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'

Ohio Lottery

Cavs
lose to
Hawks

'

. Pick 3:
528
Plck4:

6333

Super Lotto:
20-30-33-41-42-45

Low loollpt ia 4tl, partly
. doudy. Friday,· IUIIDJ, bJch "'
6011.

'Kicker:

Page4 .

• 048422

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'
. Vol. 45, NO. 239
Copyright 1995

2 Sections, 12 Pagea

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .thursday, ~pril6, 1995

3~ "'!nil

A Mulllmldlo Inc. Newapapar .

HouSe approves .$189 billiQn tax cut
'

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - With the central
promise of !heir "Conlract Witb America" fulfilled,
House Republicans are basking in triumph after ram· · ·
ming through a five-yeai, $189 billion tax cut
DemocraiS say will rob from lhe
10 give to lhe
rich.
.
. But the glow may be short-lived. It's unclear
whi~b, if any, 11rovisions of lhe buge package will
surv1ve a skeptical Senate and President Clinton's
vctopen.
·
·
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., declaring
lhe moment "a truly bisiOric and at the same time

poor

'

lruly personal e~&lt;perience, .. sbrugged off Democrats'
criticism.
,
·
. With viciOry in hand Wednesday night, Gingrich
struck a concillaiOry lOne after a day of unusually
acid debate. He thanked in advance of the \'ole the 27
Democrats who bolted to support the fmal chapter of
the GOP's extraordinary 100-day juggernaut to
reduce the size and reach of federal government.
,
''The American people can be proud of the United
States House for what we have done IOgetber," he
declared.
As midnight approached, Demociats ran out o(

Accused takes $tand
in Gal/ia ·murder trial

Enjoy the Modeling Debut
Of Two of
"Our McDonald's Family:' Miss Bethany Spann and
·Miss "Tori" Wolfe
~

Be Sure and Join Everyone At
:McDonald's of Pomeroy
Before or Mter
"Fashi.on Alive In '95"

2 FAMILY SIZE' PIZZAS

. '$,99 .
Plus Tax
·COMPLETE WITH JEWELRY - No dotbing ensemble Is complete witbout
·jewelry. Tbese girls will model selected pieces to matcb tbelr attire at Friday
nlgbt's fasblon sbow. From tbe left, seated, Erin Krawsc:zyn, Asbley Hannabs,
Sarab Anderson, Anne Brown, and s-tanding, Kristen Dassylva·and Jodi Sisson.

·C£Jl2(~S Jf£'WEL!RY S~O:J{f£
15TJ{~g{g{Jo/E!JtSf42?.JSJL£/E,
.
April 1995 proudly marks our
15th Anniversary as part of the Pomeroy Business comm~ty and a
significant year in our busiOess district as we participate in
Pomeroy's Downtown Revitalization Plan • .

.
Throughout this historic year we hope you will watch and enjoy the
pres~rv.ation of our building as we undergo renovation.

.,

for the preservation ~ncfgrowtli of ·
",..';

.....,...,_

....

our C{J'!'-munitg; ·· '
'

a

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was rule on the request today. Fung also
no secret .that O .J . Simpson's . wastoreturntothestandtoday.
law¥ers were going to make a big ·
Legal analysiS praised the work
deal about the blanket tossed over of Scheck, . whose reputation as a
Nicole Brown Simpson·~ body, the DNA expert bas overshadowed his
rookie criminalist and the crime· courtroom skills. Scheck discarded
scene glove that got moved.
the brash, vocal style that .grated on
Yet when those issues were the judge in hearings out of the
raised during a precise cross-exam· jury's presence, Instead maintain ination of criminalist Dennis Fung, ing an intense yet restrained
il aU seemed so fresh, and so· terri- demeanor as he asked carefully
bly damaging. All of a sudden, the plotted questions.
defense was exposing cracks in the
In the day's other major devel-.
strongest part of lhe prosecution's opmen~ lhe jury lost a sixth memcase- Ule physical evidence.
ber to allegations of misfonduct:
By the end of Wednesday's Jcaneue Harris, a38-ycar-old blaek
court session. lhe defense had ' woman who reportedly failed to
Fung, a prosecution witness, sec- disclose her owri experience with
and-guessing his own decisions domestic abuse. She was replaced
and those of top police investiga- by a 44-year·old black woman who
ton; .
·
•
works as a compure~ technician.
Defense attorney Barry Scheck
Harris predicted a bung jury, ·
gol Fung to acknowledge that two saying that .jurors are under too
bloody leath~r gloves -one found much pressure and might fear comat.tbe murder scene and one at . munity• pressure. ,She also said she
Simps.on's estate-· might have· was not swayed by by the prosecubeen contaminated before -.they lion's case so far.
"The prosecution to me, from
were tested. Prosecu1ors say the
glove found on Simpson's estate' what I've seen so far, is just spincontains a mixture of blood from ning \yheels," sbe said . "They're
Simpson and the victims.
·
nol necessarily saying anything,
The defense wrapped up the but they're saying a whole lot of
court session by trying lo sbow · nothing."
jurors a videotape or what it said
The dismissal intensified fears
was tbe murder.-scene glove resling
that a complete panel won't survive
· · ·on li-etlfner of lhe-bloody-,blank~~·&amp;tn:sai:a of the trial long enoosh
mat covered Ms. Simpsort's body. tO deliver a verdict. Just six of 12
' The defense said the glove bad alternates
If th~ alternate
been inoved fro~p a SPj&gt;t u11det a jloOl is exhausted 'and the number
bush~
·
·
. of jurors falls below 12, a mistrial
Prosecutors objected and asked would be declared unless both
for time to analyze the tape. Supe· sides agreed to ~ontlnue with an
rior Court Judge Lance 110 was to unqersized jury~

remam:

"sliop focaf.
'

'

.

'

.,

Da chle urg~s
Democrats to
accept deal

·

•

wbo

Expert says evidence .
was handled improperly

/'

,.

By KEVIN PINSON
years old. I loved her."
OVP News Staff
Special Prosecutor John Lentes
. A GaiJipol!! man accused. of attacked White's testimony. during
killing his wife- took the st!ln&lt;l; cross examination.·
.
Wednesday and tried to describe . How did the gun fire accidental·
bow tbe victim pointed a gun at ly six times, be asked.
. him and was accidentally shot six
If the firings were accidental,
times ·as he tried to wrestle the why were four shots f'lred at Mrs.
weapon away from her.
White's bead and two at 'ber 10rso,
"She said after 18 years of mar- · be asked.
riage she wasn't going to lose
If the shots were accidental,
everything and she was going to why was there a·pause between the
blow my head off .and she would second and third shot, as Angela
I testilled Tuesday. he asked.
get away with it because of
was," said Johnny White, on trial
White said be was confused
· for allegedly murdering Bopnie about the details of the subsequen·
· White in the early hours of Dec. 2, tial firings.
1994 at their Chatham Avenue resi"If,you bad been with someone
18 years and she shot herself, what
dence.
White said .be was trying to talk would you do," be said.
·
to his wife as be reached out and
Memory problems also plagued
grabbed for the gun, knocking tHem White when Lentes questioned
both to the floor. As be grabbed the about the sbooting of bis cousin, .
"weapon, Whtte said bls thumb bit Donald White, after bis wife's
tile· .22-c:allbex revolver's bammer, death.
cocking the weapon.
·.
Adml~.ftrlng weapon
"I was trying to talk to her, to
White ailmitted firing a weapon·
tell her sbe wasn't losing every- . at his cousin hi
Uenderson,
thing, that she could see her daugb- · W.Va., bar and .blUing bls cousin,
ter at any time," he. testified.
but denied that be was .out to kill
The Whites bad signed divorce him.
papers several hours before tbe
Donald and Bonnie bad belm
·sllOOti!lg. The separation agreement having an affair, which White said
gave Mr. Wbite custody of tbeir he was aware of 'from the begin16-yellr-old daughter, Angela, and ning.
Mrs. White open visitation rights.
Lentes brougbt out the West
Tbumb sOpped off hammer
Virginia shooting in an e(fort to
Crying, Wbite said his tbumb prove to tbe jutY Mrs. White's
slipped off of the hammer ood the murder was committed with "~or
gun fired. The bullet struck his calculation and design," a require·
wife in the forehead.
·
ment for an aggravated murder
The gun fued one or twice when · conviction, which carries a life senthe hammer slipped, White said, tence.
•
but be does not remember bow the'
The defense's stance is that the
other sllots were f1red.
shooting was accidental and White
"I just lost it," he said.
should be cbarged with involuntary
Defense attorney James Bennett manslaughter, which carries'a maxasked his cli~nt, "Did you plan .for imum sentence ·of three to 10 years
tha,t occurrence to happen?"
in prison. .
, .
·
White r_e plied, "No sir. I was
Lentes also pointed out several
with this girt since she was· 1S
Contlnuecfon page 3
.

procedural ploys and the bill Gingrich calls the
"crowning jewel" of the "contract" passed 246188 . Republicans permitted no amendments and
decisively rejected a $32 billion Democratic alterna·
live.
The GOP plan offers a $500-per-child tax Icredit
for families earning up to $200,000, a reductlon in
the so-~ marriage penalty on two-earner couples:
tax breaks for retirees, expanded Individual Retirement Accounts, a credit for adoptive pareniS and a
list of business·backed measures beaded by a sharp
reduction in the capitl!l
gains tax on profiiS from sell.

ing securities and real eslare.
Now it goes to the Senate, where senior Republicans such as Budget Committee Chairman Pete
Domenici of New Mexico and Finance Committee
Chairman Bob Packwood of Oregon have wondered
aloud bow they can cut taxes deeply and simultane·
ously eliminate the budgel defl.cit.
·
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., considered the front-running GOP presidential hopeful
for 1996, assured repo&amp;c"We're going to have a
tax bill." But he w~e&lt;!- '.. e didn't get elected just
10 rubber-stamp everytbin&amp;Jll House did."

