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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gflllpolls, OH • Point Pleas,ant, WV

Sunday, Nay 19, 1996~
•
•

•

Commercial planting still underway.••

HONORED BY CHAMBER · The Gallia County CMmber of Conll1181'ce honored 15 members
during 111 second snnual appreciation break·
fast at the Holiday Inn Monday. Honored were,
first row, ~ft to right, -Brent Johnson, Johnson's Supermarket; Janice Davison, Davison's
Landscaping and Nursery; Kevin Smith, Smith
Custom Cabinets; Eric Young, Gallipolis Developmental Center; Herb Moore, McCoy-Moore

Funel'ltl Home; Howard Saundert, Saunders
Insurance; John McKeen, William-Ann Motel.
Raar • Gary Roach, chamber preeldent; Duane
Phlegar, AEP/Gavin Plant; lester Plymale,
Ohio Valley Electric Corporation; Gene Johnson, Gene Johnson Chevrolet-OldsmobileGao.; Tom Tope, Tope Furniture Gallerlee; Bob
Bl'ltndeberry, Rio Tire; Paul Hill and Gary Hummell, Chapman Farms. Not pictured • Nancy
Tawney Framing and Jim's Farm Equipment.

.

Gannett News Service

WASHINGTON - The impact
'' hedge-to-arrive·· grain contracts are
having on some segments of agric ulture was described to Congress last ·
week as "carnage .. and " one of the

saddest events to hit the farm community since the 1988 drought. "
J.W. Uhri g, professor of agricultural economics at Purdue Universi-

ty, told the Senate Agriculture Committee some far:mers have used the
contmcts to try to lock in current high
prices. Such contracts all ow fanners
to defer delivery of the com involved,
to sell not only 1995 and 1996 crops,
but also production from three to five
years in the future.
However,
merchandisers
" hedged" these transactions by selling futures on the . commodity
exchanges, and as grai n prices have
risen, these firm s have had to pay
huge amounts of money in margin
calls on behalf of the producer/signers of the contrac ts.
This money eventually will be
deducted from the price the farmers
get for the grain they deliver to fulfill the contracts - or the producers
will have to come up with enough
cash to meet their obli gations. If not,
they and the elevators and grain firms
,will go bankrupt.

Uhrig said the res ult of all this for
some farmers who have used hedge. to-arrive contrac ts will be that instead
of realizi ng more than $3 a bushel on
future crops. they' ll get as little as $1.
I! will be worse than a drought. he
said. ''With droughts, fi nancial losses occur with just one crop. Pnoducers with multiyear contracts have
assured themselves a multiyear operating loss. This is hard-earned sweat
equity taken off the lop of their financial statement."
The situation has been worsened
by rising prices as increased e.port
demand and relati ve ly inOexible
domestic needs for grain have
bumped up against an · immovable
object: short supply.
Iowa State Univers ity economist
Robert Wisner notes as an « ample
the impact of rising prices on an elevator . holding 800.000 bushels of
corn , whose value has to be protected with futures co ntrac ts on the
Chicago Board of Trade.
The rise in prices in recent months
has required $ 1.2 million in additional margin money 'to be sent to the
exchange, Wisner said - $1 mill ion
more than in a normal trading year.
Interest on this extra money totals
almost $~0.000, he said.
The volatility of the markets "also
has increased the cost and reduced

••

Contlnaed from D-1
quality is when seeds are filling the together in the proponions described;
es and legumes such as lick! peas and pods and the lower leaves of the plant above.
soybeans are being marketed by are just beginning to tum yellow. If Brassicas
,
some seed dealers.
harvested for silage at this stage, soyBrassica crops such as turnip , ~
The legumes generally improve . beans should be mixed with corn in rape, kale. or swede are fast-growing•
prolein content compared with sum- the silo to achieve acceptable fer- crops that are gll&lt;ld options for graz-:
mer-annual grasses grown alone. 1bc mentation. Mix one par1 soybean ing, especially for sheep and beef CAt·:
annual legumes included in these with two or more paris of c'QI'n in the tie. These crops are highly produc-•
mixtures would be prese nt in the first silo. If soybeans wi ll be ensi led tive, and can be grazed from 80 to:
growth only; regrowth would occur alone, then harvest at about 60 days 150 days after seeding, depending on:
only from the grasse~ (except forage of growth (belpre seed formati on) to the species. Titese crops must be:
sorghum which does not regrow after avoid the high oil content which treated more like "concentrates" than ..
harvest).
inhibits good fermentation in the silo. "forage" iQ nutritional planning for;
Soybean
,
This practice is no t the best choice, livestock because of their ~lgb ;
, Com silage should be the first because of the resulting low dry mat· digestibility and low fiber COIJ1Cn(.•
choice over soybeans, but soybeans ter yields.
They are seldom' used as dairy ~eg ;
can provide supplemental fomge with
Soybean forage ~hould comprise because they ean cause an off-flavor;
good management and provided her- no more than 30 to 40ofthe dry ljl31- · in the mil k. Consult the latestAgron- :
bicide restrictions-.are adhered to. Use ter intake ofthe animal, because of iis amy Guide edition and county ex ten· •
of herbicide- treated soybeans for for- high oil content (assuming it was har· sian offices for more information. ~
• age or hay is allowed for onl y a few vested when seeds were formed).
Harold Kneen is t he A~ricw· ;
This
level
will
not
be
exceeded
when
herbicides, so check the label before
tural Agent for Meigs County Ohi~
usi ng herbicides on· soybeans to be soybean and corn silage are ensiled · State University Extension.
1 ·
·
used for forage.
'The optimum time to harv~st soybeans for hay to optimize yield and

the precision fro m usmg futures mar·
kets" to provide price protections
both for farmers selling grain and elevators buying it, he added.
Complicating this already tangled
si• uation is the fact that rail transportation faltered after last year's harvest, forc ing much grain to be stored,
with huge costs in necessary offsetting futures transactions and in interest and carrying charges.
Grain merchandisers faced with
rapid price nuc tuations also have
. been unable to make decisions on
pri c~s ,

Poor growing weather,

Com futures continued to fetch
unprecedented prices· Friday due to
unstoppable demand that has drained
reserves and doubled prices in the
past year.
Meanwhile, energy prices continued to fall on expectations lr~i
crude oil will soon enter the market
after a six-ye ar absence. Wheat
gained primarily on pi&gt;or growing
conditions.
The
Commodity
Research Bureau's index of 17 commodities inched .14 points lower to
259.59.
Robust com exports were more of
a factor than were predictions weather would turn hot and dry in the Midwest by the middle of next week, said
analyst Jack Scoville of the ·Linn
Group in Chicago.
He said traders believe corn for
July delivery could rise another 9 per~
cent on foreign demand and.fears of
shortages - wl\ich has investors on
edge.
Agriculture Department news
South Korea had bought I05,000 tons.
of com belped reinforce pfices, Said
Refco Inc. analyst Rich Feltes.
Reserves are at their lowest point
in 48 years due to high demand at
home and abroad. Weekly export fi gures released Thursday indicated foreign demand continues· unabated.
Com for May and July delivery hit
all-time highs after making new
records Thursday.
Wheat gained in sympathy with
corn and on predictions lack of rain
and scorching temperatures would
continue to bake pans of Texas,
Scoville said.

"That threatens to hurt a crop that.
was never good," he said.
Much of the winter wheat crop has
been devastated by lack of moisture
and c9lder than normal temJ&gt;Cratures. · Spring wheat has suffered
from abnormally wet conditions in
North Dakota. a chief growing ·
region.
The crops are needed to bolster
wheat stocks that are at their lowest
poi nt in 50 years.
Com for May delivery rose II 1/2
cents to $5.28 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, and corn for July
delivery rose 5 cents to $5.04 1/2 a
bushel. July wheat rose II cents to
$5.89 a bushel.
Energy prices dropped ali expec·tations the United Nations and Iraq
soon could sign a deal allowing Iraq
to pump out up to 700,000 barrels of
crude oil a day within the next si x
weeks, said trader AI Lindseth with
GSC Energy in Atlanta.
"Tiiere really was not m11ch in the
way or fres h news into the market
place," he said. " I think it's just (in .
anticipation) of this impending agree•ment. ..
A tentati ve deal has been reached
so Iraq may sell $2 billion in.oil over
six m'Dnths for humanitarian aid.
The deal, however, needs President
Saddam Hussein's approval.
Three rounds of talks have stalled
over who would distribute goods to
the rebel Kurds in northern Iraq.
Baghdad says that as a sovereign
nation it should be allowed to make
deliveries. but the United Nations disagrees.
June light sweet crude dropped 14
cents to $20.64 a b&lt;"''el on the New
York Mercantile Exchange·
-- - z!.-.

FAMILY PRACTICE

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
U.S. trade deficit soared to $8.92 billion in March as imports hit an alltime. hi gh even though the two
biggest items on America's overseas
shopping list - crude oil and autos
- declined.

IN 3 DAYS .

.

----·-

Galllpoll•, OH

446-6620.

Present The

,.

SATURDAY, MAY 25, 9AM·5 PM

Stop B~ and. Ask Alloul ~··Eteetrie
Beat Pump At•• ~ .
.
.

269.UPPER~·IVER ·RD.
' (6.14) .
••

OPEN HOUSE SPE.CIAL~:

(POINT PLEASANT ~EDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFEISOII AYEIIUE

POIIT PLEASANT
(304) 675·1675
•

FREEII

Vo1.47, N0.17
18u•an, 10P8gss

·.'

•-*·

Pomeroy-Niddleport, Ohio, Monday, May 20, 1996

AGMnettCo. Nsw

prp~r.

'

Toxic solution leak forces 150
Mason residents from homes

·AU SICTIONAI.S SPICWLY PRICID!·-·--'····•'. ' .....
'

COMFORT ASSURED .,..
~

cleanup.
CSX headquarters are in Jack.
sonville, Fla.
,

Two Meigs men dead foUowing 1.car crash
on
Gallia
County
road
.
.
. Two passengers
: ol
d•
I
InJUre In ear Y
morning inCident

.

MIAMI (AP) - Singed oxygen
canister parts and melted tires are giving investigators mor~ evidence that
a.fii'C or explosion may hav~ occurred
.aboanl ValtiJct.Aight 592 before. it
made its deadly plunge into the
Everglades.
Two heat·dlim~ged canister end
caps were found in one of three tires
removed from the front cargo· hold,
The tire also was damaged by soot
and heat, Greg Feith, lead investigator for the National• Transportation
Safety Board, said Sunday.
··
Al&gt;out 119 oxygen canisters were
in the cargo hold, more than double
the number originally thought. None
were outfitted with safety c~, which
prevenf,;ICCidental ignition of the canisters' firing mechanisms, Feith said.
At least one canister recovered
from the May II crash had discharged and one fuing pin was folind,
Feith said. It was not clear when the
J;anister discharged, whether it was
heat-damaged, or whether any of the
other canisters on board were full.
1bc c3nisters, which contain a
volatile mix of chemicals used to pro- ardous.
"Valulet would not have accept·
vide o~tygen to passenger emergency
masks, can create heat of up 10 500 ed the shipment had it been accudegrees when in use. Valulet was not rately labeled as hazardous material
authorized to transpon full canisters, by the shipper," the company said in
considered hazardous materials when a statement Sunday,;
transported as cargo, federal officials
Aircraft parts in a companment
said.
near the cargo hold show evidence of
However,
Phoenix-based scorching or soot, and pilots reponSabreTech, an aircraft maintenance ed smoke in the cockpit and cabin
company that ' packed the canisters, before the plane went down. Investihas said it wasn't sure whether they gators, however, have not concluded
were empty.
·
· there was a fire or explosion on the
Valulet said it believed the con- DC-9, which crashed soon after taketainers, which were being returned to off, killing all II 0 people on board.
company headquarters in Atlanta,
Investigators have held open the
were empty, and therefore not haz- possibility of an electrical fire, but

By .P~UL SOUHRADA
Associated Preas Writer

With The Purchase of Each N~w. Single Section
.
T-Shirts, Microwaves,
Door Prizes, Giveaways
and Much More!

P1rtly cloudy
Iowa In the eoe. T
,
partly cloudy, highs In the
lOa.

Pick 4:
6-1·7-7

.
.
. GALLIPO~IS .- An mvesuga:
Uon os contmumg mto a one-car acct·
dent early today on Gallia County
Road I (Addison Pike) that killed two
Metg~ County .men ~nd le~t two others IDJUred, t~ Galha-Metgs Post of
•. the ·S~teHigh~~ Patrol reported.
Ktll~ were.ilnver Thomas Long,
20, 1153 Paulins Hill Road, Middlepon, and passenger Jeremy Atkuis,
18. 5-_1/2 Brick St., Rutland, accordmg to the patrol.

.
.
The injured passengers were
Rachel Forbes, 15, 128 Lincoln Hill.
Pomeroy, and Michelle King, age
unreported, 1649 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy.
. Based on preliminary information,
troopers said the car was westbound,
1.5 miles west of Stale Route 7. at
'.2:50a.m. when it went off the right
stde of the road and overturned.
"My guess would be excessive
· speec!." said Trooper Gary Kirk ·o~ a·
posstble cause of the acc1dent. Ktrk
is investigating the accident and was
still piecing the details together this
morning.
. .
Names of the dead and IIIJU":d

COLUMBUS - Gov. George
Voinovich's value as a vice presidential candidate might lie less in
what he would attract to the Republican ticket as in what he wouldn ' I:
neg!!Jivc attention. ,
1bc low-key cliief exaaative frum
the imJ)Qrtllnt Midwest battleground
combines an "aw shucks" image
with a reputation as master of detail.
It doe,sn 't hurt that he runs the
nation's seventh-most populitus state,
which holds 21 of the 270 electoral
votes needed to win the presidency,
and that he was the first Rep!Jblican
governor to endorse certain presiilential nominee Bob Dole.
In a ntee where character is likely to be an issue, "George has a clos- ,
et that has absolutely no skeletou in
it," said state GOP &lt;;itainnan"Robert
~enl)ett, who lobbied for Voinovich
in a letter to Dole.
• Bennett lllid Republicans have no
. fe11r that . the deeply religious
.

Voinovich will embarrass them with
marital - or extramariull - problems. Voinovich, 59, and his wife.
Janet, have been married for 33
years, .and she frequently accOmpanies him on official uips.
On the abortion issue, Voinovich,
like Dole, is against the procedure
.. ,...,.!'
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• ~ " "'e-111! nf U. c~"' _..,.. ~- "'
C"'"'
... r"'
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when a mother's life is at stake.
If there's a knock against
Voinovieh, it's his often-wooden,
sometimes rambling, speaking style.
A Dole-dull ticket might not play outside the industrial heanland.
"He's a little bit of a square," con. cedes Cart Steiner, chief of staff for
Ohio's House Republicans and one of
the architects of Voinovich's successful 1990 and 1994 gubernatorial

races.
But. Steiner quickly adds, "He's
a very known quantity." ·
One thing he misht like voters to
forget: a $400 million tax increase he
approved in December 1992. His critics dubbed him • "Rockefeller

~

were initially withheld ihis morning
pending notification of families .
Long and Atkins were de~;lared
d~ad at the scene by Dr. Edward B.e rktch, Galha County coroner. Kmg
was transported to Cabeii-Huntington'
Hospital·, Huntington, W.Va., by the
HealthNet air ambulance.
·
King was listed in good condition
by hospital officials, Kirk said.
Forbes was taken to Holzer Medical ·c~~tef b f ·the' G1illia County
EMS. and was treated and released
Kirk said.
'
The deaths marked the second and
third fatalities investigated this year
in Gallia County by the patrol.

Report alleges public education
getting·smaller share of b.u dget.
AKRON (AP) - Public education in Ohio has been getting a
smaller share of the state budget in
recent years, and legislators haYe had
a tendency to seek financial breaks
for some school districts while leaving others out, a newspaper has
reported in a series on school fund·
ing.
·
.
.. lbcAkron Beacon Journal reportseveral bundles of e1ecttical wiring ed Sunday and today on its analysis
located so far had no evidence of fire or state spending.
or heat damage. They are continuing
The Beacon Journal reported
to look for circuit breakers that were today that its investigation has found
repaired in Atlanta before the plane's that lawmakers. with the approval of
final trip to Miami.
governors, have used over the years
Meanwhile, new ground-mapping millions of dollars intended to eduradar was put to work Sunday and cate Ohio children to win friends and
should help identify key remnants of · reward supporters.
the plane, Feith said ..
The newspaper reported:
"We are anticipating the material
• Legislators have steer¢ grants to
we get back to be or a sufficient financially strapped schools in their
nature to help us lind the voice districts while other distri£ts in simrecorder," he said, referri11g to the ilar circumstances were forced to borcockpit voice recorder that may yield row money or ask voters for more
the last comments or the crew and taxes.
,
help answer many questions about
• Wealthy districts have received
the crash.
state dollars for sc~ool .buildings

that are already built and paid for
with local money, while di stricts
with fewer resources did without.
" I think that 's politics, " said John
.Goff. state schools superintendent.
" It isn 'I something I love. It is
something I have a very difficult time
with, bull guess. when you gel in this
seat ... you can get left out of the conversation, too. " .
The newspaper said Sunday its
;malysis of state data and records
showed Ohio h.S siphoned hundreds
of millions or dollars from public
education for other purposes.
·
Last year the slate, for the first
time .in vears. increased funding intn
public education. The $455 million
increase was the first sizable addition
since 1987, the Beacon Journal ~aid .
Gov. George Voinovich had
promised to raise education's-share of
state spending to its mid-1980s level
of above 30 percent. Instead , the
newspaper said, the level has fallen
from 27 percent at the time of his
election in 1990 10 less than 2$ per·cent.i_n_l995 , the lowest point in at
.,

Ohio rallies to promote Voinovich as Dole VP

HEAlPU P -

&amp;'Soft
Drinks

•:::J:;•

().3.9

•

'FREE CENTRAL·· AIR C:OND,IIIO·NIN -

TO ACCOMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

Plck3:

•

.

FRENCH CITY HOMESt INC. AND
ERIC N ELECTRIC POWER·

~(~

Klcbr: .
9-7+6-0-2

Sport8 on Page 5

·Evidence
:mounting
.
.·on cause
:of crash

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PAIN CONTROL CLINIC ·
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· LOSE f: 10'· LBS.

12-13-21-28 43 46

CSX

I
I
1 Fi.rri;..A.ucl 1

Dois

·-

Total head : 334.
HOGS · Prices steady to'$2 higher than May 8 auction.
FEEDER CATTLE - Steady.
Steers, $36-46; hei fers, $34-44 . .

•I ·----···I·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
,

ation:

because rales can change sig-

Super Lotto:

Officials said about 146,000 hydrochloric acid and the remainder family members.
HIIZllrdous material pounds of the chemical spilled onto was water, Ms. Bums said. The solu- Charles Allenswonh, 58. heard
about the leak, which occ urred
tion is used to de.an bricks.
track.
crews contain leak theHazardous
material handlers from
CSX officials ,~ad coniained the around 9:30 a.m., while listening to
from
railcar CSX Transportation Corp., which leak and planned to remove the car his police scanner. He lives about a
. MASON, W.Va .. (AP) ' - Most . owns the track, and DuPont Co., were from the 85-car train to transport the · mile from the site.
" I have my windows closed and
· residents are back in their homes · at the site, said Mason Fire Depan- remaining solution·in tractor-trailers,
my air eonditipning on and it didn 't
today after a railcat; leaking . ment Lt; Chris Johnson.
she said.
· hydrochloric acid solution fo~
CSX spokeswoman Kathy Bums
Ms. Bums said' no waterways affect me," Allensworth said.
Susie Brinker, 82, lives about a
them to evacuale for more than etght said the railcar holds a· maximum of were affected by the solution and that
mile from the leak, but had
quaner
hours, authorities said.
· 20;000 gallons. She said the rate of it can be easily neutralized with
not
been
asked to leave her home.
Investigators are still searching .for leakage was up 10 five gallons a lime. .
.
what caused the leak Sunday, forctng minute.
Hydrochloric acid can bum the Sbe said she remained indoors and
· about I SO residents within a half mile
Bums said the railcar was travel- . eyes and skin and cause respiratory : sealed ventilation areas. She said her
,
ing frotn Cumberland, Md., .to damage when inhaled. It is used in husband was out on errands..
of the s!te,to,flee their ~omes..
Her
husband
drove
up
to
the
leak
No tnjunes were tmmedta.~ly Cincinnati, although she was prohib- several chemical processes and ~ a
site early in the day, but wtis told to
Ms. Brinker said she could · see
rep~ned. ~ate Sunday, ~u'!'onues ited from ·releasing its owner.
cleaner.
·
return
home
and
keep
doors
and
winworkers
rerouting traffic off U.S. 33
· advtsed residents to remam mdoors
The
carried what she called a
Johnson said residents forced from
dows
shut,
she
said.
in
front
of
her hoilse during the leak
and seal ventilation areas because of ~~!2!~~!!!:!~2!2U~:!:!!.!.....l!!!:l!.l!!!!!!!:!~~!,!w~i!th!..fri~·e~nds~an:d
a wind shift that could carry chemi· ·;.
'
cal vapors in Mason's direction.

~

Grains gain on hot demand
By HILLARY CHURA
AP Business Writer

GALLIPOLIS - Auction results
from Wednesday's (May 15) Gallipolis Prod ucers Livestock Associ-

llificantly before they can resell the
co.r.u.vdities.
.
Uhrig emphasized that the Indiana
Legislature already has.enacted measures designed to reg ulate the hedgeto-arri ve contract business, and the
Ohio and Illinois legislatures are.
holding hearings on the issue.
While Iowa and other stales also
should move ·quickly to impose rules,
Congress must set nati onal standaids. With that in mind, Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Richanl
Lugar of Indiana has announced
hearings in June to study proposed
•
legislation.

Ea tern girls .
lose district
final game

~

Hedge contracts' danger decried· .Livestock report

By GEORGE ANTHAN

Oh_io Lottery

.

least 30 years.
.
If the promise of a 30 percent level had been kept, si:hools would have
received an additional $2.7 billion
over the past six years, and $795 million in 1995 alone, the Beacon Jo'll'nal said.
.
Voinovich blamed requiremen:ts
imposed by the federal government.
"Decisions made in Washington
over the past. decade have imposed
significant unfunded federal mandates on the states that have-dramatically reduced the states' ability 10 set
spending pri!lrilies, " Voinovich said.
· In 1994, 1.3 million Ohio school.children - 75 percent of those in
public schools - attended classes in
districts where the sehool boards didn:l have enough income' to pay the
btlls. Overall, the districts borrowed
at record amounts and spent $400
million more than they received .
From 1984to 1994, 11 2 of Ohio's
()II school districts sought loan guarantees from the stale to stay open:

Blaze hits
Gallipolis
structures
.

