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                  <text>nton·

Spurs net
best record
inNBA

orders
federal

manhunt
1994 LINCOLN

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Vol. 45, NO. 250

I

$23,949 .

Clinton's c~ief of staff, Leon
Panetta, refused today to spccuiR
on the ldlJen· or their motives but
said investigators "are making
some progress. They're gettln' a
nwnber of leads and are followmg
up on every one of those.''
BLAST SCENE • The north side of the
"The·purpose of these kinds of
Alfred Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma
unconscionable acts of terror is to
City Is missing after a car bomb blast Wednes·
basically rob all of us of our securi·
ty and our freedom and force us to world's best investigators 10 belp
fmd lllose responsible. His admin·
live in fear," Panetta said on CNN istralion
was even considering an
as be made the rounds of morning offer of belp from Israeli Prime
television shows. "And tbat is
something we just cannot allow to Minister Yltzhak Rabin. In a letter
10 Clinton, Rabin cited "the very
happeD.,,
Jarae and sad Israeli experience in
''The bombing in Oklahoma sucbcases."
(:ity was an attack on . innocent
· "Let there be no room for
children and defenseless citizens," doubt,"
Clinton declared. 1'!We
a grim-faced Clinton said in the wiD fin4.lhe
people who did til is."
White House briefing room. "It
By nillday Wednesday, the govwas an act of cowardice, and it was cnment had received calls from six
evit••
"The United States will not tol- people saying they were from diferate it. And I will not allow the ferent Muslim secls, asserting they
people of this country to be intimi- were responsible, a Justice Departdated by evil cowards," the p-esi· ment official said.
"But there is no way 10 know if ·
dent said.
the
calls are genuine,'' said the
Clinton declared an emergency
who spoke only on condiofficial,
in Oklahoma City to speed federal
tion
of
anonymity.
"They could be
relief, and the administration
boaxes.''
rushed disaster aid and law
enforcement teams to Oklahoma ' Reno said the United States
would seek the death penalty for
City, .
Clinton promised to send the those responsible.

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BLOODY VICTIM • An unidentified man wipes blood from
his face Wednesday after a car bomb explosion in downtown Okla·
homa City. More than 36 people were killed and hundreds were
missing in the explosion. (AP)
·

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Gone to jail
Founder of LCCD transferred to Holzer
hours after being placed in local lockup

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stoff
By GEORGE ABATE
The founder of the Leading
Sentinel News Stoff
Creek Conservancy District began
The $153.45 million Belleville
the second day of his 18-montb
hydroelectric project officially .
sentence in Holzer Medical Center
this morning, said Meigs County
began with the soggy shoveling of
dirt at Thursday's groundbreaking.
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes.
Jack Crisp, who founded the .
Tbe ceremony opened at the
XL/,,.., •• service district in the 1960s,
. Belleville dam with represenJatives
.from American Municipal Powerstarted his 18-month jail sentence
Ohio, construction aews and state
on five misdemeanor counts of
and local officials. The project is
receiving improper compensation
slated tobegin operation Nov. I,
for bonuses at 9.a.m. Thursday.
1997.
From now on, each day will be
E. :Leon Daggett, executive vice
considered against Crisp's senpresident for AMP-Ohio, said the 13~!!!
tence, Lentes said.
project's start required the work of
HYDRO PROJECT BEGINS- The $153
Electric
representotlves are seen moving
"He is not permitted to leave
million Belleville Hydroelectric Project officially
the project's first broken ground. The project is
individuals on both sides of the
(the hospital~," Lentes said. ''It's
Ohio River.
got underway Thursday. American Municipal
slated for completion in 1997. (Sentinel photo) .
just like someone who had a gun·
"Three years from now the proThe
,iect will provide a long· employ inore .than 200 laborers,
Peak construction of the hydro- shot wound and we ha·ve to take
willinbeplaces
creating
electricity
for tenn source
' of power for 42 Ohio sru'd sam DaVIS,
· b usmess
·
· pant
1 w1'll occur at the en d them to Jhe hospital."
ject
Cuyahoga
manager e1ectrJc
people
like,
Crisp, 64, bas suffered heart
Falls. It's real," Dagge~ said. "It's commumu~.
.
.
for the Parkersburg/Marietta Build- of this year, Meier added.
attacks,
narrowing of the arteries
w1ll have no tm""'"t
ing Construction Trade Co. unci!.
Guy F. Atkinson Construction and a complete
The
occlusion of the
. pro
· ••ect
'
..been a team effort w th people
from both sides of the river.'
o:n over traf\ic, bas~ on !!'ore than Hiring will occur through this Co., San Bruno, Calif., will con- right coronary artery, on which be
StruC( the S'Zl.8 milli!!!l !!Y!!r&lt;Jelec- bad-angioplasty treaunent, accord•
, George Pofok•.cbalrinan of the '' Six-months of S"!dle.s, &amp;aid George offiCe. "' .
c
oil B 11 ill lockmaster
"We can stay home this time for tric plant
·
board 'of trustees for AMP-O~io,
o~n y, e ev rimarile
s · 1 ks i
awhile," Davisfa•dded.. .
The142-megawau power plant ing to doctors. Crisp is confined to
The '!ID" IS P
.Y oc
or.
said the project remains one coma wheelchair.
ponent of the non-profit entity's ~erc1al 'f,Bffie and It ~uld not
. The project will require 4,000 will eventually employ a dozen
The Fourth District Court of
future.
'
tmpact them, q&gt;nnolly satd.
tons of sheet metal, two 95-ton pro- permanent employees.
Appeals upheld a previous decision
CRISP IN JAIL - The
"This is just one piece of our
~etgs counttans bave and .will pellers and iwo shafJs that weigh
At the beginning of this·month, this month ordering Crisp to pay long-term future." Pofok said. "It's co.ntmue to work ~n the .pro]ect, 45 tons each, said Phil Meier, pro- federal environmental officials for bis medical expenses and the founder of lbe Leading Creek
Conservancy District was
pan of our long-term strategy for srud Conno~y. a Me1gs natl~e.
ject manager for AMP.Qhio.
approved the developmem of the cosls of his jail time.
wheeled into the Meigs County
survival and will enable us to conThe p~OJ~t - to l~ter mclu~e
"It's like building a LO-s tory 25 miles of power lines betw~en
But Crisp's attorney, William
tinue well into the 21st century."
power !me mstallauon - wtll building underground," Meier sai.d.
Reedsville and a Rutland substa- Eachus, will sso.o.Jile claims that Jail Thursday morning. Jack
Crisp was moved into the jaU at
'
tion.
Crisp is indigent, Lentes added. 11:30 a.m. Thursday and trailS·
Crisp's indigency has not been ported to Holzer Medical Center
detennined, he added. .
later in the day. (Sentinel photo)
Crisp ent~ed the jail at 11:30
a.m. Thursday after sitting in bis bad made sure an emergency medivan. At 3:47 p.m. Jhe Meigs Coun- cal technician stood by throughout
By JIM FREEMAN
9:30 a.m. at the . Racine Fire
ty Emergency Services were called the day.
.
Sentinel Ne~ Stolt
Department Annex on Fourth
to the jail, but Crisp was not transOne bed remained available for
ported.
More entertainment, more Street.
Crisp, but Crisp was kept in a com·.
craftsmen and, of courSe, plenty of
"Several floats are registered
Crisp was transported at 4:29 mon area while filling out forms to ·
p.m. toHMC.
transfer his 12prescriptions from
flowers are expected Saturday at . and there J~~ill "&lt;? a p3111de of tmcRacine's second Flower Festival at tors from the B1g Bend Antiques
Meigs Sheriff James M. Soulsby (Continued on Page 3)
Star Mill Park.
Club," Hart said.
.
· "We are expecting a higher
Anyone may enter the parade.
turnout of crafL~men and of people also sponsored by RACO, and
in general this year," said Kathryn plaques will be awarded to first,
Han. president of the Racine Area second and third-place winners.
Community Organization, the festi- Firsr, second and third-place winval's sponsor.
ners wi.ll receive $50, $30 and $20,
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Parmi is investigating the
The festival, one of the area's respectively.
electrocution
of a dump truck driver around 8:15 a.m. today on the con·
The flower queen will be
newer celebrations kicks off the
struction site of the U.S. 3311-77 Connector Road project
annual festival · sc~on for winter- crowned at noon. Candidates
. The driver of the Semi-tractor and trailer dump truck apparenlly raised
weary Meigs countians. ·
include Jessika Codner, Erica
the
bed of his truck into a bigb-tension line at the end of the Stale Route 7
"I bave talked to people who Dugan, Shannon Morarity, Brandy
four-lane near Meigs High School.
think (the flower festival) will be a Roush, Courtney Roush and Amy
The driver's name is being withheld pendin g notification of family
big thing each. year," Han said. "I Weaver. Aueml~nls include freshmembers.
anticipate a crowd equal in size or man Jayme M:tller, sophomore
The jolt blew out the truCk's tires and hydraulic lines, according to witlarger than last year's."
Kerry Caldwell and junior Jennifer
REVIEWING PLANS - Racine Area Community Organiza·
nesses at the scene. In addition, the accident caused a remporary power
In addition to more paid enter· Cummms.
.
lion members Dale Hart, left, and Frank Cleland predicted a soc· · outage affecting im undetennined number Ohio Power/Columbus SouthCountry and western smger
tainment and craftsmen, Han said
cessful Racine Flower Festival, "depending on the weather." The
em Power customers.
this year's festival wiP also feature Steve Potlmyer will perform at I
pair is shown at tbe Star. Mill Park Build!ng reviewing plam for
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department and Pomeroy squad of tbe
a larger parade than last year's.
· p.m., followed by the Midnight
Saturday's festival, slated for Racine's Stor Mill Park. (Sentinel
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded to the scene along
The parade officially starts the Cloggers at 2 p.m. The Athens Dixphoto)
with Meigs sheriffs deputies.
festival at 10 a.m. , with lineup at (Continued on Page 3)

Racine event kicks off
Meigs festival·season .

Truck driver electrocuted
at connector project site

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· VICTIM RESCUED • Gary Glover is helped by firefighters
near t~e Alfr.ed Murrah Federal Building following Wednesday's
explos10n whrch rocked downtown Oklahoma City. More than 3ti
_people were killed. (AP)

Third &amp; Olive

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I

Groundbreaking
launches work
on hydro project

day. More than 36 people were killed and hun·
dreds are missing. (AP)

5·3·8·5
Buckeye 5:
11-15-23·35-36

·a l
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 21, 1995
•

Copyright 1995

Pick 4:

•

It's a ·go

Federal officials
tighten security
By CASSANDRA BURRELL
and,' in some cities, evacuated
Assi)Ciated Press Writer
buildings.
Workers in government build- · The explosion apparently
ings throughout the nation worried touched·off a wave of telephoned
about tbeir own safety as tbe dealh bomb lhreats. All appeared to be
count climbed in Oklahoma City, hoaxes perpetrated by ''copycats,''
where an explosion tore apart a Attorney General Janet Reno said.
federal office building.
. The threats led authorities to
"Everybody is ' talking about it._ . evacuate g~vemment buildings in
It is just scary that it could happen , at leastl5 crues.
.
.
here," said Dianne Kenny, an
"~ank God ~ost of them :p-f
accounting technician with the U.S. false, srud Charlie Parsons, spe"
Army Corps of Engineers in era! agent m charge. of the Los
·Omaha, Ncb. "You don't look for Angeles FBI office. "But you bave
that to happen in the Midwest"
to pay attention. And there are
"It could happen at any federal , wacko people out tbere who get
building " said Pat Springman a some sort of perverse debgbt out of
deputy ~Jerk at the federal court- doing this sort ~f l;binf '
bou$e in Indianapolis.
A f~ buildmg m Boston and
'• Any of us who work in federal Boston Cuy Hall were evacuated
· buildings across the United States after "certain· doors and things"
could bave this happen. It's some- .that should have be~ locked were
thing to think about and worry fou!!d to be o~n. srud Bob Dunfey,
about all the time in our job,.' • regiOnal ~umstrator for the Gen·
Springman said.
era! Semces Admm1stratton.
After the blast Wednesday
Some $Overnment officials
morning, President ClinJOn ordered allowed fnghtened employees to
tightened security at federal build- .leave work early. Busmess continings nationwide. In response, secu- ued as usual elsewhere, but some
rity officials searched bags, led workers confessed that they were
bomb-sniffing dogs on patrols.. nervous.
,
eyed identificalion cards closely
"I know 1f I am, other people
are," said Larry Burns, cbief
deputy of the U.S. Marshal's Office
Developments in
in South Bend, Ind. Burns' office is·
th~ Wednesday's
in charge of security for five federal
coljftbouses in Indiana.
Heartland bombing

e.

MARK VIII.

equip.

operated.

By 'fhe Associate&lt;\ Press
I)evelopmems in the Oklahoma
City federal office building exp!D.
sion:
THE BUILDING: Alfred P.
Murrab.Federal Building, ninestory federal ·Office building where
mo~ than 500 people·work.
THE BOMB: Believed to be
1,000· to 1,200-pound car bomb,
carried in a National, car· Rental
minjvan with, Texas license plates.
Exploded outside building 9:04
a.m. local time,
CASUALTIES: 36 dead, indud·
ing t-t least a dozen children, and
morp lban 200 injured. Another
200'1lnacoounted for, and authorities said the death toll will rise bodjes seen in the wreckage
haven't been tallied yet.
THE SEARCH: ,Hundreds of
rescpe workers, including a 56meOJber url)an search and rescue
unit from Phoen1x, searched
thro~gh the night with fiber-optic
cam~ras and acoustic listening
devifes that could detect someone
breat,bing in the rubble.
SUSPECTS: Early today, the
Oldl\boma Highway Patrol said it
found a Chevrolet Cavalier that
may have been involved in th~
bom~ing in Oklahoma City, anathat "follow-up interviews" were
being conducted. . .
IN WASHINGTON: President
ClinJon called bomben ''evil COW·
ards" and Attorney General Janet
Reno said tbey would seek the
death penalty against those responsible.
,

Pick 3:

Sports, Page 4

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
deni Clinton is ordering an exhaustive fede(ai manhunt for those
responsible for the bombing carnage In Oklahoma City and
declares, "Justice will be swift,
certain and severe."
Clinton and Attorney General
Janet Reuo vowed a massive federal. probe of Wednesday's car-bomb
explosion lllat devastated a ninestory federal building where SSO
· worked and a child-care center

•

Ohio Lottery

1993 F()RD
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Poacher sentenced
on additional charges

Racine OKs sidewalk contractor
Racine Village Council has
accepted a contractor for a sidewalk replacement project for the
east side of Third Street from
Snodgrass Alley to f&gt;earl Street.
Council on Monday accepted
the lowest bid of $6,450, submitted
by Whitey Walburn. Robert Brattoo/PaLM ullcns. and G. Green &amp;
Sons also submitted bids of $7,200
and $7,950, respectively.
Council approved a resolution
authorizing Mayor Jeff Thornton to
file Jor a Community Development'
Block Grant with the Meigs Coun:
ty B'oard of Commissioners.
The granl, if awarded, would be
used as the 25 percent match for a
Department of Natural Resources
grant to make repairs 10 lhe boat
ramp and possible construct a boat
dock.
.t
Game protector Keith 0. Wood
spoke with !hornton and said be
would assist in filing tbe gran t
apPlication.

Clean up in the village bas been
set for Wednesday and Thursday,
and council . members said they
hope village residenJs will clean up
tbelr yards and lots . In addition,
council hopes residenls will takie
the opportunity to clean out their
basements and garages. Tires, oil,
batteries and household appliances
cannot re taken.
_
Items that can be picked up by
tbe village trash truck should be
placed at the curb Wednesday or
Thursday: • . · ·
In other business:
.
• Thornton reponed the building
inspector bad inspected the electrical .wiring in ll•e pumphouse. He
recommended the old wiring be
upgraded when the new well is
drilled and put on line. Council
voted to have the specifications to
upgrade tbc old wiring in the pump
bouse to meet NEC standards
included in the new water well
advertiS~;ment .

• Councit' approved hiring Cory
Hatfield as a pan-time officer to
work with Matt Richards, who is
working part-time as marshal. This
is for the summer months, Council
specified.
• Pennission was granted to Joe
Proffitt to clean and raise lhe brick
sidewalk on Pearl Street from
Third to Second streets.
• Street Superintendent Glenn
Rizer teported tbe water department emergency plan has been fin·
ished and will be sent. to tbe Envirmunental Protection Agency.
Attending were councilmen
Robert Beegle, Dale lhn, Scott
Hill, Henry 'Lyons and Larry
Wolfe, Thornton, Clerk Karen
Lyons, Hatfield, Richards, Fire
Chief. John Holman , Cemetery
Trustee Jean Alkire, and Racine
Area Community Organization ·
President Kathryn Hart.
.
The next meeting will be held
May I, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.'- The
Charleston man wbo pleaded guilty
10 numerous Meigs Counly wildlife
violations last month has been sentenced on additional charges
brougbr by tile West Virginia Divi·
sion of Natural Resources.
MiChael R. Barker, 49 , pleaded
guilty to seven counts of illegal
possession of wildlife, specifically
· deer, on T~esday in Kanawha
County Magistrate Court.
FRANK CREMEANS
Magistrate Wade Harshbarger
ordered Barker to serve 45 days in
jail ~nd pay $2,100 in fines and
court costs, WVDNR officials
a"'d~ess
announcedTbursday.
U 1 I 1
The charges stemmed from
'\,__Barker's Nov . II , 1994 arrest In
Meigs County for spo~ligbting .
Barker bad been under mvesttgation by the WVDNR an&lt;J the .Ohio
Frank Cremeans, U.S. represen- Division of Wildlife when he was
tative from Ohio's Sixth Congres- . found shining a spotlight into a
sional District, will be speaker at field by Wildlife Officer Keith
the annual Meigs County Republi· Wood, officials said.
Barker subsequently fled i.n his
can Party's, ahnual Lincoln Day
car,
was pursued and l:lter wrecked
Dinner
'i'uesday
in
the
cafeteria
at
building,
..
the
vehicle
after it struck a deer.
He added thai Marrs told him Meigs High School.
lfariCer
was apprehended by
Tbe
-doors
will
open
at
6.
p.m.
tbat the bodies were all those of
Wood
and
Meigs
SP\)Cial sheriffs
sc,rved
at
and
lhe
dinner
will
be
adults. ''There were no cbi ldren,
deputy
Dana
Aldridge.
During the
there were no survivors," he said. · 6:30p.m.
arrest,
Wood
tackled
Barker,
vl'tlo
Gene
Triplett,
executive
comIn an interview with NBC's
alfegedly
.tried
seizing
Wood's
gun.
Today show, the governor also said mittee chainnan. said tickets will
The incident resulted in a misthat he bad been told the odds of be available at the door.
A native of Gallia County. Cre- demeanor charge of assaulting a
finding another survivor at the
means was elected to his first term wildlife officer being filed against
building were about 10 percent.
Investigators boped for better last November. In the House, he Barker. who bas a history of arrests
odds in their search for the two sus· serves on the Banking and Finan- in Meigs dating back to 1974, most
· peels . Drawings of them issued cial Institptions Committee, and the of tQ.em involving poaching.
Resources Committee.
WVDNRsaid.
. (Continued on Page 3)

Bombin_g ·rubble yields more victims
By CHRISTOPHER SULLIVAN
AP National Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY - Digging for signs of life, searchers
found about 50 more bodies today
in the basement of a bombed feder·
at building, which would lift lhe
death toll to over 100 in the deadliest terrorist bombing in U.S, history.
'
Investigators, scouring the
heartland and far beyonl(, issued
warrants for two John Doe suspects.

The official death toll stood at
57 late this morning, with more
than 400 Injured, but Gov. Frank
Keating said Fire Chief Gary Marrs
tQld him there were about SO more
bodies in one section of the building's basemenl
"I am hoping that count is
wrORJ! and I am hoping there are
some people living among lhat
group. Right now wo don't.bave
any good news," the governor said
in an interview ouJside the wreckage of the Alfred P. Murrah federal

Cremeans
to.
· / GOP
loca

Barker pleaded guilty on March
16 in Meigs Common Pleas Court
to one count of felony neeing, the
assau lt cbarge and 14 separate
wildlife violatioos ..
Ju.dge Fred W. Crow III sentenced Barker to 18 months i~
prison with probation after 90 days;
$3,900 in fines and court costs;
lifetime revocation -of hun ling
rights in Ohio; forfeiture of his
1992 Chevrolet Lumina. rifle. Spot·
light and ammunition; and :forfeiture of a number of deer beads,
whole body moun ts and videotape,~.

Barker will be sentenced on lhe
fleeing charge May I .
Charges were tiled in ,West Virginia soon after BarHr's Ohio
arrest. State conservation officers
led by J. C . Armstead of the
WVDNR D1strict 6 office in St .
Albans obJained a search warrant
for Barker's Doc Bailey Road residence.
The officers seized at least 65
deer heads, four whole body
mounts and a number of videos
detailing incriminating poaching
information, according
to
WVDNR.
Ten of the deer heads were for·
feited to West Virginia and will be
sold at public auction in Seprember
during National Hunting and FISh·
ing Day activities at the French
Creek Wildlife Cenler, WVDNR
announced. Four of the forfeited
deer beads were given to Ollio offi·
cials.
•

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•

.'

:Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Comt Street'
Pomeroy, Oblo
'

.I"U.THDDA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT

---~~ Publisher --

CHARLENE l:IOEFLICH
General Manager

_:__ _~

MARGARE.T LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned leuers will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

.Washington Today:

. ·

Supreme Court offers
bad news for Congress
By RICHARD-CARELLI
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Most folks don't lose sleep worrying about the
relationship of tbe federal government's three branches. How Newt Gingricll and Bill Clinton get along is for most a source of amusement.
Some Americans migbt recall a high school lesson or college lecture .
on tbe "constitutional separalion of powers." But they~re probably willing to leave such highbrow stuff to tbe academics and the smarter of the
politicians.
·
·
But nine American academics and politicians.- the members of the
Supreme Court - still care deeply about the 200-year-old concept, and
they had some bad news for Congress on that score Ibis week.
Their new decision's immediate impact is marginal, but it may signal a
shift in the court's deference to Congress. It also reminds those in power
tbat constitutional rules apply and are zealously enforced.
the high court said Gongress doesn't bave the power to reopen a court
case !hat has become final.
The ruling struck down a 1991 law Congress bad passed to allow lawsoils by some stock investors I!VhO previously bad lheir cases dismissed.
The law, an atiempt to undo li\Supreme Court decision on filing deadlines,
required reinstatement of any lawsuit dismissed because of the high court
ruling.
.
. Led by_ Justice Antonio Scalia, the court r~led that Congress had
usurped judicial power by-trying to resurrect the fmalized legal disputes.
' In a 30-page opinion tbat read. like a history "lesson, Scalia laid out for a
six-member court majority a formalistic approach to separation of powers.:
The doctrine, be said, "is a structural safeguard ... establishing high
walls and clear distinctions because low walls and vague distinctions will
not be judicially defensible in the heat of interbranch conflict"
Such conflicts have been part of politically charged high court rulings:
• Congressional power to block presidential policy through a practice
called the legislative veto was struck down in 1983.
.
• One version of automatic deficit-reducing measures enacted by
Congress, the Gramm-Rudman Ac~ was struck down in 1986.
• Congressional power to create a commission that came up with sentencing guidelines for federal judges to follow was upheld in 1989.
·
• A federal law requiring the appointmenls .of special prosecutors to
investigate alleged crimes by high-ranking executive-branch officials was
upheld in 1988.
Chief Justice -William H. Rebnquist, perhaps the court member most
. deferentlal to the oyerall power of Congress, wrote the 1988 opinion lhat
upheld the independent'counsellaw.
.
Scalia, a fellow conservative who does not share Rehnquist's enthusi~~Sm for congressional authority, was lhe sole dissenter in the 1988 case.
He said the ~&gt;CParation and balance of powers are what make lhe Constitution a unique and enduring document.
·
' -'In dictatorships of the modern world, bills of rights are a dime a dozen," Scalia said back then, adding that shared and diffused governmental power is really what protects freedom.
Americans periodically are warned about the dangers of an ''imperial
presidency," a "runaway Congress" or even an "unCiccted judiciary."
But the United Slfltes never bas succumbed to dictatorship.
Scalia this week borrowed from the poet Raben Frost in offering one
of the reasons why: ''Good fences make good neighbors.''
·
(Richard Carelll covers the Supreme Cour.t for The Associated
Press.)
·

Today in history
By The Associated Press
.
Today is Friday, April 21. lhe lllih day of 1995, Tbere are 254 days
left in the year. ·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 21, 1918, Baron Manfred von Ricbthofen, !he German ace
known as the "Red Baron," was killed in action during World War I.
On this date:
In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, which provided for freedom of
worship for all Christians, was passed by the Maryland assembly.
Jn 1789, John AcL=s was sworn in as the lirst vi.ce president of lhe
Uniied States.
.
·
In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston defeated the Mexicans at San Jacinto, assuring the independence of Texas.
In 1910, :author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, beller known as Mark
Twain, died in Redding, Conn.
.
In 1940, the quiz show that asked the "$64 question," "Take" II or
Leave It," premiered on CDS Radio.

Berry's World
.
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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, O-!'fq ~
Friday, April 21,1995 ·

1

WAsfiiNG'IOllf -

Two wonla
were CXIIIIpicuously omitted from
the HOUle ~· "Coutract
Witb Americ:tl ': Lobbying refonn.
As a result, the lawtnakers who cut
scbool lunches.for chlldren conlin·
ue ~? enjo_Y tbeii- own free lunch on
Capitol Hill.
.
In one of their .ftrst official
actions, House .Republicans gutted
the school lunch•progrii!D, wllich
f~ more tban 25 million ~Y
children each school day. Dunng
101:! days of furious legislative
actton, however •. Republicans
failed to move an mcb on simple
reforms like a gift ~n - which
would· end the free!»es that memhers from 1?00' parties now receive
from lohbytsts.
For _fou~ decades, Demo~rats
were p1lloned for perpetuating a
campaign finance and lo~bying
system that gave )I?Wer to 1ncumbents and special mterests at the
expense of !be general public Now
·
·
Repubhcans
shown that ·while
have
they may bave the heart to slash
scboolluncbes. they lack the stom-

acb tn clean up their own act
of Congress in terins of gifts."
·At the 10p of a 1ooa lilt of hypA gift ban - unlike the soocrltes Is Hope Speaker Newt called "reforms," whi~ passed
Gingrich, R-Ga., wboae GOPAC both bouJea of Congress In J•uary
- would actually accomplish
som~g radical: It would change
By Jack Anderson tbe way_mell,l~ of Congress con•
d\ICI their daily It!es· No more free
meala ~ lohbrtsts. No more free
llcke!J to sporting_ev.ents-or golf
IIIII· "
''
v~ons.
,
~e only ~on (¥1fts) aren I ·
considered bnbery 1s because
polilical action committee raked In ~~gress gets to say what bribery
$487,520 In tbe flfSt three months 1s, says Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D·
of this year. 'This comes in addition Ind., an early supporter of congresto the aborted $4.5 million book sional ~form.
·
deal stru~ with a company owned
A g1_ft ,ban la~t came up for
by publishing magnate Rupert debate m the wanmg moments of
Murdoch, who bas signiftcant busi· the 103rd &lt;;ongress as part of a
ness before the Congress.
co!"prebenstve. bl:ll to. reform lob·
Perhaps SOD)COIIC should remind bymg. But the enure bill was killed
...Gingrich of the statement be made aft~r Gingrich _ an~ company
just days before Republicans .won clairnbbedin it would cunai11!111S.s-CO?Is
the House on Nov. 8. Should be he lo Y. g -even though Gmgnch
elected speaker of the H011se, Gin- had s1gned off on the measure durgn"cb 531"d at the tim"e, be was I"~·
-.L. lng· 20 months of hi par11
. .
.
·
san negopared "to~ a bill that bans lob- h~s.GOP b bad .
.
byisls from dealing with members
e.
as
It both ways:

d
an
•••c"'ae/-8l· ns"ein

T"*K YOU ~~ PAYING
A ReUN~ f02 'mlS.
l:NST~TION~:

'tUROLU WITH ALL

YOUI2 MIGHT, Tl4bN
WAIT FORlT
'TO Nt;\11;12 ~TUQN

-BABY m:;M~(?ang

:

Saturday, Aprll2l .

"

Accu-~ forecut

In 1990 "Rev. Joel Gregory of 2,000 or more). One critic says
became pastor of the largest Baptist the book is "a tale or insatiable
church in the country _ the egos,'' a reference to what Gregory
28,000-member First Baptist calls the "lifestyles, wealth and
Church in Dallas. His salary was
$165,000, not to mention !be pala•~
_
tial bouse the church provided, a activities of the super church pasmore-than-liberal (call it lavish) tor.; who determine the belief strucexpense accounL and such perks as tures of millions, including their
member.;bip in one of Dallas' most political inclinations."
exclusive country clubs. .
.. Among members of the super
Not the least of thc·cmoluments churches, says Greg(jry, "lfieie Is a
that went with Gregory's new sta- devotion to the right wing of the
lion in. life was that he was known Repul;Jiican Party equal to their
far and wide in Southern Baptist devotion to the church."
The most dangerous wing of the
circles as the pulpit-successor tp the
legendary Rev. W.A. Criswell.
super church movemen~ according
Two years into his lush new job to Gregory, is "the so-called
Gregory gave it all up to sell ceme- Restoration Movement that is
tery plots. The story of his &lt;lisen- attempting to install Old Testament
cbantment with the megacburch is taw as American civil and criminal
told in bls book, "Too Great a law - for example, stoping for·
Temptation: The Seductive Power adultery."
of America's Super Church."
There are 400 megachurches in
U.S. News and World Report tbe United States and tbeir number
bas called the book a ''scathing is growing at tbe rate of one every
account ... of treacb~ and deceit three weeks.
and abuse of power m the super •
What attracts people to large
churches (those with a membership -.churches? Most would say it is the

ltlf'f SAID
"PaNi- QIIIT
'(ol}fl: DAy
ros,~
1

sur

DID ANt(wA.,v_
1"#-1-lt&lt;-s

'

winningr:~lause for reform :

Parwellstone

L

Henry 'Sooner' Salser

J:::;

it was being fought, was ed by this _do!"estic oppo~ilio_n \to
unwinnable. If so, resignation as . the war -mstSted on li~tmg 11 on
Secretary of Defense was the only te~s that made It unwmnable: by
honorable course open to him. fatlmg to ask Congress to dfl!:lare
Instead he sat there, month after it, by failil:'g t? mobilize public
month and year after year, allo~ng suppo_n bebmd 1t and abo-.:e all by
Alnerican buys to be fed into the denymg our commal:'ders th~
jaws of a war effon tbat be private- 6ptton.s•. such ~s bombmg Hanot
· ly considered doomed. Np wonder and mm1ng Hatpbong harbo~. that
the doves are unimpressed!
would have won 1t. .(When Richard
Just for the ~rd, I do not for a Nixon later t~k these step~,. he
moment share the opinion or brou~bt Hano1 to the bargrunmg
McNamara and the doves that the table m a matter of weeks, ai)d !he
Vietnam War was either "wrong" settlement negotiated there colin some moral sense or unwinnable lapsed only because of his own
as a military proposition . It was subsequent political destruction
.
simply bu~y its civilian man- over Watergate.)
The
58,000
Americans
who died
·a-gers in Washington, including
in
Viemam
understood
their
counLyndon Johnson and Robert
try's
situation
better
than
either
McNamara.
Strategically, the Vietnam War Johnson or McNamara. And a
was just one of a series of regional whole lot better than a certain
military conflicts in the larger young man in cozy, far -off Lonstruggle called the Cold War. It don.
William Rusber Is a Dlstln·
was bitterly opposed by many libgulshed
Fellow of the Claremont
erals and leftists, including young
Institute
for the Study of StatesBill Clinton, either because they
rejected the whole thesis that mansblp and Political Pblloso.
America was in a global struggle pby. .
(For
Information
on bow to
with the forces of Communism or
communicate
electronically
with
because they actually relished the
and
others,
con·
this
columnist
prospect of an American defeat. ·
Unfonunately, Lyndon Johnson tact America Online by caiUng 1·
-partly because be was intimidat- 800-817-6364, ext. 8317.) •

•

Jenkin Merrill Jones, 75, of Gallipolis and Reynoldsburg, died Thursday, April20, 1995 81 Holzer Medical Center. He was a retired refrigeralion median¥: of Wasscrstrom Company in Columbus and a member of
the Coachman Club. He was also a World War II veteran.
Born July 27, 1919 in Gal1ia County, be was tbe son of the late Orville
and Stella Hawk Jones. He was raised in lhe borne of the late Johnny and
Sarah Jones.
·
Survivors include his wife, Virginia Baer JoJies of Gallipolis and
Reynoldsburg; one son, John Jones of Solon; one step-son, RoberL
Deavers of Columbus; two grandchildren. Amy Jones and Ronald ·
Deavers; one alllll, Mildred Thomas of Gallipolis; a!,1d one sister-in-law,
YuYen Jones of Las Vegas, Calif.
:
In addition tn his parents, be was-precedelrln&lt;leatb-by b!s flfSt'wife,
Marcella Jordon; and one brother, Kennelh Jones.
·
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral Home m Gallipolis where the service will be held I ·
..
p.m. Monday with the Rev. Jack L. berry officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.

blame!~ th~ !&gt;CMO· •
~~ ~~~res~!o~~l;J~ •

though ·t · i ' ring tbe gift '
::;nIss s~
DMinn., ~Cd tO put some i-eal ~th ':
into the Congressional Accountabilit Act that salle4 through
Cong~ss in January by tacking a •
ift ban amen&lt;llnent·onto ll -When ~
ami:ndment was defeali:d. Sen·
ate Majority Leader. Robert Dole
mised to revisit the issue in •
~~ But the Senate's floor sched· .
ule ~ugh June does not include a
te th ban
vo A~a .!a~ncb member o( the
House minority, Gingrich was fond
of lasbin out at the powa of his
·
.. ~ongiess is a broken sysGingrich said in 1990. "It is
·nereas·n 1 as stem of corruption
~ wbi~gJ'one: politics is defeating and· driving out citizen poli·
. ..
licsTbat.
ld
1ot
statement
woo
mean
a
more today if the "Contract With
America" hadn't omitted tw~ very
important words.
CASH FOR COMMUNISTSAlmost a year after the· Clinton
administration decided tbat money
was more important tban morality
in dealing with the "butchers or
Beijing," the results of Its his
actions are becoming painfully
clear.
Bowing to pressure from Ameri·
can business groups, Clinton last '
~ear reneged on a campaign
promise to link China's status as a
moshfavored· nation trade partner
with its performance on human
righls. As a candidate, it bad been
one of the issues Clinton used to
draw a distinction between himself
and then-President Bush.
"There is no more striking
example of Mr. Bush's indifference
toward democracy than his policy
toward China," Clinton said in ·
1992. Three years later, China's
economy continues to thrive while
human rlgbts -detetlorate under
Clinton's policy of '!'constructive
t9, engagement."
New state security regulations
have been iss11Cd that crack down
on dissidenls. Few prisoners have
been released, while others have
been detained for expressing antigovernment views. China's most
famous dissiden~ political activist
Wei Jingsbeng, remains in deten·
lion after his arrest in April1994.
Congress -,viii re-!'lxami ne
China's trade status next month.
Human righls deserve to be scrutinized as carefully aS trade.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

beller preaching and better music
often round at lhe larger churches.
Others mention the superior physical facilities that allow for bigger
and more varied youth activities
and religious education programs.
On the down side is the sometimes palpable impersonality of the
megacburcb. Worshipers are lost in
the shuffle, made to feel neither
warmed nor welcomed.
,. -cBut the minister of a Baptist
church of 4,000 members disagrees
with those who say there is more
fellowship in a small congregation.
"There are small churches that
are cold and unfriendly and large
churches where you are made to
feel right at borne." he says. "As
long as you meet the needs of your
people, you are not too large.'·
On lhe other hand, the pastor of
a black Pentecostal church of 2,600
members longs for the days of his
ear~y ministry when the.churcbes
he served were much smaller. "I
knew who had arthritis, I knew all
the children's names," be recalls.
"Eveb lhe dogs knew me. It was

Jenkin Jones

Last. year t)ley
is

-

GlwplticoNot

By The A!spclated Press
Northern Ohio will see an
extended period of" fair skies
stretching Lo the middle of next
week, but lhe southern half of tbe
·state will have to wait a couple of
days, forecasters said. A chance of
rain is in lhe forecast for southern
Obio until Sunday.
All or Ohio will have cooler
temperatures, the National Weather
Service said. By Monday, the highs
wiU he in the 50s.
Frost is possible on Monday,
when lows are predicted in the low
to mid-30s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 86. deg(ees in 1987
· wliile the record· low was·22 in
_ 195~ . Sunset tonigbt'will be at 8115

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
· Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto jaclcpot
. bas gone to $28 million and could
go higher before Saturday night's
drawing.
"This will be the second time in
the past two months lhat we have
increased the jackpot artificially,"
said lottery spoke~woman Sandy
Lesko Mounts. "We expect to have
.

-

(For Information on liow "to
eommunlcate electronically with
this. columnist and other~, con·
tact America Qnline by caiUng 1·
800-8l7-6364, ext. 8317.)

..

Meigs announcements

begins sentence

(Continued from Page 1)
Kentucky. Crisp bad heart problems while filling out the forms.
"The judge has indicated to the
·sheriff he should make appropriate
· ~acem-em rtJr Mr. Crisp," Lentes
said. "Tbe sheriff said it was in· his
discretion to take whatever steps
were necessary."
·
. ·' Soulsby is considering ..placing

.Bombing rubble
.(Continued from Page I)
Thursday - a tauoo.and a crew cut
· were about all that distinguished
·· the men from countless other medi. urn-build white men . They were
· believed to have rented ihe truek
· that carried tbe half-ton homemade
bomb, FBI Agent Weldon Kennedy
. said.
· Their identities - and their
·motive - were unknown, Kennedy
said. He speculated they may have
wanted "some revenge on the federal government as an entity or one
of the agencies housed in that
building."
The New York newspaper
Newsday said it had been ·told by a
counterterrorism source that
authorities know the identities of
the two and have linked both of
"them to narcotics investigations,
~omething .hinted at in other
reports.

Hospital news

Racine event

Retirement

I USPS 213-%0)

prise Assoclalion.

Bomb threat closes buildings

;,S uper Lottojackpot hits
:$2B .m il/ion and may rise _

The Daily Sentinel

wonderful."
While acknowledging that the
bigger budget of a big church
enables it to carry on a bigger program, this clergyman says that
closer relationships between pastor
and people make for a more effective ministry.
·
"In an anonymous, faceless
society, it is important," be says.
"that people have at least one person, such as their pastor, who
knows them personally . Now I
don't even have Lime to visit the
shut-ins. My deacons and dea··
conesses do thal"
As for Joel GregOfY, does be
plan ever to go back Into lhe ministry? He is not sure. B.utbeis sure
of one thing. "If I do go back, it
will be in a small church."
George Plagenz is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enter·

Henry Anthony 'Dooner' Salser, 69, Racine, died Thursday, April 20,
1995 in .Holzer Medical Center.
Born Sept. 23, 1925 in Racine, son of Eva Young Salser Shields or
Syracuse, and the late Anthony Salser, be retired in 1983 after 38 years of
service with the Union Mechling Barge "Line as a captain's mate. He was
' a member of the Racine Gun Club and the Pomeroy chapter of .the Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Surviving are his wife, Carolyn Salser of Racine; a son and daughterin-law, Larry E. and Deborah Salser of Chillicothe; two sons, Tony Salser
of Syracuse, and Mark Salser or Racine; a stepson and daughter-in-law,
• P Denny and Linda Evans of Racine; three_grandchildren; three slepgrandchildren and one stepgreat-grandcbild; four brothers, Nial Salser of Syracuse, Roben Salser of Racine, Ray Salser or Coolville, and Charles Salser
of Pomeroy; four sisters, Ilene Hayes of Great Falls, Mont, and Kathleen
Counts, Shirley Tipton and Dorothy Harden, all of Syracuse;
several
pm. and sullf\Se -Saturday at 6:44 nieces and nephews.
a.m.
He \...as preceded in dealh by a half-brolher, William Woods.
Weather forecast:
Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday in the Fisher Funeral Home, MiddleTonlgbt ..Mostly cloudy. Low In port, with the Rev. Deron Newman officiating .. Burial will be in Lbe
the mid 40s to the lower 50s.
Gilmore Cemetery near Racine. Friends may Call at the funeral home on
V
Saturday ... Partly
cloudy Saturday from 6-9 p.m.
nortb ... Cloudy with a chance of
rain south. Highs in the mid 50s to
the lower 60s.
Sunday ... Chance of rain
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Oklahoma City.
south ... Fair north: Lows from the government closed the Anlhony J.
A man who answered the phone
middle 30s northwest to the lower Celebrezze Federal Building and in Difford's office at about 9:30
40s southeast. Highs from the U.S. Courthouse this morning a.m. said only that Difford was in a
lower 50s northwest to around 60 because of a bomb threat. Police meeting and that no furlher inforsoutheast
also banned parking on all streets mation about the situation was
· Extended forecast:
available_ Cleveland police
around the two buildings.
Monday ...Dry. Lows 35 to 40
Orange cones were placed on spokeswoman Detec tive Denise
and highs in the 50s.
the street lanes closest 10 the feder- Reeves said the matter was in the
Tuesday .. . Dry. Lows in the al building, which rises more lhan hands of federal authorities,
upper 30s to middle 40s and highs 30 stories, and a police car was on although police were assisting. She
in tbe middle 50s rto middle 60s.
!be ~@~walk tbere as ~~~ ~it~'!.. didn't know. whether the two buildings .bad beCn'searched for bombs.
morning rush hour began.
All employees in both buildings
Stan Difford, district director of
were
ordered Lo stay borne today.
the Federal Protective Service, said
the action was lilken as a precau- Difford said no decision bad been
tion in light ofWednesday's bomb- made_-iln when lhe buildings will
more increases before-Saturday's ing of a federal office building in reopen.
drawing."
Lesko Mounls said lhe jackpot
increased automatically to $24 mil·
· lion after no one bad a winning VIctim; Rights Week
$3.50.
ticket in Wednesday's $20 million
National Crime Victims Rights
Week, April 23-29, will be Music night announced
drawing.
The lottery tben raised the jack· observed Tuesday on ibe Pomeroy
A country music night will be
pot to $26 million cln Th~y and parking lot with a balloon lifl-off at held at the Lottridge Community
later in the day to $28 nulhon to 2 P \ffi., .Greta L. Rifne, victim's Center. All bands are welcome, 7
encourage ticket sales. .
advocate for the Meigs County p.m. to midnight. F~ to be _sold
Prosecutor's Office, announced by Bethany Rid ge 4-H group
today.
beginnin~ a16 p.m.
The balloons will contain the
names, pictures and information on School funding meeting set
Crisp at Veterans M~rial Hospi- missing children, along with the
A town meeting on school fundtal or in a hotel room w1th a deputy names of deceased crime victims ing will be held Sa turday, S: 30
posted outside, Lentes added.
from Meigs County over the past a.m.-12:30 p.m . at Alexander fligh
No jails in the stale would accept four years. Tbe lift-off will be a School, Albany . Dr. William
Crisp. l!ut Lentes sai~ authorities memorial to those crime victims, Phillis, president of the Coalition ·
will search ror another Jail.
said Riffle.
for Equity an'd Adequacy in School
Despite earlier plans, Lentes
The eve~t is being sponsored by Funding, will address school fundsaid the jail would not ))e emptied the Meigs County Prosecuting . ing inequity.
to accommodate Crisp.
·
. Attorney's Office and the Meigs
Last December, visiting Morgan County Victim's Assistance Pro- Board to ...;_eet
~
County Judge Dan Favreau gram.
A special meeting of the Southrequired Crisp be put ill the Meigs
em Local School District Board of
County Jail and pay his jail costs. Dinner planned
Education will be held Mondny a18
includillg medical expenses.
A turkey and bam dinner will be p.m. at the high school.
On Jan. 10. the appeals court held at the Southern High School
ordered a temporary delay in the cafeteria May 7, with serving from Meigs EMS runs _
beginning of his sentence while 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The dinner is
deliberating on his appeal.
sponsored by Southern _Ju nior
Units of the Meigs C11unly
Crisp bad been sel for an opera- High , adults, $4 .75; children ,
Emergency
Medical Scrv.ice
tion al the end of last 'year, but it
recorded
four
calls for assistance
did not occur because of his condiThursday.
Units
responding includlion.
ed:
VETERANS MEMORIAL
MIDDLEPORT
Thursday admissions - Shirley
4:29 p.m., Meigs Coumy Sher!'runty, Syracuse; Jason Rope, iff's Office, Jack Crisp, Holzer
(Continued from Page I)
Langsville.
.Medical Center;
ieland Jazz Band takes the stage at
Thursday discharges - Charles
5:57 p.m., Lagoon Run , Anna
3 p.m., followed by the Dilly Lee lhle, Racine.
Tilrunens,
Veterans Memorial Hos· Sbow featuring country, western
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
pital.
swing and jazz from 4-6 p.m.
.
Discharges April 20 - James
POMEROY
Tbe kiddie tractor pull will be Dennett, Mrs. Anthony Dowling
3:4
7
p.m
., Meigs County Sheron Lbe basketball court at 1:30 and daughter.
iff's
Office,
Jack Crisp, refused
p.m., and the Meigs County
(Published with permission)
Lreatment
.
Sbotokan Karate Qub will haVe a
RUTLAND
demonstration at 3 ~.m.
1:39
a.m.,
Meigs Mine 2, Tennis
'
uml int .. pity.
Festival-goers can expect clouds
Edmiston,
HMC.
Saturday with a chance of rain.
•
Highs are expected to be in the 60s,
Cuckler Consulting Inc.
according to the National Weather
Service.

