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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 20, 1995

0 hio Lottery

Nerve gas attack in Tokyo subway
l~aves six dead, thousands sick
TOKYO (AP) - Passengers
fainled, vomited and went illto coovulsions after a letbal nerve gas
spewed from wrapped packages
autborities believe were planted by
terrorists today on one of the
world's busiest subway systems.
Six people died ao.d 3,227 were
trealfd iu hospitals.
No group immediately claimed
responsibility and tbere was no
obvious motive.
Police said tbe toxic agent was
sarin, a nerve gas developed by the
Nazis during Wa:Jd Warn tba1 can
be ratal in even small doses.
Japanese news reports quoted
authorities as sayillg the substance
was planted ill wtapped contaillers
in at least five subway cars on three

quickly poured into stations . jinvolvement in today's poisonings ' intravenous drips.
.
Troops were called out, including and threatened in a statement to sue
"When I got to the hospital, I
an anti-chemical-warfare squad. anyone who suggested there was a couldn't move my bands enough to
Signs were hastily posted outside link.
write my name and I could barely
stations saying tbere bad been a
Sarin was blamed for seven speak," said commuter Masasbi
guerrilla attack.
·
deaths in June at houses in tbe cen- Ito.
Authorities said 3,227 people tral Japanese town of Matsumoto.
The poisoning struclc at a cbetwere admitted to hospitals fa: treat·
The source was never identified, isbed national institution, Tokyo's
ment or observation, and hundreds and there were no arrests.
clean and efficient subway netif not thousands of others suffered
Two unexplained incidents ear- work. The trains run on precise
lesser symptoms including nausea lier this month could yield clues. schedules, carrying 2.7 billion pasand coughing.
On March 15, three mysterious sengers a year, about twice as many
Prime Minister Tomiicbi attache cases were discovered at a · as the New York subway system.
The attack also came as Japan
. Murayama expressed outrage and Tokyo subway station, each condemanded a full investigatioo.
taining 'three tanks with an still was recovering from the pbysi·
"We absolutely can't allow this unknown liquid, small motorized cal and emotional devastation of
kind of indiscriminate murder of fans, a vent, and a battery. One was tbe Jan. 17 earthquake in Kobe tba1
innocent citizens,'' be told giving off a vapor.
killed nearly 5,500 people.
reporters.
Ten days before that, 19 train
!;'a: many, the sight of hundreds
Authorities refused to discuss riders in Yokohama, a port city ' of ordinary people struck down on
traili lines.
· suspects - eitber individuals or near Tokyo, were taken to hospitals their way to work rekindled fears
All over central Tokyo, passengroups - and would not ~ay complaining of eye and respiratory that their country is not tbe safe,
gers staggered onto tbe streets, whether they included Aum Sbinri pain from an unknown source of orderly place tbey bad always congasping for breath. Some foamed at Kyo, a religious cult that bas been fumes.
sidered it to be.
the mouth ao.d bled liom the nose, accused of IW!kiog sarin.
Hospitals in central Tokyo were
"Japan bas turoed into a scary
witnesses said. People overcome by
Tbe group, wbic)l bas been inundated today. Doctors and nurs- country," said taxi driver Koicbi
the gas were carried out.
linked by news reports to several es rushed frantically to administer Horie. "We can't allow aimes
Worlrers clad in proteCtive gear unsolved kidnappings, d!:nied any CPR, give oxygen and book up this.''

SUBWAY VICfiM • A subway passenger wbo collapsed by
noxious fumes Is blken away on a stretcher from Tokyo's Tsuldjl
Station Monday morning. Six died and more tban 3,000 became iU
because of nerve gas planted at more tban 15 subway stations
tbrovgbout tbe area. (AP)

Perry meets with
Kuwaitis on Iraqi threat
KuWAIT (AP) -Defense Sec-

retary William Perry met with
· Kuwaiti leaders today to coordinate
plans for bolstering tlie emirate's
security forces in tbe face· of a
renewed military buildup.by Iraq.
: DireCtly upcn arrival liom Saudi
Arabia, Perry went into a two-bour
meetin~ and lunch with tbe emir,

Sheik Jabir al·Almad al-Sabab, and
Crown Prince Sheik Abdullah alSabah, tbe nation's top rulers.
The U.S. defense seaetary was
scheduled to fly to AI-Jaber Air
Base 20 miles northwest of the city
to meet with U.S. crews from the
two A-10 Thunderbolt squadrons
deployed .to the tiny ef!lirate .last
year.

:Meigs land transfers

District 13
All-Star
results

.

The following land transfers
Deed, Wesley K. and Jenmfer S.
were recorded recently in the office Cochran to Secretary of Housmg
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts and Urb~n Development, Salem,
E:mmogene Hamilton:
·
.91 acres, .
. .
Right of way Jol1n and Yvorine
Deed, Mtldred L, Sm1th, Sara
Dennis to TPCWo, 3.1050 aaes;
Eloise Cullums, Juanita Pearl
Right of way, Rodney E., Mona Cusbner, Robert Cusbner, Robert
L and Lilah Frecker to TPCWD, Frank Hawk and Romona Hawk to
B~ford 20 acres·
Bernice M. Hawk, Bedford parcel;
Right of way: Rodney E. and . Right of way, Flora~· Osborne
Mona L. Frecker to TPCWD, Salis- t~ ~uck.e~e Rural Electnc Cooperabury, .36 acres;
uve, ~Cipm;
. Right of way, Rodney E. and . R1gbt of way, Edward L .. a~d
Mona L. Frecker to .TPCWD, Salis- Donna K. Savage to BREC, Sc1p1o,
bury, .40 acres;
10.95 acres;
..
Deed, Mary Ahce Nease, John
Right of way, Rodney, Lilah
and Mona L. Frecker to TPCWD, Dav1d Nease, Marlene C. Nease to
Salisbury, 38.94 acres:
James Jay Cremeans and Andrea
Deed, Larry D., Marilyn D., Cremeans, Sutton, 2.44 acres;
Terry L. and Lois A. Deem to Earl
D.eed, Donald R. and Paul~tta
M: and Marie E. Johnson. Chester;
Pullins to Rita K. Wentz, Ohve
. Deed, Delber.t M . .and Loretta tracts;
Certificate, Harold C. Russell,
M. Blake to Debra A. Blake, Middlepcrt lot;
.
·
deceased, to Terry G., Lewis E.
Deed, Delbert M. and Loretta Roland E. and Raymond A. RusM. Blake to Shelby M. Powell, sell, Salisbury;
Middlepcrt lot:
.
·
Deed, Te~ry G., Kay, Lewis E.,
Certificate, Delphine J. Perone, Betty, Roland and Raymond Rusdecease~. to Thomas F. Perone, sell to Terry G. and Kay Russell,
Salem parcels;
Salisbury parcel.

PageS

Tbe awards were presented in .
dual ceremonies at the Beverly
Hilton in Beverly Hills and Tavern
on the Green in New York.
At the California ceremony,
Carl Reiner was awarded tl!e 1995
Paddy Chayefsky .Laurel Award for
Television, lbe guild's highest
award for television writing. Reiner
was the writer-creator of "Tbe
Dick Van Dyke Show," as well as
a television and Him actor, director
and producer. ·
The winners were:
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY,
FILM: "Four Weddings and a
Funeral," Richard Curtis, Gramer-

Gov. Mario Cuomo and Qklaboma' s former governor.
In 1993, then-Oklahoma Gov.
David Walters lost a c.ourt battle
witb Cuomo over wbetber Grasso
should be put to death in Oklaboma
or forced to serve a 20-years-to-life
seiuence iD New York IUs\,
Grasso said be wanted to die
rather than linger in prison.

on building aid program

SION: "Homicide: Life on the
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY, Street - Bop Gun," David Simon
FILM : "Forrest Gump," Eric and David Mills, story by Tom
Roth, based on the novel by Win- Fontana, NBC.
EPISODIC COMEDY, TELE·
ston Groom, Paramount.
ORIGINAL LONG FORM VISION: "Seinfeld: The Mango," ·
TELEPLAY, TELEVISION: Lawrence H. Levy , and Larry
"Witness to the Execution," David, story by Lawrence H. Levy,
Thomas Baum, story by Thomas NBC.
MUSIC,
Baum, Keitb Pierce and Priscilla - VARIETY
AWARD , TRIBUTE, SPECIAL
Prestwidge, NBC.
.
ADAPTED LONG FORM EVENT, TELEVISION: "Tracey
TELEPLAY, TELEVISION: ''A · Ullman: Takes on New York,"
Family Torn Apart," Matthew Tony Sheehan, Dick Clement, Ian
Bombeck, based 9n a book by La Frenais, Stephen Nathan and
Marc Flana~an. HBO.
l,.eslie Walker, NBC.
EPISODIC DRAMA, TELEVIcy.

VAN DEALER

of the prison, where 87 men have
been put to death since 1915. Three
college students sang, "Anotber
One Bites the Dust."
In New York City, members of
tbe Guardian Angels gathered in
Times Square and toasted Grasso's
death with a dozet(bottles of cbam~gne.
.
was the 11th person executed in tbe United State tbis year.

In a f'tnal statement, be repeated
his wish:'
''Let there be no mistake, Mario
Cuomo is wright (sic); Life without
parole is mucb worse than tbe
death penalty," Grasso wrote in a
statement released after be was pronounced dead at 12:22 am.
Deatb penalty opponents held
candlelight vigils outside the gates

BRAND NEW '95 CHM AS1RO EX1EM

Grasso

..

. By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
Qiesbire residents were assured
by an American Electric Power
Corp. official that noise. generated
·by fans on the scrubbers at the Gen:
James M. Gavin Power Plant
would be significantly· reduced
within three weeks.
A temporary muffling device on
the six fans in the scrubbers' waste
handling section bas already cut
noise by more tban 20 decibels.
said James A. Howard, manager of
AEP'·s Major Projects Division.
But some of the nearly 40 resi. dents wbo met with Howard Monday felt the noise was responsible
for not only lack of sleep but health
problems and contributes to tbe
deterioration of the quality of life
in the village.
"The noise I've beard lately bas
stayed around. about 24 (1ours and
is more so after midnight," resident
Ron Cornelius said. "Now I know
what it's like to be sentenced to life
without mercy:"
Howard said AEP became
aware of the problem a week ago
wben noise, variously described as
bigb-pitcbed or droning, prompted
complaints.
.
The temporary muffler on the
fans bas cut the level from 65 decibels to roughly 42 as of the reading
taken Friday, and installation of
new .equipment in tbe. next few
weekS will prompt a bigger reduc-

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lion, Howard added.
"We are confident this will take
care of the problem," be said. "The
design Work indicates to us it will
work."

Howard acknowledged that
AEP was mistaken in its earlier
belief, aired at one of several town
· meetings during the scrubbers,'
construction, that noise would not
be a problem for residents.
Stressing that the P.lant wants to
be a "good neighbor' to the community, Howard said AEP responded swiftly to the problem and will
continue to work with residents in
resolving other difncuities.
A suggestion that a citizen committee be allowed to inspect the
operation and permits was welcomed by Howard, who encouraged tbem to call bim or contact
Mayor W. Scott Lucas.
Both scrubbing units went on
line at Gavin earlier Ibis year. The
$600 million-plus project, designed
to remove 95 percent of the sulfur
content from coal burned at the 21year-old plant, is characterized by
AEP as .the key· component in its
Clean Air Act compliance.
Residents also complained of a
sticky substance bitting their cars
and damaging pain~ whiCh Howard
believed could be a moisture carryover from the plant. He asked resi ·
dents to provide bim with a sample
for analysis .
·
· Others noted that blackish dust

LOS ANGELES (AP)...:... Prosccuto~. wbo have tried to downplay the .
celebrity side of OJ. Simpson, kept the jury from bearing bis voice by
choosing not to play his taped interview with police.
Simpson's attorneys countered Monday by giving jurors an up-close·
look at the famous,jlefendant.
Escorted by bailiffs and lawyers, Simpson - appearing embarrassed
- extended a .trembling left band anct displayed the middle left Boger that
the prosecutioo contends was wounded during the knife attack that killed
his ex-wife and her friend. The defense suggested Simpson's knuckle
always appears swollen.
.
Jurors 'leaned out of their chairs to get a good view . .Only one juror
looked Simpson in tbe face: the rest peered only at his band . None
touched bim.
The display came early in the defense's cross-examinstion of Detective
t'biUp Vannatter, wbo returns to the witness stand today for more questioning by attorney Robert Shapiro.
With Vannatter's direct testimony finished, prosecutors bavc now
wrapped up the initial questioning of the two lead investigators - without
.Playing a tape recording ot'ISimpson's balf-bour interview with Vannatter
and Detective Tom Lange.
·
The interview took place at pclice headquarters the day after the June
12.murders of Simpson's ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and ber friend.
Ronald Goldman.
Legal analysts called the prosecution's move a "calculated decision" .
possibly founded on the belief the recording could make Simpson loolf
sym~thetic and remove any incentive for Simpson to testify in the case.
"Maybe they feel they've got a lot of momentum witb Ibis pOlice testi·mony and they want to move right intothe forensic ·evidence," said
Eleanor Swift, a law professor at the University of California Berkeley.
"Maybe they didn't want to personalize Simpson," sbe said.
From early in the case, prosecutors and the defense bave ·been locked
in a subtle baule over the ~umanization of Simpson. Defense attorneys
generally refer to him as "Mr. Simpson," while prosecutOr's usually call
him "tbe defendant."

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sort out your local concept," be
By JIM FREEMAN
said, explaining that the local conSentinel News Staff
cept
includes tbe district's needs
The Southern Local Board of
and
wants.
.
,
Education was updated Monday
"We
want
you
to
think about the
night on a state program to provide
concept
at
this
stage,"
be said. "The
funding for new school buildings.
most
important
thing
is to get the
Jack Hunter, from tbe Ohio
community
interested."
Deparunent of Education's school
finance division, met with board · The board would need to bave a
members at their regular meeting at project submitted to the state board
the high school to discuss the state by May 15 to put tbe issue on the
school building assistance program November ballot, but Hunter cau- which provi~es assistance to eli· tioned against baste.
"You bave to make a lot .of
gible districts for building new
tough
decisioos," be said.
buildings.
Under current guidelines, tbe
Hunter said the district is
district would .have to ~y about 50
already eligible for the program.
percent of the cost of a new school
"You are on the lis~" be said.
wbicb could cost about $8 mil"Even though the state will be
lion.
Under proposed guidelines,
very involved ... it's your schoolthe
district's
share could be as little
the state doesn't tell you wbat to
as
10
percent;
be said.
build." Hunter explained.
"There
may
be an advantage to
"The task you bave now is ... to

·AEP pledges to cut
noise from Gavin's
scrubber
unit fans
.

sa 688**
, '

--~----~~N~o--c-u~t-

On
the list
Southern Board updated
\

r,

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 21, 1995

Copyright 1995

Two-time killer .executed in Oklahoma early today
McALESTER, Okla (AP) .....: A
two-time killer was executed early
this morning for strangling 811 87year-old woman to death on C)lristmas Eve after luring ber to the door
under the pretense of giving her a
present
Thomas Grasso, who bad also_
liiTied a·person in New Ycirk; was
at the center of a bigb-profile tugof-war between former New York

Low toutgbttn tbe 305, p1rt1y
cloudy. Wednesday, portly
cloudy. Htgbsln 60s.

2 Sections, 12 Pagtls 35 centl
Vol. 45, NO. 227

'Gump' and 'Four Weddings' win top script honors
BEVERLY Hll.LS, Calif. (AP)
- Screenplays for '.'Four Wed·
dings and a Funeral" and "Forrest
Gump" drew honors from tbe
Writers Guild of America
"Four Weddings," a British
· comedy written by Richard Curtis
and starring Hugh Grant as a
charming bachelor who balks at
matrimony, was honored as best
original screenplay Sunday night
"Forrest Gump," written by
.
Eric Roth and based on the novel
by Winston GrOOm about a simpleton who bas a positive outlook on
life, won for best adapted screenplay:

Pick 3:
455
Pick 4:
7934
Buckeye 5:
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.I

. ·

Aiternate budget
plan holds hint
of break in taxes
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - House Republicans will not include a tall cut In
their substitute version of Gov.
George Voinovicb' s proposed state
budget. But they might put In a
trigger mechanism for a future cut
' Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg, said Monday tbat
linking some kind of state income
tax cut to an improved economy
was one of the alternatives tbe
Hunter said the first step In attaining • new
DISCUSSES PROGRAM- Jack Hunter,
GOP was weighing.
school building through the program Is to forstanding at right, of the Ohio Department of
Voinovicb projects tbe state will
mulate
a
local
concept
a
summary
or
the.
disEducation's school finance division met with
bave an $892 million surplus when
trict's wants and needs. (Sentinel photo)
Southern Local Board of Education members to
the
current budget year ends June
discuss the school building as.•lstance prograltL
30.
· He bas cautioned legislators
school, but the project was turned
wait and see if better funding too fast ... or wait too long."
against spending the money or giv.'
·
The district bad earlier proposed down by voters.
comes up," be said. "It gives you
ing it back to taxpayers because the
Hunter
said
a
school
of
that
size
time to draw more interest and building a new district-wide
state
might need it in tbe event of
kinderganen through eighth-grade - 550 to 600 students - is about
enthusiasm."
an
economic
decline. . · .
(Continued on Page 3)
"The key,'' be said, "is don't act element31'Y school near IIJ~ bigh
Tbe Legislative Budget Office
predicts the. surplus might total at
least $1 billion.
·
Republicans who have been
holding bearings on Voinovicb'~
spending plan for the two years
starting July I will outline an altetnativc on Thursday that- wo'uld
spend less than the $33.7 llillion lie .
recommended.
.
How much less remained the
subject of behind-tbC-scenes work.
·
'I don' t think there is a percentage number," Davidson t.old
Members of .the Southern Local reporters a!'ter presiding .at a rouBoard of Education Monday night tine nonvoting House sess1on.
Sbe has encouraged Republican
approved a plan for the relocation
colleagues
to focus not on the size
of elementary school students to be
of
a
reduction
in spending from
displaced this fall by the
levels
Voinovich
proposed, but .on
announced closing of Rac!ne Elemeeting GOP ~oals that include
mentary School.
The board voted 3·2, with mem- making education a priority and
bers C.T. Chapman and Marty avoiding a tax increase.
"Getting into whether or not
Morarity dissenting, to accept a
plan submitted by acting Superin- you reduce it by 1 percent or twotenths of a percen.t or whatever I
tendent Ja:nes Lawrence.
The plan calls for the district's · don't believe is the drivin¥ force as
kindergarten students and we considel this budget, ' David·
Racine/Syracuse-area n~t graders son said.
House Republicans were to· out·
to be located in the existing kindergarten building adjacent to the line their budget proposal dealing
with education funding during a
junior bigb school.
·
Portland Elementary will house news.conference today.
students grades three through six, . Davidson said Monday the
while Letru:t Falls Elementary will Hou~C would recommend the state
TURNING IT DOWN - James A. Howard, manager of the
host pupils gradeS one through spend less than the S12.5 million
Major Projects Division or American Electric Power Corp.,
four. Syracuse Elementary will Voinovich proposed for a pilot proassure&lt;! Cbesb~re residents noise. levels from scrubbers at the Gen.
·have classes for students grades gram tbat would give low income
James M. Gavin Power Plant will be reduced within weeks. (OVP
parents state aid to send children to
two through six.
photo)
Tbc board rejected a plan ·sub- private school.
mitted last month by a parentDavidson said the House would
was building up on cars, houses black or panicuiatc coming out of teacher committee calling for the propose limiting tbe test to tbe
and furniture in homes close to the the scrubbers," Howard said.
disUicl's sixtb graders to be placed 74,000-pupil Cleveland school dis·
Howard added that .AEP shares in the kindergarten building at the trict, the state's largest. A federal
plant, prompting one resident to
claim that cleanup at her bouse was residents' concerns about the envi- junior high school. Under the com- judge bas placed the financially
ronment and pointed out that the mittee's plan, kindergancn would strapped district under control of
"putting Pledge out of business."
Howard and albers m atten - scrubbers arc an expression of that have been held at Syracuse Etc" the Ohio Department of Education.
dance were in ag~eement that the sentiment.
Another possible twist to the
mentary.
"We are the stewards of tbis
dust was not from the scrubbers,
Board members were unable to program: community involvement.
but wind-blown particles from Earth and we should leave· it in bet· answer questions by parents asking
"We're lalking about -I'll) not
ter shape than we found it," Cor- which school their children would sure this will remain in the final
Gavin's coal pile.
''There should not be anything nelius said.
be attending this fall.
version - some concept of some
sharing of the cost with the com-

Students'
relocation
proposal
approved

~----

r-

Buck ,·n t'""Uck-----.------.
f

1

mimity
to sec iftothere's
in
the. community
bcip tointerest
facilitate
a trial program," Davidson said.
She said payments to parents
likely would not rcaeb the $2,500
per year tbat Voinovicb recommended.
"I think what you will sec is
that we won't permit any tuition to
be paid that would be more than
tbc tuition that was paid in tbe preceding school year,',' Davidson
said.

Area man
dies in chain
saw mishap ·

Ohio omclals last week retrieved rour sets or mounted deer antlers confiscated from Mkbaei
R. Barker, 49, Charleston, W.Va., who pleaded guilty to charges Th.ursday in tbe Meigs County
Common Pieas Court. Above, Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood, left, and special
Deputy Dana Aldridge aii!Dire a trophy buck preserved in a full-size body mounL (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman)

JACKSON (AP) ·- A Jackson
man accidentally cut bis throat witb
a chain saw and died while trim·
ming .trees outside his cburcb:
Police Sgt. Carl Eisnaugle sllid
William Hatten's jugular vdn was
severed Monday when a falling
limb b'it the electric chain saw,
pushing it against his throat.
• Hatten, 53, and his father, Roy
Hatten, 77, also of Jackson, were
both in the tree cutting branches .
wben the accident occwred.
The faiber suffered a broken
collarbone wben his son feU on him
after the chain saw accident. · He
was treated and released at Oak
Hill Community Medical Center iq
Oak.HiU .
I .

'
•

�.' ......

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel·

Sor.ry, kids,. we have to let .y ou go
· Thumbing through Tbe New
York Tunes last Sunday, I found a
full-page ad in the book review
section for a book called "Every
Family Needs a CEO."
We used to_ba\fe~a Qad and/or a
Mom· then we learned to settle for
an auihority figure, a role model, or
even someone who bas simple.
"socialization sldlls" and the confidence to "parent" (to use tbe latest psycboverb for an activity most
warm-blooded animals can accomplisb without the aid of books at
all). Now, apparently, the family
needs an overpaid corporate execulive to oven;ee the process whereby
human offspring are taught to fend
for themselves in a vicious world.
Well, why not? Why · not
"Every Family Needs a Warden,"
"Every Family Needs a Drill
Sergeant •• or •'Every Family
Needs a Mussolini"?
I suppose the concept of having
a CEO run family matters is meant
to be a tad more humanizing. A

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio .

. ROBERT L. WINGErt
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are weleoo~e. They should be leis than 300
words long. Allleaen ""' subject to editing and mutt be signed with name,
address lllld telepbobe number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letten
should be in good taste, addressing issues, 'oot personalities.

