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Page 12 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

j
CHRISTA ROSE

Pacers fall
119-114 to
Magic

Burlingham Qemetery
observance planned

-· r
----JEREMY SMITH

Local FFA
members·
honored

Col. Dale O'Brico, U.S. Army
(relimd) or Cassopnlis. Mich., will ·
be spealter It the lOStb unual
Memorial Day observance to be
held at tbc Bilrlingbam Cauetay at
1:30 p.m. Mooday.
Music fill" tbc celcbradoo will be
provided by Frank O'Brien, banjo,
and Joe Colburn, pianist, both of
Columbus, J oc White, bass and
Denver Rice, guitar. Singing at lhe
observance will be the Middleport
Church or Christ quartet composed
of Rice, AI Hartsoo, Mike Wilfong
and John Van Recth.

The honor guard of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, Middleport, wiD participate in the cemetery, program
whicll will in&lt;:lude a gun salute. ·
Recognitions will include the
awarding of tbc "Bungtown Good
Neighbor Awanl." ·
,
Oale Colburn will be master ol

ceremonies. J

-Alfred news·notes-

Stale FFA degn:es wen: awanl·
ed to four Racipe-Southem FFA
Chaplet members at the recent 67th
Annual State FFA Convendon held
at Mershon Auditorium on the
campus of The Ohio State Univer·
CHRISTIE COOPER
shy In Columbus. .
·
Receiving the awards were receive on the state level. In order
Crista Rose, daughter of Harold to earn the gold charm or Ibis
and Christine Rose of Racine; Jere. degree, a member must have
my Smith, son or Teny and Becky earned and prodllctlvely invesled at
Smith of Racine; and Christie least $1,000, have participated in at
Cooper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. least five activities above lhe chap.
Gary Cooper. Aaron Sayre is the ter level, have had at least two
advisor.
·
years of active FFA membership, .
The State FF A Degree is the and two years of agriculture educa·
highest award that a member can tion in high school,

1994 FORD
TEMPO 4 DR.

1993 FORD
TEMPO 4 DR.
4 cyl., auto., •lr cond., tiH,

cruiH, AM/FM c•••·• PS,
PB, PW, I'DL. etc.

4 eyl., euto., elr cond., Ult,
cruiH, AM/FM, PS, PB, PW,
POL, air big:

189.:.

income guidelines.
Beginning this year, June 28,
Pap smears and clinical breast
exams will also be offered to lhe
women of Meigs County. There
will be no charge for Ibis exam if
me client is aged 40 or older, and
meets financial guidelines. Women
who are younger and/or do not
meet•the financial guidelines will
be charged $25 to cover lhe lab and
physician cost.
Appointments will be accepted
on a flfst-come flJ"St-serve basis for
a total of 24 women. Twelve
clients will be seen by Wilma

Mansfield, M:D., rroni 9 to 11
a.m., and James Witherell, M.D.,
will be examining twelve patients
from I :30 to 3:30p.m.
The free componenl to these ser·
vices is made·possible by a special
grant from the Ohio Department of
Health, under me auspices o( the
Breast and cervical Cancer Early
Detection Project, Bureau of
Chronic Disease, according to
Nonna Torres, nursing director.
Appointments for an·y of the
screenings may be made by calling
the Health Department at 9926626.

1993 FORD
MUSTANG LX

SBA opens door for flood repair loans
· .ByGEORGEABA'fE ·
Sentinel News Stan
Flood victims will have more
access to low-interest loans, officials announced Thursday,
The federal Small Business
Administration declared Meigs
County a disaster area Thursday for
the May 14 flash flooding, said
Neal 0' Brien of tbc slate adjutant
general's office.
More than $3 million in damage
bas been attribuled to businesses,
homes and roads due to the flood·
ing, officials said. Homes with
major damage totaled 42 and those
witb niinor damage were 53 for a

Convertible, auto., al r
cond., AM/FM ceaa., tilt,
cruise, PS, PB, etc.

199 ..:.

229 ..:.

1994 FORD
TAURUS

New officers seated at Preceptor Beta Beta meeting
New officers were installed at a
recent meeting of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the Parish House,
Grace Episcopal Church.
Installed by Charlotte Elberfeld
were Ann Rupe, president; Carolyn
Grueser, vice president; Ann Wal·
ton, treasurer; Martha McPhail,
corresponding secretary, and
Dorothy Sayre, recording secretary.
Eleanor Thomas, who serves on
the service committee, noted that ·

'

1993 FORD
.MUSTANG LX

cyl., auto., air eond.,
AM/FM cusette, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB,PW, POL

total of $1,516,000.
$40,000 to repair or replace personThe businesses damaged totaled al propeny. O'Brien said.
five with major damage and 12
The interest rates on the loans
with minor damage for an estlmal- could be ·as low as 4 percent for 30
ed $748,000. oiher property dam· years.
age was listed at one major and
Home loans are limiled to ownthree minor for $85,000. County ers, but personal propeny loans are
roads, bridges and culvert estimates available to owners and renters.
for damage were updated to
Business loans are limited to
$686,493.
$1.5 million,, but if tbc applicant is
Meigs County residents and ·a major employer tbc limit may be
businesses - along with tbo5e in waived, O'Brien added. Non-profit
Gallia, Vinton and Athens - can corporations. including religious
use the loans to replace home or groupS, may also apply for assispersonal property. Home loan tance.
amouniS are limited by tbc SBA to
The SB A will hold loan office
$300,000 to replace teal estate and hours at tbe county's Senior Cili·

Future dim for Voinovich's
construction ·ballot issue
By JQHN CHALFANT
Assoc!iated Press Writer •
COLUMBUS - Senate Republicans may scrap Gov. George
Voinovich 's proposed $1 billion
school conslruclion ballot issue In
fav.or of a substitute plan that
would not require a statewide vote.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, stopped
short on Thursday of declaring me
Voinovich plan dead.
But in medical terms? "The
patient is iU and probably will not
recover," Aronoff said.
Aronoff and R. Gregory Brown·
ing, Voinovicb's top fmancial officer, agreed that mere was support
for lbe alternative concept or boost·
ing stale aid to help local school~
with a backlog of construction

1993 MERCURY ·
VILLAGER ·
V-6, auto., A/C front &amp; rear,
AM/FM caea., tilt, cruise, all
power, leather.

need for workers to cany out the Kroger's, Thomas reponed,
· Betsy Jones thanking Beta Sigma
annual cancer drive for the AmeriThe pn:sideut asked for sugges- Phi for the many wonderful years
can Cancer Society in June. Sbe lions for the 50th anniversary of she and her family have enjoyed
said there is a special need for Beta Sigma Phi in 1999. Plans · the sorority. The family members
workers in me Portland, Letart and were discussed for hosting the encompass her sister-in-laws,
R,;icine areas. Members of other 1996 Founder's Day dinner. A mother-in-law and momer.
Beta Sigma Phi chapters will be committee for fund raising was
The chapter extended congratuassisting. The kick-off meeting for designaled and includes Jane Wal- lations to Joan Corder, who was
tbe cancer drive will be held June I . ton, Clarice Krautter, Elberfeld, named Preceptor Beta Bela Girl of
at the Senior Citizens' Center, 7 Velma Rue, Grueser, Maida Mora the Year at the Founder's Day Dinp.m. A new fund raiser Ibis year . and M,cPbail.
ner.
will be square certificates of $1
Maida Mora read a leiter which
Next meeting will be a,picnic at
pledges posted in the hallwav ar _.llpplil'Ired in the April
Torch
from
me
Corder home Thursday. '
.

$279 ..:.

.!Oeeds.

.

·

·

Browning, director of the Office
of Budget and Management, Said
the administration would review
lhc Senate proposal.
· Voinovich had proposed a constitutional amendment for the Nov.
7 ballot to borrow $100 million a

year for at least 10 years to help
finance school construction projects.
Although intended for lowwealth districts, details . about
which schools would qualify and
bOw much mey might receive were
left for implementing legislation if
me amendment passed.
The resolution has been pending
since it cleared me Senate Finance
Committee on March 28.
Aronoff said the constitutional
runendmenl was too loosely worded and would cover too few dis·
tricts.
· Browning
acknowledged
schools were worried about the
proposal.
· "School districts suggesled that
if we put mis on the ballot and it
_passes lhen lhey won't be able to
· get their local bond issues passed,
which is something that.is routinely
expressed here and tbcre as we give
more money to schools," be said.
Aronoff said Senate Education
Chairman Cooper Snyder, R·Hillsboro, was working on an altema-

ti ve that had support of State
School Superintendent Ted
Sanders.
Snyder said tbc pian, still under
development, was based on a bill
he intrbduced that originally pro·
posed a $2 billion stale bond issue,
backed wilh 5ome Ohio Lottery
profits. to leverage $4 billion in
local school funds for conslruction.
State aid could go to all schools,
.but grant amounts would depend
on a district's wealm. He compared
poorer districts with one affluent
Columbus suburb.
"For example, a Bexley might
have to cm;ne up with 95 percent of
a new building project in order to
capture 5 percent of state funds.
Vice versa. a poor, poor, district
would get 95 percent if they come
up with 5. percent." Snyder said.
"Now, Uiose percentages are
just an example of wball' m talldng
about in a concept," he said. "That
was the original concept. Now
we've got to ... see if we can pull it
into a form mat's palatable."

Ohio Senate approves sentencing bill
1994 DODGE
DAKOTA CLUB CAB

1994 FORD F150
XLT 4X4

V-6, auto., air cond., PS,
PB, tilt, crulae, AM/FM
cassette, etc.

V-8, auto., air cond., PS,
PB, till, cruise, AM/FM
caaa., PW, POL, flbarglass cap..

$14,249

$17,949

1993 CHEV. G20

1993 FORD
EXPLORER XLT

~TON
NEW 1995 PLYMOUTH NEON, air,
cassetle, till, roof rack ........................... .
NEW 1995 NISSAN SENTRA, air,
cassette, power steering ...
.. .......... ..
NEW 1995 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE, air,
power windows, cassette, automatic... .. ......

•t0,999
$11,999
$15,999
After Reb1te

NEW 1995 NISSAN PICKUP,
134 !iP engine, 5 speed ................ . ........
NEW 1995 DODGE OAKOTA, V6,
automatic, air, cassette, lill, cruise .........

$8599
$13,399
NEW 1995 NISSAN KINGCAB 4x4,
$
',
Air, cassette, sliding rear window .. ..... .. .. . ,15 1 999

NEW 1995 CHRYLSER
· SEBRING •
NOW IN STOCK!

NEW·1500
1.995
DODGE RAM CLUB CABS
SLT Short Bed VB
•2500 SLT Vl 0
•2500 SLT Cummins Diesel 4x4

NEW 1995 CHRYSLER CIRRUS
"Motor T.rend Car of The vear"
,,
V6, automalic, air, power windows and locks 1111 wheel
cruise conlrol, cassette, antHock ,brakes.
'

ALL IN STOCK NOW!
. 16,999 n~~:re
5 YEARS OF AWARD·WINNING SERVICE IN ATHENS
CARAVAN NOW IN ~~" .....
5

Tiara CQ11veralon, 351 V8, auto., A/C, tilt, cruise,
rear A/C, loaded.
Lowmllll.

5

199·1 CADILLAC
BROUGHAM

1990 CADILLAC
·ELDORADO

V-8, auto., air cond.,
AM/FM case., tilt, cruise,
lsather, all power, only
34,000 miles.

"BIARRITZ" V-8, auto.,
air cond., caas., tilt,
cruise, all power.
· 50,000 miles.

17,949

5

15,949

'1'aymen1s qooted are~ moritl Red Carpel
payment at time at deliwry. Wananly ind&lt;Jled.

The Senate passed 30-2 the
COLUMBUS (AP) - Demo·
·cratic and Republican senators who package that would toughen penalsupported a criminal sentencing bill tics for violent criminals and place
agreed the measure wa5 tough but nonviolent, ftTSHime offenders in
fair. But one Republican didn't community-based centers. The bill
goes to me House. ·
mink it was tough enough.
"The reason we have Ibis bill iS
Sen. Gene Watts, R-Galloway,
opposed the bill that passed on that Democrats gave as much effort
Thursday and -offered several to it as Republicans," said Seq.
amendments to toughen it. Only Jeff Johnson, D-Cleveland.
Longer sentences and less
one change was approved: disquali·
fying repeal violent offenders from prison space would be offset by
· directing firs!·lime, nonviolent
having their sentences reviewed.
Watts also criticized borne jail· offenders - primarily drug users
ing for breaking-and-entering - to local jails, treahnent centers, :
offenders. He calied it "day care halfway houses or home monitor·
ing.
for burglan;."

GOP braces to barter
after budget victory

4 Dr., V-6, auto:,
cond., tilt, cruise,
PB, PW, POL, etc.
Low miles.

5

Plan' paymen1s.are based oo 12,1100 dow!l
not induded.

"The point of 1lle whole bill Is,
if you stick a gun in my face. and
me judge gives you 10 years, you'll
do I 0 years," said Sen. Barry
Levey, R·Middletown. chairman of
me Senate Judiciary CoiJUnittee.
Judges instead of parole boards
would determine the actual· lengm
of criminals' sentences, said sponsoring Sen. Tim Greenwood, RToledo.
Ohio Chief Justice Thomas
Moyer, whose State Criminal Sentencing Commission woricCil on lhe
changes for two years, said the bill
"will help ensure that Ohio prisons
are used to lock up menacing
felons."

zens Center from 9 a.m.-6 p:m.
Tuesday, and then 8 a.m.·6 p,m.
lhrougb June 8, including June 3.
The application deadline for
physical damage is July 24, while
for me economic damage deadline ·
is Feb. 26, 1996.
1
Although the funding bas been
made available, me federal government still bas noi declared the
county a disaster area.
Mike Slanker, spokesman for
U.S. Rep. Frank Ctemeans, R-Gallipolis, said the congressman con·
tinues' to seek relief through the
federal Emergency Management
Agency. ,
.

The disaster declaration is not lion. and $17.500 to fix washed-out
decided by the Congress but the Rutland Township Road 175.
Additionally, DankOne will
president. Slanker added.
In a related development, the accept applications for flood loans
Oltio Public Works Commission until June 30, said Steven Dunfee,
increased lhe line of credit from Pomeroy branch manager. This
$60,000 to $85,000, said Bob special loan program features an
Eason, Me'igs County Engineer. unsecured loan up to $10,000 at the
bank's prime rate, ·fixed for five
~CSCl funds will replace a County
Road 25 bridge, along wim several years.
Loans at more !ban $10,000 and
culverts.
Also, the federal Emergency . more man live years also are avail·
Watershed Program will give able. All loans will be subject to
$25,000 to repair a bridge on credit approval, Dunfee said.
BankOne also donated $500 to
Chester Township Road 152,
$17,500 to replace Salisbury the American Red Cross to help.
Township Road 165 bank protec·
(Continued on Page 3)

,__DARE graduates__, Fire units

awarded
funding
Grants totaling more than
$20,000 have been made to Meigs
County fire departments through .
the 1995 Stale Fire Marshal Volun·
tecr Fire Department'Grant Pro·
gram.
"These grants woric to emphasize the importance of fire safety,"
said Slate Rep. John A. Carey Jr.,
R·Wells!On, in announcing the
awar~s .

')/II?E.

..niJ"'n r
f.Jfl'l\'

ro KEEP KIO
OFF DIIUiS

~

K!EP kiDS
OFF DRUGS

'

. \i;,
About 200 sixth graders from across Meigs County graduated from DARE programs Ibis week, said Mony Wood, Meigs
County's DARE officer. The DARE (Drut:. Abuse Resistance
Education) program, was taught in lbe county for the first time
this year, Wood said . Here, 25 members of lbe sixth grade at
Syracuse Elementary graduated Wednesday. Students learned
·about alcohol and drug abuse, violence 'a nd managing stress,
class member Chad Hubbard said. Guest s,peakers during the
week included Nancy Hill, Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Prose&lt;u·
lor John Lentes and Juvenile/Probate Judge Robert Buck. (Sen·
tlnel photo)

According to Carey, the Middle·
pon Fire Department will use its ·
·$4,424.35 to purchase fife fighting
protective clothing and me Racine
Fire Department will spent its
$1 ,232 on general expenses.
Grants to be used for the pur·
chase of self-contained breathing
apparatus equipment. according to
Carey, went to the Rutland Fire
'1Department, $4,012; Olive Township Fire Deparunent. $4,000; Tuppers Pla!ns Fire Department,
$2.4 00; and the Bashan Fire
_Deparuncnt, $1,845.
The Salem Center Fire Depart·
mcnt will use its $2,740 in grant
money for lhe purchase of protecti ve clothing, Carey said.
The program is administered
through the Ohio Department of
Comm erce's Division of me Stale
fire Marshal. Funds totaling
$492,000 were distributed to 112
volunteer fire deparnnents across
Ohio . Amounts were determined
by population and size of lhe dis·
trier, total departmental budget,
number of lire runs and proposed
usc of me money.
"' I know tbe firefighters work
hard to provide fire service to .
Meigs County. Thanks to Ibis program, it' s nice to see them being
given th e support and equipment
Utcy need to better do meir jobs,"
Carey said.

State Democrats pick
new party chairman
in clud ing minon lleS; Improve COm·

mun icati on and fund . raising; ·and
encou rage new people to run for
office.
I lis goal is to win me slate wide
offices needed in 1998 to control
leg islative red i~cting . He said ,
victo rie s in th e 1996 election ,
including a win for President Clio. ton and gai ning lost ground in lbe
Legislatu re and Congress, will be
tl1e fust steps.

19,949

$14,949

2 Sections, 12 Pou- 35 c.nta
· A Muttlmedlalnc. Newo-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 26, 1995

Copyright 1915

$159.:.

