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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea ..nt, wv

-

Flashing
·is
prime
.
location for roof leaks ~

•

Ease and elegance

.

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
APNew.alf;llh g,l87 squore feet or IIY, •• apace and plenty of
1menltlea, Plan G· 4, by
I!DmeStyles Deslanero Net~rk, II the perfect choice for
a family look inK for an ele·
pnt, but comforubie home.
The home's brick e-.:terior
hoi decorothe hlshllshta,
tntludlns stucco l(.'(:enls, Ire ~

cliUonal ahuuera, keyatones
ahd comer quolna.
Inside, the fonnal llwlns end
dinine: room• nank the foyer,
cf1alinl a alyllah Aettlns for
~ctal aatherlnao. The llvlns
room'• 14-R. e~thedral collins

Nda a rouch or drama.
At the · rear, a fireplace

~·artn!l the tpacloua family

r'pfUR, which features a Aoar-

ier bedroom. Burin@ summer

Bulls post
semifinals
victory

•'

House of the week

lnl H -n. vaulted collins. A
).•n:nch door pro vides access
l~hl roomy deck which also
~ be r('ttched fro•n the ma~ -

Ohio Lottery

Sunday,May12,1918

bedronll'I 1 A 11 -foot nulled

~

..,onlha, friends and family
ceilln! extends Into lhe mas~~~ P.Ue and enjoy the deck
ter bath, where a plant shelf
for barbecues and reloxation.
can display norals and @Ren·
A rew Slr.ps away, the break ery. A dip In the aunny garden
raat nook shares an 11-n. l~il- tub will be a rerreahlns and
·li1111MI a serwlns bar wilh the ' anticipated event.
kjtt..-htm. •:ven a gpurmet chef
Acrosa the hOme. three secwill t.•nnl till~ kitchen. whh:h
ondary be-drooms ~hare a spill
hall a pantry t.•lusel aitd uonhall bath, which inclu~s a .
aidenble roum to mo11e
dual-sink vanity. The central
a~ut.
bedroom features • handy
.Th e extraordinary mu~ler
buill -In desk and a walk-In
at,lle will ensure that eadt
doseli lhe front bedroom al80
day atart~ and ends in· style.
has a walk-In close,t.
111e deck. and a private mornin:,; pn~ch offer delishtrul
reorealA lo the oUtdoors. The
. ~·

"".

k.~ ~.~ ~r~·~ .~··
~

""'

..·

~

••

J

'

llvtn~~:

ealsn
hall a royer,
rOom, family room •. breakfast
D
nook, kitchen. dlnlns room, rour bedrooms. two full baths,
one half-bath. and a uUIIly room, totalin@ 2,187 square reet or
G-4

Jlvin~

space. The plan is aVailable with 2•4 e"lerior wall rramln8 and a crawlspace roundation. A _two-car ,;ara@e wtth a stotase closet proYide8 -460 SQUflfe feel of ~pace.

(For a more detailed, scaled plan tlflhis huuse, includins KUides

to utimating emu and jinanclns. seml $4 lo llowt qf tlu Wtek,
1~. 0. Bor JJ62, New York, N.Y. 10116·1162. &amp; sun to ;nduth the

By POPULAR MECHANIC$
For AP Special FuturH
Aashjng is used to prevent moisture from entering under the roof covering wherever two or more planes of
a roof meet or wherever the roof
meets a vertical surface. It is also
used along edges of roofs and other
windows or doorways to direct moisture away from the house exterior and
structural framing.
Roll roofing material is widely
used for flashing. particularly along
ridges and hips, and at valleys. However, the most durable flashing materials are sheet ajuminum, copper or
galvanized steel. All are sold in rolls
especially for the purpose.
Chimney flashing is usually in two
parts: the base (or step) flashing,
which wraps completely around the
base of the chimney and extends sev- ·
era! inches unde~ the roof covering,
and the cap (or counter) Hashing,
which covers the top edges of the
base flashing. Sometimes roofing
felt extends up the sides of the chimney, taking the place of metal base
flashing.
Flashing should be inspected at
least once a year, as it is a prime toea-

tion for roof leaks. Look for cracks ally collects water and fun~ls it
and separations "here the flashing down beneath the roof where tl may
meets the chimney, vent stack, spread and do considerable dama~,
dormer and abutment walls, and
To repair, provided the flll5hinf
where roof planes meet at valleys. itself is sound, rake out the old mor:
Sometimes damaged flashing is dis- tar from the seam to a depth ohbout
colored. Very old flashing som,e- three-fourths-i~cb. Press the llashinj
times develops pinholes which are back into place, 'wedging it if neccs~
hard to see . So if possible, check the sary with small stones, then ~II tbf
roof from below for leaks.
seam with fresh mortar, usmg a
To maintain and repair flashing. trowel. Smooth the seam carefull •
coat all flashing seams periodically Seal tbe flashing with asphalt roofin&amp;
cement after the mortar has fully
with asphalt roofing cement, espe- cured. If the flashing is corroded or
cially at chimney and vent stack damaged, you will have 10 replace it.
seams. Apply the cement using a
Metals touching each other react
small mason's trowel and smooth the
contours of the cement so that it does when wet. As a result, metal flashing
must be fastened with nai(s made of
not form hollows and ridges where
Oth
water may collect and eventually lead the same metal as the flashing .
·
erwise
one
or
the
other
will
corrode,
to leaks and damage.
· Where you find holes of !-square- often quickly. If it is impossible to
inch or more in the flashing cut a match flashmg and fastene~, USjl
· same material
· ' as the
· " neoprene or asphalt washers
with the
patch from the
.
ct
flashing, l-inch larger all around than fasteners to prevent dtrect conta ..
the hole. Apply cement 10 the dam- between the two dtfferent. metals ..
aged flashing, press the patch in
.Metals . i~ contact wtth ce~X
place, then cover .the entire area with actd-contammg woods, such as r ,
cement and smooth· the surface.
wood and red cedar can also corrod~.
Where flashing meets brickwork it When p~rchasing fl~shmg, exteqor
is usually embedded in mortar. Sep- wood shtngles or stdtng, and fast~')
arations here require immediate ~rs to match, check wtth your. butl~­
~epair since the loose flashing actu- mg matenals suppher for advtce. ,

.....

' GI.RAOI

LONDON (AP) ~ Lloyd's of jnvcstors absorb bilhuns in losses .
London, hciping to solve its life" But some of the investors immedithreatening financial crisis. raised a ately said the deal doesn't go far
settlement offer to investors by II enough.
percent.
FORT
QU'APPELLE,
1he offer was ~weetened to 3.1
Saskatchewan
(AP)
~Backed
by the
billion pounds, or about $4.7 billion,
• from 2.8 billion pounds. The moye · powerful U.S. farming industry, the
cr Friday by the famous insurance mar- Clinton administration is trying to
"' ket includes hundreds. of millions of 'eliminate tariffs that Canada uses to
dollars from Lloyd's insiders to help protect its poultry, egg and dairy
farmers.

.. ,. ... i

~

Q: The shingles on our roof are
worn and we want to have the roof
:reshingled. We don't know whether
'Ill use asphalt or fiberglass shingles.
Wbatjs yout opinion?
. ~ A: Either type of shingle will work
·(91' you. Your choice depends on aes'!hetics, availability and your budget.
,Generally, the more expensive shin~es· .come with a longer warranty,
spme of which can .reach 20-25

y"ears.
.: Many people, even roofers, con.fuse fiberglass and asphalt shingles.
.Fiberglass shingles are made with
asphalt and should be referred to as
..fiberglass-asphalt shingles.
!' An asphalt shingle consists of felt
tiase mat made from 'rags, paper ani)
wood pulp. The mat is saturated and
coated with asphalt then surfaced
W,ith mineral aggregates. Fiberglass.asphalt shingles have a glass fiber
mat coated with asphalt and surfaced
with mineral aggregates.
··· The difference between organic
a'ltd fiberglass-based shingles is more
of a concern to the roofer than the
~omeowner. Fiberglass-based sbin:gles were developed because roofers
found that asphalt shingles softened
&lt;l.11ring hot weather installations, and
"(ere easily damaged. Fiberglass
shingles are coated, not saturated,
with asphalt and are not easily dam·
aged during hot weather.
: However, in the northern Upited
States, organic mat shingles are often
used. Fiberglass shingles are difficult
tQ work in very cold weatherbecause
lJley become brittle and can crack if

Mlddlepon 992.;1148

•••with the

•

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

New farm .•.
,,.
Continued l'rom D-1
begins May 20, and ends July 12.
.l. The office staff will the trained on
'ihc new progtam May 14 and May
j 5. With so many of the office staff
'away at the meetings there will be a
· ljmited amount Of people remaining
til provide service in the office.
' For additional information contact
1he Gallia-Lawrence Farm SerVice
Agency at 446-8686.
•
: Lisa Meadows and Jim HerreU
,an·county executive dlredon for
~~ Gallla-Lawrence Fann Service
~gency.
·
•,

~"·

.'

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

. :i'

~

"~-~

Car~

The Peoples Bank Connect
'connects your purchases directly with your checking
account. The amount of your purchase is then automatically deductetffrom your account.
No cumbersome checkboo~. No monthly payment or interest to worry about. A detailed
monthly statement is provided with your Connect card/checking account, now making
·
·• ·
it simple to balance your account.

''

Your worldwide cash connection.

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•

When you hold the Peoples Bank Connect Card you have immediate access to over
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interest rate and no yearly fee!

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
The. - Sat Or by appoimmenl.

:'
I

\

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, 011614-992-2478

t

''

•'''

Gallipolis Middieport Pomeroy Rudand
. 446-0902 992-6661 992-2133 742-2888

AP National Writer
MIAMI -Investigators at die .
most difficult crash sce~e in memorY probed inch-by-inch in inky water
and Everglades muck and found the '
submerged engines of ValuJet.Aight
592.
.
Exactly how to remove the wreckage and l (j9 bodies from the alliga- .
tor- and snake-infested swamp
remained as uncertain as the cause of
smoke that filled the cockpit and cab;
iri · ~Orl:..Saturday's crash.
..
-'l'lle"'!leatdi waf to resume··t-a8'ay
with Navy salv~ge specialists.
"Given the environment out in the ·
swamp there, with the mud and the ' '
water particularly, the combinatioq, it ;
is very, very tough to figure out how
w~'re going to get the aircraft out,"
Robert Francis, National Transporta· :
tion Safety Board vice chairman, said
S~nday night.
· Shortly after dawn today, Metro
Dade fire rescue vehicles could be .
seen passing a staging area, heading
toward the site six to seven miles
away. One truck was towing a boat.
The weather was clear.
·
. Asked on NBC's "Today" show
this morning how long the recovery
o( debris and bodies could llike, Francis declined to be specific. "We're
going to have to be prepared for the
fact that this inay take us some time,"
· he said.

'

.

I

..,

'

Jessica Sayre, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Sayre, of the RacineSQuthern FFA Chapter, has been
named. Star District State.Farmer of
District l 0.
•The recognition came to Sayre
during the recent 68th Annual State
FFA Convention in the Celeste Center at the Ohio State Fairgrounds in
Columbus.
She is the second daug!ller of the
Sayres to receive the award. In the
history of the Racine-So~tthern Cl!ap·
te(, Jessica and her sister, Stephanie,
are the only members who have held
the title. Stephanie achieved the hon- ·
or in both 1994 and ' l995.
:In addition to the requirements for
receiving the State FFA degree, an
intensive evaluation - including
home visits by adult supervisors
from the Ohio FFA Association ·to
evaluation agriculture educaticm proj~ts are involved in selecting
. rel:ipients of the award.
. Sayr~·s supervised agriculture

'

Longabaugh said he is not impressed by the latest GOP proposal.
"The drastic cuts the Republicans are calling for are far beyond what is'
necessary for the solvency of the program," he said.
In fact, tristate.Republicans sa)/ they are not afraid to have their. noses ·
bloodied again.
.
"There is a political danger involved in it but there is also a principle
involved in it- doing the right thing," said Barry Jackson, top aide to Rep.
John Boehner, R-West Chester. the chairman of the House Republican Conference.
"We may go to bed bloodied and battered but at least we go home with
a clean conscience."
The office of Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, said he feels similarly.
"The urgent need to do something about Medicare has be~ome even mllW·
urgent," said Cremeans aide Marty McGuinness, referring to the revised·
reports about the. status of the trust fund,

Apparent murder-suicide
probed in Gallia County

j .·

'

f'

•

toP

.~·

VINTON- Two Gallipolis residents were found dead of gunshot
wounds Sunday morning in what the Galli a County Sheriff's Department believes to be a murder/suicide.
·
The bodies of Mark Hill, 26,·and Christal Lambert, 24, were found
about I 0:30 a.m. in a vehicle on Keesee Road, east of State Route 325
· near Vinton.
According to the sheriff's department, Lambert was seated in the
driver's seat with her head leaning against the driver's side door, dead ·
of an apparent gunshot wound to the head.
.
·, Hill, seated in,the passenger seat of the vehicle, was also dead of a
gunshot wound to the head . ·
,.
In addition to a large caliber revolver with two spent cartridges, officials found a note on the dashboard that was signed by Hill.
Friends of the couple have alleged that the two had been quarreling Saturday evening, acciording to reports.
The bodies were released to McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton,
pending final arrangements.
Coroner Edward Berkich said he will decide today whether to perform ailtopsies.
.
·

.Lucasville renovations
showcased to public

experience program includes n acrps
of peppers and two acres of tomatoeji.
She has participated in urban and
rural soil judging, parliamentary procedure, extemporaneous public
speaking and forestry contests. ·
Besides being a past officer ofthe
chapter, she is a member of the
National Honor Society, student
council, Meigs County Junior Fair
Board, yearbook staff, America's
PRIDE. and the quiz bowl team. ·
At the convention, she was also .
recognized as second runnerup in the
1996 fruit and/or vegetable production proficiency contest sponsored'~
the H.J. Heinz Co: through tile O'!iio ,
FfA Fpundation Inc.
',
She plans !&lt;&gt;.attend the University of Rio Grande and major in elementary educatior.
Another feature of the convention
was the presentation of the State FFA
Degree to 398 members, representing
the two percent of ihe slllle mem(Contlnued on Pllga 3)

•,

••

I

COLUMBUS (AP) - A Repub- registered Ohio voters had a margin
lican strategist said President Clin- of error of four percentage points.
. ton's lead over challenger Bob Dole'·
When Ross Perot was added to the
in a new poll in Ohio doesn't surprise mix, 45 percent favored Clinton, 34
. or discourage him.
percent supported Dole and 14 perMeanwhile, the same poll showed cent backed Perot..
·
. a ticket of Dole and retired Gen. ColThe Texas billionilire has been tryin Powell would do better· among ing to get his lteform Party on all S&lt;J; ..
those surveyed than a ticket of Dole state bl!llots on Nov. S. He has said
· and Gov. George VoiMvich.
:he is not a candidate but would run
Th~ Gallup Poll released Sunday
if his backers insisted.
showed 52 percent of those surveyed
A nationwide Gallup Poll released
favored Clinton while 39 percent sup- a week ago put Clinton ahead 58 per. ported Dole.
cent to ~7 percent among those sur"That lead doesn' t surprise me veyed. That poll of I ,000 voters, con1 and I think it shows. that it's actually ducted April 25-28, bad a margin of
. starting to tighten up," said Tom· error of three percentage points.
· Whatrnan, executive director of the
David Moore, director of eleetion
Ohio Republican Party.
·
pol,liqg for the Gallup Organizatipn,
1 Whatman noted that Clinton was .was· not ·surprise&amp;lhat·Clinloll h8d a
,· favdrect by 55 percent of those sur- smaller lead in the Ohio poll than In
veyed in an Ohio Poll taken in the national s.urvey.
March, whi!C Dole drew )6 percent.
"I think that Ohio is a little more •
David Leland, chairman of the conservative and a little more Repub: Ohio Democratic PaJ;ty, said the poll lican," Moore said. "I don't think
showed that voters support Clinton's Bill Clinton will ever do as well in
· policies, including balancing the bud- Ohio.
·
. get while protecting education, the
·:.But if does suggest if the race
. environment and health care.
tightens - as ·most people expect it
., The Gallup Poll released Sunday will- that Ohio is likely to be a real
• was conducted May 3-6 for The battleground."
Columbus Dispatch and WBNS-TV.
No Republican has won the pres·The random telephone poll of 805 , idency without carrying Ohio.

Sayre named district's
premier student farmer
• Andersen 1ilt Windows
• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 161n. On Center
• A""strons solarian Floor 1ile
• Mari IIate Cabinets
• 8 Fool Ceiling
• 2x 10 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpels
en WiiASSlHD.
• Della Faucets
• Master T-loCk Vinyl Sldins With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Ye• Structural Wamnty On 'The Home
Our Prim Are The Lowest In The Area.

A Gan- Co. lleOOIIJIII*

Poll finds Buckeyes ·
are favoring Clinton .

I,

a

~ceptable.

. ~ PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A federal appeals court threw out a $1.3
~lion asbestos settlement, saying the
claims from up to 100,000 victims
ire so diverse they ~annot be combined under one lawsuit.

congressional Democrats portray their plans as "extreme." .
But House Republicans say they still believe they are on the right side of
the issue and sound undaunted as they plan to pursue their revamped Medicare
plans.
·
"1 think the critical challenge now is to communicate what we are doing
and why we are doiqg it," said Rep. Rob Ponman, R-Cincinnati.
Clinton said last week the GOP's Medicare savings numbers appear to
be :'still too high, butl think it's a movement in the right direction."
About &lt;;:linton's use of the Medicare issue, Portman said, "In an election
year, he bas found an issue that he loves to demagogue."
But congressional Democrats also blasted the new Medicare proposals.
In the tristate, Democratic challengers Mark Longabaugh in the 1st Congressional District and former Rep. Ted Strickland in the 6th Cot\gressional District, are also using Medicare as an issue.

A!Jaong ideas being considered
were draining a portion of the swamp
or extending a dike to the site. Officials from the Army Corps of EngiWATCHING, WAmNG - All airboat owner from the craeh of a ValuJet elrllner Saturday.
neers, the Navy, state and local agen stood on ~Is craft waiting as a command poat
Alrboa~ are the only source of ecce11 to the
'cies and the NTSB remained
In Miami, Fla., ~• aet up and search teams got. craeh area In the Everglade• other.then hell·
"nowhere near a consensus," Francis
underway looking fo{ survivors and. bodlea
copters. (AP)
1
said earlier.
Some body pans were found Sundliy, police sources said on condi•.;on Everglades seemed to have swat- lot of it is being done by feel," said measuring some 20-30 feet wide and
60-70 feet long. Officials would not
of anonymity, but federal offictals lowed the plane. Even at the spot NTSB investigator Greg Feith.
confirm the report.
where
the
aircraft
pierced
the
water,
:
The
New
York
Times
quoted
a
said they were not aware of any such
NTSB officials said fragment 8
for
clues.
detective
as
saying
searchers
proddivers
literally
groped
discoveries.
feet
long was the l;u:gest. they had
"They're down to less than an ding with poles located what inay be
The grim task proceeded in an
(Continued on Page 3)
eerie, surreal atmosphere, as the vast inch ;IS far as underwater visibilitjl. A a segment of the plane's fuselage,

A F~w Of Our Home Standard Features

hlghl .,.., 70.

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 13, 1996

By CHRIST9PHER SULLIVAN

provldlns an elesant tettl~a: for' entertaining. The family
room, with Ita vaulted ceillns, handsome flrepla(e and
eccess to • backyard deck, ls perfect for casual acthilles. A
sen-Ins bar separates the breakfast nook from ihe kllchen.
The r:naaler sulle, features a prl'\'ate porch, huse closet and o
deluxe bath wllh a sardt!n tub, separa.te shower and dual
vonltiea. Acro11 the home, three more bedrooms share a
oplil bath.

I 50- -year-old frame house. How can results,. hire a ltcensed professional
I tell if these are carpenter ants or ter- exterminator.
mites, and how can I get rid of them?
Q: I'm replaCing some bad secA: Damage from carpenter ants is lions of copper water pipe. Can I use
often mistaken for termite infestation. PVC pipe for the repairs?
However, ants tunnel only to conA. Plastic water pipe can be joined
struct nesting places. They r~move 'to steel and copper pipe by means of
excavated wood. to the outstde of · plastic threaded adapters. Both male
. their nests and keep the. passageways and female plastic adapters are avail•. clear. Termite gallen~s, on the other able. One end of the plastic adapter
hand, are packed wtth sawdusthke is glued to the plastic pipe and the
materi~l whic~ is actually a woody ·. other threaded into a fitting or onto a
excretion. Thts dtfference m the pipe. When joining plastic water
appearance of infested areas is a pos- pipe to existing metal piping, w~ap
itive means of identifying which the male threads with plastic pipe .
pest is at work.
joint sealant tape. Because plastic
Caqx:nter ants may be seen enter- female adapters can expand when
ing and leaving wood. They vary threaded onto male threads, a better
widely in size but a common variety choice is to usc a plastic male adapter
is approximately one-half-inch long, threaded into an iron or copper
· and either all black or mixed with female adapter or fitting.
·
brown. All members of the colony are
fully fotined except the larvae, which
·To submit a question, write to
are white and ~ese~ble grubs. Small, Popular Mechanics, Reader Ser·
· tsolated colomes can be eradtcated by vice Bureau, 224 W. 57th St., New
injecting pesticide dust into the gal- York, N.Y. 10019. The most interleries or into holes drilled at intervals esting questions will be answered in
along infested timber. For best a future column.

with ac1at1arad
froet tonight, lowe In the
301. Tuaeday, eunny,

•

:ValuJet
remains
located
in muck

Fiberglass shingles have a better
·fi're rating than organic shingles.
I'ievertheless, the latter is considered

:.Business
briefs•

Plck4:
7-9~ 8

By PAUL BARTON
Gannett Nawe Service
WASHINGTON- Renewed GOP proposals to trim projected Medicare
spending enjoy support froni tristate Republicans despite the pounding they
took from President Clinton and Democrats on the issue last year.
· The latest GOP proposals for bringing the federal budget into balance by
2002, released last week, call for holding spending on Medicare, the gov..
emment health insurance plan for the elderly and disabled, S I 58 billion below
:projected levels over the next six years.
.. The budget proposals come in the wake of DC\" projections that show the
Medicare trust fund could possibly go broke as early as 2000 or 2001 , rather
:t!aan the previously thought2002.
..
.
..
· Last year, Republicans proposed to hold Medtcare spendmg $2~0 btlhon
below ~theJ:wise projected levels over seven years and saw the prestdent and

~exed.

· Q: I've notice&lt;! small holes and.
iil$ects in some of the beams in my

7-7-3

GOP delegation backs Medicare propasal

.H
- omes: Questions and answers
/By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features

Plck3:

Vol. 47, NO. 13
1 Stcllon, 10 1'19M

•

FORMAL LIVING AND DINING ROOMS nank the .Coyer

40

~

'

Mkldleport Dept. Store

"On the r·

Kicker:

.

-----Business briefs---

......

1~12-17-30-38

Sp()rts on Page 4

plan numbi!r.)

1tKU:

MAS'(Jll BATH features ·a sunny garden tub, and two
Yanltlet thai eut down on mornlna tramc Jam•.

~

.

SuperLoHo:

.,

IN RECOGNITION- Tom Wolfe; president of the Racine Home
Bank, p1111M1ted a $50 liVIng• bond to Je11lca Slyre In recognition of her winning the Siar Dletrlct.State Farmer Dagj ... Only
one other So~Mam 11lgh Schoqlllu~ 1111 wer won the IWIIrd
, - her aleter, Stephanie.
·

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LUCASVILLE (AP) - At any
tour of the state's maximum-security prison, tlie electric chair is one or'
the most popular attractions.
Most visitors seem compell~d to
take a seat, even though 315 people
have died in the chair, Deputy Warden Jim Hieneman said.
"It's a fascinalion," he said.
"Everybody climbs right in."
The S9uthern Ohio Correctional
Faeility held an open house Saturday
to showcase changes made since the
. 11-day riot thai killed nine inmate8 .
and one guard in April 1993.
"People are aware that the riot
happened here, they know a lot of
taxpayer money was spent to renovate it, and they want to see what it
bought," said Warden Terry Collins.
"Basically, the entire prison is· different. Each cellblock has been refurbished."
The state has spent more than $34
million · in riot-related' expenses,
including controlling the uprising,

•
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prosecuting inmates and repairing .;
and renovating the prison .
Guards now are isolated in command centers with escape hatches ' ·
instead of out in the open; electronic
locks have replaced keys; cells bold
one pris11ner instead of two; and'thc '·
number of prisoners allowed outside ':
their cells at any one time has been
slashed.
Former guard Jim Goodman said
the pain of lhe riot lingers.
· ''There's still a lot of hard feelings
that it's going to take years to get rid
of," he said. "But the ones (guards)
who were here before appreciate all
the changes."
.....
Beverly Wood was among the '
·hundreds who toured the prison. But .
she said she was more interested in ·
'
· the prison-made shoes and printing ·
· presses than the electric chair.
; · "I was impressed with all the
· vocational things they teach here," •
she said.
·
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Commentary

•

lllonay, ll8y 13, 1

'

WASHINGTON - "When I use a Interior Secrelary Bruce Babbitt's
wotd," HW!Iply Dumpty said in a political trips, claiJniaal Interior failed
rather scornful tone, "it ~ just · to seek reimbursement for travel
whll I choose it to me111 -· Deilher costJ for 11 Jeua 3' polilical eVelltl

'Estllbfishd in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992-2156 • Fu: 992·2157

more nor less." ,

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. wiNGETT
Publlaher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Lotlltw.10 tho «&lt;lkK wo •lloomo. Tiley •llould 0. loo• , . , :J(}(} - · A W aN•ulli«:trCJHifi,.Md m4Mif bt~IJndlnetuH Ndreu Mil'?' i 'loiN,.,..
o.r. No ~ t.ttwo rrlll 0. fi'MI-. 1.-.. • - 0. In flOOd INie.
llddtwalng MtiHM,

not,.....

