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                  <text>Paa• 1D-'fht Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy41lclclteport, Ohio

Community
calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Tuesday morning Ladies Golf League, fint meet·
.ing and play, Tuesday, 8:30a.m.
Tuesday, Meias County Golf
Course. AUJaaies Invited.

•

SAVE

POMEROY - FOE Auxiliary
2171, Tuesday, potluck, 7 p.m..
meeting, 7:30p.m. at lbe ball.

Narcotics
. POMEROY . Anonymous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the Sacred Heart CatboUc Cburcb,
161 Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy.

THURSDAY
RU1LAND - Rutland Town·
· ship Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
Rutland Fue Station.

HARRISONVILLE SCIENTISTS - Th~ Harrlson"f'jiJ' EIJl·
mentary Sthool re&lt;ently held it. annual sc ience fair. At top, governor special award winners lnc:lude (from left): first, fifth grader
WIUiam Hanning; setond, fifth grader .Reese Wyant; third, sixth
grader Joe Blazer; and fourth, fourth grader Ben Bookman.
Above, first place award winners Include: (standing) sixth grader
Joey Blazer, fifth grader Amber Hanning, third grader Megan
Dodson and fourth grader Ben Bookman; (front row) second grader Peggy Duff and kindergartners Sarah Lance and Dan Bookman. (Below) Second place science fair winners include: Anna
Reese Wyant, Chris Dodson, Cour~ney Kennedy ond
(Bottom) Third place science fair winners include:
Sarah Lee; fourth grader Jessica Priest, sixth grader

WHiiam~~:.lir.w

FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER - Meigs
County Pomona Grange 46, Friday,
7:30 p.m at Star Grange Hall near
Salem Center. Jackson County
Pomona Grange to visit: potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. Coooty baking
contest tn.be held.

POME ROY
Weekend
revival , 7 p.m. Friday, Saturday
and Sunday, Endtime House of
Prayer, Bu rlingham Church,
Dempsey Montgomery, evangelist

1. BUY STOREWIDE AT REDUCED SALE PRICES
~---2. WE PAY THE TAX
---~
3. 110 PAYMENT TILL MAY 1996
"Certain Umltatlona Apply. See Store for Details.

--..;.4• FREE DELIVERY
5. FREE LAYAWAY

Vol. 46, NO. 3
Copyright 1!195

--

By JIM FREEMAN

SOlTES

.•

FRANK A. VAUGHAN

SELECT FROM:
BROYHILL • LA·Z·BOY ~
LANE • BENCH CRAFT
'
· ENGLAND CORSAIR •
PAGENT • BUSHLINE

active for ·many years in the state
and national American Legion proSentinel news stall
Pomeroy Republicans Tuesday grams.
This is his ftrSt time seeking a
selected Frank A. Vaughan as tbett
party's candidate for mayor in public ofrtce and be currently faces
no opposition in November's gen.
November.
·
' V :jugban beat out incumbent eraJ election.
"The voters of Pomeroy have
Mayor John W. Blaettnar 135 to
116 votes, according tn unofficial made their decision," Blaettnar
results . Third candidate Kenny ' conceded.
Klein received 28 votes.
Pomeroy Republicans were. the
A lifetime resident of Pomeror, only Meigs Countians In go to the
Vaughan retired from the Pubhe polls and also nominated candi· Utilities Commission of Ohio after dates for two open village council
.
25 year' s setvice. He attends the seats.
Pomeroy Methodist Church, is a
Incumbent Councilman Scott
member of Drew Webster Post 39, Dillon led the paclc with 1SI votes
American Legion, and bas been followed by Geri Walton, Bryan S.

Shank and Bracy A. Korn with
126, 125 and 97 votes, respectively.
Altbougb unofficial results
place Walton over Shank by one
vote, those results could change .
following the official count May 13
and after counting three walk-in
votes on May 17.
DiUon and the other Republican
candidate will face Fred E. Werry
Jr. who bas flied as an indepen&lt;lent
for one of the two council seats.
Registered voters may al so be
write-in candidates in the November general election if they file a
declarntion of intent by 4 p.m. on
Sept. 28.

' Clerk-tre a~ urer Kathy Hysell,
running unopposed in her party,
received 243 complimentary votes.
A folal of 283 voters, 23.14 per,
cent of the re gistered voters in
Pomeroy's three precincts, reported
to the polls.
·
Across the state
COLUMBUS (AP) - Voters
approved 63 .2 percent of school
money issues at slake in elections
around the slate Tuesday - the ·
highest passage rate in 10 years.
Tbe Ohio Department of Educati on sai d today that 122 o f 193
schoo l tax que stions were
appro ve d . Seventy- one were
defeated.

That was the best performance
since 1984, when 61.4 percent of
the levies passed
"We're very pleased. It's terrific," said .Susan Tavakolian; direcl!Jr of the Divis ion of Scbool
Finance.
.
Of the I 31 tax levies 10 provide
money for operating expenses, 57
percent were approved.
Voters approved 75 percent of
tbe 61 construction issues on local
ballots. One countywide levy also
was approved.
Most of the issues were for real
es tate taxes, bu I voters also
approved 12 of 21 school district
Continued on page 3 .

By GEORGE ABATE
returned to work, Mervis said.
S~ ntlnel News Staff
"That misunderstanding bas
Area union carpenters began
been corrected," Mervis said. "We
piclcctlng in front of the Pomeroy
think it' s a communication probNursing and Rehabilitation Center
!em."
Monday morning, officials stated
The facility has remained flilly- .
Tuesday.
.
s~'lffed since the company has other
About 10 members of the Caraffili ate d c enters in the area ,
penter L ocal Union 650 in
Meryis said. Temporary help was
Pom eroy passed out leaflets · pooled to provide care, he ad~ed. ·
because P".. RC hired non-union ·
"There' s been no problems in
construction workers for an addi the faciUty," Mervis said.
tion Monday and Tuesday, S!lid
The cons truction union wants
Patrick Day, spokesman with the
PNRC to sign a collective bargainOUTSTANDING MEIGS COUNTY SENlOR- Jacob
T ROPIDES PRESENTED - Sixty of Meigs County's bright·
South Cenual Obio District Coooing ag~ment that would ensure a
Matthew Morrow was tb~ recipient of the Franklin, B. Walter All·
est studen&amp;l were recognized for their accomplishments at tbe lltb
cil of Cawenrers. _
fair wage wolild be paid, Day said .
Scholastic Plaque, a state award, in recognition of outstanding acaAnnual Academic Excellence banquet Tuesday night at Meigs
·
PNRC is' building an $800,o00
"These people are out there in
demk achievement. The Southern senior was presented the plaque
· High School. Stephanie Wigal, a sixth grader at Bradbury,
ad4i.t ion to bouse a speech lab, protest because they are tearing
at the Academic El'ceUence Banquet Tuesday night by Meigs
·receives a tropliy from Jeff Harris, president of the Meigs County
.occupational therapy training area down the slallldards tliey' ve tried to
County Superintendent John Riebel.
Board of Education.
.and a physical therapy gym, PNRC establish in that area," Day added .
"There were a couple contracadmintstrator Jim Lindeman said in
a previous interview wltb The
tors approac hed , but they bad no
Daily Sentinel. Tbe proje ct bad knowledge of their bonding" since
been set for completion by June.
the project managers were from out
A Milwaukee, Wi se., arcbitec- of the state, .Day said._"(The local By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
preceded us, and some ~ow . some take the lime to see that home is
Southern- by County Superintentural rum tllllllaging the proj~t had construc tion c ontrac tors) dido ' t · Sen tinel News Staff
way ,· they seemed to have gotten when: the. heart is, that your borne
d ent Job n Riebel.. He then
submitted information tn local con- want to take that gamble,':
Tim e given to the pursuit of the job done.''
in Me igs County can be your land
announced Morrow as the Franklin
tractors, said Mik e· Mervi s, a 1
Day could not estimate bow knowledge is time well spent and 'it
He described th e youth at the of opponuni ty ," ·
B. Walter All-.Scboljistic Award
spokesman for PNRC.
.
long the picket would last.
needs to be recognized for the pre- banquet as a "classic exam ple of
\T he top academic achievers
winner from Meigs Coun ty and
"(Union contractors) were given
"These people are not there to . cious thing that· it is, because sue- time .we ll spent" as be pointed to from the seco nd, fo urt h , six th,
presented him with a plaque.
an opportunity (to bid )' b ut did disrupt or h urt anyone," Day said.
cess may. well de pend on bow the academic accomplishments of eig hth, lOth and 12 grades were
Morrow, son Of Mr. and Mrs.
no~" Mervis said.
PNRC will seek a res training wisely time is used . ·
the students there.
indiv idua ll y recog nized by the
Mark Morrow, will go to Col umAbout three construction: work- order against the pk keting union
That was the message of Meigs
The suNril!l~ndent spoke of the · superi ntendents ill tl!eir resp~tive bus Tuesday to join other honorees
ers were picketing Wedn esday members, Mervis said. The order Local Superintendent Bill Buckley, students who go on to college and school districts, Buckley of Meigs,
from around the state at a recognimorning, Mervis said. .
remained in court Wednesday.
when he addressed 60 of the coun- " never re turn except fo r holidays Ron Minard of Eastcrn Local, and
tion banquet hosted by the Ohio ,
Some members of the. District
Th is constr uc tion project was ty's top achievers, their parents and and alumni re unio ns. He cbal- James Lawrence of Southern. On
Superintendents Association.
1199 of Service Employees Inter- bid in the same manner as' oth er . grandparents at the 11th Annual lenged those a!!cnding, esp~cialiy · behalf of the Meigs County ~oard
Joh n Costanzo, elementary
national Union 7 a.m. shift showed projects, Mervis said.
Academic Excellence Banquet held the adults, to s~nd the ume to of Education, they were each pt:esupervisor. gave the welcome at tbe
. their support for the picket T~esday
"Certain phases have not been at Meigs H igh School Tues day .. create opportu~•U es so our youth sentcd tiophies by Jeff Harris, presbanquet and recognized staff memmorning. Orderlies and nu rses are awarded, but are in hand," Mervis night.
can return to us .
.
ident.
be rs, Kitty Hailer, talented and
represented in this group, Day said. said. "They will be awarded based
"We blame a lot of our failings
"You as you ~g adults need to
~pecial recognition was given to
gifled c:oordinator. and Dana
Members of Tuesday's 3 p.m. o~ qu aUty at)d price.''
on not having enough time to do . leave us for a y;h1le, to furtl1er your an outstanding senior in each of lhe
Kessinger, secondary supervisor,
and Wedn esda y 's 7 a.m. shifts
. this or 10 do that," said. Buckley,
education, to face new challenges high schools - David Tounda• of for their toles in the countv's aca.
• • • ·
" bu t we have the same amour\t of on your own, to see what it's like Eastern, Jason Taylor o'f Meigs,
demic program. He also introduced
faclllties ~easallthegenerations thatbave away from home. and hopefully 10 and Jacob Matthew Morrow of I. 0. McCoy and Harris, Meigs
Board of Education m~mbers .

8 DROOM SUITES

SALE M CE NTER - Star
Grange 778 and Junior Grange 878.
Saturday at the grange ball, near
Salem Center. Junior Grange will
have its annual inJ;pection. Potluck
refreshments will be served.

County's top achievers honored for excellence

SELECT FROM:

LEXINGTON • HOOKER • ATHENS ·
VAUGHAN • FLORIDA •KEllER • UNIVERSAL

·-

'_

SPECIAL OLYMPICS
Over $700 was raised•for Meigs
Co unty Specia l Olympics in projects w here an Easter basket and a
by Bob Hoeflich
band wo ven rug made by Mary
King of Long Bottom were awarded as prizes. Tbe Childers family of
RuUand won the Eastcr baske~ and
KAcCll-tlllat·s the Uvely Racine
And that mai I brought copy of winner of th e ru g was Georgina
Area Community Organization- - Opie Cobb's book. "Let's Move. . Myers of Reed'sville .. C buck Kinwill be staging a king size yard sale and Some Goodies".
nan is coacb for the Meigs team.
beginning at 9 a.m. both this Friday
Opic slarted typing on the book
and Saturday at Star Mill Park.
on Feb. I, 1981. The next day an
GRAD.UATES
Tbc organizalion members article appeared in "Dear Abby"
Melanic Jane Beegle of Racine
wou ld appreciate contributions and titled, "Moving is a Pain". The will graduate from Bowling Green
they'll even provide pickup service writer bad moved six times 11
State University with a bachelor of
for any donations you wish to months. Opie once moved 13 scie.n ce in ed ucation d egree on
make. Just call 949-2017 or 949times in less than six months so he May6.
2031.
fell the writer was an amateur. He
has moved a total of 73 times in his
ALL OHIO BAND
Fund-raising for the annual
lifetime. I'm looking forward to
Two Eastern High School stureunion of the Middleport High
rc;iding his book-now what did I dents have been selec ted to be in
Scbool Alumni Association i.s do with that "spare" time? lnciden- the 1995 All·Ohiti State Fair Band.
going well-~ut-rescrvatio~s ;u:c
tally, if you would like a copy _of They arc Christie M .. Grossnickle
not coming m. Tbc deadline 1s
his book, the cost is $15 postpatd. of Reedsville who plays the eupho·
·
Opie's address is 691 Sycamore nium, and A nna C. Wolfe of
May 19.
Cost to attend is $13.50 a person
1.. M'ddJ
1 cport .
·
Pomeroy who plays the trumpet.
and this inclu d cs t h c b anquet,
Opic .is the one-with the belp
This is the 70th year that the
dance and dues. You're making · of Dwight Haley-who crcatcd that All-Ohio Band of bigb school stu·
the planners of the event nervous · miniature ferris wheel which you dents has been featured at the Ohio
so will you please send in your
may have seen in your travels. State Fair. The band will perform
money for reservations to Mary Unfortunately, Opic was working at the Ohio State Fair, Aug. 4-20,
Gilmore Brewer, P.O. Box 109,
on the roof of the ferris wheel last under the direction of Omar P.
Middleport?
month and fell fracturing four ribs
Blackman.
so things haven't been all that
Orval (Curly) Wiles. everyone·~ pleasant recently.
STUDY PROGRAM
friend, brought by · a copy of the
There .are some interesting
The Rev. Scott Rose will pre·
-~l'raili!; J)og_ Press", his _bometow~ .:.things aboYJ Opie. He once wrote
sent a six-week study series on
newspaper in IITriicna, Kansas,
a 128 page leueiln longhand to-his
"Revelation and lbe LaSllJays"
published every two weeks. Inter- . stepmotl)er. The two of them bad a Sunday mornings ,11 10:30 a.m.
·
·
· disagreement and the ~tepmother
esting.
from May 7 to June 1 I at the
Among tbe features of the newshad asked a question which, be" Racine Church of the Nazarene.
paper is a parody to Bye, Bye
says, in realil'y, be could have
Blackbird-sure you remember
answered in three words. HowevVISTA SITE
that song. I thought yo·Q would
er, he chose the longer routc.of..l.28,
Community Assalilt Prevention
enj9y singing along with the new · pages. The letter was written in
Services (CAPS) with offices in
words which go:
·
1931 and Opie currently bas it in• Jackson, is now a VISTA site, it
his possession. By the way, Opic
"Pack up all the ice and snow,
was announced today by Karen
"Winds that blow,
Smith, VISTA member.
is 86 .
"Cold and woe,
Smith said that VISTA members
"Bye, bye wintcr.
. ·
One can only admire Fred Crow
are full-time volunteers serving the
"Dig out all your · rakes and
and his positive, persistent attitude.
community. She said that volunseeds,
He dictated his Sunday column for
teers from Meigs County are need*LIM
TO $600.00 MINIMUM PURCHASE.
uGardening needs,
The Times-Sentinel-tHere was ed, that training available, and that
REQUiRE 10% DOWN PAYMENT
FINANCE PLAN.
uHoe those weeds,
.
some good humor .in it-from a
both men and women are encour·uBye, byl) winter.
.
bed in thh Holzer Medical Center. . aged to apply.
FREE.,
"Gosh it's good to sec that sun
Amazing! More of us probal)ly
Volunteers need only to bavi
DEUVERY
a-shining,
sbould be so dedicated ..
good communication skills, care
"No more sntrfles, shivering and
about children, and have a desire to 1-----~'!'-'1
whining.
•
According to a television report prevent child abuse, according to
CREDIT TERMS
"Leave you coat and bat behind,
Sunday evening, one-flflh of tile
Smith,:wbo noted that duties would
FREE LAYAWAY
"Scarves that bind,
nation's people shop at· Wal-Mart.
involve addre.s sing children i n
AVAILABLE ·
' 7~2-2211
"We don't mind, .
Guess l'm out of it. I don't even
classrooms, ot small assem~lies, or
't
7
"Winter, bye, bye. ··
11
know ' the location of the ne.ar~sl
in role-playing activities. Smith
.Financing Available
Showroom•
1
. . The clever parody was penned Wai•Mart but I'm living without it.
W1rehousu
asks for anyone in terested to con- WHh Approved Credit
I1Y Pat Ambrosier.
Do keep smilillg.
taet her at286-61j i L
.__ _ _ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _ _...._~--·-----"!111--..1

DIHEIIE SEIS

a

s

A Multimedia Inc. Newapape1

Union members stage
informational picket
outside nursing home

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonvill e Lodge 41 I, OES, Saturday, 7:30 p.m at 7:30p.m. at the
M asoni c Temple. Work in the
M.M. Degree. Refreshments.

Beat of the Bend ...

2.Sectlono, 16 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 3, 1995

P.o meroy's GOP nominates Vaughan

•

SATURDAY

Society
scrapbQQk

Low llmflbt .. 401, ......., .
Tbunday, raiD. HJaba Ia tl!t 60s.

BIG FIVE WAYS!

POMEROY ·- Meigs County
· Churcb Women United, May Fellowship meeting, at Grace Episco·
pal Church, Friday, 11:30 a.m.
Sack lunch. Host church will fur·
nish dessert and bevemge.
REEDSVILLE - Weekend
revival, South Bethel New Testa·
ment Church, Silver Ridge, Friday
through Sunday , 7 p.m . each
evening . Rev . Gilbert Spencer.
Chicago, speaker; special singing.
Public invited.
·

Pick 3': ·
193
. Pick 4:
8600
Buckeye'S:
1·7-12-14-32

Sports, Page 4

'

WED!'iESDAY
PAGEVll.LE .- Scipio Township Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30,
Pageville Township building.

Reds otT to
worst start
since 1950

TAX·DAYS ARE NOl' ALL BAD
LET
US PAY THE• TAX ON YOUR PURCHASE
'

POMEROY - Bedford Volunteer rue Deparuneot Commiuee, 7
·p.m. Tuesday, Darwin town hall.

.

Ohio Lottery

PLA official says
are 'well maintained' ·

SELECT FROM:
KELLER • CHROME CRAFT • DOBBS
HOLLAND HOUSE .• CALDWELL • DC FURNITURE

By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Staff
Dead animals.
fly-in fested piles of manure.
Run-down facilities.
Producers Lives tock Assoc ia·
lion representatives said those may
be the ima}ies seen by the future
.' stocky ard s neighbors, but the
cooperative bas a different picture
in mind.
"!assure you our new facilities
are not that way," said Jeff liarding, director· of branch operations.
"0!"" f~cifities, we think, .are well·
.'lnatntameO:"It's til our best lntereS!
to do that."
Siate and federal regulations and
environmental concerns have done
away with the old-fashioned,
unsafe and unhealthy stockyards,

APPLIANCES &amp; TELEVISIOHS

I Middleport business owners urged to work together

Harding fielded questions from
about85 participants at an informationa! meeting Tuesday at the C. H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center.
M any ques ti ons a ddresse d
health and safety co ncerns of
Spring Valley residents who own
property near the stockyard site,
adjacent to the junior fairgrou nds
on Jackson Pike.
Manure will be stored under a
roofed structure with a co ncrete
floor uritil it can be moved off-site,
Harding said. The waste will be
protccle(J fro.m the elements to prevent run-Ort"tnlO'area streams-. _, ~
"1be manure wtll be hauled off
as often as possible," be sa.'d· .,
Weather could de la~ transportmg
the waste for spreadmg on nearby
fields and f;u:ms. Hardin~ added. .

By GEORGE AB ATE
me mbe rs who would lead the
In other news, the group has ty association will hold its annual
Sentinel News Staff
development of the stratcgy would
increased its membersh ip to 45 farmer 's market from 8 a .m. to
The Middleport Comm uni ty own their business and property,
businesses· and individuals, !lock- noon or until U1e produce is gone,
Dooley said. This year the sale will
Association is working to develop a Hockman said .. Downtown owners
man added.
team of downtown business own- are needed since Hockman does not
Eight people attended the begin the weekend before the
ers. association president Dennis operate a business downtown.
monthly meeting to prepare for the Fourth of July and likely run
Hockman said at Tuesday's monthChuck Kitchen, president of the
annual Fourth of July and River · through September.
"I've had a lot or people ask me
!y meeting.
Meigs County Chamber of ComFestival events.
The group will hold its meeting about this," Dooley said. "The
A business association in the meree, said new businesses need to
Beverly and Waterford area has · be encouraged to slart up.
for the Fourth celebration between farmer's market wi 11 be a go and
.been successful in building a net"lf someone wants to start a
8:30 a.m.-9:30a.m. May 9 at the we won't let it die."
Tbe county extension office bas
work between business owners, ·business they can be sent a package
Riverbend Arts Co uncil building
coordinated much of the activities
Hockman said.
of information,." Kitchen sai;d,
on North S.econd Avenue.
"We need to encou rage local lll,lding ;u:ea organizations can proThe Fourth of July celebration for the second year of this event, be
lmmresses- to wo1k to-gelbenvtfh-Vidll".adwGt~ .on S@@ktng--l0ans. an11&gt;d~wwill.-bc held btUWCen...&amp;;3Q.a.m.- added. ~ ~- , . _~
businesses" Hockman added. "It's developing a business plan .
9:30a.m. May 16 at the arts counAlso, concerts in the parli are sel
something' we'll look at and work
Education remaihs important for
cil building.
·
·
for between June and August., Dooon."
helping area businesses grow,
In other business, the communi- ley added.
Ideally, the .four or five team member Tom Dooley said.
_

ll~~c~:~·like
it used to be,'~ wi~~::~~~r-ro~:b~::b~i~':;~- Fel1S711/ease -pair-cletained asiJtastwitnesse-s
Harding said. "Vcan't be because waste, Hardmg sa1d, and cleaned
.
·
. ·.
.
.
.

SELECT FROM:

we. wouldn't be m business."

MAGNAVOX • ZENITH • MAYTAG • FRIGIDAIRE ·
GIBSON • TAPPAN • WHITE WESTINGHOUSE

Continued on page 3
· · •
,

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) the M&amp;M Wrecker Ser,v1ce m.
Two drifters who. bad be'e n the Carthage, saying they were headed
focus of a nationwtde manhunt m
forSacramcn\o,C~f. .
•
connection wtth the boq~bmg of. t.he
"We didn t d~ 1t. W~ re ~le"',';
federal building turned out to be an . We JUSt got quesuoned. !'bats lt, . .
investigative dead end.
.
Ja~ told reporters throu~h bis car
.
, ,Gary Allm Land and Robert
wmdow. ,"The FBI ~m \.stuptd.
Virgil P. Phillips; and for the two Jacks, whose recent movements · We haven tdone any~ung:
scats on council, incumbent Bel.b roughly paralleled those of bombLand said he and hts fnend took
Stivers, George Hoffman, Barbara ing suspect Timothy McVeigh,
a polygraph test and " passed it
Hudson, and Linda Gilkey. Dennis were held for 18 hom:s Tuesday at
with flying colors."
.
Hockman was the only independent FBI offices· in Springfield, Mo.
- He told a TV intemewer..tbat
filing for clerk-treasurer.
They were apprehended by dpzens · after agents amved at 6 a.m., We
Fred E. Werry, Jr. filed as an or heavily armed agents in a dawn
bad to jump out ot bed and get
. independent for a seat on Pomeroy · rald on a cheap ~otel in Carthage, - dressed real quick and mel a _
village C()uncil and in the fall will Mo.
. _
SWAT team rn ,front of our doa. It
go up agailllst the Republican nomiShortly after budmgbt, the two
was real scary.'
.
· nces for the two open seats.
men reclaimed Land's white 1981
The men said they did not know
Thunderbird and drove away from
McVeigh, the only person charged.

