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By The Bend

Ohio Lottery.

The Daily SentineJ

Cincinnati
loses sixth
straight

Page 1Q;

I

Monday, May 20, 1996 .

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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

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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.

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\
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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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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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

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·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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P~litics

The Dally.Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomel oy, Ohio
114-tiZ-2151• Fu: 992·2157

-~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller ·

liN--

'-10
•*"'''"' 17lo!'- I»- -1011-. A N atW .ut/lttf fO . . . . . ..., ri'NMf IJeMtnMI Mil Inc,_ I fd M1 lltll Pt'rp')QM ,_,..
,_, IIG .......4 ,.._. . . ,_ p . " 'tell. Ufllta altould be In . . . fMta,
I'd Ulng ...... IIOtpaiOI. .f' I

•

married five years or four years,
The panel said that Cahill's
would have the strength to walk away . statement about Peacock being
but without innicting some corporal " noncriminal" meant he was a firstpunishment"
time offender. The staiJmlent about
Cahill's understanding the defendant's rage was gender-neutral. And
the final comment discussed PeaThe sentence and ·the cock's anger but did not condone it.
provocative statements drew protest
At the hearing. Calhill said
from around the nation. Clearly, thatiJis sentence " would not be difCahill 's sympathy for this killer ferent if these (gender) roles were
stemmed from a sexist belief that his reversed. and I mean that with' all my
adulterous wife was somehow bean."
responsible for her death. that she
This statement brings up an
was asking for it, opponents said. interesting question~ Personally, I
Such behavior could not be tolerated. don't believe that Cahill's sympathy
But early thi s month, the for a wife-killer doesn 't have some
Maryland Judi cial Disabilities Com- sexist roots. but let's take him at hismission. a state di scipli~ary board, word. Let's say that gender bias was
exonerated the 64-year-old Cahill in not the motivating foro: behind this
a 5-2 decision, saying that they fou·nd outrageous sentence. Does that make
no evidence of sexism or any other it all right?
judicial misconduct in his statements.
·
Mind you, Peacoc;k's wa.•

a

Sacs Eclcel

A c.o~tly war
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Aaaoclllted Preaa Writer
COLUMBUS- The Ohio Senate has asked Congress to broker a ceasefire in the economic war between the states.
Sen~tors passed a resolution last week urging the federal government to .
eliminate any policies, such as tax breaks, that encourage corporations to
move from one state to another- often pitting one against the pther in an
ever-escalating economic arms race.
·
"We are in a very costly war among the states." warned Sen. Charles
Horn, R-Centerville. the sponsor of the bipal1isan resolution.
Hom, a longtime opponent of using targeted incentives as economic devclopnienttools, said the giveaways was~&lt;; tax dollars that would be b&lt;;tter spent
on overall tax reductions. education and training programs, research or·
improvements benefiting more than one business, such as roads or utility
·
hookups.
Coincidentally, the resolution passed the same day the Senate approved
yet another economic development incentive package.
This one sets aside $20 million to develop industrial parks and clean up·
contaminated sites in economically stressed rural and inner-city areas.
Hom was not one of the two votes cast against the bill .
That's because he was l ble to tack on an amendment setting aside
$~00.000 to study whether the state's economic development programs work
· or not. The money would be included in the fiscal year beginning July I,
1
and the study would have to be finished within two years.
"U's something we have needed to do for some time," Hom said.
Until now. the state generally has relied on the companies themselves to
inform development dcpanment officials whether they are living up to their
job creation or retention promises.
And there was no way of determining whether companies would have
moved to Ohio or expanded operations even if they did not get the breaks.
" Decisions about economic development have not been based on data
or efficiency," said David Kraybill, an associate professor of regipnal economic development at Ohio State Oniversity:
"They have been based on politics. on pressure - often from communities that feel they are under pressure," Kraybill said.
Kraybill. who say ~ he may seek the contract to conduct the s tudy of state
programs, said he would like the repon to focus on the entire cost of doing
business in the state rather than ·simply on specific p~ograms.
"This study will be worthwhile if it helps co_mmunities create or retain
jobs and docs it in a. way that minimizes the monetary expendit~res, " he
added.

Berry•s World

0 HI 0 Vv'Pdti1C I
w..ra1 J11, M.y n

of ·spousal· homicide____.

When · Kenneth Peacock
was sentenced to 18 months of work
release for killing his wife. Sandra,
the outr11ge spread ICroSS the country.
It wasn ., just the light sentence, it was the commems that Bal. timore County Circuit Court Judge
Robel1 E. Cahill made in giving il:
Cahill called Peacock a
"noncriminal" and said he was reluctant to pUnish him at all but did so
"only because I think I must do it to
keep the systefn honest "
He also said: " I cannot
think of any circumstance whereby
personal rage is uncontrollable
greater than this. To be betrayed in
your personal life when you were out
working to suppon the spouse under
the heightened circumstances of this
case are almost unmanageable."
He also said : " I seriously
· wonder how many married men,

'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·

Page2.
Tue1day, Mey 21, 1111;

•

o.n.I'IJ Manager

•

•

Commentary

A&lt;:c:IIWe......- fom:.st

not a hell-of-the-moment crime. He
did not kill his wife immediately after ~
finding her in flagrante delicto. He
took his time. He drank some beer,
and some wine. And argued with his
wife for several hours. THEN he
killed her.
If a woman had killed her
husband under these same circumstances and Judge Cahill slapped
HER on the wrists. would that be
OK?
Of course not. There is no
reason Cahill couldn't have made the ,
punishment fit the crime . Even Peacock 's lawyer didn't expect such a
Valentine ; he asked for a sentence
within the three- to eight-year sentencing guidelines for voluntary
manslaughter. to which Peacock
pleaded guilty.
And even if Cahill's inten- •
tions were not qonscious ly sexist.
such beliefs on the crimmality of ·
domestic violence would be disproponionatcly harmful to women were :
other judges to follow his example. ·
Women. after all. bear tile brunt of • ·
spousal violence. According to the :
Bureau of Justice Statistics, one-third •
of all female murder victims are slain :
by their husbands or boyfriends.
Only about 5 percent of all male mur- . i
der victims are killed by wives qr
girlfriends. according to FBI reports .. .
And a good number of these killings . ,
were in self-defense, where there w:a.s
a history of th.e husband or boyfriend , ;
physically abusing his female par1ner. . .
· It is i111portant that judges
not feel political pressure when making their decisions. and it is important
that they have the authority to ,iptcr.- . ,
prel_extenuating circumstanc~~-~But ,
JUStice was not served m the l(~pneJI1 1· • •
Peacock case. "' · "-t
And I'd feel that way. even _.,
if the roles were reversed.
.
·•
Sara Eckel is a syndical- .
eel writer for NewspaPfr Enter- :
prise Association.
·
Send cOmments to the
author in cart of this newspaper or ·&lt;;
send her e-mail at saraeumaol.com. - •t .

Jeremy Lee Atkins. 18, of Middleport, died Monday, May 20, 1996, o(
injuries suffered in an automobile accident in Galli• COUDty.
Born Jan. 30, 1978 in Oallia County, he was' tile son of Roaer Atkins of
Pomeroy, ud J.,oretm Atkins of Rutland.
In ldditi011 to his .,.,..,ts, be is survived by two sislcrs and a IJother-inIaw, Rodney ud Kelli Blandford of Rockport, Ind., and Misty Lane of Shade;
grandparents, Leslie and Yvonne Whiaington of Middleport. Fred. Tackett
of Vincent, ud Lyvonnia Young of Middleport; a great-tJ'andmother, Hannalh Welch of Mid411eport; two aunts, a niece, a nephew and several cousins.
He was also pn:ceded in death by Ills great-grandparents, Sam and Lillie
·
·
Smith; and a step-grandf!llher. Alfred Young.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Rutland Church of the Nazarene,
with the Rev. Sam Bayse officiating. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery. Rut·
land. Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home. Middleport. from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

•
•

Toward_a home voting network
Also, the USA Network is a cable
.:hannel.
A viewer must pay a rca:
news.
First the good news. According to - sonablc monthly fcc in order to view
the San Francisco Examiner, the it. Isn' t choosing USA for. a venue
Republicans have decided to bypass
what Newt Gingrich calls the "media
elite," and televise their upcomin g
convention themselves. Hooray' No elitist behavior? Or arc the Republimore Sam Donaldson! · No •more cans going to provide free cable bmdroning white men in headsets .wan- cs for the poor''
dering the convention floor describIf people arc expected to pay for
ing what we're already seeing!
the privilege of seeing politicians ·
The bad news? Well, this decision unfenered , unchained and-free at1ast
tunis Republicans into "media elite " of media-elite interpretations. what's
themselves. (And wcrcn 'tthey media wrong with watching the conventions
elite to begin with? They get more on dull. deocndablc. uncritical Ccoverage than I do anyway.) So all SPAN?.Justlock down the camera on
this means is a different sci of dron- Pat Buchanan and turn that firebrand
ing wh.itc men in headsets wandering laos&amp;!!
the convention flilor de scribing what
The trouble is. besides Beltway ·
we 're already seeing. Frankly, I'd insiders, a fanatical coterie of polirather gargle with hut .dog water.
tics-watchers. and the tight circle of
Worse. the GOP arc going to cov- media elite, nobody · watches Cer themselves on the USA Network. SPAN. The USA Network has a .
previously known as the. cx.dusivc much broader demographic ; its prohome of the world "s wurst made' for- gramming indicates a bewildering
TV movies ..(This could be a step up array of television consumers. USA
in the world for USA. or a step down. offers reruns of ··Murder. She
depending on your anitude toward Wrote,"' "Quantum Leap " and
the politics of Newt Gingrich or "MacGyvcr," for instance, and the
movies about innocent house wives original series "Silk Stalkings ... They
who lind out their husband of ! 5 offer " People's Cour1.' · "Love Conyears is really a Mafia hit .man.)
nection. '' profeSsional wrestling, boA-

lanShoales

ing, golf. " Highlander " (the series).
and "Wings." On Saturday nights.
they.offer R-ratcd movies with all the
R stuff dcle)ed. Oh. JCJnembcr
" Knight Rider '"' USA's got it.
So the typical USA viewer is -·
what? Older. Looking for love. jus-'
tice and " Rowdy" ' ·Roddy Piper.
They like stories about sexy private
eyes, immortal warriors and time
travel. They like to fcclthatthcy arc
being pandered to. so long a&lt; no actual titillation takes place. They arc
major fans of David Hassel holT (but
hey. who isn 'f!).
The Examiner columnist Rob
Morse has suggested th'!l the GOP
might be·bencr served if they covered
the Democratic convention instead. I
don 't know ahout that. If they go
down that road. ihcy'!l become the
elite of the media elite. They'll give
up politics altogether and hecnme
professional pundits. a tribe of journalists who enjoy the luxury of providing nonstor blather for our consumption without ever having to
account for it.. In other words. they
could all become Rush Umbaugh. As
far as I'm concerned. one is cnouJih.
Republicans should also realize
that familiarity ·breeds contempt. If
Republican s think that Americans

•

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Today in history

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Meigs announcements

Railcar leakage

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Hospital news

Today's livestock report

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Squads answer 13 calls

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Evans top EH'S

Thomas -F..Long Jr. .

will

0

London ·Poo·l openi,ng·;
delayed, council told· ·;:

Woodrow W. Wilcox

want to sec Pat Buchanan urge us to ·
take arms against a sea of Mc~icans,
then stroll down to the lloor and get
. Bob OoJc's,reaction -- .well. thc)"ve ./ '
got anpthcr think coming. No, the . ·
GOP needs .to recruit David Hasseihollltl anchor their show. They need · ·
Angela Lansbury. Richard Dean : &lt;
Anderson and Roddy Piper working ·
the lloor. The Republicans have to · :
ask themselves. what do they wanr1
Votes or ratings'' Their choice is .clear. ·'
If they lake my advice, thouglt. I · ''
shudder tn think what the Democrats • "
· will do to counter the GO!&gt;, I suspect
thcy'lllcasc time from The Nashville i •
Network. The president will dust off . ,~
. his samphnne. AI Gore
learn to
yodel.
My reaction to the election year,
in shnrt. is the sainc I have whenever I hear Whitney Houston sing "I •.
Will Always Love You ." Every time "•
I hear it. I think, "When will it end'/
Oh my God. when will it ever end'!"'
(To -receive a compllmenlllry ··
Ian Shoales newsletter, call I--800989-DUCK or write Duck's Breall), . "
408 Broad St., Nevada City, CA . • ,
95959.)
Ian Shoales ·is a syndicated ·· .1
writer for Newspaj&gt;er Enterprise
Association.

paign to return dcmouaiic govern- tics and other. major enterprises it these same Republicans were pubmcnt
to his impoverished nation.
manages. But in a nation whose pol- licly indifferent tO the thousands of
Gannett News Service
government-sponsored killings nf
But.
of
course,
Leblanc's
goal
is
to
itic~ have long been dominated hy a
W.ASHINGTON - " We arc here
· to make ourselves heard.'.' Edgar get linancial aid nowing again. A small. elite busi ness class. privatiza- supporters of Haiti's democracy
Leblanc Fils said as the small group · total of $1.2 billion in grants and tion is an alarming idea to the mass· movement that occurred · while the
of people with whom he shared a din - loans was promised to Haiti back in cs of Haitians who went to the polls military junta wa.' running that cuunner table tried to make quiet work of 1994 by the United Slates and other last December to elect the current try. Their current concern about the
~~-f ,.,..... '
•
recent spate of unsolved. killings their salads.
countries follo~ing the dispatch o( democratic government.
....~ .
• ... ~~y-. ....
Leblanc. the president of Haiti's 20.000 Am_cncap troops to the · The push-pull , between the which have claimed victims among
senate, made the rounds of official Can bbean tsland nataon to oust the demands of Haiti's finan cial aid suppor1ers and opponents of the govA PERK FOR THE PREZ
W:a.shington last week,. meeting with military dictator~hip that had sus- donors and the interests of Haitian ernment - seems disingenuous and
low-I.e vel Republicans, congression- pended democratic rule.
voters is forcing Haitian president · politically motivated.
Leblanc understands thi s. He
' a! leaders, administration officials
A large ponaon of these funds arc Rene Preval into walking a political
and supponers of his country's !)edg- bet~g held ho_stage by a demand lor tightrope. Without a rapid move knows that the foreign aid .his counhng democracy movement.
·
Haau to pnvauzc mne state-run enter-· toward privatization, little of the try badly needs is a pawn in the U.S.
:.·We arc not here to ask for mon- pnscs - and by the rough and tum- promised financial aid .will lind its presidential campaign. But he ha.' litey. but t.o help (Republicans in Con- blc of Amcncan prestd~~ual polmcs. way to Por1-au-Prince. And absent a tle choice but to try to convince GOP
By The AJaociated Preaa
.
.
Today is .Tuesday. May 21. the 142nd day ol 1996. There are 224 days gress) understand the situation in
Concerned that Ham s top leaders massive innux ~(dollars, Haiti's gov- lawmakers that the stakes are much
Haiti ," he said .Wednesday night at arc _dosct _MarXIsts, the Clanton ernmcnt will have few means for higher than the political advantage
left in the year.
the dinner hosted by TransAfrica. the adnumstrat~on wants the govemment compromi si ng with those who they seck.
Today's Highlight in History :
lobbying group that" led the U.S. cam- to gave up tiS control of pubhc uuh- oppose turning over control of govOn May 21. 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis
Without the promised financial aid
ncar Paris. completing the first solo airplane night across the Atlantic Ocean.
ernment-run enterprises to the private lor much longer. Haiti's democracy
sector.
·
On this date:
will be put at great risk. Its new
In !542, Spanish explorer Hemand.o de Sotodied while searching for gold
The problems of the Preval gov- national police force is badly in need
In 1959, the musical "Gypsy," inspired by the life of stripper Gypsy Kosc ernment are compounded by U.S. ·of money for training, salaries and
along the Mississippi River.
..
In !832. the first Democratic National Convention got under way. in Bal- Lee. opened on Broadway.
presidential politics. · Republicans , basic crime-fighting tools. If this
In
!968.
the
nuclear-powered
U.S.
submarine
Scorpion,
with
99
men
determined
to deny Bill Clinton a 10..- assistance doesn 't come before the
timore.
.
In !840, New Zealand was declared a British colony.
aboard, was l:a.st heard from. (The remains of the sub were later found on eign policy success in this election ·u.N. peacekeeping forci: leaves this
In 1881. Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross.
the ocean floor 400 miles southwest of the Azores.)
year. are couning disaster in Haiti. summer. Haiti could lapse back into
In !892, the opera "I Pagliacci," by Ruggiero Leoncavallp, was first perIn 1979, former San Francisco City Supervisor Dan White was convict- They are demanding that the Haitian .a state of political turmoil before ihe
ed of voluntary manslaughter in the deaths of ~ayor George Mosconc and government solve several killings · U.S. presidential campaign heats up.
.
formed , in Milan, llaly.
In 1924. 14-year-old Bobby Franks was murdered in a "thrill killing"
• that have occurred since the restoraSupervisor Harvey Milk.
That would give Republicans,
In
!980:
Ensign
Jean
Marie
Butler
became
the
first
woman
to
graduate
committed by Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, two students at the Unition of demOcracy - slayings GOP who are desperate to resuscitate the
from a U.S. service academy as she accepted her degree and commission legislators call "politically inspired" presidential hopes of Bob Dole, a
versity of Chicago. .
.
.
..
.
In 1941 . a German U-bqat sank the American.freighter SS Robin Moore , from the Coast Guard Academy at New London, Conn.
-.. as yet another condition for the- small I ' I told you so" victory. But the
Ten
years
ago:
President
Reagan
vetoed
a
Congressional
resolution
blockrelease of the promised U.S. foreign damage to lhe H•itian people -and
in the South Atlantic.
.
·
In 1956. the United Sta~s exploded the first airborne hydrogen bomb over
ing a scaled-down sale of advanced U.S. missiles to Saudi Arabia. (/he veto aid . .
the political fortunes of the GOPwas narrowly upheld the following month.)
The irony here is that many of w(ll he mas5ive.
· Bikin1 Atoll in the Pacific.
·

