS

5 •

(el.)

5I Singing

•••m

HOW

11~·

760

R &amp; S Furnolure, Malan WV. 304·
773- 5341 . New Store Hours. 1-~--------­
Mon·Fri
12noon· 7pm.
Sat 1885 .._azda 826LX 4dr. fully
12noon-Spm. we Buy • Sell • loadtd, Stpd, loaks &amp; runa good.
Trodrt. AMior.Rac:ky. .
. 1900. 11186 Suboru 4WD, 2dr, tur·
btl, 51pd, PW, tcoaka &amp; runs goad.
Relrigerato,s, SrOYtl, Wash•• 11,~. 30+875-1575. _
And Dryetl, All Re'condltioned
Ahd Gau;anteedl $100 And 1Up. 1918 ChiYr Spectrum, 4 Door,
Wi1 ft~- 81 · - •• 41
Auto, P8, Dotay Wipers, 4 Cyl, 2e
~· 4---. ·
MPG, New Tire1, Eatra Clean,
Sam Som~rville'e Army ctmou· Runs Good $1 ,150, 814 ·379 flage bJ Sand,.llle Poat Office. 28~5.
·
Fri·Sun,. naan· Spm, (Turkay •••· 1967 Dodge D· tSO Pick·up, acyl.
son Apr 22). 304-273-5855.
3 spd with averldrow. S2t00. 304·
SPRING SPECIAL : C&amp;ntral Air 6 75-20 74.
Candidonera 2 Ton 11,195:2 112 198 7
Ton $1,2Q5: 3 Tan 11,385·, 3 tl2
Dod~e Dajtana . 614· 44t·
1205.
Ton $1 ,ses; 4 Ton ,1,ags; Pric:et
Above lnclude ·Norml11nllalla· 1988 Beretta GT $3,000. 1984
tlan. Full 5 Y~or Vlarranty, Free Cuda11 $700. 30ol-675-7528.
Estimateo, 1·800·2DHJ098: 814·
44S-e308.
1989 Buick LeSabre. e•cellent
running condilion, V·6, PB. PS,
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gatton M;, power w"'daws, $3800. 814·
Upright, Ran EYtlnl Enterprises, 949·2045ar614·D49·2302.
Jtoc:ksan, Qllla. 1·8QQ.53NI528.
1989 8uld! Regal, aummatic, PW,
Wanted to buy· good, u1ed pool ale, one owner, SSSOQ; t988
pump, preferablr
Mnct tllter, tea· Bronco 11'~
s ·~•••
4 4 a1 PW
c,
•
'814-2·5053- 5pm
S48DD: 814-949-2534 .~.. 5:00.

3NT

wheeler.
H185 Yamaha
drive • · - r, brand new
StOOO, 814·882·8551 aflerapm. o

82811.

1Q85 Dodge Aries K, runs goad,
needs linle work, $400.00. 304·
675-1575.

•

6 ! 2

-~·11 fl I D . , . , . ,
121 ........
- Is · - u ·IIIII
54-- .....
55 .... wD• twitch
5I Onvul rldlla
57 locWIIIItilll

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Sooallt
West Norlb East

l !tDI~7~~t:~~~~~

Uo1ri1 Garage Doar Co. 11 Hav·
ing a Dent &amp; SCratch Sale! av.t
Stocked On Various Sizu Garage Doors, Call And Savel814·
4ole·4514.

• Cylinaer, AJ
Tilt, New Bal·
Tires, S1 , ISO, 814·

211Empl~····
• IAinony drllik

10

C.. tor
Ca1 4 t . ,

(obNISion)

35.W0

New Honda 111V8 CA250, S4,sq!,
Or Take Over Paymentt, 8, it·

'

•.T96

• 8 54
6 K J 7·

1D84 Handa Goldwlng Aapt!o·
cado, oxc;otlent condillon,
mil~ rain suits, lndOHiid,
prico - · 814·11112-5818. ~

tQ90 Kawatoki Ninia '250,
387-0323.

