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                  <text>~ Ohio

Reds
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sign
Borbon

Lottery

Pick 3: ·
027
Pick 4:
1066
Buckeye 5:
5·17-26-31-35

Page4
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Low tonight In 30s. Cloudy.
Wednesday, Cloudy. High In 40s.

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Vol. 45, NO. 212
Copyrlght1995

School out?

Dock
saved·

Shuttering Racine building
part of cost cutpack plan

Countywide ·
support aids
project goal
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff ·
. Donors from across ihe county helped save the Middleport
dock launching facility, officials
announced at Middleport Village Council's regular meeting
Monday nighL
The benefactors raised about
$6,500, the Meigs County 'com. missioners pledged another
$10,000 and the village will
.CO!lliibute village labor, Mayor
Dewey Horton said.
"I'm really tickled with how
the citizens came forward on .
this," Horton said. "That's not
only in Middleport. but the
entire county." . .
. The extra $10,000 pledge
wiU come from the sale of guns
confiscated from Middlepl}rt
resident Robert D. Fife, Commissioner Janet Howard said.
Middle{Xlrt authorities assisted in this mvestjgation, Howard
said.
The county commissioners
had previously committed.
$26,800 in state grants, said
Fred Hoffman, president of the
commissioners.
~- "We"promiseailleni 'imough
so they WI}Uld not have problems with the grant," Howar4_ _
said, adding more donations will still be accepted. "The commis-

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'DOCK PROJECT __: Middleport Village has received
more than $120,000 in commitments from state and county officials to build a new
dock. The project consists of a
30-by-10 foot-wide noatlng
dock and a wider ramp
(right). Also, between eight
and 10· parking spaces for
boaters will be added between
Walnut and Rutland streets
on Front Street. In the above
photo, the properly lbat will
be used for this parking space
. include.s, from left, the open
lot, a trailer, a small one-story
home and the white two-story
home, according to Jean
·Trussell, viUage grants coordinator. (Sentinel photos)

'

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sioners and I decided there was
$142,8"00. But with village
no way we would let this go
labor, the project could be
back."
·
reduced to about $120,000, Hor·
The entire county's "grant
ton said.·
process could have been jeopar- 1
The villa~e had to raise about
dized if the $94,000 in state · · \fj;$21,000 as as local match, but
grants was returned, she said.
current fiscal restraints made
The project is slat~ at about
this impossible to take from the

general fund, he added.
No larid has been puichased,
but easement wort has been
completed, s;lid Jean Trussell,
village grants coordinator.
The property owner who
owns what will become pan of
(Continued on Page 3)

II

'~
Starts witfi weclaing invitations ana accessories.'
J.;~:i·~)f./1~~ ' Stop in toaag ana visit,cur.catafog salts a_r,f!Mlf·fl[$r wfjg.~y. neetl.
.
:Here is a du.cf;.fistfor tfie 6ritfe, so gou can save time ana l(eep from forgetting sometfiing ~mti£ tfie fast minute.
.
~{{of tfie items on tfiis fist mag6e oraereafrom us.

•.

IT P1Idill{.(: ~lation e r,v
D Invitations
0 Announcements·
D Reception or Dinner enclosure cards
Cl Respond cards and envelopes
D At Home cafds
Q lnformals
u Thank You Notes
0 Wedding Pro,grams

I lt'ln.• for

.

t lt e Cl' rf' titoll )' ·
r:J Ring Bearer Pillow
D Flower Girl Basket·
u Ganers ' ,
D Bridal Bible
D Lace Parasols and Fans
0 Wedding Candle .
D Bridal Purse

....,

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.·t llt• tlllan l s'

(;iji:;

0 Personalized Stationery
D Leather Products
f.J Personalized Jewelry
u Specialty Gift Items

Tuppers Plains sewer hearing .set tonight
The Tup~ers Plains Regional
Sewer District will hold a public.
hearing at 7 tonight at the Orange .
Township Volunteer Fire Depanment building.
The session is necessary to be
eligible for more state grants.
The board is seeking $500,000
in Community Development Block
Grant water and sewer grants.
CDBG funding comes from the
federal government, but is administered by the Ohio Department of
Development.
More than 20 years of construction prohibition imposed by the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency will end when the project
· is completed, said Board President
Lindsey Lyons.
All construction near thie community was stopped by the state
due to potential health hazards
from run-off sewage.
The project may be sold by the
end of this year, with current state
funds available for the $2.6 million .
project, Lyons said. The project

' R o ok.~ ·

ftl,ms for tlu• RI'CI'()lioll
0 Cocktail Napkins

.D Bridal Book
DGuest Book
DGift Books
D Photo Book

D Luncheon Napkins
D Dinner Napkins
D Coasters
D Place Cards ·
D Groom's cake bags or boxes
DCakeTops
D Cake Knives and Servers
0 Punch Cups
0 Hot Cups ·
0 Candles
0 Tissue' Bell Decorations
. 0 Tissue Bell Centerpiece
0 Paper Plates
.0 Plastic Silverware
0 Table Covers
OToasting Glasses
0 Reception Aprons
0 Stir Sticks
0 Ribbons
0 Balloons
0 Colored Paper Streamers

Oth er lT't&gt;tlfii11g Items
D Planning Your Wedding File
D Bridal Gown Cover
D Wedding Invitation Tray
Ul Plume Pen
b Shower Plan Book .
Wedding Plan Book
Honeymoon Journal
Our Wedding Vid~ase

J

•

'·

Otllf'r ."iN•r•icf'S Pnwith•d
•Business Checks
•Business Stationery
•Computer Stationery
•Business Cards
. •Per;onalized Slillionery
~
•Announcements

SPECIAL ITEMS: (Name Plates - WaU Signs - Key Tags - Mugs Engraved . Badges); Rubber Stamps, Pens, P.encils, Folders, Post-J'tNotes, Advertising Labels, Shipping Label, Pre-Inked &amp; Self-Inking
Stamps, Custom Ban~ers, Custom Signs, Imprinted· Napkins, Binders,
Index Tabs, Balloons, Squeeze Bottles, Can Coolers, Plastic Cups,
Stornge Jars, Ribbons, Caps, Magnets, Memo Pads, Memo Cubes, TShirts, Sweatshirts, Bumper Stickers, Playing Cards, Matches, Coasters.

. '

•Graduation Accessories
•Softwa.re Compatible Forms &amp; Checks · •Business Envelopes
•Laser Printer Station.ery

·

•Snapset Business Forms
•Booklets &amp; Register Forms
~ Mai I ing Labels

·T~~Orms

•Imprinted Brown Lunch Bags
•Imprinted Recipe Cards
•Professional Stationery ·

•

Hockenberry( LEADEglPharmacy
''The Caring Pharmafy',,_

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~~...~ · 2601 JACKSON AVENUE

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could be completed by the-end of
1996, Lyons said.
The board alreadr, has an option
to buy about 60 acres of an 87-acre
farm owned by Joe Ritchie, said
John Lentes, attorney for the sewer
b.oard. The future location of the
lagoon is located about one-half
mile west of the center of this community.
This contract may be signed
later this week, he added.
At this hearing , residents will
learn about the casement process,
which will include a 20-foot-wide
easements to hook up the lines,
Lentes said.
At a later meeting or sometime
next month, residents will be asked
to sign easements, he added.
Four pump station sites also
ml\st be procured, but this is contingent on the lagoon site, he .
added.
In January ,, state officials
announced the sewer district
received $275,000 in the ninth
round of !he State Capital Improve-

mcm Program, formerly Issue II.
$360,000 in a low-interest loan
With this sum, the project has from the state water development
been pledged more than $1.2 mil- office, Lyons said.
That grant will defray the cost
lion in state money acquired
through the efforts of local, county of connecting the lines to the housand regional officials.
es, along wiLh removal and destrucOther funding included $75,000 tion of old septic systems. Currentfor engineering in Issue ll's Round .· ly, connection is estimated at
. 7, $500,000 in Round 8, and $2,000 per household, he added.
;&gt;

Schools g,et added funding
COLUMBUS (AP) - Public schools will share $86 million in State
aid 10 help pay for new buildings. erase budget deficits and provide services to private schools. But. half the money represents loans they must
.
. repay.
The Ohio Department of Education won release of the money Monday
from the state Controlling Board in three cate"gories:
• $41 ,521,804 in loans for school construction and renovation.
• $3,697,000 in loans to erase budget deficits in seven distticts.
• $40,767 ,424ln grants (or textbooks, science equipment and other services in nonpublic schools.
.
. .
Six legislators .and a president who represents Gov·. George Vomov1ch
make up the board.
·
•
Controllers released $40.7 million to cover costs of providing secular
material, health an? safety assistance and other auxiliary services to about
230,000 students in state-chartered, nonpublic schools.
.

Prosecution· revelation
undercuts alibi for O.J.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rosa two miles away killing his ex-wife
Lopez had just fmished living O.J. and her friend.
Simpson an alibi when the prosecu- .. The developments cast a cloud
over what would have been the
tion sprung its latest surprise.
"Your Honor," said prosecutor most imPQnant day of testimony so
Christopher Darden, "I have here far for Simpson. Lopez, a maid for
Sylvia Guerra." Enter a maid who, Simpson's next-door neighbors,
according to prosecutors, can was the first witness to provide him
undercut part of Lopez's .critic~! . with an alibi for the night Nicole
testimony by showin~ she lied Brown Simpson and Ronald Golcf. about her actions the mght of the
were ldlled.
osecutors contend Simpson
murders.
The revelation rivaled the prosee the Bronco 10 Ms. Simpson's
and committed the murders
cution's quick phone work last
'
t
10:15 p.m. With no known
week that caught Lopez in a lie.
Then it was time for another shock, eyewitnesses, prosecutors have
ing blow to the defense - this one framed the ti.me of murder by the
, howl of Ms. Simpson's white
self-inflicted.
'
.
· A Simpson investigator con- . Akita.
Lopez testified before a video
firmed he ·had tape-recorded the
defense's first interview with camera· - not in front of the jury
Lopez - even though, only hours - so that her testimo~y would be
before, a defense auomey told the available if she carries out a threat
judge the tape didn't exist.
to flee to her native El Salvador to
The interview is an issue · escaPe harassment from the media.
· because prosecutors say it inc,ludes She spoke in Spanish through an
no mention of Simpson's Ford . interpreter.
·
Bronco - and Lopez testified
Under questioning by defense
Monday that she saw the vehicle attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr.,
parked outside Simpson's estate Lopez meticulously detailed her
about the time he allegedly was acttvities the night of June 12. .

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The closing of Racine Elementary School was presenLed Monday
nighL as pan of a plan by the Southern Local Board of Education to
cut $242,000 in spending.
Closing Racine Elementary will .
save the district $72,454 a year,
Superintendent James Lawrence
indicated.
Closing the building will reduce
fuel, electricity, telephone, water
and sewage costs in addition to
eliminating the positions of princi-·
pal, secretary and cook, he added.
Racine Elementary was targeted
due to its age and its need for a
new roof. The building was erected
in 1911, making it the oldest operating school building in the county.
Currently, about 125 students
auend classes at the school.
Board members, along with
Lawrenc.e and Treasurer Dennie
· Hill, listed several reasons as to
why the board needs to cut spending to the approximately 75 people
who attended the meeting.
One problem, Lawrence.
explained, is declining student
enrollment. The disttict gets $3,050
from the state for each studenL in
the distric~ he pointed ouL
Hill said the district has lost
about 200 students· over a 10-year
period, from about 1,100 down to
900, but the number of teachers has
not dec: lined.
State examiners have recom'
mended that 3-1/2 teaching posi ~
tions be cut along with one service
position, he said.
A large percentage of the district's money is spent on salaries,
Hill said. "Anytime you spend
more than 80 percent of your'
money on salaries you've got a
problem," he commented.
. In addition, the district's higher
property tax valuation per pupil
puts tl)e district out of consideration for school equity funding.
"Other schools are getting
money; we're losing it," .said
Grueser.
She pointed out that if the governor's budget proposal is enacted,
the district will lose about $37,500
in basic aid and disadvantaged
pupil funds for fiscal year' J996.
Curren~y, the board needs to cut
$242,000 to repay the first half of a
$480,000 state loan. The district is
now operating within loan fund
program.
When asked if the district was
working its way out of the loan
fund or getting in deeper, Hill said:
uwe Ire working OUf ~ay out,
unless we don't make cuts."
Other cost-cutting measures proposed include not replacing a substitute teacher's position· at Syracuse Elementary School, eliminating an assistant bus mechanic's

·position and cutting supplies.
The board turned the issue over
lo a committee consisting of parents, teachers and other school
employees 10 come up with a way
to effectively implement the plan. ·
"The reason most of you are
here is you want to know where
your kids arc going t&lt;? be next fall,"
~d Board President Sue Grueser.
"I don't know," she said.
"It's a decision everybOdy in our
district should make," she added.
The committee is expected to
submit its recommendations to the
board at a special Jlleeting set for
Wednesday, March 8 at 7 p.m . in
the high sehool cafeteria. A spending rC!!uction plan for the district
rnust be submitted to the state by
March 10, said ·Lawrence.
Grueser said the board would
also consider any other suggestions
to cut costs.
. "Losing a grade school adverse- · ·r
ly affects a community," said Dave
Spencer, father of a Racine Elc·
mentary student.
"We need to build bridges ... to
come together as a community.'' he
added. "We're not coming together
with solutions."
Whatever decision is made, it
needs to be made with the chil- ·
dren's best interest in mind, said
Letart Falls resident Bobbie Hill.
"We need to make our decisions
with a positive attitude so our kids
won't get on the bus crying," she ·
said.
· (Continued on Pa11e 3)

Coolville bank
hit by robbers
this mornirrg
The Coolville branch of
Bank One was robbed at 8: I 0
this morning as bank employees
came to work, .the Athens County Sheriff's Depar!Jllent reported.
.
Suspects fled the scene . in a
dark bi'ue Oldsmobile stolen
from the bank parking lot. The
car belongs to a bank employee,
a
s heriff's
department
spokeswoman said.
Frank Root, who owns a grocery store across the street from
the bank, said he did not sec the
robbery, but said a woman who
works at the bank was accosted·
by the robbers as she entered the
barik.
They supposedly took her car
Lo Tuppers Plains, he said.
Meigs County sheriff's
deputies deployed to the nonhero end of the co unty in an
attempt to intercept the vehicle.
· No other information was
available at presstime.

Towboat captains submit ·
innocent pleas to charges

DISCUSSES TESTIMONY - As defense attorney Johnnie
Cochran Jr., right, listened, Deputy District Attorney Marcia
Clark discussed statements witness R05.11 Lopez 11ave lnvesti11ators
durin!! the Monday afternoon sessioa ollhe O.J. Simpsoa doublemurder trial in Los Angeles. (AP)

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1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newapiper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 28, 1995

. .CINCINNATI (AI&gt;) - Six tow- tencrng 1\p,il 12 before U.S . DisbOat captains, a cargo company and trict Judge Marcel Livaudais Jr. in
.
a retired executive have pleaded New Orleans.
In
th
at
cas·
c
,
the
government
innocent to federal charges that
they polluted the Ohio and Missis-' accused the employees and Cres, ·
cent Ship Services Inc., of Chal ·
sippi rivers for more than 20 years.
MIG Transport Services Inc., mcttc, La., of dumping bilge oil
retired Vice President J. Harschel waste into the Mississippi River.
The Feb . • l 6 indi ctment in,
Thomassee and the six captains
saicl, the towboat capCincinnati
entered pleas Monday before U.S.
tams
burned
waste on the decks of
MagistraLe Robert Steinberg. A
nine-count indictment accuses barges and then dumped the resultthem of iUegal dumping from 1971 . ing trash, includinjl plastic, metal,
. glass, ash, paint ch1ps and oil.
through 19.93. .
MIG Trans)J(lt:t, based i~ CincinU.S . District Judge Herman
Weber scheduled a joint trial for nati, and Thomassec told the towMay 3. Defense lawyer MarLin boat engineers to purl)p out.the
· Pinalcs, representing the six cap- wast~ oil at night in remote places
tains, said he wiU ask for a delay to to' avoid detection, the indictment
allow more lime to prepare. Not all said.
Thomassee was MIG Transof the captains are accused ofille"
pon's
vice president of operations
gal dumping during the entire periand port engineer in charge of more
od.,t .rs)th e second case th IS' year 10. than a dozen towboats before he
which transport companies were retired in 1992, the Justice· Dcpanaccused of regularly dumping in ment-said.
rivers to avoid delays and the · The tpwboat captains are
expense of proper storage and dis,· Stephen .Pearson, Jerry Ferguson,
Melvin Herdman, Walter Reed,
posal, prosecutors said. ·
A Louisiana ~sport company Fred Morehead and Roben Mont.· ·
•
and three of its officials face seri- gomery.
1

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�l'uMday, February 28, 1995

Commentar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PomerOy-Middleport, Ohio,

l\Jeld8y, February 28,1995 .
Page

WednESday, March 1

Clarence Bales

Aecu·Wea!W forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel

Cybercrimes and misdemeanors
1 was fascinated by the recent

111 COurt Street

duel between heroic young Tsomomu Shimomura and his villainous
adversary, Kevin Mitnick. Thanks
largely to.Shiinomwa's efforts, the
dread Mitnick is in custody, to
stand accused of hijacking software, stealing credit card numbers,
and reading other people's e-mail
(the fiend). Mitnick could be put
behind cyberbars for many vinual

Pomeroy, Ohio '

.t1JI.ll'EOIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PuJllloher

years.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET I,EHEW
ConlrOIJer

wek:ome. They sbould be 1.., thou 300
wcmlo lona· Allleu.n are oubject to oditins and mUJt be oigned with name,
LI!Til!RS OF OPINION are

ockhlo and telepbono number. No·unligned lotten will be pu~lilbed. Letten
lbnuld be ID good tute, ltddrelliug iuua, ont penonaliliooo.

Black, Republican
and i.n the spotlight
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON- He's black, he's Republican and he doesn't much
care what anyone thinks of that. As racially charged issues explode
around him, Rep. J.C. Watts exudes serenity.
"I am what I am," says the 37-year-old Oklahoma freshman. "I
reserve the right to have my own thoughts."
"
· Even before he arrived last month as part of. the 73-member freshman
cllus, WallS was well known in GOP cirdes. He had been a coUege football .star, he had been elected to statewide office and he had seconded
George Bush's nomination at the Republican convention in 1992. It was
the proverbial meteoric rise to the top of a party he only joined in 1989.
Now he's in the congressional spotlight, lending credibility to the new
Republican majority as it rushes headlong into racially delicate areas such ·
as welfare reform, afftrmative action and social program cuts. .
The party's high-profile catch is a married, churchgoing father of five,
a youth minister, a Special Olympics board member, a former quarterback
who played Canadian footbaU after leading the Oklahoma Sooners to two
Orange Bowl victories.
.
Watts was chairman of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, a
powerful board that regulates gas, oil and other utilities. He is interested
in small business and defense issues and has lobbioo hardlo save three
military installations in his 69 percent Democratic, 83 percent white districL
Perhaps inevitably, however, Watts has been pressed into service as a
welfare reform spokesman for the national GOP and its huge freshman
. class.
"You can't save money, you can't own property, there's no opportunity, the· mother can't marry the father of the children without being penalized. That's where we arc in this system," Watts summed up recently at a
freshman event
Watts supported the GOP repeal last week of an afftrmative action program for broadcasters, calling the program well-intended but "gone
awry." As for affirmative action in general, he said in an interview, "!
guarantee you that it has ·benefited more white females than it has black
males."
·
Republicans spent last week cutting money from social service pro. grams especially important to poor and Iow-income Americans. Black
lawmalcers were apoplectic. ·By week's end, Rep. Gary Franks of Connecticut - the only other black Republican in the House- was warning
. his party ajlainst waging "war on t~e poor." Watts, however, defended
the Republican action plan.
·
The saying goes that no one is more zealous than a.converL Watts said
he feit ·OOP stirrings as early as 1980; when he was a college journa~sm
ma'or covering a debate between two Senate candidates.
t that time I W!IS a die-hard Democrn~" WallS told the Republican
nal Committee last month. "I left the debate totally confused,
because I. agreed with that Republican whole lot more than I did the
· DemocraL''

' ·

a

Watts, his two brothers and his three sisters were brought up in
Eufaula, Okla. Their mother was a homemalcer, their father a minister.
They were all Democrats. Watts' uncle headed the Oklahoma NAACP for
16 years.
The new congressman says he was not spared the downside of being
black in America. "There is nobody in, the 104th Congress that's been
called 'nigger' more times than J.C. Watts," he said in an interview.
He recalled the times he was forced to sit in the balcony of the local
movie theater, and the day his father and uncle "raised·Cain" at the local
pool because black children weren't allowC(( to swim there.
The experiences that led others to become liberals led Watts to become
a COII$ervative. But he's not on a mission to win converts. "I am not concerned with anybody else changing their registration," he said. "I'm not
in this business to get other blacks to become Republican."
Nor is Watts planning to join the Congressional Black Caucus, which
is completely. Democratic except for Franks, He said his absence gives
everyone more flexibility "to follow our convictions." .
·
Watts does not rule out a role as a bridge, a voice of reason amid the
shouting.
He's played that role before, as a judge resolving utility disputes on the
corporation commission, "I heard both sides of the story," Watts said. "I
hadeto get beyond all the rhetoric and the hoopla. It was my responsibility
to wade through all the politics .. , and get down to the facts."
·
EDITOR ls NOTE -Jill Lawrence covers Cong~ss ror The Associated Press.

