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Page 10• The Dally Sentinel

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Monday, March 18, 19$,8

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Ohio Lottery

SheehY.'S 'rNew Passages"
·:reviewed by literary club

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Gail Sheehy's "New Passages:
• Mapping Your Life Aeross Time"
was reviewed by Mrs. Jeanne Bowen
' when the Middleport Literary Club
. met recemly at the home of Mrs. Roy
,Holter.
Mrs. Bowen introduced the book
' by analyzing "The New Map of
Adult Life" featuring such catchy
, phrases as the Tryout Twenties, Tur-.
. bulent Thirties, flourishing Forties,
•Aaming Fifties, Serene Sixties and ·
, the characteristics the , author has
, identified from her research.
Gail Sheehy, Mrs. Bowen report•ed, was born in 1937 and experienced
, many different interests in her life.
, She was a traveling home economist
forJ.C. Penny from 1958 to 1960 and
. held a fellowship in Columbia Uni' versity School of Journalism in 1970.
She haS been fashion editor and fea. ture writer for the New York Herald
. Tribune and contributed to many,.
popular magazines. She became·
•involved in sociological concerns,,
most recently in rites of passage. The
. success of "Silent Passage", a 1991 '
. study of mid-life, led to the present

volume which contrasts developlife-S148es in the 1950's and
the 1990's.
Over I ,000 interviews were conducted, the reviewer stated, mostly
with educated, middle class women
who are pace-setters. These presented a vivid contrast with the World
War II generation wben only 6.4% of
the population completed college
and women over 50 years of age were
passive with their learning and Uves
almost finished. Individuals of today
often delay parenthood, tend to look
and feel younger than they are, might .
engage in several changes of career.
and the author believes, are more
flexible and show more resilience
than bitterness as they age.
Mrs. Bowen summed up her
review of Sheehy's best seller by stating that while tl)e author uses generalized labels and that those studied
are not typical, the book is highly
organized, well-documented with
various appendices and sprinkled
with anecdotes. In short, it is interesting but not easy reading, she said.

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m~nlal

GOSPEL GROUP COMING - The Jelllaons, a family gospel
. singing and ministry group, will be at the Middleport Pentecostal
Church, 873 South.Thlrd Ave., Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday, at
• 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. The group has recorded 13 albums of gospel
. mullic In their 20 years of ministry In which they have held pal·
. ·tOni I and evangelistic positions. The Jellison&amp; who.reside In Port·
land, Ind., sing as a trio and use musical accompaniment of
: planO, electronic keyboards, ball and drums. Their singing pro. gram will Include original songs as · well as old time gospel
favorites.
·

Ann urges folks to reactivate
those newsy Christmas letters

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TOP ACHIEVERS- TheM atudlnta who achlimd superior ratIngs In the 12th Annual Scllnce Fair at Meigs Junior High School
will now competa In the dlatrlct contast to be held at Ohio Unl·
verslty, April 6. They are from the left,
ley Tholne, Tawny

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· Yol. 41, NO. 225
. 1 Butlon, 10 l'1lgaa

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In Meigs junior high science fair contest,.

Superior rated projects advance to .OU district contest
Twelve Meigs Junior High School
students who received superior ratings on their projects in the 12th
Annual Science Day Fair will now
move into district competition, April
6, at Ohio University.
Rusty Bookman, science teacher,
who heads up Science Day, said the
projects of all se•entli' and eighth
graders. about 160, were evaluated by
a team of professionals and/or educators in four areas -- originality and
creativity, clarity of expression, use
of the scientific method, and knowledge achieved.
Bookman said that the emphasis
of Science Day, held in cooperation
with the Ohio Academy of Science is
"to stimulate interest in sciences, to
promote research and scientific
knowledge, and to recognize high
achievement in attaining these objecIn previous years the school has
been awarded the Frederick Krecker
Outstanding Science Department
Award andollookman as an outstanding science teacher by the Ohio
Academy of Science.
The John Mora Memorial Award
which is ttaditionally given to the student with the most outstanding project went to Kyle Smiddie whose project was titled "Chemistry for an
Artist". That award and others were
made at an open house held at Meigs
Junior High where all projects were
exhibited and the awards made.
In addition to Smiddie superior
ratings went to Wesley Thoene,
"Which Color is Most Sunsational?";
Tawny Jones, "How Microwave
Radiation Affects the Germination of
Seeds"; Meghan Avis, "Which Fruits
Contaln the Most Acids?"; Gnnt
Abbott, "Which Insulation Insulates
the Best?"; Julie Ann Spaun, "How
Accurate are Weather Forecasts?";
Morgan Mathews, "Which Detergent Should You Use for Tough
Stains?".
"Joseph McCall, "What Stimuli
Affect Fish Respiration?"; James
Stanley, "Do People Sleep Better
While listening to Music?"; Mwjorie
Halar, "What is the Most Effective
Substance for Melting Ice?"; Sara
!hie, "What Happens Underground
During an Earthquake?" ; and Josh
Sorden, "Is the Density of Certain
Metals Related to the Expansion
Rate?".

.
.
.
; !Iff.~ said spokesman LarrY Hughes

Jacksonisthreateningapro!CStarlhe

. pf Penguan USA. parent company of Acaclemy Awards because bl!ICk4 are
·publisher Signet. ''WIII:n the idea was
,presented to him, he jumped ai it."
· •. : :fhe thriller inet in a Southern ·
in ~19l0s ,a_nd invol~~ a
· : ~: apriSOilUconv•ctedofkilling
two young ·l!rls, and. a mouse that
may )lave supematw;aJ ~wen.
··
, , ~~~~ ~y will receive· SI '
· m~llton for each ailstlllmeat. ·

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LOS ANGELES (~) - ~es~

,virtually non-existent amonj nominees. .
The only black nominee is in the
~~tegory Qfbc$tliveaclion
film.
Jac;kson_plans to meet this week
with several advocacy groups and,
community ICI4en to discuu a pos·
sible prP'iest ~t the Mardi ~
OI!Car presentabons.
.
· Executives' of tl;le ~my of
Motion . Picture Arts and Scie~s

sb?rt

• By JIM FREEMAN

Meigs County Commissioners
t.fonday aftenloon followed up on
. ~•their pledge to support Veterans
:Memorial Hospital by resolving to

'i

denied that "skulldugg~ry" was
behind the dearth of black npminCes.
They poin~ out thaf tl)is . yc:ar's ·
show is beans produced b)' cQuancy
· Jones aDd hosted by Vfh6opi ~ldbeiJ, who are both black.
"But ~·bigger issue here is race
· exclulion and cultural distortion,"
·Jackson .i~istCd (roJn Chicago on .
· . Saturday. "We're talkina aliout the ,
overWhelming cultural power of
movies."

t

make county-owned land available to
Holzer Clinic and Consolidated
Health Services for construction of a
medical arts building.
Approximately I SO people, mostly hospital supporters, attended the

meeting in the Meigs County Common Pleas Courtroom.
Of five building sites considered,
the best location is in front of the
Meigs County Infirmary, explained
Keith Taylor, representing the Mar-

~:r-------------~----~----~--------------------~~~~

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UII11HCI COUNTY

MORA AWARD RECIPIENT - Kyle Smiddle was the recipient
or the John More .Memorial AWIIrd for the moat outatandlng ·projact In the Meigs Junior High School science Fair. Hie project wv
"Chemistry for an Artist. •
Kevin Snodgrass, Pam Cade, Barbara McClure, P. J. Erwin. Jerry Clark,
Whittington, Shawn Workman, Erin Roush, Jessica Laudermilt, StaLeeann Dill, Tangy Laudermilt, cy Gilmore, Kim Bush, Jeremy Ross 1
Michael Mahan, Seth Rawson, Jamye Hudson, Tim RobertS, thristo,
Tiffany Halfhill, Ann Kauff, Mindy pher Snouffer, Chris Krawsezyn,
Halley, Christy Phalin, Amanda Kevin Harris. Brandy Tobin, Heather
Miller, Cindy Lewis, Ashley Burton, Ferrell, Jesse Thomas, Amber Black·
Ashley ·Rupe. Jason Miller, Jennifer · slon, Charla Burge, Aaron VaniO:.
Nease, Sara Fife, Ryan Fields, Shane wagon, Jeff Brown, Brandon Morris,
Leach, Amber Perkins, Tod Daniels, Mike McDaniels, Kenny Hatfield,
David Ramsburg.
Heidi Matson. Christopher !mOO:
Joho Kopczinsky. John Hill, Tim den, and Roben Setlock.

Save

20% Everyday

MIDDLEPORT
DE PART ME NT STORE

~ft%
m
6Ift. minimum of

.4

ofiiNIII

price

'a llat
•

Middleport Dept. Store
·on t·1c T

·.1:dJicpc· t

'·'&lt; :·1:

ELECT
GARYR.

HOSPITALIZED
-Loyd Lipps of Little Hocking, .
brother-in-law of Leota Birch, Portland, is recuperating from quadruple
heart by-pass surgery performed at
the Charles C.M.S.C. Hospilal on
!March 4. Cards may be sent to him
:at Route 2, Box 325, Lillie Hocking,
45742.

DILL
Republican Candidate
For Meigs

County Commissioner
Paid forb the caildidate Ga

R. 011148190 Rlebel Rd. L

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VMH ADDITION SrrE PLAN-..:... This 1rchltect'a randet'lng dllfllayl the alte plan for the
Mldlcll · Arll Building addition to Veterans

1Ml CDIIIIII11EI 10 PIDVIIIIIG 1111
MD11 flf,ICifiiJ, CDUI1fDUS AIIJ.
TIMElY SfiVICf·PDSSIIIf. •

From AP, Staff Reports
: Voter turnout was steady in
precinct polling places throughout
)l,leigs County this morning. At many
polling places, voters were reported
tQ he waiting up to 10 minutes to step
into the booths to cast their ballots,
according to Board of Elections officials.
The large lurnout is due primarily to the county office races and the
scliool issues on the ballot in the Eastern and Southern districts.
It is · definitely not due to the
weather, as constant rain showers hit
DECISION '96 • Theae two voters _ . among the flrat to cast
the area during lhe morning and eartheir
ballots this morning at tha Pomeroy flret ward polling place
ly afternoon.
In
tha
Pomeroy Village Hafl. County elections officials are expect·.
"Despite the weather. we are
lng
a
large
turnout for today' a primary.
expecting a good turnout today," said
Rita Smith, dirutor of the Meigs
Ohio were headed to the polls today Republican presidential primary.
County Board of Elections. ·
Dole and Pat Buchanan spent last
Early estimates indicate that as to cast their ballots in lhe primary
weell detalling their differences in
many as 7,000 of the county's I5,000 election.
Among races and issues facing Ohio campaign stops. Alan Keyes,
registered voters will cast ballots
Ohioans
were lhe selection of a the only other Republican still runbefore the polls offiCially close at
Republican
presidential candidate, a ning, .made no pre-primary visits to
NO p.m.
·The final number of voters could proposed sales tax increase to help the smte.
easily lop the figure of 6, 793 voters pay for two new sports stadiums in
The names of several candidates
who cast their ballots in the June Cincinnati and an auempt by former who dropped out of the Republican
1992 primary, ranking it as one of the Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich to race - Phil Gramm, Lamar Aluander, Richard Lugar and Steve Forbes
best primary voter turnouts in coun- gain a seat in Congress.
ty' history. .
Bob Dole was expected to easily - also appeaned on the ballot.
: Meanwhile, voters throughout outdistance Pat Buchanan to win the

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P,~EASE

VOTE TO HELP .R·E-ELECJ
·"

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' J

A Gannett Co. IMwapapir

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shall Erdman architect firm of Madison, Wis.
Other sites considered included
two connected to the hospila), one
across from the hospilal at a site currently occupied by a medical office
building, and another on a slope north
of the hospital. These sites were
rejected due to cost or location.
Charles Adkins Jr., president and
chief executive officer of Holzer
Medical Center, explained that plans
call for a $1.5 million, IO,OOO-tol2,000-square-foot building which
will house three to seven doctors and
create 18 to 22 new jobs.
Doctors will use the hospital facility for testing and other services,
including in-patient and acute care.
Following the commission's resolution, Adkins said work on the new
DISCUSSES SITES- Architect Keith Taylor, representing the
facility will begin as soon as possiMarshall
Erdman architectural firm, detailed five sites considered
ble.
for
a
new
medical arts building to be located near Veterans MemoCommission President Fred Hoffrial
Hospital.
Taylor shows the approved site locatad in front of
man said the commission will work
the
Meigs
County
Infirmary, above. Meigs County Commission·
on transferring the land "right away."
era
Monday
agreed
to sell or lease property for the new building.
Commission Vice President Janet
(Sentinel
photo}
·
Howard, who made the motion to
make the land available, pointed out
that without Holzer, the hospital
However, Pomeroy attorney Steve missioners and said 'We're broke,
would have closed last July.
Story was critical that . CHS we're going to ha•e to shut the hosCommissioner Robert Hartenbach HMC's parent company - guaran- pital down .' "
teed to operate VMH as an acute care
seconded the motion.
"If it wasn't for Holzer Hospital,
For the most part, comments were hospital for only three years.
we wouldn't have the hospital here
of "If we don't do some of the things today. They-were willing to guaransupportive of the hospital.
Walter Grueser and Joe Struble of we have planned soon, we won't be tee we would have a hospital for three
Pomeroy urged commissioners to there in five years," Adkins said, years," he said.
mak~ the land a•ailable as soon as .addressing the need for quick action.
As far as commitment is conpossiJ!~·- . • _ _
. .. _
"E~one wants a guarantee,"
cerned' ' '$~ 5 millfon is~ pteuy big
"Give them the opportuni!)' to Charlene Hoeflich of Pomeroy said. commitment,'' he added.
help us ... they're not there to beat us "In life, there arc no guarantees."
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
In a similar vein, Prosecuting spoke out against selling the properout of anything. They are there to
Attorney John R. Lentes praised ty - preferring a long-term lease
help us," Grueser said. ·
"This is for the betterment of the Holzer for sa•ing the hospital: "The instead, an idea promptly slapped
community," Struble said.
VMH board approached the com(Continued on Page 3}

Pomeroy merchants Forest fails
unveil suggestions
to complete
on parking to council plan's goals .

MARIETTA (AP) - Offlcials
al
lhe
Wayne National Forest said
provided the village has mud
By JIM FREEMAN
they will spend this season catchremoved from the streets first.
Sentinel News Staff
ing
up on the goals outlined m a
Following up on earlier business,
Representatives of the Pomeroy
10-year
operations · plan filed in
Merchants Association made their council agreed 4-1 to donate $2,000
1987.
recommendations to Pomeroy Village to the Meigs County Tourism Office
The plan set priorities for
Council Monday night over the future for promotion of tourism in the counthe forest, harvesting
expanding
ty.
of parking meters in the village.
timber,
hapdling
oil and gas rights
Councilman Larry Wehrung,
Bobbie Karr presented the recand manipulating habitalsto foster
ommendations, which included free declaring that lourism will do noth·
the development of wildlife .
parking in the parking lot, retention ing for Pomeroy, voted no, while
. But none of the goals - acquir~
George · Wright
of stteetside parking meters, enforce- Councilman
mg
more than 100,000 acres , sellment of the. two-hour parking limit abstained.
ing
timber rights and conducting
In other business, council:
for streetside parking, no residential
more
aucuons of 01l and gas rights
parking along Main Street and elim• Met with Melinda Strong, the
- ha•e been met, The Marietta
ination of all-day parking permits.
mother of two Pomeroy Elementary
Times reponed Monday.
Merchants would ask their School students,. about parking near
A ban on land purchases, a fedemployees to park on the river side the elementary schoo.l. Mayor Frank
eral
budgel i_mpasse and budget
of the parking lot to keep parking Vaughan reponed little progress in
cuts
all
contnbuted to the failure
.
near the stores free , she added.
the mallet.
the
newspaper
said.
'
Council took no action on the recHowever, village solicitor Chris
The
forest
will
conduct
its
first
ommendation.
Tenoglia later advised !he village to
Sandee Mills asked for help in proceed with placing limestone on. timber harvest of the 1990s this
summer in the Ironton district. Taxcleaning the river side of the parking areas across from the school for parkes
paid on the timber go to school
lot by April I and other tasks. Coun- ing, noting that "people .._e parked
districts
and communities.
cil President John Musser explained there for years."
Aboqt
200 acres, or about 1.4
that workers will he doing trenching
• Met with a representative from
million
board
feet of timber. were
work there in preparation for work on Modern Woodmen of America Life
scheduled
for
harvesting.
the grand promenade project.
lnsunncC: Agency about life insurForest officials also planned to:
In addition, merchants offered to ance for firefighters. No action fol•
Auction oil and gas rights on
pay for one month of street sweeping
(Contlnulid on Page 3}
a 212-acre tract in Monroe County this month.
• Hold a fishing derby at Leith
Run recreation area later this
spring.
reach an agreement on a balanced disputes.
· • Begin work on. a new 10-year
Clinton's budget today restated his
budget.
management plan this summer.
In his budget message, Clinton "Middle Class Bill of Rights"tax cut
But the forest's plans aren •1
signaled that he would continue to proposals he first outlined in Decemalways welcomed.
resist what he considers GOP effortS ~r 1994 after Republicans captured
· About20 members of an Athens
to cut back too sharply on the growth control of both houses of Congress ~nvironmental group staged a sit•
in Medicare, the buge health care pro- ~ for the first time in 40 years.
1ft at the Lafayette Hotel in Sep- •
gram for the elderly, and Medicaid,
The president would cut taxes by
tember that delayed an auction of ·
the federal-state program that pro- !$100 billion over seven years by
oil and gas drilling rights in the for- :
vi des health services to the poor.
:offering, when fully phased in, a $500 est.
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The goal, he said, should be "a tax credit for each child younger than
The auction made $25,000, said
government that is leaner, but not · 13. He also would allow deductions
Danny Thompson: president of.th~ .
meaner."
of up to $10,000 per family for colSoutheastern Ohio Oil I and ·"Gas ,.
Clinton unveiled his spending lege expenses and expand the avail. .
A ssoctallon.
·
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plans as Congress continued slow- ability of Individual Retirement
I.,astyear. ~p, F~~-· ~
moving efforts to complete work on Accounts.
and Sen. Mike DeWine, both R- . •
agency budgets for fiscal 1996. The
His plan does not include the long- Ohio, combined forces to stop ~ ;
budgets for nine , Cabinet depart- cherished Republican goal of cutting
forest from acquiring land in Wash&lt;
ments and scores of other fedenl taxes on capilal gains, profit$ made ington, Monroe and Lawrence
agencies remain mired in partisan from the sale of stocks and other counties.
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assets.

Clinton
budget .p ropo,al offers modest form of tax ·relief
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, ; WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dispute that has twice . shut down lies. children and other vuhierable
dent Clinton today sent Congress a major portions of the government. Americans."
$1.64 trillion election-year budget The current fiscal year is half gone
He challenged Republicans to
th!ll would provide modest tax relief without resolution of spending dis- return to the negotiating table and
IC) the middle class while reaffirming putes for many agencies.
quickly complete wOit toward reachhiS cpmmitment to balancing the budRepublicans have already dis- ing a balanced budget by 2002. The
g41t "the right way."
missed the fiscal 1997 proposal as president is scheduled to meet
': The proposed spending in the lis- doing too little to curh the govern- Wednesday with Senate Majority
ell year that hegins Oct. I i~ 4 per- ment's expensive benefit programs Leader Bob Dole and House Speakcent hither thaD the estimated 1.57 such as Medicare and providing too er Newt Gingrich.
trlllion the government will spend little in tax relief.
"In our negotiations with conthis year.'
Clinton signaled that he planned to gressional leaders, we have made
: The president's proposals, out- use his detalled proposals as a major great progress toward reaching an
liaecl'in six volumes tolaling 2, 196 campaign document, hoping to paint agreement," the president said. "We
· P4JC1, provide the first program·l:ly· the Republicans as too ·extteme in have simply come too far to let this
prop.m look at a budget plan he has their proposed government cutbat;ks. opportunity slip away."
In his budget message, Clinton
bcien .pusbins since Janutiry.
·
Dole, Clinton's Republican rival
: The formal submission of the called on Congn~ss to "balance the for the presidency, said on the cambqd~t is aix weeks late this year due budget the rillht way" by cuttinll paign Sllimp Monday in Dlinois ihat
IC) the protncted deadlock with the
unneceswy prosrams while protect: he· and Clinton should do what is
Riopublican-cclntrolled Congress, a . iDB "senior citizens, working funi- right for the American people and
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Memorial HOepital, tfte tapfc of a public hear~
lng Monday sponsored by tha Meigs County
Commlaalonere.

