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Ohio Lottery

Pirates
hold on to
top Reds 5-3

I

Pick 3:

954
Pick 4:
9190
Super Lotto:
15•28-31-33-41-45
Kicker
288183

8por18 on Page 5

Rain tonlaht. Low In the

50s. Tu .. ilay, shower•
likely. High In

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Vai. 41,N0.2
01WF, Ohio Yllley 1&gt;2U tlllltg Contpllny ,

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·chester
project
•
rece1ves
donation

Jackso·n ca,l ls
fdr .· Coalitions

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A contribution of $2,SOO from
local Modeni Woodmen will belp .
with continued improvements to the
· ·
old Chester Courmouse.
The funds, received from Modem
Woodmen Tent 4798 of Athens, were
a match of the first $2,500 of a total
of $3,500 raised by the ChesterShade Historical Association at a
March fund raising event, according
to the Association's Chairman, Mary
Poweil.
·
The $6,000 will pay for additional acreage purchased behind me old
courthouse building, which will provide parking for visitors. Additional·
ly, Powell said, the funds will help
pay oilier.outsta!lding bills. ·
\•we are well on our way to completing the restoration," Powell said.
"We hope to have the project finished
by summer, 1998, when the court.. house will be 175 years old."
The association is also planning
itS second annual "Chester Shade
Days" event, which will be held July

Dexter hearing
for rural water
slated tonight •
. A public ~eariq for residents

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~tis\ ,The jllitpOse~fttie .beet-

lila Is ·Ill ~eterml~ the Interest of
IOC!Il residentS Ia obtalnlaa nir·
.at water service. • ·
Leading Cteek Coaservaacy
·District wUI apply lor &amp;rant
funding through the Meigs
County Commlsslonen folupply
ru..._t wa~~do the Dexter
!ll'el!'"-llt'.ntll sulllcient interesL
" .previous hearing 'filS held
on Monday at the Dexter
.. Church, However, low attendance .s!towed a .!Self. of.laterest
in the projeel, according to a dis·
.
trict spOkespei'lon. •
·
L.C.C.D. manaaer Brent
Bollfl tiraes residents of the community to atte!ld the hearing.

......

·Boy killed in
roller coaster
.'malfunction'.
•

II

2 Sn'H+w.:. 12 P&amp;lll, 311 oerD
AO.w.a:Co. Ncsulplf*'

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Aprll21, 1997

· TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Amusement park officials say a roller coaster was . inspec,ted just two weeks
before an 'accident that killed a 14. year-old boy and,injured six others.
One of the cars .on The Wildcat
was being pulled to the top or an
· incline Sunday night when. just
before reaching the crest, it slid 45
feet tiack down the track and collided wiili another car, said Harry Baker, assistant fire chief. .
Witnesses said the boy who died
w.a sin the front car. He was ejected,
hitting .l!is head on one of the ri&lt;lc 's
metal bars. ·
.
"I heard a funny noise and looked
.up and the front car. was coming
,backward," said I&lt;.un Vitense, who
-was on the ride platform. "I couldn't
.tell ifthe people in me.car even knew
' 'wl)at was going on, but they hit
awfQily hard."
Bell's Amusement Park was
packed as visitors enjoyed a 25-cents·
per-ride promotion. The park
·remained open after the accident:
. The ride was inspected two w+kS
.ago by the Oklahoma Dcp811ment of
Labor, park president Robcn Bell Ill
said. He said all rides are in~pected
·Once a year.
Two 14-year-old boys were in ·
'serillllll coodition today at St. Francis
. ·Hospitai, spokeswoman Lisa Ingram
··said. A father, two of his dauaftters
:and another youna airl who wu a
·family friend were treated and
·released. ·
The cause ·of lhc tM:Cident was
ualatOwn. Bilker llid the c.-. ae
'pullld to the top or the initill crest by
a cbaia IIIII • suppcllld to delcetld
·forw•d. 1141 1, Blbrllicl. "sometlliaJIIIIlfundioned ll the top ...

.

FUNDS MATCHED • $2,500 in matching
·.lunda for the rwtoratlon of the Cheller court·
houee· building have been received from the
Modem Woodmen, Tant 4798 In Athenl. The
check was pre11811ted by William and Ethel Hart
18 ·arid 19. A' special feature of iliis
year's event Y(ill be the Ohio State
Harmonica Championship on ·1he •
.18th. A $200 first prize, $100 second
prize and $50 third prize will be
awarded, and preregistration is urged.
Other events on the 18th will
include a pie contest, an auction,

to Elsie Fol..,., and represents fun.d s raised at ·
March event. 1,110 pictured are, back, Ron
Eaatman, Howard Parker, Dele Colburn, Delmar
Baum, Mary Powell and Pat Holter, all of whom
era Involved In the restoratl~. project.

1

entertainment, square dance and
The association also plans canl&gt;e
food. · ·
rides, games a~d entertainment. a
The activities on the 19th will parade, pre-1900 costume contest, a
include a pre-1800 "time line event," square dance and illumination.
·Information and preregistration
which wilr feature period costumes
and demonstrations, American lndi· for the harmonica championship are
ans, frontiersman, traders, merchants available by contacting Powell . at
. 992-2622.
and story-tellers," Powell said.

American Jews struggle with
diversity, ·differences at Passo·v er

LAKEWOOD (AP) - The Rev.
Jesse Jackson says blacks need to
build coalitions and avoid antago·
nisms with othe,r minority groups.
· "Civil rights gains are under enormous atiack right now, with minimal
resistance," Jackson ·said Sunday
night. "We can't afford anti-Semitism, we can't afford Arab-bashing,
we can't afford Asian-bashing."
Jackson's remarks came at a fundraiser for his Rainbow Coalition and
Operation Push (People United to
Save Humanity).
"We must build coalitions," Jackson said. "We have to build it. We
need each other."
Saturday night. Jackson said his
Rainbow Coalition wants to organize .
school districts nationwide to emulate.
the challenge in Ohio to the usc of
propcny taxes to fund public schools: ,
The Ohio. Supreme Court Ia."
month declared the local propeny tax
system unconstitutional and gave the
state a year to devlsc a new funding
mechimism.
Jackson, sJ)eaking to members
and supporters of the Cleveland
Teachers Union, was silent on the
union's petition drive challenging the
city's usc of property ·tax abatement

to attract development.
The· union argu~s that years of
abating taxes on major downtown
"developments has cost the city
schools tens of millions or rax dollars.
· The union is seeking a Nov. 4 ballot issue changing the cjty"s abate:
me.nt policy.
"That is a local issue," Jackson·
told The Plain Dealer following his
talk at the Pilgrim United qaurch of
1
' Christ.
"But I am endo1$ing equal fund·
i'ng for public education," he said,
speaking in general terms. "You
cannot stand for equal protection
under the law and equal opportunity
and equal access and then embrace
property tax as the basis for fultding
public education."
Jackson called the Ohio $uph:me
Cciuri's decision "monumental" and
the single most imponant coun decision since the U.S. Supreme Court's
1954 decision that said racial segre·
gation in public schools was uncon·
stitutional.
.
He said lie was convening a meeting of superintendents in Chicago on
May 17, the anniversary of the 1954
decision .

.
Sen. Hatch wants Reno to
.

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. 9..fJ.h
off the record, ahout her dect•

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New Y&amp;k ·stalll's chief judge1
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
· occupation, saved only by his turk· . The .union is considered a fringe Judim Kaye. said she worships at the Attorney General Janet Reno decid·.
' ish citizenship, while relatives died in group by most Jews, said Rabbi Nor· Shcarith Israel synagogue. upstairs ed not to seck an Independent coun-1uschw~.·
.
.
,man Lamm, president of Yeshiva. with the women, separately from the sel in the ~ampaign fund -raising
. EaCI1 '1Yfir for Passov,er, which ~niversity in the Br~nx and its affil. men, ~·as a matter of faith , because· probe, she said the evidence simply
marks the anctent Hebrews. hberatton · tated Orthodox rabbtmcal school.
what binds us is ·more important. .. . · did not nierit il. Now a Senate ~om·
fro~ slavery in Egypt, he tllanks God
"What they did is the single most ·But when I walk out the door. I would mittee wants to hear Reno explain her
at .an Orthodox synagogue in Man· counterproductive action in decades" fight to the. death for women's rationale under oath.
hattari. Tl)e 62-year-old lawyer also in the Orthodox Jewish community, rights."
"There's no question that she will
attends a' Reform temple !lear his he .said. "This is turning into OrthoThough Turiel doesn't keep a be examined ... ils to wliy she hasn 't
home in Westfield, N.J.
dox-bashing, painting all of us in the kosher home, Shearith Israel is his appointed an independent counsel,"
When ~ small group of American
same light without regard to the . spiritual home. He had his bar mitz- Se.n. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah. said on
ultra-Orthodox rabbts satd recently immense differences." ·
vah there after he fled in 1945 from "Fox News Sunday. "
that only 'Jews who practice strict
Diversity- and adaptabilitv- is · the island of Rhodes with his broth·
" I believe she's going to have a
Orthod()xy· arc religious, " I thought at the core of Jewish survival as a cr, his Turkish-born mother and his ' very difficult iime -justifying" her
itwasridicolous,"Turiel said: "They people. said Rabbi Marc Angel of father. They survived · because the decision, he added.
c0n't tell me how I should·hve and Manhattan's Shearith Israel congre- Nazis agreed to spare Jews wim · · Hatch. chainnan of the Senate
what is jn \1\y heart."
,
gation, where Turiel has been a Turkish. protection.
Judiciary Committee. said Reno will
As Jews prepared for Passover, member for 50 years,
Despite his lifestyle, he feels he's appear he fore the panel April 30 which begllts tonight and lasts for
Angel adheres to strict Orthodox · welcomed as a religious Jew and an unless she appoints an independent
eight days,\the nibbis' words remain observances but welcomes other inheritor of a Jewish ethos that looks counsel before then. Asked if his pan·
a wedge among Some Orthodo~ Jews . members as well.
to shed new light on its faith.
Cl will put Reno under oath, Hntch
and those pf the more liberal Con-.
The first Jews to arrive in AmcriThis week, Angel left behind the answered, ''There's no ·question
servauvc and Reform branches.
ca in the 17th century accepted each controversy as Passover approached. about that. " .
The Union of Orthodox Rabbis other's differences in order to sur- Tonight, he will stand before the syn·
Reno is "perfectly willing" to
said the liberal branches practice a vivc, said Angel, former.prcsidcitt of agoguc ponal facing Jerusalem for · appear hcforc Congress. said Justice
religion that is "n()t Judaism at all. the Rabbinical Council of America, a rites that have celebrated Jewish uni· Department spnkcswnman Carole
Observant Jews, the rabbis suit!, mainstream Orthodox group of rjlb· ty since ancient times.
Florman. "The attorney general is
always willing to speak I&lt;&gt; Congress,

S.HS prom queen and king---.
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Four tobacco executives·
insist smoking not deadly
MIAMI &lt;AP) - Four top tobac- . did not believe tobacco is deadly or
• co company execUtives said under conclusively linked to any illness. He
oath that smoking cannot kill despite docs not believe tobacco is any more .
Liggett Group's admission a' month addictive than coffee or carrots.
"Carrot addiction1" the lawyer
ago that smoking is addictive and can
cause cancer.
a.' ked.
"Yes, " Schindler answered.
In private depositions given la.•t
week. the executives clung· to long- "There was British research on carheld industry statements about the. rots. "
dangers of tobacco, according to
Schindler smokes more than a
transcripts and videotapes obtained
by The Miami Herald and reponed pack-a day. His wife smokes a pack .
a day. She tried to quit once. He tried .
Sunday. .
·
The depositions were given in to quit twice.
response to cla~s-action lawsuits filed
Spc~rs said he quit smoking in
by Stanley Rosenblatt, a Florida 1977, though he sti II has an occa·
lawyer.
sional cigarette. He said he stopped
Rosenblatt talked to James Mor- because he had a heart attack. ·
gan, president of Phi lip Morris;
Morgan said he began smoking as
Andrew Schindlet, president of RJ. a college freshman and still smokes
Reynolds Tobacco; Nick Brookes, three packs a week. He has quit iliree
chief executive of Brown &amp; times, never for trtore than a year.'The .
Williamson; .and Alexander Spears, last time was in 1987, after he suf.
·chairman of Lorillard Tobacco Co. ifcred a collapsed lung.
The depositions were lengthy,
The depositions came less ililut a.
often acrimonious and sometimes month after Ligget~ maker of lAMs
personal.
and Chesterfields, settled 22 state
Spears' father, a heavy smoker, Ia"' suits b~ a!!reeing to la.bi:l its cisdied of lung canc~r. Schindler's arettes addiCtive 1d admtlttng ciga.
father, who smoked lhrec packs a day. . rettes are taraeted to teen-agers and
·
had circulation problems and died cause cancer.
from a stroke.
.
Despite the settlement, scientiftc
·studies
and newly n:leascd dlmnina
"The doctor told him ... 'You caR
·
documents
from their own cotllplleither stop smoking or I can cut off
hand
d
'
da " nies, me executives llid mey lltill
your
s an .eet some y,'
don't believe ihat toNeco is lldclil:tne
Schindler
Nevenheless, Schindler said he or can kill.

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. sions. "· ,
.
Republicans claim Reno was protccting President Clinton when she ·
announced last Monday that she .
would not request judicial appointmcnt of an independent 'counsel to
investigate allegations of illegal campnign fund raising hy the Democrats.
. . The attorney general opted instead
to allow i:arccr prosecutors in U&gt;e Jus-·
lice Department to continue their
investigation. She said she found no
"specific and credible evidence that
... any 'person with whom I would
have an automatic conflict has vioiatcd the law. "
The independent counsel statu.te is
reserved for cases in which clear cvidcncc exists that top administration
oflicials such as the president, vice
president or Cabinet member.i may
tiavc committed a federal felony and
thai the matter w.ould present a con·
flict of interest for the presidentially
appointed auorncy general to handle .
Republicans argue there is easily
enough evidence suggesting illegalitics by Democratic fund-raisers to
justify an outside prosecutor.

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Commentary
The l)aily Sentinel

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Repu.bl .•.ca n .c0 ntrol
.of Legislature adds
to union woes

~r
,

By PAUL SGUHRADA
Associated Press Writer

AccuWe•~ fOieCUt for

speech police, fought the code, send- ·on this critical issue." He then qUO(- threal that you will employ talk-show
ing news of it to the outside world. (I ed a resounding call for .Jliii1CS by hosts and nati~ organizations to
wrote about it in the Washington Onin Hatch, chainnan !&gt;f the Senate ._ pressure me mto malung such a
Post, ~ William Bennett spoke Judiciary Committee: "Those nomi- pledge.
·
nees who are or would be judicial ·
" These tactics to force others to
activists should not be nominated by adopt your narrow view of political
NatHentofl
tile president or confirmed by the correctness are.wrong,_ and reminisabout it.)
Eventually, after lipping was grad- Senate, and I will do my best to see cent of a dark period from our history."
uated, this embarrassment to the law to itthat they are not."
lipping went on to warn Sen.
The ever-vigilant Judicial Selec·school faded away.
Leahy
that
if
he
did
not.
sign
the
·
tion
Monitoring Project should alert
lipping is now in Washington,
"Hatch
Pledge"
-which
Sen.
Hatch
the
dozens
of talk-show hosts that a
where he directs the Judicial Selecwill
not
sign
because
he
doesn't
sign
relentless
judicial
activist, Chief Iustion Monitoring Project, an offspring
pledges -- the forces of judicial cor- tice William Rehnquist, insists. that
of the Free Congress Foundation.
rectness
will be unleaShed. They will "the idea of an independent judiciaIn his official role, lipping sent a
let
Leahy's
~rfidy . be known " to ry, with authority to finally interpret
letter to all I 00 senators, demanding
more
than
260
nat1onal and state a wntten constitution ... is one of the
they l!Cl to purge those "activist" fed-.
eral judges who do not agree with organizations and dozens bf talk- crown jewels of our system of govlipping's interpretations of the Con- show hosts in our groy.oing coalition." emment." Then \here was a Founder,
stitution. On Feb. 4 a follow-up let- The talk-show hosts can surely be Alexander Hamilton who ' wrote in
ter went to Sen . Pa~ck Leahv. D-Vt. depended on to assess Leahy's char- the Federalist Papers' that "the com. .
..
plete independence of the courts of
In the letter, lipping reminded acter and fitness.
.
Leahy
mustbave
e~~oyed
wnung
justice
is peculiarly esse'ntial"
Leahy that the senator had previoush1s
answer
to
I1ppmg:
I
do
~ot
take
because
the
duty of the couns "must
ly received "a lett~r from the largest
pledges
demanded
by
spectal-mterest
be
to
declare
void all acts contrary to
coalition in history to .oppose judicial
groups
on
either
the
right
or
the
'eft.
the
manifest
tenor
of die Constitution.
activism. :.. Please find enc:losed an
Nor do I appreciate your thinly veiled Without this, all the reservations of
particular rights or privileges would
amount to nothing."
Copies of the Federalist PaJll:lrS
might well be distributed to members
of the Senate, particularly those hunting "judicial activists" and demand•
ing their impeachment
When Gerald Ford, R-Mich., was
1 in the House, he anticipated the current jihad with a rousing speech calling for the impeachment of Justice
William 0 . Douglas. Ford, not a noted constitutional scholar, said that
"an impeachable offense is whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a given' moment in history."
. That was• spoken like tile stunningly overbroad University of Buffalo law School speech code. Majority Whip Rep. Tom Delay, R-Texas,
a leader of the judge-baiters, recent• ly quoted Ford's definition of
impeachment approving!¥ in a letter
·to the New York Times.
It is a wonder that the Constitution, however batterc:d from time to
time, survives \he United States Con. '
·.

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·Letters' to the editor
Trayelis under your control

Zaire rebellion -ushers in new era of global· politics

Freeloading from ·FEMA

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Program launched to
protect children on farms

SUTy Pl. Cloudy Cfo::1y

Today's weather forecast

By

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Mary Nancy Rigp Cona~. 88, Sandyville, W.Va., died Sunday, April20,
1997, at Parkersburg, W.Va.
A homemaker and Protestant by fai\11, she was born Dec. 3, 1908, at By The Aeaocl.ted Prue
Ohio traffic accidents claimed 10
Sandyville, daughtt:r of lhe late Charles and Mammie Dailey Rigs.
lives
over the weekend, including two
Surviving are two daughters, Beatrice "Peggy" Oriffi\11 of Parkersburg
and Opal Donohew of Evans, W.Va.; a son, Lawre!lte Cong~ 1r. of in one wreck, the State Highway
Sandyville; 14 grandchildren ; 27 great-grandchildren; two great-great-grand- .. P!llrol said today. One victim was a
children; three sisters, Elanor McGrew of Hometown, W.Va., and Erma Staats pedestrian. ·
The patrol counted fatalities from
and Evelyn Pursley of Sandyville.
6
p.m.
Friday through Sunday.
She was preceded in dea\11 in 1977 by her husband of 51 years, Lawrenc:e
The
dead:
Conger Sr.; a son, Clement C. Conger; an infant son; five brolhers and two
SUNDAY
sisters. .
STEUBENVILLE - Vincent
Services will be Tuesday, I p.m. at Drift Run Church in Sandyville with
Grabbits,
21, of Cadiz, in a two-car
the Rev. Don Blackwell officiating.
Burial will follow in Drift Run Ceme,
collision on a Jefferson County road.
tel)'.
.
.
TOLEDO - Michael Laumann,
Friends may call today, 6-9 p.m. at the Roush Funeral Holl,le in
58,
of Sylvania, in a one-car crash
Ravenswood. W.Va.
along
U.S. 20 in Lucas County.
"
NAPOlEON - Matthew Ober- .
haus, 23, of Malinta, in a one-car
accident on a Henry County road.
SATURDAY
WAVERlY - Ray Haselip, 47, of
WASHINGTON (AP) _ About
Abo~t 1.3 million youths belo:-"
100 youths are killed on the .farm age 20 ltved on farms and ranches m
annually and 100,000 arc injured in 1991 and _800,000 albers were ~~m­
agriculture-related activities - ·casu. bers o_f hired farm-worker famthes,
allies
that
workplace-safety mcluding mtgrant and seasonal workresearchers want to prevent.
ers.
The government's National lnstiMany fall victim each year when
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Goodyear
lute for Occupational Safety and they become trapped beneath overand
the United Steelworkers union
Health t()(jay was launching a $5 mil- turned tractors, entangled in heavy
farm machinery, involved in acci- resumed contract talks 'today in a
lion national research program dents with livestock, suffocate in strike by about 12,000 workers at
designed to prott:ct children on farms grain bins, fall or suffer .electric plants in seven states.
from illness, injury and death.
J:'legotiations between North
shock.
America's largest tiremaker and the
union stalled late Saturday just before
the contract expired at midnight, but
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- ers Livestock Association auctions at they agreed Sunday. to resume talks
Ohio direct hog prices at selected Hillsboro, Eaton, Farmersrown, Lan- in Cincinnati.
Company spokesman Fred Haybuying points Mpnday as provided caster, Wapakoneta, Mt. Vernon,
by the U.S. Department of Agricul- Bucyrus, Creston, Caldwell and Gal· mond wouldn't comment on the
talks. Union spokesman Curt Brown
lipolis:
ture Market News:
said
today from Pittsburgh, "We felt
Hogs: 50 cents lower to 4.00 highBarrows and gilts: weak to SO
their
last offer was regressive." He
cents lower; demand and movement er.
wouldn't
comment further.
Butcher hogs: 36.00-57.75.
light to moderate.
Workers walked out at nine plants
Cattle: 1.00 lower to 2.00 higher.
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
in1he
first strike against Akron-based
Slaughter steers: choice 60.00points 54.50-55.50, few at 56.00;
Goodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. since .
70.25; select 56.00-65.00.
plants 55.00-56.75.
1976.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.00U.S : . 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 50.00Contract issues include wages and
70.75;
select 55.00-65.00.
54.50; .210-230 lbs. 45.50-50.00.
Cows: 1.00 lower to 2.00 higher; benefits. but the union also wants all
Sows: steady to 1.00 higher.
contracts covering Goodyear's
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs . 41.00- all cows 59.50 and down.
Bulls: 2.00 lower to 3.00 highet; 20,000 union employees to expire at
43.00; 450-500 lbs. 43 .00-44.50;
the same time. The average Goodyear
500-600 lbs. 44.00-47.00, few over all bulls 62.00 and down.
Veal calves: steady; choice 100.00 production worker makes about $18
600 lbs. 47.50-48.50.
an hour.
and down.
Boars : 39.00-40.00.
Mike Runyon, a Goodyear workSheep and lambs: steady to 5.00
Estimated receipts: 30,000.
er
for
14 years in Lincoln, Neb., said
Hog market trend for Mon- lower; choice wools 87 .00-120.50;
choice clips 89.00-112.00; aged
day: 1.00 lower. ·
Sumnill)' .of last week's Produc- sheep 76.00 and down.

.

.'

gre~~t

-.e

•leotumbus!64•'

''·

Docu·menfsreveal the campaign ~oney cha~e

Today in history

Mary Riggs Conger

MICH.

