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·~'~~~,_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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,..2_

:Commentary

.,Tu11daly, May 14, 1M

-••

Tuu d1y,111y 14. 1•

OHIO Wr:athcr
w.tla1sd•y, May 15

•

·The Daily Sentinel Big Brothe~: ·too close for-comfort?
'E,st~Jjflsfw{ {n 1948
' ',

111 Court SL, POIMI'Oy, Ohio
&amp;14-812-215&amp; • Fax: 982·2157

.:2.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pvblllher
, CHARLENE HOEFLICH
O..Mn!M-ger

MARG.-RET LEHEW
Controller

I

Troublesome friends

When Aaricans aay we don' t
want tbo govemmeat interfering in
our livea we two lhinp:
I) We don'twlllt to pay taxes.
2) We literally don't want the government interfering in OUR lives. but
feel free to bust in on our neighbors
•• in fact. they' ve got several nasty
hlbits we'd like investigated.
How else to explain the PU'l'Oit·
ed Unpopularity of big government,
when for certain groups government
interference is at an all,time hig~1.
Take smokers. These day ~. smokers receive the public wrath once
reserved for serial killers and mob
bosses, albeit without the high-profile
book deals.
Smoking rules used to make
sense. Don't smoke in enclosed
spaces like buses and aiJplanes. Don't
smoke if your co-workers find it
objectionable. Don-'t smoke after dinncr if someone nearby has asthma.
But now, giddy from the myriad laws

that lila •IIIOirint indoon, -.moleen are alao forbidding smoking
OUTDOORS - iD puts, and bach~ and lplliU llldiums. We've even
'

Sara Eckel
started forbiddil!g smokers from
lighting up in building doorways -the place where they were exiled after
we kicked them out of the office.
(Warning to cigarette manuf~~tturers :
This defense of smokers should not
be confused with a defense of YOU.
You are still slwneless liars for
telling the world .you had no idea
smoking was harmful.)
Smokers aren't the only victims of
the lifestyle police. Gays and lesbians
have also been pestered by their share
of busybodies. II makes no sense.
What C0115Cnling adults do in their
bedrooms is their own business, yet
· somehow homosexuality is considered worthy of public debate. This

:By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Conespondent
.
' - WASHINGTON - It's almost enough to make the winner noslalgic for
the days when there were Republican rivals contesting his presidential nomination. At least Sen . Bob Dole knew where to look for trouble then.
Now there's friendly fire. from political allies with aims, advice and arguments of their own. And that's more difficult to manage than the last of the ·,
4efcated challengers fot Dole's .Republican nomination. It's simple enough ''
to keep an eye on Pat Buchanan.
'
. His positions are clear, persistent, prediclable.
·· Not so when, as Dole complained, he's blindsided by Republicans on his
handling of one issue, faced with disputes roiled by a Senate colleague who
is:co-chairman of his. campaign steering committee and challenged on his
gas tax cut by the governor who was first to endorse him for the White House.
. Add the abortion dispute stirred by three other GOP governors who favor
a~rtion rights ~nd want the issue written out of the party platform, a step :
·
:
conservatives won't tolerate.
And the grousing among GOP slate leaders about the slate of the cam- :
prugn, and the complaint of another Republican figure that there •s scant
o!rlthusi8$m \bout Dole.
It's all been on public display, in speeches, television and newspaper interviews. Dole complained on 1V about an early installment, when a bloc l'f
House Republicans b!:oke with GOP congressional leaders to endorse an
increase in the minimum wage.
"We were somewhat blindsided by a group of House Republicans, which
we hope we can prevent in the future, .. Dole said of the episode last month.
He said he wished Republicans "wo11ld at least conlact somebody in the party" to alert the leadership tQ steps like that one . .
It is an unfulfilled wish.
· As Dole tried to seize the"campaign initiative with a tough speech and a
push for his gas tax cut in Nassau County, N.Y., Sen. Alfonse D'Amato took
a swipe at House Republicans and Speaker Newt Gingrich in a New York
Daily News interview.
'
·
The same day, May 3, ~re was another distraction when Gov. George
· Voinovich of Ohio broke with Dole over re~al of the 4.3 cent-a-gallon
increase ln the gasoline tax President Clinton pushed through Congress in
1993 .."If the deficit is such a problem, how can yoo be arguing to reduce
the gas tax without sayipg, 'Well, if we do that' then we're going to have to
cut somcpllllj~ e.lse.':~VoinovicJl ~d.
:~- ~ t . ·· .- • ~. ., ••
•
"I don't get 11," the governor said. "The deficit 1 ·a real pro tern."'&gt; ~
. Dolt proposed the tax cut to ~;Qunter the Climb in gasoline price~. He says
the revenue loss would be offset so that it doesn't increase the deficit.
D' Amato renewed his complaints 10 ·a television interview, saying that
cilpservatives misread the Republican sweep ll)at put them in con~! of Congress in 1994.
·
. "When we had this huge mandate .,, people were saying, 'We really want .
change,' but they didn't want this political 'llpheaval nor did they sign on to
die 'Contract with America.' Very few of them really knew about it."
:He tempered that swipe at'House Republicans by _blaming Buchanan
perceptions of the party as intolerant or insensitive. ·
.
In New York, Gov. George Pataki, a Dole'campaigner, echoed that with
a sharper edge. "I tjlink. the main force of this has been Pat Buchanan, but
c~Jiainly SO!DC of the rhetoric COIJ!ing out of Congress, talking about a J'!'Vo)ution ... there's a big diffef\lnce hetween having an intelligent devolution
of:authority to the slates and having a traumatic quick cl\ange before the
American jleople are ready fori\.' ' ·
·
. , Gingrich rebuked Republican complainants in a Washington Times intervjew .Thursday, saying ·Republicans have an opponent, Clinton, and ought
tci be working to defeat him. "My advice to everybody who is anxiety-ridden is go out and do smnething for the party, .. he said.
• He mentioned D' Amato and Bill Bennett, the former Cabinet member
who had said there was little enthusias'm for Dole. Gingrich said Bennett
sfiould go out and stir excitement for the nominee.
. Dole sidestepped when he was asked about the griping. and the suggestions that he should spend l~ss time in the Senate and more outside the Beltway talking to voters.
,; ; "I never quespon my collea~es," he said.

far

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• • .,r

'

~:EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R: Mears, vice preaident and ~olum·
~t for The Auoc:lated Preu, bas reported on Washington and national~lt.les for mOft than 30 ,ears.
·

Uetters
to the editor
••
;:.•

Five years aao: President Bush announced his selection of Roben M.
Gates to head the Central Intelligence Agency. Britain's Queeo Elizabeth n I .
Urived in Washington to begin a two-week v,isit to the United States. Fortytwo people were ltilled'il! a U'ilin·collision in wes.-.._Japan. .
' ' "

1

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t '

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New record low temperatures in
the 30s were· set across Ohio for the .
second straight morning.
1'11e National Weather Service
said cool Canadian winds and clear
skies created the conditions for the
low !liid-May readings .
A.n approaching frontal system
will bring warmer temperatures 'on
Wednesday, but also showers and
thunderstorms, forecasters said.
Lows tonight will .be in the 50s,
followed by highs Wednesday moslly in the 70s:
The record-high temperature for
this ~ate at the Columbus weather
slalion wa~ 91 degrees in 1·991 while·
the record low was 34 in 1920. Sunset tonight wil) be at 8:38p.m. and
' sunrise Wednesday at 6:16 a.m.

· 'The following cases were resolve~
Wedne~day. in j he Meigs Co.unly

Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien .
Finec:i.were: Tommy M. Pennington, Dexter, scat belt, $25 plus costs:
Doris J. Beane, Re~psville, driving
under the influence, $750 plus costs,
90-day operator's license suspension,
one year prohation, 10 days jail suswm~¢ , to thre.e days, $450 of fine
~~jail suspended upon completion
of residentia~ treatment program :
Tony A.' Brown, Pomeroy, possession, $59 plus costs; obstructiqg official.business, $100 su~pendcd; costs,
I 0 days jail. suspended. two . years
pfobaiion, 40 hours 'ommunily service will) litter. control ;
Annil M. Chapman, pomeroy,
OUt, $750 plus coSIS, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day Ol
suspension, one year probation, $450
offine and jail suspended upon completion o(residcntial treatment program; Tina Chevalier, Racine , con ~
tributing to:.the unruliness or delin ~
quency of a child, costs, 30 days ja1l
suspended upon the chtld having no
more unexcused absences through the
1996-97 school year;·
Da'vid E, Bu sh. Middleport,
domestic 'violence, $250 suspend~ d.
costs, IO·daysjail suspended 1o three
days, two. years probation ; David
Hutchinson, Carbondale. OUt. $850
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to
10 days,, 'tw!&gt; years probation. one
year OL suspension, $450 of fine and
three jail suspended upon complelion
of resi~ential treatmenl program; dri"
ving under suspension. sentence
same as DUI ; failure to controL
costs only;
Johann N. Griffin , Snowmass,
Co., speed, $30 plus costs: Janice K.
Adams, Rutland , speed, $30 plus
costs; Daniel E. Swisher, Chcshir~.
overload. $471 plus costs; Stephanie
Lee Lombardi. Canonsburg, Pa ..

pre-p~~ged coff~li . t}I~.:S, .r!s!lt in

the shower head? Get yOiir'i\!omirif:
jolt and a shampoo at the same time!
Now, some might see this array of
products as evidence 9f a conspiracy
by coffee makers 10 get America
hooked on their product. If that's true,
it's fine with me. It would lead
directly to the next marketing phase:
mass ·decaffeination ..
Highly trained in deprogramming
techniques, equipped with mini' vacI!Ums that can detect and suck caffeine from any substance, our special ·
uniformed agents would travel in ·
two-person teams from door til door,
rather like Mormons or UPS employ- ·
ees.
·
As the final stage of the decaf- .
· feination program, they would dis·
tribute sample packets of herbal tea
'among the desperate and jittery.
The beauty part? The first one's
free.
.
(To receive a complimentary :
lan Sboales newsletter, call l.SOO. ·
989-DUCK or write Duck's Breath, :
408 Broad SL, Nevada City, CA
95959.)
· Ian Shoales Is a syndle•ted ·
writer for Newspaper EnterpriSe '
Auoc:latiOn.

•

The Plessy Conferenc~----a ruse by African-Americans. We racial separation has survived. Most a demand," Frederick Douglass once ' 1
used integration as leverage to threat- people in this countiy - black and said. "It never has and it never will.,,__./
WASHINGTON - Racial inle- en white folks, but our real goal was white - live in neighborhoods largeHe's right.
gration has long been a crude mea- not as much to .move into white . ly devoid of members of other races
But the demand for equal opporsure of racial equality in this country. neighborhoods as to force offic1als to or ethnic groups. Most of our public !Unity that comes from African Amer- r
The more access black folks have make our ~hools and neighborhoods school systems are 8Ji racially divid- jeans cannot lake !he .form of a plain- ~ ·
gotten to' the social, political and eco, better. .
· ed now as they were in 1954, the year live plea for integration, or even a
nomic caverns of white America, the
· &lt;?n Fnday -the eve ofthe IOO!,h the Supreme Court ordered·an end to court-ordered call for racial inclusion.
closer the nation is thought to have an.mversary of the Supreme Courts school segregation! As a conse- It must.spring from the political and '
come to balancing out the scales of decision i~ the Plessy c~- a s~a~l quence, far too many black folks · economic ffillscle that black folks can i
opportunity.
· ~up of J.unsts, ~adem1cs and CIVIl · have spent much of the second half command. This is the wedge we must l
This curious notion is rooted in nghts atllVlsts ~all convene a two, of this century in the blind pursuit of use to open wide America's doors of :
black America's reaction to Plessy vs. day conference m t:Jew Orleans to integration, when what mQSt of us are opportunity.
:
Ferguson. the IK96 Supreme Court ponder what organ1zers call "the really after is equality of opportuniParticipants at this weekend's con- !
decision that madt racial segregation bro~ retreat from racial justice" ty.
(erence must do more than J·ust talk
the law of the land for much of this that s occurred 10 recent years.
Integration without equality of
century. Until it was overturned in
They .should_also .explore blac~ opportunity is a cruel joke. Aclcnowl- among themselves, they must speak
19S4,the Plessy decision's "separate Am~nca s fixation w1th rac1al 101e- e&lt;!ging this oughtto be the beginning to the nation. They should offer us nOt
but equal" doctrine gave cover to grallon. . . .
point of this weekend's Plessy Con- only a perspective on the .~~ but '
those who sought to maintain African
As a prmc1plc of law, Plessy was ference. Most of the subslanlivc also a blueprint for the fu'9£C- one
Americans in a state of nco-slavery. overturned by the high court's Brown gains made by blacks this cenf!HY that puts less emph1isis on integration
The push for racial integration was - vs. Topeka .Board of Education case. . haV. come as a result of tJie Voting· lllld more on our 1191itical Bl!d ceo- I
B · f
·
d 1 · ·dea f
·
·
'
·
nomic ~nfranchisement. ·
• •
ut In act Its un er ymg I
0 \. Rishts Act, not the' push r~r . nu:ial :
'):hat's what I hope'' will com'e OUt ' I
.
·
' . integration. Political PQWCr .is the lap
th
'·
root of ~~rtilnily in ·th
. is country.• .l&gt;f
is 'g!lthering
f some of
black
America's
best and.obrialltcst
thinkers
,
•
.
.
.
=~ulurac:.al schqols iJnd ~IDS _ among them, Otarles 9lletreC and :

I

lio.day •. n· h •. story .' ..'

·The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-1160)

Published every afternoon . Mon&lt;hly through
Friday, Ill Coun St. Pomeroy~ Ohio, by 1he
Ohio VaUey Publi~hin~ Comp~ny!Gnnncu Co.,
Pomeroy. Olllo 45769, Ph. 992-lll6. s...... d
cbs pMtl11f pikl at Pomeroy. Ohio.

•

Mnnber: The tuMX:imed Preu. and die Oflio
New~ AQociotion.
I'()STMASI'IR: Send addreu corretrlons to
The Daily Sendnel, Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy,

Ohio4S769.
'

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ....... ... ..... 1..... . ,.,............... ............ 35 Cent~
· Subscriben noc detlrtna to PlY 1he enrrler1may
remit ift ldvMM:C tlif'Kl 10 The Daily Serltlael
on 11
ajx; or 12 month basi~. Credic will be

wee.

·:•nry

Out of the Plessy decision came
~ ~ates, of.H'arv~;JO!in ;
1.10•• of Duke Umvemty ~
Today is Thesday, May 14, the 13Sth day of 1996. There are 231 days black America's campaign for nu:ial 1 ope
left in the year.
·
integration. Out of its centennial , .and federal Judge Conslance Baker
. hould
I
Motley.
•.
1bday's Highlight in Histoiy:
. observallon s
evo ve a strategy
Gl'ven· 'ts
f h
the
1
&lt;
'
•
the · •
·
I CIIS 0 C aracters,
On May 14,1796,EnglishphysicianEdwardJennei'administerecllhefirst aormovmgusmto
nallonsDIIJn- PleJSy conference could be · 1
,
vaccination against smallpox to an 8-year-old boy.
stream that is less dependent than is ·
. . JUS 11
. dt
m' te...;; 00 on the ..,.~_.,......, of the ,IDiportantto ~ relations 1n the 2 hi
0 n.th IS
ae: .
.,._
_,.,.,~·ntury•• ... "N•••oroM
' ' • wbj
• ·
- UJCJ - . . - - OVCI'(IenlIn 1643, Louis XIV became King of Fran~ atage 4 upon the death of. na~?n I
te DlaJOnty• .'' .
·• from which the NAACP spnng __,.
his father, Louis XIII.
Po.wer concedes notbinJ Wtdlout wu to 'this '!DC.
_
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\

MAIL SUISCIIIPTIONS

'-

.....,Metpc-,

.............................._ .............. $27.30

..........................................:...$53.12

52 ~.........,...................... ,...,.......$t0l.56

---MIIpC..,
13-.................::......:.................. .,.$29.25
26 .....................: .......:.........&lt;1....... "'.68

.

"

Mildred V. Will

J

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George D. Baer, 89, of25763 Forest Run Road, Racine, Ohio 45771 , died
Sunday, May 12, 1996 at his residence, following iln extended illness. · :[:
He was a retired carpenter and a member of St. Paul Lutheran Churclj,
Pomeroy.
..:
Born on Nov. 19, 1906 at Forest Run, Ohio. he was the son of the late
Charles W. Baer and Esta Holler Baer.
·
"
He is survived by his wife.' Clara Baer, Forest Run; a son an,d daughte\in-law, William and De.bra Baer of Forest Run ; a grandson and his ~¥if,c:~
Christopher and Megan Baer of Flatwoods: a grandson, Andrew Baer of Forest Run; and a niece and her husband, Betty and Harold Newell of Chestert
Besides his parents, Charles and Esta Baer, he was preceded in death ~)'
a sister, Beulah Nelson .
.
·
Funeral services will be held at the St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pomero,r~
at I p.m. Thursday, May 16, 1996. The Revs. Dawn Spalding and William
Middlesworth will officiate, and burial will be in the Gilmore Cemetery, ~i~~
ersville.
,
- Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home Wednesday, May 15, 199~
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
· .
:,;:

Meigs announcements

••..

'"

Oftlces to close
.
· !'
Pomeroy village offices will be clo~ed Wednesday from 12:45 to 2 p.m.
Wednesday for the funeral services of Mrs. Reed Will. -

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f bl ac.k' b

Stocks

()

.. . .

Meigs EMS runs

Hospital news

Actions to end marriages filed

QUALift FURNitURE PLUS

Robbins A Myers ....................38
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............149'4
Shoney's ·lnc......................... 13\
Star Bank·.........:.................... 67'4
W•ndy lnt'l ............................ 18'4
Worthl"l!'an
lnd.................... 21~
,'

majl pennllt'!ll jn ,...,
where~ "Cirrier senoice is available.

.. .,

Mary Karen Hughes. 53 , Ravenswood, W.Va., died Saturday, May II,
1996 in Jackson General HospiJal, Ripley, W.Va .• following an extended il.lness .
·Born Sept. 9, 1942 in Cheshire, daughter of the late Delmar Louis and
Virginia Marie Tipton Darst, she was a homemaker. .
·
A member and board member of the women's suppon group of United
Steelworkers Union Local 5668,. she was also a member of the Junior
Women's Club, and a member of lhe Cedar Run United Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband, Leslie Virgil Hughes: a daughter, Cindy Ann
(David) Mullins of Beckley, W.Va.; a son. Allen Leslie (Dee Anna) .Hughes
of Billings, Mont ; a grandson; two sisters, Joyce Newell of Oallipolis, and
Kathy 'Bush of Pomeroy; and two brothers, Jerry Darst of Miami, Aa., and
.David Darst of Letan. W.Va.
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Casto Funeral Home,
Ravenswood, W.Va., with the Rev. Gerald Sayre officiating. Friends may call
at th!l funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

.J.

George ·D. ·aaer

n

NO seblcliJlllpo, by

52 -

Mary. Karen Hu.ghes

DeIays t hreat en

Rockwel~ ..............................58\

13 -

George D. Baer, 89, of Forest Run Road, Racine, died Sunday, May 12,
1996 at his residence.
.
Born on No\1. 19, 1906, he was the SOD of Charles W. and EstaHolterBaer.
He was a retired carpenier, and a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church of
Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Clara Baer; a son and daugliter-in' law, William
and Debra Baer of Forest Run; and two grandchildren and a niece.
Be~ides his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Beulah Nelson; ·
Services will 'be I p.m. Thursday in St. Paul' Lutheran Churc'h, Pomeroy.
'The Rev. Dawn Spalding ant!J he Rev. William Middleswarth will of(iciate,
and burial will be in the Gilmore Cemetery, Min~rsville . Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home 2-4 and 7-9 p.!f!. Wednesday.

funds.
~
Hoffman said the county cu
ly pays about $34,000 in makhi
funds: The action was at the reque11
of Human Services Director Michadt
Swisher.
Also, \he board IIPProved aD"'
request to spend $1 .827 for work ol;l
.the roof-top air conditioning u ~its 0(1
the DHS building in Middlepon. '•
In other bu ~i ne ss, the l)oard:
• Met in executive session wit~
Prosecuting Attornc;y John R. Lent~
to discuss a lease agreement;
1
• M~t with Richard Davis ofD-N1
T Pest Control, Racine, on pest cont
trol in county buildings;
,
I
• Paid an animal claim of $85 ti
Woodrow Harmon, Dexter, for threi
sheep killed by dogs on May 2:
• Paid wet;kl y bills·
.
$280,616.99, consisting 211 entries1