23

• Q J '.
• K Qa

1885 Pollrla Elplorer 4•4 400,
$4,300-304-458-1- -·

hallie

East ' ·
6K17

+

• Q to v e 8 z

1881 Flll'd E........ Sport 414, 4.0
V·l, atondard, laadad, sun •"fl.
-loapt. lt4-....2481.
'

wentngs.

bod hiler. 30ol·578·2573.

5121 .

21 .,.,, - . . . .

Solalit

1fiC,.I'Imalol RT, 110 TwoS~
Oitl Bike Rebuill EnQine, ~"jj.
Runs Goad, $800, 814-2~5-5755.•

1878 Malibu V·8, auto, ps; pb,

550

- 22-··
., -·
=
...........

• Q' 7

+ A 'K J

' '

hood not damaged, 91,828 mieo,
goad clean car, $850 , 814·84P·
2311 days or 614-849· 2844

goad body. 11,350 at uade for ftat

Ouoon Slzo Orthopedic llariren
Set And Frame. Ne'Wer Used, Still
In Plaltic Call 1100. Sell 1250,
614·n5-2380.

I

I

• 10 53
.AI07532

""'
6At2
••

740 . Motorcy~ ' '

TRANSPORTATION

882·7512.

a

aced
111'1a--111Gde
11 lliot1IY
17...,.. . . .
11 EtAii II:
211 .. I '

6A

Cantlco TuW bar, · - GOI'IIIi·.
tion. 31Ji1.n:J.51~
''

Ohio.

Livestock

630

4111M--

14D;

110 Farm Equipment

- -..r.:tl'I.OO. BSA Equot.
iz• 14 lland t2S.CIII. ~~ H

..

11 1'1111

\ ...,

1979 Cadillac $400. 304-675-

5658.

51 0

......1:!1,1161·-

~· c.lof

-.

• '

TV, "'"'

e 14 · 448·

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom apartment in
Mtddleport. no pets, 614 -992-

450

--·

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

•• 1 ~ • ,

I ........ ,._..

• L81l-

12: "*'•IIIM -4 •

12110 Schultz trailer with 14t32
factory 2 room
$7,51X). 304875-5876.

LPiely. 614·388-930:l

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

~Lumber Price

Hair dresser wamed. Full or part
time with clten&amp;ele 304-67

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Moton. Call Larry
War\ted To Buy : Ltltl8 Tiket Toys,
614-24&amp;-5887

Business

Meigs Counry is an Equal Employment Opportunity EmPloy.,
which prohibits d•scrimlnar•On because of race, color, religion, sa•.
handicap or naliorwl Oftgin.

Rick Pearson Auction CompMy,
full time auctioneer, compltte
auction
service. liunsed
168,0hio &amp; West .Virgtnia, 304·
773·57115 Or 30ol· 773·5447.

0 - Modtl Mabile Homo, Excot·

Opportunity

The Mtlgo County Camml11lan·

Tapas, Apple Computer, Elte~tic
l'-ittr, Name Brand Clothto,
Bicycles, Ba!&gt;Y Clothes, Odds I
Endo, 1535 dlitham Sdlool Road,
Off 141, Witch Far Signa.

~INANCIAL

~1 0

GRANTS ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT

1 era will accept resumes for the
part dm1 permaner:ar position of 1
N ., Chtsntrt, OH. Signa Potted.
Mountain Blkt, Roland l&lt;ay Boald, Granta Administrative Anistant
Toys, Load&amp; Of .Misc . Items. Fri, until May 27, 1998 at lhe efficet or
frl, Sat, 1-5, Tools. Orytr, VCR

Furniihed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath. Up·
stairs, Ulllitiet Fur!'1ilhed, Clean,
No Pets. Reltrence. Deposit R•
quirecl, tl14·44&amp;-15tQ.

Domino's Piua Pt. Pleasant. Now
hiring, al po~tiana.

s.R.