Despite the digital trappings,
Mitnick's alleged thefts are the
same as any other -crime since the
dawn of time. But the method of
capture must be imiqile to our age.
There were no stakeouts, pursuits
across icy wastes, or gunfights at
high noon; no, both ·parties· sat
watching pixels on monitors and
tapping commands on keypads. In
other words, they watched TV and
made some calls. Not exactly
Holmes and Moriany, is it? If this
is how police are going to catch the
psychoP!IthS of tomorrow (cyberpaths?), I don't.see a top-rated cop

show coming out of it.
Once you get beyond the youth
gangs and serial killers, modem
crime is rather mysterious, There's

/an Shoales
a disorder, for example, Called the
Munchl!ausen Syndrome. Those
afflicted expose a loved one to
some disease in order to gain sympathy and attention for themselves.
nun's a long way to go for a pat on
the head, in my opinion, but I guess
some cyberpaths will go to any
exotic length.
.On 1he enforcement end, things
are even more bizarre. I just read a
discussion between two noted feminists as to whether Rhett Butler
was a rapist or nol Obviously, both
author's and film-maker's intentions were to portray him as a dashing rogue (Clark Gable played him,
after all, not Wallace Beery), but
since Mr. Butler is a fictional character, it's all beside the point anyway. Even if he is.a rapist, what are

person.

It's hard to know what to think.
California's Gov. Pete Wilson, in
heated response to some federal
slight or other, publicly caned the
U.S. Congress "whores." On the
. same day, he allowed himself to be
photographed with Newt Gingrich.
Does that make him a sleazeball
john who pays for his pleasures, or
a presidentia~ ~opeful?
Speaking of Congress, they've
been touting a line-item veto for
the president, and a constitutional
"balanced budget" amendment.
Are these criminal actions, or just
cyberpalhic?
·
The reason, supposedly, for a

'

.

.

Setting record straight
Dear Editor,

eigh~

onc-founh days of school for
This letter is response to a either doctors appointments or
news article that appeared on page physical therapy appointments,
· one of The Daily Sentinel on Tues- thus -resulting in the two full days
day, Feb. 21, 1995. The article was of leave granted. My statement,
about the Eastern Local Board of along with those of three witnesses
Education meeting ..
to the incident were filed with the
The article referred to the Meigs County Prosecutor's Office.
motion that the board of education Third, I had filed a grievance with
granted "two days of assault leave the school system to grant me these
to high school librarian Jim Huff'.
days because I felt I should not
, Having received numero~s .have had to usc my accumulated .
phoric calls not only myself, 6ut ' sick leave to cover the time missed
others connected with the school due to this incident. The Eastern
system and friends of mine about Local Board of Education upon
this article I would like to state the hearing my grievance ruled in my
following facts.
favor.
First, I did not assault anyone. I
This is th,e reaso~ I was granted
was assaulted on Dec. 2, l994, the assault leave, and not that I ·
while giving assistance to ·another assaulted anyone else, but that I
teacher that was ill (this matter I was tlie one assaulted.
will not go into further). Second,
James F. Huff
this assault resulted in an injury to
Pomeroy
me. This injury caused me to miss

a

Today's Birthdays: Actor Ch8rles Durning is 72. Svetlana Alliluyeva,
daughter of Josef Stalin, is 69. Acur Gavin Macleod is 64. Actor·director-dancer Tommy Tune is 56. Auto racer Mario AndreUi is 55. Actor ·
Frank Bonner is 53. Football player Bubba Smith is SO. Actress
Bernadette Peters is47. Basketball player Adrian Dantley is 39. :\
·
Thought for Today: •'Who wiD give me back those days whell ~fe had
wings and flew just like a skylark in the alcy." - Marceline Desbmles- ·
Valmore, French actress and poet (1786-1859).
·
· ··

•

•

IToledo I 32" I

IMansfield
!Js• I•
.

•
W.VA.

.More typical late winter
weather arrives tonight
By The Associated Press '
except in the 40s to lower 50s over
Weather conditions across the southeast Ohio. TemperatureS were ·
state will onCe again become more expected to drop in those areas
typical of late Fe6ruary.
today.
.
Areas of dense fog were reportClouds will try to decrease
Wedn~y as highs only get into ed in some locations, lowering the
· visibility to a mile or less at times
the 30s.
Tonikht, skies will remain in Cleveland and Youngstown.
Records f?,' this date: High 64 in
cloudf. with lows 20 to 30.
1972,
low -3 in 1934.
This afternoon in northern Ohio,
Sunrise
Wednesday 7: II a.m .,
some flurries or drizzle was to
sunset
6:28p.m.
occur. Some drizzle also was
Weather forecast:
expected over central and southern
. TonighL..Cioudy. Scattered flilr·
Ohio. .
Temperatures today were to ries northeast early. Lows&gt; 20 to 25
range from around 35 in the north northwest to lower 30s south.
Wednesday ... Decreasing
to the lower 40s South. These tern·
peratUrcs are near normal.
· clouds ... Except mostly cloudy
A freezing rain advisory was in northeast. Highs main Iy 30 to 40.
Extended forecast:
effect for extreme northeast Ohio
Thursday ...Partly cloudy. Lows
along the lakeshore from Lorain
County easi today. Elsewhere in in the teens. Hi~hs 25 to 35.
Friday ...Fatr. Lows 15 to 25 .
northern Ohio, spotty freezing drizHighs
35 to 45.
zle caused a few slick spots.
Saturday
... A chance of rain ,
Temperatures before sunrise
Lows
25
to
35.
Highs 45 to 50.
today were mainly in the 30s,

-

.

The performance of Republican
presidential candidates in New
Hampshire, especially on the issue
of affirmative action, shows just
how much former HUD Secretary
Jack Kemp will be missed ..
Kemp probably could not have
won the GOP nomination though he was the pany's fronuunner after the 1992 election, he
failed to capitalize on it - but his
party sorely needs his optimistic
message of inclusion .and maximum opportunity for every Ameri·
can, regardless of race or economic
condition.
Instead of just making speeches
for the rest of his career, K.cmp
ought to consider forming a progressive alliance· with other
"opportunity" advocates, including Colin Powell - and possibly
running with him on an indepen- .
dent ticket if the GOP yields to the
temptation to base its 1996 appeal
on "angry white male" resentmenL
At the recent New Hampshire
GOP candidate show and on various TV talk shows, one Republican
hopeful after another denounced
affurnative action and racial preferences for minorities without beginning to present a viable alternative.
Some of 'them, like Senate
Majbrity Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
directly linked opposition to affrrmativc action to the fact that 62
percent of white men voted Republican in 1994. Sen. Phil Gramm, RTexas, vowed that his first act as

president would be to- repeal executive orders giving minorities preference in government hiring and contracting.

Morton Kondracke
Of all leading American politicians, only Kemp is advocating the
· obvious alternative to ,race- and
~ender-based quotas namely,
'special. efforts, affirmative
efforts, if you will, based on socioeconomic conditions and needs,"
as he salt! on '' Meet the Press.·'
On the same show, University
of Ci1icngo professor. William
Julius Wilsop said that "poisonous ... mean-spirited rhetoric.
against disadvantaged groups" was
creating "a foundation for even
greater racial hostility and tension."
In an interview, Kemp said that
the affirmative action issue was "a
dagger pointed straight at the heart
of America."
President Clinton is the ideal
person to defuse the impending crisis, but it remains to be ·seen
whether he can free himself from
the hold that civil rights groups and
other minority special interests
have on the Democratic Party and
replace the divisive racial preference system with. an "afftlmative
opportunity" system aiding the disadvaniaged of all races.
The White House has held a
series of meetings on afflimative
action chaired by Senior Adviser

George Stephanopoulos, and other centrale white voters in neighbor- _;
aides prormse that President Clin- ing districts that would increase
ton will speak on the issue "soon." Republican representation.
But a recasting of the DemocratNow, the GOP is leading the
ic Pany's position will be difficult, way in mounting court challenges ··
given the fact that blacks are the to the system it created:
Democrats· walked into both .
most dependable of all party coilstituenctes and most black leaders traps and now find it difficult to ·
are dead against any changes in the return to the position argued by ·
·sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., ·
preference system.
• Similarly, at the Justice Depart- w.hen urging passage of the Civil ; '
ment, efforts are being made to Rtghts Act of 1964 - that quotas,' '
review court interventions on affll'- preferences and racial balance in ,
mative Jtction on a case-by-case jobs and education were specifical- , .
. !
basis, but the administration still is ly barred.
tilted toward minority preferences,
The, GOP ·today professes to .
as in a Ne'l' Jersey case where a , want the law to be "color-blind," '
white teachbr wru; laid off instead but as Kemp says, "we don't have
of an identically qualified black a color"blind society" and "the . ,
teacher solely for reasons of shock therapy ofjust eliminating :
"'divcrsity.u •
.
all preferences will divide a'nd · '
Ironically, the preference system destroy our society. It's wrong."
eriginally was the creation of
Besides preferences based on
Republicans, perhaps as a devious economic background, Kemp and .
political stratagem. President other centrists - such as the Pro- •
Nixon and his Labor Secretary, gressive Policy Institute's Will
George Shultz, initiated the so- Marshall - favor . tax breaks,
called "Philadelphia plan" in 1969 development banks and employer,providing racial quotas for con- based job training as the means to
suuction workers.
create economic opportunity in · ·
At the time, civil rights leaders poverty areas.
protested, alleging it was devised to
Now that he's o~t of the GOP
split blacks and the trade unions. ·
presidential race, Kemp ought to be
Now, the GOP is appealing to forming alliances with "new
white workers on the basis that Democrats" and others to prevent
minorities are stealing their jobs.
racial disruption. Next to being · '
The GOP engaged in a similar president, this may be the most '
ploy in the early 1990s by helping important task in America.
·'
blacks use the Voting Rights Act to
(Morton Kondracke is execucreate gerrymandered minority tive editor or Roll Call, the news- · ;
congressional districts - and con- paper or Capitol HiD.)
:

·The
dreams
we
hear
too
little
·
a
bout
Letters to the editor
'

•

GOP needs Kemp's ideas
on
race
issues
·
.

It is through luck and a son's
skill at basketbaU that Shejla Agee
~arne known to the world. ·
Sheila is a resident of Cabrini
Green, a mostly black, mostly poor
neighborhood in Chicago. Her son,
Arthur, was selected by two documl"ltary ftlmmalcers to be the subject of their remarkable · film
"Hoop Dreams," which follows
the high-school basketball career of
Arthur and another .young player,
William Oates, as they pursue their
dream of playing in the National
Basketball Association. (And ·
which; in a travesty of justice, did
not get an Academy Award nomination for best picture or best documentary.)
Over the film's 4-1/2-year span,
the camera focuses on the trials of
high-school ball - the pressure to
stay on top, keep your scholarship,
stave off injury. The pressure of the
limeligh~ and the fear of losing iL
"When basketball's over," says
William's older brother Curtis,
once an NBA hopeful himself,
"William may not have a friend in
the world."
But "Hoop Dreams" offers
much more than the politics of prepro basketball. As we see Arthur
and William's lives unf9l&lt;!, we also
discover the hopes and dreams of
the people around them.
Sheila's dreams are much hum-

bier than her son's, but her resolve
is just as Slll?ng.
.
She needs it. She needs it to
cope rhen her husband, a drug

'

.'
"•

whiCh takes place far away from adversity continued to amaze us "
the basketball courL
"Hoop Dreams" director Ste~e ·
In an ugly beige Classroom, James told the Los Angeles Times: :
under a sputtering fluorescent light, "It '.s not something you see in ·· :
Sheila receives her certificate ro be movtcs about that community a loL •
a nurse's aide. The camera pans Yo~ see the destruction and people : ·
over empty chairs, then cuts to a losmg ~~. but you don't see the kind _ ~
of perseverance that we witnessed. •
addict, leaves the family, She needs line of women in white uniforms
It
happens a lot, but doesn't sell :
Sheila,. with an 89, got the highesi
it when chronic back pain costs her grade
· tickets or som~thing."
.:
in the class.
her jo~ and forces her to go on wel"Hoop Dreams" IS seUing tick· :
fare. She needs it when she must
.. . , .
·
figure out how to support her ever_
I dido t thmk I could do it," ·. ets, even if it's nolgetting many :
changing family (her grown daugh- she says throu~h tears. "Peollle Academy Award nominations (one
for best editing is the exception).
ter moves back in, as d~rul;.__ to!d ~~w~ t gomg to be any.: ·But
who- lmows,.'maybe its success
tron, a (flen(lo f ArTilur's who is thmg.
will bring a different kind of atten·
having family troubles) on $368 a
tion to plaees like Cabrini Green. :
month. And she needs it for a host , This scene makes me think of As Sheila ' says during one of ·. :
of other obstacles we discover dur- the Rodney King trial, of the vi~ Arthur's games, "We've been the I
!Ope .o f white police officers beating the course of the movie.
~ndcrdog, and I'm glad because it
1
Thwugh all this Sheila exudes mg a black man. It is remlilkable Just shows how you can come up,''
1
love and strength, dancing in the only because it has been recorded
Sara Eckel is a syndicated 1
not
because
it
is
unusual.
sidelines when Arthur is victorious, ,
writer for Newspaper Enterprise :
nqddin~ vigorously in church as
.
Associati~n.
her penttent husband sings a hymn,
We hear a lot ·these days &amp;bout
(For information on how to
lazy welfare mothers warne ho
telling Arthur's teacher she is have
more bab' · '
. "w . .communicate electronically witb •
going to "step on his behind'' .
tes JUSt to llliSe thetr this columnist and -others con- :
when his grades sag, and counting payments. We~ a lot about job · tact America Online by callina1- . 1
her blessings on her sori 's 18th programs ,~! don t ~rk. We even 800-827-'364, ext.B317.)
.I
hear talk m some cucles that our
·
•
·
·
'
birthday.
lot
in
life
is
as
set
as
our
I.Q.
'
"That's, another thing to be
He's the kind of person ·who needs •
proud about," she says as she pre:a
half
hour to pick an entree on a two· · •
pares his birthday dinner, "that he
What we don't see very much .item menu.
••
lived. A lot of kids don't make it to · are . the families who struggle.
thata~e . "
'
a!!amst the odds, who refuse to ~~_T_e_e_n--a-g-e-rs-a-re-:-li-ke-re~f~ri:-g-er_a_to-/ J:
·
It 1s this strength that helps cre- gtve up. .
:lights: When the door closes they _go ;
ate the movie's greatest moment,
"The way both families handled out, but darned if you know where.·

SaraEpkel

a

Land transfers recorded
The following land 'tranfers .
were recorded recently in the office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
·
Deed. Home National Bank to
Donald F. 111111 Shirley A. Johnson,
Lebanon parcels;
·
Affidavit, Milton E. Roush,
deceased, to Sara E. Roush, Sutton-.
lillcts;

Deed, Joanne and Robert W.
Vaughan to Greg and Paige Wine·
brenner, Olive lo~
· Deed, Robert and Peggy Harris
to Rawk Enterprises Inc.; Lebanon,
1/1 acre;
Deed, Melba J. and Robert E.
Hayes to Robert E. Hayes, Sutton
parcels;
Deed, Thomas F. Bowie to
Anthony Bowie, Olive;

Scholarship deadline set MarchJS

Claience Bales, 45, Dexter, died Sunday, Feb. 26, 1995 at Fairfield
General Medical Center in Lancaster. He was a truck driver and member
of the International Teamsters Union and had also worlced for Snyder
Transpol'l
Born June 8, 1949 in Bartley, W.Va., he was the son of the late Lester
and Faye Barton Bales.
Survivors include four brothers, Marvin (Anna) Bales of Wellston,
Sylvan (Leccie) Bales of Princeton, W.Va., William (Nancy) Bales of
Spencer, W.Va., and Narvel (Edna) Bales of Severn, N.C.; and one sister,
Carylene (Gene) Skaggs of Gallipolis.
Beside his parents, he was preceded in death by one son, t'ickey Bales;
one brother, MayoR. Bales; and one sister, Delila J. Bales.
'
Friends may call 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home where the service will be held II a.m. Wednesday. Burial will be
in Oravei.Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
·

MICH.

line-item veto is ro allow the presi- :
dent ro vetO the "pork" in a law ·
(and keep what? Turkey and .
Swiss?). But Congress put the pork
in there in the flfSl place I Rather
than enable the president to remove
a distaSteful element from a legislative sandwich, wouldn't it make
more sense to omit it when you're
first slapping the bread slices
together?
As far as the balanced budget :
amendment goes, why do they need
the Constitution to command them
to do something they know they
should be doing anyway? It's kind
of like creating a mom to get you to
eat your spinach. I say, get yourself .
to eat the spinach, and eliminate
the middlemom (cybermom?).
Despite the strange times we
live in, however, our prob)ems at ..
base seem easy to solve. Crimes
are either committed by bitter loners or mobs.
Clearly, we need to strike a bal· .
ance here. Nixon should never have
been left alone, but Clinton and
Newt could both use a little angstridden solitude. The Friends of Bill ·
and Newt's Little Crowd both
exhibit cultlike symptoms. ·1 think ·
police should wade into each of
their midsts at random int~rvals, :
muttering, "Break it up, nothing
more to see here, show's over."
But what do I know? I'm still .
holding out for sanity vouchers,
compulsory search-and-seizure of ·
elected officials, and pork pies in
every pot. I think we need a federally mandated new species, pronto.
Is that a crime? If it is, frankly my
dear,! don't give a damn.
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electrQnically with
this columnist and oibers, contad America Online by calling 1· .
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
..

we going to do, arrest him? Where?
In cybersp8ce?
·
Or take the recent conviction of
actual criminal Colin Ferguson, the
man who shot ·up 20 or so people
on the Long Island Railroad. He's
apparently demanding a retrial on
the grounds that his choice to
forego a lawyer and defend himself
was clearly the mark of an insane

-~wo brothers who allegedly

b,4~ mto a vacant home on Feb.

17 pleaded' guilty to felony charges
of breakmg_ and enten.ng Monday
afternoon tn the Metgs County
CounofCommon Pleas.
Monte Riffle, _37. and his broth·
er, Robert L. Rtffle, 40, both of
1739 Ch~ter Road, Pomeroy, were
~harged tn the breaking ~d entermg of a vacant Enterpnse house
owned by George Nesselroad.
After noting .a broken s~p at the
seen~. officer checked wtth local
. hospttals and ound where Monte
Riffle w
ted for a leg injury.
The find I to additional question·
ing and a subsequent confession,
according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
Items, including a microwave
·oven, were found
. on the porch and
.

Perry A. Carpenter
Perry Augustic Carpenter, 76, Main Street, Rutland, died Monday,
Feb. 27, 1995 at Veterans Memorial Hospital, following a brief illness.
Born Jan. 30, 1919 in Rutland, he was the son of the laJe Ellsworth and
Dora Estella Nelson Carpenter. He was .a retired railroader and dock
worker for the former Holsum Bakery of Middleport, a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and a member of the AF1.-CI0.
Surviving are three sons, Roger Carpenter of Rutland, Roland Carpenter of Marietta, and Rodney Spencer of Columbus; three sisters, Evelyn
Rife, Margie Orueser, and Kathleen Carpenter, all of Rutland; two brothers, Lawrence Carpenter of Rutland, and Heruy Carpenter of Middleport;
eight grandchildren, and one great-granddaughter.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife of31 years,
Iva Hensley Carpentor; a daughter, Pauy Carpenter Florian; an infant son,
Robert Carpenter; a sister, Anna Cline: a brother, Edgar Carpenter; and
two grandchildren., Terri and Jeff Spencer.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in the Birchfield Funeral Home,
Rutland, with Pastor Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 24 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Edsel Johnson
Edsel L. Johnson, 68, Route I, Ewington, died today, Feb. 28, at his
residence.
Arrangements are under the direction of the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton,_and will be announced at a later dale.

