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                  <text>Pomefoy • Middleport, Ohio

Pi1Qe18 • The Dally Sentinel

Administration says oi.l sale will loWer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton administtation said today
the sale of 12 million bamlls of oil
from the country's ema pncy raer.oe
will ease guoline prices. lndu.stry
analySIS called the move mispided
and unlikely to have much effect.
Associate Deputy EnerJy Depart·
mcnt Secreta~)' C. Kyle Simpson told
a House Commerce subeommincc,
"It is clear the best business practice
is to make the oil available to the
marlccts as quickly as possible."
While lhe drawdown has been

criticized by some Republicu lawmakers, Simpson noted that the GOP
Congress previously directed thai
$227 million in oil be sold from lhe
reserve by the end of this fiscal year.
The president decided td speed up
the sale to m~ tight peii'Olewn
supplies lhat have been blanied for a
20-cent-a-gallon jump in gasoline

prices since Fe'--Y. Simpson said.
Two industry analysts ane the
head of an oil industry trade lfO\IP
attaCked lhe use of the government
reserve to respond to what they
called a temponry price spike in

wllllled Philip Verlepr 1r., on oil
industry analyst for Charles River
Associates. He said it could diJcourage oil companies from increaainJ
their private inventories.
Vcrleger said he expects the sale
of 12 million b!urels by the government "will have no impact but will
give the American public the lnis-

guoline.

"If u.sed improperly, (draining) the
reserve
can ex..erblte a crisis,"
F

Ohio.Lottery

pr~ces

Liken Yiew that the aovernment is in
the business o{ 1118fta1ing enerJY
prices.''

John Uchlbllu, chairman of the
Petroleum llldustry ReseardJ Foundllioft, called the decision 1o ~;.. on
the S87 minion blrrels in the SttareJic ~ Reserve misguided.

Tournament
yields wins
for teams

"There is no shonage or disruption"
of oil, he said, attributing the price
increase to temponry "nwltet f~e;_.

Plck3:
9-5-7

Plck4:
8-2-3-8

Buckeye 5:

Sporta on Page 4

tors."

7·1 o-13-32-33

Today's hearinJ did not focus on
a relared Republican proposal to
lower by 4.3 cents a gallon the fed·
era! gasoline taX.

•

•

•l

'

Meigs .
County
Court

'Vai.47,N0.12

.z •••lion&amp;, 12 Poga

Showers and thunder·
stonne tonight, low In the
501. S1turd1r, IIIOWirl
likely. Hlgll1ln the 501.

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 10,1996

A O.nnatt Co. Now P por

Minimum wage hike heats up election

The following cases were resolved
last week in lhe Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Melinda K. McDonald, Middleport, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Earl S. McKinley, Middleport,
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Crystal D.
Dexter, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Walter C. Asbury, Columbus.
speed, $30 plus costs; Thomas A.
Myers, Langsville, insecure load,
$20 plus costs; Donald L. Gentle;
Cedar Mountain, N.C., speed, $30
plus costs; Clifford T. Roseberry,
Syracuse, speed. $30 plus costs;
Timothy P. Crihfield, Harmony,
W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus costs;
Danny R. Lykins, Chesapeake, speed,
$30 plus costs; David Alan Gledhill,
Charlotte, N.C., speed. $30 plus

. By PAMELA BROGAN
· G1nnett New• Service
WASHINGTON - Despite bipanisan support among l!fCa lawmakers,
·increasing the minimum wage has become a hot political issue in southern
Ohio because it's an election year.
. The minimum wage - now at $4.25 an hour - has not been increased
·since 1991. Nearly II pereent of Ohio's work force, 500,000 workers. earn
the minimum wage.
On Wednesday, President Clinton said he would agree to legislation pushed
by Rell'lblicans to repeal temporarily a 4.3 cents per gallon ga&lt; tax if Congress also approved a separate bill to increase the minimum wage.
The wage increase.is a key issue on the campaign trail in Ohi'o's 6th Con.
gressional District.
• On April IS, thecarnpaignnfformer Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland, who
is running against incumbent Republican Frank Cremeans, issued a press

release wilh Ibis headline: "Cremeans flip-flop on minimum wage vote ."
A day earlier, Cremeans was one of 20 Republicans who bucked the GOP
am! backed legislation to increase lhe minimum wage by $1 to $5.25.
· But as recently as April 9, Cremeans was quoted in a local newspaper as
telling Dr. Jill Neff, a Jackson pedtatrician and aconstituent, that he opposed
a minimum wage increase.
" I don'teven know why we have it," Cremeans was quoted as.telling Neff.
Neff said sbe was quoted accurately in lhe Athens Messenger. Cremeans
did not return repeated telephone calls to respond to the wage issue or his
statements to Neff.
"Cremeans told us lhat we'd all be better off without it," Neff said Thursday. "I about dropped my teeth because there are so many minimum wage
earners i.n this area."
Neff said Cremeans probably changed his position because he's "swaying with public opinion."

Salvation Army robbery tria·l
opens with youths' testimony

costs;

Keilh A. Cline, Long Bonom, fail·
ure to control, $20 plus costs; Sher·
man A. Johnson Jr., Bidwell, speeding, $30 plus costs; Vema K. Ball,
Lowell, seat belt, $251)lus costs; Lisa
L. Helton, Anderson, Ind., speed, $30
plus costs; Allan A. Lambert, Syra; cuse, speed. $30 plus costs; Donald
E. Bowen, Fairmont, W.Va,. speed,
$30 plus costs; Marilyn J. Blair,
Portsmoulh, speed, $30 plus costs;
·: Jeff E. Collinsworth, Catlettsburg.
Ky., $25 plus costs; Roy R. Myers,
. Hilliard,. speed, $30 plus costs; Naomi J. Poulson, Warren, Ind., seat beli,
$25 plus costs;
.
Lawrence K. Biggs, Cambridge,
speed, $30 plus costs; Ryan D.
Kuhlman, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
costs; Duane R. Ketelboeter, Black
Earlh, Wise., disobeyed traffic control
device, ·$20 plus costs; Everett R.
Stevens Jr., Fleming, spee\1, $30 plus
costs; Richard Spencer, Logan,
speed, $30 plus costs; William Carl- ·- .
ton Mullins Jr., Orlando. Fla., seat
belt, $25 plu~ costs; Rodney A.
Jones, Wellston, seat belt, S2S plus
coSIS; Floyd H. Collingsworth, Lake ·
. Mary. Fla., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Robert L. Sawyers Jr., Shade, seat
. belt, $25 plus costs; Charles E.
-: Chambers, Patriot, seat belt, $25
plus costs;
.
Uhuk G. Erdal, Columbus, speed,
. $30 plus costs; Christopher W. Cum·
mings, Athens, failure to control, $20
plus costs; Joel T. Perry, Worthington,
speed, $30 plus costs; Charles R.
· Ulmer. Enon Valley, Pa., speed, $30
· plus costs; G. Robin Benedict,
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs;
: Delores A. Evans, Dexter, failure to
· control, $20 plus costs; Barbara L.
Payne, Middleport, speed, $30 plus
· costs; Katharine L. Pickens,
· Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs:,
Shelagh Erskine, Cincinnati, speed,
$30 plus costs; Richard L. Neal n,
: Bidwell, overload, $385 plus costs;
Ernie J. Gevas. Hurricane, W.Va., ·
speed, $30 plus costs; John S.
. Frudell, Clendenin, W.Va .. speed,
. $30 plus costs; Landis K. Wandlipg,
· Gallipolis. failure to display valid
registration and tags for commercial
• trailer. $10 plus costs; Robm C.
· Foley, Syracuse, driving under the
influence, $750 plus costs, 10 days
ja~l suspended to three days, 90-day
operator's license suspension, one
year probation, jail and $450 sus.. pended upon completion of residen. tial treatment program; Jerry M.
.. Johnson Jr.. Racine, DUI, $750 plus
. costs, I 0 days jail suspedded to lhree
: days, 90-day OL suspension, one
' year probation, jail and $450 ·sus·
' pended upon completion of residen. tial treatment program;
: , Eric A. Qualls, Pomeroy, driving
, under financial responsibility action
,. suspension. $150plus costs, 30days
. jail suspended to three days. two
• years probation; Willard L. Moore,
. . Ponland, no OL, $100 plus costs,
lhree days jail and $50 suspended if
valid OL presented withi~ 60 'days; .
•. Tina L. Riffle. ~iddlepon. fail~ to
i .•control, $30 plus costs; Donald W.
· .. ·Shaffer, Racine, reckless operation,
plus costs; possession, $50 plus
'·costs; underage consumption, $175
plus costs, three day jail suspended,
::probation; Randy Marshall, Pomeroy.
-assault, $100 plus costs, two years
· ·probation, I 0 days jail suspended,
; restraining order issued; Jimmy Gra. ham, Rudand, failure to register dog,
· '$100 suspended. costs; Sean P. .Gra. 'ham, Canal Winchester, speed. $30
: plus costs; Bonnie M. Searls, Mid. dlepon, seat belt, $25 plus costs.

.,y
JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Opening argumen15 and testimony
began Thursday m lhe trial of Brad
R,obinson, 27, Pomeroy, accused of
robbing the Meigs County Salvation
Anny ,in Pomeroy on Jan. IS.
Two youthful offenders said they
c!»nmitted the robbery woth Robmson's assistance.
_Jos~ P. Cremeans;_ 14, formerly of
· Mtddleport, and hos 12-year-old
· cousin, Thra Booth, Pomeroy, testi·
foed that Booth purchased tools.
including two crowbars. rope and a
flashlight, for use in committing the
robbery•.that day in P(/meroy.
·- In additi9n. Cremeans sai~ Booth
purcb~ a roll. of _black electrical.
tape, uSed to restratn and gag the
elderly victims, while Booth said she
bought a pair of gloves to keep from
leaving fingerprints at the crime
scene.
Alleged cme oudined
.
During the crime, Dora Wining.
90, and her daughter. .Helen
Townsend, were bound. gagged and
repeatedly threatened.
The two separately admitted ~o
breakiqg into the rear of the building
wilh Robinson.
..,
Cremeans, allegedly accompanied
by Robinson, went upstairs to restrain
the two women while Booth waited

below so the women - whom she
knew - could not identify her. Aft~r
the women were bound, gagged and
crudely bltndfolde,d, Booth JOined the
two to further assist in the robbery.
For his role in the crime. Cremeans was sentenced to an Qhio
youth facility until his 21st birthday
after pleading guilty to two charges
each of robbecy and k.idnappmg and
one count or'burglary.
Boolh pleaded guilty to charges of
robbery and burglary and is awaiting
sentencing.
'None of my business'
During·cross-examination, public
defender Michael Westfall bro~gllt up
Cremeans' prior juveril~&amp; offenses,
including one count of aggravated
robbery and one count of gross sexual imposition.
. Also. Booth's 16-year-old sister,
Tina Booth. and her boyfriend . .23year-old Shannon Scott of Middle·
pilrt, testified they were at the Robinson residence the mght of the crime
and saw Robinson with the yout~s.
Laler, the two also said Cremeans
told them about lhe robbery, bragging
that he almost knocked out one ofthe
elderly victims.
On cros~-examination by Westfall,
the two said they did _not report tbe
incident even though they knew Tara
Booth and Cremeans were involved.

Natoonwide, pubhc opinion polls show anywhere from 75 to 85 percent
or Americans approve a minimum wage increase.
Stnckland supports a "reasonable" minimum wage increase so that workers have a "commensurate level of purchasing power that they ' ve had for
the last two decodes."
And Strickland charged that Cremeans is only paying "lip-service to a
minimum wage increase."
" It's illogical for him (Cremeans) to say that he's reluctantly supporting
a minimum wage increase now because he couldn 't get the Republican' tax
breaks passed into law. There's no connection between tax breaks for the affluent and a wage increase for lhe neediest ."
Republican Rep. Bob Ney said.he would vote in favor of lcgislati.on to.
increase the minimum wage, but would prefer a package that includes tax
cuts.
"If it come downs to a straight vote on a minim~m wage increa... I'll
vote for il," Ney said.

Tina Boolh declined in fear of getting her sister in trouble. Scott indicated, "It was none o( my business."
One major inconsistency in the
testimony was .hammered upon by
Westfall: all four witnesses said they
were watching the NFL playoff game
between the Dallas Cowboys and lhe
Green Bay Packers at Robinson's
house lhe night of the ellime.
However, the game was televised
on Sunday, the night before·me robbery.
'(estimony continued tOday in the
Meigs County Common Pleas C~urt
of Judge Fred W. Crow III. ·
•__ . Bw issue raiSed
..
The Jury, consisting- ol' ..eight
ifffnr'l:munNY - Teatimony will '
today In
wQmen aqd four men, ~long wilh one the trial
27, Pomeroy, 1ccused In the Jan. 15
male and one female alternate, was robbery ollhe Meigs County ~lvation Army in Pomeroy. Robirt·
seated at 10:45 a.m. Six potential ,SO!J, center, watched · during testimony Thursday, accompanied
jurors were excused by counsel durby public defender Michael Westfall, left, and Westfall's assistant,
ing selection.
Janniler Schaffer.
Westfall questioned prospective
tatorship," he said.
jurors in an effort to determine if any . there is some bias," he later asked.
The seating of a jury halted an earrace bias existed.
"
".. .Is that present in anyone's mind
"I would be remiss for not bring- when you look here at Brad Robin· lier motion by Westfall seeking a
change of venue.
ing this out," Westfall ~tated. "You all son?"
!'
t
Representing the state were Pros(indicating the jury) ... and we all
Crow encouraged the jurors to ·
(indicatmg the defense ~nd prosecu- keep an open mind during the trial ecuting Attorney John ~- Lentes and
tion teains) are white ... Brad is and to consider only those items assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia.
During bnef·opening statements,
black."
admitted as evidence.
"Is thai going to affect anyone?"
"The right to a jury trial is the Lentes presented the facts as alleged
No jurors responded . ·
most important difference. between by the state including the robbery,
"Look inside yourself and see if , hfc m a free country and life in a die·
(Continued on Page 3)

Gas tax relief moves closer to passage in House
WASHINGTON (AP) - Gaso- ·
But in the ·Senate. the Jax relief.
line tax relief is a step closer to pas- effort continued to be embroiled in a
sage in the House. hut remains dispute over the minimyp1 wage and
bogged down in the Senate, where other labor tssues. Attempts to end
~mocratic critics say they want to the logjam were stymied Thursday as
make sure the savings go to con· Democrats stood 'firm in their
sumers, -and not oil companies.
demand for separate and speedy
The HOU$e Ways and Means votes on bo.th issues.
Committee on Thursday by a 23- 13
Presidenl Clinton has said he
vote approved legi~lation that would .~ould sign a gas tax repeal. but only
suspend the three-year-old 4.3 cent- ~f Congress approves legosla(ton rats·
a-gallo.n surcharge for the rest of the · mg the $4 .25-an -hour ommmum
year in hopes of providing relief to wage as well. Senate MaJOnty Leader
motorists from soaring prices at the Bob Dole of Kansas accused Democ·
pump. House GOP leaders predicted rats Qf creating an impasse:
.
a vote' to approve the bill before
Moderate House Republicans sa~d
Memorial Day.
. Thursday. after mectmg wtth House

leaders. that a vote on a m.inimum
wage increase could come withi~ two
weeks.
While the politically popular gas
tax measure ha&lt; hecn gaining bipartisan support, Democratic critics in
bolh·thc House and Senot.;expressed
growing concern that without specif- '
ic assurances the tax .avings may not
be passed on to motorists.
"We must address the issue of
who gets the benefit. Woll it go to the
consumer'" said Sen. Tom Daschle
of South Dakota. the Democratic
leader.
'
During a four-hour session of the

House Ways and Mean panel, anumber of lawmakers said they were concerned that oil companies . would
have no reason to pass the savings on
to consumers because of high summer gasoline demand and tight supplies.
''There's no assurance; consumers

will ever see this (saving)," complained Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich.
"Prices are likely to go up."
The House bill would repeal the
ta~ six days after it becomes law. The
levy would be reinstated on Jan. I ,
1997. If passed on, the tax cut would
save motorists about $15 over the

seven months. assuming average
travel of 15,000 miles a year in a
vehicle that gets 25 miles per gallon.
Levin suggested it might be just as
good lo give every motorist a $15
check and keep lhc tax.
And Rep. Charles Rangel, DN.Y.. called -it "an open inviJation"
to th~ .oil companies to use the savings to increase profit margins. He
offered &amp;provision that would make
it unlawful not to pass on the tax savings to motorists, but the amendment
was rejected 21 -15. Republicans said
it would be impossible to enforce and
amounted to an attempt by government to fix prices.

J

Authorities
awaiting 10·
on corpse
Local authorities are waiting for
the results of an autopsy before mak-;
ing a positive identification on a body:
pulled from the Ohio River ncar:
Apple Grove in Meigs County Thursday.
The body wa.• found around 5 ·
p.m.,by the vessel The Captain Eb.a,:
about a mile north of Apple Grove. •
Crew members on the boat report·
ed the body was first spotted in the :
middle of the river, according to
Shenff James M. Soulsby.
•
The boat proceeded down river
~nd.tied off at the old Dravo'dock. in .
an effort lo stan hack upstream to ·
recover the body. The body 'had
noated downstream and was near lhe
barges. when crew members floated
the body along side the vessel to the
Richards &amp; Sons dock a shQn distance downriver, Soulsby said.
Soulsby and Deputy Roben Beegle were the first authorities to arrive
at the scene: They contacted Wc!&gt;1
Virginia officials to handle the inves- •·
ligation, because the recovery was
made in their jurisdiction ..
Trooper William Marshall III from
lhe Ripley detachment of the West .·
Virginia State Police arrived at the ·
scene to continue the investigation. :
An age, weight, and height are
unknown, pending examination by
the West Virginia State Medtcal
Examiii'Cr's office in South
Charleston.
"The body was dressed wearing
what appeared to be cutoff blue
jeans with a black belt, no shirt, and ·
bottom long underwear. It appeared .
that the body had been in the river for
some time," said Soulsby.
An All-Term message was sent to
Ohio police agencies asking them to
check their missing persons files,
with responses coming from two
agencies, Soulsby said.
The Racmc Fire Department
assisted a Ravenswood funeral home
in the recovery of the body, which
was later transported to the state med,
ical examiner's office.

Local high sch9ol students J·OG
~heir way into ~career selections
By TOM HI,INTER
Sllntlnel News Staff .
· Some area students unsure about
what life holds for them after high
schOol are making important college
and career decisions with the directiQn provided by a new program in
Meigs County schools.
· Johs for Ohio's Graduates (JOG)
wits launched in 1986 to help Ohio
youlhs ro meet the critical challenge
of employment. The program helps
·selected high school seniors graduate
and prepares them better for the realit~s of the workplace.
-The program is in its first year at
Eastern and Southern high schools.
with a total of 51 students participat·
.irill. An additional JOG program wi II
. -bo added at Meigs High School in the
fall.

·:sso

{,
J

'

'

.

--

JOG is apartnership with funding
frq"l local, public, and private
resources, and from the state of
Oliio. ·No funding is provided by
. school districts for lhe program. JOG
~ in the local schools, allow'

.. .

• J('

-·
.l

•

ing students to combine·traditional an opportunity to develop leadcrshop
high school cla•ses wilh the added and job-readiness skills," • said
resource of JOG.
Weaver.
Teamwork between schools, flU·
Weaver also works ~~Ctively with
dents, and the business commu.ity the business community to identify
has proven successful nationally in , entry-level jobs for stud~nts, and then
the Jobs for America's Graduates pro- helps place graduates mto the best·
gram, with which Ohio and more .suited jobs.
lhan a dozen olher states are affiliat·
The program goes far beyond
ed.
bel ping students stay in high school.
Follow-up work is Conducted with
These programs have a demon- JOG participants after their graduastrated performance !ej:Ord. About &amp;5 tion, in an effon to offer further job
percent of graduates are working, in placement assistance:
·
the military or in full-time post secStudents are also attending colondary education. More than 90 per- · leges and trade. schools as a result of
cent of JOG's panicipants graduate the program. .Four students from
from high schpol.
Eastern High School will be attendTom Weaver. job specialist for the ing Washington State Community
Eastern and Southern high programs. College in the' fall, because of their
works with students at the schools in exposure to. possible career fields
helping link them to s~ial services lhrough the program. according to
and emphasizing development of Weaver.
employability skills.
"Its great 10 see the~t. kids suc"The progtllll has given m_any of ceed, by pursuing a career and conthese students a reason to stay in tinuing their education. The pr~
school. It offers them an motivation has been a real benefit to everyon¢
to graduate and develop a career, and involved," added Weaver.

•

•

LOO~NQOVERPROGRESS~~p=~=me:ro:;y,;s--~l~ln:H:.~J~~l~n;g;hw~f«~I~WI;;.Ik~l;r~;;oo;d~~~~;r~
· revttsllutlon proJect brought Mlrtlla J. Ray·
monel, right, IMiiKI of the OhiO Hlatoricel Pill IF·
VIIIon Office, Columbus to 1own Thursclly. She
Wll hww to vt.w the progre11, offer lltehnlcel
llliltl~ and ev~lulle conformity to guJde.

town - · from left, John Mu....-. grant~
admlnlstrltor for P-~:-vltlllzatlon PI'O'

jlcl; DMn111 Stroll\,
coniUIIInt, end ,
DIIMI UWIOI'I, downtown cootdll'lll1of. ($entlnel photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

••
•
•

�I

:'Commentary

.

1'92

Tun dey, •10,1•

The IWivleniiMI• Pllge 3

~y.llly 10, 1111

G f II 0 l,'.'c J ttw r
s
May 11
1

. . . ., . .

The·Daily Sentinel Study charges bank with nondisclosure
'Lsttl6fisMtf in 1948
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

..2r

,) A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

· why balanced budget
:tiff sounds familiar . ·
By WALTER R. MEARS 1\.../ ·
· AP Special CorrelpOfl~
WASHINGTON - As a campaign e~hibit, the balanced·budget amend·
·ment to the Constitution is a Republican replay - a popular cause etching
a dear line between Sen. Bob Dole's aggressive support and President Clin. ton's opposition.
But there's also campaign grist for Democrats WhO can revive their contention that the amendment would put Social Security funds at risk of being
tapped for the spending curbs needed to meet a constitutional guarantee.
· . Dole has been looking for a compromise route around that high-risk
·issue, but Democrats want a stmight guarantee to put Social Security off lim"
its, effective with the amendment - not phased in later as Republicans had
' suggested.
Clinton went at·the budget issue from another direction Wednesday, say.: lng Republican leaders ought to resume negoti'ations on a plan for balance
'by 2002.
. ' He said he would sigh the Republican-sponsored repeal of the 4.3 centa-gallon gas tax increase he pushed through in 1993, and that.he is striving
.for a balanced budget plan without "poison pill" cuts really intended to
·dmw vetoes.
. l;lole then challenged him to support the constitutional amendment, say•ing !hilt since he talks abQut balancing the budget he ought io be for that step,
.already approved in the House.
' "We would like to take that up very quickly and we would hope he would
. ·add it to his list," the Senate majority leader said.
.
·· The.amendment, overwhelmingly favored in the public opinion polls, has
become s.honhand for curbs in federal spending and balanced budgets. But
· tlie polls also indicate that support dwindles when people are asked whether
·' they would accept Social Security reductions as part of the effort.
When the amendment fell one vote short of approval 14 months ago,
-Dole reversed his own vote to say no -a parliamentary piQy that gave him
·"the right to revive it for an immediate vote without delay or amendment.
The plan was to .force another roll call in campaign season, Republicans
;figuring that it would give them "~ " issue whatever the outcottre. For Dole,
' tile nominee-to-be against Clinton, winning the balanced budget amendment
now would be a major boost, as~ talking point and also in his broader effort
'· io demonstrate that he can get things done, a central promise of his cam·Paign.
But circumstances have changed to the point where Dole concedes the
1995 versimi would be defeated were·it put U(! again. without change. Based
lin current positions, he would be two votes short of the two-thirds majority
tequired on constitutional amendments.
~ So the shortcut tactic of r.econsidcring the 1995 vote presumably would~·t work to get the amendment through, only to make the record. Unless
blere is a compromise senlement that gains the votes for approval, Republi¢ans could opt for tbe latter course, and blame the Democrats. They would,
l!lf course, counter that they had acted to protect Social Security funds from
'udgetraids. ·
.
: Anc1 that would put thedispute back where it started. The political impact
tvas evident in the lineup of votes in 1995, when six Democrats who supf&lt;&gt;rted a 1994 balanced budget amendment voted no, while three who are
running for new terms in 1996 switched in the other direction, voting for the
•mendment: . Clinton puts his emphasis on a seven-year plan to balance the budget step
lly step, a Republtcan goal he embraced late, but heartily, with caveats about
where and how much to cut spending. That's about the timetable that would
~set by the amendment. But the budget would still have to be balanced the
~arne way, with -spending curbs and tax changes to gnidually eliminate
deficits.
The president told a news conference that he and Republican leaders had
• -been close to agreement on a seven-year plan without' what he characterized
: as sharp reductions in medical care and other programs that led him to veto
• .a 1995 GOP version.
·
•
He came late to the seven-year goal, but now champions it and says the
: Republicans are the ones who stopped negotiating. "If we want a balanced
: budget, pass it without the poison pill of cutting education or the environ-.
• ment," Clinton said.
•
"Why don "t they want to come back and sit down and work together and
: come up with a balanced budget?" Clinton asked . "Once we have an agreed: upon balanced budget nobody will ever be debating this again.''
•
History tells otherwise, even as it replays.