CANCER DAY - Educational and fun
adlvltles look place Wednesday ot tbe Big Bend
Foodland store In Pomeroy as lbe all!lulll Food·
land Cancer Day was observed. Tbe Meigs
County Healtb Department was tbere witb liter·

. ature ol\ the prevention and treatment' of caM&lt;r
and bere Norma Torres, R. N. bands Uterature
to Sharon Rousb .as Foodland assistant IDll.llager, David Sigman, looks on. A percentage of
Foodland's sales for the day Is contributed to tbe
Cancer Society.
·Ill'

Racine council
considers
.
upgrades to boat·launch
Racine Village Council continued its discussion on upgrades to
the' Racine Boat Launch at Moo·
day's village council meeting.
·
Gary Dill, representing the KD.
Amsbary Chapter of the lzaak Walton League, asked council what
was being considered for extending
the boat launch ramp.
The Racine rainp is heavily used
by area anglers due to iiS location
near the Racine Locks and Dam.
Dill said about 35 boals used the
ramp during the weekend.
Several club members and other
anglers have recently got their boat
trailers stuclc: on the ramp, Dill said.
The end of the ramp has washed
out and broken off,' Councilman
Robert Beegle said.
Council 11\embers said Izaak
Walton member Clif~ord Ashley,
wbo recently met with council, was
to contact the club and advise that
council needed some input as to
what needs done and ,bow to do the
work. It was noted .that council is
considering geUing a diver to check

WASHINGTON (AP)- Senare Democmts should accept a ten·
tativ~ compromise with majority
Republicans. on,.a $16 billioo pack- . -~· _,
age of domestic program cuts
because it's tbe best deal they're
likely to get, the party's leader said
today.
Senate Majority. Leader Bob
Dole. R-Kan., and Mi~oriiy Leader
Tom Dascble, D-S.D., worked out
an agreement late Wednesday giving both sides what ·tbey wanted
and perbaps ending a week-long
stalemate. Under it, Democ~ats
would · shield housing modernization, anti-drug and other social programs from some cuiS Republicans
sought, while the ddicit-conscious
GOP would ' gain even de,e per
reductions In other programs tbaD
the measure bad contained initially.
Dascble said tbe measure
actomplishes Democrntic goals or
deficit reduction, providing emergency funds for disaster-stricken
states and protecting cbildrens'
programs.
·
He added, "This is really as
good an agreement as we' re going
to get."

.

Dole said he believed that if
agreement is reached, the Senate
.
could approve the bill today. That
would fit GOP plans to push tbe
measure through the Senare before
Congress begins liS Easter recess at
the end of the week.
asked to move the sign.
Senate Democrats planned tO ,
the
Councilman Dale Hart again decide today whether lhey would
Some upgrades balit&lt; already
been made including paving tbe asked ·council for money to match agree to tbe tentative package. But
ramp approach and expanding tbe the Racine Area Communily drga- even if l_IPPfOVed by the Senate. the
measure s ultimate fate remained
parking area on .Second Street. nizalion and the S1ar Mill Rark
Board
for
installing
electrical
out·
·
uncenain.
Council then asked Dill if the club
Daschle lold reporters President
would consider inslalling a portable leiS at the parlc.
.
Council
declined
matching
the
Clinton
would sign the bill if no
toilet near the ramp.
funds
but
did
give
permission
for
substantial
changes were made. He
In personnel matters, formc.r
Marshal Mark Norman appeared them to go ahead and do the work said House ~epublicans bad not
agreed to accept the Senale pack·
before council and requested an with the mon~y they now have:
The
park
board
will
handle
the
.
age when negotiaiOrs frorq, the two
apology for being falsely accused .
chambers meet to hash oul a comof ·stopping a vehicle in Pomeroy, monthly bill for the hookup.
Earlier
council
questioned
tax·
promise.
with the village cruiser.
. Council apol'!lgized to Norman · payers' money being spent ~ben
since the person who witnessed the RACO and the parlc board will be
alleged incidenl did not know collecting fees from vendors using
Pomeroy also bas a simirar used lhe spotS during festivals and other
state _patrol cruiser. He did not ask events.
' WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Present were Mayor Jeff Thorn- number of Ame.ricans filing first·
for his police commission to reinton, council members Robert Bee· time claims f&lt;!r jobless benefits
stated.
Council also fielded a complaint gle, Henry Bentz, Dale Hart. Scott rose by 3,000 last week, lhe fourth
regarding the American Legion Hill and Henry Lyons. Councilman increase in five weeks and further
sign at the junction of slale routes Larry Wolfe was absent
. evidence of a slowing economy~
Also present were Street Com·
124 and 338. A driver involved in
The Labor Department said
an accident at the intersection missioner Glenn Ri=, Fire Chief today new applications for unemclaimed the sign blocked her view. J obn Holman and Marshal Man ployment insurance totaled a seaThe American Legion will be Richards .
sonally adjusted 341.000, up from
338,000 during the w~ek e11ded'
·March 25, when claims fell by

area.

Jobless claims
increase 3,000

.

Ohio· Senate
.votes
19-13
to
end
I
A
•
t
·
·
·
ra.m .
Gen era . S_ SIS _anee. pr.og_

10,000.

Claims totaled 348,000 during
the week ended March 18, which
marked lh.e firstthree-week· string
of increases in nearly a year.
Olher signs of a slowing econoCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The bill cuts the program that
e bill went through the LegisJa.. my recenlly have included a slack
Senate Republicans said cutting off prov1des $10Q. a month payments t re . It was mtroduced March 27 housing market, declining automoGeneral Assistance will help to fix for six months a year to those who aild p=d by lbe House March 29. bile sales and sluggish retail sales.
what they called (be failed system qualify. Part of the savings will be
Sen. Ben Espy, 0-Columbus,
AnalysiS altribute lhe slowdown
of welfare in Ohio.
used for job training programs.
said he was pariicularly upset that · 10 seven short -term interest rate
But Democrllts accused 'their
The Rev. Maurice McCrackin of lbosc who testifiqd against the bill increases engineered by the Federnl
colleagues. of insensitivity and ' Cincinnati listened IO the debate in a Finance Corrunittee meeting on Reserve over the last 14 months to
warned of the consequences for the
frol!llhe Senare gaUery.
Tuesday had to sit in the Senate forestall any appreciable advance
80,000 people who each receive
" I was shocked that it came out gallery and were escorted to the in inflation.
$600 a year under tile program.
as it did," McCrackin said after the noor by State Highway Patrol
Many economists contend the
1be Senate on Wednesday voled vore.
.
.
troOpers.
trend for the weekly new-c laims
19·13 . to drop the $}190 million
McCrackm, 1!9. ts an advocate
number now is about 340,000, up
General Assistancel!lf&gt;gram.
for lhe homeless who marched with
"l have never seen such securi- from a 320,000-330,000 range
"This is a redirection and not an
the Rev.
ty," for a committee meeting, Espy through the final six months of
elimination," Sen. Richard Finan,
Martin Luther King Jr. and was said: "I guess synonymous with 1994.
R-Cincinnati, said.
once arrested for refusing to leave being poor is being dangerous. Yet
The economy continued to ere. "If it's redirection, its redirecGov. G;orge Voipovich's of!ice. .
you say ~e~ people ar~ employ- ate new jobs during periods when
uon off .a cliff," responded Sen.
Dunng the debate, J-fcCrackm able. That s iacbns1srent
the trend reacbed 340,000 and .
Je(f JoJm.sop~· D-CI~.$\aJid ....' .'W~ ... afcu_sed ,the senators of ~smg tbe
~mocraiS offered amendments many analysts predict, another
.not aoout welfare re£orin. It's ilbour - pOot'as· ' tlohtl&lt;lal pawns.' ' ·· v~ ••. lo4be~ill.,...iru:ludutg retenb.o!).._ oL 235JlOQ . ,l)ots..were add.l:.(l to P..i!Y• •·
Republican unity and political privFman defepded the cuts as a · benefits for people age 55 and rolls last month. '\
liege."
.
·
way to provide eolployment incen- over, spending $5 million extra for
The Labor Department is sehedSen. JimetHowardofCincinnati , tivcs .•~or "able-bodied single literacy Pf?grams, and a $160 mil- uled to report March employment
was tbe only Republican to "Vote
aduiiS.
hon pubhc works program . All figures on Friday. AnalysiS e~pec\
against the bill, whi&lt;;ll now gdes 10
Democrats came to !he n~or were defeated, mostly along party the jobless rate 'will remain at 5.4
Gov. George Voinovich.
angry about the speed With wb1cb lines. percent.
·
·

�I

.

Thuradev, April •• 1995

:Commentar
,

•

•
Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

I•

The Daily
, Sentinel

......_,,April?

Thuraday, April&amp;, 1995

Contra~ting

for

.By TM A.aoclated Pres, ,
Dry weather is fom:ast for Obio
toniabt and Friday before tbcre Ia
another chance of ICilteted showcrs, tbe National Weather Service

recorded a low tempeiature of 21
degrees at 7:05 a.m. That llrote lhe
record of 23 set In 1898 . .
. - The temperature at the
Akron-Canton Regional- Airport
said.
was at IS degrees at 5:08 a.m. The
Temperatures should remain In previous record low of 19 was set
tbe 60s during the day and upper in 1898.
. 30s at nigh~ forecasters said.
- Tb~ overnight low at the
Fair sties arc JlfCdicted for Sun- Dayton International Airport was
day and Monday lor allot Ohio.
17 degrees at 4:45 a.m.
Winter.decided it was not ready
to leave Ohio, as recOIII·lows were
OSDI 8 neWS
set across tbe state Wednesday.
vmRANS MEMORIAL
The National Weatller Service __ , Wednesday admissions- npne.
reported that six cities set records
Wednesday discharges -Jessie ·
Jarrell, Pomeroy.
.
·
·
for tbal date.
-The Youngstown-Warren BOLZJi:RMEDICAL CENTER
Regional Airport recorded ·a telnDlscbargeo April s - Armaln
perature of 16 dearees at 7:11 a.m.; Wino, Cbatles Black. Henry Sillscr,
breaking a record low ot 18 set in Thelma Holtz.
1944.
·
Birth - MQ and Mrs. Earl
- Tbe Cinci~nati/Nortbern Cherrington, son, Oak Hill.
Kentucky International Airport
~bllsbed with permission)

'

for ·change

.