Letters to the editor
I

Edition brings
back iJld memories .
Dear Editor
I recently received a copy of
your !75th anniversary edition
from a longtime friend, Sarah
Gibbs.
I wish to thank you and com.mend you for your effort, it
brought back those yesteryears as I
viewed the river front pictures with
sandstone cliffs rising behind the
coon house.
I was in the county several years
ago. My wife and I were visiting
many of our friends and relatives in
. the Ohio country and. attended a
. family reunion in the upper Ohio
River Valley,
Ambrose Dude Gibbs (recently
deceased) was a very close frjend
with whom I'd spent days working
on the Russ Bailey dairy in Bradbury. .
.
I also visited the Sugar Run
school where I began my schooling
under the teachings of Miss Eva
Simms. IL was disappointed and
somewhat momentarily shocked
when I saw the condition of the
school and irs grounds.
My thoughrs were that if I could
get my sons all together, we could
make some mighty changes in a
few months.
Vfe are all six involved in the
consttuction business.
One of the richest blessings of
my life were the fruii.S of the teachings of those wonderful people

•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 21, 1995

who made up the staff at that
school under tile guiding hand of
Emma Seitz (my benefactor).
I still remember most of those
whose classes I attended. Durst (or
Darst), Hill, Church, Fisher, and
Bob White {the only male teacher) . .
I am expecting to have yet
another visit to the area. It is very
special and bas given me much. I
do some journal writings as I
endeavor to bring some of the
virtues of yester years into focus
with today.
Sincerely
Jennings C. Fish
panisb Fork, Vt.

CEO generally wears a white col·
lar, not a brov.:n shirt. In other
words, it's penrutted to pal around
with a CEO at certain special times
(office parties, conventions, etc.).
But you never toss a nerf ball to a
warden. You never play parcbesi
with a drill se~geant., Muss~Iini
started readmg
Goodmgbt
Moon" to you, priC?r to tucldng you
in, I'd be more alarmed than comforted.
In. the past. bowevert ''Chief
Executive Officer" bas meant
"b~~ of a company" 10 ~e. W111
families have_ to sell stock m themselves? And if th7 bottom falls out
of the market? W1ll '!'e have to sell
off Mom or (more likely) poor old
Uncle Charley, topayoffourdebt?
What if the family gets taken
over by some lean and hungry family down the blocl::? The Jobnsons
have a high overhead because they
maxed out their plastic on a bigscr~en 'FV . The ~elsons, meanwbtle, like bees w1th theu pollen,

!f

I WANWA GROW UP
TO BE dUST LIKE YGU ...

have shrewdly amassed credit cards
and ~ev~ us7d ~em. When their
cr~u ra~g ts high en!lugb, th~y
s~e. buymg J~nsons debt w1th
thet_r debt, paymg Dad off. and
putUng the rest of the Jobnsons to
wort at sub-wages in the rec room
pol.isbing old bowling ~ropbi.es,
wbtle the Nelsons upstairs enJOY
the ,full-screen fruit ·of the Johnson s bar:d-earne~ bankruptcy . I
can see this happerung.
If families are run by CEOs,
then, all the kids will have to bunker down and pull their weight f?r
the good of, the company. But ~
me~s they II have: to cover th~u
bebmds as well. Tbts means e-maJI.
Wben the CEO barks a command, "Someone wash the dish~s!" say, !twill result in a flurry of
mter-fam1ly memos, as members
argue furiously about who is
responsible for what ("I'll wash if
you dry." "I'll wash everything
but the ~asy pans."), do~. to the
most mmute of details ( I II put

away tbe forks, if you do .the
~ives . "). Hopef~lly , by the ume
this ~ ~ strrughtened out. the
fam1ly cns1s will ba-.:e passed
(Mom w1ll put everytf.l!l~.'" the
dishwasher, and press 0n ). ~
the actual need to obey the CEO s
co':"~and will not .be necessary.
ThiS IS bow corporauons work.
Other issues such as bedtimes,
proper workspace attire, the piercing of a member's ears, would all
be bandied through interminable
meetings. featuring ring binders,
flow charts and multimedia presentations. After which, each family
member would deluge ,the CEO
with faxes trashing everyone else's
positions. This · will go on, again,
until a decision becomes moot. The
ears will be pierced, the kids will
stay up all night, the formal wear
will be traded for a power app: pro:
ductivity )Viii f!qurisb, and the
CEO will talce credit fo~ everything. So wbere's the problem?
Well, the CEO bas the ability to
downsize. Wl\at if be decides that
linle baby Johnny isn't pulling his
weight7 What if be's given a pink
slip, and replaced with some eager
beaver replacement toddler from
Sumatra. who's willing to drool otT
his Leg-o' s for twice as long at half
· the wage?
I'm not saying families should
unionize. mind you, but members
should have ·some protection from
their CEO's. Wbere's the golden
parachute for little baby Johnny?
That's all I wonder.

A£CA~!

Incident puzzles
resident .

· (To receive a complimentary
Ian Sboales newsletter, call 1·
800·989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
Jan Sholes is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Dear Editor
On March 4 about I a.m. someone put some kind of an explosive
charge in our mailbox on Happy
Hollow Road and blew the mail box
all to pieces.
I know no one oo this earth that
I have any problems or trouble
with. If the person that did this happens to read this letter and bas a
personal grudge or something
against me, please let me know
what it is; ·.
I'll do whatever I can to make it
right. In the meantime I' II continue
loving everyone and praying for
this person's soul.
Sincerely
Robert L. Richmond
Middleport

''

·" (For 'information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America OnUne by caiUng 1800-827..(;364, exL 8317.)
,

Pro-lsraelis wary of Dole's stance

Senate Majority Leader Bob signing the Jerusalem letter, Dole is· in Tel Aviv until a final peace policy in as much detail as Dole
Dole, R-Kan., was among 80-odd now trying to fmd $275 million to agreement is worked out between has recently in a March 1 speech to
senators signing a letter last week forgive Jordan's debts to the Unit· Israel and Palestinians. who claim the Nixon Center for Peace and
organized by the. pro-Israel lobby ed States and keep King liussein East Jerusalem as ·capitiil of their Freedom and in the spring issue of
wish!l(!-for independent state.
that strongly urges President Cli!Po
Foreign Policy magazine.
Despite Dole's current support
ton to move the U.S. embassy in
Even So, the speech and the artiand pre-1989 positions on lbe cle indicate more what Dole is
Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
Even so. major figures in tbe on a path to full peace with Israel. Mideast, Israeli officials and pro- against than what be favors. In the
American JewiSh community won- A House committee recently voted Israel activists wonder what his article, Dole. attacks isolationism,
der, "What does Bob Dole really to provide Jordan with only $50 policies might be if be were elected protectionism. multilateralism, and
president ''The question we ask is, "declinism," without" spelling out
stand for?"
million.·
By JOHN CHALFANT
And they aren't the only ones
The other senators running for what does Dole actually belie..l[e?" a doctrine of his own beyond
II:
.Associated Press Writer
who ask the question, based on the president- Phil Gramm, R-Texas, one activist said.
American "leadership."
Questions about Dole' s convicCOLUMBUS - · Cuts .in property taxes for the elderly and disabled 1996 GOP front -runner's shifts on Richard Lugar, R-Ind., and Arlen
One prominent GOP strategist
tions
arise
both
on
domestic
and
carry obvious political popularity. But letters from seniors worried about both domestic and foreign policies.
called
Dole's altitude one of
Specter, R-Pa. -'- are signers of the
soaring tax bills provide another reason for action ..
Doubts arise about Dole on the Jerusalem letter and are described foreign policy issues, partl y' "assertive uriilateralism" to conCuy3boga County Auditor J. Timothy McCormack gave the House Middle East because.in 1989 and
pro-Israel activists as consistent because be's a moderate and a leg- trast it with Clinton's sometime
Ways and Means Committee a sample of letters he has received from 1990 be blamed Israel for the by
islative pragmatist and partly doctrine of "assertive multilateralsupporters of Israel, ''without because
he disparages broad ism." .
elderly homeowners.
killing of a U.S. intelligence officer glitches."
''visions.''
McCormack testified last week in support of Gov. George Voinovicb's · by Arab terrorists in Lebanon,
Dqle specifically condemns
letter to Clinton, circulated
proposal to dpand the state'funded homestead exemption tax break for opposed a cutoff of agricultural by The
In
domestic
policy,
Dole
bas
Clinton's
pqlicy of seeking United
Alfonse D' Amato, R- botli favored and opposed tax
. low•income homeowners who are 65 or older or wbo are permanently and creditS for Iraq, proposed a 5 per- N.YSens.
Nation s approval before using
.. and Daniel Pal!'iclc Moynitotally disabled.
cent cut in assistance to Israel and han, D-N.Y., and promoted by the increases and. in 1994, be started force. Dole favors unilaterally liftExamples:
out an advocate of comprehensive ing the international arms embargo
other major foreign aid recipients,
- A 72-year-old widow complained about a $34,900 increase in the publicly considered retracting American Israel Public Affairs health care reform and ended up on Bosnia, but it's not at all clear
· what he would .do about bigger
appraised value of her borne for 23 years. •'The day that we moved in this Congress • previous calls for mov- Committee, is designed to put pres- blocking passage of any reform.
house. I said to my husband, I want to live here until the day I die. I still ing the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, sure on the Clinton administration
Among some prominem out-of· world issues such as the rise of milsuggesting Congress might pass office Republican foreign policy
feel that way and hope I can manage it somehow." ·.
· and held a solicitous interview with by
legislation
mandating a shift in the experts, Dole bas the reputation of itant Islam, nuclear proliferation
- A woman whose tax bill rose from $550 to $676: "I am 85 years Iraq's Saddam Hussein four
and potential Russian expansionold and I can't afford to pay such a high increase."
months before his invasion of · embassy's location if Clinton does being "tactical rather than slfate- ism.
not pledge to move it by 1999. The gic" and "case-by&lt;ase tather than
- An 84-year-old woman: "Everything has just gone on up and up Kuwait.
Dole's policies are under special
fact
it bas attracted 80 signers sig- conceptual," leading some - like ·
except my income."
One Dole adviser described bis
scrutiny
.from pro-Israelis and othMcCormack endorsed Voinovich's plan to raise from the current · 1989-'le actions as "a glitch" aris- nals that.a presidential veto could former National Security Adviser ers for a simple reason: Right now~
$16,500 to $20,800 the maximum income homeowners may have and still ing from trips Dole took to Arab be overridden.
Brent Scowcrdft and former Secre- he stands the best chance of any·
The
United
States
reportedly
is
qualify for reductions in their real estate taxes.
tary
of State Larry Eagleburger countries. Otherwise, the adviser
The change would cost the state at least $23 million a year to reim- said, Dole bas a "perfectly consis-. surveying sites for a future to lean toward supporting Dole's Republican of being the next president.
burse schools and local governments for money lost from the extra tax tent" record of support fpr Israel embassy location in West presidential rivals, Gramm and
(Morton Kondracke is execuJerusalem,
but
Clinton
followLamar Alexander.
break that would average $80 per household.
over the years.
tive
editor of Roll Call, tbe news8ut McCormack believes state government also should look at a
In truth, neither Gramm nor
Indeed, Dole bas generally sup- ing the policy of previous presipaper
of Capitol Hill.)
major, and unquestionably more expensive, policy change: a tax freeze ported Israel and, in addition to dents- wants to keep the embassy Alexander has discuss ~ d foreign
for seniors.
·
''Morally I think the right thing to do for our older population is to
free~ their property taxes where they are the day they become eligible for
the homestead exe!Dption," he said in an interview.
''We ought to make a flat ~ement that once they've reached that age
that they never have to worry again about increased property taxes unless
I' m so glad I took women's dents revel in the spotlight their ~yHabi.
get :o be black and white.''
they would have some windfall of additional income, but that doesn't studies classes in college. If I alleged victimization provides.
I was a member of the campus
That's unfortunate, because one
happen in almost any household,'· McConnack said.
badn 't, I would believe all the new
I might even be so gullible to as women's group, and not once did I of the other things we discussed on
''They would be able to plan their lives knowing that their property bonks, now being published faster buy some of Rene Denfeld' s ever see anyone cry or get bugged. my quiet little ·campus was gender ·
tilxes wou'd be, let's say, $1.500 a year for the next 10 years. Just think than O.J. Simpson lfll-alls, that say
Not once did I bear anyone discuss feminism - what Sommers would
what a burden that would take off of them," he said.
women· s .studies departments are
their date-rape experience. Not have ps believe is a haven for crys- ·
McCormack said be does not know bow much such a proposal would filled with flakes and weirdoes. I
once did I bear the word "ouch."
tal gazers and practitioners of
would swallow whole their asser- exll'Cmely muddled thesis in "The
cost. But be asked legislators and Voinovich's office to begin considering
I don't doubt that these authon;' witchcraft. But back in the '80s.
the ·concept.
'
.
.
tions that campus women's meet- New Victorians ." Denfeld says anecdotes are true: tbe Catholic this was simply the notion that
Minority Democrats in the House have offered a similar approach as ings are nothing more than big that even though young women college I attended was. relatively maybe, just maybe , women
group-therapy sessf.ms, where stu- appreciate the gains their mothers low on this kind of activism, .so we shouldn't be so quick to assimilate
part 'Of atax cut package they outlined last week.
They proposed to freeze property taxes when homeowners reached age dents and teachers bold bands and and grandmothers have made' for· may well have bad different experi- into the world of men. Perhaps
cry and whine about their various them - no, really they do - the ences. And these boolcs do make feminism dido' t have to be about
65, so long as family income did not exceed 400 percent of the federal
brushes with victimbood.
poverty level.
old brand of feminism doesn't some good points. Women arc discarding feminine qualities, but
I would think that the sympo- work anymore. She tben goes on to debilitated when they blame men simply getting them some respect.
sipm described by Christina Hoff dismiss every feminist who ever for all of their problems. And there
Ultimately, I decided to remain
Sommers in "Who Stole Femi- drew breath, and cites various ARE flakes and dittobeads in the an old-fashioned liberal feminist,
nism?" was representative of what women's studies atrocities, sucb as feminist movement wbo do just focusing on what I consider the
goes on in women's studies pr:o· .tbe fact th.a t anti-porn activists that.
most basic issues: How to get fair
grams. Sommers describes tbe Andrea Dworkin and Catharine
·.
But there are flakes and ditto- pay, keep reproductive· freedoms·
By 'fhe Associated Press
. 1992 National Women's Studies ,Macl\innon are frequently found beads EVERYWHERE . What I
and shirk as much housework as
Today is Tuesday, March 21. the 80th day of 1995. There are 285 days Conference, in which •'speakers on women's s!\ldies syUabi. .
can't understand is why women humanly possible. But until I took
left in the year.
·
recited tales of outrage and warned
Fortunately, I · DID take who call themselves femini sts women's studies, it had never
'I'oday's Highlight in History:
of impending male backlash," and ' women's studies classes, back in would go oUt of their way to pro- occurred to me tbat attaining equalFifty years ago. on March 21, 1945, during World War II, Allied participants sang songs and the mid-'80s, at about the same mote such caricatures.
ity didn't necessarily mean doing
bombers began four days of raids over Germany.
recounted "ouch experiences." time that Roipbe and Denfeld were
Paula Kamen, author of "Femi- what men do, exactly the way they
On this date:
("An ouch," explains Sommers, undergraduates. In my wo111en •s nist Fatale," says that if books on do it. These classes opened my
In 1685. composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Ger•'is when you experience racism, studies classes, we learned about feminism tend to paint tbe
and expanded my horizons;
many.
sexism, classism, homophobia, property laws in colonial America. women's movement in broad mind
which,
the last lime I checked, was
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson reported to President Washington in New ableism, ageism or looldsm.")
We discussed the female characters strokes, it's partly because publish- the purpose of scholarly books· and
York as the new secretary of state.
· •
I would believe Katie Roipbe's in Shakespeare's plays. We read· ers de111and it. Kamen found that
·
In 1804, the French civil code. the ~Qdc .Napoleon. was adopted .•
assertion in "100 Morning After" Virginia Woolf. Andrea Dworkin ber book was very difficult to mar-, undergraduaiA!IIeducation.
(For
Information
on
bow
to
In 1806, Mexican statesman Denno Juarez, who w~ Mexico s fust that college women's fear of rape is and Catherine MacKinnon- the , ket because it didn't take sides.
commui'llcate
electronically
with
presidint of Indian ancestry •.was born in Oaxaca. .
..
a result of campus feminism's fear· two namj:s anti•feminisrs trot out
"If you want to sell a book on
In 1871 journalist Henry M. Stanley began bts famous expedtUon to mongering tactics, such as Take when they really want to scare you .. ..feminism,'.' ..s~ys Kamen, ''jt' s got Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by c:alllng 1·
Mrica to !cX:ate the missing Scottish
missionary David Livingstone.
Back the.Nigbt.marches, where stu; - weren't on any of my courses'
to have one main theme, and it's 800·817-6364, exL 8317.)
.

·County auditor: Freeze
property taxes of seniors

Mr•rton Kondracke

Feminism: Don't-believe the hype

Tuesday, March 21, 1995

.

.

..

.

r

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

death~s- .Frank Capteina

. .--Area

The 'Daily Sentinei-Page-3

OHIO Weather

Local News in ·Brief:

Wednesday, March 22
Accu·Weath~ forCQSt for

conditions and high 1empera1ures

and 25 pounds of dog food from the Pomeroy Kroger store Saturday

now faces two felony charges, according to Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lentes.
Roben "Dink" Kennedy apparently walked into the store. loaded
up a cart with the items and wheeled the cart out without paying,
Lentes reported.
Kennedy is expected to plead guilty to the charges today nn a hill
of information, Lentes said.
The charj!CS are third degree felonies bocause Kcnncd y has a
prior felony conviction stemming from an earlier robber y of the
Tuppers Plains branch of the former Pomeroy National Bank, he
noted.
The items were recovered. be.added.

Plea entered to domestic charge
A Racine man accused of assaulting bis 15-year-old stepdaughter
last week pleaded guilty to a felony charge of domesti c violence
Thursday.
Roben C. Saltsman, 24, was arrested following tile incident by
deputies of the Meigs County Sberifr s Department.
Under the agreement, be faces 18 months in prison to be sus-,
pended upon completion of the Southeastern Probation Treaunent .
Alternatives (SEPTA) program, five years probation and costs of ·
prosecution.
Saltsman bas a prior conviction for domestic violence. making
the recent incident a felony . Sentencing is set for May I .

Carmon Compson
Carmon P. Compson, 32, of Racine, died Monday, March 20. 1995 at
bet" residence.
~
..
Arrangements are under the direction of the Foglesong Fimeral Home
and will be announced later.
·

W.VA.

Pearl Jones, Jr.
· •Pearl. William Jones, .Jr., 68, Point Pleasant, W.Va .. died Monday,
March 20, I 995 at bls res1dence. He was a former employee of Malleable
Iron and a member of the Church of Christ in Henderson, W.Va.
. Born Sept I, 1926, be was a son of the late Pearl and Beulab Wright
Jones.
· ·
'
. Survivors .include his wife. Joan Miller Jones; one son, Bryan (Karla)
Jones of Pomt Pleasant: four sisters Osle Botkin of Vinton Mary
·Richardson of Mount Alto, W.Va., ac;nevia Conrad of GallipoHs and
Christine Sneed of Point Pleasant; four brothers Dana and Kenneth J~nes
lx_lth of Poi~t Pleasant, Clifford Jones of
and Charles Jones of
L.1ttle Suamtco, Wis.; and three grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by four sisters Delia Stewart, Catherine
Triple~!, Lillian Carpenter, and Sandra Taylor. '
. ·
Fnends may 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the Wilco~en Funeral Home in
Point Pleasa_nt where the service will &amp;e held 2 p.m. Thursday with Minis- ·
ter Sam Gwmn and AsSOCiate Minister Sam Long officiating.
Burial will be in Forest Hills cemetery, Letart, W.Va.

GalliPolis.

Esther M. Vale
· Esther M. Gardner Vale, 90, of Otterbein, formerly of Meigs Coun!y •
died Monday, March 20, 1995 at Otterbtin.
.
.
Born in Middleport and a graduate of Middleport High School, Mrs.
Vale was co-owner of the Vale Funeral Home in Morrow, established in
1932. She continued working in the business .until 1991, when she moved
to the Otterbein Home in Lebanon.
She WliS a member of the Morrow Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, and
the Auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
She was preceded in death by her parenr,,.}ames P. 3lld Maud Mansford Gardner; two brothers, Charles and Erlt~t Gardner: and her husband,
Alton D. Vale, in 1967.
·
· Surviving are a son, James R. "Bob" Vale of Morrow; four granddaughters. 11 great-grandchildren and two great-great grantlcbildren: and
a sister, Dorothy Roush of Langsville.
Ffiends may call at the Vale-Hoskins Funeral Home in Morrow
. · Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m. Eastern Star services will be conducted at 8
p.m.
A private funeral service and interment in Morrow cemetery will be
held at the convenience of the family. Memorials are requested to Morrow
Life .Squad or Otterbein Benevolent Care Fund.

Area man cited on felony charge
A 33-year-old Rutland man accused of stealing six cases of beer

MtCH.

. Frank Capteioa, 80, Charleston. W.Va., formedy of Meigs County,
died Thursday, Mardll6, 1995 at his residence.
He was born Jan. 26, 1915, in Eskdale, W.Va., son of the late Gottlieb
and Emma Sattler Kapteina.
He is survived by four daughters and a son-in-law, Barbara Murray of
Pomeroy. Grace an~ Mite: Bertoik of Joliet. Ill.. Evelyn Bauer of Kent.
and Helen Lee of M1ssoun: one son and daughter-in-law, Kenny and Kay
Captema: and 12 grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Jessie Wolfe Capteina: four
brothers, Henry, Hugo, Charlie and Emil Kapteina: two sisten, Betty
Moore and Freda Smith; ·a son-in-law, Delbert Eugene Murray: and an
mfant grandchild.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Fiddler &amp; Frame Funeral
Home, Belle, W.Va. Burial will be in the Wolfe Family Cemetery, Camp- ,
bell Creek, Charleston. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday
from 7-9 p.m.
.

By The Assoc..ted Press
You can tell spring bas arrived.
Showers and thunderstorms are in
the forecast nearly every day.

'lbe exception will be Wednesday, when the National Weather
Service says skies will be mostly
sunny and temperatures will be in
the mid-50s to mid·60s.
·
Stormy weather is expected to
return on Wednesday night and
continue into the weekend. fore •
casters said.

rain, storms in forecast

Weather' forecast:
Tonigbt .. .Mostly cloudy northeast.. .Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the 30s.
Wednesday ... Partly . sunny.
Highs from the mid 50s northeast
to the mid 60s south.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday night and Tburs,
day ... A chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows from the
upper 30s to mid 40s. Highs mid
50s to mid 60s.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A chance

Squads respond to 16 calls
Units of tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 16 calls for assistance
including seven transfer calls.
Unirs responding included:
·
'MIDDLEPORT
I :21 p.m., Gran I Street, Nora
Jordan, Veterans Memorial Hospi-

Road, Rebecca Smith, tJMC;
2:17 p.m., Main Street, Mary
Day, VMH;
6:44p.m ., volunteer fire ..ftr!·
ment to CaUaway Ridge, b~~rue
on Violet Lamben property.
SYRACUSE
2:06p.m .• VFD to Roy Jones
Road, brush fire at Roush resi tal:
RACINE
dence:
10:44 p.m., S.tate Route 338,
4: II p.m., VFD and squad to
Carmon Compson. dead upon Snowball Hill Road, brush fire on
arrival.
Bob Durst property. Racine and
· Pomerily VFDs assisted;
RUTLAND
8:19 a.m., Depot Slreet, Carolyn
8:03 p.m.. Cherry Street,
Nicholson, Holzer Medical Center: · Richard Paxton, VMH.
10:46 a.m., Happy Hollow

of
showers
and
thunderstorms .. .Mainly southwest.
Lows in the 30s. Highs from the
mid 50s to mid 60s.
Saturday ... Sbowers and thunderstqrms likely. Lows 35 to 40. Highs
from the mid 50s to mid 60s.
.