51 10th,"

-·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
·BUDGET PRIC~S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wellwood Drive
lrom S2u to $315. Walk Iii lhal&gt;
&amp; movita. Call tU ·••e-2581.
E&lt;J~II Hou~ Opportunity.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2bedtoom ap.ar-tm..,l in New HI·
ven area, refrigetaror &amp; IICW8.
S2e51ma. pius dot&gt;&lt;&gt;olt, Include•
water. 304-773-i171 leave mea·

1 Bedroom f3 Roani Aparlment ,
Truh Paid, NO PETS, On 554
Nftr f'brw, 814-31111-1100.

LOST: Male Blue Tic:ll hound, up.
per Sm•. area. Reward. 30•· &amp;75·
21DII.

70

21&gt;drm. apto., total eleclrlc. ap·
pliai'ICft furnlohad. laundry · loci~tito, ..... 10 ....... in - ·
Appaicattons awwat:M at: VIII...
GrNn APit. 141 or c::ll 814·112·
3711 . EOH.

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OhioLo~ery

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

·Reds make It

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PGMEIOl OIL

l3t
Plck4:
1111
Super Lotto: .
30-34 31 4041-47
Kicker:
741180

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n over LA

12 PK 12 OZ. CANS

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litE 11•1 TO liMIT QUAIITinES
PIICES 1001 IIIII MAY 11, 1996.

-7UP
PRODUaS ·

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
EVEIYDIJ • SEE

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199
!;tttall........................
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U.S.D~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$
_
GROUND .
.
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169
a·eef ••••••••••••••••••••••••tQ . . Eye of Round Roast.z..
BUCKET BEEF CUBED
.
. $ 99
Stea k_s ••••••••••••••••••'!••• ._
RO~ND

U.S.D.A. TOP OR BOnOM

FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC
SOFTENER

09(

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WESSON
OIL

. U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

J·Bone Steaks •••••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONEUSS -_

.tn .8 rad.RObinson trial

LUCKY LEAF

9(

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CHERRY·OR APPLE

:Chuck Roast ••••••••:;•••• 7 ,

PIE FILUNG

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BWE BONNET .

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MINUTE MAID
TW.INPET

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Dog .Food •••••••••••••••
.

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'LUNCH
MEAT

.

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$

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$

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169
Orange Juictt ••:.:~....... ·
HAGAN PREMI~M
.$
9
19
Ice Crea
112

FOX DELUXE

Pizta

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NOODLE SOUP
10.750L

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D- W Va.,
said he began talking to Toyot~ about
investing in West Virginia 10 years
ago. He met Dr. Shoichiro Toyoda,
chainnan of Toyota Motor Corp., and
other Toyota officials on a January
1986trip to Japan.
"Today, West Vitginia shows lhe
world that we have arrived on lhe
global economic stage. We are ready
to compete with anyone and optimistic about a future · made more
prosperous by Toyota Motor Corp.,"
Rockefeller said.
Gov. Gaston Capenon said, "This ·
announcement is a tribute to our
long-tenn economic strategy and
great West Virginia teamwork at the
local, state and federal level. ThankContinued on page 3

()h10 s _AG OffiCe says It has no

iy JIM FREEMAN
.
·oyp newa etafl .
' Jury selection and opening argu-

~~

·Pomeroy f!~erch~nts

plan .hoti.day act~vities
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

$intlnel news ltaff

BOUNTY
TOWELS
ROLL

(

by_l~ SJ!~

Attorney General Betty Montgomery,
said an 11-mon~- probe prompted by
a mass1ve peut1on campa1gn was
closed Wednesday.

