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I

Ohio ·

Sentinel

EASTMAN'S

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&lt;""-

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FOODLAND

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&gt;

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

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.e

DAY

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VoL 45, NO. 238

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·vote set

Rutland·manage$
s,ewage problem r

Thursday

~

on ·cuts'.

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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.

''

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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

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-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

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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

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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:

••

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.with our CANCER DAY RAFFLE ·

Cavs
defeat ·
Celtics

•

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

Ohio Lottery

,

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$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.' _
•
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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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·:Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

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.1'1..UHDiA.INC. ..
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ROBERT L WINGE'IT
hhlllber

MARGARET LEHEW .

· CIIAili.DiE HOFJ'LICH
Ge.nl Mm~t~er

Cantroller

U!TI'I!RS 01' OPINION are MlcGme. Tbcy obould be lal tbaD 300

woido JoDa. All.,... . . Mlbjoc:t m oc!itinJIIICI p~Uit be •i&amp;ned with-·

....... llld talqlbnno IIUIIlber. No llllli&amp;ned letten will be publlsbed. Leaen
tbould be iD Jood lllle,lldclzMiial
DOl penoaolitlel.
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.:.eus_h says· keeping it
·:simpl~ key to success .

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One st(X)i - told and re-told in
the mountains - ·sums up the view
of the ARC among Appalachian
residents: A Harvard-educated
poverty fighter bad become lost In
the Kentucky hills. Impeccably
dressed
driving a fancy car, he
pulled up to a mountain man to ask
directions. The curious higblaader
asked what he did. "I'm witb the
War on PovertY." the youag man
chirped. ''Looks like you won,"
the mount;lineer shot bllcll:.

'lMandeld !a- I•
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•1Columbuel85"

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------Weather----Soutb·Cenlnll Oblo
Today ... Mostly sunay with a
.high in the lower SOs. Variable
winds 10 mph or less.
TonighL .. Partly c:loudy with low
near 40. Southwest winds S to 1S
iilpb.
· Thursday... Partly cloudy with a
high in the I'!JIICr 60s.

--Area
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'r;::-.
~~·
0 1 -bjt NEA, hc.
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I give up! WHO sre you: Rush Lim·

"OK baugh or Bill Clinton?"

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211311

.20 liZ

...5 311

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&amp;tended rorec:ut
Friday ...Fair. Lows 35 to 45.
Highs in the SOs.
Saturday... Fair. Lows ia the 30s.
Highs Ia the SOs.
.
Sundaf... Fair. Lows in the 30s.
Higbs ia the SOs 10 lower 60s.
Kleltyll:a
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Star Bank.-..--.. --...--..--41

_,_._

Wendy Jnt'L---·--·--·1' tn
Worthington lad.-------19 3/4

. Stock reporlll are the 10:30 ~~om.
·q uotu provided by Advut o
Gallipolis.

Henry Parrish .
He"nry Clyde Parrish, 94, Coolville, died Tuesday, Apri14, 1995, at
Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville.
,
Born Oct. 24, 1900, In Tuppers Plains, sou of the late He'Bry
Humphrey and Emma Gertrude Dorsey Parrish, he was the owner of ~
Sarson's General Stofll in Coolville, served on the Selective Service ·
board.
In addition, he was a member of the Carthage/Troy 'Board of Education, the Athens Cqunty Planning Commission and was director of the
Wesu:mGeneral Telephone Company, now the AU-Tel Telephone Company of Hudson, was a member of the board of director of the Piooeer
Casting Company of Belpre and attended the Coolville United Methodist
Church. He was a 72-yef.lf member of the Coolville Masonic Lodge, 337
F&amp;AM and in.1970 received a Modem Woodmen of America award for
continuous and dedicated community service.
·
·
He is survived by two nephews and several great-nieces and nephews.
·,
He was .preceded in death by bls wife. Hazel Sarson Parrish; ia 1984,
apd by two brothers, Howard ')aclt' Parrish and Alfred 'Splice' Parrish.
Services wiD be held Friday, I p-!Jl. at the CoolviUe United Methodist·
Church with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Burial will follow in the .
· Coolville Cemetery.
.
. Friends may call Thursday from 2-4 and 7•9 p.m. at the White Funeral
Home where Masonic services wiD be held at? p.m. . · .

Meigs. ahnouncements
...

- The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·1160) '

'

Published every artcm.oon. Monduy tllrouah
·Friday, II { Cou n St., Pomeroy, Oh io. by the
Ohio Valley Publishina Company/Mull'l media

..

hie .• Po meroy, Ohio 4!1769, Ph . 992-2U 6.

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Newspapef Assoclntioo.
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-

-

r-

•

The following were named as
prospective jurors for the May term
of tbe grand jury in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas:
Douglas Jobuson Jr .. Racine;
Carroll Ann Harper, Middleport;
Rhonda G. Mozingo, Rutland; Roy
Robert Hannum, tong Bottom;
Jollnna Louise Council, Langsville;
Paul W. Hudson, Pomeroy; Shirley
Lorena Pyles, Racine; Terra Dawn
Schoonover, Rutland: Vicki'L.
Ashton, Middleport; Kathy Jo
Milard, Albany;
-S.uzan L. Will, Pomeroy; Anita
J. Butcher, Pomeroy; ·Melanie Ann
Weese, Racine; Eva Loraine King,
·Pomeroy: Joe Bowland. Middle·
port; Roger Lee Jones, .Long Bot·
tom; Robert Dale Butcher,
Pomeroy; Charles Raymond
Manuel Jr., Racine; Coy B.
Starcher, Pomeroy; Jessa M. Brannan, Middleport;
Violet M. Lambert, Coolville;
Harold Thomas Niee, Pomeroy;
Anna M. Layne, Racine; Elza
Gilmore, Pomeroy; Deroo Paul
Howery, Albany; William B.·
Downie Jr .. Racine; Jane Swatzel,
Pomeroy; Tracy I. Rood,
Reedsville; Robert B. Baker,
· Reedsville; Caralyn Sue .Barton,
Reedsville;
.
Cindy Sue Haye, Rutland; Larry
G. Johnson, Rutland; Roben Henry

FROM·DON WOOD:

Conversion Vans
Mini Vans
Station lWagons
·11 You're Looking
We Have Them!

1995 Ford
Windstar

"'

Vinton man sentenced
• sneaking marijuana into the
· A Vinton man was sentenced
last week to six to 15 years In Gallia County Jail wbile incarcerarprison after pleading guilty to sev- ed on the charge from lbe butcher
eral offenses, including burglary, shop break-In; and
• two counts of burglary.
theft and arson.
Cain sentenced Marcum to two
Robert G. Marcum, State Route
325, was sentenced in the Common years for breaking and entering ,
Pleas Court of Judge Joseph L. two years for conveying an iUegal
substance into a oorreclional faciliCain.
ty, two years for auto tbefl. two .
He was charged with:
· • stealing and bumlng a car a ' years for ahion and six to 15 years
for eaeh county of burglary.
1986 Chrysler SepL 24, 1994;
All sentences are to be served
• brealcing into Kemper's Butcher Shop in Vinton Jan. 21 and steal- concurrently.
ing 1,000 pounds of meat;
"

Meigs EMS logs 9
. calls
'

·'units of the Meig~ County
3:38 p.m., volunteer nre depan- ·
Emergency Medical Service ment to Turkey Run Road,
recorded nine calls for assistance Che&gt;jhire, brush fire.
Bake sale to be held
Tuesday
including three transfer
· &gt;POMEROY
Tbe Rock Springs United
calls.
Units
responding
included:
4:27
p.m .. Mill Stree t, Homer
Metl!odisl 'Yomen wiU bold a bake
MIDDLEPORT
Payne,
HMC;
sale Saturday at Pamida, beginning
· 11 :30'a.m .. Pearl Street, Carl
II : II p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
at 10 a.m.
·
Stewart, Holzer Medical Center;
., Gen evie Demoslcey. Vcterans ·
•
Memorial Hospital .
Hydrant ftusblng announced
.
The Syracuse Water Board
8:so
124.
announced today that fll'e hydrant
.
Wesley
C
la
rk,
l&gt;leasa
nt
Valley
noshing will be held Saturday.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Hospital .
Dance to be held
Tuesday admissions - Albert
11JPPERS PL AINS.
c. J. ·and the Country Genlle- Smith, }&gt;omerciy
12:49 p.m., state Route 124: Joe
men wiU be playing for round and
Tuesday discharges - !lone
Braden, VMII.
squ~ dancing at the old Legion
-----~
ball in Midlllepo"- Friday,,.ll..to 11 1 l i l l l l l l l i i l i i l l
p.m. Free, publicinvlted.
~~

p. m~~~~RP'lJtC

Hospital news

r.::---------------.. .

'rrusteestomeet
.
-The Rolland Township trUstees
· wil,l meet ~urs~y. 6:30p.m. at
the llre stauon. Buls for the lnlck
·wiD be opened: The public is invited to attend.

Hosoital news

1' DAIRY·
ADOLPH'S
I'
· ALLEY
I' - 1 "'-. .,. .

I
.1

I
.I

J

~rmitt'ed

Printed wttb ptnnlsslon.
,

.

-

'··-·~

Hottest mini van
on the market.. .. ........

Refreshments.

'

•

Roush Jr., Racine; Royal ElwooO
Wilson, Long Bottom; Pauici)
Lynn Wolf, Pomeroy; David Allen
Reeves, Pomeroy; Elizabeth R .
Gloyd, Portland; Sally Jo Moore,
Pomeroy; Joey Lee Jarrell, Racine;
William H. Lamben, Middlepon;
Sheila A. King, Reedsville:
Wayne Edward Davis, Pomeroy;
Lowell ·Eugene Plotner, Racine;
Gary W. Gregory, Reedsville;
Terry Lee Garten, Middleport; .
Harold G. Johnson, Long Bottom;
Keith. Tliomas Hagen. Pomeroy;
Dorothy Lynn Musser, Syracuse;
Judi B. Howard, Rutland; Gary
Roger Cooper, Portland.
.

'

The upcoming ann'ual Flower at Home National Bank. In addiFestival dominated conversation at . lion, a flower oontest is also being
the March 28 meeting of tbe planned.
Racine Area Community Assocla·
Also discussed W;tS the May 5
lion.
and 6 RACO yard sale . People
The April 22.festival will be wishing to donate Items should
kicked off with a parade at 10 a.m. contact Deton:s Cleland at 949featuri"g floats ·made by local . 2545 or Dave Ztrlcle at 949-2031._
greenhouses followed by the
The cc;metery fund was .also discrowning of the Flower Festival cussed w1th members oons1denng a
Queen at noon.
Greenwood Ce~etery ·. fli~d .r.al~r
A varie.ty of entertainment, m the fall to ass1st m mamtaimng
sponsored by local businesses and the cemetery. '
.
organizations, will be featured after
The group also ordered sa sea.the crowning. Also featured are sonal banners to be placed about
crafts, McDonald's Hamburg Jar town.
an&lt;\ a ldddie tractor pull.
· · ~ next RACO meelin$ will be
People seeking information Aprllll at 7 p.m. _to finalize plans
aboul the festival can obtain a flyer for the Flower Festival.

'

m4.il
In llf.e"U
~li!re1iome c:a'ffier 5trvJcel~iblt. . .

S2 W&lt;ekt ............................ :. ..... ............,.$96.20

Prospective grand jurors are named

RACO mulls April 22
Flower Festival

. BOLZtR MEDICAL CENTER
. ~ _ _ Ap~ll ~ dl•chusu : !;'!I!.
'Miller, lan 'Sf~r; M H . Jl!lilr 1
Childers and son, Darlene Nichols I
MA IL SUBSCRIPTIONS
hu ldt Mt:lp Count'
and1;r.~=t Mr. and Mrs. I
13 Weeks ................................... ............. ,S2l.S'2
l 6 Wttkll .................... - ............ .............. $47.06
Rodney Morgan, a daughter. of 1·
s2 weeu .......... f .................................... m.l6
Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs: Wilbur
••Itt Outlkle Mdp Coant)'
., Wee'a ................................................ 52l.61
~~yard, a daugbter, of Crown \
26 Weel&lt;s ................... ,_ ....... ,......... _....,.. $49.66

-~ N.a.Jubscri{do~ by

points 34.S0-3S.SO: a .few 3&lt;1.00
and 36.00; plants 35.25-37.00. · ·
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., countr!
points 30.00-34.00.
:
Sows: litostly steady.
. ·
U.S .. I-3 300-500 lbs. 24.00:
28.50; 500-650 lbs. 28.00-32.50, ~
light.
few over 650 lbs. 33.00-34.00.
U.S: 1-3, 230-Ulll lhs., oou1itry·
Estimated receipts: 36,000.

. CQLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Indiana.Obio ditect ~og prices at ·
selected buying points Wednesday
by&lt; the U.S. Department of Agriculture Madcet News:
Barrows and gilts : weak to
mostly SO cents lower; demand

No injuries were reported following a single-car accident on
Morning Star Road in Sutton Township around midnight Tuesday.
According to a Meigs County Sheriffs Report, David A. Smith,
20, Racine, was eastbound when be fell asleep behind the wheel of
bis 1985 Pontiac Trans Am. The car·went off the left side of the
fOil4, strlltinl! a mailbox, and then went off the right side of the road,
strlldng rwo fence wsts. ·
·
No citations were issued. The car sustaineil .moderate damage.

.

· Margaret Eleanor Nolan, 6S, 16069 State Route SS4, ·Bidwell, died
Monday, April3, 199S at her residence.
Born July 20. 19291n Bldw.eU, daughter of the late Willis W. McBride
and Hanna Rutan McBride of Bidwell, she was a homemaker and attend. ed the Harrisburg Baptist Cllwc.b.
She was also preceded In deatb by her husband. Marvin Lee Nolan1 1n
1982, and by a brother, James "BID" McBride.
· Surviving in addition to her mother are two sons, Steven Lee Nolan of
Qallipolis, Md Lewis Roger McBride of Bidwell; ·rwo gnmdcltlldren and
three great-gnmdcbildren; five sisters, Virginia Tiploo and Jaae Werry,
both of Bidwell, Frances Hayes of Apple Valley, Calif., Kay EasUII- of
Bowling Green. Ky., and Judy Feustel of Gallipolis; and three brothers,
. Gene.JdcBride o( Bidwell, Pat McBride of Gallipolis, and Mike McBride
· of Apple Valley.
,
· .
Services wiU be I p.m. Friday Ia the Cmneens Funeral Chapel, Gal·
. llpolis, '1'1ith the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial wiD be in the
Fairview Cemetery, Springfield Township, Gallia C!lunty. Frleads may
· call at the chapel on Thursday from 6-9 p.m.
·
,
Pallbearers will be Larry Nolan, Nick Nolan, Toay Werry, Kevin
.Werry, Mike McBride and Mike Tipton.

