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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport ~ G~!lllpolls , OH ,

Point

PIMNnt,

W'!

Sunday, June 2, 1998

Ohio Lottery

Scholarships··a,re·awa·rded
to top seniors.at Meigs High
~y CHARLENE HOEFliCH

Times-Sentinel Staff
ROCK SPRINGS - Scholarhips tOialing ninrr than $123 ,000
werr awarded to graduating seniors at
thr Meigs High School awards
assrmbly Friday.
Ah&lt;on Gerlach. co-valedictclrian,
selected as a Yeager Schnlar at Marsh~ll Univtr&lt;ity. a program for gift·
ed students,.was awarded a scholarship there valued at $42,000. That

rncludes a $4.000 stipend to allow her

study in a foreign country She was
also awarded a Roben C. Byrd Scholarship of $4.487.
Cindi Stewan. cn-•·aledictorian,
was the rectpienl of the Ohio Board
of Regents Scholarship of S2 .UOO a
year for four years, and also received
an American Electric Power sc h olar~
ship of $6,000.
Dorothy Leifueit received a Presidem's, Scholarship from Marictla
I()

•

in the junior class received
Danforth
awards
Friday's awards assembly at Meigs High School. Tar!! Grueser. and
Adam Barrett were the recipients. MJchtiel WIHong, above at rtght,
oMHS guidance counselor, presented the award to Grueser. Bar-

College of $28,000, an American
Electric Power Co. scholarship of
$6,000, the Meigs Cooperative Parish
Scholarship of S~OO. and the Bob
Roberts Scholarship of $600.
Brian Colwell was presented a
$14,500 ~holarship from DeVry,
and Jonathan Avis a $5,344 scholarship from Marshall . University for
pursuit of studies in music.
Other scholarships. were awarded
· to Amber Dennett, $100. a vocati onal award from Service Star, $1,000
Vctcran.s Memorial Hospital for nurs ing, and $250, MHS faculty scholarship; Tonya Phalin , Mason VFW,
Stewart Johnson Post 9926, $500,
and Louise Morharl Gram. $1.()()():
Suzanna Henderson. ~ tudcnt Council
scholarship. S125 ; and Tabitha Lynn
Swearingen, Student Counci l scholarship, S 125, and Hocking College.
$250: f'v1egan Clark; Louise Morhart
Grant , $1,000 and VFW, Mason ,
$500.
Also awarded sc holarships were
Tracy Shaffer, Bedford Tpwnship
Scholarship, $1,500; Cynthia Ann
Cotterill, FHA Scholarship, $100,
Parker Long Scholarship, $500, Kristen Dassylva, Linnie Taylor Scholarship, $750: Terri Fife, se nior class
·scholarship, $200: James White,
senior class scholarship, $200: and
Adam Sheets, Mei gs Local Teachers
Association sc holarship, $250, and
the Bob Roberts Scholarship of $600.
Selected as the outstandi ng Junior
girl and boy and prese nted the Dan-

Marauders
go to $tate
.tournament

Gerlac h. also received the Air Force
math and science awards. Cynthia
Cotterill and Donald Yost were pre-

years
service. The business opened May 1, and Is
managed by Mike Walker, left. Hours for J.D.
Auto Sales are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.·
6 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more
information, call 992· 7322.

Week's tri-state livestock summary
By The Associated Press
.
Following ts the livestock weekly summary, which includes direct
sales in Ohio, Indiana and Michigan :
For the week: barrows and gilts
5.1)1) lower. Sow' '\.50-4.00 lower.
The direct hog trade moved lower s t~lrti ng on Tuesday. The movement was adequate to allow packers
to buy two to three days ahead . The
product mo ved dramatically lower
tlmmghout th e holiday shortened
we ek.
.. . , Rc,:ei pll week to date I~ l.ll(HJ:
week agn 1 6~. I00: year ago 154.600.
Barmws and gi lts: Country plants:
u.s. 1-2 220-260 lb'. 55.00-57.00,
few 54.50 &amp; 57.50, 56.'i0-58 .25.
· Sows: U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs.
39 .00-41.50; 500-650 lhs. 41.5044 .00, few 45.00.
Boars: 33 .00-34.00.
Compared with last week:
slaughter steers and heifers un ali vc
bas is steady It &gt; finn . so me .SU-1.00
hi gher. Holsteins . ; teudy. Demand

itnd rtH I\Ic mc nl moderate. Trade very
uneve n thi s w~ck as cleanup and
'mixccl caHic arc comrnlln. 'll1i s whi It·
mosll y choke frtl 4.: attl c arc b~unn ­
ing lwn.lcr tn find , w1th fccJcr.' wa nt ~
ing lll OI"l' lhanl lw 1 Ul l l! lll lll arko..:: t ~vt l l
bear Some lnrnnt:"-.:-. n.. t~ ·d 10 the

market late.
, Confirmed ' ales 5 ,0f~ J . la'l wee k
2.WO: laS! year .\,500.
Li ve ha sis "ialcs : equi va lent to 3
percent shrink del ivered to the. plants,
or "'ith 3-4 pcrceut slu ink fob.
Slaug hter steers : selec t and choice 23 1100-1350 lhs. 57 .50-WSO. some
lute 60.00: mos tl y choi ce ca&gt;t 60.00lifl.SO. Select 1-2 10511-1300 lbs.
5 \ fXJ-56.50.
Holstein ~ 1 cc 1 :-.: ' L'Iccl ~ urd r lloi!..' C
-2-.\ 1250- 15{)() " " 4~ fKJ-5.\ ) (l.'l~w
5.'i.fXJ.

Slaughter hctkrs: selec t and
choice 2-3 950- 1200 lbs. 57.()().
58 .50, few mostly &lt;' hoicc to 59.()().
·Select 1-2 &lt;JfJ0-1200 lbs. 52JXJ-55 .00.

Carcass sales paid on hot carcass
weights. picked up basis unless staled otherwise.
Compared with last week : slaughter steers, heifers, and holstein steers
near steady.
Steers: select and choice 2-3 11()()..
1350 lbs. 92 ()()..94 .00, mostly choice
95.00-96.ql.
Holsteins:. select and choice 2-3
1200-1450 lbs. 85 .00-88 .00, few
80 Ofl.&lt;J0.50. Hdfc rs · se lect and
choice 2- 3 YS0-1250 lbs. ·90.0094 00, mostl y choice YS.OO.
Compared to last week. slaughter lumbs were 2.00 higher. Slaugh-

ter ewes .were firm . Mo vement was
light io mQderale in direct trading.
Lamh carcass prices were HUJO
higher late in the week with li ght to
moderate demand.
Man y of nature's most common
malc•·ials hone s, trees and
seashe lls, lor example - arc so
sop his ticated that they still defy
duplicati on by scientists.

U.S. companies make 30 million
tons of plastic each year - half the
ton nage of the nation 's wheat crop.
'

REMINDER

1 s.ction,

Meigs High School graduates received more than $123,000 In spholarships. They were recognized It Friday's awards assembly at the
school. From left are, front row, Alison Gerlach,
Amber Btnnett, Ton'ya Phalln, Suzanna Hen·

row, Dorothy Leifllllit, Tabitha Swearingen, T,.
cy Shaffer, Cynthia Cotterill, Kristen Dallylva
and Terri Fife; third row, Brian Colwell, ,
Jonathan Avis, James White and
. . Adam Sheets.
.

as the top vocationill business student student of the year.
was John Card.
Keys for highest average in Eng- :
Pre ~enl ed Americanism awards
!ish 4, Alison Gerlach and Cindy :
were Elizabeth Ellis. Matt Williams. Stewart , with Gerlach also recei ving :
Monty Hunter. Myca Hay nes, Dar- the key for the highest speech aver- '·
rick St. Clair, Matt O'Bryant, Anna age : Melissa Whaley and Lacy ;
f.in k. Amy Sec and Billy Jo Bentl ey. Banks: American Hi story:· Alison ,
Among other owards presehted Gerlach and Lori Russell, French:
were Kimhcrly Smith , outstanding Mich ae l Lcitllcit and Danie lle ·
work stud y award: Tamara O'Dell Gruescr. geo metry; Cindi Stewart,
and Jenn y Howerton , Tech Prep's Alison G~ rlac h , physics : Libby King
nest: Steve Reed and Brandi Mead- and Erin Krawsu.jm. ad vanced math;
ows, 'o-cditors, yearbOl&gt;k: Jessica Cindi Stewart and Dorothy Leillteil, .
Johnson and Bridget Vaughan .•alge - calculus.
hra awards; Libby Kin g, chemistry
award . Matt O'Bry;mt, ·marketing

Early garden yields ready to send
to markets _throughout the region
C1Jmmc n: ial vegetable growc~s
have j ust finished planting and
already insect pests and diseases arc
feasting on the young plants.
This cool ,. wet spring delayed the
life cycle of in,occ ts such as Colorado
potato beetles, Diantondback caier'
pillars. cabbage loopers, slugs, Ilea
bce.tles and aphids. but they arc
quickly being·spo tted in some fields .
at high enou gh thres hold levels to
warrant be ing controlled.
Scoutin g nf the fields for these
insects IS essential before sprayi ng.
Unnecessary pre ve ntative sprays may
kill more of th e beneficial insec ts
(i.e .. honey bees, lacewings, lady hectlcs) than the small amount of damag e hy a few insects. ·
Both. commercial and home yard
growers need to look for bacterial
speck disease signs mi the leaves of
tomato plants. Louk on leaves for
dark brown or black spots surrounded hy. a yellow hal o. Black le,inns

with yellow borders can also appear
on leaf margins where water collects.
Several plants h~ve been diagnosed.
Spraying of copper-based fungicides
will help control damage. Cool , wet .
'weather favors the devel opment of
this disease.
· ·
Another concern
Did you have hagwonns allac k:in~
your arborvitae. junipers. honey
locust, or pine trees last year? The
bagworm larvae will be emerging
soon from eggs.
·
Too often, we see the after
effects of their feeding - defo liated
plants and lillie hags hanging from
branches too late to rlTect ivcly control them. Now is the t1me to make
biweekly sprays if.da111agc was dono
last year lo your plants. For further
information, ask for .Home Yard &amp;
Garden Bulletin 2149,
(Hal Kneen is the agricultural
extension aJ!lent for Meigs Coonty.)

GALLIPOLIS CITY TAX 'DEPT.

441-6009

•

to,.._

Many are justbeglnnlng their careers In health care. Others have been reaching out to people who need them for years. Each, however, shares a dedication to the
people in their care• .
Many times 'Nurse Assistants are asked to do the difficult task In a · long-term care
facility. Then they are called on to touch someone's life with a gentle, loving hand.
Each Nurse Assistant receives training and must pass a state•lr!andated test to
demonstrate their knowledge and ·skill.
The need for Nu;se Assistants is great. .Long-term care facilities typically provide
excellent benefits Including health · insurance. For those seeking career
advancement, ·tuition reimbursement or a scholarship is often available.
I

For more Information contact tills facility or the Ohio Heallh Care Association.

ROCKSPRINGS REHABILITATION CENTER
36759 Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy', Ohio 45769-9731 • 61~2-6606
•

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Define the individuolthat you are, ·
recognize your strengths and prepare
for the future.
Those were the suggestions of Alison Gerlach and Cynthia Stewan. co-·
valedictorians, and Adam Sheets,
salutatorian, when they addressed the
131 Meigs High School graduating
seniors at the 28th annual baccalaureate and commencement program ·
Sunday afternoon .
"Greatness . is not measured by
money, fame .or power," said Gerlach,
."but from being the best individual
you can be.
"It does not matter if you become
·a star, just if you are striving to do
your best. You are the only you, but
,you cannot find greatness until you
define the individual," Gerlach
· added.
· She applied a comment made by
Jimmy Buffett to her four years of
high school -"Some of it's magtc,
and some of it's tragic, but I've had a
·gO\)d life all the way."
.
In her address, Stewan et,nphasized the need to remember the past
while venturing out into the "real
world ."
She. discussed friendships, the

support friends have given through
the high school years, the necessity of
moving on now and ·searching out
new friends.
Sheets' comments included a reference to a statement by Einstel!, "I
don't think about the future: it ci!\ncs
soon enough," He then gave his
interpretation of that remark. ·
"He was telling us that the future
is there; it's not to be lived· for,. or
longed for ... it's just to be recognized
and prepared for,"
Sheets defined the past as what
"we learn from," the present as "what.
we Jive in," and the future as what
"we need to prepare for."
In their-maroon and gold caps and
gowns, the seniors entered the auditorium to music by the Meigs band.
Gerlach gave the invocation and a
welcome was extended by Tabitha
Lynn Swearingen, class president.
Teresa Devin Simpson, treasurer,
made the introductions.
Special music by the band included Grundman's "The Blue and The
Gray" · and the Alma Mater, and
"Maroon and Gold" by Lohse ~nd
Lohse. The MHS Chorus sang "You
Are Not Alone" by R. · Kelly, and
"Wherever You Go" by Estes and
Henson.

Principal Fenton Taylor presented
the class and diplomas were handed
to the graduates by Roger Abbott,
president of the Meigs Local Board
of Education, as Michael Bradley
Franckowiak, class secretary; read the
class ro ll. Suzanna Henderson, vice
president, did the tassel change as a
symbol of graduation.
.
, Graduates were Travis Jay Abbott,
Jonathan Joseph Avis, Candace M.
Barber, Amber Bliss Bennett, Nicole
.Bentley, · Jessie Sue Blackford,
Gretchen L. Blaine, Steven B, Boggs, Arthur E. Bradshaw, Amanda Lee
Brinker, Jonathan A. Brocken, Anne
Elizabeth Brown, Chad Allen Burton,
Gary Canterbury, Marlene Djlwn
· Capehan, Christopher Harold Chapman, April Dawn Childers, Meg,!ln
Beth Clark, Phyllis Clark Coulter,
Cass Cleland, Holly Cleland, Jeremy
G. Coleman, Bryan Colwell, Cynthia
Ann Cotterill, Susan Lyn Cotterill,
Carrie M. Counts, Bonita Faye Cremean~: Ryan Crisp;
·
David Cunningham, James Ryan .
Dailey, Corey Daniel Darst, Kristen
Brooke Dassylva, Mark Todd Davis,
Ralph bavid Thuman Jay Day Jr.,
Jonathan Allen Dickens, Darlene G.
Doerr, Melissa Ann Durham, Melis_!;a A. Erlewine, Jeremy L. Fetty, Ter-

~~------~----------~~~~--~

'

• ~, • •~.

!

.•

I.

...

.

"

CHAmNG AND SHARING - These five
Meigs High School seniors got into their caps
and gowna and than took time out to chat and

ri Lynn Fife, Michelle Folmer, Hartson, Michael Todd.Hawley;
Kelly, Counney Rae Knapp, Ci'ajg
Michael Bradley Franckowiak,
Timothy R. Helton Jr., Suzanna · Allen Knight, Heather Mich,el!c
Thomas R Gannaway II, Brian Gard- LaDonna Henderson, Amy Darlene Knight,. Dorothy Wilmeua Lei~it,
ner, Alison Rae Gerlach. Travis Lee Hill , Robert W.L. Hoffman, Jeremy Travis -Lipscomb, Rodrigo B. Lopez ,
Gilmore, William R. Gilmore Jr., Keith Allen Honaker, Dorena .Faye Caroline Magne, Michael Jason MarElena Gorbunova, · Israel . Scott Horn: Jeremy C. Hubbard, Monty cum , Donita . Daniellc McClinlic,
Grimm, LaDeana V. GrQver, Angela Alan Hunter, Brandi Rennea Hysell , Shara McLead, Mark Mills, Nicholas
Marie Hale, April Halley, Nicholas Michael Joe Jarvis, William Johnson, D. Mills, Sherri Morris, Matthew
·Ray Haning, Bre~l William Hanson, Gregory James Jordan, Jonathan Jack O'Bryanl, Michael O'Neil : , ,
Amy Beth Harriso'n, Jeremy David David Keesee, Angelica Mary Marie
(Continued on Page 3)

Survey ·targets obstacle~. ·
~cCLAIN
~soclsted Press Writer

B ·JOHN 'o.

'
LAST-MINUTE ADJUSTMENt - · Melisse
Morris made 101'11!1 last-minute adjustments to
her slater's cap and hair before the processional at Meigs High School's comrilencemenL

Sharri Morris was one of the
seniors awarded diplomas in Sunday's ceremonies.

New con.s truction
spending u·p 1.4°/o
.Mortgage rate increase has no .e ffect
By JOHN D. McCLAIN. ·
Assoclatad Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Construction
spending rose 1.4 percent in April,
the' second straight advance, fueled
·by strong growth in residential building despite rising mongage rates.
The Commerce Depanment said
today that spending on residential,
nonresidential and public projects
totaled $551.7 billion at a seasona Ily
adjusted annual rate, up from $544
billion in March.
However. the Marc h gain was .
revised to 2.4 percent, rather than the
3.1 perce11t original estimate. Many
analysts had expected lillie change in
.,.,nding in April.
Residential spending, 45 percent
of the total, increased 1.4 percent on
top of March 's 2.4 percent gain.
Spending on single-family homes ·
rosr 0.5 percent, the fourth consecu-

Seasonal~ adjusted
1987;~:;100

1ro

.

index
~~n. ·~

102'.1

~~

102

tive monthly increase, to a$155.7 bii101
lion rate. It was the highest level
since construction totaled a $156.2
billion rate in July 1994.
99
Despite higher mongage rates,
98
sales of new homes totaled 776,000
a~ a seasonally adjusted annual rate in
97
April, the founh straight month that
sales have topped the 700,000 mark.
96
But analysts maintain that sales
J JAsoN D -J F M A
a1e near their peak ,and will
he "slow
,1MHS
tHII
1
eventually as buyers .ee l euects
of ri~ing ,rates. That, in tum, will "'""''eo.&lt;...,....,
.,
cause builders to cut back on conTh
.
db .
.
·
' row. e gam was pace y mcreasstrucuon.
·
f7 2
1' hotel
d tI
san . ~o e s
Spending on apartments and con- , es 0 · percen tOr
dominiums jumped 7_2 percent, 10 a and 6.3 percent for office butldmgs.
S2i 3 billion rate, highest since $22 _8
Government outlays, another
b.11 : . A.
t 1989 M If-family volattle sector, rose 1.4 percent to a
1 ton m ugus
· .. u 1 •
record $148 .3 billion rate after
spending is not as sensitiVe to mler- advancing 3.8 percent in March.
est-rate c~nges.
.
Spending on sewer system~ was up
Nonrestdenual spen~mg was. up 12.6 percent and on water supply
2. I percent, the second mcrease tn a . fa~ilities, up 21 .2 percent.

Gallia deputies recover body from river
.GALLIPoLIS - The body of a
Kanauga man was found floating in
the Ohio River, near the old ferry
ramp over the weekend, authorities
repoited.
Willian\ , "Billy" Betz, · 3S, .was
.found floating in the Ohio ~ver by
·OIIIIia County sheriff's depunes after
receiving ·&amp;call about a body In the
river Sunday at S:48 p.m.

A

,

.

{

.

share a can
pop liiif&lt;ore
From left-are Jay Day, Clint SW\Vart, Ryan Dal- : . •
ley, Terry Stobart and Mike O'Neil.

.f~~e_Q_b~_ne_w _hom,emvners __

•

missing person's report was
filed by the subject's father on Friday
at9:25 a.m.
.
The victim's father reported last
-seei ng his son on Wednesday at
10:30 p.m. leaving the house after
having ~n drinking a f~w beers.
The sllbJCCt. left on foot ·wtth. tw.o or
three beers m a sack, repons tndtcat·
ed.

Shet' •; James D. Taylor said this
morning that investigators will be
interviewing witnesses today and a
search of the river will be conducted
by boat between the railroad bridge
and: the ferry landing, in an attempt .
to establish the exact iocatiOII where
the subj~t entered the water. ,
.
The body has been released to the
Gallia County coroner's office for an
,11utopsy.
'

.'

,

'

131 gr8duates bid 8dieU
to 4 years at Meigs High

People Who Care Allout You.f
June 7 Is National Career Nurse Assistants Day and so we take this opportunHy to
salute 1hose people who provide the first line of care In Ohio's long-term care
facilities.
·

•

35cen..
A G.onnett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 3, 1996

NURSE ASSISTANTS

Margaret Wyatt and Judy Musser - 16 years
Alice Tripp and Wanda Smltll- 15 years
Barbara Payne -12 years
Carol Young -11 years ·
Deloris Cunningham, Brenda Hauber and Angela Baker- 8 years
Trlna Lee, Margam Powell, Barbara Alkire and Regina Eakins - 7 years ·
Norma Eakins, Angle Russell, Myra Obley, Dian Molden, Sally Fowler, Violet Hunnell,
Latisha Price - 5 years
lois Pooler, Mellaaa Warth, Debra Jeffers and Sharon Warner - 4 years
Phyllis Lattimer, Patti Van Ma~re, D'\bra Oliver, William Tipple, ·Sandra Malone, Tammy
Engle and Misty Porter- 3 years
.
Donna Gheen, Deloris Rife, Dil!na Copeland, Tabatha Swisher, Joann Evans and Linda Dye
-2 years
Rh•;mda Oiler, Carla Nl)ttlnghilm, Josle Mo"'on, Juanita Sayre, Christy Ward, Doug Gloyd,
. June Mars"all and Patt Imboden - 1 year
TraCy Shaffer, Amy Harrison, Peggy Freeman, Cora Kimes, Courtney Knapp, Annette
Sherman, Danya Gheen, Jana Williams, Alinda Colewell, Elizabeth Oller and Jackie
Russell- under 1 year

IF TENANTS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR
. OWN UTILITY PAYMENTS, SUBMISSION BY
THE LANDLORD IS NOT REQUIRED. •

7-5-9-2

Partly cloudy tonlt~ht,. _
low. In the SO.. Tuesqy, acatterad ahowera. Hlgha ,
In the 70s.
' .'

.

VoL 47, NO. 28

IN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS

BY JULY 1 OF EACH YEAR

Pick 4:

a1

TO ·LANDLORDS

INCOME TAX ADMINISTRATOR

Pick 3:
3-1-7

•

ROCKSPRINGS REHABILITATION CENTER will honor their Nurse Assistants by providing
a Steak Dinner on June 4.

ALL LANDLORDS WHO RENT PROPERTY
IN GALLIPOLIS MUST SUBMIT AN UP-TO·DATE
LIST OF THEIR TENANTS ·
(FULL NAME AND ADDRESS)
TO THE

4-8-0+6-6

J

By HALKNEEN
POMEROY - Is your early gar·
den ready to harvest yet?
Expe rienced vegetable grower,
· 83-ycar-old Harry Hill. has already
tra veled with a·carl oad of proc:(uce to
the Athens Fam1ers' Market lo sell .
Harry. has sold at the Athens market
lor over 20 years. Onions, radishe s,
greens and the first of the Ohio River Valley strawberries were pan of the
carload . Beets. lettu~e. cabbage and
pells will soon be ready for harvest.
Hi s secret is hard work. early planting and well drained sandy soil.
For us wit hout our own gardens,
the Middleport Farmers' Markel will
be opening the first Saturday of July
or earlier, if growers have produce.
Growers who would like to partici'pate in the market need to cmllact
either my oflice (992-6696) or Tom
Dooley. market manager, at 992-3 148
for further details.
Pests are back
500 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Is tile area's newest
used auto dealer, offering a large selection of
... tecent·year .model year autos and trucks on ita
riverfront lot. Owner J .D. Story, right, welcomes
past customers whom he has met in his 211-plus

Kicker:

Sporta on Page 4

scnted the Archie · Griffin Sportsmanship Awards, and Anne Brown
and Adam Sheets the OHSAA Scholar Athlete Awards.
Ohio University Alumni Association awards wentln L1bby King and
Justin Fields. Named Tandy Technology Scholars were Adam Sheets,
Cindi Stewart and Alison Gerlach.·
Pres idential Academic Fitness
Awards went to Anne Bruwn , Alison
Gerlach, Dorothy Lc.ifueit , Adam
1\:lrth "I Dare You" awards were Tara Sheets, Cynthia Stewart , Dodger
Gruescr and Adam Barrell.
V&gt;iughan, and James White,' while
Cindi Stewart and Craig Knigl]t Gerlach and Stewart received the
were honored as the U.S . Arm y "Best of the Closs" awards. Honored
National Scholar Ath letes in the

se nior class. and Stcwarl , (!lo ng with

Super. Lotto:
5-7~14-18-25-45

WASHINGTON _ Raising money for a down paymenI. an d earnt'ng
h
thl
n age
enoug 10 mcethmon . Y mbo g 1
payments are 1 e maJor o stac es
·
f
· b ·
h
Amenca~s. ace 10 u~tng a orne,
accordmg to a survey released today.
At the same ume, the Feder~l
Nalton~l M?rtgage Assoctatton s3Jd
tts nauonwtde poll of mo_re_ than
1,800 people found them wtlhng to
make m3JOr sae nfi ces to become
home owners, mcludmg postponmg
reluement.
.
.. The survey found 52 percent Cll·
mg do":n pay~cnLS and clostngcosLS
as a maJor bamer, compared w1lh 5 I
t
A d 50
percent a year ago. . n
percen
sa•d havmg enough mcome to pay
lheu mortgages was. a maJor hurdle,
up from 44 percent ml995 .
.
Other maJor roadblocks were JOb
secunty concerns, 48 p~rcent, and

finding the proper neighborhood, 43 improve in cpming months, 48 per, percent. .
. .. .
cent ~xpressed fears over thc1r JOb
To try to overcome those hurdles, securny, nearly lw1ce as many as the
the survey
found :
.
fA ·
· 26 percent
· who
· 'Icned
· employment
1
• Nmcty-onc percent o mencans concerns tn a s1m 1ar survey asl year.
would pass up owning a more expenDespite rising mortgage rates, 61
.
f h
11
d
·d
sive car up from 81 percent tn a 1992 percent o l c po respon enls sa1
'
now is a good lime to buy a home.
sur:c~ixty.sevc n percent said they
And 86 percent said owning a
wouldputoffretirementfor IOycars home is a good investment. In fact,
in order to own a home, up from 59 74 percent reponed they would recommend a 30-year-old friend use
per~e~~ghty- five percent said they $10,000'in savings on a down paywould forgo an extra two .weeks of mcnt rather than invest in stocks.
vacation each year if necessary to buy
The survey of 1,857 individuals
a home, compared with 71 percent in was conducted April 8-16 by the sur.
·
vey research firms of Peter D, Hart
1992 ,
• Ei•hly-one percent said they and Robert Teeter. No margin of error
e
d.
was g1·ven.
'
would rather commute a long IS tancc and own their home than rent
The mong~ge assoc iation, also
closer to their jobs, up from 63 per- known as Fann ie Mac, is a congrcs:
sionally chartered, shareholdercen~ul while 40 percent believed owned company and the nation's
their financial circumstances would largest source .of home mortgage
funds.

r
I

Republicans plan to turn up heat
on Clintons over Whitewater case
By JIM ABRAMS
Hale, the chief witness in the LitAssociated Press Writer
tie Rock trial that ended last week
WASHJNGTCiN - An FBI repon with the fraud and conspiracy conthis-week is expected to show who, vi ctions of McDougal , his former
including Hillary Rodham Clinton, wife Susan and Arkarysas Gov. Jim
handled key Whitewater documents Guy Tucker, has said th at thenas Republicans tum up the he~t on Arkansas Gov. Clinton pressured
both the Whitew@ler and the White hirn into making an illegal loan to
House travel office affairs.
Mrs. McDougal.
Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, .R-N.Y.,
Meanwhile Sunday, House Speakchairman of the Senate Whitewater er Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., said the
Committee, said the FBI would case involving the 1993 firings and
reveal this week whose fingerprints• criminal investigations of se ven
appear on the 1985-~6 billing records employees of the White House travfrom Mrs. Clinton's former law firm el office was "a much higger scan. in Little Rock , Ark.
dal " than Whitewater.
The Whire House says it has
The records , discovered in a
White House book room last August, turned over more than 40,000 pages
detail the first lady 's work at the Rose of documents and has cooperated ful Law Firm for the failed Madison ly in the investigation. But RepubliGuaranty Savings and Loan owned can~ accuse the administration of
by James McDougal , President and covering up Mrs. Clinton 's role in firMrs. Clinton 's panner in the While- ing the empl oyees so that her friends
water real estate venture.
could take over the office, which
White House aides have said it is · makes travel arrangements for the
only natural that Mrs. Clinton's fin- White House press corps.
gerjlrinls are on the documents.
"There are questions here of perD'Amato, whose committee plans to haps collusion in trying to prevent us
finish its work by June 14, said he has from really finding .out what went .
no !&gt;lans to ask her to testify.
on," Rep. William Clinger, R-Pa.,
But he said he would summon . who is leading the travel office invesanyone else who has claimed they ligation, said on "Fox News..Sunknew nothing of the records 'whose day." ·
prints show up.
Gingrich, appearing on NBC's
D' Amato, appearing Sun~ay on "Meet the Press," said the travel
ABC's " This Week .With David office affair was "more trpubling"
Brinkley," said he also hoped to pro- because unlike the Whitewater events
vide limited immunity to former that occuned more than a decade ago,
Arkansas banker and convicted felon it happened while Clinton was pres.David Hille so he can testify.
ident. .
·

He pointed to an Associated Press
report that notes a key lawyer t6ok
during investigative interviews are
missing and said it was indicative of
how the ad min istration has failed " to
keep a standard of honest and ethical
:
conduct."
Gingrich also mentioned, without
giving detail s, of "a scandal that's
about to break" invol vi ng Anhur
Coia, head of the Laborers' International union. Republicans in recent
weeks have noted. Coia's alleged
links to organized crime and h!s
appearance at several events with the .
Clintons.
'
Democrats insist that Whitewater
and the travel office affair arc noihing more than Republican attempts to
hobble Clinton 's re-election chances.
"This whole issue is about one thing,
it's about politics," Sen. David Pryor, D-Ark., said on Fox. " It is about
bringing down this presidency."
Democrats said they would be
willing to have Hale testify before
D' Amato's committee, where they
would try to show that he lacks cl."4·
ibility. Granting limited immunitt to
a witness requires a two-thirds IKl(e
of the committee.
•
Sen . Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.,
said there was "a legitimate issue of
how broad that immuni ty would be."
He said on ABC that Democrats were
"uneasy about giving blanket immu.nity across the board" lO Hale, who
has begun serving a 28-month prison
sentence for defrauding the Small
Busilless Administration.

j

'

"

�•
~y,June3,1111

Commentary

l

~oy •Middleport. Ohio

•

'nl • ,,,_.