COLUMBUS - While Rep. Ed Jerse was chastising Republicans during last week's f') oor debate over a rewrite of Ohio's workers' compensa•
tion law, Republican Jtm Jordan quickly scribbled something on a paper in
front of him.
.
Jerse, a Euclid Democrat, complained that Republicans' refusal to seek
consensus on diffi cult issues was becoming a pattern in the Legislature.
"Here's the pattern," Jordan, R-West Liberty, quipped to his neighbors
as he pointed to the paper.
.
. . .
Written on the paper: 60-39 - the SIZe of the Republican maJO~ty tn the
I·
House.
It'! thm{ind of attitude that could get Republicans in trouble, say political analysts.
·
When Republicans m 1994 captured ~o ntrol of the Ohio House for the
first time in 22 years, it cleared the way for a flood oflegislation long sought
by the GOP's corporate backers.
Last session, it was legislatiOn aimed at making it tougher for people to
fi le laws uits and to limtt potenual jury awards. The workers' comp changes
wtll save compantes a collecti ve $100 million a year - Democrats say on
the backs of injured workers. Ne xt up, repealing a state law requiring unionscale wages on governmenl constructi on projects.
J
. "There are cycles in Ohio politics," warn s John Green, director of the
Un 1versity of Akron's Ray C. Bliss lnslitute fbr Applied Politics.
Hentoll Is a nationally
"Republicans can make it so uncomfortable for unions that they re-enerlll:lU IWI\ lU/111&amp;,
II
I'I:!ZIW!e llllftlnlr'ltiiiMIIi: l"r1IIUIIII\#
~
renowned autllorlty on the First
gize the labor movement. " ·
liWft, !IV IW\117 ~
~llfllel\ Jlllr!IMI ,,.,..,._. l,..f' III!Mfl ~~,.,,
AmeDdment and the RSt of the BUI
So far, the pro-busmess tilt m the Legislature largely has irked only labor ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ · ~Ripu.
officials and trial lawyers. And labor has seen its political clout dwindle as
uni on membership declines.
The danger for Republicans lies in offending voters in general, Green says.
WASHINGTON -- Scatterell lime raising "hard money," or sritall- ~eform was not a senti meg! shared Gingrich, his staff was busy auction"There 's always a danger that the maJority will go too far. Eventually,
among the latest batch of campaign er contributions that usually come among his loyalists.
you can annoy the broader public. "
ing Whi~ ldbu!le IIICcl:sS&lt;tO' reputed r .
Remember
the Claremont mobst~rs and Chinese arms mer'
William Binning, a Youngstown State University political scienc:e pro- fund-raising documents released by from individuals and PACs.
the White House are several clues to
. "Hard dollars are increasingly covenant? It happened one ~fternoon chants. .
fessor and delegate to the 1996 GOP presidential convention, agrees:
how the culture of the politic.al monin the summer of 1995, when Presi" I think the Republicans can go too far," Binning said. "I don' t know
WASTE ·WATCH .: The federal
ey chase has become more important
Jack Anderson dent Clinton met with House Speak- · budget deficit may be shrinking
where that point is, however."
- .
. ·
Neither Binning nor Green believe Republicans have reached that point. than governing in the nation's capi. and
er Newt Gingrich in Claremont, rapidly, but some federal agencies
N.H., to iron out their political dif- still aren't paying much attention to
Binning thinks issues such as the minimum wage and health care have tal.
the potential to revive labor's political activity.
Harold Ickes, the president's for-·
"er
ferences ..The climax of that meeting where taxpayer dollars are being
mer deputy chief of staff, collected
"'
came when a member of the audience spent.
" I think the point comes when the· issue expands beyond· what is considered a 'labor' issue," he explained. " It has to go to the state of working ·hundreds of pages of memoranda difficultto raise, because much of the asked the two career politicians if
. The Depal'!ment of Veterans
peo):fle m Ohio - not just union members. Labor unions have to get other while serving in the White House, a existi~g DNC donor base has already they would work together to reform Affairs, for example, recently solicitsix-inch stack of which were released
'maxed out' (contributed the max.i- the campaign finance system.
groups sympathetic to their cause."
ed bids for .a contract to service VA
Seizing.the moment like the vet- mortgage~. The ·firm th;u won the
Green thinks issues such as workers' comp can help unions in one respect last week. Taken together, these doc- nium allowable amount)," says one
uments show how the current system undated memorandum.
eran politicians they are, Gingrich contract bid $20.8 million, leaving
- bnnging their workers back to the Democratic Party.
keeps
candidates
in
a
perpetualfundA
June
8,
1996,
memo
written
by
and Clinton quickly made a hand- Cleveland-based leader Mongagc
. · " Part of the problem labor has had is mot1 vating 1ts members to become
Clinton aide Phil Caplan to the pres- shake agreement to address the issue Co. out in the cold.
politically active," he said. "They can usc workers' camp as a tangible exam- raising frenzy. ·
The documents, reviewed by our ident warned that the re-election as soon as possible.
ple of what happens when 'the right people' aren't in office."
'
What strikes company orfieials as
associate George Clifford III, also campaign was "running into very
But a· year earlier, Ic~es fretted odd is tbat their bid was a full $9 milhint at the abject anxiety that led serious 'hard money' problems." aloud in a memo to then-chief ofsl&amp;ff lion lower than the winning comClinton administration· officials to Another memorandum explains that leon Panetta about the perils of petitor's. VA officials say that the
spin out of control in their endless the party was tl)'ing desperately to changing the system. Ickes' July 24, Cleveland firm simply didn't pt:&lt;Jve
quest for campaign cash:
make a strong showing ·in their 1994, memo complains that "it has that it could do the job. They also
So far, the fund-raising ~candals ·mandatory disclosure reports filed become increasingly difficult to raise claim, incredibly, that C&lt;)Sl is only 10
Walking, driving or nying- visit- tune and made new with progressive · haunting the Clintons have focused ·With the Federal Election Commis- 'hard dollars." ' He then points out, percent of what the agency looks' at
ing places like Pomeroy, Oh10 is an 1hinkmg. That is the way of talking on the record amounts of "soft mon- ·sion.
wi\11 obvious 'dismav. that "if carn- when doling out contracts ..
w1th senior citizens who remember ey " raised by the Democratic Party.
ex hilaratmg experience.
A "strong showing," as Caplan · · paign finance reform is enacted, the
But leader officials point to lenors
In anticipation of your arrival, a the voices of early industrialists; These contributions can be given in puts it, illustrates the reality that · DNC will be unable to use any 'soft they' ve received from several other
ge ntle breeze is a remmder the miners. pioneers and settlers who unlimited amounts, and are ostensi- everyone in !he Clinton camp under- . dollars' for its operations other than government agencies e•pressing
mighly Ohio River is just ahead. A stopped and stayed to watch the wave bly to be used for "party building" stood: In order to.win, you must look , in connection with its (lieadquarters) thanks for a job well done. And
wave to a tug boat 1s echoed back as of grain. giving bir\11 to beautiful chil- activitie.s -- which in Clinton's case like a winner. Without a big war . building."
.
they're not taking the loss lying
dre n, and a nation. The kind, qentle meant endless television commer- chest, other potential contributors
a deep throat fog horn welcomes.
The president probably now wish- down. Th.ey recently retained irasciDepending on your mood in town , people who make the river towns ~I .cials.
might be scared away.
· es he had paid closer attention to his ble former Sen. Howard Metzenthere is an offen ng of crafts, food. and ahve.
The documents reveal one major
The Ickes documents also confirm own words in New Hampshire. Of baum, D-Ohio, to do their behindLife. Compared with the episode reason why Democrats focused so what many in Washington have long · course, we have learned in recent
souvenirs, wea ri ng apparel and
\he-scenes bidding i~ Washington.
friendly clerks to assist you. Often of madness in San Diego ·Where much on exploiting the soft-money · alleged: that th~ president's oft-stat- months why he did RQI. It's because
Jack Anderson and'liut Moller
directi ng you to other nearby towns events of sad proportion terrified loophole: They were having a hard ed commitment to campaign finance at the time he waS .shaking hands with tu"e writers for Unikd Feature
or department stores, sales people sat- rati onal thinking with evil teaching,
Syndbte, Inc.
which led to death.
.
\
·
isfy your needs.
The passing of a comet is a show
The locals are fr iendly and you
of cosmic beauty, not a fantasy to
feel welcome.
Wh1 le visiting you take a stroll remove precious life froin God's
By DaWAYNE WICKHAM
France, which once treated the , power, the West is far more interest- depend on the West to put out
alqng the walled river's edge. The Places, like Pomeroy. Ohio.
Gannett
News
Service
·
Roaer
Reeb,
French-speaking countries of West 1 ed in events inside the borders of Africa's fires. Either he takes on that
downtown is transfonned by desires
Racine, Ohio
WASHINGTON - The rebellion Africa like a Paris suburb, has refused ! those nucle~ powers than the trou- • responsibility or runs the risk of the :
of a people well known for caring;
sweeping across Zaire signals more to intervene in Zaire's civil war. So I bles of black Africa. Its retreat opens ·flames eventually engulfing his :
golden, olden buildings etched in
than a change of power in that min- too, has Belgium, Zaire's forme; · · up the way for Sou\11 Africa to fill this nation.
eral-rich £ounll)'. !• is ushering in a colonial overseer.
diplomatic and milital'y void.
The new pOlitical' order that's :
new era of global politics.
The United States, which used
Already the government of Nelson emcfging is leaving the affairs of :
A man from the Federal Emer- purposes.
For
mll!'e
than
three
decades,
dicZaire
as
a
staging
area
for
much
of
its
·
Mandel
a has assume&lt;~ a political role black Africa to Africans. That leaves ·
There is a substantial income
gency Management Corporation
tator
Mobutu
Sese
Seko
ruled
Zaire
African
intrigue
during
the
Cold
.
in
Zaire's
civil war by offering to the door wide open for South Africa
knocked on our door looking for a from some of this property. They are with ttl. backing of the United S~tes War, is making a low-level diplo- . mediate peace talks between the war- - which is thought to possess
person or persons evidently putting in the first to kick and squawk when and its Eur.opean allies. Throughout matic effort to end Mo,butu's reign ring sides. But for Pretoria to assert nucl~ar weapons - to become
taxes go up. But they are victims of
for llood losses.
the Cold War, the central Africa wi\hout much more bloodshed.
~ · its leadership on the continent 'it has Africa's fmt superpower.
.
It's. no wonder that this govern- ci rcumstances within their own con- nation was a client state of western
Butthereisnoserioustalkofmil'
to
do
mote
than
host
such
talks.
It
If
South
Africa's
black-majority
ment is going into debt at the rate of trol. This kind of stuff is what '! Fred- powers. In return for Mobutu 's anti- itary intervention.
• must be willing to impose an out; govemmentcanoverseethespreadof
die the Freeloader" and "Clintonite
$10,000 a minute.
communist
posture,
the
world's
No talk of international peaee- come.
democracy throughout sub-Sahara
,The property that this man from demagogues" are doing to this·coun- democracies turned a blind eye to his keepers like the multi-national force
With
the
West's
focusing
its
atten.
Africa, it will be in a position to barthe Federal Emergency·Management il)'.
authoritarian
government.
Italy
now
commands
in
Albania.
·
tion
and
resources
elsewhere,
South
ness
lhe economic potential of a COfThere is a portjon of thi~ society
Corporation was looking for is owned
Mobutu
managed
the
sale
of
his
No
chance
that
Mobutu's
former
·
Africa
is
the
only
nation
on
lhe
continent
rich with natural resources. lt
by persons wbo never paid a cent for that are parasites on the olher part. It's country's natural resources like the friends will save his kleptocracy.
tinent
that
is
capable
of
dominating
can
bring
about lhe construction of.
it, never maintained it, and .are large the law of the land.
sole
proprietor
of
a
candy
store.
He
The Wl\st's willingness to leave the region 's politics and economics. transportation systems \hat connects
Gayle Price,
property owners with propeny they
stashed
away
billions
of
dollars
of
illto his fate is the clearest sign Whether Mandela is willing to use his Africa's nations to each other in
,
Mobutu
Portland
are evidently holding for Investment
gotten gain in foreign banks, sharing yet that Africa - south of the Sahara nation's ccononiic and military might much the same 'way that the countries
the buoty only with his family and and north of South Africa - has been to bring stabitity to Africa is an unan- of Europe and Noi1h America are
friends.
·
written off by the United States and swered question.
linked by air, rail and I'Oids.
But the fall of communism its lilies, The leader of Zaire's rebels
In the past, he has -rned reluc.
Doing this would not only· fuel . .
~rought destabilization in Europe is a one-time Maoist whose ·democ- tant to get involved in the
of' black Africa's stalled economic
m the Balbna and Albania - and the ratic conversion is suspect. He's · othen African nations. But now the
engines, it will make Sou\11 Africa a
By The Asaoct.tad Prue
. West's preoccupation with those
hllrdly the kind of liberator who holds ~African president
no Jonaer ~ actor on. the wort~ aqe.
Today is Monday, April 21, the I lith day of 1997. There are 2S4 days Europeu trouble SpotS. The retreat out
the promise of ending authoritar- ii:,..._ _ _..;,._ _ _ _ _...;;_ _...,:.-:-----~;,;;.,;;,;::~left in lhe year.
from Africa was hastened by the ian rule in the former Belgium ConOne year qo: President Clinton and Boris Yelllin tl'lded
compliToday's Highlight in History:
·
United Sl*s' disastrous intervention ao.
menasand
played
down
UUinl
cliff&amp;-.
illlillintlheir
sit
:lioa-ye~r .,...._
On April 2 1, 1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the Gennan ace in Somalia and the bloody tribal warWi\11 Russia an economic basket ·mil in Moscow w11 not bei111 influenced by pmiJ ial politica. Q! h 1
known as the "Red Baron," was killed in action during World War I.
fare
in
Rwanda.
cue
and Olina emerging as a world . Jimmy "The Oreek" Snyder died Ill
76.
I
.
I

Jackson ·inan one of
10 weekend victims
on Ohio's highways

Thaclay, Aprt12l

The .-n ew political c()rrectness ~ ·

in 1987, I heard from Tom lipping, a student' at the University of
· Buffalo Law School. The faculty had
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
imposed a speech code that was more
614-992·2156 • Fax 982·2157
contemptuous of the First Amendment than even most of the political·
ly correct gag rules proliferating on
campuses around the country.,
"Remarks," said the code,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
"diro;cted at another's race, sex, reli. gion, nation!!~ origin, sexual pr~fe~­
ROBERT L WINGm
ence" et al. would be severely punPubll8her
ished. There was no further definition
of :·remarks." Also prohibited were
" other remarks" -- not defined -MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
"based on prejudice and group·
Controller
~rei Manager
stereotype." Any prejudice?
Unique to this law school code-unanimously passed by the adminisTllo Senllnol
tho editor
tration
and faculty -- was a provision
ShOif- (31111- or 1-1 lllvo
publl-. !)'pod,._
,., .,. ,..,,.,, _ _ til m•y 1» - · &amp;ch tliould lncludt •.....,.,... td'ol 111,
tha! the administration would provide
'"" &lt;Mytlme {JIIont numbtr. Sptclly • d.,.
10 • ,....,... , _
the rap sheets of any guilty student to
"',.,., "'" 1oi . . _ 10 lilt Editor, ""' · 111 Cowl It, ,..,,.....,, Olilo
the character and fitness committees
L~4=~~.~~~·~FAX~~IO~I~I:•:~::~~~~~-----~--~------------------~ ·· of any bar association to which the
pariah were to apply.
Tom lipping, though vilified by a .
prominent faculty member and other

•

TMDelly Sentinel • P.-3

.hge2 ·.

Monny, April 21, .1117

'Estafjfisfw{ in 1948

'"""",..-to

-

•

from the upper 30s to mid 40s.
By The Aetiocl8tecl Prell
Highs
Ohio
mainly in the 50s.
Tonight. ..Mostly cloudy. Low
Thursday... A chance of showers.
upper 30s to mid 40s.
Tuesday...Variable cloudiness. ' lows in the 40s and highs in the 50s.
Friday... Dry. Lows in the 40s and
High mainly in the 50s.
highs in the 60s.
Extended forecast
Wednesday.•.Rain likely with lows.

Rain expected
to end ~y to~ight
:By The Associated Preas
The rain should end tonight but
the clouds will linger over Ohio, the
National Weather Service said.lows
will be 40-45.
Tuesday will be dry with variable
cloudiness .and temperatures w·m
remain cool with highs mainly in the
50s.
Rain is likely to return on Wednesday.
The record-high temperature. for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 86 degrees in 1987 while
the record low was 22 in 1953. Su-nset tonight will be at 8:15p.m. and
sunrise
Across the nation
A cold front pushed scattered rain
and .lig~t snow from the R';JCkies into
the Plams early today, while the rest
of the country enjoyed fair and·generally dry c~mditions. .
It was fa1r and coolm the East and
• clear and warm across the Southwest
; as a heavy ·rain fell on parts of the
·Black Hills of South Dakota and east' em Montana.
Strong thunderstorms, gusty
' winds. hail and the potential for tor-

· nadocs were forecast for northeast
Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana by
tonight, one day after several twisters
Were reported in Missouri .
It y;as expected to be cloudy
across the.East today, with scattered
thunderstorms developing in the
Southeast. Rain was possible in New
England tonight.
In the nooded northern Plains,
scattered rain and thunderstorms
were forecast and strong storms were
. possible in Nebraska and Kansas.
Rain was forecast in Washington
and Oregon by tonight; with scattered
snow.in the cascades and the central
Rockies.
The na.tion's high temperature in
the Lower 48 states Sunday was 98
degrees at Thermal, Calif., while the
lows were 20 at Alpena, Mich., and
Ely, Minn .
'
Temperatures today were forecast
-in-the 50s and 60s across the Northeast, Midwest and northern Plains;
the 70s in the South ; the 80s in the
extreme Southeast, Texas and
Louisiana; and the 90s in the Arizona
desert.

Talks resume between
Goodyear and union.

.Today's livestock report

CLEVELAND (AP)- The city's
. school system took on millions of
·dollars in questionable costs linked to
deals for its debt financing, a newspaper reported.
The school district issued bonds
· and notes carrying ne!lfly. $2.5 mil' lion in excessive interest costs from
1992, when Mayor Michael R.
White's group of reformers took
over the school board. to 1995, when
the state took control, according to an
' analysis by financial consultants for
, The Plain Dealer. ·
, The newspaper ~unday reponed'
results of the analys1s.
It reported today a financial ad visor who macle arrangements for the
; school district with a securities deal' er ran a firm which obtained a loan
·. from the same source.
Nearly $1 .8 million of the c•cess
1

The Daily Sentinel
' (USPS21,__
"'bliahecl every aftemooft. Molldly Ihn&gt;llih
~. III .Coun S1 .. ,.,.,.,., Ohio. by die
Ollio Yollet Poblllllina ~-Co.•
,.,.,.,., Ohio 45769, Pb. 992;21». Secotld
pold
Olllo.
'

clol•,...... II.........,.

M,.bon The AuociiOod P!eu. ond die Olllo
New i ; Auocllllon. ,
I'OI'IMAI'mll Sead- COOIO&lt;-oO
Ill Coon St.. l'omotl&gt;y.
Oblo4l769.

1lie Dolly Seollnel.

IUIIICIIIPI'ION IIATU

o.e-:'.~.~~-~. . ..stoo

0. .......................................... .. $1.70
0. v.. ............................................$t04.00
SINGLE COPfpaJCI
Dolly.:............................. ................ :.,, c.no.

Meigs announcements
... .

•-

'

'.

Parent aroup to ineet
A meeting of the Parent Advisory
Action Team will meet on April 29 at
9 a.m. at Letart Elementary. The purpose of the meeting will be to begin
writirtg \he grant for $3,000 and writing the three-year plan. The group
will also develop a schedule of events
fort he 1997-1998 school year'

.

·I"''"

Pastor 1im Hughes invites the public.
Cemetery fees due
Cemetery fees for graves at Beei:h
Gro~e Cemetery are. now due. The
fee of SlOper grave can be paid at the
Police Department or by sending
checks to the eemetery trustees, in
care of Ellen Rought, 320 East Main
S1reet, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Veteran and Senior event set
"Stand Down for Vet and Senior Speaker plauned
.
Dr. Leopold liss, M.D. will preCitizens" will be held Thursday (rom
9 a.m. to 3 p.m . at the V.F.W Post in sent .a program about Alzheimer's
Mason, W.Va. Medical services and . Disease at the Meigs County Multistems from the· district's failure to evaluation for veterans on post dis- purpose Senior Center on Thursday at
obtain insurance or letters of credit tress disorders, Gulf War Syndrome, 7 p.m. Dr. Liss is the founder and
that improve the credit rating of secu- and Korean leg and Foot Syndrome director ofthe Ohio State University
rities and therefore lower interest and health clinic will be alTered. Also Hospital Cognitive Disorders Clinic
rates, said consultant J.B. Kurish, planned are an eye clinic, clothing
·executive director of the Chicago- issuance, meals and information and Clinical Professor of Neurology
at Ohio.State. He is also the Medical
bascil Municipal Issuer Rese.arch and about the V.F. W. and comm!lnity serDirector of the Columbus
Analysis Center.
vices. Transponation will be provid- Alzheimer's Care Center. A public
ed by calling (304) 773-9191.
meal will be served from 4:30 to 6
The remainder stems from a 1993
p.m. .
borrowing in which school officials Revival planned
There will be a revival at Church · Youth rally slated
and their advise~ failed to negotiate
.
of
Christ
in
Christian
Union
of
Hat'\an interest rate with Cleveland-based
A youth rally will be held SaturMcDonald &amp; Co. Securities Inc. that . ford, W.Va. from April 27 to May 4. day, 7:30 p.m. at the Stiversville
was competitive with the national Hubert Salley will speak on April 27 Community Church featuring speakaverage for similar issues at the and Bob Wiseman on April 28. E;van- er Bavid Dailey and the gospel group
gelist leland Allman of Cincinnati Deliverence. PeQple of all ages weltime, according to the analysis.
will speak April 29 to May 4. Ser- come.
vices will begin at 7 p.m. nightly.
McDonald was the underwriter
that managed eight of the school system's nine publicly offered security.
deals during the period.
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Enterprise, brush fire at Pullins Excagency Medical Service recorded 18 vating propeny;
8:10 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding includecl: depanment and squad to state Route
7 and U.S. 33. mot6r-vehicle acciCENTRAL DISPATCH
Am Ele P - ......., ............... 40'!.
dent,
Wanda Adkins and Robert Rif6:38 a.m. Saturday, Butternut
Aklo ............... ......................
Avenue, Pomeroy, Cathy Mooney, ne, VMH, Central Dispatch squad
AmrTech ............... ;...............
assisted;
Holzer Medical Center; •
Aahl8rtd 011 .............""''""'""""'""'"44
9:25 p.tn. Sunday, rekindled brush
7:40a.m.
Saturday,
Old
Pnnland
ATlT .......................................33
a.nk OM .....................,••..••..41'!.
Road, John Coffman, Veterans fire on U.S. 33.
Bob Evana ............................ 13~
Ml:m.orial Hospital, Racine squad REEDSVILLE
Borg-WerMr .•••••••••••••••••••••••. 43,,. assisted;
-4:03a.m. Suoday, state Route 124,
Chllm~ ...............................18
Marvin
Reed, Marietta Memorial
9:12a.m.
Saturday,
Elidden
Lakes,
Charm ..............................~
Racine, Ramona Roush, HMC;
Hospital. ·
~rtg •.••.•..•••..•..••..•..... 32~
6:45 p.m. Saturday, Eagle Ridge
Maftul ...........................26
GMMtl .................................84\
Road, Racine, Bonnie Wilker, HMC; RUTLAND
II :31 a.m. Saturday, volunteer
52'A.
10:30 a.m. Sunday, New Hope
12\ Road, Chester, Teli\ha Casto, VMH. fire department and squad to Lasher
L.inde End..............................~7 Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
Road, brush tire at Robert Hlrt propUd.........................................17\
erty;
2: 15 p.m. Sunday, Powell Street.
ova ........"' ..............................38\
7:33 p.m. Saturclay, Overbrook
Middlcpon,
Anthony Thomas. VMH;
OM
Valley·····················
......
.17\
Nursing
Cen~. Mervin Roach,
Plop Ill ...................................30\
.3 p.m. Sund!ly. state Route 692.
p,... Flnl ...............................14\ Pageville, Chelsea Nice, O'Bieneas Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Roclr•lll ............................... l3~
12:20 a.m. Sunday, Titus Road,
Memorial Hospital, Rutland squad
RD 8t.ll ...............................177\ assisted;
John Miller, lre8led Ill the scene, Cen. ..,.................................. 4\ 16:S4 p.m. Sunday, Laurel ailf tral Dilpllcll squad usisted.
.......................................40\
Road, Christopher Lee, treated at the SYRACUSE
w:•••oooooooootnooooo MooooOO'Oooo.2G. .
7:46p.m. Saturday, Rock Sprin1s
~.l)t
11\
SCCIICI.
.
hhabilitation
Center, Anne Turner,
CHESTERVFD
ltoolll NpOrta .,. the 10:3_~ . 12:52 p.m. Saturday, Riebel ROid, VMH.
~
by.&amp;,
nJPI'EIIS PLAINS
brusb fue .
7:36 p.m. Saturday, Main Street.
POMEROY
Reedsville,
Martha Dailey, Camden·
7:09 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
Clark
Memorial
Hospilal•
de]*ttnent and squad to U.S. 33,

----'I

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Meigs EMS logs 18 c!Jis

Stocks

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.. . . ...... . . . . .....
Kft111.:................................
I

. . . . . . . . ..

he and his fellow 1,700 union workers were prepared for the long haul.
"All we 're askinl! for is to be
treated fairly and equitably like any
U.S. worker, and to enjoy a standard
of living that any American worker
should enjoy," he said.
The union has targeted Goodyear
and its Kelly-Springfield Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. as a basis of this year's
negotiations with all its tire and rubber industl)' labor contracts. .
The talks affect workers at plants
in Akron, St. Mll)'s and Marysville
in Ohio; Gadsden, Ala.; Union City,
Tenn.; Danville, Va.; Sun Prairie,
Wis. ; Lincoln, Neb.; and Topeka,
Kan.
Another 8,000 workers at eight
other Goodyear locations are working
under different contracts. Those
include aboutS,OOO union workers a!
Kelly-Springfield plants in Freeport,
Ill.; 1)rler, Texas;' and Fayetteville,
N.C.
Goodyear employs about 90,000
people worldwide.

Pomeroy Mayor•s Court

·SChOOl district's borrowing
fpollcy was costly, paper says
'

Jackson, in a one-car crash on a Pike
County road.
ZANESVILlE - Abby Wilson,
18, of Zanesville, in a two-can:rash
on Ohio 60 in Muskingum County.
. CLEVElAND - Jeremy Waller,
23, of Uniontown, and Mark B'usser,
22, of Brooklyn, in a two-vehicle
accident on Interstate 480 in Cuyahoga County.
.
HILLSBORO - Roy White, 71 ,
of Lynchburg, in a two-car accident
on a city street.
FRIDAY NIGHT
cOlUMBUS - Donald J. Hughes, 59, of Columbus, in a two-car collision on a Franklin County road.
YOUNGSTOWN - Tiffany
Lawson, !2, of Youngstown, a pedestrian strutk by a car on, a city street.

.

The following cases were settled
Monday in the Pomeroy Mayor's
Court of' Mayor Frank Vaughan.
Fined were: Richard Gilmore,
Pomeroy, driving under the influence,
$375 plus costs, three days jail, 90day operator's license suspension; no
OL, $63 plus costs; Danny Buffington, Pomeroy, disorderly conduct,
$63 plus costs; public intoxication,
$113 plus costs; resisting arrest, $313
plus costs; menacing threats, $213
. plus costs; trespassing, $213 plus
costs; Keith Day, Pomeroy, DUI,
$375 plus costs, three days jail, 90day OL suspension;
.
Julia Ann Roush. Mason, W.Va.,
DUI. $375 plus costs, three days jail,
90-day Ol suspension; consuming,
$63 plus costs; disorderly conduct,
$63 plus costs; child endangerment,
$150 plus costs; Ginger Jones,
Pomeroy, assured clear distance, $20
plus costs; Kerry Hershman,
Pomeroy, driving on a closed street,
costs only; Dusty lee Wamsley,
Pomeroy, DUI, $375 plus costs, three
days jail, 90-day OL suspension; failure to appear, $2S plus costs; operating out of marked lanes, $43 plus
costs;

plus costs; Rudy Musser, Pomeroy,
speed, $46 plus costs ; Zachary Cisco-Schroeder, Per10, Ariz., speed,
$50 plus costs; Robert Schneider,
Middleport, traffic light, $63 plus
costs; Anthony Shamblin, Pomeroy,
failure to appear, $25 plus costs: Tracy Lynn Hupp, Mason, W.Va.,
assured clear distance, $43 plus costs;
Alan Knight, Gahana, speed, $47
plus costs.
. Cases transfcrcd to county court
were: Rick Miller, Po!llcroy, menacing threats, and Reva Mulhns,
Pomeroy, assault.
Forfeiting bon,ds were: Clara Kincaid, Middleport. left of cemcr, $63;
Joseph K. Bova, Guysville, sp,.ed,
$67: Henry Cleland, Racine, speed,
$65; Leman L. Roby, Columbus,
speed, $68; Michael Frye, Letart,
W.Va., open container, $R3; Michael
Fetty, Pomeroy, failure 10 comply,
$83; Sue Bing, Racine, speed, $68;
Keith Herdman, Pomeroy. open container, $83; Ryan lee Clonch,
Pnmcroy, assured clear distance, $63;
Anita Kennc:dy, Pomeroy, speed, $66;
Timothy Sayre, Pensicola, Fla., traffic light, $63.

Steven Hughes, Lancastor, speed,
$49 plus costs; Charity Dawn King,
New Haven, W.Va., stop sign, $20
plus costs; Kenny Lunsford,
Pomeroy, operating under suspension. $63 plus costs ; failure to com:
ply, $63 plus co~ts ; Sara Schmitt, ·
Ahon, speed, $47 plus costs; Kath' leen Fruar, Symcusc, speed, $4 7 plus
costs; Amy Goble, Vinton, speed, $45

Hospital news
Veterans Memorill
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Mal)' McAngus, Pomeroy and Day-·
ton McElroy, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGE
Alice Brown.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Clifford Jacobs.

FHEE

1\~PEC ' I'If) l\

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC

_..--_

:r;:."'ntdld

PHARMACY

�,.

The Daily .Sentin~(

Sports

. · ·.

1117 .•

.'

•

.'

BARRY WILNER •

NEW YORK (AP) _ The pow-

cr source in college foOtball has
become the main pool of talent for
NFL teams.
If this year's draft proved any·
thing, it was that.Fiorida is the place
to tum to stock a roster. Nine of the
first 18 ·choices came ,from either
national champion Florida, Florida
State or Miami. Overall, t ~ picks
were from those ~hools.

