<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9205" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9205?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-26T11:53:17+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19634">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/cc228076398a63bfe384cc324cf2de9a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ff78c2ec18598cfd2f10ce54efdb18c9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29582">
                  <text>•

••
•

•

. ~ 14. The O.lly Sentinel

WedniiMy, lilly 15,

1184•

,

PEPSI
PRODUaS

STORE HOURS

lndlaris

*'
w••av
8AM·10 PM

•

defeat
Tigers

Pick 3:

220

Plck4:

7816

••

Super Lotto:

CUBE 24 Pl12 OZ.

M..tay

Ohio Lottery

.5-17·18-29-31-39

Sports on Page 4

501880

$ 49

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

•

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU MAY '11; 1996.

·'

7 UP DR•.
PEPPER
PRODUCTS .

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
EVERYDAY·

umls

USDA CHdOICE BONELESS EYE OF

Roun Roast •••••~••~.....

BONELESS SKINLESS

.

.

cken Breast ....~.....

OSCAR MAY~R

BONELESS BEEF

HORMEL CANNE~

I&amp;

•

.

.

$4 99
R1b Eye Steaks ...........
$ 1·39

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .

. . · 11.2 .oz.

Fun Paks...................
.
.

.

.

.

$
199
lb.

LAYS ASST.
POTATO
CHIPS

1

Vehicle• drive In left lanes through high. wa111r which cloeed
the right lane• on Eae111m Avenue leading Into Cincinnati
Wadneldar. The Cincinnati area received two to four lnchee of
rain yesterday. (AP)

.:Ohio River contin.ues
to riseafier hea'vy rain

(
.

•

By Staff and Wire Reporte
More than 1.4 inches ofrain fell
on Meigs County during a 24-hour
period, flooding roads·in the western
end of the county, according to the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service.
Water closed Dexter Road, .lunior
Ward Road, Rock Run and other
roads including· a .portion of state
Route 143, which has since reopened.
. The Ohio River reading at Rac;ine
Locks and Dam was 31.8. feet at
10:30 a.m., which is six feet, four
inches beiow llood level. The river
was rising at a steady pace.
Officials at the Robet:t C. Byrd
Locks &amp; Dam in Eureka said the
Ohio River lower guage reading was
37.2 at6 a.m., today, which.is 25 feet
above tbe normal pool stage of 12
feet. Flood stage at the dam is 50 feet.
The reading on the upper gauge was
15.9.
The Ohio. stood at 31.5 feet, at
P9int Pleasan)i at 6 a.m., which is
about· eight a~d one-half feet below
llood stage, It is ~bout 13 feet below
Oood stage in the Gallipolis area. The
river was climbing two-tenths a foot
an hour this morning. Officials could
not predict a crest due to Wcdnes-

CLOROX
BLEACH

lb.

•••••••••••••••••••••••

noz

VIDALIA

.

·

79 (

.

PINTO
BEANS
4LB

·Onions....................... ·
BLUE BONNET
$1. .09
•
.
.
M
. argar1ne •••••:~~:b.......
.

.Mushrooms •••••!:~•••• .2 SJ··
I food •••~!:..........•4 SJ
KAN

.

s

F

MAXWELL HOUSE
PORK NBEANS INSTANT COFFEE
15.5 oz.

s

s

99
120Z

.

ITE HOUSE
SUNNY-DELIGHT
.
. $·129
APPLE
JUICE
Punch ••••••••••••::::....... .

89(
Dinner ••••••••••••••••••••••
·
·
han~~·;~·;ss
Ice Cream •••••••••••••••

M~RTONTV

.

640Z

. ·

81.5. 10 oz

.

MEADOW GOLD

2·

•

·tiDE
ULTRA
42 USE SIZE

s

WH
COTJO .
BATH TISSUE
4ROLL

("
6PLEASE

COUP.ON GOOD
FOR 5 TRIPLE.
COUPONS. ·
GOODTHRU
SAT~ 5/18
NOT GOOD ON
SALE ITEMS
&lt;

Eastern board approves
constru tion ·resolution

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newe Staff
Action on 1996-9:7 supplementary
personnel contracts and the new K-8
' school construction .and high school
renovations projects was taken during
the regular meeting of the Eastern
Local Board,of Education, Wednes. d~y night at Eastern High School.
Supplemenl.al contracts for next
· yeif include: Casey Coffey, head
football coach; Bryan Durst, assistant
football coach; Ron Hill, assistant
football coach; Pam Douthitt, head
. softball coach; Tony Deem, head
boys basketball coach; Joe Bailey,
assistant basketball coach; Carissa
Bailey, varsity cheerleading advisor;
Don Jackson, assistant softbpll coach.
Separate motions to approve
employment of Pam Douthitt, athletic director,. and Don Jackson, head
volleyball_coach, on one year sup-

SJ~" 99

~
$ ,39

..

Personnel contracts for 1996-97 school year get OK

90Z

Steak•••••••••••••••••••••••• .
KAHNS SLICED
SJ59
.
Ba
. .

c

I

1

.

.

,....._----High water-.. .

20LB.

Rump Roast ••••••••••L:... _

BUCKET BEEF CUBED

'

:l~

31 ......
A GHnett Co. tlr• IJIIIMI;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 16, 1996

•
u·

$ .99

Patt1es ••o••••••••Jt:-

H

Vol. 47, NO. 11
2 lr Fllane,12 ~&gt;~gee

FIELD TRIAL
$.169 . DOG FOOD

.

· P•rtly cloudr tonlllht.
Lowe In the 601. F,rld'•y,
.,.tty cloudy. High In eo..

plemen_tal contracts were rejected by
4-0 votes, with board member John
Rice abstaining on both votes.
The school board agreed to hire
the following summer school teach·
ers through rural demonstration grant
funds: Nancy Circle (grades nine
. through 12). 'Cindy Linton (grades
two through six) and Sandy Needs
(elementary tutorial teaching assis·
tant).
Three resolutions were approved
to continue to keep work on schedule for the $8.75 million district ·
building arid renovations project.
The board approved a construction resolution to execute the agreement with the State Board of Education for the construction and sale of
the -project and all classroom facili· ties listed and described in the Sta.te
Board of Education's Certificate of
Conditional Approval and Reserva·

A street name change and a sug· new sign changing the name back to the water fund to cover the August
gestion that area contractors be . John's Road.
workers compensation payment. It
licensed in th~ yillage were among
• Jim Davis, Minetsviile, asked was noted there w~s a raise in the
the items discussed at Monday.' s . council if 'there was an ordinance , workers compensation rate that was
IJle~ting of Racine Village Cou~il.
requir;ng contractors to be licensed in not anti~i~ted.
• Jan "Cardon , 'a•1iihns(oiYJr•RoaiJ." {lle·villlige:-~
·
Dmutlf Riflle. Tackerville Road,
resident, reported t1Jat:residents of · He suggested the village or even said several residents with relatives
that road.would like to have the name the county should take action to · buried in GreenwoOd Cemetery have
changed back to John's 1!-oad sirice license contractors to protect resi- asked abdut mowing.
telephone, electric, and cable ·televi- dents from shoddy contracting work. , Council advised that funding for
sion bills list their residences as
Mayor Jeff Thornton said he mowing is insufficient to mow the
John's Road.
would look into the matter.
cemetery weekly like peOJ!le's lawns.
During discussion, it was brought
Council approved amending the Lyons reported the cards for lot care
out the name was changed several annual appropri;~tions ordinance .to have been mailed .
years ago when the village had home~ include $94,000 from Ohio Water
Thornton said he would send a letmade, wooden street signs. The signs Development Agency.Load Fund, .a ter to the Girl Scouts thanking them
were short "11d the name was long:.. two-percent loan the village recetved for painting playground equipment at
so it was shortened to John's Road. to help finance the village's share_of Star Mill Park. Councilman Larry
Council agreed it would be easier the new water well, a · water hne , Wolfe reponed Karen's Greenhouse
to change the road's name ·on the map extension on Yellowbush Road and donated a tree for the park.
than for each resident to change new water meters.
· . Village spring clean up was set for
addresses will all of the utilities.
In addition, Clerk Katen Lyons June Band 14. The village truck will
Council then approved ordering a was authorized to make transfers in pick up refuse free if the items are left

.day 's dow~pour.
The East Gallipolis weather station reported 1.30 inch~ pf rain in
the Gallipolis area the past 24 hours.
. According to the Associated Press,
with the Ohio River still rising, the
American Queen could be stranded in
Cincinnati seveml m(lre days.
The river is too high for the stem·
wheeler to get under a bridge blocking its movement upriver to Pitts·
burgh, and another keeping it from
going down river.
The Ohio was at 51 feet Wednesday night, was expected to reach the
52-foot llood stage today and crest at
53 feet early Friday. The river'has to
drop to about46.5 feet for the American'Queen to leave pon,.wliere it's
been for 11 days.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Senate
Total rainfall for .May is 6.06 inch- Republicans ducked a vote on raising
es, after a record-setting April that the · state's minimum wage after
saw 8.20 inches fall in· the area. Dcmocmts tried to attach the measure
Showers and thunderstorms are fore- ··to economic development bill
cast for the rest of ihe week,
favore(j by Gov. George Voinovich.
· "Righrnow, it doesn'tlook as bad
Sen. Dennis Kucinich, D-Cieve·
(as the storms in late April), but you land, offered an amendment to raise
never know. It depends on what hap- the.state's minimum wage to $5.15 an
pens over the next few days, .. said hour during debate Wednesday on a
· National Weather Service meteorol· bill providing state aid to developers
ogist Jim !.ott. "We got quite a bit of of industrial parks in inner-city and
rural areas.
Coodmred on page 3
"The .bill spends S10 million on

'

Kucinich said . 540,000 Ohioans
are covered by the state minimum
wage - which now mirrors ihe federal $4.25 minimum. They include
agriculture workers; harvest laborers
and employees of companies that
have sates· of less than $150,000 a
year. His amendment would also
have raisei;l the pay of workers wbo
earn less than ' minimum wage but
make more than $30 a month in tips.
Majority Republicans blocked a
vote on . the amendment, and the
industrial park bill passed 30-2 and
corpomtions,'' Kucinichsaid. "Can't goes to the House for consideration
· we spend 90 cents ari hour on the of Senate changes.'
people?"
The same debate has been taking

.
.
By JILL WILLIAMS
ve-by shooting.
OVP Newe Stllff
Officials believe that a note apol·
Investigaiors in Simday's milr.. ogizing to family members, signed by
der/suicide that took the liyes of two . Hill. that was found at the scene had ' WASHINGTON (AP) - The Conn., co-chairman of the Democra- ·
Gallia County residents believe that been written following the shooting Senate ls no place to run for presi- tic National Committee. He said
the murder victim, Christal Lambert, of Lambert.
dent, Republican · and Democratic Dole's action meant, "I have no
24, was unaware that she was going
Hill wufound in the passenger's · colleagues of Senate Majority Leader chance of winning unless I get out of
tp be shot.
seat also dead of an apparent gunshot Bob DOle said after he announced be town."
Sherif('s investigator Donald wound to the head .
would resign to run for presid(nt full
Since Dole's nomination for presBowen said Tuesday that wilen offi·
· I,nvestigators believe that the lime.
idlibt became certain, t!Je Senate has
cials arrived on the crime scene they shootings took place at approximate·
Legislating had "turned to fun and increasingly bogged down in partisan
fppnd Lam ben in tbe driver's seat ly 8:30a.m.• dpe to a phone call that games and gotcha," said Sen. Alan disputes.
.
with her head leaning against the dri- Lambert had placed at abOut 6 a.m. Simpson, R-Wyo., accusing DcmocIt has been tied up for days over
.vet's side door, with the car in first It had also appeared th8t the couple .rats of tying up Senate business with Democratic refusal to go along with
gear, the ignition turned on and 8 had been at the scene probably talk· ·strategies .designed to trap the pre- some of Dole's legislative priorities,
b~med-down cig~tte bet¥-"een her ing for.a couple of hours prjor to ihe
sumptive GOP presidential candidate. · including lepeal of a 1993 gas tax
fingers.
, ,
·
shootings due tQ the nu111ber of cig·
lh the Senate, "wflat you have is inc~. untii .DOle allows a vote on
: lnvesti;ators have also said that arene buUs found around the
Senator Dole actually beirigforced to · ' a minimum wage increase,
tlie driver's side window was shai- ' Following an investigati&lt;;~n of't:hi: walk ~ound a field filled with land
"Senator Dole made the right
lered.
victims, officials feel that ttie crime mi,n~s '- 47 Democrats," said Sen. decision," said Senate Democratic
: Bowen said that evidence showed revolved around a relationship that Wlllram Cohen, ~,Maine.
Leader Tom Daschle. "The gricllock
no signs 1hal a Slr\lggle had taken ·had gone sour. The couple had been
Democrats fired bBCk.
in the Senate these 11151 few weeks is
place, and by t))e way the gun, a
datins fot awhile and they were hav"Every· ti~ Senator Dole i.s on proof that running a presidential
caliber handgun, was loaded, Lam- ·ing trouble coming to terms with the lloor making a stateme~t you campaign. from the Senate floor
bert was probably unaware of the specifications of their involvement.
have to figure out whether ttrs Bob · serves no one's interests."
events to come.
Gallia County Coroner Edward Dole tbe majority leader or ·Bob Dole
·
The bodies of Lambert and Mark Berpch ruled Tuesday th8l the bod· running for president," said Sen.
"Jbis is exactly the right thing to
Hill, 26, were found about I0:30a.m. ies .were consiatent
IIIII of ·a David Pryor, D-Ark., who is doae to do," said,Hotlse Speaker Newi.Oln·
!n. a 'vehicle 'On Keeaee Road, cut of homicide and .a suicide,
Jrid!, who gains more prominence as
· President Clinton.
State Rou~ 32.5 near Vinton, and
Following the· coroner's report.•
"This Con8R'15 is in dillll'l'lly; it is Republican leader of Congress with
W~ fii'SI reported as victims of a dri- officials said the CaSe will be closed. a mess," liaid Sen. Cltris Dodd, D· tbe more senior Dole gone.

Dole~s decision to resign

area. ·

:44

wil\'

•

.a

at the curb.
:
It was requested that residenll(
clean up the lOis rather than ju~t
cleaning out garages and basements;
No l)atteries; tires or furniture will hi\

faken: -·

':.!! ...

• · • ... "·

.... •

-~ , - : '

In other ~siness, council:
,'
•· Met with firefighter David Nei.
· gler concerning fire department activ{
ities. Neigler reported the ilepartmenf
is trying to get the village's fire insur;
ance rating lowered.
·
· -- Noted CO!l)plaints concerning
dogs running loose. It was noted that
several dogs are turned loose to run
at night. The mayor reported hC:
would have officers check for dog~
and cite owners to mayor's cout1Complaints regarding cats were also
noted.
·
-- Instructt;d police to have repairS.
made to the village police cruiser. •
Council adjourned until June 3. :.

GOP ducks minimum wage vote

,

.•

the additional monies would be available in the general fund to offset the
loss of nearly $6,000 that is generated from the fees.
. "The fee was instituted with the
understan\li.ng that the board would
assume the full responsibility of paying coaching salaries when financial
conditions improved. They have
improved, and we feel that' the fee
should be dropped," said Sanders.
After a lengthy discussion on the
issue, the board agreed to examine
the issue further.
. · In other matters, the board :
•
- approved the transfer of teacher
Debbie Weber from the first grade
teaching position at Riverview Elei
mentary to the fourth grade teaching
· position atthe school for the 1996-91
school year.
,
- rejected a motion to approve
Continuecl.o~t pag~ 3
_

·.Racine Council changes nam.e of street ~!

Sherl•n· to close· book·
.
on murder/suicide
Colleagues agree with

'

lion of Funds.
The board also approved resolutions for contract approval with the
State Board of Educaiion for the pur··
chase of classroom facilities as provided by the Ohio Revised Code, and
approved setting a timetable and
extensilfn of' intent for contract of
architectural services for the project
with Vargo, Cassady, Ingham, and
Gibbs of Marietta through Sept. 15,
1996.
Easte"\ Athletic Boosters repre·
sentative Lola Sanders addressed the
board concerning the $30 "pay-toplay"· fee, per athlete, per sport, for
extra•curricular athletic activities in
the district..
Sanders asked the board to consider dropping the fee, which was
instituted during financial problems
in the district in the early 1990's.
Board members questioned whether

place in Congr~ss. where Republi cans have so far thwarted Democratic attempts to get a vote on raising
the minimum wage.

the House for consideration' of Sen.ate changes, would allow courts to.
deduct court costs and filing fees:
from prison accounts inmates have to
pay for snacks, toiletries and other'
Oppmients of an increase argue personal items.
·
·_ ·
that it would force companies to
It would also allow prison officials
reduce their work forces.
to punish inmates who file frivolou s
The ·Senpte also voted 29-3 for a lawsuits liy taking away their recrc&gt;-.
bill aimed at curbing frivolous law- ' ation. television or other privileges.'
suits filed hy Ohio's prison inmates.
·
Sen. Gene Watts, R-Galloway,
Minority Leader Ben Espy, D-'
said inmates filed 800 lawsuits in Columbus, argued that the bill W3\&gt;
1995 alone, costing the state $2 mil· unworkable and unnecessary.
lion in legal fees. court costs and othWatts countered that inmate law'
er expenses.
suits dropped 35 percent after a sim:
The bill, which now goes to back ilar bill was enacted in Arizona.
"·

..

.;

.....

�.

Commentary

,

111 Cowt St., POIMioy, Ohio
IU 112-2118 • Fu: 112-2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publisher
. CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Gen!ral Mllllllgef

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Is democratic lead
case of spring fever?
WASHINGTON {AP)- Other Republicans may blame Prcs.ident Clinton's lead of 20.petcentage points over Sen. Bob Dole on a host of factors.
Newt Gingrich blames it on the seasons.
.
"Democrats do better in the spring. Conservatives do better in the fall,"
suggests the. House speaker, a former college history profess~r. .
Gingrich spelled out his theory on t~ ebb and flow of presadenttal campaigns in an interview with The Washang.ton Times and has touched on an
recent speeches.
•
Dole, working on his own iheory, plans to step aside from day-to-day Sen- .
ate management to focus full-time on his campaign against Clinton, several GOP sources said Tuesday.
Gingrich's spring-fever theory of presidential politics: voters are more
gullible then. Liberal Democratic candidates can benefit fro!l'. what he considers cheer-leading press-coverage, and from heavy adyenasmg by Democratic constituency groups like Labor.
·
. But, as the election apJII'oa&lt;:hes, voters become ~ore serious and pay closer attention to'the issues. Then they vote Repubhcan.
.
"During the summer people begin to figure out that liberals raise taxes;
liberals appoint judges who make bad decisions, libe~als. want more pow~~
in Washington, and during September and October, thcar lead collapses,
.
.
.
Gingrich said.
Some Gingrich examples: Democratic Presadent Jtmmy Caner was leading Ronald Reagan in the spring of 198~ and Democrat Michael Dukakas
was ahead of Republican George Bush eaght years later. Both Repubhcans
won handily.
.
.
·
Democrat Walter Mondale was almost even wath Reagan an early 1984,
but lost in a landslide. In 1976, Republican ~esident Gerald Ford trailed
Caner by more than 20 points in the spring- but nearly closed the gap by
the election.
·
Not surprisingly, !he speaker's seasonal theory wasn't finding much
acceptance among J;)einoeratic operatives or political scientists.
"I- think it's closer to astrology rather than sound political thinking and
anal~sis '' said Democratic pollster Mark Mellman.
· · "And it's wron~," Mellman added. "You only have to look back to four
ye~ ago- when Bill Cli'rlion was in third place in the spring."
Mellman also suggested Reagan's bi~Q:ang comeback an 1984 had more
to d.; with a rebounding economy; and that Ford's worst figures reflected
his p~rdon of former President Nixon.
"Obviously there's no universal theory of politics," said Gingrich
spokesman Tony Blankley. "Einstein was never able to find a unive-rsal theory of physics. But,:nodetheless there are useful observataons that descnbe
hspects of political life in America. This js one of them."
.
Clinton was trailing independent Ross Perot and President Bush four years
ago because "he was no\ running as a liberal. He was running as an al!eged
'New Democrat' and sounding like Reagan," Blankley suggested.
B(lt isn't Clinton again sounding like Reagan? "Ye~h," said Blankley,
"But· we don 't believe in the P.T. Barnum theory of.pohucs. We beheve an
the Abe Lincoln theory of politics: you can't fool all ofthe people all of the
time.''
· · fA
·
'"'
. Veteran GOP strategist Ed Mahe suggested a maJO':'ty ? mencans_uo
tend " to be conservative when offered a choice on P?hcy assues . They JU~t
don 'I always vote that way, or we'd hold every office an the land. I just can t
say that 1have pe.rsonally ever tried to equate that .with the seasons. I hope
he's tight." .
·
..
.
.
Nprman Ornstein, a political analyst at tbe Amencan Enterpnse lnstatute,
called the hypothesis "vintage Newt. He has to span .some greater theory
around what was intended as a morale booster... .
.
Suggested Clinton campaign official Ann Lewas: "I can see why, an _the
sprin~. when the sun is out, the ~eas are ~loo~ang and the ~bans are _charping, people would be in 'a positave and optamastac frame_of mand. And at may
be th)ll Speaker Gingrich is somehow ass~mang that •. an the f'!ll •. when the
weatller gets cooler and dimmer, the pubhc mood wall also change. But I
would not count on i~ if I were him."
. .
The Dole campaip was keeping some dista~ from the Gangrach the• ory of seasons- although it was quick to agree wath the premtse of a Dole
·rebound.
· . f f ·.1
·
"One of the problems with Bill Clinton is that has 1ast o aJ ures as so
long, it's hard to son through them all. Luckily, we have almost sax month
to do it," said Dole spokesman Nelson Warfield.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Tom Raum has covered every presidential electio
for The Associated Press since 1,976.
· One year ~go: The-Clinton adminisU.ation threatened punitive tariffs that
would double the prices for Japan's most popular luxw:&gt;' car;;. Japanese _pohce
arrested doomsday cult leader Shoko Asahara, holdang ham m _connection
with the nerve-gas attaCk on Tokyo's subways two months earher. ·

Where and why
Dear Editor,
I suppose everyone has heard tbe
old saying, "We've come a long way,
baby". Now I know where we have
come from, but where we are headed is what bothers me.
Recently on TV a grolip had
rolled ou~ flag into a ball and tied it
with string. Now how can these
national emblems be so desecrated?
Now it is said this an expression
of the r;jght of "ffee ~h" well I'm
afraid this interpretatiOn has lost mt

An apology In order
To the pany or panies who
destroyed a monument~ March
I in the Butli~ centeJerY,I ~
they realize the grief they caused ~
the price of a new monu~t. :An

'

"'llwtks for comina ~ - Whalcver," said Sen. Roben Dole. "This
place is pretty far off the beaten path
-- maybe the press won't find us for
a while. I'm bere to tell you that bobdole needs your help on the abonion
issue and: I don 't expect you to leave
until you reach an agreement, even
though you've all been arguing for
years, pro-lifers and pro-choicers.
" But bobdole is the Senate
Leader," said Sen. Dole. "And bobdole is going to be the presidential
nominee. I don't intend to lose this
·election on abonion. We are only one
election away from gaining Republican control of the government. You
all kno--:. even if the liberal Jiress
doesn't, that we have an imponant
agenda for this country, which has
been so kood to all ofus.
"If we can work somelhing out, it
will be good for America, good for
the Republicans and maybe really
bad for the Democrats.
· "Remember where we ate on

lead~r.

A WHITE HouSE.

.I

!

