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                  <text>PomMJy • Middleport, Ohio

P&amp;JI 10 • The.Ddy Sulln.l

Ohio Lottery

'Rebellious 16-year-old'·in need of intensive therapy
n~ wilDings about druas and
ciprene smoking, but notltin&amp; we
say seems 10 make an impoessilln.
We've lried tough love, counsclItt$,
Lei
Aitfdcl
inJ. sheriff assislllllcc lllld school
, _ _ ... c...
authorities. Two years ago, we
checked Cary into a psychiatric hos·
pital because of his suicidal tendencies.
He was released after six days
ly AM LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: We are per- with a diagnosis of depression. The
IDI&amp; or a 16-y--old rebellious son boy is verbally abusive, and whon
and are 11 our wits' end. Can you llllgry, he hits walls lllld furniture.
We have replaced several broken
help?
.
"Cary" has been kicked out of windows, only to have him break
school for repeated truancy. He them again. Doors are torn off the
sleeps most of the day and stays up hinges, and there are holes in our
nearly all nisht. He smokes pot as walls.
We Clift not have Cary imested few
well as cilarettes lllld drinks beer
and alcohol. We have given him damagins our house and propeny

Ann
Landers

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because he is a minor and we ue
responsible for him until he turns 18.
We cllll't throw him out, so there's
no. point in givina him 11llimatums.
He knows he has us over a barrel,
and it's mP!ellinJ.
I don't know how we are goinato
set through the next two years. Cary
does not respond to being deprived
of privileges like most children.
Please sive us some JUidance. ·Parents of an Ollt·of-Control Son in
Calif.
Dear Parents: You say your son is
a "rebellious 16-year-old." It is
obvious to me that he is more thllll
rebellious. He is mentally ill.
It is imperative that you set this
boy into intensive therapy and

Dear Cinderella: Show your
inquirt about hospitalization. He I never aave my bad langi!IJC much
friend
this letler, and tell her you
sounds u if he could he dana- tJwvPt, but I'm sure she is riJht. I
wro~e
it.
Meanwhile, b e - ~
10 hi!Nelf and others. Also. thm- have vowed to clean up my mouth in
speech
habits
are ~ery dilficuk 10
drugs that could help. Has no profes- the hOpe that she will aive me llllolhbreak. Cultivate some a11hltitutc
sional 511gested this? It's difficult to er chaJice.
words
and phrases, and put them 10
undenWid wby no one has consid:The loss of this friendship has
work
immediately.
Oood luck.
ered onaoina profe~ional help when hurt 1M deeply. 1 have IIPOiogized
the boy is so violeot that he is break- and done everythinJ short of getting
Gem of the Day (C!Wit Andrew
ing windows and knocking holes in on 'my knees, but she hasn 'I respondCarnesie):
Put all your eus in one
the wall. Gel moving, for his sake as ed. 1 want her to know ·1am grateful
basket
..
then
keep your eye on the
well as the safety of others.
few the wake-up call lllld thllllkful it
Dear Ann Landers: 1'1!11 heartbro- . came before my children picked up basket.
ken and feel very much alone.
. my foul language.
'
I'm a 35-year-old mother and
I have very few friends and must
wife with very little social life. My face the fact that my mouth could be
neighbor, a friend of more thllll five the reason. How do I get my neighSend questloas to Au Luyears, told me yesterday she no bor.to give me another chance? I am den, Creaton S~te, 5777 W.
longer wants her chil4ren around me truly depressed over this. -· "Cin· ·century Blvd., Sulle 700, Las
because I S\Wear so much. Truthfully. derellti" in Pa.
Angeles, Calif. 90045

---Community calendar---..
The C0111munlt)' Cakndar Is
published U a free aei'Yice IO DOD•
profit groups wishing to IIDDOUJICe
meeting and special event&amp; The
calendar lnofd 'ped to pi'OIIIOte
sales or fUnd naen of any t)'pe.
llenu are printed u space permits
and cannol be guaranteed 10 run a
apec:lfk number of days.

POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary
2171 ; Tf!Csday, hall. Potluck, 7 p.m.;
meeting, 7:30 p.m . Membershop
cards can be picked up.
POMEROY -- Pomeroy Chapter.
Order of Eastern Star. 7:30 Tuesday
at the. hall.

•
Church, 7:30 p.m.• open meeting, fyr
all garden club members and any others interested in herhs. Bobbi Karr to
speak. Garden clup members to take
food made with herbs. recipes. ;tnd
door prizes. · ·

THURSDAY
RUTLAND -- Rutland Township
Trustees will meet in regular session,
WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY
Thursday. 6:15p.m. at the Rutla\)d
POMEROY-Red
Cross
Blood·
·
POMEROY -- Informational .
Fire Station .
·
mobile
visit,
I
to
6
p.m.
Wednesday
meeting regarding Division U base·
ball t!)umament in Cllllton, Meigs at the Senior Citizens Center. ResiPOMEROY .. PERSIPERI, noon
dents encouraged to donate.
High School, 8 p.m. Tuesday
luncheon, Senior Citizens Center.
CHESTER .. Chester Garden Or. Coven will speak concerning
PAGEVILLE-- Scipio Township
Trustees, Tuesday. 6:30 at Pa~ev_ille. Cluh. Wednesday, Chester Methodist mail-in prescriptions.

TEACHERS RECOGt.IIZED - Nominated for
the 111911 oul¥1andlng ••• chen awards In a cai\tnt sponsored by the Malgs County Hlatorlcal
Soclely from ~ left, 11118d, a.rt~ars
Logan, Mike K~necly, SCott W~, Wilma
. Parker, and KaJWn Wilker, nornlnal8d by atand-

lng behind, Sabra Davidian, Michael S1acy, JH.
sica Pore, Jessica G.,._, and Slndl Gilkey.
Other atudents nominating wlmlng tsachers
- e third row, left, Molly Heines, Shau1111
Manuel and Laraine Lawson.

Teachers make .a difference
Winners in the "Teachers Make a
Difference" contest were recognized
at a luncheon hosted by the Meigs
County Historical Society.Saturday at
the Meigs Museum.
.. Junior high students wrote essays
1fontinating teachers and from those
'!fSIYS were selec.ted the teachers 10
lie honored. ·
Top winners in each district were
Michael Kennedy of Meigs, DOnna
Morris or Southern. and Scott Wolfe
t&gt;f Eastern. They were presented
r '

•

Reds seize
4-1 victory
over Giants

Pick 3:
&amp;-5-6

Plck 4:

1·1·1-G

Buckeye 5:

$porta Qn Page 4

26-27-33-36-37

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·' Vol. 47, NO. 21

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our
PER
MONTH

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By JOHN CHALFANT
Asaoclated Press Writer
. Republican Gov. George Voinovich decided to accept
: COLUMBUSa state income.tax .cut that he once promised to veto. Democrats had a field
day.
·
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"Old turnaround George,''Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy, 0-Columbus, said Tuesday after Voinovich decided to lift the veto threat.
·
, Espy had taken the lead in proposing a tax cut or his own last month only
!O draw an attack from VoinoviCh.
Chairman David Leland of the Ohio Democratic Party !raced Voinovich's
.
: change of mind to ~lilies.
.
"He.is proving once again t~at he is willing to say or do anything to be
~hosen as Bob Dole'~ running mate," Lel1111d said.
Voinovich has been mentioned as a possible. vice .presi6ential candidate

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wereThe Inside Guys.

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THE HEAT PUMP HEATS, COOLS AND SAVE·S '
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319 S. 2ND AVE~

992-4485

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

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1-800-516·2·932
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By DIANE DUSTON
Asaoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Medicare's
hospital fund will be about $29 billion in the red by 200 I if the system
isn ' t changed, say congressional
Republicans who want to overhaul
·the health insurance plan for the
. elderly.
•
The forecast was e~pected to be
confirmed to4ay with release of the
Medicare trustees' annual report. The
trustees also were predicting that
Social Security will go broke by
2029.
· By 2002, the hospital fund will
owe $86 billion more than it has, and
by 2006.'the shordall could be more
than $400 billion. Republicans using
Congressional Budget Office estimates ~aid Tuesday.
· "We, as members of Congress.
and most imponantly President Clinton, .as president, owes real leadership
on this . question," said Rep. Bill
Thonias, R.-Calif.. chairman of the
House subcommittee that oversees
Medicare.
. The trustees' repon was being
Issued by the six-member board,
composed of the secretaries of trea·
health and human services and
labor, the Social Security commisS.oner and two members of the public:.
''Few the president 10 miss this
qpp\)fttlnity to step forwllld 'I'd lead
is simply • O'llpCtition or the lut year

sury.

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of playing politics with Medicare,"
Thomas said.
·
Clinton last year vetoed the bal·
anced budget hi II passed by Republicans, which would have saved about
$226.7 billion from Medicare
through 2002. About half the savings
would have been in Medicare Pan A,
which is the fund in trouble.
Under the GOP plan, the program
would be restructured to move more
senior citizens away from fee-for-service, plans into managed-care programs and set up medical savings
accounts that would include a highdeductible catastrophic insurance
p)an.
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&gt;

Politics still sur~ounds Medicare ·
as report cites· future s.h ortfalls
&gt;

3S'*'!8

with Dole. Failing that, Vpinovich already has said he intends (o run for the their shoes; they were being hammered pretty hard by the other party avd
U.S. Senate in 1998 but has not ruled out a spot on the natiortal ticket should · many of them were afraid to cast a vote against reducing taxes." he said.:
Voinovich ~aid he would have preferred to put off a tax cut until the ll)litt
Dole as~ him.
.
.: .•
Voinovich, meeting with reponers Tuesday aftei returning from a week's budget cycle in ·Janqary.
vacation, said he had decided to accept the tax cyt that he once had derided
The $828 million budget reserve, known as the rainy day fund, wa., ~­
ated as a buffer in the event of an economic downturn or loss of federal mj)n~ '
as "political bait ... fiscally irresponsible."
·
He said the tax cut was acceptable because it did not dip into the state's cy. that makes up 25 percent of state spending.
:
$828 million budget reserve. The $290 million reduction in the state income
"I really believe thai what I'm doing is responsible based on the &lt;tr- .
tax over four years will amount to about $1.25 a month for an average tax- cumstanccs,"·Voinovich said. ''I can guarantee you that if they touched t).at
payer.
rainy day fund there'd have be~n a big veto and we'd have gone after it;:
"The way they dealt with that is, it's not irresponsible," Voinovich said
Espy said ohe state could have afforded more tax relief.
•:
of the bill that emerged from the Republican-controlled House and Senate
"Fifteen dollars a year is no tax relief at all. People should turn that .$15
last week.
·
.
back and say, 'Thanks, but no thanks,' " he said.
'
"It's political, yeah, there's no question about it. But if I put myself in

i

If you want the Q.u ality
that you DESERVE and
Reliability that you can
trust, CALL US.

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A Gannett Co. Newopaw

Democrats howl at VOinOvich switch on veto -

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Drivi11g through rural Meigs
· County farmland nestled among
. hills, you wouldn't e~pecl a quaini
I00-year-old farmhouse would be
the center ror an international bllsiness.
Debra Bullington didn't e~pcct
her business to become wluit it has
in the last year; an international
herb and flower related business,
counesy of the Internet.
..,. B,~lliJ!atQq's . ~usiness •.Culpcp. ~rs Herb and SJ!ice El!l(K!riUIIl,
• wi{S'One ornliil i!lutheliSt·l:'liiio till''
: al smai I businesses' which beg1111 an
· intemet .marketing venture with the
~ financial ·and tecl!nical assistance
· of the U.S. Department of Agri.culture and the Appalachian Cen. ter for Economic Networks
(ACEnet) last October.
The b~inesscs are pan of a·
Public WebMarket, designed to
link small businesses to consumer
markets worldwide through the
Internet. Computer users who
access the site can !ravel down a
auSif;iESs IN CYBi:I'ISPACE - Debra Bullington, owner/operator ·of Culpeppers Herb and
virtual Main Street, passing
Spice l;mporlum, atand~ with her son Jan among herbal and spice stock in her new "store"booths" that feature quotes from
front" at ller Dexter area home. The home-based busines.s has grown from a hobby for Bullingthe owners of local food and crafts
ton 10 lfJ steady mall-order business, thanks in part to exposure on the Internet thrOugh the
husinesses.
Public ~b'Market of the 'Appalachian Center for Economic Networks.
The site incorporates ·stories
told by local business people, and business has igrown from a small
of the WebMarket. We also reieive
Ohio al!d in Hawaii .
digital images of people, places, hobby to an J~scr scale mail order
regular orders rrom se.vcral users in
"We hope to ·have . conveyed
and pr\)ducts, to create a new kind operation since the jump tocyberthe New England states. " said
some of the liveliness anti richness
of marketing environment on the space.
"
Bullington.
of a real .life public market on the
Internet.
"Business as really picked up
Since its initial test period in
pages of the Public Wc~Market.
. A majority ofBuiiington's busi- · an!( stayed steady. We've received
December. the WebMarket has
The World Wide Web technology
ness, which she staned neatly three orders from Hawaii, and as far
grown to include shops for a total
can help bring the products of
years ago, has been mail order. The away aS Australia, as a direct result
of26 small businesses in southeast
(Continued on Page 3)

CECIL DUNCAN'S
New Haven, 4th &amp;Rollins
June 5th, W&amp;i.jn!l~&gt;day
june 6th,

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Meigs County
herbalist sells
wares In 'booth'
In cyberspace ·

YARD SALE ·

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 5, 1996

: 2 Sec1iona, 16 Pteu

A marketplace on the· Internet

copies of "Teacher Reminiscences." of Eastern. The students who nomiThey were .nominated by Michael nated them were Sandi Gilkey and
Stacy, Shauna Manuel, and Jessica Sabra Davidson, Meigs; Loraine
Pore, who received "A Study of the Lawson and Josh Larsen, Southern;
History of Meigs County.
and Jessica Grueser and ~oily
· Those winners will be guests at . Heines, Eastern.
the Heritage Weekend Dinner, June 7
All nine of the teachers received
at ·the Museum.
cenificates and memberships in the
At the tum of the century. the
Other winners honored at Satur· Historical Society.
United States had- nearly balf the
day's luncheon were Karen Walker St:lcy, Jessica Pore, Jessica Gruescr, world's railroad mileage, pumped
and Barbara Logan, Meigs; Mickey and Sandi Gilkey. Other students half its ·oil, forged a third of its steel,
Kucsma and Donna Norris. Southern; . nominating winning teachers were · mined a third of its gold, produced
and Wilma Parker and Erlc Chambers third row, left, Molly Heines, Shau- more than half its cotton and com,
na Manuel and Laraine Lawson.
and most or its tollacco.

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News policy
In an elton to provide our readership with curreilt.news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The DaolyoSentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the-event.
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must'be
submitted within 30 days of occurrence. All binhdays must be submit·
ted within 42 days .ofthe occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

.Mostly ct. . r tonight, , .
Iowa In the SO.. ~• • ·
partly cloudy. Highs In the ~

Racine Council backs
Southern bond issue~..
Racine Village Council is once village as part of the Michael Wort'c
again supporting a proposed South- Subdivision. He reponed the alley;is.
ern Local K-S elementary school not exactly where everyone tliou~ll
building.
it was, and added that he loca1cd ptle
At its regular meeting Monday . of the original corner pins and lias
night, council met with Dave Spencer marked the property.
:.
of Racine, chairman of the Southern · Council said the alley will noi be
Local K-8 Building Commiucc, w~o closed. noting that in the futu* it
thanked council for its past endoroe- could be used for utility right-of-~y
ment of the building issue and asked or for future entrance or·egress. ~:
for a new endorsement ·- which
Brauer was advised to have l:!cr
council approved.
deed corrected.
:
·
Fire
Chief
John
Holman
reporiCd
Spencer said Racine-Syracuse
Home National Bank made a sizable the fence in front of the old gr~
donation to the building commiucc school will be replaced when lhc
allowing a spccial ·election on Aug. 6. stone wall is straightened up. ~·.
He noted that the bank apparentHolr)lan is anticipating constroicly feels ohc issue is of significant . lion of a new fire station adjacent·~
importance to the future of the com· old school and will apply for grant
munity to offer its support.
tllrli'~g~ county commission to hClp
' 9a'C kers of the measure arc seek- fund construction.
'
ing approval of a 6.1-mill hond levy
. In addition, council:
.
issue to fund construction of a new,
• Approved a resolution authorizdistrict-wide K-R elementary school
and ad_ditions and renovations to the ing the clerk to transfer funds from
the water fund into a debt service
existing high school.
In March, the issue failed in the fund to pay the principal and interest
Southern Local School District hy on a state loan for the water project.
• Amended the annual appropriaIll votes while voters in the Eastern
Local School District approved a tions ordinance ·and appropria!e4·
similar issue by 41 votes. according money into debt service and wall!r..
. ·to official results from the Meigs funds .
• Set Monday, July I at 7 p.m. for
County Board of Elections.
Council endorsed the issue to a hearing on the 1997 budget. 11\e
benclit the village in the future and budget will he availahlc for public
will encourage Racine residents to viewing at least 10 days prior to the '
hearing date .
·•
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support I he measure on Aug. 6.
• Set village cleanup day for June ..
In other business, council met
with Mary Brauer. a Vine Street res· 13- 14. Items, other than tires and liqt· :
idcnl, and surveyor Tom Smith to tcries. are•to he placed hy the curb for ·
address a prorcrty disagreement free pickup. Council also appro~cd :
having Modern Sanitation bring up~
there. '
Brauer reported that her property collection bin .
'
was . surveyed due to an ongoing
Present were councilmen Robeli
property dispute. She added that she Beegle. Duke Bentz, Dale Han, Hen;· ·
owns an alley there and has bee; pay- ry Lyons and Larry Wolfe, Mayo~ .
Jeff Thornt'on, lire chief John Hoi• '
ing taxes on it.
Smith said the survey was in man. firefighter David Ncigler a~ ·
error and thatthc alley hclongs to the street commissioner Glenn Ri1.cr. ... ~·
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it had a $134.3 billion surplus to dig
into.
Social Security's financial prob- ·
lems arc nol aS · worrisome yet

because the system still is taking in
more than it pays out. Howey,er, the
trustees had predicted eatlier that it
would not go broke until 2030.
Congressional hearings have
looked into Social Security, but the
level of debate has not been nearly as
high-pitched as with Medicare. ·
In this election year, solutions
seem unlikely because ·or the deep
philosophical differences in how to
fix the 3o:year-old program, which
was signed into law by Democratic
President Johnson and protected over
Congressional Democrats, mean- the years by Congresses dominated
while, accused the Republicans of . by Democrats.
trying to unfairly strip cnior citizens
&lt;if the coverage tlie'~ .now enjoy
In their annual report last year, the
under Medicare:
•
trustees said Medicare wouldn't be
"Their goal haS ' been to raid bankrupt until a(ter 2002, but the date
Medicare, not to savQ· it, to lavish has moved closer because of
more tax breaks on the very people increased medical costs for an ever·
who don't need them," said House growing elderly population.
Democratic Leader Dick Gcphardt or
Spendinll will continue to exceed
Missouri.
revenues, eating up the surplus and
· Medicl\fC Pan-A pays for cate for running growing deficits by 20&lt;ll
senior citizens in .hospitals, nursing unle,ss the system is changed.
fi!Cilities and hospices and at home .
II receives money primarily from
• A,n ev\m greater problem will
employcra and emp(oyees, who each exist in 2010 when the first of~ mil·
pay a 1.45 ~t payroll tax.
· lion baby boomers tum 65. Democ·
Medic:are's hospital fund actually rats and Republicans agree that a
swted spendinJ more last year than Qommission should be appointed to
it look in through the payroll ta~. but plan few that day.
· •

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CRASH INJURES ONE - A Pomeroy man
was ellghtly Injured In a two-vehicle crash on
U.S. 33 between Pomeroy and Rock Sprlnga
Tundsy. The Gallla-Melgs Post of the Stall
Highway Patrol said Keith D. Al!lll~. 42, 34415
Crew Ro41d. was trans&amp;:::' to Yelenlns ·
M8m0fill Hospltal'by the
EMS,.,... he ·
was treated and releasscl. Troopers said Ash-

ley was
·
at 2;45 p.m. when he
atopped hi1 pickup truck for traffic and was ·
etruck In the .rear by a minivan driven by Connie Q, ,Collll'il, 38, 38856 Peltch Fork Ro41d,
Po!Mi'oy. Dalnage to both vehicles was mcJd. .
. , . end Collins wu .cltad for atiSind clear
dlstan~. (Sentinel photo) ·
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�;':Commentary
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i ·:The Daily Sentinel
Xst116fis&amp;i m1!H8

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-912-2156 • Fax: 892·2157

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A.Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

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.._ger

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

• G1ner.t

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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Washington Today:
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1Candidate proposals
t~~ cut'taxes resemble
~ct under the big top

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letter to the editor
Betting the record straight in story
l)ear Ednor

: · This letter ts to set the record stratght ~bout Tom Hunter's arttcle in the
~ay 19, 1996 Sunday Ttmes-Sentmel front page story.
, : In my optmon the arttcle was totally btased for Columbta Gas I am not
i!Jre if you can beheve what you read m the newspaper tf all stones arc report·
Cd by the newspaper m the manner that thts story was handled
•: Ftrsl of allthts was not a roiitme line replacement, because the Colum·
Na.Gas ~o. hne ts now on the opposne stde of the road
: • "Sc&lt;:oild. no one had been m contact wnh me smce I asked the gas com·
PimY nolt~'instali the line last year J.ast year they knew they dtd not have
right of way and that ts why they stopped diggmg when I askellthem to
iiop . They also offered to pay me a ptddhng amount to put the hne on my
p,openy. 1 refused to let them install the line at that time because we could
nat agree on a pnce I have not heard one word from anyone smce then.
; ·So. on Friday, May 17, 1996. they just showed up and started dtggmg
liP. my land. ·
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" You notice that Columbta Gas Co. satd tbat We beheve m the local
iiathorities' eyes and our eyes that we are m the state's nght of way You dtd
uitderstand that they believe Well, I believe they have no nght of way. Let
iliem produce proof JIQ!tead of be'tef
If the stale owns ttl feet from the road tbcn they own pan of every store
Jn down town Pomeroy and many restdences on Mam Street as well.
, You also
to menuon tbat it was tbe Metgs County Prosecutor's
Office who hid me JJII'ested and put me under a restraining otder to keep
._ off my own poperty. so as not to tmpede the ·gas company's work. The
l!rosecutor'&amp; omee llplllml!ly ~ahz.ed that mtstake and dropped the charges. .
:
Slnc:eN!y,
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Dottie Turner

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roraot

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ed hirp' as somqlnng of an oddity in
the House. Long before the 1994
class of Republicans came to Wuhington promising to shake lhings up,

In a 1974 incident, "(hich has been
retold a thousand times, Ja&lt;:obs
refused to accept a first-class sell on
a fljghlto Washington even though
all the coach fares had been booked.
The difference between coach and
first class was only $20, paid by the
government. but Jacobs "dtdn 't want
to VIolate my own pnnctple " by flying first class (he had previOusly
mlroduced a btll requtring all federal
employees to fly coach). So he
Jacobs was provmg that It's entirely
posstble to get along m Congress drove through a snowstorm to take an
wilhout gomg along wttb the pre- earlier fltghtthe mght before.
The next day, snung tn hts Capt·
vailing wtnds.
He ts a man of legendary frugali- tol Hill office, Jacobs watched as a
ty, who sull dnves to work each vtolent thunderstorm flashed " balls
morning tn a 1981 Oldsmobtle of llghtnmg" across the sky Only latOmega One recent day, as he was er dtd he learn that the plane he was
rushmg off to gf.t an oll change m scheduled to take crashed on arnval
between votes on raiSing tbe mtm- at Dulles wrport, ktlllng everyone on
mum wage, Jacobs found a note on board.
Consumer advocate Ralph Nader,
his windshteld asking htm to please
call the head of the parking garage. who calls Jacobs "the consctence of
A parking attendant, It seems. thou2ht the House." beheves n's hts comtment to pnnctplc that prevented
so111eone was stealing hts parking
from attammg the kmd of
cobs
space because a car that old couldn't
adershtp status that often accombelong to a member of Congress.

WASHINGTON - The House of
Representatives wtlllose a rue IIUsure thts November when Rep.
Aildrew Jacobs, 0-lnd., retires from
the House and goes back to Indianapolis
How rare?
Save for a two-year stmt m 197274, he's been re-elected every two
years since 1964, despite spending
less than $10,000 per electton cycle.
He doesn't take money from lobbyists or political acuon comnunees. He
accepts only "about $83,000" of his
S133,500 salary out of opposlllon to
congresstonal pay htkes The rest ts
returned to the treasury. He answers
hiS own mall Hts only govemmentpwd JUnket was servmg tn the Korean War, xet he 's opposed every
Amencan m1l1tary mterven110n smce
'he came to Congress
Even more unusual. m this age of
press releases and talkmg pomts, rs
thts The 64-year-old Jacobs speaks
- and votes - his mmd. It's a practtce that's made htm wtldly popular
with voters back home but has pamt-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln

~
'

IT'S WORTH A. TRY.
~DUNfl BITES ANP

H~ANTSHMA

, By_WALTER R. MEARS

leyean.)

OHIO Weather
Thur!day, June 6
AccuWeathcr" lurc.ast lur ~ayt nll•' ''lllJttluns ~nd htgh temperatures

Congress .will. iniss 'conscience · of tlie ·House'

: A"

Special Correspondent
•
•WASHINGTON - On the tightrope between cullmg taxes and balanc: ina tbe budget, President Clinton and challenger Bob Dole both arc tesung
: ~ fOOling for nval campatgn performances
' , Sitice there's not likely to be a dcfimtlve settlement on enher laxes or budsc;ts before the prestdenual elccuon. competmg, hard-to-mesh promtses on
• lalles'and dcficns wtll be a contest for posit ton and credtbtlny, talk now, aclton
• later.
•• In tbe Dole camp. there has been dt sc usston of maJor, across-the-board
laX cuts, perhaps of 15 percent, perhaps a proposal to return to the two-bracket income tax system enacted a decade ago, wtth a 28 percent top rate
Dole tsn' t saying. "We're not many hurry to put out our agenda," he said
~ But he ts saymg he wtll push on the other front , forcmg a farewell Senate
: vole on a balanced budget amendment to the Conslttuuon
, ! It lost by a vote a year ago. and Dole docsn 't clatm he can reverse the
• outcome now "But before I leave, I'm gomg to bnng up that balanced bud; Jel amendment one more ume," he satd m Warren, M1ch , Monday "One
1
more time"
With that, he challenged Chnton to swnch and back the amendment, "no
wmks, no nods no excuses " And no way
,
Chnton satd that mstead, the Republicans ought to resume negottattons
! on a balanced budget plan. sayJng tbe amendment would only put off tbe dect~ sion on real actiOn
When Dole makes hts move. tbere'll be a Democratic attempt to rcvtse
· lho amendment so as to requtre balanced budgets wnhout countino Soctal
c
Sccunly, which currently runs a trust fund surplus Calculated that way
between now and the year 2002, that could compel unmanageable cuts m
othet federal spendmg,
But the amendmenttdea ts popular wtth voters, and the Democrats need
a counter to denect the tssue Dole wtll be prcssmg m hts campatgn.
it fits wnh Dole's clatm that Clmton ts back on the balanced budget track
only because there's a campaign on, and that the prestdent's promtses ''self
destruct m about 10 seconds."
,.. •· After promtsmg a mtddle class tax clil m 1992, Dole satd, "he tmposed
lhc largest tax mcrease m the htstory of Amenca,
' .
. • "And I mtend to go premcly m the opposne dtrecuon," Dole sat d. "I
believe we can cut taxes, reform the ta' x code and balance the budget "
· Jlutthe Republican challenger has a record of hts own on that score; he
lielped engineer earher tax mcreases atmed at curbmg delicti spendmg He
l!ttt delicti control first , paymg a pohttcal toll for n when he ran for prest'dcnt m 1988. That's not been repeated, he has satd natly there wtll be no tax
increases m a Dole admmtslratton, not qutle the read-my-bps pledge George
'BKsh made and couldn ' t keep. but close.
And while House Speaker Newt Gmgnch satd Republicans already have
J!fOVCd there would be a balanced budget by 2002 wttb a $245 btlhon tax
cut at the same ttme, there are GOP skeptics about broader reductmns
Rep Bill Archer, chatrman of the House Ways and Means Comminee,
iaid a IS percent cut would cost $90 btl lion a year. far more than any GOP
bu'dgct envisioned, and the funds would have to be made up somewhere
, .. :·1 personally am not creauve enough to know how you do that," he satd
• The tax talk ts speculative, not a Dole proposal But Democrats are on
},he case anyhow, Sen Tom Daschle. the Democratic leader, calling n " Sen
1
J&gt;ole's $700 billion tax cut" as though there were one.
•. l1te Democrats have been argumg since the Republicans won Congress
that thetr tax cut proposal would benefit the' nch, not average Amencans
:Across the board cuts would be vulnerable to that auack.
: Chnton favors targeted tax cuts, satd Laura Tyson, chatrman of hts Coun~tpfEconomtc Advtsors, to make them affordable and conststent wnh a bali.pq:d budget. "The approach ts.targetcd tax relief, targeted by mcome and
lrugeted by functton ," she satd
:: As for Dole, he 's satd only that he wtll have a pro-growth tax pollc y llhd lhll there arc a lot of tdeas out there
.
:,; "Seems to me he 's getung an awful lot of advtce," Archet srud the oth~ pay. "If I were m hts poslllon, I mtght be a httle confused by now."
• : •(Wlllter R. Mean, vice pre,tident and columnist for The Assodated
~ llu rq&gt;nrud on Washington and national politics for more than

Pege2

Wedl u;ley,Junel, 1M

LOT IN COMMON.

~

took over the HOllie tn 1994, Jecobs
chaired the Soctal Secuncy subcommtttee of the tnfluential Ways &amp;
Means Committee.
"He prachces what he preaches,"
Nader told our as~K~Ctate Jan Moller
"And he stands in stark contrast to
the knaves and hypocrites and selfenrichers on Capitol Hill.''
Yet Jacobs manages to stay princtpled wltholit bemg preachy. He
bnngs to hts JOb an acidtc touch of
humor. whtch somcttmes grates on
the fragtlc egos of hts colleagues.
Jacobs fondly recalls an evcnmg
encounter m the early 1970s With former Rep. Mendel Rivers, 0-S.C., a
whtte-hatred conservative ch:unnan
of the House Armed Services Committee who never met a milill\fY proJect he dtdn't hke .
A few days earher. Rivers had
been embarrassed on nattonalteleviston dunng the unvethng of Lockheed Corp.'s brand-new CS- A military atrcrafl Wttb cameras rolhng
and Rtvers lookmg on, the C5-A was
landmg at a military base in South
Carolma when the wheels fell off the
atrcraft
That cvenmg Jacobs was walking
through a tunnel m the Rayburn
House Office Butldmg wtth hts constant compamon. a Great Dane that
he had named C5 As they were nearmg the members· garage, they spotted Rtvers walktng tn the other dtrectlon

••
t

L_

pantes senioricy. Until Republicans

't.;.l··
_
!.. ..'': ,.,..,
- •a , . •

"'~' "-

·._;-~
'
"-'\'.
•.
~
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~- 'Poa1 Wllln\91Nv1t!~&amp;IOMA''t);7'~
_ _ __;_~--.----:---------------------,---.:__ _ ___;_ _ _j
,,

"That's a mighty fine animal
you've got thet;e." Rtvers satd of the
dog.
"Thank you," Jacobs rephed, "but
there's only one trouble wtth htm, Mr.
Chatrman- one of hts legs fell off."
fhough the dt&lt;gruntled Rtvers
fat led to find much humor m Jacobs'
remark, the inctdcnl prompted tbcn
Sen John Culver, D-lowa, to note
that Jacobs' antagontsm of the powerful chatrman might make h•m the
"hrst person m htstory to he mdtvtdually nuked "
Looktn~ back on hJS career,
JQcobs says hell mtss most " those
rare moments of rauonal dtscussion
of the problems, dcvotd of mm&lt;llcss
po;1unng "
What will he mtss the least?
"All the rest of the It me "
(Jack Andenon and Michael
Binstein are columnists for United
Featu"' Syndicate.)

