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-Poineroy

Middleport, Ohio

Ruby Burnside celebra~es BOth birthday
Ruby Burnside or Kingsbury cream, punch, nuts•and mints were
Road, P~meroy, celebrated ber served.
80th birthday with a party at lhe
Guests were Kay Koehler, Linda
Carleton Church. The affair was Jones, Audra Harrison, Betsy
bosled b y her children.
Houdas'liii1~ Sandy Carl,.Gra,;e and
V•jous poems and songs were Glen Thoma. Sandy and Steve Bai·
prese11tcd. The program including ley, Lisa and Kay Koehler, Jake
an original poem writlen for her by Watson, Janet and Ed Venoy, R~
Olen Harrison; Kenny King, her and Millie Burnside, Debbie and
son-in-Jaw, singing "Never Alone"; Mike Grate, Eileen Bowers, CocUe
granddaughter, Suzan Thoma, Salser, June and Georg~ Kalatta,
reading a poem she bad wriuen June $ayre, Yvonne FJowers,
especially for her; and group Linda, Bradley, Dean and Taylor.
singing of "Happy Bittbday". Gifts, Jones, Marcie and Kenny King, Pat
Dowers and numerous &lt;Cards were Thoma.. Mary and Richard
Houdasbelt, Audra and Wade Har· ·
presented to the honored guest.
The social room of the church rison, Frances Eskew. Barbara
,
w~s dccoraied i~ orueand wliile; FieldS. ~- -·~~
'arid decorated birthday cake, ice .
Yvonne, Yvetteaild Roger

a

OLIVIA ANNE CLEEK

llM!uns.

Aira Bailey, Sandy

&lt;;arl.

lilhttie Ball, Barbara and Michelle

The c.anteen a1 Wcdlleaday's
Stall, Olen aDd Loullc Harrison,
American
Red Cross bloodmobile
Ralph and Sadie Clit, Janet and
visit
10
the
Senior Citizeos Celli«
Wayne Bcal, Virginia Dean, Eva
will
be
.served
by the MiddlepoR
Carl, Dale and Marlene Harrisoa,
Child
Conservalion
Leapc.
Brlttney and Casey lbrrisoo, Jody
Plans
wm:
maile
for sc:rviq the
and Emilee Glass, Jeff Smith,
canleen
at
the
n:cent
bullla!d$ and
Philip, James and Delores Kina.
guests'
dinner
at
the
Stowaway In
David' King, Rohen, Crlssy and
Gallipolis.
MeUssa Ramsburg, T(lll and Mary .
The SoQtb Central ' Districl
Eua Buroside, Gail and Suzan
Spring Coriferencc was 8IIIIOUIICed
,ThOOLa.
.
for April 7 at Grace United
..., .
.
.
M.etbodist Church, 'Gallipolis.
At lhe start Or his baseball ,April 7 . Regisuati011 will begin it
career, Satcbel Paige stOOd more 6 p.m. Several members plan to
than 6-foot•3•inches in heisbt but litlend.
.. .
only weighed 140 pounds.
A special meeUng was
)

Olivia Cleek
~.observes first
birthday

anooUDCCCl Cor 7'p.m. AFdi 13, to
make plans for the re~UW Apil
mcclins.
·
Guests it the recent dmner ·
mcctins wm: Harold Blackstone,
Carol Anderson, Jeff Dar.t, Jolm .
Arnold, Eloise Zerkle and Ken

• Marine Pvt. David It I'IIIII&amp;JI/II
1994 AleuDdcr HJab School piduate, reccndy reported for duty 11
the Marine Wing Support SqlllldiOD
172 at Okinawa, Japan.
He joined the Marllle {;DIJII Ia
Augusl 1994.

Vol. 45, NO. 237
· Coprrlght 111115

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- REEDSVILLE0 h i o
·. Association of Public School
. Employees 11448 meeting Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at Eastern High School.

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WEDNESQAY

-PAGEV.ILLE·~Sclpio Town·
ship Truslees will mret 6:30 p,m.
· Wednesday at the Pageville '(own· .
ship buDding.

The

POMER'or Red Cross
BIcX$ib!i!Ie will be at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center
~esday from 1 to 6 p.m. There
is a shortage of blood, said Gladys
Cumings, county chairman, in ~!fg·
ing·residents to donale.

Business groups · ·
get item added to
. GOP's 'contract'

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Presa Writer
committee.
·• 'rbe lhiut would be $3,0oo 10 SeoByPAVLSOVBRADA
WASHINGTON - The SSOO"We have always said we're not · ate candidates and $1,000 for
Associated Prea Writer
per-child tax credit for families
COLUMBUS - A key law- wedded -to the $1,000 number," House candidates.
may be getting most of the allenZanotti's group denounced lhe
maker worked with a citizens Zanotli said.
lion, but the House's GOP's "Con·
The citizens' group placed the limits as too bigb. ~ group also ·
group on a campaign-reform packtract With America" tax-reduction
ase even as his rommiuee prepared bill before the House by gathering .objecled to allowing political caupa~kage also gives businesses
104,000 signatures 011 pelilions. .
cus commitlees In the Sena1e and
10 vote 011 a proposal in the House.
much of the relief they wanted.
By Jaw, the Legislature has unlil House 10 collect money to dis"I hope we are in a positi011 10
One major tax cut and one of
pass II version that reflects:a com- May 3 10 pass lllat bill or approve tn'bule to individual candidates.
the most criticized -. elimination
That sparked the legislative
promise," Rep. Jeff Jacobson, one the group would suppon. If .
of the corporate minimum tax :i
· cbairmaD of the House Elhics .and not, jbe gro'llp can place the issue negotialions to beat up,,with Jacobwasn't even in the original GOP
Eleclions Committee, said Mon- on the Nov. 7 ballot by gathering son as the primary negotiator
proposal.
•
among the citizens' group, the Senday. "Things are moving 1,11 that another 100,000 sig'natures.
Business groups, !rom the ·u.S.
" How close we are to a.deal is ale and GOv. George Voinovicb's
dilectioo.'•
Chamber or Commerce to manusomething
t.!Jat will unfold over the adminisll'aliOII.
The committee was expecled to
facturers, realf:$tale 'agents, restauvolli on a reform bill today, and it next several days," he said.
rant owners and bankers, all are
Zanotti added thai the group
The compromise would allow
Ulcely will go to the fuU House on
strongly backing the package of
will
be
ready
to
collecl
signatures
caucus
committees 10 conlinue to
Wednesday, the Vandalia Republi$189 billion in tax cuts over five
unlil the bill clears both houses.
exist. but they would be tied directcan said. .
years. They hope an accord reached
"Iftht Senale balks oc if it's not ly to the stale polilical parties.
The compromise would limit
between House GOP leaders and
Unresolved is the issue of
donations to candidate$ to $2,500 done by May 3, it's 'full steam
moderates will give Republicans
ahead."
whether
to limit campaign spendper contributor, said David Zanotli,
the margin they need to pass the
Zanotti said the groul' bas the ing by candidales - an idea
presidenl of the Roundtable Freebill.
.
money 10 gather more stgnatures Voinovicb and Secretary of Stale
dom Forum.
The accord, a watered-down
The forum is one of the partoers 'and to wage a $2 mUiion fall cam-·, Bob Taft pushed but House !IDd
version of the Republican moder·
· .
·
Senale Republicans rejected. ,
in Ohioans for Campaigq Reform; paign.
ates' proposed amendment 10 the
Rep. Sean Logan, D-Llsbon,
bill, would prevent. the tax cuts
a coalition of groups pushing to cap · Two weeks ago, tbe Senate
from becoming effective unless
contributions to candidates at passed a bUI Jimlling contributions said be likely wou~d inlroduce. an
$1,000 per person or political to statewide candidates to $5 000 amendment cappmg campatgn
Congress later this year adopts a
'
per primary and general election. spending.
·
budget that projects a balanced
•
budget by 2002: ~- """"' ·
"We have taken what was a tax·
cut
bill and made it a balanced·
Tbe Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Los buDding
budget
bill with a tax-cut compoan $800,000 addition 10 bouse a speech lab, occupational theranent
We
have changed the funda·
py training area and a pbysk:al therapy IYJR· Tbe construction
mentals
,of
what we're dealing
is part of a shift toward more outpatient care, said Jim Linde·
with,"
said
Rep.
Michael Castle,
man, PNRC administrator, Joe Scbllllng and Johnny Wolford
R.Del.,
a
leader
of
the moderales. ,
·· of Waterford's Jerry Ball Contradlng set tbe trusses for tbe
made remarks indicating be was
' However, Rep. Glen Browder,
addition Monday. The majority ol the work Is being completed
acting as agent of lhe prosecutor's
D-Ata., dismissed the deal as "a
· by local .contractors, Lindeman added. Tbe project should be
office;
fig leaf alternative" that laclced the
completed by Ju~ he adiled. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
~o
• He was detained in one ·
threat in the moderates' original
instance and, at Lenles' order, not
amendment of permanendy revok·
allowed·to talk with bls atlbrney,
ing the tax cuts if any or a series of
Mullen's
motion
also
included
'
specific
annual deficit targels for
By JIM FREEMAN
an affidavit from a woman alleging
fiscall996 10 2002 was missed.
sentinel News Staff
an attempt to procure perjured tesBrowder and other conservative
· A former Pomeroy auorney con- . ·
timony and an affidavit trom a
Democrats bad joined with Castle,
vicled of giying drugs 10 IWO girls
Pomeroy boy who said be observed
Rep. Fred Upton, R·M!Cb., and
is alleging wrongdoing on ·the pan
·
the oldest girl asking a boy for
mQ.derate Republicans in
oll)er
of prosecutors in a_bid for release
·
Water may be restored Wednes·
"Thirteen weeks is ridiculous,"
pushing
the tougher versioo.
from prison.
drugs shortly before the i~c•dent.
day to the Pleasant Ridge Road wid Y,oung said. "And this was high
.
L
entes
filed
a
res)Klnse
Tbursr
h
lik
b
u
Despile
the agreement with
_o. Michael Mullen was convictday, stating "lhere is no basis to. Rock Slreet area of Pom~y. pend- priority ... d ale · e e to see GOP moderates. the Republican
ed of ccmJpting two Pomeroy girls,
ing the results of a walerlest
low priority." ·
leadership was not ye( certain of
support (Mullen's) petition." DurCouncil members discussed the
In other business, council:
ages 11' and 13, with drugs on
March 12 and 13, 1993. Later, the
ing trial, Mullen had "ample oppor- water problem during Monday
- • Approved lhe minutes of the having enough votes to pass the
tunity to raise the 'issues' raised in . night's regular council meeting.
March 21 and March 27 meetings bill. It can spare only 12 Republi- .
youths were treate4 for overdose at
can defections without having to
the petition," he indicated.
Pomeroy residents Dale and and lhe mayor's repon o($3,549;
nearby Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.
Nancy Thoene, who attended the
. • Agreed to readvertise for count on Democrntic votes.
· However, !Iouse Spealcer Newt
In his petition for post-convic·
Lentes wrole that officers took meeting, claim their unoccupied health insurance bids;
Gingrich,
R-Ga .. predici~d the
lion relief, currendy being considstatements from Mullen following bouse on Pleasant Ridge Road bas
• Approved the transfer of a
votes
would
be in place by
D.
MICHAEL
MULLEN
ered by Morgan County. Common
the incident at the carryout and been wilhout water for 13 weeks. , liquor license Frank Herald to SIDI
noled
that
Mullen
was
in10xicaled
v
1
Wednesday:
the
scheduled start of
Pleas Judge Dan Favreau, Mullen
To date, workers bave installed a
entures nc.;
alleges that:
out using the wordS "alleged" or at the time.
·new water line in lhe area in the
•-Gave a $500 donation to the lhe debate.
"Frankly, I think one of the
· • His prosecution was lhe result "allegedly" in reference to the incl- ,
hopes of correcting a probiem with Pomeroy Youlh League from. the
iricenti
ves we have is that if we
of personal animosity IOwards hiql dent;
His testimony was not 11eeded low water pressure.
viUage recreation fund;
by one or more of the Meigs Coun• An altempt 6on his life was . since the perpetrator, Brenda Frye, .
It is possible lhe area .may get,
• Renewed the Cablevision fran·. don't pass this we·'re not going
home. And llhink we'll get the last
ty proseculinK'attorneys; _
made at Jeff's Carry Out in pleaded guilty to the felonious water as soon as Wednesday night. chise for the viUage;
,... ,. . • Key defense witnesses were Pomeroy on l{ay 10, 1993 and that assault on her ex-husband and was said l'omeroy Mayor John W.
•Grantedarightofwayto .Titan three votes on thai threat alone,"
not served subpoenas and that one prosecutor's office did not question · sent immediately to prison, Leotes Blaettnar. ,
Energy Group Inc. roc a natural gas Gingrich said Monday.
Rep . John Kasicb. R-Obio,
wimess bid frdm .Mullen's Invest!· him concerning the incident even wrote.
Councilman Larry Webrung line crossing the Pomeroy-Mason
chairman
of tli! House Budget
gatorS due to action by the prosecu~ lhougb he bad beard remarks by the
''(MuUen) received a-very mini- said water pressure 10 the Thoene's Bridge.
·· ·
Commiltee;l
said lhe deal wilh the
tor's office;
alleged assailant;
mal sentence .,. and this last ditch bouse may still be low because the
Present were Blaettnar, Clerk
Castle-Upton
contl"ngent would
• Prosecuting Auomey John R. · • Tbe complaining witnesses' ·effort to overlurn the convictions house sits higher than the village Katby Hysell and Councilmen ·
Lcntes' made stalemenlS indicating__ s~fa\her broke into his home on s~uld not ~ ~untenanced by this waler tank.
.
___ SrollDillon, .BiD HapiODsWI, John giye outside groups pressuring
·. 'Mullen committed the ciimes witli· two occasions, threatened him and' court," Lentes remarked.
--Councilman Bill. Young apolo; Musser, Bill Young, Larry Congress for the tax cuts a reason
r;;r;::=;:=:;;
gized IO'the couple for lhe delay.
Webrung and George Wright
·
to bang together and lobby for
· deficit reduction.

Potice expert unveils.glove
·to jurors in·Simpson .t rial

BANKSONE.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Out of
lhe hundreds of pieces of evidence
in the OJ. Simpson murder case.
only one was used by both sides either to explain why Simpson
should go·. to prison for life or how
he was betrayed by a racist detec·.
live wbo pianled evidence.
Fmally, the jury got 10 see what
all the fuSJ..,bas been·about: a very
large glove crusted with dried
. blood.
Borrowing a pair of .scissors
&lt;&gt; from lhe judge, police technician
· Dennis Fung carefully cut open an
envelope Monday, displaying the
infamous rigbt·baqded leather
glove to a silent counroom and a
raptjllry. A deteclive says he found
it on Simpson's property the day
after Nicole Brown Simpson and
Ronald Goldman were slashed 10
death.
.
The presenlalion came as prose·
cutors munched arguably lhe most
important phase of their case: an
exploration of the scientific evi· .
dence that prosecuton hope will
linl:: Simpson 10 the June 12, 1994

~

One -call to apply 1-800-800-WAN (5626)
24 hours a day

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Tues·
day. regular meeting allodge.
POMEORY - FOE Auxiliary,
poduck at 7; meeting, 7:30 p.m ..
TUesday at the ball.
.

Tax break·

.---Addition

Village officials tackle
water service -problem

...

DARWIN - Bedfor(l Volunteer Fire Deparunent Comiuee, 7
p.m. Tuesday at Darwin town l!all.

.

Lentes maintains
basis' to back
Mullen's petition

.

- United States
""=~~__,.;;J,;R~t,~l~~~'
· c Guard Auxiliary
safe boating

RACINE - Organizational
meeting for reunion of Class of
.1970, Southern High School, at
Kountry Kitchen, Racin~. Thurs·
day, 6:30 p.m.

.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 een1a
A Multimedia Inc. -11'11*'

Ex-Pomeroy attorney seeking
release from pris~n sentence

.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
pon Garden Club wm meet at 7:30
Monday night at the home of
WiiUarn Morris.

•.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, Aprll4, 1995
..

Conlmittee to weigh
$pending ~egislation

Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as ·a free service .to
non·profl~ groups wlsblns to
announce meeting and spedal
events. Tbe calendar b not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
spe&lt;:lflc number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, 7 p.m. Monday in the
band room.
·

·-

hJallaar45.

actloo

' c -ommunity
calendar

- __ TUESilAY_,

""'

Lew toDlpt Ia the . . dar· •
.... WedDndaJ, partly doudJ,

•

---bard;;-·~

EASTERN- Planning meeting
of Eastern High School senior par·
ents for the dinner theater, Tues·
day, 7 p.m., bigb school cafeteria
Committees to be named.

.J

BuckeyeS:
1-14-18-22-28

',

Olivia Anne Cleelt, daugbler•of
Corbel and Paige Cleek of
Pomeroy, celebraled her fJtSt birtli·
day Feb. 23 with a party at her
home.
.
A Mother Goose theme was car·
ried out and her cake feature the
cow jumping over the moon. The
youngster was given .her own
minia1ure cake and was presented
gifts.
-------·- AUending were her parents -and
sisler; Hannab; maternal grandparents, Tom -and April Smith, maier·
nal great-grandmother Ethel Shasteen, ·palernal grandParents, Mary
Cleek-of Racine and Corby and
Jenny Cleek, Portland, Todd and
Nancy Smith and daugblers, Amy,
Molly and Maggie, Pomeroy; Toin '
and Pam · Diddle, Chad and
Racbelle Diddle, Mary Ball. all of
Racine and Qail Houlette of Hub-

- LETART" r ALLS .....:.; Leraw "·
Towliship Trustees mee\ing Monday, 6 p.in. in the office building.

4283

MU.ITARY~S

.... r-'

RACINE -: Racine!:.. 'Vill.llge
Coun-cil, regular session, 7 p.m.
Monday, Star Mill Park.
RACINE - Regular meeting
Racine Chapter Order or lhe Eastern Star Monday, 7:30 p.m. Mock
initiation. Visit by the deputy.
Refreshments·.

'

Pick.3:
222
Pick 4:

Harris.

.. .

class Monday, 7 p.m. at the Carpenters' Hall on ~ain Street.
CARPENTER. - Columbia
Township Board or Trustees, meel
7:30p.m. Monday at fire station.
MIDDLEP'ORT - OAPSE,
Local 17, 6:30 p.ni., contract ratifi·
cation meeting, Meigs Junior High ·
School cafeteria.

Ohio L~ttery

UCLA
captures
NCAA title _

Middleport CCL slated to ~rv.e ..
canteen during bloodmo~lle VLSit,

..

LETART FALLS - Letart·
PQrtland PTO. Monday, at 7 p:m.111 .
the Letart Grade School. Plans wUI ·
_ be made for a spring.carnival.

-·

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1995 BANC ONE CORPORATION _•The introductory variable rate is the "Bank Prime Rate" ~nd is in effect through August 31, 1?95, ..
after wh1ch rate w111 convert to fully 1ndexed APR. The "Bank Pnme Rate" •s -base_
d on the Pnme Rate as published by the Bo~a of
·Governors of the Federal Reserve System·for the week including the 15th day of the prior month. The "Bank Prime Rate" as of March 1, ·
1995 was 9.00%. Offer valid on lines of $10,000 or more. The fully indexed APR on variable-rate lines with an 80% loan-to-value ratio
EQUAL HOUSING as of March 1, 1995 was 10.50% APR for lines of $50,000 or morei 11 .00% APR for. lines of $20,000 lo $49,999; and 11 .50% APf' on.
_OPPDRJUNITY Jines _of $10&gt;0QQ_to i19L999 Th§. A~e"9.n variable-rate lines may incr~ase or decrease, nol to exceed 25% APR in Ohio. If your·line is
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Bank One, Alhens, home equity line customers on new variable-rate home equity lines with a qualifying loan-to-value ratio of 80%. Subje~t to credit
approval. Consult your tax advisor regarding deductibility of interest .Property insurance may be required. Dffer expires July 31,1995:
NO PURCHA~E NECESSARY. Match and Win Sweepstakes Checks available at participating Bank One localions between March 27 and June 30,
199~ while supplies last. One Bank One Match and Win Sweepstakes Check per person per day. Official rules posted at participating Bank One
locations Open to U.S, legal re~idents, 18 years of age or older. Void where prohibi!ed. Oh1o residents M may obtain sweepstilkes check or winning check codes by sending a ,self-addressed, stamped envelope to. Be1nk One Match and Win Sweepstakes Entry Requests, P.O. Box 8393,
Parsippany, NJ 07054. One request per envelope. Game ends 6/30/95. Requests must pe postmarked by 6/2/95 and received by 6/9/95.
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murdets.

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Fung continues his testimony
today.
Simpson has pleaded innocent.
· His attm;neys suggest the scientific

evidence suffers from sloppy col·
lection techniques; bad science and
a possible frame-up by police.
ln a pre--emptive strike, the proseculion addressed those con·
tentions·lbrough Fung. Prosecutor
Hank Goldberg spent about two
hours just on Fung's credentials.
Futlg testified the person who
helped collect evidence, wbUe new
at the job, was a qualified criminal·
ist and not a trainee.·
Gol~rg also offered up a sur·
prise: a photograph of a blood spot
on a gate at Ms. Simpson's bouse.
The blood, whicb prosecutors
say matches Simpson's blood,
wasn't collected until lhree weeks'
after· the murders, prompting the
defense to suggest tecbnietans wert'
either sloppy or 'the blood was
planted there. But the photo, Fung
said, was taken the day after the
mu{ders, proving it was there all
aloog and he simply missed it a1
ftrst
· Fung also went through, in
excruciating detail, the way he col·
lects and stores evidence. Court·
fOOlll spectatOrs stifled yawns and
jurors' eyes Walldued. One member of the pubJlc was booted from
the courtroqm for (alllng asleep
and ano!OOr bad to be warned twice

· DOE. pegs nuclear cleanup costs
.at billions over next six·decades
B~

DENNIS Fu.NG
to slay awake.
Tbe session picked up wlien
· Fung showed the jury the glove.
~ Fung unbagged the appaten,t
mate 10 lhe glove found at the
cc~me scene, lhe only sounds for
several spellbound mom~nts were
the rustle of the brown paper sack
and the soft chatter of camera shutters.
11 was a very large glove,
allhougb Fun~ testified be could
ftnd no size tag inside.

KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Getting rid
of Cold War-era conamination at
·Ohio's nuclear weapons plants
could cost taxpayers up to $16 blllion over 65 years, according to
new Energy Department estimates.
A top-to-bonom evaluation of
the cleanup job thai remains was
released Monday by an agency
under fire from lawmakers wbo
want to dismantle it and budget·
cutlers wbo have asked Congress
for less money than the report estimates.
Nationwide, the new estimate
pegged the cost of managing and
cleaning up weapons complex
- waste at $230 billion to, $350 bil·
lion, with 'the lower figure depen·
dent on the government achi!lving
planned Pl'flductlvity increases.
C)hio' ubare of that total would
be beiWeen $11.7 billion and $16.8
billioo from now to 2060.
Tbe Portsmouth Gaseous Diffu·
sion Plant near Piketon would be
tbe state's most costly cleanup,
estimaled at $5.5 billion to $8.7 bll·
lion.

The repon estimate,d that clean· ·· :more ,i,t's going to cost in the
ing up Fernald uranium processing ·future.
.
·
plant ncar Cincinnati would cosl
Grumbly satd lbe department
between $4.18 billion and $5.4 bil- does not expect to be able to
lion; and the Mound Plant near restore every pan of lhe weapons
Dayton would cost between $1.~ complex to p~-World War II COD·
billion and $2.1 billion.
dition, bul "lhe Fernald site in
·· Ohio we believe we will be able to
Assistant Sern:tary for Environ· return largely to unrestricted use.' •
mental Management Thomas
Current plans call for !!bout 70
' Grumbly said the department acres of the l,OSO..acre complex 10
believes lbe lower sets of figures become a permanent waste disposal
are more realistic.
site.
Even so, the cost estimates are
What happens to the rest of the
~ubstantlally higher than the Ener·
acreage is yet 10 be determined. A
gy Departmerd'~ proposed budget citizens' task force has·been exam. for cleanup and .environmental ining the possibilities and. is scbed·
restoralion, which has been around uled 10 make final recommendaS6 billion a year.
lions In July.
. ·
.
Lisa Crawford, a local activist.
Over the next five years, the said sbe is skeptical about tbe
new cleaoup estimates exceed q&lt;)E prospects for lhe highly contamiplanned spending by $7 billion. nated complex ever to be clean
Congress bas illdlcaled it wallts 10 ' enough for people to use.
cut, not increase, spending on the·
"I really don't think that's posprogram.
·
sible,·' said Crawford, spokeswoman for Fernald Residents for Envi"These are not costs we can put ronmental Safety and Health.
of until tomorrow," said Sen. John "Wbo in their rigbt mind is going
Glenn, 0 -0bio. "The more delay to want to go over there and bave a
there is on funding Ibis cleanup, the picnic?"