Rain expected to persist
in region through Sunday

Crisp~

Pubh ~ hed every aflemoo n. Moll'dny through
F!'iUay. ll J Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by 1he
Ohio Vtalley l~b lishi n g Com pnny/Mllltimedin

Inc, Pomc&gt;my, Ohio 4.'H69. Ph. 992· 2 156

Second c!a~~ pu~wge p&lt;ud nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mtmbfr: 'Ole

As~101ed

Pf"('U, 'o nd the 0hm

Ncw,p.1per A.~socintion .

POS1 MASTER :

S~nd

addrcs5

correctioo~

to

'Tllc Daily Sentinel , Ill Court S1 , Pomeroy.
Oh1o-tH~9

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One Wetk
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One M'-'nth .... ·...... ,.......................... $7 .60

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SINGLE COPY PRICE

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rcnul in "dvnncr; d1rect to Tbe Daily Sentmct
on a 1hree. si"- or 12 monlh basis. Credu will be
earner eMh ~A&gt;«k.
No ~ub~cnpuon by mail permitu:d in ;uea!
where home earner Krvice is ovnilable
MAtLSUBSCRIPTtONS

tmkle MelpCounoy

11 w..k&lt;.. ... .....

Planning
Am Elc Power ............................. .31
Akzo .:.......... :...........................56 1/4
Ashland OU .............................36 3/8
AT&amp;T .....................................491/4
Bank One....... ,....................... .JO 1/8
Bob Evans .............................. .20 3/8
Champion Ind ................•...... .20 3/4
Charming Sbop ........................5 518

W. Tad

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Goodyear T&amp;R ......................37 7/8
K·marl .................................... l5 114
Lands End .............................. 16 114
Limited lnc. ............................lO 518
Multimedia In~..................... .38 J/11
People'• ..................................lll/2
Ohio VaUey ...................................44
One Valley ..... ,....................... .29 114

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1:1Q,i:t0 DAILY

11A1'IMU.S SAT/8Uif

1110 3:10

No injuries were reported but a Pomeroy-area youth was cited
following a three-car accident Wednesday at tbe junction of Nye
Avenue and East Main Street in Pomeroy.
· According to a Pomeroy Police repOrt, 17-year-old Eric W . Paxton was attempting to ligbt a cigarette when be struck the rear of a
stopped car driven by Charles W. Legar.JII, 18, Pomeroy.
Legar's car then struCk the rear of a clr driyen by Ardeth Proffit~
47, Racine. Moderate damage was reported to all three cars.
Paxton was cilell on a charge of failure to maintain assured clear
distance. •
'
·

- Bad-brake-s blame-d in-wFe-e-k
Bad brakes were blamed in a two-car accident 'at tl\e junction of
State Route 7 and Nye Avenue in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon.
Adam Seth Webrung, 22, Pomeroy, was stopped in traffic when
his car was struck in the rear by a car driven by Freddie Perkins, 32,
Troy, according to a Pomeroy Police repon.
The brakes went put on Perkins' car, lea(ling to the accident, a
police spokeswoman reported. No injuries were reponed and both
vehicles sustained moderate damage.
I'erkins was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance
and for cJ?ving an unsafe vehicle.

Hit/skip reported
· Pomerqy Police are iqvestigating a hit/skip accidcmlhat occured
Thursday afternoon in the Pomeroy parki ng lot.
.
A car owned by Glenda Holter, Racine, was parked in the parking lot when an unidentified vehicle struck the rear of the car,
breaking out lailligbls.

.Crash injures three
GALLIPOLIS- Three people.were injured- two seriouslywhen a woman lost conttol or her car lbursday ·on State Route 7
near tbe intersection of SR 218, the Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State
Highway Patrol reponed.
.
Drivers Jane A. Zirkle, 36, New Haven, W.Va., and Micki M.
Shaffer, 18, 1794 Sboestting Ridge Road, were tranSponed to Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia County Emergency Medical Ser1vice. Also transponed was Dustin Zirkle, 13, New Haven, a passen·
ger in Ms. Zirkle'.s car.
·
Ms. Zirkle was transferied LoSt. Mary's Hospital in Huntington,
W.Va., bul additional information on her condition was not available Ibis morning . Shaffer was admiued to HMC's intensive care
unit wilh multiple trauma and was listed in critical cOndition this
morning, a hospital spokeswoman said.
Dustin Zirkle was treated for a chest abrasion and released.
According to the crash report, Shaffer was northbound when she
lost cpntrol of her car, slid sideways and struck t,be front end of
Zirkle's soulhbound car.
jlolh vehicles sustained severe damage.
The accident remained under investigation today.

_'I can't take it anymore,'
Simpson·juror tells judge
lhing wrong.
.
"IL really seems to me if enough
individuals have a perception that
the deputies were exacerbating ...
racial tension, then lhey should be
removed, because the comfort of
the jltry panel as a whole is what
we have to ensure," Raeder said.
Meanwhile, criminalist Andrea
Mazzola LOOk tbe witness stand following nine days or testimony by
her supervisor, Dennis Fung. Mazzola, who returns to court today,
testified about minor paperwork
lapses and inconsistencies in her
statements , ·but no serio us. errors ·
were elicited.
Simpson's lawyers have accused
Mazzola of bungling evidence collection. She told the jury that she
immediately logged every item sbe
handled bul one - a vial containing Simpson's blood, which wasn't
booked until June 14, 1994, lhe day
after il was collected .
Asked by prosecutor H"ank
Goldberg why she waited, Mazwla
said, "Our checklist was loCked in
tile back of the truck and we had to
geL back (to the crime lab) to prepare evidence."
Defense allomeys have seized
upon the handling of ·Simpson's
blood sample as lhe touchstone of
their frame-up defense. lbcy allege
that th e detective who carried the
blood about 20 miles from police
headq uarLers to Simpsq n's -home
did not give it to Fung that evening,
as the prosecution maintains. That
could have given police !he Ol"JlOrmade "an excellent decision" LuniLy 10 scatter Simpson 's blood at
even if the deputies didn' t do any- · his estate and at the murder scene.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - As a
flight auendant, juror No. 453
spent a lot time sleeping in hotels.
Seq~sLration for several months in
lhe O.J. Simpson ttial, she guessed,
would be "no problem."
lL didn't Lorn out that way.
"I can't take it anymore," the
25-year-old black woman told
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito,
defense attorneys and prosecutors
Thursday during a private meeting .
She asked ·LO be released from the
case, according to a transcript.
Tbe woman's plea went unanswered for now. But jury-relatFd
problems shifted the trial's focus
away from the start of testimony by
a rookie criminalist who collected
most of lhe evidence in the case.
Ito removed · three of . the
deputies guarding the jury, apparently in response to complaints by
a dismissed juror that some while
members of !he panel got preferential Lreatmenl. The judge's decision
angered Sheriff Sherman Block ,
who said the judge didn't even
interview lhe deputies involved .
"I just lhink il is wholly inappropriate to take lhe action that he
did relative Lo th ese deputies,"
Block said, adding th at the slow
pai::e of the trial was to blame for
juror discontent .
"I have every confidence Lbal
lhe deputies performed their duties
professionally and consistent wiib
lhcir responsibility," he said.
Law professor Myrna Raeder of
Southwestern University said Ito

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

.

Royol Dutcb .......................... UI Ill
Shoney'Jin&lt;...........:............... 11 518
Star Bank ......................................4J
Wendy lnt'l........,................... 17 1/4
Wortblnaton Ind ....................19 1/l

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•

quotes provided by Adult

Gallipolis.

.

'

.

Spring Service Specials good thru April 28, 1995

Roc:kwell ................................43 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myen ........................ .ll

R~i~~=~:::::~~=·~ "S\$4,'~-~+·-1J._,••-·• repor~;~the 10:30

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1101

'

Youth cited in accident

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1050 carter Road, ShaOt, OH 45ni
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City Holding ............ ~..................... .l6

SUOSCRIPT tON RATES

One Year.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

--Area Deaths--- Local News in Brief:

MICH.

McNamara book doesn't absolve Clinton
President Clinton bas declared somebody else (who. unlike Bill
himself "vindicated" Jiy the just- Clinton, was unable to avoid being
published memoirs or former drafted) was sent to Vietnam in his
Defense Secretary Roben McNa- place. And although we can never
mara. In them,.McNamara - wbo be sure what. happened to that
was a famous ..hawk" on Vietnam
in the Kennedy and Johnson
William A. Rusher
adminisLrations - asserls, after the
passage of 30 years, lhat the government's Vietnam policy was unlucky young man, since we don't
"wrong, terribly wrong."
know who be was, It Is entirely
Mr. Clinton, who was a Rhodes possible that be resls today in some
Scholar at Oxford in the late 1960s,_ American military cemetery, or
organized demonstrations against (worse) that his body bas rotted
the war in front of the American anonymously into the soil of.some
embassy in London. He has now Vietnamese field, as a direct ·resull
JClljlCilon Mr~ MeNiilllara'&amp; belated~of-BIII-elinttm'rsucces~ful effort
LUmabout as proof.that.lle was.rigbt-to-uv~,bis-Own-precious-hide1or.
to do so.
better things.
But Mr. Clinton misses the
"Vindication" my eye!
point. The case against him, as far
As for Mr . McNamara, my
as his record on Vietnam is con- guess is that he thought be was in
cemed, is not that be opposed the for buckets · of praise from the
war. Mlllions or Americans did "doves" for declaring, tb(ee
that. The point is that he contrived decades after the event, that they
to avoid being drafted for military were right. If so, it was just one
service in Viemaln by promising to more miscalculation in a life that '
enter the ROTC program at the - increasingly seems to resemble a
·
University of Arkansas (a promise long line of Edsels.
that wo~ !lim a deferment), and .--o--On-McNamara:s own testimony,
tllen broke that promise wben ,draft be appears to have come, very
calls fell.
. early in the game, to the private
As a result of his deferment, conclusion lhat the war, at least as

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wellthcr

GOP slashers save ,their own free Iunci) . .·

Geo ..ne R. Plagenz

-.

Friday, April 21,1995

"'

H.o w religion fares in the megachurch.

(

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•

The.Daily ·S~~!!!~l

·sports

..,·

PIIJII 4

On the spring training scene,

"'

.

•Fri'd,y, Aprll21, 1996
••

.. In the NBA,

•

IVIeigs County trio
to appear at Rio's

game vs. ODU
Three former Meigs County
high school star atbletes will be
playing Ibis Saturday in a doubleheader at tbe University of Rio
Grande when tbe Red!Den host
Ohio Dominican Saturday at I p.m.
Southern graduate Andy Baer is
having an outstanding season for
the Ohio Dominican Panthers,
while fonner Meigs Marauder stars
Jason Wright and Mike Vance are
also having good seaspns for the
University of Rio Grande.

gling Ibis spring.
"I remain pessimistic, but bopc· be's done."
''The Pirates gave me every ful,' • .management negotiator
Brogna bit three borne runs for ·
opportunity to prove myself these Robert Kbeel said.
·
the New York Mets In a 10.8 win
lasr years and 1 didn't produce," · Feeling a little beller were Eddy over,Los Angeles in Vero Beach,
said Wakefield, 28.
Martinez and Rico Brogna.
Fla. All three shots came off Olan
Also, tbe Texas Rangers
Martinez, a 17-year-old shon- Ho Park. who allowed seven runs
announced that l!'·anal!er Johnny stop_from the Dominican Republi~. arid nine bits in 3 2-3 innings.
Oates bas been g1ven a IWo-week ran ibrougli aswps1gn fiom BalliR.oger Qemens made" news~ 100,
leave of absence to be with his more third-base coach Steve Boros when tbe Red Sox said tbeir ace
wife. who is hospitalized witb and slid home bead-first for an will stay .in Aorida ,for extended
exhaustion. Third-base coach 1ef1Y. inside-the-park grand slam in the spring training. He'll probably
Narron will run the Rangers. unt1l Orioles' 15-5 win ovet Boston at rejoin the team for Boston's seeood
Oates returns.
.
Fort Myers, Aa.
bomestand, which begins May 9.
"lt's two· weeks- ma&gt;:be less.
"I saw the sign, but kept going. ·Clemens bas been bothered by tenmaybe more- and we're JUSt try- 1 wanted a home run,'' be said dinitis in his right shoulder.
ing to win as many games as we through an interpreter - third
"If it's some time before that,
can," Narron said. "We want to baseman Leo Gomez.
. !bat would be a bonus," manager
make sure when Johnny comes
Martinez, 2-for-.6 Ibis spring, is Kevin Kennedy said.
back we're not buried in . a big beaded to the minor leagues. With
The Cleveland Indians lost
bole."
Cal Ripken around, the Orioles pitcher Willie Smith for the s~n
With opening day set for Tues- · aren't exactly in need of a shortstop with a ruptured ligament in h1s
day, baseball officially unveiled its right now.
·
.
rigbt.elbow. He wiD ba~e a tendon
new slogan: • 'Welcome to the
"The lcid's going to be an out- transplanted from a WfiSt mto !be
Show."
standing player with a little experi· opposite elbow.
.
"We wanted people to refocus ence," Orioles maoagerPbil Regan
The Oakland Athletics added
on what they liked about baseball said. "It's amazing that a 17-year- free agen~~~~~B~ri~a:n~~a
and on what makes ~bis game old kid can come in and do what
Wor
unique and different from other
kinds of sports," said Jeff Goodby.
co-creative director for the agency
that developed the ad carnpliign.
Tbe New York Yankees boeame
the latest team to make a goodwill
10K Gold
gesture to fans. offering 4,500 free ·
bleacher tickets to every game dur3 Synthetic Birthstones
ing the first week in May.
Pendant
Whetber the locked-out maJor
league. umpires will be welcomed
00
back in tilile for the start of the seaOnly
son was "fincertain. The umps and
owners made no progress Thurs ;

The Meigs County Sheriffs
Department's D.A.R.E. Program
will·bold a four mlm scramble golf
tournament with a blind draw on
Saturday, April 22 at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
.
The fee for tbe tournament IS
·$35 which includes a cart, prizes
and' refreshments. No alcohol will
be allowed.
To sign-up a1 the golf course. or
for more informauon, call Me1gs
County Sheriff James Soulsby or
Deputy Wood at the Sherifr s
Department at 992~3371 Mondaythru Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

season
.
·
Iiiii practice to Glenn Wilsoil, Tom
Among tbc players ·Jert at tbe Fllmeoteybc~d ~Doudgbi'?&amp;scellfO. lbcbefii'St
free-agent camp in Homeste~d.
tters S1llCC
lllre
Fla., Frank Viola tbrew for 12 mm· a ligam~nt In his left elbow last
utes without pain. He pitched !&gt;at· May 3 Wltb Boston.

•ac:e .

'

-IN.GELS CARPET
.

.

IN·StOCK
VINYL
·Save Up to

Commercial·
Carpel

5'!Y4

$

50%

KITCHEN
PRINTS

OUTDOOR
TURF

RUBBER BACK

4 Colors
In St9ck

lOK Gold
3 Synthetic Birthstones
Diamond Accented

GRAVEl¥ TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Sl.

Pomeroy, OH.
STARTING AP.RIL 3
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
Open Mon.-Fri. 9:D0-7:00
Saturday 9:00·3:00

m1

\.

All On Salell
.

Expert lnstallation - 90 Days Same As Cash
with approved credit. ·

Family Ring
Only

.

r

$99

news

'

'

Spring Carpet a~Jd Vinyl Sale

Family Birthsto~e Jewelry .

Meigs DARE golf
tourney Saturday

beat Mavs to get .60th victory

By Tile A.IOI'..W ..._
No lllllllcr bow many Oame 7a
tbc San ADIDDio Spun play In tbc
·NBA pllyotfs, tbey will all be at
tbc AJamodorne.
Tbe Spurs clinched tbe beat
RIOXIlln lbc 1eque Thursday Diabl

Reardon retires; BoSox.to start se~son Without Cl~~en~ .·
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
While baseball was talking
about welcoming back fans, the
game was saying goodbye to some
familiar faces.
_Jeff Reardon, invited to spring
trrumng at age 391ly tbe MQntreal
Expos, retired Thursday after a 16·year career.
·
. "I felt I wasn't helping the team
:and 1 decided it was better if I
-retired now, instead or later," said
:Reardon, second on tbe career
·saves list with 367.
The Pittsburgh Pirates, meanwhile. released one-time wun·
derkind Tim Wakefield.
Wakefield nearly pitched the
Pirates into the 1992 World Series
with his knuckleball. But be never
recaptured that success, going 5-15
in me minors last season and strug·

.

~ Spurs
·

$9900

-

Basketball

':I.Y. -

~-.'....c.

A--

NBA standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

n
S6

Iua

...••

"..
~

L

ra. .Ill

y.Orloado ......... o....
:14
X-New Yort..........53 :1'7

.700

MlanL................. 31
NewJeney ............11

.311

a-o .................. 3S

..."•••
....
..•.

.66!

!

4S .431

21

S1 .350
l'llllldelphla ..........13 57 .181

21
33

WlllbiDfDD ........... 20

36

4!1

•&lt;~~~c:aao

............. 46

x-CLBVI!LAND ... 42
.•·AliutL ...,........... 41
M l i -..,.......... 33
permit ...........
ll

••.

'"•"
·••

H ......

•

ISO

.1!0

~TERN

l4

1

.m

s

.52l
39 .513
47 .413
S2 .]SO
Jl

9

to

II

.510
.411

13.5
21

.263

39

.450

24

Pacific DIYWM
23 .713

1t•Pbot.DIJ. ..............S7

•·Seoltle ................. 57 13 .713
•·I.A. twn ........41 3! .593
X·I'Drtllllld ..............41 Jl .l2S

••
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•

s.::ramento ............ n

d

.•
•v
••••
•

4l .47:5

9.l
· IS

19

Ooldn Slolo .......... 26 54 .315

31

L.A. Clippera ......... l6 64
lt~llacbed pi•Y'Oif ba1h
y.-d~dlod a~nrCRoce title
~liDchcd divUioa title

41

.200

SID Antonio Ill. Dallll 111
l'llrllaDd Ill, I.A. lWn 97
s-ic&gt; llt.-aiOI
Sa&lt;nmento 112. Ooideo Stole 98

,.
;,

- , -lleinJif II AtlUII.'1:30 p.m.'
-'
Milwaukee. It CLBVELAND, 7:30

Tonight'• games
Wllhillgton 11. New Jeracy, 7:30p.m.

