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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport

Pag&amp;-n6-Sunday Tlmee

-

Ohio Lottery

•

February 26, 1995

C'•lllpolls, OH Point Pleaxnt, WV

Eastern
eliminated
by Beaver
Eastern

F-36 Statistics

House of the week-· -

Design F-36 has a living room,
dining room, family room,
ki~chen with dinette, five bedrooms, two baths and a two-story
foyer, for a total2,196 square feet
of habitable space. Finishing the
standard basement option would
add a further 1,553 square feet of
living space.' The re is a two-ear
garage with a storage area .

Ample Space a Bonus in Traditional Style

Doors from the .master suite and
the family room lead to separate
terraces. The overall dimensions
of 46'8" by 54'4" include th e
garage. Foundation optio n s
include a standard basement. a
slab or a crawlspace foundation.
Generic foundation conversions
diagrams may be requested
when ordering the blueprints.

253
Pick 4:

2957
Super Lotto:
3-20-24-35-39-45
Kicker:

'Low,tonlghtln 40s. Rain.
Tuesday, rain. Hlgb In 50s.

5

---· ---·
14 • 11 -4

Pick 3:

lhU·4

·,

·..

~-

l

II

•
nar ro w lap sidi ng , repeating
gables with half-ro und windows,
a sid e lig hted fron t entry and a
coverer! front porch. The roomy
in ter ior offers a tot al 2, 196
square fee t of space, with as
many as five bedrooms and large
. areas perfect both for fa mil y
activities ~nd entertaining.

To Order Study Plan

Inside; the luminous two-story
foyer includes a plant shelf over
th e front door and an open stairway with a balcony overlook
. above. To the left is a spacious
formal area that combines the liv-.
ing artd dining rooms. A fireplace
and .a cathedral ceiling are featured here. To the right of th e
foy e r. doubl e doo r.s open to a
cozy study or an optional fifth
bed room.
At the bac k of th e home, the
informal areas focus on an expansive family room with a combination fireplace and media center.
French doors on either side of
th e fireplace open to a backyard
terrace.
The kitchen, which adjoins the

II

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Eluild. Buy or Sell It, Rancfl Homes. 24 of the most popular from this
feature, Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems ; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send checkor money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week. The Sunday- Times Sentinel. P.0 . Box 1562,

family room. feature s a .sunny
sink. a handy pantry and a bayed
dinette.
The master suite has its own
quiet corner on the main floor.
Double doors open to the suite,
which has a private terrace and a ~
bath with a dual-sink vanity , a
skylighted whirlpool tub, a separate shower and a large walk-in ·
closet. Nearby, a mud room with
a storage closet and laundry tacitities open to the two-car garage .
An open stairway leads to the
upper floor, which offers three
additional bedrooms and another
bath . A window with a plant shelf
brightens the stairwell and foyer
below.

F-36 UPPt:R FlOOR - ' - - - - . / f r ' - - - - - ' -'

FAMILY lUI

16·4 • IS· I

DNNGDI

~c..L

Clip thi s order and return label ·

Enclos~d Is $4 for plan No. - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - -

Enclosed Is $4§ 5 each lor ?t.e booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ __,__ _
' Name __________________~------------------Street__________~~----------------------City _ _ _ _ _ _- : - - : - - - - - - - - - - State (ZIP) ______.__;___ _ _

~

_ _ _ _ _ _:.._

--

MAS1ER SUil'E
16 • 12·4

'

13. 25

Firm to relocate offices

New York, N.Y. 1011 6-1562.

POMEROY ~The, Hockman with attorneys and minimizes
Group will be moving its offices death-related taxes and administra~
from a home-based operation to a tive costs, he added. The company
new site outside Pomeroy.
, also offers help with health•insurThe HockQian Group, estab- ance claims.
lished in 1991. helps administer nappla B
.
-·.Wills, truSts and eslati! J?1pnnin~~. I"
8 an~orp~
Owner Dennis Hockman IS a ceru- ShOWS diVidend gain
lied paralegal.
·
The new office is loc·ated at
MARIETTA • The Board of
42994 State ~oute 124 outside . Directors of Peoples .B!I"c~ Inc.
Pomeroy. Th1s move was made declared a quarterly diVIdend m the
possible through a Small Business amount of $0.16 per share for
Administration loan from the Common Stoek. 1be dividend will
Enterprise Development Corp. in . be paid on April 1, 1995, 10 StoCk·
Athens, Hockman said.
hofders of record on March 15,
The firm coordinates contact 1995.

UVING 11M

)
~.\__,--,

· ' r
. ./1.- ; 'fl'- .

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I/

1

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·· F-36

· I 1-Jt. MArN 1LOOR
lliE 1WO-SI'ORY foyer is an elegant entry, suitable for this spacious hom Th f 'ly
·
I'
· r
1 th ·
e.
e. ami room 18 a sp~aw mg mto~a ga e!'ng
area, and convement to the roomy k1tchen. The dmette enJOys
bayed windows and views of the rear terrace. F'we bedrooms mak"
this a practical design, with one of the bedrooms able to function as
a study.

WEST VIRGINIA'S
LARGEST CONVERSION VAN DEALER WITH OVER 300 TO CHOOSE FROM!
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• Taxes. Tag5. T~le Fee! ertra. Rebate ntU:Ied 10 sale poc;e ol f'IE'W ~etide ~sled .-hefe

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Ohio's poor getting poorer,

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.111 ·1-.IAJIIIII Ill· III.IT

-11:-·IPI

~dvocate

says

Report finds missing records
delay hearings for parolees

. Updating system
'real expensive
pr/Qrity': official

BRAND NEW
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Reluctant witness
may make, break.
Simpson
case for _
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Hollister
updated
on needs

By GEORGE ABATE
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Assoc~
· led Press Writer
·
.
Ll- Gov. Nancy Hollister lauded
LO ANGELES - Despite all the· fancy_lawycrs. .with their snazzy
the state's recent efforts to improve
-=
co"'urtr
~ ·m graphics and top-Oight DNA expcrts, the outcome of the OJ.
sChools, particularly cxtta funding
Simpson trial may rest on the credibility of a housekeeper who says she
for the state's poorest schools. ,
doesn't even want to be here.
"
\
But, more school spending will
Rosa Lopez, a· potential alibi wimcss who used to work next door ro
not. solve all the problems, Hollistef
Simpson , reluctantly and tearfully agreed to return to court today to testify
said during her visit 10 the Tuppers
for the defense rather Lhao carry out a threat to nee to her native El SalP~ns Elememary School.
vador over lhc weekend.
\,..l
· "Thai commitment is not necesSuperior Court ludgc Laocc ho agreed to interrupt the prosccutioo's
I '
sarily more money," she said.
case with her testimony rather !han take a chance one of lhe trial's most
Both Hollister and Gov. George
important witnesses would hop on a Taca Airline flight and never be seen
1 again.,
·
·
·
Voinovich intend to improve primary and secondary educstion, she
____ Lopez' jeS\iiTlOny c_Quld put Simpson where prpsccutors say he wasn:t,
as well as funher sully lhe reputation of Detecuve Mark Fuhrman, whom
added.
'
the defense may try Lo paint as a racist bent on framing Simpson for the
· •. "First and foremost, the govermurders.
·
nor has put forth a program that
Lopez told defense lawyers that Simpson's Bronco was parked outside
will bring $3,500 for each pupil,"
·
acquired computers, Sbue said. The school dis. Hollister said. "I suppon that"
HOLLISTER TOURS SCHOOL -Tuppers
his house June 12 about the time prosecutors claim he murdered his extrict tries·to rocus on the basic needs of the stu!&gt;astern Local Schools c~ently - . Plal!'s Elemel)tary Principal Donald Shoe, right,
wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldmao.
dents ·since tbe ·Iocallevies raise such little
spend a total of$4,162 per pupiL _ fool!: Lt. Gov. Nancy HoUis~er on a tllill' or tile
Lope~ also told them she nilayed this information to Fuhrman lhe day
money, he added.
The state gives $3,035 to each stu·
-scbOQI Friday. Tbe scbool library has recently
aftcr the killings, yet nobody ever followed up with her.
dent during this fiscal year.
But in lhe grueling daylong hearing Friday, the prosecution caught
Hollister toured the Tuppers said she has visited numerous Shue said. The program is ~urrently not seen schools with as deplorable · Lopez in several lies and by the end of lhe day she was an emotional
Plains building asking questions schools aeross the regic;m.
wreck. Prosecutors said they looked forward to 'cross-examining
her In
· handled strictly by lhe county. not conditions as has been claimed.
1
front
of
a
jUly.
·
·
and hearing schools needs from
Shue showed Hollister the each district..
Hollister emphasized that
Principal Donald Shue.
· upgrades the district has made,
Still, the JUdge wasn't convinced Lopez was lying when she looked
"We focus on the basic educa- improving the· schools will rely on
him in .the face and said she would leave for El Salvador Saturday night.
This visit marked the frrst time including new ·COmputers fo( the tion. We don't have all the frills, " developing the local economy.
·
Hollister has toured a school since school's library.
"It may take until the next gen- He even lltrC&lt;Itened to jail her over the weekend until she agreed to remain
he added.
More funding would help, partaking office nearly two months
Allhough current funding mech- eration," Hollister said. "That's the in the United States at least through today.
"I will do it for you, your honor,'' Lopez told Ito on Friday night
ago, but the former Marietta mayor ticularly for the gifted program , anisms are·ur\fair, Shue said he has
(Continued on Page J)
·
Ito's ruling was a mixed bag for the prosecution.
By putting Lopez on the stand now, instead of during lhe defense portion of the case, Simpson's lawyers can interrupt !he story lhe prosecution
is trying to tell and blunt iiS impacl.
At the same time, though, it means ihc defense has to call her ·before
said.
COLUMBUS (AP) -· The fare reforms, especially ·changes in incomes below the poverty level.
adequately
setting the smge for her lestimony. in the way lhe prosecution
"Our
best
cfforl~
at
placing
welstate's poor are becoming poorer at Medicaid, the federal-state health . In written testimony to the
has
gingerly
prepared for Fuhrman's appearance on the stand.
fare
recipients
in
jobs
will
still
House Finance Commiuee last
· a time when the government can care program for the poor.
•
In
othpr
developments,
Ito has lentatively decided to dismiss a juror
with
no
leave
thousands
hving
Voinovkh l'(.ants to transform week, Frech sai~ .!here were probafford to do something'about it.
who
failed
to
disclose
an
incident
of domestic abuse on his jury question- -'
hope
for
a
job
and
bencfiiS
tbat
are
That is an unpopular message at Medicaid into a program called lems in Voinovich's proposed state
nairc;'
the
Los
Angeles
Times
reponed
over the weekend.
inadequate
to
meet
basic
human
the Statehouse where welfare is a OhioCare in which recipients budget for the next two fiscal years
ho
has
LOld
auomeys
he
plans
to
dismiss the juror - a "46-year-old
needs for food, clothing and sheltarget of cuts. But it is one that would enroll in private health starting July ·I.
black
courier,
the
Times
reported
Saturday,
citing unidentified sources.
"The governor's proposal docs ter," he said.
Jack Frech, director of the Athens maintenance organizations.
Meanwhile,
Newsweek
reports
that
a
black'
police officer testified a
The federal poverty level for a
· Savings from such a managed not include any increase in Aid for
County Department of Humao Ser!hat
Fuhnnan
questioned
her
qualifications,
sayin~ she should
decade
ago
care system to control cosiS would Dependent Children benefits for typical ADC family of a mother
•tices, waots to deliver.
go
to
work
as
a
"secretary"
or
a
"dancer
on
Soul
Train.'
Fuhrman's
Frech applauded some of Gov. help pay for extending coverage Lo . hundreds of lhousands of lhc poor- and two childten is $1,027 a
attorney
denied
the
allegations.
George Voinovich 's proposed wei- about 500,000 Ohioans with est children in the state," Frech mooth.

• Cruise Control

No Doc Fflll. DelnefJd'

BRAND NEW '95121EVRII.ET WMINA

the budget, he said Sunday night during a radio interview by Ross PeroL
He called the balaoced budget amendment "a last resort" and said that
without pro'Vsions tbat would prevent the judicial branch from determining taxing and spending issues he would have difficulty voting for it.
"The last thing we wanl to do is tum over taxing and spending questions to the federal courts. They already have too much authority," he
said. · ·
"I don't lhink we want to vest. !hem with spending and tax decisions. I .
think tlmt would stand the Constitution on its hC&lt;Id .... I think the taxpayers of !his country would be in revolt the fust time a federal judge came
down and said, 'you're mandated to increase taxes by $50 billion."'
But House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga .. said Saturday that he aod
House Judiciary Commiucc Chairman Henry Hyde, R-'111 ., arc prepared to
craft legislation in the House 10 address Nunn's concern.
·

'

$17,888
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. 2 Sections. 30 Pages 35 cents
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 27 •. 1995

emers Sam Nunn of Georgia. Wendell Ford of Kentucky and John Breaux
By JIM ABRAMS
of Louisiana.
Associated Press Writer
Conrad, interviewed on CNN's Late Edition Sunday, said he wants to ·
WASHlNGTON ....:.. After a month of debate, the Senate this week
,
votes on the balanced .budget amt;lndment, )&gt;robably its most momentous balance lhe budget, but was unhappy wilh the amendment
" You've got wording of this current amendment !hat presuines .YOU arc
decision of this Congress. And a single vote could make the difference.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., said Sunday that backers of the constiwtion- going to loot lhe Social Security trust fund," which is now running a surplus. to make up budget shonfalls, he said. "I lhink !hat's wrong. I think ·
al amendment now have 66 votes, one shy of the two-thirds majority
that just delays lhe day of reckoning."
·
needed for passage.
All but one of the 53 Senate Republicans are committed to supportiog
After quick approval in !he House last month, the bill bogged down in
the amendment, so supporters must win the votes of 15 of the"47
the Senate, where Democrats tried, unsuccessfully. 10 force Republicans
10 explain how they will balance the budgea by 2002 and to insen lan- , Democrats. Sen. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore., is the only Republican opposed.
Nunn said his main problem with the amendment was the possibility
guage removing Social Security from future budget calculations. A .final
that controversies arising from budget balancing Tequirements would get
vote is slated for Tuesday.
.
The fate of the amendment rests largely with five undecided Senate thrown into lhe courts.
He
to propose ao amendment that would lim it coUrt authority on
Democrats: Noith Dakotans Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan and soulh-

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u

•••

Single vote may-decide balanced budget

'- By PAT LUKAS
AP Newsfeaturcs
Traditional homes suc h as th is
can take on a unique appeal with
the addition of a few de s ign
touches.
Design F-36, by Homcsty les
"Source 1" Designers' Network .
is en hanced by I he addit ion of

45, NO. 211

Copyright 1!195

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio's
parole board handles thousands of
cases each year wilhout access to
computers, resulting in missing
records that. can delay hearings,
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported
today;- · "
-.
Of the 14,836 regular parole
hearings in fiscal1994, 3,169 - or
one-fifth '- had .to be postponed
because some information was
missing, the newspaper said.
The major reason was an ''antiquated system" of record-keeping,
.parole board member Raymond
Capo!S sai.d.
Parole panels have no access to
computers,
only
obsolete
microfiche machines and paper
files, as they consider each case.
"Steve Van Dine, the research
chief for the Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, said "it
has been ·a ·matter of pulling teeth
to get this far" in his efforts to
computerize the department,.
. Until about two years ago, the
department had only three programmers. lt since has added four.
Giving the parole board imme:

diate computer access to files has Since the early 1980s, lhc state has
been a priority, he said, but a "real freed more than 500 murderers,
some of whom spent only five
.expensive priority." .
The board also appears to be years in prison.
·
overworked and undersLaffcd, the
Inmates who were sentenced to
newspaper said. .
· life and were paroled during the
In fi scal 1994, the board's nine 10-year period served an av11rage
members each heard an average of of about 14 years, according tO the
3.500 cases, the newspaper .said. newspaper's examination of 36.000
Allhough 15 hearing officers assist parole cases.
board members, at least ·onc board
The Legislllllire created the
member.must be present at each Ohio ~entencing Commission in
hearing. .
·.
1990 to study "Uhfo's senienCing
·A National Institute of Corrcc- and parole laws and recommend
lions consultant hired by the board improyemCll!ts.
concluded in a 1993 report !hat lhe
"The current system underboard "!las attempted to maintain mines public trust and seems disits traditional way of conducting honesL We lcnow something needs
business, which is not working."
to be done,'' said David Diroll,
Parole officials say !hey are try· . commission executive director.
ing to ease lhc workload. One way
The commission and some legis by identifying hearings "with no islatois suppOrt so-calle4 "truth-inpossible positive outcome that arc sentencing" laws that would
fruitless for the board to conduct," • require convicts to serve ou.t the
said Jill Goldhart, deputy director. sentences they r.cceive. The state
of parole aod community .services.
parole board ·would have less disThe board also recently added crction to release prisoners before
two "'embers, for a.IOtal of II.
completing their mi~imum senQn Sunday, The Enquirer tences.
'
.
reported !hat convicted murderers
Margarette Ghee, chairwoman
patoled in Ohio between 1983 and of lhe parole board, said it has got1993 spent less than 12 years ten tougher in recent years for viabehind bars.
.
lent offenders to gain parole. They
Sixty percent of those parolees typically go throul!h several hear·
spent less than the average 11.8 ings now before bemg released, she
years in prison, lhe newspaper said. . said.

~,,I

CHESTER RENOVATIONS - Tbe Chesler Country. Kitcben,
rormerly Keebaugb's, is seiiO reopen March 11, new owner
·William Pooler said recently. Above, Denn~ Parker of Cbester fln·
lsbes putting siding "on the store's CKlerior. The inside or tbe buDd·
lng bas· been remodeled wilb new paint, nooring and drop ceilings,
Pooler said. The ~IaUer will cootmut to double 1as reslaunnl and
ice cream parlor, be added. (Sentinel
photo by. George Abate)
.

