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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

S~oe stretcher provides snug fit for wide feet

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
after opening I put it in the refrig
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
eratar immerfutel How !on is iDEAR ANNE AND NAN: I good and is it olto use it Jter i:
have been ttying to fmd a woman's turns cloudy or milky? _ M M
shoe stretcher, without any luck. HELD Harvard, m
·
· ·
Could you please help me? As we
DEAR M.M.: As tbe 'uice a es
get older, tt seems our feet get it begins to separate rro.J the P~P
wtder. -DOT CASS, Ocala, Fla
According 10 the folks at ReaLe~
. DEAR DOT: We fo!!Dd profes- mon, it's fine to use it until the
stonal shoe stretchers for men and expiration date that is printed on
women 1 n a magazine called the c of the bottle
Mature Wisdom, P.O. Box 28. . KirEP HOLIDAY PLANTS
Hanover, PA 17333-0028; tele- . BLOOMING WITII A PINCH OF
phone 1-800-MWI-9222. Tb'e · SALT- Cbrisunas plants boast
stretchers fit right or left shoes and bright, beautiful flowers ... but usu.
ally for just a few short weeks dorarc $6.95 each.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: 1 ing the season However several
buy Re~emon juice and use it for favorite varieti~s can be c~axed to
many thmgs, but It gets cloudy bloom again next year
·

.
. The Epsom ,;al! lndustty Counctl offers these Ups to help you
keep your flowers blooming longer
lind encoilrage a regrowth next hoiulay s~n._
.
.
Pot~settaa: ';V~tle _the JIIIIJ!I as
bloommg, keeJI 11m bright, mdirect
hght and n~unsb tt ~very three_ or
four days wtth a soluuon consiSting
of 2 teaspoons of Epsom Salt per
gallon of water. When the leaves
begm to yellow, _prune the stems
baclc 10 about6 ~ncbes above the
sot!. Continue thts throughout the
summer. In October, put the plant
m compleU: darkness for 14 hours
every _eve~mg. Buds should form
agam m mtd-December.
Cbrisunas Cactus: Nourish the

Ohio Lottery

Tuesday, March 14,1995

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

blooming plant with a water/Epsom
Salt solution- but only enough to
keep the soil moist. In spring and
summer, water more frequently. At
!be end of October, put the cactus
m 16 hours of complete _darkness,
then etgbt ~ow:s of sunhght each
wec:k, watenng JUSt enough to keep
~~tst: Wbe_n buds appear, start fertilazauon wtth the Epsom Salt solulion once a week . When full
blooms appear,lceep the plant from
direc(sunligbt.
··
Amaryllis: ~ce the bloommg is
complete, nounsb the sot! wtth a
water/Epsom Salt solution wbenever the soil feels dry. W~ep the
leaves tiBll yellow (usually m about
three months), nourish only enough

ASK ANNE •

.
·4
to keep the soil moist. Wben we
leaves die, store the bulb (still in
the pot) on its side in a cool place,
such as Yllur basement Continue to
nourish the bulb sparingly until_ a
new.stem appcan._lben place 11m
a bn&amp;;ht. s~nny wmdow and lceep
the so~ moiSt.
Wnte to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland; vr 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear io the column. Due to the
volume of mail, pe"rsonal replies
cannot be provided.

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nasb-Cummlngs are ~a-authors
of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:

Rio Grande
eliminated
from tourney

NAN

Page4
Two Prize Problem-Solvers
Sbare Tbelr Secrets" (Bantam).
T
11880 order, ca 11 1•11410•
1220·
_Copyrlabll!I9S NE!Vl!PAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically With
this columnist and others, contact America OnUne by calli
_
1
ext.
Ill!
)
800•827•6364'
8317·

mg the gospel_ o~ peace, to tbe promotton Of ctvthty and mutual
respect iiJllOn~ people every--:bere,
to b_eanng wnness to the hv~ng
reahty of our ~ord Jesus Cb~tst,
and to th~ pr~uce.?f hiS teachan¥s
!n our daily hves, Hmclcley satd
10 a rare _appearance before the
news m~a
.
The lifelong church officral wa~

The preaching
By DR. JAMES R. ACREE SR.
I Corinthians 1:18 For the
preaching of the cross is to them
that perish foolishness; but unto us
which are saved it is the power of
God.
There are three things about the
cross Ibm I want to consider today.
I. The preaching of the cross
sweeps away man's notions that a
·. • man can save himself.
2. It sweeps aside all man's
nolions of being good outside of
Jesus Christ. Romans 3:23 and Isaiah 53:6.
.
3. It swecps .aside man's notion
of being saved by works. Epb.
. 2:8.9
You cannot repent too soon!
Because you lcnow not bow soon to
repent. Don't be too late. Preaching
of the cross reveals t/Ie love and
grace of God. The greatest revelation and lhe greatest demonstration
!bat God could ever give to man,
was letting His Son die upon the
cross for our sins.
God always gives his best to
those who leave the choice with. .
Him. For God so loved the world,
that He gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believelb in Him
should not perish, but have everlasting life. (John 3:16). The notion
that man can save himself was
taken away when Jesus died upon
Ute cross.
Faith is not believing !bat God
c;m but that God will. At the cross
man' s crimes are seen and God's
compassion is seen. Man·s ruiri and
God's redemption is seen at the
cross. It l~so reveals that Jesus did
not die for good people but He died

PETER
GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOl'f, M.D.
DEAR DR . GOTT: I have a
child who bas tested allergic to
dogs, but who desperately wants
one. I' ve been told that some
breeds of dogs can be tolerated by
allergic people because of the difference in shedding and dander. On
the other hand, I' vc also beard that
saliva and urine make much more
of a difference because componentS
of the saliva and urine arc equally
important m allergic reactions. Can
you settle this once and for all?
DEAR READER: As a gcnc'ral
rule, most people who arc allergic
19 anunal s react to dander, the tiny
flakes and scale that tlte creatures
constantly shed from their skin s.
How severe the allergic reaction is
usually difficult to tell untillhc person is in direct contact with an animal. Lab tests may indicate an
. allergy but the reaction may, in
fact , be a minor one. .
Although I am a great belieyer
in child/dog bonding and doubt that
saliva 'and urine play much of a
role in allergies, you may, want to
investigate further before purchasing a pet. Specifically, does your
son develop nasal congestion, rash ,
wheezing , runny eyes, or other
symptoms of allergy when exposed
to otherpeople's dogs7
If you can't answer this question, let your child spend an afternoon with a neighbor' s pet. If no
reactio n is forthcoming (or it is
mild). J:d go ahead and buy a dog
·...,. the heclt: wilb the allergy tests.
On the other band, if your child

•

1

•

--- o· -yi

est presidency in the history of the a counselor to three church presi·
9 million-meoiber church.
dents since 1981 and bas been an
Tbe ord.ination of Mormon pres- apostle since: 1961.
.
idents is private, with the faiths ]4
Tbe news conference was the
apostles in attendance in the Salt . first time in at least 20 yean that a
Lake Temple.
.
new Mormon president answered
Hinckley, 84, is said to be in questions in such a fo(um. For
excellent health and bas no history more than a balf-bour, Hinckley
of serious aihnent. The grandson of responded candidly on a variety of
Mormon pioneers, be bas served as subjects, sometimes exhibiting the

for sinners (Romans 5:8) . The
preaching of the cross shows the
way of salvation. Salvation was
given to man that he ·might be
saved through the shed blood of
Jesus Christ. It shows the way of
forgiveness, (Col. 2: 13); the way to
God, (Acts 4: 12), the way to heav-,
en. (John
5 14: 15). the way to peace.

~~8~~ ;:~~:i:;~: h~:~ ~::~~

Vol. 45, NO.~
Copyrtght1995

I

sense of humor for wbacb be as
lcnown.
He said be bad-spent only one
night in his life as a hospital
patient. "That doesn't mean I'm
ready to run a 100-yard dash," be
said. ·
Asked wLat the church would
tell women forced to worlc outside
the home for
· reasons, he

Meigs board opposes vouchers, mandates
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel neWllstalf
Tbe Meigs Local Board of Educalion Tuesday rtigbt adopted reso- ·
lotions opposing unfunded mandates on school districts and a
school voucher program that will
use public school funds to subsidize private educalion.
In addition, the board stated its
opposition to a proposed governorappointed state board of education
.and a proposed professional prac-

..

divides the world into two groups
the saved side and the condemned
side. On the saved side .was the
lbief who said "Lord remember me
when thou earnest in thy kingdom"
(Luke 23:42). The man on the
saved side went to heaven. On lhe
condemned side was the thief who
cried, "If thou be Christ save thyself and us" (Luke 23:39). The man
on the condemned side was lbst,
and went to hell. (John 3:18). "He
that believetb on Him is not"condemned but; he that believeth not is
condemned already, because ·be ·
hath not believed in the naine of
the only begotten Son of God.
When we ask, Jesus Christ will
come in our bean and forgive us of
our sins Anytime we step away
from the cross and the preaching·of
·the cross; we start giVing man !be
opportunity to save himself. We
know that outside of the cross tlterc
is no hope. No hope without the
shed blood of Jesus Christ. There is
no way a man can get into heaven
except through tbe blood, and
going through the love of God. The
love of God is spread abroad in our
hearts. When we know the Lord.
"There is ·no hope, no. way, no
future, outside of Jesus Christ."

reacts violently, you may bave to
settle on purchasing a snake.
In my view, tbe saliva-urine
issue isn't as .important as your
child's actual experienc~ "in the
field," as it were.
Keep in mind that most children
are more .tban willing to put up
with minor symptoms of allergy
(such a8 sneezing) for the privilege
of having their own pets.
I recaU my brother as a child,
with severe eczema on one band
that was directly related to his
fondness for a pet cat. Would be
give up the cat? Not on your life.
He eagerly accepted the trade-off.
So, try the experiment I mentioned.
It would actually be mstructive.
DEAR DR. GOTT: For over a
year I've bad' a keloid just below
my Adam's apple. It's a bonible
sight. Is there something I can rub
on it to remove it or to belp·malce it
look better?
s.. DEAR READER: Ketoids are
exaggerated scar tissue. No one
knows wby some people develop
them, while others do not. These
scars, although harmless, crui be
cosmetic nuisances.
There is nothing you can do to
shrink your keloid. Rather, you
should be e:iamined by a plastic
surgeon, who may be able to
remove the scar wilbout causing
.
another keloid to grow.
· To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health . Report "An Informed
Approach to Surgery." Other readers wbo would like a copy should
send $2 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title.
"'Copyright 1995 1'4!:WSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASS~
(For lnformalion on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact·America OnUne by calUng 1·
800"827·6~ ext. 8317:)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe success of "VisionQuest
2005 - Citizens in Action"
depends on volunteers and the
extent of their involvement and
dedication to IDalcing things better,
said Dr. Nick Robinson, at Tuesday
night's Middleport town meeting
beld at the American Legion annex.
Attended by about 30 residents,
the meeting was conducted by
Robinson, a Middleport councilman, and Dennis Hoclcman, president of the Middleport Community
Association. The two have led
·community officials and leaders
through a series of "take charge"
sessions where goals and objectives
have been prioritized and put into a
strategic plan for the development

GUARANTEvD
BEST
BU
.
.. · . ·
YIN AMERICA
..

.

.

I ''Jrj,;~~
; !~!;:::::Zi!C:Z:=!:::::Z::::EEE!l!
~S:i~
'"' :,.

1995 ASPIRE

THUNDERBIRD LX

7820°

Stock #95308

0

lice board to ceitlfy professionil.l
educators instead of the State
• Board of Educatioo.
The' county lioard of education.
approved similar resolutions at its
March 7 meeting.
In persoonel matters, the board
granted a medical leave of absence
to Celesta Coates effective Feb. 23
and accepted the resignation of
Mae Young, Susan Metts and
Jenifer Eubanks as substitute teacher, bigh school cheerleader advisor

and assistant band director, respec- .
lively.
The board hired Carissa Bailey
as a substitute teacher and Brady
Sayre as a substitute bus driver far
the remainder of the school year to
be used on an as-needed basis.
Meigs High School seniors will
graduate May 21 at4:30 p.m. after
. the board approved that date ·and
time for graduation. Also, the
board set April 17 and May 26 as
make-up daY,s for H;urisonville

Elementary _ School. Students
missed two days earlier this year
due to water problems at the
school.
The board also approved a
1995-96 school calendar. School
will start. August 28 for students
and August 25 for -teachers. May
23, 1996, wiU be the last day of the
school year for students.
•
In other matters, the board:
- Granted the DECA chapter
permission to attend a conference

*

15 949°0 *

~

•Air Conditioning
•nn!ed Windows
•Deluxe Wheel Covers
•3.8L SEFI Engine
•4 Spe!!d Auto 0/0
•Floor Mats
·Cruise/Tilt
·Stereo/Ciock/Cass..

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StafT
Rutland's water problems seem
to be resolved, said Dale Hart, vii. !age maintenance supervisor.
"Hopefully we've got 99 percent, if not all of the leaks," Han
told council during its regular
meeting last night.
Tbe village bad beeil losing
thousands of dollars each month
because the old leaking I.ines bad a
discrepancy between what Leading
Creek was charging.
In the.next few months, the village crews will bore out around
. another line beneath Salem Street,
Hart added.
In other water news, council
approved an ordinance that will
protect certain lines from contaminating the village .water supply.
The "cross connection control"
ordinance was passed on an emer· gency basis.
"The or~inance states that if any
business or residence contaminates
the water you can cause them to be
blocked off," Hart said. "We're
coming into compliance with EPA

*21,830°

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ONLY

Stock #95304

35 *
$18I 144
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Chrysler Mini·Van Owners.
NO TRADE NECESSARY!
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.1t95 CONTOUR GL

1995 ESCORT LX

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Stock 195433

5 MUSTANG

Stock 195339

1995 PROBE

20 *

oo·
95 F150 4X2

WASHINGTON (AP)
Wboles.a.lc pri~es ros~ O.;l per~ent
last month, reflecting higher costs
for food, prescription drugs and the
largest increaSe in home-heating oil
m 12 months.
The February increase in the
Labor Department's Producer Price
Index was slightly higher thad bad
been expected.
Financial markets are closely
watching a batch of economic
reports this week to see whether
they will conf111ll market hopes that
overall economic growth is slowing
enough to keep inflation .in cbeclc. .
·Such a slowdown would be seen
as an indication that the Federal
Reserve may have accomplished its
goal and will not be forced to
increase rates again.

..

- Approved purchase of a bond
for interim Treasurer Richard
Kolcer for $160 and approved a
budget revision for !be Salem Center Elementary Principal's Fund to
allow the purchase of equipment;
- Met in executive session to
discuss negotiations.

pla~_911

meeting

SELECTING DESIRABLE INDUSTRIES
- From left, Judy Well, Betty Pooler, Merrl
Aollibary, and Kenneth King, were among those
attending Mon~ay nlgbt's Middleport town

Meigs County officials have
scheduled a public meeting to con· ·
sider the possibility of establishing
a 911 planning commillcc.
911 is a telephone system
designed io facilitate response by
emergency and law enforcement
personnel in lhc·cvent or aJ) emergency. Meigs County is one of
seven in the state without 911 or
currently making plans to install a
911 system, according to information from Robert E. Bycr, cmergen·
cy services director.
Tbe meeting will be held March
29, 7:30p.m . in the multipurpose
room at Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
In January, Meigs County Board
·of Commissioners President f'red
Hofflflan instructed Emergency
Services Director Robert E. Dyer to
set up the meeting "to obtain public
input and then consider the possibility of establishing a 911 plan- .1
ning conunittcc."
"The meeting is being held to
inform the public and officials
about what 911 is and what it will
do for the county," said Hoffman.
"Establishing a 911 planning
committee is the f1tst step," added
' Hoffman.
"If there is enough interest.
we'll pursue it," Hoffman said. "If
· no~ we'll just leave it·alone." ·
Byer said a representative from
Emergi Tech. Inc. of Reynoldsburg
may be ·at the meeting to help
answer questions about 911 systems. ·

meeting. Types of businesses and industries they
proposed for Middleport included a dry cleaners, a movie the,ter, a retirement center, plastks
industries, and nice restaurants.

Fire claims
Middleport
.woman's life
(Sentinel StafT report)

Cnunpled up behind her televi·
sion se~ a Middleport woman wa5
found dead after ftre engulfed her
home Tuesday night, accordmg to
Meigs County Coroner Doug
Hunter.
.Tbe cause of death for 36-ycarold Teresa Radatz bas not been
determined, Hunter said.
Radatz died in her 567 North
Front Street home after flames consumed the two-story wood struciure, according to a state ftre marshal official.
The fire marshal would not ·
srx;cify the cause .of the. ftre. The
state fare marshal and local authorities· are investigating the fire !bat
broke out around 10:59 p.m. Tuesday.
.
.
Radatz's boyfriend was charged
witb domestic violence Monday
night after the two fought, said Sid
Little, Middleport Police Chief.
The responding officer saw n.o
bruises on Radatz, Little said.
·
The boyfriend was in the Middlepon Jail when the fare broke out
last ni!\111. He was ~eleased this
morning after learning of the
tragedy, Little said.
"They're running an autopsy,"
Little said. "I can't speculate a
So far this year, wholesale whole lot."
·
prices have been rising at an armual
Radatz's two children were
-rate of 3 .9 percent. That was "staying witll relatives on Rose Hill
sharply high~tban the 1.7 percent at the lime of the fare, Meigs Counincrease turned in for all of 1994.
ty Sheriff James Souls by said. .
Analysts noted that 1994 began
with a spurt in price pressures as ·
well before settling down to a more
moderate pare.
The 0.3 percent increase in .. The Meigs County Cbamber of
February matched tbe January Commerce remembered one of its
increase and was slightly higher founding members· David Balcer ·
than the 0.2 percent boost many at its regular monthly meeting
economists bad been expecting.
Monday.
·
The February advance was led
Baker, a Southern Ohio Coal
b~ a 0.3 percent rfse in food cos~.
Co. employee, died recently. Balcer
which marlced a sham turnaround played a key role in the founding of
from January when food costs bad
the county-wide chamber, said
actually dropped by 0.6 ·percent.
Chuck Kitchen, cbatrtber president.
"He went above and beyond the
After having fallen in January,
prices turne&lt;l up for dairy products,
call of duty," Kitchen said. "If it
eggs, coffee and rice.
hadn't been for him we'd be at

Wholesale prices up
0.3 percent in February ·

Stock 195129

Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District to relocate water lines at
Meigs High School;

Meigs
officials

of the village.
At last night's meeting those
attending were repeatedly told that
"volunteers make the difference,
that individual efforts lead to a better" community, that good things
happening in one community benefits other communities".
"VisionQuest 2005" was
des.c ribed by Robinson as an
"actio~! plan witb achievable
goals". He said that its purpose is
to give direction and leadership to
village government through
defined goals and objectives outlined in the strategic plan. He discussed the capacity, or .ability, of
the village to carry out the plan,
and then appealed to those attending to become a pan of the process.
Continued on page 3

- accepted two benches mkde
of recycled milk cartons from the
Meigs County Litter Control.
- tabled a vote. on the 2-mill
renewal levy, which is set to appear
on the ballot this N,ovember. This
levy currently is the only local tax
money supporting the village.
Aug. 24 is the ftnal deadline to
get this issue on the fall ballot. The
. last time it was passed was four
years ago. The levy expires Dec.
31, 1996 . .
T learned a stop sign bas been
placed next to the Rutland Furniture Store. "Stop" will be painted
on the road at the intersection.
- ordered the VanMeter sidewalk be repaired at the propeny
owner's expense since it's a safety
hazard.
- urged all residents to sweep
up the dirt in front of their homes
for spring.
- announced the Phil Din and
Tbe Dozers Concert wiU be held at .
8 p.m. April 22.
- stated on June 3, a village·
wide yard sale wiU be beld.
The 'balances for this month's
requirements ~··
treasurer's ·report ·included: ·cash
Han added that be bas respond- journal, $22,872.05; general fund
ed to the Ohio Environmental Pro- total, $901.51; general fund, •
tection Agency letter demanding $681.75: civic center. $755.65;
the village bave an emergency con- police fund, $-940.89; bigb school
tingency plan.
property, $405; law enforcement
In other business, no court fund, $187 .33; street fund,
developments bavc .occurred with $285.62; state highway fund,
the David Wilkes property, Mayor $2,854.55; water fund, $1,368.23;
JoAnn Eads said. Wilkes and the water debt fund, $850; sewer fund, '
village have disputed a drainage $2,506 .36; sewer debt fund,
ditch on the edge of his property $7,065. 18; utilities deposit fund,
for more than a year.
$7, 123.26; replacement fund,
In other action, council:
$17,600.89:

TOTAL BEFORE
DISCOUNTS

1994· RANGER 4X2

.. -4

Rutland's water
,problems may be solve~

·7 Passenger

14,816

- Approved the job description
of the electronic management
information systems/tccbnolog"y
coordinator;
-Granted a right-of-way to the

H~rt ~ays

Stock 195035

1995 WINDSTAR GL

Stock #95369

.in Columbus on March 17 and 18;
- OK'd use of the high school
baseball field by tbe Meigs American Legion Baseball Committee for
tbe summer baseball program provided it is compatible with the local
pony league;

'

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Additional $750.00 Rebate to

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 15, 1995 .

Group told 'volunteers
make the difference'

I]

Highs In 70s.

a1

the cross

Boy's allergy is a shame
DR.GOTT

ordained the faith's 15th president
on Sunday.
The Church of Jes~ts Christ of
Latter-day Saints operates under a
system of apostolic succession in
which the senior apostle becomes
president after his predecessor dies.
Howard ·W. Hunter, 87, died
March 3 of prostate cancer, having
served just nine months, the shan-

low tonicbtln the 40s, cl.. r.
Tbunday, sunny.

•

Mormon ch~rch president Gordon B. Hinckley promises continui~y .

By ~RN ANDERSON
Assoctated Press Writer
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) .Gordon B. Hmclcley; the most vagorous man to become_ prestdent of
the Mormon Church an more _than
20 years, satd toda.Y that he dtd n~t
expect any dramauc changes m btS
leadership of the mmistry.
"We are dedtcated ... to teach-

Pick 3:.
438
Pick 4:
2516
Buckeye 5:
6-8-25-31·35

House
group OKs

tax cut

.

