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Pege10 • The Deily Sentinel

Tu81day, June~l,1916

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Man believes tradeoff can be. m~de in
Ann

Landers

Ann Landers:· Al. we all
know, women shouldn't be forced to
have sex. NOI even married women.
Men have gone to jail for raping
their wives.
I know this will sound inc~ibl y
insensitive, but what is wrong with
·considering sex a marital obligation? There are women who, for
whatever tcason, just don't want to
have sex. Maybe they've grown

tired of il Maybe they never much
cared for it in the fii'SI place'. Reprdlcss, muy of these women are IIIII'·
ried to men who still w11111 sex. Yet if
the man pressures her for sex or
looks elsewhcie, he is the bad guy.
So far as _I know, marriage vows do
not include a vow of celibacy.
Every day. we all have to do
thinss we don't really want to do but
must I4now ihe yard and fix the car.
I don't enjoy it, but it's pan of my
responsibility to keep the household
running. Is it unreasonable of me to
expect my wife to fulfill my sexual ·
needs as part of her duty to keep the
household running? I'm not talking
about anything bizarre or far-out,
Ann, just basic, ordinary sex on a

Eastern Local honor
rolls announced
A list of elementary students in the Simmons. Carrie Wiggins; overall,
Eastern Local School District who Ashley Boyles, Aaron Yost.
Fourth Grade: all A's, Jessica
achieved academic distinction for the
fourth nine weeks' grading period Boyles; overall. Hailee Cline,
Chrissie Gregory, Nathan Grubb,
has been released.
Listed on the honor roll were stu- Steven Hollis, Ryan Kidder, Kassan. dents who made all A's, those who dra Lodwick, Kevin Marcinko, Katie
achieved listirig on the overall hC)ilor ·Robertson, Nicholas Weeks. .
roll by make a grade of B or above
Third Grade: all A's, Briuanf Barin all subjects, and those who made nett; over·.Jl, Adam Dillard, Andy
the academic honor roll by getting a Francis, Jennifer Hayman, Joshua
grade of B or above in all academic Hayman, Katie Hoxsie, Jessica Kehl, .
subjects and a grade of no lower than Bryan Minear, Dusty Murphy, Darren
a C in art, handwriting, music and Scarbrough, Sarah Yost.
physical education.
Chester Elomentary:
Riverview Elementary:
Sixth Grade: all A's, Jonathan
Sixth grade: None
Duffy; Ben Holter, Garrett Karr, Neil
Fifth grade: Overall , Krystal Bak- Simpson; overall, Brandon Bobb,
er, Cyrus Knotts, Ryan Wachter, Holly Broderick. Joshua Marcum.
Chris Wilson.
·
Evan Needs, Janet Ridenour,
Fourth grade: Overall, Emily Jonathan WilL
Brock, Sandra Powell.
Fifth Grade: all A's, Carrie Crow,
Third grade: All A's, Jaime Reel, Sonya Frederick; overall, Joshua
Morgan Weber, Krista White; overall. Basham, Travis ·Batey, Brent BuckChristopher Myers, Casey Smith, ley, Jessica Dillon, Cacy Faulk, Cody
Chris Tucker.
Faulk, Mathew O'Brien, Jennifer
'flippers Plains Elementary:
Thoma, Erin Taylor. Chelsey Wood.
Sixth grade: all A's, Bradley BranFourth Grade: all A's, Brittany
non, Darlene Connolly, Lindsey Hauber, Jonathan Owen; Overall,
Cross, Christopher Lyons, Kimberly Rachel Elliott, Alyssa Holter, Becky ·
Marcinko; Overall, Tamara Bissell, Taylor, Andrea Warner, William
Jeremy Connolly, Tiffany Kidder, Woods; academic, Adam Will.
Timothy Moreland, Stacie Watson,
Tliird Grade: all A's, Derek Baum,
Billie Jo Welsh.
Cody Dill; overall, Ken Amsbary,
Fifth Grade: all A's, Nichol Carrie Elberfeld, Abbie Chevalier,
Honaker, Erica Lemons, · LcAnn Andrea Grueser, Ross Holter, Sara
Marcinko, Thomas Simmons, '!Yler Pore, Chelsea Young.

BEFORE
BUYING A-HEAT PUMP

nesular basis.
I know I speD: for millions of
men. I'd be happy to compromise.
but tbll's hard to do when your partner bas absolutely NO interest in sex
whatsoever. I've tried to talk,to her
and have asked wbat ·she would like
me to do differently. but she just
plain isn't interested.
So wtiy isn't sex conside~ part
of marriage maintenance? She doesn't want sex? Too bad. I don't want
to get up Saturday morning and
clean t!Je storm dnains, but I do it
anyway. I would like to see your
answer in the paper. -- l'rustrated in
New Orleans
Dear New Orlcans: A husband
who compares making love to his'

• •

marit~l ..relations

wife with cleanina tbe 110m1 draW
Delr AM landers: Our·daulhter,
is not a ~fell candidlle for I'OIJIIIIlic: . "J111ie," bas a little boy born ow or
couplin1. I c111 undetsland why your · wedlock. She nef\!Md help from tbe
wife is not v~ mponsive.
• fllher and his fllllily so she could
You view sex as a wife's duty "do it alone." Janie works for a guvinstead of as a shareG ellpfellioa of enunent agency. When she is at
Jove, and that is tlk. I'OQI or the prob- work, she leaves "Junior" with us.
' Jem. She probably feels as if she is
My wife and .J are 60-plus, not in
"servicing" you and gell very little the best of health, nor arc we
out of it.
wealthy. Janie gives us $100 a week
I suggest that you get counseling for about 4S hours of ~y care, but
from a competent sex therapist. It we have Junior more often than that
might work if your wife isn't com- and don't receive a nickel for our
pletely turned off from yean of trouble. When I objected to this
being expected to perfonn whenever setup, I was labeled the family 's
you are in the mood, whether she is " horse,s patoot.";
or not. Too many command perforI realize Junior is a typical 3mances may have discorinected her year-old. but his whining and
·erogenous zone. Good luck.
, demands for constant attention an:

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

Area students receive
AEP Scholarships
· 1Wo Meigs High School grad- ·
uates have been awarded educational scholanhips from Americar\
Electric Power. Dorothy Leifheit
and Cindi Stewart were selected to
receive two of 34 scholarship
awarded to children of AEP'
employees.
Dorothy is the daughter of
Roger Leifheit who works at the
Gavin Power Plant. Cindi'is the
daughter of Gregory Stewart who
is with the Meigs No. 3 I mine,
Southern Ohio Coal Company.'
Dorothy P.lans to pursue a
degree in physical therapy and
work in a rehabilitation facility.
She was a participant in the Governor's Scholars and Regional
Scholar's programs at Ohio University and served as a coordinator
and instructor for regional leader-

ship workshops. She received the
'County Academic Achievement
Award and the Danfot:tb "I Dare
You" Award. She is a member of
the National Honor Society, 4-H
Club, Fellowship of Christian Students, ,nd participated in the
marching band. quiz team, French
Honor Club, and freshman mentor
program at Meigs.
· Cindi will pursue a careerin the
medical field. She participal'ed in
the Governor's Scholars Program at
Ohio University. She is a member
of the National Honor Society, was .
a cheerleader for four years; and
was active in gymnastic~ and
Senior Spirits.
·
The scholarships are $6,000-$1,000 the fiflit year, $2,000 the
second year, and $1 ,500 the third
year.

•

ly chopped
I teaspoon grated lemon or lime
zest
·
2 tablespoons avocado or sesame
oil
I teaspoon black mustard seeds
Peel, and shred cucumbefli, then
place in a bowl. Sprinkle with salt
and toss. Let sit 20-30 mint!tes. Pour
into a strainer, press out liquid and pal
dry with a paper towel. Place yogurt,
cayenne or papri((a and .mint in a
bowl and whisk with a fork 'until
smooth and creamy. Stir in cucumbers. Heat oil· in a small ·pan; add
mustard seeds. Fry until seeds spul. ter and turn gray. Pour fried seeds and
oil into cucumber-yogurt mix and stir
to blend. Refrigerate I -2 hours before
serving.
TOMATO CUCUMBER
SALAD
2 large tomatoes, cut into .large
chunks
2 cucumbers, peeled, seeded and
sliced into one-fourth-inch chunks
one-half Bermuda onion, cut up
I cup black olives, pitted and CUI
in half
one-half cup feta cheese, crumbled
one-fourth cup olive oil
1 tablespoon redc wine vinegar
Salt and freshly ground pepper

Ohio Lottery·

· ·Redsedg«J

drivina me up the wall. I fear lnother six months of this will undo wbllt
several yean of Alcobolk:s AnonymoJJS bas accompliibed. More
important, our'1111lriage is in -jeopardy. I need your help. -- Grandpa in
Mesa, Ariz. · ·
Dear Gramps: Inform Janie she
no longer can depend on you to look
after Junior and ·to' make other
arrangements. No amount of money
is worth the problems you describe:.
Gem of the Day: A road map will
tell you everything you need to
know except how to fold iJ up again.
Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Aaceles,
Calif- 90045

Plck3:

Houston 6-41n
~ 'extra Innings

. 016

Plck4:
5419
Buckeye 5:

Sporta on Page 4
•

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•

a.

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"

. Vol47, NO. 38

35-

Pomeroy-Middlepor"., Ohio, Wedneeday, June 19, 1998

4llecllone,12 .....

A GanMtt Co. Nswtpapec
(

'

Fresh mint, finely minced
Mix tomaloeS, cucumberS, onion
and olives. To~s with oil, vinegar, salt
and pepper. Sprinkle with feta and
mint. Toss lightly and serve. Serves
4.
ASIAN CUCUMBER SALi\D
(The secret. to this recipe is sesame
oiL the dark sort that's sold in most
Asian food sections.)
3 lafge cucumbers, peeled and
seeded
3 scallions
one-fourth cup unsalt~ peanuts ·
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
I tablespoon sesame oil
~
I tablespoon soy sauce
I tablespoon canola or sunflower
oil
one-fourth. teaspoon crushed red
)ll;pper flakes
Salt
I teaspoon sugar
Cut cucumbers into 4-inch
wedges. Sprinkle lightly with .salt and
place in colander willi a plate or bowl
to weigh them down. Allow to drain
a half hour. Make dressing of vinegar,
sesame oil, soy sauce, canola or sunflower oiL ·
'
Add cucumbers and toss. ' ·nkle
with sugar, crushed red pep~, r and ·
peanull. Toss. Allow to sit in the
refrigerator at least one hour before ·
serving. Serves 4.

Py TOM HUNTER

WorkAmerica funds in .securing an Anny offices. in Pomeroy.
named in the suit.
atiomey for a Pomeroy man in FebHe was found guilty on all charges
In the civil suit, the state is seck. · · A non-profit organization operat- ruary .
in the robbery last montb in Meiss · ing the following relief from the
.. ing an educational and job training
The civil suit, filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun, and coun:
·
centc;r_ in Meigs County has been County Common Pleas Court 'lUes- was sentenced to 26 10 SS yean in
- order the immediate removal of
· nllffilll in a ·civil suit concerning day afternoon, relates to the trustees prison.
all .trustees and officefli of
alleged misuse of charitable monies. role in their approval of funding for
Among the defendants in the suit WorkAmerica and appoint a rcceiv~·
· WorkAmerica. Inc .. a non-profit the criminal defense of Brad Robin- are Freedom Road Ministries and ei until successor trilstees are named
· subsidiary of Freedom Road Min- son, Pomeroy.
·
W9rk America founder Walter J. by the Coun.
.. ;is!ries, Inc.: and six trustees of its
· Robinson was indicted on Febru- Robb, and WorkAmerica trustees
: issue a ~rmancnt injunction
board of directors are cited with a ary 14 on two counts of robbery, two Di111nc Snow, Reba Peck, Monika against all the defendanl5, prohibiting
. breach of liduciary duty to a charita- counts of kidnapping, and one count Bennet, Roger Rccb, and Ralph Scar-· them from engaging in WorkAmeri.ble trust, relaled to their approval of of aggravated burglary in the January . mack. James McClain. statutory ca activities or practices.
an expenditure of $2,000 .in 15 robbery of the former Salvation agent for WorkAmcnca, Inc., is also
- order an accurate accounting for
all trust assets which have been in

. · S.ntlnel Newa Staff

'

WorkAmerica trust.ees possession
and control during the time relevant
to the complaint
- detcnninc the defendants personally accountable for the $2,000
check drawn from WorkAmerica
funds to pay for Robinson's attor~~ey,
and order the amount returned to
WorkAmerica.
· Local authorities have received a
number of complaints from people
who used Freedom Road and
WorkAmerica's services and were
dissatisfied with .the quantity and
quality of diose services, according to

COIIFOIIIJ ASSURED.

AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER

Governor signs construction bill
.'

' SIGNS ~ILL - Under the -tchful eye of an Abraham Lincoln
bust, Ohio Gov. George Valnovlch, aeetad, turns to thelaat page
' of the $1.6 billion atata·i:onatructlon budget during ceremonies
Tuesday In Columbus. Wltnnalng the algnlng are, from left, Tam
Browning, state budget director; Stanley Aranolf, praaldent of the
senate; JoAnn Dal!ldaon, apnker of the.houee, a~ Tom John•
aon, chalnMn of the houH finance commlttae- (AP) ....

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Vlli110vich has signed the $I .6
billion state construction bill, giving
the go-ahead to hu~ of projects
around Ohio.
.
The bill, signed Thesday in
· Voinovich's newly restored Statehlluse office, included money for new .
univefliity buildings, state and local
prisons and sp,orts stadillli\S.
· Educ~tion received the 'biggest
share. More than $500 million was
included for colleges and university
projects and $120 million was given
to.help repair the state's public sehool
buildings.
. SchoolNet Plus, the prograin to

place computer work ·stations in
kindergarten through 4th grade classrooms, received $ISO million. It has
been one of Voinovich's priorities:
"SchoolNct Plus will help Ohio's
children be prepared for the hish tech
workplace of the future;" Voinovich
said.
The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction received $269
· milliQII to build a new prison in.Toledo and for other renovations at state
detention centers. The money will
also help pay for more local jails.
Also. included was $80 million for
parks and recreational areas.
While most of the money went to

those projects, much of the debate
over the bill centered on the $38 million set aside for stadium projects in ·
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Columbus and
Akron.
Democrats said Republicans spent ·
too little on school bUildings and too
much on the stadiums.'
Voinovich saidlthe stadiums will ·
create and keep jobs.
·
The governor vetoed two items
that were in the budget bill, including one that would have inscribed the
state motto, "With God, All Things
Arc Possible" on the Statehouse.
Voinovic~. who had suggested

By JIM FREEMAN
"We are trying to operate the village tive session and repon its decision to
Sentinel Newa Staff
. as economically as possible."
Rough!- Which they did.
'
Compensation
for
part-time
In
addition,
Rought
proposed
givCouncil members and Vaughan
BERLIN, Md. (AP) -An elec- socketthat they've been having probemployees
was
among
the
topics.
dising
a
raise
to
the
daytime
dispatcher
were
meeting with Rought this momtrical problem sparked a fire that lems with over the past couple of
cussed at Monday night's meeting of who also serves as the mayor's sec- ing to funher address the subject.
heavily damaged a black church on days," Gabriele said.
- retary. Rought ~d he is not recomIn other business, council memMaryland's Eastern Shore early this
Gabriele said the federal Bureau Pomeroy Village Council.
Police
Chief
Gerald
Rou8ht
met
mending
the
raise
because
of
his
relabers
complained about the appan:nt
. morning. sljtte authorities said. · ·
of Alcohol, To.bacco and Firearms,
with
council
requesting
moving
one
tionship
with
the
dispatcher,
who
is
lack
of
work on potholes in tbevilArson and federal innstigators whic.h has been investigating a series
of three part-time police dispatchers his wife, but because of the increased · lage.
were called to the scene of the blaze of fires at predominantly black
worlcload the daytime dispatcher now
Vaughan explained that workers
at St: John's United Methodist churches in the South, would still to a full-time position.
The move would result in four has-- including processing parking have been busy cutting up trees that
Church in a rural black community investigate the Berlin fire.
·. full-time and two part-time dispatch- tickets and mayor's coun.
fell in the cemetery about two weeks
near Berlin, but state Fire Marshal
The fire was reported about 2:45 ers.
Rought also suggest giving part- ago.
Rocco J. Gabriele said, "it's quite a.m. and put out iii about30 minutes.
Rought said the change would time employees raises above the
Council members also highlightThe blaze damaged the chl!rch's result in bette! dispatching and sched· $4.25 minjmum wage. He pointed ed roads and streets that need ditchevident it's accidental."
"Our preliminary investigation white clapboard main sanctuary and
out that the part-time workers have ing worlc, in particular Pleasant Ridge
indicates it started in the kitchen. It · destroyed an annex, leaving only cin- uling. .
Some council members citing the never received a naise although oth- Road as pointed out by Councilman
appears it S!arted in an electrical der block walls.
added upense of a full-time position er full-time and salaried employees Bill Young.
including health insurance and paid have.
Clerk-treasurer Kathy Hysell
vacations.
Mayor
Frank
Vaughan
suggested
reported
the following balances for
One man killed, one Injured
Said Councilman Larry WehJ:ung: council discuss the mauer in execu- May: general, $34,217.74; safety,

Clues sought in collapse of
~harleston parking garage

By MARK TRUBY
Jlie Herald-Diapatch

9.99o/c APH
.

'

the motto proposal. said the Capital
Square Review and Advisory Board
now will have the final say.
"It .is my sincere belief ,that the
mouo should be on the Statehouse1"
he said. ·
Voinovich also denied a req,uest to
conuibute $500,000 toward the
restoration of a church scfiool building near Toledo. Holy Trinity School,
which is operated by the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Toledo, was set
to receive the llftlney.
But several lawmakers said providing the money may have violated
the separation of fhurch and state.

-

THE HEAT PUMP HEATS, COOLS AND SAV-ES

. "He was very alert, though, and it

$4,017.64; street, $26,356.07;· state
highway,
$13,746.58;
fire,
$27,914.22; cemetery, $14,786.29;
water,
$40,222.23;
sewer,
$46,782.68;
guaranty
meter,
$18,625.21; utility, $17,32S.2 1; fire
. ttuck, no balance; perpetual carecemetery, $7,284.55; cemetery
endowment, $38,11 8.57; police pension, $1,348.40; building fund,
$3,159.03; recreation, $4,837 .89; permissive tax, $3,052.59; law enforcement, $3,425.78; COPS FAST grant,
$627 .39; . FEMA flood grant,
$I 6,944; downtown revitalization,
$87 ,000; totals, $412.290.16.
Also present were. council Prcsident John Musser and council members Geri Waiton, Scott Dillon and
George Wright.

'

Mosquitoes taking bite out of summer
By MITCH.WEISS

A81oclated Preas Writer
It's nOI enough that the cool, wet
spring has kept Ohioans from enjoying the outdoors. Now they have
something else to drive them ·inside
-mosquitoes.
"This is the ·time of year I love sit· ling outside on my front porch," said
Betsy ·Raymond, 43, of Toledo, a
teacher. "But not this year. They
(mosquitoes) arc so aggressive this
year. You can hear them buzzing in
your ear, then you look down and
t!K:re arc three or four of them biting
you at onFe. I've never seen it this
bad."
This has been the worst year for
mosquitoes in a long time, Richard
Berry of the Ohio Health Department .
said Tuesday.
Why?
"Excessive rain - so much so
that the ground became saturated,"

Beny said.
With the lteaw nain, pools of
standing water have sprouted up
everywhere. Mosquitoes lay ·eggs in
water. All kinds of water - l'ro!n bird
baths and roof gutters to the edges of
lakes, rivers 'and sllbms.
"The pools arc laigerthan normal.
Just about every mosquito egg ihat's
out there has hatched," Beny said.
Mosquito eggs usually hatch in .
early spring, then again in late spring.
The cool spring weather delayed the
early eggs from hatching. When the
warm weather finally arrived, all of
the eggs hatched at once.
· "They' came out in such numbers
that everyene .noticed them right .
away. They all came out at once,"
Berry said. •
· The population is large all over
Ohio, Beny said.
'
How large? ·
Officials estimate that Columbus

alone has more than 6 billion masquitoes - more mosquitOes than
people in the world.
Communities have been inundated with complaints by residents about
mosquitoes.
Some communities are using
insecticides in standing water to kill
eggs before they .hatch. Others arc ·
spraying neighborhoods to kill the
ones that are buzzing around in back
yards.
·
Some people have bought insect
~;epellents or foggers at stores to kill
the insects.
"We can 't get the stuff in quick
enough," said Hal Kinder of Defi,
ance's Quality Farm &amp; Fleet store.
"I want to enjoy my back yard
again,~ · Pat Joncs,.S I, oftoledo, said
Tuesday outside a store where he just
bought a fogger he hopes will kill the
pes~y pests.
"I like to barbecue. My wife has

looks like he 's going to pull
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Inspec- through."
tors are searching for clues today at
Nursing supervisor Janet Haught
d!)wntown parking garage where . said McCormick was listed in serious
one man was killed and another was condition. Claude McCormick's famsei;ously injured when a section col- ily members nearly filled the smallish waiting area at CAMC's emerlapsed.
Police identified the worker who gency room Tuesday night hoping he
was:killed Tuesday as F~dy Searls, would feel up to a quick visit.
S7. of Hamlin, a construction workMeanwhile, dozens of construcer for Kanawha Valley Construction tion workers stabilized the concrete
structure, allowing Searls' body to be
and·Erection Co.
About 5:10 p.m., Claude pulled from the rubble about 8:30
McCormick, 52, of Charleston and · p.m.
· "They've had steel workers and
Seafls were working on the top lev. el of the parking garage of the Hunt- engineers up there trying .to assess
ington Banks building at Lee and everything," .said Lt. W.N. Moss of
Dickinson streets in Charleston's the Charleston Police Department.
business district when the accident "You don't want 10 start clearing
things out and have the building fall
occurred, officials said.
the 1wo friends and members of in on yOu.' '
Occupational Safety and . Healt!l
the U'onworkers union were using a ·
crane to guide a slab of concrete into Administration officials were poised
pla~e on the fifth level when a sec- to begin an investigation once worktion • .of steel-reinforced concrete ers clea(Cd the scene.
"The investigation will begin as
app1rently broke loose and fell
through seveJal levels. Searls W\15 soon as recovery is over," said Steve
CJiARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Knudsen said the jail staff has had sex with inmates at the Santa Rib
lrapj.eil in the.liasement under sever- Sowards, an inspector for OSHA.
California prison officials expect. to been alerted'.of the possibility that I ail.
,
al tons of concrete, said Kinsley Sowards said he didn't know if know next weekwhether West Vir-· Bragg may have had the deadl
.
Y dis"There's always a chance in a jail
OSHA had inspected the building pri- ginia ~hild-killer Dale Bragg died of case. Bragg had seemed tU recently situation. This jail had 4,000 prisonNyc~. vice president of the properties
, or to ];oesday.
division for Huntington Banks.
an AIDS-related illness.
but refused all offers of med1cal treat- ers in it, roughly. I do not know that
1
The rush-hour accident drew a
Sgt. John Tabareui of the
,Bragg, 41, was found dead Sun- men.t, he said.
he was always kept separate," he
Chaileston Police Department esti- throtig of gawkcrs who stood along day jn the Santa R ·• · ita JaiJin·
Bragg walked away from the said.
the yellow tape police used to cordon Dublin, Calif., about 17 miles south- · Northern Regional Jail and Cornecmat~ the concrete weighed between
At the Mount Olive Cotrectiorial
off the accident scene. 'lbOse who east ofOiiklahd, Calif. There were no tiona! Facility in Moundsville last Complex in Fayette County, an
25 and 5(}tons.
r.lcCormick, who was stn1ck by were . near · the parking garage' signs of trauma or fouL play, said ·~ugust. He had se~ed 22 Y~~ of a · inmate,who refused to be identified
the c!oncrelc slab and suffered multi- described a tremendous rumble sim- · Alameda County Sheriff's Sat. Jim ltfe sentence for raptng ~ kilhng 7- said . Tuesday at 1~1 five .other
Knudsen.
.
. year-old ~ebecca Bnck~r of inmates had sex-Willi Bragg and ue
ple ipjurics, was ~coYering Thesday ilar to a small earthquake when the
The coroner found problems with O!arleston In 1973.
Mnccrned they mav ha
. ve been l'n'ect,
in ·the intensive care unil of aCfident occurred.
~
,
"
He was captu•-~
Cbaileston Area Medical Center's • 1Huntlaaton Henld·DJ.flatch Bragg's lungs consistent with pneu..., in Hayward, ed with HIV. the virus that causes
wrlten Patricia Maher and Jim mania and. tes~ arc being conduct~ Calif.~ in November and.charged with AIDS.
'·
.
. Gen~ral Division.
to detenrune tf Bragg had AIDS, shooting a poltce officer.
BilfWhyte West Virginia depul}l
"Jic has a broken back and ribs," Roa.l coatributecl to this story, u
Knudsen said.
·
Knudsen .did not Jmow if .Bragg
.
'
his l!rOiher Mike McCormick said. dJcl The Asloclatecl Pna.

a

lnh·t·t•st a ~ Low a~

We Are TRULY The Best Company For our Jo

a garden. But every time we go outside we get eaten alive. They swarm
all over us. We just don 't go in the
back yard anymore."
. jlfosquitoes can spread encephali us- a sometimes fatal disease. But
Beny s;lid there's no need to wony
about infectious diseases now
because disease-carrying·mosquitoes
make their appearance later in the .
summer.
The phone has been ringing off ihe
hook at the Toledo Area Sanitary Distnct from people who want their
yards sprayed. The district has been
receiving more than 100 calls a day.
. "The mosquitoes are really bad,"
sa1d Lee Mitchell, a biologist for district. He said the mosquitoes are
"nice and big and husky."
The agency's 25 full-time workers
and a dozen seasonal . employees
have been working overtime trying to
get a handle on the ·problem.

California officials await test ·results

~

31 9 S. 2ND AVE.
992·4485

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
1·800·516·2932
.
, .
.

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Investigators·say latest Pomeroy Council iiiiiTis personnel matters
church fire ·accidental
'

WereThe Inside~
·,

· Meigs·County Prosecuting Attorney
John Lentes .
"I think it's appropriate that the
Attorney General's office would
come to Meigs County to investigate
an operation such as Freedom Road,
compared to investigations of Anier. ican Legion posts in the county that_
resulted in large fines for the sales of
charitable tips. At least we know in
the cases of the Legion posts, the
money generated from the sales was
being put back into community projects," said Lentes.