Millli 11. Phlladelpbla, 7:30p.m.

p.m.

IDdlaaa ll Orlando, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clipper• at Sarl Aatoalo, 8:30

'
MiaaiCIIOta at Ullll. 9 p.m.
DaliM 11 Pboea(l, 10 p.m.

T... ato ............. 19 16
Chlcoco ............ t9 II
Dollu................ t5 t9
w;..,l.,.1 .......... t3 11

tn

94

52 lSI 113

7 4S 116 ll2 ,
4 42 131 104 ·
8 Jl 117 tOIJ
7 n i31 t57

, • • o......

t41

t20

' ..1 130
~ 101
33 liS
33 127
Anailelm ........... l4l3 4 31 104

130

a.(;alaa'y .......... 111S 6
Va.nCINYeJ ........ l516ll
Saolooe ............ ~~~ 3
Edroontoo ......... I5 23 3
LosADaelea ...... l321 7

SO

t4l

Leap: Upth Ulbtoolllld Eltebao Yu,

t42

s:...cliachod playoff batlJ

pit.chcn, to WCfl. Palm Beach or the Aorida St.te LeaJU:c; and Jo~e Pana.pa and
Evactt Stull, pltthera, to tbc Elpoa or the

Thursday'• ..,.,....

Gulr Coast Leag,ue.
NEW YORK METS: Ap-t.ed to tern.
with Eric GuiKienon, Jaoa Jacome. Blu
Minor aad Dave Mllcld, pitcher~: Alberto
Caatillo and Kelly Stial'lell, catchetJ; and
Butch HUikeJ, iafielder, on o~year contrKll:. OpUoned Cutillo; Omar Gart:ia,
flnt b~~emaD: and HUitey to Norfolk of
the laternatioul Leaaue . Sent Hector
Ramirez., pitd!er, to extendod aprina train·
iDe.
.
PIITSBURGII PIRATES:.Iteleued
Tim Wakefield, pitcher. Placed Steve
Cooke and Paul White, pitchers, on. the
ts-day ditablod lilt. Optioned Aaaelo En·
carnacion, cakher, aocf .KeviD Youna, f~nt
buemaa-outllelder, to Cllaary of tbe Pacific Co•t Lcasue.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Aareed to
tern with Brian William1, pitcher, aod
Melvin Nieve1 and Vince Moore, outfielders, on one-year contract&amp;. Sent

N.Y. !Wiaen 3,"-t!,.d 2
BO&amp;IOD 6, onawa s
Pbilwielphia2,N.Y.IIlandm l
r....,, Bay 5, Qu&lt;boc 2
Florida 1~ New Seney 0
Calaary 2, Vuoouva 2 (tie)

Toalght's games
A.D.IIhelm 11 Dcuoil. 7:30 p.m.
Hartford at Wuhlaattm, 8 p.m.
WiDDipeJ at Qlcqo, 8:30p.m.
ToroDIO It SL LoW.,I:30 p.m.
EdmoDIOall Lal A.neeJea, I0:30p.m.

PbiliKielphia It BufCalo, 3 p.m
N.Y. &amp;anacra atBoaton,3 p.m.
Chicajo II St laUil, 3 p.m.
· _ ~~it It SaD Jote 1 ~ ttm.
A.rilltlelm 11 LO""I""Anaelea, 6 p. m.~
l'tttlburJh at Hartford, 7 p.m.
Wln.nipea al Dallu,:l p.m.

Seatt.le at Sam.mento, 10:30 p.m. -

••••

Saturd~y•saames

Olartotto.
2:30p.m.
Dtnva- a OoldeD Sbte, 6 p.m.
Portland at L.A. Labra, 10:30 p.m.

•

-••

Sunday's •
regutar......on nnalos
Orla.ndo It New York, 1 p.m.

Transactions

~

GRISUELMr
SY Tl

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BasebaU
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Oplloned
Mart Smith, outfielder, to Rochelter of

the loteroatlooal Leaaue aad William
Pcrciba1, pltc:ber, to Hlah Delert lbe

or

California Leaaue. Reuarned Ruuell

~ltatMiaml,6p.m.
..
Dallal 01 I.A. Cllppen, 6 p.m.
Ulah at Houlton, 7 p.m.
Saenunento II ~nver, 9 p.m.
Ooldea. State 11 PQrtlarr.d, 10 p.m.

Hockey
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NHL Standmgs
,

. EASTERN CONFERENCE

. Allanlk rnvillon
Ium
L I &amp; 1i£
I -Philadelphia .. JS 13r 4 $4 136
Newleney ....... 2016 7 47119
N.Y. Ranaen •... 19 20 · 3 ·*~ 117
Wuhiagton ...... 17 17 7 41 104

n

liA
tlS
106
113
101

Donovan . 05~
borne, Tom Urbani and Allen Wat~&gt;on,
pitchers, and John Mabry, outfielder, on
one-year contracts. Optioned Bailey ,
Minchey, Mabry, and Darrel Deak, infielders; and Terry Bradshaw. outfielder,
to Louisville or the American Associ&amp;·
tion.

•

,''
•

•••

••
•

Broct, pitcher, to the Oakland Athletics.
CALIFORNIA. ANO£LS : Atv,.d to
terml wilh Ruu Sprlnaer. Andrew Lor·
raiD~, Phil Leftwieh, Brian .;.ndeuon,
Mike Butch« aad Troy Pttclnl, pitchers;
nd Jorae Pabresu, Chria Turoer and

MRrlc: Daleandro, auchert, on one-year
contracta. Optioaed Mark Holzemer and
· Erik Bennett, pltcben, to Vaocouver of
tile Pacillc Cout Leap.
KANSAS arY ROYALS: Aareed tD
tetm.l with Bob Hamel ill, ftrat buemaadala_olted hittor, oa a ooe-ycar contr.ct.
OAKLAND ATIILEI1CS: Atlfeed to
term&amp; wilh Brian Harper, catch«, Oil ami·
nor-league co&amp;tnct ud invited him to
aprina ttainloa ua non-l'&lt;*er player. A•
siped Ruq.ell Broct. pitcher; lO F..dmontoo or the P.cllic Co lit Leaaue
TEXAS RANGERS: Granted Johooy
Oates, mnaaer, • leave or ab1eace.
Named Jerry Narron interim manager .
Placed H~tor Fajardo, pitcher, on therestricted lilt. Sent Clvl&amp; Nlchtioa. pitcher.
outri&amp;hllo Oklahoma C;ty of the American-&amp;RQ'~Q·BLUElA.VS: A.g,rccdto
terma with Pat Heata:en. pitcher, .on a
throe-year contract.

•

Certified used car buyers wiH be on hand to give highest trade-in
val111 lor your autamoblle. Please bring your title, regi~ratlon
card, and pt¥118nl bcdc If applicable.
fll SAlB PBIMIT1ED TU IIEALBIS. Tills cllaance is for retail cus-

'

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTQRY OF OVER -BOO BRAIID NEW
CIEVIIIUTS, II JISMIIII FS, PONilACS, BIDS, GEOS AND CUSlOM
VANS. All will be sold at aubslanllal discOIIIIS!
Plus $5110 to $2000 cash back or 3.6"/o.APR financing available (up
to 36 months) on selected models on appmed credit. Tenns avail·
able up to 84 monlhsl

WEST VIIGINIA'S WI COIIVERSIIIII VAN DEAlSIIIAS AIIINVEIITIIIIY
OF OVBl300 BRAND IIEW CIEVROl£T COIIVEIISIOII VANS.
Selection includes Astra All Whlle1 Orlves and G-21J's, bolll avail·
able with raised IIIGfs or low tops. Prices range from $17,388 to
$36,988.
'

•;

•

•

tomers only. Prices apply Ia.avaiiabie Ll!lils only. No onlering per-

•

mitted at u.. prlt:e1.

'

.••
•'

.

••

S25,688

$11,688

No Doc Fees. De!MreO"

No Doc Fees. OIWJOCI'
. I

. BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
. 8-$ERIES PICKUP

1

• Dover S•de Alrbag
• Rear Anli-Loek B&lt;akes
• Powe&lt; Steenng
·
Power Brakes
•

• Cystom Cloth Interior

· Ste&lt;!i Belled lires
"Sale Pr&lt;t lGMAC Fk&gt;t lime
&amp;;yer 1ncen1vo 11 ~nod .

.

IIRAIID NEW '95 BUICK
. PARK AVENUE
•·Power Door Locks
• AMIFM Sleroo
• S~led Wheels
• St~ Belled lires

· •16 Valve Power
• Onver Side Allbag
• 4Wlleel Ant1·Lock Brakes
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes

: WertEqu~'

• PIS, PIB
• Extended Chas&amp;s
• 01iver Side Air Bag • Power Windows
• Anti·Locl&lt; Brakes . .• Poweo Locks
• Tilt. Cruise
• A~r Con~lion
• Automatkl Overdnve • AMIFM Cassette
WindoWs • Captain Cllors

• Sola/Bed
• Indirect lighlmg
• Premium Wood PI&lt;g.
• Full Conve&lt;sk&gt;n
• Alum1num Running Bds.
• Loaded!

• Ai Condilkm
• Dual Aiillag
• Anti·Lock Brakes
• Automatic
• AMIFM CasSette

. •OtOJ Ai Comi&lt;JI011p • Aluminum Wheels
Cimale Coolto
• Power Antenna
• Power Driver &amp;
Passenger Seal

• Keyoss Remote
Ent~ Sy~em

• Loa!M

•

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422·0156

•ra.e1. raos: 1111 F"' •••ra

..

'

Monday • Sa(urday: 9 am •·g pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pni ' r

•'
••

Kroger's
A·OK' Builders
Cheshire Exxon
Overbrook Center
Clark's Jewelry
Anderaon's
Geary's Body Shop
Valley Lumber
Ingels FurnHure
Ingels Cerpet
Cit go
Wayne's Place
Tri.COunty Ford
Don Tale MotoJS
The Blue Tartan
Meigs County Chiropractors
GAJ Auto
The Daily Sentinel
Suger Run Mill
KB¥'&amp; Beauty Salon

CHOICE
CHEVROLET
TAHOE

PIITSBUROH STEELERS: Signed

Damon Mays, wide receiver.

Hockey
BOSTON BRUINS : Recalled Cam
Stewart, left wina:, from Providence of the.
AIIL·

GMC
YUKON

BUFFALO SABRES : Recalled Mark
Astley, defenseman, and Steve Shields,
aoaJtender, from Rochester or the AHL.
MONfR.EAL CANADIENS : Sianed
Saku Koivu, center, to a Uuee-year contract and Marko Klpruiofr, derenseman ,
to a two-ye~t contract,
OTTAWA SENATORS : Rec&amp;lled
Pavol Demitr:a, riaht win&amp;:. from Prince
Edward Island of the AHL.
· ·PITTSBURGH PENGUINS: Sent
Ruaty Fitzyerald, left win,11, lo Ch:vcland
o(thentL.

Rutland Tire
Bob Byer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jack Hawley
ABC Cuts
Furniture on lhe "T'
Dr. Spencer
Quality Print Shop
Mick's Barber Shop
Shear Illusions
Carson Crow, Allorney-AI·Law
Banks Construction
McClure's Restaurants
Filness Center
Acquisitions
Holzer Clinic
Service Star
Foreman &amp; Abbott
Locker 219/Shoe Place
Pizza Hut
Middleport Flower
Francis Florist
The Added Touch

Dr. Kennedy
Dr. Schmoll
Meigs Carpet
John R. Lentes, Attorney-At-Law
Dollar General
Xi Gamma Mu Sorority
Cline Welding Supplies

1995
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

1994 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD
AS LOW AS

sa 995
.. I

1994 CHEVROLET
CORSI CAS
AS LOW AS

4.9 APR

199 5 CHEV'ROLE
1 TON STAKE BODY TRUCK

9,499

YOUR CHOICE

1994 OLDS CIERA
OR

1994 BUICK ,CENTURY

SJ 0,999

JJ!'= 1995
GEO TRACKER
CONVERTIBLE

•5

1.4,559

Air, cassette, power steering.

•
CUISe.

9,199

~

.

1995 CHEV•
·LUMINA

5

171488

Auto., AMIFM cassette, bedllner
• and more.

1994,GMC Safari Van......S16,99S ·

5

#3180

~17,695

13161

~· 1995
GEO METRO
.

1995 ~TON
CHEVROLEl4X4

All wheel drive, auto., air, cassette ,lilt &amp;

FINANCING

21,499

1

#3.203 .

ASI.OWAS

5

Power windows, locks,
cassette, auto:, keyless entry.
2 TO CHOOSE FROM!

1991 Pontiac Firebird.........S8,495
1992 Cadillac Braugham •..S19,995

1991 Jeep Wrangler ........... 58,995 One owner, only 43,000 mdes
1994 1SPassenger Van ... 518,995 1994 Caprice _
Classic•••••••••514,995
1993 Pontiac Bonneville ••• 517,999 1994 Buick Regal:......·....... 514,995

SSE, only 25,000 miles.

1.990 Olds Calais ................
1990 Buick Century ••,.•••••••• 56,999
55,695

1994 S·Series Pickup..........59,499
1992 Ford Ranger ~ickup •••• 58,299

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not· included.
All payments subject to credit approval

• All' pnces tndude

DON JATE MOTORS,.Inc.

included .

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

Rtt~»t•lncltded ~,. pnce o1 naw veNc~e tstoo Whefe ~· On awroweo Cfd, Not rnpontible tor typtJgfapt*:.ll ..-nn. "

•.

ALL NEW
FOR J995

Nlilflonalllockey IAaBut

-McDonald's of Pomeroy
•Rutland FurniturE!
•Clark Bingo Supplies
•TNT Parts
•Bank One
•Forrest Run Block
-o.o. Mcintyre Park District

•
•

YOUR

Football

Listed below are the Grand Prize contributors (•) along with others who
made sizable contributions:
·

NADA
Dr. Sam Griffith
Peoples Bank
Corner Restaurant
Pomeroy Office Service Supply
Country Side Ceramics
Family Dollar ·
Dairy Queen
Fnrth's
Trolley Station
Dan's
Middleport Trophies
Ride-Aid
Farmera Bank
Riverside Marathon
The fabric Shop
Middleport Dept Store .
'Porter, Utile &amp; Sheets, Allys.-AI·Law
Adolph's
Ashland Bulk Plant
Mill Street Books
Betsy Parsons
Mayor &amp; Mrs. Horton
Downing &amp; Childs Agency
Davis Quickel Agency .
Steven L. Story, Anomey·AI·Law
SA of Middleport/Pomeroy
. Dollie Turner Really
Mr: &amp; Mrs. PaurGerard

1-992·6614 - 1·800·137-1 094

.IN STOCK

Nallonal FootbAll Le-aue
PHILADELPIDA EAGLES : Sig:Dcd
Joe Sinu, offenalve tackle, to a two-year
conllact, aDd Jeff Sydn.er, wide receiver,
and Derrick Wlthei"Jpoon. running back,
to one-yetll' conr.racts.

•

Middleport PTO
Lions Club
KFC
Subway
Domino's
Vaughan's Cardinal
Western Auto
Tom's General Tire
Johnson's Variety
Foodland

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY

CHARLOTIE HORNETS : Activated
Tony Bennett , guard, Crom the injW"ed Iii~.
Placed Michael Adami, guard, oo'the Injured list,
SACRAMENTO ICINGS : Pio:ed Bobby llurtey, JUard, on rhe injured lilt.

The Middleport Fire Dept. would like to thank all the businesses;
orgariization~J and individuals who made it possible in making this year's
community Easter Egg Hunt a huge succe.ss.

•Pam ida
•Mason V.F.W.
•Ellis BP
•Middleport American Legion
•Bruce Fisher , "
•Midwest Steel
•Middleport Recreation Comm.

.SElL-ff-BRATRJRI

Basketball

~

••

SPRinG

~. J'rfiiWOit.,_NatA...Minche.y,

;.

.••

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

the California Lengue. Renewed the contract of Tim Hyen, ftnt baseman.
. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Agreed to
term• with Vicente Paiacloa, Rene
Arocha, Cory Bailey, Brian Barber, John

,· ~~·;r;:;B;•;..:....:.I;7;~::3:3;7;1;oo;:a:':::::::::=::::;:;:;:;::;;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::;

••

-

National Bukdball Auodatlon

· AmtrkM IAqu1

Aliil!lelpbia • WMhini\Qn. 1 p.m.
Olic:qo .. Mllw- 2:30p.m.
CLEVBLAND at Charlotte, 3:30p.m.
. Adauta at ladiiJII. 3:30p.m.
San Antonio at MlnD£aOta, 1:30 p.m.
Seattle at Atoeall, 3:30p.m.
Bo5too at New Jeney, 6 p.m.

~

Dallas coacb Dick Mona
thought tb6:e wasn't a fot!l on the
play, but all his arguing got bim
was an tbc extra half-second on tbe
clock.-It wasn't eDOUgh.
"Wben a team executes and you
play bard, yoil get a calllilce that,"
Hill said. "I don't know if be was •
fouled or not, but these things all
average ouL"
David Robinson bad 36 points
and 13 rebounds for the Spurs.
t while Elliott finished with 17
- pojnts.
Jason Kidd bad bis fourtb triple·
double in a lO.game span· for Dal·
. las. wbicb finished the season with
19 bane victories, an improvement
of12 over last year.
·
.
"I doo'tlhink (the loss) leaves a
bitter taste," said Kidd, wbo bad
10 points, 13 assists and 12
rebounds. "I tbink it's exciting. It
makes the fans want to come back
for more.'.'
Dallas took its last lead (111110) with 1.6 seconds left on a putback by George McCloud. Following a timeout, Elliott took the
inbounds pass from .Doc Rivers
about five feet from tbe basket. As
be went up, Jamal Mashburn
slapped the ball away, but his forearm grazed Elliott's bead.
Avery Johnson, wbo bad six
points down tbe stretch, finished
witb 22 points and 11 assists for
the Spurs.
,
Roy Tarpley scored. 25 points
for the Mavericks.
In other games, it was New .
York 91, Charlotte 86; Chicago
I
BELOW-THE-BOARD PASS- Chicago frontman Scottie Pippen
120, Detroit 10~; Portland Ill, the
Los Angeles Lakers 97; Seattle Oeft) tries to pass the ball under the backboard while Detroit frontIll, Houston 101; and Sacramento liner Mark West defends on the play during Thursday night's NBA
game in Cbicugo, '!"here the Bulls won 12fi-10S. {AP)
(See NBA on Page 6)

Moore OUlri&amp;ht to Rancho Cucamonga or

I

•

,.

4 62

Sunday's games

NowYorii01BoltoD.7:~p.m.

p.m.

a

x.SLLoull ....... l4il 4

()uawaat.N.Y.laludcra, 7:30p.m.
- Rll.ladelphia at New Jeney,7:30 p.m.
Qu- .. Florida. 7:30p.m.
Toronto atDIIIM,I:30 p.m.
Edmollloall Vllicouvet,l0:30 p.m.

••.
••
••
•••
·

JOD, pitcbm, to Hlrrilbw1 oC tbe Eastern

nLI&amp;Ii£ Ia

Saturday'• games

New Yort 91, C..lotto 86
Olic:qo 120,D&lt;IIok IOl

..

1.53

157

B....,

C-allliYiolooo

WllllliDJIDD &amp; Plttsbllrall. 7:30p.m.
T&amp;fJ1)• Bay .. Montreal,7:30 p.m.

nursd.ay'• KOliS

::

dE ·

lbc road.

'-"""Kurt

WEsTERN CONFERENCE

23

CONFERENCE

x·lioUltoa ..............47 34
DenYw ................... 39 41
Dallu. .................... l6 44
Mione&amp;Oia ..............li 59

---

1.-Ddroit ... _...... 29

r.u.
n L rn. .Ill
y.SIJI Alltoalo .......ISO 20 .750
•.u.......................n 22 .ns
2

•

PHONE 992·7028
TOLL FREE SOD-407·2634
Shop Mon:, Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-5; Thurs. 9-12; Sat. 9-2

011

CINCINNAn REDS: Pt...d Mike
)ICboD, plteM, OD the 15-dly dllabled
lill
. FLORIDA MAJWNS: Pt..ed Olrll
Hammold u4 Mm. w.&amp;el, pltdaen, oa
tbe IS~Eed Ult, retrDKtln to
Aorlll6.
Slu
Mill«. olt
.. a..lotl&amp; or tho .....
Ulloul L.-pa, aa4 Vic Dlre11bo11r1
""-~~ pltdwl. t o ortboe.tn LeotJue.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Aareed 10
lmDI whb. Ta1'0 Alvwez., ltdd Comellua,
JoeY Eiacbea, Bryan Ever•aerd, Stott
Geatilo. Rodaey He-.oa.
!leary,
Gil Hc:redia, Joae Paniaaua. C.IOI Pmz,
Kit1: lluet«, C1i1t Sdunldt, E - Stull,
Uaueth Urbina, B.J, Walla"'· &amp;teban
·y .. , p i - Tim LWr ood Tim SJ"'il',
calchen~ llrael Alcautan, Shane Andrew•,
Ch1d
Foullle,
Mark
Onrclzlelanek, lllfielden: and Yamll Ben'
itez, Cuttl.• Ptidc, Darond Stovall, Tony
Tw~~eo, Rondell Wblte, outfielder~, on
oDe-year coDlriCtl. AuouDCed tbe retir&amp;meat or Jerr Reardon, pitcher . Sent
Guillermo Veluquez, fint bueO'IIIa, to
Ottawa of thelntoraltional Loque. Optioned Scott Gentile and Rodney Hender-

x-Qwlbec .......... 2111 4 60 112 123
x-Pitl&amp;boqb ...... 2712 2 56161 i34
· - .............. 1116 3 Q t16 lOtS
Hadford:........... tll9 s 41 114 119
Bull'llo .............. 1111 6 40 t07 i04
Molinol ........... 17 20 s 39 113 133
oaawa ............. 4 n 5 13 a9 !53

Iua

MW.wut DI.W.ioa

...
~

175 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

the lea~ue. Now the real season
begins.'
The playoffs eao start on such
an up note because SCUI Elliou
made two tree throws with 0.5 secoods to play to bea lbc Mavericks

_...._.