Independent CandidateS file
•t•IOnS for fall electiOn
. petl
.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
1·800·837·8217
MAIN STREET RUTLAND, OHIO

4
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More tban .enough independent
candidates to assure a contest in
Middleport in the November gener·
al election had liled by the 4 p.m.
deadUne Monday.
That is, of course, If the Meigs
County Board of Elections certifies
that the petitions are valid~ That
will lake place before Ju)y 15.
Rita Smltb, Board of Elections
director, reported filing for mayor
were incumbent Dewey Horton and

m the bombing, or Terry and James
Nichols, friends of McVeigh's w~
face unrelated ~bar~es of conspu-,
'"&amp; wtth McVe1~h to make sma ll
bombs on aMtchlgan f.arm.
An FBI spokesman tn Oklahoma Ctty, Dan Vogel, confirmed .
thauhe men had been released but
refused to c;omment further.
Earlier in the day, a law enforcemcnt source in Washington, speaking on' condition ofano!lymity, said
authont1es were havtng trouble
finding grounds for holding the
men. .
. Whtte Hous~ Chief t&gt;f Staff
Leon Panetta saul today that the'
FBI has dealt with more than

11000 leads.

'·•sometimes they tum out to be

bo~ sometimes they tum out 10 be

cold, and that was tbe problem yesterday,'. Panetta said on "CBS
This Morning." "But, frankly, the
investigation continues at an
aggressive pace and we're conndent that ultimately well catch the
culprits."
Meanwhile. the death toll rose
to 142 today. including 15 children.
Workers searching for about 40
misSing people took their fint niSbt
off since the .April 19 explosion,
balling tile search from 6 P-!D· tn 6
a.m. because of the instability of
the wrecked buUding.

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Wedneaday, May 3, 1995

Contmentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Col:lrt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

-·

.I"'U.TNEEOA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETJ'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They' should be less than ·300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and musl be signed with name,

address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters

o· should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalilies.

Letters to the editor
To show we care
Dear Editor,
I wr01e a poem to the governor
of Oklahoma for the people of
Olclaboma City. I wt01e it from me
aJKI Racine and that we share their
grief and sorrow and that we are
thinking of them aJKI keeping them
in our prayers.
A Bomb: An Explosion of Lives
April 19th, 1995, an instrument
of Satall took souls tbat never bad a
chance. The world watcbed as the
smoke cleared. Some never had a
chance to cry or raise their hands to
the sky to say "! love you" or even
"Goodbye."
Little ones lost in an endless sea
of concrete and steel, a grave made
long before their lives experienced
growth.
Grief and sorrow ·were the tone
of that tragic day the whole ·world
joined in your tears, horror and disbelief of the explosion fell for
miles around, ·running out of
breath, praying that some. or all
would be found.
Li llle tl·ucks, coloring books,
shoes and such were found, but
now we'll never know how they
mig~l have been used.
· We might bave had an artist

another Vincent Van Gogh, a flrllman, a policeman, or an Olympic
runner cut down in tbi:ir prime but
we'll never know. A person of
desli'Uction with an evil thought in
min!! took frpm the world cbildren,
the sons, daughter$, moms, dads,
grandmas aJKI grandpas wbo might
have made a difference in the
world later on.
They are all in Heaven now with
Jesus our King making a difference
above and when you bear the blnls
.~ing, the wind blowing through the
trees, the rain on the rooftops, we'll
know they are all singing in the
Heavenly Choir, their voices the
whispers making themselves beard
through the trees aJKI the rain rears
of happiness that they are not hurting anymore.
.
Our prayers, for the grief, your
soirow, your tears, your losses, we,
the people of Racine, share with
you with love, bold you up in our
prayers and remember always that
Jesus our Lord loves each and
every one of you. This is wrote
with love and concern. 1 feel your
pain.
Martha V. Parsons
RaCine

.What other Ohio
newspapers are saying
,_;

OHIO Weather

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•

Far right needs not fear a U.N. 1nva.s1on
UNITED NATIONS - Tbe
radical frinae of the far rigbt from the Rev. Pat Roben.loo to the
paranoid Jiaralnilltaries 8Cl'055 the
nation - mi1ht be surprised to
learn bow iillll: power, lllld privacy,
actuaiJy is granted the bead of the
United Nations.
Tbe "new world order,"
Robertson cbarged in a 1991 booic
on the topic, might compel "the
government of the United Swes to
defer to the United Nations." Malk
Koernke, a Michigan militia leader
and radio talk show bast, takes
things a step further. He recently ·
suggested that the new world order
might lead to "the conversion of
the United States into an asset for
the United Nations."
Accordjng to U.N. Secretary
General Boutros Boutros-f}bali,
wbo sal down for a long a11d farranging interview with us recently,

the reality or world diplomacy Ia
quite the OIJPOiile. One ot his llllin
complaints Is the leek of privacy
and candor In conducting world

By T~e Assocb!t~ Press
.
A mass of low pressure will
Rain clouds w1ll return to Ob10 · spread sbowaa and thunderstorms
after Joday's brief respite fr001 the across the Gmlt Plains and into the
soggy weather, forecasters sai~.
Mississippi River Valley. Some
The greatest chance of ram on severe thunderstorms were possible
Thursday will be in southern Ohio, acros~ southern Olclahoma. northbut the rest of the state could get its central and northeast Texas, northlicks too, the National Weather west Louisiana and southwest
Service said.
.
Arkansas.
Also, the cloud cover and ram
A few thunderstorms were pos·
threat_will shave a few deg~s off sible across Florida as well.
Another tow pressure system
the b1gbs .for Thursday, wtth the
m~rcury htely to reach only the
will spread showers and thunderDUd-~ to low f!&gt;s·
stonns into northern California,
Fnday dcx:s~ t1ook mucb better western Oregon and western Washbut dry conditions ~ forecast for ington late in the day and tonight.
Saturday, tbe ~S satd.
.
In northeast Broward County,
. The record-bogb temperatnre for Fla., lightning struck a 7-year-old
thos .date at the Columbus _weather girl Tuesday as she and her tcamsla!tOD was &amp;9 degrees m 19~9 mates played softball. She
whole tbe reco~d low was 30 1n .~emained in serious condition
1978. Sunset torugbt wdl be at 8;27 today.
p.m. and sunnse Thursday at 6.29
For the second straight day,
a.m.
Goodyear, Ariz., was the nation's
Across the nation
.
hot spot. The temperatwe reached
Sunsbme made for dner weather 99 degrees Tuesday. The coolest
today along the East coast. and ~om S)lQt was Clayton Lake Maine, at
southern a11d central Cal1fomll! to · 25
'
the northern Rockies, but showers
.Temperatures were coolest.
and thunders~o'!"s ~ere sc:attered today in the northern Plains states,
across the nauon s mtd·secuon.
where the mercury climbed into the

MICH.

ITo~l60" I

one C1Cq.llial: A coiumn we wrote · ' see your mistress in Plrb?' ~-pe­
{n 1990 deacrlblna bis pivotal, tended I bad one. ADd I slid, No, I
bebind-tbe-atenca efforts to SCCIR am going to set; the man of the
the release of Nelson Mandela

South.'"
That is why, be said,~ co~
we
wrote was such a surpnse. For
By Jack Anderson
me, it was a mystery bow it was
denied the involvement before. known-lnevermentionedtbisto
and J
When [got involved ... it was Nelson Mandela. ADd we are very
Michael Binstein agreed frmn the beginnins \hat it good friends. We have'never talted
wiD never be mentioned." He then about it."
.
outlined a series of secret meelin.11s
The only good diplomacy, be
affairs.
"You have 185 permapent rep- be bad all over the globe that stressed, is a "very discreet one,
resentatives here," Boutros-Gbali belped pressure the South African even though you are tempted to
speak of it. You are proud; you
said. "Their mission is to write government to release Mandela.
The
meetings
were
so
claodeswant credit." Often, the peacemal:reports on what happens in tbJs
bouse. If I send a secret mission tine that bls boss, Egyptian Presi- ing diplomat is suppo~ '? disapsomewhere, hours later it will be dent Hosni Mubanik, began using a pear so tbat the two conflicting parknown. Here secrecy is more diffi- jocular cover sior:y that Boutros- des can boast tbat "we bllve solved
cult. Itis a real glass bouse."
· Gbali hlid a mistress in Paris (be this problem by ourselves," be
added. But in the case of a failure,
As the foreign minister of didn't)..
Egypt, be recaJJed, it was far easier
"I used to phone Mubarak, 'I "you (the diplomat) will be tl_le
to conduct affairs without the glare am leaving.' He'd say, 'What, scapegoal,,!l"d both of them will
of international attention. He cited again? Where are you' off to- to blame you.
, The most frustrating thing about
his job as secretary general, be
says, is that be often cannot
respond to bis critics. He is
"employed'' by ISS member coutitries. If any of them aiticizes him
publicly or in the press, be is
expecled to bold his !Ongqe.
Bourros-Gbali spent 14 yean as
. Egrpt's top diplomatic official,
·servmg Mubarak and Anwar Sadat.
In that capacity, he said; "You are
. supported by your government.
And when you are attacked, you
can counterattack.
-~
"Here, you cannot (coun ' r). I
cannot say publici y to the go ernwent of country A, 'You are
......, ·""'-, wrong.' You have to keep quiet If
you don't, it will cost you a lot
because you need them. They are
your bosses. Here, rather. than one
Sadat, I have 185 Sadats. Tbe
important ones are 40 or 50, the
active ones. But still, they are
there. So it is a handicap.''
All in all, be added, it is nqt
easy to stand up to them, even
behind the scenes. "They are so
powerful and you are very weak.
You have no army; ·you have no
· money; you have no political
power. Everything comes from
them (the member states). But you
must be able to tell them at times,
'I disagree with you.' And here is
the (greatest) difficulty."
If this is the new world order,
Robertson and bis brethren have
lillie to fear.
Jack Anderson and Mlcbael
Blostein are writers for Uniled
~eature Syndicate, Inc.
from bls South Al'rlcan prison cell.
''How did you trow about that
matter?" be pn:ssed us. "I always

What the 'bubbleheads' won ·for women
Eckel

McNamara's book can't atone his sins

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Accu-~

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' ' ' ' •' .----y-...,
IColumbus 180" I

,,,,,
W.VA.

I

Weather

Soutb·Central Ohio
Tonight...Becoming cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of rain late .
Low 45 to 50. Light and variable
winds continuing.
Tbursday ... Rain likely. High in
the lower 60s. Cbance of rain is 70
percent
..
Extended forecast
Friday ... A chance ·of showers.

Farm antiques club events
Tbe Big Bend Farm Antiques
Club will bold ilS regular meeting
· at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Meigs High
School library. ·The club will also
host an antique tractor pull at ll
a.m. Saturday at the Rock Springs
fair grounds. The rain date wiD be

EHS has minor fire

out as often as possible.
is to cut costs for buyers and sellers
"As long as that's done regular- by creating a place wl;lcre they can
ly, as far as run-off, !here's not a both meet and conduct liusiness,
problem," he said.
Bowlipg said.
'
Flies will be controlled by
Farmers save money by not bavspraying insecticide on the facili' ing to transport their livestock to a
ty' s interior walls. Harding said far-off purchasing point; the buyers
PLA is also looking at non-chemi- benefit by being able to shop for
cal alternatives, such as soL1r-pow- animals at one location instead of
ered fly traps.
.
driving to several places.
.
He assured homeowners that the
A 13-mcmber board operates
stockyard would not create any the PLA, Bowling said. Each
problems.
stockyard also.bas a farmer adviso"1 do \not view the site we • ry committee for input on bow to
picked as close to homes," he said. improve facilities.
"lt will not affect the homes.''
Besides the weekly auction ,
PLA Chief Executive Officer · PLA also offers several other serDennis Bowling described the vices, such as issuing :daily market
·ass&lt;;&gt;ciation as a non -stock coopera· reports and fm~cing_ of livestock.
. ti¥~ Memberg are not required to. ___ J'hg fae1lity-os es~ateli to ""!'" :
pay membership•fecs or purchase duct $20 to $30 million annually m
stock, he said. .
sales, Harding said.
"If you do business with tbe
"We would like to see the facili·
cooperative, you become a mem- ty up and running by fall feeder
ber," he said.
season," he added.
The purpose of the association

Pomeroy's

Eastern Local High School bad a minor lire in which a piece of
insulation burned in the school basement Tuesday morning, school
offtcials said.
EHS principal Clayton Butler put the smoldering insulation out
at 7:30 p.m. The insulation had smoldered with the heat from the
hot water pipes, Butler said.
.
School was sliD held since the smoke did not spread through the
building, Butler atlded.
.
At 7:32 a.m., the Chester Volunteer Fire Department responded
to the scene and the Tuppers Plains Vpluntecr Fire Deparunent

Marriage licenses
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Couo; of
Judge Robert Buck:
Robert Cecil DeLong, 26, and
Penny Lynn Gillispie, 19. both of
Long Bottom; Keimeth Ray Davis,
37, and Alliafair "Alice" Mances,
33, both of Pomeroy;
Vincent Dale Gray, 29. and
Brenda Sue Hawley, 23, both of
Portland; Kevin Earnest Heaton,
. 23 , and Lisa LaDonna Perdas, 21,
both of Chester.

The Daily Sentinel
0

Stn d Oldd rt!\'M'O rrettt! On~&gt;- l o
The Dril l)' Sc!'llincl , 1~1 C'mtrl St. l'omeroy.
Ohio 4.'ii69

should see this kind of pattern unlil
we do some more analysis.''
Tavakolian said.
She said that in many communities a ·school issue may have been
the only question on the ballot
"Maybe a lot of attention was
focusoo on it and people who sup·
P9rtcd it very strongly came ' out,
Tavakolian said. ·
"What it docs indicate is lhat
there's an awful lot of support for
education out there, and that's
heartening to see that kind of community support for local schools,"
she said.
Money for primary and sec·
ondary education comes mainly
from local tax levies and state .govemment taxes.
The funding system was ruled
inadequate and inequitable in Perry
County Common Pleas Court last
year. Tbe case, now in the 5th Oh~o
District Court of Appeals, IS
expected to reach the Ohio
s.upreme Court next year.

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Haley was sentenced to two
years on each charge which is the
maximum allowable penalty ,
Lentes.
He is requesting to be placed in
Ohio's boot camp program which
provides a super-disciplined learn·
~ng

environment for its inmales,

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 2 dischar ges · Yvonne
Black. Donald Trapp, Frank
Mayse. Mildred Wiilianl.&lt;. Russell
Woodburn and Mildred Nelson.
Printed with permi«ion.

YOU GET ALL THIS

-·-·-

3-10x13
3-8 xlO
3-5x7
6-3x5

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0

24- Wallets
24- Mini Wallets ·

•

(Senior Cilizen lickets may be purchased at the Senior Center)
Tickets may be purchased at the following:
Middleport Department Store
·
dhio River Bear Company
Kings Servistar Hardware
Mick 's B arber Shop
The Fabric Shop
.

Lentcs said .
Haley published two publi c
notices in The Daily Sentinel apologizing to tb~ community for the
crime and taking responsibility fo,r
the acts. Lentes said.
A co-defenilant, Jon Hill, 24, of
Racine pleaded guilty earlier to
complicity in carrying a 'concealed
weapon, possessing criminal tools
and trafficking in marijuana . li e
was s ~ ntenced to a tot al of fi ve
·-yellfS-with the-last yellf' esins. su~­
pendcd ~n lieu of fl vc years .prnha·
tion.

Stock reports are the 10;30 .a.ni.
quotes provided by Advest of
Gallipolis.

Senior Citizen TickeL ....... ............... .... ... 12.50

•

MAIL SUUSt;Rtr'fiONS
l-"lde Mtlp County

..

a

Ohio Valley ...................................44

(Stbdents thru High Sch?ol admitt ed free if accompanied by an adult)

ure-11 ~

.. .. $25.61
. . S49.66
$96.20

Haley sentenced on charges

• $5.00 -SITTING FEE
$24.95 PLUS TAX WHEN PORTRAITS ARE DELIVERED
$ 0RRY . VVE CA N

I

N O T

SPLil

tHI S

PACK A GE

QABIES, .CHILDREN, ADULTS, FAMILY GROUPS SAME PRlCE SaclzgrlluntiJ, Bt.clt - Ill/til• •
lie.

s•• ,.;, - s...,.,.}c -

CAN YOIJ 8HI£V£ IT-""?-??-.}Je.w !!! ~igR ..9-asRiot&lt;. G~aJ&gt;IOll.l Pac.~age.
SAME ~OUP OF POITIIA1f5 AS ABOVE $5 .00 OEI'OSif $44.95': WHEN DELIVllm
Do ~OLIA O WH. Ralll
ti\O.~e.up O k d St1U'e S!OO . OO
Mo~

e

o ..

P,.,p, Inc Iude'

1-J;,.t, Bq,,_

. Advance Purchase Tickets ........ ............... 14.00
At The Door ..... ..... ....... ............ ... ........... .. 15.00

Sub.scnbe" nul de~ irmg 10 p:a)' thl! c.1111cr m::ty
re mit In ad vance direct 10 flu: Daily Sc.:ntwel
on a three. six or 12 month basis. t n:di t w11l be
g1ven earner t a~·h week,

R•le-J OulSidt Meigs Count y

Wolfe Si .. Holzer Medical Center;
7:36 p.m. , slate Route 124.
Wesley Clark, Pleasant Valley
HospitaL
RUTLAND
12:24 a.m., College Avenue,
Ted Hatfield, VMH ;
3:20 p.m., Main Street, Colton
McKinney, treated at the scene; .
9:13p.m., Meigs Mine 31, Dave
Lowman, VMII;
10:05 p.m .. Cleland Hill Road,
Steve Lush, PVII.
SYRACUSE
7:01 p.m., Fifth Stree~ Christina
Yeauger. treated at the scene.
1UPPERS PLAINS
6:15 a.m., State Route 7, Debra
Young, St. Joseph's HospitaL

Units of the Meigs. Co unty
Emergency Medical Service logged
14 calls for assistance Tuesday
including two transfer calls. UniLI
responding included:
CHESTER v•' D
7:32 a.m .. state Route 7 at East·
em High School, report of a struc·
ture, Tuppers Plains VFD assisted.
MIDDLEPORT ·
. 1:24 p .m.. Butternut Avenue,
Todd.Varney, Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
POMEROY
1:02 pJD., VFD to Nye Avenue
for a street w,ash down. ·
RACINE
12:34 p.m., Willow Lane, Mary
Wolfe, VMH;
4:08 p.m.; Sixth Street, Hilton

One Valley .................... ~ ..·---·.30
R1110kwell ....- ............_ .....-.44 518
Robbins &amp; Myers.......- ........ .23 3/4
Royal Dutcb................- ....... 125 7/8
Shoney's Inc.,..............:......... ;Jt Ill
Star Bank ..................,_..;...... 413/4
Wendy Int'l........ - ............. _, __ 17
Worthlngtoo Ind.:.................. I8 3/4

. Presented by
.
The Riverbend Art Council '
Meigs Junior High School Auditorium
Saturday, May 6, 1995 7:30p.m.

SINGLE COl'\' I'RICE

1.3 Weeks ....... ,......
26 Wee ks ...
S'Z Weeks.............

Am Ele Power .......................32 1/2
Akzo ....................................... .SSt/4
Ashland Oll ..... - ..........................38
AT&amp;T .................................... .50 7/8
Bank One ................. _ ............2!1314
Bob Evans ...- .........................20 318
Champion Ind.........-,...........20 3/4
Charming Shop:.....,_.:........... .S 114
City Holding .............._................26
Federal Mogul. ........ - .....~......18 318
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .JSt/8
K·mart .....................................13 314
Lands End ..........- .............-.15 3/4
Limited Inc.-...............:........ .2013/4
Multimedia Inc. ,___ ,.......... .37 114
People's ................................. .22 112

--- The Stor-y -0/ Dance- -~

D!uly ...,,

I' W~k ~ ................................................ $23.92
26 Week.~ ...... , ................ ~ .............. $47.06
~2 Weels:s ................. :........................ S91.56

COLUMBUS (AP) - indiana·
Ohio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S . Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower, late sales mostly 50
cents lower; demand light to moderate.
'
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 33 .00-34 .50, late sales
33.00-34.00, a few 35.00-35.25;
planlS 34.50-36.25.
o
U.S. 2·3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 28.00-33.00.
·
Sows: steady .
U.S. 1-3 300-500 Jbs. 24.5029.00; 500-650 lbs. 29.00-32.50, a
few over 650 lbs. 33.00·33.50
Estimated receipts: 33,000.
Prices from The Producers Li•e·
stock Assuciuj.ion:
Cattle: steady to 1.50 lower.
· Slaughter steers: choice 60.0065.50; select56.()()-61.50. .
Slaughter heifers: thoice 58.0064.85; select 55.00-60.50.

/3et s 'Z)_a nce

i

One- Year , ........................ $91.00

1

Stocks

1

One Wee k................. . ... .....
.. .. $1.7 .~
One Monltl ........ ,................................ $'/.bO

_

Livestock report

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SUBSCRIPTION RATii:S
U)' Cnrri.e r or Motor Roull' •

No 'subM: np11 on by rhnll pcrnutted tn
whl.:rc home earner service· is ovnit nhll'.

Meigs EMS logs 14 calls

catlon} :"

Seco nd cl a ~s posmgl! pnuJ :ll Pomeroy. Ohio.

l'(J$1'Mi\S1 '~1( ;

SENIOR PROCLAMATION- Pomeroy Mayor John •
Blaettnar, seated, signs a proclamation naming May 16. as Senio~
Citizens Day in the village. Scott Dillon, ~omeroy counctlman and
.
. fiscal officer for the Meigs County Council on Agmg, observes.

ure

Inc., Ptl meroy. Ohi o -45169 . Ph. 992-2 156.

N c w~ pa pc r A s~ocimion

:

Deputies probe accidents

PubliJ&gt;hed every aFI_eS_!I_.?on. r-A9.ndjl_y ti!!"O u g l~
ffiday, rn- Crntrl St . Pomeroy. Oht ('\. by t fi~
Ohio Valley Publi5hing Cll mpnny/ MuJumcdla

nn4 the Ohto

the 80s in the Southeast; the 70s in
the South and the 90s in parts of
the Southwest desert.

50s. Temperatures ranged from the
60s in lbe Northeasl and New Engin the Paciftc Northwest;

A Pomeroy man charged with
carrying concealed weapon and
trafficking in marijuana was sentenced
Monday in the Meigs Counassisted.
I
ty Common Pleas Court of Judge
• Fred W. Crow lll.
Mark A. Hale y J'r., 20, of
Pomeroy was arreslcd in March by
No injuries were reported following two accidents investigated
deputies of the Mei~s County_ Sber_recently by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department
lffs Deparun~nt after bemg mdtclTbe ftrst accident occurred Monday around 10:30 p.m. on Vance
ed by a grand Jury.
·
R
- Road.juSUQyth ofJiol!e}'Jwlld'tlf'Sajli(l1'ownshipr Accordin~;;;-..- -- ,~l2ros~U11!!&amp; . A.\\0 £~~t..~bn
· U1e report OuliyBrumfield 22 Rutland- was so~thbound when her
_l,cntcs ~rud the md•cunent . as. e
1986 Cbe~olet was run off the. roadway into a ditch by an oncomresult ora ycat-lllll~ lnvc:,sugauon
ing vehicle. No damage was reported.
·
by th e prosecutor s ~fl~ce , the .
William Lee Smith 34 Logan was southbound on US 33
Meogs County Shenff s Depart·
Tuesday morning when 'be ;truck a deer that ran into the path ·of his .
m ~m and the (ObJo. Bureau of
1994 Mack causing moderate damage.
Cnmmallnvesugauon and ldenufl-

GOP..:ontinuedfrompage1_

personal income taxes.
There was no immediate explanation for the unusually high
approval-rate.
"I'm really not sure why we

of the power lines "constituted an
unreasonably dangerous situation"
and tbat the power companies and
King Brothers were negligent in
their safety p~ecautions .
It also claims Power Maintenance Inc ., Marietta, supplied
equipment to King Brothers which
was "dcfc;ctive and unreasonably
dl\ngerous" for the type of work
being pcrfonned.
The suit, filed in the Common
Pleas Court of Judge Joseph L . .
Cain, asks for compensatory and
punitive dam~ges, and legal
expenses in an amount to be determined by the court.

.-----Local briefs---.

PLA officiaJ.;ontinued from page 1

Pre ~s.

Page 3 ·

Damage suit filed in
Gavin electrocution

Lows in tbe 40s. Highs from tJu:
upper 50s north to the middle 60s
south.
Saturday...Dry. Lows 40 to 45.
Highs from the middle 60s north to ·
the lower 70s south.
(EDITOR'S NOTE: A lawsuit
Sunday ... A chance of showers outlines the grievances of one
or thunderstorms. Lows in the party against another. 'It does not
upper 40s to lower 50s and highs estabHsh guilt or innocence.)
mostly ·in the 70s. .
Tbe family of a consl.ruction
worker electrocuted last year at the
Gavin Power Phint bas liled suit
against Ohio Power Co. and American Electric Power Corp., as well
two other parties.
as
set for May 13. For details, call
Gregory J . Thompson, an
742-3020 after 5 p.m.
employee of King Brothers Erection Inc., Belpre, died April 30.
Harrlson•ille OES •
Harrisonville Order of the East- 1994, when the crane he w~ operera Star will meet Tuesday, 7:30 ating tame into contaCt with power.
p.m. Members to tiring item for lines, according to .the suit.
The suit alleges that the location
bazaar.