Do not count on mat Ideas in !:lime.
The remartablc 100 days of pol- put forth lhe ContJacL Its intellec- play, even wben theY are aiticized • The Balanced Budget Amend, ,_.e!Of,Obto
itics set in motion by lhe Conlnll:t tual thrust ·was clear: a rollback of and not immediately enacted into IIICIII failed by ooe vote. It will be
Witll America have elided - and lhe excesses of lhe Welfare Slate, at · law, have a life of their own. back. More important, serious
· formed a begin~ing. Things woa•t least. The ContraCt "nationalized" Al!lerica's Ideological direction b~~S spending cuts are comins. The
belhesame.
cbanged.
.
· scope of government will be
There is a tendency in reporting
. Ben Wattenberg · Tbe House-passed welfare bill . reduced, at~le11t
~ewbat ~
about Congre5s, and politics, to set
bas
a
provision
in
it
that
would
cut
·
Moreover:
C
·
s must now
ROBERT L WINGETr
up a scm:card. And so we bear that the congressional elections, contta- off cash welfare for families made abide by its OV{I1 les. Unfunded
tile House did not approve term dicting Tip O'Neill's dictum that up of a teen-age molher with ille- mandates
. Palllllw
tory. There will
limitS anll so was able to.pass just "All politics is local." The Repu!l- gitimate
a
line-Item
of some
offspring
(Medicaid
and
.
likely
be
· nine out of 10 bills in the Contract. • licans then won the election, b1g food stamps continue). It is a way sort. The explosioa ofveto
byper·litiga·
The Senate fell one vote shon on time. It bas now been shown that to send a message to the next gen· lion will be slowed. Executive
MARGARET LEHEW
CIIAilLENE BOEFI..Icil
the House-passed Balanced Budget die ideas Iiley ran on could pass eration that we will ilo longer sub- .branch rcgul~tions will be scrutiGellei'lll M•nzpT
Controller
Amendment, lhereby mooting that through lhe people's House, and · sidize illegitimate birih, and' by not nized by Congress. · .
item, temporilrily. The Senate will according to surveys, substantially
Suddenly, affirmative action . dilute some of tile olher House· raise lhe respect of lhe people for subsidizing it, stop buyin.g it That
L81ll!k$ Of OPINIOiil 111e wek:ane. They obould be leu u;;;;]oo
is
a
mainframe
idea,
here
to
stay
•
not
even mentioned In lhe Conlrilct
the
House.
A
political
chain
~·
passed bills. President Clinton will
'WOld&amp; toaa. AJt.lltlen ue subject to eCnliDg ·and must be signed wilh n1111e.
whelher
or
not
it
survives
in
tills
_is
cominR under scrutiny, where
lion
bas
expanded
the
range
of
lhe
veto some, and his vetoes may or
~~ llld tdepbomo nwnbc&lt;. No lllllignod loUen will be publilbed. !.etten
year's
legislation.
·
.
it
belongs.
r.Goals" plus "timetaoriginal
ContraCt.
may not be upheld. What will lhe
....uld be ID &amp;ood IIIIAI, ~ ill'*• DDI penollllities.
There
are
lhose
who
think
lhat
The
most
important
part
of
the
bles"
plus
COU!1S
prosecuting "dis·
final banjng a.verage be? ·
lhei'e
will
be
a
''reverse
rollbaclt.
•·
House-passed
CJime
biDs
provides
parate
impact"
equals
a ftmctional
Wrong question. Politics
shouldn't tie judged by batting Democrats bave lashed out about a for more state pnson cells llnlced to quota system.
averages. It's about ideas and "war on kids.'.:.tcutting scbool truth-in-sentencing. That establish·
Term limits failed to get .tbe
, I directi' ODS.
lunches" and "OOJancing lhe bud· es tile priloaey of "incapacita- two-thirds vote necessary amend
,
19
In lhat senSe. wbat bas hapilened get on lhe.backs of tile poor." It is lion," a big word tbat expresses a
idea:
·A
thug
In
jail.
cannot
the
Constitution.
Not
a
problem.
simple
over lhe past six months bas been said that lhlngs are looking up for
astonishing, regardless of whether Clinton and lhe Democrats and that shoot your sls~r. The Increase or! Term limits may have made some .
ByTOMRAUM
or nol'you agree wilh Newt Gin· in 1996 lhey may restore the old imprisonment 1n recent decades bas· good-government sense after tbe
Associated Pres, Writer
• .
likely led 111 the current decrease iii Democrats ruled lhe House for 40
WASHING'ION- Wben House Speaker Newt Ginsricb speaks to lhe grich' s agenda. The Republicans liberal precepts of government.
consecutive years, and it seemed
nation Friday niJb~ Pre~ident Clin100 will be clear across lhe counlry,
they could go .on forever ~use
beaded for a Democradc fund-llllser In Sacramento, Calif.
all politics is local. They won't and
Presidt:nlilli spotesDllll Mike; M~\""Y wondered mischievously if
it isn't.
'..,.-... .._ , guesta might contribute more if a large-screen TV were set 'up sci they·
could watch Gingrich.
.
•
Tpugb-on welfare, Iough oii
. And Democratic consultant Paul Begala said Democrats considered •
crime, less govenuilen~ less spendtwo ways of countering Gingrich's unprecedented 30-mlnute, prime-lime
ing, less preference, less taxation
television address: offering a 30-minute Democratic response "or letting
- this is not what lhe federal gov.. lhe speaker speak for a whole bour." ·
.
.
ernment bas been about in recent
Behind tbe jokes, behind the bravado, top Democrats privately are
decades. Not even close. All lhese
expressing discomfort over once again being put on the defensive and
ideas are conservative staples.
: ·: belnf ouD!Wleuvered ty lhe aafty Georgia Republican.
They won't all pass right now. But
· : · It s probably a good time for Clinton to be out of town.
we will spend lhe rest of lhe decade
: ; : He could hardly be expected to stick 3!'00Dd to deliver lhe "Democrat·
talking about them - and acting
: · : ic response.''
on them.
·: · Gingrich will be a touJb act to follow, having grabbed what usually is
: :: considered a presidential prerogative - free televisiop time for an
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel: . : evening address.
,
·
low
at 'the American Enterprise • · ·
:
In fact., even presidents don't always get such coverage when .Iiley
Institute, Is the bost of the weekly
: : : req!l~st it, especially v.;ben networks sense tbat tile content is to be mostly
public television program,
•
. political.
.
.
'.'Think
Tank."
· : · Bolh CBS and CNN plan to carry Gingrich's address live. NBC says it
: · : will cover it, but not live, altllougb lhe network suggests part of tlie
(For Information on bow to
::: spcecb may be aired later Friday oq "Dateline NBC." ABC bad not
communicate electronically with
·
·
· : · announced its plans Tuesday.
this columnist and others, con: .,; The decision by some networks to carry Gingrich live has been tile
tact America Online by caiUng 1· ·
· : · source of much grousing among White House aides and top Democrats.
800·827-6364, exL 8317.)
· : · Even Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, lhe usual senior GOP legisla: ·: live spokesman, is being upstaged.
· .
·: · "Not only is Gingrich tile cllier explainer, but he's become lhe chief
: :: person taking credi~·~ said Steven Wayne, a political scientist at George:·: town University.
1.
&lt;· But Republican pollster Frank Luntz, an adviser to Gingrich and other
: : :House GOP candidates in last fall's .elections, said any angst felt at lhe
:. : White House, or in Dole's office, is just too bad.
:
"It is lhe speaker who is coming up with lhe new ideas and a new
: : : vlsionof goveroment,"notlhe Wbite House," Luntz said.
: . : "Gingrich is a new phenomenon in modem history," said Erwin Hat· . • 1 NEW YORK (AP) -The most and its sibling, the National Associ- severe. Is the company failing to justified by facts or due to olher
·: · grove, a political scienust at Vanderbilt University and a specialist on lhe difficult decision investors face is ation of Investment Clubs, bave diversify successfu11y1 Is it failing reasons. If it's tile latter, why you
developed -lists of reasons for seU- to invest In research and new prod· might even consider buying more
:· : presidency. "The '94 election was the rust time a party ever ran an off. when to sell.
ing or not seUing shares you might uct development? In short, is it fail- sbares.
It
bedevils
investors
whether
.::: yC3l' election as a national campaign. He is following thn;mgh on lhe logic
ing to keep up wilh' growing com- .. And you shouldn't get rid of
stocks
are
rising
or
falling
;
It
tor·
· ;. of lhat."
·
petition?
.
your stock because of temporary
. ·. But Hargrove said GingricH's speech "also reflects his desire for a ments equally bqtll loser abd win-The
company
relies
on
a
sinbad news. Again, make a dctermi.
·:· central role" and that could backfire on him if lhe public perceives lhe , ner. It brings !ll'guish to lhe biggest
gle
product
or
a
single
customer.
If
nation.
It could be anolher buying
::: address to be self-serving. "His standing wilh lhe public according to lhe and smallest investors.
own.
the
company
isn't
tbe
industry.
opportunity.
Ask about tile stock mat was
' · : poUs is not very bigb anyway."
·
Right off, tbey declare their leader, an4 hasn't made plans to
Finally, don't sell to"take just a
· : · Democrats are all too mindful !hat polls show Gingrich bas bigb ilega- sold too early and bear a tale that
billS:
Before
you.
invest
learn
evecydiversify,
Ibis
situation
can
lead
to
small
profit. ·
_
: .; lives- and lhey've crafted their counterattack to 1ry to take advantage of would make a ·fisherman seem
thing
you
can
about
a
stock,
and
problems.
·
This
final
piece
of
advice might
modest. Ask about the stock tllat
: : : i~ seeking to portray him as mean-spirited and egotistical.
when
you
invest
do
so
for
lhe
long
The
company
has
a
disaphelp
you
avoid
one
of tb'e most
"The more lhe American people see Speake£&gt; Gingrich, lhc less lhey was sold too late and bear a lament
term,
resisting
tile
urge.
to
sell
when
pointing
growlh
rate
or
is
proving
piercing
and
f(ustiaing
actions an. ·
lhat might break your bean.
like him," said Begala. "How do I get bim on lhe.air more?"
1
short-term
events
cause
temporary
to
be
cyclical.
·You
want
to
investor
can
take,
which
is to sell
Buying, by comparison, Is easy.
Still, lhe Wliite House is not underestimating tile fact that Gingrich, n6t
declines.
·
improve
your
potential
for
gains
or
out
of
a
company
lhat
goes
on to
There is little indecision: You
Clinton, is lhe one who will bave a.national TV audience Friday night
But.
recognizing
lhat
there
may
decrease
the
risk
of
losses.
But,
you
fame
and
fortune.
. · . Democrats bave sought to counter .the House Republican celebration of wouldn't be buying .if you didn't
Just til ink of those poor folks
· · · completion of the "Con traer With America" witll a 'heavy media cam- lhink tile stock was headed· higher. be limes when it is bolh necessary are ·advised, be careful not to tum
and
wise
to
sell,
lhey
charitably
list
into a tnlderralher.tban a long-term wbo sold out of Microsoft or
. paign or lheir own lhat has included harsh attacks fll)m Vice President AI The future is yours, and you have
Investor.
McDonalds or Automatic Data Prochosen tlje vehicle lhat wiU get you lhese reasons for do so:
· : Gore.
'
'--.:To improve the quality of
Since decisions must be exam- cesslng because lhose stocks had a
· In speeches and appearances on TV news and interview shows, Gore lhere.
lned bolh positively and negatively, little, inconsequential dip. Thlnlc of
You bavc lots of aid; you· bave your portfolio.
: bas sought to portray the GOP conlraCL as.a collection of harmful budget
- If lhere is an adverse change lhere are also reasons NOT to sell how you might feel should it bap; cuts - including popular items sucb as lhe school 11unch and college Joan lhe backing of th0$e wbo claim to
stoclcs, lhe most obvious being lilat, pen to you.
know tile future, tile highly paid in the company's management
:programs ...,. to pay for tax breaks for the rich.
.
- The company has falling you're tired or doing nothing and
Wby )'ou'd probably feel as
analysts who examine stocks from
0
profit
margins
or
·a
deteriorating
want
action.
Instead,
let
your
stock
badly
as the guy wbo committed
every
angle.
Go
for
it.
your
broker
. EDITOR'S NO'l'E- Tom Raum covers the )Vhite House for The
If
the
pattern
financial
condition.
do lhe action.
tile olher blunder, that of holding
says..M'ho are you to questi011 sucb
; Assoc!ated Press.
'
looks as though it might persist. get . Neither should you sell just on too long to a stock that was
erurntion?
. .
~
because the price is down. Before going nowhere but down.
For such reasons tile National out.
-;-Competition is becoming deciding_; determine if lhe decline is
-.
Association of Individual Investors

111 Coart Street

H

0

.

