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Clinton vetoes anti-abortion ·bill.
I

.

WASHINGTON (AP) ,- With his the procedure late in their pregnan· this fall .
ton had "disappointed and .deeply
. veto of an anti-abortion bill, President cies. He stood with five women in the
'The.bill would ban a rarely used, offended one of the largest voting
Clinton ignited 'a firestorm of criti• ·Roosevelt Room as they spoke ~mo- late-tenn procedure referred to by blocs in the electorate. Bill Clinton
cistn from Roman Catholic bishops tionally Wednesday about the severe · some doctors as "intact dilaiion and has done more today than jeopardize ·
and Christian conservatives, as well fetal defects that prompted them .to ev.acuftion. '' It involves partially the lives of unborn children, he has
as ·an election-year attack from Bob have an abortion.
extracting a fetus, legs first, through jeopardized his own chances of reDole.
.
"1 didn't make the decision for my the birth canal, cutting an incision in election."
Dole, Clinton's Republican pres· child . to die," said Vikki .Stella of the barely.visible skull base and then
Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston, "
idential rival, said the president has Naperville, Ill. "God made the dcci· draining the brain, causing the skull chainnan of the Committee for Pro- .
embraced "the extreme position of sion for my child to die." She said her to ~ollapse.
Life Activities of the National Con~ •.
those who support abortion · at any unborn son had nine major disorders,
Clinton said the procedure is a ference of Catholic. Bishops, also :
time, at any place and .for any rea- including a fluid-filled cranium .with "potentially lifesaving, cenainly denounced the vetd.
.
son:•
no brain tissue.
health-saving" measure for "a small
"We strongly urge ConJress to
Yet, Clinton said Congress was
The women's stories put a human ·but extremely vulnerable group of override~tllis indefensible presidential
.
trying
to
make
"political
pawns"
out
face; on a wrenching debate likely to women and families in this country, · veto and to begin to bring a modicum
Meigs COunty recelv8cl $272,337 In flood re!let funda Wednea- ·
of women who risked serious health· be carried from Congress and the . just a few hundred a year."
ofsanity to the abortion debate in oyr
dey •• •: result of wlcleeprelld flooding In January•.The money
consequences unless thev underwenl White House to the campaign trail
will be u~ to rtpalr county road damaged aa a result of the
The Christian Coalition said Clin· society," he said.
flooding. County Engli"IMI' Robert Euon, left, gives the check
to County Auditor Nancy Cllmpbell while hlghwiy depertment
oflice manllgll' Dave Spencer looks on. Eason Aid another clleck
. , for $214,8!41~ IJ!IIO due, for rtpalrs to Pomeroy Pike, Fl•~oocie
•nd Apple Grove roAdl. The funding wae chllnrielecl throuph the .
Ohio Department of Public S.fety.

~Businessmen

told passage
"of tort reform bill not certain
COLUMBUS (AP) ~Republican ference committee. .
state legislative leaders have told the
"This is a battle that no one knows
Ohio. Chamber of Commerce it exactly .what is going to happen,"
should incf(lase iJs lobbying if it said the Senate leader. He predicted
wants a·strong tort reform bill passed floor debat~ feaiiJ1"ing ~·amendment
this session.
after amendment after amendment,
:'fhiiHouse-passedmeasure which ' and horror story after horror story
would place a ceiling on punitive and after horrQI' story."
noneconomic damages in civil suits
Tht: business1:'hmmunity says it is
,f~s f01111idable opposition, Sen~te behjg·sgueezed by costly lawsuits,
Preside~tStanle~.Aro~andH~u~ but tn~l !~.WYo/\·,~.,!l~~,m~r·:·'
SfiCMCer lo Ann Daflil!i~~told tile groups are · flghtmg Repubt,can'
chamb4;r1s ' ·annual meeting on attempts to limii,.dama~
· awardS and
"'·•ncsdav
. t" h
.f .
" ·" ".
r
.
res net t e process or overy.
"Our caucus would like to have a _ As passed by the House the bill
b.ll ;, A · rr ·d fh' 20he - •
· . .
. ·
.n~-, blmno.des a1 o IS "I mem t r also aDoWSJUnes lo cons1der collat·
1
""pu Jean
egahon.
expec a ·era! benefits such as msurance in
(
b'll
f h
.
'
!Sort re orm 1 . t_o com~ out do .t e awardmg damages, and seJs a 15-year
enate a! some g1ven pomt. 1 o not statute of limitations on recovery of
expect it to run smoothly."
damages for injuries or illnesses
1bc bill, sponsored by Rep. Pat
Aronoff said the issue in the SenTiberi, R-Columbus, cleared the ate may be even more partisan than
•44 "' b 7 d ·
... ·
Hou_se 5.,..
on re . an IS now m in the House that Democrats may
·tt
h
dedb
.'
.
~ se liSe
ec na.te comm1 ee ea
Y oppose the bdl as a bloc, dependmg
Sen. Bruce E. Johnson, R-Columbus. on how many amendments are
·.
A · ff 'd he 1h s 1
ro~ohedSlU h wh . bn 11 ,e ena et accepted.
fi
gels 1ms
wn I e I • II may no
Davidson urged the business exec'
resell!ble the Hou!ie version. He.said utives to' check votes on amendments
a variety of iunendn\ents may have to in the House to find out who their
be added to get support and the bill friends are arid not to rely on the final
may end up in a Senate-House con· h bvote on t e 111 ·

·Jobless claims
across America
level
hit lowest
'
since January

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Newe Sllff

Legislators, not .
courts should
establish school ·
funding formula .

-Fairda

.

COLUMBUS (AP) Gov. ·
George Voinovich said having a court
set'the parameters for school assistance w®ld erode local control and
'could reduce state aid.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of first-ti,me claims for job·
less benefiJs fell by 59,000 last week
to the lowest level since January as·
the effecJs of the now-ended General Moiors strike continue&lt;~ .to wane.
The Labor Department said today
new applications for unemployment
insurance totaled a seasonally adjusted 347,000, lowest since 316,000
applications were file&lt;l during the
week ended Jan.. 13. The drop w~

Voinovich and majority Republi- .
can state legislative leaders filed .
b~efs with the Ohio Supreme Court
on Wednesday, contending it'is the
job of the Legislature. and not the
courts, to set Ohio's public school - .
funding formula.
.
'1bc governor and the lawmakers . ·
also asked the justices to affinn an · :
appellate ci:il!rt &lt;dCcj$lQIJ Jiotilbig ffie .
state's sch5Kil funding 'syst'em'corisii- :
tuiional.

~~=~~~i:~~~=dcclinedur· ,

r·

· lbe'tom)ilf' w lai
~ all . th · h~~3s6· ol};;
1 many.
smal eJsr hadan 1. e ••.i
an ys
expec...,..
Claims had · mped 10 433 !d)
d · be
.kJu ded ,:, h •
unng t wee en
,.. arc 2 3 as
the effecJs of the strike,' which ended 1 1 · th
th
ad
1
a e m e mon , spre to re at·
ed industries such as automotive
art
r 111c be
fall the
s
s~pp
Jers:k·
y
gan
to
0 11
;;mg ~ee ' be
h
· ·
tel re f av~
en. ott eborrSigns
recen y o an 1mprov1ng a mark 1 Th depanm
rted 1 F ·
e. e
entrepo
astnday ·that 140,000 new jobs were
add d · M h ' 11 · h
·
em . arc •oowmgtecreation of 624,000 a month earlier.
· Th ~
k
·
f
e o~r-~e~l mo~J~g avelrag~ 0
~e~ we~ y JO. ~ss ~:.mt' a so .ek11

:S

Separate briefs were filed by
Voinovich, Seriate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and House
~peaker lo Anil Davidson, RReynoldsburg.
.
Th~ plaintiffs in the case, a coali· ;
tion made up of most of Ohio's 611 ·
school districJs, can respond before
the court hears oral arguments.

f

dun!'~ t : pel n250 en393 OOOast !wee ' .

roppmg Y • to
• · twas
the lowest since, the average stood at

.-Merchants discuss projects ~~~3~uring the period ended
·
· b eaut"f"
t•
Many analysts prefer to track the
1.OWn
.f or d. OWn
I IC8 1011 tess-votatite four-week average
,.
because it smooths ouJ the spikes in

L

The Ohio Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding, which
A new prog111m gurecl to Increasing attend•nce It the Melge
won the first round _in 1994 i.n Perry
COunty Felf 11 being ·ln111atlld by the Melga County Agriculture
County Common Pleas Court.butlost
Society. Elich dlly wiH be aponeored by a buslneu lnd thtJt bull·
·a subsequent appeal jn 'A,ugust, wants
nese will be promoted In 11111ny of the •ctlvltln et the f•lr th•t
the justices to declare Ohio's school
funding system unconsJitutional.
day. As • result of the' eponiorehlpa, children •ttendlng during
It also .wants the high court to
certtlln hour• will be edmlttlld at • reduced chllrge •nd In IIOIIIe
lnmncea given tokane for UH et the a~eorlng bualneaHI.
declare education the fundamental
Chilek Kitchen of D•Iry Oue«&lt; BI'IIZiar, Middleport, owned by
right of every child in Ohio and to
Chuck •nd Lynn Kitchen, algn •n •greemant to eponeor
order the Legislature to providC adeWlldneadlty at the Melga County F•lr. Pictured with Kitchen ers
,
o.n
Smith,
prnlclent,
left, •nd Eddie Holter, vice preeldlln_
t. _ _. . school
quate and
equal .unding to the 611
___
..;.;.._
_______________
...._
districts.

:
.
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needed, she said.
the weekly reports.
.
.
Fisher said that plans are still in
Design plans for downtown be;m- tlie approval stage and the actual
Lifi~ation t~gh plantings of flower downtown plantings are noi expectand shrubs were presented by Sarah ed to get underway until June. She
Fisher, chai.rman, at Wednesday· 's encouraged individual businesses to
JORDAN, Mont. (~)- Ranch- . state lawmen, "haven't shot anybody recogniZ4l state property laws, keep- the government is refusing to sign ·
er
K.L.
BtJ·ss s'ays he doesn't "Lnow yet
.Jileeting of the Pomeroy Merchants put out planters along tlie sidewalk as
· ' that's true · But the·'y've hurt me ing the ranchers from getting the land over $48,000 in payments that were
Association.
a way of jlllaking the village more whether to laugh or cry when he plenty, and a lot of other people too," or the financing needed to pay for it. supposed to go with the land. Bliss
11te standoff has complicated mat· had counted on that money to help '
· the strip along the piuting lot and attractive and asked for more police hears people say the Freemen haven't Bliss said Wednesday.
hurt
anyone.
Bliss
and
other
ranchers
last
year
ters
even more.
pay a bank loan for the property.
:
areas around the gaze!ws are t8rget· work downtown to curb vandalism to ·
Sipping coffee at his kitchen table
ed for plantings which will carry Ol!t improvements.
Members of the anti-government bought foreclosed property that had
Paperwork on the transaction has· :
a red and white color scheme. FishPomeroy &lt;:;ouncil President John group, holed up in their compound in been owned by the Freemen. The as storm clouds gathered outside, n't been completed, which means · · ·
er l'qlOrtcd.
Musser reported on the revitalization .a.n_t_s.-d..;ay;...stan_d..;off_w.it•h-th•e•F•B•I•an_d..,..m.il-itan_t..;grou;...,;.,P•..,.ho•w•e•v•er•••d•oe•s•n-ot Bliss, a 47-year-old catdeihan and Bliss may miss his only opportunity :
wheat grower, ruffi~ through a thick to have the land included in a new :
She said that all of the trees will project and noted that the village has
sheaf
of legal documents to explain federal farm subsidies program. · .
remain in place and the beds of flow- until Aug. 31 to complete the work.
his
pi'edi~nt.
ers will he developed along what is Extension to- that date was recently
"I guess you could say I'm a lit- :
c:ial
wbo
would
not
give
her
name.
Last
October,
he
paid
$493,001
at
CHEYENNE,
Wyo.
(AP)The
now the mulched. ;m:a. Circles of granted by the state, he said.
'tie upset at the situation," he said.
Jesslea, ac:companled by her • a foreclosure sale to buy a fann that
brick ·will be·placed around the kees
· Musser also reported that tlie 7-year-old Callfoi:nla girl attemptHe's not alone. Rancher Dean. :
arid planters will be hung on poles, application for funding for removat ing to .f ly across America crashed father and a ftlpt lnstrudo~ took ·had been owned by one of about 20 Clark bought a large chunk of fore- · : ·
peo~le now living at the Free!l'en :s closed land now occupied by
she added.
of utility poles along the bl!Siness side her plane this momln1 after tllldng otr Wednesday from Callfo~ia.
There were ao surnvon··
bamcaded compound. The fann 1s Freemen from his grandfather, . · •
To ke~p people from walkiri!l of Main Street has been rejected but off In rainstorm, oflk:lals said.
Radio
Slation
KING-FM
report·_
ne~
the 960-acre compound but not Emmett Clark: who als~t is living at . : .
Je5sica
Dubroff
look
off
at
8:ZS
through the flower beds, eight foet that other sources of funding are
ed
tbJt
the
plane
narrowly
~
_
on
Jt.
.
a.m.
during
a
rainstorm.
She
walkways from Main Street into the · being pursued .
'
the compound.
:
a
bOUle
crashing
Into
a
driveway.
But
the
pnor
owner owes the fedparking area will be developed. Trel-.
Several projecJs were discussed at crashed sh~y afterward, said a
Neighboring
ranchers
figW'C
Dean
:
·
'
.
·
·
eral
government
hundreds
of
thouCheyenne
Muaklpal
Airport
oM·
lis·tY)If;' structures will mark the the meeting including a spring art·
Clark has nnril May 20 to plant his. -.
sands of dollars in u~paid loans, so spring wheal oefore it's too late
walk-through areas. 1bc beautifica- show, and an herb fest and antique
tion plans are a part of the overall show to be held in conjunction with
downtown revitalization project.
the Stemwheel Festival in October. .
Fisher indicated that cost will be
The duck derby which this year
l!'inimal since most of the rnateriills has ' bee11 changed to Stern wheel
HELENA, Mont. (AP) - While · componeniS" that were found .
. Lowell's remark Wednesday was the
Various published reports have :
and flowen as well as labor are . weekend will be chaired by Jane and refusing to unseal a search wmant
"1bc presence o( these devices first Qfticial confirmation.
said Kac-zynski's cabin also yielded ·:
expec~ to~ ~onated, She sail! that Larry Banks. . As was previously for the Unabomber suspect's cabin, a caused some deliy in the execution
The original ciiminal complaint papers containing the.names of somr. . :.
is .in n-:e~ ?f !ISSi~~_Bnce iJ! Cll!!r·: decided, the Merchants Association federal judge gave the first on-the· of tjle warrant an~ the 'comple~on of released last week said only that the ' :Unabomber victiins, a live bomb sim- . •
mg out the m1hal plantmg8 as well as will hl\11dle the l:ostunie contest at the ·recQril cogfirmation thlit ' e~plosive the search," he said.
cabin containetl bomb components ilar 1o one used in 1! Unabomber ; .
· help in maiiltairling t~e beds. C.ash observance~ . .
· · · devices were found' there: . '
1bc New Y6rk 1imcs Co., Denver · and one' partially completed bomb, 10 attack and various toOls that ~ · ; ,
donations on the . project are also
Co~Umied on page 3
' U.S. District Judge Cbarles Lovell Posi Corp. and NBC had asked the three-ring binders full of bomb being compared to saraps of wire, . •
on We~nesday rejected a request judge to open. the file, arguina that sketches, and papers containing pipe wood and metal taken from the · ~.
from several news organizations•to there is-no li•k that evidence will be bomb experiments.
· Unabomber's devices.
~
unseal the warrant, saying he will . lost or witnesses·influenced. ·
Soutces also have reponed finding .
Kaczynski, a 53·y~-old former· :
CLEVELAfi.I).(AP) - . Om; tick- 'said. The discqunted sum, which is consider opening the ·file at "either
. But Lovell sided with federal a number of other items in Kiczyns· mathematics P!Ofessor, hu been :
et matched all six ni,lmbers in before taxes, . is what the lottery the concl~sion of the search or the prosecutors who argued there is no ki 's cabin, including type.writers charged with possessi~g ll?mb com- :
Wednesday night's $30 million Super would have invested expecting to pay return 9f a grand jury indicunent, First Amendment ript of access to authorities have tried to connect to ponenls found 1n the cabin but not •
Lotto drawing, the Ohio Lottery said. · the advertised amount in 26 install· whichever comes first."
~h warrant materials prior to an
the 35,()(J().word Unabomber mani- with any of the 16 Unabomber .;
1bc winnil!l ti~kct wu sold at·a ments.
,
·
· Lovell said Theodore Kaczyllllci's indictment. 1
fcstq that was published by The New auacks that, ovc~ !8 years, killed ;
BP gu station in Belpre.
,·
· '):be jackpot for Saturday's Super cabin . ~ had a "very thorough
, ThOU(Ih anonymous sources have Yqrk 1iines arid 1bc Washingto'l Post three people and
23 in nine _ .
• Tbewinnerc.h oseioJabthecash. · Lotto dra~jng will drop back to '$4 examination by X-ray equipment" told ~rs about a wmplcted in the Post. ·
.
.
states.
:
1
.
.
discount of $13,470,896, the lottery millioli,
bomb 'recovered from the cabin,
. ~atise
of
'explosive
devices
lind
.. '
.
. .
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Standoff complicates matters in Montana

Young pilot trying for record crashes

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Winning lottery .tickel sold 'in Bel.pre
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GOP attacks president

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thuraday, Aprll11, 1996

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CRUSH, HIRES

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WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

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Cle•r to~:;. windy.
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Kicker:

291 SECOND ST.
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FRESH . .

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Super Lotto:
3-19-24 u 48 47

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:Commenta'¥
The·Dally Se~tinel
'Esttl66sfrd in 1!J48
1114-4112-2158 • Fu: lt2-2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlatw

loiAAGARET LEHEW

Oenerll ....,..,

Controller

North Kor~a may have
picked wrong time for 'test'
ByTOMAAUM

Thurtday, Aprtl11,1198

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to~ king llac~:

cans?

OHIO Wee1ther
Frlct.y, April 1l
AgcuWe11~

Thou.shalt not _be smug

JUYS learn anything frQm Clinton's
dumb first two yean?
Thltt's not what you wen: s~
9.) Don't worry too much about
to le.-n from liberlls.) Conserva- intrapany warfare. There is no
tives believed their press clippings · apparent solution, other than the one
about how they were "the party of now in place: early front-loaded pri·
ideas. "Tiley believed the stuff about maries that get the internecine bile
how bright they were, about hQw out early, hopefully to be forgouen
they understood everything. They soon.
weren't. They didn't. Bright people
10.) If you believe that "moder·
in politics know they don't under- ate, Republican" is an oxymoron,
stand much.
•
then "majority Republican" will be.
6.) Don't stop the government
I 1.) Humble pie is political
again.
health food.
7.) The Democrats, the putative
LOOKING FORWARD:
party of "the little guy," may still be
12.) Don't overestimate Bill
the natural majority party in Ameri- Clinton. If he's so smart, such a
ca. Like crabgrass, Democrats can't great politician and .such a great
be stamped out Only when they campaigner, how come he's in the
screw up .. which is frequently •• ditch almo~t all the time?
can Jl,epublicans expect ro prevail.
13.) Don't believe that , great
8.) Do welfare first. Didn't you . debaters win political debates.

ority 8tld IIIICtimony are not good

Just a Y-IIQ. President Clinton
was _roulillely c:a1J_ed "irrelevant"
~ npe for ~cattn the I 996 olecbon. It was wd, by conservatia_nd others, th~t ~re was a "Repubhcan revoluuon underway. The
Democratic ..Party seemed destined
for the poht1~al . boneyard. They
wou~d lose aga.tn 1n the House, and
poss1bly hold only 40 or fewer Sen~te ~ts, ~reby. ~tting up a GOP
v~to·pr&lt;K]f m~JOnty. It reaj:hed a
potnt where Clinton gave a press
conference in which he said, in
effect, "I am relevant, really."
Today Chnton leads Robert Dole
by 10-15 percentage points. The
polls show more voters favoring
Democrats for the House than
Republicaris. The idea of a veto·
proof Senate for the GOP is quaint.
.What are the lessons for Republi-

polilical attilndes. (Conservatives:

.' '

14.) Remember Clinton·s.central
wlnerability. Recent polls show that
· 47 percont of Americans still regllll
Clinton as a liberal. When he won in
1992, thai figwe was 33 percent.
Only 17 percent of Americans selfidentify as lipcrals, running now at
the lowest rate 'ever in recent'American electoral history. ·
IS.) Running a campaign centered on "Clinton's character" will
demonstrate that Republicans have
little political character and less
· political shrewdness.
a.n Wal""l'*t, a Mnkft.ttow 111
lite
!nWpr'- IMtltU-, Ia
lite Mllhol' of • - booll. •.,..._ llaitar Molt." Md It lite float olllte --.k~~tic lelevlalon program, "Think ·

' ' ',,'

• ICOI!Mflbl,l~ 172' I
' ''''

W. VA.

~ I YWtP Af'JJI~ 8 AFa 1JMt5~ Rlaff/ttA'f
60T /tiD CO¥ .
.

__________ ____,

High-yi~ld funds·· are right for many

Br Dian Vujovleh

..

.
.
.
"We'll try to keep it about that size because .Fund. This fund has been around ft&gt;r 10 years and
Junk· bond funds got off to a great start this we'd rather know our names well than have too waS ranked No. 3 for the first quarter with a total
year, proving once again that one investof's trash · many narm!s," he says. · .
return of 5.5 I percent.
may bC al!olher's tre¥ure.
.
"I think ,that's an advantage we have over \he
Bart Geer, portfolio manager of that fund has
While most types of bond funds pclsted nega- big funds right now." .
·
. ·
an entirely,different management style. wbil~ this
tive returns for the first quarter of 1996, high·
Some of rpe sec'uirs this fund is currently over- · fund also has tts assets invested in communicay1eld bond funds had an average .total ret~m of weighted in include gaming issues,. telecommuni- tions, technology; paging and cable issues, Geer
2.79 percent, according tqLipper,Analytical Ser- cations, cable and paging.
keeps about 130 bonds in the fund's ponfolio. ·
vice~. In the No. I performance .,Osition was the
"Donald Trump paper was a star performet for
. "One of our caveats in style is that to do it
'Janus High Yield Fund, with a total return of7.3 us," says Speaker. "Trump had issued a bond nght you really have to . be fairly dive.rsified
percent.
,
.
with a 15,5 percent coupon last year that matured because of the credit risk," he says. "We tried
Ronald Speaker is the portfolio manageroftljc in 2005, sold at par ($100), and the bond went ~inf m?n: concentrated a few years ago, and that
Janus High Yield Fund, a small, new fu(ld wiih from par to $115."
.
dtdn t gtve us much credit protection."
only $2S million in assets. Speaker said one reaWhen it comes to selecting bonds Speaker says .
Because high-yield bond funds invest their .
son the fund has perfonned so well is·rpat the gen- he likes "odd ball ideas." One of them is Carr ass_ets in low-quality bonds, typically those with
cral market conditions for bonds started to Gottstein.
rattngs tn the B.category range, credit risk means
improve in late 1995 and continued into 1996.
That's the name .of a grocery store in Alaska that the issuers might not be able to pay off llieir
"High :yield has done so tDUfh better than that he says h~ a dominant market share because dc~t and CO)IId default on payments of principal ·
. everybody· else because the spread• over Trea- · no one else can get the"re.
or Interest.
·
suries was attractive," explains Speaker.
Another is Mother'~ Work, ·a maternity-wear . Along with .credit risk comes volatility and
"High-yield honds were yielding II t'ercent store that recenily compleied a consolidation with mterest rate risks. But in spite of the risks high:
altd Treasuries 6 t)ercent. .The reason w~y tlw,t Pea-in-a-Pod. He's also expecting big things from yield bonds and bond funds do offe; their
spread was extra w1de was bJ the fourth quarter o~ the Selmer bonds in the portfolio. Selmer is in the rewards.
·
1~5 interest rolies really fell ~nd those on high- music business and pwns Steinway pianos and
"High-yield funds are still kind of the Rodney
yield bonds didn 't .move ·as much. So high yield Ludwig drums.
DangerfiFid of the investment universe," says
"Mr. Holland's Opus was a big benefit for this . Geer. . "And while they are not for everybody,
lagged in the fourth quarter, and it outperformed
in the first quarter of this year."
company," says Speaker. "There•s a burst of little !hey are probably for more people than recognize
You won't find a lot of bonds in the !anus High kids . now entering their band-eligible years, and 11 when you look at the risks and rewanls."
Yield Fund. Speaker's investment strategy is to they are buying instruments and the movie helped
Dian Vujovlch Ia lite aulhor of ''811
Talk
concentrate on different sectors of the market, Selmer out."
About Mutual F.unda" Md "lltralallt ,.. Alli9Ut '
keeping the total number of issues in '·the fund's
Another high-yield fund off to an impressive• lnv.dilg lor , _ Re... IIMIII," ..... of whlcll . .
publlabed bf McGraw Hll. llaild CfU'!MIIOn• to her In
portfolio limi~. to about 30.
start was the State Street Research High Yield CMN
of lhla -.pllpW.