Country music night planned
Country music night will be
held at the Lotttidge Community
·Center; Saturday, 7:30 to midnigbL
.,...._ _ _...__..__.._...
. ·;,;·

·

and

. Today's livestockrt;Jport

Deputies probe accident

I

. Margaret E. Nolan

~

3

Wbite and chase lum Dlf tile ~
erty. He later turned the we~
over to the Mason County, W.V11,,
Sheriff's Office.
:
While bas been indicted 111
Masoo County on charges of~
cioos assaul~ burgtary
attempC·
ed aggr\lvatoo robbery. '

,booting. saw· the gun when Mr.
· White returned and allegedly shot
his cousin in the face.
Marcus Rice of Southside,
W.Va .. said be toot the gun away
from Mr. White when be allegedly
tried to rob his bouse. Rice reportedly used tbe gun to.. b~at Mr.

Continued fro~ pag• 1
.
Shaffer was cited for aSsUred c:lear distance and no seatbelt, and
Wolfe was ticketed for expired registration. Damage to Shaffer's
car was moderate, and sllgbt to the Lyons and Wolfe vehicles.

Deaths~
· -

.

•

jealousy of Donald ~ the subject
of maay II'JUIDCIIII, lacliidlng the
ooe wblcb led up to Mn. White's
death. •
"At tlrst I don't thinlc be really
cared (about tbe affair), but later on
it really bothered him," she said.
During some of these arguments, Mr. White threatened to lcill
his' wife, Angela said.
.
"'You're going to keep pushing
me, you're going to keep pushing
me and I'm going to ld1l your ass,"'
Angela quo~ her father.
Under cross examination by
defense attorney James Bennett,
Angela agreed the ·threats were
only a figure of speech, and that
she did not thinlc at the time that
ber father would act on them.
The daughter also testified that
she called Mr, While at his mistress' bouse
"He told· me be·shot my mom,"
she said. "I remember asking. biln
(why), but all be was saying was
that he loved ber so much
that
be didn't know what be was going
to do.''
. ·
Angela and Daniels wer~ the
last witnesses called Tuesday by
SPecial Prosecutor John R. Lentes.
Other wimesses for the prosecution included a host 9f police ofli·
cers and investigators as well as
' two people who saw a handgun
similar to the murder weapoo in
~Mr. White's possession after the ,
shooting .
Linda Priddy, a former bartender at the Henderson bar where
the cou~Ie spent time before the

-Local news briefs•.. -

1995, at'St. Mary's Hosplral Ia Huntington, W.Va. .
Friends may call from 3-S and 7-9 p.m. today at the Ewtns Funeral
Home, with a vigil service occutrlng at 8:45 p.m.
·
· ·
. Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, with the Rev. Fri"Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will follow Ia
the Sacred He~ Cemetery.

'

The Dally s8ntlnei-Pigl

and

Sboney1aliie..- - - - - 1 0 3/4

"""L. Ka~nne NeuiZ!mg, 74, of Middleport, died Monaay, i\priD,

-

(For Inform• tion on bow to
communicate electrqnlcally wjth ·
this columnist •nd otllers, con·
tact America OnUne by caW1111 1·
800-8:7-6364, exto-8317.)
,

Today's colunm Is a oonfessioo. . ments tO have children? It smacks eviscerate AineriCoips, the new corps that.basn't been thought up ·
I confess that I d9 not under· of faScism.
program that employs young l~CD'' yet.
Sland right-wing ideol&lt;)gues.
1'11ey claim. they believe in bal· pie for a minimum wage and some
More than that: In tbe
.
Notice I did not sat conserva- anced budgets, but they push for college tuition to help tutor chi!-· SpearCorps program, they would
lives. Hard-working, God-fearing,
dren, assist the elderly, treat the beilin every work day with an hour
nation-loving, debt-hating, patriotOS(!ph Sp~ar
sick, provide for the needy, wuit Ia or two of Instruction in uareviled
ic, principled.. caring conservatives
libraries, pelice crime-infested American history and wbat we •
who we1gh ideas and think for tax cuts that exacerbate deficits and areas and so oa.
used to call "Problems of Democ- ·
.fjlemselves, J appreciate and !Jnder- provide minimal benefits to the
The program WORKS. Some racy." Everyone wbo graduated
stand. 1 think; - I hope - 1 am taxpayer. And few of them ever 20,000 young people have signed from the SpearCorps would be able
one, in fact.
tallc about bow we might attack th&amp; up - those same Generation Xers to recite the F'li:st Amendment and
No, I am talkiag about butt- overall $4.8 trillion national debl, that right-wingers like to claim are name the presidents.
kicldng, fang-bearing, trasb·tallclng which is a bigger threat lo our uliappreclallve, .uncaring, do-nothAnd one more thing about right· ·
right-wing ideologues, pe'XIe who security than 10 million Fidel Cas- lag blotcbes 011 the American land·
wingers. They claim to be such
worship Newt as a mess ab and tros.
_
~
. scape- and .they are by and large patriots, yet tbey refQsed to do aaydon't lrnow what they're supposed
They sacam out of one side of 1loving iL
thing about the baseball strike.
to thinlc on a given day until they their mouths about intrUsive go'~&lt;·
National service gives young Even Richard Nixon would have
cbeck In with Rush. They must be ernment and scream out of tbe people something to believe in. Tt seen the wisdom of forcing owners
born with so~e sort of Internal. other side for the government to helps them to u~tand the con- ·and ptarers to get on with tbe
nasty-meter which tells tllem what step in and force women to .have cept of duty. It lnspuea a sense of game. • America lsp't America
they' re supposed to bate because children and purge the military of gmtltude. It gives theta a way to · without baseball," be once said.
their logic IJillkes, no sense at all.
homosexuals and,rewrite the Coo- repay their nation for the gifts of
I don't understand rlgbt·
, They say they believe in a free stiwtion to outlaw tlag burners and oppoounity and freedom that bave
wingers, but J am"PPIeful for them.
. marll:elpJace~but that is l!emOil$~'- ~al!.!!w_pray~r in pu1!1!c ~~- _ - heen..banded ®w.l! lQ. tbem. -It~~..n_eYj:t,feai ruonio&amp; out of hYP· _
ble oonsense. They qltate for mar- . ]'lley rant and rave about declln· builds cbaral:ta'. It exposes the var- ocrltes to write ab!M!L . -··
ket-dlstendinl laX brealos and sub- in~ values aad virtues, thea turn ious Classes of society to one
Joseph. &amp;pear 11. a syndicated
sidles for lbe sll'UCI1lreS they build, around 10d vote to kill a national another
abets tolerance.
writer for Newspaper Enterprile
the beasts they nlise,1he erojli they service program that could be the .
You want ooaservative? Put me Al~atlon,
grow, the children they give birth most poWerful force (or the cultlva· Ia charge IOd some sort of national
(For lnfqrmatlon on bow to
to. The resqll is empty bull\lings, tion of values to come down the set'lice would be mandatol)'. Every
communlcat. et.ctroaicallr wttlt
overgrown herds, rotting silage and pike in more than three decades.
young person would be required by
tbla columnist an4 othera, cona busted eoonomy. And !"by should
Let me dwell 01_1 this one for a law to serve in th~ military, the
tact America Online by caW1111 1the government be.dferlng Induce- moment. Rigbt-wmgers wanno Peace Corps, AmenCorps ot some
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

.S:Z 114
.2!1 VI

Katherine Neutzling
.

J

r

.

•

ATilT-'----

Hilt.

LIDda Ead ..-------17 314
LlmiW lnc.--"----ZZ 1/4
Multlmodt.IDc. ----....;.31111
Peap)e•a ... --~---.2211'1
One V.U.Y---------...Ul/4
Roclcwell ----------.39 718
R.,.blal a Myen..------.11111
Royal Duii:IJ- '
----111111

.

GOP ideologues are not · cor-servatives .·

Berry's World
.

..

•

' They draw up specs for massttansit projects that almost always
overestimate ridership, traffic
abatement and environmental bene·
fits, while grossly underestimating
both consttuction and operating
costs:
-In the end, these extravagant
light rail systems become a drain
on local government coffers, costing far more per passenger ml'e
than alternative (but less glam·
orous) modes. of mass ·transit, like
buses and oommuter vans.
Again, San Diego provides a
rlpe example. The price tag for its
center-city uolley bas increased
more than $100 million from the
original estimate. DallY. ridership Is
now projected to be little more·than
a third of the 42,000 originally sold
to voters.
·
Bec~use the trolley line will
serve so few riders, it will bave no
"~ppreciable" impact on Uaffic
congestion along its planned route,
according to the latest environmental impact report. Thus, this white
elephant in the makiug - or

3111Z

·K -mart-..-------t•l/1

c·ity 9fficials create a wet . elepbant
JO$eph Perkins

Akm---,,
.A+Irc' OD _....

Clt1 Holditttl-"
J'oderal MoaalIll.
Goadyear 'filR--....:n 518

I

in taxpayer subsidies..
The public is starting to c:alch on
to these mass-transit boondoggles.
Last November, for Instance, voters
in California, ilf Denver, in Boulder
·and in Phoenix were asked to
approve urban transit ballot lnitia·
lives. AU four measures were overwhelmingly defeated.
Similarly, in February, residents
of Chut County, Wash., voted not
to IU!k up with the light rail system ,
of neighboring Portland, Ore. And '
earlier this moatb, voters in three
Seattle-area counties rejected a hal·
lot proposal to build a new 70-mlli
rail system in the Puget Sound
region.
•
What we are witnessing in cities
throughout the country is a baclcIasb against government-funded
mass transit projects. It's not that
the commuung public Is unconcerned about tra(flc congestion and
air quality. It's that they ~ize that
light rail systems cost way too
much for the limited number of rid·
ers they serve.
Joseph Perkins Ill a columnlat
for The San Diego Union-Trl·

Am Ele P"'"'r '-

CU.ploiiiDd.-CJaarmiDc Sbop---

J

should we say "wet elepblint" - ·
will not bring San Diego closer to
oompliance with federal and state
air-quality standards, as its support·
~ originally clairneil
·
You would thinlc that San Diego
city officials would have learned
something from the costly.experiences of other municipalities.
Indeed, even those cities that boast
sleek, high-tech light rail systems
..,-lilie Washington, D.C.'s Metro,
San Francisco's BART,. Miami's
. Metro and Atlanta's MARTA have
Called to attract projected levels of
~ridership and thus r.equire huge
subsidies from local government
In fact, the Americaa Public
'Transit Association documented
that in 1993 rider fares nationwide
ooven:d ooly 41 percent of the $17
· billion cost of opel'!lling locallrl!Dsit systems. That means that c1ty
and county governments bad to
spend $11 billion in publlt funds
- tax dollars- to keep their gold· plated subways and uolleys and
people moved from sinking In a·
flood plain of red inlc.
·
. And local governments doa't ·
even dretim of recouping the bil·
lions of tax dqllars they have spent
to build their ligbt rail systems. If
these capital costs are factored in
with the annual operating cost of
local tranSit systems, .we're talll:ing
aboui more than $20 billion a year

I

llllal&lt;Oae.--

Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for Unlted
Future Syndkllte, Inc. · ·

ought to be encouraged til abandoa
their nasty, _o ld automobiles· in
favor of bright and shiny new sub~!ys, trolleys or "people movers.''

Stocks
11Gb E -

· Since then little bas Changed for
the po&lt;X- or for the poverty fight·
ers.

.

along."
Angela said both or ber parents
were bavlng affairs - MR. White
wilb her busblnd's CDDila and Mr.
White with the cousin's sister-inlaw, Peggy Jooes•
The c~!!~!!.ter aald ber father's

•

and

.:
But there: s also a lesson leanled more personally, and painfully. Less
: • \ban rwo years before the election be lost, President George Bush was rid·
: ·ing higher In the job approval polls than anyone before blm, his mtings
. ·driven as high as ~I perCent by the military victory in the Persian Gulf.
: · · But instead of goiag tO the country and lbe DemOCilltic Congress with
· a clear ll,llenda for action at bome, be waited, slumped, and critics soon
: were saying be bad no theme, couldn't tell voters wbete he wanted to lead

•

"lt waaa' t 1ood,'' abe said.
"111ey were talking about getting a
divorce. They juat weren't getting

12 YEARS. ·

·
''If you've got political capital, spend it," Gov. Bush said, recalling
: · those days. "Political muscle atrophies unles5 you use it."
.
: • , The younger Bush was adviser and traveling oompan\oa to his father in
·two White House campaigns. "I've learned a lot from my dad," be said.
· But tbe lesson of lost political capital is one be' d obviously prefer to have
· · been taught elsewhere. Dad's 1992 defeat still smarts.
•
:
Even so. Gov. Bush can joke about it now. "I inherited every single'
· · one of bls enemies and half of his friends,'' be said during his own cam:: p&amp;ign. .
.·
The pro(lle, the voice, the name and the fact that goveroors of Texas
· usually are players in national politics all oould give him a wider forum.
During the height of Califor"l'm not interested Ia that," Bush said. He said he's turned down every nia's five-year ·drougbt, San Diego
network television invitation to go ta11c and "sound smart," or to serve on voters approved a ballot proposlnational political oommittees that would iall:e him away from Texas.
lion to build a six-mile, $ISO milHe bas endorsed Sen. Pbll Gramm of Texas for the Republican presi· lion trolley line through the city's
dehiial nomination. That was almost obligatory.
midsection,
· Bush said he will woi'k for Granun, at bome. "I'll belp bim in Texas...
. What sponsors of the measure
to make sure bis borne state is battened down," the governor said.
neglected to mention was that.the
He came to office with a classic Republican, let us alone theme, telling plan called for the trolley·to be
Washington to "let Texans run Texas." Now he aclrnowledges a bit of built smack dab In the middle of a
nervousness about bow that's going to bappen, even with Republicans flood plain, alongside the San .
running Coagress.
··
Diego River.
· "I think the tendency of the federal government is to try to run states .
The' folly of this plan bas
regardless of who's in power," Bush said. "A mandate is a man~ate, become ridiculously· obvious now ·
whether It comes ... from left or right.''
that the ·drought is over. San Diego
Clinton already bas signed a law barring unfunded federal mandates, . bas experienced about a dozen
but only those to come, not tlJc existing federal regulations that cost states · rainy days so far this year and on
an estimated $12 billion a year. The new law applies to any measure that each occasion the river bas overwould oost the states $50 million a year or more, but that ceiling could be flowed its boundaries.
waived by a simple majority vote of Congress. ·
· ·
But local government. officials
Still, it Isn't one-sided. The budget the Texas legislature Is considering in San Diego are darned if they're ·
now counts on nearly $24 blllioo in federal funds, the second biggest going to let a little problem like
source of state revenues. Bush said be's bee!l told that won't go down . · flooding dissuade them from buildunder House GOP plans, But it won't go up as once projected, and .costs . ing their ttolley.
stiU are.
They plan to break ground .on
That's where lhC} squeeze could oome. And that makes even a Republi· the light rail proJect May 1 cail governor nervous.
unless, of course, It happens to rain
.thatday.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vk:e presldent.and colum- · The mass-transit travesty that is
nist for The Assodated Preu, bas reported on Washington and playing out in San Diego bas
occurred in cities and -counties
national politics-for more than 30 years.
·
throughout the country. The local
power structure (elected officials,
deep-pocket
developers, corporate
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Gregory Peck is 79. Novelist Arthur Hailey
honchos
and
other vested Interests)
is 75. Actress Gale Stoon is 73. lmpresslonist-actor Frank Gorshin is 61.
decides
that
'the
lumpen pro!ela(lat
The former chairman of the Joint Clliefs of Staff, Gen. Colin L. Powell, is
58. Actor MicbaelMoriany is S4. Actor Max Gail is 52.