.Primary vote
brisk at local
polling places

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:Commissioners commit land
for VMH medical arts building
: Sentlriel Hilwa Staff

Randall Wallace took the original
In long-form television awards,
screenplay award for his script of the novelist Michael Crichton won for
13th-century Scottish baule epic writing NBC's "ER" pilot and Chris
"Bravehcart." The lilm was nained Gerolmo won for the HBO movie
best edited film of 1995 on Saturday ''Citizen · X." In TV series awards,
night by the American Cinema Edi- Lance Gentile won for "ER" and Joe
Keenan won for the NBC 'sitcom
tors.
Both Thompson and Wallace are ''Frasier"
nominated for screenwriting Oscars,
Other television winnen; included
handed out March 25. Thompson is the writing teljl11s ofHBO's "Dennis
the first actress to be nominated for Miller Li•e"; "General Hospital" on
writing and starring in the sal'ne ABC; "The Human Quest," PBS;
film; Woody Allen pulled off the dou- "CBS School break Special"; "48
ble feat as an actor-writer in "Annie Hours," CBS, and "The American
Hall."
Experience," PBS.

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.c:ndnuedfnmpage

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"good" were:

Ross Savage, David Reynolds,
Melanie Blevins, Bill Ashburn,
Renee Stewart, Mike Ramsburg,
Clinton Hom, Francesca Roush,' Levi
Bums, Brian Harold, Tasha Johnson,
Brandy Laudermilt, Billy Jernagan,
Nathan Eskew, Andy Doczi, Stephen
Hysell, Tommy Roush. Art Tobin,
Missy Cremeans, Jimmy Yeauger,
Tiffany Richmond, Kimberly Pierce,
Mikka Jude, Jessica Monroe, Ian
Hindy.
· Brandy Collerill, Sherry Jacks, Joe
Davis, Lisa Bias, Sean Fahner, Jennifer Shain, Paul Williams, Crystal
Leach, Levi Searles, Scott Johnson,
Mall Milhoan, Denise Cotterill, C. D.
Ellis, Natasha Spencer, Johnathan
De Iavaiie, Sue McGee, Josh Hooten,
Chuck Murray, Jeromy' McNeilan,
Jillian Wilt, Justin Roush, Marissa
Whaley, Cory Stewart, Hollie Welch.
Adam Walker, Michele Kennedy,

35canta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 19,1996

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Special recogmuon awards for
students receiving superior ratings
were provided by Meigs Local
Teachers/ Association. American
Electric Power Meigs Litter Control.,
Meigs Local OAPSE, Veterans
Memorial Hpspilal, Southern Ohio
Coal Company, King's Servistar
Hardware, Vaughan's Cardinal Market, McDonald's of Pomeroy, Dr.
James Schmoll, and the Meigs Junior
High Science Club.
Students receiving ratings of
"excellent" on their projects were:
Raina Benneu, Tiffany Harder,
Jll!lon Quivey, Shawn White, Scott ·
Colwell, Brandon Collins, Andrea
Neutzling, Whitney Thomas, Becky
Karr. April Blankenship, Erik
Metheney, Jake Birchfield, Brandy
Stevens, Misty Musser, Kim Peavley,
Amber Huddleston, Marcus Bratton,
.Bridget Johnson. Laura Payne, Kristy
Six, Amher Giordano, Chris Gil~ey,
Bethany Boyles, Daniel Young, Ashley Vaughan.
Adrianne Tilley, Orion Barrell,
Adam Grim, Beverly Burdette, Adam
Thomas, Brant Dixon, Billie Dye,
Stacey B_rewer, Zach Meadows, Amy
Hysell, Michele King, Michele Fon,
Nicholas
Jennifer Shrimplin,
Michael, Stephanie Kopec, Melissa
Davis, Anna Story, Brooke Williams,
Jeremiah Smith, Joshua Sorden, Ryan
Pratt, Steve Beha, Les Hale, Tara
Gray, and Ryan Well.
Students receiving ratings of

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Clinton may root tor.

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Jones, ~han Avis, Grant Abbott, Julie Ann Spaun, Morgan
Matthawe, Joaeph McCall, James Stanley, ·ft4arjorle Halar, Kyle
Smlddle, Sara lhle, and Josh Borden •

-Society scrapbook-

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Rain tonight, switching
to enow. Low In 30a.
Wednesday, cloudy, mora
snow. High In mld·30a.
Windy •

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and Sensibility,' ~araveheart' earn writing awards

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SPQ118, Page 4

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about your cocker spaniel's litter, and
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: When we _if you have a photo of your daughter
moved to Canada from the States 10 iri her ballet costume, send it along
years ago, we knew it would be dif- with a copy of the letter from your
ficult to keep up with all our friends, alderman thanking you for helping
but we ,were certain we'd hear from him gel re-elected.
I apologize for discouraging folks
~veryone at Christmas. Those wonderful newsletters and pictures of from sending those newsy chronicles
their kids were a great way to stay in loaded with Iiersonal detalls. Please
reactivate the tradition. Obviously,
touch.
Now, thanks to your column about I'm out of the loop.
what a bore annual newsletters are,
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
we didn't -receive even one this past married for 12 years to "Rosetta."
season. The year before, we received We get along OK. Before we mel, she
was literally left at the altar when
10.
Obviously; our friends read your "Tom" decided at the last minute that
column and take it seriously. They he didn 'I want to marry her.
didn't want to come off as bores or
Rosetta and I have only one major
braggarts, so they didn't tell us how prdblem. It's a red heart-shaped box ~sense
their daughter's graduation went, if on our bedroom closet s.helf that conBEVERLY Hll..LS, Calif. (AP)they ha.d fun on their trip to the Ori- tains Tom's love letters and a photo
ent or anything personal. With all the album of their two-year romance, Actress Emma Thompson won the
employment problems these days, plus newspaper articles about Tom, top award from the Writers Guild of
we 'd like to be assured that our some rather recent, mailed to Roset- America on Sunday for her adaptation of the Jane Austen romance novta by old friends.
friends are still working.
el
"Sense and Sensibility."
A signature on a holid)ly greeting
I understand I was not her first
The award for Thompson's first·
card doesn't tell us much, although choice, but I don ' tlike to he remindwe did get some lovely cards from ed of it whenever I go into the clos- screenwriling effort made her the
our insurance agent, our dentist, our et. I have discussed my feelin~ open- favorite to repeat at the Academy
financial consultant and a number of ly, and Rosetta thinks I am 'overly Awards.
Thompson, who also co-stars in
business associates. We really miss sensitive. She also believes thar most ·
the
film, won the screenwriter union's
those ~eat newsletters from our married women have a special love
in their past that they will never for- 48th annual prize for the best screenfriends.
Thanks, Ann, for making last get and that the letters are nothing play -based on previously published
material.
Christmas a little less cheery and a lot more than harmless reminders.
more remote. You really did a numAnn, is Rosetta .right? If you say
ber dn St. Nick .. -- Bah, Humbu~! in so, I' II accept your word. I am -Uncertain But Hurt .in Chicago
Edmonton
. Dear Ed.: Here it is March, and
Dear Uncertain But Hurt: Rosetta
I'm still getting blistering letters for may be right about some women havGARDEN CLUB
putting the kibosh on Christmas ing a soft spot in their he~ for a past
HOSTESSES
newsletters. Yours was one of sever- love, but that doesn'tjustify keeping
Hostesses for the' recent meeting
at. So -- let it be known to one and the old letters on the closet shelf of the Meigs County Garden Clubs
611 that I take it back. Start now to where the husband can see them Association were Evelyn Hollon,
&amp;ather facts for your 1996 Chrisbllas every day of his life. Surely she can Peggy Moore, Juanita Will and Janet
find another place for them. I strong- Theiss of Wildwood Garden Club,
newsletter.
: Don 'I leave out anything. People ly recommend it.
· and Maurita Miller of Chester Garden
O:atly do want detalls of your face lift
Club.
Send questiolu lo'Ann Landen,
~ tummy tuck, your daughter-inSuzy Carpenter had a display at
Creaton Syadkate, 5777 W. Cen- the meeting, not Bernice Carpenter as
lew'~!, tubal ligatipn and-. your husliand's hair transplant. Tell them tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles, · was reported earlier. The program
chairman was Pauline Atkins.
Calif. 9004.5
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Pick 3:
945
Pick 4:
5144
Buckeye 5:
11-14-18-24-36

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Division 13
All-Star cage
results

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�TUIIday, March 19, 1996

Gommentary
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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l'Und8y, Mlrch 1t, 11Miia
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· State finds most Ohioans

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T.stllbfi.shd in1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-H2·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

!1,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publleher
CHAR~E

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

HOEFLICH

In dispute: Millions of
Ohio taxpayer dollars

By .JOHN CHALFANT

.
A11oellted Pren Writer
COLUMBUS - What a contrast on Capitol Square the other day. As
Gov. George Voinovich sang praises of giving taxpayer money ·to job-creating businesses, Sen. Charles Hom sounded an alarm over the practice.
In dispute: millions of dollars in government subsidies to cotpOrations
that agree to do business in Ohio and hire extra worlcers.
Voinovich called a news conference to hail Chase Manhattan Corp.'s
decision to keep its mortgage operation in Columbus.
The company's $35 million project will see it move from office space it
now leases into a new building, retain I ,000 jobs and create more than 600
jobs.'
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"Our state was competing head to head with other .states for the project
and we're gratified that Chase's mortgage Qperalions are going to stay here
in central Ohio,"· Voinovich said.
·
The state offered Chase an incentives package that included a job creation
tax credit worth $2:4 million over 10 years; up to $500,000 for infrastructure improvements; and up to $250,000 for employee training.
Voinovich said the 3-year-old job crealion tax credit program had preserved 60,000 jobs and created 41,000 through 380 projects. Total cO!pOrate
investment was pegged at $4.6 billion, while the potential tax cost was estimated at $160 million.
N. Voinovich met with reporters, Hom, R-Dayton, began a series of Senate Economic Development Committee hearings into the state's overall
development policy a'nd funding priorities.
Hom is no fan of the subsidies.
"All of these so-called incentive subsidized programs are escalating in an
alarming manner," Hom said in an interview.
"The question that arises is with all these tens of billions, maybe hun·
dreds of billions, that we're putting into these state incentive wars, maybe
we ought to be investing in education and research to some greater degree,"
Hom said.
·
Interestingly, the financial' package was not an overriding factor in. the
deal with Chase, which is merging with the Chemical Banking Corp. to ereali: the nation's largest ·bank, with assets of more than $300 billion.
:Chemical Banking President Edward Miller listed the quality of the
rcJion's worlc force 1111d physical planHechnology ahead of the incentives,
alc!tough he said they·we~ important.
·
! Miller declined to compare Ohio's offer with those from other states.
: "I think all of the states are really looking to Icy to provide naturally the
kind of incentives to keep jobs and to encourage jobs ... and I think the bottOO! line, without getting into specifics, is some do it better than others.
()Jlviously Ohio has done it a litde better than others," he said. ·
:Hom was not surprised at the emphasis on work force quality and infrast[Ucture.
,
• "There's considerable evidence to indicate that the cotpOrate interests
~ their decision based on legitimate locatii&gt;nal issues and then work the
g~vemment officials for the money coming out of the taxpayer," Hom said.
.• "We're pretty much suckers nationally for that kind of manipulation."

•

~e.rry•s World .
OH, 'fe.H ~ WELL
MY PC IS· FASTE~
THAA YOUR ~c.

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Now that he has the Republican in South Carolina and
Conservative,"
believes
presidential nomination virtually Georgia, the Christian
Dole will lose to Clinton,
locked up, Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., conservativeS
and plans to run again for
plans to unite his fractured party by believe that moral issue$
president in 2000.
attacking its common enemy, Presi- are more important than
Of course, Pat Buchanan is
dent Clinton, but be also ought to economic ones.
no Ronald Reagan who,
place conciliatory phone calls to his
TV network exit
after all, had served two sueshowed
that
cessfulterms as governor of
holdout opponent,s, Pat Buchanan polls
and Steve Forbes.
Buchanan carried the
California. Buchanan actual·
Dole will revive the all-but-for- "religious right" by narly fits the model of Jesse
gotten "Contract With America" . row margins in SQUth
Jackson, a "talker" not a
and Joio House Speaker Newt Gin- Carolina and in "Junior B y - K-Ite "doer," who nevertheless
grich. R-Ga., in pushing through a Tuesday " states, but "religious created fits for Democratic nomilegislative agenda designed to right" Is regarded as a derogatory nees Walter Mondale and Michael
embarrass President Clinton, but term by the Christian Coalition, Dukakis after losing in the 1984 and
aides say he won't begin reaching whose own polls showed that among 1988 primaries.
out to Buchanan and Forbes until "born-again evangelicals," Dole
Buchanan is likely to make Jackafter the Super Tuesday primaries.
won in both South Carolina and son-like demands for prime•time
!Jlat"s a mistake. Dole can't Georgia.
appearances at the San Diego conexpect that they will quit the race,
Even so, Buchanan envisions vention and to threaten a walkout if
but making a geslure now could himself as Ronald Reagan, who lost platform planks on immigration and
begin to take the venom out of rei a- the 1976 nomination to Gerald- Ford trade are not to his liking and if Dole
lions. between GOP blocs -- Dole's but remained the leader of the con· tries to nominate Gen. Colin Powell
party regulars, Buchanan's anti- servative movement and went on to for vice president.
establishment "peasants," and win the presidency in 1980.
Can Dole resist such demands?
Forbes' free-market purists.
Reagan battled Ford all the way Yes, if he makes a show of trying to
High-ranking Dole campaign to the '76 convention, coolly · reach out to Buchanan while at the
aides say that Dole has already endorsed him afterward, and did lit- same time clobbering him in
begun softening his rhetoric toward de to support Ford's losing cam· remaining primaries.
. B~cha~an, no longer referring to..the paign. That's the model Buc:hanan
· Dole's _main strategy for uniting
pnmanes as a fight for the "soul of can be expected to follow thcs year tbe party cs to begcn the November
the GOP, but Dole apparently wants unless Dole can woo him out of it.
general 'election campaign right now
to delay a full reaching-out process
There's little doubt that by &lt;~!tacking President Clinton for
until his relationship with Buchanan Buchanan thinks of himself as "Mr. his vetoes of Republican attempts to
is unmistakably that of victor and
vanquished ..
Anyway, Dole aides say they
doubt whether a phone call to
Buchanan would accomplish anything. "Pat's in too much pain right
now," one Dole aide said. Indeed,
Buchanan is still defiant and abusive
toward Dole, dismissing his decisive
victories as the consequence of negative ads, "push" polls, and a Washington establishment conspiracy.
He's leaving it open whether he'll
support Dole in the fall.
The truth, thankfully. is that
Buchananism represents only 25
percent to 30 percent of the Republican primary electorate and an even
lower percentage of voters nationwide.
Instead of maximizing his support by becoming more statesmanlike after his victory in New Hampshire, Buchanan became incendiary.
His "conservatism of the heart"
transformed into ·a conservatism of
the bile duct -- accentuated with
demeaning references to Latinos,
riHes held aloft at. the Mexican border, and appeals to Old South
racism.
Buchanan's act turned off even
those he depended upon for victories

Mary

balance the' budget, iower taxes;
reform welfare and entitlements.
"Clinton wan~ to accuse us gf
being the 'do-nothing Congress, •·
one Dole aide said, "bur we:
going to run agaif!SI a 'do-nothirlg
president."'
;
The campaign will pick up~
House Majority Leader Di
Armey's, R-Texas, charge that mi ·
die-class job insecurity is the pr ·
uct of a "Clinton crunch" caused!?'
J993tax increases and that Clinton.s ·
proposals for fixing the problem--~
minimum wage increase, ta..-w~­
tions for college tuition ~nd job·
iraining vouchers -- ano evidence cif
"big govemmentliberalism."
:
Dole intends to run on the I~
GOP legislative agenda and the
"mandate of 1994" and to join witjl
Gingrich in challenging ·'clinton Ill
sign or veto new Medicare, Me&lt;!it:·
aid, and welfare reforms, and· tax
and spending cuts.
. •
Dole's job as Senate Majority
Leader offers him the perfect platfOJll!

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• IColumbusl32" I

W. VA.

====GnlpiDNel~.........--with a

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Meigs land transfers posted
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Women don't need money? Get real ·

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By Sara Eckel

nated by men over jobs dominated by women 1
.
It's been called "the looniest idea since 'Looney Tunes,"' a quasi-com·
J'he an.swer, of course, is that the laws of supply and demand are not the'.
munist concept that has no basis in reality. It is the comparable-worth Jaw, a only determiners of wages in this country. Societal attitudes and customs alsq .
measure based on the radical notion that people who perform jobs that are play their part. And for centuries it was society's opinion that women did no' .~
comparable in skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions should need to be paid as much as men, because only men supported families.
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receive comparable pay.
Once this fallacy was recognized as such, the nation adopted "equal pa~
It isJllso the premise of the Fair Pay Act, which Sen. Tom Harkin, D- for equal work laws," which forbid the practice of paying men and wome~ ';
lowa, will bring to the Senate Hoor later this month. Harkin's bill, which different wages for the same job,..These laws were good as far as they weni, ''
aims to "raise the wages of jobs that are undervalued at least partly because but they did nothing to rectify the abysmally low salaries found in positions
of the sex or race of the workers," stands little chance in today's cutthroat that traditionally have been held by women -- salaries based on the "women '~
political climate. Despite the fact that 23 states have enacted successful don't really need the money" principle.
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comparable-worth laws, this worthy idea will· likely sink like a stone in
Take.the librarian profession. Up until about 1850 this was man's work, ancU
Washington.
,
it paid well. The middle of the century saw an increasing number of educated ~
The argument against comparable worth is that the market .. and only the women, and libraries hired .tpem at one-half to one-third the men's·pay. B)!..,.
market -- determines wages. That it's nothing personal. That, yes, school· 1910, nearly 80 pen;ent o'f. the nation's library workers were female.The librar-,,
teachers SHOULD make more than baseball players. That, sure, it sucks that ian had secured her position as one of America's lowest-paid professionals.
illiterate television stars get millions for book contracts while award-winThere's no doubt that women ~fere brought into the library to save money;
ning poeiS starve. But that's life. Deal with it, or move to Cuba.
-- that was the point. But the reason women were allowed to become Iibmr-'·•'
It's true that there can never be a completely just system of paying citizens ians '- as opposed to, say, carpenters or mail carriers -- had less to do with ;J
for their various contributions to society -- one that would make paupers out the market than it did with prevailing attitudes toward femininity. Librarians, t:!
of Kato Kaelin and Tom Arnold. Nevertheless, we can do some fine-tuning. like schoolteachers, were considered to be performing duties that were nat: Consider what has been accomplished at the state level. Hawaiian courts ural extensions of the Victorian women's role of gliardian of tbe young and· :
deemed the job of licensed practical nurse to be on a par with that of the cor- gatekeeper to the culture. If women HAD to work. this was work the Victorections officer. In Wisconsin, it was determined that librarians and natural - rians could deal with.
·.
resource specialisiS had comparable jobs. And in Minnesota, cleric typists
Of course, we're now on the cusp of the 21st century, and women are free ,;:
had their salaries brought up to speed with delivery-van drivers.
to pursue jobs as auto mechanics or investment bankers if they so choose.
If nothing more than unbiased market forces created the original discrep- But that does not mean that the women -- and for that matter, the men -- who r!.
ancies in the .above jobs, then we would have some really staggering coinci- do what has traditio11ally been cClnsidered women's worlc should not have \: ~
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dences. If the market is so blind, why does it consistendy favor jobs domi· their salaries corrected.
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f!leques

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Cll'l'iet

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o("C:Wman

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put to comm·lss·.on

·• The Daily Sentin'el

1

every aftemooa, Monday dlrou&amp;h
Fridly, 111 Coun St. Pomeroy, Ollie, bJ ·the
Oblo Volloy Publilbl.. ~10- Co..
I'Oaleloy, Ollio 45769, l'b. m :zc56. paid II Pomeroy, Ollio.
~bUabed

cJaa-

MloOber. Tho llilodlled Pins, and lho Ohio
Now~poperlluociiOion.

pqe'I'MA81"£R: Send 8dcira1 C(Kl'ectiOIU 10
1be Dally Seotinol, Ill c .... St, Pomeroy,
Olllo 45769.

.

:,=~~=Ono WoeL ...............................................S2.00
Ono Moodl ........................................ ........ $8.70
Doe Year .................... , ........................ SIOl.OO

SINGLIC COPY PIIICI

Doily . ................................................ 3~ Cents

Subialtlai ftOI delii'IDIIO pay lbe ~ rnA)'
iomlt lo ...._, otiiOCt ID The Doily Scodoel
on.:-. oil or 12 motttllllooi• Q.,c;t will be

...... .---.