Roger Deem of Middleport is the son-in-law of the late Mildred V. Will,
71,
of Pomeroy, who died Saturday, May II , 1996 in Pleasant Valley .Hosspeed, $jO plus costs; Cheri Lynn
:.oq
McMillier, Lincoln Park , Mich. , pital.
Singers
coming
• r.
· His name was unintentionally omitled from the hst of survivors ·providsjleed. $30 plus costs; Ricbard L.
The
Carpenters
Tqols
of
Shawsville,
Va.,
will
be
at
the
Ho~son
Christi11J1:;
Hansen, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus ed The Daily Senti~el for the death notice.
Fellowship Church Sunday. They will be singing at I 0 a.m.
.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wc'ilnesday in the Ewing Funeral Home .
costs; William Zeigler, Belpre, speed,
$30 plus cos\S: Betsy Jo Stunn ,
"'
Speaker at Forest Run
• :.1i
Washington; W.Va., speed, $30 plus
o~en1ng
The Rev. Arius Hurt will be guest mi~ister at the Forest Run Baptis~J
COS\S: Andrew J. Rawson, Reedsville,
Church Sunday, II a.m.
. ·
: 1: ,
scat belt, $25 plus costs;
(Contln~ed from Page 1)
•
I
Barry AtJen Brandenburg, BoynHorton
said'that
vill~ge
c~ws
are
currenily
preparing
l:em~teries
for
the
.
a:~lSCQVer.y
0~
ton Beach11 Fla., speod, $30 plus
costs ; Thomas'A. Myers. Langsville, Memorial Day holiday, due to the weather which .has hampered cemetery
(Contlnuect from Page 1)
w~ter.6 inches io 5 feet deep over.II)!!,
insecure load, $20 plus costs: James cle'anup work during the early days of May. Honon con finned that crews will Miami with 104 passengers and five th1ck muck. •
~ . Payne. O,!Jshen,lnd., seal hell , $25 begin cleanup and drainage improvement work on the lines on June I .
crew members. The crew reponed
A.s the search dragged on, son:le .
plus cost~; Randy F. Ptcnticc ,
In routine financial review by council. the following village funds bal- smoke in the cockpit and cabin relative~ · of crash victims wer~'
Go~hen, Ind.. scat belt. $15 plus
ances were reported for the end of April by village clerk/treasurer Dennis hefore the tower lost contact.
becoming frustrated.
' ~.\
cosrs; La'l'rence 0 , Bell, Phoenix , Hockman :
,
. Before flying from Atlanta to
"By the time they get out thcr~ ..
Ariz., speej), $30 plus costs;.Gicnn T.
General, $66,645 .81 ; revolving loan, $31 ,84H4; ODNR Waterways, - Miami on its next to ·last flight carli- with thos.c alligators and stuff, shC:O
Nevgebauer, Cincinnati , speed, $30 $766.33; refuse, $19,285.01 ; street maintenance, -$525.3I : law enforcement, er Saturday, the plane was delayed by be all ate up.". said Raquel Pcrr)/,1
plus costs; Robert E.· Lloyd, Crown $2,280.82; water tank, $359.55; water, $2,2,456.35; sewer, $14,319.82; meter maintenance problems, according 19 daugh1er-in-law or crash vicum WilCity, speed. $30 plus costs; Shane S. dcposit, $31 ,283.65 : economic development. $4,408.82; pool improvements, records reviewed by investigators. A hcmina Perry of Miami .
''"'!
Circle, Racine, window tint violation . $51 ,762.10; CHIP program. $2,008.60; fire equipment, -$4.627 .77; fire truck. worker had ·to replace circuit break$20 plus costs;
$11!,016. 10; mini golf, $1.506.79; cemetery, $1,173.12; recreation, $1,598.84; ers for the plane's fuel pump twice
In other developments:
'- ~
Iva M. Sisson, Ru1land, scm hell, COPS program (cash flow), -$2,694.46.
before
the
plane
W'IS
cleared
to
take
• In 'April, the Federal Aviatid~
'
$25 plus costs;
Steven W.. ' Baker.
Fund ·defidl·noted
off:
Administration ordered that a wiriii ·!
Zaleski, warning devices. $55 plus
Francis said he 'couldn' t "start to bundle on all , 816 U.S.-rcgistcre l
Hockman spoke to council about the deficit reported in the street maincosts; hauling without a permit, $50 tcnanc ~ fund, at!fibuting' the shortfall in part to the high e~pen~e of salt for comment" on whether there was any McDonnell Douglas DC-9s, MJ!&gt;! 1
plus costs; .,Johnny B. Wooldridge, the village streets during the winter.
link between the circuit-breakerprob- 90s, ·aQdC-9 (military) aircraft be
Bidwell, insecure load, $20 _plus
Hockman suggested that council also discuss ways 10 reduce operations lem and the crash.
rerouted to "prevent the potential for'
costs; Thof!las G. Riscici , Vienna, and maintenance costs with the ·Strcel department
At the crash scene, about 30 a ... fire and uncontrolled smokE1
W.Va., speed. $30 plus cos IS: Angel
In other maucrs, council:
divers in rubberized suits to protect · throughout the cockpit."
, .,
M. Hicks~eford, N.C .. speed. $30
• approved a motion to rescind a sale posting for a utility trailer that was them from skin-irritating jet fuel
The FAA said !here had been
plus cos'fs; Eri c D. Stein. New village surplus,. and advenise a 1984 Ford F250 truck for bidlts-excess vii- walked through lhe water in shifts repons of \'chafing lound on the wi ~'
Philadelphia. speed, $30 plus costs: lage propeny ;
thai lasted only IS to 20 minutes bundle" in an overhead control pan~~
T.G. Edminston . langsville. unsafe
• approved the April maJOr's rcpon of $2,943.50;
because of the conditions: heat' in the el. The order takes effect Wednesday..
vehicle, $20 plus costs; Shane S. Cir' J. l
• heard from Teresa Kennedy and Lori Rawson about the possibility of 90 s, swarms· of mosquitoes and
de, Racine . speed . $30 plus cosls; new sidewalk construclion in front of Middlcpon Elementary on Pearl Street; horseflies, razor-sharp sawgrass, anll
Daryl E. Nonamakcr, Vienna, W.Va ..
• opened bids for work on ins lallation of poles to secure the new aluminum
failur~ to·control, $10 plus cos1s.
docks at the village's Ohio River levee.
Russell Construction Co., Muskegon , Mich .. submiued the lone bid of
$9.400 for piling driving and steel pole installation. Council accepted the bid,
Units of the Meigs County Emer'
contingent on budget figures and attorney's approval.
·Velerans Memorial
gency Medical Service recorded six
• heard from Dave Bumgarner on plans for the new 80-by-90- foot Mid- calls for assistance Monday, includMonday' adm i.&lt;sions - Emory
dleport
Church of Christ Life Center, to he constructed on a lot along Fifth ing three transfer call s. Unit s
Gordon, Middlcpon.
Street.
Monda~ discharges - Marjorie
responding included:
•
• announced that there will not be a· village spring clean-up, becaus~ 1he
Huff, Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT
new refuse contract with Rumpke eliminates the necessity for a clean-up.
Holzer Medical Center
I :21 p.m., Village Manor ApartAttending the meeting were council members Gilmore, Mick Childs, Belh ments, Nathaniel Young, Holzer
DiS£harges May 13 - Devin
Newell. Nondus Hendricks, Robert Stivers, Rae Gwiazdowski, George Hoffman , Honon and Hockman.
Medical Center.
Council's next regular meeting is Monday, May 27 , 7:30p.m. at the vilThomas.
POMEROY
lage hall.
(PUblished with permission)
3:35 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to Meigs County
Highway Garage, truck fire, O.D.
Edwards driver, no injuries.
· RUTLAND
The following actions to·cnd mar- · Nathaniel Boring from Lora Lynn
Am Ele Power ......,................41'1.
8:23p.m., Star Hall Road, Russell
riage were filed recently in the office 'Boring, May 3; Lorri A. Barnes and Wooten
Akzo ....•~ ................................ 5&amp;~
, HMC.
Ashland·011 .............................41
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- David Barnes. May 6.
. ,,.;
AT&amp;T ...:.................................62'.1
ry Spencer.·
Bank One ............................:.35'1.
11;
Dissolutions asked - Vickie S.
Bob Evans ............................ 15\ McKinney and Chris T. McKinney,
Borg-Warner ......................... 39'o
.... :: ':1:
both of Midd)eport, May 8; James L.
Champion Ind ......................... 18
·
Mon.,
'(Ue.,
Wed.,
Thure.,
9-5;
Fri.
9-6;
Sat.
9-4
Melrose II a'nd Julie K. Melrose, both
Charming Shop .................:... &amp;~
. ,:
of 'Reedsville. May 8.
St. At 7 In Tuppera Plains across a~t from Fanners Bank
City Holdlng ............................ 23
li
Divorces asked- Madgle Smith,
Federlll Mogul ....................... 18\
•f" .J
Gannett" .................................68~
McArthur, from Oscar T. Smith,
!
Goodyear T&amp;R ..........: .............52
Pomeroy, May 7.
,
K·mart ...................................10'h
"•f ')
Divorces granted - William
l.,ands End ..........r::................. 18~
I {.&gt;:J
Limited Inc............................ 2o'l.
._T~(.i
Peapln Bancorp................... 23
'71":~
Ohio Valley Bank .............:......32
•·;1'1
One Valley ............................. 31'1.

Jivtn ~_.week.

26 -

George D. Baer

· The Meigs Couniy Board of Commissioners will ask the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to examine Meigs
County creeks in an effon to control
creek. flooding.
After flooding earlier this month
and last year, commissioners have
heard. from numerous county property OW\Ier5 that creeks should be
cleaned out to ~ i!ilate the flow of
flood water.
·
Commission President Fn:d Hoffman cited Leading Creek in particu1•, ·noting that the creek has filled
with silt in recent years, leavhig
runoff water with no place to go
except over the banks.
1be board approved a resolutiOn
to get the state to waive a requirement
of the state's Appalachian counties to
provide the 25 percent local match to
receive 'federal ,children's services

. ..
~

"

,SUISCIIIPTION RATBS

87 C.m.r .. M- Joult
Ooe\Vet1t............. .....................................S2.00
One Mon~................... ........"............ ...... $8.10
Ooe Year .......... ............ ............. ............ $104.00

'

By The Aleocll1ecl Preea

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Tumingcloudy. Showers
likely and a chance of thunderstorms
west after midnight A chance of
showersea't late. lows mainly .in the
50s.
,'
Wedncsday .. .Brcely and mild
with· showers ahd thunderswrms.
·Highs 65 to 70 nonh, to the upper 70s
southwe11.
!'xtended forecast :
Thurs'day and Fnday .. .Achance of
showers and . thunderstorms. Lows
from the 60s north to 55 to 60 south.
·Highs from the 70s north to near 80
south.
Saturday...Chance nf showers and
thunderstorms. low mid 50s tu lower 60s.,Highs from the mtd 70s nonhcast io the mid 80s southwest.

County court cases ended

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

~ Editor,
To bile a SO pound bale of hay the
;ln yesterday's mail I received a tli- twine on.one bale wOiild 45 cents, the
ep~anting to sell me burial insW'&amp;Dce way the twine was priced.
i(.twas under 85. I am over 85 so as
So, according to the Clinton
f~ as that insurance was concerned administration, inflation is under
I tln already dead and buried.
control and low. If it is, what do we
•Y/e went to the groeery store last · call this that is happening to the cost
week to buy .soine .red cabbage. It was of things?
marked $1.29 a pound. In 1959 the
It seems to me that most people do
late Dan Hartifll!er told me that he not knQw what is going on in the real
would put his whole farm in cabbage world.
Cattle prices were never lower.
if he could get five cents a ·pound
guaranteed.
Com prices were never higher. No
While out larking around we filled body is buying. Banks pay practicalour aged four-cylinder Escort with ly nothing for any of your savings,
$1.359 gas. Thought it was a bargain but go into a bank for some service
compared to other Slations.
and you will gel a list with prices
Now, the latest good news coming before you open your.mouth.
over the horizon is that the phone
Conclusion: any .one who votes
companies plan to fl!ise the wic costs (taxes) on himself is out of his
phone rate b~ $10. That in practicill mind qr stupid. These do-gooders
terms is doubling it Phone compa, · will make sure that none of. your
nics already have surcharges, access money gets moldy. Do-gooders are
charges and wire maintenance people out tryins to save humanity
charges.
with somebody else's money.
Thought of planting some soyGayle Prke
heans for hay. Those beans were
Portland
priced at $25 for a SO pound bushel.

I

Warming trend in store
for latter part of week

Does the java jive really. love me?·
picks yoiL.up then Iput§ you dqwn!
(My last produet along tliese lines, '
Zac 'n' Jack -· a mixture of Prozac
and bourbon -- did very well, especially among college students.)
. We could niake caffein,ated lipstick, balms and nail polish. My
research lab is currently working on
a sun screen lotion that will block·
harmful ultra-violet radiation -- and
deliver a 100 milligram dose of jav11
right through.your skin.
.My development team experimented with a coffee styling mousse.
Unfortunately, it just wouldn't keep
you awake. All it did was curl your
hair.
A portable caffeine i. v. drip (for
use in the car or home) is now in the
testing slages.
We're also working on a caffeinated stuffing that will keep the
family alert during those long
Thanksgiving dinners. And we've
.come up with a maple S)'rllplcoffee
combination that'll have you wolfing
!down waffles compulsively till
·lunchtime.
How about a caft:eine patch, like
&gt;the nicotine patch? We could caf.feinate envelope glue, or the backs of
.postage staq~ps. How about instaUing

Clyda L. AlleMwonh, 90, Middleport, died Monday, May 13, 1996 at the
Overbrook Center, Middleport. · '
Born Jan. 31, 1906 in Bradbury, daughter of the late Alpheus and Edith
Winkler Russell, she was a homemaker, and a member of the Middleport
Cl!urch of Christ, where she was active in cburch organizations.
' She is survived by three sisters, Sus.an Rawlings of Delaware, and Jessamae Brannon and Floradell Grueser, both of Middleport; three grandchil·
dren and seven great-grandchildren; a son-in-law, Gen. James V. Hartinger
of Colorado Springs, Colo,; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Edgar Allenswonh; a
daughter, Susan Eileen Hartinger; and four sisters, Bernice Fox, Gladys Russell. Ge~e Miller and Edythe Jay.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will follow in the Riverview Cemetery, Middlepon. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Wednes·
day.
W. VA.

Jt may sound goOd in the short
run, but even those of us who aren't
pregnant or gay and who don't smoke
or eat doughnuts should watch out.
George Orwell pred~cted that Big
Brother would be a mililaristic government. Turns ou~ Big Brother is us.
· San ·Eckel Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper· Enterprise
~mtioL
·
Send comments to the author
In care of this newspaper or send ·
ller e-lnall •t &amp;lll'llenmaol.com.

1

Clyda L. Allensworth

• JColurnoos J1o•

Gannett News Service

Inflation under control ?

'•'

MICH .

•

Or is it simply that our neighbors'
• habits are an easier target than the ·
other forces that disturb us? Why
blame pollution on your car or the
factory that employs you when you
could just as easily point the finger at
the guy on the park bench lighting a
Camel? Why wrestle with your own
conflicted desires when you could put
all that el)ergy into criticizing·lhC sexual habits iif others?·Why hate your:
self for going off your diet whcn·it's
so much .less trouble to hate someone
eiS&lt;i?
•

• I don't drink colas. I don't do midwestern sta~s where it js being
decaf. I·like my coffee ·so hot I have - mar)ceJCd. Itls called Wa$.et .Joe r; a
to sign .a relelise fonn to buy it. I'm 16-ounce bottle of artesian well water
a l¥!le-black-to,go kind of guy. My · with a 70 milligram dollop of cafmorning goal is 1o drink just enough
coffee to set my back'teeth grinding,
lanShoales
form beads of sweat on my forehead
the size of marbles, and cause my feine. It's intended to be a ·healthier
hands to shake uncontrollably.
alternative to coffee and cola,
How do I know when my caffeine .
Who's. buying i,t?
needs have been met? Simple. When
"Truckers atid traveling salesmen
the slightest noise makes me jump whose stomachs rebel at the day's
four feet in the air, and when I can no fifth or sixth cup of coffee or can of
longer hold small objects, I use both cola, bartenders and students trying to
hands to turn the cup over. It's a good stay alert in the wee hours, coffee
system. It works for me.
fanatics .looking for ways to brew
But I'in no snob. I realize that their java with an extra kick and folks
eyerybody has his ,or her 11wn favored who want their breakfast oraqge
method of caffeine ingestion, Some juice to be a real eye-opener. " Als!)
chew lablets. Some sprinkle inslant guzzling the hyperwater are futures
coffee on their com flakes . Some traders at the Chicago Board of
enjoy a frosty malted laced with Trade, where, "to avoid messes, botground beans. Some make a thin . tied water ·is the only beverage
paste of sugar, cream, and I!Biian allowed on the trading floor."
Roast and smear it on their gums.
Apparently the market for caffeine
These are all viable ways to stay is endless. There must he a way for
awake.
an entrepreneur like me to ·cash in on
And more are being launched it: Here are some ideas. Any market,every day.
ing types out there, give me a call. We
According to · The New York .can make a deal, I just know it
Times, a new "caffeine delivery sysHow about a Prozac and coffee
tem" is doing quite well in the 12 capsule? Easily dissolved in water, it

Commissioners seek·~
help for flood control:•

•

forecut

privllcllllllcihanotonlybee!lused fwith the icy gl~rea she received.
as a buis for employment ditaimi- 1Another friend wu havins a 1111 of
nltioa, it bas at variOiis times !Ken t po!ltochipl when a stnnger scolded
the rap for the entire dedine of Amer- I her for "feeding that to ycu baby."
1 "When yoo're pregnant, you're
ican civilization.
Women's reproductivity hJ also ,Ilike pub&amp; property," says Carolyn.
been prey to excessive public intru- f "People feel like they can walk up to
sion. Not since Roe v. Wade have we jyou and touch you. Can you imqine
seen so much governmental med- ~ having a total stranger just come up
dlina in women's wombs, with most r to you and touch your stomach7"
of the regulations coming from the • Now even nonpregnant fast-food
very politicians who say •they are . eaters may be subject to public disagainst big government (and who approval. Eatina Well magazine
don't have wombs themselves). But recendy reported on an Arizona State
abortion isn't the only reproductive .University study that found that peo.
issue, and, sadly, politicians aren't the pic view healtl!y caters as being more
only lifestyle monitors. My friend ·virtuous than those who eat "bad"
Carolyn discovered this when she foods such as steak, hamburgers, ice
w~ pregnant with her first child. It
cream and french fries. Doughnut
was a sweltering August day, and she · caters look lbe biaiest hit, 8Ji they
decided to buy some beer for the guys were COMidered (o- be "Jacking i~
doing construction work on her, discipline -- weak and even
house. I'm sure I don't have to tell immoral, " said the magazine.
you what happened next: She could
have cooled the entire neiahborh!)Od
Is this what we have come to7 Are
qualities such as honesty, integrity
and kindness so abstract that we must
now judge one another by the props
we carry -· the Big Macs, the Budwciscrs. the Marlboro Lights?

•

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

..............................................101.72

.

'

'

To;:

_.__,_.

Stock ,.potts ar• the 10:3~
1.m. qUOtas provided by Adwlll
of ~lllpolll.

·STARIIIG
AI

$159!s.t

POMEROY
..... PoiiMII'Oy 1111111'1 Bridge

912-2&amp;88
. VINTON

Gall l.c :s

~l F\o~

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VIsa ·. Mastercard • Discover accepted •
Ql\ Spot Financing • Approved CredH

$18900

Femlly Owned and Ope~ated·-· vour PtfiONII Satisfaction Ia Our t1 Concern

Y81d

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·

DRIVE A UTTLE SAVE A LOTI -1167-7388

!

•

•

.. r.:

GLIDER

..,

'

•.•·rl
~

....q

~- ~ ·

,

• :.

,

• 1;1

,....

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•

Sports

•

·•

•

Tunday, May 14, 1~J. ;

The Daily Sentinel

-.

·

•

..

Pege4 .

Tueaday, May 14, 1998

•

the Mei1s Marauders defeated the
Gallia Academy Blue Devils 6-0 in
Sectional baseballtourna!Jlent action
Monday evening at Meigs High
Sohool.
, The win gave the Marauders their
setond sectional championship in a
row. Meigs will now advance to dis·
trictplay next Monday at Zane Trace
High ;School against Jackson. Meigs
is now 12·6 on the year. Jackson
· owns a I 5-4 record.

DAILEY LOSER • Gallipolis senior Jason Dailey was taggecj
with the lou In Monday night's tournament game against Meigs.
The !Marauders ousted GAHS 6-o to advance to district tournament play.

"

...... &gt;.;-,

... ..
• \0., ! ,- ~· •

... ;; "

FIRES ND-HmER • Meigs' Scott George hurled a no-hit, norun baUball game against Gallipolis Monday night In the 1996
Dlvlllon II sectional tournament as the Marauders eliminated the
Blue Devils 6-0. h was a career-first lor the MHS junior, shown
aboVf taklrlg a healthy cut during his turn at bat.

76ers
. fire Lucas, .two assistants
.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - John
Lucas, who lost his JOb as general
manager of the Pt ·iladelphia 76ers
last week, was fin: I as coach of the
team today.
Brad Greenberg, hired as the
team's general manager last Wednesday, said two of Lucas' assistants,
Ron Adam's and Tom Thobodeau. also
were dismissed.
·
Lucas, 43, was hired .by former
team owner Harold Katz on June 14,
t994. but the 76ers. who haven't
made the NBA playoffs since 1991 .

continued to sink.
This season. Philadelphia was 1864, bener only lhati the expansion
Vancouver Gri12lies, who ended the
season 15-67. The 76ers set an NBA
record for sustained futility by losing
successively more games in each of
the last six seasons.
Lucas was 42- 12~ as 76ers head
coach after compiling a 94-'49 record
in his previous two seasons as coach
of the San Antonio Spurs.
There was no immediate word on
who would replace Lticas:

Blues hope to oust Red Wings tonight
DETROIT (AP) - Detroit fans
watched their club win the first two
aames against St. Louis, only to suf·
fer through three straight losses thao
have pushed the Red Wings to the
brink of elimination.
Now they can read all about the
Blues' strategy. courtesy of excerpts
from a St. Louis scouting report published today in The Detroit News.
. An employee at the Atheneum
Hotel in dow'ntown Detroit found a
copy of the·report several days ago
under the bed of the Blues forward
Brian Noonan. The employee hand·
eel it over to WDFN-AM. who faxed
itiO The News.
·
There isn't much in the 13-page
report that Detroit fans haven't
llready seen from the Blues, ·who
l8kc a 3-21cad in the best-of· 7 Westem Conference S!lmifinal serie~ into

tonight's game at St. Louis.
The Blues ' "keys to winning"
includes entries such as "Avoid
penalties" and "Take points out of
their offense. " St. Louis had only two
minor penaliies in its J-Z victory in
Game 5 and Detroit stars Sergei
Fedorov. Steve Yzerman and Paul
Coffey failed to scores in Game 4 and

s.

.

.

The report also said Fedorov
"liates to be hit," as does defenseman
Viacheslav Fetisov. It ·said the Blues
need to "finish checks" on Yzerman,
Fetisov, Coffey and Igor Larionov.
Detroit forward Kris Draper isn't
worried about the repon, which said
he "works hard every shift" but "gets
outmuscled."
"We have scouting reports on
them, too," Draper .said. "In this
league, there are no secrets."

Tornsdoe• •dt!•nce to ,HCond round

Sou~

back to retire the next three batters to
end the threat.
Meigs carne back in the bottom of
the first inning to take a 4-0 lead.
George led off the inning by reach·
ing on catchers interference. Two
ground outs advanced the runner to
third. Rick Hoover and Cass Cleland
then followed with back-to-back singles, a walk to Brad Whitlatch a Gal·

.
lipolis error and a single by Chris · Devils had to a hit came in the third Dailey walked four batters.
The
Marauders
will
travel
to
Vin·
Roush gave the maroon 311d gold the inning when Jason Dailey led off the
4-0 advantage.
inning with a soft line drive to sec- ton County on Thursday to tangle ·
Meigs plated two more runs in the ond that Whitlatch climbed the lad- 'with the Vikings in a key 1VC con·
sec()Jld inning to close out the scor- der and snagged when it look like it test.
GAHS 000 000 0-0 0 I
ing. Chad Burton doubled with two ·was heading into center field.
outs, and Gary Stanley and Rick
Meigs had eight hits off of losing Meigs 4~0 000 x-6 8 2
Hoover both~ingled to give Meigs a pitcher Dailey. Stanley, Hoover and . Dailey (LP)
George (WP) ·
6-0 lead.
Roush had two singles each. Burton
The closest thing that the Blue added a double and Cleland a single.

