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.1 p

10 • The Dilly Sentinel

~y,June3,181l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

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

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

I tll,l tltdr,.

111 , AINftl

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

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

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

·o hio Lottery
Giants best
Cincinnati in
NL action

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

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

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

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

.

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

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

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

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

Frank birth
announced
v

,.

) 81r Pack

•

Your Choice

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

POLAROID
600PLUS
INSTANT
COLOR FILM

69~

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

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

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

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

~
;:~~society
I
(

I .

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...

19'9

BRIQUETS

DAVID FRANK

scrapbook-

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

.

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

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

Single Pa ck

JERGENS
MILD SOAP

A O.nnett Co. NaOl&amp;p

i}

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

Commissioners get update
on old ·courthouse 1iroject

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

Auorted Style1

2 Ptck

35cenia

.

MENTADENT
TOOTHBRUSH

FUJIBMM
VIDEOTAPE

'

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

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

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

.

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

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

.

:Alfred U~W reviews goals

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

•

•

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

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

Sport8 on Page 4

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

·~

lfOIIIPJCILCIItiiL -.LMTrMWJ PO MIMI,

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

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

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

• Gave final rcadinl:! to an ordi-

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

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

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

tn keep a thirt.l COlT ·in

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

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

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Daily Se~tinel
'E.stiiiiOslid ill1948

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher

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, CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Geneiiiii8Mglr

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MARQARII;T LEHEW

Controller

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!Dole may have hard
jtime shaking off his
:past voting record

ay JOHN o•c•aKJ

Roorda mmed f•oulofpopution comes, I'mJOinl to call Kevorlcian"

history 's areat reli&amp;iOolniJIId II as
thoroughly dishonorable. '
Since the French Revolution malh of the May 16 suicide of Adm. him" -.1 tboulhts lib that seenttd conK,ious titter that fails to cover the which legitimized modem terror Md
Jeremy Boorda, chief of Naval Oper- 10. prevail.
undeilying fear, arrogance and des- the cult of the individual - some
ations, news accounts Jwaely glossed
lbat suicide was the awful cboice peratlon.
have re1arded Silicide as a right.
over the morality of the admiral's oftwo men at the highest levels of an
That Boorda had eliminated thC
Nof1elhl:l!:$$. suicide remains a
decision to kill hitiiiCif.
American presidential adrninistra· , middleman and .taken his own life tretnenclous human,disaster.
By and large, the capital's blah- lion hardly seemed .10 be a caUse for stunned lhe Washington communitr,
It is 1 moral ~~ - evasion
blah-blah centered on whether Boor- alarm.
.
&lt;l
but vanished i11t0 the news ether jn I of a responsibility 10 live and press on
da succumbed to the pressure from
In an age of easy abortion and few days - far faster than the Tailquestions over his right to wear two acceptance of people like Jack hook or gays-in-the-military storie$. and try to do good. It also is a terri-.
ble scandal to tile young, for whom
tiny 7S-cent brass combat V's on his Kevorkian - who once w'ould have
By and ltlrge, speakers at the adults are s~pposed to~ in ~xll,!"ple.
campmgn ribbons, causing him 10 been dismissed as .addle-brained ~ National Cathedral memorial serCultures have anatllemauzed suichoose self-destruction rather than our culture seems to be shifting the vice for Boorda avoi~ mentioning
cide
for the good·and practical reason
public shame.
me-first ethic of the 1960s to the that he killed himself. That is under- tpat it wrecks society. Suicide wreU5
· Like lhe suicide of President Clin- issues of life and death.
standablc for the sake of his crushed havoc u()lln the people who surround
ton's boyhood friend and White
Treatment ofBoorda's case exhib- family, but tile whole cathedral affair it, especial Iy members of lhe immeRouse counsel Vincent Foster, IP"C- ittd the troubling signs of America's had the aura of a ~emembrance ~fa
,
ulation centered less on the event increasing social isolation, and the · hero struck down tn battle- wh1ch, diate family.
Psychoiogic.ll
·
lilllo-1!
is;filled
itself than on the reasons and the acceptalicc of hopelessness.
of course. was. not the ,case. .
with reports of the awfultanieat that
political fallout.
.
The home-grown American ethic
. ~n eulogiZing Boorda, Chnton cari follow families ripj!l\d'down thC
Such cool, bloodless analysis of "choice" at the beginniqg of life · pra1sed h1s serv1ce and talked of the .
should come as no surprise. As Har- now...has traveled io the ethical ques- ad'!'iral's "deep sense of ho?Or" middle by a father :s suicide, ,
Suicide"-Often ·is pas'sed·on· from
ry Truman said,. "If you want a friend tions about its ending. •
wh1ch, lie sa1d, slowly and dehber- gcneratiofi to generation as children
in Washington, get a dog."
ln the vernacular; suicide is now ately. "no person should ever ques" find ~difficult to cope ~¥ith the guesMany commentators seemed to "offing" oneself, ·a chilling term tion.'".
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•.
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suggest that while suicide might be akin to the act of turning the control . Y~t II must be questtoned. Su1c1dc . tiQils'[ef~bchlnd arid as W~pijit,lifc
an understandable option ill some button when the music or talk on the IS nc1ther an honorable nor a cour~­ fades away .in a cloud of self-induced,
cases, the reactions of Foster and radio is disagreeable. "Wilen lhe time geous act. Most civilized cultures and · post-suicidal depression.,·auilt and
shame.
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Navy Capt. Allen Kapl~n, li rabbi,
came as close ~ anyone IRquestioning Boorda's decision to kin himself
with a .38 pistol. Kapll!JI said' it 'i"'as
" hard teof~nd ~cas~ ill the !muional
events of the past few· days." · ·
l)lotw,ithstandin&amp; , Washiggtop 's
blase' attitude.. suicidR ·..ttiiai"o. · ~
•grave offense in tile Islamic, Judaic
and Cliristiati codCS'of'C'ooiluct. .
The story of tfie Gri!el&lt; atheist
Socrates, who dtank a fatal dose of
hemlock ratller than faec the deaih
. penalty for "corrupting the Y.oung,"
still causes some IQ sec suicide as a
heroic act. Yet even in toontries like
India ·and Japan, where ~~nee . and
seppuku were pan of trallition, these
ritual suicides have been outlawed in
modem ti'nles.
' ·· ' ..-t 1
The callousness and vacuousooss
of the followi.tp reporting was omi. nous, for it seems tr poln\ us yet
another step ·along the toad to that
s~al chaos' where J;V~!)'onc ':doe's
their own t,hipg" a~cflife is,as cheap
as the n.cxt TV sho\1(,, , , · ·
In sharp conlf\ISI was-the cou.ragcous mes.•age sent by thc,ad111iral's
widow, Bettie Moran Boorda, to the
sailors of the u.s: fleet May 29.
.
. "Take care of each ,oiher4!
said .•. "~. honorable. Qi),,1o'lhlll.' ts
right.".. . ·
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That's
a
lot
better
idC.
a
.than
·suiL..,-~_:----'_ __:__ _ _r --::-----:---.....;.-_.:..._ _ _"'"7;:---''---___;.~.---' cide.
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: Brief break-from rain forecast
Tonisht... A chance of showers and thunderstorms north and cast before
midnight. ..11ten slow clearing. Decreasing cloudiness west and south. Low
so to s~ .. .
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We,&lt;(nesday...Partly cloudy' nonh and east. Sunny south and west. High
upper 60s nonheast to the mid 70s far south.

:Society plans to observe
Meigs Heritage Weekend

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By SARA ECKEL . ; . .
- empl?~men~ advenising, agency lion a ~ear nationwide. - they are
It sounds hke a ~tn-wn1 suuauon fees, .tram•ng 11me, etc. - f~r ea~h also enJoymg a lot of tree pubi1C1ty
for everyo~~e: Worktng parents take workmg parent who stays w1th th1s in stories like this.
It all sounds great, but it also begs
their kids ~o a day-care center locat- company ·to take advantage of its
the question: If on-siie child-c~ is '
. ed on the' .,coinpany premises. The high-quality day-care center.
.f :: .
TheLimaNews
.. .
kids have ihe security of knowing
"I want employees who feel · so cost-effective, why do so few
L1( solving America's ~blems were Jusu matter of orgaruzmg a rally Ill that Mom or Dad is in tile next JOOfll secure e~ough at home that ,they can employers provide it? I posed this •
tjjlisflinston D.C., our nauon would be m good ilhape.lteyond the hype and or building, The parents are eqiiJIIIY be creat1ve whdc at . work. I w~nt questi~;~n to several work-family
die·soundbi~. however, these political pilgnunages to the capital rarely ~e at ease.'Not only can they ~heck in . them . focused. And 1f they're diS· cxpel\5. and lhc following are the :
riiQN tJwi ~xerciscs in self-righteous gra~~iill·. dcmagos~~t.ry and pohlf . w\th the ,ki"',and ~onitot ~ir ~. , . trac!ed by ~uilt, they can't focus•.We , most CC!'!"monly cit~ reasons:. ,''
they l:an also- avo1d the fll8d .~h don t-provtde these benefits .becapse
, • ~utty. If Company X starts proiC:itl postW1ng.
~ Childre , .
..
1: ~ CISC in point is last Saturday's "Stand •or
n, a m11rcn spear- between .company . pur~~;h-out time ' w,e'renice. We.provide~m~use viding day-care at the Cincinnati ,
~ by the Children's Defense Fund and · ~ left-wins a_ctivis~ &amp;roups.
and da~-care ~n~ closhi~ time.
11. s good for : our company, ·. sa1d offi~e·, tlley had better be prepared to ·;
:; ,,.,about "our overarchin~ moral challenge of cmpo~en~~ children~~
The employer, m tum, 1s reward- Patagon!a Cllairm~ Yvon &lt;;houmard do the same at the Topeka branch.
•"healingqents of our nabo~al and world transformation, COP Pres•- ed wilh increased productivity in the at the recent Wll1te .~ouse ~on(er· . "For .companies that have a ~rk ,
·
.
; lr'MIIrian Wriaht Edelman sBJd.
form of lower ·ab~ntee rates, lower encc on CO!J!?"'te Cmzensh1p.
fofl:e 'that is broadly dispersed, .th1s
CJ1ISI((e
for
children
is
nolhing
but
a
rehash
of
the
same
liberal
hokum turnover rates, tncreased loyalty,
1
Choutnard s words are echoed by can be a real problem," says Peg
~ aclivists have been pushing for years:
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higller morale, -and a more focused, executives at many companies, Sprague, senior program manager of
dII)Iese JI'OIIPS seck ambitious new s~ndmg pro8f&amp;'!ls targetmg ch1ldren, less stressed work force.
· includmg Campbell's Soup, Pruden- Worlc/f,jllllily Directions, a Boston. . povo'11r for Child ~live Services agents, stnct ~&lt;o_ntrol Ia~~·
Patagonia, an outdoor gear com- tial Insurance and Johnson .t John- based consulting firm that was also ·'
·~ ...th care schemes, increased welfare spendins, higher Dllnt·. · pany located in Ventura, Calif., esti! . son's. ~ . companies. no! only hOnored at the Whi~C House confer- .
·~ wqes; tougher federal repladQIIS ~ a bigger, more intrusive and II!Dre mates thai it saves anywllere from avoid the high cost of child-related ence. ~
.
expelllivc central aovemment
·
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$15,00Q to .S90,000 in turnover costs ~absenteeism - an estimated $3 bil• Uability. In th~s litigious society,

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Olher voices, other opinions

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. Deed, Terry L. Ganen to Frances
I' Hendrix, Middleport parcel ; '
Deed, Russell L. and Brenda S.
Day to Dean H. and Sonora E. Sex·
ton, Orange parcel ;
· Deed, Village of Pomeroy to
Roben C. and Kathy A. Hysell,
Pomeroy parcel;
mg lo pan1c1pate 1n the 1996 Point Pleasanl Stem wheel ~cgana p~
Deed, Raben C. and Kathy A.
should contact.Brian Billings at 675- 1333 or 675-6633 .
1·
Hysell to Village of Pomeroy.
.This year's parade. spons,ored by the .~oipt Plea,apt ROtary, will !i-.J.
Pomeroy parcel :
.
Fnday, June 28 at 6 p.m.. beginning at Central Elementary School
. Deed, G. Bruce Teaford to
Main Street. Cash prizes will be awarded.
Richart! E. Sr. and Betty A. Kleincn,
Rutland;
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Deed, Virgil C. and Mary D. King
to Edward H. Ramsburg. Bedford
parcel;
•', ,'lA.
Tournament planned
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Deed, Alvin L. and Phyllis Jean
A men's slow pitch softball tournament will be held June IS and. 1~11
Grounds to Oeorge M. Grounds,
Reedsville
.. Ram or shmc. F1rs1 10 teams, $65 plus two balls. For more i~­
Columbia, 34 acres;
mation
contact
the Country Shamrock 4-H Club, 614-378-6267 or 614- 7_,
Sheriffs deed, Christopher A. 61 22.
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Yeauger to Fanners Bank &amp; Savings
Company. Pomeroy-parcel;
Service announced
Deed, James and Connie Rucker
The Dall'¥ille Church of Christ will have weekend services, 7 p:m.
to Dennis and Carrie Rucker,- Olive
urday;
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va .. s~a~~l)-,
parcels;
· Deed, Southern Ohio Coal Com- ··
' tu8
ABLE dinner
•
pany to ' Richard A . and Dorothy
11
Annual recognition dinner for the Adult Basic and Lite(llcy Educatlqn
Hagerty, Salem parcels;
Deed, Linda and Gary W, Bailey gram, Mc1gs H1gh Scho~l cafe ten a. $ponsored by the. Middloport-~omcrl?tf
10 Olga A. Yonker, Chester parcels; Rotary Club and the Mc1gs County Educauonal Scr;1ce Center. :• .
Deed, Orville . B. and June A.
.
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Ce remony
set - ·
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Sayre to same, Syracuse;
Carleton School will have an awards day program Wcdncscfay":~t 't!IA
Deed, Richard A. to Barbara Kok·
school.
The early ch•ldhood award and graduation will will he hold qt I•p.m.
er to same, Syracuse.

J.

E~t;;::.,P~~~~!!!!~n~~~~a~!~~!i~idual'wi;:J

ottJ

Meigs announcements ~s

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EARLY BIRD SPECIAL I
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son, OBMH.
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RUTLAND
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10:53 a:rn .. -Melt!il Mtne 2,
ThomiiS.Whuc, OBMH;~ ·
10:06 p.m., Me1gs M1~e 2, John
D. Waters, HMC.
,
.• .
SYRACUSE
·· 7 p.m., Wills Road, Jam~s Hall,
PVH.

Eastern BOE

(~lnued from Page 1)

1990 to become assistant principal
and athletic director at Wan'cn Local
High School.
Well received arnaster's degree in
educational administrationfrom Ohio
University in 1983. He resides in the
RiggsCrest housing development in
Long Bottom.
The board also approved retaining ·
Well 115 a consultant, on an as-need- ·
ed basis, during the monlh of June
and for up to 22 days in the month of
July.
Well replaces Superintendent Ron
Minard, who. will retire from . his
administrative position with the disVe,t enms Memorial
trict July 31.
Monday ndmissions -. ~one.
ln.other matters, the board :
\ MOnday disch~t~~es - none.
•
dismissed into executive session
HOlzer Medical Cm.Cr
for
disc,ussiori
of personnel contracts;
Dilcharlf!l J•ne 3 - . Gladys
• hired Shirley Johnsto,n•as aid to
Adkins, Ril:hard Newvahner, Ali&lt;e
treasurer
Eloise Boston, ·effective
Lawhorn, .Qlei)Jto~sh, ,Ell~~;! , J,(~hn,
June I, .f996. ·
Rosa Polak. ,
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The board's next regular meeting
(Published with permlssloa)
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.... Wednesday, June 19 at 6 p.m.' at Ea.&lt;t.
.
em High School.

,.

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I

it's under..~n,dablc that this i~ one ort.
most common reasons employerst
cite for not pursuing on-site child-t
care. However, Sprague' ,J;ays this ,
b'ecomcs less of an issue once!
employers become more deeply
involved. . "This is rarely . a deal- t
breaker," she says. Deboi'ati Wilburn;'
a senior editor at Workins Mtllller:
magazine, concllfSi. 'xplaining
the extra cov~ ·tsn:t.al' muc!i.a's
many executives. usume.,-~'Ii'~ n~ ·
!"uch more th.an yo4.n~ to insuR , ·
1f, someone ti1ps on t~, e&amp;fpet. and ,.
breaks their leg,·: \&amp;yS Wilburn. A£
1994 Workill'l' Mp,tller .~tllfly found ~
that the extra cost was normallf .r
between $2 to $8 per child.
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, (Sua Eckel II a Mhe!" l~i fer ~
NeWipaper bterpriM A-la-·· . •l
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doL) .
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Dolly ...................................................
~
.

