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                  <text>ThuiWday, March 21, 181JS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,Play it safe with
AaAJIDa•AII

•l ly ANNE B. ADAMS Wid
~V NASH-CUIIMINGS
·DEAR ANNE AND NAN: 1have

· a cti,amOnd ring and my son would
•

lib~ the diamond. I'm happy to give
1'1'n him (it was a gift from his father,

• ·ll.t:t:"' former husband), but I'm con·

cenied that his jeweler might switch
the stones. Wbal can 1 do to prevent
this?- No NAME , Ocal a, Aa.
, DEAR NO NAME: Nan called
, VonBarg~~n'sJewelry in Springfield,
Vt They sugested first to go to a
. weler y'ou trusl. Ask him or her to
JC
• llppraise lbe stone: You want to know .
· the four ·~cs" .. the stone's color,
clariry, cut and tarats (the weight),
and its value.
You could also ask the jeweler to
appJaise the stone in your preseace,
· bitt be sure to make an appointment ·
: ahead of time.
.
·
FEEDBACK: We recejved· the
following great recipe from Annette
' Smith of Danby, Vt., who says this is
' the best way to maJie yogurt.

'

val~able

Ohio Lottery

diamond·

BOW TO MAKE YOGURT
them above « behind a WOQ!Istove,
1 gallon milk
in \box with a 25-wllt liabt bulb, In· '
Stainless-steel pot
a tui'ncd-off gas oven that !lu a pilot
light, wrapped in towels with hoc
Cooking thennometer
1 small container of plain yogun water bottles, ot wtllppOd in towels in
Olass jars or plastic tubs
a sunny, warm wincJow. (Lisht
Eg heater
·
destroys the vitamins in milk.)
Measuring cup or pourable bowl
Leave about six boun. '1'1\e loager
Oet yogurt culture out of tefriger· you leave it, the more tart it gets. The
ator so it can warm to room temper· sweetest YOJIIIt sets the shortest
arure. {Buy PLAIN yogun at . the time. Refrigerate.
supermarket Dannon is a very reli·
A soft cheese can be made by,
able culture. Or reuse your culture · straining the yogun through cheese
from the last time you made yogurt.) cloth, tying it up in a bag and lenins
Leave container coveted.
: it drain for a couple hours. The whey
Heat 1 gallon milk to 180de~s' \that drail\5 out is good for plants or
in a stainless-steel pot (not alu· . can be used to make Ricotta cheese.
Write to "Alk Anne &amp; Nan" at
minum). Use a cooking thermomeler
to check temperature. Do not cover P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
pot.
Questions of general interest will
pot
appear in the column. Due to tho v~·
Remove from heat and P I~·
~
in cold water bath to cool milk ume of mail,. petsOnal teplies cannot
rapidly to 110 degtees, uncovered. be pro~~· B. ~ and Nancy
1Stir to speed cooling.
! Fill four 0""-"uart containers 314 · ·Nash-Cummings are co-~thors of
·- ,
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Wbetstone) and
:full with warm milk. Pour the "Dear ARne and Nan: Two Prize
remainingmilkintoapourablecupor Problem-Solvers Share Their
·bowl, and stir in 3 or 4 tablespoons
of yogurt cultute (use about 1 table- Sectets" {Bantam). To (11'der, call I·
spoon yogunculture for each quart of 800-888-1220.
milk). Beat .with ari egg beater until
there is a froth on top. Fill the con·
tainers to the top with the milk·and·
yogun mixture, then stir briefly.
Cover the filled containers.
Put the containers where the tem·
peratute is 90 degtee~. Try placing

Stuqy -finds
'hip surgery
cost -effective

·Utes beaten
by Kentucky
In NCAA play
Sporta, Page 4

Beat·of the Bend ...

.

·~ .
WALJ(AMERICA AMBASSADORS • Ambl•
aadan fortt.18111 Tri-County WllkAmlrfc81or
Mil ol\ of Dime~-. choeln -~~~~. Pictured
.,., IMI, Dllln1111 Eade, Ollila County Ambl•
llldor; blen1111 EliiiOII, WllkAmlrlce ·chairmen;
and Mitchell Herbrecht, 1111011 County Ambl•
aador. An . -••ador fn1!n ~ County 11

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'

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lllo bllngiiOUght. Eacls, a fourth glllder lit ~~ :
Well-Porter El1111111tary, II thl dauallf!W of Br!" &gt;
.lfland Sand111 Blake of Bidwell. 11118 te
..0: ,
ond year u ambauador. HarbiiCht 11 ·the iol:!•
of Kim Harlncht oi'Niw Hav1n, W.Va. and ./Iff ~
. Hiut1111cht of Point P ...llnt, W.V.. He Ia a flm
· 9111dlr It North PolntEiameu• !I· ·
. _.-:.

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Vol, 46,1110. 228
2 Seotlona, 12 ......

By MICHELLE HEALY
USA TODAY
Tuition vouchers, school choice
and charter schools may grab head·
lines, ~ut they aren't today's most
ptessing education issues, say some
'school principals.
A survey out Friday of 802 ele·
mentary and middle ~I principals

Public Notice

By CASSANDRA BURRELL

finds motivating students (97 per· panics (32 percent), sharing a!l'hOii·
cent), involving parents (94 percent), ty with parents and commumty (.SO
serving growing numbers of special 'percent) and handling demands· for
.education students (93 percent) and .school choice, tuition vouchers, and
.keeping up with technology (93 per· .charter schools (49 percent).
.
.cent) at,the top of school leaders! con·
"The kinds of issues that get 11lot
~ cems ~
·of press have very little to do with tpe
By contrast, priacipals worry least learning of an individual chjld," says
with for-profit com· Samll(ll Sava.
·

Public NotJc.

!

WASHINGTON - The House,
echoing the sentiment behind Cali·
. fornia's Proposition 187, passed overwhelmingly a bill aimed at over·
hauling America's "out of whack"
system of combating illegal immigration.
Foremost among !he provisions of
the measure- the first of its kind to
emerge from the House or Senate in
a decade -was one that would dou·
ble the size of the U.S. Border Patrol
by adding 5,000 agents.
B~t the House also, in the process,
voted to delete from lbe bill most pro•isions that would have restricted
legal immigration. The mammoth bill
passed on a 333-87 vote.
" II will help secure our borders,
reduce crime and protect jobs for
American citizens," said'Rep. Lamar
Smith, R-Texas, the bill's chief

~

t ·Mum44• 15' aaet tal. t fMI
W•-m
point In 1M centfl ol

By JAMES HAN~H
A&amp;IIOClllted Prtill Wrltlr
DAYTON- If history is any indication, an 18-day strike that vinually
shut down Geqeral Motors Corp.'s assembly operations in North America
·and idled 177.375 GM workers will likely end today.
Members of United Auto Workers Local 696 were to vote on w)lether to
. l'-!ify.a,tep'-live a~ment rt:ached Thursday:b}i OM.I""i uniOn 11egotiators.
' Union le84ers had n\it .released.dFtails'lif the accord"but said the,~ll rec.,
ornmend that members approve it.
.
.
, •
When !lie ~nion went' on a three-d•y strike two years ago ovtr tlmilar
issues, 97 percent of !he membershiP.. hiler approved the agreement.
.
Harley Shaiken. a labor professor at
University ofC~Iifornia at Berke. ley who closely follows the auto industry, saiil the union probably will ratify the pact.
·~My sense is. in this local there is a lot of confidence in the leadership,"
Shaiken said. "If the leadership thinks it's a good agreement- after 17 days
on the picket line and after shutting OM down nationally o•er these issues
- wc'te likely to see a ratification."
The strike at two Da)lton-area brake plants forced OM to shut down 26
of its 29 assembly plants apd I!! parts plants in the United States, Canada
and Mexico and halted ·work at many independent suppliers.
·
GM also declined to discuss te£1!1s of the ag.eement or say whether it
addressed the main point of contention between the two sides: outsourcing.
The practice of-bl,lying parts from outside manufacturers to reduce labor and
production costs is a job-killer, the union says. But GM maintains that it
allows the company to stay competitive, which saves jobs.
The New York Times in today 's editions, citing a peijlon close to the negotiations, said the pact would give GM . some flexibility in giving work to OUt·
side manufacturers, but did not provide the automaker with standard rules
· on when it could buy parts from outside the company.
The seulement also allows for some additional hiring at the brak~: plants,
according to the Times and the Dayton Daily News. The Dayton paper also
reported that OM's parts-buying deal was a key concession, and that union
sources said the coniract provided improvements in worker safety and health.
The UAW will be assured of jobs as GM develops a future brake system
to replace a system now buill at Dayton, the Detroit Free Pn:ss reported in
Friday's editions.
But GM will proceed with plans to buy brakes for its 1998 Chevrolet
Camaro and Pontiac Firebird from Roben Bosch 9orp., a nonunion suppli·
er in South Carolina. the newspaper said. The strike was triggered by OM's
decision to stop buying Camaro and Firebird brakes made at the Dayton
plants.
.
GM also will award future contracts on certain key ·componcnts to more
than one manufacturer- including at least one outside GM itself, the Free
Press said. Thai could k~p parts moving to assem~ly plants in case of local
lal?or problems at a OM-owned supplier.
GM assured the UAW it would add at least 300 jobs at the Dayton plants

LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing Case
No. 95·102-El·EFC, to review the
fuel procurement practices and poli·
cies of Columbus Southern Po~er
Company, the operation of its Elec·
tric Fuel Component.and related
matters. This hearing is scheduled
to begin at the Commission offices
all O:QO a.m. on March 26, 1996.
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard.' Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at180
East Br,oad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266-()573

o·ue to . the fact that p.eople are still calling
dropping off order forms for~personalized bricks
the chamber has decided to .purchase 100 final
bricks to. be plaeed on the amphitheatre's
walkway.
This will be your last chance to become a part of
Meigs County History! So hurry up &amp; buy a bdck
while they last.

\.J~st
for you.
.
.

Become a Plirt of Meigs County's History.!

lo {

A

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t

And
•,

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STILLATrr·.._ AIIM!bllcln Pfllldentlal hopafUI Ptlt 'IJucllanan, ·
loched out of the nomination b!l primary Ylctorlea ICcnd b!l ~· '
Boll Qoll or
nlmlllned on tt. campaign 111111 111UI'Idly
by elgnlng eutograpba at a rallyin Burbank, C.llf. (Aft)

Kan...,

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...........
•

38-

-.p.per

substantial maj ority of DemocraUi ."
California· s Proposition 187,
which sought lo deny welfare benefits and free sc hooling to illegal
immigrants, helped win support for
the bill, Smith said. A federal court
has temporarily blocked implementation of the California measure.
Propos ilion 187 "was the lidal
wave that washed up on the shores of
the Capitol, " said Smith, ,who chairs
the House Judiciary Committee 's
immigration panel.
·
Besides doubling the number of
· border agents at U.S. borders at
Canada and Mexico to 10,000 over
five years, the bill would increase
penalties for alien smuggling and
d~ument fraud . It would give the
sta(es the option of barring children
who are illegal aliens from public
schools, an idea White House
spokesman
Mike
McCurry
denounced as " nutty."

DISCUSSES BILL- Sen. Alan
Simpson, R·Wyo., partlclpalld In
a Thursday hearlflg of the Senate
Judiciary Committee to dlacues
Illegal Immigration. The HouM .
vollcl on the moet elgnlflcant
lmmigl'lltion bill in a decide lat·
er in the day. (AP)

A Middleport man is free on bond from the Meigs County Jail after he
was arrested late Wednesday for allegedly carrying a co.ncealed weapon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Brian 0 . Mullen, 40, was taken into custody after hospital officials learned
he was carrying a .22-caliber. pistol while seeking medical treatment at the
facility around II :30 p.m., Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
.
According to police reports. J'.{ullen went 10 the hospital and sought treatment from a physician who practices at Holzer Medical Center. 1\fter hospital officials.toUJ:Mullen the phy~ician could norbe'cotitaaed;:Miinei'fsi'OOit'
up and was bCiievclJ to have a weapon.
·
Mullen did not allempt to brandish the weapon, but was restrained by a
relative and hospital officials after they realized he was carrying a pistol. He
was kept under restraint until law enforcement officials arri•ed, and placed
him into custody.
Officials at VMH declined 10 issue a statement on the incident when contacted this morning.
A preliminary hearing was held Thursday, at which time Mullen was
charged with carrying a concealed weapon, a felony of the fourth degree. '
Following the hearing. Mullen posted $1 ,000 ORC bond and was released
from the Meigs County Jail.
A hearing has been set for April 3 in the case. If convicted, Mullen could
face a maximum of six to 18 months in jail, and a $2,500 fine.

CALL FOR SUPPORT - Larry Barton waved at paaslng
motorists honking their suppprt tor striking United Auto Work·
era outside the Delphi Cha11l1 brake plant In Dayton Thursday.
The union and Ganeral Motor&amp; reached lentlltive egre~ment and
a vote Ia scheclulttd tOday. (AP)

.

.

.

over the next five to seven years, a company source told The Detroit News.
But work force attrition during that period likely will reduce the net gain in
jobs to fewer than 50, the newspaper said.
Striking worker Ken Craycraft, 49, of Franklin said he was eager to hear
the details of the agreement. He said the strike had no! hurt him as much as
some of his colleagues because his wife works.
"But I feel bad if one person: is out of work," Craycraft said.
If the deal is ratified, the Dayton plants could resume production today.
The six OM assembly plants in Michigan were expected to resume production Monday, The Detroit News reponed today.
"We have a start-up plan 10 flow product to the most critical plants as
soon as possible, " said Dan Warrell, manager of the striking Delphi Chas·
sis brake plants. "And we'll he doing that."
·
GM spokesman Thomas Klipstine said most plants could be back in busi·
ness a week after parts shipments from Dayton resume.
The agreement came one day after the Clinton administration started talk·
ing about getting involved. Labor Secretary Robert Reich had offered to send
federal mediators to help end the walkout.
· ·

Legislation allows customer
to cho~se electric supplier
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohioans
would be able to choose their elec·
tricity supplier beginning in 1998
under a bill introduced in the House
Thursday.
"Technological advances have
lowered the cosl of adding electric
power generation, provided customers with new possi bilities 10
obtain power from alternative sources
.. . and improved the communication
systems that are needed to give all
electricity customers the opportunity
to select the supplier that provides the
best service at the lowest price," state
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R· Wooster. said
at a news conference.
Amstutz conceded that such a
complicated bill introduced so close
to the end of the legislative session
has no chance of passing this year.
but he said il is important to begin
educating the public now so that it

can be voted on early next year.
Backe rs of deregulation sal
Ohio's current monopoly system ha!
resulted in widely divergent electric
rates across the state and hurt Ohio's
economic competitiveness.
Amstutz's bill, which is co-sp.on·
sored by Republicans and Democrats,
is backed by Ohio manufacturers,
steel producers and other large ener..
gy users.
Detractors, though, say the interests of consumers and the environment are not properly reprosented in
the bill .
"II is unacceptable that this bill
has been shaped by only large industrial users with the goal of lowering
just their prices," said Brady Bancroft, energy policy analyst for Campaign for an Energy Efficient Ohio,
a coalition of environmental groups.

Buchanan dodges questions over running
for presidency as indep~ndent candidate .~

•

. Buy .a personaliz~~ bricj( for Y.our family or
busille&amp;$. to be used in the revitalization projeet
happening in our co~nty seat of Pomeroy. Your
brick can have a personlill message you wanJ
inscribed on four brick, and receive pe.rmanent
·
o your communitY support, that will
last a
·
A
·certifi'c~te, that states your
.00 bfi(ik m:trnb•r ·i.s available upon
...lln,jp.~,,•u· · :r~e Melg• ·~ounty 1'ourtsm. Board and
. COunty Chaml;ler of Qommerce tn«lrlk
order._ If, you would Uki to .
of a briCk ple.ase cell (fJ1'4) 992"'

A Gannett Co.

Middleport man· cited .
for allegedly carrying
weapon into hosp,ital

me

I

ariiemonal

provisions would have reduced the
number of foreigners admiued to the
country by at least I9 percent over
five years from the 800,000 who
entered in 1994. However, opponents
said the cuts probably would have
been as high as 30 percent to 40 per·
cent.
The Clinton administration, which
has called for more modest immi·
gration reducti ons, had criticized
Smith's cuts as too extreme, and
Smith said he thought telephone
calls from the White House persuaded many Democrats to vote against
the plan.
,.
'
He said he was delighted, howev·
er, with the overwhelming support h~
received for measures that get
tougher with illegal aliens.
"Obviously I'm very pleased with
the final result," he told reporters.
"We not only had the overwhelming
support of Republicans but also a

. : walkout . tod~y

can't take it

us create

hard-working taxpay~r."
The presidential primary campaign gave a high-profile boost to the
drive to shut down illegal immigration. Both California Gov. Pete Wil son, before he dropped out of the
GOP race, and commentator Pal
Buchanan made it integral parts of
their campaigns.
The Senate Judiciary Commillee
is scheduled to begin work next
week on its own plan to cut legal
immigration. and Smith expressed
some hope that a Senate plan wo)lld
be adopted by the House.
Smith said something must be
done soon to n;dute a backlog of 2. 7
million foreigners waiting to join
family members in the United States,
stop excessive immigration from
depressing wages and taking away
jobs from Americans, and reduce the
number of immigrants on welfare.
Smith said his legal immigra!ion

:UAW vote could
·.end .automaker

Who says you
with you?

author.
Sponsors of the bill were unable to
·preserve a second lnajor objective a plan to roll back significantly on the
number of immigrants allowed to
come into the United States legally.
"It is fundamentally wrong to take
the justifiable anger about our failure
to deal with the issue of illegal
immigration and piggyback on top of
that anger a drastic ... cut in perma·
nent legal immigration, a cause and
a force that has been goo&lt;!" for this
country," said Rep. H9w8rd Berman,
D-Calif., who cosponsored the House
amendment deleting the legal itpmi·
gration limits.
Even without many of the legal
immigration provisions he had
pushed, Smith said the bill "will
encournge legal immigrants to be
productive members of our commu·
nities and _ease the burden on the

AsiOCiated Press WrHer

Public Notice . ,
of aald-.olld;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 22, 1996

•

Immigration law overhaul passes House

Inspiring kids is ·principals' top . c.oncern:

by Bob H~flich
. Paul Sayre, youngest son of Mrs. does have four other children in addi, Karl (Eleanor) Kloes, Syracuse, is tioit to Paulll!ld• of course, is proud
doing exl:l'elllely well in his musical · of all of them.
studjes at Eastern Michigan UniverPresently Paul is a teacher,assis·
sity in Ypsil!lnli, wbere he is a grad- tant in addition to being a graduate
uate student.
student at Eastern Michigan He
AcomjlositionofPaul was recent· received his bachelor of science
ly selected from among seven sub- degree from Ohio State University in .
mitted in national competition as the piano performance and composition ,
best. 1be composition is ·for piano, ·and will soon get his Master's from ·
violin and clarfnet and was per· Eastern Michigan. What next? Well
• fomled at Washington and Lee Uni- right now Paul is planning to contin·
versity in Lexington, Va.
ue.his education working towards his
Paul was presented a five day Doctorate of Music Arts degree.
expense paid trip to the university in 1 . Obviously, he's Off to an eltcellent
· Lexington where he attended nwner· ' stan in the field of music.
ous concerts, symposiums al)d simi.!
Apparently we shall have music in
• lar activities as well as attending the;
· concert at which his coitqlosilion was I the Big Bend area this s~er.
.The Ohio River Border Initiative,
presented. He teeeived a tape of his!
composition as performed by Joel; a joint project of the Ohio Arts
Sarla. pianist and director of the Juil· Council and the West Varginia Com·
liard Contemporary Chamber mission on the Arts, bas given the
Orchestra; Renee Jallies, violinist. Riverbend Arts Council a $2,000
and David Gresham: a staff member j1'8111 for the establishment of a com·
munity band.
at Juilliard.
.
As I understand it, Toney Dingess,
Also last flill·P!IUI was pleasantly
surprised when he rec::eived a phone. Meigs High Band director, will be
call from the ~iarihelist of the Phillips · organizing and directing the musical
Concert Series; Phillip Oallery, of; organization..there was a similar
Washington, D.C.. asking permission ! group last year. Instrumentalists will
to perform a piece Paul had .written: come from both Meigs County and
while he was a student at Ohio State from Mason County across the river.
UniVersity. Paul had'shated this com·. Last year's group presented ri most
position with friends and somehow ~ pleasant concert in front of the Meigs
Gallcry·had gotten a copy. Paul was j County Libi-ary in Pomeroy under the
invited to Washington to coach the j direction of Dingess.
presentation and attend the concen. i · I'm sure you'll be hearing more
Learning of the opportunity for Paul, : ·about the group and like me, you
the staff at Eastern Michigim sent him . probably look forward to hearing the
to Washington for the event
~ band !his summer.
Eleanoi's eldest daughter, Angela i
Cold, cold rain poured down on
Richards of Gallipolis, lOOk Eleanor
lllld. Jessica Dickens; a grat1ddaush· Meigs County voters Tuesday. Oni
ter of Eleanor, to Lexington, Va., i Wednesday, the ftrst day of spring,!
.where they were privileged to attend . .Mother Nature clearly demonstrate4i
the taping and concert of Paul's work she had not run ·OUt of snow. Wow! J
perfomied at Washi(lgton ~ ~ 1 'What a dainty dish to set before the,
University. Eleanor teally enjoyed 1 king, huh,?This, too, shall pass so dol
'
.
being on hand for the occasion.. a · keep smiling.
'proud moment. By the way, Eleanor

Iowa
In the teens ,
rday,
partly to mostly sunny.
Hlghe In the 40&amp;.

'•

rOad; th•nc• waet
211.4 fHI lo the plac• of
lleglnnlng, contelnlng , 41

I

Pick 3:
8-5-5
Pick 4:
6-4-6-4
Buckeye 5:
5-11-21-28-35

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f:

By SCOn LINDLAW
Aaeoclatecl Pntas Wrher
SANTA ANA, Calif. - Pat
Buchanan; who has made a living
delivering $traighl answers, is stumbling when it comes to ·reports he is
considering a third-party run, for
president.
The cdnservative commentator
rejleatedly dodged questiQns about
his intentions as he stumped for next
Tuesday's Califdmia primary, saying
only that he'll meet with supporters
in Virginia.next week and "listen to
all the options."
"We want to hear from them on
· how we best advance the causes in
which we believe and for which we
all fou&amp;ht,".he told reporters 1'1\ursday after touring an English.only ele·
menlat')' school.
He also insisted h~ will be at the
RepUblican National Convention in
August.
·
Asked 'f he .":as warming !.O. the

idea of a third-party candidacy,
Buchanan responded : "As I told
you, we're going straight ahead."
He segued into an attack on Sen·
ale Majority Leader Bob Dole, who
has clinched !he GOP nomination, for
conducting "business as.usual in the
U.S. Senate."
Asked if he could rule out such a
run, he replied: "What we've said is,
we want to go to the Republican convention, bring all our folks into the
Republican Party, reshape, remake
that party into the traditionalist, con·
servative party that represents a new
conservatism of,the heart."
. Some of Buchanan's ad'viser;s are
encouraging him 10 make an inde·
pendent run for president.
One aide, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said four of
Buchanan's top advisers, including
his sister and campaign manager
Bay, are "foursquare behind the
idea."

. Finance Chairman Scott McKen·
"I didn 't know this week that
zie also favors the idea, but is con- you're going to hear Ross Perot .
cemed about whether the campaign announce he's going to 'l!et in the;
could raise enough money for the race," Buchanan said. "Lots of things
effort, another Buchanan aide said. can happen between now and
Bay Buchanan had a "preliminary November. You've got all sorts ol
discussion" over lunch last week things happening. You hear this U.S
about a third-party bid with Howard Tupayer's Party is lining up."
Phillips, a member of the U.S Tax· .
The taxpayer's party on Wednesj ·'
payers Party's eltecutive committee, day announced it would try to pu
a third aide said.
Buchinan on the November ballo
But ·Buchanan
campaign around the country, !Jay Buchan&amp;l ::
spokesman Greg Mueller said some ·said then her brother was commi~ ~
aides favor staying with the Rej&gt;ub- to running as Republican througll'thC
lican Party and trying for the No. 2 convention but no decision 1:111!1 beeq
· spot on the GOP ticket.
made on the offer. .. · • · ·'· ·' !•'
. "There are a couple of senior
It's ioo late for a'~Jiinllf'party
aides that think )VO ought to give seri· qualify for the California ballot, ~d.
ous consideratioq to a third party Alfie Charles, a spokesman for· the
while o!hers think it's important to 'secretary of state's office. The min, .,.
stay ·within the itopublican Party, deadline was in October. .
:.
vying for the vice presidential slot,
But Buchanan could run as aa :
looking toward .the future and mak· independent or under an cxistine pr- •ing it more of a Buchanan party," said ty's banner if that party permitted it, • •
Ch ares
I sm.
'd
. MueIIcr.
. • ,' '

td

�Frldly, March 22, 1t86

:Commentary

Friday, March 22,1996

•

I

Saturday, March l3
AccuWeaahe~

By&amp;enWIIl*lbeig

,111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2156. Fax: 182-2157

.
£
A Gannett Co.

~ewspaper

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

'
MAR~ARET

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Qenel'll MsiiiiiiM

LEHEW
Controller

__,..,_____ In,_-·

_.....,
_,
,_uno·.- r.a...

uar.r. 10 ..... 11111t0t . . • • ·: anv:. .,.,r •hould •
will be publlllhed.
'lf,.....nofpeiiOt......

· lw.
I

, . , thin 300 ...,... All ,..,.

uu.r. .,_,be

~-·

~oecisiori~to'
commit
.
.

;la.nd to VMH addition
:c.
. ommendable move

' 'The Daily Sentinel commends the Meigs County Board of Commission·
: ers for iiS decision to make land available for a proposed medical building
• to be located near Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
Plans now call _for Consolidated HCl!lth Services Inc., the parent compa·
ny of Holzer Medical Center, with whom our local hospital is affiliated, and·
Holur Clinic to construct.a $1.5 million building to serve Meigs County res·
idents.
Mpstlikely you have read all the letters to the editor supporting the hos· ·
pita! and the planned expansion. Clearly this is an issue important to all Meigs
countians.
Construction of this proposed !lltdical facility will represent, in our opin·
ion, a win-win situation for all Meigs countians as Holzer is planning 10 invest
$1.5 million of its own mo11ey in our community. 'I)le facility will employ '
several doctors and create 1810 22 desperately needed ne'l' jobs; more importantly, it will increase the viability of the hospital as physicians utilize its .

services. ,
Conttoversy on the maller has hinged on two subjects - lease versus sale
o( the county-owned property for the new facility, and the lack of any socall~ "guarantee" that the hospital will continue to operate as a full service
hospital in the future.
· ·
·
We feel it is preposterous to expect someone to build a $1.5 million build·
ing on property they do not own and funhermore realiZe, lhat in life- even
in IOdily's litigious society - there are no guarantees. But we do recognize
that Sl.S million reflects a major commitment on the part of Holur to make
this thing work.
Like the commissioners, we support construction of this facility and
. encourage all Meigs countians to do the same. Of course, we will keep you
updated while this project moves ahead.

Unspoken competition
dogs day-to-day matters
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP SP,eclal Correspondent
; WASHINGTON - Nobody discusJC!J the presidential campaign wben
its two contestants-in-chief got back to business at the White House, which
of them will win on Nov. 5. Nobody needed to.
. ·
- ..
: While the competition between President Clin10n and Sen. Bob Dole, :
leader·of the Republican ma;ority, was said to have gone unspoken beyond ;
'
the brief congratulations of one nominee for another, it permeates the issues·
-the budget and all the rest - now confronting the Republican Congress .
and the administration.
•
'
.
It is part of the. abnosphere. When Clinton met with the Republican and .
Democratic leaders of Congress on Wednesday for the first time since Dole ·
was guaranteed the nomination 10 run against him, the~ was none of the ordi- i
nary posing for photographs.
;

one

.

