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P... DI ... 'aS

Pomeroy • Mlddl8port • O.lllpolla, OH • Point Pllltlnt, WV

.. "al

Project completed- May ~

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The Robert Gillenwater and Brothers firm completed a three
and one-half month razing project oi the old Gallipolis Motor Co.,
building on the 200 block of Second Avenue In downtown Gallipolis Iaiit - k . Harsh winter conditions prevented an earllar
complatlon date. The building was torn down In order to make
room for Foodland's naw "Super Block" facility, to be built In the
n-futullt.

I

WASHINGTON (AP)- Fannen their crop ins~e pro~eetion since
Some experts estimale peach losshave been given until May 2 to obcain droughts, floods and ocher natural es of about $28 million.
catastrophic-risk protection cover- disaslers are a c0111tant threat."
Linvill said tbe cold weather also
age foi their spring-planted crops.
Coverage may be obl~ned ITom a llvealens remaining apples in Oconee
The extended period was autho- Farm Service Agency office or pri- County, where half the crop was
rized by Agriculture Secretary Dan vate insurance agent. W~ver forms destroyed by earlier harsh weather.
Glickman under the newly eiiiCted • are av~lable at the FSA offices.
Clemson extension agent Tom
farm law.
Biga said farmers have been specuThe reopened sales period is·availlating that as much as 30 percent of
able only for such spring-planted Crops destroyed
the strawberry crop also has been lost
corps as com, soybeans, cotton,
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -Cold to early ,freezes.
sorghum, oats, rice and many fruits weather has destroyed almost 80
The later the strawberries ripen,
and vegetables with sales closing percent of South Carolina's $3' mil- the more likely it will be that liot
dates of January 1996 or later and lion peach crop and inore than ~alf weatber will reduce the plants' prospring-planted grains with earlier the apple crop.
ductivity, Biga said. Without any furclosing dates.
"Ninety or 95 percent of trees ther problems, the normal I 0-week
Starting with 1996 crops, produc- haven't got a single peach on them," harvest season has been .!hopped
ers arc no longer required to obtain said Johnston grower Chip Satcher.
back to eight weeks, he said.
crop insurance if they waive the right
Wednesday morning's 20-degree
. The cold weather also means the
to emergency crop loss aid on an teml'&lt;oratur.es probably did . not do coastal plains now have to worry
insurable crop. An uninsured farmer much additional damage, said Dale . aboufwheat production, Lin viii said.
who fails to sign a waiver will be Lin viii, an agriculture meteorologist
denied benefits from the commodity for the Clemson University extension .
program, the conservation reserve service.
Deadline July 12
and certain farm credit programs.
But Linvill said earlier cold snap;'
WASHINGTON (AP)- Farmers
Glickman urged farmers to be cau- destroyed 79 percent of the staie's will have from May 20 to July 12 to
tious in waiving loss assistance. ·
j!each crop and noted more cold sign up for the farm program created
"Crop disaster assistance is no · weather forecast for the middle of by the new farm bill.
longer available for insurable crops," next week.
The Agriculture Department
he said: "I urge producers to lceep

Veteran employe~s fill
:two officer positions
GALLIPOLIS - The board of ing career at OVB in 1954 and later
· directors at Ohio Valley Bank have worked briefly for Bob Evans Farms.
·filled two new officer positions with She also spent a short time working
~ ve1eran employees in an announce- in banking in Colorado when her hus: men!· made by James L. Dailey, . band was statio~ed there while in the
·chairman of the board and chief exec- · serviCe.
. ulivc officer.
All direct lending loan officers .
·Promoled to assistant vice president from bank offices in Gallia, Jackson
and retail direct lending manager was and Pike Counties in southern Ohio
Patrick H. Tackett; while assistant and the OVB Loan Origination Ceovice presiden( Phyllis P. Wilcoxon ter wi)l repon to Tackett. He previwill lead the shareholder relations ously was assistant cashier and region
depanment.
.
·- manager for Jackson County. Tackett,
Wilcoxon, who once 1\andled both who began working at OVB in 1983,
the duties·assoc.iated with sharehold- · js a graduate of the Ohio· School of
.•ers and personnel, most recently has Consumer Credit at Kent State Uniserved as assistant vice president and versity. He wm remain in the retail
"director of human resources. With her bank group of senior vice president
:.new responsibilities, she has moved Katrinka V. Han and repon lo David
' into the Trust and Operations Center L. Shaffer, vice president for re.tail
. building. Her department becomes a lending.
'part of the commercial bank group
Tackett's new office is located in
:ted by senior vice president E.
the OVB Jackson Pike Office just
.Richard Mahan. She starred her bank- west of Gallipolis.

'•'

announced the dates Thursday, .a
week after President Clinton signc!d
the law. The bill replaces price·bued
subsidies with fixed-but-decllnifti
payments guaraniCCd by seven-year
"Production Flexibility Contracts.~
. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glic~
man stressed this year's signup w1D
be the only opponubity. "This is 11
now or never proposition," he said:
Payments arc based on past s~
sidies, and growers should begin get·
ting noti~ in early May with infOI:mation enabling them to calculafjl
payments under tlie new farm bill.·.
Advance payments will be male
30 days after contracts are approved.
The department ·also announc~
other activities and deadlines rela~
to the farm bill:
:
-Initial peanut program quotM
\will be mailed in laiC April.
- Marketing assessments for
dairy producers end May I.
-Final 1996 payments under tl;le
farm bill will be made .Sept. 30.
-Advance payments for the 199.7
crop will be made Dec. 15, 1996, or
Jan . 15, 1997.
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Satellites will keep watchful ·eye on crop~:
.

GALLIPOLIS - Newly-elected son, vice president and Jill Caner,
officers of. the Gallipolis Future president.
Farmers of America auended the
Members auended training sesrecent District 10 Awards Banquet sions and two members from each
held at Logan High School.
chapter voted for the 1996-97 district
They were: Steve Queen, sentinel; officers. Jill Carter was elected disRette Carmichael, treasurer; Amy ·trict secretary.
Crisenherry,
reporter;
Kimm
During the evening's activities,
McCormick, secretary; Chris Dod- awards were presented chapters,
teams and individuals. ·
The Gallipolis FFA Chapter was
recognized for its ninth place effon in
Continued from D-1.
the state urban soil judging contest.
First quarter 1996 net income
Ed Nehus received an award for a
reached a record level of fourth place finish in tire district soil
$38,128,000, which is 16.4 percent judging contest.
above the same periqd in 1995 and
6.3 ~cent over tJ!e fourth quarter of
1995.
Strong increases in fee inceme
amj lower expenses were the major
contributing factors to Star's earnings
growth during the first quarter 'of
1996. .

'

moisture. Two vegetation maps sh~SV
detailed crop growth. A founh sho""J;
how much change has occurred sin&lt;;c
the last shot.
' ·;
When information points to pri&gt;~­
in operation, giving cuslomcrs lems.in small areas, spot treatments
images once a week from each land can cut needs for fcnilizer, chemicals.
area of about t60 acres. The satellites • and water- e n~uring .that a deficieJit
area gets the extra help it may need ..
will greatly expand the capability.
Work leading to the satellite
An image taken before planting
launch
has been under way (or sevbut used for reference all season
reflects soil difTercnces, mainly in eral years at a laboratory in Weslaco,
organic matter and ability to hold · Texas.

farmers within aday it is obtained; · fidd tlieir soil or crop problems. That
Farmers and their advisers will could lead to more informed, timely
view the images, print out color maps decisions on correcting the problems. ·
and make statistical analyses - and
An airplane-carried prototype of
know exactly where on the farm to the data-collection system already is

Gallipolis FFA members
attend District 1o banquet
PHYLLIS WILCOXON·

insuranc~

deadline for crop

WASHINGTON (AP) - Three
summers from now, every acre of
crops on Eanh could be under the
watchful eyes of satellites 450 miles
high relaying essential information to

PATRICK TACKETT

.

ROUND POOLS
15' . $925•
18' •.$995•
24' • $1,22511!1 .
15X30 • $ t, 795GII

Star Bank...

Plus other sius in slock

1996

Lawn-Craft SHOW

Service under
new ownership

SPECIAL OPEN HOUSE

2,...,..

1885 Bulek l!eaturys
.. Fro• ••

BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER ·
APRIL 20 &amp; 21 • 12:00 TO s·:OO P.M.
• Lawn &amp; Craft Show Demonstration and Displays
• 9-hole Mlnlarure Golf
•Fingerprlndng of Children
•Games for Children
•Child Care Services tW•InaD,Iel
•Alumni Dls.play
*Entertainment
•FFA Auction I :30 Sunday
*Craft Show
• Greenhouse Sales ·
• Door Prizes
*Health Care Checks
* Recreadonal Boats/Vehicles
• Classic Car Show Sunday
• Basketball Hoop Shoot Contest
•Srudent-constructed Modular Home will be on Display
•Style Show
· •Cosmetology Services
•Landscaping Displays
•Vendor Lllsplays of Services and Equipment
•Amish·made Fu111lrure Sales
•Remote Control Planes •Ham Radio Demos
•Fishlng!Sportlng Exhibits
. , •Fast Foods Dally *Spaghetti Dinner Saturday'.
•Baked Steak Dinner Sunday

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65 Used Cars In Stock - All Price Ranges!

BUICK
PONTIA
..

OH ·
,.

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0 V
o~~~o

V••~&lt;r

a...

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BE _A MILLIONAIRE FOR A DAY!
THANKS TO OHIO VALLEY BANK 0

Win the grand prtza otl!itel'll8t on: $1,000,000 lor a day. 'Sign up when
vlllt the Lawn-Craft ShoW. One entry per penJOn pleaae, no
-~!Y and you 1'1118(1 !101 be .pllll8f11 to win. Drawing at

you

P.M. on Sunday

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Sho-ra tonight. Low In
408. R..ln, high In mid 408.

15·16-23a37-43r45
Kicker:
294617

Sport•, Page 6

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VoL 46. Ito. 244

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35centa
A Gannett Co• .......,..,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Aprll15, 1996

1 Section, 10 PIIQH ·

T·.he tax man calls:
]RS forms ·are due
'

House and Senate to approve tax refund.
increases. The proposal was deleted
Taxpayers sweating out the final
last year from a balanced-budget con- hours before the filing deadline arc
stitutional amendment, which fell finding more high-tech assistance
one vote shon of clearing·the Senate. from the IRS. Forms can be downBy DAVE SKIDMORE
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- loaded from the nis home page on
Assoclllted Press Writer ·
Ga., promised GOP freshmen and the computer Internet or obtained by
WASHINGTON - Taxpayers ·other conservatives a chance to spot- fax machine.
scrambling to meet today's midnight light the issue today. but doubted the
The IRS home page also has tax
deadline for filing federal returns proposal would gain the two-thirds information on a wide range of tophave plenty of company.
·
vote needed to amend the Consti tu- ics. Or taxpayers can lisfen to· tapes
•The Internal Revenue estimates tion .
on about 150 subjects by calling 1that 36 million to 37 million returns
• The Republican National Com- 800-829-4477. That's also the numare filed in the two weeks before the mittee is airing television advenise- ber to check on the status of refunds.
deadline - about 30 percent of the ments raking Presidel\1 Clinton for
Taxpayers who can't get the inforannual totaL It anticipates that an his veto of the Repubtloan balanced mation or forms they need can
additional 6.1 million taxpayers will budget plan in January. Alnong its receive a four-month filing extension
· ask for auto~xtensions giving provisions was a $500-per-child tax with Form 4688. However, it is Mt
· them four months, until Aug. 15, to credit. Clinton favors a more limited. an extension of time to pay any taxfile.
and less expensive credit.
es owed. Extension filers should
Post offices in every major city are
• An annual study by the Tax estimate how much they owe and
: extending hours or offering late mail Foundation. a research organization include a check.
pickups. Many will be open until financed by corporations, shows this
Taxpayers can request an install·
midnight. •
year's Tax Freedom Day will be the ment payment plan with Form 9465.
Whether procrastinators file their latest · ever. The typical · American The IRS will reply within 30 days. A
·taxes at midnight or ask for an ex ten• must work until May. 7 to earn $43 fee will be added to th~ first pay.sion, the key iS to take some action, enough to pay federal, state and local . ment.
·
. IRS Commissioner Marg~et Milner taxes, il said. That's the same date as
Filing late, as opposed to just payRichardson stressed today. .
last year but represents an extra day ing late, is extremely expensive. The
"You really must file something of work because 1996 is a leap year. penalty is 5 percent a month, an annu.or els~ ·you will incur a penalty," she The tax bite in an eight-hour day is al rate of about 60 percent.
said on NBC's "Today" show. And, two hours and 47 minutes, the group
The Postal Service said taxpayers
·she warned, "if you file an extension said.
should use correct postage, since the
you still have to pay" if you owe, she
• The Competitiveness Policy IRS will not accept tax returns with
~atd.
,. . . .
.
Council, a bipartis¥Jadvisory panel postage due. It also does not
• · ·• a.w~'lileliQns'•·aitm!rion·focu!l!il ·• established by Congress, is conduct- postniarksffom pfivate posial
on laxation, at IellS! for a day, pohh- ing a "Save Your Tax Refund" cam- as proof of timely filing.
clans and others are pushing their tax- · paign. It commissioned a survey lha.t
The IRS home page on. the Interrelated causes.
indicated more than 70 ntillion Amer- net .is at ht!p://www.irs.ustreas.gov.
• The Hous~ J?lanned to vote · icans expec.l refunds totaling $92 bit- The fax number to receive forms is
today on.a conslltuuonal amendment lion. Only one4hird plan to save the 703-487, 4160.
requiring a two-lhitds majority of the
·

. Congress pushes .
action addressing
: related causes · ·

Patrol says car traveled at least 10
·miles over posted speed limit

Goodmkln

JSINCE 1954f

6830

Super Lotto:

r--A day in the park- Brush fire ~
incidence·
prompts
caution .
request

law, OSHA should cite them and follow through and take it to court if
they have to."
Critics also oppPse the sealing of .
government records on industry accidents following settlements.
That occurred after an August
1993 accident at the Rhone-Poulenc

Fourth OU
student
·dies
from
.

NO MONEY DOWNt
l818 Gr-• Aa C::Oupe

.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ty expert with the Oil, Chemical and
The Occupational Safety and Health Atomic Workers International Union
Administration is too quick to settle in Denver.
"We have probably at least one of
when it comes to investigating safety violations and accidents at chem- our members killed a month." Anderson said. "We believe OSHA is just
ical plants, critics say.
'.'1 get aggravated by the issues," too willing to negotiate on the issue.
· said Joe Anderson; a health and safe- If an employer doesn't follow the

Rio Grande ·

38 Months J.eme :.

Masters

'

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel New• Staff

·',

f

.

~
4~.,...,,7

..

~ng tha~~a.m"

rriowina.•ta ,.,.,... · ''*"¥

weather Sunday afternoon at ·General ~artingel' PBrk in Mid·
dleport were Michelle Johnson and Amber Hoc:kmat}. The playground equipment they are enjoying, above, donated by
McDonald's of Ripley, W.Va., was put In place last summer by
the Middleport Recreation Committee. (Sentinel photo by Char·
lene Hoeflich)

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V

Ohio

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a,.~.

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A'FHENS (AP)- The car carry.ing four Ohio University .students who
died in a traffic accident was estimated 10 be going at least I 0 mph over the
speed limit, the State Highway Patrol said.
The four students and another who was injured were all from the Seoul,
South Korea, area. They were among 87 students from that country enrolled
at the southeast Ohio school.

Ag Co. plant in.Institute in which one OSHA's modus operandi," Anderson
.
worker was killed and two others said.
Settling
is
sometimes
the best
were critically injured. Records also
were sealed after a May 1994 explo- solution, said Richard Sollan, a
sion that killed three workers at deputy regional administrator for the
Shell Chemical Co. in Belpre, Ohio. U.S. Labor Department. A lengthy
"I don't know how often it hap- · court battle can squander the
pens, but settling seems to be agency 's resources , he said.

inju~ies
.

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The current transition to warmer
temperatures and spring weather
brings more than an opponunity lo
· enjoy the outdoors for area residents.
The change in weather, coupled wiih
April's windy conditions, increases
the likelihood for brush fires throug~­
outlhe region.
Local fire crews were kept bu~y
over the weekend, battling fires in i&amp;e
Reedsville and Pomeroy areas. •:
A Saturday morning fire near
Su~cess Road required the response
of . four· fire departments and t6e
Ohio Division of forestry 's bulldoz.
er to control !he blaze.
Ohio laws do not permit open
burning during the months of April
and May between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Burning can only take place after 6
p.m.. or before 6 a.m., according to
Meigs County Emergency ~ervic~s
Director Robert Byer.
Residents who have questions
about conditions for open burning
can refer to a class listing provided by

.

.Just Arrlved8II97 Btdek USahre's .

SEE

Pick 3:
225
' Pick 4:

Critics rap OSHA as too. quick to settle on accidents

•

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Faldo wins
60th annual

.

and

POMEROY- White Glove Cleaning Service of Meigs and Gallia
Counties is now under new ownership. Glenda Richmond of Pomeroy
received a loan from Enterprise
Development Corporation to purchase the cleaning business from Ann
and Nathan Newman.

Ohio Lottery

rating on.e
five,
on
weather readings, is posted each day,
as a condition guide for brush fire
prevention:
"Th~ ratings take into account
wind, relative humidity, recent rainfall, aYailable fire load, among other
factors. The ratings range from a
Class One rating o[ low fire 'danger, ·
to a Class Five rating of extreme fire
danger," said Byer.
For more information on daily lilt
class ratings or brush fire prevention, :
reSidents can contact the Ohio Divi- ·
sion of Forestry or the Meigs Coun- ·
ty Emergency Medical Services :
offices.
.
"Right now, the conditions ·are :
extremely dry in the area. We are just ·.
(Continued on Page 3)

·

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in Athens County wreck

"They are really in a sad state and trying to qo something lo sort of heal
their sorrow," said physics Professor Seung-Soo Yuri, an adviser to the Korean students.
.
Jae-Yong Park, 20, died Saturday night at Grant Medical Center in Columbus. The other three students died Friday, the day of the accident.
Jin-Hyoung Park, 19, who is not related .to Jae-Yong Parle, was upgraded to serious condition ioday at Ohio State University Medical Center in
Columbus, said hospital spokesman David Crawford.
The five undergraduates were in a Jeep Wrangler that overturned around
2:15a.m. Friday as it entered U.S. 33 fr;o:,:m:,:a:n:_:A::.t:::h::en:::s:,:C:::_o:::u:_:n:.:_tY:..:.:ro;::a~d::._._...:_·

'

The patrol estimated the vehi~le was going 65 lo 70 mph in a 55-mph zone.
The occupants were thrown 50 to I00 feet from the car, which landed on .
some of them. The accident remained under investigation.
·
Killed Friday were driver Ki-Chul Chang and Dong-Wook H"!ang, bolh
23, and Sang-Won Song, 24.
Many of the Korean students keep in close contact with each other.
"In Korean tradition, we set up prctures of the deceased and then a lot of
friends hold.a vigil," Yun said Saturday. "You sit and comfort each other.
They're trying to do that; they 're trying 10 find a way:"

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Oh~o

militia groups' str·idenc_y
'worries state, local officialdom
By The Ass~lated Press

Ohio officials have become
incre,..ingly concerned about violence and threats associated with
militia grqups around the country.
Ohio Supreme Coun Chief Justice
1bomas Moyer last week said the
"common law" rhovement ·is the
greatest threat to form a separate government since the Civil War.
The movement's members believe
. common law is based on biblical
principles and is ,superior to law
established by legislative bodies or
modem courts.
"There's a lot of dissatisfaction
with government, a lot of mistrust at
this time," Mich,ael Dailey, a Columbus police offic.er who tracks militia
and common law groups, told the
Akron Beacon Journal for a story
published Sunday.
A Columbus Police Department
repon says Ohio's c~mmon ·taw
movement- most notably an organization c.allcd Our One Supreme
Court - has about 350 members.
As part pf: the movement; common law advocates have filed liens
.and lawsuits against p!!bli~&gt; officials
and Olhera. The advocates say the fil.
ings are .within their constitutional

rights.
enue Service's authority to auction a
The Ohio House is considering a piece of propeny.
bill. sponsored by Rep. William · On the county prosecutor's advice,
Schuck. R-Columbus, that would some of the documents have been
give county recorders and clerks of filed, others have been returned,
coun the right to reject common law Austin said.
The patriot movement gained
documents 'and ' grant the officials
immunity from prosecution.
attention after two suspects .in the
In such papers, the groups have bombing of the Oklahoma City fedthreatened public officials- includ- eral building a year .ago were linked
ing Attorney General Betty Mont· to the Michigan Militia, which has
gomery - · in the lastyear. Petition- . denied that Timothy McVcigh.-and .
ers {rom the Canton Ohio Constilu- Terry Nichols were members.
niere is militia activity'in at least
tional Study Group accused Montgomery of sedition, treason and per- 30 other states, including 66 county
jury fo~ refusing to arrest the ·state's units of the Ohio Unorganized Mili·
seven Supreme Coun justices over a tia.
1992 ruling about grand juries, the :
"Ohio is one of the more active
states in the country," said Cliff
newspaper said.
Ohio court officials have record· Savren, regional director of the Anti"
ed common law suits in 41 of ·8&amp; Defamation League's office in Cleve·
land.
'
tounties, the Bei!'OD Journal said.
about ·100 feet by the accldant and Ytl88 reportIn Lucas County, common law
lsi June, Ohio UnorganiZed MiliWRECK KILLS AGENT - An FBI a~nt
ed dead at the scene. Although Killmer WIIS
_documenls have been arriving at 1\te tia and common law court n\ember axamlnes tha destroyed vehicle of FBI Special
. assigned duty at the nearby Freemen comrate of about one a week since last Michael Hill, 50, was shot and killed Agant Ksvln J. Kramer, 34, Sioux City, Iowa,
pound, the accident was unrelated. See story
after
he
slid
off
a
muddy
road
naar
Jordan,
fall, Mark Austin, office manager-for by a Frazeysburg police officer. The
on
Page 3. (AP)
.
· . ·
on Sunday momlrtg. Krsmer was throw11
county Recortler Sue Rioux, told The officer, wro said Hill pulled a gun on Mont,
.
0
.
(Toledo) Blade for a story published him when he was stopped for having
today.
.
a homemade license plate, was in Jan~ with assaulting a State he was framed because he had wit- northeast and east,central Ohio, said
Highway Patrol trooper after being nessed liill's deatl,l.'
Bob t .omwell, executive director of
One document was .on the letter- cleared bv •a Jirand jury. ·
·
stopped
near
Cambridge
for
changing
The
strongest
militia
membership
the Buckeye St~te Sheriffs' Associahead of Our One Supreme Court and
A former militia memlicr, Larry K.
lanes
withtlut
signaling.
Martz
claims
in
the
state
is
found
throughout
·
lion .
claimed 1o nuilify the ·Internal Rev· Martz; 53, of Hartville,
charged

was

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:commentary

Plge2
Monday, Airi 15,11911

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By Jilek AnalrMn
M1CI Mlch11l Blna..ln

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

.!1,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

L•rt•tl to tt,. «&lt;itO¥.,. 11'0/como. Tilly •hould ... ,_, 111M 300 AM loltonl
,,. aubJect to edlrlnf and muet obi alp«~ Mid lrtelude «kkrNI Md ,.Mphol~ num~
I&gt;M. No uno/gn«&lt; ,.,.,. will bo fiUIIIIt/Nd. L.,.,. tltould .,. In good ,..,.,

add,.aalng ,,...,, not ,.,-.oniiJHft.