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Ohio's bald eagles
are moving inland
By JAMES HANNAH
·1
A11S0Cia~ Press Writer
' DAYTON - Oh.io's bald eagles have staned moving inland in Ohio from
lake Erie. And slate wildlife officials say !hat's a sign of an improving en vi·
ronment for the endangered bird.
·
' Two nesting bald eagles were recenlly discovered in a couonwood tree
on !he banks of Orand Lake St. Marys, !he first lime they have·been found
irl west cenlrai .Ohio in recent history.
· "That area has the right habitat requirements for !hem," said Kathy Garza,
eagle coordinator for !he Ohio Division of Wildlife's Crane Creek Wildlife
Station on Lake Erie. "They 're gotlhe perching areas, good areas 10 feed."
· Garza said !here are 33 nesting pairs of eagles in Ohio, most of !hem along
lake Erie and in the nonheastem pa':[ of the stale.
: "The population is.upanding," she said: "And we're starting lo see !hem
move inland."
.
.
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' Eagles like secluded spots. Garza sa1d !he Lake Ene area 1s stanmg 10
gel so populated with birds that some eagles have moved to other lakes and
. rivers. She said the eagles must be near fresh water because !hey feed on
rlsh.
"The areas that they're using is a direct indicator that that area has made
a comeback," she said. ·
Garza said the numbers of eagles in Ohio dwindled to four pair in lhe
early 1970s because of pollution and the loss of habitat.
''Wetlands were be~ng drained," she said. "Areas like that were being
fanned. Trees were being cut."
·
But•she said things have staned lo reverse.
"We're protecting what we have left. The marshes have made a. comeback," she said.
.
·
. Mark Shieldcaslle, investigator for the division 's Eagle Project, said eagles
ll{ll closely watched because they are sensitive to changes in the environ ~
n)enl.
.
"They are a bioindicalor of !he health of the world around us," he said.
· Shieldcasde said wildlife ·officials try 10 maintain a protective radius
around nesting eagles 10 keep people away. Neighbors and landowners are
contacted lo work out any conflicts.
Shieldcaslle said Grand Lake St. Marys probably could harbor no more
than three nesting pairs of eagles because of the limited food supply and the
human population. ·

Rep. Don Young, R·Aiaska, often
exemplif~es Humpty 's atlitude on
Capitol Hill these days. He recently
won House passage of his National
Wildlife Refuge Improvement Act,
which sounds ec~&gt;-friendly enough
but actually could destroy wildlife
sanctuaries.
Now consider how he defines
"emergency." As chairman · of !he
House Resources Commiuee, Young
billed an Air Force account earmarked for "emergency aJ\d extraot·
dinary expenses" $85,000 for a junket to Alaska by colleagues and
staffers. Young was not able to
accompany !hem due 10 last-minute
health problems-.
With this background it's ques·
tionable whether Young should serve
as an arbiter of acceptable travel practices by !he Clinton administration, a
role he 's pursuing with relish. ·
Young recently requested a General Accounting Offic~ review ·of

Berryls World

.
.

.Naf Hentoff

-:--"-.-,.;;....;~;;..;..==--.I also had those transcripts. The
manipulation and intimidation of !he
children was so obvious !hat if tbe tri·
al had not been about sexual violalions of kids, lhe.chatges would have
been dismissed. The prosecution did
not introduce a single piece of physical evidence to suppon !he charges
and the children's stories.
After five years in prison;
Michaels was released because
lawyers who had read Dorothy .Rabinowitz's investigative 'pieees volun•
teered to prove her innocence. By
!hen, most of ttie press had come to
the belated conclusion that sl&gt;mehow
an injustice had been done, but there
were no apologies.
Rabinowitz had joined the Wall
Streel Journal by then, writing com·
menlary. But, an inveterate reponer,
she bases her commentaries· on
research !hat comes from leg work.
Allbough she writes. on other
issues, Rabinowitz continues to confront prosecutors and juries who
have convicted defendants accused
by children -- coached by therapists
and law enforcement "specialists" in
sexual abuse. As Alan Kors, a hisl~&gt;-

Think of this column as.something · something about· this evil scourge.
akin 10 the red light thai flicks on in "Gingrich Pledges Death for Drug
your dashboard to remind you it's Smuglers," read a Washington Post ·
time lo.service some system: We are · banner last fall. "Major Fight on
rapidly moving inla.thc; political sea. son and that means it's lime 10 oil up
Joseph Spear
the cowtlap detectors,
.
Some people refer to lhesc devices. Drugs is Pledged; President Promisas bullstool alarms. Olliers call them es An All-Out Effon" read a headline
flapdoodle transponders. They're all in the same paper a few weeks ago.
the same. Basically, they warn you
How long are we going to keep
when it's lime lo put your boots on. buying !his baloney?
At the moment, my 1989, hand·
Since Richard Nixon launched !he
held, solar-powered FlapAiert is war on drugs two deciules ago, we
warning me the· pols are gearing up have spent S2SO billion fighting .i t I'd
lo impress us onee again with !he like just one authority to explain what
ferocity of !heir dedication 10 !he war we accomplished. No bull;j\ISI facts.
on drugs.
Here are some J\lOre things !lie
Most of !hem are liars. Tbe rest of pols will not 11:11 you:
.
•
them are dissemblers.
. I. The war on drugs is oowinnable
That, I ackQowledge, is a fairly' and has been 'lost. After all these
.broad slalement, but I cannot think of years and all !his money, marijuana
a single exception among national use is up; heroin use is up; hallupoliticians. There was once a Con- cinogen, stimulant and barbit\ll'&amp;le
gressman from Detroit named George use is up. The only drug !hat seems
Crockell who told !he truth about the to be falling out of favor is cocaine,
drug war, but he retired in 1990.
and !hat has more to 'do with fashion
The truth is, !he war on drugs is a !han tbe drug war.
$1 S billion a year soapbox for gas2. Relatively little of !he crime
bags to stand on while they thump . associated with drugs --·murder, bur!heir chests and wu indignant and glary, robbery ~- is caused by drug
•promise you they're going to do use. It is caused by dni~ prohi~itiort,

REPENT
WE'~ ALL
GONNA BE

I '

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()()TTA. HERE
TOMORROW
•

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'

ry professor at !he University of · A local television reporter, Tom
Pennsylvania, notes: ·
Grant', told me ~ehad to 'fight 10 get
"What Rabinowitz has disclosed air timcNo report the' siOJY; .W!Jicli'fiE''
to full public scrutiny and under-· nonetheless did with much courage in
standing is sadly reminiscent of a town !hat had aspects of 11th-cenEurope's witch craze .. a jurispru- tury Salem, Mass. This year, Grant
dence of ·leading · questions, received a George Polk Award for ,
' sociopathology, disregan!, of evi· · local television reporting:
·
dence and logic, and careerism joined
He says, however; that Wenatchee
to fanaticism. "
became a national concern because of
In the MassachusettS Amirauhs' Dorothy fl.abinowi_ll.. "Six months
case, Ra~Ji!towiiZ's persis~nl st~es • after I s~~ed· ~n t~ stiiry(\he said
finally led'to the release ffum pnson to me, Doi'olhy came and every·
of two of the ,three defendants. She . thing ~~ploded. Then the other me .. ~ .
has n!&gt;l g1ven up on_ the 1h1rd. In !he . came. .
.
.
. . ·,. ,
Boston Globe, criUC·at-large Ed
Rabmow1~ was a finJlhSI for a
Sieg~l eniph":"izes !hal R~b!~ow.itz Pulitzer Prize in co~~entary. this .
was !he firs.tJoumal1st 1oprov1de In· year bUt was not cons1deted worthy. ;
.depth reporting on the case" and ."her Some member's of !he ultimate .decidseries had a ripple effect" And M~l - . ing PUiilzer BOard llad been told -- as •
~olm G{lulwell noted in the Wash-. · one ~f !hem assured Tucker Carl~on :
inglon PQslthat "!he Amiraults' case a wnter for the Standard -- lha~ she
became ·a national cause celebre had had no effect on !he local s11ua- ,
because of doubts about the veracity tions she wrote about So much for :
of the cliildren's testimony against accuracY,_ ofreponmg on h1gh . .
them.". Those doubts carne largely
In 1965, when the august Puhtzer
from stories in the Wall Street Jour· Board overruled a mus1c Jury award
nal.
'
to Dulce Ellington, he said: "Fate :
A movie could be made about doesn't wanlmetobetoofamOUsloo ,
Dorothy Rabinowitz, journeying roung." Ellington·ea_sily survived the .
alone, to the city of Wenatchee in the 1gnorance of !he Puhtzer Board. And
. state elf' Washington, where many Dorothy Rabinowitz also knows she •
have been charged and imprisoned on is wonh a lot more than one of its
the testimony of children in a night- prizes.
marisli setting !hat resembled a fusion
Nat Hentoff is· a nationally ·:
of the TV series "Pickel Fences" and renowned authority on tbe First .
a Stephen King novel.
A-ndment and the rest of the Bllt

.

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Inc.

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f,
•

wh1cltcrea1es an incredibly protitable
black market Wrote· fonriel' Kansas
City Police Chief Joseph McNamara
in Nftlional Review magazine last
F~bruary:
.
"About $500 wonh o( heroin or
coca;pe in ·a source country will bring
in as lnuch asS 100,000 on lbe streell
of an American city. All the cops,
armies, prisons and executions in lhe
world cannot impede a market with
that !rind oftax-free profit margin. It
is · !he illegality that permits the
. h' d traf
obscene markup, ennc mg rug ·
ficll,eri, distributors, dealers, crooked
COJ!~. lawyers, judges, politicians,
bankers, bosinesstnen."
·3. Anti-prohibition -- by which 1
m~'an the legalization of soft drugs.
an ·the decriminalization of .hr..d
with emphasis on ~1 and
edi:ation -- is not simply a crazy ·
nolion pushed by wackos and newspa(!er columnists. Conser.vative ·
de~·god William Buckley endorse
.s
it. obel Prize-winning economist
Mi ton Friedman endorses it. Tbe
Ml!)'or of Baltimore, Kurt Sclunoke,
en4&lt;nes it. Federal judge Robert

dnip

Sweet, fonner Washington, D.~ .• ;
. police chief Jerry Wilson, former •
New York City police commissioner :
. Patrick Murphy ·.. all endorse it
'
~ :4. The politicians are fond of argu- :
J ing !hat the drug war is really a holy :·
j war. "We must never ·baok down '
from the moral message," wrote for- :
j mer Vice President Dan Q~.ayle in a ~
recent column. "It is tiie key to end- :
·
lh has
mg a scourge at
turned count- i'
less lives
into
nightmares."
.j"
.
h
111
. 1s, too, is sop istry.
,;
, . Four-year-old Launice Smith of ::
w. h·
D
~
~s mgton, .C., died in a gunfight 1
belween drug deale!§. Three-year-old ;
Stephanie Kuhen was murdered by ' '
drug gans_~_i_n Los Angel~. Two chil-.• ~
drep in Ul!' nation's CllpitaJ who ~
.shunned playgrou~ because of ;
\'bUIUes and drug dealers" suffocat- !
ed while playing in a junked car.
~
All because drugs n lllegal.
l
I'd like 10 he$' Mr. Quayle explain •
!he morality of that.
.
Josep• Spear Is • •Ytldkakd
'II'J'Itu for Newsp~~per E.........
~tloa.

in 1954, President Eisenhower sigrlcll into law !he St.
Development Act.
/

..

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•

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'tawre~'S'eaway

IToledo 1118" I
·~
IND.

(f •
114"

.

IManefleld 1114• I· ·

M.

Mark Shane Hill

(f

(f
D
7C'f'
•leo~unDJsl66" I
• (f
Cincinnati 70"
(f
/

Christal D. Lambert

W.VA.
KY.

0-.

· 4,
.----~~~
5'-s
F1Urrl., s;;.,;;.;
S:nlr
T-storms R111n

\"Jt•

Ice

Pt.

Cl?ud¥ Clc"1'

r~clarld,_.~

Chilly temperatures again
predicted for area tonight
By The Aaaoclatecl Pren
Temperatures across Ohio plunged·
10 record or neat-record lows in !he
30s under mostly clear skies early
Ibis morning. ·
And a repeat of !he chilly condilions is forecast for tonight, with frost
possible in !he nonhero and eastern
ponions of !he state. '
A threat of showers and thunder·
slonns will return 10 !he state Thesday night and Wednesday, the
National Weather Service said. Moisture will lie pushed northeastward
into southwest Ohio and !hen will
spread across !he state.
· The record-high temperature for
!his date at the Columbus weather
station was 88 degrees in 1982 while
lhe record low was 35 in 1946. Sunset tonight will be at 8:37 p.m. and .
sunrise TheSday a16: 17 a.m.
Weather forecast:

Mildred v. Will

Tonight...Ciear wilb seatlered frost
nonh and east. Lows from 30 lo 35
north and easllo near 40 southwest.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny and
warmer wilh increasing clouds west
in the afternoon . Highs near 60
nonheast·to near 70 southwest.
Thesday night. .. A chance of show- ·
ers or thunderstonns ...Mainly west ·
half. Lows from !he upper 40s to mid
SOs.
Extellded forec~~St:
Wednesday...A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs from !he
upper 60s northeast to lhe mid 70s
south.
Thursday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows from 55 to
60. Highs from !he 70s north and central to near 80 south.
Friday... Fair and little .cooler,
Lows mid 40s to mid SOs. Highs mid
60s to mid 70s.

·Pomeroy woman cited in accident

.

.· .

.

Five people died in ltaffic acc1dents m Oh1o over. !he weekend, mclud·
ing two in one collision, !he Slate Higltway Patrol said today.
The pabol counted fatalities ft:om 6 p.m. Fnday "-'ough Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CANTON - Roben L Icenhower Jr., 34, of Massillon, when his car
missed a i:urve on a Stark County road.
·
'.
SATURDAY
.
TROY - Emclyn R. Lacia, 29, ol Troy, in a two-car accident on Ohio
41 in Miami County.
· ·•
IIFFIN- Jaines H. Ollinger, 77, of Tiffin, and Roy Walters; 47, of
Willard both drivers in a three-car accident on U.S. 224 in Seneca County.
REYNOLDSBURG - Heather Hennagir, 18, of Reynoldsburg, dri~er in
a one-vehicle accident on a Reynoldsburg city street.