.: The Daily Sentinel
'EstUfislid in 1!}48
111 Court St., Pom«oy, Ohio
114-892-2158 • Fu: 912·2157

.2,

'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

-·.,

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oener1ll Mllneger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

..-Budget plans ease
shock of tuitio'n bills

Aea!Wealhor• fotee~~~ for da)'liallO"''iftc~e~lllld

Mi~sile defense prime issue for Dole camp:.

WASHINGTON - · Moinenu
' before Sea. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., briefed
a cloaed-door seuioo oldie HOUle
Republican CaUcus on the nlerit1 of
1 national missile defense plan,
, House Speaker Newt Gingrich whispered two instructions:
"Mention (Bob) Dole 26 times,"
Gingrich told Kyl. And, Gingrich
said, be preJ*Cd to field lots of ques. lions, because most members simply ·
don't understand the Defelld Ameri·
I ca Act of 1996. Dole has seized on it
! as a top-priority 'issue for his cam: paign.
' That proved to be a tall order for
Kyl, who was standing in for the pre' sumptive Republican nominee on a
rescue mission for 'the bill. As one of
the chief advocates of missile defense
programs d!Jring his decade-long
congressional career, Kyl has often
been defeated by Democratic majorities. But the frustration level for Kyl
and Gingrich reached an all-time high
late last month, when an inteinal
whip count in the Republican-controlled House showed· he was 40
votes shy of approval:. .

I

'

· .so-a aay

Oi~

who coaulbotetl the piM, pnvalely
~ tbe Hou.llepuhlic- 6ah~ - the unJUided missiles of the

By r!ack Anderson ··
and
Mlchae' Blnsteln
I 04th Congress - for shooting down
this custom-made campaign issue.
The deficit, hawk freshmen are
unfazed by Gingrich's pleas to
remember the defense buildup of the
Aeagan revolution.
"A lot of freshmen never had to
go through the rebuilding of the
national defense after the Carter
years, and frankly don't appreciate
what's involved," one Republican
leadership source told us. "'They
didn't have to go through the battles.
We did. And ii's understandable why
their predilection would be not to
spend money."
Faced with this GOP generation
gap, Kyl patient!~ expl~ned, in his

othef Handley

sik sysacm could be built for llbout
$' bill.ioa. Clialon, who ~
· increuin1ly coa&lt;:emed
I ~
may be biui!tl his
has tried to illtllle
in&amp; for .-pped-up
.
1
It wu the CBO, not the commllll'
der-in-chlcf, who ultimately f~
Republican l~aders to withdraw thj:
act late Jut monih. Now Republicans
are readjus,ina .the.ir numbers ia
, preparation for a reneweCI leaislati~
assault ibis week.
.
•
It's an uphill battle for the GO~
which must convince skepjical fresh;
men who are suffering fro.m a ba4
case of sticker shock. In the Senate!
· thero o not only a leadership void,
.but also a well-known penchant' fa(
pqtting the JlllfOChial first.
I
"(Senaie Armed Services C0111j.
mittee Chairman) Strom Thuriitond,
R-S.C., is so ineffectual, and the sen:
aton who ought to be pushing th~
· have other agendas," saKI 011!' Repu~·
lican. "It is more imporlllnt for lhem
to get a ship or a plane (built in their
state) tlian this. This is one of the few:,
areu where Dole's leaving will actiJo' •
ally hun his presidential campaign.·: -~·
SPENDING HABITS - E~rgy ,
- - - - - · - - - - - . , Secretary Hazel O' Leary, who's •.
· under lire froiD Congress for her lavl•'
ish overseas trips, has also been
· spending some big money at home.'
Documents obtained via the Free: •
dom of Information Act reveal that i
the DoE spent $741 ,564 from 1993 ;,
to 1995 to verse its employees inlhe •'
·quasi-religious management methods
,of Stephen Covey, author of the ·
"Seven Habits of Highly Effective
1
, People."
' 'f
Ridiculed in some quarters, Cciv' : '
ey's book has sold more than 5· mil•- ·
lion copies worldwide by imploring •
managers to "synergize" and to "Ill! 1 '
proactive." Its success has spawned
a management center in Utah, where
f ·e~ecutives from around the world ,
routinely droP. in for enlightenment: ~
One of the· converts to "the
Stephen Covey method" i"O'Leary1 .:
who first h~l!l'd of t~e management
guru as a Minnesotit utility executive. ,
O'Leary probably doesn't have tq : ,
worry about White House disap- ,
proval of her speiiQing. Covey speni ,
Thanksgiving weekend in 1994'. ,
explaining .his ideas to PresidenJ : :

profeuorial llyle, why miasile
dcfe,_
sood offense for the
Dole cunt*JII. But u one Republicu Lver rellllrbd, "One or the -SOM it's IUCh a biJ dul is Bob Dole
haf elevllled it as a big deal." He
added that the Clinton administration
wu cominJ out with ill own versioa,
and ihus "Sibotqins" Dole's initialive.
._
Dole is pushing the Defend Am«·
ica Act because Americans "will be
increasingly vulnerable to ballistic
missile attacks from rogue slates as
this decade progresses." Although
U.S. ·int~lligence agencies are not
alamust 1n the short run, Dole notes
ihat "our intelligence community
has_been -~~g ti~ and time agail!
on tiS predictions.
One of Dole's own predictions has
also been proven wrong: 'The esti·,mated costofhis_anti-missile system.
· 'The CongresSional Budget Office,
wh&amp;se ~ork was touted by Republi·
cans d~nng the budget wars, recently estimated that Do.le:s proposal
eould cost up to $60 b1lhon. R.ep~bhcans have ci&amp;Jmed that an ant1·m1s-

&gt;

lti,YOI/ M/i#r WNJT1D l@ AT 'tJJIR HANP ll{(l!f11J

Cli(J~~k

Boorda story·, pursuit wa$ media .at its . wdrst ~ .
J;

f

roday
in history
..

f!nt :• .

_Most critics never served in Vietnam, either

't
0:

t

I

.-far ,:.
.,

~~ ·

.. '

.

Roy S. "Mother" Handley, 73, 443 Turkey Run Road, O!eshire, died Sunday, June 2, 1996 at his resideace.
Bom May 21, 1923 in PulnunCounty, W.Va., son of the late James Russell and Leuie Inez Meadows Handley, he retired as an electriciiiJI from the
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyaer Creek PIIIJit.
He abellded the Old Kyger F~will Baptist Church, was a member of ihe
American Leaion and the Upper Vandalia Historical Society, and was a U.S.
Navy veteran of World Warn.
Surviving ~ his wife, Anna Pearl Scarberry Handley, who he married
Oct. 15, 1949 1n Arbuclcle, W.Va.; three daughters, Dianne Turner of Centerville, Gerry (Howard) Gruber of Cheshire, and Margie Burris of Jackson·
three sons, Keith Handley and Allen (Bonnie) Handley, both of Cheshire, and
David (Tina) Handley ofNashpolt; 13,grandchildren and a great-grandchild·
three brothers, Rl,ymond Handley of Wellsburg, W,Va., Lowell. Handley of
Columbus, and James Handley of Lynchburg-, Va.; and a sister, Zelia Johnson of Saginaw, Mich.
,
He was also preceded in death by three children in infancy; a brother
Elmer l{andley; and a sister.in in{ancy.
· .
'
Setvic~ will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Old Kyger Free'!"ill Baptist
Church, w1th the Rev. Bob Thompson and the Rev. Clyde Farrell officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call
at the Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
'The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the services.
A graveside flag presentation will be made 1by ihe VFW and the American Legion.

w•

Bj JOHN CUNNFF
AP l]luslnen AMiyst
.'
. NEW YORK - Spring has sprung and so has the lock on tile family's
pocketbook. There's the big winter heating bill to pay, .and the tall payment$
to.the Internal Revenue Service. And after that, tuition.
· The latter is often the biggest bill of all and maybe the toughest to deal
with too, since tuition bills, now beginning to be mailed to homes all over
.
·
the: country, come.atop the other two.
' It leaves many parents with the mistaken notion they have no choice but
to.Jxnow and repay interest and principle in monthly installments. They may
. be; wrong. 'There is another option: Pay monthly at no inierest whatever.
. The beauty of budget plans is in avoiding lump sum payments while payinJI affordable amounts out of current income. It requires discipline, perhaps
s~fice too, but it leave
. s no lingering and costly loans to pay off.
Such an option is more available than many families realize, either directly tlJrough the institution or through an unusual type of company that arranges •
, wilh it for payments over 10 or 12 months.
Since the cost generally is limited to a minimal enrollment fee, the result
can be a big savings over loans, says William Hastings, president of Acad. en\ic Management Services, which claims to be the largest in the business.
By using such a service, says Hastings, a family can lighten its debt load,
decrease its interest costs "and avoid tuition trauma." AMC even throws in
insurance, payable if the plan member dies, at no added cost.
.'The company, based in East Providence, R.I., has arrangements with more
than 1,500 colleges, universities and preparatory schools. It remits payments
to I!Je schools and doesn't charge them either.
While win-win situations rouse cynicism that may be latent in the marketplace, there is no !Jick to how AMC and its like make ino~y: by means
of that enrollment fee and the float· earning money on funds briefly held.
AMC charges a $50 enrollment fee- $90 when the parent signs up for
insurance against unemployment - Knight College Resource Group, another large provider, based in Boston, charges $35. to $1 SO, depending on the
Anderson and 'Michael: ;
school.
Such plans seem likely to become more popular, since govemmenr finanare~;olumnists f~ Uqited .,
cial aid is rising at.a rate far lower than that for college costs. Moreover, such - - - - - - - - - - -•- . - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - ' tBinstein
'Feature Syndicate,)
aid40day is increasingly likely to be a loan rather than a grant.
~C suggests a three-step approach to paying education expenses:
t- Detennine total costs. Estimate total expen~
.~. (t 'tion, room, board,
'
.
'
fees, books, travel) and then subtract from the total
· I aid, if any. (About
Some years ago, before the vari- athletic adultery. I w~n't covering his commandCrs in the Vietnam War, in a lie, but out of fears that the mediw ~-. •
40percent of the 19 million undergraduates receiv · .)
ous gay liberation movements, I got the White House, but he carne to New "said that the rules about medals , would accuse him of o~ and blow it· • ;
2. Pay as much as you can out of your ·current income and savings through a call one Sunday morning from desk York from time to time, ~nd l blew were so unclear in the Navy during out of proponion." Of whom could , ,
. the AMS plan or through direct payments to the school. This, says Hastings, serge~tata police station in Green- .something of what he found time for, the Vietnam War that, in their minds, the ad10iral ha~ ~n ~hinking?
is the least expensive way to pay.
w1ch Vtllage. "Have I got a story for
he was fully enbtled to the 'V'
None of tlie fearless JOUrnalists on ·
3. If loans are needed, use ihose awarded as financial aid first, since they you!" he said. ·
Nat Hentofl
pins."
his trail has ll(,!mitted. •ny error of. :,
have the most favorable rates. 'Then, investigate other loan options such as
There had been a raid of a homOAt worst, Boorda.made an honest . judgm-:nt or ·~cal. With regard to'· ~ ~
home eq11ity loans, credit lines and the like.
sexual bar and amqng those caught in including the proprisitioning of a mistake, a~d when he was told a year Hack~orth, the WasHington Post ~
'The most prefera!Jie way, of course, is to begin saving for tuition when. the dragnet was a United States sen- woman in my neighborhood. A pres- ago that there was a question as to ·quoted a senior Pentagon official a$
the child is hom, but how many young families can do that after paying ator. 11!e sergeant, as a ·f;mir, was ident can put himself- and even the whc:ther he ought to wear the pins, he . saying that Hackworth - weeks ' .'
income lalles, mortgages, car payments, medical and insurance bills?
giving me an •~elusive. No one in the country - in peril by widespread took them off. But according to before the suicide - was "bragging· ' '
Were it possible, most families probably would put tuition money aside press had been there, and he was not extramarital intimacies.
Newsweek, its Washington bureau · he could bring down a Navy admi- · •.
well in advance of the need. But there's no turning back time: reality is now, going to tell anyone else. The senaBut the pursuit of the late Adm. chief, Evan Thomas, thought this raJ."
" •'
·and ii's pressing to be recognized.
tor and the others had not been Jeremy Michael Boorda by could be a "big story." As compared
Some stories are indeed hard to
AMS may·be reached at 50 Vision Boulevard, East Providence, R.I. 02914, booked. ·I t was a scare raid. The sen-. N~wsweek _ particularly l?Y its to what?
resolve. A New York Times reporter:··;;
or.. (800) 635-0120. Knight's address is 855 Boylston St., Boston, Mass, ator had gone home to another state. posse of retired Army Col. David
Newsweek, in itS autopsy of the once found out that an American Nazi · ~
o:z:16, Tel: (800) 225 6783.
·
I thanked the sergeant but didn't Hackworth and the National Securi- route to this big' story, says it did organization was headed by a hidden :•
·print
the story. My elders in the news- ty .News Service_ reveals the press nothing wrong. 'The magazine diles Jew.'Ibe Nazi said he would commit •· •
•'
'•
room had taught me of thj: public's 81 its worst.
concede that "despite his lack of suicide if the reporter exposed him . . •·
right to know, no maner who got hurt.
Boorda had not been caught in any combat experience, Boorda was by 'The reporter did, and the Jewish Nazi .1;
But the senator had not been a whit- act of corruption. se~ual harassment all accounts a superb offtcer. ''And its killed himself.
'
.
ed sepulcher. He had not attacked or Captain Bligh-like cruelty. He was insatiable expert on medals, Col.
The Times reporter was right . ' ,
BY:The Auoclated Press
·
homosexuals on or off the floor ofthe highly regarded both by the rank-and- David Hackworth·- in the manner because it was a legitimate story. But ':
today is Monday, June 3, the I 55th day of 1996. There are 211 days left .Senate. He had not said anything · file and officers who worked with of Charles Dickens' Mr, Pecksniff- this story that closed in on Boorda : .·:
in tlle year.
eilher way. In his fields of expertise, him. His alleged crime, however, had writes in Newsweek that the admi- had no legs. Capt; Carl Albre~ht, a
. foday's Highlight in History:
he was &amp;·valuable, honest·legislator. been the wearing of two tiny brass raJ's "remarkable career needed no former commander of Boorda, says · .. ;
~n June 3, 1963, Pope John XXlll died at the age of 81, ending a papaAnd except for that call from the desk "V" pins_ denoting service in com- embellishment. He should have been about the "V" pins: "You could q~Jk · · •
cy 111arked by innovative reforms within \he Roman Catholic Church. He was sergean.t, there ~ been no reports bat operations during the Vietnl\lll as proud of it as the Navy was' of to a dozen naval ?fficers about this · . 1
~uc&amp;eeded by Pope Paul VI.
·
about h1s pnvate ltfe ihat I could find. War_ to which he may or may not him."
and stx would belteve one thing and : 1
~this date:
In the climate of ~at time, if I had have ~en entitled.
Hackworth, lhe bounty hunter, six would beli~ve another."
· •.J
1'!'
In 1621 , the Dutch West India Company received a chaner for New reported the senators presence tn 3
Yet, despite those who have been was considerably less proud of him.
Some smoking ~un.
Ne~rlands -now known as New York.
homosexual bar, he would qutte circling the wagons in defense of
In his suicide notes, Boorda -115 .
(Nat Hentoff !' a nationally'
In 1808, Jefferson Davis -the first and only president of the ConCeder- probably have lost hts seat. . Newsweek, there was no story worth . reported .by Dan Morgan and G~rge reuowned authont:y on lhe
~
act.:- was born in Christian County, Ky.
·
On !he o~er hand, I. think the printing. As Philip Shenon has noted Lardner in the Washington Post Ame_ndment and the rest of the Bm- 'J
1' l
. l!t 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat," by Ernest Lawrence Thayer, was ,press, mclu~mg me, should ha~e in the New York Times, most of "indicated he was not taking his life or Righls.)
first published, in the San Francisco Daily Examiner.
repo~ed Prestdent John F. Kennedy s Boorda's Navy colle~gues, including· in the be.Jiefthat he had been caus~\
,. I'
Iii 1935, the French liner Normandie set a record on its maiden voyage,
'
arr~ng in New York after crossing the Atlantic in just four days, II hours
••
ano-a2 minutes.
1937, ihe Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the British throne, marriecCWallis Warfield Simpson in Monts, France.
'
· .
'The way ihings are shaping up for
1948, the 200-inch reflecting telescope at the Palomar Mountain Obser- the Republ~s. they may have to attorneys 'Used was that as-comman- vice issue has again reared its ugly ly h~aled enough for him to jog an~ ,.,
der in chief of'the armed forces; the
,.
vat® in California was dedicated.
.
reactivate Dan Quayle to run for vice · president . should he pe.rmitted to head, and it begs a mighty question:. run m marathons.
Dole could not anoint Michigan · 1
If this is to be a test of patriotism and
lit 1965, astronaut Edward White became the first American to walk in president.
defer the Jones lawsuit under the Sol- a ~easure of a person's right to lead governor John Engler, because he '~ .
sp~. during the flight of Gemini IV.
.
What I mean is, they keep trying
the nation, where is Bob Dole going was considered too chunky to serve. ·
Q1o 1981. Pope John Paul II left a Rome hospital and returned to the Vat- to make the case that Bill Cfinton is
Joseph
Spear
icaJrlhree weeks after the auempt on his life.
to find a running mate?
Thel'C have _been reports th~t Engler::
a weasel and a fink and perhaps even
· • ~ 1983, Gordon Kahl, a militant tax protester wanted in the slayings of a closet Comotie because he co~~c..,
• He would have to eliminate the porked up JUSt )?efore his Selective
tw~U.s. marshals in Nonh Dakota, was killed in a gun battle with law ~ived to ~void military ~ervice dur- diers' and Sailors' Relief Act of 424 members of the House who did Service physicals: The media woulq~ ' t
1940, which allows military personenfqlcement officials near Smithville, Ark . .
mg the V1etnam War, and the fact is nel to delay civil actions against them not serve in uniform. Slightly less probably e~plore this story further ~, •
It( 1989, Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, died.
than lllilf the Senate would IIOt qual- shoul.d the governor be tapped for the :
that mimy of the GOP's best and · until they are m'ustered out.
~n years ago: President Reagan sent a message to Congress appealing
ify
for the same. ~ason.
.
veep, spot. . .
.. •
brightest would not qualify for the
It was a logical contention -the
to ltwrnakers to continue financing his proposed Strategic Defense lnitia- top job under their own rules. Nation. Dole couldn t c~se Newt ~In·
Dole could not pick probable Sen· • 1
commander is surely as important to
tiv.,.incJ improvements in nuclear forces.
not, that he d want to, g1ven ate ~a;ority Leader Trent Lou 0 f r··:
al Guard veteran J. Danforth, now the national defense as the trooper in gnchthe
Speaker
s extreme unpopuiJII'Ity
. . ~ ·.
- '
l1jve years ago: Pope John Paull!, visiting the Polish city of Kielce indi- back in Indiana writing newspaper
'th the publ"
bee
N
MISSISStppt, who never served. He ~
the
trenchbut
from
a
political
per·
rectlf criticized aborti_on, appealing to his listeners to ·:prevent further destruc- columns lind books, may be their best ·
WI
tc ause . ewt
ld
1 ;... ·· ' ·
·
spective, it was a lame-brainq;l move: ski~ the Viettiatn elCperience wiih cou , not.se ect uhio Representattve •. •
tion;ufthe Pohsh family." The Mount Unzen volcano m southern Japan erupt- choice.
.
Clinton's critics erupted in a fit of st...ent deferments. "Part of .the · John KaStch, who never ,served. He ,
.ed, JOllins about 40 people. ·
·
'The event that once again brouglit outrage. Most House Republicans question I hatho ask myself was what could not choose former Defense I ;, :
. Ope year ago: Bosnian Serb officials made contradic!ory statements about the military-service issue to the fore
the )thereabouts of an American pilot, a day after his Air Force jet was shot was a brief that Clinton's lawyers signed a letter objecting to this "slap difference 1 would have made," Newt 'Secretitry Dick Cheney, who never' • ~ :
served. He could not even nominate •
in the face to .the millions of men and said .a few years ago.
do~. (Bosnian Serb military sources claimed that the pilot, later identified filed wi)h the Supreme Court in the
Dole would be forced 10 reject Mark&gt; Helprin, the novelist-columnist , .
women
...
on
active
duty."
as Gapt. Scott F. O'Grady, was in Bosnian Serb hands - a claim that proved Paula Jones case. She is the Arkansas
Many critics, wrote the Washing- four of the aspirants who ran against who wrote ·his Senate· resigl!llion • •·
falsi.)
·
woman who says she was involun- ton Times, "were angry that Clinron him in the primaries. Phil Gramm "speech. Helprin has admitted that he
· TOday's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 71. Poet Allen Ginsberg is 70. tarily exposed to Governor Clinton's
would use the law to postpone the avoided military service becau.se .... was one of those awful '(letnani-era .
Mu~cian Boots Randolph is 69. Musician Curtis Mayfield is 54. Singer Ian
'"" draft
family jewels ill 1991 and then decid- sexual-misconduct suit considerinJ "just didn 'I feel it rrulde sense ror
, avoiders. · ·
.. ,' :,
Hunter is 50. Singer John Paul Jo~s is 50. Singer Suzi Quatro is 46cSinger ed, after he became president, that she
his record of avoiding ihe draft in me." Lamar .Alexander luid student :
·
, I&gt; ·
Deft(ece Williams is 45. Singer Dan Hill is 42. Actor Scott Valentine is 38. had thereby suffered unbf:arable
1969."
deferments,
as
.
d
id
Alii)
Keyes.
Pat
(JCIIIph
SpeRIIIa
thought for Today: "Today's shocks are tomorrow's conventions."- Car· harm.
So the•avoidance-of-military-ser- Buchanan had to sit it out beciuiCI of \ Newtp~~per laterprln A-la· ; ...
oly¢Jfeilbrun, American educator and write~.
One of the.quments the Clititon ·
• a bum ll,nee., which later mi.-.cuiOUI· do&amp;)
• ' I'
&lt;

I

Wadw-..,IJIW
Lading Creek. ConiCrVIIICY District hM lifted the boil 8dviiOry ror
HlllP)' Hollow Road and~
subdivision. ll remains in effect ror
t.fasb Road, offiCialS report.

r,,

.

Troy D. 'Dick'

.

Chance of rain may linger .
throughout the work week
By The As1oclated Press

Troy D. "Dick" Russell, 89, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, June

storms east early..'.Otherwise ~ly
cloudy. Lows 55 Ul 60.
1\,tesday... Partly ~unny. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms ... Mainly
in the afternoon. Highs 70 to 75.
,
Extended forecast:
· Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of afternoon thundersiorms
north: Lows in the 50s and highs
from near 70 northeast to·the mid 70s
south.
Thursday... Fair. Lows in the mid
50s. Highs in the mid toupper 70s.
Friday... A chance of showets and
thunderstorms. Lows in the. mid 50s
to around 60 with highs in the 70s,
exceP,t near 80 far south. ·

A threat of showers and thunderstolms will linger through much of
~y. but the sun will occasionally
peek through the clouds, forecasters
said. Temperatures will be in the low
to.mid-70s.
,Lows tonight will be mostly in the
upper 50s.
.The record-high tempera)\lre for
this date at ihe Columbus weaiher
station was 99 degrees in 1895 while
the record low was 41 in 1929. Sun·
se1tonight will be at 8:55 p.m .. and
su~rise Thesday at 6:04a.m.
Weather forecasi:
.Tonight...A chance of thunder-

Ru~sell

Weekend wrecks kill five

By The A!JSOCiated P.r~s

· BATAVIA - Brett A. T~ger, 19:
of Batavia, pedestrian hit by.a · ~ar on
a Clermont County road. · !
SATURDAY '
CLEVELAND- Willie_Cox, 49,
of Cleveland, driver in a two-car accident on a city str«t.
· COLUMBUS - Unidentified
motorcycl.ist.ldlled when a'lnotorcy:
cle hit a sign and a parked car on a
city street.
FRIDAY NIGHT
, 1 , ..... "Sl!N..PA!' ".. -. ,_,
, .~OSJ:I_~N
· .,...91" :-:- l.ohq1R. l;l,lfa~'··
TROY -;-"'Wayne At shellenberg- 'ncr.,6:l,o. _, •varre, dtive~'of an atl'
er, 26, of Pleasant .Hill, driver in a terratn ve'!iicle wh1ch h1t 'l tree on a
one-car accident on a Miami County Cos~~ton &lt;;:ount)i Road. ·'" ;
road.
"
'
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~~ .
,
· •,
"
·.
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'The State Highway Patrol counted·five traffic deaths over the weeken(!, including an uni!lentifed man
wlio wrecked a stolen motorcycle in
Cqlumbus on Saturday. Police said
the . motorcycle had been stolen ·in
Spi'ingfield and the dead man had nQ
identification. ·
·· ' '
'The patrol-counted fatalities from
6 p.in. Friday through Sunday.
The dend:

2,

1996 in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
He was a ~If-employed car dealer in the area .
Arrangements will be announced by the Crow-Hus'sell Funeral Hoine,
Point Pleasant.

Bethel Vance

•

Bethel Vance, 79, Poini Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, June 2, 1996 at his
residence.
Born Dec. 17, 1916 in Logan, W.Va., son ofihe late L.F. and Grace Lee
Vance, he was a retired employee of Phillip Spor'n Power Plant, .a member
of the Loyal Order of the Moose, Lod~e 73 t. Point Pleasant,. and attended
St. Paul's Lutheran Church, New Haven, W.Va. .
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Madalyn Fisher Vance.
Surviving .are a son, Dr. Thomas (Janice) Vance of Point Pleasant; and
three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Services will ·be 2 p.m. Thursday in St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Fifth
Street, New Haven, with the Rev.· George Weirick officiating. Burial will be
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.

County court cases ended .

CooluMd plnnd
The Buriinp.n camp of Modem
Woocknen will host a cookout Satur·
day at 7- p.m. Hot do(a, halburgets,
bevenses and dessert will be provided. Those attcndins are to take a
covered dish.
SIIIOI'plboenlaet
A smorgasbord dinner will be held
Saturday at the Long 'Bouom Community Building. Serving will besin
at 5 p.m. Donations, $5 for adults and
$2.50 for children.

EapoAwdlvy
bales Auxiliary 2111 will Dleet
Tuesday at the hall. Potluck at 7 p.m..
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Membenltip
cards can be picked up at the meeting.

