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Ohio Lottery

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·\IIIII. lf1, NO. 2311
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C111117, Oh!o v.1111y l'ublllhlng Compltnr

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2 SectlOnl, 12 ....... 31 ctntii

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll10, 1897

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TPRSD to award bid to .K itts Hill firm Monday

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· By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe Stiff
Construction on . the Tuppers
Phiins ·Regional ' Sewer District
should ~gin in ~bout 30 days, now
· m~t ~ pr1mary contractor 1s about to
be ht.red.
.
B1ds for !he general c0ntracung
work were o~ned on Tuesday, after
the bi!l deadline had been extended
by the di~trict's board. .
Lindsey Lyons, .Pres1dent of the

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board, said that

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the ~ bid w.ill .be ·c~st was $,1.98 million. Th~· o~erage

30 days, depending on the· time 'it
takes the engineering firm and Rural
Kitts Hdl, the same gen~ral conlrac- ungency funds, and the d1smct wtll Development's engineers to sign off
tor who installed the s~wer system in theri' request more contin$ency on the.bid.
Rutland. The only· •:ither bid was monies fr~m iis primary funding
"It should be underway in about
rece1vedfrom LA Pipe of Belpre, at source, Oh10 Department of Agncul- 30 d~ys, maybe not quite that long,"
. $2.22 mllhon.
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lure Rural Develop~nt &lt;formerly Lyons said. "It depends on how long
. Accordmg to Lyo~s. the b1d of Farmers Home Admm1straho~). .
it takes to run through the mill. Tile
. F1e}ds ConstructiOn·was Still over the
Lyons ant1C1pates.lh':' ~e b1d ~·II big approval to begin construction .'
esb'?at~ cqst of the I;lr~JeCt: ~e .be awarded at ~ d1stncts m~etm.g will come from Rural Development,
firms ~·d w~ $~.06 mdhon, w~tle on Monday evemn~. Cons~uon IS because they furnish most of the
'be eng1neers esumate'of the proJect expected to begm m approXImately
·

. a~ard~ to Ftelds C\lftstructton of

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By BRIAN
J. REED
Sentinel NeWs Sllltf
Cattle running loose in two western Meigs County townships are
making life unple~sant fQr residents,
and those cattle have been ordered
pi~ked up by law enforcement offi:
·
. cials. .
On Wednesday, Meigs County ·
Court Judge Patrick O'Brien ordered
!hat cattle owned by Allan Halliday
of the Dexter area be collected and
contained until th~ disposition of
those caule is determined next week.
. H,alliday is charged in Cot.naty
Court with allowing animals to run
loose, a misdemeanor of tile fourth
degree. The complaint was filed last
month by Jeff Miller, Investigator 'ror
!he Prosec'uting Attorney, ·
Yesterday's hearing inclu&lt;!_ed
swom testimony from the three township trustees in Salem Township an,d

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TO BE PURCHASED~· Beautiful blue "Welcome to pomeroy•
banner• like tile one displayed here by Dottle Mueeer, Suun
Clark, ancl .VIcki Ferrell, were approved for purche• by the
Pomeroy · ~hairtl ~eeoclatlon w~; 'the· !Hinnera will .

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downtown Pomeroy

ll·m·i·f t pos ... an e . ·: I.,
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. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
!twas noted !hat the design will be
Sentinel News Stiff
on both sides of the canvas banners
TWo sets of banners to be dis- which will be installed on .slationary
played on the period lamp posts in bnickets attached to tile· light poles.
downtown Pomeroy were approved
Two contributions •were made t&lt;J
for purchase at Wednesday's meeting tile downtown revitaliziltio~ project.
of the Pomeroy Merchants Associa- One was for $424 from the J.O.G.S.
. lion held in .Peoples Bank.conference program at Meigs High School taught
room.
by Melanie Quillen and .!he second
Thirty bright blue "Welcome to was from !he Siemwneel Association
.Pomeroy" banners featuring white for $250:
lettering and a stemwlleel replica will
The group agreed to again this
be ordered immediately so as to be year participate in the Stem wheel
ready for installation once the light- Festival the first weekend in October.
ing is completed. Thirty red banners The merchants ~ill have a duck derwilh a holiday theme will be ordered by at that time and will handle the
once the design has been completed. annual costume pany and provide
Susan '"lark, president, reponed · . pri~es for the event. •.
The fashion sho'w date . ·was
thatCapital City Awning of Columbus which has installed most of the changed 10 May 9 at the Pomeroy
awnings in town as pan of the revi - Elementary School. Door prizes are
talization plan will be making the being collected. it was reponed, and
. banners.' Cost' will be .$17 each. Pur- tickets will go on sale next week. Valchase of'tlle banners will come from . unteers are needed to. help at the.
the Christmas bulb fund which Vick- show. Junior Chamber of Commerce
ie Ferrell, treasurer, reported n.ow has members will assist jn handing out
a balance of $1,771.
Contiauecl .oii'
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for more thari a decade if they sign
and mail in a paper request form .
Qetwccn . l ·million and 4 million

·.accepting electronic mail requests.; .
But regular mail responses ta~e
four to six weeks and cost Social
Security millions of dollars 'in
postage each year. .
.
So, last month, the agency made
it possible for taxpayer's to actually
. retrieve their records online.
·.
Aftcr ·national news reports about
the .service earlier this week, the
number of people using it jumped
from 3.000 a day to about 8,500. '
Critics say that anyone with
. knowledge of another person's
Social Security number.' their molher's maiden . name and the state
where ihey were born could access
' the . records electronically or by
paper request to learn their job history, salary and other information, ·:

Cold.temperatures damage Ohio fruit crop

By The AuoclatiKI Preee
.Ohio fruit farmers sell about $2S
million worth of apples each year and
$4 million apiece in strawberries and
peaches . .
But !his year tlley're scrambling to
protect !heir crops as temperatures hit
• record April lows. .
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. "This iSthe worst I've ever seen."
said Roger Monnin. who estimateS he
lost 50 percent to 70 percent of the
peach crop on his Monnin Fruit
Fann in Dayton. . ·
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Reco!d lows wen:: reponed in tile
northern Ohio · cities of Cleveland,
-Akron 1111d YQungsto- and Colum-

bus in central Ohio !his morning. The
overnight readings of 20 degrees. 18
degrees, 17 degrees and 20 degrees
respectively 11rok.c old records on
!hose cities by I degree. Mansfield
tied its old record of 18 degrees.
On Wednesday, !he temperature
dipped to 19 de11roes in Dayton,
breaking the previous marie of 20 for
tile same date in 1957. The Cincin•
nati/Northcm-KCntucky International Airport recorded a I5-dcgroe reading, !he coldest temperature for April .
Tile pn:viqus marie was 17 .degrees in
1964.
Most of the state'~ fruit crop

probably will survive the·cold snap,
said Mike Pullins, executive director
of the Ohio Fruit Growers Society. "We're not in danger of losing the
crop, especially in central Ohio and
north, "lle said.
B~re could be damage to early bloo ing strawhcr,ries. or peach
them Ohio, he said.
trees in
Monnin, who also grows apples,
strawbenies and raspberries at his 35acre farm, was using cold to fight the
cold. ·
He has been running . water over
his strawberries, encasing them in

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Earth didn 't . mar our li~es may be .for nine hours. Pans of !he pOwer grid
..AP 8UIIII!tl8 Writer
. mo.-e luck thll!llechnological savvy. in · the northeastern United States
. . NEW YORK .~ Television sets.
Scientists warri ~re·s a danger in also experienced brief disruptions.
going blank. A city hit by electrical relying too much on sensitive micro. No satellites were damaged by
blackout.
.
electronics; especially thumbnail- . !hat even~. but geomagnetic storms
·Those are the kinds of disruptio.ns ' sized microprocessor chips. to run were blamed forfailure ofa weather
that ea~ result from an unusual everything from computers to cellu- . satellite i.n 1994 and of a telephone
cxtratem:strial event · like ·~nes- , Jar phones.
·
communications sar.:llite last January.
. day's: A wave of eneray from a solar
: 'Our technologies have become
Stin: businesses dependent on .
flare invading thulmosphere, threat- ·more sophisticated,. and we've satellites said Wednesday sai&lt;llhey
ening' satellites and otller high-tech · become more vulnerable over time," weren't overly concerned. The hunequipment.
. said Louis Laiu:erotli, a technology dreds or orbiiins satelli~ !lave built• Scientists ei&lt;plalned .lhat the ener· : dpert for Bell Labs,d!e research ann in safcauards to protect against dam. . gy wa~ was moderate in size, pro- •·o f Lui:ent'lech!loloties. "Tne dani!Cf aae to solar J*!Cis, which galher
duciriJ dramatic 'pictures lllken by 11 1 to the chips is unpredictable."
c-.,. to power the Spl!CCCrafl. OperI)CW llllelli&amp;e but only a small amount
In M~h 1989, fallout from a ·aton also cu turn panels away from
ofp!liiWIIC!icradiationleiiChina!he solar fl~~e , cauMtl !he IIII'JCII aeo- .the sun.
·
p18J!et.
ma1netic storm. in 30 years. It · · Companieulso make routine oonThat !he latest wave to ·hit the knocked out a power pid in Quebec tinJeilcy plans. J'heAssociitCd Press

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our beneficiaries and our workers," fully automated version of the scrCallahan said.
·
vice.
.Tile agency will consider whetller
Sens. William Roth, R-Del ., and
new safeguards are. needed for the Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.,
Internet service, Including possibly led a bipartisan group of colleagues
giving people personal access codes who wrote to !he agency saying the
or allowing them to request that online service '.' may not afford suffitheir individual records not be .cient protections against violations
· placed in the database.
of individual privacy. "
Sqcial· Security's entire internet
Rep. lim Bunning. R-Ky .. cllairsite will be inaccessible for 'two or mao of the House's subcommittee
three days while the databise is on Social Security. asked for a SCCU·
being disabled, but general informa- rity report tQ l'ti~ panel by April 22,
tion and 'documents · about the and·Rcp. Paul Kanjorski, D-Pa., said
nation's retirement program will be be will .sponsor legislation to ban
back on line soon.
information about individuals' camThen taxpayers will be able to ings, tax records atid Social Security
request information about their per- benefits on the Internet.
sonal records through electronic
The Social Security Admini~!ramail to the agency, but reports will · tion has offered people access to
be sent through rc!gular mail rather !heir earnings and benefits reports

. By DAVID E. KALISH

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p~~~etn:!':n!hi~:nlh:~ ~~~~:~hiii.::~:~r~f~~~~r.:~~ ::~~~~·:!u~~~~,r~ ~·~:.~r: ~~e~~:s aa~~a~~o ::~n~~d ~:au~ .

.provided individual earnings and
· reti.-ement benefit
. records
and
decided to iil:gin
asking Americans
whether · such
information
Cal..hen
should . be available online and, if so, how much.
"For the next 60·days we will be .
conducting public forums in Washington and across the country on the
issue; ·• said John J. Callahan, acting
commissioner 'of. Social Security
who said • he per5onally will be
involved in the effort.
The Social, Security Administralion on Wednesday ·suspended an
·online service that allowed people to
retrieve their personal Social Sccuri-

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. : ty reCOrd$ because: it rai'l ed privacy than via the Internet.
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WASHINGTON ~ :social Secu- · . :·The Internet is • new world and · makers. questions raised by com put·

rily officials

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three inches 'or ice. And lle has

burned 300 gallons of diesel .fuel .in
flame-spewing smudge pots to try'!o
keep his fruit trees warm.·
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"I don 'tthink I'd. have anythiAg
left if I hadn 't dol\e that," he said.:
Bob MacQueen, owner of Maj:·
Queen·~ Orchard in Toledo. said : it
has ·been too cold for protective
measures to work on the apples ai.d
peaches he · grows at his 250-ac;t'e
orchard. He said up to 9() percent pf
his large apple blooms have been 1061.
"We're not out of business, l:iut
we're injured," he said.
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Sola&lt;
r .flares sh()w vufnerabiUty of high-tech communications i·

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By ALI.CE A~N !-OYE ·

. ' lii'oelated Pi'HI Wrltlf·'
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O'Brien that 11e was chased by Hall- the cattle was reimbursed to tbe
iday's cattle wllile lle was feeding his county. In the meantime. the cost
own livestock. Edward Ladd told involved in containing !he cattle '!fill
O'Brien that c; le have been on the be calculated is court cost~. aod
front porch ofh1s Dexter Road home. levied upon · the State or Hallid'i!J,
Because ofthese problems, Lentils depending on !he outcome of ihe
requested that O'Brien order the .cat- criminal case against Halliday, :
tie tel be gatlle.-ed and sold, in ordt&lt;r
O'Brien's order also included.:&amp;
to protect citil.ens in tlte area.
restraining order against Hallidlfi
"I know it's an extraordinary forbidding him from interfcri'ng With ,
request," Lentes said in court ycster- the agent's charged with collecting the
day. "However, I think we have a cri- cattle.
.
·. sis situation on our hands."
Halliday was not present in co~rt
Lentes told O'Brien thai at least yesterday, nor was his attorney
. three cattle have been found dead of ~Ieven L. Story of Pomeroy. Sto(y,
malnutrition. and that he fears other -when contacted after !he hearing, said
cattle may be diseased.
that neither lle nor his client had 'been
O'Brien stopped shon of ordering notified of the hearing.
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the sale of the cattle, but set a hear"I would be surprised at any such
ing for Monday morning to deter: order, since my client and I were ·not
mine !heir fate. If tile callle arc sold, . notified of a hearing today," Story
· Lentes said, the proceeds of ihc sale said. "Therefore, I would not comwould be returned to Halliday after ment on any 'action that is said 'to
:. ·.,r.~t:f.'":;:::;;;.~;.•:·-.:.:.:.· ;:.::~',~~.;~~~ ~f ~~~~,.~g ~.~nta!ni n.ll , .hliY5;.~~n~~~~ .,1, ., •~"-' .

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Iars over th;ll cost estimate. Tile highest bidder's price for constructing the
system was in excess of $3 milliOn/
according 10 Lyons.
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Bids for sub-contractors are still to
be opened, and one of those is ;·.t:
minority set-aside. That process is not
expected to halt construction.~
ing to Lyons. • ·
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where .to begin construction w!ll 'be
determined by the general contractOr:

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money and they have most of tile reg- .
ulations." ·
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Bids on the project. were first
opened on March II, but an addendum modifYing the specifications
for the project was ad&lt;le,d, and tile bid
deadline was extended in hopes of
lowering the project cost. A total of
six bids · was received at lh 1
opening, and all bids co siderably
exceeded the' estimated . · sts. Tile .
lowest bid ·was a quarter million dol-

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tb
· buy·~:· :· ··, ...·~:~~~ R~~~.~·~ . · p~~~.~n~l. rec~r.ds from Internet
·r·tf · n· r.·s· ..#,._,. ,

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Columbia Townships, alleging !hat
caule owned by Halliday are creating
a threat to property and personal safe'ty o( residents in the area.
Those witnesses, and ProsCC:uting
Allot:ney John Lentes,· allege that
soq~e 60 head of caule are 'On tile
loose. Tile, cattle, including several
·bulls; are said to be: wandering on private property and public roadways,
chasing people and damaging property.
"We tried to· talk ·to (Halliday),"
Trustee Ceeil Stacy said. "All lle
would do is tell us that he had wire
ordered and lhat lle would build a
fence."
·
That fence, Stacy said, has never
been conslfll!:ted.
One resident of til!: township said
his RiOIIler, who lives near Halliday,
f~ for Iter personal safety, and nm
,Mullins, another · neighbor, told

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Loose cattle ordered picked up

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~·II be pa1d from the d1smc~ s co~-

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had staff on standby Wednesd~y
night and made silre its satelliic
operators were prepared. If a satellite
went dead, AP's backup plans inctua•
ed switching 19 an unaffected sat&lt;Jlite, or shifting transmissions :!)f
news, photos and graphics to groulklbased systems.
·,
"Because we depend so heav.\Jy
ori satellites, anytime !here's llflythln11
unusual goin·g on will! tllem we
watch it very carefully." said JOHn
Reid, AP's director of communicltion.s and technology.
;·
For scientists, the excitement
that pictures talcen b;y . the s~
aaency's SOI'!O Sltellite det:ec~
the wave moving across the sufl/s
aaseous surface
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Thunsday,~l10,1997

:'Coml11entary
The Daily Sentinel

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'£stJl6Usfrd in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2156 • fax 992-2157

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A Gannett.Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT l,. WINGETT •
Pub lither

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CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenl MIMSI'i' .

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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1 - - D I ~lhort_(I!III.....,..,,...J_,._c,_otl»&gt;ngpublfth«LI}fplcllef.
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_Pa0e2

Having ineffectually written in own tradition, we would also fail in
January that House Speaker Newt our obligation as.a friend or China.
Gingrich, R-Ga., should repent, For no one Cilll be a ttue friend if that
·reform and redeem himself as;a person avoids the truth., .
national leader, only to see him lose
control of himself in public, stay most Morton Kondracke
of the time in a shell-shocked funk,
drag out the issue of how to pay his
That was not only gutsy; it also
$300.000 ethics fine, and allow con- provided a succinct formulation for
servative ma•imalists to try to drive the Clinton administration, whose
. hin1 from office, I herewith try again: purst,~it of an "engagement" policy
Dear Newt,
· '\ tempts it to mumble on human rights.
That was ,a great job you did in I hear you are close to deciding how
AS Ill. You succeeded •• and not only you can juggle support for MFN trade
m contrast to the hapless AI Gore •• status for China .. anathema to conas an advocate of Americ~ values. . servatives .. with·support for human
And people who accompamed you to rights: by making China's manageHong Kong, Chma, Taiwan, Korea ment of Hong Kong a one-year t,est
and Japan say that you were diSCI· case for MFN. That's fair.
· 1es~, eIoqucnt,an d efliecuve
·
p1·med. ure
While you were gone, of course,
1n carrymg th1s coun!JY s message. It speculation raged abol!l how long
'was w1se thai you mcluded some you have in your job. The , 0 ing
D
t
th
P
emocra &gt; on your mission ; . ey, cliche is, "it's not if, bu! when "
too, ~ay you d1d we,ll:
. . , you ' ll be forced out. Having 'inquired
It s tpo bad Amencan TV d1~n t into this a bit, 1 think it's garbage ..
carry your speech t~ the Fore1gn provided you shape up, keep your
Affmrs College m BeiJmg. Amencans mouth under control, pay your fine
wo~ld ha~e .seen .you ~~ your best, quickly, and get busy with an agen·
telltng Chma that.ll can t stop Amer· da that both helps govern the coun'
1cans from talkmg_ about human try with president Clinton .and chal·
nghts and ;.eltgtous hbcny ~.Y declar- lenges him politically.
mg.~hose . mtemal, affa1rs..
.
First, the garbage. Washington
Amenca can I remam s1lent Post columnist James Glassman
about the basic. lack of freedom -- declares thai "Gingrich Must Go"
speech, reltg1on, assembly, the press and says that you've compromised on
--in China," you said. "Were we to political principle so often that your
do
so, we would not only betray our "value as a political leader is over."
·

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·-.,-,.,.....-.Sp«Jtyo-lffiWnf'o••••tcoiOipte,.,._
0&lt; ·
10 r1N Edllor, Tile ..-rNI, Ill Coun St.,
Ohio

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..Gingrich roars back,
.;.~,.·but GOP support
·~ .may. be shaUow

By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -It was a shon e•ilc.
After lying low for a 2' 112 months after an unprecedented ethics reprimand, Newt Gingrich is roaring back full tilt. Other Republican leaders are
rallying behind the House speaker in an orchestrated show of public image· ·
.mending. But there are fracture lines in that support- imd they're not far
t&gt;elow the surface.
·. : Speculation abounds that, if Gingrich can't move adroitly over the nc•t'
· few weeks to reassen his leadership, his days as speaker could be numbered.
Fighting for his political survival, Gingrich was hurling himself into his
·~JOb this week and breathmg some of the old fire as Congress returned from
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'spring recess.