'

..
Vol. 48, NO. 20

The men of Alfred United :&gt;tacie and Alan Watson were
Methodist Church presented gcra- ~uests of Linda and Dave Williams
. nium plants to mothers attending m Belpn: on Mother's Day.
the church services on Mother's
Mother's Day guests of Mattie
Day.
Pullins were Wilbur Pullins of
Susan Pullins, John Taylor and Marietta, June, Jim and Janet Ride·
Lloyd Dillinger gave readings. nour of Chester, Bill and Judy
Stacy Watson and Kirk. Danielle Leach and Beuy Hogan of Mineral
and Tiffany Spencer presented Wells, and Les and Donna Sue
mother's days of the week.
. Ermaster and children of ColumRichard, Aaron and Sarah Yost bus.
visited •datives in the Lancaster
Marie Sargent accomPanied her
area on Motbcr' s Day.
daughter, Pat Spencer, to a motbcrMarguerite Stearns visited the daughter banquet at Parkersburg,
children or her daughter, Leah W.Va. Recent guesiS"oflbe Sargent
Cohen, in Akron while Mrs. family were Kay Bailey, and
Coben took a trip to Egypt.
Chuck, Janell, Kyle, Casey and ·
·
Thelma Henderson, and Kathy, Cory Sargent

I.- lolllcbt hi 50..
IDc!"fMifll doucll~~~&amp; SalllrdaJ,
~JIIIDDJ. H!palll upper

•

·Cancer screenings continue at health department
The Meigs County Health breast and prostate gland models
Department continues .to offer free on locating tumors. An educational
or low cost cancer screenings in lhe video is used to explain me medical
form of.monlhly mobile mammog· screenings.
This year, beginning on the June
rapby unit visits and free annual
prostate screenings for Meigs resi- 2 visi~ O.S.U. mobile mammogra·
pby screenings, there will be free to
dents.
Ohio State University Medical women over 50 who are at the 200
Center and Riverside Hospital vans percent of poverty level (i.e.: earn
contlnuetomakeregularvisiiShere · $14,940. or less annually, for
on the Health Department's park· women wbo do not have Medi·
ing lot.
caid or healm insurance to cover
Wilh every cancer screening lit· lbe cost of mammograms, and for
erature from tlic American Cancer those wbo have health insurance or
Society is distributed, ·and clients Medicare but have not met the
received inslruction on anatomical · deductible, but still meet the .

Pick 3:
6-6-9
Pick 4:
2-9-7-4
BuckeyeS:
15-18-20-35-37

Sports, Page 5

1

Beginning at 11 a.m. a smorgas-,
bord dinner will be served by Mod·
em Woodmen of America at the
ball in Burlingham,

Ohio Lottery

•

In short: he wants victori es.
" Not just victory for ourselves,
but victory for the pe ople who
depend on us to be lheir voice in
government," be said.
" ll 's time to go forward. It" s
time to be victorious. It's time to
hold our heads up hi~h lind say we
are Democratic and we are coming
back," Lelanll said.

No paper
on Monday
The Daily St fllinel will not be
published Monday so that its
e mpl oyees may observe the
lyfemorial Day holiday.
-··
· Regular publication and "busi:
ness hours resume Tuesday.
~

---------

.__,.....

~-

_.......__

�I~

~

Friday, May 26, 1995

Commen
The Daily Sentinel
'

•

·'

General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Coniroller

'

LEI IERS OF OPINI()N are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
ad&lt;IRoss and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be pubUshcd. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not pcrsonaUties.

Veto strategies'
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGfON- When presidents shape ·veto strategies, they mean
to send a message beyond Congress, oot only to block bills tbey oppose.
It's a way to draw lines and dramatize differences !bey' II be laking up
with the vorers.
But when tbe Unes blur, so does tbe message. And so far, that's been a
problem for President Clinton, given bis blend of tbreals to veto and hints
at com~:,.n:.mise.
He
'I vetoed a bill in 28 months but said be will oow, a measure 10
rescind $16.4 bUUon in old appropriations, while adding some new ones
and shifting tbe way the money Is to be spen~ away from programs tbe
Democrats favor.
Clinton threatened that veto a week ago, $en tried to negotiate a way
around It Compromise Is a moo: effective way to govern than confrontation, but it's not always the best route politically. particularly for a president with a re-election campaign just ahead.
So Democrats called a veto a way of "driving bome our points" for
tbe broader bodget struggle ahead, a clear message on cuts they will and
won't accept. Tben again, they don't have tbe votes to enforce tbose
points;
Republicans bad already drawn their lines sharply. Two senators running to challenge Qinton next year did so, Sen. Bob Dole saying tbe pres·
ldcnt bad blown an·opportunity to demonstrate that be was serious about
budget cuts, Sen. Phil Gramm accusing him of catering to special inter. ests.
Gr:mun said the Republican-run Congress should cballenge Clinton
and "try to override this outrageous veto." In the fall, Gramm said,
Congress is going 10 be enacting appropriations biUs Clinton won't be
able to block unless be wants to see entire federal agencies shut down for
lack of money:
·
·
·
And in tlie House, Republicans bad said favored Clinton programs
wouW be targets for even sharper cuts in that process. Rep. Jerry Lewis of
California said the national service program "will be a victim of this
debate and this veto."
"This is not a partisan issue at all," Clinton bad said a week ago when
be posted the veto threat. He said it involves pork barrel spending, and
that Democrats weren't blameless. He said the issue wasn't the cutsthat be wants to trim more than tbe Republicans do - but that the D\Oney
should have come out of items including federal construction projects,
and the bigbway spending influential membc;3 of Congress get for their
home districts.
·
.
~ So be proposed to save funds there and put it into education, nutrition,
public housing and otber programs the administration favors. The tradeoffs at issue involved about $1.5 billion, in a bill with net reductions of
--$9.2 billion.
·
The White House said it was a question of priorities, not budget cutting. That's moo: difficult 10 explain than a simple spending cut. In addi·
lion, tbe bill includes disaster relief funds and $250 million for-counterterrorism and the rebuilding of the bombed federal building 'in' Oklahoma
City.
,
.
Eventually, tbat spending will be approved anybow, after Republicans
accuse Clinton of bloclclng and delaying it.
They can't come up with two-thirds votes to override a veto on that
bill, or on the foreign aid and policy biU tbal ba$ drawn an even more
vehement veto warning from Clinton. He called those measures danger·
ous, isolationist, an assault on the foreign policy-making authority of the
president.
;
Some day, be said Tuesday, there'll be a Republican in the :White
House again, and be shouldn't be hamstrung either.
Clinton bas threatened vetoes on a half-dozen otber i~sues, too. He has
said be wasn't elected president to pile up a stack of vetoes. but with the
Republicans in control of Congress it's likely to be thai way or their way.
Previous presidents used different veto tactics. Ronald Reagan, who
vetoed 78 bills and was overridden eigbt times, would hint but wouldn't
say whether be was going to sign or block a bill until it got to his desk;
George Bush called it playing defense and used the veto as a bargaining
piGy, which seems closer to what Clinton is attempting now. Bush vetoed
46 bills and was overruled once.
It is not an easy way Ill do business. In a campaign season, an opposition Congress can pass popular measures and dare vetoes that a candidatepresident will have to explain to the voters.
That happened to Bush. It could happen again.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

Berry's World
INSe~1'
•

CARp ...

~EMOV't:

CM/J

••• WISH J..I5T IS il£APY ... PtiSH
GREEN SGITTO/rl 1'0 SCR.ClL

£/'1(),

•

Rebeanal cbanpd
The Big Bcotr Community Band
.rehearsal scheduled for Monday.
Mae Beegle, 93, Couagevillc, W.Va., died Thursday, May 2S, 199S at bas been changed to Tuesday, 7 to
8p.m.
her resideoce, following a ~f illness:
Tile daughiCI of the late Clovia 8lld Irma HudMln Brabham, abc Is survived by four 10111, Jed, Brownie, llld Clair of Ripley, W.Va.. and Jen· Concert ~ebedllllcl
The B il Bend Community Band
nlnp of Racine; twoaGladys Herdman and Betty Durst, both of
Couagevillc; three
·
who were raised in tbe home, James under tbe direction of Toney
'Beegle and l'lldge ceale, both of Cottageville, and Sbelba Bcealc of Dingess will be presenting· a con·
cert on June 4 on the lawn in ·front
~; and IWO stepdaughters, Mabel Collins of Ocala. Aa., and Hazel
McKenzte of Beaver, Pa.; four sisters, Lena Hunrer of Vincent, Jane of tbe Meigs Junior High School,
O'Neil and Vema Henderson, both of Parkersburg, W.Va., and Belva Middleport. 2:30 p.m. In tbe evall
of rain, tbe concert will be moved
E~ans of Fort Recovery; and two brothers; Zack Brabham of Macomb,
into the auditorium there.
M1cb., and Jay Brabham of Ripley.
She ~as preceded !n ,deatb by ber busband Jennings Beegle Sr.: and
three children, Ray, WIIUatn, and Goldie.
.
Cheerieadifj[
. ng
.
A mee · ·
girls interested in
. Serv~ will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday in tbe Casto Funeral Home, Evans,
cheerleader has been
W.Va. w1tb tbe Rev. Paul Ru~,eflkialing. Burial will be in tbe Fair· trying out
plain Cemetery. Friends may dUi at tbe fWJeral borne on Saturday from 2; set for Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Meigs
High School. AI 8:30 a.m. tbat day,
4 and 6-9 p.m.
•
~
tryOuts will be held for junior bigh
cheerleaders at Meigs Junior Higb.

This despite tbe C.Ct that Gingrich earned a giant raise when be
became speaker -to $171,SOO per
year. On top of his salary, Ibe
speaker is also given a special
cxpense account of $2S,OOO. The
last time we looked. the poverty
line in America was $12,67S.
And wbile Republicans and
Democrats can both like aedit for
passing tbe Congressional
Accountability Act, which makes
Congress live under the laws It
passes for everyone else, tbe act
bas done virtually ootbing 10 rein in
tbe frec.spending ways of Capitol
Hill.
For example, members still
enjoy a pension system that Ia
roughly twice as generous as those
of most Fortune SOO corporations.
Taxpayers lay out $20 million a
year for retired politicians, who
collect an average of $4S,OOO annu·
ally. Some former. members receive
more than $100,000 a year-·
while many or the constituents they
once served are living off Social

•

I THINK IT

FIT YOU

BETTE~ IN

THE~s

~

Security cbects.
Glngrlcb bas accrued nearly
$2.3 million in pension benefits
after 17 years In Congress. Fenner
Dcmocradc House Speaker Tom
Foley is eligible to collect
$124,000 a year In retirement
checks to 10 along with the six-figure salary be now commands a1 a
Washington law firm. It's a far cry
from the days of another former
speaker, Sam Rayburn, who died
witb about $15,000 in bis savings
acconnt.
Nor hl!s there been action taken
on tbe gift ban legislation thai Gin·
gricb once promised to bring up
early In the new Congress. As a
result, lawmakers are still free 10
enjoy the slavish attention of lob·.
by1sts who ply them with sCtak dinners and gotrmg getaways.
Gingrich even managed to preserve the rigbt of members 10 keep
their government·paid frequent
flyer miles for personal use scmetbing no other federal worlcers
are allowed to do. That.may have
something to do with the fact tbat '
Gingrich reponedly has a frequent·
flier balance of 1.2 million miles
from Delta Airlines.
In an interview witus in April
1992, Gingrich said that if the GOP
ever took over the House, coounit·
tee staff would be cut by 50 percent. "Tbis place is a bloated,
absurd bureaucracy," Gingrich
said.
Gingrich was right. ln the last
30 years, congressional operating
costs have soared by 800 percent.
Since World War II, House and
Senate personal staffs bave
increased more tbari fivefold and
sixfold respectively, while coouuil·
tee staffs have increased ~eleve­
fold imd fourfold.
But Gingrich only settled for a
one-tbird cut in committee staff rather than the SO percent reduction
be Once promised us - and be has
not touched personal staffs yet.
More importantly, Gingrich, refused
to cut bis leadership staff, which ·
bas made his speakersbip ''historic" in yet another way: He now
bas the largest·staff of any speaker
ever.
·
So much for paying your fair
share to reduce tbe deficit.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein ah writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc •.

GOP plan would balance the budget
•

May bas been a cr:uel month for posed sharp cuts in defense spendcynics in general, and for Demo- mg. which Mr. Reagan rmnly ruled
out, and called for IDll increases,
cratic politicians in particular.
For many years it bas been which be also largely rejected. One
axiomatic among Washington
observers tbal the federal budget
William A. Rusher ·
couldn't be balanced without
imposJng eilber higher taxes or
deeper spending cuts than tbe vot· result; thaDks to tbe relatively low.
ers would permit. Viewed thus, the taxes. was the longest boom in
problem was the voters' fault: They post·war U.S. history. Another.
wanlcd all sorts of "benefits," but thanks to the defensefxpenditures, .
were unwilling to pay for them. was the collapse o the Soviet
Union. But a third, thanks to the
What was a politician to do?
Beginning in 1961, and in every unrestrained domestic spending,
year since then wilb the fluke was a huge annual deficit and a
exception of 1969, the politicians' correspondingly vast increase in
answer has been: Spend more than tbe nauonal debt.
Because these deficits became
you lake in, and cover tbe gap by
borrowing money and charging the · especially noticeable in and after
1980, when Mr. Reagan was first
debtto future generations.
Beginning about 1980 the bur- elected, tbe Democrats have tried
den of paying even the interest on to put the entire blame for tbem on
the staggering subsidies ladled out Mr. Reagan - slyly ignoring tbe
by a generous government bad fact that every federal nickel spent
begun to escalate to formidable during his administration first
proportions. President Reagan sub- received the blessing of the Demomitted budget after budget tbat crat&lt;ontrolled House of Reprcsen·
·
would have scaled down tbese sub- tatives.
In
any
case,
the
day
of
reckonsidies, but all were declared "dead
ing
is
now
at
band
or
so
close
on arrival" by the Democrats, wbo
be
ignored.
that
it
can
no
longer
still controlled the House of Repre· .
Huge ~ubsidies to the poor, the
sentatives.
elderly,
the fanners, tbe students,
. The Democrats, instead, .pro-

the veterans, the disabled, the artis- pinched to some degree by the
tic, e~c . , are approaching bankrupt- Republican budget plan - i.bose
cy, e1ther collectively or individu- most addicted to government aid
feeling, as you might expect, tbe
ally. ~ . .
.
And what bas been the response sharpest pinches. The Democrats,
of tbe politicians? President Clin- still cynically refusing to propose
ton, having flatly pledged in 1992 . any cuts of their own, are confident
to bring the .budget into balance that tbe voters' greed is boundless.
witbin five years, bas confirmed In the words of one ranking House
the cynics' . pessimism by submit· Democrat (Vic Fazio), "We're
iing a spending plan that, on the going to concentrale on 1/Stbe
contrary, would produce $200 bil- Republicans' 3/8 vulnerabilities.
lion annual deficits :is far as the eye The average American will reject
can see. (Luckily the Senate, forced it. ' '
Perhaps so ·- in wbicb case
by the Republicans to vote on it,
democracy will be just another
rejected it99 to 0.)
But the Republican members of failed political system. But I give
tbe House of. Representatives, hav- most AmeriCans credit for more
ing found themselves in the majori- sense and guts than that. As Abraty this year for the first time in 40 liam Lincoln said during a crisis
years, courageously swore to cut equally great, "We will nobly
taxes and reduce the increase in the save, or meanly lose, the last, best
rate of spending sufficiently to bal· hope of earth."
William Rusher is a Dislin·
ance tbe budget by 2002.
Loud were the chuckles among guisbed Fellow or the Claremont
the cynics. Bul lo and behold, that Institute for the Study of States·
is precisely what the fiscal plan manship and Political Philosounveiled by tbe House Republicans phy.
(For information on .how to
this month would do, and it seems
communicate
electronically with
likely that tbe Republican Senate
this
columnist
and others, con·
will go along with it after various
l.llct America Online by railing 1·
nips and tucks.
Almost everybody w~uld get 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Mae Beegle

UICH.

I

a poem by an old newspaper col- for the beauty of the eartb, for spadoes of synagogues and churches.
cious skies, for tbe joys of com·
There we read of tr.ing down in league, the late Ted Robinson:
''Whether you go to iomb or radeship and for th is funny little
green pastures, of stdi waters, of
.
the fields exulting and the woods star, you dig 100 deep, you soar too game we play.
far.
,
"Bless my driving and my
· ''My friend, some day when putting. Direct th e ball into th e
winter's
gone, go lie full length bunker only for my opponent's
George
Plagenz upon the lawn,
and watch the tides shots. (If to ask this is unworthy of
of life that pass aniong the slim me, forgive me Ibis 100.) Amen."
sin,ing for joy. The glory of tbe stemsofthegrass.
It may be qui xotic to expect
"The stars are far. Lie on the your ordiiJ!UY duffer and divot.Oignauons is compared to an overf!owing ~stream and peace to a sod and let your spirit soak up
ger to be thinking tbougbts about
God."
nature and the universe as be steps
nver.
So I stepped out of a world of
I passed only three people and up to the first tee on a Sunday
stone and asphalt and automobile an lrisb setter on my walk. They all morning.
emissions into a world of trees and looked as happy as 1 to be out on a
But if be takes a minute to pray
wildflowers and babbling brooks. morning like Ibis. We said bello "The Golfer's Prayer for ForgiveThe contrast gets one 10 realize tbat (one barked) and went on our way. ness" before' be leaves tbe clubwe spend most of our lives not In a Witb church bells pealing in ibe bouse, be may indeed find bis 18world of God's making at all, but distance I sat doWII on a rock and bole journey chasing an elusive lit·
in one of our own making that has cooled my bare feel In a running tle white hall across one tiny corner
l\11 the ambience of a uash·burning stream as I wrote '~The Golfer' s of God's glorious creation 10 be ~
plant
Prayer for Forgiveness."
religious experience sucb as be
Our hope for years to come is
"Forgive me, 0 Lord, if Sunday would find in church, or anywbere
not the God who was our help in · morning finds me on tbe golf else.
ages past, bul the great god Dacron, course and not in church. Forgive
George Plagem: is a syndicalas Bill McKibbin says in his book me if I rmd You not in prayers and ed writei'tor N-spaper Enter·
"The End of Nature." In a world bymns but in Your great and glori- prise Association.
of Astroturf, be says, there may ous outdoors, more magnificent . (For inrormatlon on 'tow to
communli:ate el,•&gt;U"llnlQ!Iiy with
· stili_~.wwlt.J&lt;I'~ Qo&lt;!lQ._!Ip""Jl!!~ Jle. than an~ catbed~~ ~ _ ~-·-- _
wiD -no longer speak to us torougb ~ · "" M)' jliilyers to You on Sunooy· - tim·t:Ofuli'lnlst 'and others,din: '
the grass.
morning may be unspoken and my l.llct America Online by calling 1·
~ I thought of that as I lay on m:c b)?ns to Y~uog , buLm)' ,800-827:.ci364. e)[t. 8317.) ·~~
stomach on lbC good earth recalUng bean wll!DC always praising You •
.