Marriage licenses
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Judge Robert Buck.
Receiving licenses were: Robert
Franklin Dickens, 18, and Melissa
Dawn King, 15, both of Pomeroy:
Earl Luther Wood, 38, and Mabel
Berneas Brumfield , 46, both of
Pomeroy.

1 WEEK

ONLY!

.

nt Together

:Meigs announcements

.AEROBICS

Dance announced
will have a guest speaker, Ricky
An evening social will be held Roberts, 7 p.m. Friday. Steve Reed,
·at the Senior Citizens Center, Fri- pastor, invites the public.
day, 7 to I I p.m. George Hall aL . Riverview Club to meet
the organ to play for dancing and
The Riverview Garden Club
listening. Cost, $5 a person. Soft will meet at 7:30 Thursday at the
drinks available, those attending to Reeds ville Church of Christ.
take snack foods. ·Public invited.
Favors will be made for a nursing
home. Hostesses. Nola Young,
League's final signu p
Christy Young, and Nancy
Racine Youth League wiD hold Wachter.
signups Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m. Annual meeting
and Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon ·
The Meigs County United Fund
in tbe kindergarten building. Satur- annual meeting will be held Marcb
day is the final day to signup. ··
31, 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Guest speaker Friday
Senior Citizens' Center multipurThe Faith Full Gospel Church pose building, Pomeroy .

NEW 9 WEEK SESSION
TO BEGIN MARCH 27
Mon.-Wed. 10·11 a.m.
Royal Oak Resort
Tues.-Thurs. 7-8 p.m.
Royal Oak Resort
Mon. - Wed. 5:30-6:30 p.m.
· Carleton School, Syracuse

&gt;

Southern included ln Iist
(Continued from Page 1)
ideal for an elementary school.
In personnel matters, tbe board
voted 3-2 to approve Alan Crisp
, and Joe Hemsley as volunteer
reserve softball coach and volunteer baseball coach, respectively.
The board also accepted I,arry
Ebersbacb as a substitute custodian
and said it would be willing to
accept .student teachers from Ohio
University.
- The board rejected a motion
requiring teachers to get advance
approval from the board for professional leave.
lri addition, the board set graduation for seniors for Sunday, May
21 at 8 p.m. in tbe high school
gymnasium and set Saturday, May

.The Daily Sentinel

Sara Eckel

Today .in· history

'

(USPS liJ-.960)
l'lillli shed c'vc ry aftern oon, Monday 1hrough
friday. I l l Courl Sl.. Pomeroy, Qhio. by the
Ohi o Valley Publi!ihing Company/Mulcimedia

-Inc.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 1S6
s~·r ond cl~-~~

post:1gc pm d nt Pomeroy, Ohio.

Mrmhu ; The AHOCmtcd Pre~~- und lhe Ohio
Nt·w ~p:Jper A~suciation .

POSTMASTER : St' nd addrt:n com=ctiOM to
Tllc D:ul y Sernind I ll Coun St , Pomeroy. .
OhiO 45709
•

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ll y Ca rrlr r or Motor Houle

· One \\~eek .... .. .. .... .... ...

............... $1 .75
One MC!nth ............. .... .. ..... .... ..... .... ......... $7 .60
One Yt'ru ...
.. ...... 591.00
D;~ily .

.

SINGLE COl'\' PRI CE
. ............. .. ... .... ..... . 35 Cc n1 ~

Subsuiben nor de~iring to pay the cnnier may
re mit in ;Jdvancc direCI 10 The Dail y Sentinel
on a three, ~i' or 12 month baSi .~. Credi l will be
given c;a"ier eoc h week.

No

~ub~c ripti o n by mail permi t~ed in area!
where home carrier sen&lt; tee i~ available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMidt Mrlp Counly

13 "-'eck~ ............................ ..................... $23.94.
26 Weeks .................:............................... S-47.06
52 Weeb .. ............................................... $92.56

27 as a make-up day for Dec. 23,
which was changed on. the school
calendar.
In other bl!siness. the board:
· • Approved a relocation plan for
students (see related story):
• Met with music teacher David
Colvin, who is seeking assistance
for promoting the district· s band
program: .
• Approved a motion opposing·
unfunded and underfunded state
and federal mandates:
• Met with teacher Janice Curry,
who updated the board on the criteria for selecting students for honors
at the Southern Loca,l Academic
Banquet set for April 27:
• Announced the FFA banquet
will be held March 30 and the high
school basketball banquet wil) be
April2;
• Met with district resident
Randy Marnhout, who encouraged
the board to run the district like ·a
business and to formulate a busin~ss plan.
Present were acting Superintendent James Lawrence, Treasurer
Dennie Hill, {loard President Susie
Grueser, Vice President Pete
Thoren and board members Marty
Morarity, C.T. Chapman and Don
Smith.

For more information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992-6893

· ~ow's

Hospital news
VETERA]';S MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - none. . .
Monday discharges - Delbert
Pridemore, Middleport.
.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
Discharges March ZO Christopher Storms. Betty Denny,
Georgia Bush, Cleo Chevalier.
Births - Mr. and Mrs . Eai.l
Strafford, son, Jackson: Mr. and
Mrs. Jeffrey Stiffler, daughter ,
Jackson. ·
(Published with permi.ulon)
•
Our minister wonders why we count
our blessings on one hand but for our
proble!D•· we need a computet.

•,

~

.

~

with the

",C_i~ Saver CfD"

It's Easy to Sttlrt Saving for Your
Child's College Education.

·Your Bankfn/JI!...
.

Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
211 west Secono S1ree1

, o eo. o26

PomefOY OH 451$
61•1992-2136

Rlltl Out1kte Melp County

13 Week&gt;.,. ...............................•.............. S2l.61
26 WeekJ ....................,................. ,. ........ 149.66
52 Week~ ·...
.. ................................... 596.20

71u
7ime.~.
.......

. !Hmber F.O.I.C .

''

Aoute 7
P 0 !loa )39
1upper• Ptom1
ot•tb67·lto,

c&gt;t ~7tl

~.
LINOIIII

'

1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, .4930, red , air.
' AM/FM cassette. power wmdows &amp;'Seat. hit &amp; cru1se $11,500
auto.,
1993 OLOS DELTA 88 ROYALE, 149l1 , dark pewter . a1t ,
AM tFM. power win dows &amp; locks, till &amp; cr u1se, V6 .
$11 ,800
1990 DODGE DYNASTY, 14929, V6. air. automatiC.
AMJFM, till &amp; crUise . 811 bag
S459S
1989 CHEVY 5·10, 14900, AM/FM casse"e. re ar step
bumper, spoH wheel s, custom str1pes
S4895
1i90 OLOS CIERA, 14884, burgundv. AMlFM casse lte.
a1r, automatiC, till. cloth 1nterior. reen dohoster ... ~ ...... c...
.. S54V5
1988
FORD
'
R
ANGER,
14883,
long
baCt
2
tone
paml.
.
.
air, bed liner, rear burriper
S4895
1992.PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM, 14874, light pewtm, a1r,
automa11c, AM/F M. 1111 . rear delroster. cloth 1ntenor
,
$6226
1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE , lf4843, a1r. automahc.
AM /FM , cloth lnteriat. 4 door ....
S5495
1991 CHEVY S·10, 14784, 2 tone paifil. AM/FM cassene.
rear slider, clol h 1nlenor, new tires . .. ......... ..
16495
'

1989 HONDA CIVIC CRX, 14B08, blue, ,;,, AMIFM
casse!1e, re ar defroster. sporl wheels
1991 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 14864, 4 door. whrte.
aUoy whee ls. a1r. aulomahc. AM/FM, rear delroster
1991 MISSAN.SENTRA, 14870, red, automatt(: AMIFM ,
rear defroster. 4 door . cloth tnHHIOf
1993 DODGE CARAVAN, 14881, red. V6, a1r.
automatiC, AM!FM, cloth 1nlenor
1992 CHEVY. LUMINA, 14894, dark pewter, a1r,
autoffiatlc. AMIF M cassone . 111!, cru1 sc, rem de1r os t8r
1992 GEO STORM, 14897, wh1te. automatiC, a~~."
AMIFM , cloth interior. 19ar defroster, dua.! m1n 0rs
1991 TOYOTA TRUCK, 14901, red . exira cab. _rear
slider. sport wheels, AM!F M casse lto, 1111 , a~r
1993 PONTIAF GRANO AM SE. M4934, V6. '"·
automatic, AMJFM. btl. C1 u1se. re ar delmster
1990 NISSAN STANZA, 14904, red . AM/FM cassette,
rear defroster. dual m1rr ors, au, 11 11. crUise
1992 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE • • 4917, rur. automatiC .
AM/FM , tii t, cru1se, power wmdows &amp; loc ks. atto~ wheels
1991 DODGE DAKOTA , ~4923, 1cd. 1ear step b u rn~r .
rear slider, AM/F M cassene . sport wh eels
1990 CHEVY 5·10, lf4924, dark peW1 er. AM!FM
cassette, spor1 'wheels. dual mirrors
1t93 NISSAN t&lt;ING CAB TRU CK, 14785 , r~d automat1 c,
AM!FM casstine. rear 111p seats , bed ilfler
10D1 DODGE DYNASTY, 14818, black &lt;1 11, automa11c,
AM/FM , a1r bag. rear defro ster. clottl1 nter10r
1983 CHEVY CAVALIER WAGON, 14825, automat1c.
a1r. AM/FM cassene. !til . cru1se . tu~gago rock
1990 CHEVY LUMINA , 14829, a~r. auromnt1c.
AM/FM , cloth mlenor, lilt . cru1se
1988 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, .4853, au tom&lt;~ t lc , a1r
tilt , cru1se , 1 pa ssenger. ctotll 1nle r~or, AM/FM , wooagrein
1992 CHEVY S·10, r4872, red, 35.000 m1les .
dual mirrors . rea r step bumper. sporl wt,eels
1993 FORD ESCORT . 11'4871 . goiO. 23.000 m11es.
AM/FM cassette. ~to th 1nte11or
1"3 CHEVY 5·10 , r4889, biac~ . sunr oof. AM/FM
cassette. rear slider, spor1 whe els. dual lfll ffOr s
1992 CHEVY 5·10 • .t4902, whlt e. long bed . T;moc.
AM(FM casset!e, sport &lt;¥heel s. rear slider V6
1993 DODGE CARAVAN, 14911 , rl!d , ilu; aut omat~
V6. 7 passenger. air bag. 1111. cru1so. AM /FM casseMe.
1990 FORO RANGER. 14925, red. AM/FM ,
rear bumper. dual ffilfiOr's . sport whef! IS
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, 14867, low rn11es . AM /FM
cassetle. rea r shder, cloth lnter1or. bed m'at

S5665
$6995

16220
$10,50Q

. $7915

S7567
${\420
$9620

$6995
$8995

":'960
$6750
$11 ,Q95
$6313

S8565
$5995
$4900
$7Q05

$6620
$8815

$8255
112 ,150
$6100
$9320

�•

Sports

.The Daily ~~~~

•

Basketball

t.blit. Sealy, ruard., oa the iajured list.
A&lt;:UVIled G~ey Onm. ~ . Crvm lhe hr.·
jured lilt.

NBA standings ·
EASTERN CONFERENCE

FootbaU .

AUulk Dtrillon

Nodooalf... b.ULe""t
ARIZONA CARDINALS ' Slaoed

.It L l.d.

Ium

K·Ori&amp;Ddo .............. o48

17

.131

• -New York ........... 4l ll
N~w Jmey ............26 39

.667
.400

40
Miami ................. ,.24 41
WuhiDK(oll ........... ! 8 46
Ptll!lde!phia ........... l7 48

.J&amp;S
369
.2111
.262

lkiiiOD ........ ......... 2~

.!ill

once again showed they're an even. as New Mexico Swe edged Texasmatch.
El Paso 92-89 Monday night ill the
·
Rodney Walker scored 2~ secolld round of the NIT.
points, including tbrec in overtime,
"Tonight we got into the spirit

.
Munn , expanded an eight-point
halftime lead into a 61-44 decision
ov~r lbe Division III-IV All-Stars

or the NIT," Aggies coach Neil
N!cCanhy said. " These kids don't
want to quit playing."
{See NIT on
5)

Patrick Huotct, coraert.ct.
DALLAS COWBOYS: SianU Rty
DouJdlon, center.

S

· 22

LOS ANGELES RAIDERS ' Siaaed

23
24

Kerry Caih, Uil\t e·ad.
MINNESO'I'A VIICINQS, Decllaed 10
match the otret ahed made by the New
Yort Oiuu to Raben Harria, defe111lve

29 . ~

31

end.

Cenrul Dt't'bion
lndlaria ...................40 24 .625
Olarlotte ................ ~ 2.S .615

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS ' AD ·
n,eUDecd lbl reUremem or FraU WIITen,

.s

CLEVEL.AA-'0 ....... 36 29

SS4

4.5

Cllicaa&lt;&gt; ................. 34 32

.liS
.SOl
.379
.JS"

7
7.l
16
16.5

AU'"" ...................33 32
Milwauice ............. 2S o41
Odroit.. ................. 23 42

By The Associated Press
Aflct spliuing two games during
the regular season. old rivals New
Mexico State and Texas-EI Paso

.. The girls' Division I-II All ' Stars, powered by Gallia Academy's Meghan Kolcun and Brandi

·-

New Mexico State among NIT winners

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

defeulve tackle. Releucd Wade Wil.aa,
qulrtetb~e.t.

NEW YORK JFJ'S, DecUaed 10 pi&lt;k
up l,be optioa oD lbe coatract or Briu
Wtthloatoa. ..,.., alety.
·
SAN PRANCJSCO 49ERS' Slaoed

Patrick Rowe, wide ruelm'.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwul Dt..Uioa

'li L l.d.

film

Ullh ..................... 48 18

.727

San Antonio ........... 4S

18

.714

Houstoa-........... ......40 24
Dcnver ............. ...... JJ 34
Dallu ..... ................ 26 '17
Mio..ncsot.a .............. l9 47

.62.5

.!ill

.477

1..5
1
16 ..5

.413

20.l

.281

29

.

NodooaiBooby'-

·

•

HARTFORD WHA!.llU li'p ed Jell
O'Neill. ceater, to 1 tour-year contract.

P•dnc DiYislon
1-Phocni.~; .............. 49 17
.74~
Scanle .... ,...............« 20 .618 ·
"
l-A. l..aken ....... .....39 25 · .609
9
Portland ................. 3!1 28 .SS6 12.S
Sacmnento ............ 32 33 ...92 16.5
Golden State .......... 2J 43 .328
27
L.A. Clippen ......... l4 53 .209
3S.S
1-clinched playoff berth
~onday's

Hockey

sc.ores

Atlanta 106, L.A. Clippm 102

'

We Give Mature
I

Drivers, Home
OwnersAild
Mobile Home
OWners Special
Savings.

"

•'
'

MINE! - Southern'• ·Mason ,Fisher gets ahead of Rotk Hill's
Jerry Bowlbig to puU dnwn the rebound during Monday night's District 13 AII·Siar game. Fisher was-one of'lhree Tornadoes on the
• small-school sqUIId that won the nightcap of the doubleheader by a
• ll~point mar111n. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne) ·

lhllu I02, CLEVELAND I00 (2 01)
San Antonio 104, Seattle 96
Sacramento 91. Denver 89

Our statistics shOYI that mature dri·
vers and home owners have fewer and
less costly losses tha n other age
groups. So it's only fair to charge you
less for your msurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save even
more with our special mulli-policy
discounts.

·Tonight's games
Olarlotte at New York. 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Miami . 7:30p .m.

New Jern:y at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Orlando, Bp.m
Golden State at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Scanle at. Houston, 8:30p.m.
Washinaton at Portland., 10 p.m.

Wednesday's games
Chicaso at Boston, 7:30p.m
San Antonio at New Jmey, 7:30p.m .
Golden Slate at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Sacram.eoto at CLEVELAND. 7:30
p.m.
..
. l.A.Ciippersat lodiana,7:30p.m.
Dallas at Minnesota, I p.m.
.
Denver at Utaht 9 p.m.
Portland at L.A. Lakers. 10:30 p.m.

NIT action
Monday's seoond-round"scores
Sooth Florida 7'5, Coppili State .59
Virglnia T~h 2.Lfuvj!knce 18._. •
Washinrton State 83, 11linoi• Stille 80
Canisius SS. Bradley .53
Marquette70, St. Bonaventure 61
New Me:uco State 92, Tnu·El Paso
19 (01')

'95 Ford F-150 XLT 4X2
Add it up!
·
• Automatic transmission
• Cruise control
• Tilt ~heel
• Air conditioning
• AM/FM/Cassette
• Power windows and doors
• Forged aluminum wheels
• Chrome rear step bumper

..,.. '::U"et-:
· ;tva ·

WedneSday's qUarterfinals
New Muico State (2.5·9) at Virginia
Tech (22- 10), 7:30p.m. ·
~
South Florida (18·11) at Marquelle
(19-11). 9,30 p.m.

·Thursday's quarterflnals
Washington State (18· 11) at Caniaius
(20.12), DO p.m.
Penn St·Nebraska wiD!Ier ·at Iowa ·
NOTE: If Nebraska and 01-00 win,
then Nebfaska at mno. If Pelln State and
01-00 win, then moo at Penn State

593-6641
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

I.

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•

CADILLAC,
0:~0£ o - o ,

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

.Auto-Orlmn71tmurznee

lea se end S 13,160.32 .

Hockey

TRYING TO SCORE - Eastern's Charlie Bissell (35) battles
Rock HIU's Anthony AUen (44 at rjght) in·an attempt to score while
Ironton's Mike Freeman {left) watches the action In the paint In the
second half elf Monday night's District 13 All-Star game on the Unl·
verslty of'Rlo Grande campus. BlsseU, the only Eagle represented on
the Division ID·IV team, was one offour Meig.~ County players on the
team, which won 115-74. {OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

/

NHL st;:mdings
· EASTERN CONFERENCE
film

.

Atlantic Division

ll: L I I'lL 1i£ iiA

Philsdeiphia ...... 16 9 3

35

95

80

N.Y. Ranaers .... l312 3

29

Washington ...... II 11 ~

28

7B
71

74
67

16

15

New Jersey .......
Florida ..............
Tampa Bay .......
N.Y. I,landen ...

II 12 S 21
I l lS 3 25
II I~ 2 24
9 I~ 3 · 2V

Northeuc DITition
Quebec ......... 19 6 3 41
Pitl.tlburgh ......... l9 8 2 4Q
80$ton .............. 14 II 2 30
Buffalo...... ........ 11 10 S 21
Montreal ......... 10 13 S 25
Hartford ........... 10 14 4 24
Ottawa .............. 4 18 4 ,12

73

81

73
68

80
85

107
11 9
81 ~
63

72
98

72
6B

'58'

6S
6S
95
79
86

NIT action ...

on Toyota. ,
•*
,.. .

..,...~'

WESTilKN CONFERENCE
Ctnlrai DhisiOD

Delroit .. ............ I B 6 2

Chicago ...........
.St.Louis ..... : ....
Toronto ........ ....
Dallu ............ .. .,
Winnipeg ..........

IIi 9
IS 9
13 II
10 13
91 4

'

'. '

&gt;

102
96
81
83

Padl\c: Dl-riRon

c~..,,

............. l212 s

Edrronton ......... l 2 13 2

Vancou ver ......... 8 10
Lo1 Ana:cleJ~ ...... 9 13
SanJ011e .......... IO IJ
Anaheim ........... 7. 16

8
S
2
3

29
26

93
80

84
93

24 82 · 92
23

84 104

22 59
17 61

80
95

Monday's scores
Washi.na:ton S, Hartford 0
Qudlcc 5. Florida 4 (01')

Philadelphu B, Montrul4
Edrnooto n S, Calgary l
Los Ange l~s ~.S t. Louis 3

Tonight's gam.,.
Plttsborgh at Duffalo,7:30 p.m.

OU.awa It Wlillhingtan, 7·30 p.m.
Toronto at Vancouver. 10:30 p.m
Olicago at San Jose. 10: 30 p.m.
lol A.o&amp;tlea at Anahr:im, 10:30 p.m.

'95 Toyota 4x4

'9 5 Toyota ·corolla

Chrome appearance package •.AM/FM Stereo
· Tinted glass • Sliding rear window

Automatic transmission • Air conditioning
AM/FM Stereo • Dual air bags

Wednesday's games
Philadelphia at Hartf{l'"d , 1 p.m.
f-lorida at MonueaJ.7:30 p.m.
Boston at Quebec . 7:30 p.m
Ntw ltnity at S .Y. Rangt'r•. 7l0 p.m.
W1nn1pt1 at Detroit ,7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at Dallas, 8:30p.m.

•

St. l.ou1111. Calgary, 9:30 p.m.

Transactions
B.,ebaU
Arnerkan Lupr·
BOSTON RED SOX : Auigned Wrs
Bro'ok.a an d Thad Rc whod, p 1tchen :
And' Abr.d, outlitlder; Purl: 010p Pough,
Juoa Friedman, Lqu Merl oni and Nict.
E)rtiz, jafielden, and Jeff Martin, c:atch&amp;,
to the minot·k.lpe Corflllu.

,

TORONTO BLUE )A YS: Optioned
• Jose SIIYI, pitcher, to Knoxv ille of tJ:le
...- 51)UlfWD l..eque. ~
~~

B•kelboU
Nat'-11 .......all A•oclaUon
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS ' Pima

!

~

Athens

1

.

Find a mountain of savings
at Don Wood Automotive Complex.

DONWOOD

•

CADILLA C.

593-6641

..
·-&lt;&gt;-·

•

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

~ ~ AllfJIMQ'TM &lt;CWPUX

en ..... -. .~~'! ,..' "~

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

(~

BUICK'

• $1,000 down , plu&amp; tax and title, lirst payment and security deposit due at lease 1 ~pdon. 24 month closed·end lease. Mileage based on 12,000 miles per year. Subject to prior sale, .
Toyota 4JC4 pickup, based on MSRP $16,212 , option to purchase allease end $10,791.67 . Toyota Corolla. based on MSRP of $14.389, QpUon to purchase at lease encl $8,873.40.

.

