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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Bobcats win
83-71 in
NIT action

\

Rutland Garden Club plans th:erapy program at GDCA therapy program at the Gal·
lipolis Development Center next
week was planned when the Rutland Garden Club met recently at
the bome of Marcia Denison.
• The session with residents there
will be held 1:30 p.m. March 23,
and the wOJtshop will be carried
out by Pauline Atkins, Clotine
Blaclcwood, Marcia Denison, Betty
Lowery. Ann Websler and Dorothy
Woodard. Others will contribule to

refreshments to be served follow- responded with something seen
ing the wortsbop.
meaning sping. The traveling prize
It was noted that valentine provided by Mrs. Atkins was won
plates had been prepared for resi- by Mrs. Lowery.
Mrs. Lowery showed photos of
dents at the Me1gs County Infirmary. They were made by Mrs. birds and blooms and· raJked about
Atkins, Margaret Belle Weber, and planting flowers in a rtat bed. One
Chelcia Bratton with other mem- such bed of flowers is featured in
bers providing goodies for the sun- the yard of Lula Toban of
shine plates. Several members also Pomeroy •.
reported providing flowers for their
She also read an article concernchurches over the past month.
ing 'two foliage houseplants and
· Devotions were give by Mrs. told Of their unusual habits. The
Denison who read "He Never prayer plant which folds its leaves
Sends the Winter Withou! the Joy at night into what appears to be a
of Spring" and had a prayer, "Grant pair of praying bands, was disUs Wisdom." For roll call members cussed as well as the varieties of

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, March 161 1995'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the plans. She noted that such a
plant can add characler to a collection. Anotbec plant she lalked about
was the rabbit's: foot fern with its
furry little feet which grow over the
surface of the soil. ·
Mrs. Blackwood reported on
flowering potted plants including
~oses and begonias gown in pots
mside. Sbe talked about miniature
roses, their fragrance ~ flowering
characteristics, and colors. Fibrous
begonias produce profusely, she
said, in talking about bow to control leggy stems, growth patterns,
and diseases.
Mrs. Weber explained fertilizing

=t

bouleplants.
(OIII)ula. liDd
the nutrients
Sbe said thai
nitrogen stimulates belter foliage
aDd thai as long as plants are growing, they need nutrients.
Birds were discussed by Mrs.
Atkins wbo noted that cllickadees
are the "fiiendly sort." She spoke
of a bini's love for sunflower seeds
and of one bird lover who carried
sunflower seeds in his pocket to
feed a little bird who regularly
landed on his sboulder and ale from .
his band.
Mrs. Bratton · reported on
pigeons and doves noting that the
domestic pigeon and the morning

dove are everywhere. Sbe spoke of
· tbc cliaracteristics of the birds, as
well as bow lhey rear their young.
Plant pests need not bring panic,
members noted, since there are two
basic ways to remove pests . One
was to mix a cup of vegetable oil
with a tablespoon of dish detergent
and spray on tbe plant, or to soak a
cigarette in a cup of warm water,
strain off th~ liquid after it sets
overnight. and then add to a quarter
teaspoon each of olive oil and
detergent and spray on the foliage:
"A Snowdrop. Poem" closed the
meeting. The March meeting will
be held at the Atkins bome.

Pick 3:

2-6-8
Pick 4:

2-2-8-4
Buckeye 5:

1-5-16-18-34

Page4

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Vol. 45, NO. 225
Copvrlght 1995

•
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·p\..05

or

KATIE ALEXANDER

Slashing

By JIM FREEMAN
Barker and his ~ttorney, Steve
The court is not bound to abide
with the telliiS of the agreement as
Sentinel News Staff
Story.
The Charleston, W.Va., man
Prosecutors dismissed a charge far as sentencing is concerned,
accused of assaulting an Ohio' of felonious assault in exchange for Crow added.
wildlife officer following a car and Barker'!i. plea to the misdemeanor
"This penalty is as harsh as any
I've ever ~n for a fourth-degree
foot chase pleaded guilty to one assault charge.
felony charge and multiple misdeUnder the agree.ment, Barker felony," said assistant Prosecutor
Chris Tenaglia.
meanor charges In Meigs County will:
·
Common Pleas Court Thursday.
• Receive an suspended ISMichael R. Barker, 49, pleaded month sentence and be placed on
· Barker is also making arrangeguilty to a felony charge of failure probation for five ' years on the ments to plead guilty to charges in
10 comply with the order or s1gnal
charge of failure to comply;
West Virginia, Tenaglia ildded.
of a police officer. in addition. be
• Plead guilty to 14 poaching- · "It is my understanding that he
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor relaled misdemeanor charges in the will plead guilty to eight misdec-harge of assaulting Meigs County Meigs County Court, receiving an meanors and be placed under 45Game Protector Keith 0. Wood 18-month prison senlence suspend- days bouse arrest with permission
and other misdemeanor poaching ed to 90 days to be served starting to go to work and church,"
charges.
mid-September; PLEADS GUILTY- Michael R. Barker, 49, Charleston,
Tenaglia said. "He faces a fine of
• Forfeit a 1992 Chevrolet not more than $3,000 Jflus costs
W.Va., at right, pleaded guilty In a felony charge of failure to com·
The charges stem from a Nov.
II, 1994 car chase through we_stem Lumina, a spotlight and high-pow- arid will forfeit 10 deer to West . ply with the 'o rder or signal of a police 11fficer and to a mlsde•
Meigs County and parts of Vmton · ered .22-caliber rifle;
meanor charge of' assaulting Meigs County Game Protector Keltb
Virginia authorities ."
0. Wood. Seated next to Barker is bis attorney, Steve Story.
County after Wood observed Bark• Forfeit four deer identified as
Meanwhile, more than a dolen
, er and others using a car to spot- having been taken in Ohio;
uniformed wildlife officers from
light deer. The. 22 112-mile pursuu
• Pay fmcs and costs of prosecu- Ohio and West Virginia, along with
and West Virginia game offidl!ls to W.Va., pleaded guilty to six ·coun\S
ended ironically when Barker's car tion;
,
,
. . Meigs County Sheriffs deputies combat the nigl)ttime poaching of of spotlighting, five counts of lakstruck a deer and ran into a ditch.
• Lose all Oh1Q huntmg prt v1- . filed into tile courtroom to show of deer. or spotlighting.
.ing a deer with a gun during closed
'Barker then fled on foot and · leges for IU:e·~
" . .
support for their colleague.
Story said the agreement was "a season and one count of improper
struggled with Wood before being
In add1tton, Barker 1s not
transportation of a firearm while
"That felt good. It's good 10 . fair and just result"
,&amp;ubdued by Wood''s parmer. Spe- allowed _to use or possess a flJearm know people are supporting you,"
Warren
M. Shirkey of South
Officials earlier agreed to drop
cilil Deputy Dana Aldridge.
unul be 1s relieved by the court.
said Wood. "I'm proud of all of felony charges against two other Charleston, W.Va. pleaded no con·
A trial in the matter was canJudge Fred W . Crow Ill set sen- lhem."
men with Barker that night in test with a finding of guilt to a
celed after Ohio game officials tencmg in the rna~r ~or May 1 folThe arrests were the result of a exchange for their testimony . ·
charge of spotlighting.
reached the plea agreement with low a pre-sentencmg mvesugat1on. collaborative effort between Ohio
Rickie D. Gobert of Hurricane. ·

Katharine "Katie" V. Alexander,
daughter of Bradley W. and
Stephanie Alexander of Vinton,
celebrated her eighth birthday Feb.
25, with a "Lisa Frank" theme
party at her home and a ballerina
·
cake.
Attending her party were her
parents and siblings Carol,
Nicholas and Jessica -Alexander,
Janet Alexander. Judy Alexander
and 'Stacie, Mr. Dale Bing and
Danielle, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Eason and Ainanda, Mr. and Mrs.
Huey Eason, Trhonda Casto,
Jonathan and Austin, Patti Wallen,
Geremy and Zacb, Mrs. Cindy Paxton. Chase. Chance and Hollie
(Watts), Oma and Brittany Cook,
Josh Murphy and Wendy Wolford.
· Unable to auend, but sending
cards and gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Houchins, Victor Casto
and Annabelle, Jimmy Alexander,
.:....--~~---~lll~. IJlJ~ E_cU'erkifls, Karen
Tripp,
Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Fogarty. Brainne and Ryan,
Kellie and Christopher Dawkins
and Tessa Russell.

. · By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff ,
Springtime - tbe season of
renewal, rebir1b ... and brush ftres.
"Any person starting a brush ftre
is liable for any damage,'' said
Meigs County Emergency Services
Direc10r Robert Byer.
Under Ohio law, people are not
allowed to start a fire outside
. unless any all leaves, grass and
wood and other flammable malerial
surrounding the .fire have been
removed·to a safe distance.
In addition, outdoor ftres are not
allowed outside corporation limits
between the hours of 6 a.m. to 6
p_m. during the months of March,
April, May, October and November.
"Arrest powers· fall upon
forestry division officers or the
sheriffs department when violating
this code," Byer said ..
Improper burning is the most
common cause of brush fires in

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

·•.

(Conllnued on Page 3)

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BRUSH FIRE- Meigs County fireftghters have been busy the
last few days fighting brush fires. EMS Director Robert Byer said
many brush· fires could be avoided by following simple precautions. Above, a Middleport firefighter works to contain a brush
blaze on Stale Route ll4 ~ar Rutland Thursday.
,..._..----~....,

~

RACINE - Weekend revival 7
p.m . each. evening, Pentecostal
Assembly, State Route 124,
Racine. Rev. James GiUene, evangelist. Bill Hoback, pastor invites
public.
LONG BOTTOM - Evangelisl
Dave Carpenter to speak at Faith
·Full Gospel Church Friday. 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites public.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778, and Star Junior
Grange 878, potluck and fun night,
Saturday, 6:30 at Grange hall,
Country Road I north 'of Salem
Center. Anyone interested welcome
to attend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - James and Debra
Davis, in concert the Racine
Cburch of the Nazarene, Sunday.
Debra. bronze medalist or the .1976
Montreal Oly-mpic games, will
share her testimony at 9:30 a.m.
followed by James. singer-song·
writer, performing a blend of contemporary, count~y and gospel
songs at 10:30 a.m. Public invile.

.

NITURECO.

The I 00,000 decline in exemp·
tion l)ouseholds since 1983
occurred at a time when inflation
increased seniors' income- along
w.ith their expenses - but the
income cap to qualify remained
stable.
"The inflationary numbers
showing their income have
increased, but property taxes have
more than eaten up that differ·

' '

AEP scrambles to soften
drone from scrubber fans

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastetp Junior
High School athletic banque~ 6:30
p.m. Friday, followed by Athletic
Boosters meeting with officers to
. be elected. Eastern High School
athletic banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday.

COLtJMBOS· (A?) - Tenyears ago, almost 354,00Q bouseholds benefited from !he state's
homestead exemption tax relief
program for seniors and the dis• abled. Now the number is down to
254,000.
Democratic Cuyahoga County
Auditor J. Timothy McCormack
told legislators Thursday the time
has come to raise the program. s
income limit.
McCormack. testified before the
House Ways and Means Commit·
lee in suppott of an income adjustment Gov. George Voinovich
included in his proposed state bud·
. gel.

.....

'

TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053 and Auxiliary, joint din. ncr, Thursday, 6:30 (i.m.

Tax cut package
wins -approval
from committee
ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON House
Republicans say their outline for
$100 billion in budget cuts lets
. them whittle away more bureaucratic wasle, drive the defidt lower
and slash taxes deeper than President Clinton bas propo!ied.
But Democrats say the measure
is yet another GOP swipe at the .
poor and contains double-counted
·savings that Republicans already
had put into other legislation.
A fractious House Budget Committee approved the SIOO billion,
five- year reductions on Thursday
by a nearly party-line 24-11 vote.
The money is to be used to help
make up lost revenues from the
Republicans' $189 billion tax·cut '
bill, and party leaders exulted that
they were giving the public what it
. wants.
"You ain't seen nothing yet,"
said budget panel Chairman John
-Kasich,. R-Ohio,. referring to even
deeper cuts the GOP will map this
spring lo balance !he budget.
!Oarlicr in tbe day, .the House
voted 227-200 to cut $17 billion
from housing, public broadcasting
and other programs that already
have been funded for the current
fiscal year. The measure also con$5.4 billion in
'torn1a and other states suU reeling

.
I
SuppOrt seen to
QIVe ax . tain~d
aid_for~i.
break to-elderty,--dis-abf·ed~rr~~~~~~~ quick veto

agai.n st fires

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Belter Health Club will meet at the
home of Frances Goe_glein, I p.m.
Thursday.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.m., at Sacred
Hean Catholic Church . Al-anon
will meet also.
RACINE - American Legion
Post 602, Thursday. 6:30p.m. with
dinner. ·

1 Section, 10 Pogea 35 cenhl
A Multimedia Inc. Newopo...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 17, 1995

West Virginian pleads
-·to wildli-fe violations ·

YOU

Eighth
birthday
celebrated ·

...

Low tonlahtln the 30o, clear•.
Soturdoy, suMy. Hlah•ln 50o.

New pollution control devices at the James M. Gavin Power Plant may .
be great at cutting acid rain in New England but they're 100 loud for VIllage residents ih Cheshire, according to a story in Thursday's Columbus
Dispatch.
.
,. ·
Ever since American Elcctrtc Power switched on the second
smokestack scrubber at the Gavin plant earlier this month, a steady drone
· - described variously as a buzz, a bum or a router noise - has rattled
the neighboring village •
. . .
.. .
.
"It's constant and il s rather tmlaUng to some people, satd Cbesbtre
Mayor Walter S~u Lu~s . He bas received num~rous complaints.
Some people have ·srud they .cannot leave thelf wmdows open. Others
told him they have trouble sleepmg.
Columbus-based AEP, which also bas received complaints, announced
Wednesday it is rushing to cut the noise.
.
The scrubbers cost $686 million and took four years to des1gn and con struct. They are high-tech air, ftlterin~ equipment _that _greatly cuts sulfur
dioxide emissions and theorettcally w1ll reduce ~id . rnm fallmg hu~dreds
of miles away.
. .
~
.
.
.
The specific problem IS w1th huge fans assoctaled w1th scrubbers, satd
Jim Howard, manager of AEP's major projects division. He agreed they
may be too loud.
,
"We recognize that there is a noise concern with !be fans, and we recognized that when we brought the second scrubber on line," Howard said.
"It wasn\t a problem when the ftrst one came on. We did not anticipale
the noise level with the,second one."
.
On Wednesday, construction crews started installing temporary so~nd
deflectors near the fans. Howard said there is no certainty bow effeCtive
they will be. bitt they could be in place aii quickly as possible.
·
The utility is calling a meeting with Cheshire residents Monday at 7
p.m. at the village hall.
·
.
·
·
There is no Ohio law against loud industrial fans. In fact, tbe.re are no
laws against noise in Ohio, except local ordinances, Said Marty King, a
program administrator in the Ohio Department of Health's environmental
health section.
.
King said complaints about industrial noise are common and are normally sent to his office, although be could not remember any specifically
about scrubber fans.
·
·
The huge Gilvin plant bas dual 1,300 megawat~ coal-ftred power generators operated by AEP's Ohio Power operating company. It serves.
662,000 customers In 53 counties.
.

·· ·
ence," Mccmmiick said.
• 'Today Social Security and
some peAsion money knocks them
out of eligibility and so people are
being dropped significantly," he
said.
Currently, homeowners must
have incomes of less than $16,500
annually to qualify for reductions
of varying amounts, depending on
income, on their real estate tax
biUs.
Voinovich's proposed State 'budget would raise the eligibility level
to $20,800, an increase that would
correspond with the innalion rate
since 1989.
Such a change would make ~n
estimated 85,000 additional homeowners eligible for a reduction on
their real estate bills.
For those in the new top income
bracket of $16,500 to $20,800, the
proposed tax reduction would
amount to about $80.
In Cuyahoga County, there were
52,000 homestead cxempiion
households in 1983. The number
dropped to just under 40,000 in
1993.

threat frolJI the .White Ho11se,
where Chief of Staff Leon Panetta
· called it "irresponsible and meanspirited." But Republicans said
they would press ahead anyway.
To save the $100 billion in the
Budget Committee bill, Republicans would drive spending down in
a broad category tbat includes
many domestic, defense. and foreign aid programs. But final decisions on which programs would be
cut won't be made until later this
year, after the House bas voted on
the tax cuts.
Nonetheless, the budget panel
voted to recommend cuts in more
than 140 programs to achieve Its
promised savings, including tbe
Peace Corps, energy research,
vocational education and anticrime efforts.
Pointing· out that Congress' budget scorekeepers would give his
committee's proposal credit for an
exira $91 billion in savings over
-five years, Kasich said the money
would be used for deftcit reduction.
He said that was $62 billion more
than CliniOn achieved in the budget
he proposed last month. ·

2suspects ·Eastern Board delays decision
in robbery to place bond issue on· ballot
identified
action is not taken, the oldest
Board member Greg Bailey said
By GEORGE ABATE
If

The two other suspects in the
Feb. 28 robbery of the Coolville
·Bank -One ·branch have been
named by Athens County Sheriff Johq Hicl&lt;s.
·
Thursday's Athens News said
Hicks identified the suspects as
Brian E. Lynch, 20, Little Hocking, and Jamie Clinton Ford, 22,
Belpre. Both have admitted to
assisting another suspect in the
robbery, Hicks said.
That other suspect, Patty
Lynn Ingram, 45, Reedsville, .
was arrested by Athens deputies
March 9 and charged with rob·
. bery. Ingram, an employee of
the bank , originally reported
that she was ambushed by two
men when she arrived for worlc
on the morning of the robbery.
The men robbed the bank and
fled after stealing car Ingram· s
car, according to reports.
Sheriff's officials, aided in
the Investigation by the FBI and
the state Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, indicaCed afterward the robbery was an inside
job involving Ingram.
Ingram bas since posted bond·
and was (,eleased from the
Athens County Jail.
Hicks said Lynch and Ford,
who have not yet been charged
pending grand jury action, are
cooperating with the investigation through their anomeys.