The schedule of Memorial Day
services by Feeney-Bennett Poll
128 American Legion in Middleport bas been announced.
Legionnaires are to meet at tbe
ball at 8:15am. Monday and will
get to the Middleport leyce for tbe
r~t service at8:45 a.m.
From tbere tbey will go to tbe
Middleport Riverview Cemetery
for a service at 9 a.m.: Bradford
Cemetery, 9:15 a.m.; Middleport
Hill Cemetery, 9:30 am.: Addison
Cemetery, 10:15 i\.m.; Cbesbire
Gravel Hill Cemetery, 10:30 a.m.;
Middleport Gravel Hill Cemerery,
II a.~. ; L~gion annex memorial,
11 :15 a.m.; Howell Hill Cemetery,
1 p.m.: and Burlingham Cemetery,I :30 p.m.
Coolville aiunml banquet
The Coolville Alumni Assoc;iation will hold its ann.ual banquet at
5 p.m. June 3, with dinner served at
7 p.m. Cosl is $10 per person. Con·
tact Eddie Murray at 989-5949 for
details. Open to tbose who attend·
ed, taught and graduated from tbe
schooL

Soap box drivers meeting
The Ohio Valley Soap Box
· Horace David "Pappy" Parsons, 76, of Middleport, died Thursday,
Derby Association will bold a
May 25, 1995 at bla ~e.
Born Ian. 30, 1919 In Atbens County, thC son of the late Frank and meeting for all youths interested in
Clam Parsons, be retired from Union Tools in Columbus. He was a U.S. driving in this year's derby. The
meeting will be at 6:30p.m. Friday
Army veteran of World Warn.
·
· He is survived by his son and daughter-in-law, David and Elaine Par- at the Middleport ViUage Council.
sons of Middleport; daughter and son-in-law, William and Pamela If a youth wants a car, they need to Lebanon trustees
Inc.
The Lebanon Township
Aleshire of Columbus; ex-wife, Mary Lee Carthei; eight grandchildren be there since officials will get cars
Trustees will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday
and tbrce great-grandchildren; brother, Wayne Parsons of Warren; sisters, in Akron next week.
at the township building.
Myrtle Ogg of Atbens: Jerry Westbrook of Westerville, and Mary Conn of
Columbus; several mec~s and nephews; and special friends, Jim and Memori;li services
Drema Lenegar of Westville.
He was preceded in death by bis son, Danny Joe Parsons: and sisters
p.m. and sunrise on Saturday will Hazel Burke, Mildred Gross and Mabel White.
. By Tbe Associated Press
'
'The long weekend wiU start off be at 6:08 am.
. Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in tbe Fisher Funeral Home. Friends
Units of tbe Meigs County Call, refused treatment.
Weather forecast:
on .a sunny note, but the weatber on
may call al the fWleral borne on Saturday from 24 and 7-9 p.m.
RACINE
Emergency Medical Serv.ice
Tonigbt...Mostly clear northeast.
:. Memorial Day isn't lik!!ly to favor
7:53 p.m.. Smitb Ridge Road,
responded to nine calls for assislncrensing cloudiness elsewhere. .
o\llileor activities, forecasters said
, tance Thursday, with two transfer Rocky Hupp, refused treatmenl ·
: · Clouds will start moving into Lows from the middle 40s north to
TUPPERS PLAINS
calls.
the state during the day on Satur· the niiddle SOs extreme south.
7:53 p.m., S'umner Road, RusMIDDLEPORT
Saturday ... Partly cloudy. A
day and a flow of warm and moist
12:11 a.m., Broadway Street; sell Hol singer, Camden -Clark
Ida Inez Pooler, 80, of Reedsville, died Wednesday, May 24, 1995 at
chance
of afternoon thunderstorms
air will set the stage for more min
Todd
Quillen Jr., Veterans Memo· Memorial Hospital .
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
.
,
on Sunday and Monday, the. south. Highs from tbe lower 70s
rial
Hospital.
·
Born April 30, 1915 in Hazel, the daughter of the late Edward and
northeast 10 tbe upper 70s extreme
National Weather Service said.
7:52
a.m.,
Cole
Street,
Horace
Now Open
Mollie Smith Zink. she was a homemaker. Sbe was a member of tbe
Temperatures on Saturday will south.
Parsons, dead on arrival.
South
Bethel
New
Testament
Church
in
Silver
Ridge.
Extended forecast:
be mostly in the 70s and warm into
8:4 7 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
SPRING SEASON
Sb~ is survived by ber daughters and sons-in-law, Marilyn and Krell
Sunday
... A chance of thunderthe'80s on Sunday. Some thunderCenter, Mabelle Baughman, VMH.
Dolpbm
of
Ellenton,
Fla.,
and
Lena
and
Edgar
Pullins
of
ReedsviUe·
sons
Planters of All Kinds
storm activity is possible Sunday stonns. Lows 55 to 60 and hig~s in and daughters·in-law, Don and Shirley Pooler of Bradenton, Fla ..' Gary
9:59a.m .. Story's Run Road,
the
upper
70s
to
middle
80s.
and Monday.
• Bedding Plants
~ Glen Priddy, VMH.
Memorial Day ... A chance of ~d l&lt;elly Pooler of Whitehead, Mich., andWilliam Pooler Jr., of Chester;
The record-high temperature for
.
POMEROY
SISters,, Margaret Craft of Orlando, Fla., Louise Martin of St. Albans,
• Herbs • Perennials
this date at the Columbus weatber thunderstorms. Lows in· the upper W.Va., Betty Craft of Charleston, W.Va., Loreen Tate of Illinois and
I 0:21 a.m., Rock Springs Ceme.. station was 94 degrees in 1911 50s to middle 60s and bigbs in the Elizabeth Zink of Indiana;_brother, Paul Zink of Charleston; 12 grandcbil· , tery, Russell Meadows, VMH .
KAREN~s
while the record low was 37 in middle 70s to lower 80s.
4 p.m., Children's Home Road,
dren,
seven
great-grandchildren
and
four
great-great-grandchildren·
and
a
Tijesday ... Dry. Lows in tbe 50s
1969.
Dortba Neutzling, VMH . .
friend, Chelcie Bratton.
'
GREENHOUSE
Sunset tonight will be at 8:49 and highs in the 70s.
9:24 p.m .. Mulberry Avenue,
She was preceded in death by ber husband, William Pooler Sr.; brothHours: Mon.-Fri'. 9.5
Genevieve Demoskey and Donald
er, Howard Zink; and datighter-in-Iaw, Sharon Ann Pooler.
·
· Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with. PasSat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
tor Dewayne Sydenstricker officiating. Burial will follow in the Mound
3 I 12 miles past Southern
Cemetery in Chester. Friends may call between 24 and 7-9 p.m. Friday at
·
tn
Thursday's
Pomeroy
court
. Hi gh School, SL Rt. 124,
the funeral home.
·
·
news, an item needs to be clarilied.
Racine, Ohio
The James Priddy, Rutland, that
Jerrold W. Wilson, first vice
Wilson is a life member of tbe
was
charged
with
indecent
expocommander of tbe .Ohio American J.D. Yeager Post 199 in Harrison
614-949-2682
sure was James Dwayne Priddy.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Legion, will be speaker at the and has served twice as commanAn article in Thursday's Daily
annual Memorial Day observance der. He was finance officer for Sentinel inaccurately reported the
Thursday admissions
Mabelle Baugbinan, Middleport.
eight years, on tbe executive com· individuals who pleaded guilty to
in Pomeroy Monday.
ThurSday discharges- none.
Wilson will speak froj]l the mittee for 10 years and is presently breaking and entel'ing charges.
HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER
stage on the Pomeroy parking lot at serving as judge advocate.
. Kenneth R. White, Eden Ridge
Dlschargq May 25 - CbrlstoWilson bas served tbe Fourtb · Road, Portland, pleaded guilty to
11.a.m .. following the parade.
· Participating in the program District as finance officer, second breaking into two cabins. James ·pber Brown, T'IUiothy Howell. Mrs.
Robert Roocbi and son.
·
sponsored by Drew Webster Post vice commander, first. vice com-. Edward Bryant, Racine , pleaded
Birth - Mr. and Mn. 'obnny
--39, American Legion, will be the mander and commander. He also guilty to breaking into S &amp; W Guns
Oblinger, son, Letart, W.Va.
Rev . Roland Wildman the Rev. ~ was department assistant sergeant and the Watering Hole.
(Published with permis.sl!'n)
!lob Robinson; Charles Kitchen, at anns in 1991-92.
·A real estate broker and appraispost commander: Gladys Cumings,
representing the auxiliary; and the er for West Shell Realtors in Harri·
STATE THEATRE
son·, Wilson and his wife have a
Meigs High School Band.
523 Main SL, Pl. Pleasant
. Again this year, a wreath will be daughler, Tammie, a registered
Fri. lhru Thur.
laid in the river as a part of the cer- nurse in Cincinnati, and a son,
CIVIC DX 4 DOOR
'Mf\.IUIK
PAYNE""'"
emony, and the honor guard will Woody, serving in the U.S. Army.
&amp; 2 m.Sun.
5 speed, air conditioning , stereo cassette
offer a gun salute.

Most of holiday weekend
wi II see chance of storms

EMS answers nine calls

Ida Inez Pooler

Speaker set for Pomeroy
Memorial Day ceremony ~

.Clarification

Hospital news

Correction

$183~J

SBA opens door for loans
(Continued from l&gt;age 1)
flood victims, Dunfee said.
. ..--·· ..

-

The DaUy Sentinel

"We felt il was important to
help ·people in our ~ommunity,"
Dunfee said. adding that an account
bas been set up for donations at the
bank.

Published ever)' afternoon , Monday 1hrough
Fri day, I l l Court St., Pomeroy. O hio. by the
Ohi o Valley Publishi ng Company/Multime dia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 156

Second class pos1nge paid nt Pomeroy. Ohio.
Mtmber: The Associmed Press. and t:he Ohio
Newspaper Associntion.

POSTMASTE R: Sent,! uddre~5 c o rrection ~ to
The Daily Sentinel. Il l Court St.. Po meroy.
Ohio 45169.
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Limited Inc. ........................... .ll 718
Multimedia inc............................38
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Star Bank ..............................411/l
Wendy int'l... ,........................ 16 3/4 .
Worthington lnd ....................lO 718

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MARTIN

MEG RYAN, KEVIN KLINE

I US PS 2 tJ-%0)

Golfer's prayer drives ho_
me religion
The bost of a radio talk show for
golfers bas asked me to contribute
a golfer' s prayer for usc on the program.
Golfers have alway,s claimed 10
find in golf a religious experience.
The wonderful world of nature that
surrounds them on a golf course
makes them feel closer to God,
!bey say, than silting in church on
Sunday morning.
No golfer myself, I have always
been skeptical of that To be sure,
Shakespeare said it was possible to
find "tongues in trees, books In
running brooks and sermons in
stones." But stones do not tbem·
selves a sermon make - nor a
hole-in-one on a Sunday a Chris·
tian make.
Still, wanting to put tbe golfer'·s
argument to my own lest, I decided
one lovely morning in May to sldp
church and spend the bours out·
doors on a stretcb of green and
winding woodlawn known in our
city as tbe Emerald Necklace. I
wanted to see whetbcr it was possible to feel closer 10 God while
·"·-'&lt;m!llllU.O.in&amp;..With- ita!ure than·
crowded in a pew.
· · ·
The Bible, I reminded myself,
__speaks- more-el'-woods-and trees
and woodland creatures tban il

.

Horace 'Pappy' ·Parsons

W.VA.

Duily .................................. ~ 'i Cent~

WISHES ... f'(}5H !eEP BvTTC!V
To SELECT
WISH .••

•

ben. Yet while leDion are being
of Repescalalivea IIPIJIOwd $283 asked to saaiflc:e fot dlelr dlildretl
billion worlb of Meclbre cull Jut . and grandchildn:n, taspayera will
week - meaning an additional continue to. provido lawmakers
$900 per year in out-of-pocket
bealtb care costa for 'tbe average
senior citizen.
By Jack Anderson
Yet while the GOP's budget
balancing act demands sacrifice
and
from young and old. rich 8lld poor,
one group of Americans will
Michael Binstein
remain unaffected: members of
Congress.
.
By leaving their own pay and witb some of tbe best health care
perks intact, lawmakers missed a that money can buy. Taxpayers lay
golden opportunity to convince out $303.77 per montb for GinAmericans that their budget cuts grich's bealth insurance, wblle
are equitable. f'~~~~~~~n, senion, llu· moo: than 40 million American arc
dents and tbe poor wiD all have to slill uninsured.
pay the price of runaway dcficil
Yet some members ,apparently
spending, yet members of Congress still believe they're JCUing a rotteD
wiU continue to enjoy a gold'Jllalcd deal from tbe taxpayers. Wben
benefits package - paid for by tbe House Speaker Newt Glnsrlcb was
American IDltpayers.
criticized for signing a $4.S million
The median income for tbe 35 book deal with media magnate
milli.on Medicare recipients Is Rupert Murdoch, Ginsrlcb defend$17,000 per year, compared to a ed himself by claiming !lull be and ~
minimum of $133',600 for mem- bis wife are "poor people."

WASHING'Iaof - Tile Houle

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Saturday, May 27

Congress' cuts stop short of Capitol Hill

PoiDeJo)", Oblo

--Area Deaths-- Meigs announc~ments

OHIO Weather
' Accu-~

111 Court Street

!he Dally Sentinel • Page~

.

Pege2
Friday, May 28, 1995

•"

Pomeroy ..-ulddleport, Ohio

'

Starting June 1st New Hours 10 am to 10 pm

ATHENS
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-0-

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

-,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Friday, May 26, 1995

sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

-

Friday, May 26, 1116
Pages

•

By besting Pacers 119-114,

Magic take 2-0 lea.d in series
By FilED GOODALL
ORLANDO, Fla . (AP) They're young, bold, talented and
up 2-0 on Indiana in the Eastern

Conference finala.
The Orlando Magic, however,
area 't making any brash predictions about the remainder of the
-best-of-seven serlea that resumes
Saturday in Indianapolis, where !be
Pacers have to win at least once to
avoid elimination.
Sbaquille O'Neal . .t Co.'s
impressive perf1J11111111CC in Game 2
Thursday night ~pled questioas
about the possibility of a sweep.
"I'm not a maid," the all-star
center said after !be Magic's 119. 114 victory. "I'm not worried
about sweeping."
' Nevertheless, the Magic clearly
is in the driver's seat after getting
39 points from O'Neal and another
big night from Dennis Scott, Anfernee Hardaway and Nick Anderson.
Tbis was a team tbe experts
claimed was !00 roung and inexperienced to go !bts far in the postseason. Now they've got the playoff-seasoned Pacers wondering
what it' U take to stop them.
"Traditionally in the NBA,
you've got to learn from losing.
But this team is a team that
believes in itself," said Orlando's
Jeff Turner. "It's very cocky In
what it can do and it shows. Maybe
· this team is so young tbat they

····---:--:-.•

.:-; :: ~-:. :{i-:·

-"Then·Peter ,l l'1unto ·tbem, •·

don 'I lrnow they have to pay their by tbe Lalcers and Seattle in a tintdues.' •
.
round game las t month.
O' Neal scored seven of his 27
Miller, who bad 16 first-half
second-half points in !be last two points, was bun late in !be second
minutes to keep Orlando abcad quarter wben be feU out of bounds
until Anderson sealed Indiana's and a long-lens camera struck him
fate with a three-pointer with 13.9 in the lower back. Mter reraaining
seconds remaining.
on the ground for about a minute,
"If be's going to play like that, be rerumed tG the game and scored
and make bis free throws, they're Indiana' s las} five points of the
going to l)e trouble for every- half, in~ qditrg a basket that cut
body, " said Indiana coach Larry Orlando~ead to 58-52 with 28.1
Brown, adding that one of the keys seconds'\e(t
to getting back into !be series will
But McKey left Scott open on
be finding a way to either contain the right wing for a three-pointer
O'Neal or sbut off Orlando's out- with 2.7 seconds left, and the Pacside attaclc::
ers trailed by nine at halftime·.
Scott (25 points), Hardaway (19
O'Ne al bacl10 third-quarter
points, 15 assists) and Anderson po in ts, but Indiana kept banging
(17 points) bit 12 three-pointers . around until !be Orlando center
while O'Neal (averaging 35.5 in went to the bench with four fouls.
the series) did vinually anythin g be When he picked up his fifth with
wanted 'inside against the Pacers' 7:24, the Pacers began their final
Rik Smits (19 points) and over- · push.
·
matched j!ower forwards.
·
They took their only lead of tbc
"We've got to take one or the · second half, 109-lOS, with 2:32 to
other away - inside or outside," play. Meanwhile, O'Neal dunked
said Reggie Miller, who bad 37 for twice, was hacked underneath and
the Pacers on 12-for-18 shooting. bit one free throw and was fouled
• 'They can't have both."
on a rebound, bitting two more foul
The Magic overwhelmed the shots.
Pacers with five three-pointers in Anderson delivered his clutch
tbe first quarter, building an !! - three-pointer after Indiana pulled
point lead, and tbeir perime tet within two with 33.1 seconds to go.
shooters were left open in the sec- . "They made the plays," s~d
ond period to bit three more. Orlan- Brown. " We didn't lose this game .
·
do's 17 t,hree-point anernpts in the They won it."
first half tied the NB A record set
'

Christian Fittipaldi seeks win
in Indianapolis 500 Sunday
j

TIUS ONE'S MINE! - Orlando f~rward Nick
Anderson (lefl) grabe a rebound In front of Jndi- .
ana frontman Dale Davu (32) while the Magic's

.•i

Repent, and · he,),~~ptized

Dennis Scott moves In during Game 2 of the Eastern Conference final Thursday night bt Orlando,
Flary where the Mapc won 119-114. (AP)

-------------------Sports briefs-------------------

'

Dwight Gooden, and !be lawyer
The newspaper quoted Bill said Gooden is interested in the
Goodstein, Strawberry's attorney, .Yankees if his suspension for is
as saying be held "preliminary" lifted tllis season. Both former New
discussions with Steinbrenner. York Mets are under suspension
Goodstein also represents pitcher for substance labuse.

New York Post reported today.

NEW YORK (AP) - New
York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner bas talked with Darryl
Strawberry's agent about signing
tbe troubled slugger when h·e
comes off suspension June 23, the

.