Dole should help Clinton keep Bosnian peace
mess - but at the moment, he and
other Republicans are lookmg backward, mtent on convenmg a Clinton
success mto an embarrassment
Ftve separate. congressiOnal com-

Instead of trymg to make a scandal out of the Chnton admtntstrallon 's
knowledge of Iranian anns atd to
Bosma, Republicans ought to help
Clinton keep the fragtle peace he's
made m the Balkans
. Spectfically, GOP prestdential
candidate Bob Dole should urge
Clmton to order mthtary acuon to
arrest the war cnmmals who run tbe
Serb half of Bosma and threaten to
undermme the Dayton peace accords
Havmg been badly burned by the
botched effort to nab. warlord
Muhammad Farrah Adtd m Somalia
m 1993. Chnton is reluctant to pursue Bosman Serb bosses Radovan
Karadztc 11nd Ratko Mladtc, even
though they arc wanted for trial at the
Hague war cnmes lnbunal
Cltnton undoubtedly fears that
Republican$ wtll mercilessly attack
him for any U S. casualttes m Bosma
Dole could remove that threat
Karadzic and M lad tc are accused
msp~r~ng and carrymg out mass
cxecuuons and other atrocntcs
agamst Mushms and now prevent
anyone but ethmc exlremtsts from
parttctpatlng m Bosman Serb pohti·
cal hfe
If they remam m power, the
chances are that the " free and fair "
elections scheduled for September
wtll be a sham, and tf NATO forces
leave the country on schedule at the
end of the year, 11 wtll be only a mat·
ter of time before crvtl war breaks out
agatn
If Dole ts elected prestdent m
November, he'd be responstble for
figunng out how to cop&lt;! wtth the

. Morton Kondracke
minces are looking into tbe admimstration's Apnl 1994 dccts1on not to
obJCCtto a proposal by Croaua's prestdent, FranJO TudJman, to allow arms
from Iran to be shtpped through hts
temtory to Bosnia.
Senate Intelligence Chatrman
Arlen Specter, R-Pa. is representmg
the dcctsiOn as a "covert actton"that
the admmtstralton was legally
requtrcd to repon to his panel, but
didn 't In fact, whtlc the dccJston was
"covert," t.e , secret. 11 mvolved no
real U S "acuon" at all
TudJman asked U S. ambassador
Peter Galbratlh on Apnl 28 what the
U.S. reacuon would be if lslamtc
nattons, mcludmg Iran, transshtpped
arms to Bosma Galbratth, after consulting Washmgton. responded on
Apnl 29that he had no mstructtons
It was a "green hght" to Croaua.
but unhkc the 19861ran-contra affair,
m whtch the Reagan Whtlc House
sold overpnced anns to Iran and used
the P,rolits to atd Nrcaraguan rebels in
vtolatton of congressiOnal mandates,
the Chnton admmtstratton pohcy
was purely dtplomauc.
"If Congress' had to be mformcd
every umc we were asked our opmton" by a forctgn government and gave
11 ," a Clmton envoy commented,
" th1s country would be unable to con-

.

of

duct foretgn policy "
Moreover, accordmg to another
hero of U S. Bosma pohcy, fomlcr
Asststant Secretary of State Rtchard
Holbrookc. gelling arms to Bosmafrom whatever source - was uidis·
pensablc m savmg Bosma's Mushms
from dcstrucuon tn the. winter of
1994-95
•
"Withoutn," Holbrookc testified
to Specter. "the Bosnian government
would never have survived the wmter, and we would never have goncn
to Dayton."
• '
Dole and most Republicans
favored umlatcral U.S. liftmg of the
Unttcd Nations arms embargo to atd
Bosnta. but the admtntstraltOn resistcd because European · nattons wtth
troops on the ground m the Balkans
nnhtantly opposed it.
'
ln September 1994, Hoi brooke
and Galbraith dcvtsed an ahcrnauvc
:hat became known as the Hol~rookc
lntllattvc, whereby the Umtcd States
would have arranged for Pakistan,
, Turkey, Saudt Arabta and other
fricndly Islamic countries to secretly
break the arms embargo. but the poltcy was reJected by Secretary of State
Warren Chn stopher and tbe While
House.
Eventually, though, Bosma tlsclf
dutctly asked those countries and
others to provtdc arms, whtch they
did · Without U S. COIJ USIOn U S
dtplomats csltmatc that Iran was the
source of less than half the weaponry reachmg Bosma durmg 1994 ·and.
1995
Republicans-have anackcd Clinton
for "cncouragmg an lrantan foothold

in Europe "Or, as Rep Henry Hyde,·
R-Ill , put II, "standmg by whtlc tbc
most terroriSt nation on earth comes
mto the bosom of the most volatt}e
place on earth "
Hyde ts chatrman of a select subcommtllec created by the House
GOP lcadcrshtp to look into the
Clinton policy The full Hous'c lntcrnaltonal Rclattnns Commlltcc, the
House lntclhgcncc Committee and
the Senate Forctgn Rclallons Colmmtttcc also arc mvesttgaung
In Senate testtmony, Hoi brooke
satd that the number ol armed lr~nt­
ans m .!losma ts now down to "the
low douhle dtglls." US dtplomals
say 11 was once m the hundreds
One dtplomat satd, "The thmg
that gave the lramans thetr opportu·
mty was the war The more dcsperate thmgs got, the better they WQI"C for
Iran. Paradoxtcally, our no-obJect ton
pohcy (toward !raman anns) had the
result of reducing tbc threat from Iran
because 11 enabled the Bosntans to
defend themselves and reach a ncgouated settlement " ,
·
Exactly Prcstdenl Clinton ·s JOb
now ts to make sure that the settlement holds Republicans arc tempted
to pay Democrats back for the many
foreign policy probes they conducted durtng the Reagan and ' Bush
years, but thetr long-term interest
should be in helping Chnton keep tbc
peace
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)

Can a·dmittedly liberal media stay unbiased?
Apparently the editors and
reporters who cover Congress for our
newspapers are finally ready to abandon altogether the old wheeze that
thetr personal pohttcal vtews are
comfort&lt;1bly typtcal of tbe country as
a whole.
Accordmg to ,, survey conducted
(by mat!) by the Roper Center and lhe
Freedom Forum, a huge maJonty of
139 Washington- base~ bureau chtefs
and congresstonal correspondents
cheerfully admtl to bemg far to the
left of Amencan pubhc opimo~
(Whatever became of "diversity" ?)
Of the 139, 22 percent descnbe
themselves as " liberal"; 39 percent
as "liberal-to-moderate", 30 percent
as "moderate'', 7 percent as "mod·
erate-to-conservattve ";and 2 percent
as "conservative." In other words,
accepting !he assurance of30 percent
tbat they are mtddle-of-the-roaders,
thllleaves 9 percent describing themselves as more or less conse'O'altve1

and 61 percent (or nearly seven
ltmcs as many) callmg themselves
more or less hberal.
When these self-descriptions were

William A. Rusher
last put to the test, however, 89 percent of the 139 voted for Clinton over
Bush m 1992. That staggenng figure
can be reached only by addmg
together all of the "liberals," all of
tbe "moderate-to-liberals," and all
but one-fifteentb of the self-desc(tbed
"moderates. " (Seven percent of the
139 voted for Bush, 2 percent for Perot, and 2 percent for unspectfied
"others.")
When 11 comes to party affilla·
tions, tltinas aren't much better. Oply •
4 percelt clajm to be Republican. SO
pereenr.' or over 12 times as many,
say they're Democrats; 37 percent
profes.' to be "independent;" and 9
percent claim some other allegtanCe, ·

•

Lord knows what.
Now, there ts nothmg m the least
new about all thts. The Lichter-Rothman survey of 1980 revealed that
never less than 80 percent of Amenca's "media elite" (a larger category,
mcludmg clectromc med1a) had voted for the Democrauc candtdatc m
the four tmmediately preccdtng presIdential electtons, mcludmg even that
leftist scarecrow George McGovern, ·
who lost every state but Massachusetts And there have been plenty of
otber surveys to the same general
effect.
lttsn'tcven news that Washington
political reponers are nqw admmmg
their btas. For the last 2"0 years tbcy
have lieen denying 11 only perfunct&amp;nly. What they are now seriously trying to contend is til8l they don't let
this tndispullble bias interfete wttll
their coverqe of tho news.
As Fred Baines pointed out years
aao. the media would be the first to .

hoot at any nommcc for &amp;judgeship
who admmed to betng a member of
the Ku Klu• Klan but promtsed not
to lei hts ractal vtews interfere with
his decistons in civtl rights cases. The
whole contenllon ts laughable. But
demonstrattng the liberal bias in
news stones, though ndtcufousiY.
easy, can only be done on a case-by•
case basts, whtch in effect means tbat;
in generic terms, it ts almosttmpos~
stble to do at all. Yet the briefest
glance at almost any major newspa~
per in lhe land wtll put all pretension~
of "neutrality" to rest
!
I used to think that hberal
reporters, or at least some of them.
had such a htgh optnion of lhein~
selves that they really believed they
COilld and dtd SCI astde their biases;
when the)! s11 down to wnte a story.

(William A. Rllllter t. a DIIIWphbed Felow el the a u - t
11'1141lute for the StiMly el S.....
mc=hlp ud PollthiiPUu pby.)

MICM

/

•

~ungslown

INO

'·

• IColumbus 178' I
.

. .

The FBI fingerpnnt analysts ts
pan of Whttewater prosecutor Ken·
neth Starr's investigllion of how the
records of Mrs Clinton's work ror a
faded Arkansas savtngs and loan
turned up on a table tn the White
House book room.
The records were assembled durmg the 1992 campatgn wnh Foster's
help berore droppmg from stght.
Four of the s t~ people whose fingerpnnts were found on the records
had access to the Whnc House.

River $weep set June 15
The annual Ohio River Sweep wtll
be held Saturday, June IS.

WVA.

·· @.~ -~~4~ t1 ~a
Showers T·stonns Ram

Fl~rnos

Snow

VIa AssoCJatod Preu Graph/csNet

tee

Sun

Pt. Cfou

Cloud

1

-'Storm system to b~ing
..'rain into area Thursday
Sunnsc Thursday wtll be at6 07 a m
By The Associated Press
Weather forecast:
It wJ II be cloudy m Ohoo tontghl
Tomght.
Mostly clear lncreasmg
wnh lows m the 50s
cloudmess
west
Lows m lhe lower
A storm system wtll move mto the
~Os
northeast
to
the
upper 50s south·
oregton from the west, and showerS'
west
and thunderstorm s arc ex pec ted
Thursday Showers and thunderstatewtdc on Thursday The ram wtll
storms
lik~ly west Partly cloudy wnh
L:On tmue tnlo Fnday
a
chance
of mainly afternoon showHt ghs Thursday wtll be 1rom the
ers
and
thufiderstorms
east Htghs
mod 70s m the north to the mtd-80s
mtd
70s
to
the
lower
80s
m extreme southern Ohw Low s
Extended forecast:
Thursday mght wlll be from the
Fnday
Showers and thunderupper 50s t&lt;J the mtd-60s Htghs Fnstorms
hkcly
Lows upper 50s to mtd
. day wtll be m the 70s
.
60s
Ht
ghs
tn
the 70s
The record l11 gh temperature for
Saturday A chance of showers.
thts date at the Columbus weather
1n thq 50s Htghs m the 70s ,
Lows
stati on was 95 tn 1925 The reco rd
Sunday
. Dry Lows tn the 50s.
low was 39 tn 1990
Htghs
75
to
85
Sunset today wtll be at 8 57 p m

The Ohto ltiver Sweep, a nverbank cleanup day for.the Ohto River
and i!S tributaries~ covers six states
(OhiO, Indiana, llhnots, Kentucky,
West VtrgJnta and Pennsylvama) and
nearly 2,000 mtles of Ohto River
shoreline
Th•s year mw:ks the etghth observance of the nver sweep, created and
coordmated through the Ohto Rtver
Samtauon Comm 1ssJon (ORSANCO). Locally. the sweep will be
coordmated by Scou Copley, pubhc
relations coordmator for the GalhaJackson-Metgs-Vinton Solid Waste
Management Dtstrtcl
The sweep wtll mclude four sties

m Metgs County : Middleport.
Pomeroy, Racme, and Reedsvtlle at
Forked Run State Park The sweep ts
scheduled to begm at each site at 9
am and wtll end around noon T·
shtrts and refreshments wtll be provtded for all who &gt;olunteer
In addtuon to mdiVIduals. all
scout groups, clubs and ctvtc orgam zauons are welcome and encouraged
to parttctpatc and volunteer as a
group.
Those wantmg to volunteer should
contact Copley at the sohd waste dts·
trict office at 1-800-544-1853 to
obtam the proper watver
Copley satd volunteers should
remember to wear old clothmg,
rugged shoes and bnn~ gloves.

Accide.n ts eyed by police

.

'

'

scholarship applications available

.

· Applications for the annual Carleton College Scholars hops are no~
·available to all interested graduating high school seniors who restd
in the village of Syracuse
,
Applications for the awards are avatl able at the home of John Lisle,
1290 Church Street, Syracuse.
·

Pomeroy officers probe two accidents
No ctlallons were tssued m two separate acc idents tn Pomeroy Sunday evening, accordtng to Pohce Chtcf Gerald Rought
The first acctdent occurred at 6 29 p m on the Btg Bend Food land
parktng lot Accordtng to reports, John F Fultz, 67, Mtddlcport, was
leavmg the lot m hts 1992 Dodge when he struck a parked 1986 Ford
owned by Robert P Schnctdcr, Pomeroy.
Damage to both vcht cles was lt ght Nu InJUnes were reported
The second acctdcnt occutred at 6 40 p m on Lt ncoln Ht ll Dnve,
Accordmg to reports, Gregory 0 Erwtn , 48. Pomeroy. was travehng ,
down Lmcoln Holl Dnvc, afterturmng onto the dnve from Lmcoln Tcr- l
race, when hts 199 1 Ford wa.~struc k by a 19R7 Ponuac dnvcn by Jamtc •
J Pennington. 19 Mtddleport
Moderate damage was recorded to both vchtclcs No tnjuncs were ,
reported

I
j
I

!.

Drivers escape injury in accident
No sen ous

lflJUri C:s

were reported m a two·car Mldd lcport Jtl;ldcnl ~

I

Saturday mornm g. accordmg to Po llee Cht cf Std Lml c
The acc tdcnt occurred at II·'. I a m at the mterscc110n of Moll Street
and South Fourth Avenue Accordtng to reports. a 1987 Plymouth dnvcn by Dalla&gt;K Weber 41. Langsv tlle. was turmng left onto Mo ll Str~l·
I •
when he was strut k by a west bound 1985 Plymouth , dn ven by Ktru•
berly D Gtlh&lt;rt, 29. Mtdplcport
,
Moderate damage was rec orded to both vc luclcs No cttauons were~

J

ISSued

1f

•.a

Deputies briefed on car-deer accidents

.t

Three deer/car colhston s were reported recently by de~uu cs ol 1he
Mctgs County Shcnffs Department
•~
Clet t&gt; Dalton. 4&amp; Rutl and. was southbound on State Route '143 In:)
Sctpto 1 ownshtp Saturday mornmg when he struck a deer thai r~ n m to
the path o1 hts 1990 Ponu ac causmg moderate dam age
.:•l
Jackt c S Elam 60. Pomeroy was eastbound on Fotcst Run R o~(i \
m Sutton Town shtp earl y Sunday cvcnmg when a deer struck the stdc
ol htS 198 1 Butck. causmg moderate damage
'':'
Ehad A Hale. Alh.my was northbound•on County Road I m Colutw•l

,

Ginseng plant theft reported to sheriff

Racine VFD responds to car fire

'Recorder posts land ,transfers
: The followm g land transfers were
,pnsted recently m the oflke o1Mctgs
County Recor(ler Emmogene Hamtl·
ton
Rtght or way, Mtchael and Amy
Baker to Tuppers Pl ams-Chcster
Water Dtslnct . Chester. 6 acre s,
. Ri g~\ of way, Steven and Jackalyn
Frost to TPCWD. Chester, '
Roght of way, Robert A Durst to
zy.c;wp, Sutton parcels,
Rtgllt'of way, Darren E and Car· men Jean Hayes to TPCWD, Bed[ord, I 965 acres.
•
•
. Rtght or way, Loos Allen , Wilham
, D and Jane Graham to TPCWD,
.,Bedford, 24 acres.
Deed, Jack W Carsey to Robert E
Bush, Mtddleport parcel s,
, Deed, Gencal Duncan to Shannon
,T and Tina M Northup Mtddleport,
Deed, Farmers Bank &amp; Savmgs
.co to Russell E Starcher. Chester ,
Deed, Alan Lee and Ltlhc' A
Cummmgs to Ronald J and Tma Justocc, Saltsbury, 9-3/10 acre;
Deed Leo G and Enna J Kmg to
Davtd A and Mary Jo Barnnget
Orange. 2 5 acre ;
' Dceq, ~cnn c th 1). ond Betty L
Young. Gregory and Pmgc Wmc,brcnnc• to Fred W Crow III .
Pomcmy.
Deed, Mll ztann Kimber, Mtlzt
Ann Kimber to Rt chard Curu s,
Racmc vollage,
' Deed. June Sayre, June J and
George J Kalalla to George J and
'June J Kalatta, Symcuse,
Dee&lt;j, Shff!da M
Spyer. ,
deceased, and Robert E. Sayers to
Nctl and Juanita Beaver, Letart: otl
and gos mtnerals,
' Deed, Gary E and Kathy L
.Spenccl to Curt Spencer, Columbta
'parcel,
,
Deed. SOCCO to Harold D and
Sheryl Ann Lambert, Salem parcels,
: Deed. John and Sue Douglas to

Local News in Brief:~-

The first acctdent occurred at
No InJUries were reported m a
car/truck acctdent investigated by 3:24p.m on Nyc Avenue
Accordmg to reports, a 1993
Pomeroy pollee Monday mommg,
b1a To wnsh1p Tucsdn y cvcnmg when he struc k se ve ral d eer !hal nm
Cadtllac,
dnven
by
Carolyn
L.
Smnh,
accordmg to Pollee Chtef Gerald
mto the path of ht&lt; 1975 Ford Ranchero, causmg moderate d ama~c·
·~
.,... .,
51, Pomeroy, was stopped tn traffic
No m]unes were reported
· ·
Rought.
•id
No cttaltons were tssued m a two- when 11 was struck from behmd by a
car acctdent Monday at 9:35 a m on 1993 GMC Truck. dnven by Samuel
E. Carrell, 22, Blue Springs. Mo
East Mam Street
Mct gs County shcnft's dcpuucs arc mvcsugaung the thch of IS gto&lt;' 1
to
both
vehtcles
was
Damage
Accordmg to reports, Donna Y
scng plants from a Chester area resrdcnce.
· •?
Jacks. 48. Pomeroy, was makmg a hght. Carrell was ctted for fatlure to
Raymond Elhcr1eld, Pomeroy Ptkc , reported Tuesday that on Sun- ,
slow left turn when she stopped assure clear d1s1ancc.
day the plants were taken from a plant bed ncar hts rcstdcncc He re port_' , ~
The second a&gt;ctdent occurred at
qutckly and was struck from behmd
cd he has had that bed [or more than 25 years and that 11 was ncv&lt;.-r ·
by a 1988 Mack truck owned by 3.53 p.m. on the Rivcrstde Food Mart
bothered
parking lot
Modem
Samtat10n,
Pomeroy,
and
dn'"•
1" '\1;
According to reports. a 1989
ven by Robert F Lawson, 26, M•d·
Chevy, dnvcn by Glona D BradNo lnJUncs_wcrc rcporlcd fol\owmg an automobile f1rc ncar Rae me• II
dleport.
shaw,
46,
Pomeroy,
and
a
1991
Damage to tbe truck was hght,
Monday cvcntn~ ,
1 homas fi.l and AIJlanda D Scyoc, whtle damage to Jacks' 1984 Dodge Chevy. dnvcn by Enc J Spencer, 25,
Jerry Smtth, RaCi ne . was ncar the JUncti on of SR 124 and Bashar&gt; 1
Ohve parcel;
Pomeroy. colhded when they were
Road when he smelled smoke accordmg to a report !rom the Mctgs
was heavy to the rear of the vehtcle
Deed, George P. and Ohve M
County Shcnffs Dcpanmcnt He pulled over and then sa w O.tmcs com -n~
Pomeroy pollee tssued one Ci\a· cntcnng the lot
Murphy to James R and Vtckie D uon m tis mvesttgattOn of two sepa·
Ltght damage was recorded to
mg from under the hood ol hts 1985 Ponttac
'' ''
Taylor, Ohve. 5 884 acres.
both
vehtcles No cuauons were
The Raunc Volunteer Fore Departm ent res ponded to the stc n~
rat~ acctdcnts Tuesday, accordmg to
Deed, Charles E and Evelyn Rought.
ISSUed
Allen to &lt;'llarles W Cochran IV, Set·
p10 parcel .' 2 4369 acres;
Deed, Karon S. and Thomas L.
Burroughs, Sharon A and Robert R. League to nfeet
MIDDLEPORT
wtll be spectal smgmg mghtly EvanUmts of the Mct gs County Emcr10 54 p m. Bradhury Road Aloo
K1rkbridC, Judy and Walt~r E JurnMetgs JuniOr Golf League. regts- geltst, John Elswick, Athens Public
gency Medtcal Scrvtcc recorded nmc na Gnmm, Hol ze r Mcdt cal Ccntct
er John E. Frazer, Rebecca and John trauon and first match. 8.45 a m mvtted by Pastor Clyde Henderson
calls
for assiStance. mcludmg two
POMEROY
., 11
D Panerson to Ronald R ljand RaeWednesday, June 12, Metgs Golf
transfer
calls
Umts
rcspnndmg
lynn Clamptlt,
5 3Ra m , Children's Home R.m1ol
, mcludcd·
Dinner announced
Deed, Margaret M Andrews to Course.
Jenny
Prolflll, Veteran s Mcmonal
A spaghetll dmner wtll be held
Raymond'' and Megan Andrews,
Hospnal,
,,It
Sunday at the VFW bmldmg m TupBoard to meet
Pomeroy,
I 23 p m Condm Street, M.JrtiM
The Meigs Local Board of Edu- pers Plams sponsored by tbc Ladtcs
Deed, Vtrgil C Ktng , Mary D.
Hall,
VMH ,
,.co:
Auxthary
Kmg, Vtrgtl C and Mary D King to catiOn wtll meet m regular sesston
2 55 p m . volunteer fore dcpaot
Todd H. Renmtre, Bedford parcel • • Monday: 7 p m at the dtstncl's cen- Fi~Tmen's dinner
mcnt and s~uad to U S 33 m a~.q1·
Deed. Del and Linda Ogdtn to tral office m Pomeroy The mccung
The
followmg
achons
In
end
marvcht clc acc tdcnt , Carolt nc and &lt;': 211·
Pomeroy Volunteer Ftrc Departwas ongmally scheduled for Tuesday
SOCCO, Salem parcel , ·
ment wtll have a chtcken and nb bar- rtage were 1ikd recently tn the oir.cc ntc Wilson. reiused trc.ouncnt K;etlh
Deed, George and Margaret Buck," ,.
becue Sunday at the fire house wnh of Mctgs County Clerk ol Courts Lar- Ashley. VMH ,
'.
Icy to James and Ltnda Brnton. ABLE dinner
ry
Spencer
7
24
p
m
,
Beat
wal
low
Rocli!A
. Annual recogntllon dmner for the scrvtng startmg at II a m
Oltvc, 5 acres ,
Dtssoluuons asked - Shcn Lynn Bcnha Samerantos. VM H
Deed. Ashland Incorporated to a Adult Baste and Lneracy Educatton Homeschool group
Chcvalter, Vtenna. W Va . and Rtck
RACIN E
program, Metgs Htgh School cafcteand M Fuel Company Inc . Sutton;
Chevalier, Rcedsvtllc, May 30. James
I 5 1 p m , Folth Street . ~t\'~
The
Mctgs
County
Homcschool
Deed, George W Ill , Tamara L na, Monday, 6 p m • sponsored by the Support Group T.E A C H (Trammg Kct1h Abies and Edna Mac Ahles Crouch. treated .11 the scene
•
and Mary B Hackett to Joseph A and Mtddlcport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Education and Ch11sllan Home) wtll both of Racmc, May 24, Daron 1
2.13 p m., motor vchtcle acc tO&gt; tll
Educattonal
Maureen E Hennessy, Pomeroy and the Mctgs County
•
be having a [amtly ptcmc, June IS. Roush and Angela Mane Roush. on State Route 124 Betty Wt/l.i,)!
Scrvtcc
Center
parcels, ' .
both of Racmc. May 21 .
Forked Run State Park Noon lunch
Deed, Neva Smger to Manon W
Dtvorces asked Conmc
take covered dtsh and table servtce.
.
and Garnet M Orr. Chester. 3 03 Revival set
Aldndgc
,
Rnc1nc
lrom
Ddn ~l
Jl.evtval serVICeS Will be held June Any homeschoolers m area mvncd to
.ocrcs.
Aldndgc,
Parkersburg.
W
Va
.
May
attend. For more triformatton contact
Deed. Arnold and Shtrley Parsons 11 - 16, 7 30 p m at the Hobson Ktm Hupp at614-949-3119.
31 , Mclamc Ktllle I rom Lmdcn P'a ul
to Tnn and Ktm Parsons. SciptQ. 1/4 Chrtsuan Fellowshtp Chu•ch There
Ktttlc, botp ol Pomeroy May 2 ~
.tcre ,
Dtssoluuons granted - Amcc
Deed, MyrtJc Phtlhps to Ttm and
Sue Ward and Troy E W'trd • May 31.
Road 7)
tcontinuad from Page 1)
Ktm Parsons. SctpiO, 5 acres.
Jclfrcy M Wontcn and Altson L
All
area
hcrhahsts
and
garden•. ..
,
Wooten . June 3. Rhonda L Moon
small rural busmesscs to markets
ers arc mvttcd to a herb and 1lowcr
and Lyle V Moon. June 3
more cflictcntly The concep11s to
ex~hangc and potluck dmncr .tt
D1vorcc granlcd - Jucquchnc L
~
~nract new revenues for our comBullington's
home
and
shop
SaturHolzer Medical Center
Boho
1rom James F Boho. June 3
mumty and mcrease the Vttahty of
day
from
4-8
p
m
Discharges June 4 - Patncta our small busmess sector," sata
··we'll be opentng the shop durEdwards, Brenda Hatftcld, Anna Amy Borgstrom ~f ACEnet.
mg the exchange to gtvc everyone
Dow, Julia Ncekamp, Robert Baker.
Computer users can I&lt;IStlthc stlc
a
chance to see and smell the won
(Published with permission)
at http //ctvtc nctlwcbmarket, whtlc
dcrful
hcrhs. sptces. teas, and pot'
plans are no,w bemg fmahzcd for a
poums
we have to offer Bnng live
Inventor' Dr Peter Goldmark or Cullpcppcrs Herbs and Sptcc
to I0 plant starts of your chot ec. m
CBS Laboratones demonstrated the Emponum storefront shop for area
four-mch
or larger contamers and
customers at Bulhngton's home on
, firsllong -playtnglfecord tn 1948
a
scrumpttous
covered dtsh for
'
Stde Htll Road (Sctpto Townshtp
By Ktnney
everyone to enJoy,' satd Bullmgton
Cover Sore Spots L1ke
of Saturday's •~change
•Sand Ftmshed
Reservations are requested for
··,
The 'followi11g couples were the exchange at the home 14 mtles
Textured Walls
issued mamage licenses recently m west of Pomeroy. The home ts less
Am Ele Powe~ ..................;:: ..39':4
•Cracked Wall s
the Meigs County Probate Court of than a half-mtle south of the mterAkzo .......................: •.•,.......... 59\
•Grooved Paneling
Ashland 011 ........................... 42~
Judge Robert Buck
sectron of Stdc Htll Road and Cot•Concrete
Walls
AT&amp;T .....................................61\
James Dale Jones, 23, and Lmda tertii Road, and rs located near the
Bank One ................................37
It's easy &amp; they'll be covered•II
Kay Patnck, 20, bothofMtddleport, Carpenter Inn 'and Conference
Bob Evans ............................15'!.
smoothly forever .and can' ·
Kenneth Ray Gumther, 38, Racme, Center.
Borg-Wamer .........................40:io
be patnted or papered any· .
and Margaret Mane Smilh. 34. SyraChampion Ind .......................18~
way you want. Just stze the
Charming Shop ...................... 7~
cuse,
City Holding ............................ 23
Brtan Wayne Teaford, 33, and
wall and hang
Federal Mogul ......................... 19
Chnstina Ann Karcher, 24, both of
LINING CANVAS
Gannett •••.•.•••••.••~•••••..•••.•.••..•70Yt
Pomeroy;
Adam
Thomas
Calaway,
ustng
a ready mtx v1nyl
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... so~
22,
Pomeroy,
and
Candy
Sue
Rtffle,
K·m&amp;rt .................. l ••••••••••••••••11 'I.
adhes1ve
'
26, Middleport.
Lands End .•....••.•••..•...•.....•...••. 22
Limited Inc ........... ,................ 21 '!.
Rellll
'
P1!9plee Bancorp: •1....,....... ~•• 23
12 99
Week~
Ohio Valley Bank..................32:io
' . 0/R
One Yaney ,...........................32\
Rockwell ,,;•.•~••.••• J. ...........i ••• 58,_.
Prem Flni ..............J................14t.la
Royal Dulch/Shell ............. 151 ~
Shoney'a lnc..... :.....................12~
Star 88nk ..............................69%
MfMORIAliRIDGI APPROACH ON ,,
Wendy lnt'l. ...........................17'!.
GAIFILD AYE. PARKIRSIURG ,
Worlhlngton Ind................... 19'-

Meigs announcements

EMS units log nine calls

:::~

Actions to end
marriages filed

.

A marketplace ------..,....--

Hosp' ··t.:.l new
"" s"

,LINING CANVAS

The Piilly Seniinel - l'i"""""""""~===~!!!!!'~=n
(USPS 213·9611)

Publuhed eyt.ry nftt.rn oon MQnday through
Fndny Ill ~Coun St Pomeroy. Ohto. b~ the
Ohio Vnlley. Publlslnng C:ornpanyiOilnnell Co ,
Pomemy, Ohio 4~?69. Ph 99'2·21$6 Sec:ond
cia~~ po~ t agc p:ud at Pomeroy

Mrmhtr: The A ~~oc •a ted

Oh1n

Pre ~o;

and 1he Ohm

Ne w~pa~ A SSOCiiltlOD

POSfMASTER Send oddre.n eorrectJong to
The Dmly Senunel. Il l Coun
Pomeroy.

s, .