FATAL FIRE- A fire killed a Middleport womaD&lt;In he~
North Front Street home Tuesday night, according to reports .. The
cause .of the ftre h unknown, but the names gutted this two-story
wood structure last nlgbt. Tbe state tire marshal and other authorIties are Investigating this blaze. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
biggest tax cut legislation in more
than a decade is moving swiftly
toward the House noor after Ways
and Means Committee Democrats
abruptly gave up offering amend- ·
mcnts to a bill they said would
bankrupt the nation.
The Republican tax plan,
including a $500-a-child L1x credit
and a capital gains taX reduction.
was approved by the . commiuce by ,·
a party-line 21-14 vote Tuesday. /
"IJ•c vote carne artcr Democrats,
beaten on one amendment to limi't
the tax cuts to fi.ve years, withdrew
all further efforts to change what
· tbey said wa s an intrinsically
defective bill.
'

Radatz was found on her side;· to reports.
Middlcpon and Pomeroy voluncrumpled up behind the farst floor
television, according to the sheriff. teer fire deparunenL~ responded to
Her body was taken to Columbus the scene. Middleport fue officials
could not be reached for coounent
for an autopsy.
The two-story wood· structure Wednesday morning despite
was gutted on the inside, according numerous calls.

Debate, which bad been expected to go on for three days ant.!
nights, ended after six bours.
Committee Chairman Bill
Archer. R-Texas. welcomed the
quick vote as yet another triumph
for the House GOP's "Contract
With America."
But the Democratic re sistance
signaled tlie tough road ahead for
and disability insurance to about Ute bill, which has engendered little
enthusiasm in the Senate and is
35,000 people.
MCS is a third pany administra- likely to face ' a presidential veto if
tor for businesses' insurance poll- it passes Congress in its present
cies, the Portland resident said. The form .
The bill goes to the Rules Comfirm fine tunes benefit pliins for
mittee,
which will decide if a
companies that usually have more .
Democratic
plan will also he conthan 50 employees.
Tbe firm's largest client has sidered on the House floor. Boih
1,200 employees, Johnson said. President Clinton and House
Other clients include' hospitals, Minority Leader Dick Gcphard~ D·
zoos, schools, restaurants and law Mo., have offered more modest
.proposals.
·
Continued on pae 3 ·

Chamber honors founding member
least a year behind where we are
now."
Baker traveled to chambers in
Jackson, Monroe and Athens connties during the formative stages of
the group. He also lent his computer expertise to tl)e chamber.
In other business, vice president
Shirley Johnson talked about her
Ravenswood. W.Va., company -:Medical ClaimS Service Inc.
Based in Boston, Mass., MCS
provides medical, dental, vision

I

·-

1-

�Commentar
The .Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

..

•

Page-2-The Dally SenUneJ

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 15, 1995

Thu~y, March

1

.Angry words

W

a

a

-

sus.

~

.,...

Letters to the editor

Vote by conscience, not party
. line

Time to clean up village

.I

foreign policy. If a major foreign
crisis should develop over lhe next
two years, it would highlight his
· status as.Jiis party's leading international expert.
Whereas Dole bas a tendency to
be emotional about foreign policy
- favoring unilateral lifting of the
Bosnia arms embargo, for instance
- Lugar is cool, superbly
acquainted wi!h, and widely experienced on big issues.
· He was the author, with Sen .
Sam Nunn, D-Ga., of the plan for
dismantling Russia's nuclear arsenal. And in the 1980s, he bucked
his party in pushing through trade
sanctions against South Africa and
withdrawal of U.S. support for .
Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
Against Gramm, Lugar argues
that lhe Texan's promise to balance
the federal budget in four years will
"wreck the eoonomy" by deflating
too fast. Lugar favors a seven-year
process.
What be lacks, of course, ar~
charisma and a compelling domes"
lie message. Lugar claims he has
ideas about how to increase sav·
ings, investment and growth in the .
economy·.- whicb be'.ll unveil in
speeches at economic forums.
But for now his presidential
dream looks 10 be just that.
(Morton Kondracke Is executive editor of Roll Call, tbe newspaper of Capitol HiD.)

·Th·ird-Wave Newt comes unglued

•·

ACS campaign set .for June

..

'

'

. .
•

~v ~

Across the nation

IMansfield 162"

remarked.

Lugar's long-shot presidential .bid

cans who have· strolled !he public
stage over the past half century.
When be raniS about socialists
and unnamed White House staffers
who have allegedly taken drugs, he
does bring to mind a mad Joseph
McCarthy waving his ominous
lists . When be goes on about the
press as the "enemy," be does
conjure up vivid memories of a
paranoid Richard Nixon, who saw
snipers in school towers behind
every pencil and microphone.
When he presents [able as troih, he
does invoke images of a benign but
misguided Ronald Reagan, who
once decried faclS as stupid things.
. I've beard all the other explanatwos: Newt is intense . Newt is
impulsive. Newt is a misunder,
stood revolutionary.
·
1 nt
N
uj,sedt
say ewt has become
u .
ssuming , of course, that be
w ever glued to begin with.
Joseph Spear 1s a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact A r1 o
me ca nllne by calling 1·
800-827-6364, eXL 8317.)

By The Associated Press
Some rain showers were expect·
wbile the record low-was 4 in 1993. :damage.
A cold frollt will move through
A
blast
of
cool
Canadian
:iir
was
ed
in northern New England today.,
Sunset tonight will be at 6:38 p.m.
Ohio on Thursday but won't have · and sunrise Thwsday 316:42 a.m.
expected to cause rains and chilly while dry weather was expected tO
much of a cooling effect. forecasttemperatures in the 40s and 50s in stretch from the Soulhwes~ aero$$
ers said.
the Dakotas and Great Lakes the central Plains into the MicJ:Scat!cred showers were falling region.
The exception will be along
Atlanlic states.
Coastline fqg and drizzle from
Ibis morning in the Pacific NorthLak:e Erie's northeast Ohio shore,
Temperatures were forecast in
west and Northern California, Cape Cod to New .York was the 60s and 70s in New England.
where highs wilt remain in the SOs•
while lingering ~eavy rains contin- expected to bum off early in the the 60s in the Mid-Atlantic, the 50s
the National Wealber Service said.
ued in the Gulf Coast region.
day today.
Elsewhere, temperatures will be
and 60s in th e Midwest, the 60}
A second day of thunderstorms and 70s in the West, the 60s and
Breezy
winds
and
bigber
elevamostly in !he 60s.
Not much change is expected . lion snow also were moving across was expec1ed in the Gulf Coast 70s in !be South, and 70s and 8~
the Pacific Northwest Ibis morning, ·region, with gusty rainstorms and in lhe SoutheasL
into the weekend, with bighs in the
::
and were expected to move over bail possible from Arkansas to the
low to mid~. Showers are possiTbe nation's hot spot Tuesday
!be Roclties and Idaho by Ibis after- Aorida Panhandle.
ble Saturday and.Sunday.
was 'f1lermal, Calif., where it wll);
On Tuesday. !he storms dumped · 89 degrees. The. cold spot was Dig
noon. A sbing of storms·has proved
The record-bigb tempemture for
disasirous for much of California, 5.5 inches of rain in Biloxi, Miss. Piney. Wyo .. where it was 4 below
Ibis date at the Columbus weather
causinR widespread flooding and A tornado was spoiled in zero.
station was 79 deRrees in 1990

for daytime COiiditions and

MICH.

s.;;,.gly.opposed.
.
•'For all 1 preach family values.
I've made them subservient to
national elections," Quayle bas

He has made clear during recent
meetings that be regards a presidential run as a matter of timing
only noting that be won't be
Dole:s age for another five more
prest'denb'al eIecu· ons. An earIy test
of his political strength might be
whether Quayle has any coaUails
with the cul!ural conservatives for
whom he bas become a champion.
.Political sage Charles Cook doesn't
believe a Quayle endocsement rates .
aniong the top 15 that a presidential
candidate sbould covet.
After Quayle withdrew from the
race Christian Coalition leader
Ralpb Reed described the situation
as "the political equivalent of a
·ump ball at the buzzer. Whoever
Jumps the highest and reaches the
farthest for the pro-family vote
likely will be standing behind the
podium (at the Republican National
Convention) in San Diego, accepting !he presidential nomination of
·
the Republican Party."
Since foreign policy and farm
subsidies have been Lugar's focal
point in the Sen_ate, il' s Ji!'ely Reed
will no! be playmg ball With Lugar.
DOG DAYS - · Former Kallsas
Rep . Dan Glickm11n' s dog was
almost sworn in at the Agriculture
Department before his master.
Glickman's nomination to be
ll!e next agriculture secretary had
been on bold for ·monlbs because
the FBI spent an unusually long
lime sniffing into his background.
But Glickman's beagle, Reuben,
was on track to become an honorary member of USDA's "Beagle ·
Brigade" at a ceremony on
Wednesday.
The brigade detects prohibited
fruilS, planlS and mealS - which
can carry foreign pests and diseases
- at U.S. international airports.
But Reuben's nomination ran into
some problems ~filS own last week
when the senior Glickman was
apparently found to be cleaner !han
a hound's tooth. ·
·· Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Mild weather will continue into the weekend

lli

Accu-W~ forecast

&lt;?~~!~a~.~o~..~l.~.~.~e~~~·· ~~~~~~~

of trying to contact foriner Vice "formal endorsement." "Maybe tnstder persona. Quayle also told~
President Dan Quayle, Sen. ~e senator _should tr:y to call tl!e source that ~en . Pbtl Gramm. R.
Richard Lugar, R-Ind .. thinks be vtce presrdent," a Quayle ~ex~s. the btgb-.octane conserv~finally got the message be was
uv~m ~~ m'i;'i·~ ~~~Iis~v;re$s25
seeking: Quayle endorsed his can- By Jack Anderson
m~ ~ng IS a I l y
didacy last week for the 1996
million w_ar chest .
..
Republican presidemial nominaand
Q Nn twtthstab~dmff ~e:~•l!iys:
ROBERT L. WINGETT
tion.
. uay e vte.ws IDISe ..
was
Publisher
" I've always supported Dick
Michael Binstein !?g force m !he! I?arty, and .
I,.ugar," QIJllyie told tile News-Dis~eryb bemtnguedblwt~ thelhefa(GOctlbPa)tttol
b'
C't
I
d
"I
'an
••'d
mtg
t dJl05SI . edidal
•Or before !he
.
f
I
b
M
pa c o
IC tgan 1 y, n .
spo..eswom - .
beb'
10
think he'll do better than people
Until recently, Quayle privately ~
a ~:b' nd ~ irs .. said
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. MARGARET LEHEW ·
1
think.
He'll
beat
the
so-called
appeared
to
be
favoring
Lugar's
ocrats
ge_
th bon\
Qe • 1 has
General Ma1111ger
Controller
1
Washington expectations."
main rival, Senate Majority Leader one source ~ , w
uay_e
Lug ar told us that Quayle's Robert Dole, R-Kan.
consulted. Dole h!l~ an msurendorsement wasn't on his shortQuayle told intimates admires mountable lead ~d ll s bts year.
LETI'ERS Of OPINION are weloomo. They should be los• tban 300.
term
list
of
expectations:
"I've
left
Dole,
values his experience and As. opposed'? hav!~g a nasty fight,
.word• long. Alllellenl are subject to edking and must be signed with name,
messages
for
him
on
his
voice
places
a
premium on lceeping peace lets gel on wtlb It
address snd telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters
recorder at home. Just this morning in the GOP. He t.alked about set·
When he anno.unce~ he w~uld
tbould. be in good taste, addJessing iuuet, not penooalities.
these news reports came across my cling the nomination with lillie ~ot seek !he. prestdenttal nommadesk .... In truthfulness I have not bloodshed and before the rust pri· ~on, Qua~lrtmdi~ lh::!f d~]"
-· really baJ a definitive conversation mary.
.
·
ston was 10 .ue.n . Y
~ • •
about this (with Quayle) in the last
According to sources, Quayle ue_s and the gnnd of fund nusm~.
three weeks."
marvels at the ability of former Privatel-y, &lt;;!uayle revealed thai bjs
As of Friday, friction was de vel- Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander wtf~, Manly~ -who ha~ _been
oping b etween the two Hoosiers · to position himself as an ''out- depleted as bemg more pohbcally
•
By DAVID BRISCOE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The speaker of the House calls a senator a liar. A
Yearl, You. Ttl~ Wa rJ'tJ$T FollND SD, NO MORe iF Tllai L&lt;l:zV MOM
veteran senator accuses the majority leader of "sleazy. tawdry" tactics. A
HeY,
KiD!
ONe WiT~ NO DaD Otlf THaT You'r?~ MR. Nice GUY! OF YoURS C~lll FiND .
congressman is silenced for badmouthing the president.
The level of personal attacl!: and strong language have escalated in
aNp a reel'faGe R'e.Sf'oNSIBL.e. FoR' 'ti~'Re KiCKiNG J"oB TRaltutlG &lt;lND
Washington,' in state legislatures and over the cbatter-mled national airTil~ WFiCiT,:&lt;IriD YooR GJ?eePV Lill'!.e Ct!iLD CaR~ {!leY,
MOTtfe.R.
waves since the November elections.
We'Re STeaMeD! Ml" Off Wei.Fa!?e.! NOT
f'RDSL~M),
The tough talk comes from both sides, as the shift of power midstream
in President Clinton's term ignites verbal ftres across the land. The defiance of traditional civility in con.ional debate is echoed in calls to
more than 1,000 radio talk shows anTin confrontations on scores of public participation TVshows.
.
·
·
The swell of angry words oulSide Washington often is traced to the
success of conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh, one of Clinton's
loudest critic.
Limbaugh bas a nationally syndicated TV show and banters with
callers on a daily radio program broadcast on more than 650 stations. His
enemies are labeled ''environmental wackos,'' ''feminazis,'' ' 'commie
MaY~ Stla CaN
0TtleRWi$e, iT'$ OH, ~$ Tf!aT ~ M3V1Be. Voli'LL GeT HeR~'s YouR
Jibs."
.
·
~T JoB FOR
THe O~PIIattaGe You MaP? GOOD!
VOIJR PUFF assau~T RiFLa.
Some Republicans credit Limbaugh for part of their victories in
MiNiMUM
W~
FOR
'l'ou,
PO SDMI!T~I~G
.
November, during which voters gave the GOP control of Congress and 33
(;F
THaRe.
STiLl.
iS
FoR YouRSelf. FoR
state go«emorsbips.
·
.
MiNIM liM WaGe).
· Democratic strategist Paul Begala, ·in a television interview, accused
a cHaNGe!
Limbaugh of using ridicule and vilification "to demonize and delegitimize bis political opponents.' '
·
Nastier talk !han Limbaugh's gotl. Paul Emerson of San Francisco's
·radio station KSFO ftred last month. Emerson called homosexuals "sick''
and "pathetic" and espoused the unproven claim that sneezing spreads
AIDS. Earlier, another station booted bim for referring to "stinking
Japanese" on the air.
.
Some of the most violent confrontations are on television, wbere lhe
"U" • to~ea
.....__ _ _ _ ___. aJ Sre.i~
MTI&lt;t.
&gt;jewS
· issues arc more often sexual !han political. A flock of new TV talk shows,
and some that have been around for years, feature a good dose of yelling,
bleeped-out profanity and sometimes open combat among guests and srudio audiences. ·
While Capitol Hill has not quite reached Ibis level of dialogue, polite
conversation and courtesy have faded, particularly in the debate over the
House GOP's "Contract With America."
It reached a crescendo when Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, as pan
" People say that they can see
in Iowa." says Daniels. As chair.·
11 Lugar nas a cnance. it lies
of bis unsuccessful strategy to cajole a House-passed balanced budget
me in the Wbiie House," muses\ heavily in !he downfall of front- man of the Senate Agriculture
amendment through the Senate, at one poinl temporarily postponed a
Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind .. "but !hey running Sens. Bob Dole (Kan.) and Committee, Lqgar plans 10 cut farm
promised vote.
· ca~~'t see bow I gel there."
Phil Gramm (Texas). This could . subsidies by 30 percent over five
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va .. a stickler on Senate protocol, accused
That's
exactly
Lugar's
p~dica­
. yei!CS - a position !hat Des Moines
Dole of ''a sleazy. tawdry effort .•.
ment as a presidential hopeful, but Morton Kondracke Register political editor David
Dole retorted by suggesting Byrd's outburst violated Senate rules
unlike other potential GOP candiYejlsen says will sit "not well"
against "conduct or motive unworthy or unbecoming to another senator."
dates who found the getting there happen.
with a majority of Iowa farmers.
· House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., entered the fray by labeling
As longtime Lugar adviser
too daunting -Jack Kemp, Dick
But Lugar says polls show that
Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein a li.ar for telling voters she favored a
Cheney, Dan Quayle - Lugar has . Mitch Daniels says, ~'People rele- 40 percent of Iowa farmers want
blj]anced budget and then voting against it. ,
decided that the only way to get gate Lugar and Lamar Alexander to the government out of agriculture
Gingrich is credited with increasing the octane of congressional debate
the bench, but the two guys on the altogether and another 30 percent
what be wants is to go for it
in bis feverish efforlS to meet a self-imposed 100-day deadline for voting
court
are both in foul trouble and favor a phase-down. Yepsen adds
Tlie odds of Lugar's getting the
on !he Republican "contract" agenda.
·
accident-prone.
•'
Republican nomination are long;
that only 100,000 of Iowa's 2.5
But he has denied !he sharpest remark attributed to him - his moth- · indeed, he jokes that polls now
Dole lacks a mess·age and bas million people live on farms so
er's assertion in a CBS-TV interview ·in January that he qj]led ftrstlady
show him "in a horse race for third exploded in the past, while Gramm "there's a larger audience to
HiUary Rodham Clinton "a bitch."
place." But at least Lugar is not may strike voters as being too · appeal to." ·
going to finish out the 1996 presi- "mean" to be electable. By conGramm. says Yepsen. is simply
dential cycle the way AI Gore, trast, Daniels says, Lugar is "a telling Iowans that "everyone must
Richard Gepbardt and other top heartland conserVative who doesn't give some" without getting specifDemocrats finished 1992 - out of scare people."
ic, while Dole is saying "ag
the picture because they never ran. -- · Daniels says !hat -Lugar's best already ga~e. ".
Lugar, like many Eagle Scouts path to the nomination is to •'do
Another wrinkle in Iowa !hat
and Rhodes Scholars, grew up well early, become the main alter- Lugar could exploit, says Yepsen,
.
believing be was capable of being native to !be front-runner, and ride is the "e!hanol-melbanol war" president
and pursued a career the tiger from there." Lugar says i.e., !he battle over whether Midthat why we vote for and elect the
Dear Editor,
iJevoted
to
achieving the top rank be thinks a GOP presidential race west corn or Texas natural gas
A few days ago a vote was taken man who wiD serve our best interdoesn't require the $25 million should l)e !he nation's prilile cl~­
on an amendment to balance the ests, vote his beliefs and bis con- of American politics.
Despite repeated demonstrations Gramm says it does, and that he'll fuel additive 10 gasoline. Dole and
science insu;ad of party lines?
federal budget. .
be able to amass at least $10 mil- Lugar are elhanol advocates.
Maybe that is why. we have so of skill, though, he's been repeat- lion.
One person voled 'no' and
thwarted because someone
Despite his stance on subsidies,
killed !he amendment. Now !hey much bad legislation passed on . edly
Lugar seems fully prepared to Lugar already has been endorsed
else
got
picked
for
vice
presiare talking about punishing the account of party line votes.
take on Dole and Gramm on !be
·
Virgil Walker dent in 1974, 1980, alld 1988, for issues - Dole on farm and fpreign for president by the Indiana Farm
man for his vote.
Now tell me if I am wrong, isn't
Racine Senate Republican Leader in 1984, policy, and Gramm on budget-cut- Bureau, and Lugar says be plans to
and for ranldng member of the Sen.mobilize Hoosiers to campaign for
ate Foreign Relations Commi!lee in ting strategy .
. him in Iowa and New Hampshire.
" If !he ftrs! duty of a candidate
1986.
.
Besides farm policy, Lugar can
This year, he's going to make is 10 be interestin~. then Lugar on successfully contrast himself with
Dear Editor,
Properties such as this exist one inore shot for !he lop.
farm policy will be very interesting Dole, Gramm ·and Alexander on
Meigs County docs have ilS own throughout the county, which caus· landfill . If you don't believe me, es me to write and pose a few quesventure to Beech Street in Middle- tions .. Why do other residents pay
port . There you will find a home property taxes, when it appears that
that is literally falling to pieces.
there is no attempt to hold all prop- .
No one has lived in Ibis 'home' erty owners accountable for taxes
for many years . The roof of the due? It seems to me that those of
I really don't like to be !he fust ci" The notion of national service .their papers don't start getting
porch rests prone upon the concrete you that pay taxes arc being cheat- to raise an indelicate subject, but is ''coerced voluntarism.''
things right.
somebody has to dG it, so here_
slab of a floor. Most windows are ed.
We know that Newt doesn't ·
Apparently, .Newt has been
missing. Part of the roof has taken
. seem to care that his facts are often reading too much tendentious literSuch properties bring down the goes.
I think it's time we considered
. refuge inside on second floor. If value of all property in !he viUages.
alure from right-wing think-tanks
!he
possibility that House Speaker
. Ibis property doesn't qualify as a Why isn't this a major issue for
Joseph
Spear
.
which study such matters and con· dump, I don't know what does.
your elected officials? Growing up Newt Gingrich has become a wee
· cl~de. _lbrough their unimpeachably
Last· summer. I tri ed 1o see in Middleport I believed that bit unglued.
not factual. He spoke about a tO- nbJecUve research, !bat journalists
We know by now. of course, year-old srudent in St. Louis who are the ne&lt;tlbing to communists.
about correcting the situation. At thougli residents had a modest
the Meigs County Courthouse, income, they were a hard-working, that Newt is afflicted with logor- was suspended for asking God's.
The fact is, most mainstream
there seemed .to be some confusion clean group of people. Today I am rhea ~ unrestrained and some- .blessings on bis cafeteria meals. It reporters pay far less auenlion to
about who aqually owned the not so sure. These 'homes' arc an .times wacky talk&lt;~tiveness . Put was not true. He to!d how the FDA politicians' politics !han they do to
, property. They were sure that the cmbarrassme'nt and health hazard, another way, he is a chronic motor refused to approve an innovative the length of !heir wooden noses.
bean pump. It was not troe. He rat· The fact is, most newspapers
: taxes were past due. However, I yet apathy prevails.
mouth.
Since
Newt
took
control
of
!he
tied on and on about a "federal endone Republican presidential
convinced lhe mayor of Middleport
Wake up, clean up and return
to view the property and he did. Middleport to !he nice river com- country. we have been treated to shelter" in Denver that was oulper- candidates. The fact is, op-ed pages
some fairly bizarre commentary on formed by a private facility down these days are packed with conserSeveral excuses were given as to munity thai it used 10 be.
why such a condition could remain
C. Gregory Busb such compelling issues as the !he street. It was not troe.
valive pundits.
in the village.
So let us accept that Newt 4~ a
lndeed, I often wonder wbere all
V311dalia female's tendency to contract
· infections while siuing in wet prat.tler, a careless accuser, an !m- the socialists.have gooe. Occasionditches and the male's yearning to sponsible teller of l.jlles. That still ·ally, some daffy academic writes a
bunt giraffes. We have heard it does not explain why he made the utopian book, but most of them
: Dear Editor,
·
The annual dooHo-door solicita- argued that poor follts could miti- preposterous charge the other day have been in biding since about
The Meigs Counl.y Unit of the lion by volunteers is the only per- gate their miseries with laptop that newsrooms across America arc . 984
1 . I recently saw a guy in a red
American Cancer Society has des- sonal contac.t made to Meigs Coun- computers. ,We've been treated to riddled with "socialists."
plaid
shirt handing out literature on
ignated the month of June for the lians by !he ACS.
considerable technobabble about
He really said this. fte told a the street and aske4 if he was a
annual door-to-door countywide
. We want to express our thanks some sort of Third Wave that. is group of corporate executives !hal
socialist bill it turned out be was a
· drive to raise funds.
to 160 volunteers who canvassed · washing over us.
editorial· boards are shot through Republican poUtician trying to look
.
·
FuQdS are used to provide ser- · the county last year and we urge
We know, also, that Newt bas a wilb "socialists" who are the
•
: vices to Meigs County cancer the cooperation of county residents tendency to shoot from the hir,. Bill "mortal enemy" of the Republican like a worldng man.
There is a poSsibility, of course
· patienlS as· well as research needed for our 1995 drive.
and HiD arc "McGovemicks. ' The revolution and that they, the busi- !hat NewUs not becoming· unglued
to combat this dreaded disease.
Jim Thomas, president Food and Drug Administration is nessmen,..."ougbt to go 10 the pub- but has been injected by some mad
The ACS does not solicit donaMeigs County ACS
·.'the leading job killer in Ameri- lishers and tell thellj" they object scientist with DNA material from a
lions by mail or telephone callS.
' and will pull their advertising if g_a8£1e of mCIUj or myopic Republi-

•

WedneSday, March 15, 1995

•

I•

IND.