.,

·'

Ruling limits options to aid .
needy schools .
· COLUMBUS (AP) - While
Ohio's schools wait with their
ha!Kis out, lawmakers find their
hands tied by a state Supreme
.
Coll!l decision,
The ,,Supreme Court last year
upheld a claim by long-distance ·
carrier MCI that iiS personal property tax assessment should be 25
pertent of the property value .-- the
same as other businesses - ralher
than 88 percent of the property
value paid by all utilities.
·
To comply with the decision,
"the gov.cmor's ~33.8 billion budget pr~poscs reducing the personal
jlropcrty tax assessment rate applied to machinery and equip.
ment - for both loog-distance and
.local phone companies.
That would cost schools $86.2
million over the next two years. ·
The decision came at a bad time
for Ohio's schools. ·
"There is a consensus on both
sid~s. of lhe aisle to CQme up with
add1iional support for educatioo to
suppl~m~nt the losses,'' said Rep.
Pat Ttberi, R-Columbus. "As far aS
where the additional support will
come from ... ther.e is no consensus
even on our side of the aisle." .
· Rep. Wayne M. Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls. said the proposed cut in .
wes for phone companies means
district~ that stand to gain money ,
from the proposed ed)lcation bud·
get would gain less !han anticipat·
ed.
~

I

•

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Monday, February '0, 1995

·Commeritar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publhbet

CJiARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LE$W •
Conii'Oiler

Genenl Ma11111er

LE1TERS OF OPINION are .wek:omo. 'lbey lhould be leu llwl 300 .
loDJ. Alllcttaa are subject w oditin&amp; and must be sisned witb nome,
telephone numb«. No unligned let12n will be publisbed. !.etten
abould be in good Iaiii&gt;, addreosing isauea, not penonalitics.·
wordJ

......,,and

.

Judicial system
sees costs increasing

Page 2-The Del,ly Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Tuesday, Feb. 28

Monday, February ZT, 1995

·Accu-Weather8 forecast for daytime conditions and

WASHINGTON - Dcmoaatic
Senators ·and their staffs were
meeting ~ntly at the Airlie resort
in ruml Virginia to plan for the
1996 campaign when an unusual
thing happened. As pollsters and
campaign consultants took to the
floor to advise incumbent lawmakers to "go negative" iri their
~pcoming campaigns, one of the
!most
soft-spoken . Senate
Democrats stood up in dissent
Sen. Claiborne Pell, 0-R.I., told
the audience that in six statewide
cam~gns for office, he has never
once run ~ negative ad. In most
cases, he never even mentioned his
opponent, and he doubts he will do
it any differently next year.
Unfonunately, the patrician Pell
and others like him have become
ail anomaly in recen.t years. Judging by somj: of the rhetllric at ~~
recent incumbent "retreat,
Democrats have learned the message of the last election cycle, and
it doesn't bode well for 1996:
While President Clinton rails
against the "politics of personal
destruc·tion," Democrats in

had theni (negative ads) in Ute can. plum met in the polls. Six years
I didn't have to use them, but I had later, they survived in a year when
Ronald Reagan carried 49 States in
them in case." ·
The 1994 election cycle set new the genemf election. They were
records for advertising in an off- then re-elected in 1990, just before
year election. Candidates spent · George Bush enjoyed his highest
By Jack Anderson more
than $400 million on adver- approval ratings.
As Democrats reviewed· the
tising last year, .wiUt most or iL used
and
by andidaies to smear tberr oppo- results of the November elections,
nents.
That's up from a record they paid quiet homage to the com.
Michael Blnstein. $300 million
in 1992, when the peution. Included in an information
"Consultants are always ... presidential race alone chalked up packet distributed to Senators and
staffers was a 1990 memo from
tellin~ people Utat they have to go $74 million in advertising costs.
negauve," one Senate staffer told Last year, all of the money went to GOPAC, the political action committee directed by House Speaker
us. ~' At one point, (the consultants) local and regional campaigns.
Some consultants argue that Newt Gingrich. In the memo, titled
staned showmg figures, looking at
focus groups. The only time the negative ads aren't necessarily bad. "Language: A tey .mechanism of
focus groups responded was when · "Nine times out of 10 the mforma- control," Gingrich issues a laundry
candidates started using negative tion in a campaigo_ is about list of words that Republican candi ·
ads.··
issues " says one consultant who dates should use to describe the
Even those who generally opt . spoke' at the retreat. "Negative opposition. Among the words
for the high road are prepared for campaigning doesn't mean diny included: intolerant, destructive,
the worst. Sen. James Exon, 0- campaigning. It doesn't have to be corrupt, traitas, bizarre, cynicism.
The Gingrich memo, penned
Neb., who won his la.st race. by personal."
five
years, ago, might also be a
nearly 20 p&lt;iints, understands the
Other consultants argued that
power of negative ads. "I've never this crop of candidaies is better pre- sneak preview of whai's to come in
gone negative in my entire career," ~ for baale than those who ran 1996.
Exon explained to the audience, m 1994. Many of them were first
SEEDS OF HOPE -The presiaccording to a source present. "But elected in 1978, when President dent who says he didn't inhale
I'll tell you, that last campaign I Jimmy Carter was beginning to wants to make sure his daughter
l
doesn't either.
Drug "Czar" Lee Brown, who
has had his staff cut and who has
endured criticism from conservatives on Capitol Hill, told us
HeavY $PeLLiHG Bee 5ctfeDULE;
recently that he and the president
EfeSrDeS, Too GooD aT GoLF ·
understand each other when it
TO Be PRe!SIDel'l'l'
.
comes to keeping kids away from
drugs. According to Brown, who
believes that drug prevention and
treatment must take its rightful
' place alongside law enforcement,
the president is practicing what he
.• rtfl preaches.
,~
"I know what he tells his
· · daughter," Brown said In a recent
interview. "We spent 45 minutes
once talking about the whole. issue
of our youth using more drugs. He
sits down with his daughter and
tells her the facts .... He pointed out
that she is interesled in scient(), so
he has taken the opponunity to capitalize on her intere~ts a~d-llilk
about the fact that marijuana, for
example, contains some of the
same'toxic particles as tobacco, and
sometimes even higher in concentration. ••
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syollkate, Inc.
Congress are gearing up for _a
blitzkrieg in 1996. Some staffers m
attendance think that's only par for
the course.

"I

Letters to editor
4-H a great learning experience
Dear Editor:

what you have learned and comIt's the stan of a new year, and pete against oth_er 4-H m~bers in
soon everyone wiU be looking for the county-w1de 4-H Judgmg,
su·mmer activities. Some will which takes place in July. If you
choose softball or baseball, but oth- receive a gmnd champion honor lit
ers will enJ?y the activities of 4-H. county judging, you have the
If you don t know much abcut4-H, chance to go on to state judging
then let me tell you a little bit about which takes place at the State fair.
it. Not only is 4-H a great learning
4-H is alsd a lot more than proexperience and a great way to meet . jects and judging. In the months-of
new people, it's also a lot of fun.
June and July, you can attend 4-H
There's a wide variety of pro- camp which is an experience thai,.
jects you can take in 4-H. Projects you 'II never forget. At camp, statevary from beekeeping to electricity . wide 4-Hers come together and
and remote eonlrol cars. In the pro- practically become family
cess of completing the project that overnight.
you choose, you acquire skills that
But camp isn't the only time to
you enjoy learning.
meet new people and make new
For example, I take both ere- friends. After getting acquainted .
alive writing and photography pro- with the menibers of the 4-H group
jects. I chose these projects not that you choose to join, you'll soon
only because I enjoy writing and . find that you're all like a big famiphotography, but because someday ly. I've often found that whenever I
I hope to become ~ photO-journal- need a helping hand, my 4-H "famist. From these projects, I learn dif- ily" is always there to help.
ferent ways of writing and different
Every 4-H "family" wiU always
techniques of photography. The welcome a new member, so join a
skills that I learn are invaluable and 4· H group this summer.
·improve bolh my writing and pho·
Kelly Osborne
. tography skills.
.
·
Long Bottom
· After completing your project,
Bashan Beamers 4-H Club
~you have the chance to "show off'

..

Thelton Henderson, chief feder- tions officials that their counteral district judge in San Francisco, pans from a number of states and
had presided over a class acti~n countries had been visiting Pelican
trial- Madrid v. Gomez- in Bay to get state-of-the-an ideas for
which the class consisled of 3,594
inmaies at Pelican Bay State prison
Nat Hentoff ,
near the Oregon border.
Six years old, supermaximum the supermaximulll prisons they
Pelican Bar is - as the judge said were building. At the same conferin his opin1oil last month - "con- ence, two Pelican Bay guards
sidered a 'prison of the future' with instructed me that the prisoners
cutting-edge technology and secu- there - especia:Jiy the roughly
rity dj:vices."
1,500 inmates in the separate SecuBut after hearing extensive testi- rity Housing Unit- were "the
mony and examining over 6.000 worst of the worst," and had to be
exhibits in addition to thousands of treated as such.
pages of depositions, Hende~so_n
Not surprisingly, Judge Tbelton
said he was appalled at what 11 •s Henderson emphasizes that "the
like to be a prisoner at Pelican Bay. court is compelled to conclude that
(He also toured .the prison for two the Eighth Amendment's restraint
days.)
· · on using excessive force has been
"Dry words on paper," Judge repeatedly violated at Pelican
Henderson said in his 345-page rul- Bay." Much of that force was
ing, "cannot adequately capture , "gratuitous, intended maliciously
the senseless suffering and some- . to inflict injury rather than to
times wretched misery that defen' restore order."
dants' unconstitutional practices
There is also "the confmement
leave in their wake ... The defen- of naked or partially dressed
dants are California prison offi- inmates in outdoor holding cages
cials.
during inclement weather. These
The judge con.tin~ed: ""_rhe cages are approximately the size of
anguish of descendm~ mto sen~us . a telephone booth." One naked,
mental illness. the pam of phys1cal caged prisoher, in public view,
abuse ·or the torment of having •'was bleeding from his nose and
seriou~ medical needs Utat simp!;: mouth after a physical altercation·
go unmet is profoundly difficult If with several correctional officers."
not impossible to fully fathom."
. The prisoner said he felt like he
When I was in Sacramento at a was "just an animal or someconference on prisons two years thing." .
ago, I was told by prideful correcAmong the constitutional viola-

Bales, 45, Dcltter, died Sunday, Feb. 26, 1995 in the Fairfield
Medical Center, Lancaster.
Arrangements will be announced by the McCoy -~oore Funeral Home,
Vinton.
,.

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Laura 'Aunt Mutt' Circle

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lions. at Pelican Bay is one underlined over 20 years ago in Alabama
b th l
dar feder 1 · d
Fiaruceio=.
a ~:g :
comr.Jaints by inmates in that
state s prisons, Johnson said: ·
"Where conditions within a
prison are such that the inmates
incarceraled 1therein wiU inevitably
and .necessarily beoome more
sociopathic - and less able to ·
adap~ to conventional society - as
a result of their incarceration than
they were prior thereto, cruel and
unusual ponishmcnt is inflicted. ••
At Pelican Bay, J11dge Hender- ·
son noted thai •'the conditions in
the Secutity Housing Unit are sufficiently severe that they lead to
serious psychiatric consequences
for some inmaies."
As Dr. Stuan Gmssian- a Harvard Medical School psychiatrist
who has interviewed Pelican Bay
inmates - concluded: "For some,
SHU confinement has severely
exacerbated previously existing
mental conditions. •• Other inmates,
Judge Henderson added, "developed mental illness symptoms not
apparent before confinement in the ·
.,
·
SHU."
Henderson has appointed
Thomas Lonergan, formerly with
the Los Angeles C!lllnty Sheriff's
Department, 10 act as a special
master to make the state accountable for humanizinj! the prison.
California's duector of state
corrections, James Gomez, says
•

.4,

that the judfe's decision was a

· •'significant' victQry for the state

because, after all, he did not abol'
ish the }nisoo -a remedy the pris·
oners and their supponers on the
outside would have greatly pre. ferred.
In any ~. great credit is due
Ute Palo Alto law frrm - Wilson,
Sonsini, Goodrich &amp; Rosati - for
. the enormous pro bono time and
energy it has devoted to the case.
Lawyers there believe that the
decision may compel more than 20
other states to reconsider building
other hi~h:tech. supermaximum
prisons m the model of Pelican
Bay.
·
In the current climate, I doubt it.
Already, a grini new $60 million
high-tech federal prison is operating in Florence, Colo., in the
foothills of the Rocky Mountains.
But much depends on whelher the
·special master forces the California
corrections depanment to eliminaie
the "senseless suffering and
wretched misery •• at Pelican Bay
- or go to prison them~lves for
contempt of COIJI1Nat Heaton is a 11ationally
renowned authority oa th~ First
Amendmeat and the rest or the
Bill or Rights.
(For iaformation on bow to
commuaicate electroaically with
this columnist and others, COD•
tact America OnUae by calling !800·827-6364, exL 8317.)
·

'

"only following orders." Crimes
against humaliity were added to the
list for which there were ·emphatic
pe~ties.
·

Hodding Carter Ill
But while the legal precedents
are clear, Ute political reality for J!
number of emerging democracies
in Latin America, Africa and Eastern Europe is quite different.
Uncertain of their ability to stay in
power without the tacit
of Ute old oppressors, even less rtain of their ability to win ·a c nfrontation wiUt the past, leaders
· many of these barely launched
experiments in true self-rule have
vacillated. A few have capitulated
totaUy, offering blanket amnesty to
those whose savagery was oflen the
proximate cause of popubu- revolt
The nations of the world also
solemnly declarfd aft!!'r the war
that gen()j:ide·- theJkljb_erate
massm-.iider ofa class of people as
a matter of official policy - is a
legally defined . crime against
humanity wherever it occurs and
by whomever it is perpetraled. The
right to brin~ those accused of
genocide to tnal .is supposedly an

coopem~·on

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-~r

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-.·•'

Pt
01995ACCY·Woather. lnc.

·:

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By The Associated Press
•
A cold front will move across
the state tonight, bringing diminishing rains late tonight to western
Ohio. Lows will range from the
lower 30s in the nonhwest'to the
middle 40s in the sciulheast.
As the cold front continues to
move east on Tuesday, the threat of
min or drizzle will end statewide.
Highs wiU range from 35 to 40 in
the north to around 50 in the
extreme south.
!he record higli temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 65, set in 1896. The
recordlowofminus II was set in
1963
. S~nset today will be at 6:21
· be
at

~:~-;:.~.riseonTuesdaywiii

Weather forecast :
Tonight...Occasional rain. Rain
heavy at times ... Thunderstorms
possible. Dnzzle or freezmg dn;:zle
developing northwest late. Lows
lower 30s northwest to mid 40s
southeast.
·
Tuesday...Cioudy with areas of
drizzle west in the morning. Rain
likely cast especially in the moming. Highs 35 to 40 nonh to around
50 souUt.
ExesdalendedAfohrecast:f
.
Wedn
y... C ance 0 rain or
snow. Loll's in the 20s. Highs 35 to
45.
Thursday ... Achanceofsnow.
Lows 15 to 25. Highs 25 to 35.
. Friday ... Dry. Lows 15 to 25.
Highs 35 to 40.

~

Carolyn 'Sue' Hayes
Carolyn Sue McAbee Board Hayes, 57, Letart. W.Va., died Sunday,
Feb. 26,1995 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born June 25 1937 in New Cumberland, W;Va., daughter of Gaynell
Freeman McAOO:: of West Columbia, W.Va., and lhe late Ben McAbee,
she was a homemaker and auended Salem Community Church and the
Rutland Church of God.
She is survived by her husband, Waller A. Hayes; four sons, Robe~
Earl "Bob" Jr. and Tereasa Board of Point Pleasant. W.Va., Ben ~m!
Board and special friend Blain Walls of Columbus, Jame~ l'aul J1m
Board and special friend Leis Sayre of Letan •. and Iohnme S~ott and·
Robin Board or Middlepod; a daughter and son-m-ll!IN, Su~ Diane an~
Shawn Petty of Mason, W.Va.; stepdaughters and stepsons-m·law, TCfl_l
Ann and Bruce Hysell of Cross Lanes, W.Va., and Debra Kay 11;1111 Cecil
Maynard of Racine; 11 grandchildre~ and two great-grandchildren; a
brother and sister-in-law, James Curus and Judy McAbee of Spencer,
W.Va.; sisters and a broUter-in-law, Judy and George Starch~ of West
Columbia, and Gail McAbee of Middleport: and several meces and

ne~~e:Jdition to her father, she was preceded· in death .by her flfSt hus·

band, Robert Earl Board Sr.
.
Services wiD be 1:30 p.m. Tuesday 10 the Fogl~so!'g Fun~ H_ome,
Mason, w.Va., with the Rev. George Hoschar offic~ng. Burial Will be
inUteKirklandMemorialGardens,PointPieasantFnendsmaycall.atthe
funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
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Lester F. McKenzie -

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· " The follo~ing cases were pro· cessed Wednesday in the Meigs
County Court of Judge Patrick H.
' O'Brien.
.
.
Fined were: Bryan Keith Toney,
Munday, w. Va., speed, $30 plus
ki S
costs:
A. Jarkows
r.,
Jasper, Edward
TCIUI, speed.
$30 plus costs:
seal belt, $2S plus costs: Patricia A.
~-Henderson, Portland, speed, $30
plus costs: Vaushan Alan Dodrill,
. Parkersburg, W.Va., speed, ~30
:pluscosts;Ti=L.Felton,Siffi··son, W.Va.,
, $30 plus costS;'
. Michael McKenna, Athens, speed,
··s30 plus costs: Sheila Connolly,
· Reedsville, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Timothy Ledrlck; New
'·Philadelphia, seat belt, $25 plus
cosll!: Stacy Shant, Pomeroy. seat
belt, $25 plus costs:
· Michael T. Hubbard, Syracuse,
driving under the' in_fl~ence, SSOO
plus costs, 10 days JWI ~uspenlh;d
· to three: days, 180-day operators
· license suspension, one year pnbalion jail and $250 of line suspended ~pon completion of resident~al
treatment program: fwlure to d1m
headlights, costs only; seat be_lt,
$25 plus costs; Brenda Guthne,
Middleport, seat belt! $15. plus
costs: Donald S. Guthrie, Middleport. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Penny Aeiker, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Victor J. Coates,
'Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus
costs; Shawn D. Diddle, Syracuse,
''left of center, $20 plu~ costs;
'Charles Downer, Charleroi, Penn..
speed, $30 plus costs: seat bel~. $25
·plus costs; Sharon Cummmgs,
Pomeroy. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Richard E. Thdmas. Chauncey.
speed $20 I costs·
. Lo'ren
Shade, DUI,
$750 plus costs, ~ year OL suspension, 30 days J31l suspended to
10 days, two years probation: left
S
ofcenter,$10pluscosts; Sandra. ·

'

Little Newark, DUI, $750 plus

costs,~ year OL s~nsion, 90-

--

NEW MEMBER .:...._ Edward W. Durst, left, Ia welcomed 81 a
new member or the Board or Trustees at Veteraas Memorial H08·:
pita! by Hospital AdminisP"ator Scott L!lcas.