Orioles. hold on for 4-3 win over A's

'

.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)- David
Wells is sidelined with a case of gout.
Scott Erickson twisted his ankle
playing pepper. All of a sudden. Rick
Krivda could be a key starter for the
Baltimore Orioles.
Krivda. promoted from the minors
last week, pitched silt strong innings •
·Monday nigllt as a late replacement
for the ailing Wells. and the Oriole.s
held on for a 4-3 win over the Oakland Athletics.
" We needed that. He was great,"
teammate Brady Anderson said of
. Krivda, who allowed one run and
four .hits.
.
Randy Myers gave up two singles
in the ninth, but got pinch-hiller
George. Williams on a grounder to
short for his ninth save. it was his
252nd save, tying him with Dave
Righetti for ninth on the career list.
Krivda (1-0). whose only previous
major league appearance this season
was a twO-inning ?etief stint last
Wednesday in which he allowed five
hil~ ~nd three runs, struck out five
and was helped by three. double
plays. 'The only run ·he allowed
scored on.Brcnt Gates' bloop single
in the third. ·
·
"I think today was more anxiousness than nervousness," said Krivda,
whose ERA was 13.50 after· the
relief.appearaoice and 4.50 after Monday night's performance. "I ·knew
when I pitched in relief it was not
such a good outing."
Wells was scr'iuched from the
start because the gout was causing
severe swelling in. his right big toe.
He was .expected to unilergo more
tests today.
.
. Erickson hurt his left ankle before
Monday's game. The severity of the
. injury was.unclear,, •
,·.
"Rick Krivda did a heck of a job.
A great job. I was impressed·." Orioles manager Davey John~on said.
" It was just' enough' '
In other AL games, Texas edged
Kansas City 7-6 and Milwaukee beat
Chicago 6-2.
, ·
The Orioles scored all four of their
runs in ;he first off Doug Johns.
Anderson hit the game's first pitch
into the right-field comer for a double, and Mike Deyereaux singled.
Roberto Alomar hit an RBI double
and Rafael Palmeiro grounded out to
first to drive in the second run.
Bobby Bonilla mad.e it 3-0 with an
RBI single to left and, after Cal Rip·
J,j!n doubled into the left-field corner,
Bonilla scored on a wild pitch.
"I think it was lucky ,we got him
carl)'. because he shut us down after
thqt." Anderson said of.Johns.
The A's scored the.ir second run in
the seventh on an RBI single by Mike ·
Bordick, and Ernie Young homered

leading. off the eighth. his sixth Rangen 7, Royals 6
homer in his last six games. Both runs
Rusty Greer hit a two-run double
came off Roger McDowell .
in a thre~-run eighth inning as Texas
Johns (3-4) allowed nine hits and · rallied to beat visiting Kansas ~ty
four walks in seven innings.
,.amd won for the ninJh time in 12
"1loey wete very aggressive in the games.
·
first..Uoey were swinging at the first
Royals starter Kevin Appier was
pitch and (Johns) wasn't throwing knocked. out in the first w' n a liner
very good pitches." A's catcher Ter- by Greer struck him in e ri~ht
ry Steinbach said. "I give Doug a lot kneecap. Appier.left with the. bases
of credil - he adjusted and kept us loaded and was taken to a hospotal for
in the game. The key to becoming a X-rays, which were negative. The·
big-league pitcher is learning how to Royals said he is not expected to miss
shut the door."
any starts.

KEHL f~KES A,CUT ·Eastern's Jeremy Kehl (1 !ii) takes a cut
during Monday's 1ectlonal tournament baseball game against
Southern. The Eagles were eliminated 12-5 by the Tornadoes:

Jackson, Gallia tops in state

' .

LET US NOT FORGETooo
1bose Who Have Given lbelr Lives
To Preserve America's Freedom
7bls Memorial Day, we would like to pay tribute to tbe

Hunters take record
number of turkeys
COLUMBUS (AI') - 1loe Ohio
: Division of Wildlife says hunters
took a record number of wild turkeys
durjng Ohio's spring hunting season.
Preliminary figures the division
released Monday show 12,072 .
turkeys were harvested during the
three-week season. an inc.ease of
10.8 percent over last year's total of
I 0,892 birds. The season ended Saturday.
It was the 19th consecutive. yearfor areeord turkey harvest in Ohio,
the division said.

sc.

many brave many and women who bave given tbelr lives
to uphold and protect our country's Ideals. r

oTo remember your loved
one in this special way.
send $10.00 per listing.
Picture optional. Your
special
tribute
will
llcc.omc a permanent
memorial record il) our
paper. All tributes must
oc rccci\'cd no later .than
Tuesday. May 21. 4:1NJ Jl.m.
Fill nul the form hclnw and
.mail to:

10. 1961-May S, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

CHICAGO (AP) ~ The Colorado Avalan.che advanced to the
third round of the playoffs for the first
time in II years. defeating the Chica·
go Blackhawks 4-3 Monday night on
Sand is Ozolinsh 's goal 5: 18 into the
second over1ime.

•

TilE DAILY
SENTINEL

Always in our beans,
John anll Mona Andrews
and Family

Fondest Memories
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

With

I

Name or deceued

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Dote or ..,.inc

Dote or birth

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ATLANTA (AP) - Shaquille
O'Neal looked for a bright spot in a
· dismal evening.
"Winning at home makes it
sweeter," he said, looking ahead to
Orlando's chance to wrap up the
Eastern Conference semifinals
against Atlanta with ~ victory
Wednesday night.
Of course, if O'Neal could make
a free throw every now and then, the
series would have ended Monday
night .and the Magic could be resting

Marlins

~

Deemer picked up the win in
super ellon. He f~ned ni!'"• ~
·
one. and gave up no hill tn li
innings of work: B~nt aave up
seven Easteo11 hits. Hollsulfered
loss with relief from Dun!.
Ash, Dailey, and McKelvey weND
all 2 for 3 with O.iley colleclin1 iO
tnple and double. ~mer and Travi~
Losle also hl!d two songlea, and~~&gt;"~
nard had a songle: Deemer, Loslel~~
Maynard, and Duley all had two&gt;··
RBI's apiece.
lwl
Don Goheen and Steve Ours~
each had two hits, while Bripn
Bowen. Travis Curtis, and Clifford'··
Stev~ns each singled.
·~• :
Lonescore:
"''
Eastern 023 000 0- 5 7 3
;1-1
Southern 071 2JI x-12 II I
'•
WP-Deemer
'"
LP-Hill
/
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By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
First, a no-hitter...Then, a dramatic game-ending homer. And now, a
payback grand slam and an eightgame winning streak.
It's been three thrilling days for
the Aorida Marlins.
Two batters after Gary Sheffield
was ejected after being hit by Andy
Benes. Terry Pendleton hit a grand
slam Monday night to give Aorida a
5·2 win over the Cardinals, eJttending the Marlins' winning streak to
eight games.
Pendleton's shot capped a threeday span in which AI Leiter pitched
the first no-hitter in Florida's brief
history and Charles ~phnson hit a
two-run homer in the ninth inning for
a 7-5 win over Colorado.
· In the si~th inning, Benes;leading
J.Q, hit Sheffield on the lefrarm with
a 2-2 pitch. Sheffield fell to the
· ground in pain before jumping to his
fee( and slamming his bat to the
ground. He started to head towards

;:

·up for.the probable meeting with the clanked off the rim, most with not
Atlanta's Steve Smith, criticiz
Chicago Bulls in the conference even a glimmer of hope of touching · for not shooting enough in the series
finals.
the bottom of the net . By' the end of seemed eager to change that perce
Instead. Orlando races another the night. he was 5-for-17, missing all tion in one night. setting a c~
g'ame with the pesky Hawks, who seven in the second half when the playoff high with 35 points.
:1·
blew
20.point halftime !ead in game - and the series - was there
"l happened to hit a couple. so tl '
Game 4. but held on to win 104-99. . to be won by the Magic.
kept shooting them and hit some-:
After losing the first three games.
'"I've won more games 1han I've more," said Smith. wbo was 7-of- t¥,
Atlanta managed to avqid a.sweep in lost at the line," said O'Neal, who from 3-point range and 12-of-3['.
large part because O'Neal's old buga- isn't going to win many with his 42 overall. "I got more open looks."· ::
boo - foul shooting - ·reared up percent free-throw shooting in the
The Hawks were brilliani in thi
again at critical moments.
·
playoffs . "Tonight was my fault. I first hal( leading by a5 many as 21:.
O~e after another. his shots
points
..,
don't make excuses for .my play."

a

d~wn

boa· r~ -----. .

American League
East Division
W
L
Pd.
GB
21
14
.600
New York
2
20
17
.541
Baltimore
4 112
17
19
.472
Toronto
9
12
23
.343
Boston
II
12
27
.308
·Detroit
Central Division
GB
W
L
Pet.
23
12
.
.657
Cleveland
4'
20
17
.541
Chicago
7
16
19
.457
Milwaukee
7
16
19
.457
Minne~lta
9
16
23
.410
Kansas City
West Division
W
L
Pel.
GB
25
IJ
.658·
re~as
20
17
.541 I 4 J/2
Seattle
19
18
.514
s 112
California
19
18
.
.
514
5
112
Oakland
I
Monday's ~Is
. Milwaukee 6. Chicago 2
Tcltas 7. Kansas City 6
Baltimore 4, Oakland.3
Only games scheduled
•
'JUaday's Games
·California (Finley 4-2) at Boston (Sele 1-3), 7:05·p.m .
Deuoit (Gohr 2-4) at Cleveland (Nagy S-1), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Hitchcock 3-1) at New York (Gooden 1-3), 7:35 p.m.
«;:hhc:ago (Alvarez 2~3) at Milwaukee (Bones 2.5). 8:0S p.m.
I

1r----------------------~----)&gt;lease publish my tribute in the special Memorial Day Sect inn nn May 24. ,I
I
.

1

~r
· ·

·
at onal League
By The Associated Press
East Division
Pet.
GB ·
W
L
Montreal
27
12
.692
Atlanta
24
14
.632
1 112
Philadelphia
18
18
.500
7 1/2
A'orida
19
21
.475
8 112
N~w Vork ·
I5 •·
21
.417
I0 I12
Centnal Division
W
L .
Pet.
GB
Chicago
18
20
.474
16
18
.471 .
CincinriJli
Houston
18
21
.462
112
Pittsburgh
16
22
.421
2
St. Louis
16
.22
.421
2
West Division
W
L
Pet.
GB
San Diego
23
15
.605
San Francisco
20
17
.541
2 1/2
Los Angeles
18
21
.462
5 1/2
Colorado
IS
21
.417
7
Monday's results
F)orida 5, St. Louis 2
Atlanta 9, Pittsburgh 3
Chicago 6. Houston 0
San Francisco 2. Philadelphia I
Montreal 3. Los Angeles 2
San Diego 5, New York 2
Only games scheduled
1\Jesday's Games
Houston (Kilc 4-2) at Chicago (Nav.arro 2-4). 2:20p.m .
St. Louis (Osborne 2-2) at Aorida (Miller 1-0). 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (O.Fernandez 3-1) at Philadelphia (Sc~illing 0-0),
7:35p.m.
·
Colorado (Reynoso 2-3) at Cincinnati (Schourck 4- 1). 7:35 p.m.
Piusburgh (Waghcr 4-3) at Atlanta (Smoltz 7-1). 7:40p.m.
Montreal (Alvarez 1-1) at Los Angeles (Martinez I -0). 10:05 p.m.
New York (Wilson 1-2) at San Diego (Ashby 4-2). 10:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
·
.
San Francisco (Leiter 2-4) at Philadelphia (Mulholland 3-3). I :05
p.m.
Houston (Brocaill -3) at Chicago (Castillo 1-4). 2:20p.m.
St. Louis (Stottlemyrc 2-2) at Florida (Rapp. 2-3), 7:05p.m.
Colorado (Freeman 3,3) at Cincinnati (Ponugal 0-3). 7:35p.m.
Pittsburgh (Neagle 4-1) at Atlanta (Avery 4-2). 7:40p.m.
Montreal (Fassero 3-3) at Los Angeles (Candioui 1-3 ). 10:35 p.m.
New York (Jones 3, I) at San Diego (Bergman 2-3). 10:35 p.m.

•

July

Hunters in Jackson County took
617 turkeys. the most in any county.
Other top counties were GaiJia (55 1
birds). Vinton (529), Meigs (527).
Athens (473). Washington (453).
Monroe (439). Muskingum (439),
Guernsey (436) and Hocking (419).
Hunters with the proper permits
were allowed to take up to two bearded gobblers.
·
The season was open in 46 counties, two more than last year. Lake
and Summit counties were added to
the 1996 season.

.

On Friday, May 24, we will puhl ish
a special section devoted to those
who are gone but not forgouen .
The names will be placed in
alphabetical order and will be
similar to the sample below.

Andrews, David C

Nn:Sreve Durst followed with •two-'
run double and Blount got the hook.
Kevin Deemer carne on to set out of
the jam, giving up na more runs the
rest of the inning nor the rest of the
game.
Deemer struck out the first batter
he faced, then after hitting a batter
fanned the second victim of the
inl'ing.
In the last three innings, Deemer
struck out seven of the last ten bat·
ters he faced.
Meanwhile, on the way to an
eleven hit night, Southern scored
insurance runs here and there, going
up 8-5 in the third, then 1_0-5 in the
fourth. Steve Durst carne on in relief
of Eric Hill in the founh inning, but
tbe.da!llage had already been done as
Southern· skated to the 12-S win.

Hawks ·"void shutout, trip ·Magic 104-99

'

fiiirl!~~~*~*~~~ ·'

Colorado edges
Chicago 4-3 in
NHLplayoffs

The Avalanche. in their first season in Denver after 16 years as the
Quebec Nordiques, ·beat the Blackhawks in six games and will meet
either St. Louis or Detroit in the
Western Conference final.
:rtoe Blackhawks last won..a Stanley Cup in 1961 , the NHL'S:secondlongest drought to Detroit's 40 years.
They lost four of their final five
games after starting the. posl~eason 5. 0, including a victory in this series'
opener.
·
On the winner. Valeri Kamensky
centered the puck to Ozolinsh. whose
shot hit the crossbar. But Ozolinsh
followed the puck and put the
rebound behind goalie Ed Belfour.
It was the fourth overtime game of
the series. After losing the first two,
Colorado won the last two~ including Game 4 in triple OT-to reach
a conference final for only the third
time in franchise history.
Joe Sakic scored·his NHL playoffhigh 13th goal at I :29 of the third
period and Kamensky scored his
second goal of the game 5:33 later as
· Colorado took a 3-2 lead. But Chicago 'tied it with 59.2 seconds left in
reJulation, Joe Murphy scoring on
Jeremy Roenick's centeri11g pass
after the Blackhawks pulled Belfour
for a sixth attacker.

Brewen 6, Whit~ox 2
.
DaVe Nilsson htt his first homer of
the season and knuckleballer ·Steve
Sparks (2-4) snapped out ofa threestart slump.
.
Starting on nine days' rest, Sparks
gave up two earned runs and seven
hits in seven innings. leaving after
Frank Thomas· leadoff homer in the
eighth. Marshall Boze pitched ., 2-3
innings for his first career save.,
Nilsson, activated from tl\c disabled on Thursday, homered in the
second off rookie James Baldwin (31).

•

The
Tornadoes eltploded sinJie with no outs, but the next two
out ~f ~ aate with «seven-Nn see- EHS batters went down swinging and
Olld mnongto blast the Eastern Ea&amp;les Jason Sheets wu out on a fielder's
12-S M~~y night i~ area high choice to end the inning. Eastern left
schOOl Dovosoon IV seetionaltouma- two runners stranded, but led 2-0.
ment baseball action in Racine.
In the Southern half of the second,
Southern improved its record to 8- Coach Mick Winebrenner's club
II overall.
erupted for seven runs. Shawn Dai·
Sou~ern threatened in the first ley led off with a triple. Jay McKwhen Mtchael Ash led off woth a s1n- elvcy had an RBI single. Joe Kirby
gle, advanced on a ground o and reached safely on a fielder's cboic.e,
stole third. Ash. however. was. left Chad Blount reached on an error and
stranded on any out and 4·3 ground Mike Ash had an RBI single. K~ven
out to·end the inning.
Deemer walked and Jesse Maynard
Eastern'had gOf\e down 1-2-3 in !langed a two-Nn double to push the
the first inning. but jumped all over " score to 7-2.
~tarter Chad· Blount in the second
EaStern did not stumble. 1lof
onnong. Don · Goheen worked the Eagles came right back owith three
count to 3;2 then !ipped .a sing!e.- · runs in the top ofthe third to.tighten
. Steve Durst song led, and Mtke Smoth the score at 7-5. Brian Bowen led off
reached on an error to load.the bases. · with a single Travis Curtis singled
Clifford s¢vens had a two-run and Don Goheen doubled home a

George tosses no-hit, no-run
game
against
GAHS
.
The junior in pitching the first
masterpiece of his career gave up
four walks and struck out seven bat·
ters. Scott now owns a 5·2Jilark on
the season. Although baseball records
are incomplete, it is believed to be the
•third no-hitter in the 29 year history
of Meigs High School. Back in 1975.
Perk Ault no-hit Ironton, and in .t978
Tim Ebersbach fired a no·hitter
against Galli a Academy.
George got into a little trouble in
the top of the first inning when the
first two batters reached base on a
error and a walk. But the junior came

The o.lly S1 1llnel• P. . '

I

Southern blasts Eagles 12-5 in sectional -

ltfarauders advance In tourney with 6-D wJn as

By DAVE HARRIS,
OVP News Staff
, Sc:ott George fired a no hitter as

Pometoy •lllddl1port, Ohio

•

Cards 5-2, extend win streak ,

Benes on the mound. but · was ·
restrained by catcher Tom Pagnozzi
as both benches emptied.
Benes and Sheffield then shouted
· at each other_ for several minutes, and
were both ejected by home plate
umpire Bob Davidson.
When play resumed, reliever T.J.
Mathews walked the next bauer to
load the bases (or Pendleton, who hit
his founh career grand slam and
fourth homer of the season.
"It felt good; I was already fired
up." Pendleton said. "The fans were
screaming at us, 'Show them with the
bajS.' And they were absolutely right.
My adrenaline was going big-time."
The Marlins' winning streak. the
longest in the major leagues, ties the
club record set from July 27 to Aug.
8 last year.
Elsewhere in the NL. it was
Atlanta 9. Pittsburgh 3; Chicago 6,
Houston 0; San Fnonei~o-2': Philadel·"'
phia I; San Diego 5. New York 2; and
Montreal 3. Los Angeles 2.
Braves 9, Pirates 3

Tom Glavine won his lOth con- home~ in the seventh inning to snap
secutive home decision against Pitts- a tie, and three San Francisco pitchburgh.
ers combined for 14 strikeouts.
Glavine (4-J), unbeaten against
With the scorc'tied 1-1 in the sev-.
the Pirates in Atlanta. gave up three enth. Williams hit a 1-0 pitch from .
hits. struck out four and walked two Sid Fernandez (2·3) deep into the
in si~ innings. helping the Braves win left-field seats ror his ninth homer.
for the eighth-time in nine games. He ~pos 3, Dodgen 2
.
~
added a two-run single.
At Los Angeles, David Segui hit
David Justice drove in four runs, a game-tying double in the ninth and
and Mark Lemke went 4-for-5 for the Darrin Fletcher followed with a sac- ,
Braves.
rifice ny as Montreal rallied for itS:;
Danny Darwin (2-4), starting fourth straight win.
'
against Atlanta for the first iimc in six
Pedro Astacio took a three-hitter
years. took the loss.
and a 2-0 lead into the ninth. but w~
Cubs 6, Astros 0
.
chased by singles from Mark
Steve Trachs~l gave up ~ne hot Grudzielanek and Mike Lansing."
a leadoffdouble on the first mnong- . Henry Rodriguez's single off Todd • '
for his first career shutout.
. Worrell (1-2) loaded the bases. and
Aher Bnan Hunter opened the Segui hit a ground-rule double.
game .woth a double, Trachsel (3-2) Fletcher scored Lansing with a fly to
gav~ up a walk in the second inning medium left.
before retmpg 14 straoght .. He .struck . Barry Manuel (2-0) pitched lWO
out 11 "'-and""al~ We&amp; •n his fim ' Innings, allowing Mike PiaztJl's sev- •
c~mplete ga~c .thos season. •
cnth homer in a 12-gamc span. Mel ;•
Goanls 2•.Philhes 1
. .
Rojas struck out three in the ninth for : ,:
At Phtladelphta. Matt Wolhams his sixth save.
·.
:l.

............ ........................................................ ::

,.
Eight rookies

~

·t't

,.

included in
Indy 500 field
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
fastest driver in thdodianapolis 500
has a starting spot right next to the
slowest. with eight rookies among the
18 drivers in. the six rows ahead of
him . .
But don'tlook for Arie Luyendyk
to make·a mad dash to the front of the
pack once the green nag falls on May
26. He's been around too long and
knows better.
'Til go for alllhese openings if
they 're there ... he said. "If not. I.' II
pick my .way through the field. I'll
definitely consider the inexperience
of these guys. I'm not going to rush
things."
Indeed, why take the risk?
In 79 previous Indy 500s. the first·
lap leader went on to win the race
only 16times. Rick Mears and Johnny Rutherford were the only drivers
to lead both the first and last laps
twice. Luyendyk. the 1990 Indy winner and in the race for the 12th time.
has never led the opening lap.
"Anytime you stan in the sixth.
seventh. eighth row, you're in the
middle of tbe pack. There arc bad
spots. there's a lot of turbulence. The
car docs a lot of crazy things and you
have to be on your toes." Luyendyk
said.
·• I staned here once 14th and went
to fifth by finding openings pretty
quickly," he said. " But by no means
will I just go for it. I' m going to be
very apprehensive and careful."
Luyendyk qualified with one- and
fQur-lap records of 237 .498 mph and
236.986 mph. But the fast runs came
Sunday, the second day of qualifications, after his Saturday run was disallowed because of a weight violation. So instead of starting up front.
he must begin behind all the forst-day
qualifiers.
His tentative spot.on the outside of
the seventh row is next to rookie dri·
. ver Jim Guthrie, the slowest among
the 26 qualifiers so far at 222.394
. mph. The slow~sl qualifying speed
last year was 225.023 by then-rookie Eliseo Sal~. who will start this
time from the second row.
Scott Brayton is on the pole at
233.718 mph. Rookie Tony Stewart
is next at 233.100 and veteran Davy
Jones is on the Outside of the front
row at 232.882. Among the other drivers ahead of Luyendyk 11re rookies ·
Michel Jourdain Jr.. BuU. Calltins,

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ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1996
On Thursday, May 2lrd, The Daily Sentinel will
have a special ed~tion with photographs of high
~chool seniors graduating this year. Now
through Friday, May 17th, Drop Your Photo
Off At The Daily Sentinel or At Your High
School Office.To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge. .
(Attac~ Your Name and High School to Photo)

.