Gives mQney to schools, stadiums

SAVING MONEY WILL PUTA·SMILE ON YOUR FACE, TOO! .·
:SIAL

"

State files civil complaint against
WorkAmerica
.

'

"I am amazed, my ~ayments are $50.00
per month and my utiliiy -budget went
down over $60.00 per month. It not only
pays for itself, but even pays me to own it.
I recommend a Carrier to everyone."

•

11-23-31-32-33

AFTER
BUYING AHEAT PUMP

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Recipes ... --~--r--..,-eontlnued from page 8

CINDI STEWART AND DOROTHY LEIFHEIT

.

•

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C?" Bragg

corrections commfssioner, said he
!"as unaware of any health problems
uragg may have had.
Inmates arc not rilutinely tested
for th.e AIDS vi~ in West Virginia
unless they show signs of the illness.
Bragg was never administered an
~~ t=~~ West Virginia, prison omBragg was engaged to be married
h h
w en e ente~ the state pri•on sys. tern at age 19, said his tlrother, James •
·Brags of Wcllsron, Ohio.
·
H
· e said his brother was in good
health and would nOI have 'refused
tneatmenL
·
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_..,~
-~~....:._,:~........ ...,. ~'

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-Commentary

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VWednlld8y,June1t,1888
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.The Daily Sentinel local traffickers are loved in Mexico
'

'Esttz6t'isfldin1.948
111 CO\A't Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614--1192·2156 • Fu:: 992·2157

.!lr
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G-ral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

•

.

to
lllitn 3011 woi.l..
.,.
..,..,
lo-'1..:::.l»olgMd-lncl-- _ , . , . , _ - lw. No _,..., .
""' , . pu-. ..._ · - ,. "' IIOod ,..,..
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'By JKk
end Mlchrrl Blnllwln

II» «1/tor otY - -· TMI' • - I» IHO

AU ,.,_

add: "'"" IOuw, _. ~·wltflw.

:What they are ·saying
elsewhere around Ohio

. CULIACAN, Mexico -- In this
l"'mote region along Mexico's Pacif,ic coast, the most popular local fig. ure~ .aren't albletes, entertainers or
pollhcalleadcr; They're drug dealers
-- who are makil!l mlilions of pesos
smunling narcotics into the United
states.
The drug dealers' popularity
among the local carnpesinos -- ot
peasants -- has become one of the
·major roadblocks for the Mexican
-government in its drive to bring
these drug lords to justice.
Evidence can be foutld at a well1attended shrine in this small city,
which sits in a region that's long been.
a haven for drug smugglers. The
small blue chapel, bililt by popular
demand in 1983 against the wishes of
· the Catholic church, is home to a
plaster bust of a mustachioed thief in
a white cowboy shin.
His name is Jesus Mal verde -- a
highwayman, a common criminal
and a hero to the campesinos.
According to legend, Malverde was

a Mexican Robin Hood, who took
from the rich and gave to the poor
until be was hanged in 1909 by Mexican authorities.

· --...l.'_

_.....;,.
· ------

By Jack Ander.son·

and
Mlchaei-IJ/nsteln
__,.......;...__

~·---...;........::...;...

Not long after his death, local
peasants began ascribing miracles to
Malverde: The bknd saw, the deaf
heard and the lame walked. Busts
were. made of him and placed on
wooden platforms, and the people
streamed to the 'shrine with prayers
and requests for miracles, offering
gifts in return. The unending traffic
caused a local movement to build tbe
more permanent shrine.in 1983.
•• He is a saint to these people
because he was one of them," said a
local Catholic priest, who asked not
to be named. "We think it's a terri-.
ble injustlce to true (Cat)Jollc) saints,
but nothing we have done seems to
stop the flow of people coming

He built roads, the priest said, and
.
.
I
lr!Jtcad of mentioning Malverde brought electricity to outlying areas.

here ...

by name, most locals simply say they
are going to pray to "EI Nan:osanton, "the '"Big Narco Saint." Among
the biuest favor-seekers over the
yean have been tbe local drug traf.
fackers. The suppjicants include fanners, who grow marijuana and opium
in the nearby mountains aDd come to
the shrine to ask far good weather for
their crops.
·
It also includes "padrinos." or
godfathers, like the now-imprisoned/
Rafael Caro Quintero, wbo used to
come here regularly for good luck.
Aslting the same priest about Caro
Quintero, who was convicted of torturing and murdering a U.S. Dnig ·
Enforcement Administration agent,
produces more evidence of the local
stature enjoyed by the drug lords.
The priest would not defend how
Caro.Quintero earned his money, nor
did he deny that the .godfather was
responsiple for shoot-outs and deaths
in Culiacan. Yet he took great pains
to point out the good things that Caro
Quinrero did with his ill-gotten gains.

By the Associated Prns

E~cerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest. from Ohio news-

papers:
Dayton Dally News, J.une 17
The debate abqut Internet censorship can be said to come down to this:
.For purposes of regulation, is the Internet more like broadcast television or
more like the print media?
' The Internet has a great deal more in common with the print 111edia:
It is inore controllable by the consumer, and government does not have
·a role in picking the providers of information.
, If people on the Internet can be prosecuted for distributing adult mater:
·1a1 that might find its way into the hands of children, then the Internet is being
·treated hke broadcast television, rather than the print media.
· A panel of federal judges said last week that this makes no sense. It struck
down portions of the Communications ~ncy Act
.
This is no tragedy for parents who want to shield their children from
·pornography. The development of software packages that do that·is a thriv·ing industry. They may ne.ver be a fuJi, perfect solution, but neither will any'thing else. .
·
The Lima News, June 16
·. E~cuses . from President Clinton's panisans about the growing Jist of
lldmJDtStrabon scandals keep getting weaker.
· When Democratic presidential candidate Jerry Brt)wn, during the 1992
primary race, pointed out Cllntort's questionable Whitewarer dealings, he was
accused of engaging in pure politics.
Now that three of Bill Clinton's Arkansas associates face jail time for using
a savings and loan as a piggy bank, administration defenders have taken a
new tack. Indiscretions were made, tbey now admit, but there is no smoking gun tying Clinton to any illegalities:
The latest discoveries -that Clintonites misused the FBI to harass White
House travel. office employees and to create an "enemies list" .o f prominent
Republicans - has ·taken the excuse-making to a ne)Y level of absurdity.
The Clinton administration can 'fbe faulted, you see, because it was run
so poorly during its first two years. Bumbling Bill's minions were behind
the curve early on, but don't worry, that's all behind them now.
Middletown Journal, Jun.e II
, June 19 is the day wben the Middlelown area's former congressman and
state senator, Donald Lqkens, will learn whether he will go to prison.
Lukens was convicted of accepting bribes from owners of a local trade
school during his last year in Congress.
.
; Last week, Lukens' attorney, Harvey Volzer, asked U.S. District Coun
Judge Gladys Kessler for leniency for his client:
It's clear that Lukens, 65, is a humbled, very ill man. That was a major
reason we did not favor retrying Lukens aftei the jury in his first bribery tri·
al in 1995 deadlocked, and it's the reason we don't favor sending. Lukens
(o prisbn now.
As we said in October 1995, there is no punishment that can be dealt to
Buz Lukens that can match the "prison"- fult.of broken dreams and lost
gpportunities - that he resides in now.

Some of the money was spent on
jpublic buildings, and a lot was given .
to the Cllholic church.
·
One hl&amp;h-rank.ing "Mexican government official explains that drug
money often buys silence among the
locals. It's a system that helps the
rdrug lords elude capture .. wliile
•keeping peasants dependent on w!J.at
'is often the only localsource. of jo!'s
and income.
'• Do you think these people weep
about what drugs are doing to Alliericons?" this official asked. "No,
many see tliese drug ttaffickers as'-- ·
yes, using illicit means -- robbing
from the rich of tbe United States.to
give back to thC poor here in Mexico. The campesinos think Americans
have more money than they need, a¢
if their pampered and spoiled children·want to buy cocaine, why should
they not benefit?"
Visitors to nearby Guarnuchilito1 a
rural village that is the home b"F of
Amado Carrillo Fuentes, are u_-.ikbly to hear an ill word spoken about
the man who has become the No. I
drug trafficker in Me~ico.
Carrillo has come to tie known as
"'the Lord of the Skies" because of ·
his use of large airplanes to transport
cocaine from Colombia. Where drug
shipments were once measured in
pounds, Jhey are now measured in
tons.

tiE't', iF TMeRie 3~t.r·t

e~IJGtll ~1.1~-~Gt

R!of'Le

'nle t.J, Tlli$ W""''T VIDRK !

r

6-13-96

•

Carrillo has been connected to
hundreds of murders in Mexico and
the United States. Yet that 'doesn-'t
" seem to bother·tbe town priest, the
Rev. Pedro Coronado, who had this
to say to an outsider: " He and his
family are good, quiet Christian peepie, just like anyone else here/'
. Among other things, Carrillo's mon'
,ey has paid for the local church. :
It should come as no surprise that
Jthe drug dealers have grown in local
tprestige as their profits and influen~e
:have risen over the last decade. Mex. ico has now beq&gt;me the transshipment point for up to 70 percent of all
· illegal narcotics that enter the Unit.ed States each. year. And with the
close cooperation of the campesinos
of Mexico, those numbers show no
signs of.4iminishing.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror Unile(f
Feature Syndi(llte, Inc.

Clinton ec·h oes Quayle's sentiments
By Joseph Perklne

Quayle's message four years . ago. ther fiom the truth. f'or by. vinually patently .distoned portrait of single
.
My old boss, Dan Quayle, was in They depicted his speech as an attack every socioeconomic measure, fam- motherhood. For most single mOJl!S
town this week to speak to the City · on the country's 14 million unmarried ilies in which both mom and·dad are in America are not rich TV personalClub of San Diego, a group described
living under the satne roof, raising ities, like the fictional Murphy
·their children, are vastly superior to Brown. Most true-to-life single
as "centrist" on the political spectrum . Quayle recalled that the last
families headed by an unmarried moms have a devil of a time making
time he appeared before a. centrist moins. But acknowledgement of the mom.
It without the suJlllon of a hll.jlband . .
group here in California his remarks vital role fathers play in raising chilIndeed, one of every three families
Similarly, lawmakers in Washing~
made front-page news throughout the dren-- not just economically, but also headed by a single mom is poor, com- ton are politically irresponsible when
country.
psychologically and emotionally -- is pared to only one in 20 two-parent they enshrine policies that discourage
He was referring, of course, to his not to denigrate single moms.
families that fall below the poveny or penalize marriage and actually
1992 '"Murphy Brown" speech,
For there are many single moms line. To put this in perspechve, chil- reward single motherhood. The most .
which he delivered·to the Common- among the 14 million who are exem- dren raised in families headed by a obvioUs ex.ample, o.f course. is our
:..•
.
wealth Club in Los Angeles. The for- plary parents, who would like noth- single .mom are 650 percent likelier welfare system, which provides gen.
•
mer vice president questioned aloud· ing more than to have a loving, sup- to be poor than kids growing up in erouo benefits to poor mothers pro:The (Cievelaad) Plain Dealer, June 14
.
whether the sitcom character was a portive husband to help them bring families with both mom and dad.
;: The boys are going to Jet tbe owner of the Cincinnati Reds sit in her box
vided that they do not marry the
good role model for America's youth, up their kids. Indeed, Quayle noted
That's not all, Children in single- fathers of their babies.
~t Riverfront Sl8dium to watch her team. And she can sit in her office at the
inasmuch as she made a "lifestyle that both his grandmother and his sis- mother families are 200 to 300 per~dium whenever she wants. Isn't that generous of them?
·
The mo~t confounding paradox of
'! It seems that as long as Marge Schott is sitting off by herself, the boys choice:· to bear a baby ·out of wed- ter were single moms for a time. And cent likelier to have, emotional or the past three decades is how this
Jock.
his Murphy Brown remarks were behavior.al problems, 1according to a nation could spend so many trillions
~an tolerate her.
In the days that followed that now- hardly meant to offend them or any survey by th~ Nationai Center for of dollars to root out povcny and
:: Schott, you see, isn 'tlike her peers in the ranks of major league baseball
famous
speech, the veep was flay_ed other single moms.
~wnership. She's rough around the edges. She says unpopular and SOIJl,e·
Health Statistics. They also are like- pathology with so little to sbow for ·
by
liberals
from
Hollywood
to
WashBut
the
custodians
of
our
popular
limes spectacularly ignorant things, which 90 percent of the public ignore
lier to drop out of high school; to it. Well, Dan Quayle provided the
ington for picking on single· moms. culture·and the architects of our pub- become teen-age parents them5elves, explanation four years ago and Amer-.
Jlompletely and the J"SI marvel,at for their unrestrained wackiness~
Quayle remembers that Bill Clinton, lie policy have been loath to concede to use drugs and to sink into crime. ica was not ready for it. ·
-;; The boys had the grace ·to let Schott give up control ·of the team, after
in panicular, was criti~al of his Mur- the .problems and pathologies often
That is not say that every child
iJssuring her that if she resisted they would simply rip it away from her. But
Buttoday, the majority of Ameri-·
phy
Brown
speech.
Now,
says
the
associated
with
single
.motherhood.
il's hand not to wish that she had fought them. Major league baseball may
raised by a single mom will be both cans are inclined to agree with the·
lie exempt from antitrust Jaws, but it should~ 't be exempt fiom the First former vice president, "Clinton gives They also have been unwilli~g to poor and pathological. But clearly, former vice president. They see clearthe same speech.''
acknowledge the clear advantage the chances are far greater than if ly . the ravaging effects of Jamily'
.mendment.
Quayle's remarks were timely, that two-parent families have over those children were raised by both breakdown. They realize now that
. coming on the ev~ of Father's Day. · one-parent families.
their mom and dad. So this has impli- ·America's children need not only
For no vice president (or president,
So a fiction developed in both cations for both Hollywood and their moms at home, but also their.
for tha_t matter)' has done more to Hollywood and Washington that all Washington.
dads.
raise the nation's consciousness about families are crealed equal. That one
The entertainment industry is
Joseph Perkins is a c!llumnlsl ,
the deleterious consequences of sin- .family structu~ · is just tis good as soc Hilly irresponsible when it blithegle motherhood and father absence. another. But while thi~ notipn may be ly_airs television shows that paint a for The San Diego Union·Tribune.
I
The liberals deliberately. skewed politically correct, it could not be fur-

Joseph Perkins ,
I

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Berry•s ·World

l :

Fa.uziya ·Kasinga's road to asylum
By Sara Eckel

•

That's because the counter-terrorism
bill that President Clinton signed last
May grants authority to low-level
immigration officers to tum away

Now that Fauziya Kasinga has
been granted political asylum, it
might seem that the United Stares has
adopted a more enlightened .stance
toward tbe problem of gender-based
·
,
-'--"'U!'....,.._....,.u.K&amp;--persecution.
,_,
In some ways, it has. The Affican such petitioners at the airport. Asyreen-ager who fled ber native Togo to lum seekers can be asked to present
escape a tribal practice known as ·their entire case jmmediately upon
femille genital mutilation is the ftrst arrival, without a lawyer and without
person to be granted asyll!m on these the·right to an appeal.
grounds. Two years ago, the Immi·· Now there's more trouble•for the
gration and Naturalization 'Service victims of persecution. The imtniofficially recognized gender-related , gration bills passed by the House and
crimes -- such as domestic violence,. Senate have limited the amoudt of
rape and ·fGM -- as grounds for asy- time a refugee has' to apply for asy-'
lum. On June 13, ·they proved that lum. The House version would give
IIley meant it.
asylum seekers 180 days to file a for' Unfoitunately, at the same time mal. petition; the Senate bill would
that the United States has recognized give them a year.
the validity of gender-based asylum
. That might not sound lilce a big
claims, it has also made it more dif- deal, but anyone who has spent time
ficult for such claims to be heard.
with the victims of persecution
If Fauziya Kasinga had arrived on knows that it is. "PCORfc who are true'
U.S. shores today; sbe misht very refuiees are completely uaumawell have been sent back to Togo: tized," says Josh Bernstein at the

Slfl'a Eclce/

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C 1998 by NEA. Inc ·
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WHO IS 'RESPONSIBLE FOR THOSE
FBI FILE;S BEING AT THE WHITE
HOUSE?
'

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National Immigration Law Center.
"They've been tonured, beaten
humilialed. If you're coming fro~
that kind of treatment you are not.
going to trust authority." Indeed, the
Cent~r 'for Torture Victims says that
it takes anywhere from 14 to 21
months for such victims to be able to
state their case coherently.
Women who- have been the victims of sex crimes are particularly
slow to make their claims, says Deborah Anker of the Women's Refugee
Project at Harvard Law School. \
'.'This is sucli an issue of personal shame," says Anker. "That this·is
not their fauh and.could possibly be
construed as a human-rights violation
has not occurred to them/' •
.•
These problems are compounded
by the fact that, due to new .conaressional re'ulptiilns, there are fewer
Jl!'O~essionals available to help the
vtcUms of political penccution. "It
could take six months just to find a
lawyer," says Bernstein.
Last year Congress )l8Sied a mea-:.

,.1

Wedn11dly, June 1t, 1888

Ponwoy • Mlddl1part, 01*'

.. Rain expected to·end Republicans near compromise on health bill
across Ohi~ tonight and
•ae everyone
By The Alta lllh d Pn II
· ., The skies will stilt to clear ·over
,Ohio and the rain should came to an
~nd tonight
- An appi-oachina hiah preuure
system will brina drier air to the Slate
on Thursday, the National Weather
• Service said. Highs will be mostly in
• the 80s.
. Halvy downpours Tuesday nisht
. :and early today caused some minor
, llooding in central and east central
•.Ohi~. Parts of Hocking County
necetved as much as 3 inches.
The record-hish temperalwe for
..ibis dare at the Columbus weathei
, ~tation WIIS 9S deps in 1933 while
the rec~ low WIIS 47 in 1959. Sun·
. set tonight will be at 9:03 p.m. and
~unrise Thursday at6:03 a.m.
. :\Cf'OIIS' the Jllltion ·
, Rain fell from Washington, D.C.,
lo New York and in Texas and South
· pakota this morning, while a tropical
, ~torm made its way up the Carolina
coast. .
Troptcal Storm Arthur was center
: ~outhwest of Wilminston; N.C. and
movmg slowly north toward land.
The National Weather Service post: ed . a tropical storm warning fiom
Edtsto Beach to Cape Loolc:out, N.C.,
• and a storm watch was in effect from

IICith of Clpo Lookout to the North
Carolina-Vqinia line.
.The 1110n11 - CXpec:aed to drop u
much u 5 inches of rain and blow 40
mph winds.'
Thundentorms were reponed e~r­
Jy this morning ia Pon Worth, Teua,
and Rapid City, S.D., wbile nin fell
in New Ylft, Philadelphia and Williington, D.C., later in the mortiina.
Scattered showers lind thunderstorms
forecast in muclt of the
countty. One to 2 inches of nin wu
possibJe in southern Florida. and
across the Oulf Coast. the Great
Lakes reJion and New Enlland.
In Michisan, flood waminas
remained in effect tcxqy for stretches of the Cass, Flint, llttabawassee
and Raisin rivers after several inches of nin. At least 3 inches of rain fell
Tuesday in Detroit, and a man
drowned when he drove his car
through a flooded parkiiiJ lot into a
pond.
In Maryland, storms dumped
more than 3 inches of warer in one
hour, causing the derailment of a 44car freight train. No one was hun.
The nation's hot spot Tuesday was
Goody!*, Ariz., at l17 degrees. The
coldest temperature in the Lower 48
was 23 degrees in Bums, Ore.

were

:Joday's weather forecast
'

. Southeastern Ohio
Today... Partly cloudy. A chance of
•showers and thunderstorms. High in
; the mid 80s. Southwest windS to 10
· mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
· · Tonight... Panly cloudy with a
·chance of showers and thunder. Storms. Low in the lower 60s. Light
southwest wind. Chance of rain 40
percent.
·· Thursday... Pan!y cloudy. A chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the

morning. Hish in the mid 80s.
Cbance of rain 30 percent
l'!,.te.nded roreeut...
Friday... Fair and warm. Lows 60
to 65. Highs in the 80s.
Saturday... Fair and warm. Lows
60 to 65. Highs in the 80s to around
90 south. •
Sunday... Partly sunny· and very
warm. Lows upper 60s to lower 70s.
Highs around 90.

Today's livestock ·report
, COLUMBUS (AJ') - IndianaPrkes hm Tb.e Producers
Ohio direct hog prices at selected Livestock Assoc:ladon:
tluying points Wednesday by the
Cattle: sready to 2.00 higher.
· tJ.S. Department of Agriculture MarSlaughter sreers: choice 57.00'ket News:
6S.50; select52.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 56.00· Barrows and gilts: 1.00, a few
1.50 lower; demand light on a mod· 63.50; select 51.00-58.00.
erate movement.
Cows: uneven, 2.00 lower to 2.00
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 Jbs. 54.00- higher; all cows 40.00 and down.
5S.50, few 53.50 and 56.00 early;
Bulls: steady; all bulls 45.50 and
plants' 55.00-56.50.
down.
•
Veal calves: 10.00 higher; choice
· U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 46.5053.50.
190.00 and down.
·
Sows: steady to SO cents higher.
Sheep and lambs: un~ven, 3.00
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 43.00- - Jower..to 1.00 higher; choice wools
45.50; S00-650 lbs. 45 .00-50.00, few 90.00-!06.50; choice clips 89.00107 .00; feeder lambs 90.00 and
50.50.
· Boars: 35.00-39.00.
down; aged sheep 29.50 and down.
· Estimated receipts: 36,000.

.' '

•
~ure that denied Legal Services fund; :

.tng to any organization that provides ~
!counsel to anyone who is not a legal •
'resident of tbe United States. As •a :resltlt, the National Immigration Law ;
Center lost a third of its funding. The •
National Women's Refugee Projcci :
lost 40 peroent and was forced to Jay :
off a third of its staff. The Refugee :
Project has also drastically reduced ·
its caseload.
"We tum away excellent cases all
the time," says Anker.
.
, ·• Asylum pleas should be judged on
their own merits. Not on the refugee's
ability to secure a lawyer, meet a
bogus deadline, or be an expert iri ,
U.S. immigration Jaw the minute she ;
hits American soil.
.· :
The petltioners should be judged :
by their chpms, not their resources. :
Sara Eckel is a syndicatecl ' •
writer ror NeWipaper EnterpriR · :
Auoclalion.
.
. . :
Send COiilnMDCI to the aiilho~ :
Ill care of lb1a DeWIJIIlper or ~en( •
her e-maU at saraeumaol.com.
'
:l

and the poor.
The tempoi•Y "demoestntion"
project idea iJ a cein4*aailc bclween
House Republians, wbn wanted the
available iiiii!W!i•1y to
everyooe, and tbe White HOllie.
The issue now is how to design it
to include cnouah people to make the
experiment leJitirnale and ensure, u
Clinton wants, "that it's not so
expansive that it would just distort the
other proarams that are already in
place," laid Senate Majority Leader
Trent Lott, R-Miss.
A proposal by Republicans Tues·
day would cover the self-employed
and employers with I 00 or fewer
workers, slllltins next January, said
Sen. Don Nickles of Oklahoma, the

Republicaa whip. To eltpllnd coverto
after three yean.
Coqma would have to vote for it.
While this offer mlarpa the inl·
till COVCflle from an -tier GOP
propoul - which had limiled the
small buJinesses to lhose with SO
employees or fewer- it also puts the
onus 011 Conaress to explllld it to
everyone. The earlier offer made
expansion automatic unless Congress ltoppcd it.
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, [)..S.D., said the new offer
"was another indiclllion that we are
getting closer."
· " We have a real opportunity in the
next day or so to reach an qreement
with the Clinton administration" on
the bill, said House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, who simultaneously criticized some senaton.
"It is time for liberals, particularly in the Senate, to get out of the way
and allow the American people to
have guaranleed portability ... to
allow small businesses and the selfemployed to have a c.hance to provide
a lower-cost health insurance program that will truly belp people get
coverage," he said.

Local briefs---.
Post office robbery probed
The Athens County Sheriffs Office and inspectors from the Postal .
Service area are see!dng a man who robbed the Torch Post OfficdGcin·
eral Store Tuesday morning.
The robber enrered the store around 11 :II a.m. and repeatedly struck
posunistreSs Evelyn Sanders, 65, with an iron bar. Sbe was transported
to Carnden,.Ciarlt Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., where sbe
was treated.
·
The suspect is described as a slim-built white male between theoages
of 16 and 22, around S-foot tall with dark hair ani! a pencil mustache.
He was wearing blue jeans, a white T-shin and a red ball cap.
According to informatlon from the sheriff's department, the suspect
' may be in the Coolville!I'uppers Plains area.
It is undetermined what, if anything, the suspect may have taken
from the post office or store.
_ ... _
Anyone with information on the robbery is asked to call the Athens
County Sheriff's Office at 1-614.-593-6633.
·

, MYRTI..E BEACH. S.C: (AP)Tropiclil Storm Arth~r crept up the
~outh Carolina coast; dumping heavy
rain and blowing high wind off the
ooast of beach reson towns.
The National Weather Service
upgraded the depression to a storm
about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday as sustained wind increased from 35 mph
to40mph.
,' At 5 a.m. Arthur's center was
about 120 miles southwest of Wilmi,ngton, N.C. and moving nonh at
about I 0 mph, the weather service
said.
· A tropical storm warning was
posted from Edisto Beach to Cape
~okout, N.C., and a storm watch
was in effect from nonh of Cape
Lookout to the North Carolina· Virginia border. ·
Up to 4 inches of rain had fallen
off the South Carolina coast by 5:40
a.m., forecasters said.
' Earlier, tourists were asking officials if they should flee.the beacheS.

'

Vandals target old courf~ouse~
The old Meigs County Courthouse at Chester was one of two build·
ings targeted by vandals prior to Tuesday evening, according to a Meigs
County Sheriff's repon.
According to a report by Erma·Cleland, Chesler, several palles of
glass were broken out of the old building. In addition, the door knob
was knocked off the Daughters of tbe American Revolution lodge in
Chester.
In an unrelated repon, Mary Beth Mussar of Racine reported Tuesday that a five-person tent had been moved during the day and damaged on its top.