Funeral services were held Saturday. May I 8, I 996 for Rose Mary Ward
Doly, 68, Columbus, who died Tuesday, May 14. 1996 at her residence under
•
.
hospice care.·
EHSPROM ROYALTY -'Cryetal Surnrnerfleld, ct.ughlarofTom .J
Born March 5, 1928 in Pomeroy, she was the daughter of the late Charles
and
c;:arolyn Summerfield, Reedlvllle, named 1996 Eaallrri .
and Leah Ward. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School and the Ohio
High
School
Prom
queen
at
1M
event,
held
- t l y at the Hotel \
State University. She was a chaner member of the Christ Anglican Church,
Lafayatte
In
Marietta.
E.cotllng
Sulllnlllrlield
waa
R~ )iotfman, ~
serving several terms on the vestry and altar guild.
··
son of Steve and Barbtn Hoffman, Chester.
She was employed by the Hanna Paint Co. and White Castle Home
Vlo ANocillld l'reu Grop/llcoNel
Offices, retiring in February 1990. She was actively involved with Linden
Dog Training School, Pilot Dogs Inc., and the Franklin County Humane Society.
She is survived by a brother, James T. Ward of Pomeroy; sisters, Betty
B. Mees and Jane W. (Victor) Miller, both of Columbus; and several nieces
and nephews.
.
·
·
.
A delay in the opening date of
By The Aaaoclated ~
The record high temperature ror·:
She was preceded in death by her husband, Michael J. Doty; her brothIt was announced that anyo.nc in '"
London Pool was announced at a spe- need of recertification can take '~
A cold front will push to the south this date at the Columbus weather · er, Charles M. Ward; and brother-in-law, Robert F. Mees.
Arrangements were handled by Schoedingcr State Street Funeral Chapel, cial meeting of Syracuse Village advantage of. evening classes to bC ,
of the stale by this evening. Behind station was 92 degrees in 1941. The
offered at the pool the week of June ,~
Columbus. Burial was in the Union Cemetery. Columbus.
· Council Monday night.
the front. winds will shift to the reconflow was 34.in 1883.
'
Mayor George Connolly said that 17.
northwest aqd temperatures will drop.
. Memorial contributions can be made in her memor)i to the Mount Carmel
Sunset will be 8:45 p.m. Sunrise
Larry
Lavender,
council
mcm'b!Jr,
r)
the
delay
was
necessitated
because
Showers and a few scattered thun- will be 6: I 0 a.m.
·
Hospice, Columbus.
and
Scott
Walton
displayed
lifesaving
"weather slowed •onstruction of anew
derstorms are behind the front and
Weather forecast:
tubes
purchased
by
council
for
usc
at•"
concession 'stand and press "box.
will move with the front through the · · Tonight. .. Moslly clear. Lows in
~the~
.
along with other construction work the pool . Council aiso voted to pur- :r.
'
chase a set of pool steps for usc hy ·
Tonight, a high pressure moves
Wed,nesday .. .Panly
su.nny
Woodrow W. Wilcox, 82, 33 I 7 W. Monroe St., Sandusky. died Monday. ~ear the pool area.
I' " \.'
London Pool is now scheduled to individuals with handicaps.
into the region and Ohio will experi- • nonh ... Mostly sunny south. Htghs May 20, 1996 in the Provi.dence Hospital , following a brief illness.
Council
accepted
the
bid
of
ence mqstly clear skies. Overnight mtd 70s flol1h to around 80 an the
Born Dec. II. 1913 in Cheshire, son of the late Wilbur and Cora Rum- open the first week in June.
''I'm very sorry for . the delay. $4,065 from Davis-Quickcl for build- n"
lows will be in the 50s.
south.
field Wilcox,ltC retired from the Penn Central Railroad in 1971 after 34 years
Extended foncast:
· of service. He was a World War II veteran of the U.S. Army Fiftl'l Armored However, it is unavoidable ," com- ing and equipment insurantc for the
On Wednesday the high will cOnThursday and Friday... Fair. Lows Division.
village.
·
mented Connolly.
tinue to influence the weather pattern
.
in
the
50S.
Highs
in
the
70s.
Attending
besides
those
named
!~
At
the
meeting,
council
hired
as
He was a member of the Sandusky Baptist Temple and the Fifth Armored
keeping skies panty sunny over the
Saturday... Chance of showers. Division Association.
lifeguards Jody Hupp, Sam Cowan: were hnicc Zwillin~. clerk-treasurer; •c
north and mostly sunny over the
Surviving are his wife, Edith Duncan Wilcox; two daughters, Mrs. Allen :Crystal Vaughan, Adam McDaniel, council members Donna Pelcrson, •H
south. Highs will range from the mid- Low in the mid 50s to lower 60s.
High
in
the
70s.
70s nonh to around 80 in the south.
(Diana) Mislerof Bellevue. and M., . Lawrence (Lynda) Dale of Norwalk; Shawn Maxey. Rebecca Meier. Cyn- Mony Wood. Bill Roush and Katie
Crow: and Tim Gillilan. police
four stepdaughters, Sally E. Miller of Linle Hocking, Mrs. Paul (Doris) Dick- thia Caldwell and Keri Caldwell.
chief.
·•·
ens and Mrs. Arnold (Shirley) Tanner. both of Duck. W.Va., and Violet
1-:!t
Edward·s of Sandusky; a stepson, James A. Wilson of Sandusky, 10 grandchildren and four greai-grandchildrcn; and a sister, Evelyn Thomas of Gal lipolis.
.
.
He was also preceded in death by his first wife. Norma, in 1990; and two
(Continued from Page 1)
dy Marie Mays.• Jason Eugene
brothers. Walter Wilcox and Warren -Wilcox.
Milliron: Jennifer Denise Mora:
She ha.&lt; hccn active in student
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Sandusky Baptist Temple, 3706 council activities. the National
·CrystarLeigh Morris, Sabrina Rose
Milan Road, Sandusky. with the Rev. Wally Gilbcn officiating. Friends may
Morris, J. Robel1 Travis Murphy .
Honor Society, volleyball. basketcall attbe Groff Funeral Home. 1607 E. Perkins Ave .. Sandusky. from 7-9 ball. and softball programs during
Nicole Dawn Nelson. Gi"n~cr Lee
tonight and 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Nutter. Kyle David Ord, Micah i'''
her
years
at
the
school.
Thomas F. Long Jr.• 20, Middleport, died Monday, May 20, I 996.
The body will lie in state in the temple one hour prior to services ThursJohn
0119.. Colleen Christipc Per- · .,~
Evans was a member of the
Born August 12, 1975. son of Tom and Jennifer Cremeans Long Jr. of day.
·
.
·
.
sons Mar1i n, Jason Andrew Phalen. ·
·senior play ca&lt;t, Varsity "E'' Club
Cheshire, and Sondra and Bill Weaver of Pomeroy. he formerly attended RivGraveside services will be I p.m. Friday in the Miles Cemetery. Rutland . and served aS class treasurer.
N&lt;&gt;&lt;:llc Renee Pickens; '
er Valley High School and was a former employee of Magie's Restaurant.
where friends may call from noon until the !tour of the services,
Connie Elaine Pooler, Jeffery
Among
the
awards
and
honors
she
Surviving in addition to his parents arc two sons, Thomas Long
and
Memorial contributions may be made to a favorite charity:
Allen
Rankin. Brandi Nikcolc
received arc the Ohio University
Craigory Long; a fiance , Rochelle Jenkins of Middlepon; two stepbrothers;
Reeves. ·Marisa Dawn ·Trussefl.
.i
Alumni Award, Danforth "I Dare
Billy and Joseph Cremeans, and two stepsisters. Lisa and Stephanie Cremeans
Walter Douglas Rockhold: Oliver
You"
Award,
National
English
all of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a paternal grandmother, Mary loUise Long of
Edgar Sayre Ill. Jason Donal&lt;! tr
Merit Award. Holzer Clinic SciZanesville; and a special friend, Craig Athey.
- ·
Sheets, Amy Michelle Smith. Crysence Award, a nd Who's Who
Services will be .l I a.m. Wednesday, May 2,2, I994in the McCoy-Moore
Un.its of the Meigs County Emer- Daisy Sayre. treated at the scene.
tal Dawn Smith. Michael Lee.
Among
American
High
School
Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, GallipOlis. Burial will be . in the Poplar gency Medical Service recorded 13
SYRACUSE
Kelly Dawn Spencer.
Smith.
students.
4:02 p.m., Broadway Avcimc,
Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m, Tues- calls for assistance Monday. Units
Ray
St. Clair;
Michael
Evans plans to attend the UniDaisy Sayre, HMC:
·
day. May 21. 1996.
·
·
responding included: . ·
Clifford Dale Stevens II, Cry~­
versity of Rio Grande in the fall .
7:50p.m ., Rocksprings Rehabili·
. .
P0\\1EROY
tal
Lynn Summerfield. Eri c Dennis
majoring in chemistry.
2:35 a.m.. fire ·department. Cour1 tation Center. June Griffin·, Veterans
Tuttle.
Michelle Dawn Vance.
The top I0 scholars of the Class
Street; Gallipolis. mutual aid assis- Memorial Hospital;
Kristina Marie Warn-cr. Heather
of 1996 will he announced Friday
8:44 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitance on structure fire;
Alison
Well. Bryan Patrick Wood.
afternoon,
during
awards
cereMeigs
Hi~
School
will
be
held
at
tation
Center,
Myl11eStanley,
VMH.
Council roscheduled
II :03 a.m., Spring Avenue,
Amy
Marie
Yates, Lauren ·Renee
monies
at
the
high
sc
hool.
.
The regular meeting of Middle- 6:30p.m. Thursday in the cafeteria. Audrey Wood. Holzer Medical CenRUTLAND
·
Young.
·
12:43 a.m.. Main Street, Sandy
port Village Council has been Parents are to take two covered dish- ter.
Members of the graduating
Smith,
VMH:
rescheduled for Wednesday, May 29. es. Meat. tolls. drinks and silverware
class
arc : Beth Ann Arnon,
MIDDLEPORT
will
be
provided.
II
:35
a.m.,
Happy
Hollow
Road.
at 7:30p.m. in village hall, due to the
Michael Jared Barnell. Bcthcncy
12:46 a.m., fire depanmen\, Cuul1
Monday Memorial Day holiday.
Aria Bay, Brian Dwain Bowen.
Street, Gallipolis. mutual aid assis- Dawn King. HMC;
Meeting tonight
3:58
"p.m.,
Langsville.
Maxine
Alex William Brown , Jeanette
tance on structure fire;
The new Riverbcnd Players theAldfjdge,
HMC:
VFW ·t o meet
..
Renee
Cline, Travis Scott Cunis.
8:27 a.m .• fire depal1ment, State
ater
group
will
have
an
organi1.ational
S;
14
p.m
..
Meigs
Mine
2.
Randy
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Melissa Marie Dempsey, Debra
Route 554, assisted. Gallia County
Tackcn. HMC;
9053 will meet at 7:30p.m Tlwrsday meeting tonight at 6:30 at the River- EMS on auto accident.
Dawn Dillon, Ch risty Dawn Drake.
bend Arts Council offices, North
8:45
p.m.,
Long
Street,
Rip
Jamie
Dawn Erwin. Rebecca Marie
at the hall.
RACINE
By
Second Avenue. Middleport. Anyone
HMC.
'
Grucsser.
Evans:
3:53 p.m.. Broadway Avenue,
interested in participating in the
Dave
Jessica Vena Frederick. Donald
Sports banquet
group
is
invited
to
attend.
Keith Goheen. Renee Elayne Gray,
The sprin11 sports banquet at
·
.
Eric
Ian Hill, Brian James Hoff•
(Continued from Page 1)
Veterans Memqrial
man.
Rohen Edward Hoffman.
i
nati. and was stoppc4 in the nol1h end
Monday admissions - Richard
Eric James Hollon, Jessica
of Mason when a motorist saw the •Dill, Sr., Pomeroy.
'I
Michelle Karr, Daniellc Su1.anne
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana1
U.S. 1-2. 220-260 lbs. 60.50- leak. The driver sped up to _get the • Monday discharges - none.
Kibble. Lena Eileen Knous, Traci
I
Ohio direct hog prices at selected 62.50, few 60.00 and 63.00; plants attention of the engineer, who then
Holzer Medical Center
.&lt;
Marie
Lance.
Robe
rt
Michael
i
stopped the train. ·
buying points Tuesday by the U.S. 62.00-63.50.
The only tirrie the average
Discharges May ·20 - Mrs: Laughery ;
The
solution,
which
is
made
up
of
Depanment of Agriculture Market
person would like to be
u.s. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 53.00Grady John son and daughter. Cheryl
Arland Gene McCal1ncy, Can- .
36 percent hydrochloric acid and 64 Whitt. Walter Pinkeman, Kimberly
president is around the first of
News:
68.00. ' .
percent
water.
releases
vapors
when
·Barrows and gilts: 1.00 to mostly
the
month - so we coi..rld veto a
Sows: steady to firm.
Clagg. Luanna Garvey.
coming
in
contact
with
metals.
The
bills.
few
!.50 higher; demand moderate to ·
U.S. 1-3. 300-500 lbs. 40.00Births - Mr. and Mrs. John Har·
vapors
can
irritate
or
bum
the
throat
. good a moderate run. ·
45.50; 500-650 lbs. 45.00-48.00, few
ri son, daughter. Cheshire; Mr. and
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
if inhaled in large enough amounts.
One good thing about the ne)N
.
~
49.00.
Mrs . Randy Stewart, ,daughter. Mid446·4524
The
shelter-in-place
order
was
TV shows - the kids are doing
tt
Boars: 34.00-36.00.
dlepol1.
-n..-,
'' ...,... I
Daily
their
homework
again.
called off at approximately 4 a.m. on
(Published with permission)
.
I
Monday,
but
workers
from
the
(USPS 113-fM)
Heard about the farm thaf s so
Weavcnown Environmental Co. in
Published every allem001t. Monday lbr01&amp;b
small
, t!Je cows only give
Pennsylvania were still cleaning ur
Friday, Ill Coun Sa., Pomen&gt;y, Ohio. by 1be
_,
Am Ele Powtf' .......................40~
condensed milk?
Monday afternoon.
OIWo Valley Publilhina C....yiGannen Co.•

Tonight's lows to reach
50s as cold front arrives

..' .

'- By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

Rose Mary Ward .Doty

W.VA.

'" .. . .

I've got good news. and bad

Jeremy L. Atkins

MICI1.

i'

Haiti's need for aid caught up in politics

'

-

Good)nr T&amp;R ......................52'!.
K-mart ..................~..................10'1.
Landa End.........;...................22\
umttec~ 111c••~•• - ....................21"
Peopl11 BIIIICOI'P........ ,...........23
OhiO Valley ari_ .....................31

mnil il advMCe dica:r 10 The EWIJ s.dld
on a 111ree. liJ. C'lt 12 month t.n. Credit wiD tie

OM Ylllley....,.....................~....31'Rock•all ..............................55\·
Robbins a ~ ........ .:..........45\

No sub~eripdoa by mail perniud Ia whe1e hcilne airier lei'Vic:e ila\'liJiblt.
·

$h0rtly'ali"'c.............._ ..........12~

'
MAIL SUIIICitiP110NI

·-MIIp~

tJW..U .....---·-········-·····-···-..--S27.30

l6 w.eu ............................................ S$3.11
52 w.eu.............................................$105.~

13 -

211 -

52. -

--MIIp~

--····--······-··-··········-··········$29.25

··-·---·················--·········$36.61

. ···-···-····..·••· ........................ $10P.12

,,

~ Duieltl&amp;twl1 ............... 110~

.... Bartll ................................es\
WetMty ~r~t•L ......- ..................18~

_._a_ .

Worthington Ind.................. .21'A.

Trio will lead

(Continued from ~age 1)
Luke Rodney Holman, Jason Everell
Hudson,
Paul William lhle, Mary Rochelle
Jenkins. Amanda Rae Jeffers, Jeremy
. Paul Jobnston, Jennifer Rochelle
Lawrence, Alice Marie I:.ewis, Beanna Marie Lisle, Jay Patrick McKelvey, lonna Christine Manuel, Jyl
Alanna Mathews, Amanda Ro~e
Mills, Sean Michael Montgomery,
Rebecca Marie Moore, Chanda Ryan
Mulford, Lilian Manha Nakao,
Jamey Lee Nelson, Rachel Denise
Norman, Brian James Pagel, Kevin
Alden Poner, Christopher Michael
Proffitt. James Edward Rir.er. Pamela
Denise Roush, Alban Glen Salser.
Jason Michael Shuler, ·Samantha ·
Dyan Sisson, Gabriel Matthew
Smith, Nicholas M~l Smith. Mar. ion Edward Snider, Kelly Ann Swis.,:
er. Matthew Alan Theiss. Kirk Alan
Turley and Ray1111 Elizabeth Youna.

***

\

•••

_J

***

I

Bath mat: a small rug that
young children like to stand
next to before they're dry.

••

• .• *

PQMEROY
NNr Potneroy·Mit- Bridge
992-2588
,
VINTON

You know you're getting older
when dialing long distance
wears you out.

Gallt. Coljnty Dl.,..y Yard
1~ Mltln St. '

' II'

Rutlaatl Furniture
,,
...

.

• •

••• 124, 1111.1; Ol 742·2211
..

�'
Tu111Ny, lily
21, 1tll

'Sports

The Daily Sentin,!}
.

Meigs upsets state-ranked Jackson 4-3.

Tu11dey, May 21, 1tll

.

.

Marauders improve to 14-6 overall, .advance to Division II district finals

Atlanta crushes Chicago 18-1
By The Aatoelll'-&lt;1 Prea

"

. FORCED AT THIRD- Florida Marlin• third basemen Terry

.

Pendleton IOr!:M Clnclnnatl'l Wl.llle Greene (12) out at third dur· .
1ng the 8ttllnnlng of ~y night's game In Cincinnati. The Mar·
llnl .m on to win, 5-3. (AP)

•
R
d
d
·
u
mp
In
g
.
e
s
ro
p
SI
S···~th , game .1· n row. 5-3·

Those who thought Da~id Justice's injury would sideuack the
Atlanta Braves have been wrong
thus far.
Chipper Jones jllld rookie Tyler
.Houston )loth drove in five runs Monday night as the Braves scored their
most runs in more than two years.
routing the Chicago Cubs 18-1.
"Some of the other guys ha~e
stepped up and are really swinging
the bat;" Iones said.
Jones went 3-for-5 with a threerun homer. Houston replaced Fred
McGriff in the fifth inning and hit a
three-run homer in the sixth. his first
major league home run. He added a
two-run single in the se~enth.
"On the bench, I root for games
like this," said Houston, who had
been limited to a pinch-hitting role.
"I know, at least, I'll get in for a few
innings."
Justice separated a shoulder last
week and is out of the rest of the season. Atlanta, which had I 7 hits and
raised its batting average to .280, has
won four straight since then to run its

hoi streU to 13 of 1~ .
"E~erything fell in. tonisht,"
Bra~es manaaer Bobby Cox said.
"The hard hit balls dropped in. The
flares feiHn and the head-knockers
went through. Everything just found
a hole. n
In ocher games, San Francisco
beat Montreal 6-5, New York beat
Los Angeles 7-1, Florida beat Cincinnati 5-3, C()lorado beat Pittsburgh I 0.
7 and Sl. Louis heat Houston 5-3.
At Atlanta, Steve Avery (5 - ~)
allowed five hits and struck out six in
six innings.
Frank Castillo (1-6) save up eight
runs and seven hits in I 1-3 innings.
"I felt like 1. had decent stuff,"
Castillo said. "But the bQttom line is
that I gave up eight runs and hit rock
bottom. They're swinging the bats
pretty good, but I think I'm a better
pitcher than thai."
Giants '· Expo. 6
Mike Dyer (3'·1) walked Tom ·
Lampkin with the bases loaded, forcing in the go-ahead run as San Francisco rallied with a fi~e-run eighth.

VisitinJ Montreal. which lost
starting pi"her Jose Paniaaua after
Malt Williams' liner hit his riaht wriJt
in the second innina. led S-0 in the
fourth and 6-4 in the eishth. After
Lampkin's walk, pinch-hitter Mark
Carreon hit a two-run single .
Mark Dewey (2-2) pitched the
eighth, and Rod Beck finished for his
lith save.
Mets 7, Doqen 1
Rico Brogna homered at Dodger
Stadium and matched his season
high with four RBls.
·
Bobby Jones (4-1) won his fourth
straight decision. pitching his first
complete game since last Sept. 8 at
Montreal. He allowed nine hits,
struck out seven and walked one.
Tom Candiotti (3-3) allowed six
runs and a season-high I I hits in 6 I3 innings. The Mets had one more hit
than their total· in Sunday's doubleheader loss at San Francisco.
.Rockles·IO, Pirates 7
Eric Young homered and added an
RBI single as Colorado stretched its
winning streak to a season-high five
games.

Sentinel CorrMpondent
Junior Scbu George fired a three·
hitter as Meigs upset Jackson 4-3 in
Division II District Basheall action
Monday evening at Zane Trace High
School.
Meigs is now 14-6 on the season
and will advance to the district finals
on Friday afternoon to play the win·
ner of the game between Hillsboro
and Northwest. Jackson went into the
. contest as the ranked seventh in the
state in Division U. Coach Steve Lit·
tie's Ironmen, who were the Southeastern Ohio League champions,

Ellis Burks, Larry Walker and
Andres Galarraga also drove in two
runs each fpr the Rockies, who had
14 hits and won their sixth straight
home game .
Armando Reynoso (3-3) won for
the first time since May 3, allowing
three runs and .-seven hits in six

innings. Colorado took a 6-0 lead and
saw qte ,Pirates close to 6-S before
regaining control.
Denny Neagle (5-2). who had won
his five previous decisions, was
tagged for six runs and I0 hits as
Pittsburgh lost for the I Ith time in I 4 ·
games.
Cardinals 5, Astros 3
. Donovan Osborne (3-2) scattered
eight hits at the Astrodome for his
first ~omplete game since June 9,
I 993, and Ray Lankford broke a 2-2
tie with an RBI single that put St.
Louis ahead to stay.
Doug Drabek (1-4) allowed three
runs and .nine hits in 6 2-3 innings,
struck out eight and walked three.
It was only the seventh win in 26
games for the Cardinals.

SEATILE (AP) - The Seattle
SuP\'rSonics got all they could handie from Utah for 47 tn minutes.
Then the Jazz decided to stand
around for 20 secOnds, and the Son·
ics walked away with 2-0 lead in
the Western Conference finals.
Detlef Schrempf made two foul
shots with 1.6 seconds left to lock up
Seattle's91-87victoryMondaynight .
after Ulah let the Sonics run out most
of the clock in the final half minute.
It provided a strange finish to a
closely foughtrgame that featured an
excellent third quarter by Karl Malone, a strong founh quarter by Gary
. Payton and a go-ahead basket by
Shawn -K.emr after he was hampered .
by foul trouble most of the night.
· Game 3 is Friday night at Salt
Lake City, with Game 4 on Sunday.
The
final
standing-around
sequenc~ was set up after Kemp put
Seattle ahead 89-87 on
. a hangrng shot

a

.

Boston hot in 16-4 triumph over Oakland
By The A11oclated Preas

Brad Whitlatch of Middleport has
been selected to play basketball in the
Belgium International Tournament aS.
a member of an Area Select team
from Ohio.
The trip _is being coordinated
through ·the combined efforts of
Sports Challenge International, Inc.
of Cary North Carolina and the affil.
iated Belqium Basketball Federation. Sports Challenge has heen organizing athletic tours since 1986 under
ihe'direciion of President, Rik Sey. mour, a former college basket)lall
coach. 1996 Spons Challenge A-ill
conduct
300 international team tours
.
encompassing seven sports 10
Europe, ·tbe Caribbean and Australia.
The tournament will be held from
• August 6th- 13th and is a special
competition for boys and girl~ age
14-18 ..
The selection process begins with
. recommendations of athletes who
ha~e achieved high caliber statu.s.
1
These recommendations arc received
from various· sources which may
include area coaches. athletic camps.
scouting services 'and slate associa-

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Stank- (Bolio J.2) a18o11nn 0•1oyer 4-1).7:05 p.m.
KM!w City (LiNen 0-1) ot De1roit (WiiUams 0-2t 7:0j p.m.
Milwaukee (McDonotld 4-1) m Clc:Yeland (Maninez ~2), 7:0S p.m.
Olk.lilnd (Re~• -'·6» m. New York (Gooden 2-3 ~. 7:3!1 p.m.
California tBoskie 4-1) a! Baltimore (Krivdlll-0&gt;. 7:3$ p.m.
Toronlo (Quantrill1-$) lit Cbia.ao tTapani J-J). 8:05p.m.
Tcw (Hill 5- ~1 :u MinntsOUI IRidke 4-5). 8:05p.m.
.
Wldntldly'a Gamt~
Tuas (PIIvlik ~ - I) 111: Minnc=sota (Piml 1-2). l :!S p.m•
Kansas Cily (8elchct4-2):w: Detroil (Lin. J-3). I :15 p.m.
Toronro (Giitman 4-JJ o1OUtaao Cfunnndcz S-21. 2m p.m.
Milwaukee (Karl 3-21 at C"veland (McDowell 5-1). 7:05p.m. .
Sc-aule (Wokolt 2-$) alBoslon (Waktfteld 2-4). 7:0! p.m.
Oakland (Wojciechowski 4-0) 111 New Yprk (Ptttilte 6-2).. 7:35 p.m.
California (Abboll I~) 11 Bahi11101't CHayncsl-4). 7:lS p.m.

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Ciry 19

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge you less l9r yo·ur
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and ·save even more
with our special mufti-policy
discounts.

kmns:u City~ - Toronlo 4
B:dcimorc 1.1. CaJi(ornia I

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p.m.
C'hiC"IJO (8!111inJt't' ,1-J) at Atlanta (Gl.a\·ine 4-3). I:I0 p.m.
Pinlbutlh (Smilh 2-11 111 Colando {Rilz J-41..~ :OS p.m,
Montreal (Maninez 4--1 I at San Fnmri1co (Vunlandintham 2-6). J: J~ (l.m.
Sl. tOuh tAlan Benes .1-3) :11 Hoo11on (Kilt S-2). 8:05p.m.
New Yort(Owt 2- ~1 at LD1 AnJeles CNomo 6-J). 10:~5 p.m.
hiladt:lpbia tGnK"r 6-1 I It Sl¥1 D~JO (Hamilton 6-~). 10:.\5 p.m.

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Chit.':IJO (Te~o 1.01 at A11Mtn (Maddu:.. S·J I. 7:-Ml p.m.
. St. Louis tStonltmyrt .\-21 :a Hous1on (Reynolds 6-l). ll:O.~ p.m.
PinlbufJ.h &lt;Ruebel 0.01 ot Colorndo (furmet 0.0). 9:0"S p.m.
New YOft (HamitC"h .l -2) :11: Los AnJ.elts IVoklts-1-21. 10:05 p.n1.
fflibdef"!l (MuiK!UD.IId 3-.1) :II b DkJ.o (lkrgnmn l-J). 10:0~ p.m.

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Transactions

BASEB.UL
Amlrlc.n Ltque8AL11MORE ORIOLES-Sell RHP EAitbaliY"'IO ~1er orohet.... aalional Leap. Toanolerml
RHP Armlada 8eni1tz from 1hc J 5-dly disabled Usc toW: 6(Hiay.
Nabonall.at~~t
.
·
R..ORIDA MARUNs-Piottd RHP Kevin Brown o• lht 15-day diaabled lill, tetroectivc 10 May 13.Retalied RHP O.nid Wcalhm frOm Ctwlone ol the lnrm.arional l.tquc:. ActivMCd·SS K1U1 Abbot1 from
lhe 15-day dllilbled liorllld opoion«&lt; him 10 Chlll011&lt;.
• PI1TSBURGH PIRATES--R&lt;o:alled lHP MMI R-1 ~oin CalllrJ' or die Pociro&lt; Coao1 Lc..ue. S.,.
RHP John Hope ""rij)lllo Calpr)'.
SAN DteGQ PADRES-Recalled lB Bulh fiVlD L11 1111• oldie PCL aod p1«e4 him onlhe
60-dly di11lded lln. A'naounced·e.ey ha~ ntenckd lheir pJiyrer •YetopmefM COMrtel wilh Rllt:bo Cul:tMORJA tJl rhe CD.IifOI'ftia Ia&amp;• lhfOtllh 2000.