******

.

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

Call 992-2156.
Ask for .Dave or Bob
'"'-----••"'!"-~----~-.,.;-------••-...,;••----..J

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The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy•

Happy meals to you
By ANNI I'YJ'N
n ht.. r..........

.

Your 3-y--old whines for a cowboy birthday. Your husband
is a big fan of Roy Rogers. Up until now, you'd have to serve
'em up a bowl of beans as cowboy fare. But wait just a minute,
pardner.
Even though Silver Scm:n cowboys lllld cowgirls saved the
ranch, ran the bad guys 'into the hills and pulled out111eir guitars
to sin1 us a song, they
still had time to step into
the kitchen or stoop over
a blazing campfire,
according to two Tennessee authors who have
penned a new cowboy
cookbook.
Jim Clark and Ken
Beck have written "The
All -American Cowboy
Cookbook" (Rutledge
Hill Press. Sl4.95) to
reveal a more culinary
side to the cowboys of
TV and movies, of real tile rodeo champs and of
those singing troubadours who were more at
horne wit4 a microphone
than a lasso.
As youngsters both
COWBOY COOKBOOK • Jim
Clark
and Beck pledged
Clart and Ken Beck have written
to
be
cowboys
some day.
"The AII·Amerlcan Cowboy
Cookbook" (Rutledge Hill Press, And while they don 10·
$14.95) to reveal a more culinary gallon bats on occasion,
aide to the cowboys of TV and the closest they bave gotmovies, of real·llfe rodeo ten to their boyhood paschamps and of those singing sion is this delightful
troubldourl who - • more at cookbook. It's full of
home with a microphone than a predictable and not-so·
la110.
predictable
cowboy
·•
chow (300 recipes). plus
nearly 200 photos and pages of trivia ·guaranteed to keep that
armchair cowboy hidden between the book's covers.
·• When Beck thinks of cowboy food, he call$ to mind: the
ranch house and a ·gang of guys starving to death and beef or steak and
chilo and beans and biscuits - a heavy meal after working the land.
'f!iis stick-to-your-ribs fare was present in the TV western classic
"Bonanza, " where Hoss Cartwright's gusto for eating kept cook Hop Sing
hoppmg. And then there was the other famous range w ok, Wishbone from
·• "Rawhide."
/
.
But mostly behind the scenes of these westerns you had everyday people, some quite famous, who had families and cooked and ate just like the
rest of us . So Clark. who is a Nashville, Tenn., free -lance writer. and Beck,
a writer at The (Nashville) Tennessean. set out to collect the favorite
recipes of these famous cowboys. .
"We went to the actors ·and singers and said don 't worry too much that
the recipe has to be beans or chili or biscuits. what we think of as cowboy
.food, just make it your favorite recipe. No matter what you eat, that '$ cow-·

rec1pes
By ANNE BYRN
3 and one-half-pound chicken
Nashville Tennessean
Water to just cover
Happy meals to you with
Half onion
8ome of these recipes from "The
Salt and pepper to taste
All-American Cowboy CookGarlic powder
book" by Ken Beck and Jim
l-and-one-half cups all -purClark (Rutledge Hill Press, pose flour
$14.95). ·
.
, .. • ~,,
2 \easpqon~.baJ&lt;ing WWd~~
The first i~ a hearty chicken '
one-half ieaspoon salt dish from one of the most famous
.3 tablespoons vegetable shortcowboys of our time: Roy cmng
Rogers. Feel free to season up the
two-thirds tothree-founhs cup
broth as you like, and be careful milk
.
not to cook the dumplings at too
Place chicken in a large pot
high heat or they will fall apan.
and almost cover with water. Add
·onion half. salt and peppe'r and
ROY ROGERS CHICKEN
garlic powder. Bring to boil,
AND DUMPLINGS
reduce beat to simmer and cook.
Makes 6-8 servings
covered, for 50 minutes. or until
Continuad on
10

'

until we feed again

accepting applications

'

'!be United Slates Coast Guard
AAdemy is now accepliiiJ and processing 1pplications to the U. S.
Cout Guard Academy. Clus of

2001.
Appointments an: tendei-cd solely
on the buis of an annual nationwide
competition with no congressional
nomioations or geographical quow.
Applications must be submitted 10 the
Director of Admissions prior to
December 15, 1996. Candidates must
airange 10 participate in either the
SAT I or ACT prior to.or including
the December 1996 administration.
Appointments an: based on the
candidate's high schooi record, perfonnance on either the SAT I or ACT.
and. leadership potential as demonsuated by participation in high school
activities, community service and
part-time employment. Mos t successful candidates rank in the top
quarter of their high school class and
have demonstrated proficiency in
both mathematical and applied science_
Candidates must be unmarried at

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~~:

HONORED- Kim Mattox, honored queen of Bethel 62, Inter·
· •-national Order of Job's Daughters, .Middleport, Kathy Johnson,
_ a recipient of the Royal Purple degree and currently Grand
,. director of music, and her daughler, Jessica Johnson past hon·
&gt; ··ored queen of lhe local bethel and now Grand Bethel 'third mea·
·.~ienger, pictured left to right, were among those honored at the
recent District 5 reception held at the Middleport Masonic Tern. pie honoring stata officers.
'

.
,; Bethel 62. International Order of

) .Qb's Daug~ters, Middlcpurt was host
,for a recent DistrictS reception honoring district members who arc state
officers
• - Recognized by their respective
Bethels were Megan Reed. Pat honored queen, now Grand Bethel se,ninr
_princess; Amanda Horner. senior
princess, serving as Grand Bethel
representative to North Carolina;
Martha Muse, Bethel guardian and
-Orand Bethel librarian. all of Bethel

,,'

.-

79, McConnelsville.
Amanda Sands. honored queen .
Bethel 40. Marietta, scrvong ~s Grand
B ethel repre~entativc tn Arizona :
Kim Mattox. past honored queen and
currently honored queen of Bethel 62,
Middleport, also service as Grand
Bethel representative to Kansas; Jessica Johnson, past honored queen and
currently senior princess. Bethel 62 ,
Middleport. serving as Grand Bethel
·third messenger and a member of the
Ohio Jay Dees; and Kathy Johnson ,
past honored queen and past bethel

The Ohio Rehabilitation Services
Commission (RSC) has developed a
Personal Care Assistant (PCA) program which provides funds to eligible persons to hire necessary attendant care.
boy food," Says
He ·
· · · many of the recipes are not exactly
what you'd expect to find on the trail. I don't know if John Wayne would
have made a soufOe out there.
So Clark and Beck collected the Duke's cheese grits casserole as well
as a chile and cheese soufOe recipe . They roped in Roy Rogers' chicken
and dumplings, which was bland, Beck warned, due to Rogers' recent
. heart ailments and his low-fat diet They received Gene Autry's chili and
hos peanut butter pie. And they got recipes from more recent cowboys,
smgcrs Johnny Cash, George Strait, Waylon Jennings and cowgirl Emmylou Harris ... As well as cowboy recipes from dude ranches and rodeo
heroes.
Clark and Beck collaborated on their first cookbook, "Aunt . Bee's
. Mayberry Cookbook," Pafter Beck interviewed Clark in 1981 for aTen·nessean story about ·the "Andy Griffith Show" fan club. of. which Clark
was and is still active.
Clark grew up watching "Gunsmoke" and "The Rifleman" in the '60s
in Greensboro, N.C.
·
Both men rr.ali1.cd they shared a common interest - their boyhood
cowboy heroes - and a fascination of the subject of cowooys. What
might cowboy fOod taste like? So Beck, who grew up in Texas as a fan of
the Duke, pulled out his Rolodex and the twosome wrote to more than 400
cowboys, publicists of cowboys and fans of cowiJQys. And in just under a
year they had received hundreds of recipes, a lot of autographs and black-·
and-w,hite photos. But even at publishing lime, they weren't satisfied.
"We didn't ,llCI to Gary Cooper. I, finally tracked down his daughter
after our deadline. And last week I got a recipe· from Lloyd Bridges,"
lamented B,eck.
·
·
· . Bu~.most of the time persistence paid off. ':'I wrote Gregory Peck four
tomes, added Beck. After the last letter, one more passionate plea back
•
'
.comes a recipe with an autographed picture.
The authors realize it's hard to take·a cookbook like this too seriously. .
"W&lt;; wanted to write ·a fun cookbook. Ninety percent of the cookbooks
arc scnous ones by great coQks or chefs. I don't think there is anything.
wrong wtth a cookbook that is just fun ," said Beck, "Just like the cowboys. They were fun. I grew up loving-them. I watched them all the time.
That was back when westerns wcrcn 'I as violent as they arc tOday." -

guardian. Bethel62, Middleport, also
a. past grand Bethel, honored queen
for Ohio, a recipient of the Royal Purplc Degree and currently Bethel
guardian.secretary, serving as Grand
director of music.
Gifts and cards .werc presented to
the honorees.
Distinguished guests attended
included. Linda Gentz. Marilyn
Gentz of Middletown; Allen Bohr,
Niles; Sue Tinker. Akron : Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Lashley. Reynoldsburg;
Mildred Wisecarver, Angela Merrill.
Columbus ; Sandy Steck. Marion·,
Janet Boggs and William Bogs.
Strongsville. Mr. and Mrs. Craig

Heyder. Hilliard; Heather Lahcr. Canton , Jami Heyder. Hilliard; Mara
Craig, Strongsville. Amy Harrivel,
Gretchen Jeffri~s . Columbus; Jamie
Oul'l\, Reynolds; Betsy Barnell, Newton. Falls.
· Other local guests attending were
Ann Mattox, Delben Mitcheii,'Euvetta Bechtle. Debbie F.inlaw, Mr. and
Mrs. William King, Rachael Morris,
Carrie MooTis, Laura Payne, Julia
Payne. Merri Amsbary. Derek Johnson . Jr. R. Rife and Chris Jeffers.
At the reception, Gretchen Jeffries, Ohio Miss Job's Daughter, Mrs.
Jamie Ours, Ohio Miss Congeniality,
and Heather Laher, Grand Bethel
honored queen were honored by the
members of District 5 who present·
cd them with a card and flowers.
(Jentz and Bohr presented the honored members of DistrictS with -cer.

Kids exposed to smoke are sick more.often

By TIM FRIEND
numqer of children before. This is the
USA TODAY
first nationally representative sam; : Children exposed to' .smoke in ple... says David Mannino, CDC.
their homes have more colds, nu, Atlanta.
6Wnchitis and pneumonia and miss 7
Based on their sample. represent·
n\illi~n more school days than other ing 33 .7 million children; Mannino
~ids . a major study shows.
and colleagues estimate 10.5 million
' \• _Researchers for the federal Cen- (31.2 percent) are exposed to cigater-o for Disease Control and Preven- rette smoke in the home daily and
tKm. Atlanta, interviewed the parents adother 2 million (5.8 percent) are
exposed less often,
of 17,488 children ages I to 10.
...·.,. Secoodhand smoke exposure has · Results out Tue~day in the journal
never been studied in sU\lh a large Tobacco Control show that thC I0.5
'

.

•

"

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t

•

the time of llppoilltl!lCnt. h- 110
Ie1ai obliaalions, and mu*t ·have
reached the .,e of 17 but noi 22 by
July I. 1991. Candidates must be
assured of high school graduation by
June 30, 1997.
Coast Guard Cadets obtain an
excellent undergradua&amp;e education at
110 pmonal expense. In addition, they
receive pay and allowances for living
expenses. The Academy c!uniculum
emphasizes engineering and science,
leads to a Bachelor of Science degree.
and establishes a SQJid foundation for
a challenging career. Gl11&lt;1u3tes of the
Ac.ademy are commissipned as
ensigns in the U. S. Coast 0~J¥d.
The Academy graduate c;m look
forward to a varied, e}tciliJ.II! and
demanding career as a regular Coast
Guard Officer.

.,

CHAT LINE

Any Ohioan with severe physical
disabilities who needs assistance with
activities of daily living to hold a job
and/or function independently, may
call the RSC to request information
and an application .
Those per.ions found eligible will
he served on ·one of the following pri-

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners Anti
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special ·
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So It's only lair
to charge you Jess for your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us' and save even more
wffh our special multi-policy
discounts.

million children. exposed to smoke
every day;
- Miss 28 million school days, a
third more than kids not exposed to
smoke at home.
- Have I.7 million more colds
and acute respiratory infections, 10
percent more than unexpOsed kids.
One episode of infection can account
for multiple days of illness.
_
- Have .102 million days of
restricted activities, such as missing
spons practice after scpoot.

.

orities; I) People who are employed
more than twenty hours a week. and
need PCA to maintain their job. 2)
Thqsc individuals who are employed
Jess than twenty hours a week. or
who are ready for employment. 3)
Trainees who are preparing for
employment a.nd need PCA to continue that training. 4) People who
n.ecd PCA to live independently.
For infonnation, call the RSCat 1800-282-4536. ext. 1270.

The Light

'

.,,

$2.99 per min.
- Muit btt 18 yrs.
s.rv.u (619) 845 8434

ojltnld IIICI,_.IIIoud.
......, &amp;p.clfl ,.... ..,.t

bid formtl rMJ be HOUNd
II· the, omce of 11M Melli•
County Comml11tonere,
Courthouee, Pomeroy,
.
'

.,_,_

I.

&lt; .F.IND TOTAL
&amp;ATI~FACTI.ON!
Through a Uve
Personal Psychic!

. 1·900·255-0500
, Ext. 4009
$3.99 per. min.
MuSt be 18 yrs . '
'Serv,u (619)
. "' 645·8434

..

Dave
of
R•tfapd
Furniture

I}

Free EstirnaleS

Courthouae,PonHWOyiOh~

45769.
' ,,
Attention ·of bldhre Ia
celled to ell of the
requlremenlll conllllloed In
thla bid PICket, flll'llau'-ly
to the Federal Labor
Slllnderde Provlalone end
DIVII·Becon
W....;
vuloue
lneurence .
.-.quire-, -Jo... equei
opportunity PJ&lt;Melone, ·~
the requirement lor •
poyment . bori.d endpertorrnence bon&lt;! for 100'lli
11.1 the e~ct prlee.
.;
No bidder may wllhd,_
hlt llld within tl'llny 130~
daya after ~111'1 of · t.h«
openlqg thereof 1\ Jl4tlgel
Countr C:omml•loneral
....., - the rlgl)t tO'.weln:
eny inlormlllllet ot'IO" -o
eny onll bilk ·
--~-:

fqd~E:=
c.~lO;

.

14, 20, ~; 3TC

Public Notice : ·
adjacent to each other 11
·d•crlbed In ·certaltt',deeda
•• found In Volume 259,
Page 987, ol the Melga
County 11eec1 Recorde, ,and
'Sentinel
, Volume 321 Page 308 of the
Official Recorda of' Melga
Classified&amp;
Counllf, Ohlo, · coplee. of
which
are ·attached hereto
992-2156
and rnerked "Exhibit A" and
"Exhibit B", and;
WHEREAS, the VIllage of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
Public, Noli~
.Hyeell egree that this
property Jp of like val.ue with
RES"'~UTION.ORDINANCE regard td. the property aa
T •N&amp;FER OF UKE . . contelned In the deede
.·
"
WITH NO
altllcliecl.hereto and;
PROPERTY
WHEREA'S, both parties
t;O!'oiSIOERA!IEN
wleh to " e~chang8 thla
•
· i BcCHANOcu
property without payment
· RESOLUTION OF tHE cir other conelderetlon and
POMEROY
VILLAGE lor their mutual benefit;
COUNCIL. MEIGB COUNTY,
NOW, . THEREFORE, THE
0110.
POMEROY
v 1L LAG E
WHEREAS, the VIllage of COUNCIL OF THE COUNTY
Pome{oy ,,~ I legally OFMEtGS,STATEOFOHlO,
~~.toledtheVSI~geeof~On~: DOES HEREBY ORDAIN
~nd;
.. ,......
••
AND RESOLVE
AS
.·
··
FOLLOWS:
a
•
1 WHEREA., .Robert C.
THE Vlhage. oJ Pomeroy
Jtveell.• nd Kathy A. HyHU, council doea · hereby
hueb-".d' end .wile, of · 16 epprove the .lfanaler of Lot
oAnn Street. Po-oy; Ohio 587 ·or Annie a Estate
Mt78!
p'!:~,:'y' ~elh : . Sul)dlvlalon •• cont~lned
~ Ohio, end· ' . ,
and daecrlbed In Volume
' WHEREAS 11 • appear-• ~58, Page,987, of l,he Melga
'
p
'Countr,Detd Recorda to tlie
-thet~ .VII... 0 1 omeroy , abon ntmed Robert c.
:::l.."!··!!.~..;.
.Hwy"hlc!lhow•n• H, yeeU end Kathy A: Hy, Hll,
,. ,....,...-

a;r

'

Hilt~.

Fumnu All
- . . . . .1'1

-Ramoclellft6
•Skiing
•Roofing
•Painting
PillE EITIIIATU
112-6535

- .• , •-

f.' . .
I

)

,

-

Qu.Hty Work , :'

lneiOck

•

Competitive .._..,
.... .

... tl8111

FltMI.:
'
614-192~2524 ~

fWV010212

Truck:
I
614-441-7568 •

Mobile.Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Authorized AGA Distribulor
• Wakliov Supplies • lndustn,t Gases • Machine Shop
Sei'Vicas • Sleel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Staioless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, RaUings, Patio FumHure, Fireplace
Hems, PlAnter .hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of olher:stuftll

. tiN1

9

'

LIVE!

"No Job Too L•rge .o r Too Sm811"
We will work wHhin your budget
.Ph. 773-9173
,
FAX 773-5811
108 Pomero Stree1
·.·
Mason, WV

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

. YOUNG'S ·
CARI'tNTER SERVIa
•Room Addition•
•New G81'age&amp;
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·
•Interior &amp; I:xterlor
Painting
Alio Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) ,
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
11&gt;11tn

Conira&lt;lor with o•er 30
yean experience now
available for all types of
, New Homes, Garages,
Additions, Baths,
Kitchens, Decks, Siding,
Roofs etc.
No (Ill to s•l Or to large.
32124 Happy Hollol"( Rd. ·
· Contact Rodney Howery ' · Middlepon. Ohio 45760
594..3780 days, 698-723i
Danny&amp;. Peggy Bnckles
. ,~~nings or
614-742·2193
IFN
I·Q-264-6390 anytime!

SAWMILL
Portable

B11ntls11w MiH

LINDA'S
PAINTING

r 4131 mo. pd.

MEN
BEAUTIFUL WOMEN
.ARE WAITING TO
HEAR FROM
YOU NOW!!!

VCR Sick'!
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REPA1R

992-4507

1·901J.446·141!f
Ext. 4309
$3.99 per min.
Must b8 18 yra.
Serv·U (619) 845-8434

Public· Notice
itutband end wtf8; for thelt
jolnt'llvte, rem61nder to the
survivor of - them In lee
simple. .
FURTHER, the VIllage
Council does hereby, and In
consideration of the above
described transfer, agree to .·
lake Lot number 10 of said
Anthony
Gll·mm's
Subdlvlelon, •• more fully
deecrlbed In Volume 32,
Page 308, of the Official
· Recordo of Metge County
Ohio, In exchange for the
above transfer.
FURTHER, the VIllage
Council dot a hereby
empower the Mayor of the
VIllage, and the,Prealdent ot
Council, to execute all
deed• or other Instruments
1 of transfer to affect the
· trenoferohaldproperty.
1
lF 'SO ORDAINED AND
THIS 6 OAY OF
Vote on roll cell
Scott Dillon yea
John Muenr yea
Gatti Walton yea
Larry Wahrunz, yee
George \Vrl"lit ' yaa
.
TWclll!am
Young yea
14 , 1
.
'
·
Publtc Notice

CourthoUee,

Pomeroy,

Authority of the official or
agency elgnlngthe bond.
Bids shall be seated and
marked as l)!d for Rutland
VIII a 9 e
SIr a e.t
Improvements, and mailed
or delivered to: Melga
County Commlttklnere,
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Attention of bidders lo
called to ell of the
requlreme.nta contained In
thle bid packet, particularly
to the ·Federal Labor
Stanciardt Provlelona and
Davii·Becon
Wegea,
va r 1o u a
In 1 u ran c a
requlrementa, verloua equal
opportunity provlelona, and
the requirement · lor a

Commle1loner.

(5) 14, 20, 24; 3TC

'

30 Announcemenls '

.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

UC NE GUN
,· CLUB

OhiO.
·
Each bid . mu•t be
ecCompilnled by either e bid
bond In en ·emount with a
May 19th
eurety eetlefectory to the
eforeuld Malge County
Sam -12 n~n
Commleelonere or by
Will .Upply bait
certified check, ceahlere
ohecll, or tetter of credit
Pllll$111 for !dell
upen • 1101vent llllftlr In the
~l1mberw
wllaome to
amot~~~t of not leal then
'0% of '1111 bid amount In . ..._ tdiiUIIIIdi....:.J

Fishing Derby

949-2512

. Limestone • ~ravel
DI~•Sj~nd

CHEAPER KAlES

9115-4422 '

WELDING &amp; FIIRICITIOII
HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HI. -

· Your Sweetheart as
close as your phone

Take up orders tor Friendly
Part1es, for details call 304-7
gss 1. Doy or night
1

2115113 -IIASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(6141 949-3013 PIIOM ·
(814) 949-2011 FAX .
114 594-2008 NIGHT

Glvea~ay

40

:

2 BtaQ Doas: 1 Year Old
· m
Size Plus All Acce11ories, N
Good Homo, 814-«41-81tle.

3 Fuzzy

st, Rt. 7 .
Tuppera Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 814-&amp;67-6484
Plastic Cuiven- Dual wall and Regular 8" ohru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
4" &amp; 6" Seh 35 pipe
l/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's thru 1,000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Grave less Leach pipe
·Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings - Regulators- Risers
Full assonmcnt of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water littings
Full line of'Cistcm. Septic &amp;, Water &gt;toragc tanks.

Musi be 18 yrs old ·
Service U
619 645-8434

Howard Excavatin
Tru~klng •
Umeslone
.Bulldo7.ing and
, Backhoe
· - Services ·
House Sites and
Utilities

-

Please Call Bobbl Casto 11 6, ,.._
o048-1i«.
.