"

Roy L. Blake·

under I 8, a 24-hour wailin&amp; period, remedies will make abortion somecounseling, adoption information, no what more 'rare.' Thai's a word
• use of suite funds or buildinp for Clinton likes. Both Clinton and Gore
abortions. No federal fi\nds, either. favored limiled state restrictions on ·
:.:....::.:.:..::::.;~:.:.:,:::.;~::.:.:.;::::.
· Whatever. It should condemn 'par- abortion before they got elected in
tial-birth abortions' and say thatCiin- 1992.
ton refused to sign the bill because of
"I think we should have a public
ters of the states. The votes aren't pressure from radical feminists.
·and civilized debate about this issue
there. And the Supreme Court. with
"So abortion would be legal, but during the Convention in San Diego.
some Republican votes, has ruled thai somewhat circumscribed. For the Let everybody acknowledge that
Roe v. Wide will not be repealed.
moment that's just what most Amer- their.o~nts. are people of honor·
"So there is going to be no icans and most Democrats and most · able antenttons, JUSt as you all are. But
amendment, no malfer wbat our plat· Republicans agree with . . Did you let's also agree in advan~ about how
form says, no inatter what I think. So know that almost 40· percent of that debate in San Diego will end up.
let's·drop it for now and try to change Buchanan's primary voters were That's what we're here for:
·
people's minds. But there is a deal to · against a constitutional amendment?
"Let's remember that thas year the
be made where all of you can legiti·
"So -- those of you who are pro- Democratic Convention follows ours.
mately claim victory.
choicers could say you won because Let's have a plank that challenges
"Our (jiSt pl~tform didn't deal you gotthe Human Life Amendment Clinton 10 get the· Democrats to
specifically with limiting abortion. out of the platform. That's tough debate abortion, as )'twill do, ratioLet's tackle that. Write a plank lhllt medicine for pro-lifers- breaks the nally. passionatel'y and publicly.
says Republicans vigorously encour- litmus. But pro-lifers could say you There's already a caucus of Democa~e the·States IO considc;r •• remem- . won because you finally got some- rat l/8sic 3/8 pro-life Congressmen
ber the word is 'consider' -- the Web- thing in the platform that can actual- who are making noises for th81. and
ster and Casey remedies. That ly begin to limit aho!tion, not just talk' who want to moderate the Democrat
includes parental consent for children about it. The Webster and Casey Pany's abortion-on-demand policy. .
"But the Democrat leadership
won't do it. They're afraid to. Let's
I SEE A HoUSE. A STAffiY MMSfDN WI1)f
challenge Clinton to say no fo his radA 8tG lkiCISE.
ical feminists, and to urge the states
GRACEFUl. o:wMHS.
to consider the moderate, but real,
Webster and Casey remedies. Particularly adoption counseling. There are
several million Americans trying to
adopt, and there are no American
babies available. It is a national
tragedy. Those folks vote.
" You might question whether
bobdole can push you hard enough to .
make you agree ·here. He can. The
· convention will suppon the nominee.
Somebody might want to mention
that to the press.
"So you' re not leaving until you
$EE 808 DoLE
reach an agreement, and pledge to
IN IT.
honor it, honorably. Let's win this
ntERE'S
election. Call on me if you need some
help. Let abonion split the other party, not ours. Whatever. That's what"
bobdole says is going to happen.
That's why they. call him 'Leader.'
Someone might mention that to the
press, too."
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the American 1Enterprlse Institute, is the author of a new book,
i "Values Matter Most," and IS the
host of the weekly publit television
program, "Think Tank."

Ben Wattenberg

I

Dr. Charles

HbRE?

I

Dole's foreign policy remarks won't stick
How many synonyms are there f01;

ren.

Buchanan and various backbench do this to me."'
House members. If he's elected, U.S. ·
However, high-ranking Clinton
Bob Dole threy; every one of them at
foreign policy would follow the s.ame administration officials say that
President Clinton's foreign policy
. internationalist, U.S. leadership path NATO this December will agree on
recently. But they won't stick.
that it's been on for .the past decade. a definite schedule for admitting the
In a speech at the Center for
If Dole is elected president, it's former East Bloc countries. "The
Strategic and International Studies,
likely that his top foreign policy team · 'whether' threshold has been
Dole called Clinton's foreign policy has seitted into tbe mainstream path will include experienced, practiced crossed," a White. House· official
"indecisive," "vacillating," "con- that any moderate president would internationalists such as former said. "The 'when' and 'how' will be
fusejl," "amateurish," "drifting," pursue -- including Dole.
· Undersecretaries of Defense Roben decided this year."
.
In the 1992 presidential cam- Eilsworth and Paul Wolfowitz, forIf Dole is &amp;cted, it's likoly that
"incoherent," "reactive" and "scat·
tershot. " And that was just a critique paign, as Dole noted in his speech, mer Undersecretary of SUite Roben policy toward Russia will he marof policy in Asia.
Clinton condemned President Bush Zoollick, ·sens. John McCain, R- ginally tougher than it's been under
Clearly, as this column reponed in for "coddling dictators" in China and Ariz., and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., for- &lt;;linton, but policy toward China will
early April, Dole means to use for· . threatened to link economic relations mer United Nations Ambassador be less tough. Dole indicated that he
eign policy as a vehicle for assailing to human rights and non-proliferation Jeane Kirkpatrick, and former Rea- would lean on China to stop selling
· Clinton's character flaws. When Dole policy.
gan-Bush White House aides Richard nuclear materials to Iran and Pakattacks Clinton for changing his posi·
Now, Dole charged, "after sub- Armitage and Richard Haass.
islan. but would not impose sanction on China and "appeasing" Nonh stantially damaging America's interSome policies would change from lions.
Korea, he does it in the same terms national credibility," Clinton has those Clinton is now pursuing, but
However, Dole implied that he
he'll use about welfare policy or tri- "arrived at an argument identical to it's hard to imagine that the differ- would be more protective of Taiwan
al lawyers. He means to tell voters, the Bush administration's position" ences would be "vast and funda- than Clinton has been --.even though
"You can't trust this guy."
on Most Favored Natio,n trade status mental," as Dole declared in his that surely would complicate U.S.In 1993 and 1994, the charges for China. Dole is right, of course.
speech.
China relations. Oole confirmed that
surely applied. Clinton policy
But the fact is that Dole and ClinFor instance, Dole and Zoellick he would not support a Taiwanese
wavered and wobbled on nearly ton are going to be fighting si(je by- accuse Clinton of "dawdling" on the :declaration of independence from
every continent ·- from Somalia to side against a coalition of liberal admission of Poland, Hungary and iChina, but would sell anti-missile
Bosnia to Haiti to Nonh Korea.
Democrats and conservative Repub- the Czech Republic to NATO in order .technology to Taiwan that the ClioClinton himse.lf was inattentive to licans to maintain U.S.-China trade 10 prop up Russian President Boris ton administration so far has withand uninterested in foreign affairs, so ties, betting that a richer China will Yeltsin .
. held.
much so that his formerDefense sec- ultimately become a more democraZoellick, in testimony before the
Like most Republicans, Dole
retary, the late Les Aspin, and Secre- tic and responsible China.
House lnlf;fllational Relations Com- . would be 111ore aggressive in develtary of State Warren Christopher had · Dole's speech was significant not :mittee earlier this month, declared oping missile defenses than Clinton
to beg him to schedu)e regular for- · only for what it said about Clinton, that delays in admitting Central Euro- has been, but administration officials
i
icy meetings.
·but also for showing that Dole is : pean countries to NATO are encour- claim they are willing to extend such
ood reason, Clinton's foreign 'interested in bigger things than the · aging Russian nationalists and Yeltsin defenses to Taiwan and South Korea
policy approval ratings dropped into repeal of a 4.3-cenl gasoline tax. And · to resist the move, making it ever soon, should the need arise.
the low 30s during his first two years it laid down a decisive marker about . more difficult to bring about.
Dole's rhetoric aside, U.S. foreign
· in office. Last year, also for good rea- the direction of Republican foreign
"If Yeltsin gets re-elected in policy won't change much next year
son; his rating climbed up 50 percent. pohcy.
.
. June," Zoellick said in an interview whoever is elected. That's good.
Now, it's at 48 percent.
. Dole decisively re~isted th_e isola· after Dole's speech, "you can be sure
{Morton Kondracke, Ia execaWhat's changed is that Clinton uomst-protechomsi ude an has pany • he'll be on the phone to Clinton and live editor of Roll CaU, the newshimself is personally involved in for- led by presideqtial rival Pal say, 'Bill, help me on this. You can't paper of Capitol HW.)
~·weak"? GOP presidential candidate

A

W. Rex·Davis

\

I

eign policy. His teain of Democrats,
out of power from 1980 to 199:l, is
grappling realistically with the world.
And Clinton's policy; formerly naive,

.

W. VA.

/
.

-·
. I

Today's weather forecast

tt .

~

.

rain (Wednesday), and the ground is
really saturated."
Lightning from Wednesday's ·
storm staned a $50,000 fire in the
Covenant Community Church in .
Fairfield, which was dedicated last
week .
Wednesday's rainfall of 2.63 inch··
es.contributed to floods, landslides,
.power outages and road closings
throughout southwest Ohio.
· Lightning damaged.a North College Hill home and St. Louis Church

in Owensville, where a strike blew .;. ;:
bricks off a hell tower and cut phone&amp;. ".. .
arid electricity.
,•
The weather knocked out electricity to about 1,500 Cincinnati G~ · ' '
&amp; Electric Co. customers, and U.S.
.
50 was shut down at Interstate 275: ·· ·:·
when a transform.er exploded.
·~; ; :
In Harveysburg, Marie Cook has ·,
watched as the land around her home ..
has slipped toward_ Caesar Creek, :· , ~
Trees and large chunks of a walkway . 1 • 1
have tumbled down the hill.
"Sometimes you can almost actu: . : ,.:
Street to close
ally see it move," said Cook, who , .: .
Vine Street in Racine will be was evacuated from her home May 5. .. : .
closed Monday. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. so
workers can install a culven .
·- .

James Woold~idge

,,

-..•

Ohio River.. ..,..C~!ln-ti-nu_ed_fro_m....;.pa-ge-1---' '

EMS logs 9 calls

.

•••

By The A81oclated Press
80s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Today ... Panly cloudy with scat- Extended forerast
.
tered thunderstorms. High near 80.
Saturday and sunday ... Wa'!" with, . .
Southwest windS to 10 mph. Chance a chance of showers or thunder- . ·
of rain 30 percent.
storms. Low! in the 60s and highs.in .~
Tonight...Panly cloudy with scat· the 80s.
tered .thunderstorms. Low near 60.
Monday...Continued warm with a · ·
Light southwest wind. Chance of ntin chance of showers or thunderstorms.
40 percent.
Lows in the 60s. Highs from the.~ ,
Friday... Panly cloudy with scat- · tipper 70s nonh to the upper 80s.
tered thunderstorms ..High in the l"id south.
.......

Hospital news -

-·

~

The Daily Sentinel
..
(USPS 21:1-960)
Published t'Jt:f'J afrernoon, Monday lhrouah
Prida)', Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the·
OhiO Valley Publishing Comp~my/GIUinett Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 43769, Ph. 992·21.56. Second
paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

'"'''potU!&lt;

Mtmber: The Auocillled Press, and the Ohio
Newapipet Auotiation.

POSTMASTER: Send address com:ctions 10
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St, Pomeroy.
Ohlo4$769,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C.rril'r or Motor Route

5~:·:::::·: : : · : : : ::: : : ::ii:.~
SINGLE COPY PRICE

Doily ................................ ............. ,..... )$ Cenll

sub.~ribc~ not desiring 10 pD)' lbe carrier may
mnil in advance direct 10 The Daily Sentinel
on a.lhree; sit or 12 monlh ~~.Credit will be
&amp;1..., Cllriel each..-.
No sulm:ription by mail permitted in aretu
where home canXr service is available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
1-Mcfp~

.

tl w..u.......................................... ... s27.l0

~=:::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::sm:~

·

Ratti Oualdt Melp Coatii)O

~=: :::::::::::::::: ::::::::::ll::~

$2 w..u .....:....................:.................... $109.12

. '

~~!)(~~ ~©l!JJIWW~~~

u.• vo·'irE

\f©~O.~

.

'

DIAL 985-3450

· 7~ fJ~~e4. 1(1~

canl thke it

~ - ~.

with y6u?

'Ptaee

'·

';Vt4t , ..
'

.

'

LOCAL IIITERNET ACCESS
. . ALL OF MEIGS ·coUNTY .

ongoing grand-jury investigations by
independent counsel Kenneth Starr,
2) produced in response ·to"congres. sional investigations aad 3) "specific confidential internal White tJouse
Counsel office documents."
In other words, he wants to toss a
cloak over the White House's much. used damage-control operation. Nei. ther law nor precedent supports him,
however. Ronald Reagan issued a
decree, still in effeCt, that a president
should not invoke executive privilege
unless the disputed information
would compromise national security
or essential White House perations. ·' ''
He never used executive privilege in
'
the Iran-Contra :Affair. George ~h
shielded a couple of lraq.a!C 'j!ajlcrs
on national-security grounds, but ilisclosed the gist of the documents to ·
congressional investigllon. ·

Let \18."create

a memorial ·
juak&gt;r you.

For $ale: The .
• undivided lnt(trest
.'In tlii'John &amp; Pearl
Proffitt.eatata,
· ·Send.to:

..

'

s-.

nnOUnCemen S

.'

Clinton has been, playing Mr. Nice Guy Jately

wrtte 1baJ
Cnniat~n s,a.:
dlcate, 5771 Wilt ee.tar, '~~Yd.,
Suite 700, Lot Aaaeht, C~

••

t

o. Graber

.

.' ' ~ IColumbus la2" I

Minnie C. "ones

Morton Kond_raclce

tain a single legal citation or lawyerly argumellt, but did call Clinger a
few names.-The counsel, who is at
least three months late in producing
records sought by Congress, began
by grousing about Clinger's "tardiness". in writing. He next dismissed
the chairman's concerns as "hollow
assenions" and described the contempt-of-Co ~gress threat as a ploy
"calculated not to find the truth but
instead to makt a political point."
Quinn branded Clinger's public
statements about the counsel's office
as " broad. entirely unfounded and,
therefore, reckless" and "baseless,
unfair and completely qntnle."In one
of his tanest effusions, he presumed
to read Clinger's mind: " You arc
more interested in raising the politi.
· cal and personal stakes than in a just
and reasonable resolution of this

•

AccuWut~ forecut

Mike Douclu 10 the .open sixth endar, as revised.
· .
arade teiiChinl position 11 Cbe-.
- ~pproved the .p,emcnt wath
Elementary far the 1996-97 ICbclol Brogan-W~t~~er . Insurance . of
year by a s-o vote.
Pomeroy~ (XOY•de student accadent
Roy Lee Blake, 42, of McHenry: m. fonnerly of Middlepon. died Fri- accepted the resignation of and athletac tnsurance for the 1996day, May 10, 1996 at~ McHenry Hospital in McHenry, DI.
. .
library reader aid Marsarct Cau- 97 school year.
. . ,
Born on MayS, 1954 in Gallia County, he was thl: son of the late Walham
thorn, eiff,ctive Aug. 22, 1996, due to
• aooepled the distnct s budg~t
and Virgie Blake of Point Pleasant, W. Va. Besides his parents. he was ptebcr retirement. The board thanked am~l of$35,000 for ~logy,'" .
ceded in death by a sister.
.
Cauthorn for her 13 years of service servace, purchase of equ1pment and
He is survived by his wife, Melody Blake of McHenry; a son. Roy Lee
to the disttict.
• software•. installation, research and
Blake, and two daughters, Robyn and Rose Blake, all at home; two sisters
- approved an exteaded service development for ~seal year 1997..
and brothers-in-law, Sylvia and Dewight Sayre, New Haven, W. _Ya., ~ .· contract for Janice Weber, home ceo- . ~ board wall hold a spectal
Goldie and Edward Willet of Point Pleasant; three brothers and sasters-annomlcs teaeher, for 20 days for the • !'-ll~g Tuesda&gt;:• S p.m., for the
law, Pearl and Ruth Blake of Hanford, W. Va., [)elbert and Coretta Blake
1996-97 school year.
a~tervtew_ of_apphcan!S for the postof Middlepon, and Bill and Peggy Blake of Richmond, m. and a brother,
- approved the following cenifled taon of dastnct supennteadent. The
Odell Blake of Middlepon.
.
'
substitute teachers for the 1996-97 boar~! will hold thelf next regular
school year: Carissa Bailey, Debor.tl ~hng June 19. 6 p.m., at Eastern
Funeral services were held at the•George Jut'leS Funeral Home 1n McHenry, Ill. with burial in the Countriped Cemetery there.
Barber, Alicia Bauer, Dorothy Bentz, · High School.
Belly Boggs, lise K. Burris, Craig
Butz, Christi A. Collins, Sh.,on
Edmonds, Keith Eubanks, Rhonda CereJDODy plaluled
W. Rex Davis, 86, of Upper Arlington died tuesday. May 1~. 1996 at Facemire, cinda Paulk, Kathy Jean
Brooks-Grant Camp 7, Sons of
his residence.
,
Garrison, William 6ee, Michelle Union Veterans of the Civil War, will
Born Oct. 19, 1909 in Dexter, he was the son of tiJe late Roy A. and Gillian, Lucille Haggeny, Robyn be conducting Civil War Memorial
Blanche (Nels9n) Dayi~. He ~as former executiv,e vice-pres_ident and direc- Hawk, Kelly Henry, Janelle Hine- · Day services on Saturday at 10 a.m.
tor of Huntington National Bank. In 1962, be became presadent of Central
man, Toni Hudson, Teresa ·King, beside the Meigs County counhouse
NatiQnal Bank, Cleveland.
·
Kelly . Kisner, Mary Jane Leach, at the statue of the Union soldier.
He was a member of Covenant Presbyteri_. Church, University Golf
Vinas Lee, James Ryan Lemley, HenCourses, former president of United ApPeals, and trustee of the Columbus
ry Lewis, Karen Lyons, Lester Boil advl10ry
Convention Bureau and Pilot Dogs, Inc. He was a65-year member of H~­
Manuel, Tanya Meadows, Wilma
Leading Creek Conservancy Disrisonville Lodge #411 F&amp;AM, York Rite bodies, Red Cross of Constantine
Par~er, Melani Van Meter Quillen,
trict has experienced another leak due.
and Aladdin Temple Shrine.
.. ·•
.
Herben Redman, Diane Rice, Angela to continual slippage on the SR 143
He is survived by his wife, Shirley M: Davis; daughters ~nd sons an law:
Rigsby, Nathan Robinette, Carolyn side of Bailey Run Road. Customers
Dianne and Gerald Annis of Upper Arlington, Sherry and Donald Dodson G. Robinson, Emily Rogers, Karen in that area are still under a bQil adviof-Morrisville, N.C.,; three grandchildren, one great-grandson, sister in law
Sams, Kathy Sargeni, Nancy Scar- sory. However, the boil advisory has
and husbaind, Janice Powell and 1'homas L. Hebble of Oak Ridge, Tenn ..
brough, Jennifer Shuler, Charlene been lifted for customers on the SR
He was preceded in death by his wife of 57 years, Alice Powell Davas, Smith, Wesley Smith, John Snediker, 124 side of Bailey Run Road.
in 1992; three brothers· and one sister.
Karlita Stump, Joanna M. Weaver,
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m., at the Schoedinger Nonhwest Maxine Whitehead, Susan Wolf, AAtomeet
·Chapel, 1740 Zollinger Road, Columbus, with the Rev. Thon\asAibaum offi- Craig Wright, Mae Young, Pamela
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
ciating. Burial will follow in Green Lawn ,Cemetery. · .
.
Zirkle.
have an open discussion at the 7 p.m.
·Friends' may call Friday, from 6.to9 p.m., at the funeral home.
- approved the following classified meeting tonight in the basement of
In lieu of flowers, those who wish may contribute to Covenant Presby- substitutes for the 1996-97 school Sacred Hean Church.
terian Church Memorial Fund, 2070 Ridgeclifl ROJ!I. Columbus, 0hio 42331
year, to be used on an as-needed basis
orto Central Ohi~ Parkinson Society, 3600 Tremont Road, Columbus;Oiuo only: Susan Nutter, Joan Calaway, Festival planned
42331 in his memory. ·
;
Patty Calaway, Jill Holter, Diana NelCanbage Township Festival, sponson, Teresa Evans, lnzy Newell, sored by the Lottridge Community
Susan Nutter, Theresa Marcinko, Center Association, Saturday and
Joan Calaway, Ethel Lamben. Sheila Sunday, cars, country·mqsic, ans and
Word has been received here of the death of Dr: Charles David G~a~r. Lam ben, Mary Rose, Marie Johnson, crafts, lractor show, flea market.•
7S, of Lands End and Charh!ston, S.C., and formerly of.Pomeroy, ~ho daed Peggy White, Geraldine Holsinger. horse shoe ~ontest, and"fo¢.
Sunday, April21, 1996, in the Medical Universi~¥ of South Carohna. .
Dorothy Loscar, Grace StOut, Heidi
.·
He was born Dec. 19, 1917, in Pomeroy, son of the late Charles Davad Elberfeld, Denise Mora, Daphn,e Open Hoose planned . . .
and Julia Agnes.Hennessy Grabe~· He atten~ed Pomeroy High Sc~~l at l~t: . Young, Sheila King. Charles Sargent,
An open bouse will be held at the
er received a bachelor's degree an JOurnalism from Ohio State Unaversary , Gaiy Holter, Pat Buchanan, Ronald TOPS meeting Tuesday at the Carand wroie for the Meigs County Democrat during that.time.
.
Grimm, Cathy Sargent, Roben Bur- penters Hall, Main Stree\, Pomeroy.
He was an Army veteran of World War II a~d the Kon:an Confhct and ~ dine, Florilla Baker, Gladys Barker, Weig()-in will be from S to 6 p.m ~th
received his doctorate of immunology from Ohao State Untversaty an 1957 · . Peggy White, Helen Dailey, Leonard the meting from 6 to 7 p.m. Public .
In 1962, lie was honorably di~hprged from the Army at the rank of lieu- Dailey, Rosemary Fluhany, Mikel
invited.
·
tenant colonel.
·
'.
.
Young, Paul Brannon, Sandra McKHe taught at MUSC for 20 ~ears retirin!! as prof~ssor ementus. He was ay, Duke Pullins. Janet Life, Sonia Trustees to meet · .
a member of numerous professaonal organazauons and was an adJunct pro- Circle, Rebecca Maxson, Terry
Scipio Township Trustees will
fessor at Clemson University.
Soulsby, Laura Hawley, Karen Smith, meef7.:15 p.m Tuesday at Pageville.
Surviving is his wife, Agnes Tea:ry Graber; two sons, C. Scott Graber of Janet Hoffman, Mary Dempsey, Mike
• Man cited
Beaufort, S.C., and Dr. David R. Graber of C()arleston; a daugh!er, Ellen
1J M Ka
·Sa"nderman
o"
f
Atlanta·
.
a
brother:
Hugh
Graber
ofDayt,
o
n;
and
four
grandPooler,
om
c
y.
.
.
· • A' Pomeroy man ·was cifed by the
R.
-approved the followmg dassafied Meigs County Sheriffs Office folchild.
substt"tute bus drivers .for the 1996-97 .
'
.
.
V:
.•
lowing ·a two-car collisaon on anschool year, to be used on~ an as-need- Meter Hill Road in·Sutton Township
. ed basis only, pending proper cenifi- Thursday around I· p.m.
POINT PLEAsANT; W.Va. - Minnie Catherine Jones, 99, of Point Pleas· cation: Arch Rose, J(ay .Gillian , . According to a repon from Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby,
ant, W. .Va., died Wednesday, May 1·5, 1996, at the Pleasant Valley Nursing Howie Lawrence, Ray Maxson.
approved
the
district's
p~cipa.
Leroy R. Landers crested a knoll and
and Rehabilitation Center:
.
·
tion
in
all
State
and
Federal
Programs
went left of center striking th4; driver's
'llom Aug. IS, 1896, in Mason County, she was _a da~ghter of the late
for
the
1996-97
sch90l
yeat.
These
side
of a 1986 Oldsmobile driven by
Roben Henry Simpkins and Sarah Jane (Newell) Simpkins. She was als?
preceded in dealh by her husband, Cleveland Emerson Jones, a s_on,,Basal include, but are notlimiled to: Chap- 1 Francis ~o Taylor, who was coming .
tcr I, Chapter II; DPIA, DPPF, Eisen- up the hill. ·
Jones. two daughters, Alma McNeely and Esther Hatnmock, four sasters and
hower grant, Drug grant, Goals 2000
Landers wiiS cited by deputies on
two brot~ers. .
.
,
·
.
grant,
JOGS
grant,
Title
VI
B.
and
a
charge
of failure to control.
She was a homemaker and member of the. First Church of the Nazarene. Flow Thru programs.
·
·•
Surviving are four daughters, Delphia "Evelyn" Nelson of Point .Pleas· ·
_ approved to exempt the t996
ant, Nina Monk of Culloden, W. Va., Ruby Genuy of Columbus. Carol Senior class from taking year end
Thompson of Chll'leston, W. Va; son, Earl Curtis Jones of Charleston; two exams, as recommended by_ high_ VETERA~S MEMORIAL
sisters, Sarah l(ing of Columbus, Hazel Sampkans of Jacks~nvalle, fla; 25 ·
WEDNESDAY
grandchildren, 36 great-grandchildren, 14 great-great-grand~hildren, and sevAdmissions: Mabel Oliver,
en great-grein-great-grandcbildren.
·
.
Ilomeroy
The funeral will be held Saturday, I p.m., at 1he Farsi Church of t~e
Discharges: Emory Gordon, MidUnits oftbe Meigs Comity Emer- dlepon
Nazarene, Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Charles ~arker officaahng .. Bunal
gency Medical Service recorded nine
'
will be iii the Montgomery Memorial Park in London. W.Va.
calls
for
assistance
Wednesday
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen Fun~ral Home Friday, 6 to 8 p.m., and ·
·including four .lfansfer calls. Units .
at tbe church one hour.prior to the ·service.
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
5: II · a.m., Beech Street;. Laura
Veterans Memoria! HosGarlinger,
James Lawre~ce Wooldridge, 81 , of Evergreen, formerly of Vinton, died
pital;
. .
Tuesday, May 14c·l996 at Hol:ter Medical Center.
, .
12:34
p.m.,
Lower
Route
7, MarBorn Jan. 23, 1915 at Filben, W.Va., son of the late George and Peggy
'
vin
Yeauger,
Holzer
Medical
Center;
Howell-Wooldridge, he was retired from the C &amp; 0 Railroad, and was a mem2:58
p.m
..
Overbrook
Nursing
ber ofYinton Baptist Church.
.
He was preceded in death by a si.ster and a Wife, Thelma Ward, Feb. 6, Center, Mildred Matlack, VMH.
POMEROY
1986. They married June 22, 1933, at Welch, W.Va.;
1I:56 p.m., Village Green ApanAdditionally he was preceded in death by his parents. ~nd three brothers .
ments,
Mildred Roberts, VMH.
Surviving are two sons, James (Dorlllhy) Wooldradge and Walham
SYRACUSE
(Delores) Wooldridge, both of Bidwell; .I0 grandchildren and 18 great· grand1:07 a.m., st* Route 124, .Wes
children; a brottier, Harold Wooldridge of Payette, I9aJ!o; and SIX SISters.
.
Clark,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Annie Bales of War, W.Va:, Ethylene Bingham and Geneva_ Myers, both of
Eiben, W.Va., Fra~cis Cape of Pt. Worth, Texas; Edna Gqorge and Dorothy
Cook, both of Columbus.
·.
. , · . .
· :
cB8v~ · ~
Services will be I p.m. Satilrday It Vmton B.apttst C!mrch1wtth _Rev. Marvin Salle~ off\ciating.'B!Ifial"wiU be at Vinto.n Memonal Park. Fnends may
call at McCoy-Moore.Funeral HoJDC Friday from 61to 8 p.m.