T

••

Aldena M. Welsh

40s to lower 5(\s.
Saturday...Showers likely and a
Southeastern Ohio
••
Today...Sunny. High .in the mid chance of thunderstornis...fupecially
70s. West wmd 10 to 15 mph and north. Highs from the mid 50s ·far
nonh to the upper 60s southeast.
gusty ..
Sund11y ... A cltance of showers and
Tonight...Ciear. Low in the mid
50s. Southwest wind around I 0 mph. thunderstorms. Lows in the 40s ·to
Friday... Mostly sunny. High near . around:50 far south. Highs mid 50s
north to mid 60s south.
80.
Monday... A chance of rain. Lows
Extended forecast
Friday night...Showers likely,and . mid 30s. to mid 40s. Highs mid 40s
a chance of thunderstorms. Lows mid . to mid 50s.
,

I

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Sorority to meet
Building meeting slated
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
The Southern Loc~l Building
Sigma
Phi Sorority, will meet tonight
Committee will meet tuesday, 7:30
· p.m. at Southern Loc'ai .High School at 7 p.m. at the Episcopal Parish
in Racine to discuss, a proposed dis- House.
trict-wide K-8 elementary school. All
district re~idents are urged to attend. Lodge meeting scheduled
Shade B.iver.453, F&amp;AM, Chester
will meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. with
Shoot scheduled
A kids' gun shoot will be held work in .the entered appr~ntice
Sunday, I p.m. at the Americll" degree. Refreshments will be served.
Legion farm on Bailey Run Road.
Those under 16 will shoo!' .410 and Post offi~ extends hours
The Pomeroy Post Office will
20 gauge.
hav~ extended hou~ Monday for late
filers of income tax forms. The winDance to be held
A round and square dance will be dow will be open until 10 p.m.
held Saturday at the Tuppers Plains
VFW, 8 to II p.m. Music' wi,ll be by
"Out9fthF ,~Iue" wilb Jim Brqwn .as ...

Stocks ·

: COLONY THEATRE :

Bob Evans .......~··•••••••••••••"•••15\

Continued from page 1
Karin Johnson, county tourism
. director, and Bernice Brumfield , new
secretary for the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerc.l'• talked .to t.he
merchants about welcommg actiVI_tles
for new residents and businesses as '
well as tourist oriented signs along
state · highways directing motorists
into historic Pomeroy. She said that
the signs would cost $30 each per
month and are secured through the
Ohio Department of Transponation .
Rolland B. "Rollie" Swart, vice
president, business development for
Peoples Bancoi'p. met with·the mer-·
,chants to express his interest in the
· village's economic development and
the role which Peoples Bank will take
after assuming control of the
Pomeroy and Rutland Bank One.
branches later this month.
Treasurer Vicki Ferrell reponed
· that $923 was made on the fashion
show and that the balance of all funds
including the sale of ornaments is
now $6, 140.66.'

Meigs land transfers j~

Borg-Warner ................ ,...... :.34:0
Champion 1!1«1.........................19
Charming Shop .....................5'1.
City Holding .......................... 23'.&gt;

The following land transfers were
posted recently in the oftice of Meigs
County Recorded Emmogene !iamil- ,
ton: ,
Deed, Bernice R. and Russell
·Roush to Edward Roush, ·Letalt,
'4.200 acres;
Deed, Richard .W. and Ruby A.
Vaughan, Suzanne . and Teddy A.
Warner, Judith Kay Hunter, Patrick

Federal Mogul .......................18\

Gannen .................................63'1.

Goo.dyear T&amp;R ......................SO'I.
K·mart .................................... :9~

Lands End ........................,......17
Llmhed lnc........,................... 18\
Peoples Bancorp. ................23~.
Oh)p Valley Bank .................... 40
One Valley............................... 31

RockweH ........~ .....................55~
Robblne &amp; Myers.; ................37'1.
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............145'1.
Shoney's lnc........................... 10

. -·-·-

SUBSCRIPTION RAT!!S

By Carriere&lt; Molar-.

;One \Veek. •••. 1...................... ... ..... .............. S2.00

Who says you

Zenith Tappen Tappen

canllake it
..th
9
.wt you.

Remote/Stereo

4
79
99
249.99 ·299.99
I

, Sl!o(GLE COPY PRICE
•·
Daily ................................................... JI C....
Subscriben noc dePtlna to pay tbe ~et'may
remit in . adv~~ncc direct to The Dally Sentinel
on o three, sir. or 12 {Mnlh basiL Credil will be
slVCD carrier each week.

.

DELIVERY &amp; HOOK-UPS AVAilABLE

Spring Air
IT'S UP
Bedding
TO YOU... . Budget ·
1

·Why pay for
Sets
whauou ,
7900twin
t:Wn't
need?
..ea. pc.
.
S.ts Only .

.

•

i:~
.
.•~ HAPPY GILMORE ..... 1"•,•

illli

ONE EVENING SHOW 1:30
446-0923

~i

••••

I I I I I I I I I I II

3 Pc Living
Room
.Table
. Group Set

. ,.

CARMEL, IN (Wire Bullelin)lf~uuffer from the pain of
arthrif • rheumatism or burSitis,
there a small company In
Carmel, Indiana that
manufattureG • product that you
should try.
The product is called Pain-BustA II, and it is a soothing
medicated cream that you simply
massage into your aching joints.
It P,S to work Immediately by
penetrating deep Into the joints
wh11re paip begins- bringing
instant relief. And whefs more ~
will not stain or smear clothing or
bed sheets.
Though the product Is not widely
known, ~ Is 100% safe and users
claim that there's nothing else on
the market that even comes
close to it. in fact, according to
company president Bryan Auer...

Read what our users have . ·
to say:
"I use PAIN BUST Qecause I
suffer from tension in my back
and shoulders. I can't praise you
product enough. I've used other
ointments, but they don't seem
to work as fast nor last as long.
Thank you. Thank you...
·
Thank you!" C.K. F.
"Last night when I went to sleep 1·
rubbed some PAIN BUST on my
sore aching knee. 15 minutes
later I fell sound asleep and
woke 8 hours later with
absolutely no pain.· I Wish I knew
about PAIN BUST long age. • .
B.M.S.
·
"I'm 72 years old and suffer from
arlhritis in both hands and feet.
On.damp, cold days I used to go
out of my mind with pain. Not
anymore, I now enjoy peace of
mihd and pain free joints.
. Respectfully, • R.B.G,

"we get mora re-orders on this
product than any of lfle other 33
products in our line/ And people
write us evel)'dsy telling us that
Pain-Bust-R/1 is '!fie "'""r----:~--...-.

,.

Piice Good Thru
Tuesday

·8999

All3 Pieces

.

ASK YOUR SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS

N'o subscription by mail pennined in areu
where home Wlfticr service Is available.

. 1-M,._ CeonJr

Gas or
15.4 cu. ft.
Electric
Range . .

19"

Color TV

Let us create
a·memorial
just.f9r you.

1.1

Indiana firm DIICI!Ufl:

• All Products Priced Cash &amp;Carry

One MOI\Ib ...............................................$8.70
One Year .............:........ ........................ $!04.00

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

acres.

.Products Sale Priced Every Day

Published every afternoon, Monday throuJh '
~day; Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publish.ing CompanyiO~ Co.,
Pomemy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-21.16. Second
class postage paid 111 Pomeroy, Ohio.

'

Vaughan to Richilrd W. and Ruby A.
Vaughan, Middlepon parcel;
Deed, Wanda L. Lyons, deceased,
to Harry R. Lyons Sr., Racine parcel;
Deed,· Sharon Russell, Sharon
Roush to Gregory B. Roush and
Dianne E. Greathouse, Suuon, 3.86

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY ·
ADAM SANDLER IN

•

Stock r.eport1 ara the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adveal
of Gallipolis.

!VSPS213-Ht)

J'OS'IMASTEI: Send addm1 conediono lo
The Daily &amp;ntihel, Ill Coun St.. Pomctoy,
. ()h;~ 45769.

E., Ruth, Martin A. and Jeanette

TONIGHT

MUPPET mEASURE
ISLAND.

·s pecial New cream
for arthritis
lngel's·Furniture now has...

Star Bank ..............................64'1.
Wendy lnt'l. ...........................17'1.
Worthington Ind...................19'4

The Daily Sentinel

Membtr: The Associated Preu, IUad the Ohio
Newspaper Associllion.

. Leading Creek Conservancy Qi5tnct customers north. of tbe Salem
Center community and County' Road
I :d'c advised to boil water for hunuin
consumption until further notice d ~e
to a main water line leak earlier this
morning . .
·A hoil order instituted for lhe
Union Avenue·area near Pomeroy has
been lifted.

Meigs EM·S logs _14_calls

Am Ele Po'wer·.......................39\
Lebanon Trustee to meet
Akzo ......................................55'.4
Lebanon Township Trustees will · ·"'hltmd 011 ...........................39'!.
AT&amp;T .................................. :.. 61'1.
meet Saturday, 8 a.m. at the township
Bank One ...................... ;....... 33\
building. ·

Merchants ...

· You should report all fraud you·~e
been the victim of, Soitlsby stressed.
"Contaci the sheriffs depanme,ni or
your local police, and give them' )Is
many details as you can . They want
to know about this."
•
"If we all take special precautiotis,
we can avoid being duped. by. croo~s
and also help the hard-working, bonest people stay in business," IJe said.

Water leak prompts
..
bOil Ordar

Meigs announcements

tl\'e bane.-. · ·

tum

With the advent of wann weather,
Donna R. Grinstead, 64, of Mason, W. Va., died Wednesday, April l 0,
·
many
people start thinking of h.ome
1996, at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington. •
improvements and repairs-- with the
Arrangements will be announced bJ( the Foglesong Funeral Home.
resulting complaints concerning dis- ·
honest home repair firms .
"There are many honest, hardworking people in the field of borne
Aldena M. Welsh, 73, of Ruiland died Tuesday, April9, 1996 at O'Ble- fepair, but watch out for dishonest
home repair firms," cautioned Meigs
ness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
. Born Sept. II, 1922 a~Aibany, she was the daughter of the late Oarence County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Soulsby offered some tips to help
Pearl and Letha Steinmetz Jewell: She was a housewife and farmer. She was
a member of the Hanisonville Presbyterian Church, the Lend· A-Hand Club, homeowners ~void home improvement and repatr frauds:
and the Meigs County Fami Bureau.
-- Be suspicious if someone offers
She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law: Carolyn and Wille
to
do
an expens1ve JOb for an usualCollins of Ridgeway, and Bonnie and DarreiiNapper of Rutland; three sons
and daughters-in-law: Robert E. and Sally Welsh of Rutland, Denzil and Bar· ly low price. Once 1ou sign the conbara Welsh of Middlepon, and Leroy and Anna Welsh of Pomeroy; one sis- tract and pay the fee. you learn why :
ter, Wilma Hinds of Newark; two brothers: Harold Richard Jewell of they never deliver the service.
·-- Always get several estimates for
Pomeroy,,and Ronald Jewell of Athens; 18 grandchildren, 19 great-grandevery
repair job, and co,mpare the .
children, and one great-great grandchillj.
·
prices
and
terms. Check to see if there
She was preceded in death by one granddaughter and one sister.
Services will be held Friday, I p.m., at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home, is a charge for estimates before ask·
ing for one.
Albany, with the Rev. Krisana Robinson officiating. liurial will follow in
--Ask you friends, neighbors, and
Wells Cemetery, Pageville.
·
.
co-workers for recommendations, or
. Calling hours for family and friends will be today, from 2 to 4 p.m. and
ask the finn for references, and
7 to 9 p.m., at the funeral home.
check ·them out
·
-- Call the local consumer affairs
office or better business bureau tocheck the company's reputation
before you authorize any work to be
Units of the Meigs County Emer· REEDSVILLE
done.
3:22 p.m., volunteer fire departgency Medical Service recorded 14
-- Be wary of high pressure sales
calls for assistance Thursday includ- ment and squad to Long Bottom, tactics.
ing one transfer call. Units respond- . chimney fire at Tom Hayman resi·
-- Pay by check, never with cash.
dence, no injuries.
ing included: ·
Arrange to make payments in installRUTLAND
MIDDLEPORT
ments, one-third at the beginning of
12:28 a.m .. Depot Street, Iva Cre- the job, one-third when the job is2:06 p.m., Holzer Clinic, Floyd
means, VMH;
·Roach, Holzer Medical Center.
nearly completed, and one-third after
3:58 a.m ., Hampton Hollow, the job is done.
POMEROY
. 10:35 a.m., Union Avenue~ Orien Deanna Kruscamp, VMH;
-- When you find repair people
II :36 a.m., Bryant Street, John M. you trust, stick. with them and tell
Colmer, treated at'the scene;
I 0:58 a:m., Rock~prings Rehabil- Nelson, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
your friends.
12:21 p.m.. New Lima Road,
itation Center, John Ord, Veterans
"Sometimes you might not know
Morgan Russell, HMC;
Memorial Hospital;
you've been cheated until it's too
I :59 p.m., Depot Streer; Basil Cre· late," Soulsby said. "If you don't
'I :27 p.m., Mechanic Street,
means,HMC.
Lucinda Hudson, VMH;
report fraud , you're only helping the
·SYRACUSE
8:38 p.m., Martin Street, Magnocrooks. and that's just what they
.5:29 p.m., Glenn Street, William want."
lia Nitz, HlyiC.
Brown,
dead upon arrival.
RACINE
11:19 p.m ., Hazel Combs, VMH:
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

8y the AISOCII!ted Pre11

'••·

orlen
e
Four suits for judguient were filed
recently in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court of Judge Fred W.
Crow ill.
Wednesday, Debora Henry,
Racin~. filed suit against Ron and
Shirley Miller of Pomeroy. Henry
alleges the Millen, who ·are her
landlords, shut off the water to her
1937 Fro111 Street apartment in an
attempt to secure unpaid rent and
have refused to
the water back
on. She is seeking compensatory and
punitive. damages of $5,000 plus
costs.
In a suit filed Tuesday, an inmate
. at a Cumberland, Md .. prison, Den·

nis Boothe, u ~kina $500,000&gt; in
compensatory and pu~itive damagts
from Jeff McKinney, Pomeroy. ln his
complaint, Boothe claitn1 to be aOt·
ing on be.half of two minor ehii&lt;Wn
and alleges that McKinney shov~
and threatened bodily harm to tbelll.
Green Tree Financial Servicitig
Corporation of Columbus is seeki4g
$39,522.56 plus costs and intere,st
from John Seckman, Reedsville,
alleging default on a loan for a 19%
Skyline Tangle wood· mobile ho~.
The COllJpany seeks to recover ~
session of the mobile home.
•
Greenwood Trust Company, DiS~over Card ~ervices, Hilliard, see~
. $3,175.97 plus costs and interest
from Beverly Wood, Racine, io
recover the balance of a credit cafd
debt

It's time to beware of repair scams

Donna R. Grinstead

Today's weatl'ler forecast

•

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I'Jil

Showers

it

,.

•

William E. Brown, 95, of Syratuse, died Wednesday, April tO, 1996, at
his residence.
He wai a retired COIIIb'llc:tioo workerund attended the Syracuse Unit0
ed Methodist Church.
Born Feb. 8, 190 I, in Letart, W. Va., he was a son of the late Adam C.
Brown and Henrietta M. (Licving) Brown. He was also preceded in death
by a daughter, Dorothy L. Jenks, and several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are his wife, Anna (Brye) Brown; two sons and daughters-inlaw, William D. and Isabelle V. Brown of Mason, W. Va., HIIIT}' G. and
Dorothy P. Brown,,'o f Chester; a son· in-law, Tommy Jenks of Louisa, Ky.;
sister, LQuise Hoffman of Letart; brother, ~ow W. Brown of Letart, W.
Va.,; nine grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren .
· Graveside services will be Saturday, I p.m~ at the Graham Cemetery with
the Rev. Charles Neville officiating.
. Friends maY, call at the Foglesong Funeral Home Friday, 6 to 9 p.m. In
heu of flowers, the family requeSIS contributions be made to the Cooperative Parish in Pomeroy

...

LOOKING BACKWARD:
1.) Don't preach revolution in .a
non-revolutionary country. Voters
might believe you. America is ripe
for an evolution, not a revolution.
2.) l&gt;9n 't ever underestimate the
president of the United States, this
one or any other one. If you don't
understand why, read the Constitu· .
lion. (Start by noting that the veto
power$ of the president give him the
equivalent of 16 Senate votes and 72
House votes. He can also send
troops to B.osnia -- all by himself.)
, .
3.) Don 't forget that the federal
entitlements that need to be trimmed
(a decrease in the rate of increase to •
prevent runaway deficits) go to real
people who think they are entitled to
entitlements. Explain and be genlle.
· 4.) Don't underestimate Bill
Clinton. He's been swiping your
stuff: He's been making points on
school prayer, unifonns in school, •
evicting thugs and their families
fro\" housing projects, restrictions
on sex and violence on television
and on ending big government. (Did
Pat Robertson win the election?)
5.)· Smugness, arrogance, superi-

·on

·
·
.
Today is Thursday, April II, the 1021!(1 day of 1~. There are 264 days
left in the year.
·
·
'Foday's Highlight in History:
On April II, 1945, during World War II, U.S. soldiers liberated the rioto·
rious Nazi concentration cillllp BuchenwAld in Germany.
,
In. 1689, William III and Mary II were crowned as joint sovereigns of
Britain.
.
In 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated as emperor of France.
In 1898, President Mc.Kinley asked' Congress for a declara~on of war
against Spain.
_
.
.
In 1899, the treaty endi ng the Spanish-American War was declared in
elfect.
. ..
•
In 1921, Iowa became the first state to impose a cigarette tax.
In 1947, Jackie Robinson made his major-league. debut, playing in an
exhibition between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New YoJ'k Yankees.
In 19S I, President Tniman relieved Gen. Douglas MacArthur of his commands in the Far East. ·
·
·
·
In 1953, OvCta Culp Hobby became the first Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. .
.
In 1970, Apol!g 13 blasted off on a 11\ission 10 the moon that was disrupted when an explosion crippled the spacecraft; the astronauiS managed to
return safely.
·
·
In 1979, ldi Amin was deposed as president of Uganda jls rebel~ and
exiles backed by Tanzani!lli forces seized control'.
In 19~. the Ecjull Employment Opportunity Commission issued regula,
lions specificall;:prohibjting sexual hi!fUSR!Cnl of workers by supervisors.
In 1981, Pre
nt.~gan returned to the White House from the hospi•.
tal, 12 days afte he was 10'0U~ in a'n assassination attempt.
·

,,,,,

' ,.

ou-..

tlae~ol-partytpbttt
IHtJier, It do. SlOt ....Nitth pit

William E. Brown

At••••••

·Dole to use foreign policy against Clinton

By The Aaloclllled Preas

Edbor'11101e: A ls!wllliC

conditions and

rlM-ansfle--ld...,!-69;. , ...., .

I

Today in history

forecast for

•·
IToledo I 65· I

("Honey lei's va.e for Clinton· be's

The O.lly SanUnel• Pllgl3

Common Pleas Court news

MICH.

a great debaler but I don't ~lieve
him or what he•stands for.")