Voinovich" for elttending the sales
Steiner says Voinovich is unfazed
tax to services such as temporary · by criticism from Democrats or
employment agencies and health club Republicans. "Oetting attacked from
.
memberships, imposing a soft drink within his own pany doesn't bother
. GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis voltax that was later repealed tiy voters him," Steiner says. "!;very tim~
and increasing the top income tax someone takes a pot shot at him at the
unteer firefighters are still estimating
damages or an early morning fire
national levet. he smiles." ·
bracket.
Voinovich has made other misVoinovich's ethnic Catholic back. today that devastated a portion of the
Court Street business section.
sieps as well.
ground and nearly ) O.year political
While Dole and other GOP lead- career that ljegait in 1967 as a memA 12:25 a.m. call to the GVFD
ers were trying to score points with ber of the Ohio House and included
sent approximately I 00 firefighters
voters by calling for a repeal of a par- a 10-year stint as mayor of Democfrom Gallipolis and neighboring
lion of the federal gasoline tax, rat-heavy Cleveland could prove critcommunities to a blaze that damaged
Voinovich chided them for failing to ical to winning moderate Republic~tns ·
up to six downtown buildings.
A OVFD spokesperson said ·this
keep their eye on the balanced bud- and Reagan Democrats, political aiiaget.
morning that Dan Tax and Gallipolis
.lysts say. No 'kepublican has ever
The Ohio governor also paned won the While Hou·se without win·Beauty Supply suffered heavy strucGov. Volnovlch
ways .with the party over concealed ning Ohio.
tural damages and that these build•
weapons and affirmative action. On
ings
would most likely have to come
Voinovich dismisses such vic:e
set-asides for govemment&lt;:ontracts, presidential talk in public. "I have no · · A 12-mlnute vide~, sent last year down.
Voinovich proposed basing them on idea who Bob Dole is going to select to 1,500 party officials and insiders,
Other buildings that suffered damec_onomic and social disadvantage as his running mate," he says.
Was intended to promote Voinovich's ages were l'tiogie's Restaurant, min.
··
jllan to unseat Sen. John Glenn in inial smoke and water damaaes;
rather than on race. Most conservaBut. tike nearly all veep prospects, 1998, but now llis supp&lt;&gt;n~;n are , Elrod's, damage contained to back of
tives .want to scrap thelll altogether.
"It would be nice to know who the he does nolhins to discourage sup- showing it with Washington in mind building, a vacant building o'WIIed by
poners carrying on a shadow cam- ' ' "If that promotes him for v~ ·Russell Wood; and 8J1 11110 praae
~ George Voinovich is," said Sllte
· ,president, so be it," Steiner said .
Democratic Chairman David Lclind. paian for the. No. 2 slot:
(Continued on Plgtt 3)
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Commentary

- ~~~-~KM~,.~u.~y~20~·!1 9~·~----~--~~~--~~~----~~-P~~~m~·~o~y~·~u~~~-~~~~~~Oh~~~~------------~~;n.~o~~~~~,~s·~~~;~~~~·r~~~a

Hge2
•

OHIO W eath e r

lloncl8y, lley 20, 1111

Brown
defends
Clinton's
.
war
record
The Daily Sentinel
T.s~Gsnd {n 1.948

111 Cowl St., Pon....oy, Ohio
114-192·2151• Fax: 992·2157

.2.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Dole the doer will
have to do some
talking
fast
•

,By WALTER R. MEAR$

•

AP Special CorresponCient
SACRAMENTO. Calif- The campaign mono was a doer, not a talker And Sen. Bob Dole is going to have to stru:t talking fast now that he's
re wrmen it.
The Senate, )llhere his role was leader of the Repubhcan majority, was
to have provided a stage on whtch the GOP presidenual nom10ee would show
the way to gctthings done It wasn't work mg. Hence the all-or-noth10g gamble, resigning as leader and as senator 10 an effort to revttahze hts campatgn
aga10st President Clanton
.
N01 since Lyndon B Johnson renounced candtdacy for re-electton 10 1968
had so startling a move reshaped a campatgn for the Whale, House.
In this case, suddenly. the cross-town contest, prestdent versus maJonly
leader for lhe lirst ume e'tler, moves to a new arena.
Dole said has campaign would leave Washmgton beh10d to)ook to Amer·
1ca It means a road show, on a stramed budget, wathoutthe securaty of a
fallback to the Senate should Clanton win.
"Good move." satd Cahfornia Gov Pete Wilson. He satd it poants to an
mtenstve Dole campatgn in California. The polls ,put Clanton well ahead,
but Wilson said that was the product of an unrebuued campaagn on the Democratic sade, one ttuit Dole now will counter.
"Deny California to Clinton and you deny him re-election," said Wilson, Dole's state campaign chairman. Wilson said Dole as commUted to an
aggresstve campaign m the state with one-fifth of the electoral votes •t takes
to win.
George Bush's campatgn effectively conceded Califorma to Clinton four
years ago. "I wall not make that mistake," Wilson said Dole told htm.
It ts a catchup sttuation
"I think the most essential ingredtent now will be the senator himself,"
the governor satd an an anterview " .. He needs to get out into the country·
stde and not only press the flesh but get that free coverage you get when
you're in town.
"And he needs to take it to the prestdent," the governor satd.
Dole is due for a three-day Californaa campaign swing at the end of the
month his fifth as a candidate. compared wnh Clinton's two dozen visns
as pre~ident. DOle's first stops lA his new mode ~ere to campaign in the
10 dustrial Midwest, a testing ground that could be ptvotalm November, and
10 the South, whach is supposed to he part of the GOP electoral base
In California, Clanton is on the atr wath campaagn adverttsmg Dole cannot a'fford to match because hts spending is wuhan $2 million of the federal ceiling. Clanton, unopposed for renomination, had 10 times as much left
for pre-conventiOn campaigning
The Republican Pan.y will help finance Dole ·s travels. and broadcast some
ads, over predictable Democratic protests that they 're bending the campatgn
finance hmns The nauonal party •s launching a $20 mallion ad campaagn
against Clinton.
After the conventions, each nomanee wall get about $62 malhon an federal campaagn funds. The estimates of what an aggressive Cahforma campaign would cost range up to $10 mtlhon, much of whach could be ratsed
and spent in the state. Wilson wouldn't guess at a budget for the fall.
The surprasc shaft m Dole's course startled the Whtte House. where any
change was tinscuhng. smce things have been goang the prestdent's way.
The long-term impact of Dole's exn. alter 35 years 10 Congress, can't he
gauged. It is likely to boost him m the next round of polls A sign· CBS News
satd an overnight survey showed 60 percent approval of the dectsJOn Dole
announced on Wednesday, 30 percent disagreement.
Dole will be more difficult to depict as a symbol of the Repubhcan Congress, towdrd which voter moods have soured And his emotiOnal farewell
to Congress to nsk it all. "nowhere to go but the White House or home,"
made compelling campaign theater.
There is a risk for Dole: He and hts allies acknowledge that he can't match
Clanton as a performer or speechmaker. He was the workhorse and not the
sh&lt;iwhorsc. The Oemocrauc theme is that Clanton will he doang has JOb, concentratang on governing. whale Dole has chosen full-time campaignang
mstcad.
His dec•s•on to rcstgn and "l~ave behind all the trappings of power, all
comfon and all security" doesn't deal with the challenge of defimng goals,
of dealing with "the vast on thing," m Bush's awkward phrase.
Dole had thought to do it item by item in the Senate, his forum versus
Clanton's at the White House. But he was stymaed by Democrats and sometames by Repubhcan dascord in Congress as well. So he wall run wtthout
office. vowing to "reconstitute our momentum until Ills a great and agale
force."
No more stalls. fila busters, amendments to amendments. But no more Senate forum, either. No more opponunities to answer an issue with a bill, to
push popular measures for campaign impact even in defeat or delay.
Walson saad the Senate had become Dole's pnson. He's out.

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
nlst for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and nation·
al polities for more than 30 yeat&gt;5.

Letters to the editor
Fall soccer pr_~gram
Dear Edttor
Ah. spnng 1s m the air We hear
the crack of the bat, so now is the
time to be thinking about registration
for the Meigs County Fall Youth Soccer Program.
The sign-up period will be through
July 19. We are an equal opponunity organization dedicated to a time of

IToledo I .,..,. I

WASHINGTON
Very few think it u ~ally good havina a per- have more moral authority to defend Memorial to honor the 58,000 Amer·
members of the Clinton ldminisrra- son lib: Dole because it inspires the Clinton than Brown, whose arm was icans who died fightinJ a war he
bon would dare discuss Bob Dole's ~st of us."
shattered by a bullet as 111 18-year-old opposed.
Dole eschewed the subject of his Marine in Vtetnam. He underwent a
war record and BiU Cbnton's avoidBrown was genuinely moved.
ance of mllotary duty in the same
long and painful rehabilitauon lcavtng the ceremonies with a
breath.
process that left his limb panaally par- renewed respect and admaration for
Jack Anderson alyzed.
But a day before Dole announced
Clinton.
his ~signataon from tbe Senate, SecThe expenence taught Brown
"I have no problem with the pres·
and
retary of Veterans Affairs Jesse
~mpathy, whtch he needs as the
ident not having served," Brown
Brown saluted the presumptive
voiCJ; of the voiceless vet. Brown says. ·•t have no problem wuh. the
Michael
Blnsteln
Republican presadential nommce as
heaps the credit on Clinton as the best fact that he takes the posiuon he was
"symbolic of the greatness of the war injuries during his prevtous cam- president veterans have ever had, and against the war in Vaetnam. In retrohuman spirit. " He also lamented the paigns for nattonal office. But this is eager to serve as a character wll· -Sp&lt;.'Ct. you have to ask yourself, what
shrinking ranks of lawmakers whose year he 's embracing it wtth a ness for Oanton .. both as a person dtd we get out of that war. We gOI
characters were forged by military vengeance, hopmg he can get more and president .. with whose blessing nothinjl Out Of it Then W O hAvr. fn&lt;.
service, frening that a new generation mileage out of his war record than.he he has knocked down barriers and mer secretary of defense (Robert
of Americans has become strangers to has his legislative record. He may opened up doors for vets.
McNamara) who comes out and says
service and sacrifice
The
~lationshap
between
the
two
it
was a mistake .. a S8,000-life mtshave a theme but ~·s stall worldng on
" I have to tell you I respect Bob the tone, as he swings from sounding men took some work, however, and takc, 300,000 people wounded mtsDole," Brown told us. "When he shrill to sentimental In 1994 he mtght not have been possible had the take, ballions and billions of dollars
went into the servtce he was an ath· assened that war-scarred veterans two nOI bonded dunng Memorial mistake. It is good and we should
lete wath a beautiful body. He was bke himself and Oliver North "have Day ceremomes three years ago
always have a society that is open and
200 pounds and nothmg but muscle. to swallow hard" to accept Clinton as
The mood of Memonal Day 1993 people can take tssue. That's what
When they brought htm back he was thetf commander-in-chief.
speaks volumes about how far Clin· president Clinton did. "
less than I00 pounds and they
ton
has come. He braved jeers of
GRAVY TRAIN •• Sen. John
Dole would like to see the election
thought he was going to die. But cast as a contest between a war her:o "coward" to deliver one of the most McCain. R-Anz., is ahout to test.
there's something in the human spir- and a draft-dodger That's where poetic speeches of h1s presidency on whether Amtrak funding remains the ·.
it that keeps pushing you forward. I Jesse Brown will draw a line. Few a visit to the Vietnam Veterans true thard-rail of American politics. :
Accordmg to a draft copy of an .
amendmenJ McCain wall soon pro- ::
pose. the politically sacrosanct '
Amtrak would be dehvercd an ulti· .
matum: Become self-sufficient by the
year 2001 or be sold by "a qualified ·
auction house."
Amtrak, which is celebrating the .
AND
25th year of a two-year "cxperi- .
SO
mcnt," was launched m 1971 with a
$40 mtlhon federal appropnation ,
Although 11 serves less than one-half
of I percent of the tnterctty traveling · ,
pubhc. Amtrak has cost ta•payers ..
$18 btlhon a.' a federally subsidtzed , •
corporatton.
.
McCam wtll argue thattt's "unfatr ,
to contmue federal subsadtes at ahout
$1 btllion per year in order to provtdc
a limited service to a small group or ·
Amerkan citizens."
That "small group" includes some
powerful Senators, who have seen to
•
it that Amtrak's ticket ts always
punched on Capatol Hill Sen. Joe
Bidcn. D-Dcl., a frequent nder, has . ·
figuratively thrown htmself on the ,
tracks to save Amtrak m prevao~s:
years
Jack Anderson and Michael . ·.
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

By

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General MeMger

R. 'Sarge' Fisher

fun and learn mg. We are pleased with
the steady growth we have experienced and are looking toward a
bnght future.
Come JOin 10 the fun.
Nita Yost,
Secretary,
MelpCounty
Soccer AiiOclatlon

Five years aso: Lawmakers in the Soviet Union voted to liberalize foreign travel and emtgration. The American Red Cross announced measu~s
aimod at screenmg blood mote carefully for the AIDS vtrus. The movie ''B.arton Fink" won the top prizes at the 44th annual Cannes Ft_fm ~estival.

• IColumbus!a:zo I

Cold front may bring
break from heat wave
By T~ Associated Press

By The Associated Press

Farrakhan v. Malcolm X, 1996_..._......,.__
taon on Israel." Based on the answer,
"Hcntoff takes hiS direction on how
he will wntc that ~rtit:lc
"Mr Henton. · said Farrakhan . •
approvmgly, "as a Jew first and a
writer altcrwards." Hts point wa.~ that
black JOurnahsts should act ~cord·
mgly
•

This was precisely the OPfl"' "" uf ·. ·
how I work I had wrillen harshly of : ~
lsrocl's practtccs m the Occupted Ter- 1
ril&lt;lracs and of the savage mvasion of
Lchanon m 1982 Rogcr' W'lk'
• ms, ' · 1·
who had known me and my"Wratmg' ·:
lor a long tame, sat there and did not
say a mumhhng word.
'
He was not obsessed hy Farrakhan Just mllmidated
Wtlkms now makes a useful pomt · :1
1
"We educators have to make the '
effort to penn it sludcnb to cxpcncncc, .

•each other as educational oprnnurit· ; ~
lies rather than as part of that group
ot "others• nvcr m 'their' scctum nt
the campus cafctena "
To accompltsh that rcqmrcs a"
recogntlton that bagotry docs not "
exist only among wh1tcs And that' "
you don't have to he black to a.~k .
"Why do they hate us so?"
'
I

Nat Hentoff is a nationally "
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill •,1
of Rights.
~

••:

wrot&amp; a farewell spe~ch ard paign, gaving all and raskmg all, I Dole were mamed in 1975, she was '
rehearsed tl Thi'Cf months ago, after . must leave Congress that I love ... "
worth about $200,000. Her fortune IS ;
he botched the response to Clinton's
Well, not exactly all. Consider.
now esttmated at more than $2 mtl· 1
.. Robert Dole will retire wath a lion. As the prestdent or the Red
State of the Umon address, the punpensaon that is estimated by the Cross, she cams a salary of about ,. ;
National Taxpayers Union to be $200,000 a year. Since 1992, she has "
Joseph Spear
worth somewhere between $107,000 pulled down about $850,000 10
dits were saying he couldn't dehvcr and $122,000 a year. It comes with a speakmg fees .. half of whtch she , · ,
a luminous speech if they hooked him cost-of.living adJUStment, and if Dole donated to charity. Her mvestment •
up to a couple of dry cells. When he lives as long as the actuarial tables portloho IS thought to be extenSIVe. 0•,I ':
finally delivered his resignation state· predict he will, he will pocket
.. The Doles keep a home in Rus- ' '
ment, it was described by hundreds of between $1.9 million and $2.19 mil· sell, Kan. (has hometown), an apart- [
politicians and editorial writers as a hon in I!Upayer-funded n:tlremcnt mcntm the plush Watergate comple• I
"dramatic" success and a "bold" payments. As a World War II veter· in Washmgton, and a pncey condo- ' :
an who was wounded in battle, Dole mmaum m Bal Harbor, Fla.
move.
~:'
Dole himself did all he could to also receives an annual dtsability pen·
They earned it all, and I don't
~
enhance the notton of personal nsk, sion of nearly $18,000.
begrudge them a penny. B~t I do • 1 1
.. Before the Senate banned lecvaguely suggest10g that he would be
thmk 11 IS less than honest to suggest
without an emOIJonal rudder and ture mcome stx years ago, Dole that running for president maght ·
without a livelihood if he lost. Wit· made thousands of dollars every leave him broken of pocket as well as :
year in honoraria, and he socked a 101 heart.
ness:
· •• l
"My time to leave thas office has ofthe money away in a private penEven the pqlitical risk seems min- .. C
come, and I wtll seek\ the presidency sion plan. As of 1991, it reportedly imal. At the very least, he would be · :
with nothing to fall back on but the would have paid him $56,000 annu· esteemed as an elder statesman. BarJudgment of the people, apd nowhere ally.
ry Goldwater, after all, is 87 and he
r
•• Dole has a law de~. and if he is still n:garded as a guru.
to go but the White House or home ...
:
"As the campaign... begins in loses. he could surely pick his fmn
JOHph Spear Is a 11Jadlcaled ·
earnest, it is my obhgallon to the Sen· and probably his salary.
writer for N~ Eaterprile
•• When Elizabeth and Robert AaoclatiOa.
ate and to the people of America to
r- J
~~
leave behind all the trappings of powIn 1932, Amelia Earhart took otr fiom Newfoundland for Ireland to •...
er, all comfort and all security...
"To concenrrate upon the cam- become the first woman to Oy solo acrosa the Atlantic.

·I

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11 killed on Ohio roads

..

Judging from the reaction to Bob
Dole's announcement that he wall
resagn the Senate seat he has held for
27 years to concentrate on hts presidential campaagn, you would thmk he
was risking hts life savmgs on a roll
of the dice, or takang a second mort·
gage to finance a secret mventton, or
selling the famtly farm to stake a long
sl)ot on the ~emor golf tour.
II is utler nonsense
By so saying, I do not fnean to disparage Dole's courage or has sancerity. I do mean to say he 1s being a bit
disingenuous.
As every mteresterl catizen knows
by now. Dol&lt; announced on May 15
tilat he wtll quat the Senate to focus
on his run for the prestdency. He had
planned to c,onduct a "rotunda campaign," sending Republican bills to
the White House and defymg President Clinton to stgn them. B~t the
Democrats thwarte.d Dole wtth legislative tricks and left him lookmg
ineffective.
He therefore decided he needed to
quit playing t~ i,nside game, needed
to hone his message, needed to get on
the road and sell it. For several
weeks, he confided in no one but his
wife and his camp&amp;Jgn manager. He

1

The record hig~ temperature for
thts date at the Golumbus w11ather
station was 91 degrees m 1962. The
record low was 36m 1929.
Sunset wall be tomght at 8.44
Sunnse Tuesday will be at 6: II
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Vanable cloud mess with
a chance of showers and thunderstonns north and· central. Partly
cloupy south. Lows from the mtd 60s
to around 70.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy north and
variable cloudiness south. A chance
of showers and thunderstorms Highs
from the mad 70s to ,lower 80s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday .. Fa~r. Loy;s 55 to 65.
Haghs m the 70s.
Thursday ...Faar.' Lows in the 50s.
Htghs an the upper 60s to the mad 70s
• Fnday .Faar Lows 45 to 55. Highs
10 the mtd 60s to the lower 70s.

A cold front will approach Ohio
from the upper Great Lakes. The
front will cause scattered sh,owers
and thunderstorms to develop across
northern Ohio.
The front wtll progress mto northern Oh10 and central Indaana by
Tuesday morning. Clouds wtll
mcrease as the threat of showers and
thunderstonns spreads mto central
Ohio Temperatures overnight wall
tall mto the mad-60s to around 70
degrees.
The front will move through the
state during the day on Tuesday.
Therefore, the cloud cover wall thicken as the chance of precipitataon contmues statewtde throughout the day.
Once the front moves to the east
Tuesday mght, temperatures will
cool to more seasonable readings for
the later half of the work week.

808 DOLE·ISH

Spear says 'Don't IC?se sleep over Bob Dole'

~

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SToP AcTIN6

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W. VA.

MIND

tsh docto&lt;S IOJeCI the AIDS vtrus mto
black babies); and Kwame
Toure/Stokcly Carm1chael (the anly
good Zaomst is a dead Zionast)?
In vaew of Roger Wilkins' long.
honorable and persistent civil rights
and integrationist record, at may
sometimes be difficult for him to pubIt ely admit this poasonous damcnsion
of separatism on college campuses.
However. docs Wilkins' accurate
point that some black students feel
excluded by whites justify some ol
them demonizing all Jews .. and most
other whiles 1
Wilkins charges that I am
" obsessed" with Farrakhan. But Farrakhan is a fact. A large. mcsmeriz-.
an@: fact .. all the more influential an
the absence now of such pranciplcd.
courageous black leaders of the pa.~t
as Walter White, Roy Walkans, A.
Philap Randolph, Whatncy Young,
Martin Luther King, Bayard Rustm
and Malcolm X. (There is also, of
course, a current deep lack of force ful white leaders of mtegnty on and
off the campus )
I have had dtrecl expenence with
Farrakhan 's slipperiness. In 1984, he
was on Ted Koppel's "Ntghthne,"
along wtth Roger Wtlkins, among
others Farrakhan c1ted me as a
"responsible Journalist." Whenever,
he said, Hcntoff "writes an artacle on
someone, he always asks their posi-

SOlTI'HSJOE; W.Va. - Awm:k se~ driver who w.u .