"We've seen it comins," Tampa they've won the sames to back it
Bay . Buccaneers general manager up."
Rich ·McKay said. "It's not as if · McKay's first two choices, 12th
that's something that happened this and 16th overall, were runnini.back
year and not in years past. I think in Warrick 'Dunn of FSU and wide .
the last five to seven yearS Florida receiver Reidel Anthony of Florida.
has become the place. This has At one point in the opening round, .
l• become the focal point.
·
three of four picks were from Flori.I
"It's not Oklahoma anymore, it's da schools. A bit later in the round,
not Texas, it's not USC, UCLA and an astounding six of seve~ came
all those schools. It's Florida schools. . from them.
They 've produced the players and
"When you get a football player

Scates,••
Jimmy Johnson
wellcoached, and they're . r b athletes. "
'
'
.
'
· Johnsoa;, who once ·J!Iided the
Miarpi Hurricanes to a n.aional tille,
backed his words with ~on . He
selecte4 Hurricanes wiqj~&lt;~ut Yatil
Green with his first cboice,. t

"
'l

Joinins the p111y wu Seattle fourth pi~k. after IJIMiive IIICkle "
coach Dennis Erickson, who won Orlando Pace of Ohio Stile' weal , "
lwo championships with the Hutri- first overall to SL Louis, folloW'ed by :;
. canes. He traded up to No. 6 overall deU.nsive tackle Darrell RlweJI of
to gel Wal"" Jones, a tackle from Southern ~ifornia (Oakland} and
Florida Stili Ericjoon's seventh- Ohio State. cornerback Shawn ,..
rounder was defensive back Carlos Springs (Seattlt).
.
·~
Jones of Miami.
· Baltimore went for Semino~ DB
"He's gOII!I come in and play," Peter Boulware and, after lletroit '"' ·
' Erickson sald of the inupcrienced grabbed, Texas cornerback Bryant ·
Jones.
WestbroOk, Seattle drafted Jones.
The Florida feast began with the
(See DRAI'T.; Pate 5)

Bullets get last playoff spot; Laker*' 1-.s gives $onics title
·

of the different scenarios we had to sellout crowd at Gund Arena, the Bulls.
•
'
oft's. But these guys aren 'I tinishcd .
prepare for," said Knicks coach Jeff Washington Bullets defeated Cleve:
"it's ·11bout time," Bulleu ·owner yet. They're just getting started." ·
Van Gundy, whoile team was the last land 85-81 to earn the right to face Abe Pollin said. "lt'a•lleeit a long
Chicago won the season series 2·
to team who its opponent would be. the defending champion Chicago time since we've beet~, in the play- I but lost the last meeting, 110-102
It turned out to be the Charlotte
Hornets, who dropped to the sixth
spot in the East by losing 120-100 at
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
Milwaukee.
The Hornets and Knicks will be By MIKE HARRIS
This time, he led ·a rate
432 a little nervous there at the end, hav·
It was anything but a meaningless .·
the first teams to take part in playoff
MARI'INSVILLE, Va. (AP) -·
of 500 laps on the .526-mile oval, ing to battle some of those guy~.
final day of the NBA SCI!SOR.
The playoff picture remained acti!ln when they tip off at 7 p.m. Jeff~rdon keeps finding new ways and .not even being ·SPQR ,Put in an especially ihat 43 (Bobby Hamii·
' incident with Jimmy spe,.cer could ton)."
·
unsettled throughout Sunday, and all EDT Thursday. Other games. t~at · to w1 races.
night
are
Orlando
at
Miami,
the
Los
S
nday
at
Martinsville
Speedway,
slow
his
Hendrick
'Motorsports
Hilmi!
ton
chased
Gordmi
to the
the matchups weren 't finalized until
-9:08 p.m. EDT. when the fifth and Angeles Clippers at Utah and Min· the 25-year·old wunderkind came up Chevrolet for more· !han a few end, finishing 1.047·seconds sixth seeds in the East were finally nesota at Houston.
with liis second straight.victory and moments.
.
.
about three car·lengths behind- in
Friday's first~round games are fourth in 'eight sll!rtS this season as be
The previous in~.for tlie spring a Pontiac. Mark Martin wound up
set.
The preceding six hours featured Washington at Chicago, Portland at simply steamrollered the rest of the race was 427, laps I~ I!Y Cale third in a Ford, followed by Terry
the No. 8 spot in the East, the Pacif· the Los Angeles Lakets, .Detroit at 42--car field in the Goody's Headache Yarborough in 197~. ·Richard Petty . Labonte, Gordon's teammate and the
Powder 500.
holds the Martinsville reCord with defending Winston Cup champion.
ic Division title, the seedings of five Atlanta and Phoenix at Seattle.
teams and the matchups in six of the
The first matter to be settled Sun'
A week earlier, Gordon had to . 480 laps led in the falfrace in 1970.
Rusty Wallace, who had won the
day was the eighth and final .pla)loff bump his way past Rusty Wallace on . ·
"I never dreamed we were going spring race here four
years,
eight series being determined.
" It
for a tough day becau~. soot in the East. Before a
• •
of the last
"I got , , wound uo

.

at Washington on April 3. Chicaso's ....
victories were by one . and four
points.
'"
(See NBA on Paae 5)
"'

Gordon wins Goody's Headache Powders 500
record

--...Mia-

I. So. Loula (from New Yadt hu), Ortlodo
l'll:e. t OlOo Slooc.
2: 0oklaod !from Now Odeaasl. Dom1t R-11.
OT. 'Southcm CalifomiL
\)
J. Se.i.ltle (from Athomo1 Shawn Sprinp, CB.

Ohio SUre.
'
. .
4.
Boulw... DE. FloridOS...:
l . Dolnlit, Brylril Weodlrook, DB, 'l'e•u .
6. Seonlo (-SI.I.ooiodwou&amp;h NewYadthu
and 't'lmpa Illy), Waher · T, Florida Slate.
1. New .Y..t O(anll, lke Hlllionl, WR, Florida..
B, New Y&lt;Kl&lt; loll !from 1impG Bay), !amos F.,.
rior, t8. 'Vi!Jinilt
)9. ArizoRil, Tom Kaigtn, DB. IowL
.
10. New Orloa!l' (from Ookland), Chri, No.olc,
G. Colorado.
. . II. Atlanla (from O.i&lt;qo throu&amp;h Seattle),
Mich01Uooker, DB, Nebrulo&gt; '
.
12. 1impG Bay (from SeaHie), Warrld&lt; Dlina,
RB, Florida StOle. ·
IJ. Kansa• Cil)' (from Hou~on) , Tony Coozo.
.... TE. Califonola.
14. CiDCluali, Reinaid Wilson, LB, Florida

ning as high as second several limes. .
Gordon, who won $99,22S, averaged 70.290 mph as he won for the
second straight time at the Martinsville track.
· ·
Hamilton, who led 331 laps here
last fall before a broken air gun
messed up a pit stop and relegated
him' to third, said, "We needed 100
' laps of wlid green. We were better
than everybody, but we never JOt
that chance except once.''.
The flow of the .race was inter-.

,·'-'

....

1 lb. roll or
10 Oz. links

•

)

Brouahlon. TE. Furttuua.

3 $1

DE, Nebrosb.
40. St. Loui! (from Chicngo), Dc:.~tiCr McCicon,
Tu 111Tech. .
41. Arizonu. Jab Plummer. ·oa·.Arizonu. SIDle.
43. Cincinniri 1 C4rej Dilloa, R8, )\'ashing1on.
44. Miami, Stun MPdi1011, DB. toliisviUe.
. 4S. San DieJO. Freddie Jones. TE. Nonh Cnrolinu.
/
46. Houaon. Joey Ke111. WR, Tennessee.
47. Kwoa City, Kevin ·l«ketl, WR, Kansas
Stale.
.
48. Indianapolis: Adam Meadows, T, Qeol&amp;ja.
49. Min....., Torrian O,.y, DB. Virgioio 'll.:b.
!10. JacbonviUe. Mike LoaM. DB. Well Vir·
ginia
51 . Washington, Grea JoneJ, LB, Coloraeto.
n. Buffalo. Marcellus Willy, DE, Columbin.
~:\ . _ PinllburJh, Will Blackwell. WR, Sq'n Diego

1111

,.

...
180z.

.

'

·

Onions

Dill Chips.

#1 Russet

Do111lno

Potato s

Sugar

c

10 Lb.

..
"

"
.'1

, .~

c

Umlt3
please ·•

$

5Lb.
'
Limit 2 Please

...

,

320z.

.,

RC Cola

..

"

-

' '

HJ

Products

1.

12 pk 12 oz

n

'"

$ 49

· .cans

Limit 2
__.....___...,.___................................

....._--.... '"

_~JIIIill---iiiiiliiiiii--

.·'

.2%
1 Gallon.

. Mrelee
.
.

$. 79

Sl..le loll

80z. ··

U•lt3

Srate.

.

.

.

.• .

96. •·Miami, Brent Smith, T, Mlllluippi _
StQie.

·

0._,., 0. Mlcbipn .

9fl. H~ (from A.llmnto}, Omic:k MasOn,

s.....

WR. Midtipn
99. Now Orleana, llonlsy Wuorffol, Q8. Flori·
da.
100. Allan!A (ftam BD~- llwvu&amp;h Seattle),
Hoori Crockett. Ul. Florida - ·
'

101. D.U. (from Detroit~ Anlooio A.......
DT. Syra:uao.
·
• , 101 New Vorlt. Jell (flvm 51. l..ouil), 'llony Doy,
DE. MluJAippiSOile.
.
lOl New Yorlt. 0 - . ,_ - , . Ul, WI~

·

D~

1~8.

Te-.• Southern.

St Loui1 (from Denver), Tnjc: Allen. DB ,
I
Texas.'
.,
I59. New EnJI)oOII. Vernon Crnwronl. LB. Aori·
do Slate.
160. 0~• Bay. A111hony Hicks, LB. Artansas
161. x·Detroil, DuiUie Asbman. DB. VlrtiniL
162. x·Waahieat:o". Brad Bad&amp;cr. G. Stanford.
16:4. JI.·Kan~~IY· J•ne ~n~y. RB. Knnsa..
.

""'lh round

·

,

164. Now Yo.tl Jtu. 11m Scluuf. lB. North·
western.
165. New Orleanl {from Atlanta throu&amp;h Hous·
loa), Nicky Savoie. TE. LSU.
166. Miami (rrom New Orleans through Oak·
IDIKI), Joha Fiala. LB. Wasbina.ton.
167. BaltimOre, Ste~e l..ee, R:B. IndiiUII.
168. Detroit. Tony Ramirez, T. Nonhern .Col·
orndo
.

169. 'IM!po'Boy. AI Harrla. DB. Tms A&lt;lM·
KM!gs~ille.

170. Miami (from S!. Louis I. Briun Mannina.
WR. Stailford. -.
.

171 . NewYorl&lt;G!Jnl&amp;. MikeChm)o. QB, Mur·
roy State.

·

172. Oakland. Calvin Brach, RB • .Colondo

Slat~ .

-·

216. Houlton. Armoo Williams, DB , Arit.00t1.
217. Cioclnnllli, Willinnl CUT, DT. M".:hipn.
2111.·Soo Dicau !from~ Cily llwvu&amp;h l'in~
blqh), Toran Jama, LB. Nonh Owolin:t. AAT.
219. lndi-lis,

q.e""'

Tho........ DB.
k.axvi'tle.
· .~ .
. ·
220. Mi-a, Artll UJ...,, lB . Voldoola
S1a1e.

lll. J~~t:~ville. Jon Heue, LB. Ncbruka..
222. Allonla (from Wuhlo.,..,). Claris Boyoe.
DB. F&lt;ano St....
'
22l Pi.......... M -1Ad.nt, WR, Tow.
ll4. Dallal. 0mor s... no~.._ DB. Fiosoo s....
·22.1. l'ltiJodolpttia. Byn~~~ Coj&gt;on. DB. FlOrida

St....

. 226. Bollllo, . . flql:nld. TE. Teui.
m .Plollotltlpllio&lt;"-Sao ftaociJ001 Ootu..
JIM. - Yorlt. Jell (from ,..... loy~ 'I.Aott · ,., a....., oa.
010o.
1 - RB. Noodl Corolioo. .
.
m
.
Caooli-. Kri1 M &amp; o, Tfi, MlsaiNippi.
105. t11icoa0
s.de).
RB.
129. - Yoot lob(- 0..,.), 1 - Fer·

...

298 SECOND STREET
POMER.OY, OHIO
.

157. Millllliritlm c.rotina llwoo&amp;h Ooklond),
N-icholas Lope&amp;,

c..r.

91 . ~ Eftaland (from New Ycd lela), Damon

4

.

IS6. lndilllllpOlil {from San FI'IIM:Iscol. Carl
Powell, DE. Lou.isyJHe.
·.

.
,.
'
, . . 17:\. Miami(~ Oicago l~lh St. UluisJ.
M1kt CrowrJ.LB. Ne..vada.
State,
174. ~de. hulA Mili, TE; Drighom Youn~. ,
_---~· Oe1roit (from OtiiiM). Kevin Abrllll'ls, -DB,
...,. 11~. -Arizona. [(~ ,Brown . RB. Nonh Carolina
Syracuse.
·
~.!'.....
-'1- State.
~!'i . San Prnncisco (from Phii~W.Stlphia•. Mml:
176. CinCi-i, Canu1e Cunis. LB. West VirEdwards. lb, NOO\l Damo. ·
'
ginia.
'
~- Carolina. Mike Minrcr, 08. Nebmslul..
177. Mhuni, Ed Perry. TE. Jamc~ Madison.
~7 . PhilAdelphia (from San Fra~a:o). James
.
17M. Sun ~o. Donicl Palmer, C, Air Force
Durling. LB. Wushinaton State.
·
'
· 179. St. l.OMis ((rom HouSion), Muadianvila
~8. B311imore (from Doovesr). Kim Hmilll!l• DB,
-l&lt;azadi, LB. Thlso.
·
.
~naStatt:.
JRO. Allanla(from Wushinpon), Clllvin CoUi1111.
~9. New En&amp;IIUtd. Jlnmdon Mitchell, DT•.Tcus
C, TexasAAM'.
.
A&amp;M . .
.
111 . H01u1on (from kanw ·en)'), Dennis
60. Gm:n B11y, DNn:n.Shaf'rcr, DB. William•
SlalliftiS',' LB. Illinois.
·
Mill')'.
112. lndillDII.pOiis, Si:011 Von Ocr A.he, LB. Ari·
Third round
zortu .Stute.
·
113. Mltw~om. Ruben Tale, WR. Cirn:innlni .
M. ~w Enai:Jhd ((rom New York JelsJ. Sedrkk.
184. Jacksonvilk. DWmon Shelhm. RD. CS
Shnw, RB, Iowa.
SIIL:rumentu.
62. Ntw Orbnl. Troy bavill. Rlllnwa S1a1e. ·
'
IIC~. Butl!W, MIII"'.'UJ SfWius. T. Houston.
6:.. Tam('&gt;~ Bay (from A11anhi throU&amp;h Scaule),
186. Pit11bur8h. Onry! PoRtr, DB. Doswn Col·
· Fran~ Middil!'ton. G. AriZOIUI.
kgo:.
64. Bukimore. Juy Onimm, ~8 . Tennessee.
187 . OuJius. Lee VauJhn. DB. W11on1ing.
6:"'. Onllns (fi'C'tlri DttMil). DcJI.ter Coakley. LB.
liCK. Arizunn ((rom Philud~lph i :l}, T11n y
Appnlal:billP StiUc.
•
ML'Cunlbs. LB. Easa-rn Kemucky.
· 66. Tan"f'll8ay. Ronde lklrber. DB. VitJinia.
189. Cnrolina. Mau Finkcs. DE. Ohio State.
67. Denver (fr"um St. Louis throuah N!.!w York
190. Philadelphia (frnnl Snn Frm~ci~Cnl .
Jctll), Da~ Nt:il, c. TelUJI.
AnrwDD Wynn. WR. Bethune-Cookm.1n,
61l New York Giunt1, Ryan Pflillii'J. LB. ldn·
191 . New York Jd5 (frmn Den~cr1 . 0111ck
hu.
CltmeiWi~. QB, Houlton.
69. Chil.:qo, BOb Sapp. 0 . WUJhinzlon.
192. New En&amp;luad. Tony GaiiL'f, WR. Miami.
10. Atlanta (from Scoule). O.J. 53nliago, TE.
19l Oakland (from Orcrn l ily). Gmdy J;.Cb!.nl.
Kent
DE, KOOJI.Villc.
· 71 . Pl'liladlephia (from Arizo~). Duce Staley,
194. x·Baltimun=, Cornell Brown, LB. Virginii\
RB. South Carolina.
Tech.
.
J
,
· · 72. Oakland. Adam Treu. 0 . Nebrlllllka. .
19~ . x-Koow Clly: lsanc Bynl. WR. Kun~011.
• 73. Miami, J111oo TaykM', DE. Akron.
'
'
196: x-Chic:oao. Sbawa Swayd:l. l&gt;E. Art7,tm:l
74. San Dicso. ·t.tichacl HIUllilton. LB. Nnrth
S1111t:.
Con&gt;linoA&amp;T.
·
191. x-Thmpll.a.y. NiJta Canter. WR. Mi~· hi·
7~: Houston. OcnanJ Walter. DB, LSU. .
ttailStalc.
.
'
16. Cin~.:inrwci . Rod.Payoe, C. Midtiaan.
19M. 11-Phillldclrtain. Edw:u-d Jn5~. OT. Tt:lllll
17. Soo Fmaci1co (from lndlanapolil), Grqr.
likM
Olllk, TE, S1nnford.
.
19\). x-Pinllbu'Jh, ROO Manuel. OE. Okluhunlll.
78. Min~aoto. S1alin Colinet. DE, Bos1on Cui.·
200. x·O.icUJo. Rkhard Hotam. LB. Men'l(lhil .
lcae.
·
•
, 201 . x -c;:'hicngo.~Rkky Parlu:r. DB. San OJc~t'
79. JOC:Uonvillc. JQI'I'IeS Hamilton, LB. North
S1n1~.
Cru-olina. ,
'
Sntnlll 1"111111111
•
80. ,WIIIIlin3mn. Den;k Smilh, LB. Aritona
202. New Yorli Jels. Sl~~t! Rtupn. DB. Cnl·
State. .
·
.
umdo .
•
81 . HOuii!Jft (from Kans:w City), S~l Sandtr·
. 20l Miami (from New Ofltalllllhrooath Onk·
10n. T, Wuhiagton. Slalc.
lunll), Hlllitsoif:a llftllll:li. DB. Norchwa:t.,'fn.
82. Pin•bMTJh. Payl Wiums. T. Oregon.
204. AII!Uitn. Tony (irazinni, QB. Oregon.
83. Dallu. Steve Sc:ifres: T. Wyomina.
20.t Baltimore, OlriJ ·W•d. 01:. Kcmu.:ky.
.84. Ari&amp;Ofia (rrom PhUadelphia). 1'y Hownri:t.
206. Oclroil, Terry Battlt. RB. Ari~1111 Stut-:.
DB, Ollio State.
207. Philadelphia ~from Sl. l-.ll.lislhruu(!.h New
· 8~. Otlklnnd (from Buht.loJ. 1lm Kahn. T. Iowa
York Jet~, Koy Ott_,.,'QB; Culuratlo.
Stale.
'
.
.
20M. Ntw 'Vor\ Oi~~nts, Man Kenclty. IJI'.
86. lndiU~qK&gt;Ii• (rrom Snn Francill.-'0). Ben
Southern Califomin. -&gt;;
Berry, LB. None o.ne.
. 269. Tu1npa Bay, iulfhony Dt&lt;irale. DT.
87. Carolina. Kinnon l'Dhtm. LB. Norre Qame.
Stephtn F. Aullin.
· SS. New Yodt leis !from O.nva~ Do*ic W...,
210. ~. Mike MiQno. Df. Sootbw~ Mis.
WR, Nonh&lt;m lowp.
.
toUri Staw.
89. New Enaland. O!ril
DB; Tcxn~ .
211. Snade, Carlot Jonea. DB. Miami.
90. 0.-.,en Billy, Brett ConWG)'. pk, l'l!rlri SIDle.
212. Ari1011a. Mid Smi1h. DE. Aubura.
91 . x-PiniiMir&amp;JI, Mite -~DE. Olsio SO.•.
21l Grin Bay (tm. Ooklat14.U. Chrit Miller.
' 92 . •·Miami, Dcnic:k Rodp. LB. AqZOM
WR. Sou1hem CAlifamia.
State.
114. Kuaw City (f"",Miifti ~ Nathan Parks.
93 . x·Miami, Ronnie Wllfd, LB. K111111.
T.Sinnfonl.
~~
94. x-DDIIu. Keooy WheAton. DB. Oreaon.
11~ . S1. Louis(fromSan Dieau). Ctdfil: While;
9~ . x·Ntw York Oillldl. Brad Maynard. P. Ball
DE. Nonh IUlruliM AkT. ,

Fourth ·round

tato C •1ps

lk

•

41 . AtlooMa(fromSoau~tByron H..,ponl, RB,

14.502.

Aunt Janes Ha•burger

Oetroll, Juan Roque, 0 . Arizona Slate.

Soulhem California. ·
·
39. New OricaaN (from Ookl1111d), JQI'Cd Tomi~-h. ,

"

$

ISO Pln•'*rah· Ooor&amp;&lt; Iones, RB. Sao DieJo
Slntc.
ISS.· Phili.delphia f(rom. Dallas). Luther

·

l6. New York Oiunls, Tiki Barber, RB. Virainia. ·
37. Tumpa. Bay, Jm')' Wunsch, T, Wisconsin.
38. 'Chi~agv (from St. Louis), John Allred. TE.

C icken Broth

$··1 29

3 Lb.

151 . MinrMIIOUI.. 'lbtly William~, OT, Memphis.
IS2. Pfliladelphla. Ndukwe Kialu. DE, Rice.
ISl Bufl'i.lo. Sean Woodson. DB. JaCkson Slate.

:\1 . New York lct1, Rick Tmy, DT, Nonb Car·
ulinu.
Jl. AtiUilla, Nmhan Davis, DE. Indiana.

Sweet Sue

Yellow

.'

Dieao Sta~e.

. SeCond J'ouad .

···Rump Roast
.ourJU

DT. Otlahoma.
150. htdianapolj• Nate locqu01, WR . Snn

:\0. Orecn Bay, Rou Vatla. T. lowu.

USDA·Choice Boneless

Bottom
$1.69 lb

Austin, DB, TenKUee,
146. Son DieJO (from Son DieJO lhrou&amp;h !'insburgh), Paul Bradford, DB, Ponlud Stale.
147. Jo&lt;luonvllle, Damon Iones. TE. Sou1h&lt;m
llllnoil.
•
148. Wuhina,ton, 'IWan Ruuell, LB, Miami .
149. Mllllli (from K~City). Bllrf'OI'ITanner,

22. Dallas (from Philadelphio), David l.aFJeur,

DB. ClemsOn.'

GeOfP M.Cullou&amp;h. DB, Boy-

144. Cioci-1, Ancln Putvia. DT, North Carolina.
145. New Yodt lm (from Miami), Raymond

29. New &amp;Jiand. Chris Carny. DB. Knnsas

·• I

iJQnetesls~:ef
Steak

1.3. HooSion.

TE. LSU .

Stlllt.

.

lor.

28. Denver, Tl'e\lor Pryce, OT, Clemson.

...

.

140. Wuhlna•on (from Oakland lhrol.IJh
Adanla), Kcirh ThibodNwt, DB, NW Louisiana.
14!. Otlcqo. Van (jileL DB. KCIIIoclty. •
142. Seattle, Eric Sl~. DB, Nebfaskn.

l7. C...llna. Rae Camuh. WR. Colorado.

~======~------~------------~~r---------------4 '"

3''

s.....

26. Saa Fronciscu, Jim Druckenmiller, QB, Vi,.
ginia Tech.

'

2

138. San Die&amp;o (from Sr. Loui1). Kenny B)'Ollm,

'RB, South Carolf.. Slate.,
.
IJ9. MlOfiO, Cbodc.pe-, WR, WOihiiiJtOO

19. 1~1is . Tllrit Glenn, T, California.
20. Min,.esotll. DWayne Rudd, LB. Alnboma:
21 . 'J~k&amp;onvmc:. l Renoldo W)'nn, O'r, Notre
Dame.

VirJinia.

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

15.1·170..

137. T. . . Bay, Polri&lt;k Hapo, TE, Alabo...,.

Sc"'·

'"

c-

Cincinnati.

23. BuiTuJo. Anrowain Smith, RB, Houaton.
24. l'il!sburgb, O.ad
DB, M"l'land.
2l . Ptlllodelphil&gt; Cfrom DuiiDJ), Jon Honis, OE,

,, ,

.

132. Wuhlaatoa. (from HCNIIOn). Jamel

Williams, DB, Nebnsb!' I
133. Adam~ao M.eus Wlmblrly, DB. Miami.
I:\.f. Baltii1:Wlre. Jeff JlilcheU, C, Aorida. ,
135. Dol!oit. ...., (itwyplowi&lt;:o. TE. Nocn .
Dame.
J
.
136. New Yort Gianll, Sam GlllllCS, DB,

18. Houaon (from Kan.w C ily), keMy

. '·

Pizza

ol~u .

Holmes, DE, Miami .

]~ .

Sausage · .

13!.-YcdleiJ,...._B-.G. Eu!Cir·

. 1

:W. Bahimore, Jamie Sbarpet, LB. Vi1Jinia.

Tony's Italian Style

Flftb ....nd

llalll.-,"""'

:n . New Orlcans,.Rob Kelly, DB, Ohio State.

Mountaineer

1!0. x-Dotrolt, M1111 Ruuelt. Ul, Colorado.

15. Miami, .'farll Ciraen, WR, Miami.
16. Tompn Bay .(from Son Diep), Reidel
o\nlhony, WR, Florida.
·.
17 . Wallljo&amp;lon, Keoard ...... 0£. MJ,..; . j

. I'll

NO RAINCHECKS

126. Green Bay, Jamaiae Smith, DT. GeorJia.
l'l7. li. •Oollu, Macey Brooks, WR, James
Madl100.
128. , •.......,.,Jiay, Alllionnond Si .....oo, lB,
Temple.
I'
.
12Q. •·Dallll, Nicky SualUa, RB, ()tliO S1ate.

' Flntround

., ,. I

NocA

!"*"

WISSa

Donal.....,..

1 0 6 . - Q r t o - 0, 1......

107. -

( - - _,..DE. '1lvr-

101. IJoicalo.

-

~~Prall-.
~

P 'I

.WI. -

109. Soo Dlep. _ . . , - -· T. SoNdl

'

Cllohl-.
110. ((.-Cloy _ _ , _ _,
Ql.c :r7s•

111.0 I
~--111,-.
11111. ~~--~rrr--.,C.

PRICES EFFEC11YE APRIL 22. 1117 ONLY

~.~ -.-.~~~.-­
.....
114.1 I

"'"

liS. 'l II

AAM.

r

............ III'.Onlll.

-

e-11. ft, . _

CaomJ-.

a.,.--

-111'.
OoooJia.
.
l.lO. Now ......... s- - , , T. c..mJ
Ml:ftir.

.

Rl. 1'olooe.
•-Donit.--..
_,.._,DB.E!.

211 . ~

-, ..--.-- 111
lll. a4ll t
2)4. •·I ltd
23~ .

• ••

Pirates tally 5-3 win over Reds

-

.'

we. Wily IJd &amp;dloft, QB,

.. •. ......., HMc:hette. Wit,

..... - D B,- .
l37 . ..S.Diop. ,_,~QI.a-

.

.
....._.,_..,PI:Lr
I .....

J40. •.a.- .., -

....

MeMo, Cjl.lllfrJ.

first time 'in those nine seasons that
he failcd.to average a! least 30 pi1ints

Scoreboard
DH : N.Y. Mels ~. Chica.go Cubs 2:
Olicaco Cubs 4, N.Y. Mtls 3
.
DH : Montreal S, Philadelphia I: Mon·
treul 3, Philadelphia 0
Pin1burgh !'. CINCINNA.Tl J
Colomdo 9, At lama 2
Houston 3, Los Anz~les I
San Froncisco 2. Aoridu 0
San Diego 8. S1. Louj1l

Baseball
AL standings
8uttrn Dlv611on

IaiJI
Baltin)OI"t ............... »:
ll

":\

Toronto ........ .,..........a

fcl.
,786

lill

1 .S33 .

Boslon ...... .... .......... ..H IJ 500
Deuoi1. .............. c...... M II .421
.Nt!wYork .:..............7 II ' .:\M'l

Today'sgames
PhiladelphiA (Schillins 2. 1)

bur&gt;h (Cook&lt; 1-2). J:Jl P.·m,

CLEVELAND .. ......K

Mcls (ReytliJl(l 1.0,, I:40 p.m.

.
Wtstern DI•Won
!M:auk- ... L ............. II 1 · .611

r.,., , ...................