'

Budget amendment vote
slate(~ by Senate tonight
WASHINGTON (AP) - The would be shielded from spending
high-stakes fight over a constitu- cuts. Any changes in the amendtiona! amendment requiring a bal- mcnt would require that it be
anced budget is in its final round as shipped back l!l the House, which
the Senate ends a month-long approved it 300-132 a month ago
debate with a showdown vote that but where the fate of a n;configured
seems too close to call.
version would .be uncenain. ,
Tonight's,roll call on final pas- - Also undeclafed were ·Sen s-,sage hinged on five un~ommitted John Breaux, D-La., and Wendell
Democrats, and both sides were FordcD-Ky.
doing all they could to pressure
The amendment would require a
them. At least three - Sens. Sam balanced federal budget by 2002,
Nunn of Georgia and Kent Conrad unles·s two-thirds of senators ·and
and Byron Dorgan of North Dalcota representatives voted to run a
- were demanding changes as the deficit.
price for their support, either in the
All but one of the Senate's 53
amendment itself or with accompa- Republican senators were supportnying legislation.
ing the measure, bringing .it within
"They can count," said Conrad shouting distance of the 67 votes
in an interview, .referring to bal· - a two-thirds majority- needed
anced budget supporters. "If they to send it to the states for ratifica·
want this to pass, they're going to Lion. Thirty-eight states must
have to make some changes."
approve it for the measure to
The senators wanted to make become pan of the Constitution.
sure the courts w3"J4 be barred
The lone GOP maverick, moderfrom _enforcif!g the amCr\!!!P~by ate Sen . fvlark Hatfield, R·()re: ,
ordenng tax tncreases or spendih~r !Ieavy pressure from hts
cuts, and that Social Security colleagues to switch.

Certificate,' Michael Ray Harris,
deceased, to Lori L, Harris, Olive,
160 acres;
Easement, Joe and Rose
McKenzie to Jasper and Joyce
Oliver, Columbia, 30 acres; .
Certificate, Luther P. Oldaker,
deceased, Norman and 'Alice Laud·
. ermilt, Rutland, 1/1 acre parcel;
Deed, Norman and Alice Laudermiltto Robert Romine, Rutland,
1/1 aere parcel;
,
Deed, John E. and Helen W.
Chalfant to Robert L. Adams,
Oli,ve lots;
Deed, Joe N. and Susan M.
Clark to Nelle L. Wright, Pomeroy
Eleven calls for assist;tnce were port squad also on scene.
parcel;
answered by units of the Meigs
6:34 p.m., Pomeroy Nur.sing and
Deed, Joe N. and Susan M. County Emergency Medical Ser· Rehabilitation Center, Mary JamiClark to George L. Wright, ·vice Monday. Units responding son, St. Joseph's Hospital, ParkersPomeroy parcels.
included:
·burg, W.Va.
RUTLAND
RACINE
4:39 a.m., Happy HQUow Road,
8:46 p.m., Main Street, Jordan
Rebecca Smith, Holzer Medical Cleland, Holzer Medical Center.
over an embankment on U.S. 33 Center.
REEDSVILLE
3:53 p.m., Main Street, Perry
I :01 p.m. County Road 9, Ray
near the structure Soulsby reportCarpenter, Veterans Memorial Smith, Camden Clark Hospital,
cd.
· '
Judge Fred w. Crow Ill sen- Hospital.
Parkersburg.
TUPPERS PLAINS
tenced the pair to 18 months in the
MIDDLEPORT
8:24 a.m., Chester, Thomas
Orient Correction Center and
9:54 a.m., State Route 7, Five
ordered them to pay $500 ·for costs Buckley, treated not transported.
Points, motor vehicle accident,
POMEROY
,
of prosecution. The two received
Penny Aeikcr, refused treatment;
8:32a.m., Chester, Thomas Carmel Garvin, Veterans Memorial
credit for nine days served in the
Buckley, Holzer Medical Center.
Meigs County Jail.
Hospital. Bashan Fire Department
10:02 a.m., 432 South Third, on the scene.
Breaking and cntcrin)l is a
felony of the fourth degree said Robert Dempsey, Pleasant Valley
3:55 p.m. 277 Main SL, Walter
Prosecutor John R. Lentes. 'Both Hospital.
Greene, Veterans Memorial Hospi.
3 p.m., 33164 Children's Home tal.
brothers have multiple prior con ·
Road, Anna Frank, VMH. Middlevictions he said.
'

Squads answer 11 calls

'

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·960}
Published every afternoon. Monday through
Po m~roy,

Marriage licenses
The following couples received
marriage licenses recently in the
Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck: Jeffrey Douglas English, 34, and Jane Ann
Stewart, 29, both of Pomeroy, and
Robert Hustus Workman, 19, and
Amy Lorraine Hamon, 19, both of
Albany.

Ohio, by the

Ohio Valley Publishidg Company/Multimedia
Inc, Pomeroy., Oh io 4.'i769, Ph. 992-2 1.56.
Second clau postllgt prud ot l'o~roy, Ohio

Memben The A5socioted Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.

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Rockwell ...............................38 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myers..............-.20 J/4
Royal Dutch.......................... 112 J/8
Shoney's Inc...........................lt 1/8
Star Bonk .............................. .4111l
Wendy Jn1:1............................. 15 78
Worthington lod .................... I9 J/4

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of
GaiUpolls.

The deadline for submitting' completed applcations for the 1995

Ernest A. and Maxine Wingett l'&gt;iemorial Education-Scholarships is
March 15.
.
It is anticipated that at least two new scholarships in the amount
of $1,000 each, potentially renewable for up to three additional
years for. undergraduate studies, will be awardelr this year, accordmg to Trustee Robert Win gen.
Applicants must be legal residents of Sutton Township, Meigs
County, or lineal descendants of nieces and nephews of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Wing en, who were retired educators.
Appl ication forms can be obtained, from Sopthcrn High School
Guidance Counselor Shirley Sayre or Wingett Four students are
curren~y receiving scholarships. Applications submitted personally
or posunarked after the deadline will not be considered.

Shuttering Racine building

Baer and Barbara J . Bailey on
(Continued from Page 1)
In other business, the board March 9 and 10.
approved Linda R. Faulk and Diane
The board denied a vocational
L, Rice as substitute teachers, student's request for ·a release to
Melissa Orueser as a substitute play baseball at ~eigs ~gh Sch?OI
cook; David Smith as a substitute and took no acuon on accepttng
custodian and Earline Ebersbach as board member Don Smith as a volpart-time study hall monitor at . unteer substitute bus driver on an
Syracuse Elementary School.
emergency basis.
·
The board also agreed to grant
.In addition, the board held an
leave without pay to Charles w. · executive session to discuss per. sonncl matters.
Present were Lawrence, Hill,
Grucser and board members Many
.:(Continued from Page 1) ~ ~ Morarity, C.T. Chapman, Smith
' and Pelc Thoren. " ·
the parking lot 'said his assessment was too low. He asked for
the price be raised from $12,500
to $15,000.
Horton and council said they
will work to resolve this cost
discrepancy.
The project must be completed by July 1995, Trussell added.
B,ut an extension could be granted, she said.
The venture consists of a
floating dock, a wider ramp and
a new boater parking lot,
Trussell .said. Between eight and
I 0 parking spaces for boaters
will be added between Walnut
and Rutland streets on Front o
Street.
- • Available·for use year-round,
the aluminum dock would measure 30 feet long and I 0 feet
wide, Trussell added .

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· A Vienna, W.Va., man was in satisfactory condition this morning in Charleston Area Medical Center with injuries suffered in a
two-car crash Monday on State Route 7 near Chester.
Carmel E. Garvin Jr., 34, is being treated for a head injury and
blunt chest trauma, a CAMC spokesperson said.
The Oallia-Meigs Post of the Sta~ Highway Patrol said Garvin
was southbound at 9:45 a.m. when his ear rear-ended a car driven
liy Penny L. Aeiker, 19,34428 SR 7, Pomeroy.
Both cars then went off the l~ft side of the road, according to the ·
repon. Aeiker was stopped ro make a left tum into a driveway when
the crash occurred, the patr\&gt;1 said.
'
,
Both cars were severely damaged and Aeiker escaped without
injury. Garvin was taken by the Meigs EMS to Veterans Memorial .
Hospillll and later transferred.
Garvin was cited for assured clear distance and no safety bell

'

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•
)'

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Rutland man cited in wreck
A on_e-car accident ovc~ the weekend in Middleport resulted in ·
no lDJunes, accordmg to Mtddlepon Police Dcparunent reports.
James R. Young, 32, of Rutland, was cited for improper backing
after he stopped m the m1ddle of Ash Street and backed into another
car at 7:10a.m. Saturday, according to records.
Young's 1982 Ford pickup uuck had light daniage .to the front
end, reports stated.
·
·
Peg!,'Y L. DeWees, 45, Mason, W.Va., was driving east on Ash
Street near Pearl Street when she· collided with Young's truck
reports stated. DeWees' 1986 Mercury had heavy damage to th~
front end and was towed from the scene. ·
·

Drivers cited in accident
Both drivers were cited in an accident at the imersectitln of Court
and Second streets in Pomeroy Monday.
According ·to Pomeroy Police, Kenneth Leesburg, 29, Pageville'
Road, Albany, driving a Plymouth van owned by Gaylyrd Young,
Albany, pulled from Court without stopping at the stop sign and
struck the 1977 Pontiac drive11 by Donald 0, Hysell, 38, Racine.
Hysell was traveling east on Second. The accident occurred at 8:25
p.m.

'

· There was ':'lodenite damage to. both vehicles, the .front end of
the Hysell vehicle, and 01e 'dl:wer's side back-of lliev an driven by
Leesburg,_ - .

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Leesburg was cited for -stop sign violation and failure to yield ro
oncoming traffic, and Hysell was cited for driving a vehicle without
insurance.

Meigs announcements·
Special meeting set
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will hold a special board
meeting Thursday at S p.m. 10 discuss the building assistance fund.
Podiatrist comin11
Dr. David Faro, a Gallipolis
podiatrist, will do routine foot
scree•g and answer questions
concerning foot care at a free clinic
to be held at the Senior Citizens
Center from 9 a.m. to noon on
March 22. To schedule an appointment, senior citizens are asked to
call Diane Coates, 992-2161.
Pomona Grange to meet ·
The Meigs County Pamona
Orange will meet at Hemlbck
Orange hall Friday, 7:30 p.m.,
Rock Springs Orange will be host
for the meeting.
Weight Control classes
Registralions are still being

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show thai mature drl,
vers and home owners have rewer and
less costly losses than other age
groups. So 1t's only lair 'to charge you
less lor your Insurance, Insure your
home and car with us and save even
more w1th our spec1al multi,po lii:y
discounts.

taken by the Meigs County Health
Department for weight control
classes. The classes are free to
Meigs Countians and held on Tucs- ·
day an.d Thursday nights. To regis- . ·
ter for the . ~lasses, residents may · ;
call 992-6626.
·

Hospital news

,•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - none.
Monday discharges - Della · ·
Norton, Pomeroy.
·
.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
Discharges Feb: 27 - Dorothy . ·
Sedgwtek, Mrs. Wtlltam Zinn and.
son, Clarence Wood, Clifford
Wooten, Frank Goff.
(Published with permission)

'Jl)e Light

Toacb
By

.'

Dave
Grate
of
Ruiland

.

You have to be patienl with a
diet --especially if it's your
spouse who's on it

'

.

'

•• •

At today 's pork prices , being
called a pig is a compliment
• • •

Dentist: a collector of old
.,.
magazines.

.a

• • •

We're all raced with great
opportunities , brilliantly
disguised as impossible
situations.
·

.. .

Dock saved •

I

.

J

West Virginian injured in crash

·Area brothers plead guilty

Friday, Ill Court St ,

3

--Area Deaths-- Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

2-T11e Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel-Page

.Procrastina tion : that useful
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.

�Page 4 · The Dally Sentinel

Tuesd8Y, February 28,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~

In the NBA,

•

w1n

Rockets beat Cavaliers 86-78; Pacers &amp; Hornets also
·
By T be Associated· Press .
Clevellillll Cavalieli 86-78.
The Houston Rockets were
Drexler missed all seven of his
playing !heir last game without sus-· shots in lhe first half, and he didn't
pended guard Vernon Maxwell, score until a dunk with 2:20 left in
and at halftime it looked lilce Clyde the third quaoer gave HoUSIOII lhe
Drexler' still hadn't shown up.
lead for good 8142-40
The Rockets' recent acquistion
" I just missed so~ shots. What
finally carne ~gh in t!Je second can 1 say?" O~m. who came to
half Monday mght, sconng all 16 the Rockets in a trade with the
of his points after halftime as the Ponland Trail Blazers two weeks
defending NBA champions beat the ago, said of his opening half.

·
•
mn thm was dlea ulik.
" That quickened the pace," he
said. " lt'got us in a more aggressive mood."
Houston s hould be in a more
aggressi ve mood tonight against
the Dallas Maveri cks when
Maxwell returns from a 1 0-ga~e
suspensiOn for punchmg a fan m
Portland. Maxwell, reinstated by
the lea,~~;ue Monday, lost more than,

.
$220,000 in saiJiry allll finu.
His presence will cenainly help
the Rockets, who·played most of .
lhe second half wilh eight players.
Carl Herrera was scratched just
· before the ~ame after ~vating a
hamstring mjury. Starung forward
Robelt HOIIY 1QQ1c ~imself out four
minutes into the th1td quarter after
he re-injured his back, a muscle
injury lhat forced him to miss .five

e~:s~~mfooking for second shot at bigs
PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) Bowden said.
Pedro Borbon is in the Cincinnati
So, why the news conference?
Reds' camp, and no one is quite And why would Bowden - lvho
sure why.
.
has maintained the Reds wouldn't
The Reds caUed a news confer- bring in any over-the-hill players as
ence Monday to announce lhat Bor- strik~breakers - go along With it?
bon - a 48-ycar-o!d pilck who
Perhaps it. had something to do
hasn't playt(l in the majors in 15 wilh the fact that Schon staned her
years - would be allowed to try annual training-camp visit Monday
out as a replacement player.
and deemed it a good idea.
Strangely, the balli:lub made the Remember, Schott wanted to play
announcement before Borbon took the World Series last year with ·
a physical o~ signed a contract. minor leaguers.
.
There's a good chance the portly
"I lhink it's fabulous," Schott
pitcher won't ever appear in uni-, said of Borbmi's return. "He
form,let alone in a game.
played when baseball was really
. And almost as soon as owner baseball, (with) the Big Red
~arge Schott was !lone hugging
Machine. And I think somebody
Borbon, general manager Jim Bow- like this could be a tremendous
den started throwing water on the influence on the future of basewhole thing.
ball.' '
"He'll have a one-in-a-few-mil- , More likely, he'll remain an
lion shot at making the team, " overlooked part of its past.

In Top 25 college hoops,

Providence and OSU
down UConn &amp; ISU
By FRANK BAKER

of its last two games.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Sheffer led Connecticut with 21
There was little reason to believe points.
Pruvidence could beat No,-4 Con.
Michael Brown scored 15
necticut.
points, and Eric Williams had 14
The Friars were coming off per- for Providence.
haps their worst effort of the season
In lhe only other game involvin losing at Pittsburgh, while the · ing a ranked team Monday night,
l:;luskies were looking to clinch No. 18 Oklahoma State beat No. 24
dicit second straight.regular.s\lllson Iowa State 1'149~ ·- . - - ilig Ejlst title.
·
.
No. 18 Oklaboma St. 77
But Providence watched the
No. 241owa SL 49
tape of the loss to Pittsburgh, and . The Cowboys (20-8, 10-3 Big
the Friars were mad. They took out Eight) moved into a fllSl·place tie
iheir frustrptions on Connecticut, with No. 3 Kansas, and the teams
building a 13-point second-half play Sunday at Lawrence, Kan.,to
lead, then holding on for a 72-70 decide the re~lar-season title. ·
victory Monday night
Three seruors playing their final
- "We sar down as a team and home game for Oklahoma Statelooked at the tape (of the Pillsburgh Bryant Reeves, Terry Collins and
· game)," said Troy Brown, who led Randy Rutherford - finished with
Providence with 2'1 points. "I 17, 17 and 13 points, respectively,
!lidn't lilre the way !looked. I said as the Cowboys took command
to myself that no way was I going ·with a 17-1 run to start the second
tO play like that tonight."
half.
Providence (14-11, 6-11 Big
Fred Hoiberg had 13 points to
East) saw Connecticut close t~. 71-_ lead the Cyclones (19-8, 5-7); who
68 with 46 seconds left. • he didn"' have a field goal in lhe first
Huskies forced a turnover, commu- nine minutes of the second half.
led a tur.nover, then got the ball
~ack on a traveling call with 26 '
seconds to go.
: Connecticut . (22-3, 15-2) OHSAA to keep
worked the ball around until Donny state cagefests
Marshall, who sat out most of the
fU'St half with foul trouble and was on OSU campus
benched for most of the second
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) flalf, and he shot an airball 3-point·
er with seven seconds left. Provi- The Ohio High School Athletic
ctence's Michael Brown was fouled Association has announced the
on the reboupd and made a free state boys and girls bask.ctbaU torirthrow with 4.4 seconds left to seal naments will remain at Ohio
State's St. 1ohn Arena at least
the victory.
"I got a good look, I just through 1997.
The OHSAA's board of control
misse·d ," said Marshall, who
also
voted to keep the state volleyscored four points, 12 below his ball and
wrestling tournaments at
average.
the
Nutter
at Wright State
'ooron Sheffer's layup at the_ University Center
in Fairborn during the
buzzer cut lhe deficit to 72-70. .
"Tonight we just weren: t going same period, the association said in
to be denied," said Pete Gillen, a news release Monday. 'All four
tournaments have an option on lhe
who took over as Providence coach same sites in 1998.
this season after a successful career
board, in a meeting Thursat Xavier, Ohio. "We lost two or day,The
also:
three games like lhis to great teams
- Agreed to a contract with
~ Georgetown twice, Syracuse
SportsChannel, a cable outlet, to
once - where we had it and it just televise the championship games of
slipped through our hands in the the 1995 and 1996 boys and girls'
last minute or two.
state basketball tournaments. This
"If we play them 20 times, year's girls' finals are March 18,
(l]Qybe we win once. Tonight was while the boys' games are March
our one Lime to win."
25.
Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun
- Voted to use three on-coun
said he was satisfied with his officials during the 1996 boys'
team's effort and praised the Friars regional and state basketball tour.
fur their intensity.
narnimts. The board will review the
"Prov idcnce did a great job results before deciding whether to
emotionally,"· Calhoun said . use lhree officials during the ·1997
"When we made our runs they girls' tournaments.
stepped up, made poised plays and
- Moved up the 1996 track and
basically beat us. Providence .Cllally field season to avoid a conflict with
answered the emotion that we had Ohio State's graduation cereat the end. They never broke." .
monies. The 1996 season will
· The Huskies can still clinch the begin March 4 and the state track
league title Saturday with a victory and field tournament will be held
at Miami or if Villanova loses one May31-June I.

Borbon , who played for tbe
Reds frpm 1970-79, has tried for
some time to get cOnsideration for
their strikebreaker team. But each
time he called player development
director Chief Bender, he got .'
tumed down.
"He called us several times in .
the offseason, " Bowden said.
" Chief said, 'Pedro ' uld like to
come down and be a eplacement
player.' And I'd thro
ief out of
my office.
"Sunday, Pedro' s name came
up again and we felt out of courtesy
and dignity and pride and humor
we ought to give it a whirl. ·'
The move isn't getting much
applause back in Cincinnati. One
television station played circus
music as its lead-in to the
announ'cement. Cincinnati Enquirer
columnist Paul Daugheny called it
a joke.
"If the purpose was to make the
Cincinnati Reds look stupid, well,
what a waste of energy," Daugherty wrote in today's editions. "This
organization doesn't have 10 work
at stupidity. Occasionally for the
Reds, stuP,idity comes naturally.
Like now. '
' Borbon, who has a double chin
and a protruding belly, must pass a
physical. before he can sign a
nonguaranteed minor-league contract. Bowden wasn't sure when he
would have the physical.
"One of the biggest hurdles he's
got to overcome is .passing his
physical," Bowden said.

.

.

Borbon has been pitching in a
Sunday semipro league in Mexico.
He claims to weigh 238 pounds.
"I'll lose another 15 pounds in
10 days," Borbon said. "I like running. I like working. I'm 48, but I
feel like 25. No sore leg, no sore
arm, nolhing.''
Bowden said he has received
reports that Borbon Cl!fl lhrow in
the low 80s. ·
"We were looking for a righthanded pitcher who could play
once a monih in a 15-run game and
pitch ro one batter with two strikes
on him, and we think he can do it
with his blooper pitch," Bowden
joked.
Asked whether this was all the
owner's idea, Bowden said, "I
have a lot of respect for the Big
Red Machine. When a member of
the Big Red Machine calls and asks .
if he can play durin~ these troubled ,
times,
feel obligated ' from an
organizational standpoint' to give
him lhat opponunity.'' ·
Borbon played for Cincinnati,
St. Louis, California and San Francisco during his big-league career.
His son, Pedro 1r., is a pitcher in
the Atlanta Braves' organization.
Borbon doesn't mind going
against the players' union.
"l always played hard, but I
never got good pay. These players
today should be playing," Borbon
said. "They make too much. Why
do they need some more? When I
play«:4. there were no millionaire
ballplayers."