Auocllted Pren Writer
WASHINGTON - President Clinton went to the Korean demilitarized
zone on his first presidential trip overseas and sternly warned the North that
"it would be the end of their country" if they ~eveloped and used nuclear
weapons.
·
.
North Korea's recent military incurslbns into the DMZ may be··a way of
tweaking Clinton- who pays his second visit to South Korea next week; for that provocative July 1993 performance.
While the true motives of the secreiive communist regime in violating
tenns of the 43-year-old armistice remain obscure, any efforts by Pyongyang
to try to wring concessions from the Clinton administration seem unlikely to
succeed.
Clinton's 1993 warning to the North - made in the DMZ only feet from
grim-facecl North Korean border guards - was an effort by a new Democratic president to demonstrate solidarity with previous administrations in
dealing firmly with the Pyongyang government.
Now Clinton is seeking a second term, and the presumptive GOP nomi.n~. Senate MajQrity Leader Bob Dole, pretty much agrees with him on U.S.
; ;policy in Asia.
.
; . : In fact, with the exception of some disagreements on Bosnia and on Pen•
. .
: :tagon weapons programs, Clinton and Dole are not that far apart on most
• :national' security issues.
·
·
• . Most of Dole's disagreements aren't with Clinton but with many youriger
: -QOP activists in Congress who favor a feduced U.S. commitment abroad
I'~
~~~It'?
• .and in the United Nations.
.
·'
,
; : : Dole is more of the old-school- more inclined to support the president
; jil foreign policy endeavors.
.
·
; . : Last month, when China launched military exercises in the Taiwan Strait
: 'i!' advance of presidential elections in Thiwan - part of its continued
• )IUempt to stifle pro-independence sentiment - Clinton replied with strong
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., is planning to launch Secretary Ron Brown in
fowitz, and former State Department Undersecre: 1hetoric and by sending two U.S. Navy tamer battle groups into the region.
tary Robert Zoellick.
. · Dole called China's war games "a test" of Clinton, but also said he sup- his ·forJ:ign policy campaign against President Croatia is that it calls atten·
Clinton
in
late
April
with
a
spc:ech
charging
that
tion
to
his
tireless
effons
to
According to McCain, China understands
. :ported the president's steps.
.
.
policy
-like
Clinton
promote
American
business
strength
and consistency, but Clinton has demonthe
administration's
Asia
:. : Nonh Korea·s violations on three successive days of the 1953 annistice
strated the opposite by changing his mind on
: agreement that halted the Korean War comes in a!lvance of South Korea's himself-~ is "vacillating," "indecisive," "plati- around the world.
When' mourning for
)"hetherto allow Thiwan's president into the Unit-.
·: p!~flililllentary elections on Thursday and Clinton's brief visit next Monday tudinous" and ''undependable .."
Barring
any
disasters
that
.can
be
pinned
on
Brown
ends,
Democrats
.ed
States and by saying he fav 9rs stable relations
his way to Japan and Russia.
Clinton,
Dole
advisers
admit
that
the
GOP
presisurely
will
use
his
memory
with
China while allowing various officials 10
: : ' U.S. officials theori~ that the provocations were an attempt by
dential
candidate'
will
not
emphasize
substantive
to
rebuke
Republicans
for
·
·offend
China with threats of sanctions over trade
: Pyongyang to lure the Umted States I~ enter formal peace talks without
policy differences with ClinCPn in foreign affairs .· · trying to close down the ev """"" Ko,.lrlclg and human righiS infractions.
· South Korea sitting at the table.
. When asked how Dole would act differently ·
· : . Nonh Korea did, in fatt, get the Uriltea States to bargain with 'it directly - the truth i$, there aren't that many-- but rather Commerce Depanment -will
attack
hiS•
management
style
and
use
foreign
part
of
a
new
tendency
in
the
GOP,
Democrats
toward
a country that uses slave labor, fortes
: in resolving the crisis over its nuclear program ill 1994 and in wipning the
policy
as
a
metaphor
for
Clinton's
character.
say;
to
pull
back
from
U.S.
world
leadership·
.
·
women
to
have abortions, cheats on trade agree: t~dom of a U.S. helicopter pilot shot down n~ the border.
.
.
Adjeciives
being
tossed
around
among
Dole
White
House
aides
have
little
negative
to
say
ments,
and
sells nuclear materials to rogue
·: · "Now, maybe ihey're practicing DMZ blackmail," said Helmut Sonnen:flildt, an analyst at the Brookings Institution who held national security posts advisers to lack onto Clinton via foreign policy about Dole on the foreign policy front except that . nations, McCain said that Dole woul&lt;j not ignore
include "passive," ;"reactive," ·:ad hoc," "un- he has joined other Republicans in trying to cut such problems, but would base his policy on a
:irithe Nixon, Kennedy and Johnson administrations.
strategic"
and "inconsistent."
back the government's foreign affairs budget and, "clear and unambiguous strategy."
· · . But Sonnenfeld! said Sl!th a course could have the reverse effett,
Meantime,
Dole's
advisers
hope
to
paint
an
as
a senator, lacks Clinton 's hands-on record.
Clinton aides counter that any president will
Strengthening hard-liners in the South Korean elections and extracting more
find it difficult to deal with China, and they point
. fcirceful statements from Clinton in suppon of beleaguered South Korean image of their m~n as "strong," "resolute," 1 "Age is not experience," one aide jibed.
"consistent," "coherent," "credible" and "&lt;J
The truth of the matter is that there aren't vast out that it's congressional Republicans (though
:President Kim Young-sam.
..
·: The administration made it clear it wasn't going to bow to Pyongyang's steady hand on the tiller," · says Sen. John differences between Clinton and Dole on foreign not Dole) who are pushing independence for ThiMcCain. R-Ariz .. who could end up as Dole's policy.
wan, which China regards as a cause for. war.
: pitjmidation.
.
·
Both are internationalists at a time when isolaOne .serious ·area of conflict' between Clinton
· ; State Department spokesman Glyn Davies says the armistice "has helped secretary of State.
Conventional wisdom has that, if elected, tionism is .gaiiting .ground. Bot~ are free traders. and Dole may be Russia and 'N'ATO, with Dole
to maintain stability on the Korean peninsula. And we believe ... the Nonh
Koreans Should abide b): their responsibilities und~r the annistice and avoid Dole would iap Gen. Colin Powell for the State . Both respectthe need to pursue hard-headed U.S. charging t~at Clinton has delayed entry of Poland,
DeparJment, 'but some Dole advisers speculate national in!erests while still expressing idealistic Hungary, and the Czech Republic into the miliprovocative actions."
'
'
, ,
.
· .
tary alliance out of deference to•Russia. Clinton
For now, the tense situation has ·not worsened. North Korea has not com- that if Powelltums Dole down for vice preside!)! American values.
and Dole wins the preside~cy anyway, he'll tum
Neither has invented a new U.S. grand strate- aides respond that is' was the president himself
mitted additional violations.
· .
to someone wit~ whom he feels comfortable for gy for the post-Cold War era or even a regional who inven~ the process •. the Partnership for
'
And U.S. officials said they don; t see the situation - at this paint . State. McCain, contrary to rumor, does not want "doctrine." Both are inclined to grapple with · Peace -- for connecting NATO and the former
escalating.
issues on a case-by-case basis.
·
Soviet bloc.
"I'm not aware of anything that's thanged in our analysis of the situa- l!! be secretary of Defense.
On the DemOcratic side of tl\e campaign, the
Still, a presidential campaign is' under way and · At the moment, with Bosnia and Haiti troop
tion," White House spokesman Mike McCurry said Thesdar., '.'The ·president
does get regular updates as necessary from the national security adviser White House paints Clinton as'the "peacemaker" the two candidates. need .to fight, so Dole will involvements going well, the public approves of
related to what we see as the unneCessary provocations that.have occurred." . whO has improved the terms of international eco- open the attack wtth a speech charging that Clin· Clinton's handling of foreign policy by 49 percent
·
Fonnal GOP criticism of Clinton's Korea policy niay emerge 'before this nolnics, fostered' democracy and diminished tlie ton has no overriding A~ia strategy and that his to 46 percent.
·
inconsistency has ange~d and confused . major-" . No one expect~ foreign ~olicy to be a major
year's U.S. general election gets under way in earnest. For instance, the threat of nuclear weapons in the world,
The Clinton campaign is gearing up to per· powers lik&lt;; Japan and China.
·
.
1ssue tn the campa~gn, but Chnton has this advanGOP platform may wind up suggesting that too many concessions were
suade
the
!Jtlblic
that,
despite
a
wobbly
start,
Clin.
The
spe~h
is
being
drafied
with
input
from
a
tage: While ,Dole is making his speech on Asia,
made by the administration in dealing with Nonh Korea's nuclear aspiraion has established a strong record of leadership committee headed by McCain that includes for- . Clinton will be returning from a state visit to
tions.
. But, for now, general suppon from his GOP rival puts ClintQn in a posi- in troubled arenas like Bosnia, the Middle East, mer State Depanment official (and Dole Senate Japan and .a nuclear-control summit in .Russia.
Russia, Haiti and the U.S.-Japan trade relation· · aide) Richard Annitage, Senate aide Steve Berry,
tion of relative strength as he heads for South Korea, Japan and Moscow.
ship.
House Appropriations Committee staff director
(Morton Kondrecka !• executive editor of Roll
That's a lot more than then-President George Bush got from candidate
·
A
byproduct
of
the
tragic
death
of
Commerce
JiR1
Dyer,
fonner
Pentagon
policy
chief
Paul
WolCall,
!he niWIIpaper ol Capitol Hilt.) .
Clinton, who battered the GOP incumbent inCessantly for his late 1991 and
early 1992 travel abroad.
·
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom lfaum cov.ra the White HoUH Mel Mtioluit potltlca
tor The Auocl8led "'-a.

.Pomeroy • Mldcl1porf. Ohio

Pegl2

•

Ttlurl.y,Apll11,1 ...

By lien W " nh 11

111 Court St., P-oy, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•

Charles Riffle,
R. Ph.

POMEROY

Han1~ino.

,._. Poli*OY 1111011 Bridge

Mon. thru Sat. ·8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Servtca Pomeroy, Oh.

982·25118 .

13\Voeb.................................................$21.30
26\Voeb................................................. Sil.Bl

VINTON

. 52 ---(i;bi*'M;ilic;;;;;;;;$10!.~
13 ........................... :................... $29.2.1

Gill.. COUnty Dllplly Ytnl

26 Woeb,.... ,.... c............. ,... ................... S56.68
52 Weeks ...............................................$10!1.~

388 11!103

. ' 111111stlt181.

..

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...
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t

•

••

'

9

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~~:------~-~--...;;.,1·-'
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-

�•

•

Sports

'

-

•
•

The Daily
Sentinel
.
,•.

'

In other NL action,

Taubensee's homer helps Reds get 9-7 win over Mets
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Paul Wil·
son sat with his head down, fiddling
with his waiCh, as he groped for an
explanation to his worst moment in
the major leagues.
No matter how much he fiddled
or how many times he turned the
thought over in his head, an explanation eluded him.
Wilson got slaked to a four-run
lead in his second major-league
start, but couldn' I hold it because he
couldn 't throw strikes. The Cincinnati Reds took advantage of II
walks - six by Wilson - and rallied for a 9-7 victory Wednesday
over the New York Mets.
"I don 'tthink I've ever had an
outing like this," Wilson said softly.
"I just didn't gel comfonable, just
didn 't gel in Q groove, just didn't do
anything."
The 23-Y,ear-old rig!ll·hander won
· a spot in !heMe~ rotation by allow-

•

)

Bas eball

TOJonlo ....................4
Detroit ...................... -5
New Yort. .... c......... 3

3 . ~i1J
4 . 55~
3 .500

I

Boaron .... ....... _......... 2

lill
2
2
21

5 .286

,.

CentniiMvllian
. I
1~
I~

31
j

Minne1ota (Radke 2-0) at Bouon
(Clemens 0-1), !;O..c; p.m.
Kanua City (Belcher 0-0) at New .
YD&lt;It (Key 0.1 ), I o05 p.m.
Seattle (Johnson 1-0) ar Derroit (Gohr
' 0.1), l eiS p.m.
•
Oa.tland (Johns 1-0) at Milwaukre
(KIIII 1-0), Ul p.m.
Teau (Witt 1.0) Ill ChiCIIJO (8ere 00), 2oll5 p.m.
California (Abbott 0- 1) at Toronto
CHanson 1-1), 7:J.58.m.
CLEVELAND Henhiser 0-J ) 111 BaltiiTIOfe (Erickson 0-:0), 7:35p.m.

.L58

4.l h-

Golden Srare .... ,..... 33 4.3

.434

L.A, Clippen .. ....... 28

J68

48

'11)~

22

25'.~J

27'!,
)2'!,

Friday's games

Toronto al8o&amp;~on, 7:JO p.m.
MirmeJotll at Wasbingron, 7:30p.m.
MilwouJcee 31 Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
fndiiiRDill Orlllndo, 8 p.m.
Philn.klphia n1 Chic11go, 8:30p.m.
Sacramento at Vancouw:r, 10 p.m.
•Golden Slate at L.A. Ukeu. 10:30.
p.m..•

Friday's Pilla

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanlk: Dirislon

lam

:•·NL standings
lill
~

hit in the toe. II was bne of !hose
games where anything could've happened and it did."
Tim Pugh (1-0) pitched two
scoreless innings to finally stop a
Mels offense led by Bernard Gilkey,
who had four hits. Jeff Brantley
struck out the side in the ninth for his
second
save.
·
it." '
•
A walk helped Cincinnati comWilson's counterpart struggled plete
the comeback. Bob MacDonald
almost as much, turning il into a top- (()..1) walked Mike' Kelly to open the
sy-turvy game. Dave Burba gave up seventh, and Eric Davis doubled him
10· hits and seven. runs over five. home with two out. Reggie Sanders
innings, and had a rough night all
added an RBI double off Jeny DiPoaround .
to.
Burba got grazed on the back of
"It was·a big hit for the ballclub
the head when home plate umpire as well as for me,'' said Davis, bat- .
Paul Runge and Taubensee, the ting.just .143. " It was a situation ·
catcher, tossed him balls simuiJanewhere rou can't get down on yourously. Burba also was hil high on the self."
•
leg by a comebackcr.
Wilson obviously
"I hurt from head 10 toe,'' Burba wasAfterwards,
down on himself.
said. " It wasn't prelty. I got hit in the .
"Everybody has. to learn flow to
head, r got hit you-know-where, ! got
survive an outing likelthis :::... 'get ·

Tampa 8ay ........ J7 J l 12

86 2.\4 243
84 210 195
N.Y. Islanders.... 22 !10 8 52 22J ~

Northeett Dltiaion
y-Pinsburgh .......4~ 28 4 100 .~5 2
•-Montrea1......... 40 Jl 9 89 258
. 801ron ................. J8 30 II 87 273
lflonfonl ............. )) J7 9 7~ 2..12
Buffalo............... ll 42 7 69 240
Ouawa ... :........... I7S8 !I 39183

27:'i

N•t:loMI Leatue

240

y-Detroit.. .......... 60 n 1
x-Chicaao .......... 3927 IJ
•·So. Looio.. ... ... 32 JJ 15
Toronto ............... JJ 3S 12
Winniptg ........... H J9 6
0.11 ................... 26 40 14

.Qf

St. Louis against Atlanta. He h115 hit
i.n all eiahl games and is batting .444
(16-for-36). ,, John Franco needs
that."
throe more saves to becoltlCithe first
Wilson was asked what he had lefl·lwlder. with 300 career. ... The
learned from the experience.
Reds designated reliever Xavier Her·
"I don't think I' ll learn something nandez for assignment Wednesday
until tomorrow, when I can think and called up outfielder Curtis Goodstraight,'' he said.
win from Triple· A Indianapolis. .... ;
Nota:· The four hits matched X-rays Wedne~ay found no fracture
Gilkey's career high. He has col- ·in catcher Joe Oliver's right thumb.
lected four hits in a game eight there He sprained it slighlly while making
times, most recently laSt June II in· a tag at home plate Tuesday night.

-----Sports
BasebaD
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
owners lost more than $700 million
during the 1994 and 1995 seasons,
according to financial data obtained
by The Associated }'ress.
The 28 teams had an operating
loss of $376 million in 1994, when
the players' strike ytiped out the final

CINCI NN AT I REDS : DtsiJnatcd
RHP Xavier Hernandez for .iuign!Tit!nl.
Recalled OF Curtis Goodwin from Jodianapolis or the American Auociation.
CO LORADO ROCKIES : Sent 28
Eri c Young to Salem of the Ca rolinu

·

260

'252
2..W ·
284

911 263 2 11

19· 215
78 239
76 268
66 223

243
2-c.&amp;
. 283
·210

PacifkDivlston
)'-Color-oldo ......... 46 24 10 102 319
Cnlgary .............. :\3 J6 II 77 2JS
V11acouver ......... 3 I 35 15 11 27J
Anaheim ............33 39 8 74 224
Edmonton .......... 30 43 8 68 236
Los Anaeles ....... 23 39 18 64 248
Snn Joae ........... .. 20 S4 7 •1 252
y·clinc:hed divisiolt til~
Jl ·~linched playoff 1po1 ,

233
23."i
278
242
298
293
3$1

Some Quantities Umltad

52 days of 'lhe regular season. the''
playoffs and the World Series. The
teams lost $326 million last year
according to preliminary estimates,
compiled by the commissioner's
office.
Basellall's 232-day strike, the
longest ever in U.S . pro · sports,
appears to have cost owhers more
than $900 million in revenue

$25995
Tappan &amp; ""
. ":::'-- Lc.-;

Wednesday's scores
N.Y. II Ianden 6, PinobouJh 2
'Buq'alo ,5, Ot:tawa 2
Wa.sbington 4, N.Y . Rangen I
Pbiladefphia S, New·Jersey I
Taf11111 Bay 2. Aorida I
Detroir ,5, Winnipr:J 2
Colorado 1, Anaheim 3
Dallas 4, Edmonton 2
Los Angeles 6, San Jo&amp;e 2

Ranges
Gas&amp;

Same as Cash
Ff11ndng Availahle
cntltJ .

Electric

Pinsbur&amp;h st Onawa. 7:30p.m:
M'omreal Bl Philadclpbia, 7:30p.m.
New Jency ot Washington; 7:30p.m.
Toronto at Chicqo, 8:30p.m.
CoiOf'ldo ar St. Louis. 8:30p.m.

Swtlnglll

A 10-run third inning propelled ahead5-4inlhcbot\omoftheframe
Eal;tem's softball team t\) a 24-5 win four walks -and 'sin~les by Mary
over the Alexander · Spartans Blair. Wilson and Arianne Starling.
Wed sda ·
. Eastern's Rebecca Evans then
Yisfting Eagles (3.0) took a 4- shu! out the Spanans the rest of the
olead iq the first whe11 Tracy White way.
.
.
1dil "tne'ianle~0 f("'i;iill· ·a clciuble,
Eastern rallied to a 9-S lead 1n the
Nicole Nelson singled, Minday seeond th~n ripped open a 19-5
~ampsop hit a sacrifice fly, Patsy
advantage m:the lhord frame.
'· o'randCanEastern hillers were Evans and
Ae•'ker· reached
. !l!l qn err
·• ..
.·
.
.
dace Bunting ani! . Rebecca Evans Nelson w11h two hots each, WJih each
had ·RBI singles. Alexander· went gamenng three RB!s. While had four

r:':

'489115

Friday's gam..
Florida at N.Y. l1landen, 7:30p.m.
Tompa Bay'it N.Y. R11na:ers. 7:30
p.m.
~·.
... Chica1o at Dmoit, 8:30p.m.
Lo. Anple1at Winnipr:a. 8:10p.m.
ClliJAry nl San J01e, 10:30 p.m.
Dallaut Anaheim, 10:30p.m. ~
_

11
14
9

II

99 216 205
96 269 229
89 2!12 228
89 230 198

'
'

Baseball

~

·A 22-hit slugfest led Southern's
softballt earn to its founh win of the
year, a 25-9 victory over the host
~elsonville· York
Buckeyes,
eden~ay nigl!t.
.
·Senior Jonna Manuel had four
ts, including two doubles to lead
the way for the Tornadoes (.4•1 overall &amp; 3-0 in the Tri- Valley Conference's ' Hocking Division) . I(eri
CBidwell was next with three singles,
followed by Sammie Sisson with
two doubles and a triple and two-hit

•

SEATTLE MARINERSo Opoloned
OF Darren Brag to Tacoma of rhe Pacir-

t

I '~

2
21

Cenlral Division
O.icoao....................."i ·J .623
CINCINNATI .......... $ 3 .62S
PinoburaJt ............... 4 3 .511
St. Louis ........:......... 4 4 ,$00
Houston .................~ .. ) 6 .J33

Weatem DMiion
: San Dieao ................6 · 2 .750
San fn~nci1co ..........5 4 .!1 ~!1
lAI ......... .............. 6 .400
Colonodo ................ J ~ .m

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
.
.
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

II
3
3

Wednesday's score.t

Sr. Loui1 4, Monrrew I
Su Fmnc:isco II, Housron 5
Pbillldelphia.7, Pi1tsbur1h 6
Colorodo 10, Oiicaa:o 9
CINCINNA119, New Yort. 7
Lo1 Aneete• 9 Atlantn 2
San Dieso J. Florida o

.

Montreal (Cormier 0-0l 11 Pillsbura:b
(Z. Smioh 1.0). JoO~ p.m.
•
Atlaata (Pthddux 1· 0) .111 San Oie1o
' (Aohby Q.lJ), loO.• p.m.
.
Hou_uon (Reynolds 0-1) 111 CINCJN.
· NA11 (Ponauol (0.0). H~ p.m
Philadclphio {Mulhollond 1-0) ar St.
Louis (BeDel O.Ol..8:1M p.m.
New York (Miicki 0-1) .o.r Colorado
{Re)'00300-0), 9:Q.5 p.m.
Florida {K.Brown 0-1) nt Lo• An&amp;e.lel
(l'nrk 1·0), 10o05 p.m.
I

Friday's cames
Cbicaao (NovlliTO 0.1) ar S:m Francil·
.:u (M. Leiter 0-1 ), 4:1B p.m.
·
Montreal (Rueter 0· 1) ar Pinsburgh
(OliiWin 1.()), ?cOS p.m.

. A.DVERTI$1NG•DEADUNE:

.
HouJIOn (Sw indell 0-1) at CINCIN• NA11 (Salkold 1 · 0), 7J~pm .
Philudtlphia (M. Wilhams 0.0) nr St.
Loulo (Urbani ().O). 8o0~ p m.
:
New York (Miick.l 0- 1) at Colorlldo
, (Reynoso 0.0). 9:0."i p.m.
•
florida (8urken 0-1) at Los Angeles
&lt; C~alolco Q.l}J, 10oll5 p.m.
Atlanta (Schmidr 1-0) ar¥San Diego
: (lkrJman 1·0), 10o05 p.m

'

THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1996 ~ 12 NOON
INSERTION
DATE:
'

FRIDAY, APRIL
... 26, 1996·

Allonllc Divl&lt; ion

ra.

l!' 1.

y·Orlondo ...............!6

lill

20 .1J7
• · New York ........... 43 3·1 . ~92
;I
Miumi ................... J8 18 •.500
I8
Washiogton ........... J7 .19 .487
19
Boston .................... JO • 1 .:i90..._ 26~
New Jent)l .... ,....... 29 47 .382 · 27
l'hiladolpllia,. ......... l6 61 .208 40 ~

I'
I

I

C«nlnl Db-Won

''UliVELAND
I.t::..... . ... .......
. . . .lr4J 33Ji

.~ ~

.566-

Daroil... .................43 33 .~
Allanla ................... 42 34 .5H
Cluorloloe ................ 39 38 .5011

r

2..1 ~

2..1~
24~

21

..

,,
.'

......

.

.

homer off rookie reliever fr-=ilco
Coftl9va, ·and vis.ilin.g Philldelpbia
overcame Jeff King' lwo homen
and li~e RBis.
.
•

Rehev~ ~~~ss Spnnge~ ~

out the side Ill the Pltalcs e•Jhl.h
with the _poumtial g?"ahead run Of!
before Ri'kY Bottabco fm11hed
his third save.
,
Mike Grace (2.0) w~ de_ap•~
allowi~g five runs a~ ~1ght hits m,
sox mn•ngs. Jason ~sllan.so~ (1- l),
gave up two runs on I 113 mnongs.
Padres 3, Marlins 0
·
Bob Tewksbury (2·0) and two,
relievers combined on a five-hi!f:Ct•.
and Brad Ausmus hit a two-run.Sl'\·.
gle in the first at Jack Murphy Sta-,
do urn.
,
The Marlins got runners to second only twice agains~ Te_wksbu~.:
who allowed four hns m seven
in nings.
Pal Rapp (0-2) allowed four hits
in the first inning, three with two
outs. Ausmu~· bases-loaded single~
scored Tony Gwynn and Ken
Caminiti, who also singled. Rapp
allowed nine hits in 6 113 innings." •
Trevor Hoffman pitched a perf~
ninth for his second save.
.. · ::

tm:

The United States won the gyn;..,:.

nastics team event in the 1984·
Olympics, its first victory in that
.
• .
'
I.
compeiJtoon.
~'

M.S.R. P

. $19,509.95
Sale

The All-New Dodge Caravan

tom of !he frame. That's as close as
the Buckeyes got as SHS scored
once in the founh and seven in the
fifth for a 17-2 advantage.