.sn

1
9

-~

Atmhelm .................. 7

~

.438

2-;(l), 9:0S p.m.

1··..
~

Saturday's scores
Dnltirnnre nf Bo11on. Pfld., min ·
Oakland 7, ~tl'uil I
CLEVELAND II. Milwaukl:e 6
N.Y. Yank.WI ]. Olkn1n While Snxl
Kar11M Cily 7, Apaheim 3
Toronto 6. Te•b 0
·
Minlk!lnla 4, StatUe 0

II I)
.
AQahcim II , Kansas Cil)' 1•
Texas 10. TOIUilto ~
Scott~ I0. MinnesotD. 6

.

Sox (Drabek 1·1 ), M~ p.m
Detroil (Blair. 2·2) Dl Texas (Btd:L"tl I·
1). H :.l~ p.n1.
'Kunlillli City (Ro•IKiu 1·0) at' Seatll11:
(Johnson 2..0•. I0:05 p.m.
.
Toronro (W. Williaftll 0.11111 Anaheim ·
(Finloy0.0), IOoOl p.m. ·

Tuescbly's pmes
MinncJOhl (RAdke 0· 1) at Oakland

CMuhk:rO.Il. ~ ' ll p.m.
Boston (A~hy 1· 1) ill &lt;:l..EVf:I.AND
. (Oztu '2·1 ), 7:0.'\ p.m.

Chi\:1110 White Sox (D. Dluwin ().I) til
Bahiii'IOfe (MIIssinDl· l ). 7 : .l~ p:m. .
Milwnultec (0' Amico 0·0) at N.Y.
Yankees (Pctrii.C :l-(}). 7:~!1 p.m.. ·
·
Kansas Cil)' (Belcher 1·2) '" Se~tnk.l
IFnsst:m l..Ot lfWS p.m.
Toron1o (Ha•1on 0-0) ul Anahei m
(WatiOfl 0-21. 10:0~ p.m,

"

f&lt;l,

Gil

• -Orlando .. .. .. .. ..4~ J1 .l49

· 16

x-New ¥urk ........... ~7

21 7.W
2S .MI~

Florida ................... 10

1 .$B8
9

.438

New York ................. 6 II
Philadelphia ............. s ·12

.3.5.1
.294

Cenlral Dhhion
z.(..'hl i!ll$0 .... ..,....... &amp;9 IJ .1141
•· AIIuAI11 ............... .51'1 26 .M.~
•

~·Oecruit

........... .....$4

2M .6511

1-Cbartont ............. ~

2K .6SIJ

· 17
,l:"i
;\l,l

46

HoUIIon ................. ll

"

'-'

. ~12

IOOiM11 ......... '1' ....... 39 -4:\
Milwauk&amp;:\1 .............33 4\l

.41b

10

.402

.]6

-·-

Toronto ..........;...... JO

~2

.~

)V

WES'l'EitN CONFERENCE
Midw... llkUlan

I:
........ mJf 1'1i.~ ·~
x-Huuston ..............

lill

.69~

1

I ·Minii:SQfn ........,..40 · -42 ·.4KM

24

Dallas :......... ..'......... l4 ~tl

40

~1

. N~

Loa ......... .......... .10
Sao Dlqo ................9

7

.562

Turonln

•

I

11

•

'•
I

•

•

"

··

12~ .

BosiUD IJ4
HS, CU!VEI.ANU Kl
HU\tllun IOJ, Sun Antoftio tJIJ
Pnnhlfld 100: 1... 1\. Lukcrs 1)6
lk1roi1 12... 1ndit~tllii20 ( 0TJ
N.:w Jcr11ey IOK. Alla'ntu 92
Mitwau~ 120. Charloue too
U111h Ill Sat.:run..-mo 10\1

Hockey

NHL playofl's
Saturday'• nnt-I'OIInd""""""
N~;~

Jet•

Ouaw11 J, Rumdo I; scri~'!i 1iW 1· 1
Phii!Mklphia l Piu sburtth 2: Phi lWei."
JM~iu

k:otcb

~rks

2·0

Sunday's ..:ores

New Y~k J . J:lnridu 0, 31..'Til!s tk'ill· l
l&gt;elwit :lj St. Luuis 2. l.A.'twit leuo.l~
~~eries '2· 1
Phoc:aix 4. 1\nahcin\ I. Anuhl!inl
lca..b: ~ri~ 2·1 ·
Cbh;~ go 4, Culorudo ~ (2
Cui·
oradn lend" ~tl 2• I
I:AIIRllflton 4. Oullas :l (()T ); Edfl'k•ll·
1on leads M:rit:s '2· 1

ern:

,.
)

1
8

2
3
4

Wednesday~ !April 2
all Specials fJJesigned in
Crystals &amp; .lBrass

Check out our complete line of Cr!:Jstal,
brass &amp; !Jeaumont PotteYlj
New line of ease Knives 9ncluriling
Pocket One Collections. Limited
Eclition Series 999
yenuine Stag Collection Reel !3one
Handle Gollections
New Knives Arriving Daii!:J

... 3.- 2

Downing, Chllds,
Mullen, Mu•ser

Loa"'-""

til B. Socolld St., Pomeroy

3rd·&amp; PtNul St. 948-ROSE(7873)

91Z·S381

Racine

- &amp; h 6, CINCINNATI 5
N.Y. Mob 6. Oticop ru,. J
At-I, Colondo7

..-

120

finalscorea

lill

S.turday'aiC!Irea

St un~

Sunday's regular..H~n

'

.lS3

3 .113
5 .681
6 .w

122-. Onlden

oOTI

per game . His only other tim'es
under 30 were his rookie year ( 11184·
85. 28.2 points), his broken foot!scason ( 1985-86, 22.7) and his come·
hac)(- f~om,retircment
campaign
(I 994-95, 26.9).'
John Stockton's nine.ycar run as
the NBA's IISSists leader came to an
end as he tinishcd second to ~ark
· Jackson of the Pacers . Jackson aver·
aged I I .4 ·assists - one more per
game than Stockton .
Dennis Rodman, who missc!lthe
final 1:3 games because of a ~nee
injury, . won his sixth straight
rebounding title with a 16. 1 avcr~gc .
Muresan had the highest ''cld
goal percentage (.604) for the sc.:und
straight year.
.
Mark Price of.Goldcn State ~ad
the league's hcst free throw percentage (90.6) for the third time in his
career and first since 1992·93. ·He
beat Clcvelan&lt;l's Terrell Brandon by
.001 pc;rcentugc points. ·
Mookic Blaylock led the league
in steals with an average of2.71 , the
lowest leading average since Utah's
Rickey · Green· averaged · 2.65 in .
1983·84.
.
Oikembe Mutombo needed eight
blocked shots to tic Shawn Bradley
for the highest avc.rage (3.40), but
had none as he played just 15 ·min·
.utcs in the Hawks' meaningless loss
at New Jersey.
lri other games Sunday, New Jcr·
scy defeated Atlanta 108-92, Detroit
beat Indiana' 124-120 in ovcrtil,Jlo,
Toronto drubbed Boston I 25·94 and
Utah downed Sacramento 113-109.
Bullets 85, Cavaliers 81
At Cleveland , the Bullets
advanced to the playoffs for the first
time since 19~ 8 .

,_.......v,.'t 'forget Secretaries 'Day

w-...DI,w..
........ l3

125. LA. (.,if111tnl00

S11~.:mmc n1u

27

CL.EVELAN0 .......42 40

14 .067

Colorado ................ II

Se-o~tlk

I~ .

CINC!JoCNAn,.........6 ll .m

Soa~aco

Miami 102, Orl~ MK
Atlanra I )6, Phibklflhia 104 ·
New York IOJ. Cbil.:ngu 101
llenV\.' f 100. OalhL'I 9.(
Umh 101, Minnemln XV
Vutk.'OUYL&gt;r 121. Plwenil 107

Nc:w Jcn.Jy 4, MnnUt::ll I :

7 .611
.lOO

ChicJto..,................. l

2J
27

!icy lcOOs ~rio 2..0

c'...niDI•-

Pia....... ................&amp; I
St:. Louls .. ...... :.........6 II

J66

z-wun cunfcn:rn:e title
)'•Won division Iitie
11-clil.:lw.-d rluyuff bc11h

4

Euttm01Yil6on

Monlr'COI1 .................. 7

AI~

~2

17

21

Wa.'ihi n~h.m

_ ~~ standings
&amp;1.
. 76~

olK

I

A.tlanllc Dl•iskln

·x.Walhinaton ........ 44 ~ K S n
Nc_wJ!!rse~ ............ 26 ~ , ~ 17
· Phi111delphm ........... 22 (I() . .t6M
8nslnn .................... l5 t.7 . IK~

Whit~:

»: "-4

Sl~~:mmentu .. .... ...... J4
Gul~n Stale ......... JO

'

Ium
»:
y-Minmi ......... ........ 61 ·

. 8 u l1imcr~ {6ric:kJun 2·0), a1 BC'I~ Ion
tSc:lc ~ -OJ. II :OS a.m.
N.Y. Yanked (Corte 0-2) ul Chit:aJD

:ru.

K

EASTERNCONFEREN~~

Dctroil 9, Onlr:lond 2
.
t.UVEI..AND,6. Milwuuk~ 4
Chit~u Wbilc Soa M
. N.Y.. Y~ktc~ 7

• AtluM:n .............. .,. ... l.l

P•cillt Dl.-ltlon
y-Semtk::................ ~7 2~ ,69S
X·L.A. Lnki!tll ........ 56 26 610
x·Purtlood .............. .W JJ - ~t,IK
r.·Phoenb. .......... .. .,-40 42 .4KK
l ·l.A. Oippers ...... J6 46 .4W

NBA final standings

Sund•y's ""ores

Today's games

44
!10

Basketball

Bultimore II . Boscon I

4]

Saturday's S&lt;Or.. .

St. Lou11 (Os~ 0.2) n1 Los AngtltJ
IAsl.:io 2.()), I0:05p.m.
Hou!ton IReynolds 2~ I) tu San Dic,:o
1
(HamiiiOn 1·1), 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Madclllx 1· 1) 111 Sun Francit.co
(Van LandinJ,ham 1·0),10:05p.m.

2

.Z.'i6
.244

.171

CINCINNATI (Smiley I·;\ ) tal N.Y.
MeiS (Reed 0.1 ), I :40 p.m.
'Chic:ugo Cubs (Swombuugh 0·0 1 :n
Mon'"'al (Hermanson 0.0). 7:JS p.m.
Florida (Rapp 2-0) a1 Colorado (Bailey ·

Kan~ City .............7
3 .467
&lt;;'hicagu .. ...... .......... .. ~ 12 .294

H
Oaklan1.1 .......... .. , ...... IJ

Oenvtr ..... .......... .... 21 61
San Amonio .. ..... .... 20 62
V:Klt:uuvtr ............. 14 6S

Tuesday 's1ames

.471

1,1

111 PiU ~ ·

Chit:n&amp;o Cubs (Casullo 0..3} at N.Y.

Ctntnl Dlvlaion
Milwnukce ... ............X 6 .!171
Minncsotn .............. IO 8 .5.56

WR,

~,.:

:Dl•R 21

(Continued from Pasc 4)
"Woshington has those two bil
forwards (Chria Webber and Juwan
Howard), and big Gheorghe (Murc-·
san) is a whole different kettle of
fish," Chicaso center Luc Lonl!le)'
said. "But I like our chances against
anyone if we play the way we're
capable.''
'
The Pacific Division tide wa,
there for the taking for the Lakers,
but Shaquille O'Neal missed two
free throws with 1.2 seconds left
with Los Angeles trailing by two,
and the Lukers went on to lose I 0096 at Portland.
That gave the division to Seattle
and knocked the Lakers down to tlie
No. 4 seed. They will face the Trail ·
Bla.z.ers, who won the season series
3-l.
"These 1uys wanted us in the first
round," O'Neal said, "and now
they' ve got us. hn disappointed, but . ~
I'll sit on thi$ a couple of days and
I' ll be back. I'll see you Friday. Friday you'll see the real deal.' '
•••J
Charlotte and Detroit finished
. with the same record. 54-28. but ihe
Pistons gonhe higher seed because
they won the Season series 3-1.
Houston beat San Antonio I 03'99 ...to
finish
with the same record (57·
COMING BACK - Plttaburgh first baHIIIIn of Sunday's Natlonalletlg.. game In Pittsburgh.
Kevin V01,1ng tries to block the bueball• Clndn- The throw from right fielder Jose Gul!lan went 25) as Sealile. Even though the
. '·· nail's Dalon Sandera heads back to flrat attar wide, and the Reds scored. The Pirates survived RocketS are the No. 3 seed arid the
teammate Lenny Harris' fly out In the fifth Inning that aplaoda to win 5-3. (AP)
Sanies . are No. 2, Houston would
have the homecourt advantage if.the
teams meet in the second round
because it won the season series 3. I over Seattle.
,
· Jon Lieber (1-0) allowed one
"When you lose every day, it
By ALAN ROBINSON
While the playoff teams were.
PmSBURGH (AP) ..,... Don't earned run for.the fourth consecutive tears your heaJ1 out. I found that out worrying about their upcom'ing
call them the Whiz Kids. not just yet. start and Kevin Young, a retread
last year," Knight said. "I'll never opponents, some .of the non-qualiThey're only 8-8 and they still don't from the Pirates' last .youth move·
learn to live with it, so you try to I!Ct fiers w.ere beginning to clean house .
cause opponents' hearts to pitter-pill,
ment of 1993, had three RBis as the something positive out of every The Philadelphia 76ers fired coach
Pirates beat the slumping Reds for _day."
tcr in fear.
Johnny Davis and general manager ,
It doesn 'I mauer. These hustling,
the 1hird -time in four days.
That can be difficult when there Brad Greenberg, and the Deqvcr
'
overachieving kids known as the
· ''Yeah, we have to be happy," ·is · so much negative . The Reds Nuggets were set to fire Dick ~ol"
Pittsburgh Pirates just might be all Lieller said. "We play hard, and the walked 23 and hit tour batters in the Ia.
'
right.
.
•••
key is to do tha' every day. If we can series and now have walked at least
Indiana Pacers coach Larry
"Everybody thought their talent do that and w_e have some success, three in 17 of their '18 games.
Brown said he would decide whether
•
was so young, but they 're really it cqn be. the start of something
The Pirates,' seeing mostly posi· -to leave within 10 days, and gener- 1 :
tives from ·a team with only two $ t al manager Donnie Walsh said the
playing well, especially defensive· here."· .
•
The Reds have lostsix of seven million players, benefited from four . team was willing to let Brown out of ' '
ly," Cincinnati manager Ray Knight
said of the Pirates, ·who beat the Reds overall and 10 of their last II 'on the walks -all by starter Kent Merck· the last two years of,his contract.
5·3 Sunday. "They're running road. Expected to contend in the NL er ( t •2)- and a hit batsman, beginIn Boston, coach and general
around, knockil)g balls down, mak- Central, the Reds instead are 6-12, a ning in the first when Emil Brown manager M.L. Carr said he would . · :
ing good plays and the pitching has breakdown not attribu!able strictly to walked, Jermaine Allensworth·dou· take a week's vacation )lcfore d~id- ' :
been good."
.
bled and Dale Sveum hit a run-scor· ing what course his team will take.
.pitching.
•
•
Nobooy's ready to hoist another
They fail consistently to hit in the ing grounder.
There was no word yet from Dallas
pennant atop Three .Rivers Stadium clutch, such as in tbe eighth inning,
"You star\ out not throwing or Golden State about the status of ·••
'
just yet, but, three weeks into the when reliever Rich Loiselle struck strikes and you hit balls right at peer either of their coaches.
'
l
season, the Pirates ru:e getting a lot out Jeff Branson and ·pinch-hitter pic," Knight said. "It snowballs and
·In individual statistical races.
•
of bang for their buck from the low· Bret Boone with two on and the it seems.like the whole world is com- · Michael Jordan , '\'On an unprccc·
est-paid teain in tbe ~ajors .
Reds threatening to tie it.
ing apart.'
dented ninth. scoring title wit~ an
average of 29.6 points, but it wa' ·the

_

Plti-,.o.Jo,- I

-DH: 11. :1.L..l, I. l.ua ID111o 0; St .
.......1 S.DIIFI
.

....,..

..

BURGUNDY &amp; BRASS
FLORALS &amp;GIFTS

I

)

The Deily s.ntlnel• , . 5

NBAgames ... ·

116. - ~ &lt;"- 1 ( - . Cloy-Then came Florida wideout Ike ·
Kllida Poole, WI, AriloM S..._
Hilliard, who went 't o the New York ~).
117. loti 1 lit. D I Jco M. ...-y.
Giants, a team that hun't had a oa.til. - - ( - Dollll~ ,.,.... Mcclood.
game·breakinl! receiver in two .LB .........
I• .
ltf. N'
~,
DB. Iowa.
decades.
llO. llllflilo,
NJIIJ. T, PIMdaAU4.
Only one q~k went in the
121. ,..... (from Pl............. 51. Loola).
first round. Jim Dnu:kenmiller of .klomc Dlllliell, T, Nort ten.
1'12. CnlJao, 'IRk Solth, LB. Wil&lt;onJJo.
Virginia Tech, expected to go in the
123. Ootiaod(-Soo
· top 15, was left at No. 26 and San mi~ Cbod Lerilt, RB, Conlll .
I 24. 0..WI!', Cofer OU!iaod, DB, Ball SloH:.
Francisco grabbed him.
12~. Now Eft&amp;IIOid, Ed Ellil. T, Bulfalo.

State.

..

.

&lt;ContinuedrromPap•&gt;

I,.J-•, ......

"

FSU and Miami

Nine of first 18 picks· come from

NFL draft.. _.

-.~P.age4

,

•

NFL.draft ends
By

.

'

Pomero'f •lllddllport, Ohio .

lllclu1 'f, Aprll21, 1817

}

•

'

�.
,....,. The Dally Sentinel

,

,
Monday, April ~1, 1117

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

Caregivers sno'Lild be familiar ~~
.with Social Security"rules.. ·. ·

VMH staff,
volunteers
.recognized
In obMrvance of NatiDn,!ll Hospi. · bll Ubontory Week, per8onnel of ·
the lab at Veterans Memorial Hospl. bll atagad an open houae In Its new
quarters Thursday afternoon.. Pictured at the rafreshme"t table, left,
ars, Sandy Sargent, RN., left, and
Ruth Spaun, LPN, hoiJ,Ital employees with Cei:ella Lisle, head of the
hospital's la~rstory. Volunteers at
Veterans Memorial Hospital-both
the WOITI!in's Auxiliary and tho8e In
the Skilled Nursing FacJIIty,...wara
honored wit.h a bu1fet . luncheon
Thursday afternoon as .a part of
National Volun,eer Week. Rhonda
Dailey, I'IN, BSN, director of nursing
at the hoapltal, spoke on the vital
•
role of volunteers In hospital endeavors. Prsyer
was by Kenneth Delong; Pele Shields, vice
president of the facility's resident coun~ll,
expressed thanks to the volunteers and musical
entertainment was provided ·by Catherina

Shenefield at the plano. Donna Byer, bottom,
left, is pictured receiving a certificate of appreciation from Dalley, centar and Sharon VIckers,
activities director of the Skilled Nursing Facility.
Each volunteer waa preHnted a . certificate.
Dalley and VIckers planned the obHrvance.

BY ED PETERSON
. rity.
Soc'-! Security '11 111r, Alhlns
Our toll-free number 800-772· This year's Older Americans t213,--provides
:24-hour-service
Month celebration focuses on 'tl]e seven days a week. To talk to a reprole of caregivers in the lives of our resentative, you need to call from 7
older citizens under the theme :· a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Fri"Caregiving:
Compassion
in 'day. The telephone ' may ,be busy
Action." An estimated 12 million · around the first. of the month, and
Americans are involved in helping t&lt;,arly during the week,' so if your
five miilion older family members , business is not urgent, it's bestto call
friends, and neighbors live full and at other times. ,.
independent lives.
If you are calling for the benefiIf you are involved i'! the care of ciary, he or she must be at the phone
older persons, you should be famil.- with you so that lj!e can speak to him
iar with Social Security and how it or her and verify that you have perworks to proviile service to older missioo to receive the information.
For more informaiion on Social
Americans.·
For example, if the beneficiary Security rules you should know, call
becomes too ill or unable to handle our toll -free number and ask for the
his or her funds adequately, you can leaflet, "St;&gt;cial Security: Underbecome the "representative payee'' standing the Be~efits." .
Questions and Answers
and receive the benefits on his or her
Q. My husband died and I
. behalf. The representative payee is
responsible for assuring .that the applied for Social Security s.urvivors
benefits are spent for the be11eficia- benefits for myself · and my three
ry's basic needs and to account for young children. As the Social Secuthe funds periodically. While most rity repre,:;entative took iny claim
representative payees are relatives, she mentioned something about a
it may also be a friend, neighb!lr. "family maximum." I don't fully
. church or other concerned organiza- understand .what she meani by the
tion .
family maximum. Would you please
Another service that may be explain it for me•
helpful to the beneficiary js direct
A. When a person dies, the surdeposit of bellefits tQ the beneficia- vivov.; receive a percentage of the
ry's bank. Direct deposit saves the . wage earner's Social Security benebeneficiary time and reduces the risk fit--usually in a range from 75 to
of loss·and theft. The money is there 100 percent each. However, there is
whether the beneficiary is home or a limit to the amount of money that
vacationing away from home. More can be paid each month to a family.
than half of current beneficiaries The limit is generally referred to as
already use direct deposit and it is a the "family _maximum ." This limit
requirement for beneficiaries who " 'varies, but is generally equal to
·tiled for benefit~ siri~e August I, about 150 to 180 percent of ' the
1996 and will eventually be required deceased's benefit rate. If the sum of
of everyone .. To change over now the benefits payable to the family
all you have to do is to contact your members is greater than this limit,
bank. They will provide the direct the benefits to the family · members
deposit information to Social Secu- are reduced proportionately.

Q. Can I gr!k to wOrk, without
affectin8 my hildrcll's payments .
from Social
urity? They've been
gettin8 monthlY checks on their
retired father's c!amings record.
c
A. Tile amollnt of benefits yollr ' .
children req•ivl: is not · affected ~y
your earnings. [Their payments will '
continue until Jhey reach 18 (19 if_ ·
they're still in high school) or until •
.they marry. However, if ~ou receive
benefits as · a ,nother CJI!ing for a
child under I~ or disa~led, your
benefil! may
affected by your
. earnings. Call · ocial Sedurity at 1800-772-1213 if you need more
information.
!
Q. I receive Social Security disability benefits. I'd· like' to try to
work but! don~ know if I'll be physically able to. If 1. returned .to work
and then found that I wasn't able to
continue because of my disability;
would I have to reapply for benefits? ·
Would I have , a six month waiting
perind again . before my benefits
would be rein$tated?
·
.
A There ;Ire special rules that
help people. like you, who would
like to work but are concerned about
the effect thi; might have on their
.disability benefits. These rules,,
called work incentives" include a'
· 36-month "extended period of eligi- ·
bility which allow benefits to be ·
reinstated if you are unable to work ,
(as long as you . are stiU disabled) . .
You do not have to reapply for bencfits or undergo any "waiting periQd
as you did when you first applied for
disability benefits. Call Social Security at 1-800-772-1213 and ask for a
·copy of the leaflet "Working While
Disabled ... How We Can Help"
(Publication No. 05-10095) to find
out about work incentives for people
trying to work.

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar Is ·
published as a free service to nonprofit llf!lUps wishing to announce
meetinc and special events.. The
calendar Is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers or any
type. .Items are printed a5 space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to nn) a specific number nf days.
MONDAY
LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. at office building.
· ·
· ·
SYRACUSE -- Skin testing clinic to be conducted by Connie
Karschnik, R. N., tuberculosis clinic
nurse, at the Syracusl! fire station,
Monday, 4:30 to 6:30p.m .
'RACINE-- Racine Village Coun. cil. recessed session·, · Monday, 7
p.m. municipal building.
TUESDAY
MASON , W.Va. -- Veterans of
Foreign Wars ' Post 9926, Mason ,

Tuesday, 7 p.m. meeting and election of new officers.
'
RACINE -- Southern High
class of 1977, reunion planning, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m in the high
school cafeteria.
~hool

RACINE-- RACO, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, 6:30p.m. Plans for flower
festival to be finalized.
POMEROY -- American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster l'ost 39, 6
p.m Tuesday at the hall on Legion
Terrace. Joan Vaughan, president,
announces that Nancy Brown, dis.lri.ct president, will aitend.

1997 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

997 THUNDERBIRD

tilt,cruise •. power locks and,
wint:lows. auto, AM/FM cassette.
·MSRP Before blscount
$20,285.00
.

.

$

300
.·,

..
'

~ASHBACK

"ROM FORPt

tilt; cruise, power locks ~nd
:UN.indclws, aut.o, AM/FM cassette,
wheels, rear spoiler.
MSRP Before Discount
$19,055.00

16,

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Theee students _ , . honoi'ed u
students of the month at Letart Elementary School for the month of
March. They are: SBH, Tommy ~vender; DHI, Timmy Haines; DHP,
Paul Powell, Grade 1, Lotalha Richardt; aecond grade, Chance
Collins; third grade, Dustin Brlnager; fourth grade, ·Susan Brauer.
Paul Powell was abaent. They war• selected on the beals of academic achievement, attendance, 'behavior and overalllmprovemenl

-Society scrapbook-

1997:, EXPLORER 4x4

SCHOLARSHIP AVAILABLE
Applications are still being accepted for the Ken Amsbary ·Memorial
Scholarship to be awarded to a Meigs high school graduate thi\ spring but
the deadline is May I. Applications are to be mailed to Gary R. Dill, 48190
Riebel Road, Long Bottom, 4.5743.

first Mo. Pymt-....... $369
Down Pyt:nt. _........... '2000
Ref sec. Dep ............ 'm

'
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Misty Birchfield and Joey Coates announce 1the birth of their first child.
a scin, Zachary Joseph Coates, Feb. 24, at the Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 8 pounds, 2 ounces, and was 22 inches long.
·
Grandparents are Beth Birehfield and Tom Schoonover of Middleport;
Chris and Cindy Haye of Rutland ; Rob Birchfield, Rutland; Jane and Roy
Eslep of Long Bottom; and Roger arid Diana Coaies of Pomeroy.
Great-grandparents are Phyllis Haye of Rutland and the late Paul Haye;
the late Paul and Maxine Bums; Howard and Marie Birchfield of Rutland ;
V1¢tor Bahr of Long Bottom and the late Wilma Bahr; Mary and Alva Coates
of Belpre and Edith Cogar of Syracuse.

First M(). Pymt* ....... $369
Down Pymt. :• ...........'2000

Ref sec. pep ............ 'm

Total due at

T()tal due ~t
Inception"*..............'2j'&lt;lol
Power

lnc:E~!)ti()n~ •...•.•......• '4!i"l'!