· 1h1s
· monlh.- - . . .
games earlier
Terrell Brandon led VlSJtmg
Cleveland with _.26 pomts, ~d he
kept the Cavahers close w1th 12
points in the third quarter. .He
scored six of Cleveland's fU'Sl e1ght
points. in the fmal period~ pun lhe
C:Sval~ers to 69.fJ7 w1th Ju.:;~under
s1x mmutes to go, but basl&lt;ets" by
Hakeem Olajuwon and Drexler
helped Houston pull away.
.
OlaJuwon led the Rockets w1th
. 20 points and II rebound s and
Drexler grabbed nine rebounds.
Kenny Smith had 16 points and
Chucky Brown a season-high 13
for Houston.
In other NBA games on Monday "night it was Indiana I 08,
Boston 97; Atlanta 118, Sacramento 99; Detroit 97, Milwaukee 89;
Chicago 108, New 1ersey 86; Port·
land 96, the Los Angeles Clippers

788 N. Second

992·5515

Middle

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Aduollc D l -

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Centr•l Dlvlllon
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7;30 p.m. ·
New YOJ:i: at Orlando., I p.m.
Miami at MD waukee. 8:30p.m.
HCiolllon at Dallu,l:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND at San Antonio, I :30
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Mimeaota at Denver, 9 p.m.
fh9alh. LA. Qippc:rl. t 0:30p.m.

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Wullin ....
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Indiana .. Ddrail. 7:30 p.m.
Miami at Oica~G~ 1:30 p.m..
AloaU at LA. laic-. IO:lQ p.m.
Utah at&lt;:JoW.n St.M.10:30p.IIL
Mirmwlt.a at Sacnmen~o, 10:30 p.m.

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Payments based .on $1 ,000 doWn
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cat.cher,lo nunor-leapoontnctl .

NEW JERSEY D EVILS : T u de d
center. ro lhe D&amp;llA• St&amp;ll
fot Neal Bro~en, Olllta . Racallcd J&amp;rodl"'
Modr)', delauemm, from Alban y ollhe

Corey

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N•llonal BukdlNIII AuoclaUon
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ell: &amp;U~td Vernon Muwoll will be rein·
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NEW YORK ISLAN DE RS: A n·

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BOSTON CELTICS: Pllced Onid
Woalc)l, &amp;UUd, on the injured liA. Signed

Robert BJ.d.woll. pud. 10 • 10-doy "")·

"'"-MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES '
Waived Otarla Shackl.olard; ' cnlc:r.

Tonight's Kames
Hanford at OUawa, 1:30 p.m.

FootbaU

o

· National Foalball Leqne
CIDCAOO BEARS: Si&amp;hod Joe Cain,

Mc:alrMlal N.Y. &amp;.l~cn. 7::JO.p.m.
Florid. at N.Y. RanFI, 1:30 p.m.

lincblcker,lO a tw'o-ye&amp;r contnc:L
DETROIT LIONS : Siancd Hen ry

RIVIERA$

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DUWJOed dlll Kip Miller, cent• . hu bocn
returned to Denver of lhe lntc:mt tioo al
lloc.l&lt;oy WI"'SAN JOSE SHARXS: Traded BobErrey, left winL to Detroit in uc hanfl.e- ror
Ill W"tcondilional rllth- round aclcc1..1on in
the 199S NIIL Entry Draf t. Rec a lle d
Oody Wood, forward , from Kanua Cit y
~ lhe bucrnadon.al Hocke y l.ea&amp;ue.
TORONTO MAPLE Ll! Af S : An nounct.d that Darby Hendricb on, le ft
wina. hu been n:tu.med 10 S1. John '• of
tl!e American Hoclr.ey Lcasue.
WASRINOTON CAPIT AtS : Re·
called Sa-aci &lt;kmchar, defauc:rnan. frun
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WINNIPEG JETS : Roc: allod Olea

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automatic, AM/FM, cto'ih Interior. rear defloster ..... ........... .... $5495
1189 CHEVY BERETTA, 14860, red , automatic, air,
AM!FM, power Windows &amp; locks, lilt, cruise, sport wfleels ....... J4W5
1882 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM, 14874, light pewter, automatic ,
air. tilt, cruise, rear defrost.AMIFM .................... ..
.... . S8620
teG1 CHEVY S.10, 14784, 2 tone paint,
AM!FM cassene , rear slider, cloth interior ....... .................. $&amp;495

; Bonnevlfles, Grand A~s, Centurys,
Ave~tues, Grand Prixs
Skylarks,

1983 .

1981 HONDA CIVIC CRI(, 14808. blue. air,
AM/FM cassette, rear defroster, SJ&gt;C?r1 wheels .
tVBI CHEVY S·10, 14809, sport wheels.

BUICK ELECTRA
LIMITED

fiberglass topper, dual mtrrors, AMIFM ... ....
1911 DODGE DYNASTY, 14818, black , air,
automatic, AM!FM. air bag, rear defros!er ..

Low Miles, Senior Citizens Trade,
Extra Clean • V-8 Engine

.. .... $5665
.. $5665
.......... . $6675

1990 CHEVY LU~INA, M4829, red , automatic.
air, AM/FM. ~ loth interior, lilt , cr~i se ........ .............. ....

. S5995

Clokqo SL 73, NE DUnoio 65

Y-

AM/FM , ~ear defroster, 4 door. cloth intertor ..
. $6320
1H2 PLVMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14816, red . automatic,
air, bit, emtse. air bag, AM/FM , rear defroster ..
... $8905
1190 HISSAN TRUCK. 14823, wh ite, AM/FM cassette,
bed liner. sport wheels, dual miHors ................................ ... $6315
1888 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 14853, automattc, atr,
tilt , cruise, 7 passenger, cloth inter tor, AM!FM, woodgrain . . $5495

Southwest

~SLn,JawaSL49

Tau-Pan AmC1icm Sl,l.anlr S4
W. K-y92,M.- Sl. 7l

1989

BUICK RIVIERA
58,000 Actual Miles, One Owner,
Champagne Metallic Finish - Leather
Trim, loaded, Extra Clean

1993 FORO ESCORT, 14871, Gold, 23,000 mrles.
AMIFM cassene. cloth in terior ............ ...... .
1192 MERCURY TOPAZ, 14854, autOmatic,

"CLASSIC CAR"

Touraaments

J

Lon11aland Univ. 17, llaban .Monil

1992

. NISSAN 240 SX

Sl Mancit, Pa. 9S,St FmnciJ, N.Y. 76

Showroom clean· 1 owner, sunroof,
A/C, cassette, STD shift, power
windows, aluminum wheels
RUBY RED &amp; BEAUTIFUL

~~~-·

· C.tm GknOU 52, Uniomown Lake
Cia. US.U.16_. Cia. Wiltuuw 74
Cin. Oot IIllo 79, cq,u, 52

'

.

Cin. WoodWMI 14, Cia. W""'"lfi111
Cle.l!aall, Wmou,Joby.Soolh54

- - Spons briefsBaseball
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) - .
The strike could force a delay in
the awarding of two new franchis·
es, but expansion commiuee chairman 1ohn Harrington said officials
are still aiming for a .decision in
March.
Phoenix, which .along with St.
Petersburg, Fla., seems almost certain of getting one of the two teams
for 1998 if owners approve Harrington's recommendation, must
have a decision by March 31 to
take advantage of a stadium construction tax.
Football
KANS~S CITY, Mo. (AI')Safety David Whitmore, who came
to Kansas City fnlm San Francisco
along with quarterback Joe Montana, said he tliink.s lhe four·time
Super Bowl winner is through.
"He's probably done, tltit's lllll
can say.! have robe careful what I
· say," Whitmore rold wmw.TV in
Topeka·, Kan •

..

.... .. $8720

air. AM/FM. cloth interior, rear defroster ..... .. . .... .. ....... ..... $7495
1991 CHEVY CAVALIEA RS, .14864, 4 door, whtle.

Northtut c.,.rtl"tftCe.ttnt ftMind

45

Sprinsfiold

rllhe American Hockey Wpe..

MONTH
'

Selectl

Mill•.

1991 NISSAN SENTRA, ..4a70, red, aulomahc.

Dd'IUI 71, o.w;, 47
Ev..nmllo81, W'idU .. SL 73
Dlinaio S.. 66, Dnko 64
S.lllinoio 116, Cnoiab1oa 73 .
SW MUoouD SL 71.1odima Sl. 61
Tulia 90, N.lowa 7l
SL 79, Vllponilo 75

..

' MONTREAL CANADIENS: Rocall6d
Vakri Bun, riJht win&amp;. rrum Fnldc:ricla'l
. of the American Hockey League . At·
lipDd Crai&amp; Coruvy, eerner, 10 Frodaric-

OAKLAND ATHLET ICS : Siancd

N"'lcnoy 6, Mon-a I
I'Htoburah 7. Qu-l
SL Lcuili 3, T~to 2

58

MIGHTY DUCKS OF ANAH EIM :
Rcnllod O.vid Sacco. forw ard, r~ San
Dieao of the l ntemat ion • l lloekay
Leaaue. Aatifnod Valeri Ka rpov , fo r·
want, I() San Diego.

Rial Swan, Joe WUftll\, BNoo AroU. and
Sid Akin1, J»it,hcn, and Clay Oun n,

50

A. P.R.

Toum11111eats

$9858 Per

Escort, btue. 2 door,
radio.

$7135

18 44

N.Y. lalmdcn... 7 I 3
Phil.odclphio ..... 7 I 2
Florida .............. 1 t 1 t

Midwest

10

Hockey

BasebaU

'94'

Plocffi&lt; 14, UNLV 13

Lancer, 4 dcior,
automatic. · ·

88

60

Winnipec :......... 6 9 3

"3" NEW

.

.

N•Uontlllocluy Lea au•

Ani•k:8• Leaau•

Mood•y's SI.'Ores
2. Oaawa 0

52

NcwJcney ....... 1 7 4

Ohio B.S. boys' scores

Accord SE: brow.n, cruise.
power moon ro.pf.

$215°

23

coach.

"'"-

Transactions

to

'tarWat

89 HONDA
4

·'

Sp«~ocr apcrial team~

MINNESCYI'A VIKINGS: Signad Har. lon Bameu, tafety, to a W ee-year con-

N.Y. Ranpa at l-lutfcwd,7 p.m.

Boc.cm

CONFERENCE

Mumy SL lUI, \11"-Mudn 7S
N.C. Qulotlo 71, Jamoa Madiaon 'M
SB Mllaourl 90, Auodn Pooy 17101')
Tenneaoo71, TowtcaSLfO
Troy St n, 'Mo.·Kanlu City~~
VM17S, Cilado166
W. Cuulina 'II.~ SL 71
William A Mary 1'16, 00ora«~ M11on
94
.

~::

89 HONDA

·s

Toronto ............. 9 9 3 21 .59

Anaheim ...........

.!1'. J. I lil!: £i4. ElL
N.Y.Ran&amp;en .... 9 8 2 20 ~1 47

(2

LOS ANGELES RAJDBRS : Named

Tampa 8~~· 7:l0 p.m.
Dollu..
...,,, ,30p.m.

53

31

6
9
9
6
LooAn.......... S I

Tomi"B•y ....... I 9 2 II .52

""''
"·
x.mn

Wodn...tay's gomes

4j

61

Calpoy ............
Edmoolon .........
SID Ja~e ............
Vanoouv•........

Mc:nhead Sc.ll, TIIIMIMI6 Ttdt 12

Corsica, 4 door, gray, air,
automa~c. stereo ..

automatic, stereo .

31

P•dftc:Dht. .

Iwa .

D.ovidooo 65, Furman 55
E. Tcm_. St. 17, \11'-0lltl&amp;n.OCJia'
12 .
Jac:bmSL 71, T - S t . 61
J..U....W.16,M.-Ualo- 70
Manhalll3, GcoiJia Sa.JIU:In 63
Middk Tmn. 82, 1!. K&lt;mludty 78 (OT)

90 PLYMOUTH
Voyilger, white. air,

au;-

Atlandc Dh-Woa

Sootb

$19514

~:.

Calais, 4 door, white.
air. automatic.

17 36
15 4)
1 33

Choose from ' 10' Low Mileage ·g4· Sunbirds ·
Some 2 door. some 4 door- options include lilt ·
wheel; cruise control , power windows, AM/FM
cassette, auto Irans., air 'cond . Balance new car
warranty. Good Color Selection.

Wednesday's Jlllmes

CRX. blue.
automatic. ·

$134 8 ~

.

EA~ERN

91

. Legilcy L,
loaded I

$195

Bultolo............. 7 7 3
llmfonl .•._,.... 6 9 ]
Ouawa ...... -...... 21 1 3

.

92S.UBARU
14

100. Col. LlbaiJ.

.Loaded with sunroofs ·
a,nd super charged
· engines!

Ptill.l~a at W&amp;lhinaem,

'\

S4

KANSAS crry CHIEFS ' Rouoianod
Kurt Schottcnhcimcr, lpccia l team•

Tonight's pmes

NCAA Division I-A
men's scores

11 45

Thorou, deferuivc tackle.

OU..ao 1... New Ieney 116

4 door. blue. air.
stereo. automatic. ,
.$
14Per

Momreal ... -...... 7 7 4

ChiQIIO ............ 1J S t'

NHL standings

Cin. Mariemont 62, Ripley 46

fbnJn 16, a.EVEI.AND 71
Ponlmd 96, LA. Cll.,.,.13
Owioac l1l6, Seal:llO 114
Ulah IOI.LA t..k.., 95

92 FORD TAURUS

Nmwalk 70, Vc:rmilkll61
aw ...-Oiandod' n, Brylll6t
SL Ma:yo 73, N.,.a..., 55
·
W001t.c::T Tri"aJ 61, Akron Ccwenlr)'

Cudinpcn 14, Mari.m Plea.aant 82

5I
..
42

1i:!.
. .........~ ~ f ~ ~ 't
SL Louil ........... 12 5 -1 21 69 51

Hockey

Campbdl Mmnorial 73, E. Paleftine

Mood•y's scores

.

Madiaf.tae 63, Murillaillndian River

DIYitlonm

25,

30 II
21 71
22 50

Mib Stock tpocial team• coach. P'romoc·
od Carl Hairltm., leoul an d uaiA&amp;nt d&amp;fe nt l• t~ li ne coach, to ddentin line

uo

C•nlrallMwtaloe

Sebrin8 72, Howlaod Olr: 4S

You. Eut 74, R.avfnla 33

16
II

l'itubuqll ......... 14 3 2
13 4 2
a...., ............. 10 6 2

New Albany 14, M:uim Catholic: S9

H\lbbt.rd 60. RIVCIII\I Sa&amp;llhDul 53

50

- Indiana 101, 80itm 'Y1
AtlarU 111,S.~99
Decmit rn. Milwaakoo 89

IZ.OOO mlle5 ~· ye••· 24 ,1100 lolal mllu~ t.e.a.w rail:' lador 00010. residual hufl! &lt;:m 11 ').. flr•t payment and
~ec: ~trll ~ dep{l! l! fllu• • ~• due a t leu~ c:on( eplkm . Oo~~ end le•e ollu MUod l hru 2-ztl.-95 ..

. Mill-

~~~y Sl, Garf'ICld

2
4

~.............

each of Jhe last 12 seasons. Iolm.
Stockton had 19 points and 1·4
assists in the Jazz' s 18th road victory, tiro with Phoenix for most in·
the league. Elden Campbell led the ·
inj ury -de pleted La kers with 25
points. The Jazz held the Lak.ers
w ithou1 a fie ld goal over a 5: 16
span of the fo urth quarter to t.ake a:
93-76Jcad with 5:02 remaining. . :

Wuhinp:n,at ~· 7:30p.m.
llaUu .. Wlmi;&gt;ol.
p.IIL
Edmcdon •tCilpsy, 9:30p.m.
San Joee 11 VIIIDOIJYer, 10:30 p.m.
ctncaaoa1 LoaAnplal , lO:~ p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Ccolerbul'J 51. Foirlo•nko 41 · ·F.U,... 71, S. EuWd l..uohcnn 1!. 54
·~W'I'l n, Jacban-Mibon 46

DlololonU

llll

47

fo ur of Charlotte's last five points
as it won for the l irs t time as it
reached the halfway mark of a sixgame Western road swing. Clary
Payton led th e Sonics with 32
points.
Jazz 101, Lakers 95
Karl Malone had 30 points and~
10 rebounds as Utah became the
only NBA team-to reach 40 wins

Chicaao at Anaheim ~ I 0:30p.m.

DIYIIioiiiV
Alhlabula St Jdut 51, Blocmfidd SS
Berlin Cu. W. RCICitYCI ~7, You. Calvuy·41
Canal Winchoaa- 67, Ohio Deaf' 36 .

Xeni• Be.ave:n:ftllllll SS, Gmenvillc 3.5

43

35

Unilod LDOII73, 5&lt;Nib X..,. SO
Wama Keonedy14, Badp 12

Sprina. NORb 74, XCII'lia 47

•

.

Sudinio 1!ulem 65, Mnnoylo..., S7

SprinJ. SaUih 71, T - 63
TaL Ceatnl Catholic :li9, Tol. Start~4
Tai..Ropn. 7&amp;, Orq,on Clay 51
Tol. Sl. l;u,c;, 90, Tol. BoWih"' S9 ·

14

II

Nortlleut Dfyllloa

I..u.lon.u!o 66, l6u.lu. 37
MiMlefield Cudinal. 53, Wickliffe 50
Perry S4, Gatc1 Milh Hawken 45 (2

OT)

S""-J60,S-.,.41 ·

P.cllk Dhtllon
Phorati.K ..................42 13 .764

LA Won ... - .. ... 3&lt;\ 19 .642
Ponland ................. 30 23 ~
s..-...........21 25 .521
Golden su:... - ......16 n .302
LA Cippas . .......10 .. .179

l3

'Tol Waite 64, Foltuit 60

I~ ~

s.w. ...........- ...... 37 t6 .691

rr-..un

lila. Midpcok 50

7.5
•
13.S

W........ ...... 3 9 S

El)ria C.lh. 69, Lorain Oearview 61
G.mmvil1&lt; 59,
1 VoL 51
Jua.wwn On.ncricw 61, Ca.rUak 41
Lic:kina Val. 63, Arn.anda Clearcrcck

-..65. 0......"

I

16 .692
u...... ................. l5 19 .641
Dcnwr ...................23 31 .426
DaU.a ............-......... 20 31 .385
Minn&lt;oola .............. l4 &lt;40 .259

2 door' CIvic OX ·

Oinlon-Mulie 10. O.j. OU.wood :li7

ae. I.JneolD.w"•t 11. a .. kennedy

Puma Va.lleJ Fcqe 1S, Midd.lcb\lll

.

' Prices Good ThN March 4th.

•

I~

starters Clfrford Robinson and Rod
Stricklantt. Pooli Ricfiardson had
14 points to lead the Clippers.
Hornets 116, SuperSoolai 114
At Tacoma, Alonzo Mourning
had 34 points, including a free
throws with 31 seconds left that
gave lhe Hornets lhe lead for good
at 114-113. Muggsy Bogues scored

Demel!: Coleman scored 17 points
forthl!N&amp;.- - ·
Tran Blazers %, Cllppen 83
At Portland, James Robinson
scored 18 po ints and Buck
Williams had 17 points and 13
rebounds as the Trail Blazers beat
the Clippers for the fifth straight
time despite missing injured

Co. Mmholl.56, 37
Dola ware 49, Col Broothawaa4l
Elyd.o 67 • ....._ S9
FW!iold I I, Cin. Prin...., 77 (OT)
·-lila. fi/, fldo........ 62
11'*-12. Wmm Howlind St
Lonia Admiral Itin1 46, Lara in
Sau.Urtiow 35
·
.

Mktw•l btwidon

Will Get You These Greld

OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-6; SAT. ~5
Mastercard/VIsa/Discover

6]

NBAstandings

.~
. . . . . .:. .JJ
New YcD ..............l!ii

~--------------------------------~--~----------·~·------~

Co. !Uy 63, Moolollu. 61

WESTERN CONFERENCE

~~illllaie·~
•

Addison scored seven points in a
12·3 run to put it away. Todd Day
had 24 points for·the Bucks.
Bulls 108, Nets 86 ·
At Chicago, Scottie Pippen
scored 31 points to lead the BuDs,
who belil l!!!: NeJs 19 consecutive
times at home before losing lheir
last meeting in Chicago on Dee. S.

B as k etb a ll

.

t'

Senior Citizens Discount .
10% off on Auto Repair Services
·
Every Wednesday

I

____

Pistoas 97, Budl 89
At Auburn fJiUs. Rafael Addi8011 had 21 points and Allan 1Jous.
ton added 20 as the Pistons
matched their victory total for last
season with !heir 20tb. Milwaukee
which trailed 54-40 at halftime:
tiro the game in lhe opening seconds Of the fourth quarter, but

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

li!JJ4 action... _c_con_ti~nu_ro_~_m_~~ge-4)

· ...... .-_ ••.22
MWni
..............
.20
Jlh!ledelphi• ......_,. l.S
WuJWill&lt;oo ........... l3

we

SECOND IN CONFERENCE MEET -John Carroll senior
Aaron Sheets (right) took second In the beavyweigbt division in Sat·
urday's Ohio Atbletic Conference wrestUng meet at the University or
Findlay to boost his record to 20-(;, The finisb earned an an-OAC certiricate ror tbe 1991 Meigs Higb School graduate and the right to
advance to the NCAA Division ill National Championships, set for
Friday and Saturday at Augustana Conege in Rcx:k lsland,IU.