L}

.

. GAINS REGIONALS- Meigs
High School Junior D. J. Blanks
haalldvanced to the Dlvlalon n
Regional track meet this
Wednesday at Chl111cothe.
Blankl Clme In third In the dla- ·
trlct whh a time of 11 .5 sec·onda In the 8oom dlllh. ·

a ......,.,...,
0 fllltt Reg. sa.so MOW $5

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Reg. $5.751$6.75 .

IOW$5.00 .

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Opln IIIII)' N, Bun. 1M

8yntoult, OIL

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Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-61187
A.uto-O...nen

lruurt~~~ee ,

Ufe Home Car Bualnat18 .

n.

•

•

was eartled.

.

B1'1111 Whitl•ch led Meigs with a
pair of sinales, Cleland added his
double. Chad Burton, Stanley,
Hoover. and Brent Hanson all added
sinsles.
,
Mac Houser was the starter and
loser for Jackson pitching the first
five and two third inning. Ryan Hall
pitched the final inning and a third.
Tile two combined to strike out
eight, scatter seven hits and walk five.
Meigs, which is still in the lVC
title hunt. will host Wellston Tuesday
evening and-then will travel
. - ..to Vin·
-

Mac Houser (LP), Ryan Hall {S)
and Craig Byler

Meigs 002 002 0.4 7 2
Jackson 002 000 1-3 3 2

in the lane with 38.8 seconds left. Perkins finished with IS each.
John Stockton dribbled into a double·
Malone led Utah with 32 points.
team atthe other end and left his feet, including 18 in the third quarter, and
then threw a weak, off-balance cross- Hornacek had 22.
coun pass that was intercepted by
Payton was the only member of
Kemp.
the Sonics to score from the field dur"I just read the play, stayed in ing a span of 6:2 I beginning with
between them. got a hand on the ball · Kemp's fastbreak dunk with 9:09 left
and it worked out fine," Kemp said. and ending with Kemp's jump hook
When the Sonics got the ball with 1:12togothatputSeattleahead
upeourt, the Jazz stayed back on. 87-85.
defense rather than foul intentional- ·
Antoine Carr scored from in close
ly and send Seattle to the line despite over two defenders with 57 seconds
the four-second differential between · left to tie the game again, but' that was
the shot clock and game clock.
Utah's last shot from the field.
Sehrempf missed from the corner
The Jazz lost despite outreboundwith the game clock down to six sec· ing Seattle 34-28, having two fewer
onds. The shot. was shon and hit the turnovers and a 17-6 edge on fast·
nm, bouncmg out o:&gt;f bounds off Jeff . break points. Part of it came down to
Hornacek's hand. Schrempf war' not being able to draw a sixth foul on
fouled on the inbounds pass, and he Kemp, who played the final 10;50
sank two. free throws to seal it.
wiih five fouls.
Payton led Seattle with. 18 points,
Kemp was whistled for four fouls
Schrempf
had
17
and
Kemp
and
Sam
in
the
,first hal( and .pick~d up his fifth
'
.

after playing just 17 seconds of the
tl)ird quarter. Seattle led 61-59 at the
time, but Utah closed the quarter with
an 18-5 run to lead 73-6S heading
into the fourth.
"The thing you do in this position
is sit on the bench and watch their
offense. see what they're doing,"
Kemp said. "Then when yoq go
back, you don't get silly fouls . I kept
my patience and let the game come
to me."

lions. After attending an informa·
tiona! meeting the applicant must
submit two references atlesting their
skill and character. With the comple·
tion of the extensive process, the athlete . is placed on a traveling team
from his/her state .
The International Tournament will
be held in the city of Meche! len, Belgium. In addition to Belgium, teams
representing Croatia, Poland, Ger·
many, _ijungary, and . the Czech
Republic have been invited; Each
team will play a minimum if five regulation games through the week.
Olvmoic/FIBA rules arc utilized for
all internati.(:mal games.
In addition to the competition. the
athletes will also par,ticipate in sight·
seeing excursions and goodwill
receptions. The teams wi II tour
Antwerp along with the capital city
of Brussels. ride a boat through the
canals of Brugge, stroll the beaches
of Oostende and spend a day in Paris.
Brad is currently getting Sponsorship from individuals and businesses to help alleviate the financial
cost of the trip.

BLOCKS SHOT - Utah's Felton Spencer (50) blacks this shot .
attempt by Seattle's Detlaf Schrempf (11) during Monday's NBA
playoff gerne In $aattle. The SuperSonics won, 91-87 to take • "
2-0 lead In the Western Conference Championship playoffs. (AP) ~

*

,I

:r

••

"LET.U§ NOT FORGEToo~
l

Those Who -H ave Given 11Jeir Lives

To·Preserve America's.Freedom
'Ibis Memorial Day, we would like to pay tribute to tbe
many brave many and women who have given tbelr lives
to uphold and protect our country's Ideals.
On Friday, May 24. we will puhlish
a special section devoted to th ose
. who arc gone hut not forgotten .
The names will be placed in
alphabetical order and will he
· similar to the sample below.

BRAD WHITLATCH
Brad is the son of Terry Whitlatch
and Rita and Richard Bailey. He is
the grandson of the late Paul and
Gemma Casci of Middleport, James
an~ Jenny Whitlatch of Bradbury and
Richard and Doris Bailey of Middleport.

0-

there's a good half-a-dozen to ll "Anytime you start in the sixth, se.v·
dozen rookies here anyway, " veteran enth, eighth row, you're in the mid·
Mike Groff snid. "Mario started as a die of the pack with a lot of turburookie, A.l. started as a rookie, we all lence. The car does a lot of crazy
did. You have to stArt somewhere..
things and you have to be on your
"One thing I would say is there's toes."
Lyn St. james, the I 992 rookie of
a lot of good racers here in their own
right, and I think that's very impor- the year and at age 49 the third-old· ·
tant." Gron said. "No, some of the · est behind Ongais and Parsons tliis
guys don't ha~e a whole lot of expe- year, will start from the sixth row. ·
"But it doesn't concern me," she
rience in an Indy car, but. it'~ all relsaid of the number of rookies. ''I
ative.' '
.
Stewart last year became the first know how it feels to be a race car dridriver to win U.S. Auto Club cham- ver wlio's finally, getting to run in the
pionships .in sprint, midget and dirt Indy 500: you don't screw it up. If
cars in the same season. Calkins won they do, then they shouldn't be here .
the inauguraliRL race at Orlando in The reality-is, I think everyone will
January and was sixth at Phoenix in have a good head on their shoulders
March; Hearn .won the Toyota and will respond ac.cordingly.
"The reality is·you always have to
Atlantic championship in 1995 with
three wins and six seconds. Jourdain . be careful on the race track here .., she ·
was third last year in Mexico's For- said. .
.
Among .the other rookie starters:
mula Two series with a team headed
by 1981 Indy 500 rookie·of the year
Michele Alboreto of Italy drove in
194 Formula One races, winning
Joselc Garza.
"It's an incredible group of guys." five; Robbie Buhl won the Indy
Parsons said. "I've raced two races Lights championship in I 992 and set
with most of them. and they're prct· track records at Detroit, Milwaukee ·
ty savvy. They 're champions in oth· and New Hampshire last year; Mark
er classes and they' ve logged a Jot of Dismore was the Formula Atlantic
test miles in Indy cars. So they're . Pacific Division champion in 1990
really heady."
and ~¥On the 24 Hours of J)aytona in
He said safety in this year's race 1993; Paul Durant won Super Mod·
shouldh 't be of more conc~rn than ified Racing Association champi·
onships with 18 victories in 1985,
usual.
.
"I've been on the track with these 1991 and 1992; Racin Gardner was
guys and ~now their backgrounds. So · eighth in points and rookie of. the year
I don't think that's a problem at all in the American lndycar Series in
this year. and believe '"e ifl t~ought 1993.
it' was. I'd be talking to somebody
Also, Davey Hamilton won ·
about it. " he said.
Northwest Supermodified Racing
Luyendyk, the only former winner Association championships in 1987,
in this year 's race, will!Je making his
12th Indy' start after.qualifying at a 1988 iind I989; Scotl Harringtcm won
record 236.986 mph. But he'll start the Shelby Can Am Pro series l:hamfrom the seventh row, because his pionship in 1992 and five Can Am
qualification was on the second day races in 1993-94; Jobnny O'Connell
was second in points and the IMSA
oftime trials.
'
GTdriveroftheyearin
1994andhad
"I'll definitely consider the inexas
a
factory
Ni.ssan drifour
victories
perience of these guy$. I'm not going
to rush thing$.:• Luyendyk said:, ver in 1995·

Tn remember your loved

Andrews, David C

I·

July 10, 1961 -M.ay 5, 1980

M~y

God's angels
guide you and ··
protect you
throughout tim·e.

..

one in this special way.
send $10.00 per listing .
Piclure optional. Your
special
tribute·
will
become a permanent
memorial record in our
paper. All tributes must
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Tuesday. May ~I. 4:1111 p m.
Fill out the fnrm hcluw and
· mai l. to:

TilE DAILY
SENTINEL
With Fondest Memories
Ill Coun Strecl
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Always .i n our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews
anif Family

.

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Please pubhsh my tnhutl' mth&lt;.· spc«.:lal Mcmon;~l_
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N1111e of deceased

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Relatlonsblp 10 1M

Date or birtJI
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Date or puslng
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Zip

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MMe clleclt:

,.,.~~~..,THE n..ur:v SEHI'INEL

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I .

1.

"

Jackson closed out the IICOring in
the bottom of the seventh inning on
a walk to Brandon McGee and sinale
by Travis Hughes and a sacrifice fly
off the bat of John King.
Meigs could have blown the game
wide open. but had several missed
oppOrtunities. Tbe Marauders suanded I 0 base runners and ·wasted a
bases loaded one out threat in the
fourth inning without scoring.
George who pitched a no hitter in
sectional tournament play last wee~
against Gallipolis gave up singl~s in
the first, fifth and seventh innings.

lineup greenest in years

INDIANAPOLIS (AF) - The
Indiimapolis 500 on Sunday offers
. the greenest. least-tested and maybe·
most vulnerable field in decades.
Coming from racing backgrounds
ranging from midget cars to Formula One. I 7 rookies will make their
Indy debuts. It's the first time since
1919 that first-year drivers will outnumber veterans in the world's
biggest auto race.
Just how inexperienced is the
field?
Well, former drivers A.J. Foyt.
Mario Andrctti and AI Unser Sr..
touiled 16 more starts than all 33 of
this year's drivers cpmbincd.
The pole starter, Tony Stewart. is
a rookie who just cclchratcd his 25th
binhday on Monday. Four more newcomers will be . crowding Aric
Luyendyk, the fastest qualifier in history, in the middle of the pack . 1\vo
'other rookies will start on the last row
next to Danny Oogais, the oldest driver in the race and a substitute for
Scott Brayton, who was killed ' in
practice on Friday.
Only four drivers have started
more than six previous Indy races.
and two of those, the 54;yearcold
Ongais and s·J"ycar-old Johnny Par.sons. haven't driven here in 10 years .
" It's going to be tough 'the first
couple of years, but I think the exposure's going to be good.:' four-time
winner Foyt said of Indy Racing
League's split with Championship
Auto Racing Teams. which produced
the lineup openings for so n\any
rookies. "I think you' re going to see
a lot of young boys get breaks that
couldn 'l get a break."
Some of the "boys" include Stewart; IRL points leader Buzz Calkins,
whose 25th birthday was on May 2;
Richie Hearn. who turned 2S in January; ~nd Michel Jourdain Jr.. the
baby of the bunch at 19 .
"People are talking about how
·. many rookies there are. Each year,

Owners Special

Ctnlral Dlwllion

National League

Scott George (WP) and Cass Clewalked. Both runnen carne in to Scott struck out six and willked scY· ton County on Wednesday betore the
land
.
en, ooly . - of Jackson's three runs district finals on Friday.
score on a single by Hoover.

Middleport's Whitlatch selected
to play in international ·to~rney

M·

Today's Scoreboard-----.....

ended their season at 17-S.
Meias took a 2~ lead in the top of
the third inning. With two outs Gary
Stanley and Rick Hoover drew walks,
and Cass Cleland followed with a
double to score buth runners.
Jackson carne back in the bottom
of the third inning to score a pair of
runs without the benefit of a hit. With
two outs Travis Hughes and John
King walked, after a wjld pitch
advanced both runners they carne in
to &amp;Core on a Marauder error.
. Meigs took a 4-2 lead in the sixth
inning. George was hit by a piich
with oge out, one out .later Stanley

Seattle nips .Utah 91-87, leads series 2-0

Red Wings in 'mu~t win' situ~tion tonight

··

•

By DAVE HARRIS,

this is better off for everybody," said field in the ninth inning when George series at the Metrndome as Ricky
For all the complaints there may Vaughn. who has a league-leading 47 Williams slid into him breaking up a . Bones allowed one eamc.d run over
have been in Boston as the mercury RBis. "Our pitchers just have to go double play: X-rays revealed a seven-plus innings and Chuckie Carr
soared to a record 91 degrees, there out an~ throw strikes anr:l get ahead sprained right lateral Iigament, drove in two runs. Bones (3·6) picked
were just as many happy Red Sox.
of hitters, because we know we can according to the Red Sqx public rela- up his sixth .straight win· over .the
.
, .
, . .
Monday's unlikely mid-May heat score runs." ·
tt.ons.department.
Twms,
· who have· Iost four strarg
· ht
CINCINNATI (AP)- Craig Gre· that. That s '."hat the manager s JOb rs. wave was cited as good a reason as
The 16came one &lt;Illy aft~r a 12-2
"''m just (ticked)offright now." and 12 of 16.
heck sees a huge change in the slow· Some~ow I ve far led to do that; We .• any for the Red Sox coming up with victory over the Athletics, who hiiVe Boston manager Kevin Kennedy... · · ,. Bones gav""'p two runs on ·seven
;?IJUting Florida Marlins. They expect haven t prtchcd w~ll. we haven t hrt a second straight big number against lost five of six.
said. '·The slide looked like it was hits. He was relieved in the .eighth
to win.now.
well, we haven t played good the Oakland Athletics
"They got to our starters again," l~te to mc . lt scared him. He sprained after allowing a JeadpiT ~omer. to
1
And more often than not during defense. We haven't done anything
"You can come t~ the ballpark
manager Art f!owe said. hts knee. It's too early to speculate." Rich Becker that made it 3-2. Mike
i the last two weeks, that's exactly that represents what I feel about play- loose on a day like this " said Jose Oakland
"The amazing thing is we won a
Tom Gordon (3-2) allowed four Fetters pitched the n~nth for his sixth
·
in g the game correctly." '
Canseco whose two twO:.run homers game here. as well as they played.'' runs and seven hits over . eight save.
: what they've done.
,
: "': Grebeck drove in a pair of runs
Their mi~takes and a couple of !)ad in the 16-4 victory gave him his first
Boston won five of six and scored inn!ngs.
Frank . Rodriguez (3-5) allowed
• with a sacrifice fly and a single Mon· breaks dectded the game Monday.
multi-homer game in a Red Sox uni- 59 runs in the first six games of the 01'\flles 13, AnKels l
three runs and nine hits in eight
: day night as the Marlins heat the
Pat Rapp (3-4) struggled through form. "I'm a Floridian. 1 love this current nine-game homestand. The .
RohcrtoAiomarand Bobby Bonil- innings.
· slumping Cincinnati Reds 5-3 for 6 2-3 mnings, giving up three runs on · weather. June and July have been my Red Sox have hit 22 homers in their · Ia both homered and drove in four Royals 5, Blue Jays 4 .
' .• !!!tAir,1 e2rthstanvic_tnogrythien sel4asoganm4-cs . • the five hits and five walks. _It could have · most explosive months. When .the last I0 games.
~ns for the Orioles, who have won
Chris Haney won his ttiird straight
11
1
,1
been much worse : Cmcmnau strand· weather gets hot, 1feel pretty good up
"They're waitina for their pitch· ctghl of 10. Brady Anderson also and again stopped a Royals l9sing
: Marlins have climbed to .500 (23-23) ed erght runners tn the first seven there."
es and not missing them." said Oak- hom~rcd f~ Baltimore. which had I 7 streak. Haney (3-4) •.who heat Texas
: aiKf are playing like winners. Grebeck innings.
So did a Jot of other Boston hitters. land starter Doug Johns (3-5), who htts, mcludtng three by Luis Polonia in his las1 start to end a four-game
; s~ys there's a reason.
Cincinnati loaded the bases with
Wil Cordero had a bases-loaded was knocked out in the seven-run and two by Alomar, who raised 'his slide, brokca more modest two-game
• · "The 'big thing is attitude," he one out in the first on a hit and a pair double in Boston 's seven-run third third. Johns is 1-S with a 7. I 4 ERA · maJor league-leading batting average streak this time for the Royals. He
~ -said. "We come to the park knowing of walks, bu~ got just. two runs on . its biggest inning of the season. Bill in his last seven starts after opening to .389.
·
allowed seven hits. struck, out four
..; we can win, expecting to win. Even Bret Boones sacnf1ce fly and Haselman had a homer in his first the season 2-0 and allowing only two
David Wells pitched seven strong and didn ' I walk a hatter. Haney left
i if we get behind.early, we knO\V)he Greene's single.
..
.
four-hit game and Mo Vaughn tied earned runs:
innings to cam .his first victoly in five after Ed Sprague's two-run hom·er
: iame's not over. When a team's ·
Dave Burba (0-5) remamed wm- Cleveland's Albert Belle for the
In the only other AL games Mon- starts since April 16. · Wells (3-3) with nne nut in the ninth made it 5: lfoing bad, you· get behind and it's, J~ss in nine starts because he could· league lead with his 17th homer of day it was Baltimore 13, California .I; allowed one run. four hits and four 4. Jeff Montgomery got his II th save.
: 1fcre we go again.' That's not the n t. handl ~ Grebeck, who batted JD the season. The Red Sox had nine Milwaukee 3, Minnesota 2; and walks.
The Royals heat Pat Hcntgcn (4' attitude we have here."
front of the weak-hitting Rapp. Gre- extra-base hits in a 21-hit attack. It
Rex Hudler homered for the vis- 4) fnr the first time after he wmi his
· ; ·• I~s a stark contrast wiih the Reds, beck came into the game hitting .180 was the most hits for Boston since Kansas City S, TQronto 4,
Cordero's double made it 4-0 and iting Angels, who have lost seven of first seven decisions against them.
·: who have lost six straight and 15 of with three RB,!s.
getting 22 in Milwaukee on J~ly 2. he is 7-for-10 with I3 RBis with the eight.
Hentgen allowed seven hits nvcr
·. '.2:2. They're off to their worst start in,
Grcbeck drove in runs in his first 1991 .
·
bases loaded this season. The second Brewers 3, Twins 2
seven· innings.
&gt;,10 years at 16-23. and rookie man- two at-bats, giving the Marlins the
"When things start warming up, ba~emanhad to be helped from the
The Brewers swept the four-game
j ager Ray Knight has run out of lead both times. He hit a sacrifice ny
; answers and patience.
in a three-run SeC\)nd and hit a two.1 ', He was ejected in the eighth nut, full -count single to pui the Mar' inning - his first regular-season lins ahead to stay 4-3 in the fourth.
l ejection - for argujng vehemently
Burba gave Grcheck pitches that
DETROIT (AP)- What's wrong finals. It already faces ·a "must win" c•amplc. the Red Wings·lost the first another game for the .Canadicns.
! with umpire Charlie Williams, -~ ho were too good under the circum- with the Red Wings? It seems like the situation in Game 2 of the best-of-7 game. 3-2. then defeated Colorado Four days later. he was traded tn Col
; called Willie Greene out at third base Stance.
the next three times they mel,
best team in hockey has struggled .series with Colorado tonight.
orado.
ion a close play..
.
Cincinnati had a chance in the throughout the playoffs.
"Everybody talked about the regThe Red Wings won an NHL·
He was in goal again March 2 for
; "I seldom curse," Knight said. "I eighth, but Robb Nen came on :ind
Detroit somehow managed to sur- record 62 games with speed and pre- ular season and facing a great team the first five goals when Detroit
i cjlrscd a lot tonight. I s~ould have got the last two outs with two runners . vive into the Western Conference cision. They played heart-stopping like that." Colorado forward Claude defeated the Avalanche 7-0. So, what
lbeen thrown (out) tonight. " ·
ahoard. Chris Sabo, the first baiter he
oncnse and tight defense. If there was Lemie11• said. "When we played happens? Roy makes 29 saves and a
! When the game ended. Knight faced , new out to the wall in left Band Boosters golf
them in the regular season, we· were grinder named Mike Keane, who was
a lucky bounce. Detroit got it.
! asked for a meeting with general
field .
2
Suddenly, the Red Wings appear paraly1.ed. We were just standing traded to Colora&lt;lo in t1Jc Roy deal,
;manager lim Bowden. The two
After surviving the eighth-inning tourney ~et ay 5
tentative and vulnerable. The around and watching. We aren't play- scores .the winner in overtime.
:talked in Knight:s office for a half: scare. Nen got three strikeouts in the
The Meigs Band Boosters . will Avalanche took advantage in Game I ing like that now."
Detroit's frustration was symbol:hour.
ninth for his lith save.
hold it's annual Memorial Day week- and rang up a 3-2 ovenime victory.
The Red Wings were 5-0 againsl ized by two plays in Game I.
: Although Knight would not go
Notes: Burba gave up six hits and end golf tournament on Saturday, , "We came to Detroit to win two Roy, 3-0 after he joined the
iinto details about the meeting- their . five runs over six innings. pushing his May 25th at the Meigs County Golf games and we've got one," Avalanche. Tiley averaged 5.41 goals
ithird of the day - he told reporters ERA to 4.36. still the .lowest in ·course . The event is a scramble for· Avalanche goaftender Patrick Roy against Roy this season .
Give Mature
:!Pat he was to blame for the team 's · Cincinnati 's five-man rotation. ..'. . mat with each team having a 40-plus said. "Game 2 is crucial for them. It's
On Dec. 2. the Red Wingncorcd
', poor performance.·
.
R~ds pitcher Jose Rijo has backed off handicap. One player per team can be not so crucial for us."
tfrlvers, Ho. .
nine goals against Roy in an I J. I rout
' "We don't get big two-out hils, we his lhrowing because of tenderness in . a I 0 or under handicap. To enter a
Who could have guessed such a of the Montreal Canadicns. Angered
Owners And
:don' t do a lot of things. But hcomes his right bicep. Rijo is coming back . team call John Krawsczyn at 992- thing? Everything the Red Wings and embarrassed that coach Mario
:risht down to me," Knight said. "I've from hi,~ second elbow operation in 2158 (Meigs High School) or at992- touched turned to gold during the sea- Tremblay left ~im in to face the
Moblle .Home
:l!ot to somehow inspire people to do · nine months .
6394.
·
son. A~ainst the Avalanche, for onslaught, Roy vowed ne~er to play

,.

The EMilY Sendnel• P9 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

..

�•

Page &amp;•The O.lly Sentinel .

