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· ·o hio Lottery

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Rockies
humble··

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Pick 3:

808

.· Pick 4:
0190
Buckeye 5: ·
1-5-17-25-27

Red.13·2·
SpomonPage4

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' 47, NO. 237
~01M,
Ohio Vll!ey Publlelllng ComPIIIIY
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40s .

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Cloudy tonlaht, low In
the lo-r 30s. Wednesday,
pertly 'cloudy, high ln. mfd .

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Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, AprilS, 1997

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~yracuse to benefit

from $70J~oo grant

Section, 10 P8gM, 31 centa
.A O.nMit Co. New I; i II

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Flood escape route improvement planned
Jl\l JIM FREEMAN .

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Residents
feel road
conditions
~angerous

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S.ntinel News Staff
: Residents of.the village of Syracuse will be the beneficiaries of a
. $'70,000 granttp1repair a flood route
serving the Ohjo RiV&lt;11' community.
_ Governor George V. Voinovich
announced Monday afternoon thai
· the village will receive the grant from
the Small Cities Community Develi&gt;Jl!llent Block Grant Imminent Threat
Set-Aside Fund.
·
When the Ohio River comes up,
residents of the village of Syracuse
~tfa often isolated. Water covers state

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Route 124 -- both. upstream and of Syracuse to use during future
downstream of the village .. le'aving floods .
'
.
residents with only one way in or out,
"Through the CDBG Imminent
' Roy Jones Roaq,.connec ting the vii- . Thte~t Set-Aside program, we are
!age to other roads in the counly high- able to assist communiti~s in tlleir
way system.
.
efforts in alleviate .potentially life
The problem is the road receives threatening situations due to natural
more traffic than it can bear during- • effons," Voinovich said. "I want to
times of flooding_,according to c~un- encourage the counties affec1ed by
ty htgh":'ay offtctals.
,
the recent flooding in southern Ohio
Admmtsteredby the Oh1o Depan- to work with the Department of
ment of Development's Community Development to determine .if funds
Development Division, the funds from this program can assist in prewill be used to rebuild 11,510 feet of venting future devastation." ·
roadway to .provide an emergency
In 1996, many communities along
route for the residents_of the village the Ohio River experienced severe

I

Sentinel New• Staff
:.' :The condition of the road and,
9hches on Pleasant Ridge' were ·
bniught to the attention of Pomerqy
Yitlage Council' at their regular meel~'
!till Monday night.
· ·
- ... A delegation of seven residents of
the neighborhood, led 'by Oiane
b 'owles, say' that erosion and poor
have·caused the pavement in
to crack, making

5spd, V6, power steering, 4wheel anti.
lock brakes, As Low As•••

and ·
essary to' cur(l\il visits to the
two residents said that the fel.t their ·
horses and horse barns were in dan~r because of ROtential slips.
Councilman Bill Young said thathe, Mayor Vqughan and several otl!:!=r council members had inspected tli'i!
site, and .that he felt new drainage
pipe and culverts could alleviate
many ofthe probleni's. It was recomptende~ that the County Engineer be