this: AnytbinJ to do with a Hllman
Ufe :Amendment is just 1 p1per exercise. You need two-thirds of both
Houses and approval by three-quar-

\

OHIO Weather
Friday, May 17

Ca • xtd " - ,... 1 ·
school principal Clayton Butler.
transfer for high school LD tacber
·ltpp!Oved die 1996-97 school cal·

should say _ _ __

'such talk at a committee chairman
By TONY SNOW
than the Vatican ·would hire a stripper
Creators Syndicate
for the pope's binhday. Clinger's
WASHINGTON -- The forces of
commit~ quickly passed the conhistory like to amuse themselves by
tempt resolution -- ·although Reps.
reprising men's follies. So they must
James
Moran and Paul Kanjorski
have gotten a good laugh last week
along the way.
·
took gratuitous swipes at the wives of
What has happened to our patri- when the White House-- packed with
Clarence Thomas and fanner Reagan
Clinton
acolytes
who
first
tasted
otism and respect for the symbols of
lawyer Theodore Olsen,~, both of
freedom · which has been handed political blood when tltey humbled
whom work on Clinger's staff. .
Richard Nixon -- invoked executive
down for generations?
'The full House could cite Quinn
Recently it was reponed that privilege to stall Congress' Travelgate
and two others for contempt early
investigation.
.
another symbol, the bald eagle, had
· next week, sending the ma,ter to the
White House counsel Jack Quinn
been shot and killed and one of its
U.S. Attorney.
talons had been removed for a sou- . claimed the president could deny
A serious issue lurks at the hean
Congress
whatever
information
he
v~nir. "I'm afraid i can't agree with
of
this
feud. The Constitution sets the
· wanted to conceal without explaining
these kinds of interpretations.
executive
and legislative branches
.
VII'JU Walker why. This novel theory prompted
against
one
another 10 prevent either
Raciae William Clinger, chairman of the ·
. side from ~uiring a monopoly oo
House Committee on Government
power. The president has a veto to
Reform and Oversight, to dash off a
keep Congress honest; CQllgress has
letter saying: If you don '1 turn over
oversight duties.
.
the papers or send an ex~use slip
apology might be in order and might signed by the 'president, my commit- matter."
The Clinton team wants the powhelp to east their conscience.
tee will recommend that you be held
Big-money lawyers sometimes er to dictate whllt Con~ may
Helen Swartz in contempt of Congress.
bluster this ·way in ~ corporate receive during tile .course of an offiCoolville
This inspired Quinn to draft a world, but attorneys in previous cial inq~. Quinn says he ~ill not
Carvillesque missive that didn't con- admil!islrations would nom~ ~irect surrender anything 1) relauna to

Letters· to editor

Eastern board...

Thur.dlly, 118y1e, 1 •·
(

The·Daily Sentinel What the
'Lst#6/lslid Ut 1.948

!~~~~,u.y~~1~·~·~19~18!_~~--------------~-~--------~P~~~m=.w~O¥~·~M~~~-~~~~p~o~~~Oh~~~----::::::::::::::;;n.:;;DM;;~;s.;;nU;~;;;·;~;;~31:••

Pege2

.

•'

PAGE FOR AU BUSINESS .... ~.~.

,.'
-

• ! •. ·.
'i . .,

..
.. .
.

DESIGN • SETUP WITH TEXT AND

'

.. ~
~ I
. _...
,, ..
1

$25. 00 :~·:n th

UNLIMITED ACCESS

·'
I .... ,. ... ..,~ ·

~24~7~~

'Dally SentlneJ, ·..
PO Boxr 729-24,
Pomeroy; Ol't 4$789.'

'

90045:

~~~~~3~~

' ,.

•
l

...

... &lt;• : ,

'

�Thureday,llly 1i,1tM

·S ports

The. Daily Sentin.!!,;

'

'

Martinez helps Tribe beat Tigers 5-2
CLEVELAND (AP) - Even at win.
41 years of age, Dennis Mutinez is
He has spent some time watching
strict about his pitching standards.
a video of a perfect game he pitched
Martinez moved past Whitey for the Montreal Expos against the
Ford into a tit for 48th place on the ,Los Angeles Dodgers on July 28,
career victory list Wednesday night 1991.
"I watched the tape the last two
as the Cleveland Indians defeated the
days to get something positive in my
Detroit Tigers 5-2.
''I'm very happy with winning, head, 10 see the difference between
but I am not satisfied," Martinel that game and now," he said.
Martincz ·allowed Detroit two
said. "My ERA (4.89) is still too
high for me and I don't like that The runs on six hits in seven innings.
wins are piling up, which is nice, but Julian Tavarez and .Jose Mesa each
I want to gel that ERA down. Tonight pitched one scoreless inning, with
Mesa striking out the side in lhe
helped."
.
Martinez had been shelled for ninth for his 15th save ..
. The Indians won their lith
seven runs on seven hils and two
walks in two innings in his previous suaight home game. Detroit has lost
start, a 13-8 rout by the California 22 of 26 overall,
"Martinez got stronger in the
Angels on F(iday night.
" I was a little down after that and middle innings and then maybe he
• I have to admit I was wondering was a little tired when he came ouJ,
· what happened," said Martinez (6- but when you have guys like Julian
2), who matched Waite Hoyt and Tavarez and Jose Mesa coming in ,
Clark Griffith with his 237th lifetime thal,'s a pretty good combination in

'

Southern's softball team pushed
ARRIVES AT SECOND - Cleveland's Albert Belle (right) arrives
at second base lifter beating the throw from the outfield to Datrolt · iiS record' to 17-1 by defeating Miller
second beeeman Mark Lewla for e double during the flrat Inning .of 19-7 at Hemlock.
Jennifer Lawrence picked up the
'lfpdneaday nlght'a Amer~an League .game In Cleveland, where the
win
with three walks, two strike outs,
ln,dlana won 5-2. (AP)
eight hilS and seven.runs ~iven up.
Kim Sayre got the save-with seven strikeouts, no walks and no hits
registered against her in a great
effort. Tile freshman hurler seems to
be following in .the footslepspf her
Randy Johnson -on 1he IS-day dia~:~bled
father,
Pete Sayre, who hurled SevBaseball
list Recalled RHP Scalf Davison from
Tacoma ohhe PCL
eral no-hitters for Southern in the
. TORONTO BLUE JA. YS : Acquired
1970s.
AL standings
OF hcob· Brumfield from 1he Pituburgh

Southern plated eight runs in the
first inning and never looked back.
Coach Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes
got the ball rolling early when leadoff hitter Cynthia Caldwell walked,
Amber Thomas singled and Keri
Caldwell was hit with a pitch.
Jennifer Lawrence walked, Jennifer Cummins walked, Bea Lisle
walked and Tassie Cummins drove
in Jwo runs by reaching on an error.
Amy . Nqrthup hit a sacrifice and
Cynthia Caldwell and Thomas
walked to eitd the inning. Southern

Scoreboard

Magic retires from basketball

..

hit, four w~lks and a hit batter..Berry
came on in relief, walking ·14, fanning three and giving up five hits.
Southern plays in the.Division Ill
district tournament Friday at 5:30
p.m. at Waverly.

led 8-0.
Southern hitters wert Bea Lisle
and Jennifer Lawrence, who each
had two hilS, and Amber Thomas and
Jenny Cummins.
.
Hughes suffered the loss wilh one

:r..
»:
New York.. ............22

J. ll:l.

lil

I~

..595

Bolt!.................. 21

17 .m

Toronro ............ ... 18

20

.474

Bva1oo ................... 14

23

.J78

H

Detr0it.. ................. l2 29 .293

12

1\

4~

Central Dlvlllon
CL£VELAND.,.. ... 2.'i 12 .676

Olk:ago ................. 21

17

.!i~3

MinnesOin......

20

.4.'19

. 17

18 ..\~It
19

10 ·

4:,

.SOO

6

Callfomia ............... l9 20 .487

61\

Wednesday's S&lt;o~es

.........

~ Y&amp;~ldes

Eastern's softball team is on iiS
way to one of its best se'asons every,
claiming the Southeast-DiviSion .I II
sectional and at least a share of the
Tri;:Valley , Conference Hocking
Division Crown. The i.ai!Y Eagles
play 1'11ursday in the district against
Syrtm~s · Valley in Waverly .at 5:30
p.m. In CII$C of bad weather ihe game
will be play_cd on Saturday. since
other district games. includi.ng
Southern's district game will be
played Friday at Waverly.
After 17-game statistics, junior
Patsy Aeiker led the Eagles with a
.444 balling ave._rage, posting the
most hilS with ;20. Senior Nicole Nelso~. serving as either the second-spot
hitter or lead-off hitter posted the
Most runs scored with 35. had the
most stolen bases with 33 and most
assists (20). Senior Rebecca Evans
tallied the most runs batted in (RBis)
with 31 had the most sacrifices
(eight), led the team in putouts, I 52)
and had the best fi.~lding percentage
at .977.
· '·
Eastern has a lot of spe~ as illuslraled by its stolen bases. Nelson,
who led with' 33, was followed by
Kim Mayle and Aeikc~ with 30 each,
Tracy White's 28, Mindy Sampson's
16, Evans' L3 and Martie Holter and
Amanda Milhoan with 14 each.
N.;JIS6n and Mayle led the team
with the. most 'singles at , 17 each.
while Aeiker and White . led the
team in doubles with seven each and
home ·runs, one each. Aeiker is the
only 'person ever to hit one out of
, Eastern's park.
White also led the team with
three triples. BehindAeiker (.444) i~

.·
..
.:
·;

ROOFING SALE

from Iowa of !he

Amc:riciiR Asaoci111ion.
MONTREAL EX POS :. Pl;~ced RHP
T11vo Alv~~rez on tht: 15-d..y disabled li51,
Rtcnlled RHP Alex Pochcco from Ottawu
ofihe lnlermuionaJ Leugue.

, Fast, easy installation
.
• Goes directly over old roof
.• Won't rust or corrode ·

Boskelball

Nationll Baskttb.ll Association
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS : Numed
Fran Cassidy vice prtaidenl of sales.

Butlon 17,Cuhforn•a6''

l'lollo!uiHoo!boiiLua~~t

Dcnoh 2
, MinneiOin'l, Toronto I
Seanle 10, fl!.ew Yorlt ~
KaASaS City 3, Tt'-as I
Chtcqo 20, Mitwaube 8

THOMAS DO IT CENTER
, •• ' 814-448-~
~
, 17eJkConnickRoad, GIVE*~ Ohio ..

GREEN D~ Y P~CKERS : Sig•od

DB Tyi'one William~ und DE Wendnll
Gni~aes.
'

I

NEW

RR

ORLE~NS SAINTS: Signod
Lorenzo White 10 a Olle·)'eat controct

VALLEY LUMBER

Tqday's gaines

K Eddit Murray 10 none-year con1rac1.

Frluy's games
Tens (Gross S·3) 01 CLEVELAND
(Hcf'lbi.tet ~·3), 7:Cltf,.m.
Oaldaad (Wojc echowski 4-0) at
Bollon (Wakef.ek12-4), 7:0~ p.m. ·
ChicAJO (feraandcJ 3-2) 111 Dc1roit
(Lira J..3), 7:05p.m..
' ~eaule (Wolcon 2-:'i) 111 B11himore
(M&lt;Ii:k&lt;r :Z.2); 7:~ p.m.
. Cellforitia (A'bboll 1-S) Q! New York
(~IC S-2), 7:35 p.m.
oronlo (Ouznmn ·4-2) at Kunsas City
( Ieber 3-2)1 8:05 p.m.
' Milwaukee (Karl 2-2} at Minnesota
(l'aml Hll. 8:~ p.m.

,.

I

. Saie

a SUPPLY CO.

''\

'

555 Part&lt; Slr801, Mlddioport, Ohio

-,NEW 1-996

,(,

MD

-

'IN·ITOCIC c:or.ORI

•

$24,129

lOW

1''1
, ~\l

1998

7),

Skylark
Limited ·

Aorida ................... 20 22 .476
Nri' Yod .............. IS 2J J9~

10\

Ctnlral DMsion
Houaon ................. 20 21 .4H8
CrNCINNATI.. ..... lb 19 .4~7

22

.4~

I
I'"'

Pirisbaflh .............. 17 23

.42.1

2/.

Sd..UUis ............... .17 23

.425

2h

~o ................. l8

""'
W..arm Dh'hior1
San Dieao ............. 2.~ ll .62.1 .
San FrarK:iKD ........ 20 19 .51J
Los Angeles... ........ 20 21 .489
Colwwfo ................ l6 21 .4J2

4~
~~
7~

. Wednesday's scores
Philadelphlo ·7, Son r'lllncisco 6 (I 0)
Houston 7, Chil:n,o ~
St. Louis6. Floridn 0
Colorlldo al CJNCII'I'!~ll. ppd.. "'!''
PillsburJh l A1lanta 0
l.ol Aacc'ln 7, Monlreal2
S:m Dtcsa ~· ~w York 3 {10)

Today'i aa~~~ts
Houlton (Drabek 1-2) al· Chicpgo
(TekmDCO 0.0). 1:20 p.m.
Ne-w York (Harnisch 2·2) at Sa n
Die&amp;o (Hamillon b-2). ~:05 p.m. .
·
Philadelphia {Mimbs 0.1) at Los An. goloo (Vald.:Jl-2), 10:0~ p.m.

'

Friday's pmes

Floridu (Leiler 6·2) nt Chicngo
(Bolliftgct 2-l), 3:20p.m.
CINCINNATI (SmUey 3-l) ru Atlaruo ·
(Maddu11 4-l). 7:40p.m.
.
New YOJk (Cklrk 1-5 ) PI Srul frunciS·
co (Vanl.andinibam 2-5). 8:05 p.n1. ·
Piusbura,h (Z. Smith 2·1) a1 H~s10n
(ReynaldJ 5-2), 8:0$ p.m.
Sr. Louis (Alan Benes ~-~) o.t Colomdo (Ri .. 3-ol). 9:0~ p.m.
Philadelphia (Gmct 6-0) nt Los An·
golct (Nomo ~-3l. JO:OS p.m.
Mont~al (P. M;nlinet 4-1) at S:m
Oieso (Ttwksbury $-I). IO:O.'i p.m.

'\

NBA playoff~
Wedntoday's tcGre

19

1996 CHEVY ~"£~ 1995 CHEVY

. S·IO

CUUROZ·21

~

Saturday's pme

'••

MSRP
Rebate
Discount

• 4 Sp~Automatic
• Cassette
Cruln Control
Air Conditioning ·
• P~ Windows
Dual air

$

Your
Cost

•16 Valve 150 ~P engine

.....'
!

• 100,000 mile sPlll)Piug
•1 00,000 mile antifreeze
•Passloc~

Auto-theft

•

Transaction s

s-w

'

'

•
'

•

J

19U BUICK
SKYlARK

I

J

l•
••

•

'

•'

1994 DODGE
CARAVAN

1993 NISSA.. .
SENTRAXE

.V-0, auto, air. tift, cruise. cass.
7

•'
l

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

l

CICab. V-8, 5 spd, SLT, pkg, tift,
cruise, air, factory warranty.

I
I

,•
I

••

.•
. 1995 NISSAN 4X4
KING, CAB XE
chfoma

....

1994 NISSAN
SENTRA XE
4

•I

1996 CHRYSLER NEW
YORKER

I
I

l

I

;'

dr, auto, air, lift, cruise, cass,
I .owner.

'

~

........
«:a••• ••••

MSRP
Rebate

22,075
-1,000

·l.430

DIScoUnt

'19,645

\

••
•,•

1917TOYOTA
aUCAGT

I

:

•

I

1'il..mtt

\

•'
••
•
••
I

•

1994 PLYMOUTH
V-0. auto, air, ail power. factory

1987DODGE
CARAVAN LE

•.

1993 MAZDA 4X4 SE·
SPKG

.

f

•'•
••
•

I

JBNJ.sehe
-·
.
.

' . . . . ('.eatlllry

Av--

.· S~Jeelal

Brand
Newi

sP-~ . ~3,5M

'25,995

• CO !*It

c.....
flul1YAed
. •l..a.dld'
• llnln TOIIIIng

·TPllg.

'

'

~Plqj.

... ,..,. H

IINPIII'k

. c:.....
Demo5,000 miles

·-·-·
--..
·-•wtr-

1991 CHM
BERffiAGT
5 spd1 air, V-0, tilt, cruise.

. DUSBR .

•3100s.tn.
II V-8

Enulno

•CO ....
PM .
~

MSRP
Retijlte

Discount

.

...

;~

.

.. ;..- -

18,548
·1,500

'

- Z§Z

~~~ '18,211 ·
·~
c . IIlii

.

. • • ,..-1::
I

.,..

·-

eoo-•ra
EqrliiJPd '

•
•
''•

~

:- :~· "

1995 CJIRYSLER
CIRRUS

•
•

•••

' V-6, LX. auto. al power, cass,
ABS,

•••

1994 MAZDA MIWN.IA 1992 DODGE DAKOTA
· V-8, auto, heated leather lllliiiB.

C/Cab, BU\O, 1.£, V-0; .air, crulae.

. a1 power, 1~ likl!.new

tl.h.low miles'

1994 FORD RANGER
5 Spd. stereo. 1 OWIIII'.

'~'fMDooi"Hiages
• Free 10 yr )NII1s &amp;: labor
•• With aproved eredit

See Store for Detalb

RUTLAND'

FURNITURE CO.

1'rualqi Mille

0.:

All pay!J1entl liUIJjelit to crecfit IIPPfOYI!.

101_TATE MOTOIS, IIIC•
ITS WORTH YO(JR DRIVEl

A-•'- .
• SEATJ'L!I! MARJN£!!S: Plad LHP

.

.~

•

,._ atl!llllle'" not Included.

U1Ah :11 San AntODio, TBA (NBC), if

''''

1990 NISSAN
PATHFINDEJt

· 1988 PLYMOUTH
GRAND VOYAGER LE

1992CHM
CAVAUER

. ,~

Au

·

'

•I

Tl!lll&amp;ht's pme .

Utah, 9 p.m. &lt;:J'NT}

The second annual DARE Golf
Scramble will be held on Saturday.
June 22 at the Meigs County Golf
C011rsc with a shotgun start at 9 a.m. .
The tournament Y1ill be a fourman ~cramble, and entry fee is $35 ·
which includes golf cart and refr:eshments.
,
Don Tate MOtors Qf Pomeroy will
he giving all(ay a new car with a value of $15,000.for the firsl person to
get a hole-in-one on the par 3 number nine.
Interested indiviiluals can sign up
for the tournament at the golf co~rse.

•

l
J
I
J

••

Orlnndo 96, AIIIUJIII 88; Orlando wins
teria4-l
,.
~on AniOf'!iO at

199lFORD
F-150

I)AR.E linkfe$t
set.for June 22

,,••.:

1995 NISSAN
··sENTRA

· CAMARO

low

•1

'

$1

1983

5. spd, air, C&amp;!IS, PM,

krenhy .

Basketball

League play will ofljcially ,!&gt;egin
on Monday, May 20 for the Monday.
evening Ladies'.League at the Meigs
County Ool f Course.
The fonnat is match play with
two person teams. Teams who want
to participate in the league or anyone
who wants to play on a substitute
basis may sign up at the clubhouse
or call992-3710, 992-5485 or 9492530.
' '
'

V-6, auto, air, PW, PI,. cassatt",
cruise, WAS $18,972'
.

.62.S.
.526

IH

Ladies' golf
league·to start.
play Monday

GJI

1$

414
Auto, SLS Decor, electronic
Shift, Much more
. '
'

SPEtW

J. fa.

14 .659

GMC JIMMY

~~-·-•-

Eastern PhiliOn

Allanla ................... 2~
Pbilodclphin ...... ,.... 20

~'f.~l996 GEO

'.

NL standings

:r.
»:
MOIIII'oal .:.............. 27

.'

£ll1JISE ON IN FOB A

.99
~!u~PL)

MOWNGRAY

814-1112-8811

WASHIN&lt;ITON REDSKINS: Signod

Toroolo (Quanlrill '24) nt Minnesota
(Radke3-S), I:ISp.m.
Chicago (Mngrune 1·0) nl Milwtil.,lkCe ·
(M&lt;Donold 4-1), U5 p.m.
.
Detroit (Williams 0-1) al CLEVELIIND (M&lt;Oowoll 4-ll, 7:0l p.m.

or
·· 1·614-991-6614 .

*
.'•. ·1.1
$

Football

CLEVELAND~ .