•lcolumbuslss•

I,·

.

Local briefs

W. VA.

(f
Sho...,. T-siOtmS flllin
Via Auoc/at«J Preu Gnlphic$N«

S:.my Pl.

Meigs
EMS
logsMIDDLEPORT
7 calls
.
.

Phone sprayed with chemical

=

Cloud):

C1885 Accu-w..ther, Inc. ·

·

Louisiana.

--Area Deaths-susie M. Fischer

Tbe handpiece of a pay telephone near the Pomeroy SuperAmerica store was apparently sprayed Wednesday evening with a Macelike chemical, according to a report from tile Pomeroy Police
I&gt;epartment.
.
Officers cleaned the telephone and cbecked other phones in the
viUage, a police department spokeswoman said.

Articles of incorporation filed
Articles of incorporation for Hot Tuna Ltd, Inc. have been filed
in the Colwnbus office of Seaetary of State Bob Taft by J orma and
Vaness Kaulconen of Kingsbury Road. Pomeroy.

.Chamber.•

Susie M. Fischer, 99, Racine, died Wednesday, March 15, 1995 in Vet~contlnued from page 1
erans Memorial Hospital.
A retired employee of GTE Telephone Co .. she was born Oct. 5, 1895 f111IlS.
lions to the office include: Ken
in Syracuse; daughter of the late Seymour and Ellen Jones Blake. Sbe was
Of the 50 employees at the Young of Bill's Appliance, a
a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church.
. . :
. Ravenswood office, seven are from microwave; Patty Pickens, a refrig~
· Surviving are three daughters, Hilda Frecker of Pamesvrlle, Glona Meigs County; The Ravenswood erator;
Hora~e Karr, an intercom;
Michael of Syracuse, and Mary Porter of Racine; II grandchildren and 14 office had a $650,000 payroll in
and Chuck Kitchen, window cleangreat-grandchildren; a sister, Elizabeth Hogue of North Olmstead; and a 1994.
ing.
brother. Lawrence Blake of Parma.
"Tbe labor pool is great here.
- continues to recruit new
She was preceded in dea!h by a husband, John Fischer, and two sons, People really want to wotk," Johnmembers,
said Jim Birchfield of the
Frank and Thwman Fischer.
son said.
chamber.
The chamber bas about
Arrangements are under the direction of Ewing Funeral Home,
In other action; the chamber 157 members and is shooting for
Pomeroy.
welcomed a new company to the 200 members. The recruitment procoimty - G&amp;L Contracting. Gary .c~Ss is part of the annual celebraBates, the local GTE manager for tion for chambers.
eight years, will operate this tele- received community profiles
. phone and elecirical maintenance from Julia Houdasbelt-Thornton.
Graveside .services will be 3:30p.m. Thursday, March 16, I995 at firm out of his Flatwoods Road Thornton is the county's econmpic
Letart Falls Cemetery for Donald Cole "Pete" Guinther, 89, Pomeroy. home.
development director. These prowbo 'died Saturday, March 11, 1995 in Scenic HiUs Care Center.
"The big companies like GTE files can be given to business
The Rev. David Hogg will officiate. Arrangements are by lb~ M~oy­
have moved away from the person- prospects . .
al touch. That's what we hope to
Moore Funeral Holne, Vinton.
- announced it will hold its
/
bring hack," Bates said. His com- annual dinner dance on April 21 at
pany will perform the same mainte- . Royal Oak Resort.
nance as GTE at one-third !he cost,
- learned !he Pomeroy Nursing
he added.
and
Rehabilitation Center will douMark Wayne "ll's" Holley, 32, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died SunBates said be can also service ble its therapy department when the
day, March I2, 1995, at·Pleasant Valley Hospilal in Point Pleasant.
and split e,.;isting lines into larger therapy wing is completed in a few
A 1980 graduate of Point Pleasant High Schoo~ he was an employee
telephone systems. He and his months.
of the Mason County School District maintenance department and a memwife, Unda, share 43 years experi- will auel)d the second Meigs
ber of the Addison Freewill Baptist Church . .
ence in Ibis field.
County
Commissioners meeting at
Born May 1, 1962 in Point Pleasant, be was the son of Cleo V. Holley
Tbe chamber also:
3
p.m.
Friday
to discuss tourism
of Point Pleasant, and the late Wanda Evelyn Jolley Holley•.
- will- hold an open bouse for funding. Tbe commissioners may
In addition to his father, be is survived by bis wife, Nobie Groff Holthe new chamber offices at the for- stop funding !he county's tourism
ley; two daughters, Carley Ann Holley of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., and
mer GTE office on West Main
Shealyn Ember Holley of Heaters, W.Va.; one stepson, Justin Groff of Stree~ from 1-6 p.m. Friclay. Dona- department, said Linda Williams.'
Heaters; one sister, Anita Joy Kimble. of Scott Depot, W.Va.; and on,e
brother, Mike Holley of Point PleaSi!nt.
Friends may ca116 to 9 tonight at Crow-flussell Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, where the service will be held II a.m. Thursday wj!h Brother
Isaiah Crump officiating. Burial will be in the Mount Olive Cemetery in
Ashton.
•
.
· In lieu of flowers;memorial contributions may be be made to the Carley Ann Holley Trust Fund, c/o Michael Holley, Rt. 2, Box #310, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., 25550.
.

Donald Guinther

Mark Holley

Roger I. Riebel

.

Terri Rodatz
Terri Radatz, 36, Middleport, died .Tuesday, March 14, 1995, at her
home. Arrangements will be announced later by Ewing Funeral Hpme,
Pomeroy.

· (USPS 213·%0)

Publi shed !'!very ~ ft e moon , Monday thro ugh
Friduy, Ill Court S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Vulley Publishin g Company/ Multimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohi o' 45769, Ph. 992-2 1:i6.

Second class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

~

G,."UP to· /d

3·12 pm Hol1:er Clinic Shelby
·
· "
. C '
.
Ruuer, Holzer Medtcal enter; .
8:02 p.m., Powell Suee.t. Chf:
ford Manley. Pleasant Valley Hos.
pital;

10:5 9 p.m .. volunteer fire
• •• . department and squad to Terri
Rodall. residence, N. Front Street,
Continued from page 1
terri Radatz , dead on arrival,
Hockman - after calling for · Pomeroy VFD assisted (sec related
support from those attending in story) .
making the necessary changes to
REEDSVILLE
bring development to Middleport,
4:23 p.m., VFD, stale Ro~
both of a social and economic 681, brush ftrC.
narure - presented the nine goals
SYRACUSE
defined by the strategic planning
4:59p.m., VFD and sq uad, state
team.
Route 124, brush fire.
·
they include citizen involve'
ment 'in developing ·pride in the
Meigs
community; determining the types
of industry which ate desirable for
announcements
growth development; coming up
with sites for development, such as Evangelist to speak
the Hobson area which was recentEvangelist Dave C~nter will
ly ruled out for an industry because speak Friday, 7 p.m. at l'ailb Full
of inadequate highway systems.
Gospel Church at Long Bouom.
Providing ways for growth for Pastor Steve Reed invites !he pubthe small businesses and service lic.
industries; addressing !he quality of
life issues including things like VFWtumeet
cleaning up blight, crime, educa- .
The Tuppers Plains VFW 9053
· lion, recreation and basic needs; wiil host a dinner for~ adn
developing a doWntown business their lidies, and auxiliary members
strategy to give support to l&lt;!cal at 6:30p.m. Thursday.
business expansiOn; and establish&lt;::;..
ing a park at the marina area wi_lb Racine Grange to meet
emphasis on the needs of semor cuRacine Grange 2606 will meet
izens, and a community center.
Thursday at 7 p.m. Contest judging
Hockman stressed that l)le need wiD take place. ·
is 10 get "loiS of people doing small
jobs". He invi!cd those attending to .Benent hymn sing planned
The Kearns Family will perform
decide on a goal or goals in which
!hey have a particular interest, and at a benefit hymn sing Saturday. at
then volunteer to work in that area. the Clifton Tabernacle Church.
During lhe discussion on what is Services begin at 7 p.m.
wrong with the village, residents
were encouraged by H()(;kman and
Robinson to lake !heir complaints
and problems to Middleport Village Council. The building code, a
housing ordinance. and Iiller prevention, were among the topics discussed.
.
"You need to tell village officials what you expect, but also to
let them know how you are willing
to help". said Councilman Robinson.
Additional town meetings for
input from Middleport citizens are
being planned, according to the
organizers.
I V

·

MTD
LAWN
MOWERS

. 20" &amp; 22"
3Y2. 4 hp

\

Roger Ira Riebel, 56, of Long Bottom, died Monday; March 13, 1995,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
. :
Born 'Jan 26 1939 in Chester, son ofthe late Elber and Elizabeth
White Riebei b~ was a'member of the Professional· BowlerS' Association.
He was a m~mber of lhe Industrial League, the Tuesday Night Baseball
League, and a former manager of the Wyall Bowling Lanes in Belpre.
He is survived by his wife, Hazilee Cobb Riebel ; a son and daughterin-law, Roger and Robin Riebel of Long Bottom; a daughter, Renee ·
Riebel of Belpre; two daughters and sons-in-law, Belh and Ket~ Lynch
of Middlepo~ and Rhonda and Dave Carnahan of Tuppers Plams; an~
eight grandchtldrcn.
·
·
. .
.
He was preceded in death by a brother Leo Wilham Riebel. .
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Wbite Funeral
Home in Coolville, with Tom Buck officiating. Burial will follow in the ·
Chester Cemetery.
·
,
·
Friends may call between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
home.
·

The Daily Sentinel

Umts of th~ Metg~ County
Emergency Medical Serv•ce logged
seven calls for assistance Tuesday
including two transfer calls. Units
. luded·
respooding me
.

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Motors
•Mulching Mower
•Self Propelled

PICKENS
HARDWARE

· AUDITOR SWORN IN - Meigs County Auditor Nancy
Parker C•mpbell was sworn In Monday beginning a new four·
term as county auditor. Here, Judge Fred w. Crow m perfonns
the ceremony. According to Campbell, county auditors start their
tenus on March 13 compared to other omcebolders whose term~
usuaUy start in January.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions None.
Wednesday discharges - Betty
Kiser, Racine.
HOLZER MEDICAL CJ::NTER

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583'

It's The·Clear Winner.
You can see right through a gimmick.
When you want coupons ur New York Prime,
' you go to a grocery store, not a bank.

.March 14 dlsfharges - Sarah
Woodyard , Courtney Mooney,
Savanna Capehart, Benjam!n Morris, Mrs. Thomas Ferguson and
daughter, Ruth Hansgen, Louise
Parsons, Mrs. Michael Simpson
and daughter and Nicholas
Starcher.

Mtmbtr: Th e Auociau:d Press. and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.

'That's why our new CD special is clear
and uncomplicated. You can choose a '13-month
certificate if you don't want to tie up your money. Or
you can choose a 36-month certificate if you think the
time is right to lock in your rate. Either way, you'll
earn a great annual percentage yield of 7%.

'

POSTMASTER: Se nd addn·11s corrections to
The Daily Seminel, Ill Court St. Pomcro)'.
Oh io 45769.

With a big rate, low $500 minimum and your choice of
terms, a Peoples Bank CD is clearly a better choice.

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Imide Mti«S Couney
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26 Week..c ............................... ..... ,....... S47.06
Sl 'o\(ockl .......................: ........,,...... ........192.56
Rltn Oubkk Meigs County

\nn

13 Weck.t ,........... ..... .-............................... $25.61
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MtnHf1um dtpollt ul S!tOO lo O(!tn. Autoff.•t tc.lly rtntwahlt
ln\trnt ~tt and APY 1hown ur .. o('J/1 6195 .nd1ubje.::t to ® n1 1.
l'tn~h ~ lor urlyWi lhdt'lw&amp;l .

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�Sports

Wednesday, March 15, 1995
Pa e-4

In the NAIA Nationals,
From Staff &amp; AP Reports

TULSA, Okla. -The University of Rio Grande men •s basketball
team -came up short in its bid to
make the second round or play in
the NAlA Division I National
Tournament Tuesday when it lost
to II th-ranked Pfeiffer (N.C.) 8314.

The Redmen trailed by six
poiniS at the half but fell victim to
an 11-2 run at the start of the second period. John Lawhorn's team,
wbich bowed out at 26-10, cut the
lead to three with 4:16 left but got
no closer.
Pfeiffer's Justin Thompson led
the second half scoring burst ·to

thwart Rio Grande's attempt at a
raUy.
The Redmen got to within four
points on Larry Caudill's threepointers, but Thompson made a
nice inside move for a shon bank
shot, put-ting an end to the Ohioans'
threat.
Senior Brett Coreno led tbe

Lawhorn aed.ited Pfeiffer's win .
to its 6-8 forward Darrell WllHams,
wbo scored 27 points on a 10 of 16
shooting attempt. Williams was
seven of 12 on three-point shooting, and netted 2I markers in the
first half to lead all scorers .
Thompson finished with 23 poiniS
and nine boards.
,
The game marked the fifth tnp
for a Rio Grande team to the
national tournament in the·school's
history. The first came in 1954
with the famed Redmen team led
by Clarence "Bevo" Francis, and
all following berths came with
Lawbom-coached squads in 1985,
1987 and 1991.
The Redmen clinched the Great
Lakes Regional championship in
Division I on March 7 when they
defeated Transylvania (Ky.) 89-79
at Lyne Center.

REACHING IN- Rio Grande's Eric CaudiD Tuesday's NAJA National Tournament first·
(lower left) reaches In for tbe ball held by Pfelf- round contest In Tulsa, Okla., where tbe Falcons
fer!s Darrell Williams during tbe first half of beatlbe Redmen 83-74. (AP)

!h'erfn kdaJa

·

Rio Grande (26-10) .................................................37
.
.
Pfeiffer
(22-7) ........................................................
.43

Redmen in scoring with 20 points
on a seven-for-11 performance
from the field. Coreno also grabbed
six rebounds and blocked a shot.
Fellow senior Matt'Powell wrapped
up his career with an 11-point,
five-rebound effon.
"Tbis team should have no
regrets," Lawhorn said. "Our
seniors have had four great years.
"If your season's going to end.
it should end at the big dance," be
added.
·

37=
40 =

74
83

IT

'&amp;

Rio Grande Redmen
~

Plaut

Brett Coreno....................................... .. 7-8
Eric Caudill ........................................ ..4-8
Matt PoweU .......................................... 4-7
Eric Burris ............. ............ .. ................. 3-3
Shawn Snyder ......................................2-4
Jack Morgan......................................... 1-3
Larry Caudill ........................................ 1-6

Walter Stephens ...................................0-1
James Lavala ....... ................. ;.. ............. 1-1
Totals
23-41

l:u.t.

6-8
0-3
2-2
1-2
1-6
0-0
1-1
0-1
1-7
0-0
1-2
1-4
1-3
0-0
1-4
0-6
0-0 .
0-0
6-30 10-14

.BY RONALD BLUM
become a lockout.
::.. \YASHINGTON (AP) - The
Management lawyers Chuck
:"'auonal Labor Relations ijoard O'Connor and Frank Casey Wet"
"!odaY told baseball owners It would . infonned of the dedsion in a two;"1SSJ!C an ~fair labor l_ll'!ldice com- hour meetina wi~ M:RB general
: P~l ag31DSt tbem, rmstDg the pos- counsel Fred Femstem and New
' stbtllty the players' strike could York regional director Daniel Sll·

' A 1 ~I
' IYr&amp;..
,

20
13
II
7
7
6
5
3

0-l

7-7
4-6

2

74

&amp;
27
23
10

0-0
0-2
0-0
0-0
0-0

9
6
4
4

11-Ui

83

0

O'Bannon and Respert among college basketball · aii~Americans
By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Writer
In an age when it seems the best
college hasketbaU players are leaving school early for the. NBA, three
stayed arid bad senior years good
enough to make The Associated
Press' aU-America team.
. Ed O'Baonon of UCLA, Shawn
Respect of Michigan State and
Damon Stoudamire of Arizona lep
ihe ftrst team Tuesday. They were
joined' by sophomores Joe Smith of
Maryl&amp;lld and Jerry Stackhouse of
Nonb Carolina
: None of last season's frrsl-leam
selections returned to school.
: Grant Hill of Duke was a senior
and underclas'smen Glenn Robin- ·
son of Purdue, Jason Kidd of Calilomia, Donyell Marshall of Conoecticut and Clifford Rozier of
Louisville applied for early entry to
tbc NBA draft.
: Despite the success of ·the proframS represented on the first team,
ll had been awhile since those
~hools bad an all-American.

Arizona was the most recent to player of the year with Stoudamire, points per game-for three straight
have one with Sean EUiou making averaged 20 .7 points and 8.2 seasons since Mike Robinson from
it in 1988 and 1989. J.R. Reid was rebounds for the league champion 1972-74.
Nonb Carolina's laslfrrst-teamer in Bruins, the No. I team in the final
Tbe 6-3 guard averaged 25.5
1988. Maryland's last was two regular-season poll and aNo. I points as the Spartans finished secyears earlier, the late Len Bias.
seed in the tournament. The 6-8 ond in the Big Ten and earned a
UCLA and Michigan State went forward, named on 60 first-team No. 3 seed in the tournament. He
16 years without an all-American. ballots, Shot 54 percent from the shot the same from three-point
David Greenwood of UCLA and field, including 47 percent from range (48 percent) as be did overall
Magic Johnson of Michigan State three-point range . He matched from the field.
were on the first team in 1979.
"Shawn bas bad an outstanding
Reggie Miller's school mark with
Smith, a 6-foot-10 center, was seven three-pointers in a game.
year and is well deserving of the
the leading vote·geuer this year,
"In 1DY opinion, throughout the bonor" said Spartans coach Jud
being named on all but four first- season, game in 'and game ou~ Ed Heath~te, who is retiring after the
team ballots from the 66-member 0' Bannon bas been the most con- season. "I rate him as the finest
national panel that selects ibe sistent player in the nation," shooting guard in college basket·
weekly poll. He finished with 313 OCLA coach Jim Harrick said. baD.''
points in the 5-3~ I .voting, two
Stoudamire cleared Tuesday to
''Our senior leadership bas been
·more than O'Bannon.
·
the most ·important factor in our play for the flflb-seeded Wii~ats
. Tbe ACC player .o f the year,
success Ibis year, and Ed bas been in the tournament after allegauons
Smith averaged 20.8 'points, 10.4 at the forefront of that leadership of NCAA violations kept bim out
rebounds and ~bot 58 percent from
all season.''
of the regular-seasot~ fmale, led the
the field as the Terrapins fmisbed .
Pac-10 in scoring (23.0) aild assists
Respen,
the
Big
Ten
player
of
in a four-way tie for first place in
(7.4).
The 5-10 112 point .guard drathe conference and earned a third Cbe year, received 58 first-team · matically improved bis shoo~ng
· votes and 309 points..He is on pace
seed in the NCAA toumamept.
over bis first three seasons, making
O'Bannon. the Pac-IO's co- to become the ftrst Michigan State 48 percent from the field and 46
player to avera~e better than 20

percent from three-point range.
meant be's been matched against a
The frrst player in Arizona hisbigger opponent on both ends of
· tory to score more than 40 points in · the court. However, be bas
a game twice, Stoudamire was responded welt to.that challenge.'"
· nam~ on.JI ru:st-team ballots and
R~ndolpb Chtldrcss of Wale~
recetved 241 pomts.
Fores~ the_ MVP of the AC:C tour•
Stackhouse, a 6-6 forward, aver- . nament wtth a record-settmg 107
aged 19.4 points and 8.3 rebounds po!nts in t!Jre!l games, was fiye
for the Tar Heels, wbo held the No. pomts behmd Stackhouse in th~
1 spot longer than any other team voting and was joined on the sec·
this sc:asnn and finished in the four- ond team by Corliss Williamson of
Y'ay be for. the .ACC btle: He was Arkansas, Kerry Kinles of Villano· m the top etgbt m four maJor stabs- va, Rasheed WaUace of Nonb ear:
tical categ.ories in the ACC as olina and Lou Roe . of MasNonb Carolma earned a No. 2 seed sachusetts.
.•
in .the NCAA tournament. He was
The third team was Bryant
on 35 first-team ballots and bad Reeves of Oklahoma State, Tini
235 points.
.
Duncan of Wake Forest, Ray Alle11
''Jerry bas gotten bettc:r .~d bet- of .Connecticut, Kurt Thomas o~
ter throughout the season.. No~ Texas Christian and Lawrence
&gt;Carolina coach Dean Smtth satd. Moten of Syracuse.
"Because _or the early season loss
Williamson and Reeves were
of Pat Sullivan, Jerry has really bad repeaters on the second and thircf
to play out of position aU year. At team from last season. .
~-6 be's been .our power forward
Smith, Stoudanrire, Respen and
mstead of playmg hiS .natural small WiUiamson were on the pre-season
forward spot. That s generally all-America team this season along
with Wisconsin's Michael Finley.