Meigs announcements

Mrmbn; The A s~uc i au.-d

n. Dally SlmUnel

-

Ohioans can expect more rain Thursday

Thllnlday, Ma7 4

By The AssOGU!ted Press
·
· Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interesc
Springfield News-Sun, April23
The image will remain indelibly in our minds: men and women settling
into the bu.siness day one momcn~ emerging dazed and bloodied the nex~
Most of the arguments against environmentalists or from govern· tunitr and fair-pay laws passed. telling us just bow uninterested the
their mundane routine shattered·by terrorism.
·
.
liberalism go like this: It doesn't ment regulations like the Clean They ve helped women gain n:pro- average woman was in liberating
work. Welfare,. job training, health . Water Act, the Clean Air Act and . ductive rights. And they've put herself from dishes and diaper
· . - And too ttlftn:t wbo.nev~:r ~merged _at al). , . .
Two years ago, when a powerful terrorist bomb ripped tlii'ougfi the · care, you nallle' lL lf Hie- federal - ·the Endangered Species Act. Houoo -----i!sues-tike-cbi!d care and farnily. .. _pails. , - - -.- - ,. _ . .
World'frade Center, the conntry was shocked and angered. But somehow government has anything to do
leave on the national agenda.
We now know that the bra-less
· the bird's-eye view of the federal office building in Oklahoma City, look- with it, it can't be any good.
S,. ..,.
Most important, feminism, like bubbleheads" were a lot more in
ing like a scene out of Beirut, was even more ilisturbing. This wasn't New
But what happens when some'" "
environmentalism, radically altered touch with the social climate than
York. This was America's bcartlaJKI, where things like that .aren't sup· thing does worli1 When a progres- ·
the public's behavior and its per- their male critics, and yet the idea
sive social movement changes Republicans are so sure tbat federal cepliDns. It's not simply that we of feminists pcing out of touch perposed to happen.
, : Those images will remain with us, just as we remember the image of thmgs for the better? Wben govern· regulations are irrelevant that they now see women astronauts, police siSts. A recent spate of books criu·
. the space shuiile Challenger exploding.
ment regulations do some good? recently passed iegislatiol) that officers, senators, film directors . cize the feminist movement by say·
Si!"ple. Then the problem never makes these environmental laws and ministers. It's that we see i~g that women ~ave plenty of
: But most of all, we'll remember the children.
virtually unenforceable.
them, and we don't blink.
ngbts and opportumues.
.
;· We may try to forget the images and the sounds of cbildren crying out eXJsted. ·
· of reach of rescuers, "like blowing in the wind," said one witness. We
· If this kind of loopy logic
And yet. as with environmental·
To which I can only say, dub . .
Consider the environmental
Maybe feminists and environ: may try to forget, but we will faiL It is our sorrow. We've all been movement. which bas enjoyed a lot sounds familiar, it's because it is. ists, the people who create the
of attention since the recent release Conservarives,bave alway'S tried to changes are consisterifly viewed as mentalists should spend more.lilhe
.' changed.
·
The Coshocton Tribune, April24
of Gregg Easterbrook's book, "A seduce us with the notion that if fl_akes and weindoes, wbo are com- tooling their horns, as Easterbrook
.
The Senate's first order of business this week after its spring recess is
Moment for the Earth.'' Easter- you ignore a socilil problem, it will pletely out of touch with "no111lal" and others suggest. But franlcly ; I
don't think it would help. Social
• product liability refonn.
. brook details the environmental go away. Too many people on wei- Americans.
: To understand why a fe'deral a,law is needed in this .area, consider the improvements we've seen since the fare? Throw them off. Drugs perThis notion bas been around progressives will probably always
' :story of Dreis and Krump. a machinery makJ:r in Chicago sine~ 1899. 1970s: Smog has declined by about vading our culture? Just say no. since feminisln began, and it reaDy be viewed as freaks, and in some
• Wben Dreis and Krump filed for Chapter II bankruptcy last year, tlS only a third. Twice as many bodies of Low-income families can't afford · took off in the 1960s, when male ways they are. But they're not out
: debt was a liability judgment for $1.6 million and a stack of lawyers' water ru:e now safe for swimming . health care?-Move to Sweden.
commentators tried . to assure of touch, just ahead of their time.
and fishing, and a number of for·
This is also a great way to keep America that this women's lib
Send comments to the author
·· biUs.
:
Large punitive d~agc award~ arc needed, we arc told, to keep merly endangered species are thriv- people from thinking that liberal thing was just a flash in the pan. In care of this newspaper or send
ing.
laws and programs are of any use. · Feminists were, in the words of her e·mall at saraeumaol.com.
·. unscrupulous corporations from sellmg· unsafe products.
:. Dreis and Krump was crushed by two lawsuits alleging malfunction of
Rather than give each and every After all, creating a solution is no West Virginia Senator Jennings
Sarah Eckel is a syndicated
'machines both built in the 1950s. The cases illustrate bow liability rules environmenlalist a big kiss on the achievement if the problem never Randolph, ''a small band of bra- . writer for Newspoper Enterprise
bave been skewed against defendants. The judgments forced the company behind, as they should, conserva- existed.
less bubbiebeads.'' Ms. magazine, Association.
into Chapter II - wilh the consolation that at least it can appeal.
Nowhere has this kind of amne- it was predicted by male pundits,
(For information on bow to
lives arc now using this informaOpponents of tort reform, who couch their argument in lenns of fair- tion as proof that the whole en vi· sia been more prevalent than in the would never last more than three communicate electronically with
ness for the little guy. seldom menuon the work opportuml!es that run- rorunental movement was a lot of women's movement Over the past issues, (''I'm sorry - I'm sorry," this columnist and others, conhogwash anyway. Things just took 30 years, feminists have made said a condescending Harry Rea- tact America Online by calling!. away liability destroys.
"
·
care
oflhcmselves, without any tremendous gains for American so ner on ABC television .) And 800·827·6364, ext. 8317.)
Senate BiU 565 will ameliorate many of these problems. It will stan·
real
help
from those Chicken Little women. They've bad equal-oppor- reporters across the country were
dardize liability law for manufacturers across the United States, as
requested by the governors.
Akron Beacon Journal, AprO 25
.
Women are likely to find little that is new in the report released recent·
Jy' by the U.S. Department of Labor tilled "Working W010cn Count!"
It details in numbers and anecdotes what most women already know:
It is ironic that in the midst of sible for the tide of cynicism that told his president that Vietnam was war, be used to tell us, for many
They are pulled in 100 many directions at onqJ; they ar~ paid ·less .than·
the Newtonian revolution and the bas washed over this once cordial a bottomless pit and the war could reasons, the primary of which was
men and have fewer opportunities-for advancement and traming.
current mood of antipathy toward country would have to irlclude not be won. Then be· went back to that Asia was a bunch of dominoes.
-..
TI!e-"Working· Women Co~ntl" -report follows closely on a !_eJl.O,rt
gQvcrnmem that a book would be Ro!Jert McNamam. I'm SOil}'. but th ~ Q[Oce and plaotie.d anothe~ If Vietnam fell, it might topple
from the Glass ~citing Commission, which also fOund ibat women. e1thcr . publlsbed by~ man Wliose very ~;;;:..;;....::..:...===-::::::::..::.:::.:::::...:::: ·bOmbing
raid.
- ~ ·--,ai!and alld Inllorresta and ma}'lle
through overt or more ,subtlc forces, face institutional obstacles to
existence screams' the warning that
Josenh Spear
Why did he not speak out Hawaii and California_and Harlinadvance§lenl.
.
it is stupid to blindly trust those -::----~,.,~~:.£:.=.=-- TIIEN, when our sons and daugb· 1gen, Texas.
.
.
Another study, by the National Foundation for Women Busmess Ownwho govern us.
the man makes me nauseous.
ters
and
brothers
and
sisters
were
Wbar
be
was
really
saymg
was
ers, is even more revealing. It showed that between 19?1 and 1~94,
· You want a clue as to why we
McNamara begins his account dying in a rancid jungle on the th~t he was not going to "lose''
-womcn~owned- small businesses employed more-people m the Untted
Jtave devolved into a nation of with a plea for )lllderstanding; '.1 other side of the world'I-Why~ dill ~V•etnam. for .;,:ears, conserv~uves
States _ 15.5 miUion - than Fortune 500 companies employed worldDoubting Thomases? Read "In do not believe ... that America's
wide. The 7.7 million fmns generated·nearly $1.4lrillio~ in sales a year. , Retrospect," by Robert McNama- political leaders have been incom· be not 'Speak out when those wbo bad been accusmg hberals or 'losprotested the absurdity of the war ing" China. but Vietnam~ ~y goli~,
But even tbat study points to obsta~les face~! by "!Jsmess~omcn, par·
ra.
petent or insensitive.... They have· were being beaten and thrown in was not gomg to go comm1c on b1s
ticuiarly in securing crellit for expansoon, desp1te sohd cn:dit bis10ry. In
"Why, after all these years of made mistakes, but mostly honest jail? He might have saved thou- watch. Why? Well, that w_ouid
short, women in business often fmd they are not taken senousiy. If govsilence am I convinced ,I should mistakes. We of the Kennedy and sands of lives and soothed the mean loss of (lower. Repubhcans
~nunent bas a role in helping women improve their status, it should bullspeak?" writes the man who was Johnson administrations who par- nation's broken spirit, but he chose might win and Democrats might
doze such roadblocks.
defense secretary for both John licipated in the decisions on Viei- to remain silent.
)Qse.
The Columbus Dispatch, A,pril 25
·
Kennedy and Lyndon Jolmson and nam acted according lo what we
"I
never
thought
about
doing
Put another way, the 58,000
. Geneml Assistance, Ohio's welfare program for able-bodied adults, is
who was the primary architect of thought were the principles and Ira- ' it," be told. ABC's Diane Sawyer, Americans whose names~ carved
dead. Gov. George Voinovicb wrote the last cbapter on the program by
the Vietnam War. The reasons are ditions.of this nation. We made our "because it was just totally ·wrong into a. slab of black grantte on the
signing abolishing legislation into Jaw, effective Aug. I.
·
many, be says, but "the main one decisions in light of those values. to_ t~se ... the power that you bad 'Yasbt~~ton Mall d1ed 10 a domesMany Sjlnsitive people worry about what will happen to the 61,000
is that I have grown sick at heart Yet we were w~ong, terribly accumulated as an official of the uc pohucal war. ~obert McNamara
people who bave relied on the $100-a-month payments for a maximum of
witnessing the cynicism and even wrong. We owe it to future genera- government to subvcn the policies could spend every day of the reSt of
six. months per year. But it's importalll to realize tbat a large safety net
cont~pl with which so many peo- lions to explain why "
his life in penance for being a party
of the pn:sidenl."
still exists. and that ths: $197 million savings from eliminating the propie v1ew Q~~ JlQiitical instituti&lt;ms
Two thoughts tJ3st. through my
Please
ponder
that{
His
fustloyto that, and be would not begin to
gram will go toward education and welfare-reform efforts.
and leaders.
. . mind. One is the image of the late alty was to his president. Not to his repair the damage.
. Simply put, welfare as it bas been sttuctured in the past hurts the very
1 pray _for the strength to say thiS gadfly I.F. Stone uttering tbe country. Not to the thousands of
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
people it's trying 10 belp. The Voinovicb administration is attempting to
as gracoously as I can: The immortal words "Every govern· Americans, and certainly not to lhe wrl~r for Newspaper Enterprise
move money into refonns· lhat encourage more self-reliance, but even
hypocri~y in that slat~mcnt.is so ment is run by 1ks" The other is millions of Asians who were dying
Association.
.
these proposed experiments will take years to obange a government-sponutterly ab~ that it disorients and the notion thai McNamara is right, in his damn war. TO HIS PRES!·•
(For
Information
on
bow .to
sored culture of dqlendency.
. .
~taggers any sensible ~rson who terribly right. The tragedy is that be DENT, as political an animal as communicate elec:ronlcally with
So refonning the welfare system does not end with the elimination' of
hvo;d through those homblc years. is 30 yean; too late in teUing libout ever slrode the Carth.
tbls columnist and others, conGeneral Assistance.
·
Any list of the I 0 people of the it.
Lyndon
Johnson
pursued
the
tact America Online by calUng 1·
It bas only begun.
20th century who are most responOh. he told aboul i~ be says. He
800-817-6364, ext. 8317.)
I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-J "'cket&lt; .f:::vr&lt;
. fr Glove•

t=ashion

lip : 1=o,. off t~e 5houl.k l~l

Po• ........ , .• . . . _ . , . . . ~- ,

~T I S PAC TU~ N O UA!fi\A ~ T E.EO

'Veal'

nl'"plesl top

••o ..........,.. •....- t11 -.. ..:....
N O

t ttDOII!N C H A R GE'S b

!BUTTONS &amp; Bows

&amp;T

itt .. I!!I!!J,

100 E. Mairi St. in Pomeroy
Saturday, May 6, 11:00 a.m. ti14:00 p.m.

�... ,

•
•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednaaday,llay,3,1995

The Daily Sentinel
1•

Sp,o rts

·

Suns move to next round; Bulls beat Hornets
.

Wedn•day, Maj 3,

By WENDY E. LANE
AP Basketball Wrtw
San Antonio, Indiana and
l'boenix wasted no lime setlin&amp; to
tbe secancl round of the NBA play·
offs. The Cbicaso Bulla 190" ne
they are on the verge of joining

•

•'

Because of 6-D loss to Ph/11/es,

Reds having century's worst start

GOOD JOB, DARREN! - Philadelphia's DarDa ulton (10) is congratulated by teammates
and couches after scoring on .Charlie Hayes' triple
~e n

in the second inning or Tuesday night's game
against the host Cincinnati Reds, who lost 6-0.
(AP)

Despite unruly fans,

Indians blast Tigers in 11-1 rout
Detroit' s smallest for a borne open·
lly HA RRY ATKINS
DE'llWiT (AP) - The Detroit er since 1972, when 31 ,510 attend·
Tigers. embarrassed by rowdy fans ed.
- Lofton complained in the ftflh
during their home · opener,
inning
after ·a baseball was thrown
promised to beef up security before
from
the
stands. The public address
wnigbt' s game.
Things got so bad Tuesday that announcer asked .the crowd to stop,
Cleveland center fielder Kenny but to little avail. The barrage conLofton feared for his safety as the tinued, including whiskey bottles,
cigarette lighters, even a mcllll nap·
Indians roUied lhc Tigers 11 -1.
·
Motor City 'fans have long had a kin dispenser.
"I' ve never pla yed in. worse
rowdy re~utation . But Ibis got out
conditi ons," Lofton said . "I've
of hand early:
-Fans liuered the fi eld with never seen anythin g like th is. I
magne tized schedules before the wasn' t focused on the game today.
game began, .bo~ the introduc- I was just worried about what was
tions of Cect l Ftelder and Mtkc goi ng on. When you're trying to
Henn eman and gave manager inj ure somebody, th at' s ridic uSparky Anderson a mixed greeting. lou s.~·
Tigers presi(lent John McHale
-At least 20 fans were taken
Jr.
said he was so concerned fo r
off the fi eld by sec urity. The
crowd, . ann o unc~d at 39,398 l?ut Lofton's safety Utat be considered
probably ·about 5,000 less , was calling the game off. Indians gener·

al manager John Hart called the
American League office during the
game.
" We will do something to make
sure security is beefed up 1and the
Indians players are comfortable
taking the field,'' AL spokeswoman Phyllis Merhige said.
McHale said the Tigers began
cutting beer sales early, especially
in the bleachers.
" But, clearly, it wasn't early
enough," McHale said. " I think .
wc' lllook at the whole gamut of
alcoholic beverages. But at the .
same time, we don't want to overreact."
In the mid-1980s, then-general
manager Jim Campbell closed the
Tiger Stadium bleachers for six
weeks.
" We made a big effon this year
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - What
the winless Cincinnati Reds
wouldn't give for just one game
like Curt SchiUing's latest
The Reds, a consensus pick to
win the NL Central, matched tbeir
worst slllrt of the century Tuesday
night because their pitcbing failed
once again. The Pbiladelpbia
Pbillies scQred four runs in the second inning off Jose Rijo, and
Schilling rook it from there for a 60 victory.
The Reds are 0-6 for only the
second time in modem history the 1950 team needed seven games
to gel a win. There's plenty of time
to make up ground, bul only if the
pitching ~ets straightened out.
"We ve dug a little bit of a
bole," said manager Davey John·
son, sounding conce111ed but not
crushed. "It' s early, but I am con·
ccmed about the pitching. It's been
horrendous - the starting pitching
and the buUpen coUeclively."
The Reds came into lhe game
with the National League's worst
earned run average at 6.35 and
watched their best pitcher give up
six runs in just 4 113 innings.
The Phillies scored four in the
second inning off Rijo (0·2), who
bas undergone a dramatic transfor·
mation in lhe last few weeks. He
didn't 'give up a run in 13 springtraining innings, but bas allowed 14
hilS and 11 tuns in 9 213 of bis first
tWO Starts.
Rijo uncharacteristically left the
stadium after the game without
talking to reporters.
"Jose threw WIJU, he just got a
little erratic in lhe second inning,"
Johnson said.
Phillies manager Jim Fregosi
wasn't looking forward to facing .
the winless Reds with ·Rljo on the
mound.

Girls' softball
league planned
Girls f7 years old and younger
interes ted in playing su.nmer fast
pitch softball are ask to contact
Paul McElroy at 992-7180 or Dano
!Gng at 992-5091 .
The team will be a member of
the Tri-Cilies League.

"There's a lot of things that are
dangerous wben Rijo's pitching,"
Fregosi said. "He really threw bard
in the fmt inning. He just got some
pilebes up in the one inning." •
That's aU it took. Schilling (1.0)
didn' i even allow the Reds to
threaten in his seven innings, giv·
1ng up just three singles. No one
reached second base, and Schilling
retired the last 10 iff order.
Gene Harris gave up two more
singles before closing out the combined five -hitter.
Schilling credited his defense,
which hasn't made an error Ibis
season. The Phillies' only error was
by a pitcher.
"As a pitcher going 10 the
mound and being able to tum
around and see !bose eight guys on
the field, that makes il easier to
throw slrike one.•You don' t bave to
throw a nasty pitch," Schilling
said. " Since I've been here, it
hasn't been Hke that. And lhat' s
very, very big." ·
The anxious Reds helped him
out at times by swinging when they
should have been watching.
"We're 0-6. People are uying to

get something s~" said Barry
Larkin, who bad one of the five
singles. "People IR going to pre~
They're going to uy to dJI whatever
they have to do to be successful I
don't think we played roo terribl~,
but we didn't make a couple of
plays.''
!
More importantly, Rijo didn't
make good pitches wben be bad 10.
He started the second inning by ·
walking Dave Hollins on four
pitches, tben gave up an RBI do"·
ble to Darrell Daulton. Jim Eisenre·
ich bad an infield single - one of
bis three bits - and Charlie Hayes
bit a sinking liner that center fielder
Delon Sanders dove for and
. missed, letting the ball roll to the
wall for a two-run biple.
Kevin Stocker's RBI single
· made it 4-0 with none out, and the
crowd of 12,331 vented its frutra·
lions. Rijo gave up an RBI single to
Hollins in the fiftb and Stocker sin·
gle4 in_another "ln _off Pete Smith
to keep Cincinnati the only winless
team in the major leagues.
"We can't believe we haven't
·won," Larkin said. "I think everybody is stunned.''

Atlantic Coast Championship Wrestling
is coming to the
Rutland Civic C~nter May 6, 1995.
Feature match will be a heavyweight
bout between Heavyweight Champion
Playboy Buddy Rose and
Matt (Orville) Masterson.
Plus 3 other exciting matches
and a IBattle Royal.
Tickets are available at .
Johnsons Video, Middleport, Oh,
Video Touch, Pomeroy, Oh and
Pizza Dans i!l Rutland, Oh.
Doors open at 7:00 Bell Time 8:00
Don't Miss It!

The Spurs, Pacers and Suns

wrapped up their ftrsl·round series .

•

Tue_sday night by sweeping tbe
best-of-five seis,·but each wm have
to wait for an opponent.
After being sent home early in
three of fhe last four years, San
Antonio survived a rough-and· tum·
ble series with Denver, winning 99·

•

..
' '.

95.

''"'I

.'

Brad Hembree was hit by a
pitcb and later sror¢ on a passed
ball in lhe sixth inning to give !be
Vinton County Vikings a 1.0 win
over tbe Meigs Marauders in TVC
baseball action Monday evening at
Meigs High School.
.
The game was played in a
steady rain that fell lhrougboul tbe
contest
The loss puts lhe Marauders'
Iitle hopes in severe danger. Since
they fell one game back of Wellston in lhe loss column, lhey have
two league games remaining . All
Wellston bas to do is beat Belpre to
clinch lhe title. The Golden Rock·
eis were ahead of Belpre 11 -0

...

TAKES AIM- Chicago guard Michael Jordan takes aim at the
hoop while Charlotte's Hersey Hawkins tries In vain to stop him durIng the first quarter of Game 3 of tbelr NBA first-round ·playoff series
In Chicago, where the Bulls won 103-80. (AP)

\

..-'

Philadelphia (Wat 1:0) at CINCIN NATI (Smitoy IJ.O), 7,3.5 p.m.
·
1m All[ltltl {Astacio 0-0) 11 SaJJ fnulci.ICo {LeitCr l~).I O:JS p.m.

Baseball

Eulem Dl•llfion

Iom

.D: L f&lt;l.

Ba~ton......................4

-

2 .667

New York ... .............4
Toro nto ..... :..............4
- 1J illtfrnore .....: ...........2
Dcttoil .....................2

2 .667 '
3 .571

_..,.._.J»
4 .333

.
Central DIYliion
MllwauUe ...............
1 .833
CUVELAND ......... J
2 .600
Xanw City ............. ]
2 .600
Minnetcu ...... .......... 2
4 .333
Chicago..... .. ............ .!
S .167

s·

.lill

New York (Hamlldl
"-r

.5
2
2

!.S
1.5
3
4

Weatern Division

Seattle ....... ~ ............. s

1
3
4
S

Callrornia.............. ]
Oakland ................... 2
Tex• ,..................... 2

Tuet~day' s

.833
.500
.333
.286

2
3
3.5

~ica,o {Abbott 0.1 } at Toronto (GUJ.·

mau 0.0). 7:35p.m.
M il wau~

(Eldred 1·0) at Baltimore
(McDonald 0.0), 7:3S p.m.
Bol ton (Cor mier 1·0) at New York
(McDowell l-0), 7:35 p.m.
Seanle (Bosio 1..0) at Tt.w (PaYiik: Q.
0), 8:05 p.m.
Kanua Ci ty (Gcwdon 0-1 ) • MiDDeaota (Mahornt~: {)..(J), 1:0.5 p.m.
Oat:.lind (Darllna 0-1) at California
(Lanpton 0.0). 10:35 p.m.
.

Thursday's ga mes
Milwaukee (Scanlaa 0..()) at llaltirnore
(FerDaQdcz 0.0}, ll :J.'i p.m.
Kar~us City (Appler 2.{1) at Miontaoll

(llawklDS Q.J ), 1:15-p.m.
CLEVELAND (ltmhiser 0-0) at De-troit (Well• 0--1), I :J S p.m.
Bolton (Hant oD 1-0) at New York
(Pe(ez 1..0), 7 :3.5 p.m.
OOJI!Id (Stottlemyre 0-0) at tall(ornla {Sandetloa 0--1), 10:0.5 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
[astern Division
Atluta ... - ...............~

MonvcaJ ................. A

.

..

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~~11,688
~Eke

No Doc ~ees OEMrtld'

Fees

flhiladelphia .............3
Now Y&lt;&gt;&lt;L ........•.....2
florida .... :................ !

~5,688

No Doc Fees DeNoecr

DaM.~

BRAND lEW '9S CHEVY AS11II Emm OOIIVEILQ VAN
• 16 Valve Power
• Drwer S~e Artlag
• 4 Wheel An11-lock Brakes
• Power Steenng
· Power Brakes

• Power Door locks
• AIIJFM Stereo
• Styled Wheels
• Steel Boned T""
• Wen Equ1pped'

• Extended.ChassiS
• On'Jel S1de An Bag
• Antt-lotk Brakei,
• An Cond1h00
• Automatic Overdrive
• Vtsta Bay Wtndows

·PIS, P/B

• Sola/Bed
• lndlrec1 L1ghting

• Power Wmdows
~&lt;Prem1um WOOd Pll:g
• Power Locks
· Tilt, Cru1se·
• Full Conversion
• At.4/FM Cassette • Alummum Running Bets.
• 4 Caplain Chatrs ·Loaded!