Man cited for insecure load
A Racine woman's car received moderate damage Tuesday afternoon when it was struck by a chair falling from a passing vehicle.
Betty Willis was westbound on state Route 124 when the chair fell
from a 1985 Dodge pickup truck, driven by Rodney Grueser of Middleport. and into the path of her 1987 Buick, according to a Meigs
County Sheriff's report.
·

WASHINGTON (AP) - As the
FBI launches ~ investigation into
White House requests for hundreds of
background files, the administration
today named a former Army counterintelligence specialist to oversee
the handling of such sensitive documents.
Republicans are already crying
foul over the FBI investigation, questioning whether the probe ordefed by
Attorney General Janet Reno will be
truly independent The GOP pushed·
ahead with its own congressional
investigation of the mishandling of
·personnel documents by White
House officials.
When Whitewater special prosecutor Kenneth Starr srepped out of
the files case late Tuesday, .Reno
ordered tbe FBI back in. And this
morning, White House counsel Jack
Quinn announced that internal security matters would be tightened and

Car strikes·house in Pomf#roy
No injuries were reported when a car struck a bouse on West Locust
Street in Pomeroy Thesday evening, according to Pomeroy village
police chief Gemld Rought.
The accideni occurred at 6:34 p.m. when a parked 1979 Oldsmobile, owned by L!sa Lilley, Pomeroy, was knocked out of gear by Lilley's 5-year-old daughter. The car then rolled forward, striking a home
owned by Lennie VanMeter at 104 West Locust Street.
Danlage to the front of the vehicle was light. A porch post was damaged on the house. The vehicle was later towed from the scene.
Lilley was cited for failure to show proof of insurance.

M
•
EMS
I
11
IJ
~~k:~e:::::a~rs~~.e!~~ - . e1gs
ogs
ca s
"I'm telling them no, but they

Tommy Harrison, Horry County
. emergency prepaned~ss director.
Jack Beven, a National Hurricane
Center mereorologist, said: "At the
present time, there's very little chance
this system will develop destructive
winds."
The Atlantic \lurricane season
bega11 June 1 and runs through
November.

Hospital news
. Ve1el'lllli Memorial
· Tuesday admissions - none.
Thesday discharges - none.
HOlzer Medical Ceater
Dlscharaes June 1g - John
Cahoon.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dosslemyer, daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. James McMillin, daughter,
Vmton; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pierce,
son, Langsville.
· '
(Published with permission)

The Daily Sentinel
Published every

!'ftem~n.

Stocks.

Mo•dly Ehrouah

Friday, Ill C.un So., Pomeroy, Ohio, by ohe
Ohio v.ney.Publitlllna c...,..y/Ganneu c..•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2tS6. Second
'~I ... pos.... pol~. Pomeroy, Ohio.

Am Ele Power ......................~ •••40
Akzo ••••••••••••..•••••••••.••••.•.•••59 1/2.

Alhlll~

011 .......................38 318
ATIT ••••:.............................12 718

~.

The AJaoclllled p..,~ arid ohe Ohio
New.,aper Assoclllion.

Blnk OM ...........................36 111
Bob Evan• .........................15 111
a~w.,.,..,
.40
CMmi)lon IM ••••••••.••••••••••••••••18
Chllnnll'!ll Shop ................7 1118

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

'POSTMASTBRr Send address conecdona to
"'" Dally Sendnel, Ill Coun S•. """"""'·
Ohio4l769.
i
SUBSCRIPTION IATI!8

subtcrlption by mall permitted Ia areas

t-

.....,. ..... oam...moelsmitllllo.
MAILIVISCIIIPTIONS

MlfiiCeooilr

t1Woeb................................................. m .30
26Woeb......................................,.......... S53.1l
52Woeb......... ,,,.,,,,,.,,..........................$10S.S6

--Notpc.oitiJ

13 \Veeta..........................:......................$29.2S
26 Woeb................................................. $56.61

Teaford reunl!ID set
The annual 27111 reunion of the
Teaford family will be beld Slturday,
at-Star Mill Park in Racine. Dinner
will be at noon. Family members are
to take articles for an auction and
door prizes.

a ..................................ee112

SINGLE COPY HICK
Daily .............................,...................... 35 Cents

'

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, by Rep . .
John Carey (R-Wellston) and Jeff
Fowler,(D-Gallipolis), Bob Smiddie,
organizer, announced today.

Gooctr-" TaR ..................47111
K-m~~rt ...............................13112

One Year ............................................... $104.00

No

Meigs announcements

City Holdng ............................23
F.,_l Mo(lul...................18 718

.,One WeekBy.................................................
Conieror- - · $2.j)O
lilno Monill ..... ...................:....................... $8.10

Subtcriben not desirl111 10 pay die carrier .-y
rtm.lt in ldvuce direct to The llllily Sentinel
OP alhnle., atx or 12 tnonch bMia. Credit wm be:
JIVen Cllriereadl--

Units of the Meigs County Emer- Richard DeMoss, VMH;
gency Medical Service recorded II
5:31 p.m.. volunreer fire departcalls for assistanC!I Thesday includ- ment and squad, motor-vehicle acciing one transfer call. Units respond- dent on state Route 143, Sharon
Wright and Tammy Wright, VMH.
ing included:
RUTLAND
MIDDLEPORT
4:21 p.m., New Lima Road, Rick
7:12 a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
Center; Teresa Byer, Holzer Medical Marshall, VMH;
· 10:18 p.mc, Jones Road, Betty
Center.
Caldwell, O'Bieness Memorial HosPOMEROY
I :26 a.m., Rose Hill, Carl Dill, pital. .
SYRACUSE
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
12:22 p.m., Stover Road, Bernard
3:12a.m., Country Mobile Home
•
Neutzling,
PVH.
Park, Darwin, Tommie McChristian,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
7:59p.m., state Route 7, William
2:47 p.m., High Street, Jack
Carleton, VMH.
Lyons, refused treatment;
4:18 p.m., Willow Creek R~.

Sociallo be held
Ice cream social will be held Friday night at the Bashan firehouse,
beginning at .5 p.m. Sandwiches, pie,
beverages and 12 flavors of ice
cream will be served. Entenainment
will ~ pro,~;ided by "Specks of Blue
Grass."
·
·

...._

Llil1dl End ...........................2S 3/.C
umtted Inc......... ~ ...............21 518
Peo~n Bl...corp.•........••.,...... 23
91t1o Valley Bank..............32 112
OM Yalley ................................34

-·-·-

'

Lott said another question to blo
resolved is coverage for mental iJJ:ness. Senato11 seeking equal treat&gt;ment of physical and mental illnes&amp;
have lilready compromised, agrceina
to Jet insurance companies impost
higher co-payments and deduclibles
for ·mental care. But they want the
language in the health insurance bill.
Sen. Pete Domcnici, R·N.M., a prime
backer, said it was omitted from
Tuesday morning's proposal.

placed under veteran &lt;:ivil servant,
Charles Easley.
·
Quinn said Easley, who came to
!be White House 10 years ago during
the Reagan administration, "will
from this point on perform security
operations not only for this . entire
complex, but for the White House
office itself."
Easley retired from the Arm~
after 20 years that included 12 as ~
counterintelligence special agent and ·
eight as a security advisor with the
Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Quinn said the new, consolidated
security office "will require thatth~
person whose file is sought give consent in writing before we can eveu
ask that information of the FBI." .
The move leaves uncertain the status of Craig Livingstone, the securi•
ty chief at the center of the furor over
the FBI files. Livingstone is on paid
Jeav~ of absence.

·WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- · dards, or no accreditation at all.
Now more information is availsumers looking for objective information as they choose health plans able, including ratings for quality o(
now can get detailed evaluations for care, relationship with members:
the first time, a private watchdog physician qualifications and evalua-, ·
lion, preventive health services, deci- ·
group said today.
The National Committee for Qual- sian-making on services, and medical
·
ity Assurance, which accredits health- records. ·
maintenance organizations, released · NCQA has no regulatory power.
information on 48 health plans over HMOs, and accreditation is a
nationwide. As other plans are purely voluntary process. About half
assessed, those results will be of the nation's HMOs have been
reviewed,
released as well.
"OQr mission is to put information .
about health plan quality into the
hands of purchasers and consumers to
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
help them make informed choices,"
446· 4524
said Margaret E. O' Kane, president
,, l'.,.. ·n
of the oversight group.
The reports are available for $3
each by calling a toll-free number or
they are free on the World Wide Web
portion of tbe lntCI!lel
The repons take the information
used by tbe group to make accredi- ·
tation decisions and distill it into six
categories, rating each plan's performance. Graphics compare individual
scores with national averages.
Until now, NCQA has simply told
the public what an HMOs status,was
C':'OMUIG .,_1 ICINAJSIIIIQGD: 'DMD'
-either full. one-year or provisionI •IIUICHU.CI OP .ooftJ: ~ '
al accreditation, depending on how
Girt CIRIIPICA!Ia AVIlL&amp;aL&amp;I
close the plan comes to meeting stan-

7

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**************************************
:

You're Invited!

:

:

To our Third Annual

:

*

i*
i
!

*

~aJttJmN ~eiatitHt ~ap
Brought to You by

The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company

:

n:

Ofllce

.

~
Friday Jlllle 28tlt at tile Tappen Pbtl• Ollke

:ooam

:r~=_P'ovkllllbJ AdVnt

Low

51"""-k'....................... - .....................SIOP.n

'

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~~~··--··

· ·~

... -r--- ....

:

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*:

Fran II
to 3:00pm, Stop by 111d enjoy Hot Dogs and
Lemonade, prepared 111d la'ved by the Employees of the :
Blnkl And, while. )'OII're here, .
why not 1pply for the loen )'011 lburftmklt
need to Mike Your Summer
Drams C0111e True?

.*
*
4t
:
IF•Ift::W......
** Cllock I Oar
~ IB=' :ir-.*
nto
Rltell
-·M
1
*
.
********************

~0:3

i*
!
!

*:* ~
~ Stop By and Join the Fun!!
**
*: OIICe ...hi, Dstrtaa.011r WAN S,.te A.g....,..,. ,we *:
* will be a.-rtaa ..r cat-n wldt a day oftlleir ow• I *
*:
*
Frlchly J•• :u.a attlle r-roy,

*
:*

Rockvlall ..........:.-.............. 711
R!IPI Dutch/Shlll ......... 112 all
Shol ....... lno.........- ..........1, 111
Stir S.r* ......~-.. ···~····.......11 111
WendY lrlt'l..............:.........1t111
Worthlft!Jion lnll _............20 112

...,Ort• ... the

dition. u

Watchdog group releases
of HMOs
evaluations
'

*

Prtm Ftnl ...........................131/2

8tootc

CllniOII,Ipellll:iqto the American
Nunes Assoc:i&amp;DOII. noted thai the
orilinal Senlllle health I n - bill
"ia its purest form" - withoullbr
medical uvinp III:COUnts- "peaed
the Senate I 00 to 0," demonstrating
the biputinn suppon for the bill's
core, written by Senate Labor and
Human Resources Committee Chairwoman Nancy Kassehonm, R- Kan.,
and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mus.
Empltasizina the main premise of
that original bill, be laid: "No won:- .
er should have to worry about losing
health care if be or she loses a job• .
and no one should be denied health
care simply because they or someone
in lbeir family has a prc-nisting con-

·GOP cries foul as FBI
probe gets underway

"{ropical storm Arthur bears down on coast .

(USPS 213-!lttl)

..

WAsHINGTON (AI') - By fits
1111U. the White HOUle and
Republican conpcuional leaden
appe1r to be nearin1 a COl1lp'Oil\.iJe
on an impodiutent blockin1 a bill thai
would lot worbn carry health insurance from one jOb to another.
The obstacle is the creation of a
"demonstration" project testing
Rcpublican·backed medical savi111s
accounts, tax·free accounts that
would be UJed to pay for routine
medical bills for people who also buy
catastrophic health insurance.
Critics of the accounts, including
the Clinton administration, fear they
would siphon off healthy, aftluent
people from reaut• health insurati4:C,
increasins coverage costs for the ill

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·s ports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednetcley, Jl!ne19, 1996

The Daily Sentinel
,....4

In other AL action,

~rewers

and Rangers win
after weathering-rain delays

Wedneedly, June 11, 11M

In other NL action,

.Astros and Cards share Central s·u lnmit
By.TOM WfTHEAS
~P.

8portl Wrtt.r

..

t'S th'IS ?• "'··. the
nro teams tn
~ · nal League Central playing
... ~,
I?
.. .
t's right, the St. Louis Cardinals j
the Houston Astros atop
baseball's weakest division Tuesday
night with a 3-2 win over the
P.hiladelphia Phillies.
" A 34-34 record is a long way fi'om
"b,allenging the Atlanta Braves for
NL supremacy, but it's a start.
, Donovan Osborne pitched seven
.,5;01id innings as the Cardinals won
..Jhl:ir fourth straight game, improving
,to, .500 for the first time since April
..+6 (12-12). The Cardinals eventual11)1 dropped to 17-26.
. .. "When you think about where
we've been, I think it's important,"
St. Louis manager Tony ~ Russa
.said. "How are you going to have a
.c.llance unless you 're winning more
. than you lose? Yeah, it's important."
The Cardinals enrered the season
1411 of promise as LaRussa began his
first season with the club. St. Louis
b,rought in free agents Ron Gant,
Atldy Benes, Todd Stottlemyre, Gary
o,eui and Royce Clayton in the offSJ&gt;ason and suddenly .there was
renewed confidence in one of baseball's best cities.
~ But despite the poor start, and the
reeeni resurgence, ~ Ru~sa know!
thtre's a long way to go.
• • "It doesn 't make you feel like
'Jioy, we've got it made now, we're

.

?.n ~r way to I 00 wins,"' he said.
We ve Just got to keep grinding."
The Phillies have lost II of 12
and are in last place in the NL East.
"We weren't blown oui," pitcher
Sid Fernandez (3-S) said. "If anything, we're _looking beller, anyway.
I guess thts IS .better than the situation where you just don't have a
chance to win."
Osborne (6-3) ,gave up a two-run
homer to Todd Zeile in the sixth, but
won for the fifth time in six decisions. He allowed five hits and one
walk.
Dennis Eckersley got the last
three outs for his II th save. It was his
· third save since he came off the disabled list June 13, and he has not
.allowed a hit in 3 2/3 innings.
Elsewhere in the National
Leal!lle, , i1 was San Fmncisco 9,
Florida c IS innings; Atlanta .S,
San Diego , , and Montreal I~~­
omdo 8. Los Angeles and CJt\cigO
split a doubleheader, with the
Dodgers winning the first game 9-6,
and the Cubs taking the nightcap 74. New York at Pittsburgh was postponed by rain.
Gi1111lll 9, Marlins 8 (15)
At San Francisco, Pat Rapp threw
a wild pitch while ~llempting to
intentionillly walk Matt Williams in
the 15th and Marvin Benard slid
home with the winning run.
The Giants had blown an 8-3 lead
with two outs in the ninth. Gary
Sheffield's game-tying, three-run

homer off Rod Beck forced extra
innings.
In the ISth, Benard singled, took
second on a sacrifice by Steve Scarsane and advanced to third on a
groundout.
Rapp (3-9) thet:t threw high to
catcher Charles Johnson, who got his
glove on the ball, but was unable to
locate it after ii dropped behind him.
Benard broke for the plate and was
calle'll safe after sliding under Rapp's
tag.
Bntves 5, Padres 3
At Atlanta, Chipper Jones hit a
two-run homer with two outs in the
seventh iiming. Jones hit a 1-0 pitch
from Joey Hamilton (8-4) over the
left-field fence for his lith homer.
The shot scored Mark Lemke, who
had singled.
It was the 14th loss in 16 games
for the Padres, who fell a game
behind Los Angeles in the NL West.
San Diego stranded 14 baserunners.
. Brad Clontz (4-2) picked up the
wtn, and Mark Wohlers got his 13th
save in 14 chances.
·
Expos 12, Rockies 8
. At Denver, Mike Lansing hit two
homers, including a grand slam in
the eighth inning, and drove in seven runs.
The Rockies erased a 7~ 3 deficit
with four runs In the seventh on a
three-run homer by Dante Bichette
- his second ofJhe game - and a
solo shot by Vinny Castilla.
But with one out in the eighth,

Lenny Webster singled off Darren
Holmes (2-2) and pinch-hiltcr o.rrin Fletcher doubled. The Rockies
intentionally
walked
Mark
Grudzielanek, who had four sinales,
to load the bases, and Llnsina hit a
432-foot homer to left center.
Mike Dyer (4-2) got the win.
Shane Andrews .homered in the
ninth, his fifth in five games, for the
Eipos, who have won six of their last
seven.
Oociaen 9, Cubs 6
Cubs 7, Dodcen 4
At Otlcago, rookie Brant Brown
hit two solo home runs in the second
game, giving him three for the day
and three for his career, to give
Chicago a split.
·
Brown, who entered the gaine l for'6 since being recalled from
Triple-A Iowa on June I 5, had three
hits in the second game and went4for-6 for the afternoon.
Delino DeShields hit a three-run
homer and rookie Roger Cedeno had
four hitS and four RBis in the opener for the Dodgers.
In the nightcap, Chicago's Mike
Campbell (2-0) also had an RBI double. lsmael Valdes (7-5) took the
loss, giving up six earned runs and
nine hits in S 213 innings.
Ramon Martinez (5-l) pitched
five innings for his ·II th.victory in his
last 12 decisions.in the opener. Todd
Worrell earned his 21st save.
Chicago's Sammy Sosa hit his
23rd homer in the opener.
.

By The AtiOC'-d Preta

EASTERN CAGE CAMPERS- The 1996 Eastagain a huge success with
42 participants Involved In the annual elementary
camp gredel 4-7. Participants learned varloua
Individual and team concitPts alon!J with partlclpltlng In at least two games per dl:y with their
various teams. In fronure~L-R) Kylie Wolle, Jennifer Hayman, Jessica Kehl, Stacy Watson, Jesllctl Bartell, Lindsey Cro1s, Katie .Robertson,
Jennifer Wolfe and Carrie Elberfeld. In the sec·
ond row are Garrison Davis, Chris Connolly, Nick
Wl!!lkl, Janet Calaway, Janet Ridenour, Tammy

ern cage camp

Reds beat Astros
6-4 in 10 innings

we•

Into every American League
game, it seems, a lillie rain must fall.
Three AL games were delayed 5
hours, 59 minutes Tuesday night,
one day after Kansas City and Milwaukee needed 5 lf2 hours to play
a game because of fog and rain, and
a downpour in Baltimore filled the
dugouts with water.
Weather delays have caused the
Royals' last four games to take 4:41 ,
4:·15, 5:31 and 4:17 to complete.
" The weather in this state is horrendous," losing Kansas City pitch·
er Doug Linton said of Wisconsin,
punctuating his statement with an
obsce~ity. "I got nothing good to say
about this place. Every time I've
been here, it's been horrible. Unbelievable. If !hey can't get a domed
stadium, it's ridiculous."
''!think they 're pretty sick of it,"
Royals. inanager Bob Boone said
after his.team lost for the third time
in their rain-soaked . four days .
" We're not relishing it, plus we're
getting our butts beaten in. That will

Blsaell, C11rrle Grow,' Jessica Dillon, Chelsey
Young r 1 Abby Chevalier. In the third row are
Brandon ;-rtch, Ken Am1bary, Brent Buckley, Garret Karr, Whitney Karr, Holly Broderick, Sara
\'lansfleld, Jennifer Goeglien, Jes1Jca McGinnis
and··Alissa Larkins. In the fourth row are Brandon Werry, Adam Chevalier, Derek Blum, Cody
Dill, Jon Duffy, Ross Holter, Ryan Hawtf:!orne,
Ben Book1118n and Jeremy Connolly. In the back
row are camp staffers Eric Hill, Jeremy Kehl, Mlc~
ah Otto, Daniel Otto and Jessica Karr.

wear on you."

The Brewers' 9-1 rout of the Royals included I :57 in rain delays and
•

: CLEVELAND (AP) - . Omar
V:IZquel has become known as the
weatc hitter in a super lineup and the
tlilshy fielder in a defense with some

h!&gt;leS-

r;Ibe glove was still there in the
dl~veland Indians' 9-7 victory over
tl)c! Boston Red Sox on Tuesday
ntBht. And the little No. 9 hitter had
q•ite a night at the plate, too.
: Vizquel drove in a career high six
n)As, including a grand slam in the
fourth inning. It was Vizquel's fourth

.

~

homer this season, the ·17th of his
career and his second grand slam.
This one was worth admiring.
Vizquel - all 5-foot-9 of him ~
stood at home plate and watched the
ball sail past the foul pole in left
field .
. "I don't hit that many," said
·Vizquel, who has won three straight
gold gloves but has hit more than
two homers in a season only once in
his career. "Plus, there's not that
many grand slams that you hit, so
you better enjoy them."

MORNING CAMPERS - The 1996 Meigs Shawana Manley, Ashley Eblin, Michelle Drenner,
M1rauder glrlli basketball camp's morning ses- Angela Wilson, Mindy Chancey, Bobbl ~ue Napsion, bald for girls In grades 4-6, drew 31 par- per and Jeaslca Allen. In the fourth row JeBSica
tiCIJIIitta. In front are U--RI Carrie Walker, Bran- King, Nicole Davis, Alicia Werry, Shannon Souls·
dl Thomas, Juley Eblin, Aubrey Kopec, Meghan by, Amanda Fetty and Jessica Blaettnar. In the
Haynes, A!ln.a Sayre, Katie Reed and Aja Black- back row are camp staffers , Ashley · Roach,
well. In the 1econd row Nikki Butcher, Justine Cheryl Jewell; camp director Ron Logan, Erin
Dowler, Ashley Caldwell, Maria Dren.ner, Summer Krawsczyn and Taryn Doidge. Not present when
Folm•r, Allala 'Burton, Brooke Bolin and Holly picture was taken was Carrie Mic hae l.
. Williams •. In the third row Krlstl Lambert,

Selig ponders being full-time commissioner

Waldnig's two
homers give
him distinction

'

r.

""BEANED - Clen!Mcl'a Jim Thome u-t8 llltentlon from trainer
: •Jfol W1rfleld.,.... TllaiN ... hH In the held wllh I phch by Boston'a
~ ) Iamie Mclyer during Tu1 1 dl:y night'I Amerlc1n Le~gue gime In
: . ~nd, " " -.the lnclllln1 won t-7. (API ·
.
·

Asked 1\tesday ll'hether he was
leanin~ toward becoming commi ssioner fulltime, Selig 'a id: "I really

-

The E~stern High School Girls
Basketball Camp, for those entering
grades 7-I 2 this fall, will run from
Monday, June 24 to Thursday, June
27 from-1 to 4 p.m. "at Eastern High
School.
The cost of the camp is $35. Each
camper will receive a camp T-shirt.
certificate and camp basketball. All
area athletes are welcome to attend. ·
For those attending the EHS
camp and also going to North Carolina, a portion of lhe ,$35 camp fee
will be applied t'o the UNC-Wilm- ·
ington camp.
Deposits should be made out lo ·
Eastern's Athfetic Boosters and
mailed to Jo.e Bailey at 45690
Pomeroy. Pike; Box 395, Chester,
Ohio 45720 or register at the door
before 12:45 p.m. Monday.
All Eastern girls wishing to participate in next year's program are
asked t9 attend. Many individual
competitions nnd team play will
highlight the camp.
. For further information, please
call 949-2045 .