Oh iO 45 769

SUBSCRIPTION RATllS
ay Carritr or Molor Route
One Week
Mooth
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Om:Year

•

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$8 70
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00

1

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Druly .................................................. 35 CeRU

not de7i1Jmg to pay the earner may
refill In odvonce d•rect to The Oa1 ly Sentll'lel
on 11 thrt'e , m: or 12 month b11~1 ~ € red11 Will br:
gtven ear11er t.ach week
Sub ~n heu

No ~ubsc np don by mall permlll~ tn areas
where home earner serv1~ •• qvruloble
,

· MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnMde Melp County

Stocks · '

-·-·- .

Stock 1reportl •re lhe 10:30
a.m. quoin pi'OIIIellf 11r Atlvnt
of Gllllpolll., &lt;
•
•
I·
,-~ ..~ .,
'

Marriage licenses

••••port Dept: Store

"'n 11M r

liN! I I Dll 10411.

I
I
J
I
'I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1.:

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
This

Special:

sa

Sale
"""'
WALLPAPER
BLIND SHOP
MOI.·FRI.-11·1:30 :1
Sll.
SUN. 12·5 ' .
•
\

J

•

Fi·r st Lady's prints
found on documents

WASHINGTON (AP) - Deepenmg one of Whitewater's big mysteries. !he FBI was able to idenbfy the
fingerprints of Jusl four people other
. than Htllary Rodham Chnton and
Vmcent Foster on btlling records thll
suddenly reappeared tn the Whtte
House residence
Whttewater prosecutorS provtded
the FBI results to the Senate Whitewater Commtltec, whtch meets today
on whether to grant tmmumty to
David Hale, a former munictpal
Judge m Arkansas who has made
accusauons agamst Prestdcnt Clmton.

IToleoo l 76 ' I

•r

The Dally Sentinel• Ptlge 3

Pomeroy • Mldd~ Ohio

We&lt;lnesday, June 5, 1996

•

••

•

•

•

�SpoJ:t~

Wedllttday, June 5, 1 •

The Daily Sentin~

•

-

...•

Wednesday, June 5, 1998
• By liKE NADEL
CHICAGO (AP) ~They took on
Pat Rilefs Miamt Heat, and it was
no con~ They traded hard fouls
with the New York Knicks, and lhey

In NL action,

·GoJilla
helps
Reds
beat
Giants
4-1;
Braves and Padres lose
..
Bv The AMoclated p,...

The Cmcmnati Reds found a way
to get the1r m1 nds off their recent losing ways. They laughed.
The team that was off to the franChise's worst stan in the last2S years
and had lost 13 of 17 games laughed
before, dunng and after lis 4-1 victory over the San Francisco Gtants
on Tuesday mghl
The Joculanty was courtesy of
owner Marge Schou 's latest 1dea to
help the Reds shake off their losing
ways- Slugger, the stuffed gorilla.
Go ahead, laugh. It worked.
Sc hott call ed the team into her
offtce before the game and presented them wtlh the puffy pnmate
adorned wtth a Reds cap The team
took 11 out for battmg practtce and
used 11 for target practice Then Slugger sat on the bench as the Reds won.
" We had a choice between Slugger and some other stuffed animal,"
satq Barry Larkm, who drove in
three runs wuh a homer and a triple.
" Hopefully, Slugget can help us get
on a wtnmng streak
. ·;Everybody went up there laughmg and came out laughmg So you
c a~ mte~ret that. Slugger got us off
the !flat today We'll see how long he
keeps us off the mat "
It helped that Roger Salkeld (2-1 l
allo.wed five h1ts in seven mnings in

his third start of the season.
Salkeld had the night 's first
encounter with Slugger He was the
first htller to strike the mammate ape
dunng banmg practice
"Yes, I did. That's nght," he said.
Salkeld has become adept at
pitchmg well after long layoffs. The
Reds' fifth staner allowed one run m
seven mnings in a loss to Aortda on
May 21 , when he was pttching for
the first bme• m 17 days Hts start
Tuesday came after ~ 13-day layoff.
" Thev ' ve kept me sharp, "
Salkeld satd " Every time I've been
sktpped, they ' ve put me ~n the
bullpen and said, 'You' ve got a
chance to pitch,' which has kept my
adrenalin nowing. I've j)ISI kept
myself mentally prepared to start."
Larkin hit a two-run homer in the
first, his etghtb, off Allen Watson (56) and tripled home a run in the seventh. Hal Morris added a pmch-htt
homer in the etghth.
The Giants didn't get a runner to
second base until the seventh, when
Matt Wilhams smgled and scored on
Mark Carreon's double
"He had us eatmg out of his
hand," Gtants manager Dusty Baker. "He mixed It up well The mam
thmg ts he got ahead of the httters. "
In other NL games Tuesday. tl
was Philadelphia 12. Chtcago 3,

Aorida S, Montreal 0: New York 12,
Allanla 6; Houston 16, Colorado 8;
Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 0; and St.
Louis II. San Otego S:
Phlllies 11, Cubs 3
Gregg Jefferies 'returned to the
lineup for the first ttme smce Apnl
4 and went 4-for-5 wtth two doubles
and two RBis, and Pete Incaviglia hit
two three-run homers m a game for
the second lime m a week.
Jeffenes, who tnjured his left
thumb shdmg into first base, was
commg off a 2-for-17 minor-league
rehabilitation sunt. Incavtgha, who
connected twice agamst Los Angeles
on May 28, hit homers m the fourth
and eighth that mcreased the visttmg
Phdlies' lead from 5-2 to 11-2
Mtke Wtlhams (1-4) won hts
first game smce last Sept. 30, allow"
mg five hils and two runs in seven
innings
Martins S, Expos 0
Gary Sheffield drove m four runs
with hts 18th homer, a double and a
groundout and John Burkett got hts
thtrd wm m hts last four stans.
Burkett (4-6) allowed five htts
and struck out seven in seven
innmgs Sheffield gave the Marlins
a 2-0 lead in the bollom of the first
wnh a 453-foot homer off Kirk
Rueter (2-3).
Mets 12, Braves 6

Schott expected to come
to baseball executive
council meeting today
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Marge
Schott could be entenng her last days
of the season as Cincmnati Reds
owner.
Schon was expected to appear
before baseball's executive council
today, and the San Francisco Chronicle reported officials planned to try
to suspend her, perhaps for the rest
of the season
The newspaper quoted umdentified sources as saying the suspensaon
would bo the first step toward wresting day•to-day control of the Reds
froni Schott.
Although Schott has been vthfied
for' llileged racist and anlt-Semtltc
remarks, sources told the Chromcle
her suspenston would be !ted to her
mcreasingly frugal operation of the
Reds.·
~chou had no comment Tuesday
nigh!, according to a security guard
ather seat at Rtverfront Stadtum m
c.nc1nnati .
A baseball offictal, speakmg to
The 'Assoctated Press on the condtuon he not be identtfied, satd Schott
was expected 10 attend today's meettng'of the IO-man council.
Amember of the council, speakmg 'to the AP on the condthon he not
he Identified, satd no dectston had
been made, and 11 was unlikely anythmg would be announced today.
'I)te counctl member said base-

ball's lawyers most likely w1ll contact Schott's lawyers after the meetmg to start negouations over any
posstble penalty.
"We have to look at where the
franchise is gomg and the image she
ts portraymg to the commumty," an
unidenhfied ownershtp source told
the Chromcle. ''This ts a very tmagesensttive business, but legally you
have to clothe this by asking, 'Is thas
mdtvidual fit to run thts team?"'
The executive council conststs of
four owners from each of the two
leagues, plus the two league presidents. Actmg commtsstOner Bud
Sehg, owner of the Mtlwaukee
Brewers, ts a member of the council
Scholl, who owns two Cincinnatiarea auto dealerships and several

MARGE SCHOn

Hoo~on

'

: AL standings
lil

,.

2

II
ll
Ccntnf DMfin
' CLE'{ [.LAND
l6 IY ti'i 'i
' Chll.!lli!:O
1~ :20
bl6
'MmncsCitil
Mtlw,mkec
')&lt; .m~.t.~

Ctty

27
2~

25

2K
10
ll

2R 2•
2K 10
24 11
24 11

St Lou1s

I

491

9
II
12'

4~5

411

Puts burgh
Onc.1~o

CJNC NNA.TI

21

10

4.1
4K1
421
421
412

•

~

4
4

•

Wnttm Dhiflion
S.an Dill-go
1~ 21
ooi
Los Angeles
10 2K '17
San Fr.tnct'l.l;ll
2K ZK ~
CulonuJo
lb lK

"'
Tuesday's scores

'

6
1

Pltlladela,tua 12 Oul'.t~o l
Aond:t ~ Montr!!al 0
CINCINNATI4. San francJSLO I
Nt.'W York 11 Atl;uMu6
Houston 16. Colomdo K
Pillllbur~h ] Lus Angcks 0
St Loon II, San Die,:o 5

Today's games
4

,.7',,
••'

Tuesday's scores

: • 0 .1kl:111d M, Ka115us C1ty 1
,~ Cluo.;agn b 8os1on t
10. CLEVELAND 7
' Scttnlc
New Ynrk ~ rt)rulllo 4
••• B.tltnmlfl: 10. Detro•! 7
Mdwaukc.-c l't. T.:.11as 2
Mmneliut.L ~ C.thftlfllll.l 1

,.

..:
••

Today's games

.~ Tc.11ru1 (Hill 7· l) .tt Mtlw"nulee CM~
}x,n.11oJ .a-1). 2 ~ p m
;.. ChiL•I!IO (T.IJ•·.n• b-1) at Bolton (Stk

.! -41. 7 0~pm
.• Seattle (Wdls 4-1) .11 CLEVEL"ND
·~o~y • -II 7 Ol p m
•,. f pronto (Ht&gt;ni8Cn 5-U af N~w York
·~cy 2 ~) 7 ~$ pm.
•.. D&lt;trc.ail tOhvnrt'l 1-2) ar 8al11mo~
iwcttsJ ~). 7 ';lipm
, 1 Cnltform.:t (Ungsron .1-1) nt MmntiOtu
Qll&lt;lred 0-4). ' "' p m
• Knnsll! Cuy CHancy J-5) ur Oa.kla,W
~ohns 4-6). 10 .l~ p m
•
I

Thursday's games

,.

: ChtcaJO (MIJ,rane I-ll at Boston

fWDkdield 4-11), 7 M P m
~,; . Sennle (Wells 4·1) at CLEVELAND
unez 8·2). 7 O! p.n1
Dtonto (()w111atrill 2·~) ut New York
IIC! H· l), 7 · J~

[lenou (Ltra

.1~)

at Balumore

~

-01-r.
... .
Fe, '"'"'c-01-

' f.I!Lstandings

CDmbt!k 241 K 0~ p m

P•usburf.h (Wagner 4-j) :u LA•s Ange-les(R Martnt.!z4-0) IOO'ipm

Hockey
Stanley Cup finals
Tuesday's score
Colorado 1, AonWi I, Color.tdu leadl
senes 1.0

Thu.-.day'sgame
Flonda at Colorado. 8 p m {ESPN)

Salufdoy's game
Colorado aa Florida. 8 p m. (FOXJ

Tra n sact io n s

•

l!Lldo

llll

B-ball

!if!i!mol ... ... ...)2
~
~ - ~:'""
29
~
211 ....
·Orl&lt; .... •
u:18 32

~~
~~

Anlfl'kiR .......
BOSTON RED SOXoltwlllal RHP
Joe H\Mbon from Pawtucket nf the l.aer·
n•r•oaal l.eAJUt: Optioned RHP Brent
Knac;lrn to Plwt~&lt;ket
CALIFORNIA ANllBlS· I'IAo:od OF

- . . .. ......

17 19

661
l61

9
13

&lt;

I

as the Astros had 13 hns.
Cangelosi's lOth career homer
was as the fim hitter to face rtliever Lance Painter, who sun-ende!W
Berry's sixth of the year four bailers·
later to make it I 0-5. 'The Astros
added four more runs the next two.
mnmgs.
,
Mike Hampton (4-3) left after'
five innmgs wtth a sltff left shoulder..
\See NL on Pqe 5)

other companies throughout the
Midwest, has been the Reds' controlling owner for 12 years. She
owns 6 112 of the IS partncrs~tp
shares

Also there ts a possabtlity of a
motor coach for all olher Metgs fans
and parents. If there as any one interested you can call Brenda Roush at
Leo's Crutse and Travel at992-4233
by Thursday at 4 p.m.
The Metgs Athleuc Boosters arc
also asking all businesses and mdtviduals that have Marauders nags to
fly them the rest olthe week to show
thctr support lor the Marauders.

Jtm Edmonds on the 15-day th11.1blcd hst
retmo.w.:ttv~ tu M.1y 26 RL'\:olllcd OF Orllm
do Pulmetro from V,Lru:nuvl!r ufthe PCL
MILWA.UKEE BREWERS Op ·
t•u111...U RHP Steve: Spark~ 10 Nrw Orlean.o;
ot the Ama:n~.;an Anut:IUIIon Rtt.lllcd
LHP Hrtan Gtvt:ns from New Orlc.uas
OAKLANO ATHLETICS OpttoocJ
OF Allen Bank tn Edmomun ufthl! PCL
rEX AS RANGERS OptL oneJ OF
Rtkkt'rl Func:yrc to Oklnhom.LCny u( the
Anll,:n~.;an AuociiiiiUn ALIIvatcd RHP
Kevm Gmss fmm Ihe I:S..day dl~ablt.'tllt(l

National Ltl-ue

ATLANTA BRAVl S Phu.: cJ 28
M.1rk Lt'mke on the I ~ d:Ly c.hs,lbled b ~ l .
retrou~;ttve to M.1y 27 RcLnllctl RHP J,,.
son SdmMJt fmm Ru:lmmnd til tlw lmern.tiiOn,l.ll.A!a,uc
CHICAGO CUDS /u:uvatctl 01·
SLott Bullen fmm the I:S J.1y J•~hk.U hst
PI.M!t.'tl SS R~y S.mchcz un the: I ~ - ..l.•y dJ s•
ahlcJ hst
N11tiorud i\55«lation

of Protmlonalllutblll Ln.K-.
NA.PRL N.mk!d Sundr,1 Dean a.~ ~ ~~­
tant to lhc chn:ctur of mttlta rel:~nun $

Basketball
Jlilallonal Bad.t:lball As.. .hlfion
DETROIT PISTONS Nm111:tl Johnny
R:l(h ;as1~tant coach

United Slate~ Ba...tlball Lett.r
FLORIDA SHARKS Tr.1detl (J

•
lhey are suppc)sed to wtn handtly.
Best-of-seven series?' Why even
bother calling it thai when it i$11'1
expected to last ftl!l&lt;C thaq four or
five games?
•
"It's a shame when you're
expected to win so euily thai anything less js a disappointment,"
Chicago center Luc LonJley satd.
"We certainly don '1 e~pecl to walk
away with it." ·
But they do expect to win, a perfect finish for a sensational season.
"We've playeq under the watchftll eye of the media and fans that
expect great things," Bulls coach
Phil Jackson said. "And il's a mark
6f a great le;mt that they have been
able to meet !hose ex.p,ectations.•:
Often, the expectatiolls have been
thetr own.
Asked if he wJII confident that the
Bulls would willjthe first game, Jordan satd: "Tfte first, second, third

and fourth."
His conftdence is justified.
Th!' Bulls won 12 times in the
RJUiar SCIIIOII, an NBA record. They
were 39-2 at home. They are 11·1 in
the playoffs, the lone loss In overltme.
A sweep of Seattle for their fourth
tllle m six years would give the Bulls
the best winning percentage in postseason history and would undeniably
stamp them as the top team ever.
The SQnics discount all the talk of
a shon series as just that- 1alk.
They. too, have had a great season. They swept two-time defending
champion Houston in the second
;ound and survtved a frantic sevengame senes against tJtah for the
Western Conference title. In so
domg, they exorcised the ghost of
playqff collapses past.
·
"We feel like we have a good
chance even though we' re playing

tilt best team

in the bislory of the
league," said Heney Hawkins, who
is expeaed to start Game I with thq
defensiv~ assignment on Jordan .
"We'R 1101 thmking they 're gping to
sweep or can we push it to seven
BaJIICS; We're thmkmg we Can Wtn."
Said Seattle coach George Karl :
''I'm not ~icting, I'm prepl!ring.
I have to be prepared for a lot of
Sluff. 'There's a lot of gre~tness out
there."
And· he wasn ' t iust speaking
about the Bulls. He was speaking
about Kemp, whom he called "a real
man," and about Payton, who " has
turned into one of the top five players m the NBA."
One of the mlllljuee matchups ptts
Kemp agains(Dennis Rodmat~
two power forwards tangled al-l ier
this season, wtth Rodman etung
-ejected after the Bulls took a big
lead.

"He'l not going to beat me up out
there. Trust me,'' Kemp said. " I
know he'&gt; aoing to pull on me, hold
me, try to frustrate me.
"The one thing I refuse In do is
let these suys frustrate me. The thing
you' ve got to do is keep your hcU&lt;I
and lind dtffcrent ways to score "
Jackson has targeted Kcmr a.• the
Seattle player most likely to bum 1h&lt;.:
Bulls. The Chicago coach said Longley, not Rodman, probably wtll start
the game on Kemp.
"Kemp is a great runner m the
open floor and has such tcmlic speed
down court," Jackson sUJd "He
obviOusly has a speed advantage
against a guy ltke luc and we're
gomg to have to provide some support wtth Dennts. We've got our
match up problems wnh Kemp."
Of course, the Sanies wtll have
their own major matchup problem.
the same one facing every team that

tangles with Oticaso.
• •
Karl plans to use as man)' . . fi\le '
different players on Jordan - t~
leasue MVP and the NBA's ~
leader tn scoring ave111ge.
One oi'Seattlc'f ophons might not ,
he ayailable tonight, however. Nul '
l\o,cMillan. the first guard oiT the
Snnics' hen.; h. is hampered by · ll' '
nerve problem in his back and sajd' '
Tuesday thai he might miss the 1
game.·
'.~
Even tl McMtllan plays, he ' ll be ··
hmlled. That ohvtously wtll hurt the·!
Some&gt;, who to win the sencs mu&gt;l '
do m seven games what 11 took the · 1
cnttre league 45 games to llccorltphsh - beat the Bulls four 11mes " '
" I don't care what anyone ·.ay ~. ·'
we ' re not going to let them ll(alk all •
over us,'' Kemp sat d. " We're here to
win. Every team is vulnerable,"
Sull, Karl adm'iued " It's ltkc try: :'
ing to chmh Mou~l Everest. "
''

-.' ''

Avalanche beat Panthers 3-1 in Stanley Cup finals ~pen-er

..'

I -

By KEN RAPPOPORT

OUT AT THIRD - San Fnmclaco third baseman Matt Williams (lett) tags out Cincinnati
baeerunner Chad Mottola during a steal attempt

DENVER (AP) - Scoring the
first goal and winning the firil game
has become a habit for the Aorida
Panthers tn the playoffs.
Tuesday mght, they scored the
first goal agdin. Then the Colorado
Avalanche made sure Flortda didn't
get the second part right by scoring
the next three themselves.
The result was a 3-1 victory for
the Avalanche and a head start in the
Stanley Cup finals .
"They came hard and they sensed
we were probably not in full composure," Panthers goaltender John
Vanbiesbrouck said. of Colorado's
three-goal burst m the second pertad. ' 'That's what great teams dothey wait to take advantage, and they

In the fourth Inning of Tuesday nlghfs National
League game in Cincinnati, where the Reels won

4-1. (AP)

CLEVELAND (AP) - Maybe walked pmch-hlllcr Darren Bragg.
the Seattle Manners have dtscovcred Alex Rodriguez then laid down a
a way to get to Jose Mesa, the Cleve- sacrifice bunt that Mesa ftcldcd. hut
land Indians' bullpen ace who has threw past third base. allowing
been as dommating this season as a Strange to score.
year ago. The secret. Don't swmg.
After Gnffey Jr. was mtentaonalMesa was the unhkely loser in ' ly walked, Edgar Martinez walked to
Seattle's 10-7 vtctory Tuesday mght force home Bragg wtth the dcctdmg
over the Indians, who seldom blow run Mesa walked Jay Buhner, forca late-mning lead at Jacobs Fteld.
mg home another run.
"We dtdn't swmg at bad pttche•
Joey Cora lined a bases-loaded
against Mesa," smd Seattle's Ken single to right off Paul AssenmachGnffey Jr. "We made htm pttch to er later m the mnmg lor the final run
us. It docsn 't happen very often that
"Jose wanted to d1rcclthc ball too
he blows a save, docs it?
much and got up high wtth hts arm
"Thts team never gtves up, mollon. We saw 11 on vadeo aher the
though. Netther docs Cleveland
game," lndtans pllchmg coach Mark
That makes these games spectal, I Wtley satd "Gave Seattle crcdll
guess.
They took some close pitches and
Mesa (0-1) walked four bailers
and commtllcd a throwmg error in
the mnth mnmg in blowing his first
save of the year. He made good on
46 of 48 save opportunities last year
and had converted 28 chances since
his laM blown save last Sepl 3.
The So'!lhern Htgh Schnnl gtrls'
But Tuesday mght, he allowed
basketball camp lor gtrls grades 3-8
'four runs on one htl and four walks will he held from Monday, June 10
wllhout recordmg an out.
to Friday, June 141rom9-12a.m.at
"I was trymg to remember the Southern High School The camp
last ume I had to get semebody
w1ll he htghhghtcd by numerous
warmed up in the bullpen wuh Jose mdivtdual compoutions and general
on the mound," Indtans manager instructaon
sat d. "Has ball was moving so much
·The cost ol the camp as $35,
he couldn't keep It tn the strike whtch can bo sent payble t&lt;J Jcnm
zone "
Roush, P.O. Bo• 902, Ructne. Ohto
Trymg to protect n 7-6 lead, 45771
Mesa yielded a ptnch-hu single to
Southern coach Jcnm Roush and
Doug Strange to open the mnth and asststant John Manuel wall conduct
the camp wuh most ol the girls'
coachmg stafl and featured guest
speakers. lndtvidual c_ompctthons
mclude free throw shootmg contests,
P-1-G tournament, three-on-three
and Knock-Out
Rn~er Crnwltnd to J.ick~41nvtllc fnr I·
D..rv1n H.Lm
For further ml("mation. call
JACKSONVILLE H/\RR/I.CUOAS
Rdc.L&lt;itd G P.•ul 0 Lmey
Roush at 304-273-2161 or Manuel at
LONG ISLAND SURF Rdc,LSI!d f
949-2759.
1
Rn.1n Rct.-sc S1~ncd 11ml ;K;It\'.IIL&gt;d 1 fred
'

Southern girls'
cage camp set
to start June 10

dtdn't dtvc m wuh a wild swmg ·
They dtd a great JOO of staying
hack "
·
Ralacl Carmona (2-0) earned the
win despite allowing three runs on•:
four htls in I wo mnmgs Norm ,
Charlton patched the ntnlh for has.
seventh save
•
Omar Vizque I gave Ctc veland a
7-6 lead going into the ninth. Wtth ·
runners on lirsl and second and none
out. the Manners expected the hghthtttmg Vt7.qucl to hunt. Instead, he
slapped the lina puch from Rafael
Carmona up the mtddlc, scoring
pmch-runncr Wayne Kirby from sec- '
ond base.
Albert Belle tied lhe score 6--6
wuh a 420-fool homer - hts 22nd
of I he season - tn the 'seventh oiT
Carmona. Belle, contmumg to play ·
alter appculmg htJ; live-game sus- '
pen sum for has part m a brawl jn Mil- '
waukee on Fnday mght, received a
slandmg ovaltnn each lime he came
to hat

YOUTH
REVIVAL

By The Associated

Pre~

The Chtcago Whtte So~ got a lot
• of help they really d1dn 'I need.
"It's a helpless feeling, but I can't
throw the ball for them," Boston
:. manager Kevin Kennedy said after
: five Red Sox pitchers combined for
; I 0 walks in Chtcago's 6-4 vtctory
: Tuesday night.
Fran~ Thomas led the walkathon
• with five m his first five limes to the
:' pla1e, twice intenllOnally. He finally
~ sinj!led .in hts last at-bat to fall one
~ short' of the major-league record for
' walks in a game.
•
" "If you conunue to walk Frank
Thomas, you're going to have to pay
for tl sooner or later," backup Chtca: ':go catcher C~ad Kreuter satd

•

COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) · Here
ts the 1996 aii-Ohto htgh school
baseball team. selected by the Ohto
Htgh School baseball Coaches AssoCiation:
l)ivlsloa I.
tlnt tOM
M1ke Murt. Sr . Camon GlenOnk.
C«y RyJ,o·liski. Sr, Tul St!fl Catcher: Gn:~; McCiel·
Jan. Sr . Cnnton GlenOak ht ba.~ Mnrc GlnsstL"I
ter, Sr .l..akewood St Edw.Vll 2ntl bi~M!' Ben Cooke.
Jr.~ St lgrwt1U11 SS M1ke Wheeler, Sf, Cln Onk
H1ll1 Jrd lx!!t Jtm M\.&lt;'omttLk. Sr . Westcmlle
NMh Oulfiekl ~~~no Wallace Sr Tol Cent Cnch ,
Joe Wtu1mer. Sr . MMsllkm Perry. Zoe Johnson. Sr.
fl•~kennJI"n DH Jli&amp;M Thmnpsun. Sr, Sylvania
Southvtt'w
Stcondtt•
' Pit~.:h~:rs; &amp;r,un ~lf'IC Jr , Dre.n Tn-Vnlley,
~.111 Rt~.:c, Jr C'cnt('t'\IJI)e. CnT ..:heu Jason 8a.\ll Jr .
Ctn. St Xava!:r:.MiJ;.c Kell~y. Sr.. Ul'fi'CI Adins.lcm
l:o~~bruoc Mtlu:Mllld. Sr . T,Jol Woodw .lhllntlb:d.!
hndy W.U"d. Sr ~ SKim:y SS Alan Galhousen, Sr.
Canl&lt;m OlenOak. ~rd '-e Br.t~K~on l&gt;re.der. Jr.
Wnpakontta duificld P.o11 8UJMCitt . Sr Euchtl ,
~ou Marshall. 1Jr....Cemcrvtlk:. Tom Wh11e, Sr.
Uprer Arbngluri '{)H Andy Sletka. Jr . Not1h RoyPilcher~

All Meigs Co. Youth
Are Invited

Football
Nattonal to'outhall Le81lR
N[W YORk Gli\Nl S Rdc!L,eJ S
Vtlk:te Gknn
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Stp,ncd
OT ~mnk Polla~;k .md G lkmck LA.'Csc 111
~ ·}'C:,tr CllRifoiL
"1N

Hockey

,llllln.

Natio111l Hoday lA-au.r
RUA 'ALO SABRE.~ Slllll!.-d I&gt;Cr.ug
M111.11 to a thn.'1: year commct
MON I"REAL CANAI)IENS ~-ll\.-n!.l­
!!1.1 the: cuntr.tt:ls 11f J.IL'JUC!I t.apemen: ,tntl
Steve Shut., .ts~tsllull coaches. lor 1wo
yL'.Lr~ Annouf"M.:l..'li the R:lfgnattun Q( Fran
1;ors Allam:. guall~ndtnJ con!!h Numed
G.tetan Boucht..'t ttNkhhoruna Load~ Fiml
Ch:.rl!!s Th1flauh, S\.'UUI Stgned D Jtmm)'
L&gt;role1 tO .lthrt."e·yt!ut controot

2nd~

:'

!.

HOnorable mtntkwt

Jason S..:hone, Sr . P~elu.-nn~ton lrd
&amp;ali .'· Der1t Ooffefttl. Jr l Sidney
'
Pl»yer of1lhe . Vtar: Mtkc Muz1 C~~t~ton
GlertOaJL
,
~
•
r

c-hotiHV•r:O...:kt.au"""'n.Cin &lt;lilk
H1ll•

'•

•

. "

' D,rrillioO II
~

j'l'itlt•• .
.
Pllchen Z:kt-ouC, Ar,, T~ C•JY TJPPtC~.
Jubn Haupt. h , (IIP(pn Cet~l Calh Ca.1eher· Muu
Mtller. Sr, Shnwn« ~Ill bose Ke¥10 M11IIM:na. Jr .
Mucrow Uuk: M1ami 2nd base Mtkc Mt.nkc.' Sr .
Hn Badin SS M•t Bal. Sr . Limn BtWh ltd b."'St.
Dan Sln&amp;le Sr . Br)'M Olf_fldd. Todd tkt~b. Sr.
Col Wutknun, Jdf R~ 5( , H&lt;tm Badin Bl.d:c
Sc C1.11r. Jr lklltflW,aint DH AlkiR.'W ~. Jr .
Col Wnll'-'fliOn
S«ond ltatm
Pilcht-n Alltnn W1bott.Sr. Mom1w Link: Mlarm , Pat Schmkii ,Jr, Bt:lldontulne . C~y Held Jr .
Brynn C;~t~;hc:r: Dav1d 0 Nttll. Sr . Mlllll"'-'\! I st
bast. J~n:m)' Onfiitha, Sr, Avun Lulc 2nd ~
Ntck Thronsbury:St, Oherfi• fin:lllnds SS Cu~y
Woo.kuft'. Sr. LovclaOO ·~nl base Ty B~llnhiJt Jr .
Urb:u111 &lt;&gt;acru~ld Mn~.:h Sanosji, Sr Otx:rbn fireland•; Don' Ylllhek. ~r.• You. ~Y· Tim Newtll,
Sl' Brynn. DH Mnn Ttu"'''iilli. lr.. ,Ham
·' Wn

PHILADELPHIA A. YERS Cla1rT1L'd
( ' Cnllg Oarby orr WWVt.'fS from ltie New
York lsl1ndt.'r1
SAN JOSE SHARkS· N11rned Don
M.llor!t')' eastern profe5s1onul Kout 1
VANCOUVER CANUCKS NamcJ
Tum Reooey elw~~:h

MEIGS COUNTY-REAL ESTATE OWNERS

_,._...

.

nw

Pitcher~ NtLk One. Jr,
CJI)' 1'JIPL!'.'1Ultle.
Breu Huoloo Sr, Col W~on ~ C111,'bee" Ken

Clark, Jr , Cant:nn Ct~r C:lh, 2nd bUt. Ed'a:tphlla.
Jr .ll&lt;ll&lt;""' SS Dan Caohbaoigh. 5•.. You.Chnney.
Jake Lons. Sf. Frnnthn
I'IIIJer olthr Year: Jerf Rook. Hum. Blldin
C.Ch of lhr Ye~r : Don Throp. l..akewood

H

Jl

' '

_.._.__.. .._._. . . . . . . .~~

w,~

'

'

The Red Sox paid for 11 as Chicago posted its fifth ·straight wm and
14th vactory in 16 games. Only
Chtcago's mabihty to hll m the
clutch kepi the game clo;-e as the
White Sox left 16 runners on base,
tymg the major-league high this
season
"A reliever's job is 10 come m
and get people out," Boston's Mtke
Stanlon satd, "and I didn't do 11."
Stanton carne on m the sixth wiih
the bases lt&gt;Ad~d and the Red Sox in
front3-2. All three runnerHcored to
give Chtcago a 5-3 lead, and Stanton
was touched for the sixth run m the
seventh mnmg.
Thomas was walked wllh the
bases loaded, giVIng him .hts 59th

Van~~es

RBI and tymg Boston's Mo Vaughn
lor ftrst m the le~gue. His five
walks was one shy of the record of
stx set by Boston's Jtmmy Foxx on
June 16, 1938.
"We've been on a good stretch
right since spring traming," Chtcago manager Terry Bevington said.
"We've put some thmgs together
smce the early going. We're just
playmg our game as a team . It's not
JUSt as a ctub, ifs as a team."
Wilson Alvarez (7-3) won his
fifth stratght start, working 7 1/3
mnings for hts 501h career win. That
moves htm mto a second-place lie
wtth Alex Carrasqucl for career wins
by a Venezuelan
. - pitcher,
. one behind

Division Ill

.