·" · He seemed to be in motion everywhere- high profile meetings, a news
conference, a fresh attack on the Internal Revenue Service, a red-meat address
-, '·to a pro-Israel lobby.
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·~· : . He has a news conference today to discuss his recent trip to Asia. He goes
-'on Larry King's CNN show Friday.
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• 'c · "I think he's trying. I think he's going in the right direction," sa1d Rep.
. Peter King, R-N.Y., OR« of a handful of Republican lawmakers who has urged
• Gingrich to step aside.
·: King said he's currently reserving judgment on whether Gingrich can
make a full comeback. "There's a lot he has 10 overcome.,.
·
·· · The current GOP game plan: minimize internal difficulties and Gingrich's
problems and div~n attention to common foes like President Clinton and
t'lhe IRS .
"· • Gingrich stood with other GOP leaders at a news conference Tuesday to
- promote GOP legislation "that stops IRS agents from niisusmg their powers and huning innocent people."
What better target for him than the IRS as the April 15 tax dead Iine
approaches?
·
. Meanwhile, Republican leaders - when the subject of ethics arises have been trying to change the topic to ethical problems faced by Clinton,
ranging from Whitewater to fund-raising abuses . . ·
.. "There's no comparison," Senate Ml\fority Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss.,
told a conservative GOP audience eadi~r this week at whicxe had high
- praise for Gingrich.
.
•
;' .. Loll said he wonders why people are always asking him " w-long can
•·the speaker hang on?".a.nd not, "How long can President Clinton hang on?"
But suppon for Gingrich from Loll and other GOP leaders might be wider
than it is deep.
As have most other Republican leaders, Lott put m1les of distance between
.!tis suppon for GOP-sponsored ta. cuts and Gingrich's suggestion- before
~t!" spring recess- that tax cuts could wait until a balanced-budget deal
,..~s struck.
.
~~ : And Gingrich's trip to Asia durmg the two-week recess may have been
~~~Lett's mind - and not in a complimentary way- when the Senate leader
:;rid R~publican act1vis1s: "During the rec.~nt break. I didn 't go to Chtna or
pan or S1bena or Europe. I went home.,
" ' Gingrich has never been accused of being politically naive. And no one
' was ready to count him out.
:f In rea,ching out to moderlues, the Georgia Republican has been winning
fuppon he will need to get anything passed in the House, where Republians hold one of the narrowest majorities m history.
· •
~
But his apparent pullback on GOP tax cuts, and his couning bf liberals
&gt;' ke Jesse Jackson and actor Alex Baldwin annoyed conservatives.
h· More lately, Gingrich has been moving to win back some of that GOP
; ~ppon, with his tough talk on human right~ during his visit to China,
J ~enewed vows of support for broad 1a• cuts and wnh a fiery speech onTucs!Jay 'in which he accused Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat of waging a ter~rism war against Israel.
Ralph Reed, the executive director of the ·Christian Coalition, was pub·
B\cly critical of Gingrich's position on ta• cuts just two weeks ago.
But there was no equivocation in Reed's praise of Gingrich this week,
which he salut&lt;;d the speaker's outspokenness on human rights. Reed called
\!iingrich "the most consequential Rep~~lican - apan from Ronald Rca·
.
tJan - in the·post-World War II penod.
~:t; 'King, the New York Republican who has become one of Gingrich's !llOSt
~ocal critics, said late Tuesday that he, for one; was impressed. ','1think he 's
tl!efinitely getting the message. "
'
'$' Still, King added, "We're still wa1ting for an agenda and waiting to go
~rw~~~d. We're waiting to see wheth_er !Wiwt shows us firm leadership."

~

t+

ri;,

Village

\

-

~

complamts

· With the first-quaner performan!le
results now officially in, one of th1s
year's better performing mutual fund
categories has been international
small cap filnds .
The average stock fund lost nearly 2 peroenl duting the first three
· months of 1997, with sector funds off
I .84 percent. But look outside of the
United States and you'll find that the
world holds promise.
·
Accordmg to Lipper Analytical
Service, the top-performing fund
areas included Latin America, up
13.68 percent; emerging markets, up
Q.57 percent; European region, ahead
4.54 percent ; and international small
cap. up 2.08 percent.
In the international small cap arc·
na, Founders Passpon Fund ranked
No. 5 out of21 funds and gainedrts74
percent during the quanet. Ov. the
last three years it ranks No . .
Michael Gerding is the ponfolio
manager of the Founders Passpon
Fund. He's been managmg money for
12 years and wasn't surprised by the
strong showmg.
·
, "What we're finding in small cap
stocks outside the United States

r

-

(excluding Japan) is that earnings are ly followed. "
picking up fairly dramatically," says
The Founders Passpon Fund has
Ger&lt;\ing, whose fund invests primar- been around for three and a half years
ily in companies based in Europe. and keeps ~tween 55 and 75 stocks
in iL' ponfolio. Some of the company nam~s you'll find there include
Dian Vt[Jovlcb
Porshe. Doutor Coffee (a Japanese
coffee company !hat Gerding likens
"Japan is actually
e•ception, in to Starbucks), and United Tractors
tem'ts of markets, where we ·have not (an Indonesian tractor dealer that has
seen small cap stocks do well." .
·e•jlanded its business to include the ·
While the hope of international leasing and operating of their tractors
small ,cap stock pickers who follow 'for the mining industry). ·
a bottom:up approach (like Gerding)
American Century's 20th Century
is to find the next Microsoft, it is InternatJOnal Discovery Fund 'also
more difficult to research small cap performed·well during the fi(sl quarstocks abroad than it is in the United ter. It was up 7.74 percent. Henrik
States. That's beCause international Strabo has been lhc fund 's ponfolio
brokers and analysis don 't always fol· manager since its inception three
low their local small company stocks years ago.
Like Gerding, Strabo is a stock
as closely a' analysts in the United
picker. Unlike Gerding, he keeps
States might.
"The local players, by and large, ·around 180 different. stocks in Dis·
don't look at the small companies as covery's poitfolio.
"We're looking for ~pmpanies
much us they lo(lk at th~ big cap
names," Gerding said. "So, that . that are able tu grow organically,"
gives us a huge advantage because says Strabo. "Organically" means
we arc able to go over tlicrc, find companies that aie very successful at
great ideas, and not be concerned what they are doing and can grow on
because the companie~ ~r&lt;?,!l'l wide, . !heir own merit without acquisitions.

one

the lmman body as a "vehicle;" a
man who advised his female follow· crs to wear baggy shins with two
brea't pockets in order to disguise the
fact that underneath .those pockets
were, well, breasts.
.
Low self-esteem? No self-esteem?
Maybe, but there has to be more to it
than that. Of all our primal instincts,
survival is the most deeply ingrained.
. By what process does a human being .
come to regard his or her body as a
"vehicle" or a "container," something to be shed, like a snake's skin
or a lobster's shell? How. for that
matter, could a thinking human being
not laugh in the face of anyone sug·
gesting as much, especially if tliat
someone is named after one half of a
nursery rhyme character?
"If anything ·iS sacred, the.human
bOdy is sacred," Walt Whitman
wrote, eelebrating a wonderfully
complex an&lt;! totally uhpredictalile
process, that, unfortunately, some·
times lloes awry.
Helen Keller, Stephen Hawking, ·
Barbara Jordan, Franklin Roosevelt.
RaJ. Charles - e~~eh of lhcm swck
wtth less than perfect "containen."
How fonunate for the rest of us that
despite their aflliclions they believed

.'

OHIO Weat her
· Now and later

AccuWcather" forecast for daytime conditions and high

.,

\

Hlfe.I* a look at CSX Cotp. and Holfolk

_.,.I".Corp.'s J)lan to ipllt Com'lil'l Nil. •
ayllem and how the two COIIIPiniell wll
!
dllllgl with the addltlon ol Conrail's lUlL :

MICH.

•

•

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' ' ' ' '

t)~ ~%(

~,,

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-YOI1&lt;CIIy
'!phi

IMansfield I52• I•

1998 rail revenue

$4.9 billion

Post-mergar rail revenue
Route miles
Post·merger route miles
Price tor He shar.e of Conrail
Conrail track annexed

$6.4 billion
18,500

23,000
$4.3 billion
42%

$4.1 billion , ' •
Not available ;

I

I

I
I
I
I

j'

•

I

I

•

14,300

. About :z(ooo

•
·••

i

$5.9 billion
58%
•

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fit AP

TlMES·OISPATCM (RiChmond. 'IJ')

Norfolk Southern and CSX agree on .C onrail splitj

W. VA.

By GAYNELL TERRELL
The deal, if approved by the fed· lion.
Associated Press Writer _
era! Surface Tmnsponation Board,
Last month, under pressure from
RICHMOND, Va. - Norfolk will create two main rivals for East· federal regulators, Norfolk, Va.·based
Southem Corp. and CSXCorp. have ern rail traffic, especially in the Norfolk Southern and CSX agreed to
agreed to carve up Conratl Inc., With Nonheast where Conrail has been drop their rival offers and negotiate
Norfolk Southern cla.iming the larg· unchallenged since it was formed in the breakup of Conrail.
er share of the big East Coast rail· 1976.
CSX Chairman John Snow said
Vf.t Associated Pmss GraphJCsNBt
road.
CSX had tried to get a much b1g· the split will create "a rail balance in
"
The two companies announced ger piece of the Nonheast market the region ."
late Tuesday their plans to divide with its initial offer in October to
"We have produced a result that
Conrail after a heated bidding w~ merge with Conrail. That brought ' will be embraced broadly by the comBy The Associated Press
fruled to produce a wmner for the ratI· Norfolk Southern into the fray and munities and the states and the ship·
EKtended forecast:
Weather forectiSt:
ma&lt;J.
Norfolk Southern will pay $5.9 spawned months of dueling bids.
ping p~blic," said Snow.
Saturday.. .Showers and -thunder"This transaction will usher in a
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Lows in storms likely. Highs in the mid 60s. billion for its 58 percent stake of the · CSX had bid $9.7 billion cash and
railroad and CSX will pay $4.3 bil- stock offer, while Norfolk Southern new era in transportation for the East.
the mid 30s. Light and variable
S~nday...Showers likely. Lows in
had made an ~11-cash bid of$10.5 bil· Norfolk Southern will reach imporwinds.
the lower 40s and highs in the mid lion for the remaining 42 percent.
·
Friday...Panly cloudy and warmer. 50s.
Monday ... Panly cloudy. Lows in
' Highs in the mid 60s.
Friday night...Rain likely.. .With a the mid 30s and highs in the lower
chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the 50s.
Editor's note: The ftllng of a
1
lower 50s.
lawsuit outlines the grievance of
one party against another, it does
not establish pUt or Innocence.
,.
'
The f&lt;,&gt;llowipg suits were tiled
Mabel Kathryn Philson, 91, Racine. died Wednesday, April9, 1997, at
Hunting Instructor course set
lowed by 9 a.m . lodge work in EA
recently in the Meigs County Coun
Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility in Pomeroy.
A free training course for prospec- · degree.
·of
Common Pleas of J~dgc Fred W.
She was born Feb. I, 1906, in Racine, daughter of the late Frederick and
tive hunting education instructors
Crow
Ill:
· Regina .May Hayman Philson , and was a college professor in teaching and
will be held April 19, 9 ,a,. m. tQ 3 p.m. Reti:.Cment party slated
Associated Financial Services of
A retirement party for long-time research.
. .
.
.
.
.
at the Pomeroy Gun Club on
America, Inc, Parkersburg. W.Va.;
She graduated,.from Ractne H1gh School tn 1923 and rece1ved a bachePomeroy, Pike . Division of Wildlife · Long Bottom rural route carrier Phil
seeks $4,572.91 plus interest and·
instructor Eric Lane will show how Radford will be held Saturday, 5 p.m. lor's dpgree from Ohio University in 1928. She r~ceived a master's degree costs from Michael Scou Gruescr,
to teach the Ohio Hunter. Education at the Long Bottom Community from OU tn 1939 and a Ph.D. froll\ Iowa State Uruverstty m 1953 tn house- Racine, on a delinquent promissor:y
hold equipment and foods. She taught at Auburn University .from 1953 to
, Program. For more information, call Building.
1963 and at Virginia Tech from 1963 to 1973. She received a WINE award note.
· Jim Freemon at The Daily Sentinel at
Roben L. and Jennifer Thompson,
from Virginia T~ch in 1971 for excellence in teaehtng and retired in 1973.
992-2155.
Group to meet
She is survived by a sis,ter and bnlthcr-in-law, Mary I,Ou and Theron John· Nelsonville, seek damages totaling
· The BookShelfers writing group
$225,000 from Debra J. Frost, Long
will meet Friday, 7 p.m. at the son of Racine, and by several nieces, nep)lews a,nd cousins. ·
Shade River Lodge
Bottom, for injuries ste~Rming from
She was preceded in death by a brother, Ben H. Philson.
Shade River Lodge 453 will meet Pomeroy Public Library.
a
April I, 199S; automobilc accident.
~emorial services will be held at the Letan Fall~ Cemetery Chapel. at a .
Saturday for an 8 a.m. breakfast fol Phoebe
tlarlung,
Norton ,
later date at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are under ~tree·
executrix of the estate of Donald Harbuy.~~ndnued from page 1 tion of Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood. W.Va.
tung Jr., deceased, seeks damages in
excess of $25,000 from Mary Hawk,
pnzes.
is free on Saturdays, Clark reminded
Racine, in a wrongful death suit stem·
ming from a May 31 , 1993, automo·
, The need for landscaping along those attending.
·
The bld deadline for the Eastern rll(;eived might suffer.
Main Street was discussed and it was
Appreciation was ~ express.ed to,__ ~al .'.Sc)lool District's new con·
The bidd~_p; will no~ hav~ u.ntil
. del;ided t(l c.ontact a.oouple of. local Bob .Atwood wh~ .aucnaed ~1s .last struction project has been postponed. noon ?n Ap~1117to submtt the1r b1ds.
landscapers ~or estimates. Bc~inning meettng bef~rc retmng on Apnl 30. as
Superintenden1 Deryl Well said The b1ds w11l he opened at 2 p.m. on
. Holzer Medical Center
nex~ week Vl!lage workers wtll start an adven1stng .representative wtth Thursday morning that the deadline. that day.
DI~H:harga AprU 10 - · Justin
putttng th~ hshts al~ng the prome- The Datly Senttnel. V1ckie Ferrell which waworiginally. set for today,
Bids for t~e district'~· asbestos .
nade back Into place, tt was reponed. -JI!Inounced that Buuons and Bo~s was extended because several other abatement proJect al the h1gh school Holcomb, Marie Rossiter, Richard
It was requested that windows be will clbse on June I an~ asked that project bid openings were scheduled will still be opened today, Well said. Kleinen, Gwytha .Simms. Mrs.
dcciJ~ted for Memor.ial, Day week· another member be considered for the for today, and the district's architects The school.bourd will .meet Friday at Joseph Qualls and dtlughter, Connie
end smce many alumni will be return· positiOn of treasurer.
feared that the quality of bids 7 p.m. to d1~cuss the asbestos abate- Waugh, Roben Arthurs, Kpthryn
Conn. Ella Jenkins, Virginia Hanson,
ing for reunions. P41'king in Pomeroy
·
ment bids.
,
Susan Sheets, Eva Robson, Helen

Today's weather forecast

tant new markets and provide nt w
and better services for customer$,"
said David R. Goode, Norfolk .Soi¢11em's chainnan.
,i
•••

Under the split, CSX will operate
Conrail lines from Boston thn~gh
Clcvcland · to St. Louis, with .~on­
nccting line~ 1o New York and into
Canada. CSX a!so w111 operate Conrail's line between New York ~nd .
Ph1ladelphia ..
~I

••

Lawsuits filed

Meigs

. I

a~nouncements

Mabel K. Philson

Merchants to

Eastern school bids postponed

bile/motm:cyclc coli ision.
'
FCC National Bank of UniondaJc,
N.Y.. seeks $6,156.59 plus interest
and costs from Gladys Barker. Rutland, on a credit card debt.
J.D. McGuire, Gallipolis, sce.ks
$4,593 plus interest and costs fiqm
Jim Cleland, Pomeroy, in a debt
recovery suit.
Beneficial Mortgage Company..of
Ohio .. Pomeroy, seeks $2,962 .90 plus
interest and costs from Kelly, E.
Thoma, Pomeroy. on a delinquent
loan .
,
Beneficial Mongagc Company:;of
Ohio, Pomeroy, seeks $3,315.66 plus
interest and costs from David M.
Murphy, Little Hocking, on a del in·
quentloan.
,
Beneficial Mortgage Company of
Ohio, Pomeroy, seeks $3,719.03 plus
interest and costs from Scott So~­
kl, Albany, on a delinquent loan. ,

Hospital news

One of the fund's portfolio holdings is MLP, a German financial serv,iccs company.
"If you look at the trends of ereating a domestic investment base in
Europe, I think Europe is basically at
the stage the U.S. was 20 vears aeo
in the financial tnduslry," Stmbo said.
While finding good small cap
companies is imponant. Strabo says
that it's even more imponantto sell
a COR)pany once it has fallen off its
growth path .
Looking back in hismry, it's the ·
U.S. small cap stocks that have
rewarded investors the most over the
long haul. But while this kind of
stock may outperform its big cap
brothers, the road to riches in small