&amp;&amp; W PWnCS IIID SUPPLY

per minut"'

of £arth

Holley's Craft House, harfdmlde
.;ralta, Jots or nice lhil'lgs. 2miltatr
At2 on ·Hannah Trace rd, Gl nWOOd Wv. 304-576-2160.

killanl

oo g;,. ,..,. •-

ll!l!hlll3.

1•900-988-8988
Ext. 6733

All Kinds

. 30 Announcements!

Notiee: Connie Faye Knight! g,

$20.00/HR•

DATE
LINE

3 Kittens, long haired, g
mouaa hunter~. 304-875-2!106

d

4 Puppie~ :lo.-a7S.62C•.
9, Month Old German Sheph rd
Male, Needs To live In Coun ~.
4 P.M. -9 P.M. 614-258-6fl81 .
Free Kiuena To

GoOd

Home, 6 4-

«6·81108 Aher 8 P.M.

Ffee PuppieS: e14-388.-8532.
Full Stoc:k Copper Nase Bea Ia
and Pupt, Treeing Walker
d
Copper Nose Beagle Mi•. 6

388·8447
Furniture:- touch, etc., Willtr

. aged,
can be cleaned, 6H·9
r -:----------------,
'
4227.

Ne1U At J••les
lleetronles
•-e

,_.... Illaen.
U
11aal8
Dealer

Work

,.....

1192-nas.

.

'

6 '.

~

.

'!

•096•••don1ily.
Found : Young Female Bea&amp;e
Black, Brown &amp; WhUe 1 Johnsen

!

Ridge, 61o0-446-289e.

LOST: OVSC Clan ring. Lci11

992·2825
11311Hn

near Aerial Theater . ..04-67'1 7663.
1

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

MODEll SANITATION .
POMEROY, OHIO
Tralh Removal • Commercial or ReSidential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Renled. .
Dally, wee~ly &amp; monlhly rental rates. ·

312111-.

a llnla housed"!!

Found in Ci'- Park. Call 304·61i5·

.
T
CD
.0 fi . ape or

106 N. 2nd A'!e., Middleport

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWE;D LUMBER. ·
1x6, 1x8,2x4,2x6
·8'·10' 30. a ft.
14'·16' 35f) eft.
Also avalleble
4x4's- 4x6's
614-9854107
61 ...'742-'3337

Klnena l

60 LOSI and Found
Found: Man's Black Ami1y Bill

y;our 1;ravor1'te ar
· t1'st

992-3838

POOLI1IftiD .

•

•
,

l

3 Family: Children&amp; Clothing, 3·8
Sizes, Bikes, Manr Mise;; . hems.
41 Hilda Ori\1&amp;; Fridar. Saturday,
M•y 17th, 18th, No Sales Before

8.110 A.M.

.

All Yard Sales Musl Be Pa1d In

Wl OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m

Llm11tone, Send, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Sunday odidon - 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday odllion. 10:00 a.m. ~i1-

the day before ttte ad is ro run .

Date-Line

urday.

WE HAVE A, I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
. your choice.

JONES' TREE SERVICE
Top, Trim, Removal

.
.t

.••

'

All Yard Sales Uust Be Paitl In
Advance. Oeadtine; 1:OOpm ,the
day belore rho ad is 10 run, Sunday edition· t :OOpm Friday, Mon-

Owner: Ronnie Jones
1-800-95o-3~9

day edition tO:ooa.m. Saturda_
y. •

Free Estimates

614-992-4025

. Pomeroy,
,. lddteport
&amp; VIcinity

"

port, May 13 &amp; 14, freezer, Home
Inter ior, bedding, baby items.
dolhing, mise:.

20 Years Experience · ·Insured
367-0266 ~

too numerous ., mentJon.

685 General Hartinger, Middle-.

&amp; Stump Grinding

Pick-up dlecanled
batteries, appliances &amp;
many metela.

GARAGE SALE - May 15~18,
~am-Spm. Skinner Rd. (Grate's),

8enHipm

fallow signs. Cralts, g1f1s . clothing.
Rain or shine!

BIB ROOftll and
COIStRUC,.IOI

(!;lme StoneLow Rites)

WICKS

Residential - Commercial
ofing - Rubber - Shingles -: Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - $iding

HAULING
Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
.

Household llama, Oecorati~s .

, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Clo1hing, and many o1h~r il;)ns

.na

,-.

•

9:00 AM -3:00 PM , FurniiOre,
"-

Must be 18 yrs.
s&amp;rv-u (619) 645·8434

\'

.

Pinecrest Care Center By Hte1r
Resident Council. M4y 15, ~rs

992-3954 or 985-3418 .,.

1·900·988·6988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.

peP•J;~!ce :o~~~or 1~ .

of the contract price.
'
· No bidder may withdraw
hie bid within thirty (30)
deye •Iter datil of the ·
opening thereof. Melga
Couniy Commlaelonera
reaervea the right to welvt1
leny lnformalnt.. or to releet
any or en bide.
Fred Hottman, Pr.. ldent
'
Melge County

Free Estimiues

For aale: The undivided tnle~ll
in lho John &amp; Pow! Prolfin n oe,
send ro : Daily SentiMI, PO.. 11
na-~ . _.,. Oh •57110.
J

r-~~~~--------__.~

312111 mo.

Public Notice
favor olthe aforesaid Meigs
County Com'mloalonere. Bld
bonds
I hall
be
accompanied by Proof of

005

15 Yrs. Exp. Lie. ·Ins.
Owner. Rick Johnson

Cheater, Ohio

l

Personal~

(304) 773-5124

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

for you.
614·915-4110

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding .

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

palntlag. let •• do It

VERY RWOIAilE
HAVE RIFEREICIS

( 6 I 4) 4 ·11 - 1 19 1

TRUCKING

$2.99

-IUNLIY'S

••

R.L. HOLLOJt

H&amp;H

PUBUC NOTICE TP
CONTRACTORS
Steled propo11i1 lor the
Rullend VIllage Street
Jmprovemente wilt be
received by the Melg•
County Comml11lonera ai
·their office, Courthouae,
P-ror,_ Ohio 45769 unlll
10':00 A.lllj., June 3,1996 arid
th~ II 1:00 P.M~ June
;t, 1...., at Nld ofllce opento,l
anti re~ alouil. , ,
Plenl;' SpecHicatlone, eilll
bid. forpla mey ·be ncur'lf
at the office of the Meta•
County Commlealonere,

YOUR MESSAGE ·
'
, CAN BE SEEN HERE
:;• .fOA.A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

lenf.t11 I.E. Ohio 6 West VIrginia
Toll FIWI1......72-5817
.
4tl tUI

ONE ·ON • ONEI
CALL NOW!
1-900-446-1414
EXT. 3694

' 'BISSELL:a·uliDERS, INC.

...

Authority of the official or
-..ncy llgnlng 11M bond.
Bklll ehell be llliled MOd
marked • Bid for 11etlabery
Townahlp
s ·treet
Improvements • end mailed
or delivered to: ' Melge
Copnty Pommt..Jonera,

Manufactured Houtlng

•NewGal'lgll

fREE ESTIMATES
faka the ,.Ia out of

(No Sunday Calls)

!

...,,.1••

-New Home•
•Addltlonl

IITIRIOi·EITEIIOI

. 614·992·7643

II WARIIIOUSIS

COISTIICIIOII

c.-. ........

Must be 18

985-4473

""'~"'

•Garages • Replacement Windows
·. Room Additions • Roofing - .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

·~
RNER
.~
--.·.

PUBUC NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoeele lor tt.e
Salllblry Townehlp BITtel
Improvement• will be
received by the Melge
County Commlsoloners at
their office, Courthouee,
Po-oy, Ohio 4571!9 until
10:00 A.M., June 3,1196 end
then at 1:00 P.M., June
3,1196 at uld ofllce opened
and read aloud.
· Plane, Spftlflaatl-, anct
bid lonne mn be aecured
at the office of the Melge
Counly Commlaelonere,
Courti!PuN, Pclmero,, Ohio.
Each ' bid mull be
ICCOIItPMied by ellhw • bid
bond fn en emount with •
eurety Htlaf8ctory to the
aloreeeld Melge County
Commleelonera or b'
certified check, caahlere
check, or letter of credit
upon eeolwnt bank In the
•in••unt of not Ieee then
the bld ·- n t In
of 11M lfal nld Mllae
County Conwnllalone,..lld
bontfe
thlll
be
eccompanfed by Proof of

FREE ESTIMATES

l'•w l:l~mes • Vinyl $iding New -

~AN

__.:.P.:.u::b::ll::c;..;N.:.dtl;;.
'::;ce;;.;;..__

614-992-5048

Call today with your
window sizes for a free
. quote! -

lt·lsn't what a teenager kn~ws
that worries his parents. It's
how he finds out.

......

Hl00-446·1414
Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min.

Stop &amp; Compe"

PICKS, SPREADS,
. FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
·• RESULTS
1·90().776-2525 EXT. 5961
$2.99 per min
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 654-8434

1./m/tsd Tim. Offer

·* * *

Ohio.
Each bid muel be
eccompanled by either a bid
bond In an amount with a
eurety satisfactory to the
aloreeald Meigs County
Commlaaloners or by
certified check, caahlers
check, or letter of credit
upon a eolvent bank In the
amount of not leea than
10% of the bld amount In
favor of the .,or...ld Mellis
County Comm1111onere. Bld
b0 nd1
b8
1 hall
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or
~~g~~~cy elgnlng the bond.
Blda ehell be 1 eated and
-ked • Bid lor SyrecuH
Village Marina Drive Street
Improvement end melled or
delivered to: Melga County
Commlaeloneft,
Courthouee, Pomeroy, Ohio
457811.
Attention of blddera 11
called . to ell of the
requirement• contained In
llila bid packet, particularly
to ·the Federal Labor
Stenderde Provlelona and
Devia·Bacon
WegM,
verloue
lneurence
requl_,ll, vertoue equal
opportunity provlelonl, end
the flqulremtnt for 1
::;.lment b,ond and
ornwnce bond for 100%
olthtooto..ctprlce.
No bidder •Y withdrew
hie bid wl~ln lhlrty (30)
deye alter dlle of the
openl11g tllerlo~f. Melge

Remodeling •

Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL
needs
Phone

-Insulated

Grate

R
I
d
ut
an
FurII•tur.•
.

ISfM!CI&amp;I girt is waiting
lo hear from you!!
24 Hours A Day !I
Cali now

•

. ' SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung

7 SHOWIIOOMS

-complete

. SPARKlES
ELECTRIC'

WINDOWS

''

• ••

•New Homes
•Geragea

Hey Guysllt Your

-- .......

REPLACEMENT
.'

By

Public Notice
County · Commleelonere
resarves the right to waive
any lnlormeiiiiH or to r,ject
any or ell bide.
Fred !{oilmen, Preeltlent
Melg• County
Commlealoneno
(5) 14, 20, 24; .3TC

more. ·
1-90().255-0500
.. Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Must .be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

519 5°0 Installed

=·

PUBUC NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
s ..led propo.... lor the
ByrecUII Village Mirlne
Drive 81Teet Improvement
will be riocelved by the
Melge
. County
Comml11lonere at their
olflce, - Courthouee,
Pomeroy, Ohio,41711 until
10:00 A.M., June 3, 1118
end then II 1!00 P.M., June
3, 18111 at eeld o"lce

Ext. 2261.

'

rB~e~c~h~tJ:_c~re~g~is~te:re~d~t~he:.!gu~c~st~s:_.-~~~====~=::====!_!:;R~t.~1~2~4,~R=•~d~t~O..;· =7~4~2~-22~1;1

PUblic Notice

,~...998-3737

'

It's time to lose weight When
you're wearing a red, , while
and blue outfd, you're 'on a·
street corner yawning. and
someone drops a letter in your
mouth.

-Ill' IISSIU
COISII8m01

""" ,. ,_,. • _.--~~c. to bllctr If up

Talk fine to our gifted
psychics on questionS 01
love, success, care, soul
mates, saM-help and

. .. * *

Public Notice .

742·2803

&amp; WILLING
·

Thioty-two cents to mail· a
Jett"r? Who · has news that
good?
"

Auto-Owners lnaUI'Once
Llle Home Car Business

TooSmal
Plan Ahead, Cal Today!

Psychic-Line

TO TILl!!!.

' • * *

-·
Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

• Tree Tl'irniMig
• Mowing (Aeeidential
and commerdal)
•Shrubbery
Maintenance
• Odd~ per request
No Lawn Too l.a'liiJ or

anuaiYE

'

To

- _:,
lAIUlY'8
IAWN&amp;UI£

-"'..L

Maybe you should forgive your
enemies, but you don't have to
like them..

tificatcs of appreciation.
.
Prior to the r~ccption, a luncheon
wa• held for members and guests followed by a promotional rally under ·
the -direction of Amy Barnette of
Akron, 1\fny Brooks ·or Norwoo&lt;.l,
and Gretchen Jeffries.
Arter the reception a Southwestern
theme social was held· with saddles.
cowboy hats, bales of hay, a camp
fire and pinata broken by Heather
Laher was the scene. Red and white '
checkered tables were set with oil
lamps.
Linda Cramer, Twila Childs, Mattox, Mr. and Mrs. King, Morris and
· d wn· h Ihc scrvmg.
·
Payne assostc

NOTICE; OF AVAILABIUTY
FOR PUBUC INSPECTION
- The Carleton College
Board of Truet- h• filed
Its annual mum of a prlvtdll
foundation, Form 990-PF,
with the lnernet Revenue
Service for calendar year
1995. In accordance with
Internet Revenue Code
Section 6104(b), thl1 form le
available for public
lnapectlon at the Syracu..
Uunlclpel Building or at the
home of Roben ·wtngen,
Preeldent and Principal
Ma.....,.., 1367 College
Road, Syrecuae, Ohio,
during the 180 deY IM!rlod
beginning May 16, 1996.
(5)1411c .

1·900-446-1414
•Ext. 6445
$3.99 per IIWI.
Must be 18 yrs old.
Service U
(619) 654-843&lt;1

Nature is ~mazing! Who would
have thought of growillg • ny
swatter at the end of a cow?

'

Public Notice

l.,ive 24 Hrs a day
,Talk to Beautiful
Girls

"

/

To obtain an' apPlication or further
infonnation, residents may write
Director of Admissions, U.S . Coast
Guard Academy, 15 Mohegan·
Avenue, New London, CT. , 06320 or
call I (800) 883-8724.

~

I

Personal care available
to disabled through RSC

.

.

'

The o.lty Sautlnel• ..... 7

.U.S. Coast Guard Acade y

Jnternational
Order of Job's Daughter hosts.state rec~pti
.

~

•

Tueedly, May 14,1111

Ohio

'

35 Yo,. Experl•nce

(614) 992-2364

.

1-800-889-3943

I

·...w 24 hr.~

Rt 2 to Roule 87. 4mi. on f\8 iMt,

May 17th 9-? Rain dala May 181h, •
so
Public Sate
and Auction ' '

Rick Pearaon Auc1ion Company;
full !ima a.ucUoneer , complal~

auc110~

aervlce.

licensed

•88,0hio l Watt VIrginia, """773-5785 Or 304·773-5147. "'{
-

Howe~ L. WrlteHI

·

90 Wanted to Buy .'c1
1
'"
..--.line ' .
ROOFING
Love
. 9eo'l'1ofa. GJ. Joe, Soar w.'r;,
..
...,.
Bualness
ect. wm pay lair price basad oll
Meal tha Man Or WOjllllfl·
NEW-REPAIR
condu•on. 814-448-8830 alter 8
of your Dreams Navar
Family Matters
pm
,11 ,
be lonely again.
Gutters
Allow Your
Booka, Book a, Books. Old Ro,..:
Personal Paychlc to
8ookl, Good Condi1ion, 101 Elf!,
Downspouts
'
Assist You
lion Pretered. Also, Pa,.r ColGutter Cleaning _
.!KJO.IBB
loc1ablaii1H48-728t
•.: J
' .goo.ll88-eoo3
1
8600
1
Painting
'
Ext 1277 '
'Clean Laoa Model Cora O
Ext. 1021
•
True~•. 18i0 Modell Or N-.r~'
$2.98 per min.
FREE ESTIMATES
~-: 1~~;::~
1100 Ea..l•
Mull bt 18 yra.
. Mt-2188
Touch-T- Required
'
•
In
Set;¥-0
_
(114)845 I~:M
il/lllt'Tfrt
Blnroy(l11)848
1434
.
J &amp; D'a Au1o Pona. luylng aol.__ _-'!"'_ _
'1UO:I:!·
..,, ,,
•.
.'. _ _
, .___________
-~ voge
vohicla&amp;. Selling 111111. ..._
Need Direction?

CALL NOW

';!'

I

:'='*a':!:"':::·

..

' .

'

'

�(

•

Tueect.y, May 14, 1118

.

.