Divisipn IV

Flnt~m

•
flrslltam
•
Pnchers Shane Franzer. Sr , Coi!Jwmer. Fmnk
PLtchel'l D:m Monu Jr Dclian1;e Ayersw1lle
Gmhnm Sr. Johmlown-Monroe Clltdtc=r Brent
Ry ,ln St:hwltrtf~ Sf. Mmslcr CatLhl!r. Sl::ln Man
M~.:Kny, Sr , Zanem'lille Moyntllc llil bMt Antomo
ln:tloma. Sr , lndepcmlcm:e 1st b,~M: Vn:k Kapos·
Barbrn. Sr, Obcrtin: :!od base BenJf Cluuse. Sr , .~ t.L~y. Sr F.urport HarbOr H.1nl1ng 2nd bll!lC Truvts
Steubenville Calh Cdlt SS Joe T'hnmas, Sr . New
Mtllcr. Sr Frurpon Hurbur Hardtng SS (1u..l
london Jrd base. Cory Del&amp;uuo. Jr. Marttn.'l F~:r­
Ehmsbcr~r. Sr Kall\l&lt;~· Jrd base Orad kOdiL"D'. Jr ,
ry Outfield Jason Ori-.'011. Sr. M1ddk:fidd CaniL·
St Henry Oulficld Bryun Premlc~. Sr, CVCA
nal. Todd W.Jikcr, Sr ,Bmnbridge Paim Valley. Anti)
RanJy Wooten Sr , Col Hiwtll:y, Stev~ Stanley. So
Clou~ Sr , Genoo DH Ja5C.M1Tumr:r, Sr . Vnsaillci
Wunhmgton O.mu:m OH O..Vt' lk.'l'gi'Nvt Jr Mm
5ft'Gnd .,...
Pn~.;her~ JusonCadle,Sr.Onad lmhanVulh.oy
ANDY HELMBACH. SR WHEELERSBURG
Chu.:k Lombard)'. Jr, GUles Mills Hawken Crnch
cr Nkk Halm. Sr, Fremont Sl Jo!lt'ph 1st bi•sc
Wendell Memll Sr Zuarvtll.: Thse Vnll!!y 2tul
ba,. DUSTIN SAMPSON, JR WHEELERSBUR() SS CASEl ELLIS JR . WHEELERS·
BURG 3rd bast Nme ,Sp;mgk."t'. Sr . Batnbndtw
Pmnt V.llk:y Outfield Joe F~tcp . Sr, Col Re.ll.ly, Ty
Carpenter. Sr, Frcdcnc~lown, WE..'l HOLBROOt\
Sk • WHEELERSBURG DH Josh B...,o..,, S. .
Stcttbl:n\'llk: Cuth Cenh
Honorahlt Mtntl•
Catcher Ben Wnghl, Sr, lu;;rvllk:: Tus~ Val·
k)l I A bnsc Tom Ynsl Jr Plam Ctty Jon,llh.m
Aldd: lrtl brtst F.m Wulrl! Jr . Gn:ld lndt.m V.tl
h:y
' ...il'
l'laytr otthf Yt.u.r: Shane Frtmll'r Cqldwutcr
Coarh or tht Vrar: JACK BRANNON
WHEELERSBURG

N. games• ••
'l .
...

fiv~ .

Pirates 3, Dod11ers 0
Danny Darwin ;md two relievers
comb10cd on a five-htller as Jtm
j..cyland regtstered hts SOOth vtctory
as Pirates manager.
Darwm (3-6) went eight-plus
innings to wm for the first time m
eight starts stnce Apnl 22 as the vtsitmg Ptrates extended their winning
streak to three games -thetr longest
since a stx-game streak last August.
Dan Plesac got one out m the
ninth after Darwin surrended a leadoff single, and .francisco Cordova
got the last two for hts sixth save.
Jeff King's RBI smgle triggered a
'

,

~

Steond team

PtkherJ~ Dun l&gt;udnnsk1 Sr Col Hanley,
Justtn M.~ezug.a. Sr , S.mduiky S1 Mltryl C'*t~htr
l)ou~ Dendinger, So Grccnwt~.;h South C~.:ntml I sl

busc JU&gt;on Btddlcsaone Sr WonhmgtonChns11om

Chm E~cnw c m Jr Columb1una SS
J.ISon Ronal Sr . Sprmr.rtdtl C.Lth Cenl 1rd b t~"iC
Jusun Hodson Sr S O..~rSc s t o n Soothca~tem Out·
held Chad Hunl Sr Grccnwlt:h Suuth C!!nlrnl Josh
Chnc::, Sr Mmster. Ch:.d evt!retu. Sr , Ec.lgennll
DH Trc11nr W.::.111l"r Sr Edtt'rton
Hooorahlt mtntlon
Plll:hcr NtLk Krcmbnnk Jr Lt'tpsl ~; Clll\hcr
Kevin S!ll!llf5 Sr S Ch.trlestun SoothL'tCltcrn SS
Kuk l.oh1 Sr, Gal mn Northmuc
Player or lht Yrar: V1 ~ K.•pmta.~y Fn1rpnrt
Hurhor H.trt.hn,:
Coac:h tllhr Ytar- M1k..: Moh01.·r F.urp.lfl H.1r·
bur H.LnhnJ!

2nd

h.~Se

(Continued from Page 4l_ _
----!.::=~__:;:__.:

He allowed sax hils and 'struck out

'

st.:r

three-run founh mmng aga10st Htdeo
Noma (6-5). who allowed three runs
and seven hus 10 stx mnmgs \_
Cardinals ll, Padres 5
Gary Gactti's homer snapped a 44 tie and started a seven-run St.
Louts barrage 10 tho seventh and
etghth 10nmgs at San Otego
Tom PagnozZJ wenl 3-for-5 wtth
two RBis and R~y Lankford went 3for-6 as the Cardinals won thetr sixth
straight.
The Padres had three homers,
including Rtckey Henderson's 68th
leadoff shot to extend hts major
league record. but now have lost
three stratghl games for the first lime
this season, the last team 10 the
maJors to do so.

gelling the puck lrom Btll Lmdsay
feel confident when we have a two• ;
"In the first penod, we dtdn't
guallead, espcctally in lhe tl'iird peri· ·
play the type of hockey that we ' ve
od"
rr
been playing allthroughouttht playThe iianthct:' found thetr sccontl'
offs," Colorado coach Mnrc Crawpertod1collapse hard to explaan. • ' '
ford satd. "We didn1t pursue the
" They go~ the one goal (by
puck very well, we didn't fimsh
Young) and got some hie off that,'-''·
many checks. We certamly dtdn ' t do
Florida forward Stu Barnes said.· '
a very good JOb of getllng traffic in
"They really turned it-up and mud'c :
and around Vanbteshrouck."
some great plays. We have to give' •
That 's about ull they did 10 the
them credit lor playing well •· · ,
second pcnod - at least lor a four· Added cap1a10 Brian Skrudland: •
miOu!c span ol the second Make
"It certainly looked like we ha_sl.
Rtcct followed Young 's goal Wllh a
a hrcakdown' there for a while: 1'
rebound goal at 12:21. and Krupp
thmk 11 wn.' a~ much mental ru; 11 wa~· ·
scored at l&lt;t21 off a great pass from
phystcal. We played the type ol garqQ.,
Valeri Kamen&gt;ky for a 3-1 lead
\ we had to play to heat these guys [P-r; •
That's all 1he Avalanche needed
27 -mmutes and then hang, hang,
with Roy m line fonn.
bang, you lind your bucks up agat~-'1-: ·
"It's really sale to have hun hack
the wall That is nollhc type of hockthere,'' Forsberg said. "We really
ey we have been playing."

·,,

•

and Brewers w1n

the record held by Luts Leal. Roberto Hernandez pttched the mnth for
his 17th save.
Jose Canseco gave Boston a
thtrd-10nmg lead with a three-run
!lamer, his 15th, whtch JUSt cleared
the 37-fool left-field wall.
Trailing 3-1, the White Sox
chased starter Tom Gordon and
scored four runs against four Boston
pitchers in the stxlh. Enc Gunderson
replaced Gordon and took. the loss.
Bolh teams lost thetr startmg
catcher Boston's Mike Stanley left
the game In the top of the fourth
inning after suiTenng a bruised right
wrist from a foul tip olf the bat ol
Chtcago catcher Ron Karkovtcc.
,1\vo patches laler, Karkovtce doubled on· the left-field wall and left
after IOJunng htmsell running tnlo
second.
, In other AL games, Oakland
downed Kansas City 8-3, New York
defeated Toronto 5-4, Balumorc
stopped Detroit 10-7, Milwaukee
downed Te~as b- 2 and Mmncsota
defeated Cahfornaa 5-3.
Twins S, Angels 3
In Minneapolis, Paul Molitor's
1wo-run, fifth-mnmg homer snapped
a lie and Frank Rodngucz ptcked up
hts sctond vtclory s10ce mid-April
The wm was M10ncsota's founh
stratght, its longest streak thts sea'

son·
Rodriguez (4-6), with only one
win m his last etght stans, gave up
OnC hit In a Jive-tnntng stretch af'tcr
spotting the Angels a 2-0 lead m the
first. He left al'ler gavmg up lcadolf
singles to J.T. Snow and Tim Waltach m I he seventh
The Angels, who stranded seven runners m the last lour mnmgs, got •
a two-run homer lrom Tam Salmon
Orioles 10, Tigers 7
In Balumcre, Chns Hoiles' homer
capped a st•-run farst mnmg and
Make Mussma (8-2) won his lif'th
strmght as lhc Onoles heat hapless
Detrott
Bohhy Bontlla drove m lhrcc runs
lor lhe Orioles and Roli'cno Alomar
went 2-l'or-4, scormg three runs. Alomar extended his hilling streak to IK
games and ratsed his batung average
to .401
Cectl Fteldcr had lour RB Is lor
the Tigers, l!(ho have lost 17 of IK
Athletics 8, Royals 3
Jose Herrera hit his first moljnrleague homer, in the lillh mnmg. and
Jason Giambt and Mark McGwire
added conse,·ultve homers un innmg
later Oakland heal VISiting Kansas
Clly.
Don Wengert (2-2) ullowed three
rubs on. mnc h1ts m Sill mmngs m
ptckmg up hts second Wln m has
'.

as

.
Meigs girls' basketball camp ·
sessions to begin Monday

--

stxth career start. }lark Gubicza (4, .
8) took the loss.
. ,.
Gtambt, who missed the last three .
games With a SOrt! rtght Wrist, Weni "
4-for-5 wath his mnth home run, a
double and two RBis
Yankees 5, Blue Jays 4
. ,
In New York, Martano Dunc~n ., .
and Wade Boggs htt two-run home10 ·.•
to power the Yankees' vtclory. . .
Dwtght Gondcn (4-4) slruck out
etghl, but walked four and allowed
seven htts and lour runs m 5 213
mnmgs hclorc Steve Howe, Mananv .
Rtvcra and John Wclleland com-: ·
bined to hold the Blue Jays scorclei'-'
the last lnur mnmgs Wettcla~&lt;J , ,
pttched a hitless mnth for hts 13th
save as the Yankees won thear fourth "
strUJght game.
:· En k Hanson (6-7) look the loss.
Brewers li, Rangers 2
, ,,
In Mtlwaukcc , the Brewers .
scored live times m the tarsi inmng , •
to beal Texas and a rusty Kevaq
Gross. Rtcky Bones (4-K) got the
vtctory, hcatmg Tc•as lor the lounft
stratght ttme. •
Gross, in hts first start smcc
spending I5 days on the disabled h~t ·
with a torn ligament '" his lower
back, allowed the Brewers lim liv~ ·:·
'
hailers lo score
: •:•
Juan Gon1.alcz h1t h1s c1ght,~ : : :
homer lor Tc•as.
•• ,

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Closeout Specials

(ly has to pay more lhan $50 tf more
The 1995 Mctgs Mamudcr gtrls'
than nne gtrl attends the camp.
basketball camp wtll he held from
Jnstructnrs'lur the camp wtll he Ltdy
Mnnday, June 10 to Fnday, 14 at
Marauder coach R&lt;;n u&gt;gan. hts sl.tll
Larry R Morrison Gymnastum
The camp for grades 4-6 will he
and sentor players
Apphcations lor the camp arc
held from 9 a.m unul II :30 a.m.
'
avatlahle
at all urea schools, lor mnrc
Grades 7-8 wall be held from noon2:30 pm. Grades 9- 10 wtll be held
10formalton call Logan at the "'h&lt;K&gt;I
at 992-2158 or .11 home 992-2723.
from I p.m unttl 3 30 p m
The camp wall cost $30 No flim-

\I

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•
•
•

•

AI Flats Reg $6.50 NOW $5
AD Hanging Baskets
Reg. $5.75 &amp; $6 75

NOW $5.00

4" Geraniums Reg. $1
NOW SOC
Shrubs &amp; Trees 30'¥o oH

.. ••

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:

Open Daily 9·5, Closed Sunday .

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse, Oh.

992-sns

~--------------~------~
•

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IILIN
SUNDAY, JUNE 9TH
1:00
to 3:00 PM
•

HOLZER MEDICA~ CENTER

IN THE PR-NAlAL CLASSROOM
FLOOR
RD1115IDIINTS TO Bl SIBVID

··~

HOWARD E. FUIK !
MEIGS
CO~NTY IREUUREI ~
. . . .. -. .. -........._..__._...

what the league tenned a cheap-shot
hit of Detrott's Krts Draper in the
Western Conference finals.
No matter. Young came to the
Avalanche's rescue with a long shot
,from center ice that beat Vanbiesbrouck at I0.32 of the second penod The Flonda goaltender, admtl·
tedly parttally screened on the shot,
dtdn 't react quickly enough It wasn 't Vanbiesbrouck at his best- certainly not the Vanbiesbrouck who
backstopped the thtrd-year Panthers
to their tmprobable spot in the finals .
"Ii was just a good shot,'' Vanbiesbrouck smd.
II was just what the Avalanche
needed, after they Jell behind m t~e
ftrst period on a goal by Tom
Fitzgerald He beat Patnck Roy
from outstde the crease at 16:51 after

.

·:·wheelersburg coach· 8r:'ld-four
:.diarnondmen get all-Ohio honors.

MT. HERMON U.B.
CHURCH
JUNE 7, 8, 9
FRI., SAT., SUN.
7:00 NIGHTLY

THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
1995 COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES,
, ·ALSO FOR ·DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING DATE IS JUNE 2·8, 1996
•
TRAILER
Til DE.ADLINE
IS JULY 31 I 1996
'
'

good defense with leads, "Colorado
forward Scott Young said of the Panthers. "John Vanbtesbrouck has just
shut everybody down."
•
Vanbtesbrouck shut down the
Avalanche's btg guns, as he dtd
Mano Lemteux and Jaromtr Jagr m
the Ptllsburgh sertes It was mostly
the lower-profile players who hurt
htrn th)s time, as Young and defenseman Uwe Krupp scored the first and
last goals for the Avalanche.
Young and Krupp aren't the first
players you thmk about when ratthng
off the Avalanche's tmpresstve scorers such as Joe Saktc, Peter Forsberg
and Claude Lemteux.
Actually, Lemteux was mtssmg
from the hneup- and wtll he agam
in Game 2 Thursday ntght - after
being suspended by the NHL for

·white Sox· get past ·soston;

Hcrzng;

.

did."
It was uncharacustic or the Panthers to fall apart. After all~ they
made an an form in these playoffs of
taking the early lead and makmg 11
stand up with paralyzing defense.
They hod staned all three prevtous
playoff series Wtth vtctories.
And just look at thetr performance m tile Eastern Conference
finals against Ptttsburgh The king of
the front-runners, Florida took the
early lead in fiv~ of the seven games,
and the Penguins simply couldn't
recove"
That's JUst: whal the Avalanche
were afratd of Tuesday mght.
"One of the thmgs the guys were
womed about was them gellmg the
first goal, because they play such

other AL games,

In

Thu.-.day's games
S.m Fruncnco (FI!rnanti!!Z J-.&amp;1 at
CINCINNATI(Portu[llull ·41 12 ~Spm
Colorado (Rill 6 4) nt Housltln

p.m.

~nynt• 2·~). 1 ]!lip m.

~~

Phtladclptna {Mulhullund ~ 4) nt
Chu:nt;o (Navanv 1·6) 2 20 p m
Montreal (Cornuer 2 ~)at florula
(flnpp J-6) 1 0~ I'"'
'Sun Fran!.: tsLO (G.Lrdner 6 - 1) ;n
CINCINNATI {Jarvts0-0) 1 J~ p "'
New York (Jones!i·2) at Atlanta (Avery6-41. 7 40pm
Colorado (Reynoso J-4) at Hwstun
(Wnll Hl). 8 0~ p m
Piusbur~ (Nr.tgle 7-2) 111 Los Ang\."les (A SI:teiO J-1) 10 J~ p m
St l.o:.'lllt~ (Osborne 4·3) ut San Diego
(Ashby 7-2) 10.15 I'm

They toy~d with the team
of the future, and Orlando became
sweep city. ·
,
Now the Chicago Bulls try to
clear the final obstacle on their
course to immortaitly. The NBA
Finals begin tonight.
So what if the Seattle SuperSonics won 64 regular-season games,
I Oth best in NBA history ? So what
tf Shawn Kemp and Gary Payton
~ive Seattle the most formidable 12 punch west of Michael Jot'dan and
Scotlie Pippen? So what 1f jhe Son.
ics play relentless, confusing
defense?
The '~!Ills are on a run for the
ages.
They aren't only supposed to wm,
'

1

Scoreboard
Baseball

Paul Wilson (3-S) .Von his second
stratght stan, allowing eight htts and
four earned run s in 7 1/3 mmngs.
Astros 16, Roc:kles B
John Cangelost and Sean Berry
hit three-run homers m the fourth
inning as Houston ended a three·
game losing streak. The visiting
Rockies set a club record with six
errors, three by catcher Jeff Reed, but
all but one of the runs were earned

surviv~.

Mariners beat Indians 10-7

Meigs A~hletic Boosters plan bus trip
for Marauders' tournament game
A pep bus ts bemg orgamzed for
Meigs Ht$h School students wtshing
to attend Fnday's Dtviston II Slate
tournament game m Canton.
A mm1mum of 30 students IS
needed for for the trip, whtch wtll
cost $5 not including lhe ' pnce of
tickets for the game ($5) or meals.
Reservattons must by made no later
than Thursday at 2 p.m in the
Meigs High School mam office.

Todd Hundley homered and
drove in five runs as New York
equaled a season htgh with 16 hits
and scored in five of the first six
innings.
Hundley lut a three-run homer,
his 13th, in the top of the first off
Jason Schrntdt (2-2), who was mak·
ing his first slart since April 2S and
was pounded for seven hits and seven runs in 3 '113 innings.

rTht Daily Sentinel • Page1 ,

PoiMroy • llldclltport, Ohio

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· PEPSI
PRODUOS

•

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wed! nd•y, June 5, 1986

Wednesday, June 5, 1996

STORfHOURS

CUBE 24 PK 12 OZ•

••••.,. .. s..~

s

IAM-IOPM
298 SfCOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

49

MONDAY

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
·SEE

D

.

.

. .

Quarters •••••••••••••••••••

3 9· (

10 LB. AVG. PK.

SUPERIOR'S

The Meigs County Council on $1.00 charge for each class
Aging; Inc ., is open Monday attended.
.
·
8
00
0
throug h Fnday from : to. 4:3 .
A renresentative from the Athens
· · · are Social ~Securi.ty Office will be at !he
Regu Iar Iy schedule d acttvtttes
quilling, .sewing, cards, games, Center on Wednesdays, June 12
pool.: Weekly activities are Chorus and 26, from 10 to J.t a.m.
:Practice · on Tuesday at 12:45, · We4nesday, June 12- the Stroke
· Knitting Circle on Wednesday from Survivors Support Group meets
: 10 to 12, wiih Physical Fitness held from 1 to 2:30, with Lia Tipton,
:on Tuesdays ahd Thursdays at COTA, Holzer Rehabilitation,
:II :IS to keep participants "fit and Coordinator.
Thursday, June 13· the evening
· limber".
: Line Dancing Classes will be on · dinner will be held with servirig
;Mondays at 1:OQ during June with from 5:00 to 6:15. Cost for the
•Pauletle Harrison as instructor. meal will be $4.00 per person, with
;There will be instruction for simple the menu .announced later. The Big
:line dances and group dancing, no , Bend Four Barbershop Quartet will
:partner is needed; dancing is al so entertain at 6:30, with a free will
:good exercise to keep fit. There is a
taken for the musicians.

$ 2

Breasts ...................... 1 9
(
$4 99 L1vers ••••••••••••••••••••••• 89.
1b Eye Steaks ••••••••• ~·
ck:~:................:a••••S)19
GRADE ATURKEY

Lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

:· BEEF BUCKET . .

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.

.

lb.

'

:.Cubed Steak.............. ·
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;EHICKORY RIDGE

:~ Bacon ••••••••••
•

.S
WESSON.
.Oil

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SNACKWELLS
DEVILS FOOD &amp;
OTHER COOKIES

$2 ~ 9

lb.

••••••~~••••

$ 149

····~~. ~

.,.~,·

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.
• •1\!d Hatfield, RSVP volunteer (rear) · and ''AIIce Wolfe, RSVP
· Director (far right) present'several bags of items for Ihe. Alzheimer
: Programming Kits lo the"pallenls of PNRC. Myrtle Stanley, leh,
; and Carol Dailey, enjoyed lhe hats, purses and jrwelry. The kits
· have been prepared to ilecrease Idle time by lht rtsldeQis In lhe
: Alzheimer Unit. RSVP continues to collect Items for this project on
· an ongoing basis. You may bring your' items to the Me1gs Se~ior
: Center and Alice Wolfe· or Diana Coates wlll ·be glad ·to dehnr
them to the Nursing Center.
. '

.

480Z.

RITZ
CRACKERS
IDAHO

Potat oes ••••••••• ~•••••••••
10#BAG

DEW FRESH •

.

·.Margar1ne ••••••3~:.........
TROPICANA

$219

$

MUssELMAN$

3
1
pie Sauce·~··········
99(
Chips •• !~:~.............. .
.:

1Soz.can

AUNT JANE HAMBERGER

.

TNEY
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CHEESE

SALMON

.

s
7.250Z

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PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
2 LITER .

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s
169
l.ce Cream ••••••••••••••••••
ULTRA
BLUE

'99.
UMIT2PLEASE ·

••

21
Chicken Patty
Augratin Potatoes
BrusEel Sprouts
Bread

Prunes
•

27
BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables ·
Bread ·
·
Apple Slices with

28
Hamburger ot. Bun

Oven Roas t Potatoes
Peas &amp; Carrots
Tomato Slice
Oranges and Bananas

Une Dancing class 1s held on Monday afternoon at '1:00 ~t th; Se~ior Center, with Paulette Harrison, :
front right, as Instructor. ·New members are welcome to attend for an afternoon of fun and also !:ood :~
exercise.
.·

Senior Citizens honored at the April' birthday party al Ihe Senior Center were: Front Row, Louise
Gluesen(amp, Portland; Helen Fisher, Pomeroy; Angela Lucas, Pomeroy; Eileen Justice, Pomeroy;
Enlmll Adams, Racine; Lucille Oay, Pomeroy; Gertrude ·uass, Reedsville. Ba(k Row • Exa Mae
Christian, Middleport; Peg Dtluglas, Po.memy; Harry Sto~Jart, Lelart Falls; Ted Hatfield, Rutland;
Gertrude Robinson and Melvin Tracy, Syra(use; John Joe Shain, East Lelart.

•·
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Pictured are Lucy and Dean
Wlblin, Sr., who have been
married 63\ years. Both are
residents at Pomeroy . Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center.

...

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. ~ )# •

GROUND

BEEF

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10 LB.

Wednesdays
Senior Citizens Day
Storewi4e .

... ' • il

~

Diana Coates, RSVP Coordinator, and 'Jed Hatfield, RSVP ::
volunteer, visited wllh residenls al the Pomeroy Nurshig · and ;·.: ~
Rehabilitation Center.
·. • •

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~~~~;;;;~----~WWE~H«omN~OR.R-~.-i. :
•• J

&lt;iliiltillii!l

•

SEE US FO.R DISCOUNT TO All
SENIOR, CITIZENS

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992-3785

Watche.s • Diamonds • Jewel.ry
, Cameru • Photo Finishing • Old Photos Copied

22 2nd Ave.

446·1615

Gallipolis~

Ohio

CITIZENS DAY
· • Eveiy.Wednesday Storewide Savings

Save·15% off everything in our"store.

15o/o off

·.

. Salt

r•

Men:handlle
. Nollndudld

GAWPOU8

..
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•

..• •.•
-~ . . •'
GIOLDEN BUCKEYE CAR~ 1
•

I

Randy Leino~ chief .of communications of the Ohio Department
on Aging, Is shown distribu~lng keyrings celebratin&amp; the :ZOih
aanlvenary of the Golden lfuckeye Card lo some .of the senior
cilizens atlendlng lhe Meigs County celebration of t~e slalewlde
Sen\or Citizens Day on May 21.
" """

. ••.
.
•

TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO

40~L

..

The public is invited to attend.
Wednesday, Juae 1!1- the
Alzheimer's Support Group will
meet from 1 to 3 p.m. with.Brenda
Roush, Leo's Cruise and Travel, as
s~aker. Ms. Roush will talk about .
traveling with medical disabilities
and handicaps and offer tips for
hotels, transportation, etc. The
meeting is open to the public, so
anyone suffering with a disabling
-condition and still 'wants to travel is
invited to attend lhe meeting.
Thursdl!~, June 20· the monthly
Blood Pressure Clinic will be held
from 9:30 to 11 :30.
' Friday, June 21- The Arthrilis
Support Group meets from 10:30 to .
noon.
Thursday, June 27· the monthly
birthday party will be held with
seniors . celebrating birthdays .in
June honored. Rep. John Carey, Jr.
and Jeff Fowler, candidates for our
state respresentative, will be at the
Center at I 0:00 to state their
positions ori issues affecti·ng senior
citizens of Ohio. Entertaining at
11 :oo will be musical students of
·Ms. Sharon Hawlay.
.. . Trips scheduled by the Senior
Center for 1996 with seats
available ~re:
Wednesd'l)', July ·10- Bob Evans
Homestead Quill Show, Rio
.
Grande.
Thu~n. August 8- Ohio State
Fair, Columbus.
·
Thursday, September 1!1 •
Wilmot, Ohio Amish Country.
Friday, October 11- Bob Evans
Farm festival, Rio Grande.
Friday,
November
H ··
Parkersburg, Orand Central Mall.
Thursday, December 5- Ogleby
Festival of Lights, Wheeling.
Call the Cent.er, 992-2161, for.
further iqfor"'ation or to. make
reservations for a trip.
.
Tllesday,
June
Jl.
A
cholesterol/blood screening will be
held at the Senior Center by Holzer
Medical Center and Veteran's
Memorial Hospital personnel. This
test will 'be done by fingerstick and
will be limited to 50 people, first
come, first serve. Time 11 -1.

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1/2gal.

4ROLL

26
Meat Loaf
Ma.sbed Potatoes
Lima Beans
Bread
Peach Slices with

25
Navy Beans &amp; Ham
Cole Slaw
Cor.nbi'ead
Cottage Cheese
on Pineapple

Sarah McGrew, RN, BSN, from
the Ohio University College or
Osteopathic Medicine and Barb
, Culbertson, OTRL, from
Pomeroy Nursin&amp; ·and Rehab,
recently spoke at the Senior
Center concerning adaptive
devices for arthritis ind stroke
patients.
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·HAGAN

BATHROOM TISSUE

24
Ba.ked Steak in
Mushroom Gravy
Mashed Potat.o es
Green Beans
.Bread

20
Spaghetti with
. · lleat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Dark Red Cherries
in Red Gelatin

J~an Corder, RSVP volunleer, wor"ed al one~or several lead
screeniags for children held by the Meigs County Health
Department throughout the county.
·•

Pizza •••••••••••:.-:-•••••••~•• 69c

KRAFT MAC &amp;

'

Oven Baked Fish
Skin on Potatoes
Carrots
Bread
Strawberries

160Z

s119

Orange Ju1ce •• ::~::~.... ·1· .
FOX

19

. 18
17
Hunr•rto.n Style
Beet Tips in
Pork Chop
Gravy on Noodles
Parslied Boiled
ilashed Potatoes
P.otatoes
Buttered Corn
Buttered
Broccoli
Bread
Pea.r
Halves
Pineo.pple.

Beef BBQ on Bun
Cole Slaw
Green Bean s
Apple Cherry Crisp

.

·s . 69

.•

Sauaase Gravy
On BiScuit
Hash Brown Potatoes
Orange Juice
Bot Applesauce

13
Ham and Scalloped
Potato Casserole
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Hot Cinnamon
Peach Slices

FRIDAY

· MeigsSen~rCit~en fun~e~i~~~tl~·~~it~ie~s~~,k~~~~~~in~~-iuce~~~~~si~ns~~~~~

SUNSHINE
CHUNK DOG .
FOOD ·
20 LB

Hot Dogs •••••••••••~!:~~...

Baked Steak 1n
Gravy
Kubed Potatoes
Carrots l Broccoli
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

THURSDAY

~

· Senior Citizens from Meigs and Gallla Counly •~ pidured at the
: beiinnlng oftlle lillie' walk held on the Gallla County Hike and bike
: Trail durlug Seqlor Week Activities, sponsored llY Holzer
. Rehabllllltlon Cent~r, 0.0. Mclnlyre Park District, G11lllpolls
,: Parks &amp; Recreation, and the Galli a, Mason and Meigs Senior
· Centers.
·

CHICKEN LEG · ·

WEDNESDAY

10
oven Fried Chicken
Sweet Potl.toes
Cre&amp;M4 Peas
Brew
Apricots

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE I, 1996.