No 11blcripdon by mall pormiaed ia oreu

---IICIYI&lt;eloovalltl&gt;lo.
MAILS~

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:16 - . . ................,..............,_ ......$.U.I2

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t3 w.m.... . :.....................................m .zs I

:16·- ..............................................m61 'I

n 'AIIII!I..............'.................................s••.n
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Firefighters to meet

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Mere hant s unveII

(Continued from Peg. 1)
lowed.
•
Am Ele ~ .......................C1'1.
•
Agreed
to
purchase a new Grave- ·
Akzo .....................~ ................ sc~
ly
mower
for
the street department
Alhltmd ·011 .........;............~ ....38'1.
for
$3,200.
·
ATAT .....................................82'.4
Bank Orte ....................;..••••••• 35\
Clerk Kathy Hysell presented the
Bob E~s ............................ 111'1.
following balances for February :
Borg-Warner .•.....••...........•....~~
general,
$75,713.118;
safety,
Chemplon Jnd ....................... 17'4
$3,217
.64;
street,
S
11,346.08;
state
Charming Shop ......................4'1.
highwl\)',
$12,863
.29;
·
fire,
City Holdlng..........................23\:
'
$16,852.52;
cemetery,
$14,984.35;
F.a.r.l Mogul .........................18
water,
(-$ 16,086.82);
sewer,
Gelti'Mrtt ..................................68~
GooclyNr T&amp;R .........~ ............52'1.
$45,692 .18;
guaranty
meter,
K-mert .....................................9'$18,658.87; utility, $12,632.13; fire
Unda End ............................. 1~
truck, no balance; perpetual care,
UmltW lrtc............................ 11~
$7,245.64;
cemetery endowment,
~~· •..•• ,•..•••••••••23
$38,118.57;
police pension, $48.40;
Ohio Valley BM ....................40
One Val-., .............................32~
building fund, $1,650.50; recreation,
$4,887.89; pennis!live tax. $2,930.23;
Rockwell -~···········-··· ............58\
Robf!J"* a Mvwa.-...............m law enforcement, $3,078.66; COPS
Royal Dutchllhell ..............140'/.
FAST grant, $2,788.62; downtown
~·alnc ........................~..a'J.
revitalization,
$88,000; total ,
Slllr 181'111 t................................
13
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$344.682.63.
WendY lnt 1.,............,..............11l.
Wortfllngtort
lrtd
..................
..20\
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Present
were
Vauatwa,
Hy~ell,
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council inembers Musser, Geri Y(al·
Stock reporta •re lhe 10:30
lOR, Scott Dillon, Willilm Young,
a.m. q[lotM provided'by Adftlt
WehrunJ 8nd Wright, Tenaglia lnd
of Galllpolla.
Villa~ Administr,ator John Ander,
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!12 .....,_j.Jr.·~·-··-···..··· .......1...............110SJ6
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Tbe Jellisons, a family gospel
singing and ministry group, will be at
the Middleport Pentecostal Church,
873 S. Third Ave., Saturday, 1 p.m.
and Sunday, at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.
The group has recorded 13 albums of
gospel music in iiS 20 years of ministry, in w)lich it has"held pastoral and
evangelistic positions. The Jellisons
who reside in Portland, Ind., sing as
a trio and use musical liccompaniment of piano, electronic keyboards,
bass and drums. Tbeir singing program will include original songs as
well as olcttime gospel favorites.

gencyMedicaiServicerecordedeight
calls for assistance Monday, mcluding two transfer calls. Units respond- .
open runs and is a ·frequent target of . lng included:
vandals. Dog warden Bill Dye said
POMEROY
between 50 and 90 dogs go through
9:12a.m., The Maples apartments, .
the pound each month.
Louise Bartles, Veterans Memorial
However, Commission President Hospital;
FredHoffmanquestionedthewisdomd
4:20 p.m., Lakewood Road,
of renovating the existing poun
Anthony Perry, VMH;
when long-term plans call for con6 :41 p.'m., Village Green apartstruction of a new animal shelter.
ments, Tina Barnes, Pleasant Valley
Hoffman
suggested
.
waiting
and
H
. 'f
. ad
ospt·1a 1;
1
seem~ I progress ~ m e "'\ con10:54 p.m., Locust Street, Francis
strucllon of a new buildmg before fix- ' Burns VMH
ing the old one. Commissioners
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RACINE
.instructed. Dye to .set firm estimates
12:26 p.m. , State Route 124,
on cnstalbng addctconal runs and a Shana Richardson, VMH.
roof. .
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SYRACUSE
_WIIJU S81d she has obtamed gcfts of ·
1:05 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili~~pclp~~~- matenals from two local tation Center, Dorothy Proffitt, VMH.

Stocks

(USPS li&gt;M)

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~pelaroupcolldllg

p.m., at the Civic Center. Dean Ogen
of the l'ederal· Emergency Management Administration will field ques-'
lions during the meeting. All village
residents are urged to attend.
Barberue set
The Pomeroy Fire Department
will have a chicken and ribs barbecue
Sunday at the fire house with serving
to begin at II a.m.
· ·
Dlaner-daiiCe
There will a dinner at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy, Thursday,
with serving ft-om ~to 6:14p.m. Cost
is $4 for baked steak meal. Dinner to
be followed by Tbe Classics with a
free will offering taken from the
musicians.

_eigs EMS runs

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Meigs announcements

Tbe Meigs County Firefighters
Association will hold its regular
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at the
, Easement, Olive Townsbip Chester Firehouse. All members are Soup supper
Thlstees to OMEGAN5, Olive, .243 · urged to attend.
A soup supper w;ill be held at Fri·
acre;
day
at the Star Grange 718 hl!il with
Qeed, Steven R. and Loura Jaye Rutlud meeting
serving
from 5 to 1 p.m., and a proHupp to Loura Jaye Hupp, Sutton · A special town meeting for Rut- _gram following. Donations will be
land resideniS and village council to
parcels·,
start
the process of finding solutions accepted for the meal which is open
Certificate, Virgil H. Roush,
to the village's frequent Hooding to the public. Regular meeting of
deceased, to Mary Jo Barringer, LarGrange, April 6, with pot)uck supper
ry Roush and Donald Roush, Chester problems will be held Wednesday, 1 at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting,
inspection and conferral of second
parcels; a t e .d o g
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degree.
renov
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Units of the Meigs County Einer-

,A Sc!pio Township resident active
in the •Meias County Humane Soci~\.)1. . addressed
. ·the Meigs County
8Qard ofCommissionen Monday in
a bid to renovate the county dog
pound.
.Alden Waitt, Vance Road, offered
to write grants for funds to renovate
t~ dog pound.
The pound needs three additional
dog runs and en~losed under a roof
to !Jelp protect the animals from the
elements and the pou11,d itself from
vandals. Sbe envisions enelosins the
structure in 40-by-40 foot pole barn.
Curreptly, the pound has four
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....,0.: da.y 1•n h 1•stQ ry

Deed, Warren D. and Esther M.
Black to Rutland Township Thlstees,
Rutland village parcel;
Deed, Clemeni Lee, Joyce and Ida
May Cowdery to Roger and Tia
Holsinger, Olive parcel;
Easement, American Telephone &amp;
Telegraph to OMEGA N5, Chester,
.125 acre;
Easement, Don apd Lorette Miller
to OMflGA N5, Salisbury, 1.260
acres;
Easement, Clara Mae Conroy to
OMEGA JYS, Chester, 3.593 acres;
E&amp;Semeri( L."Rose Kautz: oebo-·
rah R. Speck, Robert L. Kautz Jr.,
·Katherine Kautz, William F. Kautz
and Paula l Kautz to OMEGA N5,
Chester, 3.431 acres;·
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Tbe following land transfers were
posted recently in the office of Meigs
County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
Deed, Patrick L. and Julie A Lawson to Jimmie D. Allman, Columbia;
Deed, Michele D. Showalter to
Timothy E. Showalter, Olive;
Cora
Michael,
Affidavit,
deceased, to Wayne Samuel Michael,
Lebanon parcel;
Affidavit,
A.E.
Erlewine,
deceased,
Eugene
Erlewine,
deceased, to Mary Erlewine, Olive;
~. Patriok L. and Julle·A~Lawson to Stephen G. Grissett, Columbia
"&gt;arcc:l;
Deed, M. Pauline Ridenour to
..hn B. Ridenour, Chester parcel; '
Deed. M. Pauline Ridenour to
.illftes L. .Ridenour, Chester parcels;
-Certificate, Helen F. Smith,
deCeased, to Timothy L. Formyduval,
Pc\meroy tot;
Deed, Dixie Kate Roush 10 Jerry
·
·
ac\11 Charmele Spradling,
Sutton
pakels;
·Comctive deed, Meigs County
B6ard of Commissioners to Pomeroy
:oiiiC'Lodge, Pomet
.

I
1'

.n

sno~

Leah Jane Swatzel, 16, of 110 Vale St., Pomeroy, died Tuesday, March
19, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center, following a lengthy illness.
Born on July 7, 1919 in Meigs County, she was the daughter of the late
William A. Pri~ and Shirley Person Priode.
She worked for 25 years as bookkeeper at Baker Furniture in Middlepon,
and was a member of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
She is survived by her husband of 53 years, Charles E. Swatzel; a son
and daughter-in-law, Michael and Kathy Swatzel.of Little Hocking; a daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Michael Winebrenner of Racine; a brother, Waller Priode Qf New Lexington; four grandchildren, five step-grandchildren,
one great-grandchild and a step great-grandchild; and several nieces and
nephews.
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Carroll; a sister, Dorothy;
and a grandchild.
'
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Ewing Funeral Home. Tbe Rev.
Robert Robinson will officiate and burial will be in tbe Gravel Hill Ceme·
tery, q.eshire. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.

Tonight .. Rain ...Switchin&amp; over to
snow. Snow accumulating one to
three. inches. Windy and turning
colder. Lows from the upper 20s
northwest to around 35 extr~me
south·.
Wednesciay...Cioudy with a
chance of snow northwest. Snow T o d a y ' s l i v e s t o c k . r e p. o r t
likely elsewhere. Windy with highs of
COLUMBUS (AP) -. Indiana-Ohio direct hog prices at selected buying
30 to 35.
pointS Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Exte11ded foreeut:
Barrows and gilts: firm to ~0 cents higher; demand moderate to good for
Thursday... A chance of snow. a moderate run. Heavy snow in the southtm third of the trade area is dis- ·
Lows 20 to 25 and highs in the 30s. rupting moveinent .
Friday...A chance of snow northU.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 46.50-49.00, few 49.50; planiS 48.50-50.00.
east. Dry elsewhere. Lows 25 to 30
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50-46.50.
and highs 35 to 45.
Sows: steady to 1.00 lower.
Satlirday... Dry. Lows 25 to 30 and
highs in the 40s.
·

A late-winter storm is expected to
leave 1-3 inches of snow on Ohio
tonight, the Nalional Weather Service
·said. Heav.iest accutpulations are
likely tri 'be in east-central Ohio.
: The- .snow will continue on
Wednesday, with temperatures
remaining unseasonbly cold, mostly
ia the low 30s.
·
•
Thc1 record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
siation•was 11 degrees in 1903 while
the record low was 8 in 1885. Sunset
tonight will be at6:43 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at6:34 a.m.
Weather forec:ut:

The Supreme Court recently
What about compensat·
robbed? Does the govern- approach t~ crime. Some might striy
upheld a peculiar Michigan deci- ing our poor · besieged
ment really want to get into dently insist that these piopenid ·
sion.
Detroit housewife? Ruth '
the Big Gulp business? were merely misguided, and should.tf
It seems that a woman in Detroit Ginsburg opined that since
Will it seize banks if n't be punished but rehabilitated. .
•
...A~
had reported her husband missing; it the Pontiac's net was 600
they're the scene of a The hou5e used in the executiC)p of~ •:
.
0 11M by NE"' InC.
turned out he'd been arrested. He'd bucks, it wasn't worth givheist? If my '89 Ford crime could become a youth hostel~ t
MODERN
MACHISMO
consorted
with
a
prostitute
in
a
1977
ing
her
half
I
don't
know
Escort
gets stolen (unlike- the car an ambulance, ·the boat ~~
.
Pontiac, for which misdemeanor he what world she lives in, but
ly, I know), couldn't the public transit ferry.
'
was fined 250 bucks, and sentenced 300 bucks is ~till a chunk
police ~eize the car,
Some might demand that these::
1,~
_
to commumty setVICe.
· of dough en mcne.
~ause ct was both the pieces of property be pupished for:' ,
In additiOn, !he court seized the
Also, the CC)Urt noted
thing stolen and scene of their sins. Put the house behind bars'1 •
BW"' .;.aoclltld p,.U
· · .
Pontiac and sold it, under a Mlchi- that the Pontiac was a secthe theft?
.
for life. Put the boat to sleep. Smas~ ',
Today is Tuesday; March 19, the 79th day of 1996. There are 287 days gan statute allowing property to be opd car. Mom must have
When I was a tad en col- the car into a tiny cube of steel.
'
left In the year. This is the date the swallows traditionally return 10 the San seized _if involved in the commission been _living high on the hog if she lege, my · 1e~t-l~ning peers woul_d
Others, myself among them,
Juan; Capistrano Mission in California.
of a cnm~.
. had stx hundred bucks to blow on a sometimes mscst tha.t pro.perty cs might feel tiny pangs. of pity ,for.;
'Jbday~s Highlight in History:
·
.
The wtfe, co-owner of the vehi- J~nker. Surely we. must all envy ber theft Here, 10 the mcllenmum, the those pitiful excuses for transporta:' .
'In 1920, the U.$. Senate rejected- for the second time .the Treaty of Ver- ; cle, protested.
't done any- lifestyle. Her lovtng ~usj!and must Supreme &lt;:;ourt has taken that com- tion in which we are forced to~ ,
ull..,..,·by a. vote o~ 49 in favor, 3S asainst, falling short of tiie two-thirds thing exce marry a jerlc. Wasn't have had the use. of the first car mumst notion .one step _further: Not enclose ourselves in JM!m!i( of our ~
~ · 'dOd~ •nnrnvaJ
that
tslimenl enough? Th
. .e ~ough (~o drive .him?self to commu· .onl_y cs property theft, 11 s also .gullty . pathetic wijje.s.. !' believe 1 speak on·l !
,or -rr·,~ . · .
,.
. , \ .. :
. ..
IC gan " Supreme Court satd, ntty ~~~e perhaps )• .bec~Uf:C ~er of n. ,
.
.
.
behalf qf previously ownecj vehicles·.z ~
,
Freni:b
cJ!plorer
Robcrl
CaW:Iier,
Sietir
de
La
Salle_
tlJe
fint
"~o."
and
her
lawyer
took
the
case
the
setzure,
our
multcply-vcctcnuzed
They
re
all
guilty
-not
JU&amp;I
the
everywhere,
when 1 say: Jet them go.·'" ,
1111687
" ~ io navipte the length· of the Miuissippi·River _ was murdeted to ~ \]nited States s~me Court; M~m had to walk her four.chtldren a y h~ and sports cars owned by As we ·used to say in the '60S,if they; : :
.•
by_._. in present-day Texas. , . , ; ,'
. .
which &amp;ftinlled the se1zure, S-to-4.
mile to ~h~l.
. .
c nv1cted coke dealers, llu~ all prop- love you, they'll come back to you. 1·
1
85 JUSUce serve~? A JO
, ;i' I. IBS9., the OJlCI'II ''Faust" by.Qiarles Oounod premierod in &lt;Paris.'
.
William Rehnquist cited a 1974
was
rty e~erywh~re. · My, 89 F~rd If they don't, well, !hey )l'.~re never, ~ 1
tn 1911:thi! U.S.,SuJJri!me Courtuphold,the 'eight-l)our workd&amp;!y for tail: declsio~: "The innoc:ence of ~ punt~hed.' and~ ~IJtute pre
Escort IS as guilty as~ 11 Ponuac. yoltrs to besin wjth. 'IbC S,upreme ... I
i.J .I'QIIIII.
, .,
.,
..
. owner of property SllbJect 10 forfci- from pjymg ~r ~ for a day, or~~ The ranch-sty~e home IR ~e su~s Court, hippies to die' cbtt, iceCm 10 . l
, ltr 1931, Niivac!a Jepli~ giiRblill&amp;, .
, ·, ,
ture has almost uniformly been least from ~lyms 1110 ~ 1977. Ponti- whe.re a B~avcs emulator ts blowmg • asree.
·I
·
,
It! l945 iboul.800 J*lllle' wae killal.U .karilikmLplaa.es AIIIIC~ \be rejecled as a defepse. '\ So if a guy ac. A mess~~was sent to wrongdo- poudtm the
roo~ '!"!..:gdawlty..~_the . : (.To receive a compli~'-'Y· Iu; ·;~
U.S.
J;wikliJJ ol JRA; til, dlipl'~~ wu ·Qv~· -- .: . ...
bonows my·car, then rolls down the • e.rs.evr,.ryw...n.
. •
ga y mansion. IR roun . w......_. a Shoiles newsletter,'calld-..00:11811· .o I
'In \l94.5, ~ KltJW,;Jtlued lib ao,cllled "ero l)l:(:ree, Ordcritl 'the window lnd buys a bake! of cnck
I wonder thou11h. I don t, kno~ ~anel wan~~ c.s ~eng_ cocmw'h»•"cta IOK'*''\I t, 408 ,., I
~ ~
fi!i:llii!Ca thai could fall into Allied hands. '• ' ,.
from an undercover cop, I'll never much about law, but. d,ocsn ' · thia m the multnnedl~ center.
.
BfO!Id St., Nevada City, CA 9~9511,)' ~; i
In 1916, _.,.,... ~ lllilol!nl:ed lhe.....,UOO of-PritPII Mar. see .my 91J'·aglin? Well, OK, that's , 2~eanhout1Je govem~nl could ~~~~,a • -~ doe?Thas
thisdepemeandsfor us as
len lha t I Ia • •11'111 kd wrttar-';..:.
preund!J!I'Jvl'bind,dtdladofS~.afterl6yearsoftlwJ:iiae. ' ' fair,lgueu.
.,
..- r cot)ventence store I Its .......encans
t
n on your farNawlpeperEnlerpol•llwoclalku~
.
. .
~ .
.
I

t?i··

f r e s h . l a y e r .o f

~Y 111e Auoclatecl Prell

GOP Sl.UGFEST....

A peculiar Sup.reme Court

•

$pring's first day to open

campaign funds, but' the Senate ,floor
affords him. a chance_to ~ ,ne'l',~
every day by eonfrontmg CUhton. ·
(Morton Konclnccke 18 •xeJ:utl~
··

Goodwin

Leah Jane Swatzel

tomal(ethatcase. ~r~11.hci:s:~df

the.....,.,..,_,

C.

Mary Catherine Goodwin, 78, New Haven, W.Va., died Monday, March
18, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Aug. 12, 1917 in'Gralutrn Station, W.Va., daughter of the late Jesse
and Cora Ihle Jewell, she was a homemaker.
A member of the Bachtel United Methodist Church, she was a. former
member of the Order of the Eastern Star, Pomeroy.
She was also preceded in death by two brothers, Charles W Jewell and
Arthur W. Jewell.
·
Surviving are a brother, Edwin E. Jewell of New Haven; and four nieces
and nephews.
Services will be . I p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va.. with the Rev. Joanne Home officiating. Burial will be in the
Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 tonight

""·

it

C".::,:":t.~ll Cal~

..
---

Commissioners
(Continued from P•ge 1)
down by acclamation.
"Jfyou'regoingtoput$1:5million
on a piece of property, you would like
to own it," Adkins commented.
Others pointed out that the commitment to secure the future of the
hospital would have to come from the
community.
"Commitment means you people
using our facility," said VMH Nursing Director Rhonda Dailey.
In addition, county Economic
Development
Director
Julia
Houdashelt addressed the hospital's
connibution to the county's economy.
The hospital is the second largest
employer in the county. not counting
public employers such as schools or
the county itself, she said.
The hospital payroll of $2.7 mil·
lion plays an important role in the
local economy and provides $27,000
in income tax to the village of
Pomeroy, she added.
Business and industries are
unwilling to relocate in counties
without health care services, she
said.

TOLEDO (AP) - The state
Health Department would like to
· make sure most Ohioans die of natural causes. But a report by the
department said most residents of the
state die as a result of a debilitating
illness or an accident.
Heart disease, cancer, stroke, eccidents and lung disease caused more
than 80 percent of •deaths In Ohio
between 1990 and 1994, the depart·
ment said.
The statistics are included in a
draft .o f the department's 1996 state
health resources plan.
The plan describes the main health
problems in the state and establishes
policy priorities.
Other kilh:rs include diabetes,
homicide and HIV infection.
The report did not explain why so
many people are dying of disease and
acCidents. Instead, it tried to give a
snapshot of the health of Ohioans,
said state Health Director Peter
Somani.
. The department previously
focused on regulating the number of
hospitals, nursing homes and other

..
health-related sites in various com-'

TRIVIA

..

Mar7 Mu11D'1 first live TV pclfor·
IIWICe

of Pttor Ptu1 lired March 7.

I'ISS. A IICCCiid live broedcut lired
'tbc fotiOwiaa IIIIUIIIY.