•

Pomeroy • Mkldltport, Ohio
•

••

NEA Crottword Pu ..l.
PHILLlP '
ALDER

_
...........
..-.
..............
-

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

17,..._

.......
11 ""' 011 . . . ,

: :"~;t
~~~·
rw.

ACtiOI8

11M.C. ......
11FIIIylll8llrflll

Upper At 1 Addison, l14· 3e7·
0111.
'

Postal Jobs 3 Positions AVIil·
able, No Experiene• Neceu arv
For lnlormalion, Call 818 -71!4 ·

Alrttt--10~
thll new 1PI$* IIIUbjlct to
111eF-Falr-.g
ol11118 _ _ _ .Ad.
.

1101eEXL1008,
Sand Ounes Steak &amp; Seafood
Restaurant now hiring waittrl,
wallreiHI. Gish WIShetS I deitY·

flty. 304·675-3663.

c all .304·8i5·

Mnitollon Of - l l o o."

_.;.,.....,.

Thla 111M paper . . not

The Sourharn local School l)a.

lritt hu tho following cooel'tlno
Wanted To Bur: Auto's &amp; Trucks positions IVIillble for tM 1HI·
Any Cor1ditlon, 61'·388·9062. Ot 97 school ~ear : lllltlan(high
"·'lt441if'ART.
s&lt;hool lootbtD, junior hi~ loo1boil,

adve-...111 tor reol-11

hi"'

JUnlot h1gn volleyball junior
boy's bl.tklllball, j~o~nkw hiDh glrl'a

Want~ To Buy: Junk Autos With

bnkllball, alllltant.high tc:hool

Wllnout Motors. Call Larry

:--..:.·-6'.,..._388::..;.·.:.9303:.;,::_____ girl's b0oke1ball oncl junior hiGh
1

614.24s.,sas7

EM PL OYMENT
SERV ICES

1~ o :,Help Wanted

chMrleading advisor. All appiiC·
ants mull be residents of M~ga
County, potaass a valid OhiO
ltachinQ eertilk:llte, sportJ;· rMdiclna certinea~e, anct a CPA card.
Pla11e 111n,d inquiries to Mr.
James lawtance, Superintendent
, Southatn local Schools Box

17e, Ratine. Of1io 45111, slso il
and Equal Oppottufity Employar.

which Is In vtolollon o1 tiWI taw.
O u r - are hOrlby
lntofmtd tiWJiatl

-·:go

lldvtrtlaad In 1111o n o - r
are ava- on an equal

-""*Ybulo.

rangte. Skaggo AppiiiiiiCtl 78

,..,.x70 Tralllf 12751Mo. 6U·446·
6958.
'
2 Bedroom Furntshed, On Clay
Chopol Rood, S250111o. $250 De-

posit 614·258-e716, Aft• 4 P.M.
2 Ba ~ ooms In Eyttgreen, $190

320 Mob"e Homes

4712.

448-1484 .. ~488218.

814-44&amp;-3158

3 Bodroom llabllt Home On lieCormitk Rood, 814-446·11189.

61.-4$41 -0181. "

Vinyl e• Patterns large ttlec·
nons, Kildwln PriNt in SIDdl Car·

Two and mrea bedroom mobtle

pel $6.50 on&lt;l up. llollohon Car·
pets 61 4-4441- 7444

homes. Starling a1 $240-$300 .
sewer, water and trash Included,

l.:7Q~j;;f,fi;o-;r~Sa~lt~liii:i4x:i2l
1:
614.flll2·2167

Wooden dining room table w/ 2
cl&gt;aWI. 140. 30+e75-75811.

520

440

Sporting

Antiques

potual Care. 614-3e7-Q214

Buy or 1111. Rlverin• Anrlquea,
1124 E. Main StrHt. on At. 12•.

Pomeroy. Hours : M.-T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m,. SUnday 1:00 .,
8'00 p.m. 614-992·2528.

Ra.inbOW Meeper WI attachments.

304-875-1125.

540 Miscellaneous ·
Merchandise

Waterbed bedroom suite. QuHn
size, head board, dra11ar &amp;

eh&amp;st 1989 Chevy van. Call 304·
875-7217,

Bulldlng

Block, bilck, oewor plpoo, wind·
OWl, lintels. IIC. Claude Winters,

Rio Grandt, OH Call 814·245·
5121.

Bldg Sj&gt;l: 30'x45'd', 1 -'15'd'
Sliding lloor, 1 -3' lion Door
Poinlod Stoal Siding, Golvalu..e
SIMI Roof: N,444 Ertcleod: Iron
Hettie·1-100-352·10&lt;15.

Pets'~~" Site
Groom Sholl ·Pet Grooming. Fea·
lUring Hydro Bath. Jullt Webb.
Coil81.....,-o231 . .
.

AKC German Shtphord pupa.
304-e 75-8639.
AKC Labs -priced 10 sale, raaGy
llay 10th. 304-805-3t2t.

814-e43026.

114milt ~om Crob Creek bridgt, Ri

2 SO\Itl\.

10 1 nk
•
1 ·
ga tl aet up ipeells. Flah

14 Bend $25.00. Opdmuo 25 , Tank &amp; Pol Shop, 2413 Jae~oon
Wan Power Boolter $1&amp;.00. Call ' ~--Poinl .Pt.easant, 30. ·675Honry'ahor 5.oo 304~75-1433

, tZer

27 Ft Round Above Ground Alol · Do
With Solar Cover, ladilflt &amp;Sonci
g &amp; Cat Grooming: roaoonalite

lng· $1,000, CaU Aher 5:00 P.ll.
814·448.0440.
82 Honda Aaco1 F1500 loll ....
3000 1.1 UQO. 2 ~ Spon l;hol·
longer P 2.55-80 R 15 S100, 2 Ul·
Yatach 235-60 R15 $110, P185-80
R13 M&amp;S with Rima Fitl
Cavalier $50, 2 Whi1a otoel
15x10 6 Lug $45, 4 AI Slot115X7
5 an 5 112 fits lord or Jeep S150.
614-446-3789.

experienced · onlr
I eo ChUd Care In M'y Home A11
_61_4_·9_9_2-_236.;.
, _4_
. E_D_E_ _ _ _ _ Hours, Cheshire Area, 614-387·
1 7849
Conservation Jobs: Wildlife posi·
·
tlons $,6,000-$35,000tyt Clerical llghl dozer wort&lt; avalablt, honest
Security. Game Warden, etc. No &amp; dependable, have ralet'ancel.
experience. For info call 219-769- Call an~lime 304-675-3984.
8301 ext WWV 548, 9am-9pm
Sun-Fri.
Mature dependable lady wltllng .to
111, shop or ~?are for the elderly,
,.~~~~~Pt.~---'"_"'_·
person
traimng,
standard
:first a1d care
&amp; CPR,
ell:perienced
in

1

ii;;;;;;;;;;:;p;;;;;-;;;-p;;;;;;;;,:;;-.;;;:;;1
_N""-I

Dynamite Fat Loss Product
managing an adult care racHitr.
A oau. lou Weinht And
excellent references, call Chns
r
•
814-992-2629.
Money. Minimal l'l'lesJment, 61 ...

Prtce Buster. 1991 3bedroom.
$825 .down, St~591mo. Free deliv·
ery &amp; setup. Only at Oakwood
Homeo, Niro WV 304-755-5885.
SaveSS. 1998 double w1de repo.
:Jbedtoom, 2bath. Wilt Geliver &amp;
98Wp on your len. Xl4-755-5566

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

_44_6:...·'...:236::..;.·_· -~-----I Mowing in Pt Pleal8nt area, have
EA N $ nM w
own mower. Have references. Ask 1 Acre Footers. Water, Septic,
R 1•e- ookly Sluffing En- lor Howard or Mary. 304·675· Garage, Blacktop Road, In Addlvelopes At Home. Start Now. No 2e80.
·
oonAI•. 814-388-8078.
E11perience. Free Supplies, Info
No Obligation . se.,d SASE To : Need lawns Mowed? 814·446·
, ~

Fairway, Dept. 1351, Box

Wes1 CoVtna, CA g1N1 ,
_.:.:...:...:.:.....::..:......:......:.....
____ 1Professional Tree Serv1ce

Stump
Earn $1000s weekly stulling en- Removal, Free' Eatimaiesl In·
velopea at home. Be your boll. surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814·388Stan now. No experience. Free 9648.614-387-7010.
supplies, info. No obUgation Send
S.A.S.E . to Prestige Unil It, P.O. Sun , Valley Nurserv School.
Box 1815&amp;09, Winter Springs, Fl Chlldcare M ~F &amp;am-S·30pm A~H
32719.
2-K, Young School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini. E11perienced LPN Apply In Per· mum 614-446~3657.
son To The Medical Plaza 93$

Soue RoU1e 160, ~kda1s DAy.

Will Do Interior Or Extorlor Point·

1ng, Reasonable Rates, Experi·
E1perienced Nurs1ng Asslatants ~. R,terencea, For Free EttiNeeded For Parr- Time Work at mates, 8'14-245-575
. 5.
Uedi Home t-lealth 412 Se&lt;,ontfl
Avenue Gallipolis,OH 814·"'41·
FINAN CIAL

1875

'

Ha1r dresser .wanted. Full or pan
time with clientele 304-675-3040.
HELP WANTED Men. JWomen
Earn $480 Weekly 'Assembling
C1rcu11 Boa;ds /Electronic Components At Home. Expeuence
Unneceuar~. W11l Train. Immediate Optnmgs Your Local Area.
Call1 ·5~80-7891

Ext 01094.

Home Typists, PC users needed.
$45,000 Income potential. Call 1·

800·513-4343 Ext B-9368.
Uan, woman or husband &amp; wile,
stay nights 4.30pm-8am. Also
days on Saturdays &amp; Sundays.
Al so care lor home, 2doga &amp;
tcat. HOme well protected w/
alarms Must have references
Wr1te to BoM G-14, %Pt Pleasant
Register, '.200 Main Sl . Pt p ,. ,,•. ·l
ant WV 25550.
10

1 .825 01 An Acre Water Septic
Included Trailer On land 1973
Rainbow 12»~:65 On Addison Pike,
614-367-7199, 614-367-5043

Bowens Estate Ashton Wv 2-112
acr••· c1ty watertcablefsepticl
30x40 garage 304-578-9907.
Parcels available for new home
construction on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels ranging from 1.l ...ac to
5.32ac:. Pawd road, county water,
reasonable restriCiiona. Map and
into avaitabl.e on requeu No single wide inqu~ries please. 304-

675-5253.
Aestricled Building Lots, Country
Sening Rural Water 814-245·

5457

Business

210

.

Scenic \falle~. Apple Grove
beautiful 2ac lots, public wale,:
CIVde Bowen Jr. 304·578-2336.

Opportunity
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that ~ou do bUllness with people you know, and
NOT lo send money through the
mail until you have investigated

me ollo&lt;ing,

ABSOLUTELY THE BEST BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY AVAIL·
ABLE . 304~75-4316.
Couplea ta do in Home Cookware
demo, part-hme hours for full-lime

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Disabled Veteran urgently klokmg
lor 30-100 secluded, private acres, wtth or without buildings, L.and
C~tract, 614·742·2182.

RENTALS

410 Houses tor Rent

Furnished Apartment 1 BA $285
Utilities PO 920 4th GallipOliS,
614-446-3844 after 8pm

Furnished Efr'ic1ency 2 Rooms,
Share Bath, $1951MO. U1iht1es
Paid, 607 Sec;:ond Avenue, GallipoliS. 614·""'6-4... 16 Attlf 7 P.M.
Garage Apartment, 2 Bedrooms,
Washer /Dryer Hook-Up, Refrig·
era tor, Stove, Water Furl'!lshed
$250/Uo. $150 Deposit, 108 Lo-

cul1 St, Galipolla, 614-448-3870.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments a1 Village Manor and
A1venide Apartments 1n Middle·

port From $232-$355 . Call 614992~ 5064. Equal Housmg

Oppor·

tunl!les.

Moderen One Bedroom Aparl·
ment. 614-448-0390
Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Sattmg, Washer IOryer, Stove, Re·
lngerator, No Pets, No Smokers,

Extra Cloanl $300

Concfete &amp; Plastic 5ep1ic Tanks
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ro,;
Evans Enterprises. Jackson, OH
1-800-537-8528.
Craltaman 2" hp. air compr•sor,
$15; lavatory w1th vanlly, $50;
glass ahower doore, •so: com.

_Dr,.,

modo, S50; eholno for IO"Iown·
$10;61 ... 992-3301. '

Electric

Scoolera
And
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van 1

Car

ll~

ln11allod, Slairglldol Uh

Depo~1.

$350/

Mo., Applications At 1743 Centenar~ Road, Gallipolis, 814-448-

2205.
Nice 2 Bedroom Centenary Area,
4 112 Miles From .GallipoliS, Refngerator, Stove, Water Furmshed_, No Pets, $250/Mo., 614 ·

446-8038

Monthly Flea Program Need

2920.

IBII 38e Computer, 3 112 I 20
Meg. Drlvo, Mono VGA &amp; Sott·
wore, 1250. Or With Color VGA
$375, 814-256-«!18
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Raoaired. - &amp; RebuHt In SIOdL
Cal Ron~-· 1·1100-537-9528.

1187 FDntiac

Fcirnwl• Good Con·

dillon, T· Too•
9081 .

suoo 814·388·

1tl8 Filth Av..-.ue 38,000 M1111.
AJC, Tilt,&lt;AuOI, 318 MoOir $3,000
Or 8011 Ollar, 814-258·1233.

grey

leather in1erior, loaded, lm·

maculale

condition,

Asking

111,000. 814·448·9998 b e 11 anm 7pn\

11188 Subaru XT. DL Soloc1ivo 4
WO, Loaded, 1 Owner, $3,500
e14·25e-e8$4 or 814-256-11329.
1189 Buick leSabre, tacellent
runninG ·~Ondllion ~ V-6, PB, PS,
AC, _.,windows. $3800, 814-

i4H045cir614-94i·23CJ!!.

'

·

a.a.

R00111tred
old, 1paded &amp;

304-773-i138,

11m hiler QU 8 t•-448,.ee30 atcar
lpm,
•

-

24 Fl f'On100r1 Boot 50 •HP llolor'

760

-14~

COME '(OUR
FAMIL'( HAS A DOG
AND I DON'T?

Auto Partsl

Caiola

610 Farm Equlpmet'!t
oaOre liT ""•""· uc .

...... $3,200. 304-675-3824.

1Q77 Chevy C20 camper van
stove, relrigeraar, lurnac:e. Ollvei
USO·T uac:tor, needs crank
turned. Oliver 1150, needs motor
partl, ci.b trike front. Oliver 880
puling chaslil, IIIII fNrt. no engtno. MIIZ tnoi•t 11at1&lt;. 2WhHI
trailer w/brakes. 100 sMell ol 10'
SV rooling. 814·311-8684 alter
8pm

13 Ponltl't Grand AM, bloe~ •. 2
Door, Quad 4, Au1o, Air, 'flit,
Cruise, Slereo CaH, SUn Rool
, PS, Anti Loek Bro~tl, Wh..i
Covera and, Trunk Releooe.
21,000 Milt~, Excallttu Condl11an
$7,ii5 6,14-3711-211117
AuOI laona. Ottltr wll orrango fl.
nancint even It yo"' have been

-

HOUSE FOR SALE

BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very GdoG
Condition, N8w V1nyl Sic:ing, Car·
port UnaUac:hed 2 Car Garage

Haute lor ule Of' ram: Nice yard,

Amer!C8n Calo.

4 bedroom~. 304-882-24011.

On Duty lledteal
Is Actively Seeking To Recruit
CNAs Who Are Looking To Work
Long Term Home Care Cases

Ono bedroom home in Pomeroy.

1-liOO·()tWUTY-2.'

'.

a.-

fan

31 Dan

DOWN

,..-

I ElecVIC llahH
2 Lamb'l cry
3 PHilO

32 .....
33 Dl
lllnt

·=!ale

·~

11

7T-ma.

..

A SURVEI{..

::r~

Will sell on land conuact, 814-

9!12-5858.
Three bedroom home in country,
W~Jti .HIII l'ld , Rudand, one ba~
on-ground pool, 614·992·5067
Thrft bedroom home With car-

Pt.

port, eolflgo II1Cf outbtlildlng In
Plouant .. Will sell on land con·
..... 614-002-!1158.

.
'

'tl .•

~'ll"''l"__..~=::..•tt~
FOllOw
..

=

:II tic laic'*""
21 Blbllul...t:11 8nMtll
.•,
rounded
.,

......

Paa•
Dbl.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I'NIGt!T
l.APPI

Tanka, All., Fully •·
100, 614-446-3485.
:

•.
•·

7

Openinalead: • Q

Ht'Un-U I

C.IOY

F~ YOU TO ~Y...

ClOt&lt;'I LIVI:. NOT iO

camper, ••cellen~ condition, wllh
all eKtraa, ptlce Includes member~
ship to Royal Oak Resort, $7500,
81-4-992-7386. · . r

TI\E.

'""' lnnsbrook. luil1 loaded, iots r ~.~
of extras, 18ft Senous 1nqu1nes ' · •

••

35' Camper &amp; lot Hohday Hills t
OUttk.llldina. E~ecellent Condittoni1 ~­
.AIC, Sewer, Fishing, B0111ng.,1 •

31=1n ~­

Norlh . . . . .
31 SWnUiiilllle hlllr
31 u.. a cllalr ' ·
41 Howl
42 w. ~ 11011.
43RI•
44Waapona
45 Door
laatll
..tn"'llln-,.a ' •
441 Acllwa
.Judllll47 TvJ» o l - : ·

There were many Jnlereating fle.ala
In the Cap Volmac Invitational pair ,t...-+-1event beid laat January In the
Netherlands. This one featured some
..r+--~~--1 · -~lbd
I
I Did
••
imaginative bidding and defense by 1....-+---151
Ear(-.
'"
Michael Roaenbel'l and Zia Mahmood.
lorm)
Nortb'a response of three no-lrump ' L.....l"-..1..sbowed S-4-3-3 diatrlbulion and uked
L
CELEBRITY CIPHER
his partner to choose between three
no-trump and foJ!r,hearta. Looking
by L,uls Campos
only at the Norlh·South hands. you
~~ce••• .. crH1.0tromqootatton•bV'.-nou•people- pest.OOpr..,n~
E.ch
In lt'le cipnlr Mands lor anoChtr Todly'f Cluf ' T ~Js P
.'
'would like to be ia tllree no-trump by
North as it appear11 to have nine guar·
WOZGYW
MNIIMW
DWKP
RFOW
'H
anleed tricks. Then you nolice that
"
West has all tllree mluing hearts a!ICI
UP
Y
W
M
X
•.
X
Y
K
X W W M'
Y V K K P
IV
the contract suddenly atan'ds no
.'
chance. &lt;Fred Gitelman and Georce
y v UGZR N ZFA SY
IRWKW'Y
Mittelman from Canada 111'ere the un·
iucity pair to reach three no-trump by
KWWDW.
Z~KNYIVTRWK
A Y L.'
North and lose points.)
Rosenberg made an imaglnalive
·"
double of four ~earl!, knowing lhat the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "John McSherry was a class guy, and a good umpire "
who loved his job . This guy wtll be sorelv missed ." - Tom Lasorda. ,
-··
trumps were breaking .badly and tllat
·•L
his. honors were over cards in the
· dummy.
Zia found the creative lead of the
lA II
apade queen (though tile 10 would have
made tile defense easier). Declarer won
With diiiiiiiiY's ace, drew two rounda of
Roorrange lttl8to of 1M
trumps and look tllree rounds of clubs,
four. Krambl.d -d• be·
low 10 lo11•. four -.!1.
finessing succeasfully tbrough East.
"'
Now came tile diamond seven.
Note that if West plays low, so does
..
· the dummy •111 Eul ia ,el!dplayecV A
spade return establishes dummy's
jack, a diamond play sets up dummy's
king, and a club switch concedes a
'''
H US B
ruff-and-discard. But Zia was there,
/
flashing the diamond queen onto the
.'
1~
table. East was oft the hook. having a
sale c!iamond exlt, and •larer had lo
lose four tricks; two spades, one heart
and one diamond.
1---rE___,R_R-r!U-TL-11
Overheard at cocktail party:
5
····;
1
. I I 1 I . .. "A bore is someone who thinks
. . - - - - - - - - . · h e is always ~t--- --- -."
""" .

.

....
_,...;.:.,.':.;;..:':.::••'_S.::....::~!c!l~.~~s·
II

-·-·'.

..
~

.

e

'lh,·...,.s,_,H,...:...I.,.s;.....:Er-:.T...--ll Complete the chuckle quoltd
by !tiling in "" .,;..ing -d·
. _LI_IL,.;..JI~..'......I~. .o...~IL-J. you develop
lrom S1ep No. 3 below.

L

'

.••·'

I '

I·

• i

I.

.'

Home

••

Improvements
&lt; •
BASEliE NT
WATERPROOFING

I

0

SERVIC ES

·

I.

\

I~~~-::-=-.:_-~~~=
. 1988 Gulf Stream Monterey ze•

810

·•t

2t0d
c=
30 leland
.~
.32 ExlltlftOI ~!
:II OI'IMCI
-•

r

'

$5,300.814-894-3101. '

aruoe-

.••.

;t=.w
.
23 MalleY- .•

I Alllcutad
• OratUng twig

4 Spcirtyahoa

a" a

10-

.

•

\

(6141 448·0870 Or (814) 2370488 Rogers ~aterprooling. E1 - 1 9 i ! i. .•
•
'

·"

J."

SCUM LETS ANSWERS

UnconditiOnal 1/felime guarantee.
Local references lurntshed. Call

.The Treasure

..

Savlnrs
Ffnd In lht
Cfossl(led SectlOfl.

Appflance Parts And Service! All '
Name Branda Over 25 Years Ex·
penence All Work Guaranteed

-~

Legume· Dally- Ozone- Balsam- SOMEBODY
My brother always learns from his mistakes. He leams .

;

.,

hDW to blame them on SOMEBODY else.

MAY 141 ..

!TUESDAY

a COr, Go1 a Job, Hove Bod · Freneh City llaytag, 814·448:Credit? Wo Can F~~tanae coli 7795.
.
1\rm 814-440-2187 - .
&lt;.
·'·

I

·--...·

720 lhlckl tor Sale
'89 F-250. autornallc. olldlng wind.., In - · 300 8 tYI .• tkctllent

.

' ' '• I

.,

' ·, ~

c:ondldan. grnt work truck. first

I ,. ,

13150 llkeo It homo, 614·141·
2311 dayL

...
.~· .
,.,

I

. ' ..

U71 Chevy pic~ up 350,

runo good, 814-2115.

..."-'

r

--~-----'--

Court Street, Oallipolis. Mogie'a,

r&gt;gnt Smy Is Required. H lntorllt·
oc1 P1eaoe Call L&lt;oa Ksroon At

Qj:

Only" 2 Freeze Plug Mod·

turned down elsewhere. Upton

Equlpinan1 Used Cora. 304·458·
10119.

·=-

23 ..._Gull Ill' 11 UtM .. ollloa
I'" • • •
24lltlaall
Ill
ol two
27 c.rtllln oct-11

.. .
..

REAL ES TATE

IY..614·24~· 0437
Willi Now Apor...,. •Above, 814·
Now Takl~g AppllcaJtons For Air' 448• 1774 Homo; 814·446·0374
Posltioni•APPiv In Person A1 39 ~-:__A_IIt_Fo:...r_wa_rk...:PII...:.:.""".::....·-­

Where You Ltve· ln And Stay
Overnight In Either 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Or l2 Hour Shih&amp;. II Pays
10 Hours A Day. Bur P,.n Over ·

KIND

•oo c.1. ·Small Block Chevrolll

ani,. 304·B75.fl9ro.

. W., "hiiUII
lllllrtiW•Ita

pay. 304·675-8191

to work any shut- days. nighrs and 3.2acrea. Home waa completely
hohda~s . Apply Monday through ':~~~:': in 1992. For more JntorSaturday, 9am-10am, all loca- .n
call. 304·675-3121 . It no
tiona. Star~ng minimum wage, run _..,...._,eave
·-- 1
measag~.
lime positions ava1lable.
3-4 bedroom home !n Syracuse,
NEEDEQ. Painten &amp; lrtm car· corner lot, close ·ID tchool 24a:40
penters to g1ve bids on apts Call bloc:k garaQe, heat pumP, 814·
304 · 882 ~3151 between 8am· 992·5315
4:30pm. Mon-Fn.

.

T~IINK IT WAS SOME

1882 '318 Clwyaler Motor, 74,000 '
llllel, $200, 814-25tH233. .

gift. Send lor your Aslro-Graph predlc·
lions for the ynr ahead by m~lling $2

=M;:.cC.:.:Iu.:.r::.e'.::s::.Re::o_ta_u_ra-n-1s-,P_o_m_e-ro,..y,·.l 310 Homestor.S818
Middleport and Gallipolis- now 2 Minutes from IOWf\ .a bedroom,
tak1ng applications. Mutt be able 2 bath, 3,000sq. ft. Brick Ranch on

Now takt ~g applications for 01pe11enced rooters and c;:arpernt·
0111 Mu5~t'lave, hand tools and
uansportatlon. Starting pay 7.25

11M NOT SURE .. I

~OW

Acc.es,s orlis

"Bloc~

1 (al.)

By P.llllp Alder

1888 Weltcrafl 21' Cuny Cabin,
350 megnum ltllfCfulae. txtollent
condition, S11:soo. 01 4-litl·20711

Excaltoru Condi1101JI $5,500,
448.0150,
'

r

IIH

114--

'

1087 Rlrltor 195- with 4.31iltr
engino, oxttlltnt c:ondillon,
with low hours, $7,100 'wllh cui·

l,t:tt~~~~~r~
Culluo

HIT
Pus
Pus

••

:e(l.:..,

Another
Dutch deligtrt

r. 2, W~tt~ Tonka, 2

Oldo

Pus

...

41TM
4t Culaln

.'

· c~~ovy

.,g..,._

1t85 Fltebird llu11 Soli Or Taka
: Over
l?oymento, CD Player 1
Phone,. Low Mtlage 81•·'
1112yr Cellular
• .,
$50. 448·87i5.
87 Clld Cu11a11, V·8, ·auto, AIC,
814·992·2358.

FA RM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11150 John

17~. Open boWollnvO,dir. HOhp
Evlnrude, Uls.' tube, .li,.{J•cMets
Uulf ttainiMI a.-..a &amp; alumiun

::

1992

Nartll

Pus

MYSLlN6
SHOT II

=

82,000rnf. YIIY good cond.,txc.
rubbtf. 13,300,304 115 3:*.

Wea&amp;

Pus

-.-..................

automatic, towing package;
72,201 m1111, very clean Jnli"-.
S!iOOO 0110, 8 14·949-2JI1 1 daya

.

lleulh

•

• Tntclamarlt

K J 5

Vulnel'llble: Both
Dealer: East

1989 Bulcll Raga~. aumma6c, PW,
11c, one owner, $5500: 1 Q88 . BudgefTranamislions uMd IRe..
Branco 1!. 5 IPlld. 4x4, ale, PW. built, All Typ81, Ac;:C·esaible To
S4800;814-1149-2534 thor 5:00.
Ovtr 10,000 Transmission, Also 1
Ovorhlol Kilo,•614·246'!ill77
,
1111 Metallic blue MustanG LX
hatch blck. wl~un rool, ps, pb, New gal tanka, .one ton truc:k.'
auto, w/ovtrdr~ve, am-fm casnne, •••· cond. $3,200. 080. 0 I R Auhl, Ripley, WI/. ~72~
304&lt;175-433e.
,lll:=3~1or:..::1:::;II00-::!;273:;:;:03::;2P::,._;': ..__·
i,.
t990 Cavalier, 1988 His~an Sen· 790
C8111per8 &amp;.
1r8, 1i81 S-10 Tohoe, -.1 984 S.10
Motor~s
E•tencftd Cab, T'ades WelcOme
Financing Available, Cook Mo: ==--~,;,:,::;;:.:.,...._
72 Chioflan Winnebago pull-1ypo
1011, 814-448-0103..
camper, 22' long, goD&lt;I concltbor\
aakaino S21oo OBCll! 8u-985·
J~90 Chevy COIIIC:a, Ill power,
1
cyl., new paint, new tires,
D14·992·33l;l:
1973 WinnebagO ~-t.ike New f
40,000 lilies. 6 Ntow $ Ply. Tires '
New Brakes I Wheeli, Cylinder •·

Nice 2 or 3 bedtoom apartment in
Middleport, no pets, 814 -992-

5858.

750 . Boats &amp; MOtors
tor 5818

1188 Lincoln Towncar Stretch
limousine 10 inch, slreleh, black -!ipm.

~a­

hook-up. refer&amp;nces reqUired,
poSit no pets. X.4·675-5182.

a

3325. '

'00 F-150 Lorlot 4x2 Ex1tnded
Clb, Irani. loft lror! - · loft 1111llght area dama~. power wind·
ow&amp;, power doors, AIC, crul. .

N1ce 2 bedroom, .washec &amp; dryer

• 7

Good $1,150, 814· 37i· ptopo. 12,500. OBO 304·862·

Paymenta Welcome, 614·388·

•

Fifth whetl fully selt·conta1ned
camper. 12,500. Large log trailer
$2,500. Computerized eaercise
Dike, new cond. $175. 304·882·

1181 Ch.vr Spectrum, 4 Door.
AulD, PB, Dtloy Wtpori, 4 Cyt, 28
MPG, Mew Tires, Exul Clean,

1993 Fora11uo11ng, 4 ely., oUIO,
loaded with toll af apliana drlv·
way with 20'rt down, grooming
available Uondly through Friday e(o lio olr bOg, 30,000 imloa,
814-992·11544.
• vac, 17250, D1UII2-4111 .
Puppy Palace KeMtls, Boarding. 1184 Cllvallor, auto, po, pb; air,
Stud Service Puppies, Grooming, arn-tm ~-· ptKplt. 11,000rnl,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds. $i,000.304-885-3088, '

Chairs, Call For Brochure 814-

448-7283.

Middleport 1 &amp; 2 bedtoom, lur mshed apts Also, 2 room efficiency. Oepos1t &amp; references reqUired. 304-882·2566

pnces, 15yra eJperience. Call for

lpptl.30+e75-8831 .
Medium Dog Houaa 1 Coga-$35
EICII814-44e-7221Mer6P.M,
llonlllly 11aa ptOOrtm nttd
Ao~ RIG Food 1- "~!~~~·A;~~
IU-1184 aboul II
JACK 3-X FLEA COLL~R.
molt and ltrnalt oduh ftua.
dOfjl&amp;catll

Help? Alit JD NORI'H
PRODUCE
BAHAMA &lt;()RUISEI 5 doyal4 81H48·1g33
About n.NAPPY·
ntghts, Underbookedlllult Sell JACK 3-X FLEA COlLAR. Klllo
$279/couplo. llmllod 1l~ke11. 1· 'l!ale &amp; Female Adull Fleao. For
800·414·4151 txt 8589'Mon·Sal ()ogo&amp;CIIII
9am-10pm.
llampored Powa, Solo, Toy PooBoa11 By Redwlng, Chlpp-. die, Shihllu, Shtldal, flaNon Gray
Tony lama. Guaranteed lowell Hound, Amaton Plrrots {already
Prkeo At Shoo Calt, GollipoML
talking), oil pot supplln 1fl%CSO%
~~~~~;.::.;===--! off, lloy 1'4th duough 11th, !aye-

Claw Fool Tub Excercise Bike
lar;e PicniC Table, little Tikel
R&gt;ol, 814·4441·2252.