El!sten Star to meet
Pomeroy Chapter, ·Order of the
Eastern Star; will meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at the hall. OffiCers are to I
wear their robes.
i

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I

Sheppard case ·suspect's
DNA samples investigated
CLEVELAND (AP)- It may be
several more weeks before i.t is
known whether DNA ·tests can
unlock the secrets of a 42-year-old
murder case that helped inspire \he'
television series "The F,ugitive.".
Dr. Sam Shl'ppard was convicted
of killing his wife, Marilyn, ai their
suburban Bay Village home on July
4, 1954. The conviction was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court,
and the doctor was acquitted at a
retrial in 1966. He died in 1970.
His son, Sam Reese Sheppard of
Oakland, Calif., hopes that proving
his father 's innocence will help repair
the damage to his reputation and bqlstet a claim to millions of dollars in
civil damages from t~e state for the
I0 years the elder Sheppard spent in
prison.
Dr. Mohammad Tahir, a.forensic
immunologist at the IndianapolisMarion County · Forensic Services
Agency, · has had more ·than 100
pieces of evidence prese..Ved from the
original investigation for about a ·
month.
Before he could begin e&lt;tracting
DNA molecules from bloodstained
materials collected at the murder
. sce~e. Tahir first had to complete a
regimen of preliminary tests. To calibrate his instruments, Tahir tested
blood containing 52 contaminants
that could skew his findings if they

_j

are present in the Sheppard e:~·
dence.
'
,
. He a:lso studied •trial· transC-ript!
and police ·reports 10 determine the '·
likely source of each piece Qf ev~
dence, said Cleveland lawyer Terl)'
Gilbert, who represents the young~(
Sheppard..
· ·
l •
Tahir told Gilbert be is preparCd
he~in ihe main part ofthe.DNAproJle,
this week.
.
:;&lt;' (
. The technology to analyze DNA:' 1
did not exist at the time of the SheP:
!lard trials, but it is now an increas!'~
ingly common tool and is accepted ~, u
evidence in Ohio's cqurtrooms.
The most direct route to absolvirigJJ
Sheppard would be to match' DNA' ·
from drops of unidentified·blood col- .
lect.ed at the murder scene with A"1
sample fmin ~he Sheppards' form~?"
window washer, Richard Eberlina. ,
Tahir has obtained DNA prints fro*.~·
Eberling's blood :md (rom a strand M"'
Mrs: Sheppard's·hair for com pari ' oil.
Eberling., 66, of Westlake
~~ , ..~
convicted of killing a 90-yea• JJ{I''··
widow, Ethel May Durkin of Lakt- ,
wood, for her $1 .5 million estate. He':~
is serving life in prison.
~, r •
Eberling has publicly denie~ ·
killing Mrs·. Sheppard, but M{-''
' ~ s ~.ormer
/
.1 "J
Durk m
nurse, Kathie
Collins, recently said that EbCrlinlt
admitted the crime to her.
Jl~~
.
"'

tJA

· The following cases :were resolved suspended to three days if valid
recently. in. the Meigs County Coun operator's license presented within 60
of Jupge Patrick H. O'Brien.
· days: seat belt, $25 plu~ costs; falsiFtned
were:
Christopher ficati.on, $100 plus costs;
Rodriguez, Maumee, failure to conR. Leroy Landers, Pomeroy, faiitrol, $25 plus costs;'Sean P. Graham, ure to control. $30 plus costs; Heather
'
Canal Winchester, speed, $30 plus L. Roush, Gallipolis, seat belt, $25
ft o..f'i
cos,1s: Glen R. Burc!Jett, Oak Hill, plus costs; .Dorothy G. Smith, Galspeed, $30 plus costs; Billy Wayne lipoiis, seat belt, $15 plus costs; CrysBlackburn, Live Oak·, Fla., failure to tal R. . Sayre, Reedsville, ifllproper (Continued from Page 1.) h II R S . " lod
S ,
. h·
control, $20 plus costs; Thomas backing, costs only; Tony A. Brown,
Tonya Renee Phaltn, M1c e e. .
tanley, vo ymyr te.ano~yc , ·~· Schmell, The Plains, speed, $30 plus Pomeroy, falsification, costs, 40 Pooler, Angela Powell, Paul Pulhns,
~hntonL;Stewan, CJnihta Dawrl .•
.G.9~Js; ,j I. _ J1aiseo.- 1\Vinllbaennel\ heurs·communitysclrvice, lO'daysjalJo&gt;~. LTisa_Ka~ Reesd e, Shawrr'AIIen Rice~·HSStt!\Vlban
lltr,"'I1ll!flltSA· D· "SStet'bbwattart,''I'J~b~~l&gt;m
Reedsville, stop sign\ $2o plus costs; susperlded, probation until21 ; Ginger
nc1a R1char s, John Kyle Rtley Jr.,
o • ef!Y 11en. .
• a I ,
Jane Anne Poetker, Silver Springs, . K. Campbell , New Haven, W.Va., Joseph A. R(jberts, Faith Rose, Jere- Lynn Sweanngen, Chff Scott Thoma;;. •'
Md., speed, $30 plus. costs; Malinda driving under the influence, $850 my K. koush •. Sara Roush, Jason Lee III, Steven Vance, Donald E,. V~ugh'-~);
.~; StrOng, Pomeroy, failure to stop; plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to Runyon, Lop Ann Russell, James an Jr., Cand1ce Jean \Valke~, R•ch~
$20 plus costS; Jesse M. Willdn, three days, 90-day OL suspension, Savage, Paul Shannon Searls, Tracy Lee Wamsley IT, Tracie Mane Wesll-. ,
10
Cambridge, speed, $30 plus costs; jail a.nd $450 fine suspended upon Shaffer, Adam James Sheets, Teresa John, James D. V{h1te, Palma Wtle\ ,
Paul B. Daniels, Bidwell, speed, $30 completion of residential treatment Devin Simpson, Shelly Sinclair, Elhe_rt Lee .Wtlhams Jr., .Roxan~ '·'
plus costs;
.
program;
.
Natasha Slater, Rodney Wayne Sloan, Mane Wtlhan1s, Stephante Ann .
RogerL. Jeffers, Pomeroy, failure
Walter H. B'arrett, Pomeroy, DUI, Erin LeAnne Smith, Kimberly Sue Wood and Donald Eugene Yost Jr.....,,
· to stop, $20 plus costs; Brian E. $1,000plus ·costs, si• monthsj!iil sus- Smith, Nathan D. Sriow, Gary Lee
·""''
Smith, Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus pended to 30 days, one year OL sus•·
costs: David L.. Sidnner, Grove City, • pension, tw.o years probation, 180' :n:;
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Kathy J. day vehicle immobilization; Johnny
Dennis, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus R. Sellers, Racine, DUI, $850 plus
''
costs; John A. Queen, Huntington, costs, 10 days jail suspended to three
lj_.,,
W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus costs; Kei- days, 90-day OL suspensioo, one
~ ··:
th W Wears; Pliny,' W.Va., speed, $30 year probation, jail and $456 sus· plus costs; Perry J. Swain, Wester- pended upon completion of residenville, seat belt, $25 plus costs; tial treatment program; possession,
.Richard .D. Shingles, Newport, Va., $50 plus · costs; Patricia Brown,
speed, $30 plus costs; Glenn L Wil- Racine, littering, $100 plus costs,
son, West Fo(k, Ark., speed, $30 plus three days jail suspended, six months
costS;
probation;
,
Billy J. Thompson, Columbus,
C.arol A. Lucas, Syracuse, $750
.:'
assault, $250 plus costs, si• months plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to
jail suspended to time served, two 10. days, one year OL suspe nsion;
,,.
years probation: resisting arrest, William Ranldn, Athens, passing bad
costs, two years probation, 90 days checks, $25 plus costs, restitution;
jail concurrent with assault: Jacque- William B. Powell. Columbus, litterline Manning. Chauncey, passing ing, $30 plus costs: Dale l.. Little,
bad checks, restitution, costs; Scott A. Pomeroy. seat belt, $25 plus costs.
·ogden, Pomeroy, driving under
Forfeiting bond was Brent A. Baifinancial responsibility action sus- ley. Reedsville, criminal trespass,
~,
pension, $100 plus costs; 30daysjail $100.

.,

131 graduates bid adieu

C'

Mor.e oxygen can••sters
.
.
v
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J
k
.
.
o
,
u
.
"·
.
In
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et
w
,
rec_
.
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f
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.

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u,

MIAMI (AP) - Searchers have lion Safe!y Board on Sunday were
found 10 more oxygen canisters. greet¢d by a taped message saying no
many· of them bum~ around· the new inform3tion would be released
crater created by ValuJet Flight 592 · ·during the weekend. Metro Dade
when it plunged into ihe Everglades. police said t~y were unawar~ of any
Until no)V workers had found spectfic findmgs at the crash Site Sunonly six of the canisters, suspected as day.
.
.
.
. .
a possible cause of a fire 1m board the . Investigators still are uncertam tf
OC-9 just before it crashed May 1·1, the oxygen'camsters started tile blaze
killing 110 people a!&gt;oard, There. or fed it, NTSB spoke~ma11 .Peter
were more tlum 120 of the canisters Goelz tQid the Sun-Sentme(of Fort
in a cargo hold ·of ihe jet. '
Laud~rdnle. It also remains uncertain
"'The canisters I saw ' were all if t~e fire starlet! in the cargo !laid or
charred and twisted by the·heat/' Sen. was stoned by an electric~) fire els~;
Bob Graham, D-Aa., said after visit- where, he said.
ing the crash site.
The Miami Herald reported SunTwo canister end caps found ear- day that aviation experts believe the
liershowedevidenceofheatdamage. fire would have produced ga~s so
The canisters, which contain a mix- · deadly that no one was .§till alive
tore of chemicals, can generate heat when the plane ~rashed and disinteup to 500 degrees when they are trig- grated. Such gases could have been
gered to provide oxygen .to passenger poisonous enough to kill in a single
emergency masks.
breath, said the report, quoting
On ,the ,plane's cockpit voice · experts who wef!: not involved i~ the
recorder. pilots are heard talking rec~e¢. inve~~~gation. .
.
about a fire .m the. cabm and p&amp;sen-.
Meanwhile, the· recovery effort
geB' difficulty breathing, investiga- : has continued. , ,
tors say.
.
.
The NTSJ;I has retrieved h.a}f the
Calls to the National Transports· plane, but the cockpit and the bulk of
·• • '----- -- - - ··-· the fuselage have not been ~ou~~- .

The Daily Sentinel

Stocks

!USPS 213-9M)
Published every afternoon, Monday throu1h
Friday, Ill' Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the !

Ohio Volley Pubtiohina CompiiiJ'_, Co.. '
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992-2156, Second
pold .. l'oollmy, Ohio.

....._

- -"-llllon.
POS1'MAS'I'ER: Send ad*as conections to
The DIIIJ Senunel, Ill COlin St, l'oollmy,
I

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·

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aa ••••••

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BtiriiC Ont ................................37

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••• ~ ....•••••.•,..........
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Alihland 011 .......................41 ,3(4
AT&amp;T

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

A~

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·

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Bob Evena .........................15 111
Borg-Warner' ............................40

Champion Ind. ..................18 718
Charmll!ll Shop ..............713118
City HoiCHng ...................... - ••. ~a
Fec::leral.Mogul, ..................18 ,511

Genrtett .•.•...... :................... Slli

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QpodyHrTIR ..................50 118
K-mart ................................11112
Laf1Cia'End ......................... 21 314:
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Dally ....:............................................... 35 CeOII '
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s.........,. 1101 dooldaa !0 Jill' 111o qrri«- '
OI"Mt VeiMy .!~ .....•••.....••..•...•32 311
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SoOn ,. ,.

INCELS

'

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -· none.
Sahirday discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday dischtutes - · none.
Holzer Medical Center
Dlaeharaes ,May 31 - Mars\e
Jenkins, Kenneth Phillips, Amy
Lucas, Moda Metzger, Freda
Facemire.
·
·
Blrlhl- Mr. and Mrs. Albert Van
Cooiiey, son, Middleport; Mr. · and
Mrs. RarKiy Wise, son, Middleport.
Dllclaaqa Jaae 1 ·- Mrs.
RaiJ4y Wise and son. Mrs. Mark
'· BplinJ- twin aona.
~ Jue 2 - Patrick
Menill, 8.t.a Webb, Myrtle Bums,
'ICnaa 'An~- ,

(Pul•l•d wllll
'

\1

LOWEST PRICES Of THE YEARI '
GUARANTEED SAVINGS ON

EMS unl"ts a·nswer 9 calls
Units of the Meigs County,Emergency Medical Service recorded nine
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, including one transfer call.
Units responding· included:
CHESTERVFD
4 :~4 p.m. Saturday, haybale fire
on Sumner Road, no injuries rep011ed.
POMEROY
2:49 p.m. Sunday, South Third
Avenue, Henry Throne, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;

6:47 p.m . Sunday, Page Street,
Sarah Congo, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
.
9:04 a.m. Saturday, Main .Street,
Ferrell Day, VMH;
II :38 a.m. Saturday, Noble Summit Road, Charles Mapley, HMC.
SYRACUSE
II :37 p.m. Saturday, Bridgeman
Street, Atlita Brown. Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
2:52 a.m. Sunday, Main Street,
Floyd McClelland, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
12:20 p.m. Saturday, Bar 30 Road, ·
Paul Roush, treated at the scene.

SPRINGUnll EYCINE n1n
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THREE DAYS ONLY
JUNE 6·7·8
Buy Dlreci Off ladory Trudt
W~J'ORADIN

WEDNESDAY'I PAPER ·
~Cred" Tll'llll
-" lay-A·Wayt

•ct:~liil

,..,....&gt;

•

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:-•Ma~~~y~,~~~~3~·!1~11~1~------------------------~~-----!~~m~~~r~ov!:·~M~Id~~~~!~~~~~~Oh~~~------------------~~n.~!~~~~~~~:~•d~~~·~P~a~"~l
,
.: In the NBA Westem Conference finals,
·
t

The ·Daily Sentinel
P-a-4

'

:,sonics defeat Jazz 90-86

Monday, June 3, 1998

..

By CHR8 IHIRIDAN
SEATI'Lll (AP) - The Seanle
SuperSOIIics.led by their two youna
All-St:.n, 1re aoina to the NBA
Finals ill&amp;lelld of the Utah Jau and
their two future Hall of Famcn.
The Sonics, behind ShaW11 Kemp
and Gary Payton, won Gune 1 of the
Western Conference finals 90-86
Sunday, advancing to the NBA
Finals for the first time since 1979 ·
and erasing a legacy of playoff failure.
"I've never doubled !his basketball team," Seattle coBCh George
Karl uid.
Seattle will meet the Chicago
Bulls in the finals beginning
Wednesday night, while Karl Malone, John Stockton and the Jazz finished one step from the championship round for the third time in
five years.

Braves
notch·6-2
.
victory over Reds
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI-CAP)- When the
Allanta Braves getting rolling like
this, the best thing to do ts just get
llut of the way.
The defending World . Senes
champions hit I0 solo homers and
got exquisite pitching while taking 2of-3 in a weekend series with Cinctn·
nati, a team they've domnated for the
last year.
A 6-2 victory Sunday night left
the Braves lied with !he Cleveland
Indians - the team they beat in the
Series - for the best record in !he
major leagues at 36-18. •
"We're consi~tent," said Chipper
. BLOUNT SCORES- Southern'e Child Blount (center) alldea
Jones, who htt the last of Adanta's 10
the pltlte to tally the Tornlldoea' first run on a wild pitch during
homers. "We've been consistent to
dtly'a Division IV regional eemlflnel game against Columbus Hart· this point, and that's the name of the
ley, which won 16-1 to move on to the small-school state tou11111· game.
, ,men! r r this week. (Sentinel photo by Scott Wolfe)
"We haven't put a (big) winning
\11
streak up, but we've won the majority of our series. That kind of win·..ff) D·IV regional tourney action,
ning percentage puts a team m first
place."
There were concerns about how
the Braves would handle the loss of.
Davis Justice, aut for the season with
a shoulder injury They've done just
1,. •
fine, wmmng II of 14 smce he sepThe Southern Tornadoes made a by Randy Wooten's single to make arated his nght shoulder.
, ,great post-season dn ve, but Fnday the score 4-0
"I don 't thmk we can expect
.,time ran out as Columbus Btshop
A long home run by Chris Hauser much more of ourselves from a team
• Hartley defeated the Tornadoes 16- m the thtrd broke the game wide standpoint," said Tom Glavine (7-3),
, ..1 in the first round of the Divtsion IV open at 7-0. Then Hartley railed for who improved to 14-1 m 16 career
• (C(Iional baseball tournament m two and seven. runs respectively in stans at Riverfront Stadtum. "We're
, Dublin.
the last two innings to clatm !he hitting the ball for average, scoring
· Southern ended the season 12- 12 game on the IS-run n'tercy rule
runs, hitting for power, playing gond
·' after a late season rally that mcludSouthern's lone httters were defense and 'getting great pitching.
ed six straight wins
Travts Ltsle and Jesse Maynard both When that's the case, you should be
Southern coach.Mick Wmebren- of whom singled. Wooten, Martin, going out there and wmning games.
ner prmsed hts club for an outstand- Longstreth, Houser, Bayless Hauser
"I don't know that you can expect
ing finish and praised hts seniors for and Peckins each head two hits and us to play at this level all year long.
·an outstandmg career. He also noted Dan Dudzmski and Rtch Lavender Rtght now, we're JUSt hitting on all
•!hat several key players from thts each had smgle h1ts
cylinders ."
. year's squad will be returning next
Kevin Deemer got the start for
The Reds are broken down.
-·year
Southern and went four innmgs, They've lost 12 of 16 'to fall nine
· Thmgs started out rocky for the allowing nine runs, five walks, no games under .500 (20-29), a season
Thrnadoes, who went down 1-2-3 in stnke outs and mne hits · Relievers low. Three players are on the dis• the first while Hartley rallied for two were Chad Blount and Jesse May- abled hst, three more are limited by
· nlns on two walks, a. Scou Marttn nard who gave up stx htls and two injuries, and the healthy ones gener"single and Tom Longstreth sacnfice walks.
ally aren 'I producing.
"lly to make the score 2-0.
Dudzinskt and Hauenstein comAll that does is compound thelf
Southern threatened m the sec- btned for six strikeouts, two walks problems against the Braves, who
' 'oild, when Shawn Dailey walked and for Hanley.
swept them in the NL championship
Joe Kirby reached on an error. Both Inning .ll!tlm
series last October and have won 13
runners were left stranded.
Southern...
.. .. 000-0 I= 1·2-2
of the last 14 games.
" Bishop added two more as Shawn Hartley.... .. ..... .. ... 223-27= 16-15-2
Atlanta has outscored Cmcinnati
•Bayless singled, John Hauser walked
WP-Dudztnskt
74-24 during the 14-j!ame span,
.
• 'and Chris Peckins singled, followed
. LP-Dccmer
holding the Reds to two or fewer
J

:··~artley

hands
. :.S outher-n 16-1 loss

.

"

~

runs 12 times. As soon as the Reds
give up a few runs, they know
they're probably finished.
"We don't have anybody who can
hit the ball out," manager Ray
Knight said. "We've got to build
innings.'"
That's nearly impossible when
Glavine is on the mound at Riverfront. The left-hander has a 1.89
ERA at Riverfront, where he feels
comfonable for reasons he can't ful·
ly explain. It has something to do
with the mound, the background and
his focus.
"I wish I could have the same
concentration ·level that I have here
everywhere else," Glavine said,
It's been at a very h1gh level overall lately. Glavine has won hts last
six decisions over nine stans, allowWHITLATCH SCORES - The Meigs Marauders' Bred Wllltletch
ing just seven earned runs. He said kicks up some duet around the plate aa he ecorea behind Wereew
he's never pitched better.
River VIew's catcher during Saturday's Division II regional champl·
"Maybe there's been some as onshlp game In Lencaater, where the Marauders, after loalnge fourgond, but certainly there hasn' t been
run lead In the seventh Inning, rallied In their half of the frame to
a stretch any better," he said. "I'm win 6-5. (Sentinel photo by Dave Herrle)
not the type of pttcher you expect to
go out and be dominant like that. "
In the Division II regional finals,
He allowed just one unearned run
over 7 113 innings Sunday. When the
Reds fell behind 4-0 in the fifth, they
knew the game was essentially over.
Kmght pmch hit for starter John
Smiley (4-6) in the bottom of the
fifth
"He threw the ball as well as I've
and came mto score on a single by
By DAVE HARRIS
Barrmger
seen anyone throw · it for three
Sentinel Correspondent
For the first ttme m 20 years and
inmngs," Knight satd. "It was tough
Meigs qUickly came back to tic
only
the
second
ttme
in
the
school's
to take him out. But four runs it
the score in the bottom of the mmng.
history, the Meigs Marauders have Scott George staned the Marauder
tough against that staff. The way our
advanced to the state baseball cham- rally by htttmg a towering tnple that
offense has been, four runs seem like
pionships on the strength of a short-hopped the nght field fence.
seven or eight to me."
,
thnlling 6-5 wm over Warsaw Rtv- Chad Burton then hit a smash that
Smiley allowed JUSt one hit over
er
View Saturday afternoon at the Bear shortstop couldn't handle
the first three mnmgs, then faded.
Beavers Field in Lancaster before a for an error and George scored the
Fred McGriff had an RBI double m
large vocal crowd.
the fourth, and !he Braves scored
tying run. Stanley followed with a
Me1gs (17-8) will travel to Can- smgle pultmg Marauders on lirst and
three in the fifth.
ton's Thurman Munson Stadium on second Wtlh nl&gt; outs. But Rtver
)ermaine Dye led off with a
Friday an,!l play Tallmadge (17-5) in View pitcher Bamnger retired the
homer, Marquis Grissom tripled in
the day's second sem1final. The wm- next three Marauders to end the
another run and then stole home, getners will meet Saturday al3 p.m. for threat.
ting a big jump on Smiley's deli\J"rthe
state champiOnship.
ate move to the plate. The left-hanMeigs made 11 a 2- 1 contest in the
Gary Stanley scored from first third inning. George led ofT the
der wound up rushmg the throw,
base on Rick Hoover's one out dou- mnmg by gettmg hlt by a pttch He
leavmg the pitch high and outside for
ble to gtve the Marauders the wm. then came in to score when Chad
catcher Joe Oliver Grissom got his
Metgs
held a 5-1 lead heading into Burton reached on a wtld throw by
left hand under the tag for his second
the top of the seventh, but Bart Bar- the Bear thtrd baseman.
career steal of home.
"I don 't know what happened on ' ringer's game-tying grand slam tted
Metgs added another run in the
the contest at 5-5.
the steal of home," Smiley satd.
th~rd mving to make 11 a 3-1 contest.
The Bears took a 1-0 lead in the Brad Whttlatch led off the inning
Grissom does: He got a good lead
top of the-f1rsl! mmng. With \'OC: ,\!Ut wtth a dnve mto the right-center lield
(See REDS on Page S)
.
'
Jason Hagans walked, stole second
(See MEIGS on Page 5)

AL standings

Sunday's Stores

Euttm Dhision

w

I. fJ:L

lil

~··

2

~96

11 2 1
...............29 21

2l :ro
22 12
. IJ 4)

41l
407
212

Central Dhlsion
CLEVELAND . 16 18 667
OIICIIJO .
14 20 6)0
Mlonesora
2~ 28
472
M1lwau~
24 29 4n
1Canw.Ci1y .

25 Jl

446

Western Dl,.lsion
14 21
biK
' ' Sallie .. ' .
29 25 5l7
CAiifom•a . .
. 27 27 SOD
Oakland
.24 10 444

7\
10
20

II \.
12

4h
6h
9),

Saturday's scores
Mllw11uktt 2 CLEVELAND I
"Toronto 5,1Cansas Cny ~. 10 1r1mngs
Boslon 6. ~ttle ~
New York f.t Oaklnnd ]
Detroit 111 OUcago. ppd , r:un
Mtnne50fa9 TutLS".'l'
California 8. B:.lumore l

Sunday's scores
,

Vaughn, Milwaukee's cleanup
, By ARNIE STAPLETON
: MILWAUKEE (AP) -The big hitter, whose $5.7 million salary
: contrast between Cleveland and Mil- accounts for roughly one-fourth of
waukee - aside from the mismatch the Brewers' payroll, also went 0' ootwe,en Alben Belle's forearm and for-5.
Fernando Vina's nose- is that the
He struck out three times and left
Indians can win without their slug- eight runners on base, but none of his
gers .
teammates picked up the slack with
In aeveland's 11-6 victory Sun- anything more !han a harmless dou1&lt;Jay, Belle and Milwaukee's Greg ble.
Vaughn, both cleanup hitters, were
"I've been leaving a ton of them
the only starters without a hit
out there," said Vaughn, )Vbo strand·
Belle was victimized by a bnlliant ed 16 runners and failed to dnve in
shift and finished 0- for-5 when sec- a run in the series. "Over the last
. ond baseman Vina robbed him of four days I probably have my own
three hits up the middle. But Alvaro · subdivision. Unbelievable. They pay
Espmoza, Manny Ramirez and Julio me to drive in runs and I' m not driving them in ."
, Franco atoned with homers.

Meigs cracks tie to
top River View 6.;.5

DH Ch1~:ago 4, Dt:trort 2 0Jrt:,,go 11
0elfOU 5

CLEVELAND II. M1lwuukr1! 6
~hnnesom 6, Tt:Jul! "i
BakmlOr'C 14, Cahrorna.~ I
New York II. Oakland 4
Seattle 3 Boston I

"

1

,.' H). 8OS p.m
Cabfornu1 (finley 1-2) ill Mmnesotn
(Rober1aon 1·7) KO:'i p m
· '
K~amu C1ty (App.er 4-5) at Oukland
r (Wasdan 1-0), IOOSpm

Tuesd•y's games .....
Kansas Clly (GubJua 4-7) 111 Onk.l:md
(Wcnaer11-2 ),3 1~pm

Chlcaao (Alvarez 6-3) at Boston (Sele
, 2·4).705p m
Seallle (H11d1coc k 4-2) m CLEVE' LAND &lt;Anderson 0-1 ). 7 O:'i p m
Toronto (Hanson 6 6l at New York
.., (Ooodtn ~·4), 7 l:'i p m
I Decroll (G obr l -6) .1t Ba lumor ~
• (Muuma 7-l). 7 1~ p m
~
Tuas (Gross 5-1) ut Mt lw~ukee
'' ' (Bones 3·11). 8 OS p m
Califonua {Gnmslcy 1-4) at Mrnnesot:t
(RodriJuez3-6), 8 0~ p m

'I

· NL standings
~ ~

Elltun Dlvllton
w I. fJ:L

r-

Allanta .

16 18
MontreaJ ..... ·.... .12 24

667

l'tlllodelplll•

New York .

lil

~71

~

28 lOO
27 27· .lOO

9
9

.• l'lrlri&lt;ll... .... .. 18
. 21

31

426

13

Clftlrol Dlvltlon
Houoto• .. .. ... 27 JO 474

Sl

Louis

. ... 26 29

471
418
408
400

ou.,... ........... . 23
CINCINNATI
Pin•bur&amp;h

J2
.20 29
22 n

)
)

4

Wfllem DMslon

''

1

,

625
l26

~

San Fl'lndiCO ... .27 27

.500

,CoiOIIdo .. . . .. 26 l6

.lOO

I

I
'

. .ll 21
:ro 27

l

•

,

San DieJO .
Loo An,.let

Saturday's JCOres

CINCINNATI ). Arlonll l
New YorU, Loo Anc&lt;l&lt;t ?

'

Philadelphia (Wal llams 0-4) at Cluca-

pm

Montr('a] {Ruete r 2-2) at Flor~da
(Burken1-6). 7 Q"i p m
San Fran cuco ( Wt~tson S-:'i) 111
CINCINNATI (Salkeld 1· 1), 7.J:'i p m
New York (Wilson 2-5) '" Atlanta

Colorado (Thompsoq 1-4) at Houston
(H.ampton 1-3) 8 O:l p m
Pittaburgh (Darwm 2-6) nt Los Ange·
lt:s INnmo b-4), 10 0'\ J1 m

AL leaders

Monday's games

ol '

Tuesday's games

5I l.ou1s (Morftun 1-0) .11 San Dtt:go
(Valenzuela 1-J). 10 O'i p m

Teus (WIIt4-4) at M1lwauk.ee (Sparks

'I

BATTING Pu1uu. los Angeles,
171 : Grace, Ouct~g o, 149 , T Gwynn,
Sun Diego, )47 Bagwell Houston. 34!1:
McOrtff. Atlanl:l, 344 GrudtJelanek.
Momreal, 141 Mabry, St Louis . :\12,
V1zcwno, New York, :H 2t
RUNS Grudz1elanek, Montreal. 48.
Bagwell, Houston ~!!. Sheffield. floru.la.
4!1 . Burks Colorndo. 4~ Bonds. San
Frnncuco, 4'i. Frnley S:tn Dle[lo. 42,
Blt:helle, Colorodo, 42
RBI H Rodnguez , Monlre31, n.
Bn&amp;well, Hous10n, 56. Bonds, San Fran.
~.:isco. 51: McGnff. Atlantn, 49, Galarraaa. Colomdo 48 . G•lkey, New York, 47.
MOlt Wilhams, San francisco, 46
HITS· Grudz1elonek. Montreal. 83
Grace, Chtcugo, 11. McGnll. Atlanta 71
Puuza,, los Angeles, 72, Bagwell, Hou~ ­
ton, 71. l Jol!nson, New York , 7. 1. Llln~ ·
mg, Montreal. 69. Btchene. Colorndo. 69
DOUBLES L.nnslllg, Monr~u l , I H,
H Rodrieue.z, Montreul. 17, Berry, Houston, 17; Gru~~. Chicag o, 17, D Bell ,
Houston, I6. B.~gwell. Houston 16. Joyn~:r. San D1ego. 16
TRIPLES L Johnso n New Yurk, R,
Morundm1 Pl~1latl c lphta, :'i , OtShtt:lds,
Los Angeles, 4, Vtzc:uno. New York 4:
Gnuom, Atlanta. 4 l Willker Colorndo,

Monday's games

2 20

~~

1

7

4. Dr=von Wh11~. Rorida 4
HOME RUNS H Rodnguc:z, Mon-

treul. 21. Bugwell, Houston, Ill, So53.
Chi cng.o, 17. Sh~:ff1eld Flonda , 17 :
Bnnds, San Frnacnco, 17, Klrsko, At· .,.
laNa. lt:r ; McGriff Atlant01, I~
STOLEN BASES M~: Rae, Chtcago.
18, Morond1n1 , Phllodelphtll, 17 .
DeShl~lds. Los Angeles, 16, E Yo.une
Calomdo, I~ . Bonds San Frunclscu 14,
B l Hunter, Hou sto n, 13 , Whilen ,
· Phdadelptua. 11. ~
PITCHING (7 dt&lt;.:111ons) Smollz, At·
lanta. 11 ·1. 917. 2 24, GtU'dner, San Fran~uco , 6-1. 857, l 02. Gra~.:e, Phtlud~l ·
phla. 7-2. 778. ~ 49; Neaale, Pan.sburgh
'i·2. 778, 3 19 Ashby , San Ote&amp;o. 1·2,
718 J 08, Ham1hon, San Otego, 8-l,
727, 4 2!1, 8 Jolk!S, New Yort 5-2, 714.
4 60. P J Martmez. Montreal, 'i-2. 714,
101
STRIKEOUTS Sr,pohz, Atlanta, 97,
P J Mnrtmez, Montrnl, 82. Kde. Houston 82, Reynold1, Houlton, 81 : Noma,
Los An,eles. 76. W~fner. Pinsburgh, H .
Stottlemyre. St LouiS. 75, G. Maddux,
.-\tlantn. 15.
SAVES Todd Worrell. Los AnJt:lcs,
16, Bonallco. Ptuladclptu.a, t4; Beck, San
fnlacbco. 14. Nen', Fforuta, 12, J Brant·
ley, CintltiRAII, 12, Todd Jo~~e~ , Houston,

BATTING R Alumar. Balt1more.
199, Kn o bl t~ u c h. Mmoc sota. 169 Md
Vau~hn , Rosto n, 1'i4, 0 Ne1ll, New
York 144 Se•lzer, ~hlwuuke.: , 140,
Bogg5, New York, 1:\9, E Mnrunct.
Seallll!. 315
RUNS Gnffey Jr &amp;auk. 49 Belle.
Cleveland 48, -f'~Thom;~ s, Ch1cngo, 4,,
R Alom:lr, Balumore 45 . E Marunez.
Se:mle, 4~. Ptulhf"l. Chh;ago. 45. Thome.
Cleveland 41
,
RDI Mo Vaui!:hn , Bo~ton, ~9. F
Thomns Ch 1 ~:ago 'i8 Belle . Cleveland,
'\4,
Seanle 54 Car!er. Toronlo
47.
Jr Sean!~ 46 E Mar11ner:
Sealtle
HITS oR Alom;u-, B:al nmore, 113, Mo
Vu\l~lm. Buston 7.~. Hamilton, Te~tns, 7\,
Mol11or, Mmnesota, 72 Lutlon. Cleve:·
lun d 69 F Thomas Ch r~:~go 68 Bdk
Cleveland 6Y

Basketball
NBA conference finals

.