cap companies is usually a bumpy,
· cyclical one. Investors interested in
iqternattonal small cap fund investing
would be wise to keep that tn mind.
Dian Vujovk:h is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
· Funds" and "StraiJht Talk About
;IDvesdng for YOur . Retirement,"
:both of which are published by
,McGraw Hill. Send questionli to
:her In care of this newspaper.

Smallpox vaccine available·

Middleport Court news
Middlepon Mayor Dewey Horton ving with no pperator's license;
processed 12 cases in Mayor's Court Charlfs McCloud, Middleport, $100
on Tuesday evening.
and costs, open container, $100 and
Forfeiting bonds were: Carl A. costs, disorderly manner; Cassandra
Stamper, Pomeroy, $47 bond, speed; Owens, New Haven, W.Va., $100 and
Sherman 0 . Buckley, Middlepon. costs, consu'lling alcohol under the
$150 bon'd. disorderly manner; age of 21: Rebecca A. Greene, MidMichael R. Turner, Coolville. S5l dleport, $25 and costs, no operator's
bond. speed; Gil ben M. Craig. Gal· license, $25, expired tags; David W.
r I' $53 bo d pe d
Stgman, Syracuse, $ 18 and costs,
lpoF~s, d
n 'ssh c · R K'n• • speed; Anthony Wlll, Middleport,
,
me were: ' awn . 1 ,. s
d
d· ·
d F RA
: Pomeroy, $100 and costs, consuming . 200 an. cost5 , nvmg un cr. · · . ·
· f
G E suspension, and Paul R. Stemmctz,
aIco ho I un der the aJ.Ie o 21 ; a1 1 . R · · •IOO d
d' d 1
B h M'ddl · s 5 d t . d ·
acme.. ..
an costs, 1sor er y
. us . 1 epon. 2 an cos s, n- after warning.

· Record lows recorded across Ohio

A limited supply of smallpox vaccine is available at the Meigs Coun·
ty Health Depanmcnt for children 12
to 18 months old . The vaccine available is of the Veriva• brand and can
be administered only Thursday

~ednesday's

.S
toe
k
S

that life is wonh living. They made ·
the best of it,-and in the process made
our lives richer.
In the last moments before the
cyanidc-laced .applesauce killed her,
did that woman have ·second
thoughts? Did she thi~k, perhaps, of
all the' sunsets she'd never sec, the
songs she wouldn't sing, the newborn
infant's cry · she'll never hear? She, · Dave 'R ouie writa.loi'tlle m.&amp;·
see~ like a bright enough young hamton (N.Y.), Pna IIIII Su·BvJ.
woman, and so we are left to wonder letia.
·
what may have died with her, An

I '

Borg·Warrwr ........ ~ ..................44

IUIICIUP'I'ION IIATU

: IIJCantor•--

Ono - ........................ ,........................1200
One M-................. ..... ..........................18.70
Ole v-....... ..:................................. $10..00
SINGLE COPY PRICE '

Dolly ........................1... """'"'' ""'"""'" 35 c....

Today in history

. . -JI. .

Sobocrlben no&lt; dotirina to f!l1dt0 COirief ""'Y
rernl1 tn lllllvMCC!: direct lD 'l1le Dilly Snd•l

-.boll• o.tlo will be
~~---No oobocrlpdon by moil pennlllld In ...,

By The AtiOCiated Prell
.
Today is Thursday, AprillO, the IOOth day of 1997. There are 265 days
left in the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History:
1 Fifty yean ago, on April 10, 1947, Brooklyn Dodgers president Bl'tlrn:h
Rickey annou'!ced he had purchased the contract of Jackie Robinson from :
the Montreal•Royals.
On this·daiC: •
In 1847, American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer-~ in Malto, :
ttunpry.
. .
,
In 1866, the American Society for !he Prevention of Cruelty to AnilMit :
wu incorporated.
.
--;
:
In 1912, the Iux11ry IincrTIIIIIic set sail froln.Souchlmpton. EnaJ- on •
ill ill-fated maiclcn voyaae.
·
:

t2

_ , _ _ _ lonllllble.

---

.dicn,IIIJO ........ ....

... .... '" lplioo porlod. _ . . , . . ,_,lpliao.

...... ....

"--bet...-,...sb)' ......... ....
-Mollo C..,

l l - .................._..............~....... .127..10

·-

• - ....._ .....................................&amp;sl.IZ

..... - .....-·-·-·.........llt1U6
-OII!Mo Mollo OolliiJ

13 tllll*l"-'''"'" __......................-

Kmar£..................;.............. 12 314
Landa End •••• •.••••••.••..•••...•. 27 1/8

Commercial. $30-35: CC. $20-25 .
BULLS: Steady; Butchers, $38·50; Feeder cattle. 265 ; Price trend,
' steady to $1 higher. Yearlings. steers.
$65· 78; Heifers, $5R-68; Cal~~s .
Siccrs, $82-112; Heifers. $60-73;
Back to the farm hahes.$80 and
down.
. Special graded feeder sale. Monday, April 14, 7 p.m.

To place •• ad, call

Sent.inel Classlfleds

992·2156

Did you fail to claim a dedudion or a
credit to which you are entitled?

OM V•llly ......................... 35 314
Peopfet .............................30 1/4

Pt.m Flnl ........................... t4 314
Rockwell ........................... 62 1J8
RD-8MU ..........................170718
llhorley''l .............................. 4 314

fIll \ll'lp
\ Dllt 11

\1

i!\J 1ili11': .111

it·!Jtl· .. 11

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I

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pt t'jt.Jr.lllot l

=

Stock l'llporta .,.. the 10:30
a.m.
of?
..proYicled by

SCREAMR
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Sat I Sun 1 :20, 3:20

....

CDIIIG . . . . niWT . . 1. . . ln
· - - ,.., 1610' ..
,._ UJIOI.D ia 'lle&amp;Ua'l IIAWY'

~3

'

'

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OPEN MON.-FRI. N; SAT. N

lt2.ee74

llalterc.ntMNI'Diecowr
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.....
.25

..-...................,..._.........,_
S2 _ . ____,....,_........................110l72
••

GPLA results

Ltd........... :............ :............. 17 518

ova ..........".......................38 1/4

,..,.

MAtLIUIIcaiPJJOHI

s2 .o.;;o,

Champion ..................... 1815116
City HOidlng ......................32 112
FtcMnll Mogul ..........~ ........2&amp; 112
Glnnett ................................... 85
GoodYMr ..........................51 318

Clarification

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

The

,.
'
unwritten novel or play? A child who
might one day have actually explored
the outer reaches of the cosmos to
\Vhich, she believe&lt;!, the crackpot Bo·
'was leading her?
In the e.nd she had it wrong. Life
)lad plenty to offer her. · She just
turned her back on it

Rinehart, Donald Scott,1 Michael
Tucker, Dotty Hill.
Births ,_ Mr. and Mrs. Vi~r
Artl. twin daughters, Jackson; Mr .
and Mrs. Thomas Seers, daughter,
Reedsville.
(Publllbed with permission) ,

through4p.m.andFriday.8to3p.m. . .
Since the supply is limited, contact
The new policy regarding execs·
should be made Friday before going
sivc
speed adopted by the Village of
to the Health Dcpanmcnt to be sure
Rutland Tuesday will not effect the
of availability:
penalties for reckless operation currently in place.
' Instead, council added a new
charge of excessive speed, which
Units of the Meigs County Emcr· Pomeroy, !-ouise Bearhs. treated at could apply to cases of speed in
excess of 25 miles an hour over the
gency Medical Service recorded scv- the scene;
·,
speed
limit. Those convicted of this
en calls for assistance Wednesday. : 12 p.m:, Elmwood Terrace Apart·
c.cessivc
sjlecd charge would be
ments, Racine. Opal Cummi ns,
Units responding included: ·
jcct to four points on their
CENTRAL DISPATCH
· VMH; .
2: 12 a.m ., Oak Grove Road,
2:32 p.m., Overhrook Nursmg record. The information regarding
Racine. Clarence Freeman, Hol1.cr· Center, Middlepnn, Sarah Congo, this charge was reponed inaccurate·
ly to The Daily Sentinel in pl'cparaMedical Center;
VMH;
tion
for yesterday's Rutland Village
10:05 a.m., Rock Spnngs Reha5:40 p,m., OBNC, Constance
Council story.
bilitation Center, Pomeroy. Dean Mescher, Pleasant Valley Hnspual ;
Wihlin, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
8:38 p.m., OBNC. John Nelson,
10:52 a.m.. Long Hollow, · PVH .
·
COLONY TH EATRE

30s. according to forecasters who
also said some precipitation is like·
ly, rahging from rain in. the south to
sleet and snow in the north .
,
It will change to all rain on Friday
as a warm front pushes into the state.
the NWS said.
Highs will be 45-55.
.
Auction results from Wcdnesay's
The ·record-high temperature for Gallipolis Producers Livestock Asso·
'
'~
--~ r..-- •
this date al the Columbus weather ciation:
Daily Sentinel station was 82 degrees in 1945 while HOGS· 23 · .Sows. $33-45.50;
the record low was 2:1 in 1985.
boars, S37 .75; Head $.30 and down.
(USI'S ZI:J.M)
CAtTLE: 424 · Choice steers,
1--~~~-~"""""""""""'i' $65.50.67.10;
Publilbed every afternoon, Monday throu&amp;h
Good, $60.63; Hoi·
Mlay, Ill Coun Si., Pomeroy, Ollla, by dte 1
stein.
$58-65
;
Heifers.
SM-66; G~,
Olria \IIIIey l'llblllhln1 Co_IG_ Co., ,
$58-61.
~· Ollio 45769, I'll. !192-2156. S&lt;cond •
tA.m Ele Power .........................40
clw -paid'" Pomeroy, o.~c&gt;.
COWS: .Pri&lt;:c trcnd,$2. higher..
'
Akzo ................. ~................69 1/4
Standard.
$42-.50; Utility. $37-40;
Mnobm The AtiOCIIIIOd Prm. and iho Olrio
AmrTech uoooooooooo. , .,.. ,,,,,,. . .58 1/8
New-Auocl-. .
Aehland Oil .............,.........43 318
ATIT ....................: ............34 1/4
P08'I'MAST.II:l1 Send addrel1 eorretdon1 10
Find the llest huys I• the
The Dolly Senunet, ·Ill Court SL, P.-oy,
Bank One ................. ~ ........41 112
C*io4S769.
Bob Even• ........................13 518

· By The Associated Press
Record lows were set across Ohio
today with early morning readings in
the teens tind upper 20s.
But the Notional Weather Service
promised it will be a little warmer
over the next few days.
.
Lows tonight will be mainly in the

Cult member had no life to begin with

.I

,,

.,,.

The Weekly Stanctard says you have around.''
"melted," and Rep. Peter King, R·
Reed also accused congressional
N.Y., says you are "political road- leaders of "timidity ... retreat and
kill." Human Events newspaper muddle-headed moderalion ." You
claims that 30 to 40 of your GOP col· mistakenly told ·the ConserYative
leagues are "contemplating" a chal· Political Action Conference that it
wouldn't be possible to enact a full
lenge to your leadership.
No question, the conservative 'right-wing agenda until after the ·
Jacobins in your pany are restless. As 2000 election, when Republicans
your. pal Grover Norquist says, might have the White House. That's
" Once you've been through the realistic, but it also sounded like
French Revolution, you can't stand it '· llefeatism. Your friends are worried
unless tumbrels are rolling' and guil· that Y.Ou're still in shock from the
lotines are falling every day." He's ethics battering you took earlier this
referring to 1995, of course. Ideo- year.
. In that famous, wise phraSe of
logical firebreathers in the sophoput it behind you. Your
politicians.
more class •• Reps. Dave Mcintosh
wife
doesn't
want you to reduce your(Ind.), Steve Largent (Okla.), Joe
Scarborough (Fla.) and some others savings by $300,000 to pay your
•• want perpetual revolution and ethics fine out of your own pocket,
can't stand it thai the American peo- but you have to do it if you are going
ple repudiated the idea and elected a to transcend your present circumstances and lead again. Such a move
divided government.
But they are few in number. Even will ·reawaken admiration for you
most of them don't really wain to top- even among your foes. And if you are ..j
ple you, their inspiration . They don't a successful speaker, your memoirs
have a champion .to lead , a coup, will be wonh a whole lot more than
either. Basically, they JUSt want $300,000 when you .retire.
What does it take to be a successaction .
ful
speaker? Some of your friends Say
And so do other conservatives
you
need someblldy on your staff to
who wish you well. Like Ralph Reed
of the Christian Coalition, who com- · tell you to shut up when you're
plained the other day: " We were tempted to bla&amp;. On the way back
elected to govern; we were not to ride from China, you had to blast the Stanat the back of the bus. This Republi· dand 's Bill Kristol on the Rush Limcan Congress should be leading Pres- baugh show. After enunciating an
ident Clinton and ~ot the other way impressive agenda . on the House
.floor in March; you stepped on the
story by telling the Washington Post
you favor delaying ta• cuts to get a
balanced budget. A good policy, but
a bad way to unveil it. When you
have an urge ui blun, you 'should call
your'Oid pal, former Rep. Bob Walker, R-Pa., to help you get over it.
You've listed 13 House OOP priori(ies for these two years, starting
:OVilh the balanced budgel,and in~lud­
tng tax cuts and IRS reform, 10n
reform, health research and education
reform. It's April. Where is ·any o,f
this stuff? You need to light a fire
under your committee chai11f1en -and under yourself, too.
There is great talent in you as well
as huge flaws. The talent is vision.
American · civilization does. need
renewal ••. no less now than before
your attempted "revolution." Great
leaders of the kind you admire -Winston .Churchill, George Wash·
irigton.-- didn't flake under fire. Neither should you.
.
(Morton Koodracke is eKecu·
' dve.editor ol Roll Call, the news~
pnper ol Cnpilol tlill.)

The Dally SenHhel• P8ge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FrldJ!Y, Aprllll

International ·small caps·are winners

By DAVE RO.SSIE
One of the saddest aspects of that
mass suicide tn Califorpia last month
was watching u nc of the cult ""'mhers - a pleasant young WOtl\an ..,.
t·
·
c. plain in a videotape&lt;! interview the
~
'
.
!Dear Editor.
ward on Seaond Av.cnue in t:&lt;ont of reasons for her impending suicide.
· She had been on this eanh for 31
;• 1 have been quiet with my pen and the humane office.
~an;. ~he woman said, .awl had come
r. ords and thoughts for over a y~ar. .
A car making a leti tum has a time
ought I would share them.
if someone is parked in front of Dr. to the conclusion that life n9 longer
Let's stan on Middlepon first . We Spencer's office. Don't get someone · had any m.cani~g for ber. So sh~ had
decided to join her fellow cultists in
1nally got Fourth and Sixth avenues hurt and then close the gate: Also leaving behind her "container,"
· QJlacktopped. Must have lost their lev- there is a good size hole making that
1. Several place's has water a0d mud turn. Keeps getting bigger. A small meaning her body, and move. on to
,tanding several days after a rairi. car bounces like an obstacle course the ne•tlevel. The euphemisms were
[.tlealthy? You can't .get to your car and a larger c'ar sti.ll takes a shaking. bad enough, but the detached, emo[)toithout getting wet feet. T h e n
Then there is our· beautiful tioriless way in which she talked of
·
th ' 1 have-complained ' Pomeroy. What an inconvenience ending her life, as if she were
why:she ordeted the baked
~§retl;:r":: 1~":ears· 1ha11e lived on · and the business people. It looks like explaing
h Fourth: .we have several no real planning was done. It looks as · chicken instead of the veal ma,rsala,
ors thil soes 10 the qhurch of their though .they could finish one spot was worse..
What could·bring someone in the
ce. It is nothing on· ~ Sunday to before tearing up another. Anyone
bloom
of life, someone not even
~ them with canes and walkc!" a ·who would drive down.here from up
.·..,a! king in the street. Why? No s1de· north or anywhere else wouldn't close to the allote&lt;l three score and
len, to conclude thai life was no
, atks or walks that have broken up want tQ come back for all the events
longer
living? ·The shon
om tree roots and l;lad weather.· I that have been planned. Not a very answer, Iwonh
suppose,
is that she had no
ways heard no money. Seems mon· t!ood tourist attraction. I could t!O "on
life
lo
begin
with.
·
is always around for something but will later 'when I get some pic·
~al else 'would cause a presum·
· Jonhlcss.that fills through. Then the lures and ask a lot of questions.
ably
mlelhge~t person to fall under
t-ffic problem. Cars stop too far for·
Joe Bowland,
the
spell
.of a daffy messiah who
Middleport
called himself "Bo," and referred to
:-

~etters . to th~ ~d~tor

•

Thursclliy, Aprll10, 1117 :

Do.n;t qui·t., Newt. Pay your.debt!

~!
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comet S.C. II ar- St, G lr Dill, OH. (Tope't Furnlb:,. Bulk:l)-448-21142
81 ~ SI.,,Midcllfl DO', OH 4.5780-992-ll250

Mon. 9:30-1; TIMI.·Thln. 9:30; Fri. 9:30 -8; Sat9:30-5

• FREE PARK!~
.__ _ _ _ _ _..._ _ _ _:_FREE90~0A~':f==&amp;:l

•

•

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a

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Sports

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Rockies hammer
Reds·i.n -13-4 rout
DENVER ( AP)- After homering' in his first at-bat of the season,
Ellis Burks proceeded to go 0-for-18.
Line dri v~s were. caught. Ground
balls didn't find holes.
·
Burks finally ended the slide
with another_.homer, but a slightly
sprained left wrist sent him to the
bench for the Colorado Rockies ' next
twli games.
His wrist still not 100 percent,
Burks returned Wednesday and hit
two·more homers in a 13-4 win over
the Cincinnati Reds, giving .him
follr hits on the seas.on -all of them
out of reach of opposing outfielders.
" I decided early in the day that I
was going to go out there and give
it a shot, and see what happens, "
Burks said. " Obviously something
positive happened and I look forward
to lomorrow."

on Page 5)

Baseball

I:&amp;Wnor~: . ,

Di~illtun

~ ~ -~

awn on
... .4
Oc1roi1.. , ... .... ... 4
New YOf'k ...

.500
..~00

,.1':,,

4