(ContlnuedfromPage4)

At Peoria, Ill., Craig Wise's tip, New Mexico State (25 -9)
in at the buzzer won it for Canisius.
• missed two potential Winning shots
: ncar the end of regulation, but
Bradley tied it at 53 with 15 sec·
~ started overtime wilb a 10-2 run
onds left .on a three-pointer by : that put the Aggies up 89-81 with
Aaron Zobrist. After a timeout,
' 1: 11 remaining.
Micheal Meeks of Canisius missed
i The Miners closed to 89-83 on a
a three-pointer bul Wise put in tlle
; basket by Pbil Crocker, but Walker
rebound for the victory. Meeks led
.
.
' 'hit a free throw and Johnny Selvie
Canisius {20-12) with IV points,
~ made a basket that gave New Mexwhile Wise had nine points and l2
: ico Slate enough cushion to survive
rebounds. Zobrist led Bradley (20:. late three-pointers by Antoine
10) witlll3 points.
: Gillespie and Mark Ingles.
Marquette 7G
: "Botll of us really wanted it.
SL Bonaventure 61
• They just outhustled us to the
At Milwaulcee, freshman Aaron
; ball," Gillespie said.
Hutchins scored all 12 or his points
~ - The teams split tlleir home-andin lbe final 10 112 minutes as Mar; home series in December.
quette (19-11) rallied to win .
. "We got bragging rights. Wf _ Hutchins, a reserve who scored a
• broke the split and thai feels
career-high 20 points in Mar:good," Walker said.
.
queue ' s first-room! victory over
: George Banks paced UTEP (20Au1&gt;urn, did all his scoring after the
: I 0) with 27 points.
Bonnies bad surged abead 49-40 on
• In otller second-round games, it
the strength of a 2"0-2 run. David
: was South Florida 75, Coppin State
Vantcrpool scored 27 points for St.
: 59; Canisius 55, Bradley 53; MarBbnaventure (18-13).
·: quette 70 , St. Bonaventure 61;
Washington St. 83
: Washington State 83, Illm01s State
IDlnols St. 80
• 80 and Virginia Tech 91, ProvlAt Normal, Ill., Isaac Fontaine
!dencc 78.
scored 23 points as Washington
· : The second-round concludes State beat Illinois State. Mark Hen: tonight with ~enn State al Nebras- drickson, playing in rout .trGUble
' ka and Ohio University at Iowa.
·most or lbe game, bad 13 points
• In the q uanertinal s Wednesday. and 10 rebounds for Washington
; New Mexico State visits Virginia State (18-11). Chad Altadonna
' Tech and South Florida plays. at . paced Illinois State (20-13) wilb 17
; Marqueue . On Tbur~~ay, It s points, and Brian Kern added 16.
. • Washington ~tate at Can1s1us.
,
The Redbirds closed to 79-78 on
'
two ·three -pointers by Antonio
' Cooper, but Hendrickson sank two
· S. Florida 75, Coppin St. 59
: , :At Tampa, Fla., Jerome Robin- free throws and grabbed a rebound
.; son scored 24 points and sparked a with eight seconds left to ciir!ch the
· 20-4 second-half run by Sout.h ' victory.
Virginia Tech 91, Providence 78
•Flori'da {18-11). Following a 7-0
At Providence, R.I., Shawn
:run by Coppin State, Robinson .hit
'a three-'pointer to put the Bulls Good scored 21 points as Virginia
:ahead 52-43 early in lbe second Tccb reached the NIT quarterfinals
•half. He tllen bit a short leaner and ' ror tbe first time since 1984.
:an orf-balance scoop shot, and later Damon Watlington added 18 points
:added a three-pointer to give South · and Ace Custis bad ·17 ror Tech;Florida its biggest lead, 69-47 . (22-10). Austin Cmshere scored 19
Coppin State {21-10) was only 5- for Providence (17-13). Providence
. 'f}r-27 from long range and was out- took a 46-44 lead on Jason Murdock's lbree-p.ointer berore Tecb
rebounded 45-29. 1 ,
• •
broke it open wilbI a .20-5 spun.
'· · Cl!nlslus 55, Bradley 53_
'

I'

,

51
66
74
81
74
78 . 99

JB 100

2 34
2 32
S 31
4 24
4 22

....

t::.

.!!' L I fiL 1i£ !iA

. Ium

.

i'

-

CAUTION

·Division ID-IV girls
{21·23=44)
Jenny Plant (MiUer) 3-1-012=9,
Jill Shafer (Nelsonville-York) 1·1·
3/4=8, Natalie Bo.othe {Coal
Grove) 3-0-010=6, TammyLenigar
{Trimble) 3-0-0/0=6, Sandy Hem
{Miller) 2-0-2/4=6, Carrie McLain
{Alexander) 0-1-0/1=3, Jessika
Codner {Southern) 1-0-0/0::Z,
Jessica Radford {Eastern) 1-00/0::l, Jodi Marks {Chesapealce) 10-010=2. Tolals: 15-3-5111=44

.

.

.

•
.. ' p.

(Results as of March 8)
Leagu~ - Early Wednesday
Mixed
~
.,
. Team standlnp - Mei~s Golf ·
Cours~ (53-27), Captain D. s {47- .
33), Tony's Carryout {44-36),
Court Sireet GriU (40-40), Thunder
Alley Cats (38-42), Chainsaws &amp;
Roses (36-44), J&amp;L Insulation (3238) and Banks Construction (24. 56).
.
Team high series - Thunder
Alley Cats {1916)
Team high game - .Meigs
Golf Course (683)
Men
Individual high series - Bub ·
Stivers (532) and Roger Carpenterr
(525)
Individual high game Chuck Burton {216) and Stivers
{205)
Women
Individual high series - Pat
Carson {512) and Shirley Simmons
(522)
Individual high game - . Sim·
mons (203) and Carson {205)

- -

- -~

·- · ··

•••

Falling Interest Rates.

%
•

AP

48 Months

•

Mason Bowling
League results

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

.'

Division III-IV All-Stars pull away Swinebart.
mainly on the strength of the 14·
Division m.(V boys
point combined effort rrom Soulb(44-5 1::!15)
ern's Jeremy Hill and Ryan
Brett Fink {Wellston) 3·3·
Williams, Fink's 12-point finish 4/4=19, SeanWiiSOII {Chesapeake)
and an 11 -point mini-clinic from ·7-0-4/6=18, Jeremy HID (SouthAlexander's 'fravis Rice.
ern) 4-J -0/0=17, Travis Rice
But as many attempts at show- {Alexander) 5-2-0/0= 16, Ryan
time - successrut or not - as Williams (Southern) 5-0-010=1 0,
-were made, none earned the acco- Ryan Mck kle (Miller) 4-0-111=9.
lades from tbe players tbe way Mason Fi~her {Southern) 2·0·
Hill's buzzer-beating three-point l/l=6. Totals: 30-8-11113=95
· shot did.
Hill, who had two treys earlier
Division I·D boys
in the game, fired his net-burner
{4Z.32=74)
Anthony Allen (Rock Hill) 6-0from the halfcourt stripe near the
sideline opposite tlle scorer's !able. 5/6=17, Chad Zimmennan {Logan)
After it reached the target. HiD was 5-0-414= 14. Jerry Bowling {Rock
mobbed by his fellow all-stars and Hill) 3·0· 318=9, Kris Begley
greeted by a group or female {Logan) 2· 1-0/0=7, Ralph Cox
admirers behind lbe scorer's table.
(Rock HiD) 2-1.010=7, Tom Green
Also seeing action for the small- {Logan) 3-0-0/0=6, Dou11 Lloyd
scbool stars, coached by Fairland's {River Valley) 0·2-D-10=6, Terry
Jack Harris, were Eastern's Charlie Qualls (Gallla Academy) 3·0·
Bissen and McGrath. The Division 016=6, Mike Freeman (Ironton) 1I-ll crew was led by Logan's Gary 0-010=2. Totals: lS-4·11124=74

·,

Nothing equals the values
at Don WoOO Automotive Complex.

Penn State (18 -10) at Nebraska (18 13), 7:30p.m.
OHIO "(24·9) at Iowa (20·11), 9:30
p.m.

of all grades received their aWM~s
between the games (all flfsHcam
district players got plaques with
their school colors, while tile rest,
including the all -stars, got T·
shirts), the boys' game saw Chesapeake's Sean Wilson lead the
small-sdlool stars witlll3 first-half
points !bat allowed them to overcome the 17-point early storm
coming rrom Logan's Chad Zim'
merman and Kris Begley and take a
44-42 lead a1 halftime.
Halftime festivities reatured
Rock Hill's Chris Long edge
Miller's Bill McGrath 2-1 in a
tnree-jloint shootofr. In regulation
shooting, both men made eight out
of 10 treys to force the shootoff.
The second of two sudden-death
slams in the dunking contest by
WeUston's Brett Fink - be led all
scorers ill the game with 19 points
- helped him slip past Logan
junior Chad Moore. ·
Second-hair .a ction saw the

SmaU-scbool slars win 115-74
After lbe all-District 13 players

V'l'm ~., :V,d/1!1'I ·

Tonight's second-rounders

Sentinei-Pag~

~

duimg Monday night's District 13 ·
All-Star senior showcases at lbe
University of Rio Giande's Lyne
Center.
After watching Muon win the
girls' three-point shootinf contest
at halftime with an 8-for- 0 effon,
the Meigs Marauders' Amber
Blackwell, Rock Hill's Angie Oil·
low and South Point's Christi
Moore scored 19 or the big-school
stars' 32 second-half points to keep
lbem on top. .
Dillow led all scorers with 12,·
Also seeing action for the Divislon .I-II All-Stars , who were
coached by Gallia Academy's
Renee Barnes, was River Valley's
Nicole Meade. Eastern's Amy
Redovian and Nelsonville-York's
Lindsay Shumway also got into the
gl!!!!l: [or the Division lli·IY All·
Stars, w,bo were led by Southern's
Jennifer Rousb.Division I·D strls
(lll-32=61)
Angie Dillow {Roek Hill) 6·0010=12; Meghan Kolcun (Gallla
Academy) 4~1-0/0=11, Brandl
Munn (Gallla Academy) 4·1·
010=11, Amber Blackwell {Melg~~)
3·1·001=!1, Vanessa Compston
{Meigs) 1-1-lll=6, Christi Moore
(South Point) 3-0-0/0,.6, Cindy
Armstead (River Valley) 1-02/4=4, Misty Coleman (Gallla
Academy) 1·~010::2. Totals: 234-l/6=61
. .

-·-·-·-

$

.

.

lJ'te Daily

-Big- and small-school teams split District 13 all-star twin bill

Pa ·e-4

.

Scoreboard

Tuesday, March 21, 1995

%

AP

36 Months
~%

•

~ -

APR

24 Month

On All 1994 and 1995
Honda Accord Models

Tbe Light
Toac!)
By
Dave

Grote
of
Rutland
Furniture

JUST A FEW DEMOS LEFT!

A bikini is the difference
between not very much and
· nothing at aiL
• • •

Seems common sense isn't
as common as it used to be .
• • •
If nobody knows the trouble
you 've had·, you don't live in a
small town.
• • •
·A word to the wise is
suHicient. A word to the
unwise is res &lt;;~nted .

•

1994 Honda Prelude-

1994 Honda Accord

Slack N94345

Slock i 9·1211 &amp; ; 1:1:~0

.$2500°0 OFF

• • •

The beauty of 'the oldfastiioned blacksmith was
that when you took your
horse' to be shod, he didn't
find ten other things that
needed fixing, too .

1994 Honda Civic
·1duor. Sloc k I 94-225. 94-305

8

l400°0 0FF

OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 3, 1995

ATHENS,1:-tel~l•l:J CARS
TJ{'£ Ji!lLptp)' J{O:J.{_tJJ!lL P'EOPL '£.
7 SHOWROOMS

II W4RIHOUSIS

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, Rutland, Oh.

742-2211

810 E. ST~TE ST., ATHENS, OHIO

Phone 594-8555

�.

.

'• ~

Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

TUesday, March 21, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 21, 1995

- ~ ~--·~-- ,.- -~.·

··--·,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Serr.tinei-Page-7

Celibate husband doesn't have to :shut up.and like it'
fATMl

Ann
Landers

~

Accepted Where Applicable.

Dear Ann Landers: 1 didn't care
for your response 10 "'1\tma, • wbo
said he had chpsen celibacy for the
last 10 years because his wife is
overweight
You were rightiO recommend joint
counseling. However. the rest of your
response· was inappropriate. Your
attitude toward him was insensitive
and sexist.
My sister is married to a slob with

an awesome gut overhang. She still
rhinks he's a hunk, which is fine with
me. But if she diditt feel that wa:y, I
would not tell her that some women
find such menallnletive.
You told "Yuma" a lot ohnen write
who are •aazy about their fat wives."
It sounded as if you expected him 10
shut up and like iL I don't deny that
withholding sex 10 get his wife 10 lose
weight is wrong . And it is also
unrealistic to expect wives or
husbands to stay rhe same weight
they were when they first married.
But yOu should not bave btzated the
man because he found his 'fat wife
"sexually uninviting." It's not as if
he left her the minute she got fat He
has stuck around, celibate, for 10

years.
Ann, you owe this man an apology
and better advice. --CHARLOTfE.
N.C.
DEAR CHARLOTTE, N.C. :
Nobody gets fat in a minute. Yuma's
wife put on rhal e•cess weight one
pound at a time.
I would never tell a man who is
married to a heavy woman to "shut
up and like it" I would, instead, hope
that he would be supportive and
loving (in ev~ry sense of the word)
and not punish her for being fat by
withholding sex. If that is "insensitive
and sexist," I plead guilty.
. Dear Ana Landers: I don 't read
your column very often, but from
now on , I will follow it closely

because my mom is an avid fan,
which is why I'm writing.
Recently, "Stunned in California"
wrote about a woman in her office
who removed her shoe and pantyhose
and began to trim her toenail with her
teeth, right in front of everybody.
Your response wa&lt; "I wonder how
many woinen over 40 who are
reading this can get their big toe up
to their mouth."
.
My mom is 77 and in good
physical co ndition and remains
active. She can bend forward and
put both palm's on the floor. She
was surprised that you fell it
would be diffi cult .for someone over
40 \O accomplish rhe foot-to-mouth
position.

Anyway, Mom got on the floor and
tried 10 put her foot up to her mouth,
threw her back out and wound up in
the emergency room.
She is OK now, bull hope in the
futu~, you will be more alert to the
power of suggestion ... J.M. IN
SANTA BARBARA
·
DEAR J.M. : Sorry about your
mom's back, but let's hope she doesn't
·try everything she reads about in my
column. Give her my best.
Our Ann Linden: 1 read the
letter from "Frank, • who gave his
girlfriend an antique engagement
ring. Some nude woman asked h~
•ts that a friendship ring? The
diamond is 50 small."
That story reminded me or the

comment my mother-in-law made
about the ring I gave her daughtct
She looked at it and said, "It swedoes
look paid for, doesn't it?"
That was 40 years ago, and it still
bums me up when I rhink about it. ..
MATTHEW IN MISSISSIPPI
DEAR.MATT: Your mother-in-law
has an awfully sharp tongue. If she
hasn't said anything worse in the last
40 years, consider yourself II!Cky.
Drugs are e"erywhut. They'rr .
easy to gtl, ea.ry to use and eve.n
easier to get hooked on. If&gt;"" have
q~Ustions abowdrugs, )"UIIUdAnn
lAtukrs ' boo/Jet, "The !JJwdown on
Do~. " Send a st/f·addressed, long,
busiMss-siu tn~lope and a chLck
or money ordu for $3.75 (this
inclutks postagr and handling) to :

•
h
.
J
h
A
1-1
•
•
• ·
Me1gs ~a -t . uepartment Otters pOISOn preventiOn tips-· . ~fthi~~g~~;/~!Js:S~i~~~

Lowest Prices In Years On
Your Favorite Meat Items.

Tbis week marks the observalion of National Poison Prevention
Week and, according to Norma
Tor:res, R.N., director of nursing,
Metgs County Health Department,
poisoning is the second leading
cause of nonfatal injury 10 children
age 14 and under sustained in rhe
borne.
"Children under the age of five
.are .rhe most frequent vict~ms of
acctdental home poisomngs,"
explained Torres.
According 10 American Associalion of Poison Control Center
data, there were 27 fatalities
· nationally ·in I 993 to young cbildren under age five wbo acciden·
tally ingested medicines and bouse.bold chemical products.
This year's theme is "Every:thing is not candy at grandma's

bouse." Torres said that the cmpha·
sis for Ibis year Is to remind not
only parents •. but grandparents and
othe~ caregivers to take e•tra precautions to make homes safer for
young children, ~pecially for visit·
ing children.
"Medications can he very dan·
gerous to small' children if grandparents and other caregivers leave·
mc;&lt;~icine co~lainers open witho~!
usmg the child-safety closures,
she said. Accidental poisonings
have happened in bomcs wben
youngsters were visiting and rhey
found open medicine containers
left on bedside tables, in unsecured
cabinets or in purses. Poisonings
bave also occurred wbe11 older
adults carried medicines into
bomesthatbavesrnallcbildreil.
Because many older adults are

often frustrated by the difficulty in safety caps; they have been shown scribed is over.
.
.
. Canada, stnd $455.)
using child resistant packaging for to be effective in preventing child·
8. Stay alert while usmg pOI ·
their medications, the U.S. Con- hood poisonings.
sonous products around the home.
LEGAL NOTICE
su'!'er Product Sat:ety C~mmission
3. Always use safety packaging Most ace~denlal poi~onings occur
The
Public
Util1t1es Comm1ssion of
recently changed 11s testing meth· . properly by closing the container wblle .parents are usmg household
Ohio has set for public hearing Case
ods to allow for new containers that securely after use.
chemical products such as bathare senior-frien~ly ~rid easy:to· . 4. Keep all potentially baz- room cleansers.
. No. 94·102-EL·EFC, to review the
open, wbile mamtammg chtld· ardous products in their original
9. Keep pOisonous plants out or · fuel procurement practices anc poli·
. resistance. "Tbe'se new safety ctoc containers, with their original the reach of children. Parents
cies ol Columbus Southern Power
sures will be helpful to older adults labels.
should e•ther remove potsohous
Company, the operation ol its Elec·
and. protect i~~nl ?.'ildren fr~m
5. Never switch medicines or plants or make them inaccessible to
tric Fuel Component and related
accidenlal potsonmgs, Torres swd. potentially dangerous household children.
matters. This hearing is scheduled
The health department recom· ' products mto food containers or
. 10. Grandparents and other careto begin al the Commiss1on offices
mended tbe following poison- unmarked containers that can be . giv~rs also need to poison: proof
al10:00 a.m. on March 28, 1995.
proofing guidelines lo help make mistaken for something harmless.
the_tr homes to prevent accidental
bomes safer for young children:
6. Never refer to medicine as
poi so ~mgs .
Grandparents'
Al l1nteresled parties will be given an
I. Keep all household chemical "candy" and avoid taking medicamedicmes c~ be very dangerous
opportunity
to be hear~. Further in·
products and medicines out of lions in front of children.
for small children. They need to
lormation.may
be obta1ned by COfl·
reach and out or sight of young
7. Clean out the medicine cabitake. ext.ra precautions with their
tact1ng the Commission att80 East
children and locked up wben not in net periodically and safely dispose ' mcdical•ons and over-the-counter
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
use.
of unneeded medicines when the products when grandchildren are
43266·0573
· 2. Use medication with child· illness for which they were pre- v•siUng them.

ONE DAY SALE
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1995 ONLY
Valley Bell

FRESH, TOWNSEND

Cottage Cheese

Armo~f!-...
Boneless/Skinless
canned
Ham
Chicken
Breast·
· Pound

9

.I

9

I

.· ,AVE

SAVE

$1.87 A Lb.

4.DD

$ 19

24 oz.

I

Ground Beef

·c

lb.

Coca Cola Products

SAVE

goe A Lb.

Russett Potatoes

0

C'

10#

Whitney

Pink Salmon

c

2 LITER

us #1

C

limit 2
please

CHEF BOY RDEE DOUBLE

5

Potato Chi

WHOLE (5-7 LB. AVG.)

1

WHOLE

U.S.INSPECTED

Boston B·u tt
Pork Roast

Genuine
Ground Chuck

Pound

Bon eless ,
oins

Cheese Pizza

5

$_ 29

$1.84 - 55¢ coupon
on box
28 oz.

4.5 oz.

Tonys

Frozen Pizza
'3/$ 00

Pound

$ 29

SAVE

SAVE
70C

Maxwell House ·

$1.81 A Lb.

Master Blend
$
69
34.5 oz.

A Lb.

Delicious
Cookie
Choc. Chip
- ··-

~--

--- ·.

SLICED

vaneydale

Bacon
1-Lb. Pkg.

;.~~'%h

'tfff '
~ill'l'l

LITE MEAT OR

oscar Mayer
Meat Wieners

INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN
. CANADIAN PINK 156-70 Ctl

Cookies

Shrimp In
The Shell

·Lb.

reg. 1.99

ays

9

Kroger score except as specifically noted In tlls ad. If we do run out of an advertised Item, IW! will offer
ou vour choice of acomparable Item, when available, reflecting thE sane savings or aralncheck which
~I entitle vou to purchase the adl'ertised lta11 at the advertised price wltliln 30 dayt Only one vendor
coupon wiH be accelll!d per Item purchasedl
\

I

\

a·9 c

.

.

Weiners
12 oz. pkg.

59'

Domino Sugar
$
39
c
5# .

PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH 22, 1995 ONLY

I

COPYRIGHT 165-THE KROOER CO. !TEllS AND PRICES GOOD 12 NOON
WEDNESDAY, IIARCH 22ND UNTIL 12 MIDNIGHT THURSDAY, MARCH 23RD
IN POIIEROY.
.
. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO L)GHT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO

DEALERS.

.

Superior Frankie.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OH.IO .

Sold In a
5-lb. Ball
ADVERTI5El rTBII'Olrf· Each of thEse advertised items Is required to be readily avall&lt;mle for sale In each

legends

.

''

I
''

f

�The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 21 , 1995

Ohio

~community

Beat of the Bend ...