• Seartle 90. Utah fl6, Seaulc wms ~e­
nes 4-l

~

DOUBLES E Mumncz, Se3ule, 29,
A ROOng.uer:. Setmk: 17 John Valent1n.
Boston. 16. I Rodr1gu~t Te.:tll, 16. G
Myeu M1nnc:sota 16 Carter, Torumo.
16 Gales, Ouk.land l:'i , B;~Crgu, Cleve
land. 15
TRIPLES Knobhnxh . Mmne1ott1, 5.
Corter. Toronto. "i , Vma Milwuuket, • .
Jo ~e Vt~lenun MdwDukee, 4, Gu1llen,
Ctn~:01go, 4, 7 01re !ted wnh J
HOt4E ftUNS Mo Vauahn, Bo1ton.
21 Belle: Cl~vel11nd, 21, Brady Anderson, Dalt1more, 20, Buhner, Seaule, 20,
Gnffey Jr Seattle, 18, F Thoma1. Ollcaao. 16. Ftelder, Detroll. 1~
STOLEN BASES Lofton. Cleveland,
12, T Goodwm, Kansas Cny, 24; UlfiiCh.
Mllwuukec, 13, Vizqucl Cleveland, U:
Nuton. Toronto, 11. ·B.!Ittle, Oakland, 10;
Ben W1lhams, New York, 9, D. Lew11,
ChlCilJO, 9.
PITCHING (7 deeUIOnl) ' NIJ)'.
Cklveiii.Jd, 9-1. 900, 153, Pavlak, Te.:u,
7-1, 87!!, 4 46, Boskie, California, 7-l ,
87~. 4 08, ~nnis M1111inez, Cleveland,
8-2. 800.4.13: Muu1na, Bllrimo~e, 7-2,
178, 4 66; Finley, California, 7·2. 778,
) $6, Belcher, Kansas Ciry, 6-2, 7$0,

Finals
Wed'l'odaY
Seattle nc CIUCliJO, 9 p m (NBC)

Friday
Seaule a1 Ch1cogo. 9' p m (NBC)

Hockey
NHL conference finals
Saturday's score

Aomla 3. P11tsburgh I. Flom.la w1n~
IC rtC I

4-1

. By ALAN ROBINSON
'
PmSBURGH (AP) - Jaronlir
· Jagr shoots. He scores!
Mario Lemteux shoots. He
scores!

In Game 7 of the NHL Eastern
Conference finals between !he Pen. guins and Florida Panthers, the
images at PiiiSburgh's Civic Arena
were the same, over and over.
. The problem with all those glori, ous goals was they.were visible Ol)ly
on !he scoreboard's video monitors.
Down on the ice, Lemieux and Jagr
, were shooting and shooting and
shooting- and not scoring.
A mostly faceless team without a
' portfolio, '' '1he ~lorida Panthers
became the 14th t~am in NHL his• tory to rally from a 3-2 playoff
: ideficit by beatin(lthe Penguins 3-1
t \Satprday night. .
·
! For the Panlhers, Game 7 proved
flo be seventh heaven. For the Pen' 1guins, 11 was a 'disappointment
: beyond belief, riva\mg only those of
; :.their 1975 collapse from a 3-0 lead
t;against the New Yot:k Islanders, and
•!the J993team's improbable second; 'round elimination,
also by the
.
; •Islanders.
.; Thts lime, they didn'tjust run into
:) hot goaltender 10 John Vanbies: 'brouck, or the fluke goal thill so often
; ~appens in critical games - Tom
·:Fitzgerald's seemingly harmless 60:7001 slap shot from just inside the
:'blue line.
:: No, the Penguins lost the least
·lmaginable way possible. They lost
'llcCause Lemieux and Jagr, the
+I"HL's two most wondrous scoring
· talents, fell into a trap - in this case,
ll rat trap.
Last year, the Penguins went
down in the second round to the New
Jersey Devils' neutral-zone trap.
This lime, they were trapped like.
rats, running wildly and -~ndlessly on

Hockey
Natklnal Hockey League
NHL
Suspended
Color01do
1\v tllun ~: hc: RW Claude lAmteu" for the
lir.~t two &amp;tlml!ll of !he Stanley Cup Jiu.als
&lt;md fined htm $1,000 fur che~: kmg Ol.:trmt
R;,'tl W1ng s F Km Drnper from bcb1Jk)m
o~n\C 6 of tl~ Western Conrt!rerKe Onuls
HARTFORD WHALERS S1gnt:d F
Hnat Dmncmcheth lind 0 Ryun R1 ~1dnre
,
NEW XORK ISLANDERS 'J'mdcd
l&gt; Brnc.l Lukowl~:h 10 !he o.•u..~ Slurs ror II
I'I'J7thml-round dro~ft~:hm~:e

Stanley Cup D~ab
Tut!dal,r

{!&lt;'())C)

Thunid11y
•
Flontla at Coloradtr K p m (ESPN)
Salurd•y
Colonu.lo ul ,f~onda, K p nt IFilXIi../

Reds lose ••.

ONE

(Continued from Pa,ge 4)
· and a big jump when Smiley looked
away.
"That's the only way I can steal
home," he said. "I watched him a
couple of pitches where he looked at
me, and once he looked at me he
went to the plate. That was my cue
right there. Lucktly he threw the ball
high, so tt was a gond pitch to run

LESS .
THING
FQRYOU
• TO
JUGGLE

American L~aau~
MINNESOTA TWINS Pl:l&lt;&lt;tl IF·OF
D~nny Hv~:kml!; on the !!!·day dumbl etl
lut Purchased the conlr-..cl of RHP M1ke
Trombl~)' from Salt luke Cuy of 1ha:
PCL Transrerred C Man Walber.:k from
the I~dny to the 60-day di Silbl~o'Ciltst
OAKLAND ATHLETICS 'Pit~r.:ed

OF Pedro Munoz on lhc I:'i -d11y disubk:d
h11 Recalled INF Tony Bat1sto from Edmon&amp;on of lhe PCL
TEXAS RANGERS Act1va1t:d OF
Juan Gonzalez from the l:'i-day diS&lt;~blcd
list, Opl1oned RHP R1ck Helhng to Oklnhomo Cny of the Ammq~n A.uCN;mttun
TORONTO BLUE TA YS Sogno:d OF
Randy Alb:.ral and RHP Jeremy Sutterfield

on."

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

NatktNtl Lurl•t
COLORADO ROCKIES At:ti'l'atcd
RHP B1ll Sw1rt rrom the IS-day dlsobl~
h11 Placed RHP Cur111 Lesknn•~ on the
I ~·dny disublcd list
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE$ Op·
11oned SS Kev•n S1ockcr and LHP
Michael M1mbs to S..n~nton-Wtlkes- B:ure
or the ln~nalionqJ 4AJue Rei:alled ss
Kevm Sefcik from Scranton-Wtlke• -

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on long·
term experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Just do this one thing,
end leave thejuggllngllct to us.

Bone.

l"olll' lndependem Apn~~
Semrw Me~ Coanty Siftee 1868

.

Do..-g CIJids Mllen •Sill'
lnswaace
111 8aco;'ICI8t.
'
1112-3311
~

W

ntprennttng the

!hln~u~~c=ty Oro_up

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLIC)'

4.D4.

•

.

-

"Vaughn's had. a tough few on Saturday, but second-base umpire
days," Brewers manager Phil Garner Derry I Cousins separated them
said.
·
.
before 11 escalated mto another
So have the rest of the Brewers, brawl.
who were left with bumps. lumps
· On Sunday, the only punch
and bruised egos even though the thrown was by Cleveland reliever
teams played peBCefully Sunday.
Jose Mesa- when he pounded his
Except for a brushback pitch to clenched fist into his glove after the
Kenny Lofton leading off the (lame, , last out.
the clubs completed their four-(lame
"I'll never forget what Alhert did.
series without incident. They will There's going to be tension ev~ry
have plenty of time Ill cool down time we play," Vina said "But
before their next game, Aug. 23 in that's behind us now. We just got to
Cieveland.
go on."
"That's all over," said Vma, the
Belle finished the series 2-for-16
victtm of Belle's foreann that tri(l- ,with two singles. He failed to reach
gered an ugly brawl Friday ni(lht.
base via a hit or walk Sunday for the
Vina also got into it with Lofton first time in 37 games, !hanks to the

a treadmtll of ttght checking and
tenacity they never did solve .
Lemieux and Jagr scored 20 goals
in the first two rounds,leadmg New
York Rangers coach Colin Campbell
to wish gond luck to the next team
they faced. But the Panthers' defensive scheme was more than luck, or
fate, more than adept personnel
matchups arid sheer will.
"It's the toughest defense I ever
played against," Lemieux said.
"Beat one guy, and there's two others waiting for you.''
The Panthers' defenstve perSIS-

tence was so sutlocating and containing that Lemieux and Jagr never
scored a goal after Game 2. During
the season, the NHL's two leadin11
scorers never went more than two
consecutive games without sconng.
By Game 7, Lemieux and Jagr
were so confused, flustered and
lacking in confidence, they fanned
repeatedly on shots they normally
bury.
·
The Pittsburgh power play, the
NHL's best during the season, was
even worse, operating at only 12 percent efficiency without point man

Ron Francis, who broke an ankle
against the Rangers.
"They've got a great coach
(Doug Maclean) and a great system," forward Bryan Smolinski satd.
The Penguins' hope is that nell!
season follows form and they reach
the Stanley Cbp finals. Smce succeeding Scotty Bowman as coach m
1992, Eddte Johnston's teams have
been eliminated, in succession, in the
first, second and third rounds.
What Johnston and general manager Craig Patrick now must dec1de
is whether these Pengums were clas-

roarit11. Malone bricked the first one
off the front rim. After a timeout. he
missed yet apin - his sixth miss
from the line in 12 attempts and his
2Sth miss of the series.
Seconds later, the Sonics were
raising their arms and huuing each
other as the buzzer sounded.
The mo~ntum swuna Seattle's
way midway through the third quarter after Payton had missed his last
four shots. He broke the streak.with
a putback for a 64-S71ead and drilled
a jumper from the corner while
guarded by both Stockton and Malone.
Hawkins then hit a three-pointer
after Stockton and Malone missed
driving layup attempts on consecutive possessions. capping a 13-3 run
for a 71-60 lead.
Seattle's lead stayed between five
and eight points in the fourth quar-

'

II'OWICI!·

ter until Stockton drove
ton for a layup with 5: II left.
•
ina it 8().77. The Sallies with a pair of free throws br mp
and a three-pointer by Dcillef
Schrempf with 5:28 left to inc:r4ue
their lead to 85-77.
:
Suddenly, their scoring stop~ .
Malone, Carr and Stoclium
scored from inside and Stocktotl hit
an 1llegal defense free throw to:cut
the lead to one, but Utah was never '
able to take the lead for what would
have been just the second time in the
second half.
With the resilient Jazz out of the
way, the SuperSonics can tum their
attention to the Bulls, who set a
record with 72 wins this season and
are thoroughly rested, having not
played since May 27.
"My nightmare's just beginntng," Karl satd.

infield shift that moved Vina directly behind second base, where he
fielded - three sharp grounders by
Belle.
"That's the first time anyone 's
done that to Albert all year," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said.
"We robbed him three ltmes,
right up the middle," Vina said.
"That was nice, get htm back a littie bit "
ltm Poole (3-0) ptcked up the victory m relief of Orel HershtSer, who
gave up six earned runs and 10 htts
in four innings. Karl (5·3) gave up
seven earned runs and nine hits in 5
1/3 mnmgs.
The Friday mght melee wtll like-

:;·

ly result in suspensi~ns for hiil.t'aukee catcher Mike· Matheny, who
charged the mound, and ln~ns
reliever Julian Tavarez. who flip
umpire Joe Brinkman over his
k
and to the ground.
.
Belle almost certainly won' t face
disciplinary actton for his hi&amp;on
Vina. which broke up adoubleljlly.
or for instructing Tavarez to throw at
Matheny.
Brinkman, who said he coulllh 't
eJecl a player for ordenng a teil!nmate to htt a bauer, indtcatcd}his
report to AL president Gene Bu~•g
will say that although Belle's hit wa.•
excessive, he was within hts rig~ts
because Vina was in the basepath as
he trted to tag h1m
'"

,,

II

• -Ryan Klesko added a sacnlice fly
m the stxth and Jones hit his ninth
bomer off Hector Carrasco in the
seventh, leaving the Reds shellshocked.
· "They lead the world 10 home
runs - at least, it seems like that
against us," Knight said.
Notes: Klesko was momentarily
~after slamming into the wall in
left fteld to cat~;h Chris Sabo's fly
ball in the fourth . He got up after a
few moments and remained in the
game. Klesko also threw out Barry
~..Skin, who was trying to stretch a
single into a double .... McGriff was
6-for-12 in the series with three
homers a double off the wall in center and 'a fly out to the wall in right.
... Grissom's other straight steal of
home was for Montreal in 1992 off
Cincinnati's Norm Charlton. ...
~in extended his hillina streak to
e•Jht gtiJrlCS. ... Smiley hu a I.S7
ERA in his four witll. 8.27 in his other eiaht lta'rta. •.

stc playoff underachtevers or season- ·
long overachievers, despite having
three of the NHL' s top four scorers
in Lemieux, Jagr and FranciS, plus
99-point scorer Petr Nedved
Losmg to Florida was a huge dtsappointment, but winning a divtsion
title and coming withtn a goal or two
of the Stanley Cup finals wasn't bad
for a team with a curious assemblage
of defensemen named Mtronov, Leroux, Tamer, and Wtlkmson .
The Pengums' b1ggest worry ts
they might lose !he biggest name of
them all.
Lemieux made a glorious return
from five years of medical m1sfortune, winning his fifth scormg IItle
and playing marvelously for two
rounds of the playoffs. But he may
forego a contract worth nearly $11
million neKt season to give up hockey again- this ume, permanently.'
He will watt about a month, play
some golf, then decide if he can

::

endure the rigors of yet another !;~!ason He would be only 31 next~son, but, after battling Hodgkin's disease and persistent back problcnis.
he feels much older. Especially now.
"Oh, I thmk he'll be baclr."
Johnston said. "You know he's llpd
an unbelievable season. Let's fac~t .
we wouldn't have gotten by ~
Rangers and those clubs withou~tjle
big guy."
·
If the big guy quits, the Peng4ins
clearly won't be the same. Neither
would the NHL. And the magmty~e
of the Penguins' latest playoff elimmalton would grow even greatcq."
Penguins fans will evenluaj)y
handle losmg to the Panthers, hut it
might take them decades to ~et
losmg Lemteux.
"We had them down 3-2,
should have buried them,"
Joe Dziedzic said "It's gomg to
a long summer."

Gordon uses Blacker
car to win Miller 500

.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS E•·
tended the conlr&lt;~Ct ol QB Scnu Znlak
through the 1998 seainn Rc-sr,!! nL'll CB
Vernon Le~1.s loa two-year contrac!.t
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER&gt; Rc·
lttt!ied RB Tonuno Smglclon

BaoebaU

fool line - the easiest place in the
NBA from which a player can choke.•
A 7-0 run brouaht Utah within
85-84. Kemp then drew Antoine
c.r·ssiath foul bn an isolatJon play
in the IUIC, and he sank both free
throws for an 87-84 lead.
Malone scored on a reverse layup
with 32.2 second left, and Kemp was
fouled in the lane again with 13.9
seconds left, !his lime by Greg Foster.
Kemp, who shot 69 percent from
the field in the series, includmg 8-of·
12 Sunday, sank another pair to
restore a three-point lead.
"I knew he'd knock 'em down,
and !hat's why he's Shawn Kemp,"
Payton said.
Just five seconds later, it was
Malone's pressure moment from the
line.
With a sellout crowd of 17.072

I

Foot hall
National f'ootbu.ll L~~u~
HOUSTON OILERS Agn:r:d to
terms with P Ra:g~ue Roby on a lour year
L'tlntmct Signed QB Donnkl H o ll u~
MIAMI DOLPHINS Agrm:d tu terms
w11h LB Jack Del R10 on a Or.!· year wn·

I

Flonda at CnlurmJu K pm

ton and Malone and sen1 the Sonic•
to Chicqo as the only !hina standing in the Bulls' way of completing
an unprecedented seuon.
It will be Seattle's lint appearance in the NBA Finals since JBCk
Sikma, Dennis Johnson and Gus
Williams led the Sonics to their only
title in 1979.
'
And the victory in the deciding
game should end the Sonics' reputation as a choke team come the playoffs. Seattle, knocked out in the first
round the put two years, was hearing the put-down once again after
losing Game 5 at home and getting
blown out in Salt Lake City in Garne
6.
.
But playing on their home court
in Game 7, they pulled away in the
third quarter, overcame a fourminute scoreless spell late in the
fourth qu&amp;r!er and sealed it from the

-.
..

:penguins seeking answers to woes after 3-1 loss to Panthers

tn~et

Sunday's score

NL leaders

Colorado (Sw 1Ct 0 0) at P~mburgh
(Ruebel 0-0) 1 OS p m
•
Sn11 Franm~: o (V.mLandl ngbam l-7)
m CINCINNATI (Burba 0-6), 7 15 p m
New York (lsnnghnusen 2-7) 01 At
lanla (Smoltz 11 · 1) 7 401 ~ m
Phlladdptua (Sch1lhng 2·0) at Chl~il.·
go (Trachsel1-4), 8 O:'i p m
St Lou1 5 (AI~n Benes 4 -3) at San
Otego (Tcwlubury 'i-1J 10 O'i p m

go (Bullinger l-.4)

I I. Hoffman, Son Dieao. II , Frunco, New
York, II.

I'·

(Schm •dl 2- 1) 7 40pm

KAnsas C11~ 1 Torotno 5

~,

Lus Angele5 I, New York 0
Pmsburgh 5. Co lor:~odo 2
San Fronc1sco 8 Montrelll I
St louts 2. Hou ~lon 0
Phaladdphm 9 Snn Otego B 12 In·
nmgs
Flonda 1. Ch1cago 2
Allnnta6 CINCINNA112

2

IO~l

·, · ', Texu

•

STRIKEOlffS Oemros, Boston, 96,
App1tr, Kansas Caty, n , Finley, Cahfor1113 , 7$, A Fernande z Ch1caao. 72 ,
Muss1nn. Baltimore. 71, Guzman, Toronto. M. Alvarez, Ch1cago 65, K HUI ,
Tt:IIWi, 6S
SAVES Mesa. Ch:veland. 20 R
Hernandtz . Ch1cago. 16. Hennemao .
Tc11a.s, I 'i , Montgomery. 1Cun541s Cny, 14,
Perc1val, C:.l•furma.
Weuclnnd, New
York, 12, Ttmltn. Toro01o. 10. R Myers.
Baltimore. 10

San Diego 8. Ph!ladetphiia i
Co lorado 2 P1trsburgh 0
Montreal ~.San F r anus~:o I '
Ch1cago llj, Aonda 4, 10 mnmg1
Sl LoUIS t Houston 4, 10 mmngs

· Utah wu seelfng to become the
sixth 1~ in NBA history to come
Nl:k from a 3-1 ~fieit. butlhc Jau
ended up getting beaten at their own
game. The Sonics did not score a single fastbreak point, but they shot S4
perceilt in the halfcouit offense and
got four clutch free throws from
Kemp in the final _77 se~onds.
Malone, plagued by foul sh001ing
problems throughout the postseason,
missed a pair with 8.2 seconds left
!hat could have pulled Utah within
one. Hersey Hawkins was fouled on
the rebound, made one throw and the '
I)Utcome was sealed. '
"We won like men, we lose like
men," Malone said . "We played
hard but dido 't get it done."
Kemp had 26 points and 14
rebounds and Payton scored 22. The
effons of those two helped nullify
the 22 points scored by both Stock-

to earn right to face Bulls

Indians beat Brewers 11-6 as cleanup men held hitless

Scoreboard
Baseball

-

I

REGIONAL CHAMPS - For the second time
In Meigs High School history, the Meigs Maraudere' have edvenced to the state baseball tourna·
ment The Marauders defeatlld Wareaw River
VIew 11-5 Saturday to adv111nce to the Dlvlelon II
atata tournament thla weekend at canton. In front
are (L·R) Chrle Roush, Caleb Shuler, Matt AuH,

Bred WhHiatch, ScOtt George, Ched H't1n1~111,
Robert Qualle and Collin Roush. Behind them are
head coach Scott Gheen, case Cleland, Brent
Hanson, Rick Hoover, Child Burton, Gary Stlnley, .Jason Mullen and assistant coech Pete
Woods.

Meigs wins ... _ ___:(:;;:.Co::::n.::.:tin:.::ued:::..::.fro;;:;m::.;P..;;:ag~e...:4)~---------­
gap that rolled to the tence wuh
Whitlatch going to third for a triple.
Chris Roush then grounded back
to the mound for the first out, w1th
Wllitlatch standing ground at third.
Brent Hanson then walked, with
Collin Roush at the plate Barringer
tried to pick Hanson off at first, the
throw was in the dirt and rolled a
short distance away from the. first
baseman allowing Whitlatch to
scamper home.
·
Meigs increased the lead to 5-1 in
the fourth inning. Stanley walked
and advanced to second on a passed
ball. Two outs later Whitlatch smgled to give the Marauders , a 4-1
advantage. Whitlatch advanced to
third on a passed ball and Roush 's
single.
Robert Qualls went mto pinch run
for Roush and was caught in a run
dow~ on a pick off attempt. Q11alls
was able to stay in the run down long
enough for Whitlatch to dash home
with the maroon and gold's fifth run
before being tagged for the inning's
final out.
·
All along, Stanley was shutting
out !he Bears after their first-inning
run. The senior was strugglin11 at
times, but to his credit was coming
up with the big pit.ch at the ri1ht
time. Heading into the 11eventh
inning River View had only man8Jed two sin1les off the senior. But

.
'

Gary was starting to ure heading into
the seveRth and the Bears took
advantage of it to make things interesting.
:
Korey Kimble led off the seventh
w1th a single up the middle. Two batters and two walks later left the bases
loaded anp Meigs coach Scott Gheen
went to Scott George, who was coming off a one hit, 2-0 win over Meadowbrook in Friday's semtfmal
agai'nst Byesville Meadowbrook.
Bam nger greeted George by
launching a towenng dnve over the
left field fence for a grand slam and
a'5-5 contest. One oullater, !he Bears
had runners on first and second, but
the junior was able to work out of
trouble and end the threat.
Burton led off the bottom of the
seventh for Meigs by hitting a line
smash to the second baseman for the
inning's lir.st out. Stanley then drew
a walk on a 3-2 pitch, setting !he
scene for Hoover. The junior first
baseman hit hit a rocket into lel\-center field that rolled all the way to the
fence. The throw to the plllte arrived
juat before Stanley, but was low and
Gary's aliclc knocked the ball.loose
(living the Marauders !heir second
regional championahip.
"Give Gary Stanl~y credit,'' a
drained but happy Gheen said afti:r
!he game. "'The kid had bee~ hurt all
:YCIIII', bill he pitched hia heart ·ft. 1

should have went to Scott (George)
at the beginnmg of the seventh,"
Gheen said. "Thts was a total team
effort, we didn't beat our self. Rick
Hoover has been Mister Clutch all
year and once again he came up wtth
the big hit. The fan support was awesome today, we must have had 150175 people her~ . it really helped."
George picked up his second win
m as many days walkmg one, and
giving up two hits in his one inning
of relief. Stanley pitched the first six
innings scattering three hits, walkmg
eight and striking out six.
Whitlatch led Meigs at the plate
with a triple and a single. Stanley
added a pair of singles. George
added a triple. Hoover had his double, and Roush had a single.
Baninger was the starter for the
Bears. Josh Bowman came in the
contest in the sixth and was the losing pitcher. 'n\e two combined to
give up seven htts, strike out stx and
walk nine.
Barringer had a single and his
graqd slam for all five RBls to lead
River View (16-9). Kimble added a
pair of singles.

..,.... &amp;GIIIa

River View.......... HJ0..()()().4=S-S-3
Mei(ls................... IOI -120-1116-7-1
WP-Oeorge (11·2)
LP- Bowman (rec:ord N/A)

By DICK BRINSTER
DOVER, Del (AP) - JefT Gordon had a bright day m a Blacker car.
No, unlike an unhappy owner
who painted his car black in a message to NASCAR, Gordon didn't put
the brush to his rainbow-colored
Chevrolet. But he gave it to the lield
Sunday at Dover Downs International Speedway.
The Monte Carlo he drove to victory is named Blacker. For the second time in a row, 11 conquered the
Monster Mtle.
"We'll take th1s car everywhere
we go now, " Gordon satd after wm-'
ning the $1.5 million Miller 500.
"It's a gond car. and it certainly
worked well today "
Well enough to repeat its victory
of la.•t September m the MBNA 500.
Well enough to grve the defendmg
Wmston Cup champion ~· s serieslcadmg fourth victory of the season.
"Blacker is the only thmg in our
garage that can keep up with that
88," Gordon sard, alluding to the
Ford Thunderbird of Dale Jarrett.
lromcally, it was a spin by Jarrett
with 138 laps rem"ainmg that positioned Gordon for his 13th career
victory. It enabled him to close in on
the leade&lt;s.
At lap 372, Gordon began to run
away from the C~evys of Hendnck
Terry
Motorsports
teammate
Labonte . and seven-time Winston
Cup champton Dale Earnhardt, and
the Ford of Ernie lrvan.
" The crucial thing was to be out
front," Gordon said .
He was, for the I ast 129 laps, and
307 of 500 overall.
Another key was patience. The
24·year-old had an abundance of it.
"I wasn't screaming today," said
Gordon, who admits he somethr,es
gelS too exctted when he gets bellind
m a race. "I was very patient."
Earnhardt accepted his third-place
finish, but tldmined he is becoming
impatient.
"We did all we could, but it wasn't good enoush to win today," said
Earnhardt. without a victory since
March 10. "That's another top-five
finish, and that's seven straight .•. but
we need a win."