..........,. 16 20 5 :n 95 till
... 13 :10 5 31 107 Ill

2S

CeolniDIYW..
z.ladiua............... .51 29 .631
•·OioriOU. ............. 49 31 .613

;

·Each Birthstone is custom set to represent a
member of the family. Place your order today.

wltb a 112-111 victory over tbe
Dllllas Maveric:ka. They JR a fniD..
cbise-bcst 60-20 witb two games
remaining.
"If was a special way to win our
60th." Spun coach Bob Hill said.
"It guarantees us tbc belt record In

Scoreboard

...•
...•

The Dally Sentinel-Page 6

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

•

rebates to dealer..
Taxes &amp; fees not

�•

'
Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Friday, April 21,1995 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ

~~~~~~----------------------~--~~~----------------------~~---:

·i

In the NHL,

J

Friday, Aprll21,t995
.

' The Dally Sentinel P.a 7

..

----- -·

-

·r .

Flyers beat lsl~nders to close in on Atlantic Division ·crown · ' ~
ings against Pblladelpbla Ibis season. took a 1-0 ~
at 15:46 of tbe first period oo Kirk Muller's sborthaii(Jed goal. Llndros, the NHL sooring Ieadet, then
tied tbe game with a power·play goal 59 secoods into
the second period.
.
well.
Before tbe latest playoff drought, the flyers bad
"It's a good day to be a Philadelphia Flyer."
advanced to tbe playoffs every season starling In
coach Terry Murray said following a 2- t' victory
1973.
.
Thursday nigbt over tbe New York Islanders. "The
Islanders goaltender Tommy Salo faced 27 shots
players have done a tremendous job. right from the
iD tbe opening two periods alonc and 38 total.
first day."
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was florida 1. New JerTbe flyers have been more noticeable recently,
sey
0; New Ym:k Rangen 3, Hartford 2; Tam~ Bay
winniDg eigbt sttaight to advance to the playoffs for
5,
Quebec
2; Boston 6, Ottawa 5; and Calgary 2,
tbe fii'St time since 1989. The Atlantic-lending flyers
Vancouveri.
~ · can clinch their first division championship since
Panlhen 1, Devils 0 - Jesse Belanger's third1987 with a victory on Sawrday over the New Jersey
period power-play goal lifted Florida over New Jer·
Devils, 1-0 losers to florida
sey, tbe Panthers' fmt victory over the Devils.
"It's done," flyers captain Eric Lindros said.
- Panthers backup goaltender Malk Fitzpatrick had
"(Makiug the playoffs) was our goal at tbe start of
17 saves to record his second shutout of the season. It
tbe season, but it's !teen refocused. We've got to
was Filzpalrick's· first victory since he beat the
keep improving."
Ottawa Senators 4·1 on Feb. 25.
·
Mikael Renberg scored wilb 8:29 Iert in the third
· Ra111en 3, Whalers :Z - Sergei Zu bov scored
period to lift the flyers over the visiting Islanders.
the tying goal and assisted on Petr Nedved's gameNew Yorlt.· wbicb had won its two previous meetBy D:N RA.PPOPOJtT
AP Boeby Writer
lbe Pbiladelpbla flyers an: oo their way to tbe
Staoley Cup playoffs, and maybe a division lille as

~

winner as New York came from behind 10 beat visitgame-winner 811 visiting Boaton ICOOld.four times in
ing Hartford.
lhC lhird pcripd 10 overcome 1 f&lt;U-goal deficiL
The win put tbe Rangers, Whalen and Wasbin&amp;·
The SenaiOJS, attemplingiO end a five-game lostoo Capitals iD 1 three-way tie for sixlb place in tbe
iDg Slleak, took a 4.() fead apiult fOIIIICI' tc:ammate
Eastern Conference witb 41 points apiece. The
Craig.BillingtoointbeBoetoonct
Rangers would aet shttb place with more viclories
Butlhe NHL's wDrStlelllll was un;lble to put away
(19). The Capitals have a game iD band on tbe otber
tbe Bruins, wbn came back with a tremendous tbirdtwo clubs.
period rally capped by Bowque's game-wiuner. The
The Raogers saed tbe f&amp;IIIC·wiuncr at 10:59 of DruiDs scOred twice iD 59 seconds during a power
tbc third, 811 Steve Larmer s pass ff()m the corner
play 10 keep Ottawa (4-32-5) winless iD 16 straigbt
illililCs. Boiirque scored tbe winncr at 15:25 on a slapdeflected off Nedved's skate past goaltender· Sean
Burlce. Alexander Karpovtscv bad tbe nlher Rangers
sbnt from tbc blueline.
goal, while Paul Ranbelm and Andrew Cassels
Flames :Z, Canucks :Z -At Vancouver, Trevor
sCOred for the Whalers.
- - -Linden saJreil goiils 21 ·seconds apart iii Uie seeond
. Lightning s, Nordlque• :Z - Rookie Jason
period 10 give the Canucks a lie with Calgary.
Wiemer scored bis fii'St NHL goal and set up aoolher
The Flames took a 2-0 lead iD the fust on goals by
aS Tampa Bay stayed in tbe E&amp;lltem Conference play·
Robert Reicbel at 5:20 and Sandy McCarthy at 9:39.
off race with a victory over Quebec.
.
But Linden quickly went to worlt in tbe second, scorPeter FOJSberg scored bnlh Quebec goals, adding
ing 11 seconds into the period and then again at the
to his lead among rookie scoring leaders (14 goals.
32-second marl&lt;: 10 give him 15 goals for the season.
46 points). Five of tbe game •s seven goals were
Calgary goaltender Trevor Kidd made 28 saves
scored by rookies.
·
and Vancouver's Kirk McLean 26 as the Canucks
Bruins 6, Senators 5 - Ray Bourque had the
outshot the Flames 30-28.

.

DeBartolo and his wife, Candy.

Mason Bowling
League results
(Results as of April 12)
League -Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standiDgs - Meigs Golf
\_Course (75-45), Captain D's (6733), Tony's Carryout (66-54),
Thunder Alley Cats (60-60), Court
Street Grill (58'62), Chainsaws &amp;
Roses (52-68), J&amp;L Insulation (52. 68) and Banks Construction (4476).
Team blgh series -Tony's
Carryout (1983)
Team ~igh game - Meigs
Golf Course (695)
Men
Individual high series - Chct
Wigal Jr. (569) and Bill Slack
(554) .
.
Individual high game -Wigal
(213) and Bub Stivers (203)
·
Women
Individual high series - Pat
Carson (533) and Shirley Siounons
(532)
.
.
.
Individual high game - Sunmons (190). and Betty McKinley
(185)

•Vegetable
•Dinner Roll

,_1

Mlddloport Cblll'&lt;b el CJ.riat
Sth and Main
Putor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
~.~, --sunday &amp;&gt;!tool-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sci'Yices ·1 p.m.

• •
~

;

•
•

Hope llopdol Chr&lt;h (Sotalbenl)
510 Grant St., Middleport ·
Pastor: Rev. David Bryan

TRADE-INS!

Saturday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m. .

~

FROM DON WOOD:

When he realized bis mistake
and cut back across two lanes,
another vehicle bit his Cadillac
from behind, the CHP said.
Besides a broken collar bone,
DeBartolo suffered a bruise4 sternum and ·bruised ribs. Candy
DeBartolo complained of back
pains, but was not hospita~zed. and
the occupants of the other vehicle
did not appear injured, but were
taken to a hospital for examination,
the CHP said.
DeBartolo was at Stanford Medical Center under the care of team
· doctors Michael Dillingham and
James Klint.
Tbe CHP said no citations are
likely in the accident. CHP troopers
generally will not issue a ticket in a
collision unless the trooper saw thoaccident or has strong physical evidence, officer John Silv~ria said.

NOW OPEN
SPRING SEASON
•Pansy •Viola
•Broccoli •Cabbage
•Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

•

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE

Hours: Mon.·Frl. 9-5 .
Sal. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3% miles past Southern High
School, Sl. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio
614-949·2682

3/4 ton H_eavy

Flnl Soutbem Boptl•t
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Duty Chassis:

1992 CHEVROLET SILVERADO

86 Buick Century
86 Chrysler Laser Red, turbo, 5 speed, air.................... 53995
90 lsuzu Pickup 4 cyl., 5 speed, AM/FM ......................... '4995
89 Plymouth Acclaim, 4 door, air .................................. '5995
88 Chrysler 5th Avenue va,leather seats, low mi. ... '5995
88 Ford Ranger Super Cab, 4x2. very clean ..................'5995
89 Ford Aerostar Excellent conversion, V6, auto., air.... 56495
84 Dodge% Ton Pickup Extra clean, local trade ....... '7995
· 92 GeoStorm Red, 5 speed, air, cassette, local trade ..... 17995

.90 Chevy Lumina APV Mini Van, very nice ................. 18995
91 Olds Ciera VG, 4 dr., auto., cruise, tiH, cassette .......... 18995
92 Buick Skylark V6, 4 dr., automatic, air, cas~ette ..... :59995
90 Fo.rd Bronco II XtT, V-6, air .................................. 510,495
92 Chevy Cavalier Z-24 Red, veryclean ................ 110,495
91 Ford Aerostar XLT E)(l.lenglh, V6,1ocal owner..'11 ,995
92 Buick Park Avenue White, tully loaded .............. 112,995
93-Piymou~h Voyager 7 passenger van'.................. '12,995
93 Chevy Astro Ext. van, 7 pass .. V6, auto. air ......... '12,995
95 Ford Aerostar Extended XLT. almost new ............ 515,995
95 Ford Windstar Hottest mini van on the marl&lt;et.. ... 116,995

Brodbuey Cburcb o.l Cl&gt;risl
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Flnl Bopllsl Cburcb
6tli and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m ., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper 1st Sunday of every month .
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Racloe tint Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School ·9:30a.m. ·
Worship· 10:40 a.m ., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Mt. unton Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoof-9:45 a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser"olices. 6:30p.m.
Betblebem Baptist
Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berrline
· Worship-9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Victory Baptbt Jndrpendant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: Janies E. Keesee
WoM;hip- tOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m,
FaJtb Blptist Cburtb
Railroad St., Mas.on
Sunday School- 10 it.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~:ts • 7 p.m.

V8 Engine,
Alum. Wheels,
AM/FM Cassette
player

Fortsl Run Baptist

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a. m.
Worship- It a.m.

1988 MONTE CARLO SUPER SPORT
T-Tops, Pwr
windows &amp; Locks.
This was the last
year this car was
made.

Mt Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor~ ·Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
. . Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7:.30 p:m.
Rutland Froe Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor :.Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

.1 988 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
4 dr. nice

lot:al car
priced to sell,

Catholic
S.tred Hean Calbollt Clturch
161 Mulberry Avo., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sac. Con. 4:45-5: J5p.m.; Mass-5 :30p.m.
Sun . Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
DaileY Mass· 8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
Pomr:roy Church of Cbri.n
212 W. Main St.
Pastor: Andrtw M1les

1980 CUTLASS SUPREME
owned car in
excellent condition,
Low Miles.

'

CHEVROLET • GEO

Rutland Cbur&lt;b ol Cbriil
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
S.unday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Chun:b ol Christ
Comer of St . Rt. 124 k Bnodbury Rd.
Evangelist: Derek Stump
Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.
Hickory IIIIIs Cburcb of Cbrist
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins "
·Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m. .
Uberty Christian Cbun:h

Dexter
Pastor; Woody Call
Sunday E..ning- 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service-6:30p.m.
Laagsvllle Christian Cburcb
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
llemlock Gron Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school-10:30 a.m.
~orship ·9:30 a.m.• 1

P.m.

Reedsville Cburcb ol Christ
Pastor: Philip Slurm
Sunday Schoolr 9:30a .m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m. · ·
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:b ol Christ In
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va .
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worsh ip· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Morloh Chur&lt;h ol God
Racine
Pastur: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Gr~gory L. Sears
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Syracust First Churth of God

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship-.10 il.m.
Evening Services· 7:30 p.m.•
Wednesday Services· 7~30 p.m .
Church or God of Proph~cy
O.J. White ~d . off St, Rt. 160
Pastor:'PJ. Chapman
Sunday School · to a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
New Ute Church or God
S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road , Chestef
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 6 p.m. '

Trinity Cbun:b

Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy
Pastor: Re.v. Roland Wildman
: Sunday school and worship 10:25,

•

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

OLDSMOBILE
608 EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO

DON WOOD
· "Where Betier Really Mat!ers"
East State Street
Athens, Ohio

593 6641
.

•

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

CIASSIFIEDS
A

1616 Eastern Ave.
•

. Gallipolis

(614) 446-3672

'

Bri~ht

Idea!

Worship. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedncldly Service•- 7 p.m.

•

CongregatiOnal

.

Retdt&gt;Uie F-aldp
Clt..Uo(lloeN...,...
PUior: John W. Dou&amp;Jas
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicu • 7 p.m.

Retdt•Uie
Putor: Rev. OlarleJ Muh
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Scltool - 10:30 a.m.
.UMYF Sunday 6,30 p.m.

G..- Eplacopol Clltlrdt
326 E. Main St., PoQleroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPJantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schpol10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour foUowing

Holiness
Doa&gt;Uie H - Chrcb
31057 State Rouie 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m .
Children's ehurch • 10:3S a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer sen icc· 7 p.m.

Tuppers Pt.lu St. Poll
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.Worsh_!e,: 10 a.m. ·
-..,.ueSCiay services - 7:30p.m.

a.m.

Eote'l'rlae
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

•

Flatwoods 1
Pastor: Keith Rade~
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
· Worship· 11 a.m.

Rose ol Slaoroo Holloess Cbun:b
Luding Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev . Dewey King
·Sunday seltool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Forest Run

P•slor: Deron Newman
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Thursday,Services -6:30p.m.

rtne Gron Bible Holiness Church
l/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9,30 a.m .
Worship- t0:30 a.m., DO p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

H•alb (Middleport)
Pastor: Vem~gaye Sullivan
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
WoT$hip • 10:30 a.m.

Wesltyaa Bible Holiness Cbunb
75 Pearl St., Middleport .
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Miatrsville
Pastor : Deron Newman
Sundity Schoo) - 9 a,m,
Worship · 10 a.m.
Pearl Obapol
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Hysell Run HOliness Church
Pastor: Robert Manley
Sunday Sehool.- 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:45 a.m., 7 p.m .
Thursday Service -7:30p.m..

Pomeroy
Pastor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday . 10 a.m.

Loorel Clill Fne Melbodlsl Cbun:b
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
· Wednesday Ser"olice · 7:00p.m.

Rot:k Spriogs
Pastor:Keith Rader
Sunday School- 9,15 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.
Youth Fello_wship, Sunday . 6 p.m.

Rutland ComntaoUy Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Sunday Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rutknd
Pastor: Arlhur Crabtree

992·2804
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7!ll5

172 Nortll Second Ave .
Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

RfOl'Janlud Cb1t~b
. or Liller Day
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor : Janice Danner
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ~rvices- 7:30p.m.

Saowvlllt

Cbrlsl of Latter-Day Salois
St. Rt.160, 446·6247or446-7486
Sunday School 10:2Q..JJ a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :05-12 :00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemak!ng m~eting. 1st Thurs .• 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -.9 a.m.

Our Salllour Lutheran Cburcb
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: George C. Wei'nck
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship· II a.m .

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship -9:30a .m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7,30 p.m. (3rd k 4th Sun)
Wednesdit)' Service· 7:30p.m. ·
Old Dener Bible Cbrisllan Cburc:h
Sunday School : 10 a.m.
Morning Worship: I I a.m.
Evening Worship : 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

MI. Olhe United Mechodisl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday ~hoot ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Meigs Cooperative Parish

Northeast Cluster
Alfred

I

Pastor : Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:JO p.m.
Chts1er
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
~wrday School· 10 a.m.
Thursdily Services - 7 p.m.
Joppa
• Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
.. Long 'Bouom
·Pastor : Rev . Charles Mash

Bethany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - l 0 a.m.
Worship- 9 a:m.
Wednesday Services -JOa.m.
Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School"' 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

St. Jobn Lutheran Cltun:b
Pine: Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

St. Paul Lulhtran Cburth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Daw1 Spalding
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
. Worship · II a.m .

• 7 p.m .

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Tbe Chun:h of Jesus •

Moi-ntngStar
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9~45 a.m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7:30p.m.

East Le1an
Pastor: Ken Molter
Sunday School- JO a.m .
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Ken Molter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. and 7 p.m .
Coolville Unit~ Methodist Parisb
Pastor : Helen Kline
Coolville CbUrth
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh ip. 9 a m,
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday SeN.ices- 10 a.m
lloc:klngport Chun:h
Grand Slrect
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ J 1 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd . 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Racine First Cburcb of tbe N•ureoe
'
Pastor: Soon Rose
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JO a.m., 6 p.m
Wcdnesda~ Serv1ces : 7 p.m.
Middleport Chun:h oftht Nazarene

Pastor: Grcgory ~A . Cundiff
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

South Reibel Ntw Testameal
Silver Ridge
~~~~ Pastor : DUane SydCnsuic:ker
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of lhe Naureat
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Corletoo loterdeaomlulloul C~urc~
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Kingsbury Rood
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Pastor: Jef( Smilh
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
Cbester Claurch of tbe NaurtM
Worsh ip Servict-lst and 3rd Sunday. 7 p.m.
Putor: Rev. Herbert Grate
No Wednesday Evening Serv1ce
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Fnedom Golpol Mlillo•
I Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Rudaad Cburcb of lhe Na:unae
Sunday SChool ·9:30a.m.
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Worshlp-10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Sunday School·, 9:30a.m.
Wedne!Kiay Service .. 7 p.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p,m.
While'o Cbapel Wateyoo
Coolviii~ Road
Portlud Flnt Cb~n:h of tbi Nuareat
Pastor
:
Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Pastor: John W. Douglas
Sunday School · 9:30 acm.
Sunday Schooi-JO,oo a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m.
Wofship - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

New Haven Cbun:h of the Naumae
Pastor: Glendon Slroud
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Other Churches
llobsOa Cbrisllu Fellowship Cburtb
Rev. Woody Call, Speaker
Sunday service, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Churth

Long Bottom
Pastor; Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:JO a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p:ni.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.in.

Folrvlew Bible Cbur&lt;b
l...etan, W.Va.. Rl. 1
Pastor: Rank.in Roach
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship.: 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m:
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.
Follb Fello'!lhlp Cruude lor Christ
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.
· Cotney Bible Cbun:•
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sthool · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Endtime Hous_e of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Rob(rt Vance
Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service ·6:30 p.m.

Cburcb or Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Fallb
l/4 mile past Fori Meigs on New LimA Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m .
Wednesday-7:00p.m.

Friday-7:00p.m.
Cliftoo TabernHie Cbun:b

Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Church

Pentecostal

575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
E\\ening- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.·

Ptotecoslal Assembly

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor; William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Faith Tabtroacle Church

Bail ey Run Road
Pastor: Rev . Emmeu Rawson
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m .
Evening 7 p.m . ·
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Mkldlepol1 PratMOStal
'Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Syratuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Pastor; Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m. .
Wedncsda~ Service - 7 p.m.
Off Rt. 124
.
Pastor! Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 ~ 30 p.m.
DytSville Community C hurc:h
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Christian Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· II : 15 a.m;, 7 p.-,.,.,.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse Fint Uaittd Presbylert.a
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Harrisonville Prtsbyttrian Cburth

Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunda)' School - 9:4S a.m.
Middltpol1 Prtsbyteriaa
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sneotb-DI)' A!.lvenlisl

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Porneroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
•
Saturday Servicc:s:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m .
Worship · 3 p.m.

Mom Chapel Church
Larry Faw , Suptrinttndcnt
Sunday sthool- 10 a.m·
Worship - 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.
Faith C.o·s pel Cburc:h
~ng Bottom
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olin Community Church
Past or Lawrence Bush
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
· Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 1 p.m.
tlnittd Foltb Chur&lt;~

Rt 1 on Pomeroy By-Pas...
Pastor : Rev. Roben E.. Smith, Sr
Sunday School .· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - HUO a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7 p.m.

.

Rejolclog Ule Cbun:b
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
School • 10 a.m.

The Salvation Army
115 But~rn u t Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m .
WoM;hip - 10:00 a.m .• 7:30p.m.

Jlazel Commuuity Cburth

f

Pastor : David Dailey
Surnlay S,:hool9'30 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.

· New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
.
Theron
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 71•-m.
Wednesday ~ 7 p.m.

F

Sllvenvlllt Word of Faith

ne Btlleven' Fellowship Minisii'J

.P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

United Brethren
Mt. Utrmoo Unital Bretllirtn
in Cbrisl Cbun:h
·
Texas Communily off CR 82
Pastor: R~rt Sanders
Sunday S&lt;:hool . 9:30 a m.
WorshiP, · 10.30 a.m . 7:30p.m.
Wednc:sday Strv1ces. 7:30p.m.