..

•

.

·Gingrich on TV

CLUB

'

~----------------~~----------------~

A guide to th~ most difficult decisions
John Cunniff

:Today in history ·.·

:Oy The Associated Press
·
· Today is Thursday, April 6, lhe 96th day of 1995. There are 269-days
left in lhe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On 'April 6, 1900, explorers Robert E. Peary and Manbew A. Henson
Racing to gatller up brains and
became the first men to reach tile Norlh Pole. (The claim, disputed by
talent as well as money and
skeptics •.was upheld in 1989 by lhe Navigation Foundation.)
endorsements, GOP presidential
On this date:
• ..
.
front-runner Sen, Bob Dole (Kan.)
In 1830, lhe Cburcb of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints was organized
bas won lhe support of former Rep.
by Joseph Smilh in Fayeue. N.Y.
·
...
·
Vin Weber, R-Minn., but prized
In 1862, the' Civil War Battle of Shiloh began as tile Confederates
GOP striltegist Bill Kristol is Jean.
auacked Union·forces in Tennessee.
'
ing strongly to Sen. Phil Gralnm
(Texas).
A furious Dole-Gramm contest
is under way for the support of former candidate Jack Kemp and his
entourage of "pro-growtll ' Repub·
licans and 'for social-issues
spokesman Bill Bennett, Kemp's
partner in the activist group
Empower America.
Neilher Bennett nor Kemp is
committing at lhe momeRt. Kemp
may bead up .a panywide I)Ommis.sion to develop a growtll-oriented
economic program of which all
candidates could take advantage.
Bennett,. too, is offering advice to
whomever asks:
Meantime, finding bolh Dole
and Gramm too "austerity-orient'
ed" and lacking the optimism associated wilh Ronald Reagan, a group
of Kemp ·rollowers led by guru
Jude Wanniski bas been trying to
persuade magazine publisher Steve
Forbes to run so lhat someone will
carry tile banner of "growtll and
--"-"-QP!l?1unitx,:_: ·_ . ~ '"'-. · , •. , .
1.\ftet a recent meet10g nl Phoenix, Kemp says he'd support
Forbes, b\II'Forbcs sounds leery of
actually running.
Weber. wbo is' close to Kemp
and would have' backed him h&amp;d be
run, will be announced soon as one
of several national co-chainnen of

Dole, Gramm woo Kemp followers for '96
issues person in lhe counlry," and
bas held several mee.tings witb
Kristol to persuade him to join lhe
Gramm campaign.
Kristol says, "For now, I'll
keep doing what I've been doing"
position papers and givMorton Kondracke -ingissuing
strategic advice - but "I'm
. · d lh D 1 . be
not taking a vow to stay out forevcompas~~on an , at
o, e IS st . , er."
.
able to SO~ten t~ rebut II and not ·
So far, Dole is far ahead of
ac.centuat_e !.t. Ph1l Gramm would Gramm in poll ratings.and endorseremforce 11.
,
ments. A recent Times-Mirror poll
, , Most . memb~.rs _or Kemp s showed Dole favored by 45 percent
growth gang . f10d G_ramm of Republicans, witll Gramm in
almost to!JIIIY lackmg in optunism, second at 13 percent, followed
compassiOn and social concern . closely by right-wing columnist Pat
"lie's like a kidc in the ~tomach," Buchanan at 11 percent. Gtamm's
~~ys Wa?,mskl. Kemp 1s sa1d to support bas not risen over the past
desp1se !Jramm, though Kemp · monlh despite a fllirry of publicity
v1gorously demes lhat
around his official announcement
Kr_lstol, ~friend of Webet'and a Buchanan's support went up by 4
one-ume 31de tp Bennett and. for- points.
~
mer Vtce Prestd~~t Dan Quayle,
Dole's 9ampai1!n bas issued a
say~ ~~.at be
~~.spects and major endorsement announcement
adrmres Dole, but rf I had to go practically every day including
into a voting boolh right now. I'd those of New York Sen. A~fonse
support Granim. J like him. He's D'Amato, Gov. George Pataki, and
close.r to wbat I stand for lhan any lhe entire New York GOP congresolil,er can~idate . He's very smart. sional delegation; Ohio Gov.
He s pnnc1p,l~. He knows what he George Voinovicb; New Mexico
wants to do.
Sen. Pete Domenici' Iowa Gov
"I don't despair at the thought Terry Branstad and Sen. Cbarle~
or Bob Dole as presiden~ •• Kristol Grassley· and New Hampshire Sen:
says, ''C,S!&gt;C&lt;:ially if House Speaker Judd Gre'gg.
Newt 61!l_gnch, . ~·Ga.L. and~~na~- , .. Gramm, disparagjng _ tl!.e.
Majority Whip Trent Lot~ R-Mi~.. endorsement game, says !bat
are running Congress, but Gramm "what counts is not lhe names bot
Is more conservative. Gramm the activism and intensity of tile
wants to change things more."
commianent. If New York politi-\
For his part,l Gramm regards clans endorse Dole, is that a sign of
Krislo~ _head or lhe Proj~t fof lhe SlJPport for .him or D' Amato's abilRepubhcan Future, as the best ity to twist arm~? Wben New
theDole campaign.
Weber says be worries that lhe
GOP is developing the image of
being mean-spirited and lacking in

Hampshire Sen.llob Smith ·said
be's with me, it's not just an
endorsement; be's working every
day to help me in New Hamp·
shire.''
I
Among Kemp-,isb "supply·J
siders," Gramm said, be's receiving support from fonner New York
gubernatorial candidate L!w
Le)lrman and fund-raiser Thomas
L. "Dusty" Rhodes, president of
National Review'lllllgazlne.
.
. And Graoun intends to take lhe
lead in securing pasSage of tile tax .
cu! package in lhe House Republican "Contract With America,"
stepping beyond bis usual role as a
spending-cutter and deficit hawk.
Dole, meantigle, may attempt to
outflank Gramni by endorsing the
flat-tax idea currently in vo~ue
·
among Kemp's "growth gang."
Pro-growth, "supply-si
Republicans believe tllat'deep tax
cuts wiU unleash torrents of growth
In the economy lhat will benefit all
sectors of society and produce
enough new revenue to lower lhe
federal deficit wilhout draconian
slashing of social programs .
Dole and Gramm traditional! y
have been skeptical of unbridled
Reaganomics. In lhe past, Dole has
been willing to raise taxes to
reduce tile deficit while Gramm
· emllbaslz,c&amp; &amp;oeial&lt;spendlng euts ""'-·~--'-t) ~-c
kemp's wilildrawalleft supPly'
siders witllout a home for 1996 ~
Sooner or later, they'll have w·se~ ·
•tie for second best.
(Morton ~ondrackti' Is execu.:
dve editor of Roll CaD, tbe news:.
p11per of Capitol Hill.)
.

The Dally Senti~I-Page 3

Temperatures return
.------.Local bri~fs-~
to normal across Ohio Boil order lifted

OHIO Weather

PI~~The

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

W.VA.

I

•t I

·

Accused..t;ontlnued ffoin pege1

.

instances wbere White's testimony·
Sbe "got nasty" and started cursconflicted wllh mat qf other wit- ing, White said. He testifted that be
~==:;:;:::::=:..:i::.~,..=.,~s~lniY:Z=Pt~M===Cioud)l=
· ~ nesscs.
asked her· to stop because Angela
Ito.
. --Giap/liwo'lel
He denied lhe testimony of olh- and a girlfriend were sleeping In
011186
ers, Including bis dauJbter's, tbat the bedroom.
e8
he was jealous ofbis wife's affair.
The daughttt carne In and asked
. South-Central Oblo
Tonigbt .. .Par.Uy cloudy. Low
"I never bad no problem with lhem to quiet down, after which
Today ...Mostly sunny. High around 40. Southwest winds the relationship," be said; "I never Bonnie "became more obnoxious~·
near 70. Mainly southwest winds around 10 mph becoming norlh.
did lhreaten to kill Don. (Our argu- and began describin~ ber sexual
10to20mJlb.
•
Friday ...Mostly sunny.
ments)wereneveroverDon."
relationswilhDonaldmdetail.
~
Donald White was, however, !he
White admitted becoming irate
....,,_"'!"''"'!''"'!'cause of tile explosive argument and "very loud." He said be tllen
- - ·
- ·
· - - -- -1hat led to Bonnie's dcatb, -the- Jert tile-room to get a.cbange_of ,
defendaotadmltted.
clolhes'SObecouldspendlhenigbt
The eouple bad returned boq~.e a~ his girlfriend's bouse.
after talking about their divorce at
As be walked passed Angela's
Robert Drew Asblcy, 74, Letart Falls, died Wednesday, AprilS, 1995 tile Henderson bar. White said be room, be changed bis mind and
left the bar because his cousin had slopped.
at his residence.
Born MllfCb 29, 1921 In Parkersburg, W.VL, son of lhe late Ralph sbowo up and bis rust t~~ougbt was
"I knew lhat as soon as I left she
Dennis and Naomi Belle Sayre Ashley, be worked for lhe U.S . Army lhat lhere "would be trouble." ,
would leave lhe girls alone to go to
Corps of Engineers, retiring as bead Iockman after 35 years service .. He . _Wbile the couple talked i~ lhe lhe (bar) to get Don," be said.
was a fanner.
hvmg room, the phone rang wtth a
White said be walked back to '
A seventh genet.llion Meigs countian, be was a U.S. Army vdteran of call from Donald. Johnny • lhj: room where "she turned around
World War )1, participated in lhe Normandy Invasion and fouJbt In lhe answered.
and tbrowed the gun up in my
Battle of tile Dulse. He served 3-1n years overseas and sang wilh lhe
"He wanted me to come to the faCe"
.
"' Glenn :Miller Orcliesfra.
.
(bar) l!,nd gi_ve bi~ a ride to. his
·Closing arguments today
·
He was a charter member of the now-defunct Racine Lions Club, bouse, White SBid. He declmed
White was the defense's fit!lll member of Racine Grange 2606, Meigs County Pomona Grange 46, the beca.use bis c:l! bad developed a . witness in the ·case. Common Pleas
DegreesofFioraandCeres,chartermemberforlifeoflheRaclneAmeri- flattireonlhendehome.
.
Court Judge Joseph L. Cain
Cl!D Legion Past 602, charter member .for life of the Tuppers' Plains VeterWife became upset
recessed until this morning for
ans of Foreign Wars 9053, past commander and life member of Meigs
White said his wife became closing arguments, after which lhe
. County Disabled American Veterans 53.
upset when sbe learned Donald had jury will be given Instructions and
He was also a charter member of lhe Meigs County Genealogical Soci- called and that be bad not given the begin their deliberations
ety, tbarter member of Fust Families of Meigs County, a life and charter uhone to ber.
·
member or Gov. William Dennison Camp 125 and Brooks-Grant Camp 7 · •
•
•'
.
.
Sons of Union Veterans, member of Ewings Chapter Sons oflhe Ameri·
can Revolution, member of Mineral Lodge 242 Odd Fellows, Fust Fami.
lies of Ohio, Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society, Ohio Sociel)i ....