Pleaaent weather has given workers an
· opportunity' to do more work on the Racine
branch of the Meigs County Public Library

~~~~~~~p:i~Inspectthe area and Minnesota flooding

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OlDSMOBILE•

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, The residents also r~quested water.
service through the village. Mayor
frank Vaughan indicated that water
servi~ in the Pleasant Ridge area
would be a prioriiy as soon as the
new water lsupply was in place.
: ·Clerk K;tthy Hys_ell reponed that
funding fot !load-related slips and
drainage problems due to Marclr.
f}Ooding is being· approved through
the 'Federal Emergency Management
Agency. FEMA's Damage Survey ·
Repairs program will provide fedei.'
.
.
al ~d state fundmg f~r mstallauo~ of
prlmg and r~tatmng walls on Wtlhs
HI Hand ·Legton Terrac_
M · e , sas well as da.
l •' f·t statton
on
'-' ·
k Matn
lb treet
A · an
.vramage wor \)n u erry venue.
'· • • C9uncil'apprpved the• pur~hase of
..aC new telep~oThne sys temh from G~L
. ontracung. e te 1ep one system,
· ' th · 1 h
t'
·11
stx te ep one sta 10ns, wt cost
"" 275 1 $600 f ·
11 ·
.., t,
, p us
or msta au on:
;{lt_e system, which will be installed
~
k 'II 11
h 'II
. ~~~xt wee , WI a ow t e vt age to
.
d 1·
'
h
I'
· a secon me 10r t e po tee
"'uc:partment.
, Gary Bates of Pomeroy, who will
~I and install the system;
said that
.
!he cost through him ts approximate- ·
ly .one-third to one-half of the cost of
.1!uying the sanie system through
(lTE North:
'
.
~: Bids were opened for a new truck
for ·the village water depanment. Bids
tor purc.hase and lease were received
!ftam Don Tate Motors of Pomeroy,
and a bid for purchase was received
fnlm Tri-County Ford in Middleport.
· •Council vo1ed to lease a truck for
S.414.67 per month, wilh Councilman
John Musser voting against the
)notion.
• No action was taken on estimates
~PF a new heating and air condition· · l111i system for the· fir~t tloor and a
· JIC)" fumaceforthe auditorium in~
m•nicipal building. Estimates were
'\-eceived from Warner Heating and
~ling of Chester and Foreman and
2'\bboll of Middleport. It · was sugjested th~tt a representative of the
~ies be invited to the next
t::Ottncil meeting to disc~ss their estipates.
. : ' ·Council members Oeri Wa.lton
s,ou Dillon inquired 'abput
:: , COIItiDIIed OD pap 3
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Funds begin to arrive
for county road repairs

.-------.pLibrary work-----.

Bj BRIAN J. REED

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IS Package, 5spd, }lQ\Vel' steering, abunimJOJ
wheek, air, AMIFM cassdte, As Low As...

has been working on th&lt;&gt; Roy Jones
flooding resul1ing in the declaration essary corrections.
Road improvement project since'the
Plans
call
for
the
county
highway
ot a Presidential Federal Disaster. It
Ohio
.River flood in January, 1996,
was determined that mitigation department to put about·two inches of
efforts should focus on Roy Jones hot mix on the road, accoroing ·w according to Spencer.
"The flood that took place in
Road to provide residents of Syracuse Meigs County Highway Department
March
is an example of what we iried ·
office
manager
Dave
.Spencer.
with an emerge~cy route during
The
pavement
will
likely
extend
to tell everyone about in January,
times of flooding , according to the
from Bridgeman Street in Syracuse to I996," he said.
Governor.
To date, the highway department
The CDBG Imminent Threat Set- Forest Run Road.
has
worked some on the road, stabiSpencer
said
·the
project
is
curAside is designed to alleviate threats
rently
in
the
environmental
phase
and
lizing
the base and making repairs to
to public health and safety that
require immedillle'resolution. Immi- that construction will likely take .make It suitable for the application of
·
nent threat grants are not meant to place between Jurie and 'the end of hot mix.
·
'.'This is going to make it a much
substantially upgrade the conditions August.
County Engineer Robert Eason better ~oad;" he said.
·
of an area, but are designed to mitigate an emergency situation with nee-

which Is currently under constructlo('l. Workers
with Home Creek Enterprises, Pomeroy, work
roof the library building.

· progresses.
/By BRIAN J. REED
Tho5e projects which have ·
Sentinel News Staff
Federal and state funding to repair received funding to date. are: $27,652
slips on county roads and other for a slip repair on County Road 40
tlood-related damage is beginning to . (Burlingham), including wearing surarrive in the county, according to face of roadway; $5,067 for repair of
David Spencer, Administrative_Assis- a si~khole on Cpunty Road 28 (Apple .
tant for the Meigs County Highway Grove-Dorcas); $.13,788 for slip
repair on County. Road 29 (Bowman's ·
·
Department. ·
'
Spen'cer announced the funding at Run); $26,124 for slip repair on
Monday's regular meeting of the County Road. 44 (Coolville Road);
Sil,790 for slip repair on County
Meigs Couiuy Commissioners.
Damage Survey Repairs are pro- . Road 14 (Wolfe l'en).
The county also received funds
jects funded at 75 percent by the F!lderal Emergency Management Agency through the D.S.R. program to recovand 25 percent by the Ohio Emer- er the costs of transporting and hous. gency Management Agency. The · ing prisoners from the Meigs Counfunds w.iU be .used mainly for sljp ty Jail'- at other facilities while 'the ; •
repairs on county roads. Road base · co~nty jail was closed.
' , ·.
· repair of roadways, ditch repair, and .
Ad.ministrative costs of,$ Z,482 on ·'
repair of bank failures will also get these projects will be paid, as w.ell.
underway now that funding has been
The commissioners approved bids ·
approved.
for
aggregate products for the year
Spencer said after the meeting that
.this is mily the beginning of D.S .R. from Richards and Sons of Racine
project funding in Meigs County. He and Jaymar, Inc., of Cheshire, and
estimates
that
approximately asphalt and concrete bids fro.m
$400,000 will be received for 50 Richards ·and So·ns.
Continued on p111e 3
. D.S.R. projects as the repair seasori

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sa,id worst in decad_es Town.
meeting_ on s.chool
d
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A I 14

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ADA, Minn. (AP) - On the, dry formed barren sheets of wh1te to the
end of town , restdcnts sJambered honz?n.
. . .. . .
aboard buses, personnel earners and
. Seve.re cold contmued brmgmg
Jeeps, headmg south ·t.o dryness .. Four m~sery to the rcgwn . overmght. In
blocks away, a souped-up . ptckup D1ckmson, N.D., the temperature
pl&lt;?ddm~ th~ollgh htp -de~p tee and fell to 7 be.'ow zero degree early
water Y.!e)dei:l at a stop sign - to a today, smashmg the ?ld record f~r t~e
rowsbo~t.
f
.
date of 3 above set m 1948, while m
aowll w.ent mu_ch o Monday ~~ · Mmneapohs-St. Paul, .11 was II
Ad . hose locatton at the ~on flu deg_rees, breaking the reading"'f 16
ence of_two swoll~n western Mm- set m 1923. Record lows_for the date
nesota nvers made II an mopportune alsb .were rec.orded m Btsmarck, and
place to be . With the Red River ris- .· Wtlhston, N.J?.; Aberde~n a_nd Stoux
ing to alarming levels today, there Falls, S.D., St. Cloud, Mmn., andEilu ·
will be more such communities soon. . Clatre, Wis.
.
" Blizzards
and
floods.
You
can
Ada,
one
of
the
hardest-hll
areas,
·
handle one or the other, but when is growing .increasingly desolate - ~ .
theY. both come at the same time, even staunch ~oldouts leave thts
what do you do? " said an exhausted. small town 35 miles northeast of FarArvid Ambuehl, an Ada farmer . go,_ N.D. On _Monday afterno_on, Pfc.
spending tl)e night at a school' turned- Kenh . Nordtck of. the Mm_nesota
shelter in Borup, eight miles south.
National Guard knocked hts . way
Across the high plains, rising down a hst of doors - Clltzens
rivers and blistering winds delivered who 'd gmie three days without elec,._
h
a one-two punc to emergency work' tricity, phone or runni_ng water.
b'
·
'd
be h
ers attling floodmg sat to
l e
. "You wonder what goes through
region's worst.in decades. Fields in p~ople 's minds. If t~e water was hipwestern Minnesota, locked in ice, . pmg·up my steps. -I d want to get out
·

as soon as I c~uld," said a windwhtpped Nordlck , a. 25 -year-old
. resemst. At one p.omt, even h1s
vchtcle got stuck.
.
.
..Along the north·fi(Jwtng Red Rtver, whtch separates Mmnesota Irom
North Dakota, even worse water
overflow from snowmelt was expected Thursday and Fnday.
. "Everythingpred_icted for theRe~
ts _a llood of h1stonc propomons,
said Mark Seele~, a chm~tologlst
wtth the Umversny of Mmnesota
Extensmn Serv!ce.
.
. In central Mmnesota, flood warnk
mgs were outf for the_n.ext twoh we~.
M s
along pans o . three_rivers - t e . m- ·
nesota, M1sstsstpp1 and St. CroiX.

fun 1ng

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ateu
prl

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A. town meeting addressing the and John Costanzo. Supervisor for
issue of equity in school funding will the Meigs County Educational Serbe held . on Monday, Ap(il 14, at 7 vice Center (formerly the Meigs
p.m. at Meigs High School. The pur- County Board of Education).
pose of the non-partisan , open pubThe moderator will be Bob Ord,
lie ·meeting is.to discuss the equity in retired Superintendent of the So!'thfunding for all of Meigs County's ern Local School District in Meigs
schools
.
County.
Acc~rding 10 Jeanne Bowen, a
The committee has prepared quosmember of the meeting's steering lions about school finance in Ohio
committee, there are great differences arid the possiblities for change,.espein the ' level of funding per pupil cially in Meigs County, now· that the
among school districts, and this . Supreme Court has .macle its ruling,
l·neq ul'tY was the bast's of the recent Bowen said. The panelists will dislawsu1·1 'DeRolph vs Oht'o and the . cuss these questions; and members of·
ruling J~st week by th~ Ohio 'supreme the audience will be given an opporc~urt directing a change in school tunity 10 ask questions as well .
financing in the state .
·
"This is a high -profile panel,
·x
pe•ple
There was no quick way to gauge
s
have
agreed
st
'
t
on
·
10
1
·
· h b
v
mcluding the director of'the Equity
how bad the 11 oodmg mtg t ecome the panel ·. State Representatt' ve John
Oh'
·
oalition, two
to lawmakers, and
once the snow melts. Seeley satd 4 to Carey, R-Wellston ; State Senator the president of the State Board of
5 inches of heavy, late-season snow , Mt'chael Shoetnaker '"'-Boumevt' lle ·
•u
• Education," Bowen· said, "and the
could equal an inch of rain ..
Wt'III'am Pht' llis Execut1've Dt' rectorof E · c ,. ·
'II
k
bl' ·
Th
tl · d'
h
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qutty oa Ilmn WI rna e pu tc ns
at year, oo mg across t e ·the Oh1·0 Coalt' lion for Equi·ly and
M·.d
bl
d f 48 d th
recol!lmendations for school funding
• west was arne or
ea s Adequacy ; JennNrt Sheets, Pomeroy the next day in Columbus."
and $10 billion in 'damage in nine· Attorney and President of the Ohio
The school boards of all three
states.
,
State Board ofEducat 1' on ·, Paul Reed local districts and the Educational
o( Farmers Bank, representing the s
· c
h
' ~eve
.Meigs County busine,ss community; erVICe enter ave endorsed the
I"
meetmg .
CLEVELAND (AP) - Finan-' Y&lt;iungstOWij district has borrowed Richard Jordan of the school man•
cially struggling urban school dis- $25 million f•9m the state in the past agement assistance office.
tricts could save millions of dollars if three years.
Susan Tavakolian, director of
they were eligible for the same lowTheir fiscal emergency status school finance with the state ,
Motorists sootr will be legally western corporation limit of Belpre
interest state loans that expanding means spending decisions must be acknowledged the . disparity in the .
entitled
to drive five miles per hour near the Farson Street intersection '
.businesses receive, teacher unions approved by a combined state-local interest rates but saill she could not
faster on portions of the Appalachi- just north of Coolville near the Hocksaid.
oversight board.
comment on the fairness of the issue
an Highway. according 10 the Ohio ing River crossing in Athens CounSchools in Cleveland and
· At the same time, the unions said, because the interest rates were a pol,
ty. The speed limit wiU remain at 55
Yqungstown _ both declared in a Ohio's public school distncts have - icy matter.
• Department of Transporthtion.
on
the Appalachian Highway from
ODOT
has
decided
to
increase
the
state \lf fiscal emergency last fall and paid up to 7 .33 percent for bank loans
Gov.
George
Voinovich
just
north of Coolville to \he western
55 mil~ per hour speed limit to 60 on
put under strict state financial. super- guaranteed ·by the state.
.
spokesman Mike Dawson said the
corporation
limit of the city of
nearly 137 miles of th' Appalachian
vision _ would save a combined $10
. The unions . cited state-backed programs are different.,
.
Highway . . The new 60 mph speed Athens. This section of roadway · is
million a y~ar in interest with d~vel- development and school loans from
· ''One is administered by the state
zone
will i'nclud~ portions of the currently un~er constru,ction. The 45
opment-t~pe interest rates, the unions i993-96 and a no-interest. $10 mil- and the other between local school
sald. .. ·
,
lion loan to Cleveland's Gateway dist~icts and local banks," bawson highway in Clermont, Brown, High- mph zone that extends · li:_om the
President John Senzarin of the sports complex this year. They said. "It would requi~;e changing !he land;·Adams, Pike, Jackson, Vinton, western Athens corporation limit to
Athens. Meigs and Was~ington coun- near Athens County Road 17, will he
Youngstown Education Association released .figures showing develop- Jaw, and I think legislators would
ties.
· increased to 55. ·
and Richard A. DeColibus, president mentloans with rates up to 4 percent have a lot of questions about how
ODOT officials cannot indicate at
The speed limit will be increased
of the Cleveland Teachers Union, or no interest at all, and school loans those school districts got themselves
thi
s
time when the speed limit
said M!lnday the sune routinely with interest rates from 5.75 percent into debt before they would be inter- Io 60 mph from Front Wheel Drive in
Clermont County · through Brown, increases will take place. In Adams,
makes low- ·and no-interest loans to IO 7.33 percent.
·
,
ested ill refinancing their,loans. " .
businesses.
The Ohio Department of'EducaThe state has approved $14 mtl- Highland, Adams , Pike, Jackson, Brown. Pike imd Jackson counties,
The 72,000-student Cleveland dis- tion said . the disparity, at least for lion in emergency school loans this Vinton and Meigs counties to near approximately 60 new speed limit
tdct has a 152 million.debt and was , !996 and 1997. wasn 't that large. year and has $240 million outstand- County Road 17 in Athens County. signs have been erected, but the new
put under state control by a judge ii\ This year's school loan rates range ing in loansmadc( to 37 districts since The speed limit will also increase to speed limit wi'l not go into effect
60 in Washington County .from the until the signs have.been uncovered.
1995 .
The
I2,QOO-studcnt · from 4.03 pcr,cnt to 6 percent. 'said ' 1991 , Jbrdan said .

Teach_ers reque.st.'loan,s af .,.,

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Ionmen f ra ,es
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Speed limit to be increased on
portions of Appa_lachian Highway

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Tu11dlly, April a, 1117

•

fomlneqtarr ..

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MICH.

'It's
tax-time
blues
for
working
wives
Tb~ Daily Sentinel
'£sttJMlslid in J.!J48
111 COUit Strwt, Pomwoy, Ohio
814 882-2156 O'fU 1112•2157

ROBERT L. WINGm

Publllher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenll . . . . . .

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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ottapli:8.

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Ill: , _ Ill IMIE-, llle S.Jii... Iff COo&amp;t Sr., - - CHilo
467lt; OJ; fiU Ill ll"'ff!N157.

or-. -

In recent years, conservative
First, there is the system of joint
groups have groused that married . fihng for mamed couples. Like most
couples pay a penalty at tax time. But married women, Elizabeth and Susan
a powerful new book by Edward J made less than their husbands, so
McCaffery, "Taxing Women" (University of Chtcago Press), shows I!ow
the so-callcil mamage penalty is
r'eally a second-earner penalty and, by from the accountants' point of vtew
extensiOn, a penalty on "orking they were secondary earners. Their
wives.
incomes were taxed on top of their
McCaffery,11ft professor of law at husband 's, and thus in a much highthe Umverstty of Southern California , er bracket. "(The wtfe's) first dollar
and the California Institute of Tech- of salary ts taxed in the bracket where
, nology, begins his book wtth the real- the husband's salary has lert her,"
life examples of two working women writes McCaffery
who gave up their careers for tax purElizabeth and Susan's next prot..
poses. Elizabeth left her $16,000-a- lem was Social Secunty. When Social
year JOb as a magazine editor after Security was first tmplemented t!) the
her accountant showed ber that her 1930s, the system was mtended to
job was actually LOSING money for dtscourage marned women from
the family. Susan made $40;000 a working outside the home, and the
year workmg for a utility company, bastes of this system have not
but after a frank talk with her accoun- changed. Pnmary and secondary
tant, she realized she was only taktng earners pay the same tax -- 7.65 per_ home about $3,500 in real mcome. 1 cent -- but recetve dtfferent benefits.
How could this happen? In plam The lesser-earnmg spouse -- again,
language, McCaffrey explains.
usually the wtle -- receives credtl for

"the greater of her own or 50 percent
of husband's 'potential insurance
amount."' This means that if a marned woman 's cumulative earnings
over. her work life are less than halt
of her husband's -- etther because her
salacy was lower or because she spent
less time in the workforce -- she w1ll
not receive Social Security credit for
her own contnbutions to the system,
but rather will&amp; credited for 50 percent of her husband's income. There- ·
lore. the couple receives 150 percent
credit for the husband's earnings, and
nothing for the wife's. For Elizabeth
and Susan, opting to stay at home
means that they will sitll colle~t the
same Social Security benefits, they
just won't have to pay the taxes.
A similar problem comes up with
the system of fnnge benefits, whereby companies compensate full -time
employees through beneftts like
health care m addiuon to thetr salary.
Workers are compensated like this
regardless of whether they actually
need the benefits, and those who are

SsrsEckel

.:l
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Government was
warned of' looming
computer crisis

OU, NO!

,-He P3RN

CQ!LLliLaR PHo~
F"oLI.oWeD I1S
aLL THe WaY HeRe!

I

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
•
WASHINGTON - Smce the year 2000 has been scheduled for qu1te
some time, the marvel of the looming Y2K cnsis JS that the government dtdn't notice 1ts computers would be m trouble unt1l ttme was runnmg short.
Y2K is msider lingo for Year 2000 and the fact that thousands of older
computers wtll have to be reprogrammed or replaced over the neKt 33 months
because they won't work properly after 1999
That's because computer systems use two digits for the year whtch makes
the year 2000 mdistmgu1shable from the year 1900_
1
It is as though nobody in charge looked at the calendar and made the connecuon unt)l relat1vely recently.
.
There were alerts from pnvate computer wtzards in 1993, sporadtc congresstonal hcanngs m 1996. But the urgency came late.
Two momhs ago, the General Accounting'Office put the computer cnSJS
on 1ts hst of htgh nsk govemmcnt programs.
There may not be ttme to fully cope wnh it The GAO advised a House
technology subcommtttee on Feb. 25 that there IS a htgh probabtlity of some
fatlures when the century changes.
•
It is far more than a government problem. It involves countless pnvate
computers and mtcrochtps, and the ability to do business when 2000 begms
The problem could even affect the operation of such devices as nucrowave
ovens, VCRs and secunty alarms. "The potenllal scope of thts situation ts
vast," said Rep. Steven Horn, R-Calif., the subcommittee chairman, who has
been pressing for actton.
Sen Dame! Patnck Moynihan, D-N Y., has urged the government to get
gomg lest computer frulures block Soctal Secunty and Medtcare payments,
affect atr traffic control and cnpple national defense systems
By TONY SNOW
He wants acommtsston created to oversee the overhaul.
"- "The potential impact on fee eral programs if this problem is not cQrrected Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON -- When Presttl',sllbstantial and potenttally very serious," accordmg to an Office of Manageirten! and Budget report, which estimated it will cost $2.3 btllion to make dent Clinton suggested recently that
tile needed changes m federal computers. Private computer experts say that the Federal Communtcaltons Comis a fractton of what it really will take And the estimate does not include miSSion outlaw advertisements for
the expense of deahng wtth state and local systems that are tted mto feder- Intoxicating spirits, his slumpilJg
approval ratmg burped U!iward. Here
al programs..
.
.
The government has more than one million-computers. 'The General Ser- was a beleaguered chief executive,
vices Admimstration is working on a precise count. 'The Internai·Revenuc buffeted by cnttcs left and nght, takServtce acknowledges it doesn't know how many of tts regional computer mg ttme froll)_his busy schedule to
prevent booze vendors from peddling
sy~tems are l!t rtsk The GAO had sought an inventory of IRS eomputers by
thetr
swi ll on Sesame Street!
the end of 1995, but tt isn't done yet.
Chnton
has become the acknowl"Everv federal agency is at risk ofwidesp~d system failures," the GAO
edged master of the mmuscule. He
report satd
Converstons are complicated because the systems that need to be fix~d seemingly has surrendered ambtltons
also are needed to keep the government gomg And once changes have been of wow.mg us wtth grand programs.
choosing instead to focus like a laser
made, there wtll have to be extenstvc tcstmg to make sure they wtll work
The task rs not technically challengmg. the GAO said, but it is masstve. on our peeves, from tcky hamburgers
to infenor car seats for kids The
complex. the largest proJect ever 10 face government computer managers.
strategy has bolstered the tmpresston
"Time ts running out," the GAO report sa1d,&gt;for changes that ought to
be completed by early 1999 to allow ume to test and tmplement new pro- that he really does fret about our
everyday cares.
grams.
Yet, means mauer as mu.\h as ends
A 1996 congresstonal survey of 24 agenctes showed that only nine had
developed plans to deal with Y2K and only seven had prepared cost esu- tn a constttuttonal democracy. and
many of Chnton's. brainstorms,
mates
Smcc federal computer programs vary. and many already are obsolete. mcluding the effort to outlaw liquor
"there ts no smgle cookte cutter approach .. to solve the problem, the account- ads through regulatory ukase, mark a
great leap backward for the cause of
tog office said.
by the people.
government
Allthts in a field m whtch mtsscd deadhnes and glitches are chronic, a
We
can
hold
to account the legistendency that pnvate computer experts conceded in congressional testimolators
who
draft
laws,
but we have no
ny. Thts time, the deadline won't move and oan 't be mtssed Without maJOr
leverage
over
regulators
They toil in
disrupttons.
In a Senate debate on Soctal Secunty earher thts year, Moynihan satd the anooymtty and pubhsh thetr efforts tn
questiOn of maintatmng payments will he moot unless the computers that · an unreadable publir.ation called The
process them are read ted for 2000. "If tht,s matter lmgers unaddressed, I can Federal Rcgtster.
Even though their handiwork suponly tmagine what else beSides Social Securtty will fail iq our computer
(jependent soctety," he satd.
· ,
'

jcovered under a spouse's ihsurance
'plan are not given the option of
receiving cash payments mstead of
benefits But think of how this could
have helped Elizlibeth, whose low
salary could have been substantially
improved tf the money her eroployer paid into her health-insurance
plan, which she didn't need, was
instead paid directly to her.
Finally, there ts the issue of imput.,
ed income. By staying at home, Eli~­
abeth and Susan will provide valuable services to the family, such as
cooking, _cleamng and chtld - care.
McCaffery esttmates that by cltminatmg the need to pay for child care,
the women will provid~ the famtly
with $5,000 to $10,000 worth of taxfree services, and he belteves this tax
relief should be extended to worktn¥
couples. "Since we do not tax the
value of domestic work provided by
a taxpayer herself," says McCaffery,
"we should 1101 tax the labor-market
earnings that stmply replace th&amp;
tmputed mcome."
Thts system of taxmg women not
only keeps middle-class women whd&lt;
would prefer to be tn the workforce ·
at home. 11 also prevents poor women
-- who do not have the optton of not
workmg --from gemng mamed Thi~·
problem, however. has some remark~·
ably simple solu11ons -- such as separate filtng for marned couples, sec-!
ondary-carner exemptions for Social
Sccunty, the opuon to exchange cor- ;
poratc benefits for ca~h payments! •
and more generous child-care dcduct10n s.

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...

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•

•

EDITOR'SNOTE-WalterR.Mears,vkepresidentandCGiumnist
for The Associated Press, has reponed on Washington and natioaal politics for more than 30 years.
•

Berry's World

i

•

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~

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4 a+....- o
0-bJoNEA, ...

.

THE LATEST: The "Hugelt Humongous
Hila" driver - (which wtll become

obeolete within tlx monthl of
pure~).

,.J,. ,,
·~

posedly implements acts ofj:ongress,
lawmakers cannot touch regulations
that violate the lett~r or spirit of the
legtslattOn. This ts how the Ctvtl
Rights Act, which outlawed quotas,
was transformed mto a battenng ram
that forced busmesses to hire by the
numbers.
Not long ago, nobody worried
about regulators. But federal agencies
these days churn out tens of thousands of pages of new· stncturcs
annually, each ofwhtch 15 backed by
federal force.
Regulallons have become a clan·
desttne way of fmhng the will of the
people, and thts Whtte House knows
11. After tacktng starboard dunng the
1996 campatgn, the president )las
pursued an ambttJOus liberal agenda
The key is that he's doing it where
nobody can see htm -- in the uffices
and garrets where regulators live
A few examples
-- The inscrutable ratings you
now see 'on televtston shows were
manufactured not by Congress, but
the Federal Commumcattons Com·
misston, which threatened to wtthhold broadcast licenses unless networks developed them
--The Internal Revenue Servtce
has announced plans to ratse tax rates
on hmtted partnerships-- a group that
mcludes most lawyers, doctors and
accountants It would do so by makmg these outfits paY, Medtcarc health-

insurance taxes not JUSt on salaries,
but on any income, includmg profi!s
plowed back 'nto the firm . ~epubli can acuvist Sieve Forbes, who blew
the whistle on the scheme, notes the
IRS classified the change as "minor,"
even though the rule would tmposc
tax hikes on tens of thousands of
small busmesses.
More 10 the point, Congress has
reJected thts proposal once already. It
wa~ an tntegral pan of the fat led ClintonCarc health proposal. Undaunted,
the IRS evidently wants to stick it to
us, anyway.
-- The Environmental Protection
Agency has threatened to deny highway funds to states that refuse to follow its gu1dehnes for testmg auto
cmtssions -- even if the agency's
methods requiTe costly, meffecttve or
unnecessary methods. (Several states,
tncluding Virgima and Maryland.
have told the EPA where to stick 1ts
tailpipe probes
-- Ttmothy Lynch of the Cato
Institute notes m a recent study
(" Dcreltctton of Duty The Constttutiona! Record ofPrestdent Clinton" )
that the admtmstratJOn has begun
usmg the Constttution 's "commer.c
clause" to se1zc power from the
states.
'
The Justtcc Department took over
the mvcsugation of a South Carolina
church-burnmg last year, for mstance,
on the theory that the case mvolvcd
mterstatc commerce: The church

Check please, I need to

I bought the latest Premtere magazmc to sec tf Val Ktlmcr was as btg
a jerk a• they say According to Premtere. maybe yes, maybe no, tt
depends So there you go Another
hard-htlltng exclustve from Hollywood!
That arttcle behtnd me, I moved
on to the David Croncnberg mtervtew, to see tl he 's as humorless as I
th_gugl!t he might be. Yeah' Pretty
much! He was talking abOut the new
movie he's directed, "Crash," based
on a J G Ballard novel I'd liked a lot
when I first reaj:lu25 years ago as an
earnest college boy. It was very existenttal ancj clinical, full of selfloathing and car accidents. Not exactly a yockfest, but! didn't have a girlfriend at the time, and readtng it made
me feel smaner than I was. Isn't that
what reading is all about? When
you're in college?
The movie sounds like it's Pretty
muc:h the same deal. But hey -- ~se
are the '90s now! Who wants to see
a grim mov1e about people who
fetishize automobile accidents? Especially if you have a girlfriend? Espectally 1f the people in this movie are
not even ·people? In the interview
Cronenberg says, "the characters are