11

• Dual A1rtlag
• An~Loclr Brakes
• Aulomattc

• AIIJFM Cassene

· Dual 1¥ ComtO!Iemp

• Alum1num Wheels
• Keyless Remote

·PoWer Anle11na
·Power DriVer,&amp;
Passenger Seat

Entry Srstem
·Loaded! •

01mate Con~ol

state pa nel of coachc1 rates Ohio high
school baseball teams in the second rcgu·
Jar-season ~IIJor TI1e Auoda!ed Press
(by Ohio High School Athleti c Auocia· tl on divis ions, with finl·place YOtc1 in

.lill
i
1.5
3 "
4

429

Storond l t: 11 -Shaker Hta: . (1) 59. 12Wo&amp;tlalc 49, 13-Meolor 48. 14·W ..
Chester Lat ota 40. 15-Worthington Kil·
buurDC 38. 16 (tie)-Ha.miltoa, C\ly. Fall1
Walsh JQuit 'II. 18 (lie)-Hu d.~on (1), Eu•
ctid 28. 2Q-Cin. Co lerain 2J.

Basketball
NBA playoffs

fll,
.. 327
2-Sieubeovtlle (4) li·S .......... ............ 197
J.Jiebron l.aiewood {3) IS-4 ....... .. 180

+Col. Watte.-.on (2) 11-4 ........ .'......... IS!
S·Fairfield Union (3) 1S.2 ........... , .. I SO
6-Franklio (3) 17-2 ......................... 134
. 7-Avon Lake 10-2 ............................. 124

&amp;erie&amp; 1-0

Seeo ncl lf1

11 - Waus~oo

69 . 12 -

47. 16·AIIlance Marllnatoo (2) 37. l'l'·
Bowlil18 Groen :U. 18·Hamlltoo R011 20.
19 (tie}-Ottaw•Giandorf, Akron St, Vio·
cent-S!. Mary 13.

:r-

-

Division III •

a.;

1-Johnltown·Monmc (17) 1'8-t ... :...... JI 3
2-0ranville (4) 14-0 ............................212
1-Coldwater (l) 12-2........................... 198

1'uesday's scores

Tonight's
Aorida at Pittlbuigh, 7:30p.m.
New Jmey at Buffalo, 7:30p.m
Boston at Mootrnl, 7:30p.m.
Hanford at Quebec, 7:30p.m.
Ottawa at T~a Bay, 7:30 p.m.

Tonlahl
Orlandu at B01ton. 7 p.m. (I'NT)
Utah at Houston. 9:30p.m. (I'NT)

Loa AnJelea al Chicazo, 8 :30p.m.

Th und• J
Chal'lotte at Cbjcago, 9:30p.m. (l'N'f)
Seattlt- at L .A. Lalcen, 10;30 p.m .
(filS)

Detroit at St. Loui1, &amp;:30 p.m.
Edmonlon at Calgary, 9:30p.m.
Vancouver at Sao Jose, 10 :30 p.m.
:roronto at Anahdm, II p m

Fr iday
Orlando at B01ton. 7 p.m. (TNT)
Utah at How;ton, 9:30p.m ('JNJ')

Transactions

Hockey

BasebaU
Amulcan Ltaauc
BbSTON RED SOX: Plated Zane
Smith, piu:her, on lhe IS-day disabled lilt ,

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanlk Dl"'*'-'

.D: L I fiL !if !iA

y_. Ptuladelphia .. -2816 ~ .60
x·New Jersey .... 22 17 8 52
.1-.Washjnj!l_ao ... Z2 18 .11 S2
t·N.Y. Raoam . 22 23 J 47
flQJ!da .. ,........... 19 22 6 44

TampaBay ....... l727 l
N.Y. blaodm ... J5'28 S

ISO 132
132 116
UD llO _ ~ .

139 134 .
111 124
37117 140
35126 ISII

retroaci:Jvc to April 24. ~•laoated Mik:~
SuHivao. pitcher. ror U&amp;ianme-nt. Pur-.
cband the contract of J&lt;Je-1 Joho11on,
pitcher, fro m Pawtucket af the lnte-rna·
tioba.l,l.eague.

.

8asketbaJI

N.;lon-.1 lluk•th•ll A-.-latlori. · -IIOUSTON ROCK.f!TS· Plated V.er·
non Maxwell, auard , on indefinitt. leaYe
o(ab~enee.

S-PORTSMOtmiWEST (3) 10-t .... t38

6-0'Iillicotho Unioto (2) 8-0 ............... 127 7·Toronto 14-4 .................................... 110
3·6loom-C.,-oll J 3-3 ......................... 109
9--MII'liu feny (I) IS -S ............ 1........ 107
IO·Zcwvlllel'ule. Van. (2) 13-2 ...........91

'

Today's games
. PitUburah (Loaiz.a 1-0) at St. Louil
. (WatiOII 0-0), I :lS p.m.
H01.1110n (Reynol,dl ~I) at ChiCttiO
IT"""" C&gt;.O), 2,20 p.m.
.
San Olqo (Hamlltao 0-0) at. Colorado
(Rlt&lt;IJ.O), MS p.m
Atlant. (OfaYine O.Q} at florida (Win

o-t), ' '3! p.m.
. N~ Yorl (Saberhaaen 0.0) Ill Moll·
ttea1 {MartiDa. J -0), 7:3S p.m.

Bask~ts,

4 in Geraniums,
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose

Bushes, Strawberry Plants

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992-?776
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-S pm

17 23 8
16 25 7

Philade lphia 2, N.Y. b laodcrs 0
Aorida 4, N.Y. Rangers 3
Washioaton 1. PittsburiJ.h 2
Los Angeles .2. Wino1peg I

+P&lt;rry(2) t+L ........ .................... , ... tl4
I
IJ
2
4

21 18 8

61 l76 132
51 lSI !14
SO 134 140
42 136 135
39 !57 177

regular-season finales

Future games

Iom

28 14 5
23 19 5

Psclflc DI,IJhJn
y·Calgary ....... 23 17 7 53 lSI 132
l·YmQ.U}'tr ... 18 }811 47 ISO 145
San Jose .......... 19 25· 3 4 1 126 158
Loa An geles .. .. 16 22 9 4 1 141 169
Edmonton ....... 17 26 4 38 133 178
Anaheim ........... l.5 27 5 3S 119 163
x-clinched playoff bH!h
y-won division Iitle
z."won confertoce: Utle

Pboeoi:t 111, Portland 109; PhoeQix

10 Maumee (3) 12-1.. ............................17

Marynil\e (l) 67 , 13-Col. DeS ales 56.
14-Bryan (I) 49. U·Oelaw•~ Olcotanay

1-St Loui1 ........
x-Oiicago .........
x·Tiiro oto..........
Dal lltll .......... ......
Wiollipeg ..........

Tuesday 's scores

3-llamllton Badin (1) 14-•i.. .............. 122
9-Parll\8 Padua 6-2 ................................96

43 123 1-44

5 l l 11 2 171

.

Indiana 105, Atlanta 89: Indiana win&amp;

('INI)

:rum
!-Bellefontaine (17) 11-3 ..............

7

Ctntral Dirislon
:rum-·" .~ w -J; T [b;--!if !.ill.--·
z-Dt: trolt. ........ .. 3211 4 611 111 tiS

New York at CLEVELAND, 7 p.m .

Division 11

!'i 63 (S J 133
3 61 178 IS4
3 55 146 125
i 49 125 II~
S 43 126 137

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Second 11: JJ.()regon Sltitcb Jll . 12·
l.eip1ic (2) 33. I 3-CUyah oga Htl. 33, 1-4Aiblabula SL John 26. IS (tie} Kal ida, N.
Balti more (I ) 25. 11·Cio. Country Day
(1) 23. U ·Oal io D Northmor 20. 19·Caoal
Winchetler J7. 20. Anna 16.

wiDii Rtica 3·0

9oTot. Suvt (2) 7"! ... ..... ..................... 82

Tuesday's ':scores
San Francisoo 4, t..m Angele~

r·

9-Colufli)lua ( 1) 9-2................ :...........73
10-St. Henry 7-4.......... ...........................69

10-Cin. Oak Hills 15-3..........................66

.. ... 113

Now Open J&lt;orThe Season
Bedding Plants
Vegetable Plants, Hanging

4

= .. ,....

'l,AJcaQIIID-R.3.. . - - - - -,I.., ..
90
8-Jewett-Sclo 8-3 ........ t.......... .fi ....... ..... BO

8-Wadsworlh 11·1 .......... ,.....................97

3 (IS
inn.)
AUanta 7, Aorida I
Montnlll 9, New York 6
Philadelphia 6, ONCINNATI 0
IJOUJIOn .5, Cllicago 2
Pinsbutah 1, St. Lowi16
Colorado 6, San Oieao S {I I ina .}

r..o. Anaetea .,........... 3

&amp;

1-FJirpM 1-tarOor Hardlng (II) 14-2.. .. 2116
2- Fre ~nt St. Joseph (S) 10- 1 ............ 257
l-Steuben. Cath . Cent. (10) 12-4 ........ 2.5 1
4-0 est line (2 ) 8-4 ............................ 192
S-Cedarv.i lle (2 ) 12·2 ......... .................. ! 04
6-Sandulky SL Mary'&amp;(I) 6-3 .............. 93

Chicago 103, Charlotte 80; Chicago
leads seriea2·1
San ADtuaio 99, Deoom 95: San Aoto·
nio win1 &amp;eriCII 3~

SecORd lll: ll·O.,noa 74. 12·Bioom·
dale Elmwood 46. 13-New London 32.
14-Ma~~illon Tual•w 29. \S.Gn.aefthut -

3 ..571
3 .571

Iom

· parenthese~~) :

.,.....
1
2
3

SIJlfrancia«J ............

'

r.tonday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

2 .600
4 .333
S .167

C11n tral Di'fl"on
Chicaio ....................4 2 .661
Ho~»ton ................... 3
3 .SOO
SL Louis ..................)
4 .429
Pitt5biii"Jh ................2 4 .333
C~CINN.-\11..........0
6 .000

!ian Dicao ................4

•

TOLL FREE 1~800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422·0'(56

2 .661

Wettrrn Di•l-'on
Colorldo ..................6
I .857

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK PARK'AVENUE
• A1r Condrt10n

1 .833

COlUMB US , Ohio ( AP ) - How a

7·Tol. Whitmtr ( I) 12·2 ...

Tonlgbl 's games
C LEVELAND (Clark 0-0) at Detroit
(Doherty 0.1), 7;05 p.m.

.D: L f&lt;l.

Ohio H.S. poll

3-Hilliard ( 1) 11·2 ................... :....... .202
4-pjqua {4) 16--1 ................................ 187
S-WeittrYilleNorth (S) 18· 1 .- .......... 112
6-Matlli. Madi10o 12·2 ..................... 150

Kansas City 4, MiDDeaota 3
Oakland 2. California 0

Iom

·

~ Qu ant n\1

1 -0) at
-----c!NCINNAtJ'(l ilrVIIil'O), 7.!! p.m
Houston (KLlc 0- 1) at St. Loui1 (O.!i boroc 0.0), 8:0S p.m.

Phila delp hia

fll,
!-Canton OteDOal (14) I 1-0 ...... ,......274
2-Ci o. St. XaYier (I J) 20--2 ....... :.. ......206

Seattle I.S, Tex. 3

Certified used car buyers will be on hand to give highest trade-in
value lor your automobile. Please bring your title, registration
card, and payment book if applicable.
NO SALeS PERMITTED TO IIEALEIIS. ~is clearance Is lor retail cus·
tomers only. Prices apply to available units only. lla ordering per·
milled at these prices.
·

q..orat Montmll

Iom

Bollon 8, New York: 0

.

..

· N•lhttuc Dlvlaton

I·Queb e&lt;:: .......... 29 13
X·PiUsburaJ1 ..... . 29 15
I·BOSlOt:1 ,., .., ..... 2618
X· Buffalo .......... 21 19
Hartford ......... 19 23
Montreal ........... U 22
Ottawa ......... ..... 8 34

Division IV

Divis ion I

scores

ClEVELAND It, Detroit I
Toronto 9, Chicago 8

.

(Henry 0-1}, 7:35p.m. ·

run.
Meigs threatened in lhe bottom
of lhe sixth. Scott George walked
and moved to third when Cass Cle·
bind reached on an error with two
outs. But Vinton County got a
break when BretrNewsome bit a
smash up the middle lhal hit the
pitcher and bounced to the Viking
ftrst bl)SCman, who just beat New·
some to the bag for the inni ng's
final out
Cleland , Bre tt Newsome and
Bradley Whillatch had the Marauder bits, which were singles.
For the Vikings Jeremy Ward,
Dusty Ward. Travis Rucker, Ben
Eberts and Crabtree had th e
Vikings bits, which where singles.

. even though lhl!)r got 11 runs and ' innings.
Sean Bergman (0·2) gave up
we got one," Anderson said. " I'D
fiv
e run s and six bit s in three
guarantee you the Indians don' t
innings.
He was followed by llri:U&gt;
feel good about that today. 'They're
Bohanon,
who gave up a homer to
just happy to be back in that club·
Ramirez
in
the sixth ahd a three·
bou.se."
,
run
shot
by
Sorrento
in the seventh .
Cleveland bit four homers,
Kirk
Gibson.
who
had two sinincluding a three-run drive by Jim
gle
s.
sco
red
o
n
a
do
ubl e- pl ay
Thome in the fir st. Manny
grounder
by
Chris
Gomez
in the
Ramirez, Paul Sorrento and Carlos
Detroit
second.
Baerga also homered for the lndi" I grew up around here and I
ans.
still
live here, but those people sure
Dennis Martinez (2-0) gave up
didn'
t. make me proud today,'' Gi b·
one run and seven bits, striking out
six and walking three in seven son said. "II's crazy."

ton Indian Valley ( I} 27. 16·Brootvllle
(1 ) 26. 17-Jeronwvllle Hillldal e 22. 18Cio. McNieholu IS. 19 (tie)· Dclla, Elyria
Cath. (I ) I J.

Thursday's games
Sao Francbco (Wi!, on 1·0) at San
Di cao (Sauderl HI), .f:OS p.m.
Atlanta (Avery 0-1} at Flori dil {Rapp
0·1 ). 7:0S p.m.
·

AMERICAN LEAGUE

_$8,688*!

when the game was suspended
Monday because of rain. 1be game
will be picked up in the thir!l
_inning at a later_~· .
It was a. pitcher s duel between
the Marauders' Gary Stanley and
the Vikings' Josh Maerker. Stanley
was the hard luck ioser scattering
five hits, sll:iking out 11 and walking two. Maerker gave up three
bits, struck out four and walked
one.
Hembree reached to lead off the
sixfh by gelling bit by the pitcb.
Two outs later Kevin Crabtree sin·
gled. Then both runners moved up
on a walk to Jacob Patrick to load
the bases. Hembree then scored on
a passed ball with the game's only

Scoreboard
Major leagues

able up to 84 months!

.
to finish the series with 95 . He
scored 12 of his points in a dedsive
26·5 second·halfrun .
'The Hawks bolted to a 7.() lead
and led throughout most of the first
half before Miller and tbe Pacers
took control.
Now Indiana aw,aits the outcome of the Cleveland-New York
series. 1be Knicks have a 2-1 lead
going into Thursday' s game at
Gund Arena.
Bulls 103, Hornets 80
Michael Jordan scored 25
points, and his double-teaming of
Alonzo Mourning helped contain
lh~ Charlotte center.
Mourning, dominaling in Game
2 with 23 points and 20 rebounds,
was missing in action most of
Game 3. He bad rwo points and one
rebound in lhe first half and fin.
isbed with 13 and seven.
Toni Kukoc scored 14 of his 22
points in the third quarter for the
Bulls, who haven't lost a fir stround playoff series -since 1987.

[nning totah
Vinton Co.'
000.001-0=1-5.0
Meigs
000.()()()-0=0-3.0
WP - Maerker
LP- Stanley

~

PAINT SALE

/ndians win ••(~.:.:OD;.::tin:::U.:.:ed:.::f~:;:;Om=.:Pa:Q;ge:.:4:!..)- ' - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - -

to try to attract families and young
people by cutting prices in the
bleachers," McHale said. "I'm not
career but be went on to pitch a ready yet to abandon that effon."
record seven no-hitters an\1 became
As Dell'\&gt;it was.coming to bat in
.the all-lime strikeout king.
the sixth, a young man climbed
Fregosi's best days were as a over the rail near the Indians
manager after bis playing 1days dugout and dashed across .the field
ended . He took lhe Phillies to the and over the left field screen. A
World Series in 1993.
man and woman both dashed onto
the field while Cleveland batted in
In 1961, the year Roger Maris the seventh. Others followed as lhe
bit his record 61 home runs, his game wore on.
"That wasn't a baseball game,
Y~ee teammate, Mickey Mantle, .
bit 54.

What a trade!
NEW YORK (AP) ~ Somelimes a team gives up too soon on a
player with promi5!!.
,
The New York Mets did in 1971
when they traded a young (irebailer, Nolan Ryan, to the California Apgeis for shortstop Jim
Fregosi, an established big leaguer.
The Mets believed Ryan lacked
major-league control. He did have
some problems throughout his

I

Selection includes Astro All Wheel Drives and G·2ll's, both avail·
able with raised roots or low taps. Prices range lrom $17,1188 to
$36,!188.
"
.

lhe Spurs, who will play~ wil)ner
of the Seattle-Los Angeles Lakers
series, which the Lakers lead 2· 1.
Suns 117, TraU Blazers 109 ·
Charles Barkley again showed
his ability to nh\lost singlebandedly
put away a playoff opponent in
Game 3.
Last year, he had 56 points to
complete .tbe Suns' fir st-round
·sweep of Golden. State. This lime,
be got loose for 47 against the Trail
Blazers.
"Onceyou ·get off toahot·starl&gt;
you feel it," Barkley said.
Barkley was 16-for-26 from lhe
field, including four three-pointers,
and grabbed 12 rebounds as the
Suns finished the season 8·0
againSt Portland.
The Suns will pla y either lhe
Jazz or the Rockets.
Pacers 105, Hawks 89
After sweeping Orlando in the
rust round· last season, the Pacers
didlhesarne .lhingAUanta..
Reggie Miller scored 32 points

, Vinton County baseball team slips past Meigs 1-0

I'

·TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER BOO BRAN D NEW
CIEVIIIIEIS, OI.DSMOBI!S, POifTIACS, BUICIIS, GEO!i AND CUSTOM
VANS. All will be sold at subslliJtial discounts!
Plus $500 to $2000 cash back or 3.6"/o APR financing available (up
to 36 months) on selected models on apptuYed credit. Tenns avail-

.

With a 105-89 victory over
Atlanta, Indiana swept its first·
round opponent for the second year
in a row and will meet the winner
of the Cleveland-New York series.
Playing at borne, Chicago seized
its opportunity, taking a 2·1 lead
with a 103-80 romp over Cbarloue.
. Phoenix advanced to the second

I

WEST VIRGINIA'S#1 CONVERSION VAN DEAlBI HAS AN INVE111111Y
OF OVER 300 BRAND NEW CHEVROlET CONVERSION VAliS.

.

~.

round for the fourth straight season
wilb a 117-109 victory over Poriland.
In tonight's games, Orlando and
Ulab hope to rebound from their
Game 2 losses and regain borne·
court advantage in their series. The
Magic play the Celtics at Boston
Garden, and tbe Jazz •.visit tbe
Ror:kets at the Summit:-"
Both series are lied 1·1.
Spun 99, Nuggets 95
In a game marred by five recbni·
cats, the ejection of Denver coacb
Bernie Bickerstaff and a trashthrowing outburst by fans, San
Antonio withstood a fourth-quarter
c:cmebadc by the Nuggets.
Down by 12 at the end of the
third period, Denver lied tbe game
on Dale Ellis' three-pointer with
37.1 seconds left. But Sean EUiott
bit a driving layup with 33 seconds
to play, and bis free throw with 2.7
seconds to go sealed the win.
David Robinson and Avery
Johnson bad 24 points apiece for

ThJ• Week's Special:

· ·corn Dog ·

74¢

with Fries ' 1.49

Lo u Ge hri g drove in 184 runs
[or the New York Yankecs in 193 1.
the highest ever in the American
tLeague.

Our s pecial exterior
rust preve ntive paint
lor metal and wood.
Gloss enamel finish.
No primer needed.

PICKENS
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MASON, V. VA.
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�•

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Wedl'\llsday, May 3, 1995,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs girls
·beat Vinton
County 10-5

Society .
scrapbook

· 37 Years of Foodland in the tri-state

EASTMAN"'S

The Dally SenUnel Pag1 7

Porr•O\' Middleport, Ohio

.wectn11day, May 3, 1995

00 GRADUATES

::

Meigs jumped out to a 6-0 first
Inning lead ea route to a 10-S win
over Vinton County in Trl·Valley
Conference softball.aclioa Monday
eve11illg at Meigs Higb School.
Tbe contest was played in a
steady rain and was called after
four and one-half inpings due to the

1bc foliowilla locll Obio Unlt vcnir.y lllldcots are candidates for .
,.de~ • tbe eud of winter quarCapd!d,..lncludc:
- Anacla Roush, Racine, and
50sro1 Adams, Syncuse, bacbelor
;;of science ill nuni111; Maurlsa Nel:Soa. Middleport, badlelor of sci·
:cncc; Daniel K~nnedy, Rutland,
•bachelor of science in electrical'
;enalnecrlng; Michael Parker,
:Pomeroy, bachelor of scicoce In
fliltd~trial tedmoloay.

:tm·

weather.

FOODLAND

·Tbe win gives the Marauders·
(14-2 overall &amp; 10-2 in the Obio
Division) at ·least a share of the
division crown in the Ohio Division.
'
Meigs took advantage of seven
wanes, two .bits bauers and Amber
Blackwell's single to take the 6-0
lead in the fll'St.
Meigs plated four more runs in
the fourth on a walk, a· single by
Ramsburg, another single by Emily
Fackler another walk and a triple
by Cynthia Stewart to take· a 10-0
lead '
The Vikings (1·13 &amp; 0-10)
scored all of their runs In the top of
the lifth inning.
Dillie Butcher, the ~tarting and
winning pitcbe, pitched the first
four innings. giving up two bits,
walked two and ·struck out six.
Fackler pitched the ftfth inning giving up four bits, striking out one,
walking one and bitting a batter.
Stewart led Meigs at the plate
with a triple, while teammates
FJtcklcr, Dlackwell and Ramsburg
aJl added singles.
. . Jenny Hammond led Vinton
with a double and a single, while
teammate Marcie· Young added a
triple. Marla Hale was the slarter
and loser for the Vikings.
Meigs will host New Lexington,
weather permitting in the first
round of the· sectional tournaments
toni ght at 4:30. ne g~me was
postponed from Tuesday. Tbere
will be a $2 admission charge for
all tournament games.
. Inning totals
Vinton Co.
000-05=5-4-1
Meigs
604-0x=l0-4-2
WP - Binic Butcher
LP - Hale .

Win a Trip

rro 'Engfana!!

r----~---~~ 7-----...,

See letaifs 6efow... ·

55 .

GJlAD.
"~ HOCKING COLLEGE
UATE .

•

~

,.ROAST
.

•. Dennis Gilmore, Union Ave .•
:Pomeroy, recently graduated with
:mgb bonors frmn Hocking College
: with an asSQCiate or applied science
~degree in computer science.

.

~·

OMISSION
.
: . Terry Neece of Pomeroy was
~ inadvertently omiued from a' list of
~ students named to tbe dean's list at
:;Hocking College for tbe winter

Maine
Superior
First Generation
SEED
POTATOES

.,quartet.

.'·'

.Community calendar------

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Salisbury Town·
:, sbip Trustees, Wedl)esday, 6 p.m.
~ ill the township ball.

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SEALlEST ORANGE. . J~ICE

:; PAGEVILLE- Scipio Town·
• sbip Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30.
~ Pageville To)oVIIsbip building..
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POMEROY Narcotics
· Anonymous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at
; the Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
~ 161 Mulberry Ave., pomeroy.

REEDSVILLE - Weekend
revival, South Bethel New Teslli·
ment Cbtln:b, Silver Ridge, Friday
tbrougb Sunday, 7 p.m. each
evening. Rev. Gilbert Spencer,
Chicago, speaker; special singing.
Public invited.

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POMEROY Weekend
revival, 7 p.m. Friday, Saturday
and Sunday, Endlime House · of
Prayer, Burlingham Cburcb,
Dempsey Montgomery, evangelist.