Vizquel helps Tribe beat Red Sox 9-7
By KEN BERGER

4

Brewen t, Roylls I
~
Greg Vaughn hit his 18th ·iatd
19th home runs and Jose Valentin
had a grand slam as the Brewers wfln
again at rain-soaked Milwaukee .•
Scott Karl (7-3) set a career hiih
for victories by giving up one n,.tn
and five hiis in five innings. with no
walks. Mike Potts pitched the last
four innings, allowinx three hits and
no walks for his first career savd: r
Rangen 7, Orioles 0 " ~
· Texas hit five home runs, inc hilling four off Kent Mercker in the lii;.t
three inninzs, and the Rangers hand ed Baltimore its first shutout this
' •.
son.
Juan Gonzalez had a two-run
homer in the first inning and R~
Gonzales and Kevin Elster hit S'Cllo
shots in the second. Dean Palmer
made it 6-0 wilh a two-run drive 'ln
the third, and Damon Buford led Off
the fourth with a home run off Jimmy Haynes.
' ' 1'
.~ %
Athledcs 8, Tigel'$ 5
Tony Batisla's first major-lea~i'l~
home run was one of five hom~s
Oakland hit at Detroit.
'' 1
Geronimo Berroa, Ernie Your-Jt•
(See AL on Page 6)
,;,

sea-

EHS girls' cage
camp slated
to start Monday

•

By MICHAEL A. LUiz
Sanders' homer gave Cincinnati ~
HOUSTON (AP)' - Cincinnati 4-3 lead, but the Astros tied it 4-4 in
manager Ray Knight is waiting for the ninth on Bill Spiers' third homer.
the day Reggie Sanders is sharp Spiers, who entered the· game as it
again. The Houston Astros argue he defensive replacement in the eighth,
already is.
hit a 3-2 pitch from Jeff Brantley ( J..
Sanders, on a tear since coming I) over the right-fteld scoreboard.
off the disabled list Saturday, home"I'm just seeing the ball and makred in the eighth inning and Eric ing good contact but the last couple
Davis added a go-ahead homer in the of times I hithomers we lost," Spiers
lOth, leading the Reds 1o a 6-4 vic- said. "I'd rather not get a hit and
tory Tuesday night.
have us win the game than this."
"When Reggie gets real sharp
Houston starter Darryl Kite
after a couple more games. he'll be matched a career high with II strikeThe slam came at a perfect time first and four in the second, Vizquel real tough to get ou~" Knight said.' outs and finished with a six-hiller
for two reasons. First, it cut into made it 6-4 with his gmnd slam, and
"Reggie is our superstar. He's our over 7 2/3 innings. Kite contributed
Boston's early 6-0 lead. Second, it then Julio Franco added an RBI sin- Jeff Bagwell. He's the .guy we need a two-run double as Houston built a
meant that Cleveland wouldn't need gle to make it6-.5. Oeveland chased the most in our lineup to do things." 3-0 lead.
an offensive outbUJ:st from Alben staner Aaron Sele (2·5) with a threeSanders was sidelined with a
· The Reds rallied from three runs
Belle on a day when there was news run fourth before .the game was strained muscle in his rib cage.
down to tie it with a three-run fifth,
about the outfielder's outbursts of a delayed by rain.
"I hated to go through it and I'm and took the lead in the eighth on
different kind.
Jack McDowell lasted only 2 1/3 glad it's over," Sanders said. "I'm Sanders' fourth homer.
Earlier in the day, the five-day innings. It was McDowell's shortest glad to be back, but everybody is a
Sanders has five RB!s in his last
suspensions for Belle and pitcher outing since he went only one-third factor on this team. I'm n&lt;ii the only three games, and has hit safely in 13
Julian Tavarez were reduced to three of an inning against Detroit in 1993, important person. I feel everyone is of his last 15 games. He is 7-for-16
games. Belle will begin serving his his Cy Young season.
important.
since coming off the disabled list.
suspension on Friday against New
Greg Swindell (1-0) pitched I 213
"I'm feeling real good. I'm just
After Houston's three-run founh,
York. Tavarez began serving his ·innings· in relief for the victory. It trying to get base hits. A lot of peo- Cincinnati starter John Smiley
immediately.
was Swindell's first victory 'since ple who come back try to overswing retired the next eight batters in order
Belle went 0-for-4, including a rejoining his olli team and ·his first and do too much. I'm just trying to before leaving with two outs in the
weak double-play grounder in the ALwin since Sept. 21, 1991.
get into a rhythm and I think I've seventh. He allowed six hits, struck
· Jose Mesa pitched the final inning done that." ·
first at-bat following a rain delay of
out four and walked two.
I hour, 59 minutes. It was an unchar- for his 23rd save.
· Davis hit an 0-1 pitch from
Oeveland's dominance of Boston Xavier Hernanl\ez (0-3) over the leftacteristic performance.
Belle homered. in his first game dates back to the three-game sweep field scoreboard for his 14th homer.
after being fined for screaming at in the AL playoffs last season. Mo Hal Morris followed with a single,
reponer Hannah Storm and also Vaughn, who won the MVP over was sacrificed to second and went to
went deep twice · the day he was Belle but didn't get .to the World . third on a wild pitch. Branson then
ordered to seek anger counseling for Series, is stumped by the develop- bunted toward the right side of the
ll!ound to easily score Morris .
.
throwing a baseball at a photogra- .ments.
"I don 'I understand," said
Roben Waldnig III of Centerburg
pher.
Vaughn,
who
reached
base
for
the
the firsllittle leaguer ever to
became
With Belle struggling, Vizquel
hit
two
home
runs over the I50 foot
I
Oth
straight
plate
appearance
with
didn't mind being the one to lift the
fence for his "In-Town Restalimnt" .
Indians to their lith straight victory an RBI single in the second.
team and has helped propel the club
"There's been a lot of games we've
over Boston.
to
an undefeated season with three
played
against
these
guys
when
"One of the good things about
games
remaining.
we've
had
opponunities
to
win.
this team is that every night, there's
The
eight-year-old Waldnig is
a different hero," Vizquel said. Today's a preuy good example."
the son of Rob Waldnig, a 1977
The Indians' 83rd straight sellout
"Tonight was my night, ~nd I'm
Southern High School gmduate, and
ended with about 15,000 in the
feeling hapy about it."
.
the gmndson of Mr. and Mrs. Roben
When Vizquel walked in the sec- stands because the game ended at
Waldnig
of Racine.
12:44
a.ni.
ond inning, he knew he would take
Rob Waldnig Jr. is one of three
Jose Canseco hit his 22nd homer
some heat from Red Sox first basecoaches for this year's team. His son
man Mo Vaughn, a more accom- in the fourth off Swindell, giving him
was chosen as an area all-star in
19 homers in his last 136 at bats.
plished slugger.
1995 and is again having a good year
Cleveland's Jim Thome was
"After I walked, Mo Vaughn told
with the Centerburg learn currently
me I looked sweet swinging the bat," beaned by Jamie Moyer in the fifth.
in first place. The youngest WaldVizquel said, as if Vaughn hadn' 1 He.stayed in the game and nodded to
nig's sister Heather plays for D.J.'s
Moyer .to acknowledge that it was
been joking.
Pizza
of Centerburg.
not
intentional.
After Boston scored two in the
ROBERT WALDNIG Ill

•

resumed in a fog. 'texas shut out Baltimore 7-0 in a game held up 2:03 by
rain, and Cleveland defeated Boston
9-7 after being delayed I :59 at
Jacobs Field.
The bad weather also played havoc with attendance. About 250 fans
remained in Baltimore from • sellout
crowd, just 150 were left at Milwaukee, and about I5,000 stayed
until the end atl2:44 a.m. in diehard
Cleveland, which had its 83rd
straight sellout.
Darren Oliver, who limited Baltimore to five singles in seven
shutout innings and lowered his ·
ERA ltl 1.41 in his last five starts,
was surprised the game wasn't called
with Texas leading 7-0 in the eighth
inning.
."Why wait two hours?" ·said
Oliver, who did not return after the
delay. "I'm sure if the situation
would have been reversed and they ·
were lip by seven runs, they would
have called it. Wha.t can you say?
Home field advantage •. I guess."
Elsewhere in the AL, it was
Toronto II , Seattle 3; New York 2,
Minnesota 0; Oakland 8, Detroit 5;
and California 5, Chicago 4.

•••

\

FIRST PLACE - Benton Philllpl (left) and stepson Keith Jories
(mlddl!!) won two awards In Saturday's Bend Area Catfish Tourna~
ment. They were the belt fathtr·IOII team and the best overall teN!'
with a combined catch of 46 pounds. WHh them Is event coordl~
tor J;lvis Zerkle. .
.
.
·•

e Th6 ·Gu11ranU6d LOWII"~ PriutJ
w,·u m•tch an-y adverti"'d price

tinuing problems in lining up fimlncing for 1hc facilily.

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Bud
,Selig, ,;.vho has been acting baseball
The Journal Se minel said· its
commissioner since 1992, is seri ously considering accepting the posi- have no comment on I haL We' re baseball sources expecled Selig. to
tion as a fulltime job, the Milwaukee busying trying lo get a new stadium . take the com missioner'sjob whether
I haven't had time to think about or not the Brewers get a new ballJournal Sentinel said today.
park.
' ,
The newspaper said several base-. . that. "
Sal Bando, the Brewers general
Selig, president of the Milwauk ee .
ball ' officials it had contacted said
they expected Selig to take the job. Brewers, has said a new stadium is manager, said he was aware · of a
·It said those officials would not needed to ensure the financial health growing movement amon g owners
of the club. Bu.t there have been ct~n- to get Selig to move to the commisallow their names to be used .
sioner's office.

e P11rtt1 Expr~tltl

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if we dot1't have
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Scoreboard
Ba seball

(Oiivarea J.2), 7:0.5 p.m.

AL standings
-

Ita

'

"

Bo11on (Clemens 3-6) at CLEVELAND (()aea l·ll. 7,05 p.m..
California &lt;Lanasron 4-2) ar Milwou-

.... 01.-.
B: L fa.

I

New York .............. 39 28 .S82
Bitlliri'IOrl! ............... 36 )() .Sit!!
801100 ................... 29 39 .426
Toronto .................. 29 40 .420
Detrolt ................... 18 52 .257

!, ,

CenlrolllkCLEVELAND .......44 24 .647
Chicqo ............ ... .. 41 27 .60l

,,

Milwaube ...... ....... 34 34

I

••I

,
I,
I, '-'

'·I
i'
t
!

be(Oiveu 1 · 1) , 8: 0~p .m
Seaule (Hitchcock S-3) ot Chicoao

·-

(Topam 7-3), s ,os p.m..

2~
10~

Toronro CHeniJtn

22'!

1' .::OoklaAd . ...........
!

27
11

IS~

.609

·s

.Sl7
ll .$22
l8 .457

Toay'o pma

11

Yort(Ooodco6-4),l~p. m.

New

&lt;"- S-8), 2j)l p111.

r...

•,osp....

Toroato (H•••o• 6·9)

.

(Htri-), 10:35 p.a

.46-t

.429

.2

2~
4~

(VanlandinJ,hwn 4-8), 10:35 p.m.
Chicaao (Ntiv~4-7) at San DieJo
(Tim Worrcii.S-1), 5:u:t p.m.
St. Loula (S101tlemyn: f&gt;.4) at Monhl:·
al (Rueter J-4), 7:35 p.m.

CINCINNATI {Burba 0-8)11 New
Yort (J .... 6-J), 7:40p.m.
Ha11on (Wall 4-0) It Los Anacles
(N..., 11-5~ IOj)l p.m.

Transaction s
. BaM.U

A........ . _

AL: Reduced the su•pe•aiona of
Cleveland Indians OF Alben 8clle and
RHP Julian Tavarez from five a....et to
11\ree Junes for lhcir actiOM in a May J I

J&amp;me II Milwaukee.
DETROIT TIGiiRS: Recalled r.:H P
A.J. S..,- from Toledo of rhe ln~mation·
ml Leaaue. Sen1 RHP Bob Scanlan to
Toledo.
.
TOROrmlBLUEJAYS: Sl&amp;ned SS·
OF Ryan SttornsborJ.

- .......

PIIILADELPIUA PIIILLIES' Slsned

RHP Evan Thomill.
PrrrS8UROH PIRATES' Opdoned
RIIP Eaieb"' Loaiza to Colaary of 1he Pa·
ciOc Coul l..ellJUC. Recalled LHP Stew:
Cooke from Carolina of lhe Southern

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SOUTHERN GIRLS' CAMP - The annual es John Manuel and Jerinl Roush, Stacy Lyons,
Southern glrla' basketball camp drew 25 girls Fallon Roush, Kati Cummins and Stacey Ervin.
who participated In varloua events. In front are In the back row are coach Jonna Manual, coach
(L·R) coach Lindsay Smith, Katie Sayre, Brooke . Bea Lisle, Dena Sayre, Heather Dalley, Heather
Klaer Jeri Hill, Ashton Brown arid Jordan Lidel. Mora and collch Becky Moore. Absent was
In th; SfCOnd row are coacli David Fetty, Kim Laraine t:.awson and coaches Alan Crisp and
thle, Raohel Chapman, ·Brandi Lane, Maggie T9dd Cummins.
Smith, Susan Brauer. In the third row are coach'

1Aa1hlar Ills.. relieves pain by
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Philadelphia tSchlllloal-1) 11 St.
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lAo Anaelea tAI1acio l-5) II Chi&lt;OIO

CGUiftiY ,.Ill

' " ' - ........... ,t,., . ...

u.....,._

.
34480 A Rocktprlnga Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. .
992-6768
\)

.,
.1,

to

21 97

I

The annual Southern girls' basketball camp was again a huge success this season as 25' girls participated in the various evc~ts for cpach
Jenni Roush and her staff. Numerous
· team and individual·instruction ,was
the highlight of the camp along with
games and individual competition.
Winners of the various individual
eventS were Jeri Hill, who claimed
:all three categories 1of free throw
.
'
'

.

,.,

,,

5cr.ttGh
P•lnt

6it Set

Tone

8 97

~

1597

Tomeo Cool1mt

T•mporature Sen!;orll

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Now
Jei'YJey
;,meric"n

Gallipolis

llrs~e
,6 hoe&amp;

209 Upper kiver Road

fro37:

.

champ. PIG champ aod Knockout
· champ in th~ White Group; and Kati
C,ummins. who claimed the Free
Throw Championship and PIG Contest in the Purple group. Kim lhle
won the Knockotil portion for lhat
group.
In the Black Group Katie Sayre
. claimed the Free Throw and Knockout ·Championship, while Brooke

Pta~tlkote

U~lc

41 'i:eDlil
··ll-J
CD
CiS]

Southern
gtrls' cage camp draws 25. .
..

Iwilht.ut a prescription and is guarf~teed IO·Work.

CINCINNAn 6, Ho..111on 4 (10)

ICri,. :1-2),
1t

Hou~

10~
12~
13~

Ti.aal.y'• scores

OliciJO (Alvarez 1-3) at Califoraia
(Orimlley +5). 4~ p.m.
(&lt;lctr*te S-2) at CU!VELAND
(-6-4), 7:.Ul·"'
DH:
(Win $ aod Oroa 7-4) ot

s.tllmore (MIWI• 9-l _,

1·5) at

Performance

Spark Plug•

l

DH' .... A.,olea 9, Chkqo 6; CIU&lt;DJ07, .... Ao,.lel4
·

o.tJaod (Waodin 1cl) 11 Dllroll (Golor
+8), I: 1$ p.m.
Kuau City (Oubloza +10) 11 Mil·
!

.500
.500
.471

.... Anaei&lt;I ...........3B 3l .m
s.,. IM&amp;o ............. .37 34 .521
SanPmaciaco ....... .3J 3~ . ~IS
Colol'ldo ................ lS 33 ,jJ5

Minne1011 (RoHnton 2·1)

woube

.441

J9 .426

Iii

WHiemDivWon

Te:w:u 7, Ballimore 0
Mllwaultco 9, Konaao City I
CLEVELAND 9, 8..,..7
California5. Oticaao .t

t_:'

37 .471

IIoul1on .................36 36
St. Louia ................:14 :14
Chieac• .................31 l7
Pinsburah ..............32 37
CINCIN'NA11 ....... 27 · l6

NeW YOlk 2. MiMHOII 0
Oakland •• Detroit '

' ·

26 .6l.l
l9 .580
)8

(Portua~

Spll~fire

Conlro!DI-

6
IO'h

Taesday'o.......,.
r ...... 11. s..n1e l

\

!t L &amp;1.

Ad•ra ....................f3
MOIIIT&lt;III ................40
Roridlo ..... ......... .....:n
New YOlk .............. )()
Philodelpllia ........... 29

CINCINNATI

1on (Hampton S·3), 2:3S p.m.
Montreal (Marlinez. 6-3) a1 Colorado
'(Thompt.on 3-6), 3:05p.m.
New YOlk (bringhuuscn 3-8 and Person 1- 1) ar Pimburah (Smilh 4-J aad
Ruebel Hl), 5:05p.m., 2
Florida (Burkett 4-7) ot San Francisco

Thunday's games

FMttmDivkMn

Ila

w..... DI.Te11u ..................... 42
Scanle ...................J6
• •Callf...ia. ............. J6
l2

111 Omk.land

NLstandings

l
10
11

.500

6 - ~)

(Wen&amp;m 2-4), IO:m p.m .

II

MinnttOCa .............. n 3~ .41.~
Kanw: Cil)' ..........JO 41 .423

~~
'I '

(Trachtcl5-4). 2:20p.m.

Thunclay'saames
Minnes01a (RodriJuez S-7) ol Detroit

____ maybe
ted
millions

Kiser won the PIG contest. Gold
Group winners were Stacey Ervin,
Free Throws; Dena Sayre, I'IG; and
Heather Mora, Knockout.
The three-on-three champions
were Stacey Ervin, Kati Cummins
and Katie Snyre.
.
Members of the Southern coaching staff worked the camp along with
various formerand current Southern
players.

5

New

446-3807

to

1397

lund Tn.Jl;t
5unVi501'5

CWLN 7 DI\Yci ,\WEEK
Monday • Frt.bty, am • pm
Saturday, 8 .am • 7 pm
.Sunday, 9 am • 6 pm

a

a

18~ 9

Salt' price' good on in·otoGk merch•ndlee: onty.
Rqulir pricet m•y v•ry due to log~l competi"!on.
W• '"""" Uio t'lfM to liltllt ~uan5ala ....... ~"' . h JiHM121l, t_..

'
'

•

•

•
•

�--.

. ••

At Wimbledon next week,

$ble draws. If form holds, the
prospective men's quanerfinals
matchups are Sampras vs. Thomas
Muster, lvanisevic vs. Michael
Chang, Agassi vs. Yevgeny Kafcl nikov, and Becker vs. Jim Courier.
On the women's side, defending
and six-time c,hampion Steffi Graf
opens against Ludmila Richterova,
and No. 2 Monica Seles - in her
first Wimbledon since being stabbed
in 1993- is up against Ann Grossman.
If the seedings hold there, the

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Aourve the RlghiiD

,

• Prtc.

tic values;
7. lack integrity;
8. are depressed.
-- Baby Boomer in St. Charles.
Mo.
_
Dear BOQ!IIerin Mo.: You see the ;
boltle as half empty. I see it as half ·
full .
',
I know (and hear ti'om) many '
teen agers " ho are hard- wot~inJ. ··
goal oncnted,.responsible, generous
and thou~ht ful and want tO !Mke _ ·
somcthm g of themsel ves. If you ' •.
keep telling kids they are no good,
they will prove you right. I prefer to '
give them something to live up to. It •'
works.
'
Send questions lo Ann Landen , ~·
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W, Cen- · ·
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, :
.,
Calif. 90045

June 22 18N • USDA Food

1

.

2

...

a 12-U OZ. ASSORTED

Dew Ann Lallden:' May I
respond to "Chris in Heyburn,
ldlbo," who wrocc about the depriVltion and cballnpa hillaenentiora.
fK*I?
I pew up in ·dte '601 and '70s.
AIIJioulh my pnerali011 enjoyed
more Ulluence than my parents',
those . yean presented their own
challenaes. 'The dilference between
me and the younp IICt is thai I'm
not whinina and complaininj. I survived the lean and inean yean
because as an adolescent, I learned
the buies of resolvina prOblems and
meeting challenaes. 'Those life skills
have served me welt
·
One of the problems in our contemporary society is that children

concept of what it is to aet a Joal and
money to realize it. They are
payin1 dearly for their idleness and
apalhy. Theyarealso missingouton
the tlvill of achievin1•1oal and 1he
sense of aocomplishment that goes
with it.
1 see too many teens these days
who:
L possess few or no copi ng
mechanisms;
2. haYe cultivated a passi ve work
etbic:
3. habitually blame parents or
society for their problems and frus!rations;
4. possess a selfish attitude of
entitlement;
S. are unwilling to delay gratification -- they want everything
NOW;
6. have failed to formulate realis-

By M.R. KROPKO
envirQnment is an an,
· t Chester El~mentary SChool was Eugene Buckley, 1941; Richard
AP
Bualnna
Writer
.
he said.
tftesceneoftheJune I Chester High Coleman, 1936, Irene ~ker, 1931;1
CLI)VELAND
(AP)
For
John
Osher
to
·"It's a combination
• Sdlool alumni meeting which saw Orva Jean Bond•. 1957; Delores
·
keep
pace
with
his
competition,
he
has
.
to
conof
a magic eye, an
•r:zs graduates and their guest.s have Holter, 1947; Willis Parker. 1944;
tinually toy with new ideas. And the more play- understanding of ·what
' ~: evening of fellowship and
Opal Wickham, 1931; Pauline
ful
hC gets. the better.
children want tQ play
i mnlnscing.
Meyers, 1933; Curtis Bailey, 1930;
"I
wanted
to
get
into
an
induslry
where
there
with and a sensitivity to
' !·•Welcome was given by President Paul Baer, 1941; Mary Kautz, 1936;
was
unlimited
pot~ntlal
for
creativity,
and
toys
market
needs," Tenen' ~ing Massar. Group singing of Kathryn Baum. 1937: Pauline Rideseemed to fit that bill," said Osher, president and baum said.
God Bless America was led by Max- nour, 1931; Jean Frederick, 1930;
founder of CAP Toys. which recently.·became a
"We've been able to
·~lac, Whitehead with George Hall at Mildred Caldwell, 1935; Jeanette
•
division
of
the
Oakland,
build
a toy division I
&lt;Qan.lnvocation was given by Dar- Williams, 19~3 ; Clarence Wolfe Jr.,
N.J.-based
Russ
Berrie
think
could
add a signif'rt.lt Hawthorne and a steak dinner 1946; Darlene Buckley, 1956; Emma
I wanted to gifts company.
icant percentage to Russ
~as served by the Chester PJ'O, PioM. Buck Rhodes, 1951; John Riebel.
~t
Into sn
In
1988,
!he
former
Berrie's sales this year
~ 4-H Club and Chester cooks.
1956; Kathleen Morris, 1948; Ivan
Industry where .Plumber, inspired by !he and contribute in a
. , J'lames of deceased of 199.5-96 . Wood, 19.51 ; Glen Tuttle, 1945; Theithere
was playfulness of his then 10- meaningful way to our
"!'I'C reed and a poem was read in ma Hayes, 1930; Hazel Rose, 1933;
unlimited
year-old son,formed CAP profitability. "
IMli' honor.
· Alfred Wolf, 1937; Richard Coleman,
potential tor Toys.
The letters stand .for
Because CAP Toys is
,.'!:fto:tll call of reunion classes was 1936; Wilma Ballard, 1940; Harry
creativity, and Children at Play.
merged.
into
Russ
iJ!I,II with Nola Will, class of 1926, · and Dprothy Brown, 1951 ; !'I ill and
toysiHmed to
CAP
Toys,
with
Benie,
it.s
earnings
fig·!l:t"! Mildred Wells present They Gladys Meredith, 1941; Kathryn fit that bill,"
headquarters in suburban ures are not publicly
; ~ presented red roses.
Dietz. 1936;
asld
Osher, Bedford
Heights ,' expects available.
' ~ 'seYCD from the class ofl931 were
Ronald Osborne, 1935; Norma
pretldent
end
about
$100 milBy comparison, Matsales
of
nt with Nellie' Parker, spo~es- Hawthome,I956; JohnBailey, 1931 ;
founder of CAP lion this year. ·
tel
inc .• the nation's No.
an, saying she thought that was M&amp;,y Rose, 1947; Bob Meredith,
Toyt.
· Osl)er says success in I toymaker, based in El
good considerina they were all 1947; Mildred Wells, 19.53; Gertrude
~}'.&lt;;F 80. Richard.Coleman spoke: for
Stalnaker, 1940; Frances Reell. 194S;
- - - - - - • the induslry depends on a Segundo, Calif.• . last
simple strategy: "If we can make a toy and test year earn~d $358 mil~(:lass of 1936 (six auending) sayLeota Krautter, 1952: James Bailey.
it and know that kids really like to play with it, lion, or $1.58 per share,
i~ they were the first class to wear 1948; Junior White •. 1948; Lila Winand
if we feel that.the toy has enough sizzle that on sales of $3.64 biland gowns. He had all four o.f ters,.'1940; Marilyn Mason, 1956.'
•
. we can properly market it, then all that's left is .lion . Hasbro Inc . recent- ·
liiillauglftrs present
·
Also attending were: Lauren
to be lucky."
ly rebuffed Mattei's
i;John Lodwick spoke for the class Young, Nola Young, Eleanor
In the late 1970s, Osher started a small ener- $5.2 billion takeover
qf;l.9 4l, the school:S largest gradual- Leonard, Wanda Wolfe, Don
gy products business, which he later soid. That's proposal.
iii'J: class. He pve· a memorial \O Williams, Mrs. Steve Hoffman. Edna
when he thought about toys.
CAP Toys was
€11rence Dean who JliSS:C!! away last Woods. Mrs. Ivan Wood, Ernie
TOY DEVELOPER - In 1988, John Oster, a former plumber,
Os!H;r, 48, ran the infant company at a loss its among about 1,600 Inspired by the playfulness of hla then 10-year-old l!On, formed ·
.;iii. Betty Chevalier or tlie class of Whitehead. Jean Trussell, Judy RigJirst .year, but has been turning a profit ever -since companies that exhibit- CAP Toys. The letters stand for Children at Play. CAP Toys, with
J'lll6 (five present) remarked that gs, Glenna Riebel, John Rose, Merby
making a line of Stretch Annstrong figures, ed products at the annu- headquarters in suburban Bedford Heights, expects sales of
Njiia Will was their first .teacher. lin Tracy, Mrs. Edson Parker, Mrs.
as well as a bubble gun, a lollipop spinner, talk- al Toy Fair in February. about $100 .million this year.
~hryn Mora of the class of 1951
O.aries Pickens, Samh Parter, Wilma
(l,p·present) said the class also metal .f'arker.. Ella Osborne, Josephine
ing blocks, five baby dolls in.a pouch and a.~sort'.' All you need 'to do,
option . In many cases we couldn ·t do a product
ed musical toys.
theoretically, is take a booth at the Toy Fair and if we did not have a Chuw or a Mdico ~r places
a.picnic at the residence of Harold Osborne, Sandra Massar, )Mrs. DJ!IIas
In October 1993, 'Russ Berrie and Co., which show everybody what you've got. But clearly, with lower cost labor."
a~· Betty NewelL Marilyn Mason
Marts, Donna Larkins, - Eleanor
markets thousands of small gifts, including you need a great product and know how to marMicrojammers, one of CAP's successes, is
SP,Q~e for the class ofl956 which had
Knight, Darrel! Hawthorne, Joan
stuffed animals, picture frames, c~ramic mugs, ket it," said Jodi Levin, spokeswoman for the niade in China. The toys resemble musical
IO~ members present.
·
Kautz, Grace Holter, David Holter,
figurines and kitchen magnets, saw CAP Toys as New York-based Toy Manufacturers of America. instruments and make sounds at the push of a
·!•Roll call of all classes followed Ml$. Richard Fick. Betty Eddy Dean,
its best bet to ge,t into the toy market. Osher and
Osher said he will receive proposals this year button.
wilb 45 guests present.
Mr. Kenneth Davidson, Glenroy
his partners were offered about $15 million, plus from about4,000 toy inventors.
"Now there's an item that couldn ' t exis t if it
•::The following officers were Wolf, Elaine Dean, Martha Durst,
cost of inventory, and additional payrr . nts based
"From. those, we pick 20 or 25 ideas at the wasn't made in China,.. Oshersaid. "Instead of
nilltled: Starling Massar, president; Meni Bryant; VUJinia Harl, Melissa
on future profits.
most and we 'll develop them," Osher said. $7.99 retail , it would he $19.99 , and then we
~ Rose. vice-president: David Coleman, Margaret Bailey, Mrs.
The
deal
also
let
Osher
continue
to
run
the
.
"Sometimes w.e get an idea that is the gerin of a wouldn't do it becau.sc it would be too expcn~blentz and Delores Holter, vice: Eugene Buckiey, Ralph Ballard, Mrs.
company
he
started,
said
Bernard
H.
Tcnen-·
better
idea. It's often the case that ideas W&lt;; pick sive ...
J!l.'tsidents; Betty Dean, secretary; Allen Brown, Mr. Bond, Manin and
baum, ~uss Berrie vice president for corporate and· what comes out are quite different . VJc
Before a toy hits the store shelves, it is kidE"ber Frecker, assistant; Betty Grace Dorst, Delmar Baum, Henridevelopment.
·
develop
it
into
a
real
product
and
design
it.··
tested
ai headquarters.
'
NSY&lt;ell, treasurer; Mary Kautz, assis- etta Bailey, Mr. Wilford, Mr. SeckCAP
Toys
became
Russ
Berrie's
first
acquisiLow-cost
labor
in
China
and
Mexico
arc
a
"
I
watch
the
kids,"
Osher
said
.
·"If
we
test a
tail!; Howard Larkins, Roger Keller, man. Mr. Morton, Inzy Newell, Carl
tion. A year later, it acquired another emerging key to profitability.
toy, we test it against four or five other popular
~~h Trussell, Bill Matkack, Harry Kuhn and Mr. Henry.
toy
company,
OddZOn
Products
Inc.
of
Camp"Any
time
we
can
make
something
in
the
toys,
similar toys in the same price range. We
H~lter and Maxine Whitehead, decRoses were'presented to the old- ·
bell,
Calif.
.
U.S.,
we
prefer
to
do
that,"
Osher
said.
"
We
can
really
look to see what they like 10 play wit.h the
.
est lady, Bertha Smith; oldest man,
oraling commillee.
Tenenbaum
said
Osher
is
"a
spectacular
toy
pay
our
own
American
labor
and
we
have
better
best.
and
we' re really only interested in toys that
. 'Hhers present were: Nellie Park- Earl Knight; and Orva Jean Bond,
er: 1931; Howard Knight, 192.5; youngest grad. Bob Meredith of Ari- l'il.p.ic!k~er~.'~'!!.,;~!!!:~=-!,!2,.:,!,!;!:!£:!~:,_.,;c~o~nt;,ro1~w~o_:r~kl~
· n:_g!o~u:!tl,o.Jf~he~r~e:;th~a;.n~that's
·J~O~,Ul!,J()O:n~li,!l
c:!!'_c~·o:m:e~u=p~o=n~the winning side of that."
a
in a
But with
not an
~ er Sponaale, 1937; Homer Park- zona and Harold Brown of Colorado
11
er, 1 1941; Charles Pickens, 1946; were presented roses for traveling the
~ Riggs. 1956; Betty Dame- farthest. First-time attendees were
300 W. Main
Pomeroy
~. 1931; Richard Feck, 1941 ; Clarence Wolfe Jr. and Harold ' .
.
992-7527
!?\"_and Eloise Lodwick, 1941 ; Earl Brown . Recognized as .having never

Pancake&amp;
WaHle Syrup

Page 5)

Chuck Finley (9-4) allowed four
runs and eight hits in eight innings.
Troy Percival pitched the ninth for ·
his 19th save in 20 anempts.