~

�.-

-·mentar
.

(i&lt;

Page 2-The Dally SentiMI

.

,..

Accu·W torec.

Democrats must heed Coa~ition messa_ge ·

G.ALLII'O(JS - Jury se1ectioD
W)Ufe ~~~~relldrml to aulhorides
for the trial of a Galllpolil man at a relative'• home after boldlng
accusecl 111bootlng his wife &lt;Xlll· pOlice and lberitf' s deputiel at bey
tinned into life lf.eaDOOii M&lt;Dday.
for more dian four boon.
Common Pleu Court
Police beaan searchinJ for
Joseph L. Cain met with the
White sbortly after midnight Dec. 2
during a break in tbe selectico pro- when his wife' • body was found at
ccu lllid said be aDticipab:d open- tbclr Chatham Avenue residenee.
ing argumenta (or tbe aagravaled Bollllie White died of multiple gun·
murder of Johnny White would sbot wounds.
begin this morning.
White also faces charges In
Special Prosecutor John R. 'Mason County, W.Va., for a lhoot·
Lentes said be believes White wUI ing and attempted robbery.
.
After allegedly shooting his
probably take the stand in his own .
defense. Attorney Barbara Wallen wife, WhifC rep!Wdly traveled to a
a member of lhe defe01e team, said 11at in Heltdmon, W.Va., IIDd lbot she could not commeot at this stage his cousin, Donald White, 37, in
wbed!cr lie will testify,
the r~e. The vlclim survived the
Another possible witness is shouting.
White's teenage daughter, Angie,
The murder suspe~;t also is
who was reportedly home wben the ~used of ~pting to tob sou.thsbooting occurred in the early s1de, W.Va., residence at gunpoilll.
The residents reportedly beat White
hours of Dec. 2, 1994.
White, wbo plead~ not guilty and be fled the scene.
by reason of insanity, remains in
Tn January, the Mason County
·jail lieu of a $200,000 cash bond. grand jury indicted him on three
·The insanity plea was rejected fol- charges -malicious assaul~ bur·
lowing a psycblatrlc evaluation.
glary and attempted aggravated
·
robbery. ..

=

aouse

administration ot congressional
Fa its p111. the COIIIdm Ia 411·
After lbe receot
welfare
v
111 Cout &amp;beet
Demo.crats will give more tba~ tinctly leery or the Democratic
reform debate, RepubllQall Rep.
· PomaGJ, Ohio ·
token ~· to Boll WeevU senu- Party's embraCe and W8lll$ to stay
Clay Shaw (Fla.) told cooservadve
ment.
"Even leadership sources to the right of the DLC.
Democrat NatbaD Deal (Ga.) tbat
Democrats "would still be in the
·~what got creamed (in 1992)
admit that they loolr: up Deal's wei'
"- majoritY," if they bad puibed
fare bill because they lacked any was the center of the party," says
Deal's 'work first" bill in the
alternative but Mink's, which Rep. Billy Tauzin, D-I.a., a Coali103rd Congress ~ of waiting and the DLC, DemoCrats had beuet would have positioned tbe party lion stalwart. "It was too mushy 11
IDIIil'lhls year.
·listen to the Coalition or find the bebind the SIIIIDS quo:
o
a time when the people
polariz·
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Minority
Leader
Rlcliar'd
pany
isolated
in
the
nation's
Inner
What's
more,
evety
indication
is
ing
left
and
right.
That's
Olntoo's
Publlsller
Gepbardt, 0-Mo.-o was with Deal, cities and university campuses and !hat Clinton will modify affltiD3· problem; be's always caugbl ill l!le
and to him Shaw added: " ... and extinct in most suburbs and in lhe live action only slightly ror fear of ·middle."
be.Spealcer."
South. • . - - ; . ~ .
offending liberal civil rights and
·
MARGARETLED'EW . you'd
CHARLENE HOEFUCH ·
There IS some sbgbt ev1dence women's groups, and possibly will
The Coollt.ion is distinctly "coo·
ll's a message tbalthe electorate
Controller
GeaeniMaupr
'bas been trying to pound into the tballistening bas begun. On March . create a blue-ribbon national com- servative," wbereas the DLC terms
10, Clinton invited the Coalition to mission· to consider the problem, as
Itself "progressive.'' Tauzin passes
Democratic Party's bead for 25
years now by electing GOP ptesl· lunch at the White House, praised recommended by former Urban out lapel buttons with 8 blue dog in
lEITI!RS OP OPINION 1111 welcome. niey abould be !ell than 300
the middle, surrounded by the
derns in five out of the last seven its crucial work on passing the Lea¥.:ue director Vemou Jordan.
wordS ' ~Conservative Demncrat.''
'WOI'Cb loaa. Alllea.en are 111bject to
and must be aipled witb nune.
elections and, finally, by delivering unfunded mandates bill and securi·
ere's no question that moving Blue dog Democrats have replaced
addreaa and telepbooe number. No una~ Jenen will be pubU.hed. Lenen
Congre$s into Republic1111 bands.
lies litigation reform, and asked its right is a dicey proposition for the dependable yellow ddg Democrats
should be.in JOOCIIIIII, 8ddlellirll iuua,·oot penonllitiu.
The message is: You're too liberal.
help In reforming affirmative Democratic Party. Right of liberal
is lhe middle of.lhe road, wblcb In the South, Tauzin says, because
The word repeatedly bas been ai:.tion.
In the House, lhe Coalition now proved to be the most dangerous ."we're more.discrimillatin&amp;·"
conveyed within the party to little
avail - by the Co.alitlon for a has two representatives in the lelld• place of all in 1992.
The blue dog Coalition, so far,
Democratic Majority after the 1972 ership structure. Reps. Charles · As former Rep. and DLC chair· "- has been amazinsly successful at .
debacle and by lhe Democratic Stenholm (Texas) and Collin Peter- man Dave McCurdy, -D-Okla., puts m&amp;Ximizing the power of its liny ·
Leadership Council after 1980. Bill son (Minn.).
· it, "Tbe only thing in the middle of membership, at getting legislation
Clinton ran as a DI.C Democral in
Also,
in
~
stunning
move
two
the road is a yeUoJoV line and dead o passed, and at improving its mem. By JR.L LAWRENCE
1992,
but
quickly
got
rrapped
by
weeks
ago,
tile
leadership
endoned
aDimals.
We're the political equlv· bers' chance's of surviving in dis· Associated Press Writer
liberals
in
Congress
and
in
his
own
.
the
Coalition's
welfare
reform
alent
of
road-kill."
tricts lha\ lean strongly Republican.
·limit
aDd
.
WASHINGTON- Detnoaals voted in droves against
entourage.
alternative,
authored
by
Deal,
.
Of~
members
of
the
modTbe Coalition is more tightly
Sl popular .
balanced-budget amendments to the Constitution, the two
Tbe
disaster
of
1994
was
the
instead of a liberal measure spon- .crate Ma10stream. Forum that organized than the Mainstream .
items on the Republican agenda. They have proven they' capable of
consequence, and now the mes- sored by Rep. Patsy Mink McCurdy beaded 10 the 1O~rd Forum, the DLC's congressional
. thwarting the GOP majority, but at what price?
·
~ongress, 32 are out of {)ffrce,
arm, with its own whip structure
Bob Dole sage-carrier Is a new gro'up, the ..(Hawaii). ·
House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senaie Majority
Coalition,
consisting
of
23
conserSlill, it's doubtful that the mcluding McCurdy.
and internal discipline. Unlike the
'vow that it will be a high one. Both have made raw polili ·lbreats aimed
·at Democrats IIley blame for the two failures. Gingrich, R-Ga.; bas.even
DLC, it'also is entirely willing to
.
.
.suggested Democrats have a political death wisb.
play hardball with the Democratic
· At f~nt g!J!nce it's bard to fathom a political rational for lining up en
leadersblp and team up with
masse l\gainst constitutional amendments' that have 70
nt-plus supRepublicans.
•
. port in public opinion polls.
Coalition members supported
But Republicans were re.warded rather than penalized m the last elecmuch of the •'Conttact :With Amer. lion after ~Ding off legislation. They blocked health care reforin and sevica," but are now showing their
. 'eral othe,r major initiatives late last fall. And Denlocrats are bahldng on
independence of the GOP by
·the same tiod of success.
putting deficit-reduction ahead of
"They're saying no, no, no," said Republican. pollster Bill Mcinturff.
tax cuts.
/
· "They are systematically imitating what they perceive to be .the Republi·
•
Like the DLC, the Coalition is
can behavior of 1994.''
.
.
'
The
objective
is
to
sug,gest
that
Republicans
are
incapable
of
delivering
now
considering outside fund;rals1
"-~ . ·the changes they promised. The risk is that Democrats could be viewed as
ing and creation of a reseBJcb thiuk
talUk.
.
·the reason why.
· That didn't stop 80 Jiercent of them from voting against limiting their
And, like the DLC, Coalition
own terms. Gingrich chalked up the massive Democratic opposition to
members are Democrats. They
· cynical self-interest while insisting that dozens of GOP opponents acted
want smaller government, but they
· on high principle. In fact both parties made the same arguments against
don't bate government. As Tauzin
:the proposition: essentially that it was anti-democratic and unne,essary. ·
puts it, "If a program '!toesn't
. , "If they (voters) w.ant to get rid of any of us, they can. And I might
work, Republicans want to kill it.
· add, they are doing a pretty good job of it," quipped House Minority
We
want to fix it.''
Leader Dick Gephardt. D-Mo. Until this year, be was the majority leader.
It's
attitude that the DemoGepbardt contends term limits won't be nearly as important to voters
as jobs, wages, education, health care and qime. "He should 'quit meeting .
cratic _Party was urged .to adopt a
long lime ago but dido 't. Now, it
with Democratic consultants," Gingnch retorted on bearing this.
·
faces lhe threat of being .a permaOne of those consultants, pollster Mark Mellman, said term limits
nent minority.
. 'don't even rate an asterisk when people are asked to name the most
important problems facing the country. "I'm noi convinced they're going
(Morton· Kondracke is execu· to be decisive" in the next election, be said.
live.editor of Roll Call, the newsThe balanced-budget amendme!lt to the Constiwtion got its requisite
paper or Capitol mu.)
~
two-thirds ml\iority in lhe House, only to be stopped dead in the Senate t!Y
· a one-vote margin. Opponents included ·a sole Republican - Mark Hat: field of Oregon - 1 and six· Democrats who had previously supported the
: amendment.
•.
•
· : Few Democrats argued against it on constitutional grounds. ll)stead
: many wilhbeld .lheir votes after Republicans refQsed to put tbe Social
: Security trust fund explicitly off-limits to budget-cutters.
They say that 'March comes in "Kato" Kaelin. Legal lions tore at "Tall tale: The Unbelievable the presence of tlie representation
. "There is satisfaction in the realization that we're protecting somelike a lion. As if in support of Ibis the flanks of illls pO&lt;&gt;r hippie as if Adventures of Pecos Bill," starring of a fox boa on the shoulders of a
: ihing that the AmeriCllfl people feel very strongly about,." said Senate
allegation, videos of "The Lion be were Caesar on the Ides of Pecos Bill, John Henry, Paul Bun- statue of Eleanor Roosevelt.
: Minority Leader T&lt;im Oaschle, D-S.D. "I think Republicans are just as · King" were everywbere in March: March.
yan and Babe, his ox. Speaking of · Thanks to PET A's efforts, the fig·
· yulnerable politically 'as any Democrat who may have voted against it, as
insane environmentalists, I under- ure, part of a projected Roosevelt
drug stores, department stores, con: long~ they're unwilling to talce Social Security out of lhe calculation."
stand that this movie mutates Bun· memorial, will sport Instead a
venience stores; homeless people
: : Public support 'for a balanced-budget amendment drops sharply when
.yan from the legendary logger respectable Democrat cloth coat.
were sel)ing tbem on the street.
. people are asked if Social Security, Medicare and other entitlements
whose mighty swings cleared the It's a strong victory for lovers of
Congress was promising a free
: should be cut in order to erase the federal deficit. The findings lead even
Perhaps
serving
as
a
~nd
of
a
Pacific Northwest of all foliage in a dead-animals-in-bronze every"Lion King" videofor every sena: some Republican strategists to conclude that Democrats may fend off
lion/lamb
interface,
March
found
'
New
York minute into something a where.
tor who supported its Contract
· ~ampaign attacks on the issue. ·
.
the
hot
beads
of
talk
show
America
little
more acceptable. Tbe cineSo. Will . March go out like a
With Amalea. 11uit' s not to men: · A nonpartisan researcher, polling director Andy Kohut of the Times
blaming
a
·salamander
ior
O,Oed---..
malic
Bunyan
says
things
like,
"In
Cray
supercomput~r or the C~A. ·
tion the "Lion King" knock-offs
: Mirror Center for the People and the Press, agreed with Democrats that · -· videos called "King of the damage in California. you i;ould my day, we dida't kill the land, we two creall!fCS boven_ng on ~e bnnk
. people generally are more concerned about issues like crime and wages
just borrowed from it." Paul Bun- . o~ exunc~on? Out like an mfomerLions," "The Lion Monarch" or practically see the veins standing
. lban political refonns such as term limits and a balanced budget amendout
on
people's
necks
as
they
raged
yait,
a tree-bUgger? Asking Mother c1al? Raungs for h~me shopping
:'Lofli of the Jungle." And there
.. ,
ment. ·
against
insahe
cnvirollmentalists
Nature
if be can borrow a cup of programs, are sa~gmg, becal!se
were the ubiquitous peripherals:
: ·an lhe other band, Kohut said, those reforms are extremely important tiny pi!!Stic toys, cheap stuffed 31'1i- who allegedly ha\1 refused to salamanders? Out with him!
eve11body s watc~mg the O.J. ~al.
to the independent-minded voters who supported Ross Perot in the last · mals tlrat roar when you squeeze dredge '!te Pajaro River Chan!iel _ What about fruit flies? Another In lil~e F. ~ee B:Uiey and out like .•
presidential election. And, as· be pointed out, "both parties need them ,"
them, tee-shirts, cereal bowls .. . because It was supposedly a hab11:31 March mutation was provided ~to. In like. Phil ~ and out
"Lion Kings" were falling froin fQt the rare Santa Cruz long-toed courtesy of mad Swiss scientists, l. 1~e ~at Buchanan . In l~e L~
. EDITOR'S NOTE- Jill Lawrence 'covers Congress l'or The Asso·
salamander. ThaCs not true, says · who apparenlly isolated a •'master King s seventh wife, out like Mike
the sky!
. ·
'i:lated Press.
the California Dep!ll'tment of Fish control gene" for the oye. Ever Tyson_? I couldn.' t tell J?U· AI! I
I imagine that the friendly
lawyers at Disney are even now and Game.. Hard as tbis is to since their discovery, they've been know~~. w~atever I came mas, I m
planning a counterattack against . believe, it turns out that the river . sticking eyes ·on fruit flies like gomg out I~ a hgbt.
.(To rec~1ve a complimentary
the substandard usurpers of its Oooded because, well, there was there's no lomorrow _on their
Ian Shoales newslett~r, call ].
royal franchise. It wouldn't sur- too much rain. (Of course, channels wings, legs, even their antennae'
· 800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
prise me to learn that an entire could have been clogged by a glut Wby? Because they can. .
TJte _llllimal ·rjgl!!s org!I!!Uation,
Breath, 408 Broa~ St., !'Jeyada
species may be copyrighted. Next of "Li_on King" videos. I do_n 't
know
1f
anyb'ody"s
looked
mto
People
for
the
Ethical
Treatment
of
City,
CA 115959.)
_:_: Dear-Editor: ~ - - · ,.
year
t~is
time;
we'·ll
have
10·
say,
ous or their religious rights,
this.).
,
.
.
AnimalS,
bas
remaineq
oddly
silent
(For
Information on bow to
''March
comes
in
like
11
lion,
cour· : What obligation has the public parental rights an.d most everything
If
1t
s
not
gomg
out
like
a
long-·not·
only
on
mutant
fruit
flies
but
communicate
electroolcally with
tesy
ofWaltDisney.''/1
1
to feed anybody' s children break- except looking after a child's
toed
salamander,
March
could
be
·
on
what
March
should
or
sb~illd
this
columnist
and others, con·
As
far
as
going
oui1uce
a
lamb,
fast or any meal? Our unit of soci- empty StO!Dach.
going
out
like
a
blue
ox.
Tbe
not
come
in
or
out
as.
It
has,'
howtact
America
Online
by caiUng J.
hasn't
been
m·
u
cb
to
offer.
there
Our family bad breakfast, fried
ety is the family or at least it should
omniprese111
Disney
just
released
·
ever,
voiced
strong
opposition
to
800-827-6364,
ext.
8317.)
Well,
there's
the
docile
Brian
be. What do the parents do? Go mu~h. toast and eggs, cocoa and
plenty of timber to start the day.
~ungry?
We seem to be entrenched in a
· If some breacbmellt of a child's
•
welfare state more from lack of
constitutional rights happens to sur:(ace, intentional or otherwise, parpersonal responsibility than lack of
ents get irate and run to court to
personal means.
•
.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
Actually, that's a tired melllpbor one bill could win, . that's why. It pay apd pensions, and that's lhe
plead before some liberal judge.
Gayle Price and bis newt army bave worked wbicb I've used a few times before, allowed the members to .vote for point. They don't seem to mind
Parents ;u:e protective and jealPortland extremely hard to meet the terms of isn't it? OK, bow about something o~e hopeless· proposal or another, pocketing the big P.ay raise, comtheir ~allybooed "Gontract With equally malodorous and unappetiz· Ums giving them wiggle room with ple!!J witb a cost-of-living provision, lhat the Democrats pushed
&lt;
the folks back borne.
America," including the bad parts
that run up 111e deficit.
Smell s like the same old through for them a few years ago.
Actually, one lorie Republican,
They bave passed most of lhe
!:.
Szechuan Bull to me, buddy.
Jim
Lightfoot of Iowa, last year
measures they promised in OIJC ing? How about sushi on a shingle? · Take all tbbse spending cuts.
bloc~ed a $3,473
single-handedly
By Tbe Associated Press
•·
form or another and sent them on
Take term limits. The Republi- Tlie Republicans have sliced public
COLA
bump.
That
·wp when the
Today is Tuesday. Aprll4, the 94th day of 1995. There are 271 days to the Senate, wbere, no fault of cans made a big deal out of this broadcasting and backed away at
GOP
was
still
the
•inority, of
left in the year.
.
f:lewt's, decidedly cooler beads one. ~y were so doggpne noble, housing for the poor and slashed
course,
but
it
was
a
courageous
act
.
have prevailed on many Items.
- they said, lhey would fix what's the school lunch program, but they
Today's Highlight in History:
and
he
might
be
willing
to
do
it .
On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Dr. -r.:tartio Luther King Jr. was
Two of the HI articles in the wrong with America and then force haven't touched the slabs of fat·
·
contract - limitations on the themselves to quit
back that buy them constituent loy- again.
• shot to death in Memphis, Tenn. He was 39.
And actually, eight Republicans
On this date:
'
imposition of federal mandates on
Right. No one I know wbo is ruty.
In 1818, Congress decided the flag of the United States woUld consist the states and a measure forcing familiar with the issue believes
Check ou't tbe $;!.43 billion and one Democrat did call a Pt.llSS
of 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a new star to be added for Congress to abide by some ·Of the Newt Gingrich's bean was ever in defense bud~et. There you'll find conference in March to assail the
everynewstateoflheUnion.
·
major rules it forces upon the rest the fight. He does not like the an $11 milbon iteut for military incredibly lavish pension plan, also
In 1841, President William lleruj Harrison ~uccumbed to pneumonia of us- have been signed into Jaw.
notion of term limits, perhaps purchases of exeeulive jets built by with a COLA, that Congress has
one month after his inaugural, becoming the fll'St U.S. chief executive to
So, give them their due, the new because be is into his eighth term. a Kansas corponllion. Say, isn't given itself. Rumor bas it, tbe
die in office.
.
chefs on lhe Hill have come up And so, Newt and his most trusted tbat where Senate Majority Leader Naughty Nine have ·since.been dis·
In 1850, the city oflps Angeles was il)corporated.
with some exotic creations and Newtoids came up with some Bob Dole lives? You'll also fjnd patched to study the parliamentary
In 1887, Susanna Medora Salter becl!me the fii'St ~oman elected mayor deserve commendation.
jmaginary ways to defeat teTm- $1.5 million dedicated tp the pension system in the Kyrgyz
.
of an American coliU)lunity - Argonia, Kan. ·
All in aU, though, I have to say . limit proposals.
· round- up of wild hors~s. on the Republic.
It looks like the same old
In 1902, British fmancier Cecil Rhodes left $10 million ill his wiiJ to that a lot of the swill being served
Why' do you think lhe House White Sands Missile Range in New
provide scholarships for Amaicans at Oxford University.
up to us has the smell and flavor of voted on a constitutional amend- Mexico. Doublecheck me bere, but sauteed shiitalces to me, pal.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
In 1945,50 years ago, U.S . .forces liberated· lhe Nazi death camp SOS.
.
ment, as opposed to a ·simple isn't that where Senate Budget
writer
for Newsp~~per Enterprise
Obrdruf in Germany.
. ~veryooe who bas served-i{t ~e statute? Because it required a virtu· Committee Chairman P'ete .
Association.
· ·
In 1945, U.S. troops on O~nawa encountered the fJtSt significant resis- military tnows what I am refehing . ally unobtainable two-thirds major- Domenlci is from?
(For
Information
on how to
tancefromJapanese forces.
to., I speakof,thecreamedcrud they ity- 290 votes- that's why.
Tastes like the same old shred~ommunlcate
eledronically
with
In 1949, 12 nations. including ,the United States, signed the North used to serve us on toast. Stuff on a , Wby do you lhinlc tho House voted ded pork to me friend.
columnist
and
c:on·
thl's
: Atlantic Treaty. ·
· shingle, we"talled it, or words to · on four different versions? It was·a
Take cong~essional pay and
_ ~....-___ln. } 974.):!~9n~oJ the At)l!n\lll!.~v'l !ig&lt;l Ba!te &amp;ut!L!J!~mn , ,tiJat..el~I,-Sam~ikst~, the.,'....del1bemle-taeticolhat;;splir-the"teniF"'=Jiell~the''Rqi'UOiicans • ·tact
' record J)y hJtung li1s 7T4tll round-~pper ln ~mcmnali.
~
more cultuied among us callcll iL
limit vote in such a fashion that no haven't said a damn word about 1100-8!'7·6364, ext. ••'1"-'
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Morton Kondraclce

are

.U:S

Dem·o cratic gamble

·.Local News. in Brief:
Racine retains alleys

.

· Racine will retain owncnblp or ita alleY'. vma,e counct1 mem- :
ben decided durin&amp; Mooday night's council meeting.
·
• ·

"We're not Joing to cl~ any alleys. We're not going to sell lilly
. alleys," CoUncilman .Robert Beegle said this mOOting. About I 5
people alt-'ed the JIM'II1ln&amp;.
At least 1-S unl!Sed. unmaintained alleys could have become priVale drives, Racine Mayor Jeff Tbarntoo said in a previous inter·
view with The Daily S~lllilli!l. Some carportS and od:!er structures
· have already been built on the alleys.

Middleport man falls from roof

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· A Middlepm man was unharmed after be eased a 20-foot fall :
from a roof by grabbing a drain spout Monday-afternoon, according :
· to Middleport Police Deplrtmcot reports.
••
- Mau ~II. 19, was treated-and released from Veterans Memo- ;
rial Hospital, accmling to a nursing supervisOr.
He fell from a Bryan Place roof at about 2:48 p.m. Monday,
records show. A Middlepm squad transpoltcd ~ to the hospital.