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THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
sbip Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.'
" Rutland Ere Station.
'

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SOliTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) Michigan football coach Gary
Moeller was so drunk after bis
arrest for punching a pill ice officer
that jail staff refused to admit him
and sent him to a hospital, according to police reports.
.
The university on. Tuesday
named athletic department aide
Keith Molin to l)ead its internal
investigation of Moeller's conduct
Eddl!y- at,!IJ....Exeltlltmr restaurant- · 11-in Southfield. ·
. '
"Keith will handle the investi·
galion and put together a factual
report for my perusal," Athlelic
Director Joe Roberson said. "After
I receive the report, I will put forth
the findings to president .(James)
Dudcrstadt, and together we will
make a final decision.''
Duderstadt on Monday suspend·
ed Moeller, 54, with pay from bis
$130,(X)O-a-year job _Qntil after the
internal review. Defensive coordi·
nator Lloyd Carr bas been named
interim bead coach.
According to reporl' to South·
field police by officers and other
witnesses released . Tuesday.
. Moeller consumed at least seven
drinks before his waitress cut bim
off, tbcn repeatedly cursed,
grabbed and pushed· restaurant
employees.
His wife Ann told police sbe
argued with Moeller when be
would not stop drinking, and sbe
went to sit in their car.
.
After she left, Moeller became
rowdy, shouling, banging on the
table, trying to pick fights and
harassing bis waitress and others.
witnesses told police.
'·'I love you. I love you," be
!old his waitress, according to her
statement. "Look in my eyes.
You're nOt listening to me."
Moeller smashed two glasses, cut·
ting himself, tbe reports said.
After the reslliurant manager
IJ\Jl!I3JlCd to get Moeller to step out·
sidi!; he defied balf:oozen' pollee
officers and refused to get Into a
cab that bad been called to take
him borne, the reports said.
Police arrested Moeller after be
allegedly !IIJnchcd Officer Vincent
Maviglia in the chest, the reports
said.
Moeller continued to resist and
swear at police and bad to l,le
ppllcd into a patrol car. the reports
. said. After Oakland County Jail
officers decided be was too drunk
to be admitted, police took him to
Providence llospjtal to be cbeclred
for alcohol poisoning, they said.'
At the hospital, the reports said, .1
}11oellcr swore at police and
patients until nllrses asked police to
isolate him in a trauma room. He I
agreed to take a blood lllcobql test I
· but later refused, so be was I
returned to tbe jail, the reports said.
I
Moeller spent Friday night in 1
. jail and was released the nellt day 1
on a $200 bond. He faces a May 12 1

a

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CHESTER - Chester Towni ship Trustees, 7 .p.m. Thursday at
the town hall.

assault and battery.

off

RACINE - Post 602, Ameri·
can Legion, 6:30 p.m. dinner with
meeting at 7:30p.m. Thursday.

Assf·•

YUBI YOGUDT
·

· ·

1\-1 ~ ~-

·

8 oz.
cans

s

SYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO,
: at the school 7 p.!JI. Thursday.

Asst. Varieties

of God Ladies Ministry. sponsoring
a ladies fellowship revival, evangelist Ruby Smith, Friday, T p.m.. and
Satll!'day afteru0011 at2 p.m.

risoaville Lodge 411, OES,. Satur·
day, 7:30 p.m at 7:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. Work in tbe
M.M. Degree. Refreshments.
·
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Junior Grange 878,
Saturday at the grange ball, near
Salem Center. Junior Grange will
bave i\S annual inspection. Potluck
refreshments will be served.

SUNDAY
POMEROY~ AItea will be
be.ld to celebrate National · Herb
Week Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy. Herbal food and tea samples will be featured.

RUTLAND - Rutland Cburcb

~~~~~!~~:!~~~-~- · · " . . . . . . $5495
. =e~~~ !~~~:~lean! ............... $5995
~!. ~=ra~~~~~~~'. . .... . . . . . . $7995

The·Keffers, a well known
' Southern Gospel Group
from Nashville, GA will be ·
performing at Hillside
Baptist Church 9nThursday,
May 4th at 7:00p.m.
Dr. James R. Acree Sr.
invites the public.
.

87 Chrysler LeBaron ·

~~o~~a~:~~ti~~~~~ ........ .......
~!:~ ::~~!atic, air, low miles..
~~o~~~~~!~s1car ...... .............

V6, 4 door, aulomalic, cruise, tilt, cassette.... ..

.

:

9'(Ju couftf

f

Bob Evans
Farm
Sausage 1# roll
Boneless
EngUsh
Roast lb.

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iG'iUsJ.Dt :.ot:_:
;.-."r.".:i

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p~

.

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99

1BU Sll!IWII!S

Be an to fill out an entry
blank at Faodland far your
cllllnce to win 1 of 37 bags of

'.Alexander
:marks s·ixth
.:birthday

stonl1hla-

ing one Iucier shopper a drelm valilli. Come in
and regilter now_you could be off to Londonl

malt.2:

.
'11111 Sift (dHmlf
Given away at each stora

0

39

7 days • 6 nights
• Deluxe Accomodations
• F1ee airfare for two
• '500 in spending cash

No....---.,.-...

:11

--~·0-.

Qlakl:

':JJ Sift (l!rtlflmll

......

Given away dally at each stora

. .llnlm. tna•nnd

i -------------------------

I

.

1JNAME

Blue Bonnet Quarters

ENTRY BLANK

----,

Auending her party were her
parents and sibli ngs, Katie,
Nicholas and Jessica Alexander,
Mr . and Mrs . Stephen Houchins,
Mrs. Janet Alexander, Mr. Victor
Casto and Annabelle, Ms . Judy
Alexander and Stacic;Dale Bing,
Krista Eason and Amanda. Mr. and
. Mrs. lluey E~son, Mrs. Trbonda
Casto, Jonathan and Austin, Mrs.
Palli Wallen, Geremy and Zacb,
• M.rs. Cindy Paxton, Chase, Chance
and lloUic (Watts), Oma aiid Britiany Cook. and Kellie and Christopher Dawkins.

I

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STATE' -----~---

0

· ~-Hagan Ice C-ream 1
BUY ONE GET ONE 1
'FREE
1 Honey

:'.1-------------.J

$

Maid
Grahams

I

1
I
'I1

1
I

L--:----~~~~~i~_;~g~ri_a~~~1~!~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-sLs1_9~_J

I

$239~NABISCO .

.

Oreo.
Cookies

box

EASTMAN'S
1I ·

'

MUST BE 21 YEARS OR OLDER TO ENTER.

Sending cards and gifts were .
Jimmy Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Perkins, Karen Tripp, Tim Casto,
Robert Eason, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Fo~arty; Brianne and Ryan,
Dainc11e Bin.R, and Josh Mwpby. ·

oz.

BIG BENQ

·n LAND
·..

·.

r.
... -----..
I LOSE
~g 10 lbs.
.

0

' •

'.

1
3 DAYS! . I
Natural
I • WilliINChromium
Picollnat&amp;
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE I
I
I . FRUTH PHARMACY . I
. All

C.H. 2001

(S2.0Q OFF COUPON • LIMIT 1)

. SUPERMARKETS ·

,
·
pono ccepted • Not Rtlponllble
for Typographical or Pictorial Errore.
•-:-w•e•R•ue•rv•e•lhll...iR.tg;;,;.ht;.,;to;;.;U;;;m;;;.tt;.;a:;:ua:;n~m:;:l•:,•
;.:
· P;:;rl;;:c•~•,:;Etl::,:ectl:v:,•;,:T)l::,:ru~s;:•t;
· :M:ay~&amp;~,1~995:.;,·~us:o~A!Fo:&lt;:~:..:t!st:am~p:•,:•n~d~W:tc~c~ou=:::A:.::::::.::!!:::!
" :!!.!:::::~;::=::::::J

•

ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1995
. On Thursday, May 18, The Daily Sentinel will

Carol Ann Alexander, daughter
· of Bradley W. and Stephanie
Alexander, VInton. celebrated ber
sixth birthday March 21, with a
''Flintstone"'. tbemed party at her
bome and a Barbie cake.

:
A dream '(Bcatlon to

,PHONE~~~~~----------------~
L
NABISCO_-:-____________ ,;,. ____________ _.

f

'

CAROL ALEXANDER

g!OC8Iies glvan a~y at each

AI a part of our 37tll annlverall f; we wUI be award-

--~L-------------------------.J
- ... 3/$1-. ~~~~RSSS
I

First-of
VIDAUA
ONIONS

.

You could win • bllg ot

spenda wee!(
· in 'Eng[and

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #140 EFFECTIVE 4 30 ·516 95

I ~

mldn:

------

Middleport

li

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have a special edition with photographs of
high school seniors graduating this year. .
·Now through.Frlday,, May 12; Drop Your
Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel or At Your
~. High School Office To--Be lncludedJn This
Special Edition, At No Charge .
(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

******
· A!\IY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INpiVIDUAL
OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIO.NS WHO WOULD .
LIKE.TO HAVE 1AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS
SPECIAL EDITION PLEASE
'•
•
•
, CALL 992·2156.
0

•

Ask for Dave or Bob

992-8491.1
•

I)

·

$8995
c~:~ufo~~~~ ....·..................... $9495 :·

91 Olds Clera ·

79

. . ,. .__;· 'COCA -COLA ·

$7995
$8495
$8495
$8495

. Convertible, turbo, auto!Tlatic . local trade ........

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

ASST.
1
PREFERRED SELECTION •
COLA .

~~~:: ~;~:,~d~~i;~~~~c~a:J

RUTLAND- Revival, Rose of
Sharon Holiness Cburcb, located
Depot Street on Leading Creek
Roadr·Riitland, 7 p, m, Friday
through Tuesday, Rev . Archie
Atwell, evangelist. with i)Je Atwell
family singers.
1
SATURDAY
.
HARRISONVILbE - Har-

. ...

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POMEROY - Meigs County
Cburcb Women United, May Fel·
lowsbip meeting, at Grace Episco·
pal Church, Friday, 11:30 a.m.
Sack lunch. Host cburcb will fur·
nisb dessert and beverage.

.!

·, .fresh

FRIDAY, •

SALEM CENTER -' Meigs
County PomonaGrange46,Friday, .
7:30p.m at Star Grange Hall near
Salem Center. Jackson County
Pomona Grange to visit; potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. County baking.
contest to be beld.

:

Duderstadt
suspends
Moeller ·

1

·

. The Community Calendar II
· · published as a free service to
,: non-profit groups wishing to
·: announce· meeting and special
' eyents. Tbe ~al.endar Is not
: designed to·J;roriiote sales or
.' fund raisers of any type. Items
· are printed as space permits and
: cannot be guaranteed to run a
specmc number of days.

Sold by the
roast only·

Racine;. Melinda Chancey and Chad Hubbard,
Syracuse; and standing, Jennifer Carleton and
Christa Cln:le, Southern Junior High; and Jessica Sayre, Amber Thomas, Matt Morrow,
Kendra Norris, and David Pickens, Southern

SOUTHERN SCHOLARS RECOGNIZED
- In recognition ol tllelr academic excellence,
dlese 13 Southern Local Scltool District students
-re preanted trophleL They were, Jell to right,
seated, Charles Moore and Garret Kiser, Portland; Jennlfe~ Walker and Jonathan Evans.

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r a• a ,. Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy UlcldiiPOi..., Ohio

•

-Wednesday, lily 3, 1895: •

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.Pomeroy lllddleport, Ohio.

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The Dill)' Sentlnai-Peae

,.

-... ·-

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SHURFINE
·TUNA

A Cln!IMI • AfftliJitd l'iipemlubt

.

·Cardinal Foods

Limit One with one
filled Stamp Folder

6.5 oz. Can ·

.•.

.GROUND
BEEF

c

SHURFINE
ALUMINUM
FOIL

WHOLE ·

·-

.,

''· ~. •

Limit One with one
filled Stamp Folder ·

.

'

., ...,·.

CHARMIN
c'
BATH
Limit One with one .
TISSUE filled Stamp Folder

(

I

818. OR MORE

LB.

4

KRAFT SINGLES

IT'S EASY!
. HERE'S 'HOW TO SAVE! .

Limit One with one
filled Stamp Folder

12 OZ. PACK .

LB. WHOLE

d

Just pick up your FREE Smart Shopper Saver Folder
.·. at our checkouts~ and fill all-40 spaces with the
Smart Shopper Coupons you receive with your
· purchase. Every time you ·visit our store, you will
·receivf' One Smart Shopper Coupon for e_ach $1.00
o f youl' ~grocery purcliase!~ Present'your filled _:_folder along with your Smart Shopper Special and
SAVE!

c

---

· 2 LITER

.Limit One with one
filled Starn Folder ·

BLACK LABEL·
-- --·-·

..

-·- ...........

LETTUCE

- ·

--

-.-.·-

~··

.

c . -

- 12 Oz. Pkg.

LB.

c

Limit One with one
filled Sta
Folder

EACH

c

SUPERIOR
BACON

You Are Invited! ·

Limit One with one
filled Stamp Folder

160Z.

SHURFINE HOT DOGS AND
- HAMBUR~ER BUNS

C
S.P'ACK

Limit One with one
filled Sta
Folder
,,

HANDY PACK

FRENCH FRIES
200Z.

Limit One with one

.· HOW TO HELP· YOUR NON·
PR~FIT ORGANIZATIONS
.

--- -

.. If you wish to help your non·profit

·organization simply-fill the&gt;-extra s·(five)
spaces on your Saver Folder. Place this
stamp on your favorite Community Service
Sheet, located inour store. Or if you wish
your filled Saver Folder containing 45 '
c~upons may be redeemed for (ommunity
Jervice stamps. (see rules for amount) If
' your favorite non·profit organization is
not presently re·gistered·with .our store, .
please see our store manager for details!

"'-

.

Thursday, May 4, 1995
_ 11:30 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
Then you will call upon me
Meigs County's observance of the National Day
an-d come and pray to me, and 1.
of Prayer at the Courthouse steps in Pomeroy.
,
will listen to you. You will seek me _ This ·is , a call to all Meigs Countians to unite together in prayer in
and find nit? u:ih ell y ow see-l( me - ·-ackrrowledgement of our dependence· on Go~lan to join-us· for 5. minutes .
with all your heart.
·
or for one hour! Bring along your lawn chair. Public prayers will be offered
Jeremiah 29: 1-2-13--c on ~~haltof national •..~tat~. andJocaJ government leader$_, and_f_o~ _ch~rches,
famalles and commumttes. ·

.

.

FOR INFORMATION CALL: .
PASTOR LES HAYMEN 992·7410
PEGGY CRANE 992-2533
CINDY MAYLE 985·44~0

Thursday, May 4th, has been proclaimed a "Day of Prayer in Meigs County" by the Meigs County
Commissioners and a Day of Prayer in the Villages o.f Middleport and Pomeroy by Mayors Horton and
Blaettner.
~

John Qyjocy Adams (1824)· "The highest glory of the American Revolu.tion was th~t i~ c~n~~ted in
one indissoluble bond the principles of Civil government and the principles of Chnst1amty.
•

pwlght p ; Eisenhower- "It (prayer) Is one of the simple necessities of life, as basic to the Individual as
sunshine, food , water, and at times, of course, more so. "

e

�Page 1G-The'Dally sentinel

Poineroy-Micldleport, Ohio

Wedl188day, May 3, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
'
:twUoiiiN .,.,

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1

.,:.'1nwi:_-..,.._....,.n ,.._. .. ,

~=RYE THE RIGHT To

standJni, Derrick Bolin, Rutland; Kelly Jobn·
ston and Betluony McMIDin, Salem Center; Jobn
H ..ar, S.JIIbury; and Llu:y Banks, Trtda Da'ril,
Meredith Felts, Jennl Howerton, Rebekah
Smith, and Bridget Vaughan, all Meigs Junior
High School. Sharilli Bobb, Salisbury, was rec·
ognlud although she was unable to attend.

~

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MEIGS HIGH ACH1EVERS -

w

.,,J:

Sophomore
and senior Meigs High School students recog·
n!zed for their Sc:bolastlc abUity at tbe Tuesday
night Academic 1\,cblevement Banquet were len
lei r.ight, seated, Taryn Doidge, Justin Fields,
. T!'ra Grueser, Liberty King, Erin Krawsczyn,

and Beverly Stewart, all sophomores; and sbnd·
Ins, Sarah Anderson, Kelley Grueser, Heidi
Hufl"man, Kimberly Janey, Mandy Jones, Shllo
Moore, Jason Taylor, Crystal Vaughan, and
Amanda Wei~ aU seniors. One of the honorees,
Casey Booth, was unable to attend.

Plans were finalized for the PfOII'IIlll.
reports were given by Chris Hill
motber-daughk:r banquet to be held
The group voted to give $100 to and Clara Mae Sargent, secretary
May 13 at 6:30 p.m. wben the the Racine Museum Fund.· Other ·and treasurer.
Correspondence
Racine United MetJlodist Women ~onetary donations will !&gt;e given was read and Mrs. Sargent reported
met rete~~t1Y at the church.
~ various organizations. and mis- that the bala:·sale beld alllie recent
Reservations are to be made by Sl?ns. A drape for the pllUlo back. . Flower Festival was successful.
Sunday by calling evenings, 949- wUI be purChased b~ the group. It ·The penny fund collection was
2627, or anytime, 949-2881, 949- · was noted that a dmner will be taken and sick calls were reported.
2604, 992-3701 or 949-2454 . served to the Alpba Delta Kappa
Each member was given a typed
Members were asked to meet at the sorority May 16. It was also decid- list of things for units and members
church on the morning of the ban· ed to order a :'Count Me In" packet to do to "be in mission." This was
quet to help with the decorating from the seM~ center.
followed by a discussion of each
Due to the •llness of the leader, item.
and to piliClice the program.
Etta Mae Hill, Margie West and no program was ~nted altliough
Refreshments were served by
~ Lee auen&lt;!ed the :'1-thens Dis- Margie West read scriptures from Mrs. Lee and Mrs . Hill to Opal
tnct retreat m April at Camp Psalms andMat~w.
Diddle, Marilyn Bogard, Ruth
Asbury, Rio Grande. They reported . Mrs; Lee- pres•lk:d at the meet- Wolfe, Mrs. Sargent, Sharon Hall,
it was a rew~g experience BD:d mg which OP!;ned w•th a group~; Mrs . West, Mirgery Rousb,
noted that a certificate of recogm- sentauon of "We Have a Pwpose
frances Roberts Karen Walker and
lion was awarded to the Racine unit consisting of the call to worship, Jennifer Wallcer:
for their participation in the reading s~pture frmp Romans, pr":yer, ~
Tbe ne~t meeting will be May
litany, and a hymn. Officers
22 at 7:30p.m. at the church.

The role that the benefits play in
retired ?r disa!&gt;led worker. A !amily max!Dium IS generally reached the lives of tbese ·children vary,
with a parent and two children col- depending on their circumstances.
. For lhe.average family, the month·
lecting b_enefits. . .
.
A cb1ld who JOins the fam1ly iy benefits help them maintain their
after benefits start (through birth, lifestyle after the loss of a parent's
· adoption, or the beneficiary's ·earnings. For low-income larger
remarriage) may also qualify for families, the benefits may mean the
benefits. If the child _is the benefi- difference between staying together
c•ary's new step-child, however, as a family or splitting up.
Its important to be familiar with l
the step-relationship must have
existed for a year before benefits these rules if you are serious about
can be paid. Also, stepchildren and planning for the financial security
some adopted ch!ldren must meet a of your family. Social
Security benefits should be a
Jlepcndency n:qutrement.
base
for your planning. You can
_The be~efits continue until the
get
an
estimate 'o f how much your
ch1ld marnes, reaches 18, or 19 if
children
could get from Social
he or she is still a full-time high
school student. If the child is dis- Security by calling l-800-772-1213
abled before age 22, benefits may 24-honrs-a-day. Ask. for a Personal
. continue as long as be/she remains Earnings and Benefit Estimate
Statement application form.
disabled.

21st Anniversary Sale
Many Thanks To All of our Good Customers For ·
. Allowing Us To Serve You For 21 Years

20% off STOREWIDE

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TO

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U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE
BONELESS CHICKEN TENDERS OR

RED, RIPE

Chicken Breast

Whole
water111e1ons

Boneless

RCColaor
Diet Rite
2.()-pack 12-oz. cans

Each

MondaY May 1st - Saturday May 6th

0 en 9 am- 5 m

SAVE 3~% ~- Selected ~chandlse ·
Ch()l)ae from name brands )Ike·
•
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.

LEVI'S

- -.--.....,

,J==~-:~:---':"
.

. ·. . . .

WrrANGLER

,: HUJB lEN

CAftHARTr

-. - ·~ CHIPPEWA- ' " . Gj;ORGIA ...... ~
LEE
RED WING
.'

DOWNING. CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

'JUsnN .

.

INSUUNCE
_
_
~

soLD

z?J tor•ln-.:t~~Cr~~~r-.

Pea• 1:t

DAN'S

Sociat Security a headstart for some
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens
. · For some children Social Security is not just something that their
grandparents get. It is something
t.11at they count on right now to belp
pay for schoolbooks, school
clothes, and other important stuff
ll!at's a pan of growing up.
:. These are some 3.7 miUion cbildten who receive Social Security
benefits liS the ·survivors of parents
who have died or dependents of
parents who are retired or have
become disabled. They receive
l)iore than $1 billion a month in
, Social Security benefits. In fact,
virtually are children under 18
would be eligible to receive such
benefits if a parent dies, retires, or
becomes disabled.
The children who qualify may
·be tire bellefieilii'Y'S biological chil··
dren. adopted children. stepchild{en, or even children born outside
Of mar(iage. Grandchildren may
gualify under certain circumstances. Note that even if the par~ents divorce, the children's benefit
rights are not affected.
.
The amount of benefits payable
may range up to 75 percent of the
worker's benefit for the surviving
cbild of a deceased worker, to 50
percent for the dependent of a

ouANmles. NONE

Riverview; nomu Slnunonl and Jonua Ke•J,
or-n Plalna; and standing, Stephanie Evans
anil- Aaron WIIJ, Eastern Junior Hl&amp;hl and
Meredith Crow, Marta Frecker, Cbarlel Blssel~
Heidi Nelson, and David Toundas, Eastern _High
School.

EASTERN'S EXCELLING STUDENTS These Eastern Local School D..trlct atudents
were recognized ·and preaented trophies ror
beln11 tops In their cluaeo. Left to rt1•t, they are,
seated, Carrie.Renee Crow, Juli Renee BaUey,
Chester; Nicol Honaker ancl Amber Baker,

Mother-daughter dinner scheduled

,.,

u11rr

The Dilly Sanhl

. - • .,.

TEXAS BOOTS

The Place for Work and Western

~

111 Second St., Pomer.oy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENor~ srR'1ING MEIGS
r .1 "' r1
COUNTY SINCE 1868·

290 North Second Ave.
Middleport
992-3684

ASSORTED VARIETIES KROGER

YELLOW. WHffE OR 81-Cot.OR
I

Deluxe
·Ice cream

sweet

Corn

'

/cfcf/
0

:f~ere's

an important message for busy people! If you don't have the time to .
apply for a loan in person, just pick up the phone and call the new Peoples Bank
Loan Hotltne.at (304) 675-ASAP. The hotline .connects you directly with Missi
Scarberry, a friendly hometown lend~r who will be glad to handle your request
right over the phone. · So you can apply for a loan without ever leaving your
home or workplace. Whenever you need quick cash - call Missi ASAP!

·~

-·

'---

--,--

·-

-,-

-

~

(304)675-ASAP
675-2727

Bernard C. Neutzling was honored on his 81 s1 birthday with a
party held at the VFW Post in
Mason, W.Va.
The Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz bad
the pmyer rollowed by silent prayer
for the people in Oklahoma City.
Attending the pany were Mary
Hood and son, Racine; Charles
Neutzling and family, Leading
Creek; Vicki Ashton and family,
Middleport; Bernard and David
Neutzling, Mason, W. Va.; Connie
and Barry Hollis, Mason, many
grandchildren, and special friends,
Tom Riley and Janet Greene, and
bls brother, Norl&gt;er~ Neutzling,

-

-

·--- -··

•, ,· , ,\ .

'•.

•

111, ••

Rotisserie·
=--Chicken

.

, ~-

To Finance Practically Anything In Practically No Time.

"S. can··•Rite"
·
,.,.J!I'
!
t
G
Ua:
• "I
ta-851-JOJJ

. If our electron~ check-out system

If you have SUIIIlestltHJS., comments

or questiOns Please contact your
.tore manager or call

•

Loans subje~t to credit approval.

it i=Dii

• MASON • PT. PLEASANT- • NEW HAVEN

Missi Scarberry
Loan .Officer

~ddleport.

•

Chips
8-j'"""

Loan Hotline
-

· DEU

Jumbo Deli
cook
If!$_
oozen
One-Get one

tluffles "

- - ·, -

. ~eoples '~Bank

"IN STORE BAKED" ASSORTED VARIETIES

CHEETOS CHEESE SNACKS OR

..

'

,

.

·

WI

1

.
.

'.

•

J!l'!t
&amp;~

Item

prtnts.and charges a Price
an
~ tbalt
ptfce fOr thlt
=·
-GtltNtiDm
absolutelY
Items With ~ Off"
labelS wUI scan.the Pl1ce on the shelf
tag minus the amount ()f the •¢ Off'
labeL NOte: Alcohol and tobacco
products excluded by Jaw.

*''"act

F
. or

0

�·.. Paaa 12-The Dally Sentinel

.