•

•

1th AIDS prevention what you don't know can kill you
The report, which wu requested
by President Clinton IUid prep.-ed
Ann
by Patricia Aemiag, White House
Landers
AIDS policy chief, rqxesenu a colIM, 1M A•fda
laboration between the National
n-.s~.sCfc.
AIDS Fund and the Until There's a
Cure Foundation. It hiJhlighls the
fact that specific groups arc at
gcater
risk. The mo,t vulnerable arc
ANN LANDERS
runaways
3nd out-of-school youth,
• [)ear Readers: I recently rccei ved
illiterate
adoleS(ents, teen-agers
a ~opy of a repon sent to President
Clinton titled
"Youth and who have disabilities and young gay
HJVIAIDS." The repon notes that· and bisexual males •• especially
e¥ery year between 40,000 and those of color.
8~.000 ~mericans become infected
Knowledge of one's HIV status
wfth HIV. Approximately half of can be an important pan in prevent·
tlljlse infected are under age 25. This ing the spread of AIDS, but ton
means between .two and four young many young people do not know
pdople are infected with HIV every they are infected until they have
hour of every day.
passed the disease along to someone

...,,,...__,

•'"

else. The repon further points out
that although voluntary, C\)llfldential
HIV testing and counseling 'fi'OUkl
encourage youns people 10 find out
if they are infected. there are still
barriers that preveDC such testina.
The repon outlines a series of
steJ!S .that can be taken by the federal government to help increase
awareness among young people in
this country. It consludes, however,
that the government cannot resolve
these problems on its own. All indiv!duals, communities and public and
private institutions must be actively
committed to combating the spread
of HIV among America's youth.
Education is the key to prevention. I hope thousands of teachers
aroun4 'the country who read this

,..__--VMH

·: SERVICE PINS - Plna for five and ten ~r
: employ'" at VMH went to, Ito r, Debre A.nlaw,
.Leanne Cunningham, Linda Ruaaell, five year
aw•da; Karen Roush, Tammy Ball, 10 year

column will send for Ibis report. It
should be clisn•Md in the class·
rooms. Eishdt-J1111cn are 1101 too
,youna to be mille aware of it.
Remember, knowledg~ is power,
and we need all the power we can
muster to fight this dreaded disease.
For a copy of the report. call the
National HIV/AIDS Hocline, 1·800342-AIDS (TTY 1-800-243-7889),
or write to the Centers for Disease
Control National AIDS Clearinghouse, P.O. Box 6003, Rockville,
Md. 20849~3. The report can
also be viewed or downloaded from
the CDC National AIDS Clearinghouse World Wide Web sitei
http://www.edcnac.org. ·.
The old saying, "Whm you don't
know can't hurt you," docs not. hold

'

'
Likewise, the people who yell at :'
tion. It not oclly can HURl' yqu, it . them may appear to be intelligenL •
can KILL.
, -Looking Fit and Trying Hard in
Your first line of defense is infor- Detroit .
t
mation. If youna people were truly
Dear De'troit: Thank you on :
aware of the qony al)d pain of the
behalf
of all the folks who have :
end stages of AIDS, they would be a
wanted
to write about this but never •
lot more cautious when it comes to
got
around
to it
·,
sex.
Dear Ann Landers: Another word
Gem of the Day: K~p smiling. •
about handicapped parking, please.
Even when life knocks you Oat on 1
Not all handicapped people are in your back. you are still in a good
wheelchairs. on crutches or using position to look up.
canes. The problem may be multiple
sclerosis, lupus, asthma, bronchitis.
heart trouble, emphysema or cancer.
t
These illnesses are not always obvi·
. Send quesdoas to Ana Lanous. .
den, Cruton Syndlealt, 5717 W. '
A person may appear to ~ fit liut Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los
may require' handicapped parking. Anples, Calif. 90045
•
tr11e when it comes eo AIDS preven-

awards, and Lucas. ·Others earning the pins

were Rae Gwl~dowsky, Sharon Stewart, Mar·

garet Coral, Helen Coral, flva Ylllrl, and Bon:
nle Dalley, 10 years.
·· 1

...

IISSE~L

Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
GaragH • Replacement Windows

.6.14-~92·2524

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

.

&lt;'

·'·,•

.

(j

•

,.

.

•

REnREES - TWo VMH employees who
.ratlred during the paat yeer were preaentect
gifts of jewelry by Lucaa. They are Joan Stew·

.art 111d June Klon, both retiring from the hoi·
pital's home he.alth service deparlnlent.
·

'

By ANITA MANNING
American Society for Microbiology.
USA TODAY
·
Food-borne diseases from ·
NEW ORLEANS- More food· pathogens ·sueh'as salmonella and E.
-borne diseases are picked up at home coli have been on the rise in the Jut
Ulan anywhere else, including re~· ISyears, says Bostonmicrobiologi~t
rants, picnics or street food carts; set· Elizabeth Scoq. An estimated 50 per·
entists report here at a meetiRg of the cent to 80 percent of those diseases

'

·•.

'

start in the home. ·
"People used to think it happened
everywhere except there," she says.
"Now we see we need to pay more
attention" to safe food storage and
handling in the kitchen.
About 36 percent of food·!'orne

.

art line'?"
The movie shows Hogait's mili·
tant slob of a fisherman reading
Manha Stewan Living and commenting that Martha's his kind of gal.
Why? She touts recycling worn fishnets as draperies.
"Pan of the humor was innate in
heing lucky enough to cast someone
like Paul Hogan, who comes with his

own irreverence," Shapiro says.
"Yes, I wrote the script before he
was involved. But working with
J:logan, who wrote all his own mate·
- rial prior to this, I set an atmosphere
during filming that allowed him to
contribute whatcver he wanted. It was
kind of like · 'Crocodile Dundee by
the' Sea for him :

real, irreverent
of the
that
gives the quality
new film
its humor
adult · - ··- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....- . .
appeal.
When, for instance. it becomes
...
clear that semisulky, teen-aged Elijah
Wood has come to care about Flipper,
Wood's uncle, played by Paul Hogan,
becomes uQcharacteristically tender.
You expect the script to go soggy at ·
that point.
But no. Here's Hogan's line exact·
.
ly: "It's OK to care. People who
don't care wind up in a home qrooling creamed spinach."
. Speaking by phone from his home
'"''
,I.
in,Los Angeles, Shapiro laughs with
. I
pleasure at a recitation of that line and
adds, "What about the Martha SteW·

COUNTRYSIDE

(

Food-borne illness often home-cooked, scientjsts say
'

··'

i

disease in. the home is caused by
"cross-contamination- you prepare
c~icken on a cutting board. don't
clean it properly, then use the same
board to prep~~e a salad," sayunicrobiologist Joseph Rubino of Reckiit &amp;:
Colm1111.

cs

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•GRADUATION ITEMS
YOu
. ,MII'I 01 WI WIU ,Mif 'II YOI ~

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. PH. 814-99~·22S, .

43370 ST. RT. 124
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Ftw l!rlttiE4!iN
IWYD1CII12

RIYauou••

.

992-3838

Llm/IH T1me Of(er .
Call today with your
wlndQw sizes for a free
quoteI

1·900.H0.3737

411--

.

Alao avallllbte
4x4'a-4x8'1 .
614-985-4107
614-742-3331·

--

'

CHAT LINE

Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
·Must be 18 yra.
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434
\
,. •
•
• 1

PUBUC JIOTICE
· .Live 24 Hrs a day
The onnuot report Form
Talk to Beautiful
110 PF lor the Klbbll
Foundiltt~n Bernard'' ·V.·
Girls
Fultz, Truttee, le avelteble ·
lor. public lntpoellon II
·~ ~900-446-1414
Bernard v. Full% Lew Olllce,
111 1/2 w. Saeond Street,
Ext. 6445
·pomeroy, Ohio - 45761,
$3.99 per min.
during regular buelnuo
Must be 18 yrs old.
hours for • period of 180
ServiCe U
deye eubooquent to
publication of thlo noUce.
. (619) 654-8434

.

'

614-742·2193

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(5) 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,

·
Public Notice

-

PUBLIC NOnCE
.befoN 12:00 P.M ESt June ;::
The Village of Pomeroy 3, IIH. Tho Pomeroy
d..lrea to receive oHied . Council r•••rwo the right bide for gaoollne product• 10 I!CCipl or~ eny or 111
unlllded plul (18 octant) bldo.
Krrlhy
ond 12 dte..t fuollor one •
yHr period. All ••led btdo
320 Eaet Mlrln
ohell bo received In 'the
Pcimeroy, OH 41718
Clerk's olllce 320 Eut Moln
.
Streit, POmeroy, OH an or (5) 21. 28; :rrc .

l.·

.. Cheater, Ohio

----

DATE
.
LINE

--------

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

I

SfiVI!RS,".

,.
'

882-1215
. Pomeroy, OIIID

·
PMtase c:onrac1 Anira Y. Brown n i
614··949·2973, i!'l reglirdt ro"' '
health &amp; will ol you&lt; lalhet.

40

Giveaway

•

a..

t· Lab 8mo. Old, 2
gle dogs,
&amp;mo.old, 3 call, 12·yellow, 1-cali co) 1· Terrier lyr old. 304 ·8 7\H
4650.
'
' '
-~
2 Ml!llea: One 4 Mo., Old Pup, 1
Part Chow &amp; Spill ; 1 Birddog ,
814-446-1062.

2 t.ti•ed dog1, terrier &amp; cocker

1-hl·

sptnlelo emo. old, t · male,
male. 304·875-8187.'
.

2 yr. old, black, ltmale, Lab mi~,
bo• lpfings fDf lull lize bed, 81
742-~.

~

3 Calico killent , 1 gray, To GOD! '
homo. 304-4175$892.
;;: •

3 Corhe m•• pupptes to QIWa~

Pllina, Ohio 45783

.

Very adorabte, Call between 'fr""
10pm. 614 -441 -1116 or 614·38~~;

"~t

_01531

P•tt~

Beaur•fure wk otd puppies,

Getman ShepMrct, 614-992·n13• . 1

'

Four kinens 10 good ho~. 304&gt;-:1.
675-2677.

• .....

::...
--------------~
· ~~

Free kinens, 81&lt;4·949·2451 .

·•

Kittens 30HJ'3.9169.

::::

Puppies :

, :J , ~

Carma .. \
5nepham, or • · •"~~ ·8059.
.,.

Molher

.

Beagle. 81&lt;-992·3357
.
....,_
(

60

~

ladle lllaeli Dealer
992·2825

~ JONES' TREE SERVICE
.Top, Trim~ Removal .
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured
Owner: Ronnie Jones

LowRatea)

367-02&amp;6 -1-800·950-3359
Free Estimates

Lost and

''

",.,

'"'

.

&amp;07~

Fo~nd

i&lt;

~
Fou"d - watch '" Mol'lkey Run
111
~~s. call J im at6.1•·992-2~~· .
~
.

'

(Lime stOne-

WICIS
HAULING

·l.ost· male

S!. Bernard between
.,
Eagle Ridge Rd . and Carmel. lit
Church, has conorvovlon c.ord ar'' ~

lached 10 collar. tall 814·94d-·~.•.,.
23611.
.

":!11

Lost: Basket for 3 wheel scoot..._~
Between Firs1 &amp; Th1rd Av•·s, Gal~ ~
Jtpoijs. Reward. 614·&lt;441..0139.
.,.- it

P: :
=======i-'"' ~
Yard Sale

10

!:''"·: ~~

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

5120 -&amp;25196 8 -Dark. 1027 Davi t

Road, Ott Teens Run, F1rs1 Tut~
Eve_
r l Complete, Household, lotpo·
Ant•ques, Rototiller. Toys, _ Gunt~.

Glassware.

;. ,

~

1.
•

1
S

Sales Must Be Paid Iii
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.nt.

•

All Yard

f

the day before lhe ad ,, to rur\.. , ~~
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.fl1, SBF
urdat.
·

'

...

.,. ~
- •
•

Pomeroy,
Mkkllepon
&amp; VlclnHy

.
•

·:::-::::-:-::-:-....,.,:..~:_.--. ,.
All Yard Sales Must Be Pa•d 1 ~
~

~·

AdvanCe. Deadline: 1:OOpm tl'le '
ts to run Sun . ·
da~ edition- 1:OOpm Frtdar ' Uon~
day ediOOn 10:00a.m. Sa!urd~y. .
da~ before the ad

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614·992-3470 .
New24 hr.

DateII"'
Meet the Man or Woman

of your Dreams NeYer
be lonely again.

BIB ROOniG and
.COIS7RDC,.IOI
Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling .
Decks - Bathrooms - Kiichens - Siding
35 Yearw ExpetMnce ·

(614) 992·2364

1-800-889-3943

CALL NOW
1-9(10-!1118-6003
Ext. 1021
$2.99 Per min.
Must be 18 yg.
Serv·U (814) 645-11434

'

Pl. Pleasant

:
:
SALE : Tues·Wed· ·. :

s

&amp; VlclnHy
AVONIVARO

~~--~~~-·
A1ck Pi-arson Auct1on Company, ~

I
.

9o

I

May 2\SI, 22nd, 23rd. 9·6 1 ·• f
''"' mi back- New Hav&amp;n. M HarL ~ 1

Thur

ru. 304 ·882·31 46. Famas11c l&gt;:,
~

buts.

=ao~--=Pu:-:-bl_lc_Sa_le--~: ,
and Auction

;: ;

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lull !ime aucltoneer , comp te1e..7 ' ~
auct1on
aervlce .
l•cenuct;..
166.0nio &amp; West Virginia 1 304 :'"-773-5785 Or 304·77J.S4ol7.
~

Wanted to Buy

:

~

1960's toy's, G.I. Joe, Slar War's"':
ect Will pay fa1r price ba:sed ·on ... ·
~ndilion. 614 ·U6 -6630 altere ;

(614) 441·1191
1-800-508 -8887

MAIILIY'·S

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

NOMJ ..PIO,_II

Roofing, Rpoili Atldlltone
· Siding, Coricrete,atc.
P.O. Box :120, lkiMtt, oh.
614 .3118-91185111an
Howard .L. Wrlte~el

15YIS. Exp. Lie. · Ins . Owner.

1·900·255-0500
Ext. 4009

$3.99 Per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

FR!I! .esnMArts
.
94.2111
5/1\llt&lt;"'"

•

Books, Boolls. Bookt. Old Rare:.,
l•on Prelered. Also. Paper Cor ...
ltc~ables 61,4-4~·7282.
"

Clean lare Modol

or: '. ,

Cars

Trucks, 18GO Models Or Newer ·,
~
Smilh Buick Ponriac, rgoo Easr: • 1
em Avtrue, Gahipolis.
: 1 ..•

Par1s.Bu~•ng ao.c." :.,.

sal« ::

Selling parrs.

773-5033.

Personal Psychic!

Outlet's
, Downspouts
GutterCieanJng
. Painting

Riel&lt;~

Serv·U (619)
845·8434

MGM

&amp;EllUL
COITUCTOIS
Siding .• VInyl .
Aluminum • Roofing
New•Repalr
Gutters&amp;
Downapoul8
F,.. E1tlritatH
992-3607
1121Mt-

'

Books, Good Condirion , 111 Ed•·*"·

&amp; O's Auto
..---F~re::e:.!:::==:..--J . Jvaga
vehicles

. FIND TOTAL .
SATISFACTION!
Through a Uve

· ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

~

Soelllttt S.ndro L • • -

(114)'14.3013 PhOne
(114) 14•2011 FAX
114 594-2001 NIGHt

or

•

72!1-24, -oy. 011 •s1e1.

Recine, O!ilo 45771

Tupper:~

·

Ptflonals

For 111e: The undivided iliteresr
., mo John 1 Plootl PYotfin H\11111.
send 10: D1ily Sentinel, PO So~

V.C. YOUNG Ill

tntltfn

Seryk:e U ·
61 645-6434

,•I

.

,_

$2.99.per min
Must be 18 yrs.
•
Serv·U (619) 654·8434

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs old

.

005

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

1-900·988·8988
Ext. 6733

.
.
Travel to Darwin's laboratory via cyberspace

By HOLLIS L. E•IGLEY
year the compames voyage to · with a blind climber and future virGannett Newa t.Jrvlce
Antarctica generated on-line visitors tual expeditions to places like MadaYou won't fccl1he equatorial sun froin 36 countries to their worldwide gascar. Vietnam .and Africa's Mt. Kil·
on your hack or the rough scale of web
site
at imanjar\). "We hav~ no shortage of
iguana &gt;kin under your fingcnips, but http:(slash)(slash)www.terraquest.co ideas." Kallen says.
·you can lravcl to the . Galapagos m(slash)anlarctica(slash).
Students at several schools around
Th~ Galapagos site will he
Islands in May via your mouse, your
the nation will work directly on the
computer and the internet.
http:(slash)(slash)www.tcrraqucst.co Internet wit)l 'the people in the GalaTerrnquest. a California vittual m(slash)gaiapagos(slash) and onlin~ pagos, says Melissa Koch. whn is
ex pedition pi anner, and adventure chats are tentatively scheduled for 10 coordinating the school connection
com pany Mountain Travel Sobek · a:m. EDT. May 20 through May 29. . from Songline Studios iri Sebastopol.
arc semhnp 2 1, people on an actual
"Antarctica anll the Galapagos are Calif. . .
· trip to the Pacifrf islands west o( both places people are aware Qf in a ,
Younger students will study their
Ecuador frQm May 20 to 29. But they barely conscious way." says Christ· own' le&lt;:al animals and go on-line to
will '"IT}' with them more than 1.000 ian Kallen ofTerraquest. "B~t what compare what they foun~ to \he
poun!ls of digital photo and satellite we try to do is give people a full observations of the people in the
transmission equipment for , daily blown JPEG color · vision of what Galapagos. High school students will
updates and live on-line chats with these places are likl; and make it p,an study·local feral animal populations,
vinual lt:lvclcrs anywhere in rhe of their experience.'' (" JPEG" is a domestic animals living wild.
wMid.
'
reference to the digital photos that Domestic goats who have gone wild
"For me , I think it's the adventure • will he pan ofihe on-line e~pedition .) are one of the ~nvironmental prob·
1'Adventure travel as a business is
... but al su the opponunitY to bring
lems in the Galapagos.
informal ion to the rest of the world, .. . sort or directed toward bringing peoThe studentS and the on-site expe·
says Diane Mc'Eachern, writer and pie ton destination th.at is•r:ewarding, dition members will post their find·
public rclntions executive from su~ unusual and worth preserving," ings and, Koch says .. learn from each
urban Washington, D.C., wlio will be · KBIIen says. "You take people on a other.
one of 1he on-site travelers to the trip to Nepal or a whale-~atching trip
remote islands that helped Charles ·to J;Jaja, they gain ~mething from
" .
. .
Darwin form his theories of evolution . that.
.
·
Krds are able to publtsh .tnfo~;
and nalural selection.
"With Tcrraquest we're provi&lt;Jing mallon an~ inake recommendallons,
"The Galapagos are under severe a new wa,y of lookina at the world, . she says .. The (Galapaf!os) na~ronal
threat," she says. "The ecotoursim is where t'~ey don't have the c~pensc or park servtce people cans':" thrs and
cnonnous, the Japanese are mining diffiCulty or time of aetually gojng on look at these recommeildatto~s. AI~,
sea cucumbers and destroy ina the a trip. But·lhey c1111 reap some of the It¥ students) ~e colla~ratt~Jl wtth
. ecological character of thQ area.··
rewards from aleim of travelers.... ,thetr peers Ol! hne, getttng drffe~nt
This is 1he second virtual expedi·
Terraquest plans an August virtu· experrences from across the eoun~
tion for '1\:ITncjilcst and Sobek . Last ,al climb of Yosemite's El Capitan and formrng d•ffe~ent conclusrons. ·

•

Your Sweelh98rt as
close as ypur phone

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

Painting

·. AIIO Concnt.. W-

·NfW Jtt ln.Jes . ~leetronies

. 985-4422

American Legion Fenney
·. Bennett f'ost 128 Regular
Meeting Wednesday.
Election of Officers
•7:30
the Post.

•

. ·:.•

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Tomatoes, Peppers &amp; FlowE!rS
$5.00 a flat
PERRY HILL FARM
FIFSI house on right pasl
Racine Locks
614-247-4881 . .

CLASSIFIEDS

,.

ANNO UNCEMENTS

a

Two ~ear old male lull blooelelf ~

Umeatomi
• Gravel .
,.
Dirt• Sand

•llooftng
·lnttrrtor Eltlerlor

614-985-3813 s14-617-t484
Plastic Culven, Du~l wall and Re,ular 8" \hru 36" , .
4" S&amp;:D · perf. · solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie• pill"
4" &amp; 6" Sch ]SPill"
1/2" &amp; J/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Seh 40 pipe
·
314" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll'sthru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Condui1
8" Crovetess Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" · Finin~s . Regulators- Risers
Full assonment of P.V.C. &amp; Fie• linin~' &amp; W•tct linings
Full line of CiSiem. S£pric &amp;: Water stor~ge tanks.

DUMeTRUCK
SERVICE

:.0\llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllltiL.:
- . ---·---- ....................... ....... ... .. ..... ... . ..

•Electrical .. Plumbing

I &amp; WPWIICS Alii SIPPi.I

R.L;, HOLLON
TIUCIINI

,

eam-lpm ......

•NewG•IICift

5961

St. At. 7

Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

Happy Hollow R&lt;l.
Mi&lt;l&lt;lleport. Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

PICKS, SP~EADS,
. FINANCE .
HOROSCOPE. SOAP
RESULTS
1·900-776-2525 EXT.

IYIUUUC REPlll
$32.00/11.

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

32124

814-992-4025

•JI_..j Addlllona

28513 BASHAN RD. .

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

BandsawMill

1-900-255-0500

YOUIIG'S

WPENTO SERVIa

~

Date-Line

Port""'e

more.

· Plclt-up dllcarclld
battet 1M. IPPIJencee a
manytNtlla

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

8'~10' 3Qe. ft.

SAWMILL

loVe, success, care, soul
mates, seN-help and

. .-.r~

r----....,-..-.:1-j---~

~~--~--------_.-~
J. E. DIDO~, OWNER
148-2512

; 'SAWED LUMBER.

· ' 1x6, 1xl, 2114, 2ldl

~. H&amp;H

Talk line to our gillecl
psychics on questions of

. $2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Serv·U (619) 645 1434

nMI!

FUMIII

WHITE PINE ROUGH

1,800·291·5600...

Psychic-Line

•••• 2261

ltEfiL

-,.....,m
serv.u (11191 145 1434

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

.

4tet411

S'PORTS1
ENTERT.AINM.ENT

14'-1&amp;'35~•11.

elnsula~

Pomeroy, Ohio

ToiFrw

Ext. 1277
$3;89 Per Minute
Muat be 11 yre.
Touch-T-llequlnld

.
lilatalled

IIMII8iftiCIS
614-tiHIQ

81rvlng I.E. Oltlo a·Weat Vlrglnlll

- ~-~

•Tilt·in
-Double 11ung

TO Tllllll

Public Notice

'

'195°0

&amp; WILLING

(619) 645·8434

"".

~

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling ·

Authorized AOA Dltitribulpr

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

IRUCTIYE

They have helped
millions find fortune,
success and love.
The future starts todayl
Call 1·900-868·4900
Ext. 4193
$3.99 per min.
Musl be 18 yrs.

~

liNN

. Business
F'amlly Matters
Allow Your '
Peraonal Plychlc; to
Aaalat,You

All Kind1 of forth Work

-

5/tlt mo. pd.