.m

3

.500

It

4
4

4

Toronlo ............ ... J

1'.&lt;:

Cencnl Division
Milwaukee .......... 1 2 .600
•
CLEV EI.AND
4 4 ..'iOO
MinnCsotu .............. .. 4 4 - ~
~;
Kans.,_, City ..... ....... J
4 .429 • I
Chicago .......... ... .... 2 , 4 · .:lJ:\.
1'·:

4

-~

.1

.400

~

..\7~

24
x-LA Lnkcn: .. ....52 25
x-Portlund ....... .......4~ n
:t-Phuenix ............. J 7 39
LA Clippers ........ :l4 42
Sn~-r..mento ... ... . 31
4~
Goldtn St:.re ........ 2R 4R

·-

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.447

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24

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llivisi on tith:
:\·Ciim:hel.l ph1yoff ben A
y-dinc~d

Wednesday's S&lt;ores

-.

I
1).

Orhmdo nt Toconlo, 7 p.m.
Chicago ut New York. 7:30p.m. '
Milwaukee al New Jersey. 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Miami. 7:30 (l.m.
se11ule u1 Dalla$, 8:30p.m.
V11ncouv.:r at Houstl)n, 8:30p.m.
Portland al San Anl onio. 8:30p.m.
Minnesota al L.A . Clippers. IO :JO

2.

Wednesday's scores .
Te x &lt;t~

m Mil~nu~1.'e, ()l'ld .. weuther
o..~ tru iiiO. Mmnt:sot&lt;i ~
Toronlo ."i. Chicagu Wh1lt Sox U
OllldunJ 4. Bm:tun J ( 10)

Tonight's games

Friday's games

Bultimore 4, Kansas City 2 (Ill

Today's games
Minnesota (Robertwn 1-0) :n Detroit
CBinir 1-J). 1:05 p.m.
,..Tc.lul5 (Win 0.01 nr Milwnukee {Kni-1

or D'Amico{)..()), 2:058.m.
Toront o (Gutmun 1- ) nl Chi caao

White Sox (8uldw;n ().O). 2:05p.m. ·
B:~llimore · (Eri c kson I=OJ a1 Kanu~
City {Belc~r 1.0), ti. :O~ p.m.

Friday's games
Oakland (Mohler Cl-1) at N.Y. Yunkec)
!Cone O· IJ, 1 : 0~ p.m.
Scotll le (R . Johnson 0-0) nt 8os1on
(A.v.....-y0-0). 1:05 p .m.
Anulu::im (OubicuL 0-0) J\l .CLEVF.LAND (Q~a' 1-0). I : 0~ p.m
Chicagu .White SoJt (Drnbek 0-0l at
Lldroit IOiivttres 0-0J. l05 p.m
Toronto (Henlgen 0-1 f ou Milwaukee
(McDonall.l 1 - 1 ) . 7 · ~ p.m.
Tt.l lllli'l (Mu ~st nu 0- 1) :u Baltimore
(Butiten 0-0J. 7 : ~~ p.m.
Minnesota &lt;R-.tlke 0-1) at Knn'-15 City

•

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CLEVELAND at Boston. 7 p.m.
Atl:mtu m Indiana , 1 p.m.
~w Jersey ut Wru;hingtOll. 7:M) p.m.
auu-l o t~e 1\l lktroil. 8 p.m.
Philadelphia Ill Milwauk«. M:JO .p.m.
Houston at Utah, 9 p.m.
Ph~M:niA ut L.A. l..ukers, 10:30 p.m.
Gol den SHile at Sacr &lt;~ ml!nlo . IO:JU
p.m.

1

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shoe oOmpantea, •• make
our Blloea ill America.

..

"·
.,

Jessica

'·'
J

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••

•U

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''

R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.

The

Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00·p.m.
PRESCRIPTION

E. Main .

PH. 9112-2955

Friendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'1111 9
'

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SHOE PLACE
992·5627

"

· Middleport, OH

"

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Hockey

I

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NHL standings

..

EASTERN CONFERENCE'
All11ntlc Dlvi$lon

l!'. J. I &amp;

Iauu

GE liA

- .11-New Jerse y .... ,44 22 14 102 22~ 177
.II·Ptlihltklphi n.... 44 23 12
•·Florida .. ... ... , 4 2H 19
•· N.Y. Run~e rs .' . J7 ~ 3 10
Thmp.1 Rny .......JO :\'J 10
Washington ..... ....m 40 9
N.Y. lsl:1ndcrs .2R ~ 12

100 26 3 21).1

H7
S4
70
69
6K

2-17 199
250 22&lt;1
20R 240
197 224
2:\2 240

'

Nurlhfa5t Division
· 11.-Bufl'alu .......... ,.W 211 12 •)() 1211 1911
~- Pill 5hurph .'...... JK :n K K4 217 2M
Munrrt:al .. . .. ... :\!' :\5 14 76 244 27()

.IJa

Eastern DlviAun

:w

!ill

J. fa;
. H~7

Floridn .................. 6
Atlantn ................... 6

I
2

Montreal .......... ......J

4

New York ................ .\
PhiludcJrhiii ., ..... ..... J

6

.429
.JJ.J

.)

6

.J ~J

'

.750

4

.. Centnl Dlvlsktli
HOUIIOD ..... .. ,........... $

) '.625

Pitrsba.rgh ................ 4
CINCINNATI ......... 1

4
S

. ~00

.m

St. {.oQit.. ................ l

6

.14:1

Chk.'llpl. .. .. ....... .... ..0

7 .000

H&lt;~nfortl.

I

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San Francisco :\, Philadelphia 0
Co10rudo I::\. CINCINNA1'14
AltaftiD4, Houston 3 ( 12)

Cfntral Di"b:ton

l!'. J.

Iwn

o~: - 0:~11~ ......... ;.,4S

Lnui ~

.

·

floridR (Fernnndet 1·0) 011 Chic:~~ u
Cubl (CIIICilk, ()!.I), 2:10p.m.
CINCINNATI (Morgan 0-0l ill Co lcndo (WriJht 1-0), 5:&lt;15 p.m.
Houlton (Holl 0-0) at Arlantu (Smoltz
J.. l), 7:40p.m. .

San Ok:JO (llilt:hl'Ot.it 1-0) ill PhilrdcfjnY {St.:hlllina 2·0l . .HI~ p .m.
Atllnfa (Madilux 1·1) ;n 0 1icago Cubt;
(-O.Ol. J ,lOp.nl. •
.
Montrt"l (C. Perez J-0} :tl Colurad11
(a.ile-y 1-0). !i ; O~ p.m.
t,.cM Anac~ (R . Man inez 0.1) lll PinllbwJit (Cordova l-Ot. 7:05p.m.
Florida (Jitapp 0-0) 1.11 CINCINNATI
(Smiley t·IJ, 7:JS r .m.
,
Houstun (S . Fernandc::r: J.{) ) ;U Sf.
. · Lotds (Oibomo'0-1), i :O.• p.m.

PIICiflc Div~lon
z-Colomdo ......... -RI2:\ 9 10~
x-.Anntk:im .........15
IJ KJ
x-1-::dmonlon ......'6 .15 9 Kl
V :mcoo v~ .... .....'4 40 7 7'
Col~tary .. .......... 32 39 9 7.1
L •s An~ les .......2b 4) II h.\
· S;m Jnl!C ..
.. 27 45 H t,2
J.-di lil:hcJ di~ i~ i~ull i tlt:
11.-cliudll....&amp; pi,Lyull bcnh
U!111W&lt;I ~- Harlfi.mJ -4
Mt,ntr~al .l N.Y. lslam.lers
Flurida 4. N~ J~y 2

m

!ill
~

16
19 ·

.5D
J 07

:w:.

lS

.276

.17

4$ 1:

C..OniDiriston

,61W ~

14'~·

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16':.
27',
29',•
.l7 .

.&gt;136
~'\87

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CONFERINCE

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..............17
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TAU-lESt

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7:30 (t.m.

Pillsbur,_h m T:m11m Bay. 7:30 r.m.
. TtWtmto :11 St, l..ouis. IU Or .m·

'

...........10 · ,. .l6l
...................10 S6 .l6l

''

'Mllte)al'x

btiseef c:ellng

. .
.
paint ~ a fait and affordable
. flliiah. 319913
..

'"'

ill

7
22
.16

l9 '
l9

"

Quick drying,
use under late:
. paints for a smooth,
quality flniJh. 133843

-~

,.

NEW CRAFT COLORS

'
,,

.

IN STOCKJI
Lat.x F'oor &amp;

.

'.'.

· Pordl Flnllh

'

t·:.

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lJu$1CMlu! New Jcr~) - 7:.l0 p.m.
Plnsburgh 111 Florida. 7:JO p.m .
Otmwlllll ~'t n ti t. 7;JO

l1.m.

Lightweight,
houHhold
raled

at SiUI Jt1r,e, IOJOr .n,.

JRU-IDt

AWMrican Ltent
ANAHEIM ANGELS': Placed A.HP
Trpy Pm:i\'al Oil the I S-tiay disabled· list~
retroacli\'C to April?. Recalltd LHP Dar·
rell May from Vancouver 11M Pacifit::
Coust l.eaJ:ur.

Paint

or

BOSfON RED

...
'I

190256

•r

II
·~

'"

gallon
'

Jo.e Bn1i1111 to • ~rear con~r~a~:t Opttoned RHP Fem:mdo Hernandez 10 Tole-

do of the: llllemationnl Uape. DeManu•·
ed LHP G~a Whitemaa for wipmrn1.

"'
'.'
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SOX : Si1ned DH

Rcuie Jcffasoe ro a two-year coMr~~o:r

'/I.

Premium quality houae paint
avaHable In tn-mixld lt'ld
custoni Colora ·

••

Better quality hOule pllnt .
for an ar.o~dlble ·palnl job,
ext slant for,.... plope.ty.

' •·

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OAKLAND ATHLETICS:, Placed

LHP Billy a.._.on tho ll-dtty dl&amp;abled
Jill. netrMCh vt to April 6. Purthaltd IPM!
contract of RHP Aaron S~ll fft)m Ed- .
lni.MIOf'l ol t1w PCL.

,..

.~

SEA TTL£ MARINERS, PID&lt;Od RHP
Joliu M.nzaniUo on lhe IUay diltbted
Mo.
Footbooll

"''

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KANSAS CITY CHIEfS: Sipod TE
Ok:IV McBritk. OT Le1lic • .,..,_, lad '
01 Nichatl Sen1eu 10 two-ye:llf co,..

"""'·

~any

,;-

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J. ury clears. P···tcher of.. all charges

Master~

mosttantalizinglin~l·m~ll(

f

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t
I

'M·ar·lners knock out 'lnd··a·ns .·11-1 .·

championship.
"I feel like my chances arc rcasonably good as far as playing well,"
to ~ake it 4.-0, chasing Colon. Cora Kline in the fifth.
Elkinglon said. " I'm not making any
foHowed ~'!th .a. tw~-~n .s~~~~. off . In the seventh, Sorrento hit his . predictiOns. but obviously my game
first homer or the 11eason against Paul is solid. When you're hilling halls on
St~vl!ln Khne to cap the brg rnnrng.
- Sorrento made it 7-0 with a run- . Assenmacher. and Buhner made it the fairway and you're hilling good
scoring single in the second and 11 -0 in the eighth with his second . iron shots, your whole game goes to
Davis homered 409 feet to center ofl homer of the season.
a different level und you don't wor-

a:.

'•

becauscofthecxtremcclcvationand.
contours.
,
And the greens arc ·as slick as
anywhere around. How fast'&gt;
'~Right where we WJinl them."
said Will Nicholson, chairman •if
competition at Augusta National.'
"The greens llre soft and fast and
substantially the same as last year:' ,

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·Our.remodeling is complete!
There
won't be any flowery speeches,.
just this invitation to -drop
by, .
pick up a little something for your garden*
and add your name to our prize drawing.
'

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DraWing Friday, ·Aprill
t,
.
• $50 Gift Certificate, Mitch'
• String
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,_.

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Middleport

.........

~•• i'-t
.... :1

. ) I l.

992-6661 .

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But it's hard toimtslug the Rockies, as Burks hil a solo homer off
Stan Belinda in the seventh ·and a
owo-run shot off Scou Service in the
eighth for the I 3th multitlomer game
of his career. · ·
·
.
,;If I could guiae the ball wherever .1 wanted, · I'd probably · hit
· 1.000," Burks said. "liut you just
have to try io hit it hard. Luckily, the
last two at-bats, I hit it hard and just
out of the reach of people." ·
Andres Galarraga, who finished
with his 15th career four-hit game,
also homered and drove in three
runs. Larry Walker added three hits,
and Dante Bichene Jinished wilh two
· and three RB!s.
"It's not just one particular guy
going through the' lineup," Baylor
said. "Everyhody that walks to the
plate feels like they can contributeand they have."
Notea: Knight did not make ihe
trip to Coors Field as he reco\le,ed
from a concussion he sustained during a skiing trip with 'his family
tuesday. ... The previous time
(::incinnati hit three straight homers
was 'Sept. I 4, 1991, when Mariano
ByJIMCOUR
~
Duncan · Hal Morris'. and Pau] . . SEATILE !AP) ......,...~Pressure:
O'Neill ~II ~nt deep'itgainst Houf ·pifching for Lou Pinielhi:ai' age'23 .
Bob Wolcou was masterful in his
ton . ... Colorado's Walker is 16-30'
stan Wednesday anil then was told ·
(.533) since going 0-for-4 on Opjln;
. by the Seltl.tle Mariners', manager
ing day.
-tllat.he_'s got to do it again·. And again
and agai,n and again. ,And then
maybe some ml)re.
"Let:s hope he 's on his way now
anti he can put together four or live
(Continued .from Page 4)
or six ofthese in a row." Phoiella said
Chasatie Hollon had a two-run after Seattle beat the Cleveland lndisingled, Mayle had a sacrifice fly to ans 11 - 1.
,
score yet another run, Crow hit a sacWith Jamie Moyer on the disrifice Hy, White walked home anoth- abled list, Wolcou ( 1-1) has a job in
er run, Sampson walked for the sec- the Mariners' rotation. After Moyer
ond time·and Aeiker slamtlled anoth- : comes off the DL. who knows'!
cr RBisingle. Holter and Crow each · · Maybe another trip hack to
walked til force homer another two Triple-A Tacoma.
runs, the scm'c 10-1. ·
·
" I feel the pressure, but I'm just
Eastern sco~d eight more in e. not trying to dwell on iti' Wolcott
fifth to mercy the Spartans.
said alter pitching 6 2-3 shutout
Patsy Aeiker had a perfect nighc innings against an Indians learn that
in which she went4-for-4 with a sin- hit '.304 with 15 homer~ in its first
gle, double and triple and six RBi's. seven games. .
"I really want to renuii;o positive
Aeiker had a career night Wedncsday, while also llaving ·the game- this year," Wolcou said. " Last year
winning ·~BI Tuesday.
was tough '\'lith all the ups and
. Tracy White was 1-1 ~ith a sin- . downs. This year 1just w11ntto focus
gle, Sacrifice bunt, two htt by prtch- on all the positives."
,
cs and a walk. Mindy Sampson and
Pioiclla prefers veterans who
Martie Holter were both 1-2 with have done it before and Wolcol!,
t~o walk.s ea~h. Sampson was ~I so with un Ll-12 career rc:cotd,' doesn' t
h!t by a pitch to put her on ,base four have major-league credontial.s yet
limes. Hollon had three walks and a
He got a lot or res~t from his
·single, while 'Meredith Crow walked manager after benting the Indians,
three times ·and was hit once. Mil- though.
.
.hoan reached threC ·Iimes with two . : 'You c!ln 't pitch any, ~tter than
walks and a . hit-batsman, while he did today." Piniella ~ ~ ·
.
Evans walked and reaehed on a .fieldOf course. it. wasn't ah Wolcou
er's choice and Mayle walked twice. · for the Mariners. ·seallle got a home ·
. J;lastem gees to Southern Friday run anct' three RBis from Jay Buhn. and to Wellston c;m ~onday. Fol- cr, and home Iii from Russ,Davis and
lowing, il nexi week's diamond Paul.Sorrento .
•-nda for.Eastern .
The Mariners had the Indians · • --..l•lng lldlla
a club that was shut out."on Iy ·once
Alexander
1()().()0= I· I· 7
last season- blanl\ed until lhc ninth
Eastern
(10)00-08=18· 8· 3 • inning when close~ Norm Charl~on
WP"Evans and Holter
'
came in. Charlton gave up lour hats, ·
including a leadoH\ hnmer. by Chad
LP,Wolfe
·' Curtis.
Charlton has twQ blowr~&lt;sa&gt;es and
week's ·
a 7.27 ERA to show for his first. ,
Eastern agenda
week' s work .
. Indians rookie Bartolo Colon (0·
Dlk
Oapopcnt
1). ·making his second stjln nf the
April I I
at s·outhem
season, didn't make it out of the first
April 14
ai Wellston • inning as the Marine.rs sent II but- .
April IS
at River Valley
ters 10 the plate in Jaking a 6-0 ledd.
April 16
·Miller
"I dpn'!l~ink t~i~ was a particuApril 17
at'Symmea Valley . ·· larly good outing for ~im," Cleve·
April 18
Vinton County
land manager tytike Hargrove under(AII games will start at.S p.m.) ·
stated. "There were a couple of batters he got 0-2 and 1·2, and m\sse\1.
That got them back into the codnt." .
Next week's
Joey Cora scored from third for
SHSagenda
Seaule's first run when Colon threw
· " wildly while attemptiDg to pick Ken
·'ln _ .
·--'
Dill
.· Griffey,· lt. off tim Buhner ....,
April II
at
Davis followed wilh RBI liJIIIes.
April 14
In hia fil'll ll·bat of the liiiiOn,
April 15 RaYelllwood-4;»p.m.
John Mtrzuo foulod oft' ciibl pitch(N lfter)
01 before drawlna a ,bUea-loaded
April 16
WatDrf~ · walk,_ Col(llt to force Ia Buhnor
April II .

8e.,...

~

By DOUG FERGUSON
ry about too
things. .
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP) - Steve
"I have a lot of confidence. '11111!
Elkinston has won two 1ournaments has been the case probably the
since March against the best two month or so." - ,
fields of the year and has reached $1
Elkington isn't the only plarer
million in earnings faster than any· lost in tl)e . ahention surroundon~~
one in POA Tour history.
Faldo, Norman and Wo,ocJs.
;•
This being the week of the ~asTom Lehman has limslled ~.. ,i
ters, few people seemed to notice.
and tied ro.r third in his foar prev':J3
The drama that began to unfold ous starts at Augusta, a~ ~ n;rgn~.i.I
t&lt;X!ay at .Augusta National is focused ing British Open champton rs sta~~rl
squarely on players who have writ· ing to lind his form at the n'ht trm~ •.
ten·l chapters of history in the MasNick Price is also.climbong clo-;i,.,
. ters. and those who are expected tu. er 1o the grune dJat made him ,the N~hq~ .
There's Nick Faldo, whose cun- I player in the world three years 11&amp;1!1
ning~ tactical mind has produced
Even some cif die relative 'new~om~,m
three green jackets. Anolher one this ers bear watching Pau\ ·
year would~ him the first play- Sl'llnkowski and Australia's ' Stuart.:J a
er to twice win consecutive Masters. Appleby, who ~h have won on tour ·wJ
Greg Nonnan wants to produce a this ye.ar and have the kind oflenalh· ,111
beller endina to his story at Augus- and resolve suitable ror the M~•rs., Jo'l
ta than the 78 he shot in his final.
And don't forget about Phil Mrcki '""
round· flop last year. when a six- elson, the leader of the tweat)'•
stroke lead turned into a live-stroke something crowd before WoOds, . ,.
victory For Faldp.
showed up.
. , ~ li
!~~~~~i;~~~;~;Joaa · learnlngotthe
hlmofript,theft
Tiger Woods has never broken
"Because :nger . has bee~ out,,1H
Men (right), leaving the
Comand groaa
He eflll 1111 par at the Masters. but already Jack here and the locus rs on hrm wrn·,.,
mon Plea• Courl with his
(IICOI'Id from
a trial coming on a concnled weapon• charge. Nicklaus is predicting he'll win 10 ning, it takes some of the focus awaY,, "~,
left), ·got 1 me11ure of relief Wednesday after (AP)
green jackets by the time he's from others," Mickelson said:
'
j
·
through. He was playing his first
The Woods-Faldd pairing Hi, ~~.
today as a professional- of the
paired·with Faldo, no less.
two~omes at the M~sters, m~~~~~
"Don' t forget, I was an amateur." the only player to wm t~ree strarjhtBy LISA CORNWELL
tJ&lt;-"Cause ... they knew 1didn'tdo thai
Judge Thomas Curran had told . Woods said. " I'm tournament tough U.S. Amateurs agairisl!he winller'c&gt;ll