1

MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Aric Patterson of Pomeroy is the winner of a $SOO F. Joseph Shonebuger Memorial Scholarship. He is a student in the ceramics program at Hock- i ·
in1 Collece.
·
·
· The awn is made possible through indOstry support and by alumni and
friCIIds of the lale Dr. Shonebargcr, an instructor in the program for m111y

The Dally Sentinel• Peoe 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wtilat happens to. childr~n when a- parent is cheating
Ann
Landers
1m. Loti Antek•
1\Ma S)'tldielle: -.1 Cr~·
MOrJ S)'ftdieue,

Ann Landers: "Not Dumb
in Missouri" wrote to you because
her husband was having an affair.
Lots of readers responded, but not
one married man wrote to defend
himself. l wasn't surprised. Men
don't need to defend themselves.
V,:omen do it for them.
The women who wrote, whether
married, ·d ivorced or . ," the other
\Yoman," expect iheir men to have
~omeone on the side. Yet none of the

Heart disease
diagnosed in
men more
~han in women

.
women were seeing otber men. I've his sons .what it means to be a good the glue of any lasting relationship.
been all over the world and have husband.
Without it, the relationship falls
known women everywhere who
A good mother does not condone, apart. The last sentence in your letter
accept this type of behavior. None of nor should she tolerate, bad behavior should be the mantra for both men
from her husband. How can a girl and women In search of a lifetime
them appears happy or fulfilled. .
Many women say their husbands grow up with self-respect if her panner.
~
stay with them "because of the chit- mother has none? Women who set · Oear Ann Lande · This is for all
dren." A man who engages in extra- their s~ndards high enhance their teen-agers and youn adults who
marital affairs teaches his sons that chances of getting what they want smoke and say, "I can uit any time
.this is OK behavior. A woman who out of life. -- Under 25 and Single in I want. " Do yourselves a favor, and
stays with an . unfaithful husband Michigan
. quit . TODAY because as you get
Dear Under 25: Your letter · older, if becomes harder and harder.
teaches her daughters to do the
s;une. Children observe and sense · reflects wisdom far beyond your
Cigarettes become your best
· years. Thank you for pointing out friend. They are always -there for
these thingnt an early age.
Cheating panners do not make that parents who cheat .on their you. When you're stressed, frustr.atideal parents. It is irresponsible to spouses send the ·wrong message to . ed, sad, bored or lonely, cigarettes
tolerate such behavior and pass this their children. Too many parents never let you down. Ending this
modet ·on to yo"r children . A good foolishly believe their children are "friendship." will be one of the hard father does not cheat on his wife~ He not aware -- or that it doesn 't matter. est thing s you will ever do. I know
remains faithful ·arid demonstrates to Wrong, on both counts. Fidelity is because I smoke. I'm 33 and had my

.

first cigarette at 14. I've been smok- . encouragement. .
ing for more than half my life. 1
I know it's not nice. to gloat, but
decided to quit today after a terrible allow me the privilege. I'm talking
coughing spell. I know it's going to . about all those cigarette defenders
be pure hell to pan with my best Who sat before a 1994 congressional
friend of nearly 20 years, but I'm committee and repeated with · '
determined .
straighr faces , "Nicotine is not
S!l1oking was cool when I stancid, addictive." Now the Ligg~tt Group,
but it's not so cool anymore. Neither one of the nation's top five cigarette
is spending a half hour every mom- · niakers, has admitted that nicotine is
ing hacking away or havi ng my indeed addictive and that smoking
clothes and hair smell of stale butts. causes lung cancer, heart disease
Smell an ashtray sometime, and you and emphysema. It also confessed
will know what YOU smell like.
that its sales pitches were specifical If you are one of those people ly targeted at 14- to 18-year-olds.
who keeps saying, "I can quit any How shameful.
time I want to," prove it by quitting
Send questions to Ann Landen, ;
today. -- Just Lost My . "Best Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen· •
Friend" and Glad of,lt
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Loa Anples, .
Dear Glad: Thanks for the Calif. 90045
•

Children
should learn
the basics
of first aid

Heart Disease Health Fair

By MARILYN ELIAS ·
USA TODAY

By GRACE STURM
The Detroit N-1
. Children as young lis 6, 7 and 8 ·
are capable of learning what to do in ·
· eme~gencies, says Trinidad Turse, ~
children's librarian in Livonia,
Mich., who teaches a course, First
Aid for Little People.
Turse, certified with the Red
· Cross seven years ago, started her,
class "when I realized that kids of
this age could do this."
She says children need to learn
who their emergency contacts are,
where emergency numbers are kept
and how to use the telephone. She
suggests parents post both the family 's home address and phone number on or near the phone'since young
children can get excited. during ·
stress.
Through role-playing exercises.
Turse teaches children how to handle the following emergencies:
- Cuts: Wash hands thoroughly
and whole area of cut. gently. Carefully apply bandage to prevent fur"
ther injury or infection. If bleeding
~eally bad, have person press folded
cloth, shirt, etc. down firmly on cut
and seek adult help immediately.
- Nose bleeds: · Have person
'pinch nose and lean forwl)fd 5-10
minutes witbout peeking. Then take
them to an adult. Ir bleeding dQ!lSn't
~top, call for help immediillely.
-"-- Feeling faint: Have person lie
flat with feet elevated or sit down
with their head between tlieir legs
and continue to breathe normally. As
soon as they feel better. take them to
an adult.
1
- Burns: l!.ve person keep
burned ·area in . cold water until it
feels better when taken out of the
water. Then tell an adult immediately.
'
- Poisoning: 'Let a grown-up
know right away. lfthat's not possible, call Poison Contiol Center or
91 .1. Follow operator's advice.

' SAN FRANCISCO- A national
pattern of physicians more frequently diagnosing men's heart disease
symptoms than women:s, and referring more men to specialists, may
already be evident in medical st4dents, suggests a study out over the
weeken&lt;;l.
· Women are no less biased than
men, ·as either medical students or .
doctors, the findings show.
The study of 221 medical students gave case reports of a 48-yearold man and a 58-year-old woman
(by age, at equal risk for heart disease). They were portrayed as hav-·
ing identical cardiac symptoms, but
in half the profiles anxiety due to
.denial of a job promotion· was
added. Students were asked to make
diagnoses·and referrals.
Gender bias shewed up only for
anxious patients. On a scale of I to
7, with 7· strongly agreeing and I
strongly disagreeing: ·
-Men were rated at5.3 -likely to have heart disease- compared
with '3.4 for w,omen.
- The difference was about the
same for referrals to cardiologists.
- But' women were more likely
to be sen! to a psychologist: 5.5
agreed on a 7-point scale vs. 3.8 for
men.
-'- Petn1\le patienls are lrnliWn•to -.
convey more anxiety, so doctors
may discount organic symptoms if
they appear with anxiety, says study
autlior . psy~hologist Gabrielle
Chiaramonte of State University of
New York, Stony Brook. She spoke
at the Society of Behavioral Medicine meeting. "But . we shouldn:t
blame the women," adds co-author
Ronald Friend. "A doctor should be
aware of differences if!. how symp'toms are presented."

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Educational Service Center, special meeting,
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the service center office in Po111erqy to discuss per- •
sonnet matters.
·

.1997 TAURUS GL

llondlly, Aprll21, 1887

"Some medical schools have
made great strides" getting up to
speed on women's health in the last
few yetlfS, says Glenda Donoghue of
the Natiomil Academy on '."omen's
Health Medical Education, a .professional group formed to spur medical
training changes. "But some haven't
changed at all."
Numerous national studies show
women . get fewer heart . tests and
treabllents such as angioplasty and
·bypass. Heart disease' is the leading
killer of women: 371,133 died compared with 361,276 ine11.

., •

l!"'f'....

•

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~·

Thli eighth annual "Teens at
Risk for · Heart Dlaeaae• health
fair was staged last week at
Melga High School by the nursIng aasletant class Instructed by
Margie Harris, R.N.
· ·
.Top, Sherry · Burke uses
"Smoking Sue• to demonstrate
how clgarett!ls deposit ter In the
lungs causing heart .and other
health problems.
·
Righi, Robert Qualls takas
Barbara Layne through a computerized program of Informs· .
tlon for an. estimate of . life
expecti~cy.
.
Other _ things offered were
blood cholesterol screen by Vet· .
erans Memorial Hosplflll, blood
sugar screening by Holzer Mad·
leal Canter, · and hemoglobin
checks by the Meigs County
Health Department. Other programs carried out by the nura·
lng etuclanbl were blood ~·
aura screening, anti-smoking
demonstration, nutrition coun·
sellng, weight for height lnfor·
matlon, •coronary rl1k gemea,
and etresti rallied dlaeaHa.

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

Students·share Rutland.Energy conservation ·ideas with DAR
.

'

The fifth griK\e class of Rutland prepared and delivered fruit
Elementary School and · their trays to some of the elderly
teacher, Donna Jenkins, participants residents in Rutland. They
in the Nllti.onal Energy Education purchased the fruit with
Development (NEED) Project, money earned by recycling
Cfl.lis.
They
shared their interest in energy con- aluminum
servation with members. of the · . planned; prepared and conReturn Jonathan. Meigs Chapter, dotted eight games for the
Daughters of the American Revolu- Primary Energy Carnival
lion, at its meeting held Friday at the and taught energy facts to
Rutland Methodist Church.
the fourth grade 4itudents in
The ~ED Project is a na\ion- March. They also presented
wide program of students teaching an · energy conservation proc
students. The Ohio Energy Project gram to the Rutland PTO.
and Ohio's 'students, teachers, par- - The student leaders have
ents and community leaders are submitted a scrapbook of
"Partners for Tomorrow. ~ As a result their energy activities to the
of the workshop held at Ohio' Uni- Ohio · Energy Project in
CONSERVATION PROGRAM PRESENTED- Donna Jenkins and her fifth
versity in November, Jenkins sai~. Columbus and will be recog- grade claaa at Rutland presented a program on energy conservation at the
the Rutland class P.articipants share nized at the Youth. Awards recent IM8tlng of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the Amer·
their interest in energy with others in Banquet in May.
lean Ravohitlon,
the school and community.
The NEED directors encourage Smith, Mary Kay Yost and Abbey will be heid during the boat ride on
. Randy Hudson, Chrissy Miller,' studef\ts to have fun while learning Stratton were elected to prepare a . the river.
Donations will be taken on a
Pamela RuP. . Miranda Stey..an and .and teaching others about energy. slate of officers for the 1997-1999
their teacher, Jenkins , planned ener- They point out that a world of need Retu.m Jonathan Meigs Administra- hand made and hand quilted queen
gy activities in which all Rutland is a world of student\ working tion. New officers will be installed size quilt will be offered at various.
fifth graders have participated dur- together to come up with real solu- at the June meeting to be held at locations in the community by the ·
ing the school year.
.
tions for our most pressing energy .Blennerhasset ·Istand. Members are t{eturn Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
The. students presented a skit on. · problems. NEED recognizes the encouraged to attend this final m~et- Proceeds from the fund raiser will
energy conservation, using Charlie power and potential of youtil and ing of the year and enjoy the stern- be, used in the renovation of the
Brown characters, to the DAR mem- , · will continue to offer energizing wheeler ride up the Ohio River to Chester courthouse.
The next ,neeting will be held on
bers. A ponion was a quiz given to programs that encourage critical the Island and visit to the lllennerthe audience on energy use, such' as thin'Jr.ing, cooperative learninJ. peer hasset Mansion .
May 10, 1997 at the Chester CourtA memorial to the Return house and Academy. A tour of the
lighting, heating, and cooling, heat- teaching and the explorat.ion of the
ing water, refriJerlllion, as well as world tii'OUnd us, .exptained Jenkins. Jonathan Meigs . Chapter's · Real Counhouse will be scheduled. Ranelie!Jy required 'to heat water, and
· Patricia Holter, regent, conducted Daughter, Edyth Stirgent Zerkle, her · dall Breech, Architect, Engineer and
energy Ulcd to operate a car.
•
the business meeting when Clotine Revolutionary Patriot father Jerimi- Consultant will speak on "ReminiscAt ClwistmBI the class bought, Blackwood, Elisa Younc, Eleanor .ah Sargent and members of the ing Chester-Shade Areas."
•
chapter who ae recently decease.;(

Great
c9verage.
Place .your ads where more. people can see them ... and act.

71% of ,U.S. adult~ read at least one weekday edition of a
local or regional newspaper, while 57% read a daily
newspaper on a typical weekday. Readership grows to
64o/o on a typical Sunday.

Newspaper readership•
Pest week

71%

reader&amp;hip

llslSundiY
readership

Rtach mort adultJ, fomr, in tht fltwJpaptr.
Get more Impact In the newapeper.

TheDaily, Sentinel.
.
I

th'e Welcome Medium.
.

c)CWNm •Souru:

T1tt 1996 MrJU Ejftrriwttn• s.,,WJ hy .Glnnt:n R~~~h.
o~nd Bt~t·uv-J hu ,

lmttvi~ by Sdmlm01r\. Rune.,

Inc,

yom.
.{

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•

•

•

1

�·I

llonday, Aprl21, 1117

~P~~~8!:•!n~ne~DM~~~~~~ne~l----------~-~-----~----~--~~·--!~~m~·~~~y~·~M~h~~~~~•!P~~~-0No~~~~--~~~~--------~--~~~¥~1~Y~·!Af!•~~~21~,~11~1~~

Grand Fork~ has become ghost
town as result of flood and -fires
GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) Senior Airman LeeLynn Nearing
gazed at the icy, brown floodwaters
as the Coast Guard boat cruised past
silent buildings in the watecy ghost
town that has become Grand Forks.
"I'm looking for a new. world,"
. sighed Nearing, who has taken refuge
wi th a friend atthe Air Force base 15
miles west of Grand Forks.
A block from ber abandoned·
apanment building were three blocks ·
of downtown gutted by a fire, the
charred skeletons rising above streets
nooded by up to 5 feet of frigid,
sewage-fouled water from the Red·
River.

The fire raged fo r hours Sunday
unti l it was put out by cre ws in helicopters hoisting 2,000-gallon buckets
of water and fire trucks mounted on
• natbcd trucks.
" There's not a heck of a lot· salva geable, " Deputy Fire Chief Peter
O' Nei ll said.
The fire started Saturday afternoon, and fire trucks were initially
unable to get through the deep water
fi ll ing the streets. The cause of the
fire was unknown.

While Nearing collected what
belongings she could. clothing,
financial records and the wedding
ri ng of her late sister among them.
authorities braced for more water.
Today's expected crest of 54 feet is

26 feet above flood stage.
At least 70 percent of the 10 1/2squafe-mile city is flooded and most
of its 50,000 residents have fled. The
city 'has no water for taps, toilets or
hydrants and there have been problems with electric, gas and telephone
service.
Maypr Pat Owens, who ordered·a
24-hour curfew in the most seriously flooded areas, said her own house
was among the many that were flooded.
"It may oot be totaled," she said.
"But now I'm in the same bucket
with the rest of you. If we come
through this and we can say we have .
lost no citizens, no people, we can
say we won the banle."
The river swept over sandbag and
clay dikes on Saturday, advancing
street by street, block by block in
Grand Forks and East Grand Forks,
Minn.
In its path •.the final 60 patients at
the city 's hospital were moved toother facilities and the Emergency Operations Center and police depanrnent
moved to higher ground Sunday. In
its wake, teddy bears floated in tbe
murky water and stores with "Open"
signs still posted were filled half-way
to the ceiling.
Outside the police station In East
Grand Forks, personal watercraft tied
to poles bob up and down. Traffic

-·-•

.

lights still blink off and on, givina
boats - not can -:- a si11nat to yield.
The high wacer bas been a nightmare for the Dakotas and Minnesota
for weeks. A record amount of snow .
frrst melted, then froze and then melted again, swamping dozens of towns
and forcing thousands of people to
flee. ·
It could be weeks before residents
can return home.
"We 're tough he.re ... but it
became too much," said Martin
Walker, who ab;uld~ned his apanment Sunday afternoon. "I don't
think anyone was prepared for this."
The Coast Guard used boats to
cruise the silent streets, looking for
residents like Alpha Mattson, llle 69year-old next-door neighbor of Nearing who had to be rescued from her
third-floor apartment.
"I didn't think it was going to be
like.this," she said as her dog Gizzmo
cowered behind her.·
·
On an apanment building ' fire
escape, 77-year-old Clarence Bide
held blankets, quilts and pillo~s in
his arms. The retired Anny soldier
was supposed to have left Friday; he
had been eating doughnuts and drinking orange soda for the past two days.
"I didn't hear nothing about it,"
'he said of the evacuation orders. "I
cfidn 't know we was supposed to have
·
. left."

'

\

.Aom•BilVIc.

I. L HOLLOI
T'UCIIIIG
. DUMP TRUCK
· SERVICE

'

! ,.

"
'

1-

. • Aquatron Boats • Cutty
Cabins • Bow Riders • Bass
Boats e Sea Ark John Boats
• Johnson Outboard

a

Radiator Repelr R.eplacetMDt
Monday-Friday· 8:00 a;m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday ·8:00a.m. - 12 noon

Big Bend Fabrkation,
·Machine &amp; Welding Shop

POINTS TO WRECKAGE • Maj. Gen. Nels
Running points to a photo taken by the Air
Force Sunday showing the unnamed peak
where they found plane wreckage thought to
be Capt. Craig Button's missing A_·10 attack jet

Apparen_
t wreckage . of missing ·
warplane is found in Colo~ do .
EAGLE, Colo. (AP) ·..,-- Eighteen
An Army National Guard heli&lt;li'YS after an Air Force .warplane copter crew spotted .the wreckage
~foke ·formation and disappeared ·. while hovering above an unnarneil
o1ver Arizona, scraps of paper on a 2- steep .cliff near New York Mountain
~rile hi gil peak in' Colorado led a heli- and Gold Dust Peak, 15 mil!ls southoopter crew to the plane's apparent west of VaiL
,
orash si te.
A close. up look revealed pieces of
The paper was spotted first among gray painted metal that could have ·
'lreckage that looks to be the miss- been from the plane's interior and.
ilpg A-10 Thunderbolt. officials said. several smaller pieces of metal, ~unThere was no sign of the 32-ycar-old ning said. Yellow-green paint used as
Pilot, Capt. Craig Button, who could · an anti-corrosion coating insi&lt;!e the
~ 1ave ' ejec ted wilhoutthe Air Force's airplane was also·visible.
k nowle&lt;lge. .
Helicooter oilots Richard Ru 22
High winds pre vented a ground and Dale Jensen, both chief wai-rant ·
crew from being sent in immediate- officers were surprised at what tbey
II( to ex~m ine the wreckage, stuck in saw.
qpe snow high above old ·gold and sil' "The first thing we saw was just
ver mmes.
a couple pieces of paper," said Rugg,
Maj . Gen. Nels Running, search who added \twas unusual to see that
commal)der, said a special helicopter at such a high altitude. "Then some~lat can withstand high wind was to thing just ca"ght my eye." .
·
~ e flown in today. ThC hope is to lowDcyer. calmer weather was expeet- era four-person recovecy team on the • ed later today, but possible storms
s lte today..
.
threatened to prevent the search from
The plane has been missing since tllking place. Runni!lg said it could
~ 1 pril 2, when Button took off from · take several days to do a thorough
a,T ucson. Ariz .. base on a routine search.
~-aining mission . imd veered nonh,
Rugg and Jensen battled winds to
~~ading to Colorado with four bombs position their Huey to within 30 feet
al&gt;oard.
of the site after spotting paper. A-10
1
.
·
·

IJSo~y

·'., .

..

SURVEY DAMAGE· Firefighters crulaa past buildings were destroyed by fires which broke
the shell of the burned out Security Building as out Satu;day on four downtown blocks In the
they aurvey damage to downtown Grand flcm ravaged city. (AP)
Forks, N. D., Sunday afternoon. At !east six

l

• Public Notice
INVITAnOH TO BID
Tho 1/lllogt ol Syracun
will occopt bide until 12
noon on lloy 1, 19t7, trom
legally llcen11d lnauranco
companlao, or their agante,
to provide to the VIllage at
Syrecuaa lor the term ol
one. (1) year, com'"enclng
May 21, 19t7, commercial
property, comrnorclol gonar·
1lllllllllty, commorctol oulo
covoroga ond commarcl~l
lnlond morlne lnouranco.
;~~;t~a.re
p.to bo In a seolod
marked •tnour·
ond oubmltloct or
Jonlee Zwilling,
VIllage ol
Syracuoo,
Bldg.,
Syrocuoe, Ohio
Tho
Vllligo ol Syracuae ,..
11rv11 th• _right to. reject
any or all bids. .
Jenlcl Zwilling,
. Clerk-ne11 urer,
. VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
(I) 18, 21, 28 t1c

1

Manine~ still bore yellow ribbons of

hope the day after the body of the 10year:old boy was found below circling vultures.
With the boy's mother and stepfather secluded inside their home
Sunday, police vowed to catch the
man who offered Anthony a dollar to
help find his cat and then killed him,
they say.
·
The boy's nude body was found
Saturday half-buried near the desert
of 8erdoo Canyon, 90 miles east of
Beaumont, more than two weeks
~he was kidnapped 111 knife-point.
H is hands and feet had been duct· taped together.

'

· Mlllllmllatlon ·
Revlaed Code, Sectlo~•
3501.11(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
Notice Ia hereby given
thal In · purouance of a
R•Diutlon altha Board at
Commlealonilra on the
County at Melp, Pomeroy,
Ohio, pu11d on the 18111
day ol February, 19t7 there
will ba ,aubmltlad to a vote
ol tha people of aald
aubdlvlalon at • Spec111
Election to be held In the
llalge, Ohio, at
pieces o1 voting
the &amp;lh day ol
May, 19t7,.the quelllon of

Public NOtice
levying a ,.,., In exceu ol
the ten 1)1111 limitation, lor
the banolll ol Melgo County
far the purpoae ol
Maintenance, capital
conotructlon, and Qlierlltlon
ol· Carleton School and
llolga lnduatrlea Worbhap
for pereono with mental
retardation
end
developmel)llll clubllllleo.
Said lox being:' An
addlllonal tax ol1.8 milia at
a rate not excMdlng 1.8
milia for each one dolllr of
valuation, which amoun11 to
eighteen centa ($0.18) lor
•ch one hundrlld dollan tlf
veluatlon, lor • continuing
period ol ttma.
.
The Poll a for oald
Election. will open at 6:30
o'.clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oluld dey.
By order olthe Board ol
ElocUona, olllelgl County,
, .Ohio.
Henry L Hunl8r
Clullrman
Dated lla~ 18, 1117
Rile D. SmHh
Director.
(4)7,14,21,284tci

Public Notice : .
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Public Notice·

1--,;....;;=~.:.:.;=:......-

PUBUC NOnCE
Soparlle,
.•••l•d
propoula will be racelvoct
atthoofllce·oltheT,....ror ·
olthe Bollrd ol E~an ol
Sou.lharn Local School
Dlalrlol. R•clne, ·ohio,
llalga County, until 12:00
o'clock noon, June 16,
19t7: For bua Chanla and
Bod Ill. Coploa of the
SPECIFICATIONS.·
.
tn1truetlon to .blddera, end
propos•t forma may ba
obtalnoct at IM otnce altho

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

pilot Capt. C ck Mitchell was flown
by in a het' opter to verify th;tt it was
a Thunde lt.
"It di n't look like an A-10," at
first, Mit II said. Closer examination supported Running's ~laration
of 99.9 pertent certajnty they had
found their plane.
·
Running said searchers probably
"flew by it 20 times," but it was only
recenily that warmer weather began
melting snow to reveal a couple
dozen small pieces .o f the plane.
The warplane was not carcying
live rounds in its guns because it was
on·a trai.ning exercise. The Air Force
said' it believed the 500-pound bombs
attached to the warplane were not
activated and would have remained
intact if the plane.crashed.
Three days after Button disappeared, the search shifted to Colorado, where faint radar signals were
detected. Radar data and witness
accounts indicate Button consciously broke away froni his three-plane
training formation and' flew to Col- .
orado.
·.
Air Force officials previously sugg!l_stc_d_ But!on could have become
incapacitated and put the$9 million
plane on ~utopilot.

Public Notjce
,._urer, Dennie E. HIH.
Sold Board ol Eclucollon
rellt'Vea the right to reliCt
any and 111, or parte olany
ond·all blda.
By order ol Board ol
Education of southern
LOCI! School Dlatrlct.
Dennie e. Hill, Tre11urer.
DennleE.HUI
· s.LS.D
Dennta E. Hill
Treoauror
P.O. Bo~ 178
RllCino, Ohlo411771
(4) 21, 28, (5) 5, 12 4 tc :.

~WANTED- ·

Unclean Motor Blocks
&amp; Unprepalred Steel

Soli~ p~la lor lhe
purch••• ol uaad Bruoh
Truck/Mini Pumper tor
Scipio Vol. l'tre Dept. will ba
received by lhl II olga
County Commlnlonera at
tholr offiCI It lha
Cou.-.11, Pomeroy, Ohio
457et ,!lnlll 10:00 1.m.,
12, 1H7 1nd ·then It
p.m. at atlkl office open~
end r•d alound
tho
lollowtng:
Auaoct Brullh Truck/Mini
Pum,.r; 1980 or newer
mlllllll; mileage ol lau than
1o,ooo·, mlle1; V·B Gllollna
EngiM; hllvy duty 4 apd.
manual trlnemloalan; all
wheol drive; , power
ataortng; power brekaa;
7.50x16 tJrea on front;
7.50X1tl tlrot oii roilr (dull
wheela); 11,000 GVW; 250
GPIII pump (PTO Drlvan);
200 .to 250 gallon tank;
booatar riel wllh haaa
(1"x150"); auortz work
lights (2X1500W or 4X 1100
W), Further apoclllclllona
provadld In 'tho bid plan,
and apociiiCIIIona.
Plena, Spoclflcatlone, and
bid lormt m1y bo aocurad
at _t.he olflco ol . Molga
County Co"'mlallloilera. A
depOoll ol 0 dolllrl will ba
required for uch oat at
plana and apaolllc•llana,
ch.,:k mado pay1ble lo·.

The founh-grader was grabbed in Angeles. s.,eriff's authorities say the
a Beaumont alley April 4 as he played boy dill~~ between two days and two
with his younger brother and two weeks ago.
friends. Tile man had pulled up in a
. Although nearly 250 investiptors
car saying he needed help finding his had trac;ked thousaRds of leads and at
cat.
lcut 100 people have been cqnsid"I know we' re 11oins to get this ~ possible suspects, there have J
guy," Riverside County Sheriff Lar- been no arresl5 and authorities sai4l
I)' Smith said Sunday. "It takes a certhey have .n~ prime suspeell.
,J
tain kind of predator to stalk and
Authorilla released a sketch of a
apprehend a child and do these ltirid slim, white man with blue eves and 1
of horrendous IICts."
· a mustache. He wu waring a black- ·
· Authorities did not give a cauae of and red 181·d hi and blue
death and police and aheriff's offi- P
s n
jeans.
cials wouldn't discuss whe!her tbere
w~re sips of trauma on the body.
~
and
._...,.
A ranger found the body when he
~ outrage n~'~'""' t!Rup lbe
s"""'-' wltures circling a barren .-ea quJet streell. Many believe the killer
....· may still be around.
·
about .130 miles southeast cif Los

~ =::!'/~':::::

\

.

.

=:·

Public Notice
Tho lull amount will
.returned within thirty (30)
dey• alllr r-lpl.o1 blcM.
Each bid muat Ill
accomp~nled by either a bid
bOnd tn an amount oliGO%
ot tho bid amount wllh •
eurtty nllafeotory to ·the
aloreoald llolga County
Commloalonore or Ill
cartlllad check, caahlara
chock, ·Or latter .of oradlt
upon a aolvant bonk In the:
eniaunt ol nat 'lou than
10% ol lha bid amount In'
lllvor of the 11oreukl Mllp
County Commloalilnaro. Blct
Ba nde
• hill
ba:
. accompanloct by Proal oJ .
.Authority &lt;!I tho olllclll or'
agent olgnlng'lhe bOnd.
Bldo shall ba -lad and
marked 11 Bid lor Salplo
Townohlp fire Deportment
Bruoh Truclr,llllnl Pumper
end moiled or doltvar.cl to:
·lila I II I
Co u n·t y
Cornmlulonaro Courlhou..
Pomeroy, Ohio 457811
Attonttolf·of tikldora 11
called · to 111 ol 1111
roqulromenlo conlalllld In
IIIIo bid peckat. portlcuterty
to tho ledtrll Llbor
Standarda Provllllona 1nd
D• v lo • a • con
W11gn,
vorloua
lnouroncoraqulramant., Yllrloua equal
opportunity provtalana, •nd
lha . raqulramlnl for •
payment bond 1nd ·
porlormlnco bond lor 100%
of tho -tbllCI price.
.
llelgeCorninluiOiMrl
Scipio Brullh Tiuck
"
No bidder ni1y withdraw
hla bid Wllhln thirty (30)
dayaetlertha actull dlle.of
the opening lheraol.
II o I
County ·
raMrvoa;
w•lvo •ny.
Hnioron.liiiea or to rejMit •ny·
or all bldl.
:
Janet HDWird, Praoldont·
Mllge County
. CommiMIOitlfl 0
(4) 21, 24, (5) 1 3 TC

&lt;:HERRINGTON SCRAP
METAL INC.