-By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - He's
the otber Fi!!ipaldi, Einmo's
nephew , a roo~ie starlin$ tbe
biggest race of hiS ·career without
the comforting presence of bis
famous uncle neArby.
_
Christian Fittipaldi, !be 24-yearold son of Emerson Flttipaldl's
brother, Wilson, will be !be only
one carrying the family name in
Sunday's Indianapolis 500.
"There are fQur other drivers
from my. country, Brazil, so that
belps a tittle bi~" the younger Fittipaldi said. "But apart from that, I
feel really sorry for tbe Team

•..•

every one of you in the name of -

Penske. Also for my uncle, for Racing after their own ~nske racsure."
ers were unable to get up to speec~.
Team Penske, wbose drivers
"They put a lot of _effon m tbat
b~ve won arecor~ 10 In~y 500s, · team ~d th~y bave .l~e a perfect .
wtll not have a car m the Uneup for
team, Cbnshan Flltipaldl said.
the fir st time since owner Roger
" Unfortunately, because of a lot of
Penske brought Mark Donohue to
problems, ~ey just co~l~'t .malce
the Indianapolis ~otor Speedway
the field this Yell!· And II s ~omg to
in 1969. Emerson Fittipaldi, a twobe bar~. It'ls gomg to be difficult,
time winner, was bumped from the
when It comes down to race day
field in the closing minutes of qualand we do n't see any Marlboro
ifications, and AI Unser Jr.. another
(Penske) cars out there.
two-time winner and the defending
" It 's g_oin g to look bard and
cbampion, was not fast enough to
maybe a hule s tr~ge. But fonu get in .
.
na tely. my uncle 1s comm~ -over
Both Penske drivers were using
here to watch the race and likes to
cars borrowed from Rahal- Hogan
(See FITIIPALDI on Page 6)

G

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�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 26, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally SenUnel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

By besting Cubs 6-2,

Reds trim Chicago's ·lead in NL Central
t

BJRICKGANO
CHICAGO (AP) - It waa a
ODC-gamc aeries, but the Chicaao
Cuba - quick alllrtcn ill the NL
CeDual- got tbc meu.,e.
Tbe Cincinnati Reds bave
recovered from their awful start
and will be the team to deal with In
the division.
"We're the same ball club as
we were before. Now we're just
taldng advantage or opponunities, ..
Reds manager Davey Johnson said
after his team beat the Cubs 6-2 oo
Thursday nigh.t.
The Reds' victory. their 14th in
17 games since Jtirting 1-8, IIIQved
them wilbio two games of tbe
Cubs.
The Cubs lost for just lbe ninth
time in 26 games, but feU to 4-5 at
Wri~ley Field.
' We're just In a zone rigbt

•

now," said Reds oulficlda' Regale
Sanders, who was involved in two
of the game's biggest plays. His Oy
ball was misplayed for one or two
crucial errors and be 1aru bit a tworun homer.
"Things are falling in our favor.
We didn't capitaliu: on things early
in the game, but we're a 'late' ball
club. We're in sync."
John Smiley (2.{)) allowed eight
bits in 7 2/3 mnings; Xavier Hernandez finished for bis second
save.
The Reds went abead for good
in the sixth witb two runs .off Mike
Morgan (0-1). Ulakiog bis fll11 start
since July 27.
Morgan, activated before !be
game after being on the disabled
list wilb shoulder inflammation.
gave up just three bits in 5 1/3
innings and only one of the lbree

runs off him was eamcd.
"I gave my team a chance to
win . Mistakes are part of tbe
game," said MOI'gllll, who may
bavc been showcased for a possible
trade . "I'm not worried about
what's going on upslain."
"We let !bat one get away. It
happens at times," Chicago man·
ager Jim Riggleman said. "We're.
not happy about iL But we've got a
good defensive club. We'D bavc to
playbelterdefeosetomorrow."
The Reds • Lenny Harris doubled in the sixth, took third on a
grounder and scored by bealiog
Rey Sanchez's throw home after
Ron Gant' s bouncer to second.
Mike Walker relieved and
Sanders lifted a Oy to right center
where Brian McRae and Sammy
Sosa nearly coUided. The baU went
off Sosa' s glove for a two-base

v

'

error, and Eddie Taubcnsee fol-'
lowed with a ge&gt;-abead saalflce Oy.
Sanders bit bis fourtb bomer, a
two-run drive oii Willie: Banks in
the eighth, to make it S-2. Dcioo
Slllldm singled home a run in the
nin~: .
.
~nctnnati also .got an unearned
~ mlbe fourtb With two ouiS after
thud baseman Steve Buechele
lbrev&lt; past rust on a grounder by
GanL
.
..
.
Sosa bit an RBI smgle m !be.
first when Chicago coUecred tbreed
In
bits and Rick Wilkins bomere
the second for a 2.{) lead.
But the Reds once again found a
way to win.
"All~ guys in our lineup are
capable of bitting .300. Wben I was
with Atlanta a different guy would
pick us up each night," Gant said.
"It'
same on this club."

Clllllt l1 nl ( 'l111~l

226.375 mph for a start on the out·
side of tbe ninth row. The fastest
rookie was feilow Brazilian Andre
Ribeiro at 226:495. Tbe otber
Brazilians in the lineup are veterans Raul Boesel and Mauricio
Gugelmin and rookie Gil de Ferran.
The other rookies are Alessandro Zampedri of Italy, Carlos Guerrero of Mexico and Eliseo Salazar
of Chile, the slowest of the 33
starters at225.023 mph. Because of
the Penske shutout and the retirement of Mario Andretti, tbe only
former winners in the fastest field
in auto racing history are Danny
Sullivan, Bobby Rahal and Arie

Luyendyk:.
"It is going to be a little bit difficult for me because everything Is
going to be a new experience,"
Christian Fittipaldi said. "It's n01
like I have raced here already lilce a
year ago or two years ago so I
know exactly wbm' s going to happen.
"So at the same time that I am
constantly in need of experience, I
have to deal with a new issue. I
have to be basically very quick on
all my decisions that I take, and I
can't afford to make any mistakes." be said.
Fillipaldi •s teammate, Robby
Gordon, got his fust Indy-car victo-

LonaRev. Clwiea Mllh

Eprscopal
G.- Epllcopol Churdt
326 E. Main Sl, Panetoy
Rec~or: Rev. D. A. duPlanlic.
llaly Eudlarill and
Sunday Sdlooll0:30 a.m.

Baseball

-lit.-

N~w

York (loom J..l), 7:40p.m.
Allan.ta (Mercker 1-1) at Houuon
(Swindell 3-1), 8:05 p.m.
,

Major leagues

CINCJNNATI (JirYill -2) lit SL L..ouis

AMERICAN LEAGVE

. Iam

.!! L

Bottoa................. ,.. t5

l'U.

.600
.500

10

New Yort .............. 12 · 12
Qolroll. ................... ll 14
Toroot~ ........ .ll 1$
Doltl~............l 0 15

.411
..t23
.400

C..tnltH.bioa
CJ..EVELAND .......16 • I .661
Milw-.toe .............13 t.t ..til
Kan• Cily ........... 12 l.t .464
Chir;q,o ....................9 IS _J7j
MinDetota ................9 18 .333
Welhm IMYlllon
Cali[oroia ...............l B 9. .661
Oalclaad .................ll 12 .!!6
Sealllo ............ :.......l4 12 .!31

Tu• ..................... J-4 1? .SJ9

(Pdtonek 0.0}, 8:0S p.m.

lill

2.l

3.

4.l
!

4.!ii
S
7
8.S

3
3.!

4

Tbanday'oocor.,
Sealtlc .t, Bciaon 3
ltam• City 3, MllwautM 1
CallComla 1$, New Yort 2

Soturiloy's games
Loa ADplc:t (Val!iN 0.1} 1t Monbul
(Pet~ 3-0}, 1: 3~ p.m.
San Pranciaco (Bautlata 0-'1) at New
York (Sabcrhqen 1-0), 1:40 p.m
·
Florida (Burteu 3·3) al Chi caao
(No""" +0). 2:20p.m. I
•
San Die&amp;!l (Valenzuela 1·2) at

Philadelphia (Wilham~ 0.0),7:0$ p.m.
Color ado (Swift 1-0) at Plttlburah
(Neaale 3-1}, 7:05p.m.
Atlanta (Small% 3-2) at Uou11on
(Dnbekl ·3), B:Ol E·m. . ·
CINCINNATI (Rijo 2·2) Ill SL Loula
(Palacioll·l), B:OS p.m.

Sunday'• games
Su Dieao at Philacklphia.l :35 p.m.
CoJoiNo., Pilbbw,th, 1:3$

r·""

Basketball

Tonlahl'a games
ChifOIJO (Abbott 2·1) at Detroit
(B«8""" 1·3). 7:0! p.m.
CLEVeLAND (Hcnhlaer 2- 1) at
Tomato (Hentpn 3-1),7:3S p.OL
Tuu (fewbbw)' 2-1) at Mlanuota
(tai&gt;&amp;Jil 2·2). a,ol p.m.
kanl8l Chy (Appla' ~ - I) If. Milwaukee (Scanlan 1·2), S:OS p.m.
New Yort (ltitchoock 2·2) Ill Oakland
(StoWemyre 3.0), 10:0S p.m.
Boi!OD (HnaoD 3-0) at California

Saturday's game

NBA playoffs
Thursday's score
Orlando 119, lndiau 114; Orlando

Saa Aalonio at Hou1ton, 3:30 p.m.
(NBC)

NHL playoffs
Thursday's scores
Detroit 6, Sao lote 2; DetJoit leadiM-

ries ]..0

Chh:aa:o at Vaa~Quvef . 3 p.m.

DclrcMllll So J01e, 7:30 p.m. (f.SPN)

SUnday's games
New Jeuey al Pittaburgh, 3 p.m.

VancouYtr at Olicago, 3 p.m. (fOX),
iC neceuary
N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, 7:30

p.m. {ESPN2), iC DeCeUuy

Pomeroy, OH.

s:J'ARTING APRIL 3
SPRING &amp; SU.MMER HOURS
Open Mon.-Fri. 9:1)()..7:00 ·

Bvonaelac Den:t Stump
Youth Miniatcr. Mic:had Tcaalnl"'
Stmday School - 9:30 un.
Wonhip. 8:00a.m., 10:30 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnqday Services ·7:00p.m.
Hickory J1111 Churdl of Christ
Paalor: Joacph B. Hoskins
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worahip. 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdncaday Servit:e~- 7 p.m.
Llb&lt;rty Chrlstlln Church

• Dater
Paator: Woody Call
Sundly llvenina· 6:30 p:m.
Thunday Servioc: - 6:30pm.
LonpYIIIe CluiiiiM Churdt
Smday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnelday Scrvic:e 7:30p.m.

Saturday 9:00-3:00

TBE

Old llelhel Free Will BopUat Cbun:~
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sundoy SchoOl· 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thunday Scrvia:a • 7:30
Hl11slcle BlpUst Church
St. RL t 43 jull Clft' RL 7
Pasi.Or. Rev. James R. Acree; Sr.
Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · liLm., 6p.m.
Wedn~1day Servicea -7 p.m.

~ · GRAVELY

SYSTEM

Paltor: James B. Keeaec:
Wonhip • IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Falllt Blpllsl Church

us p.m.

Railroad SL, Maam

Forest Run Boptllt
Pastor : Ariu&amp; Hurt
Sundoy Scbool • 10 un.
Wonhip - ll a.m.

BostoD (Wakefield 0-0) al Cali(ornia
(Di~le(:~ 2·0}, IO:M p.m.
Baltimore (Feroaftdu 0-2} 11 Seattle
(Wellsl -2), IO:OS p.m.

Eulft11 Dl'fbloft

lt L

Ph\ladetphla ...........l9 7
Allanta ................... l6 ll
Montreal ................' lS 13
New Yort .............. IO 17
Aotida .......... - ........ .6 lO

Jill

.593

.H6

3.!1
5

.370 .
.231

9.5
13

Ceatral DI•Won

Ch;c.go .................. l7

9

ltOUIIOIJ .,.,,.., •., ...... ll

CINCINNATI........ !! 11

.6!4

.sn

2

13

,ji)()

4

SL Louis ................ 12 16

.429

6

Pitltl)w&amp;JI ........,... " 10• 1!

.400

6.l

Wettera Dldiion :
ColoradO ................ 1S 12 .H6
'san Francis.oo ..... ,.. 14 14 .500
Los Anaele. ........... l3 J.4 .411

SanDieso .............. l2 · IS

.4....

M~

ML Morllll Boplllt

Sunday School • 9:45 o.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp; - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Gregory L. Scars
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Antlojulty Bapllat
SIUiday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:45 Lm.

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Worship· 11 a.m., 6 ' p.m.
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

Thunday seMces • 7:30p.m. ·

Syraruse First Church ul God
Apple and Second Su.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell

RuUIJid Free WW Bapclot
Salem St.
·PulOI"! Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 o.m.
s....un1 -7p.m.
Wednesday SeM'Zi - 7 p.m.

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Sllllday School and Worship· 10 o.m.
Evenina Service•· 7::JO_p.m.
Wcdnc:'1lly Scrvi~ - 7:30p.m.

Catholic
S.c:rod He.art Catholic Cburcb
161 Mulberry Ave., PCllneroy, 992-5898
PasiOr. Rev. Walter B. Heinl
Sot. Coo. 4,4S·H5p.m.:
5:30p.m.
Sun. Coo. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Maa&amp; • 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mut • 8:30a.m.

!'fu•·

L.S

MOrllh Churdt ot God

Racine
.
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield

Putor: Rev. GOben. Cnli.a, Jr;·
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm.

1'.&lt;1.

.731

Church of God

Fourth &amp; Main St. , Middleport

Sunday's ga,m ea

Christian Union

Hobion Christian Union
Middleport, Ohio
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Sunday ev~ing, 7:30p.m.
Wcdnc:sdoy, 7:30p.m.

Sundly Scbool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneadoy Scrvioca • 7 p.m.

tu (Bone~3-l).I:O' p.m., .

.Reedsville Chun:h of Christ
Pastor. Philip Srunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service; 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedm:~day, 6:30p.m.

Rll'ttonl Churdt of Chrlstln
Chrtstlon Unl011
Hartfonl, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
SIUiday School • II o.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneoday Scrvicea · 7:30p.m.

525 N. 2nd St. Middleptlll

CLEVELAND (Black 0-1) • T~;~ruato
(Uiter 1-2), I:JS p.m.
NeW' Yort: (Pettine 0·0) at Oakland
(0ntlvtro&amp;4--l ), 4:05p.m.
Te1.11 (RoJeU 4-l) at Miooe&amp; ota
(Guwdado o-2), 1:05 p.m.
K.ansu City (Gubk:u l-4) 11 Mllwau-

""'""' Gene Zcpp
Sunday school • 10:30 a.m.
Won'\ip ·9:30a.m .• 7 p.m.

,

VIctory BaplW Jndepeadlnl

Olicaao CB•e o-3) at Detl:oll (LIB 0-

Churdo of God of I'Tophtq
0.1. White Rd. olfSI. RL 160
Pa1tor: PJ. O.apman
SWlday School· 10 a.m.
Wcnhip- II a.m.
Wedne1day Services • 7 p.m.
N.,. Lifo Cllurdt of God
S.R. 148 A Rid&gt;ol Rood, Chesler
Pulor: RoY. William D.

llarriaonville Road
Putor. Rev. Vi"or Rou1h
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • ll Lm., 7,30 p.m.
Wednelday Servia: ·7:30p.m.

I

Sunday Scbool-to a.m.
Wcnhip-9Lm.

R-otSbltotaHollnesaChurch
Le.adills e...t Rd., Rulllnd
- . Rev. Dewey Kina
. Smday adtool· 9::!0 Lm.
Smday w«lhip ·7 p.m.
W~y pnyertneelins- 7 p.m.

FIIPutor: Kdth Rader
Stmday Sdtool - 10 a.m.
'Wonhip • ll a.m.

Pine Gr&lt;&gt;ve Bible Holiness Church
Ill mile olf RL 325
Pa1tor: Rev. O'Ddl Manley
Smday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wcnhip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
. Wodncaday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Sundoy School-tO a.m.

Foreot Rua
Putor: Deron NeWIIWI
Wonhip • 9 am.
Thunday Scniic:ea • 6:30 p.m.

I

H'"lh (Middleport) '
Putor: Vcmasaye Sullivan

S1111day Scbool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·I 0:30a.m.

Wesleyon Bible Hollnm Chut &lt;h
75 Pwl St., Middleport.
Poator: Rev. John Neville
Sunday acl!ool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip·I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service • BO p.m.

Min .....me
Paaor: Deron Newman
Sundly Sdtool· 9 a.m.
Wonhip ·IOa.m.

H,..U Rua Bola- Church
Putor: Robe~ Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wo11hip · 10:45 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Scrvico ·7:30p.m.

Peari Chapel
Putor: Flotmoo Smith
Sundly School· 9 a.m.
Wonblp . 10 a.ni.

Laurel Ctur Free Mttlt..u.t Churdl
Poator. l'tler Tta~~bloy
Sunday School • 9:30 .....
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wcdneaclay SeMco ·7:00p.m.

Pastor. ROO... E. Robinson
Sundly School· 9:15 om.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Bible: Study 'ruclday · 10 a.m.

PomttOy

RoctSpnna•
Putor.Keilh Rader
Sundoy Scbool· 9: IS o.m.
Wonhi{&gt; • 10 a.m.
Youth fellowship, SID!doy - 6 p.m.

!(ulllnd COlllmolllly Churdt
Putor: R... Roy McCuly

Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 I.DI,
Sunday Ev..U.. • 7 p.m.
Wodocaday Scrvioca • 7 p.m.

Rudand

Pastor: Arlhur Cn.~ra:
Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Semcea ·1 p.m.
Sol,.. Cosner

Latter-Day Saints
Reorgontud Church ot Jt1111 Christ
of Loiter Dly Salnll
Ponland·Racine Rd.
Putor: Janice Otnner
Sllllday School • 9:30a.m'
W«ahip • 10:30 o.m.
Wednelday Services ·7:30p.m.

Pa1tor: Ron F'lCn:c·

Sunday School • 9:15a.m.
Wonhip ·IO:ISa.m.
SnoWl'llle

The Church of Jest~~
Chrllt ot.l.aller·Day Sllnll
St. Rt. 160,1146-6247 or446-7486
Sundoy SdtQOII0:20cll Lm.
Relief Society/Prieoth# li:OS-12:00 noon
Sacnmcn1 Scrvi&lt;C 9-10: IS a.rn. '
Homemaking meeting, ht Thun; - 7 p.m.

R-leF-Ip
.•
Churdlof!MN.......
. ' \ ...l'aator. Jcbn w. "'"•'..
Suaday Sdtool · 9:30o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednadoy Serviooa. 7 p.m;
Syracuse Churdl of the Naunne
Putor. Rev. Rick Stu'Jill
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip - 10;30 Lm., 6p.m.
Wodocadoy Servia:• • 7 p.m.
Pu.eroy Churdt of the NuartM
PuiOr. Rev. Thomas M&lt;Ctuns
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 Lm. ond 6 p.m.
. ' wcdncaday ScrviCCJ • 7 p.m.

Pine Grove
Postor. 0.'!'11 Spalding
Wonhip · 9,30 Lm.

' Mornlna sw

Stmday School - 10:30 •.m.