•

••

EDITOR'S NOTE ....,. WaHer R. Meara, vice president and columnist for The

: Auociotod Preoe, ·""

:· lhari 30 yeara.

r~rted

on Washington and national politics lor more

·

~: Today ·in

history

: By The A••oc:lated Press
·
.
:: Today is Friday, May 10, the I 31st day of 1996. There are 235 days left
:· in the year.
· :
;: On May 10, 1869, a golden spike was driven at Promontory: Utah; mark·
·: ing the completion of the first tran'scontinental railroad in the United States.
:· On this date:
· In I774, Louis XVI ascended the throne of Frl\hCe.
In 1775, Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys captured the British:·held fortress at Ticonderoga. N.Y.
.
;: In 18)8. American patriot Paul Revere died in Boston:
:' In 1865. Union for;ces captured Confederate President Jefferson Davis in
·:Irwinville, Ga. .
· In 1908, the first Mother's Day ·observance took place during churcll ser, ·:vices in Grafton, W,V., and Philadelphia. ·
; In J92'l, J. Edgar .Hoover was given the job of FBI director.
: In 1933. the Nazis staged massive public book burnings in Germany.
• In 1940. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigned, and Win:Ston ctum:hill formed a ·new government.
: In 1941, Adolf Hitler's deputy; Rudolf Hess, parachuted into Scotland on
:What he claimed was a peace mission. (Hess ended up serving a life sentence
)It s(llllldau prison until 1987, when he apparently committed suicide).
, In I%8. preliminary Vietnam peace talks began in Paris .
: In 1978. Britain's Princess Margaret and the Earl of ~nowdon announced
):hey were divorcing after 18 years of marriage.
.
• In 1981. Socialist Francois Mitterrand defeated incumbent Valery Giscard d'Estaing in lhe second round of France's presidential election.
: In 1994. the stale of Dlinois executed convicted serial killer John Wayne
Dacy for lhe murderS of 33 youna men and boys.
: Ten years ago: Soviel'official Valentin Falin was quoted by the West Gerj.an magazine "Der Spiepl'" A$ saying two more people had died from the
'Chernobyl nuclear disaster. bringin&amp; the reported death toll to four.
'

.~

..

eraace fot llki111
actual survey was
risb. It further
finished last Octo~veaiJ dill .ctisber, but it has
tomen wllo made
undergone months
on-site visits to
of internal review
banks were often
and what one
directed to areas of
source
called
tbe banks thai were
"retabulation"
not physically dis-.
within the agency.
tinct from the
. A press release
deposit-gathering
was
drafted
areas.
months ago under
The study, which
the name of fDIC
was conducted last
ly Jack A.,.,....,
Chairman Ricki
year by Market
Md lllchlllllin.t.tn
Helfer. It accentuTrends Inc., is the largest of its kind ated the positive, avoiding language
ever undertaken. It involved the that might alienate the powerful
deployment of "customers" who banking lobby.
contacted banks in person or by
"Our study shows that many
phone, adding up to 7,800 contacts banks are fully complying with the
at more than 1,000 FDIC-insured disclosure guidelines and informing
institutions. Four. different lead-in their customers of all the risks assnshopping scenarios were employed ciated with 'ihese investments," tbe
for the survey, including, "I have press release read. "However, the
recently inherited some money, and results also indicate that we must
I want to invest it. What do you have continue to make risk disclosure a
that pays a higber interest rate than a top priority for the industry."
CI&gt;?" COs are federally insured.
Some of H~lfer's advisers believe
Now the biggest question sur- she may be on the hot-seat unless
rounding the survey is the timing of she packages the swvey and the
its release, which has become con- press release with politi~al sensitivitroversial within. the FDlC. The ty, particularly since" she has

addressed industry concerns by
speakina out on the need to cut back
on bank examiner intrusion.
"We don't want demands for
stricter regulation," one fDIC official told us. "You don't want to
alienate tbe banks. Another concern
is that you may give ammunition to
critics of further deregulation .... The
dilemma for tbe organization at the
FDIC was what (tbe survey) says is
you really need to be more vigilant
... and your supervisory apparatus
has to be working right." '
Before the release of tbe study
was postponed earlier this year. a
"six-point action plan" was drafted
for Helfer to announce. It included
requiring bank personnel involved
in the sale of securities to take qual:
ifying examinations; improving tl!e
training of. bank examiners so
investments are sold in a "safe and
sound manner" : revising guidelines
to ensure customers are matched
with suitable investmentS ; and
broadening the publication of the
FDIC's toll-free consumer complaint hot line.
J..:k Anderaon MlchHI Binolein ere tor United Fotltura
Syndicate, Inc.

Accu~ forecall:'for
loiCM.

James'Johnny'Johnson

ITOledo I 58" I

limes E. "Johnny" John-. 66, Mason, W.Va., died Thursday, May 9,
1996 in Pleasatll Valley Hospital.
Born April 8, I930 in Muon, son of the late Carl E. and Orpha M. Keyser
John1011, be ~as an operator for Kaiser Aluminum Corp., a member of the
Hartford (W.Va.) Churth of Otrist in Christian Union, the Loyal Order of
the Moose LOOae 731, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and United Steelworters of
America Local SS68,
He was also preceded in death by a brodter, Christopher Johnson.
Sl!fViving are his wife, Darlene L. VanMeter Johnson; three dauahters,
Jonnie Belinda (James Keith) Meadows, and Julie L. (George) Johnson Jr.,
both of' Mason, and Chiisty ll. (Eddie Lee) Russell of Letart, W.Va.; a son,
James M. "~" (Jan M.) Johnson of Mason; six grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren; two sisters, Margaret Dunn of San Juan Capistrano.
Calif., and Jell" Morrison ofColumf&gt;us; a brother, Carl~ . Johnson of Albany;
allll·several nieces, nephews and cousins_
Services will be I p.m. 1\Jesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, M~on,
with the Rev. R.A. West and. the Rev. James B. Hughes officiating. Bwial
·will be in the Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Friends may·callat the funeral home
from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m, Monday.

W'. VA.

EMS units record 10 calls ·

·cold front will put halt

to summer-like weather.

: Buckeye Lake residents
: keeping eye~ on the sky
~

•

April's wholesale prices

,nudged _upward by 0.4%

. By George R. Plagenz ·
Everybody loves lists. But the nan\es on the latest list of the "best preachers in the English-speaking world" will have more people scratching their
heads and mumbling '"Who?" than at any ·•time since Richard Nixon
announced !)lat his vice-presidential running mate WO!!ld be Spiro Agnew.
Billy Graham is on the list, but the other 11 are from Unknownsville with
maybe two exceptions: Charles Swindall. popular radio evangelist, and
James Forbes, senior minister at Harry Emerson Fosdick's Riverside.Church
in New York. And these two are not exactly ~ousehold names . ,
.The remainder include two pastors emeritus, a former pastor (now U.S.
Senate chaplain), three seminary professors (one emeritus), a Jesuit priest, a ·
woman Episcopal rector and the dean of college chapel.
The first clue that something was wrong with the list: Household name
Robert Schuller did not make the cut.
There arc two possible explanations for the list. Either this is not the
American pulpit's finest hour or there was something wrong with the selec·

home in the neighborhood .bar. On Wednesday nights at8, bartenders woul.d
· tum the TV over the bar to the channel where Sheen could·be seen writing
on a blackboard explaining some point or other about the gospels. Bar
patrons,.beer in one hand, sat glued to their stools.
·The blackboard was Sheen's only prop .. except for an angel who was
invisible but whose presence was VCI')' much in evidence. It was the angCI
who erased the blackboard.
The blackboard was on swivel. A(ter Sbeen had filied up one side, he
w?uld swing the blackbo~d over. When he would swing it bac~ again a few
mtnutes later, tbe other stde would be wtped clean. Sheen always anributed
it to the work of the angel.
An unbc;liever might say
some stagehand did the erasing while the camera was
focused elsewhere. But most
of those in Sheen's audience
were believers by the time
lion process. ·
.
.
The list was the result of a project by a Baylor University (Waco, Texas) ·the program was over. AnY·
sociology professor who polled seminary professors and editors of learned way, who can be sure? .
.An even greater miracle ·
religious journals: This 'may account for why so many of. those chosen are
from the academic world.
was. how Sheen competed
The fact that few of these preachers who made the "best"list have a wide successfully in the tv mtfollowing or a name that is recognizable to most people may point to the · ings with Milton Serle, who
need for a Great Co111municator in religion who, while not speaking for \Vas on at the same hour.
every~nc in his audience, is "at home in everyone's living room." .
"Actually.'' said Berte, "the
Pope John Paul II wo~ld fill t~e bill nicely. As a dealer in good will (both bishop and I arc pretty much
the neighborhood variety and the global variety), he'would supply this com- alike. We both usc old matemodity the world cannot live without.
·
rial.''
"People love him," adds Richard John Neuhaus, "because he reminds
One of Sheen's favorite .
them of what it is they are supposed to believe.'' He is "a reference point in · stpries from his TV days
a world without .a compass."
. ··
. · concerned an elderly couple
There 1s one problem. The pope. is not available for prime-time TV one in Minneapolis who bought
night a week as Bishop Fulton Sheen was .. the Great Communicator of the an Admiral TV set to
1950s. ,
express their gratit~de to his
'YI's • oc1t &lt;Jritlk.c.on r/Mr b " - ".to JltCido o.
Gwss what I p.id for irr
Sheen was not only at ·home in "everyone's living room.'' He was at sponsor. Both were blind.

a

a

Berry's .World

The bishop's plight with the buzzsaw
, By now you have probably seen in the papers · in the British Isles,
about which the media haven't uttered a pee~. ·
or watched on television ·at least snatches of the ' nonhero Europe, and the
. The Ameri~an Civil Libenies Union is a great .
ICQII of liberalism, one of whOse principles is 10
great brouhaha kicked up recently by the Right Anglo-Saxon countries,
Reverend Fabian Bruskewitz, the Roman the membership is
support abortion . Nat HentofT is a distinguished
Catholic bishop of Lincoln, Neb.,Although I am drawn largely from
and impeccably liberal writer who was at one .
not myself a Roman Catholic, ·I found myself aniong white Pratestime on the ACLU's national board of directors. '
sympathizing with the bishop's plight as our lib- tants."
But Hentoff, as will happen occasionally to conera! media bound him (figumtively speaking) to a
Bishop 8ruskewitz
scientious people, found his view of abonion
stake, piled kindling around it, and grimly set it has no objection to any·
changing, and ultimately he concluded that it is
ablaze . There are lessons here for those of all one belonging to any of
morally impermissible. Hentoff being Hentoff, be
faiths, and none.
these organizations, or
started saying, so publicly.
·
·
Bishop Bruskewitz's offense was to publish a for that matter to all of
• And -- what do you know? :· Hentoff suddenlist (his critics promptly dubbed it "a blacklist") them, · but he doesn't
ly found himself ousted from the ACLU board at
of 12 organizations that he believes promote ideas believe a person can do
the next election.
.
that are squarely incompatible with the teachings this and simultaneously
Now. these two cases are not, it seems to me,
of the Roman Catholic Church. He believes that it be a good Catholic. So he has ordered that, in his logic~lly distinguisl\able. The ACLU's leadership
is momlly and intellectually wrong for members diocese, Catholics who persist in belpnging to 1s enlltled to feel however it cares to about abor- '
of tbe church to belong to such organizations.
such groups after May 15 will be "excommuni- lion, and to insist that membership on its board'be
1be organizations on the list inclUde Planned cated" - which is to say, they will not be allowed confined to people who share its view. This is,
Parenthood (which is loudly and powerfully pro- to participate in the Catholic sacniments, includ- aft7r. all, a, free country, and "pto-choice"
abonion), the Hemlock Society (which advocates ing Holy Communion.
acuvt~ts don t have. t~ tolerate pro-life s~kesmen
the right of a person to commit suicide), Call to
Now, this is a serious step, and one may legit- 10 tbe1r pnvate orgamzat1ons (even organizations .
Action (which favors the ordination of women as imately wonder whether the bishop was wise to like the ACLl)', dedicated to free speech) unles~
priests•.something Pope John Paul U has official- bring down on his head the uproar that promptly they w•nt to.
.
·
ly proclaimed out of the question) and the followed. For of course the media 'treated the
But .what's sauce for the ACLU goose, its..;.s
FJCCmasons. 1lte latter is a worldwide organiza- ~tory as a b~tal offense against wha~ ~y implic- to me, IS-- or ought to be --sauce for the Catholic
uon seveml centuries old which has boasted a ttly suggest ts the democracy that exists, or ought gander. So how about it, ladies ani! gentlemen of
large number of distinguished members (George ' to exist, in tlie church. The stories ,were all about . the media? Not even one little raspberry for the
Washington, for one), but which is no stranger to "splitting the chtlrch apart," "witch hunts," etc.
ACLU?
.
controversy. The Encyclopaedia Britannica nOies.
Bul I am indebted to · the Washington-based
WIIIIIJIII A. llu"* II 1 Dllllnaulo.-, Fellolir ot
that "Generally, Freemasonry in 4tin countries Media Research Center (full discloSure: !sit on its , 1M
1n1t11u1a for 1M ll1udy of ....._
has attracted freethinkers lind anticlericals, while board) for pointing out a most interesting analogy lhlp, Md Pllllllcal ptlllooaphy,

c•-

. ~

Br DAVE SKIDIIORI!

Aaaocl8tlcl Prese wrn.r
l
WASHINGTON- ~ident Ointon is offering qualified praise for a ~w
Republican budget cleared by the House and Senate budget comminees, but
he says it'sstill not &amp;ood enouJh,
: ,
"There are a lot things in there I don't agree with." Clinton said. "Bu( it
is amovement in t~ right direction." .
;
Brushing aside Democratic amendments. the House Budget COmmin.e
adopted the GOP plan on a 23-I 8 party·line vote early today. Its SeMie co.ln.
terpart adopted a similar plan, 13-11, Thutsday evening.
•
:
1be full House and Senate were expected to consider the plans next ~k.
The fiscal 1997 plan would wring $700 billion in savings &amp;om the budget through 2002; including $300 billion from Medicare, Medicaid, welflire
and the enrned income tax credit for low-wage workers.
:
And it wo~ld offer at least $122 billion for a $500-per-child tax credit (or
parents of.cbtldren youoger than 18.
•
Extending expired or expiring taxes and closing loopholes could provi&amp;
as much as $50 billion for additional breaks including estale and capitaiJalnS
tax cuts and improved individual retirement accounts.
•
Thecongressional b\ldget does not need Ointon's signature and is a nonbinding.guide for later legislation that will make tax and spending changes.
But it is a crucial political document, since it allows Republicans to banner
their vision of government.
Both the savings and tax reduction ~ smaller than the 1996 GOP balanced-budget vetoed by Clinton.in December. But tbe president said the new
plan still did not spend enough on environmental protection, education and
Medicare.
·
He praised Republicans for dropping tbeir push to abolish the Education
Department but complained of their continued efforts to temiinate his national service program and end direct federal college loans. The House, but not
the Senate. would eliminate the departments of Commerce and Energy. ·
"What we ought to do is to resume our negotiations and reach an agreement," be said. ·
B~t rhetoric from lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans, was anything but conciliatory.
.
,
.Senate Budget Committee ChainnaR Pete Domenici, R-Ariz., said Clinton's Medicare proposal did not do enough to extend the solvency of
Medicare.
.
•
.,
"Our budget throws Medicare a life preserver while the president's budget throws Medicare overboard," he said. .
.
The House Budget Committee did its work under a prop: a giant $188,000
check from "Babl Jane Doe" of "Anytown USA," signed with a footpriilt.
·.The figttre is what Republicans say a baby's lifetime share of interest on the
national debt will be.
, .
"We're proud of this document," House Budget Committee Chairman
John Kasich;· R-Ohio, said of his panel's plan "It's filled with honest num'
bers, honest assumptions and sound policies."
·
Democrats. though. derided the GOP plan. HOUSI\ Minority Leader Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo., said it was "the same old thing ... deep.- severe, damag·
ing cuts" put into "a new glitzy package." Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, 0-S.D., called it ·~extreme, deceptive and harmful." And.Sen, James
Exon of Nebraska, the senior Democrat on the Senate Budget Comnuttee,
said it was "a cruel hOM sprung on· the American people."
·
·The GOP would save $158 billion over six years from Medicare, $72 bil·
lion fro~ Medicaid, and about $70 billion from welfare and the earned income
tax credit.
•
· ·
Republicans would keep defense spending at about'$265' billion a yoar
durmg the period. while Clinton would let military funds dip slightly, then
grow again later. ·
· ·
.
The GOP would provide $271 billion in 1997 and a bit less each year ~r­
wards for annually approved domestic programs, about $IS billion to ·~O
billion a year less than Clinton wants.
·
.."
. One of the amendments rejtJred in the House panel would have commtt,ted
Congress to enacting a 90-cent increase in the minimum wage over two yel\TS·

II ~35 a.m,, &lt;;uster Street, Mary
Units ·of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services recorded I 0 Haggerty, HMC.
' RACINE
. calls for assistance Thursday; Units
2:27
p.m.,
fjre department and
responding included:
squad, structure lire on New Portland
POMEROY
!Ill ·-r:lllld """"' Grop/llciNol
II :33 a.m .. Dr. Withc:rell's offices, Road, no injurres;
5:34 p.m., Elm Street. Annette
Mildred Will, Pleasant Vallry HospiJones,
treated at the scene;
' tal;
·
8:24
p.m., fire department and
5:46 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation, Margarie Huff. Veterans squad, assisted on body recovery at
Richards &amp; Sons river dock, Apple
Memorial
jiospital.
By The Auoclated PraM
station was 94 degrees in IJ36 while
Grove.
MIDDLEPORT
More showers and thunderstorms tile record low was 25 in I~66. SunRUTLAND
11:18 a.m., Leading Creek Road, ·
are in tonight's forecast as a cold set tonight will be at 8:35 p.m. and
2:53
a.m.,
Noble Summit Road,
Alfl'!!d Wheeler, Holzer Medical Cenfront clashes with the warm and sunrise Saturday at 6:20 a.m.
Helen Ree!l, HMC.
ter;
Weather forecast:
moist air' over Ohio the National
Weather Service said.' .
Tonight...Showers. and thunder, But relief is in sight for the week- storms. Some of the thundersto~s
"end.
could be ~eve~c and have heavy ram.
will take place Saturday, 9 a.m. to 2
With the ground saturated and Lows mamly 10 the 50s..
Horse/ta~k auction tonight·
streams full, the likelihood of heavy
Saturday... Shower.s likely ... Much
'lbe Meigs COunty 4-H Horse p.m. Help is needed.
rain tonight will create a threat of cooler and breezy. Htghs tn the 50s. Committee will hold a Horse and
more flOilding, forecaster_S said.
Extended rorecast:
Tack Auction .•Friday at the Meigs Smo111asbord plaiUied ,
A smorgasbord dinner will be bel d.
Fair and cooler weather was .
S.unday...FaJr. Lows 35 to 45 .. Couniy Fairgrounds, beginning at
May
18 at the Long Bottom Comexpected through the weekend and Highs 55 to 60 ..
6:30p.m. in the li-H Youth Livestock .
munity Building, with serving to
into Tuesday. Highs will be mostly in
Monday ... FaJr. Lows 30 to 35. · Show Arena.
begin at 5 p.m. Donation of $5 for
the 50s.
.
Highs in the 50s.
adults, and $2.50 for children. Vari· The record-high temperature for
. Tuesday... Fair. Lows 3~ to 35. Equine semiur Saturday
'this date at the Columbus weather H1ghs 55 to 60 north and m the 60s
An equine management and nutri· ety of entrees, desserts and bevernges
south .
tion seminar will be held Saturday, 7 included.
•
p.m., at the Racine American Legion
Hall Post 602. The meeting is open . Barbeque set
A chicken/rib barbeque will be
to the public and will include topics
held
ai the Tuppers Plains Fire
related to horse health and·nutirition.
Department Sunday with serving to
. .
.
.
.
begin at II a.m. Cost is $4.50. The
By The Aaaoclated Prell
electrical service were cut off as ~ Cleanup set
A cleanup session for the Rock . fire department is sponsoring the bar. Residents of c:,~unities along precaution.
Springs Uniled Methodist Church becue.
Buckeye Lake in ce I Ohio already
Thunderstorms rolled through the
have water lapping against their area Thursday night and more rain
homes aitd ·are braced (or more rain. was in the forecast today.
High water had reached about 125
"We can't take any more of this.
homes at the lake 30 miles east of If it rains more I don't know what
Columbus on Thursday, lire officials we 're going to do," said Joyce Lane,
said.
·
a resident Qf tbe ,yillage of Buckeye
WASHINGTON (AP)- Whole- tion ."
Residents were not evacuated, Lake.
The Clinton administration was
sale prices rose 0.4 percent in April,
said a Millersport firefighter wh9 , The worst flooding occurred in a a smaller-than-expected increase that also happy with' the wholesale price
would not give his name. But gas and low-lying atea near a canal that runs triggered a big rally in financial report.
several hundred yards from the lake's markets.
"Inflation is being held in check,"
emetgency ·spillway to the Licking
Despite the fact that. energy costs said Labor Secretary Robert Reich.
River. High water in the river blocked jumped by the biggest amount this "There are no "signs of accelerating
(Continued from Page 1)
the discharge from the canal and the year, pushed higher by surging gaso- inflation."
canal backed up.
kidnapping and burglary.
.
Investors seemed to agree. In earline prices, investors focused on the
"I've never seen it like this. We good news. The underlying inflation ly trading today, the Dow Jones
"One of those intru~rs was Brad
got up in the morning and we were rate, excluding food and energy, rose industrial average was up 44 points
Robinson," he said.
·
The evidence will show that Brad shocked. We did get our cars out," 'a· much more mod~st 0.1 percent .. as stock prices received a !Joost from .·
Robinson trespassed in the home, that Ll!ne said.
In another report today, the Agn- a big rally in the bond market. Heavy
A neighbor, David Lulenberger, culture Department reported that a demand helped to push the yield on
be restrained and held the victims
from their liberty. that be committed wasn't' so lucky. "I have two cars record drought in thePiains and tem- ' l!:mg-term Treasury ~onds' down to
·
: perature swings in' tbe Midwest had 6.93 percent from 7.01 percent late
a theft and threatened the women, underwater, " he said.
Lentes said.
sharply depressed the winter whe.at Thursd~y.
"You are going to hear a bunch of
harvest.
,
lies," Westfall, in his statement, told
The government forecast an
the jury. "Brad Robinson was not at
upected harvest of 1.36 billion
liS Butternut Ave. (the crime
Veterans Memorial
bushels of winter wheat, which· ·
Am Ele Power .......................40'1.
Thursday
admissions - none. .
scene)." he said.
•
would
be
down
12
percent
from
last
Akzo ............................. ,•.•:•••. 57~
Witness credibility
Thursday discharges - Ruth Sellyear and the lowest level since 1978.
Ashland 011 ........................... 41'/o
"It was a tenible crime, a tragedy,"
ATaT ,....................................61'/o
"The April (inflation ) report ers; Portland.
Westfall agreed, "but there is no evi- Bank One ......................... :......35
Holzer Medical Center
clearly indicates that despite recent
Bob
Ewana
............................
15'!.
dence tying Brad Robinson to the
Dlschai'Jies May 9 - Mrs. John
increases in food and energy prices,
Borg-Warner .........................38\1
Paulsen
and son, Harold Harrison,
inflation
is
benign,"
said
Marilyn
crime."
.,
Champion lnd ......................... 18
He attac:ked the future testimony
Helen
Nibert,
Linda · Roach, Ray
Schaja,
an
economist
at
Donaldson,
Charming Shop...............,. ....6.,_
of the tw'o juvenile co-defendants. · City Holding ..................,......... 24
Lufkin &amp; Jenrelle in New York City. Sorrell, Mrs. Brian Reymond and .
"These kids are admitted liars, admit~ Fedel'l\1 Mogul .......................18'1.
"The recent surge in energy prices is son, Loretta Rogers.
ted criminals, ·admitted thieves," Gannett ................................. &amp;5~
Births- Mr, and Mrs. William
not filtering through to general inflaGoodyear TltR ......................51'.1
Cain, daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Westfalltaid. ·
K-mert ..........~ ...........................~.
Robiriilln l!(as seated between
Mrs . l'hilip Stewart, ·son, West
Landi End.............................1B'I.
Westfall and attorney lennifer SchafColumbia,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Rhett
UmHed Inc ............................20'.1
fer, making her initial trial appear- PeopiH Bancorp...................23
Milhoan,
son,
Pomeroy.
FRI., SAT., SUN.
ance as Westfall's ·assistant. Lentes , 6hlo Valley Bank ....................40
(Published
with pennission)
WALTER IIATTHAU,
and Tenaglia wef!: joined at the One Valley..............~ ..............31 '1.
JACK LEMMON IN
Rockwell ........~ .....................56'.1
state's table by investigator John PerGRUMPIER
OLD
Robbin• a Myere .:..:...............38
ry of the Ohio Bureau of (;:riminal
. ' MEN'PG-13 .
Royai Dutch/Shelt .............. 146'1.
Investigation and Identification. · · Shoney's lnc .........................12'4
AND
..
.. . "
St. Bank ..............................66'4
ROBIN WIWAMS IN
Weilc!Y lnt'l.......................~ ...1n
.JUI4ANI.JI PO
The
Sentinel
Wortillhgton Ind. ............... ;..21'.1

.Meigs announcements

.••

Clinton offers faint
praise for.GOP's
budget proposal

Salvation Army

Stocks

Hospital news

-... ~

Daily.