-IIIQ

~,... dplii.. IOply dlo
...,.,,• ..,,_ di-... 'llle Dolly - · ·

•0. a ilw&lt;e.lli or 12 ..-boob. Cnodlo wiU be

11-cirricr-••t-IPdooi
.- .!..........
. . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . ..
No.
mall .....
;..uiiaod
whnhomoo
_by_
....._in
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13

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· MAILIUISCaiP'IlONI
~

· ·

S%7JO

.....,&lt;-,
'z - __
. . . . ...............
. . ...........5105.,.
~

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t3 - .....................- ....................m.:u
»
~·n•··-· ··-··
~~
~~ ......:........................... , . ........ .

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

.•

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~~P•.Gas
' .• u .

·

Good,.., TaR.:.................. ~.$0\
K-mart .................................:.11't.
Urtde End ...................'.............21
Umlted lrec...............'/.........d.21 'A.
Paoplaa
.23
. . ",.32'
Ohio )l'l!lley -' ..............
•
OM Ylllly............................ ~,32\
Rocllwan ...............................57'A.
Prwn Flrll.,,.. •••••••••••••••••••••.••;••13\.
Royal Dutcht8htll ..............1SG'Io

::=· . . . . . . . . ..

a.or.,~

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..., lllnlc ............................. ~•}.

_._._

IDcludes 200 Gat. Propane With
.
. App~ved ~reatt
..
~~.

I

f·
I

.

'

·•·

~

'

OFFER GOOD NOW '{HROUGH AUGUST 15, 1996

&amp;orv-W•mer .........................40'4

Ooe - . ...............................................12.00
Ooe ..................................................... 18.10

.tliatl'

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I

.Gallons of

Bank One ..............................37\
Bob EVMa ...........................;15'1.

POSTMASTBR: Scad Dddras coneclions ro
Tho Daily Sendael, Ill Cowo So., Po"""'Y,
Ohio 4571111.
·I

.

~-

The.. Daily ~en~t;l

Making 'the.case for day·care at' workplace~·· !
•

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.

's

f

•

Units ofthe Meigs County Emergency· Medical Service recorded 12
calls for assi,stance Monday, includ- ,
ing one lrAqSfer c~II. ' Uqits responding' lncluded:
•
MIDDLEPORT
6:42 a.m., Souih Founh Street,
·teresa Becker. treated at tile scene;
·, ' II :SO a.m., General Haninger
Parkway,' Tessie Bradshaw, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
.
. POMEROY
I: II a.m., Brown Alley, Alonna
Grimm, Holzer Medical Center;
3:38a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, William Cuslee, O'B leness Memorial Hospital;
l :04 p.m.; Maples Apartments,
. Helen Smith, HMC;
· 3;37 p.m., volunteer fire depanment ;md squads, motor vehicle acci·
dent on Main Street, Vicki Billingsley and Keith Petrie, Veterans Memorial Hospital; ,
5:3~ p.l)l., Rutland Street, Lisa
Potter, VMH;
9:36 p.l\l., RRC,, Margaret John·

.

The following land transfers were
posted recently in the office of Meigs
County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton: ·
·
•
Deed, Geraldine and Skippy
Moore to Dorothy Smith, 2.452
acres; ·
.
Easement, Douglas W. and Connie
L. Little, Jennifer L. and. James R.
Sheets;
Deed, Racine Home National
Bank to Thomas ·K. Woods, Lisa
Woods and Home National Bank..
Racine;
Deed, James M. and Victoria Fink
to James M. and Victoria Fink, Rutland, .2954 acre; ·
Deed1. Macia Jane Houdasheltto
Brian Dalton Houdashelt and Roben
Brent Houdasllelt, Pomeroy;
Deed, Perry·Reed to Roger A. and
·na L. Holsinger, Olive; .
Deed, Bank One Athen' NA,
Bank One Pomeroy NA, Pomeroy
National Bank to Peoples Banking &amp;
Trust, Rutland village parcels;
Deed, Bank One Athens NA,
Bank One Pomerdy NA, Pomeroy
National Bank to Peoples Banking &amp;
Trust, Pomeroy village parcels;
Deed, Malcolm Leigh Keen to
Chtirlotte Durst, Charlotte Keen,
Olive;
Deed, Jack and John Garen Morrison to John D. Patterson. Chester; ·

ansWer 12 cills

EMS units

:1upj,ort

'

.have a petting zoo,
·
~is year, there wi~, b«: space
ava1lable for the ~em~tratmn and
~ale of old-fash1on"'! ;handcrafted
Items. There )Wtll ~a hm1ted amount
ofspace for lhe tables an~ those participatin~ will be asked to demonStrate tllelrcraftthtoughout the.afternoon. To reserve a spot, res1dents
may call992·3810.
. Another feature o_f the afternoon
Will be a demonstration of encapsulahng old documents. ReSidents may
brtng the1r old documents and have
them encapsulated fo( fcc. II was
reported.:
.
&lt;;&gt;n d1spla7 w11l be the I 75th
anniversary Signature qu1lt top, and
tile Yesteryear and Teacher Makes a
Cifftr~nce winner essays. . ,
A dmner and P.rev1e"': _of th~ open
~?l!'j:P~~~ Will be ';'~ Fnday:

. The 25th annivers~ of Heritage
Sunday will be observed by the
~M~igs County Histo~ical S01:iety
:sunday, with aciivities to be condueled from noon to S p.m.
E~hibits' will feature antique
'radios by,flarry Bailey, gemstones J;Jy
f.lowani Nolan, and dulcimers "lade
by Bill Grueser.
· ·Other exhibits will include muz'zleloade~ and arrowllead~. sel'l'ing
·.accessories, tools from yesteryear.
. 't\lm of the century wedding atfire,
·and an old-time parlor setting.
' The slide show, ~'River Rails and
'Roads," will be shown in tile theate,r,
'and,the making of homemnde bread
"and !Iutter will be demonstrated.
An old-fashioned lemonade stand
.·will be in oper~tion: herb garden
'plants will be shown along with
'lllltiq!l• . ~ards, a,!'d Al,b~ Salrr will .

•

.

A Coolville man was issued two citalions in connection with a
hit/skip accident in Cliester Township Monday evening, accordin110
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soijlsby. '
·
According to reports, Thomas E. Schuler, 16, was traveling north
on State Route 7 when he lost control of his 1975 GMC Truck, crashing into an embankment on the right side of the roadway and rolling
lhe vehicle on its top.
' '
Schuler then allegedly left the sce ne of the accident. Minu'tes after
the accident, the vehicle was pushed back on its wheels and towed frmn
the scene. The vehicle was later found by authorities near the i nt~rsection of Sumner Road and State Route 681 .
.
Sch~ler WIIS charged with failure to control and failure to report an
accident. He is scheduled to appear in Meigs County Coun on thc·two
charges.
.
·
· •

Land transfers recorded

.,

been

.i. ' :

Area man cited in hit-skip accident

sell Funeral Home, Poiqt Pleasant.

Whitewater verdict.made·:on ·facts, .not ·poU1:fC.$ .·

. ....

1Wo people received minor injllries in a two car .a:iclat Olt'Wt!lt
Main Street near tile Pollar General Store Mo_?day aftanoon, .a:ording to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought.
Aecordinito repons, the accident occured at 4:36p.m. when al980
Dodge driven b~ Keith H. Petrie, 39, Pomeroy, was $U11Ck from behind
by a 1984 Cllevy, driven by Clleryl Stumbo, 36. Pomeroy, while Petrie
was stopped in traffic on W'est Main.
=
The Pomeroy squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Ser- ~
vices transported Petrie and his passenaer. Vickie Billinssley, Pomeroy,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where IIley were 11eated and released.
Stumbo was issued a citation for failure to assure clear distance.

1'r?Y D. "Dif:k" Russell, 89, Point Pleasanl, W.Va., died Sunday,. June 2,
1996t.n the Pleasant Vlllley Nursing and Rehabilitation ~nter, 1'oint Pleas·
ant.
~
Born Mln:h 18, 1907 in Leon, w:va., son of the late Jess and Ella Mont·
aomery ~.he- a self-anploytd car dealer, and a member of the Main
Street Bapti~ Olun:h, and the Minturn Lodge 19 AF &amp; AM, Point Pleasant.
Surviving are .hi• wife, Esdler L. Lamben Russell ; three daughters, Sara
J. GIISk1ns of P01nt Pleasant, Blrbm A. Esllenaur of Orrville, and Deloris
L. a..mben of ROMOke, Va.; eight grandchildren and six great-grandehil·
dren; and two sisters, Dessie Holcomb of Point Pleasant. and Essie Lee of
Gallipolis. .
' Graveside services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Kirkland Memori·
al.Oarjlens, ~ ~int Pletiant, with the Rev. Don ~ohnson officiating. There
Will be no VtSitabon, Arrangements are under the direction of the Crow-Hus-

•

slf

0

.. ADIIIW th:A

Troy D. 'Dick' Russell

By JOHN KING
AP Polltlclll Writer
WASHINGTON - Bob Dole was walking briskly through downtown
:chicago lhe o11ter day wllen a man suggested the Republican presidential can·diclate would be hurt by the unpopularity of House SP,Caker Newt Gingrich
·afid the 104th Congress.
It was enough io stop Dole in his tracks.
"Some might say that," Dole calmly told tile man. "I have to spell out
my own agenda for America- Bob ·Dote's agend~."
.
; · That is an urgent task, one Dble clearly recogniZed wllen he dec1ded to
resi111 his Senate seat to make.his case against President Clinton full-time.
But Dole discovered lhis past week how f01TJ11dable that challenge 1s. Eve~­
wllere he tUrned looking for an opening tllere were shadows - some of his
own malcing, o11ters cast by a Clinton campaign de/ermined to keep Dole from
building momentum.
· · ·
·
.
.
As Dole focused on crime, fo[ example, lie talked of llelp1ng pohce beef
up street patrols, states build more ~risons, students' find ~u'!lmer jobs and
other alternatives to drugs, and helptng women who are v1cbms of domesilc·violence.
··
." "We will have the resources," he said.
• But at every stop, the Clinton campaign offered citations of Dole votes
•~ftrturtail fundi nil for various programs or of h1s oppos1t1on to Chnton pro: ~s to increase spending.
.·
·
:. . •Almost all of these examples stemmed from Dole's opposition to the final
:: v~ion of the 1994 c~me bill, which·Republicans argued hnd SS billion in
~- WIISteful social spendmg.
·
~ :clearly frustrated, Dole explai~ed his support for .most of the bill~ and in
~ KS-eral cases offered proof that Chnton or otller ad~1ntstrat10n offic1als had
~ p.)ised him for hi's llelp.
. .
.
.
v •But being forced into such explanations meant bemg distracted from the
~ cjli,'s centtal theme, and the week that Just passed prov~ Dole's lengthy lc~­
:, ist.tive record gives Clinton's CII!IPBII!n enough matenal to chiillenge Vlrt &amp;Uflly any Dole policy pronouncements.
.
·
.
t: •This Clinton tactic appeared parbcularly exasperatmg.to Dole because 11
~ co'ines as lhe president - at least m the v1ew of Repubhciii\S - 1s co-opt:: int QOP.Ihemes on welfare ref?rm, community ~nd personal respon.sibili·
'·t¥··wposition to same-sex mam~ges and tax cred1ts to support adopbon.
tive, patient. respectful.
GOP'.s attack dog on Whitewater, Clinton's rc'-cltctimi'CaMpaigfl went ·
· :: · ~"'It is shameless," Dole said of Clinton's election-year·positioiling after By CHUCK RAASCH
GNS
Political
Writer
In
shon,
no
candidate
for
tile
tried to look, instead, like the steady, into damage control in the aftermath
::.;u!hing through a giant tax increase in 1993 and advocating a government·
WASHINGTON- As the White McLaughlin Group.
vindicated wat~hdog. of the verdicts. the president himself
:;ilu,itinated llealth care plan in 1994.
.
.
.
.
..
House
spin
cycle
kicked
into
full
gear
In
·her
few
dignified
moments
in
On
ABC's
'
Nigtlllin'
e
,"
D'Aniawas enjoying seine of the bcs!
•, ' •But Dole can't blame Clinton alone for the d1fficult1es he faces m an1c· .
and Republicans danced around how tile spotlight, Wood injected a healthy to took his StrOnges't partisan shots in approval ratings of his presidency.
::~l~ling his own agenda.
•
·
to respond to the guilty verdicts of dose of integrity back into a jury sys- defense of himself, arguing his many
• II will push the ptcs'Si'nto a fresh
mor&amp;lhan two dec~s since Dole faced. a truly competitive ·three Whitewater figures, no one tern. And she smashed the rank snob- detractors;~ho longer could say 'the ' look at the underlying legal story.
::: :lt ha5
:•eampaisn. so his skills as a candidate ·are rusty. Even as he mteracts. more spoke with the clarity of Sandy bery that says Arkansas · - or, Whitewater investigations by special Starr's continuing invesliJ!ations W0 Od
' frankly, any place outside the media prosecutor K,enneth Starr or ,D' Am~ · including ·one into how Mrs. Clin.'
·~wiot everyday vQters, he is slow to weave these anecdotes t.~to h1~ speechBu;
that
should
be
no
surprise.
centers of either coast-, is such ·a ato's Banking Commitic'c are partisan ton's legal billing iccords: 'sought by, .
::~s~n 1 way that Clinton in 1992, and Ronald Reagan before h1m. d1d to g1ve
Wood is a nurse, not a spin doctor.
rube-infected
backwater that witch hunt$.
investigators; 'suddenly appcitcd ar
:•a ~onal touch to policy pronouncements.
.
While
the
partisan
c.
u
rrents
of
.
Arkanslins
·never
.
.would
fairly
or
Here
is
how
the
guilty
verdicts·
tbe
Wlli.tc Hou~ ~;..;.; will get a high-'
: : •Jnstend, be often make~ awkward statements •. as in telling high school stuWhitewater consumed the Capitol , intelligently judge thCir own, espe- · cllange the Wllit~~ater story:
cr media profile.
•.
.
::~ts durinl an anli-drug rally; "~.would say, w1thout preachmg to anybody,
slle and II jury colleagues in Little cially those in high places. ·
• Clinton's defenders no longer
With another S,arr trial coming up1
··xiJ!Ir parents are very •mportant.
.
Rock simply were looking for the
Politics never entered into the' ver- can argue there is no "there" there, in mid-June- this one of Arkansas
;'t I I •
truth.
diets, Wood said.
even though the president clearly has bankers charged witltillegally Clivert-:
:: : :Aides insist progress on tile rlletorical front will come_. as Dole leaves lhe
Her just-the-facts style should
She considered Clinton's testimo- not been implicated i.n any legal ing money to a Clinton gubernatori~'
'- h;Jow of the Senate and campaigns more ..That sune ume, Dole pan1sans serve as a lesson as Whitewater ny on behalf of the jurors as irrelc- wrongdoing.
al ctmpaign - the president's lcgar1
:~ will help Dole establish an identity as a compassionate conservative, bloom.s again in the 'partisan haze of vant, a faetlhat the White House tried
But the investigation that began connection to Whitewater will con- '
:~ from the often unfavorable view that swing VO!Crs have of lhe Repub- this election year.
to spin its way with a blizzard of around a questionable hind deal has tinue.And he iscxpected 'to.tcstify in:·
.,ICJ!! Congress.
.
The guilty verdicts did not touch paper and in post,verdict interviews. now roppled a governor - Tucker this one, as well.
· . ·· '
., 1 i'&gt;erhlps, but Dole also has some internal conflicts to resolve.
·the presidency, but they substantialBut anollier juror, Janice Greer, will resign in July -and has given
The White House, which has
.: : ifc has been consistently anti-abortion throughout his career, but appears ly rekindled tile Whitewater story just did question Clinton's credibility, two former Clinlon business 8$SOCi· looked unbeatable rccQntly, l)_~s !Jec~ f
·~nnined to make it clear in the Republican Party platform that those who when it looked like it was dying out. arguing the president and Mrs. Clio- ates possible jail terms.
buffeted by·a week of bad·lclial news
abortion rights are welcome. But by failing, so ~ar any.way, to either
The38-year-oldRussellville,Atk., . ton ''hadjustasmuch to do with it" . Had they been found innocent; it with political implic.a!ions. ·
.
• ;..lite a specific proposal or ~le any changes to the anu-abon1on plank out, woman was forewoman of the jury as lho"" convicted.
. is a safe bet this White House would ·
In a suit. inyolviljg the_ 'll:iiUal
·~ has disappointed both s1des.
.
.
that
convicted
Arkansas
Gov.
Jim
/
The
White
House's
damage
conhave
been
in
full
political
exoncmtion
.harassment
claims against Clinton by
. .'
Guy Tucker and Jim and Susan trol campaign did not include these spin. The converse now holds: As a former Arkansas· state ·worker Paula
'
'
.: ·: .i.nd there is more internal party, and personal, IUfllloil as Dole crafts an McDougal, former business panners comments. Spin makes no claim on political .issue, with the .:onvictions Corbin Jones; Cli.nto~ . l~wyer, .
to President Clinton and first lady the whole truth ahd nothipg but the Whitewater no longer can be dis- Robert Bennett, backed off clam~s tre
acoftomic package certain to include tax cuts.
Hillary Rodham €linton.
truth.
missed as a GOP dry hole. P{lO!IIe ' pres1dc;nt sl!o,uld ~0! be_slle!l W~!lc lie •
~ : lhen Dole has su~gested lie needs to be dramatic, and many advisers pre·
In
1V
interviews
after
the
verdict,
Meanwhile,
Repuhlicans
respondmay be going to jail, and the Repub- is ·cotnmander in chief bcciUI'se ,i,
di~tlie will move awlly from his career-long disdain for the supply side ecoWood spoke plainly of the com- ed in various stages or plirtisanship. lican National Committee wasn' t 1940J~'YJW~te~d!&lt;[errP'}.~o!diers
a&lt;)rilics theory that doep taX cuts will incre~ go~emment revenue:
.
and S!Ulors agamst such su1ts. Vetcr, ·
• Yet as lie campaigns on the theme that Chnton 1s bankrupt when n comes · pelling paper trail thin led to the con· Some gleefully said the guilty ver- judge and jury.
• The verdicts also rekindled the ans' groups and Republicans went b~
.j,:~i'edibility, 9ole appears det~rmined not to~ puslled into a position at victions of Tucker and the , diets again cast aspersions on ClinMcDougals
for
multiple
counts
of
ton'scharacter,otherscounseledSen.
images
~fa presidency that never th~attack. . "
, : . '' :
· ! ·. ~ I
4dd$ with his history as a deficit hawk. Balancmg the budget, he sa1d Frtfraud
and
conspiracy.
Bob
Dole,
the
party's
presump,tive
seems
to
pick
up
a
full
head
of
steam,
.
In
response
to
th1s
rough
S!Uhng~
.IIY~ "must be our first obligation."
·
. ,
. .
With no apparent panisan ax to ,. nQmjnee, to stay away from it alto- · one that 's been defined as much' by the White J:Iouse plllled a clao;sic ~Pirij
' ·With tile campaign u11der way so early, and Dole and Chnton engaged m
grind. Wood came across as straight' gether.
.
crisis management . as by accom- move .. lt tned to change the s.ub~~
~mtit daily confrontations, nOt to mention .the internal Dole debates, t~ can·
forward,
believable,
concise,
objccSen.-Alfonsc
D'
Amato,
often
the
plishment. As the White House and altackmg . Dole for being weak •Qnl
&lt;lidlile himself concedes tile electorate 1s ' probably a httle confused.
,,
· ·domestic
. .. · ·:·' · ' ·
: Qut as lie promised to do a better job of eX.,laining ~imsclf an~ his views.
~· .
'
, violeriee
.
'
.. •~
C&gt;Oie suucsted to nay sayers lhat lie has at least one ·•mponant ally: .·
• ··trhe election is in November."
.
: :(John
Kin&amp; is chief political cornspoadeat for The Associated
.
. Press.)
••