• ,,

Earnhardt was a target of
Fehx Sabates, who owns the
ac dn ven by defending ch!lmfli~n
Kyle Petty, painted his car
matchmg Earnhardt's color .rl•enle
- to protest a penalty
agamst his driver for his invoiv'em,~llt
man acc1dent a week carhcr at

I

lotte .
Sabates, who was not at the ra1c
track, maintams that Earnhardt
one of the most aggresstve drivers
NASCAR history - would not ha
been punished for such tactics. P ty wound up 18th, four taps dow
Chevrolets took the ftrst thr
spots, a stark reversal from Friday s
qualifytng. Although Gordon w
the pole with a lap of 154.785, Fo s
took 16 of the top 25 pos1tions to JU t
five by the Chcvys .
Gordon , who beat Labonte by 3
seconds, averaged 122.741 rn a ra
slowed for 38 laps by five caullon .
There were 19 lead changes amo
SIX dnvcrs.
He collected $138,730, bringi
hts earnrngs this season to $972,5
His payoff for the race mcludcd
$38,000 bonus from Unocal for w1
nmg from the pole.
It' also was the lirst lime the ~ac
was won from the pole smce Davi
Pearson did so 21 years ago.
The backstretch crash drop
Jarrett from second to founh in t
points race, behind Earnhard
Labonte and Gordon.
''This is the kind of day you don 'J
need, for sure," satd Jarrett, wh4
explained that he spun after runni;
through flu•d on the track. " It w
just unfortunate ."

•

Closeoul Specials
U Flats Reg. $6.50 NOW $5

u ..........
RBQ: ~ 7S &amp; $6.75

NOW $5.00

4" Genzl • Reg. $1
NOW SOC
511 .. ' hi 30% ell

Open Dally 9-5, Cloeed Sundlly

H...

ns Gnt-~n•

8yntelll8, Oh.

•

...,.

•

�I

•••

.

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio
•

·'

72-year-old woman ~seeking club to quench yirile husband's thirst _i~

___
--

Ann
Landers
1m.

.,_

LM~

B)iANH LANDERS
-: Dear Ann Landers: I want to
reply to "W.O.," the widow who
tua\J· an affair with a married man.
She is proud that she is still able to
etU9y sex at age 70. .
"1\\'.G. was critical of wives who
ciilajplain about their husbands'
iiJlll!equacies yet don 't try to help
the!ll enjoy a good sex life. 1bis may
he!-true for some, but in my case, it is

hUsband's inadequacy but and trllllpoline enthusiasts. Why not
his sii'Onl sex drive and my lack of this? It would be emotionally
intmst tiW pose the problem.
healthy to reduce the guilt. MoreWe have been mlllried more than ·over, the wives of these men, like
SO years and have had a fairly salis- myself, would feel a peat sense or
fyirig •x life. Now, at 12. my body relief knowinJ their husbands' needs
just doesn't want any more sex. I are being met. I would like your
fisurc we have done it at least 3,000 Opinion. -- Nameless in California
times. Should I not have the right to
Dear California: Sorry, I cannot
say "enough is enough " ? I would endorse your idea of a club for older
never cui him off completely, but · men who are. still interested in sex
my heart isn't in it any longer.
but whose waves have had enough.
IJIUly wish there was an organi- Giving a husband a pass t~ go..find
zatlon for older people like my hus- sex elsewhere because you ve had
band, who still like sex but whose enough" is not only reckless but
partners don't. They could get· indecent.
together with people like W.G., who - Putting marital relations in the
still want sex but don't have pan- same category with hiking, bungee
ners. After all, there are clubs for jumping, folk dancing and trampohikers, bungee jumpers, folk dancers line activity demonstrates a disturbnot my

Reed speaks at
recent DAR meeting

ing lac;k or undentanding of what colleje 8pplia&amp;ions and finllicial lion in their children or lelldl them
married love is alllbout•.
aid forma, pr~ and tent out resjx&gt;nsibility.
I
Since your heart isn't in it any ~~led ~nd c;over Ieite!'· aod
'
"Double Duty" should allow this
longer but your husband is still hoi SC110U'il antemews.
letter to her boss. It's a 1limJ*' of
to trot. I supesr joint counseling
A few years ago, my bosa died what the future will be like for him
with a professional who can help suddenly ora heart llltaCk. His oldest aod his daughter. --M.
Pitl$- 1
you both find a satisfactory compro- son took me aside at the,fWICral and burgh. Pa.
• ,
mise.
hid the nerve to ask if [ would type
Dear Pinsburgh: Many readers
Dear Ann landers: The letter his term pepcr due the next· day. I
from "Double Duty in Dallas," told him what he could do with his wrote to say college students often ,
whose boss wanted her to type his term paper. From then on, neithel' he pay someone. to type their term ;
10-year-old daughter 's homework, nor the rest of the f~ly ever spoke ' papers. f say OK for term papers. '
but I 0-year-olds???? Gimme a •
hit home.
to me again.
••
1 worked for a man who expected
The oldest son is still in college at break!
••
me to be a slave to his children long age 33. The second son has been
after they became adults. Not .only ' married .and divorced twice and hasdid I type their tenn papers --1had to n't held a job longer than two
Seacl queatioas to Ann Lu- :
compose them. I made appointments months. The third son has been in den, Creators Syaclicate, 5777 W. 1
for them and travel arrangements, and out of jail. This is what can hap- Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los ;
did personal shopping. completed pen when parents fail to instill ambi- AllaeJes, CaUl. 90045
-'

n;.

J'AIIII•unity CaJendpr is
RACINE -- Racine United
publisked 115 e free service to non- Methodist Church, vacation Bible

prolii aroups wishing to lllliiOUDCe
mee.IJDJ ·and special events. The
~ .. notdeslped to promote
salts or f11acl raisers or any type.
lfeqll·are printed as spac!e permits
andunnot be guaranteed to nm a
specil'ac number of days.
MONDAY •
r.:etART FALLS -- The Letart
Township Trustees will meet at 7
p.m~atthe office building.

school, Monday through Friday, 9 to
II :30 a.m. "Camp Courageous"
theme.

TUESDAY
.
PAGEVILLE -- Scipio Townshi;
Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 at Pageville.

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birt~day

celebrated ·
Caitlin Taylor Leslie;,daughter of
Brenda Leslie of. Middlejlort and '
Mark Leslie of Lusby .MD .. recently
celebrated her sixth birthday with a
skating party at the Chester.Skating
·Rink. Pizza and kool-aid were served.
Those attending were her parents,
and sister, .Meghan; grandmother,
Elaine Leslie of Lusby Md.;·Tanner
Simpson; Megan Johnson; Justin
Duckworth;· Gabe Copely, Danyelle
Alderson ; Sarah and L.aora Hollen;
DISCUSSES BANKING BUSINESS - Paul Read, prealdant of
Weaver; Jessica and Jill ian
Michelle
Farmer• Bank, detallld the bank'• growth 1nd devttlopment IInce
Lyons
;
Kayla 11nd Jonathan
its ntsbllahmtHit In 1904, for member• of Return Jonathan Meigs
McCarthy
;
Eric
VanMeter, Samantha
Chllpler, Daughtera of thll American Revolution. Plcturld with him
Cole; Brittany Hanning; Charissa
are Patricia Hollet', regent, left, and Pauline Atldna, vlca regent.
Stanley; Adam Ball; Kathy and
Michelle Johnson and Pat Dowell.
.
National Defense Report. Her report
Sending gifts were_her ~randparShe said it was predicted that U.S.
covered a survey o( educational sta- students could match the higher scortistiq in the United States and a com- ing students abroad if the educationparison with students. abroad. The al establishment demanded as much
United States. Powell said, spends from students as it does from the tax more money per student than any Oth- payers who support it.
er country in the world. yet our stuNext meeting will be held on June
dents are not the top achievers. Inter- 14 at the Holter Holstein Dairy Fann
national surveys place American stu- at 6:30 p.m. The Ewing Chapter,
dents sixth in reading ability and Sons of the American Revolution,
tenth in math.
will be guests of the chapter. Michael
Some students abroad, some sur- Struble of that chapter will be guest
veys show, perfonn better because speaker. His topic will be "Our
their curriculum is rigorous and they Fathers and our Forefathers. " Memare expected to learn it, according to bers are to take a dish for the potluck
Powell.
dinner.

.

calendar-----

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Red Cross BlOodmobile visit, I to 6 p.m. Wednesday
at the Senior Citizens Center. Residents encouraged to donate.

crs interested in herbs. Bobbi Karr to
speak. Garden club l'(lembers to take
food made with herbs, recipes, and
door prizes_

, .CHESTER -- Chester Garden
Club, Wednesday, Chester Methodist
Church, 7:30p.m., open meeting, for
all garden club members and any oth-

THURSDAY
RU1LAND - Rutland Township
Trustees will meet in regular session,
Thursday, 6:15 p.m. 'at the Rutland
Fire Station_

.

Must be 18Yfl

.
Serv-U 1819)1145 8434

••
;

- ' ..-- .' -

CAiriiiM SEIYKE
Rat h

•

· ...MGM

''

IIIEUL
CONTIACTOIS

••
;

Slcll(lg~~yl

•
'. ''

Alumlnlllft' • Roofing

New•Repelr

!

G~a

I
\

DC~WnJpouts

t

Free E1tlmatu
992-3607

~·

•••

-·

111211111 mo.

ents. Sam and Martha t'ry ; Stephame See ; Becl&lt;i, David, and Michael Ball;
. Tiffany Simpson; Twila and Katie : ,
Childs; and Brenda and Dale Rose., !

:::::r:............
••rtor
Petullug'

.

•

Ellllflor

(FREE EITIIIATU)

,_-

V.C. YOUNG II
112-G15

1

'

SMITII'S

COISTIUCTIOI

c:-luldlnga~~ewa••••

·AddllioM

•''

-lldl..
oftCIOIIng
(814)112.aa38
4 812-2711

101111 IISSELL
COIISfiUcnOII
•New Home•
•Gereges

•

,

•

oComptete

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE ESnMATES

,....

· Janet's Hair
G.o Roulild

WILDIII
SDIICI

'•'
•
'
I

-.
•

-

'

Quality Work

CompetiUl(e Rate•

~

l

Ret.:

I

l

614-992-2524
'

614-441-7558

I

. WI mo.

'

_,I

.I

I,

.•

•I
t '

'

.

SYRACUSE -- Sunon Township
Tru5t'ees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. Syracuse Municipal building.

Truck: .

I

..............
eo-.
MANLEY'S

Rooting; Rocim Aclclltlone
Siding,
etc.
P.O. loll 220, lklwllt, 011.

•

-

CARPENlllR --Columbia Township: 'Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30p.m. at the fire station.
''
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
Truscee meeting, Monday, 7:30p.m.
at township hall.

CALL NOW
1-110().988 8003

Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Mullt be 18 ym_
Satv-U (814) 845-8434

FIELDS

-

. ......,...

Ext.~

Htmlock GrOVI Rei •
"-or, Ohio ·
992-7573 _,_,..

$3.99 per min.
Must be

-,a yrs.

645-8434

I'REE

•

I

1-800-448 1414
&amp;t. 43011
$3.M per min.
· Must lla-18 JN.
S.V.U (811) 845 1434

--~

•

--

Howard Excavalin
Trucklng-

Umestone
Bul~lng and
Backhoe
I,

HOUle Slte1 and
Ulil.llle'a

I

"Income
• Hip Safety!

..

.

I PC*ifiCliY·

-

All K1nds of [ar lh Work

'*'-

~· oanag.lnduded. ASKINCU18,0oo

litJIIIInlllol. L&lt;;CQ av

·

992-3838

J&amp;L SIDINI &amp;
INSUlAftOII

3.845+ Acree· Really niC9

't !*; ASKINO 116,900

537 BRYAN IILACE

,,', 61~ · 4011 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.
, Albany, Oblo 45710

IIDDLEPORT, OH•

8141124112
8:30 A.ll.-3:30 P.M.

...... ,
.. 1'

111M

I as

eSen . . . &amp;w'laa

• Annuities arc issued by lnluranoe
·
and have
for early withdrawals.

CHATUNE

RO'OFING
NEW-REPAIR

Live 24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful
Girls

Quttln

1-900-446-1414

Ext. 6445
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs old.
ServiceU
(619)654-8434

FREE ESnMATES
949-2168
511. . . lFM

'.

II

'

.

I
dl t:f!.
People Needed lmmodoatelr
to .
Stan With Factory DisJtlbunOil JOi"·'

~

Excellent Oi'lision Program.

tit I

• l';o lar.PIIs

; ~n D

' Rapd PromonOl'ls
' lnconlivel'rognlri11

. Jnod

' Advancod Trlinlng
'local Oillot

·~I ~ ~)

Thote Selected Must Be WIUinf \ ''~

To Stan ltnmedil!ltely AI lep
At 814-441-1969.

please

cau

304 -937 -2954 . RE.

WARD.

t,'

~~AU

_,{ ,•.!

• PilAT·TIME •

Positions Stocking MagazirJtt' . . ii
And Books In Gal"poli&amp; Area Su.·.. .
permarkels. Must Have oH :. ~
Transparl&amp;lion And. A Flexibl•: r•.::!

Schedule Mon -Fri. No Detiver"W- 1- ,
No Piek·Up&amp;, Reply To: Galllpo!ia,
P.O. Box 310, Cdlumbus, OH

.-3216.

I I

·*ATTN; Poinl Ple.IBnt"

tJ'11\

• Ji10t\..i

Postal Positions. Permanent fulltime lor clerk/sorters. Full Benefits. For e • am, application and

salary info call: 708-284-1839 ett:-':'"
38711, Bam 10 'llpm,

WElCOiotE

70

•.

Companr Olte&lt;s:

Found In The Village Ot Rio
Grande, Mi~eed German Shephard
Puppy To Claim Cau 614-448·
3217.

tered, 55·60 pOunds, 3yrs old .
bt'own eyes. Missing since 5-23 ·
96. U you know where lhls doQ •s.

Joanne's Ku I&amp; Kurl
Ch.....a,lc:Guwo

l' ~~~'!

-~s
614-446·9496

Able

I 1\ll · o\1-0" I $nk.-, ·

~7S-1Q9 .

Avon

iltiri.;

RepresentatlwiV.,l \f

neede_ct. Eam money for Chf~h~m
mas bills at home/at work. 1-&amp;0a- •
9G2·8358 or 304-882·26o4S, lrNf:'~I..'l

Yard Sale

~ ·•t n:

Rep.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AVON· $8 ·$15/Hr. No Door '151~1
Door, No Minimum "Ordet.

All Yard Sales Uust Be Pa1d In

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
1he (lay belore the aCI is to run .

Sundar edidon · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat·

Pike,
Park
3&lt;d .

ao,...,.. 1, G

es , -000-827-4640 lndiSis!Rep.

,.,v ~~'

Demonstrarors- Christmas . •lVI.-,i
.ound The World! Gifts 01 Hou-le.
Of lloyd . Would you like a tnle"
Christmas and earn extra casr\?' u !"
Call Carol, 814 -949-3301
. __
---:-'-_
___
, Jt: .' ;
Dependable babySitter tor three
children in my home, musr ha¥t•
references and be reliable, dars
,.
may vary, 614-985-3825 or en.~' II , I
98S-9835.
: · ~ 1I J
Domino's Pizza of Pomeroy
him\Q dri¥ets.

now

"~ ~

Drivers • Oisp11chers Nee~itl - ~ ~ ·.:­
Call A-1 Tald, 814-«1·1449.
' 'i t."' ! '

Friday. Saturday;

580 Reece Hollow

Earn $tOOOs WMkiJ stuffing envelOpes at home. Be your bo ..~ -.
Starr now. No experience. Free ,
1
supplies, into. No abltga.tion. Send 1' ' '
S.A.S.E. to Prestige Unit ll, P.OG~ . 7
Box 19S609, Winter Springs, Fl

32719,
Eam up to $1000's weekly stulfiQ~b- ·1

envelopes at home. Start now, no" .
experience, tree supplies. tnfdf! ": ' ,J,
matioo, no obligation, send SASE :
Buck Dtpl 77. 3208-C, E. CololfW-t

Or., 11308, Orlando. FL 32803.

Mkkltepon

~~------------I
Five Pointe Express no,w_hlrl_.,.t

&amp;-VIcinity

caahte,. Exper+ence

Big )'Brd sate, lois of clothes,

enced Medtcal Insurance Cler~ .
Musl Have Thorough Knowledge

1118, 237 S. Slh

S1.

I~~~~4~1h~.151h.~·_;,·~

Full-Time O~emng For An Experl- :
'

01 CPT And lCD Codes o\na ·Be
Eamthar Wuh Computers, See1 d
Resume To : P.O. Box 33. GatllpoU, OH45631 .

Mare Goodies! Uon -Tuea, Be·
hind Masomc lodge. Rat.i ne.
Clothes, Household, Plus Size

H&amp;H

,,.,,
,,.

Clcuhos. lotisc.

SAWMILL

Porch sale- June 3-8, first house
behind laurel CiH f•ee ....._.,
C,..,rch.
Yard sate. June 3 &amp;" 4, ai:rosl
from Syracuse Elemenlafy, child·
rtn'a clottiing, ac:cesa~ries I

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

JOyS.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

&amp; VIcinity

614-742-2193

Household

3206 H-od M , EVO&lt;y"ioJJ,

Onver Needed
COL
&amp; Household
. Requmtd, Daa1re
,qualil)'
SerYite ·A Must, Wa HaVe Tht
Best Loadett In The Busina11 'I
PlenJy Of Work'. PloaN Apply ~~
tao Columbus ROad., In A1hans

80

FGr Mew• Info.

3 Fomilr a-1 &amp; o-3 21151otL

lfH

v.r-

June 3 &amp; 4 Rain or Slllno. 32oo &amp;

&amp;WILliNG
TO TALIUI

OH Or Colllot~n, 1·800·1148eel

Public Sale
anct AuctiOn

Rick Pearaan Auction CDfnPMr.
full time I!UCtionMt, complete
aarvice.
lltenled

1·900-9f0.17J7

.

.lat. 2261

90

$2.11jlermlq.

304-

Wlntecl10 Buy

IIIIIO'tiOy'l, G,l. Joe, S•Ww'a

. llulllle11ya

act Will -,_, ..,ir ptice baMCI on

......, (111t .......

condition .• ,~·441·1130 after e

""'.
'

Home Tvpists, PC users

145.000 tncome potential.
800-513-4303 Ext. 8-93118.

pt, Pleaslnl

Danny &amp; Peggy Prickles

~
.
I

one full time and o·n e part timi' \~~
• ·
ing resumH a1 five
,
day, Wednesday and ThurSday,
9am· 11am, ask tor Chria. •

AU Yard Sales Uua1 Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:ODpm the
day before the ad is 10 run, Sun day edition- , :OOpm Friday, Monday itdlion 10:ooa.m. Sa..day.
misc. item's, )C-mas, al week, Me:·
Kel1ziO Ridge. Racine, 011.

· 211- .

I

Easy Warkt Excellent Pay! As-!
semble Products at Home. CaU I'
Toll Free t -800-467-5568 EXT.
121711.
I

POmeroy,

FREE ESTIMATES
614-992-7643

Howard L Wrlteael

• NOTICE •
TO THE UNEiotPlO'IED dG.&gt;'{

Earnings. Call Monday And
Tutsday Onty For Appolnlm•KV

dog, black and silver, mate, neu -

)
1

"

iry, 617-742·2"'24 .

Homes • Vinyt Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

. ·'·

lt.+r:d

60 Lost and Found

949-2512

(No Sunda~ Calls)

.:.111

1200·$500 wkl, in 'tOUt ·spe?e f'l
time. No exp nHded. Call n~tr t
ope&lt;r 7 daya. 1107)875-2022 EIJ1-" •
0528 H21
" t

breed puppjes to

clolhing, mitc. ll-5.

•

SIGNS ARE GOING UP II!VERYWHEREI
ON THE HUNTII WE J)ESI"ERATELY
US1ING811F YOU •REALLY" WANT.TO
SELL CALL US TOOAYI

chikiten.

Sunclet School t.t&amp;lftfiats. Slh &amp;

~ew

Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Musl be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (819) 645-8434

Gutter Cleenlng
.PillnUng.

~ng

8111 Grade, 61H4.6-43:l3.

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

1-900-255-0500

I

mixed

Small

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-()266 -1-800-950-3359
FIH Estimates

more.

304· 77'J.5083 24twllday. .

good hDIIMil 614·1109-2908.

. Top, Trim, Rem()val
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience •Insured ·

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions of
love, SIJCCesl. care, soul
· mates, 11811-~ and

11

Tl'le Cenlrat Slates ·Oiviaion. Nbu::.!
Expetience Necessary Oua,l f

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Psychic ..une

$-WANTE()-S

10 people who need 10 10M
w..ght &amp; make money, 10 t1y .1llv
patented weight -loss produf.u::J

long haired white cat, 1yr old,
neutered, dectawed, h11 had all

63 Homewood Drive, 2nd House
Off 160 AI Porter, 8/1 , 613, 6/41h.
Jack Neal Residence.

814-247-2120--.

)• '1

-1-1o
__He_lp_W_an-te"'ct--.'"""
~ 11 ?,~

M_i1ed Tett'i~rs Small Puppies, To
GIVeaway, 614·4•1 -1031 .

1149-3013 Phone
1149-2018 FAX

1~

8

nan. bookt, adull &amp; girls name

Older home with 2-3 bedJDOJIIa, 1 112 ......
F.Atf.O. Ilea~
wtJIIe will. C8llltl. vinyl and pint

S€0TT INSURANCE

. I

AYE· Atieution tnvesloiS- 1 1/2 st01y frame
· 3 ~- Pnnment, garage and rear
porch. Apamtents currently ,.,tiKI. Celt lol' details.

NEW usnNG- tJniOn r.,_

• Wide Choice of AMuities of
.All Kinds
· CaD for Information;

304-372-5&amp;18 or

SERVICES

P.lot,

shots. doesn't like
304-675-1103,

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Downlpouta .

Sa'rvlce8

· ·• No Load.s or Fees
:; Accumulate or Monthly

hiking, flehlng.
Rent by week or month.

IUUTIFUl WOMEI
Ul Wlllll&amp; 10
HUIFIOII
YOU IOWIII

~m!~-

!

no~

...

••

_______
....--...---·
------··
-::.:::-------····-

-lone.
-.lllrgelola,

S3.MPerMlnute
' IMtbe\lrR.
Ta.h-tonellequind
SlrY-u (111)145 1434

I

I

I

-----

Apple Grove, Ohio.
Electric hootc-up, dump

1-100 988-8600
.Ext.12n

'

OFFia 992·2259

- · 304-ftlS-29:18.
Kinans 614·367· 7774 C•M Arter 5

Ext.4193

Bridge, I mile from

FMPLOYr.1F''

No

KarenBumJ.

ffom Ravenawood

A11l1tYou

t

3 yr atd Oalmauan, to country
home. Can not be chtlined up.

We Will work Within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX n3-5881
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV

PRIMifiVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENIN(; SOON
on St. RL 331 W. 8 mlln

Perlonal Pllychic to

••

2 German Shepherd Puppies ,
614·448-8059, 614-446-8611 .

1-800-889-3943

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

eu 811111303

·Giveaway

lOST OR STOLEN=' Elk-Hound

PONDEROSI

lullnesl ..
Family Matters

Ploaoant

• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, RaiUng's, Pallo Furniture, Fireptace
ltams, Planter hangen.;, trellises &amp; lOts of othar stufll!

They have helpeil
· millions ftnd fortune,
success and love.
The fUture Slarts todayl
C.II1~900

u.e~y

agl' 20·27 for

2 commodes. 1biue,' 1green, you
haul-. 304.e75-35211. '

28563 BASHAN RD.

Need Dlnlctlon?
.Love

614-192-4025
811111-8 pm

II

40

Fiac:tne, Ohio 45771 .

blllletiH, tppllaricee.
11111ny mataia.

1

Found - small temate Beagle w/
worn blue cottar, langsv~le. victn -

.

Pltik-up dlac:ardlld ·

PIHu Write To ; P.O. Box 2t2,

· -- P.O. Box 501 Pl
Wv.

$3.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Se)V-u (619)~11434

Serv-U (619) .

I

'I

'

Wanltd To Buy; Junk Au101 Wh~...
Or WIJhoul lotololi. Call ~"1'1

Ouiol EYOMigl AI

camplonahip, raont~t caring,
•gentleman• oge 241 No drugs or

Authorized AGA Distributor .

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

'

Horne SMiling SWF Age: 25 · 35

SWiot Mokl SWF

. Gand

992•2364

An, Condotoon. 814-388-90e2f0.!

Galipolit, Ollio .se:ll.

"No Job Too L.s~p~ or Too Smllll"

1-900-255-()500

Thur.-s.t 1(1.5

Tuppe1'8 Plalnl, Ohio 45783

J•\CI~

Wanted To Bu"t: .Auto's &amp;

814·1"11·PART.

• Weklng Supplltiil• Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SerYicetl• Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding

Must be 18 y111.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Pe~Jonal Psychic!

Ewtrlasti1p

'I

I

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
your choice.
1-900-988-6988
Ext. 1449
· $2SJ9 per min.

FIND TOTAL
SATISFACTION! ·
Through a Live

•

'•
•

flln,AI

'

Hults
ScHtM

.

OUI&lt;Iooro. /lftd

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete' Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
35 YftnJ Elqnrient:e

Date-Line

$2.99 per minute
Mull be 18 Y1B old
. Se!Viee u
---8-1 1145 8434

.....,..,

E-Vap diurttlt.

Anllabfe Fru1h PharmaGy, Uid·

CDIItRDC'I'IOI

--

Ext. 6733

Ptrsonaia
Ore and fatt with GD-

Atduc:t
BeH tablerland

1·800·291 -5600

BIB

614-742-3331

Your Sweetheart as
close M your phone
1-900-988-8988

I

. _,,

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
AvaUable

WHITE ·PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1xS, 1xl, 2x4, 2111
1'-11!'-•ft
14'·11' 3~. ft
.AIM IVIIIIIIble
4x"'•'-4x8'a
614-985-4107

Allow Your

RACINE-- Racine Village Council, {~'gular session, 7 p.m. Monday
eve~ing at Star Mill Park.

l

.....
.,..
n••••1
41:11 mo.

Meel till Man or WOIIWI
o1 your D1811111 Never
be lonely Bglln.

005

614-915-3813 or 614-667~ .
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" 1hru 36"
4" S&amp;D • P."R- - solid pipe
4" It 6" Fie~ pipe ·
4" It 6" Sch J~ pipe
1/2" &amp;: 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I l/2"thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
..
3/4" It I" 200 p. s.~ waaer pipe (IOO'roll'sthru I,000' roll's)
3/4" U.L approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
·
Gas pipe 1• thru 2': · Filling&lt; · Regulators- Risers
Full assonment of P.V.C. &amp;: Flex filling• &amp;: Wa1cr fillings
Full line or Cislcm, Sopti&lt; It Water ;torage tanks.

UWIIBIBICU
614-tii-41H

•oATE
LiNE

FUGUNT

Sl. Rt. 7

lllfBIIOIIMI

Dltellne

985~73 .

.

•j

·Gravel, Sind,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
&amp;14-m-3470

-

AWJOUtJCf r.1 ENT S

I &amp;WPWIICS 1111 SI.. LY

. . . . . . lat ......

New24 hr.

PhOne 992-2489

•

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

Umfltone,

115 4422
Chulli,Ohlo

SWM likes Chutch, MoYiea,

FREE ESTIMATES

'

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

.• IIIIOHITIIIOI

HIULIII

~Tit .

Dirt• lind

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

LiliA'S
PAINTIIG

WICIS

""'mod111rij

_,_,..

'•

4tU411

L:owRMII)

....wa.,....

Umlll!tlit. GraN!

Call todly with your
window 1iaa for • , _
quote!

t.I.Ohlolw.tV•ult•

(l.lmllloM-

oNewltomel

lnlalllld

Llmltfld 77nHJ Offer

Mobile Horne Heating a Cooling
..., ,. ,..., " .. aiD,_. •"'
To1 Ftw

12-$20.00
16-$25.00 . .

j

Hair Cut Mens $8.50 Now $6.50
Womens $13.50 Now $10.50
Perms $10.00 oH
Color $5.00 oH &amp; Highlights
Include seis &amp; Haln:uts

IENNERS

Pof!Mt oy, Ohla

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•nit-in
-Double Hu~g
-tnaulated

AIM Cotw:o• WGitt

,.ew Location
Mlddi~Jport, Ohio
· With 3 Beds to
Serve You Better.

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SPECIALS,

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Sum• Images

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IIPLICEIIEIIT
Will lOWS

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CAITUN LESUE

YOUII&amp;'S

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FINANCE .

HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS

Sixth

--~
·~. ----Community
'hie

SPOilTS/

w..