Man pleads innocent to charges

A Pomeroy man entered charges of innocent to felony char~~ of :

g~d thef~d arson during 1111 arraignment Ibis morning m the :
Me1gs C~9.:_Comm(lll Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
·.

Brian D: Jennings is accused of theft and arson in the stealing of
a 1984 Ford Escort on Marcb 3. He is currently free on
bond.
'

·ss.ooo

--Are~ Death--·- ·Autopsies confirm father
· Temps to plunge ·tonight
L. Katherine·Neutzling
killed son, then himself
.
in the northwest late in the day.
b
r
1m k'
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By The Aaoclated Preu

A blast of Arctic air will send

· tempetll\UfCS plunging to.i'eatrd or
near-record lows tonight, the
National Weather Service said.
High winds will buffet the slate
~is evening, maldng the ra~idly
.falling temperatures feel even cold·
er. Gusts as high$$' SO mph were
expected.
Snow showers were fOI'CCB$1 for
the nortbem two-third of Ohio. But
accumulations were likely to be
limited the the snowbelt area of
Geauga, Lake and Ashtabula counties, with up to five inches by
mOOting.
Overnight temperatures under
;
clear skies could hit record-low
, levels in lhe teens. Some records
· . for April 5,include 15 in Colum' . bu's, 21 in Dayton and 23 In Cincinnati.
Temperatures will 'watni up
Wednesday to the mld-30s and
mid-40s. Some snow may develop

an

The recotd-higb temperature fa
L. Katherine NeutzHng. 74, of Middleport,, died Monday, April3, 1995
this date at the Columbus weather at StMary's Hospital, HIDIIington, W.Va.
·
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station was 82 degrees In 1886 - Born March 19, 1921 In Pomeroy, daughter of lhe late Price Parter
while lhe record low was 24 in Hawk and Mary C. Wickham, she was a h9111emaker. She was a member
of the Sacred Heart CathoDe Cburcb.
936
1 · Sunset tonigbt V{IU be at 7:58
She is survived by husband, Norbert Neulzling of Mlddlepon; sons,
~;io·::!~ sunrise Wednes,day at Norbert Neutzling Jf. of Mllfion, Michael Neutzling of Pomeroy, and
Weather forecast:
Nicholas Neutzllng of Sarasota, Fla.; dau~ters. Mary Wippel of Lancaster, Pa, Bonilie Smith of Columbus, Do
. rolhy Neutzling of Bidwell, and
Tonight... Squalls and flurries
oyAof
Silver~·
gs,
Md·,
sister,
Florence Warner of Syracuse;
northeast. Elsewhere clearing. Stella S•-n..teh
""' 'Jdren
three
great-grandcbildren.
12 6 ' -1
'Record
or near record lows of 10 to andSbe
20
was.preceded in death by her three brothers, two sisters aDd one
·
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. A sonS.ervlces wt'll be' 11 a.m. Thursday in the Sacred Heart Catholic
chance of .snow northwest in the Church, with the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will be in the
=':'io~~·=:::;~_rrom the Sacred Heart Cemetery. Friends may call
3-5 and J-9 p.m. Wednes·
Extended forecast: •
day at the Sacred Heart-Catholic Church, with a vigil· service occurring at
· . ~
:45p.m.
.
Tbursday ... A chance of rain or 8 Arrangements are by the Ewing Funeral Home.
·
snow showers south. A chance of

BRUNSWICK (AP) - Au top- one or two s ots a ter
oc mg
sics confumed a man killed his 9- down the door.
year-old son and then committed
The boy was killed with a tOsuicide at least 12 hours before a gauge shotgun bias I and the father
two-day· armed standoff ended killed lhimself with a rifle, Sgt.
when police foulld the bodies.
Jobn Stukbauer said. The weapom
Medina County Coroner [lleil were found in the home.
·
Grabens tetter said the autopsies
· Lekan' s body was found
done Monday confltlDed that John slumped over tis son's early SIDI· ·
Lekan • 54 , and h'1s son, 1ohn Lekan d ay afternoon 10
· a s bower s tall .
L
k
h
d
·
d'
Jr., died of gunshot wounds to the
e an a 10 1cated 1o a po I'ICe
bead.
· o
negotiator that be wou ld n•t all ow
He said the two died 12 to 24 himself to be taken into custody.
hours before the bodies were
Three officet'l were wounded in
· 1Y·
found, or about midday Saturday to the standoff, none senous
midnight Saturday. Police had their .
Counselors and psychologists
last phone ·contact with Lekan went to Kidder Elementary School
about4 a.m. Saturday.
on Monday to help children cope
The autopsies
· penormed
_,
by the w1·th th e death o f the'It c las smate.
Cuyahoga County coroner' 5 office The flag outside flew at half-staff.

. Fri~ay ... Falr. Lows 25 to 35. ... COLUMBUS (.AP) _Indiana·
H,ighs ID the 50s.
Ohio direct bog prices at selected
. Saturday...Falr. Lows 25 to 3~. buying points Tuesday by the U.S. ·
Highs 45 to 55. .
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
,,
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to .
1.()0 higher; demand moderate.
U.s . 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
~5:
points 34.50-36.00; a few 36.2 ;
plants 35.50-37.25.
, u.s. 2-3, 230·260 lbs., country
board officials or working in 'pom
' ts 30.50-34.50.
.
1
poIImg p aces.
Sows: steady
The procedure is for a volef to
U.S. 1_3 300.500 lbs. 24.00call for 1111 application which will 28 _50; S00-650 lbs. 28.00.32.50. a
be mailed out. Once the application

Beyer said the fatal shots may bave
been l'lre shortly after an armored
car. was used to smash down the
garage door Saturday. Police beard

from

~~~ili=~35~4~~ruie':s~~l5.
Today's
livestock
·
r
eport
toSS southwest.
.
.

Abs·entee voting deadline
in Pomeroy set April 29
R'eglstered voters have unill
April 29 to vote absentee in the
May 2 Republican primary, according to Rita Smith, director .of. the
. Meigs County Board of Elections.

ntt; bVOI..UTION OF

March came in .like a lion king

M' el·gs

Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were filed recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
. Deed, Four Incorporated to
Albert R. DeWeese. ~tart parcels;
Deed, Joseph S. and Faye Marie
Tillis to P. Davfd and Carol L.
Williams, Rutland parcel;
Deed, Ernestine Price to James
Price;
Deed, John B. and Sai'ah Alice
~ Meredith to Roy L., PatriCia, Roy
· Alan 1111d Edward Holter, Chester,

Tracy to same, Salisbury;
Right of way, Doris A. and
Michael Mertz Jr. to Leading Creek
Conservancy District, Salisbury;
Right of way, James R. Jr. and
Ruth A . Priddy to LCCD, Salis-

Tuesday,
II for
computer
training. April
The title
office
will
remain opened.
Softball meeting
Women's softball league to
form in Middleport, Wednesday;
6:30 p,m. at _lbe ball park. For more

Meigs EMS runs

bury;
'.
Certificate, Anna Pearl Nixon,
Units of the Meigs CQunty
deceased, to Bobbie Smith, Edna Emergency Medical Service logged
Fiber, Geraldine Stewart, Helen . 12 calls for assistance Monday
Hummell and Faye Pederson, Rutincluding three calls for assistance.
Units resplinding included:
land, 40 acres;
Deed, Mildred M. Grate- to -·-- .. '- MIDDLEPORT
Grate Investments Limited, Rut2:48 p.m:, Bryant Place, Matt
land parcels;
Gatrell, Veterans Memorial Hospi• 1.340 acres;
Deed, Mildred M. Grate to tal;
Deed, Marvin aDd Darlene Reed
5:07 p .m ., Page Street, Fre~a
to Craig and Barbara Reed, Olive, · Gr~te Investments Limited, Rutland parcels;
McFann, VMH;
.258 acre;
Deed, Doris M. Bailey to Loma
10:02 p.m., Peru;! Street, Martha
Deed, Michael P. aDd Debra S. ·
Wolfe to ~bn aDd Tracy Damitz, A. Gillispie, Syracusei
Stewart, VMH;
Deed, Scott Raymond and
10:19 p.m ., volunteer fire
3.2 acres; · ·
. Deed, Merlin H. Jr. and Melva Pamela Sue Napper to Southern department to Poplar Ridge Road,
Ohio Coal Company, Salem, ].137 brush rue.
acres;
" ·.
POMEROY
The Daily Sentinel
Deed, Walter W. and Rose
11:04 p.m .. Lincoln Heights,
Marie Dearing to Rose Marie Dear· Gerald Shuster, VMH;
(IJSPS 213-)
ing. Pomeroy.
11:39 .p.m., West !);Jain Street,
Publi shed ever}~ afternoon:. Mooday thrQUgh
Brian Hayes, .l,fMH.
f ri day, 1fl Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio, by lhe
RACINE
.
Qblo Valley Publishin&amp; Company/Multimedia
2:32
p.m.,
State
Rout~
338, JiU
Inc., Pomeroy, bhib "45169. Ph, 992· 2156.
Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, 01\lo.
Mattson, treated atlhe scene. 1
Am Eie Power --------.32 Ll4
SYRACUSE
.
I' Membc,r:1lte Auoclaled Preu , and the 0hio
--.55
318
3:16p.m.,
squad
and
volunteer
~wspa~ Au ociation.
ou -----...--.35 tJI
fire depar!D)ent to State Route 124,
POSTMASTER:.SCnd address correcdons to
motor-veh1cle
accident, Donald.
The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy,
·
Shaffer,
VMH;
Racine
squad rransOhio 41769.
ported Susie Lyons to VMH.
.SUBSCRIPTION KATES
TUPPERS PLAINS
By Carrier or Motor Routt
9
a.m.,
Wood Road, Rose Carr,
On&lt; Week. ................................................ $1 .11
On&lt; Mon!h ................................................ $7.60
VMH.

Letters to the editor
Parents should be responsible

GOP serves -up ·the·same old stuff
Josenh Spear

few over650 lbs. 33.00-34.00.
Estimall;d receipts: 33,000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Assol:ialion:
Cattle: steers steady to. 1.00
lower; heifers 1.00 lower to 50
cents higher.
. Slaughter steers: choice 60.00·
66 60 lect S7 00-64 00
'st~u~bter heifers: d.oice 60.00.
66.00; select 57.00-63. 00·
"
Cows: steady to 3.00 lower;· all
42 00 d d ·
cows . an own.
Bulls: lower to 1.00 higher; all
bulls 49.00 and dqwn.

announc'eme'nts

Pomeroy Village is the only
bas been sigued and re!UIDed to the
location to have a .primary election . . hoard. then a ballot will be ~nt to
• this year, she noted.
.
· lhe voter. April 2~ at ~ .1s lhe
'
Republicans who qualify to vote
deadline for geumg e s1gned . Group to meet
absentee are those 62 years of age
application back to lh Board of
The Long Bottom Community
or older, anyone disabled. confmed
Elections.
Association will hold a yard and
Ballots miiSI be returned to the bake sale at lhe Long Bottom Comto a hospital, nursing facility, or
public or private instibltion; anyone ·Board of Elections Office, Mulber: -munity building, Thursday and Friin service, scheduled to be out of
ry Avenue, Pomeroy, by .Election day, 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m.
. the county, or unable to vote on
Day either by mail or by a member ,
of the voter's filmily.
Office closed Aprllll
that day due to religious reasons, as
well as those who are election
They cannot be returned to the
The Meigs Ceunty Clerk of
polling place.
Courts' Legal Office will be closed

Jan Shoales

Today in ·history

MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Opening argum·e nts
set in area man's trial

OHIO Wcatt1cr
W±sd•y, April 5

Pomero,........lddleport, Ohio
tueldev. Aprll4, 1995

.

The_Daily Sentinel

_ Pomeroy

.. .

information, residents may call
992-6890.
Barbecue announced
· Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depanmentto have a chicken and ribs
barbecue Sunday. Serving to start
at 11 am.,
D(\R to meet
Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter,
Daughters
of the American
Revolulion, will meet at I :30 p.m. Friday
at the borne of Margaret Weber,.
Rutland. Fred Crow will be a special guest.
·

~~~~~~:~~ii.~~b
time noo~:.:~!::rfc:r~:~::
· brunswick Police Chief Patrick . ed trying to check on the conditioo
Marriage licen.ses

:fhe following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
. Jud~e Robert Buck.
. .
eceiving licenses were:
William Paul Hively, 19, SYfi!Cuse, ·
and Rhonda Kaye Hunt, 17, Portland; and Brent.Samucl Myers, 18.

of Lekan's wife, Beverly, 49, who
has multiple sclerosis. Two more
officers were wounded Friday nigbt
in a failed attempt to end the standff .

Mrs. lekan was rescued by a
SWAT team Sunday morning
before the bodies were found. She
was take'o Sunday to Southwest .
General Hospital in Middleburg
Heights, where she' was treated for
mmor· iniurks and released.
'
0

~~g~~rt~~~poan~ Melody Ann

0"ISSOIUti"OnS fl'led
The following petitions for dissolution of marriage were filed last
week in the office of Larry
Spencer, Meigs County Clerlf of .
Courts:
Edward Lemaster. and 0.
Katherine Lemaster, both of
Albany, March 31; and Stephanie

jA~-~G~ru:ese=r~,~R~u=U~an~d~,:and::M~ic:ba:e:l
S. Grueser, Long Bottom, Marcb ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
30.

·We Give Mature

Drivers, Home
· OWnersAnd
· Mobile Home
OWners Special
-" ~ .. Savipgs. __ .
Our statisti cs show that mature dri·
vers and home ownershave fewer and
less costly loss'es th an other age
groups. So it's only fair to charge you
less for your insurance. lnsur~ your
home and t ar with us and save even
more with our special multi-policy
discounts.

Akm·-------..--..

()no Year ..... ,........................................... $91 .00

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Gerald
S)luster, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges April 3' - Dolores
Donahue, Sylvia Lambert, Mrs.
Brian Junghans and son, Betty
Ashburn, Brandy Call, William
Crabtree, Mrs. Rick Farlelgh and

Subsl::nbr:rt n01 dcairina to pily the can'1er may
rcmltin advance direct tO The' Daily Sentiocl
on •lhree, al~ or 12 monlh basil. Credit will be
Jlven ~ier each week.

No sub1cript! on by rfl\ll,Pf!rml.ued In .areu
where nome carrier ~ce l1 avatlable.
MAIL SUBSCaJPTIONS
llllldeM&lt;lpCounl}'
Weekt ..........................:...................... l23.92

...
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Call for d~tails · ·
.

Hospital new$

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oally .................................................... 3S Ceatl

•

Added
you stay finahcioily fit

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You·r Ba~fo-t~...
'"

Bank
FB .&amp;Farmers
Savings Company

214 EAST MAIN
· \ POMEROY.,

2t1 W•JI S.Col')d Str"l
PO IOJ&amp;26
,
,omerov OH 457Y1

992-6687
.AuiD-OrlnuiS

r..-

o,t41'992·2U6

Ufe Home c., 9\JIIf'lft•

•

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lloutt J
p 0 lol .))&lt;1

Tu()Oefs ,.Oif'll Oiol J57t3
&amp;4 4 067·316'

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~.April

'S ports

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4, 1115

The Daily Sentinel·
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SEATILE (AP)- In tbe after·

my last game being like this,"
Williamsoo l8id.
.
There has been coosidcnble tllk
that Williamson and Thurman
might be lured by tbe ricbes of the
NBA and foreao their senior sea· .

, llllllh of a blUrt ch'D!plooalrip loiS.

· The unbeaten and the winless
came together Monday night at
William D. Wickline field In
Racine and previously winless
Eastern (1-2} defeated Southern
(2-l)oaltsh~eturf3·1.
Soulhcm took a 1.0. lead in lhe
nrst wben Ryan Manln readied on

·an error, Jeremy Hill walked, and
Jesse Maynard singled. At.lhls
point, seitior Eddie Friend,--a for·
mer Southern camper, came in for
the Eagles to relieve freshman
Steve Durst wbo started.
Friend got out of the inning and
. retired the side in order the next
two frames. In the lhird Eastern
scored one run to' lie the game

the three biggest names in
Altanaas basketball waeo'tlhink·
ing about movia&amp; on.
· Not afte(~ miserable &amp;m:De·
Not after this difiicult season.
Corliss Williamson might well
be back 10 bully bis way around
beneath the Razorbacks' basket.
Scotty Thurman may yet swish
anolhcr Altanaas 3-pointer. .
Coach Nolan Rlchardson could
well be amliling solemuly back 10 .
the Hogs' beueb.
.
· And that familiu: "Oob, pig,
sooeyl' 1 could be rumbling throUgh
the MelldowllllldS Arena at next
year~s F'mal Four.
·
Although there's pleuty of time
10 change .their m~nds following
their team's 89-78 loss 10 UCL!.
Monday ~gh~ Williamson. Thur·
man and Ric:barlkon said they were
inclined to stay in F11yetteville.
"Rifht npw, the way I feel, I
wouldn rwantto leave college witb

vanity win 011 die liiOUD'I
Coach ·Dim Thom1118ld. "1bla
was a very bil win. l,asl weet. I
tbouJbt we have a touah sclledulc
coming up, and a win would sure
make a difference in this young
team. We sure gOt what we needed.

wben Michael Smitl! singled and
scored on an error and two walks
(Durst, Bowen RBI).
Friend continued to cruise
through the potent Soutbcm line·
up, gelling a couple of S-4-3 dou·
biHiays from his defense (a Kehl,
Barnett, Bailey, combination) to
belp save lhe game.
Eastern took a 2·1 lead in the
sixlll when Michael Smith singled,
Rya'n Buckley walked, and Chris
Bailey added an RBI single. East·
em'added ail other in the seventh
wben Eric Hill walked and scored
on· a Michael Barnett sinste.
.Despite a Smilh single in lhe scv·
enth, Friend coasted on for his first

.

"Eddie (friend) did a Dice job in
lhe clutch. Our defense was great
.ADd we put across the need runs.
"''bis was a good team win. ThMe
boys never quit. Brian Bowen had
three walks at the plate and lhrows
two Soulhcm guys ClJJl at the plate.
Those were two very biB plays."
1 Meanwhile, Soulhem had three
&lt;cosUy errors. •

Eagle softballers -rema.in unbeaten with 81012. wjn
Soulhem mentor was tosse~ in a
nigh~ but only one came home a disagreement over all.eged lliesal
winner wilh an unscalhed record. pitches by lhe SHS ·Pitcher. Amy
Eastern, 3.0, defeated Southern, 2· Redovian reached .on an error and
I, .in Racine by an 8·2 ma~gin Martie Holter and Radford each
Monday night in area girls' varsity walked to load the bases. Karr bad
softball action.
.
iwo RBI' s on a misplayed ball at
Junior hu~ler Rebecca ·Evans· second and Nelson reach·ed on
picked up lhe win on lhe mound fnr anolher error for lhe inning's third
Eastern going lhe complete game to . run. Patsy Aeiker walked and Crys·
fan one and walk just two, while tal Morris, Redovian, and·Crystal
allowing just six hits. Andrea Holsinger each walked home runs
Moore suffered the loss despite for a 7-2 EHS lead.
fanning . 17 Eastern batters and
Moore was tough on Eastern me
walking ten. .
·
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1 f th
f . I I .
Eastern ftook a 1-0 le.ad when res .o e way,, annmg we ve 10
a!), but Evans was just as effective
Jessica Radford led off lhe game by despite not registering lhe strike
· reaching on an error lhen stealing outs. Eastern's defense was tough
second off talented catcher Jess behind Evans' pitching wi~ severCodner, wbo beld Eastern at bay a1 big plays in lhe field ..
much of the night by picking off
Eastern added an insurance run
potential runners. Jessica Karr in the sevenlh when Amanda Mil·
reached on an error, Nicole Nelson hoan scored on a Holsinger force
singled 10 !oad lhe bases and Eyans out
.. ·
walked 10 force bome a run.
.
Eastern hiuers were Radford,
Moore fanned two of the next · Nelson, and Redovian.
three batters to retire lhe side.
Southern hitters were Manuel,
Coach Howie Caldwell's Soulh· Turley, Lisle, Codner, and two sin·
ern gals went up 2-1 wben lonna gles by Moore.
Manuel led off wilh a single; Bea
Linescore:
Lisle singled, I ess Codner reached Eastern 1 6 o 0 o o 1=8 3 2
on an error to score Manuel and . Southern 2 o o o 0 ·o 0=2 6 5
Moore added an RBI single.
WP -Evans.
Eastern broke lhe game open in
LP-Moore
a wild second inning in which lhe

.

.LISLE MAKEs TAG· Southern's catdaer Travis Lisle makes
a tag on unldentilled Eastern runner In 3-1 loa to the Eagles Mon·
day enning.

. WILLIAMS HONORED - Ryan Williams received numerous
:honors Sunday aftern9on at the Southern winter sports banquet,
·where It was announce!l .tbat be was selected to play In the North·
:south All-Star game on Sunday, April 9 at l p.m. In SL 'ohn Arena
:in Columbus. WilUam'l, w.ho was also honored for scoring more than
:1,000 points In his career, received a new basketbaU autogral'bed by
:the players and coaches.

.

Two unbeatens collided Monday

Nodaull.....boll~l•ll'"
AtAGiutCe
,

.,'

..._...... ,_
Ali,_,EDT

All•llcW L Pc:t.
Gl

1-0!Iaado ....53
X·Now York. 47
............
29
Miounl,......
21
New Jeney... 27
Pblladelpbla ... 20
Wllhl....n .. 11

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•:
I

39 33 S42

:

Atlallla .......

35 37 .416

1
U

Mllwoubo..

21 +4 .319

II

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•
:

---W LP&lt;L
x.SanAotollio . 52 11.70
1.-Utah ...... · 52 21.712

l

!.

Twins offer tickets for 50 percent discount

~

By Tbe Associated Press
Real baseball at half the regular
price. Maybe major league teams
are serious about giving ·back
SOD!elhing to the fans.
The Minnesota Twins seem to
be - for lhe opening. four games.
at least. .
:IJle Twins made a goodwill gesture to their fans, offering all tick·

'

. Openln~ day for many teams
will be Apn1.26. AL ~d NL scbed·
ules ate bemg revtsed. and the
leagues expect to bave lhem ready
by Monday·
O~ly o~e team, tbe Colorad_o
Rockies, w1ll ha-:e a new bome tb1s
season. Co.ors ~1eld was sullposed
to ~n Fnday m a gam_e wtlh the
.Pb1lhes.

DcUolt.......
26 4S .366 19112
WESTERN CONPERINCE
MlchriiiiiDh'Woa

i

MinlaOtl...
.
P•lllc DMIIOII
x-SCitt.le ...... Sl 20.718
1-Phoellil.... !I 21 .708
1-!.A. Ukcn " 45 26 ,634

~

Golden Sta~ .. 22 49.310
I.A. Cll- .~ IS S&amp;.20S
:~-cliadlcd playorr berth.

6

14
17
29

· 37

M~'•G.aet

No 1..,...1Ch&lt;dulod
TUHda7'• C..n•
Iodl&amp;r~~

,(l.

.

1/2

37 34 .m
:U 'II .479.

Portll!ld "....
Sacruncnto ..

:
:

GB

11/2
42 29..192 10 112
35 36 .493 171/2
31 39 .+43
21
20 52.218
33

Ho..to......
Deaver......
Dallu .......

•• 1.

-

24

4S .314 25 112
4S .m .
26
51 .212 32 112
53 .:ZS4 34112 .

x.cbic.ao....

'

May 21. Richard Deats, lhe team's
dii'l:ctor of ticket operations, said
lhe box office at Veterans Stadium
did a brisk business Monday.
''We always sell out our home
opener, and we're nowhere close to
selling ·out the 271h or 2j!th, sp,
whatever our bome opener ends up
being, we probably won't sell ou~'.' '
Deats said.

S 112

43 .403

X·llldiaita ..... 46 26.639
• x.O.Iotte .... 43 28 .606 .ll/2
1-CI..ei...S... 39 32.549 61/2

!

'
.,.,,
LEADS OFF FIRST • Eastern's Nancy \\;bite leads off nrst In
Monday night's softball victory over Southern. Attempting to bold
her on Is Jennifer Cummins.
.·
.