JUNE MENtiS

MEIGS SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

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; Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Ohio University
Colleae of Osteopathic: Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
A&lt;Sj)Ciate Professor
cf Family Medicine

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Low Prices For The
Arst Of The Mon.t h

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Question: My sister was recently their own.survival. Most cause illness
diagnosed with breast cancer. She bas such as the common cold, sinus
had surgery and is now undergoing infection, warts, smallpox, measles
chemotherapy. ln our readings about and others !YpeS of diseas&amp;when they '
this condition, we have found sever- invade. Fortunately, the human body
at references to ."breast cancer vac- is not defenseless from these assaults.
cine" that is reportedly the safest and The body's defense system recogmost effective tre~tment, particular- nizes these invaders as foreign and
ly for those whose cancer has spread begins to m¥sh&amp;l body resources .to
to the lymph nodes. ·My sister saw destroy them.
several oncologists, and none of
The immune system identifies a
them mentioned the vaccine. Why small part of the invader, usually a
isn't it more widely used?
'-!hort protein sequence, as being "forAnswer: I must admit t~at your eijjn" and forms antibodies that attack
question caught me a bit by surPrise. it in a way that prevent its intended
1 try to stay upto-date on the major metabolic activi~ies. The conse·developments in most areas of mad- quence of' th1s ts a cnppled or
icine. Despite my efforts, I've totally destroyed "invader."
.
missed information on a breast can&lt;;ancer cells are not exactly hke
' cer vaccine. My initial ego-prescrv- normal cells. One consistently uniqu~
· mg response was that this must be a feature of cancer cells from breast,
new treatment ·done as research in ovarian or brain tumors is a short scgImmunology and cancer treatment. ment of proteins. A vaccine has been
Alas, breast cancer vaccine research developed that helps the immune syshas been goJRg on for 20 and more tern identify these cancerous proteins
years at some centers. I s1mply was and, thereby,, destroy them. In theonot aware of it.
ry this could be used to prevent canIgnorance is my excuse fnr not cer, but the research to date bas
knowmg about breast cancer vacc1ne, looked at the abiltty to .increase the
but I doubt thai is the case with your life span of those who already have
Sister's oncologists. I'm sure that cancer.
t~ey are aware of this area of cancer , Researchers. at Chicago Medical
research but have failed to offer .her· School ha"e been studying a breast
th1s treatment opt1on because they are cancer vaccine for quite some time ·
not involved with this research. You and now have about 20 years' worth
·see, th1s treatment is still in the exper- of data on women treated with this
imental stage. It has not become an approach Their results have been
accepted and, therefore, widely avail- prom1smg as have those done at othable fonn oi' treatment for this 'dev- er research centers. I hope their
astating disease that strikes one out of research wtll eventually make availevery six American women.
able a safe and effective vaccme for
To understand about the breast treating or preventing this terrible
.•
cancer vaccine, I need to tell a bit cancer.
about the way the body's immune
"Family.Medlcine" is a weekly
system works. The . human body is column. To submit questions, write
constantly under attack from bacteria, to John C. 1Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
viruses, fungus, and other organisms versity College of Osteopathic
that would use our bodies to promote Medkine. Grosvenor Hall . Athens,
Ohio 45701.

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Lb.
Del Monte Golden Ripe

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1 lb. Package

Beans

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FOR

FOR

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Pwicas Effa.c tl·v a JUNE • B • 8 • 7
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8 ' 1898

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coca Cola Classic·

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Also feeling a bit. or pnde these
,days are Tom and Jean Ables of
Pomeroy.
· Their grandson, Shawn Montanez,
,son of Mr. and Mrs. Agustin Montanez of Areiebo, Pueno Rico, grad~ated from Yale University on May
·27 with the degree in mechanical
engineering.
Shawn has accepted a position
with Proctor and Gamble in Cincinnati. Besides his parents, his brother,
Agustin Montanez, Jr., of San Juan,
.attended the graduation ceremonies at
·Yale. ·

Food Club
Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner
7.25 oz. Box

191-

oo'Fiii~FREE

with the day this year will be held at
the Meigs County Museum this Sunday from I~ noon to 5 p.m.
A new feature this year is an invitatioR&lt; for residents who make hand.
crafted, old:!f:ishioned items to be on
hand Sunday. There ts no charge for
their part1c1pation and they may sell
their wares. However, it is requested
that they demonstrate the creation of
their 1tems durmg tl)e afternoon and
those takmg part must provide their
own tables. If you're gonna do that
please call992-3810 to get registered.
Accordmg to plans there will be
some interesting exhibits this year
among which will be antique radios,
gemstones and others. There will be
demonstrations on baking bread and
making butter. Other features wjll
include among other things a petting
zoo, and an old-fashioned lemonade
stand.

Tiro 12-paclts per customer
at this llriCe IJ/HU.

Well, all of our high school graduates have gone through graduatiOn
and arc, hopefully, ready to find thw
spol in the world. In our economic
climate, you can almost bet that they
won't be able to fillll it here. They'll
probably work it out. Others have. Do
keep smiling.

It was a proud time for Mrs. Ruby
Grueser of Minersville.
Mrs. Grueser was in Wilmore,
Ky., May 17 through May 20, where
she attended the graduation of her
Henry Ford's first motor vehicle
grandson. Charles Edward Gruescr was a gas-powered 2-cylinder, 4Ill who received his master's degree horsepo~er quadncyc!e that weighed
at Asbury Theology Semmary. H1s · 500
It was built in 1896.
lfcgrcc was in world missions and
evangelism and he Will now be going
to Jamaica to put his education to
work. By the way, Charles Edward is
the grandson of the late Charles
Grucser who resided in Minersville.
He's the son of Eddie and Sandy
Grueser who presently live in Georgia.

•

16 oz. Can

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Hey! You thoug~t last weeken'd
was busy? Well, don't too~ now but
there's another din load comin' down
the road .
This Saturday, the Meigs County
Ftsh and Game Association will be
staging its annual fishing derby for
kids across Meigs County, 15 and
under.
The event, to be held at the association's club grounds, in the Chester
area, w;ll be from 8 a.m. to I p.m.
Saturday with loads of prizes to be
awarded. Signs: will be posted to
mark the route to the club grounds .
Youngsters taking part--there were
135 last year--are to provide their
own fishing poles and bait, and
remember, minnows are not allowed.
The youngsters will be prciv1dcd
with lunch at noon. There is absolutely no charge forpartic•pation and the
derby is open to all youngsters falling
withm the designated age bracket.
Saturday evening, members of
the association wtll hold their annual chicken barbecue and they are to
iake. a covered dish.

•
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Food Club
Pork&amp;

.

•

.. b~ Bob Hoeftich

•

Food Club
Spaghetti or
Elbow· Macaroni

Mason, W.Va.; Onna Barton, Jij:k
and Adrian Barton, Martha Bn:w
Wess, Dorothy Wise Rathburn, ~II
Brewer, Jim Graham, Linda Blii:k
Moore, Sue Graham, Albci(ta
Hawkins Brewer, Bruce Barton, aUnf
'
Columbus.
-:·
James White , Rcynoldsblft'l;
Maud Brewer Wess, Grove &lt;;i!)l;
John and Junea Hayes Dyke, and lim
Lanning, all of Fairborn; Delma
gs Nelson. McConnelsville; Amald
and Thelma Cottrill Riggs. Roseville:
Edna Gennan W1&lt;:kcr, Galion; Oee
Thomas Easter. Galens ; Burnie FrPk
Knapp. Springfield ; Edwin .rid
Goldie Knotts Nelson , Woostcr;JA)Ida Davts DeCarlo. Broadv1ew Hls.:
Emma Roush, Pataskala; David Ria.
Wheelersburg; Bob Bowen. Car(811;
Caron Snowden, West Che~;
Rosanna Goff Kitchen, West Jc~­
son: Loyd Nelson, South Pomt; Ulric
Shiflet. Cedarville; Mike and BooWje
Grate Ntcholson, Elyna: Gerald Slllton, North Lewisburg; Ronnie Tay~.
Grafton; Jack and MarY Lee Mc5illney Nelson, Bradner.
:_
Ellen Rice Brooker, N)w
Philadelphia; THelma Snyder Ha)~y,
Wilmington; Roberta Smith MI!Jer,
!14iddletown; Bobby and Rosemary
Harless Pope, Hebron , Willis Diilpn,
Clara Mac Hysell, John Jeffers, :and
Bern1ce Snyder Spaulding, all: uf
Albany; Meryl Houdasheldt. R~iff
; John Keys. Vinton; Ancil Cross,' aild
Claude Montgomery, J~&lt;:kson; ~ax­
me Dyer, Opal Dyer, Bidwell; Gamet
Harless, Lorena Harless McQu~id,
Wilkesville:•Car&lt;JI Ann Buck Pack,
(Continued on Page II) •

•

Beat of the Bend ...

••

Red Bear
Minimum
Shelf Tags
Reflect 33%
Off Savings

Marie Birchfteld, president; Lowell
Vance, vice president; Shirley Cremeans Simmons. secretarY; and Joan
Snowden, treasurer. •
It was proposed that in lieu of a
band or disc jockey, taped music
would be played low-key so that
alumni and guests fOUld better visit
after the meeting. Alumni approved
that policy for future banquets.
Catherine-Colwell Shenefield provided a cassette of piano accompaniment for the school song, "Three
Cheers for Rutland High School."
Excess food was donated to the
Meigs County Infirmary. Ftfty red
geraniums decorattng the tables were
given as door prizes.
Alumni attending included Gloria
Ferrell, Carpentervillc , Ind.; Tom
Jeffers, Hobart, Ind.; Carolyn Ferrell
Siers, West Dundee, Ill.; Clyde Ferrell, Hampshire, Ill.; Darlene Goff
Dill, Bowling Green. Ky.; Saruty
Tucker Phillips, Owensboro, Ky.;
John Ferrell, Cupenino, Calif.; Donna Hysell Morgan, Elk Grove, Calif.;
Carol and Stuart Brewer, Phoenix,
Ariz.; Douglas Long, Turnersville,
N.J.; Bob (Chuck) Thomas, Rapid
City, S.D.; Norman Hysell, t.1cl;
bourne, Fla ; Ernest Nelson, St.
Cloud, Fla.; Vernon Alvis. Woodlands, Texas; Darrell Keys, El Paso,
Texas.
Phyllts and Charles Amos,
Columbia S.C.: Jim Ferrell. Rockwood, Tenn.; Cheryl Long Lofun,
Memphis, Tenn.; Eugene Richards,
St Albans, W.Vil.; Dame! Dawson,
Nitro, W.Va ; Harry Snowden, Point
Pleasant. W.Va.; Norma Stanley,

Diet Coke or

l
l

Luck}' Charms 14 oz.
Box, Cinnamon Toast
Crunch 14 oz. Box,
Hone~nut Cheerios
14 oz. Box, Cheerios
15 oz. Box.
Frosted Cheenos
14.25 oz. Box, Trix
12 oz. Box, Apple
Cinnamon Cheerios
15 oz. Box,
Kix 9 oz. Box

ApprOximately 2~ alumni and
Cupenter noted that due to the
guests attended !he 1996 Rutland large number of applicants and the
Hi&amp;h School Alumni Banquet he til at high qualificatiqns exhibited, the
the · Rutland Civic Center recently. comminee had decided .to increase
President Thomas Hysell extended .!he number of scholarships given,
!he welcome, Robert E. Smith, Sr. although it depleted the fund .
giving the invocation preceding the
A collection was taken from the
buffet dinner. Officers' repons were alumni, and fund raising projects
given by Marie Little Birchfield, sec- inclu'ding awarding of a gas grill
retary, and Suzy Parker Carpenter. donated by Thomas Do-It Center to
treasurer. Beverly Forbes Rupe, vice- Sam Ferrell, and an auction conductpres•dent, conducted the roll call of ed by Keith Molden of donated items
classes, re~ognizing the 1966 class from Birchfield Funeral Home of
with 22 members present, w.ith the Rutland, Rutland Furniture Store,
classes 6f 1951 and 1964 having nine Cross and Sons Implements of Jackmembers each. The oldest alumni son, and Vaughans IGA of Middlepresent was Garnet Bachner, class of port. A paddle found m the office of
1922.
the recently razed high school buildThe alumni scholarship report as ing was donated by Vernon Alvis and
given by Carpenter on behalf of was auctiOned to Ancil Cross. Cross
members Joan Montgomell Corder donated a football autographed by
and James Thomas. Thank y-bu notes two-time Reisman Trophy winner.
were read from two of last year's Archie Driffm. People's Bank of
recipients, Crystal Vaughan and Reg- Rutland also gave a donatiOn to the
gie Prall.
· scholarship fund . Several alumni
The 1996 recipienls and their became members of the I00 Club
alumnt parent/grandparent mcluded: donating that much or more to the
Adam Sheets, Meigs High School, fund, and challenging others to match
James Sheets class of 1962; Matthew or exceed their amounts. Over $2,000
Hann; Cumberland Valley ~ennsyl- was raised for the scholarships next
vania H1gh School, Delma Riggs year.
Nelson, class of 1945, Rebecca
Former teachers recognized were'
Evans, Reedsville Eastern High Martha Chapman and Joan MontSchool, Robert Gordon Edwards, gomery Corder. Marie Birchfield
class of 1954; Amber Bennett, Meigs· noted that red and black Red Devil THigh School, Bonme Thrner Bennett, shirts are being ordered through her
class of 1965; Nicole Nelson, at a cost of $10. Money and shirt
Reedsville Eastern High School, J1m size~ are JO be sent to her at Rutland
and Donna ~olen Nelson, classes H1gh School Alumni. Box 125. Rutofl955 811d 1954; and Chrissy Vance, land, Ohio'45775.
Athens High School, Lowell Vance,
Officers elected for the 1997 banclass of 1951.
quet, all 1951 class members. were

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-~Bananas
Lb~

Rutland High School alumni attend banquetj;

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. Remember Heritage Day which
-became Heritage Weekend--a Jl!'.ojecf
originated by the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Socie~y?
.
· Well, don't look now but it has
again become Heritage Day and this
is the 25th year for the annual obserjlance.
All of the activities associated

FREEl

18". 20"- 22"
BRIGGS&amp;
STRATTON
MOTORS
3.5 HP- 3.7 H.P. • 4.0 HP

PICKENS '

...... ..,.

HARDWARE
304o773·51U

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SLICED

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�Pate 10 • The O.lly SenUnel

WcdncRday, June 5, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Wednesday, J une 5, 1996

Pomeroy • Mlddlapoi"., Ohio

Gerlach awarQed_Rob~rt
C.
Byrd
scholarship
9?

bckerma·n

Lowest Prices

Ohio Student Loan Commission
hasanliOWICed that 1996 Meigs High
School graduate Allison Oerbtch is
among 261 Ohio high school graduating seniors who will shire $299,307
'from tbe federally fund&lt;¥! Robert C.
Byrd Honors S4:holarship Program.

!IJis year Ohio rec::e~Ved 1app_h·
c~ons for tiM: $l,l 2 l ~~lus~•P·
·whiCh, depenchna 011 the avallabJhty
of federal funds; could be renewable
for.!;: ye":;s· anh .
_' 5 sc 0 1 . •P pro~m promotes st~n~ment and ac~Jevernent
an: rr:;ogn ~ s exce_p uo'; stude~

Instruction John M. Goff said. "Ccr·
tainly the monetary award is a
tremendous help for these outstand··
ing students as they pursue a college
degree."
. T~o years ago all federal admin·
astratJVe funds for the ~yrd program

Osteop~th~c
Immun1zauon Program (CHIP), a
mobi le heal~h ~rogram, will prov,i~e
free ammunazauons for all area chil·
dren from b i~h throug)J middle
school on ThurSday, J~ne ~0. 2to 4

in Pomeroy.
McDonald's will provide a free
personal pizza to every child immu·
nized at either clinic .
In .order for children 10 enter

required immunizations. In addition Ohio University College of Osteoto required immunizations. the clin· . pathic Medicine and th~ Ohio Depart·.
ic can also administer the Hepatitis B. menl of Health in cooperation with
vaccine series at no charge to children the Mei gs Count y Healt h Department
born after Nov. 22. 1991.
and McDonald's of Pomeroy.

The Slate Board ofEduc:ation lllld:

earns
degree

me

Rebecca ~- Ockerman, daughter
Dan?Y' and Ann Barrett
Langsvill~ . will graduate Sunday
w1th a regtSiered nursing degree from
Hockmg College, Nel~¥ille.
. She Is employed at Houston Nurs- ·
mg Home in Hamden. Qckennan
graduated from Meigs High School
In 1992 and received her practjcal
nursmg license in 1995. During the
past year she has been on the dean's
list !hrce times.

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Wood Sunkbeds
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Swivel Rocke-v-"'!1 ET~ra)
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Wing Chai rs · ··· · ·" " " " $139
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Many Scratc:hed
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rs "(3COIQ
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· . .$199

In Our.Jewelry
Department!·

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TV Carts
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Bry an Colwell. a grad uatmg
senior from Meig s High School, is
the recipient of tt 1996 DcVry Inst itute half-tui tibn scholarshi p to DcVry
lnstifute of Technology in Columhus.
Colwell is the son of Frank and
Pamela Colwell .
The an no\t,ncemenr was made
today by Dr. Galen .Graha'1', pres!-'"
dent of DeVry/Columbus. The schol·
:~rs hip , valued al u~;to $8.300, cov·
ers tu it ion payment for the electronics techn ician program. Colwcll'wi ll
cam an ass()ciatc Of. applied scie nce'
degree upon successful completi on of
all course work,
Fi nalists for the scholarship were
selected from a g_roup of more than
270 Slude nts . Scholarships were
granted on the has is of college board
scores (SAT. ACT or WPCT), high
school academic reco-rds and an essay
written by the student. Colwell's tOp·
ic was "We arc livi ng in the tec ~n ol · ·
ogy age. What do you fo resee as the
nexl age and why'!" A committee of
local l.&gt;lgh school flr incipals ~ n d
counselors 'eva luated the student's
essay' and high school records and
made the fi nal selection.
"We're de lighted to continue tHis .
tradit ion of grant1ng scholarships to
exceptional high school students,"
.said Graham. "Providing scholar·
ship opportunitie s is" o ne way
demonstrating DcVry's C0!1lmilmcnt
to academic exce llence."
A total of 28 full- and ~alf-tllit ion
sc holarships 'were awarded · ~~ the
Co lu mbu s campus. Nationwid,c .
DcVry Insti tutes presented a tOiill of
30 full -tu ition a~d' 90 MlfJ uitio~
sc holarships lo _graduating tllgh
school seniors. Tho.value· of the 120
scholarships is appro~'i m at,e ly'$2 mi Ilion.
~ ·
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All Air-Conditioners·

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NIITTOUDIO

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.
Middleport, Ohio ..srso

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11011 '11tll '10
t110 '

(614) 992-2$35:

...........

.... ...

~ ..

JIWII.IY, INC.

Mon., TUes., Wid., Fri. H

Tllwl. •1a;.s.t.•2
.'

1.-81J0.426.5581·
..

. .

•' \r" ·· .
I .

:•

......,.,

....

. .

.._ .

DAYS

SAME AS
Wilh appro~&amp;d credn &amp;
minimum purchase o1 $599 on
Diamonds preferred charge.

WP Sc1lutr Thr

(Continued from Page 9)
Gallipolis.
··
Robert Edwards, Sr., Reedsville;
Lowell Vance, The Plains; William
Porter, New Marshfield; Larry Caison, Jerry Schoonover, and Henry
Milam; all of Cheshire : Jim and
Elaine Steele Dyer, John and Mary
Southern. Syracuse; Joan Rife Wolfe,
Raci ne Glotia Oaf Oiler, Dick Lan;
ben. William Lambert, Betty Lam·
ben. Cecil Johnston, Larry and Lln·
da Midkiff Montgomery, Carol
Pierce , Catherine Colwell , Shenefield . all .of langsviile: Jimmie and
Evelyn Ward Hobbs, Martha CHap· ,
man, . Na ncy • Lambert Haddox ,
Ronald and Marjo rie Priddy Rife, all
of Dexter. ·
Robert E. Smith . Sr., Vivian
Hyse ll Jones, Rodney and Carolyn .
Malone Riggs. Jim and Donna Bolen
Nelson . Gene Carson, Linda Hysell
Bates, Joap Mont gomery Corder,
James and Eleanor Tay lor Thomas,
Linda Stafford Wi ll: Tom Hysell,
Weldon Bartrum, a!l of Pomeroy ;
Donna'Davidson, Mary Gra te B·irchfie ld, Bcnn&gt;' Slawter, Vi rginia Carson, Linda Haley, Rus!iC II Carson ,
Larry an d_,~everly Forbes Rupc , .
Raymond Wilcox, Ma~oric Hyse ll
Wilt, Sharon Wise Quillen Wi se,
Mrs .. Robert Hoover, Shirley . Cremeans Si mmons. Liri Cremean
Boyles , Linda Lathey Kean , all of
Middleport.
.·
Suzy Parker Carpenter, Fred and .
Avanell Jordan George, John Moore,
Doris Nels\)n .Thomas, Sam Hicks',
Joe and Jan~t '1\irncr Bolin, Rodney
Wright , Margaret 'Smith Edwards,
Robert Miller, Haro ld and Marjorie
Rice, Giles Smith, Nonnan Wi ll,
Marie Litt l c-Birchfi~ l&lt;!, Eugene and
Katy Fink, Aarold
Patterson ~
Dewhurst, Gamet Bachner, Danny .
and Judy Cremeans Mc Donald, Paul
and Rose Slawter patterson, ·Bru'ee
and Joan S nqwd~n Ma)'o Charles Barrett, Jr., John '!Jroganl' Rober! and
Joan Lambert Snowden, all of Rut- .•
land.
· ·

"': '•
'!

REBECCA OCKERMAN

Rutland

Sleeper Sofas

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

.Honor roll

'&lt;bue to the !lluhi-agc &lt;:nroll nicnt
at the school', there were no· honor
rolls for first and rect)nd grade) '
Third Grade: Brooke Kiser,
Autumn Reed, Nicki Tucker, aii.A's:
Ben Hatfie td , Craig Randolph, Ash·
ley Roush. Allfon Sellers.
·
Founh Grade: MicHael Roush~ all
A's; Amy Nom1an. 'BJ. Marnhout.

}

'

f

to a fuur-year

renewable-scholarship.
To accommodate these changes
and to reduce expenses. Ohio Dcp:u;t·
ment of Education staff have streamlined the selection proceso.
In its tenth year. the scholarship ·
program is flamed after U.S. Senator

·'

·June Is National
Dair' Mo,.th
..

FOODLAND WORKS!

SOLD IN RESEALABLE
3LB. BAG INDIVIDUALLY
QUICK FROZEN
BONELESS/SKINLESS

•

DOZEN

_ Flavorite
Chicken
Breast Fillets

food land
.Medium aggs

GoJden Ripe

Bananas

•

s

s 88

•

s

LB.

LIS.
f OOOL.P '&lt;D SPEC IA , COUPON

6.5-11.75 OZ. PKG.
ASSORTED VARIETIES

4 ROLL PKG. ULTRA WHITE,J
WHITE OR YELLOW/BLUE

Betty Crocker Tuna

lf-FFCTI~Ef

Meadow Gold

64 OZ. GRAPE JUICE, CRANBERRY MEOL,EY, ·
REGULAR, !iOME!!lYLE, PillS CALCIUM-CIA
.PLUS. VITAMINS ORANGE
.

BUY ONE GO ONE

FREE

34.5 -39 OZ. CAN .

ASSORTED VARIETIES
I
I
I
I

2/ 3
8

Ragu
Spaghetti Sauce

.: , __,

I

Cooked Ham

I

s 99

I

C

I

UIIIT ONE wmt
.1 THISCOUPON

1
I

I GOOD ONL't AT

I

F~D,;_ • _ -

__ -

_ •

•

• •

..;. • 1

ASST. VARIETIES

til OZ. PRETZELS OR

Mike ,Sells 10·11. oz.

ASSt FLAVORS &amp;

Pepsi Cola

.Potato· Chips

a ··a

Preferred Selection

RC

Soda Pop

PRODUCTS

2

y,

Bob Evans

Gal.

Farm

'·9 .

oz.

12
12 PACK
CAliS

oz.

4· '10

(v;iis.s
u•.
Sill
loll
MULCH
.

THURSDAY&amp;FRJDAYONLYI

2Cu.
Fl. Bags

THURSDAY&amp;FRIDAYONLYI

.

.

c·

JUICY

Ll.

8
BROCCOLI •••••••·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .

I

JUMBO - SWEET .

THURSDAY A FRIDAY ONLY/

·_ VIDALIA ONIONS••••••••••••••••~.........

•.

·

•

- THURSDAY&amp;FRIDAYONLr! g g c

FRESH

THURSDAY&amp; FRIIiAYONI,.YIIIC

NECTARINES or PEACHES..............

79c

Ll.

Ll.

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY ONLY/

YOUR CHOICE!

.

. •

SOLID

THURSOAY &amp; FRIDAY ONLY/

GREEN CABBAGE ••••••••• ~.•••••••••••••••

•••, ...

'

.

Thru Bill, June 8 1118• USDA Faod .

.

~.,.... .

'

j

SUPERMARKETS .

lllgllt to Limit Qulfiii!IM •
' .... •

•

'

'

andWIC

·Not

1
·~·

I

-.. ,

.

.

or PlctDrlal Enora.

far
•

'

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-

C

I ·
EA.

Oh!Q·VIIIey · ~pen 24 Hours- Close Mid. Sat.·Sun. 8-10
Buckeye- Mon.-!Sat. 7-11 ; Sun. &amp;-10; Big Bend . Mon.·Sat. &amp;-10
Twin Rivera·
24 Hours. Close Mid. Sat.; Sun. 8-10 ·
~llllpollis · Mon.-Sat 7· 11 ; Sun. &amp;-10

·Prices 'Effectiwe Suild1y
June 2·8, 1996
HARDWORKING ·LOW PRICES
1o;;.o

'

EA.

8

Green Peppers or Cucumbers•••• ,

EASTMAN'S

DOUBLE COUPONS

3

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY ONLY/

•

See Slore For Details Aboul Manufaclurers '

.

.

18C... · LARGE CANTALOUPES...................

YELLOW
CORN' ·····•························
JUICY .
RE'DTOMI..II OES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1

Wo

_$.79

12 PACK
12
CANS

DAY. PRODOCE
.SALE!
-

- IN THE HUSK .

·vouR .c HoicE!

All American Deli

18-30 OZ. JAR
ASSORTED VARIETIES

Folgers
Coffee ·

. Tropicana
Season's Best Juice

Sealtest .
Buttermilk

•I ·

Ice Cream

age

.-·

S.000

:•iS%

HALF GALLON · ASST. VARIETIES 1

I

Charmin
Bath Tissue

Hamburger Helper

....

••

suc:cess.~ Superintendent or' Public ship was changed

Mo~ile ~mmu~i~;ti~~tse~lciriniuc ~·6~i~he onet~ SMetobc~ C.c~~~t'ginia).
The Obao .Umversny College of p.m. at Reed's Store in Reedsville,
Q
gThe clinic is providedYby the
Medici ne Child hood and from 5 to 1 p.m. at McDonald's school in the fall. they must have the

of

.'.

.;•1
The Dally Seutlnel• Page 11

EA.

�The Dilly Sentinel• Pra•~•

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

-NURSING SUPERVISOR
O'Bienese Memorlll Ho1plt11 h1s en
lmmedllte, full-time, rotltlng 12 hour ehlft
P••ltlon avall•ble. We offer • very
cOmpetlllve sallry ,.... . . Will I I u:c:drnt
ldacltlon and other health n11ated blnefltl.
sUpervlaory experience prefemcl. Five y-.
of holpltal nursing experience required.
Appllc:ltlons can be picked up In the Hu~~~M
Resources o.partment, O'Bieness llemorlll
Hospl1al, .55 Hosplflll Drive, At~1n1, Ohio
45701.

REGISTERED NURSES
Plrt•tlme poaltlone avttllable In our IC·
CCU unit. New gredultM may 1pply. 4-8

DtnrlpiiClln:

weeo orilntltlon progr~m. Competitive

No.OMUtt

..,.ry 1nd excellent benetb.
O'Bien111 Memorlalllolpltll
Human Resources
55 Hoepltal Dr.

"'"'lly tollon
not
prtotdtd
propoitd

.cion MCI t. appttltblt to

IINI. Llgoon/llrlp lrrlttMlon

S r - IM llllllary . . _

lxtentlon tor tllfi!M'a

-."""

Athene, Ohio 45701

1TC

(I)

614-592-9227
EOE

YARD SALE and
SELLING OUT an estate.
June 6 &amp; 8, 9:00-?
Hic~'s -Residence

1508 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, Oh.

THE DRAFT
HOUSE
KARAOKE

••
••
••

8

'

.

10

&amp;VIcii*J

•

•
•

~t-Une

Hey Guyelll Your
~girl Is waiting
to hear from you!!
24 Hours A Day II

10:00 A.M.
1.0 c111 d from Pt. PlelleMt. W.V. go out s.nd Hll
Rei to R1yburn Rd 1111'11-' Milch for . .,...)VII bt

Call now

PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE

HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1-900-nS-2525 EXT.
5961
$2,99 per min
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 854·8434

·I
1·

:
;
•

~lilT

CONnRUCIION
•New Homes

•

•Complete

Auction Conducted by

Remodeling

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

FINALS TONIGHT

IISSill ·

•Gantges

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

·
Owner: Miry L. Ra!l!lum
Terms: Cash or check wHh ID.

985-4473

Not responsible for accidents or loss of properlY.

-

e ifPart"
E¥pre"" ·
we don't h.tve it, we11

Community

. eFree Te5tlng

bst.ttJru~&amp;. "JUrUrft, stttrn.ttort.,

corrtrol

!_Jet It for you fS!!ot

modu~~ tm"50r5

'
I

'

$1.09 sale price ctt·

-334 mfr'&amp; rel1ate

-50' mfr's re11ate

4
76

4
59
your co~t .1fter

your co&amp;t .1fur

rel1"te per 1\t.

Pennzol: 10W30,

10W40 or
5W30 Motor Oil
'

- ~RAAf

-4 .00 Rebate

Oil Filter

'

CHESTER -- Chester Garden
Club. Wednesday, Chester Methodist
Church, 7:30p.m., open meeting, for
1\'!ld •garden club members and any others interested in herbs. Bobbi Karr to
speak. Garden club members to take
foOil made with herbs, recipes, and
dOPI prizes.

~·dSlgnal

.

__,&amp;,

I

j

rebl:ltc per 1\t.

Ha1101ine 10W30,
10W40 or 5W30
Motor Oil

Fram
Oil

2for

- ..
•

Call
6 ~ 4~94,9~2096,.
TODD BISSELL
$5.08- per •••r
.

(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

m-eats

#46021

FllEE

. Pick-upd~

bltterles,applian- a
many metals.
614-992-4025
8 am - 8 jim """' 1

.,.

They have helped
millions find fortune,
succeaa and love.
The future starts today!

Caii1·9CJ0-868.4900
Ext.4193
$3.99 per "!!n.
Must be 18 yrs.

GENEUL
CONTUCTORS
Siding • Vinyl
Aluminum • Rooting
New•Repalr
Guttera &amp;
Downspouts
Free Estimates
992-3607
5/2111111 mO.

H&amp;H
Home
Remodeling

Quality Work

CO'lftpetltlile Rate,~

F\H\1 \1 \10\I·:T. 1'0\IEHfn

Anco Wiper
Blades.
each, or

5 for 49¢

Refille, pair'

Power Flow
Cuetom Fit
Splaeh Guards

On

304-372-5686 01
614·247-2120"""'-

TruckingUmestone
Bulld07.ing and
Backhoe · ·
Services
House Sites and

mo. PI!-

-

All Kinds of Earth Work

992·3838

••

614 388-9865.,""

IEAUTIFUL WOMEN
ARE WAITIIG 10
HEAR FROM
YOU NOW!!!
$3.89 per min.
Muet be' 11 yta.
Serv.U (610) 845 8434

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION

Handclcaner
,14 oz.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

e

Cu!Jt.am Fit Spls!&gt;h
Guard! for truck!!~

~=====;;;;;;;;;:===:

E&lt;lel~rock

Equu&amp; Triple
Gull!le Kit

Pro Flo Air
Cleaner

16170

OFFICE 992·2259

1971

Bendix Brakes
from

10'97to

·

"AUTTLE
1111nk when you see this but In

•

•

. ..