I, ' .

$1
Potato Chips ·

HEllS

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FOODLAND SPECIAL CO UPON #106
EFFECTIVE 6 6 TO 6 22 96

I
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I I
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are not .an •ed to lllllr.e dteir own
mi....._ led fipa tlteir own b.alel.
The idNI CYihNIWM for children
is liOtdevoidofproblemsanddiuppointmelltl.
Childnll' and ~ee~~s need prob!ems, setbllcb and challenJCs. Facing clWienpa and resolvina prob!ems constitute the buildina blocks
of chlrlder, resourcefulness and the
maturity to aceept responsibility.
In the '60i and '70s, you couldn't
be picky about jobs because there
werea' t ·enough to go around. My
friends and I baby-sat, worked as
nurse's ·aides, waited tables and
spent hours on our feet in retail
stores to make ends meet. Nowadays, every store and last food
restallllU!t I walk into advertises ror
pan-time workers.
Many teen-agers today have no

anfill. Thole wires can J. lblrp.)
AJid one 1Mt cautioa: Keep four feet
011 die floor Mil Ill binds on deck.

attend Chester CAP Toys founder
;~lementary School· finds playfulness
alumni reunion .
finally pays off

Lipton Tea u o.. 79

3201.99 4

For

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #1GB
EFFECTIVE 6 6 TO 6 22 96

AL games...
Mark McGwire and George
Williams also homered for the Athletics. Todd Van Poppet. who
relieved starter Steve Wojciechowski in the fifth, ,won for the first time
in five decisions this season, pitching 2 2/3 scoreless innings ..
Mark Lewis had three hits;
including a two-run single. for
Detroit. The Tigers lost their third
straight after winning five of eight.
Angeli 5, White Sox 4
California won for the ninth time
in 10 games, and the Angels have
come from behind in a!l nine victo- .
ries,
Tim Salmon tied the score with
his ninth homer in I 5 games and
Don Slaught drove in the go-ahead
run with an eighth-inning single.
The visiting White Sox lost their
fourth straight and for the sixth time
in seven games after winning 19 of

:_._

24 PACK

DOZEN

3''

Landen: I am '14, and
friell!ls and I always read y&lt;M'
~~·· but we have noticed that
')iU don '.t often lllllftss the Prob'Jiljls of teen-ap liriS- Here's a very.
problem we have - kissSome girls have the perfect ('lnt
but for most or us, it's gross. :
have always dreamed or my
-4==---'!~ kiss as somethina ten&lt;ler and
ifidroughlr enjoyable. Recently, I
~ived II; 111d it was neither of
·
things. My boyfriend nwtaged
; remove all my makeup in the
~ DurAIIn

PEPSI·COLA

s

$

·'""Loo.,.

ASST. FLAVORS

YELLOW CORN

LB.
DELl STYLE

you.11

-...
--

ptOOOii of sucltie&amp; .y r - off. It
w• bil ftnt kils, too. to I a- ht
dida'l blow blair.
ltoldhiaM-IIIOYiqeoofla
foJ me (ewa tbtou&amp;h I eotllly
reedy). He ...-,.iwl and relt bid
dte rea at dte - - ,. Now eVfrJ
time I thiJdr llbout It, I just IIN&amp;Ier
bec•toe it w81so clilpltillaSince M'l so inexperienced, I
feel J. delen'CI IOIIIC piciMcc.
Should I teD him his tiuinJ is too
agreslive? How can I Jive him
some poineen without insultinJ ot
embarrusing him? - Conf\ued and
Diapsted in Vlflinia
Dar Va.: 'Jell him there are eli(ferent styles of kissin1, and you
would like to show him the style you
likc best Then, demonstrate the soft
~~iss . I'll bet he'll be thrilled. (P.S..
Teen-aaers with bnK:es should be

~1,.: 78

SWEET

c

..

Ann
L8 nde r8

I

.GROUND

CHUCK

.I!!!!!'!~

•

"It's bec!n a little bit of a lOUgh {
road this year," Sampr1111 lljcl of .
Agassi , "The final of the Opea lut •
y-. that took a little bit oul of him. '
I don 't know if he's still tryin1 to pt :,,
over that. He does seem like he hu- ':".
n'tquite rebounded from that mall:b. ~
"Andre's &amp;ot as much talent IS ,..
anyone piayin&amp; this game," s~ ~:
added. " It's just a miller of putting
it all together .. : and being into it. ~ •
And I'm sure when he plays Jwre, he :::
will be. This place brings it out in •:

This will be Sampras' fant grasscourt event of the year. Meanwhile,
three-time Wimbledon champion
Becker won convil!cinaly a1 Queen's
last week over two-time Wimbledon
champion Stefan Edberg.
" Cenainly, winning Queen's
helped Boris," Sampras said. "But
when Boris get.s on the court at Wimbledon, he's pumped up and ready to
go anyway."
Asked about Agassi, Sampras
speculated he has yet to recover from
losing to ~im at the 199S U.S. Open.

In The Husk

80% Lean

By CHRISTOPHER
McDOUGALL
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Nancy
Schultz, the widow of slain Olympic.
wrestler David Schultz, carried tbe
Olympic torch this morning as it left
Independence Hall en route to Wilmington, Del.
"I was very proud to be there to
represent IJlY husband David," said
Schultz. accompanied by her two ·
children, Danielle. 7, and Alexander,
10.
Her husband was shot to death
Jan. 26 on the Pennsylvania estate of
chemical heir John E. du Pont where
the athlete worked as a wrestling
coach and was training for an
Olympic comeback
Around midnight, more than
25,000 people partied under growling skies at the foot of the Art Museum. while huadreds more fanned out
along the dark Schuylkill River to
cheer the Pennsylvania runners passing ihe torch.
Joe Frazier, who won Olympic
gold fighting wi\h a broken left
thumb in the 1964 Games, joined
Olympic basketball player Dawn
Staley and other )peal heroes in the
Philadelphia leg of the run to Atlanta.
''Nothing - not making the
team. not beating the Russians last
week - can match that rush," said
Staley, who fought her way out of a
North Philade.lphia housing project
to become a.star at the University of
Virginia and the smallest me~ber of.
·the U.S. women's basketball team.
"Staley was given the prize role of
carrying the Iorch up the Art Museum steps while lights nashed and the
theme from " Rocky" thundered.

22.

Certified

FOOD LAND

Schultz,
Frazier
and Staley
keep torch
relay going

fr~m

aiainst Kafelnikov."
He went home, didn't touch a
ncket for three or fou r d&amp;ys, ·111d
flew to London 011 Salurday to belin
practicing on grus.
"You look at the surroundinp
here. this is it" Sampru said. 1'This
is the biggest tournament we have. It
always gives me a gte11 feeling when
you walk through .the g~s ... It
brings back a lot of good memories
I've had the last three yean. This is
the granddaddy of them .all. That's
the way !look at it."

STOCK UP.FOR

EASTMAN'S

a

(Continued

quanerfinals would be Graf vs. Jana
Novotna, Conchita Manine i vs.
Lindsay Davenport, Arantxa
Sanchez Vicano vs. Chanda Rubin,
and Seles vs. Anke Huber.
Sampras hopes to be rejuvenated
by Wimbledon. He said he's never
felt worse than he did two weeks ago
losing to Kafelnikov in the French
Open semifinals.
"I'm better now, but I think
that's .the worst I've ever felt bodywi~ and mentally. It was a grind ...
I just kind of hit the wall in the match

•'

.

The Dally Senllnel• P.ge 7 ..:
•

een . . . . . . . . . e Romeo .n·eeds pointers on the art of kissing·:

•

Sampras may find road to fourth straight title toughe.r
By STEPHEN WADE
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- The game Pete Sampras has
played to win the last three Wimbledon titles barely resembles the
one Bjorn Borg honed just two
decades ago to win a record five
straight.
Sampras was only four years old
when Borg won his first in 1976. The
point was underlined for Sampras in
a British television special on the
Borg-McEnroe showdowns. Wimbledon opens it.s annual two-week
stand Monday.
"The thing . that amazed me
watching it is ... the game has really
changed in the last 10 years," Sampras said. "They seemed like they
were playing in slow motion in some
ways . I'm not puuing them down.
But with the racket.s today, there's so
much speed and raw power. That's
what caught my eye the most."
Sampras' road to a fourth straight
at Wimbledon could end abruptly. In
Tuesday 's draw, the top seed and
world No. I was pitted against
American Richey Reneberg in the
first round - and likely will find
big-serving Mark Philippoussis in
the second.
The 6-foot-4 Australian, ranked
No. 30 in the world and nicknamed
"Scud, " beat Sampras in three set.s
in January in the Australian Open.
"It's not easy," Sampras said.'
"Mark's a very big hitter with huge
serve. Obviously he's proven he can
beat me in Australia. He 's got a big
game, especially on grass. His serve
is very tough to return. There's no
reason to. look ahead, but this is a
very tough draw."
. The next three seeds - Boris
Becker, Andre Agassi .and doran
Jvanisevic - got much more favor-

Pon•uy •llldclllport. Ohio

-.

Wedn••rtay,June18, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The o.llf'SaniiMI

and WlC CoupoN

• Not

en-_

•

.~

v

~

:

'

ght, 1923; . Jean Sexon, 1949; missedareunionwereKathrynand
ard Larkins, 19SI; J.M. and Virgil Windon, Starling Massar and
dred Gaul, 1941: Ralph Murray, Howard Knight. The Parker family
;
; Clarice Wilford. 1941; Horace had the most present with six.
;Dorothy Karr, 1946; Mary BamThe Dale Kautz Family scholarha!,Large, 1951; Iris Weber Wilson, · ship was given to Lauren Young,
19,{1; Kathleen Bissell Seckman, granddaughter of Reid Young, Leota
19'~; Samuel Michael,l935; Esther Kraul!er and Francis Reed. The
F!Xker, 1936;
Chester Alumni Scholarship was giv• .t:leo Smith, 1947; Dallas Marks, en to Jennifer Mora, granddaughter of'
19.5!1; Nola Will, 1926; Helen Haggy Kathryn and Woodrow Mora.
P.fiiJjls, 19S6; Marie Hauck, 19~5;
Durins the business meeting it
!;lilt Malkack, 1934; Lula Circle, was asked where the alumni would
J?fl; Roger Epple. 19S6; Howard meet after 'the,new Eastern ElemenP~cr, 1941; Thelma Eddy, 1936; tary is buill, with no answer as yet.
~ Hawk,.1941; Harry Holter,
Mus~c for the dinner hour and
tta4; Pauline Swain Primmer, 1951; dancing was by George Hall, 1954
Miliine )':hitehead, .1945; lletty graduate.
II, 1957; VICtOr Balir, 1938;
Recognized for their assistance
arr,J929;BobWoods,l947; wetetheMasonsandthefiredepartHeines, 1934; Helen Henry, ment, cooks, tCiichers, PI'O and the
I~; Josepl)ine Ritchie; 1934; 4-H ·club. Also rec~gnized were
Hal le Osborne. 1941; Eileen Kuhn, Wetherall Jewelers, Raiilsoft. Chester
1' ;
.
Garden Club, Fanners Bank, Racine
.: etty. €hevalier, 1946; Louise Home National Bank. Litter Control,
1~n, 1956; Bob Dean, 1939; James Soulsby, Robert Eason,
M
Lee, 1952; Allen . Brown, Williams Insurance, Jean Trussell of
1()pal Eichinaer. 1943; Deny the wr housing office, the Ohio Lot.
, lll4i; Starlins Massar, 1952; .tery 111d In:ey Newell.
~~!)''n ind WoOdro.,V Mora, 1947;
The J1Y111 was decorated with a
B · ~1. 19.5.5: Roser and Rose- Calse ccilin1 ' of blue and white
m ' '_ Ketler,.I9S5; Kathryn and Vir- streamers, balloons and pennants.
giL 1p&lt;lon, J9S7; Dale Kautz, 1944; Tables were decorated with candles
Hlliokl . and Betty Newell, 1951; and flower arrangements by the
n Parker, 1936; ~en Dame- Chester Garden Club.
..
, 1935; Harry B11ley, 1935;
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News · po11·cy·

·
.":}.an effort to provide our Nlder·
•hii With c:umnt news, tbjl GalliiJO:
li.:JMily Trtbuntl and The Daily Sentin4l. will Dill accept wedtlinp after
6()..jfays from dte date of the event.

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.\)1 cl_ub meelin's and~ news
lltic:~ 1n the IOCtety leCIICIII must
be submitted withla 30 days or
oceumnce. All birthdays IJIUst ~
submitted within 42 days

FDA
' appro.ves f"Irst. drug .tA
u heIp
strokes, but 1'mproper u
· se dang· e'rous
_

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Aaaoclatecl Preaa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -· Stroke
victims have new hope that a dru&amp;
could protect their brains from perman.ent injury, but only if they geUo
the emergency room fast enoughand if their doctors use the medicine
properly.
Improper use .of the clot-dissolving drug tPA could kill patients
instead of saving them, the Food and
l&gt;JugAdministration warnedThesday
even as it approved the first medicine
ever shown to fight ischemic strokes.
TPA, sold by Genentech Inc.
under the brandname Activase, is
widely usC:d to treat heart attacks, and
some stroke specialists have already
given it to their patients.
llut Tuesday's FDA decision will
broaden use of the drug because it
clears Genentech to advertise tPA.
The key will be teaching patient.s
to recognize the early Wtll'llins signs
of stroke so they get medical help
within three hours of its onset Later
use of tPA could cause dangerous
bleeding in the brain.
"Every minute counts," National
InstituteiofHealthstrokechiefZach
Hall said in a statement. "We have a
major education task ahead, but the
payoff is the lens or thousands of
pauent.s who wm be spared lifr:tona ·
disabilities."
But.doctors have to know how tel
use · tht d{ua properly, th~ FDA
~ized. Some strokes 11n: caused
by brai11 hemorrhaging, so doctors
must rule that out with a brain scan

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before giving tPA, it warned. And the
proper dose for a stroke is much lower than for a heart attack.
Some 500,000 Americans suffer
strokes every year. They are the leading cause of adult disability and the
nation's No. 3 killer, claiming,about
150,000 Jives. Until now. doctors.
powerless to stop the damage.
focused instead on rehabilitating
patients.
The vast majority of strokes,
400,000. are ischemic, caused by a
blood clot that blocks blood flow into
the brain. Brain hemorrhages cause
the remaining strokes.
In December, the NIH published
a landmark study showing that
ischemic stroke victims who got tP'A
within three hours of initial symptoms were at least 33 percent more
likely to recover or have minimal disability.
Not every patienl will be cured.
doctors emphasized. But for every
100 ischemic stroke victims treated
with tPA. or tissue plasminogen activalor, at least II have a more faYorable outcome, Genentech said.

LOSE :: 10 LIS
IN 3 DAYS!
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Warning signs include weakness
or numbness in the face , arm or leg,
sudden blurred vision, ·difficulty
speaking and sudden dizziness or loss
of coordination.

Beat the
Summer Heat
with a Fan
from Pickens
Hardware!

•8" .&amp; 12"
Oscillating Fan
•20" Floor Fan
•Pedestal Fan
•Window Fan

PICKENS
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�Torch run, Olympic _Rings
not so ancient tradjtion·

Search is on for children's book 1

By RICHARD PYLE
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Call him a
spoilsport, but as a student of antiq·
uity. Da~id C. Young feels compelled
to point out that the Olympic torch
now heading to Atlanta is not a tradition dating to ancient Greece.
In the July -August issue of
Archaeology magazine, the University of Florida classics professor
recalls that the long-di stance torch
relay originated 60 years ago, when
Adolf Hitler tried to turn the 1936
Berlin Olympics into a celebration of
the Third Reich.
Not only that, but it was a Nazi
propaganda film that al so created the
myth that the five-ring Olympic symbol is from ancient Greece - a mistake that numerous books and other
publications have repeated over the

OLYMPIC MYTH· Katie Courlc, NBC "Today"
.. . 11how co-host, carries the Olympic Torch out
. of New York's Rockefeller Plaza Tuesday before
passing · It to another runner who headed
toward Manhattan's southern tip. The Olympic

•'

tury, B.C.'" said Andrew Bauer, a International Olympic Committee,
Greenwich Village writer and phi- said by telephone from Lausanne,
losophy teacher.
Switzerland.
The interlocking circles were
Young 's second book on the
games, "The Modern Olympics: A designed in 1913 by France's Qaron
Struggle for Revival ," is about to be Pierre de Coubenin, founder of the
published by Johns Hopki ns Univer- IOC, for a 1914 World Olympic ,Consity Press. He_says the torch relay was gress in Paris. He apparently wanted
invented by Carl Diem , a German the rings to symbolize the first five
who had been planning the 1916 Olympic Games, but the congress
Olympic Games at Berlin when they broke up when Archduke Ferdinand
were canceled because of World War of Austria was assassinated in Sarajevo, triggering World War I.
I.
Revived for · the 1920 games at
Twenty years later, Diem was
Antwerp,
Belgium, and used at all
back -organizing the 1936 games
later
Olympiads,
the ring logo came
under Hitler. " Diem , seeking to
to
symbolize
the
"five
continents"glamorize them with an ancientaura.
a
European
concept
in
which Nonh
staged the first lighting of the
and
South
America
are
one, Young
Olympic name, now a hallowed ritual in which millions delight," Young says.
The myth of their ancient origin
writes.
began
with Leni Riefens_tahl, the
When the torches were lit at
years.
German
cinematographer whO' chronBerlin -ostensibly to signify unity
"It actually is common knowledge
among nations - they carried the icled Hitler's rise to power in the doc- at least among people who know
umentary "Triumph of the Will" and
· a lot about the Olympics - that the logo of the manufacturer, Krupp , the extolled the 1936 Games in the 12hu ge munitions company that armed
torch ceremony began at Berlin. "
Germany
for two world wars, Youn g hour film "Olympia."
Young said in a telephone interview says.
For the latter film, Young says,
from his home near Gainesville, Fla.
In the interview, Young said it Riefenstahl had the rings carved into
As the torch neared New York
remains unclear whether Diem had a rock at Delphi, Greece, as a backCity on Monday, most People ques- Nazi sympathies.
drop for torch bearers circling the
ti oned along the route had never
Olympic officials don't deny the ruins of the ancient stadium.
heard of a Nazi connection
"Years later. American authors
torch ceremony's origins . "It began
"!always thought it was from the in Berlin in 1936, that 's true," Fran- Lynn and Gray Poole observea the
third cen tury. or was it the fifth ccn- cois Carrard , director-general of the old movie prop. mi stook it for an
ancient inscription. and published
. their error.

torch heading to Atlanta is not a tradition dating to ancient Greece. The long-distance torch
relay originated 60 years ago, when Adolf Hitler
tried to tum the 1936 Berlin Olympics into a celebration of the Third Reich.

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were unable to be present.

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All in all , it was a great outing and
• everyone seemed to enjoy just sitting
i around yard of the Bakers chattin g

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away --not a television set in sight.

: And I thought those days had gone
: forever when people just sat and
'• talked.-or should I roll with the
~Ji.m~~-~~-~ say, "communicated."

! ; Tom Riley has been returned to
! Tiis home at 531 South Second Ave.,
: in Middleport, from the Holzer Medical Center where he underwent
• surgery. His wife. Zelia, is presently
: at the Holzer Medical Center Reha• bilitation Center.
:
Things arc looking up for both of
; them as well as for James Hall of
: Pomeroy who underwent triple
: bypass surgery at a Charleston,
• W.Va., recently.
••
My informant tells nte that all
three--the Rileys and Jim--would
· : really enjoy cards.

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· Publle Notlee

PUBUC NOTICE
The
following
•+ iplllloetlone end/or -lfted
;::: complalnta nre r-lvtil
.r:••
- end the lollowln" draft,
,.. pro.,-ct, or final • ectlone
~ w.,. laaulld, by the Ohio
Envlronmenltl ProtiiOIIon
+;- Aatnoy (OEPA) lett
....,.. "Aotlone" Include the
'1"1' adoption, modHlottlon, or

Florida entered University Hospital
in Columbus on Monday and is
scheduled to undergo major surgery.
Doctors have been hesitant about performing the surgery because of Jack's
age. However, it has about reached
the point of surgery or else. I know
you join me in wishing Jack and his
wife, Martha, well.

Gayle Price, retired teacher at
Racine High, like a lot of us wonders
when the constant price -raises in
everything will stop.
Gayle recalls in the . 1940's he
hired a neighbor who had about the
first hay baler in these parts, to bale
his hay. The cost was seven cents a
bale. Yesterday Gayle figured the cost
of just the twine to bale his hay --the
lOSt 47 cents.
Of course. we cim all remember
when prices were considerably more
reasonable on everything b'ut it does
seem these days-prices change as fre,
quently as the time of day.

E'

,._11.

l:: ,....,

lkM of arden (other
.j.f- then emerganor orderl);

:;:

,.,. the l.. uance,

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Boneless Bottom
Round Roast
Poum1

CA~EINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAiN DEW,

Dtet Pepsi.or
PepsiCo/a

And, celebrities who have permitted their names to be placed on
designer merchandise are on the hot
seat because the merchandise is being
produced in sweat shops. The proceeds are quite sizable for the celebrities who do obviously endorse the
products. And you wondered whatever happened to America n manufacturing.

denial,

:~=~~n~~=

:::; verlencee, or certHicatae;
,.. and the - approval or
· ~ dl11pprov11 01 plane and
~ epeolfloallone. . "Drill
~
Actlona" ere written
~ llalemantl of the Director
• of
Environmental
•• Pootaclloil'e (Director'a)
t · lntant With rupeDI tot he
'- IHUIIIICie, dlnlll, etc. Of I
~ permit, lloanu, order, etc.
~
lnteraatad'. perao"a m1y
aubmlt wt llteol commente or
: - r•qu..t a public muting
~
regarding drell •ctlone.
, Comment• or public
,... nieetlng NC!-" muet be
;:. aurnbfllad wflltln 30 dllp of
·: . notice of the draft eDIIon.
·~ "Propoeed eotlone" are
~ wrlttan •-menta of the
..., director'• Intent with
"' raepeot to the laauence,

...,..
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Valujet has now closed down. On
a voluntary basis, I believe, it is
reported. Isn't it strange that for several days following the plane crash of
one of the line's planes in Florida,
government officials assured us that
the Valujet planes were perfectly safe
to uavel. All of a sudden now they're
not. Just another case of locking the
barn door after the horse is stolen.
But we've done that before haven't
we? Do keep smiling.

Two 12-paks

IJer customer

at this
Price olease_

TH' ~

PEPSI.(OLA

Hanlwn andAppli,_..

PRODUaS

($3), ,P.O. Box 41, Kidron, OH 44636
(ll6-857CS7,).
Aldioup we'\'e fOUDd thia
Ia ocblr calllop, l.eluDIII't
""" il by far the belt, and lbere
no tllippinJ or handliDJ ciiii!JC$.
The Item is HW and the

wn...-

By the way, we've putto,ether
newslener that lists and reviews our
favorite "genel'll merchandise" eat;
alogs. If you would like a copy, send
$2 10 "Non-Specittlty Catalogs: Anne
&amp; Nan's Favorites," c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box I 884, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY I 0156.
Write to "~k Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. !;lox 240, Hartland, .VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear; in the column. Oue 10 the
ume i» mail, personal replies cumol
be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Na•1c1
Nash-Cwnmings an: C\)-aulbors
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone)
" Dear Anne and Nan: TwO:.
Problem-Sol'vers Share Their
Sec_rets" (Bantam). To order, call 1800-888-1220.
Copyrlptl996 NE1NSf'API~R

......, ... s•••,
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
•
WI RISEM IRE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

...

12 PK 12 OZ. CANS

denial, modlfloetlon,
revOC8don, or renewal ol a
permit, llcenM, or -tenet.
Written .eommenta end
. requ11ta lor • public
meeting regarding a .
propoalld eotlon may be
aubmlttacl Within 30 dllye of
notice of !ht propoud
action. An adjudication
hllrlng may be held on 1
proPDflld action Ha h-lng
requeat or obleotlon ola
twct1vec1 by lila OEPA within
·30 claya_ol teouance of the
propooed action. Wrtn.n
oommenta, requeoto lor
public . meetlngo, and
ad)udloallon • hearing
Nqutelt muat be aent to:
H.. rlng Clerk, Ohio
Environmental PrDiect!on
Aaenor, P.O. Box . t 049,
Columbua, Ohio 43216-104~
(Telephone: 814-644-2129).
"Final Actlona; are actlona
ol the director which .are
en.ctlva upon !nuance or •
etatad ettaoilve data.
Pureuantto Ohio Revlaed
Cod• Section 3745.04, a
llnel acllon may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental Board of
.Review (EBR)
who waa a
til a

'lltellnatectiOn. Purauent to
Ohio Revlaild Code a.ctlon
3745.07, a llnll action
loaulng,
denying,
modifying, revoking, or
renewfng e permit, llctnM,
or varlanca which Ia not
preceded . by a propoalld
ectlon, nuty be lfiPIIIild to
the EBR by flUng an appetll
within 30 dllp ofleauance
of the llnel a.ctlon. EBR
appeate 'muat be flied with :
Environmental Board ol
Review, 236 Eaat · Town
Street, Room 311, Cotumbua,
Ohio 432151 A copy of the
appeal mutt be arevlld on
tha Director within 3 dey.
altar 1111ng the appeal with
thaEBR.
Final approve! of plana
and apecHic:8tlone
L.Hdlng Creek Cona....-y
Dletrlct Rutland, Oh ·
teaue o.te 0111081116
The tine! action not
preceded by propoaed
action and Ia appearlable 1&lt;!
EBR.
Water main
replacement along Rild Hill

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To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips

Publle Notice

12-14

=~~~=~ USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

_

EBR. Eaat Letart

LB

·
.
99(
uck Roast.....~ ••••••••••

Storage Project.