Lawrence was the winning pitcher, allowing just five hit~ with five
walkS and one strikeout, while
Thomas came in for the seventh to
walk just one. McGuire suffered th~
loss l!lilh 'relief from Brown. · .

1995 NISSA~ 4X4

'

XE Package, air, AM/FM cassette, rear slider,
power mirrors, loaded with all options.
. . M.S.R P. $17,13B.95

•'
•

Sale

••

Price ONL.:

•

1995 NISSAN 4X4 XE

~--------------~----------~~--~·=
Most Of Our Used Vehicles Come With A 3 Month/3000 Mile Warranty
1993 BUICK
CENTURY WAGON

1993 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

RANGER

·15 spo&lt;ld, stereo,, 1 owner.

. . . . .. . . . . ' .
'

'

•. I. '

•

.

'

~

,.

1981
REGAL

4 door. auto, V·6, tlh, cruise, oil V·6. oulo, air, oil Pf!Wer, very clean

power, l~r. clean trade.

1993 CHEVY LUMINA
EURO PKG.

v-e,

auto, alr, caas.- all power, 1
miles.

OWIIOf, lOw

ONLY

ONLY

1993DODGE
. INTREPID ES

9.995
-.

• 1987
SENTRA

I

ONLY

1993 NISSAN

ONLY

SENTRAIE

1990
GRAND PRIX SE

auto, 3.51Her, V-6, ·air, l!lalhor, all 2 door; air, coss, .tin. cruise, low 2 door, outomallc, V-8, all power.
power, faclory worr.
miles, factory warr.

11 ,9 95

-1994 PLYMOUTH

ONLY

GRAND VOYAGER SE

ONLY

19.3 FORD
FESTIVA

v-e. auto, all power, · 1-owner. 2 dOOr, 5 speed, AMJFM s1ereo.
factory wa".

ONLY

1993 NISSAN
SENTRA
2 door, auto. power sunroof,
crtolse, lllctory worr.

1993 .·

SONOMA

Door, auto, V-6, a ir, all power, V-6, air, cassette, tilt, cruise, 1clean.
owner ·

ONLY

ONLY

1991 PONTIAC

1995 DODGE

GRANDAM

~Aoll'l"oollc
'

4 door, LE, auto, ak'; caa. ti•.
couise, locallrade, lOw miles. ·

• ONLY

tin.

ONLY

1988 lUlCK
REGAL

RAM

air, till, . CIUIIe, all 1500, 4X4, SLT, auto, 4-New tires.

1-owner.

' 7 ,995

ONLY

--

-=tory warr, 1-owner

6 995

1993
414
SE-5 PKG.

1994 PlYMOUTH
DU5nR

5 speed, all', C8SSII11e, 1-&lt;&gt;wner.
IOwmllaa.

V-8, auto, air, all - · factory
warranJy.

ONLY

ONLY

1995 PLYMOUTH
· NEON

1995 CHRYSLER
CIRRUS .

V·6, auto, air, 7 )11155, all -power, 1·

owner.

ONLY

. 1996
E·150
EC.,.,.NE WORI VAll

· cass, ~!,S, PB, t-owner, factory

·-·-"•

•

•

v.a, auto, cruise, tirt, .all power, 4 door, auto. air: AM/FM lOcal
local tnlde, veoy clean.

~

•
•
•
•
•
•

ONLY

Inning l!.!llb

Southern . ... ........ 342-171 -7=25-22-5
Nel.· York.. ...... .. .....002-121-2=8-5-6

Price

v.e, Lx, a\110, a1 ASS, factorywarranJy.

Call
Bob Atwood or·Dave Harris
For.More Information
992-2155

EASTERN cONFERENCE

ram

Ray Lankford homered for the
host Cardinals, who won despite
going 1-for-11 with runners in scoring position.
Rookie Jose Paniagua (1-1) lost
despite ziving up just one runs and
seven hits in five innings.
Glaab 11, Astrol S
Glenallen Hill hit two homers,
including his fourth career grand
slam, and Barry Bonds drove in five
rubs for San Francisco at Houston.
Osvaldo Fernandez (2.0) allowed
five runs and 12 hits in six innings,
struck out four and walked one.
Darryl Kile gave up I 0 runs just four earned - and nine hils in
3 '113 innings.
Rockies 10 Cubs 9
Larry Walker a;d Andres Galarraga hit consecutive RBI doubles off
Doug Jones (I-I) with 1~0 outs in
the eighth as Colorado overcame a 98 deficit at Coors Field.
Cunis Leskanic (1-0) pitched two
shutout i1111ings for Colorado. Dante
Bichette went 3-for-5 with three
RBis, and Ellis 'Burks and Galarraga homered.
· Luis Gonzalez and Scott Servais
hit consecutive homers for Chicago,
and pitcher Jim Bullinger hit a tworun shot.
Phillies 7, Pirates 6
Benito Santiago hit a three-run

14.995

NBA standings · ·

:

V-6, tilt, cruise, air, AM/FM cassette,
rear defrost, 7 passenger.

1995 NISSAN 414
. KING CAl XE

.

Basketball

rions scored w.•lh three ~alks and a
double. Ae1ker had a smgle with a
game-h1gh tour RB!s. .
·
Other hitters were Kim Mayle,
Bunting a~d Amanda Milhoan .. · ·
.Alex h•ttel'l\ ,..,.ere Blatr, D1xon,,
Wolson and Starhng.
.
Eastern hosts Southern on Fnday.•
lnn!D!! l2tlls. .
_
_
Eastern................. 45(10)-41-24-9 I
· 'd .
. 500-00=5-4-9
A1exan er................. ..
WP- Evans
LP-Lovsey

then broke to a 6-1 lead in the· secAsh went 4-5 for Southern with a
Southern pitching e.n route to a 17- ond.
triple and three singles. Travis Lisle.
Southern 'tied it as 6-6-1n the top was 2-5 and Maynard 2-4, while
9 win. over the Tornadoes Wednesof !he founh . Then, an 11-run founh Card, McKelvey, Shawn Dailey and •
day in. Buchtel. . ·
; Southern'soffense was there, but put the icing on 1111( cake as N-Y Chad Blount all single&lt;j. : '
4team's best defe~se is its .pitching, rolled to a 17-61ead. ·
Stalder and Caner each had three
Maynard got the start for Soutli- -hils for Nelsonville. Carter picked up
l{hd the hurlers couldn't hold back the
~oOdwaters.
·
·
em and in one inning gave up two the win with 12 hits given up, three
• 'Nelsonville poured it on · after hits, fanned two and walked one. strikeouts, five walks and nine runs
~outhern had taken . a f -0 lead. Malt Dill went two frames and gave against him.
·
·
lttichael Ash ·tripled to lead off the up 12 runs, 12 hits, two strikeouts .
Southern is scheduled to 'be off
!lame and scored on a sacrifice ny by and two walks.
tonight; then goes to Eastern Friday.
Corey Williams went two rounds, lgnjna &amp;!dill
"evin Deemer.
i Southern threatened with two
gave up four runs, two hits and a Sauthern.............. tOQ.62()..0=9-t2-2
~ore base runners (singles by May- walk. Danny Sayre was Southern 's Nel.-York ....,. IS()..( II )O()..x=I7-16-4
a.nd McKelvey), but could not closer with one inning of work, regWP-Carter
N-Y tied it in !he first on a i.stering n,o strikeouts; no walks and''
LP-Dill
~ollins double and Smathers single, · giving up no hits.'

'

.

nights from Bea Lisle, Jennifer
Lawrence, Jennifer Cummins and
Cynthia Caldwell . Other hit!Crs were
Amy Nonhup, Angie Carleton,
Amber Thomas and Tassie Cummins.
Southern took a 7-0 lead with
ihree runs in.lhe first and four in the
second. Sisson, Lawrence and
Manuel.doubles were key hits in the
drive."
'
SHS went up 9-01n the third, but
Nelsonville cut it to 9-2 in the bot-

Neisonville ·t~llected 16 hits off

.

'

.

1996 DODGE CARAVAN

.

N-Y diamondmen defeat Southern 17-9

.

Tod•y's game.t

Los Angeles' solid defense helped
Tom Candiotti (1·1), who surre...
deted a team·hi&amp;h 19 WJeamed runs
lUI season and finished at 7-14
despite a 3.50 ERA. He allowed two
runs and live hits in six inninss for
the victory, walkclil six and III'IICk out
six. · ·
"It's ni~ to be able to gel some
runs for Candy,'' teammate Bren
Buller said. "He's a hard·ha:k pitcher and he's been that way for anum·
of the sixth to give the Marauders the · ber of y~ars. I told him I hope we
didn't waste all those runs on one
wtn.
'
Pullins pitched a sood game on game."
At Oodger Stadium, Braves
!he mound for coach Scolt Gheen's
starter
Steve Avery (()..I) gave up
Marauders. The senior scattered sevseven
runs
- four earned - and
en hits, walked only two and struck
nine
.hits
over
5 1/3 innings.
out 13 Falcons.
"There
was
sluff that happened
Stanley led !he. Marauders at the
plate with a double and his home that didn 'I go in my favor, but I didrun. Aull added two siiJgles. Pullins n't give myself a chance to gel the
and Burton .had. a double. Rick breaks,'' Avery said. "When you
Hoover and Cleland each added a throw 100 pitches in the first two
iMings, that's not the fielders' doing.
single.
.
For Miller, Neal was !he lgsing 'that's yourself."
Iri other NL games; St. Louis beat
pitcher giving up nine hits, wanCng
Montreal
'4-1, San Francisco beat
two and striking out two. Keller had
Houston
J.l
-5, Colorado beat Chicaa double and a single to lead Miller.
go
1()..9,
Philadelphia
beat Pittsburgh ·
Frye added a pair of si ngles. Collins ·
7-6 and San Diego beat Florida 3-0.
1
· had a double.
Cardinals 4, Expos 1
Meigs will host . Eastern in a
Rookie
Alan Benes ( 1-0). making
make-up contest toni$hl.
his fifth career start, pitched a fourIDDinel2tlls
Miller............ ........ ! ()().32()..0=6· 7·1 hitter to lead St. Louis. He took a
Meigs ... ...... .......... .401-002-x=7-9-5 lhree· lti.t shutout iuto the ninth before
WP -Pullins
LP-Neal

Southern softballers hand N-Y 25-9 loss

Transactions
Am""-Lapc

'

Ro~ll White led off with a homer.

grounders and catcher Javy Lopez
threw the ball into ~nter fJCid twice,
' "II was pretty ugly," Jones said.
" II was one of those games where
nobody really played well defensively and we couldn't string any hils
together."
·

Eastern gets 24-S ·win over Alexa~der

St.airtlrlltl at

T..,.,_n &amp; Frtglcltllre

Hartrord at Bosron, 7:30p.m.

•

Meigs took.advantage of wildness school c.areer ~ a piiCher.
scatteri~g. seven hits, walking fi.ve
from a pair of Miller pitcherS to post
The Miliiluders orily were able to. . and stnkmg out f~ur. Collen II,
a 12-0 victory over previously collect three h11S, but took advantage Roach and Kelly Go Ike~ had the
unbeaten Miller in Tri-Valley Con- of 18 Miller walks.
.
three·Marauder hots, all smgles.
f, ence softball action Wednesday
The Marauders were held hot less
Hal he Berry was th.e starter and
e~enin at Meigs High School.
· .for three.and a third innings before loser for Miller (4-1) WJ!h reh~fhelp
Mei~s (4-0 overall &amp; in the TVC) Gilkey smgled wolh one \)ut on the from Hatfield. The two comb1~ed to
Ia ed the arne without ace pi1Ch- fourth . The Marauders held a 4-0 walk IS, stnke out three and gov; up
p 1mily /ackler who suffered a lead heading into the fifth mmng, but three hots. Hughes led Moller woth a
ekrnee '"'ury
· ·
· Tu~&lt;day's
game with
broke. it open with eight
big runs. •·
double
and a smgle. Berry added a
on
~
.
•
· f · 1
River Valley. Cynthia Cottcnll
Eight of the first mne batters on ~aor o, smg es.
moved from firsl to the mound and the fifth inning d~w walks .for
Me1gs will host Eastern in a
did an outstan'ding job for John Meigs and !he only hot of the mmng ma~e-up contest today.
Amott's Marauders. Collerilllhrew was a single off the bat of Ashley In~me l2tlls
.
·
t 0 innings on Tuesday and is see- Roach.
Mdler........ ......... .. .000-000-0=0-7-2
i:g her first action of her high
Cotterill was the winning pi Ieber Me1gs .... .. .......... .. l 0 1-28()..x= 12-3-0

Starting At

Frigidaire,
I
\1 ===~~

.

:Meigs softba~l tea!Jl shuts out Miller 12~0

SIJURDIY
TAPAN &amp; FRIGIOAIRE

6

Tonight's games

briefs---~-.

TIURSD~l·

·SALE

Angeles Dodgers capitalized oo five
Atlanta errors to beat the Braves 9·,
2 Wednesday night.
Atlanta hadn't made five errors
since June 30, 199 r, when they had
sixagainst ,the Dodgers, Third baseman Chipper Jones booted two

By PAVE HARRIS
come back to lake a 4-1 lead in the
Sentinel Correspondent
bottom of the first. Scott George led
Meigs scored two runs with two off !he bottom of the inning with a
outs in the sixth inning to post a si ngle, Chad Burton and Gary Stan·
come from behind 7-6 victory over ley followed with baek-to-bacl douMiller in Tri-Valley Conference bles. Rick Hoover followed with a
-baseball action Wednesday evening single, Hoovel' later scored on a on
at Meigs High School . The Maraud- a Miner error.
ers'with the win raise their record to
Meigs increased the lead io 5-1 in
3·2 on the year and 2-2 In the TVC. the thitd inning when Stanley I~ off
The Marauders facing a one run the .inning with a long home run over
deficit in the sixth inning had Brad the 330 sign in left cen~.
Whitlatch draw a walk with one out,
But the Falcons carne back in the
but was thrown aut trying to steal top of the founh inning with three
second. Cass Cleland then followed runs to make it a S-4 contest. J.
with a sharp bad hop single with IWO Keiler led off !he inning With a 'dou·
outs. Cleland then stole second and ble and A. Keller followed with a
Pullins followed with a double down walk. Jones singled and two Meigs
Jlle line in leflto tie the score. Pullins errors plattd the three runs.
then scored !he winning run on Mall
Miller took a 6-5 lead in the fifth
~ull's single.
inning when Frye and J. Keller led
I . Pullins then struck out the side on
off the inning with singles. Collins
~ust nine pitches to give the Maraud- · then doubled in both runners with
ers the win. ·
two outs to give the Falcons the lead.
· Miller jumped on tJ&gt;p 1·0 in the
That set the stage for the Maraudfirst inning, onlY. to have Meigs . ers' two-out lightning in the bottom

auignmenr.
FLORIDA MARLINS: Purchased the
con1ract of LHP Joel Adamson rrom
Omrloue of the llllerOOtional Leag~te.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: ltecalled
RHP Tim Worrell rrom Las Ve,1.as

In Gallipolis Has
Tappan &amp; Frigidaire
Appliances on

1iA

121 3 r!5 111

,

Ault's last-inning single helps Meigs get
win over Miller
7-6 come-from·behind
,
I
.

~uguc on a rehabilit:fiion

EMPIRE

WESTI!RN CONFERENCE
Ceritr.~ DlvWon
.1[ I. I &amp;

embarrassed, tuck it away and learn
from it," Green said. "Everybody
tells me he's a tough kid. I believe

ic Cout Leaaur. Rect lled RHP Raf01e l
Carmona from Tacoma .
TEXAS RANGERS: Annot.~nced tbe
refiremenr of SS Spike Owen.

NewJmey ........ 3632 12

- By The AttoclliM Prne
Figurinr out the Los AnaeJes
Dodaen is simple. They're 4-{) when
they're errorless and 0-6 when
they've made fielding mistakes.
Billy Al,hley, Grea Gagne and
Eric Karros""h'mered, and the Los

I. I &amp; liE 1iA

•·Philadolpbio....44 24
•·N.Y. Rnnp .. 41 2S
~- F1otida ............ 40 31
x-Wrulliogton .... 39 JO

Eastern Dh·IRon

J . ~71
S .444
."i J7~
6 .m

.1[

ahead ofTaubensee, then left a firstpitch fastball over the plate.
Taubensee outguessed Wilson.
"f knew he would try to get ahead
of me, so I was looking for a fast·
ball,'' he said.
"It was supposed to be a fastball
away. It got more of the plate !han I
wanted," Wilson said. "He latt~

loa

12'-'l

Tonlght'sgames

Ookland (Roya 0.2) "' a.iooao (Fornandoz 1.0), us p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nqy 1·0) ao Bo11on
(Selc Q.lJ), 6o05 p.m.
KIUlJaa .Citr &lt;A.,Pied). J) at Milwau-·.
1«e (Sporb (). ), 7oiJ3 p.m.
Cafifomla (Finley 1-1) 111 Detroit (Ura
J.J), 1o0l p.m.
•
Tew (Hill 2-0) IU New York (Cone 10), H5p.m.
Minnesota (Robenton 0-1} at Baltirnorll! (MuuiNI2-0), 7:J5.·p.m.
Seanle (Hitchcock. 2-0) 111 Toronro
(Qumurill 0.1 }, 7:3.5 p.m.

•

Jl~

Chicaao .tu New·Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at Miami, 7:30p.m.
.
CLEVELAND at ~w: York, 8p.m.
Denver at Hou11on, 8:JO p.m.
Dalln.s at Po11land, 10 p.m:
Golden Srate ar L.A. Clippers ru AllOIheim, Calir.. IO:JOp.m.

'

J

J l6

WashiJJglon 122, Boston 108
Orlando 116, CLEVELAND 104
Miami 116, O!arlonc 95
Detroit 92, Philodc.lpbia 76
L.A. l.akc:n Ill, Minnesota90
Uuth 103, Phoenix 79
San Antonio 10.5, rancouvcr 82
Seattle 108, Sacllllltemo 89

Today's game.t ·

ra.
.62."i

II ~

22 '~

Wednesday's scores

MinneJOtq 1t1 Boston, ppd .. snow· .
Octroi! 7, Seunlc 3
Calirornia2, Toronto I
BallilhDfe 3, CLEVELAND 2 (10)

1.

4

x-c:linched playoff spot
y-dinched di visio n
z-won C&lt;Jnrerenc:e ritk:

~

3 ..571
4 .500
j
.286

Wednesday's S&lt;OrH

:
,
•

Dallas .. .-. ................ .2• 52
Vancouw r ............ 12 64

Dhbton
y·Scllnie ........... ...... 61 16 .792
11 -L.A. l.akers ...... ..48 28 .6:\2
k-Por11and .......-....... 40 36 - ~26
PhoeniL ................ J9 18 .IDti
Socramcnto ...... ...... :\5 41 .461

~

Wettern Di•llion
Texu .-.............. _.... 7 0 1.00

. New York ................ J
· Ro&lt;iolol ................... J

a-Houston .............. 44 :\2 ..~79
Ikn ver ............... .... :\~ 43 ..-aJ4
Minoewta26 ..........S I .D8
JO

lill

P~elnc

Milw.ukee ............... ) · 3 500
• MinDetOta ................ J
4 .429
' &lt;;LEVELA~O ......... 2 4 .J.U
~ Olicaa:o .................... 2
:1 .286
Kansas Cily ............. 2 S .286.

Allanla ..................... 4

l!' ... ra.
.-t-San Antonio ...... 56 21 .727
.-t-Utuh ........... .. .... 52 2.fl .67.5

Iam

ra.
. 8~7

I.

··
·: Phlladelphia ............. 4

461~

Midwtst DlvisNHI

IMa

ram
w
Monueal ................. 5

4J

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Eastern Dlwlslon

Colifornia ................. 4
S...olc ..................... 4
0•1d•nd .................. 2

Wednesday night.
"Every player has been embarras~ somewhere along the line,"
manager Dallas Green.said.
The Reds left Wilson crestfallen
by taking full advantage of his control problems. Wtlson walked five of
the first II batters he faced and threw
just 44 strikes in 88 potches.
Eddie Taubensee hit 3' three-run
homer in the first and doubled home
a run to match his career high for
RBis and help the Reds forge a 7-all
tie in the founh.
His firsJ-inning homer gave the
Reds hope al'ler their disastrous lirst
inning in the field, which featured a
· throwing error by. second baseman
Eric Owens and a shallow ny ball
th~t w;os allowed to drop for a runscoring double.
~ilso1&gt; walked the two batters ·

Milwaukt'e .. . --·----B :'i2 J 07
Toronrn ......... ......20 S6 .26J

AL standings
.1[
Ballitnore., ............... 6

ing just seven runs in seven spring
stans as a n&lt;inroster player. He gave
up that. many runs in 3 '113 innings

'

.

·Dodgers down Braves 9-2; PhiiUes slip past P1r.ates 7-6 . .

Thu~y.~l11 , 1986

•

•

Thur.dlt, Aprll11,1118

�Jn limited AL action,

•

Orioles ge by .Indians 3-2; Tigers and Angels also win
' By DAVID OINIIURQ
Jeut sb innings from its staru!rs in
BALTIMORE (AP) - Balli· si~ of seven games, and the bullpen
more's bullpen has been almost per- hun 't allowed an earned run in 17
,f«:t. the team batting averaae is .271 inninas;
.
and the defense has allowed only
This from a team that went '71-73
two unearned runs in seven games. last season. The Indians, who went
. No wonder the Balti1110re Orioles 10-2 against Baltimore in 199S,
III'C 6-1, their best start since 1971, have noticed the difference.
and lead the AL East by two gaptes,
"They're &amp;-IIIIlCh more talented
their biggest margin since August club !han last year," Cleveland man1989.
ager Mike Hargrove said. "They've
'. " If our pitching stays strong, got better pitching and a better
:Cverylhing else will come througb," offensive lineup. Plus, they ' ve· got
said David Wells, who pitched eight people out there in positions with
solid innings Wednesday night ip a more range."
3-2 victory over the defending AmerRafael P~meiro singled in the
ican League champion Cleveland winning run in the I Olh inning as the
Indians.
Orioles matche'tllheir lhird-best stan
. The pitching staff has a collective in the history of~ran~hise. They
ERA of 2.43. Baltimore has gotten at started 12-1 in 1966,7-1 in 1971 and

Winston Cup slate
and standings posted
NEW YORK (AP) - . The 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
racjng schedule, with winners in
parentheses aqd driver paint standi~gs:

Feb. 18 - Daytona 500 (Dale
Jarrett).
. Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400,
Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
· Mar. 3 - Pontiac EKcitement
4.00; Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
·.. March I0 - Purolator 500,
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
· March 24- TranSI\uth Financial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
.: March 31 ~Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon). .
.
·: April f4 - First Union 400,
North Wilkesboro, N.C.
:: April 21 - Goody's Headache
Powders .500, Martinsville, Va.
: : April 28 - Winston Select 500,
l'alladega, Ala.
: · May 5 - Save Man SupermarJ&lt;e ts 300, Sonoma, Calif.
. May 26- Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
. June 2- Miller 500, Dover, Del.
June 16-UAW-GMTeamwork
. 500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 23 - .Miller 400, Brooklyn,
Mich.
··
July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla.
· . July 14 ~Slick 50 300, Loudon,
N.H..
.
.
July 21. - Miller 500. Long

;Skyline tQ open
·racing $eason
· :wltlfghind .,,,.. ,
i'Openlng Friday

I

I

The local racing series begin
ac ..,ss the region this week as Skytine Speedway kicks off the 1996
~ CJimpalgn with a grand opening Friday..
•• This is the first in the ~ewly
, formed RC Cola racing series; which
continues each Saturday staning·this
: JNeek at Tyler County Speedway.
I.:ate Models and AMRA Modifieds
' ate the headliners on the five-class
· series.
· ·Eldora Speedway in Rossburg
. kicks off the All-Star Sprint Series
· this week with a Saturday night, All. Star Sprint event paying $4,000 to
win. Joining some of the best sprint
driven-in the nation will be the UMP
modifieds and Street Stocks·. Warm·
.ups are at 6:30 p.m.
Next Saturday, The American·
· :Late Model Series paying $2,000 to
· win will lie at the "Big ,E.''
Sat11rday, April 13 West Virginia
• Motor Speedway will open its gates
• under the NASCAR banner, the first
: such sanction in the history ofWest
; yirginia.
. The Meigs Competition Kaning
ASsociation begins its 1996 season at
:the Meigs County Fairgrou~s Sun: day.

6-1 in 1969.
Jeffrey Hammonds scored the
winning run, Roberto Alomar drew
a career-high four walks, Chris
Hoiles homered and Roger ~cDow­
ell was perfect in relief.
"That's !he difference between
last year's team and this year's team
- we have guys capable of )letting
the little things done," Palmeiro
said. "It was basically a perfect
game for us."
·
Cleveland was 1.3-0 'in extrainning games last seas'!"· but that

streak is over.
"Every year is diffel'l:nt. You
take them as they come," Hall!rove
said.
In the IOth, after Hammonds
doubled off Julian Tavarez, Paul
Assenmacher relieved and gave up a
sacrifice to Brady Anderson. Alomar
was intentionally walked before
Palmeiro lined a 2-2 pitch into the
ri&amp;ht-field comer for the victory.
Jesse Orosco (1-0), the !bird Orioles pitcher, got the final out in the

In the NBA,

Heat wilts Hornets;
Magic b~ats Cavs

lOth after wllkina Jim Thorne.
Albert Belle's third homer in two
games gave Cleveland a 2·1 lead in
the sixth, but !he Orioles J01 even in
the seventh when Tony Tlruco
walked, stole second 111111 sconod on ·
Anderson's two-out tinale. '1'hllt
chased Jack McDowell, biddina for
his first victory in a Cleveland uniform.
McDowell, signed as a me agent
duri~g !he offseason, a)lowed five
hits, walked five and struck out seven 1n his second start with the lndi·ans.
"All I had to do was throw
Tarasco strikes, and I didn't do it,"
. McDowell said. " I look back at that
game and say, 'What if7'1 think you
always do that when you lose a close
game." ,
In other AL games, Detroit beat
Seattle 7· 3 and Toronto defeated
California 2-1. .
Tigers 7, Marlaeril3
Omar Olivares pitched a five-hitter for his firsC,AL victory'. and
Detroit hit threi more home runs

By The Associated Preas
Detroit beat Philadelphia 92-76; the
It was a unique situation for Los Angeles Lakers beat Minnesota
Alonzo Mourning. For the first time 111 -90; Utah beat Phoenix 103-79,
in
his career, he was booed for hav- San Antonio beat Vancouv'er 105·82
Pond, Pa. .
ancl Seattle beat Sacramento 108-89.
.
July 28 - DieHard 500, Tal- ing a great game.
In
his
first
game
at
Charlotte
since
Bullets 122; Ccltics 108
ladega, Ala.