1

Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will probably wait until
May 1996 to let voters decide If
they ' want to build a new school.
school officials said Thursday.

schools - Tuppers Plains and
Chester elemcntaries -may eventually be condeOUled-;·be,added. .
Combining some of the dis trict's schools would save heating.
food and maintenance costs, Smith
added.
The board discussed the con·
struction issue for more titan 30
minutes, responding lo 9ucstions·
from about 20 community members attending the board's regular
meeting.

he would like to sec a new school
built soon, adding if the board does
not put the issue on the ballot this
fall it should not wait for -May
1996.
.'
"We don't have a handle on it,"
Bailey told the audience. "As you
can see, there's no simple solution.
It's not easy."

The board will seek more· inptit
from the public, staff and architects
before deciding on possible con·
If the state invests $8 million in
struction, said Board President Ray
a
new
school, it will not likely turn ·
Karr.
around
and consolidate Eastern
"We can't get enough public
with another district, II ailey added.
input in time," Karr said.
Questions focused on the need
Jack Hunier, ·a supervisor with
The board must contact state
building officials before May I 5 to for new schools and outdated the state's energy/building assislaunch efforts to get a bond issue junior high and high school text- tance program, told the school
on the November ballot. The stale's books. Residents also questioned board about two weeks ago state
energy/building assistance program the need for consolidating the ele- monies should be available through
next year.
·bas paid about 80 percent of the mentary schools.
The board continues to offer at
costs of new school construction
But. if the district's voters
, leasuliree options to residents, defeat a bjtilding levy, Eastern may
during the last 10 year$.
Karr 'said. They include:
'
fall to the boilom of the lis~ Hunter
building
a
new
centralized
ele·
•
~aid.
"(The state) will put in $8 to $9
million. There's no way our voters mentary building .
• constructing
a
new
can pass a levy .for that much
Construction of a new school
junior/senior
high
school
and
then · and remodeling of another building
money," Karr said.
Continuing to repair the current consolidating some elementary ·could cost about $8 million, Hunter
school buildings will only become schools in the current high school.
said. The district would have to
• developing two smaller build- raise only about $1.6 million, paymore· expensive, Karr said. The
junior/senior high school repairs ings for kindergarten through fifth ing this money off on a 23-year
could total $200,000, while Chester grade and sixth through eighth . bond at 5 percent interest.
In otb,er action, the board termiElementary's could be at least grades.
naled the contract of EHS Principal
'
$50,000.
'
At some point, local taxpayers ;c Pians devised for a previous · Donald Sbuc, who has worked in
will have to replace some of' the levy could be used, but the plans ' the district for nine years. Sbue bad
70-year-old buildings, .said Board were. only in the preliminary stages, a t -year probationary contract that
Karr said.
was .not renewed
by the
board.
Vice President Jim Smith.
.
.

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Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

--Area death.s ·-- ·O.J. defense team's questioning fizzles out
Kenneth L. Roush ·
• 199 5 1D Pleasant Valley Hospi!al.

M~n~;th Le V} Roush, 79, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Wednesday,

Drugs.aren't only game for crime cartels

. . PI A carpenter and member of Camenters Union Local 1159 of Point
PIeasant, he was a member of tbe St. Peters Lutherau Church In Point
the National Campers and Hikers Association-Point Pleasant
0~
•
Wanderers~. and attended Point Pleasant High School.
Bam May 14, 1915 m Genoa Township, 01., be was a son of the late
A. Ray and Lola Irene Rayburn Roush. He was also Jll"'a'AAed in death tiy
a brother, Amet E. Roush.
. Surviving are his wife, Bernice Mac Roush Rousb; son and daughter·
tn·la:"', Kenneth Ray and Martha Roush of Louisville, Ky.; two gnmd·
~ns. srepm_othez, Mildred A. Roush of Point Pleasant; t.otbec and sisterm-law, Cecil Dale and Jean F. Roush of Point Pleasant· and several nieces
and nephews.
·
'
.Services wiD be 2 p.m. Saturday In the Crow-Hussell Funeral H&lt;me,
~tnt Pleasant, with the Rev. George C. Weirick officiating. Burial will tie
m the Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the funeral
home tooight limn 6-8,

Pomeroy, Oblo

l't..ll'MDIA,NC.

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Ohio

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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 17, 1995

111 Court S~t

.•

Pomeroy~lddleport,

Friday, March 17, 1995

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Robert Swann

IEnliRS ·OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leoo !bon 300
wordl Ions. All Jetton are oubject to editing and must be oigned with name..
add!rso ond t&lt;lepbon0 number. No unsigned lelien will be publilhed. Leuen

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tbe
Mark Fuhrman .cross.Cxamination
fizzled to an end after six tense,
" allcgalion-falled days, and tbe consensus among legal analysts was
!bat the detective got !be beller of
defense attorney F. Lee Bailey.
In fact, Bailey was tbe one who
lost bls cool, although it was· outside tbe presence of tbe jury.
Fuhrman. accuse4 by the defense
or being a racist wbo tried to frame
OJ. Simpson, kept bls answers
short and remained unemotional.
"I think (Fuhrman) beid up
amazingly well," said law profeSsor Erwin Cbemerinsky of the University of Southern California.
"Despite a constantly aggressive
cross-examination, be never lost
bis composure. He was never
crulght in other !ban the most minor
op.na&gt;nsistencies."
Bailey finished questioning
Fubmlan on Thursday with a few

flat queries that ~cot nowhere .
Then prosecutor Marcia Clar~
asked Fuhrman seven crisp questions, which suggested Fuhrman
lacked !be necessary informatlco to
devise an Instant frame-up.
Unaware of OJ. Simpson's
whereabouts or details of tbe
lcillings, Fubnnan bad no reason to
take a bloody glove from !be .murder scene and plant It at Simpson's
estate, Clark's questions indicated.
Bailey passed on bis opportunity
to re-question Fuhrman, but may
eall blm qain later in !be trial.
The cross-examination failed to.
live up to Bailey's public pronouncements !bat be would demol•
ish Fuhrman on tbc stand, said
Loyola University law Professor
Laurie Levenson.
"I don't think be delivered"
she said. "It didn't show him to be
a racist. It didn't show blm ID be a
holhead. It didn't show 1!1111: 10 lil!Ve

Robert C. Swann, SS, Besoco, W.Va., formerly of Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant, W.Va, died WedlleSdly, Match IS, 1995. A disabled pipefitter,
be was a member of Plumbers and Pipefitters Local No. 521. A 1957
graduate of Point Pleasant High Scbool, be attended Baldwin and Wallace
CoUege.
·
He was a former member of tbe Army NllliOnai Guard and attended tbe
(Continued ~Page 1) ·
• Rake up a tire break - an area
Church of Jesus in Lego, W.Va
·
surrounding
the fire, cleared of
Born June 3, 1939 in Hunling«HJ, W.Va., be was tbe son of Claude
Meigs, Byer said. .
flammable
material;
·
Swann and AUene Dillon Davis, bolb of GalliJ,XIlis. ·
.
Byer said many bnlsh ftreS fol•
Bum
only
during
legal
times;
Besides bis parents, be is survived by bJS wife of 20 years, Peggy
low this scenario: "Most of the
• Try to keep a garden bose
Puckett Swann; one son ChrisiOJ)ber Swanu of Texas; two stepsons, Larry
time, !here are no proper precau- nearby;
B. Bowman of Patrick Springs, Va, and Bruce BOwmall.of Danville, Va.;
tions - no garden bose nearby.
• Don't bum too large an area
one daughter, Sbana Jeffers of Point Pleasant; one step-daughter, Mrs.
Tbe person goes inside to get b)' yourself and don't )eave the fire
Patricia (Dru) Whittle of Danville; two brolbers, Eddie Swann of Minsomelbing ID drink, !be wind lticks unattended.
I
nesota and Joe Swan of Florida; one sister, Lea Mae(William)
up and It (!be fire) gets away."
Don't
delay
in
calling
for help if
Scboonover of Gallipolis; and four grandchildren, six step-grandchildren
"If people would just exercise tbe fire gets out of band, Dyer
and one step great grandchild.
common sense and watch their stressed.
He was preceded In dcatb by his stepmother, Margiret Swann.
ftres, it would give !be ftrefigbters
"If you lhink it's gelling out of
Friends may call 6 ID 9 p.m. Friday at !be Roseland Quesenberry Peace
a rest." be noled.
contml,
call 992-6663 for help."
Cbape~ 1901 Soulb Kanawha: Street, Beckley, W.Va., where !be service
He offered the following sug- . Meigs County's volunteer ftrewiD be beld I p.m. Saturday wilb Rev. Ray Stewan officiating.
·
gestions:
figh!CI'S have been combating brush
Burial will be in Skaggs Cemetery at Shady Spring.
• Don't bum unless absolutely {ires every day since Tuesday,
necessary;
according 10 Meigs EMS reports.

sbould be in &amp;cod tute, addressing issues, not personalities.

and Clark were so nasty !bat Judge

"At most." she said, "it raised
some innuendoes."
At one point during !be aossexamination - but outside tbe
presence of tbe jury - Bailey
erupted in anger after Clarlc called
bim a liar roc
be bad spoken
to
wimess

Lance Ito told them rn apologize rn
each otbe,r Thursday. He then
issued an extraordinary seven-point
orde~ commanding all lawyers in
the case to act professionally for
tbe resli&gt;fthe trial.
"Counsel shall nol engage in
gratuitous, personal auacks upon
each other," tbe order declared.

..
Cy.

t:IIMOWI
Dl!liWf t\MIITIDW

Kii~
trottst:
'""'

nJOAY . l:00,9:00
SAT . 1 : 00 , 1:00,9:00
SUM . l : 00,1 : 00 , 9 : 00
MDI / THUI . 1: 00 , 9:00 '

Billy~huli!'lx 1
lPG · 1 ] )

IP.C - lll

7:10, 9:00

EMS urges fire precaution

T-oo many scientists
'

The exchanges between Bailey

planted a glove. It didn ' t show bim
to be a mastermind of a conspirn·

PAl~!

MATlMEES &amp;AT I RUN
1 : 10 1:00

1:20 , 9 120 OAILY

MAT1M!&amp;S SAT I SUM
1:20 , ]:20

HIAUYWEIGHTS
1: 20 lliU.l.Y

~

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Doris Wood

UNBELIEVABLE
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THE

FROM DON WOOD:
Come Down To
Don
Wood And
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COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY THRU THURS.
· JIM CAR REV, JEFF DANIELS
IN

4 door, aula.,
air,
clean ............ ..

DUMB AND DUMBER

Tbe following actions to end
marriage were filed recently in !be
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer.
Divorce filed - Toyia 'Lynn
Johnson, Pomeroy, from Michael
Leroy Johnson, Columbus, MBTCb
14.
Dissolution granted - Margaret
Ann Cox, Cheshire, and James
Clarence Cox, Rolland, March 13.

amended.
The State ,of Ohio will
accept on objection to Ita
approval of the release of
!undo and acceptance of
the certification only II It Ia
on one of the two following
bolla: e) the cei'llllcetlon
waa not, In taCt, executed
by the Village of Pomeroy's
chief executive officer ar
other olllce of the village
approved by the Stele of
Ohio; or b) that the vlllege'a .

,,.'

Why the clergy needs office hours

Berry's ·World

.·

HE\.1..0!
l.'M ::ft'i!v'tt-lG
'fa ~EACH A~
.ApPROVAL
KAn "-\&lt;:&gt;S

e:xf'e..R:f .. .

You'VE:.
6oT HIN\ I.

/

•

'f

•

..
'

environmental review lor

~~

the project Indicates
omlnlon of a required
declalona findings or atop
applicable to the project In .
the envlronnlantal review
proce11 •
Wrlllan objections muet
be prepared end oubmltted
In accordance with the
required procedure (24 CFR
Part 58) and · must be
addrasoed to the State of
Ohio;
Environmental
OHicer,
Community
Development Dlvlolon; PO
Box 1001, Columbua, Ohio
4526&amp;()1 01,
Objection• to the Releaoe
of Fundi on baoeo other
than thoH atated above will
not be conaldered by the
State of Ohio No objections
received after April 24, 1995
(which lo 15 dayo after It Ia
anticipated that the State
will receive a request for
releaae of funds) will be
conoldered by the State of
Ohio.
The addreso of the chief

,.''

,.

.

·"

cilurcb secretary or "set up an
I bad received some modemtely work might want to stop in).
Would many people availlbem- , :
I
am
not
!alking
about
ministers
appoinbllent" Churches that insist selves of Ibis opportunity to talk · •
troubling news one recent afternoon and felt !be ~ ID talk to a being available in emergencies. on callers going' through such for- • wilb the minister? Probably not but ·
clergyman. There are four churches Clergymen can usually be located malities lose many an opportunity it is always nice ID know somebody ,
to be of help.
in the neighborhood where I live,
is there for you if the occasion .,
'
Silent
Unity,
an
interdenominabut the door to the cburcb office
George_R. Plagenz tional prayer ministry, is the. only should arise. We may even gel in '.j
was !~ked at each place, It was
!be habit of dropping in on !be min- , ,
just before 5 p.m.
in !bose situations. And I know !bat 24-bour, non-recorded prayer and · ister when we have DQlbing partie- ;,•
At this point I was ready to sciif you leave a message at the cqunseling service (1-816-246- ular on our minds.
· •''
tie for going into a church sanclll· cburcb, most ministers wiD call you · 5400) I know of. (There is an 800
Wasn't it !be writer Harry Gold-.· .:
ary where I could sit alone and back. And I know you can make an number for those wbo cannot en wbo used lo enjoy stopping off ·
pray. But the doors to the four appoinbllent with a minister if you afford !be cost of a long-distance · at !be temp'e office where be and
cburcbes were locked as tightly as want a conference.
phone-call.)
.
lbe'mbbi would light up a cigar and .. :
the dOOrs to !be parish houses.
What I am talking about is clerMost ministers don't like !be while away a balf hour?
.
It made me wonder wbetber . gy being available for people wbo idea of fixed hours for themselves.
· I know a minister in Bostcin wbo
ministers should not bave office feel the urge lo talk ID somebody
They don't want to be pinned made a deal wilb his congregation. ·,l
hours like everybody else- a cer- now or to cry on somebody' s down. Their,reasons usually are not He would be iQ his office, available.
tain time each day when anyone shoulder 110w. They might not call very convincing. The' most-often- to all, fr~m . 9 ID 12 every morning. , J
could be certain of catching the to make an appointment because beard excuse is, what if an emer- ·For thm part, tbe people would : :
clergyman at bis office- when the problem doesn't seem big or gency should come up during promise not to call him at his home
people could walk in off tbe street important enough. ,
scheduled office hours? Emergeo- in !be evening except for emergen- .~
and know they would fmd a minisIt lnay even be gone IDmorrow, 'ies don't come up !bat often.
cies.
, .
·i
ter rn talk to.
but right now it is causing pain or
Many churches put the words ·
It made everybody happy.
•
I have seen signs at gas stations heartache. There are many peopl~ ALL WELCOME in capi!al le~
George Plagenz Is a syndicatwbicb say. "Mechanic ori duty."
who burt "in liUle ways" and wbo on lbeir outdoor bulletin bo~ds ed writer for Newspaper Enter· ·•
But I have never seen a church feel desperately in rieed of a listen· and feel.this dccs !be job of telling prise Association.· ·
·
wilb a sign out front that says, ing ear, a word of counsel or all who pass by that the church is
(For Information on bow to
"Minister available daily except · encouragement or a prayer togeth- interesled in them.
communicate electronically with : ~
Sunday from 9 to 10 and from 5 ID er.
Actually, these words have 1hls columnist and others,' con- •
6" (wbicb would be when men and
But. for various reasons they about as much heart as TH\{EE tact America Online by calling 1·
women on their w_ay home from don't want to give~ name IDa BARBERS- NOWAJTJNG.
II!HI·Bl7·6364, exL 8317.)
··
4

'

t

executive officer Ia;

John Blaettnar, M•yor .
Village of Pom.,oy, 320 E
Main StrHf, Pomeroy, Ohio

I

45769
(3) 17; 1 TC

PG·f3
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

GENESIS
BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning

Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church
· Middleport, Ohio
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.
Teacher Les Hayman

992-7410

,

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(USPS 21J.900)

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·DON WOOD
"Where Better Really Matters"
East State Street

Athens, Ohio

593·6641

'
'·

�The Daily S.~!l!-~~~

Sports
In the NIT,

Pa

e--4

.