......

Mull be 18

#rtJU~ tlfeta&amp;

TruckingUmestone
Bulldozing and
Beckhoe .
·Serv.i ces
HouaeSiteaand
Utilltjea

614-441-7558

.

•ROOfing

Need Dlrec:tlon?
Love

Howard ~xcavatin

Truck:

'"""
~':ranting

:.

UTIMATD

• WII ling SuPJIIill • 1ndutllriill a- • Machkle Shop
S.Mcel • Steel S81e1 &amp; Fabrk:llllon • R11P4lr Welding
• AlumlnunVSitllnlea8 • Tool Oreseklg • Ornamental
· Steps :stallw, Raliinga, Petlo Fum~ure. Fiteplace
Items, !'fanler ha~. Trellsaa &amp; ,,_of other.stUII!I

Quality Work
Competitive Rates
Res.:

..

$3.99 Per Min.

r~,...

FRIE U'TJMATD

.... , . ,.,. ........... '**It up

SERIICI

Public Notice

'

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

and ...nufaclured Houalng

•RemaMftO

We wll wQ(k wllhtn·your budget
P1L 7734173
FAX77HII1
108 Pome Street
Mason, wv

WELDIII

'

Com.-.

UIII'S
'PAIIITIII

Ntt Ct11MIIb181'11, Hill Pum111,
Fwl
I All . . 1, Rl81111n llliCII
for lnln M ' In til Rill 1111. '

•Addiii•NeWO 1111

. . . "No Job Too~ or.Too Small"

L~BD.II

2&amp;: 8TC

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

1-90()..446·1414
Ext. 1477

985 4473

Ext. 4309
$3.99 per min.
Must be 111 yra.
Serv·U (619) 645 8434

Serv-~

•

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

C...F ZE;ARs: ' t 4

10 hear from you!!
24 Hours A Dayll
Call now

FREE ESTIMATES

1-9~4!1,1414

Community calendar-.- -

By SUSAN STARK
The Detroit News
"Flipper" is more than another
kiddie film. It's going to have the
grown-ups in the crowd chortling out
loud.
The man behind the movie is Alan
Shapiro. who wrote and directed the'
latest chapter in the friendly dolphin's ·
apparently endless saga ..It's the top-

Stop I

MEl
IEAUTIFUl WOMII
IRE WllliiiiiO·
HEAl FIOII
YOUIOWUI

lege-radio staple. .
promises (he'll tour the .USA this
Most new surf bands don 't try to summer):
masterthe complex harmonics ofthc
And that diversity is reflected in
Beach Boys or other vocal groups. the music.
Instead; they .emulate ,early '60s
"What's great about surf music is
instrumental chart-toppers like the that you're allowed to do anything
Ventures' Walk- Don't Run and the you like," says guitarist-keybOardist
Surfaris' Wipe Out.
Matti Pitsinki of Laika and the Cos" You don't have to be a musician monauts, .a wildly creative Finnish
to play it," Thomas says. "It's a surf band that records .for the surfdeliberately primitive style of happy Upstart label and is touring the
music."
USA (they hit the Seattle Arena
"Cowabunga!" co-producer John Wednesday).
,
Blair, who leads the surf band Jon
"As long as you have a melody, it 1
and the Nightriders, estimates that doesn't really matter which genre of
hundreds of surf albums have been music it comes from," Pitsinki says. ·
released on CD in the 1990s, includ- "We've dealt with folk music. ska
ing lhe entire catalog of the newly heats, even fake movie themes."
reborn '60s surf label Dei-Fi.
The Cosmonauts ride high over
, Dick Dale, crowned king of the · other surf bands because they write
surf guitar in the '60s, rides a new good songs in various styles. says
wave of popularity. Thoul!h his best· Texas guitarist Teisco. Del Rey. He.
known song is 1962's ".Miserl 0 u." displays his own mastery of surf guihis '90s sound, epitomized by the tar and other styles on his sarcasti·
album "Calling Up Spirits" (out eally tit!.ed new ·album, "~usic for
today on Beggars Banquet), is even Lovers.
·
.
more ferocious.
"The CosiiJonauts have brought
Dale, 59, says he's the oldest anisl' surf up-to-date without bastardizing
ever to hit the top I 0 on college-radio it. " he says.
charts, as he did with his two previ·
But drummer Mel Taylor. who
ous albums.
rode the first surf craze. a' a member
"Under the same roof at a Dick of the Ventures. doubts the music will
Dale show, you'll find skinheads, top the charts again. "What surf
body piercers, tattooed people, music has is much more than a cult
motorcycle-jacket people, American following." says Taylor. "Tome, it's
Indians. 16-year-old black girls, and too happy to be called a cult. It's good
college professors with their 7-year- times ·and it's upbeat, and it makes
old kids on their shoulders, .. Dale everybody happy when they hear it."

Guysii!Your
I~Pttclal girt is wailing

Remodeling

(No Sunday Calls)

·.

The whole audience will laugh at 'Flipper'

·o.r.aoComplete

614-992-7643

.,

SEVENTY YEARS- seventy years of service
at VMH are repreaented in these three VMH
employees receiving awards from Lucas from

•New Homes

Room Addltfons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ·ESTIMATES

The · Community Calendar is Trustees, special session, 7:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT ·· Revival serpublished .aS a free service to ROD• Tuesday at the town hall.
vices. Ash Street Frce)Nill Baptist
· profit group~ wishing to unounte ·
Church, Middleport. through Saturmeeting and special events. The
POMEROY ·• Eagles Auxiliary day, 7:30 ·p.m. each evening. The
calendar·Is not deoigned to promote 2171, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.•
Rev. Calvin Min'is, speaker.
·
salts or fund ralsen or any type;
ltemila.re printed u space pennits
POMEROY ·· Open house.
POMEROY .. Rock Springs Betand cannot·bt paranteed to run a TOPS. Carpenter Hall. Main Street, ter l:kilth Club, I p.m. Thursday,
specific naml!et of days,
Pomeroy. weigh-in, 5 to 6 p.m., · home of Phyllis Skinner.
TUESDAY
ll)ecting, (&gt;to 7 p.m.
POMEROY •• Senior Ciiizens . .
MIDDl-EPORT •· Meigs Cnunty
Day, Meigs Multipurpose Center, WEDNESDAY
Churches of Christ Women's l'elTuesday. II a.m. Seniors to he hon. MIDDLEPORT .. Ohio Valley lowship. Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Bradored, public invited.
Commandry, 7:30 ·p.m Wednesday, ford Church of Christ.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
·
POMEROY .. Revival services,
SATURDAY
.• Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 7 . SYRACUSE .. Revival, SyraPOMEROY :· Burlingham Modp.m. through Saturday, 10:30 a.m. eusc Church of the .Nazarene, ern Woodmen hall, annual Mcmori·
and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Rev. Doh Wcitncsday through Sunday. 7 p.m. -al,Day smorgasbord, annual matchStew an speaker; .the Sisson family nightly t(J Sunday, then 6 p.m. Spe- ing fund dinner, serving II a.m. to 6
and the Stewarts, special music. ·
cial singing. Rev. Paul Womack p.m .. cat in or carry out .for a dona, ,,
evangelist.
ti!'n. Also bake sale. Funds raised
PAGEVILLE ·• Scipio Township
with matching home office amount to
••
Trustees, 7:1', . p.m. Tuesday ai
'MIDDLEPORT -· Ohio Valley go to-Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters for
Page ville.
Commandry, 7:30p.m. Wednesday. medical, surgical and rehab bills.
~
•
at Mi~d!eport Masonic Temple.
·
•
RACINE .. Southern Athletic
RACINE·· Red Brush Church of
,.
Boosters. Tuesday. at 7 p.m. in the THURSDAY
Christ, special weekend services, · •
.high school cafeteria. All parents
.
POMEROY .. Meigs County Saturday. 7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a:m. and
urged to attend.
•
Library ,Board. of Trustees, I p.m. 6 p.m. Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va ..
••
speaker.
Thursday at the library.
•
CHESTER - ~ Chester T~wnship

\

,........

........u

BUILDERS, IIC.

~ew

•

Surf musi.c is ridin. high again
BY ANDY SEILER
USA TODAY
Surf's back up, dUde!
· With the four-CO "Cowabunga!:
The Surf Box;" in stores today from
Rhino, fans can · catch the perfect
wave.
And " MOM: Music for Our
Mother Ocean," an album of surf
classics by alternative groups includ·
ing Pearl Jam and Silverchair, is due
July 2; proceeds will benefit ocean
and beach cleanup.
In the '60s, hundreds of guitar
groups rode in on the surf craze,
seemingly wiped out by the British
Invasion. But the music has flowed
· steadily underground ever since, bubbling back to tbe surface in the '90s.
One 'Cowabunga!' disc is devot.
ed to contemporary surf hands lhat
· pump out familiar, reverb-drenched
minor chords.
·
Thanks to the "Pulp Fiction"
soundtrack, which featured classics
such as "Miserlou" and "Surf Rider," the surf sound now lends instant
mook-hipness to TV spots for everything from Taco Bell to Crest. Thursday, an America Online chat $CSsion
(9 p.m. ET/6 PT) will focus on
"Cowabunga!"
"Everybody and their mother is
going out and starting a surf band,"
·says Jim Thomas, founder and lead
guitarist of the Mermen. The San
Francisco-based band's psychedelic,
feedback-heavy style makes it a col-

•

•

Tuaaclay, u.y 21,1111 ;

Pomeroy• Middleport; Ohio

.

-

•

'

•

':l

:

Non-Working Washers Orven
A~nges, Relrigerators, frMJ:ar~n
A1r Candirlonera, Colo; T. 'V. ·s,
VCR's, -Also Junk Cars. 6UI ·256· Q t
1238.
. ---·
Top da·uar - anJ•ques, hH(ttture~
Ol~st. chma, clocks, gold, sll~. •

cams, watches , esrarea. Osby
'-1ar11n, 814·992-7441.

l op p tiCH
.
~·
,.,d: Old

_.j:

1·

-va
"U

U.S. Cqlns, \
Silver, _Gold, Oiemonds. All Old, .,..

C~IIICbbloo, Paperwoighto

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1St

-

Ere /'l

SOcOod r.'!C"\

· Gollpolio, 8!4-4421142.

·~.;~

, W1n1ed To BUW i Auto't &amp; Trut:kS "u,!t\

Arry Condt!On, 814 ·318·11082 o, . "
't14-4•·MRT.
...
fio tf Jt;'l
I

�•

~.-21,1111

llay21, 1P81

•

,u.u;r UO¥

NIA Croaaword Puaale
PHILLIP

ALDER
-..... Te ..,. J1rr*
0.. W1t"''ul UOIOtt.
• ...., II . . . . .
-

TO 8u)' : IAol&lt;mg for L1l·
H: rM~ laM 8o•. Picn.c: Table
&amp; 0..1-r
114·205-

c.......

5117

l r,'Pl O'd,1E 'H
Sf F1',1Cf S

11 0

180 Wlntld To Do
30 ,.. . 1'1 trptllltnce in nuramo
home- will take cere of elderly,
hour, cloy o r - 614·949-3301 .
0.VICI"Illwn MOW II"'Q • lrH tsh·

mates, reaaoneblt rattl, ha'l!a
own equ.pmen~ Jn Tuj)ptft Ptain1
WH, G1H87.e3Zil.

Help Wll'ltld

"ATTtHTIOH"
Ha1r Sty ~ tt Neecled for JoAMe's
KUI And Kurl, 81· ·-94118.
JoAMeShoels
And tcaren Burns

$-WANTED·$

Gen..-el Weintenance, Pllntlno.
Yard Work WindOWI Wtthed

11187 Clayton 14X70, 3bedroom,
11/2bltt'l, newly ,.molded beth WI
~~ whirlpool, vinyl undltf'plnnmg.

Gutttfl Cleaned Light Hauling,

Gear. . • Parrable Sa~tl. don'r
l'llul your
10 1ht mil just caM

toot

304-77.1-5083 2.U.Ifday.

304·87S.IQS7.

$200 - $500 wkly in rout spare
time. No
needed . Catl now.

Lig/11 dozer W1&gt;'l1

••P

' ATIENTION'
lmmediale Openings
Local ~ny will be inerviewing
10 fill10 permanent, tuM·time poslliOIIS in our merchandising dept.
No e•perience necessaty. We
provide alltrau''llng. Qualified ap..
pbcantt should be 18 or older,
r.eat•n appeararu and Bvailable

to start work immedlalelf'. We off-

er. No

str~kes , rG

lay-oHs, perk»·

manc:e bonuses and promcnioms
trom with-in. For ptWsonal inter·
IIIBW call (614) -441 · 1969 Tuesoay and Wedne!daV 9.,.5pm,

Colage o1Uden11

&amp; dependable,

~t;j. "honall

t\aW refarenc:es.

cao ~75-388ol.

Looking For Mowing Jobo. Will
Come Out And Give Et'llmataa
Lawna. Have All Equipment
To Do The Job, G14·4.C1·0318
A1k Fof Norman ~ 614-448-3788

an

ASk for !lean.

ProlesStOnal Tree Stl'llic:e, Stump
Removal, Free Ellimatttl Insurance, BidWMII, Ohio. 814-31&amp;-

!,.,...,..,

9648. 114-367·7010.
S And S Home

Surmoer _,. avaH-Ior coliaOO

studenls and HS seniors. Must
be ava~able to start immediately.
No e•perience necesllf'y. Sc:holarsllps available. Great work etc·
peri9rice. Can Tuesday and Wed·
nesday. 9am-5pm. (61-4) 441 ·

1969

Will

Do Remodeling And Now Con·

structlon. No .Job Too Big Or

·

Too

Pos!al PDSIIions. Permanent lull ·
11me lor cleflvsorlers. Full Bene;
Ius Far eum, app l•carion and
salary info call: 708·264·1839 E•t.

3870, 8am"' llf&gt;m.

Able Avon Representatives
neaded. Earn moner· for Christ·
mas bils at home/at work. 1·800·

•95

"x80 Norna Islander.

3bodroom. 2bath. 304-675·2089.

Chlldeare M·F &amp;1m-5:30pm A9eo
2-K, Young School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini·

""m 61H...311$7,

Will Care For Elderly lady tn M)'
lent Care &amp; Relef'encn. 30of.. 736-

ZIKI. 614·379-2823.'

Will clean homes, reasonable
price. 304 -875· 7183. Call alter

oiOOI .
Double. wide S1405 down,
S224mo. Free air. 1·800·69 t .

6n7.
3br, Zbalh, S 1719 down. S275r
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes. Nitro

Wll30.. 755-5885.

7:30pm.
do babytllling in my home
any age. Clean erwlronment. and
nice Play area. Nutritioua mealt,
and anacka prepared, CertlliCation and references available. Call
or leaYe message at 814·1185-

Mobile nome for sale, needs re·
pairs, 12000,814-992-5858.
New 3 bedroom. · ,.~ 70 $800

Cons8fVBlian.Jobs: Wildlife positions St&amp;,OOO-I!15,000tyr Cl811ea1.
Security. Game Warden, etc. No
experience. For' inlc call 219· 769·
8301 eu WWV 548, 9am·9pm
Sun·fr1.

61•·949·2300.

Price Butter. 1898 3bedroom.
$825 dOwn, $15Utmo. Free deliv·
ery &amp; se!up. Only at Oakwocd

Oormna's Pizza of Pomeroy is now
hiring drivers, 614-992-~124 .
Dynamite Fat Loss Product SUX)
A ·oar. Lose Weight And Make
Money. Mimmal Investment, 814·
446·12'31. .

Earn S1OOOs

weekly alufJ;ng en·
velopes a1 hOn]t. Be your boll.
Srart now. No tllp&amp;rience. Free
suppiies, Wtfo. No obligarion. S8nd

S.A.S.E. 10 Prftlige Unil IL, P.O.
Bo• 195609, Wlntet Springs, Fl
32719.

HomeS, Ni•o wv 304-755-5885.

Will tit with elderl1 day or night,
will also do housacleanlng, hllll
t•perience &amp; CPR training, 814·

982-4065.

.21 o

~veS$ .- 1998 double wide repo.
3bedraom, 2batl'\ . Will deliver &amp;
setup on your lot. 304·755-5586.

330 Farms for Sale
u

Acrea With Buildings, 1870
KeH 681hel Church RoB:d, lit 4·

457·30 12 Evenings.

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE I •

7~M.

Garage Aparlment: 29 rear Neil
Awe., Gallipotis. Furnished ~living
room, kitchen, 1 bedrOom, batbroom) ul~itiel paid. 127Simo. 8(4«8·92911 , . . _ 9am·llpm.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedrbon,
apartments .at Village Manor and
Riverside Apar1men1s in Middle·

992-5084. Equal Houling Oppor·
tvnitiel.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

11• acre tot.

19M131 in Gallipolis
Ferry, mobile home ready, 30 4 •
67~1783.

.... 3356.

pay. 30.4-615-8191

Need adult babysitt8f'. One child .
Your hOme. daytime 1n GallipoUt
area. 814·•&lt;C8- 1012 8pm-7pm

01sabled Veteran urgently looktng
for 30·100 sec:luded, private acres, with or Wlrhoul buildings, Land

only.

Con..C\ 81H42·2182.

Need Full Time lnstaUera. Mual

Be Exparieneed. Apply In Peroon

REN TALS

AI Comfort Air, 2•3 Third Ave-

rile, GaMipolls.

·

NEED IMMEDIATELY
Servi ce Man For Vaccuum
Cleaner Company. Need Experi·
ence With E leclric Motors, Will
Train R1ghl Person, Call614-441·
1975.
.

On Ou!y Medical
Is Actively Seeking To Recruit
CNAs wna Are Looking To Work
Long Term Home Care Cates
Where You live-In And Stay
Overnighl In Ei ther 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shilts. 11 Pays
16 Hourt A Day, But An Over·
n1gl'\l Sray .l l Required. If lntarMt·

ed Plea,. Cill Lisa Korson AI
1·800·0N·OUTY·2.
Postal &amp; Gov·t Jobs $21 I Hr •
Benef its, No hp. V(ill Train. For

APQI And Into 1·800·536-3GOO.

All raal esuue aliWirtislng 01
lhilnewspaper Is SUbjeciiO
tho Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes RIllegal
10 adv8rllsa "any preference,

llml1al1on ordl&amp;almlnallon

based on lace, oolor, religion,

sex familial status or national

origin, or any 011en11on 10
mako any such praferance,

.llmllatioo or dlsafmlnatioo."

This newspaptJ wll not
knowll{lgly accep1

-lorrealwhlcll 1$ In vlolallon ollho law.
OUr reeders are hereby
lnlonnod thai aM dwelllngll ·
adwrtised in 1his . . _ r
are available on an equal

oppor11J'IIIy basil.

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST
Homecare' AM SluUect NF Ptov•d·

"' Has Open1ng for PT &amp; fT PO·

s!l•ons. Clin~cal Assessments,
VV And PSV Experience A
Must. Minimal Travel And On •
Call Requlred . Call Bee~/ At 1·

800· 551 ·2273 Or Fax Your Re·

sume·To 2 16-243·5457·
Social WOrkers. Now Hiring 123 1
Hr + Benelitl, On The Jpb Training To Apply In Your Area, 1-801)..

339-61110. .
Sode•ho Food Services AI Tha
University 01 Rio Grande Is Look·
1ng Fat flperience Cook 1Mosuy
11 · 7 Shill !Work Every Other
Weekend. Apply In Person AI
The Student Center Annex 8 A.M.
. 4 P.M. Or Call 814 ·245·5660 Or
•7~' Eo E
614·2 ·~- . . .
Summer babys itter, 9am-4pm .
weekday&amp;: Ac:uve 9yr old. in

childo home. Pt Pleaoan1 area .
C.l3fl4.8J'5.611f10- 11-•.
· Wanted: RN 3-11 shift super visor. . E',:perience rec:~uired .
Please apply at· Holzer Senior
Care Center.

110 MIScellaneous
Clarinet or trumpet 1100. Piano

1100. KeybOard $150. Red oequin
prom gown. size 8. $200. 300· 773-

U.Z.
Gravely G-18 riding mower. 501n

deCk. vtry good cond. s•, 500 .
304·675-58011.
Wa1erbed bedroom auitt, OuH"
size , rtead board, dreater &amp;

chest 1989 Chtvr von. Call 304675-7Z17.

'

.REAL ESTATE

31 o Hom8 for Sale
1~3-;Be;::::d:roo:::m:,,-:1 ;:::~l;::;:i::-:=

hail hard wood floor. Kllc,hto
dintng room combined.
sidiog, new !OOf, ~ car garage, tiDYe,
diahwashar &amp; rafrlgetator will be

included.·Call 304·875·4138 or
ahsr 6:30 eail 30•-675-7326.
3-4 bedroom home In sYracuse,
corner lot. ckJse 10 actlool, 24x40
block garage, heal pump, 814·
992·5315.
3- Bedroom, doubl• garage,
screened in porch, beaudful view,
12. 54tn of acre. 2mi. out Jericho.
Call3o4-fJ7S-4575.

410 Houses lor Rent

2 Bedroom, 'l175mo. Need relarences &amp; depos11. Call 304·61'5·
1429 aher 4:00pm.

l'lo pall. Call 30•·882·2018 or
304-l;75-3100.

Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Selling, Washer /Dryer, Stove, Refrioerator, No Pels, No SmOkers, -

EXIra Clean! 1300 DePQ~I. $3501
Mo. ApphCat•on• At 1743 Cerne-

nar~ Road. Gallipolis. 614 -446 -

2205.
Ntce 2 bedroom, washer &amp; drW"er
hoD«·up, references required, de1)0~\

no 11011. 304.f7S.S18Z.

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom apartment. In
Middleport, no pets, 614 ·992·

5856.
Now acc:epting applicariona lor
one bedroom apartments. Appli·
c:ations can be.piclced yp at Po·
meroy Cliff Apartments Office,
614-992·7772.

Pleasant no PillS. 814-99Z·5858.

ciency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
Microwave &amp; Refrigerator.

Smau house, $225Jmo. plus utili·
ties, 1100 depo!ut, call 614·992·
2009 until noon, 304 · 773-5707
any lime.
SmaH rwo bedroom nouse. 681 at

Allred. eah &amp;, .. 855-3504.
Two btdroo"l.l'\outa, carpeted,
nice and clean, deposit required,
no. inside pars: three bedroom
house. deposit required, no inside

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
18w70 2 Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Cen·
lral A•r. Green T&amp;rrace. 614·388-

H1rve1t

Gold,

wu

$150.00. -$125.00. Rofllgail•
tar Searl Cold Spat HIYflt Gak!
~lrigtrolor While Phi~
$1 50.00. ~~lgera1or Almond

S175.00

i&lt;o
G.E. 1 yHr Warranty, New Comperetser, $350.00. Skaa• Applicances.. 4•8· 73g9_ 76 Ylne

S-t·HIOO.o!...3o41111

520

Spor:tlng .
Goods

lntr

I

dog houta, to lovlnt

3113
Yorklhlre tl!'filft, 2 males, 1 ,..
malt. Paptrt &amp; YICcination

raeordo. 12 112 waako old. SolDO
... e1•·•oii-OS22 11&lt;11oto 1pm. M·
F an,lima Slit a Su"
AKC Regiatered Ba•rs, cham pionahip tNood linea. To good
home. Ready May 27tn, tak.ing

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
18' Ughl Duty All Purpose TraHer

1528
3 Pc couch . loveseal 1 chair.
loveseat, lg chair, 2 small chairs.
·Very good condition. 614· 4411·

3437 ..
30· Electric Range With Hood,
GoOd Condition, Corree And End
Tables, Dishwasher, Air c•ndl·

Ave. Point Pleuant, 304·875·

2083.