How impOrtant is . immigration
policy? Suppose America had adopt·
ed an Ausu-alian-style immigration
code early on, and stuck to it. We
quite possibly would have ended up
like Ausualia. It's very important.
The Congress is now working on
a m~or immigration biil, introduced
by Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., and
Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas. The prOposed legislation is complicated, and
still in the process of being shaped.
But it can be tested against some
uncomplicated ideas regarding population growth.
Americans aren't having many
babies. Fertility rates are dropping
again below the "replacement rate."
Therefore, if legal immigration is discontinued, America would go into a
slow-motion depopulation in die
decades to come. If immigration is
substantially reduced, we will grow
only very slowly. Is this good or bad?
It's no good geopolitically. A no·growth 9r slow-growth America does
not square with some nice notions we
have been hearing about: "America

~) interest on the debt, 3)
pensions ud health Clre f~ the
elderly and soon-to-~derly and 4),

defense,

everything else. New immigrants

Ben Wattenberg
help pay down the three big fixed
costS, and draw a proportionate share
only on "everything'else." lt's.a good
deal.

is the only superpower," or "a second - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ . :. ·' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
American century." The early .'
decades of the next century. will see
major popolation growth in other !
areas of the world. Of course, it is ·
true that mere population siu does
•
not guarantee global power and influence (India). It is also true that no
small or shrinking nations need apply
(Belgium). ,
No-growth or slow-growth demoI
graphi&lt;;.S are bad public economics.
Our current economic dilemma· is
undersiOod to be rooted in a demographic question: "How will we pay
for the retirement and health care for
the 76 million baby boom babies as i
they age?" It's a good half q~estion :'
The other half is less recognized. The
projected shortfall will come about
because boomers had so few cltildren
of their own. The baby boom was followed by a birth dearth. The missing
babies not .~ wil~ be ihe miss~ngl
young adults who wtll not be paytng'
for the r~tirement and health care ofl
the boomers. .
·
Clearly, America needs . some
"retroactive artificial children."
That's what legal itnmipts are:
Their average age is 25, and they
have been raised and educated on
someone else's nickel. View the
national budget as four . parts: I) L---~-------------.,-~--~------------------__,J

OUR COMB!NY

DOESN'T DISCRIMINATE

AS\INST COLLE;£· .

EOUCATEP. WHITE
HETEROSEXUAL MALES.

Dole's new strategy is to attack·veto .power .
By Morton Kondracke

Republican Congress' failure to enact
majQ!' legislation onto Clinton, who
has vetoed bills ranging from a bal·
anced budgetiO welfare reform.

· President Clinton's threat to veto
product liability legislation is a gift to
Sen. Bob -Dole, R-Kan., who is
beginning 10 frame his general eleclion cam,.;gn around a new theme:
rClinton as "Veto Bill."
So far, Clinton ~as been generally successful in portraying his vetoes

Mocton Kondracke
..

as safeguards against Republican

"extremism.,. This veto threat,

4nat

ing tile virgin birth approached a
"sulistaJitial majority" only in t!JF
Lutheran Church-MissoUri Synod,
the poll showed.
·
·

Gedrge R. Plagenz
As'for the physical resurm:tion of
Jesus, 93 pe11:ent o(~issouri Syll!XI
pastors said they believed in it, cornpared to less than SO perc4:nt of the
MethodiSt c,ergy, .
Ironically, most Of the theolo1ical
doubtin1 Thomues occqpy the
church's pulpils, 1)01 i!S.pews. Another poll, for example, shows that 90
perc4:nt of churchg~ 'iil 'the U.S.
believe in ihe physical reaUI'l'eCtion.
E'ven 68 pen:en&amp; of the unch!a'ched
profess literal faith in the !;alter d9c·
triDe:
'
c~ sbptij:mn reprdi111 the
besic .lelletl of the a.istian faith does

chin'!!"'

•':!5

I

that House conservatives will accede dren, which Senate moderates won't
to the final decision of their leaders, accept. Dole's interest in welfare
especially 1Dole. If they don't, it's reforin may wane, too, if Democratconceivable that Dole could wind up ic governors oppose the bill and it
deeply embarrassed,""nable todeliv- can't be characterized as bipartisan.
er significant legislative achieve· Some of Dole's top campaign offiments or to maneuver Clinton into cials, what'.s·more, are urging hiin to
vetoes that will brand him a "do- forget about new welfare legislation
nothing president."
because there's a danger Clinton ·
Another problem for Dole is that might sign a bill, robbing Dole of an ·
Senate Democrats may filibuster issue IJe already has: two previous :
GOP proposals to save Clinton from Clinton vetoes of welfare meaJures.·
the necessity of deciding whether to
At the moment, the White House ·
sign or veto difficult bills. Dole can di!Csn't seem terribly worried about
. rail at Senate Minority Leader Tom any of the strategizirig taking place in
Daschle, D-S.D., but he's not running Congress. "It's all insider stuff," one
for presidenL
Clinton aide said. "It's maneuver. ll's
Welfare reform is one key test ·not about the future well-being of the·
case of the GOP's skill. Building on average person."
'a bipartisan proposal by tile nation's
Clinton has been worried enough
!governors, House Republicans will abput fallout from the product liabilinttoduce.a bill giving wide di$CI'Ction ity veto threat, though, that he urged
to states both on welfare and Medic- Daschle to block passage of the bill
aid.
in the Senate to save him from hav·
It is scheduled for a floor vote by . ing to veto. Daschle tried, saying to
the end of April. House leaders hope ·friends that he simply couldn't say no·
the Senate will pass a version close when the trial lawyers were so con··
to the House's, leading to a quick · sistently generous to Democrats.
'
As cozy as Democrats are with the
conference and a showdown with
Clinion.
trial lawyers, however, Republicans
House Republicans think ttiey are vulnerable to.charges of pander-' ·
will win politically .whatever Clinton ing, too. Recently, they stripped key·
does. If he signs, ttiey·think, the GOP provisions from an anti-terrorism·
will get credit for forcing Clinton into bill at the behest of the National Rifle·
a major reform; if he.vetoes, Dole can · Association, and they are helping the
use the tact as pan of his "Veto Bill" tobacco lobby figh~proposed restric- .
ca!llpaip. .
lions on cit~arette ads aimed at chil·· ·
· ~ plan,s could fall apart, how· dren. Those Ire gifts til "Veto Bill." '··
··ever, if House conservatives insiSt on
(MOI1ea •Ko!ldncke II eucatiw
topshl!ning the meas~ with caps·dn editor of R•
the lle_WifNiper ·
ails.to mothers of illegitimate chil· of Capitol Hill;) ·
.

c•.

.

•

~_f ~

~

•

Battle of faith founct·in the p~W . vs~ the ·pulplf~
.

.a

,.,•

..

With nine months left in the 104th
Congress, Clinton .has vetoed 12
bills, and congressional Republicans
are planning to pass enough controversial legislation that he will surely
surpass Ronlld Reagan's 13 vetoes in
the 99th Congress and George'B.ush's
16 and IS vetoes ·in the IOist and
I02nd, respectively.
House and Senate Republicans
say that Dole and House Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., still haven't
decided whether to adopt a "veto
bait" legislative strategy for the rest
of this session or an "enactment"
strategy designed to produce bills that
Clinton might sign.
The chances are that they will end
up using both. Republicans are anxious to work with Clinton to pass an
increase in the federal debt ceiling
and avoid a first-ever. government
loan default. They also intend to pass
a line· item veiO that CliniOn will sign,
· At the same time, they are processing other bills - on health care,
taxes, welfare ~;~:form, crime and
immigration - whose fate is less
clear. In each case, Republican lead-·
ers aim to decide only after HouseSenate conferences wbether to produce a final product designed for a
Clinton signature or a ~eto.
The strttegy assumes, of C!)Urse, .

1

I

•

No growth or slow grOwth is not
great private economics either. In
some large mCjiSure, most American
businesses earn more profits for their
·stockholders because there are evermore cusiOmers in America to sell to.
Fewer customers generally yield less
profits, ·which lowers the value of
your pension plan. Fewer customers
lower the value of your ho¥5e. Nor
~.auld it be good for business or for
employment if the likes of a Hungarian immigrant named Andrew
Grove were not allowed to come
here. Grove started a little business
called Intel.

House Speaker Newt Gingrich said it was a working session, not for show. · though, is a naked favor 10 the Asso"lt was better doqe in an aunosphere of just sitting down in private, work- ciation of Trial Lawyers of America,
ing on ·the country's business," he said.
.
h'ch d'rectl
· d' tl
tthe
'd · he ·
h heR bl'
w t
t
y or tn 1rec y conBCSI'de.s. .....
":''Y pu , Pn:'l ent m t ptcture w. en t
e.pu 1cans could tributes millions of dollars 10 DemoshepeakC ~1r pthe1ece onttospenSdtnthegandd.bdudget balancmg on the1r own terms, at cratic candidates.
I
aptiO
Ycon 1. 0 Y I •
·
R bl'
a) · te
tthe
The amenities end at the White House door. The talks were primarily on d 1eput. tcans sollem rpreptt . dveto
·
·
k
th
·
ec ara 1on as an a m o m uce
mtenm measures t~ eep e government funded, and to extend the essen·
ad
R lph Nad .
. a,te da . Nadeer ~0
tial but long stalled increa~~e in the federal debt limit, both temporafily.
consumer Cvoc
...._
- bud
1 be
1 be~ ·
·
·
go easy on 1m on unng
rs
1 ne
gets~
gan o~g
ore the campBign hneup was set. Con- . campaign as the ,Green Party's presgreu ud the president haven I yet settled on a real budget for the current 'd ti 1 d'd
'all · Cal
1 ·
year, which began Oct. I, and they're already arguing about the next one, , !~en. a ~~ 1 ~ e, espc:c• /In f r ·
detailed in the $1.64 trillion budget Clinton belatedly sent Congress on Tues- 1b.0l~t 1a1·. .15 erandts a mart~edlor oe 0 . Ia·
da
t t y uru
repo
y recetves
y. ·
$"" · ·1 ·
. substantial support from ATI..A
lt mcludes a 77 bt bon tax cut, not as much and not the one Repubh- th h he d · ·
'
CanS promised and ~ant.
.
oThug Whiet mHes II. d • nded Cl'
,
.
e
e ouse e,e
mDemoc~ts used to pron~unce Ronald R~g311 s bud~ets dead on amv.al ton's veto announcement on the
it the Capitol. For Republtcans to have satd that of Chnton 's would have 1•
ds th 1 I' ·u·
·u· d
......... red dan ·
· 11 filled
· th bl ks 10
·
th
groun
a tmt ng punt ve am1
1
1
10
i;i'~nand ~~=nua Y
e an
proposa s ey a ready j a~s in liability suits will hurt con. the'
· · both 'd
f be'
. . . : sumers, but Democrauc Sens. Jay
At
.same ume,
st es are wary o
tng cast as obstructtontsts m · Rockefeller w V: and J Li be.
a renewal of the gridlock that plagued President Bush w_hen he sought a sec- i man Co ·n' · a., ke'd oeth e 1 r,'
I de~eatl· b'1 Cl' .
'sed
d , A d h boas
.
'
n ., unmas
e p oy.
ond term . . n
ng !'1• tnlon J)ronn
to en II. n e . ted 10 Rockefeller blamed Clinton's deci1994, When ~~IS sull ran Congress, that for the ~rst Ume smce 1948, sion 01; "special interests and raw
.· .
&lt;very appropnatmn tn government was completed on hme,
'd ·
..
.
·re
thi di ided
has tailed po1tllca1 cons• erauons, meantng
N the record m1c1s the
• ow .
.
oppo!it way; s v
government
s
' the trial lawyers' money.
·
buiJget acUQ~ longer than an~ before.
.
,
Dole, who is getting feistier in
•. Aqd dial doesn t even get to the tssue th~ shows up !" th~. polls as a mlJor campaign speeches now that he has
c~, the balanced bl!'lget Republt~s promtse4 !n sev~n Year:s· a : the GOP nomination locked up, has
g!lal Clml'l" later embraced and now c~~pto~, at)er vet~tng thetr verston. .been working to shift blame for the
_• 11111t was put on' the agenda for bargmntng wtth.congresstonalleaders next
ReJiuljlit:ans say they'll try, blit with limits, after·the long, fruitless
111100ations of late 1995.
·
·
..
· • "I sat down for SO hours, SO long hours in the White House, and I learned '
lot," Dole said while campaigning on Monday. "Whiu I learned first: we
oojlit 10 hbe a new preaident."
By George R. Plagenz
Clinton once said thAt tHere could be 'a balanced budget plan in I~ ininIn John Updike's latest novel, "In
uies but for the ideologi~al differences over how 10 do it. But those &lt;!iffer- the Beauty of the Lilies," the Rev.
elioes, between- and llso'Withiri- the political parties, always have been Clarence Wilmot, a Presbyterian minin the way in budget deblltes.
.
·
· ister in Paterson, N.J., loses his faith,
·~We should eni!Ct .a balanCed !"tdget and we should do it now, not af~r
leaves his church and all the perks
the November c~ liOI after the political season, not later, but now," Clin- that go with it, and becomes a door·
1011 said in PfCF!tia'g 1iU btldget.
,I
to-door salesman of encyclopedias.
l'llfothe presiclem wints ·to taJk seriOIISI)' about a balanced budget ... it's · .
Clergy .doubt is qothlng new. In
th8 rtp1
to do/' Dole replied. ''HC:II gain politic&amp;!ly. 1'}1 gain politi- . 1969, sociologist Jeffrey Hadden
~. But
bo!tO!I! ·J~ is the Americall people will be t!ie ~ gai~;~en." conclucted the .most wide-teachina
'!'a Clll .JO~'Or wo faR, play politics;" ~n. Tom Duchle, ~ mirior· llll'VCY ever of wlill ministers ,liclieve.
ity ~illlil:- "I belier,e Bob~ llild Bill Clin10n bbtlt,wiq if we can show He polled IO,OOOclergy for his book,
!ell ~......! !Ill• ~·
. , ,
·
. . "The Gaihering SIOI'I!'l in the Olufch' : · Jilt llllhe _..,lhOy,ciillt b'olh win, And what the.WJiile House deecribes oil: Tbe Wtdenina Gap Between Cleras • ~ ft OppOrtunitY fot prHa~~~pai,iil ~rJIIi!'n isn't aoing to last. . gy a8d Laymen." ·
He founcl' thit six out of 10
•l)oaelliit._wayhtllltdCiintoo4oth,elrJobstbisspringmaybe'a pbd
.~~~&amp; for ¥Oiln to wlleh. "Which one do y~ bel~¥e?" he ~ed. "Which MetbodiJt ministeis did not.bel~ve in
a. do ~ triis(l
.
·' •.
·
'·
· the virgin birth olJesas. Amona Epis,-"'AIIII·Ihii.Bii;bt be a J09CIIlll'li1g poilll"
·
~ Inc! Presbyterian clergy, only
• (1!111 , a. .....,
liall telimulllt (llr .....- A. . .~ •· ~half said they could give ~nt
~... a &amp;I ,atnd Oll W -~ ·-- W •••hMI fllll'da
to the doctrine. . · ·
'
,
"~)
."
I
.
.'
·
The ge{CCIIIaJe Of cf~ ,ccept··

moo"'-

.

How does tfle s1mj,son-Smith percentlge point (New Hampshire).
imrni....tion bill SlaCk up? It does Running on the same platform, be
propose some necessary changes in then lost a score of primaries, some
,tlie immigration code, particularly in by mllfJ!ins of more than 30 percent·
the realm of welfare reform. It pro- age points.
Ale we.lieing swamped? Visualiu
poses a toughening-up on illegal
a cocktail party with 500 people in a
imrnigr~tion, although it sets up a
possibly unworkable. new national noisy ballroom. 1\vo new people
identification bureautracy to do it. h enter and mind their own business.
is not a draconian cut-back.on immi- Have they swamped the plact?That's
gration of the sort we saw in the what a million immigrants per year
1920s. Still, it will reduce legal means to a nation of a quaner of a bilimmigration after a few years, from lion people. If you're·not happy with
about 800,000 per year to about the racial or ethnic mix of immi500,000. That adds up- to 15 mil- grants. why not add some Liberty .
lion fewer Americans, plus their off- Visas for those from Eastern Europe
and the Soviet Union who were not
spring, over SO years.
Why cut? Because immigration is allowed to emigrate during the Cold
said ,to be "must pass" .legislation. War years?
This bill needs changing. Even
Why so? Because it's an election year
and Americans are said to be "angry" Ausualia has dumped Australianabout imniigration, which will be "a style immigration policy.
'(Ben Wattenbe111, a senior feJ.
big issue." That notion was bolstered
when Pat Buchanan, worrying that low at the American · Enterprise
peqp)e named Jose were swamping Institute, Is the author of a new
our culture, proposed a total shut- book, "Values Matter Most," and
down of all legal immigration . Is the host ol the weekly publk teleBuchanan won. one pririlary by one vision program; "Think Tank.") ·

,..

;:t

r,w.....,- ;

not seem to have .8rown any less ·answer . .his critics' charges of :
since the publicatiQII.. of tladden's hypocrisy- by asserting 'thin he 1~
bopk.
.
believes in a ' 'spiritual resurrec- ·
:
The 1eaus SeminM',,an association tion."
This
means,
he
will
say,
that
·
:
of liberal Bible schl,lJars. concluded at
its 199~ meeting that "Jesus' resur' !"everything Jesus stood for in his··
. rection dld.not ilwol"'! the resuscita- . .earthly life remained still very much· :
tion of ~· corpse.'f 'The ~holars alive after his death on Good Friday." :
The question of hypocrisy is one , ;
1"v~w lhc _empty tomb as a legend
that de~l~ three iir fOil!' decades 'that most ministers have to wrestle' •
; with at times. Is .it our job u -past~ :
after Jesus' death."
Bee"• 111111y of tli6e Jesus Sem-. flnt alld f&lt;qmOst to pteach ·the ' i
inar echo~ .C.:!t at se!llinaries aospel effectively? Or must ·we fi~ , ·
.w1iere .future inillistei'S are ualned, ask ourselves whether we fully . .:
'~
their d&lt;iuiJta,fi...t tlieir w.Y lilck io the :.believe what we say?
loqal p.-lsh church where die ininisIf the historic f•th of the church
'ter ma:rkeep his doul!ti to himself as is in dallp,, it appears to be safet b1
f• u his congregation ts .'concerned. the hands of the person in the pew
Is this hypocrisy? '
than the one in·the pulpit.
In the' case of lhc minister who
(Gewp R. Plqeu IIIII ~
leaves the impression with his parish-· alat for Newapaper JJ:aleqfrlle
ionen that he believes in the resur- A_.!alioao)
rection when he doesn't, he may

'

.

Ada E. Bissell
•

.

IND.

'.
W.VA.

Ada ~mma Bissell, 87, of Long Bouom, died Thursday, March 21 , 1996
at Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 9, 1908. in Long Bottom, daughter of the late Alfred Fred and
Laura Kathryn Bonar Swan, she was a homemaker and a member of the Long
Bottom United Methodist Churcb; the Racine Order of the Eastern Star, theChester Council of Daughters of America, the Pythian Sisters Lodge 'in""
Pomeroy, the Long .Bottom Senior Citizens Club, the Public Employees
Reurement Corporauon·and served 20 years as an Olive Township clerk.
She is survived by three daughters and sons-in-law, Orva Jean and John
Bond of Spicewood, Texas, Marilyn and Mark Miller of Westerville, and Janet
Kay and Tom Groeneveld of Worthington; a son and daughter-in-law, L.
Michael and Patricia Bissell of Pomeroy; 17 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Mae McPeek of Long Bouom, and Leota Ferrell
ofMedway. .
·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Joseph E. Bissell; two
sons; Joseph A. and Kenneth Bissell; a daughter, Violet Smith; a grandson,
Michael Pa!rick Bissell; a ·brother, Sherley Swan;·and a sister, Leona HensIcy.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in.the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
with tho; Rev. Charles Eaton offi~iating. Burial will follow in the Sand Hill
Ccmetcf)'. Long Bottom. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. Saturday. "
In lieu of flowers, memprial contribution may be given to the Meigs County Hu"\ane Society.
'·

Via AssoQIIred Prell G~r

Spring to make bel~ted ,
arrival over the weekend
By The Associated Pren

Meigs

announcements·

Ru~nd

Garden Club
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Pauline Adkins, New
Lima ~oad.
·

extreme northeut, tapering to flurries. Elsewhere clearing or party
cloudy. Lows 15 to 25.
Trustees to meet
The Chester Township Trustees
· .Saturday... Partly to mostly sunny.
Highs ranging from 35 to 40 north- . will hold a special meeting Tuesday,
cast to the 40s south.
7 p.m., at the Chester Town Hall.
Saturday n'ighi.:. ~~tly clo~~y
north. Mostly cloudy. wtlh • chance Pressure clinic set
of rain souihwest. Lows &amp;c!m ~ ·tq
A blood pressure clinic will b4e
30 north to·the lniddlt30s south.
held at .the Harrisonville Senior CitE"teaihd rolea.t: . ,
izens Club·Tuesday from 10:30 a.m.
Sunday... A chance of rain. Highs to noon at the townshouse. Following
the clinic, a luncheon and meeting
middle 40s to middle 50s.
Monday.. .A chance of rain. Lows ):Yill be .held. In the event of bad
30 to 35 north and 35 to 40 south. weather, the clinic will be cancelled.
Highs from the ~pper 40s to the UJlPCt
SOs. . · .
.
· : · .~bile to visit
· Thesday... A chance of rain. Lows ' The Amet'ican Red Cross Bloodfrom 30 to 35. Highs in·die 40s.
mobile will visit the Meiss Senior
~
Citizens Center in Pomeroy, April 3,
. from 1-6 p.m. To be eligible to give
blood, individuals must be at least 17
years of age, weigh at least II 0
pounds, and be in general good
heaJth. Individuals can safely give
blood every 56 days.
COLUMBUS (1\P)- The special es against other businesses.
Gov. George Voinovich has called Meeting canceled
Ohio Senate coml!littee reviewing
. legislation that will overhaul the the legislation a m11ch-needed step
The Meigs County Humane Socisiate's civil justice system plans to toward n:form.
ely, general meeting scheduled for
send the bill to tbe Senate floor by
The btU passed tbe. House 54-44 tonight will be held April 19, 7 p.m.
late May.
last ~onth, after after eight months of • at Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.
, But Sen. Bruce Johnson, R- heanngs. Caps on damages were
C::olumbus, said sena,tors will seek raisedandothiirprovisionsloosened
further Qompromise on the bill.
to secure votes. •
"The nature of this bill will be one
'Among majpr provisions in the
Units of the Meigs County Emerof compromise," Johnson told the Housecpassed version are:
·
gency
Medical Service recorded nine
Columbus chapter of the Federalist ·- · • AJimit on noneconomic dam· '
calls
for
assistalice Thursday, includS'ociety for Law and Public Policy ages to $590,00() for most cases and
Studies on Thursday. "The system in Sl million in cases of permanent or ing two tr311sfer calls. Units responding included :
its current form is not perfect, as the severe pain and suffering. ·
MIDDLEPORT
~ill is not perfect in its current
· · ·A limit op punitive damages to
1:10
p.m
.• Overbrook Nursing
form. "
$250,000 or three times the amount
Center,
Mary
Davis, Holrer Medical
The bill reduces the number of of economic or .noneconomic dam.center.
lawsuits and limits monetary awards. ages, whichever is higher.. Ju~ges
POMEROY
Businesses support it, saying a Jiti- could rat~ that amount to stx h~s
7:28a.m., motor vehicle accident
gation e'xplosion and soaring jury more or dtsmtss clmms for ountt1ve
on Bradbury Road, Royce Bissell,
awards are hurting them. But trial · damag~s d~met! ,unwarranted.
Jawyers and consumer advoi:ates say · • Sh1elding, under cert~n c•rc~m­ Veterans Memorial Hospital;
6:13 p.m., .Pomeroy Gun Club,
outlandish jury awards are rare and stances, .of a defendan! tn mult•deRich
Jones, VMH.
inost lawsuits are filed by business- fepdant cases from paytng the enure
RACINE
·
amount of damages if the plaintiff is
6:51 p.m .. Durst Ridge Road,
unable to collect from other defen~Civil
dants.
COLONY THEATRE
' (Editor's note: A lawsuil outlloc!l
FRIDAY THRU THURS
tile grievances ol oDe
aplost
JOHN TRAVOLTA,
another. It does not establish.guUt
CHRISTIAN
SLATER
Am Ele Power .......................42\
or innocence.)
IN
Akzo
........................................
56
The following lawsuits were filed
Alhl.,ct 011 .•••••.••..•.•••••••••••.••37t..
BROKEN ARROW
recently in t!te Meigs County ComATaT .....................................61'4
R
mon Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. . S..k Ot1e •.••••••••••..•••••••••••.•.••35~
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Crow Ill.
BOb. EVMa .;....................~ .....15\
tt&amp; 0923
~wan.
33\
Bank One of Columbus, in a suit
Ct.mpl0..1rtd.,........ ~••••••••.•••••• 17
filed Thursday, is seeking S4.8~6.3S
~~ :
\
plus costs and interest from Avanelle
~tty·
~·-~
............
".;.
......
23'J.
•Bass of Pomeroy fot reimbursemel)l
~ ............................ 19\
, of a pl'Qmissory note,,
GM"'tt ...........J•••••••••••••••••••••:81!.i
• Asset Acceptance Corp •. of St.
GOOd) 11r TaR ....:.................!11'1.
K..,..,. rt ••••••••••.,.•••••••••••••••••••••••• &amp;\
'Clair Shorts, Mich., in a suit filed
u~ .~d ......~·······-··., ......... 117March 14, is seeking $2,812.23,plus
Lim!IM Inc.=
·......................... 18~
interest and costs· fr.&gt;m Dennis Ault
Peop,l ll 81
~
23
of Pomeroy to recover debt owned
OhiO Vlller
....................40
from a cfedil card.
.
.
Q,. Valley .............................32'1.
~tc.ll ................................10
!'Obblna a ~~Vwe..................32\.
~
Daily
Royal DutcJIIS,hell.•- ...........1 .
~.. "-c.···~·····- ................,
(USPS 11,_.
'•
Spring will m,ake a belated arrival
in Ohio over the next few days, forecasters said .
An approaching high pressure
system will slowly clear the skies and
start a gradual warmup. By Sunda~,
temperatures will reach iniO the 50s
in parts of Ohio. However, rain i~
possible on Sunday.
. Lows tonight will be 15-25 and
highs on Saturday 35-45.
.
The record-high temporature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 82 degrees in 1938 while
the record low was 6 in 1885. Sunset
tonight will be at 6:46 p.,m. and sunrise Saturday at6:30 a.lft. . ·
. Weatherf~:
Tonight..Snow showers likely

Senate committee hopes
for vote on·litiga.tlon bill

Spel:ial meeting.set
Evangelist John Elswick of
Athens will be the speaker for the
7:30p.m. Sunday evening service at
the Hobson Fellowship Church.
There will be special singing.
Revival scheduled
Revival services ~ill be held at the
Hope, Baptist Church, Grant Street.
Middleport, Monday through Sunday.
March 31 , 7 p.m. each evening.
Evangelist will be the Rev. Charles
Stansberry, ,Gallipolis French City
Baptist Church pastor.
·
Legion meeting
Middleport's Feeney Bennett Post
128 of the American Legion l'ill hold
a dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday followed
by a post Everlasting 'ceremony.
Meeting ofpost and auxiliary will be
at 1:30 p,m. All auxiliary members
are
encouragc:d to atten_d.
.
RACOtomeet
The Racine Area Community
Organization will meet Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park.
URG registration slated
Open registration for the University of Rio Grande 1996 spring quarter will be held Monday, 3-ti p.m. in
the Davis Career Center.
'

EMS Unl"ts answe.r 9 call.s

ac:tions filed
party

A Middleport man was slightly injured in an accident Thursday on
County Road 5 (Bradbury), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hip
way Patrol reported.
·
·Royce A. Bissell, 28, 269 N. Fifth Ave., was transported to Veter·
ans Memorial Hospi~l by the Meigs EMS. He was later treated and
released, a hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers said Bissell was westbound, three-tenths of a mile east of
State Route 7, shortly before 7 a.m. when the car he drove slid off the
, right side of the road and went down a small embankment.
The vehicle then struck a carport and a parked car owned by Cathy
A. Jacks, 3~160 Bradbury Road , Middleport, according to the report.
The car Bissell drove, owned by the Quorum Corp., Hurricane,
W.Va., was severely damaged and slight damage was reported to the
Jaclts car, troopers said.