OU-men down GW to earn rematch with Iowa next week.
to make it64-60.
By The Ao.1odated Press
But consecutive baskets by
For the second lime this season,
Ohio University bas banded Trent, Ford, Ed Seors and Curtis
Simmons gave the Bobcats a 72·60
George Wasbiogtoo an NIT defeaL
Tbe Bobcats (24-9) beat GW advantage with 4:49 left. George
83-71 Thursday night in the ftrs't Washington got no closer.
"Our gnats did a good job out
round of the NIT. Obio defeoted
the Colonials {18-14) 82-76 in lhe here tonight," Hunter said. "We
-preseason NIT semifinals, then give up a lot in .height and weight
beat New Mexico State for the to 1bem but we still outrpbounded
them (45-38), and I thought that
championship.
'
Tbe Bobcats are trying to was a big key."
The Colonials defeated several
become the first team to win both
NCAA
tournament enuants during
the preseoson and postseason NIT
an
up-and-down
season, including
championships in the same season.
Massachusetts
twice,
Syracuse and
Gary Trent bad 25 points and 13
Memphis.
rebounds, and Geno Ford added 23
Providence 7l
points to lead Obio. Ford scored 18
CoUege
of Charleston 67
in tbe first balf, including 10
At Providence, R.I., Austin
straight, capped by a four-poi nt
., play with 3:191eft to give the Bob- Croshere tied a career-high with 28
points as Providence beat the Col·
cats a 34-26 lead.
Obio coach Larry ijunter . lege of Charleston, snapping tbc
praised the performance of Ford, nation's longest winning .streak at
•
who bit all four of bis team's three- 16 games.
pointers.
·
Providence ( 17 -12) built a 13''He. bad a terrific game and did point second-balf lead, !ben bad to
. a good job of getting involved in withstand a furious comeback dur·
our offense, especially In the fust ing which the Cougars (23-6) got to
half," Hunter said. "We even ran 70-67 with 13 seconds lefl
plays to get him open, wbicb we
Marion Busby led Chl!fleston
with 28 points.
usu\llly do not do.''
The Bobcats will face Iowa in a
Croshere, averaging 9.3 points
second-round game on Monday or in an inconsistent season, has been
:fuesday at a site to be announced. e~tremely productive in recent
The Hawkeyes beat DePaul 96-87 games. He scored 28 points against
on Wednesday in another first· Syracuse, then 21 against Villanoround contest. Obio lost at Iowa va.
91-75 on Dec. 3.
St. Bonaventure 75
: Ohio led 41 -35 at halftime. The
Southern Miss. 70
visiting Colonials (18-14) got withAt Olean, N.Y., Nii Nelson·
in four points twice in the second Richards scored 16 of his 24 points
half, the last time on Billy Cal- in the first half, leading St.
loway's layup with 8:04 remaining Bonaventure to its fust posiseason

•washington beats OU 73-56
in NCAA women's cagefest
SEATiLE {AP) - · If rebounds those led to good faSt-break oppor·
are the fuel that fires a fast-break tunities," Foucade said. "We're a
offen~e. then Melissa Wuschnig team that really likes to run.''
created a hackdraft for No. 14
Ohio closed to within ten points
of the Huskies twice in middle of
Washington on Thursday night.
Wuschnig. scored 17 points and the second half, but the Bobcats
'
grabbed a career-high 15 reltounds could get no closer.
•"The big lead that we jumped
for the Huskies (24-8) in a 73-56
win over Ohio University (23·7) in out to can be deceptive,' : Washing·
the fust round of the NCAA Tour- ton coach Cbris Gobrecht said.
nament.
"When you jump out to a big lead
Ex.tra minutes. were given to it send everybody's expectations
:. . , Wuscboig becausecof .a -&amp;p&lt;aiued . .'.through the roof,'.'._, ___ ----~........ ·
right knee suffered in the fust h31f
Washington
immediately
by starting forward Laura Gon- responded to Ohio's challenge with
salves.
a 7·2 run that included four points
"Mctissa really saved our butts from Smith, and the Huskies COljSttonight," said Washington point ed !he rest of the way.
guard Katia Foucade, wbo scored
Molly Sito scored 16 points for
12 points. "Sbc got some of those .Obio, with Natalie Britt adding 10
rebounds out of nowhere."
points and Holly Skeen grabbing
· "Melissa knew she had to make 10 rebounds.
.
up for the loss of Laura," said
Washington won .going away
Rhonda Smitb. who scored 19 despite shooting a frigid 42 percent
points for the Huskies. "Melissa (I I -of-26) froo\ the free throw tine.
gave us a much-needed presence
"Free-throw shooting wasn't
on the boards tonight and we're their forte tonight, but they had lots
probably going to need that Satur- of others," Obio coacb Marsha
day, too."
Reali said.
Gonsalves did not return after
the injury, and her knee will be
examined by doctors today to
dclennine if she can play in Washington's second-round tournament.
game against Arkansas on Saturday.
Smith and Cynthia Lewis each
scored 4 points during an 18-4
Washington run that put the
Huskies ahead 30-12 with four .
11\inutes to go in the fust half.
"We forced a lot of turnovers
and got a lot of boards, and both of

victory in 18 yean.
The Bonnies (18-12) had not
won in the postseason since taking&gt;

the NIT Iitle in 1977. They were ().
3 thereafter, and bad not appeared
in either the NIT or NCAA since

1983.
They play Marquette on Mon·
day at a site to be determined.

The Rutland y outb League will
continue sign-up sessions today
from 6 to 8 p.m. and on Sunday,
March 19 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
station.
At the conclusion of Sunday's
sign-up sessi on, there will be a
meeting to discuss a new conces·
sion building.
. All coaches and· parents interest·
ed in working with the RYL are
enouraged to attend.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~/Taction ... _&lt;_~_.u_·._ued_f_ro_m_Pa~~-4~)------------------------~------------------------------~----~------------­
soutli Florida 74
St.-Jobn's67
At Tampa, Fla., Brian Lamb
scored 11 of his career-high 14
points in the fust .balf and played
well defensively for South Florida.
Lam~. who averaged just 1.7
pomts IbiS season, bit a lhree-P.Oint·
er with 2:24 left to give South
Florida (17-11) a 66-59 lead. With
SL John's ilhead 25-23 in the frrst
·half, Lamb scored the next t 1
,points for s ·o uth Florida as the

At Lincoln, Neb., Elick StrickBulls took the lead for good.
Heralded freshman Felipe· land bad 21 points and I 0 rebounds
_Lopez, guarded much of the time
for Nebraska.
by Lamb. only got off seven shots
. The Cornhuskers (18·13) limit·
the who.le game and fmished with • ed the Bulldogs to one point over
11 points for St. John's (14-14) . the final 5:10 and to 20 percent
James Scott paced St. John's with shooting in the second half.
22 points.
Shandon Anderson led the BullChueky Aikins and Jesse Salters dogs (18·10) with 22 points, while
led the Bulls with 19 points apiece,
Ty Wilson added 16.
and Donze! Rush grabbed 15
Nebraska trailed until Mikki
re boulllls.
·
Moore's dunk put the Huskers
rUbraska 6!1, Georgia 61
ahead 62-60 with 1:59 remaining .

NBA.standings
L lsi.

16
New York.. ............-40 21
New Jeney ............26 31

!ill

.656

AU

6.5
2l.S

8DSIOD ... .................24

39

.381

2l5

Miami .................. :.23 40
Wu.hingtoo .......... .. l7 45
Phlladclphia ........... 17 46

.365
.274
.270

24.5
30

.750

-"·...-Central DI"YIIIIon

• lndlana ............ .-...... 38 24

30.S

~

~

.613

ClEVELAND ....... 36 26 •.SII
Chicqo .................. 33 31 .Sl6
AUaota ................... 31 32 .492
40
40

-

2
6.5
1.5

.375

IS

.36S

15.5

47

z.-

.1! L lsi.

Utah .......................41
San Antonio ........... 43

17
18

.734
.705

Houston ...............,.39 24 .619
Denvu ..:.:.......... .... 30 33· .476
Dallu ..................... 24 36
Minoesota ............ .. t7 · 47

.400
.266

li.tl
2.5

7.S
l6 .S
21 .
30

Ol't'islon
Pboenll .................. 48 16 .750
SeatUe ................... .4] 19 .694
L.A. Laters ........... 38 2" .613

4
9

· PonlancL ..... ......... 3l 27 .S6l

t2

Saaamrnto ...... ...... 30

'95 Ford F-150 XLT 4X2
Add it up!

'

a.EVEI.AND 93. Utah BS
Phoeoixl08, O!arlot1e 105
Houston I04, Minnesota 91
San Antocio 112, Phil!Kielphia 86
IleDYer 123, Sacra.mento 101
Portland 113, Baston 98
SeatUc IOJ. Miami 78

.

Utah at New Ieney, 7:30p.m.
New Yort at Wuhin'gton~ 7:30p.m.
Ori8IIdo ttl!ldiana, 7:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND al MinDCSotl, 8 p.m.
Mtlwautce at Chieago, 8:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Dallu. 8:JO p.m.
Miami at LA. Clippm, 10:30 p.m.

per month, mly 24 months*
.

- '" ··---___,

.

.

Boston at L.A. Laker!, 10:30 p.m.

.

Nothing equals ~e values

.,.~ a:rnonwooa

.

Golden State at Sacramento, 10':'30
p.m.

AutoiffOuve··campiex:-· ·

.....

At Baltimore Arena
Alabama . (23-9) vs . Oklahoma State

sa.!VdaJ'• ~eeond-round ac:don

(24-9). 12 ,10 p.m.
Wake Forest (25·S) Yl. Saint Louis
(23·7), 30 miDutes aftrr previoUJ game

AI Uni•eraUy ~ oa,.ton Arena
D.yton, Ohio
MIAMI , OHIO (23-6) VI. Vlr(linla
(23-8), 4:50p.m.
KaDsu (24-~ ) ·n. Western Kentucky

Sund.ar, Marrh 19
At Knh:kerboc:lter Ann•, Albanr. N.\'.
North Carolina Cbarlotte-Stanford
winner vs. Muuchuaetli -St. Pdcr's win·
l'lt'r, 12:25 p.m
Tulu.-1Hinoi1 winnrr VI . Villanova-

P,Tarnkl, Mrmphil, Te.,..

Manhatlan 11, Oklahoma 67
Aiizona State 11, Ball Slate 66
Kentucky Ill, Mount St. Mary',, Md.

ThuriiCb.y'a aroru
Ccnnecticul 100, Tenncuce -Chat ·
tanoop71
Cin.cinnati 77, Temple 71

1\da.De 76, Bri(lham Youne 70
Today'IIMnH
At Tallah••e-L!on County
Chic Center, TaJiahllllft, tlL
Iowa State (22· 10) "'· Florida {17· 12),
ll:JS p.m.
North Carolina (24-S) VI . Mwny Stae

Tew 90, On:aca 13
Maryland J7, GoDUI&amp;a 63

Sanlo5e ........

9 12 2
7 IS 2

28
T1

4

24

5 2l
4 -10

63
9S
74 . 58
59 S5
68 74
63 83
51 79

Ium

.1! L I &amp; iif liA

Detroit ............
OliC8K,O ............
St. touis ...........
Toronto .............

17 6 2
J5 9 2

36 97
32 99

56
64

l4 8 2

30 89
28 73
24 83
22 72.

67
75
74
88

Pacific: Di"t'IRon
Calgary ............ II 10 S 27 go
Vancouver ........ 8 9 8 24 81

10

EASTERN CONFERENCE

89

Anaheim .

.W L I &amp;

Philadelphia ...... 14 9 3

31

iif liA
83

N.Y. Ranam .... 13 11 3 29 17
Florida .....

II 13 3 2S

66

73
70
72

NOW OPEN
SPRING SEASON
•Pansy •Viola
•Broc_
coli •Cabbage
•Cauliflower
Cola Weather Plants

--

j~ l~COMPUX

593-6641
I

'

·-¢&gt;-'

~~

GBTOYOTA

Athens

~

•

DONWOOD
AUT'OMOTIVE COMPLlX

I

N!lpi&amp;fJI

20 Sl
16 S6

72
88

Thursday's scores
·BQ!IIIOD 6, Montreal 0
BuCCalo 6. N.Y. Islanden 3
Ptuladrlphial, Ottawa I
Quebec 3, Pituburah 2
HartCur~ 2. New Jeney 2 Clfe)
Aonda S, Wuhin gloa I
Detro~~ 5, Dallas 4
ChicaK,o 9, Vancouver l
SL L.oois 2, Los Angeles 2 (lie)

Tonight's games

VancouVtt at Detroit.7:30 p.m.
Winn ipea at Cataary, 9:!0 p.m
San Jose 111 Edmonton, 9.30 p.m.
Tommo at Anaheim, 10· 30 p.m.

Saturday's games
N.Y. Islander• at Boston l p.m
Tampa Bay at NeW Jeney, 1 p.m

Buffalo at Ottawa, I:JO p.m.
' Outbec at Montreal. 7:30p.m.
NY . Ranaer1 at Wuhmalon , 7 :30

p.m.

Phi ladelphi11111 A'K!da, 7:30 p.m.

SUNDAY'S
DRAS71C SALE

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3\', miles past Southern High
School, St. At. 124,
Racine, Ohio

614·949-2682

•

l~se

end $13,160.32.

·

I

BRAND NEW '95 CHM AS1RO EX1EHDED

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S.SERIES PICKUP

CO-ON VAN

per I110I1Ih, only 24n101llhs·

·Extended Chass1s
• Dover S1de Atr Baq
• Anti· lock Brakes
• Atr Condttlon
• Au10ma11c OveiC:Irlve
• Vtsla Bay W1ndows
• Power Sleenng

• Power Brakes
·Tilt Sleermg
• Crutse
• AMJFM Cassette
• Power Wmdow s

• SolaJBed

·Power locks

·Loaded 1

• Onver S1de A1rbag
• Rear .Anti·Lock Bralles
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

•lndtrect lighting

• Prem.1 um Wood Pkg.
• Full Corwers1on

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4
• 4~4
·AutomatiC
• Driver Side Atrbag
·Anti· lock Brakes
• Power Steer1ng

• Custom Clolh lnte110r ·
• Steel Belted T~res

• Alumtnum _Runntng Boards

·Power Brakes
• Power Do01 Locks
·Power Wtndows
• AMIFM Casselle
• Ttn Steenhg

• Cru1se Control
• Eleclromc Shltt Transler Case
• P 23-5n5R 15· Tires
·loaded'

""Sile Pnce lncludt6 GMAC F111t
T•ml! &amp;~er lrQII'Iwt!

• 4 Captatn Cha1rs

95 Toyota Corolla

1

trO;ilofoed.

$11 ,488**

$13,888**
No (0: Fill.!. Dulti'!JaJ"

"Sale Proee

\JNI'tll.k\ITY

. ~
;)1-.p

rr~,!'

•

· [)1\'ef~ ,l,·rtxlg
&amp;~~

l!?P!!Il~

@.

106 Buucmut Ave. Pomeroy. OH

BUICK'

• $1.000 dov.:n. plus taJIC and lrtle, first payment a~ security deposh Clue lllll~ase II"IC8p~t0n. 24 month closed-end lease. Mileage based on 12,000 miles per year. Subjec!"lo prior said.
Toyota 4x4 pickup, based on MSRP $16,2 12, ophon to purchase at tease ertd S 1 0.7~ 1.87 . Toyota Corolla , based on MS8P of $,4,389, option to purchase a llease end $8,873.40.

'I

•

I

I'

,-

I

1

..

• T•n Steenng

· Power Steen'9

• SpeCoiAero G10und EftB&lt;tS

• Cril.se Conuol

·Rear QerOIIJel
• Custom Ciom Bene~ Seats

_. At.l'ft.l Cassette
• Tin Steenng
• Cl!lise Cootr~

lrii::IW!$
F•rst T11r1e Bu~ e~

• Cus1001 Cloth ln161"10r

~lr.otJII

•COnsoo
• Custom Sport Buckel Seals

&lt;&gt;-oloo .

~6,988

aoo W~l Fores
• Sjlort Suspension
· spit Dual Exhaust
• 16" Cast Alum1num Wheels

·loaded!
·l.oOOed•

·Wei E!Ji!Wld!

•

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

593-6•641

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK CEifTUIIY SEDAN
• till Contiiii(Vl
• Aulomal(

· ~Wheel An:~Lcct

@TOYOTA

• Pass-Kty II The~ Detenent
• Rear 0ec1t lKl Sjlooo1

• Power Door lodes
• Powe1 W•OOW.

owe

· PIS. PIB
• S1ee1Belted T1res

• A11 Condthon
• Aulomahc
• V-6 Power
• Duai.\Jibags
• Power Brakes

Automatic transmission • Air conditioning
. AMIFM Stereo • Dual air bags

Find a molliltain of savings
at Don Wood Automotive Complex.
~ 0

96

' $1 .000 down, plus.tax and title, first payment and secunty deposit due at lease incep1ion . 24 month closed-end tease. Mileage

95 Toyota 4x4

- j

11

7!'1

based on 12,000 miles per year. Subject to prior sale . Ford F-150 XLT 4x2 , based on MSRP $18,963,00, ophon to purchase al

Chrome appearance tackage • A~IFM Stereo
Tmteo glass • S1dtng1ear wmdow

.

21

TO PREPARE FOR

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE

Special Aero lhund Elfecls

1

~

E PIRE
FU 17DRE
CLOSED
SA7URDAY

·AIIandt Dtrlllon

Ium

West Regtonal·llrst round

67

812

NUL standings

Spedlll Eunb Cenlu
' Memphii-Louiavillc wiancr VI. Pur-•
due-WlscoDiin.Oreen Bay winner, 2:30
p.m.·
.·
.
Syracuae-Southeta tlllnol• winner VI.
ArtanJ•Tuu Southern winner. 30 minute~ aftrr preYioWIJarrie

Th11rlday'• KORI
Th~

5

12 11 4
Dallu ................ 10 13 4
Winnipeg .......... 9 12 4

Hockey

Sunday, M•.:lr. I'

Southeast Reglonai·Drst round

81
78

L.o'Angele£ ....