J)arent' s marriaRe ·had been on

rocky around for some time.

'

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: them.

' Thlll'lllly, Aprl 6
Accu-~ foceeut for

IIIIIIY=

Ohio

Dllf;lghter testifies••• _CM_,~--Irom-"-_...;_,.,...;;__1- - ' - - : - - - - - -·- - -

OHIO Weather

coasermve Republlcaas audl as
WASHING-TON- Republ~ dt:at RoJald Jt...... wbn ID'IIbf to : Sealle IIICI HoUle, retpeedvely, for . ··vtrgtala Gov. Georae .Allen aad
ellmlaate
111
fuadlag
for
elgbt
cans Ia Coaare11, wbo bave
AI
a
to Pennsyl9aala Gov. Tom Rld1e.
promised to tear. dowa the telll· atrlight ,_.a, coa1d till the proserved Ia die Honse. lilo
gram.
btiMN'
fcderll
ead
1111111 of Plaidalt Lyt!doa B. Jolla·
s
commlsstoa. ...
.
"buslaess
as
usual"
oa
Capitol
Like
maay
successful
private
son's Great Society programs,
Hill,
the
ARC
oac:e
again
flada
might spare ~~ae prop&amp;m 111at atartTbree cJecad• ago, Maryland'•
itself under auack. 'Yet GOP sill·
ed It all: die A~i• Regioall By Jack Anderson · warts
three
·westernmost couadea were
fnlm die repm are llalng up
Commilsloo. thla progtlllll filii
surprised
to flad themsewea aud·
to defend this replaal welfa proto feel the budget &amp;Jie~ however, It
denly
declared
poor by Coogreas.
·
an,d
gram, even as litber pqverty prowill bave- to do with pork-bar· ·
A
receat
mm!ysilla
~laud pcare beiag cut ladiscrlmlnatcrei poUtlcs tban respao•slble public
Michael
Binsteln grams
pared
for
the
ARC
coofeased
that
ly.
policy.
.
the
regloa
"never
bas
been
aftllct·
Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest, RThe ARC was born In March companies, die ARC- mucb of
Md.,
wbo beads a tcy aubcominlt- ed with die sevae sqdal and eco196S with a six· year mandate to Its suength to dlverslflcatioa nomlrifoblema of hard-c:ote
develop the poverty-strickea spreading· the pork to' a wide coo· tee overseelag the ARC, recently Appal 'an areas.''
·
~hv:hian regioa. It was the fint stituency. The commiMI011 c:wreat- voiced suppon for the program.
o ~boson's Great Society pro- ly covers 13 states, meaalag a Although he lMimits 1be program II I At the time it joined to the ARC
grams. Like many programs of the bipartisan coalition of more 60 ·uader fire from some within his 'gravy train, die tbrec:-county realoo
era. it was meant to be lelllpDI'KY. House members, 26 aeaators 10d owa party, be says be wants to in western Maryland bo!llted au
AI the commilsioll'a fll'SI chairman 13 governors bave a stake In ill malabtla fuadlag while Congress unemploymeat rate of sll&amp;btly
testified before Congress: '.'Mr: · survival.
figures out a lay to merge the · 1more tban 4 percent - or dose to
When the ARC's Democratic: ARC witb tbe COO(llllic Develop- full employment Yet Maryl10d
Chairman, If this organization Is
here In sb years, It will be an pali'DDS lost control ol the Senale Ia ment Administration, another collects millions each ye. that wu
embarrassment to Lyndon John- · 1930, new Senale M$r{ty ladc:r beleaguered program 1111eted by lateaded for the Appalachian poor. ..
Howard Baker . of Tennessee OQP budaet Cllllm, .
son."
stepped
forward
to
save
the
com"Ia
my
oplalon,
based
on the
Tblny years, - ,.• and more than,
While the ARC was origlaally
$6 bi!Uon later - the ARC's most mission. It also eceived sillliftcant teslimoay ol a whole range of peo- set up to belp the rural poor of
remarlcable achievement Is its own backiag from two powedul law- ple, both of those programs bave, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia and
survival. Althougb the law called makers: Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D- in recent years, doae some real West Virginia - die "Appalachi·
for Its termination in 1971, the W.Va., and former Rep. Jamie positive wort," Gilchrest told us. an" resideats of Maryland receive
ARC bas been reprieved lime and Wbiaea, D-Miss., who chaired 'the He added tbat be Is aot the only more money per capita from the
time again, Not even ~ormer Prest- . Appropriations Committee In the conservative supporter of the ARC. ARC than any other region. The
average western Maryl10der geu
$1,049 per persoa In economic
benefits from the ARC. The tesl·
.dentS
of West Virglnia'sMclDovl'el
I'VE· QEEN ON THAT S4ME •
·County - wbose resldeats
· CORNER F~ OVER
up the recruitment posters for
War on Poverty -receive about
$60 per head. .
.

ByWALTERR.MEARS
.
. · AP Specllll Corrapondent
· . ~AUSTIN, Texas - "Boring is beautiful," the governor grlaoed.
"Focus Is fun." And when you've got'pD!iticaJ capital to spend, be added.
. do it because it won'tlasL
·
With a touch of self-mockery, Gov. George W. Bush was summing up
his governing style. "Simple and understandable goals wort." said Busb,
the second Republican elected governor of Texas since the post-Civil
War
.
' . era.
· : · "I won It on specific issues and philosophy," he said. "I'm helplag to
: · remind people why I won."
•
::
So he goes on, and on and oa, every time out, on the four points ceotral
· : to his campaign: a aaclt:down on juvenile crime. reform in the legal sys: : tern to curtail lawsuit abpse, decenttalized public edueatioo and a welfare
: · overhaul.
'
·:
And be stays on message, no diversions. "That's what I am for, theae
: : four thing~," he told Texas Republican womea the other day. "And I'm
:- getting totie reairy,IXlririg ib&lt;iit1L.. ·
.
·:
Put too many goals on the table and leadership founders, be said in an :
:- interview Monday.
· · --~::::;:::p;
.:
His chosen example is President Clinton, the Democrat who ended his
·: father's presidency Ia 1992. By the governor's oount, Clinton catalogued
:~~s In his State of the U~oa address, "so man~ goals there are no

Pomero~lddleport,

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W1dn11d1y, Aprtt 5, 1 -

Six-year mandat~ i$ a pork-barrel paradigm

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. ·

WI
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This Week's Special:.

1

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PIZZABURGER ..._

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L\iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;_
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~15,1116

The Daiiy Sentinel
~.April

'

II, 11115
p

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t
CROWDED SKIES - Cleveland center John WUUamo (18) ftnds
the skies under the hoop crowded .., he loses the baD under pressure
fr""' Boston Celtk:s Dlao Radja (left) and Xavier McDanlel ·(r~t) In
the third quarter of Tuesday night's NBJ\ game In Cleveland, where
the Celtla won97-9:t. (AP) ,,

By STEPHEN Wll.SON .
Nebiolo, beail of the IntemationMONTE CARLO, Monaco al Amateur Athletic Federation,
(AP) - The IOC agreed today IIi continued to press for a greater
give international sports 'federa- . share of Olympic television ·rev - .
lions a lllfger share of n:venues --enues, of whicb the fedemtions eur~
n!ng seasons in tbe past 10 year$.
.:
· Meanwhile, public support for from next yeat' s Atlanta Olympic rendy receive ;tbout 7%.
Samarancb rejected !bat reques~
Tarkanian bas grown into a frenzy · Games.
International Olympic Commit- saying, "The current system wlrt:s
in Fresno ~venince Gary Colson
resigned In mid-Marcb after five tee president Juan Antonio Satna· · well and I am sur~ we will keep
ranch agreed to negotiate with the !bat system in !be future."
,
years with the Bulldogs.
federations
over
the
distribution
or
Samarancb
agreed
that
the
fedThe towel-chomping coacb bas
commercial
sponsorship
money.
erations
deserved
to
be
compensatbecome the topic of choice on radio
It was the first major concession · ed in connection witb the IOC's ·
talk sbows, and one 1V station h3s
by
tbe IOC to long·-r.unning commercial sponsorship program,
started a " Tart Watch" every
demands
by tbe AssociaTion of known.as TOP,
nigbt.
·. ·
·
Olympic
International
Tbe 1993-96 TOP program. bas
S,ummei
However, not evc;ryone in FresFederadons
for
a
bigger
slice
of
tbe
raised
between $350 million and
no seems to support Tarkanian :
$3
biUion
pie.
$400
million
from 10 international
Faculty mem,bers drafted a letter to
The
agreement
came
during
a
corporate
sp()nsors
.
Welty, indicating .without naming
joint
meeting
of
tl!e
IOC
executive
Fifty
percent
of
the TPP money .
Tarkanian that be sboul!l·not be
ASOIF,
wblcb
repregoes
to
tbe
Olympic
organizing
board
and
hired because bls teams liave been
sents
the
26
sports
on
tbe
Atlanta
committees.
mostly.
to
Adanta. 40
plagued by NCAA investigations
program.
.
·
percent
to
national
Olympic
cominvolving recruiting and eligibility
•
'The
federatioos
are
one
of
tbe
·
mittees
and
10
percent
to
tbe
IOC
.
ofptayers.
three
pillars
of
tbe
Olympic
moveTbe
federation
s
are
unable
to
Tarlcanlan resigned from, UNLV men!
and
we
should
receive
a
fair
participate
in
tbe
TOP
progra111
three years ago wben pbotos were
indemnity for our participation in ~.se many have tbei~ oYID compubl_isbed showing tbree former
the Games ,' • ASOJF president · mercia! sponsorship deals.
players in a bot tub with convicted
Primo
Nebiolo said.
·
fixer Richard

Fresno State hires Tarkanian as ·cage~ coach

.•

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Scoreboard
NBA starldings · .

Hockey

»: "

lil

l · NeW Yorl.. ..........47
Bolton ...... .............30
MIII!Ti .................... 29
New Jeney ............27

2$

.653
.41}

45

.ln

26

Philldelph.i• ...........10

52

.211 .

33

43

.m

&lt;l

WuhiDjtOD.....:..... 11 SJ

.254

6 '

l3.S
2l

34.5

Cmtnl Oh'bfon
, . s.-IDdiua ............... 47 26 .644
x-Clarlotte ............. 4J 28 .606

)

I·Qtl~ ..............}9

3]

. ~42

15

1-t;LBVELAND ... 39

33
J7
44

.4145

Deaolt ................... 26 &lt;l

,)66

ll .l
111.5
20

All.... ...................'!l
Mitwlukee ............. 21

.542 ' 7.l

.31$1

BueiJaU

•

. miallb'ltlo11..

··'

DIYbkln

l!C L I fiL Gf 1iA

IDm

31 101

Aorl&lt;la .......... .... I&lt; 16 &lt; 32 16
N.Y. Ruaen .... 14 17 l 31 90
Tompa Bay ....... l!ll 3 29 Bl
N.'Y .- blaftdm ... l020 4

.486

I B.S

.«3
.274

21.l
34

PuUk 01•151-.

: x-Scalllc ..................SJ

11

.lU

.

- ,.-

ll

.701

, 1•Phoeni1 .............. Sl 22
, 1-L.A. Lakcn ........ 46 26
, Portll.Dd ........ ......... ll 14

.699

.639

.5
l

.Sll

13

• Sacramento ............ lS 37
' QokkD.SWt ..........ll 49

.oll6
.319

16

• L.A. Clippcn ......... ll 59 .203
: .l·tlladled pla,vff berth

J7

21

Tuesdayt• acores

24

94
93~

9l .

15 U4

letml

Mlunl ~ l'lllladelp,., 92

L.A. L&amp;kCft 104, Deaver 101
Utoh .... s...u. !12
Goldeo Slalc.lll, Phot:Dillt4

PortlaDd 95, M.uoeiUll PI
Saa AniObiO Ill, L.A. CUppta 19
S.nmcato 109, Ho.. toD 10$

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een"~.. wQft

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OU.wa .............. 4 2S 4

Vaneouw:t ........ 12 13 9

...•..

.

o.._yetr coaltC:.

l•l 99
Pittaburp ......... 23 9 2 &lt;8 136 109
Butralo .............. 16 ll 5 J1 92 . 71
BOIIOD.............. 17 14 2 )6 91 12

IDm

...

.
WollonaiLo...,
FLORID A MARLINS : Aar-eed to

NartktUI Dlt'~on
' · Qu-..............
2• I 3 l l

.

'"'.
"••

"'"'·

91

lndiau 94, New Yatk 90

8ooto• ., , CLEVELAND !12

. BIISketball
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tbe
ttiumpbant UCLA Bruins, blearyeyed from a night's celebration ·
after winning th e school ' s first
NCAA basketball championship in
20 years. arri.ved home and were
met by about 500 fans at Los
Angeles International Airport. .
Then, it was a quick bus ride to
campus and another to Burbanlc for
a fi ve-minute appearance on the
' 'Tonight Show."
The team was to visit Disneyland on Wednesday, and a celebration was planned in ·late afternoon
at Pauley Pavili9n on campus.

