1 Continued from A1 ore than 20 outlets ' Hami l sea in meant years m we m 1 He made one final ' may on the Weekend of Wmmn he dropped several thousand dollars at outlets from Hamilton to Oakville back about Slfitlgllign he hadomfig finmeMEOfCIientstouivestina Ph°neylafi4€efinandxng me mgala's addiction» turned him into He did not i emu what he was mumsifuwfiaymg in" it Involved a kind busing that "093'" keeo books . These revelatiom left his v1 ' Who Were robbed of between 34: moafld$210,000_masml30f Shoe"ih'mddisbeliet. ' would have her SYmPa' thy for him if 1151:: blown the money on wild womaiI (a: and gamma jlmkets '0 1'5 to lotteries , 'ticket junkie' members were "absoluter shocked" when they learned about the lottery addiction "I've heard he spent as much as $10,000 to $14,000 a week on lotteries," he said He added the Ontario Lottery (brpora'tion should bear some of the blame for Mr. Rogala's down- fall for allowing him to buy so many tickets "He couldn't help They should make it mandatory for ticket buyers to sign a document ittheybuymorethanafewhun- dred dollals in tickets (to keep track of them " Mr. Kott said. Annette Taylor, a spokespelson for the corporation, said she Was not aware of Mr. Rogala's prob- lem and didn't know of any re- search indicating people become addicted to letter-la "We certainly don't encourage people purchase large quanti- ties of tickelts The average play- yield about $1,000 in small Wim» The money will be thrown into the pot, along other a§ets't9tal- ling about $360,000, to be dwlded onapro-ratedbasisamflngflle50 credith