being trade'd by the Hornets to MiaJuwan Howard had 26 points and
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indimi on opening day, the former dar- II rebounds as Washington wo~ at
anapolis
ling
of lhe fans was lusiily booed Boston for its ·fifth straight win.
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
every time he touched lhe ball. .
David Wesley led the Celtics wilh
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
"It just gave me more energy," . 19. Todd Day's three-pointer brooight
Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Mourning said after roughing up his Boston to 94-91, but reserve Chris
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
old team for 26 points / nine Whitney answered with a threeAug. 24 - Goody's Headache
.rebounds, four assists and three pointer to start the BulletS on a 1'2Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn.
blocks in the Heat's 116-95 vktory 4 run.
Sept. I -Mountain Dew SouthWedn~sday night. ,
Magic 116, Cavlllicn 104
em 500, Darlington, S.C.
·
"One guy said, 'Hey 'Zo, you left
Shaquille O'Neal, who has dediSept. 7 - Miller 400, Rich,
a championship· team here.' I just cated the season to his recently
mond, Va.
started laughing. I said, .'We didn't deceased grandmother, had 39 points
Sept. 15 - MBNA 500, Dover, really win anything when I was here, as Orlando snapped a two-game
Del.
did we?' That just shows you how home losing streak. O'Neal inade 1.5
Sept. 22 - . Hanes 500, Mar- narrow-minded the fans ean he. of 18 shots and was 9-for-13 from
tinsville, Va. '
·
They get a couple of drinks ·in them the foul line in . his first' full game
Sept. 29- Tyson Holly Farins
and they come here .and it's like, since leaving the team for five days
. 400, North ~ilkesboro, N.C.
to att~nd his grandmother's funeral.
Oct 6- UAW-GM Quality 500, 'Hey, let's boo 'Zo. "'
Leading
the
cheers
was
Miami
Pistons 92, Sixen 76
Concord, N.C.
coach
Pat
Riley,
whos~ ·team moved
Otis
Thorpe had 24,points and 16
Oct 20. AC-Delco 400, Rockwithin a half-ga!Jie of Charlotte' for rebounds for Detroit, including six · ·
ingham, N.C.
the
ejghth and last playoff berth in · poilus in a 13-0 run !hat gave the
Oct. · 27 - Dura Lube 500,
the
Eastern Conference. In 13 sea- host Pistons a 71 -47 lead. Detroitled ·
Phoenix
sons, Riley h¥.never failed to reach by 26 before Philadelphia cut the
Nov. 10- NAPA 500, Hampton,
the playoffs.
· · ·
deficit in !he laie going. Allan HousGa.
"Thfs is pr6Pltbly as well' as w~ : ton added 17 points, Terry Mills had
have played since we ha~e been . · 16 and Grant Hill h.ad II points, II
Driver standings
together," Ril&lt;;y said, referring to the rebounds and nirie .assists. Clarence
I. Dale Jarrett, 933.
two major trades this season that · Weatherspoon led the 76ers with.24
2. Dale Earnhardt, 896.
shuffled the Miami roster.
.points.
3. Ricky Rudd, 8.52.
Miami converted 14 Charlot1e
4.' ~icky Craven, 836.
turnovers into 25 pojnts and shot .~6
t.ken 111
5. Terry Labonte, 819.
percenl, making 12 of 20 threeT'unberwolves 90
6. Jeff Gordon, 800.
pointers. Tim Hardaway was 3-forSedale Threau replaced suspe"nd7. Mark Martin: 787.
6 on three-pointers in scoring 29 ed gpard Nic)c Van E~el with 20
8, Bill Elliot!, 751.
p:oilifs and Rex Chapm;m was 5-of- points and seven assists at Minneso9. Rusty Wallace, 743:
·7 on tho ,'l'fy-til'l• .&lt; · ' ·
.
Ia. Elden Cal!lpbell had 28 points a5
10. Ted Musgrave, 724.
I Dell Curry·· had
(!oints 'and the Lakers won for their seventh in
II. Sterling Marlin, 696.
'•(fien Rice )t '•i() ltall .ihe.llomets, 10 games. Van Exel was suspended
12. Kyle l"etty,'684.
·
who have five·games left.
·" forth~ remainder of the-regular sea13. Jeff Burton, 677.
·'
" We need to try to win al) five · ·son , and 'fined an NBA-record
tiC": Ken Schrader, 677.
now::· said K!lnny An!lerson, ~ho $25,000 earlier: in the day for shov: '
1.5. Bobby Labonte, 674.
bad 16 points and 10 assists. "Some- · ing· referee .Ron Garretson in ·Tues• how .we've just gotto bounce back.• dafs loss at Denver. Titreatt had. IS
16. Jeremy Mayfield; 665.
17. Boliby Hamilton, 6S6.
We just cait.' t S.em to bbunce back points as the· Lakers· built a 64:5s
18. Jimmy· Spencer, 640.
aftet a big win.'! don't know why." halftime lead. Threatt's three-point- ·
·19. Rick Mast, 613. ·
In olher NBA games Wednesday, er triggered a 14-0 run and Los
. 20. Michael Waltrip, 605.
· W"l'hington , ~at Boston 122-1()8, Angeles built the lead to' 21. lsiah
21. Kenny Wallace, 589.
.. Orlando beat Cleveland 116-104, Rider had 28 for Minnesota.
..
•
' 22. Ernie lrvan,'577.
23. Steve Grissom, 550. .
· · 24. Hut Stricklin, S42.
25. Robert Pressley, 537.
26. Wally Dallenbach, 533.
f'
. .
27. Btett Bodine, 515. :
moter, Adore Ltd. of Bay City; '
1 ;AKRON, 'ohio (AP) - Tough28. Lake Speed, S04. ·
•
man
competitions
li111'ludt
to
prize·
Mich.,
did not ·have a b'oxing com29. Joe Netliechek, 497.
fi~h.ts and are. subjeet to regu)ation
miss.ion license 'required for prize30. Darrell Waltrip, 486.
by
the
Ohio
Boxing
Comll!issi.
o
n,
an
'fights.·
·
.
31 . Ward Burton, 485.
appeals
coun
has
ruled.
'
:
In
Toughman
contests,
contes32. Derrike Cope, 480. .
. The 9th Ohio District Court of tants with.no prior professional box33. Morgan Shepherd. 477.
I
'
Appeals
deci.sion Wednesday upheld · in~ experience punchtrutd kick each
34.• Geqff BQdine, 473.
a
ruling
by S1,1ml!lil Com.mon Pleas other for up to three one-minute
35. Dave Marcis; 4S6. .
"
Court
Judge
Ted Schneidefn)an that roupds for prize money.
'
.
36. Mike·Wallace, 424.
tile
Toughman
contests
are
boxing
:
Tbe
Cohimb11s
attorney
for
the
'
37." Eiton Sawyer, 392. .
mate~ subject to c6mmissionjuris- • promoter, Terry Lyden, could not be
38. Johnny Benson, .389.
~iction.
·
.
, re~ched toilay for commept on the
39. John Andretti, 3=73.
·,
'•.
The
case
~gan
·in'
early
199S
appeals court ruling. A message
40. Dick Trickle, 355,
when
the
0hl.
o
.
attorney
general
seeking
. comment WI!§ left at his
41. Bobby Hillin Jr.. 313. ·
•
went
ro
cotin
to
stop
a
Tougbman
·
offiee
.
42. Mike Skinner, 187.
contest in Cuyahoga Falls: The pro- '
43. Jeff Purvis, 127.
44. Loy Allen, 110.
45. Chad Little, 64.
46. Chuck Bown, 43.

•

1995 FORD
ESCORT LX

1995 FORD
,WINDSTAR LX

Dr, 4 cyl, auto, air .
cond, AM!FM caaa, PS,
PB, PW, rur dlfoggir ,

V-6, auto, dual air cond,
AMIFM CD, PS, PB, PW,
PDL, · Pwr . aeat, tilt,
cruiH, leether.

•uto.. .. .r .eOnd, AIIIFM

PDL, Pwr M8t.

Hlghllne 4 Dr, 4 cyl; a~.
. air , cond, AMIFM can,
pit, CNIH, PS, PB, PW.

, 1993 CHEVY
ASTRO LT
Extend~ length,

auto,

air cond, AMJFM can,
tilt, crulu, PS, PI, PW,
POL. LOADED

•13,949
1993 PONTIAC
'
GRAND PRIX
'

Pl'.f'1fl'.cf gifts

. . . for any occasion!
Prices starting atJu~;r,

$89
FOR GENERATIONS:::
by ARTQ1RV,ED~ .

if4cquisitions.ftteJewdrg
:

11 Mill Stluet

Mlddllport, 011.45180

151 Second Ave.
o.tllpol... Oh. 45831

814112 1210

114 4412842

Student
· represents
; Rotary
·. in contest

•

.•

1

Jf

.

.

ALFRED NEWS NOTES .
Nellje Parker accompanied
Howard, Homer, .Willis and Irene
· Parker to Albany where they aJtended visitati&lt;m for ,Opal Colburn, sister
of !heir sister-in-law, Helen Parker.
:·Afterwards they visited the new
home of Helen and Edson · Parker
. near Albany.
·
, RandY Burke is rec~perating at
home ftom.a foot laceratton suffered
, while iawina wood.
... ~ .
.
·.
.".·'

TAX RF.Jr.URNS
April ~0 is the last day for businesses to fil~ 1996 pcrsopal property taK returns, Meigs County Auditor
Nancy Parker Campbell announced ,
today:
. . ,
·
·
In February, the auditor's office
!llailed a~ return to every business
thatfiledib 199~. Cainpbellsaid_tax
returns ~requtred of all tangtble
personal .~~ny owned by ~sipesse.s, 1"9•v1duals, P~c:rsh1ps,
..,.i.. ~\·, _!lECUP8UTING
·. ·associatio~d C_l)glOritions~ in
' ' .. . .~ll~ratinafol- bUsiness.~
r11iTcinnatiohiilaybe .
lowing~ hospitalization. Gards by ca!lin
auditor's office, 992may· be. sent 10 bini at, 34:412. State '2698. · ·
Route 7, Plimeroy,' 4S769.
. • '· ,, '
'

Beat of the Bend ..':

Clll.., lilt, ·crulH, PS.
1994 MERCURY
CAPRI
Convertlb,e, 4 cyl, auto; ·
air cond; .. AMJFM ClU,
crulle,, PS, PB~ Pw,

POL.

,,,,

v.ei

autoi air Cond,
AMJRI epa, tilt, CNIH,
PS, PI, PW, PDL. 4 Dr.

•,. I.449
.

•

1993 FORD
T·81RD LX

V-6, auto, atr
AM/FM ·CI!H, tilt, ..J;NIH,·
PS, PB, PW,
lilt.

•9,949
1992
BONNEVILLE

SSEI,S~V-e,
auto, llr Cond, AM/FM
caU, tilt, CNIM, PS, PB,
PW,
• POL,
· Power

SUnroof, luU••

ty!'

'

t

•

.ARTHRITIS SUPPORT GROUP

The Meigs County Arthritis Supj&gt;on Group will meet April 19 from
10:30 a.m. to noon in the conference
l'liOm of the Meigs County Senior
Citizens' Center:
· Barb Culbertson, an occupational
therapist at R{\Cksprings Rehabilita-

M'

.

•

\

•

lncid~ntally,

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-cUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Could
you help me, please? I am looking for ·
fitted slipcovers for a sofa and a
loveseat and can't find !hem anywhere! Lots of loose throws but no
fitted. -- MARILYN REPPBN, Her.
nandO, Fla.
DEAR MARILYN: You'll find a
variety of fitted slipcovers in both !he
Domestications (I -800-746-2SSS)
l!ftd J.C. Penney (1-800-222-6161)
catalogs - ,but be forewarned !hat
these slipcovers, while shaped, do not
necessarily fit tightly.
We recently clipped an article
from the New York Times !hat was
titled "Making Slipcovers Behave."
A' product called "Sitting Pretty,"
flexible, V-shaped pieces that are
pushed into the crevices of chair, sofa
or loveseat, hold the loose fabric
firmly in place and give the covering
a truly "filled" look.
'The pieces are sold in sets that
cost $19.99 for a chair, $24.99 for a
loveseat and $29.99 for a sofa Add
$4.95 for shipping and handling.

the grips can also be
used to secure quilts or sheets !brown
over a sofa or chair. You can order the
"Fitting Preny System" by calling I·
800-748--3487 or by writing "Fitting
Pretty," I00 Fusion Way, Country
Club Hill, n. 60478.
DEARANNEANDNAN: Within the last 15 years I have seen several program~ on 1V that were excellent. I've never seen them re-broadcast and would like to purchase
them, if possible. '!Wo were broadcast
on our local PBS and were based on
John Le Carre novels, starring Alec
Gumness as the British Intelligence
spy, George Smiley. They are "Tinleer, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" and "Smiley's People." The other movie was
one of the first miniseries developed
for
television tided "The Word•"star•
nng the late David Janssen. This was
a story about the discovery of a new
book of the Bible (fictional). -- SAM
RAM~EY, Flourtown, Pa.
. DEAR SAM: We think your best
bet is to get in touch with A Million
and One World Wide Videos ( 1-800849-7309).11tls is a video search service that has had a 98 pen:ent success
rate in ferreting out just about any
video ever made.
.
When you call them, you will be
lion Center, will be presenting assis- asked to guarantee your order with a
tive devices and joint protection. credit card and to set a limit on what
Anyone who has arthritis or has a
friend or family member with arthritis is invited to attend. Further infor.
, mation may be obtai~ed by calling
'
593-2518. .

Society scrapbook _ _;.....___ _

•

.,

• Some best bets on s.of.a slipcovers

Dorothy Leifheit, a student at
. Meigs High School, represented· the
' Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club in ·
the Rotary District Four-Way Test
Speech Contest held recently at the
, Dairy Bam Cultural l'orts Center in
. , Athens. Each student gave an origi·
nal five to seven minute speech from
memory.
The top three winners in the c;on~st were Jennifer Leachman, Chillicothe First Capital Rotary Club, first
LOCAL WINNER - Dorothy Lelthell, Meigs High School student,
prize of $2.5~; Sam Snavley,
was the winner In the Mlddleport.Poowoy RDIIlry apeach contast
Delaware Rotary Club, second prize
Hera she receives 1 certificate from David lusty, dlatrl~ gover·
of $150; and Stephanie Corcoran,
nor, killowlllg the district compillltlon.
Chillicpthe Rotary Club, third prize
of$75.
.
·EvelY student received a certifiA winner in the local contest, High School, won $SO savings bonds.
cated from David Lusty, district gov: Leifheit won a $100. savings bond. They were Robin Gillispie and Kimernor.
·
Other contests, both of Southe111 berly Co~ell . ·

~------:o----.-.-~

"

Asked if he would be eatiJ11 foods made ~ttl oleslra, Blaekllun ..,_, .;1
can't imqine wby I'd WIDt to. This is a purely tec:hnotop:al. ....,..&amp;ill.
get-ricb-quick Jll&amp;lir bullet pill."
:
The FDA's Jim 0' Hara says there wu a "very open and public lid t :·
about olcatra durinalhe committee's hearings. ''The adviiOIY CCIIIIIIiiM's
!"'~ndalions arc just that: They arc advisory. It is the apncy tbllt IJIIIdD
tU dec111on."
•
He says the qency hu an .;onaoina erfort to have more ~rei­
resentation on advisory committees."
. And he says the FDA will be monitoring olestra. "The agency hu made
II clear that tf new data comes to the agency dtat raises wcry concetnl, ·d$e
agency will react" ·
•
Sydney McHugh of P&amp;G says of Blackburn's editorial : " His piece rePresents his opinion. It's not the conclll5ion of !he majority of the advillliy
committee or numerous other scientists who have supported olcstta's Wt· .

By NANCI Hfl I MICH
•
The
. advisory committee voted in Nove'ftber thar there was a reasonable
UtA TODAY ' cetUI'ty of 110 M1n from tbe ute"of oleatra.
. An .editorial in Thursday's New Enaland Journal. of Medicine questions •
In an ihter:vicw l'roai his home ill ~ Blackburn, ~ retired prothe long-term wcty of olestra and levels criticisms at the Food and Drua ~of public hcaltb • the Univenity o1 Minnesota, Minaelpolia,saya there
Administration's approval process.
IS no proof at all Qlesua is bcaeficial. ft'a pure UIU!IIplion."
·
OlcJtra, the controversial fake fat dtat got fDA approval in January, ia
. He also says tbc FDA revie"\' process "isn't a balanced one." The Cam·
just a couple of months away from lell-marketins in Pringle&amp; poliiO chips. · nuttee .dtat. revie~ oles!J'l '_'wu weiahod heavily with entrepreneurs, UliDr. Henry Blackburn, a member of !he FDA advisory committee that mal ~1en11su! elmicalacaeallltl, and there wu little repcesentation of pcoreviewod olcstra, writes ia NEJ that "there is almost no relevant scienlifie pie w11h public health and~- intaest."
Michael Jacoblon, head of the Center for Science in the Public Interest,
litcmure on (olestra'l) potential health effects,!except for studies by Proc·
ter .t Gamble.''
'
~of oles~·s ~~~.critics, objected all alone to the malceup of lhe com·
He says many e~pens don't believe olestn~'s long-term safety ,has been lnlttee, cbarJiaalt had liO conswner advocates !he way it had industry advoadequately tested in hUIIIIIIS. And he questions the FDA review process..
cates."
BlackburnalsowritcsinNEithatdurinathecommittee'-inglhe "FDA
· 'Oiestnl, made. of SUJII' and vegetable oil, taste~ like real fat but slips
through !he body without Ieiding fat and calories. Critics' concerns jnclude staff memberS had already concluded that olestnl was safe and were acting
side effects such as depletion of C!IJICer-fightlnllinutrients and gastrointesti- as propottents of the petition for approval."
nal\fisturbances such as bloating and !lill!l'hea.
.

you are ·
video. (Many
these videos arc
obtained from collectors who will .
often charge from two to four li~
the original price).
•
If the movie is found at or beloW
the price limit you .have set, you ate
obligated to purchase it. If !he price
is higher, you will be notified and at
that time you may eithercancel yoiir
oi'Qer at no obligation to you or a~
to the higher price- it's your choice.
STIJMPED: Mrs. Carole Gunthir ·
of Ocala•. Fla., has been looking filr
a measunng cup which measures ·1
cup on oq,e side and, when turncid
over, measures 2 cups on the othir.
She n~.' rhe kind that has a handle.
please!
•
Write tL "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, Vf OS048.
Questions of general interest wijl
appear in the colwnn. Due to the vol)lme of mail, personal replies canngt
, he provided.
:
. I

IT TAKES I COMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

·a· thodl'st

·.

Foster Homes are needed for
Meigs County Children .of all ages
Call' 992•2117 forintonnatlon-arid·
to be part of the effort.

·ch.urc·.h plans
f
.
con erenee
Plans .for hosting the South Central District Conference on Saturday
at the Rock Springs United Methodist
Church were made when the Middleport. League met recently at the
church.
The local league will be celebrating its 50th year as a part of the Ohio
League.
The program will include a workshop by !)unny Kuhl on the repair of

' Co~gratulations to the Meigs

until II :30.
..
quilts, a talk by Mony Wood, DARE
officer, and entertainment by Denver
County teani which took the Ohio- ·
Besides auending the various R,ice on his guitar. Luncheon will be
State C~pilmship in basketball at , d~ses.~~~Fy are shown the effective potato and salad. bar.
the 'S~tal Olympics in Columbus ·. '-Meigs ql'lnty VIdeo created a few
Special ·guesis at the district meeton the weekend of Man:h 29. .
years bBf,~ by Roger and Mary ing· will be honorary mothers of the
The team ranges ill ages fr.9111 Gilmore and they are giv~n a to~r of Middleport CCL.
eight through 22 and went against !he the IIIUseum so they can v1ew vanous
Kitty Darst, preside.nt, conducted
Butler County team winning by a matenals housed there. Later the stu- the meeting with a discussion on
score of 69-66. The team, coached by dents will write essays about their serving the canteen at the American
Chuck Kinnan who gives freely of·his expCiien.c~s in visiting the !lluseum Red Cross bloodmobile. Kathy Dyer
.time in !he endeavor, was ,presented and ~artiCipaungtn the sessions. . was welcomed into membership: It
the state championship trophy which
Its QUite a umque ~rogram and ·~t was noted that several members
is cprrendy being proudly displayed has been accorded nauonal recogm· attended Lenten services at Grace
at the carleton School in Syracuse.
lion. Where butm Meigs County?
Episcopal Church. Nancy Morris
Athletes are now in training for
-----•-won the traveling prize, . and the
track and field events as well as softIt's an ill wind. ··
~L
· d that 1 have a hostess gift was won II in«&lt;a Brodball so we'.lllook forward to leam.ing ·· 1·recen'~~menuone
· ·
erick; Refreshments were served.
. . how they fare in these events as fri en d wh asses a1ong his copy of ·
"
• sp(ing moves on.
Yankee Magazine .to me each month.
·'
' ' --···-·
Alice Globokar is also a sub- Now OPen fOr the Spring Season
Tough luck end Jamie and Kim scriber to the excellent publication
Complete Une Of Bedding &amp;
Wolfe who lost everylhing when and somewhere."along the line had
Vegelable Plants
their .residence on the· Roy Jones received two Yankee Main Dish
Hanging Baskets
; Road was deStroyed by fire ~ently. Church Supper Cookbooks. Needing
(Blooming &amp;Foliage) .
.; . Members of the Syracuse Chun:h only one, she dropped her eKtra copy
Geraniums
' of the Nazarelie will be .staging a by for me. To put me in a kitchen is
: "bum out" shower for the family at 6 like putting a bull in a china closet.
Shrubs • Tl'eel Azaleas ·
: p,m: Friday at the chufl:h. The fami- However; the recipes look like !hey
Rose Bushes
: ly needs "everything•: as one relative . ate for' good stuff and ma.ybe I can
Open' Dally 9-5, Sun 1•5
·: put it. The shower Is o~n to the pub- con someone close by into trying out ·
We honor the
·; lie.______
i .. . a.c~~~!~ofthem. We'll ~e......

Hubb;d..·

LOCATION 319 S. 2ND AVE. MIDDLEPORT, ·OHIO
FRIDAY APRIL12

8:30AM - 6:00 PM
SATURDAY APRIL 13
10:00 AM- 2 PM
Good Aprll12
&amp; 13 Qnly
.

•Good Aprll12 &amp; 13 Only

2TON

AIR
'
CONDIDONER
INSTALLED

COupon not valid wit!l prior o!fers.

'

~

PatrJL

•
•

•

. ,,

.

.'

., '

.

.

00·
·I

·

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

f\\"E"E .·

Hamburgers
&amp;

· 992-5776

100 REWARD
·leading to an•st of person .responsible
for acdde~t hap,.ed Tuesday after1100n
fr.nt of Oty .Statlon on R.t .1•.S11all
red autonaoblle wltb damage to right
front &amp; "g rl &amp; hood. ·c • .State Highway

.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

'

Greenha·use

·;
Talented Meigs County Senior cit, I .. Is this tlili longest winter in histo:. · izens are up to their ears in their ry? Sure seelfis that way to me. How-'
'; annual ·"Yesteryear'' progtam tieing ever. predietklns are that we're gonna
Syracuse, OH
~ presented two days each week at the · warm up. It's time. Do keep smiling. ·
' Meigs Museum in Pomeroy.
::
With about I00 percent panicipa1
-; lion by Meigs County ~hools, the
.
·: prosram started in late March and
· 'will continue through early May in
: order to work all of !he students in.
: The program is fOr fifth graders and
•· is carried. out under the sponsorship
~ .of !he Meigs County Senior Ci!Jzens
'
I,
.
.
• Center.
· . · Appearing often· in costume, tal: ented seniors ·provide instniction to
; the fifth.gnders in "lost arts" suc:b as ·
· 'quiltiJII, anhroidering;leather work;
, ·c.ndle llllkins and •
skills of .
:"yeocayelt". The students through
• ·tbe tourtesy or tbe center arc provided Willi maa.lsls ill vuious class·
.• 10 dial !bey lll'flllllly crue items
they ca lib bame. StudMts mive .
atlhe IIIII I JJD llbout 9 Lm. and stay
'

.\

.,

by Bob Hoeflich .

1995.PLYMOUTH
·· NEON
·• .
"

TheD..Iyll llttii•P I

I

1995 MERCURY SABLE
¥4,

-

-

-PotfriMoiJ •llllkllpcli'i. Ohio

FDA.ad·viser has sonie .serious doubts about olestra ·.

I

...

••

..

apinat visitina Seattle.
Mark Parent, Melvin Niev!'l and
Cecil F~elder homend for the Tlpn.
who have hit 17 home runs in !heir
lint nine gamca. inc;ludinat4 in their
1.. six.
Olivares (1·0) struck out eiPt,
includinaJay B.._ fcu-tinw,and
walked two. Seattle st..rter Bdwill
Hunado (1-2) gave up five runs and
seven hits in five inni~l'·
Anpk 2, Blue' J1111 1
Garret Anderson homered in the
ninth, giving Califo'miathe victcry in .
front o( 25.446. the smallest crowd
in SkyDome history.
Juan Guzman (.1 , 1) got two quick
outs in lhe ninlh'before Anderson hit
a J.{) pilcll over !lie cenrer-rldd fence
for his first RBI this season.
A!lderson's homer gave rookie
Mark Holzemer his first majorleague win. Holzemer faced just one
batter, gelling Shawn Green to
ground out with the bases loaded in
the eighth.
. Troy Pen:i.val worked the ninth ·
for his second save.

n

. Court gays To.ughman. boxing
,. subject to ·oac reg~:~latior•

/

n.ur.day, Aprll11, 1,..

Pomeroy • llkldl1pcM1, Ohio

HotDogs .
Pop &amp; CotTee
During the Live

Remotes Only
Friday
&amp; Saturday
' .

•

ENTERPRISE·NAGLE
319 S. 2ND AVE.
MIDDUPOIT, OH 45760

\Wre'Illelnside Guyl

.I

tiRS. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM

MONDAY· FRIDAY

-

.

..

,9 92·4485

···800·516·2932
"

,.

�•
Thurlclly, April 11, 1.-

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

.

(Granny oVersteps authority with unruly granddaughter
'''