T he Community Calendor IJ
published as a free service to ,
QOn•proflt troups Wlshl111 to
by Bob Hoeflich
anqounce meetl111 and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raise rs or any type. llems
If you've been wondering what· of surprises for its audience and are printed liS space permits and
ever happened to Mrs. William among them for Meigs Countians cannot be auaranteed to run a
Fred (Ellen) Smith, Sr. of Middle· will be the appearance of Bruce.
spec:mo: number of days.
pon, then I want to tell you lhat she
Bruce, a Magic Kingdom enter·
bas moved from the community.
tainer for almost four years, was a
TUESDAY
Mrs. Smith is ~ow residing in part of the film ing which took
CHESTER - Chester Council
Newark with a son after having place during the rl!st two weeks of #323 Daugitters of America, 7 p.m.
spent a good many years in Mid· March. Bruce pbrtrays "Ben" from T u~ sday . Quarterly birthdays
dleport where most recently she· !he movie "Mary Poppins" and can observe4.
worked as a volunteer at Over- be seen in the background of one of
brook.
·
the Main S trcc~ USA, shots. Later
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Mrs. Smith observed her 85th in the episode during the grand Child Conservation League, Tuesbirt.\lday on March 2. You can con· finale, Bruce is one of Cinderella's day 6 :30p.m . at the Stowaway
tac t her at 59 S. Williams St .. coachmen who lead the famous Restaurant in Gallipolis. Husbands
Newark. Ohio 43055.
coach up to the castle courtyard and guests invited.
during that scene. ·
And don' t forget this Sunday
"I really didn' t do a whole lot
you will get an opportunity to bear for the episode. I' m pretty much
th e newly organi zed Big Bend just there as a part of the atmo·
Community Band which will be sphere, adding to the Disney
presenting a program at 2 p.m. at Magic. We filmed after the park
the Pomeroy Library.
closed one evening for about nine
Direction is by Toney Dingess hours. It was a lot of burry up and
and there' s no doubt in my mind wait, but I got to see the cast of the
Carrie Ingels.will be performing
that be' s doing ;~,good job with lbe · shOw up close and talk to the crew. her senior piano recital at the Ariel
musicians . I heiir that a jazz band It' s funny too that they asked me Theater. Sunday, March 26 at 2
bad been organized from wilhin lbe about as many questions on what I p.m. 'Her selections will ill elude
membership of lhe entire band.
do as I did them", Bru ce com - works by Brahms, Gershwin,
I also hear that weather permit· ments.
Debussy, Mozart and Back .
ling, the Sunday concert will be
Ms. Ingels, a student at Gallia
Tbe Magic Kingdom ' s daily
outdoors . And the besl partAcademy
High School, has been
parilde, "Mickey Mania" was also
there's no admission charge. The filmed
in
Key
Oub, OHEA partici·
active
for t.be shOw and that parade
Middleport Arts Council bas been
pant
in
Piano
A\ljudication;
Honors
features Bruce as one of. the Mick·
active in encouraging the organiza- ey
B
,and,
S
ympbonic,
Marching
and
Mouse Club finale dancers.
tion of the band.
Community
Bands
at
Rio
Grande
"It really is bard 10 say jUS\
exacUy
what they'll show on tele- · and Ohio Universities. She was
Through his work as an enter- vision and
what will end up oo the selected as Professionai and Busi·
tainer at Florida's Walt Disney
ness Women' Club's September
room floor",' Bruce quips.
World Resort, Bruce Wolfe of editing'
Girl
of the .Month.
Perhaps, I can pass onto you the
Racine, bas made it into a televi·
Sbe
attends Grace United
day and time of the airing so that
sian show.
Methodist
Church, having served
The bit show "Family Matters" you can tune in that show. I' II try.
as president of the Youth Group for
that airs every Friday evening and
What with the break in the two years. She is the daughter if
th
lk' ·
· · ·
features and nation's probably best·
Karla Blackburn and John Ingels,
loved nerd, Steve Eurkel (Jaleen wea er, wa mg ts regammg Its
popularity. So good for us, they
White) recenUy went on location to s:iy. Now if you'll just tum off the
the Disneyresortlofilm the show's television and help me off the
season finale which will air some- couch, we'll get started on that
time in April.
hike. And do keep smiling.
The .two-part episode has a lot
•

cheerleaders ----..

calendar-,....._

POMEROY- FOE Auxiliary,
Pomeroy, t uesday, 7:30 meeting
followed by 8 p.m. talk by Mooy
Wood, DARE director for Meigs
County. Presentation open to pub·
lie.
·

BULLETIN BOARD
1 00
6 column Inch WHkdays
1 00
8 column Inch Sunday

DARWIN - Bedford Town·
ship Volunteer Fire Department
Committee meeting Tuesday, 1
p.m. at Darwin Town Hall.

•Cuttom Mlde .
•Solid finyl •
ALZH EIMEAS &amp;
R ELATED DISORDERS
Suppo~ Group meeting Thursday,
March 23, 1 p.m.
PVH Nursing &amp; Rehabililalion Center
304·675·5236 1or more into.

Plains.; Dorothy : and ·Lloyd
Dillinger; Pratts Fork, and Randy
and Charlene Dillinger, Hebbardsville.
Thelma Henderson and Edna
Harmon have returned from a trip
to Aorida wh.ere they visited their
sister and her husband, Bertha and
Francis Niegsch, Naples. While
there they also talked to another
sister and her
Alta and
Aubra Bailev

742· 3149 or 992·7285

repl~eement

)&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
OffiCe Hqura: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

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

"Swee 16" ·

RUBY BURNSIDE

992-4119 AI Trom11, Owner 1·800·291·5600
KINGS'
Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
-Roofing .Painting
-Garages •Pon:hes
•Pole Barns
Fres Eotfmsftls

14-742·3090
304·773·9545

In Memory Of
Anna Jo Shoemaker
Gpne 2 Year's Today
March 21, 1993
Year"'s come, Year 's go
but how much we miss
you, and love you no
one will ever know,

the granddaughter of Rev. R Kuhn ·
and ·resides with her paternal
grandmot!ter, Pat Ingels.
She plans to attend Ohio Uni·
versity, majoring in electrical engi·
neering . She bas been a longtime
pupil of Marion E. Ford. The pub·
lie is cordially invited to attend.

In your hey day,

Love Al wa y~

you used to be

Mom&amp; Dad
Son &amp; Brother,
Nannie, James
&amp; Family

quile a flapper,
and you are still

•

H&amp;R
BLOCK®
.

Public Notice

.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
• Meigs County Intends to
. apply to the Ohio De·
· partment of Oevelopment

•We stand behind our work.
•We will go with you to an audit at no
extra charge, although we cannot act as
your -legal representative

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

very dapper.

Happy 80th
Birthday
Your Kids
· Public Nollce

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992·2753 ~ •m

3J14/t mo.

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE
Special This
Monlh
With every new
a.larm Installedreceive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.
304-882-3336
3114/t ·mo.

'.&lt;FE
~~ flllllTESl

· TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl

.1Alii.Nol UKI ~IW
Rttpair in Tubs or Slnl:s,

.I Fiiiti'i ruigs

L

618 EAST MAIN ST.
992·6674
OPEN MONDAY· FRIDAY 9-6; SATURDAY 9-5
MasterCardNisa/Di'!Cover

H&amp;H SAWMILL

rehabilitation

of neigh-

borhood facilities. The

lnvlltd to attend to make

sons, aid in tt)e prevention
of elimination of slums and

WriHen commenta will be

occoptod until 1 p.m., Morch
blight, or meet an urgent 31, 1995, end mey bt mellod
need of the community.
to tho Molga County
Citizens are encouraged Commloolonera, Melgo
to attend this meeting on

March 28, 1995 to provide
their input on the County's

CDBG program.
(3) 14, 21, 2tc

BRAJIJ NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
• Exte.1ded Chassrs
• Onv€r Srde Alr Bag
• Antr·Lock Brakes
• Arr Co11d1tron
• AutomatiC Overdrrve
• Vrsta Bay Wrndows
• Power Steenng

BRAND NEW '95 CHEvY
S.SERIES PICKUP

CONVEa!DN VAN

• Power Brakes
• Till Steenng
· Crurse

• Dnver Side Airbag
• Rear Anti-l ock Brakes

• SQia!Be&lt;l
• lndrrect l rghtrng
• Premrum Wood Pkg.
·Full Canversron
• Aluminum Running Boards
• Loadectl

· MtiFMCassene
• Power Wrndows
• Powertodls
• 4 Captam Charrs

· Power Sleenng

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BWER 4x4

• Custom Cloth Interior

• 4x4

• Sleel Belled Tires

·Automatic
• Onver Srde Airbag
· Anti-Lock Brakes

• Power Brakes

· Power Brakes
· Power Door Lods
• Power Windows
• AMIFM Cassene
· Tilt Steering

• Power Steenng

• Cru•se Coo trot
• Etectror11c Shllt Transfer Case
• P 235175R 15' T~res
·loadedl

''Sale Pna! !101Ges GW.C Flt'!l.
Ttll\r' &amp;yet lrlt'I'WIIWt! IT {).1811fied

$11,888
NoOocFees

$13,888**,

DBM'l'~'

t«l Doc fees ClEirt!Yed'

BRAND NEW.'95 PONTIAC
·. GRAND PRIX SE COUPE

" Sale Pru

·Console

·AutomatiC

· Cuslom Sport Buckel Seals

• Power Bra ~es

BAAIID NEW '95 BUICK CENTURY SEDAII
·A~ Corol10~

• PIS, P~ti
• Porr.tr Door LOCh
• D"rv• Side Alfba9 _, • PO'M!I W111~
• fWI'Ieel AnHocil • · Power T1unUielease
Br&lt;Mes
• AM'ft.4Stereo
• Automanc

• Tr1 St!!En'lg

·CruiSe Control

'• Rear ~CW!I ·
·Custom C~ n Berdl Seats

L_J:~~=~=~~~~=~·:.:'"':.: :enl W! H Ouahrte:~

• A1r Condition

A
1r1Jags

• Power Door Locts
• Power' Windows

· AMIFM Cassene
. Tin S1eenng
·CruiSe Control

· Well E~r00t!I:J 1

lnouoes

GWC For51 T.rne Bllyet'

Special Aero Grolllll Effects
• V.£ Power
• Dual
• Power S!eenng

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S.SERIES
"Sale Prtr:e
4x4PICKUP
• 4x4
lrldi.OeS GMAC

$17,488

• Pass·Key If Then Delerrenl
• Rear Ded&lt; l.i:l Speier
•Spec~l Aero Ground Effecls

• Sport &amp;Jspension
: Spl~ DualE•hausl
· 16' Ca~ AluminumWheels
·Loaded!

· PIS, PIB

• 4 Wheel Anb-lock Brakes

• Steel Belted Trres ·

• Custom Cloth lnlenor

FIISI Tirr.e Buyer

11"1Cef1trte 11
r&gt;.Jallled.

S26,988

No Doc Fees. OeWetM·

aoo Wheel Fores

• 4 .3l~er V-6 Power
• Driver Side Airba9

No Doc

fees oe-oo·

APVVAII
• AICoMOOn
• AI.Aomalk •
• DriVer SiOe Airbag
• Art~lock Brakes

• Power SteefirQ
• Pawer Brailes
• Power Cloof locks
• Power Mirrors

• 1 Passenger

Seati"'l
•loaded'

•

TOI.i. FREE 1·BIID·B22-D41'! • 312·2844
344·5947. 422·0756 .

Mo.ndar • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm ·. . .
Sunday: Noon ~. 6 pm · .

• TaJes, Tags. Tille Filii• eatra.

'!
I

2/21/t

County

CourthoLiae,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Fred Hoffman, Prtaldent

Melga County

(31 21; 1TC

Commialloner1

'Bringing up Jack'
looks for happy
childhood on ABC .

• Room ·Additions
• New Garages
• Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Wo rk
(FREE ESTIMATE S)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

112Mn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•'Garages
· •Complete
Remodeling
Slop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

L&amp;W
Lawn Care
Mowing,
· Trimming
Firewood ..
Also: ·
Contract work
(614) 992-5291

GRAY'S

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.

"Take the pain out
of painling • Let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; Alter 6 p.m.

614-985-4180

WANTED
SL' I I IOI ( ' t ( I/L' I l ' :t.hl' (, _.:;

nldn \\hrt \\;tnl

.111d

~\

ll~'ll l

{lltalt l_\ liL":Ii lh l l hltr.lll ( l·
.t t .d lrnd.thk t.l ll"-.. . I Ci lll
l.tkl· 'tll!l .tflpltctlln'l\

-+

11 1t111:lt-. Jl l ln t to ~lliH

11.;;111 b 111hd;l\
;ll.:l'/ll

I, I I

.l 11 11

Hu-.h

\ 111L' I Il' ;llt

( !l' llt.' l ;d

(, I..J-J(, 7. 7356
Howard L. Wrltese I ·
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

WHALEY'S AUTO .
' •
PARTS'
'
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
'NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
gg2·7013 OR
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Think rearing a kid is
992·5553 OR
tough? Try bringing up a bouocing baby sitcom.
.
TOLL
FfiEE 1·800·848·0070
Two years after ·comedian Jack Gallagher first
949-2168
DARWIN, OHIO
caught ABC' s eye, one year after shooting a pilot,
5116f94 TFN
three monlhs after be was certain this particular shot
7/31/91 TFN
at stardom was dead, " Bringing Up Jack" comes to
television.
.
DAVE'S
Featuring Gallagber as late· in-life· dad and
2;4S)I
Philadelphia radio sports show host Jack McMahon,
SWAP SHOP
'R0/11T1Ne2
the series debuts 9:30p.m. EST Tuesday, Marcb 28.
Onemlleoul
I~ enters its regular 9:30 p.m. EST Wednesday time
143 from At. 7
CALL NOW!!!
slot the next night.
Tues.
•
Wed.
•
Fri.
•
Sat.
1-900-562· 7000
Harley Jane Koiak: ("Parenlhood" ) plays the 40-;
1-6
ish Jack's new wife, a widowed mother of two
Extension 7101
• Craftsman ·Tools
expecting his child. The series was inspired by Gal·
•Toys
$2:99 per min .
lagber' s stage riffs on life with son Dcclan, 3, and
•Guns
wife, Jean .
Must be 18 yrs.
Loads at Misc.
The comic and producers Nat Bern stein and
Procall Co.
Mitchel Katlin ceuainly aren' t griping about the net·
Buy-Sell·Tl'llde
work' s scheduling: Their series follows ABC's top- ·
(602) 954"7420
992·2060 llCI!i/1tmo
rated program; "Home Improvement, " with the
. healthy viewer lead-in that juxtaposition guarantees.
(1bat garage is In Sacramento, the state capital in
But oh the nerve-wracking process of getting
Northern Califomi'a as distant from Hollywood in
" Bringing Up Jack" on the air.
tone as in miles. Gallagher commutes, unwilling to
"Literally two days before ABC picked up the
uproot wife and child.)
·
.
show, I was auditioning for other shows,'' recalls the
As best as Gallagher and his producers could fig·
affable, candid Gallagher. " Just back on the couch
ure, there were delays in finding a spot for the show
with all the-other guys, bearing 'Is there a Jack Gal·
as ABC gave other series a chance to catch fiiC ; net·
lagher here?'
work enthusiasm for "Jack" seemed to flag, accond·
" Then lhe network called and said 'We're gonna
ing to its producers.
. ·
·
make fi.ve episodes.' That was Dec. 14, the best
· Then the light turned green 'again. " They said
Christmas present," be said. Six episodes are scbed·
they just decided it was something they wanted to
uled to air.
take a chance on," Gallagher says.
His wife's response: "You're kidding." The cou·
His venture.into sitcomedy began painlessly. ABC
pie had already mourned. and packed up his "Bring·
executives bad beard of Gallagher's one-man show
ing Up Jack" paperwork to stow in the garage, be
in San Francisco, "Letters to Declan," caught his act ·
said.
·
and signe&lt;l him up . .
~

-Factory Auth orized Parta
&amp;

Sflrvlce

RACINE
dUN CLUB

GUN

•Feat Reliable Service
•Washera - Dryera - Ranges
•OIIhWIIhlrl
-.H.W. Heaters
-MicroWaves •Diapoaala
•Th•nka Melga 6:
Surrounding Areaa

(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 121141t1n

2/28/95

110\\.\IW
E\C \\ \Tii\G
Bulldozing, Hackhoe,
Servi~e s ..
Horne Si1e11, Land
Clearing, Septic Syolemo
·&amp; Driveways.

Trucking· ·
Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt .

(Umestone Low Ratesl

WICKS
HAULING
(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

MANLEY 'S
HOM E IMPROVEMENT
Roofing. Siding. Room
Addition s. Concrch:, c:tc.

992·5388

Kenny's Auto Rental

ITO-A· WAY

We Have Cars and Vansl

MIKE MARCUM'S
Roofing &amp; Remodeling Co.

3HR - q 86~

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Com{lllfab/e Sires &amp; Priers
NEW HAV EN, WV
304-882·2996 ..., ~.

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
Kenny 's Auto Center
1•800 .486·1590
264 Upper Rive r Rd .
Bus. (614) 446·997 l
·
'"""
Galli olis, OH . 45631

• ·

P.O. Box 220
Bidwel l, Oil 456!4

3!15/tfn

(I&gt; 14)

•

Announcemenls
3 Announcements
ADOPTION:

Happ ily

mll'ried

cowpll wl• h•• to help you a
roiilde yo ur · blb~ with 1 loving
amlly and • bright tutu,.. Medrcal/legal expenHI pa~l d . Pt.N
caii1~..SQ3..0302 .
.
·

r.

All Natural Food Product Which

· Shingles • Siding • Windows
Built Up &amp; Rupber Roofing
Rr:tsidential &amp; Commercial
Professional Service

H1lp1 Vou Lou Weight And
Have More Energy, 814-4463358.

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Free Estimates
27 Years Experience

Hey Guy. Your Special Girt Ia
walling to hear from you 24
hours a day. Call now 1-900-3886000 Ert. ~002 , U .Himln. 18+,
Procatl Co . 602-1154-7420.

1·800-377-4477

Eliminate ht From 0'-4: WUh
All-natural Herbal Pr.oduet . U..
Weight, Reduce A.ppetnt, and
Have Energy 614 -4'46·2460.

614-245-0437

LIVE GIRLS , CP,LL NOW,. 1·1100'

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
Specia l offer inc ludes:
1. Clcnn motor
2. Gmasc rol l er bea r ings
3. Clean &amp; check agi tator
4. Clea n all mov ing parts

5.
6.
7.
8.

Clean &amp; chec k filter syste m
Ch eck bel l s
Check elec trical system
Rcpl nce filter bng

ALL FOR ONLY 1 14.95 Plus Parts

602-U54-'J120.

MEET NEW PEOPLE '!liE FUN
WAY TODAY, 1-9Q0..776-3005 axt.
8002. $2.99/mln. Uuat be 18 yni.
of aga, Procall Co., 802-054·
1'120.
.THE PAMPERED CHEF
"Tho KHchon Sloro Thol eoTo Yoi.tr Door." l:.oclll Cqontulta n.t
Available At :
LAava Moaaga.
Call For Information On Order·
lng ttama, Partin Or For Bull·
0111
OpportunitiH.
Fr..
Brochu,. Avallabl1.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Main St., Ripley WV

388-1000 ext. 645i S3. illlmln~
Must t&gt;. 18 yrs., Procall Co ..

614-446-4724

One yea r wa rra nty o n wor k pe rfor med.
Va li d o n all nat iona lly advertise d bra nds.
We ser vi ce most makes &amp; models.

304·6144

4

Giveaway

1· Femalt Rolhwllar/Shaptrd. 7
wMka
old. Vat ch«:ked,
wromad,lall docked. 614-3n.

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

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

2965

5 hall American Esk imo, half
squlrttl dog rupplas. 3 llrmlllll
2 mal.. , wll bt. medlum-aluo

dogo. 304.a?ll-l'lfll.

.•

Ooa houH for' large dog ICI
glva.way, 814-085-3356.

:

Fatrialt Balgla Pup, 5 Monlht
Old, Good Country Honw, e~
446-3817.

Manure, 614-448-1456.

Puppies: Mala I Famale Pari
Bnglt I Al ..kan Huaky, 1144146-751)5 Anyllma.

One Stop Co,mplete Auto Body Reptir

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614·992·6223
Free Estimates
· lnsur~nce Work Welcome

~~

State Rl. 33
Darwin, Ohio.

SHOOTS
Sunday 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Only .
Limited: 740
. Backbore, 680 Front

Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for I 0% off.

•Lots o f Fun a n d
Lea rni n g
•Leta of ,
Experienc e
Mon. t hru Fri. 7:00
A.M. ti!l 6 :00 P.M.

•All Ma kea .,.2 Years

(No Sunday Calls)
Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
g85·3879

Maggies Crockpot

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

614-992-7643

mo.

auggeatlona . on varloua

actiVities must 'be desigried octtvltiOI which moy bo
to primarily benefit low • undertaken by tho County .
and moderate-Income per- under thl1 progrem.

'" ....

7122194

Resu~ace Olrl Ger&amp;mir. Tile, aod
Light Hauling,
NOTICE OF PUBLiC
: tor · funding under the
HE;IIRING 11
· Community Development
Shrubs Shaped
The lllolga_ · J:ounty
; Block Grant (CDBG) Small
to
Commlu!onera
·tntend
. Cities Program, a federally·
anEI Removed
:funded program of Flocel apply to the Ohio ·
Oojllrtmant
of
Oovelopmont
REFI~IS.UNG
. Year 1995 CDBG funding, far tho Ohio Small Clllll
Misc. Jobs •
providing ~he County meets
-.\\oT\LUW 10('
COBG FY' 114 Now Horlzano
Chris
l
applicable requirements.
Bill
Slack
Fair Houelng Program grant
•' Srhet!el
The first of two public Iunde
tor
Molgo
County.
hearings will ba held March
G
992·2269
614-992-4236 REFSY',I NISHIN
The flrat ol two public
11 MS
•
28, 1995 at 7:00 p.m. at the hoarlngo
wlll bo hold on\.
Meigs County Courthouse Friday, Morch
31,1118511 1 , , . . . . - - - - - - - - ,
to · provide citizens 'with p.m .. ot· tho Molgo
County
pertinent Information about Commloolonoro Office,
·CHESTER
the CDBG program In· Molga County Courthouoo,
eluding an explanation of Pomeroy, Ohio , for the
COUNTRY
Portable
eligible activities · and purpo.. ·of dlocuulng tho
program requirements. The general provlalona .of the
CLUB
landsaw Mill
CDBG program can lund a COBG
Now Horlzono
broad range of activities Program and the ilmaunt of
3212~ Happy
Golf Lessons
arid. program requirements, Iunde ovolloble. · The
Hollow Rd.
Including: economic devol· ocllvlt!OI muot bo doolgnod
by appointment &amp;
Middleport, Ohio 45760
opment protects , street, to prlmorlly benefit low •
water supply, drainage and modtrate Income ptraona,
Danny a. Peggy
club repair as·well
sa nitary sewer Improve- old In the prevantlon of
· Brlckles
ments, park acquisition and olum end blight, or moot en
Call John Teaford at
imprOvements, demolition urgent need of tho county.
614·742·2193
Chesler, Ohio
of unsafe structures, and
Alllntorooted poroono ere

POMEROY

VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lnsulallon, Stcirin
Doora, Storm
Windows, Garages.
FrH Eetlmetao

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
·Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-7587

:&amp;111N 1'110.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

KEI'IIPPLIANCE
. IBIVICE

•A.,rlgeratore ·~reezera

win.owt
•Free E1timatet
•Sterting At
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

SPECIAL CIIEERLEADINO AWARDS - KeUI Dalley, not pk:·
tured, was honored wltb the Coaches' Award, while Bekky Mcintyre
(left) claimed Most Spirited, Most Creative and Most Outstandln1
Cbeerleadlng awards. Heather WeD (right) shared the Most Creative
Award With Mcintyre.
·

YOU CAN TRUST

· Marilyn Robinson was honored
on her birthday by her husband,
Wilbur, and ber daughters and fam .
ilies. Present were Lori and Allen
Harrison, ·Larry and Codi of Cald·
well and Lee Ann and Kirk Fick;
Columbus.
In to attend John Taylor's. birthday cel~bration were Tom Taylor,
Torch; Rick, Cindy, Cassie and
Richie Dillinger, Kathy, Nicole.
and
Essman . all of The

BARR'S Nursery

'200 lnsttlled

Jeremy Johnson!
Love Mom, Dad,
Scoll, Kim &amp; Megan

.

Landscape Stock
White Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Pos t 39 Pomeroy American
Legion, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Senior
Citizens Center. Annual family
birthday dinner.

The Daily Sen tinei-Page-9

Get Your Messagelcrou
Wltlt a Dallr •••tlael

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary, 6
· p.m Tuesday at fire station. All
members urged to attend.