'

'

.

tleplm: •' Willows

..... o.....
•sr.. Dtiard wlld1ws
tl0011 Atldiliotts

'

5pi nn~r&amp;

. ...

..
..

'
'
'' .

Chassis

'

..

(614) 992~2364

No Nagging!
Just the male ol
your choice.
1-00o-988-6988

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sakis &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AluminumiStainkiss • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumnure. Fireplace
nems, Planter ,hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stulfl!

. Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs .
Serv-U (619) 645·8434

8

99 · .

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

Each

Llrve SIIICIIon

Metallic
Brake Pad&amp;

!latun:lay, 8 am -7 pm
!Iunday, 9 am -.!I pm
S.ole price•eoo• on ln-oi.oct me&lt;"Ch•lldl.. only. .
~ular pric:oo m&lt;;y
d,uo to loc4ol comJ&gt;fllt!o!J.
· W• ""'""" tile rlth&lt; to llmi&lt; ~""e.w Prion ~
JuM12.

••ry

New.24 hr.
Dltellne
Meet the Man or Woman
of your Dreams·Never ,
be lonely again .

All Vard Sa tes Must Be Pa i d ~ l]'l:- ~.­
Advance . Deadli ne ; 1:00pm ll\&amp; r'
dat before the ad It to r:JI'\, Sun- :
cfaw edition- 1:OOp.m Friday, Uon-·
da:!.y.:;od.:;tio.:;n:...1.:;0:ooa=·:...m:...
. Sa.:;t:...ur_dly;..'.-:-:"' " ' •

Big yard sale Friday, June 1, 8-2~ • :'
rain or sh1ne 111 Pearl St., Mid... 1
dlepon, gun ~. foals. toys. lot~ o ~:
tniiC

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Ext. 3505

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Serv-u (6 I 9) 645-8434

Satutday, June 7·8. 9·5. r.1ppers ! .•
Pla1ns
· ,.
Fn day; 133 Buuern u t A!o!enlje~ ~ ~
porcn swing, bike. e,;ereser. type.,
writttr ste r eo, 'sewing machine: • •
ptaype'n. collecliblel.
· t'' ~
'
Garage sale· fry res idence ."P'~ , ~
to Salisbury Ele mentary, Frtday._. .,:
June 7, 1·9, SaturdB'f. June 8. '9-., 1
4. Baby to la rger size c:loth inQ ,&lt; •
much misc.
••

1-900-988-8003
Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (614) 645-8434

PersonalS

..• .

'.

Garage sale- Thursday, June,6 _. 4,
rwo m•s out FlaiWOOOs Rd. 9arh- ..
3pm. Rain or shine.
..

::ju:::ne=7•.:;8•..:9..:am:..._
:....p:...m-.::0-:ei-.yt-::W:-el:::::t'.,; : ; :
above Eutern . Computer de)k ,...,· •.
e1ress 1ng table . marrres! , boliS 1 • J ·

pr1ngs, bedspread, t~ps.

28563 BASHAN RD.

tabtel!l and E-VAP d&amp;uretic .
Available Fru1h Pharmacy. Mid·

617196· 241 L1nco ln S~reet . · •rt dlepon, Anna EII1 S. Cu rl
,
small rugs, apartmenis1ze I L
era tor~ small freezer, 1980 Ka•!J ..

dleporl.

sak1 b1ke .

SWM L1kes Churc:h . Mov1es .
Outdoors, And 0Utet E~ten~ngs At
Home Seek1ng SWF "ge : 25 ·35
Plea$8 Wr~te To : P.O. Bo11 262 .

Th~~rsday

tams , Home lnter1or, H1ll res• ·
dence , 2. 5 m•tes out · Basha.n

GaiHpoli~

React

REDUCE ; burn o11 Ia!, lake OPAl

Ohio 45631.

SWM seeks SWF age 20· 27 lor
camplonship, honest caring.
wgentlefTl8n.. age 241 No drugs or
alcohol. P.O. Box 501 Pt. P1easam

Wv.

R.L. HOLLOJI
TRUCKING

JONES' TREE SERVICE

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 ¥ears Experience • Insured

Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt• S.nd

9115-4422
Chaster, Ohio

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
.Pelntlng
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

, 614-992-7643

51'&amp;94 TFI't

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

CHAT LINE

I

Live 24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful .
Girls

1-900-446-1414
Ext. 6445
$3.99 per min.
Mus1 be 18 yrs.otd.
Service U
(619) 654-8434 .

'

Tuesday· thr u Satutday, 300 '·
Wngnt Street. baby clcHhes gtr-' 1 ' ~
lore, lots of mise:.
· _ -; {,

Yard sale. Thursday and FridB'f,• '
Shelly Wood, 389 Beech Stre-'1,: ~
Middleport, Kimball organ.
•r. 1

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

::---::-:-::--;=:-::==::c
Garage Sa le . Tools, large men' s ' .
clOthing, women's c1Dth1ng, boolt.s,
l!l•SC. June 6 &amp; 71hr 2515 MI. V.er;
non Ave.

r

J1.1ne 7 &amp; 8 At 62 to leon· Baden
Rd. 1m1. on right. 3 family.
· ·

3 Dogs, 1black, ·3yn old . .Part
cocl(.er spaniel, good w/children.
1blw Terrier, spaded, all shots. 1
9mo. old niKed Beage, rn.JSI go IO
a good home. 304-87!&gt;41150.

80

7 K;nens. 304-675-6556.
Cocket' Span~ . adult male, black,
to good hOrrie, needs room to
roam. 6t4·992-64t2
F~re wood , ready c:ul. 304 ·6 75 ·
· 1595. Leave message

I

· ·, · ,
• ,

Public Sale
and Auction

,

.

' '

R11::k PearSon Auction Company.'

rUu

time auct ioneer, complete
auction
serv ice .
Licensed
166.0hio &amp; West V1rginia . 3Q4 ·'

•

773·5785 0&lt; 304· 773·5441.

. . '.

90

~ ~·

Wanted to Buy

t960's lOy' s, G.l. Joe, Star War's
ect . Wilt pay fa ir priCe based on
condition . 614· 446· 6630 alte ~ e

pm

=--------- ,,.

Books: Srate And County History, ·Free e Puppies, Part Colhe, 614 · Guns, Hunting. Fishing, Biog~a -" ·,
. 446·8202Anytime.
phies , Debates, War. 614 ·446 · • •
To Good Ho.me In Country, 1 na2 Evenings.

Very Cute Very Friendly, Part

Clt!-a n Late Mode l Cars dr
Trucks, 1990 Models Or. Newer, . · •
Smtth Bwck Pt. llaC, 1900 Eas1· 1
ern A\lenue. Galhpohs.
: ,' ,

ChoW Puppies. 614·441 ·0784.

J &amp; D's Aulo Parts. Buytng sat -

60 Lost and found
...

vage vehicles. Sell;ng paris. 3Cj4-.

Lost: two Walker coon dogs,
Allred. OH. SR 68 1 VICmtty. Re·
ward, can 614 ·378·62()7 or 61 4·

Non -Work 1ng Washers , Dryers,
Stove&amp;, Refrigerators, FreezerS; '.~
Air Conditi oners , Color T.V.'s ,

773•5033.

'

I

9:c9.:.
2·.:.5889=.-:::::::-:=; - -"""' l VCR's, Also Junk Cars. 614-256- •

J4ew Homes • Vinyt Siding New
G•rages • Replacement Windpws
Room Additions •. Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Gutters

...

·

3 Catilornaa OQe rabbits. 304-675·
3864.

WELCOME
Joame'st&lt;ut&amp;t&lt;urt
Chuck McGt.llf&amp;
Karen Burns .
Joanne
Sheets
614·448-9496 '

.BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Ext. 4009

Giveaway

-

Howard L. WrHesel

1-900-255·0500

First10 teams- $65 plus two

:36::_7·_:_1().0:.,:::3..:.6':...•.:.-36.:.7-;-7~70.:.5~
. ::---;::-:-:I

367..()266 -1-800-950-3359
· Free Estimates

&amp; Foelay, n1ce tatge
women·s clo tnes. De&lt;1d1ng. cur·

15w 16 . · R~sviHe, ram or.shine.

Y.ear Old Golden Retriever Fe ·
male, Good With Ch ildren, 6U ·

Owner: Ronnie Jones

•• ·

J·;

· Merfi soltbaiiiOurnamenl· Juhe

40

1

June 6·8 firsl house past churc.t\, '
in Cheal~n. barbells, high ch~ir.: ':'
colfee, end rabies. lamps, infant ...
lhru adull do thing, lOts cf mi51:, - • ·

6 Free Kmens. 304-675-4860.

M9-3013 PhOne
M9-201SFAX

· .. ·

June 5·6 10am· ? Happy Ho llciW r .
Rd .. 11.4 m1 1e !rom New U~ ." ~ ..,
Three J)I&amp;C&amp; living room su i nt, .•~· ~
bunk bedS, ~IO!htng, rTliSC.
"" ~ 1 · ~ I'

5 Kinena, 614-446-3595.

.Racine, Ohio 45n1

•

1 "

=~· ~·::!;!1~~~~~~~:
949-2512

•

=------:---:-:-:--:-·
..
Ccmmunny -,aro sate. Friditt "&amp;•

CALL NOW

Mason, WV

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

·--

=

70

vard Sale
,,

====::=======!
GaIll p0II S

&amp; VlclnHy

143 Second "venue. 9 AM . ·4

P.M. June 61'1 , 71'1.
3 Fam1ly Gar._ge : Rain 1Sh1na.

t23S.

.,

Top do ll ar- antiques , furnnur i, '
glass. china, clocks, .g old, silve r,
to ins. watches, estates. Osby"! ~ ~ :
Martm, 614-992·7441.
.. ... ;..

-· ..

Tap Proces Paod: Old U.S. Cains ,

Stive r, Gold , Diamonds , All 01Ji
Collec ti bles, Paperwetgh ts, Etc .
M.T.S. Co in Shop, 151 Secon11

, Avenue, GaNopohs, 614-446·2842. '
Wanted To Buy Used Mobili
Homes. call : 614 ·446·0175

.. #:

~·
Wanted to buy· one acre tot nfl , ":
mostly love!, Racmet yracus&amp;l r• : •
Letart/ Portland area, 614· 94-0c -:""' .~f

.

s

.• ,

....... ,,

June 61h, 7th, Brh. 8-2, Household
!!ems Lots 01 ToyS LUte New, 2 2543.

.· . ~

'

Bicycles. Antiques. 12' Boat
Home tnteuo~. Curta1ns. Clothes• Wanted To Buy : Aulo 's &amp; Tr uclta .,. J
3 Miles OUt• AddiSOn Pika 011 Al Any CoMirion. 614 ·388·9062, Or • r• •
~- •
•'* ~
7.
614·446-PART.
...
•;~:

. 2/llllt/lfn

H&amp;H
·sAWMILL
·Portob/e

'

...

3 Family: Saturcay, 6/Bth, Home- Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With ... ••
6,'
wood Drive, Bidwell, lit Raed leh Or Without Mo to rs Ca ll La,-r y•f
9 't
lively. 614 ·383-9303.
• .......
, ..
After 554 lntttsection ...
• •

All Yard Sales Must Be: Paid In

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day belore the ad Is to run.
Sunda~ edition • 2:0:0 p.m. Frtday.
Mondav edition · 10:00 a.m . Sat·

Bllllflsaw'Mill

, urday.

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middlepon, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles.-

.. ,.,.

Gatai'IA Sale: June 7lh, Bill, 1 Mile
On Vanco, Boys Clothes , Dress
Clotnes Slze'~7. Homemade Crah!\
Sweeper, Home In tenor. lots

614-742-~193

Morel
TFN

,. • :
,. ,
,. . '
• •• ;
' • ,.. •

.,. 1

Garage Sale: Thurs.' Glh. Fn 7th. 9

*'

- · ··~
• ...:..--:-::~=-=--~" + "~ •
$·WANTED-$
. ~: ~;.r
10 people who need to to~.. ....

110

HelpWanted

weight &amp; make money, fO try n~ •: ·~
patented wetghi· IQJs produ~L.. !·!•
304· 7J3.5083 24hrlldav.
..• .-"' ....

.

c ·~·

" .M. • , , 1158 Second Avenue, Dom1no's P1zia of Pometo~ n~ ; :,. :

Treadeaver Tic
Mond~ • Frida)', 8 ~ill - 8 pm

614-992-3470

FAX n3-51161

· 108 Pomeroy Street

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions of
love, success, care, soul
1. males, self-help and
more.
1·900-255-0500

1-900-988-8988
Ext. 6733

.446-380.7
Ben&lt;lix Semi

SWinQSGI, m1sc., l'tlft ~1.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

005

:

.........

&amp; lamoly, """ daJ ooty, June 7. IIi." 32S one m11e hom R1. 124,
clo thes, Home ln1erior, cur tair.s ;-- ·

We will work wnhin your budget

Personal Psychic!

Gallipolis ·

81o&amp;-992·2906

ANNOUNCEMENTS

1-800-889-3943

l

·.11

"""" roof. gel J S 10 3t mpg, call

Umestone,

Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

(No Sunda~· Calls)

$2.99 per minute
Must
be 18 yra Old
.
'
Se!Viee u
(819) 645-6434

a VICinity

Gutters and Downspouts

No arguments!

Your Sweetheart ss
.close·ss your phone

209 Upper 'River Road

". Rose Sale Also Rose H. Baskets

..-----.,
stona-

Residential - Commercial
. Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs

Date-Line

FIND TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
Through a Uve

Ben&lt;lix
Brake 5hoe&amp;

5197 . .

112a'1-. pd.

BIB ROOniG and
CQIS,.RUCTIOI

..,.,.,.,.,

DATE
LINE

-,

'' .

Wheel Mat&lt;:
Chrome or Satin

614-992·2772

S:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

'

.

•,

•

Utilities

Ext. 430t

.. '

&gt;

,....

PHIDftll

Howard hcavatin ., Psychic-Line

GoJo

SNAP Fix
A Flat

ONLY

· lilY UISOIIIIU
llllmiUICES
. 614-tll-4180

Ph. 773-9173

1-900-446-1414

..

Rose . Reg.
Btushes •14"·

5!- RL 338 W. 8 mlln

from Ra1111nawood
Bridge, 1 mile from
Apple Grova, Ohio.
Elootrlc hook-up, dump
etallona, n~ble
water, large Iota,
hiking, llahlng.
Rent by week or month.

614-441-7558 ,.

HOllE IMPIOVEIIEHT

,.latllfo Lit •• do It

35 Years Experience

Truck:

Roofing, Room Addlliona
Siding. Concrel8, etc.
P.O. Box 220, Bidwell, 011.

'

•

~~~~~~~~~~
1995 Ford Eocorl l X. om 1m IIC• •
oo, co plarer. eru iso eonut~ '1

HAULING

Tuppers"P...ns, Ohio 45783
614-9115-31113 or 614-667-6414
Plastic Culver!- Dual wall and Regular 8" nhru 36" ·
4"' s.tD . perf. - solid pipe
4"' &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4"' &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112"' &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I'' 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru· I.OOO' roll'•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8"' Gravcless Le:nch pipe
Gas pipe I"' thru 2" · Fittings· Regula1ors- Rise"
Full 'assonmenl of P.V.C. &amp; Flex filling.• &amp; Water fillings
Full line of Cistcm. Scpnic &amp; Waier storage tanks.

,I •

= :.:.,.

1

Phone 992•2489

St. Rt. 7

FREE ESTIMATES
~

4x4's-4x6's
614-911!5-4107
614-742-3337

614·992-2524

MANLEY'S

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

· - nnl1101-tm1101

992·2768 or
992·3274
IH/Imo.

i~~~~1 Oran~e
Pumice

for c ar~

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

I &amp; WIUSIICS AIID SUPPLY

:11:1111 -

and

-Double Hung
elnsulated

s.•.!

· :. j

!"""-

WI CIS

PIIITIIG'

Free E1tinmte•

Roofing &amp;
Block Work

Res.:

Chemicals

I •

Serve You Better.

LINDA'S

WHITE PtNE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6,1x8,2x4,2x6
8'-10' *alt.
14'-16; 35¢ alt.
Also available

PONDEROSI
PRIMmVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON

LIIBUSK
WII:DIIG
IIBIICE

5NI

,

•
Fri. 1012 ~~. ,,
A-..nue, PaP« w..-ghtl, Ladi• •
Elgin Warch, Furnilurt. Pe- ' ;
I K"'-, Tools. Clothing. Jtw!¥J,., 1

(Lima
lowRatll)

4131 mo. pd.

II

SATURDAY

•Tilt-in

. . ... ..,.

Serv-u (61,9) 645-8434

." '

ILG-100

Installed

Limited Time mt.r
Cell todly with your
window size• for a '--11

..., .... ,.,. . . . . . ..; , . . • It'
._lllna 8.!. 0111o 6 WMt V•glllla

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

MGM

Real Estate General

liquid Glasa

Limit2

1011

12

earan e

Armor All
Flaehi&gt;lack
"Tire Shine

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

' III'&lt;Mmo.

..

AC Delco
Reei&lt;&gt;tor
Spark Plu~e

......

Morning Hoitra

A

limit 16

POMEROY -- PERSIPERI, noon
lunpheon, Senior Citizens Center.
Dr. "Covert will speak concerning
mail-in prescriptions.
...

.'

SUMMER "
TUTORIN&amp;

994:

AC Delco
011 Filtere

Plllnllng
Alao Concrelll Wcll'k

.

.,

RUTLAND -- Rutland Township
Truslecs will meet in regular session.
· Thin'sday, 6:15 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire: Station . ·

•Interior 6 Exterior

. .

•

THURSDAY

P..QMEROY -- Burlingham Camp,
Modem Woodmen of America, cookout, "7 p.m. Saturday at the hall. Sandwic~es. desserts. beverages prov1ded.
Take a covered dish.
·

' '
t,

Umit2

AC Delco

•Eiectrfclll .. Plumbing
-Roofing

Thur.-sat. 1o-s
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pqnltroy, Ohio
992-7573 11m ........

Filters

Li mit

Limit 12

j:••

.

Mh:ld•-rt, Ohio
With 3 Beds to

•Room Aclcllllona
•New011111gt8

Ewulutlllgs

' I

1.09 &amp;ale prh::e qt.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEJMa

Geranl•••

'' 'i

"The Community Calendar is
puJJiished as a free service to nonprOfit groups wi.shing to announce
. meeting and special events. The
cafendar is not designed to pro1,110te
sales· or fund raisers of any type.
ltews are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed.to~ a
specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
'POMEROY-- Red Cross Bloodmoliile visit, I to 6 p.m. Wednesday
at the Senior Cttizens Center. Residents encouraged to donate.

White Spine
Pickle

'.

'

- ~calendar

\IEIC~

..•

~

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Her••
Scented

..'

$19 5"

IENIIEnS

11 IN·275a

FUGUNT
FIELDS

• Lifetime WarTSntiel!ll ·
on m0$t p•rt!S

-·

r.~ . .

1'1111! II'IWA'IU
(S14)1N-1131

ENTERTAINMENT

i

JU . . 71ft . .....

Sta10Rou10 211.

oNewo.agea

:::=

SPORTSI

I

....

.• ,

1

"""' a -.
. REPlACEMENT S....er
New Location
woa, Thun.
WINDOWS
.

'Is

-MewH-•

Dell ""-

FwNOift.

. - - - - - - - - . , I:T~ool..;;o;.;;.::-,.;.;IO;.;.m.;.oo;:;o-:--•1•-•·-:":-:"":-:;Ho:::"::_:::. t

eOISJIUCT. .

~ . . . . ."

!

.-.~

•Siding

Sefv..U 18191 645 8434
·:
,
1

..,.,,

:

tllu&lt;iffi. iO? s mel .._ E•
rolla. -

•A•rnodMI-'*

1-900-446-1414
Ext. 14n
$3.99 Per Min.
Must be 18 yra

Mlllnglhe fllrm equipment of her .... hulbend,
Joe Rayburn plua other houatllold 1t11111 and
entlq1111 turnltun.
.
ANTIQUES a HOUSEHOLD
Fancy oak organ (Hamilton), East Lake VICI. Or-r,
Oepreaalon dreaaar. high back oak bed, oak table,
trunk, porcelain top I able, k~chen cabinet,
Victrola, child's roll top desk, chelll, dresser,
cabinet; TV, microwave cart, oa~ tredle type.
machine, misc. glassware, meal platters, and more,
old vintage shoes, high heels, old hal pins, oil lamps,
old weight clock, MaiX complete train . set, 3 iron
kettles, stone jars, old books, childs cook stQve,
playpen, air cond. and more.
.
FARM EQUIPMENT
J.D. 420 tractor, .J.D. 60 tractor, J.D. No. 39 mOWing
machine, Little Giant 24 h. hay elevator, J.D. 5610
grain drill, J.D. manure spreader, J.D. 4 H.
J.D. disc pull type, 3 H. post hole digger, horse dra•wn I
cultivator. 2 bottom Oeerbom plows; cylinder, sm•BIII
com crib, com sheller, hay spear. J.O: 8~1-A-H&amp;lll
rake, Harron.
,
Automobile will be aold at 12:00 noon w/naerve.
1986 Cavalier&lt; air, 4 cyl, auto, cruise, new tires.
Auctioneer Note: Very little small n&amp;ms. Be on time!
Field Partcingl

I

-......

~~~
I
G 'all
:'

••

•••

BLIC
AUCTION
SATURDAY, JIN I, 1H6

Lunch

'--

: SoLD SIGNS AfiE GOING UP EVERYWHERE!

Rod . En&lt;le~
. .. f

..

Treadeaver
or..~ lln~e

•

••

8UYERS ARE ON THE HUNTII WE J)ESPERATELY
' NEED U8nNGSIIF YOU "REALLY" WANT TO
:~
SELL CALL US TODAY! ·

••

TO Tllllll

13.11 Par lllnu,.
·.
llllllt be, • •,..
T-'t-Toile Requlnd
. . ,.... fill) 145 1434

...

•
•

..

AllowYciur

Ext. 1277

..

11&gt;

••
•

AnUCTIVE

Personal f'iychlc to
AlllltYou
1-1100·981111800

"~ {
'

..

Need Direction?
Love
"uslness
· Family .Mitters

• ••

,

,.

Rain Of Shinal
hinng dflvers,
t.~ . .. •
:...=:....:;______~----- ~~.:;_~----.--~--=
·
June 61'1_• .9·5·, Roush ! Lane,

Chelhlre, unio.

&amp; WILLING.
(614) 441-1191
1-800-508-8887
• Top • Trim • Removal

1·900-990.3737

Ext. 2261
$2.1111 per l)lln•

• Stump Grinding

Mustbt11,....
Serv-U (11t) 145 14341

.,_,_

15Yrs.

·h
•

~--

Drivers • Dtspatch'ers Needed
Call A-1 Tax•. 6111 ·441 -1.449.

'. ,

June 111, 81h, 9·5. 1333 Stale Ro· Earn StOOOs weekly stulfing enute 7 N., Be.tween 5'&lt;illne Lanes ve!opes at home. Be ~our bot&amp;... :
~nd Kanauga Qrive· ln Look For Star I now. No a•perience. Fre4 4 •
Signs. Lawn Mowers . Clothes. supplies, •nfo. No obligation. Send
Dishes. And Lots More l
S.A.S.E. to Pres tige Unit tl, P.O. ~ ··
=:::..:.::.::.:::;:..;;;:..:..._~-J Box 195609, Wlntet Springs , PW '• •
t•ro- JSIIt: CheShire. ActOSI 32719·
, .,,.._

From Food Shop, Hipo Clo!hlng.

8obr 11trno, TOJI. .Nno 7!h. Slh.

Patio Slit: carp~) Beclsprtads,
Curtetne, Pictures. Whit 1&lt;nor1
Clotl&gt;ing, Mise . 9·7 24 Smithers

~.

,,

Earn up 10 $100th -kly stulllf!J , , : •
111111e1opes at home. S\~rt now. ~ • • ..experience. ftH IIIPJtfiea. lnkN:- • : • :
rnatfon, no ObliglhOn, lind SAS!~~ ,. ~·
S.Ck Dap1. 77. 3201-C. E. Coior&gt;ft, , ,_.
Or.• 1008. 0.1ando, Fl 3280:l
• , •. •

...".

,.

�P~ge 14 • The Dally Stntlnel

Wednesdey, June 5, 1196

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wedneeday, June 5, 1996

The o.uy

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

pHJI.I.IP
' AIJ)ER
630
$SOD wkty 1n your spare
No e-p needed Call now

7 days
H2t

(407)87S-2022 Ext

F ve Pomtt Expre11 now htrlng
one lull uma ana one pari 11me
cnh•ttf Expenence helpful Tak
1no retume1 11 FIVe Pointt Mon
day Wed,esday and Thursdey
9am 1 1am, ask tor Chrlt.
170

Miscellaneous

BAHAMA CRUISE! 5 dayst•
ntghts Under Dook&amp;dl Uusl Sell!
$299/Couple Lunned T1cKers 1
800 935-9999 ext 6589 Mon
9am 10pm

sat

I All Areas 1 Shir ley
~4

675-1 429

U,bl.e A\I on Rep• esen tat•ves
eoe;edeo Eam money tor Cru sl
o•ll s ar nometat work 1 800
992 6356 or 30 4 882 2645 lnd
f1€p

U\llS

AVO N $8 $15 /Hr Nc Door To
Door No M n•mum Order Bonus
~1 000 827 4640 lndiSI&amp;'Rep

n c monstralars Chr stmas Ar
ound The Wa r dl G•hs Of House
Orllo'fd Wou d you 1 ~c a tree
Ctu stmas and earn e:.:tra cash ?
Cal, Carol 614 949 330 r
Easy Work ! Excellen t Pay I As
9emblo Produc ts at Home Call
To ll Free I 800 467 5566 EXT
12170
E:.:perrenced Pan T1me Snack Bar
B!.lr Tender Submit Application I
(\esume Cllfs1de Goll Club 100
1~ lltfs de Ot~ve Gall pols OH
tJ5631 No Phone Calls

Campbell s ciean'"g serv.lces
Camarc a! Res•d8nua1 Low Ra tes
Pager 1 r 800 724 3199 then
556 1807 tr.ton-Sat BamfO 9pm

Deep freezer

~ke

new S 150 304

675 1092

Kuby sweeper w/ allac hments
30oll 675 17'26
Rad+o Shack top of the line 200
channel scanner like new reo
pr~ee $319 W1ll sale for 1125 f1rm
304 675 3734
Rambow sweeper w/ attachmems
304 675 1725
Used R .40 D1tch Wttcn Trencher
Cal 614-694 7a.t2
180

Wanted To Do

Bod~

work on cars &amp; trucks rea
sonable rates mmor mechamcal
repatrs o I changes call 6 14 742
2935 ask for K1p Rutland
Dons lawn Care Res•denttal
Churches &amp; Cemetar~es Rea
sonable Ratesl614 37g 2847
Genera Maintena nce Pamttng
Yard Work Wmdows Washed
Gunera C eaned light Hauhng
Cammer cal Res•denllal Sreve
614 386 0429

1-jome Typists PC users needed
$4,!) OQO Income porentta Call t
513 4343 E);t B 9368

Georges PorTable Sawm II don t
haul your logs to the m r JUS! call
304 675 1957

Househol d Goods Van Operator 1
Onver Needed Immediately COl
&amp; House hold Goo ds Etc Re
(.H.Aired Des1re To Prcv1de Ouahty
Se v• ce A Mu s I We Ha~e The
Best I oa ders In The Busmess &amp;
fl unty Of Wo1k Please App y At
180 Colu r;nbu s Road In Athens
011 Or Ca r Man 1 800 846 6691
For Mo1e Info

lawns Mowed &amp; Tnmmed Have
Equipment Reasonable Rates
Sen•or C t zen DISCount Fer An
Estimate 614 245 5755

,soc

Local Supermarkel Cha1n seektng
appl cat ons or resumes lor meat
dl!panment mnnagers and ass 9
ran is to updare fi les Send conh
dent all f to Box C 4 cto The ~lnt
P casan1 Reg ster 200 Ma•n St Pt
P ea9ant Wv 25550
Par T me Summer Food Servrce
Wolk()rs Needed At Umvers 1~
01 R o Gran de Apply At The
food Ser 1J1ce Ofl•ce In Studen t
Center An ne x 9 AM 5 PM Or
Call 614 245 5660
Ppstal 8 Gov 1 Jobs $21 IHr ...
Benet ts No Exp W1l1 Trarn For
Ap~ And Into 1 800 536 3040

R N poSitiOn ava table lor pro
gress ve RenaOilltallorY Skilled
ICF fal: hty Expenence preferred
bu t w11 cons1der the nght can
d dote Mus! be w 11 ng to work as
a team member With an e•cellenr
srall of therap•sts and nurses tmt
have a h1story ol 5 years WlrhoUI
any egularory compliance ts
sues Fxcel ent bene~ I package
Rota I ng sh fls reqwred Ca11614
992 6606 cr send resume to
Roc~spnn.gs Rehabll ta t10n Cenre 36759 Rockspnngs Ad Pomemv OH 45769 EOE

Professional Tree Servtce Stump
Rem oval Free Est1mat es! In
surance Bidwell OhiO 614 388
9648 614 367 70t0
S And S Home Improvement Will
DO\ Remodeling And New Con
struct1on No Job Too B•o Or Too
Sma I Free Est matesl 614 446
2450 Ask For Joe Saunders.
Su n Valley Nursery School
Ch1ldcare M-F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young Schoo l Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mm
mum 614 446 3657

W 11 care for elderly 1n 'YOur home
or t1osp11a1 N1ghts Sun Th ur s
Days Mon Fr Call 304 675 5795
as~ lor Lnda
W It do all lnttmor and eate r or
pa1nt plus some carpenter work
Free Est Cal1614 446 2637
Wtll Sit and care tor elder!~ day
or n1ght housecleamng also
have e:.:peuence and CPR 1ra1n
mg $5/hr 614-992 4065
Would l1ke Tc Baby sH lnfanl To
Any Age Large Playground Ref
erences 614 245-5887
FINANCIAL

210

Opportunity

'

Secur ty Guards must be able 10
wo k any sh1f t nclud ng wee
henos Mus I have clean pollee
roco d good work h srory: reliable
1ranspona 110n dnvers l•cense
pnd home phone Pay starts at
$4 75 per hour 32 40 hours per
week Cal! 614 669 2874 Mon
d:Jy Friday Sam .!lpm for appo nr
n ent

~OTICEI

OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness wnh people ~ou know and
NOT to send money through the
ma! unt you have 1nvest gated
the ofler~ng
2500 50 000
f AST APPROIIAL
No Adv Fee One can
1 (800)829 7687

Small local Fum Seek•ng Part
1 mC! On Ca Ct ean1ng Persons
Send Re sume Tc SCCS PO Box
538 Ker OH 45643
SOCIAL WORKE R The Athens
A IDS Task fcrce Is Seek ng A
L tense d So c1al Worker (L SW)
To Serve As Caso Manager For
The HIV Rural Cons orttum Of
Southeastern Oh o ThiS Is A Full
T1me Posit on Funded By The
Omo Dopartnlent 01 Health The
S Jccessfu Candtdate Will Be
LS W Cert1hed In Oh1o And Will
Have A M1n mum Of Two Years
Pro fes s ona l Exper ence E•pen
cnce tn W or ~1ng W11h Persons
!nleped W th HlV ls Hrghl~ De
5 ra b e Th •s Pos•t•on tnvo111es
Moderate Travel Start•ng Dale Is
Jut~·, 1996 Salary ls In The M1d
20 s. w lh Exce llent Fr nge Ben
e ts r A Le tter 0! Interest And
Cu rrent Re sume Should Be D1
ocl fd To
Case Manager
Sea rctl
Alhens AIDS Ta~k
r cr ~e 18 North College Street
A thOns QH 45701 Appl cat1ons
w 1'Be Rece1ved Uolil June t4
t 99 0 The Athens AIDS Task
Forc.c Is An Equal Oppcrtumty
£mpklyer
Soc ~ I Workers Now H•r~ng $23 I
Hr + Bene! ts On The Job Tram
ng T-o Apoly 1n Your Area I 800
nqS r 50

All real estate advertlslf'lg In
thrs newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housmg Act
of t 968 which rpa kes il1llegal
to advertise any preference
llmltallon or discnmlnat•on
basad on race color rellgton
sex raml(1at status or national
origin or any lntentlon to
make any such preference
l1m1tat10n or dlscrimlnatton •
This newspaper wtll not
knowllngly accept
ad\lenlsements lor real estate
wh1ch Is In ~lo!a tl on ot the taw
Our reactors are hereby
Informed that an dwellings
ildvertlsed 1n this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSIS

So meo ne lor general matn
tena{lce yRrd work pa nrmg
small odd 1obs ett Call 304 882
2 02~

REAL ESTATE

31

'

Warlt a rewardmg career? We
arc look!ng for car.ng rndrvtdual t
who want to rc 1n the growmg
number of Profess onal Child Care
Providers Tra1nmg and referrals
provided free Call Judy at L1nk at
304 523 9540 or 1 800 894
954!l

Business

o Homes for Sale

1 112 srory Ill Or lr dr lr base
ment &amp; sun porch $36 000 call
614 992 4480
1 Dedroom co uag o Jefferson
A•e $45 000 304 675 7482

2 3 bedroom house 50x100 lot
located tn S~rac u se apphances
Wanoted S Iter In My Home 12 •ncluded call 614 992 5767 after
M le!i From Ga ll1po11s 50 Hcurs 4pm
Per Wee~ May Brng {1 ) Child 01
Your Own M~l Be Dependable 2 3 bed rooms bnck OR new
W1tt 2 To 4 Ch1 ldren Ma I Apph windows carpet com plete new
canon To 2775 State Route H r kitchen and ba.th garage. full
basement 614 992l6389
Ga ll1pol•s OH 45631
VjiLOLIFE !CONSERVATION

JOBS

3 BR. 2 bath t'!f1Ch 2 car ge'"ge
Spnng Valley area close to Holz
er Hosi)IUli 614 446 7940

Now Hmno Game Wardens St
cumy, Ma1n1enance Park Rang
Country setllnQ 4 bedroo m 2
crs ;E tc No Experience Neces
bath hv1ng room eat m k tchen
5ar yo~- For ApplicatJon &amp; lnforma family room walk rn closets 2 car
t&lt;on Call t 800 299 247 0 Ext
garage 1acre 304 882 3326 al
O H3t6C 8 AM To 9 PIA 7 tar 6pm.