pve her an ultinwlwn. If she concinued to - him, we wauld no
Ianser Jive her financdl support.

Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: While ciur
oldest daughter, "Courtney," was in •
her second year of college, she·
began to date "Carl," who was not a
serious student. Our daughter IIWIaged to maintain a good &amp;J"Ide-p(rint
average and was plallning to attend
~cal school.
It became obvious to .us thai her
relationship with Carl was-becoming
intimate. Her father had a Ions talk
with Courtney and tried to get her to
drop Carl, but she refused. He the-n

'

•

•

Out of the blue, Courtney's
sot involved and took
her side. She bought our daughler a
new car and assused Courtney a senemus monthly allowance. A few
weeks later, Carl dumped Cowtney
anyway.
Months passed, and the results of
my mother-in-law's interference
bec:ame apparent. Courtney dec:ided
noHo go to medical school. Instead,
she got pregnant and manied a man
she barely knew. M'y husband's
mother continues to give Courtney
money and will no doubt pay the
medical expenses for the- new baby.
As you probably have guessed by
this time, our daughter no longer
wants anything to do with her fathe-r
and me.

pmdmotber

Why do some araadplreots cry to
Dear Ann I ancien: You missed it
take over the parents' authority . We -in'your answer to "I.E. ia GeoFJja."
feel we could I)Jve WCibd thipgs the 22-yeer-old whose· mother had
OUI with our dault\ter if Granny had died. "Georgia" said she had trouble
~ l)er nose wbere it belonged. sleepina and eating, cried for no reaYou can print my letter and the city, son and withdrew from friends and
but please wilhbold the name. -- family. Her symptoms BR that of
BatOII Rouge, La.
,
Dear Baton: I' m printing your
letter with the knowledge that there
arc at least two sides to every story - sometimes three or four depending
on your vantage poinL
It's obvious that Courtney
messed up somewhere along the line
and Granny stepped in to rescue her.
Courtney sounds as if she needs
some pro.fessi onal help. I • hope
Granny will foqt the bill. It would be ·
a ·far berter gift than a new car.
Mean»:hile, don't write the girl. off.
Make an effort to repair the relationship.
·

clinkal depression. She doesn't
need sleeping pills or something to
help her eat. She needs a doctor and
anti-depressants.
"Georgia" ·sounds just like me. I
wouldn 't get out of bed, cried for no
reason in the supermarket and hoped
I wouldn't walie up in the morning.
If you've never been in this black

pul!lbbed u a free aemce to -

MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
363, F.&amp;AM, annual inspection, Saturday. Dinner at at 6:30 p.m. at
Masonic Temple.

-

pro&amp; IJ'OUpl wilblq to MllOUDCe
mectlua IDd specill evea.._ The
c•lendlrilaotd1 'l'wliop-*
· tales or fuDd nlsen ol any type.
Items are priDted a~p~~Ce permits
and canilot be peranteed to 11111.
specific number ol dayl.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
PlaiJlS VFW 9053, Thursday 7:30
p.m. Refreshments at 6:30p.m. Nomination of officers.

Rl11LAND -- Return Jonathan
Meigs ctiapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 10 am. Sat- ·
urday, borne of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
Mrs..Gene Yost, program; Mrs. Steve
Jenkins, patriotic music; community
leaders to be honored.

LETART FAU.S •• Letart Falls
Elementary PTO., 7 p.m. Thursday.
REEDSVILLE - Revival service,
Thursday through Sunday, 7 p.m.
nightly; 10 a.m. Sunday,' Eden U.B. ·
Church, Route 124 between Little
Hocking and Reedsville. ·· Special
music. speaker, Rev. Richard Placeway. Parkersburg, W. Va.

live like this. - Been There · Itba-

N.Y.
De.- Ithaca: Of coune you ue
richt- Many readen also told me
that "'Gco!Bil" abould loolt ia_to
"Motherless Daupters." a IIIJipo't
poup for women whose mothen
have died. For information, tend a
self-Fiddrfssed, sumped eDVelope
to: MOiherless Dau&amp;hten, Chaobe
Station, Box20710, New York. N.Y.
10021..0074. .
Seacl qaetdoM to Allll . _
den, Cnaton Syaidlalte, 5771 w.
Cea..ry BIYCI., Suite 700, Los
Ana 'a, Calif. 90845
,ca,

Uve Psychics
1 on 1

Touch- tone phone

Umestone,

required ..
Serv-U

GraVel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

(619) 645-8434

614-992-3470

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC
Servi~g

614-992-5048
Free Estimates
.

'

· ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTIOI
!
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•

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.._

1122/M

LINDA'S
PAINtiNG

~New Garages

A Few 01 Our Home S..nclaid Featura •

Public Notice
11M -••a Ill -71151.
. 2) A bond lor 11M · lull ·
amount 111 IIIIa bid. 11le
owner wiD .....,In Ilia bond

Public Notice
ADVERTIIIEIIENT FOR
· 111118
VILLAGE OF POMEROY

"""OIIIca

- -

illll:. I

•IIIII••

llnauw••• .

... 7

ful ... , , . . . . . .

·

-.lila -••actor

•Interior &amp; Exterior '
PalnOng
Also Concrete·Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

·
•.•7.. .;,

.100 Years 95 Years 92 Years.
Fomt Hill Cleaners

1•

Pliant 511-11122
Ellllillalttd

Antlr Bros. Co,

I'Mnlla-2211
1111 Ulltld 1_,

P11ont Ill U31

:1------.;:;:;.
. _, _

- --·-···-··- · ·

Public Notice ·

. IE*III)Id 11111'

PUBLIC NOTICE
,; Setwday," April 20, 1"f;

amount of IIIIa llld. Tlla
ow- wiH relllln 11M bond ,
oflllaauccuatulllklderbut
tlla owner will return lila
bond of MCII una-.fl;l
bidder all8r a CORtriiCt baa
ball!~
Alllntlon ~

blcldera Ia
eallad to all requiNmenta
contaiMCI In 11M bid pacll:at
Including: thla prOJ8Ct Ia
federally
ualllad.
Contraeta to ba IWerdad
undar lllllllnfltatlon lor blda
will be aub)ect 10
Praeldantlal Executlva
Order 11248, a• amandacl,
raqulrln1J AlllrmaiMI Action
tor Equal Employment
tu~

C:onti'IICt- lrt ouoer
advlud lflllt 11M olanlllrY 21,
11172 Equ.. EF11ploymant
g:»J:rtunlty Executlva
oJ 11M o . - of
Ohio Ia alao appllcablll to
t1t1a bid lmiiiiiJo,l. . ·
No blddar mar ~
hla bid within ,elxtr (80)
daye all8r lila lleiUII data of
QplnlnalhaiMI. ·
All blila ahall lie ,.pr.,opao-mtvy

algnad· by an authorized
raprn 1 1lllllw of tile bidder.
Ali blda ehllll be -lad
and plainly llllrkld "811l1d
Bid fqr Rlvar ' Front
Amphhhaallr Project •
Gal...r Contract,-,.._oy,
Ohio".

,The ,...... the
l'lghttortj&amp;t.nyooFIIIblda
eubmlttacl, and w1lva •ny
lnag ~ Ill
;

llv I l i a -

Sdlr'slnc.

1/21lfn

t

;

PubliC Notice
Z) A bond tor lila lull

~

.

•Eie!:trfCII &amp; Plumblna~
·lfOiftrijj;iO ~'*:"4'~ ...~- ~"'f

_ . _. _ _ _ , · -- - -.,

·.

tllaVII.... ofP-~
~=:
CIWIII- E. Tenaglln
VIIIIDII.aw DIF Dtlr
4iMt
(4)11,11,14 '(8)1 4TC

80 Years

78·Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap SeiVIces

Phont S5H782
Eltlbllllltcl1t15

~IIIH242

E1lalllllhld 1117

70 Years

67 Years

tD:OO a.m. the Home
National Bank wFII offer for
.... at public auctiOn on 11M
tank Parking , lot · the
~

systems, lly lines, underground

bores.
For Free Htlmate call 949-2512 ·

' 367.()266 - 1-800-960-3369
Fl'flfl Estl,mat••

WIUOJfAIII a.u'U

-

SIIITII'S
COiniUCTIOI

7mo. Gor..n StlopNt~ 40
oood country ho~. 304 -875·

C.....luMngiRsu: dt'rt
•NewHomaa
•Addltlona

8138.

'•

•New Gerao.s
•Remoclallnt
•Siding
-Raoftng
•P•tntlng

SoFa&amp; 2c:l"awo.304-e75-7541.

FREE ESTIIIATES

6Q

(814) 1112-5535
814 1112·2753

•'

•

Lost and Found : ·

Found: Young Foma~ Chow IIi&gt;,
Fourth Avenue Vicinity, 814--44d- ..

75
61 Years

The Geist .

IICidlall':l 01. . . .
1'llollir- ...
E Ill h41eM

Years

Coin &amp;Stamp Center

Ball Security Bonds

Pliant &amp;55 1111
Ellallllllllcl 11131

Pllont 1551515
Elt ~~ llad 1Mt

.50

44 Years
l&lt;qmer &amp;Sons
Pllonlas.m7
Elll.llhldll51

30 Years

'

52Yeus

-

Pllonl
1217 .
Jlttl"llllad ,.,.

BIII.Secwlty BOnds

B._.,

Pliant
Elt••••hiii11G

992-3838

Flfl tlr., .,.
•
s.r.

Hlri» fD IMt:k, llP

A1TENTION SPORTS
FANS
Let your fingers do tl)e
walking Jo the sporJs
line. Flnailce·Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spreads, Dally
Horoscope. . .
1·900-n&amp;o7oo •

Ohio a waat Vlrglnll
Toll F'" 1-800-17N1167
~ 8418

PllantRII. . ·
Elll'llllad 1151

Crystll Glass Co.
PiloneiJIS.~

EillU 11aF1.11r1
.'

·, The Daily Sentinel.

The CosJ Is Only $12

\

________...,
w/eoupoa

Serving

Colltrador :orlt,b -

'.,........................

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

30

yeoon experience now

avallalildor aa types of
. New Homes, Garaga,
Addldo111, Ballla;
Kltdie511, Decks, Siding,
Roots etc.

lit""" ... .,

619 845-8434 .

,.ew Homes • Vlny! Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

It ....

COn~tR~yHoweey

594-3780 days, 6911.7231
evenlopor
I..JIOI.264-6390 utytlme!

HoWard L Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

New At lneles lleetronies

ADYEmSI_NI
THE HAT UN

•

ladle lllaeli Dealer .

Imprinting
•Shirts attats
-sportswear .
•Ball Uniforms

FREE ESTlMATES

949-2168
5111111Mli'N

DOWNUNDER
CEUIIICS

Your favorite artist
·on Tape or CD

3rd St., RFICine, Oh.

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825
113111tn

UD&amp;IfU ·

o.-nW.nt Salel

""' ·.2'5-50% Oflf

. _. JlliNSUlAnON·
· 537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 1112-2772 ·
Ofllca Houra: Mon..fFl
8:00 a.m. • 3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alllftl. Skiing,

.uao.,.;.. Jllllnta alld ·

bnr8hee.
'
Sat., MarCh 30, Apr118
Noon-5:oii P.M. ·

. VInyl

3mllaa-'hof~
off Rt. 7
CIHM;II: It Outll ...,.,. .

Raplac-~

WJncl-. r,Jown
lnaultdlen, Storm

:: ~~~~n;::::l;uc:~:

Ill·Rllftlllild
COIITRUftlll

Legion #602 .
Bingo

Residential ~ Commercial _

Sun. Nights
Lucky Bali $300.00

Roofing ~ Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts

with 21 playe!'5 or more

Complete Remodeling
· Decks ~ Bathrooms ~ KIJchens ~ Siding
35 Years Experience

week. Pay according to

WlndOWI. Qlragea.
Fraai!Stlmataa

Public Notice'
a time to be deelgnatad by

R~cine American

Raises $50.00 ea.

Doon, Storm'
1ftMfn

~

HouM Rapa7r Fir

RamodoiFng
Kitchen &amp; B1th
Remodeling
Room Addhlono
Siding, Rooflng, Patloo
Roaaonable
lnouoero • Experienced
· CalF Wayne Noll

Los1: Wallet aro und Wend~'s, Pt
Pleasant RE WARD. 304-6753994 aher 5pm or 304-875·6633. ,

70

· the Number !JI players
949-2044 or 949-2038

(614) 992--236.4

1•100.819·3943

!--=·:- :- -:- :--=.=.=.=.=-: :--:·-:;:
-

vard Sate

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
4113th. 4114 th,-9 -? 4983 Ro u1e
141 , Furniture, Ho me Interior,

Prom DreSB&amp;5, Nice Jewelry, l ots
Motet
',
. ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
. Advance. DEADLIN E: 2:00 p.m.
· the day before the ad is (E) run.
Sunday editlon - 2:po p.m. Frida1
Monday edition - ~0: 00 a. m. sat-.
urday.
: Fri, Sa1, 9·5, 1760 SR 141 , Desk
Book s, Dishes, Curtai ns, RtJg_s,
Clothes, HousehOld Decor:
.,

992-4405

. 614-992-7643
~:L..-~'!-'~(~No~s_un~d-ay.._c_al_is.;..)_.....;;'"•-;;;.;;;.;j

L&amp;E

Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
.
Painting

NEFF REMODELING
. SERVICE

Vernon • Ell•n

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request
No Lawn Too Large or
TooSma/1 .
· Plan Ahead, Calf Today!
'
742-2803

Pomeroy;
Middleport
&amp; Vlc lnHy
All Yar d Sales Mu st Be Pai d In
Advance. Deadlin e: 1:OOpm thti
day be lore the. ad is to run, su ,~

day edition- , :OOpm 'friday, Mon. day edition 10:00a.m. Satu rday. •
fr iday and ·s aturday, 6!)8 South

Third, Mid dlepott· A/C, 10,000
BTU, S300; Baldwin spinet pian(),

excellent condition, $800, granc:t:
needs repai red, $400 ; baseball,
signed Mickey Mande, $200, loot-'
ball, si gned Joe· Montana, t200 ;
- . - - - - - - - - - - - . ha rd caf)dy sucker mold s, $25;·
Awm, 50· 70% off, 614-992'1200. •

TRI-STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN CLEANING
.... , ' ,.Jtrial
Sewtr &amp; Dr*
0..., Strrkt

m;r Power Wft

Inside- Thursday &amp; FrlOd) , 1 and,
112 mi. Hysell Ru n, glasswa, j,
clothes, household, 614 -992·'

5275.

Yard sal'e, Minersville, Elladene
Wa1son residence, Thursday &amp;
Friday, April 11 &amp;1 2. 9·? ,
,

pt, Pleasant

Iff Ar I Ill

JV&amp; ViFIN
'-...tk.A..r.lle

.....-·-

""- (304} 615,1651

]::::z::=::::::::!!!!~

H&amp;H ,.
SAWMILL

'

&amp; VIcinity
Yard Sate. Plymale Rd., Gallipolis
Ferry. Fri -Sa1 Apr 12-13, 9-3pm.
·TV. VCR, Sega. Sega games,
clo1hing children to adull, loys &amp;
misc. 304--6 75-3631 .

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Mt Alto Auc tion. Every Frida'y·

7pm Ewry Salurday 6pm. f\1 2-33

Portable ·

LIRCI*I

MI/1

···-·

MODDI ·SUI'rlftON

.I

so Llndlcl;lng

ne "Honor Roll" will ·a ppear in the
F~day, May 17th Edition.of

pizza
Monday throop Wedne8day

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

· $3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs. _
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Immed iate!~,

Houck. 614-256-1967 , 614-4469638, Yout Help Would Be Much
Awociallldl ·
'

,'
1

40YHrs

DAVE YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!.·-

'1.00 off any X-large 18"

BENNETTS.

All Kinds of Earth Work

I

25 Years ' 20 Years

~Center Inc. Trllllett Party CeiDr
Pllont55111U
Elllllllllllcl 1115

ONE • ON • ONE!
CALL NOW!
1·900-446·1414
EXT. 3694

l

Phont 555 1,245
Eall~llllhtd 1.,

60 Years

LIVE! _

lo11: A• Small, Male, Brown• &amp;
While Long Haired Pupi)W. t-\81An 10 Tag On CaHar, Nama Gizmo, Missing From Eureka Ar": If
Found Or Seen, P.leaaa Contt,Ct

"C ro as road s· . Gro ceries , new
Hundred Thouund D!IJiare
LIRRY'I
merchandise. Ed Frazief 930.
·'
($100,000.00).
.
Pidr ..Ft, _ __._ ..
BE
IT
FURTHER
111Rick Pearson Aucti on Co mpany,'
full ti me auc: t1.oneer, compl ete·
RESOI,VED, tllat notlca ba .....KitS &amp; _ , MtJtls
•Trea Trimming
BlifulstJW
i7Fowlng:
aucti on
aerv1ce .
Licensed
_.
5
glvan
to
a.ll
banll:a
In
aald
4•llowl7111 (Rtaldtntlll
1983 Chevrolet Camaro County and auch other
61 992-.02
t66,0hio &amp; West VJrg lnia, 30~·32124
Happy
Hollow
Rd.
773-5785 Ot 304-773·5447.
'
and commercial)
~rial
..
•
flnanclalln.tltullona u may
Middleport, Ohio 45760
aG1API750DN1450t3
•Sivullbery
be ne,..ary aa poovlded
90 Wanted 10 Buy ..
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles
' 1911 Ford Tamp Gt. hrlel by law. All llpflllcanta ahiiFI
· Maintenance
(2FAPP31XOJB1372411
_ aubmlt, In writing, thalr
Clean l ate Modal Can Or.
614-742·2193
oQdd joblpar raquaat
: 1118 Mercury Couger . lnatltutlon'a
Trucks. 1990 Models Oi Newer.
p o II c r ·
•
Top
•
Trim
•
Removal
No UM7 Too LMQe
Smi th Buick .Pontiac. 1900 EastSertal
concerning lila foil-Ing:
• Stump Grinding
ern Avenue. Gallipolis.
orToo&amp;n./1
f111EBM8041JH6911411 ·
1) Charge lor chub; 2)
15 Yrs. Exp. Lie. - l.ns.
Plan Allead, CaFI Torllyl
Thll term• of the ula .,. Servloa cluirge; 3) lll. . .m J &amp;· D's Auto Pa rts. Bu ~ i ng salOwner: Rick Johnson
• Trail Rides
caah. Home National 81111k · balance required; 4) The ·
vage vehicles. Selling par ts. 304·
742-2803
......,_
.
773·5033.
'
........ Ilia right to blcl .. -unt ·ot tha $2,000,000.00
•Training
qua7lllacl
for
under
30%
of
... uta and or to - ·
Top Prices Paid: Okf U.S. Coins,·
•Boarding
t ny- or aFI Items from the 1otal non-public ...eta,
S1lver. G old, Diamond&amp;, All Old
.... at any lima.
.
(10'J(, Sevlnge "l.cMina,-Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc.
•lettOns
:r-~:o-;:·~·=-~-::::::-=-==-=~-======::=::-"'!
p)ZS.Zi: '
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 15 t Second
pubFic • - ) . llt!ld llolrd
(4) 1, 4, •• 11, 111,,11: lTC
L.OIE OAK FARM Avenue, Gall ipoijs, 614 -446-2842.
of County Commlaalonare
I
,...,.. ll!e right to reJect
30391 Roy Jones Rd.,
Twm bQds. with or wit hout matPOMEROY, OHIO
Public Notice
any or aFI blda. Awarda lor
tresses, good cond . 304-675,
P.O. Box539
trash Removal- Commercial or Resldimtlal
the Active, Inactive, and ·
1272.
Syracuse, Ohio 45ne .
Sapttc T1nk1 Cte•nad &amp; Porlabte Tollett Renled.
koncEFORAPPUCAnoN lntailm dapoilll of pubFic
Used lu r n11u re· antiques, one·
lunda aubject to Ilia control
·. .UNDER THE UNIFORM
,
Dilly, WHidy a monthly rental r111ea•
Terri Canay
,
p1ece or compl ete esta1es, al so
of uld Board will ba made
;
DEPOSITORY ACT
(814) 11112-2800
do appre1sa1s. Osby Martin, 614on April 28, 1996, for •
· MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
992-7441 .
:
Horae a Tacll: Sella
' Notice Ia hareby given periOd Of lime C9711manclllll
312111- pd. Used Mens Le~ti s, Lee &amp; Wrarf-~
that application• will be on the 1at dFiy olllay, 1H8.
UmeltOne, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; W1ter
gler Jeans &amp; Denim Jackets, Nike
Each
appFicant
ahalllullllllh
received'
lly ' the '
Shoes, &amp;1 4,-446-2468
iindaF'elgMCI_at tha olllce of' a copy of Ita mqat raqent
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE
tile B!Nird ol Malge County atatement of condltlctn
W~nted to Buy Used Mob ile:
algnad by Ita Cuhlel or
Homes. Call: 614-446-0 175
·
Commlaalq.._
992-3954
or
985·3418
..
....
Courthouu, PPommnoll"'ro&gt;vy, Ohio other alithOrlzad officer.
ANNO UN CEME NTS
W~nted To Buy ~ Junk Autos WI Or
45769 until 12 noon on Ilia Application• ehould be
- - ~.'
Or Without Motors·. Cal l . Larry
marked
28th day ol AprFI, 19tl6, and ualed ·and
L~•~- 614-388-9303.
.;
OPEN NOW
opaMCI and rud aloud at 1 "AC::::allo.n . under the
005
Persot:~als
.
Depolltory Act."
p.m. on that data from any Un
Little Baer's Ice Cream
EMPLOYMENT
fln1111clal lnatltutlon leg~~llr· Gloria KFoel, Clerk
CLUBV.F.P
llelgaCounty
DATWG SERVFCE
I
Second St., Syracuse, Oh.
~lble which may ck!slre to
SERVICE S
Autho~ed AGA Distributor
aubmlt a written application Commlulonere
One block from PooL
Divorced, Single Or Widowed ?
· to be a Public Doipoaltory of (4) 11, 18 2TC
• Weldng Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop Meet Others. From Tri-Stare Area
Cones,Shakes,Sundaes
the Active, lnacthra a'n ..
Servlcel• Steel Sales &amp; Fabricalion • Repair Walding . For Friends, Companions Or
•
Interim detloalta of pubFic
Dates, Wall E11. With Many
·
• Aluminum'S~ • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
$-WANT EO-$
Members t8 And OVer. All
monaye of .aald Boerd •• 110 Help Wanted
BlrthRHe Child Birth Education
Steps ·Sialrs, Raling8, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
ScreenacF With Photos. Blue Col- 10 people who need to losi ..
provided by the Uniform
Classes
will
begin
lues.
April
16th
lar Workau,· Profe11ionala And weight &amp; make money, to try new'"
Dapqlltory Act, Section 1~5
· · Hems, Planler hangem, Trellises &amp; lcits of.olher sluffll
Ratlreaa Welcome. Confidenti al. patented weighi-Ioss product. .
of tile Ohio Rtwllled Code.
6:30
pm
In
PVH
downstairs
. •
FINANCE&amp;.,
. "No Job Too 'LIIrge or Too SmBII"
Sate: Irs Fun I It Works I Greenup. 304-7 73-5083 241Ystday.
Slid aPfiFieatlon ehall be
conference
room.
KY,
Mon -Fri, 1 ~II. -9 ~~~INSURANCE .
$1,000 Weekly Proc-esaing ....11 ..
·
We will work wilhln your budget
llllde In conformity wilt. 11M
304-675-4340
ext 230 for
Free
Info. Send Self-Addreaaed
followiFig ruolutlon.
MANAGEMENT
PH. flUJ&amp;:IT.I-5901 .
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-511111
S tamped Enve lope: Expreaa·
lnfocmation or to naglsler.
. 11doptad at a · r~guler.
High Volume Ford
108 P
St,..et
Mason; wv
Oept.131, 100 Ea s1 Whlltatone,
meeting of the Malge•
Btvd., Suite , 40-345, Cedar Pant,
LJM
Dealership
.
Couniy
Board
of
TX 78613.
Commlaalonara llald AprU
n8eds assistance In ·
8j 1111i8.
.
F &amp; I Dept.
" BE rr RESOLVED, tt.t Ilia
Excellent
opportunity
·..umatad aggregate
Now Open South
·
for
advancement.·
·
· ipUimum amount of pubic
Good \'\Oiii'gw db 18
Silver Bridge Plaza.
filnda aub~ to Ilia conlnll
of aald board to be Actlva
and benefit package.
c!apoalll at 11ny o~• time
We Make Loans Fast
cfWing ... next two yaal'f Ill
Reply In Confidence
"(wo Million . Dollare
Box P-11 ~-..
(,2,000,000.00).
T~a
11t1matad aggragate
cto Polnl Pleasant
aimount at Inactive funda lor
Register
~ c1aya, 8 moilthll or
200Mal"n
St.
Sh.-.cldod P(lpor, tit Como lit
I ~· Ia Thraa •Million
. Sarvol Bactt OI,Bulldlngj, P1911 ·
Point Plealart, WV
Dollarl (D,IIGO,'IOO.CIO). T1la
' .-,. Gallipolis FlalFy Tribune, 825
.. tlm1tad 1ggragate
25550 .
ll*d · Gallipolis, QNo.
linc!\Fnt K l11taF hn fundi lor
.,

'

.

·LOAN CENTRAL

Call ·

CHERIE BARB
446-0965 .

'

;;.

•

We dig biiHmenta, put In aeptlc

. Owner: Ronnie Jonee

•New Homes
•Garages
i
I'
•Complete
Remodeling
'
Stop &amp; Compare 'I
Ext. 3685
.
FREE ESTIMATES '' . $2.99 per min. Musl be
!'
18 yrs. Serv-U
.985-4473

·•Room·Addition•

.,...IIIS.IedBrc.tor:
For
River
Front oflllaauccutlulblddlrbul
For Rlvar1 Front
AFIIpllltheatar Project lila will raturn Ilia Amphitheater · ProJect
lnci/.FFIIng - - Mating bond of-h UIIIUCCIUiul Including ai!Mt piling and
aralia, walll:a, concrall blddar all8r a CGFibwt baa Nl8llld ..t.
at1ga area, electrical bean'~
Will be NCalYad by tile
dl8trlllutlon aDd llglltlng.
Alllntlon of ~ Ia VIllage of P-oy at the
end 1alallld-'!.
eallacl to all requ'-nta Olllae of Ilia Mayor, V~'; Will be rljlalYaCt by lila _.... .... In the bid paot;et Hall, POIMIOY, 'OIIIo 4570 .
VIllage o1 '-GY at lila lnaludlng: 111111 project Ia until 11 o'clock a.m.
0111oa oflllallayor, Vllllll ladiirally' ualatad. Tuaaday, lilly 14111, 1H8 '
Hall, ....,_~~¥. Olllo 45711 Contracta to be -ardad .nd than at 11M Offtca of lila
until 11 o'clock a.m. undar lllllln•lllllkM lor blda Mayor Ill• bide will be
lin 1 r. llay 14th, 1H8 will be · aub)act to publicly opaFMd aDd N8d
llld lflaout lila Olllca of the Praaldantlal Exacutl•• aloud.
ll•ror the bide will b~ Order 11248, • -ndad,' Contract apaellleatlona
publloly opanac1 and read .......,... Alftm•ll~~a Action and blddlflg documanta
.illoud.
tor Equal Employment may be viewed at
Contr1ct apacllleatlone OPfl-ltJ.
ol lila Maror, at 320 Eaat
aild bidding documanta
C-actbra ara further llaln 8tnat, Pomeroy, OH
-rlla•lll dat 'lflaOIIIoa ·adiJindtllattlle,.,._,21, 45788oo-rllaplcbdup
" lila llafor, at 3a Eaa1 11172 Equal Employment or otdaFed by mall for $10
11a1n 1traat, ,.._or, oif g:'J:rtunlty l!xacutlva wlilell Ill~ I Ill
45711 or may lie plallad up
of lila Go-- of
Thla pro)act Ia baing
01 wdaFed by mall for 110 Ohio Ia 7llao applloabla to partially funded by w111e1t 111 -Hat n' 'It
thlll bid ~ .. 111111on.
ODNJW.WCF tundL
·Jllla projact Ia baing
No bldclar may wwftllhdiiHir••• 1'" EFIJII;-'e aatlrnata for
partially funded by atata hla bid within aldJ (80) 111111 prolaet Ill $70,1100.. ·
. ~ ODIII LWCI'lundll.
clap..,tllaiiCIUIIIdatuf
A bid guaranty, . aa
Engln nr'a aatlmata tor ap 1 q .....or.
raqulrtd by I action 15U4
tfiiii.Drolactlll$111,11110.
AllbldaWIIbap;ap7rtr of tlla Ravlald Coda of
A · bfd gu•ranty, a a algnad by an authorized OhiD, .... n Cl u any 8Mb
nqu~ed 11r Sa a t1o11 15U4 71fW
of the blddir. pr_opoaal aubmlttad, aa
of the RawiMd Coda of
All ..W. ahlll INI -lad fQIIOWa:
-0111o, a11a11 u aa • p nr 8Mb and plainly marlrad "l . .cf
1) A cartlflad chloll:,
~-:::.al au.bml.lttad; aa. Bid lor River Front auhlart aMct&amp;, or Jattar ot
Amphitheater ProJect • ONdlt aqua! to 10 paroant of