-·-·-

(tJSPS 213-He)

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotas provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Publiohed ....., aflm!oon, Mondoy """"•h
-~· 111 c ..n S1 .. r.maoy, Ohlo. b~ Jhe
Ohla Yalloy Publllllna ~'/G'""''" Co ..
.......... Ohlo.4l769, PI!. 992·1!56. Second
.... (&gt;OifaF poi4 ............ Olllo,

fat

AND WHAT
CAN IT DO FOR ME???
·•
.. A.FREE presentation
by Eureka Networks
Tuesday, May 21st, 6:30p.m.
· MeJgs County Library

' · ; The AIIOCiatod Prett, and the Ohio .
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I'OIITMASTBao Send oddlaa .....ectl'"" 10
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S2 . ..... -.~·-"'"'''''"'""'!' .. '!0000000tt011.7:l

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-

The goal of the Meigs County Humane:
Society is to raise enough money in the .
next five ye~us to build an animal shelter. ~
The Thrift Shop in Middleport will play a·.
large·part In helping to achieve this goal. ·
The Thrift Shop will be closed for a
short time from May 15th through May .
. 23rd. We are sorry if this causes any . ·
Inconvenience to our loyal customers. -.
While we reorganize the shop please bear
with us while are clo,.ed. On the 24th of·
May we will be open for 'business and
accepting donations.
'·
A cash register and a desk are badly
needed for the Thrift Shop. Other Items
Qeeded are animal food of any kind, ··
children's toys, small appliances, dishes
and pots and pans, any kitchen
Items. All ··
'
Items .are welcome, or cash. donations. To
make a donatior:~: call the Thrift Shop .at
992-6064 'or 992-6959 and .ask for Jean. ;
All money raised In the Thrift Shop will .
go Into ~he building fund for the animal
shelter with the expansion of operating
costs.
'
A special meeting for members will be ·
h•ld ·at 220 East Main St., Pomeroy on th.e :
14th of May at ~:30.

.

.

�Friday, May 10, 1998 •

.'

Spo

The Daily Sentinel
-

In AL action,

'

'

In the NBA playoffs,

FrfdiiJ,IIay 10. , .

-e ,.stern get, 13-0 ·
win over Crooksville
By SCOT r WOLFE
Is ·~stpDIIdllll

By 'The Alsoc-..cs Prest
Perhaps the worn thing lhal can

BHen'1 IOftblll 1eM1 lifted its
record lo I S-1 ~I in elaiminJ a
13-0 Divi~io. m sectional' c:t.npiVICIOry ewer the Croobville
Thunday Bight at l!utan
hool.
Pun Douthin's Eaa!cs
-'vance to the'dislrict 101aumcn1 on
~y.May 16at5p.maty.'al'el'ly Hiah School, wha'e tbcy will meet
Symmes Valley, a 3-2 winner over
South Webster 111ursday.
Both teams battled lhrough a
: scoreless fint innins, but l!utan
scnped up two runs in the ICCOIIII.
filly Aeiker walked Mindy SampSC111 singled, lllld Amanda ·Mil~
1
bullied to a vance t!le runners.
· : !Croobville muffed the play and two
. · !ru1111 came home on the play, while
· ;MiJIIOIII went to second where she

..

'

••

·.

....

....
....

wu llranded.

"I never talk about the officiating;
In a I'm n01 going te&gt;starl now," Malone
game of slreaks, the San Antonio said. "It 's just the way it happened .
Spurs struck: last
We didn 't do what we needed down
The Spun; used a late 15-3 run to the strelcp."
defeat the Utah Jazz 88-77 Thursday
Reserve Bryon Russell had 16
night and even their Western Con- points for Utah. Keefe, another sub,
ferepce playoff series 1-1. The best- made all five of his shots from the
of-seven series moves lo Utah for field and scored II .
Game 3 o~ Saturday.
"Our bench did a great job.
" We didn't play great, but we did Those who starled should have
play awfully well. at time~. " said played like our bench," said Utah
Spurs coach Bob Hill. "These two · guard John Slockton, who had 13
teanis are very evenly matched."
assists but scored only four poinls.
Utah stole homecourt advantage
Chuck Pen;on, who had root
from the Spurs by winning the open- canal surgery Thursday morning,
er 95-75 on Tuesday. But in Game 2 made three three-pointers and finthe Jazz posted their lowest playofT ished with 16 points'for the Spurs.
potnl total ever.
"I'd rather have a root canallhan
'Ole Spurs opened the game with play the Jazz any day," he said.
an 11-0 burst and held an 18-point ·
Utah coach Jerry Sloan was eject·
advantage early in lhe second quar- ed wilh 1:50 remaining after arguing
ter. Then the game became a roller- with the refs. Sloan said he thought
coaster ride, with scoring runs by Malone and Will Perdue were about
bolh teams.
to get into an altercation.
" We starled the game like we
" Next time I'll wait until somewere going to score 150 points and body gets his head knocked off."
then in the second quarter we had a Sloan said. " II was jusi a mistake on ·
different personality, " Hill said.
my part lo go out there."
. _San Antonip led 34-19 following
Sloan said the Spurs seemed to
a JUmper by Sean Elliott with 7:33 get all lhe loose balls, and the Jazz
left in the first half. The Jan then couldn 't get to the free-throw line.
Went on a 19-2 run , capped by Adam
"They just came at us• really
Keefe's three-pointer at the buzzer to hard," he said.
take a 38-36 lead at intermission.
The Spurs had a balanced scoring
Trailing 52-51 in the third quar- allack, with Elliott getting 12 and
ter, the Spurs went on 12·2 run to Charles Smith and Vinny Del Negro
take a 63-511ead going inro the final I 0 apiece. Avery Johnson had eight
periOd. The Jazz countered with a points and I0 assists.
15-4 run early iit the fourth to move
Notes: Sari Anlonio's DoC Rivers
wilhin 73-7.I, but the Spurs answered again didn•'i play because of lower
with the 15-3 spun that decided the back spasms. II was the fourth playoutcome.
off game he has missed . ... David
"We looked more like a team . Benoi) of the Jazz also dido 'I play
The last game we played more like because of a left knee contusion.
individuals," said David Robinson, ·Chris Morris siarted in his place . ...
who led the Spurs with 24 points and The nine points by the Jazz in the
12 rebounds.
first quarter was a record low for
San Antonio had a huge advan- poin\S in a quarter by a Spurs playtage althe foul line, making 21-of- off opponent ... Johnson said he
29 compared with 4-of-5 for Utah. might need some family help to perThe Spurs also outrebounded the form better in Game 3. "I'm gping
Jazz, 46-38.
to call home and see If my Mom can
Karl Malone led the Jazz with 24 send me some gumbo because when
points and eighl rebounds, but did- I eat gumbo I usually play belter,"
. n't shOot a single free lhrow.
said the Louisiana nalive.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) -

before • Mitldy Sampsoa si•&amp;led
home MIOiher run.
, Evan• reiiChed on a ftelder's
choice that forced While out 11
home, then Amanda Milhoan
sJ.miJIId a IWOolliR single ud Marlie Holttcr ripped a run-scoring siJtgle. Kim Mayle added the icinJ to
the cake with anodter 1wo-run double.
Leadilill 10-0, Eastern added an
inSUI'IIIICC run in the four1h when
White lriple and scored, when the
play at third went awry.
Eas1em llllded two more runs in
the fifth.
EYUIS ~)aimed the win, civing up
_ six hits, two willca, and fanning four.
Wood suffered the loss. with relief
from Campbell. lbey combined for
four strikouts and eight walb.
Doull\iu said, ~ girls played a
really good defensive game. Rebecca (EvUIS) pitched another ·good
.game. The shutout waS Rebecca'
ninlfl of the year. •
Doutllill added, "We really hit the
ball welf MCI especially hit lhe bill
when we .-led lhe big hit l'tn really proud of the girls and how hard
they've played."

___

In Division II sectional softballIICiion,

New.Lexington gets
·&amp;-1 win o.v er Meigs
By DAVE HARRiS
Senllnel Con'sspoi'ldant

game. -Pudgell sacrificed her to sec-

ond. McNully then sipgled to score

New Lexington scored single
.runs in the firsl, third and four1h
. innings and blew the pme Opc:n will\
diree sixth ianing mas to de(cat
Meigs 6-1 is DivisiOn U sCctioMt
sOftball .ction Thursday evening at
Meip High School.
i ., The l'uthers wi)IJIQW advance IO
1sectional final action agalnu Ri ve'r
1
'Valley, a 4.3 winner over Belpre

Cole.

Meigs tied thC game in the second
inning. Emily Fackler reached on
c:a~ehers interference, she - moved
to second on il sacrifice liy Ashley
Roach -.1 scored on a single by Kelly Gilkey.
The Panthui IQOk the lead ror
good in the third inniog when Allen
walked mvanced to second on a
Tbursday. .
· passed bill and scored os a single by
.The Panthers .drew firsl blood ~ New Leltingt~~~~ iDCtc.dthe ·,
when Cole walk'ed 10 lead off the
(See ~EIGs.:.
·5&gt; - ~

Also .in the NHL playoffs,

Panthers edge
Flyers 4-3 in OT·

r71

SQUARES TO BUNT -

The

Mtilga Marauders' Emily Fackler .

squaras to bunt -a t a New LexIngton pitch during Thursday's
Division II 88Cllonal softball conlHt at Meigs High School, where
New Lexington clalmecla 6-1 victOry. (Sanllnal photo by Dave
Harris)

· · Make Your Best Deal . , :~
At Taylor Chrysler Plymouth Dodge
.
Ohio.

In Division Ill sectional softball play,

Southern hamm·e rs Miller 11-1
Southern's SQftball team broke a
scoteless deadlock in 'the second
inning and we111 on 10 defeat Miller
I H in the Southeasl Division Ill
softball sectional· championship a1
Sodihem Thursday night
•
The· win advanCes the Tornadoes
( 15-4) to lhe. district tournament,
whele they will play either North.
Adams or Lucas ville \Ialley on
Thursda* May 16 al Waverly. '

Both clubs went down io order l2-3 .in the firsl innirtg. The Falcons
(8-7) threniened in the second as
Duffy and Halley Berry each singled, but were Jert stranded on a
Grossman ground out In the Southem second,Sammi Sisson singled
and advanced 10 third, bul was left
slranded.
Miller threatened again in the
. 11\ird and scored a single run as Steph.

Merckle reached on an error. Ward
singled, Dutiel sacrificed, Cook,singled 1111d Browning reached on a
fielder's choice to load lhe' bases.
Southern got out of the jam with
minimal damage.
Later in the third inning, Bea
Lisle walked, Tassie Cummins singled, Cynthia Caldwell walked and
Amber Thomas reached on an error
(See SOUTHERN on Page S)

1966 NISSAN SENTRA GXE
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wlndowo loloclW,-. . . - . -""I"''PI'IOIIO
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Scoreboard
il'ufnhl (Sanderson.0-1 ). IO:OS p.m.
Kansus Chy (Belcher .l'- 1} a1 S~aule

Baseball

CHurtowlo 1-J), IO:OS p.m.

AL standings
Ita

Sundoy's

!ootrmlll.w.a

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New YooL .........20 - 12
. BahiiiKJf'li! ............... l7 tr.
ToroMO .................. I5 18
llo&lt;IM.................... II 21
D•jooiL-................ 11 25

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KanwCity ,".......... JS 20

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KaMal 01)' ;u Sanlc, 4:3~ p.m.
ClEVEl...AND lll Caliroraia.. 8 :0~ p.m.

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Se:a1Hc .................... J8
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Philadolpllia ........ :.. l7

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"""""" ................. 18 17 .514

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'Thundoy's scoRs

Piftsbtl~h .............. 16
CINCI N"TI ... .... 14
SI. Louia ................ l.5

Milwawl« 17, Bo5KIIt 2
Ddroil 4. New Ylltk 2

T.wonro S. Tcua2· .
BakilftOI'C 6. Cbk:~o '*
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Urah 71; senes tied

·1M.OO

Saturdar'• games·
Sao Anlon io al Uuah, 3:30 p.m.

(NBC)

SiHiday~ pmes

Pili.._,...

(faaom&gt;l·ll. 7:35p.m. .
lid.... (Smolb 6-11.
(Motlllolllltd :1-21. 7:35p.m.
.
Saa Dieao (lcram .. 2-1) a1
CINCINNATI(......... ().4~ H5 p.m.
Ooicqo &lt;CaMillo 1-JI 11 New Yon

.

Lot Aaaelea (CandioUi I ·)) at Sl.
Lolil(h I ;:e2--2).1:05p.a

Saet . ., ........ .
Clrical;o (Fottcr 3·2) It New Yerl
1:40 P."'

By JOHN PACENTI
. OJJ two .goals by Rob. Niedennayer
MIAMI (AP)- Florida's Dave - his first of the playoffs. Renberg
Lowry redirecled the puck and the ..and Rod. Brind'Amour tied the game
Plll)thers • playoff hopes with one lit- 2:2 wilh goals in a second period in
tle nudge of.lhe stick.
which the Flyers outshot Florida 24.
Lowry tipped Ed Jovanovski 's 1L
wrist shot into the nel to give Flori:
. The Panthers took the lead back
da a 4-3 overtime win Thursday 3-2 wilh 5.5 seconds left in lhe sec'
night against Philadelphia in their ond when Stu Barnes tipped in a shot
Easlern Conference semifinaL The · by defensemen Paul Laus.
Flyers claimed the winning goal
Philadelphia then spent , a good
should not have been allowed part of the lhird period killing penalbecause the net had been moved.
. tics. but Renberg scored his ~econd
The victory tied the best-of-sev- goal of the nigh I off his own rebound
en series 2-2. Game .5 will be Sun- with I :07 len in regulation.
day in Philadelphia.
.
With Florida's past trouble in
· Afler losing two straight to lhe overtime, everything pointed to a
Flyers, the 3-year-old Panthers wres- Flyers triumph .
tled back some momentum wilh the
. "We were prelly quiet in (the
dramatic home win. .
locker room) during the overtime
"We couldn't go back IO'Philly intennission," Vanbiesbrouck said.
trailing 3-1;' Lowry said. " 'We " With the series on the line, we all
couldn 'I leave anything on the ice. look a brealh and tried lo shake ofT
We gol a lucky bounce and we won the last goal. I know it was tough for
the game."
me."
It was Florida's firsl overtime vicLowry 's winning goal came as
tory in more than two years. The last Philadelphia defenseman Kerry
ovenime vi~tory for Florida came on Huffman and Scoll Mellanby tusslc;d
Dec. 2. 1993 in a 2·1 win over Buf- and knocked the net off its mooring.
falo.
Flyers goaltender -~on . Hexlall said
"II was huge," said Panlhers the_goal should have been disalcoach Doug MacLean. "Now we arc lowed.
going to Philadelphia wilh a chance
" We got robbed a bit with the
and lhat;s all you ask for."
net." said He•tall , who had 28
Rob Niedermayer had two goals saves. "Thai's the way it goes."
and John Vanbiesbroudt had a scaA video review of the goal wa.•
son. high 43 saves for Florida . called, but referee Rob Shick salt
Philadelphia was led by Mikael after the game all he wanled to see
Renberg, who scored hi" first and was wbether lhe goal was scored off
second goals of the Series.
a skate.
In the end,lhough, the Flyers felt
cheated after outshooling Aorida 46- . Meigs loses...
32.
- '
(Continued from Page 4)
"We're a be11er1eam," said coach 1
Terry Murray. "We had the territor- lead lo 3- I in the fourth inning,on a
double b¥ Cole a Meigs error and a
ial advantage most of the night"
Center Eric Lindros echoed, ground out.
. New Lexington closed oul the
"Overall, we deserved beller."
scoring
i~ lhe sixlh inning on a walk
The Flyen; came back after FloriPutman:
back-to-back double to
to
da took a 2-0 lead in the first period .
Cole and Pudgeu and a single off the
bat of Allen.
La~lies'
Meigs threatened in \he game gelling a runner to second in each of the
lasl four innings, bul failed to come
up with the big hit
There will be an organization~)
Allen was the winning pitthcr tirmeeting · pf the Monday Evenin~ ing a 1wo hiller, striking out seven
Ladies League at the Meigs C.oumy -and walking lwo. Cole had a double
Golf Course on Monday, May 13 al ' and single to lead -the winners. .
5 p.m. A short business !"eeling will
Fackler pitcher the fin;t four
be held first, followed by a nine hole innings and was the losing pitcher
scramble. ·
for Meigs, Cynthia Cotterill pilched
League play will officially begin the final three innings. The only hits
on Monday, Mily 20. The fomlat is for Meigs was a second inning sinmatch play with two-player teams. gle off lhe bat of Gilkey aRd a sixth
Teams who "!ant to participale in the inning single by Cotterill .
league ot lilyone who wltnts to play IoninUdlla
on a substitute basis may sign up at New Lexinglon.... ,IOJ-103-0=6-6-4 .
the club house orcall992-3710, 992- Meigs.:.................0 I0-000-0= I· 2-4
.5485 or 9411-2530 by Wednesday.
WP-AIIen '
.
May J·S.
LP-Fackler

•

a,._, Ill ......... 12:JOp,,..'(NBC)

StAnk ou Houstoa. ,; p.m. (NBC)
Chit.:aJo al• New York, S:lO p.m.

(NBC)

San Aflfonio at Utab, t :JO p.m.

{TNT)

Hoc ke y
NUL playoffs

'lllllntlliJ'•-

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;

OPPOSE SHOT - San Antonio lrontmen Chuck Pet'liOn (far left)
Charles Sn11th (54) and Will Pardua (41) go up to oppose the llhot
taken by Utah's Antoine Carr (55) In the aacond halt of Thursday
night's NBA Western Conference semifinal game In San Antonio,
Texas, whet:e the Spurs' as-n win lied the best-of-HVen series at
1-1. (AP)

In the NHL playoffs,

Penguins post 4-1
win over Rangers
stand up."
By KEN RAPPOPORT
NEW YORK (AP) - Backup
· Thursday night, Wregget found
goallender Ken Wregget is siepping himself in various posilions while
~p for Pillsburgh in the Stanley Cup
stopping the Rangers' shots - twice
playoffs. moving the Penguins into on his back .
a commanding position against the
His best save of the night came
New York Rangers.
with the Penguins holding a 2- I lead
Wreggel, who replaced injured in the last m.inute or the second periNo. 1 goalie Tom Barrasso in Game od. Niklas Sundstrom followed up
4 of the first-round series against his own rebound by sweeping a
Washingtod, continued to sparkle · backhander in from the slot. Wregget
Thursday night as Pillsburgh beat was on the ice, bol somehow extendNew Yo•k 4-1 and moved within one ed his arms high enough to catch the
viclory of the Eastern Conference puck.
·finals.
·
·
"Something like that doesn'l hap"He can either be hot or cold. bu1 pen very often," Wregget said .
I know he 's hot right now, " Rangers "Sometime~ (l)te puck) hits you ,
coach Colin Camphell said.
sometimes it doesn 't I don ' I think
Wreggel m~de 40 saves, many of that (kind of save) is something you
them spectacular, as the Penguins put ·want to count on all the time.".
the Rangers on lhe verge of elimiWregge1. used just about every
nation. Pittsburgh took a 3-1 lead in part of his body to slop the Rangers •
the best-of-7 series and can wrap it shots. including his head on one
up with a victory in Game 5 in Pins- third-period shot by Mark Messier.
. burgh on Saturday.
"I dido 'I know what to do (on
Winner of this series will face tbe Messier's) shol," Wregget said.
winner of lhe Philadelphia-Florida "(My head) was the only thing I had
·
series for the conference champi- left"
onship. The Flyers and Panthers are
Wregget pu110gether two terrific
tied 2-2.
games in New York. Tuesday night,
''I'm just •ryi ng to play solid,"
he made 37 saves in the Penguins ' 3said Wrcgget, a I 3-year veteran 2 victory.
with his third team . "I'm not trying
"He's making some big saves,"
to put on a show. I'm not trying 10 Rangers goaltender Mike Richter
lie on my back - I'd just rather said of Wregget, "and I'm just try ing to keep up wilh him."

Southern wins ..._...:.;;&lt;C;;;;on::.:t:::in=ue:.:;.d.;,;fro.;,;m:.:.:.;Pa;::ge:..4.:.::)_ __
to score a run. Jonna Manuel walked,
Keri Caldwell sacrificed to force
home another run. followed by runscoring singles lo Jennifer Lawrence
and Sammi Sisson. Jen·ny Cummins
hit a sacrifice and Southern led 5-1 .
All was quiet · in the fourth for
both clulis, but Southet;n broke il
open in the fifth when Lawrence
walked, Sisson singled. Cummins
reached on an error, Lisle walked,
Tassi Cummins reached on a fieler's
choice and Cynthia Caldwell sacrificed . Amber Thomas walked to
force home the last run. SHS led 90 as a resuiL
Southern added two more in the
sixlh, propelling lbem to lhe 11 -1
win.
I
Lawrence 'again haDdcuffed her

opponent with a four-hit, four walk
perfonnance. Berry suffered the Joss.
. Southern coach Howie Caldwell
said,'"This is where il gets fun . The
girls have had a very gond year and
their hard work is starting lo pay
off."
·
Southern hillers were Sammi Sisson (2-2). Tassi Cummins (2-4) and
Lawrence had a single.
Southern plays a&lt; Miller Monday
in a regular season game and then
h9sts Federal Hocking Tuesday.
Southern then continues tournament
play with a trip to the District next
Thursday.
lnnjgg

By The Assoclllttld Prftl
Sean Berry had a happy homecorning in Montreal.
Playing at Olympic Stadium for
the first time since being lraded to
Houston in the offseason, Berry
homered and drove in four runs as
the Astros beat the Expos 11 -4
Thursday night
The loss snapped Mon1real 's 10game home winning slreak .
"ll's run 10 win a1 all costs, but
it~s kind 51f weird beating your close
friends ," said Berry, who spent three
full seasons wilh the Expos.
Berry hit a two-run homer in the
sixth inning and had RBI singles in
the first and eighlh to help stop Monlreal's overall winning slreak at five.
Jeff Bagwell went 3-for-4 with
three RBis and ·three runs scored,
and Derek Bell went4·for-6 with an
RBI si ngle for Houston, which had
18 hits. Orlando Miller was 3-for-5
with an RBI, and Derrick May doubled in lwo runs in the eighlh.
"It 's nice that I'm off to a good
' stan, but that's not whal.makes me
happy," said Bagwell, who is balling
.376 wilh 12 homeis and 34 RBls. " I
want to get wins. I think we're better than .a .500 ballclub."
DimyJ Kile (4-2) won his fourth
straight decision. allowing two runs
on seven hits in seven innings. He
slruck out nine and walked lhree,
leading the Astros to their seventh
straight win at Olympic Sladium.
" It just seems like right now I'm
&lt;hrowing my curveball for strikes,"
Kile said. "If I can do thai it makes
it tough. Tltat's the whole key."
Montreal starler Kirk Rueter (22), struggling with a swollen knee,
lasted only 1 lJ3 innings, his shortest outing in seven starts. He was
charged wilh four runs on seven hits. •
'T m worried about him," Expos
manager Felipe Alou said. "He's ·
limping badly right now."
Elsewhere in the National
League, St Louis ou.tsluggcd San
Francisco 16-8, Florida beat Colorado 6-2, arid San Diego downed
Pius burgh 7- L
Cardinals 16, Giants 8
At St. Louis, Willie McGee hit a
grand slam in an 11-run eighth

inning as the Cardinals ralbed 10 Ilea '
San FlliiiCisco. St. Louis, Which won
for jusl the fourth time in 16 pmea;.
scored its most IWII sillee a I~ rout; :
of Florida on Au1. S, 1993. The 11run eighth was one short of the te.m ;
record for runs in an innin1, set in
1926 againsl Philadelphia. Jeff P•- ,
re11 (2-1) pitched f 2f3 innings for- ;
the win. Barry Bonds hit his ~ .
leading 15th homer for the Oilnts,
while Luis Alicea drove in four Nil$,
for lbe Cardinals.
,
.
!\tarlim 6, Rodda 2
AI Miami, rookie Kurt Miller · .
pitched eighl strong innings in his .,·
first stan since 1994, and Aorida
extended its winning slreak 10 four · .
games. Miller ( 1-0) was recallecl ,
Sunday from Triple-A Charlotte to .
replace struggling lefl-hander Chris , Hammond in the Marlins rotation. -.
He allowed five' hits, walked four '
and hit two bailers en route 10 his , second major-league victory. DevoB .. .
White went 4-for-5, scored twice and .·
drove in a run for Aorida.
, -.
Padres 7, Pirates I
At Pillsburgh. Tony Gwynn and
Wally Joyner drove in · two runs -.
apiece jn support of Andy Ashby. . ·
Ashby (4-2), who has won four of
his last five starls against Pitts- .
burgh, lost his previous two deci- .- .
sions when the Padres scored jusl •
one run. He allowed one run, eight .. ·
hits and no walks in seven innings. •.
The P&lt;)dres, II -S on the road this
season, took advantage of three . ' .
walks by Paul Wagner (4-3) to score ~ . .
three runs in the first. Gwynn's . ·.
grounder scored a run.
. ..