not set up, or maybe they're not even
characters .... " I'll be there, Dave!

. ""

I•

IND.

42"

W. VA

1'11155

· Today's weather forecast
By The Associated P....s

Extended foreeast
Thursday... Dry. Lows tn the 20s
Ohio
·
.- Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Aurries and highs ~5to 55 .
Fnday~ chance of ram mamly
or snow showers north. Snow accumulating 2 to 4 inches in the extreme southwest. Lows 25 to 35. • Htghs
.from around 45 nonheast to near 55
northeast. Lows 20 to 2~ .
Wednesday .Snow showers or south.
Saturday ..A chance of rain. Lows
flumes hkely northeast. Partly sunny
in the 30s wtth htghs 45 to 55.
elsewhere. Highs35 to 40

No one hurt in two accidents
. .

The Pomeroy Police Department
mvest1galed two mmor accidents on
Monday.
Pomeroy squad was called to the
scene of an accident on West Matn
street mvolvmg Shelby Wickline,
55, of Rae me, and Ginger M. Jones,
23, of Pomeroy. According to the
police report, Jones was attempting to
control an infant passenger in her
vehicle when she htt the accelerator
tnstead of the brake and struck Wtckline's car in the rear.

The pomt ts not to pcnaltze; ·
women who choose to stay at home.''
Rather, 11 is tO' rid the system of tts
mhercnt unfatrness to working' '
women Once upon a time, there wa~··'
a common bcllct tn lhts country tllat·'
married women had no place m the- •
patd workforce Our v1ews have pro' ;
gressed smcc then. It's now time to' 1
bnng our tax system ,up to speed. ·'
Sara Eckel is a syndicated ~:
writer for Newspaper Enterprise· ·~
Association.
.
•
Send comments to'the author in:
care or this newspaper or send her.
e-mail at saraeumaol.com,
·'

Iones was cited for assured clear
distance, and accordmg to the report,
there were no vtsible injunes.
.
No cttatlons were tssued arter an
accident at the mtersccuon of East
Second and Lynn Streets. Trtcia M: ,
Richards, 19. of Pomeroy was turnmg onto East Second from Lynn
when she struck a cat dn~en by
Esther E. Hardin, 75, of Syracuse.
Ltght damage was sustamed to both
vehicles.

'

t:=unds
be·g1'n ···--~~~
continued f'rom page •
,.-,
.
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recetved electricity from a company
that somettmes purchased power
from an mterstate gnd . (By ,tht~, l~&amp;.- ,
ic , the lcdcral government could,.
swoop m and mount an mqutry ot .
anybody who uses clcctncity, natur- ,
al gas. a phone, ,ad to, televisiOn or: ,
perhaps even atr)
,,
The Clmton team also tned to pre- ,
vent a San Franctsco company from ' ,
devclopmg land that puddled up after
bart storms The parcel , the fcds rea- 1 ,
~oned. could attract mtgratory btrds ,.
that hke soggy ground. This trans-'
formed the zomng dtsputc mto a fed- ,"
eral case because the Justtce Depart- •
mcnt classttied the btrds as "impor- ·
tant" art1clcs of tntcrstate or interna- ,tiona! commerce
,;
Note tltc trony. The Cltnton ,
admtmstratton has shown dazzling ' ,
mgenutty tn shtrkmg the law. It now ,
• wants to apply that same genius to the prOJect of makmg us do what's good
for us-- even if tt has to tmpose these · .
tmprovements by ftat.
This ts the great danger of a gov- :'
ernmcnt that cares about the little'
stuff. In order to gain authority to
aboltsh all our bttty problems, Uncle . :
Sam must ehmmatc one big thmg ·
our freedom to dons we choose, even'
tf ttlsn 'tthc bc&lt;t way

..

Write Tony Snow, Creators Syn· ' '
dicate, 5777 West Century Blvd., ' ;
Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif."
90045.

.'

'I

CHIP discussed
same house at the same ume, and the
Resolutions relatmg to the general contractor wtll perform ·fin1997 Community Housing Improve- tshing work."
ment Program were submitted by
"The Racme project was a learnCounty Grants Administrator Jean mg expenence for all of us," ComTrussell
mtSstoner Janet Howard sat d. "I have
Over the obJectton of Commts- talked to M)ke and explained what
sioner Jeffrey Thornton, the com- we expc;ct thts time."
missibners approved a bid from
Howard and Fred Hoffman both
MtcroComin, Inc., of Pomeroy to voted in favor of the resolution
serve as the Rehabthtat1on Spectaltst appomtmg Stroth. whtle Thornton
tor the CHIP proJect. Bids were -v"ted ~gains! tt.
rccctved from MtcroComm, through
The commtss1oners also·
tts prestdent, Mtchael Stroth, and
- Approved a request -from the
Wtsc B~yer, and tis agent, C. Ed county htghway department for proEvans ol Dexter.
posals for a new car:
However. Trussell explamed that
- Appomtcd mcommg Economic
Stroth's btd ·was lower in cost by Development Dtrcctor Ron McDade
$10,000. and that he was approved by to the Ohto Department of Developthe state as bemg a qualified inspec- ment's Region II Advisory Commtitor of the project, while Evans wa~ tee,
not.
- Appointed County Engineer
"I have a problem with Mike Robert Eason to the Dtstnct 18 PubStroth," Thornton said, "because of he Works lntegratmg Committee,
- ,t.ppointcd Margaret Parker of
wha.t happened in Racine the last
ttme. I can't stt here as the former · the Metgs County Ptonccr and Hismayor of Racine and hire him. I torical Soctcty as the coordinator of
can't."
Meigs Coun(y acttvitics for the Ohio
Thornton referred to continumg Bicentcnntal m 2003 ;
complamts recetved from several . -Approved payment of bills in the
recipients of CHIP monies, who amount of $50,277.46, wtth 171
claim that the repatr work performed entnes: ·
on the1r homes was shoddy, and arc
- Approved the m-house hiring of
now dcmandmg further repairs. One Carol Shank as an Income Mamteof the duties of the Rehabtlitation nance staff member at the DepartSpecialist 1s to see that all work is mcnt of Human Scrvtces, following
inspected
an executive session with Michael
"'There wtll be changes made thts Swtsher of the O.H.~.
time." Trussell satd ·"Only certified
Present, m addttton to the comand eKpenenced tradesmen w111 be misstoners and Spencer, were Clerk
used. We will usc a separate con- Glorta Klocs and County Highway
tractor lor electncal work. a separate Supenntendent Manning Roush.
contractor for plumbmg and so forth.
No two contractors wtll be in lhe
Tod Sloan, a star JOCkey at the
tum of the century, popularized the
The Daily Sentinel "Monkey on u Suck" style of ndmg.
(IJSPS JJ.l.M)

Front row! Not!
'
It's all just way too ' 70s for me
I don 't know why I ptck up thts
stuptd magazine, I really don't. The

lsn Shosles
only thmg tn 11 worth reading is Ltbby Gelman-Waxner's column, and
she's married.
And halfway tlirough the Cronenberg interview, I came across an ad
that mystified me Maybe 1 was just
obsessmg on lust cults who can only
get aroused by JFK's death cars,
James Dean a.nd Ern1e Koyacs __ it •
could happen! -- but 1 was havmg
trouble focusmg on 1t.
I could not figure out what was
gomg on. Most ads whack you on the
· head with a point. But this one had
row upon row of tmy ptctures, their
tmages obscured by unreadable pnnt.
There were ptctures of race cars,
exotic fish, trai11s, golf balls, boats.
horses, football teams, moton:ycles,
teeth, scissors and atrplanes. What
kind of ad ,5 that?
Finally, after ptcking up a magmfying glass, I figured out what was
being plugged: checks. 'These were
images you could have imprinted on
your personal checks. '
(I I wouldn't think thts was an ideal

..

sponsor exactly If you loo:, at Vamty Fatr, say, us pages arc packed with
designer clothmg, perfume, and car
ads, ads for items that can make you
feel like part of the upscale gang
when you go mto debt for them.
Designer checks•
Docs Val Kilmer have personal
o,hecks with unicorns on them? Doc~
David Cronenberg have checks with
Bonmc and Clyde's bullet-riddled
vehicle imprinted on them?
It takes a btl of the glam out of the
glamor, doesn 't it?
What is wuh thts phenomenon
anyway• A check, as I understano:!_ it,
ts just deferred money:"vou don't
draw snliley faces on your cum:ncy,
do you? Not even for close friends.
And it's not very often you write
checks to your close friends (most of
my friends '!'Ouldn 't accept a check
from me if I offered one). No, you
usually write cbecks to recipients like
the phone company, your landlord,
the cable company, gas and electric
and your ex-wife.
Do any of these entities or people

Gla~ys Bowers, 81, Athens: died Sunday, April 6, 1997, at O'Bieness
Memonal Hospital in Athens
Born Apnl 21, 1915, m Coolville, daughter of the late Herbert and Rose
Buck Bowers, she WI$ a homemaker.
She IS surviv~ by four sons, Ralph Bowers, Russell ~wers, Danny Bowers and Kenny Bowers, all of Athens; a son and daughter-in-law, Everett and
Dtana Bowers of Athens; two daughters and sons-in-law, Donna May and .
Charles Slover of Athens, and Ruby and Guy Hysell of Pomeroy; four daughters. Betty Speelman of Guysville, Margie McDaniel of Athens. Karen Bowers of Guysville and Hel~;~~ Bowers of Guysvtlle, 29 grandchtldren; 39 greatgrandchtldren and mne great-great-grandchildren; three s1sters, Dorothy Jeffers of Coolvtlle, Cathenne Vanness of Tuppers Plams and Mil he Jenne of
Coolvtlle.
She was preceded 'in death by her husband Ralph Bowers:· two daughters, Pearl Stover and Jamce Bowers; four grandchildren; a sister. Rachel
Clark; and two infant sisters and two infant brothers.
Servtces will be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville wtth Pastor Ernte Stover officiating. Bunal will be in Carthage
Cemetery m Guysvtlle.
Fnends may call today from 6-9 p.m at the funeral home.

Mildred M. Carnahan

'

lea~now

•

Gladys Bowers
!Mansfield I~·

Clinton acknowledged master of the minuscule

II'

Todd Christopher Quillen Jr., 4, Pomeroy, died Monday, April 7, 1997,
at Holzer Medtcal Center, Gallipolis.
fie w~ born July 18, 1992, in Columbus, s9n ofTodd'and Toni Quillen.
In addllton to hiS parents, he IS survived by siSters Onlna and AJtaha
Quillen of Pomeroy; grandparents, Wanda and Larry Ru~r of Pomeroy and
Charles and Charlene Estep of Syracuse; greal-grandparents, E1leen and Dave
L.andaker of Pomeroy, Happy Estep of Mason, W Va., and Peggy Se.,_,h
of Pome(Qy. several aunts, uncles and cousms.
'
He was preceded in deatll by an uncle, Roy Rutter; an aunt, Usa RUiter;
and a great-grandfather. Elmer Runer.
Servic~s will be held Wednesday, I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport wtth AI Hartson offictating. Burial wtll follow m Beech Grove Cemetery. '
Friends may call Wednesday at II a.m. until ttme of servtces.
1

conditions and hiBh

care whether you have a ptcturc of
lcitty cats on your checks or not'! Do ,
you want the guy at the corner mar- •
ket to Ieel whtmStcal when he accepts :·
your marker for Mcxtcan beer, eggs
and sktm mtlk? Do you really believe •·
that some bean-counter m collecttons
gets all mtsty when he sees your pay-.'
ment voucher? Do you really want :. ,
your ex-wtfc to nouce that you have
enough money left m your account to
pay for emblazoning ptcturcs of the ,
Dallas Cowboys on your checks?
•
Remember, Val Kilmer does not ' '
pay by check HIS people m1ght pay
With checks, and hts people might 1
have satlboats on them Granted.
,' ,
So tf you put bunny rabbits on · . I
your money, I prcdicl you will never . :.
get to put out a ctgarette on a cameraman, even ~rei~ tally. Is that :.
what you want orrNIDt?
To receive a complimentary Ian , '
Shoales ncwS'Ie ter, call 1-800-989- :
DUCK or wnte Duck's Breath, 408 ;
Broad St., Nevada Ctty, CA 95959.)
Jan Shoales Is a syadkated
writer for Newspaper li:nterprile ' ·
A.~Rciatloa.
•'

• Today's Birthdays: Former fintlady Betty Ford is 79. Actor Edward Mul- ,
hare is 74_Opera sin~er Franco. &lt;?on:lli is 74 Televi~ion petsonaltty John ·;
Bartholomew Tuc:ker ts 66. Lyrwtlt Fred Ebb tS 64. lnvestiaative repdtrer '
Seymour He!"h ts ~·Basketball Hall-of-Farner John Havlicek is S7. Smser
1.1. J~ekson 1s S6. ~1nger Pegy Lennon (The Lennon Ststers) is S6.
iJ

I
l

Published every ofle&lt; '"""'• Mondoy thrwah
Aido)o, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio. b)o die
Ohio Yolley l?ul&gt;lbh!., eon-~ Co.,
~. Otito 4!769, Pli. 99):2.,6. S..Oftd
ctU.poo.,.. potdll......,.y, Ohio
M.ber: 11ae AISOCIIUed Preu, and the Ohio
Newapllpa' A11oeiadon
POSI'MA.STBRt Send add~ll COI'reCIIOM to
1be Doily Scnbne~ Ill Court St , Po.....,y,

Ohio ol.5769

.

..,. Carrier«--·

Am Ele Power ... _. ..................40\
Akzo ....... ,........... :..................n'l.
AmrTech .......... ---··· ..............-58'.1.

Alhlal'ld on ~ ..........................43\

ATIT ..................................... 34'-

Benko.,. .............................. 41'-

l:tob Evant ............................13'-

~W•rner .........................45\
Champion ............~............... 111\

' . SQIS.CRI'PTION RATIS
()ae ~ ... .. ..........

Stocks

S200
.. 1170

1.. ..... ......... ,. ..

o . -." . -· ............ ""
o.v.. " " . " .
" $10'00
·SINGLE COPY PIIICB

Doily ...................... ........................... ), c ....

Charming Shope ..........,,_,_,so;,.

City ·tlofdlng ......... -...............32}.
Federal Mogul .......................24~
GlnMtt ................................... 15

Goodr-r .....................,........52"\

..,..---

K1111rt ..................!' ...........,. ....... 12~
Linde Ertd .............................27'4
Ltd .........................................17\
ova .........................................38
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Rockwell ...............................12 ~
RD-SMII ..............................188\

S•t .,,. ,.. cle8rl.. 10 poy i11e ani« may

IWIIIit in ldvMCt direct 10 The o-ily Se.tinel
ae 1 - oil&lt;,.. 12 mooth botio. c..dit .,;11 Ito
No 11bfcriplion by 111111 pennllled lo ...,

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Stllr 8irtk ..............................40\
Worthl,.ton .. - ......................1e\

_._lit_

Stock r.porte •re the 10:

:;"!i ~owidld bJ

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

Mildred M Carnahan. 76, Racme, died Monday, April 7, 1997. at the
home of her sister tn Racine.
Born Feb. 19, 1921, m Racme, she was the daughter of the late Cunis
Leroy and Grella Loutse Shain Carnahan.
·
She was rettred after 55 years of servtce as manager and operator of the
former Hayman's Hardware Store and Wagner Hardware Store in Ractne.
She was a member of the Bethany Umted Methodtst Church at Dorcas wbere
she served as church pianist for many years.
She IS survtved by a stster. Ruth Stmpson of Racme, a nephew. a halfuncle and several cousins
Services will be Thursday. I p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home. Racmc.
Wtth the Rev. Kenny Baker offictating Burial will be in the Greenwood
Cemetery in Racine
Fnends may call Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers. memorial contnbuttons may be made to the Bethany
Untied Methodtst Church, CfO Rev Kenny Baker, 48411 State Route 124.
Racine OH 45771

Fay M. Johnson
Fa)! M. Johnson. 70.'ofMineral Wells. W.Va . formerly of Reedsville. died
on Monday, Aprtl 7. 1997 at St Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Va ..
followmg an CKtended Illness
She was born tn Akroh. the daughter of the late Vtrgil and Ada WaL,on
M1ller. She was a r.eurcd nursmg asstant at St Joseph's Hospital and a member of the Big Tygart Bapttst Church.
•
She ts survtved by her husband, Lewis Johnson of Mineral Wells: a son.
Robert Congrove of Carrollton. Texas; five stepsons: Donald Johnson of
Mtncral Wells, Howard Johnson of Parkersburg, Phtllip Johnson and David
Johnson, limb of Waverly, W.Va. and Mtke Johnson of Hebron; three stepdaughters Patncta Hall and Dtannc Buck, both of Mmeral Wells and Rtta
Porter of Columbus: a sister. Frances Reed of Reedsville; a Ststcr and brothcr-m-law, Ruth and Mtlton Tuttle of Pomeroy. a spectal frtend. Dchhtc Boatrtght of Belpre; 12 grandchildren: three great-grandchildren: and several
meces and nephews
Besides her parents. she was preceded m death by a sister, Annabelle Torrence.

Servtces arc at 2 p m Wednesday at Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home tn
Parkersburg, with Rev. Bernard 'Thrash offictatmg. Bunal wtll be m Sunset
Memory Gardens
Fnends ,!IllY call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m. on Tuesday and unttl 2 p.m Wednesday

Scott E. Lester
Scott Ernest Lester. 32, Dexter, dtcd Sunday. Aprtl6, 1997, at Ohto State
Umversity Hospital m Columbus as a result of tnjurtes sustatncd tn an automobtle acctdcnt.
He was born Feb 18, 1965, in Royal Oak, Mich .. son of Ernest H Lester
of Dexter and Barbara A Schad Gummow of Californta He was a supervisor with Mtlls Pride Cabtnet Company. Waverly. alliliated with the Lt~ther­
an Church, and was a peacettmc Army veteran
HC' is survived by a son, Wesley Scott Lester o( Radcltfl . two brothers,
Edward Darrell Lester of Andros. Bahamas, and Paul Dann Lester of Willows, Calif.; his paternal grandfather. Pans Lester ofVirgtma. maternal grandfather. Charles C. Schad of Californta. a ntcce and a nephew: several aunts
and uncles
.
He was preceded m death by hts paternal grandmother. Theresa Lester,
and by hi• mate111al grandmother. Teresa Schad.
Servtces will be held Thursday, I p.m at the Rutland Cmc Center, Rutland, with the Rev. Wtlham Middlcswanh offictatmg Burial will follow in
Standtsh Cemetery, Dexter
_, Friends may call Wednesday. 1-9 p.m at the Rutland Ctvic Center.
Arrangements are by Birchfteld Funeral Home. Rutland.

Buel W. Summerfteld, 82, €ross Lanes. W.Va., died Monday, April 7,
1997, at Thomas Memorial Hospital.
,
A rettred Greyhound bus dn,vcr and member of the Cross Umes Bajllilt
Church. be ~as born Oet. 2, 1914, m Tuppers Plains. He was a member of
the Chester F&amp;AM Lodge.
He ts survtved by his wife, Htlda V. Summerfield; four sons, Buel Stan- 1
ley Summerfield of Buffalo, W.Va., Douglas Wayne Summerfield of Denver, Colo , Ronald Ray Summerfield and Donald Clark Summerfteld, bodt
o,f Jacksonvtlle, A a ; nine grandchildren and etght great-grandchildren; 11110
brothers, Rex all Summerfield of Long Bottom and Charles Summerfield of
Tryon. N C.: and by two SISters. Irene Parker of Syracuse aild Mildred Cald- ~ ;
well of Long Bottom
:
Prtvate famtly services and bunal wtll be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at Tyler
Mountam Memory Gardens in «rross Lanes Wtlh the Rev. J.. D. Harrah offi·
ctattng. A pnvate family vtewing will be held one hour prior to services. .
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the American
Cancer Soctcty or Amencan Heart Assoctatton.

Meigs announcements
Cemetery cleanup slated
The Rutland Township trustees
request all flowers and other items l&gt;c
removed from Mtlcs. Wnght and
Robmson ccmetcrtcs m Rutland
Townshtp by Thursday so spnng
cleaning and mowing can begm

Modern Woodmen. has been postponed from Fnday night until April
19 due tn some electrical problc1115lll
the hall There w1ll be a potluck dinncr at 6.30 p.m
Road dosing announced
Zion Road in Rutland Town~hir
wtlt be closed unttl further notK.'Il for
emergency road rcpatr.

Pretrial hearings are scheduled
next week for Athens defendet'nta
ATHENS (AP) - Prctrtal hearmgs were schedulod lor next week
for some nl the 47 people arrested
Sunday alter daylight-savmg !tme
forced downtown hars to close early
The 47- includm~ 34 Ohto Umverstty students- were charged after
two dtstulhances m the umverstty
town ·about 65 mtlcs southeast of
Columbus early Sunday One of the
disturbances mvolvcd a fight between
two fratcmtttcs.
Many of the defendants appeared
Monday mormng m Athens Mumctpal Court
Court clerk Yvonne Mayer dtd not
know tl all 4 7 appeared. She satd
·some ot the defendants pleaded mnoccnt. Pretnal heanngs were set for
Apnl 17 and 18.
Others pleaded gu1lty. All were
fmed $25 each, ordered to pay court
costs and g1vcn suspended 90-day Jatl
sentences. Ms. Mayer dtd npt know
how many pleaded gutlty
Charges uicludcd dtsorderly conduct. rcststtng arrest or assault.
Seventy of11ccrs from several
agencocs were summoned early Sunday after about I_()(]() people gathered
outstde the bars, whtch closed earlier than normal because of the onehour daylight-savmg ttme jump
Just before the bars closed, a ftght
broke out m a nearby bar bat ween 30
members of the p, Kappa Alpha and
Pht Kappa Tau fralemtttcs At least

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho111e
O•ners and
Mo.ile Home
Owners Special

SaYings.
Our stat~tlcs show that mature
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fewer and less costly losses
than othe~ age groups. So It's
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your insu'rance. Insure your
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even more with our special

Correction

three people were arrested from lhtlt
ftght.
Umvcrs1ty oflic1als arc reviewin1
the police rcpons to llctcrmtne tf lillY
students should be disctplincd.

Correction
The name of County Commisstoner Jell Thornton was omitti:d
from Monday's story about the
Dcmocrattc Jeffersonfiackso11 Dinncr Commtssioper Janet Howard
was not present at the event.

By

Dave
,Grate
of
R1tland
Fnlture
Horticulturist: rose schol•.

** *

"

No matter how much the
hospital charges for a
private room, they'll
give you a semiprivate
gown.

** *

It's getting so that take·
home pay can hardly
survive the trip.

Continued rrom paae 1

Pomeroy, who will serve a~ the new
Income Tax Admmtstrator.
- Approved a record rctcntton
policy:
- Approved the mayor's report of
fines collected m the amount of
$7,331. with a village share of
$6,336;
- Voted to donate $500 for insurance for the Pomeroy Youth League
for the J997 season, with
Musser
1
abstaining.
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Attending were council members
Scott Dillon, John Musser, Geri Walton, Bill Young, and Larry Wehrung,
MHayor Rpran.k VaChu~hanfJ, ClerkRKathhy
yse 11 , o11ce
te erry oug t,
and police officers Edward Patterson
and Mark Nonnan.

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There are three basic

What people stand for isn't
everything. What Jhay· talr
for counts, too.
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hairstyles: parted,
unparted, and departed. ·

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@..&amp;

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aunuoe Servioea

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214 EAST MAIN

In Friday's newspaper, the Meigs
.t.......o.-r. ,,._.
County Dos Warden was,incorrectly
Life Home Car Business
identified as Bill Dyer. The dog war- . l_..J.Tlo!2;t;~,!,!1~'4:;.":!::~:.._J
den is Bill Dye.
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Helen Genevteve Jeffers, 73, Syracuse. died Monday. Aprtl 7 1997, at
her home.
A homemaker. she was born Nbv. 16. 1923, at Portland, daughter of the
late Homer and Anme Ward Icenhower She was a member of the Mtddleport Wesleyan Btble Holiness Church.
She ts survtvcd by her husband of. 52 years, Rollert "Boh" Jeffers of Syracuse; children, Roger and Janet Jeffers of Pomeroy, Sandra Peyton and friend.
We.tzel Batley of Langsvtlle, Donna and Jerry R. Aleslitrc Sr of Syracuse.
Shtrley and Roger Lude of Syracuse, Pattt and Mtchael VanMatre of Letart,
W.Va., Jamcc and Bud Haas of Masstllon, 10 grandchtldren; 14 grandchtldren; and two brothers. Lewis Icenhower ofNeigley and Chfford Icenhower
of Dexter.
She was preceded in death by- four brothers.' Ralph, Bernard, Roy and
Leonard "Buck" Icenhower, and by a half-brother, Roberta Icenhower
Services will be held Wednesday, I p m. at the l\l(iddlcport Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church wtth the Revs. Ivan Myers and Roy McCany offic tallng.
Burial wm follow tn Letart Falls Cemetery
Fnends may call today from 6-9 p.m. at Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy.

clean-up of homes on Chester Road.
Mayor Vaughan sai4 t)l11J the matter
has been referred to the Health
Department and that the . residents
will be asked to vacate the hou~es so
that clean up can begin as soon as
warmer w~aer prevatls.
Counct also discussed several
private stdences tn to':"n which
have trash in the yards.
Butternut Avenue resident Oavtd
Ballard inqurred about the progress
_, on mstalling a clap valve fonjrainage
on that street. Mayor Vaughan said
that the work w0 uld be underway
soon.
Council also:
- Authorized Young to solictt contributions for a playground tn the
Naylor's Run liRa;
- Passed an emeraency resolution
authorizinJ Villaae AdmtntStratoo
Jobn "'nderson to apply for disuter
Wiltance throul!h FEMA;
- Introduced Vikki L. Hayes of

·auel W. . Summerfield'

Meeting postponed
A mcctmg of Burltngham Camp.

Helen G. Jeffers

Residents say...

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The Dally Sentinel. !:_Southern diamondmen record 16-3 victory·over Trimb1e
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Behind a 15-hit attack and fine killed that initial rally. Trimble
pitching from Corey Williams, the threatened in the bonom half of the
Southern bucballteam steam rolled first, but did not score.
to a 16-3 Tri-Valley Conference :Vic- ' Southern broke the game otien in
tory over the Trimble Tomcats Mon- the third inning with seven runs to
day night in GIQuster. Southern lifts take an 8-0 lead. Pete S1sson reached
on an· error, then after a strikeout,
.. its r«&lt;rd to 2-4 overall.
Southern took a 1-0 lead in the •Jesse Maynard drilled his second
' first and had the bases loaded, but a home run of the season; a two-run
., play at the plate on a passed ball . shot, for a 3-0 SHS lead. Joe Kirby

Rockies hammer Reds 13-2
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Inning of Monday'a National League game in
Denver, where the Rockies won 13-2. (AP)

GETS HIS MAN - Cincinnati third baseman
" Willla Greene (left) puts the tag on Colorado's
1, • Vinny Castilla to end a rundown In the third

· Thomas, Edwards &amp; NBA deny
:scribes' point-shaving charges
DETROIT (AP) - A former
the book, " Money Players,"
Detroit Piston says some team,mates quotes Thomas and Edwards as
expressed concerns about poml shav- denymg any mvolve~enl.
ing because lsiah Thomas and James
" I've never, ever been involved
Edwards were losmg large sums to m point shaving, belling on games,"
.,, gamblers with ties 10 organized Thomas told the authors.
The newspaper rep&lt;?rtcd that
11 , cnme, a book says.
Thoma&lt; and Edwards deny it, and Thomas declmed to be mtervtewed
an NBA official told The Detroir Monday.
, News in a sy&gt;ry published today that
The book 1s wnllen by Annen
an investigation failed to uncover Keleyian, an ABC Network News
, · any evidence .of pomt shavmg.
correspondent, w1th co-authors Har. "We were not able to uncover any vey 1\raton, a spons columnist for
facts indicating there may have been The New York Times, and Manin F.
po1nt. shavmg," Russ Granik, the Dardis, a rcponer for Spons lllusNBA's deputy commissioner, told trated.
the newspaper on Monday. "And, it
"Our sources arc real-they live
_ would appear, neither have these and breathe, the lawyers know who
: authors, t:&gt;ased on a quick reading of they are, and they are prep~red 10
their work. At least none tha! has a · stand up and be' counte&lt;l iflhey have
1 s9urcc or any documentation...
__

to," Keteyian told The Detroit News.
Ketey ian said quotes were used
on Iy from sources who agreed to tell
thear stories to the authors' lawyers.
Four of the sources were gamblers
who said they were eyewitnesses to
crap games at the homes of Thoma&lt;'
ne1ghbor. Emmet Denha. and boxer
Tommy Hearns.
A fifth source was described as a
fortner Pistons player who told
Keteyian that he and h1s teammates
discussed the possibility that there
may have been point shaving m two
specilic Pistons games in late 1989.
The lirst was on Dec. 16. a night
al'ler Thomas had been elbowed in
the head at a game in Utah and complained aboard a plane to Oal!,land of
d1zzmess and numbness m h1s legs.

lineup. Offensively, we juSljumped
By joHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP)- The Colorado on them right away. That's .what
Rockies were beginning to wonder we're all about in this ballpark. And
how much life was left in Bill Billy Swirt wasjusl spectacular."
The Rockies- enjoying uncharSwift's arm. After two mjuryplagued seaso?s and a rough I 997 acteristic success on their season-.
debut last week, Swift must have opening ro~ trip by going 4-2 ran their winning streak to five
been wondering himself.
He provided some definitive games, They drew 48,014 for their
answers on Monday, turning in a home opener, extending their constrong pitching perfonnance in a 13· secutive sellout streak to a major
2 romp over the Cincinnati Reds league-record 133 games.
Colorado pitching, always susbefore a capac11y crowd in the Rockpect. has been brilliant the last f1ve
ies' home opener.
Swift threw a no-hiller for 4 1/3 games. The last five Colorado
innings and lasted six innings, allow- starters have combined for a 5-0
'
ing three hils and ~wo runs, just one record and 2.08 ERA.
"Good
p11ching
is
co~lagious,
of them earned. Darren Holmes finished up. throw1ng three hitless just like good hilling," Swift (I-I)
said. "When you see guys doing
innings for his 11rst save.
Rock1es batters, meanwhile, well. everybody wants to do the
pounded 19 hits- the must against same. I wanted to gel a wiu, too.
Other guys have been going right by
the Reds smce 1992.
Jason Bates and Eric Young each me.
"I feel like I'm throwing the ball
had three h11s. Jeff Reed and Vinny
like
I was in the past. I was throwCastilla each had three-run homers.
ing
strikes,
gelling ahead 1n the count
Bates and Reed weren't even sup,
posed to play: they were last-minute and getting quick outs. That's my
replacements for the injured Wah type of game. And gelling a five-run
lead didn ' t hurt."
Weiss and K1n Manwaring.
Colorado jumped on Dave Burba
"That will get the other guys well
- quickly," R9Ckles manager Don ( 1-1) for five runs in the first inning
Baylor said. " I didn't have too and live more in the lounh en route
much to do today, just make out the to a 10-0 lead. ·