' I ''We were unable t&lt;Yl!ncover any
e_vidence of collusion lietwee~. gasohne reta1lers m Galha County, Boy• Continued on page 3

COLUMBUS (AP)- Increases 1987 with lhe exception ofl990,the to live in Meigs County," Berno said
in salaries of public S~:hoOl classroom council said.
in an interview.
teachers across Ohio exceeded inflaDonald Bemo, president of the
Districts with lhe highest average
lion in nine oflhe lastl9years, a pri- non-partisan economic and tax salaries were in urban/suburban
vale tax study group said.
.' research organization, said salaries regions. "The lowest ories are defi·
.An Ohio Public Expenditure depended in part on seniority, state nitely rural," Berno said.
Council.report released Wednesday minimum beginning salaries, union
The lop five:
said the average salary for teachers, contracts, and cost of living.
- Pell)l, Lake County, $51,352.
excluding fringe benefits, was
"The salaries are driven by years
Beachwood, Cuyahoga,
$38,084 for lhe 1995-96 school year. of experience. and to a degree by the $51,218.
· · . Teacher salaries have matched or gedgraphic location. It costs more to
Mariemont,
Hamilton,
suipassed inflation In each year since live in Cuyahoga County than it costs $50,910.
- Shaker Heights, CuyahOga,
$50,476..
·-Cuyahoga Heights. Cuy3hoga,
$50,461.
•
.Districts with lowest: average
salaries:
- Frontier, Washington County.
$25,202.
.
- Eastern, Melp, $26,030.
- Danville, Knox, $26,077.
- Ridgemi)nt, Hardin, $26,447.
- Ripley Union Lewis, Brown,
$27,166.
Average salaries nave ,increased
19 pen:enuince lhe 1990-91 school

year compared with an estimated
inflation rate of 15 percent.
Demo said salaries and benefits
'
ma&lt;\e up 75 percent to 90 percent
()f
a school _district's operating budget.
· "The labor intensity is to be
expe&lt;ted. You want to have as few
students as possible ·per teacher," be
said.

:::n::.eo~x~edR~~:,:~~:~~ spe!rl~i=~~~a~~~-:~";::!~~ Eastern's salaries rank among lowest In state

Pomeroy in the Meigs Common -~-clYoulh Serv1ces fac1hty after plead~
Pleas Coon of Judge Fred w. Crow ing guilty to Ollt count each of robill.
·
bery, kidnappins and burglary stemRobinson faces two counts each of ming from the ·incident. •
rOObery, kidnapping anjl one couni"of
_loshua Paul Crcmean~ pleaded
aggravated burglary in the robbery of guilty to the c!lirges· on Jan. 17-and
the Meigs County Salvation Army in w~ sentenced by Judge Robert Buck
Pomeroy on Jan. 15.
to the youlh facility until he reaches
· He is accused of breaking into the the age of 21.
•
Salvation Army at 115 Butternut
He and another juvenile are
Ave. and detaining two elderly expected to testify against Robinson
womentherewhilebeandajuvenile . today. ,..•_ 1 _ · •
accomplice ransacked the building,
:In add1bon, i&gt;ubhc defender !stealing an ·undetennined amount of Mtchael Westfall of Alhens, who IS
cash.
representing Robinson, will seek to
. Allhough not injun;d, Dora Win- ~ave ~ trial m9ved to ~other_ loca·
ing, 90, and her. daughter, Helen uon, c1tmg pretnal pubhc1ty wh1ch he
:Townsend; were bound and gagged said.~ay ~ake it _impossible to select
wilh duct, tape during the robbery. a fatr jury m Me1gs County. . .
.•
. TOwnsend was there laking care of
Jurors .are scr,d~led to v1ev.: ~
Wining. who had just been released ·robbery sne which IS located w1thm
from the hospital.
short walking distance of the courthouse.

.160Z

. ~e

1--s u.s. Juslice Department ligation
i.n!O Gallja CQUn:
Iffound gulfty of all five charges, laifr)cliis: iuf ~iivesligatio~ into .the ty prices .has Y.ielded no proof of
Robinson may · face more_t1utp 60 . sud4en mcrease tn gasohne pnces alleged pnce fix1ng by _local relall~.
yeats in priS~?."~' ...
.
. w:ound tiJe CO';'ntry; a parallel mves· ·
Todd .Boyer, a spo~esman for