,

County court cases ended
The following cases were resolved ·speed, $30 plus costs; Billie J. Cun-:'
Wednesday in tbe Meigs County ningham, Pomeroy, seat. belt, S2f '
Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
plus costs; Misty D. Lane, MiddleFined were: Toby J. Curtis, Long pen, fictitious plates, $20 plus costs;' '
Bottom, speed, $30 plus costs; Rodney L. Rickert, Minster, seat
Christopher L. ·Bursten, German- belt, $25 plus costs; Christopher '
town, speed, $30 plus costs; Margaret Sean Clay, Parkersburg, spr#, $30
A. Ivaniel, Zanesville, speed, $30 plus costs; Ricky L. Sampson; ·
plus costs; Dean A. Blake, Picker- Coolville, seat belt, $25 plus cosis;- ·
ington, speed, $30 J!lus .costs; James Molly A Greig, Marietta, seat belt,
'
P. Conde, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 $15 plus costs;
Gregory D. Ramey, Shade, speed,' ·
plus costs; Beverly Ann Tiedmann,
Pomeroy, seat belt, SIS plus cost; Jay $30 plus costs; Anthony D. Gaither,
K. Evans, Thurman, overload, Patriot. left of center, $20 plus costs;' •
$321.50 plus costs; ·Paula Clark, Linda Marie Gaines, Van Nuys; :
Middleport, passing bad checks, $25 · Calif., seat belt, S 15 plus costs; John
plus costs, restitution; ,Tanya S. Bun, · G. Bolf, Vinton, seat belt, $15 plus· :
Middlepon, littering, $100 plus costs, costs; Ronald B. Denny, Pomeroy,' •
three days jail and $50 suspended disobeyed traffic signal, $20 plus• .
upon cleanup of litter, six months costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Richard D. Rice Jr., Ironton, speed, ·probation;
Nancy G. Phalen, New Haven, $30 plus costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Stephen
W.Va.. assured clear distance, $30
plus costs; Warren Calaway, Hood, Middleport, failure to control,
Reedsville,. telephone harassment, $80; Jeffrey Spotts, Valley View, Pa.,.:•
costs, two years probation, five days speed, $100; seat belt, $55; James
jail suspended; Teressa R. Sinnett, Gill Jr., Valley Fork, W.Va., fictiiious ·~
Parkersburg, W.Va., driving under registi-alion, $30; Linda S. Wells,. ·
suspension, $100 suspended to $50 St~~~J~ ~speed~:· $50; Matthew G. ,
plus cosiS, three days jail suspended; ~
$50.
speed, $23 plus costs; Jeffrey P.
Coley, Albany, fictitious plates, $10
plus costs; Alina L. Colwell,
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Stanford D. Cox, Gallipolis, overload. $596.50 plus costs;
D.
Nileswanger,
Jeffery
McConnelsville, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Charles A Ritchie, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Michael W.
Nileswanger, Stockport, speed, $30
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Eric J. Hankla, Rudand, seat belt, $25
plus costs;· Shannon L. Scott, Mid·
dleport, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Shane A. Stover, Gallipolis, speed,
$30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; James M. Harmon, Portland,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Randy G.
Kick, Hurricane, W.Va., speed, $30
plus costs;
Andrea D. Dillard. Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs; Debra J.
Shuler, Langsville, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Joseph A. Wolfe, Racine,

1

Hospital news
Vetenms Memorial
Monday admissions - Dorothy
Proffitt, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges- Marie Norris , Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Ce111er
Dischll11:es March 18 - i{atie
Curfman, Brenda Short, Virginia Pot·
linger, Frederick Pullins, Robert Rimmey.
(Publi.shed with pennission)

POMEROY

Near POR*'OY·.._ Bridge
992·2588
VINTON
County Dlaptav Yard

Gall 8

155MIIIn8l

388 8603

.oo,·you have an ·IRA?
a Keogh? or a ·sEP?
You can trult Hltl Block.

618 EAST MAIN ST.,
OPEN MON;·FRI. 9-6; SAT. 9-5

son.

-J

munities.
·
But t1)e health cano industry iS:
changing so rapidly that' the old:
method no longer makes seii$C.
.
Nationally, private and publichealth officials are judging commu-:
nities ~y how well they prevent dis-:
eases cnstead of how well they cure;
them.
•
· The plan will be submitted to the:
LegislallR in April following a series;
of public hearings.
It includes eight goals, among;
which ano reducing the rate of heart:
disease, reducing smoking .and:
improving access to primary care :
The hearing in the Toledo area is :
scheduled for Monday at the North- :
west Ohio Hospice in suburban Per- •
rysburg Township.
•

•

~

I•

.

dying from major illnesses .

. The Daily Sentinel Dole to tun·against ~do-nothing' Cl.inton , .'i!

General Manager

The DailySanUnel• Pql3

Page2" .

..

By

Dave
Grate

of
Rutland
Furniture
The trouble with experience is
tht far too few people are born
w~h it.
•••
Irs okay to let your mind go
blank occasionally- but only if
you tum the sound off, too.
• ••
In December we jingle bells; in
January we juggle bills.

•••

Our friend says he changed
his mind. Wonder H it works
any better now.

•••

Too bad the phone company
can't just live off the chat of
the land.

••••

•

•

•.

.'-·..

�•i TUIIdey, March 18, 1888 ..~

~~Divla/on II all-Ohio boys' basketball team chosen

MAKING HER MOVE- Southern's Jonna Manuel (left) rnakH her

mow on South Point's Tiffany Wittenberg In the flrat hen of the first

game o1 Mondey night's Dlsfrlct 13 all-atar game on the Unlveralty
of Rio Grande campus. Though Manual didn't ec:ore in that contest,
ihe won the three point shooting competition at halftime, hitting four
out of five In a eudden-deeth seaslon to best Wellston's. Dana st•
vleon. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
;Marcel Denson, who JUided Orrville
; to a No.'I ranldn1111d a shot 8l blck; to-back stace championships, is the
player of the year on the J996AsSO'
elated Press Division n boys' allOhio hiih school team released
MQJlday.
•
Dellson, a 6-foot-4 forward, was
a third-team all-Ohi6an a year ago
when Orrville won the state title with
·a 24-3 record. fie was a first-tum
·all-state selection as an end in football, with Orrville winning the regular-season AP poll crown.
And he is again a rarst-tum selection in basketball, with Orrville No . .
'J in the pivision U poll as it heads
·intO the state tournament this week
at St. John Arena.
Denson averaged 17.9 poillts,
eight rebounds and 2.5 assists while
shOoting 54 percent from the field. .
!
Orrville (24-1) takes on K~tering

Scoreboard

!

,,

i

Iaa

Bas k etb all
EASTERN CONFERENCE

..•

Atlanlk DMdon '·

r-t

•·Ortando ........... .&lt;49 17 741
New York ....... ,... .. .37 26 .587
Moami ..............•......32 33 .492
WuhlnJCon ........... 30 :l' · .462
New J....y ............ 25 39 .391
Boston ................... 25 40 J~j:
Phil.... lpltiD ........... IJ 52 .200

I ....

10\\
16\
18~

2.'

2J~
3~~

Swln~ ..9nto Sptln;~'
Satutdtut, ;11atch 23'ld
6:30 p.m. to /11ldttltjht -.

1"~1d' "'u~.
,l!MI!flit•

" ~a~~a~~e CZ:.O,.i~ht
' _.,.,., St11;lt
'Couplt $35.00 ,.

·EJ' .a,
· ·

~om- ,,

.sua~ ..-It ~~10'~'~

Y.;

.,. ~

'

.

'' Winners grab semifi·
'~.;.
,'!lew York's Madison
~g,a~-t~.
( l.

,._..c.nlltilta'IG

}'l'ii!Jd

. ~ol(a.l ·Oa.k ~eBott

I

h1 .,. '

·

8.1j~O.l$.} $~t 'l.)ttttk~ ,4~~aita6lt

.

i1Ckels AV811eble At FIRIIIII Bank In Pomeroy .
Home NeJkinel Bank In Redne; Bank One In P~.

z •

.

• Melge cOunty Ch4iml*: Ollk:e, Or Alr'J Board Member

'

.

For Moie lilrorinatlon Ce11982-5ool5
.

,

22 ~

Mnwautee ............. 21 4J .:lll
Toronto .................. J6 48 · .250

J6h
41 h

2~

MiiiWest Dt•lllon

lll L &amp;I. ·Ill
18
20

,719
.692

I ~~

4h

Houilon ................. 42 23 .646
Oen't'Cf ... .':............ .. 28 37 .431
Minncsoca .............. 21 4~ .128
Dllllu .............. ....... 21 44 .323
Vancouver ............. 11

51

18 ~

.171

• -Seanle ................. so 14
L.A. L..Un ............ 40 23
Phoonix .................. l% Jl
Ponlond ................. 31 • 34
Sacramemo ............ l8 3$
Oolden s-.......... 29 37
L.A. Clippm ......... 23 42
.IH:Iinehcd'playoff lpol

NCAA tournament.
.
·I'm concerned, we're playing for .the
"But I'm just 'thankful for the ; national title."
chaiiee to be playing. 1'ltere aren't . Rico Hill added 15 po'inlli, LeRoy ~
many teams ieft, and we're the only Watkins 14 and Muller 12 for Ulinois •
team left from our conference still State, while Okey was the only Bad- '
playing. Right now we're thinking ger to score in double figures.tue.- '
.
about going to New York. As far as NIT

.781
,63.5
.4112

'

~

PICK THE FINAL 4
In The 1996 NCAA

••

3) All entry forme muelbe reollvld before
3121198 bv 4:00 D.lll.
'
•

.lermty SIOUt. Western Browa; Cuia WaJI.::t,
Kctletina Aller: Crais Sanden, Cia. McNicholu;
aa.d Weklay, Kinaa; Brian Gehle, Indian Lakr:

Marti O.wll, 1......,..; Ibn lktW, New lA•·
......:Mllwllo)'d,A-,-Hmi-.,VIIt:
ftlll w...,.. l.oaol; DA\'1! RUCKER, GALLIPOLIS G.U.LIA ACADEMY; TJ." 1\omer,
Hlllobon; PAUL PULLINS, POMEROY
MEIGS;
Bud Schumaker, Onaw..Olandorf; LouiaGreeft,
Napoleoo; Jason Kl&lt;&amp;er. Bryan: R~ F.......
Bellevue; Eric BriakmaD. Orqoa Clly;

Nick Evanich. AllilliKZ Martinaton: Joe Burdon..

PAULPULUNS
Akron S1. ~nc:enc-St. Mary; Mak:ohn 1\ylor. Yoo .
Liberry: CraiJ RodF'J. Minerva; Du1tia Douhue.
Beloit W. Bnnc:h; John Scott. Yoo. MOODe)': Kyle

Mtu. Richfield Rtvcrt;
Dive Kewley, Cbardon: Ryan Noble, O..pin
Falls Kalaoo; D11Dt11 Sanden. Wln'efllviUt Hts.;
Jim Bollad. HllfttiAJ Val Univ. School; Bemai'Ji
Sootl, Ot. Villa Ansc:Ja.St. Jos,eph.
~

points ahead until the small-schooi'
stars started trimming the deficit to
where they could get ahead. Trimble's Heath Armbruster contributed
significantly to this effort when his
trey from the right comer with one .
second left cut the Division 1-11
stars' lead to 51-49.
Armbruster's three-pointer started
a 12-0 run for the Division III-IV
stars that included a game-tying inthe-lane jumper from Eastern's Eric
Hill (19:49) and two lead-clinching
free throws from Federal Hocking's
Jeremy Tolson 30 seconds later.

k.eep them there.
In other activities, Southern seniof
They had to overcome the second- Jonna Manuel, Federal Hocking
half offense generated by Tolson junior Neil Nelson and ArinbrusteP
(II) and Hill (eight) to do it.
were the winners in the three contes~
Ualf l!!llla
held during breaks in the action.
Division I-ll stars .......... 51-S7=108
In the girls' three-point shooting
Division III-IV stars.... .... 49-41=90
competition,
held during halftime
Division I-II - Greg Jame~~
the
girls'
game,
Manuel and Well~
(River Valley) 6-1-2/2=17, Brad
ston's
Dana
Stevison
tied in regula'
Howe (Jackson) 3-2-4/6= 16, Marq
lion
shooting
with
seven
shots eac~
Davis (Ironton) 4-2-010=14, Mike
in
10
attempts:
The
exira
five-sho•
Boyd (Athens) 3-2-0/0= 12, Paul Dillon (Fairland) 4-0-1/3=9, Mark session saw Manuel and Stevisort
White (Ironton) 4-0-0/0;8, Ryan make one each in their firsi two trie(
Wilgus (Fairland) 4-0-010=8, Mike before Manuel nailed lhe last threll'
Black (Fairland) 3-0-112=7, Brooks attempts - Stevison made only on•
In the next I ;03, Hill's layup and Fry (Rock Hill) 3-0-010=6, Shawn more in her last tltree attempts - uj
a three-pointer from Chesapeake's Wilson (Ironton) 2-0-112=S. James win the girls' title.
:
Lee Moon put the small-school crew Staley (South Point) 2-0-010=4, Paul
Among the other female competi•
ahead 58-SI. But Jackson's Brad Pullins (Meigs j 1..0·010=2. Totals: tors, Meigs junior Cheryl Jewell had
Howe started the Division I-II stars' 39-7-9115=108
four, River Valley's Amber Statort
19-6 run that included a game-tying
had three and Evans had two.
Fouls: 14
layup by Fairland's Paul Dillon ·
In the ·slam dunk competition. held
(13 :32) and a tie-breaking jumper
between
the contests, the six-foot
Division 01-IV - Steve Fink
from Fairland forward Ryan Wilgus (Wellston) 2-4-010=16. Jeremy Tol-. Nelson got the raves for his one(12:52).
son (Federal Hocking) 5-0-5/6= 15, handed jams and was declared the
During this pivotal run, the game Chad Jarvis (Alexander) 5-1-112=14, best of the 11-strong field featuring
was stopped at the 16:46 mark for Chris Thompson (Miller) 4-0-112=9, players such as 6-foot-5 Jeremy CofapproximatelY"'ftVe· minutes because Eric Hill (Eastern) 4-0-010=8, Lee fey from Jackson.
of Moon's falling to the floor and Moon (Chesapeake) 0-2-010=6, Mlc- .
In the boys' three-point shooting
injuring his mouth near the halfcourt ah Otto (Eastern) 2..0-212=6, Aaron competition, held during halftime oF
stripe. Moon never returned.
Ramsey (Oak Hill) 2-0-1/l=S, Thad the boys' game and drawing 18 play!
Behind Howe's niQil second-half Smith (Wellston). 1-1-fY0=5, Heath ers, Armbruster sank eight out of 1&lt;9
•
points and River Valley 's Greg Armbrusrer (Trimble) 0- 1-0/0..3, to win the title.
Also
com.peting
were
Meig~
James' eight second-half points (out Jamie Lambert (Wellston) 1-0-111=3.
senior Paul Pullins, Gallia Academy
of his game-high 17). all but two of Totals: 26-9-11116=90
sophomore Heath McKinniss (four
the 13 players scored after halftime
Fouls: 11
each). Eastern's Micah Otto ancl
to get the big-school s~ ahead and
James (three each).

.»

-·-·-

2 Great Recliners.
One Low Price of

GLAMJURPH6TOGRAPHY
IS RETURNING TO ...

SHEARILLU
12-16 Pose
Selection!

'

Fee
1

..

o

·

2 Greet Recliners,

10.95

One Low Price of

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT,

'599

992-2550

SHEAR ILLUSIONS

~opday'o

Swrh Carolina 80, v.-..rr70
Tulue 84, Mi•nesota65
lllinoia St . 71, WiacoDSin62
Alab4ma 12, Missouri 49

'

..,.x.

Session Includes: Professional Makeove,r

oeroild·J'GUnd ICOI'H

•

'The,._..

Pul your feel up and leon way
- . A&lt;*llly, lhenl'a oo bollor way 1o
::omcrt lllln1&gt;UI1CI you ftOrn curved luflad back lo
111c11 1111- anc1 me 11011 PIIOw anns.

Session

•
•• NITactlon

293 S. 2nd

1\liddleport, Ohio

Tonipt's

•

SOCGIIII-round comes

St. Jolqll)'a (16-12)

VI.

Providente

l.iAJ1011
~are
8:05p.m.

(17-14~

,
Michia•• S1a1e (I 6·1 5) 11 Fret ito
Stale (ll-10). 9::10 p.m.
Colleae of CbarltJton (21; :t) vs.
R!'O* IIJand (19-lll at tho l'tovldeiCO
Ct"icCeriter, 9:4~ p.m.

-RULES-

Wed-.lay's

4) .. c:.u of • t1e we wtU use......,.

·~ ecore
.
5) One 1ntry per penon.
.

1·~----------------------­
---~-------,----------

......_ (20-9) vs. lllillllil 51. (22· I I),

I
I'

-""!"

r

·

I

- - - · -..

.,

•.••

I

Thunday'o

ljUII1eliJuli
Rhode lslaftd·Coll. of ChlrleltOI
winner v1. St. Jostph'I·ProVidcnce wio-

·~

Friday's qulrlerftnm

Fre1no St.-~ichi1an SL. winner Yl.
St. wiitnor

A--

NHL standinp

EASTKilN~O,:

:rlll J. I A Ill
M.Y, . _ .....36,1914 116 :141

iiA

ll.tlatlolpbii; .... .,;MZI 13 II V2
75 Ill
w...............3l :11 ·• 74 195
T-ilojl ........ 3:!:1110 742116
2040 I 41•191

163
110
21&amp;

193

llloridto ... ,........... 36 24 9 II 227 200

-...,. ....., . n 16 II

L~--··-·-~~-··--··-·--·-··--··-·--·-··~----·~-·-•·•·-··---·-··•·~

ltl

N.v..........
16.1
·
.
·
Nft·t•ttltMII.
.
l'!aitlllltli.........41 :14 4 116 31111 237
~ ~,........,:wn a 76 .n.l 211
- . , : ... ......!218 9 73, U7 D2

Buick Pontiac

1
. ........., .........
.10 31

'

,.'

I'"'!

~ 61 2116 219
- . .....,.......:11 36 7 II 2104 217
,Oioawo ............... l,5 ,0 3 33 161 :146
r
,

WI!S1'UN CONniiNCB
c,olni-

~~Jne

One Low Price of

Low Price of

$799

$699

Become a Part of Meigs County's History!

ner

Hoc k ey

1 . ___......__ ____.;,_ _ _ __
1.3)
I
I
'Thlej»hone - - - - - - - - 14)_~------~--__.;,1 .

o.JIIpolli, OH I' '

Alabama (18-11) 11 Soutb Carolina
TBA

(1~11).

~w.,.;..,..

Address _ _ _....__ _

SINCE 1954

TBA

'

•
I'

Name------~------

'P. 0. Box 807

Due to the fact that people are still calling &amp;
droppinp off order forms for personalized bricks
the chamber has decided to purchase 100 final
bricks to be placed .on the amphitheatre's
walkWay.
'
.This wiiJ.be your last chance to become a part of
Meigs County History! So hurry up &amp; buy a brick
while they last.
·.

quuterlbllls

TOTALSCORE--------

Return To:

l..Avm:ac:e, Wwaaw Rivet View : Euaenc Land, Clo.
Roaer Bacon: Oris Scott, Bellbrook.; Brooks Fry.
lrontoa Rock · Hill; PAUL DILLON, PROC·
TORVILLE FAIRLAND: Mort \vii~e. 1n&gt;nt011;

s-..

Ctoek:

(IS..Il) at 'lbe Providl!nt.'t Ci~ic C~er.
7 30
:
(17· 11) 11 Nebnlkl

I
I

Circleville; Brian Walkios, Uhrichsville Claymont;

SJ.m Mc:Vtcker, New Coocord John Glenn ; Oary

MeMowtlrlook:. One H.-nns. St
Cllin'llllt; Cwy A11sel, Zanesville Ma)'lville· Roa
Wlloy, RichmoDd Edi100: Miu Rodpn. LiLocal; Tom Winlond. WI-Yille tndi10

By Popular Demand... .

Dctroil ·or Miami, 7:J0p.m.
Vaneouver 11 AtlMc.a. 7:30p.m.
lodi-•-Yort:Bp.m.
~011 Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Pbilldel(tl&gt;io 11 Utoll. 9 p.m.
Mi!Naao«a .• LA. Oippm:, ,0:30p.m.

••

r---~~--~-----------------------------1
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME

I

Shawl Foullllin, Col. Bccchcroh ;"'""" IWiu.

Jerry Ammlroo... Bella.., ..... Maleolci-Ftop.

to•: BfUville

*499

~- or Toroato. 7 p.m.
OriiDdo II 8011oca,. 7:l0 p.m.
San~- II WuhiqtOI, 7:)() p.m.

..'

Wrll Give You
Ne Oh1miekt

Eastern Ave.

Special mention

Btiql;

NBA : Susp!dndc:d Dnai.l Rodman,
Chicago Bulb IOtW•d. for li~ pmes.and
fined him $20,000 for hi1 actions 1n a
March 16 gmme aaairw New Jersey.

Bueball

Wldnesdlly's Plllel

•

Ne Co•• 0•11

12)

:·!
•

6TH ANNUAL

1) u.. ~coupon
2) Mall or drop off your coupon to'!911

Ooawi-O-.