that killed a Fai111JQ11t man at the (National l-lot Rod Assocaabon) cer· •
Ninian Russell Cole "Sarae" FiJher. 52, Guysvalle, died llatunlay, May Kanawha Valley Dragway m South- tified and .licen~. This_was hislh!rd :
18, 1996 at his ~sidence.
stde Saturday n:mains under investi- seaso.n dnvmg tbts parllcultr car.
,
Born Sept. 25, 1943 in Dayton, son of the late Russell Gole and Wilma gallon, according to track owner
Suckley was Down from .the •
J. Gole Fisher, he was site mana,er of the Mei11s County Health Recovery Tom Snyder.
dragstrip to Pleasant Valley Hospttal, •
Services Inc. offices in Pomeroy. and a ~tired U.S. Navy veteran.
Randy Stickley, age unknown, whe~ he was pronounced. dead.
,
He was a graduate: of Milton-Union Hillh School, West Milton, an~ 9hi,o was killed an the accident whtch
Mason County Coroner Dr. Bre- ;
Unaverstty, Athens. Durin&amp; his 20-year naval career, he served as eleclr!ctan s occurred around 8 p.m.
ton Morgan said his preliminary :
mate, chief petty officer and instructor, with special skills as a mtnesweepSnyder said Stickley drove off the autopsy showed Sucldey dted from ,
er, electrician and craftsman.
·
end of the rrack under full power. head and chest injuries
:
· He was awarded the National Defense Service Medal and Sea Service . Officials are investigating the acciThe body has. been ~nt to the.~
Deployment Ribbon, receiving an honorable discharge on Sept. I, I 983. He dent, but have found nothing yet. he , State Medacal E•ammer s Office m
transferred to the USN Fleet Reserve, serving the~ until his ~tirement in said.
Charleston.
•
1993.
•
.
'This was a very unfonunate
;
·He was a registered candadate of the Ohio Chemical Dependency Goun- thing," Snyder wd. "He was a very
:
selors Credentialang Board, 101tlally employed by Health Recovery Servtces
Inc. of Athens, m 1989, withm the Rural Offenders' and Driver'~ Intervention Programs. He was a 1991 graduate of the Gallia County Pohc~ Acade•
•
my in Galhpolis, and was an auuhary patrolman for the Pomeroy C1ty Pollee SHS Clus of '86
Rtvlval announced
· ~
.
Deparlnlept.
The Southern High School Class
Revival servtces will be held at the
He was a member of the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of Pohce Lodge of 1986 will observe its IOth year Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church,
#95, Metgs County Commumty Corrections Local Plan~mg Board, Meigs reunion with a family picnic at Star Middleport. The Rev. &lt;;alvin Minis •
County Family and Children First Counctl, and the Galha, Jackson, Metgs Mill Park m Racine starting at II a.m. wtll be the speaker, 7:30p.m. night· ;
Board of Darectors of Serenity House
Bring own lunch.
'
ly through Saturday.
He is survived ry his wife, Ltsa R. Fisher of Guysville; a son, Jacob L.
Fisher of New Pans; a stepdaughter and stepson, Jennifer G. Dailey and SHS alumni banquet
Memorial Day dinner
Patrick J. Dailey, both of Guysville; a brother, Damel L. Fisher of CovingAnnual matchmg fund dinner wil •
The Racme/Southern Alumni
ton; a SISter, Jeanne Bogner of Massillon; has mother-•n-law, Genev~ L. Riley Associauon banquet will be held Sat· be held at Burhngham Modern
of Athens; and father-m-law, Lawrence L. McDaniel of Johnson Ctty, Tenn urday, 6 p.m. at the school. Reserva- Woodmen hall, Memonal Day Mon,.E
He was preceded in death by his adoptive father, Wilham E. fisher.
tions are to be made with Shirley day, May 27, II a m. to 6 p.m Smor- ~
Services will he I p.m Wednesday in the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Johnson, Portland, 843-5279. Tickets gas board style, eat m or carry out for
Athens, with military graveside semces and bunal to follow at the West can also be purchased at Home a donatton, also bak:e sale Monday !!0
Umon Street Cemetery, Athens. Fnends may call at the funeral home from National Bank and Southern High after home office mat&lt;;:hes wtll be glv-J
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
School.
en to Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters for
thelf medical, surgtcal and rehab
Sorority to meet
btlls.
!~-'
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Beta
Beta
Chapter,
Beta
Preceptor
Thomas S. Long Jr., 20, Mtddleport, died Monday, May 20, 1996.
Ph• Sorority. wtll have a pic- Special service
Born Aug. 12, 1975, son of Tom and Jenmfer Cremeans Long Jr. of Stgma
nac at 6:30 p m. Thursday at the home
1()
Cheshtre, and Sondra and B1ll Weaver of Pomeroy, he formerly attended Rtv· of Joan Corder.
Spectal serv1ce at the Red Brush ~·
er Valley Htgh School and was a former employee of Mogie's Restaurant.
Church of Chnst, Saturday 7 ·p.m
•
Survtvmg m additiOn to his parents are two sons, Thomas Long III and Special session set
Sunday mommg worship, 10 a.m ' ' '·
Cratgory Long; a fiance, Rochelle Jenkins of Middleport; two stepbrother.&gt;,
Chester Townshtp Trustees will and evenmg servtce, 6 p m. Denve'"l •
Billy and Joseph Cremeans, and two stepsiSters, Lisa and Stephante Cremeans meet m special session, 7:30 p.m Hill Foster, W.Va., wtll be the speakaai of Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va.; and a paternal grandmother, Mary Louise Long Tuesday at town hall
er
of Zanesville.
Servaces will be II a m Wednesday an the McCoy-Moore funeral Home
\Vetherholt Chapel, Galhpohs Friends may call at the funeral home from 68 p m. Tuesday.

Meigs announcements

MAKE UP YOUR

My first editor was a black man . don 't judge you because you're
Wilham Harrison. who ran a local black. We judge you because of
weekly in Boston. He heard about me what you do. So we're not against
from a black fraend of mine up the people because they're whale. We're
street where I lived I was 19, and
Harmon satd he would try me on
NatHento"
some book reviews.
In the parlance ofthe time. he was agamst people who praclt~e ractsm."
a "race man" with an encyclopedic
I quoted from that speech at
knowledge or black h1story and Mtchtgan State Unlverstly before an
inequality He had no patience with audtcnce that mcluded a large, umbigotry of any kind. mcludmg anti· ficd sectiOn or hlack students. It was
Scmittsm. It dramcd energy, he told called As One, us members were
his black staff. that had to go 10to the acolytes ofMmtsler Farrakhan. They
politics of rcdtstribuung income and hstened to Malcolm's words wnh
power.
cold hostihty.
Years later, I met another "race
Tills bl~ck orgamzauon had satd
man." Malcolm X. Our first conver- and wnllen things that greatly trousation was 10 a Nation of Islam lun- bled some of the Jewish students on
chconcuc The background mustc campus. But anu-Semuism among
was aJUkebox recordmg .. " A White some black student groups is hardly
Man·~ Heaven Is a Black Man's
unaque at colleges. Yet, black histo·
Hell" .. by calypso smger Lou a&gt; Far- ry professor Roger Wtlkins enurcly
rakhun
agnored thts form of black bigotry 10
Malcolm and I became I nends and has recent Washington Post arttclc,
alter hts murder. I was not•surpnscd "The Rcaliues of Campus Separato learn that a year before, dunng a tion ."
lecture at Wayne State Umverstly, he
It ts hardly umvcrsal but can be so
had reacted angnly to a black student deeply woundmg that one afternoon,
who had begun a brutal I trade agamst a young Jcwtsh student at UCLA saad
"blood-suckmg" Jews Malcolm told aloud, to no one m particular. "Why
the Student that kmd O[ Ignorant big- do the blacks hate us so?"
Otry helped no one, mcludmg blacks
After all, who uivites such speakThe same year, Malcolm, in ers to colleges as Khallid Abdul
another speech, satd "We don't Muhammad; Farrakhan (when they
JUdge you because you're whue; we can afford h1m); Steve Cokely (Jew-

Dragway driver killed._
in Saturday accident
NHRA:1

County Road.
SATURDAY
CIRCLEVILLE - Norman J.
Lancaster, 57, of London, dnver 10 a
two-car accadent on Oh10 104 10
Packaway County
,
MEDINA - James Sheperd, 77,
or MediOa, motorcyclist 10 a IWO·
veh1cle accadent on U.S. 42 an MedIOa County.
CINCINNATI '- Tyrone E. Davenport, 33, of Cmcmfiati, d!tver in a
one-car accadent' on a Hami.lton
County road.
FRIDAY NIGHT
ASHLAND - Donald A Smtih,
41 , of Ashland, dnver in a two-car
acctdent on U.S. 250 1n Ashland
County
AMHERST - James W. Gregg,
19, of Amherst, dpver 10 a one-car
accident on a Lorain County road.
ZANESVILLE Mark A
H11lard, 18, of Zane~v1lle, dnver m a
one-car accident on a Muskingum
County road.

Eleven people died in traffic acci·
dents on Ohao roads over the weekend, the State Highw'iay Patrol saad
today.
.
The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday tlu',!lugh Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
COLUMBUS Laurel C.
.-rielow, 34. of Columbus, passenger
;n a onl\.·Car accident on a city street.
CHARDON - Bruce H. Panek,
45, of Chesterland, motorcy~ist on a
Geauga County road. •
TIFFIN- Kenneth E. Fox, 45, of
Fremont, niotoreyclist in a two-vehacle acctdent on a ·seneca County
Road.
CAMBRIDGE - Charles /:.
Boyd, 29, of Cambridge. motorcychst 10 a two-vehacle accident on
Ohio 209 in Guernsey County.
GREENVILLE - Anthony E.
Swtger, 25, of Greenville, driver in a
one-vehicle accident on a Darke

Kanawha County official
dies in skydiving mishap
CHESAPEAKE (AP) A
Kanawha County, W.Va., coml"issioner died Sunday after a skydiv10g
acctdent m whtch his parachutes
~ailed to mflate, a wnness saad.
Gary Kmg and two other davers
were attemptmg a Jump from 10,000
feet, said skydtver Jerry Waters, who
saw the acctdent Paramcdtcs attended to Kang for about20 minutes.
Waters satd that when King's
mam parachute failed, he released his
reserve chute, whtch opened but did
not innate
King had been skydiving for sev' · - - - · -~

eral years and had .completed about
30 jumps, Waters said.
'
Kmg. 47, of St. Albans, was elected a commissioner in 1994 and was
a fonner"J:ommtssion president. He
also served as a county attorney in the
1980s and was a heutenant_colonel in
the Army Reserve.
County Commtsstoner Lewis
" Duke" Bloom said King will be
remembered as a strong proponent of
open government.
. King IS survtved by his wife, Sandra, a son, Rob, anti two daughters,
Ashley and Carrie. ~
Funeral arrangements have not yet
been made, Bloom said.

The Qaily Sentinel
•
(l!SI'S Zl3-968)

Stocks

Publilltcd ever)' afternoon, Monday through
Prida), Ill Coon St , Po1111:10f, Ohio, by the
Ohio Voile) Pubh1hi1111 Company/Oanneu Co.
Pomeroy. Ob1o 4:S769, Ph 992--2156 Second
,,.., poo11p pold at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Ashland Oil ...........................42%

Met~~IM!r.lbe

Blnk One ···r--....................... 35~

Am Ele Power .......................40~

Akzo ......................................5'7\
AT6T ......................: ...••......•..61~

Auocialod Pn:n, and thi Ohio

Newapaper .t.uociauon

\

POSTMASTBR: Send addret1 cormc:d&amp;s to
The llallf Sentinel, Ill Coun St., PolllefO)',
Ohio 45769'.
,
SUISCRII'TION RATES

'

1

•

IIJConleror
-0111! Weell.
.............. ..............
..... ...... $2.00 ;
One Monlh- .. .... ... .
.. ......... $8.70
One Year ... ·-· ... .... .. . ....... .... .... $104.00

SINGLE COPY PIUCB
Dolly ......... ... ......... . ......... lSC..II
Subtorllten not doolrina 10 pof ihe corrier may
rmdt In advance direct 10 Tbe Dally Send~et
oo a.....,, dx or 12 -do bool• Cndil will be

&amp;1·.. ~--- •

'

. . . . home·,

No subtorlpdoo by moll pemllned lo ....,
oOrme itl'llillblo

_......,c-11
--Mt!Pc-11 $29.25 I .
~ '"'

MAILSliBIICIIIPFIONS

13 ... .................... - - ......... .....$27.!0
26 ~................................. """"'""''"3.82
!2 ................. ..: ............._$105.56 .

., Woo~&lt;~...... . ............,. .............._,

26 "'-booo ...
~. UoOO .!.~ .... OOoOOOS56o68 i ~
!2 .......:......... ,........................... $109.12 ~
OY O

'

-

~

.

......

"''

.

-

~

.....

Bob Evana ............................ 15'1t

Borg-Warner ...........................,.. •

Champion lnd........................18~
Charming Shop .....,................
City Holding ............................23
Fecienll Mogul .......................1~
Geni\&amp;H .................................68\

Q

Goodyear T6R ......................5ft
K-man ....................................,10
Lands End .............................
Limited Inc ............................ 2o\
Peoplea Baocorp...................23
Ohio Valley Banlt ....................;J2
OM Valley ...........................~.31\
Rockwe-ll ..............................557.4
Robbins • Mpna..................45\
Royal Dutt:h/Shell ,............. 1411\
Shonay'alr1c.........................1271.
Star Bank .........,....................

2n

m.

Wertdy lnt'lt...........................1·1 \
Worthlngton lncP. ...·..........,....,11,\

-·-·..,.

Stock reports are the 10:3
a.m. quotas provldld by .Advut
of Gallipolis.

~.
·.~

1
I

_:1_ .

t

J

Thomas S.' Long Jr.

·•r

Local News in Brief:

Gilbert E. Pearson Jr.
Gllben E Pearson Jr., 68, Mason, W.Va .. died Saturday, May 18, 1996 an
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born May 7, 1928 in Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va., ,son of the late Gilbert E.
Pearson Sr and Rebecca Walker Pearson. he was a retired welder an4 burner on construction crews, and was also self-employed. He was a U.S. Anny
veteran
Survavang arehis wife, Joyce McDermiu Pearson; two daughters and sonsin-law, Samantha and Make Lavender of Middleport. and Kathy and Mtke
Voshcl of Wtlliamstown, W.Va.; two sons and daughters-an-law, Rick and
Becky Pearson, and Rocky and Say bra Pearson. all of Mason; two brothers,
Bart Pearson of West Columbia, W.Va., and Richte Pearson of Mason; and
seven grandchaldren and three step-grandchildren
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Leo and Jason Pearson;
and a sister, Estovone Pearson
'
Services will be I p m Wednesday m the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Pomt Pleasant, W.Va, wath the Rev LoUis A Hussell· and the Rev. Juanita
Rousch officiatmg llurial wall be in the Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m Tuesday

Minor two-car ac~ident Investigated

'·

Driver escapes injury in accid_ent .

~;:

No mjuraes were reported after a Maddleport woman apparently fell asleep
at the wheel, crash10g mto a car and a water meter m the village of Rutland
Sunday mommg, accordmg to Shenff James M Soulsby
Accordmg to reports, Angela R. Searles, 20, Middleport, .was traveling
south on Mam Street when she ran off th'e left stde of the roadway, into the
yard of Harold E. Hysell where her 1988 Hyundat struck a brick flower bed,
fence, and a parked car belongm~ to Hysell's Used Cars.
Heavy damage was recorded to the flower bed and the par~ed 1989 Chevy
Celebrity After Searles vehtcle was removed, offictals found that a Rutland
Village water meter had been damaged.
No Citations were ISSUed in the accident. No inJunes were reported

c••

•1J

Thomas S. Long Jr.

"' ".

No CJiatJOns were ISSUed in a miOor two-ca~ accident Saturday afternoon .....
10 Pomeroy, accordmg to vallage Po lace Chaef Gerald Rought.
,,.,
The acctdent occurred at 4:57 p.m on ,Pleasant Ridge. Accordmg to
reports, Mtchclle A. Werry, 23, Pomeroy was driving her 1988 Chevy on "I·
Pleasant Ridge when she masjudged distance and inadvenently struck a parked ~I"J
1985 Mercury, owned by Alma Queen, Pomeroy.
. :··
Damage to both vehacles was light. No inJuries were reported.

&gt;\

·.
"'
"':

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP)- lndiana-Ohao direct hog pnces at selecte~ buying
points Monday by the U.S. Department of Agnculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts mostly 1.00 higher; demand to good on a moderate run.
US. 1·2, 220-260 lbs. 59.00-61.00, few 58.50 and 61.50.62 00, plants
60.50-62.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 51 50-58.50.
Sows: steady to firm.
·
US. 1-3, 300..500 lbs. 40.00-45.00; 500-650 lbs. 45.00-48.00
Boars: 34.00-36.00.
Weekend est1mated receapts: 38,000. •
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association were not avatlable.
A

EMS units answer 17 calls
Umts of the Metgs County Emergency Medacal Servace recorded 17
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, mcludang two transfer calls.
Units respondmg mcluded.
POMEROY

Hospital news

10.38 a.m., Saturday, Mona Burdent, Pleasant Valley Hospttal, assisted by Mtddleport squa4;
12 33 a.m , Saturday, Overbrook
Center, Everell Delaney, PVH, assist·
cd by Middleport squad;
3 21 p.m., Saturday, Lancoln
ljc•ghts, Dennas James, treated at the

scene,
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admtsstons - none.
1 4 20 am , Sunday, South,Second
Avenue,
Racheal Wilson. Holzer
Saturday dtscharges - none
Medical
Center;
Sunday admassions- none.
6 40 a m , Sunday, Eagle Rtdge
Sunday diScharges - none.
Road, Jack Devore, PVH
Holzer Medical Center
MIDDLEPORT
Discharges May 17 - Cynthta
39
p.m
, Saturday, fire depart·
6·
Waugh, Teresa Van Cooney, Chnsltment,
Grant
Street,
stove fire, Terry
na Edwards, August Keels, John
Kahoon, Edward Huston, Mary Ous- Yeauger res1dence, no mJunes;
8 44 p.m , Sunday, Thard and
ley.
Ma10
Streets, Earl ~mght, Hoizer
Births - Mr and Mrs Wayne
Medtcal
Center;
Albury, daughter, Rto Grande , Mr
9 43 p.m , Sunday, fire depart·
and Mrs John Erreu, son, Buffalo,
ment,
to Mason, W.Va .. for atr assisW.Va
tance
to Mason Volunteer Fare
Discharges May 18 - Mrs1Robert
•
Department.
Allen and daughter, Robert Halley,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Rosahe Bosttc, Melissa Francts, Mrs.
7 03 a.m., Saturday, State Route 7,
Wayne Albury and daughter, Pearl
Mary
Rankan, treated at the scene;
Rhea, Mrs. John Errett an&lt;L son,
12·57
p.m, Sunday, fire departWesley Hemck, Nicholas Patnter
ment
and
squad,
SR 7, auto accident.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Josh
Chapman,
treated
at the scene.
. Grady Johnson, daughter, ~ rown
Eleanor Boyles, transported to Cam·
City.
den
Clark Memorial Hospatal.
Discharges May 19 RACINE
Edith Yerian, John Roach.
12:49
p:m
.. Saturday, Pickens
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Street, Kenneth Shuler. Veterans
Dunaway, daughter, Thurman.
Memonal Hospatal
(Published with pennission)

GEM CLOTHING
Middleport, Oh

-so% off
all used clothes
992-6684
10:00 am· 5:00pm

"'

Thomas S. Long Jr. ; 20, Middlepbrt, dted Monday, May 20, 1996.
"''
Born Aug. 12, 1975, son of Tom and Jenmfer Cremeans Long Jr. of
Chesh1re, and Sondra and Ball Weaver or Po..eroy, he formerly auended Rtv- '·
er Valley High School and was a former employee of Mogie's Restaurant. ..q
Survivmg m additton to his parents arc two sons, Thomas Long I~I and ,..,
Craagory Long, a fiance, Rochelle Jenkins of Middleport; two stepbrothers,
Bally and Joseph Cremeans, and two steps asters, Ltsa, and Stephanie Cremeans • 1
all of Pomt Pleasant, W Va ; a paternal grandmother, Mary Louise Long of .I•
Zanesville, and a special friend, Cratg Athey.
..,
Servtees wtll be II a.m. Wednesday, May 22, 1996 m the McCoy-Moore ..
Funeral Home Wetherhoh Chapel, Gallapohs Fnends may call at the funer- 1 1 ~
al home from 6-8 p m. Tuesday.

Blaz~ strikes Gallipolis

, : ~:

Court Street, closed off tht ~ morntog and congested wnh onlookers,
will rema10 closed until the butld10gs
can he brought down.
F~refighters sttll on scene at press
ttme were unsure of a cause of fire,
whtle the State Fire Marshal's
tion ."
Pepartment
continues to saft thr~ugh
Huggins reported that no tax
the
for answers.
records were lost m the fire and thilt .
anyone wtshmg to speak to a Dan Ta• 1
representative can call 446-7321. :
While a lew of the butldmgs I
serve as upstatrs apartments, alf of the 1
tenants were able to get out of the 1
butldings, a spokesperson at the 1
scene of the fire sa ad.
•
Twenty firefighters were treated at\
the scene for heat e&lt;hausllon and a
volunteer from the Rio Grande Vol- 1
unteer Ftre Department was taken to
:Holzer Medical Center upon IOJUrang
i his hllnd. .
1 Fire Departments sending trucks,
, equipment, and personnel in addition
1'o Galli_polis were Point Pleasant,
Centerville, Mtddleport, Po~nen1y,
Guyan Township, Vinton and
Grande.

(Continued from Page 1)
owned by Bill Jackson
"It's JUSt time to staft. over agam,"
saad Prestdent of Dan Ta• Claudette
Huggms "We hope not to be down
. long. We're lookmg for a new loca-

·-;
.. :,
•~ l

"'
,, ,
],.

�~.M.y20,1-

~Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Pege4

Monday, May 20, 191&amp;

~~:~raves· . hand Re.ds 9·5
)y PAUL NEWBERRY
'
An.ANTA (AP)- For 46 days.
;ihe !&lt;danta Braves looked up to the

ioss to take top spot in NL East

Considering the 8raves have never hccn an especially strong first-half
team, it might already he time to
C&lt;&gt;nccdc 'them another divisional

Cincinnati - Atlanta's 12lh victory
in 14 games. " We're in good shape.
All the guys know we usually play
better in the second half than we do
nag.
in the first half."
Montreal's 46-day hold on the NL
'" W~' vc yet h&gt; hit our stride,"
thinl ha.-.:man ChiJ'IICr Jones said . East lead came to an end when the
Sulklay after a 9-.5 victory over Expos lost at San Diego 4-3, a few
hours after Atlanta's latest victory..At
28-15, the Braves have a half-game
lead over the Expos and the best
record in the league. Remember, too,
it's only May.
Tnnl«ht'•J:•mts
During a five-year run as one of
Florida tlitartt 2-41 :.1 &lt;1NCINNATI
{Ruth• 0-&amp;). 1 :3~ fUll
'

,Montreal Expos. Today, the World

:Series champions are finally in the
"1p01 everyone expected them to

oo;cupy - first place in the Nation-

.al Leaaue East.

baseball's best team, Atlanta has traditionally started its run for the
playoffs in the second half. For
instance, last year at this time the
Braves were lhird in the NL East
with a piddling 23-20 record. five
games off the lead. They wound up
winning the division by 21 games.
The difference is hitting. As usual, Atlanta has the best pitching in the
league, but the batters have increased
their average from .2.50 last year to
.276 this season and their runs per
game from 4.5 to 5.1

Scoreboard
Baseball

-01-

tDnlbek I·Jt. It~ p.1n.

L fJi.

Iii

8111inao ............... 2)
TotOMO ............. ..... 20 22 . .476
- . .................... 16 24 .400