Runs exc, Qood ahapa, new tires
&amp; b r - 12.500. 304-77.1-51119.
'

ol, 1350,814-4411·7581.

1011t0xo pel kennel, $200 f~rm.
Can be sean at red brick house

F1ttered Pump. 3 Veers Old, Alk·

1993 Honcla 300EX, ~ -oltt. :

HoriZon,

two tamale1, rudy June 15, at·
ceptlno dfOOIIII, $300 each,

2s·Magnavox Colar Conaale TV.
Needs Work; $75.00. BSR Equal:

112,QOOml, $1,000- 304·675157$.
11185 Dodge Arill. Lo1o Of RepoJ'
Work, Receipts For All Work,
!\Ina Good 1150,614-448-18011.

•• 5 s
• A K J 10 I 2

..:..:.._~~~~---l•tes
Plymoufl
5 ,.poor~,
411oor, $800, 814-11112·5858.

AKC mini Plnsche,a, ewo males,

180· Wanted To Do

Seatll

'47,000 111111, Ono Driver; Lldy
Drlvtn, Good Shape. Coli e14:,:·2i31 or ' " at 151 Borger

For oat• 2 H bOOmo. 12"x15"6",
.100eocl!, 814-742-lto3.

Goode

1171 Ford Ttlunderbird VI, pw,
c:ruise, ac, ver~ toad cond.

IO, t S
• Q •• 4
t

• e1 s

1185 Monr• Carlo, Gre~. V·8,

lloaudiut River View, 2 Bedn&gt;Omt
Froellollvoty Whhin 25111101.
tn Kanauga, No Pets, Reterences, 1:::--:-:-=::...::.:~::.=;;;::.=;::._

530

304· 773-;;o83 241YSiday.

WOI.FF TANNINCIIEDS
TAN ,;r HOllE
and SAVEl

Oudty HouiOhold Furrit.n Atrll
ApplilnC8L GrMI Dtato On
Cuh And Cwryl RENT-2-0WN
And lAw- Aloo Air 11 htt

Llvo Bail &amp; Licenaa. Crawford'o,
-eon,WV.

Including Corner Stonas and FW-

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-675· 1429

Chalra, T.V. Cablnt11, 130 BUia·
VIlli Pike, ·Gallipolis, 81 •·•••·

Grown For Sale I

20 Ca

• •••
AJ

• Qat 2

1,....,.
:a:J: •"llflll"
17 Oplriltfll

&lt;Baa&amp;
• KI I 2

Wea&amp;
• Q 10 7
• QI 5

ooltlng S7,200, 614-0G2·5011 .

Used Rtfrlgeratotl, Dinenea,
Couehos, Racllntrl, !laW, Olllot

"*'-"

A J t

• Jt. 5
•AUJ

ot extra chrome,. 7.tod. •

ster, lots

1IIUiiMI

• TItS

1988 - l d KXSOO -Front
Tire, Bodclh ~ Qood, 5110110 ,
1111 Malibu V-8, auto, ps-. pb, Running Blkt, Aoklno: l1,875l •
1I01Id Oodr- 11,3110 or 1llde lor lot 814· 37g·26127;00 P.ll. ·10:0~ •
P.M.
,:
6ld Nltf, 304-57e-2573.
10g2 Hotlt¥ Oavidoon eea Sport· :

PICKENS FUIWITIJRE
Now/\Jood
304-875-1450

Turt(ey, Archerr,, o 'una, Ammo,
Reloading &amp; F ohl~g Suppllea.

patentect weight -losa produc t.

Postal P,psitions. Petmanent fulllime ·for clerk/sorters. Full Benefits. For exam, appliCatiOn and
salary info. call: 708-264-1839 Ext
3670, Bam to 8pm

APPLIANCES

VIRA FURNITURE

170 Miscellaneous
i . . • "A1TENTION"
• Hair•Stylist Needed For JoAnne's 12X16 Wooden building. ohlngled
Kut And Kurt, 614-446-9498.
root, T1 -11 siding. 304-675-18511.
JoAnne Sheets
And Karen Burns. Kirby sweeper w/ ahlchments.
304·675-1726.
' S·WANTED-S
10 people who nGed to lose lota For Sale Gfavel Hill Ce·
wetght•&amp; make money, to uy new metety Cheshire, $200 per grave
'ATIN : Point Pleasarn•

USED

a

IIOtOJCYdH

740

Vine Street, Call IU·UI-riaa
1,800-~111.
'

month, lntludM ,...., ond """"

Deposit, Foster's Mobile Homes,

~:-~~~---.--·1

11115 l'lllario Explorer 4" 400,
$4.:100-304-411-1..
;

French Cl1y lloytog, 114-44e·
7'M,

12&gt;15 1t72 2 Bedroom, Clean,
Dapo~t Atqulrtld Coli oltor 5 Plol
e1H43631

makelnfiiiCIIPN!......

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on ,_, COlor, ro~~g~on,

orlgilt, Of any klltulloulo

11 /ulclaiOI

oraro,., 10 Day GuarantMI

GOOD

' l o - "w1y " ' - " "

aaxfomittal1111ua .. nallonll

339-6150

Wanltd ' To Bu~ Used Mobile
Homes. Calf: 61•4oi6-0115 ,

- ..--

Applioneeo:
Atconcllti..,...
Wo~o, Oryera, Rongoa, Atlrl·

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent
Minutes from Holzer Hospital.
10ll18 Srorage ~cllnQ . No Pelt

-

SOCIBI Wcwlcers. Now Hiring $23 f
Hr + Benelits, On ·nil Job Train·
1ng: To Apply In Voor Area, 1·800-

house in' Ma-

Wanted To Buy: Lillie Tikes Toys.

Smol-.

AilP!AncllniD 1-100-s:leo30ol0.

under land con -

1&lt;1~

lll*lrCWpot,
Niee &amp; Cloan, S200rllo., 1200
Depoolt Pluo Ut1111ieo, No "-11,

Postal &amp;. Gov·r Jobs 121 1Hr +
Btnelitt, No Eap. Will Train, For

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411'1111

• .._.10

anti ques, luotlture,
cloch. gold, silver,
es111... Osby

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

and SASE 10 Aslro·Graph. c/o lhll news·
paper, P .O , Box 1758, Murray Hill
Slation, Naw :Vorl&lt;, NY 10156. Make sure
1o 11181e your zodiac sign. ·
·
GEMINI (MIIy ·21-June 20)/1 you aren'l
IOially attenlive today, you mighl hear only
what you wanlto 1\ear when dilcuaslng a
~ ~ wjtiJ an asi()Ciele.
CANCER (.June 21-.IU\J 22) Proceed
one ..., a1 a time loday when deYtlopiog
your 'iateal pr6)tcl. H you 1'1 111 ·mawe
1
ma)dr changeS. you could meaa up the

aiHIIIbiY line.

, •

•CI!O (.July d-Aug. 22) In O(der for •
pa~nerahip a(rjngemenl lo work suew~. May 15, 19911
eet.rully IOday. bolh parlle8 mutt 'agree
Reward6·:could be In 11ora soon If you CXIfTtP(ollil~. E.., a ameN amoitill o1 dla·
111ay ~ y'our pra11nl oour111. In lhe yMi cord could iead.todefeal.
YlAOO
IAIIII·
23
S1pt.
22)
Tty
to
be
toler·
ahtad, do nol make unnectnary
changea 'ltlal could dally ~Ill gelling ani today H t;O-' ~11!ara f!On'l grap ldtal
aa quickly as you do. n _., hUrt you 1o
cloMr lo lulllmtnl.
TAIIRUI (Apltl 20 IIIW 20) Thil w((l be replllllte r.c:IIIOIIhe llow Ieamer&amp;. •
one ol tholl day• In WIIICh rou cobld UBRA (1lept. 23-0QI. 23) n yoll arelholt
dalut youraell ~ ·~ lloteenaary llnancla~y today, don't borrOw money
cl!anun In tomethlng lhal Ia running lrom friends lo aubtldize a lolly . Your
Will. TIUIUI, -.1 ,aureilf,IO a bWiday wallet may bl a Hlllll ligl!l at pay-back

;

'

lime.
scoR,a (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) When shoppmg today, If you're undecided aboul
buying somelhing for your house, walk
away from K and come back laler, espe·
c1ally wllle need is no1 crillcal.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) Your
work habits mig hi be erralic loday and
!here's a chan&lt;:e you'll lty to sqtMeze by
with a ·liCk and a promise.
; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.Jan. 11) An
oppommily with profi1able pole"llal might
alip.lhrclugh your flngera loday If you
hiVe an easy-come, eaiy-go alltlude.
AQU~RIUS (Jan. :.Feb. 11) Proapecta
who want to buy whal you heve lo offer
'today mlghl wiggle olf llle hook K you're
. no1 careful. Wrile up llle onler aa 110011 aa
you gel il approved.

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6- Teams to Be

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PISCES (l'tll. zo.MIIrch 20) Try lo oae

'

lltlngl lOr what lhtiy ani loday and do 1101 .
fall prey to your fears. Neglll!tle lhlnklng II
no1 ®11111UCtlva lilld w111 biMII~-

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ARIES (llareii21-Aprtl111 Today, Kwill
behOove you to ...., lliMr of .,.,. lha•
riller unique or novel ""!tchlndlal. The
iJmblance mlghl 001'1)1181 you lo buy !lidgo11 whiCh you d9 no1 need.
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hge10 • The o.tly Sentinel

Tu111My, May 14, 11M

POIMI'Oy • Mldclepof\, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Justice is not always served in some very strange caseS
Ann
Landers
1¥9$. 1.of, M lfk$
T!Mtl
C~·
-.an S}"'dkw.

s,..-. ...

Dear Ann Landers : Are you
aware that a disabled grandmother,
; who is unable to go up and down
. stairs, can lose her home through
•confiscation by the go•ernment
•because her grandson is growing
:marijuana in the basement? Here's
"more·

• A~ absentee landlord can be sued
: because the dog of a tenant keeps a
:neighbor awake by barking. •

A motber can be sent to jail ly beaten by a gang of live womea
·
because her daughter fepeatedly 'wielding bms.
skips school.
We need to protect people from
A wife can lose her car because being held accountable for the
her husband used it for sex with a actions of others. Please do wllll
prostitute.
you can to help. - Mclean, VL
You can be sued if, while you arc
Dear McLean: There is no way
at work, your neighbor cuts an over· that I can pass judgment on any of
hanging limb from your tree and it the c~ you have ciWI because I
falls on a visiting child.
don't have all the facts. I can tell
A property owner can be held you, however, that justice is not
liable for an employee's racial bias. always served and Sll'angc things
A coach can be held liable for happen all the time. For example:
"point shaving" by a player, even
In Honolulu, a man was beaten
though the coach has no knowledge into a state of unconsciousness by
of it
t~e counselor who led his anger·
Not long ago. a shopping center management class. Yes, you read
was held responsible because a right
.
woman on the premises was severePeople sometimes accuse me of

llllking up ldters. No way could I
Ullicc up uylhing to comJ*e with
whal comes in over the IJ'allsom
every day. I wouldn't even try.
De.- Ann Landen: You were way
off base in your response to the
woman who was un....,., with her
mother's newfound interest in the
computer. You said her mother was
addicted. Here's a more realistic
reply for that self-centered daughler:
Wake up and smell the coffee,
girl. Obviously, your mother is tired
of fixing your meals and doing your
laundry. You live rent-free and have
the arrogance to complain now that
your DJOther has found something
she finds more interesting than taJt.
ing care of her grown children.

jPatriotic

In view ofthe.factthat it's the 50th
anniversary of their graduation from
Middlepon·High School. the class of
1946 and their guests will be holding
a special get-together on Saturday,
May 25. ·
The e•ent will be held beginning
at 12 noon at the old American
Legion Hall on Fourth St. in Mid·
dleport. A lot of "remember whens"
should take pii)Ce and tli'ere will be
refreshments .•
Anyone with questions should
call Nita Conde, Edna Russell,
Richard npd Doris Bailey, Katie R,usscll or Louise· Radford. Louise ha&lt;
had a lot of health problems recent·
ly but she can handle things with a
walker and definitely plans to be on
hand.

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11

A patriotic program of readings
pnd music highlighted a recent
meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, held at the home of
Margaret Weber, Rutland.
Mrs. Weber's daughter, I'&gt;onna
Jenkins, and her granddaughter.
,Sarah Dawn Jenkins presented the
·music program. lbey gave the history of several selections including.
''Battle Hymn of the Republic:",
.:'When Johnny ·Comes Marching
.. Home~ and the "Star Spangled Ban-

ATTENTION.;

MOMS, DADS,.
GRANDPARENTS, AUNTS;
.UNCLES, FRIENDS OF
GRADUATING SENIORS

Cowboy recipes ... _..:.___ _ _ _ -~dumplings test done. Serve broth,
chicken and dumplings in soup bowls
and season to taste .
Nutritional analysi·s per serving:
397.3 calories; l(i.3 grams total fat;
(5.3 grams saturated fatj; 38.5 grams
protein; 21 .6 grams carbohydrates;
114 milligrams cholesterol ; appro~i­
mately 375 milligrams sodium.·
HerF 's a substantial formula for
predictable cowboy chow: white bean
soup from "Sidemeat, "tra)i cook for
the popular Riders in the Sky.
SIDEMEAT'S BEAN SOUP
Makes 8: JO servings
I pound navy beans
I ham bone
I I 5-to-16-ou·nce can tomatoes,
cutup
I onion, chopped

•

2 ribs celery, chopped
Salt and pepper to taste
I bay leaf
Oregano to taste
.
Soak beans overnight in 8 cups
water. Remember to get the water
upstream from the herd. Add a meaty
ham bone, tomatoes, onion and eel·
ery. Add some salt, 'pepper, bay leaf
and oregano. This here's your chance
to be creative or else use up what's
festmng in the back of·thc pantiy.
Simmer for 2·4 hours. Dice the meat,
put it back in the soup, give the hone
to your dog. Secret touch of ~at­
ness: Put about 2 cups of soup in a
blender and rile it up 'till it's a cloudy
liquid and pour it back ih the soup.
Let it cook 'till it's the way that suits
you. Ummm boy, now thai's good
eatin.'

The Daily Sentinel
•

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H....dsGne..
Syracuse

Bedding.&amp;
Vagetable Planta..........$6.50 ftat
10 in Hanging Baskets $5.75 &amp;
$6.75
.
12 in Hanging Basket Ferns
$10.95
Comblnalion Pots
•............................... $3.50-$9.95
Geraniums................$1.00 &amp; Up
........................... 10 or more 85¢
Azaleea................... $4.95-$8.95
RhododendtQ!II ...............$12.95
Shrubs &amp; r -..... $2.95-$10.95
Open Dilly l&amp;m. ·I p.m.
8undly 12 NMn •• p.m.

ea..m

R1ln tonight. LOWI In
lhe so.. Thlndly, 70 .,....
cent chlnce of r~ln. High

"-10.

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'Vol. 47, NO. 15
2 Seotlol18, 14 . . . .

employees receiVIng the five year
pins; three, 10 year pins; live, 15 year
pins: one a 20 year pin; with two
receiving 30 year recognition pins. In
addition two retirees during the year
will be honored during ceremonies
scheduled for Friday.

Sentinel Classifieds

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A special section of the supplement will be,'
set aside just for your personal messages.
To place your ad, send $20,
al?ng with your clearly written messa&amp;e, . ·
. of,20 words or less to:

The Daily Sentinel
III ·court St.
Pomeroy, Ohiq 45769
(Deadline for ads is Noon, May 16).
•

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35-.llj'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 15, 1996

Explains applicatiOfJS

Community calendar---

..

8846
Buckeye 5:
7-18-22-24-25

Sports on Page 6

Send questions to Ana L.nden,
CreJiton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LOll Angeles,
Calif. 90045

warn

Continued from page 6
.
chicken tests done. Remove from
heat and pull chicken from pot.
When cool enough to handle. remove
skin and discard. Remove meat and
pull into serving pieces. Discard
chicken bones and onion .from pot.
Skim fat from the top of stock.
: Return chicken pieces to the ·pot of
s.tock.
·
. M~while, in a medium mixing
bowl. combine nour. baking powder
and saJt .. Cut in shortening. and then
tllld enough milk so that bauer is
smooth but not too runny. Bring pot
of chicken and stock to a simmer,
then drop bauer by spoonsfuls into
the hot liquid. Let cook 5·minutes,
ulicovered, then co•er the pot and
cook another 5·" minutes, or until

•

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Plck-4:

Unanached."