,Hononble meaaoa

.11108 Dlvil, t:...c.ta- flirfldd u-.· Juoa
Duodlor. Cot W-..lo; Mike KJ-. c.t.lks.tc.:
.1o11o Whorton, Col. ~: ~I Wri.... Col.

Basketball

Tran sactions

22

Vueoy..a It New Jeney. 7:)0 p.m.
De~uh • Orlando, 7:30p.m.
lldillll at Olarlone. 7:30p.m.
Golden SIMeat HCMWon, 8 p.m.
SIICrllnCtlloll Cbic:IJO. 8:30p.m.
CLEVELAND ae n.llu, 8:30p.m
MinftCIOta 11 rortlud. 10 p.m.
Scllltle or LA. t.at.n. IO:JO p.m.

'
••

s100 ·cASH.

tlno-t-lleol&lt;to. llmillo,HCICII-4,
Seaior, 11.9 poi• I*" pme; M.t AihmMI. St
lo4aryJ Menailll, 6-9 112. St., 26.5; ....... .,..,;.,
C.. Villo ~llt:SL ~. 6-5, St., 22.0: 111racr, Cd. Milllio. 6-7. fr.. 17.2; 1oM Do;to. Bd·
loin&gt;, 6-1, St., 21.0: Nicl&lt; BIOWII. HamiiiOII 8do.
"'· St., 16.1; ........... ~ 6-!, ... 2U.
SeeoM ' - : Ryu Leal, Woost• Triwl)l, 64. Jr.. 27.7: ._ld Roy. Orrvilto. 6-0. Sr., 16.0:
Ryu MaoJ,
6-0, St., IU: M1J&lt;
tc..!dror. Lcxittpo. 6.3. Sr.. 20.3; DuJda - .
~ • • 5-10. sr., 22.(1: Ryu Pecloo, Baley, 63,Sr., 16,&amp;;NaCroto:bor,Eiy!lo-.6-0,Sr., 20.l.
1'lllrt _ , K7R'D' Mouey. Col. Eoot:Mor, 65, Sr.,ll.7; Rico Pieao, tloYer, 6-7, Sr., IU; CloUt
t&gt;o~boi. Spriosboro. 6-5. 1&lt;.. 21 .7: Jdlolluncu,
New Rich1110Dd, 6-6. St.. 2.5 .8: Tom Didriclo,
LouiJVille AqW1111, ~1. Sr., 23.1; Rut!a Welb,
Ashtabula. 6-2, Sr., 18.0; Jon Sandenon, Uxinaton,
6-7. Jr., 16.2.
~yer .r the )'Ur: Marcell Denton, Omille.
Cue.... ol the .year: Dave Swed, OttawaOlaadorf; Herman.Berger. Day. Carroll.

Monday'oocores

OUR

'

height and scoring averaae):

-..~bol~

27~

Denver 122. Totonlo 114
Chicaao 98, Philadelphia 94
Ulab 107, Milwaukee 90
San Antonio 104, Goklen Stile 98
Scllltle 104. LA. Clippen 101

I

Tournament And
SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

NlllonoiLattit
FLORIDA MARLINS : Optioned
Marc Valdes, MiJucl Batista IUid Joel
Adamsoo. pitchers ~ EdJ• Renteria and
Ralph Milliard, infielden; and Billy
McMillon, ootfidder. 10 Charlotte of the
lnterutioru:r.l League. Sett Jason Roba150ll, outfielder: Lou UJcca, iaftelder; and
Jolin RQSkos, Todd Cady, Mike Sims and
Hector Kuilan. catchers. to their minor·
l&lt;a&amp;ue camp.
NEW YORK METS: Traded Seou
Adair and Pete Walker, pi1c:hen. to the
San Diego Padres for Roberto Pcta1inc,
fim baseman, and Lull Arroyo. pitcher.

San Jose ac Winnipeg. 8:30p.m.
CaiP&gt;: 1:.1 Olicqo, 8:)0 p.m.
S1. Louis II Dallu, 8:30p.m.
Colorado 11 Loa Anaetes..,I0:30 p.m.

9~

'.444
.4.19
.354

Tonlpt's pmes
Edmonton at N.Y. Rangen, 7:30p.m.
Onawa a1 Florida, 7:30p.m
Torontoal Delroit, 7:l0 p.m.
NY lslanden at Ph iladelphia. 7:30
p.m.
,
Anaheim a1 WaJhin&amp;ton, 7:JO p.m.
Colorado II Vanc:ouver, IO:lO p.m.
ll:lnford 11 Montreal, 7: JOp.m.
Detroit a1 Toronto. 7:30 p.m.
Bostoa 111 New Jersey, 7 : ~ p.m.

II~
1e~
ll~

.4n

TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Sent
Michlel Huff. outftelder, and Tnvi1 Raplilt, pitcbcr, to their minor-lcaaue camp.

Wednesday's pmes

25
25&gt;
J4

Pacillc Dl¥ision

f

fOR AlL YOUR

..,.

Montreal J. Buffalo 2
Snn Jose l , Boston J (tie)
St Louis J. Los Anaeles I

20~

Toni&amp;ht'o pmes

..

~. s l\ l\...I!S fWc.

Hmnfm16. T~a Bay :\

11&gt;

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Alabama, South Carolina, Tulane and ISU win NIT games
.y

CHECK THE

Monday's scores

17~

CLEVELAND ... ....36 28 .~
Atlanta ................... ~5 29 .S47
Owlonc ............... Jl 31 .508

SanAntonio .......... 4fi
Utah .................... ..4~

' OAKLAND AlliLETICS: Optiooed
Willie Ad1m1 1nd Andrew lorraine,
pildcn, and Faulto Cruz and Scoll
Spiezi~ . infielder•. lo Edmonton of the
l'lcifoc Colli l..eque; and J11011 McDonald. iofitlder, ud lose Hemn, outfiekler,,
ro Hunuvine of the Southern Leque. Reauipcd Archie Corbin. Paul Fletcher and
Dove Telf&gt;eiler, pitchen, and 0ete1&lt; Loe
and T)rone Horne. oulfieldcrs. to their
minor·Jelaut CII!'P·

'

7 .892
hNiil!fl .................. '" 24 .625
Deuoit ................... .ll 27 .511

I-.

l02
245
206
ll6
1~8 261
224 266
221 315
277
246
207
195

y-clinched diYision tille

' CenlniDh-

Wilgus on hi' hlp
end Eastern's MICJh Otto (33) trying to cleer 1 path for hla teammate,·
Eastern's Eric Hill (31) llfllys focused,on his oblectlve during the first
han of Monday nlght~a District 13 ell-star game. Hill flnlahed wlttl
eight pointe, two of Milch came eeconde after this photo was tekah. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

A-oiAopo
CALIFORNIA A.NO"ELS : Wai~ed
Juaq Agoato , phcher, for the pufl)OIC of
Ji~illl him his unconditioul release. Sold
Julio Valera, pitcher, 10 the Kansu City
Royab for an undisdoscd 1m01.1111 or cuh.
Cl~Miolled Ben VaaR)n and Joe Rouelli,
pfrc:hers, to VDncounr or lhe Pacific
Coast l..eque. Sent Willie fnler, pitcher,
and Chria Pritchett, fint bueman, 10 their
nanor.Jeo.ue aimp.
.

•·clinched playoff spot

,_&lt;lliCoc&lt;&gt; ..............58

==

Podllc: Dl.~~~ao~
x.Colorado ......... l'J 21 10 88
Vancoo.a ......... 2129 15 69
Call'? .............. 28 JO I I 67
Anoht:tm ............ 2131) 6 60
Ed........ .. ........ ~ 37 7 57
Loo Alll'les .... ...ll lll 15 57
SanJ.,. ............. I6 49 7 39

Ill

lY L &amp;I.

lll L I Ell. lif II&amp;

y-llo&lt;nMt ............5212· 4 lOll 263 150
C1ticaao............ :.36 23 II 8J 23CJ 187
St. Louis ............ )1 21 ll 74 19l ZOO
Tot01Mo .............. 28 31 1.2 68 '207 216
Winnipq ........... 29 35 5 r,J 2H 252
llllllu ................. 22 35 12 'Ill 194 2.11

NBA standings

career-high 28-point perfonnance
by Sam Okey of Wisconsin (17-15).
"This is a big win for our program," Trotter said. "We were a little disappointC!I with the way we
closed out thel regular season and
missed out on a chance to go to the

points on the board survive a secondhalf challenge from the Division IllIV stars and tally a 108-90 win.
In the first half, the big-school
crew stayed anywhere from six to 10

.'

r.

Malik Russell's 17 points and 20 points in a 22-6 rally to stan the
The Associated Press
· Missouri thought it. had the tow- eight rebounds paced South Caroli- game as Tulane jumped on top earering twins. AlaBama knew' ft had na to its latest victory. Now Russell, ly and cruised to an easy victory at
a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., is think- Minnesota.
Roy Rogers.
It is the first time Tulane has 1ng
about returning home. : Alabama was the winner - no"We've
got
to
win
this
game
advanced past the second round 'of
contest.
: "(Rogers) was dominaqng," Mis- coming up Wednesday, of c6urse, but either the NIT or NCAA tournament.
Jerald Honeycutt added 16 poiA\s
Souri coach Norm Stewan said. "He definitely I think it'd be a great thing
to
get
to
go
back
home,"
Russell
for
the Green Wave (f0-9) and
i~timidated our guys, which is kind
said.
"This
entire
team
is
really
bent
grabbed
nine rebounds, giving him
qf interesting because we see a lot of
on
winning
the
NIT."
208
for
the
season. The only player
tiig people. As far as shot-blocking,
Defensive
pressure
by
South
Carin Tulane history to have at least 500 .
lie's the best.·:
; Alabama's 6-foot-10 center had olina (19-11) kept Vanderbilt guard points, 200 rebounds and I00 assists
20 points, 13 rebounds and nine Frank Seckar scoreless until almost in a season. Honeycutt achieved the
titocked sliots Monday night to lead three minutes into the second half. feat for the second straight year.
Sam Jacobson had 19 points and
tle Crimson Tide past Missouri 72- Seckar still finished with 16 points to
lead
the
Commodores
(18-14).
John Thomas added 17 for Min'fi and into the third round of the ·
Gamecock guards BJ McKie and nesota (19-13 ).
Hationlillnvitaqon Tournament.
Illinois St 77
j A senior ·who broke Shaquille Melvin Watson added 16 points
Wisconsin 62
O'Neal's Southeastern Conference apiece.
Thlane 84
Maurice Trotter scored 12 of his
. sjngle-game record with 14 blocks
Minnesota
6S
19
points in the second half as visit-tier this season, Rogers had a
GUllnl
Chris
Cameron,
who
avering
Illinois State (22-11) overcame a
ltand close to just about every one of
ages
nine
points,
scored
nine
of
his
~ssouri's inside shots.
; "The real value with Roy's situallan is not only the ones he blocks,"
Alabama coach David Hobbs said .
·~ow many do you think they
thought about when they got in
tiere?"
l Whik Alabama (18-11) sparkled
i~ tlie center, the same cannot be said
of Missouri (18-IS).
: Tigers 7-foot-1 center Simeon
f1aley scored just two points, which
W.S two more than his 7-0 brother,
S~mie Haley. Sammie was susnded for the game by Stewart,
ough no reason was given.
Eric Washington added 21 points
del 10 rebounds for Alabama, wliile /het5g C!:ouJttl( Cham6e'l o~ Comme'la ·
I&lt;l,!ly Thames topped Missouri with
11 points.
·
Se11t11th ,4JtJtual ~i1t1tt'l ~a11ce
,;The victory sends Alabama to
Slluth Carolina on Wednesday. The
.. ~ ~ .... $ . ""
qunecocks advanced to the third
llj\lnd with an 80-70 win oyer visit•., Yanderbilt.
11
, 1bat's not good news for Alaba, nP·.The Gamecocks are 16-1 at the
•cptalina Coliseum and hl\ve all 11, .,winniilg streak at home.
r ~ I 'The Crimson Tide lost ~ts only
• ,. ~ 8gainst South Carohna th1s
' ~
· n, 90-67 in Columbia.
· , "Jil other second-round games
y, Tuha'ne eliminated Min, n41qt184;.(!S and .Illinois State oust,-·
Wi · ·n 77-62. ·
w_ill be
.fJtt'ettalJtmtJtt
lSI(: ~;11al,.· $-vent
begmnmg w1th a
'"
'
.
... ll'lh at the Providence City '
'
· ~llfhiri St.Josep!l's takes o.n
. . · · .::
' ~ce and ~ollege · 'lf .
plan Rl\j:lde Island. Oth,$20.Q,O
! 1 • . have Wlishii!&amp;ton State 8l '
'Micliigan .State 8l ·

will be on display at the state tournament: Orrville's Renauld Ray (64, Sr., 16.0 points per pme); Ottaw•
Glandorf's Ryan t,faag (6-4, Sr.,
17.2); and Dustin Ford of Cambridge
(5-10, Sr., 22.0). ·
Also selected to the second tum
were: Ryan Lent of Wooster Triway
(6-4, Jr., 2?.7); Lexington's Marc
Kreisher (6-3, Sr., 20.3); Bexley's
Ryan Pedon (6-3, Sr., . 16.8); and
Elyria West's Nate Crutc~r (6-4, Sr.,
20.5).
Sweet owns a 268-122 record in
his 17 years at Ottawa-Glandorf,
including this year's 24-1 mark and
trip to the state Semis. Dayton Carroll was 1-20 a year ago but 'btossomed into a IS-S team U!lder Berger.
Here's the 1995-96 Associated
Press Division II all-Ohio team,
based on the recommendations of a
state media panel (with school,

)lU-stargannes..• (occooontintin~ueddif~rommPa~~ge~4&gt;~----------~------~~------------------------------------------~"

'

. PUSIING FOR THE PAINT- Meigs guard Paul Pullins (right) drl1(11 the bell Into the paint In en attempt to score seconds after enter·
lng the game In the firet half of Monday night's Dlatrlct 13 aiH1tar
game. Pullins, one of 18 ·e nlrente In the boys' three-point shootout
held at halftime, scored two pointe to help the Dll(lalon 1-11 all-stars
win 108-90. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
'

Alter (15-10) at 6 p.m. Thursday in
the state semifinals. Cambridge (214) plays Ottawa:Giandorf (24-1) 8l9
p.m., with the winners meeting at 2
p.m. Saturday for the title.
The coaches· of the year, also
based on the recommendations of a
state media panel, were OttawaGlandorf's ·Dave Sweet and Dayton
Carroll's Hennan Berger. ·
Denson was joined on the first
team by: Mark Ashman of St. Marys
Memorial (6-9 112, Sr., 26.5 points
per game); Jerome Davis of Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph {6-5,
Sr.. 22.0); Columbus Mifflin's Aaron
Turner (6-7, Jr., 17.2); and Jackson's
Brad Howe (6-S, Sr., 22.6).
Rounding out the first team were
Bellaire's Jose Davis (6-1 , Sr., 28 .0),
.and Hamilton 'Badin's Nick Brown
(6-S, Sr., 16.8).
Listed on the second team were
three other players who, like Denson,

. Koolis (Trimble) 3-0-3/4=9, Casey (Weilston) 2-0-010=4, . Totals: 23-2Smith (Chesapeake) 3-0-111=7, 8/14:::60
Mandy 1\rgabright .(Wellston) .2-0Fouls: 16
o(oi=4:·Allson Pi&amp;;rson (Federal Hock..t
- · - • -'
ing1l-0-01.2=4, Dana Stevison.(WellThe nightcap saw the Division Iston) 0-1-112=4, Andrea Wyant II boys, after putting I0 of the first 12

. SHOOTING OR REBOUNDING? -At flrat glance, one can't be
aura by looking whether River Valley's Erin Conley (15) or &amp;stem's
Rebecca fivana (1 0) Is shooting or rebounding during the nrat half
of Monday nlght'B District 13 all-star game. But Evens, whose last
on-court meeting with Conley took place when both were freshmen
In the 1992-93 season, took the shot moments before Conley's
attempted block end scored two of her 14 points. Howeter, the Division 1-11 ell-stars won 72-60. (OVP photo by G. Spe~cer Osborne)

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

. mong nine SE D.istrict. hono.rees

.~P'-'IIi
Conley and Gallia-Aeaaemy's Sara continued until Evans cut the Divi- ~ llalf ildlll
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
. Walker (two each) contributed to the sion 1-11 crew's 57-49 lead' in half l Division I-n stars............ 33-39=72
In Monday night's District 13 all- cause.
with right-wing jumper 33 seconds I Division UI-IV stars........ 27-33=60
star basketball doubleheader at the
In the second half, Evans tied the apart. But the Division III-IV stars 1 Division 1·0 - Stephanie Lowe
Universil)' of Rio Grande's Lyne · game at 33 on a layup with J·8:441eft · saw Staton sink two free throws with t(South Point) S-1-010=13, Kim BonCenter, the District 13 Division 1-U to help keep the 5mall-school stars 7:07 left to begin the Division 1-U ' ham (Fairland) S-0-112=,11, Amber
girls' all-star team got 17 of its 39 within two possessions of tying the stars • Il -l run that put the game out ·Staton (River VaHey) :Z..l-314=10,
second-half points from its Gallla contest or going ahead for the next I 0 of the Division IU-IV stars' reach.
·Erin Conley (RI-ver Valley) 4·0.
County players that helped it weath- minutes.
While making sure the Division I- 112=9, Misti Markins (A~xander) 3- .
Though Staton's lone three-point- II stars' lead wasn't gone for more 0.214=8, Arlanne Starling (Alexaner the scoring generated by Eastern's
Jessica Karr and Rebecca Evans and er(l4:42) gave the Divisjon 1-U crew than 30 sec011ds was the job of a cast der) 3-0-212=8, Jessica Black (Fairpost a 72-60 win over the Division a 42-38 lead (its biggest of the sec- of II, it was Staton, Conley and Gal- land) 3-0-l/2;:7, Whltney,Hastwell
ond half's firsfl2 minutes), that lead liaAcademy's Whitney Hastwell that (Gallla Audemy) 2-0-010=4, Sa111
Ili-IV squa&lt;j.
The big-school stars scored I5 of heg'an disappearing as the Division combined to score 17 second-half Walker (Gallla Audemy) 1.0·
the first 19 points en route to record- III-IV stars kept chipping away at it pointS despite not heing on the floor 010=1. Totals: 28-2-10118=72
ing a six-point lead at halftime. until Karr's three-pointer behind the at the same time.
Foub: 16
While Fairland center Kim Bonham foul circle (11 :32) put the smallKarr and Evans, who led all scorused her 5-foot-11 frame to get nine school sw;s ahead 46-45. ·
ers with 14-point efforts and comDivision III-IV
Rebecu
of her II points and lead all first-half
A basket from Alexander's bined for 18 sceond-half points, com- El'llns (Eastem) 7+mlo•l4,Jasl·
scorers, three Gallians- River Val- Arlanne Starling 20 seconds later bined for four points in the· last sev- ca Karr (Eastern)
Beth
ley's Amber Staton (four points), Erin started the I-II stars' 12-3 run that en minutes.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·r

Buy a personalized br.ick for your family or
business to be used in the r~vitalization project
happening in our county seat of Pomeroy. Your
brick can have a personal message you want
inscribed on your brick, and receive permanent
recognition of your community· support, that will
·last a lifetime.
·
A framable certificate, that states · your
inscription and brick number 1s avaiiQ.ble upon
request. the Meigs County .Tourism S'aard and
the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce thank
you for your order. If you would like to make a
donation in lieu of a briCk.pl~ase call (614) 992• .
2239.
· ' .· r
..
· ,
·
'
~ee A Part Of Your CommunitY Bilek Sale, Arid .
Become A Part (!)f Meigs ~nty's Hl~ryl•
"Proud Of Ye.sterday And
For Tomorrow"

'

. deeply...-

'C~·

'IIIIa

.

.

.

. .'

wlla•tpOowry we puJ you 11-ln an

lOft_,"""' fully...--

lnsllnt llleeiUIHI helvtly PIC(IIIcl Wing, I plullo clllmol lliChed t.ck led

Ill

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P111 1 •The Dally Sentinel

TuMday,lhrch 19, 1996

'
. .
The Deily Sentinel• Pege7

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•

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'R&amp;q.

Ad.
Mlddlepon, 01\to 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy Brlcidea

,

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/

WE NAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418

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Umtttone, Sand, Gravel, Coal • Water

61.4-.742-2193

SelV•tJ (619) 645- 8434

OHIO

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
.

32124.Happy, H~

ToUch-tQne Phooe .

""'uEAoV:I
. ,fl"v.l

. . Tr.eh ~ti!ICWII · Commerc;..l ol RBklllltlal
septic Tanka Cleaned l Portlble ToUttt Rented•
Dilly, wttidy l lll\)llthly t;tnbll ratH .

.....

·

Ext: 7830.$2'.9.9 per
min. M~t b8'18.yra

MarCh 20 121 '

-~ .

~ rnoie.

\-Eiboin~{oo

1\vo _·
bays Only!

•
•

.

. -~

• · ..

.SIW.ILir'

Sp1118d8. allQ mucl'i

"'

.. ,.