'

•

Poineroy--l.tlddlaport, Ohio

Wednesday,

'

j

u.y 3, 1995

Pomeroy-lllddfeport, Ohio

::Get-rich-quick scam sends reader to the poor hous~ quick
rio idea what a huge indusuy these·
M~ advice to one and all is this:
sweepstakes have become. Nor did I Get-nch-quick offers are for suckers.
know how they entice people to enter And unfortunately, P.T. Barnum was
and buy merchandise. Please, Ann, nghL There's one born every minute.
warn your readers to be aware of what
Deu Ann Landers: Will you
lhese comJ)anies do to senior citizens. please use your inOuence and suggest
They prey on naive and indigent to your readers that the appropriate
elderly and print disclaimers in such response upon hearing that someone
rine print that even people with ~ they know has AIDS is nor "Oh wow
·'
'
e&lt;cellent eyesight cannot read th~. how did he get it?" · ·
--APPALLED IN OAKLAND,
A discussion of how someone
CALIF.
acquired any illness borders on
DEAROAKLAND:Thailkyou for gossip. The more humane response
a letter that could save a great number would be "How sad.ls there anything
of readers a lot of money and some I tan do to help?"
Ann, in my case, the penon who
serious disappointment.
If you are wondering how they get has AIDS is the father. of my two
away with it, the answer is simple. teen-age children. They are carrying
These outfits have clever lawyers the heavy burden of trying ro balance
who check the language carefully and their love for their father with the
IJiake sure the company is proteCted reaction of their peers when the news
against being sued. As you pointed of his illness becomes known at
· J·
out, the disclaimers are in such small school.
It
would
help
if
those
who
hear
"the
print, they are extremely hard 10 read.
news• would remenlber that AIDS·
infected individuals have families
that must also struggle with this
disease. Please tell them. -insidious
HOUSE OVERFLOWING?

buy them as soon as she won lhe Si
million sweepstakes.
Many of the items Aunt Cat!terine
bought had not been removed from
the shipping canons. The bills that
had piled up were horrendous. She
owed money.to record companies and
jewelry srores and had signed up for
20 magazines that she could not
possibly read since she is nearly
blind.
·
I also discovered she was sending
money to companies that entered her
in their sweepstakes and to other
companies that offered to check and
see if she had won any other
sweepstakes. Of course, ·they all
charge a fee for this "service." In
addition, Aunt Catherine was
involved in four foreign sweepstakes
and two loueries. During an 11month period, she spent her entire
income on these scams.
• .Until I toOk over her affairs, I had

Ann
Landers
res.

·1
loti AnpiH
Tlmft Syndlca18 Md

CrNiors Syndat.·

Dear Ann Landers: Si• months
ago, I foun&lt;l myself confronted with
a mess when I had to Ulke over my
aunt's health care. I had known she
was h_ooked on sweepslllkes, but I had
no idea of the e&lt;t'ent of her addiction.
When she was hospitalized, I handled
her affairs and was shocked at what
had been going on.
I found that • Aunt Catherine" had
purchased dozens of COs. hundreds
of books and cassettes and over 60
VCR tapes. She obtained them a\1
through mail-order companies. My
aunt does not own a VCR or CD
player, but she said she planned to

CHECKDfE

Get Your Message Across
With ADally Sentinel .

BULLETIN BOARD

CLEAN UP WITH
·ClASSIFIED ADS

J

6oa column inch weekdays
18° 0 column inch Sunday

5

Fatten your Wallet
with awant Rd

z:·=
~

Happy Ads

State Theater
i
. . WV
On Stage Thursday, May 4, 8 pm

~

.

WV State Jazz Band Mel Gmispie. dir.

Adm. $1 o.oo
304·675·6575
Movie Every Night 7:30 pm
(e~qept

,~

. ''- •'

.

Little things
· are Worth A lot

stage show nights)

Plus Sunday Matinee 2 pm $2.00

rn

,

. the Classified Section!

ATIENTION SHOPPERS
You don't want to. miss this
huge yard sale. At the comer
of Locust and Maple Streets in
Cheshire, Oh. May 4th~ 5th,
6th. Levi &amp; Arizona jeans,
· shirts, coats, beautiful
women 's and children's
clothes. Housewares, drapes,
microwave lots of window
blinds. Lots of misc.
Phone 367 •7350

..

........

d-lapplf 13th
Bi'lthdalf
A'llca

Carpenters Local 650 of
Pomeroy has enrolled several
members in an adult education
welding class at Meigs High
School.
_The class is funded by a grant
from the Ohio State Building
Training Fund and tbe Ohio
Department of Development.
Meigs High School welding
instructor Kenneth Eblin, designed
a 60 hour course so the students
could be prepared to take tbe state
welding test for certification on
structural steel and piling. Senior
students from the Meigs vocational
welding program also volunteered
to help the adults with welding skill
development.
Local Union 650 member Greg
Gatrell, who is a student in tbe pro·
.gram said lhat was "pleasantly sur·
prised by the high quality or tbe
welding facilities and equipment at
Meigs High.

.11

..

~AIE'320

lnalnd - Experienced
Clll Wayne Neff 992-4405
Far FIH Eati!IIIIM

••
•'

..

When You Purchase A Motorola Flip Phone
Offer extended thru May 31, 19951

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-6()().848·007
DAf!WIN, OHIO

REGULARLY $369.95

$4

.•

*

• 100 minutes talk time or 20 hours
standby • Speed dialing • Volume meter .
• Battery meter • One-touch emergency
dialing • Menu mode • Auto answer • $20
rebateavailable from manufacturer

... r-----..;......,

PSYCHICS

'
••

Advise on future
opportunity,
declsion·making, love,
success, money.
LIVE 24 HOURS

•some restrictions ·apply. See deater lor details. Price Includes factory rebate

®

MO'TIOROLA

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741
I
I•
I

UNITED STATES

CELLULAR~
MOBILE TELEPHONE NETWORK

NORTHSTAR SATELLITE
AND TELEVISION
•

Pick-up applications in person

.nl/1

and Pearl St. Middleport.

.·.

•.

~·--·

_ .;"&gt;'-"....-·~·

- .

.

Mattress Sale
Save On

(602) 954·7420
.
4/U/15

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; ·
Exterior

Taka the pain out or
painting. Let us do It for
you. Very reaaonable. ·

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message. ·
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180 3124104

NEVER
'BE LONELY
AGAIN
CALL 1·900·945-6100
Ext. 8587
$2.99 per min.
Must be.18 yrs.
(602) 954-7420

"""""
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Factory Authorized Parts
&amp; Service ·

•All Makea -42 Years
•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers - Oryere - Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers
•Dishwashers

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC

•H.W. Heaters
eMicrowavet •Ditpoaals

•Thanks Meigs &amp;

Surrounding Areas

(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335

1'114/tfn

Patio Turf

room

Sale

NEW LISTING· PEARL ST. MIDDLEPORT· 1992 Modular

Home on Double Corner Lot with Beautiful View or the Ohio
River!! 6 room, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms . Level Lot. Landscaped.
New Lennex H. P./C.A. Nice Place.
Asking $6t,900.00

Sofas
25%

NEW LISTING- SR 124 Near Racine , River Front·Lol. .66+
acre . Drilled well , outbuilding , septic. Hook-up for Mobi le

Home.

•

rooms , 5 bedrooms, bath, warm morning gas .stove. Brick
fireplace , built in book shelves. This is an older home in need
of much repair on a nice large lot with some river frontage.
Nice river yiew. Paved road. Great budding site or possible
fixer-upper.
Asking $20,000

•

offer. MAKE AN OFFER!
MIDOblilm'IH· ln&gt;estment prope.~y~ story bnc~ bulldiD.lJ
with 2 apartments. Currently rented. . Asking $13,000.00
MCNICHOLS AD· 5' ·ocros with frame/block building·
Currently used as Bait Shop·. Stock and Equipment being
sold sepera19ty. Older Mobile Home on site is opt1on_al.

.'·

MAKE AN OFFER ASKING 512,000.00

At

$249°

•·

0

Light Hauling,

HAULING

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

WICKS

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
1 Umest011e &amp; Grave~
Septk Systems, Trailer &amp;
House Sites.
Reas011able Rates

Joe N. Sayre 1
SAYRE TRUCKING .
614-742·2138
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR .
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cle!lnlng
Painting .
FREE ESTIMATES
5116194 TFN

Buy • Sell • Jrade

MR. RIGGS
WHAJYAMACAlliJ
SHOP
NEW&amp; USED ·
Household·
Collectible
9-5 T·Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR33N
992-7502 or 992-5805

B&amp;W
Garage and Towing .
Service
Automotive and Truck
Repair
Gas Tank Repa1r
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH
614·247·3522
GUYS!
We want to hear
from you!!! We're
live and waiting!!!

1-900-388·7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
P'rocall Co.

(602) 954-7420
4/'2lW5

Licensed

57-946457~

RHETT
MILHOAN
Aurtioncer
35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ot\iu-45"769
Certified Personal
Property Appraiser
Bonded (614) 992·4079
.U4/1 mo

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately

Carpenter Work

Free Estimates

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, FIJI Dirt

Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614·742-2165 or

614-992-3470

Ask for Mike

COLUMBIA GAS

.

WE HAVE A LITTLE.BIT OF EVERYJHING~ BUT WE NEED
MOREll THE MARKET IS GOOD AN.P NOW IS Tl:iE TIME
JO SELLtl GIVE US A CALL· WE'LL WORK FOR YO.UII
KENRY E. CLELAND JR......................................992-6191
TRACY L. BRINAGEA .........................................949-2439
SHERR! L. HART..................................................742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND llt ....................................... 992-6191
KATHY M. Ct..ELAND ........................ .-.................. 992-6191

of Ohio
0

I

Look 10 us for ideas and the-energy to make them work.
•
•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp;· Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

..· - - -====== = =:=!:

'

1602) 954·7420

"""'"

Calll-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752

Rouer &amp; Tom Hilt
49534 State Route 338

7 Days A Week • 24 Hours A Day

Letart Falls, Ohio

$2.99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

247-2015 daytime

Kenny's Auto Rental

One mile out
143 from Rt. 1
Tuas.·Wed.·Fri.·Sat.

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

1·6
-craftsman Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
10/Sft mo.

7122194

SUMMER
IMAGES

J&amp;L INSULATION

Open 9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;
Diane Hendricks

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl '

STO-A·WAY

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon ...f"rl.

WlndQwS, Blown
Insulation, Starin
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Esilmates

1/taittn

Rooting, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.

P. 0. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614

New Haven, WV

1

264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Lonely? Call
Tonight!
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs .

ProcaU Co

(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Bus. (6 14) 446-9971

'""'"

""'"'

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

Spec1ai oHer includes:
1 Clean rnolor

5 Clean &amp; check filter system

2. Grea se roller bearings
3. 'Clean &amp; check agitator
4 CIP-an all moving parts

6. Check belts
7. Check electriccd system
8. Replace filter bag

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts
One year warran ty on work performed.
Val1d on all nationally advertised brands .

3 Announcements

::cE~u~" J:!,.t' ":.':L1bi.:
Giveaway

4

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Ma1n St, R1pley, WV

Announcements

FIU1h Pllarmacy, 11/ddlopod.

We service most makes &amp; models .

304·372-St 44

1 molo 10Wk old, - . 1 lillton,
1
.......
houoabn&gt;bn i
87!-3208.

block/gold,

-red col 304- ·

3 ldttono, 1wka old,_., - r•
.om. long hllr. 304-a75o-3177 •J.

ter 4pm.

MODERN SAN,ITATION

314 Chine.. Pug, Fwnall, I

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable -toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

Greenhouse

-

Barbo, Pereanlal•,
Everl•sllng•. Hanging
ll•kola, ttc.
- (Dep!ll St.) Rutland to
Leading Cree~, then to
P~ul1ns H1ll. Just 2 112
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7
Op&lt;n Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Weekends Cal l 614-742-2772

110\'\".\IW

WMko Old, To \.ovlng Homo
Onlyt 614-44&amp;.1515.

.

FI'M rudlflg Mlp to Adulla 1

TNna. u..on Co. Ul.,..cy
CounciL 304-675-8071 ot 304- .
W-37H.

Klnene and cata. ei4-tt:z..aoaa.
·• ·•:. ; , , , . ,

I

·.

992-3954
Emergency Phone

~O~e

·.•·

·• .

985-3418

Chuck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State

Found: Bag ol .clotMa an Bud
Chanin Aotd. 304--675-5857.

7

Yard Sate

Rt 33
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

10121r!Wtln

Home Sites, Land
Clearing,Septic
Systems &amp; Drivewnys.

.
BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.

Trucking- Limestone,

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• free Estimates
• .Starting At
'200 lnttalled

Husky't. Around Pine SL 114367•7181

Darwin, Ohio

Services.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

To Good Hom. In Country Onty.
Jiyberian li!a.kat-1.. y_.. Old.
·~71Bi'
.
·.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE . ~~~~'· ~: !::n:berl•·

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

992-:~H33

Old. maoallnee to giYMway, 114.,.2·2476.

, ..

Stop ConipleteAuto~Body Repair

EXC\UTI~&lt;~

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

. (602) 954-7420

and Speelal
· Oceaslons

1 _~ 00 _ 486 _ 1590

Kenny's Auto Center

· Angle's ·.

COMMUNITV ·
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 · 992·6471
Mq~. Fri 8 a.m.. 6 p.m.Sat. a p.m . • 5 p.m .
Sun. byappt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.
Call for rate schedule
M.tn. $2.00

~nta

Limousine for

Weddings, Proms

614 388·9865

304-882-2996

LaurdLtmo
Servia

We Have Cars and Vans/

• Replacement,

MINI STORAGE;
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.F REE ESTIMATF.S

614-992-7643
( No

3 Family S.lt: Rllln !Shin~~, 5.2
Clrclt Drtvt, Planta SubdiYidlon
Ma~ 4th, 5th, 8-?
'

.t1 Hilda Orlve, G•IIIPQIII, Fr1 &amp;
Sat, ·May Slh, '&amp; 8th.
ALL Yard Sales Must Be Pakl k\
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p .m•
the day befoN the ad Ia 10 run.
Sunday edhlon • 2:00 p .m.
Friday. Monday edhkvl • 2:00
p.m. Salurday.

Frl, Sat, SW~, VCR T•,_, Loce
Ot stuff! Clothea., Curtain., Raln
/ShiM, !13 F'u1on A..d..
Garage

Salt:

Av1t1ue, Thu,.

Sunday Calls)

1081 Second
t-4, A.ln Or

..,~1

Sh/.,.1 Lot1 01 n/c:o ClOthing
2J 12f92/ttr"l

And

~HhGid

hlma.

G1rago Silo: Frld1y • S.hrdiJ
11-5, 736 llcCorm/ck llold, Nlc:oi

Convenient Mini-Storage Units
S. R. 7 Five Points

V1rlotyl

Garage Site: Mar 41h, Slh, eth,
136 Firat Avenue, BJcye~
Large Slze M•n• Ar.:t Lacl•
Ctofhlng And Many Ml-=

lemet

May 111 Thru S.h, 1.2 Mite. ~

Pomeroy, Ohio
Open For Business

"VSIT OUR SHOWROOM"

H0 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

tall fot all of your storage needso-

"Look for the Red and White Awning"

MERIT

992-5251 '

REFINANCE
CONSOUDATE

Bankruplcy, Judgements, Slow Credit·

Our SpeCialry

1-800-MERIT-98
MB#0489

,

lily 3rd ~lh1 i-6. 42 Smltoerw
Avenue, ua•. Men.. Bilby
Clothn, HouHhokl • . , . l
Mite.

. M1y-!11h, toh, 1 IIIlO Oil~
cr..k R01d, Ott Of Bullowlllli. 1

lid....

Moto&lt;nhy,

Toddlers ElC .

Mor

In-. •

5lh, 11h, 11-&lt;1, 3112 l
N•lghborhood Road.
.

POOR BOYS TIRES
FREE • Battery Check * Front End
Check • Exhaust Inspection

PURCHASE

Route 21t.

Place U'ollng Room Sui'-. Mene.

992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800·291 ~5600

,•

Procell Co .

Listen to voice mail messages lefl by inlere.sting
singles pf all ages. Leave messages for singles
that interest you or opell' your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
friendships and meaningful relationships.

DAVE'S

SWAP SHOP

985-4473

OFFICE ................. ................................................ 992-2259 .

. $2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.

•

Asking $25,500.00 MAKE OFFER!

Asking Only $4,500.00

1..goo..945-6200
Ext 2579

Sundays by appt. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
area. Call for rate schedule.
,,,..
Mln.$2.00
'

304·882-3704

Pomeroy- Lorge 2 car bay metal garage on SR 33. Some
utilities, cement floor, access ·&amp; traffic flow. t acre +. Partially

PRICE REDUCED· Pomeroy· Older hol)1e that needs some

992·9949. 992·6471

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

NEW LISTING· Great Bus1ness Opportunity· Just Out Of

work located behind the new Auto Zone ~tore. ·

•

(U.Ut- Llw Ratts)

t/121ltn

Y0tr
Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Phone

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark
Hra. of Operation: Mon.-Fri. 8:00A.M. iii 6:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m, •

.

TREE TRIMMING
AND RIMOYAL

Community Cab Co. Inc.

ofriterlor i Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
· (FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992.e215
Pomerqy, Ohio

NEW LISTING· Just out of Pomeroy on Enterprise Rd.· 1 1/2
story frame homo w/4 bedrooms, 1 bath , liv1ng room with
fireplace, k1tchen. Home has approx . 1+ acres, nice big front
yard partu111y tenced . 1 car garage . Home needs some work
but has lois of potential fa! only $24,900.00. Make Offer

fenced.

•

4/Hmn

ARE YOU SEARCHING FOR A BUILDING SITE?? HERE
IT lSI! 8+ acres of level/sloping ground with a scenic view of
Gold Ridge Rd. TPC wate r and electric is available. Site
recently surv.eyed . Just mmutes from SA 33 off 681 . ASKING
$12,000.00 Owner wants to sell and will aCcept a reasonable

30"

Starting

'

Asking $12,000.00

• · NEW LISTING· LETART· Older two story lrame home. 8

And

·-.--

r---------~~--~--ij~

OFFICE 992·2259

·•.

Gun
Cabinets

-Rooting

. 614-742-2193

.• •• -~ -~-· Real Estate General _ _ !==::::::::;::"""::-~
·

•

Reduced
25o/o

sq. yd.

oNew Gllrege.
o£1ectrlcat &amp; Plumbing

Brickle.s

,:.....;:_::;___~---.:.:....=....:..::..:..:..;

.'

10

$695

-Room AddHion•

· 32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy

SMITH'S

Suites

Bedding

CUPEml ~IVICE

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

949-2168

•

Quality

II

•

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
tNEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753

etal Storag~F"CirlJin:et'S
Base Cabinets,
Wctrdrobes,
Utilities

1)

,.

ma.

s

,.'

240 Upper River Rd. • GaQipolis • 446·8212

Glider Gas· or
Rockers Ele.c tric

t-

1·900-656-5000
Ext1861

Procall Co.

$3.99 min. Must be 18 yrs.
Procall CQ.
(602) 954-7420

Clearance

-·- Vaughan's Card

-··-

1 ON 1

YOIII'J

H&amp;H SAWMILL

'

Must be willing to work all hours.

.

r.

.

Cashiers, carry-out are needed.

If you're planning a proJeCt . you won't htt any underground
that requires dtggtng. you can electrical, lelep llone , gas or
save yoursel f a 161 of trouble water ltnes . OUPS Will handle
and maybe even your life - by the details to r you. free of
calling the Ohto Utilittes ProtecchargG. Just call the toll -free
tion Servtce (OUPS) before
number at least two work·
mg days before you
you start
State law requtres
begin your protect, and
you to call OUPS two ·
they'll noltfy member utilities so they ca n mark
working days before
' lh etr lines tn the work
excava tton begtns
area No surposes
.
to make certatn (
.

.

D

Rlnlodlllng
Kitchin ' llllh Remodeling
Room Additions
Slclng, Roofing, Patios
l'llalonlble

Help wanted

•

" !I

HOUII Alplir 6

LIVE
PSYCHICS

CONSTRUCTION

1·800-362-2764

•.•..

Lowdown, cloAMLiwkrs, P.O. Box

985·3879

CAU BEFORE Y\)U DIG:

f~-

IEFF IEMODRIII
SEIYICE'-

LSD. PCP. crack, spud and Cal1lllia, send $4.55.)

AVOID SURPRISES!

.

•

Tune~ups

C_
o rner of General Hartinger Parkw'av

.

0

Want to be a part of a
winning team?

.

Three Family Ya'rd Sale
Yellow Bush Road,
Racine
. ........fJiday &amp; Saturday
May 5th,Gth- g am~ 4 p

I,

drurs. Send a se/faJIJI'eued, lonr,
bruiMss·sile e1111Ciope aNl 4 cltecJ:
or money order for. $3.75 (this
i11cludes postage and ltandlillt) ro: •

Blackwell

Turkey &amp; Ham Dinner
. Sun. May 7th
at
Southern t-Jigh School
Sponsored by Southern Jr. High
11 a.m. - 3
Children . $3.

'

~Mrs? 'Tite Lowdown on DofM"
has up-ro-llte-milu4le ittformation on

What's t~ ITIIIIt abouJ pot, cocaine, 11562, Cllicago,/11. 6()611-0562. (In

CarpenterS
enroll adults in
welding class

1

CAll OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

ANYWHERE '
DEAR ANYWHERE: While
curiosity about "who, what, why end
where" is a normal response. sens"itivity to the feelings of others should
be the principal concern. Thank you
for an opporwnity 10 point this out.•

We offer major brand tires· Discount SuprSwamp, Computer Balancing,
Auto Light Truck, Compir 's Struts,
. Shocks- Computerized FMCZ&amp;4
Wheel Alignments, ATV Tires &amp;
'Tubas
Rt.

33 &amp; Hornton St.

Mason ;·wv ·

21111

.

MlsiiJ ShHio, lluy leny, 2371
Addison Plko, Frid1y, Sllurdl
. ""'·
a..s.
Home rnt.r~or Blby f~
t•ro /CiolhH, G\rto Ctolhu,
Comlot1er Whh Ac

~v:.'

lng,

('lie.

::.:."'!'!Endo,
."'~t{
-hor~

Oddo •

Porm1111ng,

·

�•

.

Wednesday, MIIV 3, 1~

Pomeroy-Middlepor:t, Ohio -

·.v.dnlrcley, May 3, 1195

TheDally~l

NEA Crossword Puzzle
I

PHILLIP

ALDER

.Yard

EEK&amp;MEEK
•a

1--., loya.

Pomeroy,

llldo

"" Yonl &amp;oleo ........ l'llld In

SNUFFY'S STAYIN'
AN EXTRY

__ ,

_, .. _.

Merchandise

Lots&amp;

~

·
NOft..lmakar
Por a·
Four lomlly go._go ..... llay 5o a.byolllw 1n lly 1 don't
· 1, Arbaugh Addhlon, Tuppen~ ChlldiWI, 3 0oro A WM1L llolo 01Dfl'l
hoUI , _Portabela.wmlll
1oat to till moll
~uo~ 1.~~~~~~~=-~
.
-UIIor1PJI.
'
Four hlmlly· old bank building
In Racine, Thul'llday and Frk!ar" oara, oa11 114 •
7pon • 1Cipnl.
from 81""'5pm. Rain or ahlne.

2101 Mlu tau

Truck - RomoYOI,
.ao Fl.
Slump
FIMRooeh.
&amp;Umll•l lnlurlnce. 24 Hr.
...... _ .CON And
s...r No 11oo Too llg Or Too
lmllll 1'11 381 N 13, 114-3177010,
.... Veley N"'"!fY _ School.
Chlldcare .11-F e.m.a~ Aa•
2-K, v....nv School AIIO Durl!lll
...mmw. 1 Clop pw WHII 1111&gt;lnlum 114 Ul 3117.

tala, Bl,chU.Id Fu,_al Eam lip 10 *'·-· ,....., .....
Hom• Rutland, May 3 A 4th, fu,.. ling OIWoio!&gt;M 01 homo. nlturt, kkla i plw •lu cklthea. now, no oiportonoe, he • ..,
Dlloo,e.nd
-.,.:,~d
110 ol&gt;llpo
mise.
tlorL
..,
............
Glgontlc muHI-tomlly . , . _ &amp; pod to Alomo OooC
ytrd 1111, Hnallt E.ulam Dl)lf 112, 8407 Rd:o.....S:!!.lo
team, Mar
rain 01 ahTna. 1»411. San AniOIIlo Tll r.....
Wlpplo Rd. (Five Polnta),
Eom up 10 *'000- otuftlnt
Pomeroy.
enMI- ot - . Blllrt now.
Froo oupplleo.
Hug• yard Nle, May 4-7, 242 No
Booch
St,
Mlddlopoll, FIM lnfonnotlon. No Olltlgotlon.
hoUIIhOkl llema, tumllu .... like Sand I.A.S.E to Stoning, Cope.
now chlldrono clotll., glrlo Int.• ~- Box 148117, Orloildo, FL
.... 3, 8am-6pm.
Qar~ge

..