Troopers ticket area man after accident
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Pau-ol cited a Middleport man for failure to control following a one-car crash Thursday
on SR 124 near Salem Center.
Troopers said Jeffrey A. Six, 19, 32200 Happy Hollow Road, was
westbOund at8:38 p.m. wh'en he lost control on wet pavement and went
off the right side of the road.
The car then struck a small tree. The car was moderately damaged.

Citation issued in two-ve'hicle crash
No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident on New
Lima Road near Rutland Wednesday afternoon.
"
_ Elizabeth A. Roush, 21, Pomeroy, slowed do~n to fake a left turn
mto a private drive when a following car driven by Sljrah L. JohnSon,
42, Middleport, attempted to pass, struck Roush's vehicle and went into
a ditch, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's Department report.
Damage to Rosuh's 1989 Ford truck was listed as slight, while Johnson's I 987 Nissan sustained moderate damage. ·Johnson was cited for
failure to control.

Ohio Republicans prepared
to vote for .repeal of· ban
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Cincinnatiarea House members stand ready to
join in an expected effort Friday to
repeal an assau It weapons ban .
Responding to pledges made to
the National Rifle Association, the
GOP House leadership has scheduled
a vote on the matter.
A crime bill Congress passed in
August 1994 placed a ban on 19 specific types of .assault weapons and :
was regarded as a ml\ior defeat for the
gun lobby.
The offices of Reps. John· Boehner, R-West Chester; Rob Portman, RCincinnati; Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis; Steve Chabot, R-Cincinnati ;
Jim Bunning, R-Southgate; and Lee
Hamilton, D-Nashville, Ind., all. said
Thursday their members would vote
to repeal the ban.
"The Second Amendment rights
of law-abiding Americans must be
upheld. Criminals do not obey the
law when they com,mit a crime and
they do not Obey gun control laws,"
Mr. Boehner $l)id ip a statement.
Mr. Chabot regards the weapons
. ban as "feel good legislation that

Fannie Durst, VMH.
SYRACUSE
I :45 a.m., volunteer fire department and squad to Roy Jones Road,
sU'ucture fire al Jamie Wolfe residence, no injuries reported, Pomeroy
and Racine VFDs assisted;
8:56a.m., Bridgeman Street, Harriett Sinclair, VMH;
I :30 p.m., VFD and squad to Roy
Jones Road, rekindled structure fire,
no injuries.

doesn 't address the real problems of
crime," said his spokesman, Gary
Lindgren.
·
Mr. Hamilton contends the selec·
tion of 19 weapons to be banned was•
"arbitrary," spokeswoman Holly
Baker said.
.
"He also felt it diverts law·
enforcement away from areas where
they could be more effective," she'
said.
'

Hospital :news .
Veterans Memori,al
.
Thursday admissions - Harriet•
Sinclair, Syracuse; Fanoy Durst, Portland.
,
Thursday discharges - Dorothy;
Proffitt, Pomeroy ; Sandra Wrike ..
man, Reedsville.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March 21 - Ja{lles
Ferguson, Marian Riffle, Ethyl .
Mullins, Brenda Randolph, Robert
Bailey, Mrs. Charles Litchfield and;
daughter, Brian Lewis, Walter Pinkerman, Cora Dyer, Gerald Boggs, Jake
· Saunders, Mrs. David WOOils lllili.'
son , Mrs. Steve Shull and son.
(Publlihed with permission)

Thanks to those '"'""''
·voted &amp;
me in the election.
~incerely,

Judy Wi

'

Stocks

POMEROY

Near P~·Maaon Bridge

992·2588
VINTON

•-au•
UP CLOSE ·

Galla Count!j' DIIIPiaY Yanl
15S.Maln St.

388 8803

.........................
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&amp;PERSONAL
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1:00,hl0 o..n.y

IIIATliiiU So\'1 I SlM

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ASine•r•

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•

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

Than••·
roAD nao.. Wile

...
Pr,.n•l7

.

luppot'IMI Jfe·in

The
•)o

•

Sentinel ....-

'

. I
Pubtithed OYtry - . , _ , M - y ollraooP
Friday. Ill Cdoit 'St, Pomeroy, ~. by ~
Ohio Valley PubU'Ain&amp; Con:pM)JG
1Co.,
Pomeroy,,Ohio 45769, I'll. 992-21$6. s-.1
c:la11 polllit" ,..d 11 Pometo)', Ohio.

~~~--ThO A - , . . u . and doe Ollie

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W~ngtOII ar,ct ••• :•• ~············20\

·-'f-·-

Stocli re~,.,•r• the 10:30
a.m. quot" ~vlded b!j' A~ll
of Gllllpolll. . '

~--

POSTMASTI!Il! Send - " o:amctiCNII oo.
The Doily Sentinel, Ill c..n St., -..y,

Qhio.m69,

•

.

SUISCRJfTIOt'l IIATD

. • ,c.mo. .. - -

One - .......... .......................................$2.00
One Mondi ......:........................................SI.10
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on.

SINGUCOPYmctr

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$-""' dooiri"'IO TIIO'Doily pOJ

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Ollt.-,111 or 12 -.oh bloiL Cnoclt orillbo
liveo"'!"ie'.~t,
iomltiD ....,_ ...... 10

No 'ooblcrlpdc&gt;o bJ mall 'permiaed Ia -

----~·-·
MAIL~
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26 -

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TO.BIG

THANKS!
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IUVK Dll1JIII UD
•nrtMAl.. 'nJBAS,
WOODWorDelUPPI.IBD.
'

I . w•;ml~ like to · e'xpress my · sineer~
$ppredatioh .for the ·votes ·and ·support
gir~n .Qle in the , March 19th primary
eJection.-," · ,
•

'

&lt;AJt,.,.~!.-(')(.~

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............,..............;""'''"'"""521.!0

...........:....,,............................. $53.1:1

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EMMOGENE HAMILTON
Your Funtime Meigs County Recorder
Pol Mi. peld for

H.mllon Cdllge Rd., Sy!u~H, Oh

J\1/ito ANIMALS AND MAGtSf ,;

'.

. ·, .

. , . ,• . • •lftl . •. ,. .
--~1 .

i

.. . ·,,
;

'

'

Mid8leport man injured in .crash

fortcast fol daytime C!lnditions

MICH.

t

The O.lly SaaUntl • PliJij 3

Local News in Brief: ·

OHIO We&lt;l lh er

1:-he Dally Sentinel Immigration.- l~gisla~~on· nee-d s reformatiQn
'Utti!Jfislid in 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

J

. Page2

I

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•j

�~~~~-·-·-n.~-DU~~-S~•-n_u~~--------------------------~~-p~~~~y~·~M~I~dd~~~~~O~h~~------------~--------~F~~~y~,M8==~=:=~~·~18~M~

-,n NCAA Dlvfslon.l men's tournament action, ··

..

'

gia (21·9)faces Syracuse (26-8) and
Kansas (25-.5) plays Arizona (27·11 ).
,. ..Marcus Camby could have
Calipari said he ordered his play·
;Jmissed the bus altogetlie~.
ers to leave the bote!, but Camby got
., • Camby, the ali·Amencan center caught in traffic.
~-for top-ranked Massachusens, was , ·
"I would like to point out that he
~· ~ld.out of the Minutemen's.Stu:ting
has qever been late before for any: ··bneup by ~oach John Cabpan on thina," Calipari said. "I e~pected
.., Thursday rught for amvmg late for him 10 play well and he did "
~:the team bus 10 the ' morning
"It was my birthday and was out
~·shootaround.
at the mall,'' Camby said. "Every· ·
He sat the Iilli I : I~ of tlie game. body says Atlanta is overpopulated."
By then, UMass was already ahead
Carmelo Travieso, who tumbled
*'7·0. Arkansas was done.
off a four-foot-high podium at a
UMass scored th.e aarne's first 1,3 press conference the day before,
i.;:pomts and coas~ to a 79-63 wm wasn't hampered by his sore back,
::)Over, the - ~rbac~ at the East scoring 14 points.
Reg~onal sem11inal~ m Atlan~. The
Tyrone Weeks, who started for
jf:\,01'-ral)ked an~ lop-seeded Mmute· Camby, tied a. career-high with 16
1.:.men (34-1) wtll play. Georgeto~n points. Camby added 15, Dana Din~ :~29·7), s~ed second m the East, m gle 12 and Qonta Bright II.
·
"UMass played great," Arkansas
· • ,Saturday s fin~. ·
In. Thursdays other round of 16 coach Nolan ~cbardson said. "They
-.
ames, Kentucky and Wake Forest were tremendous. 1bcy dominated
•
v~nce4 to th~ final of.the Midwest both ends of the court. I told our kids
. gmnal1n Mmneapohs.,The Wild- they were overachievers. Let's not
~ats (3.4-1) overpowen:d Utah IOI· forget they're freshmen."
~11~· and the Demo~ ~~on~ sur·
The Razorbacks, starting four
;:vtv~ two shots by EouJSVIile !n the freshman, showed some jitters early
:~to~l/lg. ~on~ for a 60-.59 \V10: . on in front of 34,614 at tbC Georgia
:'L In tomght s games, Ml~SISSlppl Dome. They made only five of 27
::-~:s~te (24-7} plays Connecucut (32· shots in the fltst half and missed !heir
t:2&gt; an~ Cmcmnall (~7-4) meets first four attempts to begin the 'Sec·
~ .Oeorg1a Tech (24-11) m the South- • ond.
...:CIIJI,t ~eg10nll\ at 4xmgton, Ky. In
Arkansas (20-13) finished 22-of·
~~West Regronal at Denver, Geor•

i

!i,':

64 from the field, including just 3-of·
15 on three-pointers.
·
Eutll~

Georaetowa 98

'hxas Tech 90
Allen Iverson scorect 32 points on
l'tof-29 shooting, but dazzled the
Red Raiders with his all-around
skills. He added five · assists, five
steals and four rebounds.
"The fm;t half. I was a little excited,'.' Iverson said. "I was up for the
game. I missed some shots I should
have made. The team taljced 10 me (at
halftime), and I was ab\e to get my
game together."
·
Othelta Harrington canied the
load for Georgetown in the first half,
scoring 18 of his 23 points by going
8-of-9 from the field.
Victor Page added 17 points for
Georgetown and Jerome Williams 12
for the Hoyas, who made 33 of 46
free thro\Vs.
Jason Sasser had 25 points to lead
Texl\5 Tech, which had four players
foul out.
Midwest Regional
Kentucky 101, Utah 70
The Wildcats got contributions
from up and down the lineup and
made 13 straight shots during one
first-half stretch.
,
Utah had held opponents to an
average of 63 points and 39 percent

shootinJ, but -couldn' t slow. Ken- was limited to a total' of 23 points in
tucky.·
the Deacons' two ·previous -tourna· .
"I knew what Kentucky was • menl ·wins.
'
going in and I know even more goina
0111," coach Rick Majerus said.
Antoine Walker led .the Wildcats
with 19 points, eight reboullds and
siK assists.
· The defeat was Utah's woo&gt;t since
a 31-point loss to Brigham Young
two years ago, and the 101 points
w~re the most given up by the Utes
since allowing 113to 8YU in I98".
Keith Van Horn scored 23 and
Ben Caton had 22 for Utah.
Wake Forest 60
LOulsvilltS9
Tim Duncan completed a three·
point play on a classic NBA coritin·
uation call with 1:16 to go for the
Demon ..Deacons, who then had to
survive two Louisville attempts in
the closing seconds.
"I didn't think the basket was
·going to count for a second there,''
Duncaq said. "I thought the shot
went off a little l;te, but when they
said the shot counted, t wa$n 't.aoina
to argue."
· ·
. Said Louisville coach Denny
Crum: "Other ihan that one NBA
continuation play, ],thought the j!arne
· was welt-officiated."
Duncan finished with 27 points,
13 rebounds and seven blocks. He

~

(AP) - New Jersey Nets managenient refused tO comment on a report
that the owner of the NHL's New
Jersey Devils offered $90million for
the NBA team.
The New York Post, citing an
unidentified source close to the'
hockey team, said John McMullep
presented an offer in wiiting Friday

io. his fellow tenants at the Gontinental Airlines Arena.

Tennis
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP)
-Top-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov·
of Russia beat Dick Norman of Bel·
gium 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the second
round.of the St. Petersburg Open.

I

,

:
..
:

•
: In the NBA,

. Al MeNkboll Arena, Denver
· · T.,...•tfs ~emllnlll: Georcia (21 -9)
" · Syn~&lt;~~~e (~6-8). 8 p.m.; KtlnJ., (~8-1 )
v1. Arlzou (26-6), :'0 minu1es af~er previ-

NBA standings '
.

.It .L bl.

X·Orlondo .:.:..........51
NewYorlt ............. .38
MiamL .......... :....... n
Wuhi111on ............ l0
New Ieney ..... .......21
' . Botton ............ ......•.~ .

17

~7

33
36

,l!hil'*lplli• .... ....... p

.7SO

.5115

.soo

lil

The Final Four

II~

AI CoriUnenlll Alrllna Anno
J!ut RuthtrfGN, NJ.
S1turd1y, Much 3t seMifinals:
Easl chompioa vs. Midwest champion;
Soulheul ~hDft!pion \'S. Wesl champion; .
rtnt pne op-orr: HO p.m.
. Mo~ay ,. AprJI I ftn1l: Semifinal
WUIIICft. 9.22 p.na.

Division I semifinals

17

..ClS

20

39 .409
41 .319
53 ' 1'17

23
2!1
37

Coollnllll•lllon
;.&lt;;hicoao ..............110 . 7 .1196

·.

19~

lndiua ...................&lt;IO 26 .606
Ct,t;VF,LAN1? .....138 28 .576
Deuolt.. .... ,............. 37 ~9 .561
AtlM1Co ................... 36 ~9 .554
·• \ 1 •-,Ciwlone ............... J:\ · ~2 .SOB
Mil-kee ............. ~l
3~3
'I'Oronlo ...........: ..... l7 48 .262
. '[
·

NCAA Division I

21~
22~

« ..

.w.

lam

llll

.L fa.

k· San Antonio .......47 18 .72.1
~t-Utah ..........:.........46 ·:zo .691
Houston ................. 42 25 -.6'17

I~

6

Min,.....a .............. 21 45 .m
VIII&lt;OUver ......... ;.. ,II 53 .112
hcllle15 .773
24 :631
- .................... 33 33 .500
Ponliod ... :............. 32 34 .484
so..-rito .............29 36 .446'
Colden Stale .. ...:.... 30 38 .441
t;.A.. Cippert ..... ,... 24 42 .:164
o-.cUn&lt;:lted playoll.tpac .
. ~~llnchcd di\'1~?"

··-~ ................. 51
~-"' L.Wn ............41

At R

s•••

m~lt: \landerbill
.Iowa (27-3), 8 p.m.; Coanc&lt;tl·
CUI (ll·l) Yl. S.., FraaciiCO (2.4-7), 10::\0
p.m.
.
Monday,.March 25 n.ot Semifinal
winherl, 9:30p.m. .
(~:Z.7lvt.

9~

18.

19

'

21~

..

27

New ,_y·'17.. De0ver89 .
107, New Yorlt 16
CLEVELAND 98, Houaoa 8l
1'l1oenjx 104, Oo~· State \l6 .
Sunle 104. ~.A. Liken 93

'.&gt;

'

Tonlpt'o pmea

~

,.

·;

·~·

At n..
IHoo, S..ule
Satu...,J't -noll: Auburn (:U.
8) vs. Ptaa Slllle (26-6), 10 p.m.; Stanford

. (~H)

·•· 1be Fill8l Four

AI~(!
Cltarlolle, N.C.
FrWIJ"• ~"'--t: E.u1 chlmpion
M

,_..Jo

, NIT action

Ponlud or SI01III'Ielllo, IO:lO p.m.

St.lolopll'. 76, Allode l~tnd 59

,

.I

,

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

•

"'

'

.

· ,._.t•

·D~ . 3::t0 e-m.
~ .· :f-3:30p.m.

~•.A-.

~
·...
.

I

i!l

. CJortrtoaO .. J:..-'.

~9 p.lllo~
,9p.a , _.., . , . ,
..

- ,9:30p.m.

,i · NCAA,D iv-1 , )·;
me11's toiJm~nt
1

,1

'.

•

.' ,,

I

Buketball

Saturday's pmea

Sat•rday: Archbald (26-0) vs. Min·
mi Eas1 p9-7), lla.m. ..

Divl.ilon II final

htUrdl)': On-ville (2.~-) ) YS . 0UAW0·
·Giondorf(!S-1), 2 p.m.

Caiii"'Yal

V&amp;DCOU..,,IO:JOp.m.

Oallu 11 LOJ

Hockey

Nadaallabtbd A_.,•«h '
NBA; Suope- l'hi!aclelpbia 76en
Jllard Jr:rry SIIICk..oai..e for lwo aomes,
ud filled hitll $7,500 '" puocblna and
aro.bbina Utlh '• Jetr Hprnacek. by 1he
lhroat in 4 Mirdi:ZO pmc ~
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS:
Placed Rony Seikal)'. cemer. on lht ill·
jut&lt;dlltt.
.
LOS ANQELES '-'KERS' Suopended Cedrie Ceballos. forwwd. indefinitely
aher he mined a team niJhl.
, MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES:
PlaCed ADdrew Llln&amp;. ~•kr. on 1he i•·
jured lilt.
·

N.Y. Ranaers Ill: Boston, I JO p.m.
New Jenoy'" N.Y. II Ianden, 1 p.m.
Edmonlon at f.fooucal. 7:l0 p....
.
Philaclelphi1 at'TOtOI'IIo, 7::\0 p.m .
Buffolo at Pinlbut1h. 7:30p.m.
Hartford at Washina•on.1 :30 p.m.
Floridlll Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m. ·

,.,..1es1 10,30 p.m.

Sunday's pmea

NHL stand!ngs
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dtvitlon

AnMam a1 Clli..,o. 3 p.m.
CoJonda at Wiruupc!l, ~ p.m.
FAmoRIDIIIt onaw.. 1. p.na.
~~ at St. Loo,is., 7 p.m.
Pi"'btirgh 11 N.Y. Raqen, 8 p....

_,_._
F~

.W. .L I ll&amp;. !if li&amp;

lam

N.Y. Ronp ..... 36 20 14
Florida ................ 38 24 g
l'lliladclpbia ..... J5 21 I)
New Jeney ........ 32 27 II
Wuhinalon ........ 33 29 9
T""'"' Bay ........ )2 28 II
N.Y. loloadon .... 20 4~ 8

16
85
ll.l
7l
7.5
73
48

NodhtllliN•illln
Pinsburah ......... 4224 4 ' 88
Momte.ll ........... 3S ~7 8 78
Boston ............... 34 28 9 T1
Honrord ............ Jo 32 1 61
Buffolo ............... 27 36 7 61
Ottawa .............. 15 .52 3 33

c--

~42 1'17
2)5 204

~36' .18~

Tran sact ion s

199 II!~
209 221
201 272

B. .ball
A-riaftr-

18~

:r.W. .L I lll. GE
y· DelnJit.. .........
12 4 m 273

li&amp;

St. Loult ............ 31 28 12 . 74
,Toro ..o ..............211 3312 .68
WlMipeJ ...........29 36 5 . 6.1
Dollat .................23 35 I~ 58

158
241 1110
19) 202
215 226
l34 2.!9
196 23~

Podtlclllvltlon
2.1 10 92
Calpry ..... .........29 30 II 69
27 30 15 69
Antbdm .:.......,... ~8 36 6 62

l86
210
249
197

~

v_.., .........

-.....

CHICAGO WHITE SOX: SciM Eddie

207
208 '
249
217

lel&amp;ut-.

CLEVELAND INDIANS: ()pli....l
Enrique Wilson. h•ficlder, to 'CantonAkron of the Eutem Lcquc. AlliJ~~ed
Eric Helfand. catcher: M.-lo Diu•.ia·
fielder; and Toril Marah, ·ou1fielder, to ·
tlleir minof-lel&amp;ue caq&gt;.
MINNESGTA TWINS : Aulaoed .
J01e Yalell!ia. cartbef, .... Ray Gii1Melti 1

outfielder, to their minor-leaa~~e camp.
OptiOMCI $con Waw.. , pitcber, 10 Sail
Lake City or the P.clric Coat l..eque.
Waived Dan -ler, ""'{¥Older, for llle
purpoiC of aiviRI him his ~lioru~l
~-

'

~

.

·

.

Hockey

NttUooai-1.-BdSTON BRUINS : Reauiancd
Blaine """""· giloh-. to clcvcJand or

the IHL. ~nl Davis Pilynr. le(l wlnJ,
Provillem:c of the AHL

100 ;

COLORADO AVALANCHE: A"'
noonced thty wtll move lllar AHL: ,f!iw. ••
chi..e from Cornwalllo Henhey. besinning neKI season. Senl Josef Mll'ba. center. lo Connval.l of the AHL
'
. NEW' IERSEY DEVILS: 'Recillod
Steve Sullivan. center, from Alblly of lbe
AHL
OTTAWA SENATORS: Recalled
Wee Pitlick. dcrcnsemhn. from Prince
Edwtll'd Island of lhi AHL. Sent Kevin ·
Brown, ri&amp;ht wing, to PEl-

' GRAVELY TRACTOR

SALES a SERVICE

29-4 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.
,FALL &amp; WINTER t!OURS
Open Tuesday· Friday 9:00.5:00 ·
Saturday 9;()().3:00

.

..._, 7&lt;&gt;&lt;9~·"'·

.,........, t llull:
.~ ~ d&gt;i-1 )!lace. 7 p.m.;

p.m. "'· "'

•

~~~r::

LEBALNOTICE
ifhe PubliC Utilities Commission ol
Ohio h8s setfor Public heanno base ·
HO· j~102'EI:·EFC. 'tQ revi~ 'lliA ·
!Uel~femem)!I'JCtieefand poll- · . ·
llliS·DtColujnbtls SoiJU!ern P~r ',

''Will Johnson had one scholar- and Preston Murphy each made
:
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- When ship offer," Martelli s.aid. "Mark three-pointers for the Rams in the
' Phil Martelli read the roll of senior Bass is a 5-9 guard . Reggie game's first 11 minutes. When
l leadel's on St. Joseph's, it sounded Townsend is too heavy and too Wheeler made a three-point pllly
with 8:25 left, Rhode Island had a
like he was trying to figure out how slow."
Johnson led the Hawks with 18 24-17 lead.'
• his team has gone so far.
'
"Now we get to showcase this points and 14 rebounds . Bass ran the
Right after that, during a timeout,
: scruffy group of guys," Martelli . show from his point guard spot and Martelli reminded the Hawks that
~ said after the Hawks throttled Rhode . --scored seven points. And Townsend Rhode Island outplayed them for
~ Island 76-.59 Thursday h'ight to was nearly as strong as Johnson, with most of the two previous meetings
advance to-the NIT semifinals at 16 points and 10 rebounds:
,between the teams this season. and
Madison Square Garden against
"They pushed their limit," were doing it again.
t Alabama on Tuesday night.
Martelli sai "We've continued to
"For us to give up 24 points in 12
The last NIT quarterfinal will be talk about the erne of being selfish minutes, we hadn't competed,"
held tonight when Nebraska travels - selfish en gh to win another Martelli said.
Trailing by seven, St. Joe 's ralto Fresno State. The winner of that game."
s, they also were lied, scoring tbe nut 18 points to
game will play TUlane in New York
Against the
on Tuesday.
·
mature enough t to panic when take control of the game. Bass scon:d
As coach Martelli ticked off the • Rhode Island ca out hitting from the first five Hawk points in tbe run,
.names of his big three seniors, there long range.
Johnson had six and Townsend
' was obvious pride in his voice.
Tyson Wheeler. Chad Thomas

!

!

By RUSTY MILLER
COLU~BUS,

Ohio (AP) ; With the legend of Jerry Lucas' loss
: in his last high · school game and
1 Clark Kellogg's career-ending 51
l points, you can now add Vince Lit·
• tlejohn's shot to lhe lore of the state
', boys' baske!ball
.
tournament.
' LittJejohn's runnina three-point.
: field goal - which a(lpeared to
: come after the final buzzer had
sou.nded - ·give Casstown .. Miami
&amp;51 a .68·66 victory ove(' Seaman
North Adams· in a ·Division 1ij state
,lemi!inal game ~Thursday.
, · The controversy reverberated
~aroumf 'St. John ~na for houn:
:afterward. In the village of Se&amp;~~~an .
· :it will likely be araued for years.
. In the othCr Divisi!'n III game,
·Brian Aschliman's IS•foot jumper

~

NEW YORK YANKEES: Placed
n"' Rlline., ourr~etder. oa lhe 15-dly eli•·

~t;1,_e MARINERS: A.,...r '•o
tenna with Brian Hantcr. DUiftelda, on 1
minOf·leaaue COIIInct. Seru Lee Guenerman ud llob Milackl, pildlen. 10 lllelr
minor·leque -

I

I
'

,.

.'
Choo~ the best • rou.fro~ your . partii;ipatin(Poiaris',
dealer when you take delivery of a ,1996 Polaris ATV between ·
March 1 and May.Ji, 1996. Your choices ate...
·

E-tl•r•roR

in. FREE clothing
and acceiBOries. '
of yQut.choice, ~ •
'

~~

.

~

No payments for 90 days and
90 days FREE financing ~th the
·
Po~s Sta!Ca,d...

;,. to.~r.'~gj~ •ie!!ler· IIQd check out the new 1996

'ror ap,i-entl!~·an•~,fu~n:~

''.

,..

I

was asked if, from his perspective,
Littlejohn 's shot should have counted.
"Absolutely not. I'm in a direct
line with the scoreboard. All I saw,
61.
In Division U. top-ranked Orrville there were zeroes everywhere. Tbere
- seeking a second straight cham· was no way it was good," Young
pionship - ripped off 12 consecui said .
tive pqints to end the third quarter on
The officials weren 't talking. Or,
the way to rolling over Kettering at least, reporters were not permitted
Alter 65-49. And Ottawa-Glandorf to talk to them because Ohio High
made it a III!IIChup of No. I vs. No. School Athletic Association com2 in the finals by getting past Cam- missioner Clair Muscaro said,
bridge 67-64.
"Nothing would be resolved."
. Littlejohn dribbled the length of'
Muscaro, who did talk to the offithe court after' taking an inbounds cials, said, "There was no doubt in
pass with 3.3 seconds left and his their minds."
.
team trailina 66-65. Just past lhe
The OHSAA takes official videos
Miami East three-point line, he let go of the state tournament that it sells
of the ball.
•
for $30. Muscaro would not allow
North Adams coach Dave Young reporters to view the videos.
with two seconds left nestled in the
net at the buzzer as top-ranked Arch·
bold earned a berth against Miami
East by beating Bedford Chanel 63-

.

FOULED- The Cleveland C11Yelle18' Terrell Bl8ndon (1) loses tl)ll
beD efter being fouled by Houston's Sam Meek In the first quarter
of Thursdey night's NBA geme In Houaton, where the Cevallera won
98-85. (AP)
.

added a three-point play.
Martelli also credited reserves
Duval Simmonds, Terrell Myers and
Nemallia Petrovic.
"Those guys came off the bench
and did a very good jpb of upping
our energy level," he said.
At the oiher end, Rhode Island
missed shots from the outside and
from the inside. They missed lay ups,
runners and jumpers. They missed by
a lot and they missed by a little.
"The team went into a shooting
drought," Wheeler said. "We were
getting some good shots, but the ball
was not going in ihe hole."
By-the time Murphy connected on
another three-pointer, the Rams had
gone nearly six minutes without
scoring, and St. Joseph's had a 35-24

lead.
Up eight at halftime, the Hawks
went on 9-2 run after the break for a
48-33 lead.
The Rams (20-14) weren't
thrilled with the officiating. St.
Joseph's got43 foul shots and made
30. Rhode Island got I0 and made
six.
"We were getting what we
thought were soft fouls called, then '
we· d come down the other end and
get pushed and shoved - the same
kind of fouls - . and they were not
being called," Rhode Island coach AI
Skinner said.
But Skinner said the deciding factor in the game was St. Joseph's vet·
eran leadership and experience.
"There's no question they had a

tremendous amount of confidence,
and that maturity shows," he said.
"That's what seniors will do f&lt;ir
you."