Programs and displays to entice
visitors into the downtown shopping
atU were planned at Wednesday's
meeting of lb.: Pomeroy Merchants
Association held in the Peoples Bank
conferenCe room. ·
· . : Susan Clark. president, eneour.aged merchants to decorate their
.windows for Memorial Day holi·
·day.weekend when many alumni will
.,e returning to attend high, school
~!iss reunions. Memorabilia from ~

D.A.R.E. county-

Salwjes of teachers represented 64
percent of total public school salaries
and wages for the 'school year studied. The rest went to other professionals, administrators, suppon starr,
office and clerical employees .
"Because labor costs and fringes
are a .large pan of their budget, it's
something they've got to be really,
really careful with," Berno said.
School superintendents on average
were paid $69,203 during lhe 199S96 school year, while principals had
average salaries of $56,666.
•
Bus drivers were paid an average
$12,206. Food service employees on
average' earned $9,638.. .

\

Twister strikes Kenova
and Ceredo, Br:afford said,
"II picked up their freezer and
lhrcw in into the powet plant substation. It's still in there." he said.
No damage estimate was available
and power has been re~tored, liraf.
ford said.
A funnel cloud also touched down
in Cereilo and blew the front porch
off Ceredo Police Chief Roger Miracle's house, said Kenova Policeman
R.B. Chafin.

•

STAR KIST

TUNA

Toyota, Japan's largest automak-·
cr. also has engine plants in Georgetown, Ky., and Cambridge, Ontario,
which produce 500,000 and 90,000
engines a year respectively.
The addition of the West Virginia.
plant will allow the company to pul
North American-made engines in all ·
North-American-made Cbrollas. '
"Today's announcement of this
new engine plant is yet another step
ill Toyota's localization of all aspects
of the vehicle production process,"
Okuda said.
The announcement brings good
news to a state that lrllditionally ranks'
near the bottom in unemployment.
West Virginia's unemployment rate
was 8.8 percent in March, the latest
available. ,
•
..

·

69(
••••••••••••••••••••••••
70Z.

NEW TOYOTA PLANT LOCATION - Thle ..,_
82, neer ttie CSX railroad abOut 30 mil" northIll view allows the 230-ecre elte ,_, ~to,
welt of Chllr!Hton. Toyota wllllnv11t $4011 milW. VI., whMe Toyota" will build li plant to 11111ke
lion In lhe hlghly..utometld flclllty, which Ia
· : 300,000 Corolla 111glnll 1 ~r, beginning In . expected to employ 30!1 W'OI'IIIml~ (AP)
·
: 1998. The Plant will blllocltld on W.st.VIrglnle
, •
'
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Toyota Motor Corp. announced today
it will build a $400 million engine
plant in Putnam County lhat will ·
employ up to 300 people.
· The plant, ·on a 230-acre site in
Buffalo, about30 mi.les northwest of
Charleston, will house machining
' and assembly shops and have an
annual produclion capacity of
300,000 units, company President
Hiro!!hi Okuda said at a ceremony ar
the state Cultural Center.
The plant will produce engines for
Co~;QIIas starting in late 1998, Oku·
da said. News reports said the engines
will be sent to lhe automaker's New
United Motor Manufacturing Inc.
plant in Fremont, Calif.. a joint ven·
ture with General Motors Corp.
.
•

i!rguments ~!JitJ,_ tot!ar ~roof -of 'gaS price fixing' in area ·

.. $399-

.

· ..d

.J ury selection, opening

410Z

1

•

Putnam County engine plant will employe 300,
cost $400 million; opening date slated in~'1998

640Z

s

A Ginnett Co. Nenp1p1r

Buffalo, W. Va., gets
new Toyoto faci~ity

'

.
u.
J99
Chops •••••••••••••••••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
.
.
t.
s
139
Rump-Roas ••••••••••••••

.
35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 9, 1996

(

· BONEUSS PORK SIRLOIN

Low tonight In lOt.
Cle1r. Frld1y, pertly
cloudy, high In mlcHOs._

APP.LESAUCE

DOMINO

SUGAR

•

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;

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8.50Z
UMIT4

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