NEFF REMODELING
.. SERVICE

Hc;u.......,., ,
Remodeling •

KMahln A 1111111
Remodeling

Room Addltlona ·
Siding, ROOflni_
, Pllllol .

"

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· A~

•·

,lnourer8 • ExperllnCid
,Coli Wayne Neff

. ~ .:::....

·P.rozen

•

.

.

•

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Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

......-~-...,..-...,

. . . rice lrJ IMck It up
8ervfnt I.E. Ohio • Wttt Vllglnll
1~
448 8418

Sports Edge Sports

Entertainment Linen

•

1·900-776-0100
. Must be 18yrs.
Touch Tone Phone
Required

•

614-J67-o302

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

'

-Whole Boneless
SirlOin
f'ips
·
Pound

'

twoOavs

- Onlvl

CHoiCE SIRLOIN ENO

Public Notice

Co&amp;MJty of .....

.............,.,_.._,,,..... 210.00

(HUI.

AV~J..

Whole Beef
Tenderloin

;-

,__,_

WHOLE BOSTON BUTT · ·

cAFJ!EINE FREE DIET COKE. SPRITE,

..

--..-- 1SSJJO
'
··--·······-·..·-·-·'

CAI.IFOIIlWA

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c

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CU. Stone-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•

LowRIIel)

WICKS

,/4ew .Homes • VInyl Siding N~w
Garages • Replacement Windows
, Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, ~nd,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Doi:t===

Rtclnl, Ohio 41771
(3) 11; 1TC

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

614-992-3470

•

. 614-992-7643

•

(No Sunday Calls)

Need Olrectlon?

Love

' 'l

: Kroger
Orange Juice
'

1/2-Gf/ion
.'

•

.

:r

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS
ta1 your fingers do the
W$1clng to the sports
Nne. Rntnc:e Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spraqds, Dally
Horoecope.
1-900-n6-0700 .

•

~ §ia

ij]

..

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' ; If

~~~,.-~~-~

1&lt;/llllnl"l

SUMEIIMIGES
TilliNG
12 Stations For

$20.00

IIIYIWOIIIU
IAR IIFIIIICU
....915-4110

311ft mo.

. 212111 mo.

Howard ~xcavalin
Trucking·
· Limestone
Bulldcn:lng and
Bactchot
Strvlctt
House Sitts and
Utilities

RMIOnllble A-.
_IIN042 01 ~42-1120
Polly or

-

''''. Cook fOr oor "''"''in
_ ' 1'"rt!&amp; Dally Sentt.nel ·
.-.t.;: ~Smith ,
i

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LV. . Iti.

't

·Sports~ I' ' •••
Up' l_illwly,MIIil.
. . . No ,.lllllcj l!ftot t

I

.........

Buick-POntiac
·
,. : .
Qtllo . .,

_,.
.....
--·
........
.. u.tt••••••
",..:

'(

••
L

md1 of Eor th Wor k
-All K992-3838

- . . ... ..

"No Job Tao Large or Too Small"
We will work wi1hln your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomero Street
Maaon, WV

SH i riGLES • SIDir&lt;G • W IN DOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUB BER ROO FI NG
POL F B A RNS AND GAR A GES
HE.SIDEfHI AL &amp; Cm1MERC IA L

PHONE
614·245·0437

Ex p e r ic11cc

1-80[1-377 - ~4

11

'

IIDDLEPORT 11!12-2772
Ofllc:t Hours: Mon..frl.
8:00 a.m. • 3:30 p.~
VInyl I Alum. Siding,
VInyl Raplacemen1,
Windows, Blown ·
lnaula11on, Stonn
Doon, Stonn
Wlndowa, Garag•

Frtt Eatlmetes
111Min

fill CD. IICYCLIIGAnnounces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your p1111 for our envlronllllfll. Bring u• your
alum. e~~na and olhar recycablee and register to
win s handcrafted solid w..nut and cedar lined
blsnktt chill valued a1 $800 to be given away
Mllrch 30th. Trt. Co. Recycling open 7 daye a - k
tottrvtyou.
H Mon.·Frt; 1-3 Sal. tun. Located corner of
St. Rt. 143. 7,
614-992·5114.

a

New At lftlllcs llcetronles

FREE

Pick-up discarded
washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.

Call 992-4025
betWeen 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. - Sat.

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992-2825
1131/lfn

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, undarground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512
IIUIONAI'' RA1'U
tn111n
P.O. Box 587

Asbab~n~·s
Sliver Bridge Plaza
614 446 4462

Prom

Dresses
Levi's

PARKERSIURG

Mon.-sat. 10-6

SPORT'S CAR
DELUXE
Finders of hard to
find auto parts.

Niasan Headquarters
Loweet Prieee

614-992-4060

. -----M m OUNC[ r.~EN rs

PAIIJIUiulG NISSAJIIIJIIC.
1827 Nunlach An.
l'lobi 1 .... wv 21101

~

Plllfi'IIIG
Fret iEatlmltw
35Yenbp.
R-.bltRIIIw

fREE
Pldt.., . . . .

IIJIII..,.'..,-

614-"2-4025

985-4196_, ...

•NiwGer~g~~

· •Roofing

i •Interior
• Exterior
Plllidlng
• AIIO Concl'lfl Work

(FRO ESTIMATIS)

. V.Cl. YOUNG HI
tlla-1215

Pomeroy, Ohio

t/lllln

~.-~-=~ ·~
·"·· ----.--------~
--··

••

537 BRYAN PLACE

ROOFiNG &amp; REMODELING CO.
2H Ye;n"

mo. pd.

J&amp;L INSULATION

MIKE MARCUM

' •EIIdtlclll &amp; Plumbing

.

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand
985-4422 '
Cheater, Ohio
·

&amp; flO;JOE:J
FREE ESTII.It.: Ecs

SEfiVICE

. .•Room AddiUonl

' '

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

LICE~ISEC

flfiOFf cl SIO~~AL

YOUNG'S

·j

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

~111

· · CARPENTIR SERVIa

1·.-..nM~ao

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,.,,

4:30 to 10:00 P.M.

t2 Rutllnd
Room a bollld for
unlonldl,...._
8tllellclnlfd.
Lola of TLC. Fllllllly
tton. abiiOiflher*.

lltwRnSiw

1m..ot-un1101
,.latlai- Lal .... It

.

· ·Pick ·the Final4: ·

LINDA'S
.- PAINTING

$25.00

11Middep~·
~···

'•

5/tMM TFN·

FREE ESTIMATI!S
Taket.. ,..aMtof

Owners: Pete a Dlent
-Htnclltcb
Phone: 614-892-2487

$2.99 per min. Must be
18 yrs. Sarv-U
818 845 8434

Gutter1
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

16 S..slon1 For
Open 9:00 to 3:00

Ext. 3685

!

ROOFING .
NEW-REPAIR

. Raise&amp; $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
1ha Number of players
949-2044 or 949·2036

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Legion #602
Bingo
wi1h 21 players or more

........ (818) 841 1434

D

HoWard L. Wrlteaal

Lucky Ball $300.00

lll11tl1118 yre.
Touch-T- Aequlnd

0

"IN THE DARY CASE·

Racine American

Sun. Nights

AU1horized AGA Dis1ribu1or
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services.• Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/S1ainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumllure, Rreplace
~einS, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lois of o1her s1uffll

lladl8·1haeli Dealer

.

·0

.

TDS, Minerll Hardnlalr Iron, PH.

Pltul call Roi..Sojlll 182-4472 or 1~3313
to lit up your free wtter analyalo.
,_

Family llatt8re
Allow Yow
Personal Paychtc to
AsalatYou
1-900-988-8800
Ext.1277
$1.811PirMinute

·~~

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Polbllc Silety:.':;.~-:.300.o0' · ·=·~·"'M417
Public Wlllkl .... 47,310.74
~~Jd ne
H -.............. ,_, 7,012.05 ·
'
' 1118
C8pltll Outlly ~011.31
............................ :lot,M 00
Note Pltnclpti·P.,.nt...
~
lttiMI....... 31,100 00
........................... 12,137.23
Ot
............;.::12.131.00
11111:,....,-. 31,11111
lnterul end Flecel
. Chargtl .... "'''~···-·1,730.13
f"'~l;iifY''ih't;'"~=
Totll Dlabunlnllnta-...,.. report _to Itt correct 11111
...................- .... 143•738•81 true, 10 the bill of my
Tohl
Recelph ..,_.1 d :
111

J~~~~-~-~;::m:n;
Proctlda ol Bonde.:........
.....................,.,_.-.oo
Other Sou.......-R-'pll: ..

The water treatment company cordially lnvi1es you to
. participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WLL :rEST THE FOLLOWING:

BualnMa

•

i

aov.rnn-.........
.............................
"'1 ,-.
-n

...............,,__,,,.. 41.J7Q.37
IAII 0\ilabindlng Chtcu •

GtMnll

TRI·STITE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

k111flMA.......
" - (JD4} 61s-T6ST

....................~........41,170.37

Tollil Aectlpll.122,031.14

Sliced Into
Steaks FREE/

• ~l

' 2-Uter

Tolll TrMury 8a1---·

DiBtributed by

""'"-Wattr
. JttA,...,
rnvw.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®by Larry Wright

•

.'• ' .'

............................. 1,288.41

All Other Revel'llle.............

· UTEMEATOR ",

.
.
Bon~eless - . Krpger Grade A
·
,
Diet
coke
or
:'
Chicken Breast: .;. L~rge-Eggs ·
·
·
tola
Classic
•
' I

lntefeltooooooooMoooooo1,121.34

WV

Cit I 1Strrit

Btltnct,

Fund Cllh Btlance,
Dec 1m~ lr 31,_ ....40,113417
Depol.ltory IIIMJCe..Ho-oo

Water
1.JI:- Treatment
~'U..~
Eq•lpment

Stww' ,.,.

,.J.,..., 1,,,,,,....... 23,712.14

lntergovern-1
"
R-lpla ··•-···-···17,011.4e

,-

Plcg.

Fund Cllh

_,.

6")
·L ~.:ut;

II I' fill&amp; ,.,..,

...............',............. 17,G42.23

RRIIpta
1i•- •H .......... ....... 22 t 133.••
"''I

'J:*U:JJB

992-3894

TRI·STAH SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

Totti Other l'lntnolng
~ .......7110.00
Totll of Renlptl &amp; Other
Sou- 0wr (......., ... _,,,

Source Deecrlptloh

Pork Shoulder -· oscar Mayer · Red,RI~
.Roast·
Meat1-l.b.Wieners strawbeirles
tHalfRat
PoUnd
•I ·,

•.

Totlle Fund ..Ianoe

INQIVIDUAU YQUICK FROZEN
.
(51-6o-cT~ .

Twohyt .
OIQI ·

~

For FJ- v-End~
o.c.m~~et31, 11111

SUIIIIARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES

U.S.D.A.

Bring In minimum oiSO lbt. olelumlnum cant to
reglllter for Bunn Coffeemaker to be glwn -Y·
Drllwlng will be held on MII'CII 29111.

INtmo.

REJioRT OP
-·fOWNSHIP

Sliced Into steaks FREE/.

'

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Qhlo
(Special Price on Aluminum Cens
frOm March 1 thru 29)

l•ll•n '79 &amp; a,
Aholccnserle•

985 4473

IAbeMn TOwntlllp,

•"'f.

&amp;1•11• '

FJN&amp;ii-,

.

•~"':,, .MANLEY'S ;,'J:•e,
RECYCLING CENTER . '1111'

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

•Naw Homn
i •Garatti
. •Coinp~~tte
Serv-u (619) 645-8434 ·: Remodallng ·
..__ _ _ ___, • .. Stop I Compare ,.
-~"':""":'~~-- · ' F:f'EE ESTIMATES
Public Notice

• 10 I iCi • Ill iCI

· STAR
GUITAR

ROIIIT IISSILl
COISTRUCnOI

Ext. 6057 ·
$2.99 per min.

''
•

off any X-large 18"
pizza

Monday through Wednellday
wleoupoo

,~,.,.,..

Give Yo1,1rse The

·•

•

BEIN

. · .... __ .. --· .

_.PRIPE OF THE FARM

11.00

\

�-

Tueeday, !lbrch 19,198--

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohl9

~o_y • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page I

NEA Cro..word Puzzle
·- - - ·-.....PHILLIP
' . · tcitOSS -

~--·

ALDER
I {, H 1.1 _) I&gt;'' P l It- ',
1J. liV I ' 'JO.

2bdrm. apto., totol electric, appliances furnllhe.d. laundry room
facilltlot, clooo tO ochool In IIDWn.

lC Good Homo: 2 Pupp!ot, fo·

~

•

Appllcatlono a..flablo at: VIllage
Gnoon Apta. 148 or caU 014·882·

Brondal In Color Will Bo
all Houoo Dogo, 8 t4-2451.
.

3711.EO~i-

2br., unfurnished, newly painted,

le&lt;Lillronze Carpetlno &amp;' Pad81~14&amp;0.
'

utilities lurnished, $375/mo, $100
dopoail, 2217 N Main St. 304·
875-eiGe.
'

'

60

Lost and Found

3 Room Aptrtmont, Troth Plld,

FOUND: Black dog, roaombloo
Bordtr Collie. GaHipolla Forrr.
304-87!1-Mtt afllr 5pm

NO PETS, On 554 Near Port.,,
814·388-1100.

clean apt. will do all
·
anr
dmo, Apt 8 Booch St,
814-1102-4&amp;04.
111QS t4x70 Cfa)'i&gt;n 3 - . . ,
Cleaning Houus, Vtr»' Cheap 2•8alho, CA, All Eloclric, Underpinning, Skirting, Exlondod Wor·
Ra101181..__...73.
r.nty, Olhor Eoi!UI &amp;tG;500, Allor
Elloon'o Peroonel C1ro. Speclollz- 8 P.IU14 448 8415. .·
lng In Alzheimer's cart giving .
Call uo • Wo can nolp. 304-782· 1115 Skrilne, 14x70, lhroo bod·
room, ltna both, $18,5DD, 814·
254-4.

.loot- Iorge white dog wilh large
black apotl, black eera, male.
TannerS Run vicinity, 814•949·

2170.

Loot: Black And, Tan Rotwaller
Malo, An-• 1b CQdr, loot In
The Vlclnltr 01 Clraham: school
Road, 814·387·7244 After 3:00
P.M.Or8t........a:!S8.

Furnished Ap.rtmont I Bedroom,
1285/Mo. · Utliltleo Paid, 820
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolla, 114·

446-3844 After 7 RM.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BVDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 5:1 WillWOOd Drive
~om ~44 to $315. Wolk ., ohop

:~~:.~~~Jt.8·25BI.

8112-i!IIOt '

Ftrot ume buyora. e:z n"'""'"". 2
I. 2 tHtdrooma. Around l200tfno.
can Ru11 Murdock t-eoo-251 ·
!5010.

1

For lale or wi(l conilder trade,
2btdroom trailer and tot, $30,000,

304-882-3n4 anrdme.
Kaywood 1Dx55,
814-843-5394,

tw~

bedroom,
'

limited Ollorl til98 dOublowlde,
3br, 2bath, 11780 down, $2751
month. 'free delivery &amp; aatup,
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro

wv 304-7~5885.

-

New 14X80, 2 or 3bedroom. O.-y

Beach St, Middleport, 2bodrccim,

turnlohod apertmtn~ utldn ptld.
Depoolt &amp; refor•nces. 304·182·

Lawn Boy mo wer; 10' 1atollllt Charol~lo Buill For Solo, Pur·
dl1h ; llarohal1amp -~::~\~~~: labrid, Pt&gt;iltd, And Raglaterod
cabinet; IBM PCIAT c
Bred Fol CitMng Ease, 614·3111·
Couniry Sl&lt;!e Apartmtnll, Nice 2 814-8411-23114 cal altar 12 noon.
2~. 61~·448.0771 . ·
Bedrooms, AC, WID, Water, Sew,
or Garabga Included, $3!50/llo. ·Nice Alvacado Green Retrigera: Heavy Brood Chickens 1 Montn
llep!&gt;lit Required, 513-022..0tor, Good Condition, 814·258· ·Old, $1 A Piece, 814-258-6136,
Aflllr2P.II.
1281.
Etticiency. References. Deposit.
No poll, 304-675-5182.
Furnished 1 Bedrodm Apartment,

Second Avenue, Gallipolia, Ul)otair~ Udlltioa Paid, No Peta, Rei·

.......... 814-448-9523.

payments after 4yaars. 304· 755·

558S.

1,000 Pds', Round Balli, 10t Cut·
tlng Grass, Hay For Sale, 6; 4-

3116-8875.

•

.

Alfalfa hay, first cutllng, squ,.re

baleo, ...,., Wtt, Tupptrl Plalna,

day C~lt.

T RAN SPO RTATI ON

710

1075 llorcodos Origlnol llftoa

aerator, near

711,000, Good Shepi. It ,000, Call
All&lt; Foro..., 814-441-11 n.

halldoWn,8t-2025.

1083 Buick Skyhowk, $250, 81438?,032.~ttwotn 7 ·10 A.M.

Scenic Vailley, "Apple Grove,

=-:~-:-:::---:----;.....1 beautiful 2ac lata, public water,

local Co. NHds ~ Telemarl&lt;elers
To Set Appts., ParHirno &amp; F.uiiTime. Call614-441·1975 Aok For
Down.

· Bualneaa
Opportunity

RENTALS

Needed Somaohe To Clean My .Carol·King'a finnt Stying Solon,
Hcu&amp;e, ~Kim, 614-441·1700.
Soaking Sualnno Pttrtner. Exctl·
''"' Location, Vert Good Bull814-9117-0812.

'*',.,_,

Q_ONmOl 'YOUR CASHU S..,..

1

Anjllmt-OftWaaltandl.

c~doBcwtJI:"·· 304-576-23311.

INOI'rc:EI ,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
•acommtitdi that you do bull•••• wllh people' yo~ know, and
NOT 10 ooild money throuGh the
mall until' you have lnveotfeated
tiMi offarlng.

fll•u• or . -.more foi lho
~·' ca• 7t'w311-2273 1o1
rnoro inloll

foi lho

814·

2. Ello·

Phone,

410 Houses for Rant
2 Bedroom Houae. 2 Bedroom

Trailer In Gallipolis, 614-441l-6849
For lnformotfon.

door, 3.8
olftt model turbo, PS,

PB, AC, 5 epeed·, power IIIII

Rac:ine,$18,000 can finance with

210

V-~.

and locke. ,•Groat Car,' U20D
neg., 614•082· 7478 or 814·840·
28111.

2111111.

FI NANC IAL

for Sale

'88 Thundorblnl SC, -

_litre.

Building aftas wllh road frontage,

Five acrea,

~OS

Rooms tOr rent' - WHk or monlh.
Stordng at $120/mo. Galla Hotel.

814-448oi511D.'

-

,f I

•

PEANUTS

1991 Font E..,.,. Sport 4x~. 4.0.
V-6, two door, stllndard, air, •
crulae, aun root,_loaded._ mual :

aoa, 814-848·2481 after 15pm
weekandl; ·

.ves:MJ/.AM .. I WALKED TO

a.

SCHOOL 1N THE RAIN ..

1902 Chevr Aotro Con•erolon l1 ·
Van. 4t,ooo mil" 4.3 V-6, auto, ·
loaded, 4 captlln. k11111'1 ~. I•
now dr11, goroge op1. mull - · ,
asking $10,800, 814-8411-2'\111 af· ,

1

,

MotorcyCleS

.

..

~

••

~~~~~~~~~:::
1978 FLH Ha~ey Dmoon Lots Of :·
Extras, Mull Set $12,000, 814· 0
388-&amp;412.
..

·:

1085 Hondo V-:IQ Magna Nooda ;.
Pain~ I Back Brokoo $800, 814- , •
258-6391 .

·:

•

t ;as Honda TRX 250R, txc. ::

tond., many erh11. 304·182· , ,

2715.

•

.
11104 GSX 750R

-

,,..

11

,

suZUlli, 1,500rri.,

304-882-3518.

1

750 Boats &amp; Moten
for sale

1
1

'

irdudod, $2700, 814-885-3375.

Pl(.l( IT UP ~ 'ffiE

trailer, , 50 moiiOr, all acctt110rie1 '
'

MERCHANDI SE

11195 Poleri1 SL750 21!11.-,ilnra. :
&amp;Trailer; Still Undor Warranty, •

REAL ESTATE

818notw.ll . : .

.,..,.

81 ....~·7518

:

780

1:

------------'--'

~-

Over

Transminlon, ·:

10,000

et4-245-58n

·.

To '

,,

n.-.

whMia. ,...,.. nOOf
ea:. •·
D &amp; R Auto: ~:v· 1104--372·
3IICI3 or 1-100•

eye

.....

.