-.-.lnc. '

W th er _...;..._________..______

· ea·t h. '
·
r
ea
A
0
·hi

R0 bert D., AS ey

River Pioneers.
He was a former Sunday schOol superintendent of lhe Letart Falls M.E.
Church imd attended Bethlehem Baptist Church at Great Bend.
S,urviving are his wife, June; Ashley, wbom be was married Aug. 23,
1949 In Gallipolis; a son, Clifford 'Ashley of Morning Star; a son and
daughter-in-law, Keith and Emma Ashley of Rock Springs; a daughter
and son-in-law, Rand~ and lteidi Smilh of Chatfield; five grandchildren; a
brolher and sister-in-law, BurlS. and Pauline Ashley of Springfield. Mo.;
andaslster,JeaneAshleyofRavenswood.
Services wiD be 1 p.m. Saturday 1n tile Fisher Funeral Home. Middlepo~ wilh lhe Rev. James A.M. Hllijna officiating. Burial will be In lhe
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
atlhe funeral borne
·
•
•
'

., A new ed.?,cati.o option
mstg Is 1010 ow 1~am10g
es
T~cb P~ep w1ll be offe~ed at place. It has ~n dtscovered .tllat
Me1gs Htgb School !O qualtfylng new 1e.arn1~g 1s shaped by tbe
freshmen beginning 10 the fall of learner s pnor .knowledge, much
1995.
.
'.
.
!e\lfllm¥ occurnn.g ~rough so~tal
~'?rkmg wllh. a consortium m~rac~on , L~ng_ts closely ~ed
consts~g of Wa~lungton, Morgan
w particular slluattons, ~e sa1d,
and ~e1gs counties, .tf!e new pro- s10ce successfulleammg •.nvolves
gram ts dermed as a co~petency- the use of n~erous strateg•es.
based program .of combmed secT~y.lor sat~ tllat students w~o
ondary_ and post · .seco~dary and par!lctpate !D Tech -Prep wt!l
, occupatiOnal expenencc . The pro- ach1eve compet~nce and co ~ft gr~ includes !1 com.mon core '!f d~nce to succ~d m a fast-cbang1~g
requrred profic!en~y 10 10alh, SCI· btgh .tech soctety: The school will
ence, commumcabons, and tech· prqv1~e new optmns for students
nologies designed to help tile stu· that respond to emergiiig technolodent in bis/ber chosen career.
gies, which will ultimately result in
As explained by Fenton Taylor, ·employers being able to bire big'bly'
principal, lhe difference between - skilled workers.
tills option and tbe regular offer·
Meigs Higb School administraings will be In tile manner of teach· lion and teaching staff involved in
ing- methods used. It bas been this innovative new concept are
prqven lhat 70% of srudents do noi excited by the initial response from
learn in the curr~nt methods of students, parents, and local indus'"lecture and test". They learn bet· lry, the principal said.
ier in a bands-on, inquiry-based,
Parents and students are Inv-ited
discovery,,application manner.
to call the Meigs High School at
During tbe last twenty yep.rs, 9920-2158, Guidance Department,
Taylor said, research In educational for additional information on the
psychology has given us new program.

Pomeroy cruiser vandalized
A Pomeroy .ma.P.· was being beld in tbe Meigs County Jail for
punching out lhe windshield of a Pomeroy police cruiser ~ly Ibis
morning, aceording to Pomeroy Police Depirtment repOrts.
Ronald C. Coates, 37, of Pomeroy, smashed lhe windshield Of a
cruiSet at 1:36 a.m. today, records show. Coates was charged with
felony vandalism. An offJCer was called to a dispute at an East
. Main Street residence wben tbey incident occurred.
~
1

Pomeroy accident reported

" A Long Bottom pulled ber t:ruck out of a doctor's parking lot into
an .oncoming vehicle yesterday afternoon, according to Pomeroy
Police Depanment reports.
Laura Hensley, ~0. of Long Bottom, was charged wilh no insur·
ance and failure .to yield, after she collided wilh another vehicle,
records sbow. Hensley's 1976 Ford 100 bad light damage to lhe
driver's side front
Judy Williams, 45, of Syracuse, bad ~Doderate damage to lhe pas- • ·
senger side of her 1990 Honda Accord. .

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls·
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
nine calls for assistance Wednesday including two transfer calls.
Units r~nding included:
.
MIDDLEPORT
,
7:58 p.m., Walnut Street,
Nicholas Mills, Veterans Memorial
flospital. _ ,-'__
. _,, _
. POMEROY
.12:3 5 p.m .. state Route 124,
Victor Brown, Holzer Medical
Center.
RACIN'E

·
Two ~eigs County . men
charged Wllb grand til eft m the
theft of bulldozer parts were arrested Wednesday_tugbt by Morgan
County deput~es on ot~er theft
charg~. according to Me1gs County Sbenff James M. Soulsby.
Paul Pnce of Stockport, Art
9tay and Charles Cozzins entered
mn_ocent pleas W~dnesday In
Metgs County Court m tile lheft of .
bulldozer parts, steel sheet, steel
pipe and a pump from the Martin
Marietta Plant, formerly Dravo, at
Apple Grove.
Price and Cozzins were released
on meir own recognizapce while
Gray was held on old warrant.
The items were located at two
different locations along Apple
Grove-Dorcas Road. Soulsby said.
A trailer used to transport tile items
was seized.
Later lhat night, Morgan County
deputies seacbed Price's residence i
and found a 1979 truck and welder 1
stolen last month from the twin •
City Machine Sbop in Pomeroy :
.Soulsby said.
,
'
Also recovered was a low-boy '
trailer reported stolen from Patrick 1
McDole 00 Jan. 20 near Long Bot-

tom, ~e added. .
.
. Price and Cozzms: along w1th a
th,ird man, Shawn Price, were lhen
taken mto ~ustody by Morgan
County officials.

~::::;;;::~;-

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I : 19 p.m. , state Route 338,
Robert Ashley, dead upon arrival.
RUTLAND
9:14a.m., Com Hollow Road,
Nalhaniel Watson, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
12:44 p.m., College Avenue,
Tmvis Howell, O' Bieness Memori·
a!J:Iospill!l; ___
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Wayne Pauley, VMH.
.
TIJPPERS PLAINS
4:47 p.m., Mount Olive Road,
CQd.ie Banoe, OMH.

Men pleading Innocent
t 0 t he·ft arreste d aga1n
. •

New program option
to .r'
- .
• · HIQ
• h ·
be 0 ff ere
d
t
M
a
e1gs
· nal · · called · · h ·
b
· talc

·

!

·

I

..

~arof_l812,memberoflhe0-KanCiuboftheSonsandDaugbtersof

A boil order issued for tbe Leading Crw.k Conservancy District
a test railed to detect col·

was system was 1iCied·Wedacsday after
iform bacteria after a recent oUtase.

I

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tt

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.Sports

The/Dail·y Sentinel

~.

Thuntdi¥,April6,1t95
Page

.._ On this year's North-South A/1-Stsr twinbllls,

the ~CAA was • private qency . theJWnnin' Rebels a headline! act. In a city ·well acquaint~d with
and did not lllve to provide due ije filled the 8lellll, !mown u the celebrities.
:
•
• .._ sifter • process.
" Shldt TIUlk;" iiiiil tbe bald coach
Tart-man resill!led wbeu photos
: three-year~. Insists be bu
Tadlanian, wbo bu the blgbest witb the bound dog eyes and towel- were pubHsbed..sbowing tluee for·
110
•
~ "~~~~ towardln the NCAA. winning~ In NCAA bu· biting antil:l becaine a big-time star mer UNL V players .in a bot tub
. wves .,...ons to hla prop~~~~ ·ketball
~ Gary Col.
'
March 1S after
: shadowed mutb of hla '24-year son wbo
: t:anler with Lons ~each State lind
five se81QUJ. c was tbe only can. : t!Nf:.V. where b~ won a natlooal didatc for the job. ·
.,lille m 1990.
"I know that the 1UJ111Q1t here is
Wltb bls hiring at Fresno. State unmatched,'' Tarkanian ~d. "I've ·.
· oa Wednesday, Tarl&lt;anlan said bis always said the Red Wave is
trou~les with the NCAA over maybe the best (aria 1n tbe entire
•, reawdng and eligibility are In the country.
• pas~ ·
"Hopefully, we can get a proEverybody ~owN!Jey .!"ere pan1 going to the level to briug a
plc~lng on l!'e, be satd~ But ·lo~of excitement and a lot of pride
that s Qver With. It sbouldn t have 10 . the neople of the San Joaquin
· any .~ffect on wbat I'm dolus Valley.r•
Tarkanian wiU try to revitalize a
• here.
,
Just to be sure, the three-year team that bu bad only two winning
contract be signed wltb Fresno seuons in the past 10 years. The
State ~eludes the requirement that Bulldogs were 13-15 last season,
: Tarka01an ~Y NCAA regullllons. finisblns seventh in the Western
: Unlversuy president John AtbleticConference.
•
. Welty, who bad the;final word on
After 'his appointment was
· blrlng Tarbnlan, wd ·the contract
d b d d
f f
· "establisbe• the responsibility of announce , un re s o ans
·
•
SlmiiDed into a local restaunillt for
: th~ c~ to adbere to NCAA regu- a party. Red balloons lined the
·, lations.
•
d h'•• to Is
· In addition, Welty said the alb· restaur!l"t, an w 1.., we -:- a
~ 1 11 d..,..;,, 1 ill b·
pi'. Tarkanian trademark - were gtven
; e C v,--n ~
tre a CO~ I
away.
ance o~ficer to gwde coaches m all
As ·a college .coach, Tarkanian
. sports m foUowlng .JIIC~ f~!les.
was known fill; quickly making los·
_. Alleged ~les vmlauons mvolv- ing propama consistent winners.
: mg Tarkan1an date back to 19~7. He compiled a 625-122 record. wben the NCAI\ suspended bun an .837 winning pen;entage- dur: f&lt;l!'twoyearsandplacedUNLV.on . ing five .seasoDs aiLangl!eacb
j two:years prol5~tion. Tarka01an
Stale aDd 19arUNLV.
~·
. continued coacbmg and appealed
His team won the 1990 NCAA
; tbe.ca,seto the U.S. ~u~e Com:t. · championship when UNLV,Ied by ·
. c_laimmg the probation vtolaled hiS Larry Jobnsoo routed Duke by 30
; nght to due proce$S.
lots
'
GIRLS' BASKETBALL HONOREES - These girls were bon·
• · But th~ 11ati~n's highest court po At Las Vegas Tarkanian made
ruled agamst b1m in 19$8,
'
ored Sunday afternoon at the Southern winter sports banquet. In
front are Becky MooN (lett) anti Brlanne Pmmtt. Behind them are
Bea Lisle and Jess Codner. In the back are Renee Turley and Jonna
Manuel. Absent was Samml Sisson.