1·100-117-1094 ,·

• Reduces noise
• Provides added insulation
• Lifetime limited warranty

USA BASKETBALL: Named GeAo
Auritmma 'USA Women' s Selecl Team
1.-uach, and Ed Baldwin and Chtryl Bur·
nell USA Women 's Selecl Team ru~lllslunl
coaches.
·

.Bnllirnor:e ~~ O~ln~. ~ .. ~.U n

'

OF

8

8~

w"'"" Dlnslo!1
Tellllll ......... ........... 26 14 ,MO
Oakland ................. l9

cal~

4~

Milwau-..... ........ 16 20 .444 .
Kaosnsc;ry ........... l7 24 .414

Seanle .................... 21

Natlou.IIA:aaue
CHICAGO CUBS:, Piuced OF s~ou
Bullen on itle l'.'i·day disabled liSI. Re-

btCJlnse they're out in the NBA, they JOhnson was bcinc used the same
deserve all this money, and that's all way he had been since he mumed.
they're COIIIlCrned with. It's JJ(ll all of
The Lakers lost the series 3-1.
them. it's some of them."
The day after he ~eoredjust eighl
Johnson coached the final 16 points in 30 minutes and 5M out most
games for the Lakers two yea~:s ago, · of the founh quarter of the holkers'
bul quit after going 5-11 and saying 1 final, I 02-94 defeat by the Rockets
he could not handle the altitudes of on May 2~ Johnson said he would
several .unnamed players.
• definitely be back next season
Although Johnson gave the Lak- because he couldn 'I go out a loser.
ers a boost this time when he
In less than two weeks, however.
reltmled on Jan. 29, the team fell into he changed his mind again.
disarray late in the season. Leading
"1Welve days is a long time to
scorer Cedric Ceballos disappeared think. I've been playing every day
for days, not bothering to tell anyone, since we lost to the Rockets. I came
MAGIC JOHNSON
and went water skiing. Point. guard out here with•the guys (the tol!ring
Nick Van Exel shoved a referee and team) and I was having fun," he said.
was suspended. Uncharacteristically,
Johnson said he intends to limit I'd still be playing." said Johnson,
who wants to buy back the minority
Johnson himself bumped into a ref "his basketball to his touring team and
interest
of the Lakers he had to sell
and drew a suspension.
devote more time to his rapidly
to
play
again.
"But4 112 years being
Then, during the Lakers' playoff growing business ventures. He also
out,
I've
become
a business penon,
.series against .Houston. Johnson said he wanted to be fair to the Laliand
my
businesses
are doing well.
complained after a loss in the first ers and not prolong a decision.
''I've
got
two
new
theaters opengame that he wasn't gelling the ball
. "They needed to know so they
ing up. one in Atlanta and another in
enough, an.d coach Del Harris, obvi- could move on. with the salary cap
Houston, which will he announced ·
ously a little miffed, countered that and all," he said. "I knew if! was to
soon.
There are lhree other things I
c~,&gt;me back to the NBA, ii would
announce,
ari\1 I have a tennis
can't
have to be somewhere else and I'm
shoe
company
coming
out with a
a Laker.
.
.
whole line in August.
"I did what I started out to do. MY
· "I like being a businessman and
son got to see me play. It's been
I'm gelling to be good at it.''
great. This is not a sad or a bad day.
Johnson doesn't think he will ever
God
blessed me and allowed me to
average are White · (.396), Mayle . Douthitt already has been honored
get over the desire to play i" the
(.388), NelsPn is (:340), Sampson
by the state for a landmark 100-win come back and he will continue to NBA.
(.324). Meredith Crow (.286), Holter
career and should hit the 200-mark bless me."
""My juices are always going to
During his jam-packed press con(.311) and MilhQan (.250).
sometime in the near-future.
be there because I love basketbalL
A key to Eastern:s success is thai
Overall, EaStern has won six sec- ference, Johnson was .asked again · Watching the Bulls play last night,
the def~;m;~ has allowed less than two tional championships since 1985, and again if this was in fact. the end my juices were going," he said .. "I
. ~'rrors ;per game. Eleven players three district crowns, two district of his career since he'd already will always think about coming
have fielding averages of .836 or bet- . runners-up, a regional championship retired twice before only to change back, not physically to be back, but
his mind and return. He said, "It's
ter. Behind Evans, is \Vhite (.913), · and two regional runner-up titles.
just wonder how I would do in the
at least a half-dozen times.
over"
Milhoan .(922) and Juli Hayman·
For nearly her entire career, Don
"If I was just a basketball player, NBA because I'm a person who
(.897).
·
,~ Jackson has bee the Eastern assistant
loves to play, loves to win.
. OthetEasten\ players are Crystal ~ ~~~
Holsinger. Michelle Caldwell , lennifer Mora. Candace Bunting. Lauren Young and Christie Mills. ·
In 1985, Coach Pam Douthitt's
Eagle crew went 23-6 en route to a
final four appearance and state-runner up honors. In 1986, Eastern posted a 16-6 marie and another Sweet 16
appearance as the Eagles bowed out
of play as a regional finalist.ln 1990,
Eastern was 17-3 and one game
· away from a S'\'eel 16 appearance.
After lwo down yeal's, Eastern was
back on top last y.s:ar as Tri-Valley
Conference c'hampiOqs 'a,nd a 15-6
overall mark. 11-4 in the league.
!
This year's team has p&lt;&gt;sted the
least lllsses of any Eastern team to
4-4oor, auto, air. Nlo/FM cass,
this point and is riding on' the coat1-0'1!!111(
·· tails of ace pitcher Rebecca Evans,
, who has 10 shutQiits and four no-hitters to her credit in 1996. The year his been anotl)er Jand- ~
mark year for Coach Pam Douthitt
who has boosted her overall coachI
ing ·record to 185-85 overall.
4X2. XLT. auto; air, till. cruise. all SE, V6. air. auto. 4-dr, all· power.
'
·

Eastern's softballers build mark
on sqlid def~nSI! and hitting . . ·

Pinues fOI' IB D.J: Bostpn.

Euh:m Divl\ion

again

By KEN PETERS
third time Ill a pla~r.
INGLEWOOD, Galif. (AP) Although he diplomatically tried
With the Los Angeles Laken in the not to criticize any of the current
1980s, Ma1ic Johnson personified Lakcrs, it was obvious he _though!
the phrase "winning time."
some of them arcn 't as dedicated u
In 1996, he found he couldn'tdeal he is to winning.
•
with losing and with what he per·
· "The attitude of the young guys
ceives as an indifferent attitude ... y011 have some sood oncs, you
among some players.
have some bad ones. The NBA has
Feeling he doesn't blend in with the suys like Shaquille O'Neal and
the current Lakers and unwilling to Anthony Hardaway. Gary Payton
play for another team, Johnson and Shawn Kemp, Grant Hill, a lot
decided to retire, much as he ' had of great young players who excel and
when he made a brief stab at coach- want to help this game grow," he
ing the team two years ago.
said.
"Between age and whatever, il's
"And the.other ones have to catch
a big diffefJ'nce," Johnson. 36. said on to that. They have to understand
of his return to the Lakers this sea- that all the money they're making is
son. "It's not all their fault, not all ·not because of their ability; they
my fault. Maybe I just came at a dif- wouldn't be making $60 millioa, 40,
.
ferent time. and now it's changed. 50.
Maybe I can't adjust
·
"The Michael Jordans and the
"Some of it has to be on me, too. Larry .Birds, the Dr. J's and the
I'm a guy that just wants to win," he Karcems enabled lhem to make this
said Wednesday, a day after he kind of money because thev drove
announced he was retiring for the the ratings up. But they think

-

Cleveland's favor, " Tigers )llanager ond on sinales by Cecil Fielder,
Eddie Williams and Marte Lewis and
Buddy Bell said.
a
two-run double by Alan Trammell.
The Tigers are just trying to play
Marti~ did not allow another hit '
competitively against the ~fending
until John Aahetty lined a two'-0111
American League champions.
"I'm somewhat pleas~d and double in the seventh.
soniewhal disappointed in· that we
The Indians look the lead for
have come in here the last lwo nigh~
good
in me bottom of the second.
and had two well-pitched ballgames
Lofton
singled and advanced on an- ·
against a great hitting team," Bell
said. "Bul it is disaap&lt;&gt;inting not to error by Fielder at first base, and
win them. I think we are in, a posi- scored on a single by Julio Franco.
tion right now thai we have to look
Ramirez made it 4-2 with a twoat every pOSitive tbing We can."
Albert Belle eMended his hitting out homer, his eighth of the season,
·
streak to a career-high 16 gaines with in the third, .
Carlos Baerga's two-out double
an RBI single in the Clevell'\'d first.
Kenny Loflon led off with a bloop · down the right; fiei&lt;!Al~e iri the sixth
double and .Belle doubled high off scored Franco. wh6 had walked and
the left-field wall with two outs. .. stolen ~cond base.
. The crowd of 42,259 at Jacobs '
Eddie Murray followed' with a
single and consecutive walks by Jose Field was the lndi~ns' Iiiith selloot fn
Lima (0-4) to Jim Thome and Man- a row, breaking the AL record set by • i
ny Ramirez made it 2-0. ·
the Baltimore Orioles between May ; , ,
Detroit tied the score in·the sec- 23, 1992, and April 20, 1993.
'
'

Southern softballers hand Miller 19;.7 defeat.

Ponteroy. lllddlepor1, Ohio

;.We Service Whot We Selr
llaln 8ts Jilt • Rutland; VII.IO.

••
•
•

•••
•

•

•

•
•

1
•
I

•'

I
.
~

'

••'

y

.:
:

~J

�.••',
.,
.,
••
••
••
••
The Deily 81 itlnel•,... ?.·
•

• •
•

I

Ptlge I• The O.lly Banllnel

Pomeroy. Mldd~ Ohio

the jinx ledaer. Mel thll 's better !han
BALTIMORE (AP)- Although Derby wi.._ Grindstone is doing.
Cavonnier lost the Kentucky Derby . Grindstone w~ retired to stud last
• by just a nose to a horse that isn't week at owner W.T. Young's Over. .running in the l'realcncss, trainer Bob brook Farm ncar Lexington,. Ky..
: :Balfen doesn't "w1nt to do· any with a bone chip in his right knee;
· woofmg yet." '
With the victory, trainer D. Wayne
·• "I don't want to jinx myself."
Lukas extended his record string of
On Wednesday. Cavonnier l"as Triple Crown victories to six.
Since beaten Derby favorite
.made the 9-S morning line favorile
· in a field of 12 three-year-olds Unbridled's Song also is sidelined by
.entered for the I 3116-mile Preakncss injury, that leaves seven Derby grad. 'on Saturday, and that's no jinx. uales in the Prcakness. The others are
Unlike the Derby, which hasn't had third-place Prince of Thieves, sixtha favored winner since 1979, two of place Editor's N01e, lOth-place Victhe last three Preaknesses have been tory Speech. 12th-place Skip Away,
· won by favorites.
I 5th-place In Conlention and 16t~ Cavonnier arrived at Pimlico only place Louis Quatorze.
. hours before the draw and was put in
Also entered were Feather Box,
stall No. 40 in the Stakes Bam, aSpol Mixed CouDt, Secreto de .,.tado,
· usually reserved for the Derby win· Tour's Big Red and Allied Forces.
ner. That might be a jinx. No horse Each will carry 126 pounds, and if 12
has won the Preakness out of thai go to post, the race will be worth
stall since Sunday Silence in 1989. $704,800, with $458,120 going to
So, for now, Cavonnier is 1·1 on the winner.
1
M
Bajfert said he and Cavonnier

·,
rn •h
,, e NB'A
,.. piayo,s,.

each took about a week to &amp;et over Robert and Barbara Walter, who
losing the Derby by a nose as Grind- breed horses on their modest ranch
stone caugbt him at the wire.
north of San Francisco.
" On the eighth day, he was back
"Breeders like W.T. Young wiD
to where he wanted to get tough," be back, liut it's tou&amp;Jler for the WalBaffert said. ''That's when he told us tt:n," Baffert said. "I just hope to get
he was ~y to work."
through this and salvage . one for
Cavonnier. a California-bred them ...
gelding who won the Santa Anita
With Grindstone out, Young has
Derby in his final prep before Ken- Editor's Note to carry his colon in
tucky, worked a half-mile in 48 sec- the Preakncss. Besides Editor's Note,
onds at Churchill Downs on 'lUes- Lukas will saddle Prince of Thieves
day, and Baffen said he was "super and Victory Speech in an effort to
fit. ••
extend his record string of Triple
"I really think he 'll run the same Crown victories to seven.
type of race he ran in the Derby,"
"It's a great record," Baffen said,
Baffen said.
"and it'll be tough to match."
Baffen said he didn '1 see a replay
If Lukas starts three, he' ll have 21
of the Derby until last Wednesday, lifetime Preakness starters. breaking
"and it still looked the same to me. .Max Hirsch's record of 19. He has
Now I know why I thought! won it. won four total, including the last two .
lbat'll go down as one of my with Titbasco Cat and Timber Coun· '
biggest, toughest beats."
try. .Lukas also holds the record with
Now, Baffert said he would real- 31 Derby starters.
ly like to win one of the remaining
Since none of the Derby grads
Triple Crown races for owners

comes in off a victory, onlY two of
the Preakness st.ten, both Triple
crown newcomers, were winners
last time OUl ,
Allied F.broes, owned by Ahmed
al1)rer ofDubai, won the Woodlawn
at Pimljco on grass .on Derby day,
and Tour's Big Red won the Federi~
co Tesio at Pimlico on April 20. ·
Secreto de Estado and Feather
Box finished 4- S in the Wood
Memorial 81 Aqueduct on April 13,
meaning they hav~n't run in more
than a month. Mixed Count was third
in the·Tesio last time out.
Cavonnier would be the seventh
gelding to win the Preakness. The
last was Prairie Bayou in 1993. A
sclding hasn ~ t won the !{cntucky
Derby since Clyde Van Dusen in
• 1929, a!tbough there was ~ moment
on May 4 that Baffen thought he· d
buried old Clyde in the record books
forever. .
And if that wasn't bad enough, on

the day ~ the Detby, Bllffert's
prize qUIIterhone. The Teus Tunnel, finiihecl thlrd as the co-favorite
in the Grell We*m Shool.out II Thrf
Paradise in Phoenix.
Baffen had been counting on
.The Texas l\innclto make him for·
get the Derby. Instead. he reminded
him of it.
"He was a short horse 81 three·
. eighths of a milf&gt;, I ran a short horse
in the Derby aild a short horse at
three-eighths of a mile," Baffert
said, smiling at his joke.
l.alcr, Baffen said. he was sin ina
in his office a1l\irf Paradise and saw
a loose horse ny past his window in
· the parking lot...
"He looked pretty good going by
my window, so I thought, 'Must be
one of mine.' Then I saw four of my
grooms running after him." Baffen
said. Sure enough. It was The Tuas
l\innel.
/
"He ran beucl'ln the parkin$ lot
than he did in the race," Baffert said.

· First, ~n&amp; single isn 'I so bad.
You
can~ Ollllried and still be plea·
,A.nn
ty lonely, especially when your pert·
Landers
ncr is noi there for you. I hope you
will not. let the fear of singlehood
1~ , l...ui M,elca
n.as~~t~~~~c., .
drive you to make the bissest mis·
Spdlc-.:.
take of your life.
Second, love can be killed. It can
be
chipped away, piece by piece.
By ANN LANDERS
until
there is notliing left. This
' Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing
concerning the 28:year-old woman process cAn go unnoticed until
from ASpen, Colo., who loved a man everythin&amp; . falls ~· The easiest
dearly but was having a hard time way to desil'oy love is to keep taldng 1
tolerating his freeloading. ThaJietier it and give nothing in return. If that
really hit home because I have been freeloader is nice to you, it's because
in her shoes. It scares me to think it is easy and convenient for him.
ihat she might marry. this guy. If she And look what he gets in return!
After seven y~ and two lovely
llasn 't done so already, I would like
children,
f grew weary of all the•
to ~ive her some food for thought:
empty promises and disappointM;)n

· ~range

.

· ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - The
Orlando Magic don ' t have to duck
questions about the Chicago Bulls
anymore.
The much-anticipated playoff
matchup between the defending
Eastern Conference champions and
the team lhal had the most successful regular season in NBA history
wi II begin Sunday.
"I guess this is what America
wants ... what (fans) have been asking for six months," Orlando's Den·

nis Scott said after the Magic
shrugged off second-round opponent
Atlanta in five games to join the
Bulls in the conference finals.
"I think this series we lost a little bit of focus or fire, and I think.
now it's time for us to get back on
track," Scott added Wednesday
night. "We know (Chicago's) ready
for us, and they are going to try and
do whatever they can to dethrone
us."

The Magic eliminated the Bulls
and an ineffective Michael Jordan in

six games in the conference semifi·
nals a year ago, then went on to make
their first appearance in the NBA
Finals.
Chicago won three of four meetings between the learns en route to a
league-record 72 victories this season and will have the homecourt
advantage in the best-of-seven series.
"It's going to be a tough task.
especially going on the road for two
games first," the Magic's Anfernee
Hardaway said. "They're smelling
the Finals
because they haven' I

too."

Orlando hounced back from its
only loss of the playoffs to beat the
Hawks 96-88 Wednesday night to
win the series 4- I.

·

mcnts AND the 1~. Finally, I
had lbe COIJniC to call it quits. The
singlellood I chose' gave me the
peace of miftd I had not. known for
not. only is kind but supportive,
responsible and a wonderful father
to my children. It scares me to think
I would have missed all this had I
nOI found the courage to leave. ..
Mrs. X.X. in Maryland
Dear Mrs. X.: Your letter brings
to mind the wisdom of asking that
wen: known Ann Landers question:
Are you better off with him or without him? Apparently, you found the
answer. I'm happy for you.
Dear Ann Landers: This letter is
for "Potential Maniac" in Colorado

air conc1;
AII/FM cue, tilt, crulee,
PB, PS, PW, PDL, Pwr
V-6,

auto,

Seat, Keyteu entry

ONLY 20,000 MILES

V-6, a1110, air
AMJFM CIU, PS, PB,
PDL, tilt, crulu, pwr
keyteee entry.

Library, Pomeroy; Saturday. Nita
Yost, se.cretary-treasurer, Met' gs
County Soccer Association, 9492579
·
SIJNDAY .
POMEROY -- Pilgrims to Portugal to present Fatima Nighl, Sundi\y,
.7 p.m ·at Sacred. Heart Church.
Prayers. pictures, renections and
dessert will be offered.

RACINE · -- Racine Post 602,
American Legion, dinner 6:30 p.m.
followed by ·business meeting, 7:30
p.m. New officers to be installed.

·

ll

ONLY:24,000 MILES

lhouiJI

seriolfi

.

P*

MONDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County Vet-

Jli.CQVJSITI CJ_9{S :F19-f.t£ J'EW££!1(9"

Beautiful: ·~

DIAMOND
SALE!
Diamond
Diamonds
Set In IOlt (iolcl

BEUER COMFORT,
BmER SELECTION,
BEnER 5~ IN.GS•••

ON SIMMONs® BEAUTYREg® &amp; BACKCAR~

1991 CHEV
CAMARO RS .

......... pnterl plbi
IIIIlS. Caoaid In
. rugged HenUcn

Conlen1p6rary
COIIIfort enhanced by
a plushly padded
channei-Siik:lled bQd(
and softly si'Mied
delails. Collered in
resiiant Herculon.

auto,

l993FORD
. ·RANGER 4x2'
XLT, Short · 'bed, V-6;

•uta.
llr cond, AMJFM
cue, P. ltelllng, P.

Best of Class
1996 selected

air

AMJFM ceu, tat, ··crultll,

PS, PB, PW, PDL, etc.

OIILY 14,000
'
.

:1993
RANGER 4X4 ·
XLT, ehort bed, V-6, 5
epcl, air concl, AM/FM
cuaett., PS, PB.

'

SAVE¥c $670 Sml

LOCiliUDE

V-8,

s•••,••,

,_.....

CYNTHIA STEWART ·

V-8, 11110, air concl,
AMIFM .ceu, PS,
PW, POL, Pwr
MORE
'

n"•th .._

r

etc~

FORD .
THUNDERBIRD

Nobody Undersells ·
Acquisitions o~ 14K
and 10KGold
· Necklaces and
Bratt:elats • Nobody

'

Dr, 4 eyt, auto, elr
cond, AMIFM CIU, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, etc.

GG"J

White

•.

; 1993 CHEV
CAVALIER RS

ONLY 27,000 MILES

· erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday, Veterans ·Service Office,
M lbe •·
p
u rry n.ve.. omeroy.

1' Carat of

.

RACINE-- Southern Local' Building Committee will meet Thursday, 7
p.m. in the.high school cafeteria.. All
district resident$ welcome.

4.3L, auto, air Cond, AIIIFII can, PS, PB, PW, POL,
crulu

•

i

Appeals for aid were n:ad from and Ann Lambert. Reported ill were
Hoffman Grange in Monroe County Ethel Bran ' Etta Cullums and Be,..
and North Fatrfield Grange tn Huron nice Hawk.
•
County and contributions were sent.
Sara Cull urns had the lileraty
The group llsb· responded to the an gram on May holidays. Helen Quivappeal for aid t~ the deaf.
ey read "The Quilt". Ljnda SchoePP:,
Hemlock will visit Racine Grange · ncr, "My Cradle Days," and Muriol
June 20, it was announced. May Bradford, "Mothers are Men Mal(·
binl)days observed were Harley Han- ers." There were special songs to
ing, Linda Schoeppner, Ev~ Robson, close the meeting.
,
·:
·
· •
'

Tennis
Bracelet

1991 GMC JIMMY SLI

Stltlon Wagon, 4 eyl,
auto, ·air cond, p. etHr·
lng, P. Brakle, P. W., PL,

.

.

~··~·

'

••••

IOIIICODe who never acknowledges a the si.,...ures IIIIlCh- When lbe 1:111gift.
.
celcd cheeks come blck. you
I had heard of dill gimmic:k and . notify YOUR bank dill lbe lia-i
decided to send an unsianed check twe belon&amp;s to elae. 1111!
to a young "delinquent" friend. His bank can lhen Slll't an invcaligllliolt
n:sponse? He si&amp;ned my name and . for bank f..ud, which is a
collected the funds anyway! He is offense. You miJ(It not want to del
now off my Christmas list . .. this to a friend or relative.
::
Stunned But Wiser in Farmington,
:.
MiCh.
Gem of the Day (Credit MalcoiJ!i.
Dear Stunned: I was surprised at Forbes): People who say the~
the number of readers who wrote to expect nothing are often siW(X'isci!
tell me ~ ~nsigned cheek routine when that's what they get.
:.
dQesn't always work. They said the
•.
recipients .have been able to sign t~
•'
cheeks and cash them.
• According to Thomas Kelley,
Sead quesdotll til ADa LaJt;
asSistant vice president at First den, Creators Syadlcate, 5T11 w;
National Bal)k .in Cbicago, .there is Century Bl~d., Suite 700, ~
no way for another bank to know if Anpl.., Caljf. 9004$

REG.

1994 MERCURY
TRACER

•

Community calendar--------.,.~.

·

Board of Mental Retardation, 7:30
.
publis~d as a free serv1ce to non• . · p.m. Thursday at Carleton Sch09l.
Profit groups.wlsblng to announce
. meeting· find special events. The FRIDAY
cakndar is not designed to promote
.MASON .. Bend Area Gospel
sales or fund raiser's of any .type. Jubilee, Mason County Fairgrounds,
Jtems are printed as spll&lt;e pennlts Friday, 6:30p.m. Saturday and Sun·
llnd cannOt be guaranteed to mn a day, 1:30 p.m_.
··
specif~e number of days.
·
THURSDAY
.
SATURDAY
.
LETART .. Parent Advisory
. POMEROY .. Fll,ll sOccer signup,
Council, Letart Elementary, Thurs- 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Meigs County
day, 2 p.m. at the sc~ool. All volun·
tccrs urged to attend.

1994 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS (5

wllltilld 10 ~ if there is a place
where clop are prohibited.
Plaile ICI1 her, yea .. lhere is such
a plllee! My husband Mel I just
rituniecl from 1 trip to the Cook
Islands. Ailllllki, a small atoll, forbids clop anywhere on the island.
They do have pigs in their yards,
however, but they don't bark. Good
luck! .. )Vcslenr Washington
Dear W.W.: I don't know if the
Cook Islands have a Chamber of
Commc~. but thank you on their
behalf for a letter lhll could result in
some travel business.
'
Dear Ann Landers: I had to laugh
when I read in your column the sug·
~estion to send an unsigned cheek 10

years.
I am now married to a man who _'

The Community Calendar is

Shaquille O'Neal led the way
with 27 points and 16 rebounds,
atoning for a subpar performance in
Game 4 that may ·have been relaled
to chest pains he experienced in
Atlanta.

Sprinp. Sbe'slbe wbo was
dri'VCII tllld by ~~niDi doll and

miles north of Zanesville and offers . presented by MiddJebranch Band.
activities for all ages. She also noted .• and there was a humorous style
that the grange holds a stale and show by several women of tlie
national convention each year: 'Leg· grange. Refreshments w~ served. ·
. islative activities help to gel the laws
At the regular May meeting of the ·
for farmers enacted.. .
group, a poduclc dinner was enjoyed.
Rosalie Siory, master, presided at . Helen Quivey reponed on contests,
the meeting which opened wiih the Ziba Midkiff gave the legislative
song. "It's a Good Thing to be a report dealing with new laws schcdGranger."
uled for a vole in the Ohio Legisla·
.Following Dyer's talk, music WIIS ture,

or

been there in three years, so they're
going to be ready to play. We will.