Scoreboard
Ohio H;S. boys' scores

Basketball

Tuesday's regional action
Dl"'loa I ·
wamn ltudina7l, w.uwonh 74 .a

NBA standings ·

Clf)
WCilen-illc N. 61, Dublin 48

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUanUcDf...bo

~ndo ..............~

New Y00: ..............40
New Jeney ........... .lS
a.........................24
MJ.uru ....................23

1\

~

2J

.656

YJ
:18
l9

.403

.m

l'ltiladclp/Ua ........... 17 4l
Wuhingtcin ........... :17 45

.274
.T74

.371

DtY!olonD

!il
1
22.5
23.5
:14.5
30.5

i~n 71 (201')

Cydc 56, Olmolod FoiiJ 46
Fti.rlcu 66, Canfidd 59
o..cnficld McClain 76, Clf)

lO.S

1 ,

Cl£VELAND .......J5 16

574

3

A(lm~

.500

7,
7.5

...................31 31
Milwauk:CI!l .............l-4 39
DolroiL ...................2J l9

.311

l.S

.371

ll.!i

Midwest Dlwlllon

lr L Ea.

U1.1h ........ .......... .47
Stn Anlonio ........... 42

16 . .746

.lill

Ill
24

.700
.613

33

.-468

17 j

36
46

.400

.no

21.5
lO

Padnc Dldllon
PhQICI"tU. .................47 16 .746
Seoulc ...................42 19 .619

4

1101111.00 , ............•.. .38
Denver ...................29
Dt U.u .....................24
Minncaou ........... " .17

L.A. Lakon ............ 38 23 .623
Panl&amp;nd .......... ,...... 34 n · .sn
Sacn.mutto .......... .. 30 31
Oo1dcn Sute .......... \9 42
L-'· Clippcn ........ 13 lO
..clincl&gt;..l playull bcM

492
.311
.206

3...5
1...5

I
12
16

'IT
34

\1\ah I07, Orlando 95
New Yodl. 94. Denver 74

•Broccoli oCabbage
•Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

Tooi&amp;Jit's.pmes
Odando • New Ja.ey, 7:30p.m.
Mihnukcc at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
A&lt;lan~· .,'Cbka~l
o lO p.m.

• 10:30 p.m.
olden Su&amp;c, 10:30

,.

Thursday's games

Ut~~h 11 Cl.EVEL-\ND, 7:30p.m.

ltm.
HOUiloo. :J0 p.m.

Phoc:nit II O.adaac.
Minncaot.i at

NHLstandings

Dc1ta

Al Toledo
... Medina

PhiJideJphia 11 SUI Antonio, 1:30 p.m..
SammcrtiO at Derlw:r. 9 p.m.
Bolton at Portand, IOp.m.
Miami at SeauJc, I0 p.m.

29 74
27 76

NcwJ- ....... 1011 4 7A 69
910 6 7A 61

61
61

Aorido .............. 1013 3

71

w......... ......

N.Y. !Jbnd.,.... 9 13 3

23 61
21 62

T""'P' Boy....... 9 ll 2 20 6l

~

_ ~Legal woes making futures

~f two Xavier cagers cloudy

Hi&amp;Jll.and

'
"
'

·1

\
1,

.

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
Hours: Mon.·Frl. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1;:4
3\', miles past Southam High ·

IDAHO BAKING
POTATOES
1011 Bag
Limit 2 Bags

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BAG

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300 W. Main

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Pomeroy

bM!) Cable

.. School, St. Rt. 1~4,
R.aclne, Ohio ·

.

.

•

•. . i

7PMn
Call Now To Order

.-

.

. ..... 1310]
..... 11 9 3

'·

614-9:19-2682

_..,....._

=

lr J.. I fiL Gf lib.

65

•Pansy •Viola

Oallu 91. Sacramaao 90

p.m.

Hockey

Atlaadc Df¥111oft

Owwt-Glandcrl71 , Big Walma .53 ·
Oc. VA-SJ 74, Twintbutr; OlamberUn

SPRING SEASON

Milwaukee 99, Cllad~ 86
San Anlonio 1L.S, Minraou 100
Phoc:niA 116. I:JrrtnXt I09
Ponlancl 121', Miun.i 114
ScauJ.c 113. &amp;o.tcn 93,

L.A . LU:ut 1t

~~!o~:~t~,;:: {2ct;)· n . Bloom -Car-

NOW OPEN

euc.so

.

Oau.rio (19-4),
·

MOCIOoy (ll·l), I p.m.

VI .

71 (2

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Tuesday's scores

L.A.

3). 6:1S p.m.
Aurora (22-1) n . Youna•town

Yl.

111 Second Sl, Pomeroy

HOWlM 136, Phillclclphia 1rn
106, www.""" 93

Dcuoitll

Col.dwalel" (19~)
USp.m.

\'1,

4

AtCaa&amp;orl
Ncw1011 f.U. (14-9) ... OilVille (20-

·

Trail (19·5)

•

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

WESTERN CONFI;RENCE

Iu11!

m-aaAthml

fity:B;·cf.y~

H1nloy (l9 5)
Mariemont (17-6), I p.m.

I 0), 6o30 p.m.

&gt;----

•--

:: - - ' - -

...

next wed in U.S. District Coon in
New York. Tbe case would be
assigned to one of the 39 judges on
the court. an!l the individual judge
would set the ~earin~ date.
The most likely ume for bearing
would either be late next week or
during the week of March 27.
Just 19 days remain until th e
scheduled start of the season.
" Obviously, .we're pleased with
the result, " umon leader Donald
Febr said o( the NLRB action .
"Obviously, it's the right thing to
do. Obviously, we'd like to be.back
at the lable and bargain this out."
Feinstein said he " strongly
urged" both sides to return to tl)e
bargaining lable.
.
"I, my two kids and all the millions of other baseball fans around
the country have our finger s
crossed lbat the parties will be able
to wo(k this out very soon," be
said:

Negotiations were supposed to
resume today in Lake Buena Vista,
Fla., but owners called off the talks
after they lcamcd Monday tlw tbe
~RB !ntended to make iiS decis1on. 0 Connor said no one knew
wben talks would resume.
" I guess we'll have to go baclc
and speak to the owners in terms of
where we are," O'Connor said. " It
takes two to go out on the dance
floor ...
"I don:t thinlc there's any interes t on the clubs' pan to delay the
resolution .of this dispute. When
exactly we' ll get back to the table, I
can't tell you."
O'Connor said tbe complaint
may delay bargaining.•
. ' 'Some ?f the people ~b~ are
mvolved m the negouauons
become necessary witnesses and
participants in the litigatiOil," be
said.

.

.

Swingley's dogs arrived at
Nonie with long moustaches of ice
in the brisk 20-below sunshine .
They showed few signs that' they
couldn't bead right back down the
trail. .
"They're a little tired, but they
look really good," said chief race
veterinarian Karin Schmidt.
No dogs have died so far in the
race that began March 4. Schmidt
said there have been no serious
injuries or health problems . Last
year, one dog died early in the race.
Swingley's big gamble with his
team's stamina was running aU the
way to lditarod, the halfway pain~
before taking his mandatory 24bour rest, Most of the other leaders
stopped at Takotna for the daylong
break, but Swingley pushed on an
additional 128 miles .
He knew the gamble bad
worketl when he roused the dogs
after about six 'hours of rest at lditarod, and found them ready to go.
"We co.uld bave gone on to
Shageluk right then.''
Swing ley said he planned from
the beginning to push on to lditarod
if conditions were right. He left
checkpoint two minutes in front of

~.

1(8001766-ossj
67!-3398

117.11

I·
J

••
• CINCINNATI (AP)- Xavier ·Xavier players Tyson Brit and ·
'::University won't say whether Pete Larry Sykes were each ordered not
::Sears and DeWauo Rose, two play- to dress for a game lifter .they were
:·ers in ' trouble with the law, will charged . with driving under tbe .
·.play in the school's NCAA touma- influence of alcohol. Xavier offi: ment opener Friday night against cials have decHned to say whether
that would be a precedent for the
: Georgetown.
Sears
and Rose case.
;
Xavier coach Skip Prosser
Brit
is a backup to Sears. Rose
: planned to bring Sears and Rose
is
the
backup
center for Sykes.
·: along when the Musketeers left
, Wednesday for Tallahassee, Fla, Rose and Brit have the most play; site of Friday's same. But neither ing time among Xavier's reserve
Prosser nor Xavier atblelic director players.
' Jeff Fogelson would say whether
' Sears and-Rose will be permitted to
play Friday.
: Keeping them on the sidelines
. : would give Xavier ·only eight
' scholarship pfayers to face George. tOWn.
· Police arrested Sears, 21, a
senior forward-guard from Cleveland, and Rose. 22, a senior for' ward from Chicago, after a fight at
- a Cincinnati bar early Thursday.
Sears was charged with assault.
, Rose was charged with resistins
· · arrest and disorderly condo~. Both
· players•. through a lawyer, filed
written pleas of Innocent to the
, charges Tuesday In Hamilton
' County Municipal Court.
. . The 6-foot-4 Sears r.uncbed an
:. ~mjlloyee of the Cooter s bar in the
~ace after a fight ins.ide tbe ~ar.
;:police said. Rose tned to ftgbt
-bouncers at the bar. police said.
: It iben took three police officers
. to subdue and arrest the 6-foot-8
~ ~ose, police said.
, Fogelson said last week that the
' players will face "discipline by the.
; university, in addition to whatever
: ~ent the coun system might
give them .
In separa~ Incidents this season .

Eastern awards
banquets slated

'Ibe Eastern Hlgb School Athletic Department and Athletic
Boosten Club will bold the annual
winter sports banquet this week. .
The junior high athletes will be
honored on Friday and the bigb
school atbletes on Saturday. Both
banqueiS will be held at 6:30 p.u1.
. Each family is l!Sked to take
either two dessefiS, or a fmger food
and a dessert. Drinks and lable service will be provided.
Also Friday night, there will be
an athletic boosters meeting•ofteld
after the banquet New officers will
be elected. Members are encouraged to attend. ·•i

RYL sign-up
dates posted
Racine Youth League wiD bold
sign-up sessions for the 1995 season on Wednesday, on Tuesday,
March 2,1 from 6 to 9 pm. and on.
Saturday, March 25 from from 9
a.m to noon at the kindergarten
building in Racine.

'Wishes To Thank The Following For
· Their Contributions For Our
.Regional Tournament Trip:
Eastern Athletic Boosters
.Farmers Bank
Home Natl.o nal Bank
Kroger's-Pomeroy
Holter's Holsteins-Five Pta.
Reed's Store
Dale Bahr Ser. Station
Gary Holter
Gas Plus·Tuppers Plains
Bibbee Motor Co.
Village Craft and Flower Shop
Anderson's Furniture
Hawk's 76 Station
Keebaugh ~~ Shake Shoppe
Dennis Parker
Horace and Dorothy Karr
Karen Lodwick
Chester Country Kitchen, Inc.
Baum Lumber
Bissell Builders
Wesam Construction
Warner Heating and Cooling
Ray Riggs
Robert Bissell Construction
Bill Ward
Howard and Wilma Parker
Ridenour Supply
Chester Basketball Assoc.
Ridenour Gas
Summerfield's Restaurant
Mary Perdas
Chester Quick Stop
Bill Long
Gary and Flossie Dill
Linda's Beauty Shop
Fraternal Order of Eagles
Skate-A-Way
Eagles' Ladles Auxiliary
Students/Fans
Swain &amp; Son Sawmill
And the Entire Community for donati01fs In jars at area
businesses and the great support! Also ·thaMs to
anyone Inadvertently left out.

Love Wiih
Aowers From'"

"Say

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
106 BuuemutAve. Pomeroy, OH

-(614) 99~·6454 ·•
(800) 433-6203

We seGrthed '"' Gnd
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90 Chevy S-10 AM/FM cassette, air .. .... ........... ............. '6495
90 Dodge Dakota Sport Truck Sp. Pkg, AM/FM cass .'6995
90 Chevy S-1 0 Long bed, very clean little truck .. .... ...... '6995

s

91 DODGE CARAVAN
k ltJ!ilulln~ldf' k.
1

THE
EASTERN EAGLES GIRLS'
BASKETBALL TEAM

Buser, and his team pulled ~way on
the frozen Yukon River, gaining
two hours on Buser in a pivotal 70mile stretch between Eagle Island
and Kaltag.
Swingley takes home the race's
top prize of $52,500 and a new
pickup truck. He also pocketed
$3,000 for being the first musher to
the halfway poin t at lditarod ,
$3,500 for being ftrst to the Yukon
River and $2,500 for being firSt to
the Bering Sea coast at Unalakleet.
Buser collected $38,080 for second place ..Thc total purse, split
among the top 20 mushers, was
$350,000.

FROM DON WOOD:

Ohio State to play Boston
College in Kickoff Classic

Kettering Alter 63, CoL St: Otarl.es .53

Centul Di•ldoll
Charlotle ................ 39 24 .619
Indian• ...................37 24 .61J7

Chic.a&amp;o ..................32 31 ...508

ll

C•mbridpl6, SIOUbcnvillo
Cin. McNicbolu 30, an. P\uQcll-Mu-

p.m.
Columbua

AtCieYdlnd
Lonin S&lt;nla&lt; (17-6) ¥1. Euclid (11·7),
6: l.Sp.m.
Panna Vall_c)' Fcqe (1~11) v1. Cevcland Hciah11 (22·1 ), I p.m.

lrvan satisfied with return
to track for first time in 1995

.

All)o,...
Cinciruati North Collcao Hill (22--l)
v1 . Germantown Valley Vtcw (19-2). 6:15

AlCanloll ·
Zanesville (22·0) VI. Ma11illon Jad:·
Jcrt (20-3), 7 p.m.

~lion that in turn could result in
the owners locking out the major
leaguers and starting the season
with replacement players they now
are using ~ spring training.
·
Feinstem rs expected to ask the
NLRB's five-member board for
permission to seek the preliminary
injunction.infederalcowt.
" The agency bas not yet decided th~ ques~on of wb~ther.or not to
seek IDJUncuve reHef m this case,"
Feinstein sai!l. "It willt.;lke another
week or two before such a decision
is reached."
O'Connor wouldn't say bow
many votes it would take to authorize a lockout. Various management officials say it's either a
majority of the 28 clubs or three
quarters (21).
· The NLRB board bas authorized
aU but one of Feinstein's injunction
· requests. Jr Feinstein pursues an
injunction, be probably would me.

·

Swingley sets record in winning lditarod.

Total FG -31-71 (43.7%)
.
.
Rebounds- 43 (Thompson 9)
·
Blocked shots - 3 (by Smith, Wasbington &amp; Williams)
Asshts -15 (Quillens 5)
Steals -10 (Qulllens 4)
Turnovers- 15
Fouls-14
Fouled out- Washington

Pfeiffer (22-7) will proceed to
tbe second round Thursday at 10
a.m. against Vorbees (S.C.), an 8281 victor over Georgetown (Ky.)
earlier Tuesday.

•

verman.
Feinstein said the complaint
would aUege the owners " did not
properly foUow tbe rules of colleclive bargaining' '. when they ellmlna~ salary arbttratlon and rules
relating to free agency.
He said the complaint will be
issued in the next day or so.
''The remedy we will seek will
be res~on of these terms un'!l
such tune .as ~new agreement 1s
reached QI'J!!!lillhc:.parties bargain
to a good-faith impasse on these
issues," Feinstein said.
The NLRB action could set the
stage for tbe agency to seek an•
injunction in federal court against
the owners to restore baseball's
1994 work rules _rel~ting to free
~gency~ ~arbitration and slgomg pohaes.
•
If an injunction is aranted, it
cou.ld lead to the playe_rs ending
tbetr seven-month stnke - an

; By~AVEGOLDBERG
. would i'elease ~this story without
. ; PHOENIX (AP) - Warren ' confirming its contents wltb' the
: Sapp and his agent deny be tested league office."
·.
:positive for cocaine.
And the Herald quotes Steward
. Tbe NFL, wblcb rarely C01D· as saying in a statement, "My
; ments about drug policy matters, number-one concern is not bow
·bas broke11 Its customary silence this false report will affect my draft
: and agrees that tbe University of status . as bow much it will affect
. Miami all-American is cocaine- my reputation, my parents and the
:free.
people of Vero Beach and Miami."
' Not one of the dozens of own. ,
Sapp's draft stock dido t seem
: ers general managers coaches or
·
,~ personnel
directors ,at the ·NFL to r.an
•· .
:meetings this week knows anything
. "I'll voucb for him." said Den·
:about a positive cocaine test. The . m~ ~ckson. who coached Sapp at
·NFL Players Association con- Miami and now coacbe~ lbe ~cattle
;rlfilled that it bad seen the ~est and Seabawks, wbo will ptck etgbth.
Great FaDs.
'also denied it
"He's an excellent person and if be By ALLEN BAKER
NOME. Alaska (AP)- A quiet
Buser says the fastest time is
: And coaches and GMs agree comes. do~ to us, I'd be glad to
"yahoo"
was
the
flfSt
thing
Mon·
sliD
out there to achieve.
(that Sapp should still go in the top . have him.
.
tana
musber
Doug
Swingley
·
"We.
haven't gotten there ye~"
(five, even tbougb be did test posiWashington coach. No~~·
uttered
when
be
arrived
at
Nome,
he
said.
·live for marijuana according to wbo drafts founb, SBid Ericlcson IS
winning the Iditarod Trail Sled
Third into Nome was Nenana
:numerous league so~s.
doi?~ a lini:C ":isbful tbi~g.
Dog
Race
In
record
time.
musher
Bill Cotter at 8:52 p.m.
: Yet Tbe New York Times,
De.nnu .•s just saymg th~t
SwinJ!ley
is
the
first
nonAlaska
time.
. wbicb reported on Tuesday that · because be thinks the drug test W!ll
Swingley says bis victory could
:sapp bad also tested positive for effecuome ~~le ~d Sapp ":ill Alaskan winner of the race in 23
years.
He
covered
tbe
historic
encourage
more mushers from the
·cocaine reponed again today that get to Seattle, Enckson satd .
·
1.100-mile
trail
in
just
9
days,
2
lower
48
states
to enter the Anchor(four different officials on four dif- "That won't happen."
hours
and
42
minutes.
Second
into
age-to-Nome
marathon.
:ferent teams had seen reports of
. And seve~al personnel ~ople
"Maybe it will open up minds,"
· positive testing.
·
ctted .a number lbat bad noth~g ~o Nome was defending champion
Martin
Buser
of
Big
Lake.
said
Swingley, exhausted but still
: That came after the league·went do wtth drugs - 4.74 - wbtcb IS
.
Buser,
six
hours
behind
the
wincontemplative.
.
: to great lengths 10 deny the repon bow fast Sapp ran 40 ,Yards in a
ner,
beat
his
own
previous
timeThe
41-yeat-old
Montana
ranch•and also denied lbat James Stewan workout last week. That s extreme·
the
old
race
record
by
about
er,
wbo
turned
his
atiention
from
a Miami running back - . anothe; ly f~t for a defensiv~ li.ne~an.
four
hours.
That
wasn't
enough.
breeding
minks
to
breeding
dogs
; potential first-round pick - bad
Still, there ~ere mdtcaUons that
"He
bad
a
fantastic
race
,"
just
five
years
ago,
was
greeted
at
: tested positive for marijuana.
the drug test dtd affect some peoBuser
said
at
the
finish.
"I
know
the
finish
by
his
wife,
Nelda,
their
. "The facts are the facts. The pie, just as they have in the past.
information on Sapp was incorAs recently as last year, drug the feeling of holding onto the ban- two children, and bis parents, who
.
:rect," said Joe Browne, the NFL's rum~rs- nothins f!~Ore- pushed dlebars and feeling aU that power. surprised their son at the line.
It
made
me
feel
good
even
though
Swingley
says
be
hasn't
decided
:chief spokesman, whose normal runnmg back Charlie Garner from
yet whether he'll return to Alaska
line on drug questions is "no com- the first round to the second, when it was happening to him." ·
Both
Swingley
and
Buser
said
next
March to defend the title be
ment. ••
Philadelphia took him.
race
time
could
continue
shrinking.
won
in
his fourth lditarod try.
.
Sapp's agen~ meanwhile, vebeBtll Pon:m. gen~ manager of
Swingley
praised
his
dog,
Elmer,
lbis
year's
team
was
a
product
mently denied the reports of the expanston Car~lma Panthers,
~ocaine use.
whO h.ave the frrst ptck, would talk one of two leaden wbo puDed the of careful breeding, be said.
"I definitely bad the fastest
"The report on cocaine is total- only m general terms about the team into flfSt place.
"If
I
bad
15
more
doas
like
team
in the beginning," be said. "I
)y· totally false " Drew Rosenhaus .Sapp test
Elmer,
we
could
make
it
in
7
112
mean,
Ibis dog team was just all
Sald.
'
·
· "We have a·.football tCOI.peradays," said Swingley, who lives in together." ·
• "I bave demanded a retraction ment test which 11Dpacts heavily on tiny Simms, about 30 miles rrom
from The New York Times " he players we take," said Polian, one
~old the Miami Herald. "A~d we of the chief architects of the Bu.lfa!lfi: absolutely at this time consider- lo. team that ~en! 10 four Slrlll¥~1
ing legal action against the Super.Bov:-ls. It mcl~des durab~li­
Times"
ty, reltabUny, personality and train·
T~es spans editor Neil Amdur ing habits. Drug tests would cer~n Tue.Sday bad no comment on the . tainly impact on ~·:'
. .
eye.
•
But C~ter IS the .key, IDSISted By PETE IACOBELLI
. Iilatter.
, His vision gradually is improvDARLINGTON,
S.C.
(AP)
·
Curtis Polk, Stewar(' s agent, C.armen Polley, prestdent of the
ing,
and Irvan and Winston Cup
Now
that
Ernie
levan's
back
on
also was unhappy.
S~ ~cisco 49ers.
team
owner Roben Yates thougbt it
traclc,
be
may
not
want
to
leave
the
"It's a terrible thing," be said.
It.~ not SC? m~.cb substance
was
time
to test it.
racecnurse.
"His family Is very upset. People . abuse, ~e sa1.d. You .have t.o
lrvan,
who signed on to Yates' .
·, 1 · felt pretty good out there.
are always going look at bim and know y~u re ~omg to Indianapolis
Ford
team
in 1993, was shaky at
Everything was real exciting,'· said
aot be sure that be didn't use . an~ ,YOU~ gomg to be ~ted.
first,
sliding
loosely through the
drugs."
·
..
, You. d have to quesuon some- lrvan, who crawled into a racer for
turns.
tbe first .time since a horrifying
The Herald quoted Polk as say- -one s atUtude and apJ!f?BCh !O pro
He quickly found his way on
crash
last summer imperiled his
ing in a statement: "It is unfortu- s~rts and pro foothall i! you d u~
Darlington's
quirky 1.366-mile
career and fulure.
a ate that Tbe New York Times an Illegal substance knowmg that.
Tbe Winston Cup star was oval, however, and ran a solid secunconscious for two days following ond four-lap set that produced a
a near-fatal practice accident on tum of 162.510 mph in his ThunAug. 20 at Michigan Speedway. derbird. He later zipped through an
But on Tuesday, lrvan breezed unofficial lap of 163.538. Both betaround Darlington Raceway, even tered tbe Busch track record of
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. lege football's traditional opener.
setting an unofficial course record 161.342 mph set in September by
;&lt;AP) - Obio State coach John
"It's a great opportunity for us of 30.26 seconds in his Busch Randy LaJoie.
;;cooper was prepared when asked to come over and showcase Obio Grand National car in his first tour.
lrvan, known for his brash style,
:)vby his team should play in the State football," Cooper added. "It
lrvan totalled 28 laps in his was the frrst to put the run in per: Kickoff Classic against Boston gives us the opportunity to get Busch car and, because he was spective. Yes, he'd like to return to
' College with a tough scbellule another two weeks. of practice time feeling so good, took four laps in the circuit quickly, but there's still
: already in place.
as weU.' '
his Winston Cup racer. Even a much work left, lrvan said.
.: "WeD, I tum thai question right
And last year that seemed to nnal-lap tussle with the Tum I wall
"There was no doubt in my
: around and say: 'Wby wouldn't come in bandy when Ohio State - be tapped the barrier, spun out mind I'd be back," be said. "But
· you want to play in the game?'" · opened the season with a 34-10 win and drove it back to the garage we were here to see if I could do
·Cooper said at a news conference over Fresno State in the pre-season dido' t bother bim too much.
something wilb one eye. My skills
:at Giants Stadium to promote col- Pigskin Classic
"I was just trying to find out if I haven't changed, they bav·e just
can run again. I don't thinlc I forgot gone seven months without being
· anything," said lrvan, wbo still polished."
wears a paiCb on bis damaged left