·tocal News In Brie
Pom~roy accitknt leav~s two injured

Me-first philosophy .aft cts ·i.ife . aod -~~e~th
..

O..-HeweiiMCI
10 the pressures beiJII placed upon is now I Sllple Of middle-clus COD•
WASHINOTON - In the lftcr- them. "He bid so much going for venatiOD, usually followed by a self-

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•

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poll.

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�~sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

..• • 4
Tuesday, June·4, 1996

:Giants get 6-3 win over Reds~·
'8yJO£KAY
·•· CINCINNATI (AP)- The last
two days have reminded the San
Francisco G1ants of two things.
First. they're in trouble when
Matt Williams has to miss a game
:rile cleanup hm~r ~sterid his teammates and paced the bench Sunday
while Sitting out a game for the first
'rime this season because of a sore
wrist.
" ; "I JUSt bother ~ople," W1lhams
-wid. "I hate silling on the bench. I
· ~t up and walk m front of ~ople. I
can't sit there They told me to go
''{tway...
· They stood and congratulated
lhim Monday when W1lhams got hiS
•poSition and hiS horne-run swing
tback. W1lharns h1t a two-run homer
'ail'd a two-run double for a 6-3 VIC'110i'y over the Cmcmnati Reds, who
are off to their worst start m 25 years.
' -' It was a reminder of what the
Giants' offense can be when Barry
·Bonds and W1lliams are on their
&amp;arne. Bonds had an RBI double m
tlfe first and scored two runs.
Williams broke out of a 4-for-28
slump over his last eight games. ·
"It's tough to win when they're
not hlttmg, " manager Dusty Baker
""~ s'aid.
' " ·· When they are, everything seems
'' ~d much easier. Williams' homer
"'lilghhgh•~d a three-run f~rst mning
that ended the G1ants' homerless
'lltought at e1ght games. H1s double
in, the mnth clinched a second con' secullve Win that pushed the Giants
back over .500 at 28-27.
· "· "It's good just to win and get
back over .500," Baker sa1d. "We've
.- tieen n1ning around w1th thiS mark
I'd like to get on a hot streak here"
The Reds would JUSt like to win ·
a couple games 1n a row They've

lost 13 of 17to faJI a season-low 10 the hases loaded and two out.
games under .500 at20-30. 1t's their
VanlandiJY.ham lOok a deep
worst start since 1971, when they breath, threw two strikes, had Burhad an identical mark.
ba foul off two pitches, then got him
And they 've run oot of things to to swins and miss. Burba broke his
say.
bat on the ground after hitting the
"It's another loss. Thanks for second foul in the sequence.
coming," said Dave Burba (0-7),
"I thought I should have hit the
who remained winle" m 12 stans.
hall," said Burba, a .053 hitter. "I
Burba typifies the Reds' struggles saw it the whole way. That doesn't
this season . His last three stans have happen a lot to a pitcher. It looked
been interrupted by rain. On Mon- like a pumpkin coming in there. I
day, he was gelling ready to throw said to myself, 'How could I miss
the first pm:h when the rain started, that?" "
and the tarp came out after just two
Vanlandingham wondered how
pitches.
he m1ssed the next pitch as well.
"I don't know what the deal IS,"
"You can't walk the piu:her. I just
Burba said. "It's frustrating. You tned to throw strikes down the midwonder if somebody is against you, dle," he said. "I was lucky he
1f you d1d something wrong to some- swung through that last pitch."
body A million things go through
Burba was eiected in the sixth
your mind. You start worrymg about after argumg a ball-and-strike call
the rain mstead of worrying about with home plate umpire Gerry Davis.
gelling outs."
"I can understand Burba's frusHe didn't get many of those tration," Baker said of the former
when the rain ended after 19 min- Giant. "He hasn't won a game yet
utes. Four of the first five Giants had and he's a tremendous com~titor.
CJ~:tra-base hits - doubles by MarLet him beat the next team."
vin Benard and Bonds, Williams'
Notes: The G1ants' e1ght-game
13th homer and Stan Jav1er's double. homer s!ump was the1r longest of the
The 3-0 lead rela~ed Wilham season.... Two G1ants extended thc1r
Vanlandingham (4-7), who allowed hitting streaks with first-mnmg dousix hits and two unearned runs over bles Benard (six games) and Javier
6 113 innings to win his second con- (seven games).... The Reds put outsecutive stan In both wins, the fielder Enc Anthony on the 15-day
Giants have spoiled h1m a 3-0 cush- disabled list before the game w1th
ion in the first.
strained thigh muscles and called up
"Our offe~se IS stanmg to hit Eduardo Perez, Tony Perez's son,
agam," Vanlandingha.m sat d. from Triple-A Indianapolis. Perez is
"When you go out in the first wuh expected to play first base tonight. ...
a t!Jrec-run lead, it takes a little pres- The Reds planned to call up Gabe
Wh1te to stan Wednesday, but he
sure off of you,"
separated h1s p1tchmg shoulder in
The Reds scored two unearned
pregame warmups at Indianapolis
runs in the founh, set up by Benard;s
Kevin Jarv1s w1ll come up mstead ...
lieldmg error in right. They threatBarry Larkm went 0-for-4, ending
ened to 11e when Vanlandingham
went to a 3-0 count on Burba with h1s hlltmg streak at e1ght games .

Baseball

. AL standings

J~

Today's games
Ptnladelphta (WIIIIauns 0.41 n1 Out: ago (Bulhnge!r l-4), 2 20 p m

Eastern Dtwliioo

• :r.a
""'"'Yort

.w
"
ll 21

Bukm10rc ,
Toron1o
Botlon
,. 0ciJOJI .

1'&lt;1.

. ~96
~~
4~~

29 21
25 30
22 12
1J

..

liJI

,.,
l

407
2:12

4~

10
20

Ctnlnl JMwbkln
CLEVELAND . J6 IK 667
Chicoao . .. . . :14 20 6JO
,.. Mlnnetota •
16 2K 481
1~ Nilwuukec .
24 10 444
:. ~(anus C'lly:
. 2~ 12 439

2

. .

12\

pm

62~

35 21

·S Ca11rormn
Scnn&amp;r:

2s

:u1
491

,,

. 2.' 10

4ll

9'•

. 29
27

o.llwod . .

2tt

l

Monday's scores

••I

Today's gam&lt;S
(Wen~r11-2).J

15pm
Chu;agn (Aiv~ 6-1• at
2~4), 1 O'i p m

.a1

CLEVE-

(Ou.xkn J.4), 7 lS p m
Ocnron ' (Gohr l -6) a1 Ralumor~
(MuutM 1-2). 7 14i p m
Tua1 (Gruu S-l) &lt;~I Mtlwaukel"
(8oncJ :\-81. 8~ p rn

t·
I' .

Callfomm (Cinmslcy 1-4) nl Mtnlk:Mlla
(RodriJue:r: J-6). 8 05 p m

I
•'

AI Oh.., Stale Trautman Field
Semtfinnb Clnctnnall Eh.ler {20- 7)
vs TIOm Columbtan (2\-.U, II a.m. Fn·
tl~)' . Canton G!.:nOak (22- IJ Vl! Stnw
( 17: ~). J m , Fr1tlay
Fw.• Semtlmah wmncrs, 1 p m ,
Suutl\lny

r

Division II
AI Cantun Th•I'Wian MIIMDn Stadium
Scmtt1n.tb Hanulton Dadw (20-0)
VI Avun Lakt: (14-6), I I ll m Fnd.ty
Tallmad{!:t 117 'Iii vs MEIGS {17-KJ, 1
p m., Fnd.ty .
Fu~&lt;~l SefmfiRals wmnl!rs 1 fl m S:tl

urtlay •

Division Ill
AI C1ni1M1 Th•nnan Mun.J5on stadium
Semtlmal~ C"hJw.ttl"r (20-5) vs
WHEELEM.SBURG fl4-IJ. II am In day Versmlles (17 - ~1 VI Muldl~f'id d
Can.lmaJ (26-1 ), l p m , FmJ:ay
Ftnotl Scmtfinals Wlnlk!U II 11m
Smurday

r

TorurliO .JI Nrw Yorl.. 7 l:'i m
~Iron a1 B;dulllOil!. 7 15 p.m
Cabforma a1 MtRne!UMa. lt O:'i p m
K.onuas Cny at Oakland. 10 1~ m.

••

•' .

r

r

NL standings

:r.a
Allanla

l
•
I

.w 1!1"

1'&lt;1.
671

24
28

~71
~

27 2X

491

2l

418

17

u

Monln.!i!l
Florida

28

.
Ph•ll*lrhin
New York

.-

l2

Ctntral Dh•lsion

S1 Lout~

27

OIIColgl\

24

PJI!Sbutth

2J
211

Housron~................. 27

I

Division IV .

l!uttm Dtvi4on

CINCINNATI

21J

4M2

10
l2

·H-'
429

1\
10

-100

411

liJI

,.

9'·

10
14

-',
1
;

;

"I Ohio Sllilt Trau1•111n Fidd
So!tlllhnals · Mot:adurc t20·1• vs
Tolc-du Onawa Hill! (I K·ll ), II am. Fn·
day Columbus Ht~t~ky ( 19-"JJ v• C.~m·
nau Sumn1tl ~ou nlry Iny ( 17-li) 1 r m ,
Fmlay
·
Ftnal Scm1final1 wmncrs. II am

Saturda)'

SW~ F~t11..:o

CQiorado

.

,

15 22
\0 21
2H 27
26 27

614
"i26
S09
491

l
6

7

Other H.S. sports
Ohio high school
sof!ball pairings
Division I

"-• Ashl•nd Bntoluidt wm
Semtfinttls Pu.:bnn~tnn (22-0) n
Cmcmnmt McA uh:y t22·0). I 11111 Fn

day Akron E.llt.'l 12ft. I) v~ Akron Sprm!!•
field (26-.\), 1 J0 1• m Fn4ty
Ftmd Sl!nuftnals wmn~u 1 p m .
Saturday

Monday's Kores
Pi111bur~h

7, Coloroldo 2
All:mla 'li New York 4
San Fr.ut~;t~co 6, CINCINNATil
Ctuc;ugn 4, Ptuladelphtll .1
Sl U.!Ut5 l S.m'OiCJ!.U 0

R1c:~l

(21-l). 3 p m . fnday , Htll sdal~
121 -4) vs C:t.nal Wmdlester t14- IJ, :'i 10
p m fnd.1y
,

: By TOM WFrHERS

attempt In the third Inning of Monday nlght'a
National League game ·In Cincinnati, where the
Giants won 6-3. (AP)

In other NL action,

.

· Braves win while Padres fall
By Tile Aaaoclated Presa
John Smoltz's 11 -game winning
streak was in jeopardy- against the
New York Mets no less- when tile
Atlanta Braves finally woke up. ·
Smaltz trailed the last-place Mets
4-1 when he was lifted for a pinchhitter in the sixth inning Monday
mght But the Braves bailed him out
andJcft hi s winning streak mtact by
sconng three runs in the seventh and
pnc m the eighth to beat New York
5-4.
"I caught a break tonight,"

Smohl sa1d. " Maybe I can go out
now and better myself."
Ryan Klesko tnplcd to the wallm
nght-center licld olf Bob MacDonald (0-2) to score Fred McGnff from
lirst base wllh the winning run m the
e1ghth mmng as the Braves won lor
the 21st time m 26 games.
" I was yelling at Fred, 'Hurry
up,"' Klesko joked. " He's had some
sore parts lately and I was hoping he
could make it all the way around. He
was gaspmg for a1r there at the end."
Smoltz struck out · I0, but also

gave up eight hils as the Mets picked
the1r spots agmnsl basehall's hottest
pitcher.
"I really had good sluff," said
Smaltz, who had allowed only 54
hits m K8 1/3 innings entering the
game. "Every t1mc I made a good
' (See NL on Page S)

Division II
AI Albland Brooluidc P.rk

LA:~uc

TEXAS RANGERS Annoonl:cd a

l~ni.I!IVC: ·•~r.remcnl

on a four-year l:On·
1r.a1,;1 ex1ens•on wnh Charloth~ Counly
A.1 ror ~p nng ar:nntng facthltt"l S1gned
P-SS George Conrton A~.:uvatcd RHP
Kevm Gross from I ~ - day d1ubled hsl
Oplloncl.l OF Ntkkw F.tn~ylc lo Oklahnnt:t Ctl)' ol the Amcm:an A~~uoatron
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Scm LHP
Bnan Bohanon to Syracuse uf Ilk! Intern.•·
IIUilllllca,.uc

NaUonal Lc11~
CINCINNATI REDS Pl.r..:cd OF F.n(
Anthony on the I ~day d1sablet.l hs1 Rc·
c:.llerJ INF Eduardo Perez from lndt·
anarx•hs 01 the Amencun AIJO!.:talton
FLORIDA MARLINS Released
RHP Eucluks Rojas from Charlou~ of lhr
lntcrnut•onul lcatue and named him
ptlchm~ c001.:h of the M:vltns oft~ Gulf
Cou.~ll,(aJU( .