32 Baked it81118 •
35Waraaw

native
39 Fortuna

By Phillip Alder

40 EIKI dish

I am writing this column on the
morning after the Blizzard of '96 in the
Northeasl On our patio, the snow has
been blown nearly six feet high against
the kitchen window. However, as the
storm was predicted well ahead of
time, first lhlng yesterday morning I
zoomed down to the supermarket to
buy a few supplies - along with everyone else in our area. It waa busier in
the store than on the day before

43 South_.,..,

41 Uselul
42 Dumpy

.
-

India no
oM Singing bird
45 Romain
·
47 Wellem
..

delenoo Ofllo ·

48 WWII event ;
49 Rim

localfane
52 Firearm

oWners· org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

CMbrttv CipMr Cl ~ .,. CfiiiQd from quollltiona ~ lamou• people, pa~lt •net prn.m
&amp;ch titter In lle cipher ltanda for MOihel. Today's chM: M

,• p T

IAVT

ZN

E ZAN .

~

ZSSTVXJD

C

'

XZOD

fA

B •I .

.

..
'

MJPPTX

' ' C TL

IZXITLX

KA

K A Z P W

J
J

I A VT
MTBJVE.'

WATVWA
KAVPJVE
N f J B .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •;·ve gol Ty Cobb's dentures. That's as far as I'll go .• ' . ·
- (Memorabilia dealer) Barry Halper.
•" ·

'::~:~~, S©~4\l~-~£~s· ::::
- - - - - - ldlted ~, CLAY I. f'OilAN - - - - - - Rearrange lettars of the
0 lovr
Krombltd wordo be-

..
'

''

low to form four words.

.~ I I I .I 1· .
--,-L_Ar--TrE_Wr--Lr.--1,~

'

"

V0 RRE

.
-,E....,.N_Y'TD::--rE--11. ..::::,,

~I

.

I

1

I

Granny always said you
were a fool if you didn't get
angry enough to fight, but
you're wise if you - - - - •

IG

T 0 F E MN
t---T~·~~~--~~~~~5&lt;TI--l

.

..

.

. ' ..
"

Complete the chuckle quoted
.
•
•
•
•
_
.
by filhng in ttle missing words
,_.....,_ ...__..___.__.__, you develop from step No. 3 below.

'.

WE'RE WI.VING
ONE OF ~E

'c.AREEit. DA~ •
AT &amp;.HOOL
TOI'\ORROW.

'.

,,

SCJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

Sow1n11 Y011'll Find In rite
Closslfled Secrlotl.

Enamor · Trunk - Cynic - Madman- CONDUCT
·vou can get yourself into a tight place," granny lectured. •it vour CONDUCT is loose.·

....
.
MARCH19I ..:,.

ITUESDAY

rr.1 P L OY f~ ENT

..
..·.
.

::. ERV IClS

110 ' '

~

•'

Wantod"To Buy: Tanning
BIWI-0748.

1.

·
•
:·

21 Papal name
29 - on (love ·
to exceu) 30 Camputl

Budget Tranamiuions, Used IRe- r
Accoool~le

.

•

21 ~ctor Foxx ,
27 Part of the • •

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • K

Ac:c'eaaorles ,

buUt, All Typeo,

' .

o-a

1t
18 Flaur-cle- 21Door
loal!lnlng
24 Corridor
25Ancl-

7~n·a

1 Pine or llr
2 Helper .

••

10 Flag~

EUI

fi~Titl~!

u :

~----~~---.--~-New ga1 1e'nka, one 1on
k 1· •

1.

North

r

~Ck£eY

MI~T~ ,t.ND Tl"f.Y

AutoFWts &amp;

.

DOWN

.

• Aligned

3 Grav.l rldgn
4 Ar8b, e.g.
5 Hydra

Paas
5t

"Yes," said East apologetically, "I
should have seen that coming. If only I
j~ttison lhe live and seven of spades
'under declarer's ace and king, I can
play the three under his four, strand, ing him in his hand."

MOIN..,._\o.lrot-16

1082 Woflcrall boat with 198 7 :
1067 OMC Cobra boat ecyr,

West
3•
Paas
Paas

claimed.

~

1

3 Bedroom Hou&amp;e For Rant fn R;o
Gnmdo, 2 Cor Ga!llge, Pado, Do·

Toning Bad Bu1ine11 For Sale, 3bedroom, lR, FR, ful ba&amp;emen~
located At Fineot Hlir &amp; Tanning In Now HaYen. No HUD. $400/mo.
Salon, Call Anytime, 814·387· Deposit. Relarencos. 304-273·
3482. '
0612.

• •

,.

1
1995 SCIOEX 4·whetler, ss:eoo.'

helme~ $tl,ooo. 304-773-lltee:

.

Jocquea -

51 Nellhar Rep.
or Dam.
53 Put on 1101trc1
54 Relating 1o a
limo
55 E-oy unit
1511 Coup d' 57 ~ ,....., .
1511 ExpNoa
59 Playthlnga

12 wcla.l

In bridge, sometimes you see what
is coming and sometimes you don't.
East had his eyes cloied on this deal.
If North had enough 10 jump 10 live
diamonds, South decided that, despite
his void, he cotlldn 'I bid leis than six
spades.
When the dummy came down, South
saw that it was lacking all the useful
carde: a singleton heart or the spade
eight or the .cliJb,.IJ!leen. However, he
didn't bury his head in the snow.
After winning Irick one with the
heart 11ce, declarer cashed the spade
ace, spade king and club ace. Then
South exited with the spade four.
East unexpectedly won a trick with
his spade seven, but then he began 10
feel uncomfortable. Realizing that
South had to be void in diamonds to
play like this, East returned the club
nine, but South played low from hand.
On winning with dummy's club jack,
South discarded his two heart losers
on the ace-king of diamonds · and

==~=-==-=:::::1m Honda 350, 1500 OBO. 304-, : :
675·7350.

Shrtv.

43 Coat type
48ov.tui'M
50 Fllmcii-

ThankagiYihg.

-::

litor, 18 i/211., IIIII 8, $2,000 U &lt;
ta. 3(M.81'$-.1815.
''r... .
~.

eu-

SPONTANEOUS SA~CASM ..

J.

84 Ford F-1·s0 ••4 XLT, iooded, ,
16,200 mlloo, excollont condition,•
asking $18,500 814~N12tlll'.,.
81••8411-2481 aftor 3pm.
'
'

hook-upo. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-58~1 ..11aaonWV

poalt Required, No Pets,
3~720, AFTER 6 P.M.

SORR't'. MAAM ..JUST A LITTLE

i

:

2 Bedroomo In Galllpollo, 1 Both,
Air, Garage, No Pall, Kkcntn Ap
pliances, $39Mio. 614·448·
2800.

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. All

NO, OUR. CHAUFFEUR HAD'
TO TAKE TJ.I E SENTLEif IN
·FOR AN OIL CHAN6E ..

7-7,000:

8.1 .·258-e.e7,

41 LMtmo.
42 Tonnlapro

See it coming

l

1000 Ford Ranger Xlt'4¥. VO,t
5opd, flh ki~ alklng 18,7011'. 304.:'
M2·351S.

740

4 lata : 2 Road Fron1age On R1.

back of New Haven, rural water,
and finanCing avallabte. 304·882·

Dbl.

&amp;•

1992 Plymouth Vorager,
Milts, ~7.500, 11 4j58·834D ,

Wrapped Round Balta For Sole,
814·3..-..524, PIOIIt No SUn-

814-31111-1704.

South

1880 Nfaoen 4X4 AWF¥· Roil~
Air, 5•Spood, Excollom Condllion,l
814 448 '!!"
:.
1000 Dodge Ram Van B':2so,j
72,000 Mlleo, 18,000, Can Blj
Seen At:'GafllpOIIa Dtllfy Trilluno11
825 Third A•onuo, ClO:¥i,PDIIII
Ollio.

:)'Willi

Vulnel'llble: Both
Dealer: West

1088 3/4 Ton Dodge Panel Vall
318, Auto,
11.400. 814-~154,'.
.......
~~ t

SICIAtonoruriner
31-down

••

BEEN A~~ /!GA~

Nover w~i. round balta hay lor

Water, Elect &amp; Phone On Site,
Booutllul Homesite &amp; View, Oilier

.,

vans &amp; 4-wDs

81~ 258 ...=t=.

50fi.IIIIM
• Fling . .
. 12 Aacaind
13 Componlon

14 Annoy
· t5 Dutch cltone
11 Anblo
r----~N~O'"R01TH;;;;----::a::-.-::IHI=
_ - , : 17 =~':,afoDd
48 z
, nah
• 8 7 •
11 Spooldly •
• A K Q4 3
20 Ooctoral
aJ 7 6 4
dlaaortaUona
22 Gratuity
WEST
EABT
23 Unganttrnanly
a7 5 3
IMt1
•K Q J 10 9 6 3
• 2
24 Slart of a toasl
tlO 7 5
t J v8 8 2
1:1 Chrlatlan
•• 5
4Q I 0 9 3
28 R:.':n:'AP
SOUTH .
31 Had a IIIIIICII
a A K Q J 10 9 4
32 Tvlleohchool
• A 5 4
33 Oiibllottera
• .. •
34 Boy
eA K 2

'tOO A~O 'THE \VIF£

~tor~~~&amp;~w~o~t~lll~~~~~~:: '

County Blacktop Road, County

180, 17,500 Eacn; 2 Private Lots
$8,500 Each Unraotricted,
100x300 Call614·4'16-8554, Or

:EEK&amp;MEEK

814-4187-411153. :
lilt. 304-8B2-2Dn.

Acreage Available, Some Wood·
td, Phone: 814-3111·2871 Or See
Don Cox @Patriot

304-

Uao~ · rumfllire:

Hay &amp; Grain

baleo tor oolo $3.114·24S.901lD. '

t I Acrll Level To Gonfly Rolling
Graseland. Long Frontogo On

Top Prien Paid: oid U.S: Colno,
Silver, Gold, Dlamondo, All Old
Collocflbloo, Paperwllghtl, Etc.
M.T:S._Colh Shop, 15) Second
- .... Galfpoll; 614-448'2842- .

e40

2nd &amp; 3rd CUlling, all8tfa square

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Com pan,,
, complott

Thoroughl&gt;rod Golding 14 Yooro.
,11.2 ~ndo. Eng. Weot-Trail, Ex·
Staino and Flnilh 20'!1. ol1 regular ptrlonced Rlclor. St ,OOO Or Trade
price, Oeruato White or Black For Srnollor Horae, 114-3811-ll:!eS.
Enamel, (Sproy Can) Buy
Got One Froa. MINT PLUS

talot &amp;1!50, 814-882· 7207.

Ookwood Hcmn, Nitro WV. 304·
755-5885.

7750.

Quarter Horse H•• Been Team
Pemod &amp; 814-379-21121),

New STkkena lnlerlor

Pioneer receiver: BSR turnl8ble,
IWD \ltah -korl, poid $350 wiN

Price Buster! New ux70, 2 or
3br. Only $995 down, $195/month.
Free dellve'ry &amp; setup. ·only at

Bogoo Aucllon SeNice. 614-448-

PAINT SALE. Plttoburgh
Paint &amp;10,88/gaf. , Flot Wail
f11 .881gal., Somi-Giooo·
$12.88/gal., lntroductorr

8'15-4D84.

New Bank Rapoa. Only • left Sdll
In warranty, 304-755-7191.

Public sa1e
and Auction

·::~=-::.L-:Iv~q-=-t,~OCk':'
, ~~ 730

2586.

.make 2 pa~ments ID move ln. No

ao

at&lt;~-742·2580.

con• a•

1 N.ll. - '

ofoall

t8ae
Boola By Rodwlng , Chlppowe,
auto,
ID,OO&lt;Iml. per
Tonr lorna. Guarontood Lowoat
PricH At Shoo catt. ~
110iF.;~~~~ftini--I88;.•~~~
- N~o~,~~~~~~~;J
610 faJm .Equipment
T
ieee Ford Ranger pldwp; 4 cyl.7
Concroto l Plootlc Septic Tonko,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron 1885 llaaaor Forguoon Tractor, Willi....,.., &amp; _ , 113.000 mlloo,
e•••• Ent... priiOI, Jackson, 0)1 Very Good Condition, Runo Ex- &amp;1 ,800, 814-M-3324. '
1-IIQ0.537-052a
calion~ 814-742·2457.
t~t Ford Ranger Plci&lt;-Up, Ntw
Dlanoy area. 5 day1, 4 hotel Gohf RD&lt;Ind Bolero, 11...., Con- llroo, &amp; Toolbox, 80,000
nlghtl, ueo anytime. Peid ·$310, ditionera. Disc MOwers, Dloc Mlleo, 4 Crllnder, U.!!Oll• 8"·
11111$100. 304-353-0131.
M.o.,ar CQndltJon,ra, Forage 446-2058.
·
Equlpmen~
So
loa
And
Service.
tll02
louzu
pick
up,
5
op.,
4
cyl., S
Electric
Scootort
And
Wheelc:halrt, NIW fUHd, Van I Al~er Farm Suppl~. 6t4·245· I'IIC&gt;o.l , 70,000 mllel, nlco.uuck,
· ·
15800, book prlco $74001 814Car llh lnotalted, Stoir8fldol. lift ,5I
c~alra, Call For Brochure, 814·
lntornationaf Farmall eoe die.-!. 882·25041ft8r&amp;pm. ' .
4411-7283. .,
fntornaJil&gt;nal Farmall 7011 wlcob,
A-~ Chor- ll
dleoei ..Gohl 8tindorlnllxtr. Owa- 1119 4 Joop ~-"
""'
Getting NMtdv fDt lhl Elg w.a· ~dluo tonna 71L hlybino, 12jt.· korioport illd. L.-, et4-446- 748D,:;
Dor? Call Filvor Front Photogra- diiC, all good, cond. 304· 273- 11195 GMC 4x4 5 Speed, '*· Tilt,
phy for 11e boot quolity a Pfl-.
&lt;1215. '
'
•
Cruloo 14,000 111111, Appiox. 2D
3DH11-3111.
Tractor tune-up klta, 10% clia· MPG . ' 118,500 Warranty· Incl .
count lp March, Sldor'a Equip· 8!4-~l .
mont '~75-7421.
81 Dodge Dokoto,V-8, tor.per,
Wanted Ta Rent 30 ·80 Acrea
tirea, new brakes, c tan,
ForPewre_, 814-441!·2158.
14500; Ill F-150, 8 ctr-. 4 op.,tires, new btakea, new front IUIKino liza wotar bod botntd matponlion, 12500.•14-742·1800.
troll, lix d"""'r ptdootaf, $200, 630

. .....
::

- 31 Coupla
31ActNMHIJgen
37
deg.

Help .Wanted
PRESTERA CENTER
Human Aooourcn/

. . . Olllt:e llantgll'
' ~0.. 8Qxll088 •

HuntlligrDn. WV,257D5

lo

ASTRO-ORAPH

a birthday

gift. Send tor your

Graph predicliOns for the year ahead by
maliilg $2 and SASE to Aslro-Graph, c/o
thie newepaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray

Hlfl Station, New' YO!Ic, NY 10156. Make
sure to state your zodiac sign.
ARIES (Mircll 21-Apltl19) If you are too
opiniOnated today, people who Intended
1o cooperate with you might lum around
and look the otltef way when you requeal

VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;pl22) Tal&lt;e care
lo Involve a friend in something he or she
cannot afford . Everyone, including you,
will .feel bad it lhe project does not Qan

out

·

UBRA (S.,L 23-0c:L 23) For 1he sake of
expediency today, you might do someBJ!;RNICE
thing against your beller judgmenl juet to
BEDEOSOL
get a matter resolved. laler, you might
regret your impulsivanetJS.
usista~.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) CoinTAU
(April 20-ltlly 20) 'today you paniona could you oil course today
I
wiH
beller al ratlor\8IZitlg and making
you have stronger faith in their Ideas
ex us01 than you will be at producing . . lhan you do in your own. Make sure to
. Find a _ , to gellhingl done.
evaluale what-you need.
INI (May 21.JuM 20) Left fo your ·: SAOmARIUB (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You
owri
, you'l ICCOIIIpllah whal you : may not feel like being sociable early In
Wel:lnetiday, Mardl20, 1a9e
eel out 1o do _today.
do not pro- •the day. HoulMtr, don'•rejecllnvilalfonl,
. •.
: vide an openong for fl0!1Product1V8 people . Cecauae bX evening, you will look tor
If you atrlvt 10 expand llld build upon : to lnlelfere.
,
_
.
aomething fun to
• provloualy· l4tkl' I&lt;I!Jndlliona In lhe year CANI:I!R (June 21'-July ~I Partnership - CAPRICORN (0.0. 22-.lln. 11) Vaually
• 11te8d,~tlte raaulll qi)!Aid be lmprtltllve. ' , arrangemenl&amp; will not function well loday It's u~ 1o rely 1oo heavily upon
You Wll be 011 the •
~· 10 do not · r lltere 18 no COIMIOt\ goill. Bqth ~*ties Intuition, bitl loday your hunches may
ll!ve up hope. ' · · •
mualllgrW on oyery ~provide' you Wllh frnport8nllnliglll&amp;.
PliCD .,,_ ,10 II 01110) In 0t111r 10 , 1.80 (.lilly za.Aui ~ Your lteit! miOhl AOUARIUa (.Mn. 10-f'eb. Ill) If you give
ll:llleoe to you&lt; filii polenlial todly, you be In lha clouds today.!nd your mind !had. ~te lfrne today, ~
mull lind thit proper modv11fon. If you '"""I not be lociiHd on the lUI&lt; al ha!ld., will have a way ot worklnglhemaolvoe
don't, you tlllght not push youraell as Try 10 S1lclt to lObe ·111!11 require minimal out: Do_not automallcally pull'! the panic
hard lfll You,;ll\ould. Placet, li.at 'yourMII ,. COI~dralion.
\ . ; button.

.' . .

,,"

'

. . ..

... "

n

.... .
' '

a l - Rocl&lt;ets

I ' •,

.•" .'

·H9-.

ao.

.. .

' i"
I '

.II

.

...

. I .. ...

.•

;·

'

I'

.,

'·

•

'

"

�,,Peg. 10 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday, March 19,1991

Ohio Lottery

\

~.

Fresno State
posts victory
in NIT action

Pick 3:

4-1-8

Plck4:
4-3-7-6
Buckeye 5:
1 0-27-28-36-37

Sports, Page 4

Occasional snow show-'
era tonight, lows In the
201. Thuraday, chance of
· anow ahowera. Highs In
the 30s.

Spring is just arouna tlie. corner ana
temperatures are rising... 6ut at Mason 1'urnitu~
r
· , ..
_rm...:~~~
, u,.c.) ~re ~owermg..

_

· Vol. 48, NO. 226 ·
2 s.etJo.... 14 P8gee

1

1

I£'J/t£~ Jf]!E!Jv( _J9{ TJl'E ST01{.'E

Republic-an
incumbents :
win party's
.nomination

GRANDE .CHORALE

:Grande Chorale on spring
.tour of Southern states

~

I
I

•

The University of Rio Grande's
·Grande Chorale is touring North and
South Carolina, Georgia and Florida,
March 16-21 to give six performances of a medley of folk, jazz,
rock, country and spirituals,
"There is music .for everybody,"
""said Dr. Merv Murdock, director and
-associate professor of music. The tour
:incl1-1des a performance at Disney
.World on the Fantasy Faire Stage in
·the Magic Kingdom. "It's an opportunity to share with oiher folks in dif(erent parts of the country all the 181..ents and skills that Rio Grande stu·dents have," Murdock said before

departing. "It is far more than a musical experience. It is a recruiting tool
for the University as well."
Local students on tour include
Ruth Keeton, Karen Polcyn, Donna
Criaigo and Jennifer Hite, Gallipolis;
Ann Marie Belyus, Little Hocking;
Amy Rouse, Middleport; Amy Ryan
and Andy Sigman, Jr., Coolville;
Bambi Roush and Roy Mayes Point
Pleasant, W. Va.; and Angie Dicken,
Jackson.
Other Ohio residents on the
Grande Chorale tour are J.P. Lyons,
Ironton; Marilyn Kibble, Reedsville;
Ki1mberl) Pund, New Carlisle; Derek

•·.

Zenith 1!!" Remote Color ...............................................'319 .......1269
Zenith 20" Remote Coloi-...............................................'339 ....... '279
Zenith 25" Console w/remote-3 cabinet cholcas........ .'639 ....... '529
Zenith 27" Pine or Oak coneO!e wtremote ••••.:..::......... '699 ....... 1579 '
Tappan 30" Electric or gas range ..,.............................. 0449 ....... 1329 .
Maytag Auto washer, large capacity.............................'539 ....... I 4 69·''
Gibson Electric Automme dryer........ :..........................'409 ....... 1339
Gibson Eiullt·ln Qlshwaaher- f'ull featured .................. .'439 ....... 1329 ··
Gibson 15.4 Cu. Ft. Refrlg- Rollera ...............................'649 ....... 1499
White-Westinghouse 1JI.O Cu. Ft.· Glass ahelves ...... '879 ........'629

. ('

{

Beelcman, Washington Courthouse;
Jason Bingman, Mansfield; Will
Webster, Middletown; Jason Bowen!
Fresno; Matt Mosier, Tipp City; Erin·&gt;
Coe, Cicero; Summer McWilliams, ·
East Liverpool; Karen Minard, Mt. ·
Vernon; and Glen Ragan, Columbus.
The Grande Chorale performs offcampus approximately 40 times each
year for high schools, churcl)es, civic .
organizations, libraries, clubs, and
senior citizen centers. Eighteen
vocalists are accompanied by piano, ·
bass and drums . Many of the performances include choreography and ~
last 30 to 60 minutes.
.