19.736
24.662

c..lr...Dlrilloll

~

.

at New York. 7:Xt p.m.
j'hlladdplllo at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Bill:tOtl at Cie~elud, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Laken II Denver, 9 p.m.
SeatUeii:Utab,Sip.m.
Ph0«1IJ.Il Oolde.D StAte, 9 p.m.
Mlnnmcta at PortlaDd, JO p.m.
Su ADtoliio at LA. Clippen, 10:30
p.m.
HoUlton at s~neo. 10:30 p.m.
Weo!neoclay'o G..,..
CIUcaao arNew Jmey,7:30p.m.
Ddrolt at Orlando, 7:30p.m
Phu.dt:lpbla ll Ollrlott.. 7:30p.m.
Clewlaad at AUaota. 7:30p.m.
Wubinaton II Indiana, 1:30 p.m. ·
New York at Mllwautce, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. IAkm • Dall•. 1:30 p.m
MoiHIIy'• Sportl 'T tauad...
., 'hto "-lotod -

BASEBALL

•

·

Amerlran Le.pe
CALIPORN\,\ ANGI!U-Aulsnot

.,.
....
;... Sports briefs-

~7uA·sKErnALL
~ OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) -The
. ;::t;olden State Warriors suspended
"::Ruard LaueII Sprewell, the team's
:'i:adlng ~. for two games with:-out pay, citing conduct delrime!ltal
::Jo the team.
::" Sprewell has repeatedly violated
:rules . prohibiting unexcused
~bsences from official team func...uons. He will miss home games
:;ilgainst Phoenix on Tuesday and
:»Jouston on Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - David
~!rison, wbo led the San Antonio
E'§purs to a 14-2 record in March,
"'was chosen NBA player of the
::Week and month. Robinson aver·
::tlged 28.2 points, 10.9 rebounds,
"'4.2 blocks, 2.9 assists and 1.6 steals
§:~U::~~;:k~ points and 13

--~ason Bowling

::league·results
....
R, {Results as of March ll}

front are (L·R} Mason Fisher, Jason Shuler. and
Ryan Williams. In back are Jay McKelvey and
John Harmon. Absent was Jeremy HilL
·

~.

.

):'· League -

Early Wednesday

·~ed

.: ·

retires·

ALEX.ANDRlA,"'Va. (AP): Bo .1 ackson, once a star in both the
· NFL and major league baseball,
: ,ay$ be bas retired from baseball ..
-i ,J"be 32-year~old Jackson u
. .quoted in today's editions of USA
: Today as saying be had been
• lhi~king about retiring for months
:as !be suike dragged on and ~e
.: spejll more time wilh _his Yamily · , .
· "It was great wbile 11 lasted,
· Jackson a free agen~ told the USA
: To&lt;lay from bis. Chicaso home.
- "B~t it's over no.w. As of April 3,
:
from
spons."
in lhe NFL with

c:0\11'1 TEl~ Till E 1: \I. \i\C!\C

I

.Hours M·F 8-5 Sat. 8·12
614-992·7161
465 North Second.Avenue Middleport, Ohio 45760

BATT ERIE S

J

The Daily Sentinel

SHOCK S
•

en, alld J01e Papcro, la!lolda. to Vaa~
QNVer of tbe Pldllc COlli Leape: Freel

Joe Uno, lnOel"-en, to Midland of the
Telta Leopo; Cllril l'owoll, De&lt;rln Doty
aad Orea Sboctey. outrleldert, and 1
ShPm St.de and C.lc. Caa:Uio, pflchm,
10 Late Blaincn or·dw Callforalll..eap;
aad J011 DeClue, Tony Fetdlelllld DeaD
Locklelt, plteht.rl: Joel Smltb, u1chrr;
ud, Allaa P.br, iDfielder, 10 ViAiia ot
tho'Callfornla J.tque. Seat Steve Peck.
pitcher, to uteided 1prlna ttalalnala
Mct.a, AriJ:. Invited Shawa BOikie, Kca
Pattnon ud o.ntl Ak«&lt;eldl, pik:hert:

Aody AIIIDIOD IDd Dnlel Alzualde,

catchus; Cartol Martine~:, loneJder; and
Steve Hoaey, ou1fielder, to JpriDJ train-

. I.,.

KANSAS CITY ROY ALS-Rcleued MIUBrownina. Tom Do:.ler, Gary
Eave, Mart Huiamann, Orludo Uod,
Ote&amp;: MalhewJ, Ke¥i.ll.SbaW lll.d RJch Sl·
moo, pitchen; Rick Allen, Ed Junk,. Do
. Kennedy, Steve Kider, Mle~~lalis and
11m Wlla~n, lofleldera; Tooy Bro.wD,
Mike Loglu, l.oDDie MacliD IDd Jeff
Schulz, outfleldu•; aod bmlo Nel1on,

TIRES

points.

.

•

''The way I feel ri~l now, lhe
NBA is lhe farthest lhing from my .
mind," ThJD1Dllll said.
RichardSon bas been rumored to
beinlineferanNBAcoacbingjob.
As always, be said be'd listen to
any offers, "because I owe it to my
family and to myself."
"I'm proud 10 be lhe basketball

NEW YORK YANKEI!S-Aula&gt;od

Mark Couper, Frut Eufemlo. Oull .......

He.rn•ndez, Dave Plvlu, Daryl Smith,
Jotm Sutherlud ud Kont Wallloc, pitch·
c:n; Scott ~pa, catcher; Mali Stark, ftrll
bueman; arid Ricb Bnwell, Bubba Carpenter, Lew Ifill and PaW Thout1il, out·
fieJdPJ, to COiu~WI of the Jntematlonal

-

i...eape; Tom Cllt« IDd Joe Lona, pitel\~

and Steve PhUiipt, outneldt:n, to Norwlcb
or the Eutetn Leapc; and AI Drumhellet
ud Blal.e Kozcnlewatl. pitcbon; aod
Shane Speucer, outfielder, to Tampa of
tbe Aoridt Sllte Leop.
•
OAK!.AND ATID..E11CS'"..&lt;Breed .
to tern with Deooil Ec:tcnley, pitcher,
OD a one-year contract. ReauitDed Jeff
1Uttlaer, Owy Hauaht, Tom f101tet1e.r,
.Don l:'wphy. Tim Poet, Rob Pi.,., Scott
A.o10, Sten Shoemaker. Aaroa Taylor,
aod Carlo• Thomas, pltehen; Oart.ett
B-eatd and Clay Ouoo , catchers; Doua
Saundeu, Mark Sobolew1kt au,d Jim
W•uonor, iDCielden; and Kash
Beauchamp, Teranee Pruler aDd Dane
Walter, oulfieldtn, to their rtiJJOr league
CaiJ1t Ia Arizooa. Rel•ed BNOC Aloia,
Marco Contteru, Jerry Cre~mer, Larry
Melton, Pat O' Briel'l, Auturo Ondveros,
Gary Paint« and Bany P.-i•otlo, pitch·
en; Tom Carcione, catcher; Mite Hant·
inl. Ketth Klmberlil'l, Ken Shambura and
Ron Wltrne)'ft', lnRelden; and Pat Bndy,

Steve DeAnaollso Stu Pcdetaoa and

1Shawa Scca, outneldcn.

'

The Light
Touch".
.Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

.

.

I

eantn

nn

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1995

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1995
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1995

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'::

I

us: Roger Buroett, Kevin RiJII IJld Brl·
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Men
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. ;$.541)'

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'

hurts."

licensing. "If they're played in return 10 wOtk under lhe terms of
NEW. YORK (AP) - A day
D to Sian Wednesday.
after signing their .uuce, baseball
President Clinton pressed the Homestead, we'll play tbem for the Basic Agreement before
replacement players were used in
players and owners are back in
si!les tp continue bargaintng and charity.''
Players also ~ for Ibis sea- tbe regular seasm. ... .
coun today..
reach a conective bargaining agree"In balancing the equities, i
son to relax restttctions on double·
A three-judge panel from the
menl
find
lhat_lhe barm 10 lhe public, lhe
2nd U.S. Circuit Court of ApPeals
"I still bope ~y can gettogelh· headers, one-day series, nigbt
players
and the NLRB compels llle
.were scheduled 10 bear arguments
er and work outlhese differences.," games before doubleheaders, West
issuance
of a Section 1() G) injuncon lhe owners' motion for a stay
be said on CBS during halftime of Coast-to-East Coast travel and lhe
tion
in
tbis
case.'
· and expedited appeal of lhe injunc·
the NCAA championship bas~et· prohibition on playing mQre lhan
The
back-to-work
deal pushes
· lion issued Friday by U.S. DistriCt
ball game. "We don't need a cloud 20 days in a row. It also is likely .
back
all
of
baseball's
business
Judge Sonia Sotomayor. The coun
l;tanging over baseball for another that games will be played on tbe
·
deadlines.
The
sides
will
exchange
order forced owners to adhere to . whole season. Tbey ought to be day foUowing the All-Star game in
salary, arbitration figures April 28
the expired labor'a~nt and led
able 10 do it. They're not that many July .
ins!ead of Jan. 18. The hearings,
SotomayQr,
who
read
a
45·
to the end of the union's 232-day
people. There's lot of money out
wbicb usually take place during theminute
oral
opinion
after
the
bear·
strike.
!here. They can figure out bow to
firs~ three weeks of February,
ing
last
Friday.
released
her
34·
Thepanel-CbiefJudgeJonO.
divide It and give us the sport
won
t be beld until May at the earpage
opinion
Monday
and
again
Newman and Judges Ralph K.
hack."
liest.
.
scolded
owners.
·
Winter and J. Daniel Mahoney The back-to-work agreement
'The
unilateral
salary renewals
"Issuing
lhe
injunction
before
isn't likely to issue a stay. But what _ provides for e~panded rosters of 28
that
clubs
made
in
early March all
opening
day
is
imponant
to
ensure
.1
bap~s if it does?
.
players (instead of2S} until May ·
were
rescinded
Monday.
If free
that
lbe
symbolic
value.
of
lhat
day
'I have no commen~" manage- · IS. And free agents allending the
agents
are
otiered
salary
arbitration
mentlawyerRobManfredsaid.
union's spring uaining camp in is not tainred by an unfair labor
this Friday by !heir former teiuns.
Manfred, in Washington, and
Homestead, Fla., may play exbibi· practice,'' she wrote.
.
!here
won' t be a cutoff date for
"Before Feb. 6. tlie players bad
union lawyer Lauren Rich, in New
lion games as a team against big
lhem
to
re,·sign. ·
.lhe right to attempt' to salvage the
York, on Monday signed an .1 1· · league clubs.
·
The
sides
didn't addtess service
page back-to-work agreement that
"If we can schedule exhibition upcoming ~eason an!! avoid the
time,
which
will
be an issue in lhe
called Cot at least 144 games Ibis · games, we will play lhem," said continuing damage to their short
ovenill
resolution
of the dispute.
season and for Spring Training Pan Judy Heeter, the union's director ·of professional careers by offering to

cotdltr.

:P's
(699}
..

STRUTS

: 19&amp;7·90 before leaving because of
:-a bad hip, which eventually ·
• :reqplred replacement surgery·
• •

~: Team standlnp - Mel~s Golf
!fcourse (59-37}, Captain D s (57·
~9), Tony's Carryout (50-46),
i'-Coun Street Grill (50-46), Chain·
, aws &amp; Roses (44-52}. Thunder
:AJley Cats (42-54), J&amp;L Insula~on
~40-56) and· Banks Construction
: (36-60).
.
;:' Team high series - Captain
:,D's (1875)
.
,. Team blgb game·- Captain

GENERAL TIRE SALES

Tony Mact·01141 lllml Akorfeldo, pltdl·

~

....
::'

~ Jackson

"I'd probably bave made the
decision within a week had we
wou," Williamson said. "But we
didn't win, so lhe way I feel now,
· I'U be back next year.''
·
Williamson was 3-for-16 shoot·
ing, scored 12 points and srabbell
four rebounds against lhe Bruins.
Thurman was 2-for-9, 1-for-7 from
3'point range, and scored five

win.
..
.&lt;
But it seemed 10 lhem lhat luck- :
switched 10 a blue and gold uni·
form Monday nisbt.
"It seemed like things were
soini! their way,''.Williamson sald.
"Tbey were grabbing all tbe:
rebounds, coming up wilh looseballj._We couldn't hardly sink tree
thrlts. We'd make one .and misS'
lheolher.''. ·
The weight of extreme expecta..:
tiol)s finally broke lhe spirit of a-··
team lhat tlirived on breaking down
lhe·oppositlon~ ··
:
. uy ou work so bart! for two:
years. You get a championship on&amp;
year and work bard enough to get
bal;k 10 the championship game,"
Williamson said. "For some rea·
son, evrzylhing feels lila: you wast·
ed lhe whole season. You've been'
lhrough so many tough breaks and·
to get to the championship game
and not be able to win, it really

I

Diu. Tom Redtnatoa....J.D. IWalnz ud

EAS111IIN CONFIRINCE

••
'

1

Scoreboard

.,.

•

.SPRING/SUMMER
.
CAR CARE
SPECIAL EDITION
..

·'

sons.

believe they'd always find a way to ·

'

DISPLAY CROWN· UCLA's Ed O'Bannoit hold• up tile
. champlonablp trophy as he and 1111 UCLA teammates celebrates
after their win Monday night In the NCAA Flruol Four champ!-...
onsldp game in Seattle. O'Bannon was· named the game's most
outstandln&amp; player. (AP}
.
.

.

.
IJOYS' BASKETBALL HONOREES- These
• b~sketball players were honored Sunday after:
:· noon at ·th~ Sot!lhern winter sports banquet. Jn

.

coach at the University or
Arkansas," bC said. "I love the
area in which I live. I plln, even if I
sbould leave, 10 live right where I
live in Artaasas. So agaill, I am lhC
basketball coach at tbt university,
and that's where at tbis point I
intend to beY
The . Razorbacks were the nrst
national .champioas since UCLA in
1967 to return all nve starters. so
anylhing sbon of anolher tiUe was '
failure.
Slill, Ricbardson insisted be had
no regrets.
"It's been· a great rollcr.o(;03Ster ·..
ride," be said, "and I'm just happy
lhey let me ride wilh lhem. As I
told our kids, you have never lost a
basketball game. I lost it."
The play~ in the icy silence of
lhe Arkansaf locker room didn't
share J?chardson: s pbilo$opbical
conclusion. Mter surviving wbat
looked 10 be certain losses in !heir
first three NCAA tournament
gillnFs, the Razorback,s came to

Baseball players, ·owners back in court

ets to the opening series against
Baltimore from April 27-30 at a
50-percent discOunt.
. "We logged in lhe nrst couple
of hours more calls lhan we bad in
the last couple of weeks cmil'
bin~· s spokesman Dave St.
Pet said: ·
be Philadelphia Pbilles are
offering discounted tickets until

'

_Bruins ,trip ~azorbacks 89-78 to cqp t_
i tle .

1\lead.y, Aprll4, 1115
Page 4

'

The b.i1y Sentinel-Page 5

PomeroY.,....Idclleport, Ohio

•Ali pn"ces lnclud&amp;

t~tes 10 dealer. ·

Taxes &amp; fees not
Included

'
•

�•

'
Page 6

The Dally&amp;tntinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

Buying ANew ·or Used Car·
· SHOU.Lt BE FUN!!
It ~I Be If You Shop

Honor rolls for sc.b ools in the sor.
Rutland Elementary
Lee, Ross Well.
Meigs Local Scbool Dislrict for !be
Third Grade: Ashley Payne,
First. Grade: Sara Allbaugh,
Third Grade: Johnatbon Bobb,
third nine weeks grading period Erica l!.oole, Heidi Gilmore, all Joshua Bolin, Joe Bush, Valerie . Nathan Brickles, Peter Kling,'Tia
have been announced.
A's; Amber Aldcnon, Jamie Chap- Diddle, carita Gardner, Samantha Pratt, Derrik Randolph, Jessica ·
mao, Karle Childs, Jeremy Dingey, Oilben, JotY Haning, Allan ijub- Rosier, Jonlan SIOUJ.•
Students earning a grade of "B"
or above in alllbeir subjects to be Ashely Holley, Ruby Stewart, bard, Adalll Humphreys. Brittany '
Fourth Grade: Marc Ba!r·
listed on lbe honor roll are as ColAllgic Smilb. Kindra Snouffer, SIC- Hysell, Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Taryn . Dawna Brumfiel4, Jonathan· Old·
lows:
fan Stamper, Rhonda Wagner, LenteS, Michael McDonald, Jame- die, Juicy Eblin, Jon Halar, Cbr1s
BradburyEiementary
David Boyd, Page Bradbury, sonRalnes,AndrewSrump.
Haning, Megban Haf!~CS, Sbawna ·
Kinder~anen: Shauna Clark,
Kenny Carsey, Candace Casey,
Second Grade: Kelby Brown, Manley, Heather Rifne. Jason
Kayla u uule, Faith Dye, Charlie
Jennifer Dunn, John Roush, Ryan Justin Coleman, Shane Collins, Rosier, Cory VanReetb, Melody
. . . .
Eblin, Michael Felts, Ashley King, ·. Fraizer, Tyler French, Jessica How- ·Joann Denney, Kris Ginther, Court· · Felts..
Bobbi Lee, Brandon "Pearson,
ell, Kim Johnson, · Jonathall ney Nitz - Adam Snowden, Ryan
Fifth Grade: Delaila.E1cbinger,
Bradley Ramsburg, Travis Rose- Larkins.
· Varian, Renee Bailey, Ashley Bay· Levi,Gillette, Mindy O'Dell.
Founb Grade: Abram Sayre, . la,r, Jarrid Eskew, Madison King,
Sixlb Grade: \VbiiJ\ey 1\Sbley,
bc!:ry,Jennifer Smilb.-Kristin Trad·
er, Codie Turner.
Elizabeth Wilfong, all A's; Lu~y Donavan Richmond, Miranda Sbandi Bobb; Sarah CliffonJ,.Sandi
Fifth Grade: Monica Moon,
Howerton, Andy Hysell, ~Ill Simpkins, Matthew Smi\h, Kim- Gilkey, Brandy Grabam, Abby
• . Tara. Wyatt, all A's; Heather Fry,
Kl!uff, Anl00: Lee, Tony .Marunez, ber.ij Tayl~r. Belb Williams.
Harris, Carson Midkiff.
,
.
Come Hoover. .
J
Heather Phalm, Hannah Wool~d, , • Third Grade: Tyler Barnes. Mel1s Junior High
Sixlb Grade: Srep~!e Wigal,
Sara Casto, CaJT!e Darst, Casey ..- fames Fitcbpatrick, Randall HudSeventh Grade: Megan Avis,
Carrie Lightfoot, at( A's; ]ason
Dunfee, Zacary Gilkey, Cole Hag· son Nicole McDaniel Christina Orion Bar(ett, Steven Beha,
• Cundiff, tan Story, Rachel Taylor,
gerty, ·Broo'ks J~hn~on, A'!la.nda Milier Amanda Priddy Melissa Bethany Boyles, Sta9 Brew~r,
-l:&gt;erek Johnson.
Loshbough, N1kkle Phllhps, Ricbrn' d, Miranda Ste :U.., C
Beverly Burdette, Melissa DaviS,
LD: Stephanie Burdette, Tim
Stephanie Story-Schwab, Brandy Vau..: Jamilba Willf:rd
orey Lee Ann Dill, Brant Dixon, Phillip
Heldreth, Ty Gon~alez, ~s Self.
Shea, Josl!ua Simpson. Tashia
Fourlb Gradel Ashley
Erwin, ~eather Ferrell, Marjorie
Stewan, Angel ~t011e.• Emily Story, Brook Bolin, Melissa Cremeans, Halar; Mmdy Halley. Brooke Han,
. DH:. c;onn1e W1llet, Jodi
Bobby Kuhn.
Hollie Ferrell. Crystal Jacks, Jessi- Erick Johnson, Ste.phanle .Kopec,
Reeves. M1sti Clarlc. .
HarrlsonvlUe Elementary
Pomeroy Elementary
ca Justice Mallory King Racbael Tangy Lauderm1lt, N1cbolas
'
First Grade: Miranda Beha,
Kindergarten: Megban Clelland, Morris Allison William~n
Michael, Amanda Miller, Patty
~ Racbael (lardntir, J.8. King, Nic- Ashley DeMoss, Heather Elam,
Fifth Grade· Bradley ·Baylor
Nally, Ryan ~ratt, David RamsJustin Harper, Stephanie Hysell, Amber Ellis, &lt;J$iel Jenkins, Rymi jlurg! Th011l8!! R~sh, Ashley~~
hole Mull. KJ::istal Norris, William
Taylor, Kl!yle1gh W~d.
T~morrow pawn Nonnan, Nate Kauff, Darrick Knapp, Johnny Jenmf~r S~plm, Kyle SmldJ!ie,
. Second Grade: M1randa Casteel,
Riddle, Christopher Runyon, Bran- Lentes Amber Snowden
Jeremiah Sm1th, Shannon Sm1th,
Roger Davidson, Jodi Donahue,
don. ~hull, Caitlin W!lliamso~.
Sixlb Grade: Derrick Bolin, Ali- Josh S9rden, James Stanley, WesPeggy Duff, Brandon Fackler,
Cwlia Core, Heather Fmk, Dusun son Hays B J Kennedy Beatrice ley Thoene, Shawn Workman,
:rra_vis Hayes, Carl Noe.l, Amy
Lyons,· Jerry Pullins, )on-Nathan Morgan, C~l· Rickard, Elizabeth SteJ?h~ie Young.
·.
Stemme.tz, q!luley Williamson,
Stewart, Zachary Arms, ~ark Smith.
.
.
E~ghth Grade: Lacy Banks,
Jenna ~ilt.
.
Cozart, Evan Dunn; Andrew GarLDPrimary: Carrie Walker.
Jere~mh. Bentley, Venessa
Thud Grade: Joshua Allb!lllse,
nes, Kayla Grover, Courtney
LD Intermediate· James Craw- Blevms. Elizabeth Call, Ben Crane,
Tasha Boring, Kevin•Butcher,
Haggy, Craig Hensley, Casey Hub- ford, Lee Fitzpatrick: John Kessen, Mells~a Darnell, John Davidson.
bard, Sarah Jeffers, Scotty Musser, Erick Payne
·
.
Patnc1a Dav1s, Stoney Day, Sara
Maegan Dodson, James Hemsley,
Tiffany Herdman, Courtney
Dru Reed, Hollie Richard, Brimee
DH ~ary· Allen Caldwell
Dean, Robert Diddle, Meredith
Kennedy, Sarab Lee, Mark Maue,
Sauters, Dakdta Smith, Wesley Marcus Ward . ·
' Felts, Randy Hanning, Melissa
Bo.bbi Na~per, Nathan Stearns,
Wrigh~ John Baker, Michael BlaetDH lnte~iate: Debbie Bark- Holman, Virginia Howerron, Marc
•
tnar, Ryan Chapman, Randy er, Troy Brooks,Kendra Wheeler.
Jones. Amy !ohnson, Jesstca JohnHolley Wtlhams, Joshua Yost.
Collins, Ashley Cremean-s,
son, Shawmta Johnson, Knstma
Fourth Grade: Wesley Call,
Derrick Fa~lder. Jay Green. Jes\ica 'Danielle Hopper, Alex 'Johnson,
Salem Center
K~nnedy, Tlm~thy King, Andrew
Preast, Jam1 Hayes.
Rebecca Klein Andy MeAn gus
First Grade: Nalban Argabrigh~ K1tchen, Jenmfer Lambert, Kelb
Fifth Grade: Joeline Allen, Ash· Casey Richards~n. Ashley Russell: Shawn Bass, Matthew Haefner, Lightfoo~ Dus.tin Marshall, Rusty
ley Burbndgf!. Ben Haley, Amber Bradley Soulsby, Jerod Wyatt, Julia Johnson, Kimberly Johnson, M,arshall, Pamck Martin, Tamara
Hanmg, Jenmfer Reeves.
Cbristeena Young.
Donna Lambert, Alexandra o. Dell, Alyson Patterson, Stephant
S~xth Grade: Joey Blazer, Adam
First Grade: Wes Aul~ Amanda Miu:heli,-Kelly Napper;-Joey Sears,- P1ckens, .Trent~n Q~~lls, Franco
Bullington, Chnstopher Dodson, Jeffers Jordan Shank Whitney ·Harley SmallwoOd, Zach Weber.
Romuno, Bonme Sm11b, Rebekah
·
Tocnc.' Jacob Venoy, Joshua
Second Grade: Jeffrey Baugh- Smith, Jeremy Thomas, Bridget
Jonalban Maue.
~iddleport Elementary
Venoy, Daniel Young, Weston man, Eric Burnem, Zachat): Bush, Vaughan.
.
.
Kmdcrgarten: Belb Cremeans, Fife Nakita Fitzpatrick Cody Jason Crisp~ Julia Cross, Robert
Me1gsH1gh
· Holley Geary, Briuany Haning, Hys~ll. Nathan Jeffers, Abby Stew- . Cr~ss, Misty Handley, Randy Han,
Ninth Grade: Amy Boggs, Eliz. Steven Hudson, Beth Hy~ll. Joey an Alison. Woods Miranda Kayla Icenhower, Aaron lhle, .abeth Farley, Myca Haynes.
. Kimc.s, Matth~w Lan~ers, ~ayla Yo~g. ·
'
·
· Amanda. Johnson, Samanth.a Michael ~eifbeit, ChrisMcKea~.
· Lee, Joel Lrnch, Chnsty M1l!er,
Second Grade: Jerri Bentley, Pl_erce, K~mberl_L~.ey(lolds, Came 9eorg~ Miller, Amy Smtih, SabnDanny M~mson. D~ielle Phillips, Justine Dowler, Eric f'itzpatrick, Rife, Curtis Vana_n.
na Sm1th, MIChell~ ~ntder, Aaron
Kayla Pnddy, Kaue Rodehaver, Rochelle Gloeckner, Amanda .
Tliffil Grade. Qonal~ Barnett, Vaughal)', Matt W1l11ams, Sandra
Amanda Sch~rltger, Jordann , Hoyt, Regan Shuler, Erin Bauser- Joanna Bowersock;&lt;J,ess1Ca Curf- Young.
, Thomas, Dustm V~nlnWagen, man, Jenny Bowles, Jason man, Aubrie . Kopec. Cory
Tenth Grade: Ad~ Barrett,
Cassi Whan, Bobble Wtndsor, DeMoss, Justin DeMoss, Trevor . Longstreth, B~lltany _ Pow~r~, C_asey Booth, ~aryn Dm_dge, Je~­
Peggy Rollins, Christy Cape~arl, Dep(}y, Ivan Eblin, Keri E~ans, Jo~ua ~y: JeSSica Sm1th, Ph1lltp mfer Garey, Llbe~ly Kmg, Erm
• • . Kasey Winters, ¥ichelle Wea_ver, Eddie Fife, Jade Hershman, Mag- Sm1th;M1tch Taylor.
.
Krawsczyn. Slacte Reed, Jo_sh
·. Nickie Bentz, Ashley Browmng. gie Molden, Clare Sisson, Deidra
.. Four~h Grade: Rachel Roberts, Beverly Stewan. JeSSica
Cody Davidson, Sarah. Engle, Cor- Strong. Jilii Young.
Argabnght, Lin~y Bolm, Ashley Stoban.
'
nclius English. Billy Fink, Brandon
Third Grade: Josh usa Bell, Colwell, Aust~n Cross, Megan
Eleventh Grade: Amber Ben;
Fisher, Chris Goode, En nne Jaynee Davis, Maurice Johnson, Haefoe~, FranCIS Kemmer, Kelly neu, Anne Brown, John qtrd, Tern
. . Fife, Jake tlannaway, A11son GetKennedy, Briua~y King, Tom~y Jenny Proffitt, Brandi Thomas. Johnston, Sara .sch_uler.
Lavender, Chal.sJe ~anley, Dav1d Angela Wilson, Kara Buffington,
.. F1fth Grade. Erin Bush, Mebssa lach, Devon Hll!, Mandy Jeffers,
Poole. Whitner Smtih, Adam Wll- Brand~n Bumgardner, Thurien Kuk, Chelsea .Mont~o!hery, Josh .,. Dorothy_ Leifbelt, Ada!~~ Sheets,
son. .
Carter Andrea Fetty Nicole Harp- Napper, Krystal Pennmgton, Kristy Kim Sm1th, MartOn Smder, Cyn. Fust Grade: Sl!l"anl;ha Cole, er, xaitlba Smith, Matthew Strong, Puckeu, ¥isty Puckett, Jessica thia Stewart, Tabitha Swearingen,
M1chael Ours~ Janue _Eilts, Kayla Jordan Williams
Schuler.
..
Candice Walker, Angela Wells.
· Felly, Alex Hmdy, Bnltany Jacks,
Fourth Grade: Jassiline Carter.
Sixth Grade: Kendr~ Cleland,
Twelfth Grade: Sarah Anderson,
Megban Leslie, Kl!Y.!a McCarthy, Kayle 'Davis, Maria Drenner, Robert Jobnso~. Dav1d Lucas, Anthony Barret~ T~ Erwin, Jar. Amber McKown, Enc VanMeter, Heather Hysell Brandon Rams- Bethany McMtlhQ, Ben Muchell, rod Folmer, Ke11b Fnend, Kelley
all A's; Justin Bell, Manbew Boyd, burg Jeremy R~ush Jarrod Stew- Eric Montgomery, Amber Roush:
Grueser, Jered Hill, Heidi HuffM_auhew lmb~den, Brandon art, Jennifer Zielin'ski, Candace
~allsburyEiementar~
man, .Kimberly Jane.y, Man_dy
K1mes, Kyien Kmg, Tyler Way- Fetty, Robyn Freeman, Cody
Ftrst Grade:· Derek Bnckles, Jones, · Rebecca Me1er, Sh1lo
land. Melia Whan, Nathan Becker, Smith.
·
Ashton Bush, Travts Butcher, Moore, Matthew Morris, Jamie
Ashley Engle, Matthew Gilbert, ·
Fifth Grade: Stephanie Bell, M,atthew : Mead_ows, . Brooke Ord, Sherri Ramsburg, Erica
Br_yon Haggy, Anna Harten~ach, Danny Bufington, Jason Miller, 0 Bryant, . Chns VanReeth,
Robie, Sheridan Russell, Eddena
· Michael Jackson, Joshua Kimes, Jessica Roush, Mary Schultz, N1cholas Wh1te.
.
Russell-, Jason Taylor, Stephannie
JoBe.tb Rodehaver. Cory Shea, _ David Bing. Kim McDaniel, Sara
Second Gta~e: Grant Amol~. Thomas, Crystal .Vaughan,
Chanssa. Stanley, Laura Hollen, Moon, Nicbole ~unyon. .
. Sheena Ash, Emtly Ashley, Apnl Michelle. ~:Vard, Amanda. Well,
Sara Davis.
C ·
•Sixth Grade· Michael Day Nick Copptck, Ashley Grabam, Dusty Walter Williams..
Second Grade: Branoon iirpen· D
·11
H ·II' G ' ff' h ' C
ter Erin Collums, Joe IHndy,
ettw_t cr, . o IC rt IJ • urt •
•
lit:;' '~. • .. •.
~ ,.._.~
c~sie Lee, Megan Mayes, Carrie Hansune, Mehssa J-!ouser, Chns
~,~
;.~
;.~ •.II)