Centr•l 01-ritiOil

AI BSU Pullloa

At The Frank Erwin ·

previous game

1

Edmonton ....... 10 1J 2 22 70

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

Miui11ippi State-Santa Clan winner
VI . UUlh-Lona Beach State winner, 2:40
p.m.
UCLA-Florida lnternatiollll win.ner vs.
Miuouri-lndiiDI WiDDer, lO miouta after
previous game.

(27-3). 30· minutea aftrr prev\owgame

Old Dominion witmer. 30 miDute~ after

Al

Midwest Roglonal·!lrst round

Buflolo.... .......... II I
Hartford ............ IOIJ
Mol'llJul ........ .. . 9 12
Ottawa ...... ........ 3 17

~ Sunda)', M•Ch 19

ToU:J'IIMnH
AI 1lte Funk Ei-wht. Spec:lal E'ft-nh
Center, Autdn, Teas
Syracuse (1~-9) VI . Southern llliuoit
(23--8),12:25 p.m.
'
Arlt:lnsu (27-6) vs. Tnu· Southern
(22-6 ), )() tniautea afler previooa aamr
MeJrllhil (22-9) VI. Louisville (19· i l),
8p.m.
Pur.due (24·6) VI. Wiscontl n·Gree n
Bay (22-7), 30 minutel after previou1

Salurdll}' '• lt"(ond-round

Quob.., .............. 18 5 l
Pittlbur&amp;h ......... 18 8 2
BOlton .... .......... 13 10 2

SeliLeluCIIJ

-

65
65

70
66

East State Street, Athens, Ohio .

} o DON WOOD

.

.219

17
27
34

- ·· -

ThW"Jib.J'I ICDrft
MIAMI, OfUO 71, Arir.ona62
VirJinia 96, Nicholl• St•e 72
IW.u 82, Colpte 61
WwerD Kentucky 82, Micbiaan 76
(011

Tod.a1'• pmu
At Knkbrbocker Aren•, Albany, N.Y.
North CaroliDI-Charlotte (19-i ) n
Stanford (19-8), 12;30 p.m.
Mauacbusetts (26-4) vt . St. Peter'•
(19-1~). 30 minutes after preYious game ·
Vtllanova {2S-7) Yl. Old Dominion
(20-1 1), 7:40p.m.
Tulsa (22-7 ) va. lllinoit (19·11 ). 30

Tonight's games

·· .

Athens

.4!1 4
.323

ThursdaY's Scores

$

• Automatic transmission
• Cruise control
• Tilt wheel
• Air conditim1ing
. • AM/FM/Cassette
• Power windows and doors
• Forged aluminum wheels
• Chrome rear .step bumper

32

GeldeD Statt.. ........ 20 42
L.A. Clippcrs ......... l4 .SO
:t&lt;linched playoff berth

ClNCINNATI (ll-11) vs. CoiUlecticut
(26-4). 4:30p.m.
.
. Tm1 (23·6) " · Maryl ..d (2!·7), 30
minl.llet at\et prev\OUJ aame

71
62

Northnll Oi'f'lsion
39 98
38 ll S

(1~11),

SaAU,'•r;:.n

..

Thur1day'• ~eort-•

Vl. la:dlap.

VI. F1orida lntcrlllllional
( 11-11), 30 minutes aflcr previous pme

Iowa State--Florida wiDner n . North

rninutu after previout alllne

P~tm.:

aame
Mi11ovri (19·1)

S81•d.ar'•JKOnd-round •tkla
Al'lbe J• M. Uunt~ma,n Ce nter

C.-olioa-Mum.y State winDer, 30 mJnutel
after preYious pme

•

Mldwe.l Dl•bion ·

Mininippl St1te (20-7) n . Santa
(21~). 30 minute~ after previou1

GIWII PRIX SE COUPE

"Say Love With

(614) :1~2-6454.
(800) 4j3-6203

At Logan, Utah, Maurice Troucr
scored 29 points and Brian Kern
added I6 to lead Illinois State to
victory .
Trotter bit his fourth threepointer with 3:38 left in overtime to
put ISU on top 83-82, then added
four free throws to belj&gt; the Redbirds (20·12) defeat USU and
move into the second round against
Washington State next week.
. Utah State (21-8) was led by
Corwin Woodard with 28 points.

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC

~ GRAVELY
SYSTEM

-

the double-overtime victory.
Eastern Michigan's 5-foot -8
freshman guard Earl Boykins bustled down the coun and launched a
jumper that bounced off the rim at
the buzzer.
Deon Jackson led Bradley (209) with 27 points . Brian Tolbert
bad 23 points and Theron Wilson
20 points and· l6 rebounds for the
Eagles (20-10).
DUnois St. !13
Utah St. 87 (OT)

New Jtr$ey ....... 10 l l S 2'
Washington ...... 9 II 6 24
N.Y. Islanden ... 9 14 3 21
TampaBay .... ... 915 2 20

Clan

Kentucky (26-4) vt. Tulane (2~9), 30
mill.utr.a after previOWI&amp;ame

-u :u p:m-:-

Saint Louia 64, Minne.sott 61 (OT)
Alabama 91. Pel'll'llylvania 85 (OT)
Oldahom1 State 73, DrClel 49

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

Manhattan

a ..

Wake Foreat 19, Nonh Carolina A&amp;:T

Lona Bead! State {20·

7:SOp.m.
UCLA (25-2)

AI T..llll.....
Coan'1
tc Ccaler
Georaetowa-XAVJER. OJUO wh•net
Yl . Micbiaan State.Weber State wlonet,

East Reglonal-nrst round
..,

VI .

Utah (21· 5) V&amp;.
9),2:JS p.m.

No Doc f ~ Oeio-.&amp;"l!d"

THE

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP.

Less than 25 seconds later, Jaron
Boone drove the baseline and fed
Moo~e for another dunk.
Moore was' fouled and be sank
his free throw to give. Nebraska a
65·60 lead. He blocked a shot with
I 5 seconds left and drew a charge
to seal !be victory.
Bradley 86
Eastern Mlcblpn 8S (2 OT)
At Peoria, Ill ., Deon Jackson
sank "two free throws with seven
seconds remaining to give,Bradley

$11,8Q8

CLOSED MONDAY
TUE .·FAi. 9:00·5:00;
SAT. 9:00·12 :00

•

AI 11M
Arizotla State (23·8)
(26-4). 2:20p.m.

tournament action

FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS

•

,.,..old

Salur..,.'aiiKilltd-I'OU.ftd . U .

NCAA mel\'s

Pomeroy, OH.

Aowers From!"

(23-4), J0 mlnWO all&lt;l tn,;ow pl!le

Utah 11 Olltlon:e, noon
Olicago atlodiea, DOOll
CLEVELAND at Wubiqtoa. 1 p. rn.
Bolloc ll.MIIwatlee, 2:30p.m
L.A. Clipp&lt;n .. Mi ........ 3:30p.m.
Philadelphla at Houston, 3:30 p.m.
Phoenilll Mi.uni,6 p.m.
DetroU .t Golden State, 8 p.m.
Sacmnento 11 L.A. Laten, 9:30p.m.

CluvtoUe ................ 39 25 .609

MHwaube ..... t ....... 24
Detroit. ................... 23

(2G-I), HO p.ll&gt; •
Georaetown (19·9) va. Xtvier. Ohio

Sunday'&amp; games

Allaltdc Dtrillon

an.. pre&gt;! ow pme

Michipn State (2l·S) Yl. Wcba- State

Ptl11111d 11 Denver, 9p.m

EASTERN CONFERENCE

z..1!
x.Qrlando .............. .-"8

(21·1), JO mlnwo

Detroit at Seattle, J:30 p.m.
New Jersey 11 New Yort, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Atlanta, 7:10p.m.
DaHas at San Alltooio, 1:30 p.m

Basketball

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Scoreboard

n
on Toyota.

Sign-up sessions set
for today and Sunday

Southern Miss (17-13) got 20
points from pamien Smith.
(See NIT on Page 5)

Friday, March 17, 1995

•

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947 • 422·0756

Monday • Satufday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm.

•

�Friday, March 17, 1995

Frirlav Ma rch 17, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh io

Get Your Messat• Across
With l Dally Sonth1ol

BULLETIN BOARD
16" column Inch weekdays
, 18" column inch Sunday
p.m.

Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds

Church of Chnst

Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 6 p.m.

Apostolic

Nazarene
hdae Flnt Clturdl olllot N--..e
Pastor. ~X.
'
Swtday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • I 0:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wamaday Scma:a - 7 p.m.
Mldd~Ciowdl ol 1he Nuaret10
1

PUtor: O.eaary IL Cuadilf

SUnday Scbool ·• 9;30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodaooday Seryioea - 7 p.m.
Clwrdl ollht N

Neue S.Ulemenl Clturdt

Sunday Wonhip - 2:30 p.m.;

-

Thunday ICIVic:ea • 1:30 p.&amp;

SUnday Scbool - 9:30a.m.

Wonhip - 10 :4~ a.m.. 1 p.m.

Wcxlnelclay SeMoel • 7 p.m.
SJracuaeCburdtorlhe Nuarene
Pastor. Rev. Ri&lt;k Soqil1
SUnday School -9:30 a.m.

.

Wonbip - 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeMoel.- 7 p.m.

Pu tor: Rev. _
O.vid Bryan
Sunday sdmol • 9:45 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m. and 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

'•

.-.
.,

.

'

Rutland First Baptist Churdl

Sundly School · 9:30 a.n\,
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m .
PomeroJ Flnt Boptlst
Putor. Paul SlinJon ·

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
W..meoday Semee -7 p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
w edneoday Semc:e - 1 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Portland F1nt Clturdlfll tile Nazarene

First Southern JloP.tlst
41872Paneroy Pike
Pastor: E. lamarO'Bryant

Sunday School-10;00 a.m.·
Wonhip- 6;30 'p.m.

Putor: Joltn w. Douala•

Wcdneaday Services· 7 p.m.

New Haven Churdt oflhe Nazarene
Putor. Gleodoo SIJ'OU&lt;l
SUnday School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 Lm., 1 p.m.

First Baptist Church
6th and Palmer St ., Middleport

Sunday School -9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.,7:00 p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.

Pcmeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Paltor: Steve Reed

Putor. Rev. Bladl:wood
S.onday School • 9:30 Lm.
Won hip I 0:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
WedneadayServic:e - 7:30p.m.

Wonhip ·9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.

su..rntlle WGI'd ot Faith

SUnday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wedoeaday - 7 p.m.
Friday - feUow1hip oerviee 1 p.m.
Tile Belloven• FeHowaltlp Mlnlolry
·
New Un)e Rd., Rllllpld
PallOr. Rev. Marpnst J. Robinam

Servicel! Wedneoday,7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Putor: Theron Durbam
sUnday - 9:30 a:m. and 1 p.m.

Wedoeoday·-7 p.m. ·

Putor. Roo Fion:e
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - IOH Lm.

Sun!Z wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wedn y aerviee - 6:30p.m.

Snowt'llle
Pastor: Florllloe Smith

The Solvation Arm1 .

SUilday Scltl&gt;&lt;&gt;l - 10 a.m.
Wonhlp . 9 a.m.
~1

"

"
Hlllslde Boptlst Chordl
SL RL 143 just off RL 1

Lutheran

Panor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - ll ~m. , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

VIctory Bapllsllndependanl
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Pastor: Jamt s E. Keesee
Wonhip · lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Union
Sunday School, 10 a.m.

Sunday evening, 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day, 7:30p.m.

Forest Run Baplltt

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

. l

,

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m,
Evening - 7 p.m.
.
Wednesday Scrviocs · 1 p.m.

Rlldne

" Putor. Ken Meller
School - 10 a.m.

~unday

WednesdaY Service · 7:30p.m.

Wonhip • 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Old Dexler Bible Chrlsdan Church
Sunday School: 10 a.m.

Coolville United Melh'odltt Porlllt
Pastor: Helen Kline

Morning Wontu_p: 11 a.m.
Evming Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service .·7 p.m.

Pas:1or: Greg ory L Sean
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·· 7 p.m.

.

Coolrillo Church
Main &amp; Fifib St.

Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhi~ - 9a.m.

MI. Olive Unlted'Methodlsl
Off 124 l&gt;ehiod Wilkeoville
Putor: Rev. RIIJit Sp~•

Syucuse First Church of God
·
Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor. Rev. David RusseU

Tuesday Semus • 1 p.m.

llothd Chureb
:rown•hip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip -IOa.m.
Wodneoday Services - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30Lm., 7p.m.

Sunday Sehoul and Wonhip· 10 a:m.

Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

Evc:nin&amp; Services~ 7:30p.m.

Wcdneoday Scrviw -7:30p.m.

Mt:lgs CooperaUve Parish
Nor&amp;hust Cluster

Churdt of God of Prophecy

Catholic
·Sacred Heart CalhoUc Church
· 161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 9'12-5898
·
PulOr: Rev. Wlltcr E. Heiru,
Sat.?'"- 4:45-5;ll p.m.; Mau - BQ p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9.15 a.m.,

"'::"£ -

Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (ht &amp;. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4\h Sun) ·

School · 9:45a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Jlulland Church or God

Putor: Ken Moher

SUilday School - 10 Lm.
9 a.m.
W
Wodn y -7pm.

United Methodist

S~mday

Anllquhy Bapllsl

RuUand Free Will BapUst

- 9:45a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Racine
Pastor. Rev. lames Sllte:rfield
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Thunday Services · 7:30p.m.

~unday School

Church of God
ML Moriah Churdl fllGod

Worship · 10:45-a.m.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won.hip - 10:45 a.m.

St..Paul Lulheran Church
Comer Sycamon: &amp;. Second SL, Pmncroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding

· MiddlepOII, Ohio

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

ML M..-lah Baptist
Main St. , Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m .

Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m.

Sundar Sdtool· 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.

Founh &amp;

Our Snlour Lulheru Churc;:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Raven1wood·, W.Va.
lmrim palton! George C. Weindt

Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Railroad St , ~ason

Pastor. Kemerh Balter
Sunday School' · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm. (2nd 44th S101)
Moml.. Siar
Pulor. Kcnnerh Bater
Sunday School - 9:45 a..m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.
Thurlday Semee1 - 7:30p.m.
SuPutor: Kemed! Bater
Sunday.Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (ht4 3nl Sun)
Eul Lolllrt

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Pas10r: Rev. David McManis
SLm.day School - 11 a.m.

Fallh Hap~ Ch.ur&lt;h

Canaet

Sl. John Lulheran Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spaldins
Wonhip - 9 :30a.m. .

Chnstian Union
Hartford Churdt ofChrltt In
C-rbdan Union
Hanford, W.Va.

,

O.l. White Rd. off Sl. RL 160
Pastor: PJ. Olapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m. '
Worship - 11 a.m.
·
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

HodtlliiJ&gt;IIrl Cll.-dl

GrandS.-

Alfred

. Sunday Sehoul • I0 a_.m.

Pastor: Sharoo Hausman

Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Servi.acs • 8 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship , II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Tordt Cllure~

Chester

Co.JW. 6l

Pastor: Sharoo Hausman

Sun. Man - 9:30 a,m .

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Wonhip · 9 a.m.· '
Sunday School - 10 ~.m.

New Life Church or God
248 &amp; Riehel Rood, Che1tcr

Dailey Mu 1 · 8:30 a. m.

.

Putor. Kenneth Bater
Sunday Sehoul- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Wodneaday Service~ - 10 am.

P01ior. David Dailey
Sunday Sdtool9:30 a.m. ·
Evening • 1 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wedne1day Servi~ - 7 p.m.
Chureh or Jeaus Christ,
Aposlolk Fallb
1/4 mile pan FonMeip on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meier

liS Buuem~t Ave.. Pomeroy.

SUilday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - IO:~a.m. ,7:30p.m.
Middleport CommunliJ Cllurdt

Prnl....tal-biJ

51S Pad St., Middlepon

SL RL 124, Racine
Paotor: William Hobaclt
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Pa110r. Sam Andenon

s...day School I 0 a.m.

Evening -7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service- 7:30p.m.

Wedaaday Servicea - 1 pm.

Faith Tabernacle Church

Putor: Rev. Emmetl Rilw1oo

Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Evcnin&amp; 7 p.m.

Thunday Service_- 1 p.m.
Sync:uaeMllllon
1411 Bridgeman St. , Syractue
Putor. Roy (Mike) Thompoon
SUnday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
We&lt;fneoday Servic:e · 7 p.m.

s,....... Rev. ~=;=r.~iii
K .

PuiOI:

Sunday School- a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Ha.n-vlllt Prabyl&lt;ltla Chlll'dl
Wonhip · 9 Lm.
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.

Huel. Colnmunlly Church

OffRL 124
Putor: Edsel Han
SUnday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m.

Mlddlepolt PrabJI&lt;riM

Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 a.m .

DyavUJe Community Church

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m. ·

Chrllllan Followahlp Cenler
Salerrj St., Rudaod
PallOr: Robert E. Muuer

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sevenlli-Da1 Adv..tllt
Muibeny 1111. JW., Pbmeroy
Puror: Roy Lawinlky
Salwday Services:

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11:15 Lm.,7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 7 p.m.

Sabbath School - 2 p,m,
Wonhip- 3 p.m.