$17,488

·",..

Ell! and Mike Carilla, pltcbm, and Nieto
Rlesao ud Darryl Robluoa, flrtt 6ue-

•

, HO\OI!Qa .... ...... .. ,,... &lt;l 30
1 l)eovet ., ................. JS • ·JJ
• Dall ....... ............... 31 39
• MiDD~ta ..............20 SJ

-:1

BOSTON RED SOX' Ro!euod Roolcy •

Philadelphia ...... 18 l3 4 40 Jll 101
Wllhioatoa ...... J612 . 7 39 · 94 84
Ne• Jusey ...... \ 1~ 13 7

......,......""

•

PROPERTI ES: Named .Tbomll Durfy
vkl pr•ldcul or nuuce ud royalty w:J.

EASTERN CONFERENCE ·

Hartford ............ 13 16 5

~RNCONFERENCE
Mklwc•t Dhitloft
• IDm
ll' " f.d. lil
~ s-Su Antoola ...... .ff 11 .746
: z·Ut.I'I .....................SJ 21 .716. , 1. ll

. · Sports briefs-·-

Marauder eiTOl and scored o·n a
base bit by Gabe Scott.
,.
Gordon Spencer's White Falcons increased the lead to 4-1 in
the top of !be seventh . Roach drew
a walk, advanced on a wild pitcb
and scored on a single off !be bat of
King.
·
Meigs threatened in .tbe botiOIJI
or the sev:nth wben they loaded
the bases r.n a pair of Wbite Falcon
errors and a walk. But Roacb came
back to strike out Stanley to end
the game and preserve the no-bitter.
·: _,....
King was the thorn in tbe
Marauders' side. witb three or die
Wbite Falcons' five bits, all off
wbicb were singles. Van Meter arid
Scott bad the other Wabama hi~.
both of which were singles.
Wabama (5-0) will travel to
Stewflrt to play Federal Hocking
todar. and Ripley Frid.liy. Meigs (21) w11l bost Southern (2-1) today.
Inning totals
Wabama
200·100-1 = 4-S-4 ·
Meigs
010-000-0 = 1-0-2
WP-Roacb
LP _;_ Stanley

t

MAJOR LeAOUB BASEBALL •

NHL * mdings
All tp.~lc

•

Transactions

EASTERN CONFERENCE'
1:11111
'
f.d.
x-Orialldo ..............
l) 19 .7!6

SPRING/SUMMER
CAR CARE
SPECIAL EDITION
I

HQI,1fioa at dahlen State, 10:)0 p.m.
San Aa.t oni o at Sacrame1Co, l0:30
p.m.

Adaallc DtrWa6

the expired coiledlve barJainlng
agreement. Tbe 2nd Circuit will
bear an expedited appeal ditrlng lbe
first balf or May; but it may go
laughed at.
before a dllferent J1811el.
A panel of lite 2nd
Circuit . "We're happy," union bead
Court or Appeals denied their" Donald Febr said. "People ate
request to bave au injunction back and we .want a lona-term
stayed Tuelday, ~!eating tbe way agreement."
.
.
for the._ to start April2ti.
"I've talked to our lawyers and
All_three judges repeatedly I understand tbe liearing didn't jiCt
· ridiculed management lawyer into the bcart of the issues',•• acting
Frant Casey durina a one-bour commissioner Bud Selig said.
- bearing, dismlssina bis argument
Sotomayor's injooction cauled
that owners bad the unu.rat right' players to .end lbeir 232-day strike.
to do away wltb free agency and and the judges' questioning made
salary arbitnltioo. before an impasse clear there Is IIUle likellboi&gt;d the
.'In bargaining •. It could not bave injunction will be overturned.
been more one-sided.
N'ewman, 'bls voice ri&amp;lng with
"You' re fuzzing tbings." Cbief incredulity, assailed Casey wben
Jud'e Jon 0. Newman told bim, tbe law1.er claimed the injunction
. addmg later, "We're just going and its 'wblp&amp;aw f~" preventaround in circles."
·.
ed-collecdve llaiuinlng.
Tbe judges, followhig their
"Do you realfy thlnlc the answer
· caustic. questioning, let stand the Is yes? Is tbatlbe point? You reaDy
A
RUS'fY - Pittsburgh pltcber Tim Wakefield bobbles.
injunction issued Friday by U.S. bellev.e it? You really think that tbe
the
ball
during
fteldlng drills at the Pirates' Jprlng training f~~eWty in
·
Distri.c t Judge Sonia Sotomayor, leiter that Mr. Febr sent, wblcb
Braden(on,
Fla.
Tuesday. Wakelleld was Olll! ofsbr playen partldpatwbicb forces owners to adhere to said, 'We're ready to resume negolng
In
tbe
hour-long
workout, wblcb will help them when the rest of
tiations; your position is, 'We'd
•
their
teammate
Join
them today In the dab's first oMclal workouL
love to resume negodations over a
Gail's recovery
(AP)
new contract. but lbe distrl~t judge
from car crash
bas prevented us from doing it.' Is
that your position?"
continues
· "Tbat is correc~ your bonor,"
NelsonvWe-York standout foot- Casey said.
"Well. wbat will it ,take to perball and basketball player Jason
suade
you tbat that positiol( is By ALAN ROBINSON
Gail is improving after being
worst minor-league winning perwrong?"
Newman said. ' 'Do you
centages. We bave developed playinvolved in a serious lraffic acciBRADENTON, Fla. (AP) want to bear it from Judge Cam Bonifay spent 'as much dme ers without concerning ourselves
denL
Sotomayor?
Or from us? Or as any major-league general man- with winning..and losing. Now, we
Gail underwent s~cry a couple
of weeks ago to re
bls broken wbat?"
ager assembling a competitive now bave the chance to surround
Two of the tbree judges on tbe replacement team - and the Pitts- those players witb better organizapelvis. He bas been ·a patent at
. tional-type players."
·
Grant Medical Center since tbe panel told Casey they tbougbt own- burgh Pirates bad one of the besl
• 1 --- ~dentlas~montb. --~
ers made a key legal.mis.take when . Now, of course, those pse.udo
Bonjfay d9esn't c:_x~t.3DY. aniJason teamed with. bis twin tbey dropped their auempt to Pirates will never play a game, Jllld mosity or retribution 1n ihe minorbrother Justin on tbe 1VC Champi- declare an impasse in bargaining. all those bours of work tracking league camp. where 18 former
on Nelsonville.York football team. On Dec. 23, owners declared an down players and putting .together replacement players were sent
. Justin
Monday.
was an all state tailback; impasse and imposed a salary cap, a passable team were all wasted. :
"We did not play any replacewbile Jason· was an all state selec- but they abandoned !be cap on Feb.
Or were they?
, lion as a lineman. Jason also was a 3 after the National Labor RelaIf nothing else, Bonifay said ment games," Bonifay said. "We
frrst team all-TVC selecdon .in blis- tioos Board said it was inclined to .Tuesday, tbe Pirates siJ'engthened a did not play replacement baseball.
ketball. ·
.
issue an unfair labor plllctlce com- minor-league system th~t bas long Wbat we did was play minorJoe Edwards, tbe.owner and plaint
·
been productive but bas bad only league baseball in two locations.' •
One of the major-league players
operator of the Nelsonville Cable
one overall winning record in the
the Pitates are counting on, starting
Company, bas set up a fund to belp · . ~asey cal_led the NLI~B's pre- last20 years,
offset Jason's medical expenses. hnunary fmding a ''teebnical vtola" Wbat we did enabled us to pitcher Rick Wbite, also took an
Contributions can be sent to the tion. u .
strengthen our entire.organization interest in their replacement team
cable office at ~ Public Square,
by signin~ a lot of minor league by attending poe of their games.
"I put on my sunglasses and
Nelsonville Obio, 45764.
"You bad tbe possibility ... of players,' Bonifay said. "Tbe
kiild
of bid out in tbe bleachers,
Jason's address is Grant Medi- pursuing that witb tbe NLRB and Pirates bave developed as many
cal Center, Ill Soutb Grant Ave., you threw in tbe towel," JlJdge J. · major league players as any team in hoping nobody would recognize
Room 734, Columbus, Obio 43215. Daniel Mahoney said.
baseball, but we've bad one of tbe me." White said.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Cort'apondent
Junior Chris Roach fll'ed a nobiaer in leading the Walllma Wblre
Falcons .to a 4-1 win over Bead
Area rival Meigs in baseball aet1on
Monday evening at Meigs Hlgb
School.
·
•
Although records are incom"Pleie~ It is believed to be tbe only
tbe second no-bitter pitChed apinst
Meigs since 1976. and maybe only
lbe second since tbe consolidation
of Pomeroy, Middleport and ·Rutland 1D 1967.
·
·
Elida's Rick Rumer fll'ed a noliitter against Meigs in tile Class
AA stare semi-finals in Columbus
on Jgne 41 1976. Elida defeated
Meil s 1-Q -in that game and went
on to win the Class AA state championship tbe next day by defeating
Orrville. Marauder ace Jeff McXin- .
ney ftred a one-bitter in tbe game,
but came·up on the sbort end of the
score. ·
•
In Monday's game, Roacb
struck out eigbt, walked foil{ and
bit a batter. Junior Gary Stanley
·was the bard-luck loser for Scott
Gheen's Marauders. Stanley scattered five bits, struck out 14 and
walked six. Only one of tbe four
runs off of Stanley was earned.
The Wbite Falcons took a 2-0
lead in the first inning. Lane Young
led off tbe game witb a walk.
Roacb reached on a Marauder
error. They both came around to
score on a base bit by Jason King.
Meigs made it a 2-1 contest in ·
tbe bollom of the second inning on
an une,arned run scored on two
White Falcon errors.
Wabama made it a 3-1 game in
the&lt; fourth inning. Tommy Van
Meter singled, advanced on another

briefs----------

.;...;.....~------Sports
Gill was acquired by Seattle and defenseman Jason York from
.
Basketball
from
Charlotte after the 1992-93 the Dettoit Red Wings for left wing
· SEATTLE (AP) r Seattle
season.
This season be bas avet- Stu Grimson, defenseman Mark
SuperSonics guard KendalJ Gill,
aged
14.1
points, 3.9 rebounds and Ferner anqoa 1996 sixtb-round draft
wbo ·argued with coach George
choice.
·
~arl , for mucb of the season over 2,6 assists in 29.4 minutes a Rame.
1.
Sillinger,
23,
bad
two
,goals and
playing tinle. ·was granted an indefsix assists In 13 games imd York,
ihite leave from the team because
24, one goal and two assists in 10
qf clinical depression.
Hockey
games. Grimson, 29, bad one assist
. A. statement issued by Sonics
ANAHEIM Cal'f
(AP)
_
1b
president Wally Walker said the ·. .
• 1·
.. e and 110 penalty minu tes in. 31
·
diagnosis was conf'rmed
b
·
M1ghty.
.
D.ucks
o ~ A~ a~e 1 m giunes, apd Ferner, 29, one assist in
1
1
doctors.
·
Y wo acqUired forward M1ke Sllhnger . 14 games.

Basketball

Roach's no-hitter helps ·.
Wahama :beat Meigs .4-1 :. ·

: Pirates' replacements make
'minor-league system stronger

IOC to give international ·
·federations bigger slice
of Atlanta Olympic revenues .

.

~

u.s.

.

By DAVID KLIGMAN
Vegai Sun sbe ibougbt F.-esno State wants to coacb ill least three more
· FRESNO, Calif. (AP) -Jerry was close to offering ad~. .
years.
"It doesn' t seem as if lbere are
· " It bas to be something tbat is
Tarkanlan certainly doesn't·need 10
coach college basketball asaln to any major obstacles," 'she said: good for both sides," said Tarkani·
prove be can win.
· "He' s very excited about going an. ·wbo pla~d for Fresno State in
Yet despi~ tbe preSsures lif the . back to bis alma mater.' '
the early '50s and began bis coacbsport, college basketball's winOf tbe 40 candidates for tbe job, . ing career at San Joaquin Memorial
mngest coacb by peteentage wants •Tarkanian. is the only one to inrer- .. High In Fresno. •
back into the profession be left view on campus, and no oilier sucb
Sources told the. lAs Vegas SIUI
tbree years ago after 24 years, meetings are planned, said Pete the scbool is expected to offer a
including 19 at UNLV at;td an Slmls. bead of Fresno State's compensation package of about
NCAA dde in' 1990.
search Committee..
$200,000 a year from public and ·
: He's tbe front · runner for tbe
Ta,tlanlan. wbo arrived by plane pt;ivate funds.
·
Tarkanian said the f~n support
bead coaching job at bis alma ·. from 'Reno. Nev .. met with univer. mater, Fresno State. Tbe former sity president Jobn Welty, athletic in Fresno and the cbance 10 coacb
UNL V ~ arrived in Fresno on,. director Gary Cunningham and tbe . at bis alma mater are the reasons be
Tuesday to interview for tbe job. A other nine .members of the screen- wants tbe job. Not even his broth·
decision could be made as early as ing committee.
er's advice could change bis mind.
t,oday. scbQOI officials said.
.
''It's mr, alma mater," Tartan!''My brother says I'm nuts,' '·
. Bolb sides hinted that if all goes an said. ' It's my wife's alma Tarkanian said. "He says, 'Don't
well in the interview, Taikanlan . mater. We' ve got close ties with so yo,u enjoy judging beauty contests
f ill be named Fresno State' s next many people here. It's always nice and going to the beacb and all
wacb.
·
to be able to do something back in tbat?'"
Fresno State is,coming off a 13: ~ I tbiruc !ll,ere's some interest in your hometown."
me, · Tarkiuuan deadpanned after
Tarkanian would not say what 15' season, tied for seventh in tbe
amving in Fresno.
··
.
kind ·of a contraCt be was seeldng, Western Atbledc.Conference. The
told
the
Lils
·
although
'in the past
· Hi s wi~e. Lois,
.
. be bas said be Bulldogs bave bad only two win-

.

By RONALD BLUM
· . NEW YORK (AP)- Tbia time,
bascblll OWDera didn't jlllt lolc In
court, they sot routed - almost

u.e

'

.

Federal court denies
own~r!l' attel!'_pt .
to get ·1njunct1on
stay
.