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1995 PONTIAC

Of &amp;Alli'OUS, OIL

golf
league to hold .
meeting Monday

ChiCAJO al New York. I p.m. (NBC)

boHJII(I'Icqi. 'l- 1~ l~p.lll.
. Hou11011 (8roe1il J.}) II MonlrtRf

,

_

Allomta uf O..lando, 1 p.m. (l'NTJ

Colondo (lUi• :1-JJ "florida· &lt;R.W·
1·31. 7:0Sp.m.
.
San. Frw11:i~eo tbi1er 2·4) • Pius:-

~ 2-:1).

........~-'-'L.....

Srauk :u Housron. 9::10 p.m. (TNTJ

TOIII&amp;Iil's.. . -

(looal-tl7:40 ,....

~.

----

.Aula mille, lllr, ft. tit, tn111e. AUII

WIII!Op•:t..,'t1llful~,._

·Thursday's score
San Anlonio

Thunday'IICGRI

.

•

.

-

1,6 CIIIYSIB aiiG lX

Tonlpt's games

. S1.l.oui1 16. Saft Franr..i~~:o 8
Florido6.Co-2
S..Dqo7.-l
Huust.on ll. Montreaf4

.

1995 NISSAN 4J4 XE·V611NG CAl

NBA playoffs
1·1

Wnu.rnonw..
~~10 .............. 21
n .611
San Fr.u,.:ik:o ........ 16 17 .-tiJ

Co

.. '·----

- · *• AIIIFII- _, ~- "'""

Lm All.gek!s :a S1. Lottis, 2: I.S p.m.
San Dic1o al CINCINN,.,TI. 2 : 1~

.61M

.m

Flooida .................. .15 21 .417
New York.. ............ IJ 19 ':406

,

IISRP ................... 115,117.• ~
Olecount ................. ·1,tl2.•

C'hicaJU:III New Yort. 1:40p.m.

MonmaL .............. D 12 .1157

6~

1996 DODGE AVINGER (0UPf

........

Allanla a1 Philldelphia. I::45 p.m.
Colnr.Kio at Florida. 1:3~ p.m.
San ft:IDI:iJm at Pittsbur&amp;h, I :J:'i p.ni.
~Aioo ar Moo1rc:al. I :3~ p.m.

ra.

I.

1996 NISSAN 200 SX SE

A I • . - wt'-. loeb. 11ft. aullo, o 11 .... -

Sundar'• pmes

-Div-

·: r-

S

.

Sa• Fr:ancist.:o (V:inl..:lndingh:un . l·~ )
"'PhtsburJ.h IHope 1·21. 1:05 p.m.
S011n bic:f.o t H;~millon b· l 1 al
CINCINNATI (Smiley 1·3). 7 :0~ p.m. '
Huullon (Dubd. 1-2) a.t MunU!!al
(P. M:~t~inez -4-1 ). 7:35p.m..

NL standings

WCIIInn Dl'il6en

TeAa~ .·.................... 22: . 1•2

Florilla(A. Lei•~ ~2), 1:05 p.m.

Detroit 011 Texas. 3:&amp;.1 p.m.

1\.

:'i' ~

ea-•

I :O~p.m.

Bahin..e a1 Milwauka!, 2:(r.j!p.m.
New ~orll. at Chicaao. 2 : ~ p.m.

Gl

,4S~

c.tolnl DI.W...
CLEYELAND ....... 21 1·1 .656
Clii,....................... IS 15 ,j4~ •
MillfletOia ........~·-·· 16

8m1on ~ ToroniQ.

l.o$ 1\n~lc:t (VIiJdes 2·2) a1 St. Loui.'

(Alan lkn&lt;o :1-21. 2: ll p.m.
, .
A1lanto CAnry :1-l) 'at Phila~lphia
(Mimbl CJ..OJ. 7 :~ p.m.
Colorado (M . Thomp~on 2·21 :11

Astros blast Expos;
Padres beat Pirates ••·

By KELLEY SHANNON

Rebecca EvallS stymied the
Ceramic offense, pu!ting heat on the
kiln with a blazinc fastball and pin
point conuol. Meanwhile, the Eastem bals neally awakened in the third
!inning;
·
' Candace Bunling and Kim Mayle
each walked. then Nicole Nelson r•ntutmll
reached on a fielder's choice to 101111 Crooksville.......... 000.~6-4
the bases. Tracy White was hit by a Eastem .. .............028-121h= 13-7-1
pitch to force home a I'll". l'lltsy .
WP-Evans .
_._ __home a run
Aeike( walked to force
LP -· Wood

I

In NL action,

Spurs beat Jazz
88-77 to .t ie series

~4

]II Dlvlalon lll•cflonlll &amp;otlt811 .:llcM,

Orioles·top Chi Sox
6-4; BreWers win
Elsewhere in the AL, it was Milwaukee 17. Boston 2; Detroit 4, New
happen to a struqling team is to Yorlc 2; Toronto 5. Texas 2; and
finally get a big inning, then see il Kansas City 8, California 2.
washed out by,rain.
Royals 8, AJIIdsl
. ·That very nearly happened to the
Kansas City CQIIIpleted a fourBaltimore Orioles on Thursday night game sweep a1 California behind
when they scored five runs in the rookie Sal Fasano's first majorfirst inning - as many as they had league homer.
in lbe previous three games corn· The Royals, who have won five
bihed.
•tra!ght overall, also got an insurance
·The Orioles then had to sweat out homer by Michael Tucker in the
a 71-minute rain delay before taking eighth inning to back lbe pitching of
a 6-0 lead and holding lin for a~ Mark Gubicza (3-4), who pitched 8
victory overtheO!icagoWhiteSox. 2f3 innings, giving up two runs on
II was just 'the fourth victory in 12 seven hits, with 110 walks.
games for Baltimore.
· ... . .
Angels ~tartcrJason G_rimsley (2' "We've not been scoring a lol, 2) was the victim of unearned runs
then we score a lot, and it would in the second and third innings, and
haove been Iough to postpOne. B.ut·il Fasano made il 5-0 in the fifth.
stopped and we won," said Roberto
TJaers 4, Yankees 2
Alomar, whose single droVe in the
Cecil Fielder homered twice and
firSt run.
Travis Fryman hit a tworrun shot off
The s~tch of defeats had Orioles · Jimmy Key, helping De1roit halt a
manager Dave Johnson thinking like six-game losing sireak with a victoa pessimist
ry at New York.
''I figured the way things have
The Tiger.&lt;, whose 11-25 record is
been ,going, we'd make it 5-0 or 6-0 the worst in the majors, won for just
and then have it washed out," John- the third time in 21 games. Detroil,
son said. "Maybe this is what we last in the AL in both · hilling and
needed to tum ~ around - to win pitching, became the first team to hit
in spite of everything:"
three homers in a game off Key ( 1Cal Ri_pken, in an IHor-16 slump, 4) since 1993.
highlighted the five-run first inning
The Yankees, who rallied to win
against Wilson Alvarez (2-3) with a the first three games pf lhe series,
bloop two-run single. Alvarez lasted had their winning s1reak slOpped a1
jus1 two-thirds of an inning, his four games.
shortcsl outing ever as a starler.
· Greg Gohr (2-4), who e~_tered the
·AIOnlar had an RBI single, Chris game with a 7.02 ERA and hadn't
Hailes' hi I a sacrifice fly and Billy pitched pasl the seventh in any of his
Ripken followed with an RBI dou- previous five starts, allowed two runs
ble to make it 5-0.
in eight-plus innings l!ftd sca11ered II
Baltimore ac_e Mike Mussina (5- hits, 10 of them singles.
2) wenl five innings - I 1/3 hefixe
Blue Jays S, Rancers Z
!he rain and 3 213 after. He allowed
John Olerud's two-run double in
five hits and three runs.
the sixth inning broke up a scoreless
. "I actually threw be11er after 1he game and snapped Ken Hill's string
delay than bef(){e, but I didn'tlast as of 19 shulout innings as Toronto haltlong," Mussina said. "I hit awall in ed Texas' five-game winning s~ak.
the fourth."
Paul Quantrill (1 -4) lumed in his
After the rain delay in the bottom first solid slarl of lhe season and
· of the second, the Orioles made it 6- earned his firsl victOry for the Blue
0 in the third on·Billy Riplcen's sac· Jays, holding the Rangers to five hits
rifice fly.
and one run in 5 I13 innings.
:Mussina gave up singles 10 Frank Quantrill, an offseason trade -:quiThOmas and Harold Baines in the sition from the Philadelphia Phillies,
foarth and walked Robin Ventura had an 8.68 ERA in his first six
and Ron Karkovice to force in 'arun. slarts.
Ray Durham then hit a 'twQ-run sinThe Rangers' seven-game win. glel cutting the Orioles'lead to 6-3. ning streak against Toronto ended
Chicago had runners on first And and Tex.l.• lost at home for the first
third with no outs in the Seventh time this season to anAL Easl team
·again~ Roger McDowell. but man- . ._after an 11 -0starl. · .
aged jlist one run.
· Hilt, who pilched a one-hiller ·at
Randy _Myers pitched the nililh Delroit in his p-evious stalt, had his
for ;1\is. seventh save of the season streak of consi!cutive bailers retired
arid 2Soth of his Career.
'
_balled al31 by Olerud's two-oul single in the second.

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

All UNci Cat8 l Trucb ..... Go.
Taxes and title fee not Included.

All payments'subject 1o credit approval.

TI~E

MOTOU, lac.

trs WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

�•

.friday, ..., 10, 1996

4

Friday, May 10, 1H6

Plige a • The o.ily Sentinel

V-andWardRd.
, _, J.,...Mill&lt;r
s.nday Sdlool • III".JO a.1n.

-.. , w-

Worship -9:30 a. m.
Sunday Scllool • 10:30 o.m.
UMYF Suntloy 6:30p.m.

EptSCOf.ldl

~- orCirrlsl
33226 Cbildnn'• Home Rd.
Sunday School - I I a.m.
w...hip - !Oa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedneidoy St:JVices - 7 p.m.

o.-:l'
: tcnm
326 E.
St., Pomeroy

tin
Ro:&lt;tor: Rev. D. A. duP1111tiet
Holy Eucharist ond
Sunday Sdlool 10:30 o.m.
Coff"" hour followirla

'l'llppon PleiM SL Po.a
Pallor: Sharon HoiiiRWI
Sunday Scllool - 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 Lm.
Tueidoy Services - 7:30 p.m.

SyrtrCWMOtordlolllrtN.Pastor: Bill Stirea
.
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 Lm.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneidoy SeJViceS • 7 p.m.

Hoi mess

C..tnl Chultr
Allluy '(Sy....,.,
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School • 9,45 a.m.
.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday S.,ices • 7:30 p.m.

.Pll.IIO) Q u d oi'IM Nuarnt
P1111«: Rev. Thomas MtCiuna
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.

fift WIU Boptlat Cllor&lt;~

Ash Sln:CI, Middleport .
Pastor: l..c5 Hayman

Sunday Service - 7:30p.m.

Suriday St:hool - 10 a.m.
Wedneidoy St:JVi&lt;e-7:30 p:m.
R•tlutl Flnl·llopllsl CbURb
Sunday St:hool - 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
POIIItl'lly Flnt Bapllsl
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Ji1nl S..tllt.. Bapllsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sunday St:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wo..tlip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·- 7:00p.m. .
Flnt llopdlt Cllorc~
Pas1or: Mart Morrow
6th and P1lmer St., Middlepon
Sunday St:hool - 9:15a.m.
Wonh~l0: 15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedn
y Set"'Jiet:- 7:00p.m.
Fint llopllll
Pastor: Rev. Lany Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
WOBhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SCrvic:cs -7:00p.m.
SU.er Roa IIIIJIII&gt;I
P~or:

Bill Linle.
Sunday St:hool - IOa.m.
Worship- lla.'!'·· 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy St:IVICCS- 7:30p.m.
ML U•ioll Baplisl
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evcnin1- 6:JO p.m.
.Wedneidoy St:IVi&lt;es · 6:30p.m.

•

Betiii&lt;-Bapllsl
Racinc, OH
PastOr : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm. Sunday
Bible Study - 7:00p.m. Wednesday

, Old JlotHI Fl'ft WID llopdst Cburcb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday St:IVica - 7:30

.,

Ktao ClluM or Cllrill
Worship - 9:30 a. m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and Jrd Sunday
Burwallow Rid&amp;&lt; ~....~ or Cllrilll
Paslor: Jack ColegroYe
Sunday School -9::10 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday St:JVices - 6:30p.m.
ZIH CHrcb of Cllrist
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt143)
Pastor: Roger WatsOn
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Rutland Cburc~ of Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Brodfenl Cbortb or CUist
Comer of St. Rt. 124 A Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith ~r
Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m.• 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
llidwry Hlll5 Cburcb or Cbrisl
EvangeliSI Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- J0 a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Ubtrty ClariStiaa Cbun:h

Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening· 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m.

.Rrtd&amp;YUI&lt; Chart~ or Cllrisl
. Paslor: Philip Sturm
Su'!'lay School: 9:30a.m.

161 Molbtrry Ave., Pamtroy, 992-S898
, _, Rev. Walter E. Heinz
SoL Con. 4:4S-S' ISp.m.; M,.._ S:30 p.ll'l.
Sun. Con. -8:4S-9: IS a.m.,
Sun. M... • 9:30 l .m.
Dail&lt;y M.., • 8:30a.m.

Saltm Center
Pastor: Ron fierce
Sunday St:hool • 9'15 a.m.
Worship-10:15 a.m.

· Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spalding ·
WoBhip - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Lutlt&lt;ro~

Our So""'"r
Cbun:h
and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnlrim pas1ors: George C. Weinck
Sunday St:hool- 10:00 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

C111111tl
Pastor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday St:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -. 10:4S a.m. (:zntt A 4th Sun)
Mor.lrr&amp;SUr
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School .· 9:45 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30p.m.

S•tt•

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday St:hool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:4S a.m. (1st It lrd Sun)

Coot.IU. United M&lt;1~ndlll Parlsll
Putor: Helen Kline
CooiYIUt Cllorcb
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday St:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tueidoy St:JVi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

United Methodist
Groom Ualted Mrtlledlst
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st It 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd A 4th Sun)
Wednesday Servic;:e • 7:30_p.m.

Syrocut First ChuM or God
Apple and Second SIS.
Paslor: Rev. David Ru55ell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
~or&lt;b

of God or Pnlpbtcy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rl. 160
Pastor: PJ ..Chapman
Sunday St:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesda~ Services · 7 p.m.
Cbesltr Churtb or God
S. R. 248 It Riebel Road, Clrester ·
Pilstor: Rev. William D. Hinds ·, ;
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship ~ 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Family Training Hour

ML Ollvt Ualttd Mtlbodlll
Ofll24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph SRin:s
Sunday School - 9:30 a:m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Thunday Services - 1 p.m.

Bttlt&lt;l Cbu"'~
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday St:hool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10a.m;
Wedneidoy St:JViceJI • 10 a.m.

Mtlp Cooprralivt Parish
NortHISI Cluster
Alft'td
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday St:hool -9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Grand Street
Sunday St:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 P:m.

Chuler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
WorShip . 9 a.m.
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Thursday Scrvi«s - 7 p.m.

J-

Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Ton:b Cborc~
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday St:hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10;30 a.m.

Nazarene
-

flnt ~-k ofllrt Naa..,..
Pwor: Scotl Rose
Sunday St:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wo..tlip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneidoy St:JVi&lt;es • 7 p.m.

•

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992-3785 Pomeroy

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992-5141
' 264 South 2nd

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Pomeroy, OH

s.MRS

•'

rt.

892-2975

l

\

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AGENT

· Syroc- First UDited Prnbyttriu
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m .
H•rrtooa.W.l'mbyterloa Cbortb
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday St:hool ·• 9:4S a.ln.
Mkldl FIPnlbJteriaa
Sunday 'School -IJ a.m.
· Wo..tlip- 10 a.m.

OffRI, 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday St:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 Lm., 7,30 p.m.

804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

Snndt-DayMoHIJII
Mulberry Htt. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m. .

Morse Cuprl Cburcb
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

MAIN

POMEROY;OHIO

.992-2259

~
·i

Ii

let you know we love
you. And thanks for
everything.
.
Love, Larry &amp; Ruth ~

.L

Gqoptl Cburcb
Long Bouom
Sunday St:hool • 9;30 a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
'

ML Olin c-aalty Cll•rrb
Pastor: Lawrence Busll
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednedjy St:JVice • 7 p.m.

CLARINDA ·
THEISS

I.

·I i

Love, George,
&amp; Tommy

~~ ·

In Wesl Virginia, the study said,
166 people in Hunlington-Ashland;
127 in Weirton-Sieuhenv.ille; 126 in ·
Charleston; 104 in Wheeling; 60 in
Parkersburg· Marietta. Ohio; and 3 r
in the Cumberland. Md., area that
includes Keyser, may die each year
because of particulate pollution.
The West Virginia Citizens Action
Group issued a statement Thursday
that was critical of the U.S. Environmental ProJection Agency.

r7I:;;-;

"F111111Hing Kentucky Fried Ch.~lcerl"l
228 W. Main St., l"omeroy
I

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY ,
Fill Doctora1

We
Preacriptions

9'92-2955
SNOUFFER

FIRE l SAFETY
SAt ES l aaMcE
11112-7071
172 Nor1h.5-.1 Ave.
'

MldclttpD(., Oh

1

Pomeroy

.

.. -

Happy
Mothers ·
Day
THELMA].
POULSON
Love Randa.U,
Peg, Brandon

·i

r&amp;pp~
J Mother's

Day

Day

GLORIA OILER

MARIE

MARY

HUNTER
I
Love ]oni and I · Lo~e
BOYD

.
.
!~..~:J L

Always,

KathyJ ~

~~~

Happy
Mother's Day
BETTY
PUGH
We Love You,
Kate, Little
Donny

Mother's
. Day .

I.

"AUN:t" CONNIE

CASEY(Na.nny)

Love, Rhon, Kasi,
Carla, Teresa,
Ralph, .Candace &amp;
Lyndsey

.,

Mother's

I

i. ~

RUTH
CANTER
Love Charles ~.
&amp; Jennie ~

Mother's
Day .
Love Kevin
&amp; Lorena~

.

r8:;;0

~~~
. ~~-.»* ~~~~.~~----

.

\

Crow's Family Restaurant

Mother's
Day

~

l!tlto U•lted llntUft t. Cllrlll
2 1/2 mil" north of R-.ille ·
on State Route 124 ·
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday St:hool - II a.m.
Sunday Wonh1p • 10:00 o.m. A 7:00p.m.
Wedneidoy SeJViceJI - 7:30p,m.
Wedneidoy Youlh St:IVice -7:30p.m.

Uolttd Foitb C~orcb
Rt 7 On Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.

Pomeroy

Carpenter .

Mother's
Day

ML Hr.- Uolttd Bnlllno
ID Cllrtol Cborc•
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Services-7:30p.m.

Wedneaday 7:30p.m.

Mulberry AV..

=~

Un1ted Brethr en

Fait~

992·2121

trations and had a dealh rate of 56 per
I00,000 people .
• Huntinglon-Ashland, Ky., was
31 in concentrations with a death rate
of 53 per I00,000.
• Charleslon ranked 44th in concentrations and had 47 ' deaths per
100,000.
The study concluded th. t 64,000
people may die each year as a re sult
of !he particulate air pollution.

..

~:~;;-~,

~~.

r&amp;;;;~

::~~~:?:to!

Seventh -Day Adventist

Dr&lt;nlllt c - a l l , ~•reb
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

• "Dignity and Strvicil.41woys •
Esllblishetl 1913

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Coh.mbus, Oh.

==

Happy
Mothers Day
THELMA

Presbyterian

tlud Commually C~orcb

EWING FUNERAL HOME

i -

~Fl:l'-.:

Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Evenins- 6 p.m.
Wednesday St:JVices · 7:00 p.m.

SyroruseMisalotr
1411 Bridgeman St,, Syracuse
. Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • '1 p.m:

992·2104

ToMyMother
CAROL IILLENE
•
BEHA
·
You are loved
and apprecii..ted! .
.
Love, St~ve

~u.~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~·~~~.u.~~~uK

Third Ave.
Paslor: Rev. Ouk Baker

· 115 E. Memorilll Or. Pomeroy

992-5130 Pomeroy

Mother's

Mlddltport Ptak&lt;oatal

Mtmorl'l H~plt..

214 E. Main

. EVELYN
FREEMAN
Love Clarence,
Ron, Rick &amp; lim
.
Freeman

St. Rl. 124, Raeioe
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School ·, 10 a.m.
Evtning • 7 ·p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Vet•r•na

INSURANCE
SERVICES

emilie studies on paniculate pollution, which includes soot, ·smoke,
dust and other tiny pollution particles.
The s1udy found:
• Weirton-Sieubenvilte , Ohio,
ranks 15th in the nation in tenus of
the highest concentralions of particulate pollution, but seventh in tenns
of death rate from the pollulion. It
listed 78 dea1hs per 100,000 population.
• Whee.ling ranks 23rd in cgncen-

Happy

DaY-

Day

..._. _,.

Follb Talrtrude Cburrb
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
SundaySchool-JO,ooa.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thu~y service . 7 p.m.

992•5432

~

Mother's

Pentecostal

Mlddltpart Commoraltr Chrcb
51S Pearl St., Mi~leport
Pas1or: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening. 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy St:JVia: • 7:30p.m.

.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Four West Virginia cities are among
the worst in the nation for concentrations of pollution that niay cause
people 10 die prematurely, a study by
a national environmental group said.
Weirton, Wheeling, Huntington
·and Charleston were cited in the
study by lhe NaiUral Resources
Defense Council.
The 154-page repon, released
Wednesday, reviews a series of sci-

~Happy

Happy

Now Uf&lt; Vklory Cttoltr
3773 Georges Cn:ek Road, Oallipolis. OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Scrvif:CS • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. It Youth 7 p.m.

l!odllmt HouH of l'nlytr
(at Butlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday wOIShip- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service-6:30p.m.

u..~o-~

or

I

CU!IO. Tabtnutelt ChoM
Oiflon, W.Va.
Sunday St:hool· 10 a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.
Thursday SeiVice • 7 p.m.

Harrllotlrillt C o - y Cburcb
Pastor: lbcron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. ,
Wednciday • 7 p.m.

-··

The original Blue Cross. wilh
reserves !he company said will be
boosted by $77 million to $300 mil·
lion, will issue a reinsurance policy
!hal backs up BhieCo's policyholders.
An additional policyholder "guarantee" contractually binds BlueCo to
maintain the same righls for policyholders that lhey had as pan
a
mutual company, a firm owned by
policyholders inslead of shareholders.

'

Cb•rrb of Jnu Clrrlsl,
Apootolk foltb
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Putor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday·7:00 p.m.
Ftiday-7:00p.m.

St:rvicu: Wedneidoy, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday St:hool - I 0 a.m.
Worship- 11 ·a.m.

Lar.

Pollution study cites four ·Mountain.State cities

/

RejoldDJ IJrt Cllordl
SOON . 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 10 ~.m,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Tbe BtU.vrn' Ftllowildp Mlalllry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson

Pastor: Brian Hukness
Sunday St:hool - I 0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

merser

"1lw:.n i&amp; no way they can Maly2i
the fairness of dtis tranuction on !he
behllf of Blue Cross." said Joti!P
Collen, a Cleveland anorney whO
represenls two policyholdeR in i
lawsuit filed to block the pun:"-.:
Former Sen. Howard Metzen•
baum, who supports the lawsuii,
called the deal "an abdication of
responsibilily.".
.
Columbia/HCA will have an
option 10 buy the remaining IS percent of Blue Cross business fO.. a dol-

Sdvtrnlllt Word of Flldt
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.

Flllb F•ll " - ' ~u"'h
·Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Retd
Sunday St:hool • 9,30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedntidoy • 7 p.m.
t-'ri~y • fello~.ship service 7 p.m.

Eastl.dut

Rlnda1J said he couldn't e11iaJe top executives. said they merely are
when the department would rule, but being compensated for what they 're
the compuies have said they expect worth.
the DltrJCI' to be completed by yeu"The fact is, in the marketplace,
end. He said regulators will be look- he (Burry) is like a Michlel Jordan on
lng at contpetition and the effect of the subject of how you intesrate
the
on policyholden.
insurance inlo heallh care," SilverThe deal would pay a few Blue man said.
Cross leaders not to compete against
A message seeking furthef comthe new venlure. John Burry Jr., the ment from Silverman was left early
chairman and chief ueeulive officer today on a 1elephone answering syswould be paid $3 million for ~ tem at his Cleveland office.
decade-long no-compete contract;
Blue Cross announced March 29
Kent Clapp, president and chief oper- that, eKcept for programs covering
ating officer, and Jerome Rogers, the federal employees and national coninsurer's general counsel, would also ' tracls, it will transfe r all of its busihave no-compete deals.
qess to a new subsidiary thai Colum. ~urry also will be paid up to $7 bia will buy. The new subsidiary
mdhon for two consulting agree- would provide health insurance 10 all
D)ents. In addition, Burry, who had the transferred policyholders.
said he would retire this year, can
Some critics of the deal say payearn up to $1 million for each new ments to top eKeculives make it
insurance deal he brings to Columbia. impossible.for them to work in the
Burry was paid $1 .6 miltion last year. best inlerest of the 1.5 million
William Silvennan, spokesman Ohioans who depend on Blue Cross
for Blue Cross/Blue Shield and for its for their health coverage.

C.l&gt;tlry Blbl&lt; Cbrcb
Pomeroy Pike, Co." Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9,30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 1::JO p.m.
Wedneidoy Service - 7:30 p.m.

Hobsoo Cbrlsllu Ftllowdlp C~urch
Rev. Oyde Henderson
Sunday fW:J'Vice, 10:00 4.m., 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service , 7:30p.m.