Detroii ................... Jl )) .167

I~
~

16
18

.600 .
.Sill

0

OKico-.................24

(Cudioui

1

14 ~

Collf~a ............... 20

2- ~). 10;~

p.m.

Tuesday's games
Monuul (fa.uero 3-.. ) :11 San FranciKO U..eirft 2-4), .1:35 p.m.

.t~
7~

.S71
_jOO

florida (Brown 2-4} at CINCINNATI

10
II '

.4J9

Waiel'll Dlwlliln

I::.::
: : : :fz
Otlland .................20

5-1 t Ill 'Ctll~ado

MootreaiiPUilllll I- ll Ill San Francisco (0 . Fctn.andtt 3-2). 10~ 1"-m.

I

"-Cily ........... IR 26 .40'1
•

&lt;NeaJic

Pin•burln

· .610

18
Mihnube ............. 20 20
MJ._a .............. ll 2J

...

. (~y0010 2·)), 9: ~ p.m.
.
New Yort {Jones .\..I) ;a~ Los Anzclel

C..I'IIDI•IIIon

a.£Vfl.AHD .. , ... 28

der, the Braves went 0111 and swept
a three· game series from the Reds.
" We found out we could win
without David Justice in the lineup.~·
said Jones, who was 4-of-5 on Sunday. " It would be different if we
said, 'OK, at the beginning of September, we're going to get him.··But
we know now that we're not going
to have him. The other guys have to
step up, that's the bottom line."
Fred McGriff, on pace for his best
season, was 4-for-4 with two double..
and four RBis, capping off the day
with a seventh-inning, two-run
homer that was the 300th of his
career. He is only the 71st player to
reach that milestone.
McGriff has been the epitome of
consis tency during his 10-year
career, hilling at least 20 homers
· every season and 30 or more seven
times . This season, though, he is
stanin~ off like he wants to truly gain
recognition as one of the game's best
players, hilling .353 with II homers
and 40 RB!s in the first 43 games.
" I've still got 400 or more to
catch Hank Aaron," said McGriff,
whose locker is next to the sealed
cubicle where Aaron dressed during
his Atlanta career. "But there's a lot
o( satisfaction ."
Like McGriff, Smaltz (9-1) is on
JI3Ce lor a career year. The right-hander, who ~ever has won more than
15 games, allowed two hits in seven
~See REDS on Page S)

Ol K.11tl.l ((';lSIIIItl 1 - ~) :Ill' 1\llanfa (A Y·
ery 4-)). 7·40 r nl.
St. Louis (Oibornc: 2-21 :.t H c~il on

AL standings
:r..
~
Now Ycrl .............. 24

"We have all the talent in the
world offensively to score a lot of
runs, and that's what we've been
doing," said pitcher John Smoltz,
who benefited from a 16-hit largesse
Sunday to become the majors' first
nine-game winner. " I don 't think
anybody had a career year offensively last year. I'm sure they'll tell
you they can all be better."
.
After right fielder David Justice,
the No. S hitter and offcnsi ve leader
over lhe past five years, was lost for
the season with a dislocated shoul-

Hl). 7J5 r .m.

(S~I&lt;eld

21

~ ~l!

.481 .

4'

22

.476

6'

ChicaLO (Telem:aco I -OJ ot Atl;num
(Maddua ~ - J), 7;40 p.m.
St . Loui• (Ston~m,.rr: ·' ·l) at Hous·
"'" (Reynokb l ·2). s,o~ p.m.
PituburJh (Riteble 0-0) nt Co lorado
(f:wna 0.0), 9:0S p.m. .
New ·YoR (HarniSt.-h ).2) Ill .Los An,eSn (Vakies 4-21. IO:M p.m.
PhiladefP.f\Nt tGracc 6-IJ at SQII Diego

6

S.tunby'siCOftS
T.... 6, Q.EVEI.AND )
Ooldllld 6. Booloal ( 101
C!Uca,o 16, Detroit 4 . ·
New Yort 7, Cahromaa J
Se.nle 7, Balrimorcr J

(Hamilton 6-:\). 10:05 p.m.

Basketball

Toroooo 6. Kamas Ory 2

Milwaukee 7, Minncsou 3

NBA conference finals

Sullday's oc:ores

a-nti,Oaklond 2

' Semtlc I02. Utah 72. Sen!tk kowb SC·
riel 1-0

WUwaube 4, Minneto~a2
Coliforai1 10. New Ycrl I
Baltirnate 8, Seaitle 7
Toronto l. kaDAa Oty 2
Chie~~o l.t, Detroit ~

Sunday's store

ToaiJbt'a pmes

Tonipt's game .
Tuesday's game
Orlando :N Chicaao. 8:30p.m_(TNT)

Hockey

Tuesday'apmes

NHL conference finals

Seartle (80110 J-2) nl Boslon (Moyer

4-1), 7;05 p.m.
.
Kansas Cily CUntoa 0-1) 11 Oelruil
tWiiHomo 0.21. 1m p.m.
Milwaukee (McDonald •· I) nt

.

Sunday's sc:ore
~~ series

Florid;a
iESPNl ,

111

Pituburah. 7:30 p,m.

· Tuesday's game

L fa.

A1llnla ......... ........... 28 1!1 .6SI
Moalreal ................ 28 16 .636
Philldelphil ........... 21 21 lOO

.419
25 .40l

2)

1m AI) 8RAND. !
AS GOOD AS 'H liST 1
IUtALOTLm. I•

Cll
'

"
6&gt;

. 7

I \;
2}.
1
.t

.421
.419
. J9~

RHP Ariel Prieto on the 15-day disabled
li11. Activnted RHP Jim Coni from the
IS-lhty disabled list .
SEA TILE MARINERS' Senl LHP
Joe Klink outright to Ttx:Oma of the Pocit'·
ic Coast ~aaue . R~Ued RHP Bob Mi·
locki from Tocoma.

6

Saturday's sco'res

TEXAS RANGERS ' Ploced lNF Kun

Florida J. ChicaJO 2

Stillwell on tilt JS -duy disabled list . Recalled OF Lou Fratier from Oklahoma

New Yod. 14, SIUI FrariciiCO S

All""'' 2. CINCINNAn I
Pitttburch l Houlfon I (II J
Cokndo 9, St. Loui1 K
Los Anaeles7. Phibtdl:lphiu 2
Montrenll S~~n DleJO 1

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199

City of the American Associ:1tion.
TORONTO BLUE JAys , Op1iooed
LHP Pnul Spoljruic to Syrocu&amp;t Of the International Lcasue. A.ctivated C Terry
Ml:Griff from the 1~ · day disabled list .

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lbc game was as near-perfect as

one ·c011ld expect Eastern pitcher
Rebeq:a Evans fired her fifth no-hit·
ter of the year, but when the dust had
settled Eastern was on the short end
of a 1-0 score in a 'well played first .
round Division Ul district toomament softball' giiiiC at Waverly, droppin!! the game to Symmes Valley.
Eastern bows out at 16-2 overall,
but still has a game left with Wellston on Thursday.
That game will decide the faiC of
the Tri-Valley Conference championship. Eastern has at least a share
of the crown wrapped up and could
win it outright.
Eastern and Symmes Valley went
at it toolh and nail for the first four
inninJ!s. Only a first inning walk to
'Nicole Nelson and two Evans walks
marred what was nearly a perfectly
pitched game.
Evans and Symmes Valley's Erin
Sells hooked in a torrid pitching duel
·throughout lhe game.
In the fifth ~ nning, Eastern's
Mindy Sampson got t~e first hit of
the game, a booming triple to deep
center field. A strikeout and two
groundouts left Sampson stranded at
third. .
ln the sixlh, Evans got some great
defensive help when shortstop

I

NO.HIT LOSS- Ell1118rn pitchef AebecC8 EVIIIW uw her fifth riohitter of the - o n waated In the E~glel' 1-o lola to Srmmea Val.lellln Satunt.r'• Division Ill dlab'lct ftnltl. EYIInll end her tRmmetn
kept the VIkings acora1111 until the -•lit. (Sentinel photo by Scott
Wolfe)
ing up one un-earned run. Sells ·
fanned six and ·walked two, while
picking up the win.
lnpjpl t!!lal.l

Symmes Valley.....000-000-1= 1-0.0
Eastern.................. 000-000-(}:()::2·1
LP- Evans
WP-Sells

In the NBA playoffs.,

Bulls blast Magic 121 ~83 in opener
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M~lig~~shgeis. s~oDa;ictory
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uoa\llhorlzed

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double to &amp;iYe SHS the .tv......
Deemer ~ired the side in order die
nellttwo tri~ but in lhe siJ.th
into unchara:teristic coatrol pn»terns and walked four lftliaht with
just one 011t Deemer forced.._.
run, then M.u "Pork" Dili&lt;*M ~
and walked the first t.ller he f-*1
to lie the score Ill 3-3.
~
The double ~ beciiiiC SoutH.
ern's savior to end the inning with0111 further damqe being done. •
In the sevendl, Soulheru
on the victory.waaon and rode it
the finish. Travis Lisle led off w'
a double, Jesse Maynard sin
Dailey walked, Jay McKelve
reached on a f~elder's choice tJuj
gunned down Lisle at the piiiiC ani
Kirby ripped a two-run double t
give SHS the lead. A ground out a
error produced the other Sout
run as the Tornadoes to a 7-3 adv
tage.
Leesburg threatened in the se
enth, but Dill fanned one and wal
one in picking up the win in I
innings of work. Deemer went6 I
innings, giving up four hits, si
walks (four in one inning) and ha
ing eight strikeouts.
Soothem again played error!
baseball, another key in the win. '
ton suffered the loss as SHS post
.12 hits, with seven strikeoots a
four walks.
Kirby led Southern. hillers wit
two doubles and a single. Lisle
two doubles. Maynard had two sin
glcs, Ash had a double, DeelliCr
a single and Dill had a single.
Southern will play Portsmou
Notre Dame for the district champi
onship Wednesday in Jackson at
p.m.

aCcounts

011 ILUSit
AISOIIIID COLOIIS
YOUII CIIOICI!...

•

811 RICK GANO
rebounding edge, with 20 offensive Gmnt, Anderson .and Scott from Hardaway was assessed a teehnical
CHICAGO (AP) - The ,hyped boards to only si~ for Orlando.
getting wide-open shots that hurt the for pushing Rodman out of bourids.
matchup of Chicago and Michael
· Forget' that the Magic missed 16 Bulls badly in the playoffs a year
"Shaq weighs 325 pounds and I
lnpl•l Sllllla
and .Scottie against Orlando and of 24 free throws, once again dis- ago, when Orhindo ousted them in weigh 225," Rodman said. "But
Southem
.............OOI-000-4=7-12Shaq and Penny wasn't supposed to playing the weakness that teams the second round.
that's the mistake people make in
Leesburg
Fairfield.O 12..()00.0::3start, like this.
can't afford in the post-season . They
"Those two guys (Hardaway and judging someone in pounds instead
WPDill
:
Certainly it would be close, just couldn't keep the Bulls off the O'Neal) scored basically all their of how much his heart weighs."
maybe even a who-shoots-it-last boards. ·
,
·
points. We didn't have to leave Nick
'If history is an indicator, Orlando
type ending.
-"That's the best I've seen ·ateam . Anderson, Dennis Scott or Horace,"· already is in serious trouble. It has·
But in Game I, the Bulls had the play in some time. If we can not said Jordan. "'We approach it to a played seven post-season series;
Worm factor, they had a better bring the rebounding edge doser, we point where we try to keep thi: bench . each time it lost an opener, it was
bench, lhey dominated the rebound- won't ·have a chance Tuesday; and thoSe th.ree individuals from swept. ln 21 series in which the Bulls
.· ing like-no could have predicted and either," said Magic coach Brian h~rting us."
..
.
won the opener, they lost just one.
they had lin ear-splitting crowd tc · Hill.
.
The Bulls, meanwhile, did little · The Bulls jumped out 10.0 SunSenior Gary Stanley .pitched his fourth inning with four runs. Whi
, spur them on.
"We had no idea it would be so wrong as they showed why ihey won day and never trailed. Orlando was best game of the season as the
latch led on· the inning by stri=
1 · "The game turned lopsided, one-sided. Rebounding is effort and an NBA-record 72 games this sea- within four in the second quarter,
Meigs
Marauders
defeated
Belpre
6·
out,
but the ball eluded the catc
which we never anticipated," concentration. We've got to· figure son. They shot 55 percent from the down by I0 at the half and never
.
0
in
Tri·
Valley
Conference
baseball
and
Whitlatch reached first b ·
Michael Jordan admitted after the out how to get Nick Anderson and floor and displayed balance with 21 . closer than nine in the last two periaction
Saturday
afternoon
at
Meigs
Hansoo
then followed with a singi
Bulls' resounding 121-83 victory Dennis Scott involved."
·
points from Jordan, 18 from Scottie ods.
High
School.
Ault
gr011ndcd
out but George
Sunday.
The Magic might also have to Pippen and 13 from Rodman to go
"They know lhis is just o11e
Meigs
is
now
13-6
ovemll
and
Burton came through with hack-t
The numbers were staggering. find a way to rebound and win withgame. We can't take this one game
with his 21 rebounds.
own
a
7-4
1VC
mark
one
game
in
hack singles. After a strike out for
The Bulls, behind the 'play of Den- . out Horace Grant, who twisted his ·
Toni Kukoc, who'd missed the and say we won the series." said Jorthe
loss
column
behind
Vinton
Couninnings second out Hoover sing~
nis Rodman, dominated with a 62·28 elbow in the third quarter after a col.
last lhree games of lhe previous dan.
ty. Meigs will travel to Zane Trace . Stanley went the route to pick u
lision with Shaquille O'Neal. X-rays series after hurting his back, rett~med
"It hit us hard," said Hardaway.
High School in· northeastern Ross the win scattering the four hi
were
negative,
but
Grant
was
in
pain,
R~ds
for 12 points and IP assists, and·Luc "We ll!C ·the defFnding Eastern Con- County today to play Jackson in the striking out nine and walking
·
· after the game and could miss Tues- Longle~ept O'Neal busy on the . ference champions and we played Division II district tournament open·
(Continued from Page 4) .
Burton
led
Meigs
at
the
plate
with~
like they were today. We have to er at 4:30p.m.
defensiv
d by scoring 14.
innings and retired the last II batters day night's Gariun
(l3ir of singles, George, Hoovc
Grant
struggled
even
before
the
· "No on individual went out and look in the mirror, come 'back and
Stanley, who was expected to .be Whitlatch, Hanson and Ault al
he faced on just 39 pitches. He has
won nine decisions in a row since · injury, as did Anderson and Scott. tried to break this team down indi· assess ourselves and be ready to the ace of the Marauders staff this .added smglcs.
,
The trio combined for just two vidually. We moved the ball arot.md, plav."
season, but he suffered a arm injury
losing his first stan.
Bradford
was
the
starter
and
lost
before the season got underway. The cr for Belpre. He gave up seven hits!
"There's a different aura about points, missing all II lield goal took what the defense gave us, and
senior scattered four singles in pick- ·walked four and struck out fou~
: him out on the moun'd,'' Jones ~aid. attempts, and ( had only eight we made things happen. It was a baling up his second win of the season. Wise, Keith, Madison and Mo;l'ul!
' "He's just really confident. Last rebounds- 13 fewer combined th~n anced attack," said Jordan:
the
tattooed,
fist-pumping
Rodman.
When
Longley
got
in
foul
trouble,
Meigs took a 2-0 lead in the first had the Belpre hits, all singles. 1
. year, you could sort of sense when
Penny
Hardaway
scored
38
and
Rodman
switched
onto
O'Neal.
Durinning. With one out, Brad Whitlatch lggjp• t!!lal.l
· he was trying to pitch around some
:
ing the 13-0 third-quarter spurt that
and Brent Hanson drew walks. Matt Belprc ................... 000.000-0=0-4- C
. people. He's not trying to pitch O'Neal had 27. but the Bulls' defen' Ault single&lt;!, Scott George had a sac- Meigs...................020.400-x=6-7-2!
· around people now. He's going right sive strategy worke&lt;! on Orlando's gave lhe Bulls a 77-561ead, Rodman
other
three
starters.
forced
O'Neal
into
two
turnovers
rifice and and Chad Burton singled.
at people with his best stuff aild getWP- Stanley
I
Chicago
dido
't
double
team
every
and
a
missed
shot.
And
the
run
began
to plate the . ru~s.
ting them 0111."
LP- Bradford
,
Meigs broke the game open in the
The Reds, IJICanwhile, have lost time. and therefore was able to keep after the normally mild-mannered
•
five in a rt&gt;w and 14 of their last 21.
•••
They also have an 11-game lbsing
••
streak against Atlanta, including a
' four-game sweep in last year's NL
'' championship series. ·
' . '{he Cincinnati players insist that
, · the S'lide in not related to the controversy stemming from comments
made by owner Marge Schott on
subjects ranging from Adolf Hitler to
·women reporters in the locker room.
•
"Our owner has nothing to do
with our performance," said Eric
' Davis, who hit a 'two-run homer in
' · the fourth inning. "That doesn't
: affect us between the lines. lncon. · sistency leads to losses. We've been
bad and we've been good.
"We're back to bad:"
Lenny Harris hit a two-run homer
for the Reds in the eighth off Greg
McMichael. Mark Wohlers got the
last out for h1s etghth save. .
Notes: Marquis Grissom's lead'
off homer was the sevenlh time in his
career the Atlanta outfielder has
started a game with home run , the
second this year. ... Rookie Jermaine
.
.
Dye, who homered in his first major
league at-bat Friday night: got. his
first big league start. Playmg nght
field in place of the Justice; Dye
went 1-for·S .... Pete Schourek made
his first start against the Braves since
Now you can get btformatton on your Peoples Bank deposit and loan
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, 199.5 playoffs .... Harris made a ~~
catch in the eighth inning, slammmg
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did gel credit for a sacrifice lly for
the Braves' final run.
'

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Opln Dilly I e.IL ·II p.m.

IUn di!Y 12 Noon·.ll p.111.

EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

Nicole NelSon went deep behind
third base to neal a potential
Symmes hit. One play later, Patsy
Aeiker made a diving play along the
left field line in deep left.
lbc Eastern bats, however, were
still idled. Kim Mayle hit a hard line
drive that was gobbled up by the SV
sh&lt;lrtstop, but that was the hardest hit
of the night in a futile effort.
In the top of the seventh, Symmes
leadoff hitter hit a hard ball in the
hole at short, but despite a good
effort the ball was misplayed for an
error, and the runner advanced to
third. With one out and still no hits
on the SV scoreboard, Symmes hit a
sharp grounder to second.
Second baseman Juli Hayman
made a good play on the ball,. looked
home where the runner was al"ady
near the plate, and made the smart
play at first. EHS went on to get out
of the inning, but the damage had
been done.
. Patsy Aeiker got a one-out single
for Eastern, but was erased stealing
on the first pitch. EHS was unable to
score and went down 1-0.
Symmes advances to the district
final against Clay Thursday.
Eastern hitters were Sampson
and Aeiker.
Evans fanned eight and walked
two, while yielding no hits and serv-

By ICOTT WOLFE
IIIIIIIIMII COlli IF ~II
SOUihem's bu bill_,. tcomh
dnmatic 7-3 victory over l«osbura
Fairfiekl after lxaking a 3-3 cbdlock in the seventh iMina Sllllnlay
in the first round of the Division IV
district t011rument in Jackson.
The first inning looked as thoush
the JIIIIC w011kl take the form of an
iniCnse pitching battle as two of the
fll1t three Soothem batters went
down on strikeouts, then Southern
starter Kevin Deemer prescribed the
same for the Lions in the bollom of
the first Deemer fanned the first two
bailers he faced, then gave up a single to Cox. Cox stole second, but
was picked up to kill a first-inning
rally.
Southern threatened in the second
when the first two batters, Jesse
Maynard and Shawn Dailey reached
on a walk and single, Joe Kirby singled, but Dailey was thrown oot at
the plate, the Matt Dill walked in a
situation that could have forced
home the first run of the game.
Instead, a fly out killed the rally and
lhe score remained tied.
·
Leesburg scored in the second
when Dalton singled, Campbell singled and Hall an had an RBI single
with no outs. Deemer then got a fly .
out, a ground out and a strike out to
get out of the jam.
Southern tied the game at 1-1 in
the lhird when Derner singled, Travis
Lisle doubled runners to second and
· third and then Maynard had an .RBI
single. That sparked Deemer to
strike out the side in the bottom half
of the third. The senior right hander
fireballed the Lions' top three hitters
in order with the score tied 1-1.
Southern took a 3-1 lead in lhe
founh when Joe Kirby, who ended
.the night 3-4 with two RB Is, doubled
to lead off the frame. Matt Dill sin-

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CHARCOAL
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LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Placed
C Carlos Hemandet on t!K! IS-day di s- .
abled list. Recalled C Tom Prince from
Albuljucrque of the PCL. Moved. RHP
Danen H11ll from the 15- to the 60-day
diltlb~d ~~~t.
.
P . BURGH
' A'd'"'"'

San DieJO .t. Monlreal .l

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EXTRAHtGH

.. L81.

In Dlvl•lon Ill district softball action,

lo's,e...

BALTIMORE ORIOL'£5, Plll&lt;Cd JB
B.J. Surhoff ond INF Jeff Huson on the
I ~ - day disabled lisl. Recalled OF Mnrk
Smith from Rochrstcr of the International
Lea.t,ae and RHP Estebun 'r'un frnm
Bowae of the Eastern League.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Placed

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Color11do at Detruil, 7 :J.O p.m.

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1-0

Tonight's game

NL standings

........ ,.......... 22

•

For Sale: .The
undivided interest
'
in the John &amp; Pearl
Proffitt estate,
send to:
Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729-24,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

S, Pittsburgh I . Florida let~~.b

Colorodo J. Detroit 2 (OTJ: Colorado

Turon1o (Quantrill 2-!1) 111 Chic.:aJO
'(T~ ) .)), 8'0l p.m.
Teau (Hill 5-JI Ill Minne101a (Radke
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-

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· plaee Kala), Jay Clark (black belt ~en, first .
place Kala, second places In splimng and .
Weapons Kala), Tim Fl'll (under black belt men,
third place, sparring), Josh Bass (youth boys, 11
and 12, advanc&amp;d, second place sparring, second placa Kala) and Jarrod Ogdin (youth boys,
11 and 12, novice, second place sparring and
third place Kala).

.

.

serie.• 1-0

(Krivda I .OJ, 7 : 3~ p.m.

New Yorlr .............. l7

COMPETITION WINNERS - All five students
of the Jay Clark Karate School of Rutland
attending the Rick Moore Four Seasons Open
Karate Tournament In Columbus Saturday won
trophies. The winners were (L·A) Heather Ft'll
(youth girls, 11 and 12, novice, first place. spar·
ring and Kate), John Bess (undar black belt men, .

·Saturday's store

CLEVELAND (Manioez 6-2), 7'0l p.m.
Oakland (Reye1 J-6) 111 New York
(Gooden 2-)). 7,J5 p.m.
Califoraia tBMkie 4-1) at B:.ltimore

~

-. .. .c f~

Utnh at Seattle, 9 p.m. (TNT)

iH- 2..!. I'Ol p.m.

I1a

~

Chic;:aao 121 , Orlando 8J, Chicago
lelld5 Rrics 1-0

Oakland (John• 3-4) •' Bosto111 (Gor·
doo 2-Z). 6ill p.m.
Califonia (Grimsley 2-3) 11 Baltitnl)ft:
(Wells 1·3), 1')5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bones 2-6) a~ Minnesota
(Rcmpez J..l. U&gt;l p.m.
Toronto (Hen!Jtn 4-J) at Kanw Cily

.

'

Saturday's 11&lt;ore

CLEVELAND 8, Teus 5

.,.•.•

Pomeeot •llllldllpolt. Ohio

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Pom1~ • Mlcldllpoort,

, . , . The Dilly i 1ntlnll

Ohio

llond8y, May 20, 19111

·Pomeroy church · . 'Murder She Wrote' ends 12-year run'