,

By ~~ Aaoclllled Prea
Chris Gad in g. wbo were aUins. aad 111e ~Octets.
C'd
over 111e KDicks for 111e
It Sllllply malces no seuse.
alreadx loU all-star guard Tim ' • Juil114, S•fN*Scri'nlll
· Paeers' first win In nine regular. H~w can the ~ix Suu, in Hardway to season-ending wrist
Utab toot two days off, then season games at Madison Square
the ~~tor. a (unous fight for hlp sll{gery.
. .
. toot care of tbe bot SuperSonics. Garden.
. .
· pos1bomng _m tbl Weatem Ccafer·In other games; II was ~e Los snapping Seattle's 'seven-game
"Tbis is Broadway, man, all
ence, bave so mucb ~ble with Angeles Lakers 104, Denver 101; winning streak. Karl Malone led . those stars in 111e front row" said
the Golden. Swe Wamors, ~tbly Ut:tb 114, Seatde 92; Portl~d 95, · tbe way with 31 points and 17 Miller, wllo ·scored 27 points as
·the most disapPD.fndng team tn lbe Mmnesota 91 ; San A~tomo J 13, rebounds. Antoine Carr and Jeff Indiana moved within one-balf
.NBAthls.seasoo.
. .
the Los . Angeles Clippers 89; HOI'DII:ekeaebscored21J. .
game beblnd New York in tbe
. . Coach Paul Westphal, ·b as no .. Sa~ramento 109, .Houston ~OS;
Gary Payton led visiting '!leatde Eastern Conference sraadings.
.answers.
·
llldiana 94, New York 90; Miami witb26poillts.
• · ·
Heat95 76enlll
"I would l_ike Ill find some~in,, 95, Pbiladelpbla 92; an? Boston 97,
Trd Bluen 95 . •
At Miami, Gicn Rice, wbo 'bas
good about ~- .~utl,tea!'Y can I,
Cleveland 92.
Tlmberwl- 91
led the Heat in scoring for seven
bkeri 104, Nuggets 101 ,
At .Pordand. CUCford Robinson slralght games, bad 25 points. Rice,
.'!Vestpbal srud. We re JUS! going
. to have W keep ou_r b~s up and
~~Denver,, tbe Lak~rs dido t scored a seas~n-bigh 33 points as averaging 28.3 points over that
:c.ome bact fnll!' . Ibis temble expe- pan1c wben th.e r fell bebm~ late In tbe Blazers defeated lhe Timber- span, bit twQ free throws wltb
.nence. We can t beat tbe Warrion. tbe game. Trailing 94-91 w1th 4:23 wolves for tbe 10tb stralgbt dme. seven seconds left to clinch it
We bave to face tbat."
· to ~lay, th.e Lakers scored seven Tbe .Trall Blazers Jbst six of their
Rice's final capped a game-endG olden Stat~ !las won 23 games str.ught pomts to take tbe lead for previous seven games.
. ing 9-3 run, with. all of Miami's
.tb1s se~n ~gamst 49 ~feats. But good.
The Blazers needed Robinson's poln!S on free throws.
.three wms m four .meetings bave
, Nick yan E~el' s turnarou~d production, because Rod Strickland
Dana Barros· paced Pbiladelpbla
come ag!'lnst Pboerux (51 -22).
jumper wtth 29 se50nds left provlif. sat out witb a bruised right sboul- witb 22 points.
_Roolcie Donren M~ballll}ld 28 ed tbe winning pomts.
.
der. Robinson is playing on a ten·
: Celllcs 97, Cavaliers ll1
~mts and Chris MuUm ~- 2S.
Mahmoud A~ui-Rauf sustaill~ der ankle.
Sherman Douglas scored 20 or
·With 13 rebounds and 13 ass1sts. 1\ left knee contusiOil_on tbe games
Spurs 113, CHpJI"n 89
bis 24 points' in
second balf 10
.Golden Sta~e also beld Charles. final play and bad to be carrle_d
San Antonio outscored Los lead. visiting Boston, wbicb blis
Darld~y to 1110e pomts on 4-for-IS · from the n~r by teammates. H1s Angeles 63-35 in tbe second balf, won three straigbt games to build a
sb~n.ng . . .
fr. .
status was listed as day-to-day.
and began a foll{-game West Coast 1 112-game cushion over MilwauKings 109, Rockets 105
trip with its 23rd road win, tying · tee and Miami for the final 1 ff
1 m very d1sappomted m the
way we' ve. played !he last month,
Walt Williams scored 30 points the Club reconl set last season.
· spot in tbe East
P ayo
a n~ there s just n!&gt; excuse. for
as Sacramento ended a HJ"game ·... San Antonio Is 9-0 since NBA
. Oeveland was 'bit b
t
tb
0
torugh~" ~~kley srud. ."It'~ a dis- losing stteak against Houston. n:bounding leader Dennis Rodman er significant in'
Jt~e
~
•
1
grace and 11 s em~smg.
which played witboat Hakeem Ola- separated bls rigbt shoulder in a point guard Te~~ Brao~on ~u~
.· "!ot to W!!rnors ~oacb Bob juwo'! and V~rnon Maxwell. botb . motorcy~le mishap.
·
s1ress fracture of tbe rigbtleg, endL~!er. .
.
· out wttb anem1a.
Pac.era 94, Knlc.b 90
ing bis season Tbe Cavs lost
: I think thiS was tbe bes!.g~e
. Saeramen~'s victory, combined'
Reggie Miller vs. Spike Lee. .starters Brad Dau~ and Gerald .
I"~. seen us play all year • . satd
w!th Denver s .loss, gave botb tbe&lt; Part~;!.
.
. .
Wilkins to in'uries before th
_
Lamer, whose t~am was wtltlout ~mgs and Nuggets 35-37 records,
M1iler sw1sbed a jumper from son began. ~
.
e sea
suspe_JIIIed star LaiJ'CU Sprewell. Of Ued for tbe f!,Dal playoff spot in !be 20 fee~ then tii{Ded and sbot Lee,
Mark Price bad 15 po' is and 14
_tmlfse. Golden State also played West.
onl~ feet away in bis courtside sea~ assists for Cleveland m
without Victor Alexander and ·
Clyde Drexler bad 29 jloints for a triumphant glare. The basket lift·
·
·

•

· The Dltlly Sentinei-P~ge •

•

On the bueball ecene,

.w arriors beat Suns;: Celtics. down
Cavs
·
lndiw

'

I

r

•

In the NBA,

'

'

~-'"

I

TOU FREE 1·BIJO..B22·0411 •312·2844
344·5941 • 422·0156

Monday·
9 am :· 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm
'

'

,.' '
I.

�·.
....

•

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'j
~

·Pege I The Dilly Sentinel

5,1185

~

PoJMroy-Middleport, Ohio

w.ctn.ilay, April 5, 1115 •

PEPSICOU
PRODUCTS

'

·by' Bob Hoeflich
I

~E~1K~OI'D~;~Po~m:cro~oir.~w~h:o~you~can~p~liclt up ldYtlll:e licllciJ at

'

o:
a hean IJ'Illaptaat at
Univenlty ' HOipllll, lUll)' ~-

enced s

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.-TUNA

(

•

FRITO
DORITOS
9 oz.

U.S.D.~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.. 18.

1

English ~oast............
'

-

2 .s3

$ )39

.

· RINSO
DETERGENT

'

Ground Beef•••••••••!~•••99c

·-.
s
)99
Chicken Breast ••••••••~~ .
BONELESS

Wieners ••••••••••••••••!!..
VALLEY DALE

•

·

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••••~~

HILLSHIRE FARM

1
_

•

Smoked Sau~age ·••~~•••~

10 LOAD

4.9(
Leg Quarters ••••••••!~... . -·
99(

CHICKEN .

·

.

.

DOG FOOD

Lunch Meats •••••••••!~...

ARTHRITIS AQUATIC PRO.
GRAM
Tbe Arthritis Aquatic Program
:at Royal Oak Reson in Pomeroy
will begin a new session Aprilll.
. The program is a series of~ational exercises in the pool. It is

. 20 LIS.

.$2'·'

$ 29

1.
99(

open to members of the community
who have arthritis and it is DOl nee.
essa:ry to km~w how tb swim. A
uained instructor will conduct tbe

$1
2

•

'

SH: 1GCct14B6D2148122
One (1) 1886 Buick 4-door,
SH: 1G4JS69P5GK435740
One {1 I 1885 Ford
",F'!ac ~~2c4W~~~. s N'

tain.

..;, ,A

0
rT..,

H -... u,-.oo
llecelpta .........- 264,4e0.00
•~1
287 07t 00

Dna (1) 1979 Ford 4-door,
SN: 9X9m 29888
One (1) 1976 Ch,vrolet
~~;;UIT~~~on, SN:
One (1)111111 Chovrol~-

BIIIIICI aa ol 12/31/14 .......

~

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=of

,.,. ................... ' .
Balance u of 12/31/14 .......
............................; 38,1N13.oo
Trailer
Puke/
CimPitrouncle 1·1-114.......... ..
............................... 4,305.00
llocelpta ................... l35.00
Tllllll ....................... 4,140.00

~~

~ .........2-te,234.00

~"....,.,.,.,

~

.
CZl
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13,111
llecelpta ................ 7,1112.00
~ •-t
21143 oo
Ex du a
7 7ee oo
aal:c~'!':0j'j2j31t$4 ..:....
............................. 13,377.00
s•~ F nd 1 1 ft•
••• u • • ·- .............
...............................416.00
llecelptt ............ 336,580.00
Totel ................... 447,135.00
Expenditure• 332 342 00
ot'12131 t$4 ·

.o. . . . . . . . . . . . • ·

All hema..mey be viewed
upon arrangement with the
Malga County Sherlll'a
Depanment. Sealed blda
miJ8t m1ke rtferance to the
model and aerial number ot
each vehicle being bid
upon; the amount of the
bid; and the bidder's name,
address and currant

0

8

un
a•
llelancoa aa o11 •1-.........
:.......................... 128,860.00
. llac.lpte ............ 609,257.00
Totala ................. 761,0114.00
ExpandHuraa .....sae,see.oo
Total all balance• a• ol
December 31, 1994................
......................... $151,551 .00
J
J b 11 s
on Ad:fnl~reio;
141s; 1TC

bear tho model and serial
number of the vehicle tor
which the bid Ia aubmltted.
Blda lor each vehicle muot
be enclosed In a separate
tnvelope, marked a a
specified above.
Terms of the sale will be
cash or conlfted check at
the time oftranafer oltltle.
The Melga County Sheriff
raaervn the right to accept
or reject any and all blda.
The llama ora baing sold on
on "as Ia, where Ia" basis
and the Meigs County
SheriU will not be
responsible lor the Items
after the solo.
No
warrantlea oro expressed or
Implied by this public notice
and/or through tho sale of

•

o

AUCTION

Farm Equipment

111811: Stans 1110:00 1.m.
County Li• 1 • Marice!
F.wpilin, WV
T-end MachNry "*'I' Mikel end Modall
• Slaolllec1Mng Equipment on April1 3, I a.m. to
1·
5p.m.Apll14,8a.m.tolp.m.
• Equipment nut be ramcMd no 111w 1han
·
Aloof17. ;
• Equipment Must Be Pllld For Befora llemoval.
.
Forfurtherlnlonnatloncel
t ·304·372·5200 1•304-273-5738.
Oirec1ioua:-Ueelllllt132onl-77, talceRt.21 North
500 ylllla, righiiD Ceder Lalcee Drive, 112 mile to
IMIIOcl&lt; Mwket.
1ha Selet Ccmoi11ttee reiiiMIIthe right to refute
merchandise lor the sate. ft 1s the conalgnor's
reeponoltllily,to make rejection bidaatlime of lillie.
. ~ : Edwin WJnt811 &amp; John Jones
NotRnponsl)leForAnyAa:ldeuts
LiJnch Will a. SeNed
Sllb.odloy,April
S.lo be held

me
accept or reject 1
any right
oren to
bids.
r -~===========~~~=..,
Kathy Hyooll, Clark
VIllage ol Pomeroy
{4) 5, 12 2TC

=2::·::::1n=Mem==O::ry:·= :::;:1

r

In Memory of

LOIS PAULEY,
who left US
Aftrll S, 1992,..,..
Memory Is a
"'
treasure
no one. can steal.
Death ls a heartache
no one can heal.
Some may forget
now that you
. are gone;
But we'll 8tm
remember I
No matter how long.
M
. othe•,
•·
· Mrs. Pearl Williams
&amp;

11 · Help Wanted

' DELIVERJ~TELEPHONE

BOOK-5

NEW USTING • Commercial ·3 Slo2 BrickBuilding on

~~~~~~e~~~lc~~~h~K~~~~.~{'~~~rar=:.

Call For Your Appointment To See This II

Aaklng $80,000

NEW usnNG • Weal Main Street -· Pomeroy • NiCe 1
1/2 story' lrame home, 3 bedrooms, t 1/2 bath, lull
basement with 2 car garage, utility area, N.G.F.A.
furnace. Un~Air, Cable, n&amp;w cfecking. Asking $31,000.

1

lrNEWe/bL 1STkiNb~u: McNichntolyla Rdd. • bas•. ShoacresswJ~

1

am oc u1 ...mg • curre
usa as u
p. """
and, equipment being sold separately. Older Mobile
Home on site is optiOnal.
Asking $12,000 Make An Ollerll
MINI FAIIM • MAKE O~FEIIII Acres of ground localod
on Welchtown Hill Rd. 2 bedroom ·home w1th living room,
kitchen, bath , utility room. Gas warm morning heat,
T.P1C. waler, some lancing ff you'd like to have a hor$9 or
some cows. Also a- barn' and chil:ken house. Great
Garden Area.
Aaklng $13,500

No:Experience NeCessary
,
PRICED REDUCED • MAKE AN OFFEII • located on
Deliveries Start Immediately
SA 7, Nice 2 Story Frame Home wit~ approx. one acre. 3
60 people needed to deliver lhe new Ohio v• 111,'" • bedrooms, bath, newer carpeting, paintl &amp; furnace . B.G.
Telephone Books in: Coolville, Albany, Pomeroy,
Tuppers ~lains , Wilkesville , Reedsville, Apple Grove,
Racine. Vinton and surrounding areas in Gallia,
MIDDLEPORT -Located on Bradbury Rd . 1B77 Modular
Jackson, Vinlon counties, including Oak Hill, Rio Grande
with newer repairs , 3 bedrooms, 2 b'aths, electric
and Kerr.
·
"
·
H.P./C.A. . patio. applicances , above ground pool, 2+
To become an independent conlraclor you musl be
acres with nice level yard.
Asking $39,900
al least. 18 years old, have lhe use of an insured car,
IT'S SPRING II WE HAVE BUYEIIS WAmNG FOil
~~~~rd~7ryck, and be available a minimum of 5 daylig~t THAT NEW HOME, IF YOU WANT TO SEU. NOWS
THE TIME TO UST. WE HAVE BUYEIISII
WE NEED usnNGSII

Heat,TPCwater,nices.toragebuilding._:~~fn~o~~-

MelgaCounty
3 29 4 5 2 Sheriff
&lt; 1 ( 1 TC · .