M,.... Chapel Cb.-dl

United Brethren
ML Henn.. Uolled ..._...
Ia Citrllt C~urdl

Larry Faw, Superinl&lt;ndalt

Sunday 1dtool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 P,m.

Texao Community off CR 82
Pastor. Robert Sanden

Wednesday Sc:rvic:e -7 pm.

SUnday School -9:30am.
Wonhip·- I0:30Lm.,7:30p.m.
Wedoeaday Setvia:a -7:30p.m.

Follll G_.t Cllwdl
Lonallatom .
Sunday School -9:30 Lm.
Wqnhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WednOiday 7:30p.m.
Mt. OUve CommunllJ

C~urth

Pastor: Lawrence Buah ·
- 9:30Lm;

Sunday, March 19 at 2 :30
p.m . in the
French. 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Center.
. Topic:
Conva Te ch Upd a te
Speaker:
_.Chris Chiadvvidl,...c.- _,_ ~;.,,;;,-,,.;\'Z

I:I'!•¢\~'-'4

EMPIRE FU ITURE
CLOSED SATURDAY
FOR
SUNDAY'S SALE
.

·

Edeo Uolled llrdlt-1• ~
2 Ill mileo llOIIh Ill RcedoviJle
011 Stale Rowe 124
Rev. ROOen Maotley
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wonltip - 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday S'erviceo • 1:30 p.m.

•Solid 11lnyl
replacement .
windows
•Free Ettlmatet
•Starting At

Moll Wo1 k .·
C• non et M• k:llr

K&amp;C JEWELERS

6

Syracus.e
992 3918

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy

992-5141
264 South 2nd

You Don 't-Have To Look Far
To Spy the Best Buys In the
Classifieds.

Middleport

Crow's Family Restaurant
"Featuring K1Jf!tucky Fried Chicken •
. 228 W. Main St. , Pomeroy

COURT STREET
GRILL •

Gutter Cleaning

by appointment &amp;

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

club repair as well
Call John Teaford at

949-2168

Chester, Ohio

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy
;

:

..
'

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

..

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors·
Prescriptions
'

992-2955

Pomeroy

~--:=-

CHURCH SUPPLIES
• BIBLES

0\\;f/ Strut Q3••r.s
93 Mill Street
Middleport Ohio 46760

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Columbus. Oh.
804W. Main
992-231 8 Pomeroy

992·2975
•

..
-

•

-~-

-·

''·-- .......!

,.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"
Es1ablished 19!3, ·
EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2121
106 Mulberry Ave•

Pqmeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North ·second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

'

'

BARR'S Nursery
742-3149 or 992-7285

Announcements

Emcrqcncy PhonC' '1H'i-3·11fl

•
•
•
•
•

SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. _Wed. --Fri. _ Sat.
1-6
Craftsman Tools
• Toya
''
• Guns
Loads of Misc.

Burial, Final Expenses. Loans, Busines s. Family
Security, College Fuhds, Emergency Funds,
Retirement, Estates, Ufe Insurance to fit your needs .

-·

Alllloluntl FaN

680 F ront

•

--~. -Ellmlnola Fll From
Wolghl, -

.,.._ _.;.._ _._ _""''

KINGS'

WHALEY'S AUTO

Home Improvements .
33151 Happy HollOw Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
· •New Homes
•Additions oSldlng
•Roofing •Painting
-Garages •Porches
•Pole Bams

PARTS
Specializing In Custom
· Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTs FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FR EE 1-800-848-0070
DARWIN, OHIO ·
713 119 1 TFN

• P.O . Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Hav Ollyt Your 01~ lo
-king Ia ho• hm ,.. Z4

614-843-5264

-C:O. OOHM·'IQII.
. UVE OIRUI, CALL NOW, 1 -

howa oday. Coli,_ 1 - - .
~ Ell. to02, . , _ _ 11+,

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • Annu ity • IRA • Mortgage

381-40011 011. 149 N.ltlmln,
Mull bo 18 yro., ProeaM Co.,

YOUIIG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

One Stop Complete Auto 8ody Reptlr

Room Additions
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
AlsO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
112Mn

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

102-41114-'1120.
LOVE CAN BE YOURI TOHIOIIT,
11101 eolland lind out, 1--1110 4000 011. 11032. ~J N,lt/mln.
11+. p,_]J,IO:I

614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

-

-

MEET NEW PEOPLE THE FUN
WAY TOOAY, 1--I00-71'1-3001oll.
8002. $2.11Wmln. Muat bo II yro.
ol • • Proeall Co., 102-- .
l'IZO.

THE PAMPERED ClEF

Free Estimates

"Tho Knchon Sloro Thol eon..
To Vour Door." Lacll Conlutlanl

Insurance Work Welcome

AvallabloAJ:

&lt;

S14-441-1l24
loo..
Call For lnfDI'I'Mtton On Order-

State Rt. 33

M-.·

Ing •"'"'!i,::~IM
or For Buol.,...
unttl-.
F,..
Brochure ¥8lllble.

Darwin, Ohio
101211141tfn

• C
k t
M aggJeS
roc po
Ciiflon, WV
Din e-in or C arry-out

773-561 2

·

•.. :
p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

Bring· in ad
for 10% off.

Giveaway
1 natunl pa tiDor turn.ce. Call
boloro 2pm 304-17H314,

2mlxodpu-lwtraold t

Booglo 3 ...;.: Old, 114-l'IZ-iiik.

.r.::m

old . malo
w!WhHe
- . lolaclt
Pill
Rllrlo- A pori blaek Lob. Call
anytl-304-m.IN4. .

Free EstimateS

-·'IIPPLIINCI
IEBVICI

-

•FacloryAulhorizedParlll
'Servlee
•All
Makoo ol2 Years

-Foot Rallsblo Servleo
•Weahero • Dryero - Rangoa
•Aetrlgoratora•Froezera
•Diohwaohora
•H.W. Hooters
-Mlcrovio1llla •DlaP.,aalo
•Thonko Molgo •
Surrounding Aroaa
(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 tvrwn

Public Notice
. oqultoble dlalrlbutlon of
parties' proporty.
You

ere

required

to

onowortho complelnt within
28 days attar the last
.publication or thla notice
which will be publlahed
once

a week

for

ahc

IUCceaalve Wllkl. Tht loll
pu&amp;llcollon wlll be medo .on
3-31-85 and tho 28 doya lor
anawtr will commence on
th~t data.
In

Clll

of VOU1 failure to

anewer or otherwl••
rtapond •• roqulrod by the
Ohio Rulta ot Civil
Procedure, fudg•ment bV

doloult w111 bt rendered
agalnat you t,o r tho reuor
demanded In the complelnt.

Lorry E. Spencer
Clork of Courts
Molgo Counly Common
,Pleas Court
Molgo County Courthouse
Pomo;oy, Ohio 45788
(2) 24;

(3) 3, 10,17, 24, 31; 6TC

a~ook , . _

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
•

Pupploo. Pon Ooldon Rllrwlvlir
• pottblaclt Lob. 304-e?l-:m&amp;.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ES'fiM~TES

To A C:O.Onlry Homo: Malo Tor·
rlor, Appr.... 2 Yolro Old, 114441111311 Aft• 2 P.ll.
· To good homo I wit old -

6'14-992-7643
"'~'"

Kenny's-Auto Rental

"Take the pain out of
painting - Let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
37632 Weal Shade Road

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Free estimates
Before 6 p .m.-Leave
Message: After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

W:\NTEU
Sl'IIH11 ( . 111 /l'll" .IL'V (,.;; ,\

nld,·r \,\ lr rt &gt;\ .r111 ,rnd lh ·,· ,l
t i lJ.t ! tl\

1\l'd]ll\

JlhlJI,III(t'

:tl ..tl"tt i.lhk- r.rl c".

I t,tn

1.1~1' \11111 ,qtpllt:illtLif•,

Jll ttll lit 1rtttt
h .;;l h httllll l,tl I Il L H11 ... ]1
lilt•alil'&gt;

:r ~'l' lll

:1 11

, \111 •' Ill ·;r :1

( II' lh'l,rl

(• 1-.J-.V, 7-7 J56

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparohle Slm &amp; Prices
NEW HAVEN, WV
304-882-2996 :111411 mo.

SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL
.614·992-6419 TDD 1·80D-75D-075n .
Equal Housing Opportunity

Cti.

1-800-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

ROBERT BISSELL

1111l!n

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
·Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-1587

~ : 31· -·
Hair
Rod Tobbr
Col Lang
on
Bulllrillo PIM, AI IMo' T.... r
Port Family Vwry ltd, 1 - .
3154.
~:

wlrM

Alrloon Grey Congo. 8r•r
1111. ......,. to

.._.,.
"Poulfno"
Lilla~ W!clnuy bohlnd Lllfrl'o
tocker. 304 Ill 3140.

llldWoll, 114-381-101.

7

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Crmpare
' FREE -ESTIMATES .

~85·4473

992-5388

Lost&amp; Found

~: Inllolo
Dati,
Arot 01111. Olivo Roarl,

• Garages
• Complete

Yard S8Ie

Gatllpoll•
&amp; VICinity
AUYtnl--11-ln
Allhw.m. DlfDIJIC: 1:00 p.M.
lho dty llo- lito Ill IIIIo ""'·

!1115/lln

-~~.~
p.lll
,,

STO-A·WIY

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

6

•-me.

R--

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

Learning
•Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri.-7:00
A.M.1111 6 :00P.M.

Uoort RotrlgoniO&lt;,

5304-.

264 Upper River Rd.
Galli olis, OH. 45631

•Lots of Fun and

!lloo; pllll llue - - 11011
Oonnan Shophonl, S14-l'12-2112.

~ ........... 111115 "-Mold
10 dllt bflla, 11111 M 5 art .,..,
ctlll 114 4'1 3011 ,. 114-112•

We Hare Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center

Oood

dorCollo,IM-SN--.
ora,
• whllll
ltlllon 10 ...,..
homo only.
JOt-e.,._,

Room Additions • Roofing

(No Sunday Calls)

c-. "!o

-Fomolo·IIH41
tOllS.
Pu-. 314 Hoolor lor·

New Homes e VInyl Siding _New
Garages • Replacement Windows .

Linda's
Painting &amp; Co.

Apanment
for Rent

Syracuse, Ohio
Now availble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays e)ectrlc only Rang~.
Refrigerator, AJC on -site laundry,
_Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided .

•

ANIIIIII, ond

Injector Pump SVC
Tune-up1.,

·•

~

Wlh

Have &amp;.gy 114 ~ -

"========= =::::::::::::=. ~===== !::=========~-

992-2156
675-1333

Dill

AIHiolunl-ProciUci. IAM

Mobile' Welding
Diesel Injector svc

............................ 27,532.44
614·742-3090
Public Notice
Public sorely ..... 17,181.68
304· n3·9545
Public Worka ..... 58,041.62
3111!1 mo.
PUeLIC
NOTICE
HooHh ................... 1,311 .29
Mlacellanooua ... 22,DOO.OO Tho Tuppers Plalns.Chealer . r--~=~:'!":'!'::""~..,
MANLEY'S
Ctopllal Out loy ...... 7,405.73 Water District public waler
HOME IMPROVEM ENT
Total Dlabureementa....... .. supply has completed lhe
.......................... 133,522.76 monitoring cycle lor volallle ,
Roofing, Siding, Room
Total
Aocolpta organic ·chemicals (VOCi )
Addilions. Concrcle, elc.
Ovor/(Undor) Dlab ............... .. as required by chapter
3745-81
ol
the
Ohio
P.O. Box 220
.......................... (14,674.36)
Bidwell, OH 45614
Other Sourcea/R.Celpta ... Admlnlstrsllve Code (OAC).
(614) 388-9865 ·
......................................8. 41 Upon completion ol each
Total Other Flnonclng VOC monitoring cycle, 1tale
Sourcta (Uaea) ...............8.41 regulations also require the PubliC Notice
Fund Cuh Balance, owner or operator ol a
January 1, ............. 57,192.17 public water supply to
Fund Cuh Bolance, nolily lis consumers ol lhe IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Dacember 31, ........ 43,316.22 availability of the VOC
COURT OF MEIGS
Aoaorva
for analyllcal results lor lho
COUNTY, OHIO
Persons
Encu'mbrencea, Dec:. 31 ....... period tested.
Kalhloon M. Grlgoby,
............................ 43,318.22 wanli ng to review the VDC
Plolnllll
Summary
of results should contact:
VI.
Robert A. Harris, Chlel Gordon G~gaby, Delondont
lndtbtodnoaa
T U P P E R S Coso Number: 85-DR.010
Out8tendlng, Jan. 1, 1114. Operator,
.. ...........,............. .. .. . 4 ,640.88 PLAINS-CHESTER WATER NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
Outolandlng, Doc. 31, DISTRICT, 39561 Bar JO
To Gordon Grigsby,
1984 .......................... 2,8(8.79 Road • Reodavlllo, Ohio whoao la.t known addrell
Fund Caoh Balance.: ........, 45772, 1-614-985-3315
waa Marlon, Michigan; you
............................ 43,318.22 (3) 17; 1TC
ere hereby nollfttd tho! you
Total Treooury Bal.ance .....
have betln nomad dalondont
.. ..........................43,318.22 3 Announcements
In • logo! ocllon ontllled ·
Total Batonco..... 43',31&amp;.22
Kathleen M. Grlgoby vo.
I certify lhe lollowlng
Gordon
Grigsby. Thll action
SHOOTING MATCH haa bten
·report to be correct and
aaolgned Cuo
Middlc porl Ainerican
truo, to tho beat of my
Number 85-DR·018 ·ond Ia
knowltdgo:
· legion Farm
pending In tho Court of
Connlo Kay Chapman
Bailey Run Rd.
common
Ploaa , Molga
.
31385 SR 143,
Counly, Ohio 457&amp;8. .
March
19th
starts
Pomaroy, Ohio 45769
The ob(ocl of tho
1 p.m .- 12 gauge
(3) 17; lTC
complaint Ia a divorce and
tho proyor 111 that.plolntlll bo
granted o ·dtvorco lrom tho
defendant end . for an

446~2342

ProciUcl-

Holpo You !AM Wolg!ll And

ROCKY R. HUPP .

I'

- - A Y t n l l t l o .......
For Rent, IH 1. . . .J.

_.,.
__
_,.,
.......
.........

IH~

.....
......

I SI&lt;MI_.,

1loyo - · I -4'11 Glrlo IIIIo 4
...
-.1041
- To AIIIIo
7 ...
All ·
Clolhoo
t1. Ill•
rlty 11 A.ll. 4111 ot IIIII a.iall c - 11o1111o an
Cora IIIU Rood.

Th'"• Ftl Al)d Bal, SIS-a
F""" o:ODTII 7

8
Duel Wheel Pu ll

.MORRIS EQUIPMENT ·
742·2455
311111

3114/1 mo.

•

' .
'

Landscape Stock
. White Pine &amp; ·
Norway Spruce •

· American General life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.

'2128195

-·-....985·3879--requlr~1t:h:~ "[·-t::~~~!~;tt~-------~~

in the

&amp; LOHSE

Bac kbore,

CLUB

DAVE'S

CLASSIFI EDS

SWISHER

Brogan-Warner

SHOOTS
Limited: 740

Golf Lessons

IT'S RAINING
BARGAINS ...

992-5432

111111 ...

0

GUN

COUNTRY

Downspouts

Frfl!l Estimates

614-742·2193 . .

992 3954

Sunda y 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Onl y

Gutters

also
public
water
to
notify Its consumers
the
availability of the VOC
analytical rosuiiO. for the
period tested. Peroona
w'ntlng to revlaw the VOC
resulto. should contact:
RACINE . VILL-AGE WATER
SUPERINTENDENT, GLEN
RIZER, THIRD AND VINE
ST., RACINE, OHIO 949"II Other Revenue ............. 2920 between lho hours of
............................ 1~.356 . 68 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Total Recelpla .. 118,148.40 Monday- Friday.
DISBURSEMENTS
(3) 17; 1TC

..

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SO IL FOR SALE

REFINISHING
SYSTEMS

CHESTER

With Us.

Flnanclol Report"
SUMMARY OF CASH
.BALANCES, RECEIPTS
. AND EXPENDITURES
Sourc• D••crlptlon,
Totala &amp; Fund Balance
RECEIPTS:
Tlxeo .................. 22,244.48
lntaroovernmenlal
Recolpta.................81 ,108.48
lntareat................. 1,338.7&amp;

32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brl.cklea ·

NOW OFFERING GENER AL HAULING
Umestone, Sand, G111vel and Coal

RACINE
GUN CLUB

NEW-REPAIR

Auditor of Stale
FlnMclol Report Of
Townahlpa
For Fliieel Yoor Ending
December 31, 1984
Scipio Townohlp,

Port1blt
Ba1dsawlllll

3 Announc:ement•

ROOFING

44

RAWLINGS -COATS

1

CUllom !I&lt;Jildlng &amp; Aemodollng

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic lanka cleaned &amp; portable tollete rented.
Dally, -kly &amp; monthly rentaln~tes.
Joti lltea • camp SHn' Family Reunions &amp; Pa111es

BATHTUB
.REFINISHING
- Chris
614-992-4236

H&amp;H SAWMILL

MODERN ' SANI7AftDN

llapolr it Tlbs or Sinh,
Resurtace Old Ctramir. Tile, nl
~ iiiiOWOI C..clcr; or :lags.