1) A owtlflad , cflacll:, QaMnll · c..,,b&amp;~ P-.,y, 11M bid. A 111ttar at oradlt
_....,. ollaOir, 011 llltlllr of Olilo".
ma, be NYDaM._ only by
aradtaqualto10pa••tof
T h e - raurvaa the 11M-· Upon antarlng
Ilia bid. A ...., ol ONdlt right to ralaot any or·all blda Into a aontract with 1111
.-y 11a .rt¥011~11 Ollly by aubFIIIttad, and waive lny
mUit
tile - · UJIOII atltii'Jng,
thaD lila • bond lor lila'
Into a aontraat' wflll lila IIYiha-oftlla_l,&amp;t,ancl.
· ..-,lila OOIItbaoW lliUal = o f
· Poo71810y
lila oh&amp;ll or latlar ol ertCIIt
then flie a booitf for 1M
. . llltn be ratumacl to Ilia·
MIOUFit of the
II, llld
E. Tanaglln
1 u c c eu I u I
and
tJteofiMIICII' .... of .... Vllttael.awDIFeotor
-'FIIIIIhFibiUirawflan
•lliNillalllumwUt.,. ..,..
. . _,.,.,.~-aucc . . alul
nd (4J11,17,M (1)1 4TC

=*

I

· YOUNG'S •
CARPENTER SERVIa

..

...... E. Diddle
Trackho!t, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Avlilable 24 Hrs.

HouHSiteaand
Ulllhlel .

41'31mo. l)d.

~~B~al~d~w;in~J~·o~in:ed::~the~~N~a:v~y~in~·~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~

•

!

foryH.
VIII UASOIIAII.E .
HAVI IIFIIEICES
614-915-4110

t.,;,-'

VILLAGE OF POIEROY
·a p1 •&amp;alladlldalor:

-·

lalla ... ,........
pal1tl.. Lat us tlo It

FAMILY HOMES INC. ·.

Public Notice
· AiWEII11SEIIENT FOR
BIDs

fo

FREE ESTIMATES

• Amuaoaa 101ui111 F1oorn1e

Top, Trim, Removal
. lr Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Iruur/i

Racine, Oh: 45771

Serilces

. needs

'

•

I

• Marillate CllliFl'llllk B. Baldwin
• 8 ... Cellini .
Na\iy Petty ofrJCer Third Class
·
•
hJO Floor JaiFW. 16 ln. On Cenlet
Frank B. Baldwin, son of Lacy C. and , , . . .
•
s2 Gallon w.r Hellier
Janet L. Baldwin of Gallipolis,
recently graduated {Jom the Navy's ' .,._. • $haw c.'peu
•Det~tP- Basic Nuclear Power School at Naval
• MMia"T-Ioct Vtriyl Siding Wiih Ufmme Wariw!ty
Nuclear Power Training Command,
• 2S Yfilr W.-rMJiY Al(lhl'lt Ship
.
Orlando, Aorida.
During the six-month course,
• 10 v- Structural Wlmnty On The Home .
Baldwin received fundamental train·
0... Pike&amp; Are Tbe LoWf,llt Ia The .Area.
'
.
ing in several technical fields related
.to the nuclear power program. Bald· ,
win studied basic mathematics and : "-...
Model Home Located at
.physics for three ·months in pn:paration for hands-on training later i7! the.
· IDterse cdoli of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
course. In the, latter half of the
_Pomeroy, OR 614.;992-2478
course, Baldwin spent hours familModel HOme VICWina Howl I:OO.S:OO p.m.
iarizing himself with nuclear reactor :
·theory and operations.
'
~ - Sit. or b)' appoinlmenl.

·

all Your

ELECI'RICAL

·-------- tO\.\
-------Of ---

MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
'Extension presentation on conlrolling
multi-flora roses, 7:30 p.m., Ex tension office, basement of infirmary
building.
·

• Sllnley Doors
• h61!&amp;1aior W.lls, 16 ln. On Cenlet

P.O. Box 587

Trucking ·
Umeltone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe

Phone

SUNDAY
POMEROY. -· Revival services,
Dean Mills, speaker, Sunday through
April 19, 7 p.m. each evening. Nursery provided.

. • ,....._nit Window•

J.D. Drllll•g Co•,.•Y:

Howard hcavatin

IIITEIIOI·EITEIIOI

1t.._..

JONES' TREE SERVICE

•

HAULING

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.

Be A Part Of
The· Daily Sentinel's

POMEROY -- South Central Dis- 11JESDAY
trict meeting, Ohio Child ConservaRACINE -- Southern Local Buildtion League, Saturday, Rock Springs ing Committee meeting Tuesday,
United Methodist Church. Registra- 7:30p.m. at the high school. All distion 9 a.m.
trict residents urged to attend.

.Military news

~mber, 1994.

WICKS

ext 5488

· FRIDAY
.
LONG BO'ITOM - Faith Full
Gosp:l Church will host the Unity
Singers Friday, 7 p.m. Pastor Steve .
.Reed invites the public.

'

7. .

'-"-J

1-900-255s0300

POMEROY -- Rock Springs
grange Thursday evening at the hall.
Baking contest will be held.

SATURDAY
POMEROY -~ Burlingham Modem Woodmen, annual potluck Easter dinner, Friday; 6:30 p.m. Friday.
Camp to. furnish ham, eggs, salad,
rolls and beverages.

(LIIIII ..

871)1 ,

- - -·Community calendar-·-··- 'The Commaally C•Jendwr is

pit, you can't i7518Jinc bow hideous
it is.
I finally goc help. I hlled the idea
of having to take medication daily,
but I knew I couldn't go on the way
I was. You wouldn't believe the difference it made in my life. I am accually enjoying myself for the first
time in years. These ~ren 't happy
pills, as·some·people belie've. I still
have my ups and downs, but most
days I am somewhere in the middle
where I ought to he.
.
Tell "Georgia" to.see a reputable
doctor who has experience dealin~t
with depression. She doesn't have to

.

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...

�, Aprll11, 1 -

..... 10 • TMI;JIIIIy Sentinel

Pomeroy •llllddllpon, Ohio .

--

PHILLIP
ALDER

West
87 52
eA' 1098742

•3
aJ 4

•

Vulnerable: Eas.I·Wesl
Dealer: South

' UNT LOWEEXY II
HELP ME FIND MY '
8U88LI &amp;UM II
TRANSPORTATION

1993 Yamaha 350 4 Stroke
614-388-9331 .

'93 Es cort LX. a1r, '5 speed,
70, 000 miles, new transmisaion, .

3802
.
·1983 280ZX

D~tsun,

5 sp.,

YOU C!-IN STOP

e cyt.,

.

.,

Bridge is an inexpensive pastime . .
Jlist think how much you .pay for an
evening's duplicate co1J1pared with,
88y, going to a concert or the ballpark. :
And some clubs give their members ; Jn.-1--4--4even more value for their money by
publishing a newsletter.
One such club is the Vanderbilt in
Lake Success, N.Y_ Today's deal is
taken from its bulletin. How should
South play in six spades after West
leads the heart ace and switches to a,
by Luis Campos
trump at trick"tWo?
· .
~~-mooro,.-r.,.._.....,.....,.._,poolond­
Each l8ftei in tM cipher SIMda !Or anottwr: Todly'l Clle: R ~ Y
North's initial two, diari!ond re·
sponse was , by partnership agree 'VKXO
GO
HDCAW,
PGOS
lOCH
ment, forcing to game. Hence South's
J X L L G' l I •
LDAXLW
quiet raise to three diamonds.
The problem, obviously, is to play
the diamond suit withoutloss .
. 8
Declar~ r drew trumps, East disr
D U •X L T
GP
XNXLRWKGOS
carding a cluli on the third round.
'G 0
Next, South cashed ·his two heart
CMDO
WKX
ODW
WLCX
ATPXH
tricks, throwing dia111onds from the
dummy. Declarer noted with interest
M9 0 WL
G tR UK
·w U K T G 8 D N P B R •
that East discarded another club.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ,, would be very glamorous to be reincarnated as a
Finally, declarer cashed his club ace,
great big ring on Liz Taylors finger."- AndY Warhol.
.
played a club to dummy's king and
. .
_.
'
ruffed the club six in hand. When West
tllrew a heart, the deal had become an

PEANUTS

,

1-!ELLO~ Wl&lt;lb7 YES, TI-llS .

1l

15 l-IE .. VI-I, I-lUlL.'(ES,
TillS IS l-IE ...

'f'ES, LikE I SAID,
nilS IS HE ..

CELE:BRITY CIPHER

1986 Searay Seville, 140hp Uer-! .

cond.,,

CnJ iser, 19' open bo,w, e11c.

1984 Chovy Camara. $ 1000, 814- 1::$8::.:,00::0:.:..::304:..:·..:88::2:..:-2:.:.7.:.:15::...- - - - - '
992-7689.
1987 Citation Open Bow. 19Ft.:
Long, Inboard /Outboard

Schnauze~ puppies, miniatures,
Champion Grand Sire: also Poo·
dies, little loye &amp; teacup, A~C .
lhats &amp; wormed, 814-667-3404.

570

Musical
Instruments

1 Lowrey Spinel Piano, E,;cellent
C1'nditionl Cal 614-441-Q332.

Console Piano, Responsible Party
Wanted To Make low Mon.rhly
Payments On Piano. See locally.
HI00-2eU21B.
Yamaha Electron1c t&lt;e~board Ex·
cellent Condirlan, Bench Included, Aller 4:30 I'IA. 814-446-8253.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Motor,

160 HP, Good. Shape, Price Retj~
l.d1
814 ooo ~·•

198 4 Nissan Sentra, 4 cyl. auto1nalic, 91,000 original miles,

. .._~'!"1350,
._
.sonaiMI',
-~""'·
""
very go od transpormuon.
614-742·1400.
1993 Strutos Bass Boat. 120 H~
t.toror 1994, Many Extraat1984 Pontiac Fiero, Automatic, $10,5()9, 614-4..e-4J933. ·
"1
AC, Loaded, $1 ,200, 814 -367.
, ,
0182, After 4 P.M.
24 Ft. l;bntoon Boat 50 HP Motof\ 1
Excellent Condition! 814 -446 ~ •
1985 F.ord Esc:ort l, 4 Door, Au· 0150.
:
tomatic, AMrFM Ciasena, New
Tires, 28 MPG, looks And R~o~na 24' Suntrac ker Party Barge, 40 1'
Great I $900 080, 614-3711-2645.
hp. Mercury, $2800 , 614 ·992-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TO
.FB.ffviAY

1988 Dodge Omnl, 4 Door, 5
Speed, 2.2 Motor, 92,000 Miles, Baja 17' Pro Style ba5s boat. 8Q
$1,300, 080, 614-256-1233.
model, purchased new in August•
93, &amp;Mcetlent condition, 150 hp.:
1988 Mercury Cougar XL, loaded, Mercury Black Mu 08 engine,•
PS, PB, 'AC, PW, 302. new tires, 45 lb. thruster ·trolling motor, drive•
automatic, $3500, 61 4·949·2045 on traaer, 2 P{ops. motor haa less:
or 6 1~9 ~2879..
then 100 hrs. You can ll&amp;l tt'le wa-1
1988 Ply. Horizon Auto, Sunroof, . tar on fire for $815QO. EVenings or ~
Tinted Windows, Great Gas Mi. , weekends 304 · 882- 352~. wee~
Nice Car. Sharp! $1 ,200. &amp;14- days&amp;14-992 ·.23 100 ' 1"•rGreg.
245-5320 Anytime.
Boat Trailer For Small 12•14
Boat, Good Condition, $,50, 6147'
1990 Cougar LS, 80,000mi., lully 24!&gt;-11391 .
1
loaded, $8 ,000 firm. 304-675-

'

760

1993 C?UC Si8rra ,Black, Auto,
Ah 1 Cruise, Very Sharp, Low
Mileage, Lots 01 Ex~asl $12,800,
614-24S.9460, 614-384-4284.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

,.

.•

·-·

- .·

•
.

~,

.-'THE ~c. €J.!JX:£ 05€0 ro ... ,.~IT'S, tHE~~~
oc, TH€.006
/l.Te ti\Y
.

~'( f'DMa.tlli:K,~~

~94~ce-r'"'h_a_u~le~r.~·1,::6.,:".~$,:.1.:;,3;,:0::,.0,-8-1-4-:

~

, __,.s""'p,.....v'""'"""r"""'I,........, ..~:::',
....

:

790 . . Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

l. I l I

5
6
~
Have you ever noticed if you
• • • . .
·let a man ta!k about himself he
,.- - - - - - - - . will always think·you are - - •·•.

.' ~_..;..~~...;T,..;IH.;_I;..S...:;UI,..;I:..,I,.,.8-1, .• ~ompleto

:

1

1980 Holiday Rambler Fihli Wheel
34' umpar, shower and tub:':
$5500, 81 4·949-2902.
. .J 1 .

79 Cryolet Cordcwa." 45,000 miles,
mint condition, $1500, 814·992·

.

-- -··

·)

1993 Coleman ,Pioneer Pop·Up;" t
Camper $3,500, 8t4-446-7321 ;
Atttr 7 PIA.
1

8048.

Autc LO&amp;ns. Oeolor Will arrange nnancing even if you have been
turned down elsewhere. Upton 1994 lnnsbrook, fully loaded, lots 1
Equipment U1ed Cars. 304· 408- of extras, t8U. Serious lnquirietl;';
1069.
only. 304-67S.8903.
•..r~
Used Cor Doily With Spanl $775,
Tow! Bar $125, 814-~-4782.

1948 model Chevy pickup, 5
windows, very restorable , $500.

·· Savlnrs You'I~Find
'.

ITHURSDAY

.,
-----------------~~~
......
810
Home
Improvements ••

304-578-3158.

~·

BASEMENT

.WATERP.R&lt;lOFING

n

t

1992 lsuzu pickup; 4 crl. 5 Unconditionai!Uedme guarantee! :
speed, 70,000 mlleo, nice, $5500, local references furnished. CaLL-11
814·992·2594 allot epm.
(814) 448-0870 Or (614) .237- I
1983 Chevy 5-to 6 Cylinder, 'EI- 0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Ea" '•
cellent Condition, $2,000, 614 · tablished 1975.
446-0127, Anylmo.

1
••
Appliance Parts And Service: Ari !

510

19~8 GIAC S-15, Now ,Pain~ New
Condition, Aoklng $3,495, 1988 Name Brands Over 25 Ye8rs Ext •
Regal 2 Door, Cook IAolors, 814- pertence All Work Guaranteed! :
FJtnoh City Maytag, 814-4&lt;8,,_
446-()103.
1
7795.,
r 1
88 Meroury Grand IA\Ifk, $5,000,
•
C&amp;C General Home Main ~· '
814-992-5~.
tenence· Painting , vinyl aldlno; :
Ch.8vy Tow Truck .440 Holmes oarpentry, doora, wl.-s, boll"" ,
Wilh Whe~l lilt, 814-448· 4796, mobile home repair and mont. For •
IJH oatimote call Ch&amp;l, 814-992· •
814·441-o&amp;IIQ.

Household

. Goods

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lOti, public: water,
Clyde a-n Jr., 304-578-2336.

6323..

.

'

-

Wanted to buy- 2·5 acres, ull
814-949-2883.

RENTALS

1Ulae Toyota Vans, Looks a Runs
,Good $1 ,500, 080, .614·245. 55112.

Performance Tested, bl1ck /tn·
QUI reerling bulL Birth •.1,,_ , .
ing +25. milk +12. ynrllng +40.
304-871&gt;8248.

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8·250,
12,900 Milo•. $8,000 , Can Bo
Seen At: Glllllpoiia Dally Tribune,
825 "Third Avonuo, Galllpolla

Ohio.

1091 Ford EIOPiom ~~~ 414, 4.0
V~8 , IWfO ' door, standard, air,
cruise, sun roof, lo1ded, must
' "· 614-041-2481 alter Spm &amp;
·~•hands.

.

Roofing ' 011111111 COIItl!ilta homo . .
romodotlng doclto &amp; ildlnt, 36
years .. parionco. a &amp; 8 RoOIIng

and Coni!Nclion, 6t4 ·882·2344
01'

1·800 -

able Sa~yo wuhtf.

13117.

,.•

·: ..1

RSESCERTFIED DEALER

• rl

LAWRENCE ENTERI'IItSES ""'"
Ht'll Pumps. Aw Condllionlng, Hoo ;,
· 'lbu Donl Call Ill Wa Bolli LAIMI... ,
F'" Eodmotas. 1-100.281 ·00111,;~
814 146

woaher I dryer.
woohtr. Parlllble

...3.

840 Electrlcal,.lnd
Relrlgll'ltlon

eoe. wv IICit2l48.

"

R11ldendll ., .,.,..... . WinD.

}btl

"'*ll! ""~
Rtdtnoui~~

ICH.t7ii"'M
'.,

In the

·-. .Classified Section.

'

SERVICES

720 Trucks for Sale

aerator, near
Racine,l16,000 can finance with
!'oiW down, 814·949-2025.

•

the ' chuckle quoted
• .....J.
by filling In the missing words
L-.1..--..1...--J........J.L....J.
you develop from step No. 3 below.

~

19' dual axlf Play Mere, shower
and toHet , $700: '80 Dodge
Trans-Van, . kitchen, sell con':'
tai.ned, 28', $2900; 814-992·3692. l,;Tp

1995 Grand PriM Sport Coupe,
au1Dmatic. loaded, like new, 9,000
miles, nfii!V•r been amo~ect in,
asking pa~ll. $17,500, 814-7423142 or 814-992-5&amp;1 7.

five acres,

I

""ro:.l

wheats, r&amp;di8tc111, ftoor mats. etc. I
0 &amp; R AuiO, Riploy, WV. 304-372- ;
3933 or 1-800-273-9329,
,,
r

1995 Ford Escort LX Automatic,
AC, Silver IBiua lnrerror, Cassette
"""' 41'1!. 814-441 ·01 79.

MERCHANDISE

East was known to ~~~e. begun ~th
two spades, two hearts and six clubs.
So, he must have three diamonds.
Declar!!J played a diamond to dum·
my's ace and a diamond to ~is 10, tali;·
ing a toll!percent finesse .
When you can play a suit more than
one way, leave yl)ur decision as late as
possible. And ~ever' stop counting.

I
New gas tanks, one ten truclc 1

1994 Mustang GT. Rod, 5 Speed,
n · Tires, Prel'flium, Sound System With CO /Ca ssette, 614-3889445.

~ ------~·--· --'

o~nbook.

A·ll

.

IT':&gt; 1'1. 51&amp;N CF·TIE
llft\E~....

i

992-5532.

.. .

• ·'•

T:HE BORN LOSER

__

· ME~tif -

•
• ••

-T·

3656.

...

-')

I•

3892.

Pass
.Pass

Opening lead: • A

2883.

446·6689.

5t
Pass

liy P~ illlp Alder

1971 16ft fi berglau bass boat
40hp Evinrude motor &amp; apar111
parts. New floor &amp; carpeting, trail.l
er in~ luded . t 1, 750. 304 -576 ~

1983 Monte Carlo, Good Condi·
tio n, $2,500, After 5 P.U. OH-

Pass
Pass

3a

Value for members

I I

runs well, $900 OBO: 1984 CJ7
Jeep, • sp., 6 ql., par ti al!~ rt ·
.stored, 614 · 742· 2258, ask for
Mike or Jim. ·

East

2•

Paas
Pass

.LOOKIN' NOW II

Mo~

Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

runa excellent, $1995, 814· 742-

Nortb

Pass

Pa88

i 993 ~awaaak l bayou 220 4~
whe&amp;'er, exc. cond., $2,356. 304-t
67S.5&amp;43.
• .

71 0 Autos for Sale

West

jLJ5;;1 ·d8o•otlld to helping others sort out
problems. Helpirig others wHI make you
· feel belter.
LIBI!A (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 FiMnclal con·
$2 and SASE to A81ro·Graph, c/o this dlllons seem promising lor you tod~y.
newspaper, P.O.~ 1758," Murray Hill . However. II aomethiiJII disturbing occurs.
Stillion, N'ew ~mk. NY 10156. Make sure you can manage il without breaking
to state your zodiac 81gn.
•81rid8.
•
BERNICE
TAURUS (April 20·111ay 20) You can . •'SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.·22) You can
BEDE OSQL,, 'I!Chiave a significant ob~lve today if stt8J!IIIhen bOndil with co-wOO!ars today
yoU haW the terliiCfly 10 pursue M. Lock by ·COmplimenting their Skills rather than
your i!ghts pn your goal ahd proceed complaining aboullhelr shorlc:Omlngs.
with eonal8tency and courage.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
GEMiNI (M8y 21-.lune 20).. Today your wOI coneantni1e on fun activities rath~r
methods of expresilon will capture 1ha than on mundane tasks tOday. Do not
. Imagination of your fltltl)trs, especially ii . feel guilty; you wl!l have made a good
you talk about a new interest that has choiCe.
·
•
abSorbed you completely. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....n.11) A prOject
CANcER (Ju• 21-July 221 You will not you've bean working on lor. a long time
Friday, April12, 1996
be deterred once you eatabtillh a epecific has fiMIIy started to pay off. lnst,ad of ·
In the ,.... ~. you may be required course of aetton.~· Re-evaluate your ~alOng, ~trive hamer lor succesS.
to •dlual your objeeillllla.from time to Pl*n and make sure that VOII're pursuing
AQUARIUS (J1n. 20-F•b. 11) Do not
time. F0111Nittv, the ebitlly 1o perceive a wol1hwhlle goal.
,
heellale to apeak up if
believe yOur
. lhe &lt;VIIue o1 dteltiiM will bl one ol you( LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Ctoee lrtendl Will
~are euperiOr lo thole ol your peers.
...... .
,'
,
have even gr.- reapeet for vOil loday, Evert!a shOuld pn)ve you rlg!lt.
AM!e ~ 21.,\prll 11)1Vou will be lieeauee you eland by your r;onvlellona.
~ 20 IILoh 20) The Neulta
ltltiJIIIIi llidl'y II you macl« wllh com- You wtK not duck challenges or dllllcuH lhould be~~~-~ n jMGlllbte Wyou
panlona who are both JlhYIICIIIIy and dllclaloo11.
•
_,
U11Nz1 your taN!Itl property today. Try lo
metllll)'
tt..,wlng ,wllh ~ VIRGO (AIIg. ~. 221 The ~er b• lniaglnallve, enterprising liqd
could IIOW your Pill»· Oeiii!UinP on tile "portion of your efforts ~ay might be reeourtefili.

1:~!:::!=:::::=::::=:::;====~ by
the Influences
em you in the yaar ahead. Sand lor your
ASTRO·ORAPH .
Ast~raph p~icliOnfi today by ,.iling.

You

Placu

-*'·

-.

·-

sciAM.ms

•.

ANSWIU

Lunacy · Tribe : Class - Fal}ric • BASEBALL
A colleague once mused, "What if your errors were
published daily like that of a BASEBALL player?"

'

APRIL 11

I

�,
'

•

· Norman
takes lttad ·
In Masters

;.school workers, counselors .help .students·c.ope With violence
: lrDUNI!QRW.I

· Aft llklclllan Wtltae

· WASHINGTON (AP)- Still moumina the death of a fillh·Jillder shot
: ill die blck of the bead oo the ptaycroulld. swdents 11 Mll'p'et Leary Ele• : ll)elllary Scbool in Butte. Monl, wete stunned by more violc!nce.
Their ciiSIUUIIe was filially shot by anodler student on April 12, 1994.
A )'e'l' Iller, a man killed a w0111111 in front of another area scbool.
• "I'm sittinJ with a JI"OUP of lillie pts and they're just hysterical," recalled
: PriDCipal Kate SleUIICr, who encouraged them to write about their feelings.
• . One girl wrote that the second shooting caused. her to relive the fmt.
: . "We need you adults to know thai you need to listen 10 us. And when we
: cry you need to lei us cry, or cry.with us," Ms. Sletzner said, recounting the
• airl's wrinen words.
: . The shootings thai affected schoolchilchen in Montana are occurring at
: scores of American scbools every year. Crisjs counselors, mental health work·
: en, principals and others are dealing with events like the April 199S Okla• homa City bombing as well as niiUral disasters, such as floods and earth. : qu!lkes.

.

Two dozen of thae prof~ioftals lie in Washinaton today ·for the final
day of a two-day meeting with fedenl otrK:ialS from the JU!ncalion, Jllllice
and Health and Human Services departments.
Data collected by the IU!ucation Department alld the Centers for Diseue
Conttol and Prevention show lOS school·usocWed violent deallla. inchlding 8S homicides, in the 1992-93 and 1993-94 school years.
While each situation is different. children who witneas shootinas or live
through an carthquak~ or flood tend 10 show similar sympiODIJ, says Mar'
leen Wong. mental health director for the Los Angeles Unified School District.
They experience fear, sleepless nights, eating disorders and trouble concentrating or coping with daily activities. Some children act out; ottw:rs have
lifeless responses, becoming almost robot-like, she says. .
"Children can be victims of traumatic stress just like Vietnam vets," Ms.
Wong says. "They have changes in the way they feel. They say 'I feel crazY."'
After Rodney King was beaten by police officers following a car chase
in 1991, schoolchildren in Los Angeles acied out the beating on playgrounds,
says Ms. Wong.

"1'1111 ycworlha child, the tnOI1! they would play it out."..._ 'WQIII uid.
fear. 'J'bex don 't talk llbout it lib aduiiiiiSIIII·
... .

~Children act out whal they

Iy de.
.
•
Schoolchildren alfcc:ted by the bombin1 of the federal buildin1 ill otlat
homa City initially experierK:ed fear, but now are expressiiiJ lliiF u 1be tri;
. al of a bombing swpcct Jell under way, said Allaette Murphy. lbe
Emergency Manaaement Adminiltralion p111t coordiMIOI' in the city.
.:
"I think they 'rio doing well, but a lot are still nol lhrouJh the teCO~
process, and becanscthetrial i~ b&gt;epcomina up, they can't ptcl0111re.';
Ms. Murphy said. ·
t
"First it was fear. Now, we bave a lot of anaet coming out. A'lot of kidS
'really want to get (bombina suspect 1imothy) McVeiah." she said. punchi
.ing her fiSt into her J!8lnl.' ! · ,
·
:
Sixty child psych!Jiog!Ms and ~hers of crisis intervention !elmS f'roni
:across the nation traveled to Oklahoma City to cou111el sc~Jchihken lllld
staff after the'bombing, Ms. Murphy says. They were there f011r days.
,
Some schools have w~ll·researcbed crisis plans; otherl are ~
·
The access mental heal!\ workeD have to schoolchildren also varies from
school to schoql, says John Ganz, a crisis counselor based at 'The Buah School .
in Seattle, Wash.
"There are layers or resistance that have to be peeled off," be says.
The Depanment or ~alion has responded in the past to disasters by
providing funds 10 rebuild, but the Oklahoma City bombing was the rust time
the asenc:y became involved in the "human side" of a disaster, said William ·
Moduleski, director of the department's Safe and Drug Free School~ Program.

The Meiss County Grange ban·
quet to be April 26 at the Senior Citizens Center was announecli when
Star Grange met recently a1 the hall. .
Members were remi~ that tickets will be on sale unii1April21 at $7·
for adults, and $6 for tbillrren. Tiley
may be purchased from subordinate
masters Uithecounty. Speaker will be
Barbara Shane, stile legislil!ive director for the Ohio State Gralige.
·
Ray Midlciff and Pauline Rife
were elected as delegates 19th~ stale
convention.
· .
Inspection. was held 'a"uring the
meeting with the officers&lt; siving the
opening and.closing and the second
degree team putting on the second
deg~;ee in full form.
A-report was given on the ~uccess
of the recent soup super and sale and
Master Patty Dyer thanked all those
who contributed.
Janet Morris, womenls activities
chairman, _reported that the needlework, sewing, quill and •stuffed toy
contest judging would take place at
the July meting. She also noted that
this is the last year for the heedlew.ork
and quilt contests and asked that

DEMOCRAnC. SHELTER- A year ago, the Democ':llt• in Dayton opened the second floor of Its headquarters to homelaia WOiftln
and their children for uM whan the nearby St. VIncent Hotel ahelter Ia full. Accommodations have grown from 14 single beds and