HOUS{ OVERFLOWING?

ClEAN UP WITH

ClASSifiED 'ADS (\.,
.&gt; _ (

:re
:.~e:~o:~ ~~s~~s~~il1
"b~ k ., tb m
.

..

~~::.~n:f :~~~e~id mTu~~ ~z~~.;.~ ;i ...... ve.•is'.oo

~~~':.v~~~~~:i.by

PIED PIPERS PERFORMANCE
T.he "Pied Pipcn," a theattical
ttoupe of the Ohio Valley College,
Parkersburg, will perform at the
Reedsville Church of Christ, Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
. .
The group travels on behalf of

New I .

ExpendltuNI,,,,,,,,,,,.224.00

~
~~XBY234tS: ~ \ , ji;;;;d'i;;:;jc;·f'~~~~4j~~~
~ ~f:a~lJ::oFord va~ SN:
.............................
,00

HENRY E. CLELAND HH .. . ..... . . H...........992·6191
TRACY L. BRINAGER..........
... . .............949-2439
SHERRI L. HART..H ..........................H.... -............. 742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND III ............. H... H.................... 992·619t

laD

ac out
eatre progr~s at
churches, schools, yout!l rallies and

from 10 to 11 a.m. ~~istmtion is ~ Sla!f~· The ffiiSSIOD of. tbe "Pied
done at any class session.
Ptpers ts to foster Christian values
· For more information residents tbrougb tbe entertaining medium of
may call 593·2518 betWeen 8 am. drama.
and 5 p.m The fee is $20, and .
T_be "Pipers" ar~ directed by
scbo~bips are avaUable for those . Davtd Kell~:r, assoetat~: professor
unable to pay.
of communi~ns and director of
Sponsors are the Obio Universi- theatre at Ohto Valley College.
Bobbie White, a 'raduate of
ty College of Osteopathic
Medicine the Central Ohio Cbap- Eastern Higb School, ts a member
'ter of the' Arthritis Foundation, and of the nine-member cast. She is a
Royal Oak Reson.
sophomore accounting student at
the college•

16 oz.

·

c:.h 11m W'Bllon • of
o1 nmbw S1,11M
Tote~ o 1poel lllanc11: .....
................:....... 11a.-.oo
Total
Outallndlng
bel•-• and cheeb ............
_,......_,_, ............2,138.0(0
Total ell Balance• •• of
December 31, 1814................
•
151 aa1 oo
"''"-""""""""" •vv •
Summ' ary
ol
llecelpii/ExpendHUrll and
Balancaa tor l'lacal y.,
lndlng DJDimbi 31, 1114

Puauc lioncE
The VIllage. of Pomeroy
dllalrn Ia recelvt1 aealad
bide for the following
vehlclea the vlll-oe wle.,..
to dlepenee
1. 1878 GMC Pickup
Truck
2. . 1980 Chevy Pickup
Truck
3. 1982 Cheyy Pickup
Truck ,
4.
1989 Ford Teurua
Crul5. 11184 Dodge Arln
All aeeled ·bid• lhlll be
received In the Clerk'l
olllct 11 320. E•*' Main
Straat, Pomeroy, Ohio on or
before Aprll17, 1995. The
Pomeroy Council reserve•

""
OFFICE........................... ......
~~sTh~p~Thm- - ~~·~~~~l-~l~~=~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~LE§E~N~M;-~C;LE;LA~~;·;
· ·;:·........
·;···;...;:....................
;.. · ;
· ·;··;· ·;-;· ·.'.~-m~~~1~9;1!

CREAMETTESPAGHETTI .

$ )69

Q=~=avrolet 914, ·

--So,_
cl"ety scrap b00 k.

CHATHAM HI·PROTEIN

SUPERIOR SLICED _ .

t""'-'al jowwr" over.

Buuoni and Bows, Dank One,
Chapman Sboel. aart'aJewe!Jy,
McDonald' a, the Flbric Shop or at
the Pomeroy Elemell~~ey School.
They a $4 each. By tbe way, ball
or the proceeds will ao to ·the
Pomeroy school to help wltb tbe
purchase of a new backstage cur-

The Micldlepon Ana Council ls
expaodina and in the fullll'e will be
known as the Riverb,cnd Arts
COUDCil.
A new advisory board Is being
signed on and will be composed d.,
iesidents on both sides or the riyer.
The idea is to bring many fonos of
art into tbe community and' more
art in educational prosrams for
school cbUc~n:~;t. · ·
· Tb~
new
concept was
announced Satnnlay nigbl during a
meeting and social staged by the.
former Middleport group. State art
people were on band-and tbey
have been·most supportive over the
five years of the Middleport Arts
Council's existence. During the
- The lOth annual style show or
ml:eting it was announced tbat
tbe Pometoy Mcrchants ·Assocla·
Roger and Mary Gilmore, too tal·
lion will be coming up this Friday . ented to be confined' to Meigs
evening at the Pcmeroy Elementtuy
County, will be dolaf musicalSchool.
story prognuos iD all o the Meigs
At 7:20, the drawing for some.· County schools in the near future.
"r tbe 70 door prizes to be awarded
Roger and Mary have been presentduring the evening will get under·
inglhese JIOgraotS for years but in
way witb the show starting at 7:30
otber parts of tbc ·state. Finally,
p.m. Scott DiUon wiD be doing· the
provisions are made for tbem to
emceeing and there will be a variappear locally. It'll be good for the
ety of entertainment in adllition to
home kids to get a touch of their
talent and entertainment.
the actual style revue. Annie Chap'man, following ltadition, will do
·the namuing.
It appears to be a bit early 10 put
Refreshments will be servedaway !bose whiter clothes. Keep
ati4 tbey:re free of charge. TICkets 'em bandy so that you can be warm
·will be avaUable at the door but If
and smiling.
'you'd
like
to
avoid
a
possible
line,
.
.'
.

1.50L

WE NOW ACCEPT.WIC COUPONS

M

the hlrnd
t •
Carolya has been_sone from
Mclp Coullly ror 102 days. Sllc, or·
coune, lpCpt a lot of lime In tbe
bospilal aad aiDce that lime bas
beal realdill8 at Uoveafalh Houae
in Columbus, s living complex
e~peclally cleliped for those who
have tmclergODe heart tnmaplaniB.
· Carolyn was brousbt to her
Pomeroy bome by ber husband,
George, In s resalar passenaer
vehicle Slttmlay and1 returned the
same way on Sunday. It had to~ a
good experience for her to get
home after 'such a Iotta. hard pull.
Her stepson, Bracy, said tbat the
weekend did get a bit hectic at
times 10 I take It that Carolyn and ·
George bad quite a few visitors ·
durin!! 'the time slot. I undenllllld,
tbc trip was pretty tiring for berbut well worth it. No doubl she's
loqking forward to a return tbat
wiD be a tad longet.

STAR·KIST

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 9, 1995. ·-.

KAHN'S _ ~

~·

'

o

,_!

-Community calendar---~

FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC SOFTENER .

The Community Calendar Ia
· published. as a free service to
· non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. ' Tbe calendar Ia not
desl11ned to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type . lte~ru~

64 oz.

$179

are printed "" space permits and

FRIDAY
· RliTLAND- Return Jonatllan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, I :30 p.m.
Friday at tbe borne of Margaret
Weber, Rutland . Fred Crow to be a
special guest

cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.

GROUND
BEEF

.
99(
Cauliflower •••-••••E:~......

SATURDAY
. - MIDDLEPORT - Communiiy
Assault Prevention Program, egg
WEDNESDA_Y_
. bun~ Saturday, Middleport munlci·
_PAGEVILLE_- Sctpto Town- ·. pal park, 11 a.m. Prizes and candy
sh1p Trustees wdl meet _'6 :30p.m. for children participating. Invited.
W~dn~y at the Pagev1Ue Town- preschoolers through third grade.
sh1p butldmg.
For additional information call
Monica Dodrill, 286-6611.
·
POMEROY - The Red Cross
BIOO&lt;IIACilbile will be at the Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS - RouniJ
County Senior Citizens Center and square -dance featuring SmCJ\cy
Wednesday from 1 10 6 p.m. There Mountain Drifters Saturday, 8-11
is a shonage of blood,. said Gladys p.m. at VflW Post 9053.
Cumings, county chainnan, .in urging residents to donate.
SUNDAY

...

10 LIS.

S'J69
~~0. IWlilk •••••••••••••• ::~.~
. . $ 90

VALLEY BELL.

. .

2 $ .-------Marganne ••••••••••~:-... / 1
ZESTA
s9( CRACKERS
P1zza......................... .
69c
·
2
ss
.I ( . .

_BLUE ~ONETTE•

THURSD,.\Y
POMEROY - Meigs Ministe·
rial Associa!ion Lenten service,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at tbe First
Baptist Cburcb, Pomeroy. Rev. Bill
~oback to preach.

.

1

•

£01JPON

FOX FROZEN

.

70Z

Ill.

·HAGAN PREMIUM

101

· ce ream..............
VtGAL

·

.

·

'

Good Only AI Po.well'e Super tfa1u
Ol!er Good thru April 8, 1994
Umlt 1 Per CUI!Oiner

-------

RACINE - Racine· Post 602,
American Legion. Thursday, 6:30
meeting witb dinner to follow .

-(;OiJNN .- - ,

I
MASTER BLEND I
COFFEE
I
. MAIWELL HOUSE

;.-$,69 ... l

wmiMICC!lM

no&amp;3 -'2l'O~ ~ '

DOWNING CHILDS.
MULLEN MUSSER
.

...•

NOW OPEN
SPRINt SEASON
. •Pansy •Viola
•Broccoli .Cabbage
. · •Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

•

- r··;;::..

r"&gt;"(r.

fo.{ /
.·

•

tee
1 won'tleaveyou up mthe an:

KAREN'S

· · ~~ INSUUNCE- -· " . GREENHOUSE ·
111 Second Sr., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE 1868

Good Only AI Powell'• Super Velu
Oller Good tllru April 8, 1~
Llmh 1 Per Cuatomer ·

•

GALLIPOLIS - Diabetic Suppon Group, Sunday, 2 to 4, French
500 Room, Holzer Medical Center.
Dr. James Young , dennatolosist,
Holzer Clinic.
.

MONDAY
POMEROY
- Easter breads
MIDDLEPORT - TOPS Club,
workshorr. Senior Citizens Center,
Thursday, 5:15 to 6 p.m. weigh-in
Pomeroy, Monday, 10 a .m. to
followed by meeting at Middlepon .
noon. By reservation with deadline
Church of Christ.
Friday, call 992-6696. To be COR·
dueled by Cindy Oliveri, Extension
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppen
agent
Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies
' .
Auxiliary ~gular meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Members urged to
auend.

1

•

7

2nd

llale""'
Dlaloa.nar.tlot
_ .

LEGAL hereby
NOTICE given
Notice
lllat
b!Jia will be
by the lleiY.'
Sheriff, Jalmea •
at llle ~":to'~~':;
'""
(adjacent to
County
Malga
rt h ouee), Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, until 12:00
noon on "ondlly, April 17,
111115, toT the ,follow In"
•
IUrpllltl Ylhlclea: .
Ona (1) 1878 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo coupe, SN:

Beat of the Bend ..

·2am1

'·

The Dilly Sentinel-Page

Pubic

SECOND WEEK
2 I" AIIIIWIIIAIY SALI
STORE HOURS
Monay' thrv Sullllay
. 8 AM·10 PM ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hours: Mon.·Fri ..ll-5
Sat. 11-4 &amp; Suh. 1-4
3% miles past Southem High
School, St, Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio ·
614-949-2682

:

·~ ·.=~

Worried about banging on to your-Juto insurance if you happen to get a few tickets or liave an accident?
Not if you're insured witl1 Allstate. Your Allstate Agent stands by you, even if your driving record gets banged
' up, and~can_c9!1.!i.n~e to otler you ag,oy_&lt;J fron:t~e,Allstate (~iliofcomp~nies. ~o yo~ won't have to look

--.c&lt;- fo.r;t"~ew:agenrormsrrranre-companfA.~kaboutlfleAlfSTI.He .
Insurability Guarantee, Guaranteed not to leave you hanging.

·

ou,.re· m'-g· ·oo
-- dhiii"icts.
·· '.,c, ...
1klU
.
AIISiale·

-

•
I

I

-·

�J

•
•

.

•~ PIQI I
•

::

•

The Dlllly Sentinel

Poineroy-4tkldleport, Ohio

'

I-

'

WHALEY'S AUTO
.,
PARTS

· ·~ -· •· - •

"·····

· - - --

--

"'-ll~prove••••

· NEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES I MODELS

992-70130A
992·55530R
: TOLL FRI!E UOO 848 007

D,RWIN, OHIO

51 llappv Hollow Rolld
lllcld'-!, Ohio 45760

•.Room Additions• NeW Garages .
• Electrical ~ Plumbing
. • Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
.' .
. Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

· Frame i;lepalr

'

.I

IIIII'

0

CADIIRII IIIMG
·,

Specializing In Ctiltom

I :

•

~Ho­

•Addltlona eSidlng
~ng .Painting
eGaragea.PorchM
-PoleBIIma ·

F-E•614-742-3010

992=8215 '

Pomeroy, Ohio

71311111 TFN

SMITH'S '
CO ..STRUCTION

c-.. Building &amp; flomoclilr II
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
· • NEW GARAGES

Mobile W!tldlng

I. D~8MIIn)ector svc

•REMOOEUNG
• SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAII'!TING
FREE ESTIMATES

InJector Pump SVC
TUne-ups

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 ....

·.. '

•

·Apanment
for Rent

Syracuse, Ohio
Now avallble FmHA One BR apts.
' ,.Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
· Basic monthly'Rent $~69.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
.. Refrigerator, ~ on -site la!Jndry,
·' Community Room; Management,
Maintenance provided

. Whole Boneles.s -~-~·
smoked Ham.

oiling,

TruckingLimestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

WHATYAMACALLIT
SHOP
NEW&amp;USED

Household- ·
Collectible
9-ST·Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR33N
992·7502 or 992·5805

Special Tlais
Month
With every new
alarm Installed recelva 6 montil's
FREE monitoring.
304-882· 3336

BULLETIN BOARD
161M! column Inch weekday~
•aao column Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992•2155

311411

Dinner Thursday,
April 13, 1995 at 6:30 p.m.,
St. Paul Luthera,Q Church,
, Pomero9.
Aeseriations may be made
by calling 992-2010 no later
than Friday, April?, 1995. A
minimum donalion of $6.50
is suggested. Sponsored by
lhe Women of St. John. and
St. Paul Lutheran Churches.

I

.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, CAFFEINE FREE COKE CLASSIC,

U.S. .GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

C-hicken
.Diet coke or . ..
Quarters
coca Cola Classlc - BreastPound
.
·
'

6-Pack 12-0z. Cans

U.S.D.A. CHOIC.E GRAIN FED BEEF

.Boneless
Chuck
Roast
·Pound

I

•

Limit Four ·
6-Packs,
Please

.,

•

Sold as .
·Roast only.