.Letters to the
editor
•
. Express appreciation

Dear Editor,
The Eastern Local Levy Commit·
tee would like .to express their appre·
ciation to the voters in the district for
helping Eastern tum so that a better
future can be provided for our children and .our community.
The Committee would like to
express its appreciation to those indi.viduals in the district whose' donations of time, money, and display of
signs was an instrumental factor in
.the passage of the levy.
. · The Committee ,is pleased to live
in a community . where the local
news~aper and the local radio station

gun Rostenkowski was swing down
when he opened secret plea bargain
negotiatio• with U.S. Attorney Eric
H. Holder Jr. in 1994. After months

WASHING10N -· Whether he
was cunina deals for president. or
precinct captains, Conner Rep. Dan
RQstenkowski, D-Ill., always knew
wllen to hold and when to fold.
But when it came to wheeling and
dealing wil)t federal pro,ecutors,
Rostenkowski proved a poor poker
player. Two yean; ago -- atth~ height
of his power and perhaps arrogance
-- Rostenkowski made a bad bel. His
day of reckoning came last week.
The former chairman of the House
Ways and Means CQmmittee pleaded guilty in federal ·court to two
counts of mail fraud and was sentenced to 17 months in prison and a
SI00,000 fine. He was about to stand
trial on a 17-count indictment that
documented pervasive corruption
during·his 36 ye!ltS in Congress: illegally ~xthangi ng postage stamps for
cash at the House post office, using
government employees as personal
servants and obstruction of justice.
This was the double-bafreled shot-

By Jack Anderson
.and
Michael Blnsteln
I

of intense horse-trading betwee·n
Holder and Rostenkowski's former
attorney, Robert Bennett, Rostenkowski spurned his counselor's
advice and spiked a sweetheart deal:
Six months of prison, a small fine
and, perhaps most significant, a sanitiz¢ statement on his crimes from
the Justice Department
In retrospect, according to sources
close .to Holder and Rostenkowski,
the ' legendary legislator passed the
point of no return the day he turned
down the Big Deal, leaving J.ustice no
option but to open fire.
Rostenkowski had already hired
and discarded two attorneys by

August 1993, when Qennett was
br0111ht in 10 handle the·then 2-yearold federal investigation. Bennet!
cuAe out swinging in the press. and
his client vowed a fight to the finish.
But Roslenkowski was buffeted by
conflicting voices .
Some members of his inner sanctum, such as Illinois lawmakerturned-lobbyist Marty Russo, were
pushing Rostenkowski to adopt a
hard line against any deal requiring
him to relinquish his cljairmanship.
But Rostenkowski 's long-time chief
tax counsel, Rob Leonard, seemed
. less concerned with the gavel than
with girding Rostenkowski from a
painful ordeal.
·
"My guess is (Leonard) now is the
moll, Uf\happy person after Rosty,"
said one $(\Urce. Leonard was the
only person Rostenlcowski invited
into the huddle as he discu~sed plea
bargain strategy with Bennett.
Justice officials saw that Bennett
knew Holder's pressure points. One
source recalls that Bennett warned
Holder- that he was prepared for five

work with a group such as our committee in order to provide a forum for
information to be presented to the
public. This forum was a positive factor in the paSsage of our levy.
Our children and our community
appreciate what you, the vOters, have
provided for ·the Eastern .Local
School District. We sincerely hope
that the future ·is as brigh.l for our
community as we envision it at this
time of victory.
The Eastern Local
Levy Committee
Dave Hannum, Treasurer

:E-check controv~rsy
continues to boil
.
•

By .JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer

•

DAYTON - The controversy over Ohio's new auto emissions tests
. shows no signs of dying down. Opponents challenge the fairness of the JWOgram, and motorist. are fuming over car repair bills.
l"he Coaliiion to Repeal Ohio E-Chcck was formed in January, when the
tests went into effect, and now 200 members. The group plans a protest at
Dayton,area emission test sites April 20.
"The biggest problem is that the program won't work," said coalition
spokesman Greg Bell. "It's not fair. And it doesn't make the gains supporters
say it will make."
Thetest is aimed at reducing smog and involves analyzing the emissions
of vehicles. It is required in 14 counties - seven in northeast Ohio and sev~n in southwest - before motorists can renew their license plates. •
Backers of the program say that if pollution lev~ Is exceed f\l(leral stand!"q~. severe restrictions on industry could drive potential employers· out
of Ohio.
. ·But even environmental groups have concerns.
: Bruce Cornett, a member of the Greene Environmental Coalition, said
the program disproportionately affects one segment of the popullllion. All·
Ohio motorists should have their vehicles checked, he said.
.
· " Jr I have to have my carE-Checked, I want the governor's carE-Checked
too,.. Cornell said.
. 'He said the counties where the tests are required were arbit..;mly selected. In addition, drive-through traffic from out-of-town motorists contribute
to an area's pollution, he said.
·
Heidi Gagnon, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency, said the E-Check is designed to ensure that counties that have had
air pollution violations continue to meet the standards.
"It's the most cost-effective way for us to do this," she said.
Gagnon said it is not fair to ask motorists of southeast Ohio; for exam"
pie, 'to undergo the E-Checks when that area has never had an air pollution
problem.
: And she said the interstate highways, which carry much of the drivethrough traffic. are not tinder state jurisdiction. However, since 34 states have
similar auto emissions tests, many of those mo~orists are likely in compliimce, Gagnon said.
.,
.
·
· Cornell also said it.is unfair to require motorists to have theE-Check when
some service stations in the Dayton area are exempt from recovering gasoline vapors that contribute to pollution.
"They've shifted all the burden to the citizens," he said.
' EPA spokeswoman Pat Madigan said the smallest filling stations were
exllmpted because the requirement wou!d be t.oo costly for them.an.d they
contributed little to the air pollution.
· The E-Check process itself is not sitting well with some motoristS. For
.
Janet Benge, 30, of Fairborn, it was an expensive Headache.
Benge's newly purchased 1984 Nissan 200-SX was inspected last month.
After the car failed the test, Benge spent $40 on repairs and had it retested,
only to have it fail again. After a tuneup, she took 'it back again, but the car
stopped ,running during the test. ·

Berry's 'World
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•

and many other politicians ardently
desire "finality" in capital cases: ·a
one-year limit to habeas corpus petitions. To them, an independent judiciary coddles killers.
The. hu·nting down of threats to
law enforcement is likely to be quite
a sport in the 1996 presidential campaign. This .time, Willie Horton will
be wearing judicial robes. ·
When Justice William Brennan
appeared before ihe Senate Judiciary:
Committee for confirmation to the·
Supreme Court, his only opponent
was Joe McCarthy, who insisted on
sitting in, although he was not on the
committee. With his civil liberties! ·
record as a New Jersey state judge,
Brennan would now have to answer
many questions to many senators, l£d·
. by Orrin Hatch who said recently iJf,
Clinton that "he appoints judges,
who are putting criininal&amp; back on the:
street."
· But Brennan would not have been,
appointed by eitller Bill Clinton or .
Bob DOle. He was and is a true
believer in the Bill of Rights .ani
thereby a menace to public safety. .
The Republicans arc scouring the:
.records of CUnton judicial appointees
who have · shown an unwholesome•
c9ncern .wil)l Bill of Rights guaran- :
·
l
tees for defendants. , ·
. Nat Hentolf Is il nationaDy •
renowned aulhority on the First ~
Amendment and the rest of the BUi ll
of Rights.
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By Joseph Spear
It's beginning to sound like a bro- sion to enter and set up residence, but the taboo against turning on one's 1 ·
Grab your partner and we'll drive . ken record, isn't it?
we should severely limit egress. family," Liddy·says.
~
dull care. away,
Regular readers will recognize a Wouldn't you feel more comfortable . One suspects G. Gordon is view- ~
Doing ll dance we call the Sour- familiar theme when I suggest t~at with all the wackos in one place ing this through a personal prism: If !
ball's Segue...
where we could keep an eye on some member o! the p~dy family t
I really believe we are missing a
them? With all their t.Jzis and how- had clued,Jhe N1.xon campaign ·that •.
golden opportunity with this Freemen
i.tzers and bazookas, they could end they l!fere hiring a very strange duck
standoff in Montana. With a ~tile we have llere the makings of a Fruit- up blowing each other away....
R1chard may have retired honorabiy 1
1
imagination, we could solve the cake Nation. The nonhal people of
Speaking of guns and nuts brings and G. Gordon may.not have had the :
national nut problem once ·and for all. America· should just go ahead and to mind _G. Gordon Liddy. Have you chance to conspire in 'the Watergate •
The people who are holed up on buy this farm , which has been fore- heard about the latest flap our favorite burglary. How then would he have !
the 960-acre farm they call "Justus cl.osed on, a,nd' give it to these eccen-· · Watergate ex-con ·c)lm talk-show · g:Uned the notoriety thilt now enables ;
Township" near the town of Jordan . Inc fellows . We should let them do . host has gotten himself involved in? h1m 10 make a handsome living on ;
apparently share a bizarre theology what they want: Set up an 'official Some time ago, you 'II recall, he the public aJrv:.ays?
I
known as "Christian Identity... They State press, pray in 'schools, write a advised his listeners how to shoot
I take this opportunity to remind : .
believe they are members of a supe- new Constitution, issue free assault federal · ~~gents. Now h!l says !he the fine citizens of Qulf Breeze lhlit :
rior white race. They consider them· weapons and unlimited ammunition Urillbomber's brother, David K!Jczyn- if we bought the farm and created a '
selves to be "agems" of God locked i:. to all.
ski,;, a lousy "snitch" for turning in FruitCake Nation, the UFO fanalics ~
in mortal combat with the Satans of
Then we normal people · should Theodore K!Jczyqski, who is believed , could meet in Montana next YC¥.··· !
the secular world. They 'deny the build a wall around the l&lt;ruitcake 10 .be the misanthrope who.haS been
JOiepb SpeJ~r ill a syi,dbteci ·J·
legitimacy of government and have Nation and su!lrd it ualously. We murdering and maiming people with' writer for NewiJiaper Enterprise
set up their own laws. court.•. etc.
&lt;lv&gt;~ttd..iDllite..IWSOIIs of like persua- mail bombs for 18 years. "It •iolates Aaodatlon.
·

h

JOSP.p Spear

·.

. 'Hold It, doc! I think I'd rather go with one of the
OTHER methfjlds of physicil~n-tlss~tsd suicide.·

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IND.

...

W. VA.

A.

~Andy'

Cross

By TOM LACEKY
·going to boW Ow before the FBI ,
Edwin Andrew "Andy" Cross, 8S, of Springfield, fonnedy of Racine, died · ~ PrMIWrller'
came, and we darned sure uen't
Fri,day, April 12, 1996 in the Sprilllfield Community Hospital.
JORDAN, Mont-An FBI agent going to hold off now."
A farmer, he was born Feb. 4, 1911, in Ripley, W.Va., son of the late Edwin on duty outside the frtJem~n comRancher Tom Stanton moved
L. llld Nancy Matson "Mattie" King Cross.
pound wos killed when the truck ho some of his cattle Sunday onto leiled
He was a member of the Letart Falls United Methodist Church, tile Fann was dDving slid off a muddy dirt road state land that the anti-government
Bureau Council, ihe board of directors ·of Veterans Memorial Hospital in and overturned.
group claims as its own.
Pomeroy, and the Grange. He was a U.S. Merchant Mlrine veteran of World
1be death Sunday of Kevin J.
''I'm not doing it to 'defy' them,"
Kramer WIIS not directly related to the he said. "I'm doing it because lllttve
Surviving are three sons, Edwin Y. Cross and Paul M. Cross of Spring- standoff between federal agents and to earn a living."
~ ·
field, 01., and Charles A. Cross of Chicago; his wife, Arvilla Cross of Lake the Freemen, which has been under
The Freemen last month wiiRied
Placid, Fla.; eight grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
, way since March 25. 'Kramer, of Stanton and 10 other ranchers 110( to
He was also .preceded in death by.his first wife, Nora C. Yeager Cross, Sioux City, Iowa, was assigned to try to use federal or state land that the
in 1981; a brother, Robert HickS; and two sisters, Macbeth Laneve and Eva temporary duty in Montana as.part of ranchers 'lease. The Freemen pub,
Carver.
.
the Omaha bureau's SWAT·team.
lished }lewspaper notices in March
Graveside services will be at! !':30 a.m. Tuesday in the Letart Falls CemeKramer, 35, died at tile scene of claiming ownership.of the land, lay·
tery, with the Rev. Brian Harkness offic,iating. Friends may call at the the accident, about 20 miles from the ing government ownership of! and is
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., from 6-9 tonight.
foreclosed farm where tile anti-gov- illegal.
He will also lie in state at the cemetety Tuesday from 10:30 a.m. until the ernment Freemen are holed up.
The standoff near this small town
time of services.
Meanwhile, area ranchers and on the ~asiern Montana plains began
farmers said lhey needed to begin , after federal agents arrested. Freemen
working· land that the barricaded leaders LeRoy Schweitzer, 57, and
Freemen occupy and public land Daniel Petersen, 53, on a vane!}' of
Jewell Bail, 73, Guysville, died Sunday, April 14, 1996 in the Hic"ory
they now claim to own.
charges. A mother and son surren,
Creek Nursing Center, The Plains. . ·
. .
•
·
" People are getting impatient. dered last week.
. •
He was born April 25, 1922 in Guysville, son of the late Arthur and They have to make a living," said
About 10 more of the Freemen in
Blanche Ours Bail. He was ·a mechanic for the Athens County Engineer's rancher K.L. Bliss. 'lWe weren't the compound are, wanted
Depot, was fonnerly employed at the York Construction co:, and was a member of the Athens Veterans of Foreign Wars.
He is survived by daughter and son-in-law, Betty and Paul Erwin of
Athens; four grandchildren; one great-grandQ&amp;ughter; a sister, Ida Harbour
of Columbus; and a special friend, Opal Dunfee of Stewart.
He waS also preceded in death·by his wife, Mildred Bail •.in 199l; and by
·a brother, Milford Bail.
·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
.
with the Rev. Charles Gaston officiating. Burial will be in the Asbury Ceme·
tcry, Guysville. Frierids may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9·p.m.
Tuesday.
,
Edwin Andrew "Andy" Cross, 85, of Springfield, formerly of Racine, died
Friday, April 12, 1996 at the Springfield Community Hospital.
'
' Afarmer, he was born February 4, 1911 in Ripley, West Virginia, son of
Robert L. Raiguel, 69, Reedsville, died Sunqay, Apri114, 1996 at his res- the late Edwin L. and Nancy Matsqn "Mattie" King Cross.
idence.
.
.
.
He was a member of the Letart Falls United Methodist Church, the Farm
Born March 21,,1927, in western West Virginia, son of the late Earl and Bureau Council, the board of directors of Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Myrtle Stutler Raiguel, he was retired from Elkem Metals, Marietta.
Pomeroy, and the Grange. He was a U.S. Merchant Marine veteran of World
· He is survived by three daughters, Linda Smith of Parkersburg, W.Va .. Warll.
.
Susan White of Long !lottom, and Mary Barringer of Reedsville; six grandSurviving are three sons. Edwin Y. Cross and Paul M. Cross of Springchildren and two ·great-grandchildren; and his ex-wife, Margaret Raiguel of field, Illinois, and Charles A. Cross.of Chicago; his wife, Arvilla Cro~s Qf
LongBottom.
.
.
Lake Placid, Florida; eight grandchildren; several nieces and nephe':l's; at\d
· He was also preceded in death by a sister, Dot Raiguel .
a Spj:cial niece, Reta Jo liill of Ravehswood, West Virginia.
·•
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
He was preceded in death by his first wife, Nora C. Yeager Cross in 1981 ;
with burial following in the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends ma1 call at the a brother, Robert Hicks; two sisters, Maebeth Laneve and Eva Carver; alf!l
funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
by his parents.
'·
Graveside services will be held Tuesday, April ·16, 1996 at II :30 a.in. at
the Letart.Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. Brian Harkness.officiating.
•
Friends may call from 6:9p.m. Monday, April 15, 1996 a( the Foglesong
Garland Weaver, 83, formerly of Meigs County, died Saturday, April 13, Funeral Home •. Mason, West Virginia. He will also lie in state at the cem~­
tery Tuesday from 10:30 a.m. ~ntil the time of the services.
1996 in the Grandview .Hospital, Dayton.
' ·Born July 21, 1912 in Dexter, he was the son of the lateJohn Weaver and
Iva Campbell. He was a·graduate of Ohio University and a retired employee of the Dayton Veterans Administration Center.
.
He attended St. Andre.,Y Episcopal' Church, and was a member. of Har· meet Wednesday at I p.m; at the
.risonville Masonic Lodge and the Dayton Commandery. He was a military Special meeting
Middleport
Village
Council
will
Racine Kountry Kjtchen.
'
veteran of World.War II.
:'
He is survived by his wife of 56 years, Eli~beth Sauvage Weaver; and a meet in special session .. at S p.m.
Wednesday
at
Middleport
village
Gran1e
banquet
.
.
daughter and son-in-law, Anne and J_.arry Warren of University Park, Md.
·'The
annual
~eigs
.
County
Grange
hall
for
the
purpose
of
awardil\g
a~
He was also preceded in death by a brother; Kennetlj Weaver. .
Services will be 2 p.m. Thesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, contract for the swimming pool ren- banquet \viii fie held on 'April 26 at
7: IS p.m. at the Meigs Coonty Senior
with the Or. Jobn Sauvage and Father David DuPiantier officiating. Burial ovation.
Citizens Center. Speaker will be Baf.
will be in the Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral' home
bara Shaner, legislative director of the
Lifeguards
sought
from I p.m. Tuesday until the hour of the setvi'ces.
·
The Middleport Recreation Ohio State Grange. Ticket. for 'tbe
Department is taking applications for dinner meeting are $7 for adults, and
pool lifeguards. Prospective life- $6 for children. Deadline for pur-·
guards can apply at · t~e mayor's chas: 1g tickets is April22 from Ziba:
Units of the Meigs County EmerRUTLAND
Midkiff, Rosalie Story, Charles E.
·office.
8:23p.m. Saturday, motor vehicle
gency Medical Service .reported 17
Yost, Norman Will, Patty Dye~ or Bil~
calls for assistance, including two accident on SR 124, Briana Smith, .Oub to meet
Radford. •
,
· ·· . ·
· transfet'. calls. Units responding Teresa and Richard Halsey, VMJi,
The Wildwood Garden Club will
VFD and Middleport squad assisted;
included:
..
. ·MIDDLEPORT
10':25 p.m. Sunday, Main Street,
4:28p.m. Sunday, State Route 7, Rebecca Hess, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ferrell Dar.. Veterans Memoriai .Hos4:58 p.m. Saturday, SR 68 I,
pitat
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaPrices . from ' The Producers
Angela Edmond, Holzer Medical
POMEROY
Ohio
direct
hog
prices
at
selected
Livestock'Association:
8:55a.m. Saturday, SR 143, Juani- Center;
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower. • "
10:38 a.m. Sunday, Township buying points Monday by the U.S.
ta Workman; Pleasant Valley HospiDepartment
of
Agriculture
Markel
Slaughter
steers : choice 53.00:.
Road 67, Alice Kibleu, HMC;
ta1; r
•
News:
64
.25
;
select48.00-59.00.
.
2:59 p.m. Sunday, Sand Ridge
4: 18 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
BarrOWS
and
gilts:
mostly
steady.
Slaughter
heifers:
choice
50.
'
o
Q.~.
departmenl and squad to Union Ter- Road, Robert Kauff, HMC;
.
6:43 p.m. Sunday, Silver Ridge instances SO ce"ts; demand moderate 64 .00: select 48.00-58.00.
race, brush fire on Linda Adkins
on
moderate
supply.
Cows:
uneven,
2.00
ldwerto
1.00
•
Road,
Harold
Kidder,
Camden-Clark
property, no injuries;
U.S.
1-2,
220-260
lbs.
46.50,higher;
all
cows
42.50
and
do'Yn.
,
11:30 a.m. Sunday, Maple Drive, Memorial Hospital;
,
8:33 p.m. Sunday, SR 681 , Angela 49.00, few .46.00 and 49.00; plants· . Bulls: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.o'l).·
Joseph Gloeckner, treated at the
scene;
48.25-50.001 few 50.25.
h1gher; all bulls 45.00 and down.
Edmond, HMC.
U.S. 2-3, 230-.260 lbs. 40.507:57 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Sheep and lambs: steady; choice
Rehabilitation · Center, Donald
46.00.
wools 80.00-95. 75 ; choice clips r
Sows : steady to firm
89.00-94.00; feeder lambs 120.oq ,
Thompson, O'Bieness Memorial
Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
U.S. .I -3, 300-500 lbs. 32.50- and down; aged sheep 35.50 and
Saturday admissions - Hayman 35.00; 500-650 lbs. 35.00-39.50.
down .
REEDSVILLE
•
Barnitz,
PQmeroy.
·
Boars: 28.00-30.00.
12:12 p.m. Saturday, VFD to SueSaturday discharges - none.
Estimated receipts: 39,000.
cess Road, brush ftre on Marie Boyd
Sunday admissions Lena
property, no injuries, Thppers Plains
Bunce, Middleport .
and Bashan VFDs assisted;
Sunday discharges - Jessie Jar7:55 a.m .. Sunday; BaiT Hollow
rell,
Pomeroy.
. Road, Roben Raiguel, dead upon
·Thmk )Uit ID ourfriends and neighbors
•
Holzer M.edical Center ·
arrival;
·
· ,
· .
for :iour support and t!USI .
D!Kharges April 12 - · Linda
9:41 a.m. Sunday, Hudson Road,
As pmofourontrlingcommitment
Wamsley, Jim Cqmpton, Mrs. Eric
Cathy Barringer, St. Joseph's HospiHammond an\1 daughter, Emil .
to this community we offer fi«
.Eynon, Beverly ·Kent, Birdie Johntal.
Funernl Estimates. Many find peace
ston, Wayne Jarvis, Kenneth Hughes,
of mind in planning ahead. Knowing
Randy Jackson, Mrs. Robert Price
the cost of the funeral of your choice
,
and son.
·
(Colltlnued from Pege 1)
hel~
too, ;with personal financial
BIJ1h - Mr. ·and Mrs. Lloyd
planning.
•
now getting to the critical time in the Sears, son, Qallipolis.
Also ask about Forethoughtl'funeral
spring fire season..If the wind is kickD!Kbarges April 13 - Cassanplanning, funded through coverage
ing up, then people need to use good dra McCoy, Marilyn Bays, Sean
judgment and not burn open fires.lt's Lanz, Eric Donovsky, Bobbi Crark,
from Forethought Life Insurance
all a matter of common sense and Thomas Blanton, Mrs. Lloyd Sears
Olmpany.
·
Complete aild mail this coupon, or
safety," said Pomeroy Fire Chief and son.
·Danny Z1'rkle.
Dlsc:harges AprD 14 - Mrs.
call .:.S today•
In the county villages, burning is Daniel Martyn and daughter, Peggy
illegal due to proximity of buildings Anderson.
and structures.
0
I would like a fBC Funeral
(Published with permlsilon)
"It's best that residents refer to
Estimate and information about
·
their 1·oc a1 fi1re departments
1''f they
Forethough~ funeral planil~.
.
have any questions concerning open
I undmtand there ~ 110 obligation.
burning," said Zirkle. I.
·•
"""'·" bu .
·· ' Resu
.,;~
rn1qg h ours are a1so
Name
enforced in West VJtginia, with open
flames permitted IJc,tween !he ~ours
.
nd
Address
City
bf 7 a.m. a 4:30 p.m.
~
"So far, the amount of brush fire
reports b&amp;ve been relatively low. We
State
.Zip ' Phone
hope tliat JhrQugh p~FIIUtiOD\ll)' mea(:remeens Funeral ome
s~~res and J9od judgment, we can ·
9~2-2117
Radne,Oh
keep the amount of ftres down in the
area during the rest of the spring,"
949-3210 .
'dZi ld
sat . re.
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w.n.

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Jewell Bail

Wet weather to highlight
region',
s
weather·toriight
.

By The Associated Preee
The showers and thundersto.rms·
will continue across Ohio tonig~t as
a second trough of · low pressure
m~ves through tile area, forecasters
satd. Overnight lows will range from
the mid-30s to low 40s.
Colder air moving into the SttJe on
Thesday could cause some snow to
become mixed with the continuing
rain in the north. The National Weath. er Service said highs will be in the
chilly low 4,0s.
·
The record-high temperature for
this date at the · Columbus weather
station was 82 degrees in 1896 while
the record low was 22 in 1935. Sunset tonight will be at 8:09 p.m. and
sunrise Tuesday at6.:S2 a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms east early ...Othcrwise periods
of rain. Periods of rain west. Lows
from the mid 30s northwest to the
lower 40s south.
Thcsday... Rain likely... May mix
with or• change to snow showers
north. Much cooler with highs of 40
to 45.
·
Extended forecast:
Wednesday:.. Dry. Lows in the
30s. Highs fto~ the lower 50s north-'
east to around 60 south.
Thursday... Dry. Lows in the upper
30s to middle 40s and highs in the
60s.
Friday... A chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows 45 ·to 50 and
highs 70 to 75.