CLEVELAND tAP) ~ Jose siuff.'' Mesa suid after the trial.
the jury that it .could consider the now."
six major championships whose lditl
·
·
1llere's
also
Jose
Maria
Olazabni,
memory of
Mirla Mesa sard her faith in. God· lesser charge of gross sexual impo- ·
.
. the Masters is a rou.
. nd·he
Mesa shed tears of relief after his
·
f
acquiual of all charges in a rupc tri- kept her going. hut she admiued· it sition rui an alternative to the r., the 1994 Masters champion who considers his best ever.
al, although hisJ·oy was tempered hy hadn ' 1 hccn easy.
count. The jury of seven women and . · won in his third stan after an I 8~
the knowledge that he still lirccs
"Jt :shccQ t\iflicult, l ·cannot lie,"
live men deliberated for aboul nine month layoff
. with·feet problems and . · "Because of the drama and ttK:
·
another trial.
•
.
' she said of' the trial's cllcct on oheir hou.rs Tuesday and Wednesday then had a strong showinu" last week .atmosphere and· the pressure '"''and
·
Th
1 r
1
in New Orleans.
everything ... it's as good.as anyuung '
A jury Wednesday cleared the marnagc. ·: ere's a ot o pcop e before reaching the verdicts.
"This tournament has so much I've done." Fuldo said of his closing .
Cleveland Indians pitcher of charges who do worse . ... People make misThe judge earlier dropped a
of rape. the£! and two counts of' gross' takes land you have 10 forgive."
(elony assault charge.
·
hype before you play it. It's like the · ·67 Blast yehar.
.
sexual imposition.
After the vcrdi.cts were read, "I
Mesa, 30, faced up to 13 112 years S11per Bowl," said Elkington. viho is
ut 1 e one proven wrnne~ ·
· shc in prison if convicted on all charges. playing better than when he wt'1n the through lhc years has been Augusta;, .
Mesa still 'must stand trial on a just kissed him and that was 11,"
·ar'd.
· · · of I he Do· mmr~an
· ·
Repub- PG
. A Championship in 1995.
"You can set a record one y-. "•
I
d
S
charge of carrying a concea e
A cruzen
The firsrtrial resulted from comlie, he could have .been deponed if
"Eventually, everyone hus to get and the next year you tome back !lnd'
weapon.
out there and play." he said. "It's a find h nc~t In impossible," said
convicted of any of them.
. ,
A hearing on I he second trial was · plaints filed by two women.
Nicklaus, who won the Masters ·'"scheduled for today in. Cuyahoga
A 26-ycar-old woman· t.csti lired
The remaining charge against gre.at arena to play ·in l'ront of. "
·
And no one is playing as well as · 1965 and 1966 und missed the cut irt
County Common Pleas Court, with that Mesa raped her by forcing his Mesa
was filed after police said they
jury selection to .begin Monday. hand into her jeans and underpants
found a handgun in Mesa's vehicle Elkington. who has one of the sweet- · 196E7 · · h h lh
dd
·
£
18
th
·
d
·
'd
t
·b
h
1
when
he was arrested Dec. 27 ,
est swings in golf and a hot putter to
Mesa cou ld recerve u- · mon s m .· urmg a n e o a su ur an m01e
odvcn t oug
he ' hic aza1cas an . og,
· d. .
Mesa has
· not been wr'th the team go with it. a perfect combination for wo s 1·ostt· 0rr oom
prison ·r
1 convrcte
ear 1y Dec. 22
.. . Hcr ,..
nen d, a1so 26 ,
· · Ato a prcma•· t'll
~
1a s.1
Augusta
.
.
.
turc
spnng
m
corgra,
•'
Wednesday, however, Mesa and testified that Mesa fondled both since the trial began last ·week.
.
. h
he .,u•us
ql ard
·
'
He needed only 105 putts in his rs .one oft
g ens
his wife, Mirla, didn't try to conlflin · women
in a room of the· motel.
Mesa, said he had been working ·
· c most autltu
.
·
f
1 · . 1h · ·
Mesa was .charge' d. with rape
· J b F. ld
· h1 1·
wire-to -wire, 7-sti'oke victory at The ol golf.
· out m aco s .re every nrg a ter Players Championship two weeks
But she is n.o less vicious to the . ,
their emouqns a ter c eanng err
first 'legal hurdle. They both wept us under an Ohio law that expands the the trial adjourned for the day. and he ago, which had the top 50 players in game's greatest players. Wide,
the verdicts were read:
definition to include pe,netration othpronounced himself fit and ready to the world asscmbled.for the first tim~ ambling fairways without 0 ll".tce nf
" God (caused) the jury to do thi~ er than intercourse. ·
pitch again for the Indians.
ever and . has the feel of a major rough still require precise.Icc shuts':

Next

'"
••

Better Quality
LatexHouae

Baseball

I

•

' --~·
U':'"g8non

::.---g;m

,'

'499

Friday's ga.mes

Hur1fortl ;u N.Y. ld :mdt.:r~ . 7:.l0 p.m.
T umpa U11,)' Ul N.Y. M;an)!.en•. 7:JO
11.111.

Primer'

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Set

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p.m.
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Transac t ions

~l

........................... ~2 24
a.o.s..rt ................ll 24
1..(."WWofte ..............~ 26
CL£vi!LAIID .......J9 17
. . . .................. J 7 )9
....
IH .............l9 ' «t
"nMeeM ..... ............. UI ~

26.~

27()

Ceiling Brite
Whltal;.atex
$ftH

..

J'RU.IEST.

Cultmldo ;1t Dull as. K:.'m p.rn.
Pht'lt."flix ill f:...,llnoDLnJI. \1:)0 p.m.

.697

10 .170

'12gallon

Tonight's games

·. Adanllo Dl•llloo

,.ctt~&lt;qo .............67

79

2.36
269
2211

I.A."troil 3. &amp;bnontun .J (tie)
Vum:~&gt;Uw.."r6, Ph~ni x 4
A.naheint4.1.(15 Angelc~ 1

EASI'ERN CONFERENCE

.169

no

Snn loat: tl, Colorado I

NBA standings

64

200

St. Louis I , Chitago 0
OtliiWJ }. TIXOnlo 2

Am1~im

JJ

21:\
241
246
2.'i2
110
206
207

Primer/Sealer
Stain Killer

JRU.IEST. ..

Cnlg;W'y at Cbkn•u. IU l Jl.tn.

Bas ketba ll

"""""Jrhi•
........... ....l l
aa.eo.................

JRU.IEST.

79 2-liS 2.\7

Bufrulo at Bo!ton, 7JO p.m. "

Friday's games

- ~ 53

"
"

t &amp; GE liA

2-1 K 104 241J I'll
, !l. · ~t ro it ... .'.. ,.... :\H 2-1 I~ 9-1 2~0 IIJI
11.- Phocnix ...... . .17 :n 1 gl 234 241

Wednesday's score5

Today's games
Monu-enl (P. hbrti~z 0-01 at St.

23
3ol
J7

..

·

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Lna A"Jeles .1. N.Y. Me;t ~ 2 I141

Pi1111burgh &lt;1. San Dit:~o 2

J~ ~~

t)

""':'"·-

:n

Wednesday's scores

York ........... 5.J
nrtando ................ .4:!
WllhiAJIIln .... ........ :l9
New Jmc~ ........... l~

7:\ 122 2.32
~9 226 2W

x-St . Loui~ ........ J 4 ~~ I I

.

r.a-....
.
•·New

7:\ 220 :!41J

I~

· Cbicago ........... _J 2 J'i ll 77 211 20.~
Turonto ............ 2lJ 43 K 66 225 267

WHI:tm Dl"illion
Colorado ... ............. .1'1 2 750
1..o1 Anaeles ......... ... 6 J .667
San FmrK;isco .........~ .1 .615
San Dttao ................ 5 4 . ~56

(Monisp.G). I : 3~p. m.

.l l .lM II

Ouuw;L.... ........... 29 .\ 6
. lklsLOfl.. ..... .. ....... l'i 4~

'

.

Masters ·action gets •
under way today· . ~~

Eagles ...

I

(Hanc)' 0-1 ). 14:0:'i p.m.

NL st~Jndings

(Continued from f&gt;l&amp;e 4)
'inuch, lutin1 just four iuinp. He
gave up scvCD runs on I 0 hits in his
Seconil ·NL Slsu!. .
" When 1 wu in Milwaukee, I
never pitched in weather !his bad,"
· saidBilnes(O.I). "I didn't feel very
.. sood- I had the flu, but I don 't want
to use that u an excuse. It wu cold
and it made it tougher."
Colqrado starter Mark Thompson
(2-0) fared much belter, ovcreoining
the cold and consecutive homers by
Barry Larkin, Willie G~ne. and
RegJie Sanders in· the siKth inning.
It was the first timi: in six years that
· three.'sttaisht Reds baners.homered.
"1-was . mad," said Thompson,
who pitched seven scoreless innings
in ·cincinnati lasrThursday. "I was
like, 'This ' is ridiculous! I've been·
pitching well! How in the heck' does
this happen all the sudden?'lt's still
bothering me."
The homers pulled Cincinnati to ·
8-3, and the Reds chued Thompson
on lin RBI .single by Lenny Harris
'l"ilh one out in .the seventh. ·
Jerry Dipoto struck out Larkin,
and Mike Munoz retired Greene on
a groundout. stranding runners ·at
first and thii'&lt;J, ·
'
"When· ihey hit the three home ·
runs , my philosophy changed,"
Rockies manager [)on Baylor said.
"We were just going to go ahead ~nd .
try to score as many runs as we
could, because they had some lire-

poWer."

It's hard to find a pair of shoes made
in our own, country. Unless you go to
_th~ address below and .ask forthese.

~n~er ;11 Gplden SULte. 10 : ~0 p.m.
Phoenix. :u Sacramento. 10:)0 p.m.

N.Y. Yankcc5 12. Annhtim ,.,

.

East:ern COIICh Pun Douthitt said. the EHS infoeld to right, allowing the
"I thought Stephanie pitched really run to score, but Lanning was !brown
welllonight for her first varsity stan. out at first base.
•
She .only walked one and · kept the
In Eastern's half of the inning, the •
ball around tbe plate all night long. Eagles awakened for 10 runs. Kim
Tonight we played better on defense Mayle led off with a walk. followed · i
behind Stephanie. Offensively, the
by CO!lsec;utive walks to Tracy White
bottom of the order came around, got and Mindy Sa!Dpson. Patsy Aetker
onbaseanddidmostofourscorins."
slammed an RBI single, Martie :
M. Wolfe s~ffered the loss for
Holler walked home a run , as did
Alexander. She fanned two and
Meredith Crow, and Amanda Milwalked IS batters.
·
hoan.
.
In the first inning, Blair led off the
Aeiker stole home, then
game with a single up the middle. . Stephanie Evans grounded into a
She s,tole second and advanced to
fielder's choice to force home a run.
third when Angela Jewell flew out to
(See EAGLES on PageS)
;
r~ig~h~t;_
. ~~~·h~i~t~~he~ba~ll~~:e-:-"""'~=::=;:::~_ __::_ _

p.m.

Sc:aulc II . CLEVELAND I

' 0-1

.t.K4
.675

A.tlanta I If! , PhilaUelphia iOI
Omrloue 1J6. Boston I l l
Utah 101 . L.A. Luken 89
Chil.:agn 86. Indiana 80

Western Di•lsi,HI
Oaklllnd ...... .. ...... ~ :l .62.1:

Se:u1le ........... ... .. .4
Texas ... .
~
AnallemL..
. ...l

4K

.,P•tfflc Dh•islon
~-Seullle ............... :S2

AL standings
Eu!itnn

.1~4

............ .12 66

Behind a one-hit, one-ruD pilchina perfon~W~Ce.. rrom sophomore ·
Stephanie !!vas, the Euternl!agles
· rolled to a r:rne-sided 18·1 win over
the Alexander Spartans Wed!!esday
night at Eastern.
Eastern is now S·l overail and 4I in the TVC ·Hocking Division race.
Evans picked up the win.in her
initial varsity stan and hurled a 00•
hiller through five innings ot' work.
The only exception was the game's
first batter Mary Blair who sins led
right up the middle for the lone Alex •
hit.
·
Evans fanned nine and walked
just one, bolstering a pitching staff ·
that includes Valerie Karr, who earlier pitched a no-hitter and has a 4- ,
I mark as Eastern's fro.ntline starter.

NOTICE:
Meigs County Employees
. Local1080
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy is
authorized to accept your new
prescription.car..,. You ,aly
·pay the co•pay. If you have
any questions, .see your
Swish•r &amp; Lohse Pharmacists,
Chuck, Ken or Ron. We
welcome your prescriptions.

Scoreboard
Vancou~er

I

Eagles .pound Alexander 18-1

Burks and the Rockies might not
have the chance to extend thefr winning stre:jk to seven games today as .
a storm that brought snow flurries
Wedne sday was expected to intensi·
fy.
That would be fine with tlie
Reds, who have been outscored 33·
7 in .their last three games against
Colorado. Cincinnati pitchers have
'~
surrendered 38 hits in the last two
TOUGH
TIMES are what
games alone.
Cincinnati
plk:her
Ricky aon.
"The way . the guys are over
there, they know that this is their III'1COUI1tllrl attar Colorado'• Walt
Wal11 honwra off hll'!1 In the llrlt
park," Reds coach Denis Menke said Inning of Wedneaday nlght'a
of the Rockies. "They feel, ' We are National' ngue game In .,..,.,.,
going to put up some numbers on where the Rocklils won 1W.
you, and you better have your good (AP) ·
stuff. ' "
Battling a flu and a wind-chill
near 6. Ricky Bones didn't have
(See REDS

••

·-Evans' one-hitter_helps softball

•

Pomlloy • Middleport, Ohio

·Reds lose••.

Pili 4·.

•

•

A/ling Burks hits two HRs

By AARON J. LOPEZ

The Daily Sentinel:

'.

.. '

Thulldlry, Apru 10, , .

'

.

'

�1 I I II

•

• Middleport, Ohio
. : Th.,...,, Aprll10, 1117

-____,........._Society scrapbook--:---

Beat.
of the
Bend

Diego . Stale. Florida ,l,tlutic and Achievement Acwlenly.
Florida Slate Universities.
The ICeAemy recopiz,es fewer
1be lMtc Quanct, string musiThe quartet has perfonned ~Cross thin 10 percent of ul high school
CD in rqidence at Ohio Universi- the United Slates 'and iri Euroj,e, students, it was 1eporled. Drake, a
: ty, will praent a concert at Trinity · Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Mex· student at Eastern High SChool was
Olurch, Second and lynn · Streets, ico, Canada· and Russia. They have nominated for the. award bY Sheryl
Pomuvy ~ 7 p.m Sunday.'
become one of the world's most · RouSh, a teacher. Her name wiJI
Funded · in pan throuah a grant sought-after string quanets.
. appear in the Achievement Academy
from Owmber Music America, the
A. rec~!ltion will follow the con- Yearbook for 1997.
residence is designed to increase cert. The public is invited to attend. · She is the daughter of Tom and
awareness and enthusiasm for clasACHIEVEMENT ACADEMY
Debbie Drake of Chester and the
sical music and is the first of its kind
Jamie Drake of Chester has been , granddaughter of Jim and Mary
in the ·region. Past residences mimed an award winner in business King ofl..ong·Bottom, and Ethel and
include _Dartmouth College, San education by the United Stale Jim Drake of Summersville, W.Va.

\

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

The first event to commemolllle

.&amp;he 200th birthday of Middleport lias

been set for Friday, April 18, at the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Lejiion, Annex on Mill St. ·
· The celelntion will be in the
form of a dinner-dance with a turkey
'·dinner to be served at 6:30 p.m. fol~olll!ed by da!K:ing at the annex. l'rQviding music for dancing will be the
"big band," II pieces, of Orlando
Colombo out of Pmersburg, W.Va.
The band has a good local. following
so its appearance alone should bring
·out a crowd:
·
Mick Childs will serve as master
of ceremonies for a shon program to
be presented in conjunction with the
historical settling of Middleport and
il is hoped that the observance will ,
be especially weiiiiiiCnded by Middleport residents althoush it is open
to the public.
Tickets at $15 a person and can
be purchased ilt King Hardware or
the Middlepon Depanment Store.
· You can secure tickets by mail, bowever, by sending •your check anc!
self-addressed envelope to. lhe
Riverbend Ans Council, P.O. Box
27, Middleport, . Ohio 45760. The
final day oo which tickets can he
seeured is Aprill5.
Six year old Jerry Rupe of Racine
has been a patlent at Children's Hospital in Columbus this week as the
result of hand and face bums
received in an accident. He is in .
room 424 of the Columbus hospital,
Livingston Ave., Columbus, Ohio
43205: .
It might be just a tad late to send
a card to the hospital, however, since
if all continues to go well he may get
' to come home this Friday. So in caSe
. you don't move all that · fast, your
good wishes for the youngster can
be sent to his home in Racine.
Judy Gibbs of Clifton, W. Va.,
was among the contestants on Saturday night's Ohio C~h Explosion
telcvision'show held in conjunction
with.the Ohio Lottery.
Judy came out of the appearance
with about $9100 and it did look like
she would be the round winner for a ·
while. However, another contestant
carne up with a "dou~le" and was·
able to.heat Judy out in the contest to .
play for $50,000. Good to see ·sdmeone from our neck of the woods iri
the play, however.
.

-EHS Dinner Theater-----..,

lllr
CIA, tilt, £1'111...

vt,

liuto,

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

SIIHC
.,._..,...

ilr cpnd,

PB,PW,PL

.PW, PD, PS, Pl.

StlhJ-

...

Ridge tJad Blrbecut. localtd betwetn.

LOCAL TUDE

-.,....._..., , ~""""'of

flmily·lti't ........MNing . .

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

THIS
WEEK

••••

St. Rt. ~ . · Chester
. ..11-3301
j

011 TV AI~

I

Power Tools &amp;
Access~s

*elt+

Ridenour .

Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chilster

Tlmoo Eo01om

'
• NtMA, FRAM Nlltionell1 OUIIIfYinci

"i .

7:30p.m. Fltday • ESPN2

I ( JW J

aluociiGN,-·- 2 1 0
2 p.m. saturday • ESPN

Boats New &amp; Used
"ProfesSional :SIIVICB•
Guaranteed" 1

• ~..on cup H.,r·Hour .

6 p.m. Saturday • Bristol• ESPN2

a Wlnllan Cup, FOod City 500

l

I p.m. s.-y • B&lt;lstol• ESPN

I

,.. - I t ... rlpt"'

.• SCCA Tr8n1 Am
· 3 p.m. Sunday • Home&amp;1ead • TNN

-"

WIH8TONDU.

1995 FORD

1996 FORD
ESCORT
4 c:YI, 5 ep, air cond;
PB, .lU'IFM cau. ·

For Ho m eow ner s
In s urance

CIIIJEFF
WARNER

ASPIRE

llflll

Ill
............... "

·Auto, 'lllr concl,

1_7_
--

*•· greet gu mllege.

IIJW. . . . . . . . ,_...C111_,.

---Community c~lendar-----4523, 8 p.m. at the hall. Work ·in FC
degree. All Masons welcome:

..

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern local
Board of Education, Frid'l)', 7 p.m.
at the high school to discuss and
review bids for new building.

'1

\1

'

'

;I

PB, PW, PD, tilt, cruiiM

•!&gt;

, . ...... illlllllillion. SCrolcb llrp
-'of.arpet. le·llyotcarpot doolllilobnoak.

Goo- -I[Uictlly. &lt;lMi lllr

••t'-flooriat."""'
""
.......
qowry.---·

Weekly rankings by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton. L.al'l week'a
ranking 11 in P81'8fllheses.

·1 . DoleJerren (1)