Durst appointed to serve
3-year term on VMH board
Edward W. Durst, 31340 NobleSummit Road, Middleport, has
been named to a three-year term on
the Veterans Memonal Hospital
Board of TruStees. .
Durst replaces Gary Norris of
Racine on the board. Norris had
completed nine consecutive years
on the board.
Durst is im assistant vice president .and loan offfcer at The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. in
Pomeroy. Prior to joining the
Pomeroy bank, he was with the former Citizens National Bank in
Middlepon for some 16 years.
In addition to his work in bank- .
ing Durst is a Salisbury Township
~tee and serves as vice president

of the· Meigs County Township
be f
Trustees Association. A mem r o
'the Bradbury Church of Chris~.
Durst is also secretary of the Advl·
sory Council of the Meigs County
Board of Health . Durst and h'is
wife, Ruth, operate a privale busi·
ness known as Ed's Greenhouses.
Mr. and Mrs. Durst have two
sons: Tim, who also resides on
Noble-Summit Road with hi s wife
and is employed with central OI'Crating at the Sporn Plant, and l•m.
employed at Shell Chemical, who
lives with his parents.
Durst is the son of Roland
Durst, Pomeroy, a former employ·
ee of VMH athnd currcdnMtly a Mpart·
time worker ere, an
rs. ary
Durst of Middleport.

· d t d
Hollis.ter · up
a e on needS ·
C .
r
I)
( ontmued rom Page

6j,~~~~~tratingUtinpbou~~v~l, Butr locaLofflcials have..a spirit
anddesiretobuild,sheadded.

the lateEdw_ard and Lois Fmnk McKenzie.
During this legislativ~ term,
A·u,s. Navy veteran of World War II, he was a m~mbcr of Raci~e Noinovich will work to limit tax
Post 602 of Ute American Legion, the Disabled Amencan Veterans m breaks for individuals who own
Pomeroy and Ute Racine Gun Club.
.
.
homes wilh more than $200,000 in
Surv1ving are his wife, Frances Robens McKent1e; lw;JS~rs. Lucy value, Hollister said. The extra
Taylor of Racine, and Goldie Radcliff ofSyracuse; and seve m!)Ces an~. funds will be turned baclc to the
nephews
statewide
school budget.
Gmv~side ·services will be I p.m. Wednesda
The administmtion
wiiiJf?cntinue
R . pyin the Greenwood
f th A Cc:metery, Racine, with military rites by acme ost 602 o e mencan to push its OhioCare plan, ollisler
Legion. Friends may call a1 thr Ewing Funeral Home on Tuesday from 6- added.
9 p.m.
·
·
During a visit to Meigs County
.
.
·
I
last year, William Phillis, leader of
the statc 'cHort to get adequate
funding for all schools, said the

current system perpetuates
inequities 'between the rich and
·
_poor_schools.
Phims and "The Ohio Coalition
for Equu.f&amp;:~Adequacy of School
Funding won the Perry County
lawsuit last year, which stated the
current funding of schools is
unconstitutional.
About 1,200 of the 3,600 state
school buildings should be tom ·
down. Phillis said. Bringing the
schools within code standards
would cost at least $10 billion,
Phillis said.
·
"We know that money makes a
difference," he addC\1. "If it didn't
the rich schools would be sending
us truckloads of money.''
The equity appeal should take
another 18 monUts, Phillis said. ·

clay immobllazauon
· · · o veh'IC1e, 30
days jail suspended to 10 days, two
years probanon: driving under sus·
pension, $100 plus costs, 30 days
ded 10 da
jail
to ~earsysprobauon
concur
· rent suspen
with DUI, two
and 90 day immobilization;
.
Edwin M. Tubbett, Coolv111e,
imprOper baclcing, $20 plus costs:
Jeri L. Hawley, Pomeroy, seal belt,
$15 plus costs; Troy A. Todd,
··l'omeroy, wrongful entrustment,
30 days jail suspend.ed to. thre.e #
days, vehicle im!'lobilized unlll
1, .,, 1 1
•.
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valid license provtded, costs only; .
seal belt, $15 plus cos~; Hank C.
CLEVELAND (AP) -Backers . capital to areas starved for it, but
Rood, Reedsville, ~sse~1on, $50 of plans to allow riverboat gam - they haven't boosted the. restaurant
Little League to meet
plus costs: Lyle R. Sinclair, Shade. bling in Ohio stress the immediaie business or sparked tounsm where Rummage sale slated
The Forest Run United
The Racine Youth League will
speed, $20 plus costs;
.
economic benefiis of casinos on there was none before, the new spa·
Methodist Church .will hold its have a meeting for all interesled
Glenn F. Young, Rac1ne, DUI, area economies, but the long·term per said.
.
$750 plus costs,~ year OL sus- economie impact is not yet clear,
"The majority of people go on annual rummage sale Mau:h 6 from coaches and oUters for the upcompeosion, 30 days J81l.sUSJl!lDded 'fl The Plain Dealer reponed today.
the boat and leave,'' said _Donald 9-3 p.m., and March 7 from 9 a.m.- ing· summer baseball and softbaJ I
season Sunday, 2 p.m. at tltc
10 days, 90-day vehtclc,_tmmo~tCities that now have casino Fi.sher, the mayor of lohet •. !ll. noon in the church basement
Racine kindergarten building.
lization, IWO years rrobation; ~v- gambling have gotten a glimpse of "We couldn'l find a m~IUpllcr.
·
Day or Prayer service
ing under .financia responsibdlly what happens - and doesn't hapaction su51!ension, $100 plus~ · pen- when casinos cruise their · But cities like Joliet haven't · Church Women United of RACOto meet
RACO will m'cet Tuesday at
two years probation, 30 days.J81l waterways, the newspaper reponed given up hope that the casinos' Meigs County will hold its annual
observance
of
World
Day
of
Prayer
Star
Mill Park, 6:30p .m. New
suspended to 10 concurrent: fwl to in ihe second installment in a five- presence may eventually spur some
at
I
p.m
.
Friday
at
the
Mount
Mori·
members
are welcome.
dim headlights. costs mly; ~- part series on the riverboat gam - mdircct economic pluses.
ab
Baptist
church,
Middleport.
sion, tsO plus costs: Wilham L. blingdebate.
"Fifteen thousand people a day
Elliott, Pomeroy, no headlight, $5
The biggest lessons casino cities come into your community," said
plus costs; John W. Salla, Letart, such as St. Louis and Joliet. Ill., Fisher. "It's marketing tool for
W.Va., assault, $200 plus costs, offefQhio may be that the public new business."
three days jails~ one year sector ge~ an initial bolll!"za that
Joliet has benefited from
probation, n:stmirung order issued; the private sector docsn I, and a increased tax revenue. It earmarked
VIITERANS MEMORIAL
Bamhan, daughter, Jackson. · .
Frank C. Wingrove, Little Hock- toughening market makes casmo 80 percent of the $2 mil!ion a
Saturday admissions - Tina
Discharges F,eb. 26 - MrS.
ing, seat belt, $25 plus costs.
.
companies less willing to bring month the casinos brought m last Grady, Rutland.
Phillip Holland and 'son, Mrs ..Terry
Forfeiting bonds were Da1sy additional develop!J1ent.
year for capital improvement proSaturday discharges - Mary Bamhan and daughler.
Lester, Wocidfcrd, Va., left of cenCasinos have brought full-lime jects, reserved 15 per~~~ ~or debt Lieving,l'omcroy. ·
"Births- Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
ter $70, and Kevin Knapp, jobs - about 1,000 at some estab- and puts the rest m a ramy day
Sunday admissions- none.
Porter, daughter, Point Pleasant;
Po.i.eroy, disorderly while intoxi- lishments in Illinois -. and new fund ."
Mr.· and Mrs . Pat Wilson, son,
Sunday discharges - none.
caled. S!25.
.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Leon, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Discharges Feb. 24- Wendoll William Zin'}o son, VintOn. .
"Noothereconomicdevelopment tool can generate as many George, Marcia Collins, MatUtew
(Published with permission)
ical Center:
jobs, as fast. and absent expef!dl- Beegle.
. .
Units of the Meig~ County
6:56a.m. Sunday, Pearl Street, ture of p,ublic funds than cas10o
. Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Ph1lhp
Emergency Medical ServiCe logged Earl Stcwan. HMC:
. gaming, • casino operator Promus Holland, son, Point Pleasant,
14 calls 'or assistance Saturday and
· 1a ,.•vc panel 1n W.Va.
"
1 ded
12:30 p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy Cos. tol d a 1eg•S
Sunday. Units reSponding inc u : . Golf Course, Bob Freed, VMU.
Ohie.
Discharges Feb. 25 - William
POMEROY
1·.42
p.m.
Sunday,
Overbrook
However,
St.
Louis
has
found
Jackson,
Reba Hill, Melissa Amos,
12:54 a.m. Saturday, Main
d'ff' I' '
have
Center,
Freda
McFann,
(hat
market
1 1cu •JCS may
.
Estil
Johnson;Phyllis
Hayden.
Nursl·ng
The Daily Sentinel Street.
ted
th
Melvin Darst, trea ai e
f· h
r
a b1g
Birth
Mr.
and
Mrs. Terry
ene·,
Velerans
Memorial
Hospital
.
dashed
some
o
1ts
opes
.or
.
SC
(USPS21~)
C d
RACINE
ger payoff.
7:50a.m. SaturdU, on or
9:45 p.m. Saturday, Bashan
Publi1hed ever~ aflernoon. Monday through
"Say Love With
Street.
Betty
Webster,
olzer
MedRoad
Lester McKenzie, VMH,
Friday, Ill Court St. PomeroY., Ohio, _by ~e
Aowers From!"
Ohio Valley Publishidg Comp4ny/Mulumed.ia
pendi~g transfer to Gmnt :Medical
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992-2156.
Center via LifeFiight II helicopter;
SecOnd cia.~$ PQU!!&amp;e Pili~ !!1Pomnuy, Ohio.
2:34 p.m. Sunday, Portland
Mm1ber; The Auocillled Preu, and I~ Ohio
Am Ele Power ·-~·~·~..·-~··~.34 3/8
Road
.and ·Lovell Road, Glenda
•
NcwsPoper Associ:llion.
PQMEROY
Akio ·-·~---·----···•·-.58 1/4
Holier,
VMH.
A
Pomeroy
man
was
arreste.d
Albland
OU
-·-·~-:..-~--·lZ
314
POST~1AfflR: Send ad&lt;mu com:cticn1 IO
· · · · REEDSVILLE
and charged with felony .receiving ·
AT&amp;T ·-~--- ....."!..............!1' 7/8
FLOWER SHOP
The Daily Sentinel. Ill CoUrt St.. Pomeroy,
6:42a.m. Saturday, Stale Route stolen propeny over the weekend,
Bank One·---------.l9 314
Ohio4n69.
I06 Buuemut Ave. Pomeroy, OH
Bob Evans----~-----.20 1/l
124, Lydia Chevalier, St. Joseph's according to Pomeroy Pollee Ch1ef
SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
Cbamplon Ind. --~--~~--.20 1/4
.,..,_
Hospital;
· Jerry Rought.
.
(6}4) 992-6454.
By C•nitr or Motor Route
Charming Shop~................~-~·~ ..6
, CHftY CllAII Iii •ILUI M Till IKIUII"'
5:30p.m. Saturday, Joppa Road,
Tim Davidson, who has a prev•JU'P OOUJI.UJIII ln ••trDIA••.,•
City Holdlng ..•...... ~-···~·····..29 1/2
~~r!h::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::J~:~
(800) 433-6203
Adam Grossnickle. St. Joseph's ous theft conviction, was arresled
CEATIFlCATES
t
One Year ................................................. $91:00
Federal Mogul.~····~~..~-·--·19 1/4
Hospital.
.
Friruiy
night,
Rought
said:
.
Goodyear T&amp; R···--·~--·-.36 518
SINGLE COP¥ PR)CE
RUTLAND
Due to space constramts m the
K-mart
....·-------..--.13 3/1
Daily ............ ,. ........................ ............. ._35 Cenu
12:53
a.m.
Saturday
,
State
·
Meigs
County Jail, Davidson was
Lands End---·--···--···.. ······~16 SIB
Route 143, Johnathall Kirkendall, released until his 10 a.m. WednesCompl~te
C~re
Llmlled ln&lt;.~-~...... ~~..~-11"""'17 718
Subscribers not desiring 10 pay !he &lt;:Q{rien~y
remit in atlvance direct to "Jbe Daily S:eprlikl
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
·· day hearing in Meigs County
Mulllmedla Inc ..... ~~··~········.38 1/4
on 11th~. sill or 12 month b&amp;sis. Credit will be
5:021;.m; Sunday. Page Strcel, Court, he added.
Point Bancorp ·--·-·-···-----....19 '
given carrier each week.
Roc:kwelt .:..~~--~~..~···~-~--~..39
May Lynch, HMC;
Recovered in Davidson's moUtRobbins &amp; Myers~~----·20 3/4
No subscription by mail permitted in t~reas
9:43 p.m. Sunday, State Rpute er's home was a Chinese SKS rifle,
Royal Duttb...~--~---~~-113 3/8
whert home carrier lervice it t~vlli lable. ·
124, Nazareth Priddy, VMH.
he said. The rifle had been reporled
Sboney•s lnc.... - ..·--···-·-····H l/4
MAILSUUSCAII'TIONS
'
SYRACUSE
stolen from Jimmy Qualls'
Star Bank --··--·------.41112
.lnsldt Melp Coonly
·
-- I~ Wend~ lnt'L ----..-~ ..--.16 1/8
11:48 a .m. Saturday. College,~Poi3!!ImlllleromY.cl!ll!!!mOJ&lt;.e!l!l~
w"leelc~..__.,..,..,.::L"'-+--·~ Sulte-11-2 Valley Drive•.---~-~1
A-veltlle- Matthew-willi-amson,
Also recovered in the search,
Worlhlngton'lnd.~ ..···:· ····~-.19 718
~l~~::.:.: : : :::::: ::.::. ::::::::::m~
treated ai the scene;
' which was granted by Davidson's
·
Pt. Pleasant, WV.
.
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
Rltn Oullidt Mdp County
7:52a.m.
Sunday,
Children's
father,
were
a
20-gauge
shotgun,
£all
ao\t-&amp;75·1244
for
Appt.
or
lnfornaatlon
IJ we.a ........................................... c.... SlS.6t
quotes provided by Advest or
Home RQad, Opal Cremeans. .
mari;uana SeedS in vials and other
·
'
· a1
a1 PPO
26 w..a ........:........................................ l-'9.66
GaUl polls.
Tra.nsfer units handled nme drug' paraphernalia, Roug ht S8l'd • . L-~M~e~·::•~he:;:r~o::f~A:e::t:,:n:•:...:P~PO:;,::.,A:.,:;F,:ed:e:;r::,.:,:M.:;o:z::..:.:~-~·
s2 w..~cs ....................... ,......................... S96.20
1
calls.

"~Lee,

.#•t un·c.e.ar
Long-term. bene.,,
rJ•IeriJoat gaming
10r-Ohl·o
·

a

Meigs announcements

___ Hospital news._ _

EMS unl"Is answer 14 ca liS '

Stocks·

-

2§,

•.

Arrest reveals
stolen property

g:

Medical/Surgical:
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat lnclud1ng

J 0 hn
A • •"'
.,ade' M •D •
.

·.

..

-·-·-

.