(6) 19, I tc

••

POMEROY ' -- Alzheimcrs and
~ related disorders support group meet~ ingWednesday, 1-3 p.m. atthe Meigs
; County Senior Citizens Center in
~ Pomeroy. Brenda Roush from Leo's
~ Cruise and Travel will be the guest
: speaker.

POMEROY -- Pomeroy Group of
AA open discussion meeting Thurs'day, 7 p.m. in the basement of the
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue .
RA CINE -- Raci ne Post 602,
American Legion, meeting Thursday,
business meeting at 6:30 p.m. with
dinner to follo"i.
SATURDAY
RACINE -- 27th annual Teaford
family reunion Saturday at Star Mill
Park in Racine: Dinner will served at
noon. Family members are to bring
articles for an auction and door
prizes.

~

,..-.

g~:~':fChuck

g~gff~"lRound
. . .·_tb$jsg
..,

YEUOW, WHITE Oil BI&lt;OLDR

sweet corn .·

5/$

Lb$fR~

~.,.-"-A./.
_

North carolina
Blueberries

2/$

'

Bo.d.

OIL

Tuppen Ptalna-Che81ar
Watw Dlatrlct
lhadevllle, Ott
Ia- Date 061'101116

4BOZ.

not

HAGAN

Ice Cr

DEADLINE BAS
EXTENDED FOR

•

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...••
•,..
-

16 oz.

:992-2156

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news lips

4/$1
'

14.75

oz.

The Baby Sentinel is a SpeCial Section rilled with photographs of
local kids, ages newbom t~ 4 years old.
The Baby,Sentinel will appear
in the July 19th issue of The Daily
Sentinal.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
form below and enclose a·snapshot or wallet size picture plus a $6.00
_charge for each photograph. (Enclose payment with picture).

''

MAXWELL HOUSE
.INSTANT

COFFEE
12

UM'HMASE

'

DETERGENT
92-103

COTTONELLE WHITE
BATH TISSUE
4ROLL

'7 9 cUMW~

ICI'I'V &amp; S T A T E - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

FOLGER$
COFFEE

: CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp;
Submitted By ----~-------1

.

~~~~---·-~------~-~
. SENDTO:

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5 . ,..~OL

P.O. Box 129 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
BABY Sentinel
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COUPON ·GOOD·i
FOR 5 TRIPLE
, COUPONS . ·,
GOOD WED 6/19,

$ 99 '

Tht D,aUy Sentinel

oz.

49

'

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r-----~---~-------,
IPARENTS'NAME---------1
I .
I

oz.

$

99C

•

•

SQT. PAIL

PINK _BEAUTY
PINK SALMON

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

1

The Sentinel News Hotline

$2
•••••••••••••
,

VANCAMP
PORK 1N BEANS

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OL

WESSON

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The Melga loolil a-d of
Eduoatlon raeervaa the
right ·to reJect any and all
blda, and the aubmlttlng of
bid ahall lmpoae no
liability or obligation upon

\

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS -- The Rock
Springs Better Health Club w'ill meet
Thursday, I p.m. at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.

l

.fiNAL TOUCH.
FABRIC
SOFTNER

411789, on or before 1
p.m., Monday, July 22,

.•.•

••

•

OFFICE,

..

Genuine
Ground Beef Pattles.... Lb.

l

E.-Main Street, PcHn.roy,

•

The Community Calendar is
: published as a free service to non• pror.t groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
• Items are printed as space permits
:· and cannot be guaranteed lo run a
• specific number of days.
~ WEDNESDAY
:
LONG BOITOM -- Revival ser~ -vices, Mt. Olive Community Church,
'~ Long Bottom, June 19-23, 7 p.m.
!· each evening. Gary L. Backelder,
: Bellville, will be the evangelist.

.

69

64

!
l
•I •

; ~community calendar-

oz,

s

Road. •

preceded
i~~~~h~eu~r~hiE•~,~~n~·~~
aollon
of

1

KRAFT
VELVETTA SHELLS

!

Jack Greenaway of Pomeroy and

•••
•

PRODUCTS

The Sentinel News ·Hotline

992-2156

COCA COLA

PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JUNE 22 , 1996

'

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(

IAM·IOPM

ENTERPRISE ASSN.
'

2 UIEI

STOIEHOUIS

&lt;aup!) S139 - a bit more
lf8lldmolhers paid, we imagine.

Publle Notlee

~

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~·s

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

, There was a nice tribute paid Satllrday night to Ike and Mona Lee
· Neal.
-~
Rev. Clark Baker and his wife,
• Bonnie, staged an appreciation party
'•• at their home on South Third Ave., in
~ Middleport, honoring Ike and Mona
~ in appreciation for their being wonderful neighbors over the years. 1be
Bakers are next door neighbors of the
Neals.
'
was quite a large gathering
•.,• on There
hand for the observance, neigh,
: bors of the Neals along Third Ave .•.
besides others who have experienced
&gt;- . tbe thoughtfulness and kindness of
· the Neals over the years. A number of
• the neighbors coming in brought in
- picnic type foods for the cookout and
• during, the evening several friends
• and relatives spoke briefly compli·• menting Ike ~nd Mona for their good
; neighbor policy. Several letters were
read from friends and neighbors who

"

DBAR AN1'ffi AND NAN: I've
been lookina for a children's boOk,
"The Veqie-Men's Revenge." The
111tbor 's namo il Upton, and it is writ,
ten in verse form. A frien!l found a
copy some years qo, and I have had.
no luck witb regular bookstores as 1
~lieve it must be out of print. This
IS not the ftnt out-of-print .book 1
have endeavored 10 find. Since I have
small children, and not mucb time 10
comb used-book stcxes, I wonder if
someone has an easier way to locate
such books. Contacti11g the publisher bas never done me any good. -- .
VALERIE REH, Elgin, Dl.
DEAR VALERIE: We have had
so many requests for out-of-print
children's books that on behalf of our
readers we have recently enlisted the
help of Marion Adler, P.O. Box 627,
Stockbridge, MA 01262 (413-2983SS9).
.
Marion owns and operates a .
"book search .. service speciBlizing in out-of-print children's books.
If you will write (or call) her with
the name of the book you are look-

-.-.

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Beat of the Bend ...
.
by Bob Hoeflich
..••

By ANNE B..ADAMS and
•. NANCY NASH&lt;:UMMIN08

c,

in1' for, lhe wiU JCan:h for it This
may lab 111ywlwn up to eiJht weeb
(there i1 no cbarJe for thia).
AI the end of that time, M.ioa
will let you know ifpie hu ~~eft &amp;uecesaful in findinJ the book; if lhe hu
been, she will quote you a price. • ,
She Ilks that you then let her
know immediately if you wish to purchase the book u she bas 111 obligation 10 -notify tbe seller (i.e. the person or book dealer who has the book
in their collection) as soon as possi- ·
ble. The catch is, of cour\e, that local·
ing books throuah tbe "bookttearch"
process is going 10 be more expensive
than if you were able 10 find the book
at a second-hand bookslore, library
sale or rummage sale.
However, if you really Wlllt a pirticular children's book and can't find
it anywhere else, this is the way 10 go.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Befcxe
they had electric wringers or.washing
machines, they had wringers with a,
handle that you turned by hand. I am
looking for one. They are great for
wringing out rags or cloths for wiping your car down ,.tler washing. -BOB VONLUDWICK, Ocala, Fla.
DEAR BOB : You can find your
hand wringer in one of our all-time
favorite and most -referred 10 catalogs:

· THUR 6/20, FRI
6/21, SAT 6/22

SEE 'STORE FOR ·
DETAILS
•

tt

�•

P~~gt 10 • The Oily

Sentinel

Wednesd8~,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

June 11, 1

•

.•'
• ••

•

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

;

••
••
• ••

- . ...
... -IOX
.......
...-so
l o.
.,. l'lo;..r Ploo-1 R~ ·

UIIA'S
Nlimll

IISSELL IIILDERS, INC.

FAUESlWREI

.

Js' II 1 Let • •11

••

................
.. ,...
.....,...........
,..,. "

GiraOH • Repi~~Cement Windows

IIIY"VIRIIIJ

Room Additions • Rool'lng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•
•

/few Homes • Vlnyf Siding New

Mi IDHiiW

'
•
.
I '

Big .3 Day Sale

••
I

~UNE•20•21•22,19-8
•

...

ALL REGIS7ERS OPEN
4 P.M. TO 8:30 P.M.

$

.
'I

'

I •

••

quot.l

en•
IICB·S

,, 0
ear

•

I

••

.'.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

•'

Pomeroy, Ohio

. ·Food Club • 2%,
. ·• a.2S%, 1o/o or Skim
: . Plastic or Ctn.

•• lbe. Chloken Wing•
•1/4 Cup Butter, Melted
•1/4-1/2 Cup Hot Pepper
S.uoe
•a Tbep. White VInegar
•1/2 tep. Salt
•10 Celery Stalk-.
Cut Into 4,. Pleo••
•1 Cup Bl..- Che•Dre•elng
Thaw wings If frozen, arrange
In Bingle layer on greased rack
In 10X15X1" jelly roll pan.' Bake
,. ,...,,,., at 400' until brown and crlap
(about 1 hour), turning once. In
~i~·'f~~'iiio"llarge bowl combine butter, hot
~
pepper aauca, vinegar and salt.
Add Cooked wings and gently
toea until well coated. Uu bleu
cheese dreaalng ae a celery dip.
'Makes 8 -10 appetizer

5:30 , •••

•New Homes
•G•rsges
•Complete
Remodeling
Stt..p &amp; Coinpsre
FR!:E ESTIMATES

Rad• .h •CI••
f/1

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work
985·4198

•*=• '**It ..

985 4473
l

...

•

'

•I

•!
I

'

•

•

&gt;

I
I

''

'

I \ I

l.

';

I

I

Auctlonatr'l No'-: P•rt... nUde from 1840'1 firm
houH, furniture 11 In ortglnlll flnllh plu1 olhlr
•ntlq.a from other &amp;~~tatn •nd conllgnora.

'
.' ..'

' ' I

.

l I '

Chicken
••
1ngs

y.,,..

35
(614) ~-2364 .

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

•

LIVE PSYHICS
W.ttolelp
Yo•lll

.......

Serv-tl (8111) 845 8434

JESS'

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266-1-800-950-3359

'

hiking, flahlng.
Rent by""" or month.

water, laro-lo?ll,
304-372-5688 or

(UmeStonaLow Rain)

WICKS
HAULING

. St. Rt. 7

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

'

Detergent

0! ... ,

•..
....
•
• ••
: •.:.
.
.•r
.: •:l
•

·-·
:; I:
.'
' •.. ..
.,

FIIEE
Pick-up di1C41rc?ed

b?ltlertea, qqpp11-a
many metalt.
614-992-4025
aam-8

PROPeRTYI
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.......- ........,.............._III-22SI
....... L HART..- ..- - :........______ ,742-al7

•

''

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

,,,,

BllllflsawM/1.
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles
614-74~·2193
TFN

MGM
Skiing • VInyl
Aluminum • Roofing
New • R~p~~lr
Gultltre a
Downapouta

_...,

Free httmstea
lllt1JII1-

.I

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESnMATES

,.

1 Kiuens, 3·1

r

Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7573 .,... .... pd.

94~2188
5116JI,I TFH

H&amp;H
Home
Remodelini

Need Direction?
.Love
Business ·
F•mlly Matters
Allow Your
Personal Psychic to '
Atslst You
1-900-988 8600

Roofing &amp;
Block Work
Free Eatimate•

Ext. 1277

992·2768 or
992·3274....,._

$3.911 Ptr Minute
MUll be 18 yn.
Touc:h-TOIHI Required
Serv-u (619) 645 8434
~~~~-

For Quality Work

..

......_

"

.

Summer Images
New Location
Mlddleport, Ohio
Wit~ 3 Beds to
Serve You Better.
12-$20.00
16-$25.00
Phone 992·2489

•

z Black,

•••tts old, • -s

-·

Fret Kinena 304 -882-34 77
Leave meastge. w tll cau rtghl
Kmens 10 goOd home ao• -675-

18711.

t&lt;tnens: 8 I 10 Weeks Old, l tner
Tra'-d, 614-250-1650.
Male &amp; Female L111er Trained Kitten &amp; Cat; Thre• 10 Week Old

I

MiJ!td Puppies To Good Homes
814-441 -1770.

T.V. Antenna With Tower, Free
T o -. 11•·- ·1828.

60 Lost and Found

70

Yard Sale

Baths

Remodeling

Windows
Siding

Kitchens
Decks

Roofs

Most

Add-ons

Call
B. D. Construdion
614·992·2979
111Wt mo. pd.

Howard Excavatin
Trucking.
Umestone

Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites ind
Utiliti81

--- -

'•

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad 11 to run .
Sunday edition • 2.00 p.m. f•iday
Monday aditlon - 10:00 am. Sat-

r

urday.

June 2, It, 22nd, Rodney ~r os s
From faltl"t Baptist Church . Ma ·
lemity, Crafts, Furniture. M11c.

hems.

Sa1Urday, June 22nd, 102 Oebbte

Drove, 8 :00 A.ll. To 4:00P.M. ·

'

Thurs. Fri , 'June 20th , 21st . 9
A M . ? lots Of M1sc . 578 Jay
Drive, Gallipolis.

Pomeroy,
Mkkllepon
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sates Must Be Pa1d In
Advance. Deadline 1 ·oopm the
Clay before the ad 11 10 run, Sun -

day vdition- 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edilion 10:ooa.m Saturday.

i

MovtnQ sale- starting Thursday ?, va~ of household 1tems, new

typewrner, sewing machmes, cb,
dog k9flnel, Gold Ridge Rd., Thel-

ma Barlls Harper 181idonce.

Pt. Pleasant

a VIcinity

2 Famtly 109 0 -H Jones St Thur

&amp;Fn .lJne 20-21 .

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Mt Allo Au~ t• on . Every friday
1pm e..,., SalU•dey 7pm. Rl 2·33
·crossroads· . Groceries. new
men:hanclise Ed Fta2ier 930.

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full !ime auct•oneer, complet~
aut11on

lrcensed

aerv1ce.

I66,0h1D &amp; West Vlrgm•a. 304·

773-5785 Or 304· 773-5447

90 · Wanted to Buy
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Ot Newer.
Smrth Bu•ck Pont•ac, 1900 East· .
ern Avenue. Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts Buy•no sal ~age vehrcles. Sellmg pans 304·
773- ~ .

Paytng Top OoUar For Junk Cars,
Trucks, &amp; Running Vehic les To

Dave, 614-446·9575.
Top dollar· antiques, furniture,
glass, chma, clocks , gold, ailver.

Anything

All Kinds of

f

ALL Yard Sales Mull Be Pa1d In

Thur.-sat. 111-5

Earlh

Work

992-3838

SAVE STEPS!
the

Ads

frstl

IIIIEUL
COUuCTORS

KATttLEEN II. CLFI 'ND·-··,·--·-----.-.e1111
OFFICE...............- ...- .............................- .... t12-mt

• ••

Herbs
Sceated
GeraniUMS
Everlastings

Gutters

.

A CALLI WE HAVE PEOPLE FROM OUT OF STATE
UIOKSNG FOfl HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTYII 80 IF YOUR
IIEAOY TO SELl:, WE'RE READY TO LIST YOUR

•• •

"

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

.......

WE NEED U8TING811F YOUR fiEADY TO SELL GIVE US

:..

FUGUNT
FIELDS

Howard L Writesel

Monlng HCHH't

POMEROY- Union Terrace- 3.945+ acres of niee bUikltng
lots.
ASKING $18,900

: IJ ~ ~
:

.-

SIMMER
TUTORING

or n3-5447

Okl,

2580.

614-247·2120--

I.

I,

POMEROY· Owntr wan? to aolll Ranch style home 3
bedrooms, 1 112 baths, kitchen appllanc:es, WMhlr and dryer,
ellc. B.B. heat and 2 car atlllched garage. ASKING $44,900

I

Fl8vtHWWood

Bridge, 1 mile tram
Apple Grl!ve, Ohio.
ElectriC hook-up, dump

(619) 645·8434

I &amp; WPUSTIO AID SIPPlY

BAIHAN ROAD- One ftoor frame home with kitchen, llvlng
room, 2 bedrooms, one bath, electrlc hoat.pump with C.A.,
C8fll8l and vlnyllloortng, front porch, sitting on a niCe lot.
ASKING $34,900

.. .. .

1

from

985 4422'

Strv·u

Free Estimates
Tuppenl PlaiM, Ohio 45783
· 614 185-3813 or 814-687-414114
Plastic Culvert- Dull wall and Regular 8" ?hru 36"
4" SolD· perf. • solid pipe
· 4" &amp; 6" He• p1pe
4" ol6" Sch 35 pipe
In" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
1 In" tbru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" oll" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thJU 1.000' roll'&lt;)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Oravelesa Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" · Fiuin{!s - Regulators- Risers
Full assonmcnr or P.V.C. &amp; Flex fining• &amp; Water fillmgs
Full line of Cistern, Sep;ic &amp; Water Slorngc ranks.

On St. Rt. 338 W. I miiH

8tatlone, ~on-portable

1·900-988-8988
Ext.7907
2.99/mla 18+
T.T. Phone Req.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years E:rperience • lmured

PORTLAND- Vacan! Ground, 4 lots, drilled well and septiC.
?!ellkle ramp to lhe river.
PRICE REDUCEO TO $8,000

(.......
J..-:.:...

k.mena: s w.-a

1 Malo, 1 Female. I All Gtoy Female, GrHt With ICidll 81-4·310 ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Dlri•S.nd

Meet your
· m9tch

Jb'NES' TREE SE.RVICE

I .

'.

eRaplm 1 t WI • w.s
..II!IO.ages
eSt.. Doors &amp;«I ••ws

Chestar, Ohio

.,., mo. pd

8R 331- Applo Grove- Approx. 1 Acre Front Lot. Fenced In
with a 1984 ·33ft. Mallard Camper. Picnic Sheltar and table.
12' x 12' slonlge building.- Drilled WaR. All Se! Up and wal?ing
lor you ID enjoy 1ha 11U111'118rll
ASKING $24,900

-

3

8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

Limestone~ Gravel

H•adllnen - Cue?om s..;
eo,.,. • Carpet - Convertible Tope -Antlq ... cara- Boat s.at. Over 20 Y11ra Elipeflance
(814) 112·7587
41414 S!an:h Rd,
P1111111roy, OH. 457&amp;t

OFFICE 992·2259

••
f ::
•' :

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992-2772

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

LUNCH
MASON, WV.
TloRMS: C..h or Check With ~ltlve
ldentlllc:atlon
Out-of.Stata Bu, !11'8 Mutt HI,. A Cunw~t Blllk
Letter of Cnldh. No Exctptlonllll
Not I'BIJIOftllble for accldenta or ion of Pf1111811D10MI1rty.

: .,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

PONDEROSI
PRIMinVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON

$5.00· per hour

~

Free Estimates
Guaranteed results

R.L. HOLLON
TRICKING

742·3212

AUCTIONEER; RICK PEARSON ff66

..

3 lllnono 1 - k • Old, 114·2•55180 AIIK 5 I'll.

- · old, r•dy ID fiG. 304-8 755224.

Locally owned &amp; operated

1-8()().889-3943

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

' . ;.'
• I•'

I '(1' Old T - IWK. · II!IOd·
eel, ol ffhou. 30H7&amp;-4150.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

AUCTION CONDUCTED By

ltr
de

.

houtlp!IC.

.... Alltllloiss

Real £1tate General

'+' ~.

949-3151
742-2246

Experlarlca

Call
614-949·2096
TODD BISSELL

~5785

Racine, Ohio
Complete Comme7dal &amp;
Residential SeMce

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
·
Com~e Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - KHchens - Siding ·

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

w.v.

Beaut~ul 3 pc. walnut VIC!. marble top B.A. suite, oak
curved glass ch\na cabinet, elaborate VIet parlor
su~e. early pine 3 door ice box w/o!)ginal milk glass
hardware, fancy oak Murphy bed, fancy 2 pc. oak
B.A. su~e. oak S roll top ~slo;. 3 pc. mahogany B.A.
sune, curved glass showcase, Sellers kitchen cabinet,
VIC!. dressers, fancy Burl walnut dresser w/marble
lop, tavern table, oak wash stand, tall poster rope bed
wlliger maple panels, round oak tables, walnut Spinet
desk, lg. Chippendale mahogany secretary,
mahogany secreiiiJY wardrobe comb., 2 pc. French
style LA. sune, rope leg claw &amp; ball oak table, brass
bed, Early empire sola &amp; 2 c~ra. stamped British
oak Jamestown lounge, mah. desk, VIC!. sofa, VIC!.
loveseat, fancy mahogany sheet music cabinet
w/mirrors, lilriiJY table, oak kitchen clock, Mission oak
clock, Iron skllets, pictures, sevaral pes. American
Fostoria- round cake plate -platte~ &amp; m0f8, pink
depression, Fanton, several pes. stemwa.-.. blue &amp;
whHe china, water sets, 8' pl. selling Haviland china,
pressed glass, Jewel Tea, blue wiDow plataa, cookie
jars - Mickey &amp; Minnie Mouse - Oumbo tum abouts Red Riding Hood - Brush circtl~ horse &amp; others,
collectible whiskey decanter "Turllay", lamps, o~
lamps and more still coming ln.

D&amp;T
Pest Control

tft;,.U&amp; tfeta&amp;.

B&amp;B ROOFING and
CONSTRUCTION

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Let them tell you
about the tuturelll
1-1100-868-4100

I

Se!v-u (819) 645 8434

.
We will WOik within your budget
Ph. 773-8173
FAX n3o5?111
108 Pomeroy Straet
Mason, wv

Milt , . ,.,.. • ..,
(0
Sam.-tg I.E. Ohio a w.t V..ul••
Tal Frw1....,..72 5117
448 M18

Locatacl at liNt Auction Center on RL 33 In .._n,

.

"*'·

$3.911 par
Must ba 18 ynt •

($141111 3013 PhoM
($141'*'201e FAX
814 514-20118 NIGifT

"No Job Too Llll'fle or Too Smtl/1"

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Sale&amp;

..

Ext. 4193

211U'II.UHAN RD •
Rllclne, Ohio 41771

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding SuJ4: Has • lndullrial &lt;&gt;- •MIIChina Shop
Sal\ioes • Sisal Sales &amp; Flbrlcallon • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Sialnlells • Tool O,_jng • 0mamanta1
•
Steps ·Sialrs, Railings, Pallo Fumllunt, Flreplal)e
1
ilema, Plantar hange~. T1 ells as &amp; lois of Oilier stufl!!

lEN

SAl., JUNE 22, 1996
10:00 A.M.

Powdered 92·103 oz.
33·42 Use or
Liquid · 00 oz. Btl.

'

Att
~:t-~Pu..-,
F . . . - All q; IJ u•ot In 110c1?
farlmm1C 2 PniW Uon.

Ext.2469
$3.911 par min.
Muat be 18 yra.

Frozen
1st &amp; 2nd
.Joint Only

•

Ma.UB-:

ROIIRT IISSill
· COIISTRUCTIOII

Every Wetlaesclay

al
alon
-I
Orea't Hors d'oeuvre&amp;

..

1·800·291·5600

TRAP SHOOT

•

BUFFALO STYLE
CHICKEN WINOS

Instill«!

1./mlfed 77me Offer
Call tay with your
window alze1 for a free

•

Faa Yaua • • • •..•• CaRVERIII:RCE

19500

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
..nsulatec:l

I I

MONDAY TBRU FRIDAY

Csll1-t00 ... 4800

IIJHAIU( HPAII
IJ2.00/IL

Manufactured Housing

PIHHnJ

... '
and kwe .
Tha fulure lllartlllodayl

.

REPLACEMENT
WIIIDOWS

Pt.

They have halped

(No Sunday Calls)

-

W'/.2511111

ullllons find fortune,

614-992·7643

..,,1110,...

.

ltiO&lt; 200 Main SL

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

A NNO UN CE M ENTS

cams, wau:hes, estates Osby
Martin, 614·992-7441.
Top Pric;es Paid: Old US Co1ns,
S1lver. Gold, 01amonds, All Old
Collec:libles. Paperweights. Elc.
U T.S. Co in Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 61-'·44&amp;28-'2.

WanrM To Buy : Auto's &amp; Truc~s
Any Cond!110n, eu-388-9062 Or
614-4"fi·PART
.
Wanted To Buy. Junk Autos Wilh

Or Without MDIOts. Call Larry
liVely. 614-!J88.9303.

EMPLOYMENT

SERVICES

110

Help wanted
$-WANTED·$

10 people who need 10 lose
weigh! &amp; make money, 10 try new
patented wa igh1 -lass product.

304·77:).5083 241YSiday.

/YR. INCOME 1'1o1en1101.
c~·:,:,•_ .,...,~ l.-011

Froe (I) 800-

FO&lt; DeiMs.

)
I

�\.

Wedneedaly, June 19, 1991

The o.Hy Sentinel• hge13 .

Pomeroy•

Pile 12 • The Dilly Sentinel
NKA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROII

PHILLIP
ALDBR

bolnO ....... Denlal Hyr;.Nst tDr ••wblllhed
for llturity otlic:era in the Pt Pf'Kb In Athens, ONo. Mutt bl
~· .,. -

PltUanl lrtl . lfainln; I unl·

lrl

n:am.. Flll•iblt Houral $200 •

fr iendly, quality onent•d and 1

S590 WHkly. Call 7 Days 407875-2022 Ell 052e H25.

GOV1' FORECLOSED Homea
~lscellaneous

170

For Pennitl On 11 Ottlnqutnt
Ttx, Repo'a, REO'a. VDur Aru .