rec_ognizes mothers
Reoosnition of mothm with flow·
en llld a program of tributes highlighled !be annual molher~aughter
banquel held by !be Pomeroy Uniled
Methodist Women at !be chun:h.
Presented hanging baskets by
Joanne Vaughan were Helen Fisher,
rothy Downie, Alice Struble, PoiEich.ingcr, Faye Wildermuth, Artis
uter, Leona Cleland, Ruth Moore,
· fsabelle Wolfe, and June Sayre.
_ _ Tributes 10 mothers were given by
' ~mey Thoene for the children,
.l;:ourtney Halley for the teens, Nan£Y Thoene for the young adults, and
Helen Fisher for !be seniors.
- It was noted that Mrs. Fisher had
:) four generational group at !be banljUCt -- her daughter, Alice Wamsley,
• her granddaughter, June Ann Rhodes,

and het areal-granddaughter, Holly
Rhodes. There was special music by
Anna Wolf who sang "Come Ready
to See Me" accompu~ied by. Susan
Wolf who also presenled a piano solo.
· The welcome to mothers was given by Marge Reuter, and Isabelle
Wolfe had the blessing. Devotions
were led by Mrs. Downie who used
scripture from Proverbs 31. Representing four generations on the program of tributes were Alice Struble,
Janet Williamson, Darla and Kaylee
Kennedy.
Martha Hoover gave a talk about
Mother Macnee and her own Irish
background and then sang "My Wild
Irish Rose." Singing of "Blest Be the
Tie that Binds" closed the program.

Syracuse Church has fun day

7:

The first annual caravan fun day
was held recently at the Syracuse
Church Qf the Nazarene.
- Julene Stires di!'l'cted activities for
. the kids and their families during the
·.caravan program which has been
described as a Christian form of
..scouting. Games were played with
'jlrizes going to the winners and a
potluck picnic was held.
·';. Anyone interested in joining the
group is' invited to call Stires at 992~517.

. - Attending the event were Pastor
llill Stires, Jolene Stires, Josh Stires,

Cole Brown, Missy Lehew, Kathy
Lehew, Keshea Tillis, Dustin Huffman, Tom Lavender, Patty Lavender,
Tommy Lavender, Kevin Knapp,
Judy Knapp, Ashley ' Knapp, Jamie
Wolfe, Kim Wolfe, Tad Wolfe,.Tyler
Wolfe, Jarrod Folmer, Michelle
Folmer, Sandy Folmer. Amy Johnson, Codie Davis, Tonya Holter.
Chelsea Holter, Chris Holter, Richard
Hill. We~dy Hill, Amber Hill, Ashley
Ifill, Austin Hill, Amber Mills,
Meranda Davis, Anita Kennedy,
Joshua Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy,
Chad Folmer, and Bradley Brown.

.·Baby day observed at Syracuse church
.:. The Syracuse Church of the
·:Nazarene Sunday school observed
baby day at the church recently.
;.... Baby day honored children birth ·
tluough age three. Kathy Lehew, ch.ii" Ciren's director, presented each child
-with a certificate and a Precious
'''Moments Bible. Jan Lavender led the
con.gregation in special singing and ·
,'lead the names of the children as they

were recognized.
Those honored were Dylan Matson, Cory Lee, Oldessa Jacks,
Chelsea Holter, Mathew Roush,
Dylan Bass. Tristan Diddle, Austin
Hill. Christian Allen, c.Sey Pickens,
Devin Brown, and Meriam Grace
Stone. A special· prayer for the children and their families was given by
Pastor Bill Stires.

McKayla Powell observes birthday
- The first birthday of McKayla
'imzabeth Powell was observed
';recently with a party at the Middle~ort Legion hall.
- A Winnie the Pooh theme was carried out. Attending were her parents.
:Janis Carnahan and Steve Powell; her
brother, Kylen King; maternal grandparents, Jim and Nancy Carnahan,
.paternal grandparents; Mike and
~~thy Powell; maternal great-grand- .
mother, Mildred Shuler; Jean Alkire,
·

Jan and Jennie Hill, Tony, Sandy and
Rusty Carnahan, Joe, Laura Nicole,
and Joseph Powell, Jane Ann Hawley;
Nancy and Sandy_ Gilkey, l.inda
Gilkey, I 1m, Debb1e, Morgan and
Derick Powell, and De wayne, Wilma
and Damon Fisher.
Other presenting gifts to the
youngster were her . paternal great
grandmother. Ruth Golll:ey, M,ary and
Darrell Bachtel, Judy Gilkey, Bill
Powell, Susan and Amssa Howell,
Ronnie Powell and Kay King,

LOS ANGELES (AP) - For 10 do it qain this summer ID "Efts. tha world's sw~~~~~p~.
~c show had ratings problems Ibis
Anp Lansbury, thai's all she wrote. er" with "Relax, you've ~n
sUsan,
especially because it com"The time has come for you to
Twelve seasons of "Murder, She erased.•
drop your tails and leave this peted with "BR" 8J1II "Chicago
Wrote," ~ to an end Sunday niJht
Since tha right caleb johrue can swamp," he said. "But I am sure, Hope." He said me trial drama will
with ·~ sw's supersleuth alter ego 111111 a h.it into a culbnl ~non. wherever I ao u I travel around the he bacl&lt; nex.t season with two or three
Jessica Fletcher addreuing viewers movie studios - vyin1 for this world, I will find eacb and every one S\01)' lines. instead r / f one used Qll
di=tly:
..
year's " Life is like a box of choco- of you worldna your tails off to save "Murder One" this.y .
"My gratitude and appreciation to llles ...
"We'll get ano r swing at the
Olber swamps llld aive tho$e of us
all of you our great family of viewJim Carrey's cacch phrase from tha who live there a chance to survive." plate," Bocheo said.
He said he was glad to be invited
ers - who along with me have upcoming "Cable Guy" is "I'll juice
The school is nationally recogsolved 264 murder mysteries over 12 you up," and Laurence Fishburne nized for its I!Uirine and environ· to Carnegie Mellon because he
great years - with Love, Jessica repeats "We gotta fled" in his mental S&lt;:iences programs.
missed his own graduation from
Aetcher."
upcoming action movie "Fled...
Although there was a bit of CQII· there in 1966to drive to Hollywood
~ show scored big ratings "You can't manuf&amp;~;ture a catch troversy when school officials named in -search of writing jobs.
CBS said more than 10 billion view- phrase," Susan Pile, an MGM pub- Kermit the commencement speaker,
"In my haste to get where I was
ers tuned in over its history- but it licity executive, said ,in the "fay 24 no disappointment was evident on going, 1didn 't stop to consider where
I had, been," he said. "That was a
attracted older demographics and !be tssue.of Entertainment Weekly. "But graduation day.
inistake.''
network moved it out of its longtime if it makes it on the $!reelS, it defi:'It was cool," said graduate
Sunday time slot in a push to devel- nitely doesn 'I hurt the movie's gross- Sharyn Wallen. "I was glad that we
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Mr.
op a younger image.
es."
had someone that I can relate to
Holland
would
have
been
proud.
Thus it was fitting that the last
rather than someone you don't even
episode was titled: " Death by DemoRichard Dreyfuss, who portrayed
·
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP)- know."
ari
inspirational
music teacher in last
graphics." It was about a radio station It may not be easy being green, but
that undergoes an overnight trans- there's certainly some prestige in it.
PIITSBURGH (AP) - Talk year 's "Mr. Holland's Opus," joined
some 4,000 volunteers Saturday in a
formation to alternative rock in an If you're Kermit the Frog, that is.
about a tough'crowd.
effort lo appeal 10 a younger audione-day
campaign (o clean up and
Steven Boehco's was cheered
The Muppel star made history
ence.
beautify
public
schools.
Sunday when he received an hon- wildly by graduating seniors at
"How
wonderful
it is 10 see you
orary Doctorate of Amphibious Let- Carnegie Mellon University on SunLOS ANGELES (AP) - Arnold ters from Long Island University's
all here," Dreyfuss said. "How good
. Schwarzenegger once launched a Southampton College. He was hon- day at the mere mcntion .of his tele- it is to be able to take control, to
catch phrase craze with his "Termi- ored for his work on environmental vision creations: "Kill Street Blues," know you can improve the city."
"Doogie Howser, M.D." and
nator' ~ threat "I' ll be back." He plans
Lo.:; Angeles Unified School· Disissues.
"NYPDB!ue."
. trict chief Sid Thompson said the vol· Although he has spoken at HarBut when university Presil!ent
vard and Oxfprd universities, this Was Robert Mehrabian mentioned "Mur- unteer effort was necessary because
TOPS meet recently
the district lacks money to hire workKermit's first commencement der One," there was dead silence.
An article, "The Challenges of address. He advised graduates to save
Bochco acknowledged that the ers to clean and paint buildings and
Social Calories", was read by
plant trees and shrubs.
Jeanette McDonald, leader, at a meeting of the Pomeroy TOPS (take off
pounds sensibly) Tuesday night at the
.Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
Plans for open house to be held
Tuesday night were discussed and
Tina Geary explained a new contest.
Suggestions on eating out were given . and .the Area Recognition Day
penny march was held.
Participating in the prayer and
pledges to open the meeting were
Minnie Harris, Julia Hysell, Linnie
Aleshire, and Norma Dillon. Nancy
Manley gave the secretary's report.
. lbose Who Have Given Tblrlr Lives
and Jo Wilford was welcomed back
into membership.
To Preserve America's FreedQtn
Virginia Dean won the fruit basThts MemorltJI Day, we woUld like to pay tribute to the
ket, and Harris the gadget gift. The .
weight report showed Frances Hagmany brave many and
who have given t~r lives
gy as the best loser with Cheryl Hatto uphold and protect our country's ·ideals.
field and Virginia Dean as runnersup.

CHAT LINE

Psychic-Line

Uve 24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful·
Girls

T.. lne lo 0411 glflod
peychica ·O I'HIIWP' w• Of
love,IUIXJII, care, soul

-·

matea, Ill "-llld

1·900-446·1414

1·900-25S-0500.

Ext 6445

Ext, 3505

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs oid.

$3.99 perm.
Mull be 18 ,.._
Silfv-U (81g) 1145 8434.

Seovice U

(619)654-8434

1·900-990.3737

•••· 2261

Ext. 4193

Clll1~888

~.Ill per min.
. Must be 18 YIW.
Serv·U (811) 645 ~434

Hoty~••

':CNRI!Pf

4900

$3.99 ~~min.
Must be t 8 9fl.

Serv·u (619) 645 8434

.,_,_

~~

INC.

'

• Vlny! Siding New

ftepi-~Windows

LET US NOT FORGET~oo

Public Notice

MCKAYLA POWELL

b•

County Commlaajonere,
Courthoiula, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Each bid IIIUII be
· accompenlad by either a bid
bond In an amount .With ·•
aur•ty oallafaclory to the
aforeaald Melge COU!Ity
Commlealonara or by.
certified check, caahlere
check, or letter of credit
upon e eolvent bank In the
emount of not 4ell than
10% of the llld amount In
favor of the af......,ld lhlaa
County Commlulonera. Bld

Public Notice

throughout time.

..iiM."'

1-----..---.,...

•*

To remember your loved
one in this special way.
send $10.00 per listing.
Picture optional. Your
tribute
will
spcci a!
a
pcrrnanenl
. become
memorial record in our
paper. All tribuJes musf
be received no lalcr than
Tuesday, Muy 21, 4:(N) p.m·.
Fill out the fnrm below and
·mail to:

TilE DAILY
SENTINEL
, With Fon~t Memories
.· Ill Court Sueer

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews

and Family

Pomeroy; Ohio 45769

1~------~--------------------Plea"" publish my lribulc in the &lt;pccial Memorial Day S.ctiun un May 24 . ,

.I

.

I
I

. ·

1

tJrtome

.. I . Date oiWitll

t

I

R-!::

Mhu

ICI!l

I

~~ol~

-

Potnt , _ , _ ~.

I
1

l&gt;Mur -·"'-"";"""'

., Additloul...,.,._.,. ·

II v.e-.

-- -- -JIIIonenwnbar

s-

.

.

Zip

IL-----~~?-!:.~!!~!!_ll'mNIL__
,

~,··· .

PICKS, SPREADS,

FINANCE .

•R~ilg
HQROSCOPE, SOAP .. •lntttlor
• Exterior
RESULTS ..
Painting
1;900-776-2525 EXT.
. Aleo conc:..to Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
5961
V;C. YOUNG IU .
$2.99 plir min
192-U,1$
Must be 18 yrs.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Serv'U (619) 654·8434

.

.

------

II
I

,Commloslon~

(5)14, 20, 24; 3TC

1fl baths, extra Insulation, parma payne
foyer, mud ooom. pon:h, cedar·wlllk.tn doeets.
H.l':lt;.,}'-· new caop41~ng. Basement, carport &amp; patio.
Situated on two nice lots on a quiet street. COME SEE THIS

ONEI

,

l

.

¥ULBERRY HEIGifT&amp;- Excep!IOMHY. niCe home wilh.a veoy
nice location . 1 112 ·stooy frame home with eaopat and nice
~ ftoo~ng . Doywalllnterlor, paneled breezeway, alec.
t&gt;I.P./C.A. Appliances, paved driVIWIIY· I car garage, sloping
yard. 3-4 bedrooms, baHf!Minl, close lg 11ospltal and local
&lt;~oe~ors alllce. Nlcti area, poofact redroment horne for lha

PUBUC N011CE
Th• annual report Form
1110 PF for the Kibble
Foundation B•rnard V.
Fultz, Trust.., Ia avallablt
for public 'lnapectlon It
Bernard V. Fultz Law Olflca,
1/2 W. S•cond Str..t,
l'cHnaroy, Ohio 457611,
during r•gular bualn•••
hottre,for a period of 110
daya eubaoqu•nl to
publcatl&lt;ln ol till• 11otlco.
(5) 17, 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,

1-900-988:.S98fi

Ext. 6733
$2.99 per minute
Mus1 be 18 yra Ilk!
Se!VieeU
. 61 645 8434

Howard hcavatin
Truckln·g •
· Umestone
Bulldozing and

Rooilng, Room Addltlona
Siding, Concrete, ate.
P.O. Box 220, Bl-1, 011.
614 388-9865 lf/11111 ...

_ BJICkhq,t
Servh:es
House Sites and

Utilities

- 992·3838

All Kinds of Earth Work

,••.

...... ,m

Rea.:
614-992·;2524

WHITE PINE ROUGH

Truck:

SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1X8, 2x4, 2x6
8'·10' 30.. ft.
14'-16' 35¢ a ft.
Also available
· 4x4'a - 4x6'e ·

614-441·7558 .
511111 .mo. pd.

Card of Thanks
_...;;;=..::...:::.....:.;::::.:.:::::...._

r--------...,

--

614-9115-4107
614-742-3337

The Pomeroy

NALC would lf'ke
to thank
everybody who

Date~Line

participated In,
and who alao
helped In anyway

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

In Memory

--In Memory of
Charles G. Dill
July 25, .191.11·
May20, 19ro
We miss your smile and
lender touch,
But God needed you
.
more;
To be with Him lor ·
etemily, •
Until we meet you on
that bright shore.
Your Family

11'

H:ITC

young Of th!. okl. CaH for yow appolntmenL

Must be 1Byrs."
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

li'REE
Plck·up dlacilrdad /
batterlee, appliances •

manymetala.

614-992-4025
8am-8pm
(UmeStoneLow Ratoe)

WICIS

'

COUNTRY, PRIVACY, PEACE OF MIND... Irs All Hero! This
iiOIIatructlld horne 11 IOcaltod just off 681, approx .. 5
Jlftjles till SR 33. Home contalna kitchen, IMng 100111. 3
bedrooms: Masttr bedroom w/IUII bath &amp; walk In CloHII,
utility ~· cloywall/celpat lm.rlor, wood decking. TOIIII Elec.
with IViw .heal .pump/C.A., IIIII doors. therma payne
,..llCIOWW, fUlly lnauii!Jid. Salting on l!pprox. 2.5 wooded

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.• . ....,

acrea. ~

614-992-3470

I
II

VisiiM..ter~rd 87% approved.
delails. Send self addreswd
IIIIT'IP envetope. R Malhney A•1

Boo 153-A L_,, WV 25123.

-

40
Giveaway
,,
2 111101: 0no 4 liD.. Old Pup,J 1
P•tl Chow &amp; Spill ; 1 Blrdd4g.

(614) 4..)1-1191

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump 'Grinding

81 ..... 1082.

t

(304) 773-5124

lduU

8075.

1~ Yrs. ~. Lie. ·Ins.
Owner. Rick Johnson

r•boi• WIC8(181.

II ..~·

..

. S..ulilut 8 wk. old puppioo, pari
Gonren Shophord. 81H92-7tl13.
,

Free Estimates

F.:our klnens

10

goad home. 3Qic-

·

875-21117.

J . E.. DIODL£, OWNER

,

"'"ki. . . .

848-2512

1.1

814-t-411-2451 .

Puppie1 :
Molher
Ger'"!ln
Shopharo, 61 ...48·8058.
I

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

To good home- rescu~ IJUpples.
one male, IWO lamales, ShOtt and

wormed, call Dawn, 814·882·
4083.
!

~::;.ear old

mate full blooded
, 614-·:rl57.
1

60

.285&amp;3 BAStiAN RD.

with our recent .
food drive. .

Public Notice

Racine, Ohio 45771

aret,ca.IJinal814·9112-2235. "

148-2018FAX

!.!!.!2!!!...1

lost 511 119ft all-black Angus mi1
heifer. 525 lbt,, on Zion Rd,, Ru. tland. Reward leading 10 reccwwy
no queslions asked, eu. 7-tl:

211g.

I &amp; WPWTICS AIID SIMI

.

Lost , male St. Bernard berwa:tn
Eagle Ridge Rd . and Cirni\1
Church, has cottorvnylon t:ord ~~.­
tached 10 collar. call. o 14·9-w-

Tllpptrl Plaine, Ohio 45713
11~~13ar61~7~

Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D · perf. ·solid pipe
. 4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 3S pipe
1/2" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2"thru 4" Soh 40 pipe
·
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i . water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll's)
J/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Oraveless Leach pipe
Oas pipe l"lhru 2"- Fiuinp- Regula1ors- Risers
F&lt;1tl assonment of.P.V.C. &amp; Fie• fillings &amp; Water fiuings
Full line of Cistern. Sept_ie &amp; Water sooragc tanks.

2369.

'

'70

Yard Sale . .

.,-

'•.

J
g

5120 ·5125198 8 .flarll, 1027 ~·
Road, Off Teena Run, Firat TiiJ&amp;
Eve_
rl Comple18. HoulehOid, LOts
Ant1ques. Rototiller, Toya, Qu"s
GlasMB{e.
ALL Yard ·Sales Must Be Paid"'n
Advance. 0£ADLINE ; 2:00
the day belore rhe ad is to rw~.

p:tr..

Sunday edition : 2:00 p.m. Frl~.

Monday edition - 10:00
urrlay.

·lladle. lllaeli Dealer

a.m. SP,t·

.,!

.•
.
~

Pomeroy;

.

M,kldleport
&amp; VIcinity

Your ~vorite artist
on Tape o~ Cl)
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

t

Gallipolis
. &amp; VIcinity

.New At Jqles Ba.etrorafes
.

'l

Found- watch in Wonkf_Y Run

148-3013 Phone

St. At. 7

LOll and Found

~

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid!i~
· Advan~e. Deadline ~ 1:OOpm 1tfe
Clay before the ad 15 lo run, S day edition- 1;OOpm Friday, ·
day edition 10:00a.m. Saturdar

992·2825

Pt. Pleasant

11311ttn

&amp; VIcinity
AVONtYARO SALE : lues-Wed -

TIM Maw 21$1, 22nd,

23rd. 9·6 I

BIB ROOftNG and
COIS,.RDC,.IOI

114 mi back- New Haven. M Han
res~. 30,4-882-3146 . Fantastl&amp;
buys.
..

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - B!lthrooms - Kitchens - Siding
35 YHIW Experience

Rick Pearson Auction CompaQl.
lull . time auctioneer. completl
aucllon
servtce.
LtcenstK!
166 ,0hta &amp; Wes t V~rginia. 30'.._
77'J...S78SOr 304·773-5447.
"~

(614) 992·2364

90

1-800-889-3943

Need Direction?
.Love
Business ·
Family Matters
Allow Your
Personal Psychic to
AlllatYou
1·900-988 8600

vage venicles. Selling parts. 304~

·'!

773-5033.

· fer JH·

Non-Working Wasnars, Orytrtl
Ranges, Refrigerators, Fr.ezer14
Air Conditioners. Color l , V.'s., 1
VCR's, Also Junk Cars, 614-256 ·
1238.

614·915-4110

.Jc.

Top doll~r- antiQues, lurnilurfll~ ·
glass. ch1~a. clocks, gold, silv~
cotns, watches, estates. Osbr,.
Marlin. 614-992-7441 .
· ~

4131mo. pd.

JONES' TREE SERVICE
·. Owner:

~·

.

J &amp; D's Auto Pans . Buying sat

YIRY RUSOIIAII.E
IIIII REFEIEIICES

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yeon Experience e Insur-ed

••

.

T••• ••• ,.Ia

,._

pm

Clean · Late Model Cars (A
Truclls, 1990 Models Or Newe~·
Smnh Bu1ck Pon11ac. 1900 Eatfl1.:
em Avel"l.le, GalliPolis.
-,.,

FREE ESTIMATES
out of
......... let •• da II

MUll ba 18 .,...,
Touch-Tona Required
Sarv-u (619)645 ,.34

1~o·s toy's, G.I. Joe, Star War's
ect. Will pay lair price based bn
condition . 6-14 -446 -6630 altef=li

Ccu_,

IMBRIOR·EmRJOR

Eld.1277

Wanted IO Buy ;;

Books, Books, Books. Old Rao4
Books. Goo.d Condition, tst Edit
tion Prelered . Also, Paper
lec;lables 614·446-7282.
.

liNDA'S
·. PAINTING

$3... Per MI{IUII

Public Sale
and Auction

80

•
ot4i..

•

Top Prtees Patd: Old U.S. Comt:'l
Stiver, Gold. Diamonds, All
Collectibles. Paperweights, Ett~~~o
1 MTS . Co1n Shop, 151 Secon?):
! .Awnue. Gallipo~s. 61•·446-2842

•••

Wanled To Buy: Auto's &amp; Truckth
Any. Condition, 614·388-90152, oa•
&amp;IH~· PAAT.
...

Wi(-

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos'
Or Without Morora. Call Larr\1 '

Ronnie Jones

Livel1. 81 ..3118-11303.

367~86-

1-800-950-3359
F,... Estimates

' "'

Wan~ad To Bu"y: looking For L;.._.;·
tie T1k1s Sand Boll, PiCr1iCl Tabll
&amp; Ourdoor Cottage, 814 ·2•5 n.
5887
' '
.
. ~.
r1

I

J.

Tomatll88. ,Peppers and llow8no
$5.00 a flat
·
Peny HUI Farm ' .
Flret hou8e on right put

.

• Rllclne l.oc:Q

w

61~47-44181

. I

•

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Send
985-4422
Chester, OhiO

HOlliE IMPIOYEIIEIT

Attention of bidders lo
called to all or the
requirements contained In
thla bid packet, pertlcul~ly
to the l;ederal Labor
·Standerda Provlelona and
Davla•Bacon
Wageo,
various . ineurance
requirements, varloue equal
opportunity provlalona, and
the raqulremenl ~
perm en 1 bond a~
petformance bond for 100o/o
of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw
hie bid within thirty (30)
deya after date of the
opening thereof. Melga
County Commleoloners
reaervu the right to waive
any lnlormalltlu or to reject
any or all bldo.
Fred Ho"":~~=

Notlc;e: Connie F•1• Knightll'g.
C.llo 11 8J4·

....I....

I.L HOLLOI
TRUCKING
DUMPTRUFK
1
SERVICE

w..

PluM C•ll 8ollbl

""""-

..

. Quality Work
Competitive Rates

Rt2 on Hannert TriCe rd, 0""304-57S-2180.

-

~4301

TFN

457&amp;9.

..., , . ,.,.. tl Ml'fce 1111 ,_. lr "'
S. q I.E. ONo a WMI V.cglttla
ToP ;,..1..-.e72 5117
441 1411

$3.81 par min.•
MUll be 18 yra.
Satv..U (1111) 1145 1434

. 614-742·21.99

LEE RUSK
WILDING
SERVICE

30 AMOURCemeniS' '
HoHoy'l Crtk HouM, handlllldo
&lt;11ho, ID• of niclo tlingo, 2mf. 'oN

Mobile Home Heating I Cooling

Your Sweeth88rt as
close as your phone

MANLEY'S

'"
... 10:
John
&amp; -~~~~~.
ProlfillPO
- 86x·
tlocl
Dtlly
nt-24, """"' .. 011451118. • '

1-IOCI-448-1414

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

bonds
shall
be
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the oHiclal 'oragency elgnlng the bond.
Blda ahall be aealed and
marked 11 Bid for Rutland
.VIllage
Street
lmprovementa, and mailed ·
or delivered ·to: Melga
Co11nty Comml.. lonera,
Courthoun, Pomeroy, Ohio .

•

IIIUIIFUL WGP'I
IU Wlllllll TO
IIIII FIOII
YOU IIOWIII

BorHISIW..,

·

For 1110: The uocii&gt;Nted lnl-1

"' IENN

DATE
LINE

Porttlble ,

•Double. Hung
-Insulated ·
Limited 11me Offer

Melga
at

RelllliJ

•ROOftl Addlllonl
•NawGa;agae
•Eieelrlcal &amp; Plumbing

··Tilt-in

will

II

, . YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERYIQ

SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT

lll8bllled

proponle for th•
.VIllage Street

l'f-ordrn11ot .

Distributor

• Welding Supjlliea •InduStrial GaaM • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dl'lllllng • Omament..
Slef)s ~St&amp;irs, RBillngs, Patio Fumhure. Fireplace
Htims, Planler hangers. Trellises &amp;lots of other stulll!