Weekend wrecks kill four
By The AISoclated Press
· ·Four people died in traffic accident. on Ohio roads over the weekend, the State Highway Patrol said
today.··
,
·
·The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
the dead:
. SU~AY
IV\VENNA,.- Ray W. Franks, 41,
of'l'\.twilter, a Ped~striall hit by a vehicle on U.S.. 224 in Portage County.
.· SATURDAY

MILLERSBURG · - James D.
· Hanna,. 34, of Millersburg, driver in
a one-car acCident on Ohio 154 in .
Holmes County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
MEI;&gt;INA Franklin M.
B,rtlfchak, 75, of Medina, driver in a
two-car accident.on Ohio 18 in Medina County. \
' ·
MARYSVILLE - Michael .W.
Padovano, 17, of Marysville, passenger ·in· a one-car accident on a
·-Dflion S::ounty ~· ·

,

.Fruitc~ke nation is ·rising i·n Mon~an" ;

I

·w reck kills agent
near Freemen site ~

Edwin A. 'Andy' Cross

Robert L. Raiguel

Gar~and

Weaver

Meigf{'announcements · ·.-

. Boy dies ·in hous·e fire · Squads record 17 calls

'

By NaUtentoff
' tion for November, "Administration clear enough for those lawyers or
In the Federalist Papers, Alexan- lawyers are compiling ... lists of ·lower court judges who dream of
der Hamilton· warned, "TIIere is no judges appointed by presidents appearing before the Senate judicialiberty if the power of judging be not Ronald ·Reagan and George Bush ry committee for confirmation.
·
separ~ted from the legislative and
Does Dole inean a candidate who
executive powers. In our constitu- ·
Nat Hentoff
is so overly respectful of the First
tiona! government, the complete ---=-=:.:..:....:.=:.::~=.::..:.___ Amendment that he or she would
independence oftllecouru of justice . who had the temerity to suggest · allow "indecent" material in cyberis essential."
legalizing narcotics, raised questions space?
·Yet the two fil)alists in the p~si- about the. government's 'war on .
Or would Dole reject a candidate
dential contest have disagreed with drugs,' or blocked the implementa- who obeys the Fourth Amendment
Mr. Hamilton. Recently, the presi- lion of laws enabling residents of and throws oot illegally obtained evident's press secretary, Michael local communities to learn the where- . de nee at a trial even if that evidence
McCurry, threatened that his .com- abouts of one-time sex offenders."
would send a malefactor to prison? '
mander might.ask for.the resignation
If these lleretical judges are pillo· In one area, Clinton and Dole
of federal judge Harold Baer who ried, the decisions that brought them as.ree ·that Congress must make it
found against tile police in a fiercely into the stocks may well convince extremely difficult for judges to
controversial search-and-seizure drug aspiring jurists of either party to allow prisoners .on death row to surcase. (Baer, feeling intense heat from avoid such vulnerable ·views.
vive for years -- reading Playboy and
many politicians, has since reversed
Meanwhile, the Republicans are watching television -- before meeting
his decision.)
scouring the records of Clinton judi- their,appalled,Maker.
Presumably, McCurry was not cia! appointees who have .shown an
Both Clinton and Dole have
speaking only for himself at the unwholesome concern with Bill of charged that habeas corpus .-- federtime. But afterward, the idea of the Rights guarantees for defendants.
al court review of state trials to deterpresident defenestrating judges who
And B'!b Dole, who wanted Judge mine their fairness -- has gone too far.
issue unpopular opinions was seem- Baer impeached, is designing litmus They have no patience with judges
ingly scotched at the white House. tests. "In a Dole administration,"lle who between 1978 and October 1995
The president's counsel, Jack Quinn. says emphatioally, " liberal judges granted habeas corpus reviews in 40
instructed·us that "the president SUp- 11eed not apply."
. I
percent of casesin which a death SCn'
pllrts the independence of the federIt would be useful if reporters tence had been imposed __ and as a
al judiciary, which is established by accompanying Bob Dole would ask result, convictions or sentences were
the Constitution." After all, the pres- him just ·.vhat he means by "liberal." changed. And t.he innocence of .a
ident used to teach constitutional law. An official·ot .Minister Farrakhan's number of prisoners __ some on
.Despite the White House's pr~n Nation of Islam once told a college death row for years -- has then ~!\len
fessed respect for the Constitution, aud1·e
· t IS
· th
• ·nee. that th's
I .col um
. ms
.. e
proved once they have received
what would A:lexander Hamilton ann-Christ, but he left no JOb descnp- effective counsel.
· \
·make of Linda Greenh~'s report in tion . Nor is the description "liberal" . · But the preside~tial contenders
the' New York Times that in prepara-

Edwi~

'

Hamilton vs. Clinton, Dole and· Hatch
'

'

•

Thesday, Aprll16

years of litigation, a war of attrition
that would be settled by the Supil!me
Court. Holder's resources for operating in crime-plagued Washington
were already overtaxed.
Bennett was also offering Holder
a big bounty in return: A sitting
chairman of a congressional committee would be forced to .resign his
post.
•Many of Holder's staffers staked
out a hard line and fought their boss,
insisting that Rostenkowski do at
least two yean;. Some argued against
allowing Rostenkowski to skate on a
felony in light of the {aci that Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry
drew relatively significant time for a
drug misdemeanor.
' If minimizing Rostenkowski's jail
time was a hard sell at Justice, it was
an even harder sell to Rostenkowski
&amp; Co. Under all the plausible scenarios, Rostenkowski would be
forced by Democratic H'!oise rules to
r:elinq\Jish his coveted chairmanship.
Rostenkowski related to friends how
this made his congressional seat
seem pointless.
After much haggling, Holder and
Bennett hammered out a deal by ·
which he would plead guilty to one
felony, resign from Congress, pay a.
fine and serve six months in jail.
Holder would waive the indictment,
which he already had· iq draft form,
and instead file what's known in Justice parlance as "an information."
According to a source, Bennett
pitched the deal to his client as follows: If you accept this deal, you'll
lose some weight, read soine good
books and be eating steaks and drinking whiskey in six months.
As Memorial Day weekend
approached in 1994, Rostenkowski
found his lawyers pitted against his
friends -- most of whom wanted him
to continue to fight. Now it was his
fortune on the line, and Bennelt predicted to Rostenkowski that he'd never se~ another deal this good {rom
Justice.
" .
A rift opened between Bennett and
RQstenkowski, who increasingly
relied on cronies .imploring hjm to
. fight Holder. In retrospect, it was a
crucial mistake, as Holder called Rostenkowski's bluff the day after he
publicly rejected Justice's final offer.
It was perhaps the biggest hand of
Rostetlkowski's public life, and one
he undoubtedly wishes he could
replay.
.:
,
Jack All4,~11! and ~lchael
BlnsteiJi are writers United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentinel• Pege 3
•

OHIO Weather

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel Rostenkowski would love a redeal ·
•

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoi"'.,,Otilo

:&gt;\.

•

PORTSMOlffH (AP) - A fire er were,injured. Tho brother's name
early Sunday destroyed a West was not available.
Portsmouth home, killing a 7-year,
Smith suffered exlcnsive bums
old boy and injuring two family and was .taken to ~abe!I Huntington
members. · ·
,
Hospital .in Huntington, W.Va. She
The Scioto County Sheriff's was listed in fair condition Sunday
Office said Jonathon Clay died 'in the night, said Bill Parker, nursing superfire, which neighbors reported at 5:11 visor.' ·
a.m. Washin11ton Township firefightThe 4-year·old was treated at
ers found the boy in his bed.
- Southern ·Ohio Medical Center and
The · fire was believed to · have releasejl. .
.
started in his bedroom. The cause
Firefighters ruled accidental fire as
remained under investigation.
.
.the ca115e of death. The Hamilton
The boy's gra~dmother, Melody County coronet'.s.office will perform
Smith, 36, and his 4-year-old broth- an autopsy.

,r

.

Body discovery ctelays unloading
'
FRENCHTOWN, Mont. '(A:P) the work was pOStponed until today
The discovery of a b!Jdy ·in the after the body· was discovered.
· wreckage of a derailed freight train
The derailment early ' Th~rsday
delayed the unloading of chlorine ,released a cloud of deadly chlorine
from overturned tankers .
_ gas, forcing hundreds of people from
Officials believe the unidentified 'their halites and sending .Pore than
victim found Sunday was a hobo who 140 people to hospitals for lung irrihad been riding the rails. An autopsy tl!_tion and breathing problems. Two
w~ scheduled for today.
· · . people remained in serious condition
. Crews had planned to . begin Sunday.
removing chlorine from the first of · About 90 people were allowed to
three overturned tankers Sunday, but retu111 to their homes Sunday as the
'" . . danger of poisonous chlorine ·gas
rehiased from punctured cars continued to lesse!'n"!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!il

r------------'""i
The D8iJ.y Sentinel
•

c~cry

Publi&amp;hed
aftempon, MoncJay through
Frida~. Iii Coun so.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by....
Ohio Vol~~ Publishing CompiUI~KJanaell Co.,
Pomeroi. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Second
ololo pmmge paid 01 l'omeoOy, Ohio.
:

.
M.-r: The Auoc:i&amp;ed Pmt.llld lilt Ohio

Newa-Auo&lt;iation.

.

P08TMASTER: s&lt;nd addma c:on1&lt;1iona·,.
Tho Doil~ Sentinel. Ill Court so.."""""''·

Ohio ~5769.

o•~-toN n•TBS

Su~~· '
· -ByCanltrorlllollor~
. .
One wec~ ........................:...... ., ................ $2.00
ODe Monlh .........................................., ... $8.10

ODe Year... ............................................ $IIM.OO

SINGLICOPYPRtCI

~,
~ 1Y.............. ........................,••,. .......... 35
· ,..._..
~-

Suh!criben not dcairi.,IO po~ die-... remh in ........ direo:t to The Doily Selllloet
00 I ...... "" ., 12 ....do ball• Caodil wiD be
&amp;1- am. eaoti -11.
No aub~&lt;ripdon b~ mail permitted in ....
-ho""'oarrter""lceila.ailable.
.

""':tocks

(IJSPS113-9(Q)

MAJLSIJISCIUP'l'ION8

13 - ......~~.~.~-~ ...... m .JO
26 - ........................,........................JSSJ.Il
'2 - .........:.:................. ,................$1.,.'6
13 -~·~·~·~-119.2.5

ll'\lloeb .........o.........,.........................,..$'6.68

.:t j

A
' m E.Ie p Ower ..........,,.,.,. ....,,'IV
~...
M
Akzo .;....................................55!1.
Alhland 011 ...........................40~
AT&amp;T .....................................82'0
Bank One ..............................34'0
Bo bE
15\
. van1 .......
Borg-Warner .........................34~
Champion Ind ...••.. :...............19!1.
Charm!~ Shopi ....................6'0
City HOidlng ..........................23~.
F....,,.
....._ ·I Mogu I..,....................18''M

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

Glnn.n .................~.·................65

Goodyear T6R ......................&amp;O}.
K·mlrt .....................................9~
l.llnilt End:.....................:......1f!'o
Limited Inc
B •• .".........................18\
3'
Peopltl 1ncorp.................2 ~
Ohio V'alley Btnk .................... 40
~. Vallly ......;...................,..m,
Roc......
....._.1 ................................
•e'L"
Robblna 6 Myer~ .................~7'l.
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............1
Shoney'alnc.........................10~
Star Bank ..............................85'1.
W..,d~ lfll'l ............................18'0•
·, Worth ngton Incl...................11~
-·-··Stock repor,tl sre the 10:30
:;~l~=~ provided by AdVIHit

*t

.

•

•

·

n-.
.... "..:........................
..........
· ;i;;;;;;;-.i;;&amp;;i;;g---~~~
,
·,.
, .,StOf.'n j i: 1-a

..

Hospital·news

.

. tP~ ...

.
Brus
· h f Ire
•

;,

·.;

you,

·········-··------Yes,

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

Foster Homes are needed for'
Meigs Couniv .Children of all ages •.
Call
for Information and
to be part of the etfort.,. · . .
• -'"

.: • '.

j., ' '

. \.

'

•

T~day's livestock report

,, .

,.

�Pomaror • lldclaport, Ohio

The Daily· Sentinel
,. .
Allllrll

••
•

Indians top-- BoSox
7-6 in 11 in_ning~

15, 1 -

In other NL action,

Braves blank Padres; Bucs top Expos

CAUGHT OFF BASE - Cincinnati shortstop Barry Larkin strad.cllel Houlton's Derek Bell after tagging him away from third base
,attar Sean Berry's infield slngla In the first lnl)ing of the second game
-of Sunday'• National League doubleheader In Cincinnati, where the
,Reds won 9-8 to sweep the twlnblll. (AP)

.Reds get twil1bill
sweep over Astros

By The Mloclllted Pren
John Smoltz thought it should
have been an error. So did Ryan
Klesk.o, who allowed the ball to pop
out of his glove.
But official scorer Phil Collier
gave Tony Gwynn a double, and
Smoltz lost his no-hit bid with one
out in the seventh. He didn't allow
any; other hits, leaving after the
eighth inning Sunday in the Atlanta
Braves' 4-0 victory over the San
Diego Padres.
. "I feel like I didn't give up any
h1ts today," Smoltz said.
Smoltz (2-1), who struck out 13,
had a perfect game un'til he walked
Marc Newfield with two outs in the
sixth. Gwynn got aboanl when he hit
a fly ball deep to left in the seventh.
Klesko had.the ball in his glove at the
warning track, but it popped out just
before he hit the fence.
"It was in the sun the whole-time,
and when it came out it was around
my head," Klesko said. "Basically,
it was !lind of like a split•second
decision of getting it out of the sun
and trying to catch it. I don't know
if I squeezed it out or what."
Mark Wohlers finished with a

&amp;, The A11a~l111 d P1111

hits, sll'IICk out !(\and walked one in
one-hit ninth, allowing a single to 1.
Piusburgh's first complete game this
Steve finley.·ff Smaltz still had a noMeta 10, Rockies 4
ltitter, he wbuld have pitched the
AI Denver, Jeff Kent homered season, and Carlos Garcia's two-run
ninth.
and drove in three runs. and the Mets single keyed a four-run founh at
Three Riyers Stadium.
"I just think that Ryan's made a had nine extra-base hits.
Pedro Maninez (0-1) allowed
lot of great plays and he would have
Todd Hundley doubled twice.
caught that ball," Smoltz said. "You , rookie Rey Ordonez went 4-for-5 five runs and six hiu in five innings.
see it 1!11 around the league - they with · a triple, and Bernard Gilkey
Cardlaals 6, Pbllllett'5
could have given it an error and then homered and drove iri two runs as the
Royce
Clayton and Willie McGee
if somebody got a hit in the ninth, Mets pounded out 16 hits to snap a
each
drove
in two runs for St. Louis,
change it later. To me there's no three-game losing streak.
excuse in that situation to not make
Pete Harnisch, making his regu· which overcame a S·O deficit at
·
it an error.~·
lar-season · debut after undergoing Busch Stadium.
But
Sid
Fernandez
0·2)couldn't
shoulder surgery last August, gave
Collier, a member of the writers'
hold the lead, and Pat Borders drove
wing of the Hall of fame, was sure the Mets six strong innings.
.
Kevin Ritz (1 -2) gave up six runs in the go-ehead run. ·
of his decision.
.
T.J.
Mathews
(
1-0)
threw
three
· " I thought it was a hit," he said. and 10 hits in five innings. ·
'hitless innings, and Dennis Eckers·
Cubs 6, Giants 1
" II wasn 't a routine play."
Brian McRae had a threl&gt;-run ley struck. out the side for his third
At Jack Murphy Stadium, the
Braves ended Fernando Valenzuela's double and Ryne Sandberg hit his save.
six-game winning streak as Mark second homer of the season as visit·
Dodgen 6, Marlins 1
ing
Chicago
avoided
a
sweep.
Lemke hit two solo homers and
Delino DeShields went 3-for-4
Kevin Foster (2·0) allowed two .and scored three times, and Brett
Chipper Jones hit one. Valenzuela (01) allowed eight hits and three runs runs and five hits in 6 1/3 innings, Butler drove in two runs at Dodger
and Turk Wendell pitched '2 113 Stadium.
'in 5 2/3 innings.
·
PedroAstaeio(l-2), who'had lost
In other games, New York beat innings for his' first save.
Allen
Watson
(I
I)
allowed
five
Colorado 10-4, Chicago beat San
seven consecutive staru, allowed one
Francisco 6-2, Pittsburgh beat Mon- n ms and six hit! in ·seven innings.
run and six hits over S 1/3 innings.
Pirates S, Expos 2
AI Leiter (2-1) gave up five runs
treal5-2, St. Louis beat Philadelphia
Denny Neagle (I - I) gave up 10 and six hilS.
6--5 and Los Angeles beat florida 6--

Southern went on to win behind
some good pitching from Danny
Sayre,who gave up two hits, fanned
six and walked seven. Matt Dill
came on for some great relief, fan·
ning one, walking two and giving up
four hits. L. Lang, who fanned one

'

Fal.d o gets past

Norman to win

walked five and scattered 12 hits,
suffered the -loss .
.
Southern hitters were Travis Lisle
who led with three singles, Chad
Blount and Jesse Maynard with two
hits each and Shawn Dailey, Joe·Kir-,
(See SOUTHERN on Page S)

·Southern and Waterford .
win .in softball twinbill

Meigs and Athens win in doubleheader

a

Scoreboard
•

Chicago ..................6 S ..54.5
Piusliurgh ..............6 5 .!\4.5
Houston
......S. 8 ..38."i

Baseball

•

••

AL standings
••
film

•
,
•
•

2~

2 .818

6 . 4~.5
9 .182
l .lOO
6 .455
6 .400

7
ICIUIJIII Cit! ............. 4 ' 1

.:'

~

I

1~
I~

.364
.364

,
Wntem Dl~llion
Te.us ....................... 8 3 .7rl
SUnle ............... ....... 8 4 .667
Cnlifornia ................. s 6 .455
Oaklnnd ................... 5 6 ASS

•

••

••

~

J
3

Saturday's $&lt;Ores
CLEVELAND 14, JJoslon 2
Seoul.: 14. Toronto 3
Detroit CJ, Cnliforniu ~
Baltimure 7, Minne501a6
Texas 10. New York 6
Knnsus City 3, Milwaukee 2
Chicago 6, Oakland 5 (12)

•

•,.I,•'
:.•

••
•••
••

•l•

Today's games
mon 1· \),7:35 p.m.

Chicaao (McCas~ill 0-1) IU Kansas
City (JacomeQ..O). 8:0.5 p.m.
OakiiiMI (Wojciechowski 0-0) at Tex;u:
(Oii.erD-0), 8:Jl p.m.
California (-Doskie 0-0) a1 Seattle
(Menlw10-I),IO:O'Ip.m.
.

Tuesday's games
Detroit (Gohr 0-2) at Toronto &lt;Haason
2-1 ), 12:Jl p.m.
New York (Key 1- 1) at Milwaukee
tKnrll -1) . 1~ p.m.
Boslon (Clemens 0-2) at Ballimorc
(Wells 1.0), 7 : 3~ p.m.
CLEVELAND (Hcuhiser 0.2) at Min·
nc101a (RadU !t-0), 8:05 p.m.
Chiuao (Berc Q. Q) 111 Kansas City
(Belchertl-1). 8:0'1 p.m.
Oakland (Johns 2-0) ar Texas {Win 10), 8:)l p,lit
California (Abbon'0-2) at S~:uulc

(Johuon 2-Di. 10:05 p.m.

Eosltm Dlvilion

... ,..~ :... ..4

JOB

I~
1~
· 2~
J~

CINClNNAn .......... 7

.5

.583

.-

· New Yor'
PJoridl .

'

.

li!l

1
6
1
9

Alllulhl ................. .... 6
PhiladelptUa .............

s·

........... 4

.462
.455

J64

C-DI-

SI. Loooil.. ................1

s .m

I
2

i~

Pinsburah 9, Monrreai.J ·
Housron ar: CINCINNATI. ppd .• min
Philadelphia 4, Sr. Louis 2
New York at Colomdo, ppd., snow
San Fmncisco l Chicago 2 (10)
Sun Diego 6, Alb.nra 2
Los Angeles ~. Florido:l I

Sunday's scores
DH : CINCINNA11 5, Housron J (1st);
CINCINNATI 9,.Houstoo8 (2nd)
Pittsburgh~. Montrenl2
· St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 5
Chicago 6, Sttn Franci-'Co 2
Loi Angeles 6, Floritla I
At lam" 4, San Diego 0
New York I 0, Colorado 4

CINCINNATI (l'pnu8•1 0- t) n1 Chicago (frochsel 0-0), 2:20p.m.
~illldelpbiu. (Grace 2·0) at Montreal
(Pam gun J.O), 7.3~ p.m.
Hou11o~ (Reynolds 1-l) a1 New York
(lsringhnustn 1.0),7:40 p.m.
_ Aorida (Drown 0-2) at Atlanta·(Avery
0-l), 7:4l&gt;p.m.
Pituburah (Smith 1-0) a1 Sr. Louis
{Andy Benesl -0}, 8:05p.m.
Sun Diego (Ashb.y 1-0) nl Colorado
(Reyno•o 1-0),;9:05 p.m.
.
·
Los Angele; (Candioni .1· 1} at San
f,rancisco (Ftrnandez 2-0), 10.0$ p.m.

Basketball

.S90
.436

II
23

65

J\·Toronro ........... 34 ~
x-St Louis ......... 32 34
x-Winnipeg ........ 3640
Dnllu ... ., ............ M 42

~~ ~

!5J .329
O..llas ............... 24 54· .308

MlnneKlta ............. 26

V01m:ouver .............13

4 .667
.5 •.58.3
7 . ~00
6 .4.5.5

Saturday's scores

:n

J66

44

Paclflt Division
y-S.ru1le ... :........... 61 17 .782
· ,·L.A. Uken; .. ......SO 28 .641
• -Ponland ........ .. .. .:42 36 .l38
~o- Phoeni1t ,............ J9 39 .SOD
Socrnmento ............ 36 42 .462
Golden State ......... JS 44 .443
L.A. Clippers ........~29 50 .367 .
J.•clinc.hed plnyoff lpol

r.;

11
19
22
2S
26'1!
32~

y·dinched di~ision

z·won confmnce tide

Atllftllt !llfblon

l!: L f&lt;l.

y·O.htndo ...............16 22

.718
x-New York ...........4S 3l ' .577
Miaml ....................40 18
Washington ............ ~ 39 .~
Bmton .................... 31 48 .392
New Jersey ,. .......... 29 49 .372
Pbiladelphia ........... l6 63 .202

:sn

1i!1
II
16
17 •

Mio:m.i 103, New York 9.5
San Antonio 84, Seaule 81 ·
Houston 112. Dallas 1'1 I

.

Indiana 91, Dettoit86
L.A. ClippeB 91, Utah -8.!

Sunday's stores

2!§ ~

27

4()~

Ctnlr.l ()Malon

9 .88S
29 .628
3-il .S64
34 .S64
:14 .l64

Charloue ................40 38

.Sil

20
2!S
2."i
25
19

Milwaukee .............24 S4 .308

4.5

·roronto .............. .... 20 58 · .256

49

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MidwtltDM.._

film
y-S~n

l!: L r.t. . 1i!1

Antonio .......57 21
x-Uollh ....................S2 21

.731

.6l8·

r!~

National Balkel.. ll ASIOCiation
CHICAGO BU~LS : Atoivrued C Luc
Longley from the inJured list . PIDL'etl F Ja.
•on Caffey on tne injUred list.
,
GOLDEN STI&lt;TE WARRIORS ·
Signed C Gcen Hammink for the rest of
the season.
·
\

6 78 27S 291
14 66 227 280
24()
24()
247
304
302

Hockey
Natlmol HocktJLequt

~l7

Tonight's games

•

Baseball

Ltape
DETROrr TIGERS: Plac&lt;d OF Cu•·
til Pride on the 1.5-dtly disabled list. Re·
CAlled INF lim Hym from Toledo of the
lnlemlllioooll.caRuC.
.
. OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Oplioned
RHP Steve Montaomery to Edmonron of
the Pacific Const Leoaue. Reculled LHP
Sieve WojcieChowski from Edmonton.

.. Tuesday's pmes

•

NHL: Suspended Detroit Red Wi"&amp;s
LW Bob Fncy for two aames and lined
him $1,000 for slashing .Chkaso Blad;.
hawks C Denii Savard in 11 game April
12, Suspended Delroii RW Dino Ciccarelli for one same for punchina Chicaao D
Enrico Cicco~ in a gnme April 12.
.
BOSTON BRUINS: Recall~:d LW
Cam Stewart aild D Steve Saaios rront
Providence ofttk! AHL.
DALLAS STARS: Rec.olled F Jnmi~
Langenbrunn~r from Mh:higan of the
IHL.
·

CINCINNATI )lEOS': Optiorled OF
Curti• Goodwin ro Indianapolis of tho
American Association. ActiYafed OF Eric
. Anrhorty from the I.S.da)' disnbled lilt.
NEW YORK METS: Placed OF Carl
Everell. on the l~·day disabled list,
retroactive lo Apnl 13. Acrivated RHP
Pete Harnisch from the 15-day diaabled
list

EASTERN CONFERENCE
.

Iii GA

y-Philadelphia .... ~ 24 13 103 282 206
•·N.Y. Rnnge., .. 4t 27 14 % 212 237
•·Ftoridn ............ 4t )t-10 92 258 2.10
•-Woshin8ion ... .:19 tt 89 234 204
•-Tampa B•J ~ .. J8 32 12 88 238 248
New Jeney ........ 37 33 12 86 215 202
N.Y. Illandetl .... 22 50 10 l4 229 ltl

n

362 284

Iaa

We.honor the
Golden Buckeye Card

Hubbard ·
Greenhouse

Syracuse, OH . 992-5776-

a;~M~&amp;l

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CLINIC
New Location

St. Rt. 338.at VIne

Authorized Dealer and warranty: •
Briggs &amp; Stratton - Currently this area's only
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I'

'

..

,949-2804

Iii GA
.~

.

Jlle

.