Toll FrM (1) 100-188-8771 Ell.
All Natural Fat Lon Product. H-2114 Fot Cur- Uolingl.
ATTN : WOMEN/MEN. Earn eJ!ro lou Weigh!. Fttl Btntr, In·
income. FltK iblt hours ! 1200· creued Entrgy St A Oa~ 114·
Houll
- Pom•ro,.,
""" loll$2700
"""
S500 -•kly. Coil 1 days (407) UIS.-123ft
Zone in
080,
875-2022 E1t. 0588 H 25.
(014) 117~113.
180 wanted To Do
AVON S8 ·$15 /Hr. No Minimum
OM bedroom hO"'- in PorMrOy.
Order, No Door To Door, No In· My odd tabs. Painting, ~;~~rpentr,., Will 11/1 on land contract, 1!1 u .
ventory, 1· 800-73El-OUI8 lndJalll repa1rs, lawn work, etc. 304·1!175· 8112-5858.
rep.

7112.

H bedroom home In counvy,
-=c-'-D_L_I-ic-e-ns_t_d_r-iv_o_r-w-i1_h_l_an_k_o_r,l Bocty work on cart &amp; truc«s, tM.· Thr.
Wl'ilft Hil Rd.. Ru ..nd, .... bofl,
endorsement, 2 years e 1 penence aonabla retes, minor mechanical ir&gt;gn&gt;und pool, 81 ..8!12-5017.
required. fa r Columbus area , call repairs. oil changea, call 814·742·
2935 Ilk tor Kip, Run and.
6 " ·992-322C.

Two and lt'lrtt bedroom mobllt

homn, starting at $240·1300,
HWtr, water end trait! Included,
11&lt;1-992-2117.
Two bedroom mobile home in
Middleport, no pets, 814·002·
5858.

440

Apartments
for Rent

Cttttified child daycara provider,
win baby sil in""' home, refertnc·

Don't Lawn Care. Residential, 1411Q Moment 2 bedroom, luxury
Chu rches. &amp; Cemeteries, Rea - bolh, totally remolded. Call 3046.75-63117.
sonable Ratesl e14·378·2847.

1192-2216.

Orivtrs Need ed : New Contrut

lawn Care. Relidenlial, 1870 Schulrz 12185 Wllh 12116
Churches. I Cemetaries. Rea· Add.irion. Many N8w lmpravemenrs . Priced To Sell! $2,000 ,
sonable Ra&amp;esl 614-3'79·2647.
814 ~ U6 · 31 84 , Serious lnqu 1rie1
'
General Maintenance, Painting, P1ooll.
Yard Work Windows Washed
Guners Cleaned light Hauling, Hl77 1o4a70 Freedom With 1Qa18
Commeric:aL Residential, Steve: Factory Add-On, Very Good Con·
dition, S8,2SO, 814-448-8034.
614-388-()42!1.

875-1512.

x 1173.

Starling lilt June, For Points In
Eastern Ha!l Of U.S. ·Starling Pay
Up To .29o lllilo Pluo Vacation
Pey, Etc. Paid Every Week ·AI·
signed Conventional Tractors .
Ho me Weekends. Wills Cargo,
Inc . Stoutsville, Ohio 8U ··H4 ·

1377.

Euy Work! E11eellen1

Pa~!

At·

semble Produ cts 11 Home. Csll
Tall Freo 1-800-487-5551 EXT.
12170.

Full· Time Cook fEa:pe ri enced
Working In Full Service Kitchen.
Able To Read &amp; Follow Recipes.

MobUeHomes
tor Sale

114-446-8114g_

es available, 614-992-3537.

Don ' s

Georges Porrable Sawmill,
haul your logs to the miM just
304-675-1957.

1977 Ftdtral 3btdraom. 304·

675-Hl54.

HH9 Clairmont, 1wo bedroom,
Having A Party! Rivet" City Sound $5000, 614-992-4083.
11 · 7 Shift Work ·Every Other . Produc11ons, Tne Right OJ'I For 1985 Redman 14x70, 2 Bed·
Weekend. Sodexho Food Serv· Yout Reasonable Rates, 814·448· roams, 2 Baths, Washer, Dryer,
ice. University Of Ria Grande, 0571 .
Stave, Refrigerator, Excellent
814-245-5860 EOE.
Protes!ltonal Tree Service, Srump Condition, 814·245-5828.
HOME TYPIST. PC users need· Re moval, Free Estimalesl In - 1986 Fleetwood 14x72 3 Bed·
ed . $45,000 income potential. surance. B1dweu. Ohio. 614·388- rooma, 2 Batts, Utility Roam, 2 Air
96-08, 614-367-7010.
Call 1-800-513-4343 Ext. B-9368.
Canditionetl, S12,000, 304-875·
1169, 61-4·441-1 183.
Sun
Va
lley
Nursery
School.
If you are looking lor a ureer in
Childcare
M·F
6am·5:30pm
Ages
the l'lealthcare field , are nard
1987 Clayron 14.a:70, 3br, bath a
'working, caring and haw a desire 2-K, Young School Age During 112. newly remodeled bath w/6 jet
Summer.
3
Days
per
Week
Minito care lor people we will provide
whirlpool tub, t t1,000, 304· 576·
""m 614-4-46-3657.
you wit.h the education you
3190 Of 30.. 578-211&amp;1 . .
to be a STNA. Competitive, salary,
benefits, health insurance and The French City Child Care Ceft· 1991 Schult Mobile Home 3 Bed·
tuition reimbursemenl available ter, Hours : 6 A.M. • 7 P.M. Mon- rooms, 2 Baths, Kitchen, Dining
lor lull time employees. We en- day Thru Friday. Infants. Tod· L.A. , Hutch, Heat Pump, AC,
courage trained nursing assl s· dlers, Pre -School, And School Por~h. 1/ 2 Acre, HOirop Drive,
tants to apply as well. Please call Age Pro.gram, For More Informa- Gallipolis, 125,000 Cash Or
Penny Delano at 6'14· 667-3156 tio n Contact lisa Coughenour. $30,000, OWner F11anctd a.., In!.
or apply in person at Arcadia 6t4·4~6-4467 .
Wilh SS.OOO Dawn. 814-446-4455.
Nursing Center, Eut Main Street, Will Care Far The Elderly Thlfe
Country home 1n town· 1 314 acr·
Coalvill&amp;, Ohio 45723. E.O.E.
Home Or Live In Mine, 15 Years es 1n Middleport, Oh io. lovely
Exper•ence,
Excellent
Work
And
lmmtdiate openings lor
1088 SChull's Special Edi1ion moPersonal References , Call kay bile home, 1· 112 baths, carpet
RN'S and LPN'S: all i
throughout, plu!l many extras.
petitive wages. dillerenlial with e~­ 614-378-21123.
periance, eqval oppottun•ty em· Will Maw lawns In Gallia Counry, 614·992· 7350. No Sunday calli.
pto,.er. Contact the Director at
814-441-2781 .
GlenwoOd 314 acre with 3 bed ·
Nursing, Pinecresl Care Center,
170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipoll !l Will Provide Ouailty Chlldcare In room, 2 bath '89 Brandywine Mo·
bile Home. Sell lor $24,095.00
Ohio, 45631 614·446-71 12.
My Home, Located Near Holzer
Hospital. Call 614·446-8113, For caah, owner f1nance lor $29,000.
Witl'l 14,000. Down . 304· 582·
Immediate Openings For Part MOJe Information.
·
5840.
Time AN's And LPN's, All Shill!!.
Competitive Wage&amp;, Differential
FINANCIAL
Glenwood, 3f4acre wl3t)edroom
With E•perience, Equal Oppor2balh, 1989 Brand~wlne mobile
tunity Employer. Conract The Dl·
home. Sell lor $24,985 cash. or
recolOr 01 Nursing, PineCflll Care
owner finance lor $29,000, with
Business
center, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal- 210
$4,000 down. 304-582·5840.
lipolia, OH 45631, 814....48· 7112.
. OpportunHy
Late 70 Model Mobile ttomt
Need 8 Ladles To Sell Avon, 614·
INOTICEI
121&lt;10 lnc:ludes: Now Elecrr~ BoM,
446-3358.
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO. Underpinning,
Wmdow Unit Air
recommend• that you do busi ·
Rool81'1, carpenters and 'bricklav· neu wilh people vou know, and Conditioner &amp; Porch lnduded for
ers, experts only need apply,
$5,000. Call304-875-3000.
NOT to sena mone)' ~thraugh the
EOE, 61 ..992-2384.
mail unlil you have Investigated limited Ollerl 1996 daublewide,
the olforing.
Secretary Position
3br, 2belh, St799 down, $2751
month. Free delivery &amp; stlup.
OUTDOOR WOOD Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
For lmmediare Hire . Ful l Time
Th&amp; MOst Elficient wv. 304-755-5885.
Secretary For The Community lm· And LaftslIsEminions
provemenl Corporat•on Of Gallla Wood Furnace On The Outdoor
limited Oller. Only $500 down on
County. Mull Have Advanced Central Boiler Is CurrenttyMarket.
look· any new single wide in stock .
Computer Skills, Microsoft Offic:e,
For A Quality Dealer In This Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
ACT Helplul. Should Be Able To ing
Immediate
Area. For lnlormalion Oakwood Homes, Nitro. WV 304Write Buslneu Lenell, And On BecorT)ing
Dealer Or Far A 755-5885.
Have General Command 01 Sec:· Free BrochurfA Call
1-800·248·
retarial Skllll. Must Be Neat, 48111 Or 1·216-7112-2575.
Now lillnk Repos. Only 3 leh. Still
Courteous Wilh Excellent People
in warranty. 304-755·7191 .
Skills. Send Resume, Cover lttter
Professional
And Aelerence1 To Executive Di· 230
services
rector, The Community Improve·
ment Corporation 01 Gallia Coun·
ty, P:O. Bo• 485, Gallipolis, Ohio, Dozer Work: licensed con1rac1or
45631. Deadline Monday, J.une available lor driveways, ponds,
24, 1998. All Apphcelion f"' Are landscaping, etc. Hane11 &amp; de·
pendable. WV 205542. 304-875Slriclly Conl-tlal.
3964.
Tobac&lt;:o allotment of 1200 lbs.,
Moigs Co., call 814-992-5633.
Someone
To
Clean
House.
Refef·
~·---------·
ences RtQuifed, Send Response
To : CLA 100 c1o Gallipolis Daily
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue. Gall1·
25 Acres, Hannan Trace Sci'IOol
poli~ OH 45e31 .
Oillrict. Small Tobacco Allotment,
Tak1ng Applications : Bar1ender t
Uinetal Rightt, 1!114·256· 1811 .
Waitreu . Fuii · Time. Apply In
Lots lor rent: Now taking applica·
Penon At : Carl's Tavern, 856
lions, Country Lane Mobile Home
5eeand Avenue, Gallipo~s.
All real eorate ad'lerttslnt In
Park. Gallipolis Ferry WV. 304this n - r Is subjec11o
675-5421.
The Gallia -Meigs
1118 Fede1111 Fair Housing Ad
Rlver Franrage, 1.3 Acre 10 Min
Act ion
Is
ol t9611wlllch makeolllltegol
From Gallipolis, Serious Calls
Hou1ing
to advert!,. •any preference,
Onlj, 814-4-46-4051.
To Fill A
Nmltallon or dlacrimlnallon
County
based on nrca, color. religion.
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove
did II&amp;
aex famllalstatus or national
beauliJul 2ac lots, public water:
. Year1
C~de Bowen J'·• 304·578-2336.
origin, or any Intention to
make any &amp;UCII prale,..,.,
Secluded 5.5 Acres. teu Than
Imitation or dlltrlmlnallon.'
M1le From Holzer Hospital
$12,500, Financing Available
This newspaper wll not
114-388-9062, 614-446-7278.
knowl!ngly accept

ad'leJtisam&amp;ftls lor raol-te-I

360

Milch II In vlolallon ollhe low.

CMreadeloara-y
Informed !hat all dWellings
a~vertllodln i!lloM-r
are IY811ablt on an equal
CJIII)OtiUnlt; basis.

Real Estate
Wanted

Seriau1 buyer has cash for land,
any condition, 30 ac:rea 01 more.

1·800-24STAAT. leave message
for Charles.

RENTALS
The
sion Will Be
lions Thru 27

REAL ESTATE

tion

, ,l ,nd 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
n11hed and unfurnished, 1ecurit)'
deposit required, no Pttt, 61-4·
2 Bedfoom, furnished apt, deposil
required, part of utilities paid. 304·

Baths, All

Ulili~ll

Included, $4251

Aaquired ; 12 Room
And Bath. No ~ilchon S2001Mo ..
Mo. Deposit

61···4~2477.

4th Ave 2 Bedroom,
lurnished apt, depo11t &amp; refer ·
oneo. 304-11112-2586.

Middleport

New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur·
nlshtcS aptl. · Depoait &amp; relerene·
" · 304-682-2588.
NiCe two 'bedroom epartment In
PI&gt; moray. no para, 114-992-5858.

Now accep!lnQ applications klr
one bedroom apartmenrs. Applications can be picked Up ar Po·
mer.oy Clill Apanments Ollir;e,
814·992-7772.
One bedroom apartinent in Mid·
dlepor~ 111 u~lities paid, $270/mo. .
plus S100 depolit Call e14·992·
1601. 8am-59m.
'TWin Rivera Tower,

now accepdng

applicatiana for 1br. MUD aubaid·
iztd apt. for elderly and handi ~

capped. EOH ~-17S-811711.

.

Valley VIew Apartments, Rio
GJ8nde.

Now accepting applications for
two bedroom aparlmantt. Apart·
ments hiYt llr condllionlng,

kitchen appliances, fenced in
pia,. ground, laundry tacility, on

site

mana~ment

and watlf,

uw-

er. and trash ~ld ~ owners. For

more lnlormtflon pla11 coil (614)
245-9170, MOndiJ-Thurlday hom
Noon lo 3pm. EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY I RURAL ECONOMIC ·AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT.

1/efy nica cloon -

bedroom !ur·
nished aparltnent in· Middleport,
114-tt2·2171.

450

Fumlshed
Rooms

Aaams for rent • week or mon1h.

.Srarong 11 S1tlllmo. Gallia Hoi11:
814-441-tstO.
Sleeping raoma with cooking.
Al1a trailer space an rlvtr. All
hook·upa. Call alter 2:00 p.m ..
:104-113-5851' ...... wv.

460 Space tor. Rent
Uoblle home lot'ln cauntrr apPJOI. 2 mileo 1rom ste11 pllnt , _
Ohio rlv.,. 1100ma. 304-571·

2863.

room br rent, Had's Barber
Shop 507 Main St. Pt. Pleasanl,
roams upttalts and down. 304·
675-3851 . .

Offk:a

470

Wanted to Rant

Clean, reaponsible, chlldl111
cou~a need cheap house 10 rent.
Good references, wife tmployed
by VMH, wilting to do moderate

repairs, 814·992·6030, please

Houses for Rent

MERCHANDISE

310 Homes for Sale

Muat
cation

Computer
.In Accordance With
5901 -07 01 The Ohio
Code, Tht Succe~sful
~IIBaAv.tM~Or,

fitd Vetatan Ia Not
The Spouse.

Child Or Parent

2 Btdrooms AvaNable 111 Ot July,
Large Yard, S3101Mo .. 814-4482 Bedroom Home, land Contract 2515.
To Qualified Persons. 10% Down
3 Bodroom I full basement can814·2511-11573 For Appoinrment
Ira! air I no pets. t•OOmo. &amp; de2 Story 3·4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath. posit. 2418 B Monroe Ave Pt.
booemonr. Call Somerville Raol!y. Ploaoanr wv. Call 304-675·1743.
:104-675-3030 or 304-675-3031 .
Rolerontll.
814-992-4480.

AppliC!IIian• Ahd
OeiCrlptfon May
ThrouGh The Ve1erans
Office fn Tho Glllio Counry Courr· 2·3 bedroom hOuse, SOx t i)Q lot
house. Tht Gallla Count)' Veter· located in S)'recuat, appliances
ani
Commlulan ta An included, cpU 614·992·5767 aller
4pm.

.

2·3 bedroom1, brick, OR , new
windows, carpet, complete new

..rlly. - - Poot Rang.... Ole. No fXP~. FGf

--·ndlnA&gt;c:alt-IQO.
2tt-2&amp;70, en OH3tlc lanl-fpm.

,.,._

I

"*"'·no aors. 614-992·5158.
Unlurniahld 2 btdroom hauM,

nice I c"an, no inside pt11, d•
pool! r-.ulrad, It 4-llll»oto.

420 Mobile Homei

5 Rooms, Bath, City, Forced Air

2 .Badfoom In Meaon , wllhtr &amp;

i

t-ir, Carpeted

WindoWI, OOOfl,
81!1•150, Priced

JOBS

-Hiq-Wardono. s.

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom hauM In Po·

kitchen and balh. garago, lull
" " - 614-tt2-131111.
Cemral

WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION

510

1 tJ2 1101')', .. br., ''·· dr., rr., basement I sun porch, 138,000, call

rtmodeled , W/OUI
""''""' fenc:t, 1 floor
or rental,
.....1100 . 304-875-

tor Rent

dryer, oc. no pols. 304-7n-5751.
2 Bodroom Mobile llama No Poll.
$225/Ma., $135 Otposl~ 114-4483117.
2 Btdroom·T,.ilor, 8 llllao Rau..
218, 12t01Ma + Depaoli, Refer·
oncH, $14-•41·8172, 814-2511251.

And ua,.ay At1o Mh'ir
F- OollllolyWI!Iin 2 1 -

eam: 3pm. $1 .00 admillion. 4th
and Main, Pt. Pleuan~ B14·9SJ2·

5011. ~-875-4 7115.

Household

Goods
Air Conditiontrs, Washer, Dryer,
Refr~gt,.tor, FrHztr, Stove, Mi·

crowava, Calor T.V. , VCR, 814·
2511-1238.

Appliance&amp; :
Recondllloned
washers, Dr~on, Rlngaa, Rllrltrotoro, to Coy Guarantoel
Fronch City llayraa. 814-44177115.
•
Counlfy Furniture. 311&lt;4-875-81120.
Rr 2 N, 8miloa, Pr P1oooan~ WV.
Tu ...Sa! H, _Sun t t-5.
Gibson refrlg•raiDr, good cond.
1100. 304·875-11181. GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathtra, drytrl, refrigerator&amp;,
rongea. Sug9a Applloncos, 71
Vine Street, Cal 11 4· 441w7388;
l-8iJO.oiiNI99New 32,000 BTU c-ol Air Condltionar, 1500; Solo Excollont
Condition, 1100: Eloc. Hoop. Bod
With Trapeze Bar, I tOO; Obi. lltd
Comp1010 SilO, 2175 St Rt r•t Or
114-4118!50.

•

740

rtady to ea. c:all 614 ·94'il· 2495,

lng llidf Ilk 3DA-w

••

• •;

aoo-.l!t

1888 Ponlloc Grand Am -

Tirll: Bauery, Starter Engine,

-

_,

.............
lllllelll

14---....

1115 Yamaha Jimbarwoll

111811 !lor- 4Cyt, auto. olr, linlod
w i~~ aws, CO player,

Amerlcen
racong-. 304-7n-501t..

...

~

,.,.:

1115 Yamahl Warr ior S

ceHont Oondlllon, S3.815o:
......

i

• 7. 5

fJr
I

• A Q 54

-WI.

I GOT A FEllER
TAKIN 1 MY PlACE

'mE ZIPPER
ON Mlf SLEEPIN6
8A61S CAU6UT ON
PAJAMA TOP

aulomatic, PS, PB, runl good:

GRADE LOG WANTED : Doiiv- 1978 F-150 Pick-Up 302 Au ered qr ~~~ pick· up contac:t Harry rmootic, SSOO ; 1181 Mercur 1
GoldsberryiPaut Mercer Sawmill, Marquis 302 Automatic SBOO,
Inc . 2606 US Rl35 Sourh side 14
Wv, 25187. Phon&amp; 304-675-7598 6 ·44e-0899.
1979 Ford Bronc:o. 304·576-3202.
or 304.e75-7662.
t 980 Chovy r Tan Good Shapo
New TirH. S1 ,400, 8u-ue-2948
Aher 81'M.
1980 Ford Ranger NHds Malor
Work, Body Is Perfect! t300
090, 814·388-8335.
1986 GMC goOd condition. 304·
675-5162.

1987 Ford F250 314 Tan. 351
::;RO":.,_-------wl_a_nach
__me_n_ll_.l ALFALFA HAY· Srorago dolivery Windsor 2 wheel Drive, 81o4·448·
304-875-1725.
aveilable-Uoroan's Farm Rt 35 2845 or ~-875-2385
==~=------1Ptiny.:!04-937-2018.
.
t990 Ford XL Lariel, ·s3,000
Retrlgera10n, Stavts , Wuhers
Mllaa, Srondlrd, 5 Spotd, E•cllAnd Dr)'ert, All Recondillaned
TRANSPORTATION
lentCordtionllto4-24S-51121.
And Gourontotdl SI 00 And Up
w• Deliver. 8UIIII 6u1 .
•
1992 lsuzu pickup, ot c.,t. 5
spotd, nice, _]0,000 mllea, 15500,
STORAGE TAN~S 3,000 Gallon 710 Autos tor'Sale
Uprighr, Ron Evans Enterprises '84 ~rd Tempo, 4 door aulomat· may consider partial tradl lor o
Jackson, Olio, I-8Q0-517-9528. ' ic. lelt re.ar tail light damage, 4a:4 or pontoon boat, I!IU·992·
251M oftor8pm.
m1101, S400 OBO. 614Tandl Compurer, 2500 RSX. 2· 87,000
9-49· 2311 days or 814· 948·2644 1983 Chovy S-10, 5 Spotd, ExMeg Ram, 107 Ueg Hard Drive, _,;ng~
•
ltndtd Cab, v:e, 31,000 Miln
Tandy VGM 3.-o Color Moflitar
se.ooo.
Ooys: 814·441 · 442~.
Mouse !MOuN Ped. Severe! Pro : '8Q Formula , low miles, t•lra
Ni.;tii:614-441-CM87.
gram• Already Loaded. 1550, clotn, S7500, (6141992-5138.
814-245-53111:00 ~~~ '89 Thunderbrd SC, IWO door. 3.8 1883 Fard·Ringor SPLASH.4litar,
Used sweepers, all klndl . 30"'· litre, V·8, elite model turbo PS IUtO, ' air, CIIIIUe, 38,000ml.
175-17211,
'PO, AC, 5 speed, power ieati Whita in calor. IIO,too. Coli' :i04and I~Ckl , "Great Car,· 15200 875-1102.
WATER WEllS DRLLED
n.., .. lt4-9Q2-7478 or 614-849- lnternarlanol loa Truck Slnglo
!Fist Rtllanable Service 814· 2178.
Axle, Ltlo T~n 5,000 lilies On
~ -~ 7311
.1975 lincoln 46,000 Actual Engirw,lt4-·1417.
I Wted Wacker Saara Crattman Miles, A·1, Whitt, Mlln'oon lnterl· 730 VIlli 1 .t.WDI
Good Shape, SSO: New Gold or, Ptice Rtduc~. $3,900, SH
Shower Door, Fits 21 To 28 Inch
tin Jeep Wagonoer, V·l Auto
.Opening , Paid $150 Will Take Tam Kassa! 8r'H-te-n&amp;1.
Trin~.
Qudra Trac, 'I WD·• dr.,
St20, 61•·245-0114.
1977 Corvetle, Ntw Engine, New AC. PS, PB, 2nd Owner F"'m NC
Ttlnsmisslon, New E•haust, And 12.800. 0110.814-441-111111.
550
Building
NawTOfJI, 814·448-1417.
Ue-1 Ch.. y Cuatamlzod Van,
Supplies
1983 Olds Cutlus Clera, runs 01..... E.. ~ 1 .., 1 -.. 0 ndl"on, II •.
•
•
Block, btil:k, IOI'Or plpoa. wind- goad-well malnralnld, manv new 3,._ 2112_ - , "
ows, Unt•ls, etc. Claude Winltrl ..... S1, 150. 304-458-tOll.
Von El·
Rio Gronde, DH Call 114-245:
tt54 Pomloc Ba""""llle LE Fully
5121 .
Equipped, V-8, Like Now Candi·
IIOiol Raollne I Sidlnt Galvan· don, 47,()(¥1 Miles, 814-~ 1112~lztd, Galvllumo, and Polrntd. AI·
1185 Pontioc SIOO. 814-317 •
-Form Suppllot 114-24!1-51113
0217.
l'ble t!ldo s,r: 30'145'1111', ' '•15'18' .
. Sliding boor, 1 -3' Wan Door 1011 llu•!Ant or; 5 speed, AC,
f .
Pointtd S1"1 Siding, Golvolume 13000: 1880 Dodo• Omnl. ouAC,
SIIOO;
11•·1112·
tamotlc,
SIMI Roof: 18,444 Eroclad: Iron
trul ...
lt4-2!1-t220.
3242.
Horll llldf8 t-81J0.352-1045.

lb:!.ti::.d

~mp,

shower, rang•lop &amp;·
oven, rurnac:e, and hOt warer rank.:
Mull see to ·app,.c:late. Only;.

.

1972-18 11211. Calf'4*, silicone-;
rained, new tirea, aleeps e. :.
S1,200.:!04-81S:f!Q72. ·
l

'

1874 C-hateeu Traveler camper) ·
sleep&amp; 5·8, good condition, ask·!
ing $3000, 814-985-4194.
\
1978 Small Stii·Contained, 14' ~
Camper With ·Toilet. Gas .Srov.e. :t
Refri~.eratar, Fu rnace. E•cellftflt :
CondiDOn, $1,350, 614·446·~A
197~ Citation

t

2111. Sell can&amp;ained

1ra11er, awning, bath

wl~ .. , • •

frig~ratar. stan ·w1oven, ..,e•r:'.

..

.

E-111111: FolldEIIoOTO.oot..COM

~,.-,..BORN

LOSER ·
'
N-IYOOC TELLM€. WK~T "- -oq

,

.~

'ffi"-f W&lt;XX.O 0C t.IKe. l-IKEN
'(00 ~~.~ ¥00~ Fl..roHT IU. '!I).JR

0Cwe6100 15 '?

W!~ VKATIOO ·

-~~ TO

t 888 Rockwood camper; sleeps·
6, stove, iceboK, good condition.'