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. " It all boils down to pitching,"
Reds manager Ray Knight said. "II
puts-a lot of pressure on your offense
when you are down four or five runs
early. And our hillers are not making
contact in cntical situatmns. II was
10-2 and we have the bases loaded,
but hit into a do~ble play. A base hit
in that situation puts us back in the
ball game."
In the lirsl, Larry Walker had an
RBI triple and Dante Bichelle an
RBI double before Reed's three-run
shot.
The Rockies sent II bailers to the
plate m the l'ounh. Andres Galarraga hit a'two-run double into the gap
in right-center, and Castilla illil a
three-run homer- his founh- into
a suff wind in lel't, chasin_g .Burba.
Colorado then loaded the bases
against Kent Mercker, but did no.
more damage.
-"Jt was a hanging slider," Castilla saidJ "When I hil it. I thought it
was gone for sure. I crushed il. But
the wind almost brought it bacl\."
Swift, touched.for four runs in the
lirsl innmg of a 5-3 loss to Cincinnati last Wednesday, lost his .no-hitler m the liflh when Ruben Sierra,
tripled' over tho head of center lielder Quinton McC-racken. Sierra
scored on Eddie Taubcnscc's
groundout.

Aller two stans, Scon. Sanders is
0-2 with a 9.00 ERA. The homers he
surrendered to Alomar and Ramirez
were fourth and fifth he 's given up
in II innings.
"He just got h1s pitches up," Seattle manager Lou Piniclln smd of
Sanders. " If you keep it down, ir
stays m the park."
Nagy ( 1-U) beat the Manners lor ·
the 11fth time in a rnw smcc Apnl 27.
IY93. allowmg one run on eight hits
and one walk, while sinking out
e1ght.
" Baseball 's a strange game,"
Nagy said of hiS recent dominati\m
against Seattle, a team thai used to
give 'him fits "They crushed me
before. I really don 'I know the rcason. You really can't pinpoint it."
The Indians s~ored four runs in
the second off Sunders. Alomar
homc,..;d in a lounh strtught game lor
the first time in his career and
Ramirez broke an 0-lor- 11 slump
with hiS first homer of the ,season.
"He' ' s a 'very spcc1a I pI'ayer, he
really is," Hargrove said of Alomar.
"Maybe I should change my last
name to .Qril'ley instead of Alomar."

Alom~r said With a grin.
After two outs 10 the second.
Ramarez homered to right field
belore Franco singled and Mitchell
. walked. Alomar hit a 2-0 pitch by
Sanders over the lcfllield wall.
"You ~an 't get he hind the hitter,"
Sanders sa1d. "The pitch to Alomar
was just the opposite of where I
wanted it, •I fastball low ami away."
The Indians added their llflh run
in the sixth. Matt Williams walked,
stole second. went to third on a wild
pitCh hy Sanders and came m on a
smgle, by Franco.
In the eighth, Ramirez had a tworun double and pinch-runner Brian
Giles scored when Mitchell hit into
a double play for the Indians.
Edgar Martinez homered oil Enc
Plunk to open Seattle's Mlf of the
eighth. Joey Cora's RBI smgle in the
ninth closed the scoring.
Nagy was taken out after walkmg
Alex Rodriguez with the bases
loaded in the sevl'nth. Paul Assenmacher gut Ken Griffey Jr. to lly out
to end that threat. ·
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"Paul came in and with one nil&lt;' h
d1d a great job," Nagy said.

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Al'ter suffering two disappointing club also made four errors. In fa''l.
losses Saturday against non-league Mills was near perfect as shed
Fon Frye, the Southern Tornadoes' tanned eight, walked six, hit four
gals got back on track with II big bailers, and hurled a no-hitter, but
league win on the road over Trimble still lost the bout.
Monday night ill Glouster, 8-6. That
Trimble took a 3-0 lead in the sec' came despite a no-hit, eighrstrikeout ond when Sheryl Davis singled and
· perfo~anee from their ace hurler scored' on a Sara Guinther single.
· Aman.da Mills. Southern is now· 4-2 ' Chrissie Richards reached on an
and 3-0 in the Tri-Valley Conference. error and scored on an error after
Ace pitcher Kim Sayre, injured in Mandy Coffman doubled.
' a slide Thursday at Wahama,
In the third, Misty Lent singled
, returned to action Monday to lead but was out on a sman play by the
the Tornadoes 10 VIctory with an SHS infielq, but Amanda Dillon
'· eight-hit, no-walk, six-strikeout per- reached on an error and Davis dou' forrnance. The Tomadoes made four bled her home. Sayre closed .the
errors behind Sayre's pitching.
inning with a strikeout
' · Amanda Mills pitched well lor
Southern came back to 4-21ead in
' Trimble, but suffered the loss as her the fourth when Renee Turley

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CubJ&gt; (Tr.ucllc:l 0· 1), 2 20 p.m
Hou scon (HampHlll 1-01 ~• Athw1 11
(Giavuw: I-0). 7 40 p m
Muntrcul Oudeu J -0) ,11 St Luu1s
(AianBcnel0-1) 80~pm
NY M~s (Junes 1·0) ,JI Lu, Angcb
1Vald61·0), 1005rm
P.11bburgh (Cooke 0-1) al Sun D1cgo
(ValenzuelaO· I), IOOlipm
Phihuklphm (M . Lcncr 0·1) at San
Fruncisco (Fernandl:z0-0). 10 05 p.m.

Baseb all

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Eastm1 01-l§ion
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Bos10n
New Yurk ..
Detrou ·'
Toronto .

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Defencjiog Tri-Valley Conference lriple, one double and one siogl~,
Hocking pi vision champion Eastern Meredith Crow with one triple and
is off to a great start in 1997, post- one single. South Galiia had no hits.
ing wins over South Gallia, Trimble . Eastern plated five runs in the fi~l
and Belpre. ·
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mmng on a lead-off smgle to K1m
The lone loss fo~ the Lady Eagles Mayle, a walk to Tracy White, a
'' was a loss to Meigs.
Sampso.n smgle, walks to Karr,
1
Eastern staned the seaSon with an . Stephanie Evans and Merednh Crow.
. 18-0, no-hit, shut out Pcrf&lt;innance by Leading 5- 0, Eastern never looked
Valerie Karr ov~ 'visiting South back. ·
Galli a. The sopho!llore hurler struck
Coach ~am Do~lhill said, "I was
out 12 and ·walked just two in her . pleased With our hnung and run profirst-ever varsity ~tart. Karr managed . ducuon: Th1s was a good game to
at least two strikeouts per inning in open w.1th._ I was really ~!eased With
a stellar effon and having the ad van- Valene s p1lchmg effort.
Rachel Waugh suffered the loss
1 tage of veteran cat~her Manie Holter
behind the plate.
for South Galha.
Hillers for Eastern were. Mindy
In the next game, Eastern posted
Sampson with two .singles, Patsy a 10-6 lnumph o~er Tnmble .. Karr
Aeiker a triple and a single, Manie . ajpn posted the w1n wnh SIX _stnkeHolter with two singles, Kim Mayle outs, se~en walks and three h11 batswith I single, Valorie, Karr with one men. DJIIon suffered the loss w11h
double, Stephanie Evans with one four stnkeouts and II walks.

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CLEVELAND (AP) - The half, but you have·to sustain that lor
· Cleveland c;:avaliers were trying to 48 minutes and we didn't," said
keep their dim plnyoff hopes from Cleveland guard Bob Sura. who
taking a serious h11. Their desperate stane~ in place of injured Bobby
effon fell short, as Glen Rice led the Phills. "Then in the fourth quaner,
Charlotte Hprnets to a founh straight every ball they n~eded to come up
victory.
with, they did."
· "!told the guys that team (Cleve- - - The Cavaliers fell one game
laRd) was going to give a playon· behind Washington in the _bailie for
effort even though they were short- the eighth and fmal playoff ben~ in
handed," Charloue coach Dave the Eastern Conference. The Hornets
Cowens said.
are in s1xth place in the East.
Rice, who was MVP of th1s
"Glen Rice was sutierb&gt;tonight,"
year's All-Star game in Cleveland, Cavaliers coach Mike Fratello said.
· scored 42 points lor the Hornets, "To be honest, they deserved to win
who overcame_a 19-point deficit to the game in the end . Wr.: had 1too
beat the Cavaliers 110-105 '"·over- . many breakdowns and too · many
• time Monday night. ·
mistakes, physically and mentally."
"In the third quaner, ':"e had to go
Danny Ferry 's thr~e-pointer wllh
t t out and put some defens1ve pressure 33 seconds left lor Cleveland
1 on them. That \\as the only way we reduced the charlolle' advantage to
1
were going to win the ganie. We 108- 10~. A.fler Ricky Pierce m1ssed
were able to gel back in the game by a jumper for Chw;lotte, the }:lornets ·
. making them have turnovers,': said Donald Royal sfole the ball from
· Rice. who scored 26 pomts 10 25 Vitaly Potapcnku, who had grabhed
· minutes at the All-Star game m Feb- the rebound with 4.8 s&lt;conds left,
. ruary.
Pierce made two free throws wah
·, "We played so well in the first
.. ., .

0.:1 m11 10.

'

Minll(:!iOI~

I

I!

; t

Tonilhl's games

''

,.,I .

Toronto !Clemens 1-0) 011

C lu~.ttW

Boswn (W:tkcllcld &lt;i- l l al O.tkl.111d
(Adanu0-0) . 100~ I'm
CLEVELAND &lt;Hershokl' 0.0) al &amp;a1·
de (D M~me;t.().{)), 10mpm
N Y Yankeet ( Rogeu 0 -01 a1 Ana·
he1m (Dickson 1..01 10 0~ p m

I .

I~

1

Wednesday's games

l

Minnesota (Tewksbury 0-1} ,,, O.:troit
(ModderO.O), I·OSpm '
Bcwon (Sc:le 1-0) at Oakland (Karsay

l

I

().0), 11~pm

,

CLEVELAND (Colon 0-0) 111 Seattle

•

(WokoU 0.1), 6 ~~ P-m

Texas (8 Wttt 0 -0) al Mtlwaukee
(Knri0-1) 70~rm. ·
.
Bnl11mon: (KwrutRlCC:ki ().()) ut K::~nw
(JI)I (Ro111do 0-0). K:O."i p rn
Toronto (Guzmnn 1·0) at Chh:ugP
• While Sl1a. (Boldwu\ 0.0), K·O~ (l.nl.
N Y YMWs (0. Wells 0.0) at Anaheim (Wntson0-0). 10:.'\~ p.m.

I

NL standings
f

:rFlorida

Gil

.667

I

PIU"*"'"•• .... .......2

I

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2
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'p

1. .... ...... ~

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4
4
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........ )
1

00...., "'""" ......0
Sl !Aoia .................0

j

:

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a.-New York .
•n
Orhmdo
. . . 41
W:u;hina•on . . . . .\9
New Jersey .
2J
Philadelphin
. 21
Bos1on . . .• . 11

L Ed.

18
22
\4

1W
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,.'\47

.'il
.'i4

:\11
280

63

171

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.000

I

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.. .•
~I
• ·Adanla
.
~I
•.OWione . .. . 49
CLEVELAND ... JK
Indiana.. . , ...... 17
Milwa.k~ ., .......... 29
Toronto .... ,..... ' . T1

14
24

6AO
610

26
.17

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4:'

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.267

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O:llla5., ........ .. 22

I'KIIkDI.l·Seauk ..... ···' ... ~2 14 .M4
1-LA. UAWs .. - ~1 24 6IW
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l'ho&lt;nll ......... 16 ]9 -180
' LA. Oippm ..... :W -tl .-t:t~
Sa~.:ramcnto ......... JO 4!1
400
Goklen StaiC .uoM"h28 ..7 .373
y-di~ division 111lc
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211

204

66 22;\ 264

272 1%
l.l7 llY
24l 1:\l
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208

ll~

261
203 -269
20~

ADVERTISING DEADLINE: .

THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1997 -12 NOON

Tonlahl's pmes
B~tun ltl Pitlsbw'Jh. 7:JO p m
N~o.ow ~.:rsey 31 Tu~ B.1y. 7 : ~0
Delnm :M CniJary, '1:.\0p.m,

7&lt;
·~·-

p.m.

WedlltSday's pmeo

17 '~
21'~
2.1 ~

H:tnlbnl at Ou:awa. 7:)0 run
Mon1n:al Ul NY. lslanden. 7: ~ fl.m

New Jersey wFkxiUI, 1 )0 p.m.
Sr. LA"'i' u1 Chi\:1110· K::to p m.'
Tflllmlu ut O.Uus, R:)() p.m
Sun Jolll! it! CuluniW. 9 p.m.

Oelroil DC Edn,.,nlon. 9 : ~ p m. _

10~

pt.oeniA 01 Vm-.:ou'ver, 10 p.m.
lot Anttb 1i Allllheim. 10:30 P.·'"'

101
Tr&lt;111S&lt;ICliOI1S

I

'

Tonllht's pmes

,I

'

I

BueiNIII
.
........_._
BAtTlMORE ORIOLl!S: ""iva1ed

~WashinauHt

at: TOIOflllo, 7 p.m.
Mianu n1 New Jmey. 7: ~ p m
CLEVELAND M Now Vorl., 8 p.m.

'

•

I

. r.-,·•..FI«14• tA. Uitor 1-1) Chl•oao
a!

21
'

.

'

OF ~c lnnvialiA from lhe I ;"i-day dil·
abled !itt . Sent OF 'Tony Tarasco 10

Orlando ar Mifwllllkee, 8:30p.m
Portland a1 Dallu. l :lO p.m
Denv-er ar San Allonio,l ~ p m.
Mi.....,q • Phomi., 10 p.m.
• L.A. ClirtJ011, 10::10 p.m.
L.A. Laten at Gotden SJaM, 10:30

,...

Rocheolercl..,_onall.eolue.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Sianed
SS a.;, Millin IIIII llliped him 10 die
ftam·s miaor-leaaue u1nded sprina

T ,

~·~~~-·

I

.

'

•

246 IM9
244 IK6
2JO 23.'\
2~7

•

f By RUSTY MILLER

22tl
2t17

Hartl ortl4. BuUaln 2
Mootreal 2. N Y. lalmkku I
NY RanJCnl Pb111td.!lphia 2
- IJ'.alltt.'l 2, Phoi!Ria. l(!IC) . Vancouwr 1 rii1n Jusc 2

(01'1

Milmi 94, Delroil ~

264
269

· Monday's ~~eores

playoff btnh

Monday'ssc:ora
Chnrloue 110, CLEVEL ... ND

I&lt;JK

227

INSERTION DATE:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1997
For More Information -

Dave Harris - Ex:t~ 104
Bob Atwood - Ext 105

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) t New Ohio State basketball coach
: Jim O'Bnen says there IS no truth to
: a Boston columnist's contention that
~ he was 11red al Boston College
' before taking the Oh1o State job.
:
"I was never fired," O' Brie"
t told Tht Columbus Dispatch today.
• "Alii can say is that what is repon: ed is inaccurate."
·
I 0' Brien was hire~ away f~om
; Boston College Wednesday_ to
replace Randy Ayers. who was lired
as basketball coach after Ohio Stale's
}fourth straight losing season.
A ·Saturday column by Will
1
[McDonough in · Tht Bost011 Glob..
.said Boston College President Rev. .
William P. Leahy. angry over leaks
I he felt came from ,O'Brien. wllhd,rew
a proposed contract extension and .
ctold O'Brien "he was no longer.the
basketball coach.''' ,
The column did not site a source.
"Tiiere's )jothing accurate. ...
.•Other than t~. I don't ~ave .a
jwhole lot to say," O'Bnen said. "I

!

'

j

Call 99~-2155

' '

llrst on a walked to 'Cynthia Caldwc II, who stole second and later stole
home, then Keri Caldwell reached on ,
u dropped third strike and scored on
u Davis tt1ple. Jewitt singled, stole .
second and third then came home on
a Seitz single for a 2-1 tally.
Southern scored two in the fourtli
on four walks and a single by Jennifer .Yeaguer, then came back' to
score three in the liflh on five more ·
walks and aggressive base running. '
Southern went on to win 9-S,
Southern plays at Rjlvenswood
tonight.
Inning .tmah
002-020-1 5=8;0..2
Southern
Trimble
03 I -020-00=6,8-4
· WP-Suyre
LP-Mills

when Kara King, DH for Sayre, benefit of a hit. .
Trimble went down 1-2-3 in the
reached on an error, Cynthia Caldwell reached on a fielder's choice seventh and SHS went home with
that cla1med King. Amber Thomas, the WIO .
.Against Vinton County; Regina
who hit the ball hard ~II mght, was
out on a b-3 ground out and SHS was Manuel posted the win in giving up
down to its last glimmer of hope.
· nine hits, walking two, fanning six
With two out, Ashli Davis and and watchipg tlie SHS defense g1ve
Keri Caldwell walked and Renee up three errors. Cecil suffered the
Turley was hit with a p11ch to force loss with 10 walks, two strikeouts,
home a run. A passed ball scored four hits and seven runs. given up.
another run, then Sellers reached on Seitz came on in relief to walk two
l
a 4-3 fielder's choice Two more and give up two runs.
Southern hillers were Ashli Davis
passed balls, two overthrows at second, and an error on the THS catch- a triple, Cynth1a Caldwell, Keri
er allowed two more runs to score Caldwell, Ashley McKinney all with
and another scored when McKinney singles. For VC Jewin had two sm·
reached on an error at third base. gles and Liz Zinn had two singles.
Soutbern took ·a 2-0 lead m the·
Southern now led 8-6 without the

Eastern tied the sebre at 1-1 after J. Richards with two triples, two dou- singles, Patsy Aeiker with one triple,
Trimble's Richards scored on an bles and a single, CotTman with one one double and one single, Chasatie
error in the first inning.'Tracy While triple and one single.
Hollon with one single, Amanda
sin~led and Mindy Sampson walked.
In a game reported earlier Meigs Millhoan with two singles.
Aetker knocked home the run on a 4- dropped Eastern 6-4 m a very close
Vah:ne Karr wllh two rluubies.
3 ground out Eastern put the game 'leagu~ conte'st. Emily Fackler was Manie Holter with one double and
away 1n the thard when Wh11e the wmne.randKarr suffered the loss o~e smgle, Tracy Wh11e w1th two
walked, Sampson singled, Ae1ker as both p1tched line games
In pies and one smglcs.
.
and Crow walked, Holler reached on
Hitters for Eastern were Meredilll
. Hillers lor Belpre were Foraker
an error and knocked home two runs, Crow w11h two smgles. Patsy Ae1k- w1th one smglc and one tnple. ChapKarr knocked home another on a 6- er with "ne triple and one_single, Tra- man with o~e tnple.and one double,
5 ground out and C:hasatie Hollon cy Wh11~ w11h one smgie, K1m • Struthers wnh one smgle, Mollohoan
had an RBI and sacnlice fly. ,K1m . Mayle wnh one smglc.
.
w1th one smglc .
.
Mayle closed the inning with an RBI
. H111ers t_or Me1gs we~e _K. G1lk~y .
EasJern took a 4-0iead 1n the sec- ·
smgle.
wuh two smgles, ,B. W1lhams With ond when Amanda M1lhoan doubled, ·
Hillers for Eastern were Tracy o~e smgle. T. Laudermdt w1th o_ne Chasa11c Hollon smgled. Mayle had
White with two smgles, Mindy tr1ple and one smgle, E. Fackler w1th a 1-3 put.outthal brought home two
Sampson with one triple and one sin- one double and one smgle.
runs, Wh1te walked , Sampson had an
gle. Valerie Karr with two doubles
Over the years Belpre has become RBI smglc and Patsy Ae1ker had an
and one triple.
.
an arch nval. to the Eagles: The RBI smgle .
.
Hillers for Trimble were Lent Eagles took th1s rqund of the nvalry
. Eastern loaded the bases m the
.with one triple, two doubles and one ":'lh .a 6-4 wm and another good thtrd, but never scored then plate on
single. C. Richards with one single, puchmg performance by Karr. Karr m the four after Belpre had cut the
fanned three and walked eight, while score to 4-1. Sampson single and
- Adams suffered the loss in fanning Aeiker · had an RBI triple. Huller
eight and walkmg eight. Eastern had reached on an emtr as EHS advanced
10 hits and Belpre was limited to just two runners into scoring pos1tion, but
(.4 secon.ds left 10 close the sconng.
four.
Adams struck out the-side to end the
Rookie Tony Delk 's three-pointHillers for Eastern were Mindy frame.
er with five seconds remaming in . Sampson with one double and two
Belpre cut the lead to 5-3. In the
regulauon capped Charlone:s comeback.
• ••
"It gives the whole team more
conlide.nce when you come back to
win like that,'' Delk said.
The Hornets had a chance to win
after Brandon was called for traveling with 3.2 seconds leti, but Pierce's
30-footcr bounced off the rim as the
bua.cr sounded.
F~rry's 23 points led Clev.eland.
- the amazing walk-behind ,
Chris Mills ~cored 22. Brandon had
mower/brushcutter that-21 and Potapenko had 20.
Cleveland shot 70 percent from
CLEARS &amp; MAINTAINS meadows,
the lield on the w~y to a 32-18 lead
roadsides. fences, wooded
after one quarter. The 32
rough non-lawn areas with ease.
the most scored by the Ca.valicrs
the lirsl quarter this season.
Mo•ws over 1/2 acre per houri
· Cleveland shot ,\ 'season·high
• CUTS tall grass, weeds, brush,
.567 percent from the lield.
, "I think we were a lillie more
brambles, sumac - even tough
aggress1ve in the overtime." Rice
saplings up to 1" thick!
said. "We were genmg to the loose .
balls and ~illing ' some big shots."
• Plus CHOPS and MULCHES

•

most everything 'it cuts; leaves NO
TANGLE of material to trip over or
to pick up like haAd-held brush·
cutters and sicklebar mowers.
POWERFUL BHP Briggs
&amp; Stratton engine; optional
Electrio..Starting. BIG

•

have some ideas about why it agreement on the buyouts of the conappeared. but frankly, I'd rather not tracts of both coaches fired utthe end
share them. BC had taken a bealmg of the season -Ayers and women's
'"the Boston papers for a couple of . coach Nancy Darsch. Both were
tired March I0.
days. "
A column in Sl'nday's Bo.1·tm1
Beth Bums, fonnerly San Diego
Herald refuted McDonough's story. State coach, was selected Thursday
Referring· to Boston ·College to replace Darsch.
administrators. basketball wnter
Mcan\\hile, the director of the
Mike Shalin wrote, "The' leaks all seat license program at Ohio State's
came !'rom them. Heck, maybe they new Value City Arena said O'Brien's
Just wanted to run him out an~. this haring d1d not produce a large
·was a c~nvement way to do 11.
response in seat-license sales.
O'Bne"' spent· most of Monday
"When the program started out,
touring Ohio St~~e )"llh members of we sold n ton," Alex Ambrose said.
h1s coac~mg stall at Boston College. "Since then. it's been preuy steady
"'They're takmg a look at the JObs with the c~ception of when Andy
and have been meeting wuh our per- decided to change the coaching sitsonncl people and lea~;~~ing . abo,ul uation back a month or so ago. Then
Ohio Stale• ' OSU athletics d1rector we suw a lillie bit of a'lffi'rge.
Andy Geiger said. "I think thai some
"We had a preuy big month atier
of the1h may 'Vinci up here-:.... all of that m sales, and it 's basically
them might wind up here- but they' tapered oii a linlc bit. ·
need to go hack and consult with
'Tm waiting to see in the next
wives and do all that stuff before all ·two or three weeks if the naming of
of that happeos."
the new coaches docs bnng the surge
In related mailers. Geiger said the that we were anticipating or not. "
umversily wa.• close to reaching an

lCanadian ·woman tiles .c i"illawsuit
.1against Mesa and former teamm~te ·
; ClEVElAND (AP)-Awoman
alleges in a lawsuit that CleveliiDiJ
JndiiDI pitcher Jose Mesa and a fot- '
joCr teammate had nonconsensul .
eex with het', a newspaper has repott-

id.

: Th6 Plain /HQIIr reponed today

a woman from Toronto has filed a

civillawiuit in St. Ca•i~. Ont.,
'

seeking at least $1 million in dam·
ages from 'Mesa and his former Indl-.
ans teammate, catc(Jer Tony Pena, ·
now a membtr of.lhe Chic-ao White
Sol', in connection with 111 incident '
ihe says happened lillil Ma)' in Ana-.
heim, Calif. - . .
..
Mesa, 10 Cleveland, 11 awutma a ·
jury's decisiOJI
on whether lie raped
.

sixth, Holter reachd on an en:or to
reach base three out of four 11mcs.
Holter ca'!le home on a M1lhoil!l smgle sandw1ched around a Knrr smgle.
~aylc a~d Wh1tc each walk~ three
Urnes wh1le Sampson and Ae1ker had
two RBis. . .
.
.
After a season openms wm
agamst South Galha, the El:iS.baseball team has dropped three ~1ra1ght.
No slats have yet been rePQrtccl.
Both d1amo~d teams pia~ at ~me
Tuesday agamsl new Hockmg DIVI·
smnfoe Waterford.

Correction
In Monday 's edition of The Dailr Seminel it was reported in the .

ticadhnc that R1o Grande's softball
team lost a doubleheader to Midway
Sunday.
.
The headline was incorrect. The
story was correct .
The Redwomen, whose wins
boosted their record to 13-13-over~11. w1ll return to Mid-Ohio Conlerencc acuon today with a I p.m. hOme
doubleheader with Urbana.
The Sentinel regrets the error.
'

'

The DR® FIELD and
BRUSH
OWE.R

iO'·Br1en refutes scr1bes' claim ·
ithat BC officials wanted· him out

•·clinched ri&lt;~YofT berth

Gil,

49;\

-~

:w I J n

~942

Paclrk Dlvltdon
t·l'ukorntlu . -'K 22 9 10:'
K·Anahelm
.l4 JJ l.l HI
...E4Jntonh-.l
16 ~~ K HO
Van.;ouw~ .
n .W 1 7J
Calg:•ry ... . J2 :t.K 9 7J
Lm AnJ!.ek&lt;l . 2b 42 II 63
San Jo~ . . . 26 45 K 60
z....:llnd:k.'d IJIVISUUI title

' WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwtll bi"ltion
~-Houstan

-·-

Ct•1rAI Dlwb!Wn
~ L I I!U.
7.·DtllhL&lt;~ .
. . 4724 M 102
~-Oemoh .. . .J7 24 17 91
x·Pltncnix
.\7 ~ 7 Kl
St. Ututs .', ... - ~3 ':'i II 77

.\6
44 '..

.493
.392
360

· -- J-·

ftH B l 2J7

Irlm

1;\ '~

M~
~

• A ·sPECIAL SECTION

WESTERN CONFERENCE

"
16
18

ChkaJO ..., ... Jl

10

Chi&lt;llao 128, Pliilodolpllio
Ponland 110. Denver I1M
Ut¥1 I 16. San Atttonio YJ

'II

Gil

~20

.. 66

r
JI-Utah ........ ,.

12

NortiiCII!It Dhision
.19 2H 12 90 229
x-Piusburl!h .. J7 .'~ H K2 274
Montn:ill . . , JO :\~ 14 H 241
H3n(onJ. ...
Jl 17 i I 71 216
O'nuwu . . . . 2K .lr, I~ 71217
Boslnn .. , . . . JS 44 IJ SIJ 22S

'

a.·~lrou .

11 HI! 21 1 171
11 HXJ 26.\ 204
II.J J''i 21J IIJ7
10 H4 2~0 224
I.J 69 206 21M
I.J ftY 197 224

~ - Burtuk• .

Cntnl Dlwbion
y·Chi..:li&amp;D ,

1i L I Eb. G£ !a

ll·New Jersey 4411
a.· Ptuladclph1a 44 21
a.· Fluflda
\1 1H
ll·N Y K:.m~cu 17 11
Tampu 8ny . .](J .\9
Wmstun~ltHL . . ](J &lt;10
N.Y. Islruulcn .... 2K .\9

A.la.ntk Diwilian
~

Allanllc Divi¥on

Irlm

.

Vm\Couver ....... .12

~Diwillon
~ L fd.

. .. . . S
/l:danca ... . . _, .4
Monlf-eal ........3
New Yor\ ..... ,....... 2

EASTERN CONFERENCE

N Y Mc111 CMiickt ()..()) al l..us Angde);
(Park 0-1), 10 l~ p m
Pul ~btJr}!h (lomu 0·0) .11 Sun D1epn
(Worrell !.()), 10 .l:'i p n~

r....
x-Miami

Whn!! Soli (AIIIILrel Q..l l K 0.~ p 111

'.

NHL standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

NY. Yunlwes ~ . Annhe1m -'

'f

Hockey

NBA standings

4

Kansas Cny ft Bulumon: .'i J
Milw;wkee S, T~o."Xa s '
Oakland 6. Bosrun 2
CLEVELAND II.,Seanh: J

I•

Wednesday's pmes

Ba sketball

Monday's scores

I

0.0).7-Wpm

walked. B. Sellers walked and Ashley McKinney walked. Four passed
balls and ·an error on the catcher
brought home the two runs.
In the lifth, Trimble scored twice,
when with two out, Dillon singled,
Davis reached on an error, and one
run· scored on an error in right.
Another came home on a Guinther
single for a 6-2 score.
Southern left two people on base
in the sixth as.time was drawing to
.a close. Keri Caldwell drew a walk,
then with two out McKinney was hit
with a pitch. A passed ball and an
error on the ·catcher allowed Caldwell to score, however, a stri~eoul
ended the SHS tally.
,
In the seventh, Southern rallied

·. Hornets beat Cavs 110-105 in OT

A.tlnn1:.1 :.11 Plni:.Kielphl.t. 7·JO p m
Boston ,11 Charlo!!&amp;:. 7.:\0 p m
Chl~~u ut lndwna, 7:30pm m
LA Lal.crs ;11 Utah. KJ'l m

Philadelphia (Munot 0-1) at Sun Fro••·
~.:lKU (Rueter0-0). ;\ .l.~ p m
'
CINCINNATI tBuncs 0-01 al Cui·
VfOJdu (M Tilom:pson 1-0). ~~I'm
Houston (K1Ic 0.\) at AII.Uita (Ne..~le

Brady Trace, Shafer. Snyder, and
Wisor. Trace and Snyder sutraed the .
loss on the mound.
Southern goes to Ravenswood for
a varsity/Junior V;ll$ity double header tonight.
·
looina i!tliiJ
Southern
107-420-2=16 IS 2
Tnmble
002-010-0=3 $ 5
WP-Williams and Lisle
LP-Trace and Scaggs

Eastern .softball team .recalis· previous week's three victories .

VoiiiO::tlUH'f Ol Sn~ramrniO, 10 J0 p m.

Wednesday's pmes

Ctnlral Oiwl:don
CLEVELAND
2 067
1
2
M•lw,1ukoc

I

'

L f&lt;1.

collected two singles, Blount two
singles, Nate Sisson a triple. Travis
Lisle a double, and smgies by Pete
Sisson, Dill, and Williams. Maynard
hammered a home run and single and
walked twice.
Southern plated four runs m the
founh.two in the lifth, and two more
in- the seventh.
Trimble hillers were Suuon,

''

Scoreboard
I

Williams went on to scalier five hits,
fan three. walk seven, and watch his
Southern infieid make two errors.
Trimble pitchina gave up I5 hits, had
si~ strikeouts, five walks, and the
'Ca~ made five errors.
Jollin' Joe Kirby, one of the
heroes of last year's championship
team, had a 4-for-4 outing with
three singles and a double. Mike Ash

·: Softball Tornadoes lose to Fort Frye ~nd defeat Trimble

Indians defeat Mariners 8-3
By JIM COUR
SEATTLE (AP) - For the Seattle Mariners, the road to the World
Series might go through Cleveland.
The Ind1ans, who beat the
Mariners in the 1995 American
League championship senes, are
looking bener than ever - even
minus Albert Belle and Kenny
Lofton.
"We feel hke we've got a prelly
good ballclub," manager Mike Hargrove said alier watching Cleveland
beat Sealllc 8-3 Munday night in the
teams' first meeting of the season.
· "We know that any t1me you play
Seanlc. you· d better bring your ·A'
game," he added.
The "tndians got home runs from
Sandy Ali&gt;mar and Manny Ramirez,
and a strong pitching performance
I rom Charles Nagy, who has owned
the Mariners since the 1993 seasun.
"When you've got Manny
Ramirez hillmg sixth, Julio Franco
hilling seventh and Kevin Mitchell
hilling eighth, yo\l' re gomg '\o get
plenty of RBis hilling ninth," Alomar said. "On different teams, those
guys ·are cleanup hillers."

sin.led, Chad Blount singled; Mall
Dill singled, Nate Sisson reached on
an error. Williams had a 4-3 groundout, Michael Ash singled, and Pet~
Sisson reached safely for a second
time in the inning, this time popping
a run-scoring single.
When the dust had sellled, Sou)hern led 8-0 and left the game in the
hands of Williams' pitching .

• VARIABLE SP,J:ED DRIVE
lets you go full speed througtl
grass, weeds, brambles .•.
then c-r-e-e-p into tough
brush without reducing power
·
or blade speed.
• Perfect JUr·ro!w•r.

SELJ=.PROPELLED

maintenance wl~rJflc,Mtrl

IIdi
~:=S~Ifurrows,
roll through

mesdows... European-style
woodlots ,free of undergrowth ... walking paths ... or
any area that you ~nly want
to mow once a month ... or
,. JJ • ,
once a·season!

1ov•er bumps and

logs with ease.

MADE IN USA

~· ibel. FCEE

1(~2~1fae0

Please write or
TODAY for com
FREE DETAILS of Tnal
Amazing DR- FIE ......,
and BRUSH MOWER

"llikt to t·ut the

underbru.vh on&lt;·e.

IJr twi,·~ a yeu'r, ·
.wlllt' of which is 5
ft. high on:f,l.rd

gran, briars., I

I\'ESfFP~Il~e;~a~s;e~-~r•u~;s;hh -;c;(o;~mnJp;ilee'it:~e-FitEiE1

IDETAit.S of t~e DR• FIELD
IBRUSH MOWER includittg pric~s.
!specifications of Man
a·n
IELECTRIC-STARTING IVIOIICIS:,

abo u.fed the DR to
lanll details
of, "Off-Season", ~a,ving~T
,
U
cur down rhe (IOta- I
:now
tn
euect.
to·tQPs artd as you
I , '
can .lt!e the t·om
I
.&lt;talks... The DR i.&lt; ' I•Name ________;_,-'----;;;l
I
everythintr I

.

a womaiJ last December in a CleveIaiii! !illburb. .
l'e1111 received notice of the suit
lut week while the White Sox were
playing the Toronro Blue Jays at the
Skydome. Mesa has not · yet been
scn:ed;'lhe woman!a lawyer IQid The
Pla111 Ot!akr.

~&lt;xpected and

more."

-- Oscar Brougher
Markleton, PA

. StAte

ZIP

C-0-UNTR~-YHOMEPRODU.~C~
~~~!
Dept. 2S11F. Meias ROid. P.O.
Vermont 05491·