February 28, 1995

s ........................n n

Western Auto

*-Westem AulD.

Lo;

83'
116 Seattle
UUmCharlotie
Angele114·
~and
101 • the
s
ers
95
• Pacers 108, Celtlcs 97
At Boston, Rik Smits had 25
points, Reggie Miner 24 and Mark
Jackson 17 assists as Indiana won
its seventh in a. row. The Celties
led by Dominique Wilkins ' 2l
poinis, trailed 96-79 with 5:38 to
play and were never closer than
seven points after that
Hawks 118, Kings 99
· At Atlanta, Andrew Lang had a
season-high 20 points and grabbed
eight rebounds as the Ha)Vks won
their lhird straight and seventh in
nine games. The 8-4 record for
February made it their fllSI winning
month of the season' Mitch Rich mond had 20 points to lead the
IGngs.
(See NBA ·on Page 5)

1\111 dey,

BUICK ROAD MASTER SEDAN
We sold new- Only 34,000 miles.
Loaded with opth:ms. &amp; leather interior!
Lady Driven &amp; Extra Clean

ENGINE • REAR WHEEL DRIVE!

1993

alloy wheels, att, au tomatic. AM/H-1 . rear defroster ..
. 56995
1992 CHEVY S-10, 1487 2, red , Js.ooo miles. dual m•t~o r s.
rear step bumper, spon wheels, ra1sed lener Inns
. 17905
1893 CHEVY CAVALIER RS WAGON, N825, 3utgmattc,
air, AM!FM cassettr. t ~t. cru1se, luggage rack ...... ~...
.. .. 18565
1992 FORD TEMPO GL, 14817, blue, air.
automatic , AM/FM , till, cloth intenor .......
.. 18525
1991 CHEVY CAPRICE, 14852, light peW1 er, V6, automat•c.
air, AM{PM cassette. power ~mdows &amp; locks. crui~e. I til ..... ..... $82~
1H2 CHEVY BERETTA, 14863,2 door. alloy wheels ..
air. automatic, AM/FM , ttl!. cru ise .............
. ... 18495
1992 FORD T·BIAO, 14868, air, automatic, tilt, cruise.
power windows, locks &amp; seats. rear defr ost. clo th intenor ....... S8970
1892 TOYOtA COROLLA, 14819, pewter. a11,
automatic, rear defroster. cloth interior ...................
·. 18975
1tl2 DODQE .CARAVAN , 14778:7 pas senger, !1 !1,
cruise , air, autoinauc. AM/F M cassene. power equipment . . $9520
1tt3 NISSAN TRUCK, 14887, low m1les.
AM/FM casseHe, rear shder. tied mat, clOth •nter1o1
$9320
19e1 GEO TRACKER LSI4x4, 14666, BUoy ~heels, a11 ,
I
automatic, AM/F M cassett e, LSI package, removable top .
$9720
1"3 CHEVY LUMINA APV, 14775, wtll le , automat~. air,
AMJFM cassette, t1 H, crUise. powe1 windows ...................... 110,564

1!193 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 14!71, black. air,
automatic, AM!FM cassette. V6, till, cruise. power w1n0ows

S9i95

19e3 NISSAN TRUCK. 14785, K•ng Cab, red , autOf'I"'BIIc,

EAGLE TALON
Locally owned, auto, power windows,
32,000 miles, cassette with graphic
equalizer, Dark Jade

"SHARP ....... ,n,

Buick.Pontiac

AMJFM cassene, rear llrp seats, bed liner .. ,..
. S11,1it95
1193. PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, 14789, 7 plissenger, V6.
air, aU'lomatic, AMJFM , 1111, cruise ·.... .
. .. $12,389
1813 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE , 14805, wtlile , V6 eng•ne.
air, automatic, AM/FM cassene. 1111. power lOCks
........... 19870
1112 TOYOTA COROLLA, 14788, blue. BlJiomallc.
air, AM!FM . CIQ!h inter ior .

.... $!1200

Payme nts figured w• th Clown payment ot S1,000 cash or trade plus tax &amp; 11t1e
See ! alesman tor delaJtsr

SINCE 1954

"Where You

1911 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS. OH .
'
446-2282
•

More •• ·

"

-

.
---.-'
----

,,
'

-

--~

..

&lt;

'

---

.. •I

�Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

1\IHday, February 28, 1995

1\.leaday, February 28, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-7 ~·

Vaug_
han speaks on patriotism at DAR ·
Frank A. Vaughan. a veteran ol
the Kon:an War with aervic:e with
· the 19th Infantry Regiment 24th
Division, IIIII a life member of the
Amerjcan Legion, Wll spetmata
~t meeting or Return JODalhan
Meigs Chapter, Daught.en of the
American Revolution.
Vaughan spoke about wars,
begiMing with tbe Revolutionary
War, the effeets on America and
the need to educate youth about
wars and the dedication of .our
SPEAKER ON AMERICANISM- F'rallk Vupu, Kareaa
countrymen
and women who
War veteru ud Ule member or tbe Alllerltu Lepaa, lpote aa
defended frmlom.
wan and Amerlcu• wlao Jaave foualat for fntdoia Ill a receat
The progmm was a contin!lllion
meetlug of Returu Jouatllaa Melp Claapter, Daapten ot tilt
of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Amerlam ReYOiutiml. Here wltla Vaoglaan are Beralce CarDeater,
Chapter's ~ipation in the Com·
Mary Wilt llld Jeanette Thom•s, left to rJabt, .,_ - tor tbe
memorauve Community obsermeetlu1.whlda wu a coatlautiml or tbe dlapter'a putlclpatioll ill
vance of the SOth Anniversary of
tbe 50tb CWUDemoratlve olleervuce or World War 0.
. ·
World
War II.
• •
"The American people have a
great story ·to tell about a nation
dedicated to peace", said Vaughan.
"We must teach our youth more
"Forgive and Remember" was the March meeting. The thank aggressively about OIUo and Unitthe program topic for a recent offering will b.e brought t!! the ed Stales ·hiSiory and the dedication
meeting of the Rock Springs Unit- meetings in May and November, it of our forefathers in the preservaed Methodist Church Women held was decided. Missionaries were tion of our American fniedoms and
chosen by the group fro!"· the peace iii the-entire world."
at the church.
Pandora Collins had the pro• prayer cafendar.
The American Legion is active
gram using scripture from Luke 17.
Members signed a card for for- and dedicated in planning and Car·
Prayer and hymn singing, followed mer pastor, Mel Franklin, who had ryinll out Veterans' Day observaby reading of Psalm 23, and "The knee surgery. A Bible Quiz was tions, he added, and ursed parents
Purpose" were given to open the given by Collins and the next met- to bring their children and families
meeting conducted by Rita Rad- ing was announced for March 14 at out to witness the dedication of vetford. Officers' reports were given I p.m. at lhe church: Dorothy Jef- erans. He 'suggesti:4 that we not use
and a repon was given on lhe sick fers had the closing prayer. Iris and Veterans Day as just a holiday for
· and shuuns.
·
P.andora Collins served refresh- ball games and picnics but rather as
• Plans for a rummage Sale and/or ments to those attending.
a day to honor veterans from all
white eiephant sale will be made at
wars for their commiunent to their
country. ·
·
AI the beginning of and during
· · Kellie A. Ridenour .
ina, ltllve:ir.t 'llore than 28,000 World War II, Vaughan said,
Meigs County did not need to
Navy Aim~. ~eeruit Kellie A. miles. .
.
.
enforce
the draft; .the number .o f
Ridenour, dac~;t.tu of Keith and
Outstde Iraq, the ~1p enforced
Meigs County men and women
Lila Ridenour of Long)iottpm, has the no-fly wne over ~IS. country.
served three months oi'ii six-month
Rtdenour also ·_vJSited Ital~, who volunteered for· service met
deployment aboard the aimaft car- France and the UJltled Arab Emt- the draft requirements for J,he county. This is a show of dedication that
rier Dwight D. Eisenhower.
rates.
Meigs Countian can be proud
every
This vessel has served in the
She joined the Navy in February
of.
Persian .Gulf near Iraq and in the 1994.
Vaughan l&gt;:ointed out many
Adriatic. Sea off nosnia-Herzegov-

~ Rock

concerns and projects in whicll lhC

.

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......___·_Community calendar-TUESDAY
~ POMER0Y- ...:.. ~American
Legion Auxiliary·, Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, special meeting,
7:30 p.m. at the post home. All
members are urged 10 attend

Schools monies. Free baby sitting for parents and$tudents: spgnsored
- services·wm-re·avaiJable. - - · · 6y Effective Schools grant monies.

POMEROY -TOPS Club, OH
570, open house, Tuesday, 6 10 7
p.m. at the Carpenter's Union tiall
on Main Street, Pomeroy. More
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers information, ,call 992-2774 or 992Pfains Regional Sewer District 2973.
public hearing on grants 7 p.m.
RACINE -· RACO will meet
Tuesday at the Orange Township
Fire Depanment
· .
Tuesday at Star Mill Park, 6:30
p.m. New members are willcome.
RACINE - Megaskills workshop at Southern High School cafeWEDNESDA~
.
teria. 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, for
RACINE- Make-11, take-tt
eilts, sponsored by Venture C31iillil y;orkshop, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday
m Southern
Funds and from
School
.

·

-

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

-

..

-

-

CALL

100 Years · 95 Years .. 92 Years
Forest Hill Cleaners

Safier's Inc. .

Phone 555·1022 ·
Established 1895

80 Years

78 Years

Acme Rentals

Vireap Services

Phone 555-6782
Established 1915

· Phone 555-8242
Established 1917

$1MO

I

ID

75 Year

Y,

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

Woodlow's Diamonds

2

Charlie Frye
On His Birthday,
He passed away
March 3, 1986
no n·onn Bike Week in
Daytona Beach, Fla.

4 Years

Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Bail Security Bonds

Bail Security Bonds

Phone 555·9988
Established 1935

. Phone 555·6565
Established 1941

Phone 555·9547
Established 1943

44 ·Years

30 Years
,_$16.00

.

Phon~ 555·4777
Establlsh~d

1951

40 Years

..

1

S&amp;M Landscaping
Phone 555-5454
Established 1955.

fIe d s

Med-Care Center Inc.

Triskett Party Center

Crystal Glass Co:

Phone 555·8655· ·
· Established 1965

Phone 555-0267
Established 1970

PMne 555·7734
Established 1975

HAVE YOUR
BUSINESS LISTED%
.
-

'

The ""Honor Rolr' will appear in the
Friday, March 17th Edition of
• The Daily Sentine~.
The Cost Is Only $12

Public Notice

reeolutlon.
(2) 28; 1 TC

Fly on, Fly on,
Past the speed
of sound.
I'd raiher see you up,
Than see you down.
So, leave me if
you need to,
. I will sWI
remember you, . '
Angel flying too close
to the ground.
You may ~a gone, but
you'll miver be
forgotten, Charlie.
v'ou:re always in our ·
hearts and on
our minds.

·

The remaluder goes to tbe Blac:k Diamond Girl
Scout CouncU for administration aad couudl·
wide progr111111 and equipment for ~~~toutl. Top
seUers tbls year were Bridgett JobllSOD, eadette,
Jeri Hill, junior and Ashley Payne, Brqwnle.

Circle learns of love
.

letes.
· Other research which· is being
· sponsored by AHA is the study of
growth factors and' restenosis, a
regrowth of tissue which can follow surgical procedures. About 30
percent of patients receiving angieplastics each year must have th_e
procedure repeated within six
months. The reason is the original
procedure stimulates growth of tissue within the blood vessels, resulting in recurrence of the.'original
narrowing, Research is now going
on to discover says to prevent or
inhibit restenosis by targeting spe·
cific genes which will .curtail its
growth.

a

Jeannine Offutt presented a program on love when Friendly Cucle
met .recently at Trinity Church.
After reading the 13th chapter
of Corinthians she shared an article
about the characteristics of love
and concluded with a poem by
Helen Steiner Rice.
·
Gay Perrin conducted the business meeting. Plans for the community Ash Wednesday Breakfast
were discussed, Breakfast will .be
served at 7:45 a.m. followed by an

FOR MORE INFORMATION
'.

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Happy Ads .

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SAYRE TRUCKING

We Have Cars and Vans/
Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
...........--- OH. 45631

'

Light Haulin-g,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
1.
2.
3.
4.

Clean rn otar
Gr cnse roi iN bearings
Clean &amp; r: hcc k &lt;~gi til iOt
Clean nil moving part s

ALL FOR ONLY

-~

'--.-

I

We ser v1ce most makes &amp; model s.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
304-6144

ROCKY R. HUPP

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, Room
·Addilions, Concrete, elc.

P.O. Box 220
Bidwell, OH 45614

American General Ufe &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
~ P.O~J'IOII-189--· ~--~-1~ ~-'
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
. 614-843·5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

·PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

(614 388-9865

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992•2772

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

i .m.-3:30 p.m.
. VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
· Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
· FrH Eetlmatea

State Rt. 33

8:00

11111Hn

--

.

Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.

Darwin, Ohio

"BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-99.2-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

•'

)('

R EF INI SH IN(,

SYST EM S

Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
. NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
It's Not "Moocher"
ll's Not "Gill"
Looks Like "Freddie's"
Over the' Hill
Happy 40th Bir)hday

. MODERN SANITATION

l'{lL:.ll•, 1{

Scllerfll ·
614-992-4236

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning ·

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets mnted
Dally, weeldy &amp; monthly• rental rates.
·
Job lites' Camp Snes 'Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
· Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Llceneeil &amp; B ded 20 .

..

992-3954
F mcrqcncy Ph one 985-3418

.----Kerosene
'·

5116194 TFN

ICEI'IIPPLIINCI
IUIICE

•Factory Aulhorlzecl Parts
.

•All Mllluta -42 Yeal'8 ·

ofut Reliable Service

Parts ·a Service on Most
Makee Racine Mower
Clinic

11 o 11 n

(llmestene low Rates)

WICKS

HAULING
'(Specialize In
. driveway spreading)

"In Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Bora

Limestone, .
Gravel 1 Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

949-2804

614-992-3.470

50% off

.Waohoro • Diyero • Rangeo
•Refrlgerato~

.

Heater
Repair

949-2168

' • Serlllc:o

•Freezers

-Diahwaahere

ott.W. Hlosltlro

-Microwave• •Diepo~ala

•ThankO Moll!" &amp; ·
Surrounding AriM
(614) 985-3561 or

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
"GHARLIE"
Look who's so fine
and)ust
turned nine. today.

992-5335 12/IWn

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
CUStom Building

~

.-

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

Remodeling

• NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GAF:IAGES
·, REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 ~OM

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Cultom Made .
•Solid vinyl
replacement'
windows
•Free Ettimates
· •Starting At
· *200 lnshlled .
. · · "VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio ·
"Look for.lhe Red and White Awning"

&lt;

992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1-800·291·5600

' I

•

.

SJ 4. 9 5 Plus Parts

2/1219211tri

appropriate program to begin the
Lenten Season. Donations for the
breakfast will be given to the
Cooperative Food Pantry. ·
The circle agreed to serve a
WE LOVE-YOU
bloodmobile during August for the Names omitted
VERY MUCH.
Red Cross. Used greeting cards
Love always,
will be collected to be sent to a · In the Sunday announcement of
the
engagement
and
approaching
Grandma
Ruth;
rancli.for abused children.
.
Steve
Mayo
and
Diana
marriage
of
After the meeting refreshments
I~'"'"'~"~
Aunt
were served at tables decorated in a Cowdery, it did not list the bride's
parents. They are To!ly and Shirley
President Day's theme.
Jones of T-uppers Plams.

.

5 Cl ean &amp; c heck filt er system
6. Check belt s
7 Check electrical sys t em
8 Replace filter bag

One year warranty on work performed

Loads-of-Misc,Buy-Sell·Tracljl
992-2060 10J51tmo

Chris

·'

Val1d on all nati on,111y advertised brands.

Bill Slack
992·2269

.

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1_800 _486 _1 • I
Bus . (614) 446-9971
.
·

Spe ci al affr.r in c lud ['S'

or

Hospitalized

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5

plays the bass guitar for the trio.
Matt, attends the Middleport First
Baptist Church. Matt and Rief also
have a radio program -entitled the
Gospel Harvest ~rogram, which
can be heard every Sunday morning from 9: IS to 9:45 on WMPO.
This musical program is open to
the public.
·

Paul (Bill) Hu!lsan who recently
suffered a stroke was taken from
Grant Hospillil in Columbus to the
Holzer Medical Center where he is
in undergoing rehabilitation. Cards
may be .sentiO him at RI)Om 513.

.

'

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Reasonable Rates
Jo' N. Sayre

Sadly missed by your
· family and friends . ·

.

the .truck. Troops retain 40 cents from eacb bu

I

Kenny's is the place to come ...
when you need.a car rental.

•Guns

a complolnt with DCR. Such
complolnt miiol bo flied
within 30 d1' of the dote
you receive notice of tho
reclplont'o
prop on d

or c:OOkies IIOid to be used iD local projed work.

.

2/28{95

Kenny's Auto Rental

Limestone
&amp; Gravel

1-6

C.D.

Addison with their two sons, and
attend the Springfield Baptist
Church in Bidwell where they are '
youth advisors, Rief Herman, Mid- .
dleport allcnds the· Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church where he
is a deacon and teaches the teen
Sunday school classes.
Matt Morrow, Syracuse, is the
newest member of the group and he

HAULING

~

Limited : 740
Backbore,_6RO Fronl

7r31/9 1 TFN

• Craftsman Tools ·
•Toys

.

The New Vision Trio will be
performing at the.Pomeroy Library.
March 12, at 2 p. m. The triO '
consists of_Duane and Diana Bing.
and Rief Herman. Matt Morrow
plays the bass for the group.
The 'trio travels mostly in !he
Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia
area singing Southern gospel
music. Duane and Diana live in

1 :00 p.m .
12 Gauge Only

Tune-ups
985·3879

DARWIN, OHiO

One mile out
.143 from Rt. 7
Tues.- Wed. · .Fri. · Sat.

·New Vision Trio to perform at Pomeroy-Library

25 Years .20 Years

S~nday

Injector Pump svc

SWAP SHOP

Heart Fund drive in final weeks

52 Years

~.

TOLL FREE 1-800-848-0070

DAVE'S

RIDE FREE;

bypass surgery, pacemakers, surgi~
cal techniques to repair heart
defects, and life-extending drugs.
In 1991 more than 20,000 died
of a disease know as hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy. An inherited disease, it is estimated that 50 percent
of carrier's children will inherit the
gene. Until recently researchers
had ·not located the genetic defect
that caused HCM, a condition in
which the heart muscle grows
excessively, resulting in cardiac
irregularity which can cause sudden death. It is the most common
cause of sudden death in young
people, particularly in· young ath-

RACINE
GUN CLUB
-.
GUN
.
.••..
SHOOTS

368 IV. Main St.. Ripl ey WV

\

The Meigs County Division of
the American Hean Association is
in its final weeks of the residential
drive, 1UJd volunteers are reminded
to finish their assignments and tum
in materials and donations to their
captains as soon as possible.
The money raised will support
education and research projects. It
was reported that in 1993-94 the
Ohio American Hean Association
funded over $5 million to
researchers in Ohio working on
-cardiovascular disease .
The AHA crei:!its iis invesnnent
in research with the .modem medical milestones including CPR,

992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR

. TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

In Memory

In Loving Memory of

I

.

Phone 555-4466
Established 1934

' Mobile Welding
Diesel injector SVC

7/2m4

\

e

'ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

614·742·2138

985-4473

I

GIRL SCOUT COOKIES • A total ol14,186
!lues or Girl Scout cookies were deUvered Frl·
day afternoon to Pomeroy VUiage Hall for piCk
up by troop leaders. Breada Jones, COUDty cook·
1e sale c:hiirmaa, looks on as Brian SnodC
wheels a loaded llaudc:art dowu the ramp

61 Years

-

992·2156

15

i

'

67 Years

$8.00

THIS SPACE

Phone 555·4431
Established 1903

Kramer &amp;Sons

'

15

RO RT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New-Homea
• Garages
•Complete.
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

I

I

70 Years

THIS SPACE

THIS SPACE'

'

'

Phone 555-5134
Established 1946

!

i

Anter Bros. Co.

Phone 555·221.1
Established t900

..

•

M1At ,
CALIFORNIA TANS .