i!.Tr:~;;nn::~:~~h ~unean . EMS

681 , Dale Hudnall, VMH;
10:56 a.m. Sawrday, Butternut
Avenue, Mary Bonecuner, VMH; .
8:21 p.m. Saturday. Rocksprings
Rehabiliration Center, Thomas Frye,
VMH;
•
II :34 porn. Sunday, South Founh
Avenue, Emory Gordon, VMH.
SYRACUSE
6:56 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Florence
White, VMH;
7:46 a:m. Sunday, Broadway
Street, Charles Young, VMH.

~~~!u:=~~:·:~~~~~ . ----H. ospital news-----

Sentinel

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Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by !he U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gill!: SO cen~J tp 1.00
hiJher; demand moderate lo good on

a moderate run.

u.s.

172, 220-260 lbs. 54.00S6.SO, few ,l,SO ; planll S6.po.
57-'0, few ,5.SO.
u.s. 2-3, 230-260 lbl. 47.00-

'' '3.50.
I~

Sows: 1.00 to 2.00 hiaher.

...

Swisher and son.
Blrtla - Mr. and Mrs. Randal
Hawley, daughter, Pomeroy. ·
DischarJ!es May 12 - Aidan
Durban, Mrs. Randal Hawley and
daughter.
(Publlslled with pei'Diiaioa)

t ' ..

.

ADJRD
Alzheimers Disease/Related Dis'J
orders suppon group will meet
Wednesday 1-3 p.m., at lhe Senio~"
Citizens Center. Dr. Nick Robinson,''
Meigs County Chiropractic Clinic,
will be the speaker on wellness.

,...

Election Board to IIIHt
The Meigs County Board'of Elections will nieel al 9 a.m. Thesday at!:
the Pomeroy office.
'
• Legion sets meeting

;~

Racine Post 602, America~
Legion, will have a dinner at 6:30
p.m., followed by a business meetinf
at 7:30 p.m. New officers will be
insialled.
'
•·I
Parent Volunteer session set
The Letan Elementary Parent ~"'.
unteers will meet Thursday. at2 p.m.
at !he_school. All parents l!1"; asked to
attend.

I

Tneslft$ to meet

1

I

Orange Township Trustees will
have a special meeting al 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday at the home of Roger 1
Ritchie.

Sayre .named
. (Colntlnued from Page 1I
bership.
.
In thai group were three Southern
· students - Sayre, Philip Hamm an.d
Larry Willis. This brings !he !oral
state recipients in Ohio to 17,035
since !he FFA was organized in 1929.

VICTORY BAPTIST
CHURCH
Middleport, Ohio

.Ken Chapman- Australia
Mike Kramer - Poland
Mike Fellelano- Haiti
Chuck Tankersley· France
Jun Tagulnod's- Philippines
Jerry Tagoc Philippines
Richard, BHun's • Philippines

: No Loads or Fees
• Aecumulale. or Monthly
lnoome
• High S!lfety!
• Wide Choice of AnnUities of

Kinds
Call fllr Infiii'IMiion:

SCO'IT INSURANCE
614491 44111 (c~lect)

-=

'

·May 15-19 Ex. Sat. 18
· 7 pm Each Evening

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
mgh Intered Yields
AvaUable

Compoillos and have a
penalties for e~p~y withdrawa.

crash.

. "If ValuJel had any reason t to ·
. believe one of our airliners w~ "
unsafe, we would voluntarily groun4:1·
·it," said airline president Lewis lor- '
dan.
·. ,..;
Transponation Secretary Federicqi•·
· Pena and FAA O.airman David Hin: .
son visited the crash site Sunday. All
a news .conferenc~. Pena expressed '
confidence the airline was safe.
,11
. Family members of victims met
wilh Pena later in !he day, and he said..
he would try to mcetlheir request 10,~
go out to the crash site,
· ·I·
Victims: loved ones J;truggled for
words to convey !heir loss.
, r.
"There's no evidence of the plane.
ll's gone," said a stunned Bret Rugf,t,

Missions Conference

\B(Ill 1111
IH I'\ I&gt; \I \ In, I I .'

3222SwutRd.
AIIUy, OWe 45'711
• Annuities
iaued by· ~·::I

Revival to be held
A six-night revival will begin
Tuesday at the Calvary Pilgrim
Church, Stale' Route 143, with the
Rev. John White and singers featured.
Services will begin nightly at 7. Pastor Victor Roush invites the public to
auead.
Ribbon aettiDg
A ribbon cutting ceremony and
grand opening will be held Friday, 2
p.m. a1 Lone Oak Fann and stableS on
Roy Jones Road near Syracuse. Riding demonstr3tions and lours wpl he
held.

525 N. 2nd

NEH.\.()l ·s

All

on the nose wheel !hal re1n11:ts --~
!he eockpit, or engine prolllems ·
because air bled from !he engines is
used 1o pressurize !he cabin, said aviation consultant David Stempler. He ·
emphasized he was not speculating
about causes in the ValuJet case.
The Atlanta-based discount airline
has had at least three w;icidents since
il began operations in 1993. Tbe most
serious was a runway fire last year
!hat destroyed a plane and burned a
Hight attendant /
.
Federal Aviation Admirlistnti1111
records showed tbe crashed jet '-1
returned to airpons seven times over
the past two years because of varj~
maintenance problems, from an 01. . .
leak to loss of cabin pressure.
lJ
'the plane had a thorough annual
inspection in October and a. rouli~
inspection four days before !he craSh~:;
The FAA began a special investigation of !he airline in February. FAA•t
inspectors will ride in ValuJet coc~::,
pits over the next 30 days as part10f
stepped-up checks in the wake oftli(J

Music to play
The Classics will play at the
Overbrook Nursi.ng Home, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m., in !he dining room in
bbservance of National N ur~ng
Home Week.

Units answer 14 calls ·

Vetenms Memorial
. Salllrday admissions - none.
SaiUrday discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Malital Center
Disdeups May 10 - . Vicki
Alha, Teresa Van Cooney, ·Arnie
Buffington, Grace Clark, Mrs. ~~~
Milhoan and son. Mrs. Philip Stew- ·
an and son, Bernice Winebrenner,
Mrs. Williml Cain' and daughter,
Jason Holley.
Birllls - Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Rowe, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
· Mrs. William Swisher, son, Cheshire.
DiKhar&amp;es May 11 - Mrs. Terry Rowe and daughter, Mrs. William

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Title offiCe dosed
The Meigs County Clerk of
Couns Title Depanmcnl will be
closed Wednesday so !hat employees
may anend a tide seminar in Jackson.

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Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 14
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, including ·six transfer calls.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
· IQ:IS a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
· Nursing Center, Sarah Congo, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
,8:43 p.m. Saturday, Sycamore
Street, Margaret Fie"-, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
12:07 a.m. Saturday, State Route

urpncy," Fnmcis laid, The ~
crashed about IS miles northwest ol
Miami lntemlliollal Airport. ·
The souice ollhe cockpit smoke ~
unknown.
•
Possible causes include • dec- l ·
lricaf short cin:uil, an overlu I dtire •

Meigs announcements ..·:t

· ·The ·Meigs County Educational ServiCe Center ·approved ~ci·
pation in lhe Ohio School Board Association Workers Compe~~on
Group Rating program for !he 1997 payroll year and adopted rev1s1ons
to two Adult Basic 4aming Education budgets to lhe parent mentor
bud,et when it met Thursday.
.
. ·
In addition ' the service. center board accepted !he res1gnat1on .ol
Maitha Scott as pan-lime school psychologist, and adopted a tentauve
.
calendar for the 1996-97 school year.
· County Superintendent John Riebel Sr. discussed an upcoming ~­
surer's clinic and !he ABLE banquet Also d1scussed were vacancies
and appointments, !he beallh insurance program and school board member awards.
·
Present were President Jeff Harris, Bob Banon, Howard Caldwell
I.O. McCoy, Jeaneue Thomas, Rie))el and Carole Gilkey, treasurer.

.

.._ eepoxled - * i• tile codtpit.
IIIII Clitia mel ..ad 1o bn bK1t. 1\e
111pe of tile co.vtnllion Willi lila*
traftic caiii'CIIIer &amp;bowed IIIII lilt plloc
felt ~ a COIIIiderable seuo of

'

Service Center approves participation _~

State finds_more youths
going to trial as adults . .
Teen-agers sentenced in juvenile
CLEVELAND (AP) - More
youths are being tried as adults in · coun must be freed when they reach
Ohio t111d ihe number could get higher because of a Jaw that lowers the
Had !he law been in effect in 1994,
· age al which a juvenile can bci bound
83 mote'Ohio juveniles would have
over to an adult coun.
The Ohio Department of Youth been tried as adults, Youth Services
Services said 478 juveniles were spokesman Steve Proctor said.
As of May I, 135 people under
tried as adults in 1995, 196 more than
age 18 '&lt;"ere serving lime in Ohio's
three years earlier.
A law that look effect Jan. I low- adult prisons, including six girls at
ered from IS to 141he minimum age !he Ohio Reformatory for Women,
for moving youthful offc;nders to The Plain Dealer said.
In Lorain County, where 33 juveadult court. The law also requires that
!hose ·16 and older who commit niles were tried as adults in 1995,
crimes with guns be tried in adult Prosecutor Gregory White said children who commit adult crimes ought
coun.
Critics say !he move will ensure to do adult time.
!hat youthful offenders will n:main a
"Taking a baseball bat to a mailburden on society, The Plain Dealer
reported Sunday. Prosecutors and
others in !he justice system argue !hat head cannot be wriuen off as k1ds
.
some of !he crimes youngsters com- heing kids."
Prosecutors
believe
youths
may be
mit deserve harsher punishment.
...
.. comrniuing violent crimes because
!hey do not fear !he consequences of
a juvenile court trial.
Daily

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A Pomeroy woman was cited for a red lighi vi.olation ~t caused ·
a two-car accident Sunday in Middleport, accordmg lo Police Chief
Sid Liule.
.
· ,
According to reports, the accident occurred at 11:46 a.m. on Nonh
Second Avenue.
.
Tammy L. Toops, 34, Vinton, was traveling on North Second Avenue
when she auempted to make a left tum onto Walnut Street. As Toops
made !he tum onto Walnut, she w~ struck by an east~nd vehicle
driven by JoAnn M. Patterson, 69, Pomeroy, which failed lo slop for
a red light at the intersection, police said.
·
_
'. Heavy damage was recorded to Toops' 1987 .Fotd and Patterson's
1986 Chevy. No injuries were reponed.
.

Five kille«;; on Ohio roads
By 11MI AIIOClated, l'fesl

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.......... Local News in Brief:----,

a

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George D.·Baer

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What are the drug warlords smoking?
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Not included in these trips was :
one made by former IDterioc Secre- ;
tary Mpuel Lujan for • '(oung fund- •
raiser back in 1990 .. (QI' which !he l
dep8rm.ent ultimately billed the :
Ropublil;an National Commiuee a :
paltry $33.:17.
Interior Depanment memos from :
1990 claillled !hat because Lujan 's i
involvement in Jhe fund-raiser :
amounted 1o 90 minutes -- out of a •
tOtal trip W,jll:king time of 1,425 min-:
utes .. ' '!he · percenrage of costs :
chargeable to political sponsor" (in :
Ibis case, !he RNC) equals six percent •
.. or $33.&amp;7. The RNC artived at a :
slightly higher figure of $1 21.84. ,
DOG-EAT-DOG .. It might be •
said that everything Sen. Phil :
Gramm, R- Texas, 1\nows about pol-;
ities he learned as-' paper boy.
:
Gramm is tellins co!lea&amp;ueJ bor •
facing 'down Jei'bcious dogs is a-1ot '
like forcing Dem~~ .to .~ ..Just ,
as mean dogs once tested him on his
pape! route, maki~g eye .conta_cl to,
see 1f tie was scared, .~pubhcans •
face a similar ~hallenge from Democrats-. "'
.
~
· "If you start backing up, or if yotl
tum your back to rwt, you're gqing,
·to 'get bit," 'Gramm. said. "What'
you've got to do is make eye C&lt;l,J!Iacl;
and sbow the dog you aren't afr.iid of
him. If you do that, nine times out of,
'10 he'll back off."
Gramm thinks this kind of cowering caused the Republican fiasco on ·
.!he minimum wage. He says the
problem-was that Republicans failed '
10 muster ihe c'ohesion to say to'
wavering RepublicaJts thai if the•
pany ·unites, the'l:lemocra~ will back
off •• or at worst il would ·be a one-·
day story.
Gramm and other conservative
pit-bulls are also looking to bait a tnJp '
for Democrats on welfare refortn by '
passing a bill that's sure to provoke ·
a filibuster. AI that pOin~ Gramm told
colleagues, "You'd have to hold'.
them' (Democrats) in sessioo. You'll :
have to have the sergeant-at-arms go
out and anesl them. All I'd have to·
do is 11Jove that the sergeant-al·am'ls '
anest absent members. I guarantee
you il would run on t!Je networks." ..
;lac,k ~.!l~on ~•"d·,Jficha~ :
Binstein are writers for Uni~
Feature s'ylidbie, hie. ·

transcripts of the: state's ' 1inyestiga·ton" .who 4ueslioned tbe ·children ,
until . tile -kids gave the ·required •
answers.
- - - - - - - - - - --.

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of the entertaining itinerary was
i nte ~ by tours ollhe IIWis-Aiaska pipeline and mining sites. But the
delegation was d«ed on by a threepei'SOII fliaht crew, five technical
sergeants serving as _flight allen·
dants, four officers transformed into
escons and a physician.
Young's Resources Commiuec
also used military aircraft to auend
three hearings last yCII' OR !he Endangered Species Act, which Younc
wants to gut When the commiuec
was under Democratic control, the
only lime military aircraft were used
was in 1989 to view the Exxon
Valdez oil spill .
The GAO, which Young now
wants 10 unleash on . Babbitt, . has
released blistering assessments in
!he past on !he lllllk· of information
and oversight governing congres- ·
sionil-lse of military airoraft.
It's fair to say Republicans put !he
issue on the IJiap. Senior officials in
the Interior Depanment during the
Bush administration improperly
charged tal!payers for more than
$11 S,OOO in unauthorized, or dubious
Iravel.

(Ca 1111 111 d frolll .... 1)
- . Bod! ettaiftes w.e fll!!ad in
lhout 2 feet of Wiler, the NTSB aid.
Ftwis aid uu:ll of!he wrec:bce
IOWII! 10 t. is plllil'led blue, which is
Ge&lt;qe D. 81Cf of FOial Run R.Oid, Minersville, died Sunday, May 12, , !he color ValuJet p!linll the eur ol its
19915.
pJ.ftes. The rear is where !he flipt
Arne1p MDII will be M-lnc'ed by the EwiDJ FuileriJ Home, Pooaov. . dll.a and cockpit voice reccrders 1re
locnt:d
11le fWIICd from 6 inches 10
S feet deep. Beneath dill was muck
•
thll10111e locals say can be 30 to 40
Mart Sbue HiD, 26, Ylilton, died Sunday, May 12, I 9915 - ViiiiOII.
Born May 23, 1969 ia Olk Hill, 1011 of Damon Hill ofWelblon, and M.- feet deep.
Navy diV«S, specialim in underglftt L. Hilll'oltoo of Y1111011, he wu a mechanic.
.
.
Surviving in iddilion to his ~nts are a brother, Damon L. Hill nof Bid- . WIIer salvaae recovery, were bringwell; four s~ters, Kelly Franco of Waterfotd, Conn .. Bobbie J. Ge&lt;qe of ing SOU' equipment wilh which offiVinton, Fawn Hill of J~~~:kson, and Melissa Thacker of Wellslon: a paternal cials hope !hey will locate !he plane's
flight data recorders.
grandlalher, Frank Hill of Wellston; and several nieces and nephe\115.
Senior NTSB investigators with
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday allhe residence, 1219 McClaskey
Road, VintOn, with !he Rev. Don Thaxton_off~eiatina. Burial will be in the hundreds of crash investigations
family cemetery at Vinton. Friends may call at !he McCoy-Moore Funeral behind them called the site, far from
Horne, Vinton, from 6-8 p.m. Thesday.
mads and accessible only by airboats,
"!he most diff~eult scene that they
have ever encOiuKered," Francis said.
Divers had to be concerned with
Christal D. Lambert, 24, Gallipolis, died Sunday,.May 12, 1996 near Vin· gening snagged in wreckage, and
alligators and deadly water mocton.
Born Nov. 8, 1971 in Gallia County, she was !he daughter of Judy Bog- casins are common in !he swamp.
Mosquitoes and heat in !he midgs Fife of Gtillipolis, and the late Samuel Clonch.
.
·
Surviving in addition 1o her mother are .ber husband, Curus ~..an\ben of 80s also plagueil recovery workers,
Rutland; a brother, Richard Boggs of Columbus: and a s1ster, Cathy Wolfe prompting Howard and Gloria Sexton to launch a small relief effort. Tbe
of Parkersburg, W.Va.
,
.
couple drove rrom their home in
She was also pm:eded in dellth by a sister, Sandra Wolfe, 1n 1962.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in !he McCoy-Moore Fune'!" Home Boca Raton with a van load of donal- ·
Welherholt Chapd, Gallipolis, wilh the Rev. John Jeffrey offic1abng. Bur· ed insect repellent, botlled water and
ial will be in Mound Hill ceinetery. Friends may c~l at !he chapel from 6- candy bars for !he workers.
"I grew up in a town where
8 p.m. Tuesday.
everybody look care of everybody
else," Howard Sl:xton explained.
The swamp yielded pieces of
'
clothing
Sunday, in addition to a fam, Mildred v. Will, 71, Pomeroy. died Saturoay. May II, 1996 at Pleasant
ily
photo
album and a floating airValley Hospital.
·
·
A homemaker, she was born in Pomeroy on Dec. 9, 1924, daughter of !he plane seat that were found Saturday.
Clearer pictures of !he passengers
late Oarence and Pearl Elizabeth Poulin Hawley.
.
also
emerged Sunday: a Baptist
She is survived by her husband, Reed Will; a ~ug~ler, Clarin.da The1ss
church
organist and his wife on a
of Racine; a son, Sean Will of Pomeroy; five grandchildren; and several meces
dream vacation, a young man ~;~repar·
and nephews.
·
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Sbe was also preceded in death by two sons, a daughter and two SISters. ing for missionary work in his native
Services will ~ I p.m. Wednesday in the EJW~ng FuneraiJ;Iorhe, Pomeroy, Venezuela. a mother and her daughwith the Rev. William Middleswanh officiating. Bunal well follow m !he ter who had become "real friends" in
Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends may call at !he funeral home recent years.
Also among the victims were San
from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
·
Diegp Chargers iunning back Rodney
Culver and his wife. Karen, of Wood-·
stock; Ga.
Aighl 592 took off Saturday afternoon en route to Atlanta but the crew

AtcuW .fOlel:lltfor dlyliM co.diliou -..llli&amp;h (j mpllllllfea

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·A journalist who made .a .di~erence ·

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Babbiu auended over the last three
years. An Interior Depariment
spokesman says the amount billed
late to Demlicralic campaigns
involved $5,000 over 14 months.
During !he eight-day ell_cursion to
Alaska last August, .!he only "emergency " thai irose was a scaffi:r who
got bloodied in a bar fight But !hat's
not to say !he five House members,
two wives and JO congressional
staffers who made !he journey were
not on a hectic Schedule.
There reponedly were lunches at
fi ve-srar resons, fishing .expeditions
and meetings with native villagers.
The Air Force· forked over $7,50 to
chanei a bus so !he imperial guests
could see a popular. tourist
stop.I Some
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Today in history

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By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln

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I.F Stone, -one of my meriiors in
this business, used ' to !ell young
~eporters : "If you imeJK! to I!Se the
First Amendment lo change the
world, forget it.'If you 're lucky, you
may be able, over time, to make
small, incremental changes. "
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Once in a while, however, a jourl!ly The Associated Press
nalist does make a big difference,
" Today is Monday, May 13, the 1341h day of 1996. There are 232 days even rescuing innocent. people from
left in the year.
prison -- and changing the way many
Today's Highlight in History:
other journalists cover a panicular
On May 13, 1981, Pope_John P~ulll was shot~? seriously wounded in kind of story.
·
Sl. Peter 's Square by Turkish assailant Mchmel Ah Ag_ca.
For much of the last 10 years,
• On this date:
Dorothy Rabinowitz has been rigor·, In 1607, the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was seuled. '
.
ously investigating cases of preIn 1846; !he United States declared !hal a stale of war already emted school teachers and others around !he
against Mexico.
..
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.
. . . country who have been convicted or
· In 1914, boxing champ1.on Joe Lou1s w~ born m Lafayeue, Ala. ,
sexual child abuse. She first became
In 1917, three peasant children near Pauma, Ponugal, reponed s~emg a . involved in !he Ne'Y Jersey sentencion of the Virgin Mary.
. .
.
, .·
ing of Kelly Michaels to 47 years in
In 1918, the first U.S. airmail stamps, featur~ng a p1c1ure of an a1rplane, · prison on II S counts of bizarrely
' re introduced. On some of the stamps, the a1rplane was pnnled upslde· molesting 20 children from .the ages
§Pwn making them collector's items.
of 3 to 5. (One' child testified thai
¥' In '1940, in his first speech as prime minister of Britain, Winston Churchill
Michaels had turned her into a
'ld the House of Commons, "I have nothing 10 offer but blood, 1011, tears mouse. Others said !he teacher made
:.ilK! sweat."
•
them eat a "cake" of her·feces.)
f In 1954, the musical play "The Pajama Game," a lightheaned look at
The press at the time found the
~r-managemenl relations featuring the romantic song "Hey Th~re," testimony of the accusers entirely
Tned on Broadway.
convincing and a Puliizer Prize win•. Jn 1958, Vice President Nixon's limousine was bauered by rocks thrown
ner, Anna Quindlen, !hen a.columnist
" anti· U.S. demonstrators inCaracas, Venezuela.
for the New York Ti111es, urged her
•' In 1985, a ~onfrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the radi· readers to "believe the children."
group MOVE ended as police dropped an explosive onto the group's
Rabinowitz interyiewed everyone
Mladquarters; II people died in the resulting fire.
.
she was able to reach, including !he
J~ Ten years ago: Secretary of Stale George P. Shultz criticized former Philip- furious parents of the allegedly
~· Presid~.nl Ferdi.nand Marcos, saying the deposed leader was using his abused children. She also obtained
l,il'c haven m Haw au to cause trouble for the new government of Corazon
Aq'·uino.

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VsluJet remains located

Tznllay, M.y 14

The Daily Sentinel Alaska's Young chooses his w.ords ·ci:lref•J~Iy .j.

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Ponuroy •lllldll1pa......, Ohio

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"Public Welcome"
· staffed Nursery Provided
Special MusiC·
Pe8tor James Keane

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�·'Sports

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Mondey, May 13,1996

The Daily Sentinel

In_tiHJ NBA playoffs,

Mondlly, U.y

1996

Padres not~h 5~0 victory over Reds
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bob
Tewksbury didn' t have his custom·
ary rest or his usual curveball. Hewon anywa1.
Tewksbury pitched five scoreless
innings on less-than-normal rest
Sunday, and Brian Johnson dr~ve in
a pair of runs as lhe San Diego
Padres beat Cincinna~ 5·0 to end the
Reds ' seven-game winning streak. ·
Tewksbury (5· 1) pitched on lhree
days rest for the first time Ibis season and had his forearm tighten up,
forcing him to leave lhe game after
lhe fifth. Worse, he couldn't get his
curve to work, .so he threw only one
all game.
"He really struggled with his
curveball," said Johnson, his catcher. " To be able to hang in there and
pitch with all of your other pitches,
·that's the sign of a champion right
there.
· "To shut a real good offensive
team like the Reds down for five
innings when you don't have one of
your
primary pitches, that says a lot
ADVANCES TO TtaRO - San l)iego's Tim Worrell (right) slides
Into third bae ahud ol the tag by Cincinnati third baseman Chris
• 8llbo (17) In the seventh Inning of Sunday's National League con1Mt ln.Cinclnnatl, where the Padres won 5-0. Padres third base coach
Tim Flannery watches the play in the foreground. (AI')

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about him. I'm proud of him."
The Padres had to adjust their
rotation because of a rainbut in
Pittsburgh last week. Tewksllury
wound up staning on lhree days rest
for the first time this season and only
lhe eighth time in his career.
.
He didn't mind at all.
"I like pitching on three days,''
Tewksbury said. "The reason I came
out of lhe game was because rriy
forearm tightened up. I don't know
if that was (a result of) pitching on
lhree days. I've been working on a
new grip on my change-up and I
think I accelerated the stiffness."
The Reds had scoring lhreats in
-each of lhe first four innings against
Tewksbury, but wound up stranding