HOUSTON ASTRUS WmeJ LHP
Grc-1,1. Swmdcll for the ptll'fiOSC of gJVInJ
ham h11 un!..'On1hi10nal release Recalled
LHP Btlly Wagn~r from Tunon uf the

PCL

Wally Joynt.T on 1ht: 15-l.I:IJ dtsahlcd hst
Rei:uiJ..:tl LHP Ron Vtllonc from Lu V~ ­
gas of the PCI.

Foolball
N111lonal fool'-11 IAIIAU~'
CAROLINA PANTHERS SlttncLI
Joe Bu shohky to lhe 1.;0 JI~ gl! sco ullni!
~laff

DENVER BRONCOS W.nv~.:LI WR
t.hkc Pril1,; hanl
JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS
Stgnl"d CB Duve Thnma5 and S rravts

OilVIS
MIAMI DOLPHINS Anntll.tocl:"l.l t~
rcttn:mt~ nl of 0T Run Hdk:r Srgllt'd LB
Jou: k Del Rw Rc ·s 1g.n.:d QB Ot:rmc
Kosar

MINNESOTA VIKINGS Agreed to

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS
IH·ETAl BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
1995 COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES,
ALSO.FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING DATE IS JUNE 2., 1'996
·
TUlLER TAl DEADLINE IS JULY 31, 1996
''

•

HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
'

w.nvcn lmm Ilk.- San Fr.ml'lstn -l'.l~n~

2000 St:lL'lOll

HCK:key

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Signed
TE John Oavts.
PITTSBURUH STEELERS An·
nouoceLithe rcmemcrn of 00 Tom New·
berry
SEATnE SEAH.&amp;.WKS S•tne&lt;l RB
Dou Innocent
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS· Re-

st,ncd TE

Da~

DALLAS STARS Ajm:cd Itt n·rms
wllh Unh G.uncy, l_!cncml m:m:r~'4:r 11n ,,

thn:e·yl",tr ~IJ!IIf",l(,; l

OE1'ROIT REI&gt; WINC.S S111ncd D
Sc.m Gtll.rm 10 i!lhn.-.:·)'C.Ir ~.: IMllr.IL'I
w

ttad Clalme4.1 G Mall Soankscm off

; NEW YORK (AP) - American
• League president Gene Budig coun: tcred Alben Belle's forearm smash
' with a hard blow or his own.
Budig suspended Belle five
· games for hiS VIcious shot to Mil; waukee second ba.'ICmun Fernando
· Vinu's face lasl Friday night, which
: tnggcred a hr~wl between the Cleve, land Indians and Brewers.
The sus~nsion was the fifth In
SIX years, for the contrpversiul Cleveland slugger, who JUSt 18 days. ago
was ordered by Budig to undergo
.counseling to help control his temper.
8udig also suspended Indians
pitcher Julian Tavarez, who slammed
ump1re Joe Brinkman to lhe ground,
and Milwaukee catcher Mike Matheny, who charged the mound, for live
Kanawha Valley Dmgway Park m bracket race. In Quick 8 Top Oraggames each. All three players ImmeSouthslde-w.Va.
hosted the IHRA ster action, Price took the win
diately appealed the sus~nsions,
World
Champ1onsh1p
Sencs Pomts Angela Sic1lia from Salem finished
which won't take effect unt1l after
meet on Saturday. May 25 and Sun- second.
heanngs.
day, May 26
In Qu~ek HTop Sponsman uction,
The suspensiOns ol Tavarez and
More
than
300
racers
representBurton
Auxier of Dix1e, W.Va.
Matheny were expected. Belle's,
ing
17
states
were
IR attendance.
grabhed
first. Ken LangloiS of
' however, was a h•t surprising.
Durmg
Saturday's
qualify
mg.
a
new
Saline,
Mich.
took second. In Brack' HIS act1ons were cons11lered withtrack speed record was sci hy Doug
'" ha~ball's rules by the umpires Winters of Randleman, N.C. at 179 et I, John Furr of Oakboro, N.C.
wnrking la•l Friday mght's game. mph in the Hooters '55 Chevy. A new took the wm with Ben Christopher oJ"
Chesney, S.C. linishmg second. In
' And 1f he wasn't repnmanded when
track elapsed time record of 4.21 sec- Bradct 2, Ray Grice of Aiken, S.C.
' the play occurred, why now'/
onds was set by David Pr1cc of Nor- took first. Larry Bradley of
Budig, 11 appears, is sending a walk with his rear epginc dragstcr.
Reidville, S C. took second.
mcs.•uge lo Belle: l!chave or else.
May 25 action featured qualify - ·
May 26 action featured the climBelle's agent, Am Tcllcm, thinks ing, a Quick HTop Dragstcr race , a mallon rounds for the WCS riK:CI'li.
: Bud•g's decision . 1s . hut another Quick A Top Sponsman race and a Randy Thivcner or Gallipolis made
• example ol how hiS dicnr has
~ hecomc n larget.
___:_
All
&lt;Continued from___;;____:_
Page 4&gt;
;
"Once again, Albert 1s hemg
· ~ held ton different standard," Tellcm
llllh olf M1ke Fa rmer (0-1) broke a ,
': sUid. " It was just a good, hard play. p1tch, I gut them out. But when
hung
a
pitch
a
lillie
hit.
they
always
2-2 tic Carlos uarc m went 4-for-5
' • Alhert did not mean In InJUre Vma.
·seemed
to
lind
a
hole.
You'
vc
~ot
to
lor
P11tshurgh.
! " "For any other player in ha"chall,
give
them
some
credit,
too."
Swift,
who had arthroscopic
'
• there dcfinnely would not have hecn
Brad
Clontz
(3-2)
earned
the
surgery
on
Ius right shoulder last
'Ji' 11 suspcnsum.
' " hc sal d. "G 1vcn 1hat
win,
and
Mark
Wohlers
pitched
the
October, p1tchcd 3 113 innings He
was not ejected, and given that the
1'he
ninth lor his loth save. Wohlers gave Jell alter Lhrnwmg 51 pitches, six
umpire
smd
11
was
a
legal
play,
thiS
1
is JUst total, total diScrimmation on up a one-out walk, hut got Lance more than the limit set for him.
Cubs 4, Phillies 3
the pun olthc cnmmissumcr's olfice Johnson 10 line into a game-ending
double play.
At Ch1cago, Jose Hernandez, a
J-against Alhen ."
Mcts
starter
~a,oo
Jsringhauscn,
dclcnSive
replacement in lhe seventh
Tcllcm may have a JH'int. Howonly
2-7
fur
the
season,
gave
up
a
mmng,
led,
oil the bottom ol the
l ever, Belle 's tro~ek rec(}rd ul transleadun·
homer
to
MarquiS
Gnssum,
mnth
w1Lh
his
lirst homer of the seagressiOns has obviously caught up
hut
didn
't
allow
another
hit
until
the
son.
wnh h1m.
seventh, retiring 16 in a I'&lt;Jw in one
Hernandez lined a 2-2 pitch from
Bclore
hiS
fi..St
at-hat
ol
the
sea1
Ken
Ryan (2-2) over the ivy in leftstretch.
son, he wu.• lined $50,000 lor a prolsringhausen
personally
outhit
center.
g1ving the Cubs a victory in
fan~ t1radc ~uring last year's World
the
Braves
through
six
inmngs
.
He
their
final
al-bat for the lOth time this
II Series. And an Ohlb -~Oilrt Cited h1m
' for reckless o~mt1on of a motor singled m hiS lirst at-hat and douhlcd season.
Bob Paltcrson (2-2), who worked
:: vehicle, the result ol cha.&lt;ing teen- in the filth Lo spark a two-run innmg
thai
gave
the
Mcts
their
4-1
lead.
I
1/J
mnmgs of scoreless relief, got
~: agcrs who threw eggs al his house on
Elsewhere
in
the
NL,
it
was
Piusthe
victory.
:: Hallnwccn.
Chicago staner Steve Tr~chscl hit
.
The temperamental outfielder burgh. 7, ' Colorado 2; Chicago 4.
:: wa• suspended hy haschall every Philadelphia 3; and St. Louis 3, San his first maJor league homer to g1vc
the Cuhs a 3- I lead in the li fth.
.; year Irom I'J'J 1-\14 lor nlfcnscs mng- Diego 0
Pirates
7,
Rockies
2
.But in the seventh, he surrendered
:, mg from thruwmg a hall and hitting
Pillsburgh,
Matt
Ruche!
hcnncrs
to Mike Benjamin and R1cky
At
: • a heckler In curkmg hiS hat. He made
;: 11 through I'J'J5 Without heing sus- pitched seven suhd innings to get his Otero, his lirst in the majors.
Cardiilals 3, Padres 0
•: pended, hut started a new streak Ihis first major-league win as P1ttshurgh
At
rumcd
Colorado
stancr
B1ll
Swift's
San
Diego, rox1kic Alan Benes
:, year w1th his h1tcsl transgrcssum.
atoned
fur
hiS wurst outing of the
;
Only la.st week, Belle cursed a ran lirst appearance ol the season.
In only his th1rd start, Ruebel ( 1- SClL&lt;on hy puchmg a six-hitter for hiS
·: m Texas who wished to trade a
0)
allowed
two runs and live hils He lirst shutout as St. Louis won its Jifth
:; home-run hall - wh1ch Belle wantstruck out four and .1llowcd one sin'~ · cd - lt)f .1nu1hcr souvcmr.
.
:• Bud•g wa.•n't ahle to rcpnmand gle in his last live innings.
Jell Kmg\ two-run homer 1n the
·' h1m 1(1r that, so the timmg of Friday's
.,.
:; mcidcnt ccnamly d1dn't help Belle.
~~
.. . think 11 \s wurrantcd, " Vma
; said "I don'l mind the guy runmng
.: me over. hut everybody could sec he
:: hit me in the face w11h his clhnw."
', Should Belle's suspensiOn stand,
By
.; it could seriot~sly hinder his chances
Dave
~ ' at a pursuit uf Ruger Maris' singlc-

·~(lo .,.•

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run

record. Belle. who

r cnlcrcd tonight's ~arne agninst ScalI le 11ed for the major-league lead
wnh 21 homers. led the maJors with
50 last year and a1 one JHimt this seaon had 65 homers in hiS previous
'
1•162 games
~ : Bud1g suspended Tavarez "for ·
·!)&gt;lacing the safety or a.1 umptre tiL
:-risk- which is incxcusahle. Umpire
: Joe Bnnkman was allempting to
• rcstnre order when he was slummed
: In the ground."
'
Umpires unum head Richie
; Plullips called Tavarez's pumshmcnt
· ."wnelully m•Kicquatc."
:; Tavurez, whose fast hall hehmd
: Matheny's head in the mnth mnmg
:ignited the hmwl, may have gollcn
·Nf easy, ,
:: Bill Mmllnck was pumshed more
' llCVcrcly m 19Ktl when he shoved hiS
glove in the lace nl NL umpire Gerty Crawli&gt;rd. Madlock. then w1th
fntshurgh , was suspended for 15
tays.
• "There was a time m hasehall
~hen that km~ ul penalty would've
teen imJHISCd, " Ph1llips smd.
On the other hand, Matheny and
s manager, Phil Garner, thought his
nalty was lilf too harsh.
"This whole thing's new to me,
r vc never really had to deal with it
tffore," he sa1d. "But I was asking
around allcr it happened IIJ1d realized
t'hat charging the mound usually
q:.sults in some kind of suspension,
but usually a three-game suspensmn.
Five wa.s a lillie bil of a surprise."
•' The suspcns11m
•
may have already
rpttlcd Matheny. In Monday night's
IQlme against TexiiS, he s~t:Uck out
three limes and hnd two passed balls
Jiitd an error. •
·

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho•e
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

.

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge you less for your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us an.~ seve even more
with our special multi-policy
discounts.
'

the best showing of the local racers
wflo participated by linishing second
in the Hot Rod category.
The results of all classes arc:
Top Dragsttr: Pave Elrod, Harrod. win ; Glen Hedrick, Wytheville.
Va.-runner-up.
Top sportsman: Glen Maine
Westmoreland, N.Y-wm; William
Dalton, II, Pri~ccton, W. Va.-runnerup.
Modified: Ann Pcto, Burtonwin; Anthony -Benozz1, Richmond,
' Va.-runner-up.
Super Stock: Anthony Bertow,
Richmond, Va -wm; Gary WIScarvcr-runner-up;

_______

__

1
·f
iJ

BmER COMFORT,
BmER SELECTION,

"That play puts you in a severe
jam," Appicr said. " Now it's a horrible con or worms."
David Howard's RBI single in the
third gave the Royals a 1-0 le:KI
In the only other AL gan1es
played Monday mght, MmllC&lt;Oia
defeated Cahfornia \1-J and Tc&gt;a.&lt;
downed Milwaukee 9-6.
Raagen 9, Bnwen 6
Bobhy Witt needed lots of help
before getting a long-sought victory
at Milwaukee.
He left the game w1th a 6-2 lead,
then watched the Brewers whllllc
away at a seven-run defiCit 1n the
ninth nining hefure Mike Henneman,
the third reliever fur Texa;, gained
his 16th s~ve hy ~clliftg Jusc
Valentin to 1!ruund out wllh twu runncrs on to end the game
Win (5-4) gayc up two earned
runs. five hits and four walks in "'
mnings to p&lt;lst hi~ lirst win smcc
May K.
The Rangers tal!ged M1lwaukcc
staner Steve Sparks (J-6) lior SIX
runs, live earned. and nmc hils m 4

KVDP drivers announce latest May race results

,l

CITrAW~ SENAI'ORS Narncd Roy
Mlukur prc:sttlcnr :rnr.l dnl!f cxecuuw ulli •

Moore lo a ooe-yenr ~.:on­

lhrow to the plate. "I wiiS waitins for
that l!all."
in the ninth . After Jose OfTcnnan's
Appicr (4--6) lowered his ERA to
siiCrifice moved the runners to sec- 3.23, founh best in 'the American
ond and third, Johnny Damon was League, by allowing two runs on
intentionally walked to load the seven hits while throwing his first
bases.
complele game since last Sq&gt;t. 15.
Bill Taylor rehcved Mohler and
Appier struck out nine, bringing
got groundouL&lt; by Craig Paquc(te h1s season total to 84 - second in
and Mike Macfarlane on cooscclllive the ALto Clemens' 96. He struck out
pllchcs for hiS fourth save.
two in each of the last two mnings.
" It was a great pitching pcrfor·
After the game, a disconsolate
mance, and we needed every bit of Appier refused to talk abuut his own
it," A's manager An Howe said. "In performance and was upset aboot a
the ninth inning, with the way Appi- close play ot th1rd in the fourth er wa&lt; throwing, we couldn't afford when the A's scored their two runs.
to let them tic the game."
Octommo Berroa and Phil
Paqu~tte'~ squibbcr to thin! was
Planticr o~ncd the inning with sinturned into a force play at home by gles, and Torey Lovullo hunted
Tony Batista, who wns making his toward the mound . .Appier bounced
major league debut for the A's. He his throw to third, and Berroa was
was called up from Edmonton of the called safe.
Pacific Coast League over the weekGeorge Williams singled in a run,
end
.
and another scored on a groundout
"The manager said, ·u they hit by Jose Herrera. Oakland's mlly died
the hall in front of you, you go when Lovullo was thrown out as
home,"' Batista said of his tough Mike Bonl1ck tailed to execute a su1cidc squcc1.c.
· Mike Mohler came in with run-

ncn on first and second and none 0111

'
l

N11tion•l Hod~~' Lr.aau!