"No Job Too L.slfll' or Too Small"
We will work within .your budget .
Ph. 773-1173
FAX 773-51111
108.Ponie Street
' Mason, WV

Public Notice

May
. God's angels
guide you and
protect you

...

:dteu&amp; ,#et~.&amp;
Authorized AQA

-1

'gg

IW¥010112

Must be 18 yra

window alzea for a fn~e

'July 10. 1961-May 5, 1980

..........

$3.99 Per Min.

985-4473

Heall'\lmpll,

t'f IMitt In atooll
IG Qn J!an.

Ext. 1477

can today with your

Andrews, David C

••t · · ,

f'trr II I All J

1-90()..446~ 1414

SAWMILL

•

,

•

&lt;Complete
Remodeling
Stop a Compare
FREE ESnMATES

and Manuf&amp;clured Houelng

H&amp;H

On Friday, May 24. we will publish
a special section devoted to thD!'c
who are gone but not forgotten.
The names will be placed in
· alphabetical order and will he
similar to the sample below. ·

._,peel

IBPttclal girl is walling
to hear from you!!
24 Hours A Dayll
Call now

1~

wo''f"

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
of the Director which are
Plena, Speclflcatlona, and olllce,
Courthouoe,
, Th,
1 o II o w I n g effective upon loouance or a bid lormo may be ..cured Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
~lla,tlone and/or Yerilled alated elfectlve date. at the olllce of the M•lge
10:00 A.M., June 3, 1996
C..niplalnte w•r• received Purouant to Ohio Revloed County Comml11lonera, and then at1:00 P.M., Ju••
and the following draft, Cod• Section 3745.04, a Courthou11, Pomeroy. Ohio. 3, 1996 at aald olflca
propclfed, or final actlono flnll action may be
Each bid muet be openactand read aloud.
- • fllllld, by the Ohio appealed
to
the IICCOIIIpan'-dbyellherabld
Plene,Speclftcatlone,and
Envlr~mantal Protection environmental board of bond In an amount with II bid lonna may be aecured
~nay (OEPA) taat w.. k. review (EBR) by a paroon auraty aatlalactory 'to the at the olflce of the Melga
~Aotltn•• Include the who waa a party to a aforeaald Melgo County County Commlsalonero,
fdOptlon, modification, or proceeding before the Commllllonero or by Courthouoe, Pomeroy,
on of ordera (other Director by filing an appeal certified check, caahlera Ohio.
t
mergency ardara): within 30 dey• ·of notice of check, or latter of credit
Each bid muel be
til
auance, denial, the final action. Pureuant to upon a aolvenl bank In the accompanied by either ibid
mod ,:atlon or revocation Ohio revllllld code eectlon amount of not 1111 than bond In an amount with a
of II:•· pennlbo, " ' - • 3745.07, 1 final action fatO% 011 ~ ..bid am1douMn!, In aurety aatlsfactciry to the ·
vor o .,,. oreaa
"'~
aforesaid Meigs County
varia ....
denying, countuComm'-1
r,- or Cllrtlllcatee; luulng,
•r
,., onero. Bd Commlaaloners or by
and the approval or modifying, revoking, or bonda
ehall
be certified check, caahlero
illn~oval of plana and renewing a permit, llcenae, accompanied by ·Proof of . check, or tetter of credit
..,ac lcatlona. "Draft oo varlanc• which Ia not Autharlly of the iiiiiclal or upon a solvent bank In the
amount of not le11 then
Act! •" are written preced•d by a proposed agency algnlng 111e blond.
atate 11ta of tile Director action, may be appea'-'1 to · Bids ahall be -led and 10% of the bid amount In ·
o~
. E n v Ir o n me n tal the EBR by filing an appeal marlted 11 Bid lor Sallobary favor of the aforeald lhlas
Prota,ltlon'S '(Director'e) within 30 dayt ofl18uance Townahlp
Street CounlyCommllllonen. Bld
Intent owlth
to the of the final action. EBR lmprovemt~~~ta ,and mailed bonde. . ehall
be
!aue-CII, denial. ate. of a appeals must be flied wltli: or dallv•red to: Meigs accompanied by Proof of
permli llcen.. , order, ate. Environmental Board of County Commllllonaro, Authority of the official or
ll!t•• tad paraona may Review, 236 East Town CourthouM, Pomeroy, Ohio agency algnlnglhe bond.
i
wrllta" commenta or Street,
Room 300, 45769.
Bin shall b e - and
req
a Pllbllc meatlng · Columbus, Ohio 43215. A. Attention of bldd•ra Ia marked 11 Bid for Syrecu•
rega ng draft aotlona. copy of the appeal muat be called to all of the Vlllege Marina Drive street
~m
nta or public oerved on the Director requlramonte contained 111 Improvement and malted or
meett requpala must be within S deya after filing the thla bid pecket, l*!!cuiarly delivered to: Melga County
· ltlbni ~ whllln 30 days of appeal wllh 111e EBR.
to .the Federal Labor · Camml18lo-a,
notlCII'' of the draft actl.on.
Final l11uance of permit Stenderda Pro¥lelono and Courtlloul8, Pomeroy, ohio
"Pro aad ~otlona• are ·tolnalall.
Davla·Bacon
Wogioa,· 45769.
wrltte atateonante of ·the
J.D. Drilling Co.
verloua
lneuranca
Attention of blddere 11
Dll'ecllt'• Intent with c.._ TWp. Ohio
requl_.., varloua efllllll called to all · of th•
~ to tloa laeuanca, 111111 DMa 01110111118
CIJIPCiftlln:!l prolilelona, and requlre11111nta contained In
dian Ia , m'diiiCatlon, F8CIIIty · D11crlpllon : lha requ ramen! for a this bid PIICket. particularly
' on, or Nneuual of a W..tewater
payment bond and to the Federal Lab·o r
r, llo one" or V8rlanca. Appl)catlon No 06-1780
pelformance bond for 1011% Stenurcla Provlelona and
Itt
oo~manle and Thle final i c t1 on no t · oflhe-prlc..
Dnla·Bacon
Wagee,
No bidder may withdraw varloua · lneuranca
rtqu ta f
a public prec•ded by propoaed his bid within thirty (30) requlremaftta, nrlouaaqlllll
m'aat 11 ;r.ardlng • action and 1e appealable to daya altar dat• of the 9JIPOflllnlty provlelono, and
...:l:~d a on may be EBR. Septic tank and opening th•reol. Malga- the raqulremant tor 1
il
w In 30 deyt of leaching tile llatd for Twin County Commloalonera payment bond and
noll • of tl: propoaad Oelta Converollnca SION.
, • . . ,.. the right to waive perfonnanCII bond for 1011%
aotlo'l~ An
dJudlcatlon (5) 20 1 TC
any lnlor!MIItlea or to rajact of tllecontrect price.
..... may · held on •
any or II blda.
. No bidder may whhdrew
~'*'~lotion II a.......,.
Public Notice
Fred Holftl==~ldanl ' hie bid· within thirty (30)
i1elt1 t or obJaotlon '*I-·_....;..=~.;:;..:=;.;;,..·
County daya altar date of the
bY 1111 OEPA within
PUBI..IC' NOncE TO
Connl11lo,_ ~nlng thereof. Melge
' of laluanoa of 1111
CONTRACTORS
(I) 14, 20, 24; 3TC
Counfy · ·commlaalonere
pro
ad action. W~
8Mied PI'OfiOIIIIa for the
reaorv• tllt·rlght to waive
aomllllnte, raquoata for Sallabary Townehlp Street
""bile Notice
any lnformalltlaa or to rejact
pullllo meotlnga, and
will be
any or .,I bide. .
.
adJudloatlon hearing
Molge
PUBLIC NOTICI! TO
Fred Hoffman, Praaldint
COH1IIACfORII
a..~gt Cotinty
11!1-'- muet be 11nt ta:
Haorlng Clerk, Ohio
SSe11allllaiCid propoull for tile
Colnnllaaloolnvtro-ntel Protection
lyracuee Vlllaga Marina
14, 20, 24; 3TC
_. 10!: P.O. Boll 1CMt,
Drlvo StrHI lmpra-t
Cilumlllll, ()tolo 4321&amp;-1041 ,~..,.~, _-Will l!e roCIIIVId by the
Is
tine for,.,..,...,.... ·
(l'...,ltona: 11U.U121). ,...,_
II • lg •
·· C au n t y
......,. Aotfon1: . . oallaM
Commlnlonare 11 their
'telt'li illhe'cltm~ .

-o.r.gea

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.
They have helped
millions find lortune,
suceees and Jove.
Theluture stana lodayl

Hey Guys!ll Your

•New Homes

l

AnUCTIVE
&amp; WILLIIG
TO TALIIII

-IIS$.E. lL

...IIIISSill
COISIIICIIOI

New24 hr.
' ,Howard L Wrltesel
Dabtllne
· ROOFING .
Me8t the Man'orWomM
NEW-REPAIR
of ycu Oreaml Never
.
QutteB
bit lonely aglln.
Downspouts -

CALL NOW
1·901&gt;188 8003

-

Eld. 1021

12.111 per"*'·

• Mull be 18'yra. . .
Setv..U (114) 84118 t34

.

I ,

•••

,•

FINO TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
Through a Live
P~cinal Psychic!

Gutter CIMnlng : ·
PDhtUng

.

FREE 1811MATES
•

..

'

.

51•--'
.

110

H4!lp Wanted· . -~:~

."AnENTION"'

l

•

I

.-.

Hlif Stylitr Needed For JoAnnt~''lle
Kur And Kufl, 814_.46-9498. · ¥ ¥ h

, $3.99 per min
Mu$t be 18 YfS.

JoMne•~,

~

AnriiWon - -·
$-WANTEO.'

.

10 ' people who need 10 lool i1
weigh1 .,.,.... .....,, 10 1ry ·~ ·
patented

weight-lou product

304-773·5083 241&gt;-W.y.

,,

.,

-::-:::--:-:~~--:...:.·

1·900·255-0500
Ext. 4009

Serv-U (619)
845·8434

. . .2181

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'.

.

.

'

�I

•

Mandly, ..., 20, 1111

Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

WJ.EYOOP
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROa

::=.......

,

.....

' 11 Uruanu•r
1 Ldroom Siliper Ntcef Ne•r

AlirO. ,... .'"'""'
PQoiliono
• ...,. .nont luM·
tin\t lot &lt;ltfiiiiOtltfL Fuii ·~­

Holzll't ·
-·,.Plolo
o.-n
, .......
••UotiiH,
2K7.

Utl. Far ••am. application and
inlo- -28&lt;1-111:111 En

..l:r

1

38~ 11om .......

c•.

I Do CNid c ... In lly All
Houro. Cheolrirt - · 814-311771411.

14LUIIIIER
• · MANAGfRTAAINEE

•

u! LUMBER

COMPANY, THE
FASTEST GROWING NATION·
Al 'LUMBER CHAIN HAS CA·
REER OPPORTUNITIES T~Y.
ADVANCEMENT IS RAPID AND
ALL PROMOTIONS ARE FROM
WITHIN. FIRST YEAR EARNING
AVERAGE Sti.OOO·S22,000 .
BENEFITS INCLUDE liFE IN·
SURANCE , HOSPITALIZATION .
PROFIT SHARING AND MUCH
MORE. IF YOU ENJOY A COMBINATION OF SALES AND
PHYSICAL WORK. HAVE COM·
PLETED HIGH SCHOOL {SOME
COLLEGE PREFERREDI THEN
YOU MAY QUALIFY. NO
KNOWlEDGE OF BUILDING
MATERIALS NECESSARY
WE"'HEACH.

looking For Mowing Jebo. Will
COme Out And Give Estlmalea
On lewno. Havt All Equipment
To Do The Job, 814·441-0311
Ask For Norman: 114·441·3781
Atlo For o..on.

Nted Lowno llowtd? 814·448·

2303.

L-

8 1 oom. da~t~r '"'' apanmtru

I.JvinQ. Farl'ilyt
Dining end ICIIcMn areas, also
in llellipolio.

For Seto Or Renl: 111t2 o.2 Bed:oorroo. 2 Fulllletrt. Rolrig·
oraiJr, S..ve, Alt COndition-

New Haven. 1bedroom, unfur
nlshed IPt. ,&lt;toes have lto'lle, re•
lrtg. w11her &amp; dryor. Depaoli &amp;

520

roftrii1CII. 304-882·~-

Turkey, Archerr,, Guns, Ammo,

er, Built In Table, Aaki ng Price
Po:y ()tl Al2 l -.
81&lt;1-:!Se·

wv.

-AftoriP.M.

18t2 Norrlo t8t80 3 Bodraom, 2
llelho, Ctnlrll Air, LP Goo Fur·
ni&lt;O And SIOYo, llnM&lt;pinning I
Many Extras l Very Spacioua.
Priced lo Still Easy FIMncing

AvOotabltl
814·247-2032
P.U.OrL
_
_ _ _ Allor 6

2 bedroom 1par1men1, 1350 per
monlh, S200 depoolt, ••illeo paid,

no pett. 814-902· 5724.

2bdrm. aptl., total electrk. •P·
pUancis furnill'led, laundr,- room
lacill tln, CloM to achool In IOWn .
4ppllcatlons IYiilabla at Village
Gr.en A~Pfl . ~D or call 8\~ ·882·

t at• Fairmont Stctionot 3 Bod·

rooms, 2 blths 32140 814· 3'1i·

2715

tiltS Cto,ton 14:c52 uood 6 mo. 2
bedrDOm. 304-d75-2842 or 304·

875-7705.

Applo Grove 3 bedroom, 2 both,
WI 3.8 aCrtl .ot8,000. 304•578·
4001 .

IMMEDIATE OPENING5-ACT
NOW I
SEE: JIM ARNOlD
· WED, MAY 22HD
2PM -ePM

~

Buy or otll. Rlvertno Antlqu.oo.
1124 E. Moin Srree~ on AI. tZO,
Pomoroy. Houro : M.T.W. tO:OO
o.m. ., 8:00 p.m.. SUIIdey t :00 .,
8:00p.m. 6toO·IIt2·25211.

540 Miscellaneous
14irchlndllt

•

Furnished 2 Bedroom Aparam.nl,
Acro11 From Park, AC, No Pets.
Refarenc11. Oepoail, S3501Mo.,

1800, 814-448·8471

Band Want New Arm Asking
Du~ng

AKC Rlgi-od Rottwtilor Pup,..., 1300 Ftmoloo, e:~so ~~a~oo.
~'will hold; Pwen• con 11o
_,on flllll'i,.lt&lt;l-3711-21187

Day,

814-379·2183 Ater 8.

tl' L;atro eurr All Purpo.. trallor
WHh Rampo, Brakeo &amp; Ughll,
S900. Bt&lt;l-2511-t 140. •

&lt;

•

a Cot Grooming: r.Ooonolie

lllniolure

750 Boats &amp; Moton

wide

Ptrmouth Retilnc:e 4 cyinder
Auro, AC, 49,000 M, 4 Door,

8eatb

BARNEY

J

'DO Yamaha' Waverunner, two ~
pauan~ eacenenl condition, ,

e:tlamplon bloodline, shall .&amp;
81
7
wormed. 4-88 •3404•

1'73-1118.

rgaa Subaru XT, OL Selective •
WD,~~~:· t O.wner. 13.500

1 7tt. open bow Invader. 140hp :
Ev•rnude. lkis, tube, life i•cMII, 1
Muff slainllss Sletl &amp; aiUmiun •

61~·

or 81 ... 256-6329.

1989 !Iuick L.tSabre, excellem
running condition, V·B; PB, PS,

A.C, power windows, 13800, 814-.

9411-2045 or 814-go!l-2302. ·

1

en•••

1991 Geo S10'rm, blac:k, auto. air,
low miltage, e~~:c . cond . Please
c:all 304·882·2 t ga aher 5:30pm.

•·

_______

.,....::.:..
8352.

•

_:_

PEANUTS

:

I IIATE TO
TELL 'fOU TillS,
BUT I'M LEAIIIN6
1liE OESERT..

SH EeaJo inflotabio boll with live I
tafely'lOmt&gt;artmenll, suitabte for :
rafl:lng. 2 hp. rnoiDr, moror mOunt, •
boordo, ..... 8 14·902-8038.
•

760

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

•I
••

SOME LITTLE KID liAS
INVITEO ME TO LIIIE

I

!

buill, 10,000
All Types.
AccouibteAlso
To •
Over
Tranamisaion,
OvlfhuOI Kilt, 614-245-5177
1
Au~

mltl, tiC.

Ripley,
3SD3 or 1·100-213-8321.

1

!

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

3030., 304.075-3431..

Be ExPtfiefltod. Apply In PlfsOn
At Comlorr Air. 243 Third Avenue, Gallpoio.
'
NEED IMMEDIATELY
Service Man ' For .Vaccuum
Cleaner Company. NBed Expenenc:e With Eleclrtc Motors, Will
Train Rigl'lt Person, Can 614·441 · ,

1975.
Oil Duty ..-al
Is Activel, Seeking To Recruit
CNAI Who Are Looking To Wotk

long Term Home Care C1111
Where You live-In And Stay

Ovemlght In Either 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shltrs. II Paya
16 Houri ADa~. But An Over·
rrighl Stay It Required. If lntorHI·

ed Ploaoo Call Liu Keroon AI·

·1-000-0N-DUTY-2.
Postal I Gov'l Jobs S21 IHr +
Benelils, No E11p. Will Train, For

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom aparlment In
Middlapon, no pets, 814· 992·
5858. \

.._ with or wilhou1
All ............ adlrefllllng In
thil new•paper ls IUbtiCt to
the Fodlfol Fair Hou8ing A&lt;l ·
011968 which ~ ll1oQal
to 8dVtrl!le 'any prole...,..,

llmttaUon ... -lnaUon
bUod on '"""· """'· nrttgton.
- IMIIIial 8181111 or M11onot
origin, ., any "-tlon 10
ma.k8 any SUCh P'8*111Ce,,
llmltadon or dtacrlmil•dol•.•

lhla newspaper wll no1
knowtlngty . . . .

a - t a f o r real-to
which Is In -lion ollhe law.
Our readers are -Y
lnlonnod lhal all dwoll!o ogs
advef1isodlnlhlaneMr. are aveilable on an equal
opportunlly bull.

building~

lind

Con1rllct. 81&lt;1-742-2182.

RENTALS

410 Houses tor Rem
2 Bedroom t&gt;49U!I8. 2 Bedr.oom
Trailer N!. In Gallipolis. 614·448·
8849 For lnbrmalion.
2 BR Houae in Gallipolis; Good
locarion. No Pets! $300 .00 Mo.
Plus Depooit. Cal1814-44&amp;-2300
~ bedfoom in Hartford S225mo.
No peta. 304·882·21 06 or' 30'·

675-3100. after 4pm .

3 bedroom in Hartford $350ma.

No poll. Call 304· 882-2016 or
304-875-3100.

RESPtR,TORY'INERAPIST

fltt!flll•.,.•••.,..•lllll.l

2603 Lincoln Ave. Clean 2bed·
room house. carpeled, washer/
dryer hookup, close to schools,
stares, and hoap. S3001monlh ,

HDmecare And Skilled NF PrOvider Has Opening For PT &amp; FT Po-

REAL ESTATE

plus ulthties, phone 304·675·

Appl And Into t ·800·53&amp;0040.

sitions. Clinic;al Asseumenrs,
VV And PSV E•perience A

Musl. Ulnimal Travel And On •
Call Required. Call Becki ~t 1•

800-551 -2273 Or Fu Your Resume To 218·243·5457.
Social Workera, NoW Hiring $23 1

On The Job Traln;ng To Apply In Your Aree, I -800·
339,8150,

Hr + Benefits,

SOdellho food SerV'Itel 'AI The
University 01 Rio Grande Is look·
irig F01 ~llpet'ience Cook !Mostly
11· 7 Shifl tWork Ever~ Other
Weekend. Apply In Person A1
The Student Center Anne• 8 A.M.
~. · P. M. Or Call 6t&lt;·245-5e60 Or

0

310 Homes tor sale

Nice lhrae bedroom nome in Pl.
Pleasan~ no pet~ 6t4-992-5e58 ·

3 Bedrooms, 1 balh, li'llng room
hal hard wood Roor. ~lichen &amp;

Small 2 bedroom hoLiae. 681 11
Alfred, S240 per monll'l, caH BU·

aftere:30call304-875-732e.

KirJJy swa,per ·wl auac;hments.

-per

304.075- I 7211.
Rainbow

w1 anachments.

30H75-1725.

Now accepling applic;atlon• tor
one bedroom aparrmentt. Applications can be picked up at Pomero~ Cliff Apartments Office,
6tH92-7772. '
. .

·eo F-250, autllmotlc, oliding llindow ;n bocl&lt;, 300 6 cyt .. exceltnl

11LEASANT VALLEY APART·
MENTS: Are aoc'epllng oppl ica·

630

Drive Potn1 Pleasant, Wv. Phone

2 YMr Old Gelding, S - Oispolition, Very Gentle, E11cellent Far
_Youlhl Gllod, $750; YearWng Swd

1977 Ford F250 Ekk&amp; Dab, 300
Cylinder. Auto, S800, 614·UO·
9575.
.

condldon, grear work rruck. first

13850 lokeo II home, 814·8482311

tlon1 ·tor 2bf, 3br, &amp; 4br. Monday
lhru Frida~ from 9:00·4 ;00. Office
is located at 1151 e~ergreen

Ouaner tWalker, 'Great Projecl,
Very Promising! S800, Well
Cared Fori ContaCI : Garland.

No. 304.075-51108: E.H.O.
Stonewood Apanmenta now ac-

614-843-2288.

cepting appticalions for aparl·
merna. al ekl!ctric, lor eldat'ly and
disabled. FMHA subsidized, ba·

5opd, wMI

as lrade.

sic rent 1280 per month, EOH.
614-992-3055.

Twin

RiVIfl

TOifer, now accepting

applications tor 1br. HUO subsidized apt. for elderly and handl·

cappld. EOH 304.075-8879.
Very clean one bedroom · fur nished 8R&amp;rtment in Mltld!eport,

call 614·448·3091 prelorably be·
lore 10 :~am or aher ot:OOpm.

3-Bedroom,

.
double

garage,

1creened in porc;h, beautiful view.
12.S.Ih of acre. 2mi. out Jedcho.

I

', ,

Coachman Po'P·up ·camper Wt ~
swnina. steeps a. ACIOC elecuic, · -.
1
e•c. shape. Must see '" u~o~.,.~r· ~

;ca1oi. $2000 or OBO. 304-7739116.

.
•

SERV ICES

810

Home .
Improvements
..

•
"

l

2 Bedroom F!t!rniehed, On Clay
Condiuon. New v;nyt Siding, Cor- Chepol Rood. $250111o. $250 Oeport Unattached ·2 Car Garage pooi~ 814·258-e7t8, Altar 4 P.M.
With New Apwtment Above. 814·
S2251
.t.t8- 177o&amp; Home; 814·4•1-0374 2 Bedroom Mobile
Uo.•
Work Alii For Mark Poimer.
In Hanford. 3 bedraam, 2 bath, 2 Bedroom Trailer In Skidmore
nev_t heat pump. c:enb'al air, b&amp;e:k RGad, Renl &amp; Depooit $2So EaCh,
porth c;overed. Lot 80x138. Ask· No Poll. 6 14-448·4428.
ing ..
304-882·3348.
3 Bedroom Uablla Home On McSmall 3 Bedrooms, Very Good

s.ooo.

One bedroom home In Pomeroy.

eu-

Cornic:k Road, 814-448· ~g,
Furnished, private lot, porch,
yard, good clean condition, no
pe11, $275 with water, 304-882·

~·

l:

440

1873 Kit'IWOOd, 12kl5, rocenUy·

1 IIIII 2 bedroom lpottmtnll, lur-

Don'o l.wn Coro. Aooldenllol, ,.mad1l1d. whh porch I aklrdng,
Ohurchea. ·&amp; Ctnrollrlls. lltl· clll 1111&lt; 5:30pm, 814·742-37og
or 8i4-742-228t. ·
I lt&lt;l-:111-2847.

Apartments
torRent

~
~

••
:

MERCHANDISE

51 o

J

Household
Goods ·

:2-C:-o-m-p-:l-tl-o-:1'::-w-,in--:B,-e"'d,...S.,_t-o,-1 STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Chell 01 Drawera, 1 Dreuar, Upright. Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackson. Ohio, 1·800-537-11528.
Apptianeet :

RecondiUoned
Wuhers, Dryers, Rang11, Retri·
gra1ors, 90 Day Gu•ranleal
French Cit~ Maytag, 814·446-

7795.
·eountry Furnllure. 304-175-t820.

Rt 2 N, BmHeo, Pt Pteruon~ WV.
Tu.,.son-a, SUn 11-5.

Two pr skalll, tize 4 &amp; size a.
Ala~ wa1ar pump far swimming

pool. 304-675·1484 lnvt meooege.
v;deo SIOrt 11 Rimodoling 800
Movieo For Solo 15 EliCh, Princess Video 1310 Eastern Ave·
nue, Gal;potit, 814-418-2501.
WATER WELLS DRUED

550

320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

~

•

Ou"'n oize oolo olooper $250,
motehing pair ol Elhen Alton llldl·

holllot, otartlng 11 $240·1300,
sewer, n11r and nash Included,
814-982·2107.

•· \

Fleldo &amp; Son•
Residential painting 1nd wallpa·
per, IIIII ticensad, WV license
1988 Sub.,u •wd, 2dr. turbo, IWV 025243, 304·882·2283.
Sspd, pw, looks &amp; rune good.
ROn's TV Service, spac::latiring in
11.100. 304-e7S.t575.
Zenith ilso ·aer~iclng most olhtr -.

Two and thrtt bedroom mobile

PC1fl and oullluilding In Pl.
Pleuant. Will Mil on land con·
- . et4.ggz·5858.

IMONDAY

••

additions. Free Estlmatea, 614 ·

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORs
flon AllloOn, 1210- ,_ '
nue. Gellpollo, Ohio 814-4441-

Thr" .,_droom home with car·

Sovtnrs You'll Fllld In che
Cloul(led Seclion.

1

8112-42'J2.

Ilona! atyle wing b1ck chairs,
S300,1iko-. 1t.w&amp;5-:llill5. ·

VIRA FURNITURE

t088 Suboru XT Gl Selecrtve • brands. Houoe calli, t·800· 7g7.
WD, Loaded, t Ownar, 13,500, 0015. wv 30&lt;1-578-23ei.
6t&lt;l-25e-e&amp;54, 614-251-e320.
Roofing .I guttoro compllto home
1g89 Chevy 5-10 Blazer, 4WD. 5 remodeling decka a siding, 35
yeero OXPtfitnco, B ' a · Roor;ng
opd, ... 304-e75-7370.
.
and Conttructlon, 814 ·llt2·2384
11189 GMC Solari SLE StriH V-e, Of 1-800-8JIII.3843.
AIIO Loaded. 814-448-2445 Aok
'88 Thunderbird SC, two door, 3.8 For Pout.
lltrt, V•6, otile modtl JUrbO: PS,
PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats i990 Dodge Rom Von B-250,
arid tocko, "'Grell Cor.· sszoo 72,000 M1teo. $8,000, Con Be
neg., 814·092·7471 or 614·848· Seen At Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
2879.
825 Thlfd Avenue, Gallipolla
Ohio.

!:::!:=:!:!:!!~~~::!~==::!:
ASTRO~ORAPH ·

~

I

·.

t

••

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ken romance? The
Matchmaker can. help you understand
whal to do to m,ake the rell1tonlhlp wono.
Mall S2.75 10 Mah:hmak.,-, c/o ll1i8 ,_..
paper, P . 0. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Stallan, New Volt(, NY 10156.
C~I!R IJune 21..,July 22) Keep your
Chin up beCauM you Wil be au.rrounded ·
by oppoi1Unllies ·H you do no1 treat them
lndlllarently today. TheH chanc• may
be~ral.
'
UO (.July D-AIIf. 22) Quanti!Y will not
be aa important u quality today. Your
pnountallona. n the)' ...
w11
not be wonll much K YGUr woric II not up

rarve.

eaa.73tt

to par.

4338

Building
Supplies

• RSES CERTIFED DEALER
'LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Block•. brM:k, sewer pipes, wind -

HHI 1'\(mPt, "'lr' Condhtoning, II
'r'ou Dori't Call Ut W. Bolli LOHI
FrN Et111mo10o. I ·100-:!tt ·0081 .
814 4418301. WY0021UI.
'

OWl, tinletl. etc. Ctaude.Winlero.
Rio Grando, OH Call 814·2455121.
•
.,

'*-1111 or colltllllrdll wtrjng
--or........_ Mlalai'L~

niohod and unlurniohod, ,..urity
depoalt required, no pets, 814·

cenlld •lectriclan. Rldaneur

llt2-22t8.

Etoawlcot, WV000308, 304•UI·
1711,

,.
&gt;

'

" .

..

,ttl#t,

.......
~·e!,

• '' ·

. VIRGO (Aug. 2._Sell!· Zl) II you art
Inclined ID have iii good tnr(l ioday, ..,
. Tllllday, May 21, 1098
your aiP(rln bottle and diet '{Iilii Nncly.
In lie yeer ,iheltd. you can work 0111111 Enjoy yourMII, but do ., •lllbly and In
arrangement with oomeone that will rnodlrallon.
ena111t yo~~ 10 protlt frOm tomllhitlll r. ·or UlfiA
D-OeL D)
10 lllpport
going. The dial be family mllnbell .today '"""" of oomper.
llllldi II rvu do the legwoltlo ,
.
lllg them unfavorably tel oull'-"· Your
orrw111 (lilllr 11...-..101 Uie cautlan "!Miurtng deviCe ooukl evo~~· IIOatllt

T'Y

(lle!lt:

.,. atr.ctt ...

A~:

Camplore the chuckle quolad
by Iill in; ;n the milling -do
you develop from srop No. 3 below.