Dam.

aged, 114·251-1524, Both Art

1918 Plymoulh Reliance • cy11 .200 080 ....2511.1233.

Trans. 12,1500, 814·...·1131.
1088 reel Fifebird, V-&amp;. auto I air,
txcellent conditk)n, $2,800, IS1A·

.!
Black Labs AKC Registered,

Challlj)lon Blood Una, 2nd S/loll
AndWorr!1ed, 814-681-2082.

Dog &amp; Cat Grooming: r•sonable
prk:ft, 1Syrs expertence. Call !of
app11. 304-67&amp;-1831 .

Montnty Ilea ptogram need help?

Ask R&amp;G Fetid I Supply, 814·
992·2164 . oboul lhe HAPPY
JACK 3 · X FLEA COLLAR. K1111
male and female _.dull fltat. For

dogs &amp; COISI .
Puppy Palace KeMels, Boarding,
Stud S8f'vica ·Puppies, Grooming.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trad.,, All Breeds.
Paymenrs Welcome, . 61 •·388 ·

247'Z108.

eu-

Unreoistered Siber~an Hus~y. S
monU1 old female wilh blue eyes,
loving disposition , ser ious in quires onlr, 614-949·2957.

742·2357.
1888 Subaru

XT,

Ol Selective &lt;C

WO, Loadod, 1 Owner, S3,500
61•·256-6850 or 61•·256-8328.
1988 SUbaru XT, Ol Selective &lt;4

WO, Loaded, 1 Owner, $3,500
61HS&amp;e850 or 814·256-8321.
1189 BuiCk LeSabre, e•cellen1
runn1ng condi1ion,
PB, PS.
AC. pew.,- windows, $3800, 814-.
949·20•5 or 6 ''·IWI·2302.

v.e.

1991 CuUaos Calais, 4cyl, 5spd,
sunrool, ac, runs · &amp; Jooks good..

S3,500. Call304-1175-2949.
1992 Chevy Cama;o. 25th anni·
versary. Fully loaded. Red wilh
black stripes. Cau 61'*· 245·5912

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

1992 Millubishi 3,000 GT SL
Loaded, With Leather. Excellent
Col"!dirio~. $, 8,900, 614-2451993 Pontiac Grand Am V-6 Mo·
lor, SE Sor~&amp;s, L&lt;hlded. 614-446·

2445, Ask For Paul.

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIV ES TOC K

Evans Entetprises, Jackson,

~ dr., a~to., air, arereo

catatne.

anti-lock bra.kea. POL, new riret,
43,735 miles. E•c. cond. Se995.

614·379·2967.

Au10 Loans. Dealer will arrange fi.
nancmg even if you rtave been
turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equipment Used Cart.. 304·•58106Q.
'

Need

a Car, Go! 1 .100. H... Bod

Credit? We Can Ftnanca

call

Ruth BIH... 2897

condit•on, greal work truck, firtt
$3850 rakes it home, 814·148·
2311 days.

1977 Ford f250 Ex•a Cab, 300
·cylinder, Auto. SIOD, 814·441·
9575.
1883 Ford Ranger, 4cy1, ••pd.
810 eond.ll,lllO. 304-1175-2070. .
1986 CheYJ

304·675-41108.

~Zrloon ..5,pm,.

We Buy . Sell ·

~Ra=-a=·ne=-go::-.k::a::r~-::5:-h-p.-:B:-,:-gg-s-:W::K::-A~I

630

LivestoCk

2 Year Old Gelding, SwMI Disposition, Very Gentle, E•c:ellent For
Youth! Ga!ed, 1750, Year~ng Stud
Quarler !Walker, Grea1 Project
Verr Promistng! $800, Well
Cared For! Contact : Garland,

814-l;o:J-2268.
3 RtgiSiered Saddle ' Bread

legal, Norem c:lutch, liw aate, disc
brake, set up lor adult or jr., 1500,

Mares And A 2 Horses, t~89
Valley Thorouohbred Horse Trall-

114-992·2179.

er814-441 ·0624.
5 Pon.es &amp; 3 Rldtng horses. 614-

2•!&gt;5087.
50 cows lor sale, 614 ·388-8592

or 614·:188·9922.
For sale, polled black Ltmous1n
Relrigeratott,
And ryert, Ail
i
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,

.

814-1180-6•41.

eroasbra~ bull. some cows with

co ..... 61H•2·31 14.

Freezer Beef For Sale, 814-U6-

3121 .

Lorge l'llrking, SR 1•1 . Can~tnary
Area, 614-256-63311 A«er8 ~~~ .

640

Household
Goods

1982 Ford f · ISO Under 35,000
I.Uiea, Bedllne,' Step Bumper

300SX, 5 Speed, Duel Tlinko,
Calsene, PS, PB, like New, 814·
2•5-9179:
I
1992 IJUZU piCkup, 4. cyl. 5
opoed, niea, 70,000 mil ... S5500,
may considet pltllal tract. lor a
4X4 or pontoon boat, 81&lt;4-9t2·

25UO thor 8pm.

1993 Ford Ran.~ Spluh Aulo,
V·8, Air, Tilt, Crutse, AMIFM Ta·
hoo
38,000 Mlloo.

c-.

1M4 4·WD Chevy, 350 engine,
auto, ooo•• neck hilch, loaded.

2t.OOOmi. Aoking S16,000 or
080. 304-675-5332.

with low hou,., S7 ,000 wlrh cus- ~
10m niter call &amp;1•·448·6830 after •

epm.

.

.. ,
I

1980 Yahama Wive Runner LX -

TRANSPORTA ri ON

2· ComploJe Twin Bod ,S alt. 2

,
11352.
....
-h Pon-...
. ..., •
.
.c:oJ ,
W\lllt, f:Omple!~ rQSIOred ......
1993, 7'0hp rY'OIOt 1110, ~ 1193. ~ ..

S8,700. 304-875-6277.' ';,. '~~ ...._

:;

Sao Eatll inllall!l&gt;le boil 011!11 'ft~ :.
UIO!y co,.,..,.,..nll; ~ilabl• lof J.
rafting, 2 hp. molllr, mdior mlllm~: ' ~
lloor iJoardl, ooro. 11•·882-6036. ·

•

.

"'f.

~~:

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories ·

t.

••

Uied IRe- ... ~
buill, All Typeo, Accouible To ~

Budget Ttansmissfons.

Over 10,000 Tranami11ian, Also· ~
0vettuaJKita,614·245-5677
t,
I,

New gas tanlls, one ton lruck
wheela, radiaiDrs, floor mall, etc.

:1

•'l'
~

•

3933 01 1-1101).273-9321.

r

•••
•~

campers&amp;

790

1984 Toyota Mirage mini molor
home, cab air, -44lyl, SS.pd, s1o11e,
ai'*, retrig. $3,000. Call 304-IS 75-

• •'

i.

.....
-

•1

•

•.
~

ship 10 Royal Oak Resort, $7500.
614·892·7386.
. •~
•

.

--L

11184 Bronco 11 V8, 5opd, 1111 lllL
304-1175-3773.
1918 Sub&lt;lru XT GL Seltclivt 4
WO. Loaded, 1 OWner, t3,500,
11•·251.fl50, 11..2Y..f320•

••
~·

...

··r t-

1993 Coleman Ptanem Pop-Up
Campet, 814 · 446 · 7321 Alter 6

-·

Wl',ll\€.
\.!€All-Eli:.

..

....

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;:

~RE.N.L.Y
OW\~

"

U..'ffi..'f!

1994 tnnsbrook, tully loaded, tots ,..,
olextras, 18ft. Serious inquiries 1 1

oNy. ~75--6900.

35' Camper &amp; Lot Holiday Hills, 1 '
Ou1building, Excellent Condition! 1 ,.
AIC, Sewer, Fishing, Uou1mg. ~ : ·

$5,300, 81 ..1194-3101. .

1881 Chavrolal Mork,lll conver·
olon van, oxc. cond. lnoljla 1 ou~
1111, eruill, air, am·lm cuu110,
:=::r::~w llrao. 30..e 7s-

Work Alii For Mark Palmar.

In Harrtord . 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
new heet pt~mp, · Ctotrll air, baCk
covered. Lo1 801138. Aak-

1... Ford Ranger ••• Ere. Con·
-lowrnillo .....8015

One

bedroom home ,i n Pvmtroy.
Will tall on land contract, 1114·

---,Wol:-':'W':'Tan-nlnrl:--..
...,:-,---l1978 Thunderbird . Immaculate

ow-

Cl&gt;mmolci-urilltom

Sarlouo callooniy. Phone 814·
....2B17afllr5pin.

·
SIM.
I
Low mot'l1llly -~~
~ '!~y...!"!'.~~
-

1010 T·Bird e Cyllridtr, Au10mol·
ie. 1800 Nago111btt. 814·258- 1M5 K - 250 1llrae - ·
8318. _____.;.....____ 1 ....
er, naedlllrts.
wllloellehoop.
=.;;_
207·2500.

. ..

.,

••

Motorcycles

condition. 51,700 ICI,..al ·milas.

buy~ECTondSAYEI

Por10f. 11• mi. o" Sl. Rt. 110. 2
..,.., 241132 1 IIR. 2 - garoga.
10X10 ahad. ,AU
1811.
Private ioeodon. 135,000. 814 ·

740

TAN ~THOME

1

~.....

305.

r

fM5 Polario Exploror ·4x4 •DO.
So1.300-30+&lt;158-1118

Nortlr
,.

Pus

Pau
Pau

Pus

2.

••

s•
Pus

Eall
Pall

Pus
Pue
Pue
Paso

Pus

• If you want to play bridge well, It
helps ·to be imaginative, to be able to
viaualize In your mind's eye each trick
aa you move down tbe road from trick
1&gt;065 ARE SMART ..
011e to tbe critical moment of the deal.
! TJ.IINK I
Today's deal was in the February
'fi.IE'f CAN FIND 'fi.IEIR
LIVE AIWUND UERe
1996 i~eue of Australian Bridge. How
WA'f AN'I'Pt.ACE ..'fi.IE'f
SOMEPLACE ..
would you have played in six clubs af.
Al'WN/S KNOW WHERE
ter West has led a top spacle?
lliE'f ARe ..
In the given auction, two clubs is
strong, artificial and forcinc. two dia·
monds Is t)Je negative response, and
the rest Ia natural.
Apparently half the field in a mixed
pain~ evenlln Perth reached six clubs.
Every declarer'except one took the
unimaginative line: After ruffing the
lop spade. they cashed their lop clubs,
look the diamond finesse, and then
·complained abou1 their bad luck.
The only successful South was
Shirley Drage. At trick two, she
Rashed the diamond queen out of her
hand. As West didn't hitch while play.
ing low. Drage judged that the finesse
was doomed to failure. So, she went up
with dummy's ace, ruffed a spade back
to hand and played out her four top
hearts, disciJ!'ding tbe four remaining
diamonds from the dummy. Although
West ruffed the last heart with. the
club nine and returned a trump, de·
clarer won in hand with the eight,
ruffed her diamond loser in tbe dum·
my, returned to hand with a spade
,.
~ · ruffed high, drew West's last trump
Fl!E ... €XCE.Pr 'ffiEO: ~~~~~ and claimed. Wonderful!
1~ ~ 1N BN) ,.
Did")'ou viaualize the diamond ruff in
thedwnmy? .

loJE}I.'ffiE£..1

by Lull Campoe

· s ·c P

NASCEFA

TKOO

Sov1n1s You'll Find In the
Closslf~d St.ct/on.

' ,.
• 1'

C &amp;C General Home Matn tenence· f:lainling, vm~l siding,
carpenrry, doors, windows, baths.
mobile home repa" Bnd more. For
free esr.mare call Chat, 614·892·

8323.

0 K VL

HDP

ZAC

VOLZ
ZDJ

VCSUL.'

Ceilings textured, plaa1er repair.

Call Tam 300-675·411!0.'20 yeers

Earl's Ho~e Mamtenaoce, v1nyl
••ding, roofM'lg, extetiOr and 1nter1·
or ~!nting, powa.. washing, room
add!ltona. Free Es1ima1el, 614882-o~232.

0015, WY 304-Slll·231l

1'

:.~·

ITUESDAY

.~ ~ :

~.
., } ·

. ..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When I "'as in baseball and you went into the
clubhouse, you didn'l see ball players wilh cu~ing irons."- Red Barber.

"' ) ~·

......

PIUUI

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ASCCER

3

'

E.RTTI

.

.

•

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.

.

by

rho chuckle

lilting in . the

R-1111 ar ..._ial wirfna.

.... ....... Of tepl.lra. ......, . ll~
canted elecuiclan. Ridenour

e.......... wvooo30e, 30•·175-

,,

·~ '

'The elderly gent told the .
young boy ."Nothing is ever entirely wrong. Even a stopped
watch •s correcc - - • - - a • ·- _ •

quot~

-

0:.,
i ...

L·

missing WOlds

. . . : -···

.....

you d""alop from llop toll&gt;. 3 below.

... ...

4

,.

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.~

...

F'

Nodule- Irate- Rough- Layman- ARGUMENT

. Never argue while eating. The person who isn't hungry will generally win the ARGUMENT.

MAY 21

,}&lt;
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ASTRO·OftA .. H

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
- -

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

114~8308. W"t/002045,

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..

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,·,"'

~

'

'tb\J Oon'1 Call Ua We Bolh Looel
FrH Eotima1a1, f.800·2D1 ·00118,

'

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•~

Plumbing &amp;

Heat Pumps, A1r C.ondtltol'llng, 11

.,

I" · I"'

Srucco and S1bne \nttallat•ona,
stuc~o malnttnan~e. s~u norne
repe~~~ all dry-waH repairs. years
exper.e,ce, call' make appoinl·

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER'
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

&lt;&gt;~ ' A io

,, ,

·S

·

.

..

U 0 K P' N C P .

,,

DRYWALL

.. . . ..

D

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l:lano. finish. "'PPIir

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWIRS

0488 Rogers Waterpraoling . Es· ~:

:7797:5:-.-:----:-~--:-:--

AL

0 K V L.

__,..V

I' r .1 I' I' . I' I·
I -1 I ·I IA I I I I

L.j
~

DPI

8 r:mRrY~Bf~~~RES I'

W~ER~~G
~,
Uncondilional lifetune guarantee. :... 1
Local references furnished . Call

Apphanc:e Pans And Servtce: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
penence All Wor~ Guaranteed.
French City Maytao, 6U-446 -

SDP ·

HDFPKVKULPN

•

---;;:~:;;::;;---- "~

-&lt;I '

D

'-....1.-..L.......I-..L.-'--'

~~--~~--~~- ~'
810
..
Home
•. ,
Improvements
"-!

161~) 448-0e7o Or 1814) 237·

D PI

ZDOYLI

Z D J

Todly't'*-:E

~-T,-'T,;'71~-,~~-~r.a:-:i. O ~omplele

- j·

-,

TSCZP

:-:-:y:--'l

SERVICES

BASEMENT

rthlcijNratandafor~.

ED

r~-:0 -:0:-::T~I-:0

••c.

- -~ ;~, ,,;;