Baso...u
Amtrlran Ltape
AL: Suspended Cleveland lndiiiD~ OF
Alben Belle five a:urcs for hts romwm 10
lhe flk:e of Milwaukee Brewers 28 Fernando Vtna, Clevclilfld lndtans P Jul1an
Tavmz. live g:&amp;rlleS ror thmWtnJ umpm~
Joe Bnnkmnn to aile Jtound durmg a
bmwl. a nd M•lwuuk« Brewe u C Mtkc
Matheny five games fur charging th~
mound IIIli 1:ume on M.ty \J
MINNESOrA lWINS Pla..:eU RHP
IJ01vc Sacvens on lhe I Ill-day d• sabM:d lt sl
Recalled INF Bnan lbatlt' from Sal! L.akc
Ct1Y or 1hc PCL
OAKLAND ATHLETICS N,1mcd
Pcdru Bemu s ~oa~ h111g .tuhi.rnt for
Soulhl!rl1 f!re ~u n of 1\u: Nurlhwcst

.

f

•

tenm wuh QB Wmen Moon una Ulm!•
year ~.;ontr.~~.:t e1 1cn~mn lhrouJh !he 1999·

Wlisd!n s~nt the res! of the game
cheenng on thn:e Oakland rehevers
from the inside of the clubhouse.
"I was sitting in this chllir right
here an&lt;j watching~·" he said. "I
was clapp1ng and yelling at the TV.
I'm not gotng to tell you I wasn't
nervous or anything. That wa.&lt; fun ,
that's ba'ICball "
Wa'Kiin (2-0l, and those three
relievers combi~ on a seven-hitter
Monday mght as the Athletics
snap~d a three-game losing streak
hy defeating the Kansas City Royal s
2-1.
In his only two stans this season,
the A's rook1e nght-hander has
dcleated Roger Clemens and Kcvm·
Appier.
Wasdin, makmg hiS founh career
start, rooted from the clubhouse as
his teammates worked out of Jams'"
the seventh and mnth innings.
Jim Corsi relieved Wasdm with
two men on '" the seventh, getting
pinch-h1ttcr Boh Hamelin to hit into
a double play on hts first pitch.

,.,,_ games...

Fmal Semtfmals wtnnus, 4 p m .
Sanmby

SAN DIEGO PADRES Pl,•~cr.l I 0

Wrstf'm IHvi-...

Sun Dtl"J:,ll
Los An,_~~·

Division Ill
A&amp; A.JhlaRd Brook1kle Park
&amp;"'!linall Coldwater (16-0) vs New

l~

New York :11 Atlan1a 7 40p m
Colormlo al Houston RUS p m
Ptusburgh al Los An~lcs, 10 lS p m
St Luun a1 San Ot.,JO. 10 lS p rn

Wednesday's games

T.:x;a at Milwaukee. 2 0~ r m
C'tltCiliO Ul 80$11m, 7 0~ I' ln•
Soatdc at CLEVELAND, 1 0~ p m

••••

f·

J-2)

(St!it

LAND (AndeJ'S('In 0.1 1. 7 05 r m
Totnnlo (Hunson 6-6) al New Ynrk

••
·••

•

(HII~;h~Q\:k

Seaule

~

Bo~um

Salurday

·· · By ROB GLOSTER

:Belle, Tavarez
iand-Matheny

Transactions

Division I

KullJtlS Cil)' (Gubi~ 4- 7) al Oakland

I'

Ph1ladelphm ai,Chicngo 2 20p m
Monlrcnl al Aondll. 1 OS p n1
San Franctk:o at CINCINNATI. 1

Ohio U.S. pairings

Mtnneaot;a 9, Cahforma 1
Ttxll/!9, Mllw11ukee 6
Onklanc.l 2, Kansas C11y I

MINFORD(22· 1) 12 JOpm
Fimd Scmrfinal!l w1nnrrs 10 a m ,

Weclnesd•y's gam&lt;S -

10

12

WKttm Dh'l.lion
Te~u

Monneal (Rueter 2-21 al Flonda
(Burkdl :\-6}. 7 m p rn.
Snn flanctsco (WlJUon S-5} al
CINCINNATL{Solkeld l-11 71l p m
New York (Wtbon 2-~) at Atlanla
(Xhmtd12-l ), 740p.m
Colol'ndo (Thompson ~I a1 Hooslon
(Ha~on J-1), 8 0~ p m
Pmsburgh (Darwm 2·6} 111 Los Angt!·
les (Nomo6-41 JOOSpm
St Louts (Morpn 1-0).Qt_San lM3u
(Vi!len;r.uela 1-J), IO:OS p m. \._

Scrrufinnls Columbus Re.rdy (24-$)
vs laGrange Kcys10nc (21 -4), 10 am,
Fnday. Allaance MllrllnJIOn 119-4) vs

'l

lAL suspends

Scoreboard
'f' '

:Athletics, Twiris ·and Rangers stand as AL's latest victors
OAKLAND, Calif. &lt;AP&gt;- After
; pitching 6 113 strong innings, John

YOU'R'E OUT!- San Fnmclaco MCond be. .
man Steve Seer- (lett) tags out Cincinnati
baeerunner Curtla Goodwin during 1 eteel

The Dally SauUnel• '!! 5

Pomer'Qy • Middleport,.Ohio

Stock: Mark LewiS, Inman, S.C.wm; Roh Lash. Kcndallxt1llc, lnd - ·
runner-up;
Quick Rod : Dun Shu lord. Hickory, N.C. -wm: Michael Kuunt~ .
Samsuta. Fla -runner-up.
Super Rod: Carl Walls.
Alab.tstcr, Ala.-wm, Ronmc Royal,
Guyllln, Ga.-runner-up
Hot Rod: Glenn Ferguson,
Grcenshnru, NC-wm;
Randy
Th1vcner, Gall1pohs-runncr-up

Eastern basketball
·camp scheduled
to begin Monday

The Eastern H1gh Sch&lt;K&gt;I Elementary Basketball Camp. lor students entering grades 4-7 thiS fall ,
straight.
will run from Monday. June in tn
Benes (5-3) had lasted only two
innings in u 10-4 lo~s L&lt;&gt; the Padres Thursday, June 13 lmm H311 to
II :30 a.m. at Eastern H1gh Sch•x•l.
on May 5.
Cost is $35 11 pre-entered hy
The Padre.' had men &lt;&gt;n second
Thursdny
or 1s $40 at the dnnr.
and third wit)! two outs in the SIXth,
The ~uls' camp. lnr s(udcnls
but Benes)dl Brian Johnson to JK'P
cntermg gra~es H-12 tins Iall. Will he
up to second baseman Lms Alicea.
held June 24-27 lrnm I In 4 p m. at
Former Cardinals pitcher Buh
Eastern H1gh Schnnl Each preTewksbury (5-2) o~ned with three
, entered camper w1ll receive a coamp
perfect mnmgs, then was hurl hy
1:shin, ccrt1hcalc .md camp h:lsketthree straight singles and a 1wo-run
hall.
throwing error as the Cardinals tnok
[)cposlls should he llllldc nul Ln
a 3-0 lead in the fourth .
Eastern's Alhlct1c B&lt;l41slcrs and
ma1lcd to Joe Bailey lll 456&lt;Jil
Pomeroy P1kc, Box WS, Chester,
Russ1u d1d not compete in the
Olympic Games until 1\152 in
Ohm 45J21l.
Many md1v1dual cumpet•Linns
Hclsmki, Fmland.
and team pllly w1ll h1ghhght the
Red Grange uf Illinois scored
camp.
Fur further mformallnn, cull 'J'J2four touchdowns in the lirst 12 minutes agamst MIChigan in 1924.
747H.

The Ligbf
Toac!)

Grate
of
Rutlond
Furniture

II basketball hadn't been
invented, where would they
hold high school dances?

***

When everything looks like
it's coming your way, be
careful. You might be In the
wrong lane.

** *

You won't stumble on
anything silting down

***

Heredity is what sets lhe
parents of a teenager wondering about each olher.

***

Middle age: when you know
your way around but you
naver feel like going.

~

•

¥N~~
NEB_:
Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992~

illdo.Otme,. lntNMRCe
Ule Home Car Business

n.-a&gt;

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'

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.Rutland Furnit•e
lt:124,1...... 0L
\

•

1/3 innings. The biggc.t h1t f"':"·
Dean I"~ Imer's ISlh IMomcr or
sca'lOil.
Rangen&lt; All-Still' clllcher Ivan
Rodngucz left the r:amc in t!Jc ~at
inning aller getting htt oil hts n1ht
wnst hy a wild pitch. X-ray• wWc:
ncgat1vc, and he's listed day~to-d!ly.
Twins'· A.... 3
In
Minneapolis,
Chwlt
Knoblauch had three hits and tiRe
RBis and Robenu Kelly added IWfi
douhk'll as Minncsota won its ~~~
straight and fifth in the la&lt;t ,,.;,.
games.
.
· ·ft·
Knoblauch, halting -~ 14 1n h~&gt; I:L&lt;t
Ill games, drove m two runs 1n,1Ac
Twins' three-run sc.:ond innm~""
another in a four-run eighth.
c.J
Kelly had a two-out dnuhl~ it!!d
scored the ticbrcakmg run in the seventh, and his double in the ciJIIllh
drove m the linal two run•. Mike
Trombley ( 1-0), recalled frA~
Tnplc-A on Sunday, pitched IWI/'
plus mnings in rel1cf of starter RtJ:h
Rnhertson, allowing three hits '"'
Angels starter Chuck Finley (7-3)
had hiS worsl out in~ since the ••[11)1cr. g1vmg up seven runs and 12 hiJs.

4-H Club to spons~~
softball tourney
set for June 15
·
The Country Shamrocks ~~4-H
Club will sp&lt;&gt;nsor a sanct11mcd nic"n's
slow-pitch · soft hall lnurnamcnt ,pn
Saturday, Jun~ I~ and Sund~y,
16, rum or sh1nc, m ReedsVIlle , 1
The entry fcc is $65 and jf...o
halls.
,
'
1
For further •nlc&gt;nnatiun, call 6"1 4J?X-6267 or 614-M7-6122. '"
Nn alcoholic hevcra11es '"'arc
allowed

tW.c

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GAlfiBD AVI., PAIIIa.G

MON.·FRI. 9·1:30
SAT. 9·5:30, SUN. 1

428·1065

_,

�Tun_,., June 4, 1

. Pom1roy • Middleport, Ohio
-

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-

_Washington State, Rio Grande strike transfer agreement
• : . ' Wuhinaton Slate l:omm11nity
~CoDeae llld die Uaiversity of Rio
~ "'~ recendy silftCd a transfer
_. . , _ t !hat enables graduates of
·· lhl comllllllli!y col lese to pursue a
. .llll:helor's de~ at "the ·universi!y.
·_ '1111 apnnnent, coverinJ degrees in
' ilj! hlalosY. llllli~~ess management,
• -.inJ, lnd education, goes into
• ekt immediately.
·• · "I look forwll'd to working with
_w.hington State Community Col. ., ~ap to implement this agreement,"

said BIUT}' Dorsey, preSident of the
University of Rio Grande. • As an
incentive, the Univmity will offer
$500 scholmhips for each q1111ter to
Washington State Sludents who transfer into our baccalaureate proarams, •
he added.

Students completing an associate
degree at Washin&amp;ton State Community College with at least a 2.0
cumulative grade point average will
be guaranteed admission upon application to Rio Grande under the terms

of the ..reemcnt, acconlin1 to GreIO&lt;Y Sojb. provost and vice president for ICademic services 11 the uni-

dents is a transfer without delay to an
institution that will offer a biChelor's
JlfOJCUI in their chosen academic
fteld. Rio Gnnde's four-~ propari.
· in ·cducatiOII will be pinicululy
attriCtive to many Washi•gton State
students."'
"We ha"e had students transferrin! to Rio Grande for many years
with great success." added Carson
Miller, Washington Slate Community College president. "Both institutions should be strensthened by this

versi!y. ln eases whm progr1111$ have
limited enrollment or selective
admissions crit.eria, tnlllsfer students
will compete for SpiCeS with current
Rio Grande students.
"Graduating Washington State students with a minimum of 9S quaner
hours wi II be admitted as junior level students," Sojka added. "The primary benefit to Washington State stu-

qreement and I am pleased with this
fonnal adoption.•
'Those student who have ncx completed a (Iegree at Washin1ton State
Community College, but have completed 1he transfer module pf 90
hours can be admiued to Rio Grande
on a cue-by-case basis and receive
credit for all college-level course
· work in which they have received a
grade of "C" or beuer. Depending on
the cour.ses completed at Washington
State Community College. compl·e-

.

tion of a Rio Gr&amp;ftde c~e~- miy
require liiOI'e than eiibt CJUIIWS, bUI
all credit earned II Wubiai'OII $we
will be applied to the ICademil:
requirements 11 Rio Gnllde.
For more information lbout nn.
fer possibilities between Willli..,.OO
State Community Colle,e and the
Uni•·ersi!y of Rio Gr&amp;ftde. residents
may contact Gloria Nonis, Wuhinlton State ti'JIIIsfer coordinaJOr, at 614374-8716, or Sojka al Rio Grande
toll-free at 1-800-282-7201.

PORTS/

'ENTU1'AINMENT
PICKS, SPREADS,

FINANCE .
'HOROSCoPE. SOAP
RESULTS
1-900-~6-2525
5961

Serv-u (619) 854-11434

~. !Southern Junior High students honored for academic achievement ·~.

·-' Students at Southern Junior High
• _School were recognized for academ... !!; achievement during the annual
, ;;y.--cnd awards assembly at the
. • Khoollast. week.
, - - Year-Ions honor roll students rec•· ;pltcl were Sarah Ball, Amber
;. &lt;Maynal)l. Clay Enslen, Macyn Ervin,
'· 01111 Hubbard, Emily Stivers. Bren·' - na Sisson, Adam Cummings, Chris
. Randolph,. Stacy · Ervin, Kim Jhle.
.. _;,Sj.adents recognized r.or auammg
; ., ilbighl A's and honor roll distinction
•·
Sh
M
1
•; J ;All year
were:
auna
anue •

Jonathan Evans. Brandon Wolfe,
Jamie Baker, Kyle Norris.
Receiving citizenship honors were
Sarah Ball, Nicole Benson, clay
Enslen, Macyri Ervin, Chad Hubbanl,
Shauna Manuel, Lee Reynolds, FatJon Roush, Joey Sands, Jessica Janey,
Emily Stivers; Brandi Codner,
Jonathan Evans, Garret Kiser, Bre11na Sisson, Kenda Smith, Laraine
Lawson, Tara Rose, Jon Smith, Jinimy Alley, _Courtney Haines, Chris
Randolph, Julie Nakao, Kyle Norris,
Heidi Bumpus, Heather Dailey. Sta-

cy Ervin, Peggy .Lawn:nce, Jack
Rose, Tara Norman.
Students recognized with Academic Fitness awards for maintaining
above a 3.0 grade point average during their first eight years of school
were Kyle Norris, Bob Scarberry,
Brandon Wolfe, Adam Cummings.
and Willie Collins.
Student Council members recognized with pins were Shauna Manuel,
Fallon Roush, Emily Stivers, Matt
Warner. Brenna Sisson, Maggie
Smith, Laraine Lawson, Tara 'Nor-

:

man, T1r11 Rose, Stacy Lyons, Lena Stivers, Brandi Codner, Kali Cumins,
Yoacham, Erin Bolin, Sarah Brauer, Jonathan Evans, Matt Shain, Brenna
M~eyn Ervin. Jeremy Fisher, Jessica Sisson, Maggie Smith, April Stitt,
Alley, Josh Davis. Heather Mora. . Laraine Lawson , Josh Pullins. JessiStudent Council officers recognized ca Alley, Jamie Baker, J.B. Boso.
were: Macyn Ervin, Jeremy Fisher, Willie Collins, Adam Cummings.
Jessica Alley, iosh Davis and Heather J.osh Davis. Corutney Haines,
Mora.
Autumn Hill. Stacy Lyons. Melissa
CCfV program members recog- Norman, Kyle Norris, Don Proffitt,
nized with pins were Clay Enslen, Chris Randolph, Mistee Sellers,
Macyn Ervin, Chad Hubbard. Tony Autumn Thomas, Lena Yoacham,
Hupp, Shauna Manuel, Jessica Erin Bolin, Sarah Brauer, Heather
Nance, Fallon Roush •. Joey Sands, Dailey, Ryan Hayes. Bobbie ScarNicole Benson, Ta.mllii Fryar, Emily berry.

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Newspaper sta(f members rcco.,.
nized : were Macyn Ervin, Jessie,
Nance, Emily Stivers, Brilndi Codner.
Kati Cummins. Jonathan Evans. Eri1
Roach, Mau Shain, Brenna Sissor;.
Erin Bolin, Peggy Lawrence, Maggie
Smith, April Stitt, Laraine Lawson;
Josh Pullins. Jessica Alley, Jnmi~
Baker, J.B. Boso, Willie Collidsj
J&lt;!sh Davis, Ryan ~ayes, Bubbi.
Scarberry, AuiUmn Hill, Stacy Lyonst
Kyle ·Norris, Don Proffitt,
Chris ~
s
dolph, Mistee ellers. Autu?'l'
Thomas, Lena Yoacham, Heathe)"
Dailey. Denise Keyes.
&gt;

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be lonllly egaln.