Still, Skinner was proud.of whal
his team accomplished, and already
began pointing to next season.
"It's nice to have everybody
coming back," he said. "They can
redeem themselves. Maybe next time
in that situation, we'll come awe¥
with it."
Th~ Hawks (18-12) may not be
that good next year without Johnso~.
Bass and Townsend.
" The three of us don 't want itt~
end, .. Johnson said. "If you ask me.
an NIT championship is as good as
a lot of teams making the NCAA;s
and losing in the first round."
·

.

David Konicki had 21 points for game-winning jumper.
Aschliman finished with 10
Miami East (19· 7). Littlejohn finished with 15. Kenny Wilmoth had points, one of four Streaks in double
24 for North Adams (25-1 ), disap· figures. Shaun Roth led the way wilh
pointed in its first trip to the state
tourney.
It was a shame that Aschliman's
heroics were overshadowed by theJ
wild finish of ihe second game .
Chane) (24-2) pulled even at 61
on a pair of free throws by second~
team aii-Ohioan Marques Evans
,
with 54.2 seconds left.
Arch~ld (26-0) patiently worlced
the liall ;i1hund the perimeter before
another second-team all-stater. Kei th Roth, drove the lane and the
Chane! defense collapsed on him. He
flipped a pass to the left baseline,
where Aschliman - just I for I0
from the field at ihe time- fired the

18 points.
Evans had 20 points and
rebounds for Chanel.

Ingels Carpet

Spring Carpet Sale

~

:By R~LD ai.uM

' PHOENIX (AP) - Baseball
;owners appro\'¢ a.revenue sharing
·plan that would give' small-market
teams as mtR:h·as S6 million per sea·
son, then made a maj01; new propos ~
al to the players assoeiation.
: ' U!lller the plan givellto the union
kin 'I'III!J5day ~iJht, owners made

leveia! conuni~:

·

:.... abaftdoninc their attempt to
link a IIQIIII'j(
to ~venue,
.,- ch:pWin1
'-l!•nte from 50
· ~nrfo 40 P.CfCCDI, an4
~ i~ns the ihl'eshotd where
llje'tu would slar:Htom S44 million
· lo $46 million/
. The .luxury, IU Qn ~lah~payroli
IUJIII wOuld lxi in effect from 1998·
2001, with the,~ld rilinl 7 per·
cent per year UlltiJ it WIS at '$.56.3
million 2001.
·.
_ Nei~ ·man-aemen1 ne~ator
Ral,ldy Levine nor illlioo head Don· ·
aid Fehr commellted oti cleteils of the

.w

m;,ir

·'

'

to Lake Havasu, Ariz. He intended to
fly to Seattle on his own Thursday,
but was unable to start the boat and
wound up stranded.
Lakers general manager Mitch
Kupchak said the report was news to
him, and some of ihe Lakers hinted
that Ceballos was upset about a
reduction in playing time.
Magic Johnso~~ed for the first
time in 18 games since ending his
retirement, but the Sanies pulled
away after he went to the bench ear·
ly in the second quarter.
Sam Perkins, Gary Payron and
Hersey Hawkins each ·scored 20
points for Seattle, which got its 51st
victory and improved to 30-3 at Key
Arena.
The Lakers had their four-game
road winning streak snapped.
Suns 104, Warriors 96
Charles Barkley scored only two
of his 22 points in the fourth quarter,
but they carne ,after a key offensive
rebound as Phoenix held off a rally
by visiting Golden Stete.
Barkley had seven of his nine
rebounds in the final period, one of
them on a missed free throw by Danny Manning with 39 seconds left. He
was fouled on the play and made
boih free throws, giving ihe Suns a
IOI -94lead.
Manning scon:d 21 points an"
Kevin JohnSOAobad 17 points and IS
assists for the Suns,

iBa$eball owners OK revenue-:sharing plan

In

.,

Theleague.~chcurrentlyfiekb

10 Wesl Virginia schools, including
Ravenswood, as members, has been
the focus of media stories speculat·
ing that Parkersburg High. Pari&lt;;e~­
burg South. Warren and Belpre could
all become a part of a th~·division

LKC alignment.
"We have not talked to anyone
from the LKC. We are very happy in
the TVC and not lookina10 leave lhe
league. The leaaue is finally where
we have wanted it to be for sevend
years : at a good balance. The bis
schools and small schools are verybalanced and tompetitive in their
respective divisions in all spans. We
plan to stay here for awhile, • said
Ring.

Miami East defeats North Adams 68-66 amid controversy

.,

,

. ; Ohio HiS. boys'
·. state tournament

: By JOHN F. BONFATT1

~YSTEM

'·

to become a member of a two-state
Uttle Kanawha Conference, Ring
said that Belpre has conducted no
formal discussions with that league.

In Ohio.boys' state basketball semifinal action,

Sewillnal la.:n
clu..,pioatltlp, 9

.

••

'• ·'I'IIE
GRAVELY

•'\..

•

area that Belpre might leave the TVC

jst. Joseph's . beats Rhode Island 7~·59 in NIT quarterfinals

Closed Monday

MIAMI DOLPHINS: Rc-ti&amp;ned Kci·
lh Byars, fulhc:k.to ao.e--yew concmct.
NEW ENGLAND· PATRIOTS:
'SiJned Mork Wheeler, der....ivc ""'le:
ST. LOUIS RAMS: SilftOI! D'M.,..

· Peauon. firs t' ~•ernan . to !heir mtaor313 241
228 213
242 2.14
208 222
204 217
164 2S4

·

.

CINCINNATI BENGA~S: Sianed
Jimmy SpetK:er, comcrboelto a two--yell'

165

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

ou.,...,................ 36 24 11 n

BUFFALO BIW: Sia-l Mill&lt;: Ul·

Ubrid&amp;e, Uaet&gt;acl"".

Miumi Dolphiu · dtfellli.~,end, 10' a twoyear tmns u: NFLPA president.

c.-.-v...

· !lilt ·~

.'

~cape...., ,

PlaJenA-.tloa
·
NFLPA: 1EJeCtctd l'racc Amutrona.

:rlftnllt: Allbunl "cl9·

. ' • .........
;era ,.,.' ~
6.1
-'1;
•
"":-

Sllll Jose • Calpry. 9:30 p,m.Dallu • VlnCOUw.:r, 10:30 P-~·

N_F_.Lete..

. 1.1) vs. Sc.
't (IJI.j,l~ 7 or 9 p.m.;
Tuluo (21--9) va. NcbrUb·FrcaDD St.

' .,
. MMIIwatibo,3:36p.m.
1pJfL I '

•

Phi~Jphi~ at Win.nipq, 8:30 P·~·
Anllbeim It $1. Looi1, 8:l0 p.m.

end. 10 I Mveft-Yt;Qr Con-e.atc11ion.
.
T'AMP&gt;It BAY BUCCANEERS:
Waived 1bomol Everett, Kf'cty.
FilfT, de(Cft:ll\lt

. Next week'ullte

A t - s . . -..

Dt1ver • W sH

·~

Division m final

~-AN DIEGO PADRES: Optioned
Aadre1 Berumen and Deany Hlll'ipr,
pik:hm. llftd Jorae VellhdiG. inr.e.ldei, to
Lu Veau or tlrle Pacific Coaat Lua~e..
Alli&amp;ocd Paul Abbott, SCott Lewi• aDd
Richie Le'Wit, pilcMrs, 10 thier m.i1or~

Montreal Ill BurraJo. 7:30p.m.
H~ordaiOUawa. 7:30p.m.
·
OUCIIO al New ,_y, 7:30p.m.
Coi!Ddo aa Detroit, 7:30p.m.

game.
each and Bobby Phills had 14.
Michael Jordan had 36 points and
Houston, playing without OlajuScottie Pippen came back. II rebounds for the Bulls, who won, Clyde Drexler, Mario Elie and
, Hakeem Olajuwon dic;Jn't.
wanted to get even with New York · Sam CasseH, was led by former CBA
•
Mahmoud Abdui-Rauf got hurt, for a 32-point defeat two Sundays players Tracy Moore with 17 points
•• and Cedric Ceballos got lost.
ago.
and Sam Mack with 13.
'
Higb·profikl!layers were coming _
"I noticed what effect it had on
"I ihink you can tread water for
and going, - and in ·the case of Michael at practice in the morning, !&gt;nly so long," Houston coach Rudy
Ceballos, missing - Thl1fSday night he carried it with him all day long,'' Tomjanovich said.
Nets 97, Nuuets 88
,
as five games were played in the Bulls coach Phil Jackson said. "This
NBA,
Extra
security
was
in
place
is an intense rivalry, we understand
Pippen returned from an injury· it. And we are not going to allow because of death threats against
induced five-game absence, and the what happened to us in New York Abdui-Rauf, who was suspended
lasi week for refusing to stand durChicago Bulls reversed their worst happen again."
loss cif the season with a 107·86 vic·
Patrick Ewing's jumper wiih 6:20 ing the national anthem.
tory over the New York Knicks.
Abdui-Rauf exited the game earleft in the second quarter cut the
Olajuwon missed his second Bulls' lead to41 -40, but the Knicks ly in the second period and did not
'
; straight game due to tendinitis in his didn't score another basket for the . fCium.
knees, and the Houston Rockets rest of the period and trailed by 20
"My foot is sore," said Abdui struggled again, losing their third at halflime.
Rauf, who missed his only shot and·
straight - all at home - 98-85 to
Pippen wasn't much of a factor. was booed by the crowd. "It's hard
Cleveland.
finishing wiih si~ points and si~ to say how much time I will be out.
Abdul-Rauf, who revealed in a · assists. Chicago won its sixth in a I didn't hurt it on any specific play.
pregame interview that death threats row to i~pf!&gt;ve its record to 60-7. It's been sore the last few days ~d
had \leen made against him, bruised New York ha~ its four-game winning
it got worse tonight. "
his left foot and played only six min - streak snapped.
The ~uggets fought back from an
utes in a 97-89 loss at New Jersey.
Cavaliers 98, Rockets 85
18-point third-quarter deficit to take
'
Ceballos, who missed the team
Cleveland held a nine-point half· a 78-75 lead, but New Jersey closed
' flight to Seattle, was susPc:nded by time lead and stretched it to 14 on the game wiih a 22-11 run.
- the Lakers prior to their I04-93 loss Danny Ferry's three-pointer with
Chris Childs led the Nets with 21
to the SuperSonics.
2:30 to go in !he third. The Rockets points, I I assists and nine rebounds.
~
In ' the , night's other game, kept pace, hitling.seven consecutive
SuperSonics 104, Lakers 93
; Phoenix beat Golden State 104-96. free throws io trail'70-61 entering the
Ceballos was suspended for miss1 · ' Bulb 107, Knkkl ~
final period, but never threatened in ing the team flight, and his wher·
j'
Chicago broke ihe game open Jhe fourth quarter.
abouts were a mystery to the Lakers.
: wiih a 20-1 run in the second quarTerrell Brandon scored 27 points.
KNBC-TV said Ceballos pur' ter and won its 40th straight home Chris Mills and' Tyrone Hill had 17 chased a boat Wednesday and took it

r AP.Baaketb811 Writer

lmtl

Leaaue officials hope Waterford can
begin league competition in volleyball, football, wrestling, cross~oun­
uy, boys and girls basketball in the
1997-98 school year.
Waterford High School is located
the village of Waterford, just off of
Slate Route 339. The district's foot·
ball, track and baseball facilities are
located at Waterford Elemei11ary on
Slate Route 339,just one mile south
of Beverly.
As for rumors in the Parkersburg-

.

•

I Netlrub.U8·14) 11 F..,.o St. (2210), IOp.m
·

Y'!it• Dollat, 1·p.in.

',. .==·
.

r,

Tonlpt's pmea

league is a welcomed one. All the
league schools look forward to many
yean of good sportsmanship and athletic competition from the Wildcats.
I think Waterford felt ihat because
many of tbe small schools were consolidatin&amp; in the PVC, the TVC
would be a better fit for them enrollment wise," said Ring.
Waterford will begin TVC league
play in boys' and girls' track, ~oftball
and baseball in the spring of 1997.

; By CHRIS Si;!ERIDA'N

' T..uaiat•a qaarterfttilll

V"'""'verll CJ.I!VELAND; 1·p.m.

~~.

Bollon 3, Octaw1 I
Pinsb&amp;lrJh 5, Edmol'llon 4
Wuhin,ton 3, T._ Bay 3 (OT)
Aoridll., N.Y. l1llnden 2

Dlvl.ilon IV semfinals

Tonl1ht: Dallon (2S-I) vs. Lincol·
n-view ('15-0), 6 p.m.; Crinalon·Uncoln

•·Colondo ....... ..41

lbunclay's quarterfinal score

' .· ' ' $uad.y•• .... ' .
~

••

vs. ~tl~u1 champion, TBA; Midwesl
chlneiOil vs: West ~on. TBA
M•rcllll ,flftll: ·sftnifinal
win.nen. 6: p. ~ .

·~;~··~-.IO.lOp.m.

·

va. Alabomo (24-7~ -aht

,_..,, M.m. 25 111111: Semifinal
wtwn,nidoipo

, . Silturday's pmea
, , ~rroir 111 AriUia. 7:30p.m.
Minneaola at Houat011, 8:30p.m.
. :\--:I'Niadelplli• I" S..nle, 10 p:m. ,

1

.

WestR9onal
l!cba..,...
....

San An1onio ai Toronto. 1 p.m.
Deaver • Bpscoa, 7:)0 p.m.
OrtondoMWuhi- 7:ltlp.m.
: '.'\_~
·A~al~ 1:30p!m.
•·r , New Jeney II DIWoit. 7:..l0p.m. '
VIIICOUYd at l..a-, 7:30p.m.
Milml!tl Milw~t&lt;o. 8:30 p.m.
'
(
•r&gt;!ln-•• Oal'-,'8:30 p.m.!
1
· ,.
CLEVEU&lt;ND 11 U.llh. 9p.m.' •· ·
t;\ ·,, ' l'l!ilodolpiUo or LA. Ctipperl, 10:30 .
fJ
p.m.
#
•

1

AtlohMOacOf~

'

Oli&lt;a~o

1

.
Mldwat Rnloaal

H• zl L,Tau
·
Sal•rfi•J'I nalftn•ls: Louisiqna
Tech'(JO.I) n . Texoa 'l'ech (21-4), ooon;
S1epben F. Aullin (27-3) va. Georgia (2S·
4), 2:30p.m.
.
M&lt;tndltY, Mareh u _ , Semifinal
winoeno7:j"Q p.m. ~- •

~~

. 'lllunday'• KOI'tl
'·

n..,·•••

rAt Horilon. Ratlraont.lll• .

x·clioched plaro~ sp&gt;t

Todaj: Tol. St. John 's (23 &lt;H -vs.
Wester.. illc N. (19-7), It a.m.; Chi. La
Snlle (18-6) n . Lakewc:l()d St. Edward
(21·4), ~p.m .
'
S.turdiJ: Owq:Moruhip, $ p.m.

Mldeut Recional

19~
26~
26~
35~

Denver ................... 28 38 .414
Dallat ..................... ~l 4~ .JIB

'

AI OnlvmiiJHII,~IIIfllt, VL
SltlniiJ'• tt•lfla•lt: Tenneuee
(28-4) vt. Kantu (22-9~ ll :lOti.m. ; Vir·
ainia (~·6) \'I. Old Domi'nion (29-:Z), 2
p.m..
· Mondl,-, M•rdll5 nn.l: Semifinal
winnen, 5 p.m.
.

. ~ WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwallltvloion

East Re8ooal

.

Nollooall.eoaue ·
HOUSTON ASTROS: oprooacd Bil·
ly w..,..., pilcher, 10 Tucson of the Po·
cilic Cout Lcape. .
.
NEW YORK ME'IS: Sent Owia Nibhob:, pitcbet. outriahted 10 Norfolk af 1M
lntemllliooal l.eq;ue.
. ~ ·
PlmBUROH PIRATES : Waived
l.anct Parrilli, calcher, fJr the purpose of
&amp;ivinJ bim his unconditic)laal rc:leue. op.
tioned Rich Aude, infie~ 10 ~PP' of
.lhe hdfic Coall i..eQ..e. KeiQipcd Joe
Klink , pilcher, 10 11i.eir minor. leiiJue

. Thunday'111cons

(24-:2) vi1 Sprin&amp;:_ ~lie &lt;!2·:\), 9 p.m.
8at•n11J: Clllmpio.ahip, 8:30p.m.

women's tournament

23
26
38
(2

,

Oltnwa-Giandorf 67, Cambridge 64

.2:40p.m.
~ =•1'• ftMI : Semifinal winnera,

Adoodc Dtvlllon

IMa

Orrville 65, K~teriag Alter 49

Dlvloionlll
Ardlbold ~3. Bedford 0....161
Miami Eas168, N. Adllms .66

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Edmonton ...... ....26 38 7 59 206 267
1.o&gt; Aoaeloo ....... ZI 37 ll · 57 226 271
SanJ... ............. I7 49 7 41 228 316
y-clinchcd di\'ilion title

Dtvltion II

''The addition of Waterford 10 ihe

returns; Cavs defeat Rockets

~

Wresdlng
M.INNEAPOLIS (AP) -Iowa's
Mark Ironside pinned Ohio's Ed
Schilling at 4:27 of their secondround match to lead 10 Hawkeyes
into the quart~rfinals of the NCAA
Championships.
Iowa, seeking its second straight
title and fifth in siK years, leads
Nebraska 32·20.5

lbunday's semifinal scores

The Wildcats, who currently com,pete in all spans in the Morgan and
Washington county-based Pioneer
Valley Conference. will become ihe
Tri· Valley's 12ih school.
The addition of Waterford
allowed tho TVC Board of Control
to evenly 'balance the Ohio and
Hocking Division at six teams each,
as Alexan~ High School will jump
to the bia·school Ohio Division
from tbe srntll-school Hocking Division.

,_

~ P. Ippen

J

W eat Reponal

Basketball

Waterf(IJ'd High School, a school
run by Washington Cou11ty's Wolf
Creek •Local School District, has
accepted an invitation to become the
newest member of the two-division
Th· Valley Cooference.
~ announcement was made by
TVC president Greg Rina after the
league met last week, but was
rumored to be happening over the
course of the last several months.

i-..=
=
:

Scoreboard
!.'

By TOM HUNTER
s.ntlnel News Swt

Wake is \)-3 against Kentucky,
including a loss in the 1993 NCAA
tournament.

::.."!',- - - - - - - - - - - - - S p o r t s b r i e f s - - - - - - - - - - - - - ..-\ •
Golf
~· '
': LISBON, Portugal (AP) - Swe' :de~ 's Klas Eriksson shot a career·
' !best 8-un~er-par 63 to take a two~. ~oke lead ·over Australia's Wayne
: :Riley after the first round of the Por·
:"tugue~ Open.
~
· . Basketball
EAST · RUTHERFORD, N.J.

n. Deily SenU~ • P8ge 5

TVC -accepts Wate.r tord as newest Hocking Division entry

UMass, Georgetown, Ke'ntucky and iWake·, Forest win ·

By TOM WITHERS
•' AP Sparta 'flrlter

Porrwoy • Middleport, Oh~

=Friday, March 22, 1 -

[

:•

plan, but they were obtained by The major league service. They also
Associated Pre~s from a source who dropped their deman;;l to have all
spoke oti the conditio!) he not 1 be
identified. · · ' ·
.The union's last proposal, made
~arch 8, e~ntially caned for a 25
pei'l:ent'luxury taJt on the amount of
payrolls above $52 million. The tax
rate would increase to 30 percent if
baseball revenue increased substantially in the next few years.
While the union didn't comment,
one IIJenrwho spoke on !he condi·
~esday,
lion of anooymity called the owners' ·
proposal encOU[J8ing. It appeared to
be the first major move by the own· ·
ers since last M~h 27, when ihey
mllde ~ propo~, four days \lefore a
federal court injunction led to the.end_
of the 232-day strike.
·
In Thunclay's proposal, owners'
dropped their demand to elimi·
nate about " playen per )'cat: from
.saliry arbitntiOI), the troUP that has
.
-. _
between two &amp;lid illlee years of

"lo

arbitration decisions issued after the
final case is heard.

Bradbury Elementary School
Informational Meeting on the ·
Proposed Middle School and Closing of
Bradbury Elementary
March 26, 7:00 in the
Bradbury Cafeteria.
Mr. Bill Buckley, Mr. Dave Gaul and
JohnAmott wiD be present
to answer questions.
The public Is invited
. to- attend•

175 N. 2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh

10

�',&gt;

Friday, March 22, 19$6

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P•ge I• Thl Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 22, 1986

¥

Ann
Landers
1995, Lol Anplu
lliMI S)'llllallud C..·
a&amp;un

SJIIdic-.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
: teadinc your stuff for at least 20
. yean. When I was in high school, I
thought you were prelly square. The
older I get, the hetter sense you

Q

•

!Rake.

· : · You have published leiters over
: the years from wives and girlfriends
: who bad been heaten up by their

men, but I don 't recall ever seeing a about some bills she ran up. I shoved
'teller from a man who was heat up Connie (no hitting), and she beat me
by a female.
up so bad I had to go to the emer·
I was married for seven years to a gency room. (Broken nose, black
woman who used (o he a lifeguard. eyes, two teeth missing.)
I was just about to file for divorce
After that, she went to work in a
warehouse. To make extra money, when she heat me to it. Guess what?
she wrestled alligators.
She dumped me for a woman who is
"Connie" was a good spon and a piano mover.
had a great sense of humor. EveryI hope you print this lellcr, Ann.
thing was fine until we got married. People need to know that mate vioI didn't know she had such a hot . lence is a two-way street and some·
temper. If I was 10 minutes late get- times the man gets the worst of it. ling hoine, she would pop me one. 1 Sarasota Witness
never hit her back because, to tell
Dear Sarasota Witness: Here's
you the truth, I was afraid she might your letter, which .proves that viomop up the floor with me. ·
lence has no gender. You've cenainOne night, we got into a fight ly made your point, an,d I thank you.

P.S. I hope you don't go out with any yelling, they would he shocked at sionals · who do a lot more thall
more women who wrestle alligators. how uncivilized they appear to those count pills . .. "J," A Pharmacist If~
'
·;
Dear'Ann Landers: Why are peo- who are trying to help them. I'm Missouri ·
Dear Missouri: Thanks for arl
ple so combative these days? I'm a ·trained to deal with difficult cuspharmacist who is amazed at how tamers, but my job would he so informative leiter that is sure to go
loud and unpleasant customers can much easier if the public realized up on the walls of pharmacies all
that we must work within specified over the glohe. ·
;
be even though we are not at fault.
guidelines
prescribed
by
law.
"
I have been called every name in
. Gem of the Day: I have neves
the book after telling a -patient that
I often wonder if these same peo- been able ro understand why pQ5t
the doctor did not call in his or her pie yell at their doctors. I'm willing offices spend so much money chaibl
prescription and I can't do anything to het that they don't People tend to ing to desks pens that don 't work !I(
until he does. When the customer is think of doctors as God-like crea- ~ out of ink.
·:
•,
out of refills and I try to explain that lures endowed with supernatural
• --:
I must speak with the doctor before powers, while pharmacists are simSend queslloas to Ann Lafll
refilling the prescription, I get ply people who worlc in a drugstore.
responses like "Is that so? Well, it
So, please, Ann, ask your readers ders, Creaton Syndicate, 5717 ~
will he your fault if I get' pregnant! " to bt civil to their pha'lllacists. We Century Blvd.,, Suite 700, L~
If people could see themselves are hard-wortcing, educated profes-') Angeles, Calif. ,oo4S
::

-Community calendar~
The · Community Calendar is
pubHshed as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and spedal events. The
ralendar Is not designed to pn)JDOie'
sales or fund ralsen of any type.
Items are printed as space pennits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
FRIDAY
POMEROY --Youth revival Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim chapel on 143,
Pomeroy. Preaching and singing by
young men from the Bible Institute.
,Rev. Victor Roush is pastor.
!

MIDDLEPORT -- Middlepon
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, annual inspection, Friday,
6:30p.m. All master masons invited.
GALLIPOLIS -- Bold Directions,
ine:, Friday, 10 a.m. to noon, Carol
Carter, Social Security Administrator,
to speak.

l

SATURDAY
RACINE-- Southern High School
Class of 1966, Kountry Kitchen· in
Racine , 2 p.m. Saturday.

ONE STOP WEDDING • We Do - Th!t Wedding Store, a 26,000..square-foot matrimonial meci:a Hils 600 styles of bridal gowns that
110et tram $300 to $2,500. Aleo In stock: dresses for attendants and guHts, rentsl tuxedoa, bridal party gifts, etatloner.y, shoes, lingerie
and Jewelry.
·

We Do: Just supply the
C94Pie, we'll do the rest
By PAUL SOUHRADA
dos, bridal party gifts, stationery,
API Buslnels Writer
shoes, lingerie and jewelry.
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) ....,. To hear · - . "'fhey have everything here ...
Carol Feinberg tell it, finding a so you can get the whole perspecID&amp;Ie is the easiest pan of planning live," said bride-to-be Chris Olson.
a wedding. ·
The 27-year-old Dublin woman,
"The bridal couples today are a who plans a May 1997 wedding,
little older, a little more mature. was making her second trip to the
They usually ha.ve dual incomes superstore, narrowing her choice of
and they don't have quite as much gowns.
.
till)e," said Ms. Feinberg, president
The store boasts a large inventoand chief eKecutive officer of We ry but makes referrals on referrals
Dq Inc., a bridal superstore in this
The average bridal cou·
n~west Columbus surburb.
go to 15 to 30 pisces to
pie
·"The average bridal couple go
organize
their weddings.
to IS to 30 places to organize their
waddings."
The store, the first of 40 the to florists, caterers, photographers,
D'lblin-based company plans to musicians, limo drivers and recepOJIIFn around the country, opened in lion halls.
OCtoher.
Ms. Olson was certain she
For a veteran retailing executive would buy her gown, the brideswJip helped oversee the consolida- maids' dresses and accessories at
tid!~ of the home video industry as a We Do. But she was not sure she
setiior vice president with Block- would take the store's suggestions
bu1,ter Entenainmeni Corp., the $30 on a caterer, florist and other wedbillion wedding industry was a ding service providers.
niGile waiting to he filled.
Like many brides, who spend an
Enter We Do - The Wedding average of $8,000 on a ,wedding,
Store, a 26,0QO.square-foot matri- she likes to shop around.
miikl mecca that sells 600 styles ·
And she has plenty of options,
of·,ridal gowns that cost from $300 At least three other bridal shops are
to 2,500. Also in stock: dresses for . doing a brisk business right down
at ndants and guests, renial tuxe- the street.

:,
··

·;
'·
')
:;

i~

; ·

Retail analyst Ron Petrie of
Roney &amp; Co. in Detroit has mixed
feelings about how the superstore
-or "category killer"- concept
will phiy in the wedding industry.
"It's .obviously a concept that
could have some appeal," Petrie
said.
On the other hand, the so-called
"big box" drugstore - with its
groceries, sporting goods, lawn
chairs and other products fronting
the pharmacy- also seemed like a
can't miss idea.
"Big box drugstores . have
proven to be a big disappointment.
People would rather have convenience than selection and price.
"There are a lot of people trying
to figure out the nut category
killer," he added.
For We Do to become the one, a
lot of things will have to fall in
place.
"People would still have to feel
they're getting a unique experience."
·
Ms. Feinberg, who ·also has
worked for Thorn MeAn and the
Lerner New York division of The
Limited Inc., said she staned shopping for j new retailing concept
about two years ago.
"When I came across the wed-

POMEROY -- Meigs Count~
Genealogical Society meeting Satut;
day, noon at the Meigs County Mt$! ·
urn, \veather pertQitting.