8. Ernie trvon (4)

Perpelually up front
,z, Jeff Gordon (2)
Caught In crash

Mistake-prone

Rudy to rumble

-

..... .....
June8
June 15

J"" 20

&gt;

SIGNATURE SERIES, LOADED, LEATHER~

Jiffy Lube 300, Loudon, N.H.
Peoo.,tllallla 500, Long Pond, Pa.,

EXPLORER

·soNOMA SlE

.
VI; auto, llr, PS, PB,
PL. Tilt, cruiH.• PW uat.

SPORT PACKAGE

(M. - )

l""""l

(Gardon)

(Gordon)

(Hamill:gn)

,(R.. Wlllace)

.......

Aug. 31
Sept.&amp;

(

)

iUartin)

(Marin)
(trwn)
(Willa.. )

(Eatmardl)

r,•""'l
0 . Boclnt)

(Cra'o'ell)

--~

(J . .......)

Mounlliln Dlw Sou1htm 500. Darlington

· ·(Go-)

Winston Cup 400. Alcnmond

IM"'"I

(Irvin)

'

'

Auto, Air

PB,

c•••

COnd.

PW, OL,

Auto, V-1, Dull Air,
PB,PW,PL
.

~~t

I

•

'.

15 PASSENGER VAN

By ....... Dutton
NASCAR This Week
FORT WOIUH, Texos -lbe
udd, truncated lri-oval that.nut.rks
the shape of the new Texas Moror
Speedway Was invented by
Speedway Moton ports CEO
BrutV,. Smilh. lr you don't •
belie~e it, just ask h1m.
.Smilh say's he come up wilh the
shape when he wns constnJcting
Charlntte Motor Sp!edway in

"I w,ent to some of the wthite&lt;:tumI finns downtown," S.Ud ,

1994 fORD CROWN
VlaORIA LX

JCt RT. 35 • 1.111

v.e,

Auto,' All
AMlFM e••.. PS,

,.

..

GAUFot.IS, OHIO

PW, PL, P. Seat.

_....," ....

Sup,pJy &lt;?of
555 Park St. , ..

hew' NASCI\R k loolclilg n1 lhe

engines and will probably sum tllking awuy from the Focds there too,
smce I knuw Ford en~Jill(:S huve
more compression over the OM
moton. NASCAR has no right
going there. If some other tenm
wan11 more horsepower, they
shoukl swiiCh 10 D Ford block.
Thert:'s no way NASCAR cun
. totally makC' the field equal, for
ditferenHno:tke curs. If NASCAR
wants to ruin our sport totally. why
don'tthey just make one giont,
boring IROC series?

Middleport

992-6611

T.--FIIIorw
Fox River Grove, II.
' Nrou'vwgot~que-oro
. comment, wrht: NASCAR
lila- Your Tum, c1o The

--.2500E.

Franldln Blvd., GutOnil, N.C.
21054.

AROUIW THE GARAGE

Smith. "They all expreutd interis maiJht." Smith lllid.
BAD BLOOD: Aserious spo1
.,, bu1 lhen IIIey said IIIey didn'l
OH, WISE GVY,IH! When
has dtvtlilped, bc1ween Ford
know what to do with it. Nothing Ricky Craven wu informed he
ens;ineer PreSton Miller and Win·
like that had been done at the
. would bt trnnsported ~o Dull~'
stoo Cup 'Serics'dim.:tor Gary ,
ti{lle. So I had to Jet some books
Parkland Memorial Hospital for
Nelsa1. Anaend by the lacc:st
and team how to do it m)'self."
exomin.o.r.ion after his Texas prac- rule change, in which 11 qumerSmith prefers not ,lo call his
lice crash, he reportedly said to
inch was 5havetl alf the reilr
trucks tri-ovuls. The front
the attending phylician. "Juac'
spoiler un the Ford Thunderbird,
stntight, to his WA)I of thinking, "' don't drive throus;h Oealey PIIIZ.a, Miller angrily qu(!itioned the
has two distinct dOglegs, unlike ~-: 10K?"
,
integrity or Nelson and
the sweeping, more onhodox tri·
Dealey Plaza, of course. WJl5
NASC.~R officials.
ovllls at tmcks like Daytonu. Tulthe site of Preside ill John F."
He wns 1101 alone.
IOOegn and Michigan.
Kennedy'sllS$ilS.Sinlllion on Nov.
"II Willi n poordecisinu on
"lt'1 reaJ1y more comparable to 22, 196.1. and the slain president ·NASC.t\R's pan;• stud Rusty
an octaaon. ool)' the botk streleh
w;u NJhed to Partlnnd.
. Wnlla.ce, a Fo.-d dri\ler.

--of-·.

Advertise o.n this ·page

21N STOCK

·Bus. Phone (304) 372·3673

Call 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Bob Atwood
For More lnformatiort
'

. . 8. THIRD ST.

.'

aENBJGM Gi\RRETI' INC:.
Ripley, WV 26271

...,

614-992-4034

7:30AM-I JIM

,.m

lrlhtllwnsn't Mough, now' I ..

A·TTENTION ADVERTISERS!!

.. ... .

OPEN
MON.-lAT.

S u - . Calff., IIYesln
Snphia. N.C.

• RECORD: 21 stana, no winS,
1 polO, 0 lOP lives, 0 lOP 10s,
· I HOW ARE YOU ~D THE
t:Nf1l $200,000 in earnings .
1EAII GETTING ALONG?
• FIRSTS: Sla" (Aprl27, 1986,
"We're gamng bettar and bel·
01 Mortinsvlle), polo (Feb. 16,
tar every~ as far as com1997, at Daytona), .... (none).
mimlcatlon with 1M crew pa,
.HOW 00 YOU EVALUATE
commurncatlon Ylfth the race
. YOUR ROOiCE 8EAION 80
car. I've got a guxt race car. A ·
IWI?
itllltt~ mrool
OU1hor8 oo tar. Tho cor lo ..,.
1ot ~ u..- .. got to • ~"'*
and don'l have to tum a ICII1tW
nlng PNflv Wiij)Uifli itty ri(llt
now. 1rs noatt&gt; boa part of
"" h. We're """''l'llO!"."

21H7M•I'ol

,_ ..... , , , ,,.

614-446-3399

h anoeher league; then there's
a Jew in another league. In
flose 25 cars, you've wot a lot
ot Qood race car'll and a" lot of
good race car drivers. Every·
bocty In that. grqup wants 10 be
In lhal lOst gloup.'

~ uptolbcmanufac~? •'·~

Valley _
Lumber&amp;

Bruton.Smith talks about design of TMS

FULL SIZE
BRONCOS
4 WHEEL DR.
31N STOCK

CLUBWAGON

n ona league. rhere•s 25 cars

new Monte Carlo d1111 wM found
too narrow for NASCAR nx:ing.
'Now ... NASCAR i5 uyinc to fix
every ~of car wxl everyone ·
llDS their hand out for help. Wh)'
doesn~t NASCAR just slay out or
body modifteation ana leave that

Crulee.

V8, auto, 81r cond,
PB, PW, PL, nit, CruiH

.1994 E350

................._._
.................

o..rto. ~.•......,.,

•

1995 FORD F150
SUPERCAB 4x4'
XLT's

COW EiiiJYNAl~, CUP
LEYIL.: "I 11e W .ar Iii air~ ·

Dyer, Ind.
DenrYourTuril.
The governing body of
NASCA.R is in 100 deep. Chevy
!earns are crying about recent rule
changes given to Ford learns, yet
they forget about the big rule
change back in 1995 that allowed
Chevy "teams the luxury of enlarg·
ing thl; entire rear section of their

4.3 V-8, Auto, Air C01nd.,
4 Wheel Drive Ext.
PS, PB, . PW, PL,

19~9-60.

Floor Sander

• CHII.Diii!N: Jomle, ""'""'·
• CAR: No. 31 Lowe's Chevrolet
,_Carlo, owned by
Rlchord ChlldNN.
• HOIIE'IOWN: Born 1n

ll;iht OOW, and IS •

;.at on honor 1&lt;&gt; 110 o part on.•
• DESCRIIE THE LEVEL Of

.. ._ .........,t•l

• AilE: 39
•8POU8E•Bolh

.,_or

{Jimll)
(R.-)

(MMtin)
(Jinlll)

Sept. t4 New Hampetllre 300. LouUon, N.H.

1995 GMC

(Go""")

1- 1

•(.......)

Calif~ 500, Fontan., Ca~f.

Pepli 400, O.rtona

-""~~· "

Aug. 11

(Crall«!) · . (Wallace)
(lrvWI)
'
(Mril)
(T. Ubonle)
-)

!Go-l

Wy

I bt.cll; ChedOIIt truclc OWMd
by-Chl-,ondnow
he Ia the driYtr of Chllchn'

JtiJBu!Wn
(Gordon)

(Msftin~

YM1ton 500, Tal'-c:t.Q•
S.-,e M.t 300, Sonoma, Calif.
Tt\8 Wintton . Charlotte
Coc..cola 800, Chettotte
Uiller 500,'Dover, Del.
Pooono 500, Long Pond, Pa .
Uiner 400. Brooldyn, Mich. .

_

1;

O. Jarrwtt

].\);

Brickylrd,MJO, Indianapolis
Bud a1 tht Gla'l, Walld111 Glen, N.Y.
ITW DeriiMI -400, Brooklyn, Mictl.
Goody"-. 500, Brilfol

"""I·
hlg. '10

. . . .,--.Ho--cup-.
-· -

lnl«&lt;tttt B.tt. 500, Fort Worth, Tu•

Food City 500, Bristol. Tenn

"""'~ ...... Ctotlomln

............. htt.ln1 ...
ftnltl!od lillrtllor"" point
........ tM fodowOttg yell,

Best ln .class
10. Tod Muograve (10)
Doesn'illke Bristol

-y

W1ns1&gt;n CupandNASCAR In
general. - . . •
Buld'l or Cup. lbiiMiet ia; aw-

.. --

1

ON THEICHIDU lE

Goody's !100, M1rtinevllle, Va.

...,..
.......
""'.
""'''

1995 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

·:.

TllowtnnlnfNI·-inlho

---lholnl!*

t. lobby.Lllbonte lll

C..WftMCM TNt w..ll

Mike Skinner

._,. ...,...

Desperate tor a win
I. Dale Elmhilnll (I)
Slxlh Is hts beat
,

•

~ril20
~ull27

J.... ,

1995 FORD

.lal'ln

Mike Sid- I• an troak •• a favorite for Wlniton CUp roolde·af the yeor.

Truoll-11 _,...
-tor Win- Cup

7. Mork Mllrlln (I)

Aprll13'

Mey4
Mlly 17

STRIPPER

·~rher

. Mlftln gave Texas fantlheir oliclal first
te!lle of racing on lhlllahl's new hl(li·
bankad apHd palace.

5. R111ty won- (51

SATURDAY
CHESTER •• Shade River lodge
453, 8 am. breakfast followed by 9
am. lodge ,work in EA degree. ·

,._...,...
',.._

FROM LAST WEEK ·,(--{$
'•
WINSTON CUP: AM along, Jeff BUr, fliliCH ORAND NATlONAL: M...

3. Terry L l l - (3) ·

lONG ·BO'ITOM -- Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bdttom, Unity
Singers, 7 p.m. Friday.

_
....._
..._
.... _..._

10. Oftl Ael8l'ldel!. 401

· '%,

, Silldom makes mistakes
4.. Jiff Bwton (7)
"Firsl·lime winner

WALLPAPER

:----News policy_.......__..._
.iiiJs submitted after the '6CH!ay deadline will appear dlli\!11 the .,
week Tlie Daily Sentinel and die o.tlipolis Daily Tribune.
·.
Air ~lub meetings and other news artic:Jes in the society section must be •
lllblnillld Within 60 days of oceuneni:e.
.
All ~t mUll be ~Ued within 60 days of the occurrence.
All ......_. submiaed
. .for pubiJcaiion is subject to editina.

·. «:an .......

POWER SUNROOF
..

'1'. JIFT111Y HenWy, "11.
8. Mike Bllsl . ..13.
9. Ron Horn.r.dl.y, &lt;401

Pike•••Niuaa

air cona,

&gt;

'

Ia ail effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
,Ti...S.Sentinel 'fl'ill not accept weddinJI after 6Q days from the date 9f the

auto,

AMIFMCille.

RlhLAND -- Return Jonaihan
Meigs Chapter, DAR~. Friday, I p.m.
at Rutland United Methodist ·
lONG BOTroM --A hymn sing
Church. Program on ecology by will he held at the Mt. Olive ComDonna Weber and Rutland fifth . munity Church, Long Bottom, Satgrade class.
urday, 7 p.m. "Delivered" will he
featured. Pastor Lawrence Bush
'
MIDDlEPORT -- Widows' Fel· invites the public.
lowship, potluck at noon Friday ,

• ' J:llominations arc now being accepted by the bhio Depanment of Natural
Resources for individuals to be considered for induction into the Ohio Nat·
ural Resources Hall of Fame.
; For the past 30 years. the Hall of Fame has been the state's top honor for
i,Wividuals past and present who have made significant contributions to the
; quality' of life in Ohio from the perspective of naiUral resources manage; incnl. environmental education.or scientific achievement: '
: • PCrsons interested in submitting a name for consideration can receive a
· • 110111iilatioti form and selection criteria by writing 'to the Ohio Dcpanment of
Nalllfll Resources, 1952 Belcher Drive, Building C-1, Columbus, Ohio
, · 4~l24 or by calling (6,14) 265-'679'1. Nominations will be 1,1ccepted through
June 30, 1997.
·
..
•
Crealed by the Ohio Depanmlent of Natural Rcs~cs (ODNR) in 1966,
;. llle· Hall of Fame now includes 116 Individuals i~cluding John Chapman
: (Jotmny Appleseed), John Wesley Powell. Louis Bromfield, Lucy Braun,
• Boll Evans and Karl Maslo.wski.
.
•
NC)ihinations for the Ohio Naturai .Resources Hall of Fame will he judged
' by a ~-member committee appoin~d by ODNR Director Donald . C.
Andei'IOII. A ce~emony to oecognize lfall of Fame inductees for 1997 will tic
• held this September 81 ODNR;s ,Fountain Square headCjlllitell in Columbus.

ve,

.

: .a~pplicants sought '

If

air
AMJFM CllH, lelther.

Middlepon Church of Christ ..

.

'

auto,

5. ~ Br&lt;Mn. 430.

· Martin, who claims to put more
emphasis on the Winston C1.41 Serits,
has now won four Busch Grand"
National racesm alx 1997 lllrts on the
secOnd-string seriaa. N a WinstOn Cl,\?
driver; he Is zero-lof·his·lalt 39.
mi~OOtrack would bt k10d to dri¥efl
Atlhlllnllh he lad Jinmy Spenr..tr
WhO wert 001 regullrs In vi::t~ Jane.
by 1.57 MCOndt, or about 150 yardl.
The tllcky......., &amp;udact would take
Orra"day marked by moett;follaw-Theaway some of the a&lt;Nantage held by
leadet' racing, Martlfl slipped by
the 8lCJNirienced teams w~h their uoluSpenoar's Chevrolet When Spencer
minou&amp; &amp;etup notee gleaned trvm years strayed from !he racing gfOOY8 on lap
ol experience .at evtr)o track.
108.

614:~2-6520 .

. ·They are basically all the SUJ{Ie
tan, built mostly of pipe. with u
Ford, Chevy or Pontiac en1ine.
They only resemble Ford or
Chevy. Bu1 what bothers me is
that Monte Corlos come off the as·
sembly line as u from-wheel drive
with only a V-6 engine and 1hey
m:e with mu·wheel drive ngwnst
Ford T·Birds, which come out
with n:nr·wheel drive nnd a V-6 or
V·8 engine. Why doesn't
NASCAR make Chevrolet race
lbcir CIU'S rhe way they were manufDCtured? Chevrolet: owners are
alwuys crying foul abou1 rhe THirds . Why don'1 the T-Bird own ers cry foul uboutthe Chevrulets?
Sondy Oxley

6. Jack Spragw, 419.

\f. MllllGIHrl, '¥17.
10. llnFeaerMI, 803.

10. 0. ElrfrhWI. 700..

'
!RUCK

2. Rich Blcl&lt;le, 485.
a. Kenn~ lnwln Jt.. 447.
4. Jay S.\AII', 431 .

a. Mark t.IW . 938.

was crazy, btA ha kept Hying it anyway.
So It should have coma aS no sur- .
pri.. ~.... Burton won the lifst race of
1'111!1 Wi'lalon Cup career orr a VIIi~ !hat
he alMa seamed to like.
Burton, 29, had Sl!lid that the $150·

IAwHt

V8,

ns.

&amp;. Ricky RW:I.
7. G10n Bodina 740.
8. Milk Mlrtln. 709.
e. Wild aunon, 1f19.

Syracuse, OH

. don' r come Ol'r1hc llSSembly line
from Chevrolet. ford and Pomiac.

I. Bulth Miller. 4118 .

2. Rantly LaJoie, l1168,
3. PIN! PlrSOnl. 1,153.
4. Jell Gr11n, 1,082.
5. Ok:k TridW, 1,042 .
6. EHoJJ Sawyer, 1.004.
. 7. 8l1Cklhot Jooet, MIB.

ton said he litled Taus Motor SpeeO-

.·

1993 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

t . Todd Bodine, I, Ul.

way. Other driwefl loc*ed at him like he

fax:tt•••n

1994 EAGLE
VISION TSI

1. Dale Jll'nlrl. 994.
2. Teay Labonte, 8W. •
3. Bobby l..abonle, 858.
4. Jill' &amp;.ton, 137.
5 Jitll Gclrdon, 810.

Marine Service
. 2131 Karr St. .

Denr Your TUJ1.1,
I understand NASCA.R Clli'S

•

• 1997 POINIII IANDIN GI '•

The senior clau of Eastern High School will preaent t11e pollee c~;~medy "Squad' Room' by nm
Kelly It Ita dlnner~r Saturday at the high school. The mnl wll! begin at 6:30 p~111. followed by
· the play at 8 p.m. Dlnl\er and .play tlcketa can be purchaaed by clllllng Suzie Frencls, director, at
9112-41298, 667-3785 or 1-800-366-6298. Play tlckell can be purchased at the door. Senior cast ntem·
bers Include: Denial Oti:o, Nate Goodwin, Chad Wheeler, Sean Maxey, Bill Francis, Llaa Statham,
Meredith Crow, Marty H~r. Rlkl Barringer, Pally Aelker, Angela Chaney, .Amber Fortitey, Crystal
Holsinger, Laure Arlx, Ada!m McDaniel, Chris Bailey, Mindy Sampson, Mana Fracker, Amanda MIIJ..
'hoan, Dave Baker, Anna WoHe, Rick Hollon, Jo Corarn,"l'racl Helnea, Chfl&amp;he Gro11nlckle, Eric Dll· ·
lard, Angla alsiell, James Clifford and Kelly Osborne.

,

See us1or Your

flllllltl popAu ln the hill. Gtt youreefll

·ooNR
Hall of Fame
.

•

VI, ~ -.10,

·~

~

• evclt "

992·2825

-TAURUS

COUGAR
AMJPM

'

Guaranteed Service

1996 FORD·

1996 MERCURY

.,

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

1,

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non· .
prolllaroups wilblog to announce
..-tiq and special events. The
caleadar Js. not deslaned to pro·
•••••••• ·
~ - AIOte _sales or 1\Jnd ralsel'l! of any ·
Nina Dixson is enjoying ){er' type. Items are prillted as spliCe
return back to Meigs County now pennlts and cannot be aoaranteed
Jiving on 'the family home grou'nds.
to nm a spedflc number of days.
Nina is parti~ularly enthused THURSDAY
about the facilities of the Meigs
TUPPERS PlAINS •• Tuppers
County Senior Citizens Center Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
which: she· says is "one of the best Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
centerpnywhere".
·p. m. at the post f9r nomination of
. . Sh~ penned a poem, "Sprinf officers.
which- appeared in The Daily SenPOMEROY
Preceptor Beta
tinel on Good Friday and she sent
along ' a second offering which she Beta sorority m~eting Thursday,
6:30p.m. at the Episcopalian parish
jotted down. It reads:
.
house . . Bring items for Serenity
·- . . "If we didn't ever have to cry,
"God would never have made House.
tears;
e&gt;
"But when we do, He hears, ·
RACINE •• JEWEl Home
:"And ,as time goes by, those he School Support Group will meet at 7 .
p.m. on April 10 at the home of
will dry, '
"Oil that you can rely''.
Brian and Kim Hupp: Topic will be
on teaching an, For more informa- ·
-~ -----. ' '
J'\n~just when we we'rtall think-· lion residents 949-3119.
ing'spring, temperatures dropped to
20 and below Wednesday morning.
RUTlAND -- Meigs local
That's what we call a revoltin' devel- OAPSE, local 17, regular meeting,
opment. And how about that wind Thursday, Rutland fire house, 7 p.m.
chill? But look we're still smiling··
aren't we?
CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge

•

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1·800-594-111

I

r---·-·
•

llr.-....CII
Seelobtt.yee

Muffler &amp; .Tail Pipe

Bell PIM«eee Olive
GalllpoJII
Acrou from GltlliaAulo SeJea on old Ale. 35 Weat
N- Summer Houn Mon.-Fri. 8·5; Sat. 8-3

t

MUFFLER SHOP · 112.2198

982·2198

P1rta
_see
,,, Steve Mellda•

1

The Dally Sentlnttl • hgl

Pomeroy ' Middleport, Ohio

QUARTET fU()RMANCE

By BOB
HOEFLICH

'

'•

1·8()()..964-FORD

,.

Rt. 21 It the Rlpley-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your

Ext~ 105

Parts and ·

Service NHds
·,

MIDOC.EPORT, OHIO

'

r.

·'

•

�PQIMI'Oy • Middleport, Ohio

'"Page •• The Deily Sentinel

.

'!f'uraday,Aprll10,1887

Thunct.y, Aprll1 0, 1187 :

Pomeroy•

.

;_
$cience Fair stag~d ·at Meigs Junior High School
Nine
eighth grade stu·
dents received
superior ratinss
on their science
displays at the
annual
Meigs
Junior
High
School Science
Fair held Thesday
at the school.
Capturing the John Mora
Awar!l for the
most outstanding
exhibit
was
, Rachel Taylor on
her exhibit "What
Color of Light-Do
Plants Grow Bet,
ter In?"
Other
projects receiving
superior ratings

and Carson Midkiff.
Derrick Johnson, Whitney Ashley, Justin Robson, Skip Dodson,
Michael Hawkins, Shandi Bobb,