11

McClain; Amanda Reese,
Beavercreek; Jennifer 'Churcbill,
Milford.
Alternates: Sonya Swick,
· Newark; Anilra Perry, Col.
Broolcbaven
Coaches: Jane Fairall, Cin.
Hughes; Clayton Starr, Circle\&gt;ille
Logan Elm.
Dlvlllon W·IV girls
North:
Alisba'
Bable,
Columbiana Crestview; Lakisha
Price, Cleve. Cent. Cath.; Anjie
Chet, Lorain Cath.; Jodi
Dobransky, E. Canton; Sara
Whitis, Sugarcreek Garaway;
Sarah
Hamilton, · Castalia
Margaretta; Kristina Behnfeldt,
DefiaPCC 'llnora; Shl!llllon Smith,
~lpbos St..Jobn's.
. Alternates: Toni Pappas,
Wellsville: Jennifer Timbrook,
Sherwood Fairview
Coaches:
Jim
Gracyk,
Pemberville Eastwood; Don Feren,
N. LimaS. Range.
South: Jacki Raterman, .
Versailles; Carey Holden, Col.
Tree of Life; Toni Sapp, Danville;
_~je_ R&lt;?_me, L~re ,&lt;:ity Buckeye
Trail; Jlll Shaffer, Nelsonvffle·
York; Heather Infeld, Carlisle;
Jennifer Hall, Felicity Franklin.
Alternates: Amanda Stewart, S.
Charleston)l6outheaslern; Amy_
Hughes, Wheelersburg.
Coaches: Kirk Martin, S.
Charleston Southeastern; Ron
Bowman, Granville.

"

In theNBA·,

;helps Bulls .beat.Nets108-101; Hawks.down
.

•

54 secm\d-half p&lt;lints, 15 of their eqd of the game," Armstrong said.
23 points in the final quarter and "He's going to·get the ball. He's
seven of their final nine. He fin- the first option and the second
ished 13-for-31 from the freld and option. "
The Nets lost their fifth straight
added 11 rebounds. The Bulls are
6-2 since he came out of retire- and ninth in 10 games. New Jersey,
who was without injured starters
ment
The Nets bad several chances to Derrick Coleman and Chris Monis,
tie the game in the fmal five min- fell three games behind Boston in
utes, liut they couldn't make the the battle for the conference's
-eighth and final playoff berth.
big sbots or slOp Jordan.
Armon Gilliam led New Jersey
"Things are ~till the same at the

Daltu ...... ,......... 12 16 6
WIDDipea .......... 1018 6

NBA standings

C•Jaary ........ ... 11 B
Vaacou,., ........ 12 I!
Lo• Aaae.te. ...... 12 -I.S
Edmonton ......... 12 20

Atl.,.tlc: Dh·blon

.ll: L 1:&lt;1.

I.-Orlando ...... .......S4 l9
x-Nr;w York:. .......... 41 25
Bostoa .................... 30 43

Miami ................... 29

lill

.740 -' .6'51
6
.411
24

45

.392

New Jersey ............ 21 • 46
Phi1Jdtlphia ........ , ..20 53
Waahinaton ........... 18 54

.370
.274
.250

Crntral DfylJion
X· Indiana .............. .48 26 .649
x-OI~Ioue............ 44 28
.611
,.Q~;oaJl" .............. ;o l!
.548
:t:·CLEVELANQ ... 39 34 .S34
AtJaota ................... 36 37 .493
Milwaukee- ............. 28 45 .384
0.11011 ................... l6 46 .361

3 27 97 130
26 as 120
Anaheim ........... II 19 4 '26 19 126

. Jim Crawrord, Jim Woltr, John Turlais,
Mike Taylor and J01elin Mont«O, catch-

2S.S
'I1
34

Wednesday'• scores

Wettelaud. pltchef. to the New York Ylll·
tea for for FetiWldo Squign9l, outfield·
cr, a player to be named and euh. Traded
" Ken Hill, pitcher, to lhe SL Lollil Ctrdl·
nal1 for Bryan Evenaerd ud Kirk:
Bullinaer, pitcbctl, aud Dttond Stovall,

· witb 27 points and 16 rebounds,
'while Kenny Anderson bad ~I
points and 15 assists.
· In otber games, it was Orlando
128, Detroit 125; Charlotte 84,
Philadelphia 66; Atlanta 96, Cleve:land 87; Dallas 130, the Los Angeles Lakers 111; Indiana 102, Wasb·ington 90; and New Yorlc 114, Milwaukee94.
Magic 128, Pistons 125
· Playing without starling guards

3

7.l

8.5
U .S

L

f&lt;L

a-San Anmn!o ....... S3 18 .746
•·Ucah .................... SJ :u .116
l101.u1on ................. 42 30 .583
Denver ................... 3.5 31 .486

ll

Tonight's games

Frlday's games
N.Y. bltnden at N.Y. Ran11m, 7:30
p.m.
Detroit at Toronto, 7:30p.m

1..5
1U
J8.S

.451

21

Minneaolll ............ .. 20 H

.274

:W

BosketbaU
Nallonal Bukelhall A•odatlon
CLEVELAND C4VAL!ERS' Ploced
Tmell Brandon, guard, on the injured lilt.
Activated John Battle, patd, from lhe Injured !lat.
DENVER NUGGETS: Slaned Orea
Gran!, auard. for the remalndet of the lei·

Va.ncouYtt at Wlnnlpes, 8~30 p.m.
lol Angelea at Calpry, 8:30p.m.
Edmonton·~ San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Dallu at Anaheim, II p.m.

hctnc Dl•lJion •

x-Seallle..... ,.......... SI 21 .708
a-Phocnll .............. Sl 22 .699
x·L.A. Laken ........ 46 '11 .6!0
Ptttland ................ 38 34 .528
· Sacrar\'ICD.IO ........... .35 J1
Golden Swe .......... 23 49

WE WILL NoT
ON ANY ITEM

ou~ ~r1cr.s

.3 19

.20!

Wednesday'~ scores
ChiCiiQ 108, New Jeney 101
Orlando 1111, Oetroill2S
Ouu!otte 84, Phlladelpbla66
Atlanla 96, CLEVI!LAND 87
Dallas 130, LA. lakm 111
lnd!;ua.I02, Washington 90
New Yor~ 114, Milwaukee 94

Tonight's games
Phoe.nix 11 Wu.hlogton, 7:30p.m.
Seattle 11 Denver, II p.m.
HOUlton at Oolden State, 10:30 p.m.
San Antoaio al Sacramento, 10:30
p.m.

Friday's games

Philadelphia at 80111on, 7:30p.m.·
Cbarlane at Wuhinl{on, 1·30 p.m.....
(ndiana 11 AUanta, 8 p.m.
~
Orlando If Detroit, 8 p.m.
CLEVE!..ANt? at Chica1o. 8:30p.m
New Jersey at Mllwa~. 8:30p.m.
Minne10ta at DaJiu., 8:30p.m. ·
ll~uton at Portland, 10 p.m.
Utah at t..A. Laken, l0~ 30p.m.

Hockey

.,

National Horkey Luaue
NHL: S~.a~pcorJod Hartford Whalen defensemu. Olea Peatbentooe Cor one pme
for throwina hll belmct Into the &amp;tandl i.n
• same at Butrato on April 3.
.

'BUFFALO SABRES: Sent Peter Ambrallllk, left WhiJ, to Rachester of the

OAKLAND AntLETICS :

FootboU
Nadonal Foolhall

A4Toed to

..

Naalonllol Leape
CIUCAOO CUBS: Acquired Brlan
McRae, OUtfielder. from the XM.w City
Royal• !or l&gt;cf~ Wallace and Oeoo Molonea, pilchen . Aareed to termt wiUl
Todd PraU , catcher, and :ro~_.Bdena,
pitcher, on minor-leaJUe eontractr.
.
ClNCJNNATI-IIEDS' Asreed lo tenno
with Etic Anthony, oulfle.Jder, on a ono-

vear coalfact.

•

CALGARY FLAMES: Sent Todd
Hlushko,, center, to Saint JQbn or the
AIIL.

Fuoer, dctellllcrmn, lo Adirondack or lhe

AU..-.tk Dfmkln

•

Ptlal~c:Jpbll .... ,. 1113 4 '40 11) 101
Walhif1Jloa ...... l6 ll 1 39 P4 14
NewJeney ....... l6l3 1 39103 94
.N.Y. Ranacn .... IS 17 3 33 9.5 93
Florida .............. 14 17 4 32 16 96
Tampa Ba)' ....... ll II 3 29 1.5 ~
N.Y . lllan!kri ... I020 4 24 fS 114

NortheY Drr"Won
ll
PI!Ubur&amp;h ......... lllO 2 41
Butrllo ............. 16 12 S 17
8CJI.tQD .............. 1114 2 36

Quebec .............. 14 9 l

: : : :·

·: . . 13144161616 4ss
'~ ~~-JJ5~~:..........

llO 105
100 n7
92 11
91 12

)1
91 102
Ill
l! 96
12.,)~

126

..

Le••

.

BATTERIES
STRUTS

The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2155

WFSfERN CONFERENCE
.

C..irol ~Ilion

.!! L I flo. .t:ll. !iA

Ium

[)droit ......

u ......

14 7 3

.51 130

INT-15

NBA

SPECIAL. EDITION

TEH TIHE B\L\\4:1\f;

TIR ES

-.err ••

BLOCKED - Atlanta's Stacey Augmon (center) Dnds his sbot
\ blocked by the Cleveland Cavaliers' ChriS MIUs while Jobn (Hot
Rod) Williams comes In to defend during Wednesda,: night's NBA
game In Atlanta, where the the Hawks won !16-117. (AP)
·

SPRING/SUMMER
.
CAR CARE

Ly11eb and Ron RIYen , nmnina btd:a.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS ' s;ancd
Najee Mu.talaa, cunerback.
LOS ANOELES RAMS: Signed An·
thony Patktr, corne:rbtck, to a multiyear
canU'Ipt. Re-alaned Johnny Salley,, runniDI *k.. to a ono-ye.r ~nt.r.:t . S1anod
Cree Mmil, quarterback.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Promoted Seen
StODe, media relaUon&amp; coordinator, to di·
recto( ot pubtlcatJa ... Named Mike HJ.D.
aon medii rdatloo.• coordlnltar.
NEW YORK OIANTS' s;ancd Ml~e
Crod,lint.b.ct«, lo 1 onc-ye.r ~act.
and Aaroa Pierce, t!Jht end, to a'Threeyear contract Rele•ed. Cwlton Bailey.
IIDCbacU:t.