...__-

u-

82, Racine, died Suttday,Feb.
199~ in Grant
8,.,__~~td.iLMcKe~~zie,
·. M.e·l_
.gs~-countu--P-ourt
ne
.
ws
MedicalCenter,Columbus.
J "''
A retired Carpenter, he was born April 27, 1912 in Racine, the son of

I

unequivocal one.
Honest people can and do differ
But the international war crimes over the answers to both sets of
trials aiined at some of the mass questions. In the end, however, the
murders in Bosnia and Rwanda burden of proof is on those who
cannot disguise a more significant would err on the side of caution;
and profoundly dispiriting reality. Societies that cannot come to termS
While genocide has been carried with their pasts almost invariably'
out in both nations, the world ' s manage to repeat them. Left unexmajor powers refuse to say so. The posed to tiie glare of publicity, olg
reason is simple. To _name the · crimes poison the future.
crime carries an obligation to act.
Painful as it is, it is better to
In both sets of cases, the mtio- make public the full breadth of
nalizations for inaction often sound individual com,Piicity in the vast.
quite sensible; Amnesty is said to East German secret police network
be prefemble to retribution fll" rea- than it is to bury the files in
sons that range from the pmctical ire hives where they tick away like:
to the humane. Allowing a relative so many time'bombs. To aUow the·
handful .~r ,goons to escape torturers and baby killers of:
accountability IS smaU price to pay Argentina's "dirty war" of the:
for' stability. Building the future is
1970s to go free advances Ute day ·
more important than gnawing over when they can torture anew. The:
·the boneS of the past. If retroactive neo-Nazi bully boys of the Vlak-·
pardoos are the price for 'keeping plaas, the white Soulh African gov-:
the military in barracks and out of emment's secret terror squad, will :
the presidential _PB11Jce, so be iL
either l!e b':llught .to justice ~w or:
._ As for-blinking at pnooide, the- ~they will kill-again .
Hoddlng Carter 111; former :
choices are often posed in stark
terms . While hundreds' of thou- State l)epartlneat spokesmn ;
sands of people are its victims in a and award-winning reporter, edl- .
Bosnia or a Rwanda, thousands tur and publlsiJer, is presidl!llt or :
m~re would inadvertently die in
MaiDStreet, a WISblngtoa, D.c;.
any conflict aimed ai the appropribaled teleYislon production com~
ate response to post hom&gt;rs?
pany.
I

Laura Firn "Aunt Mu~Circle, 79, Racine, died Saturday, Feb. 25,
i995 at her residence.
,
.
Born May 29. 1915 at rcas. daughter of the late.Marion and Nell1e
Jacksoil Johnson she w a retired cook for the Southern Local School
District. having ~orked 29 years for the district.
She was a member of the Bethany United Methodist Church, the Eastem Star, OAPSE,the Senior Citizens, AARP, SERO, Daugluers of America-Guiding Star Council and the Grange. .
.
.
Surviving are a twin sister, Uzzie Wood of Racine: sistcrs·m-law, Edison Johnson of Racine, Pauline Johnson of Carrollton, Texas! ~ Clam
Pierce of Athens: a brother and sister-in-law, James and PhyiiJS.Circle of
New Haven, W.Va.; and seveml nieces and nephews, great-meces and
nephews and great-great-nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Wesley Circle: four brothers, Roy Johnson, Douglas Johnson, Waid Johnson and Howard Johnson;
her foster parents, Arthur and Mary Jane Be.egle:cand nephews Paul
Bostick and Howard Johnson Jr,
.
.
.
, Services wiU be I p.m. Tuesday II) the Ewmg Funeral Home, w1th the
Rev. Kenny Baker officiating. Burial will be in the Greenwood Cemetery,
Racine. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 4-9 p.m.

IND.

•lcolumoosl4s•

Nameless crimes are .easier to ignQre

:Today in history

.

=·=

Misery reigns at .high-tech. prison_.....;....;.........;.,.,__

The tide of democmcy has been
' steadily ris.ing for years, passing
one high-water mart after another
in virtually every corner of the
··
globe. Thai is a eli~ which is also
iJy The Associated Press
·
a fact. .
: Today is Monday, Feb. 27, the 58th day of 1995. There are 307 days
Whai is just as clearly a fact is
:left in the year.
·
that beneath the tide are shoals
· Today's Highliltbt in HiStDiy:
which can still sink more than one
:· On Feb. 27, 1933, Germany's J!arliament building, th~ ~..e~. newly democratic ship of state. As
caught f~re. The Nazis~ blaming the Communists, used the fue as a pretext recent headlines make clear, promifor suspending civil liberties.
nent among them are the issues of
·· On th' daie:
what to do about the leftover
.: In
Ute District of Columbia was placed under the jurisdiction of enforcers of old tyrannies and the
:Congress. ·
· .
.
:
perpetrators of new genocides.
:: In 1807, poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born in Ponland,
The debates rage and subside
Maine.
·
. R
today only to rise again in places as
In 1861, in Warsaw, Russian troops ftred on a crowd protesUng us- disparate as Argentina and South
sian rule over Poland; five marchers were killed.
Africa, Rwanda and Bosnia, the
In 1890, bo~ers Danny Needham and Patsy Kerrigan fough.t 100 former East Germany and Haiti.
rounds in San Francisco before the march was declared a draw, after more They throb on the surface of public
than 6 1/]. hours.
life like so many angry sears.
In 1922,1he U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld the 19th AmendViewed abstractly, resolving
ment to Ute Constitution Uta! guaranteed Ute right of women to VOIC.
them ought to be. a simple matter.
In 1939. the Supreme Co~ outlawed sit-down strikes.
.
The world declared in unequivocal
In !960, the U.~. Olymp1c hockey team defeated the SoVICts, 3-1, at terms at the Nuremberg trials after
the Wmter Gam~ m Squaw Valley, Calif,
-. ~ ~~ . .
- worlll Wifi Wthlll~mllivilluals wereIn 1972, PresidelfrNiXiln'liOO Chme~ Prem~er. OIO,u ~-lai .~the responsible for their actions. The
Shanghai CommuniqQe at the conclusion or N•xon s htstonc VISit to conviction and execution of leading
.
.
Nazis (and in Japan, of major figChina.
.
In 1973, members of '!'e Amencan Indian ~ovement occupted the ures in the Japanese government
· hamlet of Wounded Knee tn _South Dakoca, the s~te of the I8~.massacn: arid military) established !hat it was
of Siou~. men, women and children. (Theoccupanon lasted until May:)'
not enough to claim you were

18~1.

Clarence Bales

1

il!

•

Claren~e

NOT RUNNING

· .· 4:,

The Dally Sentlnei--Paaa 3

--Area .Deaths-.

OHIO Weather

Some Democrats are ready to 'go negative'

By JOHN CHALF~
Associated Press Writer
.
.
COLUMBUS - Everybody knows ·the cost ~f keep!J!g.l!'matcs m
state prisons is going up. So is lhe cost of opemung the judicial system
· that sends them there.
HaSN'T FiNiSHeD eXPL3iNiNG
But the amounts pale in comparison.
.
. SIIPPLV $iDe ecotiOMiCS
Spendin~ for the fopr components of the court system that handles
civil and cnminallaw manen would hit $202 million during the next two
. years in the budget Gov. George Voinovich proposed.
The Ohio Dep~ent of Rehabilitation and Correction expects to
spend $2.1 billion in the next two years.
.
.
State law forbids a governor from changmg fWJding requests that the .
judicial branch of government submits for inclusion in the budget. ·.
Those agencies include the O~io. ~upreme Court, the Court of Claims,
the Judicial Conference, and the JUdiCI8fY.
. .
The llij'gest amount of money flows through what is known as the judi. ciaiT.would receive $129 million in Ute two-year budget cycle that starts
.- July 1 an increase thai would almost maiCh the anticipaled inflation mte.
.
Th~ Office of Budget and Managemen~ sai~ the money is used to pay
all the salaries or Ohio Supreme Coun JUSUC~S and ~ouns of appeals
judges; a share of salaries ~or commo~ pleas JUd~es m each of the 88
counties; and a share of salaries for muntc1pal court judges. .
Local governments ~o~er the rest of salary, s.talf and ~pelllbng costs.
Most visible of .the JudiCial branch agenc1es 1s the Ohio Supreme Court
made up of a chie[justice.and six justices.
.
Steve Stover, the court's administrative direc~. told a House Fma~
subcommittee last' week that proposed budget mcreases ~uld proVIde
some extra staff needed in pan because of a death penalty ISSue on the
Nov. 8 ballot.
· 'tial appeals ·
Voters approved a cons~tutional ~dment to send IDI
m
capital punishment cases directly ~m. trial cowt;s f1? the Supreme Court,
bypassing reviews previously reqmred mUte !2 dismct a~s COWlS.
Stover said about 3 million cases of all kinds are ftled 10 state couns
each year- or one case for every 3.5 people.
•'While there has been a slight declme m filings overall each of the last
two years, due largely to a reduction in civil fi~ings, th~re has been .a
· remarkable increase in cenain kinds of cases. parucularly 10 the domesuc
relations and juvenile .areas," Stover 'said.
· .
.
He said child .suppon enforcement motiOns_ increase&lt;! 50 pe~t m one
year, while delinquency bindover cases -lrytng juverules llfl if they were
adults - increased 65 percent in two years. Felony cases mcreased at a
·
annual mte of 5.5 percent.

Pomeroy--Middl~port, Ohio

I.

..

--

-

---~-

I

�Peg• 4 The Dilly Sentinel

Sports

•

THIS WEE
GAMES

1994·1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

''17UI EBII
IIlLI
.
Division IV District At _Southeastern High School, Richmond Dale
EASTERN
'

Alexander upper winner
Thura. Feb. 23 - 6:30 p.m.

EASTERN

AlelCander lower winner
Fri. March 3 • 7:00

~nneradvanceato

regional at Butler·
'High School, ·
. Vandalia

WHITEOAK

:

WHITE OAK

FEB. 2 ............................. AT SOUTHERN*

FEB. 6 .............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 9 ........ ,.............................. TRIMBLE*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
· Coach - Scott Wolle

1994·1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

1994.1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16.. ............................ ALEXANDER*
DEC. 20 .............. J•lELSONVlLLE-YORK*
DEC. 23 ............. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
~~g· 27 ............... ,............. COAL GROVE '
JAN·
CHESA:EAKE
JAN. ""'""""""""""'"'"""""!~ TERN*

DEC. 15 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 1g ...... :.............. :....... AT EASTERN*
DEC. 22 ....... ................................... NEIGS
DEC. 23 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 4 .................... AT SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 5 ......................................... MILLER*

:o. . ... . . . . . . . . . .
10

Valley upper winner

..

BOYS

M~~~~~:

~:~· ~2............. AT.FEDE.RA~~~~~R~

JAN: 13::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::::::;.T
JAN. 17 ...................................... BELPRE*
JAN. 20 .................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 21.. ......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 27 .;....... :...................... WELLSTON*
JAN. 31 .....................................TRIMBLE*
FEB. 3 ................ ........... AT ALEXANDER"
FEB. 7 ................................ AT EASTERN*
FEB. 10 ...................................: ... MILLER"
-FEB. 17 ............ AT, FEDERAL HOCKING* ·

'

LATHAM WESTERN

..

DEC. 19................................ SOUTHERN*
DEC. 22 ................................ WELLSTON*
JAN. 5:................... FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 9 ................... AT VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 11 ........................... ................ MEIGS
JAN. 12 ............................... ATTRIMBL,E*
JAN. 18 ............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 19................ NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 23 ................................... AT MEIGS*
JAN. 25 ................................ AT.WARREN
JAN. 26 .............................. ALEXANDER"
JAN. 30 ..........................:.... .. ...... MILLER"

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

MILLER

V•lley loW.r winner
Thura. Feb. 23 ·8:15p.m.

Completed .Season with ·a 6~14 Record

JAN. 1 ............ .
SYMMES
N •
· 9 ..................... ,..
VALLEY .
JAN. 21 ...................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JA~. 23 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 26 .................. :............ AT TRIMBLE*
, JAN. 30 .............................. ALEXANDER"
FEB. 2 .... :.................., ............. EASTERN*
FEB. 6 .................................... AT MILLER*
FEB. 9 .................... FEDERAL HOCKING*

SOU,.B£RI ' 70RI.ADO£S~---=- __--:=·_._·_-l_n_d_lc_ac;;;,t~-5a.,!;.;~;.-~.-~;,;l ;,:w;.;Y; ;I~.;~;.;~; ;~a5; w;.;e;,;.ll~--.1
;
_

Completed Season with a 13-9 Record

DEC. 16........................... AT WELLSTON*
DEC. 20 ................................. AT MILLER*
DEC. 22 ................. AT POINT PLEASANT
JAN. 3 .............................. RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 10 ................................ SOUTHERN*
JAN. 13 ....'.................................. BELPRE*
JAN. 11 ...... ,........................ AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 20 ................. AT VINTON COUNTY"
JAN. 24 ........ ~ .... ,................ ALEXANDER*
JAN. 27 ....... : ...................... AT EASTERN*
JAN. 28 ................................ AT WAHANA
JAN. 31 ......... :AT NELSONVILLE-YORK* .
. FEB. 3 .................................. WELLSTON*
FEB. 7..... ;.................. POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 10 ................................ AT BELPRE*
FEB. 14 ..................................... WAHAMA
FEB. 17 ....................... VINTON COUNTY"
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach -Jeff Skinner

Completed Season with .a 12-1 0 Record

MEIGS
BOYS
Completed Season with·a 10-11 Record

GIRLS
Completed Season with a 11-10 Record

..

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Reedsville I!:astern's Ryan Ducllley

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while Brian Bowen (11), 8uckley's teammate, watches from a ellslance during Saturday night's Division IV semifinal game al Alexander High Schon!, where ,Beaver Eastern won the battle of the Easkis
by a 71-65margin. (Scott Wolfe photo) .
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Meigs

to Jefr."
Gordon beat Labonte to the finish line by 1.19-seconds, about 20
car lengths, as he averaged 125.396
mph. Earnhardt finished third and
took the season tx&gt;int lead after two
of 31 ·events. Rtcky Rudd was the
only olher.driver on the lead lap at
the end.
• .

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Your Local

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with lhebasketball in hi\_hands-out
PIKE EASTERN
of bound s. Instead , EHS was
(15-16-14-27=72)
.
forced to foul immed iately and
Chad Slusher 0-2-0=6. Joey
Pike drilled 7-8 foul shots going T horn sberry 3- t -0=9 . Shane
down lhe stretch. Otto hit a three at Williams 2-0-6=10, Jason Jeweli2the buzzer for a 72-65 tally.
0-1=5, Ryan Salisbury 3-2-4= 16.
Reedsville Eastern hit 17-48 for Adam King 0-2·0=6. Randy Sian35 % 2-9 threes and -had 38 ton 3-0-0=6, Keith Bolen 6;0rebo~nds, II steals, II turnovers, 2=14. Totals: 19-7-13/17=72
nine assists (Buckl ey four ), one
block and 18 fouls. ·
MEIG S EASTERN
Beaver Eastern hit 19-46 over(20-18-9-18=65)
all, 7; ll threes for 63%. htt 13-17
Brian Bowen 2-0-3 =7, Ryan
at the line and grabbed 2&amp; rebounds Buckley 3-0-4= 10, Jeff Stcl.hcm 3·
(Jewell, Salisbury and Blanton four 0-2=8, Enc Htll 1-0-2=4, Enc D\1each), had four steals, 10 turnovers, , lard 0-0-3o:3, Charhc B•sscll 7,0five assists and 26 foul s.
· 7=21, Mt c;ah Otto 1-2-4= l ~-•-•-•Totals: 17-2-25136=65

Cla1.1ic we.1·tl'rtl .1·erie.1, .farorite comedy sir ow.~ and rireti111: action 1wie.1.

.•.

.

.

Establish 1913

Mon• Fri. 7·5 Sat. 7·3

•

1-bl:Jiie

CROW'S
.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST
MAIN ST•
POMEROY

Wlc"' \alue Challenge_....___

•

and Service Alwa~s"

1OS MUlBERRY AVE.
992·2121

'

ITIHL ..

POMEROY

G)

.EWing _Funeral Home

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

555 PARK ST.
Middleport, OH

1·800·837·8217

•

3 LOCATIONS
SECOND STilEET
JACKSON AVE.
Mason, W. Va. · Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
304-773-5514
304·675-1121

sll'llightlhree poinrm leading up to sell for as long as they could mainthe :53 second mark (34-31). A rain a lead.
Srethem to Bowen lay-in ind SteibEastern missed 3-4 free throws
em free throws ended lhe half 38- while Pike went on a 6-1 run to
31.
lake·a 56-52 lead. Bissell returned
Eastem started the second half and Otto hit two safeties for a 54like a house aftre, but the Beaver- 56 tally. Pike tried to slow the ball
Eastern fir e department extin-\... down, but Buckle~ picked up a key
guished the blaze )ust as quickly. steal. Bissell hi! two safeties ,
. Pike called time wtth Eastern lead- Sophomore Eric Dillard went 1-2,
ing 47-35 . The Meigs Countians and EHS took a57-56lead.
then became careless with the ball
Williams kept laking the ball at
as Bolen grabbed two consecutive Bissell, who got too aggressive on
steals and twice scored, while East- the defensive end and committed a
ern endured an over-the-back no foul that forced his exit form the
call and an off the foot no-call that game with 2:181cft.
gave the ball ba~k to the Bea~er
Otto tie·d the game, hittin~ the
club. Wtlhams htt a Jumper wtth second of two foul shots. Mtssed
1:351eftto cut the score to47-4l.
free throws at this point in the
. Alithe whtle, Eastern mam- .fourth guarter would have given
tamed the tempo that gave them the Meigs-Eastern a 6!1-60 lead, but
lead. The Eag_les, however,lhrough instead the game was knotted at60up some unwtse shots and forced a 60 with 1:47\eft. Likewise, Eastern
lay-up wllh four Ptke defe~ders got plenty of shots from the field,
under the bucket. Deem qutckly but hit just3-29 in the stretch.
signaled for a time out to regroup,
Eastern was further wounded ·
but ~is troops di~ not respond. with an NBA three-pointer from
Ptke s Sahsbury ht~ a free thr~w Salisbury from the left comer. EHS
and Thornsbe;ry htt a goal with then threw the ball away and
three seconds left fo~ a 47-45 tally.
Thornsberry raced down court for
, The P!kc Counuans· w~nt on a the break-away lay-up on the
12-2 ':"n m the last three mmutes of in bounds play to make the score
.
65-60. Otto grabbed a key rebound
the thud frame.
After Slushe~ dnlled ano~er as Pike missed a free throw and
three, ~uckley hit l~o consecu~ve Dillard was fouled on the-pass. DilclutchJumpers to gtve the Met~s land sank both for a 65-62tally.
Eajlles a 51-:18 a_dvanUige. At,llns .
Down by just three, Eastern
pomt, Char he Btssell was on ~he .looked like 11 got the break it needbench ~1th four fouls. The Mct~s ed when an Eagle defender
Eagles thmkmg was to save B•s- lcnoclced the ball loose and Pike's
Salisbury dove into the Pike bench

.
.

Bank

"Family Owned and Operaledfor 48 Years"

CHESTER

.,.