I

'

Do~

25

�•
Pomlloy • •dclleporl. Ohio

BIECKY BAEA llllge Coun- pie crust, combine one cup of all- though, we don't want that to happen two sheets of waxed paper. ~oil ·out
lxtMelon Agent, F•mlly p11rp0se flour and I teaspoon of salt · we want the product to be tender the doogh with a rolling pin; rolling
Con8umef Sell nell! Co. thoroughly. Cut in 1/3 cup plus I and flaky. The purpose of the short- in all directions to form a circle. Roll
• .,.IY De\'llopment
.
tablespoon of butter-flavored short- enins is to coat the flour particles, the dough until the circle is two
Do you ever wonder how you can ening with a pastry bfender until the preventing them from coming in inches larger dian the inverted pie
perfec:t pie crusts · ones that fat is the size of peas. If you do not contact with the water which would pan. Carefully peel off the top layer
are tender, light have a pastry b~tr, you can
cause that elasticity. Cutting· in the of waxed paper. Place it back on the
and flaky? Does two knives or fo
he bottom of the shortening will give the pastry that dough. Tum the paper over with the
it seem like your boll{l in opposite irections. Cuuing characteristic tender, flaky crust.
dough still in between the pieces of
crusts are always the sbonening into the dry ingrediFinally add two to three table- waxed paper. Gently remove the
too tough or ents "shortens" the gluten strands in spoons of cold water to the mixture . other layer of paper. Cautiously tum
crumbly~ Here the flour (that is where "shortening" by: using a fork. Add the water\ lit- over the waxed paper with the dough
are · some UPS !O gets its name).
tie at a time to prevent the dough still on it, so that the dpugh slides
help you make .. ' What is gluten? Gluten is the pro- from becoming too wet. Avoid over- into the pim.' A glass pan or qonperfect · pastry tein found in flour. When making mixing • it makes lbe crust tough. shiny metal pan works best. Do not
:J;._ _ _....:.,,J every time you · yeast breads, we want the gluten to The dough should. hold together in stretch the dough to fit the pan.
.. 1:
bake.
act like elastic and become very · the form of a ball.
·
·
because that will .lead to shrinkage.
·"" In order to make ·a single 9-incti stretchy. When making pie crust,
Place the ball of dough between Prick the bottom of the crust with a ·

use

a

r~
~: - - C.ommunity
fit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
-calendar Is not d~ned to pro·
-111ote sales oi' fund raisers of any
·'.)'fpe. Items are· printed as space
permits and cunot .be guaranteed .
.. t~ nan a specific numher of days.
'.fUESDAY
'
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
·~Chamber of. Commerce, Tuesday,
~nuon , &lt;;:arleton School, Syracuse,
.Dianne Corkerhan of Temporary
·~rvices to speak.

••
·•.
CHESTER -- Chester Township
JTrustees will meet in regular ses•&gt;rion,1Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the township
'!fall.
DARWIN -- Bedford Township
¥rustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Bedford
town hall .
:;; POMEROY -- Meigs Local
lSoard of Education regular session
::tuesday, 7 p.m. at the central office
·~

50"·75"

Home

"li'ACFORY DIRECf
PRICES"

:CIIPET

$195.00 INSTALLED

Just off Bnldbury Rd.

Make sure that cream, chiffon
a~d Cl!stai-d-type pies·are refrigerated after baking. llecause these' 'pies
are made with eggs, salmonella food
poisoning could become a problem
if the pies are not kept cold.

(up to !13 UDited lncha)

. · ~toralgrM)

Middleport, ~ 81~711

•

School Support Group will meet al7
p.m. on April 10 at lhe home of
Brian and Kim Hilpp. Topic will be
on teaching art. For more information residents 949:3119.

Day a Evening
.

H,..

JIZ11f11N.

Gutters

oOwnepow

(Oplto.A...IUieo&amp;-C..l

Quality W~dow . Syst~ms
110 Court SL

Pomeroy, Ohio

112-41111

1-eG0-2111-11800

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

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168.
31171141TFN

.

.WIY'S

LIWICARI
Mailing·

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

(R 1111 i IIIII'6 CO!MIIn:lll)

•1'1'11 :ntmmtng
~
Maintenance
Plan AIIMCI, C.lltodey

forlreeeetll
. .,, .
.~~~····:.

DAV hosts
meeting

SATURDAY

742-2803
or446-3622

j

These officers, top, of ·the,
Dliabled American Veterans
Chapter ,53 hoste(j a ninecounty 9th district meeting on
Saturday at their headquarters netir Middleport. John
Carey was the spe11ker for the
event. Pictured are officers
Elmer Pickens, Commander;
Hap Ingels, Adjudant[Treasurer; Denver Curtis, area Service Officer; Loyd Johnson,
Senior VIce Cornmtmder; and
James Gilmore, Junior VIce
Commander. These women,
bottom, are officers In Chapter 53 of the DAV, and helped
host Saturday's 9th district
meatlng. · :t'hey are , Bette
Biggs, Wanda Eblin and Ardel·
Ia Johnson. ·