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•'

r'

•

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I

By JOE MACENKA
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
(AP):.... It was a dream scenario, one
so unlikely that Terry Labonte kept
fighting the urge to give it any serious considemtion.
.
Labonte knew that by staning
Sunday's First Union 400, he would
tie Richard Petty's record o( com·
peting in 513 consecutive Winston
Cup races.
In the days leading up to the event
at North Wilkesboro Speedway, ·
Labonte joked that winning the )Jille
and the race would be a nice way to
mark the occasion.
Then he went out and did j~st
that,- all the while demonstrating a
flair for the dramatic.
First he captureil the pole. Then
he led the most laps. Then he took
the lead tci stay by narrowly dodging
a burning crash. And finally, he won
the event by holding ofT teammate

Jeff Gordon in a tightly contested r6lap sprint to the checkered nag in
front of 60,000 roaring fans.
'
· "Everything went our way all
weekend," Labonte said, smiling
. and shaking his head after he won
$229,025, the largest payday of his
career.

.

•

Petty was impressed with the pel'
formance of the driver known as Iron
Man.
"That'll be one, way for him t6 .
remember the day," Petty said of
Labonte, who will eclipse The
King's mark by staning the Goopy's
500 on Sunday in Maninsville, Va.'
The way Labonte tied the record
was another of his many highlightS
since going to work for Hcndriclc.
Motorsporu at the stan of the 1994
season. He hiS 17 career viciories;
including seven while driving Rick
H~ndrick.'s Chevr~ MQ~M

c..a:

"This 1s a special time for Terry,".
H'endrick said.
,

GAR I&gt;

INSERTION DATE:

Call
Bob Atwood or Dave Harris
For More Information
99212155

"

Pick Up Service

',

Terry Labonte gets
First Union 400 win

FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1996

Y·ll&lt;!roi1 ............62 I) 7 IJI 325 181
•.chicago .......... 4() 28 14 94 213 220

'·

season, gave up two runs on five hits.
Angel Miranda allowed one hit over
the fin'al three inninss for the first
save by a Brewers reliever this season. •
Athletics 10, White Sox S
At Chicago, Mike Bordiek went
4-for-5 and broke an' eighth-i~ning
tie with a two-run single, giving the
A's their 7,OOOth win since joining
tilt American League. The · total
includes their time in Philadel~
(1901·1954) and Kansas City (19SS·
67). With the ~ore -tied 4-4 in tile
eighth, Pedro Munoz singled off Bill
Simas (0-2). After George Willian1s ·
and Scott Brosius walked, Bordick
singled to make it 6--4.

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1996 - 1.2 NOON

SERVICE &amp; PARTS

191 291

Yanlr.ees 12, Ral)len 3
At New York. Andy Petiiue won
his thitd 'straight stan, and Mariano
Duncan drove in t hree runs for the
Yankees. Kevin Gross (2-1) was
knocked out after 1'113 innings, giv·
ing up live runs and six hits. After
opening the season with seven
straight wins, the Rangers have lost
three of their last four. Pettitte (3·0)
allowetl two runs and eight hits in
eight innihgs.
•
Brewers S, Royals 2
At Milwaukee, Ben McDonald
pitched six solid innings and Mike
Matheny drove in three runs with a
homer and a single. McDonald (2·0).
signed as a free agent during the off-

ADVERTISING DEADUNE:

(Old Boat Works Bldg)

282 269
265 248
2)7 259
247 262

IN PuRSUIT- Cl.wa1Md'1 Julio F11111C0 (right) llldaalnlo lha pill&amp;
In fi'ont ot BoltOn pitcher Tom Gordon to ICON In lha tll'lt lrlnlng crf
Sundllly'a American Lugua game In BOlton, where lhllr.cllanaNi in 11 Innings. (AP)

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

Southern
wins twice•.•

MOVED

WESTERN CONFERENCE
c..-t!llfloloa
l!: L X ~

lpgtnc tptak-secoiul WIK
Meigs ...................000-140.1=6-7-2 .
Athens ..................()()().02().0=2-5-3'
WP- C. Roush (Whitlatch save) .
LP-Goodwin

Open Daily 9·5, Sun 1·5

!

Nalionol Ltape

NHL.final standings

North- DtYislon
)'·Piltsburgh ....... 4919 '4 102
•·801100 ............ 40 Jl It 91
. .....ni..il ..... ... 40 ]2 10 90
Honfcxd ............. :14 39 · 9 11
Bu.Talo.............. J342 7 13
Ouawa ............... 18 59 S 41

Sunday's scores

AnMrie~n

Washinatoo at Orlando. 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND at Atloot a, 7:10p.m.
Chic\J8o at Milwaukee. 8:30p.m.
L.A. Lilin n1 Dalt.,, 8:)0 p.m..
L.A. Clippen at tJtoh. 9 p.m.
Houslon 111 Phoenix. 9 p.m.
San Ant Qriio 111 Vancouver, 10 p:m.

Atlanlk Dl•blon
.W L X ~

Onawa S, New Jersey 2
Hartford 2, Boston 0
N.Y. Islanders 5, Montreal .5 (tiel,
Buffalo 3, Washinaton 2
Toro1110 6. Edmonron 3
VlliiCou~er .5. Calgary 0

Transactions

Toronto Gl New York, 7:30p.m.
New Je~y at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Charlotte at Indiana. 8:30p.m.
Sellltle at HoustOn, 8:30p.m.
SacrnmentG at Denver, 9 p.m.
San Antonio ar: Pon!and, 10:10 p.m.

Re'ds
win two ...

Now OP.n for the Spring Season
Complete Une Of Bed~ing &amp;
Vegetable Planls
Hanging Baskets
(Bioomln~ &amp; Foliage)
Geraniums
Shrubs Trees Azaleas
Rose ·aushes

Basketball

80sto116, Piusbur&amp;fl S
Philadelphia 3, Tanipa Bay 1
Aorida ~. N. Y. Rangers I
sr Louis2, Chicar 2 erie)'
Detroil S, Dallns
Los Angele• S, Colorado 4 {01)
Buffalo 4, Hartford I
AnWim $, Winnipq 2

Allanta 99, New Jersey 90
Ctwlolle 94, Philadelphia 78
Wuhinglon II 0, Toronto 97
Chingu 98, ut CLEVELAND 72
Ponl~nd 81. Vancouver 79
Denver 98, MinnefQia 91
L.A. Lnkers 118, Phoenix 114
Milwaukee 1.14, Orlando 101
Detroit I'M, Bostoo96 (OT)
Sncrnmento 101. L.A. Clippers 96
Golden Stnlc 91 Utah 82

IJam

80 247 252
80 219 248

Saturday's scores

Saturday's S&lt;ores

NBA standings
Iwa

12
16

gave up a hit.
Cleland had the big bat for Meigs
with three singles. Whitlatch added
a pair of singles. Pullins chipped iii
with a double, while Stanley had a
single.
·
.
·
Goodwin was the starter and loser for the Bulldogs, he struck out I0,
walked eight and gave up seven hits.
Andy Perry had a pair of singles to
lead Athens.
·,
Meigs (S-3) will travel to _Racine·
today to play Southern. Athens owns
a 6--4 mark and will play at Logan
today.
lnnlnc tnte!c.fint &amp;!liB
Meigs ........ ................()()().00=().).)
Athens ...............OOJ-0( 12)= 15-11·1
WP- George (LP), Brad Whitlatch (5) and Cass Cleland
LP- Ervin (WP) and Jack Cunningham

.

Pacint DJvliion '

&gt;,

i:ASTERN CONFERENCE

'

y-Colonuto ......... 47 25 to 104 n6
•·Ca1JlWy ........... J43'7 t1 79 241
lt-VIUICOU~er~2J51S79 278 278
Anaheim ... ......... .JS 39 8 78 2.14
Edmonton ... :..... .30 44 8 68 239
L..osAngeles ....... 244018 · 66 :zj6
SanJOK .... ., ....... lOll 7 47 2.&lt;2
y-clinched division Iitle
lt-~linched playoff spot

Hockey

z-Chicugo ..............69
•-lndiana ................49
t -Oelroit.. ..............44
Allnnta .................. .44
CLEVELAN0 .... :.. 44

NL standings
r.t.
.m

·x-Hous!on ..............46 · ~2
Denver .................. J4 44

. Tuesday's lames

CLEVELAND (McDowell 0- 1) nt
Boston (Wakefield 0-1 ), II :OS a.m.
Detroit (Olivares 1.0) at Toronto (Gut·

:r..
Montrell ..................w
7 . "s

S:m Oicgo ................ 8
Sun FrnnciKO .......... 7
l,.o~ Angeles ......... .7
Colorado .. ........... :... .5

Tonight's games

Seanle 9, Toron1o 4
Oelroil 5, Cnlifornia 4
Minnesota 4, Baltimore I
New Ycrlll, Texas)
Milwaukee .5, KanGS CiJy 2
Onkland 10. Chicaco ~
CLEVELAND7. Botlon6{11)

•••

2~

CINCINNATI (Burba 0-1) at Chic~~go
.(Bullinger 1-0). 8:0.5 p.m.
Pinsbursh (Ericlcs 0- 1) al Sr. Louis
(Alan Bc:nes 1-0), S:Wi p.m.
San Oieco { Tewksbur~ 2-0) at Col~lldo (Relulr 0-1 ), 9:05 p.m.
·

Sunday's S&lt;orts

••

••

3
4
7

CtnlniiHvlskln

t

I

4 .600
6 .!'i38

CLEVELANO ......... l
MiniiCIOia ................ S
Jdilwnukte ...............4
Chicaao ..~ .................4

'
:
•
•

.

!lll

ToronJO ......... ........'-. :~
Boston .................... .. 2

•

-~

.W L r.t.

Balti11101'e ................. 9
New York ................ 6
0eh0il ...... .............. .. 7

~~

Westnn Division

E1stern Divlllon

'

·~

•

the fifth. George led off. the inning .
with a walk and Paul Pullins doubled. Gary Stanley followed with a
single ~nd Brent Hanson walked.
One out later Cleland singled. ·
Athens made it a 5·2 lead in the
bottom of the fifth without the ben·
efit of a hit. 1\i;o Marauder errors,
two walks and a sacrifice fly to score ·
th~ two runs.
. Meigs closed out the scoring in
the seventh inning with a single run.
Whitlatch and Cleland hit back-to·
back singles to lead off the inning, a
Athens error scored Whitlaich with
the gamc!;s final run.
.
' Colin Roush was the starer and
winning pitcher for coach Scott
Oheen's Marauders. Roush pitched
the first four innings scatterin"g four
hits, .striking_out five and walking,
live. Whitlatch pitched the final
three innings to gain the save. Brad
struck out three, Y/alked one and

DeuoitdownedCalifomiaS-4; MinBoaon ~ S011 fans IISually
aeaoca dcfealcd Baltimore 4-1 ; New
save their won&amp;lllllfcring for lheCnd York routed Teus 12·3: Milwaukee
oflhe salOn. This year,lhey're getbeat Kansu City S.2; and Oaltland
ling u early start.
topped Chicago 10-S.
,,
Bumblini BOStOn dropped 10 2·9.
MarfMn t, Blue Jays -1
iu wont 11811 in 69 ycus, with a 7•
AI Toronto, Joey Cora and Doui
6 loss ro Clevdand in 11 iMings
S1range h.omered as Seattle comSIIIIday. The Red SoK c:onunilled two pleted a three-game sweep. Cora hit
errors. increasing lheir tolal to 19.
a two-run homer in a four-run eighth,
"Thai kind ofloss takes lhe _wind and Sh'allge hit a three-run homer in
out of your sails," Boston manager a four-run ninth. Seat1le's Bob Wol·
Kevin Keni.edy said. "We fought cou ( 1-1) allowed one run and three
baclr. and we have to keep doing that hilS in seven innings. Loser Pat
type gf fighting if we hope to bleak Hentgen (2-1) gave up live runs and
out of this."
six hits in seven innings.
Julio Franco won it for Cleveland
Tigen S, Angels·4 '
with a solo hoiner off Milr.e Stanton
At Detroit, Mark Lewis won the
(0-1 ). It was lhe thin! straight win for game with an RBI single in the bot·
the Indians and fourth conse~:utive
tom of the ninth. Bobby Higginson
· PUTnNG ON THE JACKET- Britain's Nick Faldo gellal::::,t loss for the Red Sox.
led ofT the inning with a walk off
. putting on the ceremonial green jacket from 1995 Masterl
·
"Both teams played han!, but it reliever Mike J~mes (2-1). Kimera
on Ben Crenahaw toHowlng the former'&amp; Yiclory In the Augum, Ga. was just Jl weird game," Indians Bartee. pinch-running for Higginson,
tourruament Sunday. (AP)
manager Mike Hargrove said.
was sacrificed to second and Tim
Cleveland took a 4-0 lead in the •Hyers was intentionally walked
'
first
. on Eddie Murray's two-run before Lewis' game-winning hit.
.
double, Alben Belle's bases-loaded Richie Lewis (1 ·0) pitched two
walk and Mike Stanley's passed . innings of perfect relief for the vicball. But Boston scored a run in the tory.
·
third and went ahead with five runs
Twins 4, Orioles 1
in the fifth, including a two-run douAt Baltimore, Minnesota snapped
ble by Wil Cordero and an RBI sin· the Orioles' five -game winning
.
streak as Francisco Rodriguez
gle by Mo Vaughn.
Kenny Lofton tied it in the sixth pitched 7 213 innings of tliree-hit
his voice trailed off, as if he had just
By DOUG FERGUSON
with
a two-run homer ofT Mike ball . Rodriguez (1·1), who entered
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Given begun to realize what had transpired
Maddux.
Julian Tavares (1·1) the game with a 12.91 ERA, walked
the unyielding conditions, Nick Fal- over the sloping fairways and crisp,
pitchef,l2113inningsforth~win,and
three and struck out two in the
do's 67 should be remembered as contoured greens of Augusta Nation·
Jose Mesa got three outs for his third longest stint of his major-league
one of the greatest closing rounds by al.
career. Eddie Guardado got the last
"I hope I'm remembered for save.
a Masters champion. Given the cir·Elsewhere
in
the
American
out in the eighth and Dave Stevens
cumstances, it won't be.
shooting a 67 on the last day and
League,
Seattle
beat
Toronto
9-4;
worked the ninth for his third save.
; History won't shine on the nervy· storming _through, and not what hap. ,2-iron Faldo hit to two-putt birdie pened to Greg," he saill. "I did what
range on No. I 3, or his 7-iron to 4 I set out to do, so I'm obviously
·reet on the par· 3 sixth hole that kept pleased with what I've done.
''But it's going to be remembered
him in the hunt.
Instead, it will wince as Greg for what happened to Greg."
.
.
For
good
reason.
It
was
the
sixth
Norman made bogey after bogey,
Soothe.m's softball team, enjoy- home run and Thomas singled and
shudder at ·the sight of his ball time Norman had taken a lead into · ing a fine season, split a Saturday Lawrence reached on an error.
bOunding into Raes Creek on No. 12, the final round of a ml\ior, only to afternoon non-league doubleheader
Waterford went up 7-6 in the botgrieve over him waiting in the fair- lose. But he never hall this large of at Waterfonl, dropping the first game tom of the fifth, but Southern broke
way as someone else marched up the a lead at a course that ·he so effi- 6--2 before rebounding for an II·7 it open ill the sixth with a live-run
ciently managed with great driving,
18th green in glory. ·
r;dly. A 'Thomas home run and Lisle
win in the second game.
The 1996 Masters will be remem- sman iron play and clutch putting.
double
were the big blows in that
Waterford's Lee Ann Huck held
All of th01&gt;e skills left hiin on
bered as another collapse by NorSouthern scoreless for six innings, inning.
man, not another green jacket for Sunday, 'and quickly, so did his six· but, SHS broke the ice in the seventh
Southern hitters ·were Caldwell
stroke lead.
·
Paid~.
with too little, too late. A real pitch· and Manuel (home run) who we"t 3"Even if I had played halfway ing battle developed early between 5, while J. Cummins went 3-4 and
:'This one is an amazing orie, isn't
it?" Faldo said after a closing 67 for decent, it would have )le.en a goQd Jennifer Lawrence and Huck, but a Thomas (home nm) and Sisson (doutussle with Nick," he said. "·This one ·two-out rally and Krista Neill's three ble) each had two hiu.Lisle also doua I 2-under-par 276. ·
"I guess ..." he rontinued before I did let get away. !let it slip. i made run homer changed things in !he bled. ·
·
a lot of mistakes today."
Greene led Waterford with three
third to make the score 3-0.
It wa$ the· biggest collapse in a
Waterford added one more in·the singles.
11)1\iDr championship, and it came at founh inning and two in the sixth.
Thomas picked up the win, giva tournament where the biggest Southern scored two in the seventh ing up II hits and four walks, while
comeback occurred .- the 1956 when Lawrence . singled, Jenn,ifer Neill suffered the loss. Southern col·
.. , (Continued from Page 4)
·-Masters, when Jack Burke Jr. came Cumm,ins tripled and Bea Lisle sin- .lected 16 hits, overall.
.•
. '
• from eight strokes . behind on the gled.
.Southern hosts Meigs tonight.
andpavts first sm~e Sep~. 17~ l!J?,I. final day,
·
The i-ally fell shon and Waterford
. It feels great, Dav1s sa1d. It ·- · EvJn with ill-advised attacks at
won
6--2 .
. came ata good ~me_. It·gave-us ale~ the tlagsticks that led to bogeys on
Lawrence.
suffered the loss and
. and ended up wmnmg a bllllgame.
two of the first four holes; Norman
· Schourek threw 137 pitches on a still led by four strokes through sev- Huck picked up the win.
Southern hitting was led by Joncool afternoon, and Jeff Brantley en holes, the toughest stretch of
na
Ma11uel
who went 2-3 and singles
_Jitched the mnth for the firsl.of h1s Augusta National to get anything
each by Lawrence, Lisle, Tassie
two saves of the day.
going.
Cummins
and a triple by J. CumThe second ~arne featured one of
The next live holes were blinding .
mins.
Doug Drabek s ~1ldest perfor· Faldo curled in a 20-footer for birdie
Baker, Nichols and Neill each had
~ances tn the major leag~es : H~ on the par-5 eig~•h, and then pulled
two
hits for Waterford.
fav~ up stx runs tn ~ 113 _mnmgs, ahead the way he usually does in
In the second game, .Southern's
mamly because he tted h1s career major championships: With steady,
troops
of Howie· Caldwell came
J\igh by walking seven in the shan ' grinding pars.
back
to
win
11-7. Southern took a 2·
span. John Smiley's two-run single,
That was enough to go from
0 lead on a single by Cynthia Cald·
!he first of his ~hiee hits, made it 5· three-down to two-up. Norman spun w~ll. then lonna Manuel singled,
j a~!er on~ mnmg.
. . . · a wedge back off the green on No. 9 Sarnmi Sisson had an RBI double
: I can t remember havm~. th_ts to make bogey. He went left of the
, \. tnuch trouble w1th my conlrol. satd pin at No. 10 and hit a poor chip to and .Keri Caldwell had an RBI sinDrabek, _who hadn't walked seven get another one. On the lith hole, his gle.
Waterford came baek with four
~alters .smce !.uly ~9. 1990 agamst
12-foot birdie, putt was above the
•unearned runs off Amber Thomas
fluladelphla. That s the best move- hole, always a dangerous situation
although Huck slammed a 'three-run
ment on my fastball I've had m a · on the cement-like greens of Au gusholner in the procesS to make the
long, long time. When I wasn't get- ta.
score 4-2.
(ing (strikes), I tried to put them
"I thought 1 made the put1 on the
WHS went up 6--2 in the founh,
~here they could put the ball in
first putt, and ended up threethen Southern railed for a 6-6 tie in ·
play." .
putting," he said. "!.think that real·
the fifth, T. Cummins walked, Ang·
.
· Smiley faded in the sixth, giving Jy wasn't a good situation."
ie Carleton walked, C. Caldwell
up solo homers io Bagwell and Rick
Walking to the 12th tee, they were
,singled, Manuel slammed a.three' run
)Vilkins. ~n~ the ~stros batted . all sqpare. It was, after all, match
aroun~ to tte 11 7-allm.the seventh.
play from there on in.
But Vmce ~olema~- smgled home
Faldo hadn't contended at a major
\tie Ue-breakmg run IR the botlom of since Norman's 64 beat him at the
the inning off Anthony Young (0-1) 1993 British Open, but Sunday's
and canie' home on Eddie pressure wasn't a.forgotten memory.
taubensee's sacnlice fly.
It was his pressure putting over the
(Continued from Page 4)
· .Hector Carrasco, relievin~ Jeff . last three holes that helped decide the
by and Pete Sisson with singles each.
~~aw (2·1), g~ve up B~gwell s RBI
Ryder Cup in Europe's favor at Oak
J. Coffman went 4-4 for Water·
tnple that cut II to 9-8 m the e1ghth, Hill in September.
ford.
·
·•
~ut Brantley closed it out with his
And there's no pressure like
lri the second game, Southern
founh save.
Augusta.
won 14-3 with an ' 18-hit attack.
: "The offel\se has been putting
"My mouth was sore. 1 was hav·
Southern took a a. 4-0 lead in the
together some big innings," Cole- ' ing to swig water at nearly every
first; then Waterfonl came back with
!.
man said. "But the name of the game shot," Faldo said. "It's excessive
two runs, but SHS scored two and
is consistency, and we haven'(been pressure. It's the highest degree of four runs over the next two innings ·
consistent.'
.
accuracy of any golf course. As the . to pull away for the win. In the first,
Notes: Last year, the Astros week goes on and the screws get
Michael Ash reached on an error,
played two doubleheaders and swept ,tighter, ·it's a very tough golf Jesse Maynard tripled, Danny Sayre
both- against San Diego on July 8 course."
·
hit a three-run home run, then John
and Pittsburgh on Aug. 4 .... Astros
He hit a perfectly played 7-iron a1
Card single ~nd scored on a Corey
center fielder Brian Hunter made the · No. 12,.over the bunker to about 1S Williams ~ouble.
Pt:st play ~f the day, reaching above · feet. Norman's 7-iron headed right
Jesse Maynanl was 3-3 with his
•
the wall m center to t~e a homer for the flag, one of the biggest risk- ·second home run of the day, while
away fi:om Coleman m the fifth
tewanl shots on the course, and he Jay McKelvey ~ent 2·3, Sayre 2-3,
inning of~ second ~arne . Coleman
paid for it.
Shawn Dailey 2-2, Corey Williams
hoii)Cred tn,'he first 1~mng .... BagThe· ball bounCed quickly down 2-2, Jason Lawrence 2-4 and hits
\Yell was hi! on the nght arm by a the slope into the creek. Norman
from Ash, Dill, Can! and Billy
pit~h from Schou':"k. l-Ie was hit
took double-bogey, and for t~ first
Young.
.
•
tw1cedunngll)csenes.... Derek Bell
time $ince the 14Jh hole oftl!c first
Young "and Williams. combined'
was '5·for·9 in the doubleheader
round, he was no longer thC leader.
for the big win. Young fanned two
w"""thlee singles, two.doubles, two
"It was like good ,old match . and walked four while giving up just
··runs sqored and a stolen base..... Last
play,".Faldo said. "I got to go first,
three hits'in a gr\'eat'effon. Williams
• year, die Reds swept a doubleheadand that was a breathtaking shot to ,_ came on in relief with four strong
er against Pbiladelphia · and were
hit across there. I hit a great shot, and innings, his second good effon in a
swept by the ,New York Mets. ...
it went right where I wanted to go."
row. He fanned two, walked one and
Owner Marge Schott went onto the
'
·
gave up seven hits.
field as tlic second game was about
"Nick played gre&amp;;~golf. !fhere's
E. Fauss sutfered the loss, with 14
to begin and tried to explain her no two ways about it,''·Norman said.
runs, 18 hits, sixstrikeouts and sev·
remarks about John McSheiy's "'He played sre~t. and I played en walks.
·
death to
~mpil'(s, . •
poor. ''
"
Southern hosts Meigs tonight.
.