Peoples

BOTTLE GAS

Where America Goes 1b Relax -

-

•-Indicates Tri-Valle'y games
Coach - Ron Logan

AND

RJfrable

*-lnd~cat~o!~~Val~in~~~!~sh...,.....-=

DEC. 15 ....................................... MILLER*
DEC. 21 ............................... ALEXANDER
DEC. 22 .........., v.; ............. AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 29 .......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 5 .......................... .. ,.. .-.. AT BELPRE*
JAN. 9 .......................................TRIMBLE*
JAN. 11 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 12 ....................... VINTON CO.UNT'V*
JAN. 14....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 19......................... AT ALEXANDER*
JAN. 23 ............................... :... EASTERN* ·
JAN. 26 ................ NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 30 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
'FEB. &amp;........................................ BELPRE*
. FEB. 9 ................... ATVINTON COUNTY*

RUTLAND FURNITURE

eigs Eastern 71-65 in D-IV semifinal

By MIKE HARRIS . .
to win at Rockingham. This· is a make sure everything was right. I
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) driver's track, and they say it lakes was probably a little. conservative
Potential can be a terrible burden a real good driver to win here. I'm coming down pit road, too, but we
for some athletes. Not Jeff Gorckm, proud to win at Rockingham, e~- knew we could get him in time."
though.
cially wh~n you have a guy hke
Once Gordon regained the lead,
This 23-year-old, in only his pale Earnhardt coming aft.e~ you."
l:.abonte, who brought out the lith
third full season as a series regular,
E31])hardt, flll111y established as and fmal caution flag of the event
has been labeled, the next great th~ p~emie~ driver in th~ series after when he spun harmlessly off tum
SL~clc c_ar c!!:ive~ since.J&gt;J:fore he _wmmn~ ht$ recgrd_~tymg se.venth two on lap 423, .was able to g~t
amved on the Wmst.on Cup scene. . champ10nsh•p las! season, came only one more run at the leader.
-. - Tliat hasn't slowcd""Gordon after "The Kid" midway through
down. He quickly became a star the race, !~ding three times for 72
On lap 464, Gordon w~ held up
and is climbing higher in the laps. But, m the end, the best the
NASCAR firmament all the time.
two-time defending series champi- by the slower car of rookie Ricky
Craven. Labonte drove high into
On Sunday, the slender, baby- on could do was a distant third.
faced youngster, who looks more
The o_nly driver able to push the ftrst-tum banking and got !he
like your neighbor's college kid . Gordon 10 the second half of the nose of his car past Gonion before
than a seasoned race driver won race was 30-year-old Bobby the younger driver regained his
: his third Winston Cup rae~. the Labonte, who got to know Gordon momentum and control of the !liCe.
:" Goodwrench 500 at jllorlh Carolina well when the two of them were
Motor Speedway.
.
bat~ling in. the Busch Grand
· ''When he got beside me !here
He led '329 of the 492 laps on National senes before movmg up ... I didn't want that," Oordon said.
the 1.017-mile oval, including the to Winston Cup.
"I knew we could pass him again,
final83 .
· Labonte, in his first season driv- but you just don't want to have to
:
This one didn't have the pres- ing a Chevy for Joe Gibbs Racing, run ~ide-by-side with somebody
: tige of Gordon's fiJ'St win, last Ml!Y and Gordon both pitted under the like that late in lhe !liCe."
· : at Charlotte in the Coca-Cola 6001 - green flag on lap 376. Labonte got
· or the purse from his second vic'?· back onto the track fiJ'St and it. took
ry, a NASCAR record $613,000 m Gordon untJilaf. 410 to pass htm. ·
Labonte, whose best previous
"We weren t worried allout him finish was fifth last August at
the inaugural Brickyard 400 at
Indianapolis. But Gordon may he getting out firsL It wall a green flag Michigan, said: "We got blocked a
'· most proud of !his one.
pit stop and we just wanted to be · little and got some rubber on our
"Hey, I figure this is a high pro- very exact on that and not make tires and that was about all we
file win for me," Gordon said. any mistakes," Gordon explained. could do. Those guys had an awe"Evcryonc knows' how '?ugh it is . "We took a little exll'll time just .to some car today. I couldn't qmte get

1994·1995 ~GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

GIRLS ·.

•
•

__

Eastern's Jekyll-and-Hyde season ended in the same fashion.
Eastern hit 12-24 overall the fust
half for 50 percent, played great
defense and executed well. The
second half it shot 26 percent (934}, gave up 41 points and executed poortr.
Reedsville-Eastern was led by
senior Charlie Bissell with 21
points and 10 rebounds. Teammate
Micah Otto had 12 points and 12
rebounds, wh ile Ryan Buckley
added 10.
.
.
Pike was led by Ryan Salisbury's 16 points, Keith Bolen' s 14
and Shane Williams 10.
. The ftrst quarte'r was very exciting, tied on six different occasions.
Bissell, Otto, Buckley, Hill, Bowen
and Stethcm all .got aboard the
scoring mcrry-go;round as Bissell
netted eight points in Eastern's rise
to a 20-15 lead at the end of the
first half. Eastern went up 22-15.
then turned the ball over. Chad
·Slusher drilled a three pointer and
Salisbury nailed a two to cut the
lead to 22-20. Eastern's defense
then held Pike three straight limes.
· Buckley and Bissell netted four
safeties and Bowen had the chance
(2:41) to open up a 28-20 EHS
lead, but mis~ed the bonus attempt.
Eastern sealed off the middle,
where Pike scored early, but Slusher, Salisbury and King wou1dn 'tiel
the Eagles lircak it open in the first
half, Eastern would hold a 6 to 8
point lead, but that trio nailed three

Page"'~

Gordon capt.u(es ~oodwrench 500 flag

MEIGS MARAUDERS

BOYS

....

By SCO'J'T WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
"Out of the oven and straight to
the ice box" is not a motto for a
Betty Crocker recipe, but rather the
recipe the Reedsville Eastern used
in going down to a 71 -65 defeat at
the claws of Beaver Eastern Saturday night in the Division IV boys'
sectional semifinal game at
Alexander High SchooL
Reedsville Eastern (6-14) shot a
Jed-hot 8-11 (73%) from the field
· the first quarter to spark a 20-15
. first period lead and 38-31 lead at
the half, then gradually worsened
to an icy cold 10.3 percent (3-29)
. in the fourth quarter. Likewise,
· Eastern was 11-17 from the line the
· fourth quarter, including three
bonus situations that could have
clinched a win for the Meigs Coun. tians.
·
.
.
Reedsville Eastern coach Tony
. Deem said, "Despite giving up a
few threes to Pike in the firs\ half,
we forced them to play our game.
Our kids did a great job in the first
. half. We hit a couple perimeter
. shots and worked the paint for the
good shot. We had Pike on the
ropes in the fourth quarter (12pointlead) and didn't put them
away. We wanted to keep the
tempo, but ins~ad forced a couple
shots. We just didn't take care of
the basketball very well. Pike got
the rhythm (hitting 4-6 from the
field the fourth quarter) and we
went ice cold."

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16....................................... NILLER"
DEC. 23 ................................. FORT FRYE
DEC. 29 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
DEC. 30 ..... :.AT FED. HOCKING TOURN;
JAN. &amp;............................. AT SOUTHERN*
JAN. 10........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 14 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
J.AN 17 ............ ,........... VINTON COUNTY"
JAN. 20 .....................................TRIMBLE*
JAN. 24 ......... ,AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 27 ........................... ,........... :.MEIGS*
JAN. 31 .........................AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 3 ................................... AT I/IILLER"
FEB. 4 ........................................0AK HILL
FEB. 7.... :·........................... SOUTHNERN*
FEB. 10.. :............... FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 17 ........ ;...................... AT TRIMBLE*
*-lndlcales Tri-Valley games
Coach -Tony Deem

•

Pike Eastern beats

-

EASTER EAGLES

The Daily §~~!i'J~l

•

•

---

1- -lrJ

about
the
fullVieW
Syst
-,.~.,.""7'1.--4-1~· ~ dzshe f!-J-Ifl-TJHAV'Hf"-M-J-~t--A-f-1('all 2-t

lluur~

A Day 7 Days A Wt•l'k!

�•

~The

MondaY; February 1:1, 1995

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VIctory Circle

-

·

Scribe recalls rising forfunes of Meigs County
BySCOTIWOLFE
It doesn ' t seem possible but bas~_
ketball season is almost over.
Soon "March Madness" at both
the college and high school level
Wi ll be fully upon us. Yes, late
February and early March is a magiCal time.
·
Currently, four teams in our
reading area are still experiencing
lhe magic. In Meigs County, Eastem' s girls have gone the farthest so
far, having won the Division IV
(ectional title and have earned a
l!erlh in the distric t championship
game at Ross-Soutbeastem on Fn day, March 3 at 7 p.m. afl\7 defeat·
ing Miller 4641. Eastern will play
Brown County 's J\.jo wrys town
Whiteoak, a 45 -31 winner over
Western Latham . Whiteoak and
Western split in their meetings during the regular season.
I' m somewh at biased when
reporting on the Eastern girls' team
'anct I am especially proud of lhem.
·I'm the proud coach. Our team has
played Its best ball in the tourna·
-ment (we ll, maybe not against
Miller). The girls have put forth a
good effort and I'm really glad that
they ha ve got to experience win-ning and to be able to say they are
champions. Currently, 32 teams
remain in tbe entire state of Ohio.
Meigs County claims one of them.
· Another win and Easiem is in the
''Sweet 16."
·
Eastern players include seniors
I essica Radford, Amy Redovian,
and Melissa Guess. Juniors are
Nicole Nelson, Jessica Karr,
Rebecca Evans, Beth Bay , and
Crystal Morri s. Sophomores .
i~clude starter Patsy Aeiker, Martie
Holter', Tracy Wh1te, and Crystal
Holsinger, while our freshmen are
Michelle Caldwell and Joanna
Gumpf. My assistant coaches are
Paul Brannon and Penny Aeiker,
· while Matt Boyles is the manager.
Eastern' s boys ·of Coach Tony
Deem played in tbe sectional Satur·
d11y mght at Alexander against
Eastern of Pike. Ironically, the
-Eastern Eagles faced the Eastern
Eagles. The only difference in the
two schools, besides location, is
ihat Eastern (Meigs) is green and .
white, while Eastern ~Pike) is
brown, orange, and white.
liastem 's boys have played really good ball lately, klloeking Miller
out of a tie for second place in the
league , and knocking off upper
division schools Nelsonville, Well·
ston, and Alexander. When Eastern
is on, it takes the appearance of a
state-caliber team. When it is off,
well, the Eagles real! y strUggle.
In Gallia County; Mike Jeitlcins'
River Valley boys are still alive
after defeating Meigs and y.'arren
Local, while Renee Barnes Gallia
Academy girls are still alive in the
tournament ·
Also, ll!y Rees Alexander SJIIf·
· tans will be going to the Convocation Center after a one-point win
·over Belpre.
Rees, a fonner Southern standout arid reserve coach, took
Alexander to the Tri-Valley Conference title last year. Alexander
strl!ggled at times during the regular.season, bpt one thing is for sure,
Rees always has. his troops prepared. Mostly, a young team,
Alexander will be back again next
year. Rees claims that much of his
basketball knowledge comes from
his childhood, tomato-picking days
up on Aaron Wolfe's Letart Falls
fann.
Also, Fedeml Hocking is still in
the hunt after claiming a giant win
over Southern. This is one of only a
couple Souwem teams lhat has not
won some 'tYPe of championship
since I 977, yet Coach Howie Cald·
well's boys were in every game
and always gave it 100 percent
The easy-pickings days of the
old Southern Vafley Alhletic Conference are $One. The Tri-Valley
Conference 1S perhaps one of the
toughest of its size in the state.
Scattered throughout with Division
II, Division Ill, and only three
Division IV schools, the league
touts much balance and a Jot of
. competition. Thus, the days of
Soutbem dominance, or any smallschool domilwlce may be over. ·
In I 980, more than 30 Class
"A" schools were in the Soulheast
District Now, only 14 remain dis·
trict-wide in Division IV. Consoli,
dation dealt a blow to Division IV
ball, while also the four-division
system took several former Class
•• "A" powers wilh it io Division Ill,

Soothern'a step up to Division m
was another factor in their roumament success as they were the
smallest school in lhe tournament
with 136 boys-the cutoff point this
year. In the past, Southern bas
always been Class A" and more
recently Divilion IV.
·
Southern '1 girls bad a miracuM

lous tumaro~nd over last season.
Jenni Roush's club upset several
league powerhouses to place third.
in the league with a 12-10 ~verall
marl" That was a nine game tum·
around over last year. "Hustle" was
the key to Southern's season. As a
coach I've never seen a team hustle
more. Southern also upset top·

seeded Green (15-5) in the sectional's first round , before falling to
Miller 45-33. Jess Codner had a
:great senior year.
Jeff Skinner did a similar job 81
. Meigs. His Marauders will be the
only team in the state to win the
last game of the year except for the
s tate cl)ampions. How? The

•

basket~all
.

Despite getting knocked out of lhe ·
toilrnamem ea rl y, Meigs put
together another winning season.
Next season, A
coubesin BV
I a ~ess a
Compston and m r ac .. we1 1
wi ll be greatly missed after yet
another good year.
·
Until next time, I' ll see you in
the victory circle.

Marauders won a make-up game
over Wahama aflel' already having
lost in the tournament Thus lhe
Marauders go out winners. Meigs
suffered through a rebuilding campaign last year, but ended with a
10-10 regular season mark.
Ron Logan's Meigs girls always
chalk_ ~ _ th e winning seasons.

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Porta•l•

la1dsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Mlddleport,-Ohlo 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlckletl

Your Message _Can
Be Seen Here!

.9Lnderson's ·

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

614-742·2193

""" -

YOUNG'S

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

. PUBUC N011CE
tn comptlanco with Sact
5705.27 af the Ohio ReviHd
Code, the Molila County
Budget Commlaalon wilt
· maot to review tho 1H5 •
1888 budget of the Molga
Local School Dlatrtct. The
Comml11lon will meet at
10:00 a.m. In the Auditor'•
Office of IM Melga County
courthouae on March 7,

Fund Ceah Betlnce, Dac.
31 ............................31,301.15
NON-EXPENDABLE TRUST
FUNDS .
Non-Operollng Recelpta
CDiab)
Fund Caoh Balanco, Jan. 1
,.............................. 7,823.82
Fund C11h Balance, Doc.
31 .............................. 7,823.&amp;2
Totala I Fund Balance

1115.
Nancy Parker Cempball

T11Xtl ..•..•••••.•......•44,908.02

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• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
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(FREE ESTiMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

.............................47,111.12

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
11211lo

Recelpto:

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Mlddtepon, Ohio 45760
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614-742· 3090

3114-773-9545 ,_, ..,

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HAULING
Umestone
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Reasoaablt Rates
JH N. Sayre
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.SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
,........,.,

.