R~~~~b~~:~'i:'angeal

ofMt
eWaahere·• Dryer• •
-Refrtgerator1 •Freezel'8

o!llohwMhlnl
oH .W.Heatara
.Yicrowawo •Diopooala

oThonklr Malgo &amp;
Surrounding Araoo

. REGULAR SCENT ONLY .

·

Clorox
Bl·e ach
Gallon

1/2-Gallon

Limit One,
Please
'

.

-

ARE co·rtrtiiiED
10 SERYI 1.
YOU
..

=
=

Lbs.
~

:!'--&gt;· - ___.._;··

'

• .".-~-:-

,.- .-

, ...

.-

•

:-!:

If.you

have suggestions.
-comments or questions
pl~ase contact your store
.. manager or call

.

'

1·800
'
85!·· 103!

I

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.

.-.,

.

-

Rock Springs U.M.W.

. is having a
Bake Sale at Pamida

•Convertible Tops
• •Carp!'t &amp; ,
Seat Covers
1
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
4"1 4114 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-7587 •.

:==·

=·

=·

.

'

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMAt'ES ;
949-2168

CALL NOW!!!
1-900-562-7000
Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

=
=
=
=

Procall Co.

(602) 954-7420

Bring in ad
for 10% off.

Property Appraiser .
Bonded
(61 4) 992-4079

ner JfurM"Etc.

Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard S.,_ lluot Be Pold In
Aclvoncoo. O.. ~rw: 1:OOpm t ho
d1y Mforw the lid • to run,
·
. Sunday odHion- 1:OOpm Frldoy,
Dual Wheel PtJI1 ~ Monday
M llion
10:00a.ll'l.
SotUrdoJ.

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
RUTLAND
.

QUALITY WINDOW -SYSTEMS
•Cultom Made
•Solid vinyl •
rep_lacement
windows ·
• Free htimates
•Starting At

rlllt - · .,..,... X·l, toyo, - . of,
mlac. Mlny fr• llema. 31553 SA

143, one milo ol1 Rt. 7, Pome"'J.
Deve'a SWip Shop, 10:001m..
1:00pm.
.

Yon! ..le or Rutland Amerloon
Loglon, Ap&lt;ll7 . . .

8

Public Sail .
&amp; Auction

992-4119 AI Troillm, Owner 1·800.291-5600

Auctlono ovory Fridoy4oturdoy,
7pm. Ill Alto Auction, At. 2-33
"C!worooda', Ron Prico, BAI
llooro._ QMC&lt; leo, . p~ue lola
-.1 Jed-· m.

9

ij &amp; H SAWMILL

'Portable

Brd•llrury Rei
Plll1ilL' !J'J2 4044
OwrHors Ro!lre &amp;

.

Du~me~s Woukl
Btl ApptPCir 1r~~d

20 Sr'SS!ons For

25.00

- o d ...._.., •M toJe.
~. old lolnjlo, old Ill.
tnofnlt .... okl docka, anrUque
fumll-. Alvwi,. '""lquOo.
Ru• - . , ow..... 114-1182·

8prJna Solei EllmiJWie fll With ,2-528~-W.:;::.:bu~y;:••:::·:::••o.::.,.,..-,...­
Aiklalunol Hoobol Pt ~ rot La. 1~
Welgtll, - - _ . . . ..... Don1 olunlr ftl Soli u. y..., Enorslr 114 . . _;
Worlling MaJor ~-0,

Loll bo
lhll• of lloJdl
31, 11M I-will nol bo 1 p;wllrlo

441-7271.

. WICKS
'

-

(Sjl«tliiiZlllnI
driveway sp~lng)

c- ,-.v: o, Rotr1&lt;1en1....,
FJM..... VCA'o • W-._ '
a.y- Ela.l14-256.1231.

tar
, - W, FottJ
- olf.'""' .., 1:::.!.~::::.:~==-own..Harold
J I D'o Auto onc1 BoNogo,
..,
buying -ko.lunll out.. 1
IIE£T N£,. PEOPl£ 'TME FUM tNCU. AIOo, IJOrto lor-. 1Q4.
WAY TOOAY, 1-'1'11-3001111&lt;1. 773-5343 or 77W033
11002, t2,llllnln. IIUII bo 11 ,.._
. ·
. '
ol ago. P - CG.I02-IM-lll20. Jvnlr Con. 114 31t IJDI2, 114-

Ratts)

HAULING

C.ro Or

a.n logCIIon,
For YOIIIh · Col I~
5801 • .LMw lh 1:• n No
One Home, Thonll -

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614,742-2193
(Uatest~ Low

aeon Lot• -

-

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Your

Wanted to Buy

Trucko, 11117- Or -.r,
- h lulct Ponlloc, Eooo""' ,._,..., Ootupoilo.

Chuloh-

Hollow Rd.

~~t11tley S I PWCHt

Announcements
-:::::::=::::::====

3 Announcemfllts

Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy

Slew;ul Hollow Rd Oft

L..o.-----'- ~ '

:':.':::::-;...."''~::t~·

""""· otr comp., llohlng "'l!'iP'
mlnti hind guna, nn... Matlunl, cr•a bowL ~raflaman
oncl -

11 0 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

CJ:l•"'dlrotr

2/28I9S

building. llprA
Voty largo gonogo ooJo. April U.

r-.

:'Look for the Red and White Awning"

Wullu R•'rl

Sunday l:oO p.m.
12 Gauge Only
Limited: 740
Backbore, 680 Front

~.:='":.~o ·~·==

" VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

PERFECT ViEW TAN

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN .
"SHQOTS'-·"'

Tho
r,ord

*200 Installed

by appointment &amp;
-club repair as well
· Call John Teafprd at
· Chester, Ohio

,.,..,.,.

Frtdoy1 Ap&lt;lll'p10...,..? :134 llulbllc'Ty AwenU., OIIWOy.

B-7. 1en:3~

Golf Lessons

99~·5388 .

742·2455

'

~::=::;:~=========":'"':mo~. am Communl!y

CLUB

Nt·l\' Bu•,Htt''&gt;'· ·,1

At-

Pomeroy,

C OUNTRY

•Lots of

614-986-4180

Firewood

Evorythlna, Nlco Clolhlng.

l!:!lllirM,

C~IESTER

Learning

(614) 992-5291

Trimming

'll.......

41411 mo,

E;xperience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00 P.M.

FOR SAI.I OR TRADE

IUrHocU,Tol&gt;lo.
· a.._ Sole: I To 8:00 4 IIU•
Out St. At. 110 Put HIIC on
Rlahl, Late 01 Boyo Clolhoo,
Adilft Clol'-, Cnofte. April?lh,
•h.·
a.._ Sole: Thurodoy, FrldQ, ·
112 Milo Out At. 211, Uttlo 8~ 01

· 1 ON 1

57-9~ ~-.

Auctioneer ·

1-800·486-1590 ·:;~::.::""=::ao=:f.::::;r""~·,.,.Thun
-=--·h_,~
F"

-· LIVE
PSYCHICS

·'

35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certified Personal
·

Kenny's Auto _Cen~er

lo

:.,
•":':
.•. ~24
T«MMIe,
MYCh lioN!

SttP&amp;rlftl

742·3149 or 992-7285

MILHOAN.

~dl ..

l.~:~:l:liu:~:lfs:~:r~:~:~e:;5:.~:~:1 =:Bu:s:·~:(6:1:4):4:4:6:-9:~-:71~.
&amp;'E~~tJ:;c~~
. , ·

BARR'S Nursery

Also: ·
Contract work

Mowini~ ~~-

tho ..., baton lho

143 from Rt. 7

White Pine. &amp;
Norway Spruce

RHETI'

Sl-, loyo SIZH 14,

Kenny's is the place to come . ~=::=,~:,~
ad •
non.
h
d
I
w en you nee a c~r renta. ~~~ .d.~-oo. ~;G'o
We Have Cars and Vansl

Landscape Stock

Ucensed

a-...,. Sole: April
u . Clolhlng. All

f~:~K-:::~

1•9()()-656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-742~4195

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.
''Take the pain out
f painting-1.Let us
do it for you" ·
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; Alter 6 p.m.·

L&amp;W
Lawn Care

.
.-.---.
Kenny's Auto Rental
11 11 11"

?-----~-------·-·---------------~~~~~~

Tues. - Wed. ·Fri. -Sat. ·
1-6
• Crattsman Tools
r
•Toys
• Girns
Lollds of Misc.
Buy-SeiJ.Trede
992·2060
101~1mo

WV

Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612 .

Gallipolis

! Family
5th Thou llh,

992-3954

E rncrgf"ncy Phone 985-341 B

One mile out

Maggies Crockpot
~Clifton ,

Yard Sale

7

board llotor With "'IIOPf Top,
114-441;.1270.

Ucenoed &amp; Bonded - 20 yeoro experience

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

. ROOFING

·

1184 Gloumooo or Boot · Wllh
Dual WiiMI Ttallor.c' eo HP In-

WE HAVE A -1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

~' '-----=7"""":..J

Hpward L. Wrltesel

.,,,.._.,711,_

&amp; VIcinity

Llm11tone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

985-4473

992·2269

TAMMY HYSELL'S
.E;AS1f
DAY CARE
'RO;1t]4Ne.E
•Lots of Fun and

::

-

FREE ESTIMATES

3/14/ 1 mo.

---=
Sat. , April 8 at 10:00
-=
6
-'
-;; iiiii iii iiii iiii iii iii iii iii ii iii iii iii iii iii iii i iiii iiii iii i;::FRIED CHICKEN niii.INF.R
Thursday, April
Serving 5:00 to 6:1&amp;
Meigs County Senior Center
Cost $4.00 per person
Music The Classics·

t /1Mtn

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

AIR CONDITION E~ S
Washers &amp; Dryers,
,
Dishwashers,
Refrigerators, Ranges Stock

-=

Bill Slack

Olllce Houro: l.jon.-Frl.
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Froe Eallmatea

Has

Golden · pe
·Bananas

•New Homes
•Garages ·
•Complete
R~odl!'flng
Stop &amp; Compare ·

RQOflng, VInyl . .
· · Replacement, •
· Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doora; Storm ·
Wlndowll, Garages.

842 Second Ave.

or.a,nge Juice

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
· Misc• .,lob~.

539 BRYAN PLACE
, MIDDLEPORT 91!,2-2m

EMPIRE
.
FURNITURE

llled

AND RJMOVAL

J&amp;LINSULATION

'

Kroger

; ·TREE TRIMMIN~

hlrlrod, Llnaaln

lAo!: polr of ....... . , _ wlh
k _ . II IJelae School partdng .... 814---3814

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

. ROBERT BISI?ELL
CONSTButTION

. (614) 985-3561 or
. 992-5335 1"''..;
.... n

will meet Sundey, April 9
-from 2 to 4\f).m. in the
French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Center.
Speaker: .
Dr. James Young,
Dermatologist,
, Holzer Clinic
Refreshments and
fellowship will follow
the speaker.
For more information call
446-5313 or 446·5246.

I

mo.

ofoc!ory Authorized Porto
&amp; Service
,oAII Maklra -42 Yeoro

. The Diabetic ,
Support Group

••

(No Sunday Calls)

511&amp;'94 TFN

SAriA·r

.

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned 6 portable toilets rented.
Dlllly, -kly 6 monthly rental rales.
Job Illes' Camp SHes ' Family Reunions &amp; Parties

,

MR. RIGGS

·With A Dally Se•tlnel

'

MODERN
.
.SANITATION

614-992-7643

Bur • Sell • Trade

JAMESAURM
SERVICE

I
I

--..................................____-=..... ......--.·
~

FREE ESTIMATES
r·

· ~ Equal Housing Opportunity

•

Found: ............. -

Hill- 814-ef:l-3481•

·New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows .
• Room Additloas • .Roofing · ·
COMMERCIAL and RE'siDE.NTIAL

t)t)•)
._, ... , ..
--,)(),)()

SEE MANAGER FOR BENT UP SPECIAL
614-992-6419 TOO
1

Lb.

I

l

.

. . . . dog, -

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Cle..U.,, Septic Syotemo
&amp;: Drivewayi.

EDGE APARTMENTS ·

· CUMBERLAND GAP (7-9 LB. AVG.)

=·~=~~

441-1113.

Scrvieca.
Rome Shea, Land

.

Loll &amp; Found

Found 4 O.yo Ago: Rod I - .

Ito\\ \IW
E\c \\ \TI\1,
..

44

6

985-3879

.

Limestone, ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fnl Dirt

614·992-3470
Ml/11

..

�' "•Tfsdnllday, Apftl5, 1815

Ohio

I

=~

· ACROSS

1 9wlla•

PHILLIP
ALDER

5 Clollt n n1we
1 Morrlrroer~
12
13 becchlnoll
Guido'• high

Cry"'·
-

"

.

•A

Q
4

•to

•J9B2

42 Mobile HOmel
to; Rent

_,.,,1_ ........

··-···
......,, :..-=-:..

,., - . 81111 I"• CIIY

-.

(ORRf(T

• A I0 9

54 Ml.cetlaneous
MfrchandiM

Vulnerable: East-West

74

MOtorcyclel .

BARNEY .

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

-·---

A---MI\1d'llt .......
led In Eaf!llnl ....,. !Hr. ""
Door To Dooi'. 1aa11110

WOULD YOU BELIEVE
LOTTIE'S BOY STILL

54 ...cetllneous
Merchandlae

NNdld 111 our....,.

I Ev01llr\C Por 1 To J
"""'-olorill II !!!!!UIIOII,
Jam Or Kenr•...... !

.. --

-· .

.

SUCKS HIS
TI:IUMB?

I

'

Olllo

'
''

THERE l-IE 15! THAT'S
TI-lE KID WHO WON
ALL M'&lt; MARBLES ..

,

1..,.

WJ.l'{ DON'T
WELL,I 1LL 60
OVER AND '"'~''' 'I'OU HIT 141M

ASTICK?

TO HIM ..

In ·- Bo
.....

Actw.......,....,.
To
... ,..,..._.. Pa••lbla. 30M7S-

Honellt,

11ttt. ·

dtble
NOII..a.,:htr
... In ..., ""' J
Child...,, I Dori A 114441....11AIIorfPJI.

.

Eam .. lo 11.-w ,._.,., ~~~
lint orwoiOpoO II homo. 8lar1
._. no......-,._o~

f~·s!:..'"::!':l..::...0:

Pod o n - 1o Alomo Doal
1 1 2 , - - Ad......
13W11,1on A-..o TX niiiii.

Eam up Ia 11000 -.v olufflng

.

All Mal estate aclveftlilng In
this nfMSPaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of tooe whldr makes~ lllegll
to adverUse •any preference,
umttation or discrimination
base(! on l'!llce, color. rellglon,

GonoraiOIIIco-=··

'

origin, or any Intention lo
make any stJCh preference,
limitation or Cllscrlmlnatlon.•

lnlonned that all dwelllngt .
advertised In this newspaPer·
are evailabte on an equal

2834 ollll24.

'Ill

···=··
" "' 1-.. A,._

If'S AIOUT M~. · SO' IT
\
tMS' LOTS
Of JUICY
PAilTS.

3br - . .....
1011100
"" In - ·...
oi-Ho
Pdaorlto

led-

1m1n

•.

.

Irick-_ llwoo Iori-, 1
ment,
Two Car
Conlrol Air,
Fonood e.ollyoid, Clly ilclloolo,

o.-.

Hove..... - . ProiM 11.200DollviNJ · !lhraldoy.
contact llron Mvoro 1 100 111o

P••noroy-~

.FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Ave.;
....

112 ...._, FlnlrMd I

This newtpapar.wlll noi
knowllnglyllceept .

npono•.

II

ment,

..,~.

nrrdNI,

Mnier

~

1oM, 11om •
OUIIIf. Itt: au lly ;; I ••••

advertlserrlents for real '8State
which Is In violation of lhe taw.
Our readers are hereby

1221.
lndtJSindlont

ea-..r

1101110 1a1,
f14,IIOD. :1104471-77n

.., on

sex familial status or national

No· erperlenaa.
euppn
- .. - Frw8lal1
-...
·
, _ lnlomollon. No Olrllg@lon.
8ond S.A.S.E to 8tor11ng, Doal.
~· lox 141111, o.tondo', FL

1'YIIIna. I Poyrall E
..,.,
F'ul~nmo,
_ . , ef4.446.

. s room MuM, full

11t ttiBOI

•

'-

.

Dlt:t-I'T H~VE. Ttl(

·

6288.

't

=do~~~~~·~·-=~~~~~·
Tnrck
-·
a-.
Fonl. Dodao, ':
ond 8-10,
oiHNt
l long.~~

Norlb
3•

"'

~1 1l PolnC PtooNnt flogiOIOr 200

MOin 91. Point P-nt, WV

}

255!0.

. , . _ t o lvooln I..,.
,_ oklolly lody, proler Nllrod
couple ot wl-, 1200/Wk, lf4.
IMI8.ml.
No "-lonco lloco-l)'IIIOO

*

p0o

Doml-'o PIUI frl Gotllpolio l
-oy.ApllfylnPo,_,.
::=~7::'ro'r:"~'rn'tr1
Ovo- Canoor hoo lull tlino coli :104.e71-tt57.
•

UllrTED OFFER NiW t4X'IG

DEUYERY l IElUP.
..,...
15511.
-111M 141170 3 br., J bolh, 1no
•lrtlng, olopo~o, 1
yoor
noe,
One! I montho FAEI lol - ·
Only 11025
Olid Utt por
,.., Col1_,_..
NEW lANK AEPOe, ONLY 4
LEFT. :104·716-7111.

-n

ROBOTMAN

hoi•-••••

- -':"'.-Ho-m
....-e---,:
•
Improvements

oollr.......,

rlcfor

or-...

:':.? .._