· ·In the Masters,

Southern baseball team sweeps twinbill

By ./OE KAY
(3·0), who allowed three runs over
CINCINNATI (AP) - Eric eight · innings to improve to 21-3 .
0 lead on a Travis Lisle single and
Davis wound up playing both ends career at Riverfront dnd 16-2 over By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel
Correapondent
.
home run by Jesse May nan!.
of the Cincinnati Reds' doublehead- the last two seasons.
Southern
Tornadues
posted
a
SHS went I!P 4-0 10 _the second
·
The
er sweep Sunday, and i~ showed in
In the second game, Houston
his -walk.
.
dropped two fly balls in the first sweep of a Saturday afternoon 1~10· when Jay McKelvey smgled and
boll, clatmmg a 9-5. first game VICIO· · C~ad Bl~nt was hit by a pitch. ~ete
"Man, it's a long day," said inning as the Reds went up 5-1.
ry
and a 14-3 wm m the mghtcap.
S1sson smgled _and Shawn Oatley
Davis, who missed all last season ·
"We're making physical and
In
the
first
game,
SHS
took_
a
2·
had a two-run smgle.
~ith a neck injury. "I couldn't even
mental errors and giving up five and
ice my knees (between games). I'm six runs in an inning," sald Jeff Bag·
too old to go I8 innings on turf with well, who homered and tripled to
no ice. Eighteen on turf? I haven't !ead an Astros cemeback in the secllone that in a long time."
ond game. "You just can't do that
By DAVE HARRIS
four walks and a hit batter. The game
The 33-year-old outfielder did
"We''ve got to play as hard as we Sentinel Correspondent
was called after five innings because
something else Sunday that he had- can for 18 innings. My main concern
Meigs ·and Athens split a double of the 15-run rule.
n'tdone In a long time- hit a game- right now is that we ' re not playing header Saturday afternoon at Athens.
Jeff Ervin pitched a one-hitter in
winning homer for the Reds in a 5- the game as hard as we're mentally The weary Marauders, having played picking up the win; he walked two
3 first-game victory over the Hous- capable of."
their .sixth game in six days,. have and struck out one. Kemplin, Cunton Astros.
The Reds came away still trou· · their top two pitchers battling arm ningham and Guinther had two hi~s
: He struck . out three times and bled by their pitching staff, which woes.
each for Athens including a double
misplayed a fly ball into a triple in gave up 30 runs in the four games.
In the. first ·game, the Bulldogs each for K~mplin and Cunningham.
!he second game; but the Reds held Last year, Houston scored just 39 exploded for 12 runs in the fifth
Chaa Bunon had the only hit for
on for a 9-8 win.
runs in the I 3 games of it~ series. . inning to break open a close game Meigs a third inning single. Scoll
·
. Cincinnati's first &lt;loubleheader with Cincinnati'.
and post a 15-0 win. While the George was the staner' and loser for
$weep of the Astros since Sept. 22,
"We still can't shut it down Ylith- Marauders ball led back in the night- Meigs, he had relief help from Brad
1992, left the teams with a spli.t of out excitement," manager Ray cap to post a 6--2 win oveicoach Fred Whitlatch. The two combined to give
their four-game series. That's a Knight said. "It comes down to the Gibson's crew.
up II hits, walk five and strike out
change from Jast'yeat, when the Reds . last two innings."
In the firsi contest, the Bulldogs seven.
In the second game, the Maraud',VOQ 12 of 13 to win the NL Central
The first game·came down to two broke a scoreless tie in the third
by ilin~ games.
bad pitches by Mike Hampton (2-0). inning by plating three runs on the . ' ers took • 1-0 lead in the fourth
: The series also showed. that two Joe Oliver hit a two-run homer in the strength of a hit batter, a walk, two inning. Whitlatch reached on a
Athens error, advanced to second on
of the teams expected to contend second and Davis hit a three-run singles and a double.
again this year have a long way to - homer in the sixth for all of CincinBut Athens broke it opeq 'in the another Athens miscue; stole second
fifth by sending 15 batters to the and came around to score on a Cass
go. Both have been as inconsistent as nati's runs.
.
Davis' day.
'
. It was Olivet's 'first homer in
plate. Athens had the first six batters Cleland single.
The Astros wasted opponuoities Reds uniform since April 4, 1994, ·in the inning score and used seven
Meigs increased the lead to 5-0 in .
hit.s in the inning to go along with
'
in the ope~er against Pete Schourek
. (See REDS on Page S)

•

In AL action,

••

••

•

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•

••
•

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�....... The Deily •• , ......

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

.•

~y,April15,1118

•

'
Pomeroy e Mlddl1pott,
~

•

::Evidenc.e proves tube ·feeding has saved a great ·number of lives
cian, I have never IIIIOd tllbe leedinJ
to sustain life. I have always trWed
my plienls as I 1WOIIId like to be
lrealed. If another doctor msened a
feedins tube, I would leave it in until
the patient pulled it out, but I have
never ordened that a plient's hAnds
be tied to prevent him from pullins
the tube out.
·
Tube feeding is used by doc:lors
who have the mistaken notion that
they have failed when a patient dies.
They do not wish to accept the fact
that death is a normal part of life.
It's too bad "Phoenix" did not
find a more sensible and compassionate doctor to treat her mother-inlaw~ :· Fr:e!l'_ont. C~lif., M.D.

Ann

LAnders

'ay ANN .LANDERS
0.. Ann Landers: You recently
printed a leuer from "Phoenix,"
., ;whose mother-in-law lived for eisht
. years on a f"!"fins tube. I whole• . heartedly agree with her that tube
' 'feedins is cruel, unusual and inhu. mane treatment. Removing the tube
is not a crime. Inserting it is.
In 40 years of practice as a physi-

Dear M.U. m Fremont: You are er because they. too, tboupt it was mal Jo illhuJDMe trealment. That
right when you say dealh i.! a n~ cruel. Dr. Moore overrode their puppy couldn't possibly \eep up
part of life, but is it 1101 a doctor's objections and inserted the \Ube. Wid! someone 011 ltollerbltdes. The
mission io keep as many people from Three weeks 1111«, tbc woman walbd sune go4;s for people -who ride bikes
dying as possible? l fllld it difficult to out of tbc ~ilal in excellent health.· aJid pull their dop alongside them on
accept your statement that the f~ The feeding tube saved her life.
a leash.
' '
ing tube is used by doctors who feel
Dear Ann Landers: Thday,l saw a
Please, folk&amp;, if you want to exerthey have failed and inserting ihe boy about 10 years of age Rollablad- c:lse your doJ. like him far a walk or
tube is a1 crime. There is a srcat body ing and dragging his puppy along on let him come along when you jog.
of evidence that feeding tubes have a leash. The poor clog was complete- And be sure to keep a steady pace
saval many lives.
ly exhausted. He was breathing rapid· you can both tolerate. It will do the
In his new book, "A Miracle and Jy, ·and his tongue was hanging out. . dog's heart a lot more good, and
a Privilege," Dr. Francis Moore, one The dog tried to sit down and rest, but yours as well ... Pet Lover m Gothen·
of the
Harvard Medical the boy continued to drag it down the • burs, Neb. '
School urgeons of transplantation street.
· Dear P.L.: The applause you hear
fame, te Is of a family that was vehe·
I'm sure the bby thought his dog • is from all the dog lovers in my readmently opposed to his putting a feaJ. was having a good time, but the real- ing audience. To expeet a puppy to_
ing tube in their desperately ill moth- ity is that he was subjecting1he ani- ketp up with a Rollerblader is total-

E.

• •

I

;· Social Security commissioner
·:.. :cites future value of Social Security
~ · By ED PETERSON,
· o\lhena

: · ·.; SQclal Security Manager

··· Will future beneficianes get a fair
. return on their contributions In terms
~ ' .. :Of the benefits they receive; from
: ·. Social Security? Shirley S. Chater.
'Commissioner of Social Security
· .answered this question in a speech
·; before a Senate Subcommittee
'·· ~ecently.
__ . Unfortunately, she said, many
C' .. critics of Social Security view it only
: : 'as a savings plan for retirement and
. as a return on investment. Some
; ~ .believe that if they were allowed to
1
~ •· invest their Social Security taxes in
• .. -private investments, such ~· stocks
' ·. and bonds, they would receive a
· higher rate of return--in their view, a .
· - fairer retum··than Social Security
· :: currently provides. This view mis, . represents the real value of the Social
· Security program by excluding those
·: features that have contributed the
most to society as a whole.
: . ~ Social Security is successful and
. ·· popular because it strikes a balance
· "between the two complementary
; goals of individual equity and social
· · adequacy, th~ Commissioner said. It

.

meets its equity goal by providing
benefit protection related to an individual's contributions and its social
adequacy goals by allowing niany citizens to enjoy a reasonable standard
of living. Social Security allows
almost 42 percent of the 1lderly--IO
million people--to live out of poverty. Some 30 percent of Social Security benefits go to young families of
disabled or deceased workers that
have not been able to sufficiently protect themselves against the unexpected loss of a worker's earnings.
"Because Social Security satisfies
goals so vital to our national prosperity, we disadvantage ourselves if
w~ measure its .worth simply by comparing contributions paid and benefits received," Commissioner Chater
stated.
She noted that any analysis of the
Social Security program shows that,
in the past, benefits tended to be generous relative to contributions. As the
program has matured, the return on
contributions has decreased, but
remains generous.
For example, take .a person with
average wages who retires at age 65
in 1996, wlio paid $21 ,518 in the

employee's share of Social Security
contributions. When interest on tho~
contributions is factored in, the result·
ing value is $73,703. This worker will
receive a monthly benefit of $890. He
or she will recover all contributions:
with interest, in 8 li3 years, and can
be expected to live nearly 10 yean
beyond the break-even point. In the
future, the rate of return, while
declining, will continue to be fair,
especially when .viewed within the
context of the broad social' objectives
of Social Security.
"We cannot accurately project
what lifetime benefits for those retiring 20 to 40 years from now will be.
And .we know that changes to the program are required to sustain Social
· Security in the long term," the Commissioner stated.
"For 60 years Social Security has ,
been one of the most important and
successful government programs.
Thus, those who seek to measure its
value must consider the design of the
program, what makes it work, rather
than restrict their analysis to a simple measure of a rate of return on
contributions."

.

.

:~:Scholarship

applications being t~ken

The deadline for submitting appli. ·cations for scholarships from the Rut.. land High School Alumni Association
, -is May I.
·
·
, ·· ; · · The schol.,hip committee ad vis· es that applicants must be a 1996 high
school graduate, and a child or grand. ' ,child or' a Jtutlanct !llum'li·
-. ,: Applications must include a cur-

rent official high.school course transcript, a resume of activities and
career objecti~es, a photograph, the
name and graduation year of the
alumni parent or grandparents, and
the name of the school the student
plans to auend.
•
,.,. A)l I!PPiicants will be eyaluated,on
grlldC poi.)lt average, course of study,

~

~

.

Jy unreal istic. And pleate be aware
that RollerbladinJ is a potentially
dangerous sport. Those in-IItie skates
arc not the same as the okMIIIhioned
roller sbles most of us grew up with.
I strongly recommend to those who
want to indulge in this sportcll* they
wear helmets and kneepads. And P.S.:
Fluorescent or light-colored clothing
should be worn if you like to exetcise
at night.
Gem of the Day: Death and taxes
m!ly always be with u,s, but at least
death doesn't ge' any wprse.

An Easter theme was carried out
· . at the recent meeting of ihe
· · Riverview Garden Club held at the.
: the Reeljsirille Church of Christ.
Easter favors were made .for the
. patients at Arcadia Nursing Center in
. : Coolville.· In charge of the project
: were Margaret Grossnickle, Betty
· Bogs and Mary Alice Bise. Marlene
· PUtman delivered the favors.
· : Frances Reed presided ·at the
: meetins which opened with devo-

_COmmunity
.- calendar
: wes

:ne-

.· ·roo'l'·

.

', . LETART FALLS •• Letart Town-

• ·ship Trustees will meet Monday, 7
p.m. at the township office building.
oTUESDAY
· RACINE •• Southern Local Build·
, jog Committee meeting Tuesd~y.
. -7:30p.m. at the high school. All dis·
. trict residents urged to attend.
• POMEROY ·• Meigs County
. ·Extension presentation on annual
flowers. what's best, 7 p.m. at Senior
.Citizens Center, Pol!ll'roy.
. · MASON ·· Stewart-Johnson Post
: VFW Ladies Auxiliary, Mason, 78
~.m . Tuesday. Election of officers.
· Potluck after meeting.
·
. ,WEDNESDAY
• !'()MEROY -- Alzheimers Dis. :e·ase/Related Disorders support
. sroup;'Wednesday, 2 to 3 p.m at the
J,feigs Multipurpose Senior Center.
Ann Forbes and Alisha Saunders of
ijollzer Hospice to be the

mLL TI'IJOT&gt;IIi
llRICJC

ORDJ!itiP

. .,

..........
882-2158

Docn,Btorm
·wtlllowa.
F-Eatlnlllle

o......_
lh-

... - . ··- ..

l!ilo

I

'
Comm11nlty service Is a part oJ the Girl
training program jiRd Slturdly theM
Malgs County cac!ettes of Middleport Troop
1208, from the left, .Mall..a BreMt, Brltnl
Bevan, Laeann Dill, Anna Story, Stac:ey Brew~

er, and Rachel Taylor served a dinner at iha
annual maetlng of the ~uth C!lntral District
Child Conservation League held It the Rock
Springs· Unllld Metho~ist Church.

~out

•lloorolliJ

•Pelntlng ..

Owner:

I'RII ESTIMATES
(114) fta-653!1
114 fta-2753

ONE .. ON ·ONE!
· CALLNOWI
1-900-446-1414

••
••
,:

EXT. 3694 ..

________...
$3.99 per miri.

Musllle 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 845-8434

!
:

LINDA'S
PAINTING

:.

IMIEIIOI-ImiiOI

t

FREE ESTIMATES

....... ,.•• oat af

, ,.1111111• let 11 do It
•
for Y"• ·
; VIIY IWOUIU
1
IAVIIIniiiCIS
614-915-4110

:;1..;

Public Ncitlc:e ·

•·.. PUiuC I!IOfiCE
·.
Notice .lr llenby given
• that the annual mHIIng or
::': 1111 ll\lrlllalill,. o1 , . , _

j
.'

,,••
I

•,fREE Activation.

,

B11nelhlrtr. Inc. · will ba

IMid al the lllllln ofllca-ol·
Farmen lrnll and llloiilnga

=

(;oi!IP!IIIYo

~

211

Walt Saaailid

Ill StrMt, f.iJ!oll!erov,

• One Cent
_bag Phone

!!UiuC NOTICE
: : Satl;day, April 20, 1111,
• It 10:00 a.m. th• lfoma
1 Nililoilallank win otlar for

• Two Year Agreement

· Required.

Income

WICIS

CuiiiJlildel and bave 11
penalties for Cldy wltbdrawab.

1-Soo;._
4 4·CELL·1

ATHENS •

, 385-5854
8112;7070
. 88 S. Mlrllot St. 204 W. $ocQnd St

HAULING

5824585

15 Yrs.

SliporlorEieclranlca

.

Richland Ave.

- · -

-

110

ADYEITISiiiG
IHE HAT MAil

Have you placed your order?

Imprinting
eShtrts -Hats
'•Sportswear .
·•aaii .Unlforms

.5 Pea Hen (Fowl) 1 yr. old
$25.00 each.

985-3555 ,,

-

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418 "·

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downe~

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Allo IIOI1IIi ptlnla and ,
bruilhea.
Sat., Mln:h 30, AprilS
Noon-5:00 P.M.
3 mit.. north o1 CIIMI8r

94~2168
5/1&amp;'1M-TFN

H&amp;H

SAWMILL
PortGble

11IIIBM8CMIJII.II41
'l'hellrm&amp;ollhaarlartl

I,SIIW Mil
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

·Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742·2193

.

TfN

•1.00 off any X-large 18"

Real Eatate Genenil

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS

Racine American

Legion #602
Bingo

BIB IOOftll ·and
COISRDCftOI

1·900·776·0700
Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Must be
18 yrs. Serv·U

Residential - Co,nmercllil
Roofing - Rubber '- Shingles - Minor Repalra
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

19

~·

IAilll'rS
I..ADt::ARE

. ROI.RT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

: Stop a Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473
7

SPARKlES
'
.
·ELECTRIC

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR

Serving all Your

REPAIR

needs

(614) 992·2364

and commercial) .
• Shrubbery
Malnlenance
• Odd jObs per request
. No La~ Too LB,rga .Of
TooSmaH
Plan Ahead, Call Today!
742-2803

Remod"lng

ELECfRICAL

35 Years Experience

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential

•New Homes
i •Garages
: •Complete
' .
'
1

Monday. through Wednesday
. w/eoupc;n
•

Horoscope,

with 21 pl!IYB[&amp; or more
Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the Number of players
949·2044 or 949-2038
,..
...-· . - --· -

1·800.819·3943

Rick Pearson Auction Compan~.
lull time auctioneer, complere
auctlon
S!'!ntice.
licensed
#66,0hlo &amp; Wesr Virg inia. 304 ·
773-5785 Or :ll4-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean. late Model ·Cars Ot
Trucks , 1990· ModeiS Ot Newer,
Smith Bu ick Pontiac, 1900 East-

em Avenue, Gallipolis.

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587
Racine, Oh ..45n1
'
James E. Diddle

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Bu~ing salvage vehicles. Selling parts. 304773-5033.

Top Prices Paid: Old u .s . C'Oino.
Silver, Gold, Oiamonds. All Old

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
collectibles, Paperweigoi!,- Erc.
M . l . ~ Coin Shop, 151 Sec:ond
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
A -. Gallipolis,o1•.-.2e.12.
We dig basements, put in septic
Used fumllure- antiques. ono
place or complete &amp;states, also
SyatemS, Jay lineS, Underground bores.
do appraisals, Osby Maron, 81(.
.
992-7441 .
For. Free estimate call949-2512
Used Mens Levis, lee &amp; Wran:J:1'_____...,;li~~·~A~IQ~N::A~I~I~B~JLU'U=~
·=:....,.,....:IIWII:::::._II Shol$,
gler Jeans &amp; Df.nim Jacke1S, Nike
81.-446·2468.

992-4507

•

•

•

pJZZ8

lei your fingers do the
walking to the sports
line. Flnailoe·Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL. Point
Spreads, Dally

Sun. Nights
Lucky Ball $300.00

Groat location on level lot on quiel Slreet In
. Featuring this one owner 1970 • 12' x 60'
Mo~lle Home. Includes 2 bedrooms, paUo,
cable hook-up, paved atreeUI Owner relocating
on this home to $15,00.0. COME CHECK

Umestone, sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; WaJer

Howard L. WrjteHI

,

I

W~ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

992·3838

Qreanw~ St!lel .

OFFICE 992·2259

Wanted to Bu~ l:Jsed Mobile

NEFF REMODELING
·. SERVICE

·Phone,

..

Repre..ntarlvel

Area convenience store loot.,ing

for manager, saM reei.tfnt ao. Dat.
,., Sentinel, PO Box 728:23, Po-.
met'O'j,

Ohio ·45780.

' •.

Anlatant Direcror ot Nursmo tor
136-bed .long term care unic. Ap..• plicanra musr poasen ~lora
Oegrte or certillcation 11 .peton. tologlcal nurse. Plaut f.•Jpond
b~ 4J22198 to Donna ~N6i thup.
DON , Lakin Hoopllaf.' ~04·875·

0880. EEOIM E~

Dental Hygi~ne Position Avail able. PSA, STM Practice. Please
Send Raa·urY')e To: ·CLA 3e;i Clo
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolia, OH 4563 1,
for lmerview.
·!

All Kinds of Eorth Work

3n5 SL, Rtclnt, Oh.

'•

•

Avon

OS28C1A.·

Trucking·
Umeltone
Bulldozing and .
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
UUIItles

DOWI·u·· D
. -...."'- .
GUMI1!S
UD llfiS

Help Wanted · ·

PART tiME TEMPORAFIY CLERICAL
Resumes wlil be accepted Until 1:00 p.m ..
April 22, 1996 a~ the offices of the Meig~
County Commissioners, Courthousel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
~
The po~ition involves clerical and housin;1
research dutie$ required to implement th
FY' 95 New Horizon Fair Housing program
· being administered by the Meigs ·Countt
Commissioners and the Meigs County Fai
Housing office.
.
' Applicants for the positipn should hav
, clerical e)!perience and/or training, publi
· contact skills, experience· with Fair Housin
and ~qual :Rights Laws, and eXperience with
computer technology.
· ·
Meigs County is an Equal Employment
Opportunity .Employer which pro.hiblta
· discrimination because "Of race, creed,' COlOr,
, national origin, sex, age, handicap,' polltfcal
affillali(l or ~liefs. , ·
·

A~e

". eeded. Earn monty fOr Chrl11·
mat biHs at hon'Mw'at Work. 1-800882·6356 or 304· 882·2U5, Ind.

Cnllse ship position1.'Tr811'11to

Rick Johnoon

UC. •

--{6_.1_9_)64-~--84_34_,.1

MIDDLEPORT

BIIICIIbumoAppiiNoiiCIIIVIIIe •

Mondoy And Tuesday 0·5, IH·
4-4&amp;-1075.

••otic placos. $200-$900 .,.ldj.

Howard Excavatin

Psycl'lics
1 on 1
1·900-255-0300
ext.5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch, tone phone
requir8d.
Serv,U
. Live

• 2H0%0trl
.

tn

A LO&lt;Il Buli'*l Eo•bli-t
Trmng PrcMded, No E•.....Nec-eaaar,-. Call For Appolnun.nt

Ceniried Home Health Aides '
=~-::~-----1 Needed Fbt Home H.. Uh Care
005
Personals
~II 1·800-508-an:t 8 A.'M. -4
1
1
--~r
.M. OnOutyMidlcal. .

(614) 441-1191
1-800-508-8887
• Top • Trim • R·emoval
• Stump Grinding

...

~

•••••

614·992-3470

· HWI2S

-.:RO¥ . NEW LEXINGTON

LOGAN

BASHANRD.
Ohlo45n1

5 Full Time PIHitiont Awa'11bl1

E•o1ic Places, $200 ·1900 Wtlll·
ly, CaM 7 Days, 40?-87S.2022 En

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand;.
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

lngelnEieetronlco

342-ta
, 118 N,MIIn

614-H2-4025

ANNOUNCEM ENTS

l-II0&amp;-264-6l!IO l!ll:rdmel

'

CELLULARONE
5111100
11011 E. SW. 6L

~~,..,

Contact Rbdney Howery ·
594-3788 days, 698-7231
evealopor

~.. ~75-14211.

Cruise Ship Poolllono, Tro•el To

''

614-698 40U (celled)
3m SWiirt Rd.
Albeoy, Olllo 45710 .
• Allnuities • iiiUCII bf· ~- ::I

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

3170, ..... llpn\

0588C18.

I

SCOIT INSURANCE

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
. &amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

....

FREE
•
. lti'llp . . . . .

PhOne

''

UNTLr.1AY31q

'948-2512

fits . For ailam, appll:cat"ft and
Nlory Into call : 70f.:!lol- 1. . Elot

Rep.

141•2011aFAX

I.

• Hip Safety!
• Wide qJoice of Annuities of
All Kinds

·~

985 4422
Cheater. Ohio

'' ,---~~----------------~~~~---,

FREE
In com ing Calls

J. E. DIDDLE, OWHER

Kitchelll, J),edla,' Siding,
Roof&amp;ek.

Dlrt•S.nd

'

•

yn"' experleace now
for r11 types or
· New Homes, G.......,
Addltlolll, Baths,

bltck.If
Waet Vlrglnlt
441 1411

..

Call7 days, 407-87S.2022 en

caah. Home Nrllonal lank
....,.. lila rlghf to bid at
the aria 'and· or to remove
Mit II Public ruction on 1111 an)f
or all bnie from lhe
a,nk Parking lot : the · NleatanytiiM.
t&amp;la tlil! '
· · · (3) 21, 21;
·1113 Cha"'olal Camaro {4) 1,4,1, 11,,11, 11;1TC .

l

Serving S.E. Ohio
Toll FrM NIIIO·I'i'2nlifl87

(114) 11112-2100
Horae a Teck IIIIa

LowRIIIII)

·&lt;

Serial

Tll'rt Cera_,.

IE liEnS
Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
""" tilt,.,.,. ' ..,...
up
a "'

(Limt Stont-

'

!

• lnstall'ed Car
Phone $39.95 .

.

P.O. Box 131
-lynlcuM, Ohio 45771

IW¥010212 .

n

PollOI--,..,_ 111M·
time lo• -..,....._ FuJI..,..

AVON I All Arou I Shirley

30311 Roy ..... Ac!.,

•~rllable

Limestone • Gravel

·-

•LIII~

LOll 011 FilM

F,_lllllaa...

~rwltl! over 30

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE ·

Ohio,
rcconll.lg to b I!Jirwa, on
the third Wednerdry ol
1 April, 1111, at 4:00 p.m. tor
\ .the purpo•e of electing
1
dlreciorr
and the
orr RL 1
' tranracllon of aueh other
Check It Outll - ...
buelneaa ae ·may properly.
t.'I01AP1710DN1451113
, come belort arid metllng.
r
Paul II. R.HCI, s-alary . · 1 - Fonl T-p QL Sarlal
: ~ (3) 17, 24( 14) 12, 11; 4TC ... 1.21'APP31Xo.il13724t
1
1111 Mercury Cougar
Public Notice .
Serial

.!

.

Air Candl•anlra, HMI Pun~.
Fwn I I I AI lqt'!IJ ••II In ltock
for In 11 1 lnr£ n nan.

Ronnie Jonee.

R.Le HOLLON
TRUCk IIi&amp;

•Boaclng

and M.nufactured Housing

367..()266 - 1-800-950-3359

: •lloom Addltlonr
•Nfto.r.geli
·Eiecbtcal • Plunlblng
•Roollng
•lnllrlar • Exllrlol"" .
Pllnling
Alao Concrete WOI1I
(FREE ESTIMATES)

i:-!~~·:·l::;:=="":'·mo=.pd.=

\I;()[ IIIII
1\0\ I l \I \ 1{1, I. I .'