.' j

IT

'

agrees Wlth sa~nn
f"I"
~·on
COCal·ne
"est
liesults
;
·
11

Total FG- 29-71 (40.8%)
Rebounds- 41 (Coreno 6)
Blocked shots - 3 (Coreno, Powell &amp; Snyder I each)
Assists- 17 (E. Caudill, L. Caudill, Morgan, Snyder 3 each)
steals- 1 (E. caudiu 2)
Turno~ers- 14
Fouls -15
Fouled out- L. Caudill &amp; Powell
Pfeiffer Falcons
Piner
Z:Jd... J:RL.
Darrell Williams .......... .......................J-4
7-12
Justin Thompson .............................. .. 8-14
0-0
George Reikes... ....................... ....... ... .. 3-8
0-0
John Sams ........................................ .. .. 0-1
3-9
Marlon Quillens ..................... .......... .. ..3-7
0-3
Rodney Smith .......................... ............2-5
0-0
Larry Washington ........ ........................2·5
0-1
·Marvin Graves ....................... ......... :....0-2
0-0
Totals
21·46 10-25

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

NLRB plans to issue complaint against baseball owners

Rio-Pfeiffer stats

Pfeiffer beats Rio Grande 83-74

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

(111 1

13,995

91 GMC Sonoma Automalic, SL trim .....
'6995
89 Dodge Dakota;; speed, chrome wheels .... .... 56495
'
89 Chev. Corsica 4 door, automatic.air.. .. . .. .......... .. ... 54995
5
90 Toyota' Camry Oualily used. automobile
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94 GMC Jimmy 4x4 4 dr. conv., less lhan 3,000 mi. .521,995
94 Toyota Four Runner Save Jhousar'\dsl..... ... . 123,995

\

·~

DON WOOD
"Where Bett~r ReaUy:Matters"
· East State Street
Atht;ms, Ohio

593·6641

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 15, 1995

Grange
announces.
inspection

Ohio Un iversity ·
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

Inspection was announ ced for
April
5 when the Hemlock Grunge
John C. Wolf, D.O.
2049
met
recently at the baD.
Associate Professor
to the auditing comAppointed
M Family Medicine
miuee were Muriel Bradford, Sara
Cullums, and Linda Scboepper.
Question: I've bad terrible pain h~v c the adult onset variety. In Legislative agent Ziba Midkiff.
in my fee~ panicularly my toes, Cor individuals with this type of dia- reponed on legislative bills under
the past year. I went to my family betes, foot pain can be tbe first consideration of concern to the
doctor who sent me to an orthope- symptom of the illness . On the grangers.
dic doctor. He said that th ere is other band, in. diabetes that begins
Tbe grange banquet will be .beld
nothing that can be done for me. early and requires insulin, chronic on April 28. It was announced that
foot pain is usually a problem that a potluck with the grange furnishHow can that be?
Answer: The doctors you have develops late in the course· of the ing the meat. Tbe dinner will be
seen are in a much beuer position di sease . If your doctor hasn't served at 6:30 p.m. Helen Qnivey,
than I am to determine the cause or checked your blood sugar, please women' s activities chairman, gave
your pain, and the cause determines ask him to do this important test for a report on contests and what need·
to a great extent what treatments diabetes.
ed to be completed before the April
Pernicious anemia, a particular meeting.
are available. As a general principle, however, there are several type of anemia caused by the lack
Birthdays for March observed
l!!il!g£ that ~ause cbrQnic pain in of vitanlin B12 in th!: blood, results were those of Wallace Bradford .
the feet. There are relatively obvi- in the malfunctioning of the nerves and Rosalie Story. The Bradfords
ous causes sucb as chronic skin carrying sensation from the feet. will do the janitorial work for the
conditions, and less obvious causes Chronic, burning pain in the feet - . April meeting.
such as difficulty wilb circulation just like you have been experiencReported ill were Edna Clark,
ing - and numbness are common Bernice Hawk, and Etta Cull ums.
and/or nerve injury. .
I'm confident that your foot and · symptoms. Some medications ·can Eva Robson was rc;porte4 .iplprovtoe pains are not the result of a skin ·mse interference with the .nonnal ing.
problem because you and your doc- operation of nerves from the feet,
Tbe literary program carried a
tors would bave noticed it by now. too. This is a side effect rather than March theme. Readings were
a desired "therapeutic" effect of the '3.1arcb" by V3113 Hazelton; ''MarThat leaves less obvious problems
such as poor circulation . The drugs. Chemotherapy drugs and the vel" by Golda Reed, "Points to
amount of blood flow in your feet antituberculosis drug isoniazid are · Ponder" by Rosalie Stoty, "Wilen
can be accurately measured by a commonly implicated.
March Comes" by Helen Quivey,
painless and relativ ely quick
You see, it takes some detective and " Do YIJU Remember". by Jessie
Doppler flow test. I assume that
work to figure out the cause of White. The group sang "Tbe Old
your doctors have ordered this type your symptoms. Once the cause is Grange," there was a joke by
of test to be sur.e ·your pain · is not clearly identified, however, your Harley Haning, and tbe grange·
due to circulation problems. If not,. doctOrs can talk with you about the closed with singing "How Great
you should ask one of them to rec - treaunents ·that are available. Some Thou Art."
ommend a vascular specialist who conditions are tolally curable while
will do this examination.
others aren' 1 treatable at all, and ·
Several disorders of the nerves most falfsornewbere between the .
that bring sensation from the feet two extremes. I don't know if your
back to the brain can also produce doctor told you there was nothing
foot pain. Sometimes the problem that could be done for you becanse
is mechanical "pinching" of a you have an un!reatable condition
nerve due to a diseas e s uch as or because be didn't feel like doing
arthritis,or a ruptured disc in the any more detective work - but
back. More commonly, illnesses you should know . Ask bim to
that keep the nerves from function- clearly explain your diagnosis. If .
Joe Bolin of the Meigs County
ing properly - like diabetes and be· can' t or won't, get copies of Soil and Water Conservation Dispernicious anemia - are the cul- your records .and take them to a trict was elected treasurer of the
new doctor.
·
Buckeye Hills Resource Conservaprit.
Diabetes is an amazingly com"Fa!llily Melliclhe" is a weel&lt;ly - lion and Development Council in
mon condition. In the United column. To submit questions, Marietta for 1995-96. .
·
States, 13 million people have it. write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Sandra Matthews, Washington
That is one out of every 20 individ- Oblo University &lt;;allege of Osteo· County comissioner, was named
uals. Ninety percent of diabetics patblc Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, president of the council while
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Vivian Glenn of the·Morgan County SWCD, Bob Eichenberg of
Athens County and Carolyn Wilson
of Perry County were named first
vice president, second vice president and secretary, respectively ..
According to Matthews, the
focus of the RC&amp;D council be to
by Bob Hoeflich
continue assistance in the area of
rural fire protection and dry fire
hydrants, water quality _proje~ts,
at tree planting projects and other
Did you catch the salute to
writing assistance activities.
Lawrence Welk sbow on public the base and
publish a
of grant
Tbe
program is ,funded by the
television out of Athens Saturday these things to present an accurate
U.S.
Department
of Agriculture
night? Hope so. It was ;t great account of the role the base played
and
administered
by the USDA .
opportunity to see many of the in World War II.
Natural Resources Conservation
singers who appeared on the Welk
If you can contribute send your
sbow over the years. Probably like stories and photos to the World Service. The council covers
me, you wondered what some of War Project, c/0 Dean Morgan Athens, Belmont, Fairfield, Hockthem were doing with .the demise Junior High School, Casper, ing, M eigs, Monroe, Morgan,
. Noble, Perry and Washington
of the Welk sbow and bow they Wyoming, 82601.
counties.
bandied the age thing. From the
looks of the show, I' d say preuy
Have you thought of pet sitting
weD.
as job opportunity?
There will be a seminar on the
Bob Tewksbary, Middleport, a "ins and outs". of that prOfession in
barber in Pomeroy for many years, Virginia come April and that's
bas been returned to bis home from probably too big of a deal for you
. Riverside Hospital in Columbus to get involved in. However, if
Members of the Busy Bee Class
where be underwent a heart valve you're a person with time on your of the Middleport First Baptist
replacement operation. For a num- bands and want to make some extra Church enjoyed dinner at Dale's in
ber of months, Bob bas been doing money, you might want to give pel · Gallipolis Monday. Aliending were
barbering on an appointment basis sitting a whirl.
Ruth Ebersbach, Rosemary Lyons,
only at bis Pomeroy shop. HowevAccortling to statistics, 40 per- Mary Brewer, Betty Gilkey, and a
er, no appointments are now being cent of American households have gues~ Judy Cowan.
·
made as Bob recuperates so no at least one dog and 30 percent
The February meeting of the
need to call.
have one or more cats. For pc:t group was beld at the church with
-owners, sitting services offer an . Freda Edward as hostess. Sbe gave
Mary Olive Weber, a resident at alternative to boarding kennels or devotions from "Footprints," and
the Ohio Valley Health Care Cen- relying on friends to care for their served refreshments. A report was
ter in Parkersburg, sends along big pets while they vacation or make given ou shut-ins including Beulah
tbanks for yo~_r_ ~e~embering her necessary long trips.
White, Ethel Hughes, Ruth Jobnson
on her February lllrlllday . Ohve
Tbere is a book, "Pet Sitting for and Elizabeth Slavin. Attending
received 67 cards thanks to you, Profit" you might want to read if that meeting were Gwinnie White,
you and.you and was visited by ber you're interested in pursuing the Ruth Ebersbach, Dorothy Evans,
family and friends . In fact, her idea. Perhaps, the Meigs County Mary Brewer, Elizabeth Searles,
daughter, Sandra Kay, staged a Library System can secure a copy Rosemary
Lyons, · Lillian
birthday party in ber honor at the for you to peruse.
DemoskeY and Betty Gilkey.
center.
I don't know what the demand
is in our loc.ale, but who knows it
Rose Carr is again at ber borne could be worih a shot.
in Meigs County. . .
Rose bad bad problems since
Thanks to Sister Fidel.is Bell of
December 11. Sbe was confined to Pomeroy for sending along tb e
In an effort to provide our readthe Bethesda Care Center in · words to the song "Let's All Sing ership with current news, the GalZanesville for a long while and Like the Birdies Sing". I'D see thai lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
then spent 29 days confined 10 Uni- Fern dora Story gets them if, Sentinel will not accept weddings
versity Hospital in Columbus. It's indeed, they haven't appeared after 60 days from the date of tbe
been a long haul for.Rose.
event.
before now.
All club meetings and other
As an armed forces person were
I know it's·gotta be spring . The news anicles in the society section
you ever at the Ca.sper Army Air arrival of a catalog from a plant
must be submitted within 30 days .
Field in Casper; Wyoming?
of
occurrence. All birthdays must
nursery lipped me on this. Great
If so, students of the ninth gJ1)de pictures but I didn't find any place . be submitted within 42 days of the
class at the junior bigb school there in the catalog that offered a green
oecurence.
would Jove to bear from you. The thumb. Maybe you ' re supposed to
All material submitted for publistudents arc compiling photos and be born with those. I wasn't. Do
cation is subject to editting.
keep smiling.
.

BH Rc&amp;D
offl"cers
announced

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

(

Oran e Juice •••••!!2!·.

139

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at ihe Meigs Senior Citizens Center, "Wandering and wanting to go
borne" discussed.
RACINE ·- Signup for Racine
Youth League , Wednesday and
March 21, 6 to 9 p.m.; Saturday,
March 25, 9 a.m. to noon, kindergarten building in Racine.

' THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER
es r hasePOMEROY
Tbe halUsoflb
eague signups, 6:30Alzheimer's Related Disorders .8:3.0 p. . Thursday March 16 and
Support GrotJD, 1-3 p.m. Marcli 15

4 ROLL PKG.

i p.m.

Tbur~day.

POMEROY - Pilmeroy Group
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.in., at Sao¢
Heart Catholic Cburcb. Al-anon
will meet also. ·

POMEROY -'- Pomeroy Youth
League, sign up day, Thursday,
RACINE - American Legion
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Ele- .
mentary School. Additional infor- · Post 602, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. with
mation, 992-3976.
dinner.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Better Health Club will meet at the

TUPPERS PLAINS - · VFW
Post 9053 and Auxilairy, joint din-

ncr, Tbursda y,· 6 :30 p.m .

Racine. Rev. James Gillette, evangelist. Bil Hoback , pastor invites
public.

'FRIDAy
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Junior
SUNDAY
High School alliletic banquet, 6:30
RA CINE - James and Debra
p.m. Friday, followed by Athletic
Boosters meeting with officers to Davi s, ·in concert the Racine
be elected . Eastern High School Church of the Nazarene, Sunday.
athletic banquet, 6:30 p.m. Satur- Debra, bron7.c medalist of the 1976
Montre al Olympi c games, will
day.
share her testimony at 9:30 a.m.
RACINE - Weekend revival 7 followed by James, singer-songp.m. eacb evening, Pentecostal writer, performing a blend of conAssembly, State Route 124, temporary , countr y and gospe l
songs at 10:30 a.m. Public invite.

39

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home Of Frances Goeg lein,

9 a.m.-noon Saturday 18 at &lt;the
Chester Elementary. A birth tertificare is' needed if child bad .not been
registered in the league before.
Cost is $20 per child.

14·15 oz.

TISSUE

'

WHITNEY
PINK
SALMON
14.75 oz.

•

NORTHERN

pbia~ minted pennies could be in

1

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

(

$669

STOKELY
VEGETABLES
.
$ 00

Michael G. Sellards, executive director of Pleas·
ant Valley Hospital , al left, welcome Art E.
Hartley, Jr. and Jennifer Sheets to the Foundation's Board of Directors.

ROLL

,Report: Double-lettered pennies surfacing
Coin experts believe that the
circulation.
double letters in "Liberty" and
, Beverly Beck, a coin dealer with " In God" ·on the pennies make it a
Ambassador Coins in Manassas, doubled-die, which is created when
Va., told Coin World she found 50 a di e, the device used to stamp
of th e· pennies while searching images on blank coins, has offset
through 500 . Sbe said sbe sold impressions.
.,
them to another coin dealer for
Wben dies are made, they arc
$1 50 ap1ece, or $7,500.
pressed more than once with the
Raymond Pichette, of Punta mirror image of what is to appear
Gorda, Fla., retioited finding 20 of · on the coin. If the mirror images
' the coins. He said be sold 14 to are not precisely on top of one
local dealers for $100ceach. ·
another, tl!e letters and -pic tures
1
appear more than once on the coin.
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uate of Pomeroy High School, Military Academy where be serves
Obio State University and the on the Board of Directors. He is
Capitol University Law Scbool. ·also a member of the Board of
Ms. Sheets is presently serving as Directors of the West Vir_ginia
·President of the OSU Alumni Club Petroleum Marketers Assoc•auon
-"I'ri·County~businesS-community-to--af-Meigs County• .- - an&lt;l--is on -the advisory Board--ofthe Foundation's board or direcSbe is also member of tbe Factor's Computer Software Systors.
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, tern. Hanley and wife Janet, a real
the Meigs County Chamber of estate agent, have two children, Art
' Jennifer s·beets, an atlorney in
Pomeroy, Ohio, and Art E. Hartley, Commerce, tbe Obio State Bar III (Trace), 19, and Brianne, 15.
Jr., President of City Ice and Fuel
Association where sbe is active on Tbe Hanley's-attend Trinity United
Company of Point J&gt;leasant, w_v.
the Council of Delegates and Methodist Church in Point Pleaswere chosen because of their interserves as secretary-treasurer of the ant.
est in the Foundation's goal of fur-. Meigs County Bar Association.
The PVH Health Foundation
tbering the development of new
Ms : Sheets is the pianist for the established the Pleasant Valley
and existing health care services in
Middleport Church of Christ and Endowment Fund in 1988 and in
Mason County and the Tri-County
takes part in the Meigs County 1994 completed a sec&lt;ind fundrais area, and assisting Pleasant Valley Community Band.
ing campaign which brought the ·
Hospital in its efforts to maintain
Sbeets is married to I ames, a trust fund total to over $700,000.
and improve upon the quality of · teacher and wrestling coach in Interest from the uust. goes toward
health care services in our commuMeigs County . Tbey bave three financial assistance for students
nity, Miller said.
sons ,.Jared, 24·, Aaron, 21 and from Mason, Galli a and Meigs
NAMED TO FOUNDATION BOARDSheets is an attorney with the
Adam, 17.
counties majoring in a bealthcare
George
MJUer, chairman ol the Pleasant Valley
Jaw firm of Little, Sheets and
A native of Mason County, related field 81 a West Virginia or
Hospital
Health Foundation, al right, and
Hanley graduated from Greenbrier Obio institution of higher learning.
Warner in Pomeroy. Sbe is a grad-

MASTER BLEND COFFEE
34.5 oz.

CALIFORNI A
DEAR TRACY: So true.l)le prism
of time alters perception in strange
and fascinating ways. Thank you for
.pointi ng it out so effectively.
Gem of the Day: Old norists never
die. They just make other arrangements.
"A Collection ofMy Favorite Gems
of the Day" is tk perfect lillie gift
fo r chat .&lt;pecia l someone who is
impossible 10 buy for. Send a selfaddressed, long, business -size
enoelope and a eke/cor money older
for $5.25 (this includts postage and
handling) to: Collection, clo Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562 , Chicago,
Ill. 606 11 -0562 (in Canada , $6.25).

BRAWNY
PAPER
TOWELS

MAXWEll HOUSE

News policy

DAYTON, Obio (AP) - Double-lettered 1995 pennies that coin
collectors are Selling for more than
$200 apiece bave begun to surface
along the East Coast, according to'
· Coin World magazine.
In its March 27 edition, the
weekly Sidney, Obio-b~ magazine said reports of the com bave
come in from Connecticut, Massacbusetts, Florida and Virginia
Coin experts believe that as
many as 600,000 of the Pbiladel-

·'

12 oz.