Wednesdays to become new SS ·check day
and for binhdates between the 21st
and lhe 31st, benefits are paid onJhe
founh Wednesday.
"Adding new benefit payment
. days lets Social Security give beqer
service to you· and all other beneficiaries and callers," says Peters,on.
"Thi~ means your call to our tollfree number (1-800-7721213) will
be answered faster and your visit to
our field office w'll take less time. In
addition, calls and visits to report

~~~ ~~~:·~y!t.~i~~ ~~:.~:~:

other payment-related matters will

KillS'..

llollel~~p: .......
3351 st.ppy Hollow.Roltcl
Mldtlaport, Ohio 4S7eD
Haw Ho-, Adcllll-.

Roofing, Siding. ·

Pole Barna, Decka,
· Painting, Garagea.
Poreht!a.
Clll U. For A Frw EIICIItwtt
614-742-30110
614-742-3324

.,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON
•New Homes
•Garages

... w••.,

,...,....

•Complete
Remodeling

.a......

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ·

Call
992-6342 (Diane)
'

ESTIMATEes·

Complete House
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,
Backhoe, Tnlckhoe.
Septic Syet.m•
ln1t8lled

D. Gea17's

WICKS
HAULING

··~·-·

Quality Work lit
a Felr Prlcel
550 Page St. .
Middleport, Oh. 45760

614-992-3120

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Don Geary, Owner

614-992-3470

-

,
.,

--

~2-5176

01711n

announced.
·''

SHARPENING
.SERVICE
HUPP'S

Sf

~ Fi~her.

Hubanls Grtell:ont
Se&amp;on
."PanSies $6.50 fiat
• All vegetable &amp; bedding
planis $6.50 flat
• Blooming &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75· $6.75
o4 ln. ASsort. Pots
85e. $1.25
•Rubber trees &amp; elephant
ears$5.50
eCanvas $2.00 ea.
oShrubbery
We honor Golden
Buckeye Cards .
·Open Daily 9-5 Sun 12·5

vr .

.'

.

.L..-:!lil...;;...li..o;....;,_.;._....,....

.

(

)

. .

.

.I S

CUSTOM .
SHARPENING

"I'm calling a newspaper clipping service. I' want
to see how many papers ran my obit. •

949·2647
. .

R. L. HOLlON
TRUCKING

'

There won't be. any flowery speeches,
just this invitation to drop b})
pick up a little .something fqr your garden•
·and.add your name to our prize drn,Mng.

,o\NDY FISHER

.Your

•

'·

'

''

ketpl

• String

I

'

•l

i'•

•

1

. '

Middleport.

;

:

•Realdentlal &amp;
,Commercial
oGaneral C.rpentry

the.,..

•Remodeling
~arages

for

· ovwl6yra
Mike w. Marcum
Cheater, Ohio
985-4141

•Decka

eCampmr Tl'llnlllg

992-5535

992-2753

ofllwGarlgtl

.......

·--

.

I

•

..

[!'

Yillo, Ohio 45508 0001.

G1

Giveaway ·

40

olnlllrlor &amp; Exterior ·

.PelntliiiJ
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ES1'1MATES) .
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Day Ph. 992-3671
Eve. Ph. 949-2534
Brian Anderson

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

-

lllllln

. . Ins. Ownoc Ronnie Jones

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

UIUIIt
iiCIIIftll

Farni.Buildings

537 BRYAN PLACE

Limestone &amp; G1'8Vel
Septic Systems
Trailer&amp;
HoueaSitea
RfiiiiOflllblfl Rates
JoeN. Sayre

REPAIR OR NEW .

· MIDDLEPOIIT

CONSTRUCTION

992-2m

e:oo e.m.-3:30 p.m.
eReplac~~~~e~~t Wildows

•Build '-ages
•Storm Doors &amp;

Sayre Tnming Co.

Windows

Loafing sheds to horse arenas.
Roof rep11r and p•lnt to structural repair.
Steel buildings 11 low a1 $4.00 sq. ft.
deliveried. Free estimates, prompt and
p~o!esiiDnll 1ervlce•.Call today

B•IIIIC'I'OIIS .

•R00111 Allcllllau

614-742·2138

Jllllt1ttn

;uul 'h•adt• iss • ht•

('l:tssint•d
St•t·• ion!
KIT 'N'· CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Freo to good home. IOmo.
radlwhlt• mala 112 Bugle, :M2
Bauoa Hound. 30441512211. 0
Puppleo, lloltly ll ......d, liMo
Good Watch Dog, Mull Sea To
Apptoelotol11~·3tl7·7705. 114387·7043.
•
To good hol!le, &amp;mo. old bl.' •
II arlo Auotrallon Shep~ard :~
puppj, malo, naut•rlng 11 .
b-.30HI75-7485aflor4:30p"'- &gt; 1

I

Y.-ct Site

70

', '

ALL Yord Sotaa lluat Ia ... 1~
In Advance, DEADLINE: I~
p.m. the dlf ..._ lllo _, It;,
run. 9Uftd1J adlllon· • 2:00 :
Friday. llondiJ adhloa . ,1 :00

1.m.Situ....,..

1

Pomeroy,

.~

MlddJeport
I VIcinity

,,"

All Yard Saleo .lluol Ba Paidllh
Advance. Oudllno: I :OOpm ~
day boloro tho ad lo ., rvn. Sii!i: ·
day &amp; llondaj tdltlon- 1:OO)HI\

· 'b .

F(lday.

RIM.
Wadntoday ond HvHII
ThorldiliJ,
Hou-oroa, ctotheo. mtoc. 814-

Patch ..... ""' -

·BISSEll BUILDERS, · INC~
New Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing'
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday

.

Public Site
and Auction

80

eUpgncles
•Miaor Rlpllrs . ...
elllenetSellp Help

•EieclriCII &amp; PlumbiiiiJ
•RoofiiiiJ
'

Dl

,;,

Lomtero Auction Service, L Lamloy, Auctlonaar. Houaoh'
Ealate, Form Solei. Cll 814- ,
8241, 8t~1413.
1

RiCk

Pe1r1on

Auction Comp•i'f.

full time auctioneer. c·omplite
aucaion aervlce.
Llcertlecl
168,0hlo &amp; Woot Yltglnil, ~·
713-5785 Or 3Q4-7J:I.54ot7.
•

90

Wanted to Buy . ul

Absolute Top Dollar; AN U.S. 811.
ver And Gold Colno. Proor~
· ,
Oiamondo, An~quo J-'ry.
·
Rings. Pro·1930 U.S. Curro ,
Sterling, Etc. AcquloldoN Jew11ir
· I.U.S. Coin Shop, 151 S8CQIIII
Averue, Gallpoi~ 81..._,2&amp;4t.u
Antiques, furniture, glaa,, c
,
coins, t~s. lamps, 9un1, to •
estates; alao apprllllll, o..-v
IAarnn, 814·992-7441.

Antiques, top prlceo

pald, . R~

In&amp; ·Antlciuea, Pomeroy, OhlO,
RuaJ Moore owner, 814·102-

25211.

Clean Lala llodot · Caro~
Truckt, 1990 llodtlo. Or N
·
Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1900 E
ern Avenue; Gojllpolo.
1i!
J &amp; D's Auto Pano. Burl"ti ulvage vohiclu Saill"tt parla. 3!14r
713-5033.

Non· Wotking Waahor, Ory 0ia&gt;
Stovet, Aefrlgeratora. FrH~
Air Colll!ltlonoro, Color T. V.'l',
VCR'o. AIIO JuNI Clrl, 114·2151-

ol

IZlB.

Wonted Tlmbor I Or Tim!W,
Land, Profeaalonal Servl~
. .
Mead Papor Woodlando, ~~~
772-3838.
. '-

o.,•.

Wontod 10 buy chip wood. ·3a4\
773-5Q80

Evenings.

114·812-1025

CELLULAR PHONES
360" Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH•

614-992·5479
One Unit .Niow

Available

H011t Improvement
"lo!ofrlty wit• Allll411illly" '

10X28,$65

Free Estimates

368-8879

'

April Serving li'Om 4:30 • 5:15
DoilatloD $4.o0.for meal ·

. 112-7118

Whit• Countr1 GenlleNn 41

"""' old, 11'2, 210, country wpman. Ro~ Lee . II
· 181· &gt;145 P.O. Box ~-lu ·

992·7513.

•liSt%..·

oRaom Acldtuone

~•·II

•No Job Too Small
•Any and All of Your
Home Repair Needs
oCall Today for Your
Free Estimates

•Hardware/Software
Set.

YOUNG'S
(ARPENJIR SERVIa

ICss .~.

.

•New Homes

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CEftfllEI'Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
Thn'8ys and Thursdays during

TOPic "Suraerv Tour"

..,.u

nt-&amp;64&amp;t.

GaUipolls .
I VIcinity

"11.., NN Ownnship"

at

.PVH Medical Explorei"
Meeting Thursday,
April1 0, 7 p.m. In
PVH dining room;

.

Meet Now People The Fun W.,
Todaj.1-800-772-&amp;3D Eat MZ4
suo lltn. lluot Ba II

Athens, Ohio

111!11

Ramaclellng '

SMvlng

.Safranek

(614) 592·5025

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc•
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861

EVENING MEAL

992-6661
·-

CHAPTER 7 • CHAPTER 13

742-2084

I

c._

Jd

Attorney

can R• llozlngo

ii

8G22.
GonHomon lloolll"tt
ahip ffll!ll Nico For
.
Walko I Frlondohtp. ~nd
•
ptleo To : CLA 308, &lt;Jo GltUpollo
!)oily Tribune, 821 Thlnl - . . ,

IJ82.3438,

FRIDAY, APRIL 11,
10 AM-7 Pll - .
FEENEY BENNETT
POST128
AMERICAN LEGION
ANNEX
- __.. ..lddlepCirt
Vetldlrl $5 - 8' Table

I

-

-Vldeoa.
- And1310
AnOna
AciUH
EaiWn .
nuo, ClllllpoNI, Or cat! 114· ~

2 Yoar old Ent~lllh Sellar. V'iir
good Wlklda. Ca~ Iller llpm. -

FRIDAY FISH FRY .
· •d FLEA MARKn

1

IN ~L- lllrle l'etry, Yvonne Baton, AndrN T..., and o.rrt
. Tnl llllnd In the Gllrdel• of Gett~Mm~ne on the Mount or· ~
whit II blll.,ld to be 1 2,000 yeer old olive he, the oldeat In
...... Mel . . . . . In ... wwld. Pltty Wide who 1110 llllde the trip
. . nac IW atint for the p~c~u,., .The group lpent 10 ~ In ,......
..,... upan...., l'llll'n ....,IMir experltnces with me111b•• of ... .
r.::::.
aass Llfll Clnllr Ill " •·

· • Aquatron Boats • Cutty
Cabins • Bow Riders • Bass
Boats • Sea Ark John Boats
• Johnson OutbOard

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

Drawing .Friday, Apru 11,

JoeWII1on
(61'1) 992-4277

985·3831

Dirt· Sand
985-4422
·Chester, Ohio

l

''I',

1 112 1•ar old, malo, pari 1.111.
good ·with child ron. · 304-llt!i·
5890.
.
Jq

Um~atone • Gravel

.\

•, $50 Gift Certificate·, Mitch' ~odt. .1'L..~
.

1898 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 411789

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE '

•

•

Your 5applfer For...
•Fertilizer (Bag or Bulk)
•De.Kalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds
· · •Small Seeds •Chemicals
•Twin •Feed •Lime

olnterlor &amp; Exterior

N&lt;&gt;t» Open For Sprins

OUr remodeling is complete!

CHESTER AGRI SERVICE

URCUM&amp;SON
BUILDING

(Lime Ston•
Low Rates}

FREE ES71MATES

BEATilE BLVD.® by Brute Beattie

n

"aulld Your Dream"
'
.

Customers.,.,_

mo.

Fisher birth
Ralph and Leslie F.ishcr, Racine,
&lt;Hmounce the birth of their first
'fuild, a son, Andy Lee, bom on Feb.
~ at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
'• The in(ant weighed 9 pounds, 5
llQnces and was inches long.
__ Grandparents are Wes and Lil)da
.Gilkey of Middleport; and Bob and
~bby Fisher of Racine.
:,, Great-grandparents are Carl and
l~an Will of Pomeroy, and Lydia
Qilkey of Middleport and the late
tJersch~l Oilliey, the late Oval and .
Sara Dtddle, and the late John and

stiiii11Jillllo.

Big Be~ Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop

Service to New

.,.,

beredu;c:ed~.~.. ~~r-~-~--~~:;;:::~::~~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~:J

Aerlltlon Motor .Sales &amp; Rep~~lra
Cleaning Septic Systems
Port-A.John • Rantala • Serviced WHidy
No Extra Charlli\t for Evenlnga or Weekend•
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Days A Week

614-696-1376
Lawn Mowing &amp;
Landscsplng

Syracuse
....

I

01

ATIEIIS
GUSS MASTERS

· 10% Off Any

. (614) 992-3838

..

'.

M&amp;J

614·992·7119

.

/'dJiJ'I

AillhiiM
Hao Your llarrlaoo Or IN!&gt; Gal Up a Warf. .... 1n

Complete Machine Shop Se"lee Fabrleatloa
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Rej,alr &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. · 12 noon

POMEROY

Driveway Umestone

.

Remodeling

7/22/tfn

·HOWARD
EXQVADNG CO.

Home~h.

Homes

POMEROY, OHIO

985-4473

.992·7275 (Brancla)

4/tll

JICK'IIIP I IC I
PO..,.._JOIIIDIICI

GallipOII~ qH ~-1

c........,

Gutter Cleaning

.

Foduture Social Security benefi- to be paid on the third. Benefits to
·ciaries, Wednesdays . will become current and future Supplemental
:One of the most important days in Security Income (SSI) beneficiaries
'ttieir lives. It's the. day that their will continue to be paid on the ht of
_:$,bc ial Security benefits will ·be . the month.
·
d~livered , according to Ed Peterson, · "When you apply for bem!fits: the
}ijanager of the Athens Social Secu- Social Security representative will
nty office.
'
tell you when to expect your/benefit
" "People who apply.· for benefits payment, The lener we send to you
beginQing. May I, 1997, will not notifying you of your benefit
receive their benefit on the third of amount will also have this informathe month as in the tiast. Instead they tion," says Peterson.
~II receive it on a·second, third, or ·
"The day you receive your benerourth Wednesda·y of the month," fits will be determined by the birth. P~terson said. Benefits recei\'ed this , date of the person orl whose work
-June will be based on the new dcliv- record the benefits are based,"
4!Yschedule.
according to Peterson. "This means
;·.., The change is expected to· even - tbat spouses who apply can expect
·oat the workflow of the agency by to receive their benefit based on (1\e
'!!VOiding the peak Of telephone traf- birthdate Of the working spouse.''
f1c that generally accompanies
Here's how it works: For workers
aeck deliveries on the third of the . wilh birth dates between the first
fl}?nth. It is expected to help reduce and the lOth, benefits are paid on the
W ephone waiting times for all second Wednesday;' for birthdates
callers. Benefits to current Social between lith and the 20th, benefits
~ecurity beneficiaries will continue are paid on the third Wednesday;

.. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

n•~s. CISTOM

' ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

•

JEWEL

SOUDVINYL

SAVE

~i'dLWrlteMI.

RUlLAND -- Rutland Township
trustees special meeting Tuesday, 6
p.m. at the Rutland Fire House for
the purpos~ of hiring cemetery
mowers.
FRIDAY
. EAST MEIGS ·• Eastern Local
WEDNESDAY
Board of Education, Friday, 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Ladies at lhe high school to discuss and
Auxiliary, Post 9053, Tuppers review bids for new building.
Plains, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .at the
hall. New officers will be elected. ·
RUlLAND •• Return Jonalhan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Friday, I p.m.
THURSDAY
at Rutland United Methodist ·
TUPPERS · PLAINS ·-- Tuppers Church. Program on ecology by
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Donna Weber and Rutland fifth
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 grade class .
p.m. at the post for nomination of
··
officers.
MIDDLEPORT ·• Widows Fellowship, potluck at noon Friday .
POMEROY --. Preceptor Beta Middleport Church of Christ.
Beta sorority meeting Thursday.
6:30 p.ni. at the Episcopalian parish
DARWIN -- Burlingham Modem
house. Bring items .for Serenity Woodmen will hold a potluck dinner
House.
Friday, 6:30 p.m. at the their hall.
RACINE

•

should be cut in the top crust. .
When IJiaking merinsue pies, you
c..; help keep them from shrinking
and weeping by sealing the
meringue onto tbe edge of the cruat
before baking. It will also he helpful
to have no more than two table·
spoons.()f sugar for each egg white
when making the meringue. Add the
sugar slowly to be certain that it. dissolves.
·
··

calendar

z"; The Community Calendar Is . in the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
•r::lisbed
as a free serVice to non,. '
'
'

fork to keep the pastry from puffing
up d~ring baking.
,.
··
When making a two-crusted pie,
double lhe ingredien\5 and divide
the &lt;aough into two balls before
rolling. To prevent soggy crusts,
sprinkle a little sugar on lbe bottom
crust before adding fruit fillings.
Brushing the bOttom crust · with a
beaten ·egg white or melted butter
may also be used.
Overlap the iop crust under the
edge of the bottom crust after· the
filling has been added . Flut( or
crimp the edges together, Place aluminum foil over the fluted edges to
keep them from becoming too dark
·during baking. Small steam veniS

Th,e Dilly SanUnel• Pille~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu•••· Aprll1,1117

Pu6fic is invi&amp;ti
•
't'

.....
,.
............
•••• c••

CHRim'S PETS
'fiHS.pplles

L

992·7074

GI1MII, UmutoM,
Topeoll, FIH Dirt,

lend,FWuee.

Bathl, Grooming,
Kannal Care
andlcm

lion., ,.._,,Wed.,
Thu...., Fri. 1IHI;

Slit. 12-8; SUn. 12-4
271 North 2nd
lllddllp 1)1"., Ohio •

112 4114

i0f1

•sA.

�•
•

Page 8 • The o.Hy S11dlnel

•
l

Alirtl1,1117

Pomeloy • Midd'aJIO't,.Ohio
·~--- · -

'""'-

·Lawnmowlt' Gravely I HP Dual 710 Autol fOr Slit
Wheelo Snowblade Culdvalora ... Clprlce ClalllG wagon, IX•
30' Mower, Lawn Mowat Sulky ootlenr condition, garage kepi,
IG75, 814-388-834G.
'$2500, 814-114&amp;-2111111.

101111.

Real Ellatt SaltaptOple wantflt
almoal fl'iery company In
educational re-

one month. Com-

1
po~ca.

. approved carreapon-

courH. Complete ar your

Rlv8roldo A~lmlnta In 1 1 pon. Frorlt 1231e304 - Coil .,._
11112·151184, Equal Houolntl

hobtoc:hure1-800-~n.

Town at·New Haven now iaklng

Lot 10Da14g On Lariat Drlva,
115,000 814-«1-1450 No Rlll-

application• for Pool Yan11ger A

Human Relatfont De· Life Guard• lor cllr owlmmlng
Clinic, to Jaoi- pool. Pleuo apply at Now Havon
oon Plko, Galllpollo. OH 45131. CIIJ Building bllwHn 8arn-4pm.
Fu Number 141«411-5532.
IU' or'col
AVON
·tiS /Hr. No Door To Trud&lt; drlvera n11ded lor local
Door, Eaoy llothodo, Oulck olllprnanl, April 11vough Juno, 24'
Caohl Bonuoea 1-800-827,.S.D llralghl bodo, muol have CDL
wlih mtdicll card. Call Arlhur Hll
~1/Rop.
0--814-247-- -

" aume

plrtrnon~

H.._

-.a2113.

•s

Babytllttr n••4•d in our ham.

'or 1yr old, aome daya. some
eveningt, Mt Alto area. Mutt
have own transportation. 304·
~111'304-273-8021.

IOm.ED WILL POWERI LOSE
up Ill 30 poundo. 30 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Natural,
DOCUJr Racomrnendtd. 814-441-

1.._f1M_...

CABLElV ORDERTAKERS
Earn 115 -$18 Per Hour+ Commitalona. Extremely Hi gh Cui·

tomer Demand, No Overnight
Travel. Immediate Openinga.
Candldlteo Mull Be Avalloble T9

S18r1 Paid Training Progllm·Now.
CALL AWL roLL FREE

' 1·8111-432·7311

IDrl-1

'111111 rlllwllpapllwlll nol
knowllng1y ICCIPI

advodlaarnenl81otNII-Ia
- . ill In vlol!i11on ollht law.
· ·Our !Mderlltl hefaby
lnlonned lhalddWIIIII'CI"
8cfvertis8d In ttil MWSftiPII'

.,. available on an equal
Wanlod: 42 Plopla loM 18 ·25
Poundo In Tho Noll 30 Oaya.
owortunlly ·
Natural, Ouaranllldll-800-8110-j.·· - - - - - - - •. .
22115.
remote, btaulllul land; Malgo
CouniJ, Scipio Tbwnahlp. SR 1182
Wonltd To e... For lndlvldualo 310 Homes tor Slit
(just oW SR ICI). Owner lnrnclng.
Wllh Alzholmar'i Dlatlll Or
$1500 par aero. Call for good
Tho .. Nlldlng Spacial Nurolng
nwp, 814-583 1545.
Care? Scanlc Hilla Hurling Conlttr II looklna For Oualllltd Slaltt
360 Rial Estlte
Tealtd "uraTng A11iatanta, Full
And Pari-Time, All Shllll. 1'11111
Wanted
Fill OUI An. Application AI Scanlc
Hlllo. 311 BuckrldJll Rd., llldwoll,
OH, Mondor -Friday 0 A.M. ··4
P.M. NO PHONE CALLS

1

-

,.._........, ·.

PlEASE.

Conattuctlon Workera Welcome

814--«1-11822. 1.14--«1-5187.

Room br rant· ldtal t&gt;r oo-uo-

llon wor'-r, 20 ninu'" lrom f'o.

man&gt;y, ......1 Paggy al .,..-,
31135.

Sl11plng rooma wllh cooking.
Al10 trailer

~pace

on river. All

hook-upo. Call aflar 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5151,11aaon WIL
.
lc1ERCH AND ISE

REN IAL S

Transportation All Ph11ea Fram

~10

Up Oualllt Work Family
own houra. $20k lo $50k1yr 1- Ground
Man,61~

800-348-7188 11 508.

Earn e1,000 WHkll SlUffing Envotopoll AI Homa. SIBrt Now. No
E•parlence. FrH Supplioo, Info.
No Obllgadon. Sand LSASE To:
N::E, Dop1: 1351, Bo• 5137, Dlomond Bar, CA 81715.

1Wo bedroom opar-.lln llld·
IPRINQ IPECIAL: Contra!
dllppn, no Pill. 81..--!5151.
Condl..,_: 210n .e1,1115; 2
Upolalro Apar1man1 211 112 Noll Ton t1 ,2115; 3 Ton t1,385;' 112
AYinia Nawtv R.nodoltd llalh- Ton ,1,515; 4 Ton e1,1185; PrieM
room, Scime Ollldoo Paid, 121101 Above lncluda Normal lnalalla·
llo., I .200 Dapotll, Call 814- don. Full 5 Wonanty. "H lbu
448 121111
Don't Call Ua Wa Both Loool'
Fr11 Eollmalaol Add-On Heal
450
Fumlshed ·
Pumpa Only SliahiJ Hiclhll'. Call
Ua Today. 1891 11 Tho TwoniJ
Rooms
Savonlh Year In Tho Healing i
Kino• Molal Loweol Ra1oa In Cooling Bullnaaol814 •c8 83011,
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO, 1-800-2111-GOIII.
Clnemox, Showllmo &amp; Olonoy.
WHklJ Ratto, Or Monlhly Rolli,

180 Wanted To Do
Carpentry Work Have Toola

Computer Users Needed. Work

Loll For Salt: Cora Mil Road, 812.5-51!18- .

HouRhold

Gocicls

David's lawn mowing and odd

joba, Tuppera Plains

area. Fr"

oolima10a, 614.e&amp;H3211. .

Georges Portabla sOwmlll, don1
haul your logo Ill 1hl nil jull coli
304-1175-1957.

· Finan•• Aaalotanl I - A Com- I will mow your rard, Pomeroy,
muniiJ Manlal Health Aganor Middleport, New Haven, Mason
Sorvlng AThree CouniJ Aroo lo .,..._ -vary, 304-882-3652.
Saaldntl Clndldalll Fot Tho Po- Lawn Mowing: Frea Elllmaroo,
ollion Of Finance Aoololanl I. Apo
pllcanta Should Have An Aooo- Senior Citizen• Discount 814·
clall'l Degree In Account Or 388-8769..
Strong Accoundng Background Paul'• OuaiiiJ Mowing Service(At L••t Two Year• Accounllng·
Expet'lenco) And Knowledge 01 Fill Eatimolto. 3114-11~$-11832.
HUO And HAP Roauladono Pr• Professional TrH Sarvlce, SlUmp
terrtd. Appllcanll With E•pori- Removal .. Free Estimates I In·
. tnel In LOIUI 1, 2, 3, WordPer~· ouranca, Bldwtll, Ohio. 814-388Joel 5.1, 8.0 And EKpolrience Willi 111148,014-387-7010.
Grant Funding SourGOO Prelorrtd.
s.ind Rtoumaa To: llanaQer Of Shafer's L1wncare Commercial
Human Reavurces, Woodland And Realdtnlial Sorvlca, Call For
Canllt'l; 3081 SIBil Roull 180, ~ Eotlmo181, 81-1-&lt;1318.
Gllllpollo, Ohio •5831 EOE !M'
.-NO CLEAIIINO
Gil Your Spring Cleanlno.Ovor
HELP WANTED Men!Women Wlft Now &amp; Spo~nd 'lbur Summer
Earn
W11kl1 Aaoombllng In Lalouro. Coli Now To Gel Your
Circuli Boarda!Eiaclronlc Com· Spring Fever Cleaning Dlocounll
.
ponan11 AI ·Home. E•perlonoo 814- 448 30118.
Unnacaooarr, Will Train. lmm•
dlall Opolnlngo Your Local Arao. Will Care For Elderly or Handicapped Ptroon In my home 24
Cll1-1211-e80-71111 EXT. 010G4

Building
Supplies

Blook. briot&lt;, aewar plpaa, wlrtd'OWI, llntela, etc. Clluda Wlnlttrt;
Rio Grande, OH Call 814-245·
5121 .
Oa(aga 11 Fl. 8 lnohoo 124 Fl.
Corr. Aluminum On Wood Frama
- · I FL 8 Inch 17 FL Door
Wllh Electric Opener, Walk In
Ooar Wov, 2
lbu Move,
.575 0.11.0. "4 44il 311811 Laava
MtiiiJll II No Anowor Will Ro1Um 'lbUr Cd.

w-

11184 Oklomobllo Station wagon,
custom cruiser, QOOd running

oondltion. Phona 304-875·303?
any1lme. .

5371,

'

XL~

r

1985 Toyora Clllca OT, ,1 Own..-,
5 Speed, AC, Cruloo, PB, PS,
Good Running Condlllon, 81•4481030.

12,90001!0,,814-388-0301 .

-

Soutll
It

3 JilT

'.

..... iiBDD. Cl14-7o42-Zl70.

11188 Trano Am 1-1opa, Whl18, runt
looko groa~ loadtd. 304·
875-5378.
.
grH~

IREAKIN' .·
BULLETIN .
II

AGO II

'

Sll

76,000 MIH. 'Excallont Conclllionl
.11,000 814 448 48011.

PAY r1Lt..6

Ht~e

late Ford F·250 Pickup •14 lu~ .
ly loaded. Low mllnt~. E•t~
condition. S10,800. 304 -D37o ·

·--

~

'

.,

740

,1 .e 1tt1bvNEA. tnc.

IGH.Cavallor·2
Cavalier 2 Doolr:
Book Price: $3,•oo .~:.··,;.- :c: ·• 1Gt1 K-Id 100 On /011 ""*&lt;~
$2, 150; Cook Morora, 8141-448- Original Tlraa, E..allonl Condll
0103.
.
.....AIId~ta00.8J~21101. ;
1gag Flrablrd, Auto Tr*no. T-

E•-

716.

1980 Marcurr Orand llarqula

loaded, ..., oond, 78,000 milK
. $8,000 neg. 304-875-2!113.

UKII Honda' Aocord. 12,000
Mlloo, Groal Condllion, 1 Owner,

tor iJ&amp;Ie

t {;QII'T i'f-lit-1~ :tW AAIE 11'00\"''
I~AAIIOI\ .

,_,T N..L!

:.

'!