Budget Commlaaton
tntargovemmantalt
Real Estate General
Stcntary Recelpto ................. 44,460.87
flEE tRIMMING
lnlereol ..................... 914.78
(2j 27; 1TC
All Other Ravanuo ..............
AND REMOVAL
............ ................. 87,331.56
Public Notice ·
Total Racolpta .. 1T7 ,823.33
Light Hauling,
Dlaburaemonll:
THOMAS E. FERGUSON
Shrubs Shaped
Gontrll Govomment .........
Auditor of Slate
....,........................ 47,120.53
Mobile
Welding
Financial Report of
and Removed
Public Safety ...... 15,627.15
Townahlpa
DlesBIInJector SVC
Public Worka ...... 71 ,049.05
For Flocll Year Ending
Misc. Jobs.
Hoalth .................... 2,532.92
Injector Pump SVC
December 31, 1994
Capital Outtay .....56,3&amp;4.85
Bill Slack Rutland Townahlp,
Tune-ups
Total Dlaburaementll .........
County of Motgo
........................... 183,584.50
985·3879
992·2269
"Thll II In UIIIUdlted
Other Sourceii/Rtcelpto ....
Flnonclal Roport"
.................................. 182.50
Summory of Cuh Balancoo,
Dlob. I other U111 .......... ..
Racalpta and Expendlturoo
.......................... C15,808.87)
FlEE
Source Deocrtpllon,
Fund Caoh Belanca, Jan. 1
Govommanlll Fundo
.............................~.842.24
ESTIMATES!
Racalpta:
Fund Caoh Belance, Doe.
WAIUIITY
UKI
LONG BOTTOM · Nice 1 floor frame home with 2 large
Taxaa ...................44,to8.02 31 ............................39,133.57
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, equipped kitchen, full basement
lntorgovommonlll
Depository Bell nee ...........
with garage, FABG heat. Propertv has a nice large yard
Racalpte.................44,460.87
.............................37,227.71
and some rlverlrontage. GREAT VIEW! ASKING
lntoroot.....................914.78
lnvtlotmenta ..........2,700.00
$50,000.00
All Other Revenue ..............
Total Traaaury Balance......
............................. 87,339.56
................ :............ 39,927.71
MCNICHOLS RD. • RACINE • Approx. 31 + acres of
Total Rocalpto .. -177,623.33
Leu Outolandlng Chacka.
ground
with a 2 story home that features 3 bedrooms, 2
Dlabu,_ntl:
_ ................. .. ............... 714.14
full baths, enclosed rear proch, outbuildings, newer
- General Gcivemmont .......:.- Total Bolence ....~ .39,133.57
PubliC NotiCe
furnace. and shingle roof. Large garden area and Is
Chris
.......................... , .47,120.53
Summa,Y of lndobtodnooo - - - - - - - - located pn a dead end TWP Rd. Many other features!
Public S.loty ...... 15,627.15
New luuoo ......... 48,500.00
ASKING $49,900 .00
Scherfel
Public Worka ...... 71,048.05
Outolandlng, Dac. 31 ,1liM
SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
614-992-4236
HoaHh .................... 2,632.!12
............................. 48,500.00 .
ESTATE
GOLD RIDGE RD. - Approx. 8+ acres of nice laying
ground that is mostlv cleared . TPC water and elec .
Capital Outlay.....56,3&amp;4.85
t carttty tho following CASE NUMBER M-CV·181
available. Perfect bwlding site or inobile home sitel
Total Dloburoamanta ......... report to bo correct and Flrot tnvootmant Compony
Asking $12,000.00
........................... 183,5114.50 truo, to tho beol of my
vo .
SMITH'S
othar Sourcea/llacolpto.... knowttdgo
•
Rodney A. Tripp, otel.,
CONSTRUCTION ·
POMEROY • SR 7 - ~ice 2 story home with approx. 1+
..............................,... 162.50
Opel L.. Dyer, Clerk Court of Common Pteoo;
acres
of
ground
.
3·
bedrooms,
bath,
newer
carpet
&amp;
Custom
Building 5 Remodeling
Dlob. I other UOII ............
P.O. Box 328
Melgo County, Ohio
furnace,
~notty pine paneling in kitchen, hardwood
•
NEW
HOMES ......................... C15,808.67)
Rutllnd, Ohio 45775
In purau1nco of an Order floo(\08. Home has had some remodeling. Asking
Fund C1oh Bolanco, Jon. 1 (2) 21; 1TC
of Seto to mo dlractod from $28,
•ADDITIONS
.00
• NEW GARAGES
o1ld
Courl
In
tho
obove
enltllod act!on, t will expooo MIDDLEPORT • HARTINGER PKWY. · This nice 1 floor
•
REMODELING
to oato 11 public auction 11 frame home features 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, utility room, 2
•
SIDING
on 28th Morch, 1995, at fireplaces, newer FAN .G: furnace, · perms-payne
•ROOFING
10:00 a.m. of Aid dey, lho windows, nice front ' sitting porch . . REDUCED TO
•PAINTING
•
following roolntate:
$29,000.00
FREE ESTIMATES
Y,
Calif.
(AP)
_Elvis
lives:
Sttuotod
In
tho
Vlttago
of_
MONTERE
Tupper Plaine, County of SR 338 • APPLEGROVE • 1966 Clayton mobile home
. .
(614) 992-5535
\ 59 said most of the audienc.e at a mock ~al, Sldmg Melgo and state of Ohio~
approx. 14'x56' with an added 14' x ~4' room currently
(61 4) 992·2753 m• ~
' with the argument that Elv1s Presley sull walks,
Being Lot H!!mbar Sovon bemg used as a master bedroom. Total elect., central air,
breathes, sings and swivels his hips on a remote 1sla~d (7) of tho TH!RD ARBAUGH 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths. utility -room, some newer
2 large lots that's partially fenced, well water,
somewhere as he hides from mobsters who want to kill SUBDIVISION In Tuppero carpet!
Plotno, Malgo County, Ohio. outbui ding, covered porch , cement walkways. Much
Morel Come See! ASKING $30,500.00
~im.
; Pon:el No: 08-01140
HENRY E. CLELAN0_, ___ ____'___ ____ ___________________________ _992-6191
The 2 1/2-hour trial, held as a fund-raiser for the law
Prior
tnotrumant
53&amp; BRYAN PLAce
TRACY
L. BRINAGER ..... ............ ........... .. ........... 949-2439
review publication at the Monterey College of Law, Reference: Dood Book 324,
MIDDLEPORT
992·2mSHERRI
L.
HART
......
:
.......
........
............................
742·2357
drew 200 people who alternately giggled, g~~ped ~d pego131.
.
.
on1ce Hours: Mon.·Frt.
HENRY E. CLELAND 111........... ........... ,.. ......... :..... 992-6191
ultimately answered yes to the q~estion , Is Elv1s
CurronAt OTwlner •dNSt~:Y·
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m .
KATHLEEN
M
.
CLELAND
..........
.'
.......................
..
992·6191
ali ?"
Rodney . r pp an
VInyl
&amp; Alum. Siding,
OFF.ICE. ...........
.. ........... .. ----- -- -- .................. 992·2259
~he offieial line is that Pre·sJey died of cardi~c · _L.. :~::~rty Addrooo: 183 .
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
arrhythmia in a batbroom of his Graceland mansiOn m Poplar Streat, Tuppers
·
Windows,
Blown
Memphis, Tenn., on Aug. 16, 1977.
.
·
Platno, Ohio 45789.
Insulation, Storm
But Phil Aitcheson chairman of the Presley Com·,
Appraload ot: S21,500.00
Doors, Storm
mission, which raise~ money for.mult!p_le sclerosis
hTer~;o~ s::·~=:~~l:~·:
..tl11T~GS
. Windows, Garages.
research, argued that the King ~ent m~o h1dmg after _tes- ~~~~:.
11l. y
Free Eallmarea
tifying against mobsters who b1lked h1m out of m1lhons '
Jomeo M. Souloby, Sherin
1/1tltfn
of dollars.
·
_
M•lo• county, Ohio
Law student Paul Sanford told him to get a hfe (2) 21; (3) a, 13 ::--'-:;:::~~~======:=====~=~
Howard L. Writesel
and not Elvis' .
. . d .. h
A
11
nt
44
ROOFING
"Mickey Mantle is retired, John Wayne IS dea • e
pa me
2
In Memory
said. "Kentucky Fried Chicken is no longer fned. And
for Rent
NEW-REPAIR
yes, Elvis Presley, the King, is dead . Long hve t~e
Gutters
king."
In Memory of
WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Russell P. Painter
Downspouts
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Good thing John LarroOct.I1 , 1898 Syracuse, Ohio
/ G'u tter Cleaning
quette's an actor.
.
.
.
Feo. 27, 1972 ·
The New Orleans native and rccovenng alcoholic,
Painting
Now availble FmHA One BR apts.
Gone But Not Forgotten
· who plays a recovering akoholic on his NBC· TV sit·
The Family
FREE ESTIMATES
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
com, spent the night as Bacchus - god of wme and
949-2168
mirth - as p3rt of the notoriously drunken Mardi Gras
Basic monthly Rent $269~00.
5J IMN TFN
festivities.
.
3 .Announcement•
Resident
pays
electric
only
Range,
So, this year, Bacchus was drinking root beer.
.
"I may be the first Bacchus ever to toast wllh
MANLEY'S
Refrigerator, Aft; on ·site laundry,
HOME IMPROVEMENJ'
Barq's," I..arroquette said.
'
Roofing, Siding, Room
' The Sunday parade was a wann up. for Fat Tuesday • Community Room, Management,
Additions,
Concrete, etc.
celebrations expected to draw 1.2 mllhon people to the ·
Maintenance
provided
PO
.
Box
220
' French Quaner and the Uptown parade routes. .
Bidwell,
OH
45614
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL
. 614 388-9865
DETROIT (AP) -:-II's _tears and a frown - again 614·992·6419 TOO 1·800.750.0750.
between MotownTounder Berry Gordy and ace produc·
er-songwriter Eddie Holland, who ~ave been batUmg for
DAVE'S
decades over song rights and royalues. -:
_
Equal Ho_using
SWAP SHOP
A special judge is to be appomted th1s week to sort
One mlleoul
out one of several lawsuits between tbe men.
_
143 from Rt. 7
But don't expect a harmonious ending. ·
_
Tillis. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
Coon papers filed by Holland descri~. tile busmess ,._ _ _ _ _.:s==H~a=pp=y=A=d=s==;.;,..-':1
1-«i
practices of the man he once .cal~ed h1s black father
•
Craflemao
Toqls
Sher-Fy
-&amp;
Shannon
figure" as " malice, fraud, oppressmn..
..
A dinner and surprise
•Toys
Riffl
e
announ
ce
th
e
"I doubt if he's ever been my fnend, Gordy has
lblrth•lay party was held
•Gun•
birth of iheit first child
said.
for Charlie Chigren of
Loada of Misc.
son,
Rutland . Family and
Buy-Sail·Trade
Nicholas Tanner Rime
frie~ds gathered for_ a
Born : Dec . 30, 1994 at
992·2060
· NEW YORK (AP) _ Linda Fairstein is turning from
ICV511mo
spaghetti dinner and
Hol ze r
Hos p it al,
"Preppie" prosecutor to. paperback penner with a
Gallipolis
surprised Charlie with
KEI'I IPPLIAICI
5500,000 book deal.
·
· d' Weight:
5
lbs.
15
l
/2
oz
.
1ca••e, cards, and presents
. Linda Fairstein, 47 ; head of the Manhattan J Strl ~ l
1011 1
Length: 'I 8 inches
attorney's sex crimes uni ~ has. agreed 1\) wntc two my •
of hi § 76th
of'.ctory Aulhor~u&lt;~ Porto
Time: 9:21 a.m.
tery novels for Scribner.
.
•Service
Grandparents: Pam·
Making crime pay for Fairstein is her ficuonal pros_e·
•An
Charli e is a . WWII
oFaolMokea-42-Yaora
Rellobto Slrvlcl
Dan Riffle, Rebecca
cutor, Alexandra Cooper, "who has ~me o f m~ trans
I
v••••t:tn
and
his
cake
Rou
sh,
Bruce
&amp;
t.n•r«•
oWaolllre
· DryeN
•
bui is younger, thinner and bl&lt;?.nde~.. said. F~u~~~~~;
&gt;Rolrlgorotora
•Frauero
in red , whit e,
Teaford
who •became famous prosecutmg prepp1e
oOiohwoolllro
Greal-grandparents:
blue and he was fi!(ven-1
Robert Chambers.
·
book
::::,•.:•oOIIPOIIt
J , _ _Fairstein said ScritinefWants'to pubhsh (he-fust
po c ket
kni fe · Bo-n ni e Matth ews,
Wil'ma &amp; Cha'r le s •Thanke Molgt 1
in spring 1996.
·
.0 W
commemorati~g the 50th
' In 1993 Fairstcin wrote "Sexual VJOienc~. ~ ar . ....... .
Surrounding
Araoa or
Buckley, Hele·n &amp; Virgil
(614) 985-3561
• !!oniversary of WWII .
Against R~pe," a study of sexual and domesuc cn'!'e.
Teaford
992-5335
'

GRAY'S

YOUR CHOICE

Bert&lt;line" recUnes you 1n
comfortable, sensible ttansitionaf style. Compatible with
any decor, the buttoo Mted back

$299°

0

Bertdlne's l'1!dlnllf PIO'
&gt;ides total erjoyment In tl1is
big friendly chair built fa! super
comtort and relaXaflon_ Deeply j&gt;added
and densely cusliooed from headrest to footrest.

meets hefty padded arrro; over an ample
T-cushioo

seat &amp;lft sl!lrltno coven tne

CHAISE STYLE
RECLINER
,.

I

'
'

'

0

••

YOUR

$399°0
.•
.."'
.•

-b--:-,--

,_lh.,..:-.

. . -.
1 --,-

'
...

1

.
.
~

Classic hG\ooal sl)1e. absokJta u~mate comlolt! 01 count,
~~ a BEAKUNE F~ide' redioer. Srooo11. 18aJing
gliding moion, reclines will e11ott1ess - - FIA!y
uphoiltlied wings. piJb pillow back. rol8l llm1S. plush~
packlld Ul widl1 T-cusl'ioo. Weltec( 11ee9 kicl&lt;·pieated si&lt;i~ .
ComfortAest' I:UShioo S\IP your legs ~ the !ell!
IIICI open oiiOmill, tor ~-~IOe com1o1t

"••

Rocker/
Recliner

YOUR

•

CHOICE

$469
'

,,

·-..

Wall-Away
.,._.-J-~c::J Recliner

~

JOUR

. 00
HI·LE.G RECLINER

•Over Stuffed •Soft Pillow Arms
.'

Wood Accent

Talle

o-

pay.

I

6 months

Same As

to

Cash*

No Interest

Til

SEPTEMBER 1995

DOWNTOWN POMEROY- 992-3671 ·
J

•

.
-

•.

Call

One Stop Complete Auto Bodf Repair ·

PRECISION. AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

-

· · · .StaiB At. 33

....

Darwin, Ohio
1Qf21/Mitfn

Graded Benefit Whole Life is now abailable. The
plan offers coverage ot up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
the application. Ages 40-80

ROCKY R. HUPP
American ~eneral Lile &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614·843·5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

H e&lt;,~llh • A ccident • Armuily • IR A.!

.

Moriglrgc

'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•

..

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New_

..

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RES IDENTIAL

~portuJ!!:~

(No Sunday Calls) 2112/92111n

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
'•
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
'.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
·
Job sites' Camp SHes • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
· Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
. '
Ll
d&amp;B ded 2D
992·3954
EmNg cnc y Phone 985·3418

Kerosene
Heater ·
Repair
Parts &amp; Service on Moal
Mskeo Racine Mower
Clinic

i.

50% off
"In Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Bora

949-2804

11 16 'Un

·-

.' .

/·

•

.' '

(llmtsl- low Ralesl

WICKS
HAULING
(Specialize In
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gr~vel, Sand,
Top Soil, ' Fill Dirt
&lt;

.

•

''

"

. ,.. ..

614·992·3470

~

-

/

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS. '
•Cultom Made
•Solid llinyl
repl~aement
window•
• Free Eitlm1tes
•Stlrtlng At ·
,

*200 II Rlfi ff t d
-

"lli~IT OUR SHOWROOM"

110 Court 111., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-41t9 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800·291 ~5600
. - - -~~ ..._~~-:--~~ -~--.

''

.

,.

614-992-7643

c

'

..

FREE ESTIMATES

in the l!lassifieds%

•
·'

992·7434 for more information.
1125195

0 JN'0•MJTE
S
.aJ.-,.
•••

n,,_

9:30-8:00 MON. 9:30-5:00

'

J

Low Rate Financing Available

J&amp;L INSULATION

R-•

No Down Payment

'To qualified applicants

I

Amerit;an Standard Dealer

---.. . . :::========~. ·

®

CHOICI ·

ROCKER/RECLINER .

EPA and RSES Certified
Your authorized

Names in the news

Chalst·tfftct handlt·activattd Wallaway• Recliner
with uftalhtrglldt" smooth·actlon mechanism!

~-

MDRRISON.'S
HEATING &amp; COOLING·

--------.....Ji.--------.,

CROI~E

Alexander boys
to face Minford
Tuesda.y night
Alexander will face Minford iri
the first ·round of the Division III
boys' district tournament Tuesday
at 6:30p.m. at Ohio University's
Convocation Center in A~

The Daily Sentlne j...:..page-:.-7 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 1:1, 1995

J

·'

�•

Page-8-The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday; February 'Z7,1995

Monday, February 'ZT, 1995
.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page.:.-e

Ohio

:. ALLEYOOP
...

·.
'·

BRIDGE

--

I,

•,

..•
~

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Announcements

-·-'Sol

1110 tnlornodonol 2 T"" Duntp

IS-Andloml-1
Bod-, 1 112 lo1ho, LA I
P.\'lld Driwway. 114 4•tl oe3l

Trucll,

11100+ S1F ·AIIneh • 3BA, 2 lothl,

Root, largo Yord ·•

FA, -

151,1100, -8-7881.

32 · Mobile Homes
for Sale
14•70 0ovonor s a.........,.~ !

112 lolho, Good CondHion, ""'
Up In Troller PAIII. Air, Fur•
RKO,It1W45-011 •.
11115 UIHolty, 2 bod-, 1
bolh'-~ ...... ' ...........

304..,.,1&gt;41125.

Fumlohed
I room, 807 ~~::"'·
, OoiNpollo,
$29Wo. · Utllltloo Pold, 114-44114411 Aftor 7 P.ll.
Fumlohed Etflcloncy . - _
UtllftiM Paid. She.- llolh, 107
Second.!. Glllfpoh, 114"441 . . .

2·27-95

•K 4 3 2
•7

1882 Chlv. 1-11!,_ complololy
tolum.
oobull 350 bored "" lnl•ko, duol pUmper kOitoy,

•A 5

o AQt0853

11-lrs

~r

curnm

~ss ~~ TALI::It-.t::&gt; I&gt;B&lt;JJT
. ELIMINATI~ Tl-{t; F6t ~IUS5

IS Gl&gt;tilf.6 SER!c:tr.l ...

EAST

8
108 5 4

. ~OJ PrC:RAM

Avonuo,

G..clouo Nvlng. 1 ond 2 bodroom 1pertmente •
Yltllae
M•nor
lind
Rtverwta.
Aportmentoln Mlddlo!""'- Foom
W2.., . C.P 614-1112 5851.
EOH.

•QI096
•K 932
+J 762

t4
K984 3

oftor3pm.
11182 llodgo ... _go Tnicll,
Polnl, Conolllan,
70,000 Act... - · t\2011 Or
T - Aloo, 11117 Chryolor Yorllorl _lllnl Condition, 17,000

Fumlohod
EHicloncy,
All
UtiiHIM Pold, Ioiii,

Golllpollo, 1114-4411-31145.

A.

~000,
Will
So
l _W-loar
. . .8os.._
. ....
·FOI' Rail
Bock
01 Equol
Value, t~1-0812.

orono ""'!!!.•II ,_ ,_.
pononlo, T" J50 lurtoa - . ,
8111 · ohlftor, 3000 1111 ololo
conv.tter, $1450. 3Q4.112.2117 ,

Aftor7~.11.