GRAY'S

10111/ttn

'·

-50 Yea

. I

Com• Tan With

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR

61.·992·5515

304-773-9545..,. - ·

':=======--========-

For-

60 Years

NOW

SEmCE

For All Mafor
Brands
Used Appliances
· for Sale
Call

5

--------

Phone 555-9245
Established 1925

"

YOUNG'S
CIRPENrER SERVICE

In Memory Of
Wanda Guinther
Who passed away
Feb.28, 1987
Many times we
needed you
A million times we
cried
If love could have
saved you ·
-You never would
have died
II broke our hearts admlealon or acceaa to,
to lose you
opportunity or troltmont In,
But you did not go or employment In ·tho
odmlnotratlon of or In
alone
connection
with, ony JTPA- ·
For a part of us
funded
progrom.
II you
went with you
think . you have b.. n
The day God called . oubjocted to dlocrlmlnatlon
you Home
tn a prognim operated by
He saw you getting thlo rolilplont, you moy fllo·a
complaint .ylthln 180 doya
tired
from tho dlto of tho ollogod
When a change was vlolollon With tho roclplont'o
Equal Opportunltjr Olflcor or
npt-to be
He closed His arms tho poraon doalgnltod for
thll purpoae, or you may
around you
fllo 1 complaint directly with
And whiSpl!rell the Olrocto.r, Directorate of .
"Cornela Me"
.Civil Rlghto (OCR), U.S.
For all that you were Deportment of. Lobor, 200
Conotltutlon Avenue NW.,
going lhrough
Room N-4123, WaahlngiDn
He saw ypu needed D.C. 20210. If you otoct to
rest
1111 your complaint
wllhwalt
tho - - - - - - - - - , - God's Garden must 'teclplent,
you mu•t
until
tho
recipient
laau11
a
,
be beautiful ·
decloton
at
until
so
aliyi
_......:,P...;u...;
.b...;ll.;.c.:..N...;ot...;l.;.ce:.
·__
He only picks have Pitied, whichever- lt"The Best"
ooonor, before filing wllh mey lite 1 complolnt at any
.Sadly missed by DCR. If the recipient hll not · lime Iller tho axplrotlon ·o f
wttfl DCR (too
Children, provided you with 1 written tho 60
doclolon
within
60 daya of
If you aro
Grandchildren and the filing of the complaint, dl
with the
Great-grandchildren you need not wall for 1
ruolullon of
doclalon to bo loouod, .but
comptoln~ you moy file

II

IN THE

..... _

614-742-2193

PubliC Notice ·

I'()MEROY -Lenten breakfast
and quiet tiQ!!J, 7:45. a.m. at Trinity
Congregational Church. Anyone is
welcome to the fellowship. For
. reservations, residents may call
992-7569 or 992-7765.
·

NOW ·avAILABLE

-=

IPPLIUCI

Mlddlaport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
•Rooting .Painting '
-Garages •Porctieli
•Pole Bama
FrtH1 Eallmar..
614-742-3090

32124Happy
· HollowRd. ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlekles

-

DIN'S

33151 Happy Hollow Road

• Room Additions
LEGAL NOnCE
• New Garages
EQUAL PPPORTUNITY IS • El\lctrical &amp; Plumbing
'tHE LAW
· • Roofing
.
34110 Sugar Run Rd.
Thle recipient Ia •Interior &amp; Exterior
prohibited
from
Long Bottom, OH. 45763
dlacrlmlnatlng on the
Paintl~g
ground ol roce, color,
Also Concrete Work
Sessions 5 00
. rettglon, oex, nallonol
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
origin, ago, dloeblllty,
. V.C. YOUNG Itt
All Lotions OH
polltlcol elllllotlon or bello!, .
992-6215
and for benellclarl'ee only,
949·2823 .
cltlzonohlp or portlclpotlon
Pomeroy, Ohio
1/3111 mo.
L
In progremo funded under - - - - · ....;'~"":ll::~:.l
tho
JobAct (dTPA)
Training
--~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~lJ
Partnerohlp
In II

--

--- \\0~0\\
---tlO\.\.
----- . Of
--·--

lnMemory

2

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m.,
pomeroy library. Mrs. Roy Holter
will review "My Theodosia".
Response to roll call will be to
name women in history.

BULLETIN BOARD

-

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day .

-

•

·

Porta•le
laadsaw Mill

:illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 11111111 t=
r.

. _., ... ··

KINGS'
Ho11e Improvements

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Be A Part Of The
The Daily Sentinel's

Springs UMW meets

------ Military news · .

or Ill= new members Marjorie Profitt, Gnce Warner and
Amy Bobner. Smith gave the followmg N•riooal Defense Report on
the Supreme Court of the United States: First Chief J.ustice, John ·
Jay, opened the initial session of
the Supreme Court on Feb. I, 1790.
This 43-ye!lf-old New York .
lawyer was named by Presidenl
George Washington to ~ead the
highest tribunal in the land after
Congress had set the number o(
Justiees at six in 1789. During the
Continued on page10
1an1:e

·

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bUsineSs 1De$tg ~ ICCelf'

needi L
---Vaughan called for faith in
America and for love of country.
The speaker noted thai the Amencan Legion sponsors an essay contest eaclJ year on "What tilt Ameri·
can Flag means to Me." Vaughan
said be participaleS in the Citizei!S
Flag Alliance FWld and direets all
of his speaking honorarium to this
fund Cum:atl the fund is direet·
ing support for a constitutional
amendment that would prevent
anycne from bwning an American
flag.
Regent Eleanor S10ith in the

American Leg10n is actively
involved for the benefit ofveteliDS,
promotion of honoring the flag and
· love of our country. The Legion
was instrumental in recognition of
veterans suffering from Agent
Orange, the Gulf War Syndrome
and recent-Enola 6ay incident at
the Smithsonian Institute regarding
the Atomic Boll)b in Japan at the
close of World War II, he said
With his many ~ of wort in
the Ametiean Legion, he assures
· the AmericaD peopiC that veterans
ask for help only wben they really

~ --

'

�Pomeroy-Middleport,

1\IHday, February

Ohio

'TUesday, FebNary 28,1995

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Ohio

•

I

ALLEYOOP

..

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

Announcements

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

0

NORTH

·

•A

\ 1"Hti\IJ&lt;. IT'S

• A 73

ArJ 09SCE= N 6

ftl•,.rt&lt; '-"~A- f~

1m 12.-60, 2br., 1 bath, n.wtr
carpet,
refrigerator,
stove,
. .aher/dryar, w/10x12 outbuild-

Ing, Stl500. 304-175-7848.

1982 14x70, total el.c:trlc, thrM
bedroom, one bath, 14a22
tc:rNnld porch, hilt pump,
wOIIIdbumar, atonge building,
ona acre land, $20,500 ORO,
114-Hi-24,3.

I Will NOI 81 Rnponslble For

Any Oobto Othor Thon My Own.

"My getting into college made my parents

-on, Etlzoboth- - • tho olotor
to Wllllom Henry N-1. w..
llvl~ In Pomeroy during tho
1940 • · Unknawn wh•l:wr ,,_
morrlod. Tho "cortloktor" of tho

almost as happy as when the ban~ approved
theor second mortgage lor tuition I"

Hlllie Plnkllnnan. . .

NMnll gr1VH. Information from
anyone ..-gardlng my Aunt

.

1i82 mobil• home w/101150w1SO,
Broad Run Rd. New aepUc eya-

lam,

bedrooms, ••Pindo
llvlrigraGm, pitched root, prlc.t

tji)•

9

.Wanted

to Buy

11
~=:;::~~~=~~:::::
~

4

lo Hll, 304.S82-3638.

Help Wanted

1i88 14x10 Commodore 2 Bed-

\A(,£1Jt(l,£
lt~f'

WEST

s

OIHCARD"

ARf'

ond
Rl
Apartment• In MkW ..IIOI't. Frarn
14170 Oovonot 3 - - . 1 -IZ1Z4355 . Cal ltf..lalllll.
112 Botho. Good Condhlon, Equal Houalng Opportunllloo.
Up In Trafler Park, Air, New Fur~·
~. B14~4~11l
Fumlohod Aport....., 1 Bod-m.
$275.00 Sooorld Avo.
1HI Uborty, 2 b o d - 1 Utllntoo Pold. Clolllpotto, 114bldh. new atove 6 rafrlglltator. 41&amp;-4411 Aft• 7 P.ll.

... 0 2

DID 'iW S€ND
c,.t)JR (Ll(FE A

I;;

Manot

304475-4125.

•Q tO 6 4

Y•u.

Orecioua living. 1
room apartmente

Mobile Homes
for Sale

I

'-1

• 5 2
•K Q

Ono

bldroom,

WHAT'S FER

"J_·~t

' A1'1&gt;'\

SUPPER,

Mlddloport, 611-:187.o&amp;lt.

54

63

Ml-llanaous

· Merchandise

ec:c•·
Ina oppllcotlone /.;; 1

Twin Rl"'t Tower now

Livestock

New 11 atali horNbarn for leaH
wJputuN, located on HorNIICk

6

Care For Invalid Mal•t lrngular
Tlmaa, Must Be Able 111 UH, S5
/Hour, 614-4,..7732.

tor 4:30.

800-G37-G508.

Lost &amp; Found

Lost: black long-haired dog,

nMd.d. Wark

lntwara to .. BNr", L..tart Inti.

Computer Ul41'8

L.Dsl: Pool Cue Stick In Vinyl
Cau BatwHn Senior CHizans

Compuler Us.,. nMded, work
own hou,.. 20 to 50Kiyr. 24 hrw.,

304-G75-3513 4:30-5:30, or 675- own .houra. 120-50kl'rr, 24tn.
7'14-251·3311 lxt 1508.
3651 artec 5:30.
nl-251-3311ut. 1t101.

Oftlco And Chy 614-440-3444.

7

•

v....

IJceMod
Driving Exporlonee, And Good

Driving

RIICIH1!

Roquh..t.

Saii!'Y: 14.75 IHr, To Start. Tl'llln-lng Provided. Send RMUrM To:
·P.O. 801 ·604 .ladloon, OH
oi.YofG.OIIOot; ATTN:
Cocllla.

Ooodllno For AOIIIIconto: 3MI5.
Equal Opporturilty Emptoyor.
Wontld: Lady 50 To 55 Yooro

Tycoon Lak.. ona ac:rt Jo1,
121:60 mobile home, countw
water, Hwer, alectrlc, S12,500,

18

.Wanted to Do

kaTI'H Service. Complela trM
care, 20yra. a.-p. &amp; lneured, frN
•llm~t•. 114-441-1111 ar 1-800-

trimmer• • mow.,. MrViold
now ai Sldara Equipment Comprovldw In Malga and Athana

countlea, nutrhloue m•,. and
anack!l ac:UvttN and plant)' of
TLC, 1·20 ocCIPIId,' Routo 7,
Roldo~llll,

614-9115-4308.

.

&amp;~16V7.

Georgoa Portable Sawmill don't

hauiJ:: loge to lhe mfll Jult

call

Pomeroy,
Middleport

75-1U7.

K &amp; C Pump lnatallatlon, wall
NrYice, ..,. ., aarvlce a Npal,.,
Free HtlmatH, 24hr. aervk:e.

&amp; VlclnHy

304.,'172-4388.
Prof..slonal

TrM

Sarvk:a,

Ernargtncr Sarvlca .Call And

Sl!vof614-388-11643, &amp;14-367-7010.
R&amp;D Maaonry

&amp;

ea,_nlryi

SpeclaHzlna In · Stona, Dacka,
Re~alnln\ Walls, Chimney-, Ad·
dltlafll
Etc. 20 Vu111 Ex-

Rlc:k PNrson Auction Company,
tuH time auctioneer, compiiU
auction
aanrlca.
Uc....d
166,0hlo I Wilt Vlrglnla, 304773-5785.

pt..Unt, wv, Cllll 304-171-1450,
11'1 '146 11'11.

Wish To Purchau 5-10-Acres ot
Hills I Woods On land Con- ' Ou.rHIZII
troct, &amp;14-ns-11&amp;95.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. G
Olivo St., Oolllpotlo. - I Uood
lurnlturo, -..., Wllllm a

Rentals
41

w... booto. lf4..416.31118.

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom home, like ntw,

lochod

largo yord, $400,

(lllrlgl,

month. 304-67~2523.

•

2 Bodroom In Rodnoy, Oopooh
Roqulrod, No Polo, 814-4411-

T.V.'~

Attrtoara1on,

J &amp; O'• Aulo Plrta and
buying

wrwcki:JUnlt

truc:b. Alao, pirtl tot
773-5343 or 773-5033.

hold Furnthn

114-388-9686.

Dopooll, $350/Mo. 78

~ubbord

Charming Counlry
Ll~lng,

ronly;

Bath,

W.r~

l'lhldpool
Motchlng
1 YNr W.rronty;

Wo--

1 YNr W.rrwrty

Cottag~,

Dining,

Almond,

Heavy Duty; $201, 1 Yur

St, Galtlpolla, 61~46-0488.
a.droome,

w.-,

Whl11pool

3 Bedrooms, 2 Story 1200
2
Khchln,

$425/Mo,

Dlposh, No SmokaraiPet•. 614--

614-912•5858,

Priced to Sell. 1

SUPPOSED TO READ A
BIOGRAPH'( Iii EXT WEEK ..
11112 Chov. Convnon Von. ;
1114 FORI414. 304.S75-81112.
,
11U

Dodge

150

'
WhMio, ·

4&amp;4

Automotlcl Aluminum

318, :

1M,OOO IIIII, Good ~lon.
114-251-1311, 1'14-446-1511.
•'

1• 112 Nlooon 414, v.e, 11 41&gt;d., ,

naw paint, ,... III'M, $4000, ~ ,

112-3137.

..

•

Ford F-150 414 Auto, ,.
Excotllnt
~lon '
Actuol

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
1
[;:;~G:;;~~;ifrii~::i:\7i_;i:C:.;i~;"~-;;.~W~:;;-;:;;::;;;:;;~;.;:-;;;;--;;::-::::-:-""")
' 1'\ "Y wo:. r.JIIf, " "
r•urLI "'OUT '

Millo, • . . -

To .,,.

· ~.&lt;--

. . . .,.

Cion-

304-

Soiling Out- StofO Flllu,.e,
.lt*vrng, ~epla:y TabM!a, Eta.
::~ $30;
Surpluo
- s-o
Combat
Ru$15
And Muoh Morwl Coli E""lngo

eo..:;:

,.,.., •

AI..IAT ION,

•I FanCIEBobT@aol com

BO~LOSER

Transportation

,.

~

,.IF YOIJ'i&lt;£ i&lt;£N..LY LOOK! I'&lt;'

fi(,,Jt-1'? l'f\"-T~ BErn +UI''- '
• 51'UIN... f'O~ "- MOt.lTI\!

\.111"-T':&gt; YOOil:. :ifE.C.Ifll TO!»,Y,

1141woonl'8 P.ll. 114-448-1012.

FOR ~11\lt.l' SfU.IN...,
\.lf\Y Iii£ Y"- EATII-l' fU£

IF '(bu J.\"V€ If f..VU.Y

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Clollon
U~ht, Ron Ev.na Ente~,
.tocuon, Ohio, 1-l'-0528.
BUNQUEBT WOLFf TANNING
BEDS- C-clo~ Home
Unlll from ttaa.oo, LamPl'
Lotlone- Ace
rloo. Poymonto
11 $20.00. Coli Toclo!~FREE
NEW Color Cololog, 1 100-4&amp;2-

v--~ 1»1l\£,FIFt!&gt;T

, .- ,,....,,~ HO\.l CAA IT1'£
"~IN...'&gt;

nine : three, JO. king . Declarer draws
two rounds of trumps 'as Ea st (Jenny
Mae I dis card s a discouraging club
three . Now col)les a low diamond. '
To defeat tb e s~&gt;ntract. Dizzy Agnes
must rise with the ace and lead her sec·
ond heart. But she has been taught that
second hand plays low, so she does. And
when dummy's diamond tO forces
East 's king, the contract is sa le .
I Declarer sets up dummy's diamond
queen lor a heart discard.
To .make matters worse lor Jenny,
hef arch rival, Peeker Pickles, and his
client, Eileen Diamond, beat the con ·
tract First, Pickles opens with a weak
two hearts to direct the lead. Then ,
Pickles discards not the club three but
the diamond three on the .second round
ol trump s. Now seeing no future in
ducking the diamon~ ace, Eileen wins
and plays a second round ol hearts .

Now homo undor -ruction
conotructlon In lolu ol
r11nt, tocatlld on .Hor.a CrMk
Rd. ofl Crrob Crook Rd. 304-124houal,

New Heven,
$250/mo. ptuo dopoolt. 304·773-

1171 ... VIIMII . . . .

42 Mobile Homes
for

Antiques
Buy or Mil. Rlvorlne Antlquoe,

1124 E. Main Str.at, an At. 124,

M.T.W, 10:00

a.m. to 1:00 P.II.L. Suhdlr 1:00

~...~.

horne

$250/mo., $300/dopoott. 304-

2 Bedroom Tn~ll" CloM To
Unlvereltw Of Rio Grande, l'f4.
388.fi46.
2br., all electric, Atlhlon Upland

Rd., $175/mo, pluo utllh,.., 304&amp;75-4088.
Nlco 2 Bodroom 14170 S350Mo.
•' Eiactr~

&amp; Wa11r, ......., 5

P.M. 114-441-21115.

.

y

A KG A
HL

AKZ

YDEABSOZDAE

U V D N

A

AH

XBHRHDCE
XRGTZB .

R VL Z

AKZ

CZHBCZ

E KG U .
VZBDGBN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I qUJI coaching because ol Illness ·and laligue. The
tans were sick and tired of me ." - John Ralston .

·

'=~~~' S©\\~~:nA-l£t!r~"

WOlD
GAM I

l~lto~ ~. ClAY I . .'OUAN

Rearrange leHers of
0 four
Krambled worda

low

I

ilf""'--.~.,_,...._

the
be·

form four words

10

NAYSUE

IIIIP
.T H

u A N I;,'

I. 1 I I P ...
~~N

After having my first garage
sale I learned a goad Jesson . 1 .

discovered that any item is worth
.-~=·=·==·==·=~.., what
someone is willing to -- -lor
COVDEI
1--.T~
1 ::....;~~S~~r.:l,....:~~-l-0 Compi•••. th: chuckle q uoted

BIG NATE

.

WON

HER
1'1ATC.&gt;1,

•

.

•

•

•

.

'

by fd"ng In the mostong words

L..:..t.-.L...J'-..J..-J......J you develop from step No. 3 below .

'olE i'CT\.Y'.LL'( H/&gt;.1/E A
C,HI.NC£ TO BEAT
.£FFERSON ~ T~EY'RE THE
OEHJotDING (IT'( CHI\!'\1'!&gt; I

ROBIN

8

PRINT NUMBERED LE TTERS IN
. THESE SQUA RE S

1"\R .

Jl.O~A

.

STRIKf A8111N N Tl-£ V1AA ON

$20. 304-e'~~-2~1!1.

2 long lull llklrt tormolo, o1u 11.
-·ld
g-Wblack
.nil
~nktwhtte

lace. Crlnallne .Up.
P.lr ~·· lea sbtN, lllza I,
new cond. 304-t75-5281 1ftli'

"""'
200 ·Amp DC.
w-.
2500 Wll1 Oman P-r
$400;

Dlonl whh '*'JII2-2203.

portobla

••n, S300;

"'·

:sae.am.
AKC

~nlala·

Roglotorod

Coeur

For Sale Aduhe a

AKC Raglatertd Daahound,
Mota &amp; wonnect. 30M75-2113.

blc,.._.

/fGH PRICES. SHOP M CL.ASSF/fOs;

AKC " Roglot-

i..otndor

AMrlaver pupplel, 11 wllka old,
wormld ond flrot lhoto, $150,

IM-387-083a.
.
AKC Nglotorod mo1o Cocktor
Sponlol puppy, -.bla, tal7
T'"'ndorblrd
eo..po.
bioken. Wlfnakle cage a ut,.a. $2,500. :10o1-8711-11157.
1100. 3044'711-111117.
1i88 Lincoln Town Cor, t.Oedoct
$3400. 1HI Colt Vlolo von,
$1300. 304-e'/11-2440.

Elkhound pupe, 5 monttw okl,
good lrM doga, gr... lor
=~II end ~n. can at4-843-

1i88 Plymouth Grond~ V-1,
Automotlc Good
ion,
Alao 1882 ~ 1~2.50 V1n, ¥-1

Automltk:;FIIr Condftion, ej4!

Service s

1---------8l
Home
Improvements

,.

,.,.
•·
..•
'·'·

'

41&amp;-85611.

ASTRO·GRAPH

..a

'

diCtions lor the year ahead by mailing $2
to Astra-Graph , C/O thi s newspaper, P.O .

Bo• 4465. New YOrk : NY 101 63. Be sur&amp;

TraiW lor .rent, 304..7W271.

44

XR, GTVDC

I'

&amp;........r,NON. 30H15-HI4.
AKC Roglotorod Alrodola Pupo
oiH, GoOd Wllh Chlldron, Elcollont Wotch Dog, Bill Roce 114-

54 Mlscellaneou11
2 JawnmowiN MCh 12hp W

wl2ac.,

.

HVFZWAVHO

W KVZ L

I I I I' I

111811 Comoro Z-28 - l y Robulft
400 SB Solid llodJ Good Cond~
Tandy
po....,.l · compulor lion, 114-411-11113.
wlprtntw I ut.,..l modem,
1181 Ford Fit,_ Act. MIIH,
MOO. 304475-3)28.
38,108 .a U Eng. Good Cond~
lion, Runo GoOd, Trodo For
Oood Pick-Up Truck, 112 Ton,
55
Building
Coli Au FD&lt; ~ 114-388·
1na.
Supplies
Block, brick, olpoo, _,,_ 1181 Splrl Stond I Cyllndor,
- · llntolo, IIC. Cloudo WI,. $500 Firm, I 8ot Of NyiCOI Nortwo, Rio Grlrtdo, ott Coli 814- nea Comp. $150 Firm, 814-JU.
2411-41U
'
1001.