-

PulOr: Kermeth Baker

. Our Sa\llour Lutheru Church
Walnut and Henry St1., Ravctaswood. W.Va.
lntrim paston: George C. Wcinck

Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

SuUOa
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • tp:4Sa.m. (ht &amp; 3nl Sun)

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore dt Second SL, Pcmeroy

Pastor: Dawn Spalding

East Lellrt
Pastor: Ken Molter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Sunday SchOOl • 9:45 a.m.
lt~:.m.

Worship ·9a.m.

United Methodist

.Wcdneoday • 7 p.m.
RtdM
Pu1or: Ken MeiJer
. Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Graham United Methodist
Worship· 9:30 Lm. (111 &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp; 4th Sun)
Wedn~sday Service - 7::JO p.m.

Worship- lla.m. and 1 p.m.

Old Dexter Blbk! Christian Church
Sunday School: 10 •.m.

Coolville Unlted Mtlhodlst Parl!ll
Paa10r: Hden Kline
Coolville Cburt:h
Main "' Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WonJ:til? - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Semc:c1 - 7 p.m.

Momhlg Wonhip: II a.m.
Evc:mng ,Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wedtlcsday Service • 1 p.m.

Mt. Ollve Unltod Mdhodlst

Off 124 behind Wilkesville

llolhel Chun:b
Township Rd., 468C
Sllllday School · 9 a.m .
Wonbip- 10 a.m.
Wcdlletday S'enricet- 10 a.m.

Putor: Rev. RllJi!, SpiRa

Sundoy School •'9:30 a.m.
. Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
1hunday Scmce.a • 7 p.m.
· Mefgt Cooperatlvt! Parish
Northeasl Clulter
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hau1man

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Paator. Sharon Hautman
Wonhip - 9 a.m. ·
Sllllday School • 10 a.m.

PoSlor. Rev. Pllillip Ridalour
Sunday School • 9:30 'a.m.
Wonhip - 10,30 a.m.
We.dne.sday Service. - 1 p.m.

Portland First Cburch of 11M Nuaren~
Paator: John w. Doucla•

Fllivlew Bible Church
Lillll, W.Va. R1. 1

New Hann C.hurch fl the Nazarene

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Faith Fello-lp Crulade for Chrlat
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickm1
Servia:: Friday, 7 p.m.

Sllllday School ·10:00 a.m.
Wonhip ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:ea • 7 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL

SM Franclaco 3, Philadelphia l (S.S
ian., rain)
Pittlbl.ujh 3, Aorida I
Lot AliJels 3, New Yort 0
ONCINNAn 6, Chlcqo l

Mill

Wo1l

C~lunel M~l tn ~

Today's games

,,."1'1
. .
I

·-

Syracuse

a. •..,. rr-·

'

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
992·3785 Pomeroy

Wcnhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
W ed.ne.day Service• - 7 p.m.

Calvary Blble Clturdt
Panc:roy Pike, Co. Rd.
P•stor: Rev. Blackwood
Sllllday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10,30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wodocaday Servia!. 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Faith f'lll Gospel Church
Long Bouom
Puwr: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30 '·"!·
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wodncaday • 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowahip aervicz 7 p.m.

Stlvenvltle Wcrd &lt;Jt Follh
Pot!Or. David Dailey
SWlday SdJool9:30 a.m.
Evtnina • 7 p.m.

The Believers' Fell.....,lp Mlnlstl')'
New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pl110r: Rev. Margaret J. Jtobinsm
Scivieeo:WMn·eadoy, 7:30p.m.
Sundoy, 2,]0 p.m.
Harrlsonl'lllt! Community Churdl

Putor. Theron Durham
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednelday • 7 p.m.
Endtlme House of Pnyer
(11 Burlinsham church off Roote33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wedn~day service-6:30p.m.

(Mimbll-1), 7:35p.m

0\\;((

CHUA~HBIBLES
Sr!H

(B.,,r.,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

515 Pt.trl St., Middlepon

1050 Carter Roed, Shac», OH•JS776
&amp;dlness Pnone 6i4-fi96·1400
Moble. 614·541.o296, FA.X. 6\4.()9!1·1•00

Middleport

Pentecostal

INSURANCE
SERVICES

106 bttemut Ave.
992·6454

93 Mill Strool
Middleport, Ohlo 467110

-·1,

Folth Tobern- Churdt
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Em mol Rawson
Sllndoy School · tOoOO a.m.
Evaring7 p.m.
.
Thumfty Service - 7 p.m.

. :I

•
•

.

Thin! Ave.
Poator: Rev. Om Bater ·
Sunday Sdtool - 10 a.m.
Ev..U..·6p.m.
Wedncaday Servia:a - 7:00p.m ..

Presbyterian
Syrocuse Flrol Unlhd l'rtollyltrtast
Pooor. Rev. Kri..,a Robinaat
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Wonh.ip • 11 a.m.

Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scr.ioe - 7 p.m.

HarrloonvUie Ptesbrtert"" Churdt
Wonhip · 9 Lm. ·
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.

' ·Huel Community Church
Off RL 124

Pastor: Edsel Han
Sllllday School· 9:30 o.m.

Middleport PnobyltrtiD

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.

Sundoy Scbool - 9 Lm.
Worship· 10 a.m.

l?fetl'JIIe Community Church

Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Cbrtsdon Fenow•dp Center
Salem St.• Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Mu11er
Sund1y Sdtool - ·I 0 a.m.
Worship - J1:1S Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:- 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
s..en... o.1 Advflltlll
Mulberry Hta. Rd .. Panetoy
Pastor; Roy Lawintky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Wcnhip • 3 p.m.

United Brethren

M- Chopel Church
Larry F1 w, Superintendent
Sunday achool· 10 a.m.

· MI. ltennCNS United 11re1bnta
·
In Cllrlat Churdl

Wonbip - 7_ p.m.