·
·
CARPEN'IER-- Columbia Town:

ship Tfll6tees special meeting Satur;
day, I 0 a.m. at the fire station to di$~
cuss dump truck weight.
•·

..
"

SUNDAY
::
VINTON -- Revival througH .
March 31, 7:30p.m. each evening at.
the Morgan Center Christian Holi~
ness Church on Morgan Center Road
near Vinton. Keith Eblin, preachinji
Harher Family, singing.
,•

•

MIDDLEPORT -- Evangelist
John Elswick to speak Sund~
evening at the Hobson Fellowshjlt
Churcht 7:30p.m.
"'
MONDAY
"'
TUPPERS PLAINS
Lebanon
Township Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m:
in the township building.
· ;
POMEROY-- Meigs County Veterans Service Commission, 7:30p.m:
Mond.ay,.at the Veterans ·service
Offiillt!. Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

Fellowship class
discusses hymn sing
The fifth Sunday hymn sing of the lowing ·the Friday evening service
Meigs County Churches of Christ and a potluck dinner will he held atier
was discussed when the Business and the Sunday morning services .
·
Fellowship Class met recently at the
Easter sunrise services will he at
,Jlradbury_Ghyrch o( Cl)rist. .•.
8 a.m. on April7 with a breakfast to
They hymn sing will he held at follow. The youth will present a prOBradbury March 31 at 7:30p.m. All gram during the Sunday school hour
memhers, family and friends were at 9:30a.m. and the worship servid
.s:oc;ouragejl to auenl!ras well as par- •will he 1!1 W:30 a.m.
ticipate by sln'ging special iitSI&gt;ng.
NeKt meeting of the class will tie
Plans were also finalized for the held Wednesday at which time Ric.K
spring revival with Dave Lucas, Bolin of the Bradford Church 1tf:
evangelist, speaking on Friday and Christ will give a slide presentation
Saturday March 29 and 30, 7:30p.m of his trip to Africa with members of
and Sunday, March 31 at 10:30 a.m. other local Church of Christ congreLight refreshments wil.l he served fol- gations.

a

Dlnner to honor Samaritans
of Mother's Day flood
.·
Carol Feinberg
ding industry. I saw that it really
hadn't heen consolidated and rationalized," she said. "It's stilt' much a
fragmented business - very much
like video industry was when I
came into it at BlocRbuster Video.
There are a lot of small. mom and
pop stores."
Other players in the wedding
industry aren't -worried about We
DO.'
"They really haven't hurt us,"
said Sherry Prill, sales supervisor at
David's Bridal, which sits directly
across \he street from We Do.
"I think brides lik~ t,a shop ·
around."

An appreciation dinner honorinA
. those who helped others during the
Mother's Day flood last year will he
·held at the Pom.eroy United
·Methodist Church on Sunday, March
·31.
The dinner will be held immediately following the 10:30 a.m. warship service in the church social
room. Invitations have heen sent to

several organizations who gave spe-,
cia! assistance. Others who helped are
invited to allend.
Reservations for the appreciation
dinnet are to he sent to Rev. Roben
Robinson, 2 II . Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy, or may he telephones to
992-5788. The administrative council, Alice Wamsley, chairman, Is
sponsoring the event.

Amish Outdoor Furniture
On Display and Special Prder

..

UMW hold meeting

J

'I

i

nle Reedsville United Methodist

~ WOIJI!D met ~rilly at the home of

;· Mrs. Frances Reed, with readings of
: by ¥is. Grace Weher, president, and
: Mrs, Emma Durst.
~
The ptqOSe of~ United Women
·• was read by Mrs. Weber, while Mrs.
;; DuFft read "Count Your Blessings."
Shuti~ calls Were made t&lt;i 86 people,
· i. IIlli cardS were· signed for several

·1

·""

,'

:
l

,~"

frie~•·

$

•l

I

.

'

·.

o\ motioil was ~proved to onler

material; and to contact an
:· e · ci111 coftceming the chun:h's
,., w
]lealen. P1111s were also made
for tl!iithdaY dinner !'n Man:~ 23.

!

"t r..
·T .
••

.

,

·

It was announced that a dinner
will be served in the church basement
April 27, from 5to 1 p.m. The menu
will include. ·chicken on biscuits,
mashed poll!toes, lima heans, cole
slaw, pie, and desserts. The price will
he $5 per plate.
A game was played with prizes
given. Refreshments were served to
the following in attendance: Gladys
Thomas, Pearl OsbOJ;ne, Pelores
Frank, Diane Jones,. Nina Boston,
Nancy Buckley, Ann Lacomb, Susie '
Mash, Rosemary Young, Debbie
Weber and guest Dessie Walls.

·News

,.

'·

Rullood First Boptlst Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
l'clmoroy First Boptlot

PISior: Paul Stinson
EaSI Main St.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

First Soutbtn1 Bo~llst
41872 Pomeroy Poke
PastOr: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
S.nday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.

First Baptist Churrh
Pastor: Mark Monow
61h and Palmer St., Mi&lt;ldleport
Sunday School • 9:15a.m.
Wooship-10:1Sa.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Radne Ftnt Baptlst
Pastor: Rev. l.any Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Sllnr Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School • IOa.m.
Worship· I h .m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
ML Uoloa Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoot-9:45 a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Boptlst
Racinc,OH
Pulor : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip. 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Stndy- 7:00p.m. Wednesday
Old lle1htl Free Will Boplbt Chun:b

28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30
Hillside Boptilt o .....
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rew . Jame5 R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worshop- l.ta.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi'-'Cs ·7 p.m.
VIctory Boptls&amp; lodepeoda•t
SZS N. 2nd St. Middleport

PasiQr: James E. Keesee
Worship· IOa.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Faltb Baptist Chlll'&lt;h
Railroad Sl., Mison
Sunday School- tO a.m.
W0Bh1p • II a.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Sef"\lice.s .? p.m.
F - t Rua Baptist

Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday 'School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
ML Morll~ Bopllot .
·Fourth It Main St, Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbc:rt Craia, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m .

su~~~r:am

Wonhip- 10:45 a.m. '
Thuosday Servioel ·7:30p.m.

R._ Fne WIU Boptlot
Salem St.

.

P -: Rev. l'lul Taylor
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.
W~y Services : 7 p.m.

ca...,.

Church of Chrtst
Pomero1 c~lll'&lt;ll otOrilt

212 W. Main St.
Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School· 9:30a .m.
Wor~hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Stock of

•catYoryl'llpla Chapel
Hlrrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. 'Victor ROWJil
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
WorShip· 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servio:e - 7:30p.m.

Rooe of Sliorvo Hollaeu C-un:h

Zloa d.U&lt;b or Clortat
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I43)
Pastor: Roser Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

'

Bndrord Chordl orCIIrlot
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp;t Bradbury Rd.
E"'"aelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Minister: Michael Teaprden
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service• ·7:00p.m.
Hickory Hits Cburc~ or Cllrlst
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Ubert)l Clorlsllarl Churdl
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening • 6:30 p.m.

Thursday Serv1ce- 6:30p.m.
Lanpwlllo·Cllrlstlan Cbn:h
Sundoy' School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10o30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.ni.
Hemlock Grove Ch•rrh
PastOr: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
R...._..lle C~an:b or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunda' Sc~t: 9:30a.m.
Woohop Servoee: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Chrt!&gt;tiJn Un ion
HorUord Clllll'do al Cllrlst Ia
Cllrlsd.,. Uoloa
Hartford, W.Va.
Paslor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
- Wooship ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7;30 p.m.

Ruttoad Commuolty Chun:h
Paslor: Rev. Roy MeCany
Sunday School· 9::i0 a.m. ,
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
Widnesday Servi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Satnts
Roorpalud etlun:h of J ..... Cllrlst
or Latter Doy Saloots
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pascor: Janie.....: Danner
S.nday School ·9:30a.m .
· Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
lbe Chun:h or Jesu
Christ of Latter-Doy Salois
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-748/i
Sunday School 10:20.11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood ll :O.S-12?00 noon
Sacrament Service 9--10:15 a.m.
Homemaking .meeting, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m .

St. John Lutberoa Chun:h
Pine Orove
Pa5tor: Dawn Spalding
Wooship · 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Our Saviour Lutbtraa Cborrh
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnlrim puton: Qeorgc C. Weinck.
S.nday&amp;hiJol • 10:00 a.m.
. Worship· f1 a .m.
St. Paul Latloeru Cllur&lt;h
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School • 9:4.5 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Ratlud Cloan:h or Get!
Past«: Gregory L. Sear&gt;
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship~ I J a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Syncue Flnt Cborrh or Get!
Apple and Second SIS. ·
Pwor: Rev. David Rusacll
Sunday Schor?! and Worship- 10 a.m.

Eveninc Services- 7:30 p,m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
C~lll'&lt;ll

orGed oll'rof*&lt;y
O.J. Whlk Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Paslor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Clouter Clo•n:b or Ged
S. R. 248 &amp;t Riebe:! Road, Chesler
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School. 930 a.m.
Worship. 6 P.-m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Famdy Training Hour

Conqregat10na l
Trially Church

Second ~ Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10o2S

Episcopal
Grace

Zl;' ...... Cll•n:•

326 E. ain So ., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. 0 . A. duPitntier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m.
Coffee: hour following

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
7:30p.m. (3rd
Sun)
~ednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive United Melbodbt
Off 124 bc:hind Wilkesvi)le
Pator: Rev . Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor~hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Melp Coopenll•• l'orlsb
Northust Cluster ·
Altnd
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· t I a.m., 6:30p.m.

Oester

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School , 10:30 a.m.
LoocBottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Paslor: Rev. Ourrles Mash
Worship-9:30a.m .
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Tuppen Plalas St. Pout
Pasaor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m...
Wonhip-IOa.m.
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Central Clwler

Asbury (Synaue)
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School • 9:45 l .m.

.

Por11aad First Cburch of tbe Nazanat

Pastor: Mark Mat50n
Worship • I 0:30 p.m.
Sunday School . 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fallb Feltows~lp Cn'"de ror Cllrlot
Paslor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

New Ha11ea Cbureb oftiH Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Slroud

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.uo .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Worship· tO a.m.

Cluiltito t'ellowlhjp Ceoter
Sa'lem St., Rucland
Pastor: Robert E. Musoer
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wooship- II : IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Polllfroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Worship .-10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday· 10 a.m.

llobsoD Cbrlstlaa Fettows~lp Cllun:b
Rev. Clyde Henderson
Sunday service,- 10:00 a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

Peart Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m .

RockSprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Youth fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.
Rutlaod
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10o30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.
SakmCeater
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m.

Fall~

Nl ~I Clourch
Long Bottom
PasiOr: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m. ,
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 7 p.m.
lbellellenn' Fellowsldp Mlalotry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Paslor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.
Hohisoowltle Conunauity Church
Paslor: Theron Durham
Sunday- 930 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsllip- 9 a..m.

Bdbaay
Pastor: Kenne1h Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 10 a.m.

~HouseorPnyer

(at Burlinjham chun:h off Route 33)
Pas1or: Roben Vance
Sunday worship · I0 a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30p.m.

Cannel

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp;t 4th Sun)
Moratac Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

·§"t1forsh1p.
School -9:45a.m.
10:30 111.m.

Middleport Community Cburch
575 Pearl St , Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia: . 7:30p.m.
Foil~

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:45 a.m. {lSI &amp;t 3rd Sun)

Toberoack Cllun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pasror: Rev . Emmett Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service: • 1 p.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday Sdtool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m.

Syratuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.

Radar
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Worship · 11 a .m.
Coolville Uaittd Metbodkt Parisb
Pular: Helen Kline
Coolwllk Cburcb
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - lO a.m.
Hoc:klagpon Churrb
Grand Streel
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
. Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.
Tor&lt;b Chun:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Radoe Fint Church oltht Naureat
Pastor: Scou Rose
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo~Ship • 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Middleport Cbon:b or I be Nazan:ac
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 930 a.m.
Worship : 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s · 7 p.m.
Reedsvllk Fellowllolp
Cblll'tb or tlte NIUftM
Interim Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.M.
SJncuse Cburcb ol the Naurear

Pastor: Bill Stires
Sunday School · 9:30 s.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Pomero1 Churo:~ of lbe Nazareae
Paslor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Hue! CoramuaHy Cburrb
OffRI. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
DJtsllllle Colblllualty Cburch
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mone Cbapel Cbun:h
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Worship· t I a.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
Faltb Gospel Cburo:b·
Long Boltom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

MI. Olive Community Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Senoicc . 7 p.m.
United Fottb Cbun:b
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robcr1 E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsllip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Calvary Bible l;hun:~
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blatltwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship '10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

.Sllwersvllk Word orFoltb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
E\lening - 7 p.m.
Rejoit1a1 Ule Clllun::h

500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Pastor: lawrr.na: Foreman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Church or Jnus CbriSI,
Apo•tollc Faith
1/4 mile pa&lt;it Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday· 7:00 p.m.
Ctllloo tab&lt;roac:k Cbureb
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
New Ure Victory Cenler
3773 Georges Creek ~oad, Gallipolis, Ol:i
Pastor: Bdl Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp;. 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;t Youth 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Peatecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Raeinc
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - to a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
Middleport Peotecostat
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Sync~se

Finl United Presbytert.n
Pastor: Re\1. Krisa113 Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Hanisoavllll! Prr1byterla.a Chard•
Worillip- 9 a.m.

Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Middleport Presloyterlaa
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
. Worsh~p- 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seveatlo-Doy Adweatlot
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsk.y
Saturday Services:
Sabbaoh School . 2 p.m.
Worship · 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermoa Ualted Bretlorea
In Christ Ch-h
Texas Community orr CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeNices- 7:30p.m.
Eden Uaited BretbM Ia c•rtso
2 1/2 miles nonh of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship,· 10:00 a.in. &amp; 7:00p.m.
.
Wednesday Services. 7:_30 p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service. 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Ughthowe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp;t Thursday - ~ : 30 p.m.
South Betbll!l New Ttstlmeal

Sil\ler Ridge
Pastor: Roben Barber
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worsllip- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Corletou lnterdenomlaalloool Churdl
Kingsbury Road
Paslor: Jefr Smith
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
Worsllip Service-1st and Jrd Sunda1, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday E\lening Serv1cc
Fretdo10 Gospel Missloa
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 3 t
Pastor: Re\1. Roger Willrord·
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

RIDENOUR
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of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything .

.....

policy~·........_

e;

.

Forest Ru1
Pastor: Charles Ne"w"ille
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursday Services-6:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

American
Made
.
Crystal and Brass
Giftwear

t1-81rwt
1518100i1d 8lrMt
IIIII.IP art, 011 41710 , Ol"~tlih,Oh41131
.
'

Coolville Road .
Past«: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servk:e • 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Cloaorclo
l.clart, W.Va. Rt. I
PastGT: Rankin Roach
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Woohip · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.

Sutton

Luthe ran

Wldte'a C..pel w. .1..

f'lotwoods
Pastor: Ke ith Rader
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - II a.m.

Mlnen&gt;Jtle
Pastor: Chules Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Metloodlst Cbun:b
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. aOO 7 p.m.
Wednesday St-rvice ·· 7:00p.m.

C-.r Clourdo ortloe Nuonoe
Putor: Rev. Herben Orale
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Services · 7 p.m.
R•tlaod Clollrdo ortllt N...,._
PISIOr: Samuel Basye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioel - 7 p.m.

Pboe Growe Bible Holiam Churdl
I /2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10o30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML Morialo Ch• .... or Ged
Racine
Pulor: Rev. James Slllerfaeld
S.nday School · 9:45 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m.

HyHI Rua Hollaess Churth
Putor:·Robert Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Servic:&lt; -7:30p.m.

Bndbury Cbor&lt;b or Cbrlot
Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Enterprise
Pastor : Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 1.m.

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev . Dewey Kina
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 7 p.m .
Wednesday prayer mecling· 7 p.m.

Waleyaa Bible Hollneu Cllurch
75 Pearl St., Middlepon.
Puaor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plaia Cburrh of Christ
Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip.. 9:4.5 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Rllllaod Ctooon:~ ol Christ
Paslor: Eustne E. Underwood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Worship- I I a.m.

W~nesda y Services. 7:30p.m.

O...W.H.U...Ciolll'do
31057 State Route 32S,I.anpvlk
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday woohip - 10:35 a.m. &amp;t 7 p.m.
Olildren's church - 10:35 a.m. Vouth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service . 7 p.m.

Beanoallow RJdp Clo ..... or Clltlat
Pastor: Jack Cotosrove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WotShip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6::)0 p.m.

The Dally Sentinel• Page:7

-

Holmess

Ke•o Cloureh ofCbrlot
Worship .. 9:30a.m.
Suflday School· 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lsi and 3rd Sunday

lilcred Heart
Cloan:lo
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 1192-5898
PIISIOr: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Coo. 4:45-S:ISp.m.; Mau· S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4S-9: t S a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus- 8:30a.m.

Our Entire

33226 Cllitdren'a Homo Rd.
Suiodly School • l I Lm.
Wonhip - JOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Servlc:el - 7 p.m.

Middleport Clolll't~ of Clorkt
5th and Main
Plllor: AI Harison
Youth MinisTer: Bill Fruier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WotShip- 8:15, 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

F,... WW Bopllot Chun:h
A5h Str&lt;et, Middleport
Pastor: les Hayman
Sunday Service - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

~

P-W-CiowcllatM"' _.. _

ApostoliC

CJthol1c

I '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- ..

:AIIig.ator wrestling wife bullies husband·to the emergency room ·

....

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St. Rt. 71n 'IUppet1l Plaine tlcroea illrMI trOm Flmlll'a Bank
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POMEROY, OHIO ·112 86311
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Pomeroy,OH

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992·5141
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992-5130
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115 E. Meinorial Dr.

992·2t04

�Piee i • The Deily Sentinel

Friday, March 22,1.996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~-~Society scrapbool&lt;---.;~~

Public Notice

Ptrcll No. 1 •
P1rcll No. I •
Pllllll No. I •

_. ••tat•

eo-. -

dill···

••••ry

.a

-·

•
:·.H'a rrl'sonvl·11e--.:Il•.:J 000 IAIJ"ne· r

·,n··ews .notes

-

·-·

-----Alfred news----

tor Ieee thin
lhl IPPIIIHd

Vllua.

pui'" JItia•••projlctld that 1110·

TEAMS 01' SALE: CHh
on Cltll\'lry of dlacl.

lldlrty .,.,.."' or

1*'10!'8

with
handlcappli\g
condltiOJII will uait t~• .
11rvlot IIVI!) daya ptll. •
WMk for vllrioue IOIIvltiM,
lncluillng trlnaportatlon ' o
Jobe tltea, medlc•l
appointment•
an:d

..,_. .. Soullby
8fllrlfl of
lo1tlga County, O!llo
())22, 21;

(4)1,12, 11, 21; lTC

Public Notice

II.T.S.

to preparing 1 propo~~l.
Written comnitntl or
propoaall mull . ba
· Capilli Outlay... 44,0111.31 lllllrnntad wnhln 30 dlye to
' Noll Principal Ply!Mnt .... the 1gency 1t the above
. .....................~..... 12,137.23 lddieaa with a copy to the
.. lnttrlll and FIICII Ohio Department of
CfllrGII.................. 1,730.53 Trenaportlllon, Dlvlalona ~~
:·• Total Dlabur~~:nanta........ Public Tflnilportltlon, 25
......................... 143,73t.lt
South Front St., Room 71J,
Total
Aacalpta Columbua, Ohio 4321*·
Owri(Under) Dlab. .............. 0881; - Attention Deputy
. .........................(21,707.77)

Dlrtctor.
(31 22. 21 ,;rrc

•. Procndl of Hotaa. ...........

'" ........................... 31,500.00
Other Soui'COI/AoCIIptl..
1 oooouoooo oooo ooooooo H oooo oo H o 210oOO

:

_....;..;;;;====_.;-

.

614 446 4462

Prom ·
Dresses
Levi's

........................... 17-,042.23

New laluee.......31,500.00
Attlred ............... 12,137.00
Outatandlng, Dec. 31,1115
.........................eo,tMI2.00
I certify the following
· report to bt correct end
true, to the bill of

knold•da•=

Pl":'::.:-· Ao1 ~b~r"'nY.
.
•"Ve -· ... e
· · Racine, OhiO
(3) 22; 1TC

.;,...
'--~.~~
. ~
.. ~~

·Brain scan, gene test spot Alzheimer'~ early

,Appralaed

Value:

PARCEL NO. 3: 011 and
rlihta conveyed by
I!IIJ,..,..- Llror Hoene• to
· Profflit. 'Atfitranca
Vol. 141, P••• 471
D11d Recorda,
County, Ohio, "
IHuatad In the

1/fMfn

•Shrubbery

eu.n 11u11c11ng a .. 1d..111

r

No uwn Too uro-

reglllar for Bunn Cotllemakar to be given away.
Drawing will be held on March 29th.

742·2803 Mil-

:
I

BISSELL
)

' Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING .
NEW-REPAIR

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

·-

GutterCIHillng
Painting
FREE E&amp;nUATES
0.21U

614-992-3470

......••

Allow Your
Petwnal Psychic to
AISiatYDU

uoo eaa 8800

All Kinds of fo1 th Work

992·3838

Touch-Tone
,Sarv-u(l11)434
.
.

-

. '-~

BlllfiFamRy Mitten

=lrad..

')

· FI'M Eltlmltlll
35YINExp.
, . R..anable R8tee

· LINDA'S
PAINTINI

915-4198 '_,_
'

Let yoU!' lingers do the
walking to the eports
Ina; Finance Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point .
Spreads, Daly

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

fill
Plck-ip ......
·IlPPI-- ' .., llttllsl
' . 614-,9M02,

REVIVAL

FREE ESTIIIATES
~

••••••

Morgan Center Christiiln
Hollnesll Churdl :
On Mo:fjiJ1 Cenll Rd. :leer \linton.

Horoscope.

.
' ..
lilY "IIOI''N.' ·
I{IR.IOCb
61MII-41 .. 1!

1-900-n6.01oo
Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Must be
. 18 y;s. Slilv·U
18

Ml/1,mo.

March 24-31
7:30 Nightly

r.·

Everyone Welcome .
With Keith Eblin Praechlng
Harber Family Singing
· PaStor Robl:t H""""'
Welcomel M Cd
8~4-388-8728
lnlormatlon.

.·

.......
.
.....
.......
.
.......
,,
.
.,,'
..................
Leu•••fw

In Memory

;,

: ln .Lovlng
~ Memory
2
Of

Hem, Tu;tcey,,Malhed Patldoei,
Gravy, Otelllng. Green Beane,
. Hoinemade ~oodel. ~ '
Oainlll and Drifl!cl.
·
AcUI8: $5.00
Children under: 12 $2.50
I SUNDAY, MARCH ~~ .·

•'

.

~ JEREMY

'

; ...aAv

Depa-

~;,I (

/'l

'

~

'Mtial (:0. Rd. 2t ' •

l

'·•~~'

l

.

"

dUly 23, 1877. · .

:

.

.~

'j,. "
...0

~

·.iMarch·22, 1990
~ Wel:Ove You

'·

· Pl1k

:j
Mom,
·t G111nny A:Pe PI

•

,.

•

•'

.

.

.

~ew Homes • Vlnyt Siding New

Imprinting

Garages • Replacement Windows

•Shirts •Hats

I

Roofing

-sportswear

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•Ball Uniforms
3rd St., RaciJla, Oh.

614-992-7643
2/1-

llafll8 lllaeli Dealer

Racine American

Legion #602
Bingo
Sun. Nights

.
Lucky Ball $300.00

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

with 21 players or more

992·2825

Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the NumbeT ol players
949·2044 or 949-2038

40

Giveaway ·

2 yellow cats. Wr old. insepe r·
able, 10 good home only. 3Q.t.-87S..

4650.
Contractor Vou Uus1 Be At l east
-------~-1 1&amp; Years Old. Hav e The Use 01
3 mb:ed breed te.ma le puppies. An Insured Car, Van Or Tr uck ,
304·67~506.

And Be Avai!able A Minimu m Of

:-3-pu-p-pl:eo,_ma_lh:-e-r-::5i:-be:-ri-an":H':'u""
o: I Sllaylighl Hours Daily.
ky. 304-875-5800.
To Resefve A Route In Your
4" Spotted Piranha Fish, Must Be
Neighborhood can1-800·827·
•-Alone 51• ••• 8627
1200,Job#SQ4-K, 10A.M.-6P.M.
lion Thru Fri, ADS Corp., EOE
'"""
· ·~ ·
Omoa old Beagle, well tra ined Earn StOOOs weekly stuffing enhou se dog, to good home. 304·
s 7s. 46 so.

velopes at home. Be your bos s.
- - --1 Stan now. No BliP.. free supplies.
Black Cocker Spaniel. neu tered , info., no obligation. SEind S.A.S.E.

- - - --

10 country home; also male wh ite
ce.t.neu11Hed; 614-992-8412.

. Hendricks
Phona: &amp;14-892·2487

aonable Distance, 6141-379-2SO.t.

Education lna i tution Accepting
Applications For A Part Time
Part lab Puppy, 6 Months 01~ To Business Qrfice Position . Min iGood Home, B1.t-386-83G4.· 814- m~.~m 25 Hours Per Week. Applic388-9961 .
an t Equi\lalent Office E•perience.
Roo sters, 814-25e-&amp;Ob3, Alt er 7 . Typing SO w.p .m. And Fa miliar
Wit h Office Mac~ i nea . Apply
P.M.
Monday • Friday, 8 A.M. · 4 P.M .
Small, white, female dog, no use· Ar 61 Stare Street. Gailllpoija.
broken. 3Q4·675-3392.
Three year old Beagle, will hunt,

-------- -1

Lo st· large white dog with la rge
black. spots, black. ears. mal e.
.Racine vicinitv, -sampson-, 614 ·

311/1 mo.

/'

wor k. Mus t be able to operate

Ridge, Long Botmm vicinity, 6l 4- tarm equipment Salaty &amp; benefits
843- 5247.
neaotiable. Send name, phone
lo sr: While &amp; Gray Small Ma le number &amp; experience to PO Bo x
Cat, Eastern Avenue Vicinity, 31 2, Henderson, WV 25106.

614-446-8280.

10

Yard

Full-time Pans Cou nter Sales
~le

:I

-·I
-urda_,_Y·- -::--:--·

J.D. Drilling Company
"0
... • Box 587

otio 45631.

per son , ju peri ence required.

Good benefits, pay commensu -

rate w/e,11per ience. Send resume

1o Box G·15, "4P1 Pleasant Reg·
w:r :;:,Main St . PI Pleasanl,
25
'::AL:':'L~Y:-ar":'d'::S"':alo.,•-:M::"u::II-:B~o";;P::':aid~ln I Heating &amp; Air Conditioning
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. SERVICE MAN, CERTIFIED, w l
the day berofe the ad is to rufi. minimum syra e~eperlence. Heat·
Sunday odlllon · 2:00 p.m. Friday. ing &amp; Air Conditioning INSTALL·
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat· ERrSERVICE MAN, minimum 3yrt

p,ump:JIG NISSAH INC.

.

Plan s. Executi~e Secre tarv. cia
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, CLA 378,
825 Third Ave nue, Ga llipo lis ,

&amp; VlclnHy

Lowest Prices
1827 MUidacll An.

E•ecuti~e Se cretary : The Ideal

Candidate Must PoiHII Strong ,
614-992-6119.
Computer Application Skill~ Abili·
ty To Work ·Independently And
To good home- IO\Iabl&amp; si·x month Handle Multiple Tasks With
old white German Shepherd, 61 4· Changing Priorities I Mu st Have
992·7913alter5pm.·
Exceii(Lo tus OK) /Word Par!ec:1
Medium -To -Advanced SkillS.
Two Himalayan inside cats, male Shorthand Or Speedwrltlng A
and female, spayed, neutered and Plus, But Good Transcription
decl awed, to good home, 6 14· Skills. 50+ WPM Typing Skills A
742·2561.
Must. We Offer An E•cellent
...;;=---d-F--d-1 Benefits Pa ckaQe Tha t Includes
60 LDSI an OUR
Medical , Vacat1on. Ra1iremen1

GallipoliS

Niasan Headquarten

l'arbnbuiJ. wv 28101

Unit I L, P 0 . Bo •
Winter Sp ring s, Fl

- ------ - -1 Expel"lenced p&amp;fson to milk, feed
Lo st: fema le Poodle mix , nine &amp; ca re for dairy caltle . No field

aa.elt .w ftll ... for
J&amp;refl s,.cfabf

$20.00
16 Seaalona For
$25.00
()pan t:OO to 3:00
4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Ownara: Pate &amp; Diane

195609,

32719.

949·1770.