..

XENIA.:.... Sheridan JackSon, former superintendent of !he Ohio Veterans Children's Home, has been found innocent of child endangering .
A Xenia Municipal Coun judge acquitttd Jackson of the charge
Thursday.
The charge was filed after Jackson's then-5-year-old daughter left
her house and was missing for a shon time. Police said 1he child was
found b~ a mail carrier a half-mile from the residence.
After lhe city had finished presenting ils case Jo the jury, defense
attorney Ron Keller Murry asked Acting Judge Mike Murry io throw
outlhe charge because !he prosecution had failed to meet its buraen
of proof.
Muny granted the defense moti on.
"The coun felt there was .not evidence of recklessness, which the
city has to show/' said Muny.
' •
.

Foitb Ftllo•*IP Cnsack roo ~rlsl
Pastor: Re" . Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 7 p'.m.

Cbrislirlo Ftllowsblp Ctaltr
SaleJD St., Rutland
Pastor: Raben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship,- ll:lS a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday St:JVia: - 7 p.m.

llotltuJ
Pastor: Kenneth Bater
Sunday St:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

St. Paul Lullrtroa Church
·eon19r Sycamore &amp; Sec;:ond St. Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday St:hool - 9:45 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Church of God

F•lnltw Bible Cban:~
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Puaor: Rankin Roach
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship . 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday St:rvie&lt; - 7'00 p.m.

Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday KIViCC , 1 p:m.

(I

·,

Conlvillt Rood
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sun4Ay Schqol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvic:e · '7 p.m.

Fohll Cbptl ()ptto Blbl&lt; Cbun:b
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Putor Mtchael Pangio

Sotornlllo
Sunday Scltool - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m:

St. J"'"' Lullaeru Churcb

Walnu~

Sunday School- 11 a.m·.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Rutlaad CboM of God
Pa!l:or: Gregory L Sean.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

SMml- C . - Cllorrb

Rutllaod
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Scnoices -7 p.m.

Lutheran

Hanford. W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David Mf:Manis

ML Moritlll Bapllsl
Fourth A Main St., Middleport
Pastoi: Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr.
,Sunday Sdlool- \1:30 a.m.
• Wonhip • 10:4S..m.

Catholic

Rutlaacl Commoailr Cburtb
Paslor: Rev. Roy McCarty

Christian Union

Fornt R•• Bapllsl
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday Sdlool - 10 a.m.
Worship - It a.m.

Rollad,... ww Baplill
Solem St.
Pas&amp;or: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneidoy St:JViccs - 7 p.m.

Rutk Sprtatp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday St:hool - 9: IS a.m.
Wonhir- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sundiy- 6 p.m.

Tht Cburcll of Jes•5

H•i1ford Cllan:h of Cllrislla
CllrisllaaU•IH

All~llopdA

Laui'tl Clllf Fret Metllndisl Cburcb
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.

Cbrisl ofl.allu-Doy Solats
St. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooi10:20-J I a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10: 15 a.m.
Homematins meeting. lsi Thurs.- 7 p.m.

.
WWe'a Cbaptl Wttltyaa

Other Churches

,_...1

Pastor: Robt:n E. Robinson
Sunday St:hool - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday- 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hnnlock G""'' CbiD'&lt;k
Pas1or: Gene Zopp
Sunday school . 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

.Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Ro.ger Will£ord
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhil" 7 p.m.

MlraernUI&lt;

Ptul Cltapol
Sunday St:hool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Former official cleared of charge

r.-m Gooptt Mlsalotr

Pastor: GlendOn Stroud
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Pastor: Charla NeYille
Sunday St:hool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

H,..U Rua HaUa.., C~or&lt;h
Paslor: Robert Manley
Sunday St:hool- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.• 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

C.rl&lt;loa latlmlo.-.lloul ~oM
Kin,..bury Road
Put0..: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wors.h1p Service 10:30 a.m.
Worship St:rvice-htand 3rd Sundar, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evening Sei'\IICC

New Hnt11 Clnardt or tbe Naureae

Pastor; VemagayC Sullivan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- I 0:30 a.m.

I ~

Silver RKJ,e
Putor: Roben 8ubef
Sunday St:hool • 9 o.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Portland Flnl Cbordl or tbt Nua..at
Pastor: Mart Matson
Worship · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

u..•b (Mitldl&lt;ponl'

Rtorpralud Cburtb of JtstrS Cbrisl
of Lallrr Day S.t.ls
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday St:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

l..upl'lllt C~ Chart~
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.

MI. Moria~ Cllorrcb of God
RacinC
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday St:hool · 9:4S a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
W~ncsday Services - 7 p.m.

FotHIRua
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Woi'Ship- 9a.m.
Thu!Sday Services· 6'30 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Victory Bapllsllodopollllul
52S N. 2nd 51. Middleport

Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
11tursday St:tviccs -7:30p.m.

Koso ofSHroa Holla... Cbrch
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland

Soel~ Botlltl N.,. Tt...

Rotlutl Cbordl orllrt N.....,..
Pastor: Samuel Basye
SuJ1day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday St:JViccs . 7 p.m.

JilolwGods
Pastor: Keith Radet
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening . 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip- IOa.m., ? p.m.
Wednesday St:JViceJI- 7 p.m.

C.lnry Pll&amp;rim Cbaptl
Harritonville Road
Pa~or: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday St:hool 9:30a.m.
WOilihip • II a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'1cc - 7:30p.m.

Wealty.. Blblt Hollatll Cburcb
1S Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Strvif:e -7:30p.m.

&amp;..dHry Cbon:b of Cbrisl
Pas1or: Rick Sny&lt;kr
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

CIMotar Cllorc~ of llrt N•ur..t
Pastor; Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Ea..~

PIDe Grove Blbl&lt; Hon..ss Cburcb
1/2 mile off Rt. 32S
P~ : Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday St:JVice - 7:30p.m.

Tupptn Plllia Cbrcb of Cbrisl
Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship ~ 9:45a.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedneldoy St:IViccs • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kellh Rader
Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

HUIIide Bopllsl Cllurck
51. RL 143 just off Rt. 7
PISior: Rev. James R. Af:rte, Sr.
Sundar School - 10 a.m.
.
Wonh1p • II a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wedneidoy St:JViccs -7 p.m. ·

F•itb lloplill Cllorcb
Railroad St., Muon
Sunday St:hool • 10 a.m.
Wo..tiiJ&gt; • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday St:JVices . 1 p.m.

•.

Du..uteH-~

3!OS7 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
PISU&gt;f: R... Rick Maloyed
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wotShip • I0:3S a.m. It 7 p.m.
Children'• f:hurch • 10:3.5 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednnday prayer servic:e • 7 p.m.

Fltll Goatoet ......
33043 Hiland Rood. Pomeroy
r -: RoyH101ter
Sunday St:hool • 10 a.m.
Evenina 7,30 p.m.
Tuc:idoy A Thursday· 7:30p.m.

Paator. Mad&lt; A. JluPia
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:43 ur., 7 p.m.
Wedneidoy Services - 7 p.m.

Pulor: Rev. Cblrks Mia

Sth and ~41 in
Pastoi: AI Hamon
Youih Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo]lhi(&gt;' 8:JS, !0:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

S10 Grant St., Middl&lt;port
S~nda y school - 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 1 p.m.

Cllordl olllrt N~

Raadc••

DAYTON - A state 11'00pe1' who was II~ last fall after beirig
accused of Ieavins 1 note for a former girlfriend asking her "What
would you do .. . ifl raped you?" has been reinstaled by an arbitrator.
Trooper David J. Katafias, 42, who last served atlbe Dayton post
of the .state Highway Patrol, has been working a1the patrol's l.anc;ISier
post s1n&lt;:e Monday, patrol spokesman Mike Perona said Thursday.
"This was not a case of se~ual harassment," wrote. arbitrator Marvin Feldman in his April 30 decision. Katafras "described his activity as a joke, and in his mind, (it) could have been."
Feldman recommended that Katafias be assigned to a station distant from Vandalia, where lbe woman works as a coun clerk.
He was reinstated with no loss of seniority, but w~ docked 60days'
wages.
•
Katafias and the clerk dated for a time in the fall of 1994. Monlhs
after the relationship ended, the woman said she received.the note from
Katafias.
•
Snell, who said Katafias had been bothering her in other ways, noli·
fied police. Katafias was fired Oct 31. bu1 appealed.
In February, Katafias pie~ guilty to disorderly conduct He was
given a $2SO fine, a suspend 30-day sentence and placed on two
years' probation.
.

Sunday Scllool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip .. 10:30 a.m., 1 p.M.
W - y Service · 7 p.m.

ae•·•••• ,.

Worollip • 10,30 Lm.

MW 'I pw 1QIU'Ck of Ortsl

Hepo Baplill Cllordl (Soelkn)

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.. 6:JO p.m.
Wedneidoy St:IVicet • 7 p.m.

Sunda~: 9:)() o.m.

•

a-diet..... Clll'tll A.Jtll •• [

COLUMBUS (AP) - Top eKeeutives of Blue CroM &amp; Blue Shield
of Ohio stand' to lllllke mill IoRI of
dollars in t proposed DJerFI' with
Columbia/HCA Healtbcare Corp.,
the nation's biggest hospital chain.
The benefits were revuled in
documents submitted Thiii'Sdly .to the
Ohio De~rnent of Insurance.
Under the proposed agreement
between the Cleveland-based insurer
!'nd Nashville-based Columbia/HCA,
most of the non"'?fit insurer's business would be shtfted to Bluteo, a
new for-profit company.
In uchange, Columbia/HCA
would pay. Blue Cross almost $300
million for its ~sets:
The merger ts subject to Insurance
De\"nment app':'lval, as well as
re;1ew by the Ohto Allomey Genera1 s office and the U.S. Department of
Justice, w~i~h w~uld look at antilrus~
or c~mpeht1ve, tssues, accordmg to
Dav1d J. ~andall , t~e Insurance
Depanment s deputy dtrector.

Suspended trooper wins reinstiJtment

ClnHch of Clmst

A pu ~to It c

Proposed merger ~firs gains for executives

. Ohio News in Brief:

~hnrc
., CIMirda .. c.1rilt
212 W. Main St.
Put«: NeiiPn&gt;utlfOOI
Sunday Scllool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhi(&gt;' 10.30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy St:JVicea • 7 p.m.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Happy
Mother's Day
DOROTHY
:BELL CHANEY
Love Randall,
Peg,
Carpenter