1994 MERCURY
SABLE ·

••

'·'•••

Deputy Patty Dyer speaks at Hemlock Graf)Qe

Deputy Patty Dyer was speaker at
the recent open meeting Hemlock
Grange held al the hall.
"What is the Grange?" was, the
theme of "'r message to the group .
She said that anyone can join at age
14 and up and that there is a Junior
Grange for those five to 14 years of
age. She talked about the contests for
adults ·and yout\t. Irwas noted that a
Grange ca111p is l..;ated about four

Orlando beats Atlanta 96-88 to win conference.semifinal ·4·1
By FRED GOODALL

Pomlroy •lllddllport. Ohio

Feaf of singlehood may d~prive woman of real love

:Morning .line makes Cavonnier 9-5 favorite in .Preakness
By JOHN NELSON

•4

Th\ndey, u.y 18, 11181

'

•

Four Meigs County graduates are
among the over 200 top-ranked area
high school seniors (o be honored in
the WSAZ NewsChannel 3 salute to
the "Best of the Class 1996."
They are Alison Rae Gerlach and
Cynthia Stewart of Meigs High
School, and Rayan Young and Jennifer Lawrence ·of Southern High
School.
. Top scholars from the area are
being featured in pubic service
announcements thaL were videotaped
by WSAZ during a luncheon held at
ti)e Huntington Museum of Art on
May 6. The announcements will air
on that station during May and June.
.

I YOU ANSWER

TRIVIA
Der-.

.Producer SIIUIIIIe
a pro)tfC of ilerry Gordy 81 M01own Jte.cords, w.. lhe drivina fon:c behind
:the mh' ria I.DMM/IIfl Dow.

..

· Earrings

AHf Of 11&amp; QIISIIONS,
·IT'S 11ME FOR ANEW
SIMMONS MA11RESS SET.

Diamond
Bracelets

• Do You Woke Up Feeling Tired
And Sore?
• Does YOIIf Portner Woke Yoo
., from Moving Around Too Much?
•Is Your Mattress Uneven Or
Sagging
In The Middle? .
. .
• Hove Yau Hod Your Mattress For
8Or More Veoo?

Reg. NOW

1/10 C.at--$299
I/4Cnt ...........$499
I/3Cnt..........$799
I/2Cnt.~..........$999

'

Sapphire Plush

'

Brakee

Twlnea.pc.
Full ea. jl!:.
~n2pe.eat
King 3pc. ~

Reg.

Sale

$349
. $469
$1019
$1569

$199
.$2.69
$599

$899

BackCare ·Cambridae
~e
·

Twin ea. pc.
Full ea. pc•
'Queen 2pc. eat
Klng 3 pe. eat
"

Hulin Qre•Ril•un
'.
S_yrecuse
Bedding &amp;
.
•·
Vegei8ble. Plan1$........$6.50 ftat
10 In Hanging BaskeUI$5.75 &amp;
$6.75
Combination Pots ....... _... $3.50

.(,1erarilums .............. $1.00 &amp; Up
......................... 10 or iYIOre 85t
. rube·&amp;T -....$2.85-$10,116
0,.. Dtllly I e.in. •I P,m.
8Undly 12 Noon • 5 p.m.

""" -

::

Diam~nd

'

·MAIN 'S'I'AEET
742·2211
Service Hotline 742·22 12

on

$329
$469
$699

sale!

Huge Savings Qn 1OK and
14K Gold Necklaces and
Bracelets

· Reg. ·

$259 . $149
$349
$199
$799
$469
$1199
$679

co•..

$149

Diamond
Pendants

LAYAWAY· ONLY 10°6 DOWN!
'

JZLCQUISifJJO!J{S
.

!!IIJ./:f; J'E/WU'1rJ'

LOCAnONS:
151 SECOND AVE., GAWPOUS 441-2842
. 11 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT
181-62110
Members l~wclcts'

of'l'rlde

ill

••

�•

•

Plge 8 • The D S, 81 1111•1

Pomeroy •llkldleport. Ohio

rtMnd8Y, M8y 11, 1 -

I

~Mystery

Science Theater'
reaches the final frontier
.

,

By JEFF BAENEN
AeiOCillllcl Pren ·Wrttar
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - When
we last saw our intrepid hero Joel
Hodgson, be was blasting off from
!be Satellite of Love and escaping the
mind-warping bad movies of "My~tery Science Theater 3000."
,
That was nearly three years ago.
The plucky crew of "MST3K" soldiered on, subjecting themselves to
such trashy film fare as "The Wild,
Wild World of Batwoman" and
"Alien From L.A." until ...
WHAM!
They ran into !be edge ofthe universe.
After seven seasons of mocking
movies suited only for the Late, Late,
Late Show, "Mysiery Science Theater 3000" turns on the movie sign
for what could be the last time Sat·
urday.
.
Comedy central decided not to
renew the acclaimed series, citing
low ratings. The last episode,
"Laserblast," airs at5 p.m. EDT Sat·
urday, although Qlmedy Central will
continue · showing reruns of
"MST3K" through 1996. Fans also
can catch the Pea!x&gt;dy ·Award-winning show in syndication as well as
the feature-length movie version
'EXPRESSIVE HEADSTONES • Hipper headstones are letting today's dearly departed exprees
playing across the country.
themseiVM with Immortal etchlnga that teat thl bounds of dignity: dlnclng elephants, dice, goH
In the final episode, space;strand·
chlba and even bMr cana with the epitaph, "I did It my way."
ed Mike Nelson (head writer Michael
J. Nelson, who replaced Hodgson as
_ show host) and his wisecracking
robots are told they're being cut loose
by the evil Dr. Clayton Forrester,
who's been experimenting on· them
by forcing them to watch Grade-Z
movies.

"My funding has been CUI," Dr.
Fomster (1'race Beaulieu) tells Mike
and !be 'bOis, "and you just aren 't
cutting !be mustard." .
The final episOde does leave the
door open, in case "Mystery Science
Theater" is picked up by the Sci-Fi
Channel or some other network.
h) a parody of the ending of
"2001 : A Space Odys5ey," an aging
Dr. Forrester is seen on his deathbed,
with a videotape of The Worst Movie
Ever Made staJiding in for !be black
monolith of Stanley Kubrick's classic.
Like "2001 ," Jhe ending is .
ambiguous. "MST3K" could end
after 132 episodes with mission
accomplished, or it could find rebinh.
· For Hodgson, the standup comedian and magic buff who created
"Mystery Science Theater 3000,"
!here are no regrets about his leaving
!be show.
"I kind of left for creative reasons.
I felt like it was becoming uncreative
forme, and that's always "een a really important thing in m)
." Hodg.
son said.
.
Hodgson, 36, got tlje idea for
"Mystery Science Theater" after
returning to Minneapolis from doing
standup in Los Angeles. He observed
a growing cultural fascination with
bad movies and saw the.joke potential.
''When I got to this Idea I knew it
'was very affordable, I knew it was
cheap, because I knew that there were
public domain movies," he said.
The show debuted on Twin Cities
UHF station KTMA in 1988 and was
for national

next year by The Comedy Channel,
one of two cable networks that
merged to form Comedy Central.
Writing and jlnlducing !be show in
Minneapolis-St. Paul, instead of in
Los Angeles or New York, fostered
creative freedom, Hodgson said.
"You're in this situation where
nobody is jaded in !be least, it's just
all these ideas," he said.
" And there were no rules. W.e
really made it up as we went."
\
Hodgson designed the junl\y ·\
robots.- Tom Servo and Crow T.
Robot - who join their human creator in ridiculing the cheesy movies.
He wrote !be theme song, worked on
se!s and played the show's host, Joel
Robinson.
·
.
To fans, HodgsQr{appai'ently will
always be the slciep'y-eyed, somewhat
spacy character he played in more
1
than I00 episodes.
"After I left, people would ,
approach me and want to rifYon certain shows," Hodgson said, ."And I'd
just say, 'boy, you've got 10 forgive
me.' It's like there's so niany lines in
every show. There's-like 700 jokes."
Fans will get a chance to see what
Hodgson has been up to since be left
"Mystery Science Theater" in 1993
and moved to Los Angeies. His variety-sketch comedy special, "The TV
Whe~l." airs on Comedy Central at 7
p.m. EDT Saturday, immediately
after the final "MST3K" episode.
Filmed in "real tim~." the fast.
paced show moves through 24 skits
in 29 minutes and 30 seconds. The · ·
acts are on.a 32-foot turntable, built ·
by Hodgson's brother Jim. which

CHAT LINE
Live 24 Hrs a dey

Public Notice

·

By CAROLYN THOMPSON
AssPc:llltecl Prell Writer
BOSTON (AP) - "Rest in Peace" is 'dying a slow
death.
Hipper headstones are letting today's dearly departed
express themselves with immortal etchings that test:the
bounds of dignity: dancing eleJ)hants, dice, golf clubs
and even heer cans with the epitaph, "I did it my way."
"When someone ihinks something is wonderful and
beau.~ful , it may be- in their mind." said Donald Kenney, ·•director of cemeteries for the Archdiocese of
Bqston. ''Bul .someone else may be monified to see a
Schlitz beer can·on a headstone."
.
Wiih the refinement of etching dunng the past two
decades, including the use o( lasers and the addition of
color; · the .possibilities for headstone designs have
allowed for more than just crosses and flowers.
Yves Porier has been making markers in the Boston
suburb of Quincy for 15 years, etching everything from
marij\lana cigareitcs to a monument shaped like a poker
hand,'. a royal flush. with !WO granite di£e .at the base.
·'Obviously the man was a gambler," he said. "There
are al'!lays familie~ thai would like somet!ling that per·
tains to how one Holed."
'
Po[ier recently ma,de a marker for a man that included his.date of birth, date of death and, ".Never Sa~ The
Red Sox Win A World .Series."
Juxtapositions between the religious and the secular
are i9evitallle. On a.he,idstone in Malden. words from
the Sc.riptures
side;by-side with the ,motivational

are

Public Notice

mantra: "No Guts, No Glory, Go For lt."
a-:
rl;ht 1D - p i or reJect any
ild propoaala tor tha or all .lllda and/or any pert
The trend has not been greeted as good news ·from . purchua of acr..llld ptt theNOf fnd will accept the
directors of cemeteries seeking to preserve a more sub- run aand from tlla Melga IHttt blti ·for the Intended
dued, traditional atmosphere.
. c·o·u nt_y .
Hlg h Y purpoee.
·
"It makes all of my elder statesmen tremble," said . Dapertmant, daacrlb•d
Gloria Kloel, Clartl
'herein,
wHI be -lvad by
8olnl oiMelga County
Bruc~ Schlossoerg,
of the Jewish Cemetery AssQ~:iation. tha
llotord of-llalga county ·
·
Commlnlonerl
· For Schlossberg, the biggest problem presented by CommlniOMn In tha court 11)1, 11: :m:
modem technology is the request that (aces of the dead 1101111, POIMror, Ohio until - - - - - - : - - : - - be etched into the stone. In Jewish tradition, images of 10:00 a.m. on 'llleadiiY th'
. Public Notice
the ,deceased are not put on headstones. ·
.21th day-of.Ma_y, ••· Tile
INimAnoN TO BID
As for requests for fann and home scenes, and blda will '"' opellld a1'1 :30
p.m. on Tuaaday tha 28th
Tlla VIllage of Syracuu
unusually shaped stones, Schlossberg said he tries "to day of llay, 1• and read will accept blda until· 12
bend over backwards to let them do whal they want."
aloud.
on May 20, 1..., from
"I think· it adds lo the texture and integrity of the . Propoaale are to ba
llcanHd lnauranca
returned
,
on
bill
forma
ortha.
thalr
grrilll,
cemetery," he said. "Unfortun¥ely, traditionalists dgri't aulllllled bfthawndor,..,.
wa.p
or
see it that way."
.
wtfi'IMI ,..enad on.!he dlllt
.
the ta,.,. of
1
Father Arthur Dupont oftlic Archdiocese of Hartford, I and place epacllled.
year, aomn.rclng
Conn., said cemeteries should be an extension of the Specification for 'bidding llay
1..., oom-rclal
church, a place for sacred remembrances, not sentimen- j may be o_btalnlld through pnrperty;
commercial
tha Engl""''' Office; 34110 ..llll'llllablllty, cornmtreta~
tality.
,
'
Fairground•
Road, auto coverage and

*•

"One man's sentimentality is another man 'shorror,"
he said.
The family of one man whose favorite saying was
"Boop BO'op Ba Doo." reportedly considered legal
action against the archdiocese for refusing to install a
marker reading, "Hoop Hoop Ba Doo, We Love You"
"Certain things are inappropriate for sacred places,"
Dupont explained. "Sometimes it's a close call, but
Boop Boop Ba Doo didn 't even come close."

Kimes
recuperating
Jessica Kimes, daughter-of Randy
and Carla Kimes, is recuperating a!
home from a broken leg. Cards may
be sent to her at 3~ New Hope
Road, Long Bottom, 45743 . .

Car Wash ·
by 'Mt.

Hermon

Church

we·are
·t..ere ·for your health.
'
.

Sat.May,l,_ •.
9:00 iun to 3:00 pm

'Pt'o)C
.:i. II • • • . , . . . . •~
•-.-.... ~
.0: -

Mull be 18

et4-841· 2873, in regard&amp;
,._llh &amp; wiH or yout lither. .

411--

• Stump Grinding
(304) 773-5124

Wl-.pd.

~~~~~----~~-~
J. E. DIOOI.E, OWN!ER
.
84•25.12

00

1nata11ec1

••

Serv-U (619) ·

American Legion Post .
. 128 Adult Gun ShOOt

........... ,.
---···
..............

--

announces
·30 Years Plus

.Sunday, May 19
4:00P.M.

Good Potl814-245-0030.

·llad18 lllaeli Dealer ·

ilem8814-'441-0815

.1

biltla .... ' " ... _ "
mMymetlll

Top ~~ Fill Dirt

..

'

New24_hr.

(614) 892·2364

.

. Call 992-21-56.

H00818 1003
ExL 1021
-· '
I
•
.
.
. per 1111n.
••
MUst be 18 ,.,.
,,,,

FOUCtQ!IIJU SALE

,_.,_.,.. Wolpc-..,cnu+ ' .,,.., . t;oOH
Por ~ lnlatlNtkJftCall: (614) ill6 -IV31 ...., 30, 1996 .attOOIILIIL

,,
"

''

·'

.

'...

•

1,,

'

&lt;

''

Downapollta

.

.

Need Direction?
.Love
Bualnue .
Family ...tters
Allow Your
PltaoniiPiychlcto
Allllt You

•

1-800111111800
!xt.1277

outt.r eteenlntl .

.

. •

~ (11~1~1 1«M
''
.
,)
''

'

'

·ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gunan

CALL NOW
''

wl: :

Lnt 5nlll: black lemale dOQ

tt;wf vicinity of SR 881, bur millfs! ~.:

e~st of ·Darwm. WeiGht 20 16s.

Has been clipped, answetS to the
name •Atice·. wearing cottar with'
name mg, dog tag and rabies tag., ~... ·
t 100 !&amp;ward tlr inlormatton. Helen •

Swartz,61•-6SIG-1116.

' ' ··•

·

Lost: 2 Female Calico Call
1
Lake Drive Ai-ea Ot Rio Grande,_

Please CSI8,4-245·54•s.

:: .. !

Yard Sale

·· • ·

===:::::===:====
.
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

I

1-800-889-3943

. Howanu... 'Wlltslll
.
.

be lonlly tlglln.

"

Ridge, 614-4&lt;18-289e.

I

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlly

'

Plllnllng

FRIII81-TE8
. ....21.. . ·

\

. ,.

11/11110mt

'1

,,

•

..

Advance . Deadline: 1:aopm the ,

day before the ad 11 to run, Sun- 1
day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edlion I O:OOa.m. Saturday.

•••

Large moving sale! Sa1urda1, : ,
May' 18th, Ol)e day ont~. Gam- · .

!

5Pil\ Foot house on riQh( a1 top ol
Chesler hil l on SA 248. Furnirura. , : .
27" color TV, clOthing, home ~ •
decor, exen:ise equlpmenr, an·ttqua bureau, lots more.

=~~;;.;.::;_-:--- ..

"

Pt. Pleasant

::-:::::::--::::&amp;~V~I~cl~nH-::y=:-- .. . •

· Moving -sate. l'n 1sc. rurniture,. ,
house hold 111ms. Sat May 18Jh.

..

· ·•

.

.........n....
......... 1.....

-....

=~-;::z~::
.

'

.
. "

'

All Vard Sales Mull Be Pa id In

2mt Notf'l ol Flatrodl.

~
MMC 1he Min or Wornln
of your Otlllllml... ·

.

~

J

Found : YoL,Jng Female Beagl8 '· ,.
Black. Brown &amp; White, Johnson ·. ·

70

Residential ,.. Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
•
COmplete Remodeling
Decks ,. Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
• y..,. EJq1efWnce

. 814-9824470

. '

found : Small Collie, Vic •n itr :

C11esllire 614-36 7-7681

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 fears E%perience • lmured

.

. Limestone, .
Gravel, Sind, .

30,1996

.

Ak.C Bass:etc Hound, los1 on. , •.
· Creek Veiw Drive, Childs Pet
· Could be founC:i around Bob Ev&amp;~ ··
Farrn5, 614·24S.5964
~ . \ . ~-

tn "' •

BIB aaan•a and
COISftiDCftOI

•'

Gove·m ment fdreclosure Sale!!

• .... - '

60 Lost and Found
=:--:;-:-::--::-:-::--:-:-.-""';..:.•'

992·2825

FrH E•ttmatH

WICIS
HAULING.

(Formerly Farmers Home Administrati.t:?n)

•

Two year old Slbenan HuskY. • •

61-4·992-3085 aher oilpm.

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-o2e&amp; ~ 1-800-950-3359

. Plck\'QP tht:aldtld

USDA Rural Development

o\,ol

JONES' TREE SERVICE

(UmiSiaLowRalll)

.

Several bo11ea of used clothl'lg

'

...
....

Real Estate Genenll

.. . .•

and misc . •tams, must take all 1

992-3954 or 985-3418 . -~ ,.

814-812-4025

· · Any Professional, Business, Individuad or Civic
would like to have an ·
, Q~gaDizatiom who
•
advertisement in this specia] edition please

H.ouse Cat 2 -3 Years Old, De-: . •
clawed, Black &amp; Whhe. Makes.. ,.,

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Mull be. 18 Y"Serv-U (619) 645-8434

WELCOME OLDIES
Phone 985-3929
985-9996

. R!!l Eetate ~I

...

-

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

:

Full S1ock Copper Nose BeaQie1 J· · 1
and Pups , Treeing Walker and. ' , ·
Copper Nose Beagle Milt. 614~ · .
388-844 7 .
,! : ' •

UmeitOne, ' Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

No arguments!

OLDIES

mo..

Free Kittens To Good Home, 814· · • ·

·•.a-6808 Mer 6 P.~t

W£ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Date-Line

; ' ...

Free Female Cat and four kin«~i · • ·
614-367-7882
• .. •

. POMEROY, OHIO
·Treah Removal· Commercial or Residential
Septic Tank• Cllanacl &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dilly, -~ly I monthly rental retes.

4x4'a-ti8'a

'·

4 Ploppie&amp; 30H75-620~.

•

., ...11-4107
1114-7424337

SKATE-A-WAY

,,

304-675-&lt;1302.

MIDDI SllltlftDI

aft.
AlloiVIIIII*I

At the Legl•~n

]an

I

low caiS. 2-Doga, 1 lingle. 1 T(r-,: ,

rior, 2 yra. okf. Good With childrtf\ Give 10 good home, house petl.•

ti)1Mn

14'·11'~

Sunday 1.P.M.

Happy Birtlu..:Jy,
Your younger sialer,

9~ Thursday, May 23rd, The Daily Sentinel will
.. have a special edition with photograpi.s of high
' school seniors graduating this year. Now ·
through Friday, M~y 17th, Drop Your Ph.,to .
Off At The Daily Sentinel or At Your High
Scbool Office To Be Included·In This .
Special Edition, At.No Charge. .
(~ttach Your Name and HighSchool to Photo) ·
. .

"

1-lei. ~

· male.~-675-5083 .

New At t..,-.; m.monies

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

8'•10'*•fl.

12 Gauge Only

LiliA'S
'
PAINTING

Pretty sporty
at Forty'

ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1996

3 Kinens, Gwks old, 2-male.

1116, 1111, 2X4, .2d .

PRIVATE PARTY
•

,.....

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.

645-'8434 .

,,

-;

. •- -

. .

(814) . . .2011 FAX ·
14 5t14-2008 NIGHT

Your favorite artist
on Tape or .CD

992-3838

lilalliW ·

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

.

·s.rvlcu

-

1-900-255-0500

4131

'

Bac:!ch~Mt

All K1nds of Earth Wor k

· 61.MIHIIO ,

'

Trucking· ·
Umestone
Bulld07.1ng and

. House Situ and
UUiltlu

FINDTOTAL •
' sATISFACTION!
' Th!'QUgh a Uve",
Personal Psychic!

-~

.

3 Fuzzy kinens-10 g•ve awa,. 30§- l
895-3013.
• ' .•

St. Rt. 7
'TUppei. Pr.inl, Ohio 45713
· 114115-3113 orl14-817-6414
Plastic Culven- Dual will and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D • perf.· solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" cl6" SCh 35 pipe .
112" &amp;·314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I .112"thru 4" SCh 40 pipe
'
3/4" cl I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll'sthru 1,000' roll'~)
314" U.L.'approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe .
Gu "pipe l"thru 2" ·Fillings· Regulators- Rise,..
F~ll assonmeltl of P.V.C. &amp;Flex fitiing&lt; &amp; Water fillings
Full line bf Cistern. Septic .t. Water storage tanks.

Howard hcavatin
.'
'

Ext 4009

~-~· 304-87s.o850.

I &amp; W PW11CS AID SI.....Y

Window alas for • fNe

.

.Ask .for Dave or·Bob'

1 puppy &amp; 1 female dog , Auttr~-~ •
lian Btua HNerL 304-&amp;75- 2023.. • :

3-Kinena, 1 calic:o-8mo.o1d. ·2 ~~- ·: : .

..nsulated
Limited Time ott..• Call toclt¥ W,lth your

·

Giveaway'

40

215113 BASHAN RD!
Racine, Ohio 45771
(814) .....3013 Phone

IYDUUUC IIPAII
$12.00/IIL

•nlt·ln
,. .•Double Hung ;

RACINE..GUI

"' '

2-e.&amp;. old Beagle dogs, cure, J .• •• .

~

HRVSLER ECL

-.

or n~ghl.

browntwP'Iite, 1·blaeklwhlla ._,~y·

REPLACEMENT
.
·.·
r,
. WINDOWS·

30

~

.. ,

tQ' btaclli mesh satellite diah -(no
boxat), you remove, you can
ha\le, fli1"·742· 1•nO.

....... &amp;e......

M ..

9551 . Dey

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

(No Sunda~· Calls)

·fonow., caUBtel'lll:

J

PanieJ, tor dJlails call 304 -773·

614-992·7643

·*19 5

'

Take up or&lt;*s lor Fnendly Home

IITIIIION~·
FREE ~STiiiATES

......

Pttase Call 8obbi Caato at 6tf• : ~
44-1944.

Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

· Present~ tor kldl
Marnbers walcorna to
bi'ln unta.

. .

.

Owner: Rick Johnson

- ~ewHofnes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • ~eplacement Windows

•

crafts, 101&amp; or rlic. things. 2m1. Qft- ! Rl2 on Hanmlh Trace rd. Glt~., :
wood Wv. 30~·576-2160.
• • ••
:::No~1i:-co-:-=c.-n-:ni-o::-F,-,.-K::-~":-ig7n-::
tiQv~. ::

IS Yra. Exp. Lie. -Ins.

IISSELLI.UILDE.S, INC•.:

'1

30 Announcements : ·: • :
H::o::;;lloy::;:,, -;:c::,,::-h-:;:Ho:::,::,.~
. na::::ncl::m::-,.dt-o ; :

,; Top • Trim • Removal

· May 19th
Sam ·12 noon

McDorulldl-..-... Lot

I

885,4473

Sarv.tJ (111) 845 1434

Second Street, Po111aroy,
Olllo, to ull for cuh tha

......

0

IS

S2.11t Jill' min.
Mull ... 18 yra.

'Jn°/o

Gluality Prescr~ption service at
competitive prices. We honor most
third P.arty prescription plans. We
stock a complete line. of generic
drugs to save you money. Your
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacists
Chuck, Ken ·&amp; Ron are available to
answer any questions .about your
medications:

•'

bt. 2261

Fishing Derby

'

..

•UUY'I

.

•

~len4roLa.­

20%

'

0

PIMM contact Anita Y. Brown

Will supply bslt

t '

.

I."'- I

La BUill

CLUB

Middleport Dept. Store

'

"""

'

. NOTICI Ia hlreby glvan
that on laturday, llay 11,
1.... II 1.0:00 a.ll'!~ I public
"" wtn 1M hlld at 211 w.at I

-

1·900.990.171~

•

Youth Group

Mull be 18 y.a.
Serv·U (819) 645 6434.

lnRACTIYE
a ·WILLINI
TO TILIIII

~ ~---------------------------------,

Arnold, current yQuth leaders, wil_l he Amberger, Gerry Lightfoot, Cherie
. leaying this month.
and Jared Williamson.
Paula Pickens presided at the
.meeting. Officer reports were given. ..
Delores Frank thanked !be council for Save
Everyday
a sunsliine basket given to her moth·
MIDDLEPORT
er. Marge Wilt gave a ~onation to the
, Lydia Council and Women's Fellow•
DEPARTMENT STORE
ship:
·
·
Devotions given by Nancy Morris
were entitled "You're Special" and
"Poem of Prayer." Madeline Painter
read ''How Mother's Day Started."
Morris and Madeline Painter
Save a minimum of 2Q'lro
served refreshments to Jackie Reed,
orr manufacture~&amp; Hat
pnce everyday.
Frank, Kristi, Paige and Abby Cooper, Charlotte Hanning, Edie and
Addie Hubbard, Suzie, Christi and
Darren Will, CarOlyn Nicholson,
Pickens, Becky, Ryan and Bethany

Remodeling
Slop&amp;Compn
FREE ES'NIATES

Ext. 3505
$3.1111 per min.,

(619) 654 8434

· S~ppli$S collected by Bradford women
Needed suppli~s for the ch~rch
and ~mp were dilctlssed at a,recent
meeli ng of the Bradford Church· of
Christ Lydia COUllcil.
•.
It was na~ed t!lat supplies needed
for the church in May are five ounce
cups and that beverages are the need
for June. Also needt!l are staplers and
staples. Manna for camp it was noted must be at the church by June I.
Ar:r.angements were made to purchase· )totage boxes for church costumes, The Women's fellowship will
he held at the Bradford Church on
May 23. it was announced and at that
time .Carolyn Nicholson will do a
craft demonstration on wreaths.
Va.iatiori Bible school will be
held.at the Bradford Church in July.
Plans will he made at a later date. A
report ·was given on the ,ladies day
rally )leld in April. The Middleport
Church of Christ will host the one in
1997. The Bradford church wi.ll assist
with Becky' Amberger •tind Kristi
Cooper on the committee·.
It .was . announced that· Mick
Bowe~ of-Gallipolis will be the new
youth minjster. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff

oComplete

t-1100-~

s~u

.rl ,...

1..4

-o.,•••

11'1111118, ... hllp Md

$3.99 per min.
Must be 1e yrs old.

.....,.....

•NawHomaa

--

~....

Ext. 6445

lriaurance.
are to
Tile Farmare B1nk 1nd ·
co ril p 1 n y,
a Malad tnvalope mar1&lt;ad 1 .., 1n ge
"lnaurenca Bid" and Ponllior, Ohio, -reurvaa
eubmlttad or mailed to tha right ta bid ., thla -.ta,
Jenlce Zwilling, Clark· and to withdraw tiM allove
Tralaurar,
VIII•!!• . of. collateral prior II! aale.
Syracuu, llunlclpel Bldg., Further, 11111 l'al'llllra lllonk
s,-uu, Ohio 41771. Tha .end Sevtnga Compa .. y
~hlortos~ ·" -or
,.a 11M rtghlto ,..Jaet
,,. •..
•..,..., any
any or all blda lllbrnlttld.
bldL
·
Further, the ebtlve
Janice Zwllllna, Clartl· oollltarll wtl be aold In·!he
TNaaunr, VIL.I..AGE OF condition It le. In, with no
·
SYRACUSE
or Implied
(5) 2, t, 11; 3TC
PUBLIC NOl1CE

P'1i chica on qt t 1• a 11 Dl

1·900-446-1414

Public Notice

Public Notice

..-..

Hey Guyalll YOlW
.
glt1 II waitlna I I Cor~' u ,.,
to heir from you II
....... 11 il
···na •
24.HoursA Dayll
Call now
A aJ ltij
1·900-446-1414
• •I'll
~~~..,.
Ext..1477 .
$3.99 Per Min.