PARKERSBURG l•b1jl0i-·fi1d

12 Seaelonti For

to Prestige

Lo'tling short haired small male ;:_---,.--~-­
dog, loves children, to good Easy Work I Excellent Pay I Ashome, 614-94.9-2463.
semble Products a t Home. Call
--'-----~-~~ To ll Free 1-600-•67-5566 EXT.
Mixed Breed Puppies, Mother 1/2 313.
Lab, All Males, Will Deliver Rea· - - - -- -- - -

years old. blondish hair, Rainbow

SUMMER IMAGES
TANNING

Uiddleporl, Rutland, Pomeroy,
Uason; Cheater, Coolville , lon·
don. Apple Grove. Syracuse, &amp;
Surrounding Town s &amp; Rural Ar·
eas. To Become An Indepen dent

Racine' Oh • 45771

James E• Dlddle
Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Tirackh,..,
v,lll'
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig baeement s, p ut In septl c

8Kperience. Apply ,317 Ohio St. ,

Pt Pleasant. vN.

.

Home Typi11s: PC uoera ne&lt;lded.
'Vlclnny ·
~:~~!~~~..":= Call• '
~A"'ii""Ya-rd=
sa-=-la-s~M;-u.,si-:O.~P:-ai-:d-:-ln. I RN's &amp; LPN'o, If You Would Lik•
Ad~anc:e. Deadline: 1:DOpm the To Be Patt Of A Health Care
day belort the 1 d 'ta to run, sun- Team That Pro~idel OuaHty Care
doy edition· t:COpm Friday, Mo.n· To Reaidtnll And Have Long :
day tdJiion to:ooa.m. SaluAlay.
Term ·Care Or Supetvloory Ex:
perience . Please .Contact Holzer
. O.g 1&amp;1• fill a bag ol clotNng lor Sanior Care Cellter Al 01 4-448'
.00, Friday/ Saturday, March 5001 o St 1B 1i0 F ill 0 A
·11
22·23. Humane Social•, Th ri l1 ApplicatiDO.
' EOE.
op Y
Ut n,
Shop. Mlddlet&gt;Drl.
Ulddlepon

.

........ Ratti

lfi2.6042 or 742-1120

-

Pollypr .
.

.: ..

'NtWflnStw
LYtPPkl
Sptrts h"-1 I Ill

ext..7123
12.• par lllln.

menu.

'
f.eoo.n&amp;e100

Selv·U

'

BISS_ELL BUILDERS, INC.

. _ lllnlOephlrl.

required.

.'

311 /1 mo.

L&amp;E
ADYERIISING
THE HAT UN

Room a bolrd for Hilkri • cllilbled. .
State llctnlld.
Lots cif TLC. Fllllllly

Up "tad Evary 15 lin.
No WliiiiiiO direct

.

(819)~a434

I

Cheater, Ohio

11 Mlddllport
Rutland

1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 . per rriln.
Must be 18yrs.
.Toullh· tone phone
• ,.1..

water lrealmcnt company oordlally invites you lo
participate In a tree. no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis..WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS,Ioll11111tl Hardnllo, Iron, PH • .
Pl1111 call Rioi.Soflll 912-4472 or 1~3313
to HI up your free wttar anatyolo.
1llotllln

~····~
12

.

Uve PsyChics
'"1 on1

'

GUINTHER

--·

614-J67.fl02 '
'

SERVICE
U1111111one • Gravel
•

+, TIPh, Serv·U, 819-&amp;45-8434.

Pomeroy,

STAR
GUITAR

DUMP TRUCK

1/31Jltn

.FANS

''

TRUCKING

985 4422

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

ATTENTION·SPOATS ·.

111111101-U'~~IiiNI-~ - ·

R. L HOLLON

TRI·STIIE WilER SYSTEMS, INC~

' New At l*'les lleetrenfes

Love ·

•

Dlrl• Sand

(No Sunday Calls)

Nlld Direction?

. Ext.1277
$3.8t Per lollnuta
IIIUIIbe 18 yn.

5116'84 11'1'1

'

days. 407-875-2022 '"" 0505C 10.
AVON I All Areas · I Shirley
Spears, 30«1751429.
Authorized AGA DisiTibutor
Able Avon RepresentBiives
• Walding Supplies • lndl!strlal Gases • Machine Shop needed. Earn moner lor Chri&amp;1mas bils at homelat work. 1-800SeTVicas 1 Steel salas &amp; FabricatIon • Repatr· weld'tng 992·6356
or.304·882·2645, Ind.
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Ol'llSSing • Ornamental
Rep. '
Steps ·Stairs•. Railings, Pallo Fum~ure, Fireplaca
Auto parts dal ivery position avail·
~ems, Planter hailgers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!
a ~e. 30hr!iiWeell, minimumwage.
"No Job Too Large o; ToO Sm'sll"
Inquire ••30«17521 77
Bobysiner needed lor seventeen
.We will work within yovr budget
.
month old, l)fGierabty in the RockPh. n:J.IIt73
FAX n3-5861
springs area. Call 614·992·22112
108 Pomaro Street
Mason, WV
atterspm.
1...;.;;.;;.;.;;;;,;;~'-o;.=~------------...1 DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS
EARN EXTRA MONEY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
DELIVERIES START LATE
MARCH
oos Personals
:-:M:;=E;: E:T;:,:: SJ:: N: :GL:-;E;o:S-:N: ;£;-:A';:F\B: :Y: -,7.N•. J 80 People Needed To DBIIYer
·
Your New Ohio Va lley, OH Tel e·
lion's 11 Dateline, 1 ·900~890 · phone Directo ries In: Gallipol is,
3737 ext lll60. $2.99 JIOf min. 16 Patriot Ook HiU, Bi&lt;Mel!, Cheshra.

Distributed by

Room Additions

Limestone,

Trucking·
Umeltone
Bulldozing and
Blckhoe.
Strvtcea
HOUN 51111 and
UUIItlea

Down8potltl

''

HAULING
.

Howard hcovotin

Gutten

.

WICKS •

•New Homes ·

9854473

rvnw..
ar.&amp; ,,.

(U"" SJ!Inl- .
Low Ratti)

COISTIIJqiON

'

-

Water
Treatment
Eq1lpment

T~e

, _ l»fJ 615-1657

i •Garag,s .
•Complete
I RemOdeling
' Stop &amp; Compare
' FREE ESTIMATES

1ntend1d purpoN.

~ -~

,., ..

..

(814) ION535
814 112-2753
. -·

2I22IIFN

"')
·

·

JtfAw I U

FREE ESTIMATES

RQI~RI

·

Snb

•Painting

'

992-3894

a. ' a
,.,.,_.,.,

•Rtmocleii!IO
•Siding
•Rooting

'11111

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio.
(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thr~ 29)
artng,ln minimum ot 50 lbl. of aluminum cane to

s..W&amp;IIriir

•NewGar~ga~

or Too Sllii!ll
Pl•n Ahlad, Cill Todayl .

c

11 AM-2PM
Bashan- Fire

,'J:•e,

•~•'•" MANLEY'S
•P•~ RECYCLING CENTER

2411tliday.

$200·$900. weakl y. Year round
positions . Hi ring men. wom an.
Free room , board . Will train. 7

10 I ICE • 10 I aa • IGtiCi

lrslll ffll &amp; ' '1111111

•NIW"-t ·
•Additions

-odd Jobl per rtCJutll

The
;..., .· thl '
any·lnd Ill
te
accept tilt ball bid for tht

3()4.7~5083

pizza

TRI-STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN ClWIING

·SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
'
.

•Mowing (RialdlnUal
and commercl11)

a.m.,..,..

10 people who need to lo u
weight~ make money, ro try ~
PII&amp;MIId W81QhHO II product.

•I.OO ·off any X-large 18"

.'

N Uon.-Frt; W Sit. a 11111. l.ocltecl comer of
St. Rt. 143. 7,1'9m4iroy, 614"1182-5114.

•TrH Trimming '

HelpWanted
$-WANTED-·

Announc" Customer Appreciation
. Days during the Month of March
~ your part for our en1f'o!'lf1illllll, Bring us your
..urn. C«M llld oilier ~Wt'allllll llld ngl lit to
win a handctallecl .Ollcl Wllilut lfld, otKW lined
blankt~t c'-t valwd· at MOO to be given awr1y
Marcil 30th. Trt. Co. Rec~lng open 7 d8ya 1 week

ltiiiY'I
Lift CUE

'

Hoose, 614-245-5887

110

toiiMtyou. .

(3)1, , .. 22; 3TC

Free Eat/mates

EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICE S

· . fti .CD.·IICYCLIIB

Doorl, Stonil

COIIImllllon1!11

Wanted To Buy: Lltlle TikH Toys,
Sand Box, Picnic Table, Play

B10....e·0686, 81 +~·55114

w/eoupon

537 BRYAN PLACE
loiiDDLEPqAT llt2-2772
Ofllce Holira: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
VInyl a Alum. Siding,
VInyl RlpiiCtmlilt,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm

I

c·

Wan ted : Qu al ity Hand Cra fted

Monday through Wedne&amp;day

Wlndoww, Ga......
F-Ettlmatn

llllpCOunty

(614) 367..0266

992·3954 or 985-3418 .. · ·

J&amp;LINSULATION

to be quoted lor 1 thrn
year ' ' ' " period.
Specltlc1tlona tor .. ld
1 utomoblle may bl
obtJIInad from the Clerk of
Board of
b•~•·n
of a:~.
llond '' lh·.:...-::!Z:
~ '"""":"

.

Wetlclncll
• enytlmt
.,
.U/IRIIO.

·r· - -......~~

0'

t31,2MI7

..

...

s..d blda

Owner: Ronnie Jones
Cheshire, Qlf

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

W....V. · ..... 5prn

·8ENN

1112--440$

For Frea Ettlmllll

of

Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

FurnKW. All equlp;l*llln etack · ·
for lmlllldllltl lnlllllll:llon.
{'!'' ·- .
FI'M Eatlmalll
'
IWV010212

Siding, Roofing, Ptlloa
A11aonablt.
Int...,. • Experienced
Clll WIY!)I Nell '

lolaln1-nce

20 Years Experience • Insured

'1Y.~eo.~-..~·~:!~,.,!~ft:!~red Hous~ng

AoOril Addlllona

:

Wanted To Buy: 8.2 Ten Bolt Po·
ai ~ack Uni1 To Fl1 A 1068 CliO'
volle Can Uot Any 01 The Fol·
lowing earners, 85· 70 C...,rolo~
64·72 Ch ...lle, 64· 72 ChOY)' Il l
Nova 87-70 Camaro , 814· -441·
1053.'
'
Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto• With
Or Without Yotors. Calt tarry
Lively.81+388-9303.

ML4.IIIl

Public NoUce

corporation
eubmlt an

Cllll 1112-7747

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

HomeLCol: 61H..e.0175

.

llem s For Seu onal Gift St\,op,

'

PUBUC NOTICE
The lo1tlga lnduatrln,
which Ia • prlveta

Um~atoM,

Wanted 10 Bur Uu d Mobile

I

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

o8lillorP~

JONES' TREE SERVICE

.'

SERVIa
HOUMAipalra
AemodeHng
Kitchen a Bllh
Aamodtllng

s 11t1d l!ldl will ba
IICIIVtd by tht lolelga
county
Boerd
o}
Commlaalonara In thai&lt;
offiCI IOCIIId In lh.
........................... 41,870.37 CourthOUH, Sacond St111t,
Totll TrMaury BlllftC4.... Pomeroy, Ohio 45781 until
........................... 4S,fiJ0.37 12:00 noon on the 25th dar
LIM Outatandlng Chlckl of
, ... and at 1 p.m.
............................ 8,131.50
the Clerk of...ld
Total Bll-....40,1134.17
reed aloud foi'
Summary of lndlblldneH
of 1 tta8:
Outatamllng, Jan. 1, 1115
the lolelge
........................,.• M.Ift.OO

:=:lmlly

TFN

NEFF REMODELING

Public Notice

HUMAN SERVICES

POMEROY, OHIO
Trnh Removal • Commercial or Resldentlll
Slptlc Tanka C' 1ned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dilly, - idy &amp; monthly rantal retee.

oAnnhilnMII
oCouplll (Englglmllntll)

614-742·2193

piece or compiOII " till", also
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , do aPP&lt;Woalo. ~ Mor11n,11411112·7441 .

MODDI SDrrlftOI

a.
Wldllngemurpllone

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

SKqnd

U11d fur niture· antlqull. one

Oi••

BllllllltiW,.

Mon.-Sit. 1Go6

Total Other Flnenclng
NOTICE TO BIDDERS .
SCIIIICII(UH1).....31,750.00 LEAIIINO OP AUTOioiOSILE
.· Totti of R100lpll 6 Other FOR THE MEIGS COUNT'I
Souroll Over (undor).........
DEPARTMENT OF
Fund Cllh Balance,
JMIUifY 1, ........:... 23,712.84
- Fund Cllh Balanct,
Dtcambar 31,.......40,1134.17
DapoaHory Balance.........

,,,

Sliver BrldQII Plua

r.

.....
.........
., ..
,..=-.

H&amp;H.SAWMILL

Asbabelle'o

. lnvltll oommenta and
ropoule · from • 'I I
.
TOWNSHIP
nttrlltld publlo; prlvttt
For FIICII Y11r Ending
Daollllbar 31, , ...
perllrlnlh Opii'IIIOrt
l:icludlng IIXI operetort, for
Labanon Townehlp,
the
provlalon
qf
tr•naportallon 11rvlce to
su='I'J1:.H
anil
IIAI.NICES, AICEIPTII AND the · elderly
..
l!lCPENDI1URE8
handlcepped · within our
Total• Fund Balance
-viOl--.
Jource Dtlcrlptlon
Operatora who ·~·
lnttrllltd In olferong
.'RIOIIpta
propollll to provide
l ' 'ru..........;........ 22,133.13
..vice ahoUid conttct BOb
. ., t-hilllrgo:w•nmental
RIOIIpta ..............t?,OIIM Wood, Auxiliary Sarvlcoa
blletall ................ 1,1211.34 Suparvlaor, II Mellie
AIIOthor....._..............
lnduatrlll, Inc. 1310
Carleton St. Syraoun, ptl
T;;i.;iit;;;ij;il~~:: 4577t to obt:lln lull c111111ie
1
' ' 0t!llrlll OoVIIn!lllnL .......
of the type of trtnepor11,11on
eenrlol ttt.a: Ia n11d1d prior

Coin Shop, 151

-.~,,

The lollltll lnclullrln, Inc.

........................... 31,oio.7t
Public . . . ,.........300.00
' Pljbllc Worke .... 47,310.74
Health .................. 7,ot2JMJ

__

Pold: okt U.l. Colnl.
SIIY~&lt;, !fold, Do. " " Old
Coll.clitHJ, P~t~erweJthle, Etc.

~IICIIv. . .

FINANCIAL REPORT OJ'

-r.o

Couftlw DMcl AIDDrda.

Ohio
. Top -

nn•pc:"'tlo.'l ~WVIoe for
tht
elder ly
and
hlndlnppad within Ioiii~,
GIIIII,
In d
Athlill
Cou•...• ·
The trent
rrlallllon will,.., .. , . , -·
ettndard van for thlll

Parotl No. I •

"

me.

Pomeroy • Middleport,

NotiDI

It II agr11d and 1M, In T - 2, ....... ,,,
undaratood by former Ohio Company'• PIHWIII
~-0-thel In ~ County, Ohio.
'•
· , , KIPS CERAMIC CLASS
MINISTERIAL GOOD
Rotary ~e brakf!llt S.curday at lila Gnlntlll ...... ...,. AIIO, the OMI unlllldlalurtlrtvtlll.na•·
h ,RiverbendArts Council, Mid-,
WORKS
the Senior Citizens Cenler, Mulber- miMrela and lila rlghta to the tbovt dttcrlbed
the ••m• llrlmllll •• htrtby
·. c!lei!Prt..will sponsonn Easter c:etan1~onies collected and dispersed ry Heights, Pomeroy. Serving wiU be oparata
u11derlylng
11
re11rved lliMI tut,lld to
. ~ ic cliill.oaAprill from6:30to9p.m. for good works during 1995 by the from 7 a.m. to I I a.m. Cost is $3 for
or
ectOM lila · loutll 10 iiiUOh oftheturflol
'n. ,.,ujec::l will be painting a ceram- Meigs County Ministerial Associ a- adults, and S2 for children over six
ebcwa IIIICrtlald M .... be
....
of
....
Pow
with those undu six eating
nck- premia... It Ia further ntciiHry to open and
. ic.¥Ct or two ceramic box.u with lion totaled S4,94S.S3.
E.lllllll~y inserts. Cost is $25-$30
According to the annual report, ets will be available at the door and undlt~cad by end Wwnn ap nate and equip a mining
bo1h pertlee to lhle DMd property wltli building~,
~ P,:!udes al~ supplies needed to the Association rccei~ offerings pf from local Rotary Club members: thllt
1 former Oren1or hal
· c;c;mpl'~ lhc' project. Sandy Cama- $839 from the six Lenten services, Proccc4s are used to support Meigs reHIVId unto hlmnH, hie rallroeclawltchea nee
ClliY """' eald han. 'Co1111ttyside Ceramics, 992- $68 from the Good Friday service,. County service projects.
hetre .... '"'•n• ,,, tilt to
aeld
premla11; tlao frilm
for
mlnal'llll
undtrlylnt
tile
drainage and dapoalt ol
2289~ is handing registration. The . $351.10 fri&gt;mtheMeigsCounty Fair;
balanoa ot tile above rtfualand .... right to haul
END OFYEAR ACriVITIES
· class ~limited 10 IS and registration and $:2,434.61 in other gifts, both perdtlcrlbld llml with tile throuth and over 11ld
deadline is March 29.
·
sonal and churches.
Upcoming school events were right t o - and oparellllla prltllllll ooel and from
REVIVAL SERVICES
Expenses were motel and meals planned during the recent meeting of
rtJ•c•nt prop11'11M and the
n Ia further agl'lld and .-ntort to ba .... led flom
Rev. Charles Stansberry, pastor of for in-need persons, $656.67; the Pomeroy PTa.'
lllldlretood by lila Ql'llllora eny eurlloe dem•a• by
• the F~n~h City Baptist Church in $405.83 for gasoline for car opera·
Right to Read Week will be ....
Oren11M tim • fOrmer ,.._ of mining tor coal
Gallipolis,, and chaplain at the Gal- lion;' $873.59 for utility payments; observed May 6-10; the academic fair · Orentorr hie haln 11nd undtr Hid ,._.....
. li~lis ~velopmental Center, wiU be $475.48 for drugs; $1 ,500 for flood will be held May 7, the academic -~ ..... thd ...,. • rightAn'/ aurta. land required
the lj!elker at the revival services.
relief; $4~0 for youth programs; banquet, May 14; field day, Miry 24 ot-way 12 .... wide flom .... tor u11 11 lllove ~ Hid
.,... IIOicl 331 North along trantore or any pii'IOII or
· 1he '!linister Jl'8(lualed from Well- $200 for the National Day of Prayer; · with a rain date of May 29.
the Eut line to lila Boutli paraona now or In the
ston High School in 1972, from Rio $SO, Meigs Historical Society; $40,
Other matters discussed were the and of thla prap trty.
future owning Hid coal and
::~~liege in 1983, and attend· ' Cbamber of Commerce, .and $293.96, 'stage and window curtains fund. It . Exoeptlnt th.,.frpm . 41 other ~ght exceplad and
:; ed .~tem Baptist Theological : miscellaneous expep511s.
was noted that.the goal of $2,00Q has acr11 'more or Ieee .....,.. or althar or both
CC!nVeYtd to Uoyd H1rrl1 11 atatld aforaalld to ba
: ·Selijill"Y of Wake Forest, N.C. He
not been reached and the PTO is 111d
Iuiie Herrle by Arthur peld for et the rile of
·' hilS pa,tored .churches in Frwikfon
'PANCAKE BREAKFAST
looking Iowan! outside sources for Aouall and ladle AoUIII by t30Q.OO
par acrt.
'
· and Huron. He and his family reside
The annual Middleport-Pomeroy donations.
dnd dated ltpllmller 2,
The -1bove . reel 11tata
tMI, reoordad In D..d being the ""'' property
at BidWell,
Rowy Club will have its annual
ISDok 110, Pill 411 of dlldad to William A.
lllalga · pounty Dead Pereona and Martha C.
1
Pereone by 1'. E. Tlbblta
Recorda. to
It II
Intended,
.-:.
VV
1 fl I
·
----1.-,1
hoWIVII,
Include
and
and
lol. E. rlbb111 by dnd
1
convey h-ln the frH un dlttd lolly 111, 1111, ·and
f ·" r· ' ·
of the aprlng that waa recorded In lllorttlllll Book
r111rv1d In the d11d to ·No.43,P11114.
Lloyd and Suala Harrla
Reference DHda: Vol.
lfore1ekl.
314, p. ..,,, Vol. 314, p. 433,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bolt visited
Being tho part of the Vol. - · p. .,.., Vol. 303, p.
HIM 1111 ntato conveyed 711, Vol. 211, p. 475, Vol;
• their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
to · Sadie lol. Routh and 210 p. 117, Vol. 211, p. 103,
· and Mrs: Tony Rufo and graridchilArthur E. Aouah by dnd Vol. 141, p. 114, ......
. di'cn at Rome over the weekend.
reCorded In Detcl Book 110,
Diad Atcardl.
'Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hollingworth
Page 1!4 of the lolelge County
APPRAISED
VALUE:
CoUnty Detcl AICOI'da.
.
and new san, Braden of Texas were
lllli.eoo.ao
Tilt
lut
prevlout
recent visitors of ~r grandparents,
PARCEL NO. 1: The
.conwy- of the property following
· Mt. and Mrs. Rayrllond Donohue and
ducrlbad
II (ICOrdld In Detcl IIOoll premla11 alluttad
In the
' father, Steve Donohue, Other visitoR
178, Page ..3, D..d Townthlp · of Labenon,
:were Kenda and Allen Annstrong and
Recorda of M•ltl• county, COunty of lolllga and State
Ohio.
Nathon of Cincinnati, .Linda and
Ohio;
Thlt di4KJ 1e 'lrittndad 'to of...
Oir}l &lt;flaynes and family of Colum·
rill 100 Acre Lot No.
COIIVey 17 10111, mOrt or
In Townahlp No. -2,
bus, Jack and Rachel Diles and
leu, or Ill on the Northwa.t
No. 11 of the Olllo
Damion of Shade and Mr. and Mrs.
aide ol State RoutH 124
Purch•••·
and 331 nclw or tonnerly
Gerald Donohue and family.
100
ownad by the Hid Harry
Virginia Gibson visited her son,
Allan Gibson and family in Colum·
Exotpt 1 acre aold to thereof,
bus over the weekel\(l.
Robart and Ellabeth Faye conveyed by
Ray Alkire, Columbus, ~pent sevProffitt 11 dnorlbod In Vol. and Luolnda .
171, Patt 4.4t, Daad wttt, to J111111
eral days here with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Auguatue Tho11111, Jr. Athena, left, en employee of Meigs Mine
Atoorda,
loltlga County, by deed recardtd 111
Alkire recently.
No. 2, waa the winner ot $5,000 recently given away In a promoQhlo,.
.
Vol
•• p... .,.,, ......
Mrs. Jetta Bolin had knee surgery . tion by the Mason County Area Chamber of Com.ITHN'C8. Pr1111111t·
Alltlllnoe Diode:
• 4, Diad Alcorde.
:at Holzer and is slowly improving at
p, 133.(0,A,), Vol. 314, p,
Furt1111mort IXOiptlng
lng the check Ia Beckie Stein, chamber MCretary.
441, Vol. 314, p. ~. v,l. unto Clair c. Boao, hla """
~oome.
211, p. 475, Vol. 2110, P· 217, and UllgnaloraVII, all that
Vol. 2111, p. . .
- pari Of Hid 100 ICrl lejt
APPRAISED VALUI: which llaa South of the
,,........,
State Route No. 331, 1nd
PARCEL ND. 5: The dt~crlbod 11 followa:
followln• rul ulata
The following real eallta
The Alfred United Methodist ilyn Robinson; Lloyd and Ruth Kathy, Nicole, and Kyle Essman, The
In the County of btllltl In 100 Hre Lol No.
Church held a fellowship soup lu'n· Brooks; Debbie and Tyler Barber; Plains; Edna and Clarence Warner,,
of Ohio and In 112, L1b1non Townehlp,
cbeon at the church after morning Sarah Caldwell; Janice Weber; Nina, Rose and Bill Follrod, Karen, Brian,
and d.!:~ lolelge County, Ohio,
.:sel14iies on March 10. Pastor Sharon Robinson; Susan Pullins; Nellie Park· and Brannon Follrod, all of Athens;
to •wlt: One deaorl-td •• lollowt:
.__ Lol No. One lllglnrilng 11!1 ,.. _.., of
Haulhm gave grace before the meal. er; John Taylor; Thelma Henderson; Tom and Carolyn Taylor, Torch.
......
81111 Reule No. 331, on the
Thos.e attending ~rvices and the Lori, Joe, Matthew, Jessica, Ashley,
Joe Poole received 'II(Ord of tile
a'nd;·llgllty-thrte Eut una or 100 an 101 No.
, meal, included Russell and Eloise · and Janae Boyles; Sharon and Phillip death of his aunt, Blanche Poole, in
Noa. 13, 14, 1t2; lhlncl South . . ,...
No.
(2), lo the Ohio River; thence
•.ArCher; Melvin 'liacy; Osie and Clair Boyles; Bobby keaton; S81)dm Mas- l:louston, Texas.
11
Ohio
IoUth- atono the Ohio
Follrod; Kathy, Stacie, and Alan sar; Roberta and Shennan HenderRecent visitors of Mattie .Pullins
Purchllll, Rlvlr to the Eut 11n1 of Hid
' .Vatson; Florence, I,Uchard, and Tim ._son; Will Poole; Brian Taylor; all were Wilbur Pullins, Marietta; Bob,
of Ml 100 Acre Lot No. 112,
··spencer; Dan, Sbeila, Kirk; Tiffany, local. Janice, Mike, and Roberta Pullins, .ICrl
lila Elll lhlnoe North 1.7.1 flit to
Hid
d11d1d to the ctn1ar or Stall Route
and Danielle Spencer; Brenda, Gary, . .Eleanor ' Boyles, Belpre; Norma Marvin and Wilma Buckley, all of lido
and 'ason Johnson; Gertrude Robin- Jean and Gerald Swartz, Marietta; Lonridge; Freda Harsey, The Plains. tht loi.E'. Chutcli. AIM, Ito- 331; thlnOa 10 ctagt'MI
IXCipl thl' Plon .. r North 20' - t 847.22 fill
son; Lloyd and Doris Billinger; MarOnlveyerd In the South Eut along the otn1er of 11ld
corner of Hid 101 ~nded to 8lltl Route No. 331 to the
the TruaiHI ol Llblnon pt 1 c1 of beginning,
Townahlp In loltlt• COunty, oonlllnlng 11.2 - , !110ft
Ohio, and further except or Ina. eub)lot to all 11g11
1Wo rode of lind und" • hlghwlyl, and 1110
prlvetti . burying ground tuoapllnt Ill the ..,._. lOUth
test and the brain scan, doctors may ·Tests for apoE·4 also were done.
By Till! FRIEND
altullad on the Ent aldt-of. or the above dacrlbod 13.1
"The group with two copies of the IIIII Lolend directly In fronl
be able to diagnose Alzheimer's
hi h
b
USATODAY •
-- lol. E. ·Ch·-~
w 100
c Acre
may
I
....... lbo'le ICfll,
lncloNiaclln
Lot No.
The first brain scans of people more thllll a decade before it destroys apoE-4 gene had abnonnally reduced Of ....
·
relamd
to.
112.
.
·
activity in ·the same brain regions as
.with a gene linked to Alzheimer's dis- mental powers .
The ~o~~go~ 111 btlng pert
Alao, the following
who already
have prtnilall IIIUitld In thl of the real 111111
Positron emission tomography patients
use show their brain cells don't bum
which ·as brightly with activity as nonnal, (PET) measures energy use in the Alzheimer's symptoms," said county of lolalga and • - conveyed to Clair .C, aof Ohio; and In the townahlp b diad
rd""' In DMd
:though the person is symptom-free. brain. Active cells glow brighter than Reiman.
non and boundad Book
Y 117,recov.,.
L.b.
Page
... of the·
NEJ deputy editor Edward Cam.~ BJtf,erts saY, the new findings, in inactive, dying or dead ones. ·
datcrlbod ulollowa: A lolelge County D11d
Eric Reiman, of Good Samaritan pion said the study also means PET end
Thursday's New England Journal of
trlanguler placo of land Atc.ardl.
.Medicine, confinn the link between Regional Medical Center in Phoenix, will help test the efficacy of drugs. lncluclad In the dooryard of
Reference D11da; Vol.
a gene known as apoE·4 and did PET scans on healthy 50· to 65- But PET scanning is experimental the dwelling hou11 ol 314 44i Vol 314 433
Emelina L. llcknel. Vol.' 210,
p. p.' 217,' Vol.·'~ p.;
.Alzheimer's. By combining the gene year-olds at risk for Alzheimer's. and expensive and isn't likely to be
II
lllglnnlng on the Ent "' 101 Vol p 111 lolllga
used for routine diagnosis.
of Lot No. 1M whlrt tllei.Ci'=·~:o:
:d'Rtc'aniL
1
Ianoe of the front yerd 1
1o Flbwaga
croe .. a the lint and Elllmanta to' the United ·
Public Notice
running p1relltl to tht ...,.. of Amtrlcl rtcOnlod
Public Notice
Public Nollce
Public Notice
beginning, containing 100
::'.'::':, ~....-:,':."':::; In Vol. 225, Pill 721 and
NOTII:I OF SALE
10111, mort or Ilea, within
EHt or N. Vol. 221, Pill 713, lolelga
Hid line run..._
lly vlrtut .of an Order of
.....
County Detcl AHOidt 1nd
the Ohio Compeny'l
8111 IIIUH out of. tht
Savanty4jjht fMt lllont the to all other 111111,
Purohlla, and tor 1
COlli- Pllll Court of
tide of the dooryard IInce e111mentt 1nd rlghte o1
particular dttcrlptlon of the
1nd aide ol wuh houM to wey of reoon1.
1ltiR cau!l'll, Olllo, In the
premiHa, retlrtnce Ia hid
- ) II CMIIIr Prollhl, ..
to thl Ohio bOOkl. And
:::~ ~~ ~ ~:OAAIIIO VALUI:
el., . Plalntllta, VI. P11rt
being lha aema property
81orellld; thence Iouth on
llkii'MI111111 hll linn
. Prtfntt. 11 1L, Dtlfendanta,
conveyact by Edward Aouall
up!tn • Judgalllln1 lhtrtln
Hid EUt Une to the plloa of ••:-,: Audltoc'a Parotl
end Julia A. Aouah, hla
beginning ami wHh all of Nu
: 117-GCIIJI.OOO, 117·
iil!ldtl'ld, "-"" Cen No.
wile, to Robart P. Johneon
~ 'ln ·Hid .Court, I
the appurtlnl-.
00177.000,117oGC1111.1100, flf·
by deed detod februery
.......... Mit ill the fronl
...... Will, 00171.000, e?-GOIIOJIIIO,
24th, 1113, end IIOOrdad In
......"'Uilll ~l'ft fruit ......
Mel 07-ooat.oa
. . , Clfethl Cowl!la- In
Book 24 at P11e 100 or Ilia
hou11, Ito. In end on llkl
REAL DTATE . ' '
Pawn "' lol!'l~ County,
D11d Record• of loltllll
101
Ot
IIIICIMIIOrttlkl,
uld
APPRAISED
AT: PIIGII No. 1
.
on ... 3nl! dar or May,
County, Ohio.
No. 114, baing known II Lot • $t2,....17; PIII'OII No. 2 •
·10:00 •·"'·• the
Aelarenot Dnda: Vol. 4,
Iande 1nd
p. 133 (O.A.), VoL ;114, p.
A complete
110
441, Vol. 314, p. 433, Vol.
of the ntll
2111, p. 475, Vol. 210, p. 217,
Vol. 2H, p. 103, lolalga

II••·

Friday, 11..-ch 22, 1916

l

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

•
..