•

. Your Son ·

Thomas Preston

~~~
. u.~~~M

Happy
Mother's
Day
MARY
FREEMAN
Love ChelSea
&amp; Victoria

.L

~.•..Piica....lili

Happy ·
Mothers Day!
To our Mom,
MARY C. BEHA
Thank you for
being
h'elpful,
reading to us,
your hugs,
and for being
the nicest Mom!
Love, Steven II,
Matthew,
Miranda,
Talisha, and
Josiah

Happy
Mother's
Day
Shari L.
Blackwell
Love, Amber,
Arica, &amp; Aja

�.
'' Pagel •The Dlllly Sentinel

'

. Friday, May 10,1118

Friday, May 10, 1996

Pomeroy• Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. ~------~----------------~----~--------~--~~------------------------~~~~-

Social services added to programs

:: Ashleys attend
::;SAR conference
- · Emma Ashley of Rock Springs,
• Pomeroy, was elected president of the
ladies Auxiliary of the Ohio Society,
· · Sons of the American Revolution, at
-- the recent state conference held in
· : Cineinnati.
· · Ashley succeeds Betty Kauff of
Point Pleasant, W.Va. who has served
in that capacity for the past year.
At !he conference Keith Ashley
completed hi s work as the state res.olutions chairman. He presented a
resolution asking for suppon to save
· the battlefield of the Battle of Buff- - ington Island in Meigs County. The
• resolution was overwhelming suppaned by the Ohio Society.
. John Kauff, president of Ewings
, Chapter of Pomeroy, received the
S.A.R: Patriot's Medal for long-time.
outstanding service to the Ohio Society. He has serves as the Southeast. em Ohio district chairman for the
: ~ Ohio Society as well as the representative of the Ohio Society on the
, national Historical Sites Committee.
He also serves on the Battle of Pt.
Pleasant Committee.
Ewings. Chapter received a cita. · tion for ouiStanding work in membership as one of oidy six cha.pters to
• . receive such an award. This is its
third consecutive year to received an
· award.
"·

Social servi«s for p.tieniS have
been lidded to the varied program
ab:udy provided by the Home Health
Depanment at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Jo Ann Black, Gallipolis. a
licensed social services worker, has
been named to serve the department
which provides medical care for
homebound patieniS in !he comfon of
their own homes.
Since a large population of the
patients of home bealth ·through Veterims Memorial Hospital under
Medicare or in low income positions,
Black will offer a wide range of
·
social services.
For dample, ~he will see that

spring.
..:.__ _ _ _ _ __

DIRECTIONS - Paula Eichinger, left; RN, BSN, director of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Home Health Department, tlelps Jo
Ann Black with the location of some of the departmenra patie(lts .
on a local map. Mrs. Black has.been named soclalserlllces dlrec·
tor tor the local home health program, a new service being offered
to the department's patients.

• Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF . In ihe Matter o1 Sattt.ment
oiiCcounte, probate court,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In the matter of
Melge County, Olllo
··
Change of neme
Accounte end voucher&amp;
c- No. 1211200
oll,'~utC:htaerlellollowlng nemed
NQTICE
have been flied
In the Probete Court, Melga
.• .
RIVIHd Code, Sec.
County, Ohio, lor approval
2717.01(A)
Notice Ia hereby given and Hltlement:
ESTATE NO. 2110Z! ·Final
that Rebecca M. Peraona,
; c... No. 12e200 of .211 and Dlatrlbutlve Account of
; Rivera Ide apt. 207, Max In I
G r IIIII h,
, Middleport, OH 45780, .h.. Admlnlatrator of the Eotete
· applied to the Com"'on of Cheri•• E. Griffith,
Pl.. ao Court, Probate OICIIIed.
'•
.
Dlvlalon ol Malge County,
ESTATE NO. 24979 • Final
·: Ohio, for on order 1o cluing• and Dlltrlbutlve Account of
her child'• name to Jam•• Allee Struble, Executrix of
the Eotate ol Booele E.
Mk:heef'IJI•r Weltera.
Said application will be RudlaMI, D-oied.
hoard In uld Court, at,10:00 · ESTATE NO. 26492 ,
a.m., · on tho 1Olh dey ol Second ParU•t Account
Junt,
at. Court H-. (311/N to 2/29/N) ol Robert
Robert E. Buck, Judge Wingett, Executor ol the
. : (5) 10; 1TC
.
Eatate ol Ernaat A. Wingett,
Doc:oaMCI.
ESTATE NO. 25945 •
Public Notice ·
Second end Final Account
of Ruella Colllno Crow,
· · IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Guardian of the Peroon and
COURT, PROBATE
eateto ol Kelly Ryan Colllne,
DMSION .
1 Minor.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE NO. 23791 - Sheth

l

1-.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Current Account ol Joan
wnl•la Truetee of the True!
l·c,.OIIi.oo by Item 16 of the
Will of Elee B. Klmee,
D.e cealtd.
•
ESTATE NO. 211270 - Final
and Olotrtbutlve account of
Harry R. Lyone, .Sr.,
Admlnletrator ol the Eetate
of Wanda L. Lyona,
Docealtd. .
.
ESTATE NO. 25446- Final
end Dlotrlbutlve Account ol
Jack Cer11y, Executor of
tho Eetete Of Neecll E.
Ceraoy, Deee81ed.
Unle.. exception• aro
Iliad thereto, '"'d eccounte
will be for hearing ,before
aald Court on the 1oth day
of June,1996, at w~lch time
aeld e.ccounta will be
conelderad end continued
lrom day to day until ftnelly
dlopoltd ol.
Any peraon lntereated
may ftlo wrlttan excaptlono
to eald account• or to
mettera pertaining to the
execution of the true!, not
lt1i than live daya prior to
the date oat lor hearing.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common Pleae Court,
Probate Dlvlalon,
Malgo County, Ohio
(5)10; 1TC

Commleelonera will be
applying for CDBG CHIP
Round I 8 funding and will
accept lee proposala IC!r
REHABILITATION
CONSULTING SERVICES to
Implement the program, If
lunded1 until May 20, 1996
at 10:00 A.M. Fee proposal•
will then be contldered et
1:00 P.M. during the regular

Public Notice
. Pl!BLIC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR FEE
PROPOSALS
The Meigs County

commissioner's maetlng.

Scopa of servlcea
requIred
by
the
rehabilitation consultant
will include: lnapectlon of
20 housing alngle lamlly
housing units and
preparation ol rehabilitation
work apeclllcatlona and

• We would like
thank everyone
their calla, .,.trll•.. l
flowers and glfta
ho11or of our 5011~ I
wedding annlve
ury. Your lho·ual1t·l
fulneu Ia aln•ce1'4tiY I

CHAT LINE
. Uve24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful
Girls

, -900-446-1414
Ext. 6445

appreciated.

$3;99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs
Selvice u .
(619) 654-8-434

'*'·

Francia and r:..... a

.·r.;;;w:;;:;;,

Commissioners,

Happy Ad

Mother's Day
Chicken/Rib Bar:B·Que
Feeney-Bennett Post 128
American Legion and
Auxiliary at Annex, Mill St.

ADDALOU IS 70!
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY,
MOTHER.

·
•
•
•

Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Questions In regard
to this request may be
addressed to Jean Trussell,
Grants Administrator, at
&amp;14·992-790a
Melga County
Commissioners
Fred HoHman, President
(5)6, 10, 13; 3TC

•New Homes

and oornrne&lt;dal)

•Garages

• Shrubbery
Mainlenance
• Odd job8 per requ.t
No Lawn Too l.alpll or T0C1 S11111l
Plan Ahead, Call Today!

SATISFACTION!

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compilre

.
FREE ESTIMATES
985 4473
1.
111&amp; ..

---~

Psychic-line

Personal Psychic!

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions ol
love; success, care, soul
· mates, se-·help and

Ext.3505
$3.99 per min.

1·900·255..0500
Ext. .4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

needs
Phone

614-992-5048

Serv-U (619)

free Estimates

645·8434

$19 5°

0

.-.

SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT
PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE .
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1-900-776-2525 E:XT.
5961
•
. $2.99 per min
Must be .18 yrs.
Se':V·U (619) 654-84!!4
Coniraelor with o•er 30 ·
yean ex~rlente now
avallablt ror all typts or
N.w Homts, Garages,
· Additions, BathJ,
Kltrhens, Dtckl, Siding,
Roors ett.

Installed

•Tilt-in
•Double Hung
•Insulated

No~tos.l•tollllp.
Conta~t Rodney Ho~ry
594-.3780 days, 698-7231
evenings or
1--..264-6390 enytlmt!

Limited T1me Offet:
Call today with your
window alzes for a free

100 Years 95 Years

92 Years

Forest Hill Cleaners

Satltr's Inc.

Anter Bros. Co. .

· Phone 555-1122
Ellllllllhtd 1185

Pltont 855-2211
Etlllllltlltd
1800
. '

PhonU55 U31
Ettabllllttd 1803'

IQUIIFUL . .I
IUWAITIJIGTO
HIA.fiOM

89

YOU IOWill

614-441-7558

80 Years

78·Years

Acme Rentals

Vircap Services

Phone 555-1782
Esllilllahtd 1115

Phone 555-8242

Trucking·
Limestone
Bulld07.ing and ·
Backhoe ·
. Services
House Sites and

. Ellablllhtd 1917

Utilities

75

Beaule

-

61 Years

Phone sssC'9245
ESIIbllthtd 1925

Pltont 555 ....
Ettlblshtd 1~

67 Years

60 Years

Years

52 Years

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Ball Security Bonds

Phone 555-9988
Ellabllehed 1D35

Phone 555-811115
Elllbllshtd 1141

Ball Security Bonds

: r,

Safe ' J,.ock .

Phont51Wt34

Eallblllhtd 1MI

30.Years

RAYBURNS MARKI::T

Kramtr a. Sons.
Phone 555-4m
Esllllillhtd 1151

Pttone 1155 11~5
Elllblllhed 1115

SKATE-A-WAY

'

.

S&amp;Mla~SCifllng
Pttone 1155 1454

Ellllllllhed 1115

25 Years 20 ·.Years

Med.Care Center Inc. Trlskett Party Center

KANAUGA,

Card of Thanks

.44 Years 40 Years
.
.

Phone 555o02t7
Esllbllllltld 1t70

Crysiat Glass:eo.

.

..

•'

•••

Phont --~
:
EtllbJIIIIed.11l5
.___
_ __:__ _.! :•

·J7E.YOUR BUSINESS LISTED! ~

announces

OLDIES
PRIVATE
PARTY

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

Extremaly Nics
Recently remodeled 2
story home, 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, extra
insulation, perma payne windows, Front
Foyer, mud room; porch, cedar-walk-in
closets. Elec. H.P./C.A., n,ew carpeting,
basement, carport and Patio. Situated on
two nice lots on a _quiet street.

OLIVE IWP. FIRE DEPT. AND ..,
lARK SMITH, FIRE CHIEF,
.WOULD LIKE TO THANK ,
TYE BRINAGE·R, PRODUCE &amp;
,&amp;REENHOUSES·IN ·. REEDSVILLE
FOR THE GENEROUS DONATION
THE.FIRE DEPART ENJ.
AlSO FOR·THE TWO ELECTRIC
ROASTERS HE BOUGHI ~FOR
US~ It WAS:VERY
MUCH.·
.
APPRECIATED.
.

.

,

•'
'•

ASKING $48,900

•

992-3838

Ext. 12n
$3.99 Per Minute
Muat be 18 yra.
Touch-Tone Required
Serv-u(619l645-8434
.,,_

Phone 5551147
Ellebllllttld 1843

'

Kinds of Earth Wor~

Need Direction?
Loye
Business
Family Matters
Allow Your
Personal Psychic to
Assist You
1·1100-9811-8600

OFFICE 994-2259

Open House 11:00 to 3:00
144 Hudson Street
Middleport, Ohio

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

'""'"

'

.'

.

'

I_ .

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

(304) 773-5124
1S Yns. Exp. Lie. -Ins.
Owner: Rick Johnson

Free.Estimates

32124 Happy Hollow Rd..
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

~--------------------~
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER
-94P.2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC. ·

Reine, Ohio 45771
(114) 949-3013 Phone

(814) 949-201S FAX

$32.00/HR.

Se!Vice U
619 645-8-434

NEFF REMODELING
SERVI(E
Houoe Repair &amp;
111-HIIng
Kitchen &amp; Beth
Remodeling
Room Adclftlono
Siding, Roofing, Potloo
Ruaonablo
ln...,.ere- Expt1rlencld·
Coli Woyne Neff ·
.112-4405

.,._

For Free Eatlm...•

PGILIIftiD

FIB.III

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.

114 5114-2001 NIGHT

8'-10' 311e I ft.
14'-18' 3~ I ft.
Also IVallable
4x4's - 4x6's
614-985-4107
614-742-3337

In Loving
Memory Of
ADA M. KEESEE
Went Home to
Be with the .Lord
May 14, 1995.

""'' Harrioorwilo.

60 Lost and Found
57e-2134.

Fou.-.1· amal, blad&lt;. male Poodle.

Fk.l•na vidnity,IS14-742-22S8.

Found : 2 Rabbit Bea;les. 1 Is
Black &amp; While Other Is Black 1
Tan With A Little While, On8 Is ·
Wearing A Br~n Collar The Oth. er A Black Collar, Both Have

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

3535.
Lasr: littte Brown Mhced Chihu• ·
hua, Dachahund t1ouse Dog Loa
On Johns CreH Road, Or Rock
Fork Road In Tne Mercerville
Area II Found Please Call eu-

256·6790.

I &amp; WPWncS AID SUPPLY
Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
1114-985-3813 or 614-867--6484
Pla!tic Culven' Dual wall and Regular~ .. lhru 36"
4" S&amp;D- perf. -.solid pipe
4" .&amp; 6" Flex pipe
4'.' &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
II~" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i . water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000· roll"•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Grnveless Leach pipe
Gas pipt I" lhru 2" · Fillings - Regulators- Risers
Full assonment of P. V.C. &amp; Flex liuing• &amp; Water flllongs
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.
St. At. 7

New At lqles lleetromes

lladle lllaeli .Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or. CD

LOST : Male Bue Tick hound, ul)per Smi. area. Reward. 304-875·

21119.

Yard Sale

70

Gallipolis
8o VICinHy .

-,.,..-::-,-,....,....--.;....,...,....
117 Third Avenue, Gallipolis ,.
Thurs. Fri .&amp; Sal, May 9th, 101h, .

11th, 10:00 A.M. To 5:00P.M.

.
'
Moving Garage Sa.. May 18, .97 •
Debbie Drive Centenary, rools, •
lawn mower•.oil. hOusehold items,
fWtt'e ware, brass.
5 family : 1S1 Time S,le Frl
"'CrowoCioy,

11Sa\

All Yard Sates Musl Be Paid In •
Advan&lt;o. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. '
the day before lhe ad Is to run .
Sunda~ edition . 2:00. p.m. Frida';'. 1
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sal ·
uo&lt;lay.
Fn . ·sat. 8-5. Tools, Dr~er, VCR
Tapea, Apple COmp&amp;l ler. EkH:tric
Typewrirer. Nama Brand Clothes,
Bicycles, Baby Clothes, Odds &amp;

Ends, 1535 Goahem School Road,
Off ,141, Waoch For Signs.

.

106 N. 2nd Ave,, Middleport

992·2825
tl3tllln

1x8, b8, 2ll4, 2111

In Memory

Chow,

no fill*•. 32300 SR 1&gt;13, 5 milet

Bladl &amp; whioe female Husky. 304-

HYDIAUUC IEPIIR

$2.99 per minute

VCR Sick'!
Call Quick ·
.COY'S VCR
REPAIR
992-4507

To fOOd homo only- AKC

lost- ring, in Middleport near
Corner Reatauranc , BU-982-

MUst be 18 yns old

614·742·2193

Nic• Calico Cat Oeclawed And
· Hou1e Broken To Giveany To
Good Home. 814-2AW238.

Chesler, Ohio

1·900·988·8988
Ext. 6733

Bantls11w Mill

MODERI SAIItATIOI
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal - Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.

Dilly, weeidy &amp; monthly rental rstes.

Wl OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal 8o W1ter

G~rage . Sale: May 1O!h, 11th .

llotclooll Road, 9-?

Pony's G111011

House

Qpen 10 Til

8 Daily, 1 Mile. West 01 Rodney,
Mother's Day Specials! Also Yard
SBie l
.

Rain fShine, Down At 17 South To
Clipper Mills Turn On Orchard Hill
Road , Watch For Signs, Friday
Sat, Ponr Farm Traclor, Guns,
Tools. Bikes, Toys, Welder, Horse
Haultars, Maternity, ~br Clothes,
Girls Clothes 2T, ·3T, 8, 10 Wicker
Headboard.
Saturday, 9-5, 841 Third Avenue.
Gallipolis, Something For Ever~­

onel

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Pomeroy,
Middleport
8o VlclnHy

992-3954 or 985-3418 __

All Yard Sates Must Be Pa id In

JONES' TREE SERVICE
raa

pdiiCirded

hat,.;;,.. . ,

appllences A

1111111y met81e.
14-992-4025

Top, Triin, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured
Owner: Ronnie Jones

367-0266 - 1-800-950-3359

(u. . stoneLowRitell

WICKS ·
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel,

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding

New

Garages • Replacement Windows
• Roam Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunda~ Calls)

MAILEY'S
Howlird .L Wrltelll

Dateline
Meet the Man or Woman
of your Oret11111 Never

ROOFING .
NEW-REPAIR

be lonely sgaln.

Qutterl

CALL NOW

Downapouto
Gutter Cleaning
. Palntl119

gOod deeds.
Miss me .... but let me
go.

1·901).988-6003

Ext. t02t
12.111 per min. .
Mull be 18 Y'l·

Aud.or UIMAGNII
s.ctly miiHCI by

Children A
Oranclohlldren ,

Selv·U (614) 145 8434

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VICinHy
Garage sale-2 tamily a! 2925-&amp;.
2923 Maple Ave. Thurs-Fri-Sat,
Pa,n1, !amps. adding .machlnt:,
typewrner, good clothing, mi1c.

80

•

PubliC Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson AuctiOn Companr•
full 11me aucrtoneer, comprem
auction
s1Hv1ce.
l1cenaall
f66 .0hio &amp; West Virginia, 301·
773-5785 IX 304· 773-54•7.
,

! 90

Wanted to Buy

IOMIIMPIC'VIMI11

Roofing, Room Addltlona
Siding, Concrata, etc.
P.O. Box 220, lldwtll. Oh.

:

Clean L111 Model Cars q,
Trucks, 1110 Models•Or Newe5,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 E•n·
ern Artel"l..t Gallipoli~.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buymg sa (·
vage veh1cles. Selling pans : 304

773-5033.

61~992-3470

New24hr.

Fndar, May tO , 12· 7. Saturday,
Mar 11. 10·5, 918 S. 3rd, t.4iddleport. new /u58d items.
·

Garage sale : Sat Mar 11th '&amp;
lion May 131h. 133 S. Paoli Doive. • ·

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

Sand,

Advance. Deadline : 1:OOpm rhe
day before the ad is to run, SundB)' edi tton· 1:00pm Fr1da';'. Mandar edilion 10D0a.m. Sa!urday. .

304-«175-1 -184.

FrH Estimates

8am-lpm

}.
' I

Malt Aot-ier mix, """' CoNoS! Boogie. 814-1192-11:12.

Orange Flea Collart, For Futhar
Deto!l Col! 814-448-3812.

Your Sweetheart as
close as your phone

Portable

"MISS ME - BUT
LET ME GO"
When I come to the
end ol the road
And the sun has set
for me .
1 want no rit~s in a
gloom filled room.
Why cry for a soul
setfree.
Miss me a little - but
not too long
'And not with your
head bowed low.
Remember the love
that
was
once
shared
)t1iss me - but let me
go;
For' this is a joumey
we must all take
And each must go
along.
If Is all a part of the
Master's plan;
A step on the road to
home.
When you are lonely
and- sick of heart
Go · to lriends we
know
And · bury · your
sorrow&amp; in doing

F,..Put&gt;pin.l14-381'8532.

985-4422

DATE
LINE

SAWMILL

a.- Hound
00011- 304-4118-:121&amp;

:Dia75-22011. Allor Ulqlm.

2115113 BASHAM AD.

H&amp;H

ml'- D

Fr" fife wood lo c.. ar arn for

Dirt• Sand

Res.:

Howard Excavatin

441 1411

-el. HOLLON

•NewGaragea
•Electrical &amp; 'Plumbing
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992--8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

a.-··,.,.

4 P.lot. -IP.Iot. l 1 4 - - 1 .

(61-1) 441 - 119 1

TRUCKING

I llonlh Old Gorman ShephOtd
Male. N..n To Live k1 Co1.1nuy,

llrm pond. Wll hllp you if I am off.

$3.99 per min.

-4131 mo. pet

Truck:

'*",. .,

""" , . , . , . .. ~ lo
. Senlng S.E. Ohio I WISI YlrJinle

Must be 18 yrs.
SerV·U (819) 645-8434

•Room Addlltona

Competitive Rates

'·

Toll FIW 1-tOO-e1lHII7

...... ~ 441-37M

• Adult ,_.., 304-17!1-3173 ••.
... f5pm.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

EXT. 3694

CARPENTER SERvta .

114· .... 1012.

78151.

1·900-446-1414

YOUNG'S

2 MaiM: One 4 IIG., Old Pup, 1
· Pan Chow &amp; Spllz ; 1 &amp;irddog,

dog, ·-

BEN

To

3_ ... _ _ ,.,.

ONE -ON - ONEI
CALL NOW!

614·915•4'110

614-992·2524

Woodl~'s oran\onds

Saturday, May 11,1996

LIVE!

for you.
VERT REASOIIAilE .
HAVE llfiiiiiCIS

Quality Work

•

2 8101 ~·· llle Clo!IIM,
t 1143111UI.

Gf

&amp; Go&lt;·
man Shephard mtled Wtlh 6og
houoo. Good wllll kiolo. 304-17S·

IWV01011Z

FREE EITIIIATIS
(114) 192--6531
114 192·2753

FAIE ESTIMATES .
Toke t•e ·pain our of .
pa_illtlng. Let us do It

WILDING.
SERVICE

·

Ttie Geist

Free
Refreshments

•Roofing
•PIInllng

•u I,.....,....,._

2yr. ola male, pen COIHe

,....

•Skiing

IIIERIOI·IITEIIOR

LDBDIK

and Manufactured Hou.-ing
.... Pumps,.
FumiCII. All 11 lp iwLtln stack
for Jmrt•MJ lntlllllllon.
r:o • ·; - .. . . .
FtWEitlm I

•Addlllone
•NDwGireges
•AamadDIIftO

liNDA'S.
PAINTING

All

COURT STREET GRILL

•Now Hornet

We will wOik within your budgll
Ph. ~173
FAX 773-5881
1DB P
Street
\
Mason, WV

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS ·

•

~.....,.,...,,aftll4

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

· Must be 16 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

IIII&amp;YB-

SIIITII'S
COISIIUmOI

• Welding Supplies • Industrial a- •Machine Shop
SeMcel • Steel Sates &amp; Fabricltlon.• Repair Weldng
• AlumlnumiStalnless • Tool DrMiing • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, RaUings, Patio Fum~ure, Fireplace
Items: Planter ha~rs. Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

more.

all Your
.ELECTRICAL

Hey Guys!!! Your
special girl is waiting
to hear from you!!
24 Hours' A Day!!
Call now
1·900-446-1 414 .
Ext. 14n
$3.99 Per Min.
· Must be 1B yrs
Serv-U 619 645-8434

Authorized AGA Distributor

1-900-255-0500

· Serving

Chat-Une

Nt~u~ !leta~

ELEC~IC

Through a Live

•

•Complete

SPARKlES

FIND TOTAL

Dinner $4.00,
Meat Only $2.00
Call-In O_rder 992-2749 Sun.

30 Years plus
Phone 985-3929 ·
985-9996

• Tree Tlimming
• Mowing (Afti~tiil

Real Estate General

·

Sunday, May 19
4:00P.M.

10 IILIUI '

411_,_

70 Years

MOTHER'S DAY
WEEKEND SPECIALS
All Hanging Baskets &amp; Ferns
$10 Eac,h or 2/$18
Burning Bushes ........... $10.00 ea.
Rhododent;trons ........... $16.00 ea.
Azaleas .......................... $7.00 ea.
Rose Bushes ................. $9,50 ea.
Vlll&amp; Ripe Tomatoes .. ... 51b. .,_,.,.
Watermelons, Cantaloupes, Half
Runner eeans &amp; Sweet Corn.

&amp; WILLING

$2.111 per min.
lllillt be 11 yrs.
Serv-U (61g) 141 1434

·------------ \\0\.\ ------ . Ol
--·
--·

IOIIIr IISSIU
(OISIIUCIIOI

lAWN C:AIU!:

. .1·900.990.3737
Ext. 2261

Sunday, May 12
12:00 .til gone

Presenls
Charlie Lilly &amp; The Poorside
Friday Night, May 10
9·? - No Cover

~

742·2803 .... _

cost estimates of each unit.

The Consultant will also
a"let In the contractor
bidding process and review
of such bldo, pre·
construction meetlnge,
Interim oonstructlon
lnap_e ctlona, overua
compliance with Rasldentlel
Rehabilitation ·Standards,
undertake final lnapectlona
and approvals and provide
written reporte of all
Inspections to the county.
Fee proposals should
state quallflcetlona,
previous experience In
CDBG Housing Programs;
scope ol service• to be
provided,' and amount ol
compensation ·requlrld lor
such·aervlces.
Fee Proposals · may be
mailed or delivered to the
Meigs
County

khula lhlllle Heme
14170 •11 1170 oapatwlo. Fire

1ta

Be A Part Of
The Daily S_e ntinel's

.....___
Public Notice

patieniS possibly receive meal~ on
wheels, if needed, or help !hem in
legal mattas such as ·wills and propeny deeds. She will do whatever necessary to tic in each patient with the
respective community organizations
which can assist with particular pro~
lems. Those receiving the social services must, of course, be patients of
theilospital's Home Htaltlt Department.
Black has resided in Gallipolis for
17 years with her hu sband, Bill
Black, an accounting managemerit
consultant. The couple has two children, Melissa Wood, Rio Grande, and
James Roben Black who will graduate from Cedarville College this

.

.Top Pnces Pa1d: Old U.S. Colnr;

014

Silver. Gold, Diamonds, All
Collectibles, Papenveighlt, E(c;,

II.T.S. co;n Shop,

151

Second

Avenue, Gallipolio, 814-448-21142. •

Uted lurnuure· amiques, on~
ptece or complere 8111181, 11sq
..J~~!!:!!!!!#!!!.II:J do appralula. Oaby Martin, e ,._
' 192-7441 .
..

L

, ANrJOUN CFW. NT S

•

30 Announcements

. FREE ESTJMATES
Mt-2188

Thlo

Uled Mens Levis; LH'' &amp; Wranl
. giOf JtOno &amp; Denim Jaotoe11, Ni~
Shoeo, 114--2....
•

Wanted 10 buy undtr find con.t
1rac1: 3-4bedroom hou .. in M1:
eon Co. Pleue calf 304· tiS~

11 A Public Notice Tho! 1 3CMIO.
Wade Thomu Young Am Not

.

•

Ruponalbla For Any Oebta Or Wlnltd To Buy Uold Mobil.;'
Billa lncu1red By Nooml (JHnle) Hamel Col: 114-4441-0175
•

S11&amp;'MTFN

'

E . lbor~

.

,,

A10i 1/t:IM .

•
.

••

�Page 10 • n. Daly Sullnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Flfdsy, ll8y 10. 1 -

:Friday, U.y 10, 1896

The o.lty SeaiiMI• P.,. 11

Pomeroy •llldd~ Ohio

OOP

NEA Crolt'I'Jord Puazle

==..!*...,.

PHJIJJP
,......

ALDER
Houot, Cotpal,
Nico l C'-tn,
t2001Utt.,
1200
Depa•iC Phn Utilitiet. No Pets,
UpJMr Rt. 1 Add•tan , au~ Mil' ·

lCO

0151l

-·
.-..-·-and . . .
«8-1484or44e288.

Turkey, Archer,. Gunt. Am.,.

lolobi'- Homo.
., ..:JIII.0,0 7.

3 Bedroom ll&lt;&gt;bilo Homo On· II&lt;·
Connidl Rood. 61~91169.

Live Ba it I. UcenM. Crawfotd'e.

1110 ~ t4x70 Wifl 71l14 EJ.
panda 3 a.dtOOmt, 1 Bl.tn. To•l
Elec&amp;tic With- Backup Gas Hnt,
AC I 2 Por~hea On 3 112 Acre

Buu1ilul River ViiW', 2 Btcstooms
1n teanauga. Na Pets, Retetenees,
[)epolil, Foaltr'a Mobile Homes,

cwm

and three bedroom mobile
·
homes, llan•no at S240 -S300 ,
.....,, .... , ana ttash •nth•ded,

Cal
Ye

' 814-446-

520

Sporting
Goods

2 Bedloomt 111 E¥1fgr-aen, St90

OuMn air• wo~er bod-complale.
S50. Baby ltoma 10 "'""'' 10 lltt

Used blue carpet I room tilt
rvg, 304-IIJS. J3lill.

_n_o__He=l,;,p,W=•n,t,.ed
_ _ _ ua~ badt lub. will ...op1 roo1
~Ollar. CII3114-417S-211 I.

" ATTENTION"

Ha1r Stylill Needed for ..JoAnne's
Kut Arod !Curl. 614~94811.
JoAnne~

Am Katen Burna.

bedroom aulre. OUHn
tlze, held board, dreiHf I
- L 111119 Chevy von. Colt 304eJS.n 17_
W.tMHKI

Wooded

r:-:.:.:._;_________
9543:

1M7 Clerton 14110, 3bedroom,

t-WAHTEI»
180 Wlllted To Do
1112boll\ .-.; oemoldod bolh w1
10 people who need10 1o losolE~~~~~~~~f, 6je1 wl\irlpoo&amp;, •iflyl-piMing,
weogrn l maloe money, "Y now
10x32 poteh. $12,000. 304-57S·
paltniOd we;ghl ·loss produot.
3190 0.300-S78-2!184.
30-0· 773-5083 24hrlldly.
• -7

=-~~~~~---1.:.~~
- ------~----•ATTN:
~sal"t'

Dependeble lAwn Service Big Of

Postal
Pw"'-'*'' Mf.
rime lorPosition&amp;.
ctafllfsartertL Ful Ben•

SrMIIS1 .......3103.

fits. For e11m, applicatian and
salary in1:J caN: 108-2&amp;4-10 Ext
3&amp;10,11m D lpm.

Don't Llwn Care. Retidantlal,
Churches, I Cemetaritt, R••·
IOf1llbla RIIUI 614-31'9-2847.

AVON I All Arttt I Shirley
Spear~, 304..e75-1429.
Ab1e Avon Repretef?lltives
needed. Etm money for Christmas bills at home/at work. 1-800:992-8358 Of 304-882- 264'5, Ind.
· Rep.
.
Accounts Receiwable Mgr. JSu ·
pervisor 2 · 4 Yr. Acct. Degree,
E Jpertence With Collecliona. Supervisory Skills And Computer
Knowledge . Anendance And

Punt:..alily " lolustl Pay c""-"
sib'e With EXP8ffenc8 And Oualifieatiorta. ·Bettafitl And Good 0!&gt;portunitr In A Gtowing Company.
Send Resume, Work Relerences
Etc., To: CLA 386, Clo Galnpolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third A~nue,
Gttlipolil, 011451$31 .

Artay Adamt Dairy, Milking F..O.
IOQ. Crop WOI'k, a..era1 Repairs,

614-379-2744.

Babtsi114tf Needed In Our Home
One Small Child. 2 To 3 Day a A

Week. 6 14-&lt;46-11958
Carpenlers and roolers needed,
experienced onl~ need BP.ply,

General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard· Work Windows Wasl'led
GyUert Cleaned ligh1 HaUling,
Commetieill. Retiden1ial, Steve:

814-~29.

Georges Portable S.wmiA, don't
htul your logsiO lie mil jull &lt;011
304-115-1957: ·

I Do Child Care'ln My Home AN
Hours, Cheshire Area, 814-3877&amp;49.
Mature ,d&amp;pendable lady J!lilling to
sit, shop or care fOr the _.dedy..
person care training. standard
firat aid &amp; CPR, experienced iri
managing an adult carel'llc:illty,
excellent references. Cllll Chnt

814-992-2829.
Professional Tree service. Sa.mp
Removal ,· Free Estimates! Insuranee, Bidwell, Ohio. 81,...3889648, 614·317·70'10.

Sun . Valley Nunery School.
Childcare M-F &amp;am-5:30pm Ages
2-K. Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Doya pttf Week lolinlrn.~m81......_3657 .

t~~~~~::::::_:or deposir
requ ired, no
992-2218.

Ba"'

e'

For sAte Ot Ram: 1992 OekWOOd
2 Bechoomt,.l Full Ba1hs. Retrig·

-

erator, 5 10'18,
Air Condi110ner. Buill In Tabfe, Atlling Pric&amp;

Limited Otter! 19"96 doublewide,

Mobile home for sale, needs re -

sage.

Mdbite Home, 2 Bedruoms. 199-4
14..SO Untumtlhed, 814-368-9803

3 BedroomS, 2 Baths, Overlook·
ing City Park. Deposit Required,
Rent Includes Utilities 614 ·446·
6560 Mon.Sat. S::Jl-9:00.

Baby bed, srro!ler, swing,

N 3rd Ave. , Middleport. 1bedroom, furnished. DePQSil &amp; refer-

Hoi -Point Washer, Dryer, Slave &amp;
RefngeratOt. All 2 Years ' Otd, 30467§..7858.

Uo., Applications At 1743 Carnenary Road, Gallipolis, 814-446*
2205.

lver Johnson 22 RevOlver 135;
SKS Rifle With Black Synthetic
Stock S135: New Craftsman Gas
Welding And Cut~ng Oulfil $159;
Applause Flattop Gu11ar S149:
Guns. Taols , Fenton Glass.
Dave's Swap Shop, CheShire. OH.
614·367-7106.

$37~.

Ema Cleanl'$300 Depos;~ $3501

Nic:e 2 or 3 bedroom apartment In
Middleport, no pelt, e14·9925850.

Pt.

Plea'"'JI, no pelS, 614-992-58511.

Fu11:tlshed
Rooms

RQoms for rent - week or month .
Starting at 1, 20/mo. Galli a Hotel.
614-446 -9580.

Postal &amp; Gov·r Jobs $21
Benerits, Jr4a E1p. Will Train.

1\W And lnlo 1-800-536-3040.
Sand Dunes Steak &amp;

Re5taurant now hiring
waitrHset, dish washet"1 I

ery. 3110-1175-3663.
Social Workert, Now Hiring $ZJ I
Hr • Benefits, On The Job Traift..
ing To Appl1 In Your Aree. 1-800-

3311-8150.
Stafl deYeiDpment and infectlan
controt nurse for 13tl·bed lono
term ...-a lllclll!y. Applk:atO ftllal
poSSB$1 Bachl'ors [)egrM or be
c:ertified H QlfORIOIOQicaJ r'l.lrM.
Please
511719d 10

Salli

2 Minutes from !Qwn, .c .bedroofn,
2 bllh, 3,000sq. n. llrK:II ,Ranoh on

3.2acrat. HaN Was c:ompl•ttly
remoklld in 1992. Fat' mote inbrmation call304-875-312t. ·lt no

.,.,.... ~aave meuaoe.
4 -uoma, 2-112 Baths, Bridt, 3
Mllet From Gallipolis On 141 , InGround Paol, 114·,..8·0038, 614·

«1-G584.
Green Bottom. W.VA. Rt. 2.

Rartc:hor With FuN -~ Ga-

rage, Garden &amp; Trailer Space.
See To Appr..iotol $811,500, 30452S-5185.
HouM I lot tor aaMJ. 4 bedluom. 2

DON, lltkin bolh, NOO-n (W.A.C.I, - y
EEOI~

Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Also !railer space Of' river. All
hook-ups. Call afler 2:00 p.m.,

terms.

David.

1-I00·4AI-890D

atk for

tQJ:'C:~
Small 3 Bed ~ooms,

Very: Good
Condilkln, NoW VInyl Siding, Car·
part Unattached 2 Car Garage
Willi- Aporwnonl Above. 614-

--For

448·1774 Home; &amp;14·446-0374
1o1tr1t -

-

Business loCatioi1. 1,000 Sq. Ft
large Parking. SR 141, Centenary

MERCHANDISE

2bedroom on lincoln Ave, ac.
htgh eHicienc:y heat. low utiliDes.
slove, refr igerator. No smoking,

510

no pats. 304·875- 1244 8am-

4:30pm on~.

87 otd Culla.. :v-8. ou1o, AIC.
614-11112-2351.
each,

2 Year Old Rod 1'111.,.. Ragiltorod

turned down el-lewhere. Upton
Equ1pmenr Used Cars . 304-C58-

L;mOutin Bull 814-387· 7&amp;00,

1089.

25 Charlay mixed heilert: one
85 dietel trac-

IDr ; one 5' pull -type bush hog ;

614-142·2078.'

Blue Healer Pups, Full BIOO&lt;fed
S50 Eodt, 614-319-2838.
Lamb For Sale: B14..w&amp;- 194-7.
L•mousin bulls. mc:e selection,
reatonabty' priced, caw~c:alf paira,

bOth purebred &amp; 112 limousin WI
314 Limausin calve!f, 61A ·898·
2765.

Low Birlh We;ghl!. Slo1e Rlln
Farmo. S14·211&amp;-5385 .-son.

And

$1 ,200' -

Queen Size Onhopedic Llanress
Set And Fra cne. Never Used SriU
In Plasl•c Cos11800. Sell $250.
614- 175-2360

Hunter GrMn !Southwell Pattern
15· 'Seat Ind. Reins, Bridte, Girth,
Breast Slrap, Blanket: $300 Firm,
Call 614 -886 -6334 Leave Yes-

Registered Arabian Mare, t t Yrs.

W..10tn SaOdlo Sol.

sago.

Riding &amp; Trail Horses. Pony. Oil·

TRANSPORTATION

71

Small Pun Type C8mper CoFn_.
ptetefy RKOndilioned, Exc8Uem
Condition, Sleeps 4, Sntve Furnace AM k:e Box
Or. Batt

1991

Chrwy . Spor~

1•1 . 5 Rooms, Front Porch. AC.
HBndicap Accessible, sAOOJMo.
DepoSII..814·446·0231 , 614 -446 0205.

SERVICES

IIASEMENT
WIQ'ERI 1 IOOfiNG

.""""-

31 llld ••;I H..
32 hrgolr'~
:

buam.nt

=:,;.••..

41
44-..·enttiMMI

411 Toteay (2

...)

47 Ancient
wrlling

General

Home

I FRIDAY

304-

Truclt, V-f au-

tomalic:. new tires and wheels.

85,000 mites, ""'' lhtrp. S7200,
614-992-4111.
.

Esti':"''tes, 61•·

'84 Ford Tempo, 4: doof auromaric, left 'rear tail light damage,
97,000 ...., $650, 814·948·2311
day_s or 814 -M -2844 M1fin0t.

ASTRO-GRAPH
•, .

'

"

BERNICE
'

..__ _ _ _
..•.•. ~
___.....,...
_ ..

for sale or ren1: 3 badroorn, 2
balht, tamlly room. complete
kitc:hen. 30•·675-3030 or 30•·

675-3431.

hotn. in Pt.

Pleuan~ no poll, 61 4·11112-5058.

Sa!Utila~. May 11. 1996

Pomeroy. lak•ng applic:ariona for,
Ptacock Avenue, one bedroom.

In 1M ~ ahead. you can benefit from

dapo~l required,

eotllilctllllablla1tocl"""' la11J8 orgMiza·

614-t9H002.

11ono or c:lube. SocieMy; 11 well II comn.., 1 'r· . _ ,_ rtla!IOI.ttlpa llhould

...

Srttd 1. lttdroom house. 30-0-t75-

. 2722.

~

TAURUS (A;IIII ~ 101 Today you
could ba lnliriiiMnlal In helplltg friendo
Mill out a ·.atu111on In a '*- manner.
' VOiiJ IIOiutlon will be advan~l 10
· . . .,one IIMIMd. Ttylng 1D I)IIICII up •

rabfe wl

Chttira. $40. 304-875-7588.

'

.,, ..

1

'

•

1 '

•

••

•'&lt;

lool&lt;.
broken romance? Tha Astro-Graph SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) II you've
Malchmaker can help you understand contemplated Involving yourse" in a new
what to c1o 1o make the relationship-'&lt;. SOCial activity, lhls will be a good day 10
Mail $2.75 to Matchmalll.lf. rJ/o tlti8 news- break the Ice. It should live up lo your
· paper, P .O. Box 1758, Murray Hill expectations.
Station, New YOrk, NV 11156.
SAGinARlUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 211 You
GEMINI (May 21 .June 20) You may will be one olsavaral other favored signs
receive dua1 beneflls H you accomplish who · will have promising financial
something lmportanl today . The bonua pro&amp;pecta. Make each opportunity count
' portiOn will be &amp;OIMihlng thai may not be CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1111 This
obviOus at first
mighl be liard lor you to a~capt, but
·CANCER (Ju"' 21-.luly 22) You could aomelhing good you already have going
have good luck al litis 1lm8 In partnenhlp . lor you can be funtler Improved. Keep
llituations. Good diet wiH enhanoe your . looking lor wayslo maka lht"!!" beltar.
ablllly to aucceecl.
AQUARIUS '(.llln. 20-fab. 1I) Pleaunt
LEO (Julr 23 · Aug. 221 Something turpriles mighl be heaped upon you both
you've oonaider8Cialkleline mignt take'• today and tqmorrow . .People you have
profitable tum today and poeslbly outpro- helped in lhe past will looll lor ways to .
duca your primary-- Tap 1M-reciptoca1e.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23o1.p1. 22) Fonuna1e c;117 I!IICES (Feb. :Ill lluch .20) You wiH be
~ wiA begin to jell for you today lu•tH.Ied In feeling hopeful aboul a new
~ 1 Cift:U11ouo route. They m1g111 be
lntereel. H 10oM u H It may ev+ntually
i triggered by aeveral friands YOU ki1C!W
meet 811 of your 8fCI* t•••·
eoclllly. .
· ARII!S (lhtah 21·A!"'II 11) Makl an
I UIRA 1letlt· 11-0c1. U) Subltantlal lflort lo •lllllllh IIUiy ,_illtglul object
financial ~ oou1c1 be In Ml !of today 11 Will 11 1011-. You
for yQ.r In ,lllill c:p. Tliay lliould be eo will be In a cp which will Mlp you 1o
~hi !hey w11 be cllllcUIIo .,..r- _ , . - OIIMIIhan UIUIII.

I

. ~_-.,..S-Y-.
,...A,..-S-A...;.....,.1 :..~ .
5

I'

I .I .

"! ·learned one thing this va-

Ie

cation," my nusband sighed.
"The average traveler wants to

PRINT NUMBERED
LEITERS IN SQUARES

I I I I (I

II

SCJAM.LETS ANSWERS

,Cloulfled Secc/011.

Main...

I I

1~

·~~~~~~BLEFOR
The Treasure
Sarlnfl You'll Find In 1/tr

POinting, vinyl aiding,'
&lt;k&gt;ors. ,._,. bolhs,'
1 ~~=~~::~repilir and more. For
I.
call Chel, 614·11112·

I

3

fj

o'LI'IO!ioT AS
IF ... . A'::&gt; ' IF.....

Apptlance Pails And Service: AIL
Name Blanda. Over 25 V.rs E•·
per1ence All Work Guaranleed.
Ftench Cily Maytag, 814-441~

1 . K URCT

_L...JL....J.._J__.J_L.....J · by liU;ng ;n lite m;ssing words
L
·
yov dOYOiop from Slop No. 3 below.

lT~

(614) 446-0870 Or (114) 2370488 RogtfS Waterproofing. Es1975.
.

·

Corn .
cowrl.,.
31 SIUir'a

I

WWO.l's TH"T -'LL
,._IOVT', HUH?

pelS. 30-0-IIJS-2884.

.

llljor (con. ttllltlon)
27Jop
2t Luclly

'R I V E U T
go where there are no------ "7'
1--..l,~i-1~lr.s;:-;1;-:.,lr-i
Complele lhe chuckle qUOied