S.
.
J J,!.eed, president of the Farmeo;;k, Pomerey, was guest speak-

a new building on Second Street.. He
said that in 1987the bank purrhased
er ~ilt a recent meeting of Return 1ts first Branch office located m TupJonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters pers Platns, and was the firsa_bank m
of I)Je American Revolution, held at Me1gs County to offer dnve t~ru
the Meigs County Public Library.
(1969) and ATM (1994) ba~kmg
-.~.a fourth generalion Farmers serv1ces to 1ts clients. Ree~ saad the
Bank president, outlined the bank's. ph1losophy of the bank 1s - Not what
hislQry, the Reed family's dedication _you can get out of Me1gs County ~~~
to establishing the bank and plans for what you can g1ve Me1gs County.
f~tare growth.
'
. He explai~ how general bank~oonded in 1904 by w. F. Reed,. mg technologaes have advanced over
the- Farmers Bank over the past 92 the years. In 1904, bank records were
years has observed many milestones kept ?n a Boston ledger. Bank record
as it has weatbered the financial cri- kee~mg over _the years advanced to
sis::aown through the years. Reed . posnng ~achmes, computers and to
said.
electromcs,
tic detailed problems of the past
One outsllJndin~ historical record
.. 1907 when the great money panic about banks m Meags County, Reed
occurred the 1913 1933 1937 1942 said, was the fact that no bank here
and 194S floods 'which fore~ the went under during the depression.
bank to move the stock marlret crash ,
Reed concluded his presentation
of 1929, the bank "holiday:' of 1933 by showing a video of the history of
and the great depression of the early Me1gs County.
During the business meeting con30's;
·Reed listed the original members ducted by. the Regent Patricia Holter,
of thO Board of Directors, W. F. Reed, the chapter voted to give, posthuGeorge H. Parke, Dr. J. W. Hysell. Dr. mously, an Outstanding Citizen
L. F: Rush and Thomas Turnbull.
Award, to the late Frederick W.
He noted that the bank was a pioneer Crow, .II, longtime attorney, for his
in lii1Jlointing woinen to the Board of outstanding service to the P?meroy
Directors, having dooe so as early as and the ent1re County of Me1gs.
1940?
A memorial service was held for
speakef talked about change the late Mary Fanner Skinner, a long'
and remodeling programs which the time member.
Mary Powell presented the
banl(underwent priof[o constructing

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

pHJI.I.IP
ALDER

: ·;:;;r-.r..

ACMII
lwllu

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IJII.

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-1111!-

I Aiililtt ..... -

-

.Com-

---ng.
merc.al S8 00 Hr S20 M•n•mum,
Alit For~. 114·245-11079
L.awns Mowect &amp; Trtmmeo Hl\11
Equ ipment Reasonable Retel,
S.ntor Cu;zen 01scount, For AI\
Esliml,., 614·245-5755
L.oekmg For Uow•n; Joba Wll l
Came Out And G1vt Esuma1e1
On lawn• Have All Equ lpmtnt
To Do Th• Job, eto!· 44t·0318
Aak For Norman, 81l·U8·3798

Alit For Dnn.

po~lon

lYIIilablo b -

g&lt;OUNO RollabilitatiOnl Skllod

ICF lacit/ty E-1011:0 ~~~­

r;~~wt will eor'llidtr ._ rigtt aan&lt;lllllte Mu1t ba Ml~ng lD work u

• ·••m rnembel' ..,.., anexcel.-tt

staff of lherapisrs and nurses N1
have a hiSrory or 5 years 'A'ithOut
any regulartry cornpianca •asues E•ceitern benefit pad&lt;ogo.

Ro .. ~ ahitts requited. Cell e1•
li92-eeo&amp; or .end "''""'" to
RocksP&lt;inos RohObiH•non ~
10( 36759 Rocksp&lt;~ngt Rd .. flo.
..; ..meroy, OH -45769. EOE

Seftrny Guards- must be able m
-Nork any shift tncludlng wet·

1.

kends Must have clean pallc1
record, good work history, rtllabte
tr ansportati on. drivers lietl'lh
~Ad

l'nlteolllonol Tree Setviu, SlUmp

Rtmcwal, F'•• Eatlmate•l In·

ou,.-. Bi-n. O!lio 014· 388·
-.114-367-7010

S And S Horne Improvement W•ll
Do Remodeling And New Con
Slrucuon No Job Too B•g Or Too
Small! Free Estimates• 614 ·446 ·
2450 Ask F01 Joe Saundor•

Su r

alit~

Nururv

School

Chuo~. .re M·F eam-5 30pm A$es

2-K , Voung School Age Duttng
Summet. 3 Days per Week Utnl
mum614-·3657.

Will do all in1ertor and ex1er1or
patn1, plus 10me carpenter work.
FfM EtL can 014-4411·2837

home phone . Pay atartl It W1H lit and care for elderly, dav
S4116 per hour. 32· 40 hours per or nighr, hou1ecleanlng also,
1

week Can 814 -669-2874 Mon·

day- Friday, 8am-4pm for appointmem

~ ~~ Local Firm Seeking Part
r me On Call Cteantng Peraons
Send Resume To SCCS PO Box
538 Kerr, OH 45643

have expemmce and CPR tra•n·
•ng. SSitw . 614 992 4065
Would Llke Td Babys11 Infant To
Any Aue, large Playground Releronces, 614·245-5867

'\~D6 Task Force Is Seeking A

Social Worker ILSWI
To Serve As Case Manager For

lr cense~

The HIV Rural Consortium Of
Southeastern Ohto This 11 A Full

r 1me Posmon Funded By The
Oh•o Department Of Health The
Sll.HOSsful Ca ndtdate Will Be
I! SW Certtf!ed In Ohto And Will
Have A M.n tmum 01 Two Years
Proless•onal Expe r1ence. Expen·
f! nce In Work1ng W1th Persons
t11 fected W1th HIV Ia H1ghly De·
!! 1rable Thls Posilt.on 1n11olves
Modera te Tra'llel Starltng Date Is
Jul)' 1 1996 Salary Is In The Mid
20 s W• ttt Excellent Fringe Ben·
efts A letter 01 Interest And
Curr ent Resume Should Be Ot·
reeled To
Cast Manager
Search Athens AIDS Task
Force , 18 North College Street,
Athens OH 45701 Applications
W1ll Be Aece•ved Unttl June 14,
1996 The Athens AIDS Task
Force Is An Equal Opporlun•ty
Employer
Soc1al Wor~ms , Now H1rtng $23 I
dr / Benel•ts On The Job Tramng To Ap ply In Your Area. 1·800·
J396150
Some one to help care for elderly
ady eV'8nmgs, must be dependollie 304 1!95-3403
Someo ne fo r general matne nanc8"' yard work , palnltng,
small odd JObs, etc Call 304-882·
2022
The Soulhern .Local School Dts-.
tncl has Jhe following coaching
po!ltttonA available for the 199897 sch ool year asSistant h1gh
schOol foolba ll, JuniOr ht.gh football,
tumor h•gh volleyball , junior high
boy's basketball, JUnior l'ltgh g~rl's
basketball and JUntor htgh cheer
leadmg adviSor. All applicants
must possess or obtatn a sporrs
med•cme cen•hcate and a CPR
catd Please send tnqu•nes to Ur
James Lawrence, Supermtendenl,
Sou thern local SchOols, Boll •176,
R~c •n e , Oh10 4577t SLSD ts an
Equal Opporrur1ty Employer.

yvanted Full· Time Meehantc For
Autos &amp; Trucks, Must Have Own
Tools, Be Rehable &amp; Honest, Ref·
erences Required, Staft lmmedi!Hely 814 -446 4514 Monday
T.n::-'.,
" -oF':::-'da::::y'-8-:·::-5-.,----...,-,- l
:::
WANT'EO ParHtme pOSitiOn
avatlable at a communltv group
home lor persona w11h MRIOD 1n
Gallipolis Hours· 1t pm -8 30am
Fn 7pm 9am, Sat. 2 hour weeklv
stall meeting (currently 9·1 1am,
Tl'lu rs). or as otherwtse sched
uled H•gh school degree, val •d
Ort'ller s ltce nlf,e , three years ' h
censed dr~vlng e~epeflenc&amp; and a
good dn11tng record requtred Sal·
ar y $5 OO thr to start Tra 1nmg
prO'IIIded Vacat•on and s•ck; bme
oenelus Send resume to PO 8o•
60 4, Jack son, Oh 45840 , Ann.
Cectha OelldJ1ne for apphcants 61
5196 Equal Opportuntv Employet'.

i'
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I

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE !
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bu s•
ness Will'\ people yo u know, and
NOT to send money through !he
mall unli t you have •nves11gated
the oftenng.

Campgrounds for sate on nver,
wtll finance, 614·949-2526 -

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is suiJieelto
the Federal Fair Hooslng Act
or 1968 which makas It Illegal
to advertise "any pteference,
ltmllatlon or cllscrlninatton
basad on race. cotot, religion,
sex familial status or natiOnal
or1gln, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
ftrili1atlon ol dtscllmlnallon •
This newspapet .Oil rot
knowllngly accepl
adYedlsements tor real esrate
which Cs In violation ol tne law
OUr readeiS e"' horeby
lnlomoed that all dwellings
a~verUsed In lhfs newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

310

I'

Wa n ted S1tter In My Home 12
Mlles l rom Galhpohs 50 HQurs
Per W_.k May Bnng ( 1) Child Of
Your Own Must Be Dependable
Wllh ~ To 4 Ch•ldren Mall Apph ·
catton r'To 2775 State Route ut,
Gailtpol;~ OH 45831

170 ' Miscellaneous
Campbe111 clean •no servtces
Co melc:ia(· A~a•dent •al low Rates
Pager , • 1 800 -724 3199 then
556· 1807 Mon-Sat8am to 9pm

I'

I

l

Used A 40 011ch Wnch Trencher
Call 6tH94-7842.

180 · Wanted To

'l

Body WOrk on cars &amp; trucks, rea·
sonable rates, minor mechanical
repan, oil change&amp;. call 814·742·
2935 atk Ia&lt; Kip. Ru~and

l

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Do

Couple- w11l do lawn ma1menance,
lor further tn formalton call 014·
992 2085

(

Dons Lawn Care Restdent tl l,
Cnurches,
Cemetanes. Au
sonab'e Ra18s l 614·379·2847

'

a

''

1 Bedroom. downs•lrs aparun.nt
tn Galipolil. latge livtng, Family/
Ol ntng and Kitchen 11111, 1110
hot Utilly Room 1325/month, In·
cludtl Wlltr. Deposit and references requred 814-446-3903

limned Offer! tQ98 doublewtde
3bt, 2bath , 11799 do10n, 12751
monrh Free delivery &amp; se tup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nttro
IW 30&lt;· 755·5885

New Haven, tbedroom , unlurnlsl'led apt ,does have stove, relflg, washer I dryer. Dtpotll &amp;

refefencea.

~

882·2566

New 14' wide 2bedroom, 1bath,
S6QQtdown, l139tmo Free sklft·
ong Call 1-i00-691-117n.

1 BA Apartment Unlurrushed Wf
S!ove tRelngl'rate. No Petll
$195 00 Waler Included $100 00
0epoSIL814 446 3817

N&lt;ow Bank

2 bedroom apar1ment, $350 per

1n warranty

Rapo~ Only 4
334 · 755-710~ .

ieh S11t1

Pnce Buster. 1998 3bedroom
$825 down. 1159/mo. Free del111·
ery &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Homot, Nouo WV 304·755- 5885
SaveSt 1896 double Wide repo
3bedroom, 2bath. W• ll dehver I
se"p on ~our lot 304 755-5566
Three bedroom 1974 mobile
home 12x70 $1900 , 614 949
2526

330

Farms for Sale

Lots

&amp; Acreage

25 Acres, Hannan Trace School
Dts!rtcl, Small Tobacco Allotment .
Mu'l8ral R1gh ts, 814·256·161 1

month. $200 depoSI~ utUotteo patd.

no pets, 61~992·Sn4
2bdrm apt1., total eleelnc, IP·
pllances lurntshed, laundry room
fac!lttles, dose 10 school In town.
Appl lcauons available at· V•llage
Green Apts. 149 or call 814-992-

3711 EOH

35 West 2 Bedroom Bnck Town houses 1261 Jackson P1ke, Gal·
ltpo l• s Across From Cmema .
S295fMo + Oepoa•t, Rental lnlor·
mal•on . 614 -446 0006, Ot Wrne,
PO Box 994, Ga lltpoht OH
45631
458 1f2 Second A'llenue, Upsualrs, Furn•shed, Newfy Decorated, LIVIng Room, Kitchen. 1 Bedroom, Bath, large Screened
Porch, Total Elec:tnc, $235JMo •
Oepos11 , Reference Requ~red ,
6 14· oM6-2581 Between 5 PM ·9
P.M

S Acres located Satlor Road .
South Of Vmton $10,500, 614 Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
$295/Mo Ut•hlles Pa1 d, 920 fourth
388 8521
Bowens Estale Ashton W'll 2· 112
acres· city waterlcab let sepi1CI
.30x40 garage 304-5,76 9907
BRUNER LAND
614 775-9173
Me1gs County· 20 Minutes SE 01
Athens, Near Albany, Country
LMng On 10+ Acres Wtth Stream
S8,500 . Great Hunttng On 11+
Acres W11h Woods + S!ream
$9,000, 5 Acre BU1 Id1ng S1te
$6,500
Gall•a County Go1ng Gotng Two
Miles Out Ne1ghborhood Rd 22
Co untry Acres W11 n Pond
$26 ,000 , 9 Ac:res $ 14 500 tO
Acr es S 17 000, Near Locks &amp;
Dam, 3 Mtles Out Teens Run Ad
5 Acres $12,000 7-t Acres Wllh
Pond $ 12,000, N•ce Level 8 Acr
es $n ,900
Call for Maps • Owner F1nanc1ng
Information 10% Off Cash Purchases.
Butldlng lots lor sale on M1dway
Or 1n New Ha'llen For mlo call
:134 882 2904
Bu1ld1ng s1tes •n Syracuse, three
ditferem tots. call614 992-2282
lots lor rent Now tak •ng appt1ca·
!Ions. Coumry lane Mob•le Home
Park, Gall1pohs Ferrv Wv 304 ·
675 5421

REAL ESTATE
Homes for sale

Scentc Valley, Apple Grove ,
beauttful 2ac lot&amp;, pubhc water.
Clyde Bowen Jr 304· 5 76·2336

1 112 s10ry, 4 br . lr , cfr , !r, base

RENTALS

mont &amp; sun porch S36,000 cau
6 14·992·4480

Avenue Galllpalts. 614·446-3844,
A!let 7 P.M

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ES TATES, 52 Westwood Dr1ve
!rom $244 to S315 Walk to snap
&amp; m0\118$ Call 614·4"8·2568
Equal Hoos•ng Opporrurvty
Extra ntce one bedroom furlllshod
apartment In Pt. Pleasant, no pets
Phone 304-1175-1386
Furmshed 3 Room! I Bath, Up·
ata~rs, Ulihlles Furntshed Clean
No Pets, Relerence, Depostt Re
Qutrod 614 446- 1519
Furn1shed Apartmenl 3 Room s &amp;
Bath, AU Utilil•es Paid, Downstans
919 Second A'llenue , S2e5tMo
6 14·446-3945
Furmahed Ell . All Uulmes pd
Share bath $145 Month, 919 2nd
A'lle. 61 4 -446 - ~45
Furmshed Elflctenoy 2 Rooms
Share Bath, $195/Mo. Uuhues
Patd, 607 Second Avenue Galh·
pohs, 614·446-44 16 After 7 P.M
Gracious l1111ng 1 and 2 bed room
apartments •I \11llage Manor and
R1ve rs1de Apartmen ts m M1ddle·
por t From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Houstng Oppor·
tun•es
•
Mtdd!eporl 1 &amp; 2 bedr oo m, lur·
n•shed apts Also 2 room elf1clen
cy Depos11 I relerenc:es re qutrad 304-882-2566
Moderen One Bedr oom Apart ·
mont 814--446 0390
N1ce One BR
Unfurmshed
Aparlment Range &amp; Refr~g provided

Prtvate Parking Water &amp; Garbage Pa1d Oepoa•t requ ~re d
(61 4) 446-4345 attar 5 PM
N1ce two bedroom !_Partment m
Pome..oy, no pets 61 4 992 5858

2 BR, 1 Bath, N1ce Level lot

Now accep!lng apphcahons fo r
one bedroom apartments Apph
cauon5 can be ptcked up a1 Po
meroy Chfl Apa r tments Offi ce.
614-992-7772

Newly Rremodlec:l Fatrland or
Galha Countv Schools Call lor
Details (614) 256-1095

One bedr oom lurn•shed apart
mem, 614 992·2178

1 bedroom conage Jetter son
Ave, $45,COO 304-675·7482

2·3 bedroom house, SOx tOO lo t,
located 1n Syracuse appliances
tncluded, call 614·992·5767 alter
4pm
2 3 bedrooms. b11ck, DR , new
wmdows carpet complete new
kttchen and bath. garage lu II
basemen• 614·992 6389

Oountr~ selling, 4 bedroom , 2
balh, hvmg room, eat·ln kitchen,
fam•ty room, walk 1n closetS, 2 car
garage, Iacre 30 4 ·882·3326 af
ter 6pm.
Four bedroom, rwo bath home m
Syracuse, 14x36 family room, one
car garage, equ1pped kitchen
$90.000
614 992:-~2

ceq.

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
.,
3 Bedroom Home Excellent Con·
dillon, New V1 nyl Std1ng, Central
A~t, Carporl Double Garage Whh
New Apanmefn Above 614 446
1774 Home, 6 14 ·446·0374 Work
Fof Mark Palmer
New Homes For Sale Construe ·
lion Near Complet•on 3997 Bula·
vtlle Ptke Call614 -379 2749
One bedroom nome 10 Pomeroy
W1ll sell on land contract 6 14
992·5858

41 0 Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom. $175mo Need relerences &amp; depos11 Call 304 075t429 aher 4:00pm
2 bedroom tn .,.artlord $225mo
No pel! 304·882·2106 or 304 ·
675-3100, after 4pm

3 bedroom 1n Hartlord $350mo
No pets Call 304 882 2016 or
304-675-3100
3bedroom, stove. relngerator 7th
S1 , New Ha'llen S295tmo pl us
deposll 304 · 773 9 1 71 lea\le
message
House near langsville, b1g ~ard,
garden space, approved relerenc:es and deposit req'uued,
s22s'""'. 614·992 n8s
Ntce three bedroom home In Pl.
Pleasant, no pets, 814 992·5858
House ku renr m Rutland, no pall,
deposit and references requtred ,
call614- 742·268t
O("'q bedroom house in Pomeroy,
$225/mo plus ut•llttes, $100 de·
pool~ 814·992·2009 •d noon. 304773·5707 allet

One bedroom, furnished. all ullh·
11es, $250 per month plus depos1t
614·949·2526
Takmg Appl 1ca t•ons 2 Bedroom
Apartment R10 Grande New Ca r
pet All Uttllt1es Pa1d S295tMo
Oeposo~ 614·3118-9946
Twm RIVers Tower, now accepttng
appltcahOns lor tbr HUD substd
•ze d apt lor elderly and hand 1
capped EOH 304-675·6679

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rent · week or monm
Starnng at $1 20/mo Gatha Hotel
6t ...46-9580

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Sle&amp;p•ng rooms wllh cooktng
Also tra•ler space on r~'ller Al l
J'IOOk ups Call after 2 CO D m
304-773 5651 , Mason

5091

460

Three bedroom home m country,
Whiles H111 Ad. Rutland, one bath,
•n-ground pool, 61 4 -992·5067

2 Bedroom Tra1 ler In Small Trailer
Park. No Pats And Oepo&amp;tt &amp; Rei·
erence Requ~red , 6t4·446· 1104

Bus•ness localton , 000 Sq Ft
Large Parking, SA 141 Centenary
A.rea, 614 256 6336 After 6 P.M

Three bedroom home wilh car·
port, coftlge and outbJtkting m Pl.
Ple1aant. Will aell on land contrac~ 814·992·5858.

2bedroom, unfurnished, clean,
ntca New porch, hke new carpet,
nice yard. near school. 304·882·

Mobile home 101 tor rent. $100/frO
304· 578·2883

Three bedroom. bath, liVIng room,

Furnished , prlvale fol , porch,
vard, good clean condition ; no
pets. $275 w•th wa1er, 304 -8822468 anyllme

320

Mobile Homes

General Matntenance, Pamung
Yard Work W1 ndow1 Waahtd
Guttera Cleaned llghl Hauling, J975 Feslt\lal 1•r70 3 bedroom,
Comm.rica j, Res idential, Steve: 2 bath, $6,500 304· 675·2928 or
4 75
6 t4·388-0429
I . .:_30.:__.a_
te78 Dixit, :1 bodtOom, now cor,
Georgea Portable S.wmlll, don't pet,'.....,. S6,295 30 75houl your log&amp; 10 tile mti jutt oaQ
~~"""
5708
30H75-1 DS7.

_·_2382._,----,..-o.e

2389.

Tratlet tor rent In Gllllpollt area
614·«6·8849.
Two and three bedroom mobile
homes, tlarttng at $240· $300,
aewer, warer and, trill\ included,
8t4·882·2t07.
Two bedroom mobile ha'me In
country, Gapo1il and referanc:es
requ;,.d, 81-;.2833,

'

Refrigerator, W•a her, Dryer, 30"
E l ectr~c Stov•. 30" Gu Stove,
Color tV $50 Each, U1crowave
$40, Alf Conditioners, 614· 258·
1238
:-:--:-:-:-:---::-:--::--·I
Used End Tables Collee Tables,
Apt S•ze Relrtgerator, D•nettes,
Couches 130 Bulav lle Ptke, Gatllpohs 614446·4782.

wv

Space for Rent

Tratler Space For Rent On Ball
Run Roa&lt;l t1001Mo., References
Raqulred, 614-.U&amp;-4111 Daytime,
Or Evemngt, Bt ...~- 7157.

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

Goods
Apphancn
Reconditioned
Walhera, Oryeta. Ranges. Rt!rt·
grarors, 90 Day Gua,anteel
French City Mawrag , &amp;u ..ue .
7795.

·-=---'-----'--

~It ~dg

Sitf· 3th45"xll'. 1 · 15'x8"

Shd1no Door. 1 ·3' Man Door,
Patnled Sltal S1dmg, Gllvlluma
Steel Roo! S&amp;,444 Eracted Iron
HotM Bldtt 1-800-352·t045.

Pole Bu1ldtng, 30a48al c:tthng, 1·
3' entry door, 1· 1•xo aUdinQ door,
pamled rttel llc:ltt roo!, &amp; gul
lers, trecttd prlct $15800, Preci·
lion Past Freme Bldrt. Inc:, 814·
9Q2-6411 or t..S00.386-3028

Pets fOr Sale ·

560

-'----:-~~~-----·1 Groom Shop ·PI• GtOOmtng. Fea·
VrRAFURNITURE
1~rong Hydro B11h ' Julte Webb.
614·446· 3158
Oual•tv Household Fu(nttur&amp;And
Appllanc8'5. Great Deats On
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WH
And layaway Also Available.

ca~

&amp;14-.u&amp;-0231

Will board llarHI, 250actoo Ill

t9110 Dodo• Rom Von 8 · 250.
72,000 Mtln, 11.000. Con
Seen A1 GalltpoAs Dally TrtbU. :r•
825 Tnud Avenue , Gallipoltt

a· •

ride on.. t 1!0frnD. 304-115--5850.

TRAWiPOflTAT ION

710 Autos for

'84 Ford Tempo. 4 claOr automat' ltlt rtar tatl hght damagt,
,ooo
taoo 000. 814·
048·23t t dayo or 114·840·2044

mil••·

ovoningL
"110 Thun-d SC. two doot, 3 8
lnrt, V·l , tina modal turbo , PS.
PB, AC , 5 speed, power teall
and locka, • Grtat
15200
~ . , lt4-lle2- 7478 Ot 014· 048·
2079

car:

~~~IS~6;_1~4~•.:•6:..7:..«~4~------·I0095

530
Antiques
AKC Getmon Shephttd pups.
~~~~~~~~~~-~-4_-11_75-_6_~-'----------1957 Ford '11·8 auto. 4 dr , 70 000

L1nco1n 4 ,000 Actual MiJes
White, t.taroon tnt ste· Tom
Kttsel,et4-448-nl7
1978 l t?&lt;Oin Matk 5, 480 eng,

76 ,000 actual m111s, black on
black. 110f11911 kopt dM March ol 85
...000 firm. 304-773-11110
te82 Cotvette, Sharp, U,SOO .
1950 Ford looka Good $2,000,
14·388-802ll.

~

.,

1987 KX80 Ott! Bille S300 e•.t
379-2101

WHO IN

19,1 Harl" SI!Qtlltor 1200 Ltk•;
New, Alktng $1! ,800, 814 -448;.
9355 Aller • P.M.
·
t

ARE YOU?

*

11195 Soltait Harl•y Oavtdton,$
~ ,000 Milea, Some- Exlras,4
' :
$18,500, 814·440.38113.

Buv or sell Rtvenne Ant 1ques, AKC m•m Pinschers, two lemales,
1124 E Matn Street. on At 124, S300 each, one male, S250 ready
Pomeroy Hours M T
10 00 June 15, accepung deposlls

1988 lmcoln Conttnentat 4 Door
GoOCI COnditiOn Runs good$1500

750

s

Merchandise
12 5 HP Craf tsman 38~ lawn trac·
lor hke new $450.614 992 3044
14 HP Bolens Aldtng Tractor, E•·
tra Deck &amp; Snow Blade $600 6
An11que Oak Cha1rs. $150 614·
245 9496
2 Wee d ea ters cha1n saw. boa I
motor, water pump e~~:erc 1se b•ke
adult po1ty cha1r, patnt sprayer
304 773 5360

3 Pc Couch, love!;eat &amp; Cha1r 2
Small Chatrs &amp; loveseat, All In
Very Good Cond111on
3437

6 14·446 ·

AKC Regiotered Chthuahua, lo·
male, apple head 304-1175-3695
AKC
Registered
German
Shephard pups, 3mos old 304,
675-2753.
AKC Reo• s tered Maltese Pup·
p1es, Beaut tlul While Coals,
Makes Good Companions Fo,
The Young And The Old! 814446·0857.
AKC Reg111ered Pomaran1an
Puppy, UKC Regillered "PR"
Amencan E1k1mo, Chow Chow,
loll Papeta, Cocka•el, Grey And
While Starting To Talk 814·448·

6301

8 Foot Deli Case, st• Donu t
Case Two 6 Foo t Wooo Culling
Tab{es, A large Bulcher Block. 4'
Relt~gerated Frozen Cooler Other
M•sc Equ1pmenf. 6 t4 446 -617-4
Complete Babv Bed W1th 8edd1ng
$60,614-4410234
.
Blue Camper Topper For Truck,
FttS 150, 614·24S.5n3
Boots By Redw 1ng Ch1ppewa
Tony Lal)"'a, Guaranteed lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe, Gallipolis
Concrete I Plast•c SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpn ses, Jackson OH
1·800·537-9526
Couch , C ha ~r 2 Ch es t Drawers
Dresser, Box Spnngs, Mattress,
Small Couch Chatr Anttque P•a·
no, 614·446·3224

AKC Rott Wellera, TaUt Docked,

l.lew Claws Removed. 111 Sholl &amp;
Wormed, Have PBrentt On Premtses $300 Fltm ot•·388-9220.
AKC Rotwetler Pupp!&amp;S, $300 fe·
male $350 Male. Sholl, Wormed,
Ta•ls DoCked, Depos11. W111 Hold,
614 379 2687
Beagle pupp1es for sale, $20ea

304 576·4 t09
Beautiful AKC Reg Botton Tem·
er Puppies. Excellenl Bloodltna
Wtll Ba Ready To Go in 3 W..ks,
Shots &amp; Wormed, Now Taking
OepoSII, Asking $300 Each. 1 Fe·
male, 2 MB181, 814·446-8270
Busmess For Sele: Pet Shop,
Fuly Equtpped. Stocked, Grea1
localton, SeriOus lnqumtt Only,
614·441 0710, 614-446·7507

t987 Cadillac Ctmmaron, 8 ely ,
tun roof, very good conc:litton ,
82.000 rntlet, S3,ooo. o 1•·992·
3880
1987 Dodge Charger, 11100 080
61.·441.(1825.
1990 Ford T•mpo. 1988 Nissen
Sentra, 1990 Chevy Cav1her, All
Cara Equipped With AC , Au
lomallc Transmtlltons, Cooks
Mo101'1614·448.0103.
1988 Cutlau Catav. International
senes, good cona, must 1e11 304 ·
675· t970 altet 8.00pm Mon·Ftt
Anyltme Set.Sun
H~8D Bu1Ck L.eSabrt, excellent
runntng condtlton, V·6, PB, PS,
~. power WindoWS, 13800. 814·
949·2045 01 8t4·9&lt;;.2302.

Fle• Steel 3 Cushton Couch, Fte•
Steel Loveseat, Upught Sweeper
614 446 2857
Free Royal Oak membership call
614·992·3666
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa~red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron E"'ns 1 800·5.'l7·9526
lo is For · Sale Gravel H•ll Ce
metery Cheshtre, S200 per grave
•ncludmg Corner Stones and Per·
potuat Care 614 367·0214
Murray R•d•ng Lawn Mower. 8 HP
SIOO Al so 3 1f2 HP Self Pro
pelled Mower SSO 614 446 9780
New Gas Furnaces, New Gal 'llan

Fans,

Ret ngerators Stoves Washets
And Dryers. All Recond•t •oned
And Gauranteed l SlOO AM Up,
W1ll Deliver 61 4 669-6441
STOR AG E TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Upnghl, Ron Evans Enterpuses, '
Jack~n. Oh1o, 1 800-537·9528

WATER WELLS DRILLED
Fast R eas onable Service 014·
886·73t1
WHITES METAL DETECTORS
Ron At hson 121 0 Second Ave·
nue Galhool•s Oh•o 614·448

4336
Wo Uld like to buy used plastic
ladder for above ground pool.
614-992-5053 aner 5pm
Yo ung Ghl1 Bedroom Su ite Includes
..
11 Full S&lt;Ze Headboatd
2) Dol Dresser W•th M•rror.
31 Chost 01 D"'""s,
.S) Cabinet /Hutch
51 NoghltUmd .
All Wood, Excellent Q~ality ·
Must See To Apprac•atel Price·
St .OOO . 10 Spead Gl~t Sch.Onn
Blc~cte $35 Ant1qu• Oretser J
CheSI $200, 8t4·440-1423 Aflet
6 P:M Or Leave Message

Zap The Fatlll Loae Up To 301
lba , 30 Day Money Back Gu1111n•
ree l 1DO% Na tural, Dr Recommendec:l No StarYa!lont Alh
About Freebies.' 81 • ·•46· t604.