S • •
14fj;.. ,.,,¥t;..
~~~~~~IB ~~~~~~ ~~~~eb~~~~~ ~~~~~sj~ ~~~~n~aa;~~~~\t~dnr~~
;~ ~ ••• • •• .~. ••. • • .~••••••• .~ ••••• ••~. ••••• • ~. •••••• .~. •:.
Whan. Elizabeth We\1, Natasha Krawsczyn! Shannon Pnce, Adam :,,,~: ~:.· r;Ql rvtJJ'ErA rp LJl. MrTdf"A.(r: S
_ 1forW:.'·,,~,:
. Wise, Daniel Thornton, Lisa Shank, ~bris Ward..
, ';:l.ru\:
.!'(.
./'{!'{; ./'(.~

·.e-• ;: KAREN'S .

· Gheen, Ashley Johnson, Brandon
Bell Lee Bryan, Eric Cullums,
Cbu~kie Davis, David Kuhn ,
Heather Lavender, Ashley Lilchfield, Jordan Rawson ,' Kl!tie Reed,
. ~nna Sayre, Asblee Smith, Kasi
Smith, Mike Stewart, Matthew
. Thomas. Chel Wigal, Cassi .Wind-

DHI. Hope Bonn¥· James Crcm_eans, .Shawn Day! Randy Lee,
TlffanyTt~?ns, WilheZahran.
D_H_II. Alisba Cre~eans. Jennifcr _Foreman, Eddie Jones,
~:
Zachary ~hul(!f, Amy Stover.
. .
MH. Fra11k Denny, Crystal • ~ :.
South.
~. :

Let

=

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY
IS COMING TO...

r·

BU'TTO. NS &amp;-BOWS
APRIL 8
SATURDA
. ,I '
V

.

12-16
Pose
Selection

ee

I

14.99

Fun For

All Ages!

Sess\o~ Includes: Make-Up A~•!•!&lt;r't~drobe C)!a.ngcl ~

==·IJ-=~ · ~

-ea-11 FmJflloillliijeiiT;(6 ,4

-5177

BUTTONS &amp; Bo ws

100 E. Main St.

.· .

~

.·~
._

92 PONTIAC

Blue, automatic, air, T-Tops,

stereo cassette. ·

4 wheel steerjng, 5 speed,'
one owner. clean,

one owner.

loadedI

Firebird. white, automatic, T·
Tops, power wiodows &amp;
·
locks. alf, Hke new.
' pll '

89ACCORDLX

93 HONDA
Civic OX. 1 owner. 5 speed,
air, stereo cassene, •
23,000 miles.

• aiJ.

Per

114300, air, automallo, power windows &amp; ··
1
cruise .

Safarl7 passenger van,

V6. air, power
windows &amp; locks.

auto~tlc,

COnvertible, red, 5 speed,
.
AM/FM,
real dean.

84VOLVO

84 HONDA

89 HONDA

]60 GLE turbo diesel,
1 owner, air. '
loaded I

Civic OX, 4 speed)
stereo, great gas
mileage.

CRX, automatic,

·
,

94

$17,488

'
alr,AM/FM,
new car trade.

_

__

•Geraniums

08 Mo.
Per

•

•

BRAND fH '95 CHEVY ASTRO EXTENDED
• Power Brakes
• Tilt Steering

• Cruise
• AWFM Cassene
• POWE!f WtndOWS

• Power Locks ~
• Ct!f!tain Cha1rs

• Power Steenng

90 FORD

90 CHEVROLET
Corsica LT. white,
one owner, air,
stereo ca§sette.

• Raised Rool
• 350 V-8 Power
• Extended Chassts i
• Dnver Side A1r Bag ·.·.
• Anh-Lock Brakes
• Air 'cond1l1&lt;m
• AutomatK: Overdnve '
• Vista BayWmdOws

• Sola/Be&lt;l '

. ·lndrecl Ughtmg
• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Full ConverSion
• Aluminum Runmng Boards

•loaded!

~

$11,888

·Lancef,
aif. automatic,
s18reo cassette.

Per

.

No OoX fees.

~eG'

•

HONDA CIVIC

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC

1141!25, air. 5 speed ,

GRAND PRIX SE COUPE

• ,.

:~. +~~~~~~~~~~~~

r

Special Aero Ground Elfecls

. ~· ~
F.LATS OF FLOWERS &amp; VEGETABLES ~ ••

.., ~•
~

:2~~~:~e~~es
1

23 varieties offiowers

28 varieties of tomatoes

8 varieties of cabbage
10 varietie,s ot peppers

4 varielles of cucumbers
Many more varieties too
numerous to list

•
._..:

Refreshments Served
llot Dogs
Coffee or S.(!ft llrinks

~.
•~~~~

~

; ~·

i~

• Au!Omat.::
• V-ti Power
• Dual Arrtlags
· Po ..•Sreenll9

·Powerllral&lt;es
• Power Door locks
9~SUBARU

84 HONDA

91 DODGE

Legacy L, one owner,
automatic, air,

Accord. 5 speed. ·
stereo cassette. grav.
hatchback.

Monaco 4 door. air, automal·
lc, power windows &amp; locks,
crUISe. One owner.

stereo ea.s~ume .

.. $2995

_ j ... .;,

~~·•

~

• Air ConditiOn

~.

:
. : ... ,
;
•
:~

~

· P~er W.nt:lows

· Powe1 locks

• • Captatn Cha1rs
• SolatBe&lt;l
· • Indirect LJ9htlng
• Pre.mum Wood Pkg
• Fun Converston
... ·Aluminum Runnmo Boards
·Loadedt
-

Mo..

Mo.

94

• Power Steermg
: Power Brakes ·
• Ti~ Steenng
•Crwse
• AMr'FMCassene

8800DGE

pickup, VG, automatk:, rear sliding window. bed
liner.

Ra~e r

Per

BRAND NEW '95 G-20 314 TO.NRAISED ROOF
CONVERSION VAN WITH 350 V·B POWER

COWERSION VAN
• Extended Chassis
• OfiYer Side Air Bag
• Anti·lock Brakes
• Air Corldition
• Automatic ~erdrive
··Vista Bay Windows

~
f!ll!

i
;..,.. i

puter network and link to the ·
"information highway", demonstrations of lbe latest computer based
hardware/software used in education, demonstrations of physics
experiments in th'e new labs of
Denison's F.W. Olin Science Hall,
and access to Swasey Observatory
and the new Olin planetarium for
star gazing.
Housing will be Denison resi·

HONDA ACCORD

lf:
"'

line for applications is April 21. .Trip".
Participants will select two of
The cost is $350, and limited finaneight research labs in astronomy,
cial aid is available.
Among the research topics biology, chemistry, mathematics,
offered as "Stars and Light", "Gene or psychology iQ order to obtain a
Manipulation· and Detecti·o n". range of experiences in different
Adaption and Behavior Ecology", sciences. All students will partici"Problem Solving Workshop", . pate in the geology/archeology
"Cryptology", "Cognitive and field lri~.~ :
.
Social Psychology Laboratory",
Optional evening programs will
and "Geology/ Archeology Field address issues of Denison's com-

194215, air, automatic, power windows &amp;
lac'k~J~ cruise.

~

~ •
..,

Denison Universiiy at Granville
is again. Ibis year offering scienceminded high school juniors (high
school class of 1996) a summer
opportunity to do bands-on cotlege
leve'l research ranging from astronomy to archeology and including
MTVandDNA.
The eigblh annual Investigations
in the Sciences Program will run·
from June 18 to June 23. The dead-

$135.36:.

Taurus,
aif, automatic,
AMJFM

.

TOPS
Between September amj.D.ecemo
ber, members of the Syracuse

- stereo,
nice car.

Aerostar XLT. air,
aUtOmatic, power windows
;•.
&amp; locks.

_A•
• 7#
Over 9,000
; ~·
Jlanging Baskets. :. f!ll';
tr!!
t~ Choos~ from
;

•Ferns

9Qos, automatic, air, stereo
cassette, power windowS
&amp; looks

Corsica. gray, automatic,

fllll.

'

:Dennison University to offer hands-on summer science program'-c'J

94 HONDA PASSPORT

. ...

FREE PLANT DURING SHOW
·
·
PLANNING SHOW APRIL 8th &amp; 9th

Automa1ic, air, stereo cassene. power windows &amp;
locks , cruiSe &amp; till.

Red, one owner,
5 speed r stereo,

:

us Help Yort

'Ill :

·; :
:·~·

92 PRELUDE Sl

92 FORD

~:

from the three states have reserved ~:
table space. Dealers will ofrer ~ree
111: :
appraisal~, while acc~pting trades • ~ ;
m gold, stlver and plaunum goods.
.
Coins and paper money from ~&lt;I ·:
the last 200 years will be featured.
Soq~e door prizes will be given
including the grand prize- a U.S. •
:
.
gold coin and paper currency at 4 ~~ :
__... '
p.m:
!~ :
security caswwlil be ".. :
for !bose interested.-------~~!· •·

'L:

91 CA"'ARO RS

87 FORD

·~
-

·Spring coin show set. :tl Flower
P'lan Your . r
Gardens

Coin collectors from Ohio, West
. Virginia and Kentuclcy will congregale in the Holiday Inn b~nquct
· room near Kanauga for thctr 33rd
. Annual Spring Coin Show Sunday.
Hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. .
The OH KAN Coin Club of
·Middl eport will sponsor the show
which is lbe only one scheduled for
thi s area this year, accordil)g to
·
Burkett. show chaimuin. , ·
~~lh!'!ia1~

'

90 CHEVROLET

GREENHOUSE

Ill: :

•

lntroducing &lt;?DYSSEV
The Honda of Minivans
.
In Stoclt Ready For Immediate Delivery

;i"'
'
:
•

The Daliy Sentinei-Page-7 ,

Ohio

ATHENS HONDA CARS!

Bartrum,

...

Pomeroy~iddleport,

l'l•aday, April 4, 1995

lUesday,

•

Meigs district a~nounces honor rolls

•

•

?

• Power Windows

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK CEifllJIIY SEDAN

• AINFM Cassene
• T~Sieenng
• Crutse Ccrltrol

·-W
-

·PIS. Poll
'-

Doo ""'

·Console
• Cus10m Sport Buckel Seats
• Pass·Key II Theft Derenenl
• Rea~ Deck L.C Spoief
• Special A"o Ground Elleds ,
and Wheel Flares
• Spoil Suspensoo

BRAHD NEW '95 CHEVY

S.:SERIES EXTENJED CAB PICKUP
• Edet'l()ed Cab
• DriY~ Side Alfbag

•Power Brakes '

·Custom Clo1h lntenor
•RearAntt-L.ock S.»es ·P205175AI5"Tires
• Pt)w(M Steer1'19
· Steel Belted Tites

"Saoe Pr~ I!IOulle!l

BW_.,C Ftrit T1me
8uvfflncenlM'11
W&lt;i~~

~1,488

• S(J&lt;t Dual Edlausl
• \6'Cast Alummum Wheels
· Loaded!

'

'

•Powet lrur.l( Pt4ei'Se
•AMifM Stetoo

•

•Payments figured-with $t ,000 down - 93's for 60 mos . at9 .t 5 APR, 92 &amp; 91 for .
54 mos. at 9.20 APR . so &amp; 89 at 9.24 APR and 88 &amp; 87 for 36 mos. at 9.3 t APR.

·e-!~KAR£N!LGRE£NH.OU$LJ_._
M~N.-FRI.!I-s; sAT.9-4;su~u-4
-a:- · ATHENS
'
HouRs:

• •

~ 1I;

~~;

.

LoCated 3!-1 miles past Southam High

RACINE, OH. ONRT. 124

~\ \ ~

9411-2682, ~~

_j__..-.

·k·~::\~~~·Yif~!~~i·~~.;;-:~'1
~....
.. . . .. .

.•.

TOU I'IIEE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344-5947. 422·0756

Tiff/llfPPf//10;1/0,1 PfOP/[ ./ /

...

810

E.·S;~:~=~~:~BHS~~S, OHIO

I

.'

.

'

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 PRI
Sunday: Noon - &amp; pm

�•

•

•

. P•a•

'

•

-a n.. o.uy Sentinel

""••IIIYI Aprll4, 1•.

. Poiwoy-Uiddleport,·Ohlo

'IUHdaj, Aprll4, 1111

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

:t'!~ ale'!!!!.!!L~!.fl..W,.~[!.ef..!.O£i~!!..~9!!,'}.'r,ti~hts, res':~~~lities.

5 , Attie• Social Security beuefil&amp; IIIII cova- ·meaaaofdlat '!~-~~to be
Women need to be eapc:cillly .,e.
.
IWI!Il= bow......., ~--s aats
· alert to lbdr Social Sec:wtty risbta
For
are man: • tbem'
WCJ!:ken, wiYCS, widows,
111111 n:apnnalbllillel to ld die molt likely to
· for beadl11 ou die diYOR:ed wi-,11111 math«&lt;.
•
out of tbelr Social Security pro~~~~:- buia of ~ir bu1bllld' •
It you c:bole to lleallmrmaJrer,
: 1ion. AltbouJb Soclal Security il IbiD men&gt; lite 10 qualify for
you are coverocl uadet Social Secu·
tbc -.nc for men IIIII - . dlf· on their wifq'a eamiDaa. Womea rity lbrouJb your busblllll'a wort.
· . fC~a~Ce In lifcatylcl ·md Wildt pet.. .may qualify for spODJC'a bencfila. When tbc l'amlly incomo'ia ~ucecl
tans tbat c:11arf1C1erize tbc aeo&lt;Jcn moebet's·beDCfits, widow's bellcflll bccai!Se of bia iediCiiiWI. cleaib or

::licw:W Secuity Me

e;g:;- -=

:

u

e:=·

Socill Sccuritylf ~~~--~.....
~ b If you diOicbo a ·ancr Ollllklcf all
. at any -ae ,00 -vc.......,. .....
ome- a at 60 percent o
drcD In l'~ c;ue rec;elviDa belle· womea do-you
Sodal Scc:ufill , or u early •• aae 60 u a rity protecdou of your owa for
widow, or fmD ace 50-59 • • dis· younelflllldyourfamily.lfyua die
a bled widow. However. if you . or br«mc clilabled. your ciJlldral
di'IOlCC after leu IbiD teD yean ol lei beoeftll UDiil tbey'~ 18, or 19
marriqe, you may bav~ 10 CUI! ff .a tilllnacbool. Your buabaod
your own Social Security protec:· could lllso qualify for bcocfill ou

eara

.-----~~~~-Community.
.

: ne Commualt)' Caleadar Iii
: published as a free aervlce .to
non•prollt aroups wlsblna to
• 'aDDou nee meetlna and special
··events. Tlae e.lendar Is not
&lt;lealaned to promote ••••• or.
ruad nlser• or any type. lteiDI
: are printed as apace ~ and
· .eauot t,e auaraDteed to r ... a
.. . 'specific number of daya.
:
TUESDAY
. . EASTERN - Planniq meetillg
• -of Eastern Hlgb ScbooiiCIIior pat·

eniS for the dinuer thealer. Tuesday, 7 p.m., bigb scbool c:afelala.
Commillees 10 be namtA ..

'

RACINE - OtaaaizaJional
meeting for ~union of Class of
1970, Southern High School, at
Kountry Kitchen, Racine, Thurs·
dlj.y, 6:30p.m.

.
.

RF.EDSVD.LE0 b i o
. Association of Public School

~ployees #44&amp; meeting Tuesday,
7.3() p.m. at Eastern Hlgb School.

:· First birthday celebrated.
. Alison Rose Brown, daughter of
· Bonnie and Danny Brown, cele·
; ; braled her first birthday wilh a
party at ber Minersville home.
.
Cake and ice cream were
··. served to her brother, Teddy;
,grandparents, Gay and Donna Mor..
ris and Danny and Dee Brown; Jeff
and Jane .Morris; Robert, Cindy,
An'ton and Morgan Brown; Belb
· and Bradley Brown; "Harry and
Janet Rifl]e and Mirioda Davis.

. @)

;:

~

' . '\:J

.

Tlaae 10 Check
GreatBuya... .
Shop Clyajfjedi

..
MIDDLEPORT -

.•.'

Middleport
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 ~~· Tues·
e.
day, ~gular meeting at
•

POMEROY - FOE AuilJ.IMy,
potluck at 7; meetlna, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at tbe.ball.
· EASTERN -

Easlem Alblctle

Self-esteem
program
scheduled

· The Child and Family Health
Services program of the Meigs
County Heallb Depaillllent will be
hosting a one-day prognun, "Building Self-Esteem on AdolesccniS"
oo April21. '
·Participants will be learning
about their own penonality types
and··describing strategies that
impact self esteem eilbet negativeALISON BROWN
' '
ly or positively.
Small group activities and case
scenarios ·will be used to discuss
problem solving and pOssible inter·.-entioos especially as they ~fa to
on dues and coniests with charms adolescents . .
The prcseniCr 'will be Norman
lo·be awarded at various limes for
Wittsch,
e n, M.S. psycholoaist,
individual weight loss achieveTrinity
Lutheran
Seminary, cenimeniS. Incentives 10 bring in new
members· were also discussed. fied behavior analySI from the
Members we~ asked 10 coouihute InstituiC for. Motivational Living.
RegiSIJalioo il)ust be completed
low-fat snack or fruit for goodie
before
the workshop at the Meigs
ba$ket 10 be given 10 a person wilb
County
Health Department, 992a weight loss whose named Is ran- ·
6626.
Educational
crediiS will be
domly drawn each weelc.Kathy McDaniel, area TOPS available for registered nones and
director, wiU talk at lbe next 111CC1· liC!lllsed practical nones.
ing on how TOPS helped her lose
over .1 00 poiDlds. Meetings wiD be
held every Thllrsday at tbe Middlepon cbW'Ch, weigb·in from 5:15 to
6 p.m. following by the meeting.

::TOPS install new officers
. Officers were elected .at last
· . week's meeting of a new TOPS
, (take off pounds sensibly) club
: held at the Mlddlepon Church or
Christ. Tbiity-nilie persons signed
up as chlU'Ief members.
• Elected were Dreama Pickens. .
: leader; Missy, Frazier, co-leader;
Sharon Stewart, secretary ; and
· RocheUe Lawless, tteasurer. Nancy
Fre.eman was named weight
· re corder with Peggy Hartman,
· assistant. Penny Evans, Cindy
Capehart and Melanie Arnold are
measwers;
Club bylaws were read and
approved. A discussion was held

.

WHALEY'S AUTO
.,

SYRACUSE - Syracuse PrO
7 p.m Tuesday at the
school.

mee~ing,

•frame~~·

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
, ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·70130R
992·55530R
I TOll FREE 1-80().848.()070 .

Bloodmobile will be at tbe Mcias
MIDDLEPORT - TOPS Oub.
County Senior Citizens Center ' ThUISday, S:1S 10 6 p.m. welgb-ID
Wednesday trom 1 10 6 p.m. ~ followed by meelillg at Middleport
is a sborlage .of blood, salcl Gladys Church of Cbriat
Cumings, &lt;OUDty cbairman, in 1111·
' .
ing resideniS 10 do1181e.

WEDNESDAY.

. I ,..

Public Notlca

Public Notlca

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE II tleraby giVen lll.t
on Saturday, April 8th,
, 1995, etjO:OO a.m., afubllc
, tale will be held at21 West
Stcond, Pomeroy, Ohio, to
tall for caoh the following
collateral: ·
1989 Chevy Cavalier
11G1C1118KJ118991
The Farmer• Bank and
Savino• company, POI!Miroy
1 Ohio, reaervet the right to
·bid at thla aali', and to
withdraw the abave
collateral prior lo llle.
· Further, Tha Farmoro Bank ·
and Savlnga Company
. rasorvoo the right 10 reject
any or all bldo aubmltttd.
Further, the above collateral
·will be oold In tha condition

lonAprtlt4,1lllltl.
· lido will be opantd tl 1
p.m., .t tho oamo location
on tho obovo date.
Propooala ahall bt tor ona
'(1) 1111 modular EM'S
Ambulance. Detailed
Information. lnttrucllono,
propoaal form&amp; and
compltlt apoclflqatlona
may be obtained from the
offteet or The MtiOt County
Emergency
Mod leal
Sorvlcoo, P.O. lox 748,
Mulberry Htlghtt. Pomaroy,
Ohio 41711. (114, 112...17.
Each propoul muat conitln
tht lull nimt of tho party or
partlllmtklno the propoul
and muat be occompenltd
by an original bid bond or
certllltd chock made out to
Tho Molgo County
Commlnlonero In the
en•ount of Ten (10 trt;!![t
(10%) of iho loti
. Bldo
art to bt placed In a ttaled
onvolope marked "BID FOR
AMBULANCE".
Succlltlul bidder muot
guarantee all work
porformod ond have
evalltblt tor damonttratlon
and lnopocllon 1 almllar
unit •• bid.
The· Malo• County
. Commllllontrt r01erve 10
right to rejeclany and/or all

It l1 In, with no e1preaa or

Implied warranties glvan.
For further Information,
conlact Mlkt Kloet at 11112·
213e.
(4) 2 , 4, 7, 1IMIII 3TC

t=~~~~~!:=
PubliC
. PUBUC NOTICE
Soalod ~~~~=0o'r:'l~t O'l'T\:
c o unt y
1 1
le••m•nl.ttll""'!.".• Third Floor
o u .,. •
10 o.m.

..

PubliC Notice

I

SMITH'S

PAGBVILLE - Scipio Town·
POMEROY - Meigs Ministe·
sbip Trustees will meet 6:30 p.m. rial Association Lenten service,
Room.' Holzer
Cclilel'.
Wednesday at tbc Pageville TOWD· Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the First Dr. James Young, dcrmaiOioglst,
ship building.
·
Baplht OIUrcb, Pomeroy. Rev. Bill 'Holzer CJinlc;.
Hobackto~.
·
.
. .
PQMEROY - Tbe Red Cross

soo

DARWIN, 'OHIO
7131181 TFN

·SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetic Support Group Sunday 110 4 Freacll

THURSDAY

P(lf!TS

Speclalizin!lln Clletom

calendar .________,;..__

Boostets. Tues4ay. 7:30, cafeteria
Ill bigb school . .

DARWIN - Bedford Volun. leer Fire Depaitmeot Committee, 7
p.m.·Tuesday at Darwin town bait

J:!

_ _!f
~ betw~ ~
....
em a. you._ eoaware IIIII you c;aa moln!e"' your
full Socill Seautty ..~ witb
aliale ,....,tlou.
•
Tbc lmporlantlbloa 1a 11111 you
rcoop~zc lbe ~ 10 11ay 00 top of
your Social Security protec:tfon.

CONSTRUCTION ·.
c-. Building &amp; Remocloang

Mediad

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
,• .NEW GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
• SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES .

Public Notice

bklo or any part thereof
· .a.-coun~~ea.
to wtlvt ony Informality In
Tho Mtls County
any propoul.
Council on
lng fnviWt , ·
(3) 21; (4) 4, 11; 3TC
commantl an propoaall
from all lntereotad public,
Public Notice
privata and paratranalt
oparatora Including taxi
PUBLIC NOTICE .
operlloro, for the provlalon
Tha Malga County pf ll'llltporlltlon urvlca.to
Council , on Aging, Inc., the elderlY and hancflcapptd
which 11 1 privata nonprlfll within o~r HMce am.