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MeRK?~ot

BOB ,.

· We would like to
thank ·o ur frlenda for
the beautiful card.l
(with axp~e11ion1 of
lov:e), for the flowerl
and gifts' on· O\lr 50th
wedding annlverla.,Y.
. A spe!)ialthllnks to
our nelghl)or, Mr. 1J
Mra. Don· Hunnel,
·a nd our daughter,
Lynn Paoplea, · and•
our gr•ndchlldl'ln,
Jelihlfer .. nd Allen
Peoples, for 1
wonderful surprlae
dlnl)er.

David ~ Aucll'ly
Slttllr

'

4" S&amp;O - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 p_
ipe
112." &amp; 314': c. P. v.c. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. waler pipe (100' roll's lhru 1.000' roll'&lt;)
314" U.L. approved Condui1
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe l"lhru 2" - Finings - Regulalors- Risers
Fullassonment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fining&lt; &amp; Wa~cr fiuings
Full line of CiSicm. Scp1ic &amp; Waler .-oragc lanks.

BIB IOOnNI and
COISYRUC,.IOI

GalllpoHs

&amp; VIcinity

Residential :... Commercial
Roofing - Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
. Decks - Bathrooms - Kltchens ~ Siding
35 YMI8 Experle,nce

(614) 992-2364

.. , MEII
iEAUfiFULWOIIIII

Psychic-Line
Talk line I!):our gifted
psychics 'on quesllol)s or
love, success, care. soul
males, seK-help and

HDIFIOM .
YOU IIOWII!

1-900 446 1414
Ext. 4309
$3.IIJ*min.
Mulil be 11 yra.
Serv·U' 111) 145 '8434

--

more.
1-900-25!Hl500
Ext. 3505

$3.99 per min.
Musl be 18 yi'S.
Sery-U (619) 645-11434 ·

I

3 Famil~ Garage: 'Rain IShtne,
June 8th, 7th, 8th. 8-2, Household

Items lots Of Toys like New, 2
Bicycles, Antiques, 12' Boat
Home Interior, Cunatna, Clothft,

3 Miles Oul Addison Piq OH Rt
1.

Gigantic; Yard Sale: J,ickson Pike.
91 Fraley Drive, Ne•t To Park
lane. Slarta Manda~ June 3rd Blh, From 9-4 EaCh Dey.

1-8()()..889-3943

June 3rd-7th, Mon-Fri 9-7: 2 Milet
East 01 Partat On 554. Cur1alns;

And loll Clolhol.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • IHduslrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services.• Shiel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repalr'Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless·, Tool Dressing • Omamen1a1
Stepa ·Stairs, Railings. Palio FumHure, Fireplace
Items. Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffl!

Mary layne' • On Graver Road,

Cheshire. Oh June 3Jd,

Howard Excovatin
•

-

Utilllieia

All Kind s of Ear th Work

Stale Roule 218.

992·3838

Wed , June 5th, 4118 Bulaville

c

·,.suunor.

Wed , "rh.lil's, Fri, 107.2 Second

Avenue. Paper W~ughtl, Ladies
Elgin Watch , Furnilure, Ppcket
Knives, Tools. Clothing, Jewlery,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

WELDING &amp; FAIRICAIION

dar edlion IO:CIOa.m. San.cfay.

or

28563 BASHAN RD.
Ohio 45n1
1!49-3013 Phone
1!49-2018 FAX

Big yard · sale. lot !I
clorhas,
misc. item's, X-mas, aq week, Me·
Kenzie Ridge, Racine, Oh. .

537 BRY~N PLACE

.MIDDLEPORT, OH.
814-8112-2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

........
.. I.IUJ

Friday- 133 Butlernut Avenue.
porch ...wing, bike, exerciser, type.
writer, stereo, sewing !118Chine,
playpen, collec,bles.

Garage &amp; yard sale. 237 S. Slh SL

JONES I TR,EE SERVICE .

Middleport, 3rd. 41h,Sih.

Garage sale· Thursday, June 8,
two miles out FlatwQocjs Rd. 9am-

Top, Trim, Removal
· &amp; Stump Grinding

3pm. Rain or shjne.

June 8-8, lirsl hou!oe past church
in Chestltf, barbells, high chair,
coffee. end tables, lamps, infant

Owner: Ronnie Jones

thfu aduh clolting, lots of mise:.

I.

.SIIni Dlln &amp;wtn••••

&lt;

Must be II yra..

4'1--

llerv-u (111) 145 ..,.

Porch sale- June 3-8. first house
behind Laurel Clift Free Methodist

Cturch.

J4ew Homes • Vinyl Siding New
'
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE. ESTIMATES
.

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Llrneltone • 0!'8'111
Dirt• Sand
H5U22
ChM\W,Ohlo

day, Wednesdar

I

~:.:c· .

hursdar.!

9am -11am. aslc for

~u~ll~tim~o~~~::~:il
needed

call

I

Home Typists; PC users "!"~:'II'
$45,000 incom~ potenUal. Call
800-513-4343 E•t B-9368.

Yard sale, Thursday and Friday,
Shelly Wood, 389 .Be&amp;eh Streru.
MiddleporL Kimball organ.

&gt;Millllfn

Pt. Pleasant
8r VIcinity

Need

derlr Man 111
367-1932.

Port1161e

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctianeet, complete
auction
service.
licensed
•e&amp;.Ohio &amp; West Virginia , 304·
713-5185 Or 304·773-5447.

32124 Happy HOllow·Rd ..
Mkldleport, Ohio 45760

90

Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

Wanted to Buy

1960's toy's, G .l. Joe, Star War's
ect. Will pay fall prtce based on
condition. 61A ·A46 ·8830 arter e

614-742-2193
TFN

""'
Clean

late Madill Cars Or
Jrucks, 1SI90 Modets1 Ot Newer,
Smllh Buick Pon11oc. 1900 Eoll·

"""""""e,Gampois.

ANN OUN CE MENTS

Good Tror·llillli"tr, l 'hp. or leaL
Will lrldO likf nOw Chipper lhrtd·

Person•••

dor, 114-742·2772.

Roduco oafo ond laO! wilh GoBeH 111bl111 and E·Vap dlu,.tlc.

Non-Working Washers. Dryers,
Sto~es. Refrigerators, Freezers,

Air Condilionert. Color T.V.'s,

Available Fru1h Pharmecr. Mid·
deport
.

VCR'o.
12315.

SWM llk.. Church, Movioa,
au-.. And Oule1 E..,;nga AI
Homo Seelllng S)W Ao-; 21 -35
Plouo Wrll• To: P.O. Box 212

Oe.lflllo, Ohio &lt;15131.

inQ resumes at Five

Yard sale, June 3 &amp; 4, acrou
from Syracuse Ehlmenl8ry, child·
ran's clothing, accessories &amp;
IDyl.

H&amp;H

oos

Five Points
ana lull time
cashier. ExPerience

Tuesday thru Salurday, 300
Wright Street, baby' clothes ga·
lore, kns of miK.

614-992-7643

$3.99 per min.
M'usl be 18 yi's old."

Ezt. 2261 sueper min.

·1Wllttm

. . . . . ,.1111

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES

1·900-998-3,37

817fi6· 241 lincoln Street, Middleport, Anna Ellis . Curtains,
small ruga, apartment size refrig erator, small traez8f, 1980 Kawa Uki bike.
·

Free E$tlmates

Service U
(61 ~) 654-8434

Hollow

June 5·8, 108")· ? Happy
Rd., 114 mile tram New lima .
Three piece living room suite,
bunk bed~ dolling. rrisc.

20 Ye-ars Experience • Insured

CHAT LINE

··

day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon·

$20.00/HR.

lfmt/sawM/1

&amp; WILliNG·,.
TO ~TILIIJI

Turn In

All Yard Sales Mus1 ~~ Paid In
Advann. Deadline : 1:00pm tht
day before lhe ad is to run, Sun-

1-900-446-1414
Ext. 6445

AnucnvE

IILSIDINI&amp;

~561,

Sllrine Club Oriwway.

.849-2512

Downspouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
·

p511M\rf TFN

·

S -.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER .

SAWMILL

....2168

5lti g

Tools, Automobile&amp;, ""d Household Goods, June 7th, 8th. s.t59

Pike, Gallipolia, OH

lo.ivs 2'1 'Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful .
Girls

Glitters

BllckhCMI
Services
House Sites and

~II\

Till 5 P.M .

.
We will work w~hin your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-s-.1
108
wv

(No Sunday Calls)
t!oward L. Wrltesel
ROOFING
' NEW-9EPAIR·

YIII:IS sale

70

367-0266 ~ 1--800-950-3359

Se!Vice u .

Card of Thank8

In Loving

01 SALE IT ·

$2.99 per minute ,
Must be t8 yrs old

Tuppen Pllllns, Ohio 45783

614-98~13 or 814-667-6414
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" lhru 36"

CHEAPER I!Al'ES

j

in a hurry... TRY · . Trucking '. '
. Umestone .
:. ..aCJ.AssmEos , Bul!d07jng
·and

106 N 2nd Ave.
992-2635 · Middleport, OH
II
co,_p.,nld · .··
·
~===·=:::~=:------------·------------------------.1 L-----------------------~------.-------------··-·_..l,,l
EXPIRES 6-11-96
:1

,.

' 1-900-988-8988
Ext. 6733 · .

.

,._

Serv-uj619)64~

'.ARE ~Ahllll ' ' '

. Your SweethsatUs
close as your phone

1112211

91 Mill Street, Middleport
992•6250

Iii

MWtJMIBrre.

'r-h-Tone Requlr4id

.DATE
LINE

Images

MEIGS CARPET &amp;DECORATING CENTER

I
1

13.11 ""' Minute

· • Top • Trim • Removal
.• Stump Grinding
15 Y!ll. Elcp. lJc. - Ins. Owno&lt;: Rick Johnson
Free E1timate•

• &amp; wPwncs •• •PPLY

St. R1. 7

Ext. 4193

Electric hook-up, dump
etatlon 0, .non-p-ble
water, large lola,
hiking, ftahlng.
Rent by w..k or month.
304-372-6688 or
614·247-2t20 """--"'!

Ext.12n

EXPIRES 6-11 -96.

SAVE UP TO

1·800-291 -5600

· Call1~900

On .St. Rt. 336 W. 8 mUee
fram ReveRII(VOOd
' Bridge, 1 mile trom
Apple Grove, Ohio.

1·9oo-tle-86oo .
(614) 441 -119 1
1-800-5 08 -8887

Pomeroy, Ohio

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

PONDEROSI
PRIMmVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON

'

•

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

success lind love.
The.luture startillodayl

13.119 per min.
' Must ll9 18 yrs.
Serv-u (619) 645-8434

~Jl

SE'NICF S

Recine,

614·992-4025

$59·9 . .·

f rJPt OYHr

r....

"No Job Too urge or Too Smt~ll''

a uve

Pomeroy, Ohio

51811 mo.

Sarv-U (619) 645-8434

fiNO TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
through
Personal Psychic! ·

. Thur.-Slit, 1D-5
Hemlock Gto.ve Rd

"Truck:

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the male of
your choice.
1-900-988-6988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.
Must be 1il v
..S.

· ReJ~~odellng

••ir

COUPON

· oate~Line

'

H&amp;H
Home

T~DD !,IISSELL "
$5~00· per

window IIZH for "a
quote!

Ohio. W... V•glllll

c:- ....... AIIIFidll.

ROIIIT IISSILl
·COIISTRUCTION

..noulated
· Limited n,.. Offtlr ·
Cell today with.your

Mabile Home Heating a Cooling

'(t14)tt2-aa31
14 112.zTN

MGM

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung

Ill

liNNEns

I'IIIIIITIIIATIS

"Must be 18 YfS

s19500 lnatlllled

,..,.,....

...... II

•

REPLIC-IT
WINDOWS

~

•lnelrtar 6 Extlrlor

I&lt; S.rv-U (6191 645-8434

~

ll.

•Skiing
•Rooting
•Pillntlng

$3.99 Per Min.
I

:.=t:.,_

'

·chat-Lin&amp;

.

":a••trU••

Also Caner-. Worlt
(FREE EITIIIATEII
V.C. YOUNG HI
tt24211
Pamwoy, Ohio

S2.99'per mln
MUst be 18 yrs.

•

.

EXT.

YGUIIS'S
CAIPIIhd $1LVKI

~

• P.O. ... . , fit 7

-

Also Junk Cars, 114·251·
\

'lop dollar• !llnrlqutl, rurnllure,

giau, clllne, c1ocllo, gold, oi!wr,
coins, welches, etllltl. Otbr

Marlin. I14-M2-7.. 1.

•

•

lp;;;:-;;~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;-:;;;;

i

�•

Pege I • The Deily Sentinel

.

June4,1•

OOP

•

PHILLIP
ALDER

Will do all intarior and exterior
paint. ,plu1 some carpenlet wortc.
Fret Ell. Gel 614-44e-21137

Will sit and care tor elderly, day
or nighr, houucteanlng a110,

lfAn5portahon, drivers licen11
an d home phone. Pay stana 11
54 ~S l)et hOur. 32·"0 hOurs per
week . Cetl 814 · 889-2.74 Mond~W; Fn;l8y, lam-4pm for appoint·

rnent.

Opportunity

.

NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busl. ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated
the ollering.

Small Local Firm Seeking Part
T•me.-~.On Call Cleaning Persons.
SMid RMumo To SCCS P.O. Box
531.&lt; Kotr, OH 451143.
SOCIA~

FINANCIAL

WORKER: The A!llont

AIDS' Task Force Is Seeking A
U c: en!lled Social Worker (lSW)
To ~r'l&amp; As Case Manager For
T1he Hl\1 Rura l Consortium 01
Southeastern Ohio. Th11 Is A Full
Trme Posit1on Funl1ed

By

Business

2500·50,000
FAST APPROVAl

No Ad\1 Fee, One Call
1·1800)829-7687

The

O~o Oepartmem QI .Heallh. The
. S ~'c1i!Uful Candidate Will Be
L ~ C &amp; rrilied In Ohi o And Will
!l ave·&gt;A M•nimum 01 Two Yean
Pr ofei~ibnal E•perience. Experienc e In Workin.g With Persona
lnfected•With HIV Is Highly De·
s•rabte: :Yhia Posilion Involve&amp;
McfdWatl Travel. Starting D1te Ia
Ju~ h ot996. Salary Is In The Mid
20's Wilh E•cellent Fringe Bene fts . .A .t.etter 01 lnt~re11 And

Current...Resum-e Should Be Di·

recred . To : Case Manager
Athens AIDS Task
~~ca. 1,8 North College Street,

oil 968 which ,makes nIllegal
to adverttse
prelerence,

Atfl'ens OH 45701 . Applicalions
Wi ~Be ,Re,ceived Until June H,

based on race, color, religion,
sew familial stalus or natiOnal
ortgln, or any intention lO
make any such preference,
limilaiiOn "'diSCrlrnklallon."

E!'ll&gt;ioyer.

Soc1a1 Workers, Now Hiring S23. J
339·6150.

Some one 10 help care for ~derly
lady, evenings, must be depend·
able. 304-895-3403.
SomErone lor general ma•nrenance- yard work, pamt ing,
small odd JObs, etc. Call 304-882·

30x40 ga-. 304-578-IMI07.

Building 1011 for 1118 on M idwll'f'
Dr. In New Haven . Far info call

:104-882-2!104.
Bu1lding 11111 in SrracuM, three
clllorantlota. ca11 &amp;14-092-2282.
loti tor rent: Now lAking applica·
lions, Gounlry laM Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry Wv. 30•·
675-5421 .
Parcels avallable for new home
construcrton on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels ranging from 1.84ac to
5:32ac. Paved road, counry water,
reasonable restnelions. Map aod
into available on request No sin·
gle w1de mqulfiiS please. 304 ·
675,5253.

RENTALS

llmllallon or discrimination

.li 6. The Athens AIDS Task
'tf ·e Is An EQual· Oppartunlt,-

Hr + B.eQefils. On The Job Train-

Bowens Estate Ashton Wv 2-112
acres · city waterJcabletaaptic/

·,ny

(&amp;HfJ&lt;Ii.,

'"9 To Apply In Your Area , 1·SOO.