~~~~~MBlE

FOR . .

In· r.pnl to,your oomflllfCial lnvotv• •IIPG' t
mente today, tfll8cially 11 a 1mooth ant PC lOlL It Not. Ql If rvu 11110
11111nw1 otr.ra ,ou a aaamlttgty tabU- ·think lllrouglt your cf"la'- oarefvlly
~ hltiiM... Trying 10 .,.,., up • tJro. IOday, rvu wll f111!M • nq~1101 ot mli-.
•

'

••

'

,.,.

elnend.
IAGITTARIUS INov. 23-0ec. 21) Treat
your preotnt ruourcea raapeclfutiy
today, even II you expecl n._w lunda
lhOrtty. Delli only with what you hove In
hand.
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-..lan. 11) II you
have lo mak~ an Important judgment
today. baM H on exlating c:ln:umelancaa.
Wlohful thlnlcing will be counterproduc·

live.
AQ~ARIUS (Jan. 20·Ftb. 18) Tty to
watch what you aay today. Do not lafk 1oo
freely about 1 confidential matter to a

.,.,on-Who can, keep .-ntll.
I'IICI!I (M. 10 Pllroh 10) Do no1 try 10
mcKIIy IOClil arrangementa today without
diiQ••Iflll them wllh IY8I)IOM lnvotv.d:
WhiiiUill you might not oppeaiiD .......
A"'l!l (ltllroll 2t·Aprll 11) Try not to
prMI your luck loo far today .Hyour rapu-

lallon Ia on ihe line. Your ll!C* may run

out juii-When ror.t need Mmoot.

TAURUI (AprtiiO Mev 10) Foi:ul your
full attttntlon on tr. mental Iaska you
. _ to perlomlllldly. The lilY Mllgnrvu can UIUdy do aut0111111cally

might-""

ll10II ptllllllml.
-1

~.

"·

.

.....

....... .

o.l,

r'

''"'·' .

.. ~ "'f

•u:--..

...
" ~

•

.,. ..
~"~• , .~

' . J.

o::.t o;,

.....,,

•l o' \111

,..

~

..•.

..
•.

'

~·

•

.·1.1; ,

. .. :
."' ·,
.......
.. •. ,.
;

... ,.'
11 .-..

.... .

•.. 1

·.,.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

~" 1 .'

1 1 1

11

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS

~1
or l"'intlng, _., wallhlng, room · t

size, Mid board, dreSser &amp; $27,000. 304;875-2722.
. NICe 14!'70 2 Bedrooms, Prlv11e
chell. rgall ChOYY van. Call 304ThrH bedrOom home In counry, 'lot Cia.. T~ Gofllpoiil, 1'1• PolO,
675-7217.
.
t.fus1 Have Rafe'rences,-81•·•"·
Willes Hll Rd.. Rulllnd, one bolh, 6890.
;,
.
in1rround pool, 814-9112·5087.
180 wanted To oo·
'

2488 anylimo. .

.,

...
:1
+;

1

Two bedrOD(I1 house, carpeted.
nice and CleAn, deposit required,
no inside pelS ; lhree bedroom
houl&amp;, deposit reqUired, no inside

· e~~o:~.

A
9

..

ellpelience.

-1-I.

I ·-~·-..1.-.J.I.........L.-L.--1

,......,"

~

YAM' NAL

1---,1,.,..7 ""'11----nlar-TI..:...,..I

BASEMENT
111·
WATERPROOFING
~~
Unconditional .lifetime guatantu. r.•
local reterences furnished . Call ..,
(814) 448·0870 Or (814) 237·
Dot88 Roglft Walerproollng. Es·
•
lab!- 1g1s.
"io
•
u
Appliance Pa.rts And Service: All ~_'1
Name Branda Over 25 Vtars E•· =1

DRYWALL
Hq, finish, repair.

Smal IWO bedroom house, 681 at
Alfred. ca11,814-985-35CM.

trai'Atr, Green Terrace, 614·'388-

HOl,ISE FOR SALE
BY OWNER

I

••
I'

8323.

G6o0 USEQ "'PPLIANCES
Waahe;n. dryer•. ralrlgeratora,
rangeo. Skaggo Applloncoo, 78
VIne Stttlt, Call 8U·••e·73D8,
1-48t348t.

-.AI..

15.300, 8t&lt;I-JIII4.310f.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence - Painting, · vin,.l sl ding,
c;arptntrr. doors, windowi, baths. ·..t
mobile hDma repair and mo,.. For 1
ffH 11t1mate call Chel. 814·0fll2· !'!"

Fa11 Reasonable S.,vlt:el1•·

..... 814-tl87.e3211.

35'. Camper, &amp;. Lot: Holiday Hills, ~ ..l
Outbuilding, E11callan1 Condition! ~'"'
AfC, Sewer, Fishing, Boating. :· '

7195.

pall: 814-992·3090.'

Six properties for aile on land

matet. relitOn•blt rate&amp;, have
- oquipmOI!~ In Tuppero Ploins

i'•

inquiries •

Earl's Home Maintenance, "lnyl
slcUng, rooling, exlefior and inltri·

llt2·5315.

OuHn con1r1Cl ringing lrom $10,000·

Devid'' L,wn Mowing- lrte tlli·

:~:·::=o·~~~~riout

••••

I I 1• I I

•• .

199• lnnobrooi&lt;, fully loaded, loll '~

Ft~nch Cit~ Marta g. d14·448·

Furnished
Rooms

SNT

Pus

Last January, after playing in the
Cap Volmac, moat of the players
moved across the North Sea to London
!or the Macallan International Pairs. It · lr::l:-1--1-+-+--+was won by Jeff Mecbtroth, from
Tampa, Fla., and Eric Rodwell, from
Napier, m. They thus became the lint
pair successfully to defend the title In
the 25-)'Ur history of the event.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Tile 'llctors scored well on this deal,
whlcb features bridge in the modem
by Luis C.mpoa
tournament jungle. Two diamonds
QMbrity Cipher c~••• .. CfNted from~ biJ 11mou1 ptcple, Pf*
,
Each IMt4K lhe dphef~folllnOIIWf . Todly'• OW: W «JU1i11 C
showed a weak two-bid in either major, perhaps with only a five.Qrd ault.
y
YO
V G E .Z V G R R
'UK Z D
UGE
GDN
Two no·trump uked for definition
while promising at least game-in'llta·
YDAH
AKZ
THS
UZDA
tlonal values. Three hearts showed
spades and medium strength. After
THS ' NYNii'A
WRSVKHSEZ,
E Z Z
East made a lead-directing double,
South signed off in three spades. Now,
VGRR
XRGTZBE . · UVAK
WSBAYDC
though, North (Rodwell) decided to
iake a siM)t at three nq-trump, which
·y 8 H DE. '
BZN
South would not have passed without
a heart stopper.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Hollywood: th!! enty place you ca.n wake up in the
The defense began with three
morning and hear. the birds coughing In lhe trees; - Joe Frisco.
rounds of hearts, a club being discard0 lp96 by NEA , Inc.
'
18 ·
'
ed from dummy. Ther. East continued
with the ace and seven of clubs.
Meckstroth went up with his king and
l~d the spade queen, covered by the
IAU
king and ac:e. Back to hand with a diamonrl, Meclt.!itrotli ran the spade nine
loorronoo lotraro of !he
successfully. Now he had nine tricks
lour ocromblod wordo be- five spades, one heart, two dialow to form lour -do.
monds and orie club - for a big gain .
At another table, North passed,
L 0 N DUE
East opened one diamond, South dou·
bled and West passed. Amoment later
North was In four spades. After cashing the heart ace, East continued with
T I EAR
the ace and seven of clubs. Declarer
fineued dummy's 10 and called for
the spade queen . But when West
played low smoothly, North put up his
ace, ~laying for a singleton Iring off. ....
I.......,..H""'o,....,R=-=-G"""u___,, :=··
side!
· I l6
Never argue while eating.
5 1
. . . .
The person w~o isn't hungry
r--::--:-~~-,...,...-., wtll generally wtn the - • • - - - - -

perience All Work Guaranteed, M

General Eloc;tric. electric • - WI
double oven. S125. 304-e75-4308

30 y.. rt ••parience in nurilng
home- will takt Clle of elderly,
"""· dey or week. 01 4-94~330 t .

~P.,.;.M;_.;______________

btoc" garage, heat pump, 81•·

Will 1111 on land contract,

tu1t1.

1987 Charger UOO 080, 8 Fl I
8 Fl. Truck Topporr 614-Ut0925.

./)f/lr/Vli.ITION

1D83 Coleman Pioneer Pop-Up •
Camper, 814:448·7321 Aller e ~.

1970 Chevy pick up 350, au1o,
runs
01ot-fl98..27e5.
·

___ ..

~rner lot, close to school, 241'&lt;40

Used 2300 Oilch·Witch T!fncher. 1182·5158.
Ce!614-6ll4·7842.

waterbed bedroom

LlvestQCk

DbL
Allpaaa

0

TOTAL

•,.

814·11112-7388.