$145/llo. ... Socond

Aut_.., " · I

3t N.E. ltale ·

ACROSS

'

Announcements

NEA Crossword Puzzle

,. 10
SOUTH
•A 7 5

•A J 6
I K 9

Mlloo, A,!OO, - - -·

.. Q J 7 6 2

1 MontNel

41 Auricle
421ntendto

ballplayer
5 Slippery

s. Grant

45-

t Pub,clrlnk
. 4t Omolot
12Mohemmedton
lngrodlonl
noble
50 Common
13 Hint
cont ...ctlon ,
14 Wornen' e 52 Door leotonlng
15 Shoe pet!
53 - Clolre, Wlo.
16Gymneat
54 Ac1or Oanny
Korbut
· De17 law deg.
55 Allant• orane
18 nny Ol*llng
56 Ike
20 Rei••••
57 Engllah achool
22 Brood o1
56 Adoloocenl
~~~
pheaunto ·
23 Chem. ending

DOWN

24l!raoa i:or
brona
27 Spoon or lark
31 Noblomon

1 -Saarinen
2 Dec. holiday
3 Liquid maoau,.
t - well that
4 - number
ondo well
5 Franch school
10 Jaunty tune
6 Faohlon
11 WinOS
- Ino

32 Walked
large bird
lang....,. aulf.
Of the dawn
Give oil
Falcon

32
34
35
36
37

7 Haul with ollort

I Longod (lor)

19 Popoyo'a
·
lrlend Olive -

Vulnerabl e: Both
Dealer: South
South . West North East
1 NT
Pass
3•
Pass
3 NT
Pass
Pass
Pass

NOBODY

OL' SNORT
IS ON A
RAMPAGE!!

Anawer to PN'vloue Puule

40H8Wkl

Opening lead: • 5

TROMPLES ON MY

PATOONIE BED ! !

On the edge
of destruction
By Phillip Ald er

r-----"

PEANIITS
THIS IS CALLED
A LEASH ..

..---1

t:\1&gt;

v

v

WI-lEN THE MASTER
AND HIS D06 60 ·

I=OR A WALK, TI-lE
LEASI-l 15 ATTACHED
TOTI-IE DOEi'S COLLAR ..

Once, when standi ng on the _
bow of a
small boat in Kakadu National Park in
lhe Northern Territory of Australia, I
was filming a cro~o dil e lying on the
sunny riverbank. As I was only four or
----:-.;J
1 five feel from lhe impressive creature,
7
1 DON'T
if he had wanted mo for breakfast, I
I-lAVE TI-lE
think he could have had his wish 11 asSLiii-ITEST ~f~7d th e boatman thought I was

OKAY, LET'S REVIEW
WI-IAT W~ I-lAVE
JUST LEII\RNED..

WAAT 15~15
CALLED AND
I-lOW 15 IT
VSED?

EY~GLASSEf

b-606~
'b~/oo '06 .~~~-==:­

--a¥·'b6

, . ' ..

BORN LOSER

...

W~Yc.AAT~il«&gt; .

srm l&lt;fTCF. CUNOF
lor locol dairy

I

rarm. 304-815-3082.

' - · - • -·-- 1

8

Auto Parts-&amp;
Acc:essorlea

Bllbyol11• Port-nmo And
Some Saturdaya, Must Be
Dependable, Hive Rer.r.nc..,
Pr- s - n . l n Golllpollo Or
Addloon - - Coli Evonlngo.
- - Jl.8 P.ll. 614-4411-1012.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2 Ford Mator c"'"~ny Frant
End Covoro (Bru) 1 Flto Thundootllrd And 1 Flt0 Eocorl OT

Will do lnteriOI'IIIIorlor .. model.
occOtillng rau..,.. for tto. lng, lrwtall wlndowa, •ntry &amp;
pooKion of Donlol Aulotont . . gorogoo doon, docko, ole. 304Expoolonco pnlorrod ·but not 675'6237 .... 5pm.
requlrod. PIMM Mnd reoumo
to: Dorrtol Anloton~ P.O. Bo1

Ak:tl Poo.-on Auction Compony,
full time ·~-r. complolo
auctton
allr'lica.
Uc.n.ct
-.Ohio I Wool Vlrglnlo, 3041'73-15785.
380, Maaon, WV 25210.

9

Financial

Wanted to Buy

Oolc Hll Tnocklng Compony
Sooklng Ovor Tho Rood S.ml
. Cl•n ·Late lloc:tel Cara Or Drtvn, Excellent Pay, Ex·
Trucka, 1981 Or - . . .
Drlv... OnlY, 614-882·
Smfth Buick Ponlloc 11100 '1773, Or Aftor I P.ll. 614-245·
· Exotllf'll Avonuo, Golllpotlo.
1304.

-need

01 c = ,..M . . . . . . ., . . . tea.
phonM, 0k1 llmpe ok1 t~..
rnornet•, old c~oclr...-lnllque
tumHwe. AlvwiM ·-A.Itlqun,

buy.......

pt ....nt Y1llav Nurwlng 1nc:l
Aeh1blllt1tlon 61nter Ia IMklng
1 Director of Nurelng. The per•
~ mult be 1 progtnaltte

RuM 11-. -nor. 114-112· IMdor In .... fthco.- -'•llzlng
. 25211. We
In goronloloaY ond ,....bllfto·
Iton: Allllllcorii' mull hovo o BSN
Don~ Junk ftl Sol Uo Your Non- ond th;.. y..,. monogoomont
Worldng llo)or Applloncoo, ,.lotod oxportonco, ucollonl
Color
T. V.'o,
RofrtaoniOI'I, -bo11 wrtlton ond communlcaF,..zoro
VCR'o,
flo ......, lion 01lllo. lluot boo o poog,_
Dryo,., Etc. 614-2.56-1238.
o!M thinker. Contoc:l Chrfiillno
J a. D'o Auto Porto ond Solvogo, Slo-AAdmlnlolriilor, 304-875.buylng w..ckaJunk outoo 1 52311.
OE.
truckt. Aloa, porto lor oolo. 31MPOSTAL JOBS
173--5343 Of ~5033.
·
Stert $'11.41/hr.lo tor uem end
Old button•~ co.tume t-llry, lppllclltlon In . call 21•78•
aid llghtors 1_1oon okllloto, ole· 8301 ut. WV548, ilim-Upm, '
turn. $t•r ••,., a..... ch)na, Sun-Frt.
'
tumHw• toor. or complete . .
Poetel Poeltlone
tot•, Ooby llortln, 614-tl2-11141. 12.26/hr. • bonolfto .• C.rrtoro,
""'
clorb, oortoro, ond molnt. joboo.
Wanted To Buy: J ..,k
oe For uam lnfor1mt1on a. 1pp1Jca.
With Or WlthoU llotOI'O. Coli lion COU 7'06-284-1800 Ill. 3670,
_larry Uvoly. IM 388 1:1113.
oloo opon ovonlngo.

Rlnn

Top Pr1CH Pold: All Old U.S. •-~oe·
eotno, ~-ld
su- catno,
""'
Gold Colno. II. . cain Shop,
151 S.C..nd Avonuo, GolllpoiiL
Wonted Ta Buy Uood llobllo
Homo, i;:all&amp;~-4~75.
W1nted• 1831, 1938, 1939
Pomeror Hlah Sc_hoof y•r~

21 .

INOTICEI

~~~~~~~~~:I

w.-,_ary.,

Color T.V., Cl

Rodlo, •la-ovo, llolrtgoratOI',

814-2156o~.

-' ~,
••---•
~ Duty, W
' 205• 1 y - Worronly;
Whirlpool
llolchlng
Dry..-, 121151 f Y- ~rrolll,;
lloylog W - 1 Yoor. womroty
1205;
Wo-Whirlpool

Wh=

:;s·w::

For~ -~~~~:~~~:~ Oold,
Ex Ei!t~
Condllon, 1150;
~=

•

=-~·dop~. ,:~

This newspaper will not
knowllngly .accept
advertisements lor real estate
which is in violallon ollhe law.
Our readers are hereby
inlonned lhat all dwellings
adver1ised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opponilnlty basis.

Ti-aln In o llold o1 wKh oornlng
polinllol ol N p. hour pluo
::,n -~~- ::

=:"'"troublllihooc

hNI:Inglelr condKionlna oqulpmonl, ' boo on
llectrtcil
conll'lctar
or

molrrtononco -rtclon. Slort In
Eloctrtchy on llorch 13th. Coli
,_Ill Tho Aduft Educ.ttlon
Conlor, 1-IOC).f37.-

Real Estate

*'otna.

12x11 1872 Tn~ller, 2 I
CIMn, Mlnutoo Fl'lltil - r
Hoopltol, 10111 Sb8go Biela:,
No P•a. DlipOIII A'«Pilnd, I~
4444838 After 8 P.ll.
14170 3br. troll«, C.mp Cantoy,
IYOIIIO_blo llorch ~ . . . . . .. pluo

304-47UWI.
.
1972 mobltt, home wl2ac.,
$250/mo., 1300/dopoOII. 304524·2m.

2 lodnocim .Troller ~ To
UnlvoroHy Of Ria Orondo, 8142br., oil oloclrlc, Aohlon Upltind
Rd., $175/mo. pluo utllttiM. 30487S-40118.

Supormarkot,

bollom

School Dogroo, Volld Drlwr o
Ao Saloodulod
,
~.
TliNolAo
Yooro
Do-lvlng E1p.lonco, And Good
Do-lvlng
Roconl
Roaulrod.
.:...:::..:...;.:-::,=.7.::::-::=::---~ S.lory: 14.li1Hr, Ta Stort.-,...lnAVONM$SAlES
Avorogo S8 41S IHr Pluo Fonlootla Dl-ol loll AI - Worll

comptotoly ..m-d, 2
booyo: "'""' boy 40'11211', ...,
""' 12'11231, 100'140' lot,
131,000. 304-112·2713.

dop. Rop. 1-1112-4'131.

For Solo By OWner, -lng On 3
Aoooo, Rurol Wotor, Lcicolod

2 long lull oldtllomoolo, "•
_,ld
g..Oov1oloc~
ona
blnlll\oihlto 1-.-: crtnollno Ollp.

leo--·-

4pm.

200 Amp
portoblo
1400;
21011DCwoll
Omon P·
-

wMh ......111:1.2203.

orort, 1300;

P.• . l14-448-2515.

~-lYing rocim ouko; 110

44

Apartment
torRent

4 arovo ' - • AI Ohio VoiiOJ

1 • 2 bedroom tum..,_. apl•.,
utllhl• paid. .,.,... ,..

lolly bod
otn&gt;ll«,
-·
wolkor,
hlg~.
-~~31M-

cuoto;;j,'

e7!1-4141.

fumlahlld and unfumw.ct,
eecurlty dlj)oslt rwqulred, no

...... 614-9112·2211.

town lumK ..o wit~

Y.rnory ....... l1t Uti3M7.

·~menta,

.

·
- eo-, Eu"' Sport • •
lion

-

W:..I.J..

=• _

famltr, S2210, •
~-··21145.

,...;...

1311.

.

By Rod Wlna Ch'-lrawn
0Uonlntood.l.i&gt;owHii'rkioo,Tho
"-Colo, t14-441-4222.
-

-40 Ta

-a !loll-,ll.H.

2bd,.... •pta., Ialit .-:trlc1 ~
p l l - fumlohed, loundry
room fo&lt;:NHIM .to ooho9t eo.-o I , Plootla Soptla
In 1-n. -lcOitono OVIIIoblo T - . :100 Thru 2,000 Gollono
Yllloge ·o,... Atilo. ..... or Ron 1 . . . E............_ Jock·
coll114-112-3111. EOII.
011 t-IOC).f37..11211. .

-·-

=·=
Mllllllo

v:.';,~l':~:":::

1186

714-251-3311 ... 1!5QI.
.:..:.,..;;o_ _ _--"----:.' '

I
'
=

. ..

Potolol I NorthuD
Polmo Hunllng. Prlcod To Solll
814-371-3240.
.

•

nlco,

or

v..
q

Mercury

«ougoor,

out-lie~ olr, looko

v..,

lnd runo

=r.DR
tenka.

- I worrnod.llll4-t7S-2113.
Brokoo, •2,500, o1WII6ol840.
AKC
lloglol- · Llilndor 1166 Uncoln Town Cor, Lotodod
Altrtev. puppla1, 11 ....U old, $3400. 1885 Colt vt.11 van,
and - · $110, $1300. 304-117..-. .

•--~,...
=-=Pir:--.----::ho-=o,.-nd-:-eao
=Fu-~--=-=v.,..,..,
AKC
Aalacll..,. P..-.
4 Autonwtlc · Good
kM'I1
F~21111Eoc• 114-446- Aloo 1182 b.,i;;; 11-280 Von,
WOI'Rotlc;-FOir
CooodNioro, 814~~~
~ ''
568

VNVS

M E

_VBBEJUU

J~

I'

M

U V X- C

A J . ,

WJXMNUJ

XKMXFVEI,

.s

V l N J .·

-u-e-p-&gt;

KA

S F J

S V G •J · P

GIIBUSK .E .

Z K FE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I am not sixty . I am three limes lwenty! Inside, I am
still t;Nelve years old.M-

Sophia Loren.
.

Tll&amp;f DAILY
PVUUI

'

S&amp;\\.cij~-lt£~s·

WOlD
GlMI
- - - - - - 1~110~ ~f CLAY I . P O L L A N - - - - - -

R.arrange len•rs of
0 lour
Krombled word•
low to form four words

G E NN I S

-,-A_Nr;-,-;:-BO_T111:
N,'

:.__,__._..__.___,N
I ll I' I .
._1
·

s

I I 16

lfyouwatchallthenewsbroadcasts hoping that the news will
r---:----:-'"":"......- - - - ,' get better you are considered a
•

.

r-r_M-.

.

.

8

\JS, NATE 1
YOUR 11"Tc.H ~TAR15 IN
;.0 11 1N liTES ~ TH Itol 1"ABOVr '(OUf&lt;. OFI'ONEWT!
1!.~~ CONCE NTRATE
TRY 1;o

A~=·
.rnoto,

ole:.
- · -·
m-3133ort

•

.

.

.

couckte

q~o•ed

by Id ling 1n the m1Uing word s
you develop hom step No. 3 bel ow ..

PRI NT NUMBERED
!ETTERS IN SOIJARES
ANSWE R

~-

~

.

~ UNSCRAMBlE fOR

ON Hll'll

Saul-•
Plclt-Up Porto
•
C.boo, Doaro, .. ., - . :

1

~,.,E,,P..,r-11 tOe ~~~~.:.~- ;"•

_A'"'I7'R-,..

1
.

.

one ton true*

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Aloo, 414 Do-lw Troln Porto. ~
1111• Sauth 01 Clolllpallo "'-~

""'"'
-w:m.
·

lion AI. 7 I AI. 218
PHONE NUIIBER:

Motor Homes

' V

.

Aloo, Cooh A"'f
Corry . Tnu101nlooloroo, I14-37So
226S.
.

aood, .. ancM to ~. 114AKC
~CaaUr 1141-:zm «114-M~~-:~048.
·Truck-· Chlv., ~
Sponlolo For Solo Adufto I ~11::18::-::Colo=-;:-btll=y-;E;-,uroo:::-=p-::-,-;;R,.-un-o =-~10, ohort I long.
,
Pupploo, tl4-37t-2721.
Elcoltoro Cruloo, n1, AC, DW,
AKC. llilglol- Do-nd, PB, 4 CVIInotor, Now Tl,.. I 79
Campers&amp;

STRI&lt;£ ABLOWN 11-£ Will ON

HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASs.FIEDS.

FEBRUARY 27 I

I MONDAY

ROBOTMAN

.

Indigo • Funny - Umbo - Strong, NOT DOING
Granny always says that if you don't have a good reason
for doing something. you have the best reason for NOT
DOING it.

1187 Prawllr llo@l 2U Pl. Fifth

· Awnlna, -Raot, Air, 114~. 114-f46.ao:n.

v..,

44~4·~·~~-~~=-:::~~~­

EIIdoound pupo, I morotho old, lilt Oklo 66 R-oto a-Mbom
goodrrol....
dogoo,
- 114-aQ.
"" 1 Ownor, Gorogo
-· l(opt,
-~- Uko
oqul_
ond _
, , col
5171
~~41Looclodl Aoldng. $8,000,

8

PAl sicaI
Instruments

1181 Oldambile D1111 • · 3100

Enalno, loodod, 111,000 lllloo,
14,200 Auto. T,... WIOD Air,
~ RodiiCIIon Solo Up Ta 114 448 8211, 814-4411-1511. .
11112 II uotong lX L.ooolod, Excotllummlnalllrd 11lolll Candllloil, 814-448-1027.

59

For Sale
or Trade

11113 Pontloc L.onoono 1~000
MIIM, Autotnlllft : - C.....ne,
$1,200 080, •
1111, ......
258-1252.

C80 Chow 2 Ton Truck With 1816 Doc1ao Noan, -·
30k75-7MI.
Soli loodfng Log Bod Waukl 113,800.
Uko To T,.do For· John Dooro
Wonlod to buy- •• or - r
Troctor, 114-1117-2llt~
Coprloo Cluoloo otuot· boo
Brougto.mo or LS, II.., loodod, 4
door, 614--1112--3802..

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

=· -·

4000 FOI'd Troctor Dl-1

-r

CondKion, -ot4-44ts-

Serv1ces

·1435.

72, Trucks lor SJ!Ie
1983 Feoo Ford Dump Truck,
tm Dodgoo Plclt-UD, tm 01c1o
INI Coli For Prtcoo, Ct4 441 3868.

81

Home
Improvements

IIASEIIENT
WATERPROOPINQ
u.--011
g.,.....
_
. _ _ _llollmo
_ lumlolted.

-

Coli ~-..... Or 114-231-

:::.::J•

a:.
..

0 - - - .• •

VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept. 22) Try rio t

ASTRO-ORAPH

Ill llllononco
CIC
Oonorll
ond
- l o 11orno
11orno

Ropolr. For trw - · -aoll
ChOt, 114 lt2 1321.
Ron'o TV s.mco, ..............,
In Z.nllll •too - . n g mool
athor bnondl. ~~ 1·

-moots. wv

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.

•

1918 Ford 112 Ton Plak.Up, 3110 F,..rnon•o 'Hootlng And Caallna.
Englno, llodlllod Whh ..._ lnotolllltlon And . 8orv1co. EPl
1111-. 10,000 Or ~ 111100 Certified. Re•hlentJII, eom.,.,..
.
On Tlilo Englno, Na RUII, Uloe clot. 114&gt;!116-tell.
On Ford Stock
Aluminum Wlloillo, 13,000, 111- 84
:1451414.