Wcdnesda~ Servia:·

Te~.u Comml.l\iry off~ 82

1 p.m.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chick,en '' l

228 W. Main St.. Pomeroy

992-5432
~~~

Veterans
Mamorlal Hospital

"Digniry a1td Strviu AIM-·ays"

Esiabhshed 1913

·~~fiO't.~F'Ilt&gt;f"--·· · ·--992-2-12.1.

-··· 804.V'Ud!li.ll _
992-2318 Pomeroy

'

Middleport - - . . ,

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman $L, Syn.cusc
Paotor: Roy (Mike) Thompson

EWING FUNERAL HOME

--

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Putor: William Hoblck
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Ev..U..·7p.m.
Wodocaday Services • 7 p.m.

EVening ·7:30p.m.

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992·21 04

P. J.
of Columbus, Oh.

Pen-l~btr .

.

W. TIKI Cuckler, Pre&amp; ldent

Pomf!roy Flower Shop

Pomeroy, OH

Clition ToberniCit Churtb
Ollloll, W.Va.
Sunday Scboot • I0 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 pm.

Wcdncaday Servia:. 7:30p.m.

MI. Qllve Community Cburdl
. Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 Lm.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wcdncday Service- 7 p.m.

· Brogan-Warner

Nationwide Ins. Co.

Fridoy·1:00p.m.

Partor: Sam Anderson
SIUiday School t 0 a.m.

~hChurdl

9uc~.,:=.~~@.~·

992-5141

204 Condor St.

Wedne.aday-7:00 p.m.

The Salvadon Anny

Crow's Family Restaurant

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Dli4-\&lt;.t

Rejoltlag Llfe Churdt ,
500 R 2nd Avo., Middleptlll
Pastor: Lawimce Formian
. Sunday School • .10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Church of J..., Christ,
A postollc Falth
1/4 mile p11t Fon Mcig1 on New Lima Rd.
Putor: William Van Meter
Sunday·7:00 p.m.

Pa1tor: R.cben Sanden
Sunday School • 9!30 a.m .
Wonhip · 10:3Ch.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:et ·7:30 p.m.

Eclat Uolhd Bntll... In Cltrill
2 1/l milca nonh &lt;i Rccdaville
onSuuROUte124
Pastor. ReY. 'Robert Mukley
Sunday School • I0 am.
Wonhip -7:30p.m,
Wodnclday Services · 7:30p.m.

.

area merchants

RAWLINGS·COATS
FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
264 South 2nd

992 ·3978

sd2· 1),.3:20p.m
[AI AllidCI (R.M.-tlaez 4-2) at Moa·
ueaJ Olcrodla 1· 3), 7:3! P·"'
Su Dieto {Duet 0-.t) If. Philadelphia

CooiYillc Road

Paster. Rankin Rpach

Panor: Glendon.SU'OUd
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

. Filth Gospd Churdl
Long llouom
Sundly School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship - J0:4S .:.m., 7;30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Church announcements

Wednetday Serlice • 7 pm.

Putor: Samuel Buyc
Swiday School · 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip · 10:30 a.m., 6 :30p.m.
Wednesdty Service• - 7 p.m.

Hodllnaport C~urch .
Grand St"""
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wcnhip • U a.m.
.
· Wednelday Scrvioct - 8 p.m.
Co.Rd. 63
Stmday School , 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Chester

Freed'"" Gospel Mlotlon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roter Willford
Sunday School · 9,]0 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Whlte'a Chapel W-r••

Middleport Community Church

Cumtl
PUI(Ir. Kennel)&gt; liucer
Stmday School· 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip • 10,45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th SIUI)

IGnpburyRoad

Pottor. Jeff Smith
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip Servia! 10:30 Lm.
WorshiP. Service-Ill and 3nl Sunday, 7 p.m.
No Wednelday Hvenin&amp; Semce.

RuUand Church ~the Nazarene

Bethllly

.

South Bettad NewTtala•llll
saver RidiOI
Pastor. 0\aane Sydabuid:er
Sunday Sdtool • 9 Lnt.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~esday Service· 7 p.m.
CarlttO.. loterclenowttnlll'"'al Cli-

Cll...,. Cburdl of the Nl&amp;lrene
Pallor. Rev. Herbert Orale
SSchool·9:30a.m.
w . ·lla.m.,6p.m.
W
y Scrvi&lt;:ea • 7 p.m.

Wonhip ~ 9 a.m.

SL John Lulh~ Church

Neue SetU...ent Chon:lt
SWidoy Wcnhip • 2,30 p.m.·
Thursday aervic:e1 - 7:l0 p.rri.

.

ll·S Buaemul Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 10:30 o.m.
Wo11hi~ • 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wrdneadly Services- 10 •.m.

Lutheran

Wonhip-

ollbe Nar.arene
Plator. Gn:Jory A. CuodiJf
StuJ\IIY Sdtool • 9,30 o.m. • .
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
W... doy Serviooa • 7 p.m.

Putot: Aorenee Smith
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WoniUp • 9 a.m.
Putor: Kenneth Bate'r
Suriday SchoOl • 10 a.m.

Full Gospel IJpt..,_
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pallor. Roy Hunter
Sunday Sdtool · I 0 a.m.
Evcnina 7:30p.m.
Tucadoy .1: Thuradoy • HOpm.

Mud'~ 1ft Clnwdl:

'

3

St. Louia 4. Atlanta I
San Dicao 4, Montreal 3

'

Enterprioe

.Putor: Kdth Roder

Rl.
P1aor. Rev.
Sr.
Sunday Sdtool • 9:30...... .
Wonhip • 10:30 LID., 7 p.m.
Wcdocaday Scmoc - 7 p.m.

·-.F1n1CIIIordllf!MN......,
Plator.ScouRoae
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30 o.m.
Wcnhip. 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wodoaday Servi&lt;ca • 7 p.m.

2

Thursday's 1cores

Florida (Ropp o.3) -

Beodl'onl Cltun:lt of Chrlot

Hemlock Grove Church ·
~

Saturday'• gam01

Ium

Rulllnd Ch- of Cluilt
Putor: Euaate: B. Underwood
Sunday School- 9:30 •.rn.
Wonhip- t0:30o.m., 7 p.m.
Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bndbuty Rd.

Wedneaday Service• - 7 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Youth~·5:30p.m.

E....unaSuvke·7p.m.
Wodncaday, Bible Study · 7 p.m.

· Bethlehem BopUst
Rocine,OH .
Puto&lt; : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sllllday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wo11hip . 9:30 o.m.
Thursday Servia,.. 7:00p.m.

(lolmloa 4-0), 10:3S p.m

OJ.it.IIO at Detroit, 1:1 S p.m
CLEVEI...AND_If.Torvllll.l, 1;3S p.m.
Tuu atMihDaKita. 2:05p.m
Kal»• City .t Milwauket', 2~05 p.m.
New York ar OUIIlfld, 4:05p.m.
Bo•toa at Cauromta. 4:0S p.m
Baltimore at Sea!'"Je. 1:05 p.m.

.

ML Unloo Bopllst
Paar.or : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Bvcnina • 6:30p.m.
Wcdnelday Sorvi&lt;za ·6:30p.m.

(FOX)

(SilllderloD 1-2), IO:OS p.m.
B.JUmore. (McDonald 0·1) at SeatUe

2).

Bradbul')' Chutdt of Chrlll
Plilor: Tom Runyon
s...day School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30Lm.

Sliver Run BllJ&gt;IIat
Putor: Bill Unle
Sunday Scbool· lOa.m.
Worship·lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednculay Services· 7:30p.m.

Saturdly's games

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Conaor St.

Tuppero Plata Chrdt of Cllrlll
Puu.' Stanley Minc:lta
Sunday Scbool· 9 a.m.
. Wonhip-9:4Sam.
Wednadoy • 7 p.m.

Radoe Flnl Baplllt
Poator. Rev. Larry Haley
Youth PallOr. Aaroo You.nJ•
Sundoy School • 9,30 a.m.
Wo11hip -10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wcdncsdoy Services • 7:00p.m.

(ESPN2)

Hockey

l'a-=R01ctW111t1n
SIOlday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip·I0,30a.m., 7:00p.m,
WcdneadayScrvim-7p.m.

Putor:
-lioiiMoinSL
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m • •
F1n1 Soutltern BaP.'l'l
41812 Paneroy Pike
Putor. B. Lunu O'Btyanl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wo11hip -10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicco ·7:00p.m.
. Flnl BopUat Chan:~
6th and Palmer St., Middleptlll
sw..lly School· 9:15 un.
Worship ·10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lool't Supper Ill Sunday of r:vety mcmh.
Wcclticlday Savic:e-7:00 p.m.

.

.

7J• CHrdt ... Cltrlat
l'oanetoy, Horrlact!.ute Rd. (RLI43)

Rul1111d Flnl Boptlol Churdl
Sllllday Scbool- 9:30 o.m.
Wcnhip • 10:45 a.m.
Pumoroy F1nl Bapllll

.

I

Sunday School ·9:30 ......
Wonhip·l0::10o.m.,6:30p.m.
WcdneldaySavioca·6::10p.m.

CeotriiCIDier
All&gt;u'1 (Sy,.._)
Putor. Deron Newman
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Wonhip - I J a.m.
Wednclday Scrvicet ·7:30p.m.

CIIYII'J' Pllpiln Chlpel

Plllor: Jack Colopove .

AlbS.....,
Putor: l..e&amp; Haym.m
Saturday Scrvicc ·7:30p.m.
Sllllday Scbool· 10 a.m.
Wcdnelda~ Scrvicc-7::10 p.m.

PillJbW',tl at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday'• game

tatlllll3nl Suaday
I
Besi"WWIhwlUdp C..rdl ot Cllrlol

Free WUI Bar:.,~:";" .·

Tonlght's games
p.m. (ESPN)

l'la«·Jdf..,. w.u-

Wonhip·llo.m.IIDII7p.m.
WeclneJday SeMco • 7 p.m. .

Philadelphia al N.Y. Ranaen, 7:30·

Orloodo ot ladWu, 3,30 p.m. (NBC)

Tupptn Plaltu St. Plul
Puw:SiwonllluSumlay Sdtool · 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Tuclday ScrviOOJ ·7:30p.m.

DIII... Hola•Cii31037- Route 325, Lanpvllo
-Rev. Rid&lt; M.oloycd
s..ayt&lt;ltooi - 9,]0Lm.
• Sunday -.hip· 10:35 Lm . .1: 7 p.m.
autd1011'a cbun:b · 10:35 a.m. Youth 6p.m.
Wcdnc:aday P'"fOr aervi&lt;:e · 7 p.m.

K.GCM... II'Citrlo&amp;
Wonhip • !r.30 a.m.
Sunday Sdlool- 10::10 Lib.

Pulor:
S101day

JO leadl lefiel'l-0

Sa.o. Antonio It Howton, 9 p.m. (TNT)

R....... le
l'oiiOr. Rev. O..rlea Mash
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Smday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF SIOlday 6:30p.m.

\.

Holiness

ry earlier Ibis season at Phoenix
and is in the SOO Cor the third litrie.
He was fifth last year and qualified
for Sunday's race at 227.531 mph
on the inside of row three.
Both Walker teammates are
driving new Reyoard-Fo$.
"I'm very, very happy witb the
car, and I think the race is going to
start for me about the last 100
laps," Flttipaldi said. "I'm just
going to try to pace myself until
there, and I tbink I can go for a
strong fmisb towards tbe end."
The entire field averaged a
record 226.912 mpb, breaking the
former record of 223.479 set in
1992.

(ESPN2)

SID Prancbtx~ .t New York. :40 p.m.
. CIN&lt;:U-fNA11 at Sl LouJa, 2: iS p.m
Aorida II OUeaao. l1lO p.m.
'AUanllat J;IOUJI.on. 2:35 ll·m.
l.o&amp; A.optewll Montreal, I :O!ii p.llL

MIDII.,q ... Detroit 3
OttlaDd 9, B.Jtiroore 6

Tonight's game

. )

Coft'ce how' foi.Jowin1

Ollcaao 3, ViDoouYer 2 {OT); Olica-

Colorado (Acevedo 2·2) 111 Pitltburab

Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday Scrvi&lt;:ea · 7:30p.m.

j

Scoreboard
(WaanrrO-!), 7:35p.m.
Sao Frauciaco (Mulholland 2-•) at

Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Smday Scbool· 10:30 un.
Pa~~or:

Christian Flttipaldi. !Son_u_·nued_rrom_Paa_e_s)--------+-~------'support all !be qther drivers out
then;, and I think that's greaL"
Christian, like EmeBoo, came to
Indianapolis after racing in Fonoula One. Unlike .his uncle, a twotime Formula One champion,
Christian never woo a race in 40
Formula One starts from 1992-94.
His best finishes were fourlb in
both the Paci(ic and German
Grands Prix.
His best finish Jn five Indy-car
races with Walker Racing Ibis season is a fifth in the season opener at
Miami.
.
He was second-fastest among
six rookie qualifiers for !he 500 and
put his car into the lineup at

p....,, =I'Miolpb

Cong1cgat1onal

Nazarene

106 Mulberry Ave.

•

· Pomeroy

.

RACINE. MOWER
CLINIC
Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio

949-2804

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
·PHARMACY
We Filt'Doctors·
Prescriptioos

992·2955

Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
!1!12·7075 .
172 NoF1h~lldlllifA•e.- ·
Middleport Oh

-

�Pomeroy •

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

llliklkiport, Ofilo

Friday,

May 26,1995

The- Dally-Sentinel • Page 9

--College announcements
UNIVERSrrY OF DAYTON
Two Meigs Countians were
IIDOIII this year's phetcs of 1be
Univenil}' or Da)'IOO.
JIIIDCI M. F1Dt, Rmland, ataduatcd with a master' 1 desree In
soc:ial agcocy romscUng, and Jennifer L. Usle, Syracuse, earned a
bllcbeklr's dea- in psychology.
URG
Manba Maynard and Ximberly
Michael. both or Racine, were
among !be 61 nursing students

!!Warded their associate degree
from the University of lUo
Grande/Holzec College of Nursing
!ast'weekend. .

OHIO UNIVEilSJTY
Ohio University bas lllllllliJJlCcd
the members of ill frahman clall
who will receive scholarships.
About 850 sllldcots of 3,200 were
selected for scholarships. Local
recipients were:
.
Heidi Nelson of Cong Botlllm, a
director's scholarship for the I 995·

eo t.oet anc1 Found

70

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Cullom Building I

Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ES'fiMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

---Community calendar--,
,.

Tbe ColnmuDity Calendar II
publlahed aa a rree 1ervlce to
non-prorlt group• wbhlng to
announce meeting and special
events. The calend.r Is not
designed to promote 1alu or
rund raiser• or any type., Ite1111
are printed u 1p100 permllll and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
tpecmc number ofdaya.

'

POMEROY - Pancroy Class
of 1960, reunion, Pomeroy Legioo
ball, 2 10 6 p.m. Saturday.
RACINE - Southern High
School class of 1985 reunloo, 2 10
5 p.m. at the bonae of Alan Crisp,
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Ala·teen, 7 p.m
Sunday, Sacred Heart Catholic

SATURDAY

'

'

PSYCHICS

Church.
POMEROY - Rural Life Sun·
day observance, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. 10:30 a.m. Sun·
day, speaker formei- Albens DiStrict
superintendent, the Rev. _Ben
Edwards.

SUS ALUMNI
CANDIDATES
.,.- At Southern
alumni banquet
Saturday night a
and queen will be seleded
from the graduadll(l clus ofl!l95. Tile candl·
POMEROY- Gods Kids, Gal·
dates are left to rlglll, ftont, Courtney Roush,
lipolis Christian Cburcb, program
dauabter or Debbie and Marshall Roush, Letart;
at Zion Church of Christ, State
Andrea Moore, dauahter or Cathy and Dennia
Route 143, Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
. Moore, SyracUH; A_!Dy Weaver, daughter of

Advise on Mura
I opportunity,
decision-making, love,
success, 1110ney.
LIV,E 24 HOURS

and Carl Weaver, Syruuse; Brandy
Roush, daughter or. Terri and Gary Roush,
Letart; and back. Ma10n Flaher, son or Linda
and Gordon Flaher, Syracuse; Ryan Wllllain,
10n of Judy and Jack WBIIami, Syracl!le; Grant
Circle, SOD or Patty and Larry Circle, Racine;
and Brian Anderson, son or Becky and Jim ·
Anderson, Racine. · .

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741
$3.99 mln: Must bets vrs.

Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420.,.,_

Anderson reports on funding at OVAL meeting
Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

Congratulations to Mrs. Ethel
·Arbaugh of Tuppers Plains. Mrs.
Arbaush will be observing her 90th
birthday Sunday, May 28.

was Jbe grandfather of Eric and
Phillip. Two of Dr. and Mrs.
Davis's daughters also 'are graduates of M.H.S.-Cbarlene Davis
. Batey having graduated in 1962,
and Elaine Davis Preece in 1966.
Elaine was a member of the last
class attending M.H.S. which is
now the Meigs Junitr High so she
gradualed jointly from Mlddlepon
High School and Meigs Local Hlp
School. ·

Eric Swisher, a graduate of
Point Pleasan~ W. Va, wiD receive
a Susan Parle Scholarship at the
annual Mid~leport Higb School
Alwimi Reunion tomorrow nigbL
Coincidentally, bis brother,
Phillip, received tbe same scholarship in !991 and Ibis year graduated swnma cum laude with a degree
Remember Karen Hemsley?
in accou~uing from Miami UniverKaren and Albert Joe Fares
sity at Oxford. Eric and PbiUip are became engaged last Dec. 24 and
the sons of Elaine Davis Preece and after much delibera!ioo and consideration of stress, costs and time,
Don Swisher.
Interestirig that the great-grand- Karen and Joe decided to elope.
mother of Eric and Phillip, the tate They gave up everything but the
Mrs. Mattie Bush, a reacher, gradu- receptio.n and they will be holding
ated from Middlepon High School that on June 3· an informal, casual
but not until 1926 at the age of 41 . cookout at their borne in SpringMrs. Bush bad taught school in .boro, Ohio. A number of friends
West Virginia and bad completed ·from Meigs County have been
soine high school wtrk at ''normal invited 10 be on band for the event.
school." High schools were a rarity
in ·those days, particularly in West
You oright want to malce a note
Virginia where she grew up. Mrs. on your June cale,ndar since May is
Bush wished to teach In Ohio quickly wrnpping ·up.
wbicb required a bisb school diploTbe Meigs County American
ma. She bad lived in Middleport Diabetes Association Support
· from about 1909 so she attended Organization .wiD meet at 7 p.m. on
Middleport High School daY. long Tuesday, June 13, at the cafeleria
sessions for one year and then one- - fn Veterans Memorial Hospital.
half ~ay for another. year to
Those attending-d thf&lt; meetings
her.~IPI&lt;?ma. _Her ftrst teacbmg are open to those having diabetes
posttton m M•ddleport w~ com- as well as their friends and farrupleling the last one-half year for the ty. are asked to take mulliple
late Mildred Hawley. And that ~as copies of their favorite recipes for
at the old Central School wbtcb the diabetic diel to sbate with the
stood near _where the Middleport entire group. Jackie Starcher,
Post Office IS now l~ted.
.
R.D.L.D., COrtner supervisor of the
Grandparents of Eric and p~,ll~p nutritrbn department at VMH, will
are Dr. and Mrs. Jose~h Dav~s of be talcing an active role with the
Middleport and Mrs. Mma Swtsber program that eveniqg.
of Pomeroy. Mrs. Davis (Kathleen
Bush) graduated from M.H.S., in
Enjoy your alumni reunion this
1935, and Mrs. Swisher (Min a . weekend Funny, everyone of your
Hines) graduated from the same classmates got older-except you.
school in 1932 along with ber late of course. Do l&lt;eep smiling.
husband, C. Wayne Swisher, who

e:un

"Say Love With
Flowers From!"

POMEROY
'
FLOWER SHOP
106 Bullernut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433~fj203

New Oplln For The Smen
Bedding Plants, Vegatabla
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
4 In Geraniums,
Shrubs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992·5776
Open Dally 9 am·5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-5 pm

A repon on funding issues was
.given by Eric S. Anderson, at the
recent meeting of the Board of
Trustees of the Oblo Valley Area
Libraries held recently at system
headquarters in WellSton.
Anderson reported that OVAL
funds are retained in the Senale
version or the budget at levels recby
Gover~ or
ommended
Voinovicb. He indicated that the
dollar amount was basically a con·

Ant'ta Rei""""
....,•.., OV~ Trustee"""'
••,.
resenting Nelsonville Public
Library, the Board approved the
purchase of 11 dozen ergonomic
chairs. This purchase is part of an
ongoing program to .decrease the
number of hazards in the worl&lt;
envirorunent.
The board approved a renewal
contract witb the Lane Public
library of Hamilton Obio for Books
By MaU services. This contract will

increase by about 3'000 households
served in Butler county.
A contract with Netwocl&lt;s Inter·
national of Columbus was
approved for the printing of the
1995 Union Serials list. This ·Jist
allows citizens wbo use OVAL
member libraries to request magazine articles from 29,170 magazine
holdings in 169 libraries within the
OVAL, NOLA and NORWELD
regional library systcms.

110\\ \Bil
E\C \\ \TI'\4,

OVALlibrary
is lbe system
only state
funded
regional
in Ohio.
It
serves the citizens and libraries of
Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Sclotp and ViniOn Counties with
. programs of services developed by
those libraries.
Wanda Eblin serves on tbe
OVAL Board as a representative of
the
Meigs County Pu~lic Library.

existing
with a r~;;;;;;;~;;;;;~---lri~iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimtiiiitiiiiiiimtiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiim
3tinualion
percent of
increase
forfunding
inflation,
Anderson also reported that the
Get Your Message Across
library and Local Government Support Fund (LLGSF) cunent approWith A Daily Sentinel
priations will be reduced 10 S.7 per·
BULLETIN BOARD
cent. The reduction will keep
OVA!. members funded $6.44 per
1 1111
capita less than tbe State average. ·
The Board accepted the resigna~~~~~~
tion of Jim Jacobs, bookmobile
PubliC Notice
Publlc.Notlce
OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
I
ru'de..
On the recommendation of
$2,500,000 ·million dollars.
PUBLIC NOTICE
These lunda are baing
The
Ohio
Bureau
ol
'
Employment Sarvlcaa made available lor 1)
(OBES) Job Training· lnduatry-wlde projects,
Partnerahlp division Ia ptant closings, regional or
seeking proposals lor Title apeclat projecto.
Heath R. Smith
Any organl..tlon who
Ill, Economic Dlatocatlon
Heath R. Smith, son of Ronnie and Worker Adjuatment wishes to received
Monday, May 29, 11:30 am
and Cynthia McDaniel of Point Aaalatance Act (EDWAA) proposals, please call or
At the Chester Volunteer
to be allotted to the write by June 2, 1995 to
Pleasant, W.Va., recently reported Iunde
OBES
Planning
and
Grants
Slate
ol
Ohio
by
·
the
Job
Fire Dept.
for duty aboard the aircraft carrier Training Partnarahlp Act Management, 145 S. Front
Serving
chicken,
ribs, baked
U.S.S. George Washington in .Nor· (JTPA). Funda will be made Street, Columbus, OH
oeatns,
slaw
&amp;
ice
folk, Va.
available lor ·retraining 43215, (614) 446-3817.
Smith graduated in 1993 from 1 ac!lvltlea, adml nlllratlve May26,1995
costa, support aervlcea and
Point Pieasant.Hisb School.
needs·related payments. Announcements
Thaae lunda do not require
Middleport, Ohio
A.rldreuiftB 011 ch.all6i'l8
matching contributions.
Cheshire
profe.uionalUm n,W iqtesrity.
Presents
The purpoae ol tha
program Ia p:aca eligible
Gravel Hill Cemetery
'WHITE RAVEN"
dlalocatad workera Into
In their debut show.
permanent unaubeldlzed ~emorial Day Services
Cuckler Consulting Inc. employment Dislocated
Saturday, May 27 and Friday,
May 29th • 10:30.
workers lncluda those
June 2, 9:30 pm tfl1 :30 am.
Middleport Post
lndlvlduala who: have been
Real Estate
terminated or laid off, or American Legion i 28.
WHITE RAVEN IS:
Appraisal
who have received a notice
LONNIE MAYES·Lead Vocals
ol termination or tayolllrom
Special Speaker:
MELANIE DUDDING-Lead Vocals
employment; are eligible lor James Sands ·Tribune·
PHIL SIMMONS-Lead Guitar/
or have eKhauated their
050 Carter Road, Shade, OH
to
Business Phone: 614·61&gt;6·1•1001 entitlement