corporation, lntando 10
Oparatora who are
oubmft 1ft application for 1 lntenoted In offering
capital' grant under tho propoaala to provide
oervlee 'ahould contact 11th
provlolon 1 lht FTA Thelat, Aa-1•11 DlrM!Or, ·
Sptclallzad YralllpCirllllon .t 1111 Mtlgt County Council
Program (formerly Stctlon on Aging to obtain full
10
U)
provide dtiallt oftht type of
tranaportatlon ttrvlca .for I
rt tlo
I - I
elderly p-araont and
ranepo • n aarv ct "''
poroona with dltabllltlao Ia n11dad prior 10 propaltno
within MtiOI County. Tho o prapoul.
Wrttton commonto or
1lcallon will propoulo
grant
mutt be
raquoolapp
· ont
(1) nine
paattnoor convorttd van oubmlll8cl within 30 doyato
equipped with whoalchillr thll agency al the above
lilt and one •whaolcholr addrtll with a copy to tha
potltlon.
Ohio Department of
II I1
I 11 d th 1 t IO · Trtntporlttlon, Dlvltlon of
pro oc
Public Tranaportallon, 25
••::::~~ will
and/or
dloabltd
P•
uta.tht
urvlct South Front Street, Room
1 .wttk, 52 wuko a 718, ColumiK!•. Ohio 43211varlouo actlvlllat, 0888; Atttnllon: Deputy
·
tranoportatlon to Director.
toclal oarvlct (3) 28; (4) 4; :zrc •
d
1 M1 1
n
oa an

.::..,.
J BATHTUB
~

l @~.!!~ISMING
I

·~

(614) 992·5535
(614) 992·2753 .....

----------1

,) \l l '

ChriA

•'·

·'

~

&gt;;!

H1

614-992-4236

~ l~ii',H

tJ'

,!', r r 1,r-, '

---------1

°

With A Dallr Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD ·--~
,,.. column Inch weekdays
saoo column Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
BULLE lll't DUMKU DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

-

•

·.WHAT IS THE HOLY GHOST?
A free, orie hour, in your home, Bible
Study will give you insight in the
scripture concerning the Holy Ghost.
Call 992-4178 leave name a:nd phone
number after prerecorded message.

With every new
a.larm Installedreceive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.

.

304-882-3336 .
3/14'1 rn"o.

Bur • Sell ·,Trade

MR. RIGGS
NEW&amp;USED

Household ·
· Collectible
9-5 T·Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
. SR 33N
992·7502 or 992·5805
.

Services.
' Hom e Sites, La mJ
Cle aring, Septic Systems

&amp; Driveway•.

.

Trucking·

We are THE oHiclal buyers olall Military War Rellcl. hlvlna acquired
llama r,om lila followlna American Generals, 111d famiHa:
eo•

Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

*MARK CLARK * WALTON WALKER * HOBART GAV.
*HAYDEN BOATNER * MATHEW B. RIDGWAY*

GRAY'S

CURRENTLY INTERESTED IN PURCHASING
WWI &amp; WWII WAR RELICS FOR CASH!
'
"
GERMAH · JAPANESE· RUSSIAN ·ITAUAH ·US. I UK.
. SWORDS........... \ ........ . up to $10,000 ·
DAGGERS. ... ......... .......... up to $4500
HELMETS ....... ,........... . ..... up to $850
FANCY FLAGS·.......... .... , . . .up to $2500
MEDALS &amp; CLOTH ITEMS .......Open Off•r
u·NJFORMS ............. ... ..... up to $2000
US A·2 LEATHER.JACKETS. ... up to $1500

'f

t.f\\\\.

450 PIKE ST,
on RT. 7 &amp; US 35

011t.,y1

You could be the one who
• wins big in the Bank One and

' ' Only $100,000 Home Equity Loan
· Sweepstakes.•
Just pick up your Match and
Win Sweepstakes Check in the
lobby of any Bank One Banking
Cedterwhile supplies last Scratch
· 4 torevealyourpersona!BankOne
Match and Win Sweepstakes
Check Code. If it matches qne of
the winning check codes on the

PRICE REDUCE D ~Tuppeos
Plains - Immediate possesion Is
posslbfe In thiS J be&lt;Jroomr anch
home. ThiS home is located in 8

,.
'

E1Jterthe Bank One
:1o111e Equity Loan

"'''~1 POINT PLEASANT 1 D.t1~
·HOLIDAY INN

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, wHkly &amp; monthly rental 111tes.
Job sHes' Camp SHes • Fam!ly llellnlons AParties

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION ·
•New Homes
'
• Garages
Remod,hng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMAtES

·985-4473

LIVE

NEW-REPAIR

PSYCHICS

5116194 TFN

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

p.m. &amp;olurdoy.

Uconaod &amp; Bonded - 20 yaori experience

Corpot1 Solo: ' Btoolnot, loby

Emerge ncy Phone 985-3,118

11 H1111

1 ON 1
1-9()().656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 'per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Proqall Co.

.--.

Onemlleout
143 from Rt~i
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sa\. •
1-6

• Craftsman Tools
• Toys ·
• Guns
Loads of Misc.

Buy-Sell-Tmcle

Kenny's Auto Rental

992·2060

,1015/tmo

0UI

We Hare Cars and Vansl

sM464s7

~
•

RHETT
MILHOAN

Clot._,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

· All , ..... ,.... -

. . Pold ln

Dtolll ..: 1;00pm tho
Kenny's.Auto Center · · ·
dor·"-·
- - ' tho "" to to Nn,
1-800·486·1590 sunctor
OldMion- 1:oopm Ftldoy,
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614 ) 446 _9971
OldHion
1o:ooo.m.
,_G.a.-lli'"o.-1.-is;:.•.;;O,;;;H.;.;_4;.;5;.;6;.;3.;,1_ _ _ _ _ _ _,;,,.....
;:.:::.t IFrtdtr, Apllt 7. 10om-? 234 ....

::..=,.

llony A...,.,., P.,.,...,;,

.

1 .. Tho Community Aotoclotlon
~----------------------~
ond 1Mb - · l.bng .....
FOR SAI.E OR TRAD.I • ,.tom.... Community
building April
&amp;-7, lorn-3pm.

•8
. Rldl

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.,..,_,Auction Compony,

Ml londme ~--'!!-r, ==•;I lw

liUCI

White Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce

, _........ .

I ' CII

J

Ylrl!lnto, -

IIOI,Ohlo • -

77:W7Ill.

·9

Wanted to Buy
Cleen Llll• ModM c.,.

BARR'S Nursery
742-3149 or 992·7285

Trucllo, 11187 Or SmHh Buldl Pontltc,
&amp;•ern AWWtua., Galllpolla.
Du81 WhMI Pull

CHESTER

MORRIS EQUIPMENT"
RUTLAND

742·2455
3116/t

Golf Lessons

Ucen11d

lt. II. 110 Pool HMC On.

Rlahl, ""'" or ...,. ClotNt,
A&lt;U
Crllo, Apolt 7lh;

Landscape Stock

CLUB

r

0 . . . -: tTqi:0 0 4 -

(602) 954-7420

COUNTRY

~

Ololt

......,,N.

.

414195

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

'"!!,

- · Cor

FumltuN.
m
--· ..
. _ ._ __ _.....,.....,_ _ _ _ _ _..........., ~~Loollt -Drtvo, ...
r-.,
• -....:

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

, ROOFING .

Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting .
FREE ESTIMATES
j
949·2168
'

ALL Yo
ilutl 8t Ptld In
A - . DEADt:IN£: 2:00 p.m.
lht dty lie- thii ed to to run.
Sundtr
• z:oo· p.m:Frtdty. lllonclly edition • 2:00

Llrneatone, Sand, Gmvel and Coal

992·3954

,-

' Howard L. Wrltesel

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HA U LING

•,Complete

Or

....0

•onew....... .....

Dlconlllld
......... old .. ..,. old ·- . . .. old
onttq ..
tumlton. Rlwwt,. Antlq-

Cloer..;

- nor. I M-tt2·

R- - . ,
212e.W. bwyotloloo.

mQ .

by appoin&lt;ment &amp;
club repair as well
Call John Teaford at
Chester, Ohio

35581 Flatwoodslld.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
CertHied Perso nal
Property Appraiser .
Bonded (614) 992-4079

•Free Ettimates
•Starting At .

-41411 mo.

ALSO NEED: HATS, I EI.T BUCKLES, INSIGNIAS, DOCUMENTS, ETC. ' :

s\l"t9 t\\\

MODIRI.SAII7Aft0N
.

Auctioneer

IN YOUR AREA APRIL 9th

Come by anytlml 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. · TROPHY ROOM

Bill Slack ·
9U·2269

Bulldozins, Backhoe,

Real Estate General ·

4427 Wlaconoln Avt., N.W.
Wtthlnglon, DC 2001f.· Ph: 202•31M547 ·
TOLL FRE l l-IC0-241......

-~ .

110\\ .\IW
E\C \\ \TI'iG

HISTORICAL MIUTARIA SOCIETY OF AMERICA
"A Tribute To Our Vett"ran.s"

. Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
· Misc • .Jobs.

WHATYAMACALLIT ·--

SHOP

&amp; VIcinity

(No Sunday Calls)

· · TREE TRIMMIN~
ANDRJMOYAL
oWtthert· ~ro • Rong18al
ofltlrtgoraton . , . _ ,

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

614-992~7643

v-.

Special This
Mo11th

7

COMMERCIAL
and RESIDENTIAL ·
.
FREE ESTIMATES
·
. ·'

IIDICI

wMo cl4 wllh yol- oot-

lar ond otlochod ltnh, Storyoo
Run Rd. vlclnl4y, 114-341l-7132.

New Homes • Vinyl Sidlng .New
Garages ~ Replacement Windows
• Room Additioas • Roofing

ofactory Authorized Porta
· &amp;Service
•All Mlkeo -42
ofaot Rolloblt SaiVIce

JAMES ALARM
· ·sERVICE

~:

. BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. .

· . (614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 .

will meet Sunday, April 9
from 2 to 4 p.m. in the
French 500 Room at
Holier Medical Center.
Speaker:
Dr. James Young,
Dermatologist.
Holzer Clinic
f1E~freshments and
fellowship·will iollow
the speaker.
For more information calf .
446·5313 or 446·5246.

STARTING.SUNDAY
·AP IL 9th ONLY!

~9 BRYAN PLACE.
MIDDLEPORT e112-2m
Ofllqe Houro: .. on.-Frl,
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl A Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl. .
· Replacement,
·
Windows, Blown
ln•ulatlon, Storm
Doo111; St01111 '
Windows, G11111ges.
Free Eatlmatea

Surrounding Areaa

The Diabetic

Support Group

J&amp;L

-DIIhWtlhert
-+t.W. Hoetera
oMicrowaveo •Diopo10lo
•Thanka Molgo &amp;

· Seder Dinner Thursday,
April13, 1995 at 6;30 p.m,,
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
. Pomeroy.
Reservations may be made
by calling 992·201 0 no later
than Friday, April 7,'1995. A
minimum donation of $6.50
is suggested. Sponsored by
the Women of St. John and
St. Paul Lutheran Churches.

I

~: p.lr ol n!On't .,._ with
bltoll-tlllolgoSc- ptrlllng lo4, 114-1112-3114
otl14.1112-3711.

good ·neigh-borhood on .a: lot
that ls 100X400 fh at panially

Ch!aJI!Only$1()()J)()()Ibre&amp;Jujty
sweepstakes display, you could
·win $50,000 or other great prizes. Loan Sweepstakes and home
When you stop by, you'll also equity loah offers, everyone wins.
want to take advantage of our One
and Only Home Equity Line offer3.
Like having your interest rate be
the same as "prime~ throughout
the summer.* One dollar in closing
costs~ What's more, you can apply
•with just one phone call.
So call or stop by}'Ournearest Bank One,Alben~ NA
Bank.One branch today. With our Member FDIC

fenc ed ln. l~ Is set up for you to
hook up a woodbumer If yoU
choose . Eat· ln kJtchen Is
charming and has a dishwasher
for your convenience. One bath,

BANK:SONE.

.,

POMEROY'- 4 mi. north on SR
7. One of the finest hOmes In
the area is now avallab tel This

LA, w/lp, FA w/fp, eat·ln kitchen

utilily roo m, 1 car ga rage,

w/appl,, lormal OR , lg. utiUiy nn.,
21/, baths, 4 BR {master BFI
w/dressi ng rm. &amp; bath) , tUn
bsmt .. 2 car gar., private
blacktop driveway, pool, 3 stg.
bldgs. &amp; lots of privacy. 2 acres
m/1. Call &amp; let us qualify youfor

carpo n, crawl space, Insulated
Le Ius show you this home right
away!

·this home.

24ho~

'

Your home
could be
pictured here!

'

'\

- This nice s1one
home Is located on Union Ave.
on 3 lots. 11 otters 3 bedrooms, a
batf\., a large living room, eat·
lnkllchen, lull basement and 2

Q

c 1995 BANe ONf. CORPORATION 'The 1nlrOlkJc1ory var1able rate is the- ·Bank Pnme Rate" and rs in affect through August 31 , 1995,
atter wnk:h rale wllt convert to tun~ 1nde•ed APR The "Baril. Pnme RatE( IS based on the Pr1me Rate ali published by the Board of
GoverntYS of the F9deral Reserve System lor the week lllCiudiOQ the 151h day or me priOr mon!rl 1l:'e ·sa~ Prir'nl) Rate' as of Maret'! 1,
1995 W'BS g ()()% Offer valid on lii;I8S of $10.000 or more The fully rndexed APR on vanable-rate ltnes with an SO% loan-to-value ratiO
~...-m as Of March 1 1995 was 10 50% APR for trnes of $50,0CXl ot more, 11.00% APR .fOf IK'lef! of S20.tx:Xlto $49.999; and 11 50% APR on
CI'PORl1.M1'f' 11nos of S10.00o to 519,999 The APR oo ~tarlable-rate lines may 1ncrease or oecraase, not 10 eMceed 25% APR In Ohio It your !!Oe Is
lfMliER
d!sconUnliM wi!h11'1 the first year, approximately S350 111 closing costs Will be! ct)arged. The annual lee 1&amp; ~ C?!!!!._,_ls !lV81Iabte only to
Bank-~!l.lherls hofTte' equtty flnQ Cll&amp;l:!ift OA--AAW.-t.IAilablo-r~ ~l:y lil'ljilfr-WI&amp;h ll QU&amp;Ii!¥1flg ~IONSiuB(Stio...cf--tJ..m~o, Sub]«:;IIO Cfadil

ca r gara ge.

LIST
WITH US

1 floor plan.

ASKING $42,800.

MIDDLEPORT - N Sec ., 4 BA, bath, LR, kll. , alum. sldlng. Wouki

make a ~ home or rental propeo1y. Reduced to St,$00.

.
_:: .___. afWroval Consult~r tax advisor regard
cteduCttb.1111y ol1nterest. lfiooperty 1n11Urance m8y be reqi.Jlrea-on&amp;! ejpTr"CS July 3 f. mM.
MO PURCHASE
ESS&amp;Jrf. Matcfi lll'rd in Sweepstak8S Checks avatlable at partctpat1ng ~One IOCatiOI'ls Detween March 'l1 and Jtme :lJ,
1995 while supplies last Ooe Ba1it One Match and WJfi SweepstaM&amp; Cheek per oerS6n per day. Ollie: Ia\ rules posted at pS.rtteipeting Bani&lt;. 0oe lcx:a\lons.
OpeO to U.S legal fflSidents, 18 vears or &amp;ge Or oldel VOid where prOhlbhed bhio reSidents riiDtt may obtain sweepstakes chock or wlnl)lng check
COdes by sendtng a self-addressad, stamped envelope to Bank One Match and Win Sweep8takes Enlry Requests, P.O Bo~ 8393, Parsippany, NJ
07054. One request per onvelope, Game ends 6130.19$. Requests must bB postmar~ed by 612190 &amp;'ld received by 6l9t95

.•.,.,-

. ·-·::c

.

-~-

•.

•

&amp;.;;;; ..

--·~

•

SYRACUSE - Beautiful olcfer 2 Stofy hOuse on 1 comer lot with en
extra garden 101. This home 1eatures a large bay window, blg front
pomh &amp; patio. AppUancos Included wlktt., 3 BA , 1Yt bllh, LR. FA,
·

Willi

JACK AT HAYES REAL ESTATE

992·2403 I 992·2780

•

__:::._ •

$~,900.

LIST

i

;__

LANGSVILLE · Greal Huntlngl BeaUIIIwNy remodeled talmosl
plus 18 acres mil, 3 BR, LR, f j:\, OR. Nlc ehome. Cell us today!

basemen!.

985·3879

wo ...OidT6auy : NI.. LftlltGiota.

~":"1on~*2~~7 ~

'200 Installed

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out

Top -

· "V/Sir OUR SHOWROO.M"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look. for the Red and White Awning"

773-5612 .
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

KINGS'
Ho!'le Improvements

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

33151 Happy Hollow Road
. Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes ·
•Addlllons •Siding
•Roofing •P)IInllng
-Garages •Parches

· •Pole Barns
FrH Estimates
614·742·3090

2AS'l)

7\0!1tf1Ne£

CALL NOW!!!
· 1..9~24000~
Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.

Must be 18 yr~.
Procall Co.
·(602) 954-?420

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE
•Lots of Fun and
Learning
·Lots of
Experi ence
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6 :00 P.M.

992-5388
LINDA'S

PAINTING,&amp; Co.
•
"Take the pain out
.of ,paiJ1ting • Let .us
do it for you" .:
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.

614-985-4180

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
S unday I :00 p.m,
12 Gauge Only

H&amp;HSAWMILL
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Midd leport, Ohio 45760

Limited: 740

Danny &amp; Peggy

Backbore, 680 Front

Brickles

2/W95

61 4-742-2193

ADOP'IlON:

HoPI!Ity -

couple ""'"- "' Mlp

col_#_ _
Churcl1 -

Onouoe a

AVON t AK Anoo I Shlnor
Spooto, 304-471-1421.

r• •

pold. - -

AVON to byy or t•tl, Marltvn, I~
dsp tdenl rep. 301-182~2645 or

1-.eN-1151:

·

._nBog Chon,

M•
• ttNo
For YOU1hL.n
· Col11·

(Umesro. Low Rates) .

l'honll y-

AVQN SPRING SALES

Awwogo M......a /Hr. At Wooll
Dlocounto!
- N o o-IDoor .........

_._ -•it.

WICKS

Rop.1-~-

HAULING
- (Speolaliz• in .
driveway •p,..iding)

Limestone, .
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, FHI Dirt
614-992-3470 .
\

•

'

Help wanted

11

~ yolll' boby wtlh. lomlty ..... bright tuturo: -"

coll 1'1100-1-.

••.•14-3-.
-

3 Announcements
0

Wonted: Stondng Tlmbw Cuh
Or p..,-110 WHh A ~

Employment Services

Announcements

Porta!&gt;le
Bandsaw Mill

Pold: AI 04d U.S ..

Ringo, su- eotno,
Gold Colno. M.T.S, Coin ~
,., Sooond A...W., Oolllpoilo.
eotno, Gold

•quality home offers a lg . foy er,

Whatever it takeS:

One call to applY 1·800·800·LOAN (5626)

·Mobile Welding
Dles_allnjector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups ·

::~og, rw,.~ ~!..""'c::

!Any Llvoly. 1'14-3M-11303.

•

· ·-

�.

•

J

.. .

•
~1G-The

'

.

Ohio

Dilly Sentinel

Dilly
ACROSS

.

orgenlaill1

=:n-

1 Cl1v In V1llnam 44 Pllygrou~
I Acfor TOIII11 llefuddltd
I (3 well.)
13 Nor~lc
..._

.PHILLIP

- ! - 4 WD Alii!' 4 P.ll.'

1144 ......7.

fUmiiMd.~
~

113 .0 1 -

of_.,. ....... Noirrow, "il

55 ACINM'

11om!

23P-.Ive

pronoun

':t
•. -..a.. ........

111111441N711.11011.

--·--·....,

29 Not outolde
31 Plcao of. 35 lnolanlftc.rnt
311'walold
37 Having o good

:::r.·.......
...

..... PIWmO_tlt ttc; •• ¥ln. high

Clind., .....,
. . . . . . _ •• 22 .... ......~

-. -,......

chance (2
Wdl.)
40 Opp. of NNW ·
41 Small
• .

--~liLT.._,
.....
41&lt;4, ¥4,
... - .
loppll'

•

24 Deo1toy (II.}
27 Certeln ruder

\

'5 )'

-·1

8uplrJitf.;

ending
41 Tropictl nut

57 Jain - oltllt
IHIMIIIorces
17- Got. Secret .. M a t 11 ~· Certer 111 Not tr.oh
20 Somewhel
10 ...... of
elderjy
burden
11

112 9 I

41

14 Evil
15 lYDe

ALDER

-;:-. :.............
::z:, •

4e

ltodlll•,

..........
-·-,.C. 1'8, PM:

DOWN
1 Snoa'ooound
2 Dye plant
3 Zola heroine

4 We'r o - - 1111 ........
5 Ooblor:a note

.Arnoflcan

a Propo(ed to

6 -polloi

propoM?

7 Arabian

10· Tradoll for
monty
12 llovlng porch

HOPOfl

e· Japano~.

~no:.'

-.---.CA.Jio
...... . ..,. [$"

DIDOell ...
quftd, . -... . .444f.GIIn

'Wrrj bolher ctilling 11110'..91 national parks? The only
thing you SloW down to lOok ar are 1T8tlic acx:idenlsr

,........... · 1111 I ncy 1 1 - .
UIMIM Pold1 ...h, W1

...... c

Allor 7 P.ll.

Goo
No4 WllorFuol
-Dll
·,
10_
lon, Colo1N111
b10 Convoo C o - Toni Col
~ ·~

31 HOrnel tor Sale .

·-.... - -

Twin A._. T_, __ - • ·
Ina
-~~~- ,.,. 1br. HOD
a-oo.•.-.114--37141. ouloolilfzod
opt. far oldorty ond
TtuM blllroom, ane blth, lull honcllcoppocl. EDH 30+417&amp;o

.,...

.

~.~···~-~
declll, ,_root.
In Chlllor, 114-

...-.

32 Mobile Homes
- forSIIa

1171•

=:

-oy.

Unturnllhld
-·
2ncl - · 4 ,_,.,
llolh, nc polo, rolwonce and
1-2·3271 ollor

4S

KI!IIJ 111D W01- BwUIIful,
Uloi N-, -

il....,_h,

lllrror.cl, · - -boorcl,
1271, .,.~...1421 114-211 ' " '
...... golf olrm. 3Q4.111.7730
llllor5pm.
·

1111111' Slop o x -. ,_,

-

Furnished

1_

... 1&amp;0. :104-178-2111.

Rooms

=

1111 Lincoln Town Cu, L.oodod
·
- 1111-..,
Dcdgo Yon, 14200.

~440.

·1111 Chry. Now YorUr ~SIS;
1111 COI\wo T·Tcp,_ _13,115;
1111 Chov Corolco ,:~,~~~~· 11187
Mulk:al
Cololo 12.211· 118~ PI)'