~~~~-J~~==:::~§::_J

1114 '"' . . . ..

Hour Care. 81,..441-0291

L

Will haul junk or truh aWIJ. $351
p1clwp load:m4-e75-~

IT's A GREAT CONCEPT, OONT YOU
TI-IINJ&lt;. 'i' rT~ A NEW
HIGH ' IN GROSS-OUT
HUI'IOP.!

Will Sll Wllh Elderly In Their
Home. Have Referancea, 814·
~4233.

A Part Tlmo, Fill In Llcanold
Practical Nur11. Mull Be Avail1885 Pine Rldge._,j'ci,ooo'ciiio; Tlw11 bedroom mobileltomt, 01113br, 2 porches, '
aida of Pomo110y, 8.14-082-5039
able All Shllll. Long Term Cora
FINANCIAL
aa.
..
75-7085.
bobra 9pm.
Eaporlonoa
Contaol
Tho
AlalalantPreferred.
Dlraclar 01
Nuro- · - - - - - - - - - - 1883 UK70, Olohwuhlr, Heal
.Apai bnentS.·
~&amp;,Lioa Lll, AI 814-.48·7112 210
Business
Pump, Dock, Gilmour Balli, Sky 440
Ugh~ Walk-in Cloooto, E•cellenl
for Rent
OpportunHy
loca11on61-Hl701
·
lnOUIIIICI PIUI Aganoloo Inc. li
1 and 2 bedroom opar1111n11, rur- ·
!NOTICE I
Heklng crHtive and mDtivruad
lndiYiduala 10 join our growing OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 1886 14x70 wllh loll ol ••1rlo. nished and unlurniohld, atturity
304-875· 3067 or 3D•·67S. depooil require~. no pa!A, 814·
...,. of pov-lonalo. W. hava a recommenda thai you do buol - Call
.
992-221&amp;
na-k ollnou..,.. aaoncloo In neas with ,people you know, and 4872.
Sou-n Ohio and WHI Virginia NOT 10 oond. mqnoy llirough lhe
tn714110 3lrl111211a
1 Bedroom ,4\parl(nanl, All Now
..... lo11D.awl!live 181m . ·mall until you have lnvtltlgated
$171
Down-$173llonlh
Riverview,
Call llornlngo 814- .
p1aJaro. You would .,joy bolh •• .lhe ollorlng.
W. . lllplavHo-372-:MOO
446-8028 ; Or See AI 8 Allen
warding Pl'Oiaoolonal oppor!UnlOtlva·
... and an ._..nJI)' br grawlh. Local Vend. Ale. For Salt. Bfg 1987 14•70 2 or 3. Bedroom, 1--:--:--~-----­
Caoh
Weekly.
Call
1-800-350W. IN - n g lndiYiciUall wl!h I
$885 down, e18Stmo. Only 11 1 Bedroom Near Holzer Exira .
111-ugh knowledge of Finance 8303.
Da-.. Hornto, Nlii'O, WV. 304- Nice, Gu Haa~ S288/Mo., + Udiand Loon ,...._oolng. Tau.,... Pre-Engineered ltHI buildings.
lio' Depooil Aoq. 814-4-48-21157.
moniiD • - • raur lulllrt and II
NatiOnal
company
awarding
1SISIJ
uxao
3
or
4
Bedroom,
JOU _,. a ....., with a well ••
tabHahod expanding Agenor. doalerohlp In open merkOL High $1,3511 down, $2211/mo. FrH air,
aonc1 JOUr RESUIIE-10: Insurance profll poiOnllal conolructlgn or oklrtiOU: &amp; dotlvtr'y. Only al Ook' wood Homeo Nilro,WV. 30•·755Plue Apnclee, Inc., 114 Courl aalea. 3!3-7511-3200 8tiL 1900.
.
. 5815.
Snl4, A&gt;or•or; 0119 457811. ·
Thriving· Cillerlng Bualne11 I
an .. rance Plua Agenciea Inc. 11 aqulpmanl lor aala. Priced upon 3Troilatoloraalo. :J04.C175-1071.
... king crHtlvt 1nd modvated lnopac~on. 304-875-4281 or 1114·
D--Pnla....
lndlvlduala 10 join our growing 875-21118. .
Wo have tl 000 to 12000 por
team of profeaalonals. We have
home In dlaaater relief tunda
Professto~:~at .
a netwOrk of lnaul'lnce agencies 230
avallabla
10 halp rou purchau
In Sau.... n Olio and WNI Vlrglo
Services
replacement home. Call 1-800·
n11 a lol 111 olltr -oislva
•118-7871 10 111 appolnlmlnl for
111m plaparo. You would enjoy
dalalla.
bolh rowarclng ptofalllonal op2~drm . apia., Iota! alootrlc, !IPporllnl... and an opportunill lor
pliances furnish~, laundry room
~ · We are ottklng .,,.,;.
lacllltiN, .Gloll IO llihool in IOWn,
incad llcanald Ull, HMIIh, PerAppllcallana"available at: VIMage
aonol and CoiM\Otcial producer~
Groon Apll. 1148 cir call 81•'982wl., • production rooord. Tlko 1
3711. EOH. '
1110ment to aas111 your
- ·II JOU want 1
451112 SaCOnd AN; GiiHpoNL'2
walaoiUiahtd
BR., N::, Ajopllancea. s•so Mon.
$225.00 dapooll. UIIHIIoo Pold.
1814}-448-2128 . . :

~li1i1'iFiiHii1E~!&gt;~--'-~
.r AMAZE
. I.'l'l .
t\V!&gt;ELF
WITH THE
STUFF I .
COt1E UP
1
WITH!

fJ

A80UT TO
«lt'\E UP
WITH !tDI'\E·
THING
I'IVSELF ...

houoa; In
2171.

tate Soctional241112 2br Wldan,
2 lull balho, control air, dockl,
OUI building, 3 112 mllol OUI
Sandhill Rd. ·• k.ooo. 304-875-

lllddltpor~

17-Merla
19 Holy penon
21 Noel
.
22 Dr8maiiC
conflict
23 Mr. GIIIJIIcll'

Nonh
3t

East
Pllllil •

Paas

Pass

PillS

•
•.:1 •
~

11

....-+-1-+-+-+---i

.,.._ .

' :llllomlllua or

'1111 by bit ~ ou
Film ell~ . ~
- +-.+-+...:.....j :33 c
.. • ._one,·'
·.·"
:l

1-+-t--+-+---1 .3111111111 d
.

. •' &lt;I

~~of

·~

apeople

· ·~ ·· d

; 40 Firat ~ of '"
a t.lry ,... " ·'.,.,.'
,, 41 Soft clrlnk·
·42 Anchoon · ~ -

Pllllllp Alder

I

..,

::!
·r;

.,

.,
;•

·Jq
b

.z
~

'H

DO IT :
FOR '(OU!

, 1~

J1

...
•.

~

,,

••

I -. •

~3

iT

D E L E G ,,..

to~l

•

•

•

_ · _~

ROOF IS I
LIAKIN&amp;.

IF PERCIWICE '(OU
MI6J.I1' IIA'IE
NOTICeD...

. ·oi

Ie. .

'

' )I

- -- - • - - it!

&gt;t'l
'

)~

Complete tho chu&lt;kle quolad

' :i·.'Y
. 'hl

by filling In · the m!lling words

f) ~:c_:~~e. LETTERS To

If'./
• lol

• ·:~~n~~:e~UTERS r r rr I' ·I' ·I' 'I

.. Tt:fE

WE WERE JUST
WONDERING, M~AM.

)3

could become President Now

you davolop ·from slop No. 3 below.

-LEAI&lt;IN6 A6AIN,
AND 'fOU'RE 6ETTIN6
ALL WET..

•••

I I

. ,. 0 N G u L E
.
. ~~r-TI.;:;,.;I;...,.,.;;,.,I;;...;;.I'rl

TJ.IENAL

fJ
;I

-

::::::;:~~~~~~~ l"m beginning to

!SIR, TI-lE ROOF IS

'"

·
~ f ~II'
·,' ztWute(-~

1---nls;:..;l:...,;;lr-rl~ ~ · As achild I was told anyone

• ·

...
,w
'IW

''·'

...

•tit

I IIl I III

1m

..'"'

;('f

SCUM UTI ANSWIH

'· •!q

. ~!!

Chatty • Guest~ Jerl&lt;y • l411iten - SHARE it WITH
Granny told the newlyweds, "You only get the.full value .
of joy If you hive someone to SHARE it WITH.•

,-----~~~~~------~----------------~------------------~-· -·----~~~~·-~":·-~",. ~.. ;~

~~T:;UE;;S;;DA:;;Y;:::;::;:;;:;::;:;:r;::·;'r::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;:,A~P~RI~L8~1 '.~ .@
,,

&lt;&gt;&lt;I
''8

···r
•·
.. .ot

..""'
....
.. ,.
•lw

1IR

·~·
o;)

-

Ill

(lj;

""'

, "a
•M

·814-0U-

\

. AsTR~·OWB

r1'l

nA

·•!!
o!l ~

the

•

Zbr hou ... Rlduold 10 SS,too
080. A .-a a.,. 304-875-2722. .

BERNICE
. BEDEOSOL

JB Kiln kUn dried herd wood•
ooftiHiillvo prlcaa. Sl Rl 82,
· Wo11 .Columbia WV. 304·'173-

.®

11!*·•·1 -- 7113.

I

e. ·

~.; .

'who partirke In the c:Onvemllori. Aries, . ally in
WOfkplace,
·
· .: ·
treal JOUfMI!Io a birthday gill: Send for . LIBRA. (Sept. 23.()ct. 23).!!. ye~~ feel cer·
· ye~~r Aelro-GI'JII)h p!edlc:tiutl!l for lh1l year lain ye~~r ld8aa are beHer lhan thoal of
ahMd by mdlrtg S2 -.d SASE 1o Al1ro- your associates lodey, push iorward.
Gr-..h, c/o lhll newapaper, P .O. Box . Don1
rtl""'JIIde ye~~ .
1758, '-"may Hill Slatfan, New YOOic, NY SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II may be
10158. Be IIINIO 11a1e your.ZOdiac 81gn.
wise lo gel an 0U1111er's opiniOn lodly,
TAUfiUII ,(Aprtl ljG •• 20) A¥01d being eepec1a11y K ye~~ and your 11!818 can' recloo--~
IQ ypur Objectlwt onc1a a specific llaue. .
IOCiay. H Ia b1!p0o11nC fit111o . _ ofhers SAonTAAIUS. (No¥. 2Hieo. 21) Strive
how they can lilneilt ee much • you.
to keep an onleriy agenda today. Clear
· 01!11!1111 (. .y 11 :-June ao• II Ihere Ia up euenlial old tasks before pursuing
.IOII'IIIhlng yilu Willi.lo do today lh1ll IIIII endea¥0rl.
· ~ tainliiCatlona, do MHCf81iy. Thll CAPR1CC)!'N (1110.
11) Try lo
will
~llllscll.. aug11M1f01111rom get togllh8. ~ IIIIa w.'timoon will 1
P,8IIOI1 who wilhM 10 fullhar
· CANCU (,_.11..1111y 22) You might - · Then I II!Qcouldbefnlllul.
be 1DD 111' 1 ladly for PltcfM llllllllnl. AQUAIIUI
20 ,.... 11) A ~ .
· Try.1o ~an'- IIICII'vllu 10mor1ow lie lhould 11e:•
teen! II paalwMrlyour"*'dll-riiOipllvt.
bit today. lyou-alr•out.rtotoon¥
LIO (.lilly . . ..., II) Tcay ye~~ rnlghl wllhi1
fwnly.
be llbll1o cMrM • pNIIII flam tomlllllliQ .• PII en (fell, 20-lllrGIIH) a. optf\·
11111 ........ wluelll your Ill roll. . " ,, • ..,llldly . . . .IJ . . . . . . alilct
. . Nw ... -'tto you,
yoU -.d your lllllla. TDgllw, COIII:W l .
~lltCAu!l-al ILII)MIIIIInghtllly aolullon IIIII btaltervea bolh your
C
OOUitlllltl 'ycu on . . palll 10 .,....
;1: llao•ladly, L..t,...ICitbeyour
••

•

" ""
·- ileadav ._.II 18117
· ;
_ Wodo"**Y• .,... '
.
Poel11ve oppot111nllln rney aoma your
way In 1111 yaer al1aad from tou.you'vellll un1apped. These bentllla
' - a1W11Jt btM1
VOU1' Q1'1111, IIIII
11111 might be . . .,.. 11rn1 you'l *Oll-

.-n

,...__
, _ (lllrc!lllt...... till . . lllniM

1

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-

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. i II

..a

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a.,.,.

••*'*
'*-· . ·

·

.vour "*"

.

c-.

vour

..-.,..uw• f; ••a
F

,ycullldlytolryiD
.ln. your field of tndNvor. A good
1 IMIQUIInlarlliaFc • could...,... ..

a.')
-11$

181anvone

lllil•••,

ii...

(

Cue

5 uplolt

-+-+--+"--+--i .. 21
Door,.._
27 lallft - -

•

5522.

1

WH&amp;
2NT

••,.

12~d'-

24 Hold ln.- ,
25 , _ t;lavta il

I

i

One ..acs,oqm iurniahecl •Pt!rl··
menll, two bedroom turni•M:d

310 .H olnH fOr Slle .

..... ,....

11 Caun'aof

I

s Rooma 2
•aewo.,
e100 Dapoall, UIMiiiH ·PIId, 'No
Pall. 814-445-3431.

~, rATE

u-•t-a

2
3 ltellnae ;nan
4 ..... ftildllte

.

I. 1

Uldtoomo..

REAl l

31118ckotf
32 Long IIJIId
bini
.
33 Of CNblla,

In this column, I have nienlioned ·
-+-+-1
(abbr.) .
once or twiee I.U right, IIC!Veral tl!nes!l
that I don't like the ,Unusual No43 llrulna' 01144 ......
Trump. ThiS Is a jump OYI!I'CIII .of two· lrr+-+-1-+'-+~
SUNn ..,.
no'trump showing·at least 5-5 In the
41 81up.kln
lowest-ranking unbid suits. The normal
ahOcl
,
outcome is that the other side buyB the
contract, and t~e declarer lmowa CIX·
actly how to play aa he has been given
a road map of .the distribution.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
In today's deal, West's two-no-trump.
by LUis Campos
overcall showed at least 5-5 in the
c.llbrily c.,.~ .... .,. CI'Mted fl'om quataUcn by r.rnou. people. put and '"""'
highest-ranking unbid sulllf: here; tile
.
Ed
lnW.cipt'*fNndl'torMattw. r«My'ldw: Z ~,.x
,
~rs. It is more sensible to leap into
the auction with majora rather tban
minora, wh~jn you have a greater exC N' H
L Y S' C
LVIIH
'THXALRSH
, pectation of outbidding the opponents.
"
However, the denouement was the
URIICNXYD . ' LFTT!'S
same.
Sitting South was Piotr Gaweys, tile
KHS '·YCF ·M )'
( K H 0 H 8 C D • K R Z • D H Y II :· F .I X
Polish world champion. His one-dla'
!IIOnd opening lild guarantcied at I~st
.a five-card suit - hence, North.'s
three-diamond response.
Gawr:Ys ducked the spade-jack lead,
won the spade continuation, and
cashed his six diamond trickl. Which
live cards sbould West keep?
· He would have liked lo try iomething deceptive, perhaps dlscariling
. the seven, eight and jack ol beartl, try. lng to look like a man who has blanked '·
the king . .X.e l a(\~r .thls_auc.tlol!,
. Gawrys wauldn't ·fall for II. Instead;
West came down to the club ace, the
. king-jack of hearts and two spades.
I I t•• ·'
·,
Declarer calmly exited .with a spade,
2
· giving Weal his three black-sl!lt tricks. ·
Atlrickl2, Weathadtole¥awayfrom
the heart king, Gawryucored tllese ·
B YNE 0
,,
. nine tricks: one spade, twO hearts and
six dlamonda.

:::=----:------

NOW HIRING: Jlka'a Bar I Qrl
RL 2 liM~. can lor lniOtVIaW
104-273-0021 Aok lor Rhonda.
· 11M1bl21ar-.
·

,_....

'

11184 Honda XRIDO,- Ureal
chain I I!""C.kll. $1,100. 304l
1112-3851.
'
late Hondo 300 414 4-WhHler'·
rod, liken-. $4000, 81 ..848j
3327.
I ,

750 Boats &amp; Moi«&lt;I'J

DOWN

· 1 Melund

=~l'alof
OtWct
ate.

I

50==

41 Bonnll'a

Diffefent .meaning,
same result
B~

Motorcycles
1D73 HariiJ Davldoon Sporrllat;
R'S; 1t6U Vf11 ciHn, very 1111, $&lt;1500 flr.O:
114 812 8520.,
9

Topa, Allov Whaala .a All Opdono
Condlllan, ...
Cook
......... C114-44&amp;01DS.

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

20 ,..,.0.....1

24 Wrllal'a

41 i:loia~baanl

Opening lead: • J

THIS IS A LATE-

YOU TOLD ME THAT··
TWO HOURS

1887
TIUtul; • ~oro, Au- ,
Ra~ Ext Cob, 4K., y.#
lomrlic, 814-370-2720 AFTER 8 1988 ·~·
:-r
a 11 ·
Auto, N::, PW, PL, Exc. , Cond~
-~·=·--:::--:-:::--:--:--1 Nog.,,l14-258-8257. .
.
'
1887 Plymoulh Grand Furr .
50,463 mlleo, 3!8 en81na, aulo, I GOO Chevy S-10 Bluer 4W
air, oxc oond. $1,500. 304-875- eliGtiiOnl condition, aoklng $8
11H82..1S48382-4.
1900 JIIIP ChtrokH Larado;·EIII
1188 · Chevy Allro Mark Ill, coUonl Condldon, Call Alt..- 4:3t.
Loaded, Runo Looko ·oraall
$&lt;1,200 !'lo Raaoonoble Offer R• P.M. 81 .__,7585.
•
luoed .814-441-oll31.
IDOl Aarollar Van 13,000. Cab
18118 Chavr Coroloa, 4 door, 8 ~":::. 8111 • .Hiahland Ave. ~
cyllndor, $1250 OBO, 814-Q4g3136.
1901 ChlvJ Van Full Size Sttori
Ford
Eocort
lor
oala
or
lor
Whaelltlae
One Owner, -i21l
19118
-•11. 3114- 571-2451.
Loadtd, Excotlenl Condition, Rot
1888 Ford Tauruo, aloolllo windilwo, dll, c:nolao, lodlo. - od, klw nila, Claan. WIN conoid..- . 12250 080, 81.o-IICI2~.

I III ...M

47=-lheni

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer:, South

!tiS S-1~ ••• V-8, Very oa\ ·
pendollla Manr New Par111

....... 814-440-1444.
1093 Dodge Grand caravan

11pnt't: curve
11 Gollw

a
r• '
. . . . . did

•AQt642
• 9

1&amp;85 Ford Econollnt 150 vo4:
Rood Crall deolgn , 302, ruril
1987 Buick c ..IIIIJ S2,000;
good, lopka good, 121 DO,, 814:
Oldt Caiola $875; Honda
98&amp;&lt;125e.
•
t:lso:814-:lBB 89011.
11188 Chevy Full Size eonv.toloti
.1887 Buick LeSobre oood conG. Van, While ond Navy Excotl!ftl
30H'IS-1264.
low Ill._, Pricl Rei'
.=,_;_-,--.:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 Condl1lon,
duo:od, 114MI-'11121.

~

.. 10 8 s
• 10 ' 1 s
• Q 10 • 3 2

Soutil

QS FORD RANGER 4X4 ,
N:;, Standard; 23k Mllaa. $13,1100
NEG. (8141-448-7380
:

730 Yans &amp; ~WDs

• 47

a A98
.. A 9 4

·:=:-· ·=I
....
:::r..
r.•

11 ..... 1rio111D W
11-14ar11 1'11111 lloldar
11 Nol elllnr

of1he10a

But

• 7 .
a AJ

I

1985 Oldo ~ 115,000 Millo,
Loadad, 114--«1-8227.

extra clean, lour new t1r11. no

••eo

lmmadlalt Opening Avallabla Fll'

550

I

1Gt4 ChavJ S-10 LS' 4x4 4.~ .
hpd, oharp, 34,731 mllao. 01·•
taka over paymen11. 304-875•

11188 Mazda. 4clr., all, runt -~

E......,...

HOIE'JYI'ISTS,
PC uoaro noiodad. $45,000 Income potandal. Call1-800-513.4343 En B-11388.