~~~~·~~~~

Home
Improvements

·

woocJan dining ·room

ze -

- 1

'

BEDE OSOL

Twa bedrvom hou1e, carpete.d,
nl.- and ~loin. dapolll required,
no lntldt Ptll: U'lr" bedroom
houte, doposil roqulrod, no ptl0;81o!-9112-3090.

'0'

~

Carpeled, s room house in WaSOf'l area. Deposil required , no

$200 per mon1n,

mTIY TI'OO':*\TRX.. 6\?

l
~

Ttuck Camper For

114....·3780.

992-7853.

' Nice lhrae bedroom

-JOn

25

.

Righi; East must ruff the second
club and relurn a trump. Declarer
doesn't have the entries to unblock the
club king, eslabliah .dummy's fifth club
and ellioY il. He must lose three tricks:
one spade, one heart and one ruff.

o. Autos 1of Site

ewtn~ngs.

AVailable June 1St· three bed·
room house'" Middleport, 614 -

l-

"&lt;&lt;

Ml NON~ fQI:: 1-\U:"!!COO!(;UP
fQI::. US, 11-IP\T~ WI-IP\tl

1

,..__,'

(:££,

Olio&lt;, 614-388-8354.

Nns good, 1 1 ~2185.

1917 Ford F-150 $3,100 oall
895-3013.

., v
. MDJP&lt;£ a' I'll(£, fP\T fiLE.T

~ff\Y \.liFE!

I

23 Cameato

Nor:tb

you?

·

·saoo.

tallll-

815-2074:

I

.

'90 F· 150 lariat ••2 Extended
Cob. loon~ left ..... - · lafl!U-

t9e71lodge D-150 Plclt-up. &amp;&lt;yt.
3 spd wilh overldriyo. $2100. 304-

-·

IT':&gt;~ D~-&lt;! (;;0£5'5 '.JII.Io..T

'87 Pt.,-mouth Reliant lE stationwagon, burgand.,-, lront wheel
drive, auto, ate, front damage,
llood nol damaged. tt,828 miloa.
good clean ctr, S850, 6U-949·
2311 days or 814 -949-2&amp;4•

41 Miles From Gallrpolis, St. At.

S Dooeboy (ol.l

111 w.Jrd
21 lllgl••r•

&lt;O&lt;e~(llA-L&amp;'E~s·

1991 S-10 En Cob, 1ot110, Nt, HO E111's Home Maintenance, vinyl
A· I Condition, $7,400, 614-448- · · roofing. •terior and interi.
we~ng. room
8657 Allot 5 P.M.

lor... Prio:ea, 614-4411·4110.

1

$5,000, S1-3101.

2311 ditys.

Iight area damage; power ·wind~
ows. power doors, AIC, crui••.
automatic:, towing packag_
e.
72,209 miles, very clean inaide.
$5000 0110. 614-1149-2311 dip.

·r -

AJC, $ewer, Fishino. Boating:

Unconditional lifehfl't8 guarantn.
local references · rurniahed . Call

S3e50 1akeo il homo, 114-949-

1179 'chevy pk;k uA 350, aulD,

REGIS'IERED ANGUS

And Ch; ·Angus .Bulls, And .H•ir·
ers $700 Up. EKtlltnl Bloodlines

. .

35' Ca"""" 1 Lol; Holkloy Hu...;
Oulbulldlng. Exclllen1 Cond;uont

'1111 f -250........... sliding window •n t.ck, 300 8 cyl., excetlenl
condition, great work trUck, fir~l

eo,_,

114..f41-12&amp;4.

810

720 ll'ucks for Sille

Pap-Up

Ill;, 3 Way RalligatatOr, •

'

"""'
l.oono. Dotlar wil ..
nancing . .en if you. have been

New lennox Furnaces. 75,000
BTU On Upl $549. 614-371&gt;-2720.
AFTER6 PM.

Relrigerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl StOO And Up,
Wil Deliver. 614-669-6441 . .

twa, 61 &lt;·256-6336 Allor 6 P.M.

0196,leeve Message.

.... &amp;14-

4&lt;8-8195.

MatH)' Fwguson

R &amp; S Furn•ture; Mason WV. 30-4 173· 53-41 . N8w Store Hours .
Mcn-Fn
12noon -7pm .
Sat
l2noon-Spm We Bur • Sell Tmde. Ask lor Rodoy.

460 Space for Rent

Cttlu* Phone, l4IW -

Elll!lingo.

Morris Garage Door Co. Is Hav mg a DenJ &amp; Scratch Sale! Over
Stocked On Various Sizes Garage Doors, Call And Save! 614 446-4514.

304-nJ-5651, tolasonWV.

Homes for

.

Repa•red. New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoc:k.
Call Ron Evans, 1-&amp;l0-537·9528.

nished apartmenr in Uiddlepon,
call 614-4o48-3Q91 preferably be·
tore 10:30am 01' aftet' 4:00pm

Take

Sell Or

Over Payments, CD PlaYer -.&amp;

Livestock

614-985-3958.

AERATION MOTORS

oapped. EOH 304'075-11819.
Very clean one bedroom

1995' Fwobirtl Mull

' 614·379-2272 -.~~ P.ll.

JET

Twin Rivers Towltf, now aecepting
applicar•ons for 1br. HUD subsid·
ized apt. for elderly and ·handi-

2 Bedrooms. Basement, Gallipolis
City limils. $375/Mo., + DepoSit 1
R·e letence, No Pets. 614 ·448-

614-256-9318

¥9&lt; $l250,61o!-9112-4111.

Hollltf1d 2515 l\ly Rallo, GoiN . 71 Chov. lmpela, Ill -kic, No
Tedder Rake, 51! ford Mower, rul~ Na lltKtf- 814-245-So082

630

Oul~hmon

1 Di3 ford Miitlang, 4 cJr., •uao,
toaded wirh lots of DPfions, driver's side air bag. 30,000 milet,

-

2 year old Chickens, SOe

IBM 386 Compu1er. 3 112 &amp; 20
Meg. Dr.ve, Mono 1/GA, &amp; Saltware, $250, Or With Color VGA

REAL ESTATE

Cub T...:IOr, .,_, l Culd$2,500,814-256-1131.
Forti. 2000 With Loodar SS,850:
Ford 3.000 S3.f95; Ma- For·

61~·245-9190 ,

Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Set·
ling, Washer /Dryer, Stowe, Relrigeralor. No Pets. No SmQkers.

Houses for Rent

-1,

guson 35 $3,1195; 5 Ft Finished
Filth Wheel fully self·conrained -118115, ....3118-11522.
camper. $2,500. large log trailer
12,500. C.omputerized exercise .Jo"n Deere 317 Lawn Trac:lOf
bike. new cand. $175. 304 '- 882- With Uower, Baughman farms,
814-25N53S.
2920.
Heavy Duty Trailer Fla1 Or Stake

RENTALS

•• c:om .......... ~

446-7283.

Bed,

- - -.......
a Food

~

port from $232-$355 . Call 614·
992-5064. Equal Housing Opporhmiliea.

814-742·2182.

EAB~F.S.T

.t ICNfW .Ttlt~f ~OV~P If
nou1~e wtlffll vou MAr:&gt;t
Ttlf tiVM~I'IS F~ff-~Afll~f/

Etectr~c
Scooters
And
Wheelchairs, New JUted, Van 1
Car lill Installed, Sl8irglides1 lift
Chairs, Can For Broc:hure, 114 -

sa. Gallipolis, 614-446-3870.

450

FRANK &amp;

o·

enoes 304-682-2566.

:.::::::::::..:..:..::.::...::.:::.___ ,310

car

Craftsman 2 hp, air compreasor.
S75"; lavatory With vanitt, $50;
glan shower doors~ ISO: commode. $50; chains lor 1 taWnmowet' Dres. ,,0: ~14-992-a301 ..

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedfQOf11
apanmentt 11 Village Manor and
RiYeflkle Apartment• in Middle-

veteran urgeruly looking
tor 30· 100 acres, private. with or
without bu1ldings. land conrract,

FARf,l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1-800-537-952&amp;

$2501Mo. S150 Oepos ;l, 106 Lo·

._

7111rd'•home

Ct•••tflld - .'

I

SORRI(, MAAM .. I
SLICED THE ANSWER ..

I'LL SAV. •MISSISSIPPI ::.

Concrete &amp; Plasdc ~tic T8nks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons ROn
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

Garage Apartment. 2 Bedrooms.
Washer /Dryer Hook-Up, Relrigeralor, Stove, .Water Furmshed

31 ~T:'.!.

n....,

10 Motoog~ompl\

columns from a press release about
41V...
the 1995 Cavendish Invitationel Pairs. 1.-.-1--1-. 411....,.._
'
'Thia year's event begins' tomorrow at b-+-1~
br+-~-+~
~
the LoeWll Hotel in New York City. Tbe
11 1..81'-'
bundle contained many excellent Ln-+-+-~
deals, but I think I have spotted an an12-En-111
83LookiiW
alytical oversighl
·
L-..I,....L.In this deal, East opened with a
5I
weak two-bid, showing a decent sixcard suit and some 6-10 bigh~card
CELEBRITY CIPHER
poinls. North bid five diamonds as an
by Luis Campos
each-way bet: Maybe il would make, or
Cetlbrity Cipher~ .,. crNied lrom quotalione bw l....aue ~-put and~
. Each lllittei in !he clpMr tt•nda for .-.olher. Todtlr'• ~; Z ~ 1
it might be a good saeriflce.
.
. West led a low spade. Aller winning
wilh his ace, East switched to.the
I IIJ: B
OZWA . I
PCFO
'AKIKWPC
heart eight, declarer winning with the
ace. · Soulh, P-Gt Eliassen from
CK
OPMEKY.
I
FO
ATM'EI
Sweden, saw lhat if the clubs were
breaking 3-2, he could draw trumps
BliP
WBY
WYO
I
PCK
EWPHCKY
and duck a club, making easily. But
what if the clubs were 4-1?
B W.!) C.
MOYKB
T M W Y.'
PC K
AI trick three, Etiassen cashed the
diamond jack. Then be played a club to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "A love song Is j~st a caress set lo music." - :
dummy's ace and a club back toward
'
his king. If eyeryone followed. d_eclarer .Sigmund Romberg. .
was going to give up a club tnck and
cl'aim . And when East discarded,
Eliassen was .still all right. He won
'IIAfDAILf
with lbe king and conceded a club tci
_ Nlllll
_ _ _.....;._ N11H
C\AY L POUAII
West. Back came a heart, but declarer
won with his king, played a trump to
loorranaa letters of
Ofour
dummy, ruffed a ~lub, returned lo
scrambled -.It
dummy wilh anolher trump and dis- ·
low to form four words.
carded his heart loser on the ·establillhect club eight
Looks good. but did anything strike

. PEANUTS

Car Oolty, Real Nice, 1550 Firm,
614·-M6· 1266.

Furnished Eflic'i ency 2 Roams,
Share Balh, S 195t Mo. Utiliues
Paid. 607 Second Avenue, GallipoltS. 614-446-4416 After 7 PM

One bedroom apartmenl in

,

Boot5 By Redw1ng, Chippewa ,
Tony Lama . Guaranteed lowest
Prica&amp; AI Shoe Cole,.Gallipofis.

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up·
stairs, Ulilities Furnished, Clean,
No Pets, Reference. Deposit Requtred, 614.·446-1519.

31A-Iedlly

,

I GNecly

8 Change lnlv
110M

3 Aacllned
4 AilbwtOmy

As you will presumably have gathered, 1 haw been drawing thia week's

7007. '

!Jeat :J04..675-4548.

'¥1 1'1 lillolled

By Phillip Alder

New gas tanka, one tan trUcll
- · .-IOtS;IIooo- . .11. ate. •
D &amp; R Auto. Ripley, W'l. 304-372;
3833 or 1-aJ0-213-t321.
•

Arch sreet buildings _
. Huge S.v·
•ngs on Sel.a Models While suppties last. Cancellation &amp; R~a.
20x26, 25x44, 30xSO, 40x78. low1
mon!hlt paym8nts. 1-800·34 !·

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Oriv'e
from $244 'to $315. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 614 -446 -2568.

Oisabl~

o...tual Kill, S1..245-5077

1093.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET·PRICES AT JACKSON

Real Estate
Wanted

buill. All Types •. Auessible To
10,000 Trantmiuion. Al•9

Pt-e11. &amp; Porta Power. 814·44.1 -

Trash Pard , NO PETS, On 554
Near Portet. 6, 4·388-1100.

cust

u- IRe-

2 Orawl rldgoa

Giv~n a reprieve

Chevrolet

Over

o4 Ft. Metal 'Brake, 12 Ton Power

2bedroom apanmenr in New Haven area, refrigerator &amp; stove.
$26Simo. plus. deposil, includes
water. 304· 773-9171 leave mes-

. Fr&amp;e delivery &amp; setup.
Oakwood Homea, Niuo

c.i. Small Block

1 Wllldng alick

1

34

Auto Parts &amp;

lludgtt Tranam;-..

izet 14 Band $25.00. Optimus' ~
Wan Power Booster $15.00. ·call
Henry ahor 5:oo 304-1175-1433

E&lt;JOal Hous&lt;tg Opporwnily.

Gaod Housekeeper, Referenc:ea
Needed. 814-446-8788.

'

'llttxk Only• 2 Freeze Ptua ... $350,814--446-1511 .

TV,,
Needs - . ; $7500. BSR E&lt;1110l·

3711. EOH.

l3mb,.r,.n,2hbath. $1799 down, $275/

400

llaa at

DOWN

Opening lead: • 5

WHQ BAlLED
HlM OUT?

Acc.essorles

25"Uagnavox Color ConsoJe

2bdrm. apt! .. total electfiC , ap·
pUances furnished, laundry room
lactlilies, close to school •n town.
ApplicatiOnS available ar VIllage
Green Aprs. 149 or Call 614·992-

JU6HAID HAD TO

SlAY IN AFTER SCHOOL
FER BEIN' ROWDY
OOWOY !I

440150.

message.

1 Bedroom 13 Room Apanment:

Penon Wanted To · Sit With El·
cjet'ly Handicapped Man, Yus1 Be

11119 WtUcralt 21' Cuny Cobin.

760

1111 aid

••

350 rNQr~Um MarouiM, lliC:eNtnl
t:Gndltiart, $17,500, l14-94ll-201tl

24x4 above ground pool , Used
one seaaon, exceUent c:ondilion
$1 ,200. 814-949-3029,. leave

2 Bedroom. Fridge, Stove. 663
Tl'lird Annue, Gall, poli s, $3001
uo. Plus 1 Monrh Deposit, 614 ·
2.(5-QS95.

Wnl

·'

7G/

2 Crypta In Ol'io Valley loltmoriOI

:2:';:, 2 pt.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

. . . Baja 114 1111221-18511&gt; 110
~- 14.!00. 300-e75-

Gardens For Sale Fron1 Wall
61-4-24tS..5905.

:6.:.n~7.:..- , . - - - ' - - - - -

410

'l'etnaf\a Waveru.n ner, tw9'
pat":'Jr.: ••ctllenl condilian,
S2iOO
s••-2311 ditya. •

alto&lt; 5pm.

35""'
..... "

S.lll

'IQ

w--

83PniiM

IDAIIIIIS
311mp

+AJt845

posit, All Utilities Included, No

Double wide $1495 down ,
$224mo. Free air. 1·800-691 -

360

Towncar Slttldl

'

c:.n.

21-

.;,xet

24 FL Ponolon Boa1 50 HP lololllr,
Exc:.llonl Ctnditianl 15.500. 81._

And Stove, Underpinning &amp;
Many Ex.trur Very Spacious.
Priced Ta Sell I Easy Financing
Anilablel Gl-4- 247 -~32 A.tter 6
P.M. Or le&amp;Ye Messape.

Will Do tnterior Or E•terior Paintino. Reasonable Rates, Experienced, Refefenc:es. For Free Eslimtlel, 814-245-5755.

Or-OIIw••, ..2!11-1Zil

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

10 Jungle Cll
24 , . . . . lllnl 11 Curiy ....
21
poov.
12 CoupiM

A Q I 8 4 S

• 4
•AXS

10
14 Spclen IMI lllr
- Glllw
II C..C.-

22 l!go

• J I I
+1032
.. J

.. Q109S

for Slle

Trailer, Trolling Uotor, l'· 1J2 Gat
Motor, Fishfinder, lite JICkaft,
614· U6 9484.

nace

•

lllita. 750 Boats 1 ltiOtors

l~

~Reference!, 614-446-3437.

EaR

• X 10 7 5
• Q 10 4 2

317-1538-

1111 Filth- 31,000
NC, Till, """' 31.lolo10r $3,1100

$250: 1 UMd Johnson GIS FurniCe, 180 ,000 BTU' t, Upflow
$250; 3 Uted Electric Furnaces
15KW. 2DKW. 25KW, 1 u ..d 3
Ton Rheem He•t Pump, 1·800287 -&amp;308, 614·4.46·8308, 1 100~
291 ·0098.

12 FL F;borgiasalTr;haul,

Weo&amp;
+7'

'

1 Bed(oom. 3 Raams Furnisl'lad
Apartment , Utilities Paid, 94 locusr, GaJiipolis, $2651Uo, $100
n..-...:t. 814-4t"6-t340.
.......-2 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment

-2 "-"'
u-- · 1ux
• eo 3 Bed room, 2
t_.
S.ltts, .Cenual Air, LP Gat Fur-

.

-~II.

19a4 Maran 11 ft. OP,.n BoW
Wilh Sun Deck. 4.3 litef, V-&amp;.
M«c: CrutHr, Wift Ski Actnsorin, 814-258-e180:. .

6QI80 Atler eP.M~

Neverliva!lnl

614-992·236-&lt;. EOE

IU 8413028.

$3,000. Cal 300-e75- 7:1111.

1 Used Coleman Dooori'FIOw Gas
Furnace, 111,000 BTIIs. Cornpleoo

f'or Oft Rt 2 l -. WV, 614· 25&amp;· For Renl, $375/Mo., +$100 De-

pairs, $2000,614-992-5058.

-

to ule, tHdy

Merchandise·

614·

.-:
prioa 131QD, .,. ~~

-r r•
. rttr\1.,.... _ _ · -l!oymtnla,
CA250, 14.!!IICI.
Or Take
0...
•14.-

-

11~1111120 RIP JCt

• 7 54'
+X Q 4
.. AI752

35,.000

1172 1o1GB Co,..llillle,

311211.

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous

1 Bedroom SuJ)*r Nice ! Near
Holzer' s $268/Mo. Plus Utili ties,
Deposit ~wed, 814-446-2957.

1091 Brookwood 14x76, CA . 3
BR, 2
on t/2 Acre lot, RE ·

OUCED 130 000 Wt1 Sell MH Seperatefy, E•..i.s 1+250-638t .

pe ts,

AKC lab pups, black &amp; brown.

Bu"t or tell. Riv8fine Anliqu ...
112o1 E. Uain Street, on Rt. 1~. ,.., 10th. 300 - -·
Pomerot. Hours.: Y. T. W. lO:OO.
a.m. 10 8 :00 p.m.. Sundar 1 ;00 10 AKC mini PinKht&lt;l, ""' nlos.
tamaloa, ready Juno 15, IC·
6:00p.m. 61 ..St92·2528.
cepting depotirl, 1300 each,

1 and 2 beOoom apanmerns. lurnished and unfurnished, security

Point
, •

#1

13.500. Needs Rellored, 114- - - .... of
882-7512.
1W1q S7,21111, • t --501 t.

readJ 1111 10, 1996, 304 ·1t5AKC llbt.·ptktcl

114·11112-2167·
440 Apartments
for Rent

-

a1nl-. 7.-.

--W'l

1·_ _ _ __ _
8..;
lor Close To Gallipolis 1 ,".:.1~4~
...
.:.1.:.'0.:.1:;:

Sell Sepefalt) 814·448-

I No A n - l 11......._11....

1H9 Nova SS 3118 - 375, Lt .. 1110 Kaweolli Ni"" 250, 11•·
lltotor:. I Trarts, 13,000, Needs 317-liiZJ.·
:
Raalllf011: 118t a.M:k GS 350, 4
SpHG, FaeiOfy Air, AtiZORit Car 11182 Hartoy le3 Sjoot•

Reloading l flshlna Supplies.

530

Mr-.
a

\

1

==et=ZJrz,.

...... __.
17 Trectci-4rllllr

• J 2

Ho- - l n g ,.......

1150 CMoro'-1 2 DOO&lt; Sodlil, cMe

fo.r Rent

Er,1PLOYr.1ENT
SERVICES

'IMoiCJCIII

. . _ .. ",......
y'-1 ~

41.U.$!1*.)

11., . _
·I
11 On...
14-- CIMr
11 " ' - """""
11 A" Ml

·

117S. 7fO- 11._:145 SCI!

420 Mobile Homes
1070

. . . . . . . .11- --

1 · 5 - - l......... -

'1'

Trough- Offer - Dl!,nce- Guiny- FIGURE
While trying on dresses in a local department store I
overheard one woman mumble, "A girdle is the differ·
ence between fact and FIGURE.•

MAY1ol

�•

.