.Instruments
Colt 11,111; 1N7 ilorii. Bonn
tz.lll.i..,~- PI)'. Col ll.~i
AMI'""
lorlol No. 1N7
. 12,111· ,...
UlreNowiiOO,
llWINm.
..... Comoro, ~ A.H5·
Iii+
- l o w Oubr And F - t 11U Comoro
s.w.
.Ill; 1117
8w Amp. • !Cor !11--. 114. !)odgo
loulii Auto A AI&lt; ,215• 1117
441.o727Aftor7P.II.
.

rrul; .

4411NI

==' =:. 't!!d.Ji

&amp; Livestock

91o~lftJIII

:::::~:::..
""~ ='1!i
_..,.,.. Coli oftor 2:00 p.m.,

1110 CloYion 14110 112 Acra ~. 30tom.50S'I, Mleon wv.
2 lA, 1 Bllh, CA, ~
Colllng, 2 Docu, , _ v~
~ Space tor Rant
IIIIo Du1 Dn Loll, 128
,
114 ... 1133.
Trollor Lot Eloc1!1o IWolor Hooii1m Skyllno 141713 1 J =-. Up,l~
1 8Ith, 81-, Rofllgomot And

Financial
•

Bulft~n

DloiMw._r,_ 2 Dooa
One .. C:O..nod, D n - Lot, 111,000, 114.:114a.I007.

Bus InaSI
Opportunhy

Merchandise

8UILDER81~12-1045.

Goods

v.....

East
All pass

1524.

1_
811
cury.

~

col~

U'IUCI, 114.

11110 Yomo._ Wa¥0 R =1Wo
po-ngor,
· aeu
· -evenlno-.
kin,
a:HSO.
114-141

76

1lltll L.uonlno Eu"'

Couoo, 2dr.,

lrnmlculolo cond.1 _ 4S,OOOml.,
-Upt.IOW711-11177.,
1lrlvon In "'"""'•
gongo
171.:11714.

• ....~~

1-0ion, tiCOIIont

Cond~

lion, mlloogo 11,1100, -coli 114141.:11113 oftor lpm. ,

1114 Pomloo Sunblrd LE. llopd,

2cfr, Cfte. 'IIWfm ca...ttl, IC1

Auto Parts &amp;
AcctSIOrlal

A"''f~
INVASION/
,

8~

Tronomloo._, Uood I
Aobiilll ~I lYDM, Accooolblo To'
Over 10000 Yi'anamllllon, Aa.o '

......---~
.,
.. • ..

,,

,

rr-1oo1ono

Jolm-..
And '
S.tylco • ~:,ct And Aoltull ·
TraMm1 1
AM,.c..h And •
Corry Tronomloolono, 114-2J!I.
2213.
.

·-J

goo 1onko, ... 1011 1ruck
rocloloro - WV.'304:
milo,
lie. D1o AA~(ploy,
-

~

P'

~ YOOPI&lt;E.VI~Y ~

272-1221.

3'72-3133«1

~JIUS

P. \flOR.AAP!'LE. IS !&gt;.. ~m:,
'j(X) qw« FroM, t-¥&gt;T TO I .

BY rot-~Yonu~N-1£ '?'

Soul-ot Pl&lt;&gt;k-llp Porto - ·
Cobo, DooN Foncloro a 11oro. 3

liM• Soulft bi GoiiiDOIIo AI J110o
11on 111. 7' At. 211, · -:
Tronomloolono. Uood, "'!1!'!"...!1: ,.

· Cho¥.1!;" Dodao.
. . . . .~

.

, CELEBRITY CIPHER

I
It--ri--..P--.1-..-1,--jl ·

Phillip Alder's new book , "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request, for
Hts., NY 11577-0169.

guo-ood,

Truck -

•

i

i

~----~~!~~~

•

'

~~-llon.18100.

1111 JlorJ lluolong at 3,100
lllloo, lllnl Conclh\h ~lock ln1ortor, • Ex1ortor, I
7841.
Clvlo Dll, 11,711, 814141.:11211. .
.

f)
.

.,.., CJuerantM, NOli Whirlpool

AI,_ Now lloclol, 1
Ouoronloo; laVS; O.E.
Wo- Ex-~ CondHian,

'

lido, Almond, Sltll; ... _

poy. Pff lo FIT on dufy modlool.
1oll0~""3811 uk tar Dobblo '
Kelly.
AU teal

limttat!on or discrimination
1 based on raee, color; reUglon,
sex familial status or national

Rentals

•

AMERICAN
NATIONAL
INSURANCE
YICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO IJtS.
COUNTS UFE&amp;HEALTH
:104 • • t217

18

wsntedtooo

.

441.1100Q.

11o.,.

TIW lenrlce. Compklte lrM
core, 20yTI. o1p. &amp; lnourod, troo
001lmoiM.I14-44H111 Of1.f00.

eae-.

42 Mobile Homes ·
tor Rent ·
MaiO 2 If, 1 milo South of

.

.

.

E........ Oft 81. 111.7. No polo,
,......... :c ••• 114-258 · -

llodol 12 Wine- 30 Inch
FuH; Excollonl Cond"lon, I Shot
lvor Johnoon 22 Plolol ¥wry

Troller For Aont, 0011po11e City
Umho,l14-441-2411.

53

55

:::-uy::.,:-....
::::-.':;R;::1.::::
.1,.::-:.r.:::nl:;:lq::uo=-o,

;:
8

11l14 E. 11o1n •-~ on

boyo: (front boy 40'1121', ...,
boy :12'11231, 100'x40' lol,

5AcrMMILCropLindForAanl:
Cloy Townohlp 12.1 Por Aero,
114-441·1111.

to 1:00 p.m. 1-·2521.

3 lodi'OOIII -lonol Approx. 1

44

v..r Okl, A~•· 4 ..,... ott sa
On BuloviiiO Plko,l14-l-.

Apartment
tor Rant

Building
Supplies

BlOck, brick, -

Antiques

43 Farms tor Rant

booldo ~~~-. t.anom
~ioor cornpltlt~ r.rnad•lld, 2

SCRAM-LE'tS
. . ANSWERS
Elixir· Cross -Royal-Ninety· TAXES
C•
A family discusslon had turned to the financial diffi~ul·
ties of the government. My brother says that the govern·
ment makes money the old fashioned way itTAXES 1L_

ITUESDAY

'

52 Sporting GOOCI8

A1.

ASTRO-GRAPH

olpoo, wln-

dowa, llnt•l•, 11tc. Claude WJn1oro, Rio O.ondo, DH Cou 114245-Stat

....,pr.-

124,

&amp;
Pon•ow. Holn: M.T.W. 10:00 Grilv•n..
dralnpl"" now Jn etock. SkMn
a.m.19-1:00 p.m..''"*' 1:00

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Equlpmon1, 304-411·1'1121.

56

Pels for Sllle

1113 Fanl~ XLT Ex1ondod
Cob...~
• 20,0o0 lllloo,
112.-. I
3'J11.2j153.
1113 S.10 Tohoo~T, 4.3, Y-4,
..... 21,uuu lllloo, 1

Pu"""

flloonlng
llpocllll;
Aulhciilzod Eloclro!Ox A o - ·
lotlvo, Fno Dom.,uOirotlon, •
Eltln)Ofoo, - · O r ..........

114-317o02114.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Owner, I~.

Two

1111 Ford PU; 1..1 Dcdao
Dolralo llpor1 PU 12,1115: 1118

114-31'7·'1211~

Ford Ronoo! 414 PU • h,llliJ·
1114 ~ c:- Cob 1·Ton P
Cloorl, 12;5Mi,1~ Ford !14 T.
4x4 D -; 1 - ChOir PU Y.a,
Auto·~ 1... Chov S.IO PU

Amorlcon Cockor Spaniol Pupploo, MC Aoalolorod, ctllil""
pion 8-llno,lM-3~

~=!i
...
1185 'roroto
1br, turnlohod, ·duplox.
$211 oluo oloclrlo. Goo A •lor
turnlohod. No HUD A no poto.
Aof.,.
• dopooll. »W'fll.

2NI.

2 loci,_ UI!II•"*~Aolorouoo
Aaqulnod, No Polo,
lnqulro:

100 Fourth A -

111111 M37.

llpollo,

·=tJ"t,:.

4 ·Runner; Iii:!
Ford lkOnoo, 1814 lludo PU
IllS; ND Aut• SoiM, Hwy. 110
N. 4 lllloo N. or ltol»o10, 114-

11117 Ford lluotong, 4 ~
5 ........ Tlnlod·Wfnd-

~~

CoR

ln..

4

1111 c:!lryolor l.tlo...,, 4 o-,
Low ....... ...,._... Ill, Ex·
011~ Condlllon, 114 eta 11n

44114MI.

.

73 vans &amp; 4 \yO's ..
1114 ChoYy 4•4 -

•

tV---.

""IUUr ·

Froomon'o Hooting Ancl Cooling. lnllollollon Ancl - · EPA
Certlhcl. R•.w.ntW, eomm.r.
clol. 114.:1156-1111.

84
•....

'Birtllday

•

LN1w-.

Enterprt1•

Wednesday, '"""n

Elocl!lo

T.W. "

Pu,.-.

F'" &amp;o
ou Don1 Coli Uo Wt •
I 114 Ul 8301, 1..a.
W¥002141.

,_-or-

R-~101

or

304oflllo1711•

•

work for what you wanl.
10 a blrlhday gift Send for 'your AS1ro,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Some petty.
Graph predictions fQr lhe y'ear ahead by · bi.JI frUstrating siluallons might develop
matling $2 and a SASE lo Aslro·Graph. ,loday. They WJII be man~geable if you
c/o !his newspaper, P.O. Box 4465. New treat I hem philosophocally. Hang loose

York , NY 10163 . Be sure to state your

and keep your cool.

Zodiac sign
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Someone

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov . 22) In a 10101
endeavor today . you m•ghl lind yourself

relegated to a mmor role~ Swallow your
pflde instead of speaking out and creal·
you .repeat your old mistake , yOU'll have • ing addrtronal diHrcultres .
who is presently indebted to you might

try to put the bite on you again today. If

only yourself loblanie
GEMINI (May 21-June 20J Vdu aren'l
apt to let today's events cave you rn. and
thrs is well and good . However, don 't
treat srtuatioris too lightly rf they should
be taken seriou~ly.
.
CANCER (June 21·J•II' 22} Even

·

..

SAGITTARIUS (N!Jv. 23-Dec . 21) Slee•
clear of arrangements w11h lrrends loday
in which you either have to borrow or
lepd something ol value . Unantrcipated

complrcations are likely
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.:.tan. 19) Mallars
ypu deem tmporlanl should be laken

though you mrght feel you're treating oth.,..

care of as early as possible today . As

ers fairly today . you may frnd yourself •n

lime :llcks on , you mlghl begm 10 coast

a Position tihere the more yoy grve. the

and get off on a difterent roUte.

~'~ -ltUilllc~ahead..you_-ma;:-dP-c'l'"te_well _ I!)Or&amp;lh~JTliO_wanl. ~ ·'

L:arw""!1 ~ Goo F - ,
L.P I ""'· Hoot Pumpo I .,
llmll
Bath

•" .
15 1995

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration -r-""

_. __

AOUA_!I~\1_!'

(Jon.

2~·Fab.

19) Your

Clmlpan~-I!;'CIIlJli~IZatiOnahkllfs'm•ghro.lflener "'"'=·l1i~!~~~!!!~!!~~~~;;~iii~~~i~~~i~~~~~~~

rially. The more you see In i1 for yourseH, could exert an unusually strong r~lluenee your ~eers' today, yer you might not be
in
motivate
you mate'23-Au;.
fiJ around wrlh • able to convince them ol lhis. What m11rr
thearrangements
harder you'll !hal
try and
the more
likely on you today
. If you .hang
'you
you'll be to succeed.
pals who waste their t1me and resources, bind together they could untie .
ARIES (llorch 21'Aprll 19) Your judg · yo.u migh1 do the same
. PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) In your ·
menl might be 1mpa11ed by the wrong VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your proba- business'dealongs loday. don'! bank on

li:O' !JU(j

oom._lol ,.

people rQda)r. Just' because a person has bih~ies for personal ach1eve~ent are

"

8 title or 0 position. doesn'l mean he/she good loday , provoded you don I look for
has all the answers. Ar~es , treat yoursetf easy outs or shortcurs. Be prepared to

...... wiring,
- · Lookt GOod, Runo Good, llootor Uoonwd iloc1rtclon.
~~· Or lloko Oflor, 114-S71' Rldonow Eloc111co1, W¥1100301,

•

'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Spring

3 - - · 2 8otho, Hoot
Goo .......... 1 Aero,
Garage. Aeldloon Aroo, fll2,000,

•

I I I I

UNSCiAMSLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
.

Qptllty Ha4'1thold Fumhurt
Ancl Apptloncoo. Clroal Dn
~ Ancl Conyl RENT·~ N
And _Laraway Al.a Avaii•IM,
Froo Dollvory Wftllln 25lllleo.

2·01ory gorogo.

$21,000. --4112·2713.

~.

6

PRINT NUMSEREO LE!TERS IN
THESE SQUARES

YI'AA FURNITURE
.14-4411-3151

114-W-'7827.

Hlv•n

24 How C.ro For Eldorly Dr
Honcllcoppod Qonllomon, 114-

by ld lmg H'l the m 1ssrng •words ·

Worlo booto. 114-448'3151.

31 Homes tor Sale

u.

•

Auc:TIOII A FURNITURE. 12
Olivo 91., Oolllpollo. Now a UMd
tumlture, hNtera, Wliltem •

--471-411'1.

Good CondHton, Clll AnytlnM,

11.. 14x711 Cornmodono
An ottor1 :104-41'5-3341.

ROBOTMAN

Services

applllncee,
Houuhold
-----------~I No
nlohlng.
Vol mi. olorrioho
Rd.turPl.
Pl-nl, wv, coli 304of71.1480,
111118 .....
SWAIN
:lllr
·
~pluo
utmu,.. w
• ,.,.,.,...

• This newwaper.wlll no\

Insurance

.

!he chuckle quoted

41 HOUIII tor Rant

make any such preferenCe,
limitation or discriminatiOn. •

13

.

e.~to:~·.:..

,.

1-kiH PRICf.S. $HOP THE. CLASSF/f.DS.

PICKENS FURNITURE
No.WU.od

origin. or any Intention to

knowllngly accept .
ael.,.enlsemenls lor real etUI!e
wnichls In viOiallon ot the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that aH dwelllnris
advenlsed In this newspaper
are .available on an equal
opportunity baSis ..

I '~~~A BWWN TH:,~ ON

,.

Dlloncooil 71 Ylno 11-. a.~
llpolll, 14-446ontl8, loi00-4...
34H.

estate advertiSing In

this oewspaper ts subject to ·
lho Fodoral Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes II Illegal
to advertise •any preference,

F....,

:ll ~ WI' y IE

Wo-

$15; Eloclrlc Rongo, 30 lilch
115; Eloctrlc Aongo, 40 lnoh
$15; Rolrlgoro10f F - Froo, 2
DOor, 1150; RolrtgoroiOf lido 8y

Sconlc Hlllo Hurolng_ Contor, lo
Cu~tontfy
Accepting
Ap.

I · I I I" ...

II -

W_hfto,_ 1150; Whlrtpcol o.y.r,

oto~

--,P"""'RTO_._Dr-0.,.,...-il:~ \ After

a long weekend a coworker sighed, ' By the time our -·· :
·
Children learn to keep the house
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ clean, there are grandchildren to
..
l

e

Y-

RN • CNA'o ntodod lo

r

I

LEMSL

._......._...__._..._......_ .... you develop rrom step No. J below.

lloytog W..._ Horvool Gold, 1

Homo Hoonh Coro Agonoy. Top

I

- sl
1• .

4

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Cornplllo _ hOfno lumlo~lnao.
Hou111: MOn-ht, N. ........
D3aJ, ! mlloo 0111 Bulovlllo Plko
FrwDIIv1ry.

I

West led the spade queen. After win·
ning with the ace, East switched to a low
by L!JIS Campos
diamond. South finessed his queen suc·
C.lebnty ~r cryptograms ars cr•sted from quolallons by III"'''IUS people. past ana prK&amp;M
Each .~ 1t1 the cipher standi lOt" anothef Today'.l diM T equals P
cessfully, drew trumps , cashed the diamond ace, played off the spade king and
ruffed his spade loser in the dummy.
' LV M .O Z U
FN
N Z A H • T K V F N L. 8 Z V M . '
Nowc)lme the diamond jack. When
East covered with the king, South didn't
LCNZV
SYAACK .
ruff. Instead, he discarded a low club ,
leaying East endplayed. If he attacked
C H
BYUYZNN
M .L Z
F N
'LVIIOZU
clubs, dummy's king would score a
'
trick. Wherea s if he led a diamond , it
LZVOII . '
ACOU
SJOCV.
would concede a ruff-and -di•card . · ' MLZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "'f1·road rac1ng in Baja IS like being in an airplane :
Declarer would throw a second club
crash thai lasts all day .'~ Parnelli Jones .
from his hand and ruff in the dummy.
Either way, Soulh would lose only one
club trick to go with the 'spade and diaWOlD
mond already conceded.
GAM I
That was nicely done by South, but
East should have foreseen the advan·
tage of retaining communication with
his partner. If he had left the spade ace
up his sleeve at trick one, the contract
could have been defeated. Upon being
QESBIU
given a trick with the diamond king,
East could lead a low spade to his part2
ner for the fatal club switch through
dummy's king.

$14 .95 'from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn

l-oll,
--~
41811. Ablo fo worll . . . _ clol•.

- S.10, ohort '
8281.

.
50 Minars'lln&lt;ts
5~ Misplace
.·
52 Picnic pest~ .
54 Peer Gynt's •
mother
56 Actress :
Arthur

I

Swfvellut1,111111 1101

Po~l~l.

47Seed
coverjng

.

..........

condMion,

,

(2 wda.)
38 Lived (In}
39 Female rei. .
41 Terrhories :
42 Fragrant
43 Part ola
bird'&amp; wing
45 Distorts

four of a minor.

'!~=f·wk
1IOhp
. .Of
.
lOr Ed

Pontloc Gnn Am, 2dr.,
$12!0. MW711-7121.

111110, ......... '11-11500.
:104-411.:11111 .... 1:30pm. '

1

NO. TI4ERi 5 HOTI-IiN6
WIWN6 WIT!! 8EIN6 TRUSTING..
'{OU'RE JUST '1'0UN6 ..

12 Fl. Y..ol10fn With
lllnlralo II: Tr&lt;llllna llc4ot A 2
Oono .... .,.._fill,

For Silo Dr Trodo; Go!M Flollor
Flo1 Bol1om 13' 1• Two

r.n.~ ...,.~

W.....,_

75 Boats &amp; Motors ·
tor Sale

llahl gror lnlortor, 1\000 mlloo,
on - Ofl.l"':it _, nlco i:or,
$11.1100, I
14M4ewnlnp.

1810 LaHr, 14Wnlf, 11,000ml,
avta, tilt, cru._, .,...fm en-

AM I TOO
TROSTIN6,
CMARLIE
BROWN?

SO T!IIS KID WON ALL
MY MARBLES.. I DIDN'T
KNOW WE WERE PLAYING
FOR ''KEEPS~·.

--::-r.,

. . . .714321.

,.

PEANUTS

1114 GIIX 7IOR .,_,., 11100,.

11112-41144.

·w....,.,

Real Estate

(abbr.

34 Nautical rope
36 Pollia society

may switch the canjs o~~~~::~~
l!is hand with others. I
he gets th~ cards from up
ln.-t--1fsleeve. East should have borne this in
Ulind when defending today's deal.
What do you think of North's raise to
four hearts' With eight losers, it is an
overbid. But knowing of a 10-card
fit. North reasoned that if they were one I'L-.1-...1.-.1-...1.Ievel too high. there wa s a chance the
opponents could make three spades

E...,., Good

1111 FOrd Tourao, ,_ hood oncl
- · high - d m l - PS,
oruloO, 11b, 121100, 4'14-IMt-

112 ,.. old whii•Jocod pcllod 1HI Ponlloc 1000 81ollon
A&amp;S FumMuro. Wo buy, HI ond Ihor8Jrild
purw- 1tu11, 114-112·
.11.31!,8,;, 1111 PonUoc
lrodo
onllquo,
now/IIOOcl 2011.
·
Gran Prix, ll, ...i 1110 ~~Maury
ho4•ahold fum!Ming.. Will bw
...-1ilei
· 11115
Cho¥
S.10
•nr •mount, ~II. 508i 4,11 Plgo rr...Solo, 1144111'1031, Cougar
PU ,3,1511;
Ford
:rou!VII
Second 91., lllo"!'!', WY.
_.., ...._ . i1U0•77J.I341.
4,. old goklng, - - - .
Allfria•r.tona. Stew-.
· ---21111.
111171.
~ ~. All Aocoo-rod One I old llorl&gt;lonl buH, :::;1112~Ch=ryo::c~erlor:::-:S:::Ih-,A"'vo--.--::
uEx,. .·
And a....~- 11011 And Up, ~.. 1112.1 lbo., ...,. gonll•i c.ltene condltkMI, u. New,
Will Dollvor. I1WIM441.
live
- old, Of*1i
hollero,
two ,..
.aao,- fit ona
cat· 72,000114 tt~ 1754Afler4 P.M.
11o lOr tlw hMzor: coli 114-IBSo 1113 NINon ..,.,. E, A1C,
3801.
lmlfm taclo Cl...til1 lulom.llc

aw--

-!I\IY .lloltull

Coo dillon, Auno - 1 11,000,
I14-24UIII.

'

.

·

AI 110 Dirt 11U. ·

11117 11' Cllollon, ,..........,
boW, 130 hp. lnboorcl 4 cYL, ...

1NI ....'Cidu 300E. black wllh

Now 01 Polill PIUOI BUill .- .
BUILDING
IPECIAL
onion ooto, 11-r l&gt;ulbo &amp; boJ. POLE
30'x41'xr. Polnlod llool -!t
dlftJI pllnll. 304-4711o111114.
Golnl'""" Root, 11'11
Polio umbrolle toblo, 4 -.._ llool Slklo• ,. lion Do«.
SIOO. 30W11-1714 ollor llpon.
11,444. EAECIJEii. IAON HORSE

1lltll

13,000, 114-441-1111 Allor 4 P.ll.

:'n

Prom ....... .a. 12, U..ll•,
block oncl 0011n Livestock .
g
- .... llllochod
......... 63
choker, worn once: II• 11, ot1 1 v- Did Pony, 0o~1o, Good
tho_.................. with
lace trim, wom once: 114-V02- WHh
1103. Clllldron, - · t14-441-

House!loki

=

.
.3'-mJ v.Y(. ~~
N. 4 lit North or ~.'.,...

Fnrm Suppl1es

-,.,'""'.-.,month.
tl20/-. Golllo
Hd4ol.
114 14f.ll80.
•

4•

When a magician performs a

~~

AERATION IIOIOR8
Aopolrod, A · AobuiH In
SIOclc. Col .Aon E•127-1521.

Flw , _ , .......... llkf.
dlopotl, _ ......... lUll monl, odJolftlnO utra ~ lal,

North

PjSS

By Phillip Alder
1 1 1 1 - - &amp; 'a1110
Ex-~ Condlllon, Low - .

1-

JET

.West

I•

-

71 Auto• tor Sale

.,. .....

Cnoltcnoll Ad. 10 , _ • ltolh,
1 - . 111,000. J04.e11.13H Of
:104-411-lloyllme.

llr'M.,.-

C 1N5 by NEA, h:.

Fumlllhed
EfftcllncW',
All
Ulllltloo 111
.......Bocond
--·
11481Mo.
A
,
lkloll Alnctt. ThrM I J Q:OIIt, 1 Golllpallo, 1M 441 31141.
112 lllltw, ,..,..... •• •.....
:JWo Cor ~ .c ont... lltt,
PenoN lllllkjaid, City lot 1 ala.

South

form)

The magician's
trick

..... p ..

~f'Z.I

.

32 Car'o fuel
33 Time rriods '

Opening lead: • Q

.

Dam one
21, -of Lond011
22 Cultlvo11ng • •
24 Pep
:
25 One (Scot.} •
26 Celli. oumrner
•
30 Ear (comb. :

• Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

1171.

. . . . .............

. 18 Slnver-

lime

·-Ill• 4, 5,p....,a.wn,
-.
1. tJI To fJI,.....
._

Allor7P.M.~

awing

13 I.e .. In lull . • ·

28- Tin Tin

,.
FurnWM4 2 lid ootn ....,...

'

th~s that you hope wlh ~3j)Pen .. l~ a sih

uat1on can't stand'on iiS ~wn. wishing

WOO't make r1 better.

'
•

�•

•
I

Ohio ·

Sentinel

EASTMAN'S

•

&lt;""-

.

FOODLAND

..

1' .

'

&gt;

Pick 4:
9781
BuckeyeS:
6-15-10-24-34

••

.e

DAY

'

'

'

VoL 45, NO. 238

•I

•

·vote set

Rutland·manage$
s,ewage problem r

Thursday

~

on ·cuts'.

,.

.,

For The Clergy
Of Meigs, G_allia and
Mason Counties

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Boneless·Chuck