Ba!!\ boal. ttatlet. 40hp nlotot,;
lt,!oW ~·571l · 2683
~

· ~~

Pontoon boat wwlh tralttJ, camplt' ~
ond dock, celt 6t4-9&lt;;.2111 .
'

760

Auto Parts &amp;

.}

Accessories

,..,

~
1!18'

Budget Transnn11ons. Used tRat
bu •l t, All ,T~pes , Access•ble
Over 10,000 TransrTHSS•on Also 1
Overhual Klls.l14 2A5 5677
• •

'J1i

7002

I

TOO

790

Campers

&amp;

1'

~

Motor Homes

MUG~

INPUT '
~~
MARS MY . ""'
i
tit&lt;MIYTi
,!.
tiAG·A·BIT.
I

/

I

1990 Hyunda1 Excel GLS. amJim
casaene • .air, power moonroot.
alarm system , 60,000 m1les.
$3100. 614·742·2125

1992 Chevy Z·34 Red, loaded.
low Mtleage, Garage Kept, 814

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

New gas tanMa , one ton true~:
'Nheels, radtaiOrs. floor mats. etc
1
0 &amp; R ..\uto. Ripley. WV 304·372' •
3933 Of 1-800 273-9329

t979 Dodge 23' Motor Hom~
SeU Conta1oed...Gas...Stav.e, N•w..i!
Fudge, 440 E ng1ne, Alf $6,50Q': 'JI..
614 245-9460
'\

1991 Pontiac Sunb~rd LE sun
chaser package, tow m11eage, ac,
casaeue. $5.500 304 -682 3399
ewr'tlflgl.

..

At

--------~----~--~·

1971 Layton self conta • ne~
sto'lle, relngator. air conditioner, ~
TV an1enna , canopy, real good 'I
cond $1 200 304·675-6418
~

4~

=~:~r~:~e~o~~ ~~e t~~e n~x~~c~:!

eame a low heart toward the dummy,
West ducking in case her partner had
lhe singleton ace.
East put up her ace on the second
~play and didn't lind the diamond
switch. Instead, she returned a club.
Me~ won with dummy's ace. played a
h~rt to her ace and led spades Crom
the top. She lost only four tricks: one
spade, two hearts and one diamond.
Plus 140 turned oul to be wwlh nine
matclqioints out or 12. This was slight·
ly surprising as 10 tricks were avail·
able in spades with a winning gues6 in
trumps. I wonder if everyone m
spades took the heart finesse (and so
lost two heart tricks) instead or leading twice toward dummy's honors
(which tsthe right play).

•
r,
II:

•

I
I

1

0

.,

1985 Bona" Fokt Down Camper ~~
Gooc:l Condmon, S 1 500 614 258 :'
1142
1, 11

-:-:~~~--~-=-~~~
··
1&amp;93 Dutchman 32 F1 5th Wheel. I

Used Once, T.V, VCR Combo, 24 ;:
Ft Screened Room, Sl8reo, 24 Ft ,,
Awnmg, Mtcrowave, Colleemaker, \'
614 441-1358
I'

''

SERVICES
~~-~-----

81 o

Horne

'·
~
'·

Peacocks 3 pa.tr, $100 per pa~r
614·379 2701
Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Stud Serv1ce Pupptes. Groommg,
Buy Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Paymen ts Welcome, 614-388-

0429
Reg1ated Female Boxer One I'
old Ears, Tatl, F1xed. All Shott.
(614) 2566155
RegiSiered Atre~ale pupp1a1 8
wks otd, shots and warmed $200
call 814-258-t793.
Reg1srered Mtn1ature Poodle,
black, 1yr old, neutet'ed, all shots
$100 304·576·2444
Th1s Week's Spectal Poodles,
Huslu es , German Shepherds.
Chows. Puppy Palace 014·388·
0429

580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
S ~rawberr1ea

Ta~lar'a

Berry
Patch. Open Mon. Wed, Fri. 9·8:
Sat Till Noon, 014-245-11007
St,rtiwbemel, 752 Jaclilun P1ke,
Slat Bank On Old Rt 35,
614·..6.3496

a,.....

Sltawberto•t. Pick 'll&gt;ur Ownl Coli
Claude Winlets, 81&lt;1-2,5-512t
Swoet po1010 J&gt;antll, call6t4·742·
2773

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm

Equipment

1995 Ponuac Gfand Am 3,000
Mitt; B1•....a.6238

UH9 Lmcoln Mark Only Made
SOO. Call Sertout Vtry Good

Cortd, 01 ... 48-3437
86 Oldt 442 T· Topt Grey Stiver
ltke New· One Ownet 20 200
Mtles Full Power, Garage Kept f
Coverad (61&lt;/4~ 0109
88 Plymouth Sundance AS. aulD,
"''· 814 992.5085
90 N1ssan Stanll XE, a~r, cru111,
$4700. 614-992·3395
94 Chevrolet Ca11aher Turquo1se,
2 dt, autp. atr, sttreo cassette.
anlt·IOCk tHakea POL. hew 11rea,
43,735 mtles. Exc: 'i':ond. S6795
814·379·2967
loans Deater w1ll arrange fi.
nancing even II you hav.e been
turned down elsewhere Upton
Equ.pment Uted Car, 304·458-

1069.

•

720 Tl'ucks

tor

Sale

"71 Fotd F250 4WD. $1200, 614
742 , 100

'89 F·250, automatiC, slid•ng Wlild·
t¥W 1n back, 300 6 cyl . excellent

8'•10' TriA1ie Ttailor $1,250; 014·
245-11441 8 A.M. To 10 P.M.

cond•t•on, great wo,k uuck, f1ttl
S3850 takes 11 home, 614 ·9•9·
2311 days

Manure Spreader t150 , Disc:
P1ow S100, 614-379·2720 AFTER
&amp;P.M.

1888 GMC 350 Small Block
s1,100 teeo F·t50 S1,000 014·
245-5812

Sttaga Wagon, 11fl tt ~d•ln 3
meter. Rool t3ood 114-245·5103
Altizer Fann Euiplmlnt 1

te79
t 10n llat bod kuck,
mtkll 304 875-7071

Squate baiera. hay ,.k••·t•oo
up. MOWirl, hayblndt, S1400 UJI,
dis~a. plows &amp; com
cu~
tiplckeu, cultivator~, od'ler
B(luipmenl. Howe'a Farm Machinery, Jackson: OH 014-2118-5144.
'
'

plan*'

630

Uvestoek

Chlckont far oalo· all typeo 01
ra.- br. .d Bantamo and hnvy
b&lt;Hd chicken&amp;. Hatclled 3/4/Ve,
have bttn vacclnaltd, would
make ooo&lt;l 4-H Of folr PtOI..tt,
114-1102...11211.
'

i:old

1988 Chevy 112 Ton

22 , _

lltOMNtll

a

:M Map wttllln

II

13 Pert oiiiSVP
14 IJaed a llenQII

IIIIIP

=~---=~
W'W.
bini
33 Fol31

(al.)

-

•

....,._

DOWN

34Faltkw..ra

1 Aaglon

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-llllfll.. .r--.-0-P
..- ........ _

by
Ceiol&gt;tlly Cl&gt;ltefctyp!Oflll'lll ...

Lull C.mpoa

EICI1-nll1o_o_loo_
Z X K

'IVHEZ

IIEWWKMM

HCAG

OFHVAKI

Z XI Z

PM

,.

PZ

...... ,

YPZX

UHKII
r

ZKI WX

CHZ
YPZX

0

XH Y

HE

liPAEFK . '

ZH

UK

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IA

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AIIIHFUI .

"
urges in human beings: food ,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION . "There are lhree pnmal
and r8\\'nllng someone else's play. " - Romulus Linney

ae•.

,

'

'::~:t:~,. S©1'.~lA-~£~s·

- - - - - - - - ldilod ~y CLAY I. POLlAII

r

••••
IAMI

.-

0

Rearrange Jeffers of the
four Krambltd words be·
low to form four words

"

'

-'

G,AHMOE

I I I II I

'

v'

'

TAMU0

-

... ..
• r

GNR UW
r
,~

I I
•

1-.::

Students were discussing
the problems of the future .
" Don't worry about the future,.

• •.•

-

.Presentl'
•
Complete lhtt chuckle quol.d

.

.."' '

by ftlhng an the miAtng words
you develop fr0111 slep No. 3 btlow.

PRINT NUMBEREO lfTTERS IN

tft UNSCRAM&amp;I.E ABOVE LETTERS

V

I ,

the professor lectured," until

IHESE S9!/0RES
TO

Gff ANSWER

.

.

I IIIII'

.

'

SCRAM-UTS ANSWERS

0

..

vi
'

'

~

The Treosure You

.,.. ·e.

· •

' nd

Savlnrs You'll
In tile
C/oul(led Sec11on.

,.

Turban - Mumps· Com1c- Gentle - IMPORTANT

As a keynote speaker at a

college commencement

a

fjlmous author mused , "Today ' s troubles are caused by
people want1ng to be m~re !~PORT ANT than they are "

'

'

IMONDAY

~t

~~------------" ~

Cl C General Home Ma1r(,:~ :
llnence · Pamung, vtny l BtdlnQ.t· ~
carpentry, doors, Windows, bath~" '
mobile llama tepa• and mote F01• ~
lree esllmate call Cha~ 614-992· I

..o1:~

6323

ORVWALL
·Y~
Hang, finiSh, repatr •
f
Ceilings textured. plaster repa• , :
Call rom 304 ·675·4166 20 years exper~&amp;nce

Earl's Home Mam1enance. vm)it ..
Sldtng, roo11ng, extenor and 1ntert·
or pamung, power wash•ng. room
acrd•l•ons Free Esl•mates, 8t4:"7
'•
992·4232

.~

Ron·s TV Serv•ce, specJBhz•ng itf "'
Zemth also servtctng most otner
brands Houae calla. 1·800· 797·
0015.
~··570.2398

wv

Roof1ng &amp; guners complete ~
remodeling decks 1 sld•no, 3
years experlenc:e, B &amp; '8 Roolin
and Construction,
:992·2384
Of 1·800·689·3943

eu

Vtny! Wotkt Vinyl Sldong. ROoling,
27 Years Exp Frae Ett Spectal
tn BriCk Homot , 814·387·08t3.

=--=-~----.....:~ .
820 Plumbing &amp;

HHtlng

loW

v.e Englpt,

palch up a broken "romance? The AstraGraph Matchmaker can !)alp you under--------.:.....--~ stand whallo do to make 1he reiJ1IOnsltjp
work. Ma~ $2.75 to Matchmak•r. c/o thiS
newspaper, P 0 Bo• 1758, Murray Hill
Stalkln, New York: NY 10156.
'
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Someone
you mel r-ntly could bring you good
luck today. He or she wtll know how to
get things done and will want to help you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Trying to do
•
things 1hl1 Will benefrt others wiU help you
to achieve your goals today Your slogan
lhquld be "winner helps all," not "winner
lakH'all"
'
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Todlty you
should par11clpale In a vigorous activity
Tueedey, June
.1998
which will alimulela your mind aa well u
Some of lha fbrtunele lhinga.thal rnighl your body. A competitive, social spor1
haPPen to you tn _lhe year aheed will be would be perfect.
initialed by doaret not talker• When
UIIIA (tept. 23.ocl. 23) A situation that
1omttng a~. make eure to Hnd peo- might requtra you 10 niak8 adjuslmanta
may transpire loday. The changea wHI
pllt who can~-"'·
Qf!IIINI (llay lii·June 20) You can
bring you good lUCk, 80 don't .;,
acltla'+'8 JUCCNI ,and periOnll grat!f!ca· 1he tide.
lion
H
your loved
SCORPIO (Oct. 24•NO'I. 22) Eo/tn
1hotql
you~ mate may be
imlglne·
- · Do not
appliuN: 11y to ldcua
Cln par11onal achlavemenll. l;rytng to
tlve than yo~ todtly, you will have lha

ASTRO•ORAPH ·

·•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

t·

1989 Niasan Truck AIC Topper.
48K Mtlll, Runs Grea11 eu 4483200Eventnga.•
t 888 Slvierada, ext Clb, lots of
tlltiS. like new 301·576·2383

lechntcal ability to carry out the plan
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Condillon&amp; Cor parsonal gatn look encouragIng today. Colleagues woll benefrt as well,
bul you will reap the highest profrts
CAPRICORN (0.0. 22·Jan. 19) If you
show leadership qualltes today, you , will
be both effecttve and comfortable. Coworkers will appreciate your style .and
energy.
AQUARIUS (J8n. »Feb. 19) Today you
mtght have to make il small sacrifiCe in
dlder to help EOme&lt;HI8 you lOve. To your
credit, you will be hap~ to asstsl lh(s

.
....-'-•PISCES (Fall.

(

~. .

feel

todaY

'

yo, Wattc io t.:'P
II'*

more

,,

\,

••

rl

'

»MMIrch 20) In order

lu~lllad loday: you will

to

neeq

aome
· lorm of coniiiUellve eoclal Involvement.
Try to spend lime with lrlenda you've

neglected lately.