...a.

••110,_

Roclno ArM Community Clr'
ganlutlon- 1:00am. S&amp;ar MUI
Parte. Uly 5-e. Ff'MHI", *Y.• •
chord orgon, mini lotlrido,
dlohoo. pone, opplioMN, ...."'
lng. - -lilted,
conlact
DIIQN8 Cleland, ~~
141.Ztm Of Do.. Zlrldo, 1-llo
2031. Pick up av.... ble.
Rood- Pork In SyncWodnMCior, Moy w. All .,...,
.-oypluo.k,..pm.

""'"r. ........

Tine tomlly
y ..
R1ln or ahiM. Glrt'a alolt..llzl
3T-t. 8arn-3pm.

..,11011, $8!0 Down, $1110 Por
Month, Sollthond Oolllo County,
Mk Hlger1y, 114-111-3402..
ua ..,.., :m I wide ~!!~go top
building IIIIo, *'3.1110. Rliyburn
Ad, reaeonabfe rMtrlctlonl. No
llngto wldo lnqu~........... lnlonilltlon moiled on NqUMI.
304-e7U253.
C.moolo 501100 13,1100 OBO,
304.812-2412, ITo I .
.

*•·

Ellpwlonco~Orill
CMk,
Woltr8o d Bor, 8110
&amp;
DlohP.,.
1\pplrlnP......,
Only From
11 6 U
Rod
RoOM:• A• aurant.

Financial

o
.....l - ·m,..
" "have
" · u:Nia.nt
roporter.
Candlelit•

21

typing ...II. lind backgrCOind.

Engllah
Computor
knowltldga • plw. Send rMUme
to Mincty KMmt. Edlor, Paint

OALUA COUNTY: J... Eaot 01
Stole AI. n. 30 llln.,.. Solllh
Of Golllpo1lo, 351 Wooded
Ac,.., Divided In 11 Tr1cta
Ranging From I To 34 Ac:r•
Eactt. All For Sale Gn Land Con-

1'wD
tomllr yord - · lloy :lrd4th, N, JOhn Jetfera, 41281

tract Wllh 101., Dow~nd 10%
lntere.t For 10 Y
Some 01
The Plicae Ar11:
Acraa,

. Eoglo Rldgo, ltttle olovory1hlng.

lxt

Rick , . . _ , Auction Compony,

full time _auctkJnMr, compl~li
· euct:lon
eervkla.
Lk:~~nHd

w..t Vlrolnlo, 304713-17810r -~- .
-- 9 Wantec! to Buy_
IIIJI,Ohlo I

Loto Modo! Coro Or

Deoonlld atonewaN, wall ttl•
phcrtell, old lempe old ttw-

· Ru..

Moor•,

owner. ll+m·

2521. W• buy 11tattt.
J a D'o Auto Porto end Solvogo,
buying wrecki:Junk aUIOI &amp;.
'rucluli. Al.,eo, paita lor. ...._ 304oo
"'7:J..63A3 7734033

.

l·.

Rentals
IPotanUal
ProcMalng lillortgag• Flltunda.

1

Own Hour.. CaR 101-715-2300
Ext. 1:151- (:M Houro~

All Htal estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 wnlch makes II illegal
to advenise ~any pret~:~rence,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention !o
make any such preference,

Now Accepting Appllcl.tlona At

Domino'• l'lzza In GalllpoUa l
Pomwoy, Apply In Par.on.

limitation or discrimination:

Furnished
Rooms

41 Houses for Rent_
5 room• l blth. $250mo. plus
dlf&gt;OO~- 304-e75-13115.

a.•aam•,

121:10, 2·

mploymenl Services
Help Wanted

$85lmo .. ~~~0 mlnul•
Athena, S
·21S'Z

trom

47 Wanted to Rent
l.octllnfl lor blclo on olllce

opoc:o. lluot bo fiiOUnd

ft-.
ottlclM

conte,.nce room, 1000.1500 '1q.
ft. noodod. Roopond In w~tlng
to P.O. Bo1 724, Alhono, ott.

51

C.ri&gt;OI &amp; VInyl In Stock $5.00 Yd
&amp; Up 1, eo Ptttema Of Kitchen
Carpet In Stock. Over 3.5 Plit·
tame VInyl In Stock.
C.rpat.,.6M-446--X44.
Country Furnltu111-Fumhurw tar
Every Roam. Sml., Rt. 2 North,
Pl. PleuanL 304-4175-8820.

~~-

.

2bedroom, central air, 7ml oul

Sondhlll 011 ~ghl. 1250mo pl110
otllllloo. O.pooit· 304-4115-3483.
Th,.. blldroom lrallwln RaciM,
'

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete

home

tumi~~~~C·

Houra: Mon-Sat, 8-5. I

0322, 3 mllu out Bullville Pika

Free Delivery.
Lovueat Launge Ct.lr, T.V.,
Mlcrowav•, Dolik, Chllr, 114258-1267, Coli Aftw 7 P.ll.
PICKENS FURNITURE

.....~m.

2bdm'l. apta., total 111-=trkl, appf..
fumJahlld, laundty

Pomeroy,

10

paid,

utllltl•

S40Qimo, 114-11111-4251.
a---h St llldd,__, Oh ••~

-

.,

..,.....1

tvmllhed ept., ullllt •

' ·~-

·paid,

d•-" 6 tole-. 304-182-

2541.

Mo:l::a~:;es 1

1184 1ob.70 3 Btdroom~, 2 Full

llondoy Tl-.u Sotunfay, 7 Batha, Total EJactrlc, Hou•
A.ll. -t P.M. ~ lnt-lod C.U Typo Shlnglo Good Condhl&lt;&gt;n,
3 chlklr., 8,12. a·11. - . 114-441-1115.
Sat U,IOri Renlll Lat, 18,500,
' tion nquf,.. trtt\aJ)(HUtlon to
OBO, t14.Z45o1408.
a.tl'llourrlcYIM actiYhiM. Ap- ctvt.ta.n
woman will ell
or
do · chor• 10150 mobile homo,
plblnf muat ~· an llcef. wlaldariJ
cond.,
lent drtwlng . . - . eon e~o~o~a. .....nlnp. 114-1112·23Q tltq ..... fully fumiiMd. *2,500, unrur.
rencla.
13Diaft• lpp.
nlohodl2,000. -~21.

a-

.n.,. 1:30pm.

r

WAIT A MINUT~··
TtiiS lfN'T ONt Of .

727

quipped Few TM Elder1y, Han-

( . .1

•

6 Tilted

7 lmperaonate

~GTIONS" QtALS

-=a'"ud::-g'"ot~T,:;ro~nom~l;:;oo~lot.:.no~:"'.~~::1,:-:od:-:&amp;

i

Robulft, All Trpoo, - b l o To&lt;
Over 1o,OOO TranamiM&amp;on, .U.O
P,rt.. 8'1+31'1-2935.
I~
JohnAnd
S.rv~•
liNd And Aabulll'
Tronomlooiono. Aleo, Cooh And ·

T,....,,......

~~ T r · - - · 11+-371o

au tanka, OM ton truck
w~. r.dlatorw floor mat~
otc. D i R Alllo, R{ptoy, WY. 304i;
naooaosa •-1~11321. _
New

. ' BORN LOSER

.~'~ SCi'£no\lt-&gt;S l I\Llo.l/',1'5 "'
~Ill-ITE!&gt;

TO fo.:lK WJ N:iXJT,
~- !&gt;T~- -- WI-lEN '!OJ I-ERE
. I~ MEDICJ.L ~OOL ...

CELEBRITY CIPHER

are

by Luis Campos
Celebrtty CJ9F18r c7.p1ograms are crealed I rom QUOIIhonl by IJITIOul ~. put and l)rHanl
Each etter lfllheo copher stands lor anOiher Today's ciiJit' Z llqllllls U

'XHCCA

P'WAAT \.ERE Tll£ f'RDfO.lND
"' ,.~TO(.()(,I~"\5 OOt-li C:£T "'
CN.J.."-&gt; ~~TI-l~ il-l Tl'£ ~l-IS
~ \AAT it-I.FLJ.E--ILED'f(JJ
ltl SPEC.IN..IZ€ I~ ~i()..(X:,Y . TO TfV\T N-1 ~ CX:£

0001€.!

11-\STE:N&gt; OF &lt;:AY,
t-l~Y? -

UYHHV

WVHGC

SZDVG.

"XZUID8

SXOJOSJ

GYNGJBH

S K

C F H

OM

OJ

I GO . ' - · ESFJ

WGIMOSYCFA ·.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Human potential IS rather limitless and we have no
business giving up on it at any Boint."- (Playwright) Nicky Silver.

THAT DAILY
PUULII

Ciri'J
0\!::)

_;_:_:::..:.:.;;.___;=-.=

WDID

GAM I

Edited by

lhiorronge lerters of
0 four
scrambled words
low to form fou r word$

I~ I 1 I I I

deaL
Instead, West switched to the heart
10: queen , ace, five. Since South's opening bid had denied a side-suit king, it
was easy lor East to continue with the
heart four to West's king. Noll' came
the heart lwo through dummy's 8·6 lo
East's J-7. Four heart tricks to the defense meant one down.
Look out for the unblocking middle·
card lead.
Phillip Aldfr's new book, '"Get

Smarter at Bridge," is

I G 0 M

BYDLHM

East's heart ace wins a trick in the next

IS IT1

AulD

ther~

SAYTEY
2

broke off ·
'
engagement and was be1ng
r·sued by his former fiancee. 1
f
..·~
~
· =-=~-~-=:_,told
him that you can't go back
,..
~- -eft·yocrrwtml with oat first conS F L U E U
suiting a smart - - - - - s
Complete lhe chuck!.- quoled

_.:,O_K.:..,..W___,N_N-,-~~~=''

j

·

-

II
.

.

.n.
~

I I' I . .

I I I
.

.

.

I
16 0
•

.

•

bv follong on the m•nmg words
yay· dev~lop from step· No. 3 below.

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET AN SWER

Ground -Aglow · Vixen - Piping - PL UGG!NG
"With the new gadgets we have today ,·· the old t1mer
sighed , "nothing gets done by hand . All the homeowner
has to do is keep PLUGGING away! "

6pm.

_.,.m

Transportation

ua.l---------71 Autos for sale
.:_:_:.;::::::...:.:.:....:.:::.;.:-,.,1m Dodaa As~ Slant Sla

Rune Ooool, $1100, 114-3711-2240.

18M Chrysler E C1au High
IIIIM, $8_00, t1...2.SI-1233.
1885 Chevy Celebrity Real
Clean. Good Tim, Good
~bla Car, $1.000, 114-371-

11115

Chow

CoioJ~

Sot

h2-2o&amp;O.
n
... profn dr...... .,· .. 7., one

Of

llar)O

Ooll

Clube

Mc:Gr-a_or lrone, 3 ThrouGh PW

1 Yoor Old,_DI!fllop llo!oll'r'oodo
1 + 5 1 lHr Old With Uaht
Wtlght Nylon Bag, Haw 5110,
Coli Do VII- Bol.,. a P.ll. 114388.e174.
Uood golf clubo.

304-etS.:mz.

53

Antiques

::-.:.--:....:.~!;:.:.;..,_

a-·· =. -···

But· « MI. Rlvarlna AniJqua ..

1124 E. lloln St-~ on AI. 12_4_,
- o y . Houro: II.T.W. IO:w
o.m to •:00 p.m. Sundoy 1:00
'
"' 'M- '
•
to 1:00 p.m. I 11112·21211.

54 MiscellaneOus
' • Merchandlla

81

Home

1

.