$

bed on tbe hospital room fl oo[ He
couldn't see why both of us had to
stay awake during those wee hours,
and neither could I.
We made an agreement that I
would wake him up if I felt tbal I
needed him. When I began to go into
hard labor, I did need him, b~t it was
impossible to wake hi m up. I told the
nurses to let him sl~ even though
they had to step over h1m to attend to
me. Finally, he woke up on his own
-- just in .time to see the birth of our
youngest son.
While it was a bit disconcerting at
the time, we both can look back 81 it
·now and laugh. Isn't it interesting how
some incidents that seem catastrophic
tum out to be the things you laugh
about · later?
TRACY IN

- - - - - - - - - - - -.Community calendar------------

Beat of the Bend ... ·

Busy Bees
share dinner

•I

ARMOUR
TREET
LUNCH MEAT

MINUTE MAID

should also know that they can live
very nearly normal lives by following
a few simple guideli nes. The lcey, of
course, is acyclovir, tru ly a miracle
drug that has changed the lives of
millions.
Dea r Ann Landers: I wish to
respond to Kendal l Park, N.J., whose
husband went to the movies .during
her non -life-th reatenin g live-hour
plasuc surgery. 1 see absolutely no
reason to criticize him. The fact that
he didn't ban~ around the hospital and
pace the comdors does not mean that
he loves his wife ahy less. ,
My wonderful , loving husband
spent every minute with me during
my long labors before our children
were born. With the last child, be
became sleepy and made himself a

a

s

$ 199

the infec tion. Thi s is known as asymptomatic shedd in~ could be
"asympto matic shedd ing ." That reduced by 95 percent through dai ly
means people with herpes can treaunent with acyclovir, an antiviral
transmit the virus even when no drug currently used to treat herpes.
symptoms are present
Scientists, however, cannot yet say •
Some researchers suspect that as for certain if this also preven ts
many as 60 percent to 70 percent infection.
of new cases of herpes re sult
You have an excellentlniCkrecord
from sexual contact with an or informing readers about genital
infected person during periods of herpes, Ann. With over 30 million
asymptomatic shedding. Please make Americans infected with this virus,
thiS clear to your readers so they will those 1101 infected may unlcnowingly
understand that they cannot rely on contin\!e,like "Wisconsin Woman1"
Uie absence oi' physical signs of to place themselves at risk . Please
herpes as a guaranree that they will keep giving us solid information. -not be infecled.
A GRAT EFUL READ ER IN
New dala presented in October at NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR N.C. READER:Thanlc you
the 34th lnter.;cience Conference on
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemo- foryetanotheropportuni w toeducate
therapy in Orlando, Fla., shpwed thai my readers. Those who have herpes

PLEASANT, W.Va. George Miller, chairman of tbe
Pleasant Valley Hospital Health
Foundation, has announced the
appointment of two members of the

LAYS
POTATO
CHIPS
9 oz.

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-7

Pomeroy attorney, local businessmalil
named
to PVH Health Foundation 1~
POINT

(

Srlo1n np .Steaks•••~•••

... .. lOI N.otftl

l'lrnle Synllc.Me and
Cteatots Syndic:fte'"

printed 1 leuer from ' Wisconsin
Woman," whose husband has genital
herpes. She said that by abstaining
from~ exual c ontact dur!ng her
liusband's outbreaks, she lias
remained free from infection.
It is important to point out that
scientiSts now believe people infected
with genital herpes release substantial
amounts of infectious virus even
wllile diSplaying no physical signs of

2 LITER

U~DA C~OI~E BONELESS BEEF LB

Ann
Landers
•

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Herpes is infectious even when no physical signs are evident

Dear ADD Landen: You recently

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT T.O LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., MARCH 18, 1995

Wednesday, March 15,1995

~s~ot

TOLL FREE 1·800·822-IJ411 • 312·2844
344·5941• 422~0156

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Manday • Saturday: 9 am ~ 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • .6 Pl!l •

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�Wednesday, March
: Page

8

The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

15, 1995

Pomeroy-Mfddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

15, 1995

Got Your MeJSCIIO Across
Wit• A Daily Sontlnol

BULlETIN BOARD
1 10
6 column lach wMkdays
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low latH)

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

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HAULING
(Specialize In
driveway apreadlng)

WAYNE'S PLACE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
· PfiESENTS

-

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Top Soil,

SJ!I., Mar. 18, 9:30pm til1 .:30 pm
$2.00 Cover
KARAOKE
Every Mon. Starting Mar. 20 .
9:30 pm til 1:30am

.

A Cardinal· Affiliated ·supermarket

Gravel, Sand,

CHARLIE LILLY

.

'

Limestone,

•

Chris .
Scher!el

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
· SETTLEMENT OF.
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY, ·
.
OHIQ
Accounts and ·vouchers

ESTATE NO. 28286-Final
and Distributive Accounl of

of the following named
fiduciaries have been filed
in the Probate Court, Meigs

the Estate of Karen Louise

D. Edwin Oberholzer,
Executor of the Estate of
Lanna
Oberholzer,

Deceased. ·
ESTATE NO. 23007-Final
and Distributive Account of

Mary A. Layne, Guardian of
Incompetent

Person .
Unless exceptions are

Learning
•Lots of '

said Court on the 18th day

·Common

and Distributive Account of

(3)t5

Robert E. Buck, Judge
Pleas

Court,

Probate Division, Meigs

County, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop

&amp; .Compare

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

'"====
r

CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

Created by the

La~t

of

Will and

Announcements

SHOOTING M

L.

~ Don

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• Sf DING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(6t 4) 992·2753

Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.
March 19th starts

Gloria A. Wagner, Executrix
of the Estate of Edward J .
Waqner, Oe:ceased.

44

CH

Middleport American 1

Betting, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 28570·Final
and Distributive Account of

l p.m.- 12 gauge

Apanment
for Rent

I

llo\\ .\IW

E\c \\\TIM;
WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse,

.Now availble

BuUdozi"B• Backhoe,
Serlice8.
·
Home Sites, Lan,l
Clearing, Septic System•
&amp; Driveways.

Ohio

FmHA One BR apts.

Trucking·
Li10cstonc,
Top Soil, FiiJ Dirt

Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent

$269.00.

Resident pays electric only

Refrigerator,~

Rang~ •.

SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

614·992·6419 TOO 1-800-750·0751l.

®
u-~

Suri'oundlng Areal
(!i! 4) i§5-3561 gr

992-5335

Equal Housing Oppertunity

n
'II

'·'-----....:.:~~

11'0-A·WIY

Maggies Crockpot

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING

Clifton, WV

Dine-in or Carry-out
773-561 2
Bring in ad

C0111pG1'a6le Slllt &amp; Pricet
NEW HAVEN, WV
304-882·2996
•
311411 mo.

8 ·

for 10 % off.

P.ublic Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC
AUCTION
Located at the Auction Cent~ on Rl 33 in
Mason, W.V.
1
•
~~

Oak wash 'stand. oak dresser, Early one drawer
wash stand, oak bed, maple bed, drop-leaf table, oak
rocker, sofa , chairs, oak night stand, A.M:C. lrost·
free refrigerator. Westinghouse 30" electric range ..
dishwasher. matching . harvest gold side·by·side'
refrigerator 'w/ice &amp; • water dispenser &amp; 30" electric
range, Maylag wringer washer, 5,000 BTU air condi·
tioner, Virginia Rose plates, Carnival bowl, Aladdin
lamp, old oil lamp, 4 gal. churn, crocks, blue jars.
canning jars, baskets, skillets , Wagner Griswald,
woodep adv. boxes, books, rugs, beautiful set of oak
kitchen cabinets (over 20 cabinets). ceiling lans,
lavatories, commodes. bath tubs. 5 small Sears &amp;
Montgomery Ward . gas wall furnaces, few tools &amp; ·

more .

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
304-m-5785 or m-5447
AUCTIONEER, RICK PEARSON
'

Terms: Cash Or Check With I.D.

·-

'

l

-----

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sHes • Camp Sites .:!•'!lily Re~n ions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Licensed &amp; Bonded - 20 years experience

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life

&amp; Accidenl

P.O. Box

•

Ins .

Co ..

189

Middleport, Ohio 45760

614-843-5264
life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident ·Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

985-387g
Howard L . Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

New Homes • Vinyl Siding

New

Garages • Replacement Windows

Gutters

Room Additions • Roofing

Downspouts
· Guttar . Ciear~ing
Painting

949·2168
5.11619~

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

TFN

COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
.••
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calis)
2112J92!1 1n

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl

Licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
West Virginia 866.

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

MANLEY·s

Rooring, Siding, Ronm
Additions, Concrete, clc.

Kenny's Auto Ren·tal.
Kenny's is the place to come :·
when you need a car rental.
We H•re Cars and Vans! ·
Kenny's Auto Center

264 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1_800. 486 _1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
1011jn

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair :

P.O. Bux 220
Bidwell, OH 45614
(614) 388-9865

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE:
614·992·6223

Chuck Stotts

Free Estimates ·
Insurance Work Welcome

Announcemenl s

3 · Announcements .

Phoebe (peevish): "Why would you want IO ask

.J

1116111n

Burial, Final Expenses. Loans. Business, Family
•· Security, College Funds, Emergency Funds .
Retirement, Estates, Life Insurance to fit your needs.

Or ...

',

I

1/2/lln

Tune-ups

Light Hauling,

AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - At Chec11;, everybody knew
yourname.
·
On "Friends" ~cy know each other's names, cof·
fee preference and seemingly everything else. And
do !hey love 10 talk about it!
.
·
· Rachel to Phoebe : "I can't believe he hasn't
kissed you yet. I mean, by my sixlh date with Paolo
he had already named bolh of my breasls." lben to
the enlire group: "Oh ... did I jusl share too much?"
. It's just talk , bandied among the sitcom world's
sexiest sextet. Also, its most prudish.
Befitting an lllh·place ranking for the season to
date, "Friends"' is full of preny funny talk.
• Ross: "She said she's looking for a relationship
with someone exacdy like me."
Joey :'"She really said that?"
Ross: "Well, I added the 'exactly like me' part."
out my sisler?"

On.~

Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.·Leave
Message; After 6 p.m .
614·985·4180

Injector Pump svc

Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

ily FRAZIER MOORE

In Tomato Sauce
16 ounce can

LMIT FOUR
Ptt F.-n4y
Good"""
.. ,_,..-....

37632 West Shade Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

MASON, WV

Apprentice Auctioneer: Kevin Meadows -A-116

./

• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting .
,
Also Concrete Work
(F REE EST IMATES)
V. C. YOUNG Il l
992·62 15
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC

FREE ESTIMATES

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY.'

Ri!al Estate General
·

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.• Wed . • Fri .• Sat.
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
• Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992·2060

• Room Additions

GRAY'S

.MARCH 18, 1995,
10:00 A.M.

LUNCH

Painting &amp; Co.
"Take the pain out of
painting . Let us
do it for you ·
Interior &amp; Exterior

-

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Linda's

10/5/Hno

'Friends' has
companionship
along with laughs ·

L

311411 mo.

7/31191 TFN

Public Notice

Chunk Light•Canola Oil or
Water Paclled•S ounce can

304·88~·3336

-··

l2!1Wn

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Maintenance provided

FREE monitoring.

992·5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

on-site iaundry,

Community Room, Management,

alarm Installed receive 6 month's

992·7013 OR

992-5388

Nease, Deceased. ·
15STATE NO. 25t48,First
Account of leslie Janette
Test~ment

With every -new

Frame Repair
NEW. &amp; USED PARTS fOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

.Oiahwaahertl
*I.W. Heeter•
-Microwave• •Diapoule
•Thanke Melga &amp;

A.M. tiiiS:OO P.M.

the Estate of Frederick S.

3

Service

Experience
Mon. thru Frt. 7:00

31

Atkins, Trustee of the Trust
,

•Lots of Fun and

filed thereto, said accounts 1.:::::=:::':""':"~
will be for hearing before r

Mary Nease. Executrix of

BEEF•BONELESS

REJ:INISHINC.
S'r' SfE M S
•

:====~

Public Notice

·Huntington Trust Company, · ol Aptil, 1995, at which time
N.A .• Fiduciary lor the Trust · said accounts · wil_t be
Considered and continued
Under the Will otThomas A.
from day to day until finally
May, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 28781·Final
disposed Of.
.
Any person interested
and DistribUtive Account of
may file written exceptions
Harlan Pate Quick, Executor
to s'a id accounts or to
of the Estate of Arlena Mae
matters pertaining to the
Quick, aka Arlona Lyons
execution of the trust, not
Quick, Deceased.
less than five days p"rlor to
ESTATE NO. 25148·Eighth
Annual Account of Tina,
the date seHor hearing.

lb.

Op,L.I.JW,D

~ ~/

614-992-423

Marie Collins, Guardian of
the Estate of Wendi Michelle
Collins. a Minor.
ESTAtE NO 28672·Final

M01tllt

PARTS ::t
Specializing in Custom

-Refrtgeratore •Freezer•

Haggy, . an

Special This

• WHALEY'S AUTO

oofaot Aaltable Service
owulllfi • Dryero • Aangeo

~·

TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS. All ITEMS flOT AVAILABLE Ill All STORES

2128{95

&amp;

D .J . JOE 1000 pm 111 .2:00 am
SPECIAL ON DRAFT BEER
POOL TURN . SIGN UP AT 7:30

ESTATE NO. 16606-Thlrty·
fourth Account of The

Sunday 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Only
Limited: 740
Back bore, 680 Front

•All Makoti -42 Ytlrt

THIRSTY THURDAY
FEATURING

and settlement:

VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing , Vinyl
Replacement,
· Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmatee

•Factory Authorized Parte

EVERY TUES.

SALE DATES: MARCH 12 THRU MARCH 18, 1995. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR

Office Houra: t.ton.·Frl.
8:00 o.m .-3:30 p.m.

KU'IIPPLIIICE
IERVICI

LADIES' NIGHT

County, Ohio, for approval

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2172

JAMESAURM
SERVICE :

111Mfn

DON'T FORGET

Public Notlca

J&amp;L INSULATION

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

·

Joey (exaSperated): " So that if we went out on a
date.sbe'dbelhere!"
·
·
There's one thing more important to a ~itcom
audience than laughs: comfort level.
Just as with I'Cheen" and iiS bar, "Taxi" and ils
garage , or scores of other sitcom successes,
'~'Friend
•• 'nvites your vicarious involvement with a
f ·
· nds as they cocoon in each olhers': Iiv·
in · rooms r at the Central Perk, a living-room-like
coffee bar.
.
.
Bottom line: Who wouldn'l want to join them in
lheir floating kaffeeldalsch?

~ ·-·~·

\,

•

c

~--·/

.I

.

'

�Page-10-The Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1995

•

Pomeroy--Middlepon, Ohio

.The Dally

BRIDGE

mammal
45 Perchft
41 FNriCit friend

"fi-lii' 011'11\J(';R... -rA~l-110 .

YOU CAN FIND THAT SPECW.

lllte Out'SN

114 111 1133.

..

.

4

on L.ott.

121,000,

Giveaway ·
1HI

DOUBLEWIDi

REPO,

...,llvedln,ftOdi~JIMUI

~-7.

2

--11121.
.21-.

1111'0011'1

12.1110.

.....

Trailer,

Lost&amp; Found

Found 1 112-21\' mole block l
ton hound doG. WMring blue
COllar. 304.e'J5.135o 01 304-1~

m.~~Golllpofl~ 114--

18 Now lloon 12d0 with 121140
oddod, , _ HP.GF, 10ll10 &amp; porch, mUll· mow. tala of II•

liM ...... Coonpor · Top.
Auton•Ue, R--. GOod, T•U
Good Gun On Prtco,

loot: llole Rodbono
Doa. In AnM 01111. Olivo
BldWOII, SU 311 111151.

lloka 2 poymonto ·• In,
, _ 'Mx'/11 2.3br. Call Ruoo llu,..

1I_1.;;8;-T,;;i;;;;;;~to;Do;;;;;;;
-T-

tho , _ of .......,lng vic&amp; To bnomo port Of lho
- · · moot Ot I Cl lui ....
loom '""" to: Jill Undomon,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Norrlo .-·-· .,
c1"''lclo ,.o, never
Yotd Work WI- WIIIMil llwd ln. Sovo 11000. Call Raua.. Cloonod Ug1tt Houllng. -.1-100-211-e!O. .
~ Rooldi... lol,ltovo:
II4-446-11111Z
35 LDts &amp; Acreage

31'19 Roell• lii;;;;;;;;t;i;ji'ijUiniiji:Cj;iftoi
:!:.:.:i:,"t'.."!":.~.:"!'ilct;':

Admlnlotrot•, P........, N.,..

b

lngiR .... Cantor,
..,_
11.!1.:~. Pon• .or. Ohio
ALL Yord &amp;olio IIUII 8o Poldln
.ldvo.... DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. 41711; 114 w-.1 1101. EOE
tho doy boloN tho od le to run.
Sundoy odldon • 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy. Mondor odhlon - 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.
,__
Th~n, Frl And Sot, 31 Smft.....

71-lt57.

coli

·

4 Acr• Comw Of PDIIDm Trot

Bloar Rood, Addloon
Townohlp, $14,000, 51+31J.78flt.
I

·

u2
ocroo, m ft ridge tDp
building oao, $13,1110. Ropum
Ad, rMeoneble I'Mtrlcl:loril. No
olnglo wlclo lnQUirM, ploooo. '"'
tormollon mollod on Nqueot.
304.f'IU2113.

· F,_I:OOTIII?

Trocto Of Lind 5 45 Actoo' 5
.lc,. Trocto 11110. Mill Down,
1100 llonth Lond eo...roct, Gollle CO. " - - 10 lllloo ~
50

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AI Yonl Soloo 111111 8o Pold In
Advo.... Doooll,.: 1:OOpm tho
befoN the ed Ill to run, F~llrnl En'* call ~
Suildoy odftlon- 1:00pm Frlcloy, llonlot.
-1-Uno - . Alllll.
Mondoy
odHion
10:00..m. Schodult'!o.
Owr ·Tho .eount.r
Soturtloy. ,

Merchandise

'"Hlw

n ..._

For Lease

49

For......._ RJo

14500,

14 Hlretord OOW8 I

· -'polled. llfiW7a.

.

old....
--oldold ~--An!1q-.

lquo
tvml-. RlwiiiiO
Ru. llaore, OWMI'. 1'14-4122525. Wo buy . ..wo.
·
Don, Junl&lt; ftl Soli Uo Your NonWoftlng llojor .....,..,_.,
Color T.V.'o,
Rolrlgorat-.
Froo..,.
~

w-.
·

J I D'o Auto Porto ond Solv"'l'!,

buying -kaJunk outoo I
truc:lui. Aloo, porto lor - · 30477W343 .. 7n5033.

Old butt- cootumo iowol..,,
old light-. Iran oklllolo, olotu-. Star Wara, glu8, ehlna.

To
SIOO 'll!fooldy
No Experience
tl•c

ThrM b• droom
lor. 11""1'

~~'\.~~~=

42

Ext. 1311. 124 -~
Nuroo .lido Tnolnlng Prog'"""
- 0 1 Nu~ I llol!oi&gt;IIK•
lion Coritor •• bO olloring ,,.....
1!111
In , .. -o,. ,_
ot
April.- APflllcotlono
bolng ot:coplod 01 31751 RockOI&gt;rlngo Rd., - 0 1 · Clooo
olu lo lmKod. Tlinoo (31
.. - . . . po,... 111 requloWol

no petl:, IM-ou--2103 before

pm.
3 lodroom Tr- Portlolly Ftll'
. nlohod Lacotod ADDr. 2 lllloo
-11om, fl14.441-1341 Aftor 5
P.ll.

44

Chof 17 cu. Ft.
Rofitclo!!ltor I • Eloolrlc 81owo
$200 Eooh· ColdorNol llflhQ,E. w.Mr I
Oryor $15 uch, OU..r 21"

Spoo ... ~--

AVON lo buy « ooll, llorityn, ln-

dapandMI ,..,. ~2644 or

P£RSOHAL CARE PROVIDER
to provlclo
arw IIIIIWince lo
montour Ill ...... oln lho - o ·
.,.. to old In tho
molnt- ol lndopoliving.
Wll
......
with
_llo.-ulaanll~~~; ~. dilft..
w•ehlng, MCf .....,.,.. -~
.... p o - hygloile, ....
lndiVIduol -

..,.on~~

tranoporl
polni"*"O.

ct...

to

....

Roqulrn

HS

~lld,..=·!'::l'.:.
p

Apply In po..- ot Contor lor 11on1o1 .._.,.. lor&gt;
vic:•, Inc., ..... 213 of tho
PI-nt Voloy Hoopllol, ""'"'
PI-nt. EOEIAA

tarKt4erm care nuralng ......

tonlio lor pert~lmo -Ung
olllfto.ot aur . .bod oklllod nu,..
Inti loclllty. Jill llumao-r, AN,
DOn Point P-nf Nlftlna I
RoW.Motlon Conlor1.!1! I lox
321 Point Ple-nt ... 251550:
,.,.!e711-3oos. (A Glonmorl!
FociiHy) EOE.

own
- ...- , _
l:ompul•
- , , · 24....
-

~~lad!~.
COOKWARE .t
WI,..od: IEllpor- Cookwo;.
Soloo
People In
Homo
Domooootrotlon.
ll..t
Bo
-·
Advo.-oTo
lllnl.,..,. Poe.ltM, 304-f?l-

-

-ru,..

Pl..until WV, cal
114 441 -t41.

~1450,

AUCTION I

Autos for Sale

.

SWAIN

FURNITURE. 12

Olivo lilt., QolllfOCOIIe. Now • u.d
lumll~n,
- · Wootorn
I &amp;TOR- TANKS 3.000 Work
bcoolo.-114-44WI
...
l;lprtghl, Ron E":'~:l

-do

a--..

uu d • • e-!1'1·
high ~ · low .
ltciOIII•• holt ...... I
·~ .