: _~~-1_2_•~---~~~~------------------------------~-P-~_m_~-~~y_•_M_~-~~~·-O_h~------~----~----------~F-~-d~~·~· ~1-0,_1_~_

~ Caregiver
Ann
Landers

: By ANN LANDERS
: Dear Ann Landers: I feel com: pelled to respond to lhe lener from
·. "Lorena in MichiJan '" whose hus· band suffers from Alzheimer's, and
: lhc kids aren't much help.
· My falhcr has dementia, also.
This disease is undoubcedly the most
difficuh imaginable for !he person
who has it as well as the family. For
two years, we knew that Dad was

may ne.ed to give up role in Al.zhe~mers patient's lite·
different. but we just mulced it up to her out of her wits by threateninato
"crabbineu" that comes with old shoot my brother-in-law. My father
a,e. When we talked to Mom about had always loved my sister's husit. she admined·he was getting a bit band, so his behavior finally conhard to live with, but she .never vinced Mom that Dad was not the
same person and things were beyond
asked for our help.
When it reached the point where her control.
That was two years ago. Dad is
Dad thought lhe closet was the bath·
room, put his cloches on backward now in a good nursing home. We
and went into the kitchen and · visit several times a week and are
cooked breakfast at midnight, we very pleased because there is a speknew something had to be done. We cial wing for dementia patients. The
suggested to Mom that she put Dad staff is competent and cariog. They
in a nursing home. ·
look after him well.
At fll'St, Mom refused. She said it
Please tell "Loretta" not to feel
would be failing Dad, her faithful that she woold be deselting her huspanner for 60 years, and it would be band if she put him in a home. Tell
the same as abandoning him. The her she must do it for his safety as
final straw was the day Dad scared well as lier health. There comes a

..----~-Chester
.

operetta---.....
.

time whc1l Iovins fllllily members
must tum over the role of main caregiver to professionals. For her. the
time is now. •• Louisiana
Dear Louisiana: You have wrinen
a letter that could serve as a cui!le
for every person who has a family
member suffering from Alzheimer's.
Thank you on behalf of all of them,
for an informed, compassionate
response.
Dear Ann Landers: I am 19 years
old and work 'in customer service at
a major depanment store. I try to be
friendly and courteous to evctyone,
but sometimes it's hard because of
lhe comments about my linJemails.
·1 have iet my nails grow· until
each one is over 9 112 inches long. I

realize people are going to notice
my nails simply because of thi:ir
lenp. But I devote a lot of time and
expense to keeping· them perfectly
manicured and beautifully decanted
with unusual nail an. Usi~ a ~wel­
er's drill, I've made tiny hOles along
the entire length of each nail and
inselted little gold rings. This is my
way of •~pressing my desire to look
differenl
I just wish people would stop act·
ing like I owe them an explanation.
I've heard every possible comment
and question ypu can imagine, some
of lhem quite rude. It gets tiresome.
Actually, my nails are only about
half the length I'd like them to
reach.

I realize I "on'l have to answer
qiiCSiiOIIS' just because ~
people ask. How do I manage this
and still remlin' frieadly and cOII!Ie·
ous to customers? ·- Long Nails in
ntll)'

Dear Long Beach: Anyone. who
grows 9 112-inch fingernails and
decorates them with art and gold
rings should not be upset when people ask questions. You grew them to
attract attention. and now you are
getting it, so don 't complain.
Sead questions 1o Ana Lauden,
Syadkate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Lol Angeles,
Calif. 90045

recycled right down to the gas, oil
and 'antifreeze. Donors may. call I·
800-590-1600 to make the pick-un
arrangements.
According to Mike Randolph,
spokesman for the progil1111, everyone
benefits-· the donor is relieved of an
unwanted vehicle and_ may· be eligi·
ble for an income ta~ deduction, the
community benefits by being cleaner and safer, he recycling industry
benefits from the increased volume of
business, and most 'impoltantly, the
16,000 Special Olympics athletes in
Ohio benefit from the funds raised.
Although not every car nets
$1 ,SOO, the program has proven to be
quite successful, said Randolph. To

TRIAL OF THE BIG .BAD WOLF· Then stu·
dents In grades 4-6 will preHnt a 50's veralon
of tiM tale of the Big Bed Wolf Friday, 7 p.m.,
at Cheater Elementary. Cast members Include,
from left: Brandon
. Car-

ria Crow, Michael Taylor, Jonathar ·" Ill, Brent
Buckley, Alysae Holter, Jonaf1an 0 1. n, William
Woods, Becky Taylor, Jennifer Thoma, Tiffany
Hensley and Sonia Frederick.

The ACS also recommends that all
women, who are or have ljeen sexually active or have reached the age of
18 should have an annual Pap[ smear
and pelvic examination. After a
woman has had three or more con·
secutive satisfactory normal annual
examination, the P.ap test may be per•
formed less frequently at the discrelion of the physician.
The American Cancer Society
also reports that there. has . been a
decline in the incidence of ·cervical
cancer over the past 30 years. This
undoubcedly because of lhe extensive
use of Pap smears for early diagnosis of precancerous conditions that
are often curable.
Nearly two million U.S. citizens

date, more than 350 vehicles. have
been collecced and the donations
have resulted in more than $30,000
raised for Ohio Special Olympics.
Residents can have their vehicle
removed by calling i-800-390-1600,
Special .Olympics is the world's
largest program of athletic training
and competition for children and
adults with mental retardation. It is
the philosophy of Special Olympt~s
that every athlete, regardless of abtiity, should have" chan~e I~ expe~­
ence success. By affordtng thts
oppoltunity, it is believed that the
"winning .altitude". gained throu~h
sports will transfer mto the dally hfe
of these Special Olympics athletes.

developed some form of cancer in
1995 and close to half will result in
death.
Some cancers can be prevented by
a healthy lifestyle and early detection:
. Two of the main c"ncers afflicting
women, breast and cervical ca~c~r••
are examples of .cancers that can be
detected through early screenings.
Planned Parenthood is a private
non-profit organization providing
preventative reproductive l)ealth ser·
vices to women and men. It serves
eight counties in Soulheastem Ohio
including Athens, Oallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Ross and
Vinton counties. Additional in forma·
tion may be obtained by calling 614
-593-3375

Local TOPS Club arranges upcoming open house .
Plans for an open house to be held
May 2 were m~~e whe~ the local
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Senstbl~)
met recently at the Carpenters ~allm
Pomer?Y·
.
.
M111da Long gave a report on
preparations for the open house to be

Hi-t. 'the

HI: 50a
Low: 30s

t:reril•••

Details on:•
pageA2 •

•

.. .

,,

.

.,

'

. #:

•

•

I

·.

me

tmts

··
· ·
pot" contest. It was noted that Franheld from 6 to 7 p.m :
· · . · .1
nd d ·
Recognized at a recent meeting as ~s ~aggy ost seven pou s unng
TOPS best loser and runner up were
pA· ro ram on the benefits .of
Tina Geary and Brenda Oars~ respec- laught~r !as given, Minnie Harris
uvely. KOPS (Keep OffPo.unds Sen- read a poem written by Linnie Bell ·
sibly) best loser was Juha Hysell . AI h'
d Geary read "It's a New·
. tina Geary talked about the "fill the o:~ ':~:'lltrs san several songs.

.

A Gannett Co. New spaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 12 , 1996

Vol. 31, No . 14

Robinson 'guilty' of Salvation Army robbe·ry.
.

,J • f
·
J ury re turns gul"/fy veruiC
s on robbery,
kidnanning,
ag'n.ravated
robbery Cha,ges
1"1"
:1
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmn-Sendnel StaH . .
POMEROY - A Meigs County jury Friday returned ·
ftve guilty verdicts against Brad Robinson, 27, ·of
Pomeroy in the' Jan. 15 robbery of the Meigs County
Salvation Anny.
The verdicts followed a second day of testimony and
arguments in Robinson's trial.
Robinson, accompanied by Josh Cremeans, 14, of
Middleport and Tara Booth , 12, of Pomeroy, broke into
the Pomeroy residen ce of Dora Wining, 87, which also
housed the local Salvation Army chapter.
Once in the house ..Cremeans and Robinson went up
to Wining's second-floor apartment and surprised Win·
ing and her 63,year-old daughter, Helen Townsend of .
Ashville.
·
Onc.e the two women were restrained. the two rob·

..• bers,
One of the rob·
in an effort to
· struck
find her purse,
her on the

head.
bers,' accompanied hy
Booth, proceeded to ransack
"I couldn't brush
the dwelling, stealing an
my hair for a
undetermined amount of
week," she said. "I
money and other belongwas very mad,
ings.
very angry. I still
Townsend said she and ;' ,;
.~' am. "
Wining we~ upstairs talking '
·' Townsend said
the evening of the crime.
, she heard the rob·
"I heard a terriblti crash,"
bers say the names
Townsend said.
"Tara" and "Robby."
When she went to tum on the light, a man with a
After the intruders left, she said she lay still for sevmask _: apparently Cremeans - came up the steps, era) minutes, afraid to move after being threatened and
grabbed het arm, threw something over her head and intimidated. Eventually she got her head uncovered, got
threw her to the floor. Next, her hands and mouth wel\!1 off the floor, freed her hands and mouth and assisted
tied with tape.
· Wining.
.
"If I'd had a gun, I'd have shot him," she said.
Townse!\(i said she then tried to use the phone and

r.::-::su:-:::-:No~:-::-:-::vN~oteb~ook__,_--....,--___,

.
'
discovered that it did not work- Booth )lad disabled ill
She then went out the second-story door and saw tw.o
people at a nearby residence. Afraid they were the ro~
bers, she went a different route and, traveling througlj
the darkness and snow, reached a residence from which
to call police.
.:.'
Pomeroy police officers arrived ahout five minu.tes
later and escorted her back to the Wining residence . .. :·
"It upset me to think that someone had done this to
(Wining)! .. after all those years of service. Especially
someone who knew her."
. ~ , .,.
Wining testified next, being assisted to the wilno&amp;s •.
s1and by Deputy Danny Leonard and court Bailiff Pa,ul
Gerard.
She said she saw Townsend being grabbed at th~ top
of the stairs by a man wearing a mask and turned to run
before being grabbed from ·behind and similady ,
restrained.
_r
Wining remembered: "I thought they. were going to
smother me to death. I said 'Oh, no."'
Continued on page ~2
··:

Canipai_
gn '96: Where the elderly .stand
Ed~ar's

nate: This Is the sixth In a continuing series

of Gannett f.lews Service, Suniloy Tlmea·Sentlnel
ertlclea, entlded "Report Card an America," looking
at crucial illuH of thla election year.

big corporations."
The sought-after
pledge comes in the

GALLIPOLIS ..,... Capturing the senior citizen wak.e of a series of
~ote may come down to which candidate offers television and radio
the best benefits package; or, woich candidate ads in which Citizen
"It was not unusual when I was a child to see my mother behind a team
will pledge to do the least har.m 10 Action claims Cre·
of lank horses, the leather driving lines looped across.#....,...._ .
·. e~isting benefits.
means voted five
her sturdy shoulders, her calloused, steely hands
65
compdse
times "to cut Medicare
Americans
.
over
gripping the wooden handles of a hillside
IS percent of the population, · last year, and (cast)
plow, ·her brown bare feet following the
they are politically active four votes to cut Med·
cool, damp furrow as the plowshare sliced
and
heavy voter:;, And, dramat- icaid programs that
and turned the spring sod." .Wiih these
ically
altering the health care · cover children and cit·
words; Jennings Beegie of Racine begins a
seniors ·have come to izens who need ourspersonal tribute to his 1 and all - motlj'
·
and
ttust for the
bQme care''
ers•P!!PC1
·
...
years }l;IS,unsettfe&lt;fmany ~i;;~;:j~ffi,~·.,.....ot~liiM"4ii"'!fil11tt1!1!
· '
are likely to come up
cans.
M-G-M Cub Scout-district
against
next year, and
The continuing debate has brought forth posi·
we
've
heard
· nothing
set to hold 'B.i ke Ro~eq'
.
'tion papers and ~pecial interest group pressure on
from
Rep.
Cremeans
GALLIPOLIS ·- The Cub Scou~ ',-Metgs-Galha·
·candidates seeking to hold or achieve political
that indicates he' ll
Mason District will hold a "Bike Rodeo" on Satur·
74%
office in November.
58%
76%
vote
to
pro
tect
Ohio's
day, May 18, at the Gallipolis City park front. Sixty
Locally, Ohio's largest consumer organization
65"'.,
.., ;
trophies and prizes wilt&gt;be awarded
last week called on Sixth District Rep. Frank Cre· elderly, di sabled and
• Page C4
means, R-Gallipolis, to sign a "Pledge to Protect said
youngest
citizens,"
· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
· ·~·· L-~L.·
Jim Lowe,
Citi ~ l..£~:!·~
ot'Retired Persons, Bureau of
Ohio Families."
gress in proposing swee~ing changes to the health
.Citizen Action, with 350,000 members zen Action's member·
Recycling firm not.es rise in local interest statewide,
care system serving 33 niillion American elderl.y" .
asked Cremeans to sign a pledge that ship director.
"That's.
why
we're
asking
him
to
sign
this
Cremeans.challenger, former Rep. Ted Strick·
GALLIPOLIS - The al)lount of recyclable
he will vore:
pledge
to
p~otect
Ohio's
families
and
publicly.
land
, D-Lucasville, has called the GOP-propo~ea
material processed by a Galli a County' firm near• "Against cuts in Medicare that increase costs
oppose
such
cuts,"
he
lidded.
changes
"shameful."
ly doubled after its first year of operation, and its
to elderly and disabled Ohioans;
As
of
Saturday,
Cremeans
had
not
publicly
"The
Gingrich-Cremeans changes would lead
owner expects the rate of growth to leap by the
• against reductions in the coverage or quality
responded to the group's request.
to higher out-of-pocket costs for seniors," Stric~ .
end of 1996.
of Medicare;
For
his
part:
Cremeans
says
the
votes
criti.
c
ized
land
said. '"That's a cut in the program, as far'* '
, L &amp; L Scrap M:etals' and Recycling, 128 Thx~s
. • again~t limits on senior citizens' ability to
by
c;itizen
Action
were
designed
to
save
the
fail·
I'm
concerned."
.
·,:
Road, Gallipolis, recycled 4.4 million ·pounds of·
ch~ose their own doctors;
· ·
ing
system;
and,
that
the
challenged
"cuts"
are
Republicans
say
such
messages
are
part
of
an·
material during 1994, its initial yeru' in business,
• against stripping nursing hom~ and health
orchestrated Democratic Party "Medi-scare~ :
and saw the total for 1995' increase to ·s million pounds, owner Doug . coverage for seniors, children · and di sabled ' really "cuts in the rate of growth" in spending.
Last
year,
when
the
Medicare
Board
.
of
campaign , charging that candidates like StriciC~·
Lester said. He noted that recy~ling has moved beyond the stage of tum·
Ohioans against Medicaid; and,
.
Trustees
reported
the
fund
would
be
bankrupt
in
land are more interested in preserving Medicar~ :
ing in aluminum and steel cans • Page A3
• against using cuts in Medicare and Medicaid
2002,
Cremeans
joined
other
Republicans
in
ConContinued: on pa.9 e A2
'·
• to pay for tax breaks for wealthy individuals and

Tribute to _m others on their special day

loll·

.... ..o.:: ~

~

·~-....

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

.--;
.·

IrS A JUNGLE OUT THERE· These atu$nta
In gredn 1-3 will preBBnt this tale remlnacent
of the Jungle Book Friday, 7 p.m., at Cheater
Elementary~

· Matthew Frank, Sara Pore, Carrie Elberfeld,
Derek Baum, Abbie Chevalier, Cody Dill and
Chelsea Young.

Cast members Include, from left:

Good Morning

- -.Community calendarThe Community Calendar . is provided. Mothers to be presented
pulilisbtd as a rree service to DOD· ·. flowers. Guests welcome.
proflt.groups wishing lo announce
POMEROY -· Return Jonathan
meetlna and special eve"!ts.· The
ealendar is not desipled to promote Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
sales oduncl raise~ of any type. American Revolution, 10 a.m SaturItems are printed 11!1 space pennits . day, Meigs County Public Library,
and ~:~~nnot be guaranteed to run a Pomeroy. Speaker, Paul Reed, preside~! of Farmers Bank.
specific number of days.

FRIDAY
POMEROY .. Hemlock Orange
2049. open house, Friday, 7 p.m. at
the grange hall. Spea\(er, Patty Dyer,
state deputy. Entertainment by Mid·
dlebranch ..Refreshments.

SA11JRDAY
RACINE ·• Racine United
Methodist Women mother-daughter
banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the
church. Reservations to be made
with Opal Diddle, 949-2051 or Lee
Lee. 949-2454.

MONDAY
POMEROY .. Meigs County
Right to Life meeting fvlonday, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Liprary in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY ·- The Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m at the Meigs High
School Library.

Today's Glimu·-'.eutbul
13 Sections - 134 Pages

Syracuse OIH

Bedding&amp;
V8Q81able P~ts ..........$6.50 flat
1o1n Hanging Blskata $5.75 &amp;
$6.75
.
12 In Hanging Basket Fems
$10.95
Combination Pots
................. ............... $3.5()..$9.95
Geqnlums................$1 .00 &amp; Up
...................... ~ .... 10 or more 85¢
Au..•• ................... $4.95-$8.95
JI)KidoCllndrone ............... $12.95
Shntbl 6 r ......... $2.95-$10.95
'
Open D11r t a.m. ·I p.m.
.. .., tt "-•lp.m.

-..m

\

ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL ·
GRADUATES OF 1996

ONLv 55495
85 CHEV. C-1 0 PICKUP Stap sld8
bed, v.a 305, automatlc ..... $3415
82 CHEV. S·10 Long bed, V-6

•ng. 5-spHd ........................ $1895
90 PONTIAC GRAND Allf 4 DR.
Automatic, air, extra nlce ... $4Bil5
Many Cars • Truckl• 4x4'1
• Va111 to choose lroml

Your Laat Stop Car Slaop

RACINE .. The Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet· at 7 p.m.
Monday at the annex.

MOTORS

POMEROY ·- Burlingham Modem Woodmen, potluck dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday. Mea.t, rolls. beverages

H•••·• Gree..

Insert

5-speed, good milts.

MorBEB'S DAY SP.ICIAt
Ali Moms Receive A FREE Plant
at ••'• s...r.asbord Ravenswood, W.V.
. SUNDAY, MAY 12

Dlnaer Buffet Featurl•l Roast Beef

•

'

S1

Creat~~n

·Planned Parenthood marks Healthy Moms' Week
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio is sponsoring "Healthy Moms
Week" May 12·1 8 in its eight county area to highlight services to
women of all ages.
·
Planned Parenthood clients have
received a Health Mom Card with
information 10 encourage their mothers to schedule an annual e~amina­
tion. including cancer screening for
breast and cervical cancer.
The American Cancer ·Society
recommends regular · preventative
measures. The regimen for breast
cancer screening includes mammograrns, clinical breast examinations
and breast self-examination. Breast
cancer is the second leading cause of
cancer•relaced deaths among women.

·

1

111&lt;.1( p

• FMiurwd on C1

LonaaeaCh

Donate unwanted cars to Special Olympics
Ohio Special Olympics Recycle
for Gold program definitely proves
the old adage that beauty is in lhe eye
of the' beholder.
The · organization recently
receiv~ a donation of an unwanted
1989 Dodge Caravan. The vehicle
was retrieved by Denison Auto Parts,
Inc. in .Cleveland and resold. Ohio
Special Olympics received S1,543
through Recycle for Gold for the
vehicle.
The novel fundraising program
allows owners to donate their
unwanted car or truck to Ohio Spe·.
cial Olympics. The vehicle is
removed free of charge then either
resold, sold for parts or comllletely

-

Along the River

Editorials
Obituaries
Soorts
· Weather

Jac!s Anderson
·Aug Landers

JlmSancls
Dorothy Sayre

Ask for Dave or Bob

A4
Cl
C2
. C2

cs

.

.

'•

Concrete work begins
on Belleville hydro project
•

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va .. (AP)
- State police have recovered'
the body of a Gilmer Cou'nty man
they believe was murdered
almost three months ago.
A barge crew on the Ohio
River found the ·. decomposed
)ody of John P. Shock on Ftioay
about · 6 miles soul~ of
Ravenswood, according to James
Shock, the victim's twin .
Last month, Gilmer County
, sheriff's deputies charged Craig
Craft with murder in the death of
Shock, 27, of Normantown. Craft
is free on $~0,000 bond .
Gilmer Sheriff Charles Hess
said Craft confessed to killing
. Shock and dumping the body into
the Little Kanawha River en Feb.
25. The Linle Kanawha feeds into .
.the Ohio.
James Shock said his brother
·and Craft were close friends . .
Craft's .father, David Craft. is a
state Senate candidate.

By TOM HUNTER
Todc.· .
,.,
Times-Sentinel Staff
The 42-megawatt hydroelectric plant y;ill
BELLEVILLE. W.Va.
Visible contain two Austrian turbine generator units
progress on the Belleville Hydroelectric · ·to create electricity, with both units served
..Project is moving at a steady rate, with the by a common intake and tailrace. The tail·
. first concrete placements being made on the race is the water channel exiting the turbine
$153.45 million .project.
area, returning water to the Ohio River. ,
The $73.8 million hydroelectric plant
. The project, which includes backup genconstruction by Guy F. Atkinson Construe- eration, is owned and will be operated by,cpe
tion Co., based in San Bruno, Calif. reached 42 Ohio municipal electric systems that
another milestone comprise Ohio Municipal Electric Gene~a­
with the first con- . tion Agency Joint Venture 5, and is slated to
crete poured for begin operation Nov. I, 1997.
construction of
The first concrete pours totaled appro~i­
the powerhouse mate1y 3,500 cubic yards of concreJe.
last week.
Before the project is completed, more than
The first con· 105,000 cubic yards of concrete, all procrete placements duced by an on-site batch plant, will be U'\Cd
were for the east in the construction of lhe facility.
,
retammg
wall
The project received another boost early
and the east side last week, with the opening of construction
of the tailrace , according to American bids for the 26.5 mile transmission lin~ por- - - "· Municipal Power-Ohio spokesman Curtis
Continued on page A2

·City may ·seek 1-milllevy for purchase of new fire departme~t ladder truck
"A truck like this is such a major purchase ihat we'd
By KEVIN KELLY
hate .to put .a significant amount of resources into one
Tlmes-5entlnel Staff
.
· GALLIPOLIS - City voters may be asked this fall item," Commission President Carol O'Rourke said.
to consider a l·mill levy that would allow a new ladder ·
"Also, we hope.people will recognize the importance
truck io be added .to the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire of keeping the lire department in good · shape,:' she
added. "The truck we have now is 36 years old, so it's
bepartment.
.
While the City Commission has take,n no action to time."
'
put such a levy ..:.. the first ~or the flnfd~partrttenJ since
Based on specifications, a new ladder truck could
tlie late 1950s - to voters m Oalltpilhs qme precmcts, cost from $250,000 to $600,000, Coppler explained, but
it 'has been examining the possibility since early this he said the VFD only wants a reliable piece of equip'
year, City Manager Matthew Coppjer said.
·ment.
"It's amazing, some places really go for the frills, but
During review sessions prior to the passage of a ne~
budget, the commission found reve.nue is available to the· fire department told me not to worry, they were only
buy a new vehicle to replace .the l960 International nO.V interested in something functional, not a showpiece," he
said ..
in the GVFD's fleet.
·
Replacement of the ladder truck is vital 10 the city
But corttmissioners are reluctant .to ·spend the entire
amouht for a ne:w truck ana strip .the' budget, and are keeping its current fire insurance rating and possibly
leaning toward a limited·tiiJle-lax .issue .to, make the buy., improving it when .the city'S firefighting and water

·Any Professional, Business, Individual or Civic
Organizations who would .like to have an .
advertisement in this special edition please

Don't Forget Seafood Fri. Nights ~ PM-8 PM

Bl·8
A2

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

******

· Call 992-2156.

A6

Columns

On Thursday, May 23rd, The Daily Sentinel will
h~ve a special edition with ~holographs of high
. school seniors graduating. this year. Now ·
through Friday, May 17th, Drop Your Photo
Off At The Daily Sentinel.or At&gt;Your' High .
·. School Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High School to Ph~to)

Opea I hOO A.M.- Open 7 DaYs, 6 AM to 8 PM

A4

Authorities.find body
of homicide victim

:•-7-;,J

.

'•

department services are reviewed in 1998, Coppler
explained.
Homes and.businesses covered by the GVFD, which
include service contracts \\·ith Addison, Clay, Gallipolis
and Green townships, have a rating of 5 on a scale o&lt;' 10,
10 being the worst possible rating.
Loss of that standing due to inattention to services
could send the rating to 7 or 8, with a corresponding
Increase in the amou,nt of insurance people must pay, the
·
city manager explained.
The amount paid on an additi onal mill to property
ow ners could translate into the amount of extra in•ur·
ance coverage wi.th a rating increase, Copplcr noted. .
' "If your fite insurance rating went up; you'd be payiog that easily for the aMiti1mal insurance," he said :
''that one mill would be gping back into the community
for the good of the community."
The commission has examined two options on the

,,

•

length of the levy. continuing or limited, and favors
keeping it in force only as long as it takes to pay off the
truck, Coppler e&lt;plained.
"The commission is leaning towar&lt;l that option, but
we will discuss it further at the next meeting," he said.
The commission has until August to file with the Gallin County Board of Elections and get a levy on the Nov.
5 ballot.
·
'
Upgrading the OVFD's fleet is part of an overall plan
to meet expectations when the insurance review coll)es
up, Coppler said . Firefighters and water tlepartrri~nt
employees have been undergoing updates on new pnke·
dures..
.
.
.
Last week, the commission approved first reading of
an ordinance issuing bQnds totaling •$350,000 for the ·
purchase of a new engine, brush truck and skid unif for
the VFD. All of those items were requested by the VFD
when the city began formulating·this year's tmdget. '.:

·;

'

'

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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