Vocals·
Correspondent
unemployment
ROGER
DENT-Guitars/Keyboards
Everyone Welcome ..
compenaatlon, and/or are
KIM FRENCH-Bass.
unlikely to return to their
RICK HICKMAN-Drums
previous Industry or
occupation.
DON'T MISS THIS EXCITING
The public is invited
GENESIS
PV 95 funding lor these
NEW BAND
to attend C.P.A.
programs Ia Intended to be
$2.00Cover
BIBLE STUDY CLASS
limited Jo approximately classes to be given at
Fraternal Order of
~lll!ll
. Every Sunday Morning
Eagles
#2t
71.
In Memory
10am·- 11 am
Classes will be
given Sat.
OFFERS FREE .
Ash Street
In Loving
June 10 from
DELIVERY
Me!llory Of
9:00am· 1:00 p.m.
Freewill
773·5541
EVELYN
Sun. June 11 from
Baptist Church
·1 :00pm • !i:OO p.m.
GILMORE
All American So4nd Sysem
Must attend both
Middleport, Ohio
Who Passed
For all your entenainment needs.
classes to be certified.
Away 2 Years
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Oeborah &amp; Pete Peck
To register for classes
Karaoke &amp; D.J. Private Parties,
Ago on
·
call:
Diplomas Offered.
Wedding
Receptions, Employee
May 26, 1993.
9g2-220t 992-7275
Teac;her Les Hayman
Parties.
6
·
Registration ends
Sadly missed by
June 3, 1995.
· family.
992·7410

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
. Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Seplic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Angie's .
Greeliho:ase

you want it ...

you·ve got It ..

Rerba, P111inm.Ja,
Ewerblatlnga, Banging
Baallets, ate.
(Depot St.) Rutland to
l.e•ding Creek, then to
Paul ins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

6 column inch weekdays
column inch Sunday

• Open Mon.-Fri . 10 a.m .-5 p.m.
- Weekends Ca11614·742-2772 .
-~

In the service

.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Factory Authorized Parts
6 Service·
•All Makes •42 Years

•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers - Dryers • Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freetera
•Dishwashers
•
•H.'(:I. Heaters ·
•Microwaves •Disposals
. •Thank~ Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Areas

(614) 985·3561 or
992-5335 1211 4111n

(Umestone low Roles)

WICKS
HAULING
(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

512311 mo.

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you! II We're
live and waiting!!!

(602) 954-7420
4Jm'i5

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnlerior &amp; Ex!erior
Paln!lng
Also Concrele WDfk
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

Laure[Limo
Service

-- .

.
.
ZERO IN ON THIS GREAT DEAL With a value One®checking account, there's zero in the way ofmonthly service fees, balance requirements BANKiSONE.

llent a
Limousine for
Weddings, Proms
and Speelal
oe~aslou . .. -·

Whatever it takes:
Bank One, Alhen11. NA

·-·~

Mf'mbtor rmc-

......... -...--·~-+1

.,

i

P.

c.ml

Limestone Sand 0111veland Coal
WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL f'OR SALE
: I

,:,1 •

:,1 I

I :,t

(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
-·

..,..,,..-

I

: : 1.

: U.: 1,: I t'!

992·3954

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY
CARE
•

• Lots of Fun and .
Learning
• Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00 P.M.
992·5388

AB&amp;T AUTO

........

MANLEY'S
BOllE
IMPROVEMEN'r
Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614.
(614) 388-9865

24 Hour Pager·

Anserlng Servic
1-800-215-2023
51181tfn

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry C.lark
992·9949 . 992-6471
Mcin · Fri 8 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m.. s p.m.
Sun. by appl. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middlepor1
&amp; surroundif~g area .

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.oo

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
. Now renting on S.R. 7
in Chesler across from
the Dairy Queen. Size
1Ox28 ·store cars,
boats, furniture, or
what ever you want.
Call 992·3961

Saturday,
May 27, 1995
Meigs High
School Gym
Doors open
at 7:00p.m.
Dance from
9:00p.m. to I :00 a.m.
'5 per person

•ALIGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

AU Yard S&amp;lol Mull Bo Poiclln
Ad&gt;janco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the daW' before1ht ad Ia to run.
Su~ ocidon • 2;00 p.m. Fridar.
llonday odilion • 2:00 p.m. sa,.
day.

5 Fomlly: Goorgo'a

REFINANCE

CONSOUDATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements,'SIQw Credit

Radialor Repair
Service Portable
aluminum welding
New radiators
· · available,
recores 'also.

614·742-3212

House flepllr &amp;

1-800-MERIT-98

Remodeling

MBII048?

PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior

Take the pain out ol
painting. Let us do It for

All Yard Sal.. Uu11 Be Paid In

Room Additions
Siding, Rooting, Pllllos

dar before "- ad 11 to run, Sunday edifion· 1:OOpm Friday, lionday O&lt;ilion 1O:GO&amp;m. Saturday.

Adnnce. Deadline: 1 ;OOpm the

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Re110nable
lnstnd - Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-4405

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

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Mobile Welding
Dlesellnlector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

61.4-992·7643

Chuck Stotts
614·992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome .

( No Sunday Calls)

1

Repla~ent,

Windows, lflown
lnsulalion, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

S. R. 7 Five Points

Free Estimates
1/19/ttn

SUMMER
IMAGES
9:00-2:00 '
5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487

Open

Owners: Pete &amp;

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

985-4473
7f22!94

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

v~ s~"-~'c.

MIKE MARCUM'S
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS

BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
28 Years Experience
1-800-377 ·4477
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Cuslom
Frame Repair .
NEW il. USED PARTS
·FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992·5553 OR
' 1·800·848·007
. TOLL FREE
DARWIN, 0~~~. TFN

A Big Hug
C::ould Be Yours!

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING

Just Call

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

1-900-945-61 00
Ext. 1327,
12.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602-954-7420

51t81t mo.

949-2168 .
5/16194 TFN

PHONE
614·245-0437

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 froni Rt. 7
Tues.·W!!d.-Fri.-Sat.
1·6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
11Y511 mo.
949·Z192

RACINE , OHIO

FARMS

JIM REEDY Auctioneer
Anliques

Lonely? Call
Tonight!
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Pe~ Min
Must be 18 yes.

Meet Int
ingles
Safely And Pnvately
,

Listen 10 voice mail messages Jefl by interesling
singles of all ages. Leave messages for singles
that interesl yc10 or open your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
friendships and meaningful relationships.

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A Week- 24 Hours A Day
$2.99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co.
954-7420

TREE TRIQING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Procall Co
(602)

954~ 7420

BE LONELY
AGAIN
CALL1·900·945·6100
Ext. 8587
$2.99 permi~.

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

STD-A·WAY
MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING

'Compa,rable Sizes &amp; Prices

New Haven, WV
304-882-2996 .

Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Syslems, Trailer &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

FREE
ESTIMATES
FULL WAARAIITY UKE NEW
Chip Repa ir ln Tub s Or S1nts.
Resurfnce Old Ce ram 1c Tile, And

Pomeroy
4126.'11n

Ylld Solo SalurdaJ. 11om. 2505 Ill

Varnon Ave., Pt Pfeeaant Clotf't..
I'1:J, 10y1, loll mite.

PubliC Ssle
and Auction

Auctions every

Fri~)'-Sat\lrday,

7pm, Mt Alto Autllon, Rt 2·33
•croSiroada•. New merehandiM,
gracerloa &amp; loll ""'"· Ed Frozlor
930.

005

All NEW OATELINEI1000'o of
MEN AND WOMEN an our dam- . . , . . _ . , moot .. dale
yw ..,;g,u ca1 ,_11·JI00.221J.
G-U&lt;t44.S1.ll&amp;'mln. I&amp; B1 213.
1193-0&lt;50.
AOOPTipN : A decision ollove
for your baby. W• know 11 can
. work. We can provitle you with
peace ol mlr.j, knowing 1hal ywr
baby will be loved . MedleaVIogal
e•penaaa paid. Please call us 11
our t-omo. 1-800-883-0302.

Giveaway
112 RoiWollle&lt; Pupplo~ &amp;1&lt;,37&amp;·

40

~onth

Spaded Yellow Lab.

ewk old whitt kittens . 30-4·"'581Jl2Q.

.$6.00
Roger &amp; Tom Hill

49534 Slate Route 338
~olart Falls. Ohio
247·2015 daytime

614-742·2165 or
_E.Uni,Y:Radio _ ,.--- 304-(l82.3704,

Ask for Mike

Wanted· to Buy

90

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1987 a.c·odela Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easl·
em Jwerue, GallipoUa.
Oec.oraled stoneware, wall tete·
phonet, old lamps, old tlfs, old docks. antique furniture.
Riverine Antiques. Ru11 Uoore,
owner. 614·992-2526. We buy
Oon'l Junk It I Sell Us Your NonWotililng Retrlgeratofl, Freezera.
Waal'lers. Dr~era, Microwaves
C,olor T. V.'a VCR'1, Air Condillon:
era. CDmputert, Office Machines,
E~&gt;;.51-4-256· 1238.

J &amp; D'o ,o.J!O Par11 and Salwgt,
buying wracks, Junk autos &amp;
trucks. Also, parts for aala. 304·
773-5313 or 773-5033.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, G~id Rings. Silver Coins, •
Gold Co1n1. M.T. S. Coin Shop,
151 Second A...anue, GaUipoltl.

Wanted To Buy, Junk AutoJ, Any
Condition, 614 ·388·9062, Or 614·
448-PART.
Wanted 10 buy- antique and used
lurnitur,e, no item 10o targe or too
'"""n. Will bu~ one piece or complela estates, Osby Martin, 814·
i92·7.W1 .

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoa With

Or Whhout Motors. Call Larry

LIYoly. 61-4-388-9303.

Wanted : little Tvkea Outdoor
Castle In Good Condition , 81.t·

245-,5867.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.Personals

304-675-&lt;!585.

flowers &amp;
Vegetahle Planls &gt;!!:
tt.ging Baskets
&amp;Flats

auction
tantice.
Licei'lnd
•ea,Ohio &amp; We11 Virginia, 30&lt;4773-5785 Or 304-773-54.&lt;7.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

2yr old male RetrieverJCoUt. mil,
neuttred I shots, to good home.

Carpenter Work
Free Estlmstes
Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc_.

min .

(614) 992-7040

18

As Close As
$2.99

DUI- SR 22
DISCOUNTS

Good watch dog, Good country
holM. 814-448-38SQ.

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

1-9oo·945-6200
Ext. 2579

Violations

21118.

Your
Sweetheart Is
Your Phone

Accidents/

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Happy
low Rd.
leport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
4/24/lfn

. Auto Insurance
Easy Payment
Plan

Best Rates

Portable ·.
dsaw Mill

614-742·2193

Big Big Yard Sako. Fri, S&amp;~ Sun.

811&amp;.18&amp;.

All Ohio

Bill Slack
992·2269

H&amp;H SAWMILL BATHTUB

NEVER

Snlt,.,.,tlpC1.

RieJ. Pearson Auction CompanJ,
full time euction.. r, complete

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
AUCTIONEER
SERVICE

~.;d .J. Saalnlaf, 1-

MorctoondlM7:00~M.

992-5251

We Hare Cars and Vans/

1)\\\1.\.

Two

AuctJon Every Friday &amp; Sat~.~rday ·
Crown CltW' On St At 7 All New

Call for all of your storage needs

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

l)~~o:,S\ ~

011010.

80

Open For Business

Kenny's Auto Rent-. I

Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486·1590
264 Upper River Rd .
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH . 45!)31
uwn

Saturday, Moy 271h. David Duffy
relkte~ on Sf' 1 below Eastern
High ~hool, loll al illlorn &amp; tod·
der girio olo1hao. orollor I ...,.h

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnhy

Pomeroy, Ohio

539 BRVAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Rooting, VInyl

.

l!milH on NQ.lh 2. Anllquoo, hlrd
bodo boolca. ....

985-3879

J&amp;L INSULATION

Wac:,. 27th,

Moving Nit,
23&lt;1 Mulberry N&amp;.

?,111

2f l2f92/t1n

you. Very reasonable.

Free Estlmales
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After6p.m. ·
614·985-4180 312vU

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Kitchen l Bath Remodeling

4/25/lfn

· LINDA'S

c-. a MiJoo

Northup S•cand HauH Acroat
Bridge In Norlhup. llondoy 28.,,
Chi- Clothing, Fi!'Wtr~ lCJL
Tabln, Mite.

Our Specialty

f.Jberglau Shower Cracks Or Sags

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING

Yard Sale

From Rt. 7, Looll FG&lt; Signa, 1-3,
SaUdiy OniJ,

NEFF IEMqpEUNG
SERVIlE ·

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.

""'*'

..... 2711. 10 Til 7 Home --...
Lalhor Coo~ Clofljng, EIC.

&lt;113/15

$2.99 per min.

Oft

3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949·2882
Owners: .Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

For Free Ellllmatet

1·900·884·7800
Ext. 4466

foullll

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity
111:17 Choamut SUM~ S&amp;OirdoW,

Looking foTVJard to &amp;eeing old frienrb
and making new! .
5111/lfn

E me• gcncy Phone 985·3-l I 8

Reunion and Dance

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

_...,,._...,_.........
. ·--~--

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portsble 10itets ranted.
Dally, -'tty &amp; monthly rentsl ...t".
•lin •
SliM • Fa~~ ~nlone &amp;

Meigs Alumni
Association 1995

•Sidewalks
•Driveways
•Patios
•Porches
•Slabs
992-3265

$3.99 per min .

and checkwn'ting fees. You'll also receive THE ON&amp;. Card with zero annual fee. For details, visit Bank One. There's nothing we wouldn't do for you.

MODERN SANITATION

(602) 954-7420

1-900-388·7000
Ext. 9970

•

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

96 school year. Sbe b an Eutr:m
Hitb ~cbool araduate and will
ma or m psycboloay.
avid Toundu or Ponscroy, a
£lllduatc of Eutrm Hlp Scbool, ·a
director's scbolanlblp.
Jason Allen Taylor of Pomaoy,
A Meigs Hlgb Sc:bool IJ'IIduate, a
director's scbolanblp and a
provost's fresJunl¥! scbollnbip.
Geoffrey Watsoo of Reedsville,
an Eastern graduate, a director's
scholarship.

9x12 ruat nrpet to Giveaway,
15 14) 7&lt;2-23211.

110

Help Wanted

Artn: PI Ploasanl. Poalal Posi·

tiona available. Punranent fulllimt
lor clerkilsorlers. fu tl benefits,
For eum'da1e, appllcatJon and
aal&amp;fJ inlo ; 706· 264 · 1600 ext
3670, "'"" ., 8pm.

AVON I All Areas ! Shirley
Spew~

30&lt;-675-1429.

AVON SELLS AT WOAK·HOME

Need 1\ddolionallnc:omo?
Awrage $841 !&gt;Hr. Bonofili i
Terrotory Optional. lndlrep.
1-800- 742·4738

AVON to bu~ or. sell, Marilyn. in·
dependent rep. 304·882· 26-45 or
1-800-992-6356.

Bilbytiner for ; J&amp;ar old, muat bl
able ID S'Mm, also be 18 years or
older. Ca ll 6U· U6· 161Q alter
4pm.

E&amp;ly Wo rk! Exc:e llenl Pay t AI·
semble Products AI Home. Call
Toll Free , 1-800--46 7·5566, Ext.

313.

.

�.•.

•

Friday, ll.y 26, 1995

Fi'*y, May26, 1895 --

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio -

--.....

The Daily Sentinel• P~g~11

J ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

..c:

ACROSS

f

"-'1man

o&amp;a $. Air.

8 WMch pocket
12 Fnt-rllle

(2 wda.)

NORTH

•

~ 12.000_,.304·

·~

W-.

llull S.el TRX 21GX FourGatage ~ E - 1
· Condition 114-2A-IAI Clll AI·

()
0

1

5-26-95

-.A 7 6 2
WEST
EAST
eA 2
eQJtOPS
' •to 9 6
•K J 8 7

IH4 S..rukl OSX710R 11,000.

,,., -

13 -long Syne
14 Uncle
15 Get taller
.
,16 Verne hero
17 Ma. Farrow
11 I'Jouover l...t
20 Over there
21 High eleva.
22 Now-:.... me
down
to
24 I.e., In ull
26 T11aeled hal
28 Mythical figure
31 Orgoon pipe
33 Atver talend
34 Baba au38 Aclor - Ray
39 Exptoalve
(abbr.)
40 l'lohfng otdo

e7 6 4
.s 4
•A Q S 4

..

•J

•t 0 3
•J 4'

.,

750 Boatl &amp; Motors
for Sale

steer,

9 8 7

+10 9 8 5
SOUTH
eK 8 3
•A Q 3 2
• K 6 2
+K Q 3

lOr 1:30pm.

..

AMww kt Pearl • Puata

Z..o-

1 Actor- o·-1 oil Ramen brona
s AchMt5 PoiiH

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLEQD by Larry Wri&amp;bt

41 Actor

mon'ey unfl

50 Tuno
51 Ruv.&lt;f rock

5t Folae

-•••nee

57 Labat
56 Writer
Anita 60 Legal
document
61 Chem.
auntx
62 Singer - Pinu
63 Ancient Italian
1amlly
64 Gloomy
65 Depend (on)
66 Comedlan -Laurel

DOWN
1 Shabl&gt;y
clothing

2 Old lime
3 Coaled
chemically
4 Slalr-t
5 Fled

6 Politician

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

South
1 NT

BARNEY

.•

•

West
Pass

North
3 NT

Opening lead:

LOWEEZ.Y-:CAN l SORRY
A LITTLE PAIL OF··UH--

E""t
All pass

•Q

Aim along _
the right path

"

..

By Phillip Alder

,,
-.s:::=..:.:J:~~~g!j

-

..

ASK 'r'OUR BROTHER
IF HE WA~TS TO
HIS D06 ..

"'

..•

-

AND TI-IEN THE'&lt; TI-H~EW
A BEANBAG AT ME ~

THERE'S A STUPID KID
OUTSIDE WHO WA~TS TO K~OW
IF VOU'LL SELL YOUR D06 ..

There is an expression about having
more than one string to one's bow. But
has anyone tried to shoot two arrows si, mu(taneously from a bow with two
strings' And how about a bow with
three strings - as in today's deal?
Againslthre~ no-trump, West led the
spade queen. After winning with the
ace, East returned his second spade.
South ducked the trick to West 's nine;
he won the lhird spade in hand , East ·

'

discarding a heart Now dealarer tried
each minor suit in turn, but both broke
4-2 rather than 3-3. Finally, declarer
took the heart finesse , but it lost and

West cashed his two spade winners to

CELEBRITY CIPHER

defeat the contract.
"Wow!" said South. "We h a d 27
points, yet nothing worked."

Celebnt)" Cipher cryptowwns are creared from QUOiallons by lamou! ~ past and present
Each leUer Jnlh8 c•pher standS tor ano1her. Todays due M .q~ls F

by Luis Campos

·

"Yes , you were unlucky,'' agreed

1D81 Mazda GLC, platon engine
I 4 opd. 814-388-8700 leave
.

.

..

111114 Ce1111110 body, good tirao, no
motor, good cond. $1,500.30-4-

875-5785.

•'

Budget Tranamiulana, Uaed a
Rebull~ All Typoo, "cceoaible To

: and cash the heart ace
1

Over 10,000 Transml11lon, Alao
l'lno. 81+3n.293S.

So&lt;Yice, Used "nd Rebuilt Trono-

He iust discards from the same su it as
the oummy. What I suggest is thai after
winning Irick two, you try clubs and diamonds . If either brea ks 3-3, you are
home. But here, when East shows up
four cards in each minot, you just
with your last spade . We st may
· · his spade tricks, but then he ·must
a heart around into your ace -

-· · ---- ~ ·

·oQRNLOSER

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.

~

YOJ'u. FIMD IT !t-11!\E KllUlOI

·1872 Continenllll RV, 2811. 13,000.
304-578-2444.

UGGA

c

low to farm four words.

ARJOLI

I

Bull's eye!

1D74 Titan motorhome, 28h, 440
Dodge engine, awning, root air,
large genet'ator, $8,500. 304-6752949.

PI I

2

I 1

ANUA F

K0 CEH

~~

J

"Just remember," the grande
s
*, mother told the young girl, "life is
_ _
_ _ notalwayseasy lfyouwantrainr--------~_,bows you must···· - ·- -_"

I .I

~

~

1981 Yellowltone 35' camper/
hauaetrililer. Haa two 4' &amp;llpan -

~

doa. E11r tD pull with pickup. Ide·
al for use o" campsite, etc.
$7,000. Call 304-882·2069 ar
304-862·2247 altar 5pm.

"

~--------~~--~~OL-----~----~----~

1888 Coleman Pop- Up Camper

_,

I"

IO

VATY!C
~-.,....-,,.,7:--TI"'e:O,·~..,,.:....,..-.:j

I

~

Excellant Candldon, $2,000, 614446-4315 Aha&lt; 5:30.

V C 0 G

Z H

WOlD
'::~~;~' S©tt,~n~A-&lt;Z£trs·
GAM I
ldl.. d '!' CIAY I. POUAN
letters cf the
~~........-~.....
0 Rearrange
four Krambled words be·

queen.tl

Hl79 Coleman pop -up camper,
aink. atove, t leeps 6, new hres,
$950. 304·578-2998 aflo&lt; 6pm

HJ

JAG

VJ B

LVZIF
RPJFZY40. . '
MPCAS
IZXSH •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "l thank God for ·my handicaps. for throu'gh them. I
have1ound mysell. my work and my God."- Helen Keller.

tO squeeze East

mllllont. Alto, Caah And Carr-

3933 or 1-800-273-9329.

ZNCWZAG

in the minors."

Trantmlaolon' 814-378-2263.
New gu tanka, one ton tr.uck'
radloll&gt;rt, ftoor moll, etc. I
D I R ""'"· Ripley, WV. 304·372·

LCAAJH

XRJZIX

''No, that isn't what I mean . The
squeeze doesn't work -because you must
• discard from the dummy before East.

Johnaona Tranamlatlana And

790

'DJT

North. "But you still should have made
the contract. Why not win the second
trick'"
"A h, I see what you're getting at. I
exit with my third spade. West cashes
'· his tricks and East discards his three
f;- hearts. Bull win West's minor-suit exit

.

•

.

.

.

cho~kle

Complete the
Quoted
by folhng .n the m1U1ng words
you de&gt;~elop from step No. 3 below.
'

.

' .:'\ P~INT NUMBE~ED
\ '(;;:tO' LETTE~S IN SQUARES
0

19811 28h NoiNid, vory good condition, oleapi S. $8,500. 304-5782345.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

28 Ft: Trotwood Newly Relurblohed, Nlco $2,500, 814·245·
8441, Or Su A1 8928 Rt 588,

. . Versus · Noisy· Dandy- Limpid- DIVIDENDS

(Rodney).

••••

SERVICES

610

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the.fatheranswered, "andyou'llearngreatDIVIDENDS"

MAY 261

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nice, a2000; hand tool1, power
toolo, oxl ladd«, ouno, B14-lll2-

iz42.

.

1888 Jeep Camanche pickup
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"co Vinyl Sldlng 20% 011 Sale,
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owa,

aince, 814-:l6Hl613.

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•
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General Home Maln tenence- Painting, vinyl aiding,
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._,

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aldlng, roofing, t)lterior palndng,
power washing, lraa aallmarea,
814-892-4451.

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brand1. HauH ·calls, 1· 800·7Q7001
304-576-2386.

ASTRO -GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

s. wv

820
FINANCIAL

llliill•••lli

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

•'

lnolallallan "nd Service. EP"
Certified. Rooldenllll. Conimerclol.
014-258-1811.

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840 Eleclrleal and
Lawrance Enterprlaa• T.W. La·

wrenct. aN Ga1 Furnaces, l·P
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Furnacea. Ftee EsthNiea. If You