illk line 1o our glllld

Talk to Beautiful
Girls

From beer qans to golf
clubs, departed expressing
t~emselves in granite
·~/!!8:Ysf!.\and :!:::1!~Je!;.:~~ ~~~i!!J~~~~~~1CHT4IDIEC31MI3
·

Psychic-line '

•
!

..

�.

•

•' ••.

-~-----·-·-~-r_11_,_,._~--~~----------------~~----~~=m~•~O,~·~M=I~=~=•~P=~~~~~----------~~--~nw~D=•:Ih~r=S•=n=~~~~·P~a~ge~~11 ~;

•

OOp

.I=:-,

_
..............
.....
................
..:=_:

12~

-~ -

.. ..
....
•••

N:IA Crouword Puaale
PHILLIP
ALDER

'
1 - t ~t. GJ. Joe. SW Wor't
- Wll 111r Ill&lt; priot llaotd 0t1
condlion. l14·toll-le30 after a
pm
Bookt, Bookt, _ . _ Old Aoto
Bookt , Good Condllion, Ill Edi·

nl- """
... .. .... 10
.. , _ F*
AINIII-IctiMG~

tlon Pr•fered. Ataa, Paper Col·

- - &amp;1HAI-121Z

Oln

., .......... p;. .iij ....
II b 5 101' .. lJtL , I

Mrluo•GollopOIJS.

J I O' t Au 10 Pans. Buying sal·
Selling l)lrll. 304773-5033.

- ..,.clot.

_......,..,.,.....,
.,..._,..,_10
•n .

Ringel, Aefrtgoro tort, FrMzoro,
Air, Conditioners. Color T, v: s.
VCA't. Alto Junil Coro, 61• -2561236.

:l Plec:o llfueI bolgo flvl .. - . ,
ouiiO, fan rldlnor, 1200. 0..
~~;jf,::-;;tiq;;,;:t.;;;;;~~1
-·
$15.304-773-1231
.
Top doll,r· anti quts,
·olall, ctuna, cl ockl, go\d, 1itwer. Car . .t. bab'f" bid, ~• ..._
coins, wa tcnn. e11ate1. Osby er, GOod cond. Alto, ..., ttornllls
Marlin, 814-11112-7.. 1.
30112 ln. cui rilllng fawn mOwer.
,Srlggo I Srronan "'tina C.i ,of·
Top Prlc .. Paid: Old U.S. C oin~ l8r 6pm. 300-e75o28!10.
Sil v-er, Gold, Diamonds, All Old

t a.droom " ' " ' Nk:tl Near
Holzol'l • -· Plooo Ulllllioo,
Oopooil lloqund, 81• ••*7.

.\Kc mlnl l'lnochoro. IWOIWO - . _ rM dW Jono 15, IC·
'•:~':: deposi1 t , $300 each ,
..
3021.

Uoo

c - "''

wv.
tt•· l·:Lio0~~~~~-~·
~'1::':'·

---·

.\KC O..man ~- ,.Pl.

AI&lt;C Aoglo,.rO&lt;I BoQrt, cham·
plon1hlp latood lines. To oood

:::-10.

540 MlscelllniOUS

homo.

Mti'ChiAdl8l

eludes wa1er, Deposit and r er.r·

AoooiJ llor 27th, tolling

Cofl.ofl« !fpn, SO.-e7S10 Fl. UnlSlloiN,. Sro,.m ·
Wll~ Boordo Con RK- KIT
AogioiOrtcf "",_"' PupBand Wa1t11 New Arm AP;Ing AI&lt;C
ploo, S300·Fomafos, $31G lofiiH,
New Hberi, tbedroom , untur~ $800. 814....a-IA71 During 0.,, o.otit will hold: Pwonll con be
nlshed lpL,4otl have siD!Ie, re- 81 ....37'1-2183A..,6.
.._.. CWI PICilila614-311-2117
frlg, waohor 1 dry*&lt;. O.,.oil 11-~~--:--"":"-:::::-:--::--'
~:J04.112·25el,
t0110XIIJ per kennel, t200 ftrrn. tOgal tank M1 up sped ala. Fiah
Can be ._, 11 rtcf brfcll ....... Tank I ~t Shop, 24t3 -'-cklo n
2 bedroom oporunont t350 P., 11ffom Crib C - ........ AI Ave. Poi nt Pl easant, 30 ..· 8 75 11Dnlll, S200 -Iii. utiilioo poid.
2013.
. no - 11•-1112-512•.

. _ . ,...rolll1•-&lt;1*31183

riWIIIIqiUChpc··-

NOJt·Worttlng Wathtrs. Or~ers.

Bath • .Mfe .__
Turlley, . , _ ,, Gunl, · lilrlnt
ReiOadl:'\ 1 FlatMng su::o..· CelfllUII OZI1..
•

Dining 1nd Kilehtn ateu; also
1\U UliiiiJ Room. In-

-on--.lllfglon.

170

•I ~ • • 1 11
.... .. • ••
r • •• - ·
unl\lrnlohtcf. .......,
tt2-2211.
O.poOil roquiiO&lt;I, ,.. pd.

Bur or Mil.
~.
11~ E. on AI. til.
Pomoror. Hourt: .T.W. 10:00
1 8 1 ~ oo.n. daw ...,, _......,.. a.m. t&amp;J 1:00 PJI'., 8uMIIr 1 • •
In GlltipoUo. l""' Living. ~I 1:00 p.m.II4-III2---

HGulfng
""al1 _ _ _
llloglf

'Clean Lale Moclel Cars Of
Trucks. 1t80 Mod~l Or Newer,
Smilh 8u " k Pon111c, 1900 East·

_.,..,..,_,.....,..
IIJ4ro

IOf" ....llil...,.._•

.;e...,.

1'hll ••
wll nol
.... l9) aooopl

....... tor•--

Our-.. ....,

Miicllllfn_cl ......
inb'mld lhlt .. ou....
aa...w.t In thla •• ,.... ·

I:''"
2877.

IlleS C'-i' C-ty 1800. 01 4-1114.
1N51l9dgo Arios, Lola 01 Aopoir
Wt;uk. Recelpt1 For AU Wark,
fb'o
I 14-446-78011.

Good-·

1Q85 Lin&lt;ofn Town Cor, ·0
D 15 n¢. up ., 20 "'1111· on .._
-..y, ll 1115. 814-11112·230-t~
1185 lionlo Corio.- Grey,
• 7.000 iliiu, Ono Orivor: Lody
Dri,.n, Good She,.. Call II ._
4411·283 1 or'" at 151 . Berger
lot.

!""'·

Collec tibles, Paperw eighll, Etc. ·Kirby IWHPtf· wJ anachnMrnta.
U .T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second 304-175-1731. •

Roiobow-.,

875-7217.

81o-24!&gt;--5687 •

180 Wlitlled To Do

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Help Wanted

110

"AnENTION"
Hair Stylist Needed For JoAnne'a

Kul And Kurl, 81.-446-IM!Ie.
.
JoAnne 5I-.

-

•

hour, day or-"&lt; 014-IMt-3301 .

OaVld"s lawn Mowing- tr. . e•U·
malls. ,eaaonable rates, have

own

~lpmon~

in Tuppert Pfolno
'

area, 614-el7-63a.

Don's lawn Care. Residentill,

And Karen BU{M

Churches, &amp; Ctmetariea. Rea·

$-WANTED-$
10 people who '"need to lose
YttHgnt &amp; make mon~. to uy new
patented weight -loss produ~::t.

- · Ao..l61··319-2807.
General Mainten·ance, PalnJing,

30&lt;4-773-5083 24tvSiday. .

Commerical, Raaidi!H'1tlal, Steve:

. 'ATIN: Point Plooum"
Postal f;'osilions. Pertnlnent full·
time lor clerk/sorlen. Full Bene·

!its. For eXam, application lfld

Mrr- inro caM: 708-~· 1839 Ext
3810. earn "'11pm.
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spoarl. 30-4-875-1.29.

Able Avon RepreaentaliYII
needed. Earn money for Chrilt·
m&amp;l bills at hon'Mtlllt wark. ,:soo.
992-e356 or 30•·882·26•5. Ind.
Re~

AVON • $8 ·S15 IHr. No Door To
Door. No Minimum Order. Bonus·
01 HI00-827· &lt;06«llndiSI~

Blbr- , _ tat

Yard Work Windows Washed

Gutters Cleaned liGht Hauling,
81··~29.

G8orgel Po"r18tMe Sa'!""ill. don' t
loG• to lhe mjM just c:all
300-e15-1957.

haul yaur

I Do Child Care In My Home All
Hours, Cheshire Area. 614 -387-

7809.
Light dozer work avalable, honest
&amp; dependable, have reference,.

Call an111mo 300-675-3884.
looki ng For Mowing Jobs. Will
Come

ut And Give Eatimates
On lawns. Have All Equlpmanl
To Oo Th&amp; Job, 614-.C-41-03 18
Ask For Norman ; 814· 4•6•3798
AJ,k For Dean.

IWO children . Mature dep&amp;ndable lady willing 10

nmt be Patient,. MaNre and Love

Ki(l&amp; &amp;14-256-Ms:l

,

Oonino'ol'tzzll of Pomorov is now.
lirlnQ""""" 61,. ·992-212• .
Domino's Pizza Pt Ptetlsa.nt. Now
hiring, •• poaitiona.
•

sil. shop or care tor lh'e elderly,
person care training , standard
first aid a CPR, e•perianced in
managing an adult care laC:illly,
e•cellenl references, c:lll Chris

614-992-2629.

Mowing in PJ P.., ..., area. have
own mower. Have references. Atk
A Da~ . Lase Weight And Make for Howard Of . Mary. 304~675·
2690.
.
Monet. Mlnlmaiii1V8almen1, 614-4"6-1236.
Need LaWns Mowed? 614-448·
EARN $1;1100 Weeki&gt;' Sruffi"ii En- 2303.
velopea Ar Home. Start Now. No: Prolei slonal TrM Service, Stump
[}ynamil8 Far loss Product $1.00

E•perience.

~ree .Suppliea, Into.

No Obllgalion. Send SASE To :
Fairway, Dept. 1351, Box 4399;

West Cavina, CA 91191 .
Earn $1000• weeki~ &amp;luffing enveloRe• at hon'la. Be your boss.

Start now. No a~~:pefianc:a. Free
ouppllos, Info. No obllaaUon. Send
' S.A.S.E. to PreBIIge OniiiL, P.O.
80• 195109, Winter Springs, Fl

32719.
E•perlencad Nursing Assisllnl&amp;
Needed For Part-Time Work at
Mecll Home Health 412 Second
A:oJenue Gallipolis,OH 614·441 t87S

HELP ·WANTED Man /Woman
Earn $480 Weekly Aisembling

Circuit Boards!Eiaclronic Components At Home. Exper;ience
Unneeesaary, Will Train. lmmedtate Openingl Vour loJ:al Ar:ea.
Clll1-520-880-7891 EKL D11l04.

Removal, Free Estimates! In·
surai'1Ce. Bidwell. Ohio. 814-:J88..
9648, 61 .. ·367·7010.

S An&lt;1 S Home Improvement Will

Do Remodeling And New Con,

struction. No Job Too Big Or Too
Small ! FrH Estima1est 81 4·441·

1911 Lintoln

8jtll
whirlpool,
vinyt underplnniflil,
10132
porch. 112,000.
30•·5783180ar304-S18-2184.

For Sale Or Aonl: 11182 OakWOOd
2 Becfroomt. 2 Full
Rolrigorator, ~. Now Air Conditiontr. Built In Table, Aaki ng Price
Pay Off At2 Leon, WV, 61•-2566980 After 6P.M. '
·

Ba""'.

1092 Norris 16x80 3 Bedroom, 2
Balha, Central· Air, lP Gas Furnace And. Stove, Underpinning &amp;
Many Eztrasl Very Spacioua.
Priced Ta Sell I Ea1r Fi nancino
Available! 814-2.47-2032 Atttr 8
P.M. O..lellW Meauga.
1994 Fairmont · Sectional 3 Bedrooms , 2 balhs32JI40 81 .. · 379·
2715

EJ~tetior

Plinl·

ing, Rea1onable Rates, EJiperi-

enc:ed, References, For FrN Esdmares. 814-245-5755.

11~:~;':.~'~~------

81H.6-1833 Aboul The HAPPY
JACK 3· X FLE:II COLLAR. Kills
M'ile

a

Female Adull Fleas. For

Dogs &amp; Cllll

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apa rtment,

Acrooo From .Park, AC, No Palo,

Range With Hood,
i
Coffoo And End
Air Condl·

References.~ Deposit, $350/Mo .•
81~5. 114·446-0577.

Furnished 3 Rooms 1 Batn, Up11airs, Utilitie1 Furnished, Clean,
No Pitts, Reference, Deposit Re·
CJ~ired. 81 4-4A6-t518.
'

Pampettd Paws, S.le, Toy Poodle, Shihlzu, Shellies, flalian Gray
Hauncl , Amazon Parto11 (already
talking), all pet suppliel 10"tr50%
oft. May lAO, through 171h, taraWa~ with 20% down. grooming
avatlabte Monday through Friday,

81..al9.2-82••·
Puppy Palace Kennels, Bo8tdi_~~g.
Saud Service P uppies, Grooming.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, .AI! Br~edt.

Furnished Apartment 1 BR $285
U1ili t1 ea PO 920 4th Gall ipolis,
$14,.48-38U afser ~

steel AMR

Furnithed Efllcienc~ 2 Rooms,

, 4 AI Slota 1517
brd or Jeep 1110.

Payments Welcome, eu-3 88-

0421.

inWIInllnty. 304-755-7191 .

=:;;~fu;;;u~6'3h,;;;~~~

IU,_

I

~rica
1996
$825 down, $159/mo. .frte deliv·
err &amp; IBIUp, Only ·l t O. kWOOd
Hamao, Niro WV 304-755-58115.

Middleport 1 &amp; 2 bedroom,' fur nilhtd apt1. Also, 2 room afficien~f.•JOepotit &amp; references re -,
qulr~ 304-882-2568. ·

SaveSS. 1996 double wide repo.
3beclroom. 2bath. Will deliVer &amp;

Moderen One Bedroom Apart-

sarupoft yourk)L304·755-5588.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1.625 Ot An Acre Water SeptiC
lnc:luded ,f railer On Land 1973
Ra_inbow t2x65 On Addison Pike,

61o-367-7)99, 614-3117-5003.
Parcell available lOr new l'lome
construction on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels ranging lrom 1.84ac to
5.32ac. Paved road. c:ounl)' water,
raa1onable restrictions. Map and
Into avallabte on request No single wide lnqu"iriea please. 304-

'

Cl';dt

ao- Jr.. 30-1-57&amp;·2336.

360

Real Estate
Wanled "

.

~

tor 30·100 secluded, private ~r­
wilhout 'buildlngs. Land ,

or

C.onuae1. 814-7•2·2182.

·

Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Set·
~ng. Woofter IDryor, Stove, Refrigerator, No Pe11, No Smoken.
Exrta C...n! $300 Deposit, 13501
Mo., Applicariqns At 11-i3 Cente·
nary Road, Gallipolia, «11&amp;·446·
2205. I
,

'

Rabbus :1Min lop, Ne!P'Ierland
Dwarfs, Uin Rex , Mixed Breed,

3111or : :

BARNEY
YONDER GOES

··

HOME FROM

1180 Bu ick LeSabtt, er.cellent
running eoftditlon, V-8~ PB, PS,

AC, poWer WindoiOI, t3800, 81+
1140-20&lt;5 or 114-1140-2302

1180 Ford Taurua GL , V-1 ,au to'matic, ale, kladad, goOd tlrea,
looklonll runo gooQ. 12550. 114-

247-0292.

Electri c
Scoatera
And
WheelChairs, N8W /U,ed, Van I

Clr LIH lnolliiOd, SIOirgll&lt;fft,

FARr.1 SUPP LIE S
&amp; LIVES fOCK

Chaira, CaM For Brochure, I 14-

'

.

RENTALS

•

PEANUTS

11112 318 Ctvyolot Molar, 74,000 • • ',
Uiloo, S200. 814-258-1233.

FINANCIAL

BEEN TNINKIN6,.

400 c.f. Small Block Chevrolet "
"'lloc:k Only' .2 Freeze.Plug Mod- •

TI-lE DESERT, OON'T 111111?·1

... $350.11-1581 .
BUdget Trontmllliono. Uoed ~

'bull~ All Typoo, Acc ..oiblo To •

Qver 10.000 Ttlnsmislion, Also : ·
Dvor!IJII fClll. 114-2-45-Sin
•

,_._..,_,

New gas IIJ1kl. one ton lruck

'

o ' A AuiO. Ripley. wv. 304-3n- _• •
3833 or 1-I00-2T.H3211.
• '

93 Ponti-c Grand AU, bleck,

Motor Homes

Deafer wil .,.,... 1-

1981 Gulf StreMI Monterey 28'
camper, exc:etleru c:andilion. wtrn

Ill
·..price
ino:Woo
lhip
Aopl
Ook
~
014'11112-731111.

t1500.- ' • :
.

083 Colef'!'l-.n Pioneer Pop--')p , "'" i
Camper, 614- 4A6-7321, Altere , .... -

P.M.

wu ao dab trick. However, East
hadn't complemented West's aggre.aive bid. Note that five duba is lay·
down for East-West if declarer

'

1118&lt;1 · fu!ly lolldad, loll
of extral, 1811. Serio.u_s .inquiriel
cony 31lo4-87!HI903.

gueaiel the diamond queeJL

1\1111 61 ......28117

720 ll'ucks .lOr Sale

35' Camper &amp; Lot Holiday Hills,
Outbulldit'IQ, Excttllenl Conditionf
AI~. Sewer, Fishing, BOating. r .
15,300, 614..&amp;94-3101.

call 81._••6-3091 preferobly
be 10:30am or ahlir 4:00pm. ·

' Home
Improvements

810

,,.,

BASEMENT
W~TEAPROOI'ING.

;

'

Unconditional lifetime guaranlH.

~­

Local references run,;lhed. Call
f61•J ••1·0870 Or (81C) :!37 • •

Furnished

poaition availabta in lhe
~radii clept. Apprax 34·38 hralwk.
Main dul~ will b~ ae11ing up &amp;
monitoring credil a~countt .
Pltale send Of1 hand delver your
resume to: Catolina Lumber Co.
312 erh St. Pl. Pleasanl, WV
25550. Resumes must be re-

-.

labllsntd 1975.

.

-

OF .SEC.UA.ITY !

,_

Tile Treasull! You
lilt
Sari"fs You'll·,,,., In the

..Cionlfled
StctiOn.
.

~

..

d!&gt;Oro. 1
.. - .
mObilo ,.,.. •.llf/Oir and mont Fot

,·

I

0 A y

w

DG

.FSC .CSVSO

CXVA. '

-

PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "In aU my films, there's lhl'&lt;l&lt;l
ot r~al$!!J!!na." - Akira Kurosawa.

....'· "" .
..

. ...•

.....

.
.

DS

UJFF

UXYYJSC

•!

'

, e

.'

IIXYAKS •

. ..

l

or maybe four minutes

lAIII

I

~ ~ Jo;:

....,-.

---

• •• 4

..

.....
"

.

'

. .. ••.
•
v, .

.: r...,.,.P'....:..E...,...P...o_o...s...,...-11

. I' I I I 12
-·~.......P_u...r...,...N....:,",..........!.