WI-,_ Dtyor, ..Color
T.V, Cl
, llolt1gorotor,
Rod;:....M~I

1231
l14'
52 Sponlng Goods

Mit ....

~-. ":;~ ~
Worn I no, $180,
.
.

55

•• CIIOvy Covolor. Conlfl.
12100
1.....,.....180
lion
w.-o odo ond Aftir 5 p.m. II-F.

1m llulalt R-·Shope
.,,100; 1111 lfon:urt 'S.blo LS
, 13,000, l_,o0147.
a
till .loop CJ7, VI, honl-top.
, ola 7 , - 'IS,DOOml, 110011 cond., IOfdrig
14000. 30MJI-1102.
.

Building
suppllla

.,.,.lo

POSTAL JOBS

scort .,..
lor u - ond
spplicatlon In . Cll 21'"111-

l!lln ut. WVMI, ............
s..F~.
-

~lor­

......

eectlonl HUD ••blltl'w' o.plox In PI P._.... WV. W.oportmont

-

I

Ultlltleo.

to John -

IOnd

.ot

211ory - · boolclo Now
Ho- lupoimortlot, boctom
noar oompe.l~ NmDdalad, 2
bop: , _ ..., &lt;10'1121', IMr
loor U'IID1, IOO'x&lt;IO' lol,
Dow.. _ . Clolllpollo. 1,.._
121,000. 304 1~-2713.
7f111,
I ltd~QMMJ, 2 latha. Hilt
Pump. 0.. FurMoe, 1 Acre, BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTll AT
Q o -. Add- Arlo. 112,000, BUDGET PRICES AT J.lCICSON
ESTATES, 52 W o - Drtvo
114o311·'12t7.
~ to 12111. Wllk to •'And 1.o1 " - Down · 1.,_
movloo. Call ~46-2511. £.
Po_,, Euy Tonno, 4 Bod- quol Houolng Oppcoltunlly.
raomo, • Bolho, Locotod Nlor
Rutllnd AnM. Cal 1-100 141 For Ront: 2 -oom .lportMOt, Alit F o r - nwol, Unlvooolty Of Rio
Grande, Clean.
.....llul eou...r Eololo: Hu,...
lng And Form~l/4 - .. Fumflhod 2 I 3 Room .lporto
nwol, Cloon, Ulllltl• Pold. No
Nlilo ~!GUM, S
- · Well Ptlta, Ratw.-aan. ·Dipoell Reo
Goo, Bom, 3
kl9, In
Door Plu_!nblng, $10,000, 114,.._.MI Rep.
And Lol ... Down
Po,_i
ANo. Colll-100 141
Elllcloncy,
AH
lltlllloo Pold, Both,
I14Mio. 1111 . Bocond " -

Colt Aftor 5 P.ll.

13

lnaurance
~~~~~~~---AIIEIIICAH~~~~~L 111V1CK1E CAITO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I ••CCIUNTI-•u DISUFE I HEALTH
304 111 t217

'~~:t~~, S©\\4UM-~t.~s·
_O

I

I
' I

.... -·-roof.
,...

COd- Efdo-, 1u1t
...........

~...., oand., .,.. - - .

5321.

304-77).

'"":~~~z~··
....- .-.
. o..o.,

BORNLPSER

folf. YOO 0C
AAVI~G DIFFICULTY &lt;£Tilt-!.(,
'-G;:S,. NJ):(, 1-JITI-\ Y()!Jf:.

Auto Parts &amp;'

Now au tonU. -

· - . roolol~,

ton lrUcfl
Door moto;

AI. 211

J!!.W:

.

Truck
Chov"
Ford,304-fJ&amp;;•
Dodao.
......10, ·
oltort
• long.
8281. .
.

Campers&amp;
MotorHomee

. - Old1n abita FINftu Good
Condition, 1114 Oldlll'l cbile Cut·

53
Antlquea
"B_uy_or__
....,._""R"'h.:.,....,~-,.-Anl.,....,lquot,,..-­
t124 E. llaln 81,..t, on RL 124
Pomeroy. Hou,.: II.T.W. 10:Di!
o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Suntloy 1:00
to 1:00 p,m.l--2121.

lllll ~rc:ortt. 14•'111. -

bod-

, 114-14~ . .

room,

'1.,

--Cot"''-

.

1811

eo--

8

rho'

..

~~

~

"~~

-· ,

~H
r

......
r-:

_

II

STRI&lt;f ABLOW H Tt£ W1R ON

~

1-fGH /'RICES. SHOP TI-E. CU.SSI'£05.

~

1 V.~W IT! li&lt;NEW IT!
~ SJ-ttS CAll! 'VOUR SI\JPIP
&lt;:~ll GOt ME OUT Of THE
T®~ 'I'OIJ l'rol'lE SIWlD
Ill RO\J!oll)t() UP AND sr;NT
10 SIWiir.~ FOR A
CM\1~6 "~1) ... f

lpm.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

MuSICal
Instruments

Baldwin Mr cn=:i.\o500.
Cal boloro ......
lor oote,
.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Lt vcslock
Thursday.. March 16, 1995

Smold,..

411 22011 ·

eonc..to

acr.

-

IIO(IIIo

~-=..J:..J::o?"::

in project' that provide crea,tiv~ outlets
for Your ·talents. The end resull of your
efforts could be quite impressive.

lloulz Troalor ....-~,::
ItO
Now,.,..
- ,fulllloo
!tog12.~111
S3.1M;

~ll~lcldi~IP:=•rt:::_•::.:::
114-112=o811=51.:._~- I .:;-.~c;IH::.:...:.I.:.::..:.::..:.::.=--- ... Dlooot$8,480,1t4-..a22

..

••

a prgd_U_ctive d(!y lor you, provided you

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) Evon
lhoogh you mighlleel your judgment is
boner lhan your lriends' today, yjeld a Iii·
lie to salvage lheir pride. Trying to palch
up a broken romance? The .Aslro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you to understand

.I
· ~

assessme nt s might. not be accurate
toda y, so don 't iunip lo conc lu sions .
Allow adequ ate time fo r studying all
aspects of a situation .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Instead ol call·
ing in the e•pert s for mmor household
repairs today. pull out your tool kit and
see' if you can handle these tasks your-

organize it crinstrucl1vely. II you dilly-dally
too much , you'll accomplish on ly a lrag·
ment ol your aims.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today you

sell.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Noy. 22) You shou ld

might encounter an endividual whose
st rong opini9n s diametrica lly oppose
yours. Resist becoming involved in a

be adept at managing your persona l
affairs today, but don't try to impose your
ideas on othe rs or te'll th em how they

frurtless comb a! wrth this person .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be ware ol

should run their lives.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211

incllnations today 1o make your lite harder

Important objectives might be 4nusually

than it needs to be , especially where your difficult to achieve today , but don't toss in
caree r is concerned . Sco ut out easy ·the towel. Vlcfory will come through per·
routes.

In the year ahead, try to involve yoursell . CANCE~ (June_21-July 22) In matters

IN-aMok'rpM. ·

I

· what to do to make the relationship work .
Mail $2 .50 to MatGhmaker, c/o thi s news-

papal, P.O. Box 4465. New York , NY
10163.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) This can be

61 Fann Equlpmem

Com~l•••

.

P~INI NUMBERED lETTERS

IN THESE SQUARES

ohe · chuckle quolld
by f,ll,ng in the missing words
develop from step No. 3 below.

I

·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•
Fl~tly · Notch -Jumpy - Jagged - HAD your FUN
I always feel bad after a holiday. since I usually go
way off my diet I've concluded that a conscience only
bothers you after you 've HAD your FUN.

y

11 R. Sol~

to 111111. 304-178-2473 nom-

Splnot piMO I coiiiM-tt2-1114.

•

ll'!a&lt;

.ASTRO-GR.APH

57

_

UNSCRAMBL E LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

.\,

Contolnod
Auto,
Roll-Out
AW!IIng, il.n. ,Condhlon,
12.000. eM-2N-t111.
11117 P_,., R . 27.5 Ft. Fifth
Whoot, Awning, Roof, Air, 114245 ISJII, 814-24W021.

1111, . 1188, 1tlt, , . , . ,
T - boMMII ooto, (_,mi..
to mint) common• I lltlrs 1N4

_

L-...1..-..L.-l._.J.......JL-.J ~ou

BIG NATE

ROBOTMAN

.....

Comploto 10' - - oyo. Dovlo- 2h4 11111; .....
11111 W/Ct.nnot-11' lAD I 110o eon Trencher t..\tada, tow
CM10fY NCIINr. $310. !Ot 112 flo¥; lila dumb ........ FoRI, 114-

I

hung this sign over the door of
the gym: "Developingyourbody
, . . - - - - -- - --. is important. but don't neglect
D I P E U S
your mind in the • - - •.. -!" 1.
~...1.-J...
. .......1.-.l..
. .......1 ~

Serv ices

Now, 1
tina. WID, Stow, llolrfa«ot•,
$3011 Dopooll, $38MIIO. No
.lfl..a. A'IIIIUII 1..
Wool! AplfL Appllcollono: 11111
Cantonory Rood. Clolllpollo. 114-

. Nioo 2 llr ol*, In - O J I

_G,...s_,!,_...::;E~~

I
1--.....,.16,.-.,1=-7--olr.....:;1,...::......--1 O

v

••••

·1 1 Is · 1

Merchandise
N 011 Por Iaiiie Dn All llllllnl
FOI Buinor Productel Morell
Solei Clown City. Oh. - -

oport- • Vlllloond
Rtv.olilo
Aportnwolo In llldd= ,,.,..
S23USSI • COl
-1111.
EqiiOI -ngOpportlltltloo.

Howl 2 BA, 2 Full loth 114-211HIO W-ondolor5:00
p.m. II-F.
1tte&amp; 10li~U, 2tlr., 2 both,
,, ... etor. I
., ao. cond.,
$3100. 3
.

DI~U!(£. Yd.! ?

54 Mlecellan8oua

G....- 11v1ng. 1 ond 2 bod-

'112 OUWood- Homo. Uka

CAUSING E:VOOONE:. TO

•). 1995 by NEA IlK'

GtiiiFCI'I, 114-441-3141.

32 Mobile Homes
for Slle

I~

2213.

...........

""':4..'"" -.,

. YOOR. A.Tnl\JOC 1-JKIO\

"'

ludall Prtud Tranembl' ~
Uool. - . 011 . oiOf\'
I 01 tel; - - 114'-378-B35. '
J o h - Tr.nomloolono And
Borvlco. Uood And Robulft
Tronopiloolono. Aroo; Cooh Ana
Corry Tronomloolorte, 8~.

Tronomleolono.
Uood, ~"~oil
,.._.... . . . . . . ..
784110. AbtJ to work Wl8ome . , .:

llontn 22 o,.o W/41132 $125.....,. good oond. 1200
Wine~
... cond, 1100.
37-2733.

...WAAT DO YOO THINK IT 1:, AWJT

Accessories

1
PHONE NUIIBER: fl14.44o-mor.
•

T-Top. CondMion, A~
tor(P.II.I_._

I

~~~

1112 Jot Sid, 1_,.0738.

76

3-t s

vl'l.niCAA£. AATIIE.. lt\l~•. ~y "'

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale .

lion AI. 7 I

=.
'fr.=J =::;
=City
....... ,_......._

43215.

=--"'#::.·

•

So'"hwoOI Pick-up Porto - ·
cabo, Dooro, Foriofo,. I lloro.
Aloo, . 4•4 Drivo Troln Porto. 3
Ill• South Dl Clollpolle AI Juc;

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

Colonial
Amoricon
- · 40Dott
S
ldl Ill, 4th
floor,Columbuo
R panllbl. ~titer Part·
TlniO Roxlblo Hou... lly Homo,

114 441 1332!

:.,j.f.,A:~tsr.": ~

plio-- lumflhod, "'""""
ooom lociiKioo cloM to ochoo1

Furnlohod 1250 Pluo
Doo&gt;ootl, M l.ocuot SL 114-4411340.
•
Fumlohod Aportrnont, 1 Bodroom, 107.Second Avenue, O.J.
Hpollo, tz75111o. lhiiKioo Pold,
114 441 1411 Allor 7 P.ll.
All Now s Room Fumflhod
Efflcloncy,
.lportmont,
In

$10,500,

T1 anspo1 tation

2bdnn. apta•• total llectrlcl, ap.

S -

,

I

_. ., do-

coii.,._,I2-3Tit. EOH;

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

'

~!!!I.114o247-an tloyo ....

.-....ztlf-Zim ..... 7plll,

roqutrod, no
. ..... 114-1112-2211.
1 B o - Aportmo,.. N!coly
Fumlohod, All Utlftleo Pold. Ell·
c:op1 OWn E*trlc, Prlvoto Porll·
lng,l-2&amp;02.

Help Wanted
11
AVON I All AnMo I Shlrtoy

condition, 15,500, 114-4112-zm.

Sctuote boloo ot mlaod hor,

Apartment
for Rent

In liMn. ADPti'aiiono onlloblo
ot: VII- ·a,_ Atllo. Ml or

ox-

1183 Chevy - l~j_4X41 ltMvy
duty, lour opoool, &gt;OV,I • · bod wfth tool boxoo ..., buntper I hftch, 132 il,

inl ..., 13500, 1'14rll2 2107.

· 1 and 2 bedroom lpt~ltmentl,
fumfohod ond unl\lmlohod,

Employment Services

11114 Ford 4114. 304-e?S.!tl2.

Joop Wogonoor O..d lruck, ~~~~
..... point, 78,000 crtg...,

~

:1

1112 CMv. Corworolon Von.

IIUoo,

JOo-., 01tlo,

Dn Cloy
· 2 Trolle,. For . Chopol Rood, ... 2511401.
3 bedroom . - . homo locotod
In . Burtlnghof!l,_Hud oppro~odJ

,. ....... Clolllpollo.
Wo,..od: Stondlng Timber, COoh
Or p.,..,..lll Wllh A Guorontooll~i!7BI.
.
Wo luy Junk COra, 114-31111012, 114 44t PART.

Aaglatartd

Mobile Homes

wo·s

11t-381-1780.

for Rent

Gold Colno. II.T.a. Coin Shop,

•• ltOI Few lntemew.

.:··.

·~· saoo ~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~r~t'~"·~~c:~:a~,~~§~,..~~~~~

wKh optillootlon. Aptily lri portot•. 00\,y llorlln, IM-112-•cr. oon ~~~~- 10oo.m: a·sp.m. II,
F. 81ucllntl ttw1 W'
nfulty
WI- To Buy: Junk Autoo -ploto lho TCE-wiN bo
Wfth Or WftltoiO llol.... COli Ollalblo lor ...p~o, ..... ~ . Al&gt;Larry Lt.oty. IM-3118-1303.
oofutoly no phonlcolle. EDE.
WI- To . luy: Tobocco Ook Hill Trucfdng Compony
-~. Pormonont Or louo, Sooklng Ovw'Tho Rood.,_.,
514o-l1e0.
Wfth aOad driving coccrd. COL
Roquliod. .114-482-777.1 Or A~
Top Pr'- Pold: All Old U.S. tor
1:00 P.ll. Colllt4-24'i-1301.
Colno, Gold Rlna'!t s11- Col,.,

BOOKKEEPER
lluot Havo E•porlonco In .liP,
PIR, AIR, And aon.ot l..odtl!!,
Aloo lluot Havo K,_lodgo "'
1811 Compotoblo Computer; 114-

a..

-ng

IPGiomlal

,rumhure 1oo1e or complete . .

.

In

CHIRP!

..

n,...

No optillo-.
.nlohlng. 112 mi. Jontcho Rd. Pl.

111;.'1;~

·.---------..... ..-------..

Roclng Whooto, lodllnor, 41.000

~

In

-r

I

The best bridge players who compete ·
Mec:Graw
·in both duplicate tournaments and at
51 'Woahlngton
the rubber-bridge table usually do bet· 1...-l-~­
bill
ter at one fonn of the game than at the
other. They don 't fail, exactly. It's just
that their skills are better suited to one L.....l-.1...•
style.
(&gt;.
Someone who has been equally ~uccessful at both is Sami Kehela. from
Toronto. He has won many Canadia n
CELEBRITY CIPHER
and American national titles. has repby Luis Campos
rese nt ed Ca nada in several world
Celabnty C1phtu cryptograms are created lrom qUOiatiOOs by famous people . pa&amp;llnd pret«~l
Eilch leller 1n the c 'J)her stands 101 another Tod.ty 's clue. W (IQUJIS C
championships, and played in th e
Bermuda Bowl for North America in
'l A A
IF Z
FKTEPFKM
WHEFIDK.· · 1966, '67 and '74. When back home, he
wins regularly at rubber bridge
ICCK . ZEWJKF .
Today's dea l s hows Kehela at his
best, ·reading the .cards accurately to
land a contract.
' PSOFKMMPHCPMS
P M
·z X K
Playing in three no-trump. Kehela
was -faced with a lead of the club six lo
CKYMOIOKF
HL
Z X K
M HE A . '
East's -10 and hi s queen. Ho w did he
continue'!
X. K C F P
S I Z P M M K .
At another table. South immediately
played a diamond. But East won with
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Those pieces of plastic we did are still some ol lhe
fin~st pieces of plastic around." - Ringo Starr. ·
the ace and returned a club: one down.
Kehcla decided to delay the decision.
He ran his five spade tricks first. dis ·
carding two diamonds from his hand .
I AMI
West, to keep hi s heart guard. had to
ldllod ~y CLAY l . POLlAN _.;;..._ _ _ __
throw his three diamonds. East also re·
Rearrange letters of the
leased a diamond.
four scrambled words .be.
The key moment had arrived. It was
low to form fou r words.
at!ai'n1st the odds to ti-y to drop the heart
queen. If the clubs were 4-4. a diamond
play would be successful. But s melling
out the position perfectly, Ke~~la exit·
ed from the dummy with a clUb . West
was welcome to his winners, but at
trick It he had to lead away from the
heart queen.
Philltp Alder's new book , "Get
Smarter at Bridge. " is available,
autographed upon request , for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
. : :;: .
Our new aerobics instructor
I~-.-E
Hts , NY 11577-0169.

I

.PEANUTS

11113 ..io 4x4, Rod Wfth Gr., lnt
lorlor, Wotl llol,.olnod And vlcod, New
Now A.O:

PICKENS FURNITURE

NMd tw.bpln• tor 7mo. old,
my homo. 304-773.f871.

'

llpollo onlo.

~

1\-""·

--

.

t~im1111on

unK
· 35 Verne hero
36 Hateful
36 Smell child
11 En'-1'1111- 'McEniiN
42Prea43n\eoaUN
44 Crevlbl'
'li.Cut
47 Ocun
mo-t
'II Cool&lt; alowly
49 .lcbwoo

By Phillip Alder

Soon At: Golllpolle ~~
Trllou"!,, 825 Third _.....,.,

Mogle

Eutorn
Gotllp;;jlo.
Docorotodot-..........
pltonoo,
leltiJIII
thor-

v~~

l.':.:"·.l!.... :::'".,.

lion

Cloon lalo ea.. Or
TrueD. 11117
Or ~
Smllh
lulcli- _...
,_

n-.

1110 Dodgo Rom Von 8-250,
72,000 1111-. $8,000, Can 8o

T.V. fl!li_Doll Colloe I
2 End To-,_, 114-311'·7123
Allor 5 P.ll.

I

k
;;.63;___;l;;;lv.:..e;.;II;.;OC.....,,....,~-

Financial

Wanted to Buy

2!110Poto.

34

Stars at both
forms of the game

:

11110 ctt.v. ..., 4 CV-r••
~1 AIC, Condition,
107,oou 1111eo, $2,200, 114-3N1112 Chlwolll s..1o,- 4.3

Hay&amp;Graln

~="-·=~~

... .....

outo, bod
1oua oholld,
Tohoo ~· 45,cM!O mllo1;

Aeg...-.d Umaslrw. bulle I

9

.....

llltlDINO

-. --.w:"·old.--···.--.

· - iiii!;

'onata

SPECIAL
30'x45'xr. Polntod ~~toot Slcloo1
~ Stool Roof, ta'xl
&amp;tool lido&lt; 3' lion o-.

-

IM,Ohlo I Wool VIrginia, 304-

Comp

~.13.200.114

Hellera. 111113 GIIC 1500 S.L.E., oil op'
tldnl, loppor,_hKc:ll. · - · ..,
~:~'r~o;.!,,..~,..~~3:: t"~lr
'=:.~ ::S~ bood col-. collont
conclnlon, liUOO, 114.
112-2478.
114-2~.
. 1:::..:..::::..::::..:•:,::::.:304.f71.41.::.::..:::111.=-- 52 Clolckono. 5 IQui. . . . . ··01!
~
111114 Chow S l - Ext. Cob
JET
For Ali1 114-S'IN422.
AERATION IIOTORB
l7f Off llood. "\000 lllloo,
Merchandise
Rlpllrod, Now I Ro- In . lull, 25 moo, roglotorod. Lcodod, 114-441-1104.
81oick. Col Ron Enno, 1 - Q.f400 .... long I toR, ..000.
111114 Ford Rongor XLT, 7,500
~:
""'"171-lm. · ·
51
mil•, IJC, Alf..fll caJMtte,
HousehOld
L11o - . bop 33 H..ky BuL
C-loltllmmontol otkflna
w~.- bod - .
$1\l'OD. OBO. 304-1111-1143.
Goods
)ooo............ - · · - · gentle. -.e'lll- 11-11. J04.f'll-'1113.
;;303=4·----,..---..,.,
Roglol- Ana• !tulle, 14-20 73 Vans &amp; 4
Jumbe Drive-In

m-QII.

t-100-112-4311.

Doflvwr, ,,._

!1180.

fuN lime auctioneer, complel•
aucUon
ll'f'Yk:e.
Ucen:Md

1231.