Days

WILDLIFEtCONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Hfnl"'g Game Wardens Secuntr, Malnumance Park Ranger
ero; No E KP necessary For apph
cation and inb cal11 800 m
2470 exl OH316c Sam 9pm 1
deys.

E1gh1 room house Rac1ne fcur
bedf"9om a LR OR lam•ly room
lu•aplace large kttchen full altlc
basement, new central heat and
aif" room for thrH cart 4 68 acrot, coukloell loll 175,000 nege
tloble 814 eg2 292• or E14 992

8071

GOV T FORECLOSED HomOJ
for Penn•u On $1 Delinquen t
Ta1 Repo 1 REO I Your Aru
Toll Free (1) 800 898 9778 Eat
H 281( For Current l.Jstmos
HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
3 Bedroom Home E•ce41&amp;nt Con
d111on New V n~l S d•ng Cenrral
A r CarpOft Do uble Garage W•th
New Apartment Above 61411146
171'4 Home 614 .ue 0374 Work
For Mark Palmer

In Po1n1 Pleasant exc cond
good netghbornood 304 675
7000
New Homes For Sale Conslfuc
ton Near Com~ellon 3997 Bu la
'tt'llla P1Ke Cal 614 379 27_.9
One bedroom heme n Pomeroy
Will se ll on land conrract 614
992 5858
Three beclraom nome 1ft caunlfy
Whites H II Ad Rutland one barh
m ground pool 614 992 5067
Three bedroom heme Wit h car
port cottage and outbUIId ng .n Pt
Pleasant W111 sell on land con
tract 5t4 992 5858
Three bedroom bath lrv1ng room
fam1tv room eat m knchen base
menl, two car garage central heat
aM a r m Rae ne 614 949 3034

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Porter Aree You Pay Utll ititl.
Relerencall Oepolit Req 114
388 D102

2&lt;tee anytime

MERCHAND ISE

Jra•ter tor rtnt In Gallipolis area
6144-168849

440

&amp; Acreage

25 Acres Hannan Trace School
0 stracl Small Tobacco Allotment
M1 neral R1ghts 6U 256 1611

GOOD USED ~PPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr igerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
\l•ne Street Call 614 4•6 7398
1 800-499-3&lt;99
Relr gerator Washer Dryer 30·
Elecrrrc Stove
Gas Sto~a
Color TV $50 Each Mtcrowave
$40 Alf Cond1troners 814 256
1238

3a·

Used End Tables Collee Tables
Apt S ze Refflgerator Dtneues
Couches 130 Bulav.lle P1ke Gal
I pols 61111 446 4782
VI RA FURNITURE
614 446 - ~158
Ouahry Household Furn1ture And
Applaances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry! RENT 2 OWN
And layaway Also Ava1lable
Free DeiiVE!f'~ Wilh•n 25 M let

35 West 2 Bedroom Bnck Town
houses 1261 Jackson P1Me Gal
I pohs Across From Ctnema
$295/Mo + Deposit Rental lnlor
manon 614 446 0006 Or Wflle
PO Box 994 GallipoliS 0~
45631

Vmy l 64 Pa 11er ns Large selec
t•ons K tchen Pr nts '" Stock Ca'
pet $6 50 and up Mollohan Ca1
pets 614 446 7444
Whirlpool dryer good cond S100
304-675 :1085

458 112 Second Avenue Up
sta~rs Furmshed Newly Oecorat
ad liVrng Roam Kitchen 1 Bed
rocm Bath la rge Screened
Porch Total Electnc $235/Mo
Depos•t Reference Requrred
614 (46 2581 Berween 5 PM 9
RM

New 14 w•de 2bedroom 1bath
$699tdown $139/mo Free sk ~rt
1ng Cal 1 800 691 6777

350 Lots

e

1 Bedroom down&amp;1aM"J apartment
n Galllpohs large L1v1ng Fam•ly/
Dm ng and Kuchen areas also
has Ulif ty Room $325Jmonth In
eludes water Oeposu and refer
ences reqund 614 446 3963

An A ttract•~e Upsta~rs Apart
ment 3 Bedrooms In Pomt Pleas
ant Full~ Carpered AC Oepos1t
Relerences 614 446 004 , Ail e•
600

34 acres 2 br mobile home 6 8
acres tillable askmg $3o4 000
6,4 992 2822

E•tra large tndoor pet cage used
2mo $65 double oven works
great $50 Hunter green Queen
Anne tables w/glast tops S50pa~r
dark walnul roll top desk wtc ha r
S35 304 75-8053

t and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nished and unfurnished secumy
deposit requ1red no pets 614
992 2218

Furft4shed Apartment 1 Bedroom
$295/Mo Uuln es Pa1d 920 Founn
Avenue Galllpol s 614 446 3844
Alter 7 P M

Farms for Sale

Counrry furnnure 304 675 6820
AI 2 N 6mlles Pt Pleasant, WV.
lues Sat Q-8 Sun 1t 5

tor Rent

l•m ted Offer Only $500 down on
any new s ng e w de 1n s to ck
Free deliver y &amp; setup Only at
Oa~wood Homes N1tro WV 304
755 5885

330

App liances
Recond•ltoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relr1
gra ters 90 Day Guarantee !
French Ctty Maytag 1514 448
7195

Apartments

1991 Fa rmont 14•.80 3 bed
rocms 2 bath all electr c 6~
house wal s heat pump 400 sq
fl pressure treated deck mcluded
614 992 5044 Of 614 992 6134

530

540

12 W ndows ln clud ng Storm
W ndows 2 Entrance Doors 6 Ft
Pallo Door 814 448 2467
14 HP Batons A1dmg Tractor E:.:
tra Deck &amp; Snow Blade $600 5
Ant ique Oak Chars $150 614
245 9498

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDG ET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dr ve
from $244 to $315 Walk to shop
&amp; mo~1 es Ca ll 6 14 446 2568
Equal Hou srng Opporrunny

16 Ft Camper Tra er Call Alter 5

PM 6 'I 446 2163

Phone 304 675-1386

19 64 Chevy 11 4 Door Sedan
75 000 Actual M les Old Car
Show Ready ' Truck Topper F11s
1988 Ford Ranger $25 614 446
12t4AIIcr5PM

Furm shed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath Up
sta rs Ut1ht1es Furnished Clean
No Pets Reference Oepos t Re
qwed 61 4- 446- 1519

2 Weed eaters chan sa w boat
motor wa ler pump e:.:erc •se 0 ke
adu t pclty char pa1n1 sprayer
304 773 S360

Extra n ce one bedroom turn shed

apartment •n Pt Pleasant no pers

Furn1 ! hed Apartment 3 Rccms &amp;
Bath All Ur•ht 1es Pa•d Downsta rs

2) Gas Powered Cui Off Saws 2)
D !ch W tch Drenchers Carpe t
Cleaner Gravely Mower lawn
Edger !Drencher Posr Hcle 0 g
ger A.~rless Pa nt Sp ayer Ram
mer Compacto( Tow Dolly 614
446 8217 Evemngs Or leave
Message
Boots B~ Re dw•ng Ch 1ppewa
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowest
Pr ces AI Shoe Cafe Gallipolis

s
1-------- - - -

Lot s lor rem Now !ak•ng apphca
ttons Country Lane Mob te Home
Park GallipO li S Ferr~ Wv 304
675 5421
Furn1shed Eff•c ency 2 Rooms
Parcels ava table for new home Share Balh S1751Mo Ullhlles
conslrucl en on Rayburn Road 5
• 807 Second Avenue Gall•
parcels rang1ng !rom 1 84ac 10 ''--'-614_44_6-_4_4_1_6_A_I"-''7.,.P_M
__
5 32ac Pa~ed road county water ,reasonable restnct•ons Map and Furn1shed El11ec ency Apartment
mfo a~a Ia ere on reques t No s n
All Utlhhes Furn1shed Cemral
gle Wide mQu1r1es please 3Q 4
Heat &amp; Au Condlltonmg Pr wate
675 5253 '
Park&lt;ng 814446 2602

41 0 Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom House 2 Bedroom
Tra •ler AC In Galhpohs 614 446
8849 For lnformabcn
2 Bedroom $175mo Need reler
e nces &amp; depos11 Call 304 675
1429 alter 4 OOpm
2 bedroom m Hartford S225mo
No pets 304 882 2 106 or 304
675 3100 aller 4pm
3 bel!room m Hartford $350mo
No pets Call 304 882 2016 or
304 67~3100

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Elf All U tll t es pd
Share baln 14 5 Month 9 19 2nd
Ave 614 446 3945

RENTALS

Antiques

Buy or 9e l1 R1venne AntiQues
1124 E Main Stree t on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m Sunday t 00 to
600pm 614 992 2526

Bowens Estate Ashron Wv 2 112 919 Second Avenue S2651Mo
61 4 446 3945
acr es CIIY watertcable lsep t1C I
30:.:40 garage 304 576 9907
Furn1shed Aparrment Upsla~t s 1
Bedroom No Pets Second Ave
BUitdmg lots for sa le on M dwa y nue Gallipolis All Ut hiles Patd
Dr 1n New Haven For ntc ca l Deposl! 614 446 9523
304 882 2904

Scemc \/alley Apple Gro~e
beautiful 2ac lots publ c water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2338

Household
Goods

Two bedroom mob1le home m
country depotlt and references
requ 1red 6 14 94 9-2833

2bdrl"n apts total electriC ap
phances fum1shed laundry room
lac1 1t1es close to school •n town
Apphcat ons available ar Vrllage
Green 1\pts 149 or call 614 992
3711 EOH

Pr ce Bus le 1996 3bedrcom
$825 down $159/mo Free 11ehv
er~ &amp; setup Onl~ at Oakwooo
Homes N1tro WV 304 755 5685

510

Two and three bedroom mobil•
homes ttarung at S240 S300
sewer water and trash included
6U 992 2167

2 bedroom apartment $350 per
month 1200 deposit util ues pau:l
no pett 614-992 5724

New BanM Repos Onl~ 3 elt St•ll
tnwarranry :..l4 755-7191

Trailer Spac:t For Rent On Ball
Run Road $100/Mo Refer"""
Requtred 8t4 441&amp; 41 t 1 Oawt•mt
Or E&gt;lflllt!tl, 814-•&lt;te 7157

Fur n11hed -private lot parch
yard good clean condil1on, no
pelt $275 with Wlrtr 304 882

1985 Sch \.J t 1•h:?O 2 bed•con1
eacellent ca nd ton ~ nyl s~ rt1ng
mcluded w II rent lor pnced re
dvced $ 11 500 304 773 6062

L1m1ted Ollerl 1996 doublew •de
3br 2bath $1799 down S275t
manrh Free delivery &amp; serup
Only at Oakwood Hcmes Nitro
W\1 304 755 5885

llot&gt;to hOme lot lor ront S1OOimo
304 57&amp; 2683

&amp; Dryer '""""' 1291

New Haven 1bedroom untur
nnthed apt dces have stove re
fng wuher &amp; dryer Oepos1t &amp;
references. 304 882 2566

1995 Clay ton Hx70 2 Bedrooms
2 Balhrooms Ga rden Tu b All
New Apphances Washer
Bu II In Hutch All New Fu
Oak Porch 8•10 Bu1ldmg 614
441..0119 After 4

.we
460 Space tor Rent

Bedroom To Rtnt In SlnDfe Heme
1 112 Miles To Gallipolis Use
K tchtn living Room Washer &amp;

1976 01"1e 2 bedroom new car
pet good cond $6 295 304 675
5708

1995 14x52 2 bedroom heat
pump $14 t;f95 Call 304 675
2642 or 304 675 7705

Rooms lor r~tnt • week or mon.,
Storong 11 S12Cimo GaiUa Holll
e1 ..
158:1

2 13 Bedroom t.lobUe Hornet fn

Concrete &amp; Plast c Sepu c Tanks
300 Th u 2 000 Gall ons Ron
E~ans Enterpr ses Jackson OH
1 800 537 9528
CrA fts man 10 HP Ad ng Lawn
Mower 5395 61111 245-0 134

Gracrous hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom

E lectra(

Scooters
And
Wheelcha~rs New !Used Van 1
Car l•lt Installe d S1mrgl des L•ll
Cha~rs Call For Brochure 614
446 7283

l rt,~;~;~::'~

at Village Maner and
1 Apartments m M ddle
porL From S232 S355 Call 614
992 506• Equal Housmg Opper
tuftl11&amp;s.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~rod New &amp; Rebuilt ln Stock
Call Ron E~ans 1 800 537 9528

M iddlepo rt 1 &amp; 2 bedroom fur
n1shed apts Also 2 room ell c en
cy Oeposu &amp; reterences re
qu~red 304 882-2566
Moderen One Bedroom Apart
ment 614 446..()390

K•mball Console P1ana EKcellenr
Shape16 14 446 6696

N ce One BR
Unl urn shed
Apanment Range &amp; Relr~g pro

lots For Sale Gra~el H1il Ce
me tery Chesh•re S200 per gm~e
•nclud ng Corner Stones and Per
poruai Care 614 367 02t4

vided
Pr111ate Parkmg Wa rer &amp; Gar
bage Pa1d Oepo sn requ~red
(6 14) 446 4345 alter 5 PM

New Gas Furnaces New Galvan
zed Duct Work New Hood Fans
614 319 2720AFTER6P M

N•ce two bed1oom apanmem 1n
Pomeroy no pets 614 992 5858

New \1 1~ tar Frasn lor Cancn
35mm camera $50 Several teet
ol cha n I nk lenc•ng w1th post and
accessor es $125 Call 304 675
3432 evemngs

N ow accepting apphcat•ons for
one bedroom apartments Apph
catiOns can be picked up at Po
meroy Chit Apartments 01!1ce
614 992 7712

House 1n Chtrcn 4 bedroom l.v1ng
room bath kitChen lull basement
big lor &amp; tarpon SU5mo plus
ut ht•es Oepcsn &amp; relere nccs re
t;wred 304 773 5054

Takrng Appllcauons 2 Bedroom
Apartment R•o Grande New Car
pet All Ut1ht•es Pa•d 5295/Mo

One on one stepper with ccun
ter umer &amp; v1deo l1 ke new $80
flfm, 614 992 6949

De_
po-:'::"-"-'-4::3_88-_99_4_6_ _ _ _
:
Twrn R•~ers Tower now accept ng
apphcat1ons for 1br HUD subs1d
rzed 'Bpt lor elderly and hand•
capped EOH 304 875 6679

S•ze Otthoped c Manress
1 Queen
Set And Frame Never Used St•ll

N•ce th ree bedroom home 1n Pt
Pleasant no pets 614 992 5858
House for renl 1n Rurtand no pets
depos t and references requ~red
call 614 742 2661
Two bedroom house tn Pomeroy
pt rvate semng S250tmo 614
985 4256
Unfurnished 2 bedroom house
n1ce &amp; clean no ms• d&amp; pels de
poatt required 814992 3090
420

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

12x65 2 Bedroo ms AC $2501
lAo Plus OepoStl No Pe11 Reier
ences 814,.41 0318

In Plast c Cost SBOO Sell S250
614 175 2360

R &amp; S Furn tura Mason wv 304
773 534 1 New S!ofe Hours
Man Ffl
Sat
12 naon 7pm

Upsta1ra Furntshed Apartment t
Bedroom e 14 11146 4927 614
446 a519

12noon Spm We Bu~
Sell
Trade Ask tor Rock~
A
efrrgera.tars Stoves Washers
And Dtyers All Recondwoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
Will De!tver 614 669-6441

Very clean one bedroom fur
n 1shed apartment 1n M•ddleport
ca ll e1• 4 -45 309 1 preteral&gt;ly be
lore 10 30am or after 4 OOpm
Wedge Apartments 506 Burdeue
St 1bedroom No pelt Furn1shed
&amp; unfurr~;•shed 304 675 2072
wemngL
450

ru1 Rauonable Str~lct 11 •

Bee 7311

bu-

used ptu11c
Would 11g to
ladder lor abo..-e gtound pool
flt499250S3.,_.5prn.
Young GITIS Bedroom Su•te In
eludes
1) Full Size Headbo•d.
2) Obi OrH.w W•lh U1rror
3) CheatOfOrawvrt
4) CabinoiiHutch
5) Nightttand
Wo"d, EJCC.ellent Ouahty
•
Mutt Sea To Apprec•ate l Puc•
$1 000 10 SIH!ed Gtrls Schwtnn
Btcyc le $G5 Anr lque Dreuer f
Cheat S2dO 814 ,ue 1423 A.frtr
BP.M Or leave Message

"tl

Zap The Farr" lose Up To 301
lbs 30 Day Money Back Guaran
lee! I 00% Natural Dr Recom
mended Ho Starvauon! Ask
AbouiFreebies 61-4-446-1804
550

Block bnck sewtr p1pes wmd
ows lintels e1c Claude W•nters
R o Grande OH Ca ll 614 24S
5121
Metal Roohng &amp; S1dmg Ga l ~an
rzed Galvatume and Pamted Al
tiZE!f' Farm Supplies 614 245 5193
Pole Bldg Spf :rll45x9 1 15:.:8
S 1d ng Oaar 1 3 Man Door
Pa1nted Sreel Stdmg Galvalume
Steel Roo! 16 444 Erected Iron
Horse Bl&lt;h 1-300 352 1045

Pole Bu1ldrng ~x48•9 ce•l ng 1
3 enrr~ door 1 14:.:9 shdlflg door
pa1n1ed steel s•des root &amp; gut
ters erected prrce 16600 Prec+
son Post Frame Bldrs Inc 614
992 64 16 or 1 800.396 3026
560

Pets tor Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom•ng Fea
tur no Hydro Bath Juhe Webb
Call614 446..0231
1 Female Toy Poodle S15D 1
Male Pup Toy flood e $115 614
446 3398
2 At&lt;C Cocker Span1ets 1 C!w
part• female 1 b/IN paru male exc
temperament 304 675 7495
AKC Boxer Pupp1ea 304 675
8095
AK C m m P1nschers two lemales
$300 ea;ch one mare $250 read~
Junv 15 accepting depos•ts
614 949 3026
AK C
Registered
German
Shephard pups 3mo s old 304
675 2753
AK C Reg1stered Pomeraman
Puppy UKC Regtstered "PW
Amencan Esk1mo Chow Chow
Lost Papers Cockatiel Grey And
While Star rang To Talk 614 446
6391
AK C Rou We1lers Ta•ls Docked
Dew Claws Removed 1st Shots &amp;
W(lrmed Have Parents On Prcm
ses $300 F rm 614 388- 9220
AKC Aotwe ler Pupp1es 1300 Fe
ma te $350 Male Shots Wor med
Ta11s Docked Depos11 W1!1 Hold
614 379 2667
Beag le pupp•es tor sale S20ea
304 576-4109
ausmess For Sale Pet Shop
Fuly Equ1pped Stocked Grear
local en Senous lnqutrres Only
61 4 441..0770 614-446-7507
Dog &amp;,.,Cal Groom1ng reasonable
•
15yrs e:.:per~ence Call for
304 6 75-8831

•

Full blooded Sheltle m1marure
Collie pups S125 each AKC
Regrstered th1ee year otd female
Cothe lass•e color $200 614
742 2050
Male Walker Coon Dog 2 Years
Old CB Equ1pmen1 614 245-5622

Remadehng Sate Harvest Go1d
30 Srove Matching Range HoOd
Good Condtllon Also Sears
Dishwasher 614 256-8647

Furnished

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upnghr Ron Evant Enterpr~ses
Jackson. Oh10 1 800 537 9528

Rooms
Cucle Motel Galllpoht OH 6,4
U8 2501 or B14 387 0612 Elle
c•ency Rooms Cable Air Phone
Mrcrowave I Refrigerator

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Unlur
ntohed No Pe11 On Krlnar Read
814-448 9569

Now tak1n~ deposrts on AKC
while &amp; atlver sable German
Shepherds ready to go 6 12 96
304 675 7495
PupP'I PaiKe Ker:mels Boardmg
Stud SerVICe Pupp1es Grooming
Buy Sell &amp; Trade AU Bre eds
Payments Welcome 614 388
0429
Reg sted Female BoKer One yr
old Eara Ta11 F1xed All Shota
(61412566&gt;55
Reg•stered Mm1a1ure Poodle
black 1yr old neutered all shots
$100 304 578 2444
Thrs Weeks Spec1al Poodles
Hu sk1es German Shepherds
Chows Puppy Palace 614 388
0429
580

Fruits

&amp;

v~etables
Slrawbemes Taylors Berry
Patch Qpen Uon Wed Fr1 9 8
Sa! Till Noon 614 245-9047
Strawbern&amp;s P1ck Your Own l Call
ClaudeWnters 614 24&amp;-5121
Sweet potato plants call 614 742
2713
FARM SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

1 Alphirt•Sanaan: bhly Pl. ISO
~ &amp;ant.,.. cllicl&lt;ent t 10 lor
811 304-S1I 2*12.

Cand111on S2000 080 6 1 4 38e
8146 61.a ~&amp; 4197
250
1990 Dod~"~e Ram Van
•
72 000 M le s $6 000 Ca n Be
Seen At Gart pols Oa ry Tnbu ne
825 Th rd A~enue Gall co! s
Otuo
l

Ch•cktns fo r sale all lypes ot
rare breed Banrams and l'lea~y
breed chtckens Hatched 3/4198
"ave been vaccinated would

Trr S1ar livestocK 5th Wheel

740

Hay

1 John Deere 160 , Wheel
Horse 11 HP 2 Club Cadet 614
446 9227

TRANSPORTATION

1994 CBR 600 F2 4200m r ~
eludes helmets c11nvas cove,
etc Aski ng S5 600 304 675 6541
or 30 4 523 2526
r

Hay 8 te-2•5 9393.

710

1975 L•ncoln 48 000 Actua l M1les
A ' White Maroon lnl See Tom
Kes set 8 14 U6- 7787
-----------I
1978 lmc oln Mark 5 460 eng
76 000 aclual m les bla ck on
bladt garage kept t111 March or 95
_S_4_ooo
__
,,_m_30_4_7_73_6_17_o_ _ _

GRADE LOG WANTEO DeitY·
erod at w11 pick up oontact li""Y
Goldabarry/Paul M t - Slwmlll,
Inc 2$08 US Rl35 South oldt
W•. 25187 Phont 30""875-7598
01 304 875-7882

PEANUTS

1980 Chr~sler Le Bar en needs Pontoon boar w th Ita tier cam pet
call6 14 949 2111
-;:.
760

p I1S &amp;

u o
a
Accessories

·:i

l

,
1985 Oodge Ar es K Car one
owner Well taken care ol $900 Budget Transm1ss•ons Used IA~ 61111 388-9809
built All Types Access •ble l;J
Over 10 000 Transm ss on A~
1986 Celebr~ty maKe good work Ovcrhual Kns 5 14 245 5677
"t
car $1 000 304 773 5284
~
New gas tanks one ton tr ue
1 986 Po n118c Sun b rd N ew T res
&amp; EJhaust And Many Other New wheels rad arors floor mars elc \
Parts! S1 000 614 256 6109
0 &amp; R Aulo A pie~ WV 30ot 372 -IJ
3933 or t 800 273 9329

_,.. YOU r.NOvl TtfAT Ill,
T~.AT Ill" AS treMOVtl&gt;

I

F,o,..,

1990 Ford Tempo t988 N• ssan 790
C
&amp;
Sent'" 1990 Chevy Ca&gt;&lt;her All
ampers
cars Equ&lt;pped w th AC Au
Motor Homes
1
roma uc Transm1 ss to ns Cooks
Motors 614 445 0103
1974 Blt De! Ray truck campero~
sell conta•ned w!lurnace gooc»
1989 Bu•ck leSabre eacellent cond $600 304 895 3596
t
runntng cond111on V 6 PB PS
AC power wndows $3800 614 19 ?7 Prowler 20 Fr 1973 Fleer ....
94!J2045or6t4 949 2302
wcod 17Ft 1976 Blazon 24 Fr •
24 Ft Ponloon 1699 McCormick:
1990 Grand Am 2 Door loaded Road Gall pots 614 446 1511
New T res Run s Good S2 600
F~rtn 614 245 5465
19?9 Dodge 23 Moro r Ho me

ou,

PtAL.ING

. .•·

S'lt&gt;~1

WIT~

F'A""''N~ fo\Atcts ,..,e
T!-IINr. IT viAl

I

llt,LA(~l&gt;

1

BY

A T!-IOil N.

1-:-::-::-::--.---::--.-:---;:---..

1990 Thunderbird V 6 charcoa l
gr. y • u to Ps Pb cru se 11 I t
wheel pw pi pow er sea ts rear
defroster ac auto nead hghts &amp;
d1mmer S5 goo nego 304 88 2

2030
1991 Olds Cutlass Calars sun
roof rear defrost 4 cyl 5spd ac
am fm cassette $3 30 0 304 675
2949

Serf Conta ned Gas Stove New t
Fudge 440 Engme Alf $6 500., '
t
614 24 5- 9460
1
Mm 1 motor nome 1984 N sstlt\r
Mtrage dual rear w t1eel~ 4c~l '
5spd 20mpg sleeps 5 $2 BOO 1
304 67&amp;-2949
:

31 Small opota
41 Guido 1 high

4 Roclly

3 In

not•

caM

Mounlaln

t catlfomla &gt;Cifl
10 Concert halli
11 lmmedlatelf
lotlowlnf
'
111 Shrewd
20 Stlller'a

5 DNapar1
I Ovarturno
1 Wallar a
handOUt
8 FI1ICIII

partl

pannar

W01l

North

Eosl

3•

Pass

Pass
Pa8s

Pass

•

22--eomlng
24 Invitation

alate

26 Hollow
28 Irish poet "
30 Back of the
loot
31 Columnist , -

6

Bombaek

33 Located

-

40Rowbolt

'

35 Store fodclef&lt;

t;:'!.h

43
45 Contalnlrig
gold
46Cttyln~
47 - - o f
bricks
48 Emerald
Isle

Phillip Alder

Upon leavong New South Wale s,
Meta Goodman and I had a long dnve
back to Bn8bane Once there I trans
!erred to Margaret M1llar s car for the
onward JOUrney tq Noosa I!spent sev
en hours 1n cars tbat day ) Once at the
p1ctureaque town renowned for tte col
ored san d$, I ran a duplicate mto
whtch I had pls,ced e1ght deals wtth to
struchve potnts !The players d1dn't
know whtch deals w e re mme I
Afterward, I dtscussed those deals
and few others With the playecs
The Noosa Bndge Club 1wh1ch used
to be a church hall and was moved to·
tact on the back of a truck - a b1g
truck- to 1ls present location &gt; con
tams more cetllng tans to one room
136) than I have ever seen before
Th1s ts one of my deals from the al
temoon Ustog the Law of Total Tricks
as a base, West made a pre empt1ve
JUmp to three spades When you have
a combtoed holdmg of mne trumps
compete to the three le vel II West had
held a h1gh card spade ra1 se he would
have cue btd three h earts
North wanted to act but didn't have
anythmg comfortable to do South un
der pressure btd what he hoped he
c ould make
When the dummy was tabled the
good dec larers stopped to count th e
potnls Here. only 18 were m1s smg So
West couldn't have both the h eart king

r

r

SO lndtan
garment
51 Horaaa galt
52 12131 word
55 Non-proiiiJ 'V

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipt'Mrr cryplog ams are &lt;:fealed from quolltiOOI by l•fi"IOI.II people pesl and present
Ead) '-11er ,..., !he cipher slandl lor another TOO.y .. du. Y ttquaL1 P

VKBYYNZYNVBJO

XZP

J

XV G

0 B N J X

YSBKOJ

F

z

FBSS

PXOK

ZFOBK

FSOBNSM

VG

J

vJ

BNJXAN

•

FSBNDO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ' Honor ts ltke a rugged tsland wtthout a shore once
you have left 1t you cannot return· - Nicolas Bo1ieau

WOlD
GAM I

0

Reorronge 1et1ers of
four scrambled words
low to form four words

tho

be

EMPPAR

and club ace
South led the club king from hand at
tnck two When West won the trtck,
East was marked With the heart king
Knowmg •here was no pomt tn finess
mg, South played the heart queen
(just tn case) to dummy's ace and
smiled cont~nledly when th e ktng
dropped

I

Roofmg &amp; guners comptcre home
remodeling decks 8 S1d1ng 35
years eKpeflence B &amp; B Roofmg
and Construe! on 814 992 236~
r. 1 800 889 3943

BIG NATE

...