•

Howard L. Writesel

The Racine Village Public
water supply has completed
the monitoring cycle lor
volatile organic chemicals
(VOCa) as required by
chapter 3745-81 of the Ohio
AdministratiVe Code (OAC).
upon completion of each
voc monitoring cycle, alate

Bill Slack

m•ns1
\¥ARIWiol UIE liiW

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

Public Notice

Misc. Jobs • .

9«#2·2269 .

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

Saturday, March 18
. 9-?

and Removed

Cifl

SMITH' S
CONSTRUCTION
•NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(6 14) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 ~...

Ill...

KARAOKE

Thomaa E. Fergu•on

Shrubs Shaped

614-992·3470

•Cuatem M..e

Church announcements
RACIN E PLANING MILL

Fill Dirt

" VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

Sing

. Public Notice

Home Sileo, Lutd

TruckingLimestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

*200 lnlttlltd .

General Government ...... ..

. Bailey Run Road

.

Light Ha-uling,

QUALLJY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Association will meet

Rejoldna Ulo Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreri\an

HarrPvlllo Communlly Churdt

Won hip • l 1 a.m.

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

CalvarJIIIIole Chureh

Other Churches
Faith Full Gospel Chure~
' LonkBouan

Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

•

Fairview Bible Church
l.elarl, W.Va. RL I
Pa1tor. Rankin R01eh
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wc:dnelday Service - 7:00p.m.
Fallh Fellowship Cruoode for Chrltl
Paotor. Rev. Franklin Diclten1

Wedncaday Services · 7 p.m.

lord's Supper lst Sunday of every moolh.

Putor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

ville Road

. Phillip Ridmcar
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Wedncsd1y Servica - 7:00p.m.

'

WhSiChapol Wesle7u
Putor:

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.,7;00 p.m.

....~,.. '

Top Soil,

·TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Senicea.
Cleoring, Seplic Syolem•
&amp; Driveways.

Gravel, Sand,

311411 mo.

Bald Kaob, 011 Co. Rd. 31
Paotor: Rev. Roaer Willford

Putor. Samuel Buye
SUnday Scbool· 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.

_

Freedom Gospel Ml-

RuU.nd Church or the Nazarene

East Maill St

,. ·

Wednaday SeMczs - 7 p.m.

Cburdt of tile N.......,.
Puror. Rev. llerben Gra~e
Suoday School · 9:30 a..m.
Wonhip • 11 LDL, 6 p.m.
Wednel&lt;fay ServiCCI - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

' '

WonhipSemteJ0:30a.m.
Wonhip Service-lot and 3nl S',!nday, 1 p.m.
No Wodneoday Evenings..,.. ,

~

WedneJClay Service-7:30 p.m.

.

Pomeroy Cburdt olthe N......,e
Pastor. Rev. Thomu McClwtl
• SUnday School · 9:30a.m.

304-882-3336

,1

~r-------------------~
The Oh io Valley Ostomy

Kin
Road
ru:,
JdfSmitb
Sunda' School • 9:30 Lm.

1

Saturday Service -7:30p.m.

.,_

bury

W~ - 10:30Lm. and6p.mm~
. _

Free Will J!_al!!!_sl Churdt
A1h Stn:e~ MiddlepOrt
Putor: Us Hayman

South Belhet New Teollnaat
Silver Ridge
PallOr: Duane Sydenllricter
Sunday Scltool • 9 Ltn.
Wonbip - ID a.m., 1 p.m.
w..me.day Servi... - 7 p.m.
Carleton latordenomlnllll'"'al Cllwdl

·

F R EEZER BEEF
Fed a ll natural feed .
$1 .65 lb. cut , wrapped and
fr oze n. - 304 -882-2886

Blllldollns, Baekhoe,

(Sp.clallze ln ·
drlv-ay apn~adlng)
Limestone,

With every new
alarm lnsl!llled receive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.

F OR SALE

•

Full~ Lichl-

nven~n 1 7:30 P-'!'·

Panor: John w. 1»'&amp;111

Jloptltt Churdo (SouiMn)
570 Ormt SL, Middlepon

M on l h
33045 Hiland RDad. Pomeroy
Putor. Roy llwttcr
Sunday.School - 10 a..m.

IICI\\ \IW
E\C \\ \TI'f;

WICKS
HAULING

Special Tltis

Tueoday 4 Thunday -7:30 p.m.

K-Uio FollOWIIIlp

(lilest• low Rates)•

JAMES AlARM
SERV.ICE

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

I

f

'

.

mo.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

�Friday, March 17, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

: Friday, March 17, 1995

The Dally Sentinel-Page 8

Ohio

:ALLEYOOP'

ACROSS

BRIDGE

~ntlquea

53

Mobile Homel
"for Flent

PHILLIP
ALDER
.

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlghl

..., .. ......... Anllquoe,
1124 E. lloln . . - . . . AI. 124

-OV· -

II.T.W. 10:Gif
p.111., lundoy I :00
toi;OO,.... I _ _

1.111. tO 1:00

W~'/ C'l"f'J A"~
Go~ A~.oo "'61 '

--

FuilM11"Vft.E" t&gt;oN' T

ev-. a

-

eMil. s-10 4.
M:, Good Condition,
107,000 - . . 12,200, 114-m-

lllo!!IJ

· bua -

1&gt;A K Q 7
•A Q J 6

v...

1112 Cho- 11-10, U

=.=::r..:.·~~
oulo, bod -

r---Niiii'i'iir-1:7;:;.;-i

....

·

1111 Nt_,.,. , Spoed, llllvr
llul. bnll•nt CondtlkM, Pvlf..
Oul ....... Under _ ,,
:1'1;000 llllol, 114-24Hil'l.

l · IHS

t76
"K Q 5

-

.EAST

5r
K82

t A·
1,0 8 7 6 4 2

•JI04 3
• ···
tQJI 09852
.. A J

SOUTH

"8 6
" 1097543
• K 4 3

41 Slender finial
42 Foe

Anawet to PNYIOUI PUZZle

~laplndle
46 lnd..,n nurae
41 Turn the page

1 - Sumoe
4 Twirl ·
8 Flnopi1C41 part
12 R01nan 3
13 It's off to

(obbr.)
49 Actor Brynnor
51 Baaeballer
Hodges
53 Played anow
57 Cui out
60 How do - do1
61 Moon goddeu
62 P.oiflon of
medicine
63 Jack - Jill
64 Messenger
65 Employs
66 Born

work- -

14 Director
Jaequeo15 Writing tool
18 Sharpoolghled
18 Go In
20 Sweet potato
21 Spring month
22 Roman 56
24 East Indian
palm
26 What
landlubbers
lack (2 wds.l
30 Remains al

•

DOWN

••••

1 Cry of pain
2 Appearont41
3 Slangy

33 Ovor there

34Ego

Ryan
8 Soult - Mario
9 Salary-check
dlapenaer
10 Willow

contraction

36 Portico
37 Zola heroine
39 Weslern marsh
pionI

5 Edlbleaoed

6 -Pop

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Ease
West

North

East

Pass

Pass

2 NT
Pass

Pass
3•
Pass

4.•

Pass

commander

19 Cloth
measure
23 By lhe limo - to Phoenix
25 Footllko part .
26 Auld Long .-'l!l"""''ll'll"''!n., 27 01 tho down •
28 Hardonlng
ir.r+-j- +-i 29 Poor arM .
31 Orlnk hea•lly .
32 - boat
35 Coal lapel
38 A Carter
40 Matncou,..o
43 TV antenn• , -

4 Voero

•J 9

South

11 Neat
' 17 Arabian

1 Boseballer -

:r:.::•••

Opening lead: • A
Wo ..., Junk eo.., 114-381o
1012, 114 148 MRT.

By Phillip Alder

Employment Services

Probably, like most players, yuu love
to bid . But if you aren't going to buy
the contract, it will allen be better to
pass. Unless you can point partner to·
ward the killin g lead, yo~r bid will JUs\
help declarer place the cards .
In today's deal, East couldn't .r esisl
gelling into the act. However , just lor
once, it's possible his action didn't al·
l er the course of events. Also, East ·
W es t finished with a plu s score which usually res ults in all sins being
forgiven.
We st l ed the di amond ace. under
whi ch East sig naled with t he two
Reading this as a suil·prelerencc sig·
nal. West swilched to a club. East won
dummy 's kin g with the ace and re ·
turned th e diamond. queen. West un ·
sporlingly rulfing away South's kin g
The declarer won Wes t 's club ex it
with his jack and led .a trump. Wh en
W es t played the eight, South, knowing
a 2· 1 brea k i s more likely th an 3·0.
called lor dummy's ace: one doWn.
Was South unlucky, or did he miss a

Help Wanted

11

AVON I AM A-• I Shi~OJ
S,.Oni, :IOW7&amp;-M:III.

or-.

PEANUTS

AVON to 11uJ
ll~zt'i 1oto
d : iclet.t np. 304-882·
or
1100112.Q58.

T~IS CONCLUDES M'&lt;
li!EPORT ON TI-lE SUN ..

Ac-MI.

lmmodloto Fufl.
Pooltlon For llotr..tod,

n..

Solf.S.. rter.
A
c - Po
l.odgo&lt;l

THIS
. ISM'(

For
Genorll
l Flnanclol
- l n g Dog-

Aooponojblo

i;l"""·

R - ' ng.
. Or 1-3 Vra. Rolllod Work Ex·
porte.- Should lnchJdo C.....
putortud Accounllng p,_.
du.... - . To; CUi 3!2, o/o
aom- · Dolly T~buna, &amp;25
· Third Avenue, Gllllpolle, OH

41131.

REPORT
ON TI-lE
WIND..

.

APPLICA110NS Will Bo Accoptod UniA Tllurodoy, April I, 1191,

For Tho Pool lllnoger Pooltlon
At Landon Pool For Tho 191111

9wlmmJnt 8el80n. R•umu,
Including Exporlenco, T10lnlng
And R-mondotlono Ara To
a. Molted Or lklbmltlod To
Jonlco
Lonon,
Ctork
·T-IUIW, Vllllll!l 01 SytK..I,

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
~Yef AN~

t41S

Munlclpll ltd;., Syracuoo. Ohio

UTili.

NOSt. AI'IP
FAT~~~·s

critical clue''

Pt,SONAL

A - SPRING SALES
Avwogo .. -$15 /Hr. At Work

South never asked himself why East
hadn't opened three diamonds. As he
had a reasonable seven•card suit. the
logical explanation was that h e al so
had a lour·card major. II this was the

tMBITS.

DliCOunlal
.tloor,lndop.

Compoeolonolo

. ~enn oar~~

Homlacll 4'·T tor llnclocoplng
compoct, nallly ohoorad. Bll~

llogiolorad

&amp;

nurelng • • •

tantio lor port~lmo rototlng
ohlfto 11 our ...bod oldllod ,..,..

45

1!111 fllclllly. Jilt Boongordnor, AN,
DOn, Pe1n1 P-nl Nunlnil l
_.,.llllllon Conlor1• .!'! 1 Boo

11211.--..·-·
304.e7NOGII:
~oclllty) EOE.

714-:zat-3311111111101.
COOKWARE
Wontod; Exporlo.-d Cookiooro
Soloo
Poopto
In
Homo

Doouonotrotlon.

111101

Bo

HoneM, . Advancement
To
lllnoaomont -lble, 30W7&amp;-

atllt.

opoly In poroon.
Soulhlortllnn 9'-.l:l Rt. 2 N.,
Pt Ploo"!'!'J
nlghitr,
304..

wv.

Dollvory drtvor noodod COL 1
muet:, nMd to haVII .ame
manaotf' aldllt, Clll 800-804
1005 ror lntorvlow.

Elm up to 1110110 wookly otuntng
onYOI- II homo. Stall ,_,
No 01porlonco. F,.. oupplloo.
F- lnlormotlon. No Obllglllon.
Sond S.A.S.E lo Slorllng, llot&gt;l.
K, P.O. Box 148117, Orlondo, FL
3:1814.

-ta

EIOJ Work! Excellonl Poyl Aooomblo
At Homo. Coli
Toll F-, 1-800-417-6NI, Ell .

:ns.

Ropolrod, Now l Robull In
StociL call Ron E....., 1 . 531'111121.

46 Space for Rent

Wont to mow ...,...., lolo ot 35 Loti &amp; AcrHge
Union l Hutlmon •-•""· 10 ocroo on llo-MI llkltjo. oountry.
llobllo - gorlloao,
In
304..112·2548.
- lor - ond
IIIIIRioo on ..._er. WIU 1011 d
.... rnc~
Clble .........
or poll. $2;100 por ocra. :J04. . . - , , lwt 10 mlnutoo 11om

Financial

Doncoro-

711-a-.

JET

wtth ~cooking.
Aloo
trOllor
- ·p.m.,
All
hoolt"'PI. Co~ ohoron2:00
304-7'7Ntel,llloon WV. .

87W401.

.

Business
.Opportunity

4 Acr• Comer Of PUXGIII Tral:
l
Bllzor
Rood, Addloon
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO. Towlllhlp, IM,OOO,IIWP-7181.
roeommondo thot you do buolnaoo with _,.eo you k,_ ond 5.32- m • - r!&lt;lto top
NOT to aond monay through tho building IIIIo, tl1,1110. Ro)buril
moH until you hovo ln .... tgllod Rd, rauonablo - - · No
~~~- lnQulroo, ploooo. fn.
tho offorln8.
hlnillllon moiled on .....-.

114-24M311.

.

51

1117 Cllowy - . Aulomotlc,
127,000 MillO, 111,725, Con . .
Doutz Troclor P,!llllil· 11F
At Tho Oolllpollo DollY
IIOIIow-Hoaa- -Tllbuno._~~.!'!!."!}YIIMII,
Gof'
~IIIII; Ford Jubllll! $2,111; 1111
llpollo,o.........,.....
..- Dlnel$1,410,114 211 I'D
POLE IUILIIING BPECIAL 1H7 Horlron · 111,000, 114-R30'x41'xl'. Polntod IIIII Slcloo.
112,000
-- Roof, 11'11' 1187 1roc z~•
lltool ~~- I' lion Door. IIH10, ~ Shlpol
~~~· ERECrED.IAON HORSE U,IOO, fM-44t..7MO.
·
luolDER8 1..CIO 311:1 - .
1117 Dido .. Aovllo -.ghom,
loodod, 3.1o1 Yf, uc. Oond.,
63
Livestock
froulwMII
teooo 080. 304-

-.

eomoro,

*•

ro-

lpotlo, "" 411131.
.
IAgol Socrolory, lomlllor with
WOrd Pert.ct, good communlca.tlon
oldllo, typing -::,1~
roqulrod.
raoumo lo Box 11-14 c/o Point
P I - A1111lllor, :ZOO . lllln
Stroll, Polnl Plolllnt WV

This newspaper will not
knowlingty accept

2115110.
.
Hood I Lldloo To Soli A..,, 114-

advertisements for real estate

4413111.

which Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed thet an dwellings
advenised in ttlls newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

; A u-tn Homo Cora
Qlvw For TT Y- Old Womon1
Llltlna Room • Boon~
PrOYidod Wllh Sota.y, 114-3177121 I No A,_. Loovo -

..

No Exporlouco -ooOryl $1100

Wooldy

IPotonllol
Pr : Ill 'ftg Mortgaoe AI fundi.
0wr1 Houra. eon 110f1.71$-2300
ExL 13111. C24 Houro).

Real Estate

Household
GoodI

comp111oty ramodolod, 2

-

111'"11"· Shown by lppolnlonly ~7U401 .

I
-

roofn.

&amp; Nth, ..., .....
..~5-UIIO oftor lpnl.

I

''t &amp;011'10 m

CK.AY, CON:.H ...

~

VJIW~KI~

NUr.\&amp;.1&lt;: 7

Tf\I:J Yo.R 1 [
WN&lt;I\'10010
,-- PRN.TIC.E

.....- -plot·

_.

f'W:L~ f.&amp;..f\tool

Tran.alnlona. Ueed, ~llti all
""-'od, , ......
ood.
41SO.Abloto
_
_ _,..

N.i.Rl~T?

" That was the curious incident," re·
marked Sherlock Holmes.

&amp;211.

Plck.IJp TOfllllr ~· Sooto 2

1187 P - ltapl Zll Fl. Fifth
Whool, Awnlll(l, Roof, Air, 114-

STRI&lt;f A8LOW IN TI-E WV! ON
HGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CI.ASSFIEO$.

FRIDAY

ROBOTMAN
~{)?NO . 1'~

. ---·ao.

.lUS\I&lt;.IC\1 ~OU

RI:P~r.,1tDLX 11-\ "S~NSITW~
~GION Of ~OOR 1&gt;-\ll\10"'-'f V\lnL
'j\)\J'tl RVt ~E ~'{ '10\1 'NtR'C

~-Good Coudllloo• $121,
Soringo,
f14.441.1tl2.

lloglo

Choi

Ro~or l

1T

Cu.

Ft.

Eloclrlc &amp;IOYO
Excft~·
Co'dlpol ~

$200
" · O.E. -hor I
Dry.- $71 .
Ouooor 21"
41 Houses for Rent .
~T.V. l!!ll..O.k Cotloo I
2Br • 2103 u - Avo. 2 End To- """' ._n23
304~110 • 304-t7fl.3402.
Allor I P.M.
3 Or 4 Bod.-, c-.try 911PICKENI FURNrrUR8 .

OORN I'Mlt..

'"-il --

·~···~~·
AldiCDIIUd, frio tppll
, tfo:l g tfhiJW fur.
I
For lnlormlllon.
nlolllng. 1&lt;2 mi. olonlolo&gt; All. Pl.
wv, ... 304-87J.1410,
4 l o d - 1 112 .........