five baserunners. The right-hander
improved his record to 4-2 when
pitching on three days rest.
"When Tewksbury's on, he's hard
. to beat," Reds manager Ray Knight
· said.
Tjm Worrell ~llowed two hits
over three innings, and Trevor Hoffman pitched,lhe ninth.

Johnson went 3-for-3 off staner
Dave Burba (0..4), who remains
winless despite having the lowest
earned run average in the Reds' rotation at3.96. Johnson, hitting eighth,
drove in runs with a two-out single
in the second and a two-out double
in the fourth.
"I'd hoped to get a win on Moth·
er's Day, " Burba said. "Maybe I' ll
get one by Falher's Day."
. At the Padres' request, the
umpires checked Burba's right thigh
for an illegal substance in lhe third
inning. Burba puts resin on the thigh ·
and rubs his hands on it between
pitches to help him grip the ball.
"There was . just some disco!·
oration·!here on his unifonn,'' Padres
manager Bruce Bochy said. ''We
know his habit is to go !here. It's just
something we decided to check out"
Burba was cleared.
" It's no big deal. I thought it was
funny," Burba said. "That's the first
time I've ever been checked."
San Diego b'roke the game open
with three runs in the sevenlh, which

ln'otherNL action,

· · ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) .:_
Albel'f Belle gotlhe best ofTroy Per. cival's fastball- and lhe California
Angels reliever's hairdo as welL
Soon after announcing he would
1
let his hair grow until he gave up a
. run, Percival was rocked ·by three
solo homers in lhe ninlh inning as lhe
Indians beat the Angels 4-1 .
' "I haven 't seen as hard a healer
as his in a long time," Cleveland
manager Mike Hargrove said. "But
we've got guys who can get the bat
out in front."
.
Belle, after being seemingly overmatched by a fastball that put the
count at O..and-2, hit a towering shot
to dead-center to break a 1-l tie.
'The homer, Belle's major leaguehigh 200th in lhe last five years, ended Percival's string of 24 straight
outs, II of them strikeouts. And two ·
~IS later, Sandy Alomar and Jim
'll'Ome also homered.
·. , "Albeit got a prelly good pitch to
. ' hi), and seeing him homer pumped
up to face a guy who throws 98aujle fastballs," Thome said. "Alben
fiied everyone up."
: BeiJe's 14th horner also humbled
PercivaL
.
"I let mY confidence get too high. ·
I tried to !brow the ball by him, and
I should know better than that," Per·
cival 'said .. "The guy's got tremen dous strength." ·
Percival (0-1 ), whose perfect

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record of II saves in II opponunities wasn't damaged, hadn ·~ allowed
a run in 20 113 innings dating back
to Sept 19.
He had shaved his head in spring
. training, but vowed not to get his hair
cut while his ERAremained 0.00.
"If you're going to give up runs,
they might as well all COIJie in one
game," he said. "I guarantee it'll be
a different story next time."
Percival had not allowed a hit
since a single by Melvin Nieves of
Detroit on April 20. He ran his streak
of consecutive baners retired to 24
on Saturday with a perfect ninth
inning against the Indians that
included striking out Thome.
''I threw some breaking balls Saturday, so when r got the count to Oand-2tonight, lthoughtlhey'd be sitting on one," Percival said. "It wasn'I sman pitching."
While the Indians enyed the road
trip with a 6-4 mark, the loss was the
Angels' si~th in seven games. They·
had won six in a row. and 10 consecutive at home. before being sent
reeling by Kansas City and Cleveland.
·
California starter Jim Ahboll
equaled his · career high with si~
walks 10 5 2/3 innings, but was
bailed nut by three of the Angels'
four double plays .
Only Belle's run-scoring single in
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

was appreciated in the face of 33 . tered the outfield with "Oh Henry !"
Atlanta runs built on 55 hits the last candy bars.
three times tlie teams met. .
_The umpires instructed the play·
"After getting our butts kicked ers to leave the field while it was
lhe last two nights, we needed Grace being cleared of debris. Alou, celeto win and he really shut lhem · brating his 61 st birthday, was tossed
down," said Phillies manager Jim for arguing wjth crew chief Harry
Fregosi. "That was an outstanding Wendelstedt that the interruption
effort, but he's pitched very well for was too lengthy.
us all ·year."
"If you noticed, no umpire -came
Four-time Cy Young Award win- to the Expos' dugout and communincr Maddux (4-3) lost consecutive-· . cated with us," Alou said. "I had a
ly for the first _time in nearly two right to go out and see what was hap- ·
years. The Pholhes scored three runs pening. For that 1 got thrown out. "
in the first: on an RBI double by
Cubs 3 Mets 0
Todd Zeile, a. run-scoring grounder
· Jini Bullinger 'pitched a two-hitand a throwong error by Atlanta ter at Shea Stadium, and Ryne Sandsh~~stop Jeff Blauser:
berg and Sammy Sosa had home
I got.~ c~uple of puches up. That runs as Chicago broke a five-game
hun me, saod Maddux, who lasted losing streak.
just five innings. "I'm not frustrat- ' The 30-year-old Bullinger· (2-3)
ed, I just have to try and bounce
·
back."
Expos 7, Astros 6
Mark Grudzielanek was among
the the beneficiaries -of Goff's play.
He ti~d a career high by going 5-for5 and scoring three runs as the Expos
increased baseball's best home
record to 11\-,4.
"We got to keep winning,"
Grudzielanek said. "That's the key.
I'm staning to feel comfortable, so
I'm jl!jl going out, hitting the ball
harcWIIid having fun."
Henry Rodriguez and F.P. Santangelo added two-run doubles for
the Expos. The one by Rodriguez-'giving Montreal a 5-l lead in lhe SCC·
ond inning - led to the ejection of
Expos manager Felipe Alou.
Fans, in what as become a ritual
following a Rodriguez highlight, lit-

! :r. »:
New Y«k.. ............ 21

ld.

lill

. ~2K

2~

.472

4'•:
9
II

L

14
17

I

.600

I Ballimore ...........: ... J9
t Ton:~~~to ............ .. 17 19
1 Bos1o"n....................l2 2J

343
-~

: Ddroit ................... 12 27
1 CLEVEI.AND ....... lJ ll
I Cbic:~Jo ...... ....... ..... 20 16
~ Minnesota ............. :lb

',

• Te~r.as: ..................... 24
• Stante ................... 20
: Oak.land ................. l9

IJ

4
.t',
~

Saturday's S&lt;:Ores

Hous1on (Reynold~ :'i-ll al
(Tmclv.-.el 2-l). 8:05p.m.

Mi1w:.~ukee

1-4). 8:05p.m.

Kan11u City (Appitr J-3) ;u Tu.us
(Witl4-2). 8:J5 p.m.
Ballimore tW~IIs 2· 3) a1 Oakland
(Johns V\) . 10·0~ p.m.

Tuesday's games

California cFinlt~ 4-21 at Bostoo tSek

I·J). 7 : 0~ p.m.

011

CLEVE-

SeaHie (Hitchcod: 3-ll a1 New Yorio:

(Gooden i -)).1:~~ p.m

Chicago IAivarrz 2-.\) :u Milwauket

(Bone• 2- ~J. ti :O~ p.m.
Toronto (Hanson ]·.'li l nl Minne101;1
(RobeniOII 0-~). 8:05p.m.
Kan•a• Cily (Gubicza 3·-ll at Ttxas
(Hiii"'J~ 8: ~5

p.m. ,

Bahimorc (Muuina
(ll&lt;ya J.SJ. t0:05 p.m.

~-2 ) 111

Oakland

... Dl......

»:

:.::. ... ....... ......... 26
AIUUI ................... 2.1
l'tliladelphia ........... l8
Florida .............. 18

Flori!..la leads snies J-2

Tuesday's games
(Kilt 4-21 :n

L ld.

12
1•

11
21

.684
.62:2
,,.4

-~

N&lt;wYoo:O&lt; .............. u 20 .

I

lill
2~

6''

:~

Tonlght's game
Colorado ar Chit:il.go. M;:\0 p.m.

A•trianll.eque
BALTIMORE ORl&lt;iLllS: Pam:hase~
lh~ .:o ntracl of OF luis Polonia from
Rocheslcr or lhe lnlernatiuau1 leD(IUt: .
Activ:ucd RHP Alan Mills (rom !he 15dny disabled lial . Optioned OF Tony
Tarast:o and RHP Keith Shepherd 10
Ror;heuer.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Aclivnh:d
RHP Scon Sanderson frnm lhe l.'i· day
disabled list
MILWAUKEE BREWERS : A.:livnted OF Chuck Carr rrom Ihe .J~·-day di l·
abled lis!. Optioned INF Mllfk Lorena ro
New Orleuns of che American . A~sOC"ia­
lion.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : "Placed
RHP Bill Risley on the 15-day di1abled

Chica~\~

(Navatro 2-4). 2:20 p.n1
Sr. Lorris (Osborne 1-1:) ;u Florida
IMillt:r 1-0). 7 :~ p.m.
San Fr:mciJCo (0. Femarukz 3- 1} al
?trilarklphia (&amp;:hi llillg ()..0). 7 :3.~ run,
Colorado (Reynoso 2-.\ ) ill CINCIN·
NATilSchuurek 41-IJ, 7 : l~i Jl.m.
Piu 1 burzh (Wngncr 4-]l 31 Atlanu1
{Smollz 7-1), 7:40p.m.
Montreal (Alvarez 1 - 1)&lt;~1 Lm An~lea (Mt111inezl-0), 10:0~ p.m.
,

or

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OR 1995 BUICK
REGAL
. YOUR CHOICE!
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GUNDAMOR
1995 BUICK
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NadonallAa&amp;•

Saturday's scorts

New York 102, Cllicoco 99 ton
U1ah 10~. San Ancllfti~ 15

· BAM!- Chicago center Bill Wennlngton hangs from the rim after
dunking the ball in front of New York postman Patrick Ewing during
the final seconds of Sunday's NBA Eastern Conference semifinal
contest at New York's M·adlaon Square Garden, wher~ the Bulls' 94·
91 win gave them a 3-1 lead In the best-of•seven senes. (AP)
·105-75 Game 31oss Saturday- and
Chicago.
took just three shots from the fielc)
Jazz 101, Spurs 86
Utah blew ·out the Spurs for the
before fouling out midway through
the founh quarter. Sean Ellioll led
third time in t6e series and can clinch
the conference finals benh with one. San Antonio with 22 points.
moie win. Game 5 is Tuesday night
San Antonio got within 83· 78 in
the fourth quarter, but the Jazz went
at San Antonio.
on a 16-2 run for its biggest lead of
Chris Morris scored 25 points on
the game·. Malone and John Stockton
11 -of-14 shooting and Katl Malone
each had four points in the run.
had 22 poin!s for the Jazz, who have
"We have out backs to the wall
won by 20, 30 and 15 points in the
and we have to go home and win,
series.
come back and win, and go home
David Robinson had just II
win again." Spurs coach Bob Hill .
points- the same as in the Spurs'
"Utah is playing great basketball ."

and others remember Culver
th~se

manag~r

( " BERNIE WILSON
Spturday.
· ·
ities straoghL
.
where the ll1ght origmated. General
SAN·DIEGO (AP) _There was
A year ago, starting outside line·'He was JUSt one ol
guys
Bobby Beathard satd the
'plenty for the San Diego Chargers to . backer Davod Gnggs was kolled m a who had 11 all together, a rock everycouple s two daughters, ag~s I and
say about teammate Rooney Culver; car crash in a Miami suburb.
body went to when they needed a 2, were woth Rodney Culver s moth·
lhe tough part was expressing it.
On Sunday came. .. (!rd that stron~ shoulder to lea~ on," Carney er, who also hves man Atlanta sub:' 'With glum faces and! voices that authorities called off the. search for said; 'He always had It me lor peourb.
h-aiied off the Chaigers numbly possible survivors of the fatal crash pie, whether ot was a teammate or
Lou Holtz, who coached Culver
pealt with their second tragedy in 11 of ValuJet Flight 592, which carried ball boy or fan ."
.
at Notre ,,O~m~: remembered the
months. Culver and his wife Karen 104 passengers and five crew mcm. T1ght end Alfred Pupunu saod he play~r as a class act He was a very
were aboard the airliner that nose- bers.
.
.
found out about the . crash from
positive, upbeat person.
!Jived into the Florida Everglades on
"A tragedy like this makes foot· · defensive tackle Don Sasa, who
ball seem small and insignificant missed much of his. rookie season Mcfann among
compared to the death of a good with a knee injury. Culver called
friend," said kicker John Carney, Sasa several times in the offseason to Meigs Chamber
who helped Culver coordinate team ~ee how he was doing.
chapel sessions and was a fellow
"That meant a lot to him, a vet- linkfest winners
Notre Dame alum.
eran talking to a rookie," Pupunu
The Meigs County Chamber of
" It makes xou realize that life is said. "Guys usually don'tdolhat. _He Commerce held a golf scramble
fragile and you need to make the was there if you needed any help hke Thursday at the ,Meigs County Golf
most of it. When you have the that. He was a good human beong, a Course.
opportunity.to care for somebody or great father, went to church. He did
Winning the tournament with a
a chance to make a positive inllu- what was right.
team score of II under par was the
ence, you beucr not wait for tomor- ·
"It hurts down inside," Pupunu
foursome of Becky Anderson, Jack
.· row."
'
said. "He was a good friend, he was Slavin, Larry Bunger and Jim Ander·
Everyone had the same imprcs- a good athlete. Losing two top indi- son.
sion of the 26-year-old running buck viduals like that, it's hard on a ballFinishing in second place with a
- pleasant, humble, team -oriented , club. We've just got to rebound."
score of nine under par was Ray .
devoted father and husband, an all . The Chargers didn 't know what · Karr, Rita Slavin, Kenny U\) and
.. '};\ ..
around
good
guy
who
·had
his
prior·
the
Culvcrs were doing in Miami , Henry Thrapp. In third place was the
; .~
'
team of Bobbi Karr, Roger Hubbard,
Roscoo Mills and Rollie Swart. The
~(1/11~~•••----(~C~on_ti_nu~e_d_fro~m--Pa~g~e-4)~~~~--~~~~~~~~ four finished with a score of eight
.
walked one, pitched hi s first shutout straight victory and a sweep of Col- tnmngs. Dennis Eckersley got his
under par.
.
in .64 career stans. At bat, Watson hit orado.
eighth save.
Winning awards for the longest
a bases-loaded, two-out single and
Johnson, who entered the game as
The score was tied 2-2 when
pull on the first nine holes were Ken
McFann, Roger Hubb!)l'd, Tom
.added a two-run bloop double.
.a defensive .replacement in the Mark Sweeney - 4-for-5 against
Wolfe ,. Pete Cundiff, Jack Slavin,
Glenallen Hill hit the Giants' eighth, connected off Curtis Leskan- ·Noma in his career ~ led off the
.league-leading 56th homer as they ic (2-2) for . his seventh homer. It decisive two-run sixth with a single.
Denny Facemyer, Dale Warner,
Horace Karr and John Morrow.
finished off their first sweep this sea- scored Jeff Conine, who had walked He Scored from first when Pagnozzi
Following the tournament a steak
son and first in Pittsburgh of three with one out, sending Colorado to its lined a double into the left field cordinner was served.
games or more since June 6-R, 1977. seventh straight loss.
ner.
On Aug. I the Meigs County
Hill went4-for-5 to raise his aver·
Rob Nenn (2-0) got the win by ·
Mike Piazza homered for the
age to .550 during the Giants' 5-1
striking out three of the seven b~llers Dodgers..:.. his ninth of the season . Chamber of Commerce will hold
another tournament.
road trip. The Pirates have lost four he faced. Nenn pitched I 1/3 innings. . and si~th in I I games.
straight, six of seven and are a
Conine and Terry Pendleton
·league-worst 7-14 at hom~ .
drove
in two runs each to lead the
1
Barry Bqnds got the Giants stan- Marlins. Dante Bichette had three
ed with a run-scoring dquble in the hits for the Rockies.
first off Zane Smith (2-1 ), who came
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 5
Mark Petkoysek pitched well and
off the' disabled list for his first stan
since AJlril 26:
.
Tom Pagnozzi had two RB!s,to lead
Marlins 7, Rockies ·s
St. Louis over Hideo Nomo ~Charles Johnson hit a two-out
avoiding a sweep by visiting L&lt;ls
homer in the bouom of the ninth
Angeles.
Nomo (5-3), who had won three
inning 10 give Florida its se.venth
•
straight, allowed four runs on nine
hits in five innings. Petkovsek (2-0)
(Cootinued from Page 4)
gave up two runs on five hits in six
the fourth, )Vhich extended hjs hilling
streak 10' 14 games, hurt Abbott.
Max
Still, lhe left-bander remained
winless in 10 starts at' Anaheim Sta·
dium sim\e rejoining . the Angels in
July in ,a deal woih the Chocago
White Si&gt;~'
Clev9land's Orel Hershiser went
seven innings and allowed five hits,
including a homer to Jim Edmonds
in .the fourlh . .
by
Jim,Poole (2~) struck outlhe side
in the tiaihth and ·lose Mesa worked
lhe iltlilh ~o pid up llis 1~'\Buc-lead- ,
ing ~4th save.' He has converted 22.
stralaht
opponunitin since,
blowiiiJ one 10 the Detroit
last
Sept. 3." : &gt;
'

FIRST WIN

to Onawa.

AND WHAT
CAN IT DO FOR ME???

Basketball

By TOM WmtERS

AP &amp;porta Wrltar
Jesse Levis made like Jesse "The
Body" Ventura to help lhe Milwaukee Brewers win.
Levis pinned Baltimore's 'Scott
Erickson after falling on top of the
pitcher in the sixlh inning Sunday,
giving the Brewers time to score lhe
go-ahead run in a 6-4 victory over
lhe Orioles.
Although Levis didn't claim to be
a pro wrestling fan, he was able to
emulaie a move by Ventura, a fonner
pro grappler.
".J pinned him for three and we
got an extra run ·out of it," Levis
joked.
.
The ~lzarre play unfolded in the
sixth inning wilh-the Brewers trailing 4-3. Milwaukee had the bases
loaded wilh none out when Levis hit
a sharp grounder to first baseman
Rafael Palmeiro, who threw to second for the forceoul as Matt Mieske
scored the tying run.
Erickson (2-4) ran to first base to
take ,the return throw from ;econd.
The right-hander tripped after making the out at first, and Levis purposefully fell on. top him, allowing
Fernando Vina to score from second.
Levis said he had no choice but to
fall on Erickson.
"I wasn't going to be able to
jump over him and I didn't want to
spike him, so I just, kind of like, fell
on him," Levis said. "I was telling
him, 'I'm soriy.' He was trying to get
up but all my momentum was lean·
ing on him. He didn't say a word. He
didn't know what.the ·hell I was
doing on him."
Erickson had his own view of the
incident.
"I didn 'tthink I was going down,
but I kind of fell and I think he laid
on me a little bit," he said.
The Orioles had thrown out two
Milwaukee runners in the first two
innings before Levis executed his
takedown.
"Well, we worked on that in
spring training. It's called the old
pile-on play," Brewers manager Phil
Garner joked.
Orioles manager Davey Johnson
vainly argued that first base umpire
Larry Young should have called
interference against Levis.
" The pitcher fell down, but you
can't jump on him," Johnson insisted. "He (Young) said he thought it
was an accident. I told him he had
plenty of time to get out of the way."
Dave Nilsson finished 3-l'or-4
with three RBis as the Brewers overcame a pair of two-run homers by
Palmeiro, who hadn't had an ex.trabase hit in 16 games.
Angel Miranda (2-2) got the win.
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was: New York 9, Chica' go 8; Detroit 5, Texas 3; Toronto 8.
Boston 7; Oakland 8, Minnesota 3:
and Seaule 8, Kansas City 5.
Yankees 9, White Sox 8
At Chicago, Joe Girardi cleared
the bases with a three-l't!n double in
the sixth inning as New York rallied
from an 8-0 de licit to stun Chicago.

Trailing 8-4, New York ~
five in the sixlh, SllltinJ lhe 1~
when White Sox fint '-tlan F~
Thomas failed to touch first on 111
grounder for his first error of lhe sea-

son.

Tom:•

Chicago cut it to 8-5 on
Raines' RBI single. Wade 119u..
then singled to chase Alex Fernandez
and reliever Larry Thomas (1-J) surrendered an RBI double to Paul
O' Neill.
Tino Maninez walked to load the
bases and, after a strikeout, Girardi.
doubled to give lhe Yankees a 9-8'
lead ..Girardi was 3-for-4 and is now
on a 13-for-29tear.
Reliever Bob Wickman (3-1 ), the
fourth Yankee pitc!oer, went I ']J
innings for lhe wi,(. John Wettela
got three outs for his seventh sa~.
·
Tigen S, Rangers 3
,.
At Arlington, Texas, Felipe Lint
gave Detroit's pitching staff a ra&lt;;.
quality stan and John Flaheny jUmp-!':\
staned the offense with a three-run~
double.
• l!
Lira (3-3) gave up three runs a;Ktl
five hits over 6 1/3 innings for a staff
lhat started the day with a 7.19 ERAll
Mike Myers got four outs for hi.e
second save and just the Tigers' fiftlfl .
this season.
i .,
Flaheny's second-inning double
off Darren .Oliver (2-1) belM~thit
Tigers win justlheir sixlh road ka~~ •
all season.
.
'
Blue Jays 8, Red Sox 7 (l~)i•..,
At Toronto, rookie Robert Perez
hit a bases-loaded single in the bottom of the lOth off Heathcliff
Slocumb (1-2) as Toronio ralliedA
from a four-run deficit to win.
. io
Perez's single helped fellow rook-A
ie Many Janzen ( 1-0) get the victo- ·.
ry in his major-league debut. .
lUI '
John Olcrud drove in live runs, ul
three with ri homer in the cightM~
inning, and Carlos Delgado had fournl
hits for Toronto.
Mo Vaughn went 3-for-5 with azn
monstrous homer and John-Valentin'll
hii a two-run homer for lhe Red So~_ , .,.
JO

Athletics 8, TWins 3
At Oakland, Calif., Ernie Y(\ung, 1,
homered for the founh time in three ..
games and Don Wengen got his first .)J
major league win as a staner as Oak·
land completed a three-game S\"eep. 1rt
Young, who hit three homers o~
Friday, also had an RBI double. uo

..

Hubbards

Gre••••

Syracuse

Bedding&amp;.
Vegetable Plants.......... $6.50 flat
10 In Hanging Baskets $5.75·&amp;·
$6.75
12 in Hanging Basket Ferns
$10.95
Combination Pots
................................ $3.50-$9.95
Geraniums ................ $1.00 .. Up
.. ...... ................... 10 or more sse
Azaleas .. ................. $4.95-$8.95
Rhododendrons ............... $12.95
Shrubs &amp;Trees ., ... $2,95-$10.95
Open Dally 9 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon • 5 p.m.

.

PL~

MONTREAL EXPOS: Reaallcd RHP
Uguclh Urbina rrom OttaWII or the Inlet•
na!ionlll League. Setu RHP AICJI hcheco

Answers to your questions and
other usefullrifonqatlon

SundiiY'• scorts

1-100-117-10t4

cuSt.

p.m.

New York (Wilsotl 1-2) aJ San DieJo
10 :0~

·'

lis!, re~roac:rive 10 May 10. Optioned RHP
Giovanni Carrnra lo Syracuse of !be lnlcr·
mllionnl League . Called up LHP Paul
Spoljilric and RHP Jeff Ware from Syra-

A FREE presentation
by Eureka Networks
Tuesday, May 21st, 6:30 p.m.
Meigs County Library

(Aahb)' 4-2).

•

'not a pleasant feeling."
Map 103, Hawkl/96
Orlando won its sixth straight
playoff game behind 24 points by
Shaquille O'Neal to get within one
win of lhe conference finals.
"I'd like to get this over with, rest
up, and watch the Bulls get tired
. playing the Knicks," O' Neal said.
Atlanta got within one, 97-96, on
two free .throws by Christian Lae.t·
tner with 2:47 remaining. O'Neal
fOund Dennis Scott for a lhreepointer 19 seconds later.
" Dennis hit the key, shot,"
O'Neal said. "He does that a lot."
Anfernee Hardaway had 21
points . for Orlando, while Laellner
led t~e Hawks with 26.
Game 4 is tonight at Atlanta.
Bulls 94, Knicks Ill
Backup center Bill Wennington
had two crucial baskets down the
stretch as the Bulls overcame a
drought in the fourth quarter. Chicago blew an 11 -point lead by going
scoreless for more than six minutes
in the finai' period.
Michael Jordan, who had 27
· points; didn 't have a field goal ih the
fourth quaner and didn't score a
point in the period until II secodds
remained when his two foul shots
gave the Bulls a 94-91 lead. The
Knicks had a chance to try for a tie,
but John Starks had trouble h!mdling
a pass from Anthony Masori and wa'
called for walking with 1.2 seconds
left.
"They can look back and say they
should have won all four games, but
that's not what the si tuation is," Jordan said. "This game came down to
who wanted it most and who made
the big shots down the stretch."
Wennington broke· the scoreless
drought with a dunk over Patrick
Ewing witQ I:32 left, then put Chicago ahead for good on a baseline
jumper with 37 seconds to go after
Ewing was called for traveling.
Those. were his only points of the
game.
Ewing led New York with 29
points and 10 rebounds.
•
Game 5 is Tuesday night at

~y

Chk01~0

NBA playoffs

NL standings
_

Florida 2. Philadelphia I (2 OT); _

M onln.:&lt;~l (C..mnic=r 2-11 ar Lo~ An@l.'·
k"S (Astacio 2-3). 10 :0~ JUn.
Nr:w York (lsringhaulicn 2-]) at S:m
Dieto (Valentucla 1-1). 10:05 p.m.

H d u ~10 n

lear.! ~

serie s · ~ - 2

I ·~) af Aorid.!.
7:0S p.m.
·
San Fr:.nc isco (G;1niner ]-1) af
Philadel1thia (FIITna.ndez 2-2), 7 : l~ p.m.
Pinsb urgh (Darwin 2-.\) al AJlanla
{Giavinc J-3) . 7:40p.m

Tonight's games

Dcuoi1 (Sodpwtk)' 1-lJ
LAND (N:!IY ~- I l. 7:05p.m.

Sunday's scores

St. Louis (Andy Benc-s

Decroir S. Tea~ J

Saturday's srores

S1. Louis J, Delroil 2; St. Louis

(8uf'l(eul · ~ l.

Oakbnd 8, Minne~ota J
Seattle II, KilRS\IS City 5
CLEVELAND 4, California I

NHL playoffs
._I

Sunday's scor~
01i1:i!gO J. New Yurt 0

Tonlght's games

Toronto 8. 8os10n 7 (!OJ
Milw01uktt 6, Oaltimore 4
New York 9. Chicago 8

Hockey

Pinsburgh 7. N.Y. Rangers 3: Pins.burgh wins Jerits
Colorado 4. ChicilJO 1; Co Iondo
leild5 series 3-2

Slm Di~so ~ . CINCINNATI 0
St. louis 6, Los Ang&amp;:les ~

Sunday's scores

(~

Mnnlrcat 10. Hous1m1 9 ( I ])

Transactions
BasebaD

Tuesday's pmes

c~1 m p .

I

Philmlelphia Ul Florida. 7JO p.m.
De1roil ur St Louis. 8 p.m.

'

Tonight's game

Florid:r 7, Colorado~
Monlrcal7 , Houston 6

Baltimore~ - Milwaukee ~ ( 10)
Oakland 12. Minnesotil S
Cbicago 7, New Yort .'i ·