Sar-IH1g ... 1434.

.

lll1tl_!!!!!o

•

''·

•

�F~, lll8rch 22,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

::~

1911

-

FrlcMy, March 22, 1
ALLEYOOP

i,;;

ALDER
... ,., • .,.t\iiiL ........., .,...

•• Wuat H.we Ralllletat, 114-._

'f"......

"""'1 ~..

f6i.......
... .,., ·,
f f il C.""""""'
"'f I .... f'l•

., . 11473.

. ,....

""~'"''"

~~..

,.....

·,,::, - . WV. 304-G75-5404.

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs .S21 tHr •

il ;.j:.Bonollll, No Exp. Will Train, For
.;; 1 Appl And'""' 1·t!Q0.5311-3040.

n&gt;

NORTH

.~

6108653

·,·
,1fll

,;,,,

WEST

'.

1881 Fonl ~~ Spott 414, 4.0
two door, •tandard, air,
cruiae. eun roar. loaded, muet
• ; 8 f 4·14f·2481 altar 5pm &amp;

·~· .~-.

SOoill WOI~II, Now Hl~ng $23 I

"t. The Board Of Trusteao. 01 Tho
·· Ulllan E. Jonoa Muoeum Ia Setk'
ing A Creative, Sall-llodvotod,
Energadc And Depel\(labla Par·
aon To Servo As A Plirt·'flmo Dl·
'rwctor for Tho Muaoum.
Reporting To Tho Seven Mtmbor
Board, This Plirson WIII'Be Re·
aponolble For Admlnillrlllve Du·
dol Including Selling Up An 0!·
lice, Co-ordinating And Auladng
' Volunteer Commlttltl And Doctnll And Helping With Exlllblta
And Special Events. Salary Ia
Negoi- .
Appllcama Should send Retuma
!Cover Lener To: Board Of 'Trui,.... lilian E. JonH IIUIO\Im, 75
Broadway Stroot. Jackson, Oh"
45640 No later Than April15,
1998.
Wacktnhut SeCurity Is Now Ac·
capting ApPilcaNona For Employ·
ment lnqutre At The Main Gaurd
Ho~ae, Gavin f't!wtr Plan~ Soo
Captoin Mike Alnehlr~ ~ A.ll. • 3
P.M. Mon • Frl, 814·387' 7331,
E1t3341, EOE, MIF/KIV.
'·.

F-

Nmltallon or discrimination
bottd on c\oce, Color, rellglon,
·oex 11-llltalul or national
origin, or any lntenllon to
make any ouCh pre""'""-. ·
IIMtallon or dlscrlmlrjallon.•
'Ilia ~ wtllnot .
lq1oiMingly llccept '

General Maintenance, Painting,

Yard Work Windows Waahad
Guners Cleaned Ught Hauling,

Commerical, Realdonlial. Stova:
814•3811,0429.
Georgos 'Portable SaWmill, don't
haul your logo to thJI mil jull c:all
304-875-1957.

....

108.5 acres In Malo• County, l •
banstn Twp. Call Gotdon it 814 596·2551 .

--fcH. .

Our ,_,.are hor8by

adwrtiled In flla rteMP.P..
are • - on an oqual ·
oppoi\!Jnlty basts.

Building lites with road frontllge',
back of New Haven. rural . water.
and finahcirlg aVailable. ·30i-882·
2688.

I-18
f&lt;t1lch 1o In vto1o11on ollhelaW.

' *'"""" lhttan--

Five

acres

aerator,

· ;: PEANUTS .

.,. . - - - -.......~----, r - - - - - - - - , r---:--------,
'fES, Mll1AMr I.WALKED IIOMEWORK? DID
TO SCNOOL'IN TilE RAIN
M'f IIOMEWORK
.A6AJN .. VES, I 60T
6ET WET?
KIND OF WET ..

16NORE I-IER, .

, ~,. :..,.

MA'AM .. SI-Ie'S
HOMON60U5L'I'

WEIRD!

·"·

-'
..,.;

near

Racino,$18,000 can finance with
halldcMn, 61 4-1149-2{125.

REAL ESTArE

-t tl

310 Holiles tor Sale
3-4br., 100r100 corner lot, .close

to ochool, Syracuoo. 24x42 block
garage, heat pump 1 614·.0 92-

5315.

140hp . lnD&lt;Iardlliutboard MFG
boat, good· cond:;.. ope,n bow, w1
compioto covoro a tniiiOr. ...000.
304-8112·23211ohtr 5llfl\

2 Bedroom House, 2· Bedroo·m
Trailer In Gallipoija, 614·446.s849

For Information.

MERCHANDISE

2 B&amp;clrOoms In Gallipolis, 1 Balh,
Air, Garaoo. No Pets, Kitchen Appliances. $395/Mo. 614·448·
2800.

101~

19i1 Nitro t80 TF

510

&gt;fit'Jci/l
$17,ooo .

...'"

p,•ce
.

ftfS,FT't'. Z,D()O

150

Johnson HOI Foot, JICk Pl~ta ,

Household
Goods

Depth f lndero E.C. 114-388·
81113.

2bedraom house at 2803 Uncoln
"""·· Pt PlHoanL 304-875-3402.
2bedroom, furnished, ac,

ll.r

1.881 Waverunner

2;,0oo

Yamaha

850 tl.OOO •1,.... 1756.

'.

IM5 Poltris. SL750 2 Lilt VIOla,
&amp; Tr1il1'r: Still Under Wattanly,
614-'44J-7518.

in Middleport No pebl. Relerenc-

oa. $275/mo. + $100 depO&amp;IL 304773·5185.
.
3bedroom, 2205 N. Uain. Can
seen after March 25th. Referenc·
es &amp; de,:~oa i t. No pels. 304 ·458· ·

1994 Mercury Cougar XA7.
32,000mi., loaded oxc. cond. 304·
895-3287.

1728.

1195 Grand Am, VB, auto, 2dr,
red "'gear inllrlor, ac, •1~ crvloo,
pW, pi, &amp;m·lm Clllotle, 114,000
080.00.0.773-50711.
.

cal.

llinnkotr uolllng motor, lront tnd
mount, 281b. thrull, 5apd. 304·
875-e531 . .

,

.

""""'""'"" ~1Rll'l6

~ccessorletl

Proru5a'&lt;'

llud;tt Trirnarnilalona. Uttd IRa-

.,

UN~'(

W~OOT~Y

'):J~ WOO£-~D

fUE Fa':,(\ C..XN'¥C-'

built, All Typoo, Accot~lblo To
Over 1$1,000 Tranamlaaion,
et4-245-56n

-

'I'IO... IHJ~~T

COli TaL filE. 1-'L ,
W/'6 t•c.:ruw.x to~

fll1lJ\1.Y.&gt; ~~ 11'£Sf1Wii...~

Auto Plrta &amp; .

760

1 -t!QO.~.

790

Campens &amp;
Motor' Homes

10x50 Mobile Home, 614.·368·

::908-:-2.:-::::-:--:--:---::--=:-12x80 mobUe home lor sale, twO
air conditioner, goad

bedroom,

condion, 814·9112·5323.

.

1972 Buddy 14x80 Good Condi·
don, $8,800, 814-6&lt;3-2818 After 4
P.ll.
1978 Skyline. 14x85; two bed·
rooma, bath, new furnace, heat
pump, appointment only, 814-985-

311118 alter 5pn\
·
--~7'"~~--~-:--:--1
1980 WlnciiOr, 14x70, 3 Bedroom.
2 Bathl, EIOc&gt;tc &amp; Gea, CA, Well
W.tet &amp; County Water, Building,
Garage, GarGen, Pasture,
SrHned·ln Back Porch &amp; BuiltQn Sunroom, Hannan Trace Ele·
mentlry, 2 Acree +I·, Very Good
Conci~IOn, t32,000 No l.8r\d Con,
· ,1884 14x'lll, two bedroom, 2
ballla. goa. H. furnace. on
lo~·$8500, 814-1182-4135.

14&gt;10 2 Bedrocmo, TOtal Eloctrtc,

No

Ro

Peta·; 1 Uile South

~· · -

fenlnctl. 81 4-.-~.
2 Bedroom Furniahed, On Clay
Chapel Road, $250/Mo. $250 Qo.
poli~ 81 4-2'56-8718. Alter 4 ~M .

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Ron~ $250/Mo.. Locoted 8ttwean
Addison &amp; Cheshire, 814·367--. 1
7802

2 8tdrooms, 8'MIIOo Out SR 211•.
12t01Mo .. Plua Daposlt, Reier·
oncea, 814-M8·8t72, 814·25b-

Ford Rang•r ,Super Cab,
pa, pe, ounroot, exc.
$3,000 OBO; 304-882·
no an- pl-loavt a

ssp&lt;~,

825
1.

Two and 1hroo bedroom mobile
homoo, starting at $240·1300,
tewer, water and lta~lh included,
814-882.2187.

:WO

depoall required, no poll. 8t4·
.11112·2218.

General .' Homo

lleln-

wl-.

~

llfii'WALL

.Hlnct. lnloh, ..... ~

'

.

•
Collfcigo toxturod, piutw rapolr.
Clil Tom 304-875-41 Ill. 20 yoaro
eJCperilnce..

'"

Pat's Home imp.rov8rttent·remo·
doling,. rooflngi=~,c'!'l 81+
1112-4!1113 or 81
7.

.

.Patio Decka, Carp6rll, Sldln;
Frao
Call SMvi; 814:
245-15711.

·•·•

'

e..........

,, 1 , -:---;.....~-.;....-"""':-- -t10 do 10 maltelll8 rNiionaltip WOIIt.
Mail $2.75 10 Malchtnlket; t/o lhle - .

· O

'

~ITR ~GRAPH

·

papar,

Murray Hill
.
TAURUI (Ai')rll 2Ht8y 20) lriterootlng
developmenll may occur ·tn the social
...-. 11 will bel1&lt;lcM you 10 link up will\
• many new giotipS and organlzationl
P.O . Box 1758,

statiOn, New Yot!&lt;. NY 10156.

,.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

. :

Upcll'ble.,

,

lble Nlalionlhlpl wilt bacon• ....., IliON
signlllcinlln 1118 near Mule. Mutual beneflta Mil be derived by oonalstenlty look·
~y., MIIdl23, 11196
1ng out lor one another. •
fltii!IClai .,Oalllon looks like II wlil · LI!O (Jui» ZWUg. 12) 11 will be lime 10
gain llllioglh
year. HoW!Iver, . llevate your •ilt&lt;lt wt.... your wor1dly oc
,,.,.,_ ot. yow r'tilr\ftlll-1 dlliroo might mat81111 obj8ciiVW are concerned. Do not
be afraid 10 aim for new torgata. _
. . . .u bd.

!t''"

dliml 'tlte

'oillllll (... rch •1·A'pr!l 1t) V,r~u are
p j II Illy ln.an iniMIIiog cycle end _ ,
aid . . . )'au have long
given up
On wtl be repaid. Trying 10 patch up I

.me.

j

li,'

'

J

VIIIQO (Aug. 23-&amp;.pt. 12) Parmerehlp
imngamenta inilieted In 11111 period wiN

..w a good chance ole•&lt;

tedlcog. VOUt

cllar1 lhld yOu wtll lltllbllsh '!lt'oll•n rpmaf!c•? The Aalro·Graph flln one llllilnol!· . .
·ua~et~m~~ttr can help you undeqtgnd . LtB!'A ·(a.pt. II..Oct. 21) 'Beginning.
'
~
'.

' .

~.

,,

,,•

today. llllngs might brighlen up a biii'n
regard to your llnanclal situation. An
!nf8f8SIIng occurrence could help you to

generate more earnings ._
SCORPIO (Ool_ 24-Nov. 12) Do not get ·
upset II things havenllione too well lor
you In the romance deparlmenf.lately .

-·

Cupid has been buar sharpening his

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) You
(llay 21·Juna 201 You can
lnlllnCe your repiMiion by liking acMin- • .... ante&lt; a very prOCiucliw cyc48 end you
111ge ollavorabl!l corodlliot • and by con- CIIIIM your intelligence 10 gamer allen·
- ~~nu~ng 10 dHI wi1tt olhers In an honof· ·liort and -refs. Ulilzt your alcllla to 1118
lble IIINon.
~~

GeMINI

CAPJI (Junit 11-.lulr 12) Two VIIU·

"l

...

11

Garfield

11 Knola In

colton fiber

9 Someblnla

Mufpltr.
Brown a

258omb ......
27 Vary (Fr.)

Pass 3 •
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: • 2

I FRIDAY

MSEIIENT
• 'ROOFING
Unconditional lifetime ouarantH.
Local refertncia furnlahec:l . Call
w~er

.

a Faton'a _.,.

8 Mr. Trebelt
7 Nagatlvea

Pus

The Treasure You
Sdvlnrs You'll Find l1111te
. Clossl(led Section.

corpontry, doors,
bolht,
mobllo homo ropolr .and ....,.,. For
lree eotlmoto call Chet, 114,912·

,., · 210
'

: :::~•aufllx

10 Dog In

21 Latoneaa
2t Egg-altaped
30 AppraiM
32 Region (Hbr.)
35 More
muacutar

318ack
31ChlneM
phllol"ffhy
311 llumlnatacl
41 Honking
blrdl
42WorMn
43 Buahy hairdo
44 Purple lruH

45 Actreu
Eikenberry

47 Sleepa

48 Formerly,

tormarty

51 Luau

garland

52 Sp.ce

, CELEBRITY CIPHER
·

c..oy~_......

C•mpoa
...by
_Lui•
__
_ , _ _ .......... ...-

Eaeh lettei" in 1hl eiphet ltandt for anollef. Todty'a ct.: F IIQUIIIt L

• p 0

PXHMSY

DSJVA

A V

URC

RlRJVCH

RKHYSCC-

JVHYXOIKSO

MSY

HX

IVHJF

PS

J

ZYAVW

CJVRHYR. '
AVAJS
OJKWJVCXV .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I always thought my mind would tum 10 luzz WI lived
on 1118 We~t Coast.•- (Naw YQrf&lt;or) Judy Collins.

....
tAM I

I
~~RI ~Ar::;F~[:;R~,
~N: ,
I
I
I
REOVL

3,,,~,

.

_

.

.

CU B 0 N E

POliticians would rather
have their weaknesses and imperfections made public than
their ....... •.

IG

Complelo tho chuckle quoted
by filling in tho mioOing -d•
you dovolop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQl iARES

I I

UNSCRAMBLE FOil
ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

tenence- Painting, vinyl aiding,

FINArJCI/Il

filii

5 FIIIICing Cllll,
en -

21 lnatlnt (Hbr-1
23 - to Joy
241emoll - 25 Young boya

8

Improvements

C&amp;C

35 Borachl

1 Choltee
2 H.-Utn food

8

~ppllonce Plirll And Soriico: AN
Namo Branda Ovor 25 Yaoro El·
parlance All Work 'Giiar,ntoed,
Fronah City llaytag, 114·441·
7795.
.

TRAN SPOHTATir)N

DOWN

~-,,-;lr--,:;17~T,-,r::--l
•-...1-..Jl._.....__..._ _.__,_

tablllhed 1975.

1 and 2 bod"""" apor1mllnll, fur·

galling IOUnd

33Actreu

I

(814) 446 ·0870 Or (814) 237·

fo( Rent

31 Buay u - -

32 Walllr'alced

EUt

,,..

0418 Rogoro Waterproofing. Eo·

Apartments

JoanM -

Infant - Blimp - Sniff· Remand· FIND ME

"I'm changing my answering service,· the dentist said .
"The one I have now always manages to FIND ME!"

Hotnli

810

·

54 Elli:lrlc IIIIIH
511 lln8lon
511 - Kippur
117 ~
511 Atlendon-

's
_

SERVrCFS

nl'shed and unfurnished, Hcuril)t

~....

18

Do you like to try new bidding con·
ventions or do you prefer to stick to
the recommendations of your parents?
Or do you fall somewhere between the
two extremes?
Whichever it is, probebly if you used
to play four-card majors, you have
moved to five-card majors. Although
this deal isn 'I being used lo justify the
change, it was bad news for North·
South lhat they were using four-card
majors.
- South rebid two no-trump because
he was afraid that if he jumped to
three of a minor, partner would as·
sume he had at least five hearts.
West led the diamond two, fourth·
highest from his stronger minor.
With seven top tricks, declarer real·
ized he would need at least two heart
tricks. So, after winning East's dia·
mood queeil"'WIIh his ace, South fi.
nessed the heart 10.
Although East won wilh the king,
South wa5n't worried. Surely East
would return his partner's suit. Yet
East had paused to count out the
hand . As South had bid three no·
trump, not four hearts, surely he had
only four hearts. The opening lead
marked South with four diamonds.
And if South had only three clubs,
Wesl would have started wilh five.
Since.West would have led from a fivecard suit, not a four-carder, It looked
as though South must have started
with 1·4-4·4 distribution.
Backing his' assessment, East
cashed the spade ace, dropping
South's king. Thl'n came a spade to
West's queen and'a spade to East's re·
maining jack·nine tenace, defeating
the contract by one trick.
Never play without thinking and al·
ways count out the hand.

Campground Membcirahip In·
eludes All' Major ~ffiliatloni,
Neorly soo Resorts. 14.00 /Night,
USA a Canada, sacrlflce. 1425.
1-80!1:23&amp;0328. -

Eureka,

12 Flowing
garment
24 Wondlr ·
25 eom.. to Hrth
27 Farm .....lcle

53 A -

· '*-"

1884 '""'brook, fulti loaded, loll
of extras, '8ft. Serious inqulrltl
only. 304.0~11903. '

Doublo Wiele Ropo'a, Save ThOu·
Mncltl304-738·7295.

52 Kit

•

...._

~ ~ly.::U,..

............ -mi.,M:.

31133 01

18 - Paule
11 11&lt;11Nn 410

4t C10 ...,_
50 1'1111111 pre

lngredllnl

D l A Auto, Rl,..,, WV. 304-372·

lniCI 814-2!ie-1813. ·, .

.'

Pass

luxury
45 Goo burY*
45 Co-np" pl.

By Phillip Alder

.'

Do

Cleaning Houaeo, Very Cheap
Aatetl81 4-381H473.
.
Elloon'a Paroonal Care. ~ptcllilz·
lng In Alzheimer's care giving.
Call ua - we can help. 304· 782·
2544.

,11\J t
;

1(', •

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

4 Lola: 2 Road Frontaqe On At.
180, $7,500 Each: 2 Pnvata Lata
18,500 · Eac~ Unrestricted,
100x300 Call 814·448-8554 , ·Or
e14-3138-170-4.

ePUIIII

. . . . . . tDPi&amp;t',

Are you resolute
or flexible?

Wood Homes, Barboursville,

New gaa tanks, one ton truck

180 Wanted 10

2 NT
3 NT

25504, 00.0.738-3-108.

Cecilia. Deadline For Applicant•: J'tl.me &amp; number, wUI relurn

Specllr Which
For. Equal Op-

IW

BARNEY

,-

lhl$ niOTpopei' lo IUbjaciiO
lht
Fa~~ Act
of.1968 makoo n 11ega1
10 odYirtl&amp;e "any prof....,.,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Soulb Weal Norlb ·

Ill II

AUrao1-11~1n

78 acrea ITVI 'Yith tnree beclroom.
WANTED: COM!!UNITV SKILLS rwo both brlci&lt; homo, three pond~
INSTRUCJORS Needed . To pole barn building, rwo car gaTeach COmmunity And Peraanal rago, 814-742-1902.
Skills To Adults In Their Own
Home In Meigs Coirnty:
- Four bedroom hou• on Mulbeny
(1) 32 Hra IWk: 3 P.M. Fri.Tfvu 3 Hel;hll, equipped kitchen. lull
bailment, heat pump, nice lot
P.M. Sun; Sloop .o.or Required;
(2) 23 Hrs /Wk: 11 P.M. ·8 A.M.. close tD school and hotpltal, one
car gorago with breezeway, 814·
Th !Fri; 4 Hrs As Sclloduled;
(3) 18 J:lrs !Wk: 10 A.ll . • 8 P.ll., 182-31 19altor Spm.
S8t15uq:
~~
Nice hon:Mt l.n ~Cine, large build·
All Poaitiona Re~~J~IrecJ Antn ·
ing will hou11' small buainaaa,
~nee AI 2 -Hotcr ·Bi-llon1hly Sial
also a one car 'garage, fenced
Moodngo Or Hours,;~ Olharwloe yard, out of flood area, asking
SchedUled. HIIIIJ School DetlrH, ..7.000 614-!149·2804.
.
Valid Driver's Ucenle, Thru
Years Llctntld Driving ExPifl·
. , 2boaroom. LR, OR, KT,
once, Good Dtlvlng Rec:ord And
complete furnished I car·
Adequate Auto~blle lnauranca
Nice O&lt;jltl\llldlng, vinyl aidCoverage Required. Salaly: 15.00
roof, ounera and
·
tHr, To Start Vacation /Sick Ben·
deck. 0110 acre.
eflta . Training Provided. If Inter- catad on
2mllea
ested. Stnd Riaumo Te P.o. Box Loon, UB,000._30•1-1il.. ~·a~a
804, Jackoon, OH 45840, ATTN: 00.0.8115-3584, If no an-.

3129198 ;
Position

..

•'.-q
'"''~

'It may not be an
coat·of·arml, but
we find it gets the idea across."

:ta, 0&lt; 218 SR f7 N.. Slw&lt;llrfdgo
·, Plaza, GalllpoHi.
Toxi -Oriv$fs Nooded, Sand Namo
&amp; Phone N.umbor To, P.O. Box
512, Galllpoill. OH 45831 .

;..

""5pm' ......,.. '

=

..

fHi o

12 ~aid 13 Lily IIJIIUI
14 Lamon drink
15 ~ (el.)
II Relax
17 ~ IOUnd

O.rdner
34 Not wet

•Q 10 54
•A K J 3
8A Q 5 t

'

looded, 4 capbin ltall a bench,
now ~rtl, geroge kept, mull - ·
all&lt;lng '10,1100, &lt;814-1411-2481 af·

c.,.,,,

eJ 9
eK

Van, 41,000 mUea. i-3 V·8, aulo.

ind To A!W&gt;IY '" YIM!t f't-. :NIOO(·1.1 ~·!SO· ' . •
•
.

810 8 3 2

SO liTH

18a2 Chevy A'atro ConversiOn

Hr, .- Beneflll, On The Job Troln-

! ·~. ;.,~~~~~~~~.:.1\k

.

W7 S
uo 8 4 2

EAST
eA· J 9 4
WK986
•Q 9 7

eQ 7 2

v~ e .

Stop L~·Fet-A Job And Ap• . ply Todoy For A
Rental .
• ,,. King II Looking For The Solllolatlvated Person To Fill An ,Opon·
ina We H~• Here In·
Local
t . Store. We Offer Good
llodl·

31
40 1 PIICIIIc llllncl
(alrllnl
5 Anti~
41 i . . o-

20 Donlulye

H 5
eK 7 6

Ploole Inquire at 304-G75-5677.

'Salas Peraon Commiaaian Agent
Wlm ,Lead I Benellto. Apply AI
French City Prooo, 423 Second
• •~. Gollpqllo_

03·22·11

• wA J Z

•

...
' •'

1881 Chevy Plck·U" '4x4 350 Y·

I~ : ·RiM:~donlot wanted • modlc:al o~

,,

,1_21145. . '

a. 88.000 1111... Now Wheolo 1
Tire•, 6_14 -388-08181 Dayt; 01•·
441-1304.EVOI1i"'IL

,i.:~ · fica. Ortlce experience requl~ .
I;,•;

1887 Ford 150 c-olon Van,
300 Six .lull, II&lt;, CrYM. CB T.V.,
Captain Ch81ro a Bad $3,600,

I 110 Podge Ram Van B·25Q,
72',000' Mn ... $1,000, Can 8o
Seon At: Glllipplla Dally Tribune,
825 Third ~venue. Galllpollo
Ohio.

:.: ' Part·Nmo cuhlor nooded, mull

~ ' , bo IS,ro old. Cr-d'l Qrocory,

~;':.

=pa1111

ACROSS

• C::-Volghlca :::0.:--

KIT 'N.' CARLYLE II byLany Wriaht

-

r=-=-~~:;:=
.

NEA Cro1sword Puzzle

BRIDOII
PHILLIP

fA~
~ ~~~~~~~~
110 ' He4p Wllnted

Sentlnll• Plgt , 1 .
.The Dally
'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J!~n . 11) Your

popularity might auddenly take a awing
Upward. Aeooctatee wiK appnK:Iate your
-.ling qudlleS _ , more.
AQUARIUS (Jen. lO-feb. II) Flnllnclal
p1'0II)ecta look enc:Ouraging tor the next
few weeice. Soon you can acquire -rar

you have denied your'
PISCES (Feb. 20 lla ch 20) H you have
••pensive ilems

Mil.

held back a prornlalng Idea lor a new
endeavor, 1oot1n your grip on ft today .
You might be.ontv something much bigger than you realize.