CetebrityCiphw~·· .... aMiedfn:wn~by:~peqllt.ptll.nG.,......

~~~w:;:::E;::A~R~A
~, ;.,.:'
5 I I l

'· '

"""'· ....1112·9819.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1.

ptedictlons lor 1ha year ahead by mailing
S2 and SASE 10 Allro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Sox 1758, Murray Hill
Slatton, 'New Yor11, NY 10158. Mike eure
to slate your zodiac lllgn.
.
CANCER IJunt lhluly 22) Conditione
pertai~ing 1o your flnenclllt s11ua1ton will
ba lavoi'Jibfe today. It looks like you can
siMI diaw wa1er from an Old we".
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) A close 1rlend
might need your courage and counsel
lodey lor -.,;ng he or she hal been
l'llluc:1anll0 IIUIIU8 independently.
VIIIOO (Aug. :13-llepl. 22) 'l(ou may find

Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good
Condition, New Vinyl Siding, Car·
pori Unauached 2 Car Garage
Wilh New Apanmlnt Above. 614·
448· 1774 Home; IIU-448·0374

Weal
Pass
Pass
Pus

Coachman PoP,·up camper w/ • : ~
awning, sleep&amp; 8, ACIOC electric, ""
lha.,.. Mutt ate 10 appericate. S2000 or 080. 3Q; . 773·
91tl.
_,

820

1101

A K J 10 8 3 2

! '

.Ron'a TV Service\ specializing In
Zenith .a,laq servicing moat other
run• ar•1. ·$3000. ,
brenda. ttouse calla, 1·800-797·

19811 GMC Safari SI.E Sorieo V-11,
Also Loaded. 814·446·2••5 Ask
for l'llul.

Cheal Of Drawers, 1 Dretler,

WAITING ' llOW DO '(011
FOR M'&lt; TMINI&lt; UErS ·
HEW D06.. EVER 60iN6
FIND '(OU?

:

eso &amp; lraller. S2.800 .'30• ·675·

~

,.......,. __

•

ArMf tiS Boa1 Wilh 4.3 fit8f' ~ ~

Ctwvy engine, eutlltr1t eondition, .... .~

760

• Orlpplng7 Kill ot mono
I lndlaln, e.g.

By Pbllllp Alder

""";

f·l50. 302¥8, ·~· lf)d., no

~

--

till'

32~~

' 34-..ut ......
SIAclnu
Fleming
:MICIWnlcal

The shrinking space

,.

Orange· ••perience.

Red, $11,500, 614-448-7850 Allor
4~11 . .
.

HOUBSEY.!.,ORNESALER

---.

12.500. 080, 30•-eez. .•',.

labliahed 1975.

1981 Dodge Truek, N-• Minor
Body work &amp; pain! job 3t8 2
WhMI Drive AC, Au10, 97,000 II
$3,000080 61 .. 251·1233

Hay &amp; Grain

MER CHAN DISE

814·245--.

S· 10 ..yl, 5spd,

lake Honda 4·wneeler as trade.

R &amp; S Fumnure, Mason WV. 30•·
773·5341 . New Store Houn.
Mon-Fri
1 2noon· 7pm.
Sat

!•

.,_

30 Wllhaut

Opening lead: • K

171t open bow Invader. uonp i j
Evtnrude. 1k11, tube, lite. JICkell,
t.lt.~tl 1t11n1e11 alttt &amp; alum1un ' •'

r.,.-

Q4 Chevrolet Cavalier. Turquoise,

H!00· 537·952&amp;

e1•·n5-231!0.

::

$1 Olds Cutlua Suprame, a/c, 1988 Gull Stream Monterey 26' -·
pw, ps. V·6, 2dr., lady driven, ¥try campet:, e•c"~ru condition~ ~ilh ~
nic:e cal, "eoll e1 4·0112·2358 anv· ·all'titnoi: pni:e"lhttudes 'iriilmbei'· ,..
lime. .

••
a•

SQU&amp;IZIN'S II

.

.

2041.

300 Thru Z.OOO. Gallono Ron

In Plastic Coli S800. Sell $250, .

713-1111.

Motor Homes

79' L1ncoln Mark 5 Call. series.
Only made 500. Very good cand,

QUIT MAKIN' COIN

J' '

10r In rOll good ohipe, Soloo. 30•· ~·

D &amp; R Aulo, Aipiey, .WV. 30•·312·

5389.

614.ol46-3037

2 Bedroom
j)OSII,

1918 Oldo Troloo, 1887 Oldo Tro·
Ito, Ont Ownor, From ·End

3.••2.

I CAN'T BELIEVE SNUFFY

,.

1988 Plymoutn Voyager, AC,
Cruise, Tilt, 5 Speed, Manual

-non ........... 81H111-2687 ·

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,

Oueen Size Onhopedic Manress
Set And Frame. Never·Ustd Still

pane~, axdllant condllion , ;.
12500
, e1•·1M8·2311 dlyo
,,

12ft Aluminum borll WI 3.511p, mo·

Soulll

BARNEY

:;.,;;;o-Y&lt;V:o::m:::a:;h::a:""i:wi.o:::.,:r:::u::'nn=:a:::,:-,-:,w=o ....

tl' Stat crat1 boat, 1 15 horae ·::
Johneon motor I rrailer e 1• · 985· •'

Oepo11r will t\Oid: Parent• can bt

BAHAMA CRUISE! 5 dayl/4

81•·992-11815.

~

IOrSIIe

propo,
3325.

pito, 1300 famoioo. 13110 l.lalos,

Two Chow pups. S175 eacn,

Christian Olor Barbie: 35th Anniversary gift Mt Barbie and others,

1817 Ni11an 300ZX Turl&gt;o T·
Tope, Loaded, Ereollon1 Co~dl·
lion. e1•·2SI535.

ze;r
..::rd
27 - ... 4COCidlil)

Vulnerabll~: East-West
Dealer: West

J:

A.uto, AC, 49,000 M, 4 Door, .

0429.

Boots By Rtdwing, Chippewa,
Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowell
PriCes AI Shoe C8fe, GaiHpolis.

a'f

•

••

780 Bolla &amp; MotOI'I

7

• AKQJ
• Q5

82 KX 250. new kiCk ttan enr. ..·I'
,.
1017.

•

•

•I

AKC A~tgittertd Rottwtiltr Pup.

lio,.., 614-f!s6...6e47.
nights, Underboakedl Musl Sell!
S2791couple. limited lic~ers. 1.
800·414-4151 ext 6589 Mon-Sat
9am· 1Dpm.

New Yorloer goO&lt;J
Ul·
4 PM 408-3102

• Kt 2

Soulll

.fl.

lmldod.

Tank &amp; Pill Shop, 2413 Jackson

Buy or selL Riverine Antiqutl,
1124 E. Uain Street, on At. 12•.
Pomeroy. Hours : U.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 6:00 p.m., Sunday I :00 10
6:00p.m. 614-992·2526.
·

~hryalar

• Q 10 4
• 10 1 a s • 3

• 10 7 3

depoo;ll. Call al1or Spm. 300-675-

1Ogal tank 111 up specials. Fill'\

Antiques

1817

condition ; Nordfctrak call

8095.

Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo,
Reloadmg &amp; Fishing Supplies.
live Ban &amp; license, Crawrord'a,
Henderson, WV.

530

SrMt.Gioilpallt.

~r old Walmer·

2 112 to · eta unit. 1250.00 after
llpm 61 .......8251

Cllapel Road,

• Q ••

AKC Rogilllrtd blue l oold

Business Loc,tion, 1,000 Sq. Ft.

510

"'""""'" looko ,_, $1 ,00o. 300·
87&amp;-110o41.

Elec:tric

Steeping rooms wilh cooktng .
Also uciiler spac:e Of\ river. Atl
hook -ups . Call after 2 :00 p .m ..

pall: Gl 4-IIG2·3080.

••• s

&amp;205.00 . Dryer Ho1po1n1 woo
$150.00 now 1125.00. Range

810-4..·9580;

460 Space for Rent

taU Yohomo YZ·IO. rlddon 2

IINnille

21 Cowboy

24 Deeply

BaR

• A K J 8

alklng $7,200, 81•·M2·5011 ,

3Qo.113-5ollll.

1Yr. W•rrantr waa $225.00 now

Rooms lor rent - week or month.
Sta1'ttng at S1201rn0. Gallia Hotel.

304 ·77!J.58SI,IIason WV.

W~t

20~

22=Hunter

• as

1M2 Hltlt¥ Ohidoon 11:1 ...... '
• ..,, to11 of ltltnl chram' 7,800. l

-

Waon•f Whirlpool. wao S1SO.OO
now S12S.oo, W&amp;lher Hotpalnt

Now accep!ing appttc&amp;IIOns ·to;
two bedroom apartmenls. Apart~
mants have air condilioning,
kitchen appliances, lanced in
playground, laundry facility, on
site managemenl and water. Sew81', and lralh paid b'f owners. For
more Information p$ase call (614)
245-9170, Monda~·Thuflday from

Circle Motel. Gallipolis, OH 614·

t AJ I I 4

~ txtrt perta. tx*'-nt COndi· .. ,;
lion, uklng 12.200, 81•· 7•2· ~·

paiSG14-4oiiS·74...

'19 F·250, au-lit, lfiding Window in (&gt;aek, 300 e i:yl .. exeelenl

Furnished
·
Rooms

i

·~·

1&amp;-ZI··

...

Roo -

1101 18.50 ond up. Moiiiii)On Car·

Valley View Apar1men1s. ' Ri o
Grande.

450

.

:,.=:-:~::.:.::=kl:-:2::50:-::ll:::ln::;lli-.n::.::.7:dl ~
fnlnraJrinl.l750, .....,___

..

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

1llnllmlc1Mtd

.,17532

., 6-611-0211 .

~C

Vinyl •• P1ttern1 Lar. . aeltC·
lione. KiiCIIan Prlnlo In SIOC:k Cor·

720 ll'ucks for Slle

Noon 10 3pm. EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY· I RURAL ECO·
NOMIC AND COMMUNITY DE·
VELOPMENT.

,,,.

10115 Hondo XR· IOO. 300·175· ,
......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ •I,

And~--.

capped EOH 30"-675-6679.

446·2501 or 614·387·0612. Ella..

985-350•.

~Z11 .

14 """"'
11ilnllla
1. pi8poeed 10

MIQf\1 -..~:

V-41

1818 Ch... Conwroion 'lin. Ill·
HHino Hydl'o Barr.. Julit Wel)t). roon and Grar 305 VI Loaded .
e7,ooo miln. &amp;e,8U ..8U· 258·
Col814-440231 .
111121
AI&lt;C mini Ptntcnera, IWO malts,
1WO •....,.,, rHdy June 15, ••· 1918 Lincoln T""" Car Excel..,,
copll"t ~oli ll, 5300 uch, Condittaft, Reaao'nably Prlctd,
s..: John Allllor, 20 Vln1on
114·~.

&amp;- · Gl.-687·300•

mtnl 614·4... 0380

Engine, New._, 2 0.0.,
N" Tires. AU.tng 11 ,400, .,..

GroOm Sl1op ·1'111 Grvo...,g. Foa·

2-Spaces in Memorial Gardefll
located in Garden or Devotion
Phone 614-446·4011 or 61•·448·

a

Middleport 1
2 bedroom, fUr·
nished aptl. Also, 2 roam efficiency. Deposit a references re·

Nice three bedroom home in Pt
Small 2 bedroom house. 881 at
Allred, $240 per montn, call su ~

Pets tor Slle

$900,610-256-1140. '

Aller 8 ~~~ .

-ill

1M5~k~C~

Good, Looko Good, AUio. 1100.
.........8575.

«8·004.1,

Very clean one bedroom fur::-.=::...;..::.....:.:.~:-::-:-:=:---1 ntthed apartment in U lddleporf,
2 bedroom in Hartford S225mo. call 614-446·3091 prelerably be·
No pels. 304 · 882 · 2106 or 3Qc - 10re10::xlamorafler4:00pm.
675-3100. aher cpm.

:-:-:~---:-~::::-:-:::=-1
3 bedroom
Hartford $350mo.

G14· ...-31M

~Hou-Futria...And

"""*- OrMt.,.. On

Hof\4a

1SIIIOII

1. . V...he 110 IMIIIN, w.. I
11r Coo~Mi, look• Aftd Runt :
Good Aoklne I 1,4DO Or Troda,-

1115 Pon1i1c Grand Pna, Runt

Miniature Schnauzer puppies,
AKC, champiOn bloodline, shots

23 Acrea on leon Baiden Rd. 3
Wells &amp; c•ty water. Call 30 4·675:
3030 or 304-675·343l .

Estate
Wanted

SIHI Rool: $1,4.. Ert&lt;led: Iron
Horoellldrol·IDCI-352· 1045.

With Ramps, Brakes &amp; .Lights,

PlEASANT VAHEY APART·
MENTS: Are accepting appilcarecommends thai you do bull~--;--:::::;-:----:--1 lions for 2bi', 3br, &amp; 4br. Monday
ness wnn people you know, •nd
Parcels available for ne~ home lhru Friday from 9:00·4:00. OHice
E••Y Work I Exeellenl Pay I As· NOT 10 Send money through the · construction on Rayburn Road. 5 I! tocated at 1151 Evergreen
mall
unlit
you
nave
investigated
aembla Products al Home. Call
parcel a ranging hom 1 .84ac to Ortve F\l1n1 Pleasam, Wv Phone
To'n Free 1·800·•67·5566 EXT. 1ha olfeltng.
5.32ac. Paved road, county water, No. :JJ4-67~5806 . E.H.O.
12170.
reasonable restrictions. Map and
All STEEL Reaidential, Commer· into available on request No sin - Stonewood Apanments now acE•eculive eec:retary needed lor cial, Agriculture building DEAL· gte wtde inqu ines please.
304 . cepting applications for apartlocal company, cai1614·911Z·Z360 ERSHIPS available. Big 1'01en1ial 875-5253. •
ments, all electric, for elderly and
Prolils from tales and conauuc·
lor -inlll8tl. EOE
disabled. FMHA subsidized, ba·
lion. II qualified, buy facmry direct Scentc Valley, Apple Grove. stc rept $280 per momh. EOH,
Home Typist!, PC us8f's needed. lrom National Manufacturer. 303· beauttful 2ac lots. pubUc water, 614·992-3055.
$45,000 income potencial. Call 1· . 759-3200 ext. 211ll.
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304.$76-2336.
Tw1n RiVers Tower, now accepting
800·513-4303 Ext ll-11368
Couples to do •n Home Cookware
360
Real
applicalillns tor 1br. HUO subsod·
Need 6lad1es To Sell Avon, 614· demo,' part-rime hours lor full-lime
ozed apt for elderly and handi·

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.

Slldtnt boot, 1 ·3' Man Door,
Pol- SIMI Sidine. Gol,.luma

In Pt. Pleasanl Upslairs Unfurn•shed 5 Room Apanment, 6 U·

Moderen Ona Bedroom Apart·

Will do babV•illing in my home,
Racine vicinity, nave relerences,

males, 81,..2~755.

furnished El.liciency 2 Rooms.
Srtare Bath, $105/Mo. Utiliti es
Paid, 607 Second Avenue, Galli-

New' Bank Repoa. Only 4 left. Stitt

Rep.

eneed, Relerences. For Free Eod·

Equal Housong Oppo.wn11Y.

down, $157mo. l-800·691.f777.
in ...,.nly. 304·755-7191.

Will Do lnterTtr Or Exterior .Painting, Reasonable Rates, Experi·

&amp; movies. Call 61'* ·''*8 ·2588.

QUirod. 30..882·2568..

•300.

992·6358 or 304·182· 2645. Ind.

3711 . EOH.

Pilla .... Sill: 110'&gt;•1'.... I ·15'&gt;11'

VI'RA fURNITURE

FrwllaiNory -2511111.

port. From I232·S355 . Call 614·

limi!ed Ollar! 1998 doub!ew•de,

Sail, ~ CJJOiiiY , mint Can
1M teen 11 ·ownert retidence.
207·81h Street or c«ll 304-175·
1elt. Priee 11110.

Applicallona available at: Villagt
Gr. .n Aplt. 140 Or c:alt 11•· 992·

1995 Cla~IOn ·,,..52 Used 6 mo. 2 polis, 61 ....6.oi418Aftor
bedroom. 304-875·2842 or 304-

-~

Caoh And Cony! REHT-2-0WN

Z715

Apple -Grove 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
w/ 3.8 acres 149,000. 304 - 576-

Sc:hool.

2bdrm . IPlt., IOial tlfclrlc, IP·

.....

l nQie·- -

pliancet furnitt:-cf, launc:Uy. tOOm
flcilfti", close to Khoof in town.

1112 Norrlt 1ta80 3 Bedroom, 2
Balhs, Cenual Air, LP Gu Fur· Furn•thed 2 Bedroom ~lrtrnent.
nact And Stove, Underpinning l A.crost From Park. AC , No PelS,
Many Exrra1t Vary Spacious . References . Depos it, 1350/Mo.,
Priced To Sell I Euy Financing 81H..·8235. 81H.8.()577.
Availablol 814 -2,t7 -2032 After e
Furn&amp;sr"led 3 Rooms &amp; Bath. Up·
~II. Or Leave Mesuige.
slairs, U1ili1ies Furnished, CleJn,
1994 Fairmont Sachonal 3 Bed· No Pets, Reference. Depos1t Rerooms, 2 baths 32x40 614· 379· quired, tl14·44&amp;-1519.

Sun

Will

AVON I All Areas ! Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.,

89liC! Alief eP.M.

675-17C5.

Valier 'Nursery

2 bedroom apori!Mnl, $350 j)Or
month. 1200 dopooil. ulililies paid,
no - e14·992·57Z•.

10r32 pore•. $12,000. 30•·576 ·
3 apartments ava ilable. Call tor
3180 or 304·571·291o.
........ 8, ....... 10158.
For Salt Or Rent 199Z OakWOOd
2 lladroomo, 2 fuN llolhs, Relrig· aEAUTifUL APA"RTMENTS AT
erator, S10ve. New Air Condttian· BUDGET PRICE~..AT JACKSON
tr, Buill In latHe, Asking Price EST~TES, 52 Westwood Or~ve
P1J OH Rt2 Leon. WV, 810-258· lrom 12u 10 1315. Walk 10 shop

Smolll Froe Eotimallol 8 14·4...
Z450 Aile for Joe Soundono

Ona, West Virlginia Home, bcel•ATIN: Pomt Pteasant".

r.._....._

320 Mobile Homes
forSIIe

814·381-0428.

open 7 days. 101171875-20Z2 Erl
0526H21

• Ntw Haven, 1bedroom, ~o~nl1.1r ·
n11hed apt ,doel hi:Wt IIOVI, rt•
ThrN btdroam home"wirh car· lt1g, wa1ner &amp; drwtr. Otpoth &amp;
PD'L ....... lind OU1bullding In Pl
3Q.I.U2.2!&gt;88.
Pl..UI'II. Will NH on land c:on·
tft.OtOUndpoGt,I14-SIIIrl-5087.

Dan's Llwn Care. Rtaidtnlial,
Churc:het, &amp; Cemeterlea, Rea ..,;,.blo RaleSI 61•·379-2807.

Comrnetlcal, Residential, StMie:

10 peopl e who need to lose
w4t10I'II &amp; mak4 money, to try rtfNI
patented we1ght · loss produc:t

Thr• INdrOOm home in counr~.
Wh100 Hoi Rd .. ~- ... .,.,,

...._ t~•-M2·5151.

-·

1112

l . -. 11,000. 304-17S-7&lt;k2.

Solo I 2 ehllra. White lo11e1
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(Nov. :13-Dec. 211 If you
portlclpatt In a eoclal !lpOflloday and you
are ptlrt ot a 111m, have fun bur don'l
treat the ....nt lightly. Your teammates

'

will play 10 win.'
CAPIIICORN (Ilea. 22..Jtm. 11) A per·
oon whC! It fond of you mtghl prove the
depth of hla or her leallnge today wllh·
aomalhlng far more mt~ningful than

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AOUAIIIUI (Jin. »Feel. 11) When mate·
tng a decilfon today, COIIIIdet all of 1he
lllglllve upiCII, but 1110 look at 1he opli-

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•ypurself In an unusual attua11on loday. rniltic and pol. . . . . . be!m' dlcldlng .
Someone' for whom you lhlnk you're IIIICI!I (l'eb. 20 Mli'GII 20) A poblnllaHy
doing a tavor wilt acrualy do one for you. profitable dev8topment you haven, liken
strtoutly will be worth pursuing. fla·
You both wilt benefit
In lht year ahead you can nap large UIR~ (14!Pt, 2J.OcL 13) You might be examine b more C8Niuly today.
IMinlllilll from IOClll con1toC11. Thlt could caflecl Uf10" today to ·~ a dllietop. Aflll. (MII'OII 21-Aprll II) Today; you
be a banner year lor you M you foc:ue on men1 Involving twO 1nt1ma1t 1rlef1dl. Your will dlacovar thai tomeone you .know
your rtlationlhipS.
Imaginative IOiullona CCMJtcl .,._. .ver&gt;J· socially haa more in common wHh you
Of!.l jMey 2l.JU111 20) You may nol . one.
than you ..tiD, Try to ln\•111fg11t.
.
know whallo do with a new. brlghi ldU, ICOIIPIO (Oot. 24oNcw. 22) Your llblll· TAUIIU8 (April• ... 81 Tl)l+_., ,
·but an Oldlr and more experiao ICed hlend tiN might be CIIWioul to M CI I 1 will cNnge end lrltiMd of,lllweya ......
c.n guide you. OIICUII lilt metter with today. You lfOUid reclllo• tcknowlt_dO- tilt ltN, you oould be an lha rwcalv'n-,g "
him or ~~tr. Gemini, treat you...., to a mtnl lor ~fllllhlng you've orien ~ne tnd ca.tno .... ~· Gille lllnkllor ..
bllthday gill. Sane! lor y&lt;IUI ~Graph
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:Pege10 • The O.ly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 21, 1896

The Chelsea collection feeds Britain.'s horticultural .frenzy
8y TOM GROSE

display, from blood-red azaleas to
111e social scene is just gilding on
lpedll for USA TODAY · .
royal-purple pansies to snow-white the lily. however. Roy~ty may give ,
Chelsea cachet, but flower power
• LONDON - In May, English zantedeschia. .
gardeners tum their eyes toward
"It lifts lhe spirits," says well· attraCts the media and crowds, as· it
Chelsea, a posh London borough known landscaper Christopher has since 1913.
and home to the world's most Lloyd, 75. "It's the beginning of
Exhibitofi use cold storage,
renowned flower exhibition.
summer."
.
forced growing, express shipments
111e four-day Chelsea Flower
Lest we forget, however, the from overseas and other costly lechShow, which opens Tuesday, is to Chelsea A ower Show is also one big niques to show plants from all seaBritish gardeners what Graceland is party that attracts global interest and sons : for spring, canary-yellow
lo Elvis fanatics, what Yankee Sladi· saturation media coverage. And it's tulips and purple crocuses; for sumum is to baseball enthusiasts: a a blue-blooded party at that 111e mer, scarlet roses; for fall, pink and
' sacred place that davotees must visit royal family, usually including the white asters.
al least once in a lifetime 'and true q)Jeen, is given . a pre-opening-day
Chelsea will also feature 25 show
zealot.....,ver lire of.
~ private tour of the show. That ele· gardens created by some of horticul·
: Since most adults in Britain are vales Chelsea to a high-society hap- ture' s mos1 distinguished designers.
passionate gardeners, Chelsea has a pening that's part of lhe summer The gardens will range from the traunifying, uplifting effect on the season for the upper classes, a glit· ditiona1to the very innovative, says
national psyche. And given the tery sting of events from the Royal Ruth Anders, shows manager for ttle
drumbeat of bad news in the United Ascot horse races to the Henley \l-oyal Horticultural Society. which
Kingdom this year- mad-cow dis- Royal Regalia.
sponsors Chelsea. "It's the show to
ease, a renewed Irish Republican
At the Chelsea Royal Gala Pre- end all shows."
Army bombing campaign, a school-· view, a two-hour charity fete for
But most show gardens will
house massacre- the nation 's psy- 4,000, well-heeled patrons will reflect the traditional English garden
che could use a soothing balm of knock back 2,000 bottles of cham- popularized by author Lloyd in the
rosewater and lotus.
pagne and consume 80,()00 canapes. late 1950s in his seminal'tract "The
The 3 1/2-acre grounds of the During the run of the show, specta- Mixed Border."
Royal Hospital have been trans- tors - some so slylishly turned out
Before Lloyd's book, the typical
formed into a steamy greenhouse of they'll nearly eclipse the flo·Ners- British gardener tended wward
Brobdingnagian proportions. The will down an additional 6,000 bot· monolith. One had a rose garden or
entire site is covered by a giant tent lies of champagne, 2,000 lobsters, a tulip garden. But Lloyd counseled
In~ide, 700 exhibitors will pla.:c $30
70,000 icc creams, 80,000 sand· re-creation of the many-hued. naturmillion wonh of flora on colorful wiches and 300,000 cups of tea.
. al wildflower gardens of long-gone

countrY tottages. "h's controlled
nature, planned chaos," explain~
Mike Park, a bookseller who trained
at the prestigious School of Horticulture in south London.
However one g~n s in Britain.
!here is no question that most people
do garden, which explains why
Chelsea strikes such a deep cullural
chord.
It's a $3.8 billion industry and
easily the country"s most popular
leisure-time activity. says Mintel
International Group Ltd., a market·
ing research finn lhat puts garden
ownership in the UK at 85 percent
Gardening is so popular here, it's
recession-proof. While other industries stumbled during the economiC
downturn of the early 1990s. the
horticulture sector grew by I0 per·
cent, Mintel calculates.
TV and radio stations across the
UK offer an array of gardening programs, and most daily and Sunday
newspapers have columns devoted
to the subject About I0 gardening
titles, including weekly newspapers
and glossy monthlies, cram newsstands. Indeed. millions of Britons
who can't attend Chelsea · will rely
on those media outlets to bring
Chelsea home.

Endeavour chases satellite
Spartan satellite

0

A satellite with an experimental
inflatable antenna was hoisted by
the space shuttle Endeavou(s
robot Blffi and set free 176 miles
over Australia. The $14 million
experiment introduces inflatable
structures -antennas, sun shades
and other major parts- which
are lighter and cheaper than
traditional mechanical
systems.

Endeavour's
robot ann lifts lhe
satellte from the
shuttle's cargo
bay, sats it free, .
;~nq backs away
400 (eet. ·

8rwohours
' later, doors swing
opeli and Its 92·
loot-tong struts
extend.

.Nitrogen gas Inflates the reflective
.'

Mylar antenna, measuring 50 feet across,
abouHhe size of a·tennis court. It wiH
reenter the atmosphere and bum up.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Something new for the M~igs
Local School Districlthis year will
be a fine arts festival to be ~laged
Thursday nighl in the Larry R.
Morrison auditorium. Meigs High
School.
Over 600 art projects completed by lifth and si&lt;th grade Sludents
will be on displ!iy beginning at
6:30p.m. for viewing by the public .
At 7:30p.m. a vcx;al and·,·nstrumental musical program by elementary students wi II he presented.
"We want the' community to
know that the ans arc alive in the
elementary schools of the Meigs
Local School Districl." comment·
ed Ralph Werry. art and music
teacher, who is festival chairman.
Monday the artwork of the students of Donn·a Clark. Harrisonville . Pomeroy. Rulland Sal·
isbury; Jeff Baker of Bradbury. and
Ralph Werry of Salem Center.
were judged.
Entries were in charcoal, pencil.
crayon, and marker.
Blue, red and participating ribbons were placed by the judges.
Wendy Halar. Meigs Local admin-

noon.

The satellite, which contains all
lhe data from the $14 million experiment, flew more than 20 miles away
fn)m the . shuule while awaiting
loday's retrieval.
Whether the thin . Mylar antenna
inflaled properly won't be known for
certain until the shullle returns to
Earth with the satellite next week.
·The balloon appeared to extend to its
full size of nearly 50 feet in diamc.ter and slruiS 92 feet long.
The antenna, which had noticeable
rippling across its surface. rolatcd
more 1han expected and even began
to tumble.
"But I'd say even in the worst
case from what we've seen. it was
very close 10 a full success." said project manager Steven Bard of NASA's
Jet Propulsion Labora10ry in Pasadena, Calif.
·
. The anlcnna did nol broadcast any .
lsignals. NASA simply wanted to
demonstrate the technology of using
inflatables - lighler and cheaper
than traditional mechanical syslems
- lo pface large objects such as
antennas, sun shades and solar col -

lectors in space.
AP/Tracie Tso

Source: NASA, AP research

. By MICHELLE KOIDIN
Aaa~atad Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- Astronauts today chased a 2,000pound satellite they set free from
space shuttle Endeavour to test a
h\lge inflatable antenna. . .
The spacecraft. released by the
six-man crew Monday. served as a

In a nation where only 14 percent
attend church regularly, horticullure
may be Britain 's true religion. "You
have to feed your soul somehow,"
says Sandra Lea, curator of London's Museum 'or Gardening History.
.
Ask why the English are such
keen gardeners and you'll get as
many answers as there are flowers .
Certainly. Roman invaders culti·
vated gardens here. Early monks
!ended 10 physic. or herb. gardens.
And the great estalcs built · in the
16th and 17th centuries all featured
magnificent gardens. Lea reckons
lhat among European countries.
England was the first 10 evolve from
a feudal state to a land-owning soci·
ety, giving peasants impetus to gar·
den.
Moreover. though infamous for