SHOC KS

spec1a1 orDers

Nl Tlul:h

..

614-992-7161

'

excludm~

;11r•lct aelill •

2~!

.ll: L I flo. Ill !iA

Ium

...

com•t

~er

Alll..

GENERAL TIRE SALES ·

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~~r111et

DETROIT RED WINGS : Sent Mark

Hockey
NHL standings .

ll!

ofth~

AHL.

AtLANTA FALCONS: Siancd Eric
Metcalf, runnlna back. Released Jumpy
Oc:athcu~ defensive tactic. Aarced to
tarms with Rich Miano and Brad Ed·
warda, aaf'ttlea:
CAROLINA PANTHERS: Siao.cd '
Darice CoD.Det, linebacket.
'
D~ROIT LIONS: Re·slaned Eric

with Orc~~o Cadarlt, pitcher, on a minor-leaBUe contr&amp;Ct.

term~

nl~'l

DALLAS STARS: Sent Manny Ftt·

11ande:z, a,oaltcmder, to Kalamazoo
IHL. ..

BALTIMORE ORlOLES: Ai"toe4 to

ter011 with Chris Hoila, catcher, on a
five-year contract.
CIOCAOO WHITE SOX: AiTccd to
ternw with Jo1e DeLeon, pitcher, on a
ono-year CODttld..
CLEVELAND 'INDIANS : Slaned
Dave Winfitld, dulanatcd hitter, to a
one-year contract. Agreed to terms wilh
Jmci. AnN:trona and La La.Dcutet, pitch.cn, on minor·\eaiJll~ntracta.
MllWAUK.EB
ES: Ageed to
t~rms with Bob Sc lan. pitcber, on a
ono.year contract.

AllY TIME

•

NEW JERSEY NETS: Placed Chris
Monia, pant, oe the illjuted list. Activat•
ed Sleepy Aoyd, suard. from lhe injwcd
llat.

Alltft"k• IAIIJU•

UNDERSOLD

can'l oe beat• We w11l match a n~ local pr1ce Ofi comparable 11ems
Pr1m

~

fOD.

BasebaU

16
28
37

.486

LA. CHppm ........ l5 l9
x-clinched pit)_'Off berth

Transactions

.l
l.l .
13

S!lNJOR LADY TORNADO -Jess Codner was honored Sunday
afternoon at the Southern winter sports banquet for an outstanding
career in a Sou them Wnt.
,... basketba[l
. unlrorm.
.
I

fU'IIt bale

with JohD FriDco, Pitcher, on i IWO·ycar
coattact, and Pete Walter, pitcbtt, on a
ono-ycw contract. •
SAN DIEGO PADRES : -Aarecd to
terml with Femando -VI.Iennu:la, pitcher,
on a oae-year ~ntract.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS' Asreed
to tatn~ wilh Ma-i Dewey, pltchu, on a
one--year conttad.

Butraii.J at 805to'D, 7:30p.m.
Montreal at Quebec. 7:30p.m.
TaqJI Bay at Phlladelphla,7:30 p.m .
.J&gt;allu lll.ol AngelP, 10:30 P·Ili-

!ill

,

Anfernee Hardaway and·- Nick
Anderson, Orlando got 40 points
and 19. rebounds from Shaquille
O'Neal to beat Detroit.
·Dennis Scott bad 30 as tbe
Magic came back froni an 18~point
first-half deficit. Orlando made six
of seven free throws in. the last
1:01, with O'Neal making one for a
126-125 lead with 32 seconds left.
Anderion suffered a concussjon
(See NBA on Page-$) '

"'"~
NEW: YORK METS: A&amp;rCICd to ter~

19.5

~

Dallas .................... 32

oulfielder. Re-hired lui1 Pujola.

Sao Antooio Spun in 1992. Tm·
Dian spent bls Jelift:meat holdn1 a
.QdioJpOIU talk &amp;bow givlnJ moti·
vational spe«:bca .d appearing In
cameos in scveJlll inovies.
.

'

"'·MONTREAL EXPOS! Traded John

llartlonl a. Plllll&gt;urgh.
N.Y. Rangm $, AoridaO
St. UJulJ 6, Toronto 4
New Jeney 2, Ottawa 0
Mo11trcal6, Quebec 5
WianlpeJ 4. Cbicaao 1
Ot.troit 5, San Jote 3
Anaheim 4,_ Edmontop 3 {01)

3S.S

Midwest Dlriflon

n

5 ·!9 114 9&amp;
9 33 105 106
7 31 116 tJO

san JOR ........... 12 19 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

30 99 91
26 103 1:18

P..:me DITI•ion

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

FLORIDA MARLINS: Aareed to'
term• with Mario Diu, ltlrlelder, aad .
Chril Hammond, pitcber, on one-year
contract&amp;. Traded Matt Peteneo, pitcher,
to tb6 ChlcaJO Cub1 for t. playtt to be
named later. Releiled TQdd Pridy, innelder; Tim Cucy and Eddie CbriaUaa, outflcldcn; Kip Yauahn, Randy Shqena,
Jake Ote~e. Frank Roberti, Sean
Touchel ~ad Don Tynan, pitcher~, tnd

St. U..lt ........... 21 10 ! 45 128 92
Chlcl80 ............ 19 n l •1 125 11
Toronto ............. 1.5 1.. 1 37 101 106

with convided spons fixer Richard
Perry. Tlllkanian said be bad told
bis players repeatedly to.saay awar
froal Perry.
Following a sbort lllint with the

Ca.v_iilie~s 9~-87

Scoreboard
Basketball

The D811y Sentinel P1g1 5

bicJ.. "

.

: By The Associated PNss
Conference.
It didn't take Michael Jordan
Mter missing 11 of 13 shots In
: long to have an Impact on his the fii'St half, Jordan clicked in tbe
: team's playoffp6sllion.
second.
In bis eighth game back, Jcirdan
"I think they were waiting for
: scored 30 of his 37 points in the me to mali:e my move, and I just
• second b'alf Wednesday night In · missed a lot of easy shots," said
:Chicago's 108-101 victory over Jordan, who was 11-for-18 from
: New Jersey. Their fiflh straight win the field in the second half. "It was
· moved the Bulls past sinking more me than anything. It wasn't
: Cleveland, wbicb ·lost at Atlanla, any!bing they were doing.''
: into the fifth spot in the Eastern
Jordan scored 30 of the Bulls'

~

8 J ~O~~~)
· TarbniM
bin- Jerry

Williams among six SE Ohioans to"app.e. ar

~MJ

Pomeroj-Middleport, Ohio

.Fresno State signs Tarkanian to three-year coaching contract .

4

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)North: Jim Lambert, Cortland .Arlington; Jobn Diebl, Bristolville
The top bigh school seniors in tbe Lakeview;
James
PoSey, Bristol.
·
state, including Mr. Basketball• Twinsburg Chamberlin: Anthony
South: Jason H~mmerich,
Da:mon Stringer aild Ms. Stacey, Grarton Midview; Jami Ansonia; Nathan Adldns, London
Basketball Beth OStenOCrl, will be Bosley, Massillon Jackson; Anson Madison Plains; Todd Sands,
oil display Sunday in the annual Wiegand, E. Liverpool; Demar Centerbutg; Brady Ankrum,
North-South All-Star bigh school Moore, Sandusk~; Neshaun Zanesville W. Muskingwn; RYAN
games.
Coleman, Tot. St. John's; Marc WU..LIAMS, RACINE soum.
The boys' games will be played Bishop, Elida; Jitri Carter, Girard; ERN; Jason Cruse, Chillicothe
Unioto: Shay Richardson,
; at Ohio State's St. John Arena, Damon StringCf, Cleve. Hts.
· with tbe Division 10-IV game at 2
Coaches: Dave Close, Stow; Middletown ·Madison; Chris
.
Dablmeier, Cin. Mariemont; Brad
: p.m. 3J!d the Division 1-D game at Ken Burgei, Wauseon.
. ·. ·
South: Shaun Stonerook, Hostasa, Utica; Kevin Weakley,
4 p.m.
The girls will play at Otterbein Westerville North; Jon Stafford, Worthington Christian
.
College. Tbe Division I-II game is New Carlisle ll:cumseb; Orlando
Coa¢bes: Tom Petty, Bloomat 2 p.m and the DI-IV game at 4 Rogers, Marion Harding; Andy Carroll; Ray Slagle, Worthington
p.m.
.
Smith1 New Concord Jobn Glenn; Christian.
•
Stringer, a 5-foot-11 guard from ·:rERRY QUALLS, GALLIPO- ·
-•-•-•Cleveland Heights, aYeraged 24 -LIS GALLIA; ·Richie Harris,
Dlvlllloa 1·0 &amp;f~
North: Dana Sulenski, You.
· points, seven assists and five steals Chillicothe; Ryan Fletcher,
a game. 1be Obio State signee will Middletown; Scott Marston, Cin. Austintown Fitch; Kate Mooney,
lead a North 1-11 team that also Oak llills; Aaron Stumpf, Sunbury Eastlake
North;
Megan
includes Buckeye recruits Jami Big Walnut; Charles Johnson, Chawansky, Avon Lake; Kelle
Bosley of Massillon Jackson and Pataskala Watkins Memorial
Saxen, Tol. Cent. Catb.; Rikki
Neshaun Coleman of Toledo St.
Coaches: ' Dave Hoover, . Cerett, Dover; Kim Lawrence,
John's.
Westerville North; Phil Rice, Clyde; Kari Barcus, Sylvania
Another Ohio State recruit, Ironton.
Soutbviev.:; Nilclti Mim, St. Marys
Westerville · North's Sbaun
Division m-IV boys
Memorial.
Stoneroolc,. anchors the South bigNorth:
·Brad
Qecin~t,
Alternates: Chrissy Billiter,
--school squad~ .. Columbiana - CreJtv.iew; . Pat Elida; Summer Erb, Lakewood _
Ostendorf, a six-footer from Duncan, Aurora; Ron Manlini,
Coaches: Bill Lobb, Findlay;
Pickerington, w~ good for 21.5 Lorain Cath.; losh Piau, Creston Roger Zieghlr, Salem:.
points, seven rebounds, four assists Norwayne; Mike Pryor, Malvern;
South: Mag~le Clarl, Piqua;
.and three steals a game. A Bryan Moloney, Ontario; Adam Mindi Fusetti, ,AsbviHe TC'Iys
Vanderbilt signee, she leads the Kuhlman, Holgate; Andy Butler, Valley; · Beth
Ostendorf;
South Division 1-11 team.
Findlay Liberty-Benton; Brett Pickerington; Sbawna Daugherty,
.. Here are the rosters for the Seidel, Greenwich South Central; Marietta;
Erlea
Hayes,
·games.
Mark Howard, E. CantoJL
McArthur VInton County;
Division I·D boys
Coaches: Mitch Cerny, Upper Heather Hilliard, Greenfield