Eden Uaittd Brtlbru in Christ
2 112 miles nonh qf Reedsv1lle
on State ROU te 124
Pastor: Rev Robe rt Marklt' y
Sunday 'Schoo!. 10 a.m
Worsh1p - 7.30 p m
Wednesda y Scrv1ces - 7:JO f'J .m.

:

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus. Oh.
B04 W. Main

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

992-2318 Pomeroy

POMEROY, OHIO - 992-666n

Homelile

Saws

BILL QUICKEL

X

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

We Fill Doctors'

992·2975

Prescnptions

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-51.41

N•... Set-at C~urc~ '
Sunday Worship. 2:30p.m.;
Thursday services · 7:30p.m.

SuUon

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

RAWLINGS· COATS

Fill Gaopel u p 33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday Scbool--10a.m. ·
Ever~ina 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday k Thur&gt;day ·7:30p.m.

SJnrtuse Cban:b of die Nuare8t
Paotor: Rev. Rick Sturgill
S!!ll&lt;loy .5&lt;bo&lt;&gt;l - 9;30 a m
. Worship. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Ceatnl Clusttr
Asbury (Syncuse)
Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship-11
Wednesday Service&amp; . 7:30p.m.

Cal&gt;lll']' Pllplm Cbopol
Harrison..,ille Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 P·R'!·

Middleport. Ohio

Walker Alley, Aacine, Ohio
TRY OUR HOMEMADE .PIES
Open Mon.•s&amp;t. 6:30 11111 to 10:00 pm

Eptscopal

.Church announc.ements n~~
C\\\;ff ;)trul (&amp;.,r.l
sponsored by these area
93 Mill Street
45760
(614)
992·6657
·
(998-ooks)
merchants.
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

4 d(., Locally

$59~

You1h Meeting - 5:30 p.m.
Evening Service · 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study • 7 p.m.

•

Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Senlicu - 7:30p.m.

~saay-servlces .~p.m. _,..........._

Hillside Baptist Cbun:h
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pa!itor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School -1 0 a.m.
Worship- lln .m., 6 p.m.
1
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

towing truck

4 door, auto., local trade .................... 52995

Tuppers Plato Cbu&lt;b ol Cbrlsl
Pastor : Stanley Mincks
Sunday School .. 9 a.m.
Worship- 9 :4S a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Old Bethel Frte Will Bopllsl Churth
.
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening-. 7:30p.m .
Thursday Services • 7:30

1993 Dodge 0250 4x4

An excellent

said.

Zion Cbun:b of Cbrtst
Pom&lt;roy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Rullo•d Flni Bopll•t Cbun:b
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
WorshiP· t0:4S a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt llopllsl
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St .
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m . . . :.

- 1-994·CHEYBOILLIE~
. T~~:iiiiilJ~tr~~J:~~~~:~.i~p.m~.

were on their way to their jet at San
Francisco International Airport on
Wednesday when Del3artolo mistakenly started to exit Highway
101, the California Highway Patrol

Beorwollow Rid&amp;• Cbun:b or Cbrlal
. Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
worship~ 10:30 a.m ., 6:30p.m .
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

FrH WID Jloptlll Cbur&lt;h
Ash Street, Middleport

THIS WEEK'S

The Best Used Cars
Are Found Where
The Best New Cars
Are SOLD!
~=d

K - Cbur&lt;b o!CIIrlsl
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 o.m. .
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Island 3rd Sunday

l;unday school " 9:45a.m.
Worship- II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

I•

W-C~..UofCIII'III

33226 Children'allome lld.
Sunday School • l L a.m.
Worshtp. 10..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.

1

NBA action .•.

CHICKEN &amp; NOODLES
•Mashqd Potatoes &amp; Gravy

Ap ostoltc

.,
•

All five defenders are sw-ters, '
iftbat's wbere we end up. Whoever gals' No. I picks Ibis decade bave · Williams in 1992, when Cincinnati Daddy" Wilkinson last year, wben
we choose at that pick would be a been on defense: linebackers James had two ·flrsi-round picks; defen- the Bengals bad lbe fmt pick over- allhougb Francis and Williams are
· unsigned for Ibis season.
•
good player for us and would help Francis and Alfred Williams in sive end Jobn Copeland iii 1993; all.
1990
and
1991;
safety
Darryl
and
defensive
tackle
Dan
"Big
us,
. .
"We are exploring otber
options, talking to teams about
_(.;..C_on_tin_ued_fr_om_P_:ag:...e....:5)_ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-::moving in either direction. Those
things, obviously, are very sensi- 112, Golden State 98.
lead Cbarloue.
ers in Portland since Nov. 27, some broken ring fmger on bis left .
live, and I won't want to get into
Knicks 91, Hornets 86
BuDs 120, Pistons lOS
1992. Despite the loss, the Lakers band, scored 25 points to lead Se:'tthat. But it is something lbat is a
The Knicks' road victory
Michael Jordan bad 17 points, wrapped up the conference's No. 5 tle lo tbe four-game season senes
sweep.
possibility."
clinched the second-best record in eight rebounds and· seven assists in playoff spot because Houston lost.
Hakeem Olajuwon topped the.
Cedric Ceballos bad seven
Sbula, although refusing to offer the Eastern Conference for them 27 minutes, but be still missed
the names of players who are bigb and gave Indiana the Central Divi· more shots (1 0) than he made three-pointers and 36 points for the visiting Rockets, whp led by 12
· iwice in the first half, witb 26
on the Bengals' list, was willing to sion title. The Hornets, who were (eight) for the. seventh time in Lakers.
points, while Clyde Drexler and
SuperSonics 111, Rockets 101
let speculation focus on Michigan cbasin~ the Pacers. will be the seven bome games at the new"Unit·
Gary Payton, playing in his Vernon Maxwell bad 17 each.
running back Tyrone Wheatley and fourth seed in the E&amp;llt and play the ed Center since coming out of
fourth slraigbt game with a botherPiu tackle Ruben Brown.
Chicago Bulls in the ftrst round.
retirement.
He called Brown "one of the
New York didn't have starters
Scottie Pippen led the Bulls
top tackles in the draft, no ques- Patrick Ewing. who straiDed his left with 20 points and nine assists, and
lion," and said that Wheatley's hamstring, and Derek Harper, who rookie Dickey Simpkins bad a
record "speaks for itself - over has a sore right ankle, for much of career-high 16 points.
100 ~ards 20 times.'; ·
the game, but still managed to rally
Tary Mills sco
Grant Hill bad 20 points and 15
' Our needs, I think we have from a 76-64 deficit with 8:57 to
made plain," Shula said. "We'd play. The Knicks took the lead for
rebounds for the Pistons. Trail
tlke to see a tackle, we'd like 10 see good on Charles Oakley's three"' Blazers 111, Lakers 97
a r~nning ba~k. But, tben again, point play with 20 seconds left.
P~tland locked up the ~evenlh
we, re not rultng out pass _rusher,
Ewing finishe4 with four points spot m the? West as Rod. Strickland
we re not rulm~ out quarterback ... in 19 minutes, while Harper played had 19 pomts and 12 assiSts and the .
lh'lt~s-probably.it. -·
· · 1 1minutes ana dtd not score-. -- Blazc:ts
l"We would like to take an
John Starks led New York with for the sixth slraigbt time.
Just traded to US.
offensive player. We have devoted 18 points, while Alonzo Mourning
. Los Angeles, lo~rs of six of its
most of our attention in recent had 22 points and 10 rebounds to last seven, hasn't beaten the BlazAM/FM Cassette
years in the top rounds to defensive
playerli."
and Tonneau
Except for quarterback David
Klingler in 1992, all of the BenCover

DeBartolo in stable condition
after breaking clavicle in crash

said.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worsbip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser"olicea • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Les Hayman

.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~ San
Francisco 49ers owner Edward
DeBartolo Jr. is expected to be
released from the hospital as soon·
as he's ready to make a flight !lack
to Ohio.
'
DeBartolo was listed in stable
condition Thursday night after
breaking his collar bone in an colli· .
sion on bis way to the airpon.
DeBartolo, who came to San
Francisco for Joe Montana's
farewell rally Tuesday, sbould be
able to return to, Ohio today, team
president Carmen Policy said.
·
"EverybOdy's concern is that be
is comfortable enough for that long
trip back to You~gstown/' Policy

,
;
•
'

•

Bengals
. to pick fifth in NFL draft despite· back~to-back 3-13 years
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) -Drafting
fifth bas put the CiDcinnati Bengals
in a sort of no-man's land.
Witb no chance at Penn State
running back Ki-Jana Carter or
Southern Cal tackle Tony Boselli,
tbe Bengals are thinking about
trading picks. But coach Dave
Sbu Ia doesn't know w hetber
CinciDnali wiD trade up or down.
"It's been pretty well said
lhrougboutlhe league that there are
two players - Carter and Boselli
-who ·stand above ,t be res.t."
Shula said Thursday. ·
"But there are a lot of good
players, and there are no guaran(l:es
that those two guys wiD turn out to
be as good as everybody thinks
they're going to be."
Tbe irony Ibis year is tbat tbe
Bengals, who -drafted ftrst in 1994
because of a 3· 13 fmisb the previous year, draft only fifth Ibis year
after fmishing with the same record
last season. ·
Now the Bengats,' ll-37 under
· ---.!llmla,bavHo-yield-lbe-top-picks to
the two new teams -· Carolina and
Jacksonville- and to Houston and
Washington.
"There's still a lot of discussion
going on as to what we'll do,"
Sbula said. "First of all, you bave
to be prepared to use the fifth pick,

'

992·2955

Pomeroy

Crew's Family
Restaurant
"Featuring K~ntucky Fri~d Chiclctrr"

228 W. Main St., Pom,roy

992·5432
EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service A /ways"
Established 19P

214

992-5130

00
--'57

E. Main
Pomeroy.

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

992·2121

,

•

�•

•

Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

friday, An1rll

•

Friday, Aprll21,1995

The Daily Sentinel Page I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Health fair identifies factors in heart disease
seling. and did 'body weight for
By CHAIU.ENE HOEFLICH
height evaluali0111.
Selldnel News Staff
There were demonstrations of
Heart disease - the risks
lifestyle imposes and changes the Heimlich Maneuver, a heart
which can be made to alter lbe out· risk 1ame. and computerized esticome - was the emphasb of the mates of life expectancy taking illto
health fair staged by the Nursing consldcration, aae. 11re11. •mokillg.
Assistant Class Tbunday for stu- alcohol use, heritage, and medical
history.
.
·
dents at Meigs Higb School.
The displays included a samIt was lbe sixth annual "TeeDS 111
Risk for Heart·Disease" health fair pling of heart-healthy foods prewhich is sponsored with funding · pared by lbe students i_ncluding low
from the Carl Perkins Vocational fat. whole grain, sugar and sodium .
free food snacts.
Education GranL
-- About a hundred·studelits·turned -.- The t6.seniors from Meigs,
our 10 take advantage of the health Eastern and Southern Higb Schools
all participated in lbe health fair.
. screening and educational exhibits.
EAT SMART FOR YOUR JIEART- Lowfat foods, whole
Veterans Memorial Hospital's
As explained by MarJie Blake,
grains, fresh vegetables, and suaar and sodhnn free products were
laboratory personnel, Julia Qualls R.N. who heads up the program,
prepared for students who par11clpate In the sixth annual "I'eens
and Tammy Halley, ~vided blood the nursing assistant program quail·.
at RISk for Heart Disease" bealtil.,lair held Thursday at Meigs
cholesterol screenmg; Candace ties the students to become state
H\gh School. U:ere fro~ the len, Mike Barney, Eddena RusseU,
Pope, R.N.,was there from Holzer tested nurse aides. Sbe said that the
Tara Erwill, and Kevin Logan serve students, Robbie Baker, front, 1 Medical Center to do blood sugar between SO and 75 percent of the
and Corey Seymour, who took advantage of the free screening and
screening, and Debbie Babbitt senior studeniS enrolled in the prolnfontllltlonal
.
R.N., and Beckie Ball of the Meigs gram go on to college to earn
County Health Department did degrees of licensee! practical niD'Se
hemoglobin checks for those or registered nurse.
attending.
The VOC!Itionai program at
Nursing studeniS did blood pres- Meigs consists of two periods of
sure screenings, gave anti-smoking related instruction during the morn- .
demonstrations, nutritional coun- ing and four periods of simulated '
•
laboratory experience in lbe after·

aoon.
During· the second semester,
students participate in on-the-job
!!OOpttlltive employment at a local
beallb care or bospilal facility during tbe aftemooo or evening hours.
Students who complete the pro·
gram are certified in CPR and Ftrst
Aid, and also complete a 7S-hour

nurse aide training program
required by law 10 work in a lona·
tam care facility.
AJ explllncd by Mn. Blalre, the
prolram provides the acquisition of
basic skills needed for employment
.. nursing assistajlts as well as a
sood foundation for future study in
the medical field

"

Health department to offer lead screenings

The first week in May will be 1993, 37 percent of Meigs County is in their environment."
National Lead Awareness Week · children were found to be at risk
"Cleaning pacifiers, toys, pets
and in recognition the Meigs Coun- from lead poisoning, sbe said. In and olber objeciS wilb which chilty Health Department is offering 1994, the
bad • dren
into contact and which
Screenings
held April
2S, May 2 and 9 at the Meigs
County Health Department. In
addition, a screening will be held
Wednesday, Apri126 at Dave Diles
Park in Middleport from 2 to 4
p.m . .
Norma Torres, R.N., nursing
director at the Meigs County
Health Department said that in
1992 the Ohio Department of
Health said 38,84 percent of all
Meigs 'County children are at risk
for lead poisoning. •
After a random screening in

screened having
lead levels.
Those with medical cards or
inswance are asked to take them to
the screening, but no one will be .
turned away due to the inability to
pay, she stressed.
Torres suggested· activities
which parents can initiate at home
to decrease a child's exposure to
lead.
.
.
"Young children have a natural
thumb-sucking pattern and also put
objects into their moulbs," she said.
"This exposes them to lead which

decreases the danger," she said.
Houses built before 1950 are
suspect for containing lead-based
paint since the addition of lead 10
paint was not regulated until 1979,
sbe said. Peeling and flaking paint,
sanding, stripping furniture and
scraping paint increase the' risk of.
lead exposure in the home.
Children ages six months
through five years should have a
simple finger-stick blood test done
every year, Torres said. Early
detection results in less damage to
the child's developing neurological
system, she added.
·

BULLETIN BOARD
NOW
AVAILABLE

Show Mom your warm and

Council ol the VIllage ol Commloslonero or by
Pomeroy, all membera certified check, cashiers
Thaf the Clork(Treaaurer
ol the VIllage ol Pomeroy,
trenater the aum ot
$40,000.00 (Forty·Thouaand
dollera) !rom the General
Fund to tho Street Fund lor

the operation of current
expenaea. Thla resolution
deemed emergency for

O'paratlon

ol

current

expenses.
Poa 0 od April

·

17, 1995
· Kathy Hyaell,
Clerk/Trellurtr
John Musser, President
(4) 21, 28; 2TC

Public Notice
'
-:--P-U_B_U_;C_NO_;
. .:.n:.;.C.:.E:.__
NOTICE ·Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, April
public aale will be hold at
211 Wool Sacond, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to 1111 lor Cllh the
lollowliogcolllltral:
1884 Chevy Chovotte
11G1ABOBC3EY183891
Tho Formore Bank and
Savtn·ga
COmpany,
Pomeroy, Ohio ro1orvee the
right to bid 11 thlo oale, e.nd
to withdraw the above

noon on May 4, 1995, from

insurance

requirements, various equal
opportunity provisions, and
the requirement lor a
payment bond .and
performance bond lor tOO%
olthe contract price.
No bidder may withdraw
hla bid within thirty (30)
days alter the actual date ol
·tho opening th·ereol. Meigs
County Commlaslooars
any,,. all bids.
(~) 21, 28; (5) 5; 3TC
•
.,.---------'
Public Notice
RESOLUTION NO. 3.9~
A
RESOLUTION
AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR
OF . THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY, OHIO TO APPLY
TO THE STATE OF OHIO
FOR PARTIG:IPATION IN
THE SMALL CITIES CDBG
WATER AND SANITARY
SEWER COMPETITIVE
PROGRAM.
WHEREAS, tho State of
Ohio, Dept. ol Development

legally licensed Insurance

provides
.financial
assistance
to
local .
governments for the

to provide to the ·V!Uage 01
Syracuse lor the term of (1)
year, commencing May 21,
1995,commerclal property,
commercial general liability,

purpose of addressing local
and WHEREAS, the
VII
lage of Pomeroy desires
to participate In the
Program to receive tlnanclal

compan lea, or their agents,

needs;

commercial auto coverage assiat.ance under the Small
and commercial inland Cities C.DBG Water and
marine insurance. Bida are ~anltary Sewer Competitive
to be In a sealed envelope · Program·, and
marked ·"Ins urance Bid"

.·

NOW
THIS SPACE
.$16.00

$8.00

•

992·2156

THIS SPACE
$12.00

10% of the bid amount In
favor of the alorHald Meigs
County Commlsolonera. Bid
Bonde
shall
be
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or
agent signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid lor Scipio
Township VFD and mailed
or delivered to: Meigs
County Commlasloneni 200
East 2nd Street Court
House Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention ol bidders Ia
called to all of the .
requirements contained In
this bid packet, particularly
to the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions and
Davis-Bacon
Wages,

22nd,1895, at 10:00 a.m., a various

INVITATIC~JN TO BID
The Village at Syracuse
will accept bids until 12

THI~ $PACE

check, or letter of credit
upon a solvent bank In the
amount of not leas than

thereto concurring:

Public Notice

CALL

J

FOR MORE INFORMATION
•

Call By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition

J&amp;L INSUlATION
539 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT Btl!-2772
Offlee Hou,.: A!on ..f'rl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl .:
· Replacement,
· Wlndowa, Blown
ln.sulation, Stonn
Doora; Stonn .
Windows; Garages.
Free Estimates
111tltfn

'

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;
"Take the pain out
of painting • Let us
do it for you•
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Me~sage; After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180
.

- -·

: 33151 Happy Hollow Road.
· Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760
•
•New Homes
•Addltlons.•Sidlng
•Roollng •Painting
•Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns
Free Etillmstes

:
I

'

Beata
l.laaoulae for
Weddings, ProiD8
~ad Speelal
Oeeulons
(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

and submitted or mailed to
·
Janice Zwilling, Clerk·
Treasurer,
V.ll.lage of

Syracuse, Mumc1pal Bldg.,
Syracuse, Ohio 46n9. The

VIllage of Syracuse
reserves the right to reject '
any or all bids. .
Janoce Zwilling,
Clerk-Treasurer
VIllage of Syracuse
(4) 14,-C!l, 28 3TC
· Public Notice '
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Seated proposals lor the
conatructlon of a lire
alation bay In Scipio
Township will ba received
by tha Meigs County
CommiHionors office In the
Meigs County Court Houee,
Pomeroy, Ohio until 10:00
a.m., May 12, 1995, and then
at 1:00 p.m. at said office
opened and read aloud.

Each bid must be
accompanied by either a bid
bond In an amount of 100%
ol the bid amount with a

WHEREAS,"the Council of .
the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio hao the authoritY, to
apply . tor financial

assistance
and
to
administer the amounts

received from the State ot
Ohio, Dept. of Development
through Ito Small Cities
COBG Water and Sanitary
Sewer
Competitive
Program· and
WHEREAS the Council of
the VIllage 'ol' Pomeroy must
direct and authorl•e tho
Mayor ol the flllage ,ol
Pomeroy to ac'l In
connection I with the
·application and to provlo!e
such addltlortal Information
aa may·be required
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED BY THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO AS FOLLOWS
SECTION ONE: The
VIllage Council of Pomeroy,
Ohio authorl..s tho Mayor
a1
the
ottlclal
representative ot the VIllage
ol Pomeory to make
application to pantclpate In
the State olf Ohio

ltles ClDBG
compliance with program
and Sanltaty Sewer guidelines and aasurancaa.
Competitive Program, and
SECTION FOUR: The
to provide all lnlormatlon Council hereby commits
and
documentation ltaell to provide the local
required In sold Application share funding as described
tor submission.
In the application.
.
SECTION TWO: The
Paaaad this 17 day ol
Council hereby approves April, 1995.
llllng an application lor
John Musser
financial assistance under
Couneils President
the Smail Cities .CDBG ATTEST:
Water and Sanitary Sewer
Kathy Hysell
Competitive Program.
Clark ol Council
SECTION THREE: The
Approved thla 17 day of
Council
hereby April, 1995.
1
understands and agrees
·John A. Blater, Mayor
that participation In ihe (4) 21, 28; 2TC
·

(lllltstOit low Rates)

WICKS

'

' .

HAULING

I
I

I

.........

SUMMER
IMAGES

SWAP SHOP

MR. RIGGS
WHATYAMACALLIT
SHOP

One mile out_
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.

. Open 9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00

985·4473
. I

·Portable
Handsaw

$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co
. (602) 954-7420

Danpy &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

'

·LIVE
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

'

.
.

Buha, Puanlliala,
Everllalinp, B1nglng
lulitala, ale.
(Depot St.) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Patiiins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

1-900·656·5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procali Co.
(602) 954-7420

1994 Ford 5610Tractor,
130 hours- $16,995
1994 Simplicity Sunstar,
20 hp Hydrostatic with
60" Deck - $5,995
Both absolutely like new.

Slt:wa rl Hollow Rd. Off
El1·aclbury Rd
Phone 992 4044
Owm~rs

Roll:e &amp;
Shir ley Stewart

Your Buslfless Would
Be Apprectated.