~~~~f~..wl~~~~~R /...._.,,_.c0~
. \::I'_.. I ?S~ti-\OfAT\11 ~, "OMICIW.~,.. . ,. "

Merchandise

51

s \'

tobt-1W71:

Household

.

-~

. .:;

HolM :

CIC
O.neral
llalortond llobllo
Aopolr. ""' lroo
oollmoto- eol'·
Chol, lt4-te:zo1323.

Goods

11

Bonilhi=A
•• lroo
-.
up, 121
:10447Wtt4
or
304ol
12.
.
.
""
1 Sl4ocroo on Tobnor .,..., Ad.
Sllnrllo oil Jorry'a lkrn. lfor.

ASTRO·GRA.P H
Matchr:naker can help you to u nderst~d

-304ol71o1A7.
· .,,.. -

Financ1al
Buslnesa

Opponuntty

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

III,GGO firm.

Poillrn ,_ Nnt. 1CJ4.1'15.2Ittl.

'

~

&amp;.,aM.. -

.,.. loll,

lhiO · mollllo-. ~=

liT.
-~~···

....

@

•
..,rio,

Real Eatate
Wantlei

=

2lor - .. 2211 Ill Vrtmon,

ea.-

no

:I04oi7NI72 .....

a~e

to handle d1H1cult ass1gn,ments com·

wha t to do to make ttiE! re lationship work . mendab ty today . Your behav1or w11l
Mail $2 .50 to Match make r, P.O So~ enhance your standmg tn the eyes of

dorod on 1111111 c-11. Elloolo
lonl oliO lot homo I I _,.,.. of

•

i

Hello and greelings from.
· automat~td tel.emarketing
.services!

~llu!lnl

::::.mr.t •:~:err

21

• '!!

WATEAPAOOFINQ
~
u.-odltlonol Nlollrno Quo,..,., ,
t•. l.DCal rwt.r.ncer ~
Colt ~~~ Or 114-ZDo•
0111 R.-. W•.-pra aa..... £8.~

S..n Yollwy N"'"!'Y . ..,_,
2-K,

:

S

11t:LP 1 WE'RE ll~IN6 ~~~LI)

Roam Acldltlono .OOCko, And'!
Pore,_, Ellpo&lt;toncod, F- (o. ,
tlnut•, 114 ••• uea. .,. ·
,
BASEMENT
~

prog.-, I n homo. 1-220- Chlldcaro M-F lomoi:3CJPI!! Agoo I.Sacroo on Bolio Ad (off

1M2\

01&lt;.1'!1 GOWNA G\~ ~()ij ~\11) NO f UNlol~

'T~HHOW'E.IINIJ ~()~~ SlUFf. OHtSE! \\0&gt;-1"-~ ll'l ~ 1&gt;~6el&gt;,

:=Bor...:..no~n::-.,e::-:,101-,.e~l.m-por-,...-rne-IU":"':=

t_,

-.y

Bel9lum

.

•

,I

tV-··-

4465, New York, NV t 0163 .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Mental pur·
suits might be mOre yo!Jr cup of tea than

your peers.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24· Nov. 221 You mustn't
let yourself get 1nto a rut today Try. to do
mildly adventu rous thlngs that stimula te

to ~alance the barbells.
'
GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) Because you
Will be Sharper than USU81 When If Comes

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 - Dec . 21 ) II
you're alero ooday , you moght spot an
0pponun1ty lhat COuleJ be Of p&amp;rSOnal ben•

phys1cal ones today. You wou ld be belt9f
off balancing the books instead o1 trytng

your enthusrasm af"'d zesr tor hie.

tbol bsuhy1ng
w ·or se1tltng today. you wm proba· eht to you m an ~rea where you seldom
y 0 8 pro 11 •
operate.
CANCER (JUM 21..July 22) Endeavors CAPRICORN (Oec . 22' J an . 19 1 You
wh1ch. you assume personal manage· ,m1ght not f1nd com ton mingling ,w1th the
ment should 'QO smoothly today, but w.hen crowd today, but you may find great plea·
Th ursda~. April 6, 1995
you delegate dUt1es to others, the results sure m 1he companionship of o n~ w11h
might be less desirable.
whom you snare much In common
•
Ventures or enterpnses you originate LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Let persons wrth Ad'UAFIIUS (Jan&gt; 20· Feb . 19) ·Yo u'll
mJVlf b·e tier tnan average 'Ch8r'tCe&amp; tor whom you're involved &amp;avOCIIhe stpgt#ght - ·have mere ~n being...activg. and produe,auccess 1n the year ahead . Oo no,t be today . You will be more eH&amp;etlVe as the : tive today than you Would fntte nng your
afraid 10 stnke out on your own. \
director who call s t fle shot s from the t1me away . Involve yourself in meamnglul
ARIES (Mar ch 21 - Aprll 19f Your . wrngs
aCt\voties.
rnstoncts lor gaging the wants and needs VIRGO (Aug . 23· Sept 221 11 your expec- PISCES (Fab. 2D· March 20) Someone
of others is accurately luned. today. This talions are higher than usual todey , do ydiJ recently mel whO you'd like to know
,.::ould be a b•g plus if you're marketmg not put a da mpe r on you r thoughts . better shares the same sentunents ThiS
something to the publrc. Trying to patch Instead. think like a wrnner.
IS a goo&lt;f ·day 1o arrange somelhrng«pe·
up a broken romancie? The Astro-Graph LIBRA (Sept. 23.0CI. 23) You shOuld be coal)ust lor the two of you .

_I\AIJ_

'IJirthd
. BY, ·

'"

.

30 Epic poetry
31 Clooo by •
32Abomi .......
snowman ·

boxing

ptono
40 Cove
41 Declares
44 Mountain
on Crete

45 Stern

46

Country

Europe

01

4! fl!lure oltyt.'
The main reason an expert plays this
exam
~
game so well is that he never stops
48 C..rrison ~
counting, He keeps track of the high51 Uoed up . •
card points and the suit distributions.
52 Towel word
53 Journey
However, counting isn'( everything.
55 Meadow
South counted today's deal carefully
56 Color
but still ended wilh a minus score.
Following North's forcing spade raise,
Easl wisely kept quiet. He didn't rate to
be able to win the auction, and bidding
would only warn South about the distribCELEBRITY CIPHER
utional nature of East's hand.
by Luis Campoa
West led the club lwo. East won with
~ Cipher cryptograms~ crealed from quol•tiont by lamour; people. pas! and~
Eldl~ertar in 1M eiphe:r.t•nds tor ~._ ra1 s ctw: M equa~s u
the .ace II'Ml'etumed the sev~ n to
--· .,
.
'
partner's king. West switched to
heart two , dum.my 's queen lo sing to
, R .'
LRJ-.WTRW
I N VV
' I NU F
L J
:East's king. After a heart went ·to dum·
my's ace , South drew the missin'g
UNXXBB . ' "A•NA .
CBVZNX .
trump.
Now South had to find the diamond
queen. Assuming West's club and heart
leads were honest fourth-highest cards;
West was known to have started with
'ANWSLRC
T X X 8 U W B z·
PB
one spade. four hearts and four clubs.
This meant he had lour diamonds to ..
., . u R w L v
eVHLJ . '
ONSR
VBRRNR .
partner's three. Smiling contentedly to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Haired is seff-punishment.' - Hosea Ballou .
himself. Soulh cashed lhe diamond ace
'Hatred is the madness of the heart.' - Lor&lt;! Byron .
before fine ssing dummy 's jack.
However, East produced the queen:
one down.
WOII
"The odds were with m~ . partner,"
lAIII
l~llo~ ., CLAY I . POllAN - ' - - - - explained South.
"Odds, clods," commented North sot·
Rearrano.e letters of

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twicebeforewedidanything. She
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Complere the chuckle q uol•d
by f,ll tng on the mtnrng words
you develop from !.fep No.. 3 below.

PRINT NUMSERED
1
IN SQUAR ES

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U N SCRAMB~E LETTERS

FOR ANSWER

I

Bisque • Smell • Droop - Wisely· MESS it UP
('.ftera long weekend a co-worker sighed, "By the time
our children learn !o keep the house clean there arB
grandchildren to ~ESS it UP.·
' .·

Sill DOWII, ..-~AEE

pooltlono opon lor o 3-lt AN.
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flotbM, um pon:-go ol Truck llontlco oiO Fl. Rooch,
groM ,._,,.. putting oornpony
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Blo- Rood, Addi-~
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Tolrrnahlp, $14,000, 11441'1o7811.

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26 Enllce
27 Rlwrln

SCRAM·LETS ANSWER~

Controcl

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mom wanting to do
babplltlng in mr hoine, 1:r,:
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the dawn

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Pass

Phillip Alder 's new book , "Get
Smarter at Br-idge." is available,
autographed. upon request, for
$14.95 from P .O. Box 169, Roslyn
Hts., NY 11 577-0169.

'

MolorHomea

Wanted to Do

...

CKI\RACT£R \0 STAY
OM YOUR DI£T. Q\? .

ln8pected, QUIIrantMd. ~~,

41110. Ablo lo WGfll- -

West
Pass

He had noticed that if South had only
won the .third trick with dummy's heart ·
ace, he couldn't go down . After drawing
the· trump, South exits with his last
heart. Whichever opponent wins the
trick must either lead a diamond, finding the queen for South, or con~ede' a
ruff.and-discard.

5Tii£N6nt. ar

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341 Plnoory. 37 Not oinking

to voce.

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BORN LOSER

opportunity ba~s.

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3SF-'ooword &amp;Chi-

33-111

By Phillip Alder

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75 Bolta &amp; Mella,.
for Sail

2 Ulyor ol eye
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Opening lead: • 2

.PEANUTS

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Dealer: South

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w.lklu·nv. April s.1•!

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

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CRICKER . FRENCH · SEASON'S BEST
. 21 OZ.
BLB. BAG
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89
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. INTDifwrE

· . SPECIALty

GEL FOOD -·
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.·CBECKUDT .-&amp;ESE GROCERY
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· · age

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APPLE JOICE .
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Limit 3 With $10.00

Purchase

64

.

.

I

· CORNER OF GENERAL
- HARTINGER PARKWAY
. · · AND PEARL STREET
MIDDLEPORT
.
. OPEN 24 HOURS .·

'

· 1995 Spring Fashion Show
Friday, April 7, 7:30 p.m.
Pomeroy ·Elementary.
. School
'

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Sponsored by

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