Te•oas II , Odroii7CLEVELANO 6, ·Califomiil ~
SeanJe II , KansiU Cily I

Chicago (Billdwin J-0) ill

series 1- 1

Orltmdo a1 Atlanta. 8 p.m. (TNT)

Philadelphia b .. AIIanra 0
~an FranciS~..:o 7, Piusbl.ugh 2

Torunto 9, Bmlon H(II)

Tuesday's games

3-l
Utah 101. S:ln Antonio 86: Utidllcads

New York at Oli&lt;:ago, 8 p.m. fl'NT)
Utah at San Anronio . ~A

CINC INNATI it. San Oil'!!'' 6.

.649

17 - ~I
17 .. S28
18 .:"i14

, California ........ ....... 19

Wntl'm Di•iMon
SaniJitJ:,O......... .... 22 I~ . 59~
SanFmnc~.~ ~ o ....... l9
17 .52M
Lu.~ Angcles ......... .. IR 20 .474
Colnr:uJo ... ....... .. .. IS 21 .417

or s u ~ p. game
Aorid:JII .Colorado O · ·
Srm Fr.mciSL'O 12. Pi11s.hurgh 7
CINCINNATI I. SomiJi~:~~~ 0
A1l:m1 ;~ II . PhilmfaiJihia J

Wnltm Di¥ision

:t..O

l~.:..W ~eries

Lu~ An~elts

Milw:wkce ............. IS 19 .441
: KnnwCity .......... . l6 22 .421
'

I~

~chargers

t::RUISE ON IN FOR A GREAT BEAU

tle wins series 4-0
ChiL:ago 94, New York 91 : Chi c&lt;~go

New York 7. 01k:1go6
4. SL loui ~ 2

.651

. ~56
4~7

I~

'"

I\

Saturday's sc.:ores

Cmlral Diflsion

:

.471

Chicago................ :. IJ 20 .4~9
PimN!r~h ..... ,....... 16 21 .4:\2
S1. t..oois ................ r6 21 .4U

F.ultm Dirilion

•

18

struck out four and did not allow a
walk in his first shutout and complete ·
game since July 30, 1995, against
Philadelphia. Jeff Kent had both hits
for the Mets. .
The game was tranquil, a reversal ·
from Saturday when a brushback- .
inspired brawl led to the ejections of :
eight players and a coach.
Sandberg hit his eighth homer, ih
the first inning off Mark Clark (1-5), ·
who lost his· third straight decision. ·
Sosa led off the founh with his lith
home run - and ·fifth off the Mets
- to make it2-0.
Giants 7, Pirates 2
Allen Watson allowed six hits in
eight innings and drove in four runs .
as San Francisco swept Pinsburgh.
Watson, who struck out seven and
(Continued on Page 5)

1-614-991•6614

Sc:rnlt 114. Houston 107 IOTl: Seat-

Hous1on .............. IS 20 .474

II AL standings
1

leillh series

Central Di•ision
CINCINNATI ... 16

Johnson opened wilh a single. Jody
Reed 's kill single ended Bur)la's
outins. and Chuck McElroy gave up
a run-scorins single to Tony Gwynn
and an RBI double to Wally Joyner.
The Padres salvaged the final
game in their three-game series,
which include4 a 1-0 shutout by the
Reds on Saturday night. 1'he NL
West leaders have not lost more than
two consecutive g~es this season.
Noles: Padres third baseman Ken
Caminiti will be re-examined Monday for an abdominal strain. Doctors
will decide if he can play Monday
night against New York. ... The
Padres have been in first place in the
NL West for 40 c~ecutive days ....
Luis Lopez went 0-for-2 with. two
walks, ending his hitting streak at six
games .... Brad Ausmus is in a2-for23 slump. ... Knight gave some of his
reserves a start Sunday.. Chris Sabo
staned at third for the first time si nce
April 30, and Vince Coleman was in
left for lhe first time since April 27.
They were a combined 2-for-6.

.

Scoreboard
••

By The Asaoe'tMcl Press
The Chicago Bulls will remain
lhe only team to three-peat as NBA
champions over the past decade.
The Bulls won !heir third straight
title in 1993. Three others have had
lhe chance, but the Houston Rockets
on Sunday joined the Los Angeles
.Lakcrs in 19~9 and Detroit Pistons
in 1991 as teams lhat failed in pursuit of a lhird c011secutive championship.
The Seattle SuperSonics beat the
Rockets·lJ4-I 07 in overtime Sunday
to sweep the semifinal series iri four
games. They will return to the Western Conference final~ for the first
time since 1993
" I believe our heart was there, but
we ran into a team who really got it .
going," Roc~ets coach Ruily Tomjanovich said. "I'm not ashamed.
I'm not ashamed of how we played. "
Seattle will face the winner of the ·
Utah-San Antonio series in the con·
ference finals. The Jazz lead that
· series 3-1 atler a 101 -86 victory Sunday night.
In the Eastern Conference on
Sunday, Chicago took a 3-1 lead
over New York with a 94-91 victory and Orlando went up · 3-0 on
Atlanta with a I03-96 victory.
The Rockets, who swept Orlando
just II months ago to repeat, rallied
from a 20-point founh-quaner deficit
and iied the game 101-10 I · on a
three-pointer by Sam Cassell with
4.1 seconds to play.
''They haven :t won.· championships by giving up," said Shawn
Kemp, who led Seattle with 32
points and 15 rebounds. "They held
their composure and fought back.
" It got a li\tlc scary at the end.
FQrtunately, we regained our composure in the overtime."·
Kemp had five points in the over·
time and the Sanies locked it up with
a 9-0 run, beating the Rockets for the
13th straight time.
The Rockets we're.led by Hakeem
Olajuwon 's 26 points.
"I always wondered how !·would
lee! when we would have to give up
ihe title," Tomjanovich said. "It's

•

By DICK BRINSTER .
AP Sports Writer
Mike Grace escaped a predicament. Jerry Goff was one.
With Greg Maddu~ on the mound
after Atlanta had pounded Philadelphia pitching two nights runn ing,
Grace was supposed to lose.
But, like many rookies, he ~idn ' t
get the message.
" I really don't pay much aUention
to who I'm pitching against," Grace
said after raising his record to 6-0
with a four-hiner as the Phillies ende!l the Braves' seven-game winning
streak with a 6-0 victory Sunday at
Veterans Stadium.
Still, he didn't put his pame in the
record book. Goff did, but he'd
rather forget it.
"It was ugly," lhe backup catcher said after allowing si~ passed balls
- tying a major league record- ip
the Houston AStros' 7-6 loss to the
Montreal Expos. " After the first one
· got by, I got a little tentative. It just
snowballed from there."
Goff's gaffes were an aberration,
considering his commission of just
four passed balls in 69 previous
games. But the 31-year-old, recalled
from the minors four days ago when
Tony Eusebio was disabled, gave the.
Expos five unearned runs.
Elsewhere in . the · Nation.al
Leagu~. it was Chicago 3, New York
0; San .Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 2;
Florid'a 7, Colorado S; and St. Louis
6. Los Angeles 5.
Phillies 6, Braves 0
Grace struck out five and walked
only one while retiring the final 17·
batters in his first career shutout It ·

Brewers edge O's; :
Mariners also win ;•

Rockets swept

Phils shut ·o ut Braves; Expos also win

-Indians tally 4-1
.win over Angels

In other AL IJCtlon,

:~ulls beat Knicks;

Pege4

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Indians Win...

AU Uaed Cars 6 Truck• Mual Go.
Taxes and tme lee not Included.
All ~ayments subi,ectto credit approval.

TATE MOTORS,.Inc.

""e

iT'S WORTH YOUFi DRIVEl

Orlandu 10~. Atlanto 96: Orlando

,,

\I

'
~·
•

and Peggy Hill enjoy their first win
of the season at Kanawha Valley Dragway
the weekend of April 13th . with the
Camaro running a 5.90 at 116 mph in the
Sth mile. ,
One of 3 cars, owned . the Hill's with
nipjor sponsorship, Key motors,,Poineroy
Area's Most Unique Car Store"

nscn

.

ATTENTION:
. MOMS, DADS,
GRANDPARENTS, AUNTS,
UNCLES, FRIENDS OF
GRADUATING SENIORS
You can place your QWn special
message to a graduating high' school
senior in our 1996 Graduation
supplement, which will be included
· in the Friday, May 24" edition of the

The Daily Sentinel
A special section of the supplement will be
set aside just for your personal messages.
To place your ad, send $20,
along with your c1Qarlywritten messaae
of 20 words or less to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(Deadline for ads is Noon, May 16) ·
'

••

•

�.

Monday,..., 13,1886

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentirlel
P-ee&amp; ,

Monday, May 13, 1998

Th_ere are too many morons sitting on, benches these days
- Dear Ann Landers: I have been
Dlarried to "Clyde" for 3S years. As
(a.. as I know, he has always been
(aithful. I just learned he proposi·
tioned my 47-year-old daughter while
w.e were visiting her for the weekend,
and I am stunned. "Della" was II
Y.Cars old when I married Clyde, and
he is the only father she has ever
. known. She was devastated by"this,
and so Bril I.
·
" I don'tthink I will ever be able to
forgive my. husband. I talked it over
~ith a couple of friends. One said
Della could be lying and I should not
mention this to Clyde. '1"111' other said
I· ought to confront him immediate·

If

Ann
Landers

he has never spoken my daughter's
name, which.leads me to believe he
is indeed guilty.
Della has two daughters, 20 and
22, and now I am afraid to leave them
alone with Clyde. They always have
loved him so much it would kill them
to find out about this. Do you have
any words of wisdom for me? --Palm
Desert, Cali{."
Dear P.O.: I cannot e~plai~ why,
after all these years, Clyde suddenly
made a pass at his stepdaughter. Given the ages of his .granddaugbters, I
don 't think you need to worry about
their safety. They probably would
give him a clop in the chops, which
would be richly deserved.

Clyde had.a mild stroke two years
ajo, and I asked his neurologist if that
might explain his bizame behavior.
"{he d&lt;ictor said that my husband
knew exactly what he was doing and
mat I should let him know I am aware
of-the incident. I believe Clyde would
l;leny that he came on to Della. but the
doctor said a marriage counselor
could sort out tlie truth from the fie. I suggest that you and Clyde see
tion.
a cou nselor together. Meanwhile,
After Della told tile about the inci· please stop shopping your intimate
®nt, I said nothing to Clyde, but I did family business around to friends.
uoeat him differently. Since that day, The doctor was OK," but this sort of

..
'

Local teacher honored
'

· :. The late Lucille Smith of Chester,
a charter member of Alpha Omicron
Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, was
ainong those honored i_n a necrology
program presented at the chapter's
meeting held . recently at the
McAnhur Methodist Church.
President Fern Grimm conducted
thio memorial program for Smith and
another deceased member, Elizabeth
L~ntz of McArthur, in the absence of
cltairman, Saundra Tillis."
_Smith was initiated into Delta
Kappa Gamma on May 6, I939 and
served in many offices of the local
chapter as well as representing it as
a ~elegate to the National Conven·
tion.
Lantz was a longtime Vinton
County teacher and active in many
or'ganlzation~ there.
· Prior to the dinner, Diane Partlow
p~sented Jim McPeak, director of
the Vinton County High School choir
which presented several selections.
Judy Fetherolf read two poems by
Eslher Dauber, a life member, "It's
Spring" an~ "God Spoke to Me in My
Garden." Tables for the dinner were

decorated in a spring motif and
favors were fl owerpots containing

seeds, beads, and candies.
Outing the business meeting, Nellie Parker read a thank you note from
Serenity House and Grimm read a
card of thanks from the Delta State
president, Dr. Ruth Brooks. She
announced that books had been
donated to the hometown libraries in
memory of Lucille Smith and Eliza·
beth Lantz. A get- well card was
signed for Saundra Tillis.
The membership committee chair·
man Vicki Norris led in the Founder's
Day· program. She gave ABC cards
showing faCts abo~jt founders and
Delta Kappa Gamma services to
members who read them to the society.
Officers elected were Carol
Eberts, president; Norris, first vice
president; Marjorie Fetty, ~econd
vice president; Nellie .Parker, secre-.
tary ; Deborah Hammond, treasurer;
Fern Grimm, parliamentarian .
Ne~t meeting will be held on Sept.
23 at St. Peters and Paul in Wellston.
' .

Catholic women to
meet in Steubenville
~e Catholic Women's Club·convention will be held on June 12 in
Steubenville, it was announced at a
recent meeting of the local group.
The convention wi II be preceded
by a dinner to be held the night
before, according to local pastor, the
Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz.
.
'A decision on the annual picnic of
the local club will be made at the
next meeting, it was noted. Marie
Johnson presided in the absence of
Cecelia Lisle. Reports were given by

Alice Freeman,.secretary. and Phyllis Hackett, treasurer. Jane Beegle
reported that the crafts committee
would begin meeting soon.
A collector doll and a giant teddy ·
bear were awarded Sunday to contributors to that project.
It was noted that the 28 members
of the parish who made a pilgrimage
to the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima
in Portugal will be making a report
on their trip.
Next meeiing will be held on May
14.

Poet's corner
'Prom Night'
It was a ·warm spring night
and several young people
thought that it was alright
to go to town and have some fun,
but the party did not end
until half past one.
The driver said that the car
had quite -a load,
when he began to drive
his car out onto the road.
He sped out onto the highway
and was going real fast,
not knowing that this ride
was going to be their last.
They didn't take time
to really think,
that they had already had
too much to drink.
They came upon a really
sharp curve, ·
and then the ca:r
began to swerve.
It went into a long
sideways skid,

and tben over the bank
until it was flearly hid.
· The headlights shone
up into the air.
and many people passed
with not a care.
Soon someone began to hear
a long. long scream, ·
and then they realized
that it was not a dream.
The squad went as fast
as it should,
trying to save
some if they could.
But for some of them
they were too late,
because they had already.
met "their own fate .
Their classmates came
and stood nearby, ·
to wish them all
a final goodbye .
- Aoyd Ross. 1986.

Public NoHce

Public No11ce
PUIIUC NOTICE
. REQUEST FOR FEE
PROPOSALS
The Melge County
comml.. lonere will be
applying tor CDBG CHIP
Round t 8 funding and will
·accept tee propoeele tor
REHAIIIUTAnON
CONSULnNG SERVICES to
lmpllment tile· program, It
!undid, until Mtly 20, UIIMI
M 10:00 A.M. Fee propot~le
will then be coneldered at
1:00 P.M. during the regular
commii•IO-'• ...-tlng.
Soope of urvlcee
required
by
lhe
.rehabllltetlon conaullenl
. will Include: lnepectlon ol
20 houelng elngle family

•

inf~on should .remain in ~he .
famtly. Now you ' must dectde
whether or Pot you Willi to s_tay married to Clyde in light of -!lis repre·
.
hensible behavior. ·
~ar Ann Llnders: ~ dtvorce
laws m the state of Texas snnk. Here,
it is possible to get marrl'ed without
a blood test, and no one cares if one
pany has a sexually ~smitted disease. But a divorce can drag oul for
a year or longer because of our
mealy-mouthed judges.

In one case I read lbout' recently,, father was. Then, she Jet another man
· (unemployed) move in with her. The
bed with a ·IJIIII. She told her flllher. husband was ordered to ~y $700 a
He had his wife foil~ and ICIIlled month in child support for a child
that she .was, in fact, involved with who may not be his, plus the mort·
several men. He filed for divorte and gage and the wife's living expenses.
was granted temporary custody of the He was cautioned not to date 01her
little girl.
women.
Not long after the suit was filed,
The wife is the guilty pany in my
the wife had a baby and told the judge opinion and should get n01hing. What
she did not know for certain who the do you think? •• A Disgusted Texan

a7-year-old air! caualtt her mother in

CHAT. LINE

Dear Texan: People must ' pay
more attention to the judges they
elect and complain vociferously
about lousy appointments. Entirely
too many morons are. sitting on
benches these days.

Uve 24 His a day
Talk to Beautiful .
Girls

1·900·446•1414
~· 6445

Send questions to Altli Luders,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W, Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 7110, Los Anps,
Calif. 9Q04S
.' .

·. $3.99 per min.
MU$1 be 18 YB old.

•

Service u

(~19)

'

Be A Part Of
The Daily Sentinel's

Community
calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promOie sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific nu1,11ber of
days.
MONDAY
POMEROY -· Meigs Cou·nty
Right to Life meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Library in
Pomeroy.

·---

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

---

. LONG BOTTOM ·· Faith Full
Gospel Church revival Monday
through Saturday. Guest speaker,
Charles Hall.

$2.1111 pw min.
Mtiat be 18 yr..

FI~DTOTAL

SATISFACTION! ·
Through a Uve
Personal Psychic!
1·900-255·0500
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
(619)
645·8434

Serv-u

-

--

POMEROY -- Bedford Townsh•,
Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday at the township hall.

'1·900..990.3737
Ext. 2261

.,..., ...

'

Gabriel C. Farley
Navy Fireman Gabriel C. Farley
recently graduated from the Gas Turbine Systems Technician Mechanical
Course at Navy Service School Com- ·
mand, Great Lakes, Ill.
During the course , st udents
received training in the operation and
maintenance of gas turbines engines
and support systems.
.
Farley is a 1995 gmduatc of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy. He joined the
Navy in June, 1995.
·

.I~!~~;1:~1~:f:;a~!i

was removed from its perch ncar an
elementary school after students
complained to the sign's owners.
Students in Mary Del Rio's thirdand founh·gradc class at Markham
Elementary School noticed the sign
facing the school last month and
wrote in protest to Ackerley Outdoor
Advcnising.
"You know how Joe Camel dresses cool," saidAnna Barrett, 9, during
a class discussion. "He's stupid.
Smoking cigarettes can ·cause cancer
and kill you." .
· The company wrote back and
said the sign would be taken down.
Within a few weeks, it was .
· "Our policy restricts tobacco and
alcohol advertisement placement
within 500 feet from ·our schools."
the company said. " We apologize for
the oversight." .
One gove_mment study found that
Joe Camel was recognized by as
many 6-year-olds as Mickey Mouse.

Public Notice

Public Notice

11ouslng unite and CDBG Houelng Progrema,
PUBUCNOnCE
preparation of rehabilitation acope of aervlcee to be
OPEN WAinNG UST
work apeelflcatlone and provided, and emount of
The Melge Metropolitan
cottettlmettl of each unh. compeneatlon requlr.cl lor Houelng Authority le
The Conauttant will alao eueh ..,.....
announcing the wahlng 1111
FH Propoeala may be tor Section 8 Rentll
eealet In the contractor
bidding proce11 and revlftf mell.cl or dellver.cl to the Aealatence will be open.cl
. County llftactlve II!AY-21, 111M. All
ol euch bide, pre- Melge
conatrucllon m11tlng1, Commllllontre,
hout~holde lntareated In
Interim conelructlon CourthouH, Pomeroy, Ohio receiving aaeletenae mey
lnepectlona, overeee 457111. Queetlone In ragard obtain an appiiCitlon .M our
compllence with lleeldenU.I to thle requeet mey be office located at 31350
Rehabilitation Standarde, ·addreee.cl to J11n TrueHII, Union Avenue, Pomeroy
undertake tlnel lnepectioldl Grente Adminlltrltor, 11 OH, TUESDAYS AND
THURSDAYS ONLY, 11:00
end approvall and provlda . 614-9112·71108.
MalgaCounty e.m. to 4:0!1 p.m begfnnlng
written reportl ol all
Commlaalon.e Tllllday, May 21, 1116.
lnapeetlone to the county.
Jlln Trulllll
Fred Holfmen, Preatclant
Fee propo1111 should
EIIICU1tve
Director,
IIMHA
etale quellllcatlone, (5) 6, tO, 13; 3TC
(5) 13, 15, 17 3 tc
prevloue experience. In

C:HmtlmOII

• Tr-.e Trimming
• Mowing (RIIklentlal
and COIYIIY*dal)
• Slln.tbbely
Maintenance
• Odd joi!IIJ* I'1ICIU-'
No LIWII Too Lwpe or
Too SIMI

•New Homes
•GIInlgH
oCompiet.
Remodeling
Stop • Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

•

Plan AhMd. call TOO.VI

985 4473

. 742·2803

.
1.
·

Chat-Line
Hey Guys! II Yf?Ur
special girl is waiting
to hear from you!!
24 Hours A Dayll
Call now ,
1-900·446·1414
Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min.
Must be 18 yra

Serv-U t8191 845-8434

psychic-line
. Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions ol
lolle, success, care, soul
mates, seN-help and
more.
1·9&lt;J0.255-0500

Aulhorlzed AGA Ol&amp;trlbulor
• Welding Supplies • lndi!Sirial Ga!IIS • Machine Shop
SeMc:es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding

• Alumlnum/Steinleas • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Slep&amp; -Stairs, _Railings, Patio Fumhure, Fireplace
hems, Planter hangers. Trellises &amp; lots of other stulll!

EJCI. 3505

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

SPARKlES

614-992-5048
Free Estimates

$19 5

Installed

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
•Insulated

CARPENTER SERVIa

•Room AddiUona

·N- G1111g411 .
•Eiectrfcel &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
•lnlerlor &amp; Exterior .
Pelntlng ·
Al110 Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-82t5
Pomeroy, Ohio

lit jM lo ,_. 1r lo llrge.
Conta&lt;t Rodney Rowel"}'
!94-3788 days, 6!i8-7%31

32124 Happy Hollow Ad.
Middleport. Ohio 4576()
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

eveninp or

614-742-2193

Blllfllsow Mill

1·800-Z64-6J90 anytime!

TFN

Tab the ,.111 out of
pi~tj... let .111 tlo.ft

, ·L••usK ·
WILDING
SICRVICI

95 Years

92 Years

Forest Hill.Cleaners

Saflii''S Inc.

·Anter Bros. Co.

Quality Worlt
Competitive Rates

Pliant !55-22ft

PltGnt 555 4431
Etlllllllltlcl1103'

614-992·2524

Ettablahtd 1100

. ,.,,.._

VERY RUSOIAILI
NAVE REfERENCES
614-tiS-4110

Res.:
Trucking·
limestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

80 Years

~8 - Years ·

· Acme Rentals

Vircap Services

Phone 555-8712
Established 1115

Phone 555-1242
Eatabllahed 1917

70 Years
The Geist

614·441-7558

75

SIQ/1 mg. pd.

.·MANLEY'S
·Card of Thanks
' .
'

67 Years

61 Years
.
.

E·Z Motor Service

Phone 555-9245
Eatlblllhecl1925

Woodrow's Diamonds

. ''

P"-555 Ute

'

Ellll!lllhed 1934

60 Years

.Years

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Bail Security Bonds

Pltont 555 1188

Phone 555 8565
Ettablllhecll!l41

Eatabllthed 1135

50
Plt011t &amp;51:M
Etitallllalted 1!141

30 Years

'

Bail Security Bonds .
Phone 555-8547
Ettlbllthed 11143

~ ~.

'
'~

:
.' '•'
..

40 Years

,'

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M LandscaPing

PhOne 555-4m
Ealabllahld 195t

..._ !55-5454 .
Elllblllhtti115S·

.l

Pltont 555-0287
Ettablltlted 1170

.

52 Yeals

25 Years · 20 Years
.

:I

44Years

Med.Care Center Inc. Triskett Party Center
Pliant 555 8155
Ealtbllllted 1te5

I '

•I

••'

On May 9, 1996,
Ralph and · Nell
Graves celebrated
their 6lnd. Wedding
Annivei'SIIry.
They
would like 'to take Ibis
opportunity to thank
all their friends for
the many urds,
nowers, and wishes
they ·reieived.Speclal
thanks to all or those
who took the time to
~top
and e'tend
Best Wishes In
person. ·All 'or these
thoughtful things
made the day so
won~erful. Thank .
you ag~in.
.Nell and Ralph

:by

..•"

f'Gravy
. " Graves
.
.

10• IMPIOJEIIIIT

-

Roollng, Room Addlllone
Siding, Concrete, etc.

All Kinds of Earlh Work

P.O. Box 220,-8-1, Oh•.

614 3118-1865111.,;

992-3838

MEN
IEIUTIFUL WOMEN
IRE WilliNG TO .
HEAR FROM
YOU NOW!!!
1·900-446·14 1.4
Ext 4309
$3.99 per min.Mull be 18 yra.
Serv·U (8111)645-8434 .
3r'IIN

me. pd

Real Estate General

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

;;;;a:

frH fire wOod 10 ca.ar arM tO!
11, pond.
1w1p ""' H 1 am Oil.
30487!&gt;22011. Allor 8:!XIp.m. ·• "-

w•

ftM Puppiea. 114-• H32

:m:••,_,. . . .,.....,,waw
Furnitut• coudl, etc.,

.. r

G11ft-.

114·111~'

Kirtena &amp; a linle houN dog,
li);2o7285.

,,._'l
•'11

MalO RottwoKOf mix. malo cCIIIPil
Nose Belg&amp;ef814-i12&lt;8122. . 1L)I

(614) 4~1-1191

60 Lost and Found • ·'1 '

·• Top • Trim • Removal

30ft.

Bladt &amp; white lema'* Huaky.

578-2t 34.

. • Stump Grinding
(304) 773·5124

"'"

Found: Man's Bladl Amity Billoti
Fourd In City Park. Call 304-875-'
~ UJidon~ly.
·~

1S Yrs. Exp. Lie. ·Ins.
Owner. Rick Johnson

Free Estimotes

lost: linle Brown Mixed Chihua·

llua. Dachshund H..,..

Doa Loill•

On Johns Creek Road. Or Rtxq;
Fork Road In The Meu;ervllfe-

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Area It Found Pleaae Call 8141!
256o8790. ·
.
I

9411-2512

Umestone • GraV1il
Dirt• Sand

CHEAPER llATES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HI.

Chester; Ohlj)

Yard Sali

70

'.

.

.. ,

All Yard SaleS Must Be Pakl

ttfa.

. Advanoe. DEADLINE: 2;00 P-1\tlq
the day before. the ad is to run
S..ncl.ly edition - 2:00 p.m. Fndii{.!
Monday edition . 10:00 a.m. s.tM
urday,

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
9411-3013 Phone
9411-2011FAX

Pinecrest Care Center By Thehli t
Resident Council. t.tay 15o; hourfin
g:oo AM ·3 :00 PM, Furniture
Hounhold ltem1, Decoratlonrtf..l
Clorhtng, and many other itemtf ..

too numerous ., mention.