~.;..:..~~.;..:...;..:...;..:...:.._
· ------------3-ot bedroom home in Syracute, .=·~~·~

For Sate Or Rani: 2 Bedroom 420 Mobile Homes
Home, located 1801 Grohom
for Rent
School Road, S2751Mo .. otpooi~
81 ...48-0050.
16•70 2 a,drooms. 2 Baths, C&amp;n·

304~75-5111)0.

720 ll'ucks for Sale

,.,.

Ceilings textured, plaller repair.
•
Call Tom 304-875-4188. 20 yeara ...~

Well Tendeo General Laborer
needed· r,..n time, must haV'e a
truGk. Apply in person at J.D.
Driiing Company, Racine, 0!\M&gt;.

Gravely G-18 riding mower. 50in
deck, very . good cond. 14.500.

Bed
Credil? We Can Flnence call
Rulh 814..... 2887

2009 until neon, 304 -773·5707

Call304~75-4575.

Clarinet ot trumpet $100. Piano
StOO. Keytioard S150. Rod sequin
prom gown.sile 6. $200. 304-7735842.

.;

Neid a Cef, Gola Job. -

dining room combined. VInyl oid· 985-350•.
Wig, "'"" rool, 2 cor 'garago, ......
dishwasher &amp; rerrlgerator will be Small house, S2251mo. plus utllilncludetl. Call 304·875-•139 or ties, 1100 depo&amp;il, dtl 814-992·

614·24!;.7502 E.O.E.

110 Mlsi:ellaneous

Rl!&gt;dJII.._13N_e.

no pelt. 304-67_5-5182.

450

3402.

Chevr Turbo 400 Trano Willi
2800 Cono Con¥or1tr 817$ Colt

s•

_I'M_,._~~-~:_~'_S_~_~!~~L~~S·

'--

1988 Gull Stream Monterer 26'

360

Oisable&lt;l Veteran urgently: looking
lor 30·1DO secluded. private acr·

'ri0(1$EW,e(J&lt;ING

camper, excellent condition, wttn
al 1111ras, price inch.lctas member·
ohip 11 Royal Ook Reoon. $7500,

875-5253.•

Need Fulf Time lnaralla11. Must

••

Allll&gt;
~~Ntf:f .·

a ,;IY water. Cell 304-675-

Real Eslale
·wanted

·I

f,IW/c

23 Ac;res on Leon Ba:iden Rd. ·3

reasonable reslrittions. Map and
info ·available on request. No ain·
gle wide Inquiries please. 304·

Ealt

Md,.......

AT f.ll S I-lOUSE ..

Budget Tt11nsmisaions. Used IRe· •.;

Parcels available for new home
conttruction ~n ~~burn Road. 5
parcela rangtng from 1.84ac to
5 .32ac. Paved toed, county water,

N~

Zt

By Phillip Alder

-..
-.....11oorWV. 30&lt;1-372· •
Da R

'Need 8 L1c1iH To Sell Avert, 814·
446-3351.

.=::

==.:£

IFIIr . . . .
31 Odar: •
31 ow. col*llon I Enttoitlllel

CLIPPIN !!

New gat lilnkt, one to'n truck :

pooi~

,g.:)

Opening lead: • 3

I
-~3325==·-Ri-------------·tg&amp;7
..... t1151!oot with 4.31R8t "·
~-

txcallorll condition,
with tow houra, S7,HO with CUI·

041 • .

I KNOW II

1
l SAVEO TH
1

I

Nice 2 bedroom·, waaher &amp; dr~et
hook-Up, returencea requited, de-

' COWN .

21Jacldto'a2nd
1 -Her!
t ICII
ill eu!IIK 2 An&lt;! Gillin
27 '"
Chait
3\) Lillian
O'IIINy Rlty

propo. 12,500 . OBO 304 -882- :

Chivy engine,

1990 Dodge Omni, 4 Door; 5
Speed, 37,000 MUel. New Tlret,
Mifll Condition, S:J.ooo. 814·441·

·w"'

s•

;

1910 Cavalier, 1MI Nisl8n Sen- 10m n1ar call
11!30 ahlr ~: ·
va, 1988 5-tO Tahoe, 1984 S·tO lpm.
. •
Ek1erodod Cob. Trodoo Woiccimo,
Financing Available, Cook Mo- ,ggo Yohema Wovo Runner LX· i
IOrt, 81&lt;1-448-0103.
850 • 1ro1tor. u.eoo. 304·875- ,

.

Sc;enlc; Valley. Apple Grove,
beautilul 2ac lots. public .water,
Clyde 8oMn Jr.. 304-576-23311.

2111? 14J&amp;ih

First again

Trono. $2,500, OtU48·1139.

c·~~~~~:~~ ~:~~:~f,r: 8Ei":.l~~~~

Wollo

'

K 10 4

INT

MY MAN SNUFFY
UP AN' QUIT HIS
Pll,l-stON If

~•;.c•;;.~.:..o==8.:..'•.:..•.:..•:..::23.:..1.:..'.:;dlr;;;:a_ :
IG88 PlyOIOU1h Voyager, AC, 121L Nunirum bolt WI 3.5tlt&gt; mo- ;
Cruiee, Tilt, 5 Speed, Manual lor In 1011 goocJ " -· 1400. 30&lt;1- I

S1,200 090614-258·1233.

AKC,

1ernate

.

for Sale

'*

'

Schnouzer,

Q7

OOicl .,••• , ••
1411.........
II Couwtl 1 •

Vlllnerable: Eut·Weat
De,ler: North

=~':S::.Itnco. Call lor
Horolord Bull for ..lo roung a
niOo. 304..l5-fi8t.

A

S..lil
• Q. 5.
• J 10 e 2
• AQ

Blook Lobo AKC Roglotored,
ChompiOII Blood Line, 2nd Shots
And Wormed. 614-881-2482.
Dog

tO Fl. Unlden So1elllle Syotim
With Boordo Can Ro..IYt KU

2

-::n:..

II I
" I
.., . . . . Dill-

•• 7••

• AKt 7
t • I 53 Z

Puppy Polace Kennalt, Boerrling,
I14DS down. . Furnished 3 Room• &amp; 8a1h, Up·
Srud
S..Vico Puppieo, Grooming,
S22•mo. Free air. t ~BD0-8D~ · stairs, Utiliti11 Furnished, Clean,
::~~;7,~;;~;j'f;;,;;,;;
·l8uy,
Stll &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
an1.
Parmentt Welcome, 814· 388No Poll. Relerenco, Depoail A• ?·Spaces in Memorial
localtd
In
.Garden
or
_
D
evotion
0429.
quwed,
61
...
•o-rstg.
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Tatter- Afoot- Nudge- Cohotf ·FORGOTTEN
'Wise sayings usually fall on deaf ears," the professor lectured . 'But. a kind word will,never be FORGOTTEN."

MAY20 I

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By The Bend

Ohio Lottery.

The Daily SentineJ

Cincinnati
loses sixth
straight

Page 1Q;

I

Monday, May 20, 1996 .

. '

Woman with bisexual impulses told to seek evaJuation

SCHOLARS PROGRAPt!l - Four Meigs County students attended the 199615th Annual Regional Scholars Program at Burr Oak
Lodge In Glouster on April 28 and 29. l,ocal students attending
were, from left: front- Vanessa Shuler and Libby Kingi rear· Jessica Sayre and Erin Krawsczyn. The goal of the proJect was to
bring together outstanding students and allow them to Interact
with each other tp provide them with some new experiences. This
year's focus was on creativity. The Martha Holden Jennings Foundation, area schools and the Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional Resource Center (SE0-5ERRC} sponsored tha program.

Area Military news·
Dennis M. Donohue
Navy Petty Officer First Class
Dennis M. Donohue is currently
halfway through a six-month overseas deployment to the Adriatic Sea
and Persian Gulf. serving with Strike
Fig hter Squadron 136 embarked
aboard the aircraft carri er USS
George Washington.
Donohue's squadron , home based
at Naval Air Station Cecil Field. Jacksonville, Fla., flies the F/A-18C Hornet, a twin-engine supersonic strike
fighter capable of providing protection against enemy aircraft. delivering ordinance on. targets asho_r~ and
at sea, and providing close-alf suppan for troops on the ground.
bonohuc, a 1978 graduate of
Meigs Hi gh School, Pomeroy, joined
the Navy in September, 1983. HIS

Michael E. Phillips
Navy Seaman Michael E. Phillips,
son of Ronald E. and Carole A.
Phillips of Langsville, has completed a 10-week western Pacific Ocean
deployme,nt aboard the U.S. Seventh
Fleet flagship USS Blue Ridge.
Phillips is one of 750 Sailors and
Marines who work aboard the command ship, home based in Yokosuka,
Japan. During the deployment,
Phillips' ship monitored the recent
Chinese military exercises in the
waters around Taiwan.
Phillips, a 1993 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy, joined the
Navy in February, 1994.

Ann
Landers
l'm-Syl
Md
··-·
U.Anfllel
s

c...or.sr r=-.r

.

'

out WHAT you are and WHO you are
and weigh the consequences of coming out of the closet. Should you
decide to take that course of action,
be aware that it will affect every
aspect of your life. as well as the lives
of your family membel'li.
Dear Ann ·Landers: I had to write
when I read the letter from "Bill in
Oregon," who has a bipolar disorder
(manic-depression). I, too, suffer
from the malady and have read
everything I can find about it. Besides
counseling and medication, there are
lifestyle changes that have been key
to my own continuing recovery. May
I give Bill a few poi_nters .that might
help?
First, get adequate sleep. Even if
you must use sleeping pills. make

sure that you sleep every night. Eat
regularly, and avoid excessive use of
sugar and caffeine. Stay away from
alcohol. Other people can drink. but
we canno1.
Make a conscious effon to reduce
the stres5 in your life. If it means
changing jobs, do it. No job is wonh
dying for. Your ·state depanment of
vocational rehabilitation can help
you get training to change to anoth·
er career if that is necessary.
As you suggested, Ann, the
National Depressive and Ma.nic
Depressive Association is a great
resource and will give referrals to
local suppon groups. It is helpful to
know there are others wlio are coping·with this illness. Please pass the
word, Ann. -- M.S .. Fon Lauderoale,
Fla .
Dear M.S.: Consider it passed.
Meanwhile, I hope you have a good
doctor who keeps. your medication
balanced. This can make a world of
difference.
Dear Ann Landers: The surgeon
general has a warning on cigarettes.

By Ed Peterson
Social Security,
Manager, Athans
\ Financial planning has become
one of the buzz words of the decade.

Twenty years ago, there was ~o
such creature as a "certified financtal
planner." Today, it is o_ne of the fastest
growing professions on the country.
However, it is clear that many
financial planners don't quite understand the role that Social Security
should play in financial planning for
the typical American worker. Indeed,
it is not unusual to hear a finan~oal
planner begin his/her sp1el by statmg.
"you know you can't count on _Socoal ·
Security." They are generall_y 1mplying two things: (I) that Soctal Security will not be enough to retore on
and (2) that it may not be around for
the future.
On the first point, the fact is, you
can count on Social Security for what .
it is designed to do: provide a base of

income for you in retirement or if you
become disabled, and for your (amoly should you die. 95 percent ~f ~opie aged 65 and over at the begonmng
of 1996 were receovmg, benefits or
would be able to receove benefots
when they or their spouses retired.
About four out of five _men and
wom~n under 65 can count on ·
monthly cash benefits m the event the
wage earner 5uffers a severe and prolonged disability. About 98 P&lt;:rcent of
the choldren under 18 and theor mothers or fathers (wnh children under 16)
can count on monthly cash benefits.
if a working parent dies.
Social Security was never supposed to provide all of your retire inent incomet and that's why planning
is so important. Social Security ben-

Community calendar
· The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special. eve nts. The calendar os
not designed to promote sales or_fund
raisers of any type. Items are pnnted
as space permits and cannot be guara~tecd to run a specific number of
days.
~ .... ....J '
MONDAY
POMEROY -- God's Neighbor'
hood Escape for Teens youth pro- .
gram (God's N.E.T) will have an.
organizational meeting Monday; 7
p.m. at 106 West Main St., Pomeroy.
Purpose of the meeting will be to
identify possi ble board members and
establish the first approved volunteers.

POMEROY -- Meigs County Veterans Service Commission. 7:30p.m.
Monday, Veterans Service Office,
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.

. high school cafeteria. All parents
urged to attend.
POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary
2171. 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY -- Open house,
TOPS. Carpenter Hall. Main Street.
Pomeroy, weigh-in. 5 to 6 p.m.. ·
meeting, 6 to 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Ohio Valley
Commandry, 7:30 p.m Wednesday,
Middlepon Masonic Temple.
SYRACUSE -- Revival, Syracuse Church of the Nazarene, ·
W~dnesday through Sunday. 7 p.m.
nightly to Sunday, then 6 p.m. Special singing. Rev. Paul Womack
evangelist.
MIDDLEPORT -- Ohio Valley
Commandry, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
at Middlepon Masonic Temple.

POMEROY .. Revival services,
Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 7
p.m. through Saturday, 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Rev. Bob
Stewart speaker: the Sisson famoly
and the Stewarts, special music.

7.().2 .

Pick 4:
1-9-4-3

Sports on Page 4

Buckeye 5:
1-4·22·28-32

Mostly clear tonight,
Iowa
In
the
50s.
Wedneaday, aunny, high

•

•ound 10.

•
\
Vol. 47, NO. 18
1 Section, 10 Plgee

35-

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 21, 1996

·Railcar ..-Remembering the fallen
leakage
probed
in Mason

A G8nM1t Co. lleWIPIII M•

Town meeting
set for M.ay 29

•

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•
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cfits replace from .25 percent to ~
percent of pre-retirement _ earnongs~.
the lower your wages the hogher p~oportion of wages that benefitS .
replace. In fact, the program works s4
that other types of retirement income'
other than some government pen,
sions, do not affect your Social Secu
rity benefits. This allows you to save r
to invest, to purchase ins.urance an1
build your retirement income up to
meet your lifestyle using Social Secu,
rity as a base.
Will Social Security be there for
you when you retire' The Social
Security Board of Trustees says that
it is suffiCiently funded to pay benefits for the next 30 years. and there
are already plans in the works to see
that it is funded beyond that.
I.
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·, ,

Rutland Pumltu_.a
GRADUATES • Joshua
Paul Snouffer who · recently
graduated from the Cincinnati
College of Mortuary Science .
has accepted employment
with Delong, Baker &amp; Lanning
Funeral Home in Zanes_ville.
Joshua Is the son of Mr. sand
Mrs. Dana A. Snouffer of
McConnellsville. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William
E. Snouffer of Pomeroy,
Midge
Sidwell
of
McConnelsville and the late
Kenneth Sidwell.

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Tuesday, May 21st, 6:30 p.m.
Meigs County Lllirary
Answers to your questions and
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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nawa Staff
Ray an Elizabeth Young and Jennifer Rochelle Lawrence are.co-valedictorians and Charles Jeffrey Harris
is salutatorian of the 1996 graduating
class of Southern High School.
The th'rec scholars will be speaking at the combined baccalaureate
and commencement exercise to be
held Friday at 8 p.m. in the Charles
W Hayman Gymnasium.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Young, Pomemy. Rayan has achieved
a grade point average of 4.0 out on a
4.0 scale. She plans to attel)d the Uni. vCI'liity of Dayton where she will pursue a pre-med major.
In high school. she has been an
OU Governor's Scholar. a Johns
Hopkins University Outstanding
Jennifer Lawrance
Scholar. and a Who's Who Scholar;
won the United States National Lead- Mrs. James Lawrence of Syracuse .
Cflihip Merit Award: an~ qualified for She will be ancnding the University
the National Honor Society and the of Rio Gram)c . where she plans to
academic banquets of both Southern major in elementary education with a
and Meigs County. She is also a vol- concentration in English. She has
unteer at Veterans Memorial Hospi- received an Ohio First Full-Tuition
tal.
·
Scholarship· from Rio Grqn.de. alo~g
At Southern. she has been with .a Phi Delta Kappa Scholarshop
invo.lved in numerous activities $200 grant.
includ,ing Student Council. Quiz
At Southern. she is a member of
Bowl; Spanish Club, Computer Club. · the National Honor Society, serves on
yearbook staff. chorus and m.edia the Student Council, works .on the
center aide.
yearbook, has been a past class offiYoung has been selected as tbe cer: and involved in Pep Club and the
recipient of the Ohio Academic Lettennen's Club.
Scholarship at $2,000 for four years,
In addition. she has been cheerand has also been awarded a Univer- leader for four years, played both volsity of Dayton Leadership Scholar- leyball and softball, and was named
ship of $5,000 a year for four years. to the TVC All-Academic Team each
Jennifer is the daughter of Mr. and , year on varsity fo!.~ach sport.

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LETART -- Letart Township
· Trustees. 7 p.m . Monday at the office
building.
POMEROY -- Meigs High and
Junior High bands under the direction
df Toney Dingess, spnng concert
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the high school.
TUESDAY
POMEROY .. Senior Citizens
bay, Meigs Multipurpose Center.
Tuesday, 11 a.m . Seniors to be honored, public invited .

Send questions to Ann Landers,:
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen;
tuty Blvd., Suit~ 700, Los Angeles;
Calif. 90045.
'

.

Reedsville resident Rebecca M.
Evans has been recognized by the
University of Rio Grande with an
Ohio First Scholarship, which pays ·
four years of tuition for 1996 high
school valedictorians and salutatorians.
Daughter of John and Teresa
Evans, she is a senior at Eastern High
School and plans to major in chemBiblical references in the Book of
istry.
Genesis. indicating that Damascus
To continue the scholarship pro- was a place 'of imponance at least
gram past their freshman year, recip- 2.000 years before the binh of Christ,
ients must maintain a 3.0 grade support the belief of many hist~rians
point avera~e each academic year.
that this place is the oldest coty on the
'
world .

•

Many states have seat-belt laws
Some bottles of sparkling wine have
a label urging caution in opening
because the cork could pop out and "'·
hi! somebody in the eye.
.
Why, then, are there no warnong
labels on handguns? Better yet, why
is it vinually impossible to win a ·
product liability suit against a manu~;
facourer of fireanns? Why do juries'
penalize tbe purveyors of hot coffc&lt;;.
arid chili when unbelievably dumb,
people scald themselves, yet nobodY:
sues gun makers and sellers over the
deadly harvest?
I'll tell you why. When a 7-yearold ac~identally shoots himself in tht&gt;
head with the pistol his daddy keeps:
in the bedside drawer. the gun has';
done exactly what it was made to do;'
-- Unanned, Raleigh, N.C.
:
Dear Raleigh: You 're right on:.
Thanks for the bull's eye.
·;

Social Security's role in financial planning :

wife, Janet, is the daughter of John
and Kathryn Lam ben of Middleport.

Evans gets URG scholarship
..

Dear Ann Landers: I have been
straight all my life and always have
put my family first. I aJI) married and
have children who are almost grown.
Lately, I've had thoughts that I would
be happier living with another
woman rather than with a man. I
guess what I'm trying to say is I have_
strong lesbian leanings and want to
explore the possibilities.
This is not something that happened overnight. I have had these
feelings for quite some time. I am not •
involved with another woman as
yet, but I am definitely looking for a
potential "panner. "
· I know you can't tell me to go
ahead and do this, but maybe you can
help me make sense of it. -- Trying
to Stay Straight But Losing the Bat. tie
Dear Trying: Your letter suggests
to me that you are bisexual, even
though you have not acted on your
bosexual impulses.
1urge you to seek a psychological
evaluation before you· make any
decisions about this. You need to find

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RUTLAND, OHIO·
1-80o-837·8217

, PAGEVILLE .. Scipio Township
Trustees. 7:15 p.m. Tuesday at
Page ville.
: RACINE •• Southern Athletic
Boosters, Tuesday, at 7 p.m. in the

Brandi-Reaves

AayanYoung
Harris is the son of Mr. and Mrs .
Jeff Harris, Ponland area. He will be
attending Bob Jones University in
Greenville, S.C. . where he will major
in Bible. ·
. He has received the Holzer Clinic Science Award and a sc holarship
from Alpha Delta Kappa
AI Southern, he is amember of the
National Honor Society, on Student
Council, on the Quiz Bowl team, editor of the year5ook all four years, and
in the drama and Spanish clubs.
Honorarians of the class are Jay
McKelvey, Jason Barnett, Rochelle
Jenkins, Paul lhle, Robin Gillispie
and John Card.
Tentatively slated to graduate Friday night are Eugene Owen Adki'ns,
Angela Marie Atkins, Jason Wayne
I

' I

'

.,'

••

·Reeves, Evans top
EHS scholars o-f '96

.-c.J. 'Harris
Barnett, Megan Regina Bing, Jeromy
Ray Black, John ·Paul Card. Jessica
Lynn Chapman, PauLChapman. PepBy TOM HUNTER
Reeves, Chester. She has been
per Dawn Cole, Michael Jason
Sentinel
News
Staff
active
in student council activities.
Collins. Kimberly Dawn Cornell.
Eastern
High
School
seniors
the
National
Honor Society, and
Elijah Douglas Craig, Roben William
Brandi Nikcolc Reeves and Rebec- the track and field prngram during • '
Crow II, Jennifer Jill Cummins. Tasca
Marie Evans have hecn named her years at the school.
sica Noelle Cummins, Shawn Ervin
the
top students of the graduating
Reeves was a member of the
Dailey.
,
class
or
1996
at
the
Reedsville
.
senior
play cast and 1995 Big Bend
Angel Star Day, Jason Michael
school.
school
ollicials
announced
Stcrnwhccl
Festival queen , and
Deem, Kevin Bradley Deemer,
today.
'attends the Zion Church of Christ.
Howard Raymond Ervin III, Jason
,Pomeroy.
The
students
will
address
their
Keith Fitch, Christopher Robinson
and
the
community
She plans to attend Berea (Ky.)
classmates
Gilbride, Jclfrey Ray Gilland. Robiduring Eastern's 38th annual bac- College in the fall . majoring in prenette Jo Gillispie, John Christian Harcaluareatc and commencement cer- medicine .
'
mon, Charles Jeffrey \iarris, Jessyea
emonies Sunday at 6 p.m. in the
Class salutatorian is Rebecca
Faith Hatfield, Billy Joseph Hendrix, · high school gymnasium .
Marie Evans. daughter of Teresa •
Devon Mape Hill, John. Ryan Hill,
·ClaSs valedictorian is Reeves, Evans and John Evans, Reedsville.
.
'
daughler of Roben and Marjorie
' (Continued on Page 3)
(Continued on Page 3)

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