B&amp;W

CHARLIE LILLY

Licensed

57-946457

Gar;.ge and Towing
Service
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tarik Repair
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,

MILHOAN
Auctioneer

3558 t Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ofl!o 45769
Centlled Personal
Propeny Appraiser
Bonded (614) 992-4079
.

2

L&amp;W .
Lawn Care
Mowing,
Trimming
Firew1tod
Also:
Cont.-act work

In Memory
In Loving Memory Of .
BIRDIE BOYD
GIBSON
.Sept. 2 4, 1925·
April 22, 1988

842 Second Ave. Gallipolis
24 MONTH

FREE FINANCING SALE

(614) 992-5291

.

, .

CHECK IT OUT!

TREE TRIMM,N~

AND RJMOVAL
Light Hauling,
. Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
To some you are
forgotten
To others you're part ol
the past
To us who loved you
dearly,
Your memorlea will
._.,w._ys

L

Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slacfc
,,2·2269
.

Otfloe MnchlnM. Etc. • ........
1231.

..poile..,--

J a o•e Aulo- onc1 - buying -•.~un~~
a

trucu.
- ·
773-a3Q. m-.

Bulldot.ing, Backhoe,

luvtna ....... e..., ... 311 1012,

Scrviec1.
Home Sites, Land

Clearing,. Septic Syetemo
&amp; Driveways.

Trucking.

Wanted

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, Room
Add,itions~ Concrete, etc.,
P.O. Box 220 · '
Bidwell, OH 45614
388-9865

Employment Services

Announcements

11

3 Announcements

AVON to buy "' 1011,

tor r I I

Wit toni 3Qot..e71.~14
llnyllme, daye: 114-3111.-.
ewNnga: 114-318 8888.

· We Have Cars and Vans/
_
_
_
1 800 486 1
Bus. (614) 446·9971

MODERN SANITATION
POMi:ROY, OHIO
,Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rate,s.
Job sHes ' Camp snes ' Fam!ly Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

FOR SA I.E, OR TRADE

St"•lntW......

5 HP llf1191

MOunred !1101)
Swllrro

• $1rM1611

/

-.........

-~ ·

. ..

En~M

lluel WhMI Pull

YOUNG'S •
CARPENTER SERVICE
~- Room

Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical~ Plumbing
• Rooting ·
• Interior &amp; Ext!lrior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992:6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

-·- -· ---··-

l~ln

ICIN'I APPLIANCE
IDVICB
•Foctory Aulhorlzod Parte
6 Service
•AU Makos -42 Yoora
'Foot Rolloble Service

STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
·New Haven, WV
304-882-2996

GRAY'S

eH.W.Heatere

.

•Thanke Melge a
Surrounding Aroao
(614) 985.;1581 or
992·5335

.

s_':~'~;y
m!!!.!'·sed~ CLASSIFIED ADS sure to
Your

12114/lln

311611 mo .

Landscape Stoek
White Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce
7 42·3 1 49 or 992·

Mobile Welding
Dlesellnjector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV ,
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring iu ad

72~8~51lfL,.=::;:;::~:o:r:l:O'l!:o:::;:o:ff:·::~

WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Cullom Made
•Solid ~inyl
re~lacement

•Rifrlgeratora •Freezers

-Microwave• •OiapoaaJa

·742·2455

BARR'S Nursery

•Washers - Drrare • Ranges
.Oiehw..htrl

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
RUTUND

FULL WARRANTY UKE NEW
Ctup Rrp~•r l11 Tubs Or Smb,
Re surface Old Ceramic Tile, And
Fibtrglus SboW&lt;: r Cracks Or Sags

BATHTUB

Help Wanted

Spoero, 300-&lt;175-M211.

Kenny's is the place to come

Del,,.,

u.s.

~·In Hlatary To 1980, ,,.:

Cllart- buo lo ClllrokM NC
lor BINGO. Eeotyblrde JIDDO-

Kenny's Auto Rental

Adlualll&gt;ll
Mil ...._

Peld: All Old

&amp;:rc=R~~.8~~= .

U:Z-8714,I1W'INML

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
·REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES ·
(614) 992·553~
(614) 992-2753 ~·~
WHALEY'S AUTO
,
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
• Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
I
992-7013 OR
992·55530R
FREE
DARWIN, OHIO

Condition, 114-245-6887.

Top -

m-...A_,uo,Galllpolle.
W.niM• GIIU. Coutty Ohkl

=.:o.~-:.,v;;-~

264 Upper R!ver Rd.
.
OH. 45631

Buy: J - Aut•

AVON I AI .t.rwu I Shlrltty

7 Days A Week - 24 Hours A Day
$2.99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

Kenny's Auto Center

Ta

WaiOtcl To Buy: NICOl Uttlo 01&lt;10
Clothao IIIH 6X To 7 Good

.· r-""'i~Ni:i~s---..,~1

Ext. 5752

Iorge

wah
a- wa~~ou~
- - c..
1MrJ Uwly.
IM 388 1303.

992-:·H~33

Listen to voice mail messages left by inlere~ling
singles of ail ages. Leave mes'sages for singles
that interest you or open your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
friendships and meaningful relationships.

m-

.-lllnlltun!,!!!' ..

tin,.,.__....

· Lime8lone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

1

·~7.171.
Wonted lo ....,.. ontlque .....

.. too .......... ....,. .... ploCe
or DDmpldl ..._, o.by ....,._

4/411 mo.

American Legion Farm

Bailey Run Rd
12 gauge, I p.m, • 1

t--'

RHETT

St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH
614-247-3522

SHOOT-ING MATCH
Sunday, April 23
Feeney Bennett

EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.

THE SOUTHFORK INN
SHOW BAR
DANCERS • DANCERS
1!
QANCERS
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
675-5955

~~--=~;;,;.r::.;'"~l
r;:_••
...,'~:e'r."v.-..=
""
Air, CondiiiOnonl, Compul-.

(602) 954-7420

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

'25.00

3 Announcement•

. COUNTRY ROADS BAND
. LIVE ,
FRIDAY &amp; SAT. NITE
AT WRANGLER'S
GALLIPOLIS FERRY. W. VA.
675-7115

_....____ _

\IW
E\c: \\ \TI \(;

Calll-900~656-3000

CeN ar
Clr lkii:li

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

llo\\

"
. s. 1
Mee t IntereStlflg
mg eS
Safely And Privately

*OIIIf·

=..=...::=•

..

Nt·w lJw,n1es:; l•t Ouetd!IUrl

20 Sessions For

6.14-446-2412

Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Weeke nds Call614-742-2772

4/4195

1-900-562-7000

PERFECT VIEW TAN
Wolfe Bert

Open Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

. Carmichael's
Farm and Lawn

COURT
STREET
GRILL
FRIDAY, 21st

4/2CIIll5

Anle's ·
Green ouse

2AS1f
'RO!11A.AJe£
CALL NOW!!!

Carpenter Work
Free Estimates
Pqrches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614-742-2165 or
304-882·3704
·Ask for Mike

Middleport, Ohio 45760 '

.'
.

Mill

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.

Ext. 8878

Diane Hendricks

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

H&amp;HSAWMILL

· Lonely? Call
Tonight!
1-900-726-0033

12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;

•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Mlac.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992-2060

Collectible
9-5T·Sun.
1 mile lrom Pomeroy,
SR33N
992·7502 or 992·5805

W I

tMe Truotoo, tllf -

Gutters
Downspouts ·
n
,.. _,, ,,.. - Gutter Cleaning
~..,.t:
Painting
....,...._ ·-~· ..,••••
FREE CC!'I"IlliATCC!I;I2521.~~ . Danl.lunkMIItiU.Y-949-2168
Wootdng
_..., .. _

Saturday 8:00 a.m. tHIS:OO p.m.
Sundaya by appl. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Millilieport ana surrounding
area. Cali for rate ~lieduie.
·
Min. $2.00
31&gt;1/H

r---:"~--:"~------,....,...-,.---...,

GUYS!
We want to hear
from youlll We're.
live and waitinglll
1·900-388· 7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99' per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Buy: Sell"· Trade

Stop &amp; :Com1111re
FREE ESTIMATES

Get Your Message Across

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

992·9949 • 992·6471

....,1195

..

_,....,. '" bi'WWerll
..... Qo l,!lnjlr, .,. -

_

HoUH Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen l!c Bath Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Rooting, Patios
Reasonable
Insured - Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Estimates

"'""

BISSELL
CONSTButnON
New Homes
Garages

Public Notice

Service

(Speclaliz' In ..
driveway
spreading)
Sunday 1:00 p.m. I
. Limestone,
I
12 Gauge Only
. Gravel, Sand, ·
Limited: 740
Backbore, 680 Fronl : Top Soil, Fnl Dirt I
614·992·3470
2/111193 :

614-742·3090
304-773-9545

992-6250

BULLETIN BOARD
1 00
~ coluiftn inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday

NEW-REPAIR

. SERVICE

·- ·

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

.,,, mo.

· With A Daily Sentinel

Owners: Robert Barton e Harry Clark

NEFF RIMODEliNG

Laure{ LittUJ ·

Co.

KINGS'
Home Improvements

!Jig{'£ J'EWE.L!R.Y

PubliC Notice

Stlte Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio :

NEW

and Sovlngo Company
rooervoa tho right to reject
any or oil bldo oubmlttod.
Further, tho above
collateral will be oold In ·tho
condition II le In, with no
exprou or Implied
warrantloo given.
For Further lnlormatlon,.
contact Mike Kloee at 992·
2136.
(4) 16, 18, 21; 3TC

•

''

It's I he most special gift she' II

flubllc Notice

Howard L. WriteMI
• . ROO~ING

..

evt!r have - a give to wear for a
lifetime.

91 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT &amp; (3ALLIPOLIS, OH.

Community Cab Co. Inc~·
Hrs. of Operation: Mon.-Fri. 8:00A.M. til6:00 P.M.

Insurance Work Welcc;»me~~.

.(No Sunday Calls)

one for each of her loved ones.

YLCQ'UISITI09{$

614-992-6223

Free Estimates

'614"992;;'7643

Family Jewelry. Choose one of
our new contemporary designs, or
any from ou' collection of
lraditional styles in 14K or IOK
gold. Eac~ style can be mount.ed
with from one to si&lt; brilliant
genuine or synthetic birthstones;

Open Mondays 9-6
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday &amp; Saturday 9-5; Fridays 9-8
Visa ·
Financing Available
Discover
90 Days Same As Cash
MIC

stotts

• .c~... ~ ..

.

matchless, custom designed

collaterll prior to aale. reserves the right to waive
Fur:ther, The Farmere Bank any Informalities or to reject

IN THE

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.
FREE ESTIMATES

special love with one of our

-Society scrapbook-

LIFE EXPECI'ANCY EVALUATED- WbUe It's Impossible
to accurately determine bow long someone wiD Uve, Ufestyle and
famUy history play a role. Students Rhonda Oiler, left, and Erica
Roble, use a computer program to give estimates to Paul Pullins,
left, and Cass Cleland, at Thursday's health fair at Meigs High
School. Age, stress, heredity, medical history, and use of alcohol
and nicotine are put Into the computer and evaluated.

New Homes e VInyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows

Tlegant new :ramify Jewefrg
- -..~oiiljj tFte-6est for Mom &amp; (jrandrrwm.

--·

STATE SCIENCE FAIR
Type of Fabric is the Most
Five Meigs Junior Higb School Flammable?"; Timothy King,
studeniS will be among the nearly "Time to Move"; Rebekah Smith,
1,000 junior and senior high school "Can Polluted Water be Purified?";
students taking their award-win- and Bridget Vaugban, "Does Temning science projeciS to Obio Wes- perature Affect the Development of
leyan University on Saturday to Crystals?."
The. students are all eighth
compete for -honors in the Ohio
graders
and their teacher if Rusty
Academy of Science's 47th annual ·
Bookman.
State Science Day.
The students qualified by earnThe local students and lbeir proing
superior ratings at the district
jeciS are Virginia Howerton, "How
science
day held at Obio University
Would One Predict a Snow J
where
their
projects were judged
storm T; Kristina Kennedy, "What
by
professionals
in medicine, edu.
cation, industry and science.

ht ..., Ctll!plete .... ltq ••, ••,

• Room Addltloas • Roofing

,

'

BISSELL IUILDEU, IIC.

Publlellll

windows ·
•Free Estimate• ·
•Star.tlng At
*200 lnstalltd
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

99H 119 AI Tromm, Owner l·BOG-29 H600

Yerd SOlo 114mllo N ct Allllon
Poet 0111oo. Frlder • satutder

Stam-? Futnltura, car,-t, 11.,.
cln oqu._.,, clothing, mlec

"-

Veld Sole Saturday April 22 II
2222 Jttclteon AvenUI, Sacred:
Hoort- Hell ..m-:lpm.
Yard Sale. At 36 eouth, Sl4mlle
llc:Oonald'e. W.loh ...

............,. a SUnder

e~g

OOM·

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

liM

llertlyn, Jn.

d~rop.304-882·a641i«

t.-ee2-t35&amp;.

�-•

I

Ohio

Friday, Aprii21,1HS

Pomero~iddlepcjrt, Ohio

. Page-1~The Dilly Sentinel

The
33 1111 oolinO

,

~~~
:II Invent

41 Anew
· 42 I!Jqilotlve

431::'~

PHILLIP

44-d'

ALDER

47

50

KIT 'N' CARLYLFAD by Urry Wright

..... ....
,.~

-

~

Pl.~ Itt •••••

51
52
53

a.y ...... 110,- ...

...........

(reetaurent
employee)
Stretch out
Whlrlpaolo
Want
wetar Full of alhar
Correopond

bY,

' ""'ill, ... - - - - -

...

DOWN '
1 German
phllooapher

2 Naval pMiy
officer

8 Jump

3Tired
4 Outfll
_!_!veryone

weddlnv

7 Kannel sound

8 Secrel

l!'"",.,.""''lr-,......,.,,....,
-+--+-+--+-1

....,.t-+-1-+-+~

"

•

Vulnerable: Both
,Dealer: North

SHE ACTS LIKE
I NEVER GIT HOME
AFORE SUNUP II

51
plyfnlftta. ~.·

h-

This na~per.wlll

Household •
GoodS

lead:"??

Barrymores'

36 Tan-cent
pieces

,

38 The sweetaop

40 Donkey
45 Gratuity

46 Bridge of
46 Indian
memorial

pool
49 Spanish

..

aunt

-Ioiii.

She had

noq-.

always ·

30447W253.

_..., "' sr-.

- been kind.

lo'IO of on _., wolw ond

origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limllatlon or dlscr1mlnatlon: .

5-41151 10

1¥ '
Pass

By Phillip Alder

Rd, .......,.blo
No
olnglo wide lnaulroo. ....... ~
lonnallon , 011Uool an

based on race, color, reBglon,
sex familial status or national

-~~·-

Eas~

1.32 ..... 271 • r!dll• top
building olio, f13,110. AOriKom

limitation or discrimination

diJ&gt;IOmL Coli
ooluplnl........

Pass

lolo
Pass

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

estate advenislng In

this newspaper.Is subject to
the federal Fair HouSing Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advenlse "any preference,

8ubollule AldH lor chlldron'a
village, R'- Va~DS~-

North

23 Northern aea
25 -off
(started)
27 Pigeon- 29 Tells
31 Conotallatlon
32 New York
lake
34 Newsman
Thoma a
35 One of the

San Lula-

Trollor to. oolo, loka- llenk
All~e~~l

1 NT

West

Cannot bid,
can lead

Merchandise

32 Mobile Homes
for Sill

Soutb

, partlclpenl
9 Meda. homo
10 Reglona
12 Longings
13 Evil
18 Conllnental
21 Sailor
(2 wdo.)

2212.

~...--

Sometimes, however,
she wondered if she
was appreciated.

"Even so,'' she

Once a Golden
Retriever. always

thought," I shall
always smile and

by Luis Campos

Golden Retriever.

kind."

be

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celitbrdy C•pher crypt~rams aru ~ reated from quotatiOf'IS by laffiQlJS people . past and l'l'esent
· Each letltM" •n lhe c•pher !illands lor anottwr TPCi.lly's clue. T flqU.llls L

no\

GD

' ,E C C V J W Y· C X

knowllngly accept .
advertisements tor real estlfte
which Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby

EHV

FW _
L NWDCZ

wxc

lntonned that all dwellings·

v

J.

c

LWAUZV

G D

v

J

c

P"G W U F F J G X W

advertised In this newwai:..r·
II

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

opponunlly basis.

Real Estate·
Wanted

31 Homes for Sail
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
INSURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS 6 AUTO lila-

COUNTS
UFE l HEAL'IH
304 1588 4257

18 wanted to

oo

15 Voor EJ~d llobllo
Homo Roof Palnlw, Lawn Sor-

'llce, Mowing, Trimming~Etc:.
FrMIWimatM,IM 388-8064.

-Ina

11yr old

to

mow yorda

in O.IIIDOIII ~~~~· Call
30447a..!l311 or
·
711.

Ace Troo So&lt;vlco. Comploto 11w
ure, 20yrw. exp. ~ lntured, frM
astlnllt•. 114-441·11111 Of 1400-

Bud~ Tronomleoiolll, llaad ,6
llobliiK1 AI TvD-, - b l e To

~~~·~

lraiM' · • W
S
e
=
Uood
Andc..h
- W
Tnu
1 ·~na. AIM.
C.ny Traurla bw, I~
rJohneone

226!1.

Rentals

SoUl- Plck.Up Parle llodio.
Cs~ Dc&gt;Qro, FondoN 6 - .
lilt,_ Soulh 01 Golll....lo AI .1\10tlon At. 7 6 Rt. 218, 814-M~

1
0
-k-··--· -..

3 Bedroom Capo Cod Slylo
Home In Rkl Orande, £1:9111nt
Condhlon,
Now
KHchon,
Orl511nal ' Oak
Woodwork,
$58,000, 114-245-53QSI.

":::li71-II

Tro,_loalona. UMCI,
lnopeclod, g,.roniMd.
7034. Able

Truck bodo. Chov., FOrd, Dodae.
ond 8-10,- ........ ~

For Sale sw Ownlf, s.ttlng On 3
Rural WatiN, L.Ocatld
Botwoon Pllrlol l Northup
Primo Hu!lllng, Prlcool To. Solll

oleyl

Stump

RemGval,

tneurance,

Fret

b-

24 Hr.
Emergency Sorllco -Call And
Savor No TIM Too 81g Or Too
SmaMI 114-388-16'3, 114-38'JL
7V10.
Ouolhy Child Csro In My Homo.
Monday Thru F~day, Ooyo,

tlmat•l

Evan!nao,

Exporloncod,

Ro-,114-2-~

Chlldclro M-F eam-1:30pl!l Agoo
2-K, Young School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Oayo per Weak Mlrilmum 114-44&amp;-3657.

Wilt do bobyoltllng In my lllddloporl homo, 2 _.,lngo oval~

lblo, 1114-11112-11128WIM Do lnlorlo&lt;, blorlo&lt; Palnl·

Raaoonoblo llaiM, Ell·
:;;:).n&lt;*J, llofaro"'*!, f..or Frao
~iiinotoo. Cllt 1114-241&gt;'0118.
1ng

Do

Spring . Eioanlng:

CIOHtt, Cablnaca, Wlndowl and
Etc. 114-44&amp;-21118.

Would llkllo trad• t,ou.... he

In Lakeland, FIOrldo lor 3br
hOUII I~ •Pt• PleaNnt tor the
wHit of Jur. 17·2•,.,;. CloM to

OIIMW' • bNchla. Prwftr

.:..:_

LOSER

.,.

"

· ·· 1-Utt&gt; YOJ llW€.VE: I
~·
•"-UP 1\T Dl\\..lfl \OC-l\YTO
• ~1\TCJ\

. -:rn£-:J.JI-l
·-

I

'IOU C.OO..Dt-1\ f\1\VE:.
Plc.K£D i\ OC\re:R
Till£. TO =-· ----r-00 IT!

I

EXORB

. ~....;C,...:E.,..;.T_H:,:.,..:.K.:..,.___;J : ,~

Rl~ 7

.

r

15 I

I:;

~===~·===-_,.L

molar, . . . . . - lunool,

rl

H E L 8 0 D

I,

18

·I I

av.r double
Price Reduced-Largo 3-4br, 2bo,
llmlly room, dlnrng 6 IMng
room, 2 a. I GU gaf'llge zac
lend-view of Kanawha luvornlco. Call Somor&lt;lllo Roolly 304875-30;10 Of 304-175-3431.
Six r_... and beth lnd ullllly,

,~M~A 81..0W tN Tl-£ ON ·
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSFIEDS. •
-

DarKly- Tease- Quiet· Palate -ILL at EASE
After a short stay 1n our local hospital my neighbor
complained tome that his hospital c.osts made it imposSible for h1m to be ILL at EASE!
'

'

IFRIDAY

APRIL 21 I.

uklng

$11600, 114-0112-7282.
ThtM bedroom, Gill bath, full
biMmer&amp;, IWO oar Qlrage, two
deckl, new root, kl ChMf•,

1166-4144.

by ldlihg in rhe m11s.ng words
you develop from step No . 3 below.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

1lll'l Bwlngw llolor Homo.
Croma PuH - · Hllch, 10011
miiM on 440 .-.giM $7000.00
814 Ul 3541

apace

·r

, The new owner of our neighborhoodgymgaveusallachuckle
when she hung this sign over the
door: "If You Want Your Just
Desserts, Don 't-- • - -.- -1
V c omp Iete the chuckle quottld
....
.