·~

•Siding

•lntiiRidH
•Training

I .

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean Ezperience • lruured

•NewHomaa
•Addltlooa
•NewGaniges

892-62111
Pomeroy, Ohio

CHICK THI CWSifiEDS fOR Ill YOUR

( &gt;l .S

:\ E

eu..•uqu ''a

: 1"""-":"::":":~~~-.,

' '

District director
Milhoan s,peaks

JONES' TREE SERVICE

COISIIICJIOI

V.C. YOUNG HI

'·

I

111111'1

; . WPEIJTER SERVIa

'•

..,.,.

"llfTN! """"

YOUNG'S

r

'''

Call for Inf11111111ion:

The last 100 personalized bricks to be used
in the Amphitheatre are going fast! Order
Nowl It's a great .gift idea for Mother's or
Father's Day. Stop by the Meigs ·County
Chamber of Commerce at 238 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy or Call ··992-5005, and
,.,... ...41•1 place your order today. ·
,.......11,1•1 ••••
Hurry, They won't be' availabl~ much longer!

I:GG Lm. • 3:30 p.m.
VInyl a Aluln. 8kllng,
Ylnrl A!pi CI •tt.
W".awlowe, Blown
!Nulal!on, Storm

•

• No Lollds or Feet
• Accumulale or Momhly
liRe YOU

' '

'''
•
••

Available

-ineeting and ipecial evenis. The
·'.Calendar is not desigaed to promote
or fund raisers of any type.
are printed as space permita
· and cannot be guaranteed to run a
: ~eciflc number of days.
·MONDAY
POMEROY •• Meigs County .
'. Extension presentation on controlling
·multi-flora roses, 7:30 p.m.. Exten. s1on Qffice, basemeht of infirmary
building.
·
. ,
. POMEROY •• Community band
: practice, 7 p.m. Monday, Meigs band

Ofllae Houri: lloft..Fil

LIVE/

High Interest YieldS

' profit groups wishing to announce

BRVAH PLM:£

•

Glllll'80teed Safety &amp;

The. Community- . Calendar
Is
' I
.
• ,
, pubUshed as a .rree serv1ce to non·

·m

MIDOI.EPo!IT lfll.2772

•

,...--Doing community·

Legislation reganling raising ben- ·
efit
levels for older retired teachers
and compiiance of requirements,
was
discussed by John Milhoan of
with consideration of extra curricular
and co-curricular activities, ~long Gallipolis, district director for the
Ohio Retired Teachers Association, at
with career objective.
.
a
recent meeting of the Meigs Coun- .
The information is to be mailed to
ty
Association.
the Rutland High School Alumni
. At the businps.s session plans were
Scholarship Committee, Box 125,
an~ounced
for the April 23 mee.ting
Rutland, 45775.
at the Sali•bli!'Y Elemen~ SchQOI
with Rep. John Car~y as s~er. He
will talk about school legislation,
especially state. funding for public
schools.
It was decided to invite all class- ·
room
teachers, school administratorS
April 20 at 6:30 p.m. at Royal Oak
and members of boards of education.
Park.
Refreshments were served by The dinner will be served at 6:30p.m.
Nola Young and Nancy Wachter to Cost is $7 and reservations arc to be
guests, Sherry Myers and Sarah · made by Tuesday at the Meigs CounWachter, and members Marilyn Han- . ty Superintendent's office, 992-3883
num, Reed, Pauline Myers, Young, or 992;5592.
Gladys Thomas. Putman, Frank,
Grossnickle, and Bise. 'Putman
I~\ ,
received the door prize, Plans were
discussed for a trash pickup on May

tiona) readings "Springtime'' and
"prelude to Easter" by Delores Frank.
A PfilYtr was said for the Weber family.
Thank you cards were received
from those who received fruit baskets, Dewain Durst, Ella Osborne,
Mel:vin Smith,.and Mildred Hauber.
Next meeting will be May 2 at the
home of Janice Young. She extended
in invitation to the club for a layette
shower for Kila Frank to . be held I.

..

Send queftioas to Am I ,.pc~r.,.,
C~ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Centuey Bl~d., S\llte 700, L"!' Angeles,
Calif. 90045

. Favors made for nursing. home patients
~

J&amp;LINSUW'IOII·

614-992-5048

New At Intles lleetronfes

llatlte
l'llaeli Dealer
'

ttouMRepalra
Remodeling

Free Estimates

litltchtn a Bath

.

Rtl)llldlllng

i, '

Your favorite artist
o:D. . T~pe or .CD

Room Addltlonr

,

Sldlna, Roofing, Patloa

R-nrbla

lneUI'II'I • Ellparlancad
C!JII Wtyne Neff

'

. .-44GI

F0. F- Eltl~...

_
0

\ '

100 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992n2825
1111...

••

Homes. Call! e 14-446.01 75
Wanted

To

Bur Jun_k_A:-u-,o-,·:-w:-lth

Or Without Motors. Call Larry
l~·~· 61~9303.

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

�•

•

llondey. Aprll15, 1tlll

Pomeror •lllddleport,·Ohlo .

8 • The Dilly Sentinel

OOP

.••.
..
..
------------------~~-------------------------------:·
N:&amp;A CrOIIWord Puzzle

PHILLIP

••

.

•••
•

ALDER
FINANCIAL
NOW HIRING
Prior Military With ltu

21

o

Business
Opportunity

'Yean Bro"'" Strvlet

Ot~ct'large Code
6 1. ·446 -0646 !304-523-

Hot10iitble

Jobs $ 21 IHr +

Exp W1U Train, For
1·800-s:Jil.304ll

, Q88 1 4r70, 2badroom, elettrl c

hnl. t2a28 porch, located on 16

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bullness with people you know, and
NOT to eend money through the

tnatl until you 1\ave 1nveanoated
!he offering
VENDING· Won't Get Rtc:h QuicK
Will Get A Sleady, Cash Income,
Pru To Sefll 1· 800-820-4353

P•nn1ng, Slur!lng. E•tended War

814-441-0181

Beautiful fiNO&lt; View, 2 Bedroomo

ranry, Otner Extras! S19,500, Aher
6~M. 614-416-8.15

2 Bedroo.,., 121165 Mobile Home,
$5.500. Move II OJ Ron&lt; E•ls&lt;lno
314 Acre Lot 61o4·245· 9693 Or

614-663-5566

As $189tMo Only AI Oak Wood
Mobile H.omea, S"rbouSY!IIe. WI/,

304-736-3ol)l9

meJl l screening and at least

All IV81osta1a advonlsing In

24)im'old 1 800-228-8658

this n8w.ipaper Is subject to

Red Hbt Fat Loss Product, O,.nA·

litO Fodellli Fair Housing Act
of. 1968 which makoslt illegal
lo advertise •any preference,
Umttat!On or discrlminatton
basad on race, oolor, religion,
sex familial status or national

m1c Markeung Plan, Lose We1ght
&amp; Make Money I 614·-4-46· 1236,
6 14-44J41167
Sflle!l Person Comn'IISIIOn Agenl

Leads Benoflll. Apply At

FrenCh City Press, 423 Second
Awenue. Galt1poNs.

origin. or any ln1enlkln to
maka any such preleJenCe,
l!mttatlon or discrlmlnadon.•

Sat es Rep For Snap On Tools,

EOE, 606-926-6128

Thla newspaper will not

Screen' Prmter, Expenence Necessary, Sen ous lnqulrtes Orily,
614 446 2388, As«ForCMa.

knowtingly accopl
advertisements for real estate

SOC IAL WORKER Needed For

Double wu:te, new, $27,900 2 lef1
at this pnce Cal HWJO 691 ~6717
Llmued Offarl t996 doublew1de.
3br, 2bath. $1799 down , S2751
month Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homas, Nnro

wv 304-755·5865

New 14•80, 2 or 3bedroom Only
make 2 payments lo move 1n No
payments after 4yean 31)4-755·

5565
New Bank Repos Dnly 4 left St1ll
1n warranty 304-755-7t91

wltich Is In vlolallon ollhOiaw
Our readers are hereby
lnlormed !hat all dwellings

Prlct Busterl New 14x70, 2 or
3br Only $995 down, S195'monttl
Free del1very &amp; setu p Only 81
Oakwood Homes, N1tro WV 304·

adver1lsed In this newspaper
are avaMable on an equal

New Bank Repos Only 3 lelt l

opporlunlly bas~

I•••••••••••

755 5865
304-736-7295

330

Two and thrtt bedroom moblft

homta, starting at $240-$300,
sewer. wa.ttr and tr.sh Included.

614-1182·2167
Two bedroom trailer on Condor

Apartments
for Rent

310 Homes for Sale

garage, partly furnished base~
ment, out·bu1ld1ngs, barn, baske tball coun and gas well. Oall 8111
Williamson , 614-742· 2007 No
land oontracts.

1 112 Story, 3 Bedrooms, Free
Gas, Back Of Addison Oh10, Re-

350

REAL ESTATE .

duced $37,500. 614 367 7259,

1 and 2 bedroom apertmenta. furnished aM unfurnished, secunty
depoa1t required , no pets, 814 -

992·221 8

Lots &amp; Acreage

1 Bedroom New Exi ra N1cel
Range, Refrrgerator FurniShed,
Gas Hea~ $2¥flolo . 'Plus lhillneo,

Deposo Req'"rod, 61•·•4&amp;-21157
19 112 Pi"" Sireel, Garage Apart·
ment 2 Bedroom, Refrigerator,
Stove, Washer, Dryer. Hook Up
No Pets , References , Depos~l .
6t4· 446·21tl3

2 bedroom apartment 1n Pomeroy,
nope•~ 614-992-5858 .
2 Bedroom Upstatrs Apartment
300 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis,
Utlllues Pa1d, No Pets, Reference 1

Deposh, 614-4ol6 3&lt;37
2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pHances furnished, laundry room
tac11it1es, close to school 1n town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts •49 or call 614·992·
1 Bedroom 13 Room Apartment,

Trash Patd, NO PETS. On 554
Near Porter, 614-388·1100
3 Rooms. Bath, Washer IOryer.
A1r Conditioner, 01shwashet', Utili~
lies Patd, Good Ou1et Neighbor·
hood, No Pets, Referen ce IDe·
posit 6,4·446-1370

614-446-1988

1 318 Acre s SUitable For Bu1ldmg
Or Mobile Home 300 Ft Road

3 Acre Panoram1c 1/Jew 1993
Tra11er, New 24lC28 Garage, 8k1 2

Fronlage $5,500, 614-441·0926

Baath St., Middleport. 2bedroom,
IUtniShed, utilities pafd Deposit &amp;
references. 304·882·2586

6 ac:res with 3 bedroom house

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

339·6150

614-367-5022

Telemarketing Needed, No Sell·
1ng, Setung Appomtmenls, For
Free Program 9 ~ 5, Top Wage, t·
800-323·1718

3 Bedroom Full Basemenr Large
Deck, City School 01stnct. CA.
614·446-1 828

va,lor, on Ann S&lt;. ~moroy:Oh .
614 756-456&lt;4
• BRUNER LAND

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WeSiwood Drive
hom $244 &lt;o $315 Walk lo shop

614-775-9l73

&amp; mov1es Call 614-446·2568
Equal Housing Opponunlty

pole barn bu ilding two car ga ·

Truck dnvers needed, April, May
&amp; June, short dally tnps, straight
tru ck., CDL license, medical card,
cle an dnv ing record , 6~ 4 - 247 ~

Green Bottom W. VA At 2, Con ~
I
Shell, A.kzo, 13 M1les
Plus 2 Adj. lots,
1 112 Baths,
I Base-

two bath bflck ho'me three ponds,

tage, 6"·742-1!102

Wind·
WANTED IMMEDIATELY
SECRETARY /OFFICE
MANAGEf\.

t~~~~~~~~~3:0:4·

Local 0 1rect Sales Organize:;,

Need RELIABLE Socrelary. Mu al
Have Expenence In Sales fl ·
nancmg. Inventory Control, C&amp;m~
puters &amp; Pubhc Relations Pay
Negotiable Accord1ng To E~tper1
ence Interv iews By Appt. Only
Ca ll 614 441 ·1975 Mon • fn

Worker with at teas! one year e•·
penance m food serv1ce. Apply ln
person at O&amp;M Pizza, Syracuse,
Oh10 Start 1mmed1ately, gradu·
ates onlv apply

180 Wanted To Do
'

Batlys1!11ng 1n my home reasonabl e rates flexible hours , ha11e
rererences, tl ose to school 304~

675-2784
E11ean's Personal Care. Spec1a!IZ·
1ng m Alzhetmer's care givtng
CaB us ~ We can help 304~ 762~

2S.4
General Maintenance, Pa1ntlng,
Y&lt;vd Work Wmdows Washe~
Gutters Cleaned light .Hauling,
Commencal, Re~udenll~l. Steve.

614-368-0429.
G~orges Ponable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs tQ the mill 1ust call

304-675-1957
•

G1Ve ptano lessons m my home,
to all age groups, also teach
c:hord1ng &amp; rran sposmg , tf I
ested, Cf1116 14·992-5403

learn1ng &amp;t loVIng environment lor
chjld care serv1ces 1n my home.
Close to school&amp; Have re rerencesl Call lor 1nlormat1on 304· 075·

8053

•

House on Railroad Street, r1ver

. 3 bed10om, $35,000, 614-992Ma~twel

Ave , 3bedroom, LR, OR.
large ram~y room. dOuble garage,

6y11 old•, $107,000 304 6754046

sun Valley Nursery School
Clilld,are M·f 6am·5·30pm Ages
2·K. Young Schoo l Age Dur~ng
Summer 3 Days per Week MintmUm 614·446·3657
Tramed Eques1r1an /Cer11f1ed Farrter W1H T(aln, G1ve lessons,
Board And Shoe Horses, For
More lnlorma.non, Matthew Angel,
614r256-6801

W11i Bab~s lt 1 Ch1ld In My Home
Infants Too' In Rodney Area Ref·
erences Available, 614·245· 5887
Anytime

F1ve acres.
aerator near
Aac!ne,$16,000 can finance with.

hall down 614·949-2025
lots on Midway Dr 1n New Ha·

ven 304-662·2904

$47,000 614-9.49-2504

Parcels avallable· tor new ho me
tonstrtJCtion on Rayburn Road 5
parcels renglng rrom 1 84ac to
5 32ac Pallid road, county water,
reasonable restriCtiOn! Map and
1nlo ava1lable on request No s1n
gie w1de mqu1nes please 304 ·

Pm:e reduced 3beclroom ,' full
basement, 9acres. n~te propeny,
Leon artia Call Somerville Realty

Scen1c Valtey, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots publtc water.

N1ce home 1n Racme, large buildIng Will hou.se small busmass.
also a one c:ar garage, fenced
yard, out ol flood area, asklflg

304-675 ~30 or ~4-675-S.31

675·5253

Clyde Bowen Jr , 304-576-2336.

Three bedroom home 1n tountry,
Whites H1ll Rd • Rurland, one bath.

RENTALS

Three' bedroom, two baths, above
ground pool, heat pump. n.,.,.. root
and 'siding, on 2 acres 1n Bradbury, $37 .500 negotiable. 614-

992-6190

320

~

41 0

Hou.ses for'Rent

1976 Oi111e 2bedroam, stove &amp; re·
lrtgerator, copper w1r1nQ, under·
pmnmg, new carpet &amp; wallpaper,

1r"76 FestiVal t4x70 2 Bedrba'ms.
2 Baths, Total Electflt, AC, Total -

Nti. Covered

2 Bedroom Hou se, 2 Bedroom
Trailer In Gallipolis 614 · 446-6649

2bedroom, unfurmshed, 507 112

Second St, New Haven Call

304~

3bedroom. mosfty lurntshed, $350
plus deposit and references 304&amp;75·55..0

tnlct, 614·388-8835

2158

Water &amp; County WatP.r Buil d1ng,
Garage,
Garden, Pas ture,

Sleepmg rooms With cook1ng
Also tra1ter space on r1ver All
hook ups Call at1er 2 00 p m

Space tor Rent'

Trailer lots 1n country Trash pickup, c1ty water, &amp; Cable ava1lable
Ohio R1ver access, $100 plus de-

poSit AshiOn 30H76-2683

MER C HANDI SE

510

Household
Goods

675-3469 after 5pm

Reference, $4251Mon!h 614 ·446·

Gas, GA, Well

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms ror rent • weelli or month
Startmg at S1201mo Gallta Hotel

deposit &amp; references requ1red, no
pets ca/1614 742 2661

$35,000. Wtll Constd•• Land Con-

&amp;

450

460

684
Garage,
WhileGas
Rd HeatiA~r,
• 3 Bedroom,
Deposit
2 Car
&amp;

1980 Wmdsor. 14x70 3 Bedroom.

V&amp;f'J clean ana bedroom tur·
Oil~ apartment i n Middleport,
call 814~-4-48-309, preferably be-..
foro 10;30am or alter 4.00pm

rage , $325/Mo., Waler P.a1d, De·

Porch.
2 1 Acre
Very
s Beautlfl!.l
In BldweH
Setting
A rea
On,

2 Baths Etectnc

cai&gt;IJod. EOH 304-875-8679.