1...: - - - - - - - - - - -

'\bur

n-,___

'Birthday

Tues day, Feb. 28, 199~
In the year ahead . your annude and oul·
look might change sigmlicanlly. Views or
co ncepts th at have imp eded your

10

look lor romance and you 'll l ind· it. Th e ' begin a ptojeCI today If you' re not rliotl ·
Astro-Graph Matohrilake.r instantly
vated enough to see tt thrpugh to conclu·
reveals w h1ch s1gns are romantically pers10n . Any sm all amount of en thu s1 asm
f~ct lor you . Ma1l $2 .50 to Matchmaker, could wane . if te sted

c/o this newspaper. P 0 . Bo• 4465 . New

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) An assoc1a1e

YorK, NY 10 163.
ARIES (MIIreh 21 ~ April 19) You Wi ll
come across 1nlormat10n today that could
damage someone·s reputat1on. Do not be

might do something today tha t warrants
c riticiSm . but re.stst ma k1 ng any com ·
menls. Faultflnd tng will creat e more prob·
lems than it solve s.
~

the one lo pull the cork oul ol the bottle.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You won't

SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov . 22) Prote ct
,your prized possess1ons today. Anyth1ng

have ·much luck today try1ng to rem o ld . le~ ly_
irig about U!)811ended Will be 1n jee p·
friends mto your 1n'1 ag e Yo ur critiques
ardy , espec1ally if s u spi CIOUS· io OI&lt;If"JQ
and sugges t1ons Wi ll be r ~ sent ed and ·· slrangers are 1n the vic1n1ty
.

ignpred.
•
.
·
GEMINI (May 21-Jun• 20) The ·people

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 21)
Instead ol reopen1ng old wounds today ,

who ·usually back you up might oppose
you today . Instead of overreacting . try to
v1ew you r recent actions from t~ e1r per·

let bygones be byg one
cu stng on
un resolv e d d1ft er en c e co1 l d m a ke
th~ngs worSe than they we r b ore.

spect1ve
·
,
'
CAN,CER (June 21·July22) Take the

CAPRICORN (Oec . 22-Jan. 1 ) Make. 11
a po1n1 not to speak about olhers loday 1f

t1me to carefully read th_e d~rec hon s fo r
your thoughts or comments are negaltve.:
~~-p-ntrgl'MriNII-b""Er"weeded~-o ut -a·nd - handling-any-new-mate:tal --or....unfamtl la ~rne words- you ull er~at tt:l+s 11 me m1ght~
product you work w1th toi:Jay.
come back to haunl you.
renounced . .
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 2P) You may LEO (July 2~·Aug. 22) You might be a ,AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Feel tree
to r-eject the request fo r a lav ~ r by a
ma"ke some progress with an important blttoa posses·srve of the people you love
today_.
The
t1ghter
you
try
to
b1~d
thern
to
friend who is always as king you 10 do
sell-interest today , but probably not as
you
.
the
ha
rder
they
'
l~
s
tr
ain
to
break
more than he/s he is ever wilh" g Ia· do 1n
.much as you'd expected. Be grateful for
retL.Jrn .
gains, even small ones ~ Know where to free .

-Homo. Ton:IIOI'f ODII-. lr&gt;-

Worll
Compulor uoono own houri. $20-5'*/yr, 24hra.

if:otr,•

2 lomolo H - pu~
Comoro
Lotodod I WOI'Rood, S80oiL
• 11... 1 RIOM,
:11,000 A.iiuot
AKC !lolio!- A I - Pup- llloo, 14,200, 111-21&amp;-11105.

61 Farm Equipment

Cobllielo, 13 Fl. 114-saa.

-·

o,_.,
--~lt
....
-urlng~-Ina.
Bl!h. JuiTo ,
_ u,.. ond

,_
Cond.
Potr · ·:IOW75-UII oftor
5, Jecbon, OH.I14-2111 5811.

ozr round owt...,lng pool; -

qulrod. 304-675-7183.

-

Merchandise

Nlco 2 Bodnoom 141711 1350/llo.

~-~14; I Wl!or, l!!!l••a l-f

24Ht21.
56
Pets for S81e

54 · Miscellaneous

38841146.

1 and 2 bedroom

Hovon

Antiques

Buy ar MI. Rlvwlno Antlquoo,
1124 E. lloln Sl~ on At. 124
Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
Lm. lo 8:00 p.m, Suntloy 1:00
to 8:00 p.IIL 114-111:1-25211.

dopoOII.

IOI'ftl

31 Homes tor ~le
a.-ory ao.-goo, bookie Now

::.0:::., :'~..s~.
~·~·
53

for Rent

nee-..,.

.........
·~..Tap I - -·OvWI, Block Orin
Doaro, ttlljj· KonmOI'O Portoblo
WIko - · ti!IOj
R~ ...; RI..._OI'.
Door, Frwt F,.. $1!10; llatpolnt

3411.

42 Moblkl Homes
All real estate advertising In
. lhls newspaper Is subiect to
the Federai.Falr Housing ACt
ol1968 which makes lt illegal
to actve(!ise M
any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, relig ion,
sex familial status or national
· origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimlnatlon.w

-Inch
Sll·, -- ·--·
•-•

/lpallo, 114-448-7SI8,

1171 ..... - . -

-- ·
na- •_,._

~h
Uo..,...

5

locol Solid
-lng
Buolnno
Solo.
All C.oh
lncOI'RO.
In Pl. - n t .
Coli-· t.aoo-350-11363.
NIW hom11 undlr contlliucUon
Vending: Won~ Oot Rich Quick. comptoto conotructlon In lolu al
Will 0o1 A St~ncorno. rom, tocotod an Crook
Prlood ta a.~ .
.
782.
Rd. off c,.b C..... Rd. 304-1242773

en• &amp; AabbUa For :salellll-25&amp;-

Employment Servtces

~~ ~~~~]$~~~

'~
OHIO VAlLEY DIIBLISHIIIO
CO. 2 Bedroom Upotolro
..commondo tbot you do b\111- VIne Strwol, Nur Flrot
nooo with -'&gt; you k.-1 ond Golllpollo. $3!5/Ma.
NOT to oond money througn tto.
-11 uniH you bovo lnvftllgolod Rofw- R-lrod, 114-448thoollwlng.
2411.

I

WAHTED: EMERGENCY REliEF
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
WOAKE R PooR ion (o) Anlloblo
At Two CommunKy 'Q...,p
For P o - With
IIRIDD In
Clolilo County
(Ciolllpoilo And IT.~i :--:

2 Bedroom In Rodney, DopooH
Roqut ..d, No Polo, 814-441122U.

aJ:r=~"~zt.il'l!:.blo.

by Luis Campos
c.tebroty Copher cryptogram~ are C1UI~ from qool:aOOnl by lamous ~ . pill and prMMit
Each littter on ltw! coptww alands lor 11'101Mr. Todly's ~: C eQU~II K

II

814-241-2132

ludaol Prtcod T........olono,
UMol a. owbulft, oil ty- otort=~~S::::u;.:p::p::l::le:-:s=:-:::::-I"M llonlo c.oto 2dr., P8, PI, lng .. $811; -814-371-2131.
-8-3156
Bloclt, brlclt, blp1111, w111- AC, , _ tlooo, , _ polnl, eac.
OUolty Fumhuro -._Pntillo, otc. Cloildo Win- -.:104...,._1Z18.
Joh.- Troownt.loroo And
And Appl-. Oowol Doole On
1-,
"lo
Grtlndo,
011
Col
814111114
Oklo
CUlloM,
$13GO.
304Cah lind Corryl REHT-2-0WN
S.rvlool.t~ And :;:

CELEBRITY CIPHER

NEPIT

:

41 Houses tor Rent

~=- j~.IM~g;- yord, $400.

Business
Opportunity

Ulto
Now,
Evonlngo.

Building

55

Rentals

2 bodroom homo, llko now, ol·

~
c,..., opon
Guorontood fl,. yoor, $211,800
bluo boonoiKo. Sond .-.umo to:
P.O. 8o1 I'M, Porkorobuog, WV
26102.
;S.::too:::::--:::
poo::oao
= n--;:for::--::r.t:;,:;;;ill
tMnt'Women lpparel lton. Appr'OX 31 hra per wMk. IX~
book•, f14-892-e732. ,
Ptlrienc•
Send work
hlllory, Ullty Nqulrement• to
WentH: Chickene, Guinea•, Bolt C-22 % Pt Pit Aegl.tw, 200
Duck•, Aabbhl, Goat•, Uaed 10 Main st, Potnt P... e.nt, WV
ln. T1ble Saw, A.laal. HIVI Chick~ 25550.

1880, 8 A.M. Ta 10 P.ll.
Wonlod: Ll111o Tyka OUtdoOI'
Toyo For Ago Gooup 14, 114245~187.
Wonlod: Slondlng nmboor, 114371..m1
•
Worood: UMd largo Dog HouM
Or Konno! RoooOnobloi Prlco,
e\4-441·1115 Anytime.

.The declarer on today's deal was in
similar peril, but managed to sidestep
defeat.
How should South play in three notrump after West has led the heart five
to East's king' ·
Assuming diamonds aren't 5·0. this is
a sure-trick problem. South should win
the first tn ck, play,a spade 10 dummy's
king and-lead a di amond to his nin.e.
Even if West wins with the jack. South
has nine tricks: two spades. one heart,
five diamonds and one club.
However, South decided to go for
overtricks by assuming the diamonds
would. run . Yet he took a small precaution . Aller winning the first Irick with
the hear\ ace, South played a diamond
to dummy's ace and a diamond lo his
king. w·hen West disca rded a club,
South ran the dub queen successfully.
He continued with a club to dummy's
ace. thf diamond queen (South threw a
club and West a heart!, the spade king
and a spade lo his ace. Finally, South
exited with a club .
South's 1\Jc as in. 'West could cash
lwo clubs and a h rt, bul then he had
lo lead around
the he art jack .
South's ninth trick - whew 1
An adull croco ile has a brain the
size of a cigar: suffiCient for a predator.
Luckily, ours is th'e size of a loaf of
bread. It only. remains to us e every
crumb!

" " - d Hood :E&lt;!!..I34 PlaitUp, w. - · .........21111.
$1.21 lib. On Tho
Roll, tl4481-t170.

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The .Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, February 'ZT, 1995
Pag&amp;-10 .

Library activity high due to 1994 programs
Activity Kits for children who are the third year r~ the contest and as
March is music appreciar,ion
homebound bwlnse of illness. The in the past, registration is required. month at the library and in obserltiU will circulate for two weeks You may register by calling or vance of this the library is offering
and will include books, a video, stopping in at the Pomeroy or Mid- two pro~rams. The New Vision
audio read-alongs, puzzle pages , dlcpD~tLibrary.
·
·
Trio, whtch is a gospel group, will
and pictures to color. The !tits are
The library will be holding a perform on Sunday, March 12 at 2
arranged in three age levels Laubach Literacy Tutor Training p.m. On Sunday, March 26 at 2
preschoolers, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Workshop, on Friday, March 24 · p.m., the Meigs Community Band
graders , and 4th 5th, and 6th from S-9 p.m. and Satw:day, March will perform. Both performances
graders.
.
25 from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Partici- are free and open to the ~lie.
·
The Library Youth Council will pants need to attend both days to
If anyone needs the
kmobile
be sponsoring a Teen Talent Con- · receive certification to tutor. Regis- to stop at their home, this ean be
test on March 18 at 6:30p.m. at the tration is required but the workshop arranged by calling the library and _

By RUTH POWERS
MelliS Coudty Librarian
1994 ·was a very busy year for
the Meigs County Library system,
We had a circulation of 130,466,
answered approximately 20,000
reference questions; had an atten·
dance of 50,708 patrons, Our adult
programs were 188 with 2,372
attendance and children's programs
were 168 with 3,681 anending. We
anticipate 1995 to be even busier,
as we are offering some new services and programs.
A brand new service is our

4-H reps to be na-med

· ·YOUNG VALENTINE WINNER - ·Tbe Olive Towhsblp Vol· .
: unteer Fire Department Ladles' Auxllllry awll'ded Ill Valaitble's
Day giveaway to J.year-old Dard BlsseU, at left. Praeatlng tile
prizes Is Connie Smith, auxiliary president. Blaell- a Vlleatlne
pacbge ror two, $30 dinner oul, two movie tleketa and a box o1

Interviews for 4-H members
interested in serving on the Meigs
County Jl,lflior Fl!ir Board will take
place Monday beginning at 7:30
p.m. These interviews wUI be held

chocolates.

--Community calendar--The Community Calendar
is published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed as space permits and cannot be
.guaranteed to run a specific num- .
her of days.
·

forming new flotilla urged to information, call 992-2774 or 992attend.
2973,
POMEROY - The Meigs
WEDNESDAY
County Veterans Service Commission will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m,
nACINE - Make-it, take, it
in the Veterans Service Office in · workshop, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday
Pomeroy.
in Southern High School cafeteria,
for parents and students, sponsored
TUESDAY
by Effective Schools grant monies,
'

MONDAY
POMEROY American
MIDDLEPORT ~ Middleport
CHESTER - Meigs County Legion Auxiliary , Drew Webster Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m ..
Chapter of the Izaac Walton Post 39, Pomeroy, special meeting, Pomeroy libr.u;r. Mrs. Roy Holter
League featuring Ray Zeyler, state 7:30p.m, at the post home . .
will review • My Theodosia".
director, Mond"ay, 7 p.m. at the
Response to roll cal,l will be to
I
. 1zaac Walton Farm on Sugar Run
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers name women in history.
Road near Chester. Business ll)cet- "Plains Regional Sewer District
public hearing on grants 7 p.m.
ing.
POMEROY- Lenten bn:alcfast
Tuesday at the Orange Township and quiet hour, 7:45 a.m. at Trinity
PORTLAND Lebonan Fire Department.
Congregational Chureh. Anyone is
Township Trust.ees regular meet·
welcome to the fellowship. For
in~. Monday, T p.m. at the townRACINE - Megaskills work- reservations, call 992-7569 or 992. shtp building.
·
shop at Southern High School cafe- , 7765.
teria, 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. for parMIDDLEPORT - Middleport
MIDDLEPORT- OH KAN ents, sponsored by Venture Capital Youth Led"gue fJtSt 1995 baseball
Coil Club, Monday, 7 p.m. trading Funds and from the Effective season meeting Wednesday, 6 p.m.
session followed by meeting at Schools monies. Free baby sitting in the Middleport Council
.
Burkett Barber Shop.
services will be available.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - U.S. Coast
POMEROY- TOPS Club, OH
RU1LAND - Rutland TownGuard Auxiliary meeting Monday, 570, open house, Tuesday, 6 to 7 ship trustees, regular session,
7 p.m. at the Carpenters' Hall on p.m. at the Carpenter's Union Hall Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the fJre staMain Street. Those interested in on Main Street. Pomeroy . More tion. ·

.

isJ..reer.ea
J4..

Pomeroy
Library.
cash prizes
trophies will
be awarded.
Thisand
is

to conjunction with the Meigs
County 4-H Committee meeti1t4 at
the Meigs County ExtenstOD'
Office, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
·
.4-H members (14 years of age
and older as or January 1, 1995)
may apply by completing ~ submitting an Ohio 4-H Achievement
Record form p~ior to Monday's
meeting. Applicants are.encouraged 10 attend the meeting prCpared
to discuss why they wouliilike to
be a representative on the. Junior
Fair Board.
For more information, please
contact Chip Hag~erty, Meigs
County 4-H Extenston Agent, at
992-6696.

W. VIRGINIA
COUNTY MAPS
IN STATE BOOK

A book contaJninc aU of Wool
Vlrginla'o 66 county maps is avoiloble.
PriDted on 16122 inch double apreod
pag•, each county h11 a tepll'ate map.·
The book eont.aint I« pocea,
The state's 34,24.2 miles of roads are

m II" targivmy'

g thenneceessarywinf.Sormation.

I"

Dale A. Kiag
Navy Petty Officer Third Class
Dale A. King, son or Vera Thompson of New Haven, W.Va., has ·
served half of a six-month deployment aboard the dock landing ship ·
U.S.S. Gunston Hall off the coast
of Bosnia-Hem:govina.
This vessel is part or the threeship U.S.S . Nassau Amphibious
Ready Group.
King has served with NATO
forces off the coast of Bosnia in the
Adriatic Sea. He also has been
involv«:d in an amphibious landing ·
· exercise in Morocco.
In Toulon, France, he and his
shipmaics helped renovate a house
for the poor and elderly. He has
·visited Spain, France, Malta,
Morocco. In Barcelona, Spain, he •
helped receive former British
l'rime Minister Margaret Thatcher
and her husband on Christmas Day.
He graduated in 19711 from
Waharna High School arid joined
the Navy in December 1982.
Richard J. Rice
Navy Seaman Richard I. Rice,

CN

there is much additional information. To
order Weat VirilnJ.a County Map book,
oend al4.85 (prico includes delivery).
VISA ond MooterCord occepted.
Moke checka payable to
Couat:r M•p•
52t Pueh Ptoce
L,radoa Slotloa, WI 53944
(6G8)686-333t

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn I
SINCE 1868

I

s

· ~300.00 SifN -ON BONUS

shbwn in detaiL Towns, cities and
viUagea are ipdu.ed and located, and

son ·of Clarence and Panicia Rice ·
of Route I, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
recenrly returned to San Diego,
Calif., after completing a six-month
deployment in the wesiern.Pacific.
Rice served aboard the U.S.S.
Kilty Hawk and visited Korea,
I apan and Australia. He traveled
more than 31,000 miles. ·
His detachment worked with
Australian Navy in an exercise.
Rice graduated in 1993 from
Point Pleasant High School.

·

Overbrook Center is ,offering all newly hired CNA's a
$300.00 sign on'bonus. We offer competitive salary and
benefits. Please stop in or call Jan Elias, ADON
for more inf•e~rn1ati

@~i'Mlh
333 Pit!JI! Stree1
Middleport. Oh io 45760

Other atolea avoiloblo: AR. FL. IN.
. KY, Ml, NC; OH, PA. SC, ond TN .

$8 688**
Fees~·
'

CONVEIIION VAN
• Ant1-Lock Brakes

• Au Condition
• AutomatiC Overdnve
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• Power Steer1ng

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'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY ·
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• fa~es, Tags, Title Fees extra Retollle 1rr:lu(i8d in ~le

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WE'VE GOT THEM ALL!

Monday &amp; Tuesday 9 am • 10 ~m

'·

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