Extra nice one badloom lurnilhld
apattmonl in Pt. Plea..,., no p111.

Scenic Valley, Ap.ple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots, publ1c water,
C~de Bowen Jr. 304-576-2336.

All rea l estate advefttslng in
this newspaper Is subjecllo
!he FederBI Fair Housing Act

Thls newspaper wll riot
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In vlolallon the law.
Our readers are hefebv
lnlormed thel all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

01

II

Bedroom
I I 6 14-446·

2 Sadro~m. ,S17Smo. Need refer·
ences I deposit. Call 304 -615 1429 afrer 4:00pm

2 bedroom .n Hartford $225mo .
No pels. 30-4 -882· 21.06 or 304 675-3100. aher 4pm.
3 bedroom '" Hanford S350mo.
No pels. Call 304 -882-2016 or
304-675-3100.

-

304-615-1388.

Furnithecl 3"Rooml &amp; Bath, Up.
111ira. Uiitin Furritolted, ClaM,
No Pwtf, Rolo&lt;once. Oopolil Required. 81 .....1511.

Fufnilhea Ap.~runent 3 Rooms 1
Balli, All Ulliliet Alld, Downtllirt.
t i t S..ond Avenue, U65/Mo.,

514U63U5.
Fumilhed Apattment, UPIUIIra. 1
Bedroom, No Pent, Second Av•
nuo Galllpolit, All Utill~ot Paid.
Dol&gt;clttil. 614-4411-9523.
Furniahed Elf. All Utlllllet pd;
Shore ..Itt 8145 Month, tte 2nd
A•. 814-446-31145
.
Furnished Elficiency 2 Rooms,
Share Bath, S1151Mo. Ulih!les
Ploid, 807 Second Avenue, Gall•·
pol~. 614-446-... 16 Alter 7 P.M.
Furntshed Ellt.aency Apattmenr.
All Utilities Furnished, Central
Heet &amp; Air COnditioning, PrNate
Parking, 614-4411-2802.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
lpettmentl 11 ViUage Manor ilnd
Riverlida Apartment• in Middlepotl From S232·l355 . Call 614'
~2-50!1-4 . Equal Hous.,g Oppor·
tuniies.
Middleport 1 &amp; 2 bedroom, lur·
niahed apts. Also, 2 toDm efficiency. Deposit 1 references re ·
quired. 304-182-2566.
Moderen One Bedroom Apart ·

ment 61t-.W6-o390
N1ca One · BR .
Unlurm&amp;tled
Apartment. Range &amp; Rafrig. provided.

'!'1-"schdal year : anilrant h1gh
school loolball, junior high loolball,
run1or tugtl volleyball, j~nior high

boy's Wllltball, junior high girl's
baske~j!ll and junior high chear-

leadinA "advisor. All applicants
musf PoSsess or obtain a spans
med1cin• certllicate and a CPR
~rd . Please tend 'inquiries to Mr.
Jam&amp;s,'4Wienr:e, Superintenden~
Southern local Schools. Boa 176.
RacintJ~~o 45771 . SlSO is
Equal
turity Employe&lt;.
Wante,d:".Fuii-Time Mechamc F9r
Auroa (&amp;' Trucks, Musr Have Own
Tools,IBe Reliabl~ &amp; Hones~ Ref·
erend•. Re~ir~. S.tarr lmmediatelw_\~14a448-45'14 Monday
Thru ~f!CIII)' ~5.

Want¥:ia Pan-time Position available af.t: communitY 'uroup home
tor ' persOna With URIOO in Galli·
po'l is: Hours : 11pm-8;30am,
Thurs; 10:30pm-83Jam, fri: 7pm·
9am, $at; 2-hour weekJy start
meetmg. (currenuy 9 ·11am.
Thursr; or as otherwise sched -

uled. High scnoo1 degree. vahd
dr1ver' s license, three years II ·
cenaed driving experience and 3
good dWing record required . Salar~ · 15.00/hr. to stall. Tramtng
prov1ded. Vacation and sick time
benerus. Send resume ro : P 0
Box 8041, Jackson, OH 45840;
ATTN : Cecilia . Deadline for
pllcanta; Jl~SJ'Q&amp;. Equal Opporlluni·l
~E...--.

2 Whd eaters, chain iaw, boat
rnoaor, •••r ~mp. a11erc:iY bike,
adult pony cna11, pa1nt spra't'er.

81C.OI2·7574.

AKC mtnt Pinecher~ 11110 ,.,.._
1300 ~ - ..... $250, *"'I'

304· 773-5360.

2) Goa - o d Cut OH Sew•. 21
Ditc;h Witch Orartt:l'\ett, Car~t
Cleaner, Gravel,- Mower, Lawn
Edger IOroncher, Poll Hole Dig·
oar, Airlesa Paint Sprayer. Ram, . , Compactor, "(ow Dally, 814·
448· 8217 Even ings Or leave

Juno 15, accoptlnt 4opoaitl,
~6~14~t4~t..c30;..;::;21_•
~~=od
PuppiH.

Metrtagt.

675-27~.

.....,..,....-:--:---l

Registered ~" German
Shephard pupa, 3mal old. 30.0·

8 Foot o'eu Ca,e, 51a Donut
Case: Two 6 Foot Wood Cuttinv
TableS. A large Butcher Black, • ·
Refrigel'llted Frozen Coqltf Other
Mtsc. Equipment, 814·440·617-4.

AKC Rogialorod Maline Puppies, Baluritul Whila Coat•.
Maka1 Good Campa'llone ·for
Tha Young And Tlta Oldl &amp;1•·

Complata Baby Bod With - n g

AKC Regiattrtd Pomeranian

seo. &amp;1t-u1-ozw

Puppy, UKC Rogitlarod "PR"
American EakiJIIO, Chow Chow,

Boots 8y Radwing. Chippewa,
Tony lama. Guaranteed lowest
Prices At Shot Cale. Gal;polis.

Whitt Starting To Talk. 114-441-

1886 Pontiac Sunbird New Tns

Parlll$1,000, 614-256'111011.

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks.
AKC
Puppiel, 1300 F•
mala S350 Male, Sltolt. Wormed,
Ta;ls Docked, 08110111, Will Hold,
e 1•·3l'fl.2867.

Co.,ch, Chair, 2 Chesl Drawers~
Dreuer. Box Springs, Mauress.
Small .Couch. Chair, An11que Pia·
no. 61 ... 48·3224.

3 BR., 2 bath ranch. 2 car uarage,
Spring Valley area. ctose to Holzet Hospital. 614·446-79t0.

Boagle puppin for 10lo. S2Dea.
Beautiful AKC Reg.
er Puppies. Exctllenl Bk00dHntt

Eleclrlc
Scoorers
And
Wheelchairs. New !Used. Van t
Car Lilt lnslalled, Slairglides. lib
Chairs. Call For Brochur&amp;, 614448·7283.

mtle,2Malel,114-448• .

flex Sleet 3 Cushion Couch. Flex

StoellfiV0\88~ Upright Sweeper,
fS1.tl-446-2857.

10galtank 111 up tpeciala. Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Shop. 2•13 Jacllton
A11e. Point Pleasant, 30•·675-

Free Royal Oak . member~hip, call

2063.
Bpainen For Sale: Pel Shop.
F,u ly Equ;pptd, Slockod, Great
location. Serious lnqujrkts Only,
614·... 1.0770,814-446-7507.

Full blooded Shallie- 1)1inia1ure
Collie pupa, 1125 each; AKC
Registered three year old fenle
conle, lassie-color. $200; 61 4~
742-21150.

Evanings.
Now takinQ depoaits on AKC
white· &amp; lilver sabfe German
Shepherda, reacly IO go 6·12-96.
304-675-74115.
Peac(!cks 3 pair, S100 per pair.
614·379·2701

Unlurnished 2 bedroom house,
nice &amp; clean, no inside pet1, deposit required. 81,.992-3090.

Puppy Paloce Kamela, Boarding.
Stud Serv1C41 Puppift, Gtooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Braedo,
Paymenrs Welcome, 014·3880429.

420 Mobile Homes

for Rent

R~ISted ~amale Boxer One yr
Old . Ears; Tail, Fixed . All Shots.
(1114)-2568155

Fou, bedroom, lwO bath home 1n
Syracuse. 14136 tam1y room, one
car garage, &amp;qL.upped kitchen ,
S90.000 080. 814·992·5862.

2 13 Bedroom Mobile Homes In
Porter Area . You Par Utilities.
ReferenceS/ Deposit Raq. 614·
388-9162.

Reg111eied Minialure Poodle,
black, tyr old, neullred, all lhoiL.
$100. 304·578-2&lt;1....
This Week'• Special Poodles,
Huskiet, German Shepherds,
Chows, PupP'I Palace.~ 14-388-

0.29.

-'1

Strawberries, 752 Jackson Pike,
Beside· Srar Bank On Old Rt. 35.

Construc-~F~;;i;~~pr;l:iv;;a;;le;/:lo~l~.~p~o;;rc;h,h,

814·446·3498.

clean condition, no
water, 304-182-

170 Miscellaneous
Campbell'l c1ean1ng serv 1ces
Comerciai-Residential Low Rates
P(ger J 1· 800 -724-3199 then
5 -1807 Man-Sat &amp;am to9pm

Sweet potalo planta. call

w1

2773.

MERCHANDISE

anachmenls.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Household
Goods

610 Farm Equlpinent
Jlt!in~

sweeper

w1 attachments.

u¥ct R--40 Dilch
Witcn Trencher.
7842.

C~14.fi9.._

111114 16 FL HNIIboro S - Trail·
«Allor 5:00, 114-446l2HI3.
,

sollilble

on cars &amp; trucks, rea ·
. minor mechanical
I changes. call614·7&lt;2·
Kip, Ru~and .

Care. Residential,

Cemetaries, Rea 6,4-379·2847.

Manure Spreader . S 150: Ofsc
Plow 8100, 814-379·2720 AFTER
GP.M~ '
1

5706.

Resldenuat, Cam• 814-245-9079.

a T11mmet1 , Have

~ BARNEY

46

LeT Me

Pontooo bQat with !railer. camJte,
anddock,cal8.14-g..j9-2t11 . !J

BEANIE!!

.

T~AT

WAS ME
FREAKING OUT..

:1

..:.

~

•

tD70 Dodge 23· Morot Home.
Sell -Contained Gas StoveJ New
Fridg11,
Engine, Ai;

1995 Ford

Es~ort

LX Aulo.

A~r .

Sa ..soo.

1995 Geo Metra Sspa, 3-dr, hlb
coupe, ale, radio-cassette-player.
White w/gray cloth &amp; vinyl bucket
seats. 4•mpg, .oxcollenl cond.
$1,800 or take over payments or
$180.50 per month 3.BODm;: :J0.4.
882-2187.

./.----

Ft.

Ft Screened Room,. $1et"to: 241Ft.

'·

~ - ;-;:'1f"

'

·-··,

.

'

. ,,

W..T fi..D, POl:\~ I~ I WU£

Uifti moror nome.' 198• Nisun
Mirage, dual rear wheoli, 4cyl,
5spd. 20mpg, sleeps 5. $2.800.
:ioH75-2949.

PW. 4 Cylinder, 4.500 M1tea,
$9,250, 614·367· 1932.

'::~:~' S@~illA-~i.~s·
U•o&lt;l lty ClAY .. I'OIIAII

spade ruff.)

614-245'9480.
1991 Ponuac Sunb~rd lE. sun k-::-::-:-~:-:-:-:--~--:chaset' package, low mileage.- ac.
1985 8qnair Fold. Down CamP,ef
Good Condition, t1,SOO. 814·256c1ssene. t5.500. 304 ·882-3398
vverings.
, ./
',_

1992 Taurus Glloaded, 17,000,
00061 ...446-2751 .

--

TV an1enna, canopy, real gold
cond. -1 1$)0. :1)4,-675-~ 1 8•
1974
111. Del -Ray trucll, c;amper,
setr 4;0nta1n&amp;d wtlurn11ce. gooo
cond. $600. 304 ·89 5-359G., ·.

Awn1nci, M1crowavit: Coffeemalier,
614 4t1-1358

EllA

4•
Pus

.

"

1992 Lumtn1 E.u rosporl 3.4 liter.
72,000rri. 304·675-2228.

31 Fir u r - '

~0~ ~~TillE.?"

If South ruffs the second round of
hearts, he is defeated by the 4-U.rump

Rearrange letten of
0 tour
Krombled words

break. If be draws lnlmps, East-West
will run the hearts when West gels in
with tiie club ace. And if South attacks
dubs early, West will duck one round
and then give his partner a club ruff.
,But Soul)! aoea,n't ruff the second
heart. lutead diseirdinc biJ unawidable diamond loser. Now the cuntract
mates, a third round of hearts being
rded in the dWIIIIl)'.

low to torm fOur words

'.

1 1

rr

_
.....,.,A,...~_T,~~r-t~:~::
5 ·1 16 · 1

I

I

.

_

_

.

HAIWEL

."

•

_
L......I-..L-.L--t-...L-...

pa-.

1believe lhat if you insist in
alWays having your say you will
undoubtedly lose some friends
---- . the- - -.

I

1...,-~,..;..8....,1,...:.....1-TI--r-1-1

BASEII(NT
WATERPROOfiNG
::=::-:::-'-::--::-:--:-~-:::--:-:-~ , I •!Jr&gt;COinditl.ionatlilet!!J'i .guarantoe.
1905 Pontiac Grand Am
Local referen&lt;:os1urn~shed. C81l
Miles, 614·446·8238.
C6t4J 446·0870 Or f6HJ 237 ·
0488 Rogers Wftteiprocif•ng. Es ..
86 '01'1&amp; 442 T· Tops Groy Sliver tabliShod 1975.
like· Naw· One Owner. 20.200
Miles Full Power, Garago Kept 1
COYOfOd. (614)-446-0109
A&amp;J Home lmprolfemanta· room
additions, kitchen' and balh reri)O ·
88 Plymoulh Sundanc:e AS. auto,
deling, instal 11M rePiir wi~a.
..,.. 614·992•5065.
. doc~" porcltes and
r&lt;tOii!&gt;g
90 Nissan Saanza XE , a•r. cru1se. and wtnyl siding. mstall e•tenor
stucco, siONt and brlck. dama~
$4700, 614 ·992·3395.
Sidewalks, lleps and •luck pa1~1 94 Chovrotel CavaiNH. Turquo1se, ing. far eslimate call814 ·992 2 dr .. autO., Blf, S!OfOO CIISCIIO, 9971t.
anti -loO. brakes. POl, now t1ros,
43.735 miles. Exc. cond . SS795.'
Applia- 1'111'11 And S...tc'a: .l.r1
81'4·379·2967.
Name Brandl 0.« :!5 'lUis ~­
parienC.,-All .Work Gu•iantetid.
Autu.laans. 0oal8f w~l arrange liFrench City May1ag, ~14-UIS~
nancmg even if you have. boen
7795.
,I
j
turned down elsewhere. Uplon
Equipment Usod Cars. 304 -4tS8 ·
C&amp;C G8riera1 Home - Main·
1060.
renence - Painli'11l, vinyl tiding,
carpenlry, doors. Windows. baths,
Sale
mobile ltomO ropair anc1 """"· For
tr" eslimlte call Chat, 814-112·79 Ford F250 4WO. 11200. " "·

G Complere
by lillin"
vou

ciuotecl

the chuckle
in the mjuing words
develop lrorn step No. .3 below.

Cloulfltd Sectlan.

r

-·
. ...
'

.
•

.

. ,

SCIIAM-lfTS ANSWERS

Sd.illfl You'H Find In tile

I

..

.

~

Improvements

,.,,,

lhe.
be-

.. ..'
' .

•

Home

:: :·:.:
,.'