-e::b! ~ ~·~' !:'~·~··~~·~··~·=-:::----r--

DIPoelt.
1n
. lt2Mio.
IIIMZZ~ZM.
.
SWAIN
tar 1W11 In Pl. Plo-111, AUcTioN I FURNITURE. 112
a
. -.
"
Olivo 81., Oolllpotlo. l Uood

c::-.r.

tumhurw, ......., Wellem a
Nloo 3 bod- homo, Work_._ 1 - 1 1.
llr, 2 - gorogo, $3110 R*llhly
VI'RA FURNITURE
-2400 oftor
-"'t
ilopoolt,
IM-JU.
IIM-44W118
I pm.

Home ·
lmproveme.nts

lhp, Irani Uno MW $4111, 2
Yfll old, w1111ake •2110, MD ,...,
1-1-11111 onwtlmo oftor lpm.
!lop!
CU.
Wllmborohlp.
_ , , Ohio. Soli or troda fat
..,.hlng of _ , - . c.
...... 30444~.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANO
Uncondhlonll llf•llmo guoron••· Loo.l ...,.,.ne.. fumlahecf.
Col 1.-...m-GI'II Or 114-231'

=~W--Hng.
&amp;..
1175.
.

.

fect tor you . Mall $2.50 to Matchmaker.

12

:IIUIZI.

.

BERNICE.
BEDE OSOL

,_.,Meal. .

----11-_,

-

2 IDJ oom 1'fllllt No ,._

$211/llo 8200 ~ .........
Pika, TI'Mh Paid, .14·!il IOOD

finn, ....m.aoa.

'Birthday

ol milled hoy,

~-·
ohor7pm.

•=·

for Flent

mally do by rote'. Oaydream•ng w•ll defi nitely cause your work to suffer.
GEMINI (May 21·Ju~e 20) Stay as far
away as po ss 1ble from the ·c ompleK .

'Your ·

.._.In

9

1n an associate whose

judgment you ques!IOned recently . There

ments today. even to the one&amp; you nor-

Whllo
Reel•, fuN hllmlut, I300J w.
....~a Orj"w, . . .Sloclulblo
114-381-

,.......

too much stock

TAURUS (April 2Cl-May 20) Devote com plete attention to your tasks and assign-

• • oom, CIA 1 2 -

Thrw t.daUCIIIIft
ct.. 52 Sporting Goods
requlrwtl
camtor. Mony
Houolna uu·,.. MoPtwrwon •
pound Wlolablll..r ...,,. or114 ttllliAiaftlrlpm.
poop IIIIo ond - r
button. Brand now I double X
42 Mobile Homes
71 Exllon onawo wlqulvw, $125

c/o th•s newspaper, P.O .' Box 4465, N ew
Yo rk. NY 10163.
ARIES (March 21·April19) Avoid pulling

is a good chance he/she hasn 't gotten
anY smarter lately.

Ollilllly .... FIIIIIMin
And AtiPII- Orall Doolo On
- · In oountry, lllll'mcdh Cull And Corry! RENT-a-owN
plue • ...,rlty dotioolt. 114-1112- And L.nowOJ Atoo Anloblo.
2400
F,.. Dotlvo'Y- ZIMIIII.

-

il. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker !n'stantly
reveals which s•gns are romanl•~atly per-

ASTRO-GRAPH

nueka tor Sale
1m Ford Dul!tP Ttuc\T!J;""to,
,. 1'1. .......
114-

Som .,,.., •lllo'o AIJr!Jiurpluo,
by Sondrvllo Poll .,..., Frt.aun. Hoovy wlnlor
clothing. (-IHlo choeko). 304:n:J.IIII.
STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Go11on
Uptlghl, R.on Evono t.....,..._,
......... Ohio,

Saturday , March 18. 1995

Transport ation
55

-\

Building
Suppllel

Block, brick, IIIPH. Wfn.
·
Hntlll,
OIC.
CloUdO
two, Rio Oro-, ON Coli -114-

.

f1nancia l problems of a fnend today Do
not let your pal draw you mto h1s/ her

never-never la nd.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Make com:
tive i~ choosing his/her .frien ds . You w1ll mitments very selectively today . Although
you may not take them seriously . those
be glad you were p1CkE!d 10 be one.
.
you
make promises to w1ll hold you to
, PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201 II •s pass• ·
them
.
ble lhal you might nol credit lhe proper
LEO
(July 23·Aug. 22) Use your com ·
person lor helping you today . fh1s could ·
mon
sense
today in hea lth matters . lf
create hard feeling wilh th e ollended
there
are
loads
and beverages you
party if It isn·t rectified quickly . ~now
shouldn't
eat
or
ctrink,
avoid them .
· where to look lor romance, and ·you II fmd

In 'the year ah ead. you might mee t a
unique individual who is extremely sele~­

71 Auto• for Sale
•• Chny Conllor. Concfl.
tlon
l210G
.,, 311 ,,.

ww ... ...., Aaor. P.III.M~.

.,

and.....,.

WKX

VGDX

W K X

KGITLGDCP

HXUITLTWGD ·o

. JTHX

G p

WKTW

YDL

··

A .R

VDLWK

JTO
IGNGOS . '

D'UTPXR .
P X T 0
PREVIOU S SOLUTION : "The superior man understands what is rig ht; the
inferior man understands what will sell.~- Confucius.

••••
IAMI

THAT DliLT
PUZILII

O fou
Reorrange letters of the
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good impression on the other
kids. "Son,', his dad told him,
"You can get into hot water by
trying to make a big---- • ·."
Complele the chuckle quoted
by f.lltng in the m1ssing word1
yo u develop hom step No. 3 below.

P~INT NUMBE~ED lEITE~S

THESE SQUA~ES

·

IN

UNSC RAMBLE ABOVE tET1ER S
10 GET ANSWER

Servtces
Rentals

PDC, I : •.

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245..3111, 114-245-11021.

And
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Each letter in !he c1pher stands. fO! anolher TodtJy's c~: II llqtalt: W

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1114 23' FI'DIIc By Coochmon
u~oo~ Lltlto,
Condition,
P,IIOO, 114-318-1522.

56 Unclothed
58 Aclrooo
59 Mao-tung ·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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QW.I&lt;£ TK"-T

Po~o from 111711 Ford dump
IIUOII, 330 onglno, tronom-.

1m 21ft Yr.rnn1hg• llllllorhomo, oloopoll, gonarotor • root
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will poy 112 of ·roto. Aloo
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Ooo Fumoco Ho11 Pumpo,
Vory Roooonably Prlcod, Ono
Uood 25KW Elodrlc Fumoco,
Control Air CondJ!.!~!".~ F,.. Eoo
tlnwt•, 1..aoo4D-AUII Or .....

W. Nloo 1om On 71.11 Acnoo,
3 lllloo 01 Crown Clly,
$20,000, IIM-44fi.TI:III.

31 Homes for Sale
2... ory aoraao. boolclo 11ow Ho.., Supormorllll, bottom

otxlriao Rd., POIIII!OY. Clo• boyo; (front bOJ 40'1121', roor
olu -,, MmHod. TIM'• (31 boY 32'1123'), 100'•4G' ·tot,
,...,_ poporo .... roqutNd 121,000. ~112-27U

f'llOili.IA. f1K&gt; N..WI\Y5 e££1'\

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campers&amp;
•
Motor Homes

441-4131.

of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ~any preterence,
Hroitatlon or discrimination
based on race, color, reUQion,
sex lamUial status or national
origin, or any' Intention to
make any such preferenCe ,
limitation or discrimination.•

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boy; 1175
dumptiUCII,
Font, .....

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COIIIIM.fta-37113.

All real estate advertising In
th is newsppper Is subject to

· BORN LOSER

111111 Cootolw- 11 Ft. Sol~
Conlolnod.
A....
Roll-Out
Awning, v~ ~:;;.' CondHion,
$2,0110, 114.

Vending; Won, Clll Rich Quk:IL 304..n..213.
Will Clll A St..W ~Income.
Prlcod to SoH. 1~712.

Poymont Colloctlon. 51101111 Or·
gonlullonot Sklllo With Allonflon
To
Dlllll.
Mll,.o,
llot!Yolod, Wllh Good Ccmmunlc8tton Skllla. Reply To:
CLA :1531... c/o GoiHpotlo Dolly
Trlbuno.L!~;.S Third Avonuo, Gol·

with oppllcotlon. Apply In par·
_, bllw- 10o.m. l 3p.m. IIF. I t - o tt.t oucco•l\llly
OCAIJCIM;Ie lhe TCE claM Mil be
ellgibM tor emptoyment. .\b.
...rutolr no phone callo. EOE.

Lown Chill Riding - r With
Blldo 11110; liTO Rltlna
$300; 4 IU) LillO WRh Bor 11171,

1111-llc.
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ilnd iuno
aoad. ,..lewd
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mends, two clubs
no hearts.
II makes one think of that piece from
Conan Doyle. ·
" Is there any other point to which
you would wish to draw my attention?"
" To the curious incident of the dog
in the nighttime."
"The dog did nothing in the night·

and,

v...

Merchandise

INOTlCEI

Fufl.nmo Erporloncod ·R tlonlll. Mu"~Una Phone, Appt.
Schodutlna, O.or ·Tho -Countor

Nu- Alclo Training PhlgromP-oy Nunlng • Roho!MIIt..
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ap.tl. Appllcotlono
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bolng occopeod 11 3671111 Rock·

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HOG, 114-1'12·2614.
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Dlnllto 911, VIII Mix, ex....,..

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own hourw. $20-IIOklyr, 241n.

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45
doar :
47 Native of
India
49 Bark
50 Hawaiian

'.

~

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I

I

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) II you waste
your resources today. you may later WISh
that you had exerc1sed greater sell -con·
trol You may realize ~hat you can't buy
something you need .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) D•sappoint ·
men! 1s hkely today if yqu expect persons
who rove · you to drop whatever they are
doing to cater to your momentary wh1ms.
Try to be more cons•derate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your lnends
w11t see through any Insincerity today, so
don't attempt to use flatlery as a devise
to man1pulare otherS. It won·t ·work and it
could even backfire.
'
SAGITI ARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) There
·is a good cha nce you might gel sluck
with the tab today if you pal around w1th a
friend who never seems to have cash
• when the bill is presented.
·
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 19) Your
effi cacy could suffer today if you fail to
clearly define your objectives. Unless you
have specific targets, keep yoUr arrows in
the quiver.
'
AQUARIUS {Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Things
mighl nol go as smoothly as you'd envi·
sioned toda~&lt; so don't lake important situations for granted . Anticipate various
areas where problems fmay occur.

•

•

..

..
'·

SCRAM-lttS ANSWERS
Nestle , Pixie - Since · Weasel • EXPENSES
Going over my monthly bills was always a hassle. I
think my income is only something that falls short of what
I need to cover my EXPENSES.

�•

Pa9e-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 17, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Superior ratings abound at Meigs Junior High Science
Eighteen of the more than 160
science projects displayed received
superior ratings from judges at
Tuesday's Meigs Junior High Sci·
ence Day.
Rusty Bookman is chairman of
the annual event which features
area professionals judj!ing the
exhibits with participauon from
businesses and organizations wbo ·
provide awards.
·
The students were recognized
and presented plaques during an
awards program Tuesday night at
the school. They will compete in
the district contest to be held ·at
Ohio University on April 8.
In tbe group are Lacy Banks,
Jeni Howerton, Ben Crane, Kristina
Kennedy, Ben Fowler, Missy Dar·
neil, Becky Johnson, Matt Justice,
T.J. King,'Melissa Hollnafl, Franco
Rumuno, B.J. Smith, Bridget .
Vaughan, Deeley Smith, Megan
Drummer, Meredith Felts, Sara
A
Williams and Tricia Davis.
Kennedy, Lacy Banks, Sara Williams, Becky
RECEIVE SUPERIOR AWARDS - These
The most outstanding project
Johnson,
and Melissa Holman; and back row,
students who received superior ratings on their
award went to Becky Smith, whose
T.J,
King,
Meredith Felts, Tricia Davis, and
Science Day projects will now compete In the
project was titled "Can Polluted
Matt Justice, and top, Franco Romuno. Also
Water pe Purified." She was I!~Tec;,·~­ district contest to be held at Ohio University
receiving superior' ralliigs but not pictured were
A:prU
8.
They
are
left
to
right,
front,
Jennl
Howsen ted the John Mora Memorial
Megan
Drummer and Melissa Darnell.
erton, Ben Crane, Bridget Vaughan, B11nne J •
Award.
Smith, and Ben Fowler; second row, Kristina
In addition governor awards
were presented in seven areas.
They were energy research by T. J. OAPSE, Veterans Memorial Hos- Jerod Gilmore, Amy Johnson, Ste- Hays, Tara Blount, Sarah Larkins,
Sing, water resources by Lacy pital, Southern_Ohio Coal Compa- fani Pickens, Dustin Miller, Chan· Melissa Swisher, Joshua Lynch,
Banks, agriculture and food tech· ny, Vaughan's. Cardinal ~ark:.et, dra Moon, J. T. Humphreys, C. J. Marc Jones, Randy Haning, Kasey
nology by Meredith Felts, enVtTOn· King Servistar Hardwar.e, Me~J!S Scarberry, Ryan Ramsburg, Anny Williams, Kelli Lightfoot, Beth
mental sciences by Megan-Drum· Junior Science Oubs, Metgs Jumor Honker, Stciphan Thornton, Jason Reynolds, Jessica Evans, Jennifer
mer, biotechnology by Melissa High Teachers, AEP Sporn Plant, Harris, Ryan Dill, Tanya Dill, Lambert, Becky Collins, Clark
VanMatre, Cinda Bratton, Jennifer
Holm'an, materials science by Bookman and Associates Insurance Austin Carr, Tamra O'Dell.
Patrick
Martin,
Amy
Sayre,
Heck.
Kristina Kennedy, and manufaclllf· Agency .
. .
.
Those receiving ratings of good
ing science by Melissa Darnell.
Students recetvmg· supenor Melissa Werry, Joshua Price; Justin
Jeffers,
Josiah
Rawson,
Jason
were Matt Pavich, Brandi Snider,
The special plaques going to the awards were Joe Weaver, Brandy
students with superior projects Stan ley, Kelly Gilkey, Jason Young, Jeremy Rowe, Beth Call, Clayton Tromm, Macie Pierce,
were provided by Meigs Local Preast, Kim Wells, Kimberly Rtl· Stoney Day, Stephanie Jones, Jessi- Shelly Pavich, Misty Ebersbacb,
Teachers Association, Columbus terbeck, Kristin Brown, Thomas ca Johnson, Sarah Dean, John Melissa Priddy, Clayton Oblinger,
Southern/Ohio Power, Meigs Litter Kopczinsky, Clinton Hendricks, Davidson, Tim McClure, Amanda Misty Hart, Jenny Manltin, J. R.
Control, Meigs Junior High Aca- Jeremiah Bentley, Jason Carman,
Mei
Local

Gee

skills for
survival ·
on

A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

_Read~ng,

MOST OUTSTANDING PROJECT - Becky Smith was
awarded the John Mora Awant for most outstanding project in ·
the Science Fair. Here she-Jspresented a piRque by David-Gaul,
Meigs Junior High School principaL Her project title was "Can
Polluted Water be Purffied.''
·

-Community calendarFRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Junior
High School athletic bafiquet, 6:30
p.m. Friday, followed by Athletic
Boosters meeting with officers to
be elected. Eastern High School
atbietic banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday.

Church of the Nazarene, _Sunday.
Debra, bronze medalist of lbe 1976
Montreal Olympic games, will
share her testimony at 9:30 a.m.
followed by James, singer-song·
writer, performing a blend of contemporary, country and gospel
songs at10:30 a.m. Public invite.

V6, auto., air cond., cassette,
power windows and locks,
cruise, till.

$13,995

HARRISONVILLE - Special
POMEROY - Meigs County
meeting
of Harrisonville Lodge
Chamber of Commerce, open
41
I,
Saturday,
6:30 p.m. Annual
house 1-6 p.in. Friday, at former
to
take
place. 6:30 p.m.
inspection
GTEoflice.
dinner followed· by 7:30p.m. meet·
RACINE - Weekend revival 7 ing. Degree work.
p.m. each evening, Pentecostal
POMEROY - Naomi Baptist
Assembly, State Route 124,
Racine. Rev. James GtUette, evan- Church hosts Rev. Roben Jackson
gelise. Bill Hoback, pastor invites of Ashland, Ky., at II a.m. Sunday
atlbe church. Public invited.
public.
LONG BOTTOM- Evangelist
Dave Carpenter to speak at Faith'
Full Gospel Church, F:rjday, 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Recd,invitcs public.
" ·
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grauge 778, and Star Junior
Grange 878, potluck and fun night,
Saturday, 6:30 at Grange hail,
Country Road I north of Salem
Center. Anyone interested welcome
to auend.
POMEROY - Rerum Jonathan
Meigs Chapter DAR, charter day
· luncheon, noon Saturday at Episcopal Parish J:!ouse.
SUNDAY
RACINE - James and Debra
Davis, in concert the Racine

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, at6 p.m. Man. day at township office.
TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council
#323 Daughters of America, 7 p.m.
Tuesdayr Quarterly birthdays
observed. 1
POMEROY - FOE Auxiliary,
Pomeroy, Tuesday, 7:30 meeting
followed by 8 p.m. talk by Mony
Wood, DARE director for Meigs
County. Presentation open to pub·
lie.
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire ·
Department Ladies Auxiliary. 6
p.m Tuesday at fire station. Ali
members urged to attend.
·

8ttk recoverv

Veterans services
employees appeal
salary reversals
.
By

..