. I' I

I

':

~

.....,..

I .

1~

... ....,

. .
_,

~

;::~Z::O;:;T~A~P::::1::
s
I_ r_ I. _.-~'.
.

"He's a

vince:·a

person to con-

..•
..
. ,_...

cou~ague remarke&lt;.

~

about a new employee. "He's
the type that will go around

-..~I_·;a.I__,I._'_._I_L,_,

••

•

... ·-.,
. ..-..

br lilfin(ll in Jho mi..,.

...

~

•

.

,4

- '

.......
' ..._
..
'. , .

-d•

you do•olop l10m flop No. 3 below.

.... ..

. ·-....

":--;

Yonder Clang Venus Umpid. COPYING
,
Granny says you should always be yourself and that·
you will accomplish nothing by COPYING others.
7

7

'

.:

J •

7

MAY 161

~ ~

-~

..... ,•
"l •

I

.

.

.- ... '

. .'
.

•., -. " I

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

.

......,.

exparitnCfl.

€ai l' s HoiTHI Maintenance; vh•yl
lidil\g, rooling. ....,.,. ond inlerlor patnting. power washing, ruom
a·ddilions. Frellt Estim.les, 814-

,

'•

..."

'• ·

, of2) ICC)

7

.

...

.. .. .
~

[,

........
~

&lt;. •

Household

--..

TRANSPORTATION

~~~~~~:'I no

Typewriter Sri1ith Carona Ueriy
Ad'lllnca Fealurea, Fairly New.

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

I

.

.
'

'
••

.,..:.

..

.

..
~

'

.J

· · Friday May 17, 1998
.

..

• J ..
j

;.

..'
•

'

"

,~

.. ;

( I "

. ,..

:{"

In ... year

....~.!. you . . . . . . . -

~ to ! - ' lor boll bU!Iinaa
and pl. .eure. Unlqu• beM!lll might
INU!t ?rom your lnvot•amenta
In .,...
.

-

TAURUI(Apll21iMip201An

.

I

~·

t)y mellng

that ~ OllpOrlarliO 'fiN . . . , IPP'IIIO
olhM. Vou.., be 11
fiA II ,au IIIII

.

I

...-r •••illl!-

wPIO It lnt? 1•110 p .
be
ed Ill hio .tM\illklll toc?ay. Thlt .......
.. taelpOIAIIt • ,.,., jog hio
Gel
• ; . , On .. by . . . . . . IC!IItglll,lil?lu-

"*''"",.

. . ....j

...

~-

CAPRICORN (Dtc. ;12-Jan. 11) Your
1o fine lip pollliltial....._
·
ambition will be sparked easily today,
CANCER ~ 21~ Zll Do noiiJIII 'aapecially H material reworda are at
deapQndenl today II OOIIditioul appear" - Yciur- wil Npn you lo gal
-~ Vou will . _ ••ouiiOUS niOII•-·
,...,.... upon whldt to dmr, and you AQUAIIUI(.-.. aiH'eb. 111 AM ale
.., ~come ro&amp;glll.. ~authority arrangemenl Will have lo be
L£0 (July 2Uit. 211 A Vllluld fMnci ,.nagec~ wilh a firm, but friendly hand
might r«~Ui,. bot!! mpral PCI malerlal today: " you ....., "- iUIII and rwgula·
support fiOnl ,au todiiV· In wr 11an.lly 10
wl .,.,.,.._
.
. . - up on hio or Pill' llalll?l In fnlnlol &lt; P?l CES .,..._ 20!? . . 20) h 10o1c1 •
. . ..
'
'
~ ,au miglll be In tar • VIIJ ...... .
VIIIGO(Auja.21'tilf211t a em••
an1 aurpriH today
1o.,. out·
and deiW"'*odloi• will
today In COIIII Ill I lljing ..,_,, lhllll will be
your C..... lolalle 10 ' - tilptiCII no nMdlo c?oublyour r p
gaa!lindclonoldllloli-. ' .
p ell :11-Aprl$111"
WM-.,.. 21 Chit a) YCJIII!IaiM dO • - rou'd ._.., , _ - tmit
WI?$ lodfllt In WllljiOIM • . .""ionn. Thio CM't COIIIIIO you lodly, ....... ..,...,
w1 lnCUit tpOI'II. ,our .udl? • or Ill .,.,..,.,..,,.. ... villi'*" or,__•lhollld
tulnut __,.,_
blfun. '
·

!A
:~

-.

"'"

~

' .,·,

• ••

I 0

'

• .!

.: .

~

: ...
"· !.

'• . i t

IlOna._,..,.

in........,

,.,.1111

r

·~ .

... :..
.,:...

·rou adapt majorily "*·

7

u

.

.. _ ;~..

1758, ~ HI Sllllon. New Y..._ NV IAGIUAIIIUS (NDv. - -· 211 Com10158. Mlkteu,.to- your zodiac , panionetsu~louslottodlfucllvitieo
lign.
.
,
might be cont1ary 10 your plana .
GEFI !*r 21 ........ Ill) 1o(l IIICINIIIJr IIOiit•:er, MJYihiiJg will run amoothly W

7

.

. ...:c

$2 llld
lo Alln&gt;- diUons can be beqellcial; even though
Graph, c/o lhli naw~papttr, P.o, Box • you ml!;1t not fell too ..W llbiM Uoclay.

Autos-for Sale

t100, Nllfl-, 114-&lt;1-. 1CJ-e

P.M.

24 221 A

IOday

• ;

.....~·.

~=:~=~=~~-'-::.:•scoRPIO
(OCt.
Nov.
clliinge
S
pi
. that io i j ' I J by outside lorcas and con-

ASTRb-ORAPB
.
.
.

Uotcf floallng DoCk' $10 A Foot
Seo Lqulo File At Golllpollo Boat
Cfubo()ol 81......a-32112.

Two Bedroom Trlilot 114· .. 41·
127V

~

.•

..__

,.

Goods

•, Wllllltcf:

.

.. . . llo

r,1 E RCHAND ISE

Fu,rnl1urt. 30•-e75-8820.
AI 2 N, OmiiH; Pt PiteM~~ WV.
Tueo-51! e-e. SUn 11·5.

50 011 ala vllllli ,

51,..,..

. .. .
~~~~~~·I
DAYWAU
•
I
H-:!9- finioh, rOpoil.
Ceilings textured, platter repa ir.
CaM Tom ~-875-.. 188. 20 ynra

11112-1232,

Co~nary

~

• '

frH . .limite Can Chet. 81'A-992,

nary, 014..t.US-1810.,

77V5.

' .J

6323.. •

Mobile Home Spate In Cente-

81•·-'46· ·

•

·=· ...
==··

!THURSDAY

''

CO,_Iry,

Businell L... lion, 1,000 Sq. Ft
IMoe.Pirl&lt;i"ii.'SA 1•1. Conwwy
ArM. 814-256-1336 Marl P.M.

Fren~;h City Mlytao.

.·:-,
.·'·"
.........,. ,'
. ..

4YI

SCI•M LEfS ANSWE1S

:'

Genan~l HOme Main·
ttnenct· Painli~ =1 aiding,

460 Space for Rent .

Day Guar'anteel

..

.. ..··""'

I

C&amp;C

30H73-56St, uooonwv

90

45 Ccppar.z?nc

• •

.. ·

"

Sletpinq rooms with cooking.
Also trliltr IC)ICe on river. All
hoak-upt. Call after 2:00 p.m.,J

Qralors,

....,

43 lloic?llld

'

,

I

814-U&amp;-9580.

Apphonceo: . Roco'l"lllonod
Washers, Oryero, Aongot, Aafrf-

......

., ~oi.YP.

"l PLA'J'INf. f!Q1 8E·
t!IND' I'T~ l'floRT OF
tlt5 STW£6Y '11:&gt; LULL
Hl5 OPI'ONEtiT INn:&gt;

• 1 ..

•r

GBI11polia, OH 61•-

Staning 11 11201tn0. Gallia Horel.

510

• ••

.
·Anl::r·
-~lng

"""nil.

. ..

Room• for rent - week or month.

1'1 May 21 , 111118.

2tlllvlng30 Color atlylillr
33 L?Py fllllll8

'I'CU'RE O'IEAAEICI'IM6!
TEW( IS ,_

'

••6-2501 i&gt;r 8,.·387-0612. Elfeciency Rooms. Coble, Air, Phone,
111-&amp;Ralrlgoro..... '

part- ~me

2111dnnr-

.. '
.... .

=-r

0488 Roo•rs Wat,rproollno. Es- _. ••

Rooms

.... .....

27--

-

•partmenl in Middleport,

..... .

·...
••
,

24,.... _,

riYal
211 OUtlr layer

L.

Yer~ clean one bedroom fur·
nished

tkahert

21 lntolm aii!MI
agcy.
211o
__ _

r-17---:T:-:-:W~E=-·-::R:-. ~N:---,1 ;::~· ~ ~c:~~ q~ed

SERVICES

5858.

•nd
COI&gt;PO&lt;l EOH 304-e75-66l'G.

s...-~1

Allpul

West Won with the 10 and reluml!d lbe
two to East's ace. Even tbao.gh South
dropped the queen, Eut returned a
diamond Wby? Because West bad bid
two spades, a Michaela Cue-Bid shooing at least s-:5 in bearta and a minor,
over one apade. So East lmew there

~

Door: Quad • . Auto, • ir,. Tilt,
Cruise. Slereo Call, SUn Roof,
PS, Anli lock Br1ke1, WhHI
Covers · and Trunk Rele8••·

Need a Car. Got a Job. Haw B8d
Crtdit? We Can finance · call

Twin Rivers Tower. now accepting
application• lor 1bf. HUO aubsiG ized apt. tor elderly
handi·

I Hopelllif

Eat

do.now?
At two tables, East cashed the diamODd Ke and followed with the diamond four: queen. 11iJ11. eight. Worried
that South .... &amp;-3-2-2, not 6-3-3-1, both
Wests tried to cub the club queen. 80
the pme made. Dedarer'alaat diamond ftllt 011 chommy's long bearl
Both Weet. lOI!re wrong. East will
return his origiDal fourth-hpat diamond on lhe second niUJid. 80 South
.... marted with another diamond
At uotloer lable, Eut IIWitdled to a

Campers &amp; ,

1oe&amp;.

Nic:e 2 or 3 beelroom apartmem in
Middleport. no · pets, 81 .. ·992·

....

low diamond i~atelJ. c~.

"""' Laons.

posll, no 1)111. 300-e75-5162.

Clrc~ Motel;

Local retailer haa a permanen1

•

-

311111 I '~ for

7

a IIPIII4 wuu .... .

10.r.Cab·· 11 Fooc?CMiar
11CIImp

There are two logical apprciiiCbes.· a......~o.....a.­
He cu cub dummy'• IIJNlde ace. If
• the king drops, fine. II not, perbapa
the player with lhe long trump will
CELESRITY CIPHER
• have three bearU. 'lbll wiD allow de- .
by Luis C8mpos
elarer to dleeard a 'diamond loser.
Cellbrity c.,. a;J•• • ... a..- 1mm q.re · • bJIMklul '*'*·.-a tn11 ~
However. when West dilc:anll, South
Eac:hleiW1n . . c:iphef 111nC11 lOt...,..., TClfdl:r'.t OW: W . . . . If
bas to play IIIIOtber l'IIIUid of iplldea to
Z Y X P
II RES
JPPIVJHG
' CXVAC
East's ldng. The altemalhe liDe Ia to
play a heart to bud at trict two for
XEJO .
OSRHII.' the apade finesse, loaing to East's
lliJII. In either cue. wlllllhould East

'itlU AA'IE A BR&lt;miER
WIIO LWES OUT ON

IIERE15 IAIAAf (tJE

vgc: $7250, 81.-992-4111 .

nanci ng even il you hava been
turn_ed d~wn el•ewhere. Upton
EqUIPment Used .C afl. 304-451·

Nice 2 beclroom, washer &amp; drytf .
hOok - up ~ references required, M·

450

1100·513-0303 E•L B-9388.

, llieft.CIQ
~.!!!'!• .• pll!nt,...........

37 ?lflalry

=-)

._,......

1 F ,....
2 Urp

Today's deal from the Cap Volmac:
pelr event Ia full of pouibi1ities.
Wbeo South II iD four lpldea, bow
sboulcl be bmtjnue after winDiDg the
lint trick with dummy's club ace?

1993 Ford Mustang, 4 ely., auto.
loaded with lots of optlons,.{Wfver's. side air baoJ 30,obo milts.

21.000 Uifao, EICBflenl Cordlion
17,99581.-3711-2987

Nice 2 Bedroom Centenart Area,
4 112 Milit From Gallipolis, Refrigarator, Srove , Water Fur·
nished, No Pets, $250/Mo.• 614·
~38.

.... .......

"

e -ollllra

. !_.'1

rear end, 80% tirn. looks ~d.

1101 Mustang Conv. LX While 1

.,... ....

por1$011

\

18000; '13 Ford ~100 .,r pono.
300 8 cyl. engine, 5 pod rrans.
million. 2 ,opood aile. 1500; 814- I '
N!H215.
.
, ~- ~

Ill Top IRed fnl, 5.0 Ltr.,V-e, A.,.,
231&lt; Milel; Loaded, Mini Condition. $11,900 Call Evoningo 014•o06-2510, 0ayo:6U U811921.

.

34 .....
32
"' · · · - ·

' .

- l ••

so little space

_.-..lflg,

790

. ··.
....
••

Many possibilities,

'11 While co.....ndor 2 Talldlm , ..
350 Cum. Engine, 10 lpood Wilh
1
00 ..,...
Earon •

1910 Chev~ Corsica, a.P power,
air. e cyl., new paint, ,...., lirH.
$4000, 814-11112·3350.

' ,

·=(Z.,
:u:::r:•
ft=-'.... .c, .. :, ..
:M . . .
2711npllll
31 cc•--

. ,

·-·.

9

WKit:Y

Acceua:Jes

0I

• J

Opening lead: • K

DESI&amp;NATED ·
DRIVER II

Auto Parts • ..

____

E111ndod Cob, Tradu Welcome,

-· -

TH' BARN DANCe
WITH HIS

w-. Runner Lx'-

Financing Availabl~. Coak. UoIOrl. &amp;1........0103.

1990 Covofior, 1988 NiU., Son-

I.

...

a How--

1

9" 5 3

West ,Narlls
Pus u

llcMdlt

'

·

1-800-537-8521. ,

.

1eBB Suba"' XT, OL Selec:lovo 4
1 010ner. $3,500
t1 4-256-81150 or 61•·256-e329.

Ira, 1MI 5-10 Tahatt, t9&amp;4 5--10

15 band graphlc EO, $50: Digi,
Concrele &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks~ teet! Olgl ~II "Oelay, $35; two. NRG,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron 212~ •tereo power amps, $75
Evant· Enterpt'IMI. Jatrkson, OH each, •14-085-4~15.

-.1283.

111,000. IIH.S-11998 bel_,.
11anl07pm. ~

•

••

.

Vulnerable: North-South
Deater: South

C'-7 ...... - n • -lion, • o
with J. fwUrs. $1,800 wilh CUI· ·· ·;

760

• A J 54
• Jut a 7

•Q 7S

3DHI2· ·: .

11117

4

• 4

-··-with
.
10m127.

~•

:

=':!!=~,~..-!,:.

-·

•

17 l.allob'aiiOIIIId
11Diyup
• ..._

'

Disabled Veteran u~l~ ~Dking

es, with

m&amp;nl81....,.48-0:.0

Inch,
orer lead'lttf inlerJot, loaded, lm·
maculale cof1dition , Asking

wo: Loaded .

570

HarM Typists, PC uHrs netdad.
· $45,000 inc:ame potenlial. Call 1-

-

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
~T
BUDGET PR.ICES
AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from S2•• 10 1315: Walk., shop
&amp; movloo. Call 1 1&lt;-448·2588.
e~ ··• 11ou · 0ppor
•
.,....
""''
IUnily..

Monlllly Flea Program Need
Help? Alk JO NORTH PRODUCE

1·1 :~F!!::,~pup""•~·~~!~~--h;_,

Will do babysilting in mr home,

Will Do lntertor Of

Limoulin. eo

Share Bath, $!1 95/Mo. Ulilitiest~~~~~------- 814-388-8577, 15.00 To Sto.oo
1995 ClayiDn 14x52 used 8 mo. 2 Paid, 807 Second Avenue, Galli· 1·
bedroom. 30•-675· 26•2 or 304- jllli~ 11 ........... 18 Allor 1 P.M.
BAHAMA CRUISE I 5 day s~&lt; Each.
675--7705.
nighll, UnderbOokedl Must Sell I
11 5
6
Garage
AperuNnr.
2
Bedrooms,
$278/coul)le.
Limited
tickela.
_ '_""
limited Offer! 1996 doUblewide, Washer tOryer Hook-Up, Refria - 800· .. 14-4151 ert 8589 Uon-Sar
3br, Zbath, $1799 down, $2751 aralor, _Stove, Waler Furnished Qam.10pm.
monlh. Free cl 81ivery &amp; serup. S2501Mo. S15Q Deposit, 106 La ·
Only al Oakwood Homes, Nitro .cu11 St, GatliPQMs, 81A-4~70.
Boo11 By Redwlng, Chippewa,
Instruments
WV. 304-?55-5815.
•
.
Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowest 1;;::;:::::-;~~:::::;;-;;;::::-::;-:-:::;:Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom Pric:eiAtSftoeCaf&amp;,Gallfpalia.
l&lt;ohler &amp; Campbell Piano. $.COO.
Mobile home tor sale, needs re- apartments at Village Manor and
614-446-2161
paira, 12000, 814-902-5858.
Riverside Aparlmenls in Middle- Claw Foot Tub Excercisa Bike,
·port. From S232-S355. Call114- large P icn ic Tabla. linle likes MusiC equ i pm~n,. Peavey 1200.
New Bank Repoo. O..y 4 Jell Sill 992:5084. Equal Housi"ii OpliOr· Pbol. 814-..S-2252.
12 chan. s10reo ·"'""'· $250: DOD

Su'n Valier Nursery

614·0.9-234• .

li• }adllttl,

::Z,I' lrliltr. !2~~··. 304·175- ; ,

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautit~o~l 2ac lots. pub,it waler,

Racine vicinity, have refafences,

=•·

lmrador.' UCihp

Evi""*, lids, rut..

3

• A Q ,4

Mutt 1lainlH1 aiN I alumjun

1110 Vahtma

875-5253.

SChool.

Spm.

17ft. opon -

s

•• •

IT Awfu?

-llo

111Ftcta

AS ~

s..u.
.QJ

-Spm.

3 Room upstah• apt. 30•-e75303D.

10 .7

S2,000. Call 304-112-3237 after

concfilion. $17,500, e••·IMV-207V

1087 ClayiOft 1Ax70, 3Dtdroom,
\ 112blilth, nawty renmlded 'bath WI

•

• K 10 2
• K Qes 2

1efi; V·Houl bMI &amp; ....... 1!50hp
Meircurlea enfln'e, lull ' co•er.

310 magnum Mtrefuit« ..a~~n

2•50 Ask For Joe 5aundof~
Childcare M·F 6am-~:30pm Agel
2-K. Young School Ago During
Summer. 3 Oayo por Wook Mini·
llllm 61•-446-3657.

:

125000B0.81-2:SI1..,..

lpm" ·

·

30 years e~~:perteliet 'in nutting
home- Will tl]lcl cart ot etderlf,

"'
'10 Yameht. WaMrurmer, two •
PMHnoe!'· eiCIIIIenl caftdilion,

coif 11• U8 lfl39 all« ,
..
, r
. ·1
.1Mt Wef1Crafl21' Cully Cabin, •

Avenue. Galfipoio. 814-&lt;148-2802.
a'*~Jmor...
Wanted To Bur : Auto's &amp; Trucks · 3p4-&amp;75-112S.
•
81 388 9082
:::r.:~:· • " " ' Or Uotcf 2300 DIICh-WIICII Trencftoi.
Cal 114-814\1142.•
Wantecl l o Buy: Junk Autos Wilh w.,.btd bedroom IUilt. Queen
Or Without Uotorll. Ca ll Larr~ . size~ hnd baird. drtlllr I
;.LHe....:il'·_8~'..::-386--:--9303
~--:-:::::--:-- cheot tee!~ Cl)ovy ""n. Coli.304Wanled To Bu., : Uttfe Tikea Tors.

a A I 0. 7 Z
• K J t 1
• 113

· 1100-

1887 Ford Escort, ¥8'ry vood
condition, 8 1A· 74 2 -2833 alter

--""*Y-,·
· - onanoquol

16-t&amp;-tl .

.,.,
.....
:.:.
•
-.

.._,

.. . . . . .,. ·=-

..----,r=,...---==...., It•11 =-(poa?.l
,._

1880 Tri- ' r TA 7 corwrdtlfe,
$2,000 mHo'\
kOI'I. no

11112-. ......... . 75-8123.

.
~ ~-

.....
13 i;l';;-- 41;:::.;

.,
-13100. 11

ACROSS

••• •

.

'

I,_

, . .._
__

~
~

•••

·~

.. &gt;1'..._,.._

•

�•

•

I

hge 12 • The Deily Sanllnel

Tllureday,May 11, 1111

Pomeroy • Mldclleport. Ohio

•

Ohio Lottery

Time for mother to finish
college,
with
·daughter
:By KAREN S. PETERSON
·USA TODAY
SOl!TH HADLEY. Mass.
Fifty-year-old Janet Field will spend
much of MOiher's Day lhis Sunday
stlldying in her spaaun room a1
Mount Holyoki College.
She intends to ftnish her course
,work in lime to graduar.e in 1997 with
,her daughter, Carrianna, 20, also a
junior at Mount Holyolte.
A former Peace Corps worlter in·
Micronesia, Jan is a work in progress.
The mother of three grown children
returned to school in 1995to acquire
what she saw as a missing piece of
;her life: a college degree. "I was
·raised to be the perfect wife and
mother," not a stllden~ she says. And
back then she had no money for college.
As she treks toward her libellll arts
.degree, with a major in psychology,
:Jan finds most everyone's image of
·her is changing. Aild that includes her
image of herself. " We women have
such trouble with this thing called
self-esteem," she says. " I am much
more satisfied ·with myself as a
woman now."

Cartie, as she is nicknamed, is
delighted her mother is a scholar. "I
am just so proud of her. Mom has
always been intellectually curious,
but she has never hruhn intellectual
life," Carrie says. "Now she is getting a chance at what I have always
taken for granted: college."
Some daughters might be underwhelmed by the thought of attending
college with Mom, but Carrie leapt at
the chance, though they' don't room
together. "I spent my junior year (of
high school) in Germany," she says.
"It is almost nice to have her here so
we can be together. ... I am very independent. She has always given me
lots of space."
They are, Carrie says, truJy
friends. "If there is one person who
can understand you, it's your mom. "
And besides, her mom does l)er
laundry. "I always ask her if she still .
wants to, and she always says yes,"
Carrie says.
. The two deliberately don't spend
all(hat much time together. "It's not
like she asks where I am if I stay out
until 4 a.m.," Carrie says.
Jan laughs, "She can stay out until
4 a.m.' I could never do that."
Most ol\en, they get together to
transfer the car keys. "We have one
car. Usually I just walk," Jan says.
They keep track of each other by email.
·
Although in genellll they avoid

classes toJe.lber, the r!Cids did take
one psycholOI)' course jointly last
semester.' "Our professor would JCI
our names confused," Carie says. "I
lhou&amp;bt thai was cute."
They readily admit they an: competitivc about .,...:Jes. " If my (gnde)
isn't as &amp;ood u hers is. I can deal
with that, Carrie ~ys . "But if! get a
bener grade, sbe'll'be all upset." Carric has a double major in German and
psychology.
Jan notes that so far she has the
better grade point average, but Carric is gaining. "See what having your
mother here does for you! " Jan
laughs.
Today !an is wearing black jeans,
a white blouse and green sweater, the
same type of campus knock· abouts as
Carrie. On a tour of the school
.founded in 1837 - it's one of the
nation's oldest women's liberal arts
colleges - Jan points out that .her
own ban:-bones dorm room is quite
different from Carrie's.
Carrie's room is modem and airy,
with posters of President Kennedy,
Wonder Woman and "Thelma &amp;
Louise," plus two TVs and assorted
sports paraphernalia. Jan 's room in
utilitarian, 80-year-old Dickinson
Hall has vinually no personal touches other than photos. "My life is not
allinthisroom."Jansays.