·'

SE RVICES

810

'

I

..

wl

t993 Dutchman 32
5th Wheel.
Usod Onco. T.V. VCR Comtto. 24

a

I

1 Bablae' CIOCII. . palo:..,..
2 Olwn'a a1111i •

..., Fut
M Ac1Dr- Jtollll

The final stop in northern New
South Wales was the Glen Bridce Club
in Glen Innes. This wu one of my fa.
write days. I gave two claues, In the
aftemoon and evening. ~h to 50 people &lt;about 40 did both &amp;elisions I . And I
ran a queslion-and-t~nswer jNlriod for
about an hour before dinner. The
members were very responsive, and
we had a most et~!ertalninglime.
The second lessqn was about comCELEBRITY CIPHER
IJillilive bidding. with particular l'lt!fer·
by Lula Campoa
ence to the Law of Total Tridrs. This
caDtyC...,c.z::;:al4lirler.....tromq~ I &amp;lllrt.moul~. . . . . ,._.
deal was solved by about half the dehch
of' '
. .... . _ ........-.... r-.,.'*-E . . . W ·
clal'lt!rs. Against four apadea. Wes~ bep R . W PI D
'UNJNII
v IIFHHDK
gins with two roun... of hearts. How
•
shOuld South plan the play?
' • l '
,. .fr
PRWVJK
EPXUNFI
v RUNIID;
Alter West opens one heart. EaSt applies muimum pressure with the
p X,
NJAD
L NF
UVYD
WOBX
jump to four hearts. One cilnclusion
from the Law of Total T-ricks ii that
JPANWVA
·A V J J N X
with a combined holding of tQ lhlmps,
,,,
you fusuallyl bid to the four-level.
.s N P W D V F.
Now South has a close call. If be
......
doubles. it probably ends the bidding
and l'lt!sults in only plus 100 to NorthPREVIOUS SoLUTION: "About lite Only D&lt;Oillem with suc:ceH .illllat • ~
··~
South. So, South lakes a abot at the . no1 teach you how lo deal wilh failure." - 'rommy Lasorda.
major-suit game. &lt;Note that live clubs •
---~:-:~~-::--:~~~~::-::~-==-· ....,.
can be beaten by a spade lead and later heart underlead by Weal to gel a

buill, All Types, Accessiblefo
Over 10:000 Transmission, AIJD
Oloemual Kit~ 6t4-245-56n ••

1992 Chevr Z-34 Rod, loaded,
law Mileage, Garage Kept, 814 446-7002.

..

- """. "

...

DOWN

·The last was best

IF AN'f'ONE MENTIONS
sUMMER CAMPTO ME
nus VEAR.I'M 60NNA
F«EAK OUT..

•

uo

,_unit

2S - a l l
M llmr.
-.rei (3 wde.)

MY CARD,

Bass boar. ltliler. 40bp motor.
$1 .500. 304-518·2683

1971 layton se(J con rained, .
srove, reJrigator, air conditioner.

1991 CMds Cu11ass Calais, sun root, rfKU delrost, 4 cyl, Sspd, ac.
am-tm cassene S3,300. 30-4·6752949.

... liMy

By Plillllp Alder

New Tirtt. Runs Good. $2,600
a(nlfm
cassene. au. Power moon1o0t.
alarm aysrem, 00.000 miles.
$3100. 61t-742·2125.

._

Opening le~: • A

GIVE YOU

THAT'S Mill

,..otor Homes

tHo Hy'undai Excel Gl.S,

24

2t Femilllne

We.t N111111
t•
Pus
Pus Pus

•

BEANIE BAGLFf!! ;
THe IIANIA8 KIN6 !!

Zl --(poet.)

I

nploaM
'It;;~ a1

Vulllerable: North-South
De8ler: West
s.&amp;lt

11H10 Gnand Am ·2 Door, l.itadod.

flm\11._24&amp;-5465.

2

-=aiiOUP .. ..

81'-'ul

.'

Homage - Datum - Wrung - Female - MANAGE . ::::
Students were discussing the problems of the future. :-_:
'Don't worry about the future." the professor lectured," , • •
until you've learned to MANAGE the present!"
:; · ·

6323.

7t2·1100.

'8111 f·250, automatic, aNding Wind·

ow '" back, 300 6 cyt., ~xcellonl

13850 takes it nome. 614 -9•9 2311 da~s.
11168 GMC 350 Small Olock
S1 , 100 t960 F· t50 $1 ,000 614
2~5-5812

llRYWrll.l

'

Ita~ !nith. repair.
•
Ceihngs te•tured, plaster repair.
Call Torn 304'1175-41118. 20 y. .,.
experience.

Eart·s Home. Mainlenance. vi~l

lcling, roofing. • - lhd ~­
or pain~nt. lf!IIShlng. ""'m
additions. Free Esltmataa. 614..

992·4232.

·•

.

1981 Chevrolet S-10, Dark Blue,

Squara balo;a·. hay ~kot.-$400
up. M-... heyblndt. S1400 up,
dill&lt;l, pl-. &amp; corn pllntora. cu•
tipackefl, cul1ivalors, other
equipment. Howe'• Fatm · Yachin~.-; OH814·288-5944.

1975 Oixift, 2 bedroorrt. new carpet, good COnd. S8.295. 304-675-

Hr. $20 M1n1mum,

- -.

for quick sale, 1350. 304 -773·
9116.
•
'

.......

11 ...... Cell

• AS 2
K Q 71

AJu~m-·bOat WI 3.5hp. ;f;;.
tot m real good shape. Reduqed

790 . CamperS &amp;

20 Unedarned

• • 54 3
., Q 10 t I 7
• Q 10

• s

'

Motors :·
for Salt
'

-:ID45or81--2302.

a

S..llo
a A K 10 t I

'?1100

Auto Pa11s &amp; II
Accessories '•
'
8udge1 Transmissions. Used 1~

1f'!We al aad
,,......._

• A 11 I

1~5 300 4 Tr.ax 2 WD WI
W)nch and Running Boards. Ex·;:;nt Condidon.
614·-...a-

760

• J 10 5 4

7

'

running condiUon, Y-8, P8. PS.
A C , - wt-., S3800. 614 '

1979 Fafd 1 ron flat bOO 1n~ek, low
miles. 304-675·7071.

19 75 Festival 14170 3 bedroom,
2 bath. $6,500. 304-675·2926 or
304-675-2382.

Sawmill. don't
ID 1l"le miM JUSI call

I

qas tanks, one ton !rufk
. radleiHS. loo1 ma1s, etc:.
D • &lt; Aukt, ftpley, WV.' 304,32:!31133or t-800·273-9329.
~

condition, groat work !ruck. h ~ sl

8'x18' TriAJtte Trailer S1,250; 614·
245-11441 I A.M. To tO P.M.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

•

,.._
,, -'TNII,..

EMt

1004 CBR eoo F2, 4200m;, includes helmets, canva1 cover,
et&lt;. Aaking S5.eoo. 304-&amp;7H541

IOEIIIN-

.. , 2
t K I 54

•AKJS4

S2.000. 304-675-1274,

......

..........

720 Trucks for

1 John Deere 160, · 1 Wheal
Horse 11 HP. 2 Club Cadet, 814·
446·9227.

Jef-675-1725.

1081 Honda 250}( , e•~ r:orid .

• J ••

'

Dog &amp; Cal Grooming: , . . _
pric;es, 15yr&amp; experiaou::e. Call for
.,..• . 30-4&gt;875-8831 .

Male W.lker Coon Oog, .2 Years
Old. C:B Equ;pntent, 614·245-5822

510

• 2,

·a

7::-:--:-:~7-~----::-:--1 Nt&gt;
1181 Buick Lel•bra, excettint

14x70 lraUer, $32Smo &amp; depolil
Available June 1.11. 304-e755091 .

new. S 150. 304-

.Cut1as1 CALly. 1nteuwt10na1
•riel. good cond, musr HI. 304875-1870 alter 6:00pm. Mon-Fri.
~SII·SUn. • .
,•

Str-iea. Pick \lour Ownl Cell
CleudeWirllers, 61.._2~5-5121.

Uke

I

Depolit. Asking 1300 Each,

614·379·2720 AFTER 8 PM.

.

.

•

1990 Ford TempO. 1988 N1uan

Senrra·, 1980 Cht'wr Cav1lier, All
Clirs Equ1pped Wllh AC , Au ·
WiU B1 Reedy To Go In 3
tomarlc· Tranamiaaions, Cooks
Shota &amp; Wormad, Now ••••~ .. r
et4·446.0103.

Countr'f' setung, 4 bedroom. 2
bath. living room, aat·in kitchen,
family room, walk in closets. 2 car
garage, 1acra. 304 -882-3326 alter 6pm.

New Homes For Sale
lion Near Completion 3997 Bula ·
ville Pika Can 614·379-2749

.81.tl·441-092S.

31!4·578-41011.

2 Bedroom Tra;ler In Smoll Tra ..r
HOUSE FOR SALE
Park, No Pets And Depo~t &amp; Ref.
BY OWNER
3 Bedroom Home, Excellent Con· erenc8Required, 5t4...C46· 1104.
· dition, New Vinyl Siding, Centr~l
Air, Carport Double Garage With 2 Bedrooms. Clou To Gallipolia,
New Apartment Above. 614 -446·
School, Garage, $325/Mo.,
1774 Home: 614· 446· 0374 Work ~~~~·_!61~4::·4~46-~43~1~4~.- - For Mark Palmer.
Bedroom To Rent In Si'lgla Home
Wante~ : ' Sitter In My Home 12
In
POint
Pleasant.
exc.
cond,
1 112 Miles To Gallipolis. Use
Miles FrOm Gallipolis 50 Hours
Per Week. May ll&lt;ing (I) Child Of good neighborhood. 304· 6 75- Kitchen. living Room, Wuhat &amp;
·
&amp; Dryer. 610-141·1291.
Your Own. Must Be Oependa~e 1000.
With 2 To 4 Children. Ma11 Appll ·
c:ation To: 2775 Slate Route. 141,
Gallipol! s. OH 45631.

3880.
1917 Dodge Cherger, S900 OBO

2· 3. bedrooms, brick , OR. new
windows, carpet, complete new
k1tchen and bath, garage, lull

4-992-6389.

t991 Harley Sportsrer 1 ~ likt
New, .laking $6,800, 14· 448 9355 A!tat 4 P.M .
·

1887 Cadillac Cimrnaron. 6 ely .. t917 WitiJ craft 2011. 200hjt, ~8.
1un roof. very good condit1on, am-tm cass, n prop. 304·8012·
,;..
' ~
82,000 miloa: 13.000. 614 ·D92· . 2807.

Ro-

300 Thru · 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses. Jackson . OH
1-800·537·9528

"""'·

6,

KX80 01rt 81ke t300. 814 ·

Dl' 304-5,23.2528. ~

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

• QJ 7

12tr.

&amp; Ellhaull And uany Othel' New

2-3 bedroom houae, 50x100 lot,
located in Syracuse. appliances
included, call 61.tl-992·5767 ahe-r

basement,

1NI Pl~mouth, hcelleru Cond1 ·
lion Call Attar 5 P.Y . IU -4482103.
tt75lincoln 46.000 Actual llilea
A· I Wltnt, Maroon Int. Set: Tom
Keull , 614-44m7.

car. $1,000. 30oi·773-5284.

c;ardio glide St50, lolclng tlraw~ng
tabfe ISO. IWin size rmnress S20.
304·882·2755.

New Gas Furnaces, New Galvanized Ducr Work. New Hood Fans,

1 bedroom collage, · rJeUerson
Ave. $45,000. 304-675-7482.

u•-

19M telebtil}', make good WOrN

01.

Lots For Sale Gravel Hill Ce merary Cnesnira, S200 per grave
including Corner Smnes aM Perpolual. Care. 614·367-0214

1 112 arory, 4 br., lr., dr., fr.• basement &amp; sun porch, $36,000, call
614-992· 4480.

11116 Honda ATV 250, 2tod. runt
good, S1,500. IIOUSII-1618.

750

loll l'wiiOfl, COCkalial, Grey And

Call Ron Evans. 1 -800' ~7·9528,

310 11ornes for Sale

'114 Ford T-po. • au-1·
1c , left r•ar tail llghr damage,
111.000 milet. seoo oao.
141·2311 MY' or 614 ·114t·2844

12 hetult
a,....&lt; 1 111
14 &amp;tdeoMIIan . 17 .,.., 1D ........
15 lllloiler
....... -

1995 Softail Harley DaWidton,
1.000 · Miles. Same E x1ru,
:=:::::.:=:2....:~-:-:..::::-::::-:--1 $18,500, 61 ...46-~ . '
11711 Caclllac Soollle SSOO,
Two I !MIS 300. 1our. wheeler•. · 4f4
!'="::d::
. 304:::::_·.:675-:.:..1::0112=·- - : - - - - 1 w/25 hr.• ••2 w/20 Jtr., also 8!8
1113 .Oodva Aries, lor ~rlt . rra~er, all e~llenl condiuoo. stfl
$100. 304·5711-2802.
,
all lar S8,500, cal~ ~fore noar.
61.•7•2-3153. I ~
t
1185 Dodge Anea K Car. one
~
~ner, Wall laken cate of $900
614·311-teOII
BQats &amp;

448·0857.

JET

REAL ESTATE

1 g 1 3 - - ~. GrMI
Condition. Allting; S1 .. 614·
367-7.1

~

AKC

AERATION MOTORS
Repe;red, New &amp; Rellui~· ln Stock.

2022.
trict has the following coaching
.AA:S_itiona aYailable for the 1ggs.

Golden--·-.

...._

'11 c-o, 350 - · 11871. · ,.lty - · · 61 ... ~2-

y.e.

AKC
10
mon1h1 old. goad with chlldtan.

614 ·992-3866.

OJlPOrtUnlty baSis.

l he Southern· LoCal Sc::hool Dis-

a~

t21Al--

•• Ti'&lt;lndorbird SC. 1W0 dOOr, 3.1
lllro,
oliiO model IUfbo. PS.
PI, AC. 5 apeed, power seats
and locks, •araat Car: $5200
neg.. 614-~2- 7471 or 614·U9·
2879.

AKC German Shepherd DUPS.
304'675-ee30.
.
'

1&amp; Fl. Camoer Trailer Call After 5
P.M. 61H46-2103. .

210

41 Cllll - - .,.

7304..

_.......

14 HP ~"' ~ing Tractor, b ·
tra Dock I Snow BliM SIIOO; e
AnUque Olk Cha•rs-, $150; fSU·
2&lt;15-9488.

have axpertenc'e and CPR training, S!ilttr.. 614·1192-4065.

···-

I CIIIIIMI

.. ClllllplniM

1U3 - Hooda • - 110.
12,000m•. Exc. c..... :Ml4 · 6~5 ·

710 Auto. tor Slle

mume, .........7.

...,a won.

............
-........
...... ..................
. ..... .....
Sf Cllrua lrull

IO.al . .

S14n Va lley Nu r ~err Schaal.
CnMdtllrl lA ,f 81111·S:30pm AgM
2-tc , Young Schoot Ag• During
Summer. 3 Oaya per Week MIN ·

pollee
hiaiDfy, -

...........

t985 Schult; 14x70, 2 bedroom;
excellent condition, v1nyl aklfling
InCluded, will rent lot, priced re·
ducod. Stt,500, 30-4-773-110!12.

63o

Livestock

1995 141152, 2 bedroom, heat
pump. S14,9115. Call 304·675·
21542 or 30-4'615-7705.

11.000 Mllai, ~- 5 Fou, C~lhlder,
Fuel Injected, 4 Speed, Power
8ralles. AC. Alplno At.IIFM Cas sene, Topper, BedJi"Df, Atumtnum
Toolbox 14,200, s·i-4-4146·6133.
1988 Cnfh'y 112 Ton V-6 Eng•nv.
PS, PB, .Atr, Auto Trans, $5.495,
614·4&gt;06·4225 Call Aftc&lt; 4 P.M.
1989 NIISin lfuck AIC, TopPQr,
4IK M1fes, Runs Gtein 614-4463200E-L
1989 SiYierado. ext cab. 101s al
exns.like rMM. 304-576·2383.

Dairy Cross Calves, l14 ·

Ratea,
For An

•

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27 Yeart E xp, l=fH 'Est. Spacial
In Brick-· 814·367,41813.

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Ton' PU 4.3
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limited OHer. Only $500 down on
new single wide in stoCk.
delivery &amp; letup. Only at
Homes, Nitro, WV 304-

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Tri -Siar Llwetrack Slh Wheel
Trailer 22'•1'. U.OOO; · I ' Galv.
Truck Rack 8225; 13 ft. Buill
Mo-r 81.200. 814·843·

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Conr:trtlon. S2,000 080, 6 14-388·
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19to Dodge Rorn Van B · 250.
72,000 Milts. 16,000, C1n Oo
Seen Ill ; Gallipoh Doily TriburtO,
. Thitd Avenue. Cellip!)lia

Will bolrd horMI, 2!101cro1 10
nolo on. 1150/rno. 30447!1-5150.
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�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

eo..
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·' Vol. 47, NO. 21

'.

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.
·
·
"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

I •

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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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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.
.
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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. ... ~·
'

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.
· •

.•

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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