MARCH22I

�... ........ , ..
~

1Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 22, '~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Alonq tiH' RlvC'r

•· .----------~----------------------------------_.~----~----------------------------~--------~
'.

' r----------------------,

'

Voinovich
inks
adoption
law
overhaul
a.
c
tion
.
.
Ex-Ohio
.
because
~

legislator
..~. will not
. face trial
'

~

By I(ATHERINE RIZZO
' MMCbded Preu Writer
WASHINGTON - Former
• Rep. Mary Rose Oakar won't go
: on trial for wnting a $16,000 bad
, ·check because !here was nothing in
~ writing that said she couldn't do it.
~
"No rule was in effect regardIng overdrafts," U.S. District Judge
Harold Greene wrote Thursday.
The Ohio Democrat still faces
charges that carry maximum penalties of25 years in prison and $1 .25
million in fines. She also failed to
convince the judge that the House
' Bank Task Force exceeded its
• authority.
· Greene dismissed the core of
the government's case against
Oakar: a charge of converting-pub; : lie money to private use, a charge
of lying to Congress and pan of tlte
' government's conspiracy case.
Left intact for a jury to consider were campaign finance charges,
· charges of lying .to the PBI and a
· . narrower conspiracy case.
Justice Department spokesman
• John Russell said the government
had not decided whether it will
appeal.
"We are still reading the judge's
· gpinion," he said. "Overall we are
. ; nol displeased."
Defense lawyer Stanley Brand
said the ruling showed that prosecutors went overboard.
"It certainly changes the whole
ihrust of the case," Brand said.
"What it is and should have been
is a garden-variety Federal Election
Commission case and what the
government did here was layer on
all these other things that should'n't have been a part of it."
Greene was critical of the prosecution.
"The government has failed to
give the Court any reason why other House members, who had overdrafts much in excess of that with
which Oakar is charged, have not
similarly been prosecuted," he
wrote.
Oakar said she was more optimistic about her chances of winning the case after reading the
judge's opinion.
"I was making the argument
that I was selectively prosecuted,"
.•he said. ·"I knew that something
.was wrong in this case."
Oakar benefited l'rom recent
:court rulings that made it difficult
to support lying-to-Congress
charges. The judge cited those rulings in throwing out a count
involving her failure to list a
$50,000 personal loan on a financial disclosure fonn required of all
·lawmakers.
The judge allowed bakar to go
to trial on charges alleging that she
fabricated names of contributors
and left some expenditures out of
campaign disclosure fonns filed in
1992.
Greene also let Oakar to go to
trial on charges that she lied to an
PBI agent about transactions in her
House bank account and that she
tried to mislead the PBI by giving
investigators a back-dated document.
Oakar was one of the last people charged with wrongdoing as a
result ofthe House bank scandal.
· I!Rd the only one charged with con- .
version of public money for personal use.
Eight others, including two former congressmen and the District
of Columbia's fonner nonvoting
congressional delegate, pleaded
guilty to other crimes as a result of
House Bank Task Pprce investiga·tions.
In the only House bank cases to
go to trial, fanner Ohio Rep. Don8Jd Lukens, a Republican, was convicted of bribery and 'a jury deadlocked on whether an Ohio man
paid bribes to Lukens.
The House """lc- and Oakar's
213 overdrafts - ·was the major
issue in the 1992 campaign.
'

. · *~Ions to end
. marriages filed

.·:t'he following actions to end mar-

~e were filed recently in the office

·cJt. ~ Spencer,
Cttit of Courts•

Meigs. County

· ·

.

·

• •Diuolutions asked - Sandra R.
lllrt, Portland, and Marty D. Hart,
j&gt;aneroy, March 20; Chi'rles Andrew
J'..tm IIICI Diana Lynn Landers,
, bAib ofPomcroy, March I5. .
·,, r ;Div~ , ~ - John Wa~ne
. ·• Gtiin; MbiJiy, from Pamela Bl11ric
~ ~-~. C1Uyayi)~ March 13. . ··
• '- Diilolu~on granted - Sandra L.
~ Wlllillals 'and Mi~y . C. 'Williams,

....... B.
r D,ivorc:u grant111f Edith Ann

' ,.,:

. lllni!l-~~~~~~·
~; r u.;nia E, . .......... y ,rom
Willllm.O. Ramacy Sr., Marc~ 20.

j

,7~
"
, ,.,.
0

o

I

good adoption system in the state of
Ohio that's not so fraught with delays
and inconsistencies and so on," he
said.
The bill, sponsored by Rep Cheryl
Winkler, R-Cincinnati, was the culmination of five years of work by the
Ohio Adoption Task Force spearheaded by Ohio's first lady Janet
Voinovich. "When I got into office in
1991 , Ohio's adoption system was
inconsiste nt from county to county
and downright ineffective," the governor said. "Many people just quit
because the system was filled with
red tape."
The bill Voinovich signed into law
decreases the time a child waits for

an adoptive hom~. develops
statewide standards for adoptive procedures, implement safeguards for
adoption procedures and improves
access to adoption information.
Under the law, all essential parts of
the adoption process are now standard in all 88 counties across Ohio.
For Ross County, the new adoplion laws mean a better reservoir of
information about the 1,771 children
currently available in Ohio, said Anita Kefgan, director of the county:s
children services agency. "It's a better flow of information and it'll
enable us to stay on top of the situalion better," she said.
Kefgan said she liked the bill 's

there is not an adoptive ho~;
provisions eliminating hurdles for
ready
•·
foster parents wanting to adopt "It
requiring
that
the
psychological
•
rep~sents i real change. We're saying now that we can let our foster par- attachment between foster child and
parent be seriously considered in
ents be adoptive parents," she said.
Key provisions of the law include: adoptive placement decisions.
• defining identifying information;
• requiring a motion for pennanent
for access once.
custody hearings filed by prospective with clear procedures
I
'
adoptee
becoiJIIls
an
adult,
as well as
parents to be heard within 200 days .
• allowing for .a foster parent or protections for any party to prohibit
relative of a child with temporary sharing of information.
• establishing registry for unmarcustody to immediately file for perried fathers to ~limi nate post-plac~­
manent custody.
'
• prohibiting delaying placement mcnt disputes.
• requiring clarity l'rom the court
-based on race of the prospecti:ve
when
a child is labeled dependent.
.adoptive family.
.
.
•
establishing
"best interest" cri• preventmg placement of a child
in long term foster care solely teria-for court consideration at adoption• finalization.
I

The city of Toledo owns the land,
which it had purchased in 1987 but
' had been unable to annex because of
community opposition.
When Toledo bought the property, no one knew it was the s ite of the
battle that opened the Midwest to
white settlers and closed it to American Indians.
But last summer, Michael Pratt, a
Heidelberg College anthropology
professor and historian, discovered
that the battle took place on the land
- about a mile north of where historians had thought it happened.
Pratt 's discovery came after
researching the battle for I0 years. It
also included an archaeological dig of
the site, which turned up several battle artifacts.
Some of the land is heavi Iy wooded, just like it was when the battle
was fought in 1794. Maumee officials
and historians would like to tum the
battlefield into a national park honoring those who died in the fight.
ODOT spokesman Howard Wood
said the battle site "just was not close

enough lo heing a transportation
type of project" to qualify for the
grant.
Paulcen said talks were continuing with the National Park Service about
designatillg the battlefield as a national park or a national park affiliate, He
said the city should have an answer
by July.
Toledo Mayor Carty Finkbeiner

The following cases were resolved
Wednesday in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Patrie~ H. O'Brien:
Jason A. Riggs, Rutland, speed,
$30 plus costs; Glassco Fairrow II,
Pomeroy, seat helt, $15 plus costs;
Chris Ward, Dayton, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Timothy Gilbride, Racine,
assured clear distance, $20 plus costs;
Vickie Billingsley, Middleport,
domestic violence, $100 suspended,
costs, 30 days jail suspended, two
years probation; Keith . Petrie,
Pomeroy, 'domestic violence, $100
suspended, costs, 30 days jail sus- pended, two years probation;
Dennis G. Little, Pomeroy, speed,
$22 plus costs; seat belt, . $25 plus
costs; Pamela S. Shields, Coolville,
speed, $33 plus costs; Harold R.
Williams, Reedsville, littering, $100
suspended to $25 plus costs; David
A. Park, Pomeroy, underage consumption, costs, three days jail suspended, probation, 40 hours community service;. William A. Smith,
Pomeroy, underage consumption, $50
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended,
probation, 40 hours community service;
Dwain H. Edwards, Rutland, driving under the inHuence, $500 plus
costs, I0 days jail suspended to three
days, 90-day operator's license suspension, one year probation: James T.
Ray, Albany, $500 plus costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three days, 90-day
OL suspension, one year probation,
$250 of fine and jail suspended upon
completion of residential treatment

program; George W. Reitmire.
Pomeroy, underage consumption,
$100 suspended, costs, three days jail
suspended, probation, 40 hours community service;
Timothy W. Chaffee, Reedsville,
DUI. $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day OL
suspension, one year probation, $250
of fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment progr;un; Alfred C. Smith, Pomeroy, failure to control, $25 plus costs; Gregory P. Garretson II, Rutland, DUI,
$500 plus costs, I0 days jail suspended to three days, 90-day OL suspension, one year probation, $250 of
fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment program: no OL, SI00 plus costs, three
days jail suspended if valid OL presented within 60 days, one year probation;
James M. Creamer, Athens, speed,
$25 plus costs; Walter Haggy, Middleport, driving under financial
responsibility action suspension,
$200 plus costs, two years probation,
si~ months jail suspended to IOdays
if valid OL presented within 60 days;
failure to control, $25 plus costs;
speed, $24 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; John L. Ridenour, Racine,
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90 day OL
suspension, one year probation, $250
of fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment program.

.'By KEVIN KELLY
.Time..s.ntlnel slarr
•: GALLIPOLIS - Producers
~ Livestock Association has' planned
, the first auction for its new opera~ tion off Jackson Pike for April 17,
· officials announced Friday.
• : n.e stockyard has been the sub:ject of a legal and procedural battle
'y nearby homeowners who want' ed the facility moved, citing health ~=~~;J;;:;;;
and environmental concerns. Protests
currently on file with the state Environmental Pro:tection Agency.
. • : PLA officials have maintained the stockyard is en vi~rpnmentally sound, and local PLA manager Brian Hamilron said recendy the company has gone "a step or two
.above and beyond what the EPA has ordered."
' The inaugural auction is expected to begin with feeder cattle and proceed to fed cattle, cows, bulks, calves,

:are

Great Deals Are Popping
Op All Over At

DON TATE .· MOTOR

II Y

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51500 on 2 Dr.

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Models
Save 51000 on 4 Dr Models
· Sever(l# to pid from

1996 CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
2000 miles,

IE~ather,

1995 .CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
'

1995 OLDS ACHIEVA or 1995
PONTIAC GRAND AM or .1995 BUICK
SKYLARK YOUR CHOICE

$11,995
1995 CHEVY LUMINA MINI VAN
OR 1995 GMC SAFARI
Both Loaded- V-6, PW, PL. More

$15,995

Land transfers recorded
The following ian~ transfers were L. Dailey and Heather A. Dailey to
recorded recently in the office of Jim Walter Homes Incorporated, RutMeigs County Recorder Emmogene land;
Hamilton:
Deed, Sharry, Sharon K. and
Deed, Kimherly S. Michael, Kim- William R. Edwards to William R.
berly S. Pickens, Charles E. Michael Edwards, Columbia parcel;
Jr. to Brian E. and Rebecca R.
Deed, Beulah W. Hem to Hope .
Durham, Sutton, 3.02 acres:
Baptist Church, Middleport lot:
•
Deed, Emma Lee Bird and
Deed, Virginia M. Sayre to Hope .
Michael D. and Genevieve Bird Baptist Church, Middleport lot:
Rush, Lctan parcels;
Deed, Beulah M. Hem and Vir- ·
Right of way, Barbara and Billy ginia M. Sayre to John K. and PatriVancooney to Tuppers Plains-Cllester cia A. Arnold, Middleport lot;
Water District, Lebanon, 1.241 acres;
Deed, Willard and Judy Miller to
Deed, Ziba and Sylvia Midkiff to Dorol.hy M. Roach, Middleport, one
Cecil and Emilia Midkiff, Bedford acre;
parcels;
Deed, RobertS. and Mary,Maxine
Deed; Steven L. and Wanda R. Marcinko to Eric S. Sr. and Mlllvina
Jacobs to Charles T. and Dottie F. M. Marcinko, Orange, 40 acres;
Curtis, Sutton;
Deed, Malcolm E. and Donna J.
Deed, Mary Jo and David A. Bar- Guinther to Home National Bank,
ringer, Donald C., Larry L., Shirley Syracuse;
S. and Diane E. Roush to Robert Ray
Deed, Roland E. King to Robert E.
and Patricia Louise Harris, Chester Davis and Pamela Persons, Salisbury,
parcels;
2.1882 acres;
Deed, Russell Nottingham to
Deed, Larry A. an4 Sharon L.
Hazel Nottingham; Salem parcels;
Vanee to Richard A., Michael L. and
Deed, Sandra K. Marcinko to Timothy J. Vance, Scipio tracts;
·Otto A. Marcinko, Olive, 190 acres;
Deed, Raymond A. and Agnes
Deed, Randy and. Judy Hall to Joan Nelson to Rex Howard Jr. and
Marek A. Dupler. Olive;
Sara Jo Cheadle,. Columbia; ·
Deed, Freda M. Swan to James R.
Deed, Cut:tis J. Dailey and
and Faye Elaine Quillen, Rutland;
·Willadean Dailey, Columbia. one·
Deed, Clifford Jack and·Carolyn acre;
Vonon Bachner to Steven, Clirk , Deed, Ada Starcher to F~ers
Bachner; Middleport lot;
Bank &amp;: Savings Q&gt;., Chester parcels;
r&gt;eect, John and Pamela L. Hocan · Deed, Harold Ted and Randi
to Ruuell L. and Brenda S. Day,. Ganoe Gillette to Scott A. 'Bradley
Orange; one aere;
.
'
and Christina t . Stepjl, Bedford par. Deed, JeffetY B, 'Floyd, Michael· eel.

·'

Meigs County nets
another $622,564 for
flood-damaged roads
By TOM HUNTER
TlrMI•SenliMI Staff

•

IN STOCK &amp; READY fOR DELIVERYI

$19 995

Vol. 31 , No.7

tri-state area," said Hamilton, a Wilmington area native who has been with PLA
since 1993. "It will be a great benefit for
area farmers tp have a viable market
nearby."
Gallia County has been without a
stockyard since the Gallipolis Stockyard
Co. burned on Oct. 3, 1991 and was later
closed, forcing area breeders to sell and
buy livestock at Hillsboro and Parkersburg, W.Va.
Although a ground-breaking ceremony was held last July for the stockyard,
construction did not get underway until
READIED FOR USE - The holding pena at the new p~
the fall. An opening was expected as Livestock Auocletlon atockyerd ule bam off Jecaon Pika lire
early as February, but Hamilton recently being readied for un In the first auction, nt for Apr1117. The atocll_told a local service organization that "bad yard, the subject of nearby raaldante' objactlona, 11 opening later
weather .conditions this winter forced a than expected due to wtntar weather, manager Br:tan Hamilton IBid. ! ··
later opening."
C. H. McKenzie Agricultural Center since late last year,
Hamilton has been working out of an office at the making contacts with local livestock breeders.

GALLIPOLIS -The deal thai ended a crippling strike at two General
Motor~pWS plants allO'!fS the
_ United Auto_Workers..upj,on to claim it
·~ar·Pl~'~s ·of jotis (ilr.lll!!llllt*s 'in:Ohio. · '!&lt;'r
• ~Jio.i0/4"41_.,..
· It lets GM continue to uie ' 'out5burcing" as a tool in its ~plllgn
·
lower costs and greater productivity.
• It also mean~ that thousands ofother companies tl!llt depend on General MOt~for business can begilr ba!:Jting away from 'production cuts and
layo'ffnnil stait trying to make up for revenue they lost becau!C of the virl tual shulllown of OM vehicle assembly in North America.
.
:
Laid off employees at tlie Gallipolis division of BorgWarner automotive
1 have been directed to return to work beginning tonight. ·
"BorgWamer-Gallipolis will resume nonnal operations beginning with
the midnight shift Sunday ac II p.m.," product line manager Michael
Wollerman said in a statement released Saturday mn.minl!.
"All employees should return \0 the classification
on prior.to the layoff on March IS. Any employee w·~~ ...
ently will be notified by the BorgVy'amer personnel ~riil11me•••A total of I t 4 workers - 91 hourly and
23 salaried - were furloughed by BorgWarner during the strike against GM. The
layoffs represented 50 percent of the Gal!ipolis division's total wort force.
· The walkout forced closings at GM
assembly plants as they ran out of what was
)nade at [)ayton. Then it forced cutbacks at parts plants that supply the
115se"'bly plants.
·
. Analysts_estimated .it would cost the world's largest automaker hunsecond-quarter statistics.
ilreds of millions of dollars in short-term profits.
Diane Swonk, an economist with First Chicago NBD Corp., says the
· : Many other vendors to GM also will feel a profit pineh. For example,
strike
may reduce gross domestic product growth by three-quarters of a
Ryder System Inc., the nation's largest car hauling company, said Friday
percentage
point in the first quarter.
·
ihal irs first-quarter eanlings would fall short of year-ago levels primarily
"If
it
all
shows
up
(in
the
quarter),
ii
will
take
growth
down
close to
because of the strike. GM is Ryder's largest customer. m Industries, a
Jl!\liOr pins ntaker; said its first-quarter operating .incbme would be zero," she said.
But as GM resumes operations and boosts production to make up for
reduced by about $30 million, but that it expected to recover all but $10
what
was lost, the economy will be pushed ahead in the second quarter.
million to $12 million during the rest of the year.
Swonk
fO!'ecasts a growth rate of about 3 percent.
· : 'lbC·-strikc's effects on the nation's economy will show up in first- and

4x4 ext cab, 3rd door aocess, auto. air, cass, tilt,
cruise, PL. PW, &amp; more.

V-8, loaded, leather

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II.! hogs, sheep and goats. Weekly
auctions will be held every
Wednesday, Hamilton said.
"The modern sale barn
·: should allow for easy and efficient handling of livestock
. from unloading at the drive• , " ·.: through trailer docks to send· ing the livestock to the buyer 's
.(. ·. destination," he added.
The Gallipolis operation,
PLA's 21st in Ohio and Indiana, is based out of a 25,000
square foot building on land leased to PLA from the Gal lia County Agricultural Society. The facility will hold
700 head of livestock, Hamilton said.
·
He added that a grand opening ceremony has been set
for April 13 and will include an ox roast and tours of the
facility.
''The support for this market has been outstanding,
both on the local level as well as throughout the larger

Borg Warner
~resumes normal
ioperations tonight

1996 CHEVY K-1500 PICKUP

$31,625

mt

Gallipo lis • Mid dl epo rt • Pom eroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 24 1996

·End of strike leads to local recall:

1-992-6614 1-800-837-1 094

all power, V-8

•

_Stockyard set to open amid .c ontinuing protest

Spring Has Sprung!

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

Details on
pageA2

'PLA raises gavel on first auction·

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Meigs County Court

Downsizing's ups ·a nd downs . Page o1

tmts A Gann ett Co New s paper

HI: 801
Low: 20s

.

•

said he would he would be willing to Indian resistance. Within a year, h~
had negotiated the Treaty of
sell or trade the land to Maumee.
Greenville,
which opened about twoOn .Aug. 20, 1794, Gen. "Mad"
Anthony Wayne defeated a con fed- thirds of southern Ohio to settlers.
· Until the battle, the government
eracy of Indian warriors at Fallen
Timbers. The battle· took less than had heen negqtiating with Indians fm:. ·
two hours. Fifty people were killed use of the Northwest Territory,. which
and I00 were wounded.
included what is now Ohio. Indiana,
Wa~e 's victory broke the spirit of Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin.

Gea

'

• Featured on page C1

Maumee continues efforts to buy site of historic battle
MAUMEE (AP) - The city will
continue looki ng for money to buy
180 acres where the Battle of Fallen
Timbers was fought more than 200
years ago, the mayor said.
Mayor Steve Pauken said .Thursday he was disappointed the city had
lost its bid for a $1 .9 million grant for
the land. which could be turned iillo
a national park.
"We're going to look for other
so11rces of funding. I don 't know
where and I don't know what. But I
do know that there 's money out
there somewhere, " Pauken said.
He said the Maumee Valley Her-itage Corridor, a nonprofit historical
group, will help the city find money.
That may include asking the public
for donations.
Last year, the Toledo suburb
applied for the federal grant under a
program designed for historic , scenic
and pedestrian transportation projects. But the Ohio Department of
Transportation, which administers
the grant, rejected the city's application this week.

S1

NCAA hoop action . Pa~e a1

High-tech
courthouse:

r

By AARON MARSHALL
Gannen News Service
COLUMBUS - A major overhaul of the child adoption process
aimed at simplifying the proceedings
and boosting the numher of children
placed with families was signed into
law Thursday by Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich.
Voinovich said the legislation
should increase the number of children placed with families in Ohio. "I
don't know if you can say it's going
to discourage abortion. But I think it's
just another step in creating an environment in this state where women,
!think, will be more likely to choose
to have a baby if they know there 's a

lll'ilde

POMEROY - The Federal
Public Assistance Program has
released an additional $622,564
to Meigs County for repair and
construction of roads damaged
·
flooding in six
to:,:~~::·~~;.i~ac~c:ording to Meigs
County
Robert H. Eason.
.
Meigs
authorities were officially notified of the additional federal funding Friday .
"We wouldn't have been able to have any shot at this funding , had it not
heen for the great cooperation between our office and the other county
offices. Everyone has pulled together and has done a super job," said Eason.
The county engineer specifically cited a cooperative effort among the
local emergency planning committee headed by Meigs County Emergency
Services director Robert Byer, the Meigs County Commissioners, and township trustees.
To date, the county has received $1 ,189,623 in federal and state emer.~
gency f~nding for repairs of roads and highways damaged during the Janu:
ary Hood emergency.
:
Townships which will benefit from the latest dispersal of federal emer- _
gency aid include : Chester ($67,469), Letart ($98,357), Olive ($185,000};·
Rutland ($147,769), Scipio ($16,060), and Sutton ($107,882). .
:
Friday's announcement follows the March 15 announcement that Meigs :
County received $567,059 in federal and state funding for repairing over 36 ;
miles of damaged highway on 15 county roads.
Nearly 20 miles of damaged highway on Happy Grove Road, Pomeroy :
Pike, Aatwoods Road, Oak Grove Road, Pine Grove Road, and Morning :
Star Road will receive two-inch lifts and be patched throughout this ~pring :
and summer.
,
Plans also call for double sealing and patch repair for Roy Jones Road, :
Bearwallow Ridge, and Swindell Road , Eason said .
,
Bowman's Run Road, Apple Grove Road , Aood Road, and Burlingham •
Road will also be repaired with the emergency funding, allocated under the :
13-county southeast .Ohio federal emergency declaration signed in January :
by President Clinton.
Recently completed slip repair work on Pomeroy's Union Avenue was :
that was also budgeted into the Federal Emergency Management funding :
request, while the road will also receive a two-inch lift and patch late this :
spring, according to Eason.
. --:
•

••
(;remeans vot~s .t o repeal r-----------~----------------------------------~----------------------------------------------_.···
.
News ca,psules
Good Morning .••
•
assault-style weapons ban
•

Feds press drive against student loan defaults

: WASHINGTON- Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, joined 10 other
Today's ttimn-Jamliul
•
WASHINGTON (AP) - The government on Fri- in America- part of its press to drive down the num·
O~io Republican laWmakers Friday in voting to repeal the two-year-old ban
16 Sections- 144 Pages
•
••
day
the loan default rate for every school her of bad student loans foisted on taxpayers.
on assault-style weapons.
1
,,. ·: · ·
·
But the head of·a school at ihe top of Ohio's default
•
·
Of the members' of the Ohio delegation to the House, II
.•
Calendars
cz
list said the percentages the Education Department
Republicans voted for the repeal, while two members of.
• .
C!assifleds
the GOP voted against lifting the ban. Five Democrats ·
published are misleading.
03-7
•
Warren County Career Center in Lebanon , Ohio,
voted against repeal .
Comjcs
Josert
•
•
got a state-topping 50 percent default rate because it
A spokesman for Cremeans, Barry Bennett, said of the
Editorials
M
congressman's vote, "The Constitution is . pretty clear.
processed two federally guaranteed student loans in
••••
Obituaries
A6
There is a right 'to bear arms, not j~t the ones that (Presi1991 and one student defaulted.
•
Sports
B1 -8
•
"It does make it look like every other student rundent) Clinton says are•OK." ,
•
ning around here is a deadbeat, " Superintendent Ed
Wea!l!er
•
Despite the House's approval of a bill to repeal the bail
A2
Perkins said, citing that as one reason the school has
on sale of assault-style.weapons, any similar attempt in the
••'
•·
since dropped out of the loan program.
Senate seems unlikely. An opponent ofthe repeal declared
,-"'
.;_
Columns
The center- a public vocational high school that
it
also provides classes to about 2,500 adults - tied
: "I don't think it will be up in the Sepate this year," Senate Majori-ty
"
Jack Anderson
M
with Scott College of Cosmetology in Steubenville
Uader Bob Dole, the Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting, said
~
Bob H~k;b
CS·
and Vogue Beauty Academy in ,Cleveland Heights for
hours after the repeal passed the House on a ~39- 173 vote Friday.
~...- '
Ohio's highest default rates.
- ~~ '
: Sen. Dianne Feinstein, 0-Calif., who prOdded the Senate into including
Jim Sanc!s
C1
Officials at Vogue, the another Ohio school with a
the ban in the 1994crime law, said the repelll would' be ·.~dead 011 arrival."
Dorothy Sure
· Cl
-·A· "
SO percent default rare, did not return a call seeking
· s~ said she has sufficient commitments from colleagues to mount a sue· Ohio Valley Pubtiahiaa Co.
••
comment.
. ce5sful filibuster or to sustain a promised v~to by President Clinton should
•
the measure get tlvoush the Senate. The House vote fell well short of the
tl!{j)-thirds majority needed to override a Veto.
studi~s
· Dole had promised the National Rifle Association last year that he would
"They will compliment each other," he added.
·
·
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Unused dormitories at Lakin Hospital
prOduce ·a vote on repeal~ but he signaled achange ?f ~ .Thursday by saymight
soon
become
the
site
for
a
200-bed
women's
prison
.
Hun
told
the
Charleston
Gazette
a
shortage
of
bCds
for
women
inmates '
ing.a vote was "not a pnOi'tty" and he .wu not opumasuc at would pass. •
·
Mason
County
EConomic
Development
Authority
Director
John
Musis
prompting
swe
officials
into
exploring
the
possibility
of
the
move.
•t.nya M•ku, the NRA's chief lobbyist. held out hope that the Senate
grave said Friday that community leaders met with West Virginia Correc- Hun estimated the conversion could be made for about $S million, includ·
w~l act. "We're aoina to try working with the leadership in the Senate, as
ing $2 million for renovations and $3 million for operating costs the fust
tions Commissioner Nicholas Hun recently to discuss the venture.
w• worked with the leader1hip in the House to get this issue to the Ooor."
Musgrave
emphasized
that
if
the
prison
is
located
on
the
Lakin
site,
the
year. Building a new prison would cost approl\imately $13 million, he
:Lifting the ban on 19 specific styles o.f fireanns, dozens of similar modadded.
e14 and larse-capaciry ammunition miiJazines is the top legislative priority , existing hospital or its staff will nor be threatened.
of·the NAA.
' '

..

...

."'

,.
~

All

Use~

Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.

Taxes and tlUe fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRive!

• All ·prlces include
rebates to de81er. ,
Taxes &amp; laea not
Included.

State

.,

OPEN

SUNDAY1-5

.

•

''

use of dormitories at Lakin Hospital for women's prison

-

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