bad weather, the British Isles offer
the righl mix of rain. surl and and
mild temperatures for long growing
seasons and I he cultivation of plants
from climates around lhc world.
"Our dull. gloomy weather is good
for something." says Norwich grow·
er John Metcalf. a gold-medal win·
ncr in 14 years of cxhibiling al
Chelsea.
Of course. for most Brito~s. gar·

Cincinnati
loses 7th ·
straight

dening is a way to relax, a means to
work off the tensions of modem
society in a colorful, creative way. ·
And while it's mainly a pastime·
for those middle-aged and older most Royal Horticultural Society
members arc in their 60s - it is
starting to catch on with thirty· and
twenty-somethings. The Evening
Standard ne\olspaper, the nightly
bible of upwardly IJlObilc London
commuters. ,and always qUick 10
spot a trend, recently claimed that
gardening is spreading like prairie
fire through London's young ar.d
trendy set.

istra\lvc assistant: Dana Kessinger,

.;·we really think we took a giant
platfonn for the experimental anten· step," Bard said. "We really showed
na, which e•pandcd to the size nf a that you can inflate such a large structennis court when it was pumped with ture like lhis." ·
More tcsts.are needed. however.
nitrog'cn gas.
Tiny e•plosivcs set off by a timer before equipping spacecraft wilh
severed the silvery antenna from the infiatablc parts. Erratic motion like
salcll11c abou1 an hour later. Depend- tumbling and rippling . for instance,
ing on your [!Oinl of view, the an.ten· would make any anlenna prcuy uscna looked hkc a flat parachute or a less.

spring monso(Jns . a "chcmicaf

drought" occurs .
This can occur. too. on trees, espe-

cially white pines as lhe chloride ions
arc taken up by roots and accumulate
in needles.
.
It's too laic to 'try to flush the area
with water. That should have been
done before growth appeared. The
best you can do is prune out the problems, if you can.
May and car.ly June is a fine time
to shear many evergreens with hand
hedge shears. Take off a scant one·
half inch•as new growth appears or
just as it stops growing. For hemlocks
and arborvitae. the hcsttime is oflen
late June. Do not prune any evergreen
after July I or you will remove next
spring's buds on the ends of the
branches.
·
Because you arc unlikely to either
move the roads or the wea1her, you

secondary supervisor. and John
Costanzo, clcmcnlary supervisor,

Karen Smith. · parent mentor. and
Carole Gilkey, lrcasurcr. all of the
Meigs County Educational Service
Center.
Thursday night annnunccment
will be made of the winners in the
art program, outstanding for flflh

might considencplacing sah-sensi. tivc pines with salt-tolerant· plants
such as the evergreen bayberry, frajlrant sumac. ginkgo. gray dogwood,
"hawthorn or London plane·tree.
SYMPTOMS: Tea roses appear
half-dead and half-not
TREATMENT: That's bail news.
Many of these arc grafted. which you
will know by lhc presence of a knobby bump where I he top part, or scion
wood, with lhe blooms you like(d), is
grafted 10 a hardier root stock, which
has unappealing , n01hing-colored red
bloon\s, if any.
Mercy killing is called for.
Next year resolve to protect your
lea roses better. After they arc dormant either mound diri up over the
graft or make a protective fortress .
Tic up the bush loosely with twine:
and make a cage of chicken wire·
anchored wilh stakes and stuffed with

1OOth birthday
celebrated

,,

Genheimer was a farmer in
Meigs County most 'of his life. He
was known for his decorative wnrk
with wood including thin,gs like
windmills. wh\rligigs, stcrnwhecl
paddle boats, bird boxes and wish·
ing wells. Hes c~auons were many
times displayed m the l~ge yard and
driveway to the Genhc1mer home.
He raised dairy cattle, laymg
liens, broilers. hogs and sh~ep on the
tlum along with a variety of grains
8U!d garden vegetables.
·
Genheimer is now living with his

The sixth grade instrumcnlal

sludcnts of David Bowen. Brad.bury. Harrisonville. Pomeroy, Rutland. Salem Ccnlcr and Salisbury.
will pcrfonn .

clean. dry leaves.
SYMPTOMS: .The nandina is
selectively dead and diuo lhc azaleas.
TREATMENT: Many broadleaf
evergreens suffer lcrribly in a rollercoaster winter because they have
leaves in a scmidormant state and so
can dry out faster than a dormant.
leafless deciduous plant.
Salvage pruning is the trick. Cut
damaged pans .hack well into good
wood. which is where ,you sec a
strong green cambium layer under the
bark. Fcrliliw lightly wilh a slowrelease produc1; mulch and water as
necessary.

· 2 tnlla...,te p._..
.

Nexl year help broadlcaf evergreens with an anti-dcssicant spray in
November and a thorough watering
in later faiL Mulch and wrap loosely
in burlap.
Consider 1hc need fnr wind protcclion but do not creel a solid barri-

· " It'~ like Zen or lherapy."

'

•

daughter. Lucille White, in Colum·
bus.
·
·

Noteftll....dwlth•ny
eo-nnwut lgency.

The fcsliva l will conclude. with
vocal studcnls of Werry from Har~
risonvillc. Rutland. Salem Center
and Salishury. presenting selections from musicals: They will
include "Celebration for You and
Me" ; "Oh Whal a Beautiful Morn
ing" and "Oklahoma" from Oklahoma; Do. Rc.. Me" from The
Sound of Music; and "Love in Any
language:· and "Believe in Your-

se ll" frnm The Best Christmas
Ever.

Next year lay down a thick mulch ;
in laic fall and don't remove it until .,
the weather has sClllcd in laler spring. '
(If you have questions or sugges·
tions. drop a n\)te 10 Gardening.
Gannett News Service. 1000 Wilson
Blvd .. Arlington. Va. 22229-0001.)

In the John &amp; Pearl
Proffitt estate,
send to:'
Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729-24,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

Mall this

t()day
forFREE .
lnfonnationl

COUpon

'

•

•

•

Mtull to: WORLDWIDE BURIAL BENEFITS, P.O. Box 1161, Galllpolle, OH. 45631

I Mr. 0
I

IIIM. ( )

PLEASE PRINT

MTH., DAY, YR. OF BIRTH

Adtlre••

Apt. •

CINCINNATI (AP) - Life along
the OhiQ River should start returning
·to normal later this week, but not in
time to save . at least two music
events ·at an. amphitheater on the
city's east side.
11uC Riverbend Music Center post·
poned two coriCC(riS that wou14 have
opened its surntner series. Some
pavilion seats remained under water
T)lesday.
,
The · concert .featuring Styx and
Kansas. seheduled for Friday night,
;..as postu"'Oncd and not immedia~Jy
resCheduled. The l!ob Seger concert
scheduled for Sunday niglit• was
moved l?ack to June 17; spokes·

I
I

I
I
I

City---- - - - - - s- ___ Z i p · - - - ' - - - -

I

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U.S. Rep. Frank A. Cremeans'
campaign' for. Congress in 1994 did
not constitute "excusable neglect"
when his concrete business failed to
respond to a lawsuit, the Fourth Dis· .
trict Court of Appeals has determined.
The (our-judge eoun reversed an
April 1995 ruling in Gallia County
Common Pleas Coun relieving Cre·
rneans Concrete Co. and Frank Cre·
means from a judgment obtained ear·
, . lier bY.DOM Inc., Beaver.
'
While admitting "there is no
bright line test to,determine whether .
a party's neglect has been excausable
or..inexcusable," · Judge Earl E.
Stephenson of Portsmouth wrote, "a
'complete, disregard of the judicial
system' should not, for instance, be
tolerated under 'excusable neglect."'
"... This.case clearly represents an
instance where a litigant's neglect has
crossed the boundary from excusable
to inexcusable," he added.
DGM filed suit locally in September 1994, alleging that Cremeans
Concrete failed to delivcrmaterials at
·a price previously agrec;d upon. The
materials were needed·by DOM for
a project bid it prepared for the Ohio

1·1

.........

.. ...

· woman Eli~abeth Cannon said.
River Downs racetrack hopes to
reopen Thursday, after losing a week
of thoroughbred racing. General
manager Jack Hanessian estimated
that the canceled dates cost the
already struggling track $500,000 in
revenue.
Next door, Coney Island amusement park and its Sunlight Pool are
expecting l'\.,b4;,.(/pen for the Memo1
rial Day weel&lt;:end. Much of the property was overrun by the river, which
must $tay below 50 feetto allow fullscale .cleanup, said Mary Schurnach. cr. •ice presedent of wes anhe park.
The Ohio River fell to the 50-foot

.

"

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Sevlraf'substitute leaching and
non-certified maintenance ·personnel
were approved for the 1996-97
·school year during the regular meet·
ing of -the Southern Local Board of
Education, Monday evening at
Southern High School
The board approved the following
certified substitute teachers for tHe
1996-9( school year: Carissa Bailey, .
Deborah Barber, Alicia Bauer, Jennings Beegle, Dorothy Bentz, lise K.
Burris, Christi A. Collins, Sharon
Edmonds, Keith 'Eubanks, .Linda
Faulk, William Gee, Michelle Gillian.
Lucille Haggerty, Robyn Hawk,
Kelly Henry, Janelle Hineman, Toni
. Hudson, Teresa King, Kelly Kisner,
Mary Jane Leach, Fann(e Lee, James
Ryan Lemley, Karen Lyons, Lester
Manuel, Paul McGuire.
Tricia . McNickle, Tanya Mead·
ows, Melani Van Meter Quillen,
.Angela Rigsby, Nathan Robinette,

Departmenl of Transportation.
DOM alleged !hat neither Cre·
means Concrete or Frank Cremeans
responded to the suit, and moved for
a default judgment in November. A
certificate of judgment was prepared
by Nov. 23, 1994, when Cremeans'
attorneys filed . for relief from the
judgment.
The Gallipolis Republican· said at
the time there had not been "any actu·
al contract" between . his .firm and
DGM for supplying concrete, and !le
had not responded to the suit because
he was "preoccupied" with his race
for the Sixth Congressional District
seat and "had no time to devote to
that suit." .
Cremeans subsequently told the
local coun he had signed lhe certified
mail receipt when the suit was deliv·
ered to his office, but said that at the.
tfme he "was no longer involved in
the day-to-day operations of his business and that the mail was left to the
employees of Cremeans Concrete to
be handled by them."
Cremeans also told· the court he
had read about the default judgment
prior to the November election. Evidence was alsb presented on his
behalf 10 show there had been a "mis-

llUc.e" in the price of concrete quQtllif,
to DOM and lhat the price was "sUb-.. '
stantially less than what it shotjld
have been."
The price error was relayed :to·
DOM, Cremeans said.
. •• ·
The court reversed the finding for '·
DGM and found that Cremeans and ·
his fif!ll were subject to "excusatile · ·
neglect" due to the campaign. . . •
DOM appealed the findifll and'· ·
found a sympathetic ear with the
appellate court, which found that ere. ·
means "was clearly aware of the '
pending lawsuit.
.,
"He nevertheless ·continued to ~
ignore the matter until after the eleC'·
tion and after default judj!llienl h.d;.:,
been enicred against him and a judg:
ment lien executed thereow,"
Stephenson wrote. •
.
"This ongoing disregard of die .- •
legal process, in order to attend to :. ·
other matters, is not 'excusable ·.
neglect' under Ohio law," he added. ; .
.Stephenson wrote that detennitl·
ing what is or is not "excusable' ·::
neglect" has to be judged on eael).
case, but noted that the . appellate
judges felt "compelled to look for ·
somi:lhing more and to analyze re.;
sons why such process was ignored"

Carolyn Robinson, Nancy Scar· Athle.tic Association (OHSAA) fot
brough. Jeryl\ifer Shuler, Rita·Slavin, . .the 1996·97 school year. • ·
Charlene Smllh, Pamela Z~rkle.
•• approved Guarantee Trust life
The following non-certified sub- Insurance Company. Brogan Warner ·
stitutes were approved fonhe .1996- Insurance, to offer student accideiu ,
97 school. year: Lynda Adkins, Jeff insurance for the 1996-97 school
Beaver, Becky Bradford, Patricia year.
Brown; Earline Ebersbach. Larry
.. approved the renewal of the diS:
Ebersbach, Tom Lane, Wallace Mor- · trict's dental insurance program with
ris, Teresa Miller.
· Coresource, Inc. for the 1996-91
Judy Parsons, David Smith, Wor- school year.
.
thy Slanley, Becky Wilson, Frank . :· approved policy revision$~ .••
Shane, Jennifer Michael , Lynda replacements, and additions for vii- ··-·
Adkins, Becky Bradford , Linda Har- ious board policies introduced at tHe
mon, Sherry Harris, Janet Manuel, lasl regular board meeting.
· ... -Teresa Mille•. Judy Parsons.
·
.. approved a motion to advertise
Becky Wilson, Melissa Grueser, the unfilled coaching positions for
Sally Caldwell, Connie Chevalier. anyone that has a sports medicine
Juanita Frederick, Becky . Wilson, certificate and a CPR card. ·
· · ..
William Downie, Scoll Hill . William
.. approved Ohio School Boards
Justis, Charles Lawrence, Delbert Association membership for 1996-97
Smith, Tom Theiss, Ron Wilson.
school year.
In other matters, the board:
Present were Superintendent · •
.. approved membership of South- James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie ·
em High School and Soulhcm Junior Hill, board members Marty Moran- · ·
High School in the Ohio High School ty, C.T. ·Chapman, Bob Collins ·
·David Kqcsma and Susie Grueser. · '

ings.
The fire was believed lo leave
started in the alley near Bill Jackson's
body shop and quickly spread to the
other buildings.
The hardest hit areas were the
Dan Tax' building and the Gallipolis
Beauty Shop. Investigators are call·
ing the two buildings that share a
common roof a complete loss.
·
The wall that ran between the two
buildings was made of wood timbers
that are an estimated 150 years old.
The timbers had been in ·there drying
for years and were eKtremely flammable, Mills said.
Mogie's Restaurant and Elrod's
are in pretty good shape despite
smoke and water damages, Code
Enforcement Officer Mike Null said.
Magie's is believed to have been
saved by a fire wall that separated it
from DanTax. Owner-operator Edie
Cunningham worked Tuesday to
restore the business, but seemingly
was having difficulties with an electrical short.

Ohio ·River still causing problems

I

lire.()

' ' "'

I

Southern board OKs substitute personnel: ,

Deputy State Fire Investigator
Gallipolis fi're officials said that
Bob
Lawless of Ironton has been at
despite. published reports that the
downtown Court Street fire was the scene since Monday and is
caused by arson, the investigation is expected back today.
· Two spot fires were quickly extinstill continuing.
·
guished
l;uesday after they were
"There has been absolutely no
notification, from anybody to anyone detected by one of the business ownhere regarding the ruling," a Gal· ers who was at the scene working to
lipolis Volunteer Fire Department put her business back ~ogether.
One tru~k and six .firefighters
spokesperson said today. .
Investigators are working to rule reported to the DanTax building at
out the obvious causes of fire first, , I :33 p.m. when the spot fire was
such as lightening; ras leaks and elec- detected oil the second floor, eventu·
trical reasons, said · osi~ent firefight- ally causing the third floor to fall in.
The second fire in Russell Wood's
er lim Mills.
While the department f~els that storage building was quickly put out
the fire is of suspicious nature. the with a fire extinguisher.
Mills said thai spot fires are no at
cause will not be declared arspn until
all unusual in a tire of that magnitude."
all other causes are eliminated.
"II really surprised me that we
All business owners have been
ruled out as suspects and investiga- weren 't back down I here Monday
tors are thoroughly probing a lead night," Mills said. "In a lot of cases
that developed on Tuesday:
like that, you don'l see the fire but it's
The blaze that broke out in the his- still burning."
toric downtown area early Monday
A structural engineer called in by
destroyed four buildings and dam- .the city seemed to think after seeing
aged two others is estimated to have the damage that it will be necessary
caused $1 million in damages.
to remove the back end of the build-

,

•-*
o.n.- Co. Nell!
. I p1P4f

••

Probe of Gallipol~s blaze continues.

cr. which increases wind speed. The
best windbreaks arc plants or an
npen-wcavc fence; both sl&lt;iw rather
than stop the wind.
SYMPTOMS: The rhododendrons
arc resting at an odd tilt and look ,
ponr.
,
TREATMENT: These arc shal- ·
low-rooted plants readily uprooted by ·
the repealed freel.Cand thaw we have ,
experienced. This literally lifts roots ..
out or the ground and exposes them
to the air, which kills them.
Salvage hy replanting or recover- :
ing, !rimming any ·exposed dead ;

r:---------------------------------,

I

.,

• Aging, A Lifetime Opportu·
nlty" w" the theme. of an
obMt'Vance of Senior Citizens
Day ha.ld Tuaeday afternoon at
the Melga CoUnty Canter. Highlighting the activities were
Hlect!on of royalty, (bottom
photo) Clarence Storj, king,
and Helen Fisher, queen, and
the ·preuntatlon of prdclama- . lions from the Ohio House of
Representatives· and the Governor's Office. Accepting the
commendations On behal( of
,.the 011e..1 (top photo) were,1eft ·
tD!.r:lght,'- Su,aan- Oliver; execu·
tlve director, Sherrie Hughes,'
AI'INI Agency on Aging; and
JOhn Rice, ·president of ·the
·Board of Trustees, Meigs
County Council on Aging.
About 150 . senior citizens
attend~ tl)e observance,
Among the guests was Randy
Lelfler, chief of communlc•
Ilona of the Ohio Department
of Aging. Ther.e were special
musical programs by "Maxi·
mum Impact" of the Middleport
Church of Christ, Sharo.n Stew·
art, director, and the. Meigs
High School Jazz Band direct·
. ed by Toney Dingess. Nellie
Parker had re11dings, and the
"nlor. staff entertained with a
play written by Evelyn Clark.

You are now·ellglble to apply for up to $10,000 of Whole Life Insurance. No medical exam Is
required to apply.
·
Mall the coupo!'l below for details on the benefits available to agea 40 to 85.

undivided interest

'

. l.': f.{

IMMEDJATE ACTION RE«::OMMENDED:

For Sale: The

... ..

.

A

Appellate .judges reverse\~~·
Cong. ~remeans' ruling

'·

This is to Inform you that Social Sacurlty pays a death benefit of just $255, and only to
qualified d"pendanta. This won't make a dent In the usual funeral cost - anywl'!ere from
$3,501) to $8,500.

\'00 CAN'T ESCAPE Tf-£ GREAT
8IJl'S N Tl£ CI.ASSFEDS.

'

•

Senior Citizens Day observed

A'I"rENTION AMERI~ANS .

..

Pome1 oy-Middleport, Ohio,
Wednesday, May 22, 1996
.

trees.

rnols ."

Moatly clear tonight,
lows In lhe SO.. Thurldtly,
aunny, high In lOa.
•

•

Vol. ~. NO. 11

"It's a spiritual thing. a really ·
important connection wi1h nature,"
relates Jason Payne, 31. a former
rock musician turned garden design·
er who has · transformed his north
L'ondon garden into a mini-paradise.
complele with a· pond stocked with
gold fish and Koi carp and such
exolic plants as papyrus, bamboo,
Santa Cruz ironwood and banana

has not increased death benefits for over forty ( 40) years

· VICTOR GENHEIMER

8424
BuckeyeS:
1·5·19-27·32

.

S-0-C-1-A-L S-E-C-U-R-1-T-Y

A .IOOth birthday open house cclehration for Victor Genhcimcr will
be held at the Pomeroy Gun Cluh on •
Pomeroy Pike Sunday. May 26,
from l.p.m . to 4· p.m. All relatives.
friends and acquaintances arc inl'ited to attend.

· Plck4:

•

Gardening column: Rx for gar~en victims of crummy winter, spring weather
By DIANE HEILENMAN
but unaffected buds lower on the
The Loultvllte Courler.Journal
.limbs can take over. If this happens
The long harsh winter and rainy · winter afler winter. some1imcs you
spring has sounded the death (nr ncar . gel a witches' broom. a knot of
death) knell for many garden unusual twiggy growth.
favorites.
Next year protect vulnerable
. However, some quick ac.tion can plants with burlap screens, or wrap
save or revive shrubs. plants. lrCeS the entire tree, if feasible . This
and flowers hcforc they become involves winding it around with a
. compost
cord .tied tb .selected branches and
Here are 1he symptoms and treat· lhcn wrapping with strips of burlap.
ments for common garden problems. fastened to the cord With big pins or
SYMPTOMS: Pines and .arborvi- lhread.
tae have turned brown along the side
SYMPTOMS: Tite perennials and
nearest 1he road.
shrubs in lhe flower beds alongside
TREATMENT: Some browning the driveway appear stunted.
and needle drop is to be cxpeclcd as
TREATMENT: Road salts can
·old needles.arc shed in late spring and damage perennials if the sails have
summer. However. this selective hccn mixed with snow and lhc snow
brown death s.uggcs1s injury from shoveled or plowed over the ground.
road salts, which dcy o~ttissucs when As the plants break dormancy and
roatl spray is k.ic,ked up by passing 10ke up waler, or uy 1o, the salt solucars. The ends of branches mighl·die. lion hogs all the w:uer and. despite

Pick 3:
472

SporbonPageS

. JUDGING ART PROJECTS •• More than 600 art P,ojects were
JUd.ged ".'onday in preparation for Thursday night's art festival at
Me1gs Htgll School. John Costanzo, Meigs elementary supervi·
sor, front, evaluates some artwork as chairman Ralph Werry, art
and music teacher, looks on.
and sixth. and first and second runners-up in each grade.
.
The musical portion of the prngram will be opened with a program by the Bradbury and
Pomeroy vocal students of Chris
Rouse presenting "Identity", "We
Go for the Gold" and "America.
My Home" by Teresa Jennings.

...

Ohio Lottery

•

Meigs Local School District
to hold fine arts festival

round trampoline on an upside-down
tripod.
The giant orbiting balloon was
expect~d to plummet through the
atmosphere and burn up this after-

,\

'

.

ALISON GERLACH

ADAM J. SHEETS

Gerlach,.
Stewart,
Sheets
top 1996 Meigs seniors

BY CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
level on Tuesday and was forecast to Sentinel newa •taft
drop to about46 feet by early ThursTop scholars in the Meigs High
day.
School class of 1996 have been
That would mean a stranded pad- announced by Fenton Taylor, princi·
die-wheeler, the American Queen, . pal.
' fin,ally would be able to leave down- ..
Co-valedictorians of the class are
town Cincinnati, where it has been Alison Rae Gerlach, daughter of
. stuck hetween two bridges for two ,Mike and Debbie Gerlach of Mid- ·
weeks. It has not been able to cruise dldport, '"d Cindi Stewart, daughter
beneath the ,bridges because the riv- of Greg Stewart of Rutland and
er level is too.ltigh. •
.
Dinah Stewart of Middleport. ,
The Delta Queen Steamboat Co.;
Saluiatorian is Adam !. Sheets,
owner of ·the American ·Queen, has sori of Jennifer and James Sheets of
been helping its passengers changt: Rutland.
,
their travel plans and paying related
Gerlach plans to attend Marshall
inconvenience costs.
University where ~ will major in
board casti. journalism. She was

recently recogniied as the top senior
in Meigs County and was awarded
the Franklin B. Walter State Award
and named recipient of 1he WSAZ
"Best of the Class" award. Other
recognitions include being selected a
.regional scholar, a delegate to Buckeye Girls St~te, an Ohio University
Governor's Scholar, and Hugh
O'Brien Youth Foundation Ambassador.
AI Meigs High School, she has
been active in .the National Honor
Society, mock trial work, thC French
Honor Society, the Fellowship of
Chrlslian. Students, Senior Spirits
which included two school·spon·
sored trip to Europe, lhe marching

...
~

.
·- ..

I• ."·'

.....

and concert bands, and the senior
play.
As a member of the Middlepon . . ~··
Church of Christ, she is active in th&lt;; ~:·: •
youth group there and assists in tho ··~,
nursery. She worj&lt;s pait·time lis a disC,' .:;::
jockey for WMPO Radio.
: ~...~
· Stewart will be attending Ohiq:~~::·
University in the fall. She has been~:::::::
· recipient of the two ~eademic excel;:~;:.-..:
lence awards for maintaining a 4.11-~ ...:·
grade point avenuac, and hu partici;~:~ :
paled in the Oluio Unive~ity's Gov-:~' :;:
emor's Scholars Proaram llld a spe:~~ ~,;
cial summer Jli'OII1IIIU lherc for a com;, : • ::·
'• "'...-""'·
Puter course:
At Meiss Hish she hu been .: • ;~.
Coatlnued Oil paae 3
:· .·~:

. .
~

~

~

...
... . •·: "'

•

,l

\
-~

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