I &amp; WPWnCS AID SIPPLY

Pomeroy, .

Tuppera Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36" .
4" S&amp;Q - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6_': Flex pipe.
4'" &amp; 6'" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. PV.C. piP!'
1 In'" thru 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" Grave less Leach pipe
Gas pipe I'" thru 2'" - Fiuings - Regulators- Riscrl
Full assortment of PV.C. &amp; Flex fining• &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.
St. At. 7

' 1·900·988-8988
Ext. 6733
$2.99 per minule ·
Must be 18 yrs old
SerVice U
619 645-8434

.'

Houoe Repair I
!lemodellng
Kitchen I Bath
R•modellng .
Room Addlttone
Siding, Roofing. Pltloa

.

.

,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
;!h
:;66;;5-;:G:-:e~:':•::":r_a::-1:':Ha:-r::-lln_g.;.:or:.. ,M'."'i'"'dd..,.,lo"Tl. .11
port. May 13 &amp; , .c, fraeref Homit i
Interior, bedding, baby 'it•")}~

clothing, misc.

1
All Yard Sales t.tusl Pe Paid 1(11"
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm th6 '

day belore the ad is 10 run Sun.
day edition. ,, :tJOpm' Friday.' Morf:tq
day editpn t~OOa.m. SaturdaV.

I

lla...e lllaeli

lneurero • Expeo leiicod
Call w.yne Neff

&lt;

992-4405
For Free Eetl-

..

Your f~vorite artist
on Tap.e or CD

.,_

.,_LII'IUI

FABMma

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

WHITE PINE ROUGH
. SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1li8, 2Jt4, 2x6
8'·10' 30f; a II.
14'-16' 35¢ a 11.
Also ttValleble
4x4'e-4x6's
814-985-4107
614-742·333.7

992-2825
tl3tlttn

..rr

GARAGE SALE- May 1S, Iejw

NeUJ At lneles lleetronies
.
r
Dea. •.er
' ·. I
. a

At110n1ble

'~

,

9am·Sp.m. Skinner Rd. (Grate'l),
lollow s~gns. Crafts. gihs, Clothing.,...
Rain or shine!
:~~ ..

Pt. Plea~n1
&amp; VIcinity

"'ut J

·

Garage

sale: Sal May 11th'
MonMay13ti1. 133S.f'llkOriwt.

80
Public Sale
,..,.-::-.,;.a._nd:.,.A;:uc:;l::.:lo:.:;n:..__;,
·"'~
:!'
.
Rick .Pearson Auction Company, •

run 11me auctioneer, complete
auction
service .
llcenud ·· ·
•ee,Oh1o &amp; Wast Virginia. 304- ,
773-5785 Qr 3()4. 173-S.467.
II :
'~

.:,90'=--~W.,;;an.:..:,t:,:e;:d~to:....:B;.:u::!y_ . ,
1960's toy's, G .l. Jot, Star. War'a

MODEll SANitATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Commercial or Residenlial
Septic Tanks Cl~ned &amp; Ponable Tollels Renled.
·
Dally, WH«Iy &amp; monlhly rental rates.

W~

'
.

Date-Line

r

ect. Will pay fair price based on v· .
condition. 614·446 ·&amp;830 aller 6, ~

..

~

~

Clean late Model ·Cars Or

') ~

Trucks, 1~90 Models Or Newer,
Sml!h Bu1ck Pontiac. 1900 . Eaat-..; 1~.
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.
--~~--~~~--~-J~
~U!O Part~ . Buying sal:ot}

J &amp;

o·.

vage vehicles. SeU1ng parts. 304- .
773•5033.
I)

OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Umestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

•

Top dollar - anuquea, turnilure........

gl~ss, china, crocks, gold, Sillier,

~;

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

c:oms, walcha$, estatu. Osby -·

992-3954 or 985-3418
'"·
.•

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Caine,

t:

Martin, 614·992-744 1.

' ·
_________,.;.._______,

:~
Silver, Gold, Diamonds All Old
Collectibles, Paperweights Etc.
M.T.S,' Coin Shop, 151 se'cond' : .1 .
Avenue, Galipolis. 6146·44&amp;-2842. .r ..

Used MeQ$ levis, lee &amp; wran- 1" 1
gler Jeans &amp; Oen•m Jackets, Ni~a- , • •
Shoes, 131-4-4.1\16-2468.
to~ ii

G

Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

UCINE GUN
CLUB

Fishing Derby
May 19th

OFFICE 992·2259

8 am- 12·noon
Will supply bait

..

Preeents lor kids

l.M_em..Jibe~raa.&amp;wl!!el!ic!!of;me;...to...J
brlna

,,.

EMPLOYM EN T
SE RVICES

•••

--:------·· ·
,

I 110

PltontSSS.~
EIIIIJIItiMcl1~

.

'

'.

. MESSAGE
UA.N.· BE .SEEN HERE
¢ORA TOTAL OF
PER DAY.

WE NEED USnNGSII WE WOULD LIKE TO SELL YOUR
HOME IF YOU ARE PLANING ON UOVINGI GIVE US A
CALLAND WE WIU. WORK FOR YOU!
HENRY E. CLELAND JR..............................,....... II82·2258
SHEIQII L Ho\IIT. .................................................742·11357
KATHLEEN M. ct:ELAND,...::......1......: ............... . ~111t
OFFICE•.••••••_,_,,,,_,,,,......................................., 992·2258

..
.i •

.

,~

c

·· '
•,

•,

JoAnne Shoe!s

And Karen BUms. ~.
2112J'Pmn

BUCKTOWN ROAD- Very Nice Level Site that contains three
lots. Paved road, PTC water available. Nice building or
Mobile home Site With a River View:
KERR STREET· ApprpK. 14 acres In a secluded location
near town. City water. This property contains an,older t" 112
stoty home approK. 100+ years Old, wllll 3·4 badrooms, bath,
omete woodwor1&lt;, basement, added Insulation, w111p around
porch. Gas space heater, cable hook-up. Home In need of
repairs. But Kyou ~ant Prtva«a,y· CHECK THIS Q.UTII

Help Wanted
· "ATTENTioN"

'Hair Styli at Needed For JoAnne's · ·
Kut Ard Kun. 6tH4f!.9496.

1 114 Story FrlllrM Home locatod on Salem St. "SR 124" In
Rutlend. Home contains 3 bodrooms, storage area. Home
neods soma repair. Sltuatad on large laval lot with flowers
and fruH trees. MAKE AN OFFERII

DAVE YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!
The "Honor Roll" will appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
The Dally SentiJiel.
The Cost ·Is Only $12

{

nU, .. good- :104-4!58-221&amp;

ue 1411

Toll F.... 1-100-112-a11

Crystal Glass.Co. ,..
.

boon"""""*'"' '

&amp;awn.'WIVII ltlomN a.....

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

--

"j

Monlh Old GO&lt;man -~~
llato. Notdt To LiYo In Count~
I

4 P.M. -t P.M. 114--

R.L•.HOLLON
TRUCKING

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
your choice.
1·900·988-6988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 pe,r min.

30 Announcements

dog, ...

ONE ·ON ·ONE!
CALL NOW!

W:H mo. pd.

Truck:

' .

"i

----75-2101 . .

wftlt 1M,.,. I HrllceiO IMI:Ic II-IlP
141Mng I.E. Oltlo a West VIrginia

LIVE!

'

3,..,.oldnDIII~ .....

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVICE

FREE ESnMATES

71151.

3. Ki!tano, tone lt.ti•H. 10011

.

(114)1112-1838
114 1112..zTU

!i

2yr. DIG mole, pout Cot~ l
man 'hot&gt;ha•d miNd Wtllt
,.,..... Good .... ....

•

,,..es••••

•PIIntlng
I'RIII!ITIIIA-r.&amp;

Your Sweetheattas
close as your phone

IITERIOR·EITERIOI

100 Years

..

DATE
LINE .

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portllble

LINDA'S
PAiftTING

'

•Addlllonl

. 985-4422

&lt;:oniractor with over 30
yeors nperlence now
evallable ror aU types or
New l!ornes. Garages,
Additions, Baths, .
Kitchens, Decks, Sldlna,
Roors etc.

I t

•

and Manufactured Houalng

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

1/211fn

w

All C:ondlllonere, Hell Pumpe,
fum cII All . . I~ tMIIt In .-ock
for ltm~11· 1 Ina I "•II &gt;n.
.
fl' , .. -~··.
.
IWVOI02t2

•NewO.,....
'Remodlllrij
•Siding
•Roollng

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (819) 845-8434

YOUNG'S

Cloaol Homo. tl-.ttlll.

- .. - - -.
0 •

~ . . . . . ""' jJ14
•NewH-

. We will work within your budget
Ph. 77M173
·F.AXn3-5181
1il8 Pomero Street
Mason. WV

PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCEHOROS,COPE, SOAP
·
RESULTS
1 -9&lt;JO.nS·2~25 EXT.
5961
$2.99 per min
Mu$1 be 18 yr.~. '
Serv·U (619) 654-8434

Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL
needs
Phone

SIIITII'S
COIAIUCTIOII

''flo Job Too Large or Too Small"

·
ENTERTAINMENT'

l.lmlted Time Offer
Call today with your
window sizes for a free

. Plt011t 555-1022
. Eltablltht4 1885

LCOI1 .........

Dooo: , - OlolSite Plus AI Al:cMIOtieO, -

1-900-446-1414.
EXT. 3694

· s~ORTS/

· ELECTRIC

00

THURSDAY
LETART ·· Parent Ad visory
Council, Letart Elementary, Thursday, 2 p.m. at the school. All volunteers urged to attend.

Military news

101111' IISSILL

REPLACEMENT
·WINDOWS

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER ·· Chester Township
Trustees. 7 p.m. , Wednesday at the
town hall in special session. Regular
Tuesday meeting postponed.

FRIDAY
MASON -· Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee, Mason County Fairgrounds.
Friday, 6:30p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 1:30 p.m.

IAIIIll"S
LAWNt:AU

7/DIII

Serv·U (81g)845-8434

------ ttO\.\. -------Of

POMEROY •· The Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs High
School Library.
·
·

654-8434

lnHCTIVE
&amp; WILLING
TO TILIIII

-

---

2-

2 logo Yarol Solo Clo-.

·Qr

'

New24 hr• . ·
Dateline
Meet the Man or Woman
of your Dreams Never
be lonely again.

CALL NOW
1·900-1!88-6003
Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Muatbe18~.
~-1,.1 (814) 1145-8434

ANNOUNCEME NTS

Howard L Wrltpel

ROOFING .
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
· D6wnspolrta'
Gutter·Cltlenln9
PltlntiJ'g

005

Personals

Foi sale: Tne

undivided interest
in the John I Pearl Prollitt estate,
send co : Oail~ Sentin~l, PO Box

729·24. F'ameroy. Oh 4Sl69 .

3D Anno11ncemenis

.

FREE ESTIMA~S
94.2168 I

. Patented Fat Los• Product lose
Far. Feel Betutr, L~lima• Home
Baaed Buslno•s. Mlnimal lnwst·

""ern. 814-448-1238.

$·WANTED·$
10 people wno need to lose
weight &amp; make money. 10 try new
patented weighl-los i product .

304·713-5083 241YSiday.

•'

1: ·.,•

"ATIN :Po!rnPieasanc•
· ·~f'\r.
PoSlal Post t•ons. 11rmananr full· J""t •
lime lor clerk/ sorters. Full Bene • ..,.: ;
lila. for exam . application and . ~:~

aalary mb call : 708-264-1839 Ext ~-· • ··

3670. 8am UJIIpm .

.

-~~·~

..

...,, ·.:
AVON I Ail Areas I S!'1irley "'I ' ~~ ~
Spe:,:.::.ar•::.·.::30~•·.::67.::5·~":::29:::·_·_...:_
· _ • •I U. .',
:::
.•
AbJ

Repreaenta~ives I" jj\,'
needed. Earn money lor Chrilt· ·•
maa bills It home/at work. 1-800. t-......

Avon

~~; 6358 or 304-862-2645. Ind . .:

7 ._ 'r

...,...

~, . ltfiljj

SI1MMTFN

'

Take up ordora 101 Frifn&lt;lty H- . Sa bjlltter tor IWio ohitoftn , ,,
must be Patient. Mawre and ~o.. 11
Kicfl. 6"·258-e&amp;Ji:l.
""·
'

Pard11, for ctetalls oaR 304-773a55t. Day or right
••

"

·

�+

The Deily Slntlnll• Pill t

Ponwroy • ljjllddleport, Ohio

N&amp;A Cro11word Puz•l•

.....
I.... •. . . .II..,_
_
a.-.
•n

PHIJJ.tp
420 Mobile Homtl
lor Rent
Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo,

12170 Sctw1tz trlllef' With 14l32
_ . , 2 100m · $7.500. ~
875-587$.

Roloodlng &amp; F l o~l ng Supplioo.
Llvo B:aJr &amp; Lleenoo. C-d'o,

14:~70 Freedom Mobile Home,
81 .. 388-il2111 , 814-3IIH107

3 Bedroom Uobite Horne On Mc-

1111 Festival Ux70 2 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, All New Remodeled
Front Porctl With Root, 2 Acres ,
Bidwell Aroa , $35.000 6 14·388·

Two 1nd thrH bedroom mobile
homea, atarting It 1240-1300,
sewer, Wllltr and trash Included.
6,.·902· 2187.

------1440

187$ Baron 1Cx70 W•th 7xt4 h ·
pandO 3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Total
Elee~rk: With Backup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acre
Wooded Lot Close To Galhpolis
(W•II Se11 Seperate] 6 14 - 4 -'ft-

AVON · $8 ·$15 /Hr. No Door

OoOf, No

Whn~mum

Order. Bonut·

"'.eoo.sv..a ln&lt;l'Sis.flep.

180 Wanted To Do

CarjM!nltrl and roofers needed,
eJperlenc;ed onl)' need apply,
814-to2-231!4. EOE

hour, dll o r -. 614-949-3301

Domino'• Piua 1'1. Pllo10nt -

8ab~1il

nnng. aa po~lion~

Onvers Needed Corwentlonal
Tractors No Weekend Wort~: .
Mostlw 500 M•lt Radius Wnh Bo·
NJMI Starling Pay AI .29f A Uole
+ Vacation , Stop Ofl Par &amp; So
Forth All The legal M1les You
Wantl Cheek Us Out At Wills
Ca'JO, .,, ..... 7..13n.
EARN $1,000 WHkly Sluffing Envelopes AI Home. Stan Now. No
Ex.,.rlence. Fr. . Supplies, Info.
No Obllgalion. Sand SASE To·
Fatrway, Dept. 1351, Bo• 4399,
Welll:cMna.CA91701
Earn t10001 weekly atuft•ng en·
velopel at home. Be your boss
Starr now No expenence Free
ouppl'"· onlo. No ollloganon. Sand
5 AS E to Prestige Un11 IL, PO
Boa 195009 , Wmter Spnngs. Fl
32719 I

home- well take care of elderly,
In Yo1,1r Home $5 tHr.
Plenty Of E •peuence, f!U -2568487
Davtd's lawn Uowmg· rree es11·
mates, reasonable rates , have
own equipment, 1n Tuppers Plains
area, 814·667-6329
Dependable lawn Servic:e Btg Or
Small614...6-3103.
Dan's Lawn Care. Res •denllal,
Churches, &amp; Cemetaries, Rea so~e Ratesl 61.t·379-2847
General Uatntenann, Patnttng,
Yard Worlli Wtndows Washed
Guners Cleaned Ught Hauhng,
Commertcal. ReSidential, Steve:
614 -388.()429
Georges Portable Sawmtll, don't
haul your logs to the mtl JUSt call
304-6751957

I Do Chtld Care In My Home All
Hours, Cheshue Area, 814·3817849

· PosJtlon Aui!Jb!t

Hocking Valley 'Communtly Rest·
denual Center seeks Execuuve
Director. Responsibilities of total
manaoement and adm1n1stratton
or • 22·bed juvenile rehabilitation
facility for males adjudtcated for
felony offenses. Oaher duttes tn·
elude. work with c•t•zen advtsory
board and governing board all
aspects ol planntng, developm&amp;nt.
1mplementa1ion and monttorrng,
auunng program compliance
wtth legal mandates, tnteragency
coordina11on; budget process and
Heal management, pa-sonnel actlvtl181, developing community
1upport: public relations. Mini·
mum requ11ements· Masters degree and approPfi&amp;le adminu'Jira·
uve expenence. Background
cheek required Salary commenlurlile with e•penence and rratntng. Resume and three letters of
rehtrente may be torwaldecl to ·
lntervtew Commlllee, Ho~k.ng
Valley Commumty Residential
Center, cJo Honorable Stephen D
lrlhchael, Jackson County Probate
&amp; Juvenile Court, Courthouse,
226 E. Main St , Jackson, Oh
45840
Apj)hcaltOnl must be rec:&amp;~ved 'by
118120. 19911 81400 p.m.
Elcpenenced LPN Apply In Person To T~o Medical Plaza 936
Slale Roul8 160, Weekdll• Only.
Ha1r dreuer wanted. full or part
bme Wllh cl""'ele 3:14-8753040
HELP WANTED Men /Women
Earn $480 Weekly Assembltng
Circuli Boards /Eiectrontc Com·
ponents At Home Expeuence
Unnecenary, Will Tram lmmedtate Opemngs Your local Area
Call1·520-680-7891 Ext 01094
Ho~ Typtlls, PC users needed
$45,000 1ncome potential Call 1·
600·513-4343 Ext B-9368.

Local Alf Fr81Qht Company NeedA Driver Over 21. Good Dnv·
mg Record In Good Physical
Condl110n. Send Resume To WV
Air Fretght, 4210 Ftrst Avenue,
Suoi830S, N1~o. WI/ 25143

•no

McClure's Res~aurants. Pomeroy,
Mtddiepofl and Galhpohs· now
taktng appltcattons Must be able
to work an~ shift- days, nights and
hohdays Apply Monday thrbugh
Saturday, 9am - 1Dam, all Iota·
tions Startt'lQ m1n1mum wage, lui
bme postt!Ons available
NEEDED· Pa1nters &amp; tr1m carpent8f's ro g1ve bids on apts. Call
304-882·3151 between 8am -

Matur8 dependable tad1 w1111ng to
slf, shop or care for the elderly,
person care tratnmg, standard
hr st atd I CPR, experienced in
managmg an adult care faCility,
e•cel lent reterences, call Chr~s
614-992·2629
Mowtng 1n PI Pleasanr area, have
own mow&amp;r Ha'!le references Ask
lor Howard or Mary. 304 -675 -

2690
Professtonal Tree Servtce, Stump
Removal, Free Esumatesl In·
suranc:e, B1dwell, Oh1o. 614-3889&amp;&lt;8, 614-367-7010.

I ChildcOIVa;alley
1

Nursery Sc:hool
M-F &amp;am-5:30pm Ages
2·K, Young Sc:hool Age Ounng
Summlf. 3 Days per Week MlnfrnJm 814 -44&amp;-3657

W•ll Do lntenor Of Eater~or Patntlng, Reasonable Rates, Ex~n ·
enc;ed, Referenc:es. For Free Eso
mates, 614-245-5755

FINANCIAL

21 o

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend• that you do bul! neu wtth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
matt unttl you have 1nvesttgated
1he olleiong

Now Takmg 4ppltcaltons For A11
Posttlons Apply In Person At 39
Court Street. GaiiiDOII&amp;. Mogte's,
AmeriCan Cafe
On DulY Med~al ,
Is Act1valy Seet~ing To Recrun
CNAo Who Are Looking To Work
Long Term Home Clue Cases
Where You Live-In And Stay
Overnight In EUher 24 Hour. o&amp;8
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shih1. It Pay1
16 Hours A Day, But An Overntgl'll Stay Is Requtred. If Interest·
ed Please CaM l1sa Kerson At

l.eQO.ON-OUTY·;!.
Pollal 1&amp; Gov'l Jobs U1 IHr +
Banefill, No Exp. Will Train. Fpr
Appt Mil kilo 1-800-536-30«1• •
Postal Jobs 3 Po1111ons Avail·
U., No Exper11nce Necauary.
For Information, Call 818- 764·
9018 Ext. 1006
'
Sand Dune• Steak &amp; Sealood
Reltlutant now hlr1ng walters,
wattreiHI, dish washers I deliv·
ory. 304-1175-31183.

-·Olio

nlshed and unlurn1shed, seeunty
deposit required , no pe ts. 814·
902·2218.

1

New Bank Repos. Only 4 left. Still
tn warranty. 304-755-7191
Pt~ce Buster 1996 3bedroom
$825 down, $159/mo Free dehYerr &amp; setup. Only a1 Oakwood
Homes, Nttro wv 304-755-5885

SaveS$ 1996 double wtde rePo
3bedroom , 2balh Wtll dehver &amp;
setup on your lot 304· 755:5566.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

;1A,;;;F.;;;;;;;;-w;;;;;;~;;;;;;;-1
Acre
Wa!er, Septic,
Garage, Blacktop Road, In Addt·
son Area, 614-388·897a
2+acrea, back or New Haven .
675-2770

~--------..11
REA L ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2 Minutes from mwn, 4 bedroom,
2 bolh, 3,000sq. It llridl Ranc~ on
3 2acrea. Home was completely
remolded in 1Q92. For more tnJormauon c:all 304· 675·3121 II no
an&amp;Wef, leave message
3·4 bedroom home 1n Syracuse,
c;orner lot, close to school, 24•40
block garage, heal pump, 614·
9112· 531 5
Green Bottom W.VA. Rr. 2,
Ranc:her With Full Batemenl, Ga·
rage, Garden &amp; Trailer Space,
See To Apprecialol $89.500. 304·
525-5185
House I lot for Sale, 4 bedroom, 2
bath, $600 down (W A C ), easy
terms, 1-800-448·6909 ask lor

Gn!om
Shap ..... ~- ­
turlno Hydto Bath. Julie ~ebb.
304-t~.

AKC min1 PinKherl,

rwo

males,

two Jtmafet, ready Jur'141 15, ac·

cepting dtpositl. 1300 each,

AI&lt;C Ragis- male Old. 1200. 304-4175-2074.

Puppy Peloce Kennels. Boording,
SIUd Service Puppies, Groomong,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Pa~ments Welcome, 6t .. ·388·
0429.
.
Pure Whue Germari Shephetd
Pupo, AKC, 614· 286-8753. 614·
523-8965
•
Reg1ll&amp;f'ed Hm'lalayan cat, 1 112yr
old, spaded &amp; declaWed . ISO
304-713-91311.

Deere lawn I Garden
Tractor 218 48 Inch Mid Mount
Ro!Ory Mower, 614·379-2214
Load lacks For Box Sem1 $80 ,
Tape Cabmet wnh Glass Doors
S20. 35 UM Camera, lawnmowers $150, 2 ·84 Ford Radtors
$100, Plus More 61o&amp;·388·8835
Free Candy for the flfst 20 Mothers
Morna Garage Door Co Is Havtng a Dent &amp; Scratch Sale! Over
Stocked On Various S1zes Ga·
rage Doors, Call And Savel 614446 -4514

New lennox Furnace&amp;, 75,000
BTU On Upl $549, 614-379-~720 ,
AFTER6~M.

au, 8 cyl , new pawn, new tlrn,

S4000. 614·9112·3354.

610 Farm Equipment

1990 Dodge Omnl, .. Door, 5
Speed, 37,000 Miles. New Tir11,
Mint Condlrion, $3,200, 814·441·

0414.

1991 Ford Mus~ang ' LX 5.0, red
Wlflwt' tnmnor, cruise, pw, pdl, ex·
cellent condluon. Alk1ng $7,000.
614-441 ·1826.

1996 Ford tractor, 42hp ltve

1992

PTO power steenng .
3441 Callaller 4:30pm

on446·2518

.

f\.C. c-row no tiU corn planter, cal

Cutlass

Calais

199• Cavar1er, auto, ps, pb, air,
am-lm cassene. purple, 11 ,OOOmi.,
$9,000 304·895-3068.

614-992-2553.

1995 Flfebird Must Sell Or Take
Over Paym'e nts, CO Player &amp;
Cellular Phone, Low Milage, 814·
448· 8795
I

1. ~F~or~d~~~~~~~;;

71 Chev. Impala, ell electrtc, No
rusL No bcldl-k 61 .. 245-5402
87 Old~C4JII!JS9, V-8, M;UIO, ltJC,
614-902-2358.

New Holland 2511 Hay Rake, Goihl
Tedder Rake, 515 Ford Mower,
614·3~2272 Aller 8 P.M.

83 Ponliac Trans AM, black, 2
Door, Ouard •. Auto, A1r, T1lt,
Cruise, Slereo Casa, Sun Roof,
PS, Ani! Lock Btakes, Wheel
Corners and Trunk Release
21,000 Miles, E•c:ellent Candition
$7,995 61 4·370-2967

Livestock

630

2 year old eh1ckens. 5Dc each,
61•·985-3956

2 Year Old Red Polled Ragosl8red

Auto loans · Oea,!er will arr&amp;ng~~: fi.
nancmg even tl you have been
turned down eltewhera. Upron
Equtpment Used Cars. 304-4581069. •

ltmou11n Bull 614·367·7600,
CaNs &amp; Calvat. 614-&lt;46-1514
For sale, polled black l•moustn
crossbred bull, some cows wtth
calves, 614·742-311•.

720 Trucks lor Sale

L1moustn bulls, nice selecuon,
reasonably pnced, cowJca11 patrs,
both purebred I 112 llmoUSin WI
314 L1mous1n calves, 614·698·
2765

460 Space for Rent

R &amp; S Furnrture, Mason WV 004·
773-534~ . New Store Hours
Mon· Fri
12noon-7pm.
Sat
12noon-5pm. We Buy - Sell .
Trade Ask lor Rocky

rrN in
condilion, great
$3850 lakes It home, 814-040·
2311 dll~

'90 F- t50 Lanai Cx2 Elltended
Cab, fronL lefl ~ant - . . . leh lai·
ltghl area damage, ~er wind ows, power doors, AIC, cru1 ...
auaomatic, · towing package,
72,209 miles, very clean Inside,
$5000 080. 814·949-231 1 day&amp;
1979 Chevy ptclli up 350, auto,
runs good, 614·698-2765.

sage.
Reg•stered blac~ Angus bulls·
one 3 yr. old herd bull; one weantng age, 7 mos old. Caii ,81C-8986581

198 7 Dodge 0 ·150 Pick-up. ecyl.
3 spd Wllh 01rerldrMI. $2100. 304·
675-2074.
1991 Chevy Sporl Truck, V-8 au
tomatic, new tires and wheels,
85,000 molea, ver1 oharp, $7200,
614·992-4111 .

TRANSPORTATI ON

71

o

Autos fQI' Sale

'84 Ford Tempo, 4 door auaomat•c. tell rear lall light damage,
97.00.0 miles.
614·949·231 1
dlyoor614·949·2644ovenings.

seso.

'89 Thunderbird SC, two dOor, 3.8
lttre, V-6, ehte model turbo, PS,
PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats
and locks, •Great Cpr; $5200
neg., 61•·992·7478 or 8U·949·

1992 lsuzu p1ckup, 4 c:yl 5
spHo, niCe, 10,000 mites. $5500,
may contidlr partial lrade for a
4x• or pontoon boar; 614· 9~2·
~atltr8pm,

2679

730 · Vans &amp; 4-WDs

14x70 Trailer $27&amp;Me .. 814-446·

6!158.
1994 Fatrmonl Sec110nal 3 Bed·
roams, 2 baths 32140 61-t-370 ·
2715
2 Bedroom Furnished, On Clay
Chapel Road, $250/Uo. $250 DepoSI\ 814·266--6718, Aher 4 P.M
Beauliful River View, 2 Bedroom•

In Kanauga, No Peta, Rele"""",
Deposit. Foster'• Mobile Homes,

•·

1988 Subaru 4wd, 2dr, ' turbo,
Stpd, pw, looks &amp; tuns good.
$1,100.304-875-1575.

1989 Nova SS 396 ~ 375, loss
Motor, &amp; Trans, $3,000, Nee.:ts
AeSlored: 1969 Butek ·GS 350, 4
Speed, facloty Air, Anzona Car
S3.500, Needs Restored, 61 c682-7512

_:_:--------1550

Building

VIRA FURNITURE
614-448-3158
OuaUty Household Futnil.lrt And
Appltances. GfeatDIIIIOn
CashAnOCarryiRENT-2-01'1111
AnO~AIIO-.
Free Dolowry Wolhin 25 iliiH.
----...:..------I
Vtnyi 64 Panernslarge atlec·
tlons, Kitchef' Prtnts 1n SIOCk Cat·
pel $6.50 and
Mollol!an Cor·

SupplieS
Block, brick, a.w.r pipes, wind·
ows, ftnttlt , etc. Claude Winllra,
Roo Grandt, OH Coil 614 · 245·
5121
'

·

For aile· 2 H btlms. 12"115"8",
lf00Md).l14-7.t2· 1803

Polt Blda Sjll: 30'x45'd'. 1 ·15'x8'

P)1011;'::~~~~=::-::=.::::;-: 18lldii'IG
boat, 1 .a· Wan Door,
:;
Peinled S1HI Siding, Galvolumo
Wooden dining roam
che... $40. 304-875-7588.

S,... Aool: S8,444 Erecled: Iron

Hor•llldri1-4!Q0.35.2-1045.

1978 Uollbu V-8. oulo, po, pb,
IJood body. S1,3SO or lor flal
bod trailer. 3:14-576-2573.
1070 ~ullau wilh TITopo 814·

T~underbird

CEREAL!

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

'72 Chieflan Winnebago pu"·'Ypa •
camper, 22' long, good cond1b0n, ·
oakaing $2100 OBO. 814 · 98~-:
CUM.
'1
1g73 Winnebago Like ' NeW'·
co,ooo Miles, ft New 8 Ply ~ues ;
New Brakes &amp; Wheels, Cy-hnder ;
Ganerator, 2 Water Tanks, 21
fully ·
Holdtng Tanks, A~r,
Equipped' ill.7110, 61&lt; .. 4ll·3485 '

1D$14 lnnsbreok, fully loaded, lots ~
or e•trll, 18ft. Serious tnqUir181"
only. 304-875-li903
,•
35' Catflper &amp; lot Holiday H1l1s, -·
Outbu11dmg, Excellent Candm,oraf ·
AIC , SeweP, Fishtng, Boating .'
S5.:m. 614·894-3101
·
Small Pull T•iPe Camper Com-:
pletely Recondilloned, hcellem
·condmon. Sleeps"· Slove, Fur- · ~
nace And ke Bo• $800, Or Best 1
Qffer. 614·388-9354.

Zl Crtcllat
poettloN

•J3

23 Not • NUl
~-l

• • • 52

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPJ¥)0fiNG
Unconditional htel'ime ouarante. ~
local references lurmshed. Call
(614) 446 -0670 Or (6,.) 237·
0488 Rogers Waterproormg Es, 1
18t1llshed 1975

THE BORN LOSER
v'
OlJ/o\ .....
•
ll€:001o\

I"

00/.\ ...

,...

'

MEN W£ Fl?DI&lt;\ ~ MID
~ Iff.. FROM. 1/ENt.r.&gt;...

BUT

'I ~

"'l

~IUS T~~,l.ffi£ ...

Mf """" """" !

30 SUM lcomli.
,, ..... holder

._

cotumnlat

10 Treaty
11 Fencing
awonl
ti'CompiSI pl. ...

5 ...., ,.,_
I Skinny IIIIIM
7 Conclualon
• Jollad

I RuiM
2 On111e briny
3 - -bllay
' Poll-ehower

32 AFL·33 Benl
34 Goaatp

I UrvMI
conUnent

1'0811 ,

BIG NATE

Phillip

39

Heating

PICTVIi:E

••

For Sale Or Trade: 11188 S-10 4114

,_ llfYioa or raj1111rt • .....,I]., r.

Don'

illrlna.' .'

censed eleclriclan. Ridenour._ 1.
1
Eleorrlcol, WV000308, 30J1·875- '

", '
•' I I

omen of

a-+--+-+--1

You'H FjnrJ In 1he

Ctoss/(jed Section.

48 Dog nol. .a

!t

50 New Deal

..,

prog.

.....

CELEBRITY CIPHER

brolkan romaM&lt;a~ $Ito buSineSS
ASIICO·(lra[)h Mlatclhn)llker can help ':"SCORPIO I Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Important