-

311 1 tau .lot For Edlla.
1....-.rc~:ll 4'-r tor Ill dtcr-::,

11110 .... -~-ng Ohio
Rlvw 2ml - . AI 2. 304-171-

To
DotoU.
IIOIIft, ~---------II&lt;ICivolod, Wltlt Good eon.. 1"21
Rentals
Business ·
munlcotlon 1101111 To:
CLA US. olo Golllpollo. Dolly
W·T-F. 5 112ml off Rt57 on Gi.wt- Trlbuno, 1124 1hlnl .._
Qo~
Opponun....:HY:..___ 41 Houses for Rent
vlllo Rd. Lolo of otull. Spoclol Hpolle, OH 451131.
- l o r ......... 304'458-1875.
2Br houee • 2003 Lincoln Ave.
Full-limo fonn llotd. - . oxp.
304.f7W!IIO .,.. 304-1711-3402.
pr.flmd.
Old
Town
FIUIII.
304Public Sale
8
1711-11111.
t. Bodroomo, t 112 Botho,
&amp; Auction
1325/llo. Dopooll, In - .
!IIMZI-G2M.
Rid! Poo...,.. Auctlon Compony,

Drrorw. Etc. I

61 Fann Equipment
POLE

SPLINTERS II

(lbbr.)

·23 -on
(opolllng)
24 kill
25 Wetvhl unlbl ·
~-..--....--. 27 L8111tlng
...
28 Employed
29 Roman
bfon..
30 NewDNI

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North East
Pass
Pas s
1•
Pass
I NT
Pass 2 NT
Pass
Pass Pass
3NT
Pass
lead: &amp;6

WATCH OUT FER

--·~17511.
IIIII CllfiY..~-4 Cyl-. 5

Crib, ·
-1·
- .hlghcliolr,
AIIo
- r
STO.A·WAY mini otorogo. 5x10, ......
S250. 304-115-'1'1124.
.
!!,444. ERICrED. IRON HORSE
10x10, 10x15,
·
rontlng
HI¥-. 304-112:-2111.
...... _ ... "True~ Lood, $41 BUILDERS 1-.:152·10411.

Rlvw, ew:i~N412.

•v

Pl. Pleasant
. &amp; VIcinity ·

54 Mlecellaneoua

oklrtlng, ..... .. 1
yeer hom 1 nw1 IMUranc.,

ond
lol - por·
Only I.,025
- .FREE
ond 1213
mo. Coll1.-.a1-3231.

,.

t...

11117 Dodao. 112 Ton PU

46 Space for Rent .

-

DIET TECHICDIII- W. .,. - ·
SoMco.
,_ 0 RDT wllh ~~-~~nut~- ..._ :!Oyro. oxp. I 1-rod, ~
, ..
w ·~ •lmot•. 114-441-11111 .,..,_
loCuo lor porHimo ond o CDII 508-llll
lor ful-(11111. W. 011 I fiOGP- ' 1===------oMo ........ ond rohob urill In - • 1 1 - - . Pol,..lna.

Yard Sale

7

$1,100.114-38MM3.

'71i:i:i;';N;;;;;;:t--t:;;\;:;;;;;;;jj;i];-- ~~--~­
liM Mrl'O 3 llr, 2 both, In-

Mille -ptiOod _y_ ~lol
..._own .:..11;___,H_,e;_:IP:;_W_,a_n..:.ted:...;;..._ _

:~~o~ ~,

•z.-.•roo.

Europe
21 Heot unit

etones
19 Country of

&amp;A 7

-~-lon,4-

... ...... u'llly 00. lruok. iii
- rodlot
ru.. I dllv•
good,
114-R!-2478.

11 Boxer L8rry-'-13 Preclouo

•J 6 4 3
oQ 9763
&amp;Q J

Condllloi\

Exeof._.

ss.ooo, ....- - .

..... .,. _ _ _ ..... 5 pm.

IIICMI.

LaM. lluhi-Calw wei Auetrallan

IIMoo,

7 Extra
8 n• together
9 D' Amato end
Bundy

SOUTH

81. AI.

3-.

5 4

K965

1178 Ford PlckoUp liLT Whllo
Flbooglooo T - . 17.000 1!"1-

45

1 Y11,-l
2 - Brecldnrldge
3 Shopping,,..
4 Blotchea
5 Roman 1,0111
6 Uncanny

&amp;8653
• I0 9 7
t A 8 2
&amp;1042

8 5

1 - -.

q ..up.
HIIed
bu!or. ,_ dotlo11 r 1.:;;;.::
18'11. _ _ _
. _ _ _ __
Itooot
304-JSUIM

Sblplwd,
lwnalo.
1p1yed,
opproL
111' old.
304-

6

4

II fl. - · Jonoon loci, 114'
258-1325.
1171 :t/4 Ton Cllowy 4 WD 17'00

. .b1hflztd apt. tw .w.ty Mil
hand'&amp;PfJd
EOH . . . . . .

DOWN

EAST

72 Trucks for Sail

tm Ford a- Truett. Trt-Ax'!f

7 month old SlboHuoky, lo good .._, ll+et:l·
70:11.

'·

&amp;KQJ92
•A K 2
• K J
&amp;J 8 ?

litO Cloyton MltO 112 ~
2 BR, I loth, CA, C
Cotllng, 2 Docllo; F..- Yotd, 1

-.0,.0.74.

8011EOIIE NOW: 1.-.11112UL 1140, ~-- 111111
• ,... Procll Co., - -

a.n.

lo 1(6:ef&gt; '(ovfl... CA\ Ot"F ·

lTaddo, Opon
ah. Nlahle........, llln-

ProYiauo PuDlo

50 Stupid p.nan
(II.)
52 Single 11om
53
Rollwl
E. 54- Domini
55 Fecllon
5e Apr. 15 ogcy.
57 Vlllll ollltfotlc
5e Clturclt Mot

PHILLIP
ALDER
·· ~

-to

43 .lquotlc

where. 1t s truly tmp~rtant , 1t ~ OK to be
assert1ve today .. AvOid. be~av1~9 aggres·
Sively, however , m soctal st1uat1ons. ·
LEO (July 23-.lug. 22) II you want to

spruce up your surroundings tOday, try to
do so wllhoul go1ng overboard on !he
expenses. Real bargains might be hard
to lind.
.
.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Your llrs!

·-

I

sistence.

CAPRICORN

(Dec . 22-Jen . 19)
Someone you like mighl do something
you'll disapprove oltoday . II you make it
into an issue . it might deteriorate and
prove tlifficult to rectify .
·.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2D·Fib. 19)
Associating with h1gh rollers today might
give you delusions ol grandeur. Trying to
rnalch them would be a lolly you'd soon
regret .

-

.I

•' I
I

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 15, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AIMirrHD rmiiiOltf· Eadl Of these ad'lerl!sed Items ~ reQ~red to be rt!8dlly a~lable for sale In
each Kroger Storl, except as speclflcaly noted In tills ad. If we do 1111 out of an advertised ll!m. we

wRI Offer IOU your dlolee Of a comparable Item, MlEI1 a'llllable, reflec~ng 1t1t same savings or a
ralncheck wl'lch Yldl entitle you to purthase the ad\1!ftlsed ll$11 at the advertised llllce '!Mihln 30
days. Only one vendor coupon wB1 be accepted per ll$11 pllthased.

Ohio ~ottery

COPYRICHT 1995 · THE kROCER CO. ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD SIIHOAY. MMOI12,
TIIIOl.icH SATURDAY MARCH 18, 1995 IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY.

NIT cage
action
underway

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. fjONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

rick 3:
'962
Pick 4:

3747
Super Lotto:
1·12-20.26-32-43
Kicker:

~ageS

..

CAFFEINE FREE DI.ET COKE, SPRITE

Dl
coca

a
Ia Ciassic
•

12-Pack
12-oz. Cans

Limit Two
12-Packs,
Please.

Luw tonlgbt In tho 40s, clur.
Friday, sunny. Highs In 601.

678082

•

•

a1
Vol. 45, NO. 224
Copyright 1995

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents ·
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 16, 1995

~yoinovich supports t~x hike for highway projects
By JOHN CHALFANT
·
.
Associated Pre W
COLUMBuSS rltesr
G
G
.
. eems a 11 ov.
eorge
bears
· a bo uta ·
IVomovich
k f
£ these da_YS are co~pIamts
boc kino mone&gt;: or local htghway proJCCts .• Now he ts
iitoc thegcl:artaxetncrease for roads- but be s not lead·
8.,
g ·
.• ,
,
tb : Eve:;whe~ .I t~,~1 s You ve got to do~~;
v~/:!v~C:~~J ;.s !8 way or that htgbway.
.
ednesday.
..
. .
He_ satd be would suppon an m~ease m etther
::ehcense ~g fees or the slate g~line tax.to pump
. money mto htgllway construction.
He tol_d House an_d Senate leaders be would
endorse etther alternauve to help erase a backlog of
road and bndge building projects. He· left the choice

up to legislators
·
.
, ,
. ·
.
,
1
think'! m basth!cal~-~!! 10 Bbetbdoattheredstbeno ,money. .
some mg 1o:a10 to
ne an
Y ve got to
dec'de
• gomg
· to dott,
· " Vomovtc
·
· h 10ld ·
1 wh en th_eyre
reportelS at an unpromptu news confe~ce:
can _tell you they'll either do tl thts. y~ar o;&gt;r
~Y II do 11 next year becau.se the heatls ~~ldin~ m
tbtS state and people are getung very up~~ · be srud.
Oh~o Departtnent of Tmnsportallon has told
legtslators 11 ~ 1101 bave e~ougll m~ney to fmance
all the ~M?W higllway and bndge projects ready for

·:1

!he

cons~uon.

Dtrector ~erry Wray blam~ the federal govern- .
ment for falling to. return to Ohto·more of the money
from federal gasolme taxes.
But Wray said last month that the department

·
would not propose a gas tax mcrease.
Voinovich said Wednesday that legislators should
place any gasoline tax increase on a·balloL
But he said he would not object if legislators
wanted to increase vehicle registration fees on their
own.
. .
"I've already indicated to the leadership that I'd
have no. problem with tbat. We're supportive but •
that's up to them," Voinovicb said.
. "If we got the $IS along with the money that we
have in the pipeline ... we could put together a very
robust program,'' be said.
.
The Ohio Contractors Association has recommended _a $15 increase in auto tag fees witb the revenue gmng to fund operations of the State Highway
Patrol.

That would replace money lbe patrol now lakes
from its snare of the slate 22 cents per gallon gasolm'e ··~- spending gymnastics would free up about
Such
$150 million for new highway construction
Voinovich said be would recommend nothing
without a consensus among legislators.
"They know that 1 will be supponive of either
alternative. but they have to come back and put the
consensus together in regan! to that or I'll ·ust let it
go by the boards," he said.
j.
. . ''And people in southeastern and central (Ohio)
will continue to complain and scream and ell and
lben maybe they'll do sometliing about it nci:
Voinovicb 'd
.
Y
sat ·

Car,"

Barker
pleads
guilty

Governor says tourism
deserves another look
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP)From the Statehouse to the White
House. government and business
seem to believe the tourism industry de·serves a closer look."Count
Gov. George Voinovicb among
those who agree that it d&lt;Jils.
He said tbe industry employs
204 million pe~le worldwide, and
337,000 in Ohio. ·

U.S.D.A. GRADE A 1Q-14 LB. AVG.

. Kroger
Fresh·Turkeys
.Pound

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" ASSORTED VARIETIES CHILLED

Minute Maid
orange Juice
64-0z.

Black seedless
Grapes ·
Pound ·

60¢

KROGER

·

1-Roll

Two - injured~

one
cited ·tn wreck

two Meigs Colin!)' men were
flown to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus f11llowing a ooe-vehicle. ·
CI11Sh on state Route 124 in Olive ·
Township early this morning. ·
Ricky I. Blake, 41, of state
Route 124, Reedsville, was eastbound wben his 1977 Chevrolet ·
pickup b'Uck went off the rigbi side
of the road, came back onto the
roadway, crossed the road and
struck an emlwm~e.nt before coming to rest on its top in a ditch,
reported the Gailia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
·
Passengers Gerald L. Barringer,
59, and Robert Richardson, 41,

Save

HI·Drl
Paper Towels .

"The days when our economic
development sights can be set
exclusively on manufacturing,
those days are gone," Voinovicb

Tender TWISt
WhiteBread
16-0Z.

said Wednesday· at the ftrst Governor's Summit on Travel and
Tourism.
. "Travel and tourism is a Clean
industry that benefits small, medium and large businesses. We can
spur Its growth through planning
and promotion." be said.
Voinovich said a state-funded
research project showed visitors
spent $9.4 billion in Ohio last year.
He said the industry had an
Ohio payroll of $4.3 billion in
1994, and generated $510 million
in state Wld local taXes. ·

'• •

both· of State Route 681,
Reedsville, were transported to
Grant via LifeFiigbtll helicopter.
A hospillll spokeswoman said this
morning tbe two are in fair and stable condition after being !Rated fill',
lacerations.
Blake refused treatment at the
scene, according to the report. Tuppers Plains, Reedsville and Racine
fue and medical~tnits of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service responded.
.
Blake was cited by the patrol on
charges of driv.ing under the inllu- ·
ence, failure to control and fictitious registration.

Cox promises to take IG
office to new, higher lev.e ls

Dorltos
Tortilla Chips
9-&lt;&gt;z.

f

.

(

.

cabbage ______

FRESH GREEN

Glazed
Donuts

.

Lb.

ICED &amp; OECORA'T~
S'T.PATRICK'S DAY

Boneless
stew Beef

$ 99

$

corned see~ . . . Lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE CRAIN FED BEEF CUBE STEAK OR .

Pound

·2/$
THORN APPLE VALLEY
BRISKE'T

· COLUMBUS (AP} - Tbe
inspector general's office will try
to prevent wrongdoing as well as
investigate it, Gov. George
Voinovich' s nominee for the posi·
lion told tbe Senate Judiciary Committee.
"I will lake the office to new
and higher levels.'' Donald Cox
sad Wednesday promised. He said
his plans include making recom mendations to government agencies on how they can prevent prob·
lems.
·
Tbe committee recommended
Cox for confirmation . after
Democrats-questioned the foiDier
Gallia County judge's qualifications. His nomination now goes to
the Rules Committee and then tbe
. full Senate,
Democrats have criticized Cox
' for his lack of experience as an
investigator. Cox responded be
would be wiUing to take on tough
cases.
The nomination bas also been
under a cloud , following
Voinovicb' s decision not to reap·
·point former Inspector General
David Snirtz. who had been investigating
charges
against
Voinovicb' s chief of staff, Paul
Mifsud.
·
Cox told the Senate committee
that bis office is continuing tbe
Mifsud investigation and will com·
plete tbe case in 60 days. Mifsud
bas been accused of offering a
Cincinnati contractor work in
exchange .for dropping a law suit
against the state. ·
Mifsud has denied any wrong·
doing. Voinovich has said be wants
a fresh ~tlvc in the office.
Cox also drew fire from some
lawmakers for firing all four memben of Sturtz's staff during his fmt
week oo tbe job. Cox slal1ed Feb.

.Duraca
Resin Chair
Each

·

cup cake .-:. .-:--·s-et.

51 ' PA'TRICK'S DAY
•
fliESH C:UT "SINGLE STEM .
GREEN BOUQUET

Kiddie
Resin Chair .... 99¢

c,rnatlon. . . . . . . ..Each

inierviewin~

the current staff. He
said they dtd not share his ideas
about expanding the scope of the
·
office.
Sen. Joseph Vukovich, DPoland, said that it "strains all
sense of credibility" tbat Cox ·
could have been chosen on the
basis of his six years as judge and
four years as im assistant prosecutor.
Cox said be bad no knowledge
of any political motivation in his
nontinalion.
.
"I am nota political person,"
{::o~ said. "If there .i s some political reason for my being chosen, it
is beyond me."
Tbe committee voted 6·3 in
favor of confirmation. Seti. Jan
Long, of Circleville, was the only
Democrat to vote with the majority.
Republican Sen. Scott Oelslager, of
Canton, was not present to vote.
Immediately after the vote.
Vul(ovicb lri\ld to mend fences.
''If you do the job as tbe slatute
·says. I wiD fight vigorously to keep
you in the job," Vukovich said.

6.

•

'·

+

He said he made the deCision to
hire new staff on .his own-. after ··

DONALD COX ..:...

..

'

A trial- set for a mwuccused or'
assaulting an Ohio wildlife officer
was canceled this morning after
officials reached a plea agreement
Michael R. Barker, 49; of
Charleston, W .Va., pleaded guilty
to a felony charge of failure to
comply with the order or signal of
..
a police officer.
Barker · lead Meigs County
Game Protector Keitb Wood and
other law enforcement officers on a
· 15-mile chase through western
Meigs County on Nov. 11, 1994,
·after Wood attempted to arrested
Barker for spotlighting, the night·
time shooting of deer. The chase
ended shortly after Barker's car
struck a deer and ran into a ditch.
Prosecutors dismissed a charge
of felonious. assault iii exchange for
Barker's plead of guilty to a misdemeanor assault charge. Tbe charge
stems from a struggle between
Barker and Wood following a foot
chase after Barker's car went into
the ditch.
As pan of the agreement. arlcer
wiD receive a suspended 18-month
sentence and be placed on probation for five years. In addition, he
will plead guilty to 15 misdemeanor charges receiving an 18montb sentence suspended to 90
days to be served starting midSeptember.
Proceedings were still. in
progress at pn;ss iime. Complete
details will appear in Friday's
Daily Sentinel.

a

CLASH IN. COURT • Defense a~torney F.
had with defense witness Max Cordoba In Los
Lee Bailey, right, and prosecuting attorney Mar·
Angeles In the double-murder case against 0. J,
•
cia Clark discuss an alleged conversation Bailey · Simpson. (AP),

Fuhrman denies using 'n-word';
0. J. Simpson case limps along
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Tbe
"You say under oath that you news conference.
jury that Includes eight blacks have not addressed any block per·
Nearly lost in the day was any
finally beard the "n-word" in the ·· son as a nigger or ·spoken about indication that it is Simpson who is
O.J. Simpson trial, but not from the black people as niggers in the past on trial, accused of the June 12
mouth of the detective"accused of 10 years, Detective Fuhrman?" murders of his ex-wife Nicole
uttering iL
Bailey insisted, his voice rising to a Brown Simpson and her friend
At least seven times Wednes- roar.
. Ronald Goldman.
day, defense attorney F. Lee Bailey
"Th.at's what I'm saying, sir,"
"What we have now. is two trigrilled Mark Fuhrman abo lit the Fuhrman answered.
a1s going on here," Loyola Univer·
word "nigger." Each time,
Defense attorneys have accused sity law Professor Laurie Levenson
Fuhrman denied using the racial FubiUian of framing Simpson by said. "One is about who killed
slur that Simpson's lawyers are try· planting evidence, possibly out of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
ing to pin on him.
racial hatred. Outside court, Bailey Goldman. The second trial is about
Asked point-blank if be usesolhe said the defe~se would produce a . whether Mark Fuhrman is a racist,
word to describe peQple; Fuhrman number of people . to contradict and did he plant evidence on OJ.
-who didn't even use the woni in Fuhnnan .
Simpson? Somehow, we're getting
"Let thousands of witnesses more on Fuhrman than anything
his testimony -responded with a
fiiDI yet simple, "No."
come forward," Bailey said at a else."

TRC discusses WVOW
clean-up project updates
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. . (TCE) in·the groundwater. ·
dards and the creek will be moniUpdates on clean-up projects were
Arguto said the EPA has begun
tored. ·
given during Tuesday night's meet- ' temporary action to eliminate the
Concem.s ·were also expressed
ing of the Technical Review Com- problem. They will. drill wells over wetlands in the Mill Creek
mittee (TRC) of the West Virginia around the affected area and then
area and creek flooding because of •
Ordnance Works.
pump and treat the groundwater.
tbe &lt;liscbarge and run-off. The
Wayne Budrus, Army Corps of
Arguto stated the city's water
corps, state . and EPA will work
Engineers, reported the eight moni-' · supply is in no danger.
.
together on working out the possi·
loring wells for the ~int Pleasant
A meeting will be held next
ble problems.
In a repon on Operable Unit II,
and Camp Conley water systems week between lbe EPA and slate
have been inslalled. He said the officials to discuss handling the
Sellite Plan~ and remedial investi·
fmt reports Are due in June.
problem at the l'a!itasote propcny.
gations, Bu.trus said tbe perimeters
Budnts said the corps is continA discussion over concerns
have been se~ but the study is not
uing field investigations ili the about pumping the treated dis· complete.
magazine area. The repons are due charge from lbe Red and Yellow
Budrus said the corps expanded
bock in December 1~5.
Reservoirs into Mill Creek was
the site investigation 4. Red Water
He also reported the repons for held. The decision to pump into the
sewer. He said a draft n:port is due
the !lCid dock area are due in creek has been approved by the
in June.
·
A spring fish sampling will .be
September, Red Water sewer line · slate.
reports are due in JUDe and the fuel
Michael Hoeft, WV-DNR Fish·
done in Pond 30, Budrus reported. ·
' cfewtreponisdueinNovember.
. erles Biologist, said be is conThe next TRC meetingwill be
Bill Arguto, U.S . Environmental cemed over the traces of Iron and· May 16, at 6 p.DI. at the city build·
Pro.te~t.i on Agency, reported ·On
manganese from tbe treated water inR.
tesqngs done at the foiDier Pana- building up in tbe creek over a long
A special meeting to discuss ·
sote Plant site. Arguto said there • period of years. Officials said the sewer discharge into Mill c~eek
were two areas that showed a high treated water will meet state stan·. will be organized, but no date was
concentration of Trichloroethene
....., set. · •
·
I .

Percent chan!JB, month to month,
seasonally adjusted.
·
0.8%
0.6

: u.Uit••lll
-&lt;J.2

MAMJJASONOJF
1894

'15

Labol' Slati5liCS

Consumer prices
up in February
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices climbed 0.3 percent in
January as higher. costs for food
offset the first drop in gasoline
prices ip four monlbs.
The Labor Department said
today that tbe February increase in
its Consumer Price Index matched
the January rise and left prices
climbing at an annual rate of 3.7
percent so far this year.
That is 1 percentage point high- · ·
er than tbe 2. 7 percent increase
recorded for all of 1994 and served
to -emphasize the widely held view
that irination, after falling to the
lowest levels in three decades, is.
healing itp again . .
. Higher costs for food, airline
fares, auto financing charges and
d&lt;1ctors' visits contributed to the

increase.
The rise in the CPI was tbe
same as a 0.3 percent rise in wbok:sale prices.
I

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