Justin Gilmore, Elizabeth ,Smith,
Mandy Powell.. Alben Stearns; .
Michael Lamben. Adam · Bameu,
Mike Salser, Tiffany Qualls, Sarah
Houser, Devin Clemmons, April
Blankenship, Amanda Neece, Shanna Price. Chris Pickens, Missy
Lehew, Holly Hannan JI!JIIes Con- .L .
ley, Chasidy Biggs and Heather
Whaley.
· Zach Williams, Adam Shank,
Debby Searles , Ricky Naistetler,
Beth · McMillan·, Aaron Krautter,
Abby Hubbard, Erin Harris, .Chris
DodSon, Sara Clifford, Alison Hays,
Nick ·Dettwiller, Stephanie Leish,
Leah Morrow.
Awarded good on their projects
were Ashley Thomas,,Josh Hayman,
Michele Cundiff, Kendra Cleland.
;.,
.
~~irtidei Michael Day, Johnni Barley, Joey
·· · SUP!i!RIOR RATINGS • These nine eighth graders al Meigs Junior High School were: Cara Ash Blazer, Marjorie Bratton, Sabra
-;ftCeiVed superior ra~lngs on their aclenc.e fair exhibits which were judged Tuesr;tay. for "What Pop- Davidson, Heather Boyles, Nancy
I
·~F'rom the left they are Rachel Taylor, Christi Bareswlh, Cera Ash, Beatrice Morgan, com Pops Best" · Rife, Kelly Canan, Amanda Oldak- .
.. ahd Sandi Gilkey, end back, Ouslln Erlewine, .Curt Hansllne, Carrie Llghtfool and Der· .Sandy Gilkey fot er, . Abby Harris, Koriel Carter,
-;: ~l~k Bolin.
·
. "Which Battery Amber Vining, Arica Blac.kwell,
o.;....
Lasts
the Mau Lewis, Brad Riuerbeck. Ryan
Longest-:; Dustin Erle)Wine for Fields; Bobby Johnson, Brandy · ,__...,;....;._
"Which is Faster? Diffusion or Smith, Tiffany Day and Mark
RICKY LYNN GREGG
Osmosis?"; Christi Bareswilt, "How Browning.
Safe Is our Drinking Water?" ; Carrie
Lightfoot. "What Colored Dyes are
Amber Roush, Dorothy Lane,
Found in Powdered Drink Mix and Lillie Tremblay, Eric Montgomery.
Colored Marking Pens?" · Cunis Autumn Goode Slater, Brooke
Hansiine, "Whicll Has Less Fric- Smith, Groce Kitchen, Amy Sarver.
The second March -of Dimes benefit concen featuring country recording
tion?'" Derrick Bolin, "Alternative Jennifer Fife, Terra Barton,
anist
Ricky Lynn Gregg will he held Saturday; April 12, at the Point Pleas•
Energy" and Bea Morgan, "Can You Stephanie Wigal, Ben Mitchell .
ant
Middle
School.
Detect If Iron is Really in Cereals?" Joshua Jones, Jason Chapman, AshDoors will open 5 p.m. and local group, Renegade, will begin the concen ,
Given excellent ratings were ley Hannahs, Brandy Graham. Jenny
at
6
p.m. The concen kicks off the Tri-County WalkAmcrica which will be
·Chris Ward. Zach Bolin, Cassie Daniels, Thaddeus .Bu,mgardner.
held
Sunday, April 27 at Harmon Park. Vaughan, Tif(any Priddy, Britni Trisha Garey, Alex Shuler, lan Story,
Tickets
for Gregg's concen can be purchased at WBYG. Criminal
Bevins. Jason Cundiff, Chasity Kathy Taylor, Jessica Chapman. 1Y
Fowler, B.J. Kennedy, Melissa Gonzalez, Joey Sisson, Shawn Records. Fruth Pharmacies and Health Aid. Tickets can also be purchased at
· ·
Young, Hollie Griffith, Roben John- Roush: Chris Self, Adam Tillis and the door on the evening of the concen. if still available.
son, Susan Tobin, Trish Walker, Eric Stephanie Burdette.
·Runyon, David Lucas, Lisa Eblin,
Reatha Bush, Noah Chasteen, Steve
Satisfactory ratings went to JenSigmon, Jennifer Allen, David ·nifer Eaken, Dawn Yost, Dustin
Camp. Melissa Houser, Amy Freck- Smyers, Carlisa ·Barton, Charles
er, Mia Bass and Julia Kennedy.
Sampson, Dustin . Butcher, Ereck
Nathan Burnem, Tenaya Spcnc~r.
Jonathan Runyon, .Melissa Brewer, . Payne, and Lee Fitzpatrick . --:;:~~$=~:r.====::====:;=r.~~~~~=~:;
Public Notice ·
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Andrea Krawsezyn, Jeremy Jones,
...
Michael Stacey, Benji Call, Zach
conetructlon pe{lhe plan" · Municipal Building during ·McCten•than, Ouerdlan ol
LEGAL NOnCE
Krautter, Jaso n Knight, Derek
z. Labor to compla'- the 11M lloura 018 a.m. to 4 p.m. the Mlndl' Haire ol Lyman ..
Project: Racine Voluntatr
.:'·' .
'
.
lnatallatlon
ol aald ltema . Monday through Friday. Swadman, dtctaaad, and
Miller, Jonathan . Sturgeon, Man Flrw Dept. • Flrw Station
·;:·'13EST OF BEST- Tim Curlman, Meigs Junior High School sci· Stewan, Bill Soulsby, Chris Jeffers,
Oucrlptlon:
etd and obtain nacta .. ry Tbara Ia a charga ol $1 per being 11 part ol a tract of
by tha ·a tatt . drawing. ekle wll bt.du. at land conveyacl by Roy R.
ence teaciHir, presents a plaque to Rachel Taylor who took the top Adam Bullington, Given Porter, Sollclltlon lor Cantrutoro. approval
lnaptctor.
rciugh·ln the uma location on Ap#. Johnaon and Mabel E.
.W.anl In the annual science· fair held Tuesday al the school. Her Rachel Dishong, Jessica Marcum, The Vlllaga ol Raclna plumbing Thea hall
ba 21, 1H7, at4 p.m. Biela will Johnaon to Harold Orval
to
conetruct
a
naw
wlahtll
~ojecl was "Wha.l Color Light Do Planta·~row Better In?"
Jarad Staats, Brandi Sinith, Anthony ,lira elation batwaan tho complalacl wlth.ln 0111 """ ba awarded lha following Johnaon and Nedra Sue
Carpenter, Leah· Lonca,
Davis .month• ol April and Auguat ol achedulacl awrt date. 1111 ,...., II not rajtcted by tha Johnaon bX Oatd dated
1H7. Bid a ahall 111 baaail tintah plumbing a hall bt village council. Qu.atlan ,November 24, 1872,, and ·
complelad within two'WIIb .can ba anawarad by lht mort tully datcrlbad 11
Olachadulad
alllrt da'-. proJect angl- at 114-441- followl: .
and
HVAC
!n~~!~J:~~::
Will• lor the
Bid lwm 13 Floor..: lind 1130, 8 a.m. to · II p.m.,
Beginning al ' a atone at
only. CoJIIractora
Monday through Friday.
the loilthaa•t cornor ol a
an any portion ol Aprona:
Contractors
Include (3) 20, 27; (4) 3, 10, 17; STC
parcel convavlll to Suat•
or on the llftllre
the lolawlng In thalr bid:
Foetar 11 racordecl In Deed
..
.
CONDITIONS
1. Concrete, remaoh,
Public Notice
booll1411, Pea• HZ; th.nae
and
s 11 dagraao 38' 30" E 1
I,
7 a.m 1011 . vopor barrier,
Addrua \lllpanolon lor lht building , IN THE COMMON PLEAS dlalanco ol 18.38 mt to a
.p.m.
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION poat; thonca N ., degraao
varlancoa with project floor and aprona. .
2, Labor to ploca and
MEIQS COUNTY, OHIO
117' .01" E 300.111 flit to a
anglnaar
IN THE MATTER OF
. atat0; thence N 42 ~~ag,...
2. Utllltlae: ·cantractort llnilh tho concrela olobt,
smLEMEHT OF
rn• rn• w 485.74 1111 to'iorf
.are reaponotbla lor water, per 1111 plena and provldla
'97
potrowelled
llnlah
wllh
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE
.
Iron pin at the Chiller to
aawaga, power, traoh .
COURT
Keno RDIIII, Tmthlp Rold
ramoftl lOr tllllr worbcope the proper elopet and no
MEIGS COUNTY,~
11; 1111...,. S.38degraaali7'
"Thank
3. Sohadull: Tha projeCt peakl or vallay1 more thin
engineer will provide 114". A broom llnleh Ia to bl ·Accolinta end vouchtrl oe• w 1etl.ll feat alanglha
Our Business
for
the
Past
46
Years!'~
IUCCIIIIUI blddara with I ·provided on the' aprona · of tho following nomod townthlp rood to • point
'
.
progr•aalvt · achl'dule only. lmrure proper rough llducllrltt have bean flltd daelgnatljl by an Iron pin
plumblnt tl•ln. Tht drain In the Probata Court, 1111111 localt.d 8.42 teat ·In a
baloro wilrk blglnl
4. tn.ourenca: Cant;actor troughllhlll bt formaci and County, .Ohio, lor opproval northw..terly direction
1rom the center o1 a 12 Inch
muot • provide copln of •pouracl par the plan detail. anclaenr-t:
liability (1 mUtton dotter) Contractor thall obtain ESTATE NO. 28818- Firat Maple traa; thence s 45
_and Workman'• Comp. n-allry approval by tht Annual Account 01 R. Roger Ham• 37" 41" a 121.58
lnauranc• providing lull 11111 lntpeCior. All work Hunter, Trutllt 01 the Truat 1111 .otong the exlotlng
I:ccoY~raga btlorw owanllng th811 bt complllld within 2 ·created by ltam XV of· the driveway to a polnl located
Wilke of achadulld owrt Will and Tettamant of tlfaotfrl&gt;'llthealdeoatartv
CantraDtor ahall · daw.
·VI•glnle E. Hartley, corn.r 01 the former Suala
o~~:~::.~rwlth tha project 8klltam 14 8ulldlng Kit: .
D1c1111d.
Foattr·ratldanot; thence S
11 required and
Conttaclor8 111111 Include
ESTATE NO. • 23791• 2 dagraao 112' 31" E 151.!17 :
11
approval before lllllaNowtng 1r1 thalr llkl:
Seventh Annual Account ol lilt along the 1111 line ol ·
•NO GIMMICKS
1. The building ldt wlllch Joan Wolla, TnitiH of the two parcote dlltlad to s ...ta :
job ella upon
•NO INFlATED PRICES!
mille the 11narot arlttrla Ttuat C...wct by 111m XVI ol Footer In Dead loOk 141, •
•JUST GOOD HONEST DISCOUNTS!
Tal'llll:-Upon att lol1h In the plana and the Will of E111 B. KIIMI, pega I 73, and Deed Book •
of worli and 'meeting State oaac Dtntnd.
·
·
141, Pill• 1112, to. the 'place '
tubeequent . anglnear'l , roqul- for, atr:uclural · Unlete ' exceptlona ,Ira ol beginning, contolnlng
approval, the oontraotilr .dlalgn, ale. ·
.
'filed MN!o, llld .Ccounll 2.03 _ . , mora.or lett.
ehall prtallfll hlo bill tor · 2.
Building
k.lt will bt tor helrrlng before
Known .. Route 1,. eox
.work II blditad, Including ' IOOIIIOrlal IUOh I I 'Hid Court on the 12th day 41, Longbottom. Ohio 411743
any pre-approved axtro guftaraldoomtpou18,
· May, 1H7; ot which lima
Aud
, .ooltlir't Parcel No. 03. work, to the project lnoulatlon, Wllldhru doora, I•aafd aaaountt wilt be' 01 807
angiMaro · A check at ovarhucl door and window aoneldenrd and continued. /IPprlllld lj$26,700.00
payment iJIII bt ltoued . fr'llmlng, .tnchor ~. •trim jtrom day to day until flnlllty · 'ririna 01 Stla: To bt aold
wllhln 14 daya tor 10"- of and flllhlng I I relei'Nd 1o dlopolld of. .
·
· for not tau than two-thlrda
the 10181 bill. ADhiCII for till In 11M plana.
Any paroon lntarootld ol ' tha appralotd value.
If You're "Ianning On
10~ ratotnoge will be
3. Labor to coiiOPiata till .IIIIJ nil wrltlau ••aaptlana U,170.00 caahlara check
Purchasing New Furniture
. luuad within eo c1ay1 OIIIM tnotattotlan al llld ltoma to aald aacounto or to only at lima Oleate. Balance
llrat ohack If no probltmo and, obtoln noceaoary mattara partalnlng to the Cllhllfl check only Within
In The Near Future ••.
dtvalop
with
tha opprovat by tha 11111 axooutlon. 01 the truat, nat thirty
diYI
alter
- - · • . work. The . lntptctor. All - " lhall bl laea than flv. cllya prior to conllrmatton.
. '
.JAMES M. SOULSBY,
retatnaga ohack will be oo"'PI!rladwlthln3-"aol lhldatuetlorhaarll~.
laauM within 14 doyil of aohadultc! 111rt data.
.
Robart E. Buck
Shtrtlf
problam aorrtotlali, pe( lid II•• IIIII Elactrlca,l
. Probate Judgl
'KENNETH c . JOHNSON,
.__.. Ollhl qlnMr..
lnatallatlon:
Cllmmon Plaia Court,
Attornay,l14-227-2300
. iiD DESCRIPTIONS ARE . Contnatora Wll inclUde
Probtii·Oiwlllon (4) 3, 10, 17, 24; (S) 1; STC
AS FOLLOWS:
the following In their blcL
Mt1g1 County, Ohio
Bid liam 11 Foundation:
1.
All aloatrlaal (4) 10; lTC
· ....__....;.,_ _ _ __
In Memory
· ~~~;~~~..,att
Include equipment,
llxturn,
·
1n thtlr llkl: .
_,,rlalt to lnotott
In tho
Public Notice
1.
rabar, and 1\lbltct building par. the
labor . lor
building plane. Thia lnoludaa, but Ia Sherlll:a Sala 01 Rial Elllta
In Memory Of
.
· not· llmllad ·to, lighting,
R- t,lox 441
looting"
ALLAN RAY
2. Conorota, rabar, and lwllchta, outltta, oarvlae
Longbottom, Ohio 41743
.labor lor tho- troat well and penala, fine, HVAC oupply
Com"*' Plaot Court
BRICKLES'
oatumn pedlltllllnoludlng Ia dlaoonnacte, ·all home · llllgo County, Ohio
Birthday, 4/10(11118the halrplnt and Iabar to run wiring, ala.
·
. Call No. ti-CV..Qiil
lnttall provided a.n11hor 2. Labor to lntllll Hid · . Broadview Mortgage
1187, 39 Today.
bolla. •
IIIIRI par NIIIIOIIal llaatrlc Cam,..,, Plllntlll- Lawlt
A Pill In the book
3. ln'ulljlon board and Cade,o.IC,NI'I'A,eta.llnd Pulvtr,
Jr., · et at,
'labor lor thll porlmatar oblaln naoallllry approval Oellndinta.
of memory
lmrulltlon.
by 11M alate lnapactar. All
In pura-• 01 an Order
Silently turne today
.( 8011..40 plaollo alon11 work thall bt oomplatad of lall.from Hid Court to
For memortea live
and· lallor far the wall wlthln3MIItl01aoflldultd - dlraotld, ·l wll o111r lor
lp a n a·I ro tl on •.
All a1M1 dole.
111111 public luatlon, a1 the
forever to ua
,maaaurtmtnlt thall bt . ltd 111111 lilt HVAC ll'ont door of the lltlga
They are Juat aw.y
Mhlrtd lo within 1/4" 01 lnttl' I'Min:
c-ty Court Hauaa, In the
'plan Jlltaour•••nto. ConiiMtora 111111 tnoiUdl 'City ol Pomeroy on
No one knowa the
. eo.--••IIIIIIMrollar lhlldau.lnalnthllrblcl:
Tburwloy, lley t, 1817 at
Every Item Reduced!
lltent heartache
a1zo ahall 111111" auaod . 1. All HVAC IIIUifltllllll 10:00 o.m., the following
pion . raqulremo nta. ltlld llllltltalt par lhl ,._ duortbld l'lllllllatl:
Only thoal who
Nothing Held Back!
· . Cantraotor ahall olttaln Including, but nollllllltwl to,
lltultad In the T-hlp
lov.cl can tell,
•
-MirY apprDVal 01 lha hilt PUIIIPI W/llr¥101 Of Chtllar, County Qf
'
I
The
grief
M
bear
In
•
atata lntp ntor. All work dlaoonnecta, · duotwoik, . ......, end 1tato 01 Ohtci. ·
· •Credit Term•·Av..l8bll
ahlll bt oo•plteld within 3 ral1111r., dlmpara, eta.
ltlld In 11M Ohio ~Y'• i lllence
· •
• •
Thl1 Sale Doll Not Apply To Prlo( Purchllll
. .....
·-Ill If oahwlultd . , .
• Labor .to oom111111 lha utohoat, 111d lurthar
the OM we
dMa.
·
lnotlllltlon of
ltemo
end daaorlbad 11
8klllltn r.tl'lr.wllblntl: · end olltoln nooaaaorr ·
•
·
lov.cteo.MII.
·
Ca rtJUiarl allalllnoluda 1pprov11 by thi atlto , • lalna In ltillon 14, ,._.,
Sadly mlltld by
,the lei xllllln tlltlr loki:
~lllllllcr. AI - ' ! IIIII.bt ~ Nortll, 1t11111 11 Waat,
moll•,
MIIIIIIM
1• . Piping, flltlnga, oaqlllldwlllllnlwaeltiOI ~ln1 1 part ol 1 lot
'llxturaa, IIDIIIOrln, lllludullhtort-.
• Let No.3 Oli
.Perldlltalt, and
304-773·5592
IIASOI, WV
hit 01111111 laid lUI In~
hlnlwllro lor the building f'lllll lor the p;Diaat ,.plumbing portion of ovollallla at the ,.._,na lftd aald llr a.w.

.

s•n ·

·50"·75%
•

_,_

1112-41'it

1--100-281-11011

,.,...... .

Howwd L. Wrlteul

J.dua,...r

ROOFING
. NEW-REPAIR

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

Downlpoutl

.

FREE ESTIMATES
949-216e
1117AMITFN

URRY'S
LAWN CARE

CIMnfq

Call
992-8342 (Diana)
992·7275 (Brenda)

I

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
' .,
ESTIMATEES .

· .Backhoe, Tntckhoe.
( Septic System•
Installed

742·2803

(614) 992n3838

or446-3822

41111 ma.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yra.

llrrll

.~'

..,.tt

·,

..

'•

, ,,,,,.;

Ronnie Jcnea

• tr..

0

I"~:....

OFF

On Ill

Living Room Suites
.Bedroom Suites
Dining.Roo• Suites
Chairs

I

-No Job Too Small
•Any and All of Your

-Garage•
eOecka

Hoine Repair Naeda
"Call Today for Your
. F..-.e Estimates

•·:MASON FURNITURE· COMPANY

t

I.

......

992·5535

. 992·2753

•

'

ThU'f., Fri. 111--6;
Sat. 12-8; Sun. 12-4
271 North 2nd
Mklclleport, Ohio
992-4514

!--..::992-3961

our
.arketplaca
r

Able · Avan
nNded. Earn money far
Mil blflo It hanNI/at -11.
DD2·8351 or 304-882·2e45,
Rap. . .

. .

AIHI OUIIC E1.1 EtHS

li11Eh110N

Hu V.ur Marriage Or Rllotlon-

.llllp Gor Up I Wwl, SlOp tn Ptlno
.... Vldoo Md RlnJ Ono 01 0..

Gravel, Llmaltontl,
Topeoll, Fill Din, ·
Sand, RlfuH.

Chllter, Ohio
885-4141 .

10xz1, S85 per mo.

Adult Vldaot. 138o Ealltm tw.,
nua, Golllpolle, Or can 114·441·

,11122.

Companion·
Far Talla,
Walke I Frlandlhtp. Stnd Ra·
pilei Ta• CLA 3011, o/a GolllpaU1
Qliiy Tribune, 125 Third A-..o.
~ntlamon SMI&lt;lng
lhlp From Nloa -

Glllpoll1, OH 41131. ·

.llf_,"

. '·

LINDA'S ..
PAINTING

CHAPTER 7 • CHAPTER.13

Attorney ·

,

Safranek

(614) 592·5025

,Athe1s, Ohio

A fOOd painl job on
any clc.udy day,

malcea il •eem·
bri§laler.
· ·Interior
. Blforeep.m.
leavemeseage.
After e p.m.

614-985-4180
.
_,mo..

FREE ESTIIIATES

D.O.a~'s
~SIIop
•

'
:

CUSTOM
SHIRitENING
949·2647

,.,...........
........,
·w11111D

·(No Sunday Calls) ·

PVH Medical Explorer
Meeting Ttlursday;
.April1 0, 7. p.m. in
PVH dining room.
Tooic

Sr~rae·,ry Tour"

JUST ARRIVED!!
The ALL NEW '97
Centurys &amp; Regals
SMITH
BUICK·PONTIAC
1911 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

Call ft2·2J77

1/1-

CELLULAR PHONES

'IIIOtilr block&amp;.
114-882-4025 8 1111 • 8

360° Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

KINGS' .

· Hael11provt_,l

113 W. 2ND ST.

3351 lbtppy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Nilw t t - ; ~11101111,

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479
. . .___
·H•••••Gnl••alll JB Roofilg &amp;

Roollng, Siding,

,

Poll Blrna, Dectar,
. Pointing, Ollragaa,
Porohae.
CIIU. Fflt A Frla EM''"*

Syracuse ·

lloa!tl•pm-t

...

Introducing,

892·5778
Now OJH!ra For Sp..U.,
• Seaoora
• Pansies $6.50 flat
• Alwgetable &amp; baddi1g
plants $6.50 flat
.
· • BloomJ!g &amp; Foliage
. Baskels $5.75-$6.75
t4 ln. AseOrl. Pols

Hlldwll

I. L. HOLLON
TIUCKIN6

oflubber tJees &amp; elephanl

DUMP TRUCK

614-742-30111
614-742--3324

sse -sus

. 111m .

· aers$5.50

oC8nnaa $2.00 ... .
tShrubbery
We honor Golden

Bucke

Cti'ds

Opan ~9-5 Slll12·5

. 982·7896

4/rtfn

102E.IIIIn

\

"laftt~ty

wttlt Allo..WIIry"

Free E1tlmates .
388-al79

SERVICE
Umntone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Cheater, Ohio
1

Campurer Ueare Na..tell. wo
own houra. UOk ta ISOkly1
~718811508.

2110 llloden' Rd., oil Rt.
~ tD Oullr Radla

..,..,..

Pick up diiCSrded
appli1DC88, b8tterlea,
many melal• a ·

, Don GH.ry, OWM~

.· Galllpolll
ltu
&amp; Vlcln••,

614-992~7643

FREE

614-992..:U20

'

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FRI;E ESTIMATES
r•

POST128

a Felr Prlcel
I 560 Page St.
• Mi-eport, Oh. 4571(1
Home Ph.

HUPP'S