Pupploo, 114.,'11'11-2728.

•·P!O.

mobile

' A K Z

2

11187

to 5:00 p.m. 614-1112·25211.

14x70 3br. traitor, Comp Conley, cut, $250.
I
cllavailable Man::h 1. $300/ma. plua farant elza, UM new priced
dopooh. 30447WOII.
.
125. to SIIS. Bolton tin - r
·,972

by Luis Campos

&lt;Aiebnty Cipher eryp~ogramt a.re cre ated trom Qvola1ton5 by lamou• peoplto. Pll'l and PfMer\l
E~ lener 1ft the ciphe r ata,l'lds lor another Today's clUe. 0 equalS M
,.,

P0 0AT

2 tamale Heller WPio llrwt .ahola

Merchandise

Rem

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

-plo.

to - ·
•·hamo
,.,.~ raqWNd.
rnuma to: The Dally Senlin~. P.O. Box 1'21-a-1, Pomeror,
Ohio 457&amp;a.
·

no
Sa

to state your zodiac s1gn

Apartment
. for Rent

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

782.

ARIES (March 21 -Aprlt'f9)'rhis

Is a

goo9 day to begin a process ol weec;hng
~ out unprodvclive p lans or endeavors .
Use your best new ideas a s rep lace -

ments . •
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) .Rema+n

COnc:,.o olo Pilotte Septic
Tank8 300 Thru 2,DOO Gal..._
Ron Evono EniaRKI-, Jock·
ton, OH 1-eoo.e37.o621.
Fl-ood $40 PU "-'!,
Dollvorod $30 A LDod Pick Up,
114-:IN-27111.

•

TO
T OU, fiUt~TS

FA"~/

.'0 19!1!1 NEA 1nc

w/1 it•-, 2 mo
olcf, $175. 30W78-2141.

Sogo

ro ,.

Wf t-IAVf
G.ONCf'ALtP TLIO:.IIf
I" I'
ll&gt;E.NTITif$,..

Som vlllo'o Army Surpluo, Squo,. boloo $1.25 to $2.00 por
by S.ndY&lt;illl Office, ,_,. boll. Allollo, Clovor, Orchord
llt&gt;m Fri-Sun. Hoovy wlntor Gra... 304.fi15-3960.

..,

optimtstic about a· new protect that has .
recenlly cap tu red your fa,ncy . T h i s
endeavor has ment and can be tremen ·
dously successlul1f properly nurtured.

(

'Your
'Birthday

LIBRA ISiiPt. 23-0et. 23) Ma~e yOutSell
as valuable as you possibly can to yobr
preserit emp loyer. Chahges m1ghl be in
l~e offi ng thai could spell advancement
or more money

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Beginn+ng
today . there could be a.notable improvement m your soctal life . Lady Luck and
Can Cup1d might team up on your behalf .

'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) A

domestic matter !hat ha s cau sed you
considerable
anxiety w1ll begin io resolve
might develop at this Hme thai will stir
itself
before
your
eyes. Obvious Improveyour am1M1ions . Ydu are pertectly able to
ments
w1ll
stan
today
.
handle challenges that you · ~e been '

tn th e year ahead. new r~la1ionships will
ex't end your social outreach consider·
ably . Your clout will come from being
friendly with the right people.

:!!:r fc:~p'!.~~~~2~~·

who wasn't prevtously support1ve ol you
fntghl comple tely turn around at thts hme.
This relationship woUld be mutually benefiCial .

GEMINI(May .21·June 201 Someth ing'

Wednesday. March 1, 1995

61 Farm Equipment

,.

Llj.t.
I" ~

Square Bale Alflllta Hav, Nevar
B•n W•t, 814.446-1062.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

(

f

MACPONAL.t&gt; AN l&gt;
~fT

LIQ To Trade For John Deara
Tractor, 814-X7·2'11.

..•

~ ~"'"""

0 "'","'-1

C60 ChivY ·2 Ton Truck Wllh
Soli Loedfng Log Bod Would

clossi(~~

·

\.
· \.

Real Estate

be (locJting on ocloud
1/H! buys 'foti'll find In 1/H!

Ona Lasllegs, who tends to open her
eyes at the sound ol diamonds , and
when Ona has her eyes open, it is easier
for her to see her cards."
If so. buy the new book "Jenny Mae
the Bridge Pro" by Matthew Granovet·
ter and Martin Hollman tGranovetter
. Books; 216·37 t-5849; $11.95). I assume
the 128 pages were writte n by
Granoveller around th e interesting
deals supplied by Hoffman . Today's deal.
!rom the book will give you a good idea
.Ao..L.oilooo:::t 1 of whatto expect.
We st, Dizzy Agnes , leads the heart

DON'T KNOW .. SOMEBOOV
DIDN'T LIVE VE~H LON6

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Small

Solo. Solid All ·cuh lnoomo.
Coli - · 1.S00-310-8363.
Vondlng: Won, Got Rich Oulck.
WlU Dol A Stood~-·

WHOSE BIOGRAPH'( ARE
YOU 601N6 TO READ, SIR ?

(

Sun Valley ... Nursery School.
CtiUdcara M.f 6am-G:30pm AgM
2-K, Young School Ago Durlng
Summor. :J Ooyo por Wou Ml,.

, Loc:lil Vendlrig Bullnne For

co rrect when partnerin g the like s of

THE TEACHER SAVS WE'RE

.I

-Of· ,_,

mall until you have lnvMttglltd
tM offering.

PEANUTS

Collogo tar ront In Pt. P.......,

:rn:t. '

Business
Opportunity
INcmCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
racomrnanda that you do b~ll­
nno wllh pooplo you k~mW, ond
NOT to oonot monoy ttwough tho

VCR'I, jiloohlro,
Dryers, Etc. 614-~1238.

O...IMy Hm

And A~&gt;Ptto.-. OrNt ·en
Cult And Corry! RENT·2.-N
And Loyowoy A1oo A~oii­
F- Dolfvory -In 25 lllloe.
W.-,. Dryor, Color T.V., CB
Rldlo, lo..._ovo, Rolrtgwotor,

2 Bedraoms In Caunlry, Stove,
Rafrlgerator, Water, Tr•sh Paid,
Very Nice, $300/Mo • O.poslt, 114-2111-1238.

S24·2m.

Froouro

'

VI'RA FURNITURE
814-440-3151

at~

Dennla 614-256-1054.

Financial

ColOr

.ofa,

'ory gOod cond. 304.S82-2181.

53

lmum 814-446-3157.
Will do lntertorfnt.,kw n~modaJ..
lng, 1,.11111 wlnclowll, entry &amp;
gorogo d00&lt;1, docks, otc. 304675-Q37 oftor Spm.

Don, Junk nl Soli Uo Your NonWoddng Mo)or Appllancoo,

hld.•bad

_,plot•

perlanca, FrM Eltlmatn, Call

Wanted to Buy

nlohlng. 112 mi. Jorricho Ad. Pt.

245-5053.

Completa .Tree Slrvlca, Bucket
Truck Service -50 Ft Raach,
StuMp Atinovat, FrH £s.
tlmalnl lnsul'llnca, 24 Hr.

Public Sale •
&amp; Auction

Houn: llort-Sm, 1-1. ,..._..,
0322, 3 m11oo out autovlll• Ptu
FrM Delivery.
NoW/Uood
Na opptlo,_, HouMitotd tur-

Real Estate
Wanted

2266.

Genaral Malnt.naoca, Painting,
Yard Work Window. Washed
Gunal'l Claanld Ught Hauling,
Commarlcal, R..adlntlll, Steve:

1
800-411i-34w.
.
, LAYI'jE'S FURNITURE
Comptoto hamo lumlohtnao.

PICKENS FURNITURE

I

Do you like to read books conCaining
prose like this? "Drools begins wilh one
1 diamond, his better minor. a bid that
Jenny Mae later Jeams is wrong when
playing with another expert, but may be

:O.::S..~"'"A~:":i
Vlno St- ~iiii14-140-73N, 1·

&amp;14-1112,:1157. '

Old To Uvaln For Room Board,
Srntlll Wagee, 61f.-440.-341SI.

pony. 30H7S.'11121.
Child co,. cortlllod cloycort

9

304.S75-5253.

508.S887.
Boot 1"- Sorlna Rulhl a.t your

Yard Sale

·a

building alta, $13,160. Rayburn
Rd, reasonable rntrlctlona. No
elngl• wlda lnqulrnl pt1ate. lnformallon mallad on r.quast.

ground lloor

By Phillip Alder

ront--

Licon•• TlirM

11 Social mlaflt
17 Related

Amerk:en

anlmol
7 Low cleg.

Jenny Mae,
present tense

......-,

ulllttlaa paid, ,.,_encee ana
dopoah, 3 tr.l miloo - h of

40 God
42 - C r 14 Princely Hollan

Opening lead: • 9

MAW?

c"'"''
1995&amp;-&gt;1'
by 1N£A. Inc

8 Hearing organ
9 a.-nmaxl
and mini
10 - - the

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: East
South
West North Eosl
Pass
1•
Pass 2 +
Pass
21
Pass .4 1
All pa ss

·

br. HUD'
Rd. off Crob C..... Rd.,
rooma. . G.E. Appll1ncu In
apt. tar tldarty and
F~ Ramlnglon mud Brut tim, $300/mct. 304-624-2773.
Soloo
lot rotoll Khchen And Can1ral · Air Unit. aubsldf1ad
hondlcoppod. EOH 304-f75. LT255185R-11, $120i. ch,.... roor
• - opponl otorw. Apo C.ll After 4:30 611-441-0144.
11871.
bumpor tar '84 &gt;ORI pickup, Seven YNr Old Roglollrod
pool 31 hro por wool&lt;, •~­
$30: 10" racial arm NW with Gelding, 114·2se.&amp;e29.
Nrlence MOMIIry. Sand work 1810 Clayton Mx60 112 Acre Lot,
hWOry, .... , requlrernante to 2 BR, I Both, CA, Cothodrol 45
. Joln•r, $200; four blcyc;l. .,
Furnished
Fooda You EnJoy Without Th•
Bo1 c-zz 'II PI Pn Roglotor, 200 C.lll~, 2 Deck•, F~nced V~ud, 1
tsoion; IM-11112·il806.
. 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Wanted;
Standing
nmber,
114'
Guilt.
No
Caft.lne,
No
Rooms
Main Sl, Point Ptouont, WV Milo Out 588 On LAo«, $2&amp;,000,
3711-2758.
F
St.U
nb.
On
Tho
I
·1,:;700=1::-b-.
__:.nd.,.bo,...,.loo-o"'f.,.ho_y_;-.,,...
..
Chemlcalt. For More lntonna.
2!5550.
614-446-6833.
Roomo tar
or moillh. Rail, 114..-...70.
don. 114 -25&amp;-e850.
·
alfalt.
~uarw
bal•;
ur
com;
Wonlld: Ulod Lorve·Qov SWtl;' ot $120/mo. Ootlla Hotol. Goluy Sotwn CB, Sll- Eogll 814-11115-35i3 &lt;&gt;&lt; 814-611H164.
Or KenMI Reee Tltii:M Prlce. r Train for employment oppor· 1993 Sunahlna 14x16 3 · Bad· 114 4 ISIG.
THE PolMPERED CHEF
tunkite lvallabll whh toniUUC• room•L. Z Baths, Laund2JiRoom,
1-1-1-115
Anytlmo.
"The Khchen S1ore That Comn
Power Mike, PDC 100. Wan 111 &amp;. 2nd Cutting Orchard
lion _,ponloo ond tlwough 8X20 uec:k, BK12 Bull
, On
To Your Door." Local COnsul•nt
Matar11, Ptareom 1000, NOS Pre arau, Large Square Balea,
IIINm-dlnco._.,.,
S
l
.......
with
-~~~·
LDt
$19,500,
61
-446Rantad
A111ci lr~llt IIPKI on river. IJI Amp, A... Ani, 12 AMP Powor Aveltable AI:
$2 &amp; $2.25 Por Bolo,
MW c0n.hvc11on or ...mod~ 8785.
'
Employment
Services
,_..,po, Col after 2:00 p.m., Supply, - - Spork:'11 9co,_ 114 118Wot
114-ol48-4724
Ina. 9lorl b'llnlna March 13th.
1053.
,_;,-104-171-1841.
.
Leave M. . .g41.
COli nowiii1-.G~.
1ii5 DOUBLEWIDE AEPO, 304-m-sast, Maoon wv.
COli For Information On Ordor850 lb. round balM, 114-843- '
never llviiCI In, no downpayment
Kina Wood /Cool Wllh - Go~ 5350 or &amp;14-Hi-2201.
lng homo..._Ponloo Or For Buol- 11
Help Wanted
Troln In 1 of whh oomlng lo qualified buvar, tree delivery
' vanTzMI Pipe .250, KW1mor1 I
Merchand tse
n...
"'Pportunlllu.
FrM -;;:;:;;--;-~;-;::::.:.;.~::-;--:-- fiCI4onllol of t15 por hour pluo &amp; Mt up. 304-'1S5-5885.
Cu. Ft. ChMt Freezer, 3 Yura Alpha And Mixed Orchard Grau
Brochu,. Avoltoblo.
AVON I All Aruo I Shlnoy loonofho. Cloln ulllo noodod to
Old, $150, 11'14-416o8805.
12.00 To IZ.Z!i A Bala, Delano
work.
with
motore,
to
Doublewlda
Rtpc:!!l.
Never
Jlv~
Spooro, 304-175-14:111,
Jackaon'e Fann. 304-1~1i'l3,
trot
'all
hoot
hutlnalelr
can·
ln.
Call
Ru81
Mwdock
1-800..251·
St
Giveaway
4
Uke New: Couch 3 TabiM, SUO, lt4-3N.2714. .
-Household
AVON to buy or Mil, Uertlyn,ln- dllloring ~ulpmenr, be en 5070. Financing Avallabll.
114-2111-1Mt. .
conlr~etor
Of
Boston Bull Terrier, Ulxe~·MIIa, .de~ndent rep. 304-882·2645 or Mdrlcal
Goods
Good Ml11d Hoy Round Boloo
Make
2
parmants
I
move
In,
rn~~tntenanc.
eiiCtrlclen.
Start
In
-2 Years Old, 614-25&amp;.1i'16.
1.S00..992-635&amp;.
HIO,OOO ITU HI Eiflclonay Good Condhlon, Sloto, GC&lt;.il
Electrtchy Dn Merch 131h. Cell new 14.-70 2-3br. Call Ru" llur·
0.. Furnace New Heat Pumpa, For·Painting, Naar Thurman, OH
Ooborrnon Mlxod To Good
AVON$$$ SALES
nowlll The AduH Education dock 1.S00.251·5070.
Veoy Roooonobly Prtcld, One 114-288-23a4.
Home, Good Wllh c;hlldran, 614· Avereg8 S8 -$15 !Hr PIUI Fantu- C&lt;lntor, 141oo-e31'-6508.
u.id 21KW · Ellctrle Fumac:e,
New 1995 14x70, lncludta aklrt·
388-41514:
tic Dracounlsl Sell At Work
Contnl Air Condhlonor, F- EIIlng,
staps,
blocU,
1
yur
'WANTED:
EMERGENCY-RELIEF
,---=-::-=--o"'""-o-c'""'"
I -Homo. Torrltoty Ot&gt;Uonol. '"'
II mot-. 1-.a17-1301 Or 114FrM To Good HDml:
Col- dep. Rep. 1.SOO..Jt2~.
COIIMUNilY
SERVICE hOmeowner• lnaunnct, 1nd 6
....._.308,
month•
FREE
lot
..
f!nl.
Ontw
lie Terrier, Female,_g Manth Old
WORKER Pooltlon (o) Avolloblo
Country Fwnlturo. ~ on
Pup. Shots, WaflT'Ied, Spade, Baby.ltter NMded, City School At 1Wo Communhy Group $920 down and $1M par mo. _ , pur&lt;-. &amp;mi. Rt. 2
Coli 1-SOG-837-3238•
614-388-9626, &amp;1•·245-5115. "
District, Your Harne Or Mine, 3
North, Pt. PIMoont. 30H15""'"""" C...nty
.-WIIh
ChNdron, Agoo: 6, 5, \ R - ..-IUIIDD Fw
In
Oolllo
11820.
W
_Pu~n: 7 112 eeke Old, P,n c. Preferred. Mon .ftti ~~ (Ciolllpotla And Bldwoll). Houro:
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
LAo IShophord, Good Outoldo 8037.
GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Ao
llchodulld
/Ao
Noodod.
H~
Dog, 114-388-HSI.
. •
Btgln training March 13th In School ~. Valid Driver • 5.32 acru, ps I wide ridge toP

AccountlngiCOmputlng.
Employment
opportunttl•
avallablt 11 account c..,k.
payroll - clerk.
computer
oparalor!. word proc...ar. Call
The Adun Education Centw at 1·

•QJt08 2
tK 73
187 43
SOUTH
aKJ9S 65
•K 6 4

would M gretlly appreciated. Wanted: Chlchnl, Gulnel1.
Trlaha N.wall, P.O. Boz 4205, Oucllll, Aabbtttl, Golt1, Ueed 10
Delrborn, MI. 48121.
ln. Tabla Saw, Allao.L. H.va Chkk··
ens 5 Rabbit1 For :t~~lal 114-251AII Natural Olet Systam. Eat Tha 6890, 8 A.M. To 10 P.M. ·

Two Conldale rami, •wcellent
wool, 614-742-2630.
Young Dogs, 2 Main, l Femal•,
Oral Guard Doge, But l.ov•able
They Are All Fixed, Mo'111ng And
Thty Can't Ga, 614441..014"4, Af·

• 7

01 95
oAJ 98
•AJ9 65

Ntc. 2 br opg, In Pomoroti I
Mlddllporl, tM-1112-1111.
Ntc. llpotolro Aportmenl, 2011
Socond Avonuo, Oolllpotlo, Na
Pat., DtpoeM I Atftftnc• Reo
qulred. 114 Ull 3017.

EAST

• 4 3

ARf.

On• blc:lro111m tumlahad apl: In
duplex, 1250. month .,....
electric, 1 paraon oce, no Rud,
na Pate, nf l dap. 304-l'fl.2111.

2·28·95

Q 10 2

tomMy
+18 t..yer of 11011
1 Cloth
47 Shade treea
-·50 Alfoa J1M1
5 Fmlch lor IM 52 Thlcllen .
fl Hr. ugment . 55 Porches
12 Brother of
58 ap.ro role
Jlcob
59 - de Franco
13 MI. Fltzgorlld 60 Klao Me11 Like (auft.)
. 81 Copl1al of
Ukraine
15 Grote
18 - retrllver
82 Uncouth
18 ao-ll'a
peroon
Mel 53 Pilcher
19 CI'Md
84 Slove
20 Blnovotent
21 Tho (Ger.)
DOWN
23 Wild ohoop
1 - Saarinen
26 - Twill
2 Future allyl.'
291ntterent
ellm
33 Alrtottoy
3 - - - act
34-.. (de-rail
. Wonderful Life
31 Crowd
·
meeaun~)
4 Eo!
37 Circle part
5 Slippery fllhel
38 To one1lde
39 Rl•er In Spain 8 South

deliberately evading.
CANCER (June 21~July 22) Focus your
attention on long range plans at this time
Your potential for success lies there , not

CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan. 19) Give
serious attention to new 1deas or conceptt_v_o~·-~-a~loday . on how to
enha n~.~JS!.W•!''·~·a ,_o::~~al secur~Jy . You are

tuned tflto benefic influences .
AQUARIU~ (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A change .
for
lh e better is indicated for your finan ·
migh! develop today concern ing a jomt ·
l
affairs . You m1ghl not become
C1a
vepture that had not seemed prom1sing,
wealthy
overmght , bul th1ngs shouk1 be
It could be difficult to recognize, however.
looking up .

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Endeavors w+1h shon 1erm projects. .
· ·
you personally conceive or control couiO LEO IJuly 23-Aug . 2:i) An opportunity

o
H
rwan
ouw FraiM 20181
HNvy Duty Plpo, t14-25HGIII.
63
Livestock

be s·lated for the winner's circle today
. Rely more upon yourself an~ less upon
others. Pisces . treat yourself to a birth·

Brooding
Ago
Roalollrod
Holotoln Bun., 114-:zsts-nll.

day gi«. Send fo r your Ast,ro~rap/1 pre· VIRGO (Aug . 23_- ~ept. 22) Someone

f

.

-

I,

~t

·-

Ensign - Baton ·Inept· Tamper· OPTIMIST
lfyouwatch all the news broadcasts hoping that the news
will get better you are considered a true OPTIMIST.

.

�Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy--llllddleport, Ohio

TUesday, February 28, 1

Ohio Lottery

Overnight is spons9red by Cadette Troop 1261

Deacons
•
surprtse
Tar Heels

q.dette Troop 1261 sponsored an
overnight for all Meigs Cou nt y
Dai sy and Brownie Troops at
Carleton School . in Syracuse on
Jan. 20 and 21. It was a night fu ll
of fun - Girl Scout friendship,
games, crafts. songs, pizzas, skits

Pick 3:

524
Pick 4:
6230
Buckeye 5:
2·4-10-29-31

Page4

Low tonight in lOs. Cloudy.
Thursday, cloudy 1High In mid

30s.

and movi es. It was a time to visit

with some old Girl Scout friends
and to make some..new ones.

.and carryi n

Melissa

ut the eve nt Were:

Holm n,

a1

ephanie

Robei-ts, Tara Norman,

Alley, Amanda Spaun and thany
Cooke . The girls deCided w t they
·would fix for breakfast and got the
SWEETHEART COURT - Royalty was crowned at a recent
groceries for the meal. They
Meigs Junior High School dance. From the left, they are Juslin
worked on comparing prices while
Roush, prince, SOD or Kenny and Lisa Roush, Pomeroy, and
shopping for the event. The gi rls
Bethany Boyles, princess, daughter of Chris and Vicki McKinney,
decided on crafts and reviewed
Scouts playing games·at the overnight held at Carleton Sehool in Syracuse on January 20 and 21.
Middleport, and David Follrod or Louisiana; and Tonya Miller,
how to make them. They made
queea, daughter of Phil and Deui.se MiUer, Rutlalld, and Jeremiah
God's
Eyes, Fri endship Bracelets
The girls· attending will receive
Bentley, king, son of Jerry and Donna Bentley, P0111eroy.
and Pine Cone Bird Feeders. Some an event patch. We would
of the ga mes played were : Redlight especially like tothank those who
Greenlight, Telephone, Present helped· us spo nsor the eve nt. They
Game , Parachute, board and card were Carleton School' for the use of
Nineteen Meigs County students Langsville: Beth A. Clark, games and many more. They sang th e building . D&amp;M Pizza for
have been listed on the University · Langsville; Susan R. Coleman, some good old Girl Scout songs. dooating pizzas, and McDonald's
of Rio Grande's faD quartez dean's Pomeroy: Lisa R. Dorst, Albany: The cadettes worked with the girls . for the mange drink .
honor Ust.
We would al so like to thank all
Adria C. Freckez, Racine:· Kristi A. and taught them how to do skits.
To achieve the dean's honor list Gaddis, Tuppers Plains: James A. There were also movies to watch . Daisy and Brownie leaders and
.sratus. students must earn a 3.75 Gheen, Middleport, Danielle R. - Some of them were: Little Heroes, parents who helped us' make the
grade point average on a 4 . scale Gray, Shade: Chad E. Griffith, Home Alone 2, Fiintstones and eve nt a big success.
·
during the quarter.
Tuppers Plains: Lori B. Hill, · Mrs. Doubtfire. Some girl s stayed
The following students from llacine; Connie S. Jones, Rutland; all ni ght and some went home at
Attending were Cadette Troop
Meigs were listed: Deborah A. Darin · P. Logan, Middleport;
Alkire, Pomeroy; John H. Ander- Matthew w. Michael, Racine; 10:30 p.m. Pizza and drinks(were 1261 , Daisy Troop 1020 - 2 girls, 2
. adults; Daisy Troop 1292 - I girl,
son, Pomeroy; Deborah M. Barbez, Srephanie M. Sayre, Racine; DoD- served. .
Members or Cadette 'froop 1261 explaining skits al lbe overDaisy Troop 1303 - 4 girls, 1 adult;
Coolville; Lorrie A. Burnem, na K. Smith, Langsville; and Mary
night held at Carleton Scho"l.
The 'cadettes fixed French toast Daisy Troop 1334 - 1 girl, I adult;
1. Whan, Middleport
and sausage for breakfast. There Brown ie Troop I 004 - 3 girls, I girls, 2 adults; Brownie Troop 1308 Jim Holm an, Anna Norman, and
was cereal for those who wouldn't adult; Brownie Troop 1015 - 3 ·- 10 girls, 2 ai.lults; Brownie Troop ·Debbie Cooke . The troop leader
contlnuedtrompages
girls, Brownie Troop 1079- 9 girls, 1067 - 3 girls, 1 adult.
was DeniSe Holman .
205 years of its existence, the remain active, vocal, visible and a eat the French toast. After breakfast
3
adults;
Brownie
Troop
1271
6
.
was.over
the
cadettes
cleaned
up.
Submitted by: Denise Holman
Leaders
were
Denise
Holman
,
Court' has often fought hard lo productive force in our individual
maintain its place in American communities. We must increase
government. The cilurt gives the our participation in guiding and
final word on a law, by the stan- · molding discourses, concepts, dcciA CHANGE FOR THE BFST
When we know what He can above,
I KNOW, NO LONGER!
dards of the Constitu)ion. John Jay sions and actioits in our town meet·
By Olen D. Harrisoo
do1
·
What shape would we be in?
By Teresa Hill Miller
set lasting s~dw:ds of judicial ings, !chool boards, cuiiUral instituPomeroy, Ohio
Change a broken twisred life,
Letart
FaDs
exceDence during his five .years of lions and community service a-gaSEEING YOU
And malce it good as new.
service. His Coun :srablished an nizations.
·
BY Teresa HiD MiDez
We know up there.in Heaven,
Put a smile back on a face,
Someone asked me ,how you
aU imJ!Ortanl ~~by refusing
The next meeting was whl~ove the fl_ee£y clouds so~- Wi th a mind_!hat's tro_yllle free.
Letart FaDs ·
were·
.
10. adVIse .the President on matters ·announced for SaiUtday March 18
And I had to say I did not
of law: 10 this dar.; the Court at Grace Church Parish
willi
When I see you in the haU way; know,
There's a God who is a1 ways
Why !hen. sliD reject Him,
·
speaks only ?n spectpc cases that the annual charier Day Luncheon watching,
· -My mind goes into flighL
Why not try it, its still free.
It was a surprising answer
come before 11 for !'"VICW.
·careced by Wilson Catering. Mezn- • Over us, both day and nighL
I don't know what I see in you
He wiD be with us each minute,
That
I didn't care.IO explain. .
Roberta 0 Bnen presented a bers and guests should call their
That gives me such delighL
We know He wiD poteet us
Every day and every nighL
Still,
I revealed the story.
message from the DAR President reservation for the luncheon
PeOple say I'm crazy,
If we let Him have His way.
W;m:hing over us with care,
As
if
time were repeating itself.
(leneral Mrs. Wayne Blair: Blair ($7 .SO) 10 Mrs: Abbey Sll'atton 81 '
Ircll them that it's true.
Help lead us through life's
Wh~n we switch Off the JighL
And
I
found myself
reminded DAR members that in r992 6103. Prescnrations of Ameri- problems,
I guess they just don't underAnd as we feel His ~scnce.
Painfully
reliving the pasL
fulfilling our vital role in preserv- can History Month Essay Awards
stand,
So we do not go astray.
There's a ftlCiing stiD wjthin,
Next
time
someone asks,
ing American heritage we must aU and Good Citizens Awards will be
. ·How much that I love you.
If it had not been for Him
I'll say I don't think of the pasL
made.

Mel'gs students· on dea'·n's ll'st

••

•

The cadettes planning, organizing

--------Poet's corner---.. -----

House

35 cents
A Multimed ia Inc. 'New Spaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 1, 1'995

Tokens
at issue

Water to flow

-

Vaughan ... ,

2 Sec1ions , 12 Pages

Vol. 45, NO. 213
Copyright 1995

State grant aids installation
of new Leading Creek line

.,

By .iJM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Smrr
Work is expecred 10 start in May
on a $7.50,&lt;XXl Leading Creek Con'
servancy District project in
Columbia, Rutland and Scipio
townships.
The project calls for the insraUation of almost 13 miles of 6-inch
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) water
line along Side Hill, Carpenrer HiD,
Cotterill, Dye, Loop and Mount
Union roads, said LCCD director
Brent Bolin.
In addition, the district will
insraU a 70,000-gallon groilnd storage rank and 25 gaDons-per-minute
boosll:r pump sration, he said.
"This project will provide a
safe, dependable supply of parable
warcr 10 al'{lroximately 125 households," sa1d Bolin. "These households are currc;ntly dependent on
wells, cisterns and hauled warcr."
Bolin said work on the project
started in the faD of 1992 when the
district applied for ~ject grants.

"We had a lol 01 mterest from
potential customers in the area,"
Bolin said. ''They had been after
their (township) trustees to help
them get warer."
The next step was to contact
people familiar with the area to
complete survey sheets - 10 see if
enough people wan red warcr 10 pay
off a loan and make the project feasible, he explained
Bolin said the LCCD staned out
with 80 households, but has currently signed up 125 customers.
. The project is somethi!'~ 11:~11
wiD definitely help people liVIDg tn
that area, he said. The new lines ,
wiD also have en()ugh capacity for
light industrial usc, he added.
The undertaking;s engineering
cost estimate is $750,000, Bolifl
said . Of that amount, the LCCD
acquired $475,800 in grant funds
.from the Meigs County Board of
Comm~!lsioners'
Community
Develofltlltent Block Grant for lis-

Mines' temporary
shutdown begins

Problems could
imperil county's ·
one t;~xi service

holds. Above, from left, are Fred Hoffman, presRECEIVE GRANT - Meigs County and
ide!Jl of tbe Meigs County Board of CommisLeading Creek Couservancy District officials
sioners;
Voinovieh; Julia Houdashelt-Tboml!ln,
r'ecenlly received a $350,000 mock cbtck from
.
director
tbe Meigs County Economic Develop·
. Ohio Gov. George Voinovicb to construct an
ment
Office;
and LCCD Dlrectot Brent Bolin. ·
additional water Doe and storage lank for 125
Columbia, Rutland aad Scipio township hou~ .
cal year 1995,the Ohio Department
of Development CDBG Water and
Sanitary Sewer Grant and the
Appalachian RegioQal Commission. .
.
Bolin- and county officials
recently received a $350,000 mock
check from Gov . George
·voinovich, representinJI; the

Appalachian Regional Commission
portion of the funding.
The remainder of the project
costs will be borrowed from the
Ohio Water Development Authori·IY or a local financial institution,
said Bolin.
.
. The district is currently wooong
at obtaining easements for the liries

· and a suilable rank site. As soon as
this is complered, .the plans will be
submitred 10 the Slate Environmen. tal Protection Agency for approval.
Currently, the dtstrict is planning to advertise for -bids for the.
construction in March and April
and begin construction sometime in
. May, he noted.

-Reduced to.rubble_____,

, ;•S9!1llJem Ohio CQIII.·Co. impleznenred the planned shutdown of its two

WEST VIRGINIA'S LARGEST CONVERSION
WITH OVER300 TO CHOOSE FROM!
. VAN·D.EALER
.

Meigs DivisiOn mines today.
·
\
.
SOCCo announced in January its plans 10 rcmporarily idle the mines
mines due 10 ourages at Ohio Powez Co.'s James M. GaVIn electrical generating plant in Cheshire, which is fiieted by !he mines.
SOCCo spokeswoman Melinda Ackerman said the shutdown will
affect about600 of the mine's Unired Mine Workers of Ameriea employees. Approximarely 175 employees wiD work through the idle period 10
Rlainrain the mines and equipmenL
· ·
~ workers wiD return 10 work on April3, she said.
\
Employees wiD maintain full benefits during the idling and will.be eligible for unemployment compensation for the periods they will not be
working, AEP said in January. · ·
·
·
. Both of the Gavin plant's 1,300-megawatt generating units were idled
due to alterations associared with a flue-gas desulfurization (scrubber)
retrofit project.
·
·
·
.
Gavm's Unit I scrubber was· closed while workers repaired a boiler
and surrounding supports damaged during a negative pressure incident on
Dec. 15. The unit has since been returned 10 service. ·
.
Gavi!l's unit2 was raken out of service on Dec. 21 in order 10 complell:
the scrubbez retrofit. The unit is scheduled to return 10 service this month.

",. ..
The old two-story red structure located on Mulberry Avenue near the intersection of Lasley
Street Ia Pomeroy was tom down Tu~sday. Built in lhe late 1800s and used rm: a cafe or tavern
for many years, the hui!diDg was owned by Jerr Mor~ls. It operated as The Ram~ow Inn before
beiDR closed permauendy aboullh~ee years ago. (Seutmel photo by Charlene Hoef11ch)
'

Attorneys take turns battering O.J. witness on stand
BRAfl) NEW '95 CHM AS1RO EXTENDED
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~

• Power Brakes
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LOS ANGELES (AP)- Barely
able 10 eat during the day ~sleep
at night, Rosa Lopez said she ·was
sick and tired and wasn't going 10
answer any more questions,
"This is not my fault 10 work
close 10 Mr. Simpson, to have seen
and to have heard," she said in a
quavering voice Tuesday after a
long vitriolic day in which prose. cuto~ accused her of being puppet of the defense and lying under
their orders.
And with that, the maid-turneddefense witness became the first
person in the OJ. Simpson trial 10
·ctan: tum her back on the judge and

a

walk away.
.
grilled by the defense about boo7~
Lopez. the larcst w1tness whose and blondes; Mark Fuhrman, the
life has been shredded'!" na~~ detective who · went from enviable
TV in the name of JUStice, d•dn I hunk to alleged ractSt; and Mary
get far. Judge Lance Ito called her . Anne Gerchas, the jeweler and
back to tht lectern and made her potential defense witness arrested
promise -· relucrantly- to return on fraud charges.
Thursday to continue her tesllmoIn a different predicament is the
ny.
.
·
· sequestered jury. The last time it
As she left the couruooin, she was in action was Friday, when
burst into tears. Sh~ was_conso!ed jur~rs were hastily called from
by Simpson's relauves, mcludmg thetr hoteiiO the courthouse only 10
his son Jason.
be told to go back again.
Add Lopez to the dish'!nor ~II
"The jury must be going nuts,"
of witnesses savaged 'durmg th1s said Loyola University law profestrial. It alrea4y 'included Ronald sor Stan Goldman . " They. must
Shipp, the former Simpson friend think there's something bizarre

go in~. on. and they 're probably
nght.
..
Three court days have been
spent so far on Lopez - and she
still hasn't completed her videotaped testimony, which wil! be preserved in. case she-makes good on
her t.hrcat to flee to her nahve El
Salvador to escape media harassmentand other pressures. .
. Lopez,. who was a ~aid for
Stmpson s next-door netghbors,
testified through a Spanish interpreter that she saw Simpso~·s
white Ford Bronco parked outstde
his house about the time prosecutor~ say Nicole Brown Simpson

and Ronald Goldman were murdercd.
Prosecutors contend Simpson
drove to the murder scene in the
Bronco . Police found a drop of
blood ncar the handle and more
blood inside.
But some of Lopez's statements
aren't consistent with a Julv 29
interview she ~ave to defense
investi~aiOr William Pavelic - an
interview that•prosecutors just
found out about Monday.
· Prosecutor Marcia Clark said
that in that initial interview, Lopez
ncvez mentioned seeing the Bronco
shortly after 10 p.m. ·

I

Elusiv·e one vote prompts delay
for vote on budget amendment
WASHINGTON (AP) - The 67th vote, required for a constltu·
Senate's balanced-budget amend-· lional amendment.
ment supporters are franticall-Y
"We might lose the vore," conchasing the single, decisive V()le ceded D()le. "Bull think it's a
~~for Republicans 10_avert , gamble worth talcing."
; a stunning defeat for one of their
Conrad himself expressed Iiille
premier priorities for 1995.
hope that he would see an offer
To rescue the measure, Republi- from Republicans that would per. cans may have to acce~e to suade him to support the amenddemands by Sen. Kent Conrad, D- menL In an extraordinary series of
N.D., and other Democrats that talks with GOP senators late Tuesthey formally exclude !&gt;'Jcial Secu- day in cloakrooms and on the Senrity from budget cuts, phasing the ·ate floor, the North Dakotan sought
exemption in o~er a decade or middle ground, hutto no avail.
more. The prospects for a deal, Republicans are reluctant to rake
however, did not look good.
the government's biggest program.
On the brinlc of seeing the pro- currently running a huge surplus,
posal beaten by the narrowest of out of budget calculations.
.
margins after talkS with wavering
"I don't think there's much
·senators failed, Senate Majority p,rospect here,'' Conrad said.
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., abruptly
"They seem addicred 10 using the
calle4 for a recess Tuesday nighL It Social Security uust fund to bal·
was approved by voiCe vote afrcr.a ance the budget.".
.
.
tense, daylong session. A roll call
. ~onrad was also seeking flext.could occur as early as today, and }•h~Y . to let _the government ru_n
Republicans expressed hope that a . deftc1ts dunng receSSto~s so II
night of work would win over at could pump extra mon_ey 1010 the
least one lawmaker for the crucial economy . But angry Repu~licans

..

said they could not agree to that,
and accuSed Conrad or issuing that ·
demand laiC in their bargaining.
"He had basicaU~ agreed, as far
as I'm concerned, ' and then he
bro.ugfil up his conutns about
deficits during recessions, Said Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Urah, a chief sponsor of the amendment
•
The bargaining and Dole's decisian to postpone the vote. angered
many Democrats, who thought they
were about to sink the paramount
GOP initiative in the party's .
promised drive to whiule down
spending and with it the governritent itself, When Republicans
took over Cong.-ess after last
November's elec;ions, many
observers thought the) would final ly be able to push the 111easure
throufh after five losing efforts
since 982.
.
AME~DMENT DELAY- Sen. Orrin Hatcb, R-Utab, chair• "W~'re tampering with the
man
or the Seaate Judiciary Committee, spoke lo reporters Tues· Constitution or the Unired Srares,"
day
after
Senate Republicans forced a delily ror a rmal vole on a
said Sen. Robert Byrd, D' W.Va.,
balanced
budget
ameadment lu the Constitution. Halcb argued in
the leading opponent of the balfavor
or
the
amendment.
(AP)
anced budget811JendmenL
.
•
! .

.

-

costs~

• Meigs County Conlmissioncrs,
$4,800; and
.
• state and federal government·
grants, $148,252.
'{ . Middleport has had to pay t~e
dtfferencc between tokens sold and
grant funds, which last year meant
a $13,000 loss, Horton said. Currently, state money pays for part of
a village employci!'s salary to manage to~_en sales; he added.
.
A token costs 60 cents for
seqiors and disabled individuals,
and is $1.20 for others.
·
The contract could be re'negoli ated with the sratc if Blue Streak
leaves, Horton said. But, the stanup costs and limited area demand
might prohibit success for new
business, he added.
"We'll just have to see how it
plays ow and who comes forward "
Hortonsaid.
'
· If Blue Streak stops operating.
another cab company could come
forWard, Amiet said.
ODOT could give the village
and county between three and six
months to resolve the situation she
added. .
.
•
: B~f'Ore any action occurs, th e
state must resolve the contract with
Blue Sirealc, Amiet said.
Snouffez said ODOT gave Blue
Streaic three options:
• priva~ the operation, which
would cut off state funding;
• back out of the raxi service and
make room for a new company. or
• continye the subsidy for six
months.
Blue Streak's one-year contract
ends this June, Snouffer added ·
During the last 10 years, 'state
and federal mandates have made it
more difficult to opernre, Snouffer
srud. The roull:s have been changed ,
· 110d the borders for where service
can go have shrunk.
Abdul 80 percent of the routes
·- .. including the ¥aples, the senior
ctuzens cenrcr and on edJ~;es of vil(~onlinued on Page 3)

a

'

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By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy and Middleport senior
ci tizens may not be able to use
tokens to ride on a subsidized taxi
service after March 31, Middleport
ViUage officials have announced.
Ohio Department of Transporration officials met with the county's
only raxi service, Blue Streak Cab
Co., in January. Negotiations are
continuing on this 12-year service.
ODOT iniLiated .a review of the
service after concerns were aired
that Blue Streak was misusing the
token system, sa id Rosemary
Amiet, director of Ol)OT's rural
transit
. "We discovere&lt;J some problems
wtth the way the service was ~ing
provLded.'~Afl!iet said. ·
~
ODOT has ordered Blue Strealc
to conform with the Americans
with Disabilities Act and institurc a
drug testing program, said Gary
Snouffer, Blue Strealc'uo-ownez.
The Middleport family-owned
business may stop accepting subsi dized tokens March 3 r, Snouffer
said. But, the state's action may
force the business under since nearly all of its riders who are on ftJted
incomes use tokens, he added.
The cab company told Middleport officials that 81 the end of the
month _tokens will not be aocepted,
accordm~ 10 Mayor Dewey Horton.
The vdlage is waiting for a letrcr
from Blue Strealc before taking any
action, he added.
"I'm sorry about this, but I
emphasize it was not our decision,"
Horton said. "The village of Middleport has horne this burden for
the last 10 years. Maybe the county might decide or might not do it."
Since 1983 , Middleport has
acted as the local administrator of
the county, state and federal funding that mostly serves senior citizens.
·. An nual government contributions for this program total about
$160,000. Contributors include :
• Middleport, adm inistrative'

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