304·773·5651, Mason wv

Porch _Fo_r_ln_lor_ma_,,._n_ _ _ _ __
~~~~~~~~~5.-I
11
2·3 bed room house In Ru tland,

1972 401170
Wa sher JOr yer,
S? 500 Very Good
614·446· 1440

TWII'\ Rivers Tower, now aecepti ng
apphc:at1ona lor 1br. HUO subsidIzed apr. tor eld&amp;rl~ and hand ~ ·

15-112 Gallipolis, 2 Bedrom UpstairS, Near R1ver, Duplex, Ga·
pos1t, tRefet"ences, 6 14·446 2419

Mobile Homes
for Sale

One bedroom apartment m Pt.
Pieasanl, no pelS, 614·992 5856

814·4o16-9580

in-ground pool, 614-992-5067

ly New Remodeled

ChOSIOf, 614-965-S.06

12 llv1ng Room S411es 2 Ptece

No! $498 Each, Only $275 Each ,
61 4~886 - 6373, Rt 7 Above
Proi:IO!Inlle. Oh10, Bes1de G1ovan

I~~~~~~~~~~~

WI!/ mow ra rds In spare t1me
..Pl ease cafl anyrlme 304 576·

2499
W11i stay With elderly person ,
~oung Chnst1an woman. 61.-.985-

4(l89
Yatds· Free' Estimates! 20 VHra
In Yard Work, Mow, Edgo, Wee·
deal, EIC OU-446-7014

AKC Black Lab pupp1o1, now
ready to take horr,e Both parentJ
on premiua. E•c . family doQ&amp;,
wor!Md &amp; lito,.

IN-11-11

•Q 4 s
•A 3 2
•A 3 2

30•-an-2265.

Good Home Only 3 Year Old
Male Black &amp; Wh111 Cocker
Spamtl, AKC RegJitered, Good

Well

Sofas, LDVtSHtl, ChairS, titclln· Sire, 61 .. 319·27211.
ing Sofa With Matchtng Rocker 1
Recliner Corbin ' Snyder 11-4·
Puppy Palace Kennell, Boardtng,
446-1171
Stud SerVIce Puppiea, Groornfnst,

YIRA FURNITURE
814-446-3158
0Ua11rv Houtehold Furi"'I&amp;Jre And

Grea1 Deals On
Cish And Carry! RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Also Avaiablo
~PI)IIancos

570

•Q

e 14· 388 -

Antiques

Antlque Oak Pedestal K11chen
Table, $200 Ftrm, 614-379-2923

.... t

1 Used Coleman Down Flow Gas
Furnace, 70,000 BTU's, Complete
$250 , 1 Used Johnson Gas Furnace, 160,000 BTU's, Upflow
$250 3 Used ElectriC Furnaces

15KW, 20KW, 25KW, 1 Used 3
Ton Rheem Heat Pump, 1· 800·

287-6306, 614·446 8306. 1-800·
29 1-0098
12 HP Ford Lawn Tra cto r 38
ln ~;h

Cutting Deck, 5 Years Old,

Perfect Cond111onl S995
6753

6 14 ~ 256-

~977 Ford Tn -Axle 19F t Alum
Dump Bed, S1de Oresstt' For Far·
mall A Tractor 614-256 6325

BARNEY

Z NT

ale. Call 614· 446-8022 Leave o\
Message Please

BROKE,

'61 0 Farm

Massey Ferguon 4t12 Square
Hay Baler, Wheel Hay Rake, John
Deere 12Ft, Tandem D1sc, Pnce
Aeasonablei814-388-9Q46

EMILI( INVITED
YOU TO TI-lE

Gehl Round Balers, Mower Con
dl11on ers, D1sc Mowe rs, D~tc
Mow er Conditioners ., Forage
Equ 1pment Sales And Serv1ce
Alt1zer Farm Supply, 6 t4 245

ABOUT SOMETJ.IIN6
EL;SE ••

5193

:Jl4· 773-5 171

Baler Goad

Come see lhe ex1raordlnary new
technology 1n mtenor !ltalns &amp; lm1she s An Akzo Nobel Sikkens
represe ntanve w'lll be demonstra tlilt this e~tetnng new l!na, featuring
22 dazzling colors, from 8-1 1 this
Tuesday morning Free coffee
and donuts Will be served Pamt

Tractor hydrauliC fluid $16 Q9/
Sgal. Sider'&amp; Equipment. 304-e75742 1 Dl 1-800-2n-3917
Wanted To Buy 400' · 800 Bulk
Milk Tank In Good Condition,
e1• 911"1022
... ~
·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Contrete &amp; Plastic SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Ga llons RM
Evans Enta rp nses Jackson , OH

4-H Club Lambe For Sale, Bam 21
15 ·3119198 Ideal Size For Gallaa,
Me1gs, Maaon, Lawrence &amp; Jack·

1·800·537-9526

san t:o. Fairs, 614-44e·10o47.

Electr~c

4-H Pig~ AI Sired Righi Sizes Fot
Gallla, Melgt, Mason &amp; lawrence
Counuosf 614-256-1360.

446~4514

Ratnbow sweeper with attcichments 304 675 1725
Refngera tors, Sto11es , Washers
And Dryers , A.l l Recond1t1oned
And Gauranteed l S100 And Up.
W1ll Deliver 614·669-64 41
Shop Smuh Wood Planer 12 Inch,
$375, Ftrm, 1969 Ood9e 250 P~&lt;·
Up $4,975,61 4-446-8568

SPRING SPECIAL Con&lt;ral A11
Condntoners 2 Ton $1,195, 2 112

Ton $1,295, 3 Ton $1 ,395; 3 112
Ton $1,595, 4 Ton $1,695, Prices
Above Inclu de Normal Installation Full 5 Year Warranty, Free
Est1mate!l, 1·800·291 ·0098; 614446-6308.

Newly decorated 2bedroom,
basement References Oepos1t
No pots 304 675-5162

Livestock

Sreened
tn B'ack
Porch
&amp; BUill·
On
Sunroom
Hannan
Trace
Ele~
mentary, 2 Acres • I·, Very Good
Condlllon, $32 000 No Land Con
tract614·256·6813

Twc
bedroom
mce and
clean,house,
depostlcarpeted,~
required, i~~~~;~~~:]~
no lnstde pats. three bedroom
house, depostt requited, no Ul&amp;lde
pms; 814~992-3090

196 1 Governor l4x70 W1th TtJ)
Out, 2 Bedrooms, 1 112 Bath s,
Flfeplace, 614-367 7~.c

Two bedroom, new carpel, stove,
ca.bleltrash i ncluded, in Mason
near park, constru~ti on workers
welcome Call 304·773· 576-4 to

I

:~~:~:~s~
SktiQ.Jl'':.

550

Building
Supplies

Block, !&gt;rick, sewer pipes , w1ndows. hntels, etc. Claude Wtnlefl.
R1o Grande, OH Call 814 · 245·
5121 .

Montl'lly Flea Program Need

Help? Ask JD NORTH PRODUCE
814·446·1933 ~baul Tha H&lt;'PPY
JACK 3-X FLEA COLlAR. Kille .
Male &amp; Famala Adull Fleal. Fot
·Dou• &amp; Calsl

"IIPRIL IS, HOW I DRfJID IT I

"Tf&gt;¥£ IT Fw.\ 11£, 'TWJRNN'Rf,~
,._ MU.LIOIIAIF!£ 151-t\ f&gt;iL

...........
anlftlj

•t

DCDUplill

36111ikj

........

I I' I

r--=-s-:'I-=x~E-=r__,, ": :.,

lI

~ I_ •Is I

.---S-W_E_E_L_A_

•

Overheard 1n collage Frat
House 'A big deterrent to a
budding romance is the bloom·
_,,,ng---.- --.

..-..,,,,-..,,....;;...,,;:;--.;;,,.,7,..;-rl-f f)

•1
I.-..1.-...L.--'--..1.1-...L.__,_

BIG NATE

304·675-6246
S1xteen feeder calvea, wetghmg
between 500·8;00 lbs., me,xed
breed; INa Charlay hoiJill'l, wetghmg between 800 -90 0 lb1 , 61-4 ·

THAN~

A

FOil&lt;

V

WAlKING

ME
HJME"'
GORt&gt;IE .

742-2068
There's A Reason Irs Calted..

CHAMPION DRIVE
CLUB PIG SALE

The

You

Sovfnes You'll Find In the
Clossf(fed Stcuon.

C0r11plete

1fte

by f1lltng in

chuckle quoled

t1't!

m1U1ng words

you develop from step No 3 below.

I
LETS ANSWEU

Drowse - Candy - Jerky - Native - CARRIED

Grandpa always told us kids that it wasn't the load
that we1ghed vou down but how it was CARRIED

Come To Tho SOURCE! II Starts

71 0

IMONDAY

•

TRAN SPORTATION
Autos for

Sale

'89 T~underllird SC, IWO door, 3.8
!tiro. V-6. elite mqdel turbo, PS,

P8 , AC , 5 speed, power seats
and locks. "Great Car,• $5200

neg . 614·992· 7478 or 61•·949·
2879

IIOI'T !.tAP 1ll
CONCLU&amp;JCJH&amp; ••
UIICONt&gt;CIOUG
SYMSOLS CNIBE.

111AT'S JUST A

CPNVENIENT
l~85~ FOR
P/I\6NOSTJC

'llJ
DRYWALL
1089 N1ssan 4x4 AMI FM
AC , 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed, Good
Cond1ti0n, 614-446-2323, After 5

Hang. hmsh, repa1r
Ce11tngs tex tured, plaster repair
Cat! Tom 304-675·4186 20 ~ears
expenence

~-..;_

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8 ~ 250,

72,000 !ltles, $6,000, Can Ba
Seen AI: Gallipollo Dally Tribune,
825 Th Jrd Avenue, Galhpolie

Ohio

'

______

Jr
~

:
• ,

_,

Pars Home Improvement- remo. ·~ t
dehng, roofing. siding, cdlf 614· '

992-3.1116

•

1991 Ford Explorer Spon 4•4. 4.0

Patio Decks, Carports, Siding, ~ !
Free Estimates, Call Steve, 814- ...

two door, standard, air,
crui se, sun roof, loaded , must
see, 814 -949 ~2481 alter 5pm 1
week-.ds.
=~~--:---=----1
1992 Chevy Astro Conversion
Van, -4, ,000 miles, 4 3 V-8, auto,
loaded, 4 captain seats &amp; bench,
new t11e1, garage kept, must see.
aalung $10,900 , 614·949·2481 al
ter 5pm 1 weekends

Ron's TV ServiCe, speoahzl ng 1n
Zemlh also servio1ng IT),Oit other
brands House calls, 1-800- 7970015 WV :..:&gt;4~576!2398.
•
~
Roolmg &amp; gutters c:omptelet home
remode lmg decks I sldlng, 35
years e~tper1ence, B &amp; B Roofing
and Consttuctlon, 614 ·092 236-4

v-e.

-:-::-::-------1

1980 Cadillac Sedan Oev111e, 4 1993 Ford Aeroslar XLT extenddoor, 97,000 actual miles. good ad van 1992 Yamaha 350 Wartisha pe, must be seen, $2400, ~ or. Bolh axe. cond ~4-675-21 1 8
1963. Buick leSabre, 4 door,
58,000 mHes on motor. new pain~ 94 Ford Ranger, 9,000 nt1les,

$ 1S.OOO, loaded, heavy tluty, 814·
1192-5532
Luxury

1983 280ZX Datsun, 5 ap., 6 cyl.,

.•

·-

.I

At The Champ!on OrNe Club Pig
Sale II
Wednesday, April 17, 1996, 7: 30
Fayette Coun,ty Fa~rgrounds,
Washington C. H., OH
AuctiOneer· Merhn WOOdruH
Selhng. 200+ Barrows And Gilts
Farrowed January, Februay And
March Hamp, York, Duroc, Purebre ds And Crossbt'eds, Also P.atram Crosses Free 8uy1ng Serv·
1ce Ava1lable
$ Cash Awards To Champions
And Reserve Champions AI
Couoly And Sial&amp; Fa•• $
Buy1ng Cer11f1cate Available Toward F~rst P1g Representln' A
County We've Not Sold To In he
PaSL Call For lnior""111n
Gener·GeAetics Don Black 814·

'•
'

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•
SC~

ln· 1995, We Had 40 Class Winners That Parttc1pa1ed In Chem~
p1on Dnves At 17 County Fa1r
Shows In Oh 10 And Michigan

P.M

'•

31 Slloelloolllll :.
Indian
:
34 l'oeil
&gt;

I
I I. I I' I~

1n ~DUPit&gt; et!

Performance Teated, blac:k An gus yeartlng bulls Birth - 1, wean·
mg +25, m1lk +12, yearhng +-40

v,_n

Packed

Goodies For Kids 1990
Econollno, 71,000 M1les, Color
TV. W~red For Ntnlondo And
Soga, VCR, Atr•Condlhontng, And

IDmallc, 91 .ooo origmal mil to,
vary good transporlati"' $1350,
61&lt;4-7•2·1400.

Tape Deck IRadlo Wnh Pnvat&amp;
l1stenmg Stations Captains
Chatrl, CourtesW' Lights, R1ch Pot·
11had Oak Interior, Sky llghrs.
Power Doora tlooka / Windows,
Cruise Control, 50 L1tre V·8 En·

1988 Chevene, auto, atr, new ,..

Power Steering, Power Btakel,

buill engine. 10.000m1., new 01 •
haul! no
t $700
30
nog. • ·
575-793. ruo '

I\Ulama1ki, 5 ·Wire Tawing Package. PtrJocl For Kidl And Sum·
mor Travol. Call 014-U0 -2055
Allat 8:00. WI Be Gone Soon!

Steel Roof $6,444 Erected. Iron 2256 ask lof Mike Of J1m.
Horse Bldrs 1 ·800-352~1045
;.:;;;;;;:.;:;;;::.:..;..::.::;;..:;:;:..;:;;;;___ 1198-4 N11aan Sentra, 4 cyl. au-

for Sale

~

p1gs Aprtl 201h, 8am 10 8pm. Scan
Up!Qn, 614-378-8102.

Pa1nted Steal S1d1ng, Gablalume. runs well, $900 080, 814- 742·

560 Pets
-----------1

·=:.. . '

•

vantzed, Gatvalume And Pa)nted,

now, will sell Jor $800 304-675·
3181 .

-·· ·THE BORN-LOSER
-~ -

Fair pigs, 95 Athena &amp; Melga
Coumy Grand Champ1ona, select

:6-:14-·24-:5--5193
-:-:::--:----- l1962 Otds 98 Rogency Brougham
~io 7Bldg 7Spl ~·••Sx9 , 1 -15'•8' )1100 304 576-3197
Sl1d1ng Door, t ~ 3 ' Man Door,

=c::" :;.

llf1Sil .. ilt • . , .
What do you think ab&lt;lut hypnosis? I
'Sf ..........
have always been somewhat skeptical,
aAuclan
but I suspect there are people wbo are
.~
susceptible to this form of control.
dol•llllln
In bridge, "control" usually means
41 . . . , .
keeping trumps in check. Many play·
thpuli
era would lose trump control in this
43 Hllllul
I'
deal. But, as often happens, the ltey
play occurs outside lhe trump suit.
so fltw~~~~n ' 1 '
What do you tbinlt about the bid· ,..,._,_.._._
ding? How would you Icy to mate. four hearts after a spade lead?
Four hearts isn't a bad spot, but
three no-trump will often be easier.
North was correct to raise to two
hearts with bis minimum band. South
ahould rebid two spades or three notrump. In the later caae, if North has
'SPMYQ
MES
YMHPB
MES
four trumps, he will go back to four
hearts.
AQOFSI)OCYQI
YciPCP'B
EPUPC
South appears to have 10 tricks via
one spade, three hearts, five 'd ia·
MEL
AXEUPEOPEY
YOVP
W XC
monds and one club. HowevAr, if the
ti'Umps are brealdng 4-2, as South has
xw y G p y. •
YMCNMCPY
to expect, the liming needs to be perfed.
VOYAGP .FF .
Suppose South wins the flr&amp;t Irick,
ruffs a spaoje in the dummy, playa a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "Every actor in h1s heart believes everything bad
that's printed about him •- Orson Welles.
•
club to his ace and ruffs another
spade. Whatever South does now, the
defendet'l' have an answer. Let's as·
SUIJ1e South playa a club to his queen.
West wins with the ldnc, playa a heart
to his partner's ace, regains the lead
with the spade king and forces declar·
er with the club 10. Eaat must malte a
long trump for one down.
The b1111t play is~to duc:lt th~ ftrlil ·
trick. If the defenders continue with a
ELFENI
second spade, declarer ruffs in the
dummy and drives out the heart ace.
When back on play, perhaps with the
spade ace, declarer dfawa trumpa and
P U J M·Y
runs dummy's diamonds.

eu ~

-M-o-ta_I_R_o_o_JI_no-A-nd_S_id-ln_o_G_a_l· I ~~l:. •~ape.• $1500; 614·0. 12·

New generatiOn for Kirby vacuum
cleanet w/all attachments, $1.600

21

Eul

All pus

Boaro Jor sl!o. 614-949·2908

671 .7697, 614·675·66g2i Jldf
Swtne Farm Joe Dresbach I 01.-.
STO RAG E TANKS 3,000 Gallon 684·48.7, Rick Sfarr Nigh1 814·
Upnght. Ron Evans Enterprises, 996-2515, Day: 814-.5347.
Jacksof', Oh&lt;&gt;. 1-1100-537·9528.

:W: -Trammg System, We1ghr Machme /Stair Stepper, Parallel
Bars, Electrlf; Read Out, Elet::tm;
Tread M11l With Read Ou t, 614·
446·9442

Vf(TIM1

5515.

630

Morn! Garage Door Co Is Havmg a Dent &amp; Scra tch Sale! Over
Stocked On 1/anous S1zes Ga ~
rage Doors, Call And Savel 614·

-

-~-ABOUT ~0¥1 OL.P
15 T~f

New Idea 706

Plus 304·675-4084

Long PJOm dresses, s1zes ~- 6 , 7.
8, 13-14 1 white, 1 pmk, 1 peach.
Worn once :'1:14·675-7858

23 Far

51=

SOAA'(. MA'AM .. I
WAS THIN"-1N6

SWEETHEART
5ALL "?

OH 614-266-5944

O~eael Unlsyatem
With Combine &amp; Grain Table, New
Idea 2 Row Corn Picker, John
Deere Row Com Planter, Fertilzer
Spreader, 3 PL Hitch, 300 Ga. ,
Spreader W1th Boomer, 814-245-

Like new electnc range, 2 refngerators, 2 au1omat1c wa shers, all
m good condJbon, 614·949-2790

1e~J..

•

: :t:::•hanl

PEANUTS

Com Planllfl, Plowa, D11ks, Manure Spfeader, Rakes, ·Square
Balers, Blades, Scoops, Bale
Movers, Other Equipment How·
ell's Farm Machinery, Jackson,

:uo

••

..

Equipment

Boots By Red w1ng, Ch1ppewa ,
Tony lama Guarameed Lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe GaUtpoils.
Ca rpet &amp; Vtny l Sale Molloh an
Carpe ts 614.44 5.7444 Rt 1 N

Repa tred New &amp; Rebu1l1 In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1·800·537-9528

&amp;NT

7

22 8panlallitrtli6 · .

The day to pay

PARSON!!

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

8 pool table, slate, e~~:c cond. wl
all accessories $900 f1rm 304

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Ul

By Phillip Alder

New Holland

1

Pus

10~....-

11 8 I-=- ·
17 AIR3J&amp;

ed, Ahor 4 30 P.M. 614-4~6253

ConchtiOn, $2,200, JOhn Deere 9'
D1sc, Good Condition, $400, 614~
367-7554

~g 304-675 4136 or 304.895

lllei (CI ldall)

· Opening lead: • J

I'M FLAT

Yamaha Elec1ron1c Keyboard Ex·
cellent CondJJion, Bench Includ-

«6·616il

Hemlock from Santa's Forest' lor
la ndsca p.ng Neatly sheared 6'·8'

._

ra.---

7 6

Dealer: South
South
Well Norllo

-----------~ Larg e capacny sand blasung
1995 Ranchk ~ng lawn Mower equipment, tank, hoses &amp; pur~f1er

H1gh Wheel. 4 HP. 22" Cut, l1ke
New Used Only 4 112 Hrs . 6 14 ·

.~

Vulnerable: Neither

6 00 p nt. 61•·992-2526.
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

·=-

•s
•K Q J
•K 14

K1mball Studio P1ano . Beautiful
Walnut Fm1sh Looks &amp; Sounds
L1eke New Must see to AppreCI·

Bay or sell R1verme Antiques,
1124 E Maln Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours t.4 T.W 10 DO
am to eoo pm , Sunday 1:00 to

540

.101754
aQ J t 7 5

s•2

MusiCal
Instruments

1 -800 -268 ·6~18

Turkey, luc:hery. Gun,, Ammo,
Reload ing &amp; fiSh ing Supplies
Live Ball &amp; l1cense Crawford's,
Henderson, WV •

1 12

• South
lA K J

Console Piano Re1ponlibla party
wanted to make low monthly pay·
mertts on Ptano See locally can

Sponlng
Goods

530

l uoaaes

•K J 10 I
Eul

: ...
UO I

Buy, Soli &amp; Trade, All Broodo
Payments Welcome,
CM29

Free Oelr;ery Within 25 M1les

Women 's golf clubs. 304 ·6 75·
1211

Will do babys1tt1ng 1n my 'home
304· 576·4007

W1U Do lnter1or Or E1tter10r Pa int
lng Reasonable Rates, E~tptH I ·
enced References, For freil Es ~ ­
mates, 6 14~245-5755

V1ne S treet, Gallipolis, 1-800· 490·
:J.49tl

$150. Amana Microwave S25 ,

9648, 614-367· 7010

able rates, references, playroom,
home envi ronment, Texas Rd.,

ranty $205. Caiorle 30 lnc:h Eloc·
VIC Ra~ Almond, $1 50, Sl&lt;agg1
App l1ancoo, 5H ••6- 7398, 70

614-446·9627

$6,500 304·6{5-5708

SANDIE'S OAYCARE· reason-

1150, Whirlpool

turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb

0.151 ...440231

G E P.otscrubber Dishwasher 3 Bulls, he1fera and sleera,
Years Old, Excellent Cond1lton, 985-41 17 or 614-985-41 20.

Professional Tree Service, Slump
Removal, Free Es umate&amp; l Insurance, Bidwell, Oh10 014· 388~

••

lOr

Scoo ters
And
Wheelchatrs, .. New / Used , Van 1
Car Ufl Installed Sta1rghdes l!ft
Cha1rs, Call Fo r BrOchure, 614
446-7283

WELDER
Experte nced Welder, F!$.bflcator
Needed In Jackson Area Mln1
mum 5 Years lndustnal Experi ence With Arc, MIG And Read
1ng Bluepnnts Send Resume To
CLA 384, clo GaHtpolls Da1ty Tnb·
une, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 45631

point Rol

Washer L kt New, 1 Year War·

Groom Shop ·Pet G&lt;OOMnQ. Fea·

372-8480

18 atres mil w1th three bedroom,

Tefemarkellng Needed, No Sellrn g Soe:tllng Appomrmenrs, For
Free Program, 9 5, Top Wage, 1·
800·323· 1718

Hotpo.n1 Waahar Harveat Gold
t&amp;5, Kenmore Dryer Harveat
Gold U5. M1g1c Chof 30 Inch
Gas Ran~,Almond t UIS, HOI·

520

3111 EOH

Farms for Sale

24+ acres, three bedroom home,

Soc 1al Workers, Now Hmng $23 1 Shod, 12.,6 Butlding, 24x40 Barn.
Hr + Benefits, On The Job Tra1n $41, 500, $1,500 Down, $400
1ng To Apply In Yoor Area. 1-800· Monthly 7% Interest, 629 Blazer,

2664

In Kanaug~. , No Pet&amp;, Rtferenctt.
Deposit, Foater'l MobUe Homes,

440

erper~ence,

E1 glit Res1dent1a l Programs For
Peo pi e Wuh Mental Retardation
And De&lt;Jelopmental 01sabB1t18&amp; In
Sou theastern Oh1o ltcenaed So·
eta! Worker And Graduate From
An Accred!led Soc1al Work Program Required, MRIOO EJCpenence Preferred AnQ Knowledge
Of Med1ca1d ICFIMR Regulations
Helpful Travel Requl red ·• Must
Have A. Vahd Dnver's License
And Good Onvmg Record Salary
$22 25 000 tYear E11c:ellent Ben·
elt t Package Send Resume To
PO Bolt 604 , Jac kson , OH
45640
ATTN
Cec1tta
All
Resumes Must Be Post Marked
By 411-8/ 96 Equal Opportunity
Employer

1995 Ux70 Clayton 3 Bedrooms,
2 Ba ths, CA All El&amp;e!ne, Under-

Why Rem 1996 2 or 3 Bedroom
Uob•le Home's Payment As l ow

cle an MVR record. pre employ -

WI &lt;~

Mile CrMk. 3)4-4M-2244.

D -"·Up 61......e-38?0.

Suaat in Pomeroy, $125 deposil,
New 14.1180 2 Or 3 Bedrooms, $250 month, no inaldt pets, 814·
Make T~o Payments, Move In, 4 667 :1183 allat Sjlm
Yea• On Nole, ~-736- 7295

Ravenwood , WV baud 'arrier
now hiring truck drtvert to pull
van and flat -bed tra•lers. 1884·
19 g5 conventiOnal Peterblll ti'IC ·
rors Employee paid health insurance, paid vacation after

t yea r Three years

3 Bedroanlo, 3 Mileo From GaiU·
polio $2751Mo , $150 Dopoa11, Wr

- - - - - - , . - - - - - - .1 gino, Rear An1 1-lock Brakoo ,

....

245-9579

ASTRO-GRAPH

J

'
®

or 1·600·889-3943

820

Plumbing&amp;'
Heating

,..

Freeman's Heating And Cooling

lnllallatlon And Service. EJ&gt;o\
Certified, Rolidtnlial, CarMiftclal
614-256-1611.

840

El

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lt

t'
'

lea

ectr
I and
Refrlg&amp;Mtlon

generosity.

~-----:- GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) You will not

i'Ktt.......
~

Alllh (MMIII 21·Aprll It) II you ftnd

youruH 1n tile preeence ol Influential ,
Pi0P1t ltldlly, I . . be ll1!p0111r~ lo mille
a'gdad ..!prmlm. Do 1101 boall Of act
pcolle:IIOUt. Trying Ill palcl1 up a btcUn

you ...,, tlnleh
VIRQO (Aug. ~· 22) UN caution
today Wyou
a complex uatgn.
ment for a lrtend. Do 1101 take lilY IItke or

ma....~v~.....

-..a u....y.

In the year ahead you might become
Involved in a ~ profitable endeavor. 1\oo-, you - be lliloiU1ely &lt;:er·
l8ln 1118111 ... COflt- and legal agree.

,.,....

••e

Reol~lial or comnle!clal o.trlng,
~!;t or ropalrL Ua11llr LJ.
censed ei.C:Irlelan. Ridenour

Eloclricol, WV000300. 304-871·
1788.

.. .

, ..,:...,
~n

•.:-.. 1

~ "' '

• ::it\4_.

!

•

I'

be labeled s~ngy lpd&amp;Y 'If you uae your
common sense and turn down a loan

request from a pal Let your llnanclal
atalements speak for themaelves.
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) If the value&amp;
associated With a present objective are
not In accordance with your high stan·
darda, drop Mand """""'''rate on a goal
that Ills your needs.
·
U!O (July 23-Aug. 22) Malee 8Ufll yoU!
licllla 818 tufted 10 the lypee ot lll8ica lor
which you Intend to u.. lhem today, H
they aren't, you,mlghl atart 110m8thlno

Tuesday, Aprlll8, 1998

RSES CERflfiiED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
••Y'",
Ho11 Pumpo, Air Ccindi&lt;ia~lng p I -' V
You Don't CaM Us W. Both l.Di.1 :1..:;,
Free Eatlma181, 1·800-211-GON. fi"'I;J"'
OH
6308, WV0021145.
•.·Jjor.';

1\Siro·Graph Matchmaker
can
you understand What to do to
make 1he relationship work. Mail $2 75 to
Matchmaker, c/o thiS newspaper, P 0
Box 175B. Murray Hill Station, New Yoll&lt;,
NY 10156.
'
TAURUS (April 20-M8y 20) You should
try to jlS$181 olhers today when they ask
for your help. Howevw, don't let a rl\8ftlpulallve person taka advaQIIO'i or your

,.Idled~.

~·

•

Rllnlllle

operating Independently
LIBRA (Stpl. 23-0cl. 23) You might get
caught In the m~ Wyou try to appease

two warring parties today. Do not step
owr the line 1n favor of either person.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Weigh your
Words carefully today. If you don't, you
might dlscloee confidential lnfonnatlon by

ac:cklenl. If you spllllhe beans, 11 Will be
herd to cover up.
S~GITTARIUI (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) Try to
be raaNstiC IOda)r In regard to something
you want Do not e•pecl to have a lin·
fShed prodUcl handed 10 you on a silver
platler
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ...Ian. 11) When

discussing an Important family maHer
today, give everyone a chance to speak
You may elicit re..ntment II you try to
irripose your views on the others.
AQUAfiiU8 (J1n. IG-Fab. 11) Before
you docido 1o drop In on -today.
you ahould chacl&lt; In advance to - II
they will be aYallable: OlhtrWIH, you
mlghlwMia a trip.
'
NCIII ~ 20 1111'1111 20) Today, I a
·ca..- lriand WMII 10 boltow a prize
pDIIIII Ieo, rniM l*n llhdloAul hil you
8IIPid lo gat • blc:l! In the- ootdlon.

I.

APRIL 151

�:·

••

pege10 • The O.lly Sentinel
•

Monday, Aprt115, 1 -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thousands gather·for march against the right
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Fightina wbllthey see IS a rising tide
of conservatism, thousands of
marchers toolc to the streets to support affumative action, women 's
reproductive freedom and gay rights.
" An extremist ultra-right wing has
taken control of one of the two major
centrist political p.rties. They are
racist. !hey are sexist, they are homo-

H~uman

phobic," author Gloria Steinem told
a crowd of about 13,000al Su~y 's
"flight the Right" rally sjJonsored by
the National Organization for
Women.
Marchers - including actor Danny Glover and the Rev. Jesse Jackson
- pr01ested racism. violence against
women and w~t they called a war on
women in poverty. Several carried

signs with slogans such as: "Slop tiie
War on the Poor," and " Oet Your
Rosaries Out of My Ovaries."
·~ we aie a majority," NOW President Patricia Ireland said after the
march. "If 1992 was the year of the
woman and 1994 was the year of the
angry white man, then 1996 is going
to be the year of the majority."
Ireland said attacks on abortion

clinics, arson fires at African-Amer- crowd at about 13,000, NOW said
ican churches and other hate crimes about 40,000 came and went throughwOQ)d not intimidate those fighting out the day.
fpr the cause.
"It's wonderful to lcnow there's so
"They only make us more com- much support out there. You can feel
milled to SWld togelher in unity." Ire- so isolated sometimes when you ' re
land said. "Our lives .re on the line. • bombarded with the bad news from
Our future and our families' futures Washington," said 'Sandra Holland.
are on the line."
32, of Brunswick, Maine.
Though police estimated the

It pays to be at the right place at the right time
NEW YORK (AP) -Take a star Phoenix Suns on Sunday. Afterward, people because of her collapsing
from "Melrose Place" - Heather Johnson acknowledged he will prob- marr~ge and a reputation for aloofness. But her popularity has sbared
.Locklear, for example - add an ord i- ably be suspended.
"I have to accept the responsibil- since her 1992 divorce · from Capt.
nary TV movie script portraying tile
Mark Phillips and her successful
comeback of a victimized woman, ity for what I did." he said.
The
incident
was
out
of
character
marriag to Cmdr. Timothy Laurence.
imd there's a deal .to be made.
With little to distinguish one for the 36-year-old team leader who She also has shown devotion to a
movie from the next,. TV producers chided forward Cedric Ceballos last number of charit~ble causes.
say the only winning ticket is to fea- month for leaving the·team without
ture a hot female star from one of ·permission, and guard Nick Van Exel
LOS ANGELES (API- Christtelevision's hottest shows.
last wee k for a similar referee-bump- ian Slater had to flee through a bed"You can attach any of the gals ing incident.
. room window to escape tlames
from " Beverly Hills 90210" ·Or
. "I want to lie the best e&lt;ample for engulfing the deck of a home where
"Melrose Place" to a blank piece of this team," Johnson said. "I harp on he spent the night.
paper, and you'll wind up with a net- the other players all the time for what
A smoke detector woke the actor
work deal," a producer who asked to they do wrong. and now I do this. I early Sunday morning and flames
remain anonymous says in the April just hope they still hear my voice." prevented him from leaving out a
20 "TV Guide."