you
whal to do to make the
domes11c decisions s~ould nol' be made
relat1onsh1p work . Mail $2 75 10
Wllhou1 coneuHing your mate firsl today
-----'----~ Malchmaker, c/o thos newspaper. P.O . Ho or she mighl have a much better way
'
Box 1758, Murray H1il Slaloon, New Vorl&lt;, - o1 doing lhings lhen you do.
NY 10156.
SAGITTARIUS INov. 23-0ec. 21) Avoid
GEMINI (M.y 2hlune 20) The bltll way
1es11ng shortculs al work loday. You
to pursue 'fOUl lnlerests today will be lo
m1g~1 have 10 re1race your Sleps
you
avoid selfishness when dea~ng with othlake off wilhoul your propeller. Do nollry
ers. II you IDol&lt; oul for them, !hey wil loolc
lo race againsllhe clock
,
oul for you .
CAPRICORN IDK. 22.,.,. It) You can
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Try co be
perform better lhen usual today in silua·
lions lhal have an elemenl of chance.
disciplined in your financial aftalrs today.
OtherWise, you might shell out too much Howe~~er, you should not lake nSkS Wtile
money to have a good lime, or buy things odds are unlavo-.
· you'll never use.
AQUARIUS IJM. 20-Feb. It) Today, do
LEO (July ~3-Aug. 22) In compelillve
not wasle lime negotialing an agreement
career ~evelopmenrs today, do not tip
you think ft Ia unbalanced. Ha~ Ill
Tuesday. May 14, 1996
your hand premalurely. Before you take
feelingS could put a damper on lflit deaf
Your nnanclal pro&amp;peeta look encourfg· out your big guns, try lo see what your • before ft &amp;181'18 • .
lor tile
aheed, but Mmight lake competition has.
PISCE81Feb. 20-Mar'ch 20) Today, lry
lime 10 get a proper groWih pattern llart· VIRGO IAUQ. 23-Sept. 22) You can dis·
to lhlnk withOut tlylng 100 han! 10 find a
ad. Patience and peraiarence will cuss a delicate i&amp;eue loday with a lrfend
solullon. Your good ldetle wilt nol counl
enhance tile prcbabiUiy ot succese.
you know you can trull. However, don'l
much If tlley are all alzzte and no subTAURUS (April ' 20·IIIy 20) Guard make lhe mielake of talking
an
sl8nce.
against 11111 inr:IIMtlan to get l!llQIY with acqualnlanca who has a mo1or mou1l1
.ARIEl (11Md121·Aprll11) Try to JMin.
lhe wrong people today, eapec:lalfy If LIBRA (Sept. ·3·0ct. 23) You can
lain a
policy today In
you're trying 10 blame ._lor ... ,... 'II acNeve an ~m objecll\le loday pro- ragan! 10 your e1lpendflures. You Should
you tid. Try to be IIOnMt wtlh yourMII. vided you don't .,... time will an Idler be neiCher too stingy nor too ubaoagam •

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

n

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rnlddle-ol-thHod

••

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..••

by Luis Campos
C8lebrity q:.hllf C1YPiograms are crelleciiiOI'n quolaliOnt by famous PIOIH, past and presenl
Eactt ltt1er In the Cipt\ef IUincll tor anothef Toeflty s C/iJe N ~IS P

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TUDWZBU.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "Beneath lhls slab I John Brown IS Slowed I He
watched lhe ads I And not lha road." - Ogden Nash

WOlD
'::~:.~' S~\\.t()lA~£
~~s·
I AMI
1411oo1 lty ClAY I . POlLAN - ; . _ - - . . , ..-

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four ocrambltd wordo
low 10 form four

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1

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by Idling in the missmg words

you develop from step No. 3 below

.,'

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•.,

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

..
..'·,'

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

Govern- Truck· Assay· Virtue - TOURISTS

"lleamed one thmg th;s vacation." my husband s1ghed
"T-he average traveler wants to go where there are no
TOURISTS?"

IMONDAY

.c

45 Hawaiian
food tloh
46 Invalid
47 S!udy at the
last minute

"SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Sowlnes

,,;

(2 wdo. )
41 tiny morHI J
4201n-t
· ·~
43Tolodo's
slate
~
44 Be an
('

KIO:,I&lt;. .. .

'

Third

Army

command

I

:

Plumbing &amp; .

..

38 Pig

A WATER
BAllOON

~L~CE 1

-

e

.r

COULD M~KE A TON
Of MONEY f\i TH15

.

.,
(disordered) ~

Alder

THINK

AllOLJT IT ! S011E.oNE

Reatdenttal pamting and Rllpa~ ,
par, stale licensed, WV hcense
1WV 025243, 3:14·882-2283.
' ..

a.

l
,,

34 Ve.
37 Out of -

8

'.

Ron·s TV ~rvtee, specializing 1n
Zen1th also servicing most Olhar
brands. House calls, 1-800-797- •
0015. WI/ 304· 5l1!-~.

.,

28 Cleoprltra'a
river /
29 Dell...

L-.1.--J.-'-..L--~---J.L......J.

~

Patio Dectls, Carportt, l Sid fng} J
FJee Est1mates, 'Call Steve, 614~·'
24!HI519:'
'

n

...-+-J,...,.+~· 27 Cooler

.r7,-,I_M_ATI_s.,lr::..-LI_B.,.I~~ ;s:ornp;ero rho chuckle

l
l

f.lefdl &amp; Sonl

•

rldgN ,,
j
26 So..
,;

Allpau

'

CENTAAL!

)

lhape
22 H...tlaye

S1Me

Eut

~j;

YEN\, VOU
.SAID IT 1
TOURIST

20R-1Ck .

PIMsant
:
Gra...
How clumayl •

I

CIC General Home .,.,,,;: ..._
lenence· Painting, vinyl sidln17. ~·
carpenuy. dooro, .,,_., bal~') ,
mobile home repa~r Aind more F.or •
free estimate call Chat, 614·992•
6333
, .

•

57-DOWN

form)

was the venue for the Cap Volmac
World Top Tournament, in which 32
players from around the globe compel·
ed. The winners were the Norwegians
Tor Holness and Gejr Helgemo.
To win an event like this, you must
play weD and have some luck, as Hel·
neu and Helgemo showed in this deal
The two-heart opening by Helness
was a weak two - bid. The hand
wouldn't satisfy a purist, but the bid is
considered mandatory by the Young
Turks. Helnesa, at 40, is perhaps a lit·
tie old lor this eQrt of thing, but his
partner is only 30.
A two-no-trump overcaU in the bal·
ancing seat shows a strong no-trump.
This is different from a balancing one·
no-trump overcall, which shows a
weaker band.
When West led his fourth-highest
heart, the declarer probably expected
East to hold a singleton. honor. And
since he knew that West wouldn' t
have both missing aces, it looked safe
to win the first trick. But it wasn't.
First, Helgemo found the key play of
unblocking his heart jack under dummy's king.
·
Declarer would still have been all ·
right if he had played on diamonds, but
he called for a low spade. Unerringly,
Helgemo rushed in with the ace and
returned his second heart.
Now the contract went two down.
·West established his suit while still
having the diamond ace as an entry. As
every other North-South pair won at
least nine tricks in the same contract,
this gave the Norwegians a nice gain.
Finally, note that if declarer just
ducks the first trick, he sueceeds. And
this is surely the right play.

Appltance Parts And Serv1ce A~l •
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ell, ;·
pert,.nc:e All Work Guaranteed, 1:
Frencl'f.. Cily Maytag, Gt•·44~· 1
7795

1718.

a

......
14 .,_,.
115 Actlw115 City whlc..

My brother always learns
from his mistakes. He learns,
I
.--~~-::o-r-:-.,---. how to blame them on ; · - • - • • •

. '

Rosldenlial or commercial

11 Dlallow:tl. . .
12 T. . the ' 53 Summa -

... uadn'aJob

~-+----~~---L~·~-L----~----~~

1800
72,0001
SHn At:

448-0744.

E·mail FondEI!obTCIJAOl CdM

••

SERV ICES

1

50ActorCklll

Qat • Seen~

22 -

21

10 5

ll

820

New Tlrts. E1haust, New
Pirll, -·Some Work, 114·

)·I~

.;,,.., .....'"' ,,..,..,_VEf

Yellowstone Truck Camper For
Sale 614-446·3760.

ASES CERTIFIED DEALER • .
lAWREljCE ENTeRPRISES ,
Ho'' Pumpa, Air CondiUoring.' lr r
Vou
Call Uo. Wo Bolli Lo..l'....,
frH Eotimaleo, 1·800· 201 · 00!18 , ,
81 ... o18-8308, WV0021145
~.,

eon.

' ew

~ UP.

••

VI, pw,Oiio
1070 Ford
crui,l, ac, very good cond. 161 ford Exptoret Sp6rt 4xc, 4.0
112.000mi. $1,000 · 3:14-4175- v-e. llandard, loaded, sun rool.
..:15~7.::5.-:::---:-:---:---·1 ~ 11apC. 814-11411-2481
1885 Pl~ulh Horizon, 51PHd. 1905 pVIarls Explorer 4x4 400,
4 -,
, 61..il92·5858.
$4,300-304-458-ISM.,
~ntlac Formula Good
T· Tops $2,800 814-388-

....- E-NOIN6 --

1903 Delehman 32 Ft 5111 Wheel,
l1ke New, "loaded, After 3 P.M .
614441-1358.

tiM Ford Ranger XLT, 2.9 fuel

~~·--~--:-:---­

.1"•"1. '

£02 ...: .. ' ·
Cf" - .

'

'"lec18d. olomlnum rimo. bed knor,
Canuco TuH bar. exc:ellent condi·

1887 Ford Cargo van, $1,200.
:lg4·875-2343ololf5pm

MY Gt41Ll&gt;tiOOI&gt;
tiAI&gt; AN UNtiAPPY

PsyctttATiY

1988 Gulf Stream Momerey 26' ,
camper, excelk}nt condition, With 1
all extras, P,tce "includes member·
ship to .Royal Oak Resort1 $7500, ~
814-t02·73811.
.

Roofing &amp; gunero CO~lo hOml
r~modeltng. det::kl) l aid1nq, 3!'
yHfl eMpefllf1U; I 8 Roofing
and ContaruchOn, 81 • ·192·2364
or 1 800 8~ 3843. %

=------' 1a2s

_288--·7_58_,_
.

COLD

tanks, one ton lruck'
wheets, radia.IDI'I. ftoor mall, ek :
D &amp; R AuiO, Aopl"''. WI/. iJO&lt;I-372· •
3933 on -800-273-9329
•

re- ~ ~1ion,~304~~-7~73'~'[51~4~2.~~~~~

storable,
runs
oood, needs
rTMnOt
1972 MGB
Convertible.
very
work s:!,ooo. Call304-875-7.198.

D06S LIKE

oa•

902..232.
1992 Ford F150 XLT, 302 au ·
tomauc:, exc:ellenl eondi11on.
$10,500 080, 614-949-2070.

1950 Chevrolet 2 Door Sedan,
Call Anybme, tf No Answer leave
Meuaoe. 6t4-446-1164

614~383e

1 20......

Last Januuy, The Hague in Holland

Earl's Home Mamtanance, vlntl
sldino, 100hng, extenor and tnt8f~- 1
or painting, power walhmg, roo111 4
adduions. Free Esl•matea, 6t4 1 }

Recondttlohed «&lt;-6308.
Appliances
Washers, Dryers, Rangel, Refn- STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
grators, 90 Day Guarantee! Upr1ght, Ron Evans Enterprises,
French Ctty Maytag, 614· 4&lt;46- J~. otia. 1-80().5.1:7-9528
7705

t2x65 1972 2 Bedroom, Clean,
Minules from Holzer Hospital.
10x16 Storage Btlildmg. No Pets
Deposil Required Call aher 5 PM

By

Budget Transmissions, Used IRe· '
buill, All Types, Access1bl&amp; To :
Over tO,OOO Tranam11110n,l Also ,
Oilrhlal Kita. 614-245-5877

810

::~:.=fit

In the land
of windmills

400 G.t. Small Block Chevrole'
-stock Only- 2 Freeze Plug Uoq.
ol, S350, 814·448-7581 •
• .

790

c-lled

31 Skeletal p8r1 ?

AUto 'Parts &amp;
Accessories

New

41

Opening lead: • 6

'

1002 Ford F-150 Under 35,000
Miles, Bedllne, Step Bumper
300SX, 5 Speed, Dual Tanks,
Cas~ette, PS, P8, Uka New, 814·
245-9170.

Two bedroom house, carpeted,
mce and clean. depostt requtred.
no tns1de pets, three bedroom
house deposit r8Ciutred, no 1nstde
pelS, 614-992-3090

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

.\

1992 314 Ton 2 WD Che¥1, 3SO,
5 Speed, E•cellent Condition,
614·387·7927.
'

Small 1 bedroom house 304-8752722.

2NT

24 FL Pon1oon Boor SO HP Uo!qr, '
Excellonl Condlllonl S5.500, 81l·
448.()1

DRYWALL
1
Hang, ftrnsh. repa~r
Ceiltngs textur&amp;d, plaster rtpau~ ~
Coli Tom 304-675·4186 20 yearl &lt;
e!Cp&amp;ftence
1~

'87 Plymou1h Reliant LE stat1onwagon, burgandy, front wheel
dnve, auto. a/c , front damage,
hood not damaged, g1 ,826 mtles,
good clean car, $850, 614 ·9402311 days or 614 -949· 38-44
everlngo

Unfurnished Small House, Carpet,
Ntce &amp; Clean, S200JUo., $200
Oepostt Plus Uulities, No Pets,
Upper AI. 7 Add110n, 61&lt;4·367·
0156

1904 Uarada 18 Ft Open Bo\.
1
Wllh Sun j)eck, 4.3 lilor, V-8,
Mere Ctuil:er, W1th Skt ACCIIH·'
riel. 814-2'5e:el80.
•

,·

r, t?u•
40-de'-

(Mill!'.)

EMt
aAJI74
•

I

IU '

eloquatlly

West North
2•
Pus
P08&amp; · 3NT

lleullt

LITTLE
OL' ME!!

• ' 1

so.

Ctl

Dealer: West

PORE

&gt;

~ 5pm.

'89

SPRING SPECIAL : Cenrral Air
ConditiOners 2 Ton S1, 195; 2 112
12 ltvlng Room Su1tes, 2 P1ece Tan $1,295; 3 Ton $1 ,395; 3 112
Nol 1498 Each. Only $275 Eacll, Ton $1,595; 4 Ton $1,695; Prices
Call 614-886-6373, At 7 Above Above Include Normal lnllalla.
Proctorville. Ohto. Bes1de Gtovan- t1on Full 5 Vear Watranty, Free
nt's Pizza
Esrtmates. t -800.291 -00IJB; 814·

Two small houses tn New Haven
lor rent, S1001mo I S1SO!mo,
6U-99Z· 751t afler 5pm

s

Vulnerable: Neither

•

1989 Wellcralt 21 ' Cully Cabin,
..
• ,
350 ITll.,.um ... ercru1se, excenern
condobon; $17,5011, 614·940·20'19
I•.,-

'

f

10m niler caR 6 14.4•• -~ a~'
- - - r..
epm.

Need a Cor. Go1 o Job; Havo Bad
Cradn? We Can F•nance call
Rulh 614-446-2897

Lamb For Sale-814-446-1947.

Avatlable June 1st- three bed room house m Mtddleport, 614 992·7653

Pomeroy, taking apphcauons for,
Peacock Avenue, one bedroom.
S200 per manth, deposit required,
614-698-6002.

Oldl

1993 Ford Mustang, 4 ely., auto.
loaded with lois of options, drlv ~
er' s stde air bag, 30.000 miles,
vgc, $7250,614-902-0111

.-

Queen Size OrthopediC Mattress
Set And Frame. Nevitr Used Still
In Plast tc Cost 1800. Sell $250,
614 -nS-2360

Household
Goods

Extras' low Milas, Always Ga.
rage, Not Used In Winter Weath·
er, 814-446-6137

9ft Side Delivery Rallie and Wag-

Sleapmg rooms with c;ooking.
Also trailer space on rtver All
hook· ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5851 . Mason WV.

o

able, Excellent Condition, V-G, All

304-895· ~ . ~~~~~~~~;·~•::••·

2 BR House m Gallipolis; Good
l:ocauon No Pets! $300 00 Mo
Plus Oeposll CaliS, C-446--23)0

51

1991 Chrysler LeBaron

cOrwen-

1977 Chevy C20 camper van,
stove. telngerator, lurnact. Ohver
1950-T tractor , needs crank
turned. Oliver 1750, needs moto1
partl, cab trike front. Oltver 880
pultng chaSSIS, last ge&amp;rS, I'ID IIDQinG UMZ eng1ne sta9l. 2wheel
trailer w/brakes 100 sheela ol 10'
5V rooftng 614-388·9684 afrer
6pm.

Rooms for rent • week or monlh.
Srarling at 1120/mo. Gallia Horet
614·448·9580.

pel&amp;, consrructton workers wei OOn11, 304-773·5764

eXhiUII, 70,000, ICtual milet,
look• &amp; runs good, $1,500, 11•
247-•2112.
1180 Metallic blue Nualang L)(
hatch back wfsun toot, ps, pb,
auto, w1overdrive. am·fm cassene, llC , cond 13;200. OBO.
304-675..3315.

11187 R - 105 Boor...., 4.3 1118(
Ch.W'f'
eng~ne, e11ce11ent condinon.,
with low hourt, s7,900 wtth cdl'

1990 Chevy Coraica, all powett',

2 Bedroams, Basement, Galllpoltll
C1ty ltm tts, $3751Mo. + Depostl 1
Relerence, No Pets, 614 · 4.t6 0796, Leave Message.

Relr1gerators, Sto'lles. Washers
And Dryers, AU Reconditioned
And Gaurantaedl 1100 And Up,
Wtl DeliVer 614-689-6-441

··-lie.

1989 Ford tauruo Gl, V •, auiO,
..,
ate, loaded, 1311,000 milas, good
ttrea, looks &amp; tuna good, t2.700;
195 7 Fo r d, 4 d r.. V·8, au.,, duol

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropatred, New &amp; Rebuoilln Srock.
C811 Ron Evans. 1·800·537·9528

I S

• At 7 5
e K 10 4
a A K e3

i..

1982 318 Ctvyslet MaJor, 74,1
UMs, $200, 814-256-1:!33.

RegtSiered Atabian Mare, 11 Yrs.
S t ,200, New Western Saddle Set.
Hunter Green /Southwest Pattern
15"' Seal Incl. Rems, Bnde, Girth,
Breast Snap, Blanket, $300 Firm.
Call 61 4· 886-6334 leave Mes-

MERCHANDISE

• 2
Q 10 •• 2
A I
J a4 z

FARM SU PPLIES
&amp; LIV ESTOCK

Pond ltsh lor said, 6x6 112' oak
cuno cabinet with glass doors,
porcelam dolls; large roll of gal·
vanized aluminum steel , e1ght
w1ndows w11h screens, 614·992·
7504

Ntce two bedroom, remodeled,
new carpet, near Mason Park, no

inl:l&lt;*d.

price-···. -··· .

760

C~rcle

N1ce three bedroom home 1n Pt
Pleasant, no pets, 614-992-5858

• K4
• QJ 7
• Q. 7

T__...

Plgo, For Sale· $25 Each, Call AI·
tet' 8 P.M. 614·388-8280.

Busmess Locat1on, 1,000 Sq ft.
large Parking, SA 141, Cenlen8.ry
Area, 614-256-6336 Aher 6 P.M.

- · · - 1 - - !15,000

j

Fo,d

Motel, Galhpolis, OH 814·
446·2501 or 614-367-0612. E~
c:tency Rooms. Cable. Air, Phone,
MICI'OW8V8 &amp; Refr!QBI'aiOr.

11188 Follh Avenue 98,000 UIIH,
NC, Til~ AulD, ~~~ Uo10r 13,000
Or Bell Olllr, 814-2!5$-1233.

10

aQt

Pamsomc 46. ProJectiOn TV ex cellent cond1bon $900 or best off·
er phone -441.0105 after 6 pm.

2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Tra1ler AC , In Gaihpol ts. 614-446·
8849 For lntormatoo

a K

I

1........ 1
...........
11....
eellan
17 Waf • • grlln 41 c.t an-111 ProuaiN
Tin lloof

8oulll

2920

Furnished
Rooms

1014 Hondo Goldwi ng As,.n·

lillie Buidl D~··.
PW.
ale, one owner, SSSOO : 1911
B&lt;onco II, 5 s)JBed. 4x4. ate, PW.
$4800; 110.04~2534 allor 5:00.

:0

14

Merchandise

Meg.386
Orlv•,
Mono VGA,
I Salt·
IBU
Compurer.
3 112
&amp; 20
ware, $250, Or Wllh Color VGA
$375, 81··~318

5F.....

Conal Mtt
CJ . . .)
13 . .11 I I ~for

1075, 750 Hando ti..Z.!I-$482 +.

milia, rain ...... -

...

~ 12

•

· 9mo.

Cub Trac10r, Plow Mower &amp; Cul11:·
vamrs, $2,500, fl1o&amp;-2~1139

------~-!450
410 Houses tor Rent

.. lor-· 3111112...

&amp; ExhOull$1 ,000, 814·25&amp;-6100.

f14·114Q-30211.

Ftfth wheel lulry sell-conlam&amp;d
camper $2,500 large tog trailer
12,500 . Compulerized e•erc:ise
bike, new cond. $HS 304·882·

ences. 304-882-2566

1981 Pontiac Sunbird New T1re1

AKC Lobo-priced ro ult. rtldl
May 1011\. 3044185-31128.

Grac1ous hvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
R1verstde Apartments 1n M1ddle·
port. From $232·$355 Call 614992· 5064. Equal Houamg Oppor·
tuntbes.

N 3rd Ave . Middleport. 1bed·
room, lurn•shed Oepos•t &amp;

MPO, New Tlrtl , E1na Clean .
Runo Good $1 , 150, 814 ·371·
21145.

AKC Gtrman Shtphtrd pupa.

Electric
Scooters
And
Wheelchatra, New /Used, Van 1
Car ltft Installed, Sta1rgltdes, lift
Chatra, Call For Brochure, 614446-7283

9t'•

w"*"

Coll814--l.

Garage Apartmenl, 2 Bedrooms ,
Washer fDryer Hoolli-Up, Relrtg·
erator, Slave, Water Furmshed
$250/Mo $150 Depos11, 106 locustSt. GalllpoHs, 614·446-3870

Moderen
Bedroom Apart·
ment. e14-446-0390

1918 Chevy Spactrum, 4 Door,
Au.,, PB. 0o11r
4 c~. 28

Fotti Rontt&lt; 414 l3,s0p

540 Mlsceltaneoua

sse,

'

1eatate
which lS in violation of the taw
OUr readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advenlsed tn this newspaper
are available on an equal
11p110rtunlly basis

e·oo

....._

RENTALS

a~Th:"l'"~~~~~=l~l~nol

Buy or tell. Riverine Antlquea,
112• E. Main StrMt, on Rl 12-t,
Pomeroy. Houra : M.T.W. tO:OO
a.m 10
pm., Sunday 1:00.,
6:00p.m. 614-il92-25al.

2 Bedroom Upsta111 Apanmen1
1990 Clayton 1070 eentral air, For Rent. S3751Mo., + SlOO De1Dll.l etecuic, stoVe, refrig, washer. poSit, All U~1 1111 e_s lnch.tded , No
2414 above ground pool, used
$15,500 Coil 304-895· 3638 ~r Pe.ts. References, 61 ... 46-3437.
one season, excellent condltton
304- 89532~.
2 Bedroom, Fttdge, Stove, 663 $1,200, 6U-g49-3029, leave
1991 Broolli'wood 14x78, CA , 3 Th~rd Avenue , Gallipolts, $3001
BR 2 Balh on 112 Acre LoL RE· Mo Plus 1 Month Depostt, 614·
2s·uagnavo• Color Console TV,
DUCED $30,000 Will Sen UH S.. 245·9595
Needs Work; 175 00. BSR Equal·
poralely, Exns 614-266~391
2bdrm aprs , 1oral electric, ap- izer 14 Band $25 00. Opumuo 25
pliances furmshed, laundry toom Watt Power Booster $15 00. Call
For Sale Or Rent 1992 Qalcwood facilities, close to schOOl 1n town Henq oller S:oa 304-41751433
2 S.ooms, 2 Ful Baths. Refrtg- Apphcations avatlable at Vtllage 82 Honda' AICOI Ft 500 less than
eraiDr, Stove, New Air CondthOM· Green Apts 149 Of can ,.,..992 3000 U $800, 2 Roqul Sport Chal·
er, Built In Table, Asktng Pnc:e 3711 . EOH.
Ienger P 255-60 R 15 $100, 2 UiPay 011 Rt2 leon, WV, 614·256·
1 Bedroom f3 Room Apartment, kalec~ 235-60 R15 $90, P185-80
6980AhO&lt;~M
Trash Pa1d, NO PETS, On 554 A13 M&amp;S wilh Rima Ftta Chav
Cavalier $50, 2 White ateel AMR
Uf92 Norna 16•80 3 Bedroom . 2 Near POIIIJr, 614·388·1100.
t5•10 Slug $45, 4 AI Slots 15x7
Baths. Central Atr , lP Gas Fur·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 5 oo 5 112 fill lord or Jeep $1SO.
nace And Stove, Underprnnmg I
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Many Extrasl Very Spactous
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Onve BAHAMA CRUISE! 5 dayl/4
Pnc:ed To Sell! Easy Ftnancing
lrom $2U to $315 Walk to shop n1ghts, Underbookedl Must Sell!
Avallablel 61-t -247-2032 Alter 6
&amp; mo'lltes Call 6 U -4.46 -2568
S279rcouple. l1m11ed uckels 1·
P.M Or l..,.e Message.
800·414·4151 e•t 6589 Mon-Sat
Equal Houstng Opportunlly.
·10pm
Double wide St495 down,
Furntsh&amp;d 2 Bedroom Apartment,
$224mo. Free a~r . 1-800-891Across From Park, AC , No Pets, Boots By Aedwmg. Ch1ppewa,
67n.
·
~elerenees Oepos•r. S350fMo , Tony Lama. Guaranteed lowest
llm1ted Oller I 1996 doublewtde, · :.61:..•:..
·•:..•:.&amp;..:8:.:23:.:5:..,6:.:•..:•_·•..:•6:..·05:..:.:.7:..7_:_ PriCes AI Shoe Cafe, Galtipohs.
3br, 2ba th , $ 1799 down, S275t Furnished 3 Rooms I Bath, Up- Car Dolly, Real Ntce, $550 Ftrm,
month Free delivery ·a setup
Only at Oakwood Homes. Nitro statrs, Uuht•es Furmshed , Clean, 814-448· 1266.
wv. 304 -755-5885
No Pets, Reference, Oepos•t ReConctete &amp; Plastic Sepne Tanka,
qUired, 614-446-1519
300 Thr~ 2,000 Gallons Ron
Mob1le hQme for sale, needs ·repalrs, $2000, at 4·99Z-58S8
Fumished Aparlment 1 BR S285 Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
Ut1httes PO 920 4th GallipoliS,' 1-800-537·9528.
Mobtle Home, 2 Bedrooms, 19~4 814-4-46-3844 ~fter Bpm
Craftsman 2 hp. atr compressor,
14X6Q Unluri-ushed, 614-388-9803
Never ltved In!
Furmshed Efltc1ency 2 Rooms, $75; lavatory w1th vamty, S50 ;
Share Bath, $1951Mo. UtthtteS glass ahower doors, SSO. com mode,
chams for 10" lawnNew 3 bedroom. 14170 $800 Patd , 607 Second Avenue, GaUt
mower tJres, $10;614-992-3301
down, $157mo 1·800-691·6777
pohs., 614-446-4416 After 7 P.M

eo_,

All real estate advertising In
lhls newspaper Is subject lo
1he Fede!al Fair Housing Ac1
of 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise •any preference,
limitation or dlscnmlnallon
based on race, COlor, reltgiOn,
sex familial status or natiOnal
Origin, or •01 intenllcil 10
make any such prererence,
limitation or discrimination.•

Antiques

530

1 Bedroom Suptt Nicel Near
Holztft S26811Ao Plus Utllilies,
Deposit Requited, 814-44-2D57.
1 Bedroom. ) Rooms .fumished
Aparament, Utilities Patd, 94 lo~;uti, Gallipolis, S2651Mo, $ 100
OeposiL 61 .. 448-1340

)Ill,.

S&lt;N:ill Workoro, Honng $23 I
Hr + BanetilS. On The Job Trainong To App11 In Y011r Area, 1.-. David
3311-41150.
I
HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Tho Soulhorn Local School DisSmall 3 Bedroom1, , Very Good
trict has the following coaching
pooidOnl IYBiilblt for lhe 1890• Condtrion. New V1nyt S•dtno, Car·
97 school yeat: aasittarl( high port Unattached 2 Car Garage
With New Apartment Above. 614·
Joallol, lunlor hi~ loolboll.
446·
1774 Homa. 614 ·448 ·0374
junior hit~ volltyiHIII, junOOf hla/1
Work All&lt; For U.rk Palmer.
boy'l blsilelball, junior ~lgh girl's
blll&lt;elboll, uliolanl ~ig~ school One bedroom home in Pomeroy.
girl's bllilelbail, and junior ~iph W1U aell on land contract, su.
chH~oading ldvloor. All apploc· 9112· 5858.
an1s mull be restdentl or
Count~. po11111 a walld Oh o ThrH bedrDOm home In country,
r•aching c:etllficatt, sports JMCII. Wtil81 Hill Rd.. Rudand, one balh.
cmt c:erllf1cate, and a CPR c:ard. on11rounc1 pool. 61 .. 992-506 7.
Please send mquirtll 10 Mr.
Jamel l.awrence, Supe&lt;ln-l Three ,bedroom home with car·
Southern lanl Schoolt, Bo• ))11rl t.OI1agt and OUibu•ld"'l In Pt
;lll
45n1, SlSO .. P~a1ant. Will sell on land conIra&lt;\ 814·902·5858.
and• Equal Opporllri'Y E..,..,.,..

MeJr.

Apartments
for Rent

Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Set·
Bowens Estate Ashton Wv 2-112 tlng, Washer !Dryer. Stove, Re·
acres· cuy waterfc:ablelseptiCI frigerator, No Pels. No Smokers,
30x40 garage. 304·576-9907
htra Clean! S300 Oepos1t. $3501
Mo. Applications At 1743 Centa·
Parcels ava tlable for new home nary Road. Gallipolis, 614· 448·
constructton on Rayburn Road S 2205
parcels rangtng lrom 1.84ac to
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST BUSI ·
S.32ac. Paowed road, county water, N1ce 2 bedroom, waaher &amp; dryer
NESS OPPORTUNITY AVAIL · reasonable reslrlchons Map and hoak-up, ref8fences required, de·
ABlE. 304-875-4316.
1nlo available on request No s•n- posol, no pers 304-675-5182.
Couples 10 dQ 1n Home Cookware gle wide 1nQu1nes please. 304 · NIC8 2 or 3 bedroom aparb1'18nt lf'l
demo, part·bme hours lor h.JU-t~rne 6755253
Middleport, no pets, 814· g92304-675-8191
Re:stncted Bu11d1ng Lots, Country 5858
Sening Rural Water 614-245 One bedroom apartment in Pt.
.5457
Plea"""'- no pell, B14-t02-S858.
Seentc Valley, Apple Qrove,
beauttlul 2ac lots, publtc water, TWin RIVerS Tower, now accepting
appllcauons for 1br. HUD subsidJr.. 304 576·2336.
Clydo
tzed apt lor elderly and handicapped. EOH 304-6758670.

c·30p'n. Mon·Fri.
Now taktng applications for ex·
per1enced roofers and carperntera Uusl have, hand tools and
transportation Starling pay 7 25
IY. 814·245-0437

1987 Clayton 14a70, 3bedroom,
11/Zbeth, newly remolded bath WI
ejet whwlpool, vinyl underJ)Inntng,
10x32 parch. $12,000 304-576·
~3_;190~or'-304"'-·-5_78-:.;;.2084_;_·_ _ _ _

•

1 ancl 2 bedroom apartments. lur·

9543.

30 y11r1 experience In nursmg

-oon,WI/.

Cormk:i&lt; Road, 814~9e89

=883=5::..
.

ALDER

730 Vans 14-Wpt
1M7

ACRCV

MAY13I