Carrie Ingels
recital slated
March26

--Alfred news notes--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 21, 1995

-

6

Found In Shada River ar.a Long
Bottom • Roltw.llar, lt4·gas;.
4457.
Found: BaagJ. mix, t.mala, But·
tamUI Avenua vlclnhy, call 114112-1822, Monday~rlday.

7

...

1012tn4lt1n

Burial , Final Expenses. Loans. Business, Family
Security, College Funds, Emergency Funds,
Retirement, Estates, Life Insurance to fit yo.ur needs.

Lost &amp; Found

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
. &amp; Vlclnlly

ALL Yard Sal.. Mu.t Ia Paid In
Adv1nc.. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befo,. tht ad Ia lo run,
Sund•y edition .. 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday tdltlon - 2:00
p.m. Saturdary.
Dog 7 Monlho , 614·245-58117.

ROCKY R. HUPP

Flel Market I Yard S.la Spac•

American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
Middleport, 'Ohio 45760

Pomeroy,
Middleport
. &amp; Vlclnl!y

614-843-5264

All Yard SaiM Mutt 81 Plld In
AdY8nca. O..cllna: 1:001Hn lht
day blfcn 1M ad II (o run,
Sundor od•lon· 1:001"'! Frldoy,
-.Y
odHion
10:00o.m.
S.llurday.

For Rent, l1...,.48-826l

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
. Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

lnsk»- Thur.day and Frkl1y, 1
112 mille on Hysell Run. Summarfwlnt• clalhaa, ml~ .• 114--

MODERN SANITATION

~-627!1.

POMEROY; OHIO
Sepllc tan~s cleaned &amp; portable toilets renled.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
· ·.Job sllea • Camp Sites • ~am!ly Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Llmeslone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Llcenaed &amp; Bonded - 20 years experience
992-3954
Em N gcncy Ph one 985-34 18

,

11 111it l n

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Paraon Auction CompanV
full time auc11onMr, eompi.Ce
IUetlon . llrvlct .
Uc•nMd
168,0hlo &amp; W••t VIrginia, 30477:J.5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Clun Uta Modal Clrs Or
Trucks, 1987 Moda.la Of Ntwer,

Smtih Buk:k Pontile, 1000
E..atam Avenue, O.lllpolla.
·
Decorated atoneware, Will • •
. . , _, old lompo1 Old ' ' mometlf"', old ClocM anl'que
fumH ..o. Rl-lnt
RUM

Moore, owner.

ArMiq....
~~

25211. Wt,buy altatea.

614·992·3470

o. .....

"'""

....
o.~

....

A&lt;ttut~•n ..

'

• •••~r~vw•­
Mo.,..t..a Stop

'-"tel&gt;

"-. II\'

J &amp; D'o Auto Porlo ond Solvogo,
buying wrwckaJunk eutoe 1
truckl. Alto, · p~rrt. lor Nil. 30+
77:J.II343 Of 773-~ .
.

Old buttona, co.turne Jewel~
old llghlen Iron ekllt.la. ,.:
turw, 91•r Wara, QIIM, China.
tumttura, loola or complett ..;
t1t11, o.by Martin, 114-812-•41.
Wanll)d To Buy; Junk Autoe
Whh Or Wl1ho11 MoiOI"', Colt
, Lorry Lfvtly. 8M.,)fll.f1303 .

WonCtd To

•uy: Tobocoo u,.,

Permontnt Or L.oo, 1~
6501.
•

�•

..
Daily

Page-1G-The

S~tinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport,"Ohio

1\Jelday, March

21, 1995

Tuesday, March 21,1995

Ohio

•

The Daily Senti

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by .Larry Wright

0~
~

..

3·21 ·95

. EEK&amp;MEEK

/

· o,•

./
D

•A98 5Z
• .A 9

•

•

• 5 3 2

. 6 5 2

I Hr'lvt THIS 1ti'!J&lt;I&amp;E.

A '!1&lt;(£ MORAL
DILEMMA CF CXJR

(Ojfl.I(T E.V6RY IJ IGHT,.

~

TIW.S...

.........

k»na-4:•m ure nu,.ang ....._
tantia t a r = - -Ung
ahlfte It our
llkllled nu,...
lng lociUty, Jill Bumgardnor, AN.
DOn, P - Ploosa.. Nonlna I
Rohobllftotlon Contor1 .~ 1 lox
321, Point Ploooont .., 25510.
. 304..ST$-3001. (A Cllonmork
Foclllty) EOE,
Cotnpulor uoora . - . Work
own houra, $2011 1o UOk/yr.
24h,.1·'714-211-3311r1501.

W.nllld: Experi.MM:ed Cook•re
In
Homo

M..t

lo

....,.,._,
Advanc.rnent
To
Mana;-IMftt P~~. 30f.&amp;7S-

IIt81.
Dance,.

apply

In

peNOn.

Southtark Inn s-~r, Rt. 2 N.,
Pl. Ploosant, WV. Ptua nightly,
304-67$-6II55. .
.
Dollvory drtvor COL o
muot, nood to hovo oomo
managw llkllt1, call 800-804-

8005 for lntorvlow.

Eom up lo $1000 wookiJ oluiiW!g
envelopee .. home. Start now.
No oxporlon... Frao oupplleo.
Froo Information. Na Obllgotlon.
Bond S.A.S.E to Storllng, Dopt.
K. P.O. Box 149167. Orlolldo, FL
32814.
Screen
Printer
/Computer
Grophlco Ar.piJ AI: Span Stop
In GalllpoUa, 614-441·1412 Or

Ot4..s86-7105 AHor 6 P.M.

E•Pirlenced Ferm Hand,

..

·~1'M3.

W.rilod: Bricklo'"'rJo:.:Z • Hr.
":l1;r-d Only •
A..,.,
I
11313 Or. 114-441-llllt.
Pt-111 M.-ry.
Wu-.., of the World Llfl 1ft.
ouranco 8ocloty hU cuiTIIII

4br on Rodmond Aldgo, 5mln
from town, sac fond, bom I
by _.nt_,.

Ill-·
only

304_

.

Moko A Dltloronco In Tho Ulo or
Som- WHh Spoclol N By Boccmlng A Footor Coro
Ptov-. Thi llonlo Lonhom

~.':"tot...~~~~&amp;.~'=

And Young Adulbo Whh Montol

Rotardotton, Hoo Oppanunhloo
Fa&lt; Poaplo 1ntorootod In . _ .
Ina. 'F081er F•miU•. A ·13 Y•r
..Qfd Young Lady In 'The .Aru
Currently NMda A Supportive
Homo In Which Ta Th~V.. For
llaro lnhlrmotlon On You
Con 0t&gt;on Your Home To AChild
·Whh Spolcol ~... Coli Mr.
Uvlngoton AI 1-800-001-2558.

Orophlc

•'-

dellvMJ.

&amp; Mth, n.r

-loci

co-,._ ·eeo

11-,

Ina And ' flf'm~114 .-c:~
Hliie Hovel, •
.....
,.oumo ta: etor Allf10)', 2413 Cloo, 1om, 3
klngo, In
Joe"-!
Avonuo,
Point Door Plumbing, SIO,OOO, 114PI-nt. WY 255150, or coli 304- ~318=:-:..S::-1148.::..:Ro=p.:.,....,-,;::-:,-:-I'PII-401D. EO£.
3 lodroomo, LAP~lr"lng Aroo,
FR, Swl111m1ng
LaHI Lal,
13
Insurance
Cltr Schaalo, ~--Ge21 Anor

Warner HNttng and Cooling In

Log.ol Socrotory, tomlllor with
WOrd Pert.ct, good communU·
Uon · ekllla, typing
refllrencn
required.
r.aurM Ia Ia• A-14 cJo Point
PINHnt R~lller, 200 Main
Street, ~nl Ptelunt WV
25550.

•:!'::J

NMd 5 Lad I" To Sell Avon, 114-.3351.

NEW BANK AEPOS, ONLY 4
LEFT. 304-7115-7111.

Baora
Pravldod WRh Sotarr, 814-387·

7523 It No Antwer LIIVI .....

oog.o.

Oak Hill Trucking Compeny.
S.eldpg Over Thl Road Drlvera,
With gOod driving rtconl. COL
Roqulrod. .81US2-7773, Or A~

tor S:GO P.M. Colll14-245-t304.
Ovorllrook Contor, 333 Pogo

Str..., Mkldleport 18 offaring all
newly hired CNA'a 1 S300 elan
on bon~t. W• oHtt coml*llfva
•lary tnd benellta, PINH atop
In Of call Jtn Elltl, AOON, 614992~472 tor more lntorrntUon.

EOE
POSTAL , JOBS(qe

Pot111 Poalllona

21

3S

PEANUTS

Lot~ne-

'Icc uur-. Pe~nt•

NEW Color Calllog. 1-«10-482·
.

81117

*

Thrw ~
ua, ~- 7, one
wocldlng long .._.,
high nook, toW boCII, hDao. half IH'Ice, 1......,2411 or
114-KJ-ozfl.

Woddln'
- 1110,
· .lllzo
I, WhHo,
Worn 1 lme,
t14-317-42H.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

55

2-otooy gorog.o, booldll Haven Supermartcet, bottom

YNr Old, ApproL 4 Mlle1 Ott 35
On Butavillo Plko, 114-446-4281,

Country 11 112 AcrN, 147,000,
114-~2187.

,
1

Rentals

41 HOU88S for Rent
BIIII'OOIM, 1 112 Btlha,
13251Mo. ~. In Eurou,

4

51J.IIli2.021M.

-~~~';Go4br, m-ry. 1 cor
ga,.p,
/mo., .....,.nc.. &amp;
aopOOH. 304-4175-2411 bot._

6-tpm.

.

Nice 3 bad:oom home, central
olr, Z cor gorogo, hiO monthly
pluo -•rlty ...,..., IM-l'lt:Z400 Ifill' I pm:,

H1vt1 A Current COL And A· ~;':'::;::-;:;:;-;-:_:,.~~--::

c--.

'a::

$20,000, 114-44..75211.

Lola For Sole On 0.0..... CRok

Rood, Oolllpallo Coli' A•or t
P.M. 1--7111'
·

•

6f4.416.2153.

3

Bodraam

Ronch,

Nlco

Nolahboltlaad Wh~ ln-&lt;l&lt;ound

Pool, 1400/Mo. • Ullnu.., 614-

..e-4toe, IM-37V-Z1110.

42 · Mobile Homes
for·Rent

.
. - '15
" - - Y-41
'II_· - "gaM
·
....
"'""lla.$1100;
'17Co
top, fully loodod, now -.......
. Y-ftoutotMdc,IO,OOO orlalnol mlleo,
- O"M
14000 potco
""""'"blo; IIWIZ-1532.
·a
1 •'!,~ 4 - ·
•ut.,..lla. - · 114411 ;qae,
'10 Thundorblrd, law mllol, oxootlonl condHion, bluo, ,_

-ton.

eot-,, ·

=:rom::r,
tl,., 114-14•2011.

'!~~~~~~c=:
IDIIliJOI Ski,
76

ezoo.

t.tAV~
ti~ALTtl

. ANI&gt;
PI..AN ANO
~r'-L

'Ttl~

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce•rles

llfT

.,...,,.-.,-=-:-:=-=-4 corvono Aolly'o With Tlroo,
~ CondHion, S300, 114-311-

e--..

Homtock 4'-T far londocoplng
compact, Milly ahaarM.

IMaio.......

I
Santo'o Forool.
S04-6IWOOI or 304-175-tl38.
Hoooltol bod wlmotr- oil
otoclrtc;, . Whtnpcol -110r •

AKC

A-lor

Pupo,

Cltlnooo

Shorpol .

a1 wrinldoo, ooll

Tomo Cocllotlol !logo I llo~J
Uu llo!!. _1 112 Yoora Old, -

114-441-... 1.

~
mo
-

homo In ~ountrr only.
2YT. aid llock Lo&amp;,

30M~S7.

-·

drJOr,
-rolla,
- loothor
r - Wlntod: MC Aklo llud SorploJO&lt; ,_..
om-lin

.....

i:cMich' I

choir, 10 ·ynt aid
kHchon oolo wlgl- doOro. 304-

511-20118.

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repaired, N• I

vlco, 114-317-1311 Loovo -

59

1~=---,-,----:--:--:­

TO Willow
11 Former

Ru•alen ruler
19 ChOOM
21 Head

movement

24 Eaatlndlan
palm
26 Got·- of
(ltlrow out)
27 lltemllh
2.8 uke In lttly
29 Surgical

North . East
2•

Pass

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

procedure

30 Country ol
Europe
32 Golf moundo
33 Spanll~

Opening lea d : • 6

cheer8

36 Coin
39 Beam
41 Stuck (to)

Canberra, Australia' s capital, is an in·
teresting and peaceful city. The high ·
light is the arehiteclure . The Ci rcular
Parliament building can be seen from a lmost everywhere. And each embassy is
designed in the s tyle of that country.
Canberra is also the site for what I be·
lieve is the world 's largest bridge team
event played in one venue: the National
Open Teams. Las t J anuary.-285 teams
competed. Eight days later. the leading
Indonesian team had won.
This dea l from th e qualification stage
hig hlight ed an interes tin g technica l
point
North used a t ransfer bid be fore
in g ga me. South, who se opening shoWed
15-17 poi nts. rai fic d beeause of his fiVe ·
card s uit .
West hui lt the foundation fur a sue·
ce ss ful defen se by leactin ~ hi s fourth -I
h1ghest heart. After declarer had ducked
the tric k ·to hi s queen, East cont inued

with the heart 10 to dummy's ace. South
called for a low.c!ub, but East didn 't destroy Hie good work already completed:
He put up the king. .
Whe n he won the trlck, East re turned
his las t heart. After winning in hand wi th
the king. declarer continued with the club
jack. But Wes t won with the ace and
cashed two heart winners: one down.
Note that if East doesn 't play his club
king at (rick three, the contract makes.
Wes t will have to win this or the next

46 Zoclloc algn_
46 Tlllcket lence
50 Loud cry
51 TropiC8ItrW
53 GaMoua
element
55 Securt
56 Matinee57 Chr1otmoo
di1nk1
59 Mao-tung
61 Sauthern
blackbird

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C~ C~ r cryp~ograms
E~

are created hom quOiallons by lamout

people, Pill and prllal'lt
lener in rhe c1ph&amp;t ttandslor anotner Tcx1ay·s Cl~: D equall B

OB

.Z G PCP
.

JFMAP

M

xw

J F P E YL

Z X Y P E

I

.... -.

.

. 1· 1 I I I
2

· •1wish I knew whatto do," the
· teen sobbed to her mom. "Life
doesn'tcomewith instructions," ·
the mom laughed, "that's why
we have ---- - - -."

")_5

For 5ale

or Trade

KIIJil _..bumor wHh plolng,
500 g.ollon plootlc lonk,
lloOrno far ront - - o r monlh. 125'1;
ttl; Rorol ERt:ZS c.oh roglotor,
s::~l42' II . - - . GaUio Hatol. UMd 3 moe~.. l71i 1'112' x.....
I
1510.
wnh tour giHI ca... and
81- with - n g. otoc:trlc, S710; 114-0854351.
Alao. tmtw ..,._ on river. All
hook..,po. CoM oflor 2:00 p.m., Largo Dook, HoJWOrd Wlkotlold
PtrMHo ~~
MIK, Exorcloo
304-m..aatl, Maeon WV.
S t - . · 4 7521.
Moving: All Dl,_nt Kl- or
46 Space lor Rent
Fumlture, S. At: W Second
STO.A-WAY mini otorogo. 5•10, Annuo, OolllpOIIo, 114-446rontlng, 34...
10.10, 10.11, 10x20. In -llovon. SOWI2.2!Ifll.
100,000 BTU HI Enlcloncy
Gao Fu...- Pumpo,
v., Au.nt~ Hoot
Priced, OIMi
Merchandise
Uood 25KW Eloclrlc F""*",
Control Air Cond•= ,_Eo-

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Fann Equipment

Cot-.

110 AC Wldo F..,. End Goad

114-2111-11117, .

-:o

tlmal•, 1~87

Household

$2,~. 14-2114117.

STRIK£ ABLOWN THE 'MIRON
HIGH PII.IC£S. SHOP TH£ CLASSIFtEDS.

Coroot I VI!IY'In S1ock SI.OO Yd
I llp 10 Pottorrw Of Kltchon
Corpot In llociL Ovor 18 Pol·
tomo Yln¥1 In StociL - • n
Corpota, 114-441-11144.

81:,

3br lrollor, rlopaoll •
ret. •
u r.q'*td. 2 112m1 on

!HIS IS YOUR

~!1'11'~11:.~-l~IS

IS Yo\JR N\UG...

--I
..

c- ..:.::Loko- ono 1010 -lol Wiiilw, drJOr,IJI:, Ill..... pold,
'12i&amp;o rnobUe home countY
wetw, Mw.,, .-.nc; 112.100, oxc.pl · -rio,
cond.
114-N-2157.
. ~=~

•

18,3ljl. :10K71-3017 (Sondra~
Services
1. . CUI._ luprM~~, 72,000
Mlloo, 18,100, 114-441-17111
Aftor 'I'- - - - - : - : - - - - -....:
4P.M.
..
81
Home
, . . Ford Eocor1 OT I Spoodl
:: ~ ~~~~~.:~.... Loldod 1___1m_p~ro:::v,.,.e,m,e...n_t_s_....;
BASEMENT
1110 Otd~Cioro s UL, v~.
WATERPROOFING
Auto, 4
, 130 K Ml~1 • P~1 UncondHionot Nlotlmo g......,..
PS, ACJ. roan Color, AMIFW tM. l.oeel
tumlehed.
Radio w1Mt1e, $3,100, IM-388-- Col 1.aoo.2117-11511 Dr 814-231'
1553.
0488 Rogoro Wotorpraatlng. EotitS Pontile Lomono 1\000 tabll8hld 1m.
Mlloo, Aul.,...l~1 Air, Co-o;
CIC
Oonoral
Homo
18,000 080, 111-251-1118, 114- Mairwenartee and Mobile Home
2511-1252.
Ropolr. For lroo ootlmoto coli
Chot,l14-lllll-6323.

,...,.nc•

ASTRO -GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

day grfl. Send for your Astra-G raph pre·
drc!lons tor the year ahead by mallrng $2
and a SASE to As!ro·G raph . CIO l htS
·n ewsp'aper. P .O. Bo~~: 4465. New York.
NY 1O:J 63 Be sure to state your zodrac
srgn

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Av?•d doing
a~y t h m g today that goes agarnst you r
oe ue r Judgments JUS! to eve n up an old
score. It would only further complicate an
ab rasrvc rssue.

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Try not 10 be

I I I I .I

Or 114-

Wed n~sday

MARCH 21

LIBRA (Sept, 23· 0CI . 23) St11ve lo be
toler ant and understandmg today rt a co· .
worker !eels hrslher rn.terests should take
pnonty over yours. Thr s person could t&gt;e
a rea l test case.

SCORPI!) (Oc:l. 24-Nov. 22) Do nol de l·
egale responstbllrties to rndividuals today
it you know they cannot be relied upon :
Th eu rrre sponsrb ilrty cou ld ro b you o f
somelhrng you want.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) Th os is
not the day to be shy and re1iring. A com·

March 22 . 1995

1

CAPRICORN [Dec . 22·Jan. 19) You

Thrs rs•espec1a lly hke ly it You assum e
aulhonly you don 't possess

• yoi4. COnfide in coyjd be very .ba~ choices .

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Qthers mognl find

e_xpect fr ie nds to give· mo re of th em·
selves tod a y tha n you're· prepa re d to

A_RIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19) Unchacleris·

you diHicult to tolerate loday rf you resis t
the will of the matonty. Don't be surprised
•f they vent the1r anger in no uncertai n
·r
terms.

troally . you might not have lhe courage of
you r convr ct ions todciy' Thoughts th at
usually st1r ybu. strongly may tail to molt·
va te vou. Aries. lreat y9urse 11 to a birth·

sive famrly rssues 'drplomaticahy. today. II
you don't, you wrll f'!lake a bad situa.tion
even worse .

an asset to your character.

'

CANCER [June 21·July 221 Co-workers

mrght nol be at y9ur best today when try·
mrghl keep !he rr hands clean today by
.
ifig
to keep secrets. Unfortunately. those
placrng the blame for mrshaps on you .

You might nol choose the easrest path •n
t~e year ahead. bu t yOu' ll e ntOY and benefil lrom the challenges you set for your·
self1The self-discipline you'll learn writ be

•

II

My brother was worrying about a very trivial matter.
"Don 't invite trouble, dear.' his wife said, "It will appear
on its own EVERY TIME."

'\'"1&gt;.1'S Rl~ . Dll. ~01! CJ\Il M 1'\'
!&gt;.T /IN~ TINIE AN~ JV'i.'\' l'IIE.1E:N9
~OU ' R!;. COI!NTIN6 I'IIONE'V

mat enal rsftc wr l h frie nds to.day . Th e · petitor mrght be eager ly awarting the
chance to knock you out of something
ur .pleasan tness thci.t may resu lt coul d
th ai rs rtghtfully you rs .
·
leave a bad rmpressron that hngers . ·

-ott,_

I

Urto. ..l M 1\\~'\' !:AJT
~M.Ill'.\1£11.
'"""
~~N 1&lt; ~~ LINt. ot-

cuf&gt;T()!AERo E.I::TS
REM.l'l \,0\,1\; .

..,,444.

Rt 35 - · SQW71.12711, .
2b&lt;
Cornplotll\'
fumlohod,

PRINT NUMBERED tETTE"RS I
IN lHE,SE SQU ARES

.

loHad, all-.c:tronlc, uc. CQnd.

POLE BUILDING IPECIA~
of Point Pluol Bulk - . S0'•45'KI'. Polnlod I~
onion ooto, - r bulbo I bod- OoiYIIumo Root, 11'•1
ding plonto. 304-171-4014.
Stool llldo&lt; . s• Mon Door.
ERECTED. IRON HORSE
Orange kitchen counter to,., 21
8111LIIE~ 1-3112·ft. 304-171-2331.
.
Roclng
5.5 HP onalno, WheiiHGn.lrw:lor, 11 t.,., 4r
$525, ef4..M~D71 or 114-~1- dock, - . laodod, -=-~
cllolno, I plOw, $1200, I
2045.
3517.

2 •

ITUESDAY

;.ROBOTMAN

44H301.
New 1111111 hand garden cultivator, eldl8 ltllldla, $60; aokl
gu dryor, $100; g.oooillno
weedeater wlbruah tuct., $10D;
4hp Roonlno tlllor, llko now,
$400, 114-QQZ-31151,

Goods ·

by /,Bing in the miss ing word$

you develop from step No. 3 below.

1117 p,_lor Rogal 27.11 Fl. Flft~
,_•aal, UL. WhMI, Awning, Roof, Air, 114+
, 14,-., ·fully 245..3111, IM-2illl-5021.
•
.
.