"'*.:
,,,

P.M.

a-·

Mila '

W1111
A K J 10 4 2
•KJI72

-· ... O
M
_.,
1003 Chivy 9-10. Low lllloag~ ;
A-1 st.po, 814--«1 ·13311

,...,.._,
..... .,....
.,
(..lallhll'

1 . . . . . ,...

21 ,._,. chlkl •

•K7~54

0

Grlcicluo living. 1 and 2 • • 01111
.,.,lmlnll II Vllaga II_, and

Jack KotloJ'o Norlhlll11..-n
Collage of Reel Eotalo. Call lot

·-

N
• 6 5.3
• .. Q 5
• KJ 5

1868 Ford F-110 XLT Lariot TMf
Cruloa, Air, AIIIFII Calllllt~
lluallilnb, 814-2SIHI735.
1

'

NBA Cro••word Puzzle

,PHU.I.JP
ALDER

PDotaf Jobt Pootlono Available
No E•pet'len" Noceroorr For
lnlo Call I -800-884-2800 E•l.

The o.Jiy S1ntlnel ~ P... l ~

'

tl

•

7•'

'

�Ohio Lottery
Indians

·- Pick 3:

lose to

622

· Plck4:

Mariners

5622

Sporta or. P-ve 4
...

~·.,

... _"

.

Buckeye 5:
1·12·16-31-36

l

a

.,

.,

..

•

..

..

-

Cle• tonight, low In the
20s. 'Thur•day, sunny,
high near SO.

;",

•

..

\

WI. 47, NO. 231

Racine
.
TaSk
force
officials
say
announces
.
cleanup money ·nQ.t!the answer
.

to all schOol

p~oblems.

2 SeetioM, 11,...... I I -·
A O.ntit Co. Ilea I 1•

Meigs board
OKs ·contra·cts

.

dates

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 9, 1997

~·Ohio.....,~ Cornp.ny

By JIM FREEMAN
Chancey, athletic facilities ·care;
Sentinel News Staff
• Eleanor McKelvey, yearbook; Becky
Personnel mailers dominated busi- · ·Cotterill, high .school newspaper;
. Spring cleanup in the. village of
.
'
ness
at Tuesday night's meeting of the Celia McCoy, dr11ma; Carol Crow
~ine 'will be held May• 14 and 15,
yi llage council decided at its Monday
COLUMBUS ·(AP) - Lawmak·
Meigs Local Board of Education, and Jennie Dorsey, . co-Junior class
night meeting.
ers and state officials who have just
held at the district's central office in advisor; Toney Dingess, band direc·
one year to • solve Ohio's school
the
Pomeroy Municipal Building.
tor; John Arnott, Cliff Kennedy and
.
R
, • csidents were reminded to place funding problems anl agreeing 10 forThe
following
teachers
were
hired
Mike
Wilfong. guidance; Eleanor
lhei[ items for pick up out 81 the curb.
No Qtl, batteries, gas tanks or tires g,et about some of their diffe!'tnces.
on one-year contracts for the 1997-98 Blacttnar. librarian; John Krawsczyn,
will be picked up, it was noted.
. ~v. Geo'rge' Voinovich and six
school y.ear: David Barr, Michelle part,timc assistant high school priq.other members of the Ohio School
Frazier, Janet Hollingsworth, Krista cipal; 'o(ii:ki Haley, head teacher .at
.•. Mayor Scott Hill pre~nted a cer- Task Force met for the first .. .e on
Johnson.
!leth Mayer: Teawana · Harrisonville Elementary; Marsha
t!ficate of.appll:ciation to William Jr.
Heater 'for his participation in the Tuesc;!ay. The group plans I meet
McCaulla. Lisa Miller, Cassandra Radabaugh. head teacher at Middle·
Green Thumb Project The award once a week ·to study solutions in
O'Sullivan, Chris Stout, Laura Stump port Elementary ; Cindy Johnston,
was to be presented last month, but response to the Supreme Court's
and Carin Taylor. ·
head teacher at PoiTJ1'roy Ele!Jientary ;
Heater was out of town due 10 a death ·decision last month that declared the ·
The following teachers were hired Marjorie Fetty, ·head teacher 81 Rut·
in his family.
state's school funding formula unconon three-year . contracts: T(m Curl~ land Elementary; John Arnott, head
stitutional.
man, Judith Gannaway, Sc.ot Gheen. teacher at Meigs Middle School ;
.• • Council opened II bids on an old
"We' vegot real challenges ahead
Mary
Grim. Cheryl Halley, Sam Har- Eleanor Blaett.nar,libmry supervisor.
:Village-owned Ferguson tractor with of us.•" Voinovich said. "We have to·
ris; Sheila. Harris, Melissa Howard
The following wcre·hired on twothe highest bid of $l, 367 being sub· do more to respo11d to ttie court's
FORCE MEETS· Ohio Gov. George Volnovlch,
and
and
Jennifer
Wolfe.
.
.
year
contracts as non-certified
.IJ!itted by Victor Wolfe, Racine. Oth- · mandate. " ·
·
Office of Budget end Manegemer:rt Director Gregory Browning
Teachers
hired
on
,five-year
con-.
employees:
William Capehart. Patti
·~rs submitting bids . were: Chris
·House Demoi:ratic ·leader Ross
confer during Tueaday'slnltlel meeting of the Ohio School Fundtracts
were:
J(arla
s
·
r
own;
Teresa
Johnson
and
Delores Surface, bus driWolfe, Oris Smith, Clarence Frank, Bog',.s, , D-Andover, said the taSk'
lng Teak Force at the Ohio S~ehouse in Columbus; Browning
Carr,
iudy
Crooks,
James
Crow,
Jcnvers;
Robin
Butcher and Edna Will , •
l90 Sayre, Roger Chaney, Dwight
"
r1 ed h 1
f he
kf
(AP)
Porbin, Cecil .Frye. John Riley and f&lt;lrce should loo~ ·at this as an oppor- ' waa. am . c 1 nnan o t tas orce.
.
·
"
nie Dorsey, Ron Drexler, Dale Har· cooks; Mona Frec~er, secretary; Con'on. R. Starkey. Council accepted the tunity. to look at the entire education
,
rison, Janet Hoffman, Elizabeth Sto- nie Halley. aide.
·
funding i~sue, and then recommend agreed
·
tem. ·
. ry and Julia Vaughan. ·
The following non :ccrtified
bjd submi.lted "y
Victor
Wolfe
.
.
The
sys
·
•
.
.
"Thr'
· money· 1o a11 o,. our solutions. to the Legislature. B,oggs
''I'm not here to lt'sten to . talk
·
, owmg
.lowest bid WIIS'"$652. ·
In ~.ddition. Bryan Zirkle was employees. were hired on continuing
. ' Councilman Henry Bentz aSked schools is not the answeno pui prob- said the task forCe sho11ld avoid fin- . about the problem. I'm here to listen hired on a continuing contmct as a contracts: Cynthia McMillin , bus
· ger-poi:nting and blame-shifting.
to solutions,'' said Finan, R,Cincin· teac.hcr.
about the status of the Cross · Mill lems," he said.
driver; Tom Musser, custodian; DonMuseum at Star Mill Park. CouncilThe task force, appointed by
nati. He was one of the early critics
Hired on supplemental contracts na Knapp arid Marsha Russell, assisitJan Dale Hart reported the projei:t is Voinovich, will stUdy the sch6o! _ Senate Presit~tft Richard Finan of the c&lt;!urt's decision.
. for the upcoming year were: Mike tant to the treasurer; Randall Car·
Chancey, liead football ; Rick Blaet. penter, aide.
'
$till alive and that he is in the process
tnar, Mick Childs, Gregg Dee!, Scot
.The following supplemental conGheen and Pete WOods, assistant var- .tracts ,l!(ere not rene)Wed becaqse the
sity l P&lt;?tball;_Scot Gbeen· al)d ;Pete. peoplt are not. under contract as fullWoOds, reserve football; 1\ick Bfaet- time ietlcheril : Carson-Cro.w, seventh
.
~'-'•·Mayor !Jail ad~~ ,t1te , . · 1J; .. ~~~·lllfoi .
.,.;'!&gt;'/(
' , ,
.
.
'.
· · .tnar ~ Mick Child~~; fre$hrnari-foot, and eighth ' g~* . rootbilll L"Uid!i '
bili: ·Don· Dixo». Jesse Vail and Gri11t Wise. bo'yso~ ~inth • grlldC bas:
b08i'd.'IO·Come back,ilf
recessed
• ·• .
~
~ ·.'' .. , ' · ' · 1.-41
•
'
. '·
meeting with the tjgures that they
Flood-related · projects wef!l dis- account ~ahw:es,as fOIIo~s: lJeneral placed a driving record due to such Bryan Zirkle, ·seventh and eighth ketball coach; Travis Abbott. bOys'
w~nt: .
·
cussed atlht: -regular monthly meet- fund, $1 ,108.22; civic center fund, an offense is the detennination of the grade football; Mike kennedy, cross co-seventh J!rndc basltctball .coach ;·
Cguncil also approved the pur·- ~ng of Rutland Villag_e Counc.il qn $2,75Q.34i police fund, -$47.85; law , village. an~ that assignment was country; Jim Sheets, head wrestling; · Darin Lngan, girls' reserve bruikctball
,cllase of several items as requested by Tuesday evening. .
enforcement fund, $487 .33; street modified from six points. to four John Krawsczyn, .golf; Rick Ash: 'oach; Heather Hudson, girls' junior
street commissioner Glenn Rizer and
Joe Balm. pres1dent of the coun- fund, $3,968.03; state highway ful!d ; points, with a $100 fine.
. girls' volleyball; Dale Harrison. girls' high basketball coach; Cindy Fields. •
approved repairing the tran·smission ·cil's flood committee addres~ coun- $4,858.94;
water department,
volleyball assistan~; Ron Logan, girls' high schoql cheerleader advisor;
Council also:
varsity basketball ; John Amon, girls: Stephanie Price, junior ·high cheer?O the village pqlice cruiser. Council ctl_ ~nd ~tScussed the ~tllage s Hazard $7.780.41; · sewer department,
Approved
the
mayor's
report
of
also approved purchasing two bat- MmgaUQ!I Grant proJect. 'f!Je funds, $7,788.21; Sewer debt, $14,619.70;
junior high volleyball and girls' junior leader advisor.
Continued on 11age 3
(eries for a fire truck a!lhe request of wh1ch wtll come from the Federal utility deposits, S10,797.09 and fines collected of $2,397 for March; high volleyball assistant; .Mike
• Approved the purchase of a hot
fire chief John Holman .·
· Emergency Management ~gency, replacement fund, $19,797.77.
.Ifill appointed Bentz to come up . will be us~d I? raise ho.uses out.of'the
Council authorized tbe imple· water tank.for the civic center;
- Authorized the purchase of a fax ·
with a plan and cost of work on the fl?od pla1n ~nd to relocate restdents ' mentation of the Uniform Accounting
machine
for the village offices;
end . of Tyree Boulevard where the · wtthm the vtl,lage out of flood-prone Ne!work through ihe Ohio Auditor of
- Authorized Proffitt to purchase a
,steps were removed ,several years areas. .
.
.
State. The pilot program provides
. :ago. Bentz 'is to report -back to counIt was a':ib repone:&lt;~ · that Clerk software and online support to the portable DU!testing machine.
• Voted to hire a part-time police
ceil so that action can be taken.
Rose!'lary Esllew was tn the process . village clerk a! a c~st , of $7~ per
·
officer
to assist during the summer
: : He ·also reminded &lt;;.ouncil to offilil)g th~ necessarY paperwork for m~nth. and ~sststs With compliance
months.
'r~meinbenhat the roofon the muniC- FEMA rehef for the March .noodmg. ~111:!_ the auditor's accounting proceA Galli a County mari has pleaded · Sowders' sister. "I can't believe we
:ipal building needs painted and 8 :.
Phil Din and the Dozers wiU per· . dures. The sta_te. w1ll prov1de !~stalguilty to voluntary m;mslaughter and have a jury system set up and we're
:ramp in~talled for handicapped peo- fonn m ~utla~d on Apnl 26. T1cke~s lauon and tramtng at no add1uonal
Members present were Herb aggravated robbery in the death of a not using it." .
:pte.
are avatlable through the clerk s cost.
Elliot, Vema Martin, Dick Fetty and Tennessee man .
But Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
, Hill reported he is still attempting . ~ffice: Proceeds w1ll be. used to con·
Upon the recommendation of Danny Davis, Mayor' Joanne Eads,
Richard· Hubman. 29. Rodney, Saunders said the plea t~ .the charge
·f&lt;HO!ltact National Gas and Oil con- unue tmprovements on the covoc cen-. Police Officer Mark Proffitt, council Clerk Rosemary Eskew, Mark Prof- entered a plea to the charges Tuesday . was acceptable given. circumstai)Ces
ceming •fuel recovery costs. He said· ter.
.. •
. .
adjusted . the number of points fiti of -the Police Department, -and in Galli a .County Common Pleas surrounding the case.
·the vice president of the company had
. C~uncll approved Eskew s Tr~a- asstgned for a reckless operation • maintenance_employees Joe Ander- Court in the 'case of Troy Sowders,
"Based upon circumstances of
i'eturned his call, but he was out of the surer s report -of $54,, 10.42: w11h citation due to speed. The poi~ts , soh and Davtd Davts. ·
this
death and a lack of incriminating
who was rcporrcdly last seen in Gal·
evidence, all law enforcement offilia County in October 1996.
Sowders. 56. was believed to be cials involved believed a plea to vol- .
ttaveling the county fair' circuit and untary· manslaughter was an appro. · In other bustness, councol:
·
.
.
.
.
was residing in Gallia County with priate plea to accept," according to
Hubman and Brct Pelfrey, prior to his · Prose9yting }\.ttomey Brent Saunders.
family
reporting his disappearance.
"In addition. during the course of
share bemg $260.
.
• .
.
. .
. .
.
·several
extensive
searches
Qf
Rae;
this
case. members of the victim's
· -· Declined joining Sam's Club;
JIM FREEMAit
He said members of the chamber ·. In addition, some companies hire
8
Creek
over
.
a
three-month
peri·
'Cocin
family
and Jheir legal counsel agreed •
... :ntt'~essed until its next meeting
y
Staff
of commerce nei:d fO'-'attend the short-term specialistli for spec ill! pro1
od led deputies to lo:icate a body on to accept the plea;" he added.
8
whtch wtll be field at 7_p.o_n. on Apnl . 8!;'~::~t!r happens in Meigs ground breaking Thursday at·l p.m. jects that require outside expertise.
· Although a sentencing date has yet
~I at the f!'umc1pal butl~tng. . .
near Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Temporary agencies arc the largest Fch. 3.
Cqnfirmation of fingerprint to be sCheduled, Hubman will Serve
Atlendmg were H1ll, counc1I Co~t~?~·~omin~n complaint, but not support construction of the building. growing industry in the United States,
records, indicaling that the body was
membelS Robert Beegl~. Bentz, John entirely true these days, according to
Finally he recognized the Apple 'she said. A lot of companies that have that of Sowders, were made through thrcc-to-10 years on the voluntary
manslaughter charge.
DUdding, Dale Han, Henry Lyons
. d
T
E '
'd · 1
· · downsized in recent v_i:ars have real·8ncl La . Wolfe. Also attendin
new Meigs County economac · eve1.·
ree_ states rest enua communlly
'·
the Mansfield Penitentiary.
Saunders indicated that the state
A member of the victim's family · i ask for the maximum sentencing
were
Karen Lyons, Rizer an~ opment director Ron McDade.
· _tha~. ts ~otng up near Tuppers Plao~s. ~z:~c ~~~:~;:.n~~po:~ry f:pt,_ and
.u Jill
.
McDade was introduced Tuesday
ThiS represents an opportumty
said Tuesday she wasn '1 happy with f eight straight 'years.
'.o
dunng the m~nthly Meigs County Cot growth," he~d. addina that theSe
Some advantages of hiring work- the plea, and would have pll:ferrcd
Pelfrey, 2S. also of RodQey, plead.ftnS.•,_.18·
Chamber of Commerce luncheon at projects have the potential to create ers through a temporary agency are that til!: case against Hitbman had ed guilty on a bill of infonnation to
V
&amp;I
I' Cll
Car1eton Sch'oo1 .on
· s· yracuse.· He a 1o t o f JO
· bs.
.
. . · . the reduced cost of payroll adminis- gone to trial .
complicity to ·Jobllcry and WIIS senwas intrOduced by chamber President
He also pointed out progress on . tration and P,aying only a fixed
"IPs just got me dc.v,asta ,. sa.id tenced \o three years · in the Orient · :
Horace Kan'. .
the T\lppers Plains industrial site and amount per hour with no additional Wanda Parker of Rushville, Ohio, Correctional Facility. ·
:
"Things are really happening," he P~eroy's ongoing Downtown Rcyi-- taxes, benefits or payroll.
·•
.
said~
· '
Jjlli~tion Projeci. , ·
·
Chamber Vice-presi~ent Sue Mai• ~RLJNGTON, Va.._(AP) -;- ~ .
McDade, holding a copy of the
"It's good to he Iilia in Meigs son mentioned the April 17 Chamber
$',ICtal ·Secumy Admmtstrauon IS ·· SundayTimes-Sentinelforemphasis, County," said McDade, a Meigs Golf Tournament and reponed that
bemg asked by Senate leaders to shut ·pointed out three items in the news- County native. ·
·
!he ieccntdinner/danee was very sucdown- 81 l~ast temJ!Oranly .- an paper illusu'ating progress in the
He said his plan was to "live with cessful.
·
Groundbreakln' ceremonies to mark the betlnllina of c:on~~~ wd! stte that gtves taxpayers county.
'
.
economic development professionals
She said plans are being made for
structlen on the new Meias County Medical Clinic wW be held at
·&lt;l'!"ventenl access to theu. perSonal
First is the Eastern Local School with the state" and to "take advantage a possible stem wheel cruise with ·a
1 p.m. Thunday in Pomeroy.
· ·
~~iai ·Security Records. .
. , ·District. building project, which is of their contacts".
dinner and dance.
The cereanonles art belna slllged by Holzer Clink: aDd Con·:: ·. l!S~ Today rcpo~s t~ today s scheduled for bid opening Thursday. "When they think of sooitbeastem
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
sollclated Health Systems, Inc., parent of lhe Holftr Medical Cen'41110n1 thll Senate Mtnorny ~ader . Next he pointed' out Thursday's Ohio ... they'll think ofMeigs Coun· commended Patty· Pickens for her
ter and Veterans Meinori.i Hospital.
Tom. D~hle, 0-S:D., ~nd Sens. scheduled ground brcakin1 for a pro- ty," he ·sal~.
offer of land for a proposed veteraAs
The publk Is invited to be on hand for the lhort ceremonies
. :f,lilltJI!II Roth, R-Del., Dame! Pillru:'k posed medical arts . building nc~
,
,
liome.
to be held in fi'OIIt of tbe Meip County Jnfirnoary on Mulberry
Moynihan, 0-N.Y., aJid John Chafce, Veterans Menlorial Hospitai tn . · The gueM speaker at the luncbeon
Heiallts in Pomeroy, site of the new dink. ,
·
In addition , P!ckens treated a del!~R.I., sent a _let~~r to the qency say- . ~ineroy.
.
,
was Di,nne Cocke!ham, manager of
RefreshmentJ will be served Ill the conclusion of the program,
IIIJ. the webs1t~ may ~ot a~ord ~ufCharles Adkins Jr., pc-e-'dent and Personnel Temporary Services of ~gation to a tour of the~~ing
Construction of the 12,000 square feet fltdlity Ms been in
_./' ·
Ga~n~ P_TOICCitO!ls ag~nst Vlolauons chief cllecutiye offJCU. of. Holzer Parkersburg, W.Va., 'w"'l explained · a buffet. .
tile plunin1 stages for narly two years while dtldl Wet'ef'OIII·
An A.mericailLeaion liaison said
&lt;!Ctndi~tdual pnV~Y·.
· Medi&lt;:al Center, earlier -stated plans some of the reasons companies hire
pleted oo the deslp aDd IOCIItio• of the - .....,. ftnlctllre.
he had never been tt:eated better any·
~ : U111tl such pnvacy can be ~ured, caU ·for a S LS million, 10,000-lo- temporary help.
The Melp c-ty Commlslionen ...... to-lllllt.e ..nd avaUwhere
than
in
Meias
County,
Vauah·
·: · tile Mnalon said in their letter that · i~.OOO-sqiiiUC ;foot ,buildi.na .which
.BusinesSes ellen hire ternporuy
able for the fl!dJily om 1 year -ao. 'nie t:almiJ owned land has
~ request tlw IICCCII (to the will boule three to seven doctcn and help ror their bltsy .-ons durina an said. ·
betn pun:hase!lfor tile $1,$ IIII!IDioe bulldlaa.
"A veterans home would be a
. ~) via the Internet be suspend· cru&amp;e 18 to 22 new jobS. Dott\)IIIR 1ummer and before holidays or to flH
The new dink wUII!Ollle at least H\'fll dodon ad il ex~tca:
. .
upricted to ute lhe IKitpital facility vacanc:ies durina employee lei~ peat asset, not only for veterans, but .
4fd to provide 20 new Jobs In Melp Couacy. Cl!lllt1'11Cti0a
for their families," he ·lidded. "Patty
will be by Enlmlon ud Aaol:lala
n. -c-:Y set up the web sttc a for testinallld odlcr setvicel iac:lud: and viiCIItions to prevent over!Oidina ,tid
an outstandina job.·
'
• .Ca PI ei • . . . 3
ina in-plliltllllldacutc c:Mt.
Olhe1" employees.

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suuid 1o choose

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from.3doorll:

4door models in
srock..Yaious
equipment aod
rolonl .
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Gallia m'an pleads
guilty to charges

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meets new
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Groundbre~king set for new
Meigs County Medical Clinic

~------------------------~
l
'

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