:Area student
•
.rece1ves
scholarship

Rio Grande .
classes
offered

John Card of Racine has been
awarded a trustees scholarship by the
· University of Rio Grande. He is the
· son of Paul and Sharon Card and a
: senior at Southern High School .
Card plans to major in manufac: turing technology at Rio Grande and
:. to pursue a career in the automobile
"industry.
The trustees scholarship is awarded to students graduating in the top
15 percent of their class who have
earned a composite score of20 on the
ACT and have a 3.0 grade point aver-

Several classes are being offered
at Rio Grande College through the
Office of Adult and Continuing Education.
They include: 1
Introduction to Computers -- sessions, Wednesday, March 27 from I
·to 4 p.m. and Thursday, March 28
from 6 to 9 p.m. Cost $35. Preregis:
tration deadline Friday, March 22.
The beginning course in computing
introduces adults to the most basics
of computers and computer technol·
ogy.
Retirement .... Can You Afford It •
-course offered March 26, 6 to 9 p.m.
Cost $30, preregistration deadline,
Marc h 21. The class will offer ba,~c
principles for planning retirement,
gathering assets for savings and
pulling to work savings and pension
plans.
Introduction to Negotiation and
Bargaining -- two session class, Tuesday and Thursday, March 26 and 28,
6 to 9:30 p.m. lileadline to register,
March 22, $75. Class designed to
highlight critical aspects' of negotiation and bargaining and for discus- ·
sion of techniques applicable to wide
1
variety of negotiation situations.

•

JOHN CARD
age. It covers partial tuition for the
recipient.

AHA campaign-·raises funds
for education, research
The "Have a Heart" campaign of
the Meigs County Division of the
American Heart Association has
raised $720.
Volunteers distributed paper hearts
to area business where patmns could
make a$1 donation and have their
names pu't on heart replicas. lbese
hearts we.re then displayed making
people aware that February was
American Heart Month and that heart
disease is the number one cause of
death in Meigs County.
Participating in the program were
Kroger's, Crows Kentucky Fried

Chicken, Fruth's Pharmacy, Vaughan's Cardinal Foods, Meigs Senior
Center, Little John's Food Mart,
Pomeroy Exxon Tiger Mart, Super
America of Middleport and Super
America of Pomeroy. Top collector
was Kroger's bringing in $321 of the
total.
These funds will be used to sup·
port research and educational projects
of the American Heart Association.
For more information about the
American Heart Association or about
cardiovascular disease and prevention, residents may call call 1-800AHA-USAI.

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Alzheimers and
~elated Disorde,r Support Group will
meet Wednesday, I to 3 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center. Topic will be
on keeping humor in caregiving.

tuESDAY
· : POMEROY -- FOE Auxiliary
· m~ting" Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
'
. RUTLAND -- Rutland Fire
Departinent Ladies Auxiliary, Tuesday, 5 p.m., Rutland Fire Station.
Plans for Easter egg hunt.

MIDDLEPORT -- Missionary service at Wesleyan "Bible Holiness
Church, 75 Pearl Street, Middleport,
Wednesday, March 20, 7:30 . p.m.
with David and Pam Ferrell who are_
going to Alaska as missionaries.
Public invited.
·

SYRACUSE -- Syracuse Youth
League meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m,
·Syracuse Grade School. All parents
apd .interested coaches invited.

We

BEBHOfHI~

Four Dr&amp;Wfr Chest- Maple Finish .........~......................... '79 .......... *49.
Ashley 4 pc. White Oak· DoorH Places~ .....................'899 ....... 1499
Cherry French Style- 4 pc. Large Drawere ...................'999 ....... '639
_Ute Pine 4 pc.- Door Dresser &amp; Chast..........................'899 ....•.. 1599
Singer 5 pc. Pine· Hutch·Miror·w/Stand ..................... '1295 ....... '799
V/Baasett 4 pc. Oak- Country Style .............................'1199 ....... '749
SJnger 6 pc. Pine- "Southwestern"·Biack Pulls ........ ~••••.'1399
~ -

T \BLE

l

I

.

,

•

•

'

'.

· . i -~nj~yea· them. all.

Mature

Drivers, HoiH
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

l

'

'

PlloL~TEtn

"

.

I .

'

'269

.3 pc. Droplaaf Table, 2 Braas/Carie uph. chalra .......... '199........ 1119
'
.
1
5 pc. Pine tresua Table/4 Padded Seat
. Chalni ............ '349 ....... 199
5 pc. Country Oak 36x48 Table/4 Wood Chalre ........... '449 •••••:. '279
'
5 pc. Almond Metal Fra..-t/4 Tan VInyl Swlv,el Chalra ... '1199 ....... '749
6 pc. Oak TresUe Table/,sench/4 Bow Back Chalra ..... '799 ....... 1549
7 pc white/Natural 36X80 Tabla/6 Bow Beck Chalni ... '799 .......1569 •
7 pc. Country Oak 42" Table/2 Ltafa/8 Sial Sack Chalra '6llt ....... 1489·
•
0 n Front 46" Oak Hutch ............................................ '619 ••••••. 499
'

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'

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1-:\B~

.

Twin or Full Size Foun4at1ona (Cuh'n Cahy) ...............'ii....;••. ~J42
.
Bean Chall'l· 3 color Cholet ............................................ *71.......... 49
.

.

Rustle Pint Bunk a•..-................... _ .............................. '271 .......
'

'

'2........ ··

Doorad Ckt. Tabla- Gre~~:helrry ......................... ;..........'1Sit...........li
Student Desk· Maple Finish .....................................~l-. •••• ''231.~ .........'9
&lt;
Cedar Chest· Padded
'371 ....... '239

ROGAN _ ~
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Insurance Services
214 EAST MA!N
POMEROY
.

'

,,' , .
''

.

(304)

Mason, WV
•
L---------------------------~---------------------------J I••"
2nd Street

By TOM HUNTER
and JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel N-a Staff

' .-

' •.

Janet I.. Howard

Judith A. William•

I

· :.Incumbent County Commissioner
Janet Ho)Vard held off challengers
James L. Davis, C.E. "Ed" Evans-and
Djana D11ff Phillips, winning the
ri•ht to seek her second term on the
commission in the fall during Tuesd4y's Democratic primary.
. . Howard garnered 1,187 votes,
Davis 335.• Phillips 284 and Evans
163. Howard will now face Repul!litllll challenger Judith A. Williams in
. the Novem~ general election.
. In tbe race for the seat of RepllbIican incumbent .Commissioner
R9ben Hartenbach, Racine Mayor
Jeffrey Thornton received the full
sujlport of County Democrats. Thorntop accumulated 1,096 VOtes, while
Jack Slavin riftted 672 and Clyde R.
Moms \Von 200.
'

I

Nearly half of registered
voters ventured to polls

After the dust settled at the Meigs
County B08!'(1 of Elections late Tuesday night, it appeared very clear that
Almost half of the registered voters in Meigs County turned out to
the question of "what price should
vote
in Tuesday's Ohio primary.
taxpayers pay for better educational
Out
of 15,057 registered voters, 7,220, or 47.95 percent, reponed
opportunities" was likely the decid- 1
to
the
polls.
Of these, 4,918 voted on the Republican ticket while 2,265
. ing factor in the results of school ;
voted
for
Democratic
candidates.
. issues in the Eastern and Southern
voters
opted to vote on non-partisan issues only.
Thiny
-seven
: local school districts.
Turnout in some precincts, particularly those with school tax issues
Eastern Localmade the sacrifice
on the ballot, was much higher. The high~st turnout was in the Racine
for its children aS. voters approved a
Precinct, where 65.3 1 percent of the voters reported. Other precincts
bond issue to finance the 19 percent
w•th. htgh voter turnouts were North Chester, 65.28 percent, and Minlocal share of a $8.75 million build.ersvllle,
65.17 percent.
ing program by a 804 to 766 margin.
Voter
turnout was lowest in the West Rutland Precinct, where only
Meanwhile, voters in Southern
32.58
percent
reported.
·
Local rejected 918-814 a 6.1 mill tax
bond issue for construction of a elementary school and for renovations to built adjacent to Eastern High School. full Internet access capabilities,:
the high school.
Estimated completion date for the according to levy committee member ·
At Southern, the state agreed to new elementary is sometime in 1998 Richard Roberts.
.
· pay only 40 pencent of the $7,370,800 or 1999, according to. board member ·
Equipment and furniture for the :
project.
Greg Bailey.
new library will be purchased by the ·
· "The sun is rising in the Eastern
The project will also include a County Libmry !Joard, with the facil- ·
Local School District. We've reached "new" high school, as the 39-year-old ity to be leased from the district by
our turning point," Superintendent secondary building will be gutted and the county board.
Ron Minard said.
remodeled at a cost of $1.5 million.
"The agreement we reac hed with
"We couldn't be more excited
One of the project's main selling the county library board not only benabout this, and we would like to thank points during the campaign for pas· efits us from an educational standthe voters for making the visions of sage of the levy will most likely be .point, but also from an economic
better educational opportunities for its biggest attribute: a new branch of standpoint in the fact that it will free
all the district residents become a the Meigs County Public Library in 'up money that can be used elsewhere
reality," he added.
the Eastern Elementary School.
:in this building project ,~' Eastern
Preliminary site work will begin
The library will offer a complete Board President Jim Smith said.
shortly on the new 72,000-square foot line of research and library materials,
"It's a win-win situation for both
· central K' 8 elementary school, to be including computer terminals with
(~1~lnutd on Page 3)

«

· l ilcumbent Recorder Emmogene .
Hurulton, Syracuse, garnered 3,258 .
votes to handily defeat challenger ·
Deborah J. Watson, who received
· ,1"81 votes.
·
Incumbent Treasurer Howard E.
r'rank, Albany, defeated 'Edward W.
.Jurst of Middlepon, 2,610-2,125.
Eason, Hamilton and Frank are
now unopposed going into the fali :
election.
Meanwhile, retired Columbus ,
poli~=C" officer Michael R. Canan, ·
Pomeroy, defeated Pomeroy Police
Chief Oerald E. Rought by a comfortable 2,402 to 1,842 vote margin.
Canan will face incumbent DemQCratic Sberiff James M. ,Soulsby.
Incumbent Probate Judge Roben
E. Buck, Clerk of Courts Larry :
Spencer and Coroner DouglaS Hunter .
received 3,466, 3,582 and :!1.958
complimentary votes, respectively, ! ·
while Sreven L. Story, running for
prosecuting anorney, received 3,270 '
complimentary votes.
• Story, a former-Meigs prosecuting .
attorney, must now go up against
incumbent John R. Lentes in November.
In the Republican Party central
committeeman election, the following votes were recorded:
Bedford, Brenda A. Roush, 155;
North Cbester, Debra Chevalier, 126;
South Chester, · Edward . J. Werry,
203; West Chester, Blair Windon,
187, over Ray R. Pickens, 103;
Columbia, Marco Jeffers, 125;
Lebanon, Charles 0. Neal Jr., 124; .
Letart, Harry C. Hill, 161; North
Olive, Janice Young; 132; South
Olive, Dors,:l E. Larkins, 113;
(Continued on Page 3)

By TOM HUNTER
s.tltlnel News Staff

'1•

Will PJcturea- Select,cl Prlntl .................- ......................'49.......... *19
' .
.
'.
1177
Olk Finish Curio- Ugh~
:....•...........••...•.......••••.•...•.••.•
Fool Stools- Choice C~loria &amp; Stylea.....;....................... :.............. '29

But So~thern's fails by 104-vote margin

'

ON TO THE FALL- U.S. Rep. Frank A. Cremeana, R-Gallipolia, reviewed hla Itinerary for
· today with his acheduler, Stacy Mlrrotto, In hll
Washington office. Cremeans defeated prime-

Emmogene Hamilton

Robert H. Esaon

Howard, Thornton win Democratic
nods for county commission races

NOW

WAS

Tuesday was a great day· for local
· incumbents in the Republican Party
primary election, as four veteran
~ounty officeholders defeated opposition in seeking re-election to their
existing seats.
Incumbent Commissioner Raben
C. Hartenbach of Pomeroy will seek
re-election to the Jan. 2, -1997 seat on
the Meigs County Board of Corti•missiopers after edging challenger
Gary R. Dill by a 2,178-to-2,122
. margin. He will face Democrat Jef-,
frey L. Thornton.
· · For the commission seat com- ;
mencing Jan. 3," 1997, Judith A.
Williams of Syracuse will seek elec"tior'i after receiving · 1,156 votes to
lead a six- candidate pack consisting 1
of Patty Goeglein Pickens, Joseph :
Stobart, Mary. Powell, Ernest "Ike" '
·Spencer and JohR W. Blaettnar, who ·
_received ,878, 802,530, 504 and 471 ;
votes, respectively.
Williams --will face incumbent '
Democratic Commissioner Janet L. ,
Howard in the Nov. ·S general elec- .
lion.
· .. ·Three county races were decided
'in the Republican primary, including
the county engineer's race where
i_ncumbept Robcn ·Eason, Pomeroy,
received 2,473 votes to Eugene ·
;I!iP.~.. ~.:IW..

Flexsteel wall recliner· ,_,BUY'! or Turquolse ................'528....... .'275
'
La·Z-Boy Roc;_
ker ChalsrtracnnerBlue or green ........ '539....... '36
.9
Glider Rocker· Oak B~ BI!ICk· Tan or Blut................'429.;.....

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
1ewerandlesscostiylossesthan
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charQe you less"' lor your
Insurance. Insure your home.and
car with us and save even more
with our special muHi-pOlicy
discounts.

.

·:,
ww·ww fliggs

NOW

wAs Now
Colonial 2 pc pillow arm-Blue/Mauve Mnt.:................'1119···.... 1499
Tradltlonal2 pc. Brown Strlpe.Oak trlm .....................'1095 ....... '699
Contemporary 2 pc. Ma~-Rope Skirt Trlm-Pillowe'1299 ....... *899
Bassett 3 pc. Tan·Racllolng SCifa &amp; Chalr,loveseat.'1899..... *1288
Early American 3 pc. Blue w/mauve, tan &amp; green floral. '1599 ....... *899
Contemporary 3 pc. Tan multi cl;llor swirl-pillows ,... '1999.....'1088
Tradltlonal3 pc. Multi-color strlpe-gi'Hn plllowa......'1499 ....... *888
Early American 3 pc. Oak trlntrGrHII/mauve floral ...'2499.....*1399
Traditional Queen Sleeper·Biiletmauva swirl .............. '699 ....... *459
La·Z-Boy Contemporary G1111riltan atrlpe quHn elze •• .'1079 ....... '699
Colonial Queen Size Floral prlnt-mau.ve/blua ..............'799 ....... 1499 ·
fltcllner 2-way-3 color cholce............ ;..........................'22t........*119
'
.

Mason County Extension Homemakers organization, the Junior
Woman's Club, and the Wahama '
High School home economics classes.
.
Approximately 75 booths of. find
handmade crafts and foods from area
craftsmen and local cl vic organizations will be featured. Among the.
items io be · for sale ·are handmade
dolls, dried flowers, wood crafts, ·
· ceramics, rugs and many gift items. ·
Refreslmients will be for sale.
·

"

WAS

Ba888tt BrasS/glass Oval Ckt/2 Ract. Ends ................. '990. 1549 Ht
Rlverelda Solid Oak Storage Tables- ckt. 12 ends ..... '1 050. '799 ·eet
Ashley Oak French Oval ckt./2 &amp;nds ....................;....... '360. '229 ..,
Oak Pedestal set• Oval ckt./2 round trids ....................'120. *499 ..t
Oak Legged Set-ckt/2 rect. ends .....,........: ....................'299. *199 ..,
Black/Brau-Giau tops- 3 pc sat..................................'279. 1129 ..t

.Spring craft sale to be held

would like to thank my family·
•;.;./·_,,, ,..,~~-,. --'friepds for the ~9re ~~an 50
and ha~es I r~e:ive~ for fny

SFT~

Eastern OKs bond issue

· By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News stan

NO W

WA S

AGannett Co.N.!\1:;::

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 20, 1996

Incumbent Sheriff James M.
Soulsby ran unopposed in the primary, picking up I ,647 votes, and will
face Michael Canan on the Republican side in the N9vember election.
In ihe race for prosecuting anorney, incumbent John .R. Lentes ran
unbpposed, as he tallied 1,596 votes.
Lentes .will face Republican challenger Steve Story in the November
election.
Democratic candidates did not
file in the following races: probate
judge, .coroner, clerk of courts,
recorder, lre!JSUrer and engineeF.
In the Dem{!Crat Party central
colllll'itteeman races, all candidates
in th@ county's precincts were uncontested. The following results were
announced Tuesday night;
. Bedford, Gary A. Phillips, 77;
North Chester, Mary J. Hunter, 42;

South Chester, Bruce Bissell, 54;
West Chester, Elsie Folmer. 55:
Letart, David B. Sayre, 69; South
Olive, Melody L. Roberts , 102; Rutland Village, Samuel Bruce May, 46;
West Rudand, Norman C. Will, 60;
Salem, Norman Hamilton; 65; Middlepon Second, Kenneth Imboden,
55;Middleport Third, Connie J. Dodson, 48; Middleport Fourth Ward,
Barbara A. Hudson, 46; Bradbury,
Lisa Ann Roush, 28; Rock Springs,
Carol Ohlinger, 48; Scipio, Shirley
Mitcbell, 66; Racine Village, Anna
M. Layne, 50; Syracuse, Woodrow T.
Zwilling, 99; Minersville, John Ihle,
92; Pomeroy First Ward, Maureen
Hennessy, 31 ; Pomeroy Second
Ward, Rebecca 1\-iplett, S3; Pomeroy
Third Ward, Catherine L. Welsh, 40.
Candidates did not file for the cen(Contl!!ued on Page 3)

ry challenger Bob 'Kaney Tuesday to face his
1994 opponent, former Rep. Ttd Strickland, In
the November election. (AP}

Cremeans' primary win assures
·rematch with .Strickland in fall
turned him out," Cremeans said.
Strickland said Cremeans is too
extreme
for his constituents.
WASHINGTON - Republican
"I'm
going to call Frank CreRep. Frank Cremeans Tuesday easimeans
extreme
because I think he is,
ly defeated GOP challenger Bob
Kelley in Ohio's primary in the 6th on his voting record," Strickland said.
Congressional District, setting the "He's voted with Newt Gingrich 95
stage for a political slugfest between percent of the time, so he might as
Cremeans and former Democratic · well be Newt Gingrich."
Strickland also said hC will chalRep. Ted Strickland.
lenge
Cremeans to debate him in
District-wide, Cremeans netted
every
county
in the district,
45,782 votes to challenger Bob Kel" I really believe that Frank
ley's .15,349.
" I think this race is going to come believes be can buy this congresdown to whether the voters trust me sional disuict, and it's not surprising
or Frank Cremeans," said Strickland, that he's best buddies with a man who
who lost to Cremeans by 4,000 votes thought that he could buy the presiin 1994. "Idon'tthinkhe (Cremeans) , dency, Steve Forbes," Strickland
can win it on his record or the way said.
he has represented the district."
Kelley said be entered the GOP
Cremeans said the race will turn race because "Frank Cremeans
on voting records and issues. ·
desened us (the voters) when he was
· "I oppose tax increases, Strick- campaigning for Steve Forbes."
IIInd favors them," said Cremeans. "I
"I feel exaclly the same, and nothsuppon regulatory reform, Suickland ing in my li fe will change," said Kel·opposes it. Strickland supported Bill ley, who has no regrets about chalClinton the last time, and the voters lenging Cremeans. "I still believe

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service

Cremeans has abused his office," said
Kelley.
Cremeans declined to comment on
Kelley's comments.
Cremeans was one of Forbes'
three national campaign managers •
and w~s criticized by Kelley during
the pnmary campa1gn for " playing
up to corporate America ins~ad of
the people who elected him."
Forbes, a millionaire publisber
has since dropped out of the GOP
presidential race. No~ Forbes and
Cremeans are bac)(ing Bob Dole, RKan., who is the GOP front runner for
the presidency and won Ohio's GOP
primary.
·
Kelley, a Portsmouth resident and' Scioto County ' vocational teacher '
predicts Strickland will defeat Cni: ·
means in a close mce in November. ·
· '"Ted is a very compassionate
guy," said Kelley. "'I'm conservative ·
and he.'s liberal,' but he's a good man .
and has a feeling for the people in this
district. I really respect him," Kelley :'

!

I

Sflid.

"

,,

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29403">
              <text>March 19, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="970">
      <name>goodwin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="923">
      <name>jewell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3995">
      <name>priode</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2251">
      <name>swatzel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