ThWMitrblrd,

-n, •:II"::

'

Compll!te th e chuckle quoted

0

Empire - Vying- Bevel - Rather- EVERY TIME

l:~m or 1"1ti.~· IM- .
Motor Homes
1111 Manto Corio ss Bleck, · l·l~lll""'""'aon-..-,-:T:-,.-....,..,T"'
.. ro...,l00
to-r"'011,...
17,000 Mil•, Good Concltlon, EIICirta, R•frlaentor, Stove1
Sorlouo Colloro Only, Coli lot- Fumoco • Air, Stoopo I, $1,200,
· - 2:30-6:30 114-446-4945.
114-3111.()5'12.
•
1187 Oklo 88 AoYltlo Broughom, 1HI Covarwagon 11 Ft. Self.
Auto,
Roii-Oul
loodod, ~-· ve, •••. cond., Contolnod
frantwnool dr, S4GOO 080. 304- Awnlngi Yory Oood CondHton:
Ford

•

S,CRAM-LETS ANSWERS

;:t .

1181

I

f) ~7fc:~~~i~ t ETTERS 10

"'..

111-3511.

7

e

YOU GONNA
f i&gt;IISH TMOY:
C.HtP!o,

EX

KNE J I R

6

LMvenaaeaga.
'
1115 CalobrftJ Euro-Spatt oto- Truck - - Chov., Ford, Oadgo~
Uon
wa~.
nice, and S-10, ohorl " tong. 304-ti'lli!
amltmleastette. V-1, IUto., elr, 6281.
, _ Uroo ond boHory, lpOft ,.. 7B
. '
camping
tomiiJ, 12210, IM-Mt-a1171 or
.\
·-1-2041.
Equipment
Buick Conturr, Mint Condl- I=~-=-:-'-~---~::-!
tlon, Till. Air, Cruloo, AMIFM !::~::_m~,:, ~:r:i.
Slweo, PI, PS,I14-256-1140 .
• .... 00··~ - · - •~ .,.n~~·
~·~---~~-~~~~·-~ae~·~···
11811 Morcury &lt;:ougor, V-6, '·
automo:::.,:lr, ...... Ond runo 79 ' campers &amp;

Ml: S

MCP

recreation . It you work at it, It's golf.-- Botl Hope-:-

I I 1I I I
"LL THE 0\.D I'\.O.SHR5
PI E. D 1't N&gt;lllEss 1• I'M
(',OI&gt;JG 10 li¥E LIKE
THEY Dl D
CREAU
C.I!EAT
a' o\RT !

YGPCP

OX -NMCV.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "II you watch a game , it's lun . II you play it, it's

P R I NEP

dump:
.,.,.Ill......
,

JMCMSOBP

QKVJGCPL

EPZBJMJPCVPE.

Phillip Alder 's new boo k, "Get
Smarter at Bridge." is available,
autographed upon request, for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169 . Roslyn
Htli. , NY 11577-0169.

5TM.:ol-&lt;f&gt;-NT I

xw

OSPM

'BOEMYCM'B

4 4

Rooms

'

Wesl
, Pass

try to his heart winners.
Walch for this entry-preserviog play ;
when your partner is trying .to establish ·
and run a suit.

t'-10, NO ..
n11\T tT':l

Four QaadvMr Gatorblek :
DlroclloMI VIIIO 11-. olzo 225- •

oomplotl
lronf ·
1113 Oldo CUI- ClolTII 4
door, UOII'IIIIc tra .. ~, ou;;,.;;;lon, li4C. 304-171-at52. ,
runo and loako goail, 11150, lf4. Tran.. nlaalane. \Jilad. ~ •
MW318.
·-od. g..rilntood.
1llo
1111 C.V.IIM', 114-446-1000 4150. Ablo Ia work wloomo -

cuotoon

Rtbulll In

StociL eon Ron Ev1n1, 1 . Wocloo AporlmoniL 1 I 2br, no 537-1521.
.,.t:&amp; 501 lun:etta Strw•. 304Kimball oltlco dooll 3'xl'
lll-2072 onor 5pln.
wldlolr, filing d,_ pluo 8
di"'Wertl, .ICl .. t.rd. condllk&gt;ft,
Furnished
45
$400, 114-Jlt2-2154.

5I

Soulh
I NT
2.
3NT

club trick and will no longer have an en·

.,..

Fomota Chlnooo
c,,~c= . 10111. Ae new condiUon, IW.
W Yoon
13
HouM BrOken,
8MI
..W ....._, epooll. ••._, full 1:,.~-;;;;;;;·~
· r;;;;;;;;;i;i;-AACi
114-441-4113 Alii For Chor1o,
oot~ __quortor otlck, ohlllnokt, !.tot..-11 Tranomloollono And '
Sorvtco, uooa Ancl AKC Mlnlotu,. Plnochoro For "·'""'· 114-11112-MOl
ChoVJ Monzo, out a, PI, pb, TranomloolonL Aloa, Cooh ArM~ '
Solo, Roody To Oo, 114-371-2818 tin, onglno~now 1,.1, Corrr Tranornloolono, 114-~ '
Aolcl'or-.
Oaacf work cor. ...... 304-41"'- ~221,-3_.--,---~--.,.
1011 ._" - · on ma- Naw gaa tanb, . . lon
chine.
........1 nulatora, Door mata, ·
1111 Codlllec IEidaroda, full otc. D • R Auto, Rl-. WV. 304- :
AKC roglotorocl CMw CMw P9Wif', A-1 cond., new bt'llkn, 372-H;q ... 1-100473'13211.
ill.......... block new exhaullt, aun root. 304;.ns. Plrte from 1m Ford
lomolo,IZOOIH, 5321.
lrucll, 130 angl~,
AKC

Roglotorod

1671.

. I'IUI?e onor !lpm.

50 Trocto 01 Lond 5 -35 Acroo 5
Ac~ Tr11cU 1500, $150 Down,
. ltOO Month lond
Qol.
Ill Co. Approx, 10 Mlloo F"""
Rlvor, 114-618-3482,
lt/10 ocro avor~ookl
Ohio
Rlvor 2m! - n Rt 2. ~711_581:::0:::,-:;;:"C"::--=:--=----,
Lo
Nl B
oo am On 71.15 Acroo;
3 lloo lock Of C-. CIIJ,

56 Pels for Sale
"o'"roor-m""""st'"m-d-Pot"=""""""ar--~~~•'"ng-.
Footuril)g
ro B~. Julio
Wobb. Cill
-4411-0231.
I Full 8 - Mole lhlhlzu,

~~

ThrM r - tumlohod opoi1·
5.32 ocroo, 271 I wldo ridgo top ....,., uUIHioo lncludod, 114-11112·
building otto, $11,110. AoJbum
Rd, roooonoblo raotrlctlono. Na T\ilfn Rlvoro Towor, , _ occotllolnglo- lnqulroo, ploooo. ln- lna~pplkatl- 111r 1br. HOD
lormaUon mall_. on r.qUIIIIII. ou'bolillzod .... far oldorty ond
304-675-a:W.
llondlcoppod. EOH 304-1711-

Bedrooms, 1 112 Balht, LR &amp;.
Povod Drtveway.l14 441 01135.

S"IC

...

-Y·

13 Acr• And Bam I Hou• 3

WANT 'TO APPLY f'O, A JOB•
Sr:tAitiNG P,OGrtAM·· ~ltl'llt
'IIOULP '-l~~ Tt4~

Orovol-orplpo
I
drolnplpo now In otociL Sldoro 71 · Autoa for Sale
Equlpmont, 304-11"'-71121.

Cockor Sponlot Pup~. AIIIIJ
To Oo BOth Moleo &amp; F...-,
114-446-llll2.
Blrdo, lauonoo, Torontuloo,
mlco. Floli Tonk I Pot Shop,
Z4t:S JooiiMn Avo. Point
P l -. 304-67$-20113.

Witlt' I Cllble IYIIIIble; $5,000.
304-678-2811.

Homes lor Sale

3 B.ctroom· StcUonal Approa. 1

· l&gt;fPT.

Transportation

Fomoleo, $210 Each, ~1341.

tO oc- on Rodmond Rldg.o.
UUIHiol on
Will oollol
...,.--'~o-555
--:·:c-.,.-------,-,,- I or port. SUOO por 1010. 304Vondlng: Woo1 Oot Rich a..tc:IL · 67&amp;-14011.
Will Get A StNdy Caah Income. 17 + ecne, SJII rklhte, catt or
Pflced lo Sell. 1..aoo..a2().4353.
land contract.L. Derwin area, ltohl aad Apertl'ltlftta. lllddlo!MMf, Ohio , _ hoo ovolloblo
$20,000, 114-111•-4415.
one bedroom •parlmenll• all
Real Estate
4 Acroo Corrw 01-.om T,.. ~~-btft,,

31

vi~

f:MP~OYMEI"'T

Z

""""

•
llaz.r Aa.d, Addleon
Townlhlp,tM,DOD, 114--317-71tl.

NO WONDE!l. .. r
TJ.lOV61-lT SJ.IE SAID.
•niCK OR TREAT "

low 11 S20.00. Coli TodoY- ~REE

1.7 ttnlhl acre ott Cney Rd In
Apple; Grove. Clur.d wlchy

=

TI-lE TEACJ.lER SAID
Tl-115 WAS A '' TRlJE
FALSE " TEST..

'{OU HAVE TI-llS
ALL WRON6,

,..,_

dwolllng, $41.!00 nog. 304-6"'5277 (ook tar l'l'oolanJ.

lrond OJ&gt;llnlng, ole. Con
I doyo. Mr. Loughlin, 112-

Sandra-

truck:

lotS &amp; a-reage·

TRUCK DRIVER FOR SOUTH 3br, Zbolh an "Pf""'!· 5ocrao.
EASTERN OHIO AREA. MID- Uml ... .IOITJ o Run Rd.
NIGHT SHIFT, Appllconto Muot • 185,750. Coli 304-571-22Q4.

Umolroo : Tho ONon looo bIll
boll Aooaclotlon to looldng
For Umpl101 For Tho Soooon. Allt&gt;llclnll MUll 11...61:
Laatt 17 ~Nrw Of Age. Rut•
Provided. Con\lct B1rb eM-441·
1538.

$3150/Mo. ~

lor ... w.nc~~. 2b~ epl and 2
mobile home "'" exlatlng.
Spoco romolnlng far .oddHionol

RIIM branct.. $25,100 to
t37,800: Inventory, lralnlng, fiX·

Sal1ry P11d lneu,.nce, Apply it : P.O. Box 3br houu, 2yr. old, 2.e.cr.. on
1155, Oolllpatlo, OH 45131. Dr LKtlo Slxtoon, S... holdo. 304-

~
/Salt

2 Bodroom _AJII!•·

rnMI, Aarau From Park. CA. No
Peta, Aeftrenc•, DIDoelt - ~

~..'l.'!iot; .:','":.:Tp..~!:\.1~

ecctMOrt• atON. over 2000

Exalllenl

266~4-;;;:Ti;"-i;;;;~~~

-OJ·

1 113ac mor&amp;'tMa, k»cated at Y

Own your own apparel or ahot
otora • - : foonioportOWIIr,
bridal, llngorlo1 wootomwoor,
lodloo, . .n·o, 11rgo olzoo, In·
toni/prot- · po!Ko,
dan-=-•rl....~c, rnat•nlty, or

S Bodroomo, 2 Botho, Hoot
Pump, Ou Fum~ce, 1 Acra,
411t-21S7 LD fojl.
Oo10go, Addloon Arlo, $12,000,
RN Ful~Tlmo Poonlon Avolloblo; 114-317-7217.

ctoon Prlvlng Rocord. Solid
A.,l ..l To: CLA 354, c/o Galllpatlo Dolly Trlbuno, 121 Third
Avonuo, Oolllpallo~ OH 45131.
EEO
.¢0M~REHENSIVE
BENEFIT PROGRAM.
Truck Orlvoro- tor 24' otralght
trucko, cloon drlvlng ro oord1
COL. opproprloto moillcol cora
roqulrod, noodod 7 dliJO por
wook. coli Dollilo Hill, 114-241'

-'!.·--.
·--3113&amp;.

.locbon,Ohlo,l--SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEOS. Commorclol- Homo
UnHo from tiii.OO. Lompo.

Oalll~oUI, 114 441 3MI.

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
NCOft'Untndl lhlt you do bull•
.,.. wllh ~ Jau know1 and
NOT to unci ~ thr=ren the
:'h!'~l:~~~ llovo lnnot gotod

PTJFT peop.. nMdMIIo pr~pa~r•
._beta 11 home. Clll now 1-800-

PhonO: ,,......_3101.

Buy 01 etfl. Riverine AnllqUN,

EftlclencJ tiN-.
UtiiHioo Pold Shoro Both, 107
Socand. Gall(patt., 114 ~41 Uti
Aftor7P.M.
Fumlohod
EftlclencJ,
All
UtiiKiol Pold, Bhoro Both,
tM&amp;IMo. ttl Second Avenue,

Business
Opportunity

For •nm lntoramllon ,. .l•t&gt;ll&lt;&gt;~­ 3 a.droom Subtlffll,...n In
tlon call 708-264-1600

also 01*' ftenlngs.

no. -

stngto bod
_.tum Roglot- """"' buill, 14-20
w/acceMOriH sa. 304-875- - o l d. Wiy
6042 onor lpm.
lonl-1....
STORAGE TANKS 3"000 Oollon 64
Hay &amp; Grain
UP'!IIhl, Ran Enno Entorprlooo,

Fum~

Financial

Ston floql; completely remodeled, 2
$1t41111r. FOf 111m and applica- boya: t~ont boy 40'&gt;28', raor
1~'140'
101:,
tion Into. C.lll 219-769-8301 ext bay 32'x.23'),
WV,_, tam·llpm, Sun..frt.
~$-2-=r'-,
oo.,..o_.304---:..sc-a_2·2763:--,· ___
12.26/hr. + benalhs . Carrtera,
c.. rb, aorlera, and malnt.

---

... oond, S1QO. 304-e~

Color Pug I

q-.

42 Actress

ol thlngo

5 Actress Farrow

6 Picnic peals
1 Bowling lone
bun on
8 Alley 9 Large number

Many teams,
lots of matches

1·-·--laroolo,IM-

Wlnchoolor bonot, tun . - . ,

Apartment
lor Rent

Fum~

1 Non-profit org .
2 Mohammedan
noble
3 Borlc 4 Had too much
load

By Phillip Alder

Monln 22 oula wl4d2 $121. _ , (ION oond. Aloa 1200

tlmat•l ·lnau,.nca, 24 Hr. dudte aklrtlng, atape blocU, 1
Emergency Serv~ .Call And r-r homeoWMr• lnaurance,
Sovol No Trao Too Big Dr Taa ond 1 montho FREE 1o1 rant.

Needed: A Llv•ln Home Care
Glv• For 77 Year Old Woman1 lu101,

Somo Uftlng, Room I

TEETH?

Miscellaneous

•=

OniJ $1Q25 ond S213 por
ma. Colt 1..soo..s31'3238.

DOWN

noise
35 Heroic

44 Hork lood .

•nc:•uc:r

JobS•rvlce·•t 225 6th strMt, Pt
PINUnt WV 26550. ~75--

ChM1er,, Ol'lk» at 114-885-4228
iocally or 1-800..717-4223.

AN' MAY I
KNOCK OUT YORE """'''
1 FRONT

Goods

52

1124 E. Moln Stroot, on Rt. 12_4,
Hounl: M.T.W. IO:ou
Fumlahld Efficiency Aptrtment, a.m. to. 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
Qutet C._n, Nicely Fumlahed, to 1:00 P·-:n· 114-882-2521..
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
IN- :'·: ___ _ _ _ _ _ __
Aa
llutntoo
~· 54 Miscellaneous
·
suAANCE
32 Mobile Homes
Portdng, J255111a. 6 411
' VICKIE CASTO, AGENT ·
1 ond 2 bodraom opol1monto, '
Merchandise
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DISlor Sale
COUNTS
Nm~ _. umum~. ~~~~~--~~,..--~~
UFE I HEALTH
'llll OOinraad Mabile Uu -~= -trod, no 1 otorm - . t dllhumldlflor.
8.
304-171-3021.
30UII 1257
- · 2 BA, Z Fun Sol~ I,.__. .......
1180 Wookondo ond oftor 5:00
p.m. 11-F.
18 Wanted to Do
'iii"J;;~i;;jj;~;;;;;;;d;;i,;jj, 111'18 MoMion 1417V, 2 Bod2 Ford Mator Camponr Frant
A&amp; A · ~ointing. . ,.modolng, raamo, Boot onor : n Bo s-n
ljl40., Iaiii -trlc, IP. End Conro (BIOI) 1 Fila Thunlondocoplng, otc. Froo ... AI Ill FrlondiJ R1 Rood, Dr 2bdrm.
plloncoo tum~, lounclry dorblrd And 1 Fill Eocor1 OT
tlmolll, 614-llllll-3863.
'
CoiiiM-aae.eiiOI.
roam -Hieo, . - to ochool Uko
Now,
114-247-2032
1111 Mxlu Commodo,. 2 Bed- In '"""· -lcotlolll ovolloblo E t VHa.ge ·er.., Apt•. Itt or ;:'-""=·~.:....·,.,......,.___,--.,-­
,_., O.E. Applloncoo In
2 Queen Sl111 Full-Wave Water·
KHchon And Control Air UnH call f14..112-m1. EOH.
bodo,l-53.
304-67&amp;-3341.
Fumlol!od Aportmont, 1 Bodroom, 107 SeConcf AYinw, Gal-- :M' Round obovo ground pool.
Bobyohllng In MJ HOmo, 1110 Cloyton•140110 112 Aero IDI, llpatlo, S275111o. Utllftlol Pold, Complolol Llko NoW. Muot Raterencu, Au1001ble Aatea, 2 BA, I Bot~. CA. Cothodral 814 441 4411 Aftor 7 P.M.
to appr.clate. Kaneug•,Oh. IMIf lnternted Call Caml smnh, Co!llng, 2 DOoko, Filncod Yo'!',)
441-71173
Mil• Oul 181 On Lift, 121,uuu,
614-388 0001.
All - • 3 Roam Fumlohod
&amp;14 ue 8833.
Etftcloncr,
Apor1mont,
In labr beef, Cllr ...t, . . 11wr:
Oonoral Molntona..., Polnt!ng1
DownfOMI Oolllpallo, I..._ piiJpori, pan- crlb, lablo w/~
Yord Work Wlndowo W - S B - . . .21 Acroo, St. Rt. 711'11.
Guttlfll CMianMf Ught Haullna, 14\ I Mllol ~- Galllpallo, 114i:llllrL 304-175-4548.
Commerical, Rnldlnllal, Steve: 441-730:1 Ennlngo.
BEAIITlfliL APARTMENTS AT Bonory Oporotod Botmon Cor,
1--16117.
UMITED OFFER NEW 14170 BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON - · 1100, 114-24 ..588'7.
52 W.otwood Dll_ n
01 a o- Potta~ S.wmlll don't $11115 DOWN, $115110.~- fREE ESTA::.
to $211. Wolk Ia ot-P
h.tul ,.... logo ta tho m(ll luot DEUVERY I lETUP. -.755- tram
I
mcvloL
CoU
114-441-211111. E·
55H.'
coll304-175-ll57.
quoiHauolng o_.unlty,
Protlulon.l TrM S•rv•. Mob 2 pormonfo I mavo In,
Complete Tra C.r., BuCbl: new Mx70 2-3br. Cal Au. MuF* For Rent: 2 ladroom Apart·
"*"•
Untr:~/a.01
Rio
Truck Sorvlco -so Ft. Aoooh, dock 1.aoo.281-5070.
Grande,-a.an,·l
II.
Stump Romovol, Frao Eo- till 14KlV S br., 2 both, ln-

benelll peekage. We are in ..
quol -urilly ornploJor. All
lnqulriee arw to be Mnt to WV
;
HVAC ln.. al..,_ nMded. At ..._.
thrM yu,.. ••perlence. Salllry
bi.Ad on ••perience. Contact

44

34 ExAl_oslve

37 'Fight tor two
38 Hebrew
measure
40 Region

•K 7
"K .3 2
o AK 4
•Q J 8 4 3

Merchandise

proach. Send ~, peraonil

GOod

0857.

54

Informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunltv basis.

tor-. t«*lly prolanlonal •

62 Fuss

18 Enthusiasm
63 Courts
20 D.C. lawmaker 64 Auetloneer·•
22 Paving material
word
23 Shallow veuet · 65 Mist
25 Actress
66 Unasp·lrated
67 Wife of Geralnt
Spelling
27 Type of dog
68 Overhead
31 Likewise
tralno

Vulnerable : Botlt
Dealer: South

·""

Our readers are hereby

=--=--=-=-:-;-:-

60 E•pensive

I

614 ttl ••••.

This ne~r will not
knowllngly accept
advertisam6nls tor real estate
whlcn Is In violation ollhe law.

a....

. ochool ~ onor lpm.
oponm.
far
"""'n
Mlddloparllotl-ln tho Mooon, Galllo I · IIO'x100,.-lol, , _ bod.Molgl 0001nty .... L
Full ccmplotlly
·tnoldo,
-..nta: twa.r-r tr*llng .~ , . . Darpll, ,... ldlahltn, 114lowanco far o oon o1or1, pluo ~11112::.:..:-6:7311;.::-;
ccmprohonoln
od-tlon
-ram. Conotont omphoolo a.utiM COuniJ Eototo: Hunt-

Artlot Wontod For
Scraon Prlntlng Co. 114-446- Smotn 614-38 ..9143, 614-361'
=m_o.-::--, _-:,----..,.--l
2388 AI For CMo.
Sun
Valley Nur'llry SChool.
HEINERS BAKERV ROUTE Chlldclrt
U~F Sam-5:30pm Agee:
SALES DEUVERY
2-K, Young So- Ago !Juring
NMded: an en.rg.Ch: lndt¥1:dual Summer.
:r Dip I* WeN MinwMh o jiOM drivlng rocord far imum 114-441-3157.:
raute

nMIII1II

16 Dines

17 Entreaty

SOUTH

304-1~.

I

=

COOKWARE
S.loo
Poaplo
Domonotrotlon.

Homeelor Sale

Aegt.tel'lllf

• J 6 4
'f Q I 0 5
•9J 8 7
•K1 09

~

9 6
7

'

Pl_..nl, WY, caH 304-171-1410,

31
1'onate

Comp

o I0

0

No appllencee, ~ uhold fur.
nlohlng. W mL JonlcM Rd. Pt.
All real estate advertising In ·
this newspaper is subject to
lhe Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes lt illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any Such preference,
limitation or discrimination.·

AWI~T~

0

PICKENS RIANITURE

omploymont Aprtf ond Moy.
NoododHll,
7 114-247-2114.
dliJO por - · coli
Dolloo

&lt;HCXQ.ATC 1E'1£V15100 SE;r

EAST
Q 10 3
J 8 7 6

81111 $15, 114-

Stondlrd -

Bookkeeper wHh motala~~ and
*lger 1kJII.. Molt term

'

~

Ono II Inch S,Wonlo Color T.V.
$35; Ono 9wlvol Oftlco Choir
tiS; OM Aluminum ltonn Door,
Complolo Wh~ 0 - I -

1 388 91101.

SCME lDiOT c:e.5161JW A

43 The
Pentateuch
1 Cry.of
45 Boundlell
elllrmadon
47 Indian nurae
49 Ar11tlo
4 Actor SharH
8 L81ve out
50 Sllll .
12 Roman 2,100 52 Yearning
13 Climbing plant 54 Chemical dye
14 Ins and 58 Newspaper
15 Roman I 02
noll co

'1

.