1

Sundonco,
~~~~~;2~~::

oldlng,Homo
roollng,
llolnlutorlot
......., poinio
Ylntl
1Joe'o
ng,_ power .wa• hi ng. In
. a -.::
1i&amp;7 Pontloc TA Low lllloogo, timet.., 8*il82o4232.
Zonllh 25" conool 1V, ployo Loaded, Air, 114-245--6465 After o Ron'• TV . Strvlca, •pac:lai\Pna
good, 1100; ta'l3' owlmmlog P.M.
'
·
In Zanhh •lao Mrv~lng " mo.t
Poat, bouaht new 1aat Summar
tg88 Dodgo O.ytono 8holby
other brondo. Houoo coho, 1·
uoo, 114-1112-3800.
.
now point, dr.., too mony lOW 800-787-0015, WV 304-5:111o23v8.

'

AS.T RO-ORAPH

_ _BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

z.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, uww Dlpoo, ..,.,..
c1ow11 llntale, ate. ClaUde WinIn, Rio Oron&lt;to, ott Coli •~o~24Ht2\
Omolluworplpo
a
dralnpl~ now In atoci. Sidere
Equipment, 304-e7$-ll121.

Lwe tCC)

Condl-1 :~~f,f;@:;;;;;;~

tlan, $1,200, 814-388-8128 Laav•
11.-"L
Bamatt'1 Horne lm~· wemantiMJo·
-~
A-. AddHiono
ocko, A
w.cldiiVI
high neck, tow blc
nMda 11186 Aen•ult Alliance, doea not Porche~. Experiancad, FrH E.
hoop, t'tall prk:~, t14-NW•BI or run, lor part• only, S200 •• · Ia, tlmat-. 814-44&amp;-&amp;568.
6*3f7o0288.
• ...1112-112011.
· cac o.norot Homo
Two c~bo, hiGh cltolr, wotlcw, 1187 Oldo Dono 88 Roroto llolntononco ond llol&gt;llo Homo
ploy pon, blonli:oto, monhor, bol· Broughom, lolldod, hont-wheo! R pol• For ~lmoto coli
tin. nawbom-18 monthl, alrle driv.~._3.8, v..e, uc. cond., M- ~. 814-9'9'2:6323.ond boro clothing, 114·ll12-21i2. king u,HI. 304-8115-38118.
UAd Stovo &amp; Ro~lgorotot S7S
Elich,. 114-318'Hll!._ f\4-388-_
830
.
4

__

alan, 2 Ownara, Good

Services

v-e,

""''""
Plumbing &amp;
...,
3087. ta llol, $4500. :JOoO-m. 82
1111 1rao z 0ooc1 Condition,
, Heating
l..oHediiM-3~ 4-1.
F'"man'1 HNtlng And Coaling.
1ua Pontile lonnevlll•, axtra lnttau•rlon And 5enrlcl. EPA
dean. 304475-'1641 01 anw 5Qm

304.. 711-4121.

.a.ttory Oporotod Botmon Cor,
11u &amp;cort ar LoOdodl Black,
llolol Rooffl!; I Siding• Check ....245ot20t.
dicllppod, I. Dlooblod Ptroono, -.1100, 81olo24HI!Sl
Ouf Prtceo Bofoow You BUy. AJ..
1 Bedroom, Applications M~)'
Be Picked Up At Spring Volley a.r- sao Bomi-Automotlo, 13 tlzor Form Supply, &amp;M.Z*-11111
72 Trucks for Sale
PtHI 1128 Jllckaon Pita, Or - · $400: Colt Dtamonclbocll
Can i1t 41! 4838, Equal Hou• 31 Nickol And Wolnut SliGO, 56 Pats for Sale
1813 Ford F·1100 Stop Sldo Now
lng OpporlllfiHy.
Both Rool Nicol Coli e
....... 114-3N-:IUII.
A.ll ... P.M ..llolo-11.
Groom Sllop --Pot Grooming.
Fu"""*' Apartment, Utlllll•
Foatu~llg Hydro Both. Julio
11170
28 Ft. City Dump .Trollw,
Pakt, 1 Bedroom, Upatalre, Booll By Rod Wlna Chi_. WobO. Cill .114 1•1 0231.
$4,000,
.......... ~
'
SecOnd AVIAI.JI, Galllpallt:, No -10 To -60 ~INO, li.H. Brown
Ouorontood
I.Owoot
Pric..,
Tho
1171
OIIC
Truck
Auto,
PB,
PS,
AKC llolo Cockor ~1: Ponr
Pote, Eocotlent Condnlon, '"" Shoo Colo, f14-4 11 1222.
1 IIIII. AIC, 11~110 Firm, 114-441-G14.
Color, 1300 PBO, I

~-

3 Diner
4 Opp. ot NNW

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS

t2 18 Oougo,_S411G, Oood
Condition, IM-448-11110,

8021.

Aportmonlo,

FO; YOU!t Oy/N

Hay &amp; Griilfi -

Beretta 2:5 ltol, lit; ~z plllfol, Automatic, 4 Door,
CIHn
135; I MM, $8· 12 g•ug• doubt. Ca
W86't
barrel, tl&amp;e; 2.5 ~llol,l31i loaid
r, 11,?00, 114-2.5
of mlec. lteme. O.n'a Swap 1185 Oida CU11ta Supreme,
Shop. -come mak• onar-. 114- Aebuln llator, New Tran•ml ...

quol HouolnJI Oppotlunlly. ·

Fourth AYonuo, Oolllpcillo, E·

Parts &amp;
. Accessories

fltSPONflriLITY

Sotollho oyotom $300. Porch
owning. 8l&lt;24ft w/J)OIIo 1200.
Dryer $25. ~5-11Dl anar

., us 8418.

18' Color Zonllh T. Y. Coble
Roody Hordlr Uaod, llolo446-

FIWIChtown

76

Tt.fOS~ ~ TAIC~

Haw •llvat .U!lf · whaele 11-.
Umoualn bull, 11 month• Old, ... _ .. '"" 1111 &amp;-10. 304-t75j
PurebNd, mutt ... •o .- 172't
l
-loto, $8do, &amp;lololl85-3540.
South-01 Pick-Up Porto ....._:
Matched fomll tNm of mu.IH, I
Door. FandeN • Men. 31
a 7 yr. old brothoro, 1500 lbo. Cab.,
1111.. South Ot Gollloollo AI Juo-'
ooch, well broke, gontlo, $4500; lion AI. 7&amp; At. ;118, 614-441-3767-;
llolo102-im0.
UNCI, ,.:t)J~ al'
Polo Urnouolne Bull, 12-t400ibo, Tr•n.mi.,.JDM.
lna~.ct, guarerdNd.
'1St
a 1/2yrs old. Aoklng $800. 304- 71134. Ablo f o - wloomo675-!5621.
dalneada.
.
..
Refrlgtnitora, SlovM, Waahlnl
A~ 1Jrpra, All Reconditioned Aegl.. ared black Angua COWl,
And Oourontoodl *'00 And Up. aow a calf. palra, alsa wunlng
ego bulle, phone 814-e88-e581.
Will Dollvor. 814-66..-..

PINAnt, WV, cell 304-175-1450,

BEAI/fiFUL APARTIIEIITS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 112 W o - D~n
1n&gt;m $22~ Ia 52111. Wolk~o ohop
&amp; mavlea. Clll IM""'41-25N. E·

Coli oltor

•n•

Sim Bomtrvlii•' • Army Surplua,
camouflage turkay ciOU!Ing, by 64
Sondyvlllo Pool Oltlct, noon8pm F~·Sun. tcaoh-no chocko).
304-27346115.

5 Emerald Isle

seafood

YII~Y

37F~~ .._ ,

certain holdings from which you
shouldn 't lead the "'normal" card .
Today's heart suit fits this bilL
South opened with the gambling
three no-trump, showing a solid minor
sult with no side ace or ki.ng. No one
saw fit to argue.
Against this opening bid, it is usually
best to lead an ace ·lo loo~ at the dummy. So, West led the diamond ace. But
to which card did he switch at trick two?
It was clear to West that he had to attack hearts. And the normal card to
lead from K-10·2 is the two. Yet what
happens then' Probably declarer will
play low from the dummy. allowing
East to win with the jack. After winning
trick three with his heart king. West returns the heart 10. But declarer plays
low from the dummy and the contract
makes , the heart suit being blocked.

11113 Hondo XRIOOR WiCol bllit
tl'lller, mint oond., t\400. 304!

:10 Lop Ear Robbtlo Block Merlino 6 Dworl Rouonoblo $8 a
Up, 1 Or AI~ il14-2ota-0111.
3yr. old Reglatarad Umoualn
bu.!!J. 1!!&lt;1 !loo!ijlo polled. :104-8115o
35n
Spm.
.
4 CMroltll Llmoulln Cronad
Holtora, ~=~hlng Appro•. 350
, 1250 Eoch, 81olo
Poundo
441-4053.

No IIPt&gt;lloncoo, Houoohold fur.
nlohlng. 112 mi. Jortlcho Rd. Pt.

nca•

room tK:IUt&amp;.. CIOM Ia -=hoot
In town. o\i)pl{cauona avallabla
M: VIllage Grwan ApiL i148 or
coJII\4-taz-:mt. EOH. .
4 bedroom large apartment In

In SyracuM, .-.carey ramod•la&lt;f,
3 bedroom, 1 112 both, now 2 ~r
gorogo, $4»,100, llololl82·m7.

~,;'=~=--

1 An1ielles

2 Cock1oll

New/Utad

52 Sporting Goods

Apartment
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apanmtnla,
fumlshacf and unturnlahad,
-urhy dopoolt Nqulrod, no
polo, 114-11!12-2218.
1 Bedroom · H_. -Holt.,,
125Wo. Na Pot.; Avollablo lloy

Hou.e for ula on land cOntl'llctL 30+87s.Z122.

Lawn Chlol ta 131 Rld~llll Lown
Mower, 1450.114 388 0401.
llro. Stnhh Conlnlo Wonl
Pra
u ComDiete Delk With
Chllra,$250, 114-24$4104.
Now 100,000 BTU HI EHictonoy
ON Furnoco Hoot l!umpo,
Vwy Roo_,.bly Priced, One
UoOd 25KW Eloctrlc F"'"""o,
Control/1/!r Condh~'i. F,. &amp;tlmot... loll00-217-e3.. Or llolo
441H1308.

a

44

partner expectsL However,

•

1
Polomliio Golding All Excellent 446-fhr.tG.
Troll - · S..loo C.lloro
•
Jolin Door ~~~Ill lown mowor, Only, 114 380 8358.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
lhp, 4 unlroylo 13" tlroo. 3041m ""'"""" horN trollor,
l:lllo1411
for sale
good condhiOn, llololl12·2021.
Kina Wotorbod Full w... a 112yr old Rea. Chi-AngiiO bull. 11&amp;7 Cltotlon old llool1 130 ho. :
llotrrMo Including Heeter UMCI 1'wD
Rea. lilocll Umouolno lnboord, opon bow, ourvondy '
lllontM, 1175, 114oa4H02'1
Bulla.
Savtn Rag. blllck •nd whll•, MBOO, IM-112·SM.t. :

Solo,
g-n,
cond., t150. 304-e75-1141. '
SWAIN
Two Hdroom, fumllhed, all AUCTION 6 F\JANITURE. 112 Stairway
Elavatara
And
llactrlc, prtvata loC, OOOd ciNn Olivo St., Oo!llpotlo.- &amp; Uaod Whaalchalr IBcoot• una For
condhlon, Rt-. 33 above New fumhure, hutlf'll, Wettem
eo.., N- And U"'!!!,__!owmone
Haven, no Pl\l, $275 with watw, Woric booto. &amp;14-441o3151.
Homacara,l14-448-ra~;~,
304-&amp;82-2466 onytlmt.
VI'RA FURNITURE
. STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
114-4411-3151
'43 Farms fOr Rent
Uprtghl, Ron Evana tnt•rpri....
Ouolhy Houoohotd Fumh.,. Jackaon, Ohio, 1..aQ0.537-8528.
Tan acr• of bottom land- Carr ""d Applloncoo. 0,.01 Doolo On
Rd. 1231 ( 1 112 mil• wut of Cuh And Corryl RENT-2-0WN Teurua 357, $165; S&amp;W 31 SpeAltr.dl along .... acta- at mid-· And Loyowoy Aloo Avolloblo. clal.r. t171ii Browning 22 rlt ...
·die branch at Shadll or•k, 1· F,.. Delivery Within 25 Mllae.
$18&gt;; 20 a•t:• pump gun, t125;

dlrtc.

..,

1111 Ka-kl Boyou 300, 2WD,
good condHion, 11160, IM-ID
1110

HJIUSehold. Goods

ChaiMI Roltd, IM-446-3617 Aher

513--815~050 ....

Child Coni In 'lly OoiiDOIIo

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

2108, ....

4oH Limbo For Solo, 81olo44611581.

On Clark

1Wa Hdroom moblla home tor
r.nt In Middleport, call 614·892·
1060 and t.lva nama and num-ber.

Real Estate

Mobile home apacae tor ...,.. In
country• garbage, MWW and
water rncluc:lad. cable nallabla,

1

8VT TELL 141M 1M NOT
60NNA PUSI4 ~1M AROUND
IN A STROLLER~

t..._._..,

=.lmt

DOWN

When leading, you use a set of
"rules." For example, you lead fourthhighest from your longest and
strongest, especially when you have at
least one honor in the suit. And in the
middle of the play, if you soo:itch to a
new sui~ a low card should promise an
honor in that suil (unless you are hop'ing to fool declarer and don't care what

A6AIN ..

WWKC reg.
P'IIHM..
woh 11"-, I I wile. ild, 1"'Y IIMUtltullr
Choot, llod With Now Box mortood, hoe hOd -..Ina 1;::-:-,;.:~:==-:-:-:---:--::==
Sorlnao, " ~ SI.GOO: • - . .
4 -loo,$250
Mlo....... O.on • Cort ~
f14C310-4m'L
21" ZonMh T.V. ..00, """ 11., ·
·
1111 Hondo 210 ATV 11+-371o
Bolore I P.ll. , , . _

. '
10 Yoor Old Bucllokln llaro; 13 882..Z356.
I
YNr Old Rog!ot- Stock Point 1883 Y•maM Tlmberwotf • I
Ooldlna 4oll Sho.., 4 Yoor Old Whe•!~ Uu Now, S2,711G, 114- •

for Rant

Trallei lor rani. You pay utllltlaa.
550 dopooh. 30U75o2535.

Child .... ........ - - , .
..tttlng Mar lt, In DW home for

1-·=-=-------..,..""*•caUc:r

Livestock

' 42 Mobil&amp; Homas

11!12-e542.

3~

~a.d.- - .. ,
y..,
~.&amp;. lnal dn: u...,.

For your loa homo or-. ot Paint PJ.., llkllono Wood
Flnloh. I04-I'/5o4084.

._.lohan

$250/ma. piUI utllltlaa r•t.r.nc.. and d•pot;lt requ 1rtd, t'*

11

45

Merchandise

Buick Pontloc, 18w
Ea.t.m Awenye, Galllpolla.

WMkiJ

Wodgo Aplrtmento. 1 a 2br~
polo. 508 Burdolto St-.
•J6.2072 oftor 5pm.

SEVERAL l'ACRE PARCELs.
romoto, bNullful~ ~dgotop lend;
Molgo County l.iOiumlllll Twp.,
Mount Union ~d. (Twp. Ad, 14),

Smhh

$DOG

Vary clean 1 tndroom apart-

ment In lllddlopoll, ooa IIWII25304 or 111-441-30111.

handicap ecceulbla, M
whh r.cepllon liM and ont

llolo-5.

To

ASK '(()UR D06 IF
1-\E WANTS TO 60
RABBIT CIIASING

c1oar
- n ' l llomll- l1olo446- - K i n..., C.F.F. RogO.
7211.
FuU Polnl 1300, llolo221-

111,000, And 7
Acr-. H,IOO, 114-'71&amp;-1173.
Bconlo Volley, Apple Grove,
bNIIIIIul aoc ~. public ""'"·
Clyde -·~ ·Jr., 30WJ6.2338.

$14,0001 ~ Acr•,

·-···o.·tlolt ......... ..,p,

Tr..,lut, 1987 llodolo Or NOW!'J

Riverine .-.nilquel.

~Uood,~ T~· .......
And Oridnr lllloiWa, a tan, AKC,

:::::'".,..

46 Space for Rent

Pluunl R~~glatw, 200 Main
Str..C, Polnf Pill...,., WY
25550. No phan. caUL

momet...._ old clocL._-·inllque No UparlerNlll Nec.... ryt $500

Chotr1• CofiM T - &amp; Ful biCDdod P - l o r otuci IEnd T . - .,..,104-11'1-7111.
only. t14.Wl-6201.

!

Business
Opportunity

Public Sale
&amp; AI,Jctlon

Pets for S81a

-

21 T-• Of Unci, Unci Conlrac:l I To 31 Acre•i I Al:rN

For Ale one acr. more or
llwn, houH, garden, one 30x30
unlumlollod log houN oloo lull
bo..... nl with houM, price on
lnopoctlon, oloo wNI loncl controd ln&gt;m tho ~ght portr, 33050
Now Umo Rd., R.. lond.

COUnty AOIId 11, MCh Fork Rd.

h.lmtU•e.

-ott ' ~37,.i121. ·

, aoiii04-IJ1.1l67.
1/ZociW SOUII\Aiclo, WY, Well &amp;
Prolonlanol 1no SoMco, ooplll:, 12,!00. Phone nHIIIComploto TIM Coni, Buclcol 4112.
'

Belgium

55 Hrson, e .g.56 Relate

'
,By Phillip Alder

AKC Real- Cactwr spenlot,
btootllwfi'Mo, 111 - · &amp; moil. 104-71M071ollor llpm.
- . . , Cockw llf&gt;o!llol Pupp1oo, N«: Roalolorod, ChernPion Bloodlno,114-aN-mt.

- · • Plullo tltpllo
TonU, 300 Ttvu 2,000 Ron 1 - lEnto~ . . _

1

Drtv.. I'Mieded 10 'I&amp;W p t

56

sc Miscellaneous

Fitzgerald

54 River In

33 Cloth ,_..,.

34

Sln~r

The bidding
often helps

LOW~EZ.Y

Goll- """'' II 1P10ocN.
~y ...... ~,000. -

Plaint, rorlow .ag,., t:CJOam.?

HE'S CRAZ.Y ABOUT
OUR NEW DECOR II

DAY

Caesar

53

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South
West North East
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
h~ad : oA

dlopotl, lloy w, ...........
nace, tota of mlec. tl:ema.
Adva~. Dudllne: 1:19Pm lhe
dlly bltor. lhll ad • - to run,
Sunday edition- 1:00pm Friday,
Mondar
Nltlon
10:ooa.m.
Salurdly.

Sl~by

52 Come&lt;llon

32 Anger

... s

•9 5
• 5 4
•A K Q J 10 7 6

I lamlly .., _ - · lloy U.S.
booldo WMI Col&lt;lmblo onlct, w.

Clun

6 s3
•A J 7 4
•10763

SOUTH
•Q 2

35

51 Appointment

26l'/peofbread
27 Frenzy
28 Elovotlono
tobbr.)
31 Lock opener

•to

9 4 3

MiddlepOrt
.&amp; VICinity

8

24

EAST
7 4

•K 10 2
tA 9 8 2

quel,
guitar,

49 Oval-ohoped

18U..,-18 Go In
'
21 Eleclral unH
22 Kind ol flbolc

•A K J 9
•Q863
• K Q J
.s 2

9AWI"ft~.

HOllinger,

_.......

46 GoHmound
47 Greenland

17~-

~"tG·1"1'1Nq

N5 -

..........
~--­

1a Y-Mwll

15-

w~&gt;'~"

ton.

41 Repeal
43 Unk of ener9Y
44 Fiber plenl

aullltl

KIT 'N' CARL\'La by Larry Wrigllt

tor sale

hotcetiOkt

(3 wds.) -

eneme.·

1

13 lnlll
14 Dtmlnullve

lloblleltomlll

~

40 Mollmtul cry

ACROSS

C.r11flad. Ra1ldentltl. Cornmar·

clol.l14-2!56-1611.

Matchmaker can heiR. you tQ understand
· what to do to rrlake the ~ lationsh i p work;
Ma ll $2.27 to Matchmaker. c/o th1s news·
paper, P 0 . Box 4465, New York . NY

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) II lhere

IS

something you want to accortlpllsJ'l today:
be sure to choose a·ll,es and partners
who are sm~rter than you. Try not to let
your ego direct you otherw1se .

...

' 10163.
GEMIN.'JI!•Y 2_1-June 20) Obslacl_es SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .. 21) The

I
that impair the progress of others might -sectet to favorable commercial
rodav
1S
te
show
a
willingness
to
cooper·
slow you down a b1t Ieday , too, but they
won 't stop you in. yqur tracks . Your ate: Others w1U respond to the example
you eslabltsh .
willpower w•ll be extraordinary

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Give ere· CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Con·

'Your
'Birthday
Thursday, May 4. 1995

.dence to your hunches and 1nS1ghts today d•l •ons app~ar prom1s1ng today" lor a
pertaining to close fr1ends . Do what your recent joint venture . Both you and your
•nluit•on directs, even 1f it seems illog1caL · counterpan musl rema1n continually v•gi·
•
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might be !ant , however
.more lpt;tunate than usual1n your ln"Yolve·
ments with influential persons today .
Establish these contacts yourself instea.ct

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb, 19) Success •s

1nd1cated today. provtded you do not t•p
your hand prematurely . Save some .of
your aces forth~ r.ilal round . ,
.

1n the year .ahead, several platon1q rela;
nonShips you establish with members of
the opposite gender -could , prove
extremety helpful in furthering your amb•·
llpns. Romance won't be a factor.

of us1ng a middleman .
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) II could coo-

TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) You ltughl

lor something that was brought about pn manly by you! eHorts ..

be e•tremely fortunate today in develop·
ments strongly motivating you to pmv•de
for those you lo"Ye . The more you give ,

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) II you have an . ARIES (March 21 0 Aprll 19) Gadding

oppoFtumly today to work w1th a parson • about town Wllh two or more or your beSt
who has been fortunate for you in the lriends could be a very .happy oxpenence

tfle more you_may get. Trying to patch up
a br6ken romance? The Astro·-Graph

tnbute considerably to your popularity
IQday· .i you let fnends tak~ a few bows

past , put the team together aga in for
even larger stakes .
'

PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) lloncere ser-

vice. you render t~ay will not be readily
forgotten by those you help Allhough you
won't be seeking rewards . the'y will probably be forthcamtng.

loday. T'Y 10 arrange lor~ gel-togelher.

·--

.-

· - ).

�•

Pta•

•

16-111t Dally Sentinel

Wednaadey, -3,1811

PEPSI COLI

FIFTH WEEK..
21sr ANNIVEr.SAr.Y SAL

•

-

PRODUCft
, 24 pk. 12 a. can•

StORIIOUIS
MondQ lin
Sunday
8AM·IO P11

Meigs girls
advance in
sectionals

WE RESERVE THE RIGB-rftl LIMI,. QUarrrrrJD
PRICES GOOD ftiRU MAY I,
.

Vol. 46, NO. 4

liLLY OR JAM

.

Proposed change in state funding sparks
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A pro·
posaiiO give state highway projects
a share of $1.2 billion in public
worl&lt;s money that now goes to
)!&gt;!;a! government could jeopardize
voter renewal of !be program; a
municipal group said.
At issue is a voter-authorized
program of state aid for local
water, sewer, and road projects !bat
expires in 1996.
Pending in !be Senate Highways
and Transportation Committee is a
plan to place on the November bat·
lot a 1().year renewal of !be plan at
its current rate of $120 million a

.

18 oz.

sIll
Bacon ••••••••••• ~~·•••
sIll

JAMESTOWN BREAKFAST

CENTER CUT

Chops •••• ~ ••
KITCHEN PRIDE LAYOUT
.$
II
s129· Bacon · · &amp;lb. box
••••••••••••••

.

T-Bone ,Steaks ••••

s

ifications for the water projec~ he
added.
In other business, council gave
Mayor Jeff Thornton permission to
seek a Community Development
Block Grant through be Meigs
County Commissioners to be used
for sidewalk replacement.
Also, council will number !be
village's houses by summer, Beegle said. This topic was discussed
after Vine Street's April Hudson
told council of her difficulty in get· .
ling deliveries because of lbe lack
of a street number.
In other infrastructure action,
council purchased 27 street signs,

Racine Village Council will
spend $80,000 in state grants to pay
for waterline extension , a new
water well and water meter project,
council decided at its regular meet·
ing Monday nigbl
The appropriation ·or the
$80,000 from the Appalachian
Regional Commission was one of
several appropriation changes
approved at !be meeting.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District will
advenise and send information on
lbe project to contractors soon,
CounCilman Bob Beegle said.
Council also discussed the spec-

8.5 oz.

which completes tbe three-year
project of placing reflecting metal
signs across town.
It was decided to have the riding
mower repaired and permission
was given to !be park board to use
the backboe to repair !be Star Mill
Park building restrooms once sewer·
pipes are purchased.
Councilman Dale Hart stated the
Cross Mill building will begin
reconstruction during !be middle of
May . ·council also discussed th e
liability inherent with the property.
The month's financia l reportS
included:
cash
balance,
$250,083 .58; · general fund,
$45,944.98 ; trash collection,

$24,591.94; parks-m useum .projec~
$1,046 .25; street maintenance,
$35,053.35; s tate highway ,
$3,038.94 ; fire operations,
$52,212 .09; water re venue ,
$74,755.82; c~metery, $1,629.28;
water deposits, $5,084.05; and
ceme~t:ry endowment, $6,800.
Attending were co uncil mem·
bers Bob ·Beegle, Henry Bentz,
Dale Hart, Scott Hill, Henry Lyons
and Larry Wolfe. Also present
were Clerk Karen Lyons, Mayor
Jeff Thornton, street commissioner
Glenn .Rizer and firefi ghter David
Neigler .
Council set its next meeting for
7 p.m. May 15 at council chambers.

Police chemist stays calm under cross-examination
'

79

Beef or Pork
VIETTI BBQ
Limit.2
Please ~---11

SUPERIOR
......
-----~

The proposal, if approved by
voters, would continue funding for
local government at current levels,
but would force them to request
renewal after five years instead of
10.
·~It's notr.bat we don't lhink the
state need.s money," Collaniore
said.
"I guess what we're seeing out
there in terms of local infrastructure needs there's very little chance
that we're going to reach a point in
!be foreseeable ruture lbat we don't
need this money," he said.

Racine Council receives update on water project

S,.ARKISt
tUN.A

Chuck Roast ••• !:~. ·
. SMrrH~ELD BONELESS WHOLE
s
149
..
B
LB
T avern am ••••••·•• ·

c~ncern

for local government infrastruc· doesn' t mean we wouldn't be sup·
ture," be said.
portive of it. The governor asked
Committee Cbainnan Scou Oel· for it to be discussed, lbat' s it,"
slager, R-Canton said Wednesday Dawson said.
lbat the proposed change to benefit
The County Commissioners
Q_DQT would receive serious con· Association of Ohio said counties
sideration.
·
need the money they are rereivlng
A letter Voinovicb sent to lbe from the fund.
panel last monlb did not identify
"I think there's a concern that if
lbe source of the propOsal.
we foreshorten the lbin g 10 five
"1be governor ·tbinks Ibis is one years and the state bas half of the
of many ideas lbat ought to be money, that it inay he that much
looked at," press secretary Mike' harder to pass again,'.' said .Jerry
Dawson said.
·
Collamore, assistant director of the
"It is not his proposal. That association.

percentage vote in Obi(),"
year.
Gov. George Voinovich bas rec- Mahoney ~d in an interview.
Issue 2 is lbe name generally
ommended analysis and debate of a
proposal to borrow $1.2 billion in given to lbe 1987 infrastructure
five years instead of 10, Half the program.
"In 1987, we were selling a
money would go to the OhioDepartment of Transportation and . concept thai envisioned success. In
1995, we have a story to tell that
half to local goveinments.
·
John Mahoney, deputy director says it's no longer a concept, it's a
of the Ohio Municipal League, said program !bat's been extremely sue·.
Wednesday that including ODOT . cessfui,"Maboney said.
"I don't Iffiow if !be case for
in !be proposal may tbreaten voter
OOOT
money is anywhere near as
renewal.
.
.
"I'm very confident that given strong as the case !bat was made in
the success of Issue Two, .a pure 1987 and bas been over lbe years
renewal issue would pass by a large

LB

~ork

1
2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 4, 1995

Copyright 1995

JIF PEANUT
BUTTER

8141
~ork Chops •••• ~~~ ·

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' SERVICES HELD FOR VICTIM • E~linda Guzman, mother
of Marine Corps Capt. Randolph Guzman, who was killed in the
bombing of Oklahoma City's feder~l building, lays. a bouquet of
Rowers beside his coffin Wednesday m Hayward, Cabf. (AP)

Crews close to ending
'
. search for bombing victims

US #I

COTTO NELLE
·BATHROOM
TISSUE

s

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) videotape by a camera in the car of
Bone-weary afler a frustrating two the state trooper who arrested
weeks of work, crews are close to ·· bombing
suspect Timothy
ending the search for bodies in lbe McVeigh, The Dallas Morning
r11ins of the bombed federal build- News reported. The truck pulled
over when McVeigh was stopped
ing.
When they leave, relalives of for a traffic violation, the paper
the victilns will be allowed to have said .
a last, private remembrance at the
site.
•
Authorities released two drifters.
"It's almost over," said police whose travels had seemed to con·
Sgt. Lynn McCumber, one of just a nect them to McVeigh, tbc only
half-dozen workers wbo dug person charged so far. Gary Alan
through rubble Wednesday. They Land and Robert Jacks were taken
found the body of two adults and imo custody Tuesday in a dawn
one young child Wednesday, bring· raid on a Missouri motel, then
ing the death toll to 146.
released 18 hours later.
·
About 25 people, including
Jacks, 60, ·initially told reporters
three infants, were missing today.
he didn't blame !be FBI, ,but later
Investigators continued to pur· criticized the agency in a televisi\)n
sue thousands of lips in the deadli· · interview.
est terrorist attack in Ibis country,
but the hunt for a second bombing
"All those morons bad to do ...
suspect, John Doe 2, remained
was
call that room .... Had me walk
unsuccessful.
outside
the room, have Gary walk
Authorities were trying to .
enhance the image of a pickup out there and they could have
truck license plate captured on restrained lis.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - A !be best way" or "That's not how I friend Goldman. Blasier took a
bloody shirt. was ·improperly stored would do it" kept croppipg pp in detour around that issue Wednesand grew slinky. A single swab bls answers,' 1he remained calm, day. instead suggesting that security was lax at the lab where blood
tested lbree sepataie pedals on a ·friendly, unapologetic and main·
was
stored and sloppy technicians
Ford Bronco. Blood was caked on tained eye contact with the jury.
Matheson 's style impressed may have altered evidence.
the outside of a test tube. Blood sat
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
around for days before it l'(as legal analysts, who said be put lbe ·
mistakes in context and made them repeatedly urged Blasier to speed
booked into evidence.
up bis cross-examination, interruptAnd what does the Police seem less serious than errors elicit·
Department crime lab field manual ed from evidence collectors Dennis ing with comments such as •:This
is !be third witness who has testiabout gatherin g, packaging, Fung and Andrea Mazzola.
fied
to this" and "Let's proceed."
..
·14w.professor
Erwin
Cbemerin·
~t_.~~~~?B and reconjiug..s.uch evi•
But
Blasier plodd.@.on with his
sky
of
thelJDiversny-or
Southern
l
challenges
to blood evidence, a
California
said
that
even
the
more
. Simpson's attorneys wanted
vital
issue
fQr
the defense. Prosecumemorable testimony - Matheson
to know, but !be manual was never
tors
say
routine
conventional serocom pleted and the entire draft describ in g the moldy smell of
logical
tests,
as
well as high-te'C h
Ronald Goldman's improperly
apparently hasn't been read by anyDNA
analysis.
show
that Simp·
body in the Scientific Investigation s1ored shirt - was defused by
son's
blood
was
left
near
the bodies
Division.
· Matheson's forthright altitude.
and
the
victims'
blood
endL'd
up in
Police chemist Gregory Mathe·
Matheson returns tu court today
his
Bronco
and
on
a
glove
found
·
son, tbe No. 2 m·an at the crime lab, for more ques•.ions from defense
behind his house.
spent the better part of .Wednes· attorney Robert Blasier.
Blasier showed jurors slides of a
day's court session testifying under
Matheson testified Tuesday that
test tube of Ms. Simpso n' s blood,
cross-examination· about these laps- routine blood tests link Simpson to
with crusted blood that had leaked,
es .
the June 12 murders of his ex-wife
or spilled on the outside .
Although phrases like '.' it is not Nicole Brown Simpson and her

Matheson acknowledged there
were some problems with the way
his criminalists collected evidence,
and !be defense hammered away at
that point. He said Mazzola erred
when she used a single ·swab to col· .
!eel three blood stains from the
pedals in Simpson's Bronco.
"That's not how I would do it,"
Matheson said.
\ "That's unacceplable?" Blasier
asked.
·
·" That' s right," Matheson said.
· "I try to limiflhe tise or a sWl!b to
one piece Of evidence."
Matheson also admitted that
.-Goldman ' s bloody shirt was
improperly packaged while it was
still wet. When be opened it in
J uly. he &gt;aid. " There was definitel y·
an offensive odor. ... 11 was not
stored properly ."
- Criminal ists used pcncit .to
fill out some crime rcpans and erasures we.re e vidcn~ suggesting pos. sible tamPerin g.

Point Pleasant physician-awaiting trial
of documents from !be U.S. State
Department. A hearing to resolve
motions and discovery material
was held Monday.
During the bearing, all motions,
except for one, were resolved: The
unresolved motion pertains to
Cbbibber's request for depositions
from India. Billups said the judge
took the motion under advisement
and told Cbbibber be must prove
!be need for the depositions.
Should the judge grant tbe
motion. !be trial could be further
delayed because the subpoena
power of the federal anorney 's
office doesn't bold up in India,
Billups said.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The dale for a federal trial against a
Point Pleasant physician should be
set within the next two weeks,
Ass istant U.S. Attorne y Pau)
Billups of Huntington said.
Bakshy Cbhibber, 43, is charged
with international parental kidnap·
ping involving his two daughters.
Preeti and Heeral.
Chhibber pleaded innocent to
the charge Marc h 10 in federal
court He is free on $50,000 unsecured bond on the condition that he
we.ar an electronic monitoring
device pending Ilia!.
Billups said !be ·COurt postponed
setting a trial date pending receipt

Cbbibber allegedly took hi s
daughters on vacation in ·August
1994 and did not return them. The)
girls' molber. Babairav i, discovered U1cy were in India and went
after the children. She and the chJI·
drcn returned to Poi nt l&gt;icasant on
March 6.

Along with !be federal charge.
whic h carries a three- year prison
tenn and $250,000 tine. Chhibbc r
also faces two felony charges of
ch ild concealment brou ght during
the Janu ary ter m of the Maso n
Cou nty grand jury

39

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By JOHN D. McCLAIN
Ass""iated Press Writer , _
WASHINGTON - Americans
face a severe crisis with the aging
of lhe baby boom generation unless
they dramatically increase tbeir
savings and improve retirement
·coverage, top business and academic leaders predicted today.
'
"America's retirement system is
underfunded, overregulated and
soon to be challenged by unprece·
dented growth in the retirement-age
population," the Committee for
Economic Development contended
in a report urging immediate
reforms.
·
·The
recommendations,
announced here bf the New York·
based committee, include tripling
retirement saving, overhauling the
Social Security system, fully fund·
ing pensions and expanding pension coverage.

." If we take prompt steps to
!!Dplement !be reforms CED rec'
ommends, significant sacrifices
will be required, but they will be
manageable,'' .sail! Lawrence A.
Weinbach, chairman of lbe group's
pensions and saving subcommittee
and chief executive officer. of
Arthur Andersen &amp; Co.
"If action is postponed," be
added, "the nation will face the
very unpleasant choice of a sub.stantial cut in !be economic status
of the elderly or a crushing tax bur·
den on future workers.'·
The report ..:.. "Wbo Will Pay
For Your Retirement? The Loom·
ing Crisis" - noted lhat the baby
boom generation will stan retiring
in about 10 years, boo&amp;ting retirees
from the current 12 percent of tbe
population to 20 percent by 2030.
Tbat grow!b will be exacerbated
by an elderly population that

already is growing rapidly because kept without vastly improving pre·
of increasing life expectancy while funding or imposing a harsh burden
birtlware declining. The result..wiil on MIDl! ~or~ers." !be report said . .
" Clearly, fortlie vast majoriry-·
be a sharp decline in the ratio of
·workers to retirees, from about 3.4- of those currently in the labor
force, their future economic cirto· l to about 2-to·l, the ·report said.
cumstances
will depend greatly
In addition to demographic fac·
upon
lheir
own
saving and partiCi·
tors, !be report cited other econompalion
in
retirement
plans."
ic and fiscal trends thai threaten the
well-being of future retirees and
- "Underfunded .pensi on
workers;
promises
in botli private an.d public
-The national saving rlue bas
retirement
programs are a growing
declined to record lows in recent
and
often
understated problem.' ·
years and "private saving for
The
deficiency
for governm en ~
retirement is woefully inadequate."
civilian
and
military
pensions coin·
The committee contended that
private saving jler worker is only bined is estimated to be S l.~ trilabout one-third of what .will be lion, it said.
- "Rapid growth in govern · ·
needed - if Social Security bene·
POST OFFICE RENOVATIONS -The Syracu.e Post Office
fits are not cut, as it and other ment spending for the elderly
recently
received • focellR In the form of painting and new poSt
threatens 10 get so far out of con1rol
experts suggest may be necessary.
boxes.
Here,
Postmaster Thomas Bennett stuffs ldlen into the new
"It is now clear !bat tbe Social .when the baby boom generation
boX&lt;f·
Customen
say they lib the refurbishment.
Security system bas made promises retires that it cannot be fmanced by
1
to future retirees lbat cannot be reasonable burdens on taxpayers."
I

I

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