Business Services

(614) 682-n68
••

. (UrneSt~a-

POMEROY

I,.OW Ratti)

AliENS

WICKS
HAULING

110 Help wam.HI

...

TIRED OF MEANINGLESS

GUSSlWIEU
614-696-1376
Lawn MoWing &amp;
LilndsctJplng

0

Ume.stone,
Gravel, Sand, ,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

WORK???

MAKE A DIFFERENCE !It Yo~t.tr
help is need8d to improve the
quality of life for persons
with MR/DD. Caii .Cecllla at
1.;.ao()-531•2302 for further
Information.

10" Off Ally .

s.rvtoe to New

614·992·3470

....... ww.ws
· •51-Doors&amp;
·~~
•R. . Addltllls ·

~·

. ...

-

..

-

- ..

s•v•

_IOIE~T. IIS$EL~

CONSTRUCTION

50"·75"

•New Homes
- ~•rav•·
-complete .
RemOdeling.
.Stop I Compere
FREE
' ·ESTIMATEES
. ·gas 4473

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

for...,.,

Just off Bl'llllllay Ad.
(look
Middleport, Ott
&amp;14-tt.N371

-1

o.y a ~wnlng ""·

,7

Tired of paying high
COIIIIbor rates?

. Hook-up Chargee?
· We'H IIIIIch or beat

YOUR MESSAGE ·
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

lilY olhllr compelltor'a

.a .33. MNIC &amp;

FJH e.u....

614/992·7274

Roofing-

\

81dl.._____
._
.. _ _. . i

'

24,HITOWI.

"'aa
Panwowo 011
e.13CIO ......

Cultom Homes

POMEROY, OH.

614-992~5479

11

Bulld Your Dream"

1918 ,..rtln Street

Jot Wilson
(814) 882-4277

DRIBILI

Farm Buildings

•Small Engine•
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain S1ws
•Weed Eaters

Gallipolis, Ohio 45831

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

Loellng aheda to horae arena8. .
Roof repair and paint to.structural repair.
Steal buildings 11 low 11 $4.00 aq. ft.
dallvtracl. Fret ntlmatel, prompt

"nd
profeaiiONIIIII'VIca. can today

2 mi. off At. 7,
'l.aldlng

· · · • Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

· l·i'MIDD

20 Yra.

·
Alao ConcNII Work
(AlEE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG IH
1182-f215
l'clmeroyt Ohio

1-

·FREE ESTIMATES

Creek Rd.

742·2925

.._,.ue1"••

. ·101. Owner.- JQn8o

....

D. Geat7's

....~

Quality Work at
a Fair Price!
550Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45780
Home Ph.

T.K.

614-992-3120

Don Gaary, Owner

HAULING

Pomeroy, Ohio 45788 .

REPAIR OR NEW
·coNSTRUCTION

ohlntlng

Remod•llng

M&amp;J

·.INSURANCE
.

• Umestone
• Gravel
• Refuse • Etc.
Will Mcil- jual ""·
Rtltonablt Rates

(614) 742·3800
liNGS'

Holle l•proY8•1111
3311 HIPPY Hollow Ro.d

lltddlapart, OhiO 45780
New Homea, AildltloM,
Raollng, Biding,
Pall lllrna, Dacka,
Pllntlng, Glrlgoa, .
Parches. ·
Clll Ill For A FIW &amp;til*

614-742-3010
1114-742-3324
1114-742-3076

.llllfW3!"

QuM ••rl•l

FormtriJ lhldtra on IIO&lt;hanlc
Lit, (cllllpl tall "' lllmt, 25t .-od
....... Mon. 1llto. Wtd.

DriYO,.,
Your
CtM,.OJ o\ Truek Put not
....., T-ar~ Yeur Clwo Lillo

Publ.l c Sale
end Auction .
LtmltJ'a Aol&lt;tlon Sttvicl, ltlllt
LtmltJ, o\uctlonoor. HauaohOid,
E1111te, Form Cal 814-4418241,11..._8443.
Riel&lt; Punan AucUon Companr.

Earn •1.000 -ldy Stul!lng EnvtloPH AI HOmo. .Soan Now. Na

80

llo4ol COitYHUoaall '-or
Cf'tldll No Pra~lentl tt.- W..
kon41. Claae •a• COL. lila 1
Yr. CJTII. Ctll1_,-,.•tt01.

Expo&lt;ltnct. FrH SuppUu, Info.
No Ollll;aolan. Sond LSASE Ta:
ACE, Dopt 1351, Box 5137, Diamond Bit, Co\ ft'IIIS.
full tlfnl auctioneer, complete
au,tlon ••rvlct. Ltcenaed
GET 1'111010 SHOP
llle,Ohlo &amp; Wtaf VIrginia, 30•· IIVBTERY SHOPPERS Hooded
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447..
In GALLIPOLIS. No Fttl 0•

90 .

wanted to Buy

Al&gt;lotute Top Dollat: All U.S. Sil·

VIr And Gold Colna, Praof&amp;lll.

long Olatanct Charges. s•nd

Name, Addt111, Phone Numb.,

To: IIIF. 1572 Capilol Circlt. NW,
Tatlahauot, FL 32303. Or Viall

u•• _ _ ke.,_.c:am.

Antiquo J-lry, Gold
Rlnp, Prt-1830 U.S. Currene,, HOIETTNIB.
·Sit!llng, Etc. Aequili- J-ry PC U18fl naaded. s.es,ooo ln- II.T. S. Coin Shop. 151 Second ..... potential. Call 1-800-5134343Ext.B-11388.
- . Gdpol' 811 ue 2&amp;1:1.
....._ .. tv.Htudanta
Andquoa, turniiUrt, ·;lila. china,
colna, 1oy1; tampa, ;una, IDola, Earn extra Income aelllng and
eatatee; 1110 apprafaall, OtbV dlt~lbudng our product No '11Pif..,CII necesaary. For more lnMoAn, 814-Qtl2-7..1.
lormadon call Beverly 11 I14-II2Anl...-a.
top prical plld, - · 1Jtle3.
!no Antlqu11, .PDmoro,, Ohio,
~

.

Ru11 Moori owner, 0 14-192· LOving woman to care lor Child·
ren In oyr home. Mon-Fri dllytlme
2521.
houn, refaranc11 requl_red.
Clean . Lilt llodot Caro Or PIMU call lor Interview at 304-

Trud&lt;t, 19to Modtl1 Or Nowor. 875-5580.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 11100 Ellt- lly nama II Frod C. 8Hv1&lt;. I am
tm ~ GolllpoliL
soa!Ch ol • lin-In companion
J I O'a Auto Porlt. Buying oai- 10 atllac me with minor. cnorea.
VIQO vehlclet. Soiling patlt. 304- Remodttoct homo, pr!Yitt becl773-5033.
.
rcom, TV ancl phone, non-amaklnoho.._l_a_pr_,
Wanted Tlmbor .I Or TlmlMr oaTklng on tho phone..CaU Irani
Land. Profe11lonal Services, 81m·2pm 8 t 4•H2·5552, Ilk lor
llud Popar Woodlanda, 6t4· Fran. laabal or RetiL Afltf 2pm
772-3838.
cal 614-11112-3201, alit tor Fran
To Buy: Wa ·Buy ·Junk NHdtcl 10 Ltdltl To Soli Avon,
6t4·44M"'RT. Or 814-388- Coll814-4• 3311
f:low Taking Appllcaionl At. DomIno'• Pizza In lht GoUipoUa and
A I - - · onlY D:Drivn.
Nur..o: NHdi,. Poro-Tl"" RN'1
And LPN"1 For ltlo Shiha AI Cd·
Ef.1P L0Yr.1E fH
tnt To Work Ill Long-To11n Care
Sooting. Plouant Environment
SEn\!1Cl S
Pick Up Appllca~on In Ptraon Ai
Scenic Hilla Nuoal1111 Cl&lt;lltt', 311
Buckrlclgt Rd., Bldwtll, OH NO
110 Help W8liteCI
PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
AVON I All Atoll ·1 Shlrloj Part tlmo hot tub rapolr, ·1111111
Sp.a, 304-el&amp;-1428. .
hove ;ontr~~l otoclri&lt;at 1 plumbtxperltnca. pa,. negotiable,
Abla Avon Roproaonlatlvto Ing
dtponding
on c:redonllll1, o~ply
needed. Earn money lor Chi'llt· a1 !laum Lumblr Chat11&lt;, Oh or . .
mao billa at -~~ -11. t-80o- land rosumo to Box 87, Cllt1tor,
gg:z..e358 or 30•·882-2845, Ind. Oh, •5720.
Rip.

115-20 Houra /Wk)
ACCOUNTANT-A vory progrea· Part·Timo
Poraon FOf ltundtl Dopoc, llld·
llvt multl·lptclalltr mei:Ucal night Shih. At10 Ntocllng Portgroup
a mothrated tum Time Call-lno Foo All Sftltta In
member. Succallful candidate ·
And Hauttlotopi1111. AI&gt;'
wUI havt BS Of BA In Account- laUndiJ
ply In Poraon At Sconlc Hilla
Ing, Bualneoa Admlnl-llon or Nuralng Ctnltf, 311 Buckrldae .
Finance. knowledge In cath and Rd.. Bldwtll, OH. NO PHOME
accrual accountfne, protlcltnt CALI.S.
with PC, campultr ao-ro ond
cllc~lllor. R11ponalbltiUoa In·
etude: Pr-rallon of llnanclal
ond dtpartmtnoallncomo IIIIo· Tht GoUla - lltl;t CommunitY

•••k•

e(=l...

/Softw..

Set-ipS
el•stalatloe
...

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

at
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR r.,,.,....,.,o

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
. Tuesdays an.d Thursd~ys during
April Serving from 4:30 • S:lS
Donation $4.00 for meal

Pu.DB.c is invite/

13rlan Andarion

CHAPTER 7 • CHAPTER 13 .

Attorney

PRI£Es~~

Day Ph. 992-3871

Quality Window Systems
110 Cburt St.

wv ~77

1192....118

Mllnlln•. Plen Aheld, Cell todly
lor trM oetlmttt..

The
Kountry ~,...._

••FA£1'011Y
DIBECI'

elltlrllf Sellp Help

oMowtng
(Rnldt IIIII&amp; Ccmmlrclttll
'WittiiiUng
•Traa Trimming
. Shrubbery

742·2803 .
or446-3622

SOLID VINYL ·
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
15 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Eve. Ph. 949-2534

WRY'S
UWNCARE

EVENING MEAL

COMPUTER
HELPI

(614) 592·5025
Athens, Ohio .

·.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Safranek

1-1100-211-51100 .

Golf Lessons
Golf sales, Club
Repair, Custom
Orders; Awards,
Engraving
John Teaford

Ohio
A NN OUNCE~ 1[fJT S

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~ .
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•Decks
•New Homes
•Roofing
•Additions
•Siding .
•Remodeling
.•Garages
"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvemenra." Call Today!

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Daily HoroSCtpt.
up-to-clal• ....
reillts. Cal..wl
1·900-263~2700

Cu.tonl!lrs

8:00 a.m.-3:30.p.ft!.

3fi00 Communications

JEFF

High Prices Being Paid

of missing California boy found in canyon

I BEAUMONT, Cillif. (AP)- Two
t:r'ees in the front yard of An~hony

112,2772

.Windows

CELLULAR PHONES

·.1.

Notlca o1 Electlan11n Tox
Levy In Excesa o1 the Ten

during an Air Force briefing In Eagle, Colo.
Runnlflg said he lti 99.9 percent sure thet the
wreckage is that of the warplane which dlaappeered April 2. In the background is a topographic mll!p of th,e area. (AP)
·

113711RYAH PLACE
IIIDOLEPORT

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769• •
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 814; 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-5661

Public Notice

I

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULAnON

CC?'Jiplete Mildlble Sbop Servkle Fabrlaatlon

Steel s.le8, Wddlq Sappliel, IDdtletrltll Gila

1

I

Alf8tlon Motor eSalas a Rapelrs
Cleenlng S.ptlc Systema
Port·A~ohn • Rantala • Serviced Weekly
No Elltnl C._rga lor Evening• or Weekend•
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7
A Week

985·3831

Chester, Ohio

'

I'

614·992·7119 .

• Small Seeds • Chemicals
• Twine • Feed • Lime

985 4422

'j '

I:

POMEROY, OHIO

oRoom Adclllotll
-HiwGir I I
4lutrlolla Plumbing
oAaaftng
otnllrlar • Exterior

~~~Sf:.W..:.O.::
"'* dJf, 814441·
ttiZ,f.-Wi;'

.
Dllllllti!IWiv'T'
Flloltlan .. ...., ......
maH ,...,.,. to: P.O. Bol 123,
ll ·pI L00H41710.

(AIMid SEIVICE

• Fertilizer (BIIg or Bulk}
• DeKalb lr Pioneer Seeds

Dirt • Sand

f,

•

&amp;VIcinity

OoaOt Ar

YCUI8'S

J'ftr8......... P.a..

Um11tone. • Gl'IVII

r
'

~:r=~

lllddllport

113 W. 2ND ST.

'

~. ­

•

'.

EXT. 6925.
$2.99 .. ....
......:18 yrs.

Serv-u

(619) 645-8434

~-

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG CO.
Dllaoear Llmr1 tone
CGmp!NHoull
encll'rllltr an.
Work, Bulldozing,
. Duldlae, Traolchae.

SlptiG8JIIIIoM
. lnltilllird

(814)112-:a

992·2753

Um11tone

_.

JoeN.Sayre

Sayre TriCking Co.
814-742·2131
.

. ...

JIIM
HM.I t

&amp;

m•••lf

"latoerlty •Ill AfftliltWhl(

Ftwlllllmetal

........
,
...
........
.......I._
,...,...
388-8871

Cl• ....

Cit ..
Clll

992·5535

RUMMAGE SALE
FLEA MARKET
Saturday, May 3
9:00-4:00

a Gravtl

S1ptlc Sptania
Tnllltrl
HouttSIIea
~If.-

Free Eatlmatea

SENIOR CITIZENS
CENTER

l

949·2647

Licensed • Bonded
ln•ured
: ...;

Electrical - Plumbing - Carpentry
Repairs - Conversions' - Remodels

1182-5778
N01&lt;1 Open For Spri!aB

.Syracuse

Setuon .

• Pansies $6.50 flat
• Ali vegetable &amp;beddi1g
pilnls $6.50 flat . .
•llloon*lg &amp; Foliage
. BalketS $5.75- $6. 7S

&lt;4111. Aeaott. Pols

CHESTER STORAGE
One Unit Now
Available
10x2i, N5 per mo.
992-3981

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

LINDA'S
PAINTING

•Gutter CIMnlng

oR~,..... &amp; elephant

... $5.50
oCinnu $2.00 88,

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

11t7 doiMiy lley,

laloftlp.m.

· We honor Golden

9-5 Soo12·5

..

Gutters
Downapouta

Painting
FRE!E ESTIMATES

848-2188 .
0117-

;.

lnlerlor

o6lrubbaly .

lelvemllllgt.
After I p.m.

-

114111!1 UIO

.

Parsonals

·s..ldng

An

Door.

OulciiCitllt

•BONUSES"

FllNI

tlon SkUll,
.

1-tl00-ll27- INOIOLOIREP

IOffiED WILL POWER! LOSE
up 10 30 pound!, 30 OAY MON EY BACK GUARANTEE! Natural,
DoCtot RacDnvntnded, 11.e· 44t·
11182, Frat 111f4l161.

I

A

Wllllngnou To

Travel, Reliable Tran1parlatlon

And A Valid Driven

licente~

Previous Demonstrated Ability In
Admlnil,.,lng Social Service Pro-

.,....

·e ducatlgn: Degree In Social

Work, Public Or Bu1i11011 AdminIstration, Education. Or Related
fklld Pnoforrod. '
•

lntallllod Poroont 1111 APD11 'At
Tho Gallla . 'II olga Comiliilnily
Action Agency o\dminlltraoift Of-

fiCII Ar 8010 Nonh Stall Route
7, Chtohlre, Ohio 45120. Appii&lt;a·
tlonl Uuat Bt Received ND la18r

Than.•roo ey ·yw 1

19RZ

Gama · Meigs Community Actlon

A;ooncy' Ia An Euqal Employment

OpportunitV tAtlirmatlva Actian
Employer, Private Non:Proflt Corpotlllon.
I
Poaraf· Joba 3 Potltlonl Available, No Experience Nece11arv.

For lnformallon, Call 1·818·764IIOtB Ext. 3020.
.
Rowardl1111 PDiillon Opon For An
STNA, 2 P.lot. ·10 P.M. Shih, Port

Time . Prograaalvt long-Term

Core Facllloy Spacilllzin; In AIZ·
lltlmefa Caoo, AI Welt AI Skiled
And Rohab Sorvlcoo. Appll In
Person At Scenic Hilla Nuraing
Conler, 311 Buckrlclgo Rd., Bidwell

OH. NO PHONE CALLS,
PLEASE.

TIRED OF MEANINGLESS
WORK??? IIAKE A 01·
FERENCEIU lllur Help II Ntod·
od To lrTiflrov. Tho Quality 01 Ult
For Penona With MR/00. Call
Cocllla AI 1·800·531 .. 2302 For

FurNr l'lb,.tion.

W1n1od: 42 Poopto Lo .. 18 -25
Pounda In Tho Nexl 30 Daya.
Natural, Gualllntoodl 1-eoo-eto.

WanJed· someone to tear church
down lor conttnta, mu1t be ln-

Howard L. WrltaMI

A pod palld jo6 .,,.

85¢·$1.2S

005

Actlan Ag•nc,. Ia

2285.

·- 992·2483

lhlbeGr•••i...

'0p1n

CUSTOM
SHARPENING

MGA Construction Services

Mulberry Hllghta,
Pomeroy
Table• for $10 ·
Call
892·2181

. = 'Citda""

SHARPENING.
SERVICE
HUI'I''S

menta. Financial anatylla. Quar·

ltrlj and amual IUIV"I. Holztr . e-utlvt Dloec:tor. Thlt lndivlduCtlnlc ollero a compe!IDYI aalary al Will Bo Roapan1lblo For Adl~ucouro, oxcotlent btntllll and
onlnlottrlng County, Stolt Or fed·
great retirement "PI•na. Call, fiiX aral Anti-Povtrl,. Program• In
or mall confldtnllal lnlormatlon
lltlg1 Countloa. Tho
IO: Hollar Clinic; Human Rtll· I Su~lll~l Candldlto Will e-"
dona, to Jackaon.Pike, Goltipo· uro All Flacal, Poroonnol, And .
llo, OH 41131-1112-Phono (81•) Aclmlnlatratlvo PDIIcloo And Pro·
448·5783-Fax (8t4) 448-5532· coduroa E1toblahod Through
Equal O!illortunlll E~.
Sllto And Fldlral Roqulromonll
AVON
And Aclmlnlotored By Tilt Goltlo •• $1111 Hour. No Door- Tolltlga
eom....nlty Action " ...BowdOI~

IIIIIWd, 81•·112-7410.
WANTED· Poro tlmo medical ieb
tochnlc:ian. Aollti1'9 ....,"tti anc1
mlclnighoa. Stnd roaumo or oppoy
10 C. Utlt, lot.T., V.lnno Momo·
olol Hoapllll. 115 E. llomorltl
Drlvo, Po""'roy, Ohio •s7at "'
phono114-ll2-2104, txt217.
WANTED:
liXPERIENCIO
AooftOtL Fo""""n Anti -~­
. 5 Yra Exparltnct In AN 01 Roaldentlal Roollng - Muat
Haw Tlllntpolllllon And
Hand Tool a. lttrt t-t.toiY.
Ctll ChrlaUon'a Conatrucllon At

114.-...&amp;14 Or Slip tn At. 1403
Eatllm M ., 0 rr !t. OH.

180 Wlntecllb Do .
Picllup lin t il
IJIIPI&amp; c11, hlliMIM,

In

ll110t1, 11.00 Jill'
ltaltrtnCIL

lhllt. ..

11, Home,
Ctooo To Pork,

�,.,

P8ge10 • The O.Uy SenUMI

.. - ..

•
,. llondlly, Aprll21,1887:

Pomeroy •lllclclllpDI't, Ohio

llonc!llz· Apr!l21,1187

•

Pomeroy • ,Micldllporl, Ohio

The Dilly !•nlf&amp;wl• Page11

NIA Cro••word Puizle
•I

PHIIJ~IP

I

ALDER

·-

AeRO. . . . . . . . .
• IJrt

1 Plar

38 " ' - St.. 3 badroom, 2 t.lll,

now vinyl oldlno. new

Rlwrvlow,

c&amp;riM't. new kitchen. atklng

148,800.

.

241 North Third, 3 bedroom, 2

:::J..Olho.-FREEbedroom,
lncludeo 8
lol rant

ball!, 1 ltory hoult, 5 yra old, . . Now 1gg7

Do lbu Naod Your lawn 11-od
And You Don'l Have Time? Your
In Luckl B&amp;L Lawn Service Will

at.1emen~

oil remodolod, Iaroe

room•. aroraa• thad, ukino Only S181.BI( ptr monlh wllh

141.aoo.

Mow And Trim, .Do Somt Yud

$1050 down. 'Call 1·800-1137-

.,

32311.

Work. Call Today For Free Eati-

221 Cole St. 3 urill. Ill.- OWL , _ c:arpt1. ar:lriot
,.., 1 •1 !f. botlom unU
2 upatairw wn.ler unita.
$a10. ullifiO IIS;I.SOO.

PI!"'.....

maiOI All14-311-11821 .

' Documanll typed, reaumoo, 11rm
pa~pe rs,

AICC Pomeranian•. one cream
malo, ono blue erey malo, 111
weoko, v11 chockod, oholl and
~ 1300.81-1015.

Fumlahod 1 Borlroom AjWIIIIonl
Upolalro, All Utilllltt Paid, 854
Socond Avenue, Golllpolla, No

C-lhl• out-"* lnllriao'/
a111rlor palnllng, roof painting,
prouuro ond hind wall! ,......
mobl'- homo&amp;, neat work guor·
anteed, 15 ye1r1 ••parlance a
referencea. Fr" Eltlmatet. 304·
175-111121 or ~31121 .

ny.rs, etc., taat aervlca,

- - " ' • ..... 304-713-51211.
.
CP R
Fun Loving Young Woman

Poftwew:
ll .Fioher, 3 bedroom.

1 ball!, ...

Spruco Rldllo 1880, 14152, 2
bdrm. o-. ..rriaoralor, lurriiUno
oplional Jl,100 bBO, con 8 14·
584-7&lt;42.

330 F1111111 for Sail

new carpet. same 150 acre farm with remodeled
remodeling, oliolng , 18,000 , can houao, ,_ goraoe &amp; other ou1
building, $150,000 wllh oplion to
1-e 14-825-4II50.
~buy home &amp; 2 acrea br $75,000,
Geor8tl Porlol:lo -wmlll, don, For oate. 1 bedroom honw In Po- 810·742-2157.
haul your togs 10 lhe mil jull ~I mOfoy, will 1111 on land contract, I.::.:.:;::::;!.:,;::.;.._________.;:
304-e75-1957.
·
&amp;14-992-sasa.
Lots &amp; Acreage

Trained, Seekt Employment As

terlar painted,

Babyoiuor, R:iconl Checkable
RoleiiiiCOII can 814-245-98011

Stwlng In home; window treat- 32 Acret Out Hannan Trace
men1s •nd acceaaorl es for all
·1 AC &amp; 2 AC loti far 1a11 In
rooms, some alterations and ,.... ROid, At Crown Cjty Ohio, Rural Scenic VallSubdivision.
·WOier Ctnnf Ao, 3 Badrooma, 2 .
R
"'
pliro, 814-llfl2-~ .
Full lltlho, $55,000, 114·441 · Wodge Oli!y, Bro~er 304-875-

2722.

ap~

1:~~~·~~~·~;~~~~~

This 11 The One You've Been
loo~lng

For. One Bed...., Exlrl!
Nice. Wuher, Dryer, Slove. Ro·
lrigorator lncludod,_We Pay Water I Garbage. NO Pall, No
Smokerl 1300 Dopool~ $350111o.,

e1•

Old oak church. peWa, 11111

nM11y 100. flOOD. 814-11112-7410.

Poll Pluo, Sliver Bridge Plaza.
814-441-0770.
Purobrod Shallleo, aable and
no pap'irl,
$125. 81~0&amp;-1085.
White, three mates,

Shih·Tzu pupploa, lull bloodod,
11t shall, wormed. 304-17&amp;1275.

570

MusiCII
InStruments

Baldwin upright plono

asoo:

RoYce drum Ht $300; Hammond

1817 Ford Tauruo. 4 Dooro. AuIOmollc, 114471-2720 AI'TIA I
P.M.
1887 llonll Carlo SS, 305 ha,
loodod, burgundy. rune I looko
good. 30+713-5078.

~

Will Do Any Type 01
dienlng 814-448-0o94.
:.:::::.:::::=-7:-::i-7~:-:::r-:-:-1
Wiii"SII With Sick Reloren,oes, I

lovol 10 Acrea $1o,OOO, GrHn
Schoolo, Counly Wallr, Teeno

.a.., nice, 11

one and 11•

Tl'lelr Home. Have

814-4441-4233.

Schoala.

and 112 balho, LR, -DR. .lamllp
room, oek klli:lwl, , _ CIIPit llfl
basemen!, oio&lt;lric lurnaetlhHt
pump, IWo-car ganopo (2~~

5175.

:..;_.:.___ _ _ _ _ _ _
Syracuse- two srary colonial,
· great location lor children. 1tne
bodroamo, grao1 conoi1ion,-

FINANCIAL

------------------1
210
Business
diale pooaeuton, 114-812·5551

argon &amp; laolla 1400; llula S75;
1g1t Pontiac Grand Prix, VI
TVNCR J71: call1411112 3200
L-.. Runs Good. Looko Good.
Slar Oullar, ~heohlro, Ohio- ..... S2.toO.It4 •• 8804
ono and lnotrumonll• plano, gu~
111111 Pantlac Sunblrd, crulae, Ill~
., :In:! :lruma, 814-317-0302. .
aunroot, lllack. txCIIenl condlll9n
Inside lnd ~ 12750, will corilidor &amp;tde, 814-IIIIU824.
FARr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

0&lt;814-1192-6502.

Opportunfty

--:--:-J;ic[@ii:-~-=:· 1 320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1910 EICar 12x00 lnliler, localed
Bualnan

Oni,· Radio Shack in Point Pleasant. $3,500. Good

condition. Call 304-882·2001 al·
Deoterahip!VIdeo Ren1al. Well· IOrSpm
•

EatabliaMd. Includes Inventory.
Fi11ure1. Unlimited POtential for 197o Grandville 14170 3 BedGrowth. Call Homestead Bend roomo, AC; $7,000 Good Condi·

Blaker, 30+812-2..0S.

c-

lion, 814-258-1069
Aftor8
.
. P.M.

Pre-Engineered ale81 'buildinga.
National company awarding
dealership in o~n market. High
profit potential construction or
.. ~ •. 303-759-32Xl ext 7VOO.

1983 Fairmont Townhou11,
14x70 • .Three Bedrooms. Two
Balhs, Heel Pump,
l'llmb-

lng, Buill in Microwave and Slllr·
eo. Excollonl Condhlon. 112,500.
114-001-GIIB3Aftor4:00p.m.
1~84

COmmodore 14170, Ver'J
Nice, 2 Bedrooma, Central Air,

Appliances, 110,000 814· 597-

2603 Daytlmea; 814·888·1583
Evenings.

410 Houses for Rent

HARTS IIASONARY · Block, Walk-In Cioeelo Rontod
bdck &amp; a10na work, 30 years ex - New 61....,...1..0701
perience, reaaonable ratea. 30ot-

'

lo~

Uilo

·

185-3591 ah_or 8:00pm, no job 10 1995 Schull! 14x70 Single Wide
JmlllonoBIG. WV-021206

Home Feature• Vinyl Siding,

·

Shingle Root, 3 Bedrooms, 2

. Learn a Trade 0&lt; juai Reupholster Balhs, 2 Covered Decks, .On Pri·
lhal ugly Chair. Upholstery Class- vote Rer11ed Lo~ Wll Toke Payon,
ea S8ring Soonl (614)-441-0777
Ploaoe Cal 814--7840.
Livingston's basement waterprooting, all base.m ent repairs
do.ne, free eatimatea, lifetime
guarlntee. 10yrs on job expert-

..... 30+875-2145.

11197 14d0 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$995 down, $195/mD. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro, WV. 304755-5885.

1---- - - '-- 1997 14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom,
$1,359 down, l2291mo. Free air,
skirting, &amp; delivery. Only at Oak·
wood Homos Nluo,WV. 304· 755·
5885.

I

3Tnliiero lor IOio. 304~75-1078.

01-•llotlof Pro1ram
AM real ntate adY&amp;rtlsii'4J in ·
IIIII newspaper Is &amp;ullject to
1t1a Federal Fair liousing Acl
ol1968 which makes h ilegal

10 advertise •any prelerence,
llr!il811on ordlscrloilinatton
"'""~ colOr, religion, ·

-aex tamtllal
·on status or.na.Uona.l
origin. or any Intention to
rna1&lt;o any ouch prelerence,

imllallon or dl&amp;crlminalton.•

T h i s - will not
knoWtlngly •CC8!l!

lldYertllementa lor real estate
"'*"'Ia tn Ylolallon ot 111elaw.
Our readellare hereby
Informed lhal aM dWellings
-~lnlhls· -

ant avallble on an equal

-'"ntY bellls.

REAL ESTATE

--------------------!
310 Homl8 for Slle

c--.-·· a.•

2 bedroom houae, 2 car garage,

largo

doc~.

742-21&amp;3. .

new

wlnd-1,
flliod, 114-•

We have $1000 to $2000 per
home in disaster reliel funda
availafNa ro help ~au purchaN a
replacement homl . Call 1·800·
488-7871 to aat appolnlment lor
details.

FACTORY DIRECT.
NO IlDDLE MAN . .
SAVE$$$$.

2 Bedroom Houoe, In Galllpollo,

For Lease

2 Or 4 -..m Apartmonts, Un·
lurnlohed, CA, Waoher, Dryer
Hook-up, Qloh•ohor. Shciwer &amp;
Balh,lnGallpalio,814-888-7174.

MERCHAND ISE

Household

Goods .
Appllancoo: . Recondllioned
Woohors, Dryers, Rengea, Ref~ ­
gratora, eo Day Guarantael

251·1238.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washera, dr~en, ralrla•ratora,

2400.

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, · 76

3 bedroom houae with garage in
Middlopon, $350 par monlh wllh
depo~

614-11112-3184..

Room For 3 lndvlduala, Home,.
Environment Utllltfe1, Stove, Ra-

lrlgerator, CA. Provldod, $100
Wook Each, 814-048-2515
Nice 2-3 bedroom houl8, large ·

yard, gQod parking, · no lnolde
pots, J4DO wllh depolil and gqod
relerenceL May aell on land conIJaC~ 814-ei!B-7244.
.
Throe llldrooma, Rl. 35 Rio
Grandi, Roferenooa and Depoolt
Required, For more lnformalion
caN 304-875-22e0
Two bedroom houae, nice and
CleM. no inoldl pots, depoail and
references required, 614-9923090.

.

420 Moblll Homes
for Rent
3bedroom trailer· In Muon. No

poll. 30+773-5751.

Vine Slreal, Call 814·408· 7398,
1-eoD-499-3499.
Kkchen Carpel $6.50, Sole on All
Boom olze carpet and Vinyl Mo~
lohen Carpeto 814-441·7444
Kllehen carpel $6.50 yd. Sa,. an
all Carlio~ Room Size lWn'o 614·
4411-3221

dealer in the 1rl-a1•1e arH lhal
bulldl 8nd IIIII 'their own

thop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nt·
TRO, WV 304· 755-5885.

Two bedroom,.attached g.tr1ge,

112 John Detro lawn - · · or
ou~ runo good, 1700 090, 614·
116U-4755.

Four Small Uood llobl'- Homo&amp;
$250 10 11500. Call 614-441·
3067 E........ o only.

poll.l14-tl2-&amp;130.

dragonlly, 1 alzo I, rod. Balh
ai!Orld. One 8ft llir hoc:kly
llbll 1150. 30o -lg5-3178 Iller
5pm

Dulcie dtllvtry. Coli 1·800·&amp;37·32a8.
Umlted Ollarl1887 doulllewldl,
3br, 2balh, J1788 down, $27111
month . Froo dollvory &amp; aetup.
Only al Oakwood HOm,tl, Nilra
wv.304-755-5815.

llobUo Honw Wilh Many Amini$or 4 lecioom Hou• Hal
on 113 Aero +I· OS Ill. N. 01
. - In E. . .. ApprWiod It J45 •••
Day10na.
C&amp;oh. 1104Prlcod For -Quick Sell 114·251· 1111&amp;4313. 130.000.00
No
Colllc:l Cob.
11188
Ropo'al Only 3 lef1,
31111 brick ranch, crawl opaco, 2
bllhl. cenlrellir, llinglo car Ql· owner linanclng available. 304·
raee, 1tl32 In ground pool, 112 155-7181.
acre lot C&amp;N ahor ~:OOprn. Sari·
ou1. lnqulrtl ONLY. 304· 175· Dwn your- honw -'11 ~
,_ HUD app;o.od homea
11 ..
br l""tanl dollv«y. Trode-ln
coma. Your choice: 21R, JfiO
· only t17...,.. 3BR J1,QIU
d-n. only J1t01mo. "Monitor
Sill Spoclal' 11110-'lburo for
onlr t1 ,450 - n J2351mo. All
llomH ind~do dellvory ond 181·
up, 1·5rr. •rronty. 1yr. o l , _
•naro lnourance paid In lull.
Plu• n ,.,u colt . - . your choice
IHu~M bldreom, 2 112 ollrH ulrting or 1111110. lrH lol
.... lot ' - " " ... large . .. reniO par~ of ,.,ur choice. No
lnf - · COIIt kltcllerl, fu ir ftn- opplicallon rofuoodll Phone In
iiMd bl 1 uem. •••....,. your "" tPIIIIcallon lor pr•ap...... loll. .... ...., ... .,.. _ , ., (108)47.UI13. f no.,._
lltht. hHI JUOIP, CA, Nlollito, ,..,. .., numblr on
t111/1». 11~7C!-21111.
•
New

lon~

'".::l

a:i2~.::..

-

TAN~S

3,000 Gallon

Summer Special New jet a8fatlon
motors lot septic tank1 $399 plus
tax . lnsrali.a lion $35. 6,4-C48·
4782

Top of 1he line NordicTrac, Croll
County Skier, Nerver Been Uaed

614-448-8015 cat Aner 2 p.m.

Troy-Bill 21' fivo 112 ho"" -

aell propelled mul~~ing · mower,

hardly u&amp;ad, leu lhan half of
ori{jnelcos~ 81o-817-e935.
Wedding Gown And Veil $850
New Will Sell For $200 Size 14,
614-401-!)101 .
.
.

Pets ·

can.-1 air, total electric, countty
letting, cton to tpwn, 1300 depallt. 1300 rent plus utililiea, no. 2 prom dre1111; t llize 10, color

440

.

A1*1J111nts
tor Rent

, and 2 bldloom IPIW'bllltlll, fur·

nlshed and unfurniahecl, HGurlty
depoait required, no pets, eu-

rloo Included . $800. 304·876·
1114.

1 Bodr.oom Apartmtnl On Flm
AYM~e. 814-441-10'11,

27Ft Diame.., Pool4 Feol DHp,
Loddor &amp; ,Deck. IU·041·

Nice, very deon. ac, now corpa1,
applloncto lncludod, $225/mo.,
pluo utlilita, ,..,., &amp; earbtQo 111,
30H7S-41175-·Igl.
2bdrm. apte., tolal electric, apo
plla-. fumlllled, laundry room

locllldeo. doeo 1D -lin....._

Appllcodo"" ovaliable ot: Vll'-ge
G.- Apta. 1411 .. call 114-11112·
3711 . EOH.
.
051 112 -.cl AIM. Golllpolla. 2
IR., II;, Appllanolo. J450 Mon.
•221.00 dlpoolt UIINUH ... ld.
(814)-lo!Niat
•
• Room&amp; 2 l t d l - hii/MD.,

Gfllt For 4·H Project I 8 t ... 258.
1318.

24' Round swimming pool, Hay·
ward fllt•r &amp; pump. all acc:ello·

11112·2218.

e.....,..
'I

,

Nlfolf

I

:

· YA~l&gt;$.

•'

•

'
:

•

Wllh New Lighll and Wiring
S2.DOO. Catf814-446-3087 Evan·
lngsORy. .
·
Ono Jaol: 2 Vura Old Vory Gen-

Ua, 3 Year Old HorN Vory 0... . Qualify For This Bank Financing.
llo, l14-245-5087.
.
No Cradir Turn Downs! 6t4·441 ·
0807.
ReQiatered Angu1 Cows &amp;
C&amp;IYI~

814-3811-41708.

Rogillarod Black Anguo BuM, 4
yna old. 11.200.
old Holaleer, 2.000 lba, 800, 614·742·
2157.

Slna

Tap 01 The Lint Callle; Simmonla! Rod Anguo Cowl 1 can Pllro,
Bred Htlloro, Red Angua Slm·
monlll Mix Bull Some . 3 Way
Crooei14-441-3111D.
Two yoar old horefl:rd bull, call
814-11112-4252 Iller 5l:m;

TRANSPORTA liON

710 Auto8 fqr .SIIe
'88 Chevrolal Ctlebrlly wagon,
88,000 'mllet, 2.8, V·8 automatic;,

-liepi.I14-IID2·2875.

no loa~ •• price nog. 30o-773!1018. .
.
4" hlevy carrugoled pipe, IOOIL
roll. J21.ot. """"" PWS HARDWN£ 30H7S-4010.
7 Place jungle animal nuroary
oot from JC .,.nny, ••• cond .
$35. :104-671-Zi84.

Available. 304-458-1008.

720 1tucks tor Sale
1990 Chevy Silverado I Cylind•.
5 Speed, OD 112 Ton AC, New
Tlreo, Excellenl Condl~on, S8,450
Cell AJ8r 12 P.M. 810·441-3570.

. :': :--,.

.=

F-2$0 ••4 1:1aovY Ouly.

1111 Buick A-1 V·l , Robulll
Motor, Croloo, Air, Till, Blac~

......

0.: .,.~ J171.

Monlllly Fl• P,..... N....
Holp? Ao~ .Ill NOiml I'MDUCI 11....._1... AMon The
HAPPY JACIC 1-1 PUA CIOL·
LAA. Kille Mull Flail WI ......

.

TDJL

CGLS

·

USCJJ.

VKSJ· N

NC

N A K S I

NC

JLUCPI. ' -

DPI

RICLSJDFF,

ACHL

AFDNL

CENVKLFILS

AC Z

CP

. N·C

CGLS
WKHHX

RKP

·I K D A L S J .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You look at· Harrison Ford ond you listen. He looks
' like he's carrying a gun. even il he isn't.' - Carrie Fisher.

WOlD
tAM I

SORFYT ' I

I I 11 I I

.

A F R0 V

I

1~

My friend likes to tell her ·
=
.·,. handsome
bOyfriend that a guy

I I _ who fails in lave with himself
.

Comple:e lhe chucklo quolod

f.a"!

New gas tanks, 1 tan truck j
wlleola I radlolora. D &amp; R Aulo, 1

•

TO

BORDER
COLLIE
I-IERDIN6

•

genaratar· an Ford challil-480

~

engint-,.8,000 milea, txc cond.

r

I

I I

1·1

I

SCIIM LITS ANSWIIS

Adjust- Wiper· Lousy • Nodule : WOUND
A good time to find out what makes a·person tick is
when they are all WOUND up!

SOME.
SI-IEEP

•

304-8~.

1991 Titrry RtaOrl Trollor 25 :

810

PRINT NUM&amp;fRED LUTERS IN I~
THESE SQU...RES
.
•

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETTEitS I
GfJ ANSWER
•

'

.

I

"

1

'

Jtome

.

.••
•~

,.
•

.)

~

l

lmptOVtml!lts
BASEMENT
,
WATERPRDpfiNO
Uncondlllonil illlotln euaron1e1.
local ,.,_encea furnflhM. El·
tabllahed 1171. Call (11'1{.:'".
0170 Or 1·100-2117·0$78.
...
Viollp:.....

jO

.,.,_,, - .. wlndowa. ......
moblll home """" Will more. For

T

kee aolmo8 cell Chat, 114-11112-

grades . Do noi let Crilleal aallgnmenta •
_....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _. pile . ~!~&gt; . on you and ,,squet~e you Into a
corner . Trying 10 1111ch up a broken
tomtnce? The Aalrd'Oraph Matc:hmeker
~n help you understand ~at to do to
mo1ce the rellllionlhlp -'c. Mail $2:15 10
Malchmaker, C/o thia ?-wapoper, P .O.
Box 1758, Mufrl)l HIII' Siation, New York,
NY 10156.
I .
GI!MINI (MIY 21·JUf'8 20) In your
~
frlen!IIIOCiay , do not
bllloo IIII·NnilnQ. VoiJ may lind your
~ lnvigOIIIIIIQ- '
• • ·.
Tuetdly, Aprll2l!. 1110'7
CANCI!R (,._ 21.J~ 22) Keep per·
tone · who lllvt no ~I tole _In your
cor- out ol your all~riiOdly : Their ,
Input COUld do_. cllmploe "-good. I

BERNICE
BEDE OSO:L

Nonw Bren:lo Over 21 - . E•parlonco All Wor~ Guaranlaod,
Frtnch Cllr llarllg, 114·441·

«123.

• I

...

MO Ellclllelllftll
Alftlgli II Ill
'b'ld .... 01' liT 1I...........

•""

_......,., ..... ....,0-

...

-lriCion. Aldeneolr
l!loetrleli, W'o:GDDIII, 114-171·

'•
I"

1-

..

'

.j'

.,

AB'l"RO ~ORAPB

Applla- ""'" And ....... , All

'14 Suzu~l OS 501 E, H~o rift, ""''" IuNden, Declco, Corporl
. , 400 nilea. 11100, 114-11112· T-SotUpt1ta•••m.

I

.

··

Weal IHeaty LuutJ found the only
way Ia beat live dlamoada. rtnt. he
led the apade two. Then, on wlnnlng
.the aecond trick wllh hlllntmp u,.
Luut underled hla top three .hew.
When t:11t relined he bad won the

*""

•

who have domineering peraonalllle• .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Friction ~n
be minimized loday il you don'l hold
assaelates ·responaible"fl!t lhings you
tlhould 1;:e taking ~re o1 yourlllf.
SAGITTAAnlS (Nov. :13-Dec. 21) Share
time today with lriendfl WilD knoW how 10 ·
enj0y -them881vll rather then wllh ·per·
sonr you leal you must entertain every

moment.
CAPRICORN (D8c. 22....... It) Succua.
could be dlniod you IOdiV you trHIIile
liliu war inllead oil lark. :reka, oil ,our
atmOI' llld hiVe 101M lunl

n

A.auAR1US (.IIIII. »f'ttl. tt) n you fill
If!· llalen 41llenllvoly loday, you might ·
embolk or1 a Nritl ol ~ttillly dlngtr·

•.

•

..
..

·•I

·•

'

LI!O (Julr. .. •• Ill Plena you hope I OUI mlu1dlorltllndl .
.
10 h•tp~t~n~r~IOdly COUld be........, M1 l'laCI!S (fall. 20-Maroll Ia) Today.
you ~ It (!Me lao muciiiUihoriiY 10 0111- evold cont!overaial dlacuaalofta with
n. 1111 tllin 00'*01 Md . . . . . . . .
IIIGCII.... II you may Ullinlel~~
'VItlaO(Aul. D lrli' Ill Tlllt might.not dollnly an~ lllaliouehlp.

, . . lulolo c-, ...........
. , R:n &amp; ~ Gread I1 ,4CD,
I14-I7NIIII.

-Polaona.

··x c E

Is I I I' I e

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

1171-·. . .

by Lui" C.mpo1

. ....J
by f illing in the. miuing worch
L -J..--.1.--.l.--..J.L.......I.
you develop from lflp No. 3 billow.

ClC Oanoral Home Main·
tononco· P1olndng, vinyl lldir!a.

,

.

CetltNty Clpntr cryptogrwns are crwed lmm ~by t~ people, past anti PfltSC!It"ll
EICilletltf In lhe ciphtr tllpCIIIOr lnOIMr. Todly .. due: V 9QUIIS F

Ovor 1.0,000 ,

77115.

=·.. . ,...........

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Tran1mlelions, Acce11 Tranefer ...
" &amp; .Rear Endo. t14·245·
.:.;.:_1_ _ _ _ __ : _ _ 1t

oond. $350. 304-882-32a8.

tNSIIazda RX7 Umllod, blacll.. t1 Ford F·21G, 4•• XLT Larlal,
tunniOf, air. 1 opted; 1114= 151. · ·"""· - · manr ....
no, 74,1100 ...._ 110.000 0110,
AKO Shlllla,
-··
Allie .,.;
ounroal,
air, lor
I
: 114-741171.
whl'"',
ve
.
~
..........
1
~
101!
oacll
or
boll"
1600
1
~
_...

17 Court dlvldior

11 Maund
23 Furry wrep

,.....-N-1_G_E_L_M___,, has no ·... . --!

,windowa wlscrean, verw goad Foal; ltlf Ford GoOd Condillon,

~,".'.:e~S:"''· 12,000 QBO

11 HNring llftlll\1

Dbl.

;

1980 Holiday Ramblano mo1ar- 1I
homo. Cla11 C·ol"pa 8·ownlng- · 1

1"'''•

I Con1ir o1

llllllld
· 10 Scnlli.U..

rug

I

87 Nlsun 4x2 lt'uck, new dutch,
tirts. exhaust, looks greet. runa
IOr 5prn -'&lt;d:lya

42 11111ore,10 a
poot

1-....E.....,..v__L....o.;...,..N~~

ltOke
1,000 111111.
od. llony. Exlraal Call
814-3111-1111111.

grll!li( 1 - · 814-742-2301 oi-

Ole......,.__.

7 Napa Vlllay_
llghl
I leanclinlvlan

40 Tclle cca cheW

trick with hi• jack, lle returned a
spade lor the Iaiii rutr.

1881 18 fl. Campar Sloopa 4, 1 .
Slnglo Axlo, Air Condilionlng, 1
Complellly Stii·Conlalnld, Good ·=
Condld::n, .1.500, 814-381-0407.
1

01-.

4 Bnlund
movll
I Aomln 2,100
•
muoleal

L--L--L--L--L-..1~

Budget Prlca Transml11lana,
Slalllng at ...® Met ~ Ulld I
~pao,

Pass

leuU·5.J

'·

"

Motor Homes

~:=-~·=,!'!:."=.
;:~~';.::'
.:.,kl:..:
Tillla CU~ Do I I~
/WNio. Glt.
15-1132.
Exoollont Hunlor
114-317-011111.

-Aclua•·

Auto Partl I

Robulll, All

.

Dbl.

lbe dummy.
,
Here. North c.leu Aukeal bid four
apadea becauae -be waa a p11aed ·
band. Ae be ltada't opened with a
weu two.IJltl, be· l'llted to have only
ave apadei. So. be COIIId be apected
to have mJaor.elllt t,U'da. After
East's daft double, South IDenala
Kocb-Pabnuadl eoatlnued with lour
110-trump to show 1-4 la the mltien.
· (Bicldlag live elubl would p1 M 'n at

AcclssoriH

4000, .

1182-3341.

~
=·~
....., ..... 11-7823.

.....,....,

·KE:UDOCX)!

campers a

111112 ChiVy van, 3150, V-1, Tiara
~-lon,_ very low mlloo. tx,.
ciHn, coli Tom Andoroon, 114·
AKC Reollltred leeton

_______

Rlplop, WV. 30o·372·3U33 or 1· I
:
111115· 5-10 Chevy OIIOnd cab, 4 1100-213-8328.
ely., 5 op., .~. til~ crul•; olr l:eQ,
38,01!0 ...... $10,000, 814· 74~- 790

runa tODd- U.soo 080. 304-8752518.
'
' I

...

....

Soulh of Leon, WV. Financing

760

·S3 Actrtta
And35 A,1aca1a
31 Tllal
37 Mile IIIIa
31 Thlli (Sp.)

Paae

ru«a,

e••·--1•.
owner, 85,000 ac1uat miles, ga730
V1n1
&amp;
4·WDs
tgu Tioga Montara, elau c, I'
roge gp~ lmm.cuillt inalde &amp;
~ $3500,814-755.
. 1g14 Chevy Cullom Von, Excel- 1g,ooo ml'-a, call114-11112-ot03 1
"' can IH&gt; - al 31 Hudlon St, •
1t77 C&amp;price PW. Pl, AulD, TNI lent Condillon. $4,200. 304-8t5- MkklePor1':
31120.
850 HP 360, 2500 Mila On R•
I
21 Fl. Campor (Trophy) Fully ,
build, New P1olnt lo,ooo OBO.
1811·112 Torota 4x4. 5 opoed, Equipped. AC, Excetlont Condi· •
au ue1m
83,000 ac111 mlioo, olr, Uolod :r. ll::nl J4,500,114-387-7401.
I
32" tiel; - blldo rlml. doulllid
chrome toll ~~Are, flvo KC high
,,ERVICES
•I
llghll, now alutch, whllo, ohlrp,
aokl"'l 15,800 OBO, 114·742·
I
3142.
.

Call 300·I75·522Z.Afltr 5 P.M.
TUP.II.
'
2tQal, Ill ICC:.SIOtlH inclucftd,

Uplon Uood C,aro Rl. 82·3 lllloa

Swill llbtrglou toppar 1111
Dodgl Da~ola, alldtng gtaso

2i Gallon Aquarium Wllh All Ac-

3 Fioh -arlumo. 10got, 20aai,

THE BORN LOSER

~8tlaouu,DMo.