(mom II borne) no matter how well
daughter runs a hocel dinina room in
depw, says she 11CtU111J got to know she is doing her job?"
nity colleJe. All !DUSt convince Fort Lauderdale.
When she graduates, J~
Like Jan, Mruy Fanelli has her IIIOiher at Mountlflllyokc. "I had
Mount Holyoke they can ~ a
wants
to
join
a nonprofll firm, somechanged
in
both
her
and
her
chil·
alwaysaoen
her
u
~of
a
mother
course load. Ian bad enough credits
how
working
with adolescents. Shi
·
dren's
eyes.
"My
kids
had
always
from Norwich University in Norththan a~ - I carne 11 realize what
tried
the
nonprofit
route before, IKl
field, Vt., to enter here as a sopllO- thought of me at horne gardening and a J00t1 wn1er and thi. . . she is. She
dclcided she would forever be typint
is cxcm.cly' focused lid driven."
more.
1 baking bread. but never as a scholar,''
Both
Mary
aaiJ
Jan
sliD
put
up somebody else's ideas.
:
Mruy
says.
As
Ann,
her
founh
chile(
But other FPs have "a problem
Now
things
are
quite
differ&gt;
role
u
mother
ftllsL
"
I
am
so
their
left
for
Mount
Holyoke,
Mruy
decid·
adjusting." She runs workshops in
Dickinson to help moms get into the ed, "It was my tum. Everybody had alad I s{lnt the time l.did with my cnt. This lime around. "I have rnor1=
gone to college but me. I had never kids,'' Ian says., But ille also frets, confi*nce. I will be ready for ~
academic swing again.
"Who in this society tnily values the challenge."
Currently 160 FPs are had the time to just read.~ '
enrolled at Mount Holyo)le. The fee
••
is hefty : The school's tUition alone is
'
521 ,250. Both Fields work on campus, and each re.ccivcs modest finanMon., '1\le., WM., lllura.,
•'
cial aid.
Their money buys an edu·
St. Rt. 7 In Tuppera P'-lna m o1a ~cation at a small, women's liberal arts
•
college noted for academic excellence, a 10-1 student-teacher ratio
and 800 acres of woods, lakes and
English gothic architecture. The
Princeton Review calls it one of the
•
most beautiful campuses in the USA.
Mount Holyoke is one of a
handful of women's colleges in the
USA with full-time residential pr(}grams for nontraditional students.
The Fields are not the only
Twin Set
mother-daughter team to come here
at the same lime. Mruy Fanelli, now
VIA • Mastercard • Discover accepted.
56, and daughter Ann Croft, 23, grad•
On Spot Financing • Approved Credit
uated together in 1995. Mruy, who
F II Owned d 0 -eel "
...,_,actlon.
I 0 11 Co
majoredinphilosophy,nowworks in
amy
an
pe.... -.our.Pe
. rsonal ..QIIUitl
' ur
ncem

60 percent have -nded a commu-

STARnII

IT

$159

:Past CouncilorsCI~b
of .Chester meets

Pasi Cou.'Cilors Club ~f Chester · "At Grandma's House"·by Erma Cle·
p,uncil 323, Llaughters of America, land. "This I Know" by Goldie Fred'
met recently at .be hall wilb,~lma . crick. Rccogn.ized were Thelma
White and Mary K. Holter as 'host- ·White, Mruy K. Holter and Shirley
esses.
Beegle, whose mothers.are still liv·
. Mruy Jo Baringer, president, read ing. Oames were conducted by Grant
ftom Acts 3 and led in the Lonl's and Marcia Keller. Refreshments
Prayer and pledge. Members were Served and door prizes awardlulswered roll call by telling some- ed to Jean Frederick and Sandra
thing about spring thai they liked. White.
The death of Faye Kirkhan's p1111dOthers attending were Cora Beodaughter·was noted. Jean .Frederick · gle, Opal Hollon, Pauline Ridenour
and Cbarlone Gr;mt gave officers' . Laura Mae Nicc,lnzy Newell,
JCpor1S.
Orr, Lora DamewOod and Opal
. ·, Mother's Day readinp inclllded Eichinger.
•

•
Vol. 47,H0.17
: 2 Sectlone, 12 Plgta

•

GUDiR

Break
Ill
BtiJk·

•r

=

Rr riiiUt

000.. ,.. :........................ ...,....1
..................................... 112
.....................................668
. .. ................................4,385

3olaKIIII

By AARON MARSHALL
· Gannett News Service
COLUMBUS - A bill creating a committee to study the fe asibility of
locating a veterans' care facility in southern Ohio 'inched closer 'to being
passed into law.
House Bill 58 I; sponsored by State Rep. John Carey, R· Well ston, cleared
· the Senate's State, Local Government and Veteran 's Affairs committee by a
?-0 vote this week. Since the bill already passed the house by a vote of 96l, it needs only to meet approval on the Senate Hoor and be signed into la·w
hy Gov, George Voinovich .
·
The bill does not specify any particular site for the home except to say it
~ust be in the southern half of the state. Carey said that is on purpose. "We
tried to discourage that... We wanted to focus on the needs of veterans in the
~outhern pan of the state, " Carey said.
. ·.
··
Current!)'. the only state veteraos care facility is in on the extreme nonhcm edge of the state in Sandusky. That means Sandusky is the only state·
financed facility where veterans needing nursing home or assisted living care
can be placed.
The bill creates an 11 -person commission to explore the possibility of pro·
viding care for veterans fac ility.
The commission would include five persons representing veterans organizations, with one person repre se nting the Vietnam Veterans of America;,
American Veterans of World War II , Korea, and Vietnam; Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States; Di sabled American Veterans; and the American Legion. All of those groups arc supponing the measure.
The committee would have to hold meetings within 90 days of being ·
passed into·Jaw and have until Sept. 30, ,1997 to submit a report of its findings and recommendations for veterans care.
The bill creates a comminec. similar to the six-member Veterans ' Home
Site Selection Committee created se'eral years ago. ·

.

'

complaint
reviewed
by panel
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - An Ohio Elections &lt;;:ommission panel found prnb~
able cause Thursday to conduct a l'ul(
hearing on a Democratic complaint
against Rep. Frank Cremeans, ROhio, that stems irom the 1994 election.
Chairman David Leland of the ·
Ohio Democratic Pany alleged in a
May I0 complaint that Cremeans had
falsely accused former Democratic
Rep. Ted Strickland of bouncing two
checks at the Gallia County Cour1hou sc.

....

~

· Emergency personnef examine the wnickalJe of a pickup truck driven by Jeffrey A. Dorsey,
36, Pomeroy, that crashed Thuraday on State Route 124. Dorsey was transpqrted first to Vet. erana Memorial tfoapltal by the Meigs EMS, end later transferred via HealthNet to St. Mary's
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., for treatment of Injuries. He was in goOd condition this morning.
The Gallla-Melga Post of tile State Highway Patrol sald Dorsey was eastbound at 12:40 p.m.
when his pickup went off the left Side of the road and struck a utility pole. The pickup was severely damaged, th!l patrol said. (Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)

;,. ·11.

.

~&lt;

, .........~ ............................'.,1" .
$6000
$3,000....................,.. ...............2
$1,200 ............................:.......2
$600 ...... ;.... ~ .......................35
$300 ...................................43

. Calli iii

.. -·

$500,000:............................ 1
$10,000 ....................:....... 14

;a.5;9Q ............................ 18

$5,()()() ...............,..........'... 37
$1,000 ..........................243

1~QQ0 ........................... 3
,IMJ ............ .'....... ..: .... ...B

aN •. .. , ..... .... ..... ... ...... 311

$500 .................. {.,,.~ ...:.426
$100 ...........~···· .......... 5,888

100 .................. ;.... 12,213
................... ...... 45,287

.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1
linlall's

Achievers
recognized

.

Academic achievement . antt
citizenship awards were pre·
sented at the annual academic
banquet at Pomeroy Elementary
School thle week.,
Recognized tor having all A's,
kindergarten through aixth
gr1de, were Nichole Runyon,
Delane Eichinger and t.lary
Schuhz, at right. A total of 191
·students were honored"belng on
the honor roll.
Citizenship awards presented
by ~bbie Haptonstall, principal,
assisted by Randy Hays of the
Farmers Gank, the school's part·
nera In education, went to (top
photo), Mated, from teft, Natasha
Knapp, kindergarten; Katie Kibble, Jill Reeves, Cecilia Corl!, and
Larissa Hood, first graders;
Nathan Jeffers, Brandl Reeves,
Amber Evana, third grade;

$75 ......;... ................1.0,646 '

15.

.....................................355

$50 ..... ,; ,,,; ~,',• :, ........ :25,831'
$QdCIIII
.~

..................................5,796
•

$5,()f;K) ............... ;..,,;.•~ ............10

aiU.Irlsh:... 46
JJ!0 ................................

$200 .....................................293
$100 .....................................320.

.................................... 2,653

$40 .................................. 10,717

'•"*

W

w ..................................3,734

lnsiMIPIJIIaJ

000 .................................... 36
.....................................49()

................................19,627

Ballpadc Bucks

,000 ................ ~·..................:..4

1 ~ .................... :.............. 53
.118
O . . . OO . . . . O 00 O 00 00 00 . . . . .. .
M. 0 0 . . 0

100.....................................2n
.'...........:....................... 2,216
..................................15,904

·

".~. f!r1so:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::4~

100.;................................ 1,182
.................................... 9,486

000....................................31 ~
..................... ~ ............ 1,025 i~;~~
·. ..................................4,915,,

. . . . .lzzl.
$2,000 .................................... 10
$1,000..................:...................8

.. $500 ........................................30
$250 .......................................23
$100 .....................................486
$50 ...................................·.8,451

•'

I

$60 .......................... ::. ~ 11;363 ,

DUller

WlldC&amp;Sb

.
TO~· ..v~.
:Sentinel News Staff
Bid~ for the latest round of street
paving projects in the village of Rutland have been adveitised. with work
expected to begin soon,· council
members .noum;ed . during their
regular mc.ting Wednesday night at
the Rutland Civic Center.
. Bids for paving projects on Hill
Street; L9ng Street and Col)egc
Avenue near Rutland Elementary
were advenised Tuesday and arc '
expected 10 be open within the next
month, according to Rutland
Clerk/Treasurer Rosemruy Snowden
Eskew.
The paving projects, funded in
pan by community block grant funds,
have been continuing yearly in the
village. Council members hope to
secure block grant funding to completc the village paving projects during the summer of 1997, with ·thc
paving of Larkin. Nelson and Bryant
streets.
Council members learned that the
village showed a clear profit. of
$602.95 on the recent Phil Dirt and
the Dozers concert at the Rutland
Civic Center, with all profits direct-

$100............t '" ' : .......... ;,;.132

BuclciJ8 00111118

·

'

$200 .......~ ..........................31

500 ...........................24
00 ............................592
...........................8,692

• .,.'NV ••• •

i.f..

'

$'18900

A Gannett Co. New1-·

Driver survives crash- Democrat

: Nearer to law
:Southern
Ohio veterans home
bill
.
.
·headed for state Senate decision

JIM.nisir

00

3Scenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 17, 1996

The allegation vias made during a
Nov ember 1994 debate between the
congressional candidates in M:!fictta.
" In fact. Mr. Strickland bas never "hounced' a check at the Gallia
County Courthouse," Leland said i~
the complaint. He a.:cuscd Cremeans
of violating a law that prohibits dissemination of fal se infqnnation about
a .:andidate.
·, Lawyer Quintin Lindsmith or:
Columbus. who represented Cremeans, iold the threc-memhcr panel
Thursday that the law cited in th~
complaint did not take effect until
August 1995. almost ayear after th~
dcb'atc.
·
·
"We believe as a mancr qf.law Ihe .
panel cannot lind prohahlc cause :
because. in cfl'ecl, In do so it would .
have to l'ind that Mr. Cremeans vio,
lated a statute that did not even c.ist
at that time.'' Lindsmith said.
But Virginia Richards..the lawyer
for Leland, said the complaint was
properly fil ed under a technical
change in the law that took effect Jan . ~

Rutland advertises
·bids for·
street
work·
-

Ethei

i

5-16-29-30-33

Partly cloudy tonight,
scattared thunderttorms
POalble. Low. In the lOa.
Saturday, partly cloudy,
highs
90.

oe..-

~the~c~ol=le~ge!·s~c~om!:!!m~un:ic!au!·o!n!sde~part~--~=======D=R=IV=E=A====S=!f.=~=A=l:O:T:I=-=66=7=·7388====·=====~~

ASK AIIIIJ: • RAil

.' .-

Sports on Page 4

Her husband,
Field,
54,Indeed.
an attorney
home Bill
alone
in · ment and audits Italian for fun; her
Chelsea, Vt., "is wonderful," Jan
says. But "he is lonely. He likes me
to come home ·on the weekends."
And, "When I come in the liouse, the
laundry aild the cooking are done."
Her husband's image of her is
evolving too, Jan says, as she is
molded in this feminist environment.
She worked for him at home. before
be joined a law firm. Now she feels
more: like his peer.
"Our relationship has changed. He
has always been incredibly intelligent, and I was the one with the social
graces. Now I'm willing \0 take a
stand, even if he disagrees."
Carrie thinks the change is :'really neat." And she thinks it something
of a hoot when Dad stays overnight
on campus. "All my friends say it's
like Mom has a date!"
Mom is anendi~g Mount Holyoke
thanks to its Frances Perkins pr(}gram, named after the alumna wbo
becantc the first female Cabinet minister, secretary of Labor, in 1933.
"FPs" fulfill the same requirements as other undergrads but are
over 25 and are usually finishing an
abandoned college career. More than

preservation materials. You can order
acid-free storage folders, envelopes,
sleeves (you name it) from them,
As to restoring the leiter, we're
afraid it just isn 'I possible. Any
process that might be used to restore
the color of the ink would irreparably damage the paper.
. The best we can suggest is that
you locate a technical photographer
in your area who can lake an infrared or ultra-violet photograph of
By ANNE B. ADAMS and 1
your letter; at least you woukf then
NANCY NASH-cUMMINGS
have a legible copy.
DEARANNEANDNAN:Aiate,
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Some
beloved friend and I corresponded time ago, you pub6shed a "lip" about
with one another for many years. putting a few drops of liquid garlic ·
Recently I carne across one of his let, concentrate in outdoor hanging plants
ters. II is so faded it is almost inde-. to kill mosquito larva. Question: Can .
cipherable. I was shocked, because it I usc garlic in my pond as well with.has remained for years in a folder, not out killing the fish? -- P. DENISE
exposed to light. It is typed on a sin- ISRAEL, Barrington Hills, nl;
gle sbeet of typing paper. Do yqu . . DEAR DENISE: We are reluctant
know of any fi1111 that restores faded, to say ''yes" as we have no evidence
typed letters? -· OLIVE ANA one way or another. However, there
LIVEZEY, Pasadena, Calif.
is a non-chemical control for mosDEAR OLIVE: The probable cul- quitoes available that can be used in .
prit is the folder itself, which over a ponds, water barrels, birdbaths, etc.
period of time has been releasing acid · "Mosquito Control Rings" con(an ine~itable byproduct of the dete- tain Bt ·lsraelensis (now there 's a
rioration of wood pulp-based paper
coincidenj:e, Ms. Israel!), a naturally
· ptoducts). This has interacted chemoccurring bacterium that kills mosically with the pigrneiu in the typequito larvae.
writer ink, causing it to fade.
You can order the rings from GarWe can't stress enough that, when
preserving or saving docuinents (let- dener's Supply Co., 128 Intervale
ters or anything that is paper or Rd .. Burlinpori, Yr05401 -2804 (I :cloth), the items should be stored in .800-863·1700).
. A set of six rings (item OS-390) is
an acid-free environment.
University Products, Inc., 517 S11.95, plus shipping and handling.
Write to "Ask Anne &amp;: Nan" at
Main St., P.O_ Box 101, Holyoke,
MA 01041 -0101 ( 1-800-762-1165 P.O. Box 240, Hartland, vr 05048.
. fot customer service and questions) is Questions of general interest will
:a firm that specializes in archival and appear in the column.

Pick 3:
8-1-8
Pick 4:
3-7-2-9
BuckeyeS:

Q-ILift

Is faded letter from
friend gone for good?

.

Cleveland
makes it two
over Tigers

•
Ana, who Cllliala teachin1
•

$.50() ..................................... 148

..........,

Thai*'-!
Cine &amp;bJ&amp;IIIiiSI

H&amp;I'IIAnl.......-11

$500 ....... ~:·....................~ .......939
$1.00 .... ~.~ .......................... 12,276
$50.......... '!,••;·;.·'''!.. '''"' ....·,.46,a.75

. . Ge**
c• b-.. .
'
S;rtagFI-

$20,000......................~ ......:,.. ,;....$
$1 0,000................. ~.~:.........:: ..:..9
$5,000.:..................................24
$100 ................................$0,645
$50 ..................................76,633

·-

'

$10,000.................................. 39

$1 ,000 ...... ,·................. ~.........:t 90
$50() ......... :.........:....., ........ 1,722

~~ ...........................~ ......2,322
$175:.:.;.............................3,420
$100 ............................4•••• •7,133
$6.5 ......................... ~ ..........4,551
$50~ ....... ~ ..·.........................4,799

$42 .....;....:_. ......................9(),557

Patrol will ticket drivers
using connecto.r section

Amanda Hoyt and Letha Lauder·
milt, third grade; standing, from
left, Jaynee Davis, Alra Little,
fourth grade; Brandon Re"'s·
burg, Jason Murdock, fifth grade;
Derick
John1on,
Delana ·
Eichinger, Nichola Runyon, and
Mary Schultz, sixth graders.

Stephanie Hysell and
Richard, not pictured, also
received clllzenahlp awards.
Speaker at the banquet was
John Costanzo, Meigs County
elementary supervisor. (Sentinel
photos by Charlene Hoeflich)

Parkersburg mayor faces theft charge

$1,500 ......I :·.....• ..... ., .................. 31
$200 ..........;.....................:.....423
$100 ..................................1,549
$50..................:.................3,593

~

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)Mayor Eugene Knous is scheduled to
appear May 24 in Wood County Circuit Coun on charges that he stole
$35,QOO from an assessors' group
when he was coupty assessor.
Knolls was indicted on charges of
grantl larceny and embezzlement.
He also is accused of stealing $3,000
from the Wood County · a-ssessor 's
office and. since he became mayor,
, misusing a city credit card, Prosecu. tor Michele Rusen said.

t';

A gtand jury on Thursday charged
Knolls with 10 counts of embezzlement and six·counts of grand larce·
ny by embezzlement. If convicted, he
could face up to 60 years in prison
and a $15.000 fine . ·
The mayor is free on $10,000
bond.
,
"I can assure you that if any money was due to the city, the county or
the asses~ors' association, I would
pay it,'' Knotts said in a statert)Cnt.
His lawyer, Harry Deitzel, con!

... . ·.

cd i~LO '(be l Civic' Center fund .
Attempts will be made to book the
group for aiu&gt;thcr c&lt;1nccrt in spring
19'l'7.
Village operating balances reportcd for the month of April were : gcnera! fund, $7 ,171.53; civic center,
$1 ,445.27; policeman fund, -$910.85 ;
law enforcement. $287.33 ; street
fund , $1,124.37 ; state highway.
$3,750.33; watc(, $5 ,967.22; sewer.
$6,310.22; sewer debt, $15,860.02; I.
Richards said an identical proviutility deposits, $8.267 :21 ; replace·
sion
against false statements existed
mcnt fund, $21,556.20.
.
in
election
law that was in effe.:t at
In other mauers. council':
the
time
of
the debate.
• Discussed the replacement of
" A viohiiion is a violation. The
broken tiles in catch ba,ins at the Lori
Barnes property and Weber Drive. statute number changed." she said .
At issUe was an exchange in
• Heard complaints from a village
which
Cremeans told Strickland:
resident about mini-bike, traffic and
"When
you sent your operuiives to
noise in the village. Council said that
the bikes cannot be used on village the county courthouse to lift 120
streets. but the village cannot limit some pieces of my personal and business records·. you didn 't even have
usc on private property.
the
courage to send a valid warrant. '
• Approved the April mayor's
rcpon of$1.734 .00collccted in fines. Both your checks bounceil."
Strickland denied bouncing a
Allcnding the meeting were coun·
check.
cil members polly Marlin, Marie
Lindsmith told the commissio~
Birchfield, Danny Davis, Dick Felly,'
Thursday
that Cremeans' usc of the
Judy Denney, Gladys Barker; Mayor
word "your" had an ambiguous
Jo Ann Eads and Eskew .
meaning. He said it could have :
referred to Strickland's organi7.ation, :
· and not to him personally.
The. complaint now goes before
the full commission for a preliminary
review. If the panel ultimately linds
Drivers traveling on the completed portion of the U.S. 3311-77 connector evidence of a m1sdc mcanor violation ,
road at Rock Springs are being warned they face citations from lhe State High- the case would go to a county prosway Patrol if their use of the road continues.
·
ecutor.
A patrol spokesman said motorists have been using the finished section
Chairman Robert Bennett of the '.
as a short cut, but the road is officially considered closed by the patrol . Dri- Ohio Republi can Party accused :.
. ving on a closed road is illegal, the spokesman said.
•
Strickland of falsel y stalin~ that Crc-: ~
. "It's not open for public travel," the spokesman said. "The road is not com- means had been found guilty of 24 ;
pleted and presents some hazards for drivers. Units will be patrolling the area election violations. That complaint '
and ~rivers found using it will be citerl."
was filed Nov. 2, 1994 .

tended the charges were "politically
motivated " but did not elaborate.
"He did not misappropriate, coriven or steal any money. Nobody has
ever told him that any money was
missing from any account ihat was in
his care or control," Deitzler said .
Knotts was assessor for 27 years
before his election as mayor hi 1993
and was secretary-treasurer of the
West Virginia Assessors Association
for the last 16 of those years.
Rusen said Knolls is accused of
stealing $35,000 from· two association accounts between 1990 and
1993 and $3,000 from the county val. uation fund in 1993: That fuild is used
to finance reappraisals.
. He also misappropriated city
funds by obtaining cash advances on
a city ctedit card, Rusen said. She did
· not say what amount that involved,
but The Parkersburg News reported
last September that Knotts repaid the
'city SS.IOO for cash withdrawals.
Knous previously has said he

periodically borrowed association
money for pen;onal use but repaid the
•.
money. He said he l;n"oke no rules by
bOrrowing from the association.
The cl)arges stert)med from an FBI
investigation that ended in January,
Rusen said. Agents turned over their
fjndings to the prosecutor's office,
which took over the investigation.
The allegaiions are the latest in a
·series of financial clouds over Knotts'
,
tenures as assessor and mayor.
..,
In March, the state Department of
Tax and Revenue.asked prosecUtors
I
•
,,,.
to consider civil or criminal IICtion
against Knotts and Bill Parrish, who
~·
~~
succeeded Knotts as assessor, after an
.I
audit showed they fw)ed tQ collect ac
;,
'
! ·~,
least $1.5 million in taxes between
•·
1991 and 1994. '
'
1The audit said Knott$ and Pairish
••
depleted the county's tax base by pi'O'
LEVY DONATION- HOlM National Bank of . tee Prealdant Dave Spencer end Treuurer Kim
~
viding "blatant" tax breaks and said
:
. Rlc:lne llld SyrtiCII• dclnlted $5,000 Thuradlty , Phillips. The bllnk'1 boln:l of directors voted to
several state laws were violated. It . night aoward ll'lclrts to - - funclng tor.a new.
ancforae the 6. Hnlll bond Issue on Ajirllt, recsaid the evaluations have been cor~ ..~
Soulh1m Local 1(-8 Elem,entary School. HNB
ogr!izlng that ·~ kll9ols build better com·
rected since Assessor Steve Greinet
VIce flrlakllnt Gary Norrll; cAiitlr, pt' II Jhta the
munltlel, • according to Bank Preakllnt Tom
took ·office in November 1994.
donltlon to Southern Local Building Commit·
Wolle.
·,t
J
I .
.f

.

..

.

~.

..

.

•

,,

"'·

''

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="387">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9759">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29584">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29583">
              <text>May 16, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="341">
      <name>blake</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3522">
      <name>graber</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="177">
      <name>simpkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4162">
      <name>wooldridge</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