.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~ ·

and FLEA MARKET

AMERICAN LEGION
ANNEX
Mill Street, Middleport
Venders $5 • 8' Table
Cell Rus Mozingo
742·20M

Quelhy Work at

SHAR fNING
SERVICE

FRIDAY FISH FRY
FRIDAY, APRIL 11,
10AU.7PM
FEENEY BENNETT

I

l

Btlhe, Grooming,
Kennel C.,.
andLova
Mon., Tues., Wed.,

992·7074

MI~V:.1~!:.m

OneUnltNow
Available

IatlMOre

742·2925
"W•&amp;awr-

. For

••lei

·

Wlld.·UULIUftCILL.

-a...., Carpentry
SMvlntJ ,. ..... ,.

SFfNICf ' •

e'feetiS.HIIes

•Small Engine• ·
•l,awn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7,
Leading Creek Rd.

-

ONE WEEJC ONLtf

l

Aemoclallng
•Realdentlall
· Commare111

E1.1Pl 0Yr.1i Ill

CHRISTY'S PETS

COMPUTER
HELPI

olnterlor 1 ExteriOr-

"·\

DIIBILI

-New Hornet
•RemOd,ilng

You for Your Support of

25%•.50%

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Melal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

. MARCUM·&amp; SOl
BUILDING

•. b

614-992-3470 .

· "lhldtr N"" Oanamllip"

25%to $0%

SAVI

10%0ffAny
Service to New
Customers..,.,.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

30-H1S-!ild.

"1

Big Bend Fabri,atlon,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop

WICKS
HAULING

Wanted Ta Buy UNd Mql!lla
Hom••-Call: et4· U8·017Ji .Or

985·3831

614.696-1376
Lawn Mowing &amp;
Landscaping

ILim.e stoneLow Ratee) .

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

• Aquatron Boats • Cutty
Cabins • Bow Rlder.s • Bass
Boats • Sea Ark Johrt Boats
• Johnson Outboflrd

11082.

ATHENS
GRASS MASTERS

,.....~...,_-..,

--4277 .

Wentad To BuE~• Buy Junk
C111 114-4-III·I'NU, Or 114-MI-

Complete Machine Shop Service Flibrlciltlon
Steel Sales, WeldiDil Supplies, Jndustrl&amp;l Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday • 6:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m.· 12 noon

POMEROY .

JoeWIIIOR
(114)

Pomeroy, Ohio.45718

\

7/22/tln

Di'lveway Llme•!one
~mplete HouH
.-.d Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,

1111 M1rt1n StrHt

•Fertilizer (Bag or Bulk)
•DeKalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds
•Small Seeds .Chemicals
•Twin •Feed ...lme

985-4473

HOWARD
EXCAYAnNG CO.

oMowlng
(Ani taillltll Con-clll)
oW'IIdiiiJng
•Tiw Trimming ·
Shrubbery
. Melntenance
Ptu Ahalld, Call today
lor fraa utllilala.

.

aJ

"Build Your Dream"

Your • ...,.,_ for.~. .

•New Homes

~

M

CHESTER AGRI SERVICE

·ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTR.,CTION

CIMnf..,

~uttent

SAVE
OFF
BUY NOW-NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JULY

Our Way of Saying

Pornaroy, Ohio

110 Coult St.

"

Guttw Cleaning
Painting

614·992·7119
Aeration Motor oSale1lr Repel,.
Cleaning Septic Sy1tem1 ·
Port-A..John • Rantal1 • Serviced WHidy
No Extra Charge for Evll'llngl or Willi rands
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Day1 A Week

Quality Window Systems

61+1112-1371
Day a Evenlrig H...

Remodeling

. POMEROY, OHIO

(up ~nll!d lncbeo) .
(o,a-A-otAddllloMIC..l

Midllllport, OH

·~

"Customer Appreciation·Days

PDI.,.._JDBIIiRIICI

"FACI'ORY DIREq
PRICES"
$195.00 INSTALLED

Ju.t oft Bl'ldbury Rd.
(look for ligM)

Ricky Lynn Gregg to perform
at WalkAmerica kick off ·

Cuetom Hornet

~

Till'S
·CUSTOII
.
CAIPET

,,

:

SOLID VINYL .
REPLACEMENT WINDbWS

7, Friday
ond lllic:al-

Can1ulllng 11Mutlcloni8orbar
138 bed lCF nUlling flclllty on

faa for ttrvlce bars. lnter"t
pareana coli 304·175-0810 E11j

.102 or 109 8:01lorn-4:oopn ~
Fri Ia• bld farm. Lakin HaapltoliJI
., EEO Empq-or.

S

Conaultlng DlotiUon Nrvlcae ~
t31 bed tCF laclllty. Mu~
raglataradlticonead · dialll!-ntt;
April tO· II· 12, 1:00 em, 5:00 Sanicel "' ... prllo.......
pm,
an- month ar 11 neadad. lnllrM
~ Glul. Clolhll, ....
ptnona contacl 304~875- o~
Ext
t02 or IOD from I:OCJioin!'
Tlluradoy · SoL 1-5. 110 1bov1 4:00pm
l.ton.frt for 1 bid lcimti&gt;'
_ . , Mtr'-L QuoNty clothing lakin Hoepltal Ia an EEO Eml"
._,_
II
1

2002 E....,-:-.

lnlarf.aolllta. Honta """""'·Iliac.

Pomeroy,

~·

at

~

Consulting Phatmacw ltrvlce.:.
lor a 131 bed ICF nuralng IICIII!V'

· Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

PfllrmiC)' mu1t be. camputerlztcf:
and Interlace with IBM AS400::
oyetam. Win bill Mecl1·4
All Yard Salol Mull 81 Paid In campuror
Medicaid and/or 3rd 'pany.Advonca. Duclllna: I :OOpm the carat
lnauranc•. lnttreattd ptttana~:
day beiDN lie ad II 11 run, SUn·
day l Mondey edition- 1:OOpm
ao:~~~~:F~
~.
"'"-·"-" Lakin Holjli•l
Aptl 10·11, 400 Rulllnd Street,
~· clolhll, toyl,
parte. atarmdoo•. rruck tapper,

-ld. .

mile.

.

.... mt.. H¥UII Run,
Wldntlday ond l'hureday.
Hau-u, olothee. rNIC. ., ••
Ford! -

lll2-711:1.

Public Bill .
Mel Auction ·
t.amt.,.•
Awdon ......_ Leala
L.,tay, Awctlonaar. Houllllold,
80

•••ta

E--. Foml .... Collll-

1141,111

�10,1187

l'oi'*Oy e Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

AU.EYOOP

NEA Cro11word Pul•l•
•

PHJU.IP
ALDER

ACAOII
1 flltl'l
..... ~

•

(2 IIIII.)

...

__ .. ,,...

...

4111. 'h"PNIIl
4alljmlllle
«* a
41 ..........

2'

Alio

.

I '-mm111ure • . , . .. _
. 12A8toogtl
aer,

1S . . . Po!lnt
• DOo • ......,
14PD1111dft , · - - pronoun
112 ....... c..
11
dal'
10 11ome r1nc11
-*t
MGrup
'

--.a- o.v

'

I 'AKQ •l0t72
•KQ

.

'

• 82

~Eft &amp; MEE•f

• ·J e
But
• J 8ea

ME'S eEC'OME A

. 1la"tt~ R;R.I ..........

•J

oJ753 .

• Q 10 8 ?
Sotltb

........,.. Plua AQenclea Inc. Ia
-lng 11•dve end madvaiM
lndlvlduala to!oln our orowtne
..,. of pratn1 • We have •
,._.. of lnau- agenclaa In
Sou-.. Olio
and
W•t
Vlrgl!llol
wlthalol.,
_
_
_
_
plav-. You would anjoJ -

0..·:1

,.

II.IO. CM~ty

warding proiHalonal -rtunlliH and an -lllli!J Rlr ......,_
We ... -ng Individual• Will a
thorough knowledge of Finance
. and Loan procauing. TW a moment to 111011 Y!&gt;Ur flilure and If
Y!IU Wlll11 a ""'"' wllh a 10011 ••
labllshod oxpandln~ AQancy,
oond ,.,.,r RESUME » : Plua A=::· Inc., ! .14 Court
&amp;nil,
Clio 4511111.

414-1178 Tran•Am
1115 lroc Oamaro w/1-topo
U,IOO. 304·112·3111 Ooll allor

.....

"*" ••.

tN4 Oldamoblll Sadon .....,..,
cuacom crulaer, good running
condidon. Pllono 304-e711-3037

anr1kno.

In Soufwn Ohio and VIIDIria wlft a IDt ID Dltlt 18Q41 lh&amp;
tum playera. 'lbu would lftior
bolh rwwardlng proto.lonaJ op.
portunlllll and .. opportunf¥ lot
growth. Wa are -lng a1perl·
tneod lconUd Lila, HNIII, !'lor·
tonal and C - 1 prod.-nt
With a producdon rocord. Tw a
mament ta ••••••·your future
and II you want a caroar wllh a ·
wall oatablllhad aapandlng Aaan·
cy, aend your RESUME to; In·
.., _ . Pluo Agonclllillc., 114 210
Court Sltoat Pomaror. Ohio
45781.

1185 VW Ooll RWII Groot 8850;
814-3874150.
18U Chovy Oarll .., 4 door, 1
cyllndor, 81250 080. 814·8419135.
FINANCIAL
1111 Ford Tauru1, oltclriC wind·

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
otthl l'lllnt Ploaaont building. recommend• lhlt you do buaiMondtoro and aoma Sa.,rdaJ ,. nlll wllh pooplo you know, and
qulrod. Drop on ro•maa or pick NOT to und money lhrough lho
up oppll ..dona at lha Maaon mail unUI you htvo lnYNiigalod
County Public Library In Point . tlltolllrlng.
.Piaaaanl, 1101 VIand SII'HII. Polnl
Pluaant WV 25550. Maaon Forocloauroll Flllr· Upoia For
Sale Bolow Value, lnvoatoro
:..!:'~ Public Ubllry II an oqual
~.Cal 814-2511-8130.
nl1y omplojtr.
lola- Counll' Public: Ubraly hal
o 18 lair, paiHima poolllon -

230

NOW HIIIINo: Jake'o Bar &amp; Grill

Rt. 2 Millwood. Call lor Interview
304·273·1021 Aok lar Rhonda.
MUll be 21 OfOidor,

...., 1111, aui~--. load-

ad.
... milia, - · Wlllconoldor
lradt, 122511 080, 814 llt211824.
14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,

=:

Dealer: East. .

M._

Solalb

I
I

=:'

'81 Hondt cxsoo motorcyc'-; •
11...at2-nu.
·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

•g4 Suzuki GS SOQ E, like new,,
only 400 mlta, 12100, 814-112· •
5678 ...... '11..
!

CAUTIONCONST,UCT ION

•

1173 Hatley Davldaon Sporlatar, ,
Vtrt claon, ..,., loa~ t4500 llrm, :
814812'520
7' ••

AHfA~
(IVT IT StfOULP
Je FINIS~tC&gt; .

A.

U8g Flroblrd, Auto Trona, T·
Topo, Alloy Whoala I An Opllono
E x - COndition, 84.715~ Co!*
.._114-441-0103.

Professional

Services

1081 Ford Taurua LX vorr good
cond, 53,000 mlloo. vinyl uphol·
11aty, aunroot. phone, .vary good
tir11, rebuilt .,ansmi11ion. AC
nuda replaced. Due to 11tna11.

terloua Inquire• only pi••••·
Aeklng price $4,395 . 304·882·

PEIIIONIIEL A!JS!STANT

3511.

•ur ' •-...paeflt•ed;pr1or

.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Salt

.

ANY PAY flOw).

I

.

;1,

.-

I

-:' '

,.

"

. . ..

' ll.

O I~ O,NU,, IfiC. .,..y-t~~,5

4•10

17 loot Canoe mlm aanc!Non wtlh _
llltjackota and 5 loot wood pod- , ·• .
dlaa $400 llrm· calf 814· 441·11 13 !' 1
I her 5 pm
L c/
11 Ft. Flborglau With Good .,...,

Trailer 55 Evfnrud• Motor New ; ;.:
Power Heod $80Q 080 ~14·3fl8. • •
11820 Allor..
., :
1888 rwe.nty-faur. tool Riviera
Cnlloor Pontoon, 10 hp. MIICU(J,

:
I

1910 Mercury· Grand Marquis ~ tralor. 15 poiaon eopoC~ :
loaded. exc cond, 11,000 mllta. ly,
lookl ntw 17400, '114·112· , .
88,000 neg. 304-8~3102.
...._..

......... O(p!Oillllonal-

. arlil -looocaln Human Rat_...._Ability »lnltll&lt;:twlth
otlltrl. qud~ CCirMUlicadona •

1111 Gao Storm. SoKiol Edition,
black, aunroof, aowtin CIIMIIa, 5

................llorlicy(piOCIHing, dalabooo,

..,...._, and aatrong 1111·

__ ....,. __

chclod-'&lt; •tNc. CoordinoiOI

r.

and mol........
rtCOrdl,
-bonllltoandatoiOand-reportlng.- _ ....
ce~•aiWI and ciMciJ·clnlat.

Poll Plua, Silver Bridge Plaza.
114-;441-0770.

i&gt;upjMaa· mlnlaiUro Schnouzaro,
AKC champlon bloodline, ahotl
and wormod; olao tiny ·toy Poo·
d•: 814-t57-3404.

iMIIPIDw .... Cumpedlha salary

......,.,., I ::1-llond
• - • pion. Mal or lox r•
•ma-to Human_..._ 0.
,. lt•ll; HolzorCir:ie, DO .lad&lt;·
aon Pll:t, Gallpolla OH 45031 .

All ~l .astatelldvellialng In
thl! nl'l'iti!\aper ls.SUbjectto
tt:a Federal Fair tiOualng Act
ol1968 which ma1:ao RIllegal

Phyi.lclan to p·rovlde contract
..,.lcat to a 1311 bed long term
.... facility. Will aiiUmt acting
Medical Dirtc1or -dutitl and bt
rtlponalble. or ahare •on calr
·covorago 24 houra por day, 3115
dayo a .yur. Tho provider shall

814 UB 0011.

·

HlilmlllalllliiUi or notlooal

o:lgln. or any lnltnllon to

makl any ..ch ptoleronce,

llrilllltlor! or olacrlmlnatlon."

Tho

~~-------------il04 Baja' 18 Fl. With 4.3 V·8 ~:

Uerccrulur, 1013 Marad8 18 Ft

" '.
!" :

.
SOl

·IN ' F....CT, FOR

17 Batt boo~ '88 Mercury 45 hp. ~~ l
V·6, fully oqulppod 304·815· full~ oqulppod, elllntruna groat, . :
SDOII.
83800, 814-742-2301;
;:,- ,

t~~a chllloa~at CaYIIar RS. Rod, 4 760

Auto Parts &amp;

Acc:essorlel

.....

...........

1
• .. ....

Nh
l

'

' 10 AI; illtld

7~ ,

11~·

4•

8 NT

Paaa
.Paaa
, All p~

We ·end the week with surely the
inost amazing successful slam of 1996. ·
The·.decJarer was Beryl Kerr, wlio·wu
making her international debut for
Great Britain in the World Women's
Team Olympiad. Like mosf of tb.e · ...r-+-lf-+-. field, Kerr and her partDer, Roberta
Trayman, reaphed 'the excellent alx
no-trump. However, the de~perately
unlucky 4·0 spade break offside
doomed the contract at every table ex·
ceptone.
Four clubs was Gerber, asking for
aces.
Kerr won the first trick with dummy's lieart queen and cashed the
spade ace, preparing to claim an over·
trick. However, West failed to follow
••
. suit. Of course, you or I would liave
I!VXCIX
' I!PXIX
NIX
LWCA
thrown .one of those US!!Iesa llearls,
but West discarded the club two. In
EIXNI! ' 4
WLEXU .
ALM
KMUE
her partnership's methods, this was
encouraging in clubs. IWe call this a
(OLKRLUXI)
reverse discard: the reverse of the
ONIXGMCCA.'
normal procedure in North America.l
;
Thinking there was no hope, Kerr
_PJW. FXKJEP .
"•
called for the club six. If East had
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He whO laughs, lp!S." - Mary Pitllbone Poole,
trusted her partner, she would have
"Seriouanel8 i8 the only te1uge of lhe ehallow. • - Olear Wilde.
.inserted the 10 and defealed the slam.
Instead, she played the seven. Taki~l
West's discard ai face value, Kerr put
in bet nine- and it won lbe trick!
.Ove~ to dummy with, 11 heart, .Kerr
horranga ~otter~ of tho
tried the club jack, covered by the
lour tcrlltnltlad - - ....
q~n and king. Bad news; W.est pro·
··· low to'- lour wora
duced the ace. Good nett1: West
couldn't return a club. When she
I FTI SM
played a heart, Kerr cashed all her
red-suit trlcb. Dummy was left with
the K·Q..IO of, spades. Declarer.had
,,
the spade five and 111e·4·3 of clubi.
Poor East couldn't keep three spades
0 RP 0 T
. and the club 10. She '!WBS squeezed and
the smaU slam made!
·•

~

STMIGMT

t'VE. BEEN

lNG THE.SE
LUCK'I" !;OC.K&lt;;; I

. ·~

~:

,• ,

_c. .,E,. . . V.,.,. T. .H.,. . . .I ~,'

I 1· I r I .

• •
Budget Prlca Tllnamloeloite, , . 1
Slatting at 8H.OO and Up, Uud I ,; !
Rebuilt All Typos Over tO 000 •.;j
t..namiulona Accou Tranaler ' . 1
'c1111 a Rooi Ends, 814·245· Q
5577

.~ .

·

1-...;,.
·

0

p/ L

G F y ..

.I r I r I

...,..

Now gu lanka,· 1 ton !ruck " •
wh- I ..dlatDIL D &amp; R Auto, ~ -~Ripley, WV. 304·372·3133 or 1·
4'
-.o-273-1321.

L

A

V

&amp; LIVI'STOCK

In For Tho Jackson /Oak Hill
ANa, H lilllloa~ Call 814-441·
OliiO. Cr 1-IIN713.
of NIW H.Yon now 1alilng
tlllllflcadono lor Pvol MaMg~r &amp;
Lliot Guards lor elty owlmnllno
pool. applr o t - " - '
OilY 8ulkl;s '='aon ..m-4pm.
ii-F
1 -3201.

or.. .

...

c..e For lntlvldi.ata
Alzholmofl DliiiU Or

Willi

Nu=

· , . _ _ . , . .,._.. Nuralng
C..? ..... Hill
can., ........... For au.- .....
T..... Nllflfnt Alolatanto, Full
And
M lhllla. " ' FII Cllll An Applloalon At SctniC
.....tt~Ad.,llidwlll,
Ott, ...._ ·F
I A.M. • 4
P.M. NO PH E CALLI

.

Gravtly wolk·bohlnd tractor, I 0
HP, -Kohlor. _ , , riding aulkJ,
culM.,, llit&gt;ol dull- blado,
••cllltnt condldon, ao•· na1112,CIIIIon.

-.. ..
. .. ~

.;

,u.~~

....

'

h.F,.
~

t \.'D :I
~ •h

Cotnplola .... chuckle quoted

by filling In lhe milling WO&lt;ds
yov dovalap lrom stop No. 3 below.

.

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'

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• 1nl

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TQ
GET ANSWER
•

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a i{q
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.. Jt•T
d or
r. N~

t..:riQ
•n q.q-,

~ ·~

APRIL 10l ··•.c.R
~~

.,.

..,c!
.::tq&amp;&gt;

•JU

Orubll'a Plano- tuning 'a ..;.IlL
Prablame? -lllnlld'l Colllllo
plano Dr. et...-..szs

lq""'J

'

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.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

JB Kiln, kiln drlod liard woodl
oompatillvo prloai. II Rt ·l2,
Wast Columbia .WV. 304· 773!iOIOoot--l'UI.

,'...
••
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,"

........

.,.~1~

.

.- ........,1;..
·~·
·;=;~.

-

"11'11

Frldlly, Aptl11, 1'J1
lraruM l8 11a1 .DOUid diU lOp .1011 you
iacl lylnb· ~lhMd. You RIIJbm
...,... 'I M 1111111 wllicll you'l build •
lllranJ llllt.IIIOugllllllndl _, lie M¥10111 at flrel. Wark to brldill thl, gap

::!.."" jlu

ilon,.

. yt1!111811. •

· C~ (,._ 11-Julr 22) Ouilt lily
·dlelre lo lletrly I coor:tdluca IQdln!. An
:lmpolflnt frllnllllllp Jllly lie II ...... H

j)IOOtollillg at finlt,

but_.....,

111111 you

lrtld lo deny may be publicly 1Xj101111.

AQUAIIIUS (.1111. ao.l'tb.11) Kyou.,.
lnvotvad In • joint • d - !Udav. taka
.:you Ill~OOnll'!ll ollht liluatlon. A Pllf1llll'a Input
1.110 (.luiJ II AUI II) All WIOIIId 110 ~ , IIIIJ be I liMit ad

c::-..!:'.&lt;;;":.::'::

1*101111 end prcl . I lal . :"'.,::
............... ttt Do not hOld ... 8 II II wl ~In cltldt.
Illicit: 1 1 '-"' fltend 1a In Mid o1 your VM0 CAul- II IIIIC lit Tilt po'GIIIblllI 7 \llltllfdlr. . . . . . yout I I ~ tv ol ~ ... abjlt
loolta ~
X

ooi

today,
YoU might offend someone In
lllo proca88. Keep your prit)ritiet IOc:uetd.
· Gel a jump oil life bV ~. the ~ LIBRA Cltpl. 23-0ct. 23) S1rlve to be
lnftuancei that govain you In the yur , IIIJI·sllllfclant today, ~Uie lllodl•
ahead. s.nc1 for your·Altlo-OriiPit pra4ic· on whom you're del*.'dlug mighl not be
tiona today by mallng $2 and SASE to . availabla lo assist you.
.
Aalro·Graph, c/o lbil newspaper, P.O. SCORPIO {Ocl. 2• Nov. 22) You inlght
110lt' 17!i8, Munay Hll S!Biicin. New Yllfk, , be called upon today to by to Clear up a
NY 10158. 8t aura 10 11111 yout rOdloc diiP,Ute between, two close frtands .
llgn.
,Remain l~rtial and lhlra will be a poel·
TA~.,.,..., 20 MIJ 20) Bt ~. ' tiV90U1C011141.
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not u1t1n; Iii litem 111111 you
lilt al ~ belora Olhera IOdlly may .....,
lhlp by puMing OU1 all lllf Slops In 'four
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SCIAM Lm ANIWIIIS

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

THE CUSTODIAN
FELL. OFF TI-lE ROOF!

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Wllh 200 HP Mercury, Coma Sol
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Podlarat ,.gialrltion &amp;klnntl on. Condition, 41,000 Mlln $8,000
pitrrUa Col304-e7S.4860.
Arml14-441-7127
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8184.
good condlllon, bean atrvlotd
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Book Prlco: 89,400 Sell Prlco 3327.
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