Don't Call Uo We Both Loael 614446·0308, 1·600·287-8308,
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new aervlw or rapaJra. Mester
canud tlec;trlclan. Ridenour

'Birtlld"ay

~-~

I

I SAGITTARIUS

(Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Mall·
ers that affect your famtly should be given
pnonty today. Put them at the top of your
agenda InStead of trytng 10 sltp them in
whenever possible
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Some ·
one you l1ke mtght come to you today for
adv1ce on a conftdential matter. The kind·

new ones is to be as stncere as posSible
with everyone.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) UneKpecled

level

shtfts and changes you hadn't counted on
m1ght transpire today to turn your weak
p,asit1or\ 1nto a strong one . Prepare to

cond1tions look· promising Jar you today.
provided you -operate '" tam111ar zones.
Any ga1ns will come from sources you've

capitalize on rt .
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Base your

previously tapped.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your best
asset today could be your talent tor solving problems . Once you come up with a
remedy, follow It all the way through to

important ~eCISions today on the practical
asp'9cts of an issue , not on its poss1blli-

est way to help thts person would be to

with

him/her.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Malerta l

...

ties . You won 't go wrong If you remam
realistic .

•, 11 will be to your advantage to build slur-

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Regardless of

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 You can pay

'"' dler foundation.s of knowledge 1n your
~ chosen field in the coming yeaf. Your
, measures to enhance your O)lpertise

the difficulties of a career challenge , you
can overcome any obstacles today if you
have the .;ourage to face them . Do not

off old obligations during this current
cycle. You may finally receive something
valuable that you're eritilled to but that

get the results you desire .

• could give you a b1g edge over others.
duck your desllny.
has been d:1'ayed.
•
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) In a compeli- ~' SCORPIO (Qcl. 24-Nov. 22) Show eKira TAURUS (&gt;(lprll 2D-Mey 201 /1 current
~e car.M!.J !tua:~of!.!g?~X·_~n't · l lp your friendliness and alt~~~~- t~L~l.t!.L!'-~9"'. .,. ~ndeavor may not seem
i 1
it
hand ~rert~ahj[ely. Lelthe others_play elates today . Someone you become - -has ·more positive aspects
their cards UrSt and then trump thern . chummy with m1ght lead you to some· ones. W1th a few sl ighl adju stments , il
_ Dyjng__(o J&gt;_alch__!!Q_ a br!)MllJ:l1__m~a_ce? lhinR wgnbw.Mei
could become bperational.
1

Electrical. WV000308, 30~·675~-

(.'ti
0Uf

Saturday, May 27, 1995

Refrigeration

,..,_

tn a mode to bu1ld rnendshtps The secret
to improving relationshlps ·and .acquiring

._.

FrHmBn'a Heating And Cooling.

~ ~ -'
.

The Aslro-Graph Malchmaker can help
you unde'rstand what to do to make the
relationship work Mail $2 .75 to
Matclmaker , c/o thiS newspaper . P.O.
BoK 4465 , New York. NY 10163 .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You wrll be

I

•t ..

I...

,....._:.........

- - -

j-

•

•

---

•

••

�Pomeroy • Mlddlepolt,- otilo

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

· }tllcmorlal Da11:

ONOR HOSE

A time for
remembering

Thunderstorms
possible today

-FMtured on page B-1

ONOR HOSE HO lED N

xm.es -

I

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

•

•

Middleport Trophie~ &amp; .Tees

King Hardware
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply. Ingels Furniture and .J
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

The Shoe Pla·ce and Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5144

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Home National Bank
RACINE
949·2210

SYRACUSE

CHESTER, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121

Downing·Childs·Mullen·Musser
Insurance ·
992·2342

'

.992~2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Veterans
Hospital
992·2104

'

OHIO

992·2975
POMEROY, OHIO

Crow's Family Restaurant
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO.

The Daily Se~tinel
992·2155

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy.
OHIO

Swisher &amp; Lohse P.harmacy
POMEROY, OHIO

Williams &amp; Associates
Insurance
POMEROY, OHIO

I
,

OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Adolph's Dairy Valley

y 992·2955

MIDDLEPORT~

GRAVELY TRActOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO

•

I

985·3301

Ewing Funeral Home

992·3985

.

992·6128

Bau

992·6533

Ridenour Supply
985·3308

992·2635

,_Iller

'lie ~~me,. o1 tiM Unltlld stdli H - of R.,.
_ , . _ ,..,_,eta. }olrlil4
Frlt»y
PrNident Clinton Ullintl him to
-.ld« 11M~ on bal8llelng the ~t. ·
,.mb«•, Including Frank Ci'eme•n•, R0./llpoll(l, elreaed ft»lmportatreeotlhe
and •XJII •••"' thelrwllllnglllla to worlc with him 11
he would rwfhlnlt
cu,.,.,t poe/lion.
·

'

_,..,. •,.,_,to

-111'8

h,.

·w. muM not ,., w. oppottimlty p8A .,. by,.

balancing the budget by 2002, bargainers frol)l both
IMp. Cl•m- Nld. "Thlal• far too IIIJPOfUnl ftx
chambers must resolve.differences.
lire fUIUIW of our llllt/on to p/lly PMflun polll/u
with II..
'
.
They'll begin after next week's Memorial Day recess
and hope Congress will approve the measure - which
does not need President Clinton's signature- by late the federal government
But when the Senate completed its own budgel-balancJune.
ing
road map Thursday. its plan lacked immediate tax
Differences loom over defense .spending. Medicare.
Medicaid and other programs. But the most im'portant reductions. underscoring the dominance of the champer's
. more deficit-wary elders. Instead, the plan promised $170
discrepancy is over tax cuts,
The House included a se ven-year, $350 billion tax billion in lower levies, but only if the government reaps
reduction for families and businesses in the budget it that amount in extra savings from eliminating the deficit.
"It is tbe most imponantarea we have to focus on ... said
app1;0ved May 18. That reflected the dominance of Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and other conservatives who see House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, Rtax cuts as the "crown jewel'' of their effons to remake Ohio.

Because of .the political emphasis given to tax cu ts by
many Republicans -. mcludmg Senate Majori1y Leader
Bob Dole. a prestdenttal candidate- it's cenain that lhe
House-Senate compromise will include some form ofta•
cuts. probably somewhere between lhe two ligur"'.
. But the House budget signaled the reductions it prefe",
mcludmg a $500 tax credtt for children in families earning
less than $200,000 annually; reducing the capital gains 13,
rate on pro fils from propeny sales and enlarging busine'"
writeoffs for new equipment
The Senate budget contained no specitlcs. Bu1 Dole c;a 1d
he '!'ould light fortax credits for children, expanded 1RAs.
a capital gains taxcutand
other items.
• Differences loom
The battle lines between the two are already
over defense spendforming. On Thursday.
Mcintosh. Rep. Sam lng, Medica,,, MedJohnson. R-Texas,and 77 Icaid and other proolher House Republicans
wrote Gingrich, c;aying grams. But the most
, they would vote against
important discrepany co mpromi se that
"significanlly dimin - ancyisovertaxcuts.
ishes'' the House tax cul.

Mental health Gallia County veterans prepare to-observe Officials outline
.service lays
Day·with monument dedication-: status of road,
·o ff workers · Memorial
By KEVIN KELLY
_ _ _ _ _ _ _--,1 b •d
•

A SALUTE TO THOSE
WHO GAVE THEIR
LIVES TO PRESERVE
OUR FREEDOM

T'IIT'iT

'

WASHINGTON (AP)- House and Senate Republi-..
cans face a struggle over tax' cuts as they prepare to craft
a compromise plan foreliminating the federardeficit. And
to Democrats who believe the GOP always marches in
lockstep, take heed.
"Unfortunately, the Senate reflects the old way of
thinking, ·and that probably reflect• the factthatthey had
~ery little turnover last year bet ause only one-third of
them were up for re-election.'' said freshman Rep. David
, Mcintosh. R-Ind.
· " I'd bC disturbed, deeply disturbed," said Sen. John
Chafee, R-R.I., when asked his reaction should the House
tax package prevail.
.
Now that the House and Senate have approved plans for

This Memorial Day, we would like to pay tribute to the
many brave men and women who have given their lives
to uphold and protect our country~ ideals.

992·5020

J

Vol. 30, No. 16

Freshmen send letter to Clinton

Taxes loom as most sensitive
hurdle fdtr compromise budget

Those Who Have Given Their Lives
To Preserve America~ Freedom

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- May 28, 1995

GOP tax cut battle:

.. •

992·3322

Details
on PageA2

•

(

Dairy Queen Brazier

HI: 70s·
Low: 60s

992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Farmers Bank
"YOUR BANK FOR LIFE"
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS
. 949·2136

Ridenour TV &amp; Appliance
. 985·3307

CHESTER, OHIO

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A local mental
health ,service has laid off 17 employees as it shifts achildrer.:s treatment program from in-house to inhorne treatment. And not all of the
workers will be rehired:
"Some of those can be called back,
some cannot," said · Dr. Bernard
Niehm. director of Woodland Centers. Inc.
Many of the laid-off employees
had caretaking responsibilities related to the children staying anhe
Children 's Residential Treatment
Program facility. Since the switch
emphasizes at-home and out-patient
care. those Services will not longer
be needed, Niehm explained,
_ The employees received layoff
notices Thursday and Friday. ,.
It is too earlier to tell how many
will be asked back, he added. Many
are already applying for positions
"'ith the new program.
The change was initiated after the
center learned the CRTP would not
be funded next year.
Niehm said the 317 Board, which
handles Woodland's funding. felt
lhe program was not being ulilized
enough to justify the expense.
The board is more interested in
funding the new program proposal,
he added .
. "In temis of children and family,
this new service will have more
~mphasi s on treatment of the whole
family," Niehm said. Unlike the
Cfi,TP's patienls, the new program
will leave the child in the home
environment and work with solving
problems within the family. not just
the individuaL
Continued on page A2
.

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

n~~·L~~g~~~StaffGallia County

~.

veterans will
have another reason to celebrate Memorial Day
when they dedicate a monument commemorating
thecontributlons ofevery co~nty resident who served
in wartime,
The ceremony will follow the annual Memorial
Day observation in the City Park at II a,rn. Monday.
Finishing touches were put on the monument last
week. although James Saunder~ oftheGallia County
Veterans Association said the task of adding more
names lo the monument 's black marble panels wi II
continue.
The four-foot-high
structure. funded by

..

donations from vel-

erans and other orga,nizations, sUrrounds
the Doughboy Manument and contains.
panels bearing the
name s of Galli a
coun1ians who served
in every conflict from

WorldWarltoDe~

1---"'"

Storm. The p· els
FINISHING TOUCHES- Jerry Mullett, left, and Jim McKinley of Chet Baker
h
. &amp; Co., Canal Winchester, placed a marble top on the rim ol the Gall Ia Cou!lty
eac carry app xt- Veterans Monument In the City Park In the above photo, while atlefl, McKinley
malely I50 names.
works on the top near a panel bearing veterans' names. The monument will
In addition, bricks be dedicated Monday.
carrying individual
l
names are thebaseoftheDoughboy. needed to remind the public of veteran s con1ributions.
Saunders explained.
Opposition to adding more memorials in the park by ihe City
About 2.000 names are yet to be Commission and the Gallipolis Park Board prompted veterans 10
.
inscribed . Saunders said, partly be- putthe issue before volers in a May 1991 referendum. The issue was
cause 'not all veterans' names were submitted in time for the approved by a large plurality and the association spent the next three
dedication, During Monday's ce remony. a table will be set up for years raising [he $83.000 required to build the memorial.
people to supply their names, and names will continue to be
Approval of the memorial's de sign last falf allo wed
accepted until early ·October. he added,
.
grou ndbreaking lo proceed on Ve.terans Day, The general contnrc"We wanted to try to get everyone who se rved. especially 1hose tor on the job was. AOK Builders Inc.. Cheshire. owned by Paul
who didn't have to go overseas." Saunders said,
Knox. also a ve teran.
·
The dedication marks the end of a rocky path for the monument.
Veterans raised mote I han $120.000 in donations and will use the
·conceived by Sau nde rs and Bob Barcus.six years ago as a means remaining fund s lo. maintain Ihe memorial as well as add more
of keeping faith with the sacrifices made by local veterans.
names. Sau nders said. '
Saunders said the Rus se ll Memorial in the south endoflhe park
"We wanl to impress.on p~~pk thatthis is not finished- there
was incomplete and veterans felt a more fitting memorial was will be more names added." he said.
.

-

Meigs selects industrial site
By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Meigs County officials have given a Tuppers Plains site top
priority for potential industrial developnlent.
All of the potential development sites considered would,llave lower. startup costs than th e Great Bend site. sa id Ron Schuhz of Burgess &amp; Niple ,in
Parkersburg, W.Va: Great Bend has been the long term preterred mdustnal
si te .

News capsules

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Stall
.
Meigs County highway officials oUIIJ ned road and bridge
work that has been completed and remain' ahead at Friday ·,
Meigs County ·
Board ofCommis- liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=====
sioners meeting.
Disaster assistance ...
More than ,$3
million in damage
COLUMBUS- Vlctlmaollloodhas been attributed lng In Meigs County will be ell·
glble for low-Interest recovery
10 nash nooding
two weeks ago, of- loans.
The Small BuslnHI Adinlnlsficial&gt; said.
tratlon
on Thursday decl•red ft»
County road.
county
area becauiie ot
bridge and culvert floodinga disaster
May 13·14.
damage was estiThe toana also will be available
mated at more than to residents In Gallla, VInton lind
$686.493. said Athena counties who were afDavid Spencer of fected by the flooding.
the Meigs County
Gov. George Volnovlch had
Engineer's office. asked the SBA to examine the
The Ohio Army damage In Meigs County.
Temporary SBA offices will be
National Guard
activated about 30 set up within the next few days.
be
M ·
mem rs to e•gs
County last Friday 10 help clear debris and roads and
townships assess damage .
The .Civilian Conservation Corps helped with assessments. road and bridge work. The Ohio Depanment or ,
Tmnsportation provided crews and equipment for more ,
than four days.
"We got total cooperalion from all the agencies." Spencer satd,
The nal1onal guard &lt;pread 220 tons of large stones. 5S
tons of pit run and 3.4ton, of tly ash.
The guard completed "ork on the foll'?wing lownship
roads: bank and cu lven repatr, Che,ter T.ownship Road
11 2: culvert pipe. Salisbur; Town&lt;hip Road 27A: bridge
repair. Salem Township Rllad I5: pipe repair. Sulton Township Road 124: culver! rep;ur. Salem Township Road 34:
and bridge repair, Sal"bur~ io"n,hip Road 165 ,
'\
· The CCC .worked on County Roads 12. 4 and 13. 3 1ong
wtth OD0~1e CCC al"' p1cled up debm in Rutland
Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING

•

Philip Morris recalls up to
88 cigarettes, cites filters
NEW YORK(APl- Philip MatTis USA halted sales of
many cigarette brands Friday. including versions of lop
selling Marlboro. and dispatched legions of sales representatives 10 collect up to 8 bi Ilion possibly tainted cigarettes.
The nation's biggest tobacco company said "a small
percentage" of filters was contaminated and it doubted
any reached the public, bul could not be sure.
With the tobacco industry under intense pressure over
the health effects of smoking, the company decided on a
sweeping pre-emptive strike that could deny millions of
smokers their favored brands for at least several days.
· The contamination could cause smokers such ,•'lempomry discomfort" as eye. nose and throal irritation. dtwness. coughing and wheezing or just leave a bad taste in the
mouth, the company said.
'
· A prominent tobacco critic called the recall absurd ,
"A company that makes products that are lethal and
responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths 111 the
United States a year seems suddenly to have laken an
interest in a lillie dizziness, '· said Dr. Alan Blum of the'
l3aylor College o~edicine in Houston.
·
The recall affected 36 package styles. including 1he
Marlboro red box. Marlboro soft pack and gold box and

rl ge repairS

Today's

Times-Sentinel

16 Se&lt;lions- 174 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classitieds
Comics ·
Editorial&gt;
Local
Obituaries
Spot'!$
Along the River
Weather

.

Dl
83&amp;6
03-7
Insert

The Tuppers Plains sile- about60 acres- has a gently rolling terrain. the
loca1ion has a 10-inch water main right at Slate Rou1e 7. That size pipe could
accommodate fire protection and. regular use. ·
.
1\4
Sewer systems currently aren't availab le, but should be ready by the fall of
1996, Schultz said. Three-phase power is on-si le. and it is just four miles from
A3
a four-lane highway.
. .
.
A5
The site is 400 feet from state Route 7 and 1.000 feel from Stale Rou14 681,
Cl-6
west and south of the Tuppers Plains crossroads. owner George Collins said.
"I feel we have a favorable price for the site." Horace Karr said.
Bl
·An environmental asse,\s ment will determine if Qi l and storage tanks have
A2
contaminated the property . Sawdust remains on the site from the former Ohio
Manufacturing Co., a pallet company. with some farm land also on the
"'
properly, Collins said.
gold soft packs of Marlboro I 00'&gt;. Marlboro Light•
Columns
South ofthis site, large amounts of developable land are available, according
and Marlboro Lights IOO's. It abo incl~ded vanou'
, to Collins.
.
packs of Virginia Slims. Benson &amp; Hedges. Merit.
Jack Anderson
A4
''There's a pot'ential for some real jobs," he said. "ll's within 25 minutes of
Cambridge and Basic.
.
Fred
Crow
M
At~ens and Parkersburg. Tuppers Plains has tremendous growth polential."
Spokeswoman Karen Derr1gan the company e~­
Bob
H!lfflith
87
The officials chose the site over three other sites:
pects up to 8 bilhon cigarette' may be returned. nr 4
Jim Sands
• !55-acre property near State Route 32. owned by Denny Facemyer, This
percent of the annual U.S, production nf 220 billion
Ill
;ite had slopes at more I han 20 percent grades, water not available on site. bul
cigarettes. The recall doesn't invohe tigareues sold
a six-inch water main is located two miles away. Sewer is not on-site,)"!lile
overseas. ·
three-phase electricity is not available.
·
• 80-acre property near Flatwoods Road. owned by Patty Pickens. The site
has access to a five-inch water line from Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District. An eight-inch line is located about 3,500 feet away. Sewer and threeWASHINGTON (AP) -The Clinton administration rejected Japan's lions slilrted quickly to. clear the way For an early deci"on from the Genevaphase electricity are not avhilable. Access could be from County Road 26. This
request for urgent talks on lheircontentious aula trade dispute Friday. saying based World Trade Orgamzalion.
was the nauest site:
•
it would .be belterto wait until,about a week before America·, punitive tariffs
Now. Japan· s case will be handled under normal WTO rules. whiCh mean'
, 20-acre property near State Route 124 in Sutton Township, owned by Paul . take effect.
that a final resolution could take a year or more. allowtng the U,S. sanctton•
Thaxton, This site has a rolling terrain. but much has more than 20·percent
U.S, Tmde Representative Mickey Kantor suggested ip a letter to the agamsl 13 models of Jai)ane'e lu,ury cars to remain in effect.
slopes. A four-inch water line is available on-site. but sewer an.d eleclricity , Japanese that both sides meet beginning June 20 in W.ashinglon. The tariffs
The enure d"pule o'er the tunmg of talks"'"' ju&gt;t the lale't high-tension
acces.rlif!Timife(["SeweHould be-hOQked on to Racine.
-·-- · --- -- ;1&gt;f 100 perceni on$5.0-binion..wortb of)apan~se luxury autos a_~,S.C.be&lt;Wied . maneuvering between the tw:o nauons over the auto.issue. Before Kantor's
"The Facemyer and Pickens sites have some attracti,ve parts, but you· d have
to take effect June 28.
a~;oluiceuienf. Secretary of Stan: Wal'ren'ChnS!opher met Wtth Japan's
more loops to close," S_chultuaid.
.
The U.S.. ann6uncement was a rebuff to a Jaeanese effort 10 get consulta- ambassador to the United States .. Tak!ILu Murayama.
7
-· ~
·
ConilnUi&lt;l on pilJI' A2
- - - - - ~;;;;;;;;;;;::_~~~~~~:;:;;;~~:::;;;;;::;:;;;~;;;:;:o;;;o,:;.._ _,;._________.....,..,;,=,.....,._...:...____...;__~J

.

United States rejects Japan's proposed May auto talks, suggests June

•

.
'

'

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30634">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30633">
              <text>May 26, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>beegle</name>
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    <tag tagId="5956">
      <name>brabham</name>
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    <tag tagId="1059">
      <name>parsons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1122">
      <name>pooler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6240">
      <name>zink</name>
    </tag>
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</item>