1:::::.

I

~

~.

l"'

ke.. ,,eNI.in.!

Ia,..

IJ..L~ of • bl.. ~- ..,
~school Jol' o,.,ore'

,.. lit

~\ .~~..,

Plumbing

"o"'

•

.

•

•

Comple1e the chuckle quoted
by ftlltng •n the mtsseng words
you d ewelop I rom srep No 3 below

@j

soe'.

ID 0 S'

UNSCRAMBLE FOR

ANSWER

eU noW 'iCHA

ro a

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

wot'l · t

Tht

Trrosurt

Sovm1s You'll Find In the
Crossirird Stttian

.~ ..

"'re.al " E1lt11

Inborn - Sally Tangy Awhile· ALONG th e WAy
1 believe that 1f you tnstst tn always hav1ng your say
you w 1l l undoubtedly lose some friends ALONG the WAY

IWEDNESDAY

~======~==~~~====~==~~~romance and
Graph Matchmake•
reveals
ASTRO·ORAPH
whtch stgns are romantteally perfect for
,.------...;_-~ you Matt $2 75 lo Matchmaker c/o lhts

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

&amp;

newspaper P 0 Bo• 1758 Murray Htll
StattOn New York, NY 10156
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22). You should
not use a close rnend s belonQings With
out hts or her permiSSIOn today Bad feel
1ngs could result tl what you borrow ts
misused or broken
LEO (July 23•AUg 22) II you and your
male disagree today try to resolve II tn
pnvale II your problems are atred In publtc everyone present will feel uncomlort

Heating
Freeman s Healing And Cooling
Serv1ce EPl'
11'1S tal1a1•o n.
Cerulred Re'slden tlal Comrnerc1al
614 256 161,

'-"CI

840

.

PRINT NUMBE I fD
LEITERS IN SQUARES

Rl..( Vt

EV

V n~l Wor.ks V•nyl Sid no Roohng
27 Vee.rs Exp Free Est Spec al
In BriCk Homes 6l-4 367 Ofi13
820

I

PREPHO
~--r:;~7,.-,;I~&gt;T~--,~--,~rl G)

~~c=-a=-c::--:G:-e-n_e_'i-:1--:-H-om-e-:-:M-:--a,:-rn ,

wv

t 984 ChBVfOiet Grandvrlle Cus
(Om•zed Van AMIFM O•tstl Ga
rage Kept E•cell&amp;nt Condthon
814 379 2$55

1 ~nd
2 Layar of eye

A famous comtc once sa1d

t

&amp; 4·WDs

37 a.rtand
31 Varaamaker

inHs

'I

tenence Pant ng v 1 n ~l s d ng ,
carpentry aoors w•ndows balh!l. '
94 Chevrolet Ca~aher Turquo1se mob1le home repalf and more For •
2 dr auto a~r srereo cassene tree est mate call Chet 614 99~ •
an11 lock brakes POl new !Ires 6323
:
43 735 m1les Eac cond S6795
•
614 379 2987
ORVWALL
1
Hang f•n sh repatr
J
Auto loans Dealer wrll arrange 11 Co1 lmgs te•tured plaster repa1r
nancmg even 11 ~o u have been Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years
tur ned down elsewhere Upton eJr:pcmence
Equipment Used Cars 304 458
=-~~--=~---------:- ,
1069
Ear s Home Ma ntenance vmYI
s dtng roohng ex tenor and 1nten. .
SEIZED CARS From $175 or paant ng power wash•ng room )
PorRhes Cadtllacs Chevys add1t1ons Froe Est mares 614 r
BMW s Corvette s Also Jeeps 4 )192 4232
WD s Your Area Toll Free 1
800 898 9778 En A 2814 for Ron s TV Serv •ce specaaiJzmg an ~
Zenuh also serv1cmg mos t oth9t'
Current lisiJOgs
btancls House calls 1 800 797"1
0015
304 576 2:198
720 Trucks tor Sale

Vans

36 Aclrna Lel;h

25 Toledo's •

_,..~

A&amp;J Home Improvements roomi
adO 1ons 1(1tchen and bath remc 1
dellng Install e.no repa r wmdows f
deck porches and pa nos roohng !
and vm~l Sldtng ns ta/1 exter d'r
stucco stone and bfiCk damaged
s•dawalks step5 a(ld tuck potn t- I
1ng For &amp;shmate call 614 9g2-- )
86 Olds 442 T Tops Grey Silver 9979
,
L•ke New One Owner 20 20 0 1----,--------;-t
M les Full Power Garage Kept 1 Appl•ance Parts .And Serv1 ce ftll t
Name Brands Over 25 Years E ~ :
Coverod j6 14) 446 Ot09
pet~ence All Work Guaranroed ,
88 Plymouth Sundance AS aulo French Ctl~ Maytag 614 446 ,
ate 614 992 5085
7795

730

aultlorttY
DOWN

32 Mount -. c.lll
34 IlioN UIICIIIInr

weaknesses without showmg

1995 Geo Metro 5spd 3 dr hlb
coupe ale rad1o cassene player
While wtgray cl oth &amp; wmyl bucket
sears umpg e:.:cellent cond
$7 BOO or lake over payments ot
$180 50 per monrh 3 BOOm• 304
882 27 87

1D82 Black GIAC 112 Ton PU 4 3
V e Eng1ne Auto Air Bedhn er
Good CondttiOn 614 388-848~

11 Quoit 11 an

A"'- -

SERVlCES

1992 Chevy Camar o 25th anm
WATERPROOF ING
y
versary Fully loaded Red w lh Uncond t• onal hle11me guaranree
black stnpes Askmg $ 12 200 loca re ferences lum shed Call
Call614245-5912
(614) 446 0870 Or !614) 237
0486 Rogers Wa1erproohng E ~
1992 Lumma Eurosport 3 4 hter labUshed 1975
...
72 OOOmo 304-675 2226

1g88 Chevy 112 Ton v 6 Engme
PS PB Arr Auto Trans $5 495
614 •46 -4225 Ctll After 4 P.M

10 , _ . blrdl

True humor potnts out human

t 99t Pont&lt;ac Sunoord LE sun 810
Home
chaser package tow mileage ac
1
1
ceasene S5 5oo 304 882 3399 '---:-m-;;-p;;ro:;:v
c;:e:;:m
;:;;e-n_s
_
1ewnangs
BASEMENT

90 N ssan Stanza XE atr cr u•se
$4700 614 992 3395

10

24 L1111
21 - -t~aiar
2t T1111nla pro

a

Eleclrlcal and
Refrigeration

Thur!ldety, June 6 1996

RSES CERT If lEO DEALER , ,
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES "I"
Heat Pumps A ~r Condn1on1ng It
You Don t Call Us We Both Los.t11 v
f ree Esumares 1 800 291 OOQap,\
614 446-6308 wv 002945
~

In the year aheld you may make several
Sig))lllellnt changes 1n ordar to advance
your personal pis TheM mo¥11 Wtll be
well·loundad but you must give them

Restdenhal or commere•a l Wifing!" ~
new WYiC• or repa;ra Mas ter lllhll t
censed electrict•an R•denout ,
Elec trical WV00 0308 304 e 75 v
1786
"~

QI!MINI (May 21·June 20) You might
,_... 10 dear with an annoying Individual

'Y'
I

SORR'f' IF AN'f'ONE
MENTIONS SUMMER CAMP
TO ME, I I=REAK OUT

HERE'S A BROCI-IURE J;"OR
A SUMMER CAMP TI-IAT

_..,._,_&gt;_S600
__304_-e_7_5_298_~3--- l and dock

1987 Chevroter S 10 Dark Blue
87 000 Mdes 2 5 Four Cyhnder
Fuel Injected 4 Speed Power
Bra~es AC Alp•ne AMtFM Cas
sene Topper Bedhnef Alum•num
Toolbox $4 200 614 446 6833

Tns 4 ~ew Frresrooe 245 175
16LT seo Each B14 388.0321

By

s

t

SI·P5t Crtctr.l
t r bird DOeltiona

A long drive

s

8 x16 TnAxle Trall&amp;f' $1 250 614
245 114•18 AM • 10 P.IA

Buy

KINCS II

for Qu 1c k sa I e S3 50 3 0 4 77 ~
9 11 6
...,
-1- _ _w_e_ll_c_ra_l_t'""2-,, -2-0-0h_p_V
98 7
0
am fm cass ss p•cP 304 88 ~
2007
,.
;
1991 Bran New 650 Kawasak Silt
Jet 1995 Tra ler 2 BOO 61 .s "'
:
367 7912

A

K QJ
10 4 2

Opemng lead •

1979 Cad•llac Sev1lle $500 runs Bass boat lra•ler 40hp motoq
good 304 875 t092
:
1 500 30-4 576 2683

lor parts

•K

Pass

SNUFFY It YOU ARE
FAMOUS AND 1 AM THE
BEANBAG

1

1

C~IC)

57 NurNI'Y n.m

I 6

BARNEY

1211 Alumnum boar w1 3 5hp mg
tor m teal gaod shape Reduc ed

~2=16:-3:-:---:---::-=::-7--:-:-:-::--l

to-

541 Comecllen

'

Two 1995 300 lour wheelers 4ll4
w/25 hr 4a2 w/20 hr alsc 6~8
89 Thunderbird SC two door 3 8 tra1ler all e:.:cellenl cond 1on sol
litre V 6 elte model lurbo PS all for $8 sao call before noon
PB AC 5 speed power sea ts 6 14 742 315l
and locks ·Grear Car· S5200
neg 614 992 7478 or 614 949 750 Boats &amp; Motors '
2819
for Sale
1968 Plymouth l!:.:cellent Cond1
t1on Call Alter 5 PM 6 14 446

"a •...,. way

Vulnerable Both
Dealer East

1995 Vahama Blaster 200 -'
wheeler Real good cond•hc f;'
S2 400 Call a~1er Spm 304 1?'J
5686

84 Ford Tempo 4 door auramat
1c let t rear tar! llghl damage
97 000 m!les $600 080 614
91119 2311 days Of 614 ~149 2644
IW&amp;nltiQS

1983 Dodge Ar es
s1oo 304 576 2802

6KJ&gt;t42
t
•

F~

....,......

,.,., ... 11

6A
• Q J 10 6 5 3 2
t A 3 2
• K fi

1995 Honda 300 4 Tru 2 WO j., 1
W1nc h and Runmng Boaras fJ
81 Camara. 350 enorne excellent cellenl Cond111on $3700 614 411fi
conch11on tally wheels 614-092 3945

rg83 Ford Ranger pick up 4Cyl
4spd goodcond 004 675-2074

Wanted to

t:oU.l

C.aw~oee

et54

11AIIII«o
11 l'llrt Df a pAQf1
21 Slllf1.front

23-IIIA

Soulh

Autos tor Sale

9979

53

or__,t

Eul

Weal
6 10 I 7 8
• 9 4
• 9 a4
• A J a5

1991 Harley Sportster 1200 l •k&amp;
New A slung S&amp; BOO 614 44f
9355 Atte&lt; 4 PM

25 Acres Hilltop Grau Clover

2 Row Tobacco Smar 614 37g
2254 6 14-379-2519

620

I

1991 Honda 250X e.11 c cond
S2 ooo 304-875 1274
1

1994 te Ft Hrllsboro Stock Trarl
er Altef 5 00 61-4 446 2163

Square balers hay rakes S400
up Mowers haybinds S1400 up
diSk!l plows &amp; corn ptanlert cui
t1packan
cultiVIIIOfl
oth8t
equrpment Howe, firm Machin
ery Jackson OH e1• 286'51144

~ PRIC£5

s

&amp; Grain

89 f--250 automatiC sl1d1ng Wind
ow •f'l back 300 6 cyl eKcellent
condr11on grea t work truck llf$1
$3850 takes 11 hom&amp; 61 4 Qoi\Q
2311 days

K.ng Cutter Bush Hog Uke New
$350 614 24~0134

Motorcycles

f!RII.IG

t983 Honda ShadOw 750 Gte~t
• '
8
Ccnd 11on M'"'"U 1 00 61
367 7893
I

1

640

• Q 53
• A a1
•• 7 5
• Q I 73

lf.4A'T

l

TrOtter 22 x8 S2 000 8 Gal•
Truck Rack S225 13 Fr 8uth
Hog Mower S 1 200 614 s•3
2285
~':":':"-:----:---:::-:----1
W11t board hOrses 250acret to
ride on llSOimo 304-eJS.S950

01-0596

Nortlo

a

make good 4 H or fair prolectt
814 992-45:!8

..

14 ,..,
15 lllble dlvlelon
17 Annoy

-,-9811
:-:-C:-._:--,-:C:-a-,~:-v-:-a-n-::E-xt-e+-:l..;lr'rt

Angus Dairy Crdts Calves et.a
2•5GS57

~

lllmllll -cs

882 27"

Pu:~zle

:;:·u- _ _,....,,
.......,.

12-IL~

198'* Fotd V•n 302 IUIOma~te
new ures eura thafp tnstdt
S3 500 lorm Sunny G&lt;bbs 30\

7111

61 0 Farm Equipment

Ten 24 Foot Treatea $150 814
446 2514

Twin Beds IAattrou !Box Sprtngt,
SZOO 814-4481357Aitet8P.IA

Livestock

Bulldll)g
Supplles

E~rnngs

3oedr{)Om stove relflge raror 7th
S1 New Haven S2951mo pl us
depOSit 304 773 gr7t leave
message

House near langsv lie brg yard
garden space approved refer
ences an d deposrt requ1red
S225tmo 614 992 7285.

WATER'M!J.S CRUED

.....
44=......

NEA Cro••word

Sentinel• P91fl

tnQUOh time 10 work
IOdly Even lltough you tcnow you can do

sornetltfnQ
her

•

would emt&gt;arrus him or
you!'MII KnoW where to look

thel

raatraln

able
VIRGD (Aug 23·Sapt. 22) Stnve to be a
postltve thinker today II you anttctpata
negat1ve results you might ensure latl
ure Avotd sen luKtlltng propllectes
U8RA (lept 23-0ct 23) Today a nosy
friend mtght try to probe tnlo an Issue you
wanted to keep secret She will be a
skilled tnveallgator, so take care not Ia

get eaug1tt oft guard
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24•NOY 22) You and
your male will agree on ma1or lasues
today However, dlflarenc&amp;s over lnvtal
matters could provoke an angry

exchange
~ 21)lb:a...,.
ally you treat hie wtlh more tndtllerenee
than you should Playtng It lo os'l has
a dvantages tf tl s not carrted to an

SAGITTARIUS(Notr

e1dreme
CAPRICORN (Dec 22.Jan 19) Today a
deStre lor personal gatn might tempt you
lo take chances or rllks you would not
maHy avotd long shots are called long
shots for a good reason
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) You can
not be all things to all people today so
don 1 knock your head aga.nst the wall
trytng Do not waste time on people who
wtll not appreciate YQUr efforts
PISCES (Feb. 20-llhrcll 20) When dn
vlng aroull(llown loelay, keep one eye on
the speedometer and the other one on
the drivers who share the race track wtlh
you
ARIES (Mircll 21·Aprll It) In order to
avoid petty squabbles with colleagues
today dOn 1 jump to conctuakinl You can
reeolve diSagreements II you r~~alntaln
your oompoaura
TAURUS
aHIIy 20) App!oprilte
sttl·aatMm will be nelltltlal today Do
not 1881 superior but you ahoUid not think
you are lnllfiof either

(AIJIII

JUNE sl

�.
Pige 11• The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 5, 1tll

Ohio Lottery

•

•

~ Suspension

Suw-Lotto:

12-fl-17·20-34

Klc ....:
0+2-5 81

·is possible·
.for Schott

•

Pick 3:
9-2·1
Pick 4:
2·7·7-4

S~onPage4
' (

•

TO THE

Occasional ahowera •
tonight, ....

llld ltornll

In the 101. Frl~_r •. oocaalonal aho-1'11. High , _ .
10.

•'

•

•

·'
•••

'

•

•

.''•
•

'•
•

.••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 8, 1996

.; 2 Slictlcin&amp;, 11 P-v-

'

·-·
.

· ~47,N0.21

•

'

AGinMIICo. NIL:Ipaplr"

~~A

slow.sta.rt.to spring
:-.plays havoc with farms
.

HAMILTON BADIN (20·1 0)
vs AVON LAKE (15·7)FRIDAY, 11 AM

TALLMADGE (17·5)
vs MEIGS (17·8) FRIDAY, 3 PM

ALL Gt\MES AT THURMAN MUNSON STADRJM IN CANTON.

..

Williams and Associates
Insurance
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

9H·6611

Dairy Queen Brazier

Sheriff James Soulsby
992·3371

K &amp; CJewelers
Home National Bank
SYRACUSE

··' RACINE

·. 949·2210

992·6533

Ingels Furniture and Jewelry
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.992·2635

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 992·5627

Quality Print Shop

POMEROY, OHIO 992·3345.

. 992·3785

Ridenour Supply
992·3308

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6128

992·2104

POMEROY, OHIO

Baum Lumber Co.
985•3301

CHESTER, OHIO

(row's Family Restaurant Birchfield Funeral Home
992·2432

.

POMEROY, OHIO 742·2333

Ridenour TV &amp;·Appliance

Farmers Ban·k
'

"YOUR BANK FOR UFE"

TUPPERS PLAINS

"MElOY

RUTLAND, OHIO

985·3307

POMEROY, OHIO

-:~Leo's

Cruise and Travel

992·4233

POMEROY, OHIO

Hartwell He»us•
992·7696

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

King Hardware
.

Sugar Run Mills _
992·211 5

POMEROY, OHIO

McDonald's
992·5600

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
Insurance

992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Meigs
Athletic Boosters

'

992·6~17

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6491

Crow and Crow
· Attorneys at .Law
·

POMEROY OHIO

Western Auto
MIDDLEPORT,.OHIO

992·5$15

Vaughan's IGA
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3471
(,

Above, workers ·push In tomato 1teke1 It I
letlrt Fells farm - work thllt 11 usually clone
by now but .hea. been postponed clue to the

weather.

"We're not seeing the ·wild bee . good yields on grasses," he said.
' the good stuff for later.
popu!ation," he said, adding that he
The problem lies in gcuing the hay
"It has reached a crisis point for
went out looking for bees and did not out of the field and into the barn.
some people." Knccn said. "Agriculsee a single one.
"A lot of hay that has been cut has ture is a risky business; so much of
On the other hand, the weather has been rained on," he said, adding that it is in the hands of weather."
·
been almost ideal (or grass growing, fanners should keep cutting until they
"You can be a -good manager but
Knc.en said.
. get what they need - feeding the you can only do so much if the
.· ".It's perfect weather for' getting · poorer quali~y hay earl n~ keeping . weather i.:; against you,:· he added:
'.

"

·''

.,. ..-_;• ....,Hoo-,.1:,..

... ~~~~

.... ;

.. .....,__.... ,.

...'+;...... • •

.

'05
0
-$100
·$200

..' '

: :wASHINGTON (AP)- Repub: lions. Reptiblican,s, knowing .that
lic,ilns hope another Senate rejection polls show 80 percent public support
ol: a balanced-budget· constitutional · for the amendment, think even a
ahiendment will brand President · ~efeat will strengthen their bid forth~
CI;nton and fellow Demoi:rats as White House • and continued coninsincere about battling persistenl gressional control by embarrassing
fe~eral deficits.
Democrats, most of whom will vote
·Five days before he quits the Sen- no.
ate to campaign full time for presiSenate Judiciary Committee
dell!, Majority Leader Bob Dole, R- Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, one
Kan., is bringing the amendment to of the measure's chief champions,
a vote today. The proposal would sounded his party's theme Wednesrequire a balanced federal budget by day by accusing Clinton and Democ2002, but would leave decisions rats of finding it "tough to stop
about how to do it for later- by the spending other people's money."
vo;:r.y politicians who have be~n stale- Republicans say the .amendment is
mated over the issue for years.
needed because there is not enough
Dole .has conceded the measure pressure on lawmakers 10 solve the
will fall just short of the two-thirds problem.
. majority amendments to the Consti- . . "Last year, President Clinton won
tution require, as it did when it failed and the American people lost," Hatcll
narrowly in March· 1995. ·At the. said. "The American people.will lose
time, he promised to bring the mea- again if President Clinton has his way
sure up again during this year's this year...
political campaign. .
, Democrats say that with RepubliThough the vote is preordained, cans and Clinton havinf proposed
the political fallout is up for grabs, competiJII plans for halung deficjts
anll both plkties are vying to claim it · by 2002, what is needed i~ a bipartias 'an issue for the November elec·

.,

$250

$200

.,

$150

-$300

$100

$100

$50

-$400
·$500 .

w

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

.

0

'05

'00

~

1 - rellects the Intermediate estimates provided by trustees. Figures are for calender
years and differ slighdy from esumates for fiscal years. (This corresponds to calender·
year figures cited above from 1995 report.)

'95

'00

'05

Sources: 1996 annual reports o(Jile Board of Trustees of the Federaf
Hospital Insurance Trust Fund and the Board of Trustees of the Federal ,
Supplementary Medical insurance Trust Fuod.

'

·ing 5ome Social Security assets from Treasury bonds to stocks is significant.
"That hasn't happened in 60 years," says council Chairman·Edward Gramlich, Jean of the University of !.1ichigan's School of Public Policy.
The Social Security Administration collects 12.4 percent of every workers' pay up to $62,700. Employers and employees each pay half the tax, called
FICA for Federal Insurance Contributions Act.
·
Most of the money is used immediately to pay benefits to retired or disabled workers and families of workers wh.o've died. Your payroll taxes don't
go into a personal account at the Social Security Administration . What's not
spent on benefits is used to buy Treasury bonds. That means the Social Secu-

Dole makes new attempt to pass First-time
~mendment for balanced budget jobless

Brogan Warner Insurance

992·6059

9 • 1 1

By ANNE WILLETTE
U$ATodey
· Social Security will be broke by 2029, the government said Wednesday,
drruned by some 80 million beneficiaries who will have had fewer children,
s!Valler pay increases and have lived longer. than their parents.
:The annual insolvency prediction comes amid a cotTosive cynicism ab9ut
the 61-year-old Social Security program. Less than a quaner of Americans
exP«:ct to get benefits equal in value to what today's retirees $et, according
to :a poll by Mathew Greenwald &amp; Associates for the Employee Benefit
Research Institute. That's do'!"n from one-third in 1992.
:And few people expect politicians to fix the system. Congress's inaction
isrl't surprising, given the choices: raise taxes,· cut benefits or· both. After
explaining the alternatives to voters, "you try to get out of town before dark,"
says Sen. Alan Simpson, R· Wyo.
:Restoring Soci:tl Security to solid financial footing - and resioring public:faith in the system -· will take radical action, a presidential advisory eoun·
cil·is expected to say later this month. The answer, the coun~il will conclude.
lies not in the beleaguered federal government but in the soaring stock mar·
ket.
·For the first time, the Social Security Advisory Council will recommend
that a pOrtion of Social Security payroll taxes be invested in stocks. And a
majority of tbe panel believes individuals should control some kind of Social
S~u~ty savings account, much as they do company 40l(k) retirement plans.
.Congress would hive to approve stock investing, and that's not likely to
happen in an election year. President Clinton and Sen . Bob Dole, the Republicim presidential candidate, have nol'proposcd ways to fix Social Security
an~ did not respond to questions about the council's recommendations. But
thefactthat the council, which meets every four years, is united behind shift·

Fisher Funeral Home

CHESTER, OHIO 992·5020

· WEATHER WOES- RICet'lt 1;001, wet WMther hat resulted In a late start for many Meigs
County farmers, 11111nlng tomatoes and other
produce will be late hilling the market thle year.

attends projection
SS_will go broke-

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 9U·5144

Adolph's Dairy Valley Veterans Memorial Hospital
992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply The Shoe Place and Locker 219

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO . 992·6611

992·3322

In ad~ 1n, farmers attempting to farmers - not just produce and
cultivate or spray their crops can flower farmers.
quickly find their _tra,tors mired in ·
For instance, livestock and dairy .
wet fields .:... meaning weeds and farmers are having a hard lime getbugs have more opportunity to grow. ting com planted - or hay cut and
"We are seeing some insect dam- baled. Like their produce-growing
age," Kneen said. "There seems to be counterpans, they are unable to use
more insects outthere, including Col- · their tractors due to waterlogged
fields.
·
orado potato beetles and aphids."
According to Kneen, most farmFanners can't get their tractors out
in the fields to spray, he explained. ers are just now getting field com
We are recommending they hand planted.
Statewide, as of June 2, fanners
spray the hotter infestations until a
more thorough spraying can be done, reponed being 65 percent completi:d
· in the planting of field com- comKneen added.
· Meanwhile farmers like Max Hill pared to the average completion perJr. of Lelart Falls just keep pushing centage of 95 percent., Kneen
on, knowing that their crops will be explained.
late this year.
· .
In addition, lower yields are also
Workers on his farm were busy anticipated, he said.
"The • question is 'Can we get
Wednesday pushing in tomato stakes
- work that would usually be done enough yield out of the corn?'" Kneen
already.
said.
Hill noted that farmers across the
Some fanners may soon have to
state and in other pans of the coun- decide if they should plant com or
try were experiencing similar condi- soybeans for silage. ·
tions, making him confident there
In addition, many fanners can't get
will be a market·for his tomatoes.
out to cut annual weeds before they
Greenhouse florer farmers are ,go to seed. Due to this, farmers may
also being affected by the weather; encounter infestations of curly dock,
finding large . heating bills in 'heir mus1ard weed, multiflora rose and
. mailboxes. To make matters worse, thistle.
people tend to,plant fewer flowers in
Kneen is also concerned about a
cool, · wet weather, according to lack of honeybee$ this year. Disease,
fanner Paul HilL
mites and.the harsll, cold winter hav,c,
So far, the weather has affected all !aken their toll o~ the bee pop~lation. :
,. .
' ' .

tirOwtng ·cynlcfsln·

Cleland Realty

POMEROY, OHIO 992·2259

.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
,·: : Although area residents may be
saving money on their air condition'lftg bills, recent cool, damp weather
is proving to be a big headache for
·· the local agricultural scene.
Meigs · County farmers, · often
accustomed to hot weather accom, panied by little rainfall, are having a
hard time coping with recent cool
climes and seemingly endl~ss showers.
· · The weather has resulted in late
planting - in a business where get. ting an early crop to market can make
the difference between a good or bad
· year. .
· · Tom~toes and other produce are
about two-to-three weeks behind,
· according to Hal Kncen •. Meigs
· County Ohio State University exten- ·
. sion agent.
. · . "Titere is plenty of moisture, but
we need some wanner temperat~res
· over the 70 degree mark," Kneen
. added.
. Wet fields and cooler temperatures
liave resulted in a later-than-usual
planting, Kneen noted.
. · For instance, fresh Meigs County
. ·cabbage usually 'hits . the market
around Memorial Day. This year,
· •fanners anticipate harvesting cabbage
.. next week - two weeks later than
· usual.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
SATURDAY 3 PM

•

san agreement, not a change in the
Constit~tion. Tiley say Dole's insistence on a vote is designed to hurt
tlinton, and they say it is inconsistent for Dole to pursue the amendmcnt while also considering big lax
' cuts and an expensive anti-missile
system.
.
"It's madness," said Sen. James
Exon, D-Neb. "It's unconscionahle.
It's the biggest flim(lamin histm y."
In his final week in the Senate,
Dole is hoping the amendment's
defeat andia Democratic vote to block
consideration of a missile-defense
· system will boos! his presidential hid
and GOP congressional prospects by.
de(ining differences with Democrats:
On the balanced-budget amend·
ment vote, some Democrats are try·
ing to blunt GOP attacks by advancing an alternative that would remove
Social Security from· the fonnula
used to measw-e whether the budget
is balanced.
•
The jlroposal has stron11 political
appeal because,ofthc,program'spopularity with senior citizens.
,

c!aims up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of American workers filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits rose by 9,000 last week but
remained in a range that analysts
maintain suggests modest employment growth.
· The Labor Depanment said
today that new applications for
unemployment insurance totaled a
seasonally adjusted 354,000,'. up
from a revised 345,000 a week earlier. The initial estimate for the
week ending May ~S was 346,000.
The June. I total of new cl'aims
was the highest since 372,000
were filed during the week· ended
April 20. Many analysts had
expected an increase of only 4,000.
The four-week moving average
·of weekly claims also rose, up
·J,SQO to 349,000, the first increase
in nine weeks. It was the highest
since the averaac reached 353,000
during the period ended May II.

'

'I

rity surplus is being loaned to

t~c

federal government to cover its other

expenses .

The rationale for investing the surplus in stocks is simple: Stocks historically have outpcrfonned Trensury bonds. The past 50 years, the average annu- .
al return on Treasury bonds is 5.5 percent, vs. 11 .8 percent for stocks.
'
'
Wall Street loves tbe notion of lcning every worker.set up a retirement' '
account with payroll taxes. That would have pumped up to $150 billion into
stocks, bonds and other investments last year. Proponents also express a deep ;
faith in the efficiency of private markets over government.
:,

.

ODOT plans .to open
bids on u.s. 50 jo,b ·.·:
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Ohio Depanment of Transportation officials should know within the
next month who the contractor will
be for construction of the first segment of the 16mile four-lane widening of I:J.S . 50 between Athens and
Coolville .
The bid opening for the first
phase of the .project is scheduled for
next Wednesday, with an alternate
date set for June 26, according to
Nancy Yoacham, public information.
offiCer for Ohio Department of Trans·
ponation District I()..Marietta.
At that time, slate officials will
announce the complete list of contractors submitting bids and the low
bid figure. Each bid proposal will
then be evaluated by ODOT, with a
final decision on a contractor expected before mid-July. according · to
Yoacham. ·
Tlte project, which has been in the
dii!Cussion phasC for mtlfl; than 20
·years. is Ions overdue in the minds of
area residents and motorists along the

.

J

dangerous road.
Traffic enforcement has been
stepped up in recent months by tflc , ,
State Highway Patrol, due to the high
number of fatal accidents on the busy
two-lane highway.
"The process has been long and
frustrjlting, with funding delays and
environmental problems. There have
been several contractors showing
interest showing interest. I expect the
project to be an active sale," said John
Dowler. deputy director of Ohio
Depanmcnt o{ Transportation Distri~t- , ,
IQ

Excavation work on the first phase
oftbe project. a 2.7-milc section from·
the intersection of U.S, SO and State··
Route '1 at Cool ville to Vanderhoof '"
Road and Fought's Used Cars, · i( •
expected to he gin by the end of sum•
mer, according to Yoacham.
Work on the second section, stan: •
ina at Athens, is to begin in 1997. The
final phases are two middle sections,:•
which are expected to be under con:
tract by 1998. Officials hope to have
the project compl~ted b~ 1999.
~

.

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