•

W welco~e

e
all active and retired ministers of counties we
serve. to stop by your EMlh}an 's
Foodl~ds to receive· yuurfree large ·
bucket of chicken. (Due
to
unavaUability of chicken · at Big
Bend and 'Gallipolis Foodlands, we
will substitute a Deli Cake and '/,
Gallon of Foodland Ice Cream.)Just
come to our Deli Department. this
Sunday between 11 and 3, 'r egister
the name of your church, and you'll
get our delicious deli fried chicken.
(For fairness to all, we ask that

LB.
,

ministers or ministers' wives only

pic.kup the chicken. No congregation
llJCmber please.)

FOODLAND

White iread••

$

"

20 oz.
LOAVES

This is Eastman's Foodland's' way
of expressing our appreciation for
the area's clergy. We acknowledge
the importance of their work and
spiritual leadership in our ·communities. Please join ·us in th.a nking
these individuals for their devotion
and service.

''

.
'

ASST. FlAVORS

. HEJIRS
POTATO -CHIPS

J

I .

Gun bill on way to Senate ·with 88-10 OK

99

VELVET SUPREME

ICE CREAM

$199

24PACIS

' .

· I LB. BAG

.

•

-nESB 'EXPRESS

TOSSED SALAD
BUY ONE, GET. ONE

.FREE
________________
...

._
1 WITH COUPON
ASSI. 16·18 Oz.

Chips Ahoy
Cookies

2/$5

Heiner's

V05

King Size

Sha111poo &amp;
Conditioner

White Bread
20 01.
Loaf

.Wa RaM.va the .Righl to Umlt QuantlUH • Prlcea

.

'

Local N·e ws in Brief:

EXPIRES 4/8/95 I

EASTMAN'S

GALLIPOLIS
OHIO.VALLEY
BIG BEND
IWIItRIVER

Monday crash injures two drivers

'

IS 01.
BoHle

Sentinel NeWll Starr
.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Senate
Any machine or system has
Majority Leader Bob Dole hopes
waste.
·
Democrats wiD stop delaying a $15
jtulland ViUage bas managed its
billion spending-cut package, but
buman ·waste during the last three
just in case be bas set a ThllfSday
years, sewage supervisor Dale Hart
showdown vote to force a bait to
said.
lhe slalling taeiics. · .. '
State environmental officials
The Senate cast no votes Tuesmade the village residents switch
. day on the Republican effort to
from their septic ·systems because
. cancel already-approved spending
of health and nuisance problems.
for summer youth jobs, public
"The. process bas been refined
broadcasting and scores of other
so we can (purify the waste water)
programs. But behind the scenes,
and it's safe,'' Han said.
the Clinton administration and
Some residegts continue to commembers of the two parties tried
plain about the cos~ and the com·
lnaneuvering through a bill that
plexity of the grinder system
present! each side with political
installed.
risks.
Long·time ~utland resident
~ - '-'It's a two-way street-up here.' •
Gene Fink's only concern was the
Dole, R·Kail.,said as he described
grinder lhat lif1s the spwage near
just one of many struggles sur'his bouse runs sporadically and
. rounding the legislation: aid to Jorloudly. This electronic grinder sys·
dan.
tern costs $3,500.
To malce the bill more appealing
Fink - who installed his own
to President Clinton to sign, Dole is
septic system - · said be was glad
· tryin~ to insen $275 million in debt
to see the p~bleni sqlved since be
forgiveness the adminis-tration
lives down wind from tbe elemen· wants to grant lhe Middle Eastern
tary s.chool.
,
"That was just a legal way to
kingdom roUowiiis its peace treaty
with Israel:
put my ....:._ on my neighbors and
neighbors' neighbors," Fink said.
· Democrats, led by Sen. Cbris!oOnce the sewage leaves the
pber Dodd of Connecticut, are tryhomes, it collects in a small pool
log to keep the aid in a separate
and then a system like a thermome· measure.
ter automatically lifts the sewage to
Demoaats also have bc;en trying
REMOVING.WASTE- Rutland vm..,•s - Dale Hart, village maintenance supervisor. Hart
feed to the plant
to force a vote on an amendment
sewer system bas required continual malnte· weighs matter on a minutely accurate Kale.
At· the plant. the sewage is con·
!hat would restore $1.3 billion of
nance during Its three years of operation, sold
tairied
within a 5().by·SO foot space
the GOP cuts in ·educali® and chil·
and
constaDtly
tluSbed and recycled
d~~n·~ progr11ms. Repubii~ans
lbrougb
gates.
The
water is divided
lll!~bt agree to restore some of their .
into
two
separate
tanks,
which Cfi"
reductions in exchange for a pledge
by Clinton to sign the bill.
. But short of an agreement
between Democrats and RepubJi-·
cans for a quick .vote, the s·enate
Attorneys representing both At question with some of the state· received information the fire on
would vote Thursday on ending the sides in a suppresslon'hearing iDa ments is whether Roush's rights Salser Road near Racine may bad
delays, a move one Republican said case involving a Middleport mao were violated.
btien arson, Lentes sai4 earlier.
-the GOP would win.
·
charged with rape an4 arson have
Story and assistant Prosecutor
Lentes alleg~d that Russell
. Under s·enate procedures, that
until4 p.m. Friday to prepare legal Chris Tenoglia were ordered by Roush paid bis brother, William
vote would have the added benefit
briefs on lhe mauer.
Judge Fred W. Crqw ID to produce Roush, 46, New Haven, W.Va ..
of automatically eliminating many
Russell M: Roush, 32, is legal briefs outlining the law con- $1,000 to bum lbe trailer. A claim By GEORGE ABATE
amendments to the bill. That would
accused of raping a 7-year-old girl cerning what constitUies as a vol· was then submitted to an insurance Simtinel News Sta"
include ·one by S.en. Alfonse
·
.
company which paid $12.000 to
and an~nging for the arson of a untary statement.
Several Middleport merchants
D' Amato, R-N,Y:, that effectively
Racine III'Ca mobile home on Sept.
Crow's order .Tuesday ·followed Russell Rousb, be said.
discussed with village officials bow
blocks the rest of Clintm •s planned
5.
days of testimony by Prosecuting
During lbe investigation, inves- the village got into its current
John
R.
Lentes,
Sheriff
tigators
uncovered evidence that financial situation at Tuesday
Public
defender
Steve
Story,
Attorney
$20 billion rescue of Mexico's llil·
Roils!~,
is
attempting
James
M.
Solllsby,
fire
marshal's
R~ssell
Roush
bad allegedly been night's Middleport Community .
representing
, ing peso. Some supponers of the
to
suppress
sralemeuts
Rousb
made
investigator
Bob
Lawless
and
pros.
molesling
'a
7·year-old
girl, Lentes Association meeting.
president's effort would be uncom·
.
said.
fortable voting to proiiiCt it because · Dec. 15 and 16 during an lnvestiga- eculor' s investigalor Jeff Miller.
Mayor Dewey Hqrton explained
lion by law enforcement officers.
The State Fire Marshal's ortice
Russell- Roush is currently being lhe village overextended itself. by
of the -widespread unpopularity of
foreign aid.
.
held in the Meigs County Jail.
seelcing too many grants. The vilThe Senate bUI is a more modest
.lage did not anticipate lhe changes
version of a $17 billion package of
lhat would occur in state and federcuts the House approved on March
al grant money.
ond Amendment, and lbe parenlal 21 and under) ..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 16. The White House bas threat· ·
Originally. lhe state .and federal
ll would increase lbe penalty for government paid ·au the grants,
ened to veto the House measure. The need to stop urban violence authority issue bas been trampled
improperly furnishing fireanns to a · Horton said. Then, during lhe late3J!d bas repeatedly said lhe Senate came into conflict with the rights of on also," said Hood, R-Canfield.
"Too
many
people
look
at
thi:
sportsmen
as
the
House
p~sed
a
minor
to ·a fourtb-degrec felony. It 1980s the grants demanded more
bill also contiins cuts in social proproblems
in
lbe
city
and
don't
real·
bill
that
would
make
it
bardet
for.
previously
was a misdemeanor.
grams lbat would bun lbe poor and
local matches.
lbat
by
taking
away
rigbls,
you
ire
young
people
to
get
guns.
Between 1988 alld 1992, the
slow economic growth:
"We bave made some bad judg"Disputes that WllfC once settled are af(ecting lbose in lhe rural area. juvenile crime rille increased dra- ments,"
But Clinton and' Democrats
Horton said. "I don't ·think
where it is. very COif!mOn for a
mus.t contend with lbe popular view by playground scuffies are now $Cl· . falher lo ,train a son in lbe use of a matic!llly, Salerno-said.
.
any_
l
bing
was int.enlionru ... We got
Her bill also would plohibit pos· 10 spending as if we had the money
tqat the governmen1 must pare its tied by the sounds of gunshots
being fire&lt;!," Rep. An,ly Salerno, gun as eal'ly as age 10." ..
session of a firearm by a minor
spending.
.
·
He acknowledged the problem unless the minor bas a bunting there some place."
R
-C~Jiumbus, said Tuesday. "ChilThe&gt;:, also realize the legislation
Two
years
ago,
lhe
village
borof urban violence but felt the bill
comains something that the presi- dren are not even safe in their own would b:tve been more fair wilb his license, bas completed .a gun safety ·· rowed $200,000 to cover back
b&amp;!s~ lei alone in their owri yards." ·
course, and is participating in safe expenses. This loan- wilb interest
dent wants to sign: $6.7 billion in
The
House
voled
88-l
Q for the amendment. The bill already bas a gun activities under lbe supervision
aid to states for natural disaster bill, which now heads to the Seq. provision allowing a parent to pro-had to be paid back.
.
relief. The chief beneficiary would · ale. The bll~ sponsored by Salerno, vide a firearm if self defense is Qf an adult.
"Somewhere down lbe line the
In olher action, the House:
be California, still rebuilding from increases 'lbe penalties for guo sales required. The 'provision was ~ug­
money ran out," he add~d.
- Voted 96·1 for a bill that
las't year's Northrid11.e earthaualce to minors and for stealing and sell.. gested by Hood while the bill was
During Horton's 12 years as
requires
financial disclosure stale- councilman and mayor, no audits
and a key state for Clinton's 1996 ing stolen weapons.
· being studied in conunittee.
ments from university presidents.
re·election bid.
found theft. Tbe audils addressed
The bill increases the penalty for
Rep, Ron Hood proposed an
The biH corrects a measure tech!lical pointS, Horton said:·
Republicans are eag.er to send . amendment that would allow a par- . stealing a fire3fD\ or receiving a
Middleport businessman Tom
lbe bill to Clinton before Congress ent to provide a juvenile wilb a stolen frre,arm from a fourlh-degree · passed last year that inadvertently
begins its spring recess at the end ftream1 if a polential need. for self Te,ony to a lhird·degree felony, cxempled the presidents from Dooley stalc;d most of lbe business·
financial disclosure requirements.
es in town have been affected by
of Ibis week. Not doing so would defense existed, such as going on a punishable by 10 years in prison.
,.Voted97-l
to
allow
17·yearallow Democrats to spend the camping trip alone. he said. The ·
Tbe bill' also creates two new · olds to be hired as precinct w&lt;irkers . ibe village's current fiscal situatbree·week ~reak accusing the amendment was defeated.
offenses: underage sale of a firearm during ele"ions. Previously, tion.
"It: s mismana~tement of funds.''
GOP majority of failing to pusb its
•'Right now I believe it (the bill) (for those age 18 and under); and precincl workers bad to be 18 or Dooley
said. "How did borrowing
agenda lhrough the Senate.
tramples on our rights in the Sec- · underage sale of a band gun (ages older.

I

Elloctlve.T)lru Sot. ,April 8, 1WS •.USDA Food Stompalfld WIC Coupona Atceptld • Not Ruponelblelor lYpographlcal or Pictorial Errora.

be used f6r peak levels which occur
in tbe spring and fall. -.. .
,
The water is constant) y agitated
by lbe jeUing air, flowing thrbu~b a
series of areas where tbe waste falls
out The waste cominually settles
and before the water is returned to
lhe stream after it is chlorinated.
Inside the building, are a series
of lbree blowers. Two of the blowers run constl\DIIY sucking in the
outside air.
The system works because hac·
teria in feces will not grow if aerated enough, Hart said. The system
has been complicaled by lbe data
required by lhe stale and 1federal
government -.
·
-Daily, Han must !flOnitQC levels
including Ph, ox.yg~n. suspended
solids and temperature. Weekly,
lhe solids need to be weighed.
The simpler way would be to k;t
nature take -ils course, Han added.
This would save moQey, since it
would pool it in a lagoon and feed
by gravity, Hart said. Tuppers
Plains will install Ibis system next
year, but large open spaces are
needed.
Tbe e~cess maller is poured
onto the fii!:lds by area farmers,
Han said. Most is siphoned into
anot\ler truck as a liquid fertilizer
for the much-needed phosphates.
People think nolbing of spreading anunal manure on fields, Hart
said. But. many think human waste
· is different.
"There's a liltle truth In that
though,'' Hart said. ~Humans will
eat things that an animal would
never think of eating."

changes leave village
financially drained

Attend The Churclr of Your Choice

$1

By GEORGE ABATE

Parties in suppression hearing
ordered to prepare legal briefs State, federal grant

5'tP'Rj;L 16 IS V'l.ST£9(

150Z.

3 Sectlono, 20 PaQH• 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newapope.-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 5, 1995

Copyrlglit 19915

'

*PLUS OTHER.FUN, PRIZES AND FUND RAISERS

545

hp4

-

Donate •1.00 to fight cancer and get a chance I~ win
•1 00.00 in Food land ,Groceries.
.~ ALL PROCEEDS 'to AMERICAN
CANCER SOCIEn -

Pick 3:

••

•

.with our CANCER DAY RAFFLE ·

Cavs
defeat ·
Celtics

•

Help Defeqt -Cancer
MINISTERS
0
Win,s1 00° In Groceries

Ohio Lottery

,

.•

.

$50,000 lurn ioto borrowing
~200.000 ... lf funds had not been
mismanaged in the past you would
not be in this position."
.
Few questions were asked of lbe
village's decisions during the previous adminiStration, DOOley said.
· But, Dooley added steps have
been taken to improve the situation.
The village needs to focus' on the
present :ind future, Dooley said.
Mayor Horton responded that
the last year has been marked by
difficul~ unpopular decisions.
'
"We are pulling out of our problems,'' Horton said, adding it may
be five years to the conclusion .
More community support is needed.
In olher business, tbe Middleport Community Association: ·
- listed treasurer's beginning
balance at $3,274.39 and an ending
balance of $2,440.89.
~ congraiUialed the Riverbend
Arts Council since it was chosen by
tbe Ohio Arls Council from 12
counlies for a pilot project in
Appalachian music and storytelling.
- will set meetings for tbc
Fourlb of -July committee and the
fall River Festival sometime next
week .
- has 42 members, nearing itS
goal or 50 members. ·
- will organize a MiddleJX&gt;rt
farmer's market at 7:30p.m. Tuesday al Riverbend Arts Council.
-set lhe next meeting for 5:15
p.m. May 2 at Peoples Bank.

Daughter'. testifies in White m-urder trial
By KEVIN PINSON

•

Angela Wbitc Said she and Belb
OVP
News
Sta"
Daniels,
a friend who was spending·
Two Racine residents were raken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
A
sobbing
teenaged
girl,
wiping
tbe
night.
were in bed when the
for injuries received In a three-car accident Monday on Stale Rou~
tears
from
her
eyes
with
the
sleeve
couple
relumed
from a bar In Hen1~.
.
of
h'
e
r
denim
jacket,
described
to
a
derson,
W.Va.
La t e r
Tbe Gallla·Meigs POst of the State Highway Pall'OI said Susan D.
jury
Tuesday
how
her
father
that
night,
Angela
said
she
beard
Lyons. -32, Fifth Slr\let, and Donald W. SbalTer, 18, !16450 Mornallegedly
murdered
ber
mothe~
last
ber
father's
loud
voice
coming
ingstar Road, were transported by the Meigs EMS foUowing the
. December at their Chatham from lbe living room:
3:05 p.m. accident.
·-·- ·
.
Avenue residence.
· He was arguing wilb Mrs. White
Lyons was treated and released, but a VMH spokFSPCfSOn said
Angela
White.
16,
described
aboul
his cousin, Do!lllld While,
Shaffer was transferrec;J to Holzer Medical Center. HMC had no
straddlfng
=with
~1Rl1!!;1be·
mother Wlls having
finding
-JUIJiillfWbile
' reCOOi or'imlmrenrror Shaft&amp;. upaKe&gt;peuolBald.' _
•
· •
Bonnie
While
and
pointing
a
gun
at
'
an
affair,
Angela
said. The daugb. Troopers said Shaffer was eastbound when be was unable to stop
ber
check.
Sbe
described
being
sent
ter
said
sbe
went
i01o the Hving
his car In time and slrUCic the 1eat of Lyons' car, In lllm fon:lng it
back
to
her
room
and
bearing
the
room
and
asked
them
to quiet
into lbe rear ofa ear driven by Wendy A. Wolfe. 22. 48760 Canter
firSt
of
sevellll
gunsbols.
down,
but
lhey
paid
her
no
allenRoad. Raci.ne:
Her
testimony
brought
tear$
to
tion
and
sbe
returned
to
bed.
Lyons and Wolfe had each slowed for lrBffic when the crash
the eyes of at least one juror, severThe next time Angela came into
occurred, accordin~ to the reDOn.
al
courtroom
observers,
'w.d
the
the
living room was when sbe
Continued on t»l• 3
man accused of killing his w1fe.
. heard a tbump a~d ber mother

yelling _her name. The tlllUgbter that of a belt hitting@ lable.
said Mr. White was straddling his
Tbe girls then heard more sbots.
wife with a gun pointed at her Terrified, Angela and her friend
cheek.
· remained in lhe bedroom. Both tes·
tified that Mr. White came in,
"My mother was lying on the
·noor," she said. "He bad his legs asked where the phone was and
over top of her, like she was lying · lh~n left.
belween his legs."
·
Angela and Daniels chllnged out
· Aogela said she put her arm
of their nigbtFlothes and walked
around her falher's neck,· trying to
into the living room, where Mrs.
pull him off of Mrs.. White. She ~ .W.b.it.e.Allf.-&amp;P£ll.wled ot,lt on tbe.
also lrled punching him, but to no
floor.
,
avail. Mr. White pusbed her away
"l.tbought lh81 sbe was (breathand t.old her to go back to ber ing)," Angela said. "Bul (now) I
room, Angela said.
don't thin~\ that sbc wliS." The girls
She returned to her room where lhen ran to a neigbber:s house ror
she beard a gunshot Daniels, who belp.
·
'
remained in the bedtooll\_ during
The daughter testified that her
lhe struggle, described the sound as
Continued on~ 3
•

•

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