•.'"...
..

�..

-

•

·~'~~~,_o_·_n.
__~----~-"-ti-~------------------------------P_om_•_r_ov_·_M_i_dd_~
____o_h_io------~----------------M-~--~~-~~-1-3,_1__.__

~ May

is older Americans month

'YidPels:Ho'l ·
SCI clei Seourlty,

older Americans throughout the
month of May. And we lake the occal'lnlger,~.a
sion of Older Americans Month to
' For IMIIY older Americans, Socii! say that Social Security is proud of its
~wity has been there to help.
role in helping to reduce poverty
· How? "Socii! Security," accord- among the aged.
'Jng to Commissioner Shirley S.
Social Security pays benefits to
Chater, "pnllects u's all against the more than 90 percent of Americans
•economic ravages that can accompa- aged 65 and older. It IS the main
old age. If Social Security did not source of income for more than half
exist, the povert~ rate among older the individuals and couples who
Americans would today be over 50 draw it. Tile average monthly bene. pj:rce.nt insteadofthecurrent 13 per- fit is S698.
·~nt."
The second-fastest-growing type
· Social Security stands with those of American family is the "olde(
who recognize the contributions of · family. Theil number has almost

ny

doubled in the past two decades.
Even so the rate of poverty for older
Americans, as compared with other
families, did not increase. Older families clearly htve held their around
with respect to income gains. Except
for those livinc alone, the poveny
rate changed little from the 1980s.
Added to these advantaces, beneficiaries no longer live on "fixed
incomes." Automatic cost-of-living
adjustments have allowed incomes to
keep pace with inflation. The Supplemental Security Income and the
food stamp programs are fully and

auromatieally indexed for inflation 15
well. Over one 15-year period, old·
age benefits increased by aim.,_ 200
pen:ent. 'Thiswas faster than inll8hon
increased over the same period. In
1973, tloe year following this automatic adjustmeni, poveny levels
dipped to their lowest ever.
"Social Security is not a luxury.
For IS million people, it is the barri·
er that separates them from poverty,"
says Commissioner Chater. Partially
relieved of economic worries, many
older Americans can open th~ door to
opponunities that give luster to their
golden years.

·Fifth.
annual
SEO
bike
tour
slated
Sunday
-

Cyclists participating in the Fifth
'Annual Bike Tour of Southeastern
Ohio starting at Wilkesville will be
Tolling through Vinton, Gallia, Meigs
and Jackson Counties Sunday.
• . The event, sponsored by Unity
Savings Bank, Wilkesville. will get
.underway at II a.m. and the cyclists .
~ ill compete on a 52-mile circuit
c.ourse through the hills.
,.. .They will move southeast on State
Route 124 out of Wilkesville to
Salem Center, over to State Route
3~5 into Vinlon, then over Cemetery
lljll and Bull Run Road, and back to
·'jVilkesville on State Route 160.
f'.rom there they will continue on
State Route 124, go onto County
Road 9 to the Vinton-Jackson Coun-

ty line, then traverse Kribble-Mulga
Road to the Appalachian Highway
onto Vinton County Roads I 0 and 9.
back into Jackson and onto State
Route 124 to the finish line in
Wilkesville.
The racing segment of the tour is
made ·up of four classes, citizens,
juniors, masters and professionals.
Jane Ann Bums. event organizer
for the Wilton Civic Association, said
it takes many volunteers to serve at
various locations through out the circuit route, starting with the registration area.

There are tlaggers and roving
patrol fi lied by the Gold-Wing
Motorcycle Club. Emergency medical posts of each county are

informed and a paramedic travels
with the racers in the event of accidents.
,
Each division is followed by, a
pickup "b.room truck" to carry extra
wheels in case of flats or to pcovide
lifts back to Wilkesville.
The Salem Center Volunteer Fire
Department members serve as corner
marshals in the Meigs County area,
the Vinton Volunteer Fire Department
members handle Gallia County area,
and the Wilkesville department
serves in Vinton County. There are
also other volunteers who assist.
Food will be available all day at
the Wilkesville Community Center
which will receive all proceeds from
the event. The . money will go into

completing ·the construction of the
Center.
In talking about the tour, Tym
Tyler. TeamCOLUMBUS, director
and tour organizer, described the terrain as "challenging for event the
most experienced rider. "He said that
racers love to be cheered on by spectators along the route, and encouraged residents to get out and show
their support for the bikers as they
move through the four counties.
Questions concerning the race
may be directed to Jane Ann Bums at
614-669-3915.
In conjunction with the tour, the
Wilton Civic Assocation will be
hosted a spaghetti dinner at the new
Wilkesville Community Building in
Wilkesville, II a.rn. to 4 p.m.

Bulls'
Rodman ·has busy weekend, both on court and off
.
"'

•

NEW YORK (AP) - Dennis
..Rodmari is burning the candle at both
e'nds - with his clothes on and his
(jothes off.
· · The golden-haired, tattooed
_Ghicago Bulls star played nearly the
entire game Saturday in a 102-99
qvertime loss to the New York
'Kni~ks. But that didn 't stop him from
showing up a few !)ours later on
-J(iBC's "Saturday Night Live " naked.
• ·:· Rodman sat behind the show's
;:weekend Update" desk, trading
jokes with cast member Norm MacDonald and regularly flashing a copy
of his new memoir, "Bad As I WanbaBe.;'
·.• MacDonald chided the mercurial
sJar for having the gall to show up on
television with no clothes on. ")bere
are rules!" he screained.
_ .Rodman, who earlierthis year was
fined for head-butting a .referee,
promptly turned to MacDonald and
head-butted him to the floor.
The next afternoon, Rodman was
b~c k on the court against the Knicks,
grabbing 19 rebounds in the Bulls·
94--91 playoff victory.

-

.

'

SHEPHERDSTOWN,
W.Va.
(AP) - Who can tum the world on
to, vegetarianism with her smile?
At Shepherd College's commencement, Mary Tyler Moore asked
graduates to follow her example and
stop eating meat. She said she
became a vegetarian after learning
how pigs and chickens are treated
before slaughter.
·
" I couldn't sleep," she said.
Moore said human hunger could
be eradicated by feeding people the
grain that now is given to animals
schedul~d for slaughter.
The Emmy-winning star of "The
Dick Van Dyke Show" and "The
.
'
Mary·Tyler Moore Show" on Satur-

&amp;

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Steve
Kroft returned to his alma mater to
stand as an inspiration to average students everywhere.
The "60 Minutes" coiTespondent
told 5,()()() Syracuse T,Jniversity graduates Sunday that he never was the
ideal student.
"My parents and my former faculty members would be surprised t_hat
I'm standing •here ," Kroft said.
" While my name appeared on several .
lists in the dean's.office, none of them
was the dean's Jjst·.lhat my parents

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••

35cenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 14, 1996

A Gannett Co. Ntwlp ap '•t

Delays threaten ~;
opening of pool ,
for Middleport

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
By TOM HUNTER I
Sentinel News Staff
Sentinel New• Staff
.
.,
A contracr for the construction
Middleport
recreation
officials
expressed
their
displeasure
with
architecof the Racine Branch/Meigs Countural and-engineering delays that have pushed the Middleport pool projci:t
ty· Public.Library is expected to be
past the planned opening date of Memorial Day. village council learned Monawarded next week.
day.
·
,
Bids will be accepted until noon
A:mold
Johnson
of
the
Middlepon_
Recrcation
Department
addressed
cou~­
next Mond;ly and will be opened at
cil on the delays and unsuccessful attempts to contact SBA Consultants of ·
a meeting of the Library Board of
Jackson,' engineering and architectural contractor on the $100,000 pool renTrustees on Thursday, May 23. at I
ovations project.
·•.
p.m.
"The
longer
it
takes
to
get
answers
back
from
SBA
on
questions
we
have
..
Architects on the project arc
the
longer
it
is
taking
to
get
the
project
completed.
If
work
continues
at
this
Burgess &amp; Niple, Ltd., Columbus.
rate, we might' not get the pool open this summer," said Johnson.
'.
Plans, according to Board PresMayor Dewey Horton, Johnson and Council President Bob Gilmore notident Pat Holter, call for the renoed
that
several attempts have been made to contact SBA officials with qu\:5vation of the old carriage house
tions
on
the partially-approved plans by the state Department of Commerce
behind the Betsy Tyree Pickens
Board
of
Building Appeals.
· .
·
'
home at I Pearl St. and Tyree
Workers
with
Banks
Construction
have
been
on
site
for'lnorc
than
a
week
Boulevard into a library building .
working on the pool project w~M;n )Neather permits. Concrete work began late
An aUdition to the carriage
last
week on the new deck section on the south end of the facility, Johnson
house will include a meeting room,
said.
.
rest rooms and a kitchenette, makThe
biggest
questions
have
foscused
on
construction of the ADA-required
ing for a facility of about 3,000
handicapped
ramp
to
the
facility.
square feet on nearly six acres.
"We spoke with state officials about constructing the ramp along the back
Access will be from
both Tyree
'•
side
of the pool, with steel tied into the existing outside wall. We ha'(e
Boulevard and Fifth and Pearl.
explained
what we wanted to the architects, but the drawings that have come .
Hoiter reports, with plenty of spaci:
back
to
us
haven't looked like that. .When we try to conlllct SBA to inquire
·for parking.
about
the
plans;
we can't talk to anyone," said Johnson.
··
LOOKING OVER PLANS - Melga County Library Board President Pat Holtet, left, dleeussed
The-house on the property has
Drainage problems
- details of the architectural plans for the Racine facility with llbrery personnel. From left are
'been sold to Jeff Thornton. the only ·
Severe
drainage
and
sewage
backup problems in the village were
Eric
Ander10n
of
the
Ohio
Valley
Librarill,
board
member
Wande
Eblin
and
Krlltl
Eblin,
extenbidder. It will be moved soon to a
addressed
to
council
by
several
village
residents in attendance at the meetsion
services
director
for
the
Meigs
Llbrarle1.
lot on the original property that
ing.
Thornton is purchasing from the
a portion of the personal income
Grant Street resident Bob Schmoll said that drainage problems along Pead
fully staffed, with both daytime
comes from a building fund establibrary board. Holter said that
tax. Currently 5.7 percent of that
Street, between Lincoln and Grant streets, have caused basement flOOding
Thomton plaits to operate a bed - and evening hours.
. lished several years ago by the
tax collected is allocated for operand sewer backups with mqre and more frequency over the last f~w )'earS
and breakf~t in the spacious home. · . Holter saig ,tllat Racine was
cOiintr, library trustees. That fi!JIIl,
lllion .~ lilln!r.iU•~.&amp;~~-1"'!-...-~
. ~aljl!lM!id.tMl the p~c~lolils · - .
tliii;-m,ycars:
· ' A~ for ttie' project, Holter said · • selecic!"d'fllt a'Jli.~nch N:~a4S~b'l\tllt"'·.-ffpteiRts:.moni4•te~\led· from
PU1ns for buildjng'~- branch in
.llut are more pfdbiematic than ever before 'with 'l{~nvy s'iorms 'and rainfali \
l!~t'sbo anticipates renovatioh and'·· high usage of library services iit
the $tate in excess of that neeiled to
Racine have been under consideramounts more frequent.
'construction 'to begin early summer
that area.
operate the main library at
ation for several years, and last
Sixth Street resident Charles Byer said that the same problems arc occur•
I and be completed in early 1997.
Cost ~stimate for the project is
Pomeroy, the branch in Middleport
September
the
board
purchased
the
ring
at his residence. "Every time we get a real hard rain, I'm cleaning the
Once completed, the facility
$300,000,
and the bookmobile.
former Tyree property fro111 Hermud and old sewage out of my basement." said Byer.
· ·
will operate as a full-time library,
Mon~;y for the construction
Libraries are funded iri Ohio by
bert White and Patsy White.
IConlln!Jed on Page 3)
•

•

• •

1 '

.Discovery of ValuJet black box
relieves burden of grim search
By CHRISTOPHER SULLIVAN
AP National Writer
MIAMI - A police diver stumbled upon 'the data recorder ofValuJet Flight 592 while searching for
human remains in Everglades muck.
a discovery that could yield clues to
the cause of the crash that killed I09
people.
" He stepped on it," Robert Francis, vice chairman of the National
Transportation Safety Board, said
Monday night, calling the find
"extraordinarily fortunate. "
Navy sonar failed to lind either of
the jet's recorders.
The 30-pound data recorder.
buried in the muck under a few feet
of murky water, was sent to NTSB
headquarters in Washington for
analysis, shipped in a water-filled
cooler to ensure against drying that
might damage it.
The recorder was bent but in

I

;;

We're 75 years old and proud to
have brought you a wonderful
Heritage of Healthcare. In our
roots are compassion and .

commitment. Our ongoing
vision is to wed thes.e great
fundamentals of caring with
the best technology to bring

you medical excellence. Join tis
at O'Bieness as we celebrate 75
years with these gifts to you and
your health.

FREE HEALTH
SCREENINGS
Tuberculosis
Body Fat AmiJ.ysis
Cholesterol
Blood Pn:ssure
Skin Cancer
Philip Kinnard,' M.D. and
Halesh Patel, M.D.
Eye Vision and Health
Tom Quinn, O.D. and
Athens Lions Club
Pulmonary Fum;tion
Colon-rectal Cancer Kits
Coupons for Glucose Screening
DEMONSTRATIONS
AND DISPLAYS
'
Breast Cancer Awareness and
Breast Self Eumination
Catherine Coats, D.O.
Vial of Life Kits

,,

good shape, Ftancis said. The box on
the 27-year-old plane recorded fewer details than those on newer jets ..
Older reclitders 111easure only I I
functions . such as speed and altitude.
The search at the crash site
resumed today for pans of the plane.
human remains and the DC-9's other so-called black b(lx, the cockpit
voice recorder.
.
Teams of divers walked side by
side on Monday.· searching the
swamp inch 'by inch and accompanied by a sharpshooter on the lookout for alligators and poisonous
snakes.
The searchers filled bags with
bady parts, including lingers, hands,
feet. but nothing larger than a knee,
said Metro-Dade police Cmdr. AI
Hamer.
"It would be ·traumatic for even
the most seasoned homicide detective," he said .

Retirecl Dade County Medical
Examiner Joseph Davis, who is taking part in the investigation, said
some of the victims might never be
identified . "I don 't hold any hope ·
we'll find any recoverable large parts
of people, " he said.
·
The divers have also been selectively collecting small pieces of the
Jellhat could be considered "significant," FraQcis said, "and these may
be a bundle of wiring, or a particular ..
switch, or whatever it is."
The pieces could be "eaily indicators of what might have happened," he added .
Francis said the jet's engines,
found Sunday. would undergo a thorough examination but that an early
inspection showed no "catastrophic
damage."
·
The Atlanta-bound jet crashed ·
Saturday shortly after takeoff from
(Continued on Page 3)

.

CHARLCSTON, W.Va. (AP)A study of pollutants 'in the Ohio River mirrors previous studies by two
federal agencies, which said the river has too much cancer-causing dioxm.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

55 Hospital Drive. Athens. OH 45701
614-59.1-555 1

A hospital we can all be proud of. ,

j
.,

' 'i

WRECKAGE RECOVERY- Dada County (Fla.) Fire &amp; Rescue
members carried what was believed to be lhe black box, or flightdata recorder, from the ill-fated ValuJel DC-9 thai crashed Into
the Everglades. The box 111(as recovered Monday as divers con·
tlnued to feel their way lhrougl1 weeds and muck In search of bodIes and wreckage from the jet (AP)

Ohio River study repeats'
concerns over dioxin level

May 21st • 10 am to 4 pm
·
• Medical Display on loan from
the Ohio University College .'
of Osteopathic Medicine's
Medical Museum
• Entenainmimt- The Local Girls
2:00pm to 3:30pm
• Historic Hospital Photo Display

SAFETY ACTIVITIES
Bicycle Safety Course
Bring bikes and helmets
Helmet Adjustment ·
Bring Helmet
Seat Belt and Helmet Safety
Athens Co. Sheriff's
Department
· Bicycle Safety Story Sessiqns
Athens County Library

Energy cos·ts·
cause prices
to climb 0.4%

•

ANNIVERSARY
OPEN HOUSE

Organ Donation Information
Lifeline of Ohio Organ
Procuremeill (LOOP)
Advance DireCtives Information
Living Will and Medical
. Power of Attorney
Video Demonstralions
Mammography, MRI,
Surgery, Vision •
DRAWINGS
Stress Test
Pulmonary Function Tests
Restaurant Club Coup.on Book

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

'I

'

.

May 18th • 10 am to 2 pm

Your lndependellt Apnu
Se..-, Me;,. County Sinee 1868

W

tOS ANGELES (AP)
"Twister," the siory of scientists
determined to drive into the vortex of
a tornado, was the No. I ·film this
weekend with an estimated gross.of
$37.5 million, industry sources said.
While the amount was the biggest
opening ever for a non-h&lt;Jiday weekend in May, it was far below the
$52.8 million record held by " Batman Forever," which opened in June
1995.
"TWister," the latest special
effects-filled adventure from Steven
Spielberg an&lt;j George Lucas, stars
Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton.

(

WELLNESS EXPO

Talk to your independent agenl. Insist on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Just do thla one .thing,
8nd leave th• juggling t1ct t9 us.
·

representing the .

•

Two Events-Our Gifts to Our Community

You've got a lot on your mi[ld . You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don;t need to add this worry
to your list.

.

Planning moves ahead
for Raci_ne library branch

top film at

Cloudy tonight, ci!Mce
of ehowere, lowe In the
so.. Wed""day, chllnce
of l'lln. Hlglle In the 70..

••

Vol. 47, NO. 14
1 Sectlon,10 PllgM

CANNES, France (AP)- While
Robert Altman promotes his new film
"Kansas City" ai the Cannes Film
Festival. the mayor of Kansas City is
there promoting along with him.
"There's a lot al stake for-Kansas
City with this movie," Mayor
. Emanuel Cleaver told Variety magazine.
Cleaver said he hopes the story of
the jazz scene in the 1930s will boost
the city's historical image as well as
African-American culture. A $20
million jazi and cultural museum is
under constru~tion in the city.

FOR YOU
• TO
JUGGLE

~

-e

Kroft, a 1967 graduate, also talked
about the future, and some of tbe
roadblocks that may go along with it.
.''There are revolutions underway
... and there are more opportunities
than ever before," Kroft said. "If you
have a great idea, pursu~ il. Stay
informed, and be ready, because
before you know .it, you're going to
be running .the place."

THING

1111eoond St.

Sport8 on Page 4

wanted."

.

Do. . . Clilds

over ·GAHS .

The midtown building was llnoccupied and no one was injured in the
fire.
Eighty percent of the building was
destroyed, fue battalion chiefWaJiace
lane said.
The only rooms sparel! by the
blaze were the basement and the
apartment' Miss Mitchell once occupied.
"I was hoping hope against hope
that we could save it,". said Mary
Rose Taylor, chair of the board of
directors of the Margaret Mitchell
House. " But the Phoenix is the symbol of Atlanta, and like the Phoenix,
we shall rise again, too."

'Twister'
box office

Pick 3:
5-0-0
Plck4:
3-2-8-9
Buckeye 5:
5-10.13-14-18

.poet vlctor:y

.
.
.
'
day was awarded an honorary degree · ~----------------~------------------~~--------------~---.
in humanities in recognition of her
acting career and her charity work.
She has been international chairwoman of · the Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation since 1985.

?~ -

ONE
LESS

ATLANTA (AP)- One of Margaret Mitchell's biggest fans promises that the "Gone With the Wind"
author 's home. like her beloved
Atlanta, will rise again.
The 100-year-old apartment house
where Mitchell began writing her
famous novel was extensively damaged by fire Sunday for the second
time in two years. Fire officials
believe it was arson .
The three-story brick building,
which .·Miss Mitchell affectionately
called "The Dump," had been set to
be opened to the public June 30 after
a $4.5 million renovation .

Ohio.Lottery

Marauders ·

·Arsonblamedforsecdnd
blaze
to Mitchell home
•
.

'·•

TRUCK FIRE - No Injuries were reported
after a truck lied IlNck a power Hne.and caught
fire It the Melt• County Highway Garage Monday efternoon. The tractor and 11ml-treller,
owned by Ra._'1 Excavating, ·Racine, . wee
delivering !)I aWl to the p,.ge whan the .~
1truc:k
the powar line. The driver, O.D.
'
. Edwarde,
.
'

Racine, jumped from the truck to ufety.
Pomeroy firefighters Todd Smith, front, 1nd Ire
Van Cooney battled the blaze, which burned
III'WI and elr holes, according to Fire Chill Denny Zirkle. The ll!llh8p 1hut down poiier In the
Rock Springs aive, (Sentinel photo by O.V.
Herrle)
. . •

The new study has f0 und that
dioxin levels in fish are, in some cases. more than twice the safe level.
Environmental groups cite those
studies in opposing a proposed
Mason County pulp mill that would
dump dioxin into the river· ·as a
byproduct of paper bleaching.
The p~lp mill "is the whole reason the study came al:!out," said Peter
Tennant, the Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation Commission's technical
programs manager.
The commission, based in Cincinnati, conducted the study at various
locations along the 981 miles of the
Ohio River from Pittsburgh to Cairo,
Ill.. including several locations in
West Virginia.
The study e~amined a wide ran1e
of pollutants, but only the dioxin

results have been made public so far.
Details of the study will not be
released for a least another week, but
a summary was provided to the West
Virginia Manufacturers Association
last week. Tennant said results are
still under review by the states along
the .river and declined to comment
further.
At five locations between Willow
Island, W.Va., and a lock and dam 30
miles upstream from Cincinnati, fish
tissue contained levels of dioxin
between 12 parts per trill ion and 17
parts per trillion, the study said.
In West Virginia, the acceptable
dioxin limit in consumable portions
of fish is 6.4 parts per trillion.
The state Division of Environmental Protection disputed tile previous studies by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and the Environmental Protec.tion Agency.
Director Eli McCoy said today the
study is important because it provides
data from all along the river.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer .prices climbed 0.4 percent in
·April as energy costs jumped by the
largest amount in more than five
years.
,
The surge in gasoline and other
energy products accounted for threefifths of the tolill advance last month.
Analyst,s noted that excluding the
volatile energy and food sectors, the
so-called core rate of inOation
Climbed a much more modest 0.1 percent in April .
. The better-than-expected showing
for the un&lt;lerlying inflation rate plus ·
a second report that retail sales
dropped by 0.3 percent in · Aprjl
proved a further tonic to financial
'markets. Analysts said investors arc
coming 10 reali1.c that earlier fears of.
a runaway economy and rapidly ris.
ing inflation were overblown.
•
The bond market staged an imme,
diate rally following release of
today 's reports. Yields on 30-ycar
Treasury bonds fell to 6.85 percent in
morning trading from 6.90 percent
late Monday. A week ago. when inflation jitters gripped financial markets,
yields were above 7 percent.
The Commerce Department said
that retail sales dropped 0.3 percent
in April.
The worse-than-expected showing
for retail sales provided support to
economists' contention that the.econ-:
omy, while rebounding from an·
extremely · sluggish 1995, was not
threatening to overheat.
They said today's reports funher·
strengthened their conviction that
the Federal Reserve is not about to
begin raising in)erest rates at thel~
next meeting on May 21.
In today's inflation report, the
government said that the 0.4 perccni
April advance matched the Marek,
rise and left consumer prices so far
this year increasing at an annual rate
of 4.1 percent.
..
While that is sharply higher than;
last year's 2.5 percent increase, the
best showing in nine years, econq,.
mists have stressed that there are no_.
signs that the slirge in enetBY,priee&amp;:·
threatens to ~ill over into other parta
of the economy.
.:

.

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