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in g.
It was noted that the program

was written by women of tbe
National Committee for the World
Day of Prayer in Ghana. Taking
part were Pauline Horton, Lula
Hampton, Martba Lu Beegle, Ada
Titus, Racbael Downie and Margaret Bowles. Patty Craig bad the
meditation, and several songs were
presented wilb Kelly Roush accompanylnJ! on tbe piano. Approximately 40 women artended. ·

Tlmea..Sentlnei Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A county officer and his secretary have hired an attorney in an attempt to recover
more lhan$12,000in pay increases . - - - - - . ,
tl!at they feel the Galiia County
Board of Commissioners unjustly
took away from them.
Veterans Service Office Direc·
tor Steve Swords and ......;.."
R!Jonda 1.-ee. lta"e,appe~ied.to.
State Personnel Board of Review
in Columbus. '""'
,
L---t,~;i.
"It wasn't a money thing,"
·swords said. "Our commission
J!ave us a psy raise and the county .commission denie&lt;)
us the raise."
In January, the Veterans Service Commission prepared a 1995 budget of $206,800, which included a
$6,600 raise for Swords and $5,700 for Lee.
The county commission approved amuch smaller
estimated budJ!et of $117,600 and refused to put in
additional funds for the pay raises, saying they would
give an across-the-board increase to ail coUiity employees once the final budget was in. ·
County commission President Harold Montgom·
ery declined to comment on the appeal, saying the
issue does not involve th"lcounty'commission.
"This is berween (the VSC) and their personnel,"
he said. "They're the ones who appropriated the raise
and they would Ill' the ones who made the decision to
withdraw the pay increases."
VSC President Dan Runyon·said the issue has been
turned over to Prosecuting Attorney Brent Saunders.
He said he is unsure who will be held responsible if
the personnel board sides with Swords and Lee.
"That's for the courts to decide," he said.
Saunders could not be reached for comment Friday
afternoon .
Swords· said the county commission reversed the
VSC's decision.
"I'm queslioni~g whether they have the authority
noltocomplywhen the Jaw says it's up to the veterans
comm1ssion," he said. The two commissions have
Continued on PI!J&amp; A2

scfi~;l99s

Don't Count on lour Leaf
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and See lite Mid Oltio
Valley's Low Price l.e•der•••

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1992 CHEVY
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•

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1991 BUICK PARKAVENUE .............................. $10,995
V6, auto., air, leather, more.
1990 CHEVROLET G20 CONVERSION VAN .... $12,495
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4X4, VB, air, power winddws.
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Firat lady Hillary Rod ham Clinton eats stales a ulo ·
with flrat1Jradera and criticizes pro- malic-dlly ."
Hecitedac·
posed school lunch changes.
tion on the
school lunch program as an example of the de-evolution of
Continued on page A2

S.R. 7, U.S. 35 interchange

for confiscated guns

By KEVIN KELLY

By JIM FREEMAN

Tlmt•S.ntinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Drivers
using upper State Route 7 in
Gallipolis on a daily basis can
expect their trip to become more
hectic starling next month.
A widening of the road to
add a through lane from the
U.S. 35 interchange past the
·
Plaza will be the
significant portion of an Ohio
Department of Transportation
upgrade set lo start April 10,
said District 10 spokesperso~
Nancy Yoachain. :· ,
(.
The through lane will allow
drivers in the southbound lane
to enter the Silver Bridge Plaza
or drive past, she explained.
The lane will extend 200 to 300
feet from the present three lanes
and then taper off to create a
smoother traffic flow through
UPGRADE SLATED-The portion ofState Route 7 near the Silver Bridge Plaza will be upgraded
the primarily commercial sec· as part of a nearly $800,000 resurfacing project in and around Gallipolis. The job calls for a new
tion of the city.
.through lane from the U.S. 35 interchange past the plaza.
Yoacham said the present
•
traffic signal at the plaza will be upgraded and the magnetic loops additional of rwo more businesses on Upper River Road -the Ald1
that trigger the signal will be replaced. A signal is also expected to bulk grocery store and the adjoining Auto Zone.
be placed on 7 at the end of the
ODOT has been keeping the city
35 exit ramp, she said.
liTh h · · h I
Ill II
dI
I h administration updated on progress
"Thestatehadbeeniookingat
e I rou!l aneW a OW r vers n t e andCityManagerMatthcwCopplcr
this for some time, which is why
southbound lane to enter the Sliver Bridge noted that concerns had been aired
the traffic pattern forexiting from
Plaza or drive past. The lane will extend 200to over the cond11ion uf 1 around the
35 was changed last year,"
300feetfromtheptesentthree lanes and then plaza.
Yoacham noteJ.
t
part of it IS the fact that
aper off to creaI e a smooth er t rafll. c fl ow roa"Idthink
. ge tt.mg .m bad shape, .. he
A Contract for lh ~• 1.0 b was
1s
awarded to the Shelly co.,
through the primarily commercial section of said.
Thornville, for$792,452.41. The
the city.
Shelly's projected completion
project includes resurfacing of _...;.._.;;..._
. - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - daie on the upgrade is Aug. 31,
4-1/2 miles of 7 in and out of Gallipolis, starting from State Route Yoacham said. Maintaining traffic flow will be up to the contractor,
218 to the city's south end, from State to Pine streets.and from she added.
- Norris-North up Dodge to Southeastern Equipment Co.
"in other words, they 'II be flexible about keeping traffic on the go
The project comes when !raffic is expected to increase with the and make compensation as they go along," Yoacham said.

Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY- A request to restore the Reedsville voting precinct in Olive
.Township has been denied by the Meigs County Board of Elections.
A letter to Dale Smith, spokesman for the Committee to Restore the
Reedsville Voting Precinct, signed by Rita D. Smith, director, said that the
"Board of Elections unanimous! voted to stand by their original decision o(
February 1989."
. ·
.
That decision closed the Reedsville precinct and established North Olive
an\! South Olive precincts, with .voting at Tuppers Plains and Long Bottom.
The leiter of explanation to Dale Smith reads, in part: "The Board of
Elections must main tam a non -partisan office and all decisions must be even·
handed. We cannot establish voting precincts in every community or neighbor·
hood that would like one, especially since our budget requests are lowered
every year in order to balance the county budget."
11 was noted in the leiter that there are II precincts in Meigs County with a
greater number of registered voters than in North and South Olive, and seven
townships that have only one voting precinct.
It was also pointed out that since the original decision of the board to close
the Reedsville precinct, House Bi II 143 has bt:en passed which allows up to 800

, auto .. a1r, cassette, air bag ,
power windows &amp; locks,
anti-lock brakes.

HOT- HOT- HOT

uNo

longer will
states have to
jump through
hoopsunhl fed·
era! bureau'·
crats have had
thCif fill . .. .
Those checks
will now be
•-.:nt to the

·Firearms
ODOT plans through lane at
-for
sale:
Couhty opens bids

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

1994 CHEVY
CORSICA

COMPLETELY RESTYLED!!

•

Vol. 30, No . 6

'

Board denies voting
News capsules
precinct for Reedsville IRS fraud crackdown slows tax refund rate

$16,995

1995 CHEVY
CAVALIER

IN STOCK AND READY lOR DELIVERY ~~..JJ

World.Day of Prayer held
"~e Eartb is a House for all
Peop e" was the theme of the
Wor Day of Prayer service held
recenUy atlbe Mount Moriah Bap·
tist Church in Middleport. Tbc
Church Women United of Meigs
County sponsored the observance.
. Edith Sisson, president, wei·
· corned tbose attend!ng and intra·
duced Florence Richards, key
woman of the bost church. Greeters
were Anna Lee Harris and Lina
Dixon, who alsO accepted tbe offer-

1994
CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD

L.....!!::l2...!:!!!J!;!!;...J

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant. March t9. 1995

GALUPOUS -It's been a steady diet of the four Rs- their fight over federal spending cuts and attempts to hypocrite.
.
this spring at schools inside and around the Washington balance the budget.
And it didn 't end there . Last week, President Clinton
Take March 1:
Beltway-reading, 'riling, 'rilhmeticandrhetoric. Politi· .
chomped on tacos at an elementary school in a. Virginia
cal rhetoric, that is.
• First lady Hillary ·Rodbam Clinton ate with first· suburb of Washington and later told reporters that educaOn Friday, Sixth District U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R· graders in Arlington, Va., and criticized proposed school tion cuts were destructive.
Gallipolis, publicly stepped ipto the debate by iabelinJ! lunch changes.
Cremeans said he was "appalled" at such "flat-out
•
House
Speaker
Jl(ewt
distortions"
in a statement released Friday.
allegatioris of cuts in the federal - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - •
school lunch program as "lies,"
"It seems that in Washington the facts are often second"Not one single dollar now St'f'nt Gingrich handed out donated
and pointed to House Republi·
books at Moten Elementary in ary to the spin," the freshman House Republican said.
can action on the issue as exem- on providing lunches to school chi/· Washington and touted the role
Cremeans said the proposed change in funding for
plifying " ... what the new Con· dren will be cut ... In fact, the total of charities.
school lunches representee! a "change in the way the
grcss is trying to do with hun- amount spent on lunches will In· .• A bevy of Gingrich's Demo· federal government transfers money."
cratic congressional foes had ' "Not one single dollar now spent on providing lunches
dreds (qf programs) just like it."
'
Democrats and Republicans ·crease. •
only recently left the same to school children will be cut," he argued. "In fact, the total
alike are usinJ! school cafeterias
Rep. Frank Cremea'ns school, after eating lunch with amount spent on lunches will increase.
and kids as a battleground in
kids and calling the speaker a
"Who pays for the lunches of our school children is the

Kinnison, Chad Shuler, Heather Tonya Miller, Rhonda Campbell,
Wise, Brandon Larkins, David Stacy Williamson, Wylon McKin·
Hop.kins, Tara Hawley, Robert ney, Rainy Walker, Amanda Ralpb,
Klein, Adam Williams, Candy Bar· Bobby Rupe, Eric Richmond, Shari
nett, Chuck Eggers, Alexandria Wright, Ryan Rickard, Melinda
Moore. Michael Bing, Jonatban Clark, Bobby Hart, David Staats.
Daniel Hannan, Daniel Whit·
Wyatt, David Bottomley, Rachel
tekind,.
Jeremy Thomson, Melinda
F{J(beS, Tracy Coffey.
Lambert,
Bobbi Stewart, Jamie
J. R. Rife, Rusty Stewan. Carrie
Jason
Sears, Marlene
.
Barrell,
Lambert; Adam Moodispaugh,
Moodispaugh,
Darlene
Moodis·
Jared Woods, Bob Carter, Robeft
paugh,
lcssi
Priddy;
Crystal
Rose,
Diddle, Rachel Reeves, Crystal
Allison
Streetman,
Jonathan
Tipple, Aiyson Patterson, Robby
Smith, Edson Hart, Ben Molden, Roberts and Hope Neace.

DOWN

1994 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS
SUPREME

-Pagess

Details
on PageA2

•riting, •rithmetic a.nd (political) rhetoric

KEVIN PINSON

GOVERNOR AWARD
- Recognized for their
expertise in specific sdentiC'tc areas with governor awards-were left
to right, front, T. J, King, energy research; Melissa Holman,
biotechnology; Lacy Banks, water resources; and back, Kristina
· KeMedy, materials science, and Meredith Felts, agriculture and
rood technology. Megari Drummer, not pictured, won the award
for environmental sciences.

•Guess Who• tp perform

HI: 60s
Low: 30s

School lunches &amp; the four Rs:

'

4 Door, auto., stereo, air,
power steering, bucket seats ..

B·1

tournament action .P$ge c1 (

•
nnts -

tJ DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

1994
PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

NCAA

*All pnces lntlude

rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

included.

..,

·-

·

North and South Olive precincts have a total of I 048 registered,voters.
Reedsville was one of several small precincts dissolved and/or combined
with others in 1989. The reasons included cost savings, accessibility and
safety, and convenience of the voting_public. .
.
.
The O:&gt;mmiltee to Restore spokesman, along w1th Ohve Townshtp trustees,
Bill Osborne, Randy Boston, and Ernest Barringer and Clerk Martha Durst,
met with the Board of Elections last week to renew their earlier requests for
return of the Reedsville precinct. They detailed for the.board improvements to
the fire station, voting place for many years, along with the concern of )lOme
citizens who are now required to travel several additional miles to vote.
Twice before the matter was reconsidered after petitions opposing the action
were filed by tlie. Commiltee to Restore the Reedsville Voting Precinct.
Both times the vote was two in favor and two against restoring the precinct.
As provided by state law because of the tie vote the matter went to the office
of th~retary of state. Both times the secretary, first Democrat Sherr~
Brown and then Republican Bob Taft, voted agamsl overturnmg the bo~rd s
original decision. The latest ruling was made on Dec. 27, 1991. I'

.,

WASHINGTON (AP) - The government has issued taxpayers to get refund·anticipation loans. Electronic
17 percent fewer. tax refun.ds than it had by this time last returns through March 10 totaled 8.8 million, down 21
year as a result of an anti-fraud crackdown, the Internal percent from the same period a year ago.
Revenue Service said Friday.
·
The IRS is counting on growth in electronic filing to
In a report on this year's filing season through last week, speed the transformation of its antiquated, paper-based
the IRS said it had received 46.5 million returns, down I returns processing sysleiiJ:
· Filings so far this year bear out pred1chuns from tax·
- percent from"41'milliorrlast year.
The numberofreturns processed, 36.4 million, is down preparers that electronic filing would fall off after the
11 percent from last year and the number of refundS . IRS made it riskier fqr banks and finance compamcs to
certified, 22.4 million, is down 17 percent.
make refund-anticipation loans.
Also, the IRS' e!Cctronic-return program has been hard·
Lenders have cut back on loans and raised their fees
h:t by rule changes that ~ake it much more difficult for because the IRS stopped issuing speedy notices that a
.--=---...:..---'--~--------------,
refund is coming soon.
Who g~pta aul:lltttd?
'
. .
'The government has cited the Ion n it
HiatoricaJIY, people 'Aith hlghef Incomes face a higher chance of an IRS audit.
as an mducement for fraud , parhcu·
S% perp!ll~ auditfd (ff/931
li!rly under the earned income tax
credit
program for low·mrome work4
ers.
3
The IRS also has delayed about 4
2
million refunds because Social Se·
curity
numbers for taxpayers and their
1
dependents are missmg or don't
0
match government records and be·
$100,000
rota/
..... '
cause
of· more thorough anti·fraud
$25,000
~~~~~checks by.computer.

Tlmea-Sentlnei Staff
POMBROY - The Meigs County
Board of Commiss1oners Friday
opened bids on the sale of 1,416 firearms forfeited to the county in 1993.
The board is seeking to sell guns
sei2ed from Robert - D. Fife; Middleport, who pleaded guilty to a
charge of recc)vmg stolen property .
in retorn for the plea agreement, he
agreed to forfeit the gu~s to the county
with the county and himself splitting
proceeds from the sale.
Commissioners rece1ved 18 bid"

. ranging from $90,000 to $2,000 with
the highest bid coming from Stevens
Wholesale of Ashland, Ky. Most of
the bid• hovered around the $20,000$30,000 range.
The board tabled accepting any of
the bid' peodmg a rcv1ew from the
county prosecutor.
.
Commissioners said they were d1s·
appointed with the b1d1 . "We were
hoping to get more mo'ncy ," said com·
mission V1ce·preS1dentlanet Howard
Tackett.
Tackett said the board retains the
option of rejecting all the bids and
selling the guns individually.
Tourism discussion continues
The board then continued its ongomg disc.ussion on tourism with mem- '
bcrs of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce tourism committee .

The chamber is scekmg assistance
· from the board in funding the tourism
office including the hiring of a pari·
time tourism director. Commission·
ers earlier handed tourism responsibilities over from the park district to
the chamber.
Commissioners want the chamber
Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
t8 Sections -144 'Pages
Business
Calendars
CiassiOeds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Columns

Dl
83&amp;4
DJ-S
Insert
A4
A3
AS
Ci -6
Ill

A2

·

Fn:d Crow
Jjm Freemari

Bob HoeOich
.Jim Sapds

1:':'--:

Appalachian Regional Commission targeted f.&gt;r scrap heap in cutting plan
I LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The Appalachian Regional Commission was
targeted for elimination in a new plan by U.S. House Republicans to cut $1'00
billion from the federal budget over five years.
The cutbacks suggested Thursday by House Budget Committee,Chairman
John Kasich ofOhio as a way to help pay for $190billion in GOP-proposed
tax cuts also include reduced fundinJ! for two coal-related programs.
Kasich proposed a 66 percent reduction in funds for strip-mine regulation·
by the U.S. Office of Surface Mining and a 75 percent cut in fossil -fuel
. energy research by the Department of Energy.
·
·, I

Kasich's comminee approved legislation to force t~c overallS 100 billion
reduction.
. The Appropriations Committee w1ii make spcc1fic cuts.
Besides having Democratic support, the ARC has Republican fnends in
key places, including Rep. Hardld "Hal " Rogers of Kentucky, a senio~
member of the Appropriations Committee. A Rogers spokesman said the
eastern Kentucky lawmaker will oppose Kasich's recommendation.
Kasic~ predicted that if the Appropriations O:&gt;mmittcc doesn 't el!minate
ARC funding, there will be an effort to do it on the House floor . .. --

I

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