'

~~~~~~ "'''·

AllES ~ 21-Aprll

19) Today, Y,OU
should give pllority to developments thai

inCOme or ~ to your

can lncreue '/fiA{t
11111011rcetl. You Wll

eQalnal monayllan...,..

&amp; 4·WDs

ttl• Chevrolet Orond•ill• Cuotomlzed Van, AMIFII DieHl, Oe·
rage Kept: Exe~lltnt' Condition,

114-3,111-21155.

11
Info
12 AIIOIIIInltllle

21 lllllllrle...

~

Appliance Parts And Serv•ce AU i
Name Brands OYer !5 YeatS Ex=' P
per~ence All Work Guarantee ~ -..
Frenc:h Cny Maytag. 61 4· 446,.
7795

6 14·•48·4225 Coil Aller 4 P.M

Vans

211 AcUir Minto

..,_II
Airline

L.-.1..-.l.-....1...-.1.---'-'--~

•to!ti• •hed

PS, P8, Air , Auto Trans $5,495,

730

10 A l

ME l A F E
,l--n,sr-r,-'
t,6,-,,-,,r--i1 0

::

-

.....

r--:-:-~~~~---. you 've learned to • - • - • - the

WATERPROOFING
'
Unconditional hle11me guarantee
local referenc&amp;s lurmshed Call
'•
(6141 446 ·0870 Ot (614)
0488 Rogers Waterproofing
1975
1995 Fotd Escort UC A.uto, A1r, l - - - - - - - - - - -&lt;. j
PW, 4 Cylinder, 4,500 M1les,
S9.250. 61,·367·7932
A&amp;J Home Improvements· room
adcli11ons, kiiChen and bath rei'I"'I-',; fi
"
1995 Geo Meuo 5spd. 3 dt. hlb
doling, ir\SIOII a(ld ttROit WindoW~
deck, P9rches and palios, rooll
.coupe, ale rad•o-cassene player
Whlle wtgra~ cloth &amp; v•nyl buclce! and Ylnyl 1ldlng, ln&amp;tall eaterlor
atuceo, stone and bridl., aamagH ~
seals, ••mpg, e.11cellent cond
s•dewalks. s[eps and tuck PQtnt· .~
S7 ~ 800 or rake over pavmenta of
1ng For est1mate c:all 6U ·99~
$180.50 pet month 3,8QOml. 304 882-2787
9979
'
.~
~ ~~

199-4 Plymouth Sundance Au ·
1oma11c, AC. PB, PS, Gtoot Gas
Mtteage, 21,000 M1les, $6,500,
01 ...~ -8158.

11 Lllle-

.

: :·

Improvements

Now taking depOIUI on AKC
white &amp; stlver aable German
Shepherds, ready lo go 6·12·96.
304·675 7495

17P111111Dft

Autfior l'ltlllllnt M Mop

•

-----.;.,.,==;----,.
BASEMENT

T~res. 4 New Firestone, 245 175 -

16 LT $60 Each, 814·388·0321

1987 weu.crafr 20ft 200hp, v-l~~
am fm can. as prap 304 ·812-~
28071
•
'
t.

1990 Grand Am 2 Door, loaded,
New T.rea, Runs Good, $2.600
Flrfl\614·245-5485

Crosley chest freezer, 14 8 cu ft
"good as new, $200 Bearcat 16
channel scanner $20 304 ·675 ·
37&lt;'19 al!et 3 30pm
Elec l fiC
Scooters
And
Wheelcha 1rs New fUSed. Van f
Car L•lt Installed. Statrgl•des, lth
Chatrs, Call For Brochure 614
446·7263

NO, TI-lE 616 QUESTION
IS, DOES TilE RAKE 60
INSIDE TilE BUNKER OR
O~TSIDE TilE SONKER?

~
)
, ~

for Sale

1986 Pon11ac Sunblfd New T~rea
&amp; E.11hauat And Many Other New
Pat !II $1,000, 114·2511-6109

The third stop on my tour of northern New South Wale6 was the
Lismore Bridge Club. Sadly, as we
were running a lillie late, we didn't
have lime to loo'l, for the koalas that
live in the area .
I was traveling with Meta Goodman,
a member or the Queensland Bridge
Association Committee, who bad done
the seheduiing Cor the tour.
We played in the Tuesday pair game
at the club. Mel4 got us a good result
on this board. I opened with a thin one
diamond . Then, after my one notrump, I think Meta should have rebid
two spades, not two hearts, the spade
suit being self-sufficient. (Three
spades i• an overbid.)
Against two hearts, West led her
rourlh·highest club. Arter finessing
dummy's queen successfully, Meta
played a sp1,de lo her queen (This
was a clever play, mating it harder Cor

.,t'

614 446·7598

304-6 75-8095

de·.;ltlr

17

By Phillip Alder

. ..

Two t995 300 but whaalers,
wt25 hr.• 4J~:2 w/20 nr , also 6JI~
11a11er, au excellent condu•an. se
all lor $8,500 , ca~ before noon,1
614·742-3153
~

M lscellaneou

.,

duplicate fray

Etl

1985 Dodge Afles K Car, one
owner, Welt taken cafe of $900
614·388-9809

540

I

~wde.)

Into the

111115 Honda 300 4 Trax 2 WO
Winch and Running Boards.
ceMent Cond1tion S37o0 14-44p

Motors

.......

Opening lead: • 4

THUNDER

1982 Suzuki GSXA IOOW lolt/J
Milt&amp;. Good Condition, Extra't(
304-1175-1782 LHVOII' •

&amp;

A 8 7 3

• 7 6

1986 Honda ATV 250. 21Nd. tUfll
:•

Boats

e3 2

• 5

pd, 11,500 304·458-1818

I

AJ I I

Vulnerable: Neither
DeaJer: North
Soulb
We.t North Ealt
I e
Pus
Pus !NT Pus
Pus Pau
Pus

e

w

e

•

tea• Honda Gotdwtng Aspen\
c:adt excellen t cond•uon, 35 OOQ
tTllel, . . ICftiOrltt, ~ $3500,'!'
814-992-5818
'
:

e

t

• J

South

1304

.

e o4

eKQI0782

actual m11es aual exhaust. 0 ,.g 1 AKC Golden Relnever, female , 10
na t. looks &amp; runs good, s 1,250, monlhs old, good wun Chtldren.
614 247 4292
61-4·992 7574

am to 6 00 p m, Sunday 1:00 to l-6~1:-:
4-~94~9--30-:-26--~~~~-6 00 P m 614-992 2526
AKC Reg •s tered Bo.11er Pupp1es

...

Honda. Shadow
12,000m l Exc cond 304 · 875r

Ja.•S

eA'I

• K 10 8 2
t K 10 2
• K 10 5 4

eso:

1083

'81 C.mo10, 350 ongono, ,,.ellen!
condition, rally ~els , 6t•·992·
111171 .

•J5

HAD A 13/G
·~·

;

Motorcycles

Weat

1HE eJ..H

:

740

s

tQt743
• A Q·l
Eu&amp;

'

10 Pol liD.)
11 Tlllllillli ...

15 ,.
,,
11._
.O 'Itlll'a

• QJ 5

!!f

Ohio.

tempe&lt;ament30&lt;-675-7495

Pomeran1an pupp1es $100ea
Vmyl 64 Pauern!l Large setec· 304-89§:.3926
110ns, Kttchen Pnnts tn Stock ~ar
pet $6 so and up Mollohan Car- AKC Boaar PUPPIII. 304·875-

• 4

1981 Ford Renger Ill •x•
R una ~
,...tnt,
~rMI, •··
.;a~ . .rp I •4
• ·000
r •
614·38S -11)28

s

2 AKC Coc:ker Spanttt1 ·1 bl •
pp.rU ferrw.le, t blw pam rrele, exc

-:-F~ree-:-Oet-:-~-01.:Y_Wi_•_lhi_·n_~...:_M_u..
_ _ l2

A &amp; S Furniture, Mason WV 304·
773 · 5341 New Srore Hours
Mon Fr 1
12n oon· 7pm
Sat
t 2noon- 5pm We Buy . Sell .
Trade Ask lor Rocky
..

Unfurnished 2 bedroom house,
"rttce &amp; clean. no 1n11de pell, d...
posit tequired, 614-992.JO!Io

420

::-:-:---'--'--'-----1

We~e Apartmems 506 Burdette
St ! bedroom No pets Furn•shed
&amp; .unlurn•shed 304 675 2072
eYenlngS.

private aellmg, $250/mo. , 6149115-•256

10 Pomeroy.

New. 3 pleoe tot, 810yhill b&lt;an·
glsn top tatllea, cost $600, $150
for lei, p1ne dry smk wfll•t• lop,
$100, 614-992-7574

Queen S1ze Orth opedic Maltress
Se t And Frame N811er Used Still
In PlaSitc Cosl $800 Sell $250,
614-775-2360

14x70 lratler, $325mo &amp; depoSit
A.va•lable June 1st. 304 ·675

family room, eat-in kitchen, ba s&amp;ment. 1\W car garage central heat
and a~r, 1M Ractne, 614·949-3034

U.,

..-..Lolt-

14 GNIIt.....

l1veatotk 5th Wh•• l
G 1
22'10"
2.000
v
Reck $225,
13 .F1 B uth
Mower $1 ,200. 814·843·

Suppllel

Block, brick, IIWir pipes, windowt, NnttiS. tiC Claude Wlntel'l,
:::::::::::~::7::7.....:-:::---- l Rto Gtando. OH Call 014· 245 ·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 5121.
Wuh.,s. drvers, refngeratofl , :-:---::---:--:-:--:--::-:ranges . S~aggs Apphanctt, 76 Metal Rooftng &amp; Stding Galvan
V1ne Street Call614 -446·7398 tied, GaMih.1me, and Pfunted AI·
1-800·499-3499
' IIZGf' Farm SuppheS81 ...245-51Q3

Very clean one bedro om fur
nlshed apartmenl in Mtddleporl
call 814·446-3091 preferably be
lore 10 30am or after 4.00pm

450

014·0•G· Il~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~

Counuy Futntru re 30•·"7"e820
u ~
At 2 N 6mdes. PI Pleasant WV
Tue&amp;-Sat9·6, Sun 11 ·5

~~ 3~~c; 7~~feeR 6Hp~d

Ctrcte Motel, Galllpol•s. OH 614
446 2501 or 614 367-061 2 Etfe
Ct&amp;ncy Rooms, Cable, A~r. Phone
Microwave &amp; RefngMator

Two bedroom house

~I·

8toyhill
wingW/liohlod
bad&lt; club
chltlt,
Rld tno
mowot, S400,
pto tlrHmitior
hult:h ~252e~·
:....-~-::-::---lop; tuiuqo..., ~. . I&gt;Hdbo~rd, 2 550
Bul~~t~ovt
mepi•4Wld llb6es. 814-985-3595
..........

Upstairs Furnished Ap artmen t 1
Bedroom, 614·446 4927 6 14
446 8519

S11 room house wtbath &amp; laundry,
b•g red barn on 2 112 acres
33821 New Lima Rd , Rutland, On ,
614 742 2757

for Sale

•

1D95 Clayton 14170 2 8~roomt,
2 Bathrooms, Garden Tub. All
New Appliances. Washer !Dryer,
Bu1h In Hutch All New Furnj turt l
Oak Porch, 61tO Bulldtng, 814 ·
.. Hl179Aher4

Parcels a'llailable to r new nome
construc tion on Rayburn Road 5
parcels rangmg from 1 84ac to
5 32ae Palled road, county water.
rea&amp;onable restncttons Map and
Info available on request No s•n·
gle w1de mqu1nes please 304 675-5253

Wam6d Part-ume posn•on ava11: ------~---­
able it a commumty group horne 3 BR, 2 bath ranch 2 car garage,
tor parsons w•lh MRJDD 1n Gatti· Spnng Valley area . close to Holz ·
pol•si Hours
11pm 830am , erHosp.tal614 -446-7940
lhurSj 10 30pm-8 30am, Fn, 7pmSam ,1 Sat : 2 hour weekiV start
meettng {cur rently 9·1tam.
Tnur~) . or as otherw•se sc hed ·
uled tftgh school degree valtd
d nve~s l•c.ense. three yearS II ·
censf¥j dm1ng expeflence and, a
good tfrtW'IQ record requ1red Saldf y ~5. 00/hr , to start Tra1n1 ng
prov•ded Vacation and SICk lime
benefus Send resume to P 0
Bo• q04. Jackson. OH 45640.
AT TN t Cecll ta Oeadhne for ap
phcants 6t5196 Equal Opportun•·
ty Em~er.

1 Bedroom New Extra N1ca l
Range Refr~~~erator furmshed ,
Gas Hut, $266/Mo , Plus UllliMs.
De!&gt;o~• Requited, 01 ... &lt;16--2957.

1895 Ux52, 2 bedroom , htat
pump Su 995 Call 304 675
2642 Of 304-675-7105,

2500-50.000
FAST APPROVAL
No M-1 Fee, One can
1·(800)829-71387

1 ond 2 bed&gt; oom opotlllllnl' ..,_
nllhed ond unturnoshed, toeunty
deposn raqulfed , no pttl, au 11112 2211

1es5 Schult, t4170, 2 bedtOOm,
excellent conditiOn. vinyl akirdng
Included, Will ren1 lot, prteed re·
du-ll 1.500, 3()4. n:J.&lt;I082.

350

210

.....

1\:~:~~
:~
tll"**i. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

34 acres, 2 br mobile home, 6 8
acres tillable. askmg, $34,000,
614·992 2622

FINANCIAL

SQf;IAL WORKER : The Athens

41

...

;--r:;-:-:--

TAUIIUI (Apjtl ao.ftlay 20) Your grul·
u l aal!ll today will be your 'ability lo

. , . OlhM. Do not IIIIOw ···~ 10
IUblll1u1e lor you.
·-

'•

,. ' ... ~"'

'

have good luclt 1lihen

,,

�••

.1 p

10 • The Dilly Sentinel

~y,June3,181l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

··~--------------~------~----~~------------------------------~----------------

.•·rttren most often .asked ·questi-ons.about Social Security
1!0 PrTI!R80H

I tll,l tltdr,.

111 , AINftl

IJ it IDY WOilder thll Soc:ill Securily piS questions from tbousands of
people every day? At present, more
tflan 141 million people work. in
~· SPcial Security~vmd employment
•·.llld another 43 million receive
·monthly benefits. Whit do people
· ·...nt to kn~w about Social·Security?
·The followmc are ten of the most fre.
quently asked questions and their
wwers:
:~. I. How do I change my address
'with Social Security?
A. Call Social Security (1-8007&gt;72-1213) to report your new address
· and new teleph~ number: Be s~
to have your Soc1al Secunty chum
.number handy when you call.
.
2. How much will my Social
Security benefit be when I retire?
'
A. It depends on your average

eaminp over your worting years. In
aeneral, Social Security benefits
replace about·42 pen:ent of the prior
earn!ngs of a person with average
eammgs. To find out how much your
benefits w1ll be, based on your earnings, call Social Security ( 1-800-7721213)andaskforaPersonaiEamings
and Benefit Esumate Statement. If
you use tbe Internet, you can get it
from hap://www.ssa.gov
3. ':'ow d~ I get my benefit check
deposited d1rectly mto my bank
account?
.
. .
A. Call Soc1al Secunty s toll-free
number (1-8()().'?72-1213) to arrange
the dtrect depos1t of y~ur benefit. A
teleserv1ce representatiVe _wtll ask
you for your Soctal Secunty cla1m
number and your account infonnation
about your financial institution(you'll
find that information on a check or
your bank statement).

4. Why is my neil!hbor's Social
Security benefit larger than mine? A.
Benefit computations are based on a
person's date of birth and complete
work history. It's unlikely that you
• and your neiJI!bor slwe the same
date of birth and the same work history.
s. How are my retirement benefits
figured?
A. Retirement benefits are calculated on total earnings during a lifetime of work under the Social Security system. Years of high earnings
will increase the amount of the ben·
efit, but no group of years counts
more than anOther group.
6. lf I lose my Social Security card
or Medicare cud, how dp 1 get 0
replacement card?
A. Call Social Security's toll-free
number (1~8()().772-1213) to ask for
an application to apply for a Social

·o hio Lottery
Giants best
Cincinnati in
NL action

the IRS. You IDlY have to pay income
A. If your pen5ion is from • job
Wl on your Social Security beneftls where you paid Socilll Security ~if you have Olher income. If you did es: it will not lffect your Social Sec»
not receive your copy call Social rity benefit. Pensions from work not
Security at 1-800772- j 213 for the covered by.Social Security, for exBminformation.
pie, the federal civil service or so~
9. How much can 1earn this year state or local government systems,
before my Social Security ben~fits probably will reduce~ ~mount of
are reduced' ·
your benefit For. an explanauon of
A. If you are .· nder 65 and still ho"': benefits may be affected, call
working you can earn up to S8,280 Soc1al Secunty and ask for the factin 1996, before your benefits are sheet A Pension From Work N~t C?"c
reduced. Your benefits will be ered by Soc1al Secunty (Pubhcauon
reduced $1 for each $2 you earn over No. 0510045). ·
$8,280. If you're age 6S.or older but
If you ha~e other questions abo~.t
not yet 70 s1 in benefits will be Soc1al Secunty coverage or benefits
deducted r~r each $3 you earn above for you and your family, call the toll·
SI2,SOO. Earnings in, or after, the f~ee number (1 -800772-1213). Our
month you reach age 70 will not hnesarebus1estearly ~nthe, weekan~
affect your Social Security benefits. early tn the month, so 1f your bus1ness
10. Will the retirement pension can wait, it's best to. call at other
from my job reduce the amount of times. Or use Social Security's Inter·
my Social Security benefit?
net site, http;//www.ssa.gov.
'

Security cud. Be sure to have your
Social Security number handy when
you call. The Internet address few
Social Security infonnation, including
replacement
cards,
is
http://www.ssa.gov
7. Where,is my local Social Secu·
rity office?
.
· A. You'll find Social Security
office addresses listed in the telephone directory under "U,S. ·Govemment" or "Social Security Admin·
istration." You also can call our toll·
free number to ask for the local
office's address.
8. How will I know what ben~ fits
to report on my income tax return?
.. A. The Social Security Benefit Statement (Fonn SSA-1099) that was
sent in January to all persons who
received benefits in 1995 shows.the
amount of benefits you received. A
copy of your SSAI099 also is sent to'

den, Renee Bailey, Ashley Baylor,
Madison King, Sarah Wilkes. A's and
B's Kelby Brown, Justin Coleman,
Shane Collins, Jarried Eskew, Kris
Ginther, Miranda Simpkins, Beth
Williams. Kimberly Taylor, Raymond Hess. Angela Graham, Kim·
. berly Miller, Amanda Maxwell.
Fourth Grade, all A's, Christina
Miller, Pamela Rupe. A;s and B's
Tyler Barnes, Nicole McDaniel, Gary
Moore, Matthew Salser, Miranda
Stewart, Corey Vaughan, Randy Hudson, Jamitha Willford, Carrie Walk-

Bartrum , Gary Hess, Keilah Jacks,
Bethany King and Adam Lambert.
A's an.d B's Alishia Compson', Corey
Jarvis, Natashia Ginther, Dustin
Knapp, Amanda Miller. Timmy
Spires, Joshua-Taylor, Brittany Varian, Morgan Wolfe. .
Second Grade, all A's, Jos~ua
Bolin Valerie Diddle, Carita Gardner,
Adam. Humphreys, BrittanY. Hysell,
Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Taryn Lentes,
Maggie Rupe . A's and B's Holly
Davis, Sarah Eskew, Tyson George,
David Youn·g.
Third Grade, all A's Adam Snow-

.

J.H. Sisson of Pomeroy, left, became the HCond member of
Brlcklaver- Local32 of Ohio to earn a gold bar and pin for 50 years
of continuous membership In the union. The first Wll Elden Wal·burn of Middleport who made the presentation to Sisson, who eerlltr had been given 1 watch by the district council. Walburn lathe
business agent of the local.
· ·
.
.

of Ohio.
~The institutes began in 1991 with
institutes in math, physics and life
science at the host sites of Miami
University and Ohio State University. This is the third summer for institutes in Southeast Ohio; previous
institutes were held in New Concord
and Marietta.
.
The participants will be inten·
sively ·studying math and science
content as well as modem pedagogy.

. "Celebrating Membership" · was · ular reports were by secretary Manha
t~e- program theme used )&gt;y Sarah Poole and treasui'er Osie Mai Follrod,
Caldwell at a recent meeting of the with 24 friendship calls reported.
AJfred United Methodist Women
Mrs. Spencer presented the prayer
h~ld at the home of Aorence Ann calendar and chose Lawrence Lauber
SP,Cncer.
in education at McCurdy 'School,
'All members took part in reading New Mexico as the recipient of a
arid discussion of UMW goals and birthday card signeQ by the· group.
concerns for women, children, the Thank-you cuds from the Clara Foilelderly, ho_rnele~s. addicts, AIDS vic- rod family and Alma Swanz were
titl'rs, and single mothers.
.read.
. "Thelma Henderson reported on ·
Mrs. Hendersotl and Mrs. Cald"LeeChing-Chee: Called Home" well reported their attendance at Disfrom the May issue of "Response," trict Conference in Logan · where
which told the story of Miss Lee's life Alfred UMC received an award for
growing up in Hong Kong, traveling excellent work. They also reported on
the'world and finding Christ, and Iat- county parish work on comforters
et.tetuming to Hong Kong.
and seed ·distribution. The society
"Mrs. SpefiCer read "A Special voted to donate blankets to the FesOccasion from the publication"Coun- tival of Sharing ahd discussed maktry Woman" to close the program.
ing kits for the non-profit group.
• 111e business meeting was opened
The next meeting will be June 18
· with prayer by Eleanor Boyles an&lt;! at the church with Charlotte Van
group singing of "Love Lifted Me" Meter, hostess and Nina Robinson,
~~dreading of UMW Purpose. Reg-

·. - WASH'!'~GTON (AP)-:- M~ican: trustees arc to report Wednesday that . . Gi~grlch said Medicare ':Cfotm could be accomplish~d "if the president
:: Jhe system s hospllal fund ts gomg broke even faster than previously expect· w1ll Sit' down and say, 'all nght. we can find a compromise,' I think,.some:- ed.
,
·
time this summer we could pass a Medicare bill ."
· · While that news is not unexpected, it prompted the head of the American
In their report a year ago, the Medicare trustees predicted the hospital fund
· :~ Hospital Association to say that partisan political factions an:n'tlikely to fix
would be broke by 2002. Preliminary reports from the trustees since then
!he program and that an independent citizens commission should be estab- and an estimate from the Congressional Budget Office now predict bank; fished to find a solution.
·
ruptcy by 200 I.
·
.. Republicans and Democrats have been debating Medicare "and demo· Whether the fund goes broke in 2002, 200 I, 2000 Or sooner is the wrong
; hi zing one another," AHA President Dick Davidson said. "That'hasn' t served focus, Davidson said.
·
.
i the Ameri_can people."
.
'
'!We need a long-tenn solution," he said during a panel discussion on
~
The new repon. he said, " will tell us what we knew last year: The situ- Medicare at the National Press Club.
'
Under Davidson's plan, a fulltime commission on Medicare would eval-illion gets worse and worse."
Asked about an independent citizens commission, House Speaker Newt · uate the funds needed to maintain current commitments. Then Congress ·
. Gingrich said today that, "certainly, that 's one of the things we ought to· be would set a target for how much it wants to spend on the program .
exploring·as away of. getting it solved."
·
The commission
would hold public hearings and translate the congres·.
.

Frank birth
announced
v

,.

) 81r Pack

•

Your Choice

also home to
the 1.5 million-it.em collection of
A"m. RichqnHlyrd, cre.dited \1\ith
being the first person to fly to the
Nonh Pole. However, the first
researcher to analyze a !CCently
discovered diary of the 1926 flight
said the notations showed that
Byrd_never made it to the j.ole and knew it.
Cook. claimed to have beaten
Robert E. Peary to the pole by land.
arriving April 21, 1908. But history accorded Peary, who had better
documentation of his feat, with the
distinction of being first. Peary 's
documentation said he reach.ed the
pole April 6, 1909.
The Cook -collection includes
letters, telegrams and anicles about
the dispute, but-no documentation
of Cook's trek, Gocrler said. Cook
also explored "the Antarctic aod
Alaska, and the collection includes
pictures of both poles.
"This is probably the greatest
controversy in polar history,"
Gocrler said.
Most of the papers related to
Cook's North Pole Claim, including
his reconstructed diary of the trip,
arc at the Library of Congress, said
Russell Gibbons of Pittsburgh, ·
executive director of the 160-meml;ter Cook Society.
The items being transferred to
OSU will be on permanent loan to

POLAROID
600PLUS
INSTANT
COLOR FILM

69~

· Jphn and Kila Frank, Syracuse,
anqounced the birth of a son, David
Alan, May 8, at Camden-Clark ·
Memorial Hospital · in Parkersburg,

w
.va.
: :;.l ie weighed six pounds, three

ounees and was 19 inches long.
··'Maternal grandparents are Ray
anti· Janice Young, Reedsville, and
·p4'.1Jimal grandparents are Clarence
and wuise Frank, Racine. Maternal
gr~t-grandparents· are Olen and
Jo5eJ'hine Young and paternal great~parcnts are Sol and Fan Bigley,
all :ijf Reedsville.

...,
&gt;I - ::.:

~
;:~~society
I
(

I .

/

...

19'9

BRIQUETS

DAVID FRANK

scrapbook-

went to the 94th Aero Squadron for
: SJ'EAM AND GAS ENGINE
an
evening of dancing, and had a
· •
SHOW
: The West Virginia State Fann. family party.
Attending were Mrs. Thomas'
Mu5eum will host its annual spring
daughter,
Karen Dee and her hus"Steam and Gas Engine Show" in
band,
Chuck
Easter, another daughcpnoection -with West Virginia
ter,
Kathy
Ann
and her husband,
Homecoming '96 Saturday and Sunda;f.Gales will open at 9 a.m. There Roger Schultz, granddaughters, Kelly Easter-Child, Heather Easter, Paige
is-rio admission charge.
· There will be a "one room school Easter, and Desiree Barrett, and
reunion" at the Mission Ridge School great-grandchildren, Kasey and
of' . former teachers and students, Shane Child and their father, Jeff
ajltique automobiles, a tractor parade, Child. A family portrait was another
and ·demonstrations of various pi&lt;&gt;- feature of the weekend celebration.
SO·YEARPlN
neer crafts and farming skills.
.
A 50-year pin wa$ presented to
~ Residents arc invited to join in
Goldie
Frederick at a recent meeting
c!Jurch services at the Old Zion
of
Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
Lutheran Church at 9 a.m . Sunday,
America, held at the hall.
with·Rev. Louis Hussell preaching.
Frederick read a poem, "It's a
: -Beans and cornbread and cornWonderful
World." Reported was the
JI)eal pie (com meal is ground at the
·site) can be found in the Country hospitalization of Dorothy Myers. A
thank you note was read froln Zelda
Kitchen.
Weber
on the death of her son, and
'"
~ ..
80TH BIRTHDAY
Enna Cleland thanked those who
:" Doris Thomas celebrated her 80th went to the funeral home to pay last
~j):tJJday-recently with a weekend of respects to Beulah Mazey's daughter.
fiUIIily activities in Columbus.
A report was also given on the rally
They dined at local restaUilJits, at East Liverpool.

.

RITE AID
CHARCOAL

LUBRIDERM
LOnON

Origiqal,
Fragrance Free or
for S.nsitive Skin

16 oz.

10 lb. B19

COPPERTONE
SUNTAN LOTION

w_..,

SPF 145 or
bbin SP~ 110 ~ 4 ol.

•

·

24
INCH
FOLDING

1299 INIUUITED199
NYLON
LUNCH

BBQ GRILL

699

Wi1h

40QUART

FOAM

~~d~T

EA.

BAG

~Indies

~99

IIIII

SUMMER
FOOTWEAR
M•n'J. Ltdin
or Chlldr~n·s

·

149
PAIR

249

MASSENGILL
DISPOSABLE
DOUCHE
Country Flo"""·

Vinegar &amp; Water -bt ra
Mild or Elctra Cleansing - 4 Pack

.

. EA.

Flac~s

•
·'r

'

RITE AID
ORIGINAL
SKIN CREAM
16 Ol .

RITE,
AID
~59
DISHWASHING
LIQUID
~
Lemon, Blut
or Green - 22

RilE AID PHOTO FIN ISH ING COUPON

oz. ·

~

·

69#~

ADVIL IBUPROFEN469
TABLETS, CAPLETS
;
OR GEL CAPLETS
.
'•

9 oz. Bonus Bai_ ot

lEA.

Pkg, of so

7.Sw.

·

MARY
'ANES
PEANUT
BunERCANDY

SALT WATER TAFFY
·

EA..

BUYS

Coke/
Diet Coke

$29.9

Frito
Doritos

$1~9

12 pack 12 oz, cans

.

.

·

Beverage Items plus appHca~e taxes and depoalte.
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By Jlf:4 F~EE118AN
Santlnai ,Newe Staff
.
·The Meigs County Boud of Commissioners was updated Monday on
.efforts to restore the old Chester
Courthouse, the oldest standing cour, !house in the state.
The two-floor, red brick building
was buill in 1823onland&lt;;lonatedby
. County Commissioner Levi Stedman
ll~td served as the seat of county' gov·
ernment until June 1841, when the
county seat ~as moved to Pomeroy.
Pat Holter of the Chester Vil.lagc
Historical Associalion told commissioners the group has secured more
· t~an .$7,000 through benefit dinners,
CQiltthousc tours and 'lthcr activities.
. · :Fut\lfll_. plaps...~a\1 ·f'l~:-&lt;/1 ;_Sflllc,ial
event called Chester S6adc Days.
Chester Shade was one of the earliest settlers in the area, lending his
name 10 both the ~ommunity of
Chesll:r .and the Shade R1ver wh1ch drams a large portoon of the
county.

By DEliS MARTIN
A1sociated Pntu WrHer
COLUMBUS - A collection
of polar explorer Frederick A.
Cook's papers,.which are headed.to
Ohio, are expected to show the
'extent of the dispute over:who was ·
the first to reach the North Pole by
. land. '
·
The Frederick A. Cook Society
has agreed to transfer the 24,000. item collection to Ohlo State Uni·
versity's Byid Polar Research Cen.ter in August. The collection will
' be catalogued and made available

Single Pa ck

JERGENS
MILD SOAP

A O.nnett Co. NaOl&amp;p

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sionaltargct into recommendations for a benefits package and pro,idcr paY,.
ments.
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The nine-person, pennancnt commission would bC experts in health care
appointed by the president and conlinned by the Senate, Davidson said.:·
Last August, Rep. Phil English, R-Pa., introduced a bill to create such a
commission, but the measure has not gotten very far in Congress.
On Monday, Democrats responded to comments over the weekend by Gingrich, who accused President Cl.inton of misleading the elderly about the GOP
plans for Medicare "for the purpose of getting their vote."
_
"People who live in glass h·ouscs shouldn' t throw stones." .House Dcm&lt;&gt;cratic leader Dick Gephardt said.
•
"They want to end the Medicare system as we· vc known it for 30 yca11&lt;. ''
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said of Republicans.

Commissioners get update
on old ·courthouse 1iroject

Cook archives
.may fuel dispute
over discovery of
the North .Pole ·

Auorted Style1

2 Ptck

35cenia

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MENTADENT
TOOTHBRUSH

FUJIBMM
VIDEOTAPE

'

i~loomy Medicar~ report prompts call for quick fi~'

er. Darin Horn. Leigha Bryant,
Robert Evans, Thomas Jones,
Daneille Nye.
Fifth Grade, all A's, Brook Bolin:
Mallory King. A's and B's Ashley
Bartrum, Melissa Cremeans. Hollie
Ferrell, Crystal Jacks. Jessica Justice,
Allison Williamson, Jonathan Sears.
Sixth Grade, all A's Amber Snow•
den. A's and B's, Brad Baylor, Amber
Ellis, Gabriel Jenkins, Ryan Kauff(
Darrick Knapp. 'Johnny Lcntes;
Melissa Richmond, Chris Rupe. Lana
Barrett, Travis Siders.

SALE PRI CES EffECTIVE JUNE 3 THR O UGH 9. 1996

8 oz.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, June 4, 1996

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The institutes will model pedagogy ,
such as cooperati ve learning, inquiry
learning , critical thinking skills,
authentic assessment like journals
and portfolios, aod issues of gender
.
and racial equity.
For inore infonnati on about the
program interested persons may con- .
tact the Discovery!RPDC office .at
Ohio University (6141593-0732). Jer·
ry L. Montgomery is the Discovery
program coordinator and Martha
Smith-Singleton is the director.

RITE AID
SUNTAN
LOnoN
DROlL

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: Vol. 47, NO. 27
· 1 Beetlon, 10 ......

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:Alfred U~W reviews goals

Clearing tonight, low..
In ·the 50s. Wedn . . dey ,
. aunny. High• In the 70..

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Two local teachers to attend program
Two Meigs County teachers, Vicki Haley and Bryan Durst, will join
41 others from Southeast Ohio for a
five-week Discovery math or science
institute this summer.
The institutes will be held at the
Logan-Hocking Middle School from
June 17 through July 19 from 8:30
am. to 4 p.m. daily. The institutes are
supported by a $10 million grant
from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and matched by·the State

Pick 3:
4-7-5
Plck4:
6-5-1-8
BuckeyeS:
7-12-13-20.21

Sport8 on Page 4

·. .---Recognized-- Rutland school honors academic achievers
The Rutland Elementary School ·
held its annual academic banquet
Tuesday night at Meigs High School
with over 200 attending the dinner
and recognition program.
Students recognized for academ- ·
ic achievement this year were:
Kindergarten, all . A's Corinna
Cross, Andrew Denney, Levi
Metheney, Joshua Starcher, Jacob
Barnes, Emily Davis, Katie Doczi,
Keith Moore, Cassady Willford, Kori
Priddy, Heather .Hawley, Jesse
Mullins, Bethany Gibbs.
First Grade, all A's, 7\ndtea

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. Unlven~lty's Byrd Polar
Reau.rch Center has
to arclllva lhe papers of explorer
Frederick A. Cool!,
. who cjalmacl to·have beaten Robert E.
Peary In~· land'rtlce.oto the Nortli Polaln the early part.of the
20th century. (AP)
urn in Hurleyville. N.Y.. near
North Pole, 'Peary agreed to bring
Cook's hometown of Hortonville .
back the hunter, Harry Whitney,
Cook died in 1940.
who was ill and starving - but
Peary called Cook a fraud, and
only if Whitney left behind anyCook accused Peary of · makin g
thing that belonged to Cook, Goersure that his detailed noteS on' his
ler said.
trip never mnde it back to civili7.a·
The feud was a spectacular bat·
tion.
·
tic between "two Americans rival Cook, fearing that his papers
ing for the distinctio~ of being the
wold be damaged while traveling,
first at the top of the earth," Goer·
left his field notes and navigation
lcr said.
readings in Greenland. with a
Even Peary's trip was question·
hunter in an Eskimo· settlement,
able. .
.
Goerler said. He returned only with
Despite its travels, Peary's field
summaries of his calculations and
notebook seemed lube remarkably
observations, the archivist said.·
clean.
Cook and his supporter's later
claimed that on his return from the

Coun·c il ·members want action
on pothole repairs in Pomeroy:.

By JIM FREEMAN .
riverbank.andWrightaskedVaughan
Sentinel News Staff
to obtain the two temporary workers
Pomeroy Village Council mem- council had earlier agreed to hire to
bers asked M9nday night when work- help cut weeds.
·
ers would begin wo~k on potholes in
Members also said the police
the village.
dcpanment needs to begin enforcing
During open discussion at the reg- existing ordinances requiring resi·
ular council meeting, council mcm- dents to keep their property free of
bers Geri Walton, Bill Young and trash and other debris.
Wehrung asked when work on potAlso, ordinances · dealing with
·hole repair would commence. · .
youth curfews and loitering need to
Walton asked Mayor · Frank he enforced.
Vaughan for a work schedule showCouncil met with Jim Davis. reping when work would start.
· resenting the Big Bend StcrnwhcdIn addition , Councilman George cr Association, to discuss the sale llf
Wright asked when workers would beer during the annual Bi~ Bend
pave a large h.ole on Second Street in Stemwhcel Festival ·which will he
front of the Parts Plus store.
held Oct. 3·5. Ci&gt;uncil agreed tu
Walton also asked when motorists allow the sale of heer.
whose cars were damaged during
In ot~cr business. council :
water line replaceme nt on Main

• Gave final rcadinl:! to an ordi-

·Street would be reimbursed. Vaugh· nancc granting a 3 percent raise tu
an said the construction company village employees. excluding some
would be responsible for the claims salaried employees.
and that the motori sts would have to ·
• Gave first reading to an ordi·
contact Village Solicitor Chris nance revising appropriations tu the
Tenaglia.
village general fund. The revision
Counci:man Scott Dillon asked will increase
fund apprnpriwhen
w.
o
rkers
would
be
the
Rep, Roben Torricelli was unopposed state Sen. Roger Bedford leading two
on the Democralic side.
·
other candidates. Runoffs for both
Zimmer, with.endorsements from parties are likely, however, s_ince a
the state's Republican hierarchy, led nominee must win a majority.
by Gov. Christie Whitman, has paid
In 1986.1;1etlin cast the deciding
little attention to his primary oppo- vote on the Senate Judiciary Com·
ncnts, Passaic 'county Freeholder mittec to reject the nomination of
Richard . DuHaime and state Sen. •Sessions, then a U.S. Attorney, to a
R1chard LaRossa.
federal judgeship.
. •
Sessions, who is white, was
· DuHaime portrays himself as the
"true conser.:ative " in the race, while accused of trying to intimidate black
LaRossa has targeted a broad coali- voters by unsuccessfully prosec uting
tion of GOP voters that he hopes will three civil rights workers for vote
pull him through a low-tul'l)ou,t pri- fraud in 1985. Sessions vehemently
mary.
denied the charges.
Both say 1hey would have a bet·
Montana's Democratic Sen. Max
tcr chance 'or defeating Torricelli thll!l Baucus has no primary opponent in
Zimmer.
seeking a fourth tenn. Lt. Gov, Den"People who want a real Repub-. nis Rehbetg is expected to easily win
Iicon, they have to vote for me," the GOP nomination.
•
DuHaime said at a campaign. stop last
Democrat Pat William,s is giving
week. "They have no-choice.between up the s.tate 's on!y House seat. Polls
CANDIDATE VISIT- Former third P1'tv .,.eldentiel candkleta
Zimmer and Torricelli."
• ..
suggest that fof!11er state Sen. Bill
· New Jersey has not elected a Yellowtail remains the favorite for and Alabama governor Georga Wall*ce was visited Monday.by
Republican senator since 1912.
the Democratic nomination lo sue- Republlc;an White Houn hopBful Pit Buchl,nln Ill Wallace's home
In Alabama, Attorney General ceed him,' despite recent revelations priC?r to the latest round of stata ptlmarles. (AP)
Jeff Sessions was leading a field of about his PB;SI..
.
the 1980s.
,
seven Republicans in 'the , race to. . . Yellowtat! has admit~~ burglarPolls say the three-way Republi- Grubbs and Maggie Tinsman are
~place Heflin..
•
· .1z~ng a store m college, hnung h1s ex· can race is too' close to call .
fighting for the Republican nomina.
On the Democratic side, polls w1f~ 20,y,ear~ ago and falhng $7,21.1
tion
to face two-tenn Democratic
In Iowa, six-tenn R~p' Jim Ross
have shown Rep. Glen Browder11nd beh1nd· m ch1ld support payments m f.i ghtfoot !IJICI state legislators Steve Sen. Tom Harkin.
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for Congress high.light primaries ·

By NED KILKELLY
~aociated Prau WrHer
111e bpsiest congressional primarY day of the year so far features a
former weather forecaster in Iowa, ari
·admitted burglar. wife heater and
ilcadbeat dad in Montana, and open
senate races in New Jersey · and
Alabama . .
Sens. Hill Bradley of New Jersey
•and Howell Heflin of Alabama are
'IWO of the eight Democrats retiring
~his year. Add the six Republicans
calling it quits, including Bob Dole,
and the fall election looms as a
.&lt;lhance for the GOP to extend - or
relinquish - · its 53-47 Senate majorijy.
• . Four other senators who want to
Pemain in W!~:!hington face no priopposition today.
: · Monilina has the only governor's
r:ace on the ballot. GOP incumbent
Marc RacicOt and his leading DemoGI'Iltie challenger, former state Sen.
Chel Blaylock, were expected to win
tfleit primaries.
"
In New. Jersey. three-tenn Rep.
Dick Zimmer was the heavy favorite
tC, · capture the GOP 'nortlination to
replace Bradley, while seven-tenn
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The group is currently seeking a received the following bids: S.W.
$46,000 gram through a pannership Dean of Proctorville, $9,940; ShCIIy
with the county and the University of . Co. of Thornville, $9,946.25; York
Rio Grande.
Paving Co. of Athens, S 12,000. · ·
Once restored, the old structure · Bids received on the Syracuse Viiwill be the subject of tours and open !age Marina projects were: s·.W.
houses . Living histories and displays Delm, $20,240; Shelly, $20,9:2'6;
will be held at the buildmg, Holter York, $21,000.
·
said.
·
Bid s on the Rutland Village .
Commissionel1&lt; said they would . Paving project were as follows:
like to be updated monthly on the Shelly, $13,922.75; S.W. Dean,
gro~p·s progress.
$14,455.10: York, $18.400.
At the request of Commissioner
· In other business. the board: ·'
Robert Hartenbach, the hoard adopt·
• Met with fair board president
ed a resolution supporting the con· Dan Smith. who requested $6,500-(or
struction of a proposed new veterans the 1997 Meigs County Fair. 1'I1C
home in the county.
$6,500 is a customary gift from ·ltle
Commissioners will write state county to support the annual fair.
of(iei~IJI,Pr'/f11otillg Meigs County a'
• • , Paid • wcck!Y . · bills ·.of .
a constnict1on site for the proposed $206,567 .67, cons1stmg of 117
home. · ·
entries.
In addition, comm 1ss10ncrs
Present were Commission Prcsiopened bids on three Community dent' Fred Hoffman, Vice Prcsidcht
Development Block Grant Projects. Janet Howard, Hartcnhach and Clerk
On the Salisbury Township Slreet Gloria Kloes.
Improvement project, commissioners

"' ·

• Approved the minutes of the
May 20 meeting.
:
•. Accepted the mayor's repor{ of
$4,203.
•:
• Approved a liquor license trans·
' fer for the Pizza Hut restaurant due .
to a change in management.
• Approved renewing a workers
compensation compensation contnitt
through the Ohio Municipal League
for $RR7.
• Approved the sole fuel ' hid
received frnm G &amp; M Fuel Cu.. Min·
crsville. fur 91.4 -cems a gallon for
'JR-o,·tane gasoline. and 7X.4 cents a
gallun for number two diesel fuel.
• Approl'ed the purch;lse a radio
li•r approxim;llcly $5!Ml !Orr a recently purchase pnlicc cruiser and agreed.
with cuuncil member L;~rry Wehru·~~
nl~j~..·~o: lin g.

tn keep a thirt.l COlT ·in

rcscrn as a hal'kup &lt;'ruiser.
• Thanked h&gt;eal 'rc~idents ;tnd
busi nesses whu hdpcd uecnrate the
Bec~ h Gmw C'cmclcry' prior ·iu
Memnrial D;ty.
· ·Nut prcscnl was C'nunl'il Prcside.nt
Jnhn Musser.

Eastern. BOE ·
names Well
new leader '
'

Dcryl E. Well was hired as new
Eastern Local Schools superintcn·
dent, effective Aug. I. during a special meeti'ng of the Eastern L&lt;&gt;eal
Board of Education last week at Easl·
ern High School. .
The board voted 5·0 to approv ~ a
three-year contracl for Well. according to Board President Jim Smith.
Well has· served in se veral administrative roles in the WWTcn L&lt;&gt;eal
School District since 1990, including
the job of principal at Warren Hi~h
School during 199S-96.
..
He is a .graduate of Eastern Hi1,oii;
School and the University of Ri.&lt;&gt;.
Grande, obtaining a hachcior's
degree in education in !970.
, .. ,
He was an English teacher for ~
years in· the Gallia County Loclll,
School District at Kyger C)'Cek High
School, before leavinJ the school ,in,
(Continued on~ s);
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