Meantime, the Burlingham Modern Woodmen will be having their
annual matching fund dinner on
Memorial Day, officially, May 27.
It will be a smorgasbord dinner at
the lodge hall with serving to be from .
II a.m. to 6 p.m. The group will also
ner."
have
baked goods available which
Historian Mary Yost spoke on the
you'
can
take home. There is no nat
'history of the nag, noting f!lc sym·
charge
for
the dinner, you just make
·holism of the stars and stripes ·•
a
contribution.
·
·"'We take the stars from heaven, the
The Modern Woodmen home
'red bf our mother country, scparat·
office
at Rock Island, m.. will match
'ing it by white stripes thus shown we
the
money
taken in at the dinrier up
Mrs.
Abbie
Stratton
who
retired
have separated from her, and the
to
$2500.
And
the best part is that the
here from teaching a few-years back ·
white striped show k, do gown to
entire
amount
will be given to Mr.
staged her first piano recital at her .
'posterity representing liberty."
PATRIOTIC PROGRAM - Donna Jenkins and her daughter, Sarah D.wn presented 1 prog111 m of
home on Mulberry Ave. , on May 4. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters to help out on
patriotic music, while Mary Yost, right, tllkad on the hlatory of the l~g at the recant Retum
attributed to George Washington.
,
Students presenting , selections their surgery and medical bills.
Yost also noted that on June 17, Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, held It the home of Margaret B
Both
have
had
surgery
and
Mrs.
were
Anna
Grueser,
Emily
Stivers,
Weber, Rutland. · · ·
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1777, after the colonies declared
Lillie Tremblay and Jo11 Tremblay Sauters underwent major surgery
'independence, the nag had 13
'stripes and 13 stars in a lllue field concluded the program with the trib· the country. ·
Ohio, the new member enrollment, while Norma Custer, Nan,cy Grueser, plus has rehabilitation bills.
By the way, if you can't hang
Phyllis Skinner, Mark Orueser, Pam
representing a new constellation." ute by Sergeant Percy Webb, "I Am
She ..went on to point out that and outstanding Constitution Week Tremblay, Rev. Peter Tremblay, Rita around the hall. carry-out dinners will
By 1795 the nag had two more stars Old Glory."
overall, immigrants use all forms of ac'tivities.
be available.
:and stripes with the admission of
A donation was made to the state Lewis and Mary Roush were on hand
welfare and the number of new SSI
to hear the musical presentations.
;~ve more states, and by 1959 the
Rae Rey~olds gave the national applications has more than tripled regent's project at the state meeting.
Larry and Bessie Taylor of Mid- ·
Abbie has taken a busy role since
flag had attained its present 50 stars defense message concerning non· since 1982 with the increase going Invitation~ were received to
dleport
enjoyed a week's vacation in
returning
to
Meigs
County.
Teaching
'for 50 states.
citizens legal immigrants and from 92,000 in 19882 to 459,200 in Nathaniel M,assey t:;hapter, and
Naples,
Fla., away frQm .the Meigs
is
just
one
endeavor.
She's
prespiano
: She said that in a day's time the refugees who have increased the 1995. The roll also show, she said, Nabby Lee Ames Chapter, May 17
.
ident
of
the
Women's
Aux.iliary
at
County
cold.
For the most part the
flag may be hoisted at sunrise. low- social security program by 14 per- that blind and ·disabled aliens at 'the Athens Country Club with
ered at sunset. raised· over a battle· cent each year since 19B5. For increased from 36,000 to 326,190 in state regent, S. Woolslayer as l)on· Veterans Memorial Hospital and is weather in Naples w&amp;S about 90
active in the Retired Teachers Asso- degrees every day. Wonder how Larfield, nown at half mas1, presented ell.ample, l.hc .llllid, in \.988 abo111 the same period of time.
, ored speaker.
ciation and the Daughters of the ry a~d Bessie enjoyed the local
to a classroom, suihg to, raised for 643,000 non-citizens were admitted
Bernice Carpenter'read the attor·
Pauline Atkins reported on the American Revolution besides other weather on Mother's Day. After lhc
!he pledge of allegiance, reven;d to the United States for permanent ncy general's message. Abbie Strat- Ohio'Congress annual meeting host·
when in a parade, flown over the residence. In 199(that number rose ton gave the secretary's report. June ed by the Southeast District. Attend· groups. And in between times she southern beat, not to well probably.
capital, tattered . and town, but to 1.8. million for permanent resi- Ashley led the pledges, and Weber ing were Holter, Atkins, Anna Cle· does a bit of traveling.
1be experienced "green . thum·
always deserving of respec! and care dence. · When the immigration read correspondence. Eileen Buck land, and Reynolds. A luncheon was
It's National H~pital Week and as bers"
that it's best to wait until
· after long service.
reform and control act legalized 2.7 acknowledged a certificate of merit served by ho!tesses, Weber, Atkins,
a
part
of
the
observance
at
Veterans
after
Mother's
Day to plant those
She conducted an education quiz million illegal aliens and in 1994; received from the Ohio Society for and Jenkins with contributors,
Memorial
Hospital,
some
18
employ·
nowers. Eager be;!verlhat I am, I didabout the proper use of the nag and more than 8Q4 immigrants entered publicity. first place in Southeastern Sharon Jewell and Clotine Black·
ees will be presented service pins.
~·t
wait did yoq? How long does it
·wood.
The pins are in recognition of take us to learn to listen to those who
long-time service as employees of the know the ropes? Along lime, appar•
hospital and are given ~ lh five year · cntly. Do keep smiling.
increments. There will be seven
The Community Calendar is Chamber of Commerce luncheon Citizens Center. Dr. Nick Robinson to
flatl the ..., buys I• the
published as a rree servke to non· Tuesday, noog at the Meigs County speak on wellness.
To place aa H, call .
profit groups wishing to announce Senior Citize.ns Center.
992~2156
· meeti11g and special events. The
.TUPPERS PLAINS ·· Orange
calendar is not designed to promote
POMEROY •• Revival services, Townsbip Trustees, special meeting,
. sale_s or rund raisers or any type. Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Items are printed as space pennits through Sunday, 7 p.m. Tuesday Roger Ritchie.
and cannot be guaranteed to run a · through Saturday, 10:30 a.m. and
specific number or days.
· 6:30p.m. on Sunday. Rev. Bob Stew·
POMEROY · • Revival, Calvary
MONDAY
art speaker; the Sisson family and the Pilgrim Church, State Route 143,
POMEROY -- Meigs County Stewarts, special music.
Rev. John White and singers featured.
Right to Life meeting Monday, 7:30
7 p.m. nightly.
·
p.m. at the Meigs County Library in
MIDDLEPORT -· The Classics to
Pomeroy.
play. at Overbrook Nursing Center, THURsDAY
. LETART ·· Parent Advisory
Tuesday, 6:30·p.m., part of National
POMERO.Y ·· The Big Bend
Council,
Letart Elementary, Thurs·
'Farm Antiques Club·will meet Mon- Nursing Homo Week observance.
day, 2 p.m.. at the school. All volun.
day. 7:30 p.m at the Meigs- High
POMEROY •• Meigs County teers urged to auend.
School Library.
·
Board of Elections, 9 a.m. Tuesday at
RACINE ' · Racine Post 602.
TO
the Pomeroy office.
RACINE
··
The
Racine
Board
of
American
Legion, dinner 6:30 p.m.
D'Hart country entertainer,
Public
Affairs
will
meet
at
7
p.m.
followed
by
business meeting, 7:30
-will be performing at a 24WEDNESDAY
Monday
at
the
annex.
p.m.
New
officers
to be installed.
hour cancer fund raiser at
CHESTER ·· Chester Township
the P~rkarsburg City Park
LONG BOITOM ·· Faith Full Trustees, 7 p.m., Wednesday at the FRIDAY
. Friday 1nd S1turdly. On FriOospcl Church revival Monday town hall in special session .. Regular
:'day aha will be among enter·
MASON •• Bend Area Gospel
through Saturday.. Guest speaker. Tuesday meeting postponed.
tllnlll'll at the 9:30 p.m. lumiJubilee, Mason County Fairgrounds,
Charles Hall.
nary aarvlce to honor cancer
You can place your own special
RU1LAND -· Rutland Village Friday, 6:30 p.m. Saturday and Sun.victim• and following that
day. I :30 p.m .
POMEROY -- Bed lord Township Council regular meeting Wedncs·
will pre•nt another program
message to a graduating high school
day,
7
p.m.
at
the
civic
center.
Trustees. 7 p.m. Monday at the town·
· of mualc. On Saturday she
senior in our 1996 Graduation
ship hall.
·
·will perform It 12:30 p.m.
POMEROY
••
Alzeheimers
Dis•
· D'Hart II a cancer sui'Yivor.
ease/Related Disorders suppon
supplement; which will be included
At 11 years of age she had a
TUESDAl;'
group,.
I
to
3
p.m.
Wednesday.
Senior
malignant brain tumor.
POMEROY •· Meigs County
in the Friday, May 24 edition of the

I
1

Pick 3:

by Bob Hoeflich

.Presented

I

!'low when I'm asked. "Willi is
your C~~~Tent marital ~?"I'm
sUre how to answer. Am I considered
single aaain? Should I say I'm still
di•orced ? Widowed? Willi's tile
riaht answer? ·• Calegorically COlifused· in Calif.
Dear Confused: You arc
divorced. Widowed is out becaUJe
you were divorced when your for.
mer husband was killed. "Still
divorced" doesn't fit·· it sounds as
if you arc planning to get your
divorce annulled. The best answeris

Her lean and tbruts to sell the
bouse and move away n revealinj
clues that reflect her weariness or
havina you boss her around. Get a
life, and stop tryin1 to run yOur
mother's. •· Roslyn Heights, N.Y.
Dear Roslyn: It's fascinating how
a letter can be interpreted in a variety of ways, dependinj! on the bias
of the reader.
Thanks for your opinion.
Although you and I don't agree,
you're entitled .
Dear Ann l-anders: I was married
for II years. after which time my
husband and I separated and
divorced. A few years after that, my
ex-husband was killed. I have never
remarried.

Beat o.f the Bend ...

progr~m

I

Gooden hurls·
no-hit, no-run
victory

Under ihe bill. motorists at the
time of registration could teH the stale
to keep all information confidential,
The policy is Ohio's response to
a fedenillaw enacted to shield from
disclosure information that could
give stalkers a way to track down vic·
tims.

"It gives indi•iduals the opponu~
nity to indicate to us on either a
motor vehicle registration, a driver's
license or vehicle title application
that they .do not wish their personal
infonnation disclosed," said Frank
Caltrider, assistant registrar.
"That will prevent us from pro·
viding it to companies that market
prOducts, or to individuals checking
en another individual."
lbere are several exceptions. Law

enforcement agenCies would still
Frank Deaner. executive directof
have access, as would private detec· of the Ohio Newspaper Association.,
lives. The names and addresses of said the bill was a reasonable way 1u
vehicle owners would remain open to react to the federal legislation.
;
automakers who must recall cars for
" It's better. than closing th~
safety repairs.
records totally," he said Wedncsda)'.
Even motorists who want inforCaltrider said some Ohioans
mation kept confiden· ·al could pro· · might prefer that companies hav¢
vide for its release in certain cir- access to the data.
cumstances such as applying for a job
"I happen to own a boat and a jet
that required a good driYing record. ski. I get magazines and catalogues
Caltrider said that without the for services based on the fact I have
state disclosure section, federal law those registered. I appreciate that
would shield all the d·ata after Sep- myself," he said.
tember 1997.
Final action on the bill came after
"If )lie had not come up with this legislators rcmo•ed a section that
program then we' would have been would have raised the fees tow-truck
pre•ented from releasing anybody'~ operators may charge for hauling
information." he said.
velliclcs out of private no-parking
zones.

Additional funds sought by Chester
Courthouse restoration committee

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news 1tlff
The Chester Courthouse Restora·
tion Committee is looking for more
donations to increase local support
Convicted burglar,. robber, kidnapper ·
for the project before applying later
l.
this month for matching funds
· receives maximum of 26
to
55
years
·.
..
through a special state block grant
By Jl~ FREEMAN
by separate prison t~rm"
program. .
.
OVP.rie*s staff
· Lentes·, wanling ~cparate se.n·
Pat 'l:lqltcr. nroject coordinator,
~~
r ,
,,CIIiivltied· bilrglar~· robber · and tenccs ori each count, said there was reports
that·r the county
can appIy '.or
kidnapper Brad Ro,binson, 27 , a separate motivating factor if! the up to $20,000 in funding. bu.t a
Pomeroy, was sentenced to 26-to-55· kidnappings.
matching amount must be on h~nd
years in .prison Tllesday.aftemoon for
"The kidnapping w~ done not just · when the application is filed. Curhis role in the Jan. 15 robbery of the to facilitate the robbe(Y. but to aid in rently 'there is about $6,000 in the
Meigs CoUJity Salvation Army in the escape." he said.
. ·· . .
fund.lncr0asingthat amount through
Pomeroy.
·· Public defender Michael Westfall · donations will mean that the county
Meigs Common Pleas Court disagreed: "The ki.dnap and .rob· can apply for more matching funds.
. .:: - .
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill gave Robin· beries would merge ."
son, who convicted by a jury Friday,
Crow agreed with Lentes,
the maximum sentences on two
Before Crow passed sentence,
count~ of robbery, two counts of kid- Robinson. wearing a green Meigs
napping and one count of aggravat· County Jail uniform, shackles and leg
ed· robbery.
irons, said he was not there the night
On the night of the crime, Robin· of'thc crime but apologized to the two
son, acco111panied by J.osh Cremeans, victims for their inconvenience.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (APJ 14, of Middleport and Tara Booth, 12,
"I ask for your forgiveness," he The man who was once West Vir·
of Pomeroy. broke inio the Butternut said, commenting that he "will be a ginia's youngest governor will have ·
Avenue residence of Dora Wining. model prisoner."
to defeat a coal miner's daughter in
87, which at the time housed a chap·
Crow then scnlen,cd ·Robinson to November to become the state's old·
ter of the Salvation Army.
four cighl-lo· l5-ycar terms for the est governor.
There, Cremeans and Robinson two robberies and kidnappings, and
Businessman Cec!l Underwood,
went up to a sccond-noor apartment, · to a single I0-to-25-ycar term on the who was 34 when he began serving
assaulted and restrained Wining and aggravated ~urglary charge , with all a lour-year ten.n in 1957. beat out two
her 63-year-old daughter. Helen ·to be served consccuti'vcly with crcd- . rivals Tuesday to capture the GOP
Townsend of Ashville. and then pro- it for time served in the Meigs Coun· gubernatorial primary..
ceeded ·IO ransack the dwelling with ty Jail.
He'll face former state Sen. Char·
BoOth's assistance.
Crow said the age of the victims lotte Pritt. who won the DemQCratic
An undetermined amount of mon- made his job a little easier.
gubernatorial nomination by defeat·
ey · and other belongings were
Crow suspended the kidnapping ing a field of I0.
removed from the apartment.
sentences in lieu of five years proha·
In 'the state's Democratic Senate
During sentencing, Meigs Coun- lion.
primary. Jay Rockefeller swamped
ty Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Under a new sentencing bill that his only challenger. Bruce Barilla, a
Lentes, in accordance with the vic· takes· effect in July, Lentes said part·timc minister who also works as
lims' wishes, recommended the Robinson may actually wind up scrv- a college janitor.
harshest possible sentence. noting the ing 26 years.
And in Nebraska, Omaha invest·
~ge of the victims and the nature of
Cremeans pleaded guilty earlier to · ment panker Chuck Hagel won the
~e crimes.
similar charges and is now serving Republican Senate primary. He'll
. '"This defendant is a dangerous time in a state juvenile facility. Booth face two-term Gov. Ben Nelson in
offender," he said.
has pleaded guilty to charges of. rob- November to fill the scat of retiring
: "More compelling is the psycho- bery and burglary and is awaiting Democratic Sen. Jim Exon. Nelson
was unopposed in the Democratic
lpgical injury. the victims are suffer, sentencing.
' ·
ing to this day." Lentes said. "We
·"We're just glad the whole thing is prill]ary.
.
Hagel,
49,
a
deputy
administrator
lielievc the maximum sentence is over for the victims. lltcy'vc been
appropriate."
terrified. reliving this every night." he for veterans affairs under the Reagan
.: One question was whether or not said .
the robbery and kidnapping counts
"Now they can go home and feel
were allied offenses. not punishable safe ." .
.
~

•

Motorist privacy bill orr
Gov. Voinovich's desk

COLUMBUS (APi - Motorists
could keep government-maintained
personal information about them·
selves from prying,eyes under a bill
the Legislature sent to Gov. George
Voinovich.
Voinovich is expected to sign the
bill , which the House and Senate
· approved Tuesday.
A motorist pt;ivacy provision was
included in the bill that Rep. Sam ·
. Ba!eman, R-Milford, sp&lt;insored to
make a series of mostly minor
changes in motor vehicle registration
laws. ' "
· Current law lets anyone - not
just th~ .police - run a check of a
Jeln TI'USIIII (lett), Meigs County Grairts Administration, explain• vehicle license plates through comgrant 1ppllcations to over 40 tQwnship and vlll119e offlcllla at Tuas- puters at the Ohio Bureau of Motor.
dly's Community Development Block Grant pujJiic hearing at the Vehicles.
·
Meigs County Courthouse. TNaaell •ld $166,000 in CDBG funda
Ia available lor a maximum of alx projecta county-wide. Attending
- . t (I tor) Meiga Colinty Commisaionera Robert Hllrtenbach, Janet
Howard, and Fred Hollman. VIllage arid township admlnlstrllors
must have grant applications completed by May 30. (T. Hunter/Sen·
tinel photo)
·

Robinson sentenced
to pen by Judge Grow

A ~nett Co• .......,.._

The deadline for submitting the appli· $1 oo;ooo.
cation is May .31 .
Since· then the ft~nd got a boost
Holter reminded residents that from the Modem Woodmen of Amer·
contributions of $100 or more quali· ica who matched $2,500 raised by the
fy for .having a name put on a memo· committee at a dinner.
rial plaque to be hung in the court·
Plans call for the work to· begin
house.
this summer with replacement of.thc
the committee has for sale per· roof which now has large holes in it.
s_&lt;inalizcd .commemorali ve mugs But before that work can begin,
beanng a ~ICtur.e of the cout'lhoulle. ·~·Holter sa\d, the ·cxtcrior,-wall~' wilt·.
The mugs arc $10 each and may be ha•c 10 be reinforced. The commit·
ordered by calling Holter at992-7261 tee is working with Mary Ann
or 992-2622.
Reeves, Southeast Ohio coordinator
The county was recently awarded ·for ·the Ohio HistoriCal Society
$46:~ from the Appalachia ~ublic because everything that is done must
Fac1hty Grant Fund but the esumatc conform with the Society's specili·
· the oldes t stand'ng
on res onng
1 cour· cations.
'
thouse in · Ohio is more than
Plans call for the first noor of the

building"which many years ago was
remodeled will be restored to the way
it was in the early 1820's. Holter said
that the second floor is pretty much
the same as it was 170 years ago with
a s_inglc room and large exposed
beams.
The committee ha' entered into a
joint usc agreement with the Uni·
vcr~it~ of. Rio. Orandc~Ol!lCordil\g to
the coordinator, who expects t.l\c uni·
vcrsity to play a . vital role .in ·pro- ,
gramming and exhibits once the twostory brick structure has been
restored.
Several public tours of the building ha•e been offered over the past
several months in an effort to garner
support for the project. ·

West Virginia primary

Pritt, Underwood clash in November·
During the primary campaign. wouldn't be using the go•crnor's
· administration, got 62 percent of the
vote, handily heating Attorney Gen- Underwood auempted to usc his age otTicc "as a stepping stone to anotheral Don Stenberg, who received 38 to his advantage,. telling voters he er job." .
percent.
Rockefeller, a former go•crnor
and popular two-term senator,
received 89 percent of the vote. Bar· .
illa got II percent.
Rockefeller's opponent in Novcm·
ber will be Betty Burks, a nurse's aide
with no political experience . She was
unopposed in the GOP prj mary.
Barilla, who spent primary night
working ill Concord College in
Athens, said he nc.cr expected to
beat Rockefeller. "I hope I gel to·
meet' him sometime and we gel to
talk." he said.
·
·
Underwood, who won the GOP
contest with 41 percent of the vote.
would be West Virginia '6 oldest governor if he wins on Election Day,
Nov. 5 - his 74th binhday, .
He has his work cut ou1; for him :
TheOhioRiverhesCiuBedtrafflcproblemsonthePomlroyPat'k-1
Democrals in the state · outnumber
Lot once again, with the river hitting the 36 loot mark :"~:d~=~~
Republicans more than 2 to I among
the parking lot at the river access ramp. More l'llln II
the 884,000 registered voters. All
the weekend. Offlclala with
U.S. Army Corps
statewide elected officials and ·a ~~~~:~~at the Racine Loeks and Dame silted ·this morning
majority of the Legislature arc
is dropping at a steady' rate and thart1 Ia no clinger of flood· I
Democrats.
(T. Hunter/Sentinel photo)

.---More high

th"

Cong. Wise outlines damage pla.n for Henderson residents

Meigs board OKs list for
substitute teachers, others
. .
: 'The Meigs Local Board of Education rehired substitute teachers and
l)iher personnel at. Tuesday night's
regular meeting held at the district's
central office in Pomeroy.
• Hired as subscitutes for the 199697 school year were:.
. Aides .. Josie Morton, lo An~
Wildman; Peggy Carpenter and·Phyllis Witherell; Bus drivers t· Patti
Johnson, William Capehart Jr., Roger
Collerill, Jo Oilmore, Larry Drake.
Gary McKnight, Carolyn Rickard,
Kevin Jewell, Oliver Norris, Ron
Wilson and Donna Bentley; Cooks •
: Edna Will, Robin Butcher, Carolyn
CHapman, Coleen Whaley, Kay Dod,
spn, Jacgu~line Hoover, Tammy

.

.

'"-to

'

Jarvis, Tana Kennedy, Cindy Lam·
bert, Janice l:.yons. Debbie Riffie and
Loretta Schartigcr;
Custodians •• Charles Hysell,
Ricky Birchfield. Doug Jenkins, Bob
Johnson Anha Welsh, Max Wilson,
Carroll Johnson and Dennis Tillis;
Mechanics .. St~ven Couerill. Den··
nis Tillis, Gary King Jr. and Ronald
Mullins· Secretaries·· Lilly Kennedy,
Mona Frecker, Kay Hemsley, Julia
Sayre, Deloris Shepard; Charlc~e
Thomas Allee Jean Buckley, Bonme
Denny. 'Margo f1orian, J~queline
Justice, Pam Napper. Jenntfer Kay
Upton, Jennie Williamson and Rose
Mary Eskew. '
Cclntilllled on p-.e 3

the project began.
By JON TROYER
"You're absolutely right," Wise
OVP News Staff
replied.
·
HENDERSON, W. Va. · U.S.
Wise
outlined
a
four-step
plan
by
Congressman Bob Wise and West
which
(I)
the
remaining
fami,lics
Virginia State Senator Robert Dittmar
addressed approximately 40 resi- woul4 be able to get out as soon as
dents at the Henderson community possible; (2) the compensation
center Monday afternoon, and process would be drastically sped up;
announced their efforts to speed up (3) one phone number and one coilthe process of relocating the llfarn· tact person would be n:'ade available
ilies who still reside close :to the con· in case anyone needed mfonnat1Qn or
struction .site of the U.S. 3S upgrade. help; and (4) in two weeks S~n .
None of the families have· been Dittmar would set up a meeung
offered any reimliurs~ment either by between area residents and state ofli·
the state or the constriletion compa- cials w.ho would give a progress
..
ny's insurance backers, but it has been · report.
1be
meeting
has been set for I
clear their houses are in danger from
falling rocks, debris and mud from an p.m. on May 28. with the Division of
Highways.
.
overhang above a row of houses.
"''m
glad
that
we're
finally
getting
.One Henderson resident susgcst·
ed all the homes along the construc- down \o.an organized effort and dis- .
tion site should have been bought out cussioti, aild we've got their·attention,
and cqnde.mned right away, ~fore . and their ~~lOVing." Dittmar said,

referring Lo the state.
All matters of relocation are han·
died by the State of West Virginia,
while Mashuda's (the construction
company's) insurance company is
tesp~nsiblc for damaged personal
property.
Wise reiterated his apologies at the
end of the meeting, which lasted
approximately an hour: ''I'm •ery sor·
ry you hjld to go through this. · This
is one of the most blldly handled pro·
jects I've ever seen ."
Wise told residents he had spoken
with Secretary of Transportation 'Fred
Van Kirk over, the phone Monday
morning, and Van Kirk assured him
that the state is willing to buy out all
the properties along the construction
site.
. According to area residents, state
oflidals with •uthority over the project have ne•er met with them as a

group, thOugn repeated complaints o{
weakened foundations, falling rocks
an.d sliding earth have been reported~
When asked if they were e•er giv:
en direction as to how to find reimbursement for damaged property ·
one resident said flatly, "No. We edu:
catcd ourselves."
In another exchange, Wise asked·
if the residents would be inrerested in.
his requesting the state to meet witli
them as ~group. ·.The response was'
a long pause, before he was simpl)"
aske~. "How long would that take?":
Wise assured ihem the admlnis.'
trati•e ·process was "moving a lot
faster now."
,
Another frustrated resident said.'
"We feerJike we're in a war zone over
there," and quoted ~ Mashuda ~ ·
sentati•e as denying )hat any or the
d~~ge was done by the company's
acUVtly.

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