bedroom door. He and an unidentiThus. viewers have already witLONDON (AP) - Once the least fied woman esc;oped through a firstnessed such made-for-TV classics as popular of Queen Elizabeth ll's four . floor bedroom window with two
Tori Spelling's "Co-ed Call Girl" and children, Princess Anne is now the dogs, said Fire Chief Rod Wilmot.
Tiffani-Amber Thiessen's "She royal more Britons would like to see
No one was injured and no one
Fought Alone."
as their monarch, .
was in the house, located in a .
Locklear
is
commanding ·- · Those questioned in a new poll else
rustic canyon area about eight miles
$500,000 per TV ·movie. Spelling of chose Anne - eighth in line to the . northwest bf downtown.
'
"90210," and her former castmate throne- from a list of heirs and pubSlater. who co-starred with John
Shannen Doherty are right behind, in lie figl!res. •
Travolta in "Broken Arrow," later
the $400,000 range. Other actresses
She polled 33 percent with heir- walked through the charred deck area
on the two hot shows earn about apparent Charles second, backed by and talked to firefighters. He refused
$250,000 for a starring role.
26 percent of respondents in the Mori to comment to photographers:
poll, commissioned by Independent
The fire was blamed on an elecLOS ANGELES (AP) - When ·Television.
·
trical problem.
his teammates got into trouble this
Only 47 percent thought Charles
season, Magic Johnson was outspo- would make a good king, compared
ken in his criticism. Guess who's in · to 82 percent in a 1991 poll. His rep-·
NASSAU. Bahamas (AP)- O.J.
hot water now?
utation has suffered following his Simpson's golf practice is paying off.
The Los Angeles Laker~ basket- 1992 separation from Princess Diana,
Simpsgp led his team to victory
ball 'star was ejected for bumping a · and subsequent cpnfession of .adul- Sunday illl a celebrity golf tournareferee after he was whistled for a tery.
ment, which raised $43,000 for the
technical foul in the second quarter of
Their _son Prince William. after International Sickle Cell Foundathe Lakcrs' 118-114 victory over the . Charles in the succession, came in tion.
third place with 12 percent. Diana,
He teamed up with his daughter
34, scored 7 percent. but she is not in Arnelle; Detroit Lions cornerback
line for the throne .
.
Ryan McNeil and three others to win
Princess Anne, 45, had for years the 36-hole tournament.
lost her standing among the British

'Primal Fear' ·
still No. 1 at
the box office.

Safler's Inc.

Anter B.ros. Co.

Phont 555-1022
Ellabllllttd , .

Pliant 555-2211
Elllblltlttd 1800

Pltonnss 4431
Eltlblllhttl1903.

80 Years
Acme Rentals

Vircap Services

Phone 555-8782
Established 1915

EllabHihld 1917•

70 Years

67 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service
Phone 555 Udl

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Bsil Security Bonds

Phones~

P'-5556565
Eltlblllhld 1941

FOR YOU
'
• TO

52 Years
Bail Secu~ty BOnds
Phone 555 95t7
El11blllhed 1M3

'

44 Years

40 Years·

Kramer &amp;Sons

S&amp;M Ll~scalilng

Phone 555-4777
EstiiJIIIIted 1t51

Phone 555 545e
Elllllllalttd 1155

25 .Years

20 Years

.•

JuGGLE

Talk to your independent agent. insist on longterm experience, communitv presence, and
someone who is with vou both before and
.after things happen. Just do this one thing, ,
and leave the juggling Kt to us.

Your lndependelll ..Venu
Semn, Meip County Since '1868

. ~ Gllcls Mil• laser IIIHI1*t
. 111 Second...
Ponlelot
'. 112-3381
~ repruentlng the

W

·

~~c~~ty Group

.

WHEf!E EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR

.

POliC~

30 Years

Med.Care Center Inc. trlskett Party Center
P1lont 555 11155
Eslablllhttl1965

Pltont 555 0287
Ellablllltld 1110

,
..
LORDSTOWN (AP) -Workers
UAW Locallll2 represents about
.. retumed to the job today at a Goner- - 5.500 active workers at the plant,
al Motors Corp. assembly plant after. which assembles Chevrolet'Cavaliers
a one-day walkout to protest the fir- and Pontiac Suofires.
ing of a union official.
On Monday,. first-shift workers
· Limiled production resumed Mon- reported at 6: 18 a.m., b.ut walked out
day _night after second-shift workers, . three hours later.
ordered back lo the
. plant·by the Unit1be union local issued a statement
ed Aulo Workers union, reported for Monday oideri'IS,the·workers to' end
work.
the unauthorized walkout,.known as
II was un~lear if production a wildcat strike.
"This is not an authorized strike
resumed with the today's first shift,
which began a1 6:18 a.m. EDT. Nei- and the membership should return to
!her the union nor the company work immediately," the statement
returned . phone calls seeking com- said. It was signed by Local 1112
ment today, but workers heading into President Tony Zone and by the fired
, ;the plant this morning told WKBN in shop chairman, AI Alii.
: Yount~stown they were planning to
Union officials could not be
:.: get back to work.
reached for further comment today.
.'
OM spokeswoman Linda McGill There was no answer early' today at
·d Monda 'ght lh
"" ..._
·
fli
The h
1 h
w
y ru
at enqu,... wo...- unton o 1ces.
ome te ep one
ers reported for tilt &amp;ec!lfld shift to numbers for Alii and Zone are unpub·resume limited production. She did lished.
,
'd
, ·not have an ~xact number but sa1
A man who identified himself as
:about '1,800 peOple typically work :·t a memher of the local's executive
.each shift.
.board ordered reporters out of the

Crystal Glass :Co:

OU s,lects
new Pf0V0Sf

Pltonesss-~

.

Elllblllltecl1171
.

f'E YOUR BUSINESS LISTED!
The "Honor Roll" ~ appear in the
Friday, May 17th Edition of
The Daily Sentinel.
The Cost Is Only $12

mittee chairmen for the project are
er and hopefully started making
Mike Duhl, quality of life; Dun
some real progress in the future
Poole, infrastructute/transporta. growth of the .county." said Duhl.
tion; Jim Tompkins, economic
The plan will now be used as a
development; John Costanzo, eduresource tool for business and ecocation; and Jon Jacobs, human
nomic development opportunities,
resources and services.
new resi'dents and visitors to the
"Meigs County now has an
county, and for county groups and
oq:anized vision, There is a wealth
agencies, according to Houdashelt.
of untapped resources in this ooun"This plan' extensively involves
ty which have a great j,otential for ·
individuals , and organizations
development. With this plan and
which have a stake in the future of
.... Its
· "deve1~ment, .. Me1gs
· c ounty.· Th'IS WI'II deve1op .
1he 'I'&gt;Wk l()w.,u
lfte eooun\\~ltY'hiiS-wbriieJtiigethpartnerships With'!elated; and even
·
p--_

competing counties, and increase
the possibilities in accomplishing
one or more of the goals recommended," said.Houdashelt.
The completion of 1he county
plan will not conclude the strategic
planning pr~ss for local officials.
"The process is really just
beginning. The co~miuees
Involved in the plan development
will continue to meet bi-monthly in
order to pursue the goals established as a result of their work,"
adlled Houdashelt. ·
•

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
•
County employees will observe a.
moment.of silence Friday morning in
remembrance of 168 l&gt;eople killed in
the April 19, 1995 bombing of the
Alfred W. Murrah Federal Building
in Oklahoma City.
At the request of Sheriff James M.
Soulsby and Common Pleas Coon
Administrator Paul Gemrd,the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
Monday afternoon adopted a resolution honoring the victims of lhe fatal~~
blast.·
·
'
.At 8:30 a.m .. all county offices
will observe one minute of silence
and the U.S. fl~g at the courthouse
will be lowered to half staff, accotding to the resolution.
In other qtatters, the 'board opehed
bids on a Community Development
Block Grant projeet to replace the
. roof on the Middleport-Fire Station.
The lowest bid of$9,700 was submined by the Hackel! Co. ofColuinbus. Other companies submitting
bids were : Banks Construction.
Pomeroy, $18,500; Home Creek
Enterprises, Pomeroy, $15,498; and
AOK Construction, Cheshire,
$14,385.
Commissioners also opened bids
on asphalt concrete and bituminous
· matena
· I'• •or
' • an d!.AQre&amp;ate pav1ng
the remainder of the month .
·on the recommendation of Coun-

arking. plan in June ~~:::;~~2a~~i~~.~~r:
The issue was first brought to

nade, making parking along the
promenade a permit-only proposition. establishing one-way tmffic in
the parking lot; and enforcing a twohour limit on meter parking,
At that meeting, Blaettnar suggested' a $25 permit.
Bridge wins suppor1
Council also endorsed construetion of a new Ohio River bridge · 3}

council on Nov. 20, 1995 by former
. Mayor John W. Blaettnar in light of
the ongoing grand promenade project. For aesthetic reasons, village
officials are reluctant to reinstall
Parking meters along the. promenade.
Blaennar proposed ' dropping the
price of parking permits, · not
installing meters along the prome-

'

•

ATIIENS (AP) - A dean at a
New York universily has been
appointed provost at Ohio Univer.,. sity.
.
: · . Sharon Ste(lhens Brehm will
.start her new job July 1, OU President Robert Glidden said Monday.
The provost is the head acadeinic
f the ·
•
...,.... 0
umverstty.
Brehm was awarded lhreeyear cootract and will be paid

By EUZABETH NEUS

Gannett New• Service

. . . . .ft

a

"!"

_¥_

technolog~

plant, any walkout could not have the
nator for the Eastern Local ScllooJ~r· : &gt; • ,'
wide-ranging effect of last month's
who wants to hold a technology fair
·•
~trike at rwo Daytdn brake plants.
in the county .to allow Meigs resiThat walkout created parts shortages
dents access to new compyter techat other plants and shut !fown much
nology.
of GM 's North American operations.
Sbe asked for assistance by the
. The 18-day strike by 2,700 workcommission and Economic Developers in a local contract disnute was setment .Director Julia Houd8sheh to
tied March 22.
"
plan the event.
The Tribune Chronicle of Warren
Ken Riggs of Chester indicated his
reported that Alii was fired Saturday
intention to start a company offering
for improperly clocking oul Alii told
local Internet access with a special
the newspiJPCr that he clocked out the
discount for school-aged children.
same way he has for 20 years.
Riggs said he does a lot of business
Deibel said Alii was fired "for
through the Internet.
improper conduct in the plan~ conIn other business, the board:
duc t to
· vto
· 1au·on of au
1
th
'
Met &amp;with
Mi1chel
R. . Strain
of
··~ rues at
Burgess
Niple
En. '"nee
n'ng and
apply to that"
.,.
He refused. to give details or say
h TELLING
h 1 HIS SIDEf ., 1 AI Alii; .Architects of Columbus about further
whether it was related to the clock- s op c a rman o un ted Auto study of the old county landfill on
.
Workers 1112, discussed his fir- Howell Hill Road near Pomeroy.
tng out procedures.
. ing from a General Motors · Strain said the .Ohio EnvironmeitAlii, the union's lead negotiator, assembly plant at the union
Pr
· A
.
has been deadlocked in talks with
ta1 otectJon ·gency requires tWo
office In Lordstown. Union mem- studies before work can be done to
Lordstow~ management over use of bers staged a one-dav walkout
ff f
outside sources for the manufacture Monday 1o protest A~l's firing. treat water runo rom the closed
of rome parts, staffi.ng and health and (AP)
landfill. One study has been comsafety issues.
(Continued on Page 3)

Studies differ over personal cost of health insurance:

WASHINGTON - If you are
keeping score, the tally is now three ·
studies that say health insurance
refonn will.not affect your premium
much if you buy insurance on your
own, and two studies that say iiJWi\1 ..
1be latest study. released Monday,
•YS premiums for people who buy
insurance as individuals and not.
tlirough their jobs 'will go up anywhere · from ·less than I percent to
S'.~he~O:, ~~ of the College about 5.7 percent if the bill sponsored
of Arts and Sciences at the Stale
by Sens. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan .•
University.of N~w York in Bing·
and Ed')Vard Kennedy. D-Mass.•
·
becomes law.
~~ou, ahe repltces David
But because premiums in.the indiStewmo who a1lltO!lnced hla retitevidual market t~enprally rise more
: ment. Iul f.JI.
;
,.
lhfllr lheach year; ."The lon
,dg:ruke-n"
1
1
1
.-~-------'..----...1 ~nee! o ts egu abon wou 11
•'

·
union hall earlier Monday and said
there would be no comment.
1\vo retired UAW workers picketed for a short time Monday alongside a road leading to a plant
entrance. They expected the strike 10
continue until Alii went back 10
..._
'
wo!1oey got rid of AI, they got rid
of everybody," said Tom ()ales, 53, of
Austintown. "Without AI, the place
is nothing."
GM spokesman Ray Deibel said
the union members must return 10
work, but he would not say whether
they will be fired for the walkout. The
company was not ta!ki ng WI'th th e
union about the s••ike.
"I can tell you...the action taken at
Lordstown by UAW Local. 1122
employees who walked off the job is
an illegal work stoppage and violates
the work stoppage and strike a.,...,._
co·ment between General Motors and
the United Auto Workers," Deibel
said.
Since ~rdstown is an assembly

lis, for asphalt concrete, and for
bituminous by Asphalt Materials Inc.
of Marielta and thenJurthered three
bids for aggregate material to Eason
for further review.
Eason explained that the highway
departrnentisapplyingforagrantfor
additional repairs to Roy Jones Road
between Syracuse and Forest Run
Road.
He ~ed the board to commit
$5,000 Jil CDBG funds toward the
$70,000 project, a request commis-

sio~:~~rs~~~~
then mei wit))
Nancy Larkins,
·coordi-

;GM workers return .from one-day walkout

hllbllslttd 1eM

Years

cOUNTY PLAN RELEASED:._ Sybil Haney, left, of the Buckeye Hllls·Hocklng Valley Region·
el Development District, dlecuuea the compilltlon of 1he Meigs County Strategic Plan .Man·
day. With Haney Is Meig1 Economic Development Director Julia Houdashel1. (Sentinjl) photo)

'·
'
'
· By JIM FREEMAN
ing permit. ThoSe parking elsewhere
"I thought !he original suggestio~
· Sentinel Newa Staff
will have to feed parking meters and about permit parking was best,"
Rejecting a plan proposed by be limited to two hours.
Council President John Musser said.
downtown merchants, Pomeroy ViiLast month, the Pomeroy MerMusser said the merchants' prolage Council Monday night look chants Association proposed. free posal would reduce parking revenue
action to resolve a 5-month-old parking on the parking lot coupled byabout$8,000ayear,whichwould
· dilemma over the future of downtown with metered, timed parking on the · costthe village about $2,000 annual: parking.
streets.
ly after deducting wages paid to the
As of.June I, motorists wanting to ·
Both plans eliminate day-long meter maid.
park on the river side of the parking . streetside parking permits and com"It's the only way to create enoltgh
. lot will have tQ purchase a $50 park- • plimentary permits.
money for the meter maid," he said.

61 Years

Phone 555-1245
El1111lllhed 1925

'·

You've got a lot on vour mind. You're building
vour world and vour insurance needs are
. real. But you don't need to add this worrv
to ·v our list.

ByTOMHUNTEfl
focuses available resources on
Sentinel Newt Stllff
shaping emerging opportunities in
Meigs County officials feel they ' a rapidly . changing environment.
have taken another vital step in the This plan will play an imponant
process to attract economic devel- role in receiving future state fundopment to lhe ,area with Monday's
ing for various projects, and will
official unveiling'·of the "Meigs immediately provide us direction
County Strategic Plan for the late in following through on goals the
1990!i'and Beyond."
various committees have set" said
Presentation of the plan at the Houdasbelt.
regular meeting of the Meigs
Committee members are hopeCounty Board of Commissioners fullhat this stnitegic plan of action
. culminated over two years of data will be beneficial iii:
collettion. information gathering,
• Helping Meigs County
planning and organizing by an become an attractive develo)iment
advisory committee of several area of diven;e C~:Onomies which
Meigs County business lllid com- . provide full employment;
•· Encourage area residents 10
munity leaders, according to Eci&gt;'nomic Development Director Julia prom01e their culture and heritage
Houdashelt.
as part of their diversification
The 92-p;!ge plan was compiled efforts;
by Houdashelt's offiCe in coopera:
• Promote the county as an area
lion with the commissioners and offering a high quality of life and
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
multitude of diverse opponuniRegional Development District. · ties, based on its natural resolll'ces.
During the project, advisory Such recognition can only be
committees evaluated the issues of accomplished by providing suffiinfrastructure and transportation, cient public infrastruCiure, educationa!, health, and social services 10
quality of life, economic develop·rnent, human resoun::es and ser- amply support a high quality of
vices, and l!ducation. Objeclives communily life.
"
and strategies were set by the
Houdashelt ~ked the comcommittees to increase grQWih in , missioners and committees for
those areas and make Meigs Coun- their time and dedication toward
ty more marketable for develop- the successful completion of the
ment. .
p\an, and presented copies of the
"Thi
· •L· s 1s
u'!" resu1t of a co11abop1an to all strategic pJaimins par- .
· ' · ·~~pniessthllt l';-"'u'clpaniS'.
. ··~ :-: ---eti nr:· '
·
·
·
·

.

LESS

THING

89

555-1.342
EllabftshM1t23

.flttone 555-8242

A Gonelt Co. lh:MIII'I*

Moment
of silence.:
scheduled
for Friday··;

.Po. .meroy -t o_implement

78

Eatabllslttd 1835

ONE

•

.·~

Fonst Hill Cleaners

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll16,1996

Meigs unveilS
stra-tegic, plan

.'

92 Years

tonight. Low In
301. We n . .dly eunny,
high In mid eo..

•

• -·

60 Years

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Richard Gere courtroom drama "Primal Fear" was the nation's No. 1 film
for a second week with an estimated
weekend box office take of $8.1 million, studio and industry sources
reponed.
The children's animated fantasy
"James and the G·iant Peach" was a
close second, earning about $8 mil·
lion in its debut, followed by "The
Birdcage" with $7.1 million.
Final weekend box office figures
were to be released today.
·
" Fear," starring Mark Wahlberg.
opened in founh place with $6.9 million and the Martin Lawrence film
"A Thin Line Between Love &amp;
Hate" ·was fifth with an estimated
$5.6 million.
The comedy "Kids in the Hall :
Brain Candy" earned $85P,OOO at
163 locations in its debut for an
impressive $5.~15 per location. That
compares to $4,085 per location for
the top film: "Primal Fear."
The Top I0 weekend box office
performers:
J. "Primal Fear," $8. I million.
2. "James ani! the Giant Peach,"
$1! million.
·
· 3. "The Birdcage," $7.1 million.
4. "Fear," $6.9 million.
5. "A Thin Line Between Love &amp;
. Hate," $5.6.million.
· · 6. "Sgt. Bilko,'' $3.8 million.
· 7. "Executive Detision," $3 million (tie).
.
8. "Flirting With Disaster," $3
million (tie). '
.
· 9. "Oliver &amp; Company." $2.4 million.
10. "Fargo," $1.9 million.

Voi.41,NO.Z48

:I ~ICIIono, , . ......

•

100 Years 95 Years

Cln"1.

Buckeye 5:
4-18-23-29-36

•

·---·----.-,.---

---

8814

r

Be A Part Of
The _Daily Sentinel.,s

'

Plck3:
926
Pick·4:

Sporta, Page 4

could be a potential long-term use,"
Cognitive functions did not improve off the idea, saying there is evidence effects of aging.
"it may •!ow down things and that Papadakis said.
significantly and many experienced that the hormone at least ·retards the
side effects.
·
More than three-foUf(hs of the
men complained of swollen ankles.
aching joints and stiff hands. A quarter of the research sul&gt;jects asked that
their dose~ be lowered because of the
physical problems.
"To our disappointment. we found
absolutely no improvement in function," Papadakis said.
One possible reason the studies
yielded different results could be that
Rudman's participants knew they
were getting the hormone and were
expecting to feel better, Papadakis
said .
In contrast, half the men in thehtest study were given shots of the hormone .three times a week and half
received a placebo. ~ut .none of
them - including their doctors knew who was getting the real thing.
I
In addition to the unpleasant side
effects, Papadakis said, the drug is
expensive. The hormone therapy can
cost $12,000 a year.
But she did not completely write

----------

Ohio Lottery

Marathon
tunnerdles
In 1OOth race

San Francisco SupeJVi- Kev'Shelley told the crowd he hoped
never become a "mean-spirited white
male.''
"As one white guy who nevO.
wants to be a narrow-111inded o!jl
white guy. I say to those of yQu he!'!
that you must stand finn for justice.'·'
he said. • ·
' •

growth hormone ·does not ·gr~atly reverse aging process

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
Papadaki s sought to duplicate
growth hormone hailed for its poten- Rudman 's study and go further by
tial to reverse the effects of aging comparing the men's strength, stadoes not significantly improve the mina and mental skills before and
lives of elderly men and can cause after taking increased levels of horpainful side effects,' according to a mone.
study published today.
" The bottom line with aging is the
" Thi s is not the fountain of issue of loss of function, not how a
youth." said Dr. Maxine A. person looks," she said.Sunday.
Papadakis, a professor of medicine at
Over six months, 56 men between
the University of California-San . the ages of 70 and 85 were given dosf'rancisco and director of the study on es of somatropin equivalent to levels
the growth hormone somatropin.
in men half their ages.
Her findings, published in the
Higher levels of the hormone are
Annals ofinternal Medicine, contrast naturally found in younger men.
with those of a ballyhoOed 1990 Also, previous stu~ies have found
study by Dr. Daniel Rudman of the that increased levels of growth horMedical College of Wisconsin, which , mone in younger people can improve
found the first evidence suggesting muscle mass and strength.
growth hormone could reduce sympThe Papadakis . study 'found the
toms of aging.
·
older inen's muscle mass increased
In that study, 12 men between the slightly - about 4 percent - and
ages pf 61 and 73 who took growth body fat decreased - about 13 perhormone reported that they felt · cent - but they did not get any
stronger. more active, and their minds stronger.
were sharper. Researchers observed
The men had thicker muscles, but
that six months of treatment appeared it didn't improve their ability to lift
to cancel out I0 to 20 years of some a leg.machine, squeeze a hand grip or
age-related·changes.
• ride an exercise bike, the study said.

.,..

...•

said.
"Legislation like the KassebaumKennedy bill moves us in the right
direction, but· we have to remember
there are larger underlying problems
that must be solved lo promote reasonably priced health care for all consumers," said Gail Shearer,' author of
the CU report, "Health Care CheckUp: Consumers at Risk."
The RAND report is the latest in
an ongoing tug-of-war over what tbe
Senate bill will do to insurance premiums. Depending on which report
you read, the bill either will do nothing - or send premiums soaring for
anywhere between ).50,000 and several million people.
/
The studies all focus ·on the same
I0 million peopie -those who buy
insurance on their own. The Senate

ly be undetectable," said the study by exhausted COBRA benefits; is buyRAND. a private research finn spe- ing soon afler thejob loss; and cannot get insurance through a spouse's
cializing in health care issues.
"If you're going to oppose this plan.
.·. The bill would do little to help
.legislation, there are a lot of reasons,
but this (the chalice of higher premi- those who are uninsured because thev
ums) is not one of them," said Jacob · cannot afford the coverage. While
Klennan, author of the repon. · . insurers would have to sell· to most
As the Senate debate on Kasse- ' new customers, the bill does not
baum-Kennedy nears - a vote is require them to make the coverage
expected sometime· ·this' week affordable for everyone.
In fact, Consumers Union Monstudies dissecting its pros and cons
proliferate. The _bill is designed to day issued a .report ·claiming the
help workers whO cannot get insur-. health care marketplace is Jx:coming
ance for pre-existing medical condi- more unfriendly; the number of unfutions. arid those who cannot change spre'&amp; and underinsured (those with
jobs bec•use they will lose wiiatever not enOugh insurance) has risen since
'
covenge they have. . •
national health care refonn efforts
Insurers wolild be required to sell ' failed in 1994, and the number of
to anyone whc:&gt; hai had insurance for people uridet 65 with employerat teas1 12 months II! an old joti; has based COVCfllge has fallen, the report

'

••

•

•

.bill requires that insurers sell ro
those who leav·e employef'-based
· group insurance·and want'to enter the
individual market - a process
known as guaranteed issue.
Premiums for those who buy
insurance through employers - thi!
vast majority of people with insur•
ance - should not than11e much if
the bill passes.
·
The largest estimate comes .ffom
· the Council for Affordable Health·
. Insunince - CAHI - which said
. premiUIJlS 'lllent up imywhere from 25'
.to 80 pertent in seven states with legislation requirin11 insurers to sell to
·anyone. An oft-quoted study from lhe'
·Jieallh Insurance Associadoa of
·America- HIAA- SI!YS ~IIW
lwm rise as !"tich as 30 percent ·

1

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