rransrnl11ion, rna~tenc:t rtcOt;d,

.-....eu•••l-

Down- .QoJIIpollo: Modern 1
Ballrolim, AI E,_lc, ClrpOIICI,
Com le II Kllt:flon. Elecltlc 1*11
Air Condlllonlnf, 814·441·0138

TwO 'Axle

c:ellorl•• &amp; E•1r111 $100 080

. ·

Equal-."""""'""'

~· Ll.. TAICE Ttte
vi~OL.e

11

:
,

814-ti2-ii2D.
.
•
Muol SM. Groll Dtalol 1818
Chovy Aouo Mallo Ill V-B, Runo Lowt Ball Baal t8hp Mercury
&amp; Look• Great 14,100; 111112 Pol'l· electric alert, flah Iinder. lool
tiac Groftllo Am E1cellenl Cond· ,control trolling ma10r, excellenl
lion. 01{~ Quad 4 $4,200, 814· condlc:n. S2. '100.
441-093L .. .
·
1888 Palomino oNdl Jn, cr011k up
--$2.000.
30+713-52111.
Need A Car? No Crodil, Bad
Credit. -ruptcy? We Can Holp Procrah Baal wllh Troller, Gareoe
Re-Eolablioh Cradill Mull llako Kopl, 2 Floh Finder (Humming
1150 Wlok Take Hom 0 , 15% Blrdl 70HP Evenrudo, 2 Banory,
Down On Cul'l Or Trade Ta EllraU14--.e2110

1NI Fonl Aeroa•r Von rw: rua~
now banory, now tlroo, rtbullt

AuiOgraphed lllclce~ Monllo
·buoblll; Joe llon11na Supai· · c... r..,. 51~, ~......
bowl XXIV lool ... ll; llolh worlh
Aportmanll For Aent On Flret UIO, wl Ill 1ar 11200: lnnd- 1 1 - ....... ..._
•• llllct rack, ...... t14-tl2· 1Wo AI&lt;C Rogl ..... ,
_ ,....
32110.
.
BEAUTIFUL APioRTIIENTS AT
or Spaniol ...,..._ • • IIIII
BUDGET PRICES ,;r JACKSON Booll IIY Redwlng, Chippewa, IIIIer on p:iwrilol. 11om 2-10ot7,
ESTATES, 52 Woo..- Drive Rocky, tonr lama. Guorantood llrll lhell ond Wllrmed, S110
7I0ft.
"""'
- - IllCaH
$314.
- 441·2108.
10 llhop . . _ Allhoo Coli, Go!- -"- 814t••m I -leo.
114·

e11 He a•u.

Cani1 Stock Tr8illtr,

::S.

t100 llapolll, UdUIIH P1old, No
~

25111 Annuol Bamly Pig Solo: Fri·
dey April 251h, 7:30 .P.II. Feyollt
Coun!y Ftlrgroundo Waohlnglon
Courlhoult, Soiling 200 Hood 01
Barrowo. Gllll. Conlig""ro Roger
Bontlty, 837·584·2398, Loroy
Larrick 137--2.

1177 Codillac Coupe DeVille, 1

1 Year Old Rabbill $5 Each,

horne&amp;. Far lactory direct prlcu,

Large#.111ection of uHd home. 2
or 3 tiechvomo. Sl&amp;rllng at $3485.

STORAGE

Upright. Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackaon. Ohk&gt;, 1·800-537-11521.

.

.

Rldoro ·Ball Baale ·Johnoon
Oulboard llolorl Sal81. Service
ol al oud:oe:do. cortllled ..,.._
ic. Marin• S.rvtO., 1131 Karr" ~

Don1 Call Uo Wo Both LaaoJ•

Free Estimates! Add-On Heal

Parrot

21
2 f!~a·::-•
21 D1al1re openly, 3 ....u

E111l

. lag the semifinal match between
lndoaeala and Dentlllrk at the World
Open Team Olymplad, ~n by
lndottelillla overtime.
.
At the other table, the lint lour .,ctionl weN ldintleal. Tllen. eurprWng-·
· ly, the lndonnlaa North paalld. de-'lllte beinc a1at011t mu1- lor hll
Initial paaa. So, four helll'lll by Wnt
became-the llnal eon~ Nartlt llart·
ed wltb tbe club jack, which held.
· Tben be switched -accurately to a
heart. Deela~ in dUII!DIY and 1
called lor the club queen. Soulb did
. well too. He - with the ldnl and led
a low spade to bia partner'• queen.
Now a seci!ad hUrt pliy II Iaiii. •IIIPpiDI a second diamond ruff·in tbe ·
dummy. However, North fell from
· grace, tryiDI to cash the spade ace.
So, declarer rulfed. took his
and
had 1.0 trleb: seven heerta. the dia·
monel ace and two diamond rulra Ia

·.ran Boats -Cuny Cebln•· -Baw

lion. Full 5 Year warranty. •n Vou

560

.

1

Boll Sole Going on -

DOWN

By Pldlllp Al•er
Let utllart the ..... wllb- of the
belt del n- of ltN. II oceurred dur· '

Boat Parll llercrulsor Ouldrive.
Olo-446-9200.

SPRING SPECIAL: Ctnlrat Air
Conditioners: 2 Ton $1,1115; 2 112
Ton $1,295; 3 Tan $1,395; 3 112
ron $1 ,595; 4 Ton $1,695; Prieta
Above Include Normal lnstalla-

Uaod Furnlrure 130 Bulavll'- Pika
Good Typawrltere, Deoko, electric
stove, Iampi, bookcue, Uoor
mo'del color TV, ~cyclel, bunk- · 550
Building
bad1, mattranet, lots Of good
SUppiiiS
fumilure. 814-4411-4782 HRS. 11-F
10-4 We buy ulod lurfliiUro.
Block, brick , S&amp;Wer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Wint"'·
5.30
Antiques
Rio Granda, OH Coli 814·245·
5121
.
Buy or salt Riverine Antiques~
1124 E. Main Slrllt, on Rt 124, Gr8velest sewer pipe. Siders
Pomeroy. Houro : II.T.W. 10 :00 Equipmenl304-e75-7021.
a .m. to e:oo p.m,, Sunday 1:00 10
8:00 p.m. 814·982-2528, ,Run Sleel Buildings, New .
Moore-.
Was $15,250 Balance
50X100116 WU $:!1,200
540 Miscellaneous
$17,631 60xl50x18 Was .
Balance $39,872
Merchandise
5125.
,.

Olkwood Homea It the Only

IT'S BIG. 1gg7 oBR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . 11 ,848 DOWN,
Ulg/110. F.AEE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES. NITRO. WV. 300·755·
5885. Urrilod Ofllr.

Lincoln

2120AFTERI

22=:-

. 211 C!ienlng tool · 1 Campue-

A knavish defense

87 Baas boa~ '88 Mercury 4S hp.
luly equlppad, cleanlruno area~
$3100, 614·742·2301 after 5pm
weakdlys.

Sho-

•

SNUFFY IN FER?

1

34 Fool Hauoo Boat, 304·773·5115.
Speed
WhiiO

'*rldrv .
11 Brl\lall gun
12 ..... K8NI8Ciy
113 Hldo Md -

Opening lead: ??

Sii&amp;RJFF II WHAT'S

1995 Slr&amp;IUI 285 Prar XLI DC
Ball Baal 175 HP. Evinrude Lillo
New ManY Ex1ra1, Must Seel
814-441.()991 .

References &amp; Deposit Requtr.d,

No Pall, All Carpelod, 814·378·

:

11393

S5501Mo, Dopoall Required, 3
Bedroomo. 2 112 Ballls, No Pall, Freezer, Washer, Dryer, VCR,
Retrlgeraton. Microwave, 614 ..
. 614-448-4111 .
· 1983 141.7 0.. 2 tsedroorna, ~
==..-:==:-:-:::::--:::-7"1 Baths, Ol.hW!Ither, Heat Pump,

750 Boats 1 Motors

111110 llarae I 8 Foot Open - ·
wilh Sun Deck. 4.3 U8r VI, llorcrulaer. wirh Am Fm Cllltlll,
and S~l Aoctooory. 814·258·

French Clly llay1og, B1o-446Pumpa Only Silghty Higher. Call
m5.
Ul Today. 1997 II The Twen1y
Boautllul pine dining room sel, Sevenlh Year In The Healing &amp;
Includes rable, 8 chairs &amp; hutch. Coall"'l Busineool 814' o48-8306,
1-600-2i1-0098.
304-675-301111.

RENTALS

1i

1981 twenty-four foot Riviera
Cruloor Pon100n. 10 hp, Mercury,
Hoo~., li'illlor, 15 paroon capocl·
Jy, l00kl ntw $7400, 8U · g92·
3102.
.

5t

Pali

11~7840.

tor Sale ·

tNT

I

510

.

Dealer: Nllrth
Soulh
West Norlll
Pass
I o
4.
/

111118 Honda 300 4 Whealor Llko
Nowil Prlct Of J3,850 Firm. P~.

•Q~- 32 .

Soulh .
• K 7
• 7

.. Contplll pc.
10 Gnllod, In

11111 lfl•-11 Red plgtl'l8fll
11 - VIdor
20 1¥1111!01_of_

Vulnerable: Neither

1884 19h. Concord 1lllll200hp.
Mariner outboard, blutlgray l
J10,500. 30H75-311SO.

Parco! 01 Land, .518 !\ere Wilh
Seplic Syolam, On 1ao Norm 01
Vinton Approx. 1 111-.. 814-3888091,423-335-7770.

map.l14-593-8545.

•.,.

• J 10 9 7 5 2
6 A K 6 4

1913 Saaray 21 Ft. Cuddy Cobin, '
G50 110 Evorylhlng Opeol Eocol- ~1
''"' Conditionl814-448-1713 AI·
,_ 7P.M.

u.ooo.

c-

'

-go.

oilerS prn

$10.000 • . a-..-. Rd;, _ , ,
Acrea, ·COUft!y Wolor • Rtduood
l1t,OOO- S1.000 DIMn +

S..onf S.OCN

~
•JJ095. 3
• A K Q 10 9 5, 3 • J. 2
't A Q 3
t I

1

490

14
17

victory .
21 CIIGIIal

West
• 2

17 bol Canoe ninl condllion wllh
lifejotf&lt;oll and 5 loot wOocl pod- 1
dltl $400 firm COl 814-441-1113 I

Run Rd. •. t3) 10 Acre Plircela,

remate, beautiful and; Melga
Coun!y, Scipio Tlll!inohlp. SR 882
Qull oil SR 1 43). Owner financing.
$1500 par acre. Call far 900d

EEK &amp; MEEK .

111113 Nigh- 750 3000 Orlgl- I
nol lllloo. Excollont Condition, '
Asking 13.000. Coll114-251-e101 :
-.2:00P.M. ~

e

K ·e 4 ·
.. J 10 7
t

mo10r w/llaller. $1 ,200. 304·875- 1
4210 .. 304-875-7513.

CounL Water. Just

-~

-

1g10 Hondo 200SX good cond.l
- ~- u.ooo QBO, 304-ee2·

~-=--~~--~~----:
1•ft. ~· Tnlckor will~ l!ercury •

ueoses.s,~s.

~~r:"s~':.ooolld, 1~1:":. 1~

llolge Co.: Noar Alhtna Co.
Bonlilr • Hurwo Ywy Ron:o1110
Only. • 1.000 Down
+ J101 A Mo. Aloa, In Some
. Na
Sill
on 5 ""'•
$7.500
. Alhona
Schoola.
jull
Soulh ol Tu- Pjalno on l&lt;ea. . . . R:l..follocl " ' 18 • Acr·
eo $14,000 - $1 ,000 Dawn +
S171.tll Uo.
Aile: nice larm gn~~~nd on 12 a::rea$10,000.
Call Today For Froa l.lapo &amp;
Owner Financing lnlo. Taka 10%
Off lilled Price~ on Cash Pur-

• A Q J I 4

• 1

I

$17,000
Dr 22 Acroo
Noighborhood
Rd., With Pond
$i,OOO. J25;DDq. Greon

Syraeu 18• 1hree bedr~m. one

M-Jt-17

1888 Honda ~sox. J1,750. 304·i
1175-1274. .
'
1981 Ford ·f.Bird V.I . garage . 1881 .2BOX Four~riix, axcalltnl ·!
condition. S2.200. Cen IH&gt; INn ,
io:pL 14.000. 304-571-211211.
behind Do·lllllln Pl. PINaont 1
~
''81 Ford Tempo LX, 4 Dooro, :lOH75-1731.
E•ctllont Condlllan, loaded,
$2,850, 81 ..........21101.
' ' 1Di1 H - 300 ,._wheel drlvo; :
-~roo, bll of uuao. 304-713- i
.
:
188t Cavalier, lUG Flroblrd. T· 1145.
Tapa Wllh All Opllono, S4,860; 1883 Kawaoa~l VUlcan IOo Ab- ;
tU7 Buick Conlurr 4 Dooro, oalulllp Ulnl Condi11D!I,"f4,000 1
$1,295; cook 11o1oro, 114-448· llllea $2.1100 Firm. Col 114-317· :
0103.
1177orau •• 4101
,
1g88 Chevy Borona, 2.8 VB,
5opd. 30H75-!1379.
.

Shalet'l Lawncare Commercial 9885
And Ro-nl81 Son/leo, Call For ::
ne- :-:N-:-e-w- :-:
2 8-,d.,-roo_m_o-.--·.1 40 ocroo-5 Milot From T-., on
0 'fMI Eblliml... &amp;14-441-0318.
Room. Family Room. Kitdlon.
Stale Roula 218. WNI Sal All or
SPAHGCLEANINil
I)' Room, 1 Balli, Bollll Gao,
...,._114-25N574
Get Your Spring Cle8ning Over nace, One ·outbuilding, lx20;·
llrUftlr LMcl
Will &amp; Spend Your Summer Second: 2 Badroom, Kildltr1, 2
l14-771o1171
In Loloure. Call Now To Gel Your F"'"l Roomt. 2 Balha, I ' Spring Faver Cleaning Discounli Room Wood Boltle Gao Heal, Golllo Co.: Galtpolo, 2
Out

Bolh HouOn tx'~
&amp;:1 Acres,
1141~4~·~16~3069~~~~~~~~2ox24
Garage,
.Bulldi"'l.
1o tear down lor 118 0050.

..,

11 RoMan , ...1
14 Noll ..... 011- .. Venue do-

540 lllcelllllioul
· Mlrchlndllt .
ConcreiO I Plaollc Sopllc Tanko.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
E
Pits. 81 ~ 111 8523
.
vana En~erpristl, Jlckeon, OH
1-800-537-9528.
Furnlohed 3 Roome I Bath, No Farm Lum~H&gt;r approl. 800ft. por
""'"· Ro.._ Alii 0.,0111 Ill- bundlo. $120 a bundle, ,.ndom
...-, 81..-.15lt.
longlh a rondom wldlh.· 304-773·
Gractouo living. 1 ond 2 bodraom 5060 or 1-800--7883.
apor~m a1 VIllage llonor ond F S
w·
RIYoroldo Apatbllenllln lllddla·
or alo: linen CJoooi . 18'
F
I ..
x2o"O 17'T • f75; 4' Voillly With
part rom 2311 304 . Cal 81o- Top And Fauci! Sel . 171; 131
: : ' :· Equal Houli"'l Qppor- Tollom • S25 Each; 24'·Wilily NO
Top • t10: 24" lnlorlor Door •
Uodorn 1 Bedroom Apar1man1, · $10; 28" lr\llrior Door f10; 10' Cilf
114 U8 ~-Baot I Wall .O.k Cablnllo,
Coun1er Top And Sin~ • $200! (21
P1orllally lurnlahed 11H&gt;droom, 8" Sliding lloor1 • $3p Eai:h; lofod.
utilldoo paid, J4001mo. 304-e75- Ieino Cobin•• $5; 32" E11erlor
2722.
Door 130, 014-441-3703, Or 11444 1 51 4
room, lurnlohod
ki1Chon &amp; both.1br.
S2001mo
Plano- tuning &amp; ~
Smllil
living
ulllltiol paid exCtPI e-.1/IC, rei·
Coli .chi
orencos I · dopoolt. 304·875·
1385.
.
'

II

.,.....,_
£

ICuiCtr-1

rill'...
11 Clllld

llobjlil In 11y Honw Doponeble
&amp; -ble Jl2 A Illy 2 112 Ou1211 Will Ta~o lnlllnll, 114·
441.oll04 AI Fot QwillinL

,_.,ll,iOlO .. ,_..

. . . . . 11110

Ill . . ~ ltllla(l. . . . . COUld ba a good
..... "" your w.tdMd MDM!IIIgo . be !he righl dly ID-' out coonpiiQoltd ARtiS(...... 11·Aprii11J A 11rioua
· ..... a Q0110111td .... 1D lind out wilD 11ner1cM1 matMII. PDIIIJDM " ' - 1111111 lmpr II....._. 0011111 ..... Ill . . , _.
. . . .... you , _ 10 olllr. " . . ba
1
you're.- • .SID~m·anl"l.
~budglt; Wyoulflll
... WOIIt your..-.
....,.(llfi.DCIGI DIY-~, Ill- ,... .....
~··
dance will biiiiiCI8t impollant to you
o-ltriiiA...._
....,_., to .... - . IMIId ~lllott·•
a ollaM8 rou might not get P811int

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Boston
Marathon
winners .

.

'

Ohio Lottery
Plck3:
976
Plck4:
9881
BuckeyeS:
12-14-25-27-32

'

Sporta on Page 5

· Cloudy tonight. Low In ·
the 40a. Wedneeder.,
ahowera likely. High n

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Jill

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Air.,ahnnitnJOl wlwls; .
' dlt,~AMIFM I
cax:ttte and Moch More!
' •·.

"'

\..,I()\\

-By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
. • The Village of Syracuse will once
again receive assistance from the
Meigs County Commissioners for~
.operation of London Pool. 'The commissioners voted to give the village
$6,000 for pool repairs at their regular meeting on Monday aftem~n.
· Syracuse Mayor.George Connolly requested the funds for safety
improvements which must be made
before the pool is opened this year.
The commissioners gave the village $7,000 for the pool last year, and
those funds were Used to'improve the
filtration system, Connolly said.
· With the Middleport Pool having
been closed for the past two seasons,·
Connolly said that residents from
Middleport, Pomeroy and other com-

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Racine to
host .4th
flower ·
festival
.

' Meigs County's flistival season
begins Saturday with the fourth aimu~I'I~acine Flower Festival at Star Mill
Park. .
The eveJ;~t, sponsored by th'e
Racine Area Community Organization, will begin at 10 a.m. with a
parade followed by the crowning of
te5tival queen on_the Star Mill Park .
stage at noon: . . .
Line up for the parade will be at
9:30 a.m. at the Racine Fire Station. ·
From the fire station, the parade will
proceed down Third Street, right at .
Pearl Street, right at Fifth Street to the
American Legion Hall, then .left on
Sixth Street and left at' Vine Street
before returning to the fire station.
All Ooats with flowers are eligible
for prizes of_$75, $~0 and $25 with
prizes being presented on the stage at
noon. All are welcome. For more
information call l')llarilyn Powell at
949-2676. .
.
.
Queen candidates and their atten- .
dants were selected fr,om Southern
fiigh School students.
Queen candidates are Kristen
~ensler, daughter of liill and ·sherry
Hensler of Racine; Vanessa Shuler,
daughter of Steve and Wanda Shuler
bf Letart Falls; Melissa Canan,
. daughter of Michael and Vicki Canan
of Pomeroy, and Angie. Carleton,

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•1.111118

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. Approved the lateral transfer of
P.J. Harris to telephone operator at the
Meigs Co~llty Department ~uinan
Services; following an eKecuuve session with D.H.S. Director Michael
,
Swisher;
- Renewed a lease with Jay Hall
for the &gt;Ounty office space on Union
Avenue;
.
• Appointed Sue Maison to replace
Eleanor Thomas on the Buckeye
Hills/Hocking . Valley Regional
Development District's Executive
Committee al\d !Jenera! Policy c~·
cil ;
,
. -Authorized the payment of bills ·
in the amount of $258,770,07, with
227 entries.
Attending, in addition to Commissioners Hoffman. Thornton and
· Janet Howard, were Lentes and Commissioners Clerk Gloria Klocs .

State refuses
to toss out air
permit for pulp
mil.l project
"I feel a need to try to drive this
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) · A
thing
to closure;" said Tom ~sing,
sla!C
appeals
board
·refused·
unani,, ' ,_ "'
mously Monday to thrl))o" out an air chainnan of the air board. ''This has
·
• pollution permit for a proposed $1.1 been a long, drawn-out affair."
The agency permit would allow
. billion pulp mill in Mason County.
It tunied down a request that it dis- tlie plant to emit 8.4 million pounds
miss the permit without taking evi- · of pollution into the air yearly.
dence, said Rebecca Charles, attorney
Environmentalists contend the
state is wasting taKpa:yers' money by
for the Air Quality Board.
The board, o seven-member proceeding with the ..permitting/
Canan of_Pomeroy, en~ Angle Cerleton, daughQUEEN CANDIDATES • One of the four
appeals panel, set hearings June 9'- .11 process when the company's interest
Southeni High School eenlcii'S lhow here on ter of Cathy end Bin Carlelon of Racine. Alto
to take evidence on whether the per- appears to be waning.
ahown are attendante, from rear-left: ·Jayrne
· the fi'Ont row will be nemed the 19117 ·Raclne
mil for the plant should be ~~scind­ . . The Rye Brook, N.Y., companY.
Flowlif,Featlval Queen It the ennuelevent'Set- Miller, )unlcir, daughter of Jemea and Denial
allowed its option to buy property rot
ed.
Miller of Portland; Jody Hupp, aophomcire,
urday. Candld8tu Include, from ·front-left:
Environmentalist who oppose the the mill to eKpire and has not interKrlaten Henaler, daughtll' of Bill and Shiny daughterd Launa Hupp of Rile..,~ SteYen
Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. project at vened in any of tfic appeals of its perHupp of HI,IITii:ene, W.Ve., and Erin Bolin, frelh.
Henellir of Racine; v-... Shuler, cleughter of
Apple Grove sought to the project's mits.
Steve and Wanda Shuler of .Letert f:alla; Mella. man, daughter of Mlcheeland Kathy Boll.n of
Appeals were filed by the Ohio
state air pollution permits nullifi~d .
Syracuse.
ae Cenen, daUIJhler of Mlc!'~l end. Vlc!&lt;l
The Air Quality Board said it Valley Environmental Coalition, the
vi.ould ·go ahead with hearings to Buckeye Forest Council, the Condaughter ot Cathy and Bill Carleton daughter.ofMichael and Kathy Bolin 5p.m . .
allow
~bout the permit cerned Citizens Council, and Monty
Also on site will be flowers, craft issued arguJRents
ofRacine. ·
of Syracuse.
last June by the Division of Fowler of Huntington.
'The .qu~n candidates will be
Entertainment will begin at I p.m .. and food bOOths; an antique tractor · Environmental Protection's Office of
Environmentalists · fear cancer· .
attended by Jayme Miller, junior, with the Midnight Cloggers followed display and a kiddie tractor pull. Air Quality.
.causing dioxin would result from the
daughter of James and Denise Miller by the Dixieland Jazz Band at 2 p.m. Racine Youth League preliminary . . The board also rejected requests processes used at the mill. Both ex.
of Portland; Jody Hupp. sophomore. Country musiciail -Steven Pottmeyer games will also be held.
Gov. Gaston Caperton and Gov.
Flowers will be available by the from the division and envirortmen- Underwood favor the project.
daughter of ~Laura Hupp of Racine will perfonn at 3 p.m. and CTM
talists to delay the hearings. ·
and Steven' Hupp . of Hurricane, Magic Productions takes the stage at flat or basket. The festival ends at 6·
. p.m.
W.Va., and :Erin Bolin, freshman, ·

C~uncilman John Musser said · Musser, council approved the ·
that he would discuss the matter with removal of 15-minute parking spaces
Village Solicitor Christopher • on Mulberry Avenue in front of th~
Tenaglia, and ~nquire about jnstitut- former AEP offices. Musser said he
ing condemnation proceedmgs.
felt the spaces 11ggravated traffic
Wiles also discussed a sewer problems on the narrow street. ·The
drainage problem in the area.
spaces will still be authl)rlzed for use
Upon the recommendation of at funerals at Ewing Funeral Home.

· Simtlnel News Staff
. · Pomeroy' Village Council vot.ed to
~uy a new heating and air conditioning system during its regular meeting
on Monday evening. Warner Heating
and Cooling will install the.system at
a cost of $6,100.
· Purchase was approved as an
emergencyactionbythecouncil.in ·
.·
\hat ihe system which provides heat - - - - - - to the village offices has been out of
service for over a month.
. ·QuotatiOns were also rec:eived ·
from Foreman ani! Abbott Heating
lipd Cooling of Middleport ($6,240) .
and So11them Heating and Cooling of
RI!Cine ($9,3s0). Edgar Abbott fr9m
Foreman and Abbott; Patrick O'Neil,
t'l;presenting Southe!'ft Heating and
Cooling, and Rick Schafstall of
Warner Heating and Cooling were at
the meeting to discuss the'installation ·
process and the quotations their firms
provided. The prices include the '
installation of two furnaces and an air
oonditioning unit for the auditorium
and main office area on the first floor
of the building.
· Orval Wiles met with council to
discuss hazardous conditions in the
area of Wolfe Drive aDd Pilher Street
~car Spring Avenue. ACconlin11 to
Wiles, an abandoned hoUse on Fie~ ·
er Street owned by. Diana Juvis crp.
IlleS l'licalth and safety huard due to
iG "dillpi~" condition. The house
is located about 20 .)'lrds from a
playpuund in the - . W'tles llid,
aDd he feln for the ..rety J the Chil- .
~ who play there.
.
.
A110 ~ a safely riak ill die

uea It die old Ehnllwlt 'h.wa
buiJdlna. Wllelllid.

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man's motion to provide the funds to
Syracuse, Commissioner Jeffrey
ThomtOh said that he wo~ld like to
SCI! the·c;ommissioners provide similar financial suppOrt to other villages
in the county. Hoffman said tltat he
felt that requests suFh as Connolly's
must be decided on a case-by-case
basis.
Steve Beha, Les Hayman and
Gladys Cumings, · representing the
Meigs County National Day of
Prayer Committee, asked the com·
missioners to sign a proclamation
declaring May 1 as Natio.nal Day of
Prayer.
·
In addition to the proclamation,
the commissioners also authorized
the committee to hold events in conjunction with the observance on the ·
courthouse steps.

Re·. S·t orat lOn
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CHEVROIEI•

A proclamation declaring May as following members of the Meigs
Mental Health Month . was signed County Community ·Corrections
after a brief meeting with Ron Atkins Local Pla!lning j:loard: Roger
and Pat Aetcher of the 317 Mental Williams, Middleport; Coimie DodHealth Board.
son, Pomeroy; Dr. Douglas Hunter,
Upon the recommendation of · ~ine; Chief Bruce Swift, MiddleProsecuting Attorney John Lentes, . port; Chief Gerald Rought, Pomeroy;
the commissioners approved a lease . Janet Howard, Middleport; I. Carson
agreement and resolution wiJh Con- .Crow, Pomeroy; Donna Boyd, Mid·
rai I, which allows the board to dleport; John Len1es. Pomeroy and
acquire, by lease only, an access road Patrick O'Brien, Pomeroy. •
in the Langsville area. This "cutThe commissioners·also:
through" road will will be used as a
. Increased the appropriation to
flood road for residents. on State the Chester Courthouse fund in the
Route 124, who, according to Lentes; amount of$3,000, representing fundS
are now without access during times receiveo for the project architect;
of flooding.
. Established a new line item in
The cost per year for the lease is the county budget for $50,000, rep$65. with the . county agreeing to resenting the county's micro-entermaintain the ~oad. ·
.
prise grant, and departmental transThe commtss10ners appomted the fers within the Meigs County Court
-oor-,....--,......:..:-~--,....--~,....--,....,.;,..-..'"",~
· =-~
budget (Sl,040.71) and the Correclions budget ($200.00);

munities in Meigs County are now
using the Syracuse facility.
"By helping Syracuse, you'll be
helpingeveryoneinthecounty,since.
ours is the only pool operating right
now,'' Connolly said.
The average attendance at London
Pool last summer was 65 people per
day. 'The pooJ. also hosted 92 private
parties. For the first time in several
years, the facility operated at a mar·gina! profitlast.year, due to d!e commissioners' assistailce, according to
Connolly.
The funds will come from .the
commissioners' contingency fund,
according to Commissioner Fred
Hoffman, who also pointed out that
financial aSsistance was provided to
Middleport last year for pool repairs.
In making the second to Hoff-

.Co-..ncil to buy new heat, ·air-conditioner system
. By BRIAN J. REED

...

"

A O.oltft Co. New •....,.,

Syracuse .receives help from county to fepair pool

,,

'

2S.CUOM,12 , ..... · -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll22, 1997

'1117, Ohio 111111ey Publl.... Comp.ny

.

I Q

New shopping center
·may go .up in Bend Area
1

Spring clean-up in the village
Sy MINDY KEARNS
one ' one~and-a-half acre piece of
will be held next week. Those with
1 OVP News Staff
ground, ·and two one-acre parcels.
· items to be picked up by village staff 1
Mason
County's
Bend
Area
may
residents might remcm·should place the items on the curb on soon see a shopping center or mini bcrLongtime
the old "Vista" service station that
· the appropriate day: April 28, first .
ward; April 29, second. ward; and mall, if the owner of a company that was once located on the front of the
April 30, third ward. On May I and purc.hased land ai the foot of the property. There was also a smaller
Pomeroy-Mas.on Bridge has his way gas station on the Mason side of
Continued on p•e 3
about it.
Vista. Rector said the former Vista
Charles L. and Margie Cartwright filling station land is contaminated
sold 72 . 53 acres ·of land across the and must be cleaned to bring i1 up to ·
road from the bridge toM 1000 LID, Environmental Protection Agency
.,
an Ohio Limited Liability Co. for standards. He is unsure about the sta$385,000, according to a deed book tus o( the second station.
in the Mason County Courthouse.
Rector said the 45 acres 0 n the
Eldin Rector of the Columbus area is . back of the .land are long and narrow,
ownerofMIO()()LTD.
· filled with woockd, rolling hills. He ·
Rector said he is seeking a Ration- said the land once; · contained an
al company to buy or lease a 15-acre orchard. Rector said he will sell that
plot of the land, located at the back area for$1,500 per acre, butthe buyof the flat area of the property.· He er must try to find access to it, as
will k~ep the ihree smaller parcels there will be no access from thefront. ·
which fr~mt at the junction of S.R. 62
Mason Mayor Fred . Taylor was
and U.S. 33 fot commercial busi-. pleased with the news. "I think it's a
nesses. "The big key is the back I 5 good idea," Taylor said of the
acres," Rector said. "I know if I can prospect of having a shopping center
sell it, I can sell the front three parcels in his town. "If somebody would just
easily."
start the growth in the Bend Area, it
'The front three parcels consist of woold help and catch on."
1

gl•tt _ __

President Clinton will
visit Grand Forks today
1 By

JEREMIAH GARDNER

: Astoclated Prwae Writer

pnnnll the allack to tlaad PlilaJ, oec;la,
UldRan!l .I t•i,IIP lllill.therl I rlllan
I DIIWUIDU ·

.'

GRAND FORKS, N.D. - nrcd
of sandbagging, John Neppel and·his
family gave up, fined up the ouldoor
grillltld wlldlod the Red River cneep
toward their home.
"We knew we were losing it alt'
so we pulled all the steAks out oft~
fneem and hid one last good sup-

.•'

per," Neppel said Monday from
Bemidji, Minn., where the· family
took refuge.
Moving slowly north across the
flat plains of eastern N~ Dakoca.
the reneg~ river.chased out nearly
all SO,OOO ctty nesulents . .·
Those who stayed behind have
had to c9pc with filthy, icy floodw•
Con"eeM' Oil , . . 3

t

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