I

'---l.-..1-.....l-..L.-L......J.

IO,liOOrril. $1,000, 3044711-.2141,

'*

ThrMpromd-oi•7,0M

woddlng gown, long _ . ,
high nook, beCII, . hOop, half prlc~ ~--~~ Of

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Services

114-31'7-o281.

12lll0 1117S Govomor WRh Add~

Troy Tiller Pony, oloctrlc - ·
114-1112-1310 or bl-112-2102.

Hooi&lt;-IJpo, t17,700, 114-441-4011.

Two 250 gal. lull lonka, Mka
now, 110 Ooch, ~ul Karr 1148116 3531. '

=.. ~~:"'W:h"'rr!l::;
Commoclo!o Claaolc
thrM Hdroom on• and 1/2
14x70

24ft round 'ground pool
wldeck. Pump ~• flltw •. - I
OOVM" l Nll.r
floOd. Unw. ~. Buysr
hail lo dl-ble. 30W7Io
2035 aHorlpm.

. .1011 wlnt.,

both, IOXII dOCk Wllh 100f, OJ·
cellent oondHion, $101500 r,.p
tlable, 114-882~064.

co,_.
2BI

lanllh

20-

Compulor

w,.._h....,. llonllor.

Herd Drive. 2 ~ ...........

~DreAd ShiM,
2br1 ~~ oloclrlc, oppllancM lur- Word Pr . ,_,ng, c.m..r men.
"''"""· lrolh 6 walor pold 1 1225.011
-lflor
~ to etONe. &amp;ehoal, ana 7 : -

ware lnctudlt:

churchoo, holiday octlvHioo lor
children.
12104:fl8/mo.
L.aunoland Apll., llh • Goorga
!!!:..New Hovon. 304-18241'15 or
I If•
H00-48H771 Of 1772.

no

EOH.

UMd Oolf Clubo, Good Cond~
lion, Will ~~":~
Ollar, AIlar 1 P.M. 1
~,
Whho prom dr-, olzo 11,..,.
onca, Paid t110 1111 tor $70. Call

t"'

64
lllxool

IIOYO

55

:t P.M.

·

And

Drchanf

.•.

Transportation

""

With

B.lower, ExerciM Blkl &amp; Stair
Stopper 114-441-32911 -

~ P.M.

Alfllll

Groas $1.75 Sq. Ba'"!,_ Delano
.lockeon'o Form, 3044.,..1lll3,

304-e7U788.

W-mlng

Hay &amp; Grain

. ·

71

ASTRO-GRAPH

Autos for sale

=~;..;.,;.;.;;_;..:..:...;,;;.;.;;.._,..
1111
Cuetom 2 IUn
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orlalnol, thlo - k only t11150,
114=2~'JI.ol282.

C6C
, _ Chevy . .10 LB llotlae, I
~000 1111., 111,100,

Dod~ TNCk, 1118 Cougar
liM Nl-n K1ng-Ctb XE, V-t,
XR~ 11164 Cougor XR7, I~
~wd wlovordrtva,- o..o, ocj,:
:121• Botwaon (P.M. -1 P.ll.
Im •-no, 4,500ml, t1
•
11173 Dodge Choll- BodY, 304476-71151.
t1,000 OBO, 114-25&amp;-1111, I~ 1114 Ton tm Fonluo':dIllleo,
25&amp;-1252.
' ~ Spaod, Now ~lnl,
1m lllrocodoo aooo, 150l&lt;, dillOn, $1,710, lt4-S48-11031.
movln~ol
1111.
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eon.

1184 lll!cll lloaal, 100,00llml,
""'~•-v~.!!!,. !1!1, cruloo, . pw,
12,-. .,....._,_
,

Real Estate

~

18'M ~ Tllln molorhofnl. fully
Mlf..contalnld 1 . tlcM•I• daar
r.frlglf'Ator, miCrOWive, roof U,
Iorge g....,otor, 20' owning,

omokor. Colll-e13-&amp;46·n90.

Vending: Won, Qol Rich Oulck.
Wilt Ool A Stoo~tt"'"·
P,lcad lo Soli. 1
3.

~--· BORN
.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

fl&lt;IO-

Financial

ldiiOd loy CLAY I. f'OUAN - - - - - - -

Reorronge letter1 of the
four scrambled words be·
low to form four words.

,75-3385.

glnlgt, ~,000, 114;-624758.

1+ ICIW1 nHCII Worlfo,

Sun Vatloy NWHrY School.

•Wtlt

etoragt

S©\\JllA-lG"E!fs· ::::

0

1250 080. 4 clnma oonlerllnO
wh- ,.,....., t4", 1200. »4-

10 Minute• From Gllllpoll•,
Good Road, Aaklng SZti,OOO,
114-441-4118.
'
3 Bedroom Ranch, FR, Rodney
VIllage II, $42,0011, Phone 614-

a-gao Pootoiblo sawmill don'
haul
logo to tha min Jull
01111
71-1~7.
. 148-2371.
HouMkllplng.:
I'UMRlble, 3 Bodroomo, 2 Balho, Hill
honOII and depandable, pi\OfM Pump, Gu Furnace. 1 Acrt,
814-IIZ!-6038.
Oarage. Addlton ANa, $12.000,
JII&amp;T Roofing, Siding, &amp; All 814-3&amp;7·72e7.
Corponlry ~- EotlmatM, 614- I R_, HouH For Ball, Mid
218-1088.
140'• Eurwkl. 150x50 LDC,
Floa&lt;tl,
Now
Mow Lawns 6 T~m In Golll.,..la Hardwood
Balh--,114-256-10!11.
Clly Dlalrlcl, 1~46-0026.
Pro••loMI Trw
Sert'lcl, Five room brick ho""' In llldComolol• T- Care, luckol dlaporl, control hta~ hlU bo. .
Truck Service -50 Ft. Raach, ment, adJoining elltra tot,

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Two atandlnf Fonl 4spd
tronomlollono $711 • f100, Fonl

'
llalntonanca, Palnl!ng1 114-3'19-2240.
Yanl Work Wlndo- Wasnoa s BMiroom Houu, 112 Acre Lot

Cl..ned Ught H1ullng,
Commertc.el, RMidlntt-1, Sll'n:
114-141-16117.

.

'

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- · Largo Building
All
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lor ~ :00 P.ll. 114,

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•

tr.:di

IHe 011111, Sp1, 25 112 Ac. Bam,
Toblcco B-. 2 SIO'Inal, Csllor

3 Boolroom Homo In Country

.,

'

Now
tanb, ....
Whoa
rolla
-0,
olc.D
37:1-31133 or 1
t.

Con, ' HondwUhool,
Hand
Wt"!:'ta~' Will Pick Up, 1144441
Exporloncod.

ounn

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Wind--, Cowlly Wolw, !leloi-

1108.-allf.

-1

Accessories
O.or 10,000

2-olory garage, bMido Now
Hovan S-markol, bollom
flo« oomplololy nmodo&amp;od, 2
boyo: (front bor 40'1128', roar
boy :12'x23).L. 1DO'xl0' lol,
~.000. 304 ......-2'N3.
2 Story,~,_! R_.., 4 lr., 2 FuN
Bollia,...., w- Dr Cool HNI,
Now Roof, VInyl Siding, Pollrlo

•'

Auto Parts&amp;

luboN Tulbo
aUI-Ilc, olr, cruloo,

f1200, '1WIIH72I·

~WD
ro11U.:

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,....

-

Chol,l14-0112-1323.

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Ron'a TV BoMoo,
In ,Z.nlth aloo •wlciJog ......
olhar brando. "tl:."~e:l-

100-NJ.OOII, wv

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
I;;:=:::::;~=-~~~~
82

F""'man'o HNII~Cool~
lnotatllllon And
E
- · - · Re•ltllntlll, ColtlltNU
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Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Law-

Enlltl&gt;1 •

T.W,

Llwrence. 82% GU Furrncn

'12 Silverado lllafleldll ~x4 Nd L.P 6 Nil. l'IHnpo '
Torota Csllcl CIT, 1:21~ good. ti,IOO. . . . ond ollvw, . . . _ bod co¥..., Elactrlc l'wiW-. FtM Ealu'l- 150 V-4. olr, _,.. ..., ll(llltiL H You D,on1 Cal Uo We
-o, PW, POL, l&lt;ltomlllc Bolh i.Qool 514-4414301,
1111 Fonl Crown victorto, Fully 30 0011 sctuol mlloo, la«fod' 28'1'-130f, WV OD:Ii41.
·
~· &amp;:1,000 Mlloo, NoW ht,IOO nagollal!lo, . . . . . RMidllnllol or 0011
•• ..,12,100,1'14 4~1 4014.
wiring, - - or
11117 ChoYJ Aolro Vt!n, ' Good · ~~~- Uoonoocl -.!clln.
Conctlllon, ,,.__,_
Ridenour Eloctrtcot, wv-

1-,,.alii

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'

:104-41&amp;-1'1118.

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-•••

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-.

York , NY 10163.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take yoursen
out of th~ picture today if negoliating a
complex contract. If you don't seem too
sel~serving , the other party mighl start

making conCessions .
.CANCER (June 21-July 22) Two heads
are better lhan one today. sO before you
fly off without you'r propeller, check with

·

clall14-1158-1111.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I
:~:;:a~~ o

Gonorol

·lRopU.
l l l nFor
l - 11M
llld 011-o
- ...

reveals wh1ch signs are romantically perfect lor you , Mail $2,75 10 Match maker,
c/o lhis newspaper, P ,O . Box 4465 , New

you mtght find e~actl y what you want at

the right price. Be patient and don't settle
for your firSt finci.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- 0ec . 21) Cnt1cal

informatton yoU've been hunting for mtght
be more obtainable loday Ihan yeslerday,
If neell be , p1ck the brains of close
fnends ,
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan . 19) Some~

one you went out of your way to help
recently is looking for a way to repay you

Today he/she mighl do something thai
could
make your day .
· LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) You will benefit
AQUARIUS
(Jon. 2Q-Feb. 19) You won't
most today from people With whom you
be
misreading
intuitive s1gnals today tf
maintain close personal ties. Individuals
you
feel
a
bit
luckier
than usual . Believe
wt;lo know ltttle about you will have more
Saturday , April22, 1995
in
what
you
perceive
and have a great
Interest In themse'lves.
day.
Conditions in general should improve for VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You could be •
.." you in the year ahead . Your social life luckier tn matters pertamtng to your home PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Do not be
.. should perk up as well as your commer· and tam tly than your mate is today . It intimidated by competitive developments
there is a toss up as to whose tdeas to today, especially concerning your career
cialaffairs ,

,,.

Ohlr
'Birthday

co-workers for their ideas and optnions .

.~

: TAURUS (April 20 -May 20) II would
behoove you to cooi&gt;erale fully with per-

sons you share a coUectlve ·inlerest with
;:. loday. Be supportive and don'l make

use. choose yours .

·

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Socialize wilh
pals today inslead or co-workers. There
1s a chance you might say lhe wrong

• waves or even small ripples. Know where· thing to someone who'll carry the tale
.... to look for romance and you'll find it. The dire&lt;:lly back 10 the boss,
Astro-Graph Matchmaker lnstanlly

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Today, il
\

I

you shoP spectfically for an unusual item.

You can draw upon some secret aces. ,

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) It will be
imperative to maintain your faith in what
you're doing and w1th whom you 're doing
H today. Substantial resulls are probeble
d you don't railer.

2 oi4)(CC)
II

(CC)

�•

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A reader's view
By GENE BAltRIS

srnc-

.

· Wby a.earch for tbe AJk 1Q prove
God wben tbe stooea cry out his

ume
U during a winter lrip nonb we
(ound a fresb flower tbat only

blooms once a year, oa July tbe
fint, frozen in a block of ice, and
we lcnew for sure it wasn't placed
their intentionally, we could lhea
safely assume that the weather con·
.ditions changed suddenly from a
modcrately warm to an elltremely
cold condition oo July lhe fust, oC
tbe previous year.
.
,
Now· suppose we found a sedimcntary roclt with a rabbit fossilized in it. If it would take two
months for a rabbit to completely
decompose, bones and all, !hen, we
can safely assume that either the
rabbit fell into ~ sedimentary enviroiiiDent or sedimentation formed
around the rabbit in a period of two
moolhs or less.
In a similar way, if evidence of
another object whose existence is
very short, on the order of about IS
minutes or less, was found in a
granitic type rock and we knew
there was no way for that object to
·get into the rock other .than for the
rock to be formed around it it
would be safe to assume lhat 1tbe
' rock material forming the rock
solidified around the rock in less
than 15 minutes.
This latter kind of evidence is
exactly what Robert Gentry, an
honorary pbysicis~ author of "Creations Tiny Mystery," and the
world's leading authority on what
are known as radiobalos bas dis-

Friday, April 21,1995

·Festival entertainment -

minutes and other halos can even
suggest that the genesis of these
r011ks took place in small fraction
of'a second.
Gentry's balos wbicb he eails
"Gods' finger pints" not only teslify of an earth created in one day,
but also explains why radiometric
dating 'of these rocks produce age
estimates (3.7 billion year) vastly
older than the Biblical recOrd. Age
determinations are calculated by
bow long it would take for daughter products to accumulate. If
daughter products were already
present from day one naturally

FIUDAY
POMEROY - Mowins and

· SATURDAY
1UPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Atbletic Association, 2 p.m.
Sallllday lllhe ball field.

.

MIDNIGHT CLOGGERS - The Midnight Cloggers will perform Saturday, l p.m. at the Raclne Flower Festival. The doggers'
Is opoDSOred by Dr. Melanie Weese and the Racine ·
CUnlc.

SUNDAY
. REEDSVILLE '- Revival serv1ces at the Reedsville Church of
We Nazarene to be held through
Sunday, 7 p.m. each eveni~g.
~va!lgellst Paul Lucas. Spec1al
smgmg.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs

Pet-give-away to benefit WalkAmerica
Quality Farm and Aeet of Silver
Bridge Plaza in Gallipolis will bold
a Pet Give-Away a:t the store on
Saturday, April 22, from 1-4 p.m.
Those attending lhe giv«-away can
lake home puppies, kittens, bamsters ~ o_lber pets_ brought by persons WISbmg to gJVe the animals
a~ay. Anyone having animals to
g1ve away may be able to find them
a good home by bringing them to
Quality Fann and Fleet on the·day
of the event.
According to organizer Sandy
B'lake, "the Pet Give-Away is an
opportunity to fmd a pet and help a
good cause all at the same time."

covered
from hisare
research.
Radiohalos
tiny microscop· . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
ic spheres that appear abundantly
in precambrian granites - the foundation rocks of the earth. Spheres
are formed as the decay of tiny
granules of radioactive materials
cause damage to the surrounding
. mineral rock. When the mineral
.
· rock is sawn across the center of
the spheres for examination under
the. microscope they appear like
halos or onion rings. Hence, the
name radiobalos.
The
of Ibis article is too

There will no charge for the animals, but participants will be asked
to make a donation to the March of
Dimes in lieu of payment.
· Visitors can also register for
prize~ donated by local merchants,
meet "Biscuits and Gravy" from
Bob Evans, "Unc~ Alligator" from
Rax and ''Little Caesar," and purchase popcorn, bot dogs and bal-

CIRCLE'S GREENHOUSES

FLATS St_ -":-- -. -~··--1
BASKETS .
Vegetables • Flowers • Friendly Service
Mon.·Fri. 2 p.m.-??- Sunday 2 p.m.-??
Saturday - 24 Ho.rs !Make my day.)

RACINE - Racine Lodse 461,
F&amp;AM, will bold an annual inspcc· .
lion Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at the ball• .
Members to take a pie. Master 1
· masons invited.
WEDNESDAy .
.•
·
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport!
• Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednellday,;
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck.
George Hackett to review "An:
American Tragedy."
'

Mrs.

Now Open For The Season
Bedding Plants
Vegel~ble Plants, Hanging
Baskets, 4. in Geraniums,
Shurbs &amp; Trees, ·Rose
Bushel!, Strawberry _Plants

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992-5776
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
Sunda~ 12 noon-S pm

"Middleport First Baptist Church
6th and Palmer Streets
Middleport, Ohio 45760

\

This ~ an you need to get anew
Mustang or F-150.
'

'95 Ford Mustang
·• Air conditioning

• Automatic transmission
with overdrive
• AM/FM/Cassette
• Rear window defrost

News policy
In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gal·
lipolis Daily Tribune and T11e Daily
•Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event. '··
All club meetings and other
news articles in lbe society section
must be submitted within 30 day.s
of ocelirrence. All birthdays musi
be submitted within 42 days of the
.
'
occurence1
All material submitted for publi·
calion is subject 10 edilting.

'95 Ford F-150 XLT 4X2

•.

GENESIS

'

BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning

10am- 11 am

Ash·Street
.
Freewill
Baptist Church
.

Middleport, Ohio
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.
Teacher Les Hayman

"

• Cruise control
• Tilt wheel
• Air conditioning
•
• AM/FM/Cassette
• Power windows and doors
· • Forged aluminum wheels
• Chrome rear step bum per

No money down.
Now through April 29th
at Don Wood Automotive Complex.

.per ITIOI1Ih. only 24 111011H IS"

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

·593-6641
BUIC K '

J•

•

@

.

CA DIL LA C,

• prus true and mle. first payment and secunty deposrt due at lease rnceptton Cklsed-end lease. Mileage based on 12,000 mites per year. Subject 10 pnor sale. Ford
'F-150 XLT 4x2. based on MSAP $18.820. optton to purchase at lease end 513.068 80 Mustang. based on MSAP of $16,645, op1100 to putchase at lease end ol
$10 72!; 75

•

..

-

-DONWOOD

I J ..,_,.,., c-.o

C...C...••-" "'"'· ~· ~•....._.....

992-7410

...

.•

TUESDAY

i

directed by SAM COWAN narration by MARK MORROW
"That God is on one side and all the people on the other side, and Christ Jesus, himself a
man, is between them to bring t~em together, by giving his life for all mankind ...
Alone on lhe Allar he must die ....Calvary's Lamb"

Racine, Ohio

'

REEDSVILLE- A special
meeting of the Olive Township ;
Trustees wUl be beld MODday, 7:30
p.m. 11 tbe township bulldins.
:

CALVARY'S LAMB
a musical of the rederhption story
...:.-.-~~- --.....1.;Sunday;-ApriH3 - 8 p.qt.
--

From Racine just past Southern High School take CR 28 (Bashan
Rd.) exactly 4 miles to TP 109 (Carmel Rd.). Walch for the sign.

Tum left, 1 mile on the left.
Larry Circle 949-2021
47955 Carmel Rd

enna Service Ofllce, Pomeroy.

AL@NE
ALTAR

Reward Yourself 8)' Shopping At:

Super Selection - Top Quality
YESFEIYEAR PRICES

loons. WBYG "Big Country" 99.5
FM will conduct a live remote
broadcast from lhe event. All proceeds will be dol!ft(Cd to the March
of Dimes. Dianna Eads, Ambassador of the 199S Tri-County
WalkAmerica for the March of
Dimes, will aiso be a special guest
For more information, contact
Sandy Blake at446-7328;

County Vell!lliiiS Service C&lt;Jmmiasioo,Monday, 7;30p.m. in tbe Vel·

Middleport First Baptist Choir
I
.
presents an encore presentation of

"REWARD"

and boring .to be
entirety here. But. essentially what
Gentry found was that the existence of certain types of radiobalos
that are formed from certain types
of rad.ioactive daughter products
cannot be accounted for in the precambrian granites by any materialistic means. Evolutionary cosmology lheories suggest the earth was
formed from bot magna co&lt;,Jiing
over a period of hundreds of millions of years. If this were true,
radioactive daughter products wilh
sliort half-lives would have
decayed long before ibese granites
cooled. The danlalie effects would
be permanentlr lost like a bullet
. trail is soon lost in water.
Evolutionists continually try to
explain this phenomena by suggest·
ing lhe short-lived daughter prodUcts responsible for lhe halo formations were formed secondarily from
a uranium source and migrated into
place from other areas as water
seeped lhrougb lbe minerals: However, lhese halos are found in areas
of lbe mineral where fissures are
not available for migration to lake
place.
··
Dr. Gentry's research repeated·
ly show that the only way to
aecount for lhe presence of lhese
halos is if both lhe minerals, and
the daughter products were created
simultaneously in a very, very brief
period. Some halos found suggest
the precambrian granites were
made in a period of far less lban 15

~

cemeteries in Salisbury
TOIVIIIblp will bcain Friday: 'Those
wllh paves in 111y of tbe cemeter·
ies are asked to remove deconllive
Items.
.
rleaning

fal~age -esUmateswouldresult.

When Jesus road a colt into
Jerusalem and neared lhe bottom of
lhe Mount of Olives his whole mollilude of disciples began to rejoice
and praise God. SQIIIe of the Pbar·
isees heard and !Old Jesus to rebuke
his disciples for doing so. But Jesus
told them that if they held !heir
peace the stones would immediately cry out (Luke 19:37-40).
While no scientific knowledge
· can explain to evolutionists the
qu~stion they like to challenge
believers wilb "bow was God ereated" !here is more lhan eriougb
knowledge available 10 show them,
beyond the r~n of a doubt, that
the Biblical record of Creation is
verified scientifically and to prove
that evolution could never happen.
Today, while the Christian communily is holding their peace these
siOnes of Gentry's ~begging to
be held ·up where !hey 1"111 be beard
crying out to aU within bearing dis- .
tance praise unto the Lord for "God ·
created us."

.Gommu11ity calendar

•

·1-·

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