· two cribs In two bedrooms to 17 beds and four cribs in three bedrooms. A food pantry alsa haa been added.

.Democratic shelter·
'political' asylum
flee

G~NG INVOLVED - The Democratic party decided to open
the headquarters to the homeless because they fait It waa Important to get involved In helping peopla. The party has spent about
$5,000 in utilities to keep the shelter running In the flrat year of
operation, Mid Jim Van Grove, a county · Democratic Party
spokesman. Homelesi families arrive in the evening and leave
first thing In the morning. They have little contact with the party
faithful.
·
They have litde contact. with the in the first year , of operation, he
pany faithful.
said.
"We don 'I mix politics with it,"
The move has raised the issue of
said Van Grove. "It's not what it's . whether political parties should
about"
'
take an active social-welfare role.
The pany. decided to open the
"This is a return to an older patheadquarters , to the homeless tern of political-party org1111izations
because they felt it waS important that used to serve this function,"
10 get involved in helping people. said Linda Benneu, !ISSOCiate proThe party has spent about $5,()()0 in fessor of political science at Witutilities to keep the shelter running' tenherg University.

.Neighbor says FBI tricked
suspect into leaving
.. cabin

b'aSh.''

I may not soon win. ov~r Mr. de
Holczer, any more than I waP change
the mind of Ponca City."'kla., resident Eddie Davis, who declared. "I

.

·1 11ft

Pear

Crlmlion King
Maples .

''••

· I" Pot
(2 yr. old buahea)

President Clinton proposes changes in pension pl~ns

• Lavendar • White

Shop Early
,.

For B~st Sel~ectipns

. Re.-e•hr Bob'll For t\11 ......._
Spi'IIICt. .e ~l~tball Ne4~
Y. Ml1c North ofp......,..,J - ~ Bridfe,
1VV

Phone

...

.

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel
news staff
PROB!
• Investigators check the s~ite of an
The
fund
io restore the 1823
accident cin Route 33 In Athens early thla morning that laft three
Chester
Courthouse
got a boost
OU stlidentt de8d and two In critical conditiOn. The State High·
Thursday when the Modem Woodway Patrol reported that all five occupanta In the Jeep were
men of America presented the comthroWn from the vehicle. Names of the vlctlma have not been
mittee
a check for $5,001;). · ·
. reltued. (AP/John Martin of The Post)
Half of that total had been raised
at a dinner slaged ~eceQtly at Royal
Oak Park by the courthouse restoration ~ommittee composed of repre'
.
sentatives from Return Jonathan
Melgs Chapter, Daughters of America, and Ewing Chapter, Sons of the
American
Revolution.
.•
.
i.
By JIM FAEEMAM ,.
The caae was turned over to the
The other half came as a result of '
,.
·
.Sentlnei ,_. etaff
. jury 1\f\!Und 3 p.m..w~ich deliberat- · the national
Qut C?f the frying pan and'int&lt;fthe ed abOut I 0 minut~s!before returning gramoflhe
Han, a member of Camp 4798, was
fire could very well describe events with a verdict.
surrounding Thursday's trial of a
Whittington may face up to 18 instrumental in securing the matclaing
Middleport man in.the Meigs Coun- · -month~ .i.n prison on the charge fund contribution for the courthouse
ty Common Pleas Court of Judge according to Ohio Revised. Code. work.
The county was recently awarded
Fred W. Crow Ill. ·
Sentencing will probably' be held
Dean Whittington. 32, was found Tuesday, according 10 court admin- $46,000 from the Appalachia Public
Facility Grant Fund, but.the estimate
guilty of a felony escape charge, only islratqr Paul Gerard.
on
restoring the oldest standing courto be charged with felonious assault
.But, according 10 Sheriff James
in Ohio is more than
illouse
almost immediately afterwards. · M. Soulsby, Whittington a~pled to
On the morning of SeP.t. 3, 1995, escape again after being returned to . $100.000. .
Plans are being inade to stage
Holter, project coordinator, Thursday. Pictured
Whittington was involved in a dis- jhe Meigs County Jail.
MAKES DONATION -A'$5,000 check for the
another
dinner
sometime
later
this
with
them ara other commlttea members, from
. Cheater Courthouae restoration fund repre· turbance at Wayne's Bar in.MiddleWhile waiting in 'the cell block, he
month.
Personalized
commemorathe
left,
Mary Powell, Dale Colbum, and William
senting monies raleed locally and matched by
port and verbalfy harassed and threat- jumped up and fled oial the .door, only
Hart.
the M.oclem Woodii!Bn waa presented by Ethel
ened Middleport Police . officer to he captured by deputies outside, tive mugs are being sold by the comHart, Madam Woodmen representative, to Pat
mittee for $10 each and memorial
Joseph Banee wheri he responded to Soulsby said.
plaques
are
being
offered
for
S
I
00
the ?Cene, according to assistant
Southeast Ohio coordinator for the . as· it was 170 years ago with its sinThis came after he was served donations.
made.
Meigs c;:ounty Prosecutor Chris
Ohio Historical · Society because gle room and large exposed beams.
On April 20, from I to 3 p.m. the
Tenaglia, who represented the state with a warrant charging him with an.
The committee has entered into a
The work will begin this summer everjithing.that is done must conform
earlier alleged feloniQu{ assault, courthouse will again be open for
during the day-long trial.
joint
use agreement with the UniverAfter Whittington'S' arrest, anoth- Sou)sby 'said, opting not to release · tours. Residents are encouraged 10 witlf replacement of the roof which with the Society's specifications.
sity
of
Rio Grande, and Holter said
The first floor of the building
er individual hegan harassing the details concerning the alleged assault: visit the old brick structure situated now has large holes in it. But before
she
expects
the university to play a
"He will be charged with escape on a knoll overlooking Chester. that work can begin, Holler said, the which many years ago was remodofficer-and Whittington ran out of th.e
Guides will be on han!l to «plain exterior walls will have to be rein- eled will be restored to the way it was •!tal role in programming and
bar with handcuffs behind. his back. again," Soulsby added.
About jwo hours later, Whitling- ' Afterwards, Te~oglia qommented: plans for the restoration and use of forced. She said the committee is in the early· 1820's, Holter said. The exhibits once the two-story structure
' ·ton went to the Middleport Police "People cannqt ignore a lawful order the facility once repairs have been working with Mary Ann Reeves. second floor is pretty much the same has been restored.
Department, Tenoglia said. The hand- from a police officer."
"This offtce will not tolerate that
.cuffs had lightened during his attempt
to remove them, cutting off circula- and we will prosecute."
Meanwhile, Whittington is being
tion in his hands.
CHEYENNE, Wyo.•(AP)- Jes- just iiving your life .... 1couldn'i hear · , .daughter's arrival.
held
in the Ross C:Ounty Jail awaiting
"The cuffs were partially cut off
"If there was something to be consica
Dubroff's mother today defend~ to have my children in any Qther posisentencing.
He
was
represented
by
and his hands w,ere purpje," said
tion."
cemed
about ... she and Joe would've
ed
her
decision
10
allow
her
7-year·
public defender William Safranek.
Thnoglia.
Hathaway
said
that
if
children
talked
about
it," she said: referringto ·
old daughter to make the flight thai
ended in tragedy, saying "you've no were forbidden to do anything unsafe, flight instructor Joe Reid. "There's
"'They would he padded up and they no part of me that wants to question
idea what this meant to Jess." ·
"She had a freedom which you . wouldn't go anywhere. They would- that."
Less than a month away from her
can't get by holding her back," a cry- n't ride a bicyCle; my God they
8th birthday, Jessica used a red boosting Lisa Blair Hathaway told NBC's wouldn ' 1 do anything."
HELENA, Mont. (AP) - FBI week before the raid. "Ted stuck his "Today" while cradling her 3-year" I ask anybody that questions er seat to see over the dashboard. At
agents used a ruse to get l.inabomber head out" and recognized his .neigh- old daughter, JasQ~ine.
whether Jessica should have, quote, 4-foot-2 her feet couldn't reach 11\e
suspect Theodore Kaczynski to conic bor, she said.
.
Jessica, i.n an effort to become the 'gone ~p· to speak to somebody who control pedals without some help, so
out of his mountain cabin in an effort
On April 3, the same ~orke~...,. youngest person to fly cross:counlry, loves her dearly."
· she used extenders.
to avoid a confrontation, a neighbor -,this time accompanied by an FBI was killed Thursday when her single"Yo?,'ve no _idea what this meant
"I'm going to fly till I fly solo,"
said.
·
agent -came 10 Kaczynski's front engine plane crashed in driving rain to Jess, she saad.
she told The Associated Press last
"I don't think anything else would door and shouted for him to open up, and snow shonly after takeoff, bare·
Hathaway said she had spoken IO week, "Fly till I die."
,"
have go~en Ted out of. the cabin," · saying they were trying to find a ly missing a house. Her father and her daughter on the telephone
On Thursday, after the crash,
said Wendy Gehring, who cooperat- property line. ·
·
moments before the crash, and while Hathaway said she would "lieg peoflight instructor also died.
ed with the FBi in planning the April
Kaczynski, who recognized the
"I did everything so this c.hild she heard the rain in the background, . pie" to let their children fly. ; ·q~ar-. . .
"3 raid oia Kaczynski's nearby shack. Forest Service worker and came out could have freedom and choice and there was no h111t of trouble. Hath- ly 1would want all my childr!ln-to die~.
Kaczynski, '53, was arrested last of his cabin, was grabbed by the have what America stands for," Hath- away was il\ Massachusetts at the in a stale of joy, biit not at age 7,"'she
week at his reajlote cabin near Lin- agent and another on~ hiding nearby, away said. "Liberty comj:s from ... time, where she had gone to await her said.
coin and is being held on a single
The Oehrings also knew to shout
count of possessing bomb compo- ~utside the door rathe.r t!!an knock. ·
nents. He.hasnotbeenchargedinany "No one knocked on Ted's door,"
of the 16 Unabomber attacks that Mrs. Gehring said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - In an ry released in advance of the presi· nomic trends, many Americans are ·plans more portable from job to job '
killed three people and injured 23 in :
Also Thursday, Attorney General
anxious about their future .
by allowing employees to start sav-..
nine stales over the past 18 years.
Janet Reno picked Robert J. Cleary, election-year appeal to anxious mid· dent's remarks said Sl million workMixing old and new administra· ing immediately, rather than wailing
die-class workers, President C)inton ers would he aided.by the .prop&lt;isals.
The effort to. trap Kaczynski' a federal prosecutor from New Jersey,
today proposed opening pension ~ut many of the ideas have been lion ideas, the president was promot- a year as some plans now require.·
peacefully began about two ·weeks to lead the government's team to
ing a package Of proposats, including: New Treasury Department rules will.
ago. Mrs. Gehring said Thursday. FBI investigate and prosecute the plans to more Americans and impos- introduced in Congress in recent
make it easier for companies to· ·
ing stiffer safeguards to proteCt sav- years and chances for patsllge are
· agents told ber husbimd. Butch, they Unabomber c~.
··
-Expanded opportunities for accept 401 (k) :·rollovers" from a
lngs. ·
unclear.
hail targeted someone for writing
"With the Retirement Savings
Clinton said the single•bill pack- individual retirement account (IRA) new eQiployee's previcius job.
some threaten,ng letterS. Agents did
Stem said the choice does not and Security Act we can help to make age should he embraced by Capitol savings plans, including a provision
nOt reveal their suspicions about indicate any decision on where the
allowjng workers to withdraw the
. -Simplified procedures for small
Kaczynski until two days before .he first fedelll charges in tbe case will · retirement something At!tericans look Hill .."I do not believe there is a par- '
money without penally for first ·businesses that want to establish 401
forward
to,
not
dread,"
Clinton
said
lisan
issue
here,"
he
said.
•
was taken i~to custOdy.
be filed. Sacramento- lllid northern
during . a sunny Rose Gilrden cere. 11le ceremony was pan of Clin~ homes, education expenses, . job (k) savings plans for theiremployecs.:
Kaczynslti had bo\lghl his land New Jersey are the leading c!!ndimony.
"Where
their
hard-working
·
!On's
e~ort to focus on the econom: retr,;Uning apd major medical expens- Invited .to the ceremony were severfrom Gehring:s father.
clates because federal. death penalty retirement earnings are concerned, ac secunty of lftlddle-class _voters as es. Another·idea: Double iACome eli- al small business ownen who )lr1lvide
Mrs. Gehring .said ~ husband · cases could ·be brought i!l either
fNe can · aive Americans peace of . he .prepares for a re-electapn cam- gibility levels so more middle-class health insurance but say they can't
and a uniformed Forest Service place for 1995 and 1994 deaths in mind "
·
·
paign against Senate Majority Leader families can get tax-deductible IRAs, . cope with complicated 401 (k) r;egu- ·
employee wandered into the wonds Unabombet bluts, Justice officials
A .20-pagc White Hour;e summa- Robert Dole. .Despite .pOsitive eco- · · -· Making the 401 (k) savings lations.
:
.
·
·
, . .
.
·ou.lsfde ~nski~s cabin about a ·have said.

Mo~her. defends daughter Jessica's decision

It's official! Viewers elect to keep Andy .Rooney!

~Makd:~.,lhad!tl

.

.

exempt

• Ornamental ·
Bradford

Ohio Stale University Medical Cen·.
' ter in Columbus and was in critic~)
condition, said Doug Brandt, an
administrative associate at the hospi·
·tal.
The other suffered head injuries
and was. in serious ·condition at Grant
Medical Center in Columbus, said
Beih Heffi&lt;en, nursing ~11pervisor. .

W.h ittington
faces
·
"
additional charges

AmerleM IIIIWCUitUntl Student Exc.......
AISE, 18 a non,iflcillt, till
eclu·eO'-o,w fDwldlltloll.

• Apple • Pea(fh • Pear
• Plum • Cherry
.And ,Your Faltorites~

.

.

nte

Va~ofColoraTo 'I '
Chooat Fro~T~
"•

River, Hunter said. The Jeep landed
on.at least some of the occupants, the
patrol said.
Athens County Coroner Robert
Butts pronounced two of the victims
dead at the scene. The thjrd w~s pronounced dead at O'Bleness Memor-.
ial Hospital. .
One .of the injured was taken to

•

Modern Woodmen donate $5,000
to help restore Chester Courtho·use

'

$6.49

.

ATHENS (AP)·-AJeep skidded
Patrol Dispatcher Sandy Collins
on a highway early today and Dipped today said all five were international
several times, killing three Ohio Uni- students at OU. She said their names
versity students and injuring two oth- . had not been released. pending notification of relatives.
ers.
All five occupants were thrown 50
The vehicle was traveling south on
to 100 feet from the vehicle, said Lt. U.S. 33 near Athens about 2:15a.m.
when it Skidded and flipped. It land,Mic~l Hlinter of the State Highway
Patrol. They were not wearing seat ed on its -..:heels and glided down an
embankment toward the Hocking
belts.

members use up · their supplies by·
completing several items for the contest.
.
· Jams Macomber; deaf chainnari,
reported that she has entry blanks for ,
the sign-a·song contest and enc:our· •ged members to think about enter- .
ing the COfllest. Eldon Barrows, legislativechairman, reported on the law ~
which went Into effect Jan. I requiring drivers to carry their license, registration and proof ofinsurance with
them at all times. ·
Rachel Ashley was issued a demit
and ~ appeal for aid W'IS answered
for two members of Huffman Grange
in Mo.nroe County.
Lecturer Vicki Srilith presented a ·
program on April. Readings includ-"
ed "April, What a Month" by Smith:
"An Easter Rule" by Charlotte
Erlewine; "Because He Rose: by
Kenny Bolen; Because He Lives: Wanda Fetty, and ''The Power of. the
Tongue" by ·the lecturer.
An Easter egg hunt was held. The .
39_ members, juniors and visitors ·
enJoyed a pollock supper Next meet- ·
ing will be April 20 at 6:30 p.m al the
grange hall.

Host a foreign exchange sltldent for the upcoming ~hool year!
AISE is seeking families for high school students from over 40
countries . world wide. This non-profit
. organization offers a
terrific opportunity .for Americans to I~ about ~er culture
.in a fu~-til1ed, famil~ setting. AISE provides host families wltl:J
complete backgrou~~ infonnation on each student, and allows
families to select the student whom they would like to hoSt.
Interested families should call AISE at 1-800-SmLING. Call
world is just a phone call away! .
today.

.HARDY AZAL~S

·-

A O.nnett CO. tiiWU lpltMir

Three OU students are killed in!
Rt. 33 crash early
this
morning
.

BRING THE WO~D TO YOUR DOORSTEP!

'

•

Two others injured

,,

..

Cloudy tonight. Lo)lllln
501. Saturday, ahcnrert,
high IINr 70.

:Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll12, 1996 -

"What is Alzheimers. Disease" Keith Rader, pastor, will be taking the
was the program topic J,tesenled by youth to ''kthus" a Christian rock ·
Lenora Leifheit at the Rock Springs conceit. ThC UMW donated sso ·to
United Methodist Women's meeting the group for expenses and also gave
held recently at the church.
$SO to the Senior Citizens Center. •
Leifheit explained the symploms
Final plans were made for Mon:
and the neei1s of care giving. She thl\n day's meeting when ABC quilts for
gave an quiz on Alzheimers Disease. sick babies will be m~. The work
Rita Radford presided1at the meet- session \.viii begin at 10 a.m. at the
ing whicb opened with scripture chureh. All UMW members are invit'
from Psalms S7 and pmyer. She pre- ed to auend.
Prayer by Dorothy Jeffers closed
' sented literature on missions and
·announced a spring retreat at Camp the meeting. Refreshments were
served. Attending were Iris·Collins,
Asbury, Rio Grande. II
i A thank offering will be collected Pandora Collins, Haul Ball, Ri.ta
Radford, Dorothy Jeffers, Virginia
'at die May 14 meeting. I
Plans ~ere made for the JrOUp to Wears, Beuy Wills, Frances Goeglei'l
hold a worship 511rvice' ,_,oo April 21. and Lenora '-"itheit.

By JA,.ES HANNAH

dows. '
This time, the people were on the ·
outside caUing in. To us. And there
were 7,000 of them before it \vas
over. On top of that, a couple of
crates'. worth of cards and letters.
So what is ~ upshot of this survey? I can confidepdy say that among .
the viewers who responded 10 his sea:
to-shining-sea appeal, plenty of them
loye Andy Rooney. A mi!Ch smaller ·
number wish he'd go away. ProAndy: lots. Anti-Andy: nol so many.
Consider that the official count

5120
Buckeye 5:
3-17-19-25-36

a1

.

never heard of you, but I'm sure I
wouldn',t llke you."
I want to n:assure anyone who
does manage to read this that I'an a
reasonably likable guy. Besides: of
the ISO columns I write in a year,
most are pretty nice.
The Rooney column? Granted, not
too bullish. You might say I criticized
a critic who himself is often critical
of otl)ers. Wily isn't that fair play?
Roonc:y seemed to hate it when
the tables were turned. and issued an
on-air rebuttal.
"Mr. Moore says I act too old and
should retire," Rooney told 22.5 mil.lion' "60 Minutes" viewers during his
Marth 31 -coinmentary, just ·before
inviting them to write or phone ~~te'
. with their feelings on the mallet.
· Wait, I thought to myself. I didn't
really say thai.
.
. Never n\ind. A moment later,
phone lines were jammed at the
Associated Press number Rooney
.had given out.
The next few hours and days
smacked of the ftlm "Network" after
anchorman Howard Beale be~hed
' his audience to tell the world ''I'm
mad as hell," and the next moment
people were calling out their win-

570
Pick 4:

•

Methodist women l'earn·.about Alzhe.irriers. , ...,

: give~ home~es

By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Televl81an Writer
· NEW YORK (Ap) - Ever since
• 1 )mlte that "'6Q'Minutes" would he
better off without Andy ~ooney, and
be challenged my column on the air.
1 have learned many things.
1 have learned from Andy's fans
that I have rocks in my head. I have
teamed thllt I'm ajerk, a loser and an
idiot, not to mention "a crumb. thai
should be swept off the AP floor ·•
Andy'~ fans -have instructed me
thai ifl don't like what I'm watching,
1 should just change !he channel. I
should keep my negative opinions to
rny5elf. I should be fired for my rude, ness llllY~ow.
·
Each more helpful than the one
' before it, these tips came from peo·
pie who made no secret of the fact
they never actually saw my Rooney
• column thai so set them off. Who
could blame them for their abstention 1 As George A. de Holczer of
Bloomingdale. N.J., explained, " I do
not like 10 contaminate.my mind with

Pick 3:

Fedea., .

Star.Grange .elects·
state delegates·

·
_ ~rick building.
.
Assoc:lltld PraM Writer
Accommodations have grown
DAYTON, Ohio (1\P)- Forced from 14 single beds and two cribs
to
a difficult domestic situa- in two bedrooms to 17 beds and
tion, the 26-yearcold woman and four cribs in three bedrooms. A
!ler four children sought refuge in a fond pantry also has been added.
downtown homeless shelter.
While it's not the Ritz, the headThe shelter. often cramped and qullflers provides a safe, clean and
noisy, offers little privacy. Which is comfortable place for the night
l"hY the. woman hopes for a full . ·Beds are lined 'IP in each of the
house.
.
bedrooms. Photos of cute cats, dogs
1bat allows her 10 seek political and ducks adQm the walls. A com, asylum of sorts- at the Democra· mon eating and play area includes a
' tic Party headquaners across the television, chalkboard and toys.
street.
'
.
"The rooms at the Democratic
"It's private. We .get our own headquarters are more spacious
room. It's beuer for me. After all than our own family rooms," said
the kids go to bed. it's quiet," said Jim Butler, executive director of St.
the woman, who asked that her Vincent's, the sheller across the;
name not be used, for privacy and' street. "Over there, it's more
safety reasons.
peaceful for them, and they are able
. A year ago, the Democrats to function more as a family."
Before the party opened its
opened the second floor of its headquaners to homeless women and headquarters to the homeless, fam' tneir children for use when tile ilies would be sent to motels if St.
nearby St. Vincent Hotel shelter is Vincent's, which can house up to
full .
·
60 men and 25 women and chil11le makeshift shelter has done a dren, \vas full.
booming business, open 105 nights
Jim Van Grove, a county Demosince it opened. In that time; 1,211 cratic Pany spokesman, said homewoman and children have spent less families arrive. in the evening
nights in the aging two-story red and leave first thing in the morning.

Ohio Lottery

'l'hunldlly, Aprt111, , •

•

7'73-5721

I

'

..

\

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