·

V!RGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Handle ab1a ·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Do not

give . You may no! know lt; but you'll be
the person to set lhe standard.
PISCES (Feb. W.March 20) You might
be surprised at how far you can stretch
your assets and resourCes today .
Success is Indicated when you make the
most of what's al ~our disposal.

YS. A ~u nder Zotkrn

I

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief: ~

New law improves arrest record
•

1\Jesda~,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

COLUMBUS - The number of domestic violence arrests and
charges have increased in Franklin Counly since October, when a
state law designed to better protect victims took effect.
.
During the first two months of tbis year. 666 charges of domesuc
violence were filed in the county, compared witb 431 during the
same period last year.
·
.
The prosecutor's office is hiring two full-time and two part-lime
employees 10 handle tbe extra worlc:, said Assistant Cily ProsecuiOr
Rob Levering.
The itew law increases penallies for ·violating court protection·
orders and requires a " preferred arrest" policy.
.·
Officers Il!.ust me charges even if the accused batterer has left the
victim's home and the victim does not want to prosecute, S8ld Lt.
Kim Jacobs of Ll!e Columbus Police Division's' patrol bureau.
In the past , many people calling to report domestic · violence
would have been referred to the prosecutor's office, and many
would have decided not to go, Jacbos said.

Guards lined up for women's wing
CIRCIEVfLLE - Interviews for three jailers at the Pickaway
County jail began on Monday, tbe first step to reopening the
women' s wing next month, the sheriff said.
.
~ ·we're moving as quickly as we can," Sheriff Dwight Radcliff
said. "We'd be happy if we could open it tomorrow."
Radcliff closed two of tbree wings of the $12.4 million jail Feb.
24, 1994, about a year 'after it opened, because of budget cuts that
forced the layoffs of 10 guards.
.
The county commissioners agreed to rehire tbree officers
because it would be cheaper than senditig prisoners 10 Ross Counly,
the sheriff said.
The women's wing can bouse 16 prisoners.
'

Libr.ary directors protest state cuts
MANSFIELD - Area libraries are being held back by state budget cuts, library officials say.
·
Libraries formerly received 6.3 percent of the state personal
income tax, but the number was temporarily reduced to 5.7 percent.
Last week, legislators said the decrease would be permanent
The difference in the tax takes ·has totaled $1 .2 million sin'ce
1991, said Joe .Palmer, director of the Mansfield/Richland County
Public Library.
.
"Therefore, we're faced with a library ·system where all the
equipment was purchased in the 1980s," he said.
The library bas eliminated three or four full-time jobs by aurition, cut part-time hours and bought fewer books and less equipment.
The cuts have not hit Galion Public Library as hard, said Lynn
Dominick, director. But she said the Galion library has been unable
to advance technologically.
"In this time when there's a lot more emphasis being put on
technology in libraries, such as CD ROM, we feel pressure 10 keep
up," Dominick said.

March 21,1995

Injuries in nerve gas attack · exceed 4,600
By MARlY AMAGUCID
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO -,.. Many riders avoided lhe subway and police n:moved
trash cans from stations today for
fear of another terrorist attack as
the investigation focused on a man
seen placing a container of nerve
gas on a train.
Tbe man. one of l)lousands of
victims of Monday's lleadly attack.
was being treated in hospital, and
police were· waiting for his condition to improve before questioning
.him, Japanese television and newspapers said IOday.
.
The death toll from the .rushhour attack climbed to eight today
with the deaths of a second subway
employee and another passenger.
Another 75 people remained in
.critical condition, officials said.
A fire&lt;lepartmeot official,
Takashi Yamagisbi, said 4,695
people had been treated and nearly
700 remained hospitalized.
The three lines Contaminated by
sarin, highly toxic nerve gas,

a

resumed operation today after mili- desaiptions of suspicious pcnons.
rary chemical-warfare experu in
News reports said the bospitalmasks and protective clothing ized suspea had been seen by sevsprayed chemicals in s!lbway ears era! people placing a plastic bag
and platforms to neutralize the gas.
wrapped in newspaper on the floor
S~. ~ nerve gas devel?Jled by by the door of a train.
the Naz1s ~World Vfar II, _1s heavWhen he got off, a passenger
1er than alf, so II IS d1fflcull to who was suspicious of the man
remove from underground subway kicked the object onto the plalform. ·
tunnels. .
It began to e!!Ut !"bite fumes and
Altbougb subway officials the suspect collapsed. the reports
i~sisted the trains were safe, the said. Two people died at that standershlp was about 30 percent less lion.
than normally seen on a public hoiPolice officials would say only
iday; the stock marke~ · government that they were investigating the
offices and many businesses were reports,
closed for the Spring Equinox
A cult-like religious group
today.
named Aum Sbinri Kyo again
All trash _cans were removed denied today it was involved in the
from 148 staUons on the three lines . attack. The group has been linked
because of fears of ~ f~llow -up in news reports 10 several mysteriattack. Some other tram ltnes also ous releases of irritating gases near
removed or covered over trash-con- its facilities and to several unsolved
lalners, but there were no reports of kidnappings.
any unusual obje;;IS being found. ·
Three members were arrested on
Tbere were no cr_edible claims Sunday on. suspicion of kidnapping
of responsibil!tY for. the attack. . a college student wbo .reportedly
However, pollee sa1d they bad wanted to leave the group.
received
30 eyewitness
. - - -about
--,.

1be Buddhist sect, which claims
10 000 members iD Japan, accused
th~ government of carrying out the
subway attack as part of a "tricky
crime' • to blame the group and
then suppress it.
The search for a possible motive
turned up at least piquant but
incooclusi ve fact : newspapers
reported today that trading in the
stock of a company that bas a
monopoly on gas mask man~facturing in Japan was 100 umes
abov~ average on Thursday and
'Friday the two trading days before
the at~
A spokesman for the company,
·Shigematsu Works, called the
surge in turnover •'visibly unnatu•
rat' • and was at a loss to explain it.
Bookstores, meanwhile, reponed §trong sales of a 1991 British
novel, uanslated into Japanese,
with an eerily similar plot to Mooday's attack. In the book "Deadly
Perfume " research(.rs 'study the
impact of a plan to spread antbrax
bacteria in subway systems.

Iowa
eliminates

NEW YORK (AP) - Former
New York Gov . Mario Cuomo
derided tbe execution of a man who
murdered two elderly people, saying the killer himself made It clear
·he would rather die than spend the
rest of his life in prison. ·
. "Thomas Grasso's words reveal
that we have let our anger and confusion panic us into an absurdity,·'
Cuomo said Monday. "He admitted that being allowed to die was
an act of clemency for a double
murderer, relieving him of fbe

relentless confmement be dreaded
morethandeath."
Grasso, 32, became symbolic of
the fight over the death penalty in
New York state. Cuomo, a deatb
penalty opponent, insisted that
Grasso serve a 20-year-to-life sentence for the 1991 murder of an
elderly New York Ciey man before
going to Oklahoma, where be faced
execution.
Cuomo lost his re-election bid
last fall to RepubliCan George Paraki, who promised in his campaign

that one of his fii'St acts would be to
send Grasso 10 Oklahoma.
Grasso's execution was "not the
consequence of my actions, it's tbe
consequence of his actions ... in .
killing two innocent people," Pataki said Sunday.
In a final written statement,
Grasso wrote, "Mario Cuomo is
wright (sic). All jurors should
remember this. Attica and Oklahoma State Penitentiary are living ·
hells."
,
Grasso· s widow. Lana Yvonne

GeEll

Page4

VOl. 45, NO. 228

· ATHENS- A man riding an all-terrain vebicle up an embankmcn~hit a tree root and the vehicle flipped, .killing him, authorities
said.
John Humphrey, 52, of Vincent, was killed Sunday near Opio
550 when the ATV fell on top of him, the Athens County Sherifr s
Department said.
.
Coroner Robert Butts ruled the death accidental.

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_.WEL..COMED AB.OA.RD - Pomeroy Pollee Chief Gerald
Rought, right, welcomed the vtllage's newest omc:er at Tuesday
nlgbt's couDCU -.ling. CouncU approved hiring Pomeroy resl·
dent Edwud Pattenoa, U, as a part·dme oftlcer under the COPS
FAST lli'BDt, part or last year's crime biD. Patterson wiD prlmarUy
serve as a foot palrohnan for the downtown area.

~reade

WASHINGTON (AP)- America's trade deficit S!lfled 68.4 percent in January as the deficit in
merchandise soared to the bl&amp;hest
level in U.S. history, reflecting
heavy demand for imponed cars,
toys and televisions-:--~--·~ . .., . .
The Commerce Department
repOrt today showed that the total
de(icit in goods and services rose to
$12.22 billion, up from a Dece.mher imbalance of $7.26 billion.
.
The report bightighted the first
trade fallout from the economic
chaos in Mexico. The United
States, which had been enjoying
trade surpluses with Mexico, suf-

ments of the Americans with Dis"Two-thirds or his time will be abilities Act.·
foot patrol," Rought ~aid.
Council then scheduled a special
Council met with Pomeroy resi- meeting for Monday, 6:30 p.m. to
dent Harry Clark wbo approached . discuss granting Clark and Barton a
cou.ncil asking for a franchise to taxi franchise and asked Clark to
operate a taxi Slirvice. Clark said he present a fee schedule at the meetand Bob Barton would operate the ing.
business as partners out of Barton's
"We want to take over at tbe
Sugar Run Ashland service station fmt of (April)," said Clark.
on Mulberry Avenue.
In addition, council met with
The move follows in the wake Pleasant Ridge and Rock Street
of an announcement by owners of homeowners regarding water probthe Blue Streak Cab Company, lems in tbe·area.
Middleport, that they will bait
Pleasant Ridge property owner
operations effective Marcb 31.
Nancy Thoene said her house bas
"I'm not in it 10 make money," not bad water for 1 I weeks and
said Clark. "I'm doing it for help- said village workers are not doing
ing the people."
all they can to fix the problem.
Clarlt, who currently drives for
"I know you've got a problem,
Blue Streak, said plans ,call for but I don't know when·we'll get it
starting out with two cars. Since done," said Mayor John Blaettnar.
the operation will be privately
·"We have been patient... going
funded and unsubsidized, the com- into three months is a little bit
pany will not bave to meet require- much," Thoene said.

Blaettnar said be would call
Thoene daily to keep her informed
on the worlc:.
About eight houses in the area
are .affected by the problem whicb
consists primarily of low water
pressure.
·
In other water-related matters,
council authorized Village Administrator John Anderson to proceed
with the replacement of a pressure &gt;
tank serving Lincoln Heights .
Anderson proposed replacing tbe
existing, 40-year-old underground
tank with a I ,600-1,700 gallon,
above-ground tank.
It will take about eight weeks to
complete the project, Anderson
srud.
·
Council also asked Anderson to
appear at Monday·s,special meetmg to update _council on progress
made .toward mstalhng new water
wells m Syracuse.
Continued on page 3

downward pressure on tile li~Jllar.
In recent weeks, the U.S. rurrency
has wmbled to record lows against
the Japanese yen and German
mark.
The blg increase in 1an uary
reflet:ted13rge ..gains In imports of
goods and services, which both hit
record highs in January. By contrast, U.S. exports fell with goods
dropping 5.4 percent and service
exports fallin&amp; 2.3 percent.
· Today' s report represented
another setback for the Clinton
administration, which has made
trade expansion efforts a centerpiece of Its foreign policy.

fered a SS63 million detidt in January, the biggest imbalance with
that country in nearly a decade.
Imports from Me:xico jumped by
10.9 percent while U.S. exports fell
by 9.8 percent as tl!e steep devalualion of the Mexican ·pcso· pri·cetl
American goods out of what bas
been America's third biggest
export IIIlll'ket.
.
Economists bad been looking
for the overall deficit to widen in
· January, but the actual jump was
far above the $9 billio11 .many analysts had been forecasting .
Analysts had worried that a bad
· trade report could put further

WASHINGTON (AP)- Lima,
Ohio, was the nation's most affordable housing market in the last
three months of 1994, topping the
National Association of Home
Builders' Housing Opportunity
Iodelt for the second straight quarter.
Lima is in the Midwest region
of the association's survey,
released Tuesday. ·Dutchess County, N.Y.. in the Hudson Valley
north of New Yark City, led the
NQnbeast region; Melbourne, Fla.,
paced tbe South; and Boulder,
Colo .• topped tbe WesL

San Francisco remained locked
·into last place on the affordabillly
list of 183 metropolitan areas, a ·
spot it bas held since the Home .
Builders be$an the quarterly surveys in early 1991.
·
The least affordable markets in
the other regions were Chicago in
the Midwest, New York in the
Northeast and El PaSo, Texas, in
the Soutb.
·The index measures the proportion of bomes sold in a market that
a family earning the median
income in that market could afford
to buy : The indd takes into con-

Four accidents, one resulting in
serious injury to a Portland area
man, were investigated Tuesday
evening by the deP.artment of
Meigs County Shenff lames M.
Soulsby. .
Billy G. Jones, 18, of Bald
· Knobs Road, was westbound on the
Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road
around 3:35 p.m. when his )990
Geo collld~ beadon with·a 1990
Hyunda driven by Mary E. Parlcer.
Parker was reportedly left of center, and was cited on that charge.
Jones was taken by UfeF1igbtto
Grant Hospital where be was
reported to be in stable condition

this morning. The Racine Squad heavy damage to the 1984 Mercury
and fire department were on the driven by Craig .
scene. Jones was transported to
At 7:-10 p.m. Roger Dent, MldVeterans Memorial Hospital by ·dteport, was northbound on State
squad and then life nighted to Route 143 near the Bailey Run
Grant from there.
Road In a 1979 Chrysler Lebaron
Debl1! L. Craig, 30, of Route 2 and struck and killed a deer tbat
jumped into the roadway.
~ine, was cited for being left of
center following an accident on
The fourth accident investigated
State Route 338 at Letan. Accord- by the sheriff's department
ing 10 the report, Craig was coming . occurred at 10:05 p.m on Sate
around the curve and looked away Route 681 just east of Tuppers
from the road, went left of center, Plains. Carl Smith, Reedsville, was
and sideswiped an AT&amp;Tconstruc- traveling welt in his: 1990 Chevrotion truck. 1bere w;IS no damage to let pickup and struck one of several
the 1981 Ford truck but there. was deer that jumped intb the roadway.
There was no ·damage to his truck.

Local briefs-......,
Search for motorcycle continues ..

Youth faces mischief charges
*All prices include
rebales to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

included.

sideration differences in property
tax and insurance rates.
The national opponunity Index
fell to 62.3 during the fourth quar•
ter from 66.8 a year earlier. That
meant a family earning the national
median income of $39,900 could
have purchased 62.3 percent of the
bomes sold during the quarter. The
national median price of a home
was $114,000.
The median is the midpoint,
meaning that half of the incomes
totaled more and half totaled less.
or that half of the homes east more
and half cost less.
•

Portland man·injured in accident

A 16-year-old Meigs County youth faces criminal mischief
charges in Meiss Cooney Juvenile Court for damaaing the mailbox
of Yost Road resident Charles Fmley.
: ·
According to a report from Sheriff Jtimes M. Soulsby, neighbors
hearing the Incident obtained the license number and a description
of a pickup truck at the scene. The driver, wben confronted by
deputies at his ~sidence, admitted to doing the damage, according
to the report.
Continued qn page 3

{

area on foot

deficit hits all-time high

The Middleport Police Deparunent ~ sear~ing for information
concerning a motorcycle reported missing earlier this month.
The green. 1995 Kawasaki KX60 was reported stolen March 11
by Richard Haggeny, Middlepon, Anyone with Information concerning the motorcycle should call the Middleport Police Department at 992-6424.

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news starr
The hiring of a new police ofticer and establishing a special meeting to discuss a taxi franchise highlighted Tuesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Village Council. .
·
Council . approved birin&amp;
Pomeroy resident Edward Patterson, 26, as a part-time officer under
the COPS FAST grant.
1be COPS FAST gran~ part of
last year's crime bill, is designed
for communities witb fewer than
50,00.0 residents . Pomeroy was
awarded $34,071 to hire the officer
_ who will primarily serve as a
foot patrolman for the downtown
area .. according to Police Cbie,f ·
Gerald Rought.
Councilman George Wright,
who serves ·as a liaison between
council and downtown merchants,
asked for contumation that the new
officer would patrol the downtown

-

Lima has nation's mos( affordable housing

V6, auto., air, stereo, 2 Dr.

Correction From Sunday's Insert

I Section, 12 Pages 35 conto
A Multlmedlalnc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy•Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 22, 1995

.Gopyrlghl1995

Grooins, was charged with firstdegree murder .in New Yo.rk on
Monday for allegedly helping to
hold down S7-year-old Hilda Johnson as Grasso strangled her witb an
extension cord from ber Christmas
tree on Christmas Eve 1990.
New evidence linking Ms.
Grooms to the Oklahoma Slaying
was developed during the past two
months, but prosecutors delayed
filing a murder charge against ber
fearing Grasso would decide to
fight his execution.

~'
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Vincent man dies.in ATV accident

l~)u1rt1ro1iit 1 §I()~CiiJIII

Pick 4:
. 1293
Buckeye 5:
17-20-22-28-33

: I I

MINGO JUNCTION - After 28 years of consolidation·, Mingo
Junction wants its own school district again.
· A group of supporters called the Hope Commi!lee is expected on
Tuesday to present a petition to the Jefferson County Board of Ed~­
cation, asking that Mingo be allowed to break away from the Indian
Creek School District.
.
About 1,600 people have signed the petition .
Mayor John Corrigan told peoplC attending a rally Spnday night
that the repeated failure of·schciollevies is evidence the consolidation is not worlc:ing.
Mingo Junction is about 130 miles east of Columbus.

Gll.BERT, W.Va. - A Wyoming Counly man was killed in a
logging·accident in Mingo County, state police said.
A tree that had just been cut Monday hit another as .it fell, breaking off a branch that landed on Michael Eldridge, 33, of Cyclone, .
said Trooper M.A. Smith in Williamson.
.
The accident remained under investigation, Smith said. He said
Eldridge worked for Shannon Logging Co. of Gilbert.
- The Associated Press

626

N. Y. governor labels execution 1ustice'

Split sought in consolidated district

Logging accident kills man

Pick 3:

ou 66-62

· ,

WEST LIBERTY, W.Va. - Clyde Campbell will retire July I
after II years as president of West Liberey State College, the school
said.
Campbell started at the school as a chemistry instructor in 195S.
He later became chairman of the School of Natural Sciences, director of the School of He.alth Professions, dean of administration and
academic dean.

Ohio Lottery

•

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i

LOOKING TO EASTER- Colorful plastic
eggs were tied to a bush on High Street In
Pomeroy Tupday afternoon by the Ebersbach
children, Ashley, left, and Amber, as their

younger sister, Autumn looked on. Over the put
sever.al yean decorated trees bave grown In popularity for the Easter season. (Photo by Charlene Hoerucb)

'Kato' Kaelin returns to witness
stand today in 0. J. Simpson trial
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A of how he came ·to be living on
detective in the O.J. Simpson ease Sittqlson's eslale at the time of tbe
admitted mlsstatemenu in request- murders.
ing a search warrant for the Simp"Little bit nervous today?"
son estate the day after Nicole Clark asked.
Brown Simpson and her friend
''Feel g£eat," · Kaelin said
were slain.
brightly, before admitting he was a
Also, it was revealed tbat Supe- little nervous.
rior Court 1udge Lance ,Ito bas
Before Kaelin was sworn in,
ruled against showing jurors a Detective Tom Lange was brieOy
·knife contained In the so-called recalled for just a few questions
"mystery envelope."
about garage doors at Simpson's
At tbe end of tbe court day estate.
Tuesday, prosecutors called Brian
Earlier, in explaining statements
"Kato" Kaelin to the stand for the that Ito had earlier described as
fii'St time in the.trW •............ _ .
"reckless," detective Pbilip VanKaelin, his blond hair longer natter acknowledged that he wrote
and shagaier than when he testified in .im affidavit that.human blood ·
at Simpson's preliminary hearing was found on Simpson's Bronco,
last summer, squirmed and fidgeted . although no tests had been conin his seat as prosector Marcia ducted to conflllll thal
Clark led him through an account
''That's true. I misstated that. I

guess, based on my experien.ce, I
believed it was buman blood, and I
think now, I still think it's human
blood. I think it's been proven to be
human blood," Vannatter said.
Vannatter insisted . that his
beliefs at the time were warranted ·
by the circumstances, since be Juid
just left a bloody crime scene.
Defense attorney Robert Shapiro
also questioned Vannatter about
another statement on the .search
warrant affidavit - that Simpson
bad taken an unexpected flight to
Cbicago the night of June 12 wben
Simpson bad actually planned tbat
trip for some time. .
,
"In tiDing out a search warran~
you indicated to a maaistrate, under ·
penalty of perjury, that you were
told that OJ. Simpson had left on
an unexpected flight to Chicago,
did you not?" Shapiro ask~.

House OKs bill tf) grant firms immunity from lawsuits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Employers often are afraid to passengers to drink alcoholic bevComplaints about lawyers and peo- glve other companies anything erages in Hcensed limousines.
pie who sue their former employers more . than employment dates
Sen . Gary Suhadolnik, Rdominated a House debate on a bill because of the threat of lawsuits by Strongsville, said he sponsored the
that would malcl: it easier for com- disgruntled former Workelll, Corbin latter bill to reward people for.
panies'to give and get references.
said.
responsible behavior . Tbe bill "People are sick and fed up
Opponents argued the bill was would not allow people to desigwith the amount of litigation that weighted too heavily in favor of nate a driver and drink· in a private
goes on today," Rep. William employers and takes away the legit- vehicle.
.
Balchelder, R-Medina, said during imate right of workers to contest
Sen. Dennis Kucin,ich, D-Cleveunfair references.
·tand, said that was unfair.
a lengthy floor debate Tuesday.
The House passed the bill, 61 "Wbat' s happening here is the
"it's class-based legislation, "
33, that wou)d grant companies · closing of the courthouse doors," Kucinicb said. "If people can ·
immun.ity from lawsuits unless it • said Rep. Qtto Beatty, D-Colum- afford a limousine, they cru1 have
can be proven they lmew the inb- bus.
· the privilege of drinking.".
mation was false, was given in bad
The bill now goes to the Senate. •• The bill passed 27.-5.
faith or was malicious.
Meanwhile, the Senate passed a
The House defeated several
"The present system protects bill giving the State Highway amendments to make the employee
poor employees and hurts good Patrol the power to enforce the reference bill more worker-friendly
employees," said sponsoring Rep: state's rules RoveminR the Capitol and one .that would have forced the
· RO!Jert Corbin. R-Centerville. .. · gro.unds, .and legislation allowing losing ·lawyers to pay tl!eir oppo-

.

.

nents' legal fees if they fail to dissuade their clients from filina
frivolous lawsuits.
Two Republican amendments
did get through, bowever.
Corbin amended the bill . to
. reduce the burden of proof for
workers filing civil rights or discrimination lawsuits. He said the
change was necessary to conform
with existing law.
Opposition by trial lawyers led .
the House to remove an .amendmentau.acbed to the but in committee that would have forced loser$ to
pay the winners· atiOmey fees and
court costs.
.
As passed, the ~IU gives judges
the right to determine whether a
lawsuit wa! frivolous and 10 force
losers to piCk up legal tabs.
·
1

.

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