E8a&amp;

AUpua

AAW"-11 !

tlon to scuba diving, It was strange, ·
breathing through my mouth. Abto, for
someone who can only do the breut
atroke, kicldng up and down with my
feet got me nowhere rapidly! But by
the end I was keen to do more .
However, I had to w•it until
Wednesd8y, my last full day in
Australia, when I went s~uba diving at
the GJUt Barrier Reef with Matthew
Byrne, who runs
Adventure
Connection Australia. It was wonderfill, swimming among so many colorful
filh, including several stingrays. In
tl)e amazing •rray of cor•l we even
aaw two enormous clams, one blue
and one purple. It is thoroughly recommended, but be prepared lor a dry
mouth.
After a quick lunch, it was back to
the Cairns Bridge Club for a clus
called Watch Those Spots.
Sitting South, you get to three notrump with alacrity. west leads the
heart 10. How do you continue?
North is rillht to respond three notrump, not_three diamonds. With Umlted high-card strenJilb and without a
siJtCielon or void, shooting for the noChimp game is better than aiming toward an 11-trick contract.
There appear to be 10 easy tricks:
one spade, three hearts lgiven the
lead&gt;, five dianlonda and one club. But
If the defender with the diamond ace
can hold it up until the third round,
you will need a dUIIIII\Y entry. The only
candidate iJ the heart ldng. And if you _
Keept the Greek 111ft. winning the lint
trick with the heart jack, that candi·
. date wiU not win any election. •
'J uat win the opening lead with the
heart ace; then drive out the diamond
ICe. N'me lricks swim in without diftk:uiW-

1~91 Travel

Trailer Van, Manjt
Ea:Ua11 Includes Slldt·Ouf
122.ooo 614 -89&lt; -5321 c~esa-'
ptlko, QH _

.

nt

I'.ND 6EAUTIFUL. .

C.IA.L.ISH
PETAL-5!

RON

PIIULN . '

RON

WZLOFP
HXROTLP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ' II a llter•ry man put" logelher two words abolll
music, one of them wll be wrong," - A8ron Copland.

lllll DAILY
PUZILU

'0@\\.~~-~r..~s·
ClAY I. POllAN

..

.,

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·0 lour
Reorronge lett•i'• of
acramblod words
tow

to form four word1.

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NIDWWO

.

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R 0 G A C • ..
r_ ~-::--~-:--,1

l1 1

A professor hung his ravc&gt;rite -adage on his office wall . It
_
•
_
•
read: "Proper Use OfToday Is
r---::~-:--:-:--:--:-:----. The Best Preparation For ---

I l6

~~plele

II

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM Lm ANSWERS

Cement -Frill - Icing • Bygone - NICELY

•

I:-::--::---~--_;,)

Sov/"fl You'll find In tilt
,, .Clolufied Secc~a~~.

IWEDNESDAY

Applianoe Parts And Service: A~
Name Branda Over 25 Year1 Ea:•,
perience All Work Guaran~ed ':
French Cit,. May tag. 81 4· 448!
7185.
·
_ · :-

"M .. IIELLO? 'Ni-b
rs 7!-llS ?... umo ?•.

C&amp;C General Home !jail"
ltnence- Painting ~ vinyl 1ii:ting:
carpan•y. ctoors, ,.,_,, bo!hii:
mobie home repair and morw. ~Fr.i
tree ealimate call Chat~ •~ 4iaea.
8323.
- (

The speaker at our community club was discussing
the art of diplomacy. My neighbor says that diplomacy
is simolv savinq nothing NICELY .

JUNE 191

~ 11 WOUI.I&gt; l" BertERIF l
SWT IIER A ~ETIN&lt;il CARl&gt; FIRST. ..

l

~'T Tl-l//1/1{

fiAUMARK UAS

C~EWTWrrH

• ' -r

DRYWAll

NXMCOP

lleouT '«llA.

8UT t Ill'\ STRONr., TOO.

·

erne I!. : 1
BASEMENT
1
•
,
WATERPROOFING _,1 · :
Unconditlonallifttime ~uarantea~
loc~l rettrenc11 furntshtd. E~o~
llblished 1975. Call iiU) 446'
0870 Or 1-800-287-0576. Roger~
Warorpraafine.
· ·~

A"~

· ~

Heng. llnillh, repoir

ULF Z W

SRTIIO.

8

I LIII.E
THE PART

'fES, '1: AI'\ A FLOWER
ANO I: Al'l fRAG.ILE.

Home
lmprov

CVLFZWO

RON

WZRW

PRINT NUMBERED
(HIERS IN SQUARES

S~RVICES

810

PCIIUUVO,

XLJVX,

WZLOFP

D K

SVRXVWZ

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. the ch"cklo quaiOd
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--1.
.
by
lillin~
.
in
the millin~ words
L
you develop lrom step No. 3 b.low.

Mini molar hame, 1084 Ntsian;
Mirage, duel rear wheels, 4cyl, •
Sspd, 20mpg, sle,ps s. t2:eoo .~

.

ULVV

re-TIE:...;:.R,..;:O..,,~IJ"""'TAI-r/-,1--ll

.

304-875-2949.

L P

'H REV

5

814-1185-4198.

!'OR
TERRoRIZIWtii

Ceiling&amp;IIX1ured, pla111r r&amp;pai~
Call Tom 304·875·-4188 . 20 year.
..porienco.
~

VET.

YOU"

E-rl's Home Ualntenanc:e. 'find

sldlrl(!. raalint. txrorior ~nd iljrerr,;
or '"''"""~~· woah1ng, ,..,.
eddiliona. Fre• EstirMitl, .e'14~'

t; ::

lt2-4232.

R
on·o TV Sorv!Oo, spocllllizlflt T~
· Zenilh •Ita HrviCing moat Olh•L
btonds. Hause coils. t -100-1g7.
0015. wv 304-518-23111,
Roofing I fjUI- oomplaro ~
·remodeling do~kf l ' tldln ..~S
yeara
B &amp; B Ralitilg:
ond Can11rucli0n, 114 ·11112-J*t'4
0&lt;1-800 IIIII 31143.
. ,.•

"''*-·

820
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Plumbing

Heating

&amp;

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l

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FrHman·o ·HOiting Aild COOling.
lnillllttlon And Sorvlco. EPA
c-~-" ~-·~-..
· I Co
.
-"'--- ~-~
~1114-251-1811.
.,

.

840

Electrlqil lncl . ~-_)
Refrigeration : 1

;c

RSES CERTIFIED DEAI.EA

LAWRE~ ENTERPRISES ·
!loot Pumpa, Air Candliillnl!lQ, II·
""' Dan' Coil Ua
Bolh !.'OUr .:
FrH Eltlmeteo, 1·100-2t1-QH8 ' ' .
au 4.a 1301, WV0021o15.
, , ·: "

w.

-

.-

R-tial or COII'mOrclll wiliftll.--.

new wvtce or repeira. Mnlllr•U::t. ~

El.. trlcol. wvooo~. 304-lt"'-'·"
~~~~~~~~~;l t;:tnlld
RldtnQur
1111.
..

NW:

.•

, ~CN,_

cond. To many e•tras to list Call
lor dlllils. S3,950. 30+372-84!1Q.

Wett .Nord!
J;'ua 3NT

Mrmday momlilg saw my illlroduc-

1g72 Seem Per 18ft pull·blhind·
camper, llaeps e. IOtany lelt con-:
tained. Oat•chat;rlt awning, de-.

.

(2 WCI8.1
·~drink

4 l\'apleiii11M1181

B:y Pllllllp Alder

M...&amp;Qe.

$3,500 Col61+4-l-l

5 Pracnd

Under the water

Pirta

mand

5

~glead:•tO

COOL OFF
IIANIE 11'

c'l:4i,

., ,_111ft

. . .,

Dealer: South
.Boa..
!NT

Boatl •

·!r.::lll
. Ill : •

.

-

1 U.I. IGI!IIIrt
2 Fu.llllr'a
ucl8m8llan
3 Clwwlel
111811111'

Vulnenble: Both

•

200 Yohama 4-Mora. Colt 304Buick leSabre, eJcellent 451-1541altar
lj)Opm.
runnlne condition, V-1, PB. PS,
AC, power
$3100, 81-1· Ko...~i Ba~ou 300 4 WhMf•r
948-2045 or 114-e.-2!102.
1 Hanlo lluah Hoi. 42 lncil ·c-u~
·
11HI9 Ponliac Formula White, T· n.ooo ~~a~~. e1 ..245-to18. •
Tops, Garage Kep~ 22,000 Mloo,
MOtOf?~ ' .
305 Fl AC, PW, PL, Aula Wlrh 750
for Sale
· ;
Overdrive, lmmaculase $0,000
114-446 ·3721 Alter. 5:30 P.ll.
1117 Starcrall 18', 1$78
LeoveMeooage.
11178 Mercury to HP wirh IIOWOf
. - •
. 1989 Sundance RS CruiH, Tilt, 1111. woo. ~-773-5707.
AC, PDL, AoiO, 2 Dooro, AMIFM
CasHno, SUSO. 080, 114-258- 11111 boll bolt CCII'IIpie!O Wjrh - ~
una. 12150, .011 camidor PI••:
1119.
urt bOat on trade, (I 14) .e.tz..
' J
-1881 Mustang LX Ao,_ilc, 5.0, 81S..
Laodedl law Milul 814-441·
11118 21 ft Wol Crah CC 210 HP
1600.
lnboord' full~ Loodld, Tornderi!
1991 ·Old·a Cutla11 Calais, sun· Aa:les, Eegle Drive On Tr•ifer :1
root, rear defrost, 4 cyl, 5lpd. ac, SurgoBrokol, 114-4411·2072. " "
am-lm cas..no. 13,300. 30&lt;4-175Ball Munier Twa Man Po~tofn
2808.
Boll wllh Swivel SOlita and TIP~
1893 Chevy Lumina, 40,000 '"~' Motor 1 400 6t-o-2•s-5St_24
Wilts, $12,000 81&lt;4-245-5311 AI· 114·245-&amp;80:2.
.. ...
utr 11Xl P.M.
760 Auto
l · _. -;
·. I ~··
1993 Chry~or LeBaron GTC .low
, ,'
Uii&amp;S, E•cellent Condition,
S 10,999, 304 -875-1782 leave
1D8D

....

DOWN

IIWa;' ad

• 10'.

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14 llllnlcl-

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• A Q 54
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304-aJS-1782 L-.. . . . . . ... .,..,

Fouibly lockod ~~p. sr .ooo. 114- 13,500, 114-319--367-1067 Alltr 8.

6! 4-119 2_21100 _

'

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OIIIr
,.
_ __
_

•

.

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DCtllll

• AS 2

• KJ 7 I

tH2 Suzuki GSXR
llilol, Goad Condtrian, E~ll

ooar:

•
,630
livestock
Ono G - !roar ~.. JOirlgennor,
almond, 5 .,rs. otd, 16.8 'ublc bot 2 Hallinger Geldings Sroka To
treezei: one Kenmore, gold, frost Drive I Ride, 8 Years Old, 814·
''"· 19.2 cubic !oar, S250 aoch, 245-9232.
114·tt2-55S3.
::---,-.:....-------1 Three month olc;t male Pygmy
Ouean Slz• Orthopedic llanroos goars. 1100 OBO, (614) 992Set And Frame. Never Used Still 2822.
~~:.i~~~~~ seoo . Sell mo. 640 . Hiy &amp; Grain

• K 7I
•Qlttl7

1-·-·- """'

Puppy Palace KaMela. Boarding,
T~ny lama. Guaranlted LoWest Stud Service Pupp1es, Grooming,
Buj, Sejl &amp; Trade, Al l Breed!. 1994 Dodge Sha- ES. 2
Prlc&amp;l AI Shot Colt, GallipoliL
Payments Walcom·e. 814 ·388· • 4 Cylinder, 5 Spotd, Air, Alollfll
Cuoerro. 57,000 111111, Aakln9:
~~ SPfintl &amp; llar11eu Sor Now, 042!1 .. .
$8,700 080, 614-251-1340. 01&lt;4Nor Used, 1o Year W•rranty,
251-11487.
S195; Ll,lng Roam S~lres From
$275; BUnk Bod S210 Camplere;
1998 M••• Goa, 'or. llr. obi. omAt. 7 Betide Giovanni's Pizza,
1m cao1t11e. Poid S13,000 1841 lot
Proctorville,lt4-BIH37S.
S10,500. Call ~-882-3413.
Carpet Otr White Plush Nap Ap· Aegisltred Weimaraner puppies.
11 ·Oldsmobile 88, 7•k. v.a .•
304-875-7740.
""''· 10112.814-245-5181.
S1750: '85 Dcxlgo 800, 114k, v.g.,
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks, Schnauzer puppies, At&lt;C, salt &amp; $1350; 814-IMV-3228,
300. Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron pepper, aholl &amp; W~)ffT'td, cham·
N_ow 88 Olds 442 T-Tapa Groy
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH ·pion blogd lina. 614 · 667 - ~4 . ·
SIIYe&lt;; ono Owner. 20.m llllta
HI00-517-9528.
Unregistered female Siberian Full Pawor, Garogo Kept (614~
Coun.try Slyle Red Checked Sofa Husky, 7 months old, verY loving, 4-46-0109
$125: An!lquo Otk Bed $600, preferably 10 home on a !arm,
AuiO loans. Dealer w~l arrange fi.
614-446-112511.
$100, 614·949-2957 after 4pm.
nancing even if You have,bean
turned down elsewhere . Uplan
Due ID Illness must Hll complete li70
Musical
Equipment Used C111. 304·458·
111 al Ping Eye 2 Golf Clubs, like
Instruments
1069.
,_ $110 Firm Ask lor Otve81 ..
245-58911
Piano lessana: lucy Jan, Bulm- Drag Race Cars: 1t59 Angllll Ill·
nus Engine; 1179 Uonza Round
Electric;
Scootert
And or. Hartford. Coll304-882-2315.
Tube 4 Link Chasals; 1870 Nova
Wheelchain, New tUsed, Van 1
FruHs &amp;
Beck HaH Cor AY Now; 111118 - 3tl
Cer Lift Installed. Sreirglides Uh 580
Engire. 614-842-2031.
Chaira, Call For Brochure, 814 ·
Vegetables
4441-7283.
Sirawberries Ta)'lor's Berry SEIZED CARS From' 1175.
I.D. Collor Radio S~ck, S!io, ln- Palch, Open Mon. Wed, Fri, 9-8; Parsches, Cadlllau, CheYyl
BMW'a, Carveuoa, Alaa Jttpo, .i
sutanet For 3 Years: Sw11ch .s.m1 Noon, 814-245-9047.
WO's, Your Area. Toll Free 1·
Tank For Camptr 140, Used Car
800-8911-97111 .Eit A·28t4 For
,Bed, Wilh Baby Bed &amp; Matter~&amp;
Currm Lls~ng1.
$30, 814-3N-211tt.
_
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
JET
720 Tl'ueks for Sale
AERATION MOTORS
;Repoillld, Haw a llebuir 111 s -.
'84' Nissan King Cab, 414, runs
Coli Ron Evonl, t-81J0.517-D528.
610 Farm Equipment
good, $1000; '61 Toyota Corolla,
Large China Cabintl, goad cand . .Ford 4000 wt8' disc, 2 bonom runo8roa\S-400;114-8!12-2liN.
~304:_-8:..7.:.5-e..:..:.llllll:::..- - - - - - 1 plow, runs good, goad condition, ·ee F-250, ••,_ric, llldlng ......
ow in boG~~. 300 e cyl., e -1
LaWn trlctar, MTD Lawntllte, 11 $5,200. 814·992~2822. 1
condilion,
ortat work truck, li111
HP, 31• cui, 5 speed, elecrric Spring Clearance on Hamelite &amp;
ltart, good condirion, 1375, 814· Green Machine trimmers . ,Siders $3400 080, 614-949·231 t cltys.
1975 Ford pickup, S/4 1an. V-I
t_48-.c...:22:.4:..g_
, - - - - - - - 1 Equl&gt;mern Co 30...,75-7421 .

620 Wanted tO Buy

"'"'

'iS"'

Boora By Rodwlng. Chippewa,

Now 16 Fr. INew 5•8 Utillry TraUer's W~ad Floors With Ramps ,
RIB Tr11ler Slits, 814·441-8588.
New Gaa Furraces, Naw Galvanized Duct Wo"', lllew Hood Fanl,
114-3711-2720 AFTER 6P.M.
::--::::-:---------1
Now RCA 18 Inch Sorell ito Dish.
Complota, $450, 814-2.5-8737.

:_~

lllotorcyc:IH

1111 Hondo 200u, now tliol
new rMr fender,
d,., .

3 F-... AKC Rartwoilor PuPf)itl

AKC Registered Ba11an Tirrier.
puppies, two males, one female,

~ -

·--

11
IIWI*IIIoe ... : :

• s2

Ltft, P rice Reduced , 1!1 Weeki
Old, E •ctlltnt Ouatit,. Also For
Sale 7 Monll'\ Old Mate ChlnMM

WIIIrlPC&gt;DIWulltr liS; Smolt A.
lrlgorarar $75; I,OOCi BTU Air Sllorpei l14·3!t-2ee7.
Condi-r·S75; Hotpalnl Dryer 8 Week Old Chow Puppies, $50
$85; Waahtr To Watch 115; G.E. El&lt;h, 614-«e-1772.
Almond !Wr~tor N - ......
II, SIS; Gr- rWrilidalro Allrig- AKC Lhooa Apao Puppies,
orarer. 1150; HOIPOint Ringo Hor- Ready I Sholl, Wormed, Prittate
vell~l
S: Ska
Appllanc· OWner, Athens /MariJtta, State
... 11 v·
po111. 8t-o- Roone 550,11 4-551 -2722.
...,_
• ,.
tt-:MIIt.
.•
AKC mini Pinschenl, twa tomolot,
S300 oac:h, ono mole, $250, reo&lt;IJ
530 ., Antiques
June 15, accepling dtpo alts,
Antique Bonta Show. J~o~na 2SI
814-849-3028.

r:::--"

11 . . . . . .

or..._.

• KJ 2
• K Q J 10 t I

81~· 2!1-1133.

Buy or sail. Rinrine ,Antiqu•s. 814·992-3752 or 61 .. 9g2-39e5.
1124 E. Main Su••, of~ At. 124 ,
2bdrm. aptl. , ~toral electtic. ap·
AKC Registered Ba1er puppies.
pl11ncH lurnilhtd, laundry roam Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 304.e75-I!QII5.
a.m.
10
8:00
p.m
..
Sundoy
1
:00
10
laciJilies, cloH to school In rown.
Applications available ar Village 8j)O p.m. 114-11112-2521.
AKC
Reg111ared
German
Green Aptl. 149 or call 814 ·992·
Shepherd Puppies, From Getman
540
Miscellaneous
3711 . EOH.
lmpofla, Call Riverview KeMefl,
Merchandise
614-4-18-1842.
BE4UTIFUL APARTMENTS 4T
BuDGET .PRICES AT JACKSON 170 XL Fronklln lot Sklddor With Australiaft Shepl'lerds . Out Ot
ESTATES. 52 Wesrwood Drive Power Shl~ Coble Winch Husky Working Stock. 114-2511-1360.
from $244 to 1315. Walk 10 shop Brule 300 XL ~nuckle Baam log
&amp; movie1. Call 814·.U6· 2588. Laadar Mounttd On Tandem Blue Heeter Puppies, 814· 258·
Trailtr WU Caae Forkllll With 0535.
E"'al Hau~ng Opporrunily.
Bucll:et And Log Forks, 814·446·
Furni!lhed 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Bulinesa For Solo: Per Shop. Ful1417.
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,
ly Equipped, &amp; Stocked, Great Lo·
References, Deposit, $350/Uo., ·11105 Craftlmen Riding Lawn cation ! Serious Inquiries Only,
614-446-8235, 814· ...6-0577.
Mower, 20 HP, 52" Cut, Koehler 614-441-0770, 81 .. «6-7507.
Magnum Enelne, Eic:o!lanr CondiFurnished 3 Rooma &amp; Balh, UP· ilon, 814·2511-1224.
Ferrets, e Weeks Old, 1 Male 2
ll81fl, Utilities Furnished, Clean,
Years Old, 614-31'V·2682.
No Peta, Relertnc:e, Deposit Ae- 4· 12 Inch Kicker CompeU!Ion
CJ.nrfKI, 614· 448-1519.
·
.SubwooiOro JVC KS -RT808 Far Sale Or Trade: A.KC Rtgis·
Tapo Dock, JVC KD ·MK70 12 leted Chow Puppies, Firat .Sholl,
Furnished Apartment, Upstairs; 1 Ditc Chenotr All Almoll Brand Wormed. Wlrh ·Papers, 814·2•5·
Bedroom, No Pets, Second Ave· New, 81 .. 441-8711
8121 .
nue Gallipolis, All Utilities Paid
()eposi~ 81 .. 441·9523.
. 4 Piece Living Room Suite, Wood Jack Russell terrier Puppies, 10
Wlfl CusNano, Liko NeW, S2!15· 2 lbo. lUll wown. all colors, S2501oa.:
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedioom Roclinoro 125 Both, 814-2S6 - two Sheltle minlalure Callies,
apartments at Village Manor and 13l2 Alter 6 P.M.
main, St25iea.;614-742-2050 . .
Riverside Apartments in Middle·
porr. From $232-1355 . Call 814· ~lue Ridge Spa with cover, red · Mate Afi;C Regillered Pomere992·5064. f o· · &lt;~I Housing Opper· woad framet steps, 8 jlts, like nian Puppy, Champon Lino, S250;
new, lUll e. Paid $4000, Octob· Border Collie Puppy, Not Regis·
runillel.
er 1095, was asking $2700. now tered, Female Husky, 175, 614 ·
Lalayelle Mall ; 2 Bedrooms, 2 $2200, 614·992-4044.
446-8827.

feave meeuge.

410

~·--GtoetOooiiOn
Cllll! And Cony! AENT-2~

a

117=--.
=¥IMler .',,'.•

• s2

I t

.

Trailer b rent in Gllllpolla atta.

. .........
.....
a ,_..

1 . - .. . . . . . . .
11i111M1118117
...........

. - 1~ -2 - - UniUrnlo~d. llobllt -UIICI
Lampo,F
llell!s, Cholro, - . E.,: Coll1&lt;4-448~1 H._, No Poro, t22Wa., S135 ttrtalnment Centtra, Taa."
Dopoo;~ 11&lt;1--17.
Cnttta, Typewrittra, IU-441~ 2 AKC Female 8atM11 Houndt.
I J'!-317-nss.
4712.
3 8edtoorft Houu Tt1ilet locared
' 2 PurebrM Ct'leleolatt Lab Pup·
In Rio Grandt, Re&gt;Jet'tnctl Rt·
VrRA FURNITURE
qulrtd, No Poll lnoidll 814-Sl'V·
~»~••· e Wtelll, Botb Yale,
814·-....31.
2720 AmA I P.M.
Ouollty Hauaallald fumi..,. And Warmed, 111 Shots, 1100 Each,

Compurer Users Needed. work
Own Hours. 20K To S50K /Yr. 1•

800·348·7186

......

Groom Shop -Pol Go0oming. FHtuting Hydro Barn. Don ShNII.

totms are PfOI/Id~. Contact Ad- ttam player. Stnd resumes to :
R.L. Sporo, DDS. 115 W. Union
..,... Socuri1y :104-744-&lt;1391.
Sr001, Allwna. ot1io 45701.

ATTN: WOMEN /liEN. Eorn El-

1 o..rt 111""'
1 VIlla

..

__......_,_

• ...,._

't
r ;.,._.~

elecuiclan.

~~~~=--=-------~·
Reoldontlol Or .Cammorclal ~J;. ·'··

IIIQ. Now Service Or A.,..j,l.J." ~
ce...., El .. triCion. Wlllh Eltc-";1 ·
~II 4· 440-HSO, Gallipolis,'

•

!::~===~:::~:~~~~:':::

\\

Graph Matchmaker -Instantly reveals ·
'' -ASTRO·ORAPH
which signs are romanucany perfect lor
_ __;_ _:,___ you. Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, clo this
·newspaper, P.O. Box 175B, Murray Hill
Sta1lon, New York, NY 10156.
.
CANCER (June 21-July 22} Try to be as
'
generous with your f'IIIOIMC881oday a8 a
BERNICE
recent benelaclor was with his. Spend
BEDEOSOL money on lhlngs which you bolh can
enjoy.
LEO (July 2:1-Aug. 22) Even though your
assignmenl might be tough, you'll do
things wijh a flourish and you wiR·Impreu
everyone today . You will own 1118 center
stage.
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llept. 221 You wlil be
more ellectiv.e today Hyou pul 1118 strlngl
lrom lhe background rall18r lhan !rom a
rhurid.IIV. June 20, 1.998
visible position-' Lei otherl think that your
Y.x;_Wly lf)hence your leaderShip skiUa In
Ideas are lhelra.
_
lhe.,_r ahellil. People will lollow your LIBRA (Sept. lla-ODL 23) Thlot will ba an
lead bolh 11 work and in your SOCia! l~e, .eapeclally good cycle lor r•HZing your
hope• and •~P,c~allona, ao make the
Pltui Ji-lun ac:tlville&amp;GEilliu· ~ 21..Juna 20) YOUI ability 10 moll of II. Do not let negative peqple
pro!rfol• ~our Ideas will put you a lew lnlluenoe your thinking.
st.Pi ithe8d allhe crowd IOdaY- Uao your · ICORPIO (Ocl 24-Mov. 221 Focua your
Judgrnenl !nolead ol lrylng to uek anenllon on your moal dllllcuh objec:IMI
a~ 1r0m 0Jhara,'K!10w ~to look todiry. YO!! will i.wlhe llilllly Ill~
for ~ - and you'll lind ft. The Aatro- your goell. rag81'ill~lt al impoldlnwo!ll.
• 1! ..

• ' •

I

,

'

SAOinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21} II
11880Ciates do not egree with you today,
do not anempt to lmpolllt your Ideas on
them. Make your presentallon bold, bul
do no1 apply prauure. ·
·
CAPRICOiiN (O.C. 22-JM. 1t)
on
1118 Judgmenl of a loyal asaodale - Y· H
you lack essential knowledge in a co~n­
men:lal involvtimenl, he or aha can till In
1118 ,blanks.
AQUARIUS (J8n. 20-Fab. 11} falf'l1888
·and tact will be your two g - a loday. Olhera willlreat you fairly aa BOO!'
aa IIIey - thel you're no1 lrying 10 Irick

fWJ

them.
PISCES (Feb. 20 11111111 10) Trendl ~~
continue to look lavorable tor you In
al your career. Keep pertoru•'ll 1o.
lhe beet of your abiiHy bacault your
ellorla will be acknowledged.
- · (Maroll 21-Apll 1t) A hlend f1111Y
be on a light budg•t IOd8y . Do not

embarrau lhla lnclvltbtl ~ -..glng
him Of
10 lf*'CI money lrlvaloully.
TAURUS (April 10 lily 201 A cun.nt 811uallon probably will not Improve with
-time, eo lry to rwolve ~ ~y, . Thla will_

'*

be •

good

-10

act:

,'

,,
-

'

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