Aprll6, 1116

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contests. ~C:ntinuedfromPage4)

when be bumped heads with
Detroit's Rafael Addison and was
taken off the court on a stretcher .
early in the second quarter. Hardaway missed t\le game with an
Inflamed esophagus.
Joe Dumars had seven threepointers ,and finished witb 41
points, and Allan Houston bit six
tteys and 28 points for the visiting
Pistons.
U:omets 84, 76ers 66
Cbar!Qtte held Philadelphia tQ
eight second-quarter points, and lhe
76ers fmisbed with tbe lowest scorJng total in club history.
.
: The teams combined for .,Q!)ly 19
· points in the second quarter, the
&gt;second lowest-scoring quarter in
: NBA history .and the lowest tolal
· ever for a second quarter.
Alonw Mourning bad 16 points
for Charlotte,' which tied a francbise victory with their 44th victory. Sbawn Bradley led the Visiting
76ers with 21.
Hawks 96, CavaUers 87
Cleveland lost its third in a row
: -and ftfth straight on the road. falling to Atlanta for the fii'St time
: in three meetings Ibis season.
Andrew Lang, Steve Smith and
Grant Long each scored 18 points
for the Hawks.
John Williams led lb'e Cavaliers
witb 14 points. Mark Price added
11 points and eight assists, but
missed nine of I 1 fiehl goal
auempts.
Pacers 102, Bullets 90
Indiana beat Washington and set
·a club record with its 48th victory
of the season even though Reggie
Miller did not bave a field goal.
.
Miller, who scored 27. points the
previous night, scored just six
points, all at the free .tbrow ¥ne. He

.

was 0-for-7 from the field. ·
·Rik Smits bad 29 points and 10
rebounds for the Pacers, who lead
the Central Division by tbt'ee
games over Cbarlone.
Calben Cheaney led the Bullets
with 19 points, while Cbris Webber
added 18 points and 14 rebounds.
Washington lost Its eighth in a row
and seventh consecutive road
game.
Knlcks 114, Bucks 94 ·
New York b!&gt;unced back from a ·
loss to Indiana the previous night
with a rout of Milwaukee.
Patrick Ewing had 34 points and
18 rebounds and Hubert Davis
scored 20 points as the Knicks won
their third straight on the road.·.
Tbe Bucks fell two games
behind B\)ston for the eighth and
final Ea.stern Conference playoff
spot.
· Rookie Glenn Robinson led
Milwaukee with 22 points, and Vin
Baker bad 18 points and 12
rebounds.
Mavericks 130, Lakers 111
Jason Kidd's first NBA triple· double helped Dallas keep its longsbot playoff hopes alive with a victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.
Kidd bad 19 points, 12 assists
and 10 rebounds, and Jamal Mash,
·burn scored 32 points.
Lorenzo Williams added a
career-bigb 19 points and 15
rebounds as the Mavericks won for
the IOtb time in 13 games and
pulled within 2 112 games of Denver a11d SacnuneniO in the mce for
a Western Conference playoff spot
Nick Van Exel scOred 24 points
and .Eddie Jones added 22 to pare
the visiting Lake~s. ~bo bad thetr
tbree-game wtnnmg streak
snapped.

1

17
pelql
l imrt 12

2~?
Frlm

BtN!ll- PfJifORMANI:t PFIDJfCHON PUN

Stf S.IOAf fOR OH AIIS

..",.I

IJIDR~&gt;IIW

59

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2 •w"r
-IIIII.•

each

8pltrft .

'TIIIII.T t:llll1
YGU
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rn.fl

==~
Eltptm Say:

• More Power
• More Mlla~ge
• Lower Emilslons

Sports briefs----~

- ~... · - 'Jfasketball -'-"'' --: NEW YORK (AP) - Patnck
'Ewing and Derek Harper of ~be.
· New York Knicks and R1ok
. Ma!Jorn of lhe New Jersey Nets
. were fmed a total of $18,500 by the
NBA.
Maborn received the biggest

P:qarty;a-S7;ID0 fine loi:-siarunga ~

fight witb ~wing, who was fined
$3',500 ·for retaliating in the
Knicks' 94-85 victory Sunday.
Harper .was rmed $5,000 .ror comments to officials following his
ejection.
L

Wiitcm

-=··
I•)
USED OIL

lr.o-.!· -

"-i.r~

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• GALLIPOLIS

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~ .=::..:.....-'-'~::.-~-

O_PEN SEVEN DAYS A·WE·EKM~nday

Store Hours: 9 1.m. to 8 p.m.
through Friday,
8:30 a.m ..to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday

209 Upper River Road

446-3807

.,

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'•

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Tlluray, April I, , . ,

'·

Thurld8y, Aprll8,1~

Dod_g ers &amp; Marlins reset opener day; Expos begin salary purge :

Ninth
birthday

P11111 I .. Tht Dilly Sentlntl

BJ RONAUl BLUM

AP SpaN Wrtter
Wblle tbe Florida M.rtina 1114
Los Anplea Dodgen were dlq-

lns openins day, the Moatreal
Expos chlmged tbe nucleus- or their
leiiD. .

Los Anleles will play II Florida
at 7:35 p.m. EDT in an early opener on April 25, baseball officlala
announced WednesdJ!Y after an

· Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

asreement wilh ESP:N· and tbe
players a'Odation
The AmaiciD Leque vbedule,
barrios rainoub, would see Cal
Ripten tie Lou Gebrig' a 'COOl CCII·
rive· aames record on Sept. S at
bOIIIC aaa~nst California. He· would
br'eat it tbe followins day 11 bane
against the Angell.
Wbn Ripken would rcaclllllc
record was calculated with help

from

a sowce who bas Baltimore's

schedule. The fuU scbed"le will be
released tbil week when all teams
have finali•ed tbcir adjusmwnu.
There were several slsnlnaa.
most notable amons .them pitcher
Fernando Valenzue~ning ibe
San Diqo Padres for
,OOO'and
reliever John Franco returning to
tbe New Yoct Mets for SS million
over twa years.

.Southern diamond men get 5-3 win
over Meigs in eight-inning affair

Dave Winfield. traded to Cleveland durinJ 111e llrike oo Au1. 31.
signed with tbe Indians, reportedly
for $600,000.
. And Baltimore owner Peter
?Angelos showed no bUrt from tbe
strike, apeelns on a $17 .2S mllliop, S-year deal with catcJrr Cbrls
Hoiles.
·· Montteal, meanwhile, bepn Its
salary .purge, dealing closer John
Wetteland to the New York Yaatees and No. 1 starter Ken Hill to
tbe SL Louis Cardinals. The Expos
already have lost outfielder Larry
'Walter to t'tce agency.
.
"This is nou rue sale," Expos
general manager Kevin Malone
said. ·~A rue sale is when you're
giving guys aJ~~y." ·
The Expos didn'tgive 'em away
for free, but they didn't exactly
brcalt tbe banks of tbe Yankees and
Cardinals. For Wetteland, who bad
25 saves in 52 appearances last season, the Expos ,sot Fernando
Segulgnol, a 20-year-old outfielder;
a player to be named later and cash.
For HiU, 16-S with' a 3.32 ERA
last year, the Expos got outfielder
Darond Stovall and pitchers Bryan
Eversgerd and Kirk Bullinger.
"The economics of the cooent

splaD a tbe reaoo we're llllkllls I who mille $3.56 million Jaat Ul I rA
the changes,'' Malone admitted. and allo Ia dilible Cor aiblblltklt, •
''Theae deals are fmlncian moti- could lie dealt by Prlday, Maloof
¥111Cd."
.
y
'llid.
'
Expos manaaemeot, which
"Thcrc n aevea leiiDS ltill il
probably would have bad 10 pay In tbe bidding for Grissom," be ....._
excas of $4 mlltion 10 eil;b~ pitch· "Other GMa arc swt1n1 to c:all

er, bas claimed It will !ole $20 mil·
lion becaute of the 111r111c ana 11 tty-In&amp; to pare Its payroll io about $12
miWoD- a drop of·$6 mllljno.
Malone said an nndlsclosed
amount of cash from tile trade wlib
the Yanteea, combined with the
$2 225,000 from Wl!tleland's 1994
salary and the $2,S!5 m!Uion Hill
·made, would enable the team to
sign some free agents later this
week.
Outfielder Marquis Grissom,

By DAVE RAIUUS
out Bradley Whitlatch singled .to bas. Chad Burton tben hit a D)lbber
.Sentinel Con-apnndeat
plate two more IUDS.
between ibe mound and third that
JIDimy Randolpb's bases loeded
Southern (3-1 overall &amp; in ibe Marlin fielded on ibe charge and
slnale In extra Innings gave ibe TVC) made It a 3-2 game in the !brew Burton out at fust for the
Southern Tornadoes a come-from- third. Ryan Williams readied _on an inning's second out. Hanson then
behind 5·3 vic~ over tbe Meigs error before Ryaa Marlin singled popped out to ~econd to end the
·Marauders In Tn-Valley Confer- and stole second. ~r a strikeout, game.
.
~ence baseball action Wednesday Jesse Maynard singled In both runMartin aad Dailey led the winevening at Meigs High School..
ners.
ners at the plale with .a pair of sinRandolph's single with nobody
Southern tied it with an gles each. Maynard and Randolph
obi In the eighth inning drove In uni;amed run In the slxib. Jeremy also each added a single each. ~c
Shawn Dailey and Travis Lisle. Smith reached on anotber Maraud- Jones picked up the win in a route
"Dailey led 9ff the eighth with an er error and advanced to third on . going performance. The senior
infield single ou a close play at two more Mar&amp;IICier miscues. Dai- scattered four hits, slnlct out nine,
rmt. and thenUsle waited. Deamer ley then singled In the tying run.
walked one and hit two battersreached on a Marauder error to
That set tbe scene for Ran·
Newsome led. the Marauders at
. load the bases before Randolph dolph's beroics in the extra lnniDBs ibe plate with two singles. Fetty --Sports briefs-. tben sillgled &amp;batply un lrlve in the to give Mlelt-Winebrcnner's Toma. added a double, while Whitlatch .
winning IUDS. ·
docs the win.
bad a single. Newsome gave up six
B~baU
.
Meigs (2·2 overall &amp; 2-1 in tbe
Meigs tried to rally In ibe bot· bits, struck out five and wallced six.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
TVC). which losing Its second .tom of tbe eighth, but Martin came .
Meiss will host Ravenswood Senate subcommittee voted for a
straight game, took a 3'd lead in up with a two lieldinJ gems to end today.
partial repeal ofbascball's antitrust
ibe ·bottom of the second ; nning. tbe threat Gary Staaley waited to Janina totab
.
exemption, the rust step In ·wba&amp;
Brett News001e singled to lead off lead off the inning and Newsome Southcia: 002.()(11..()2. 5-6-2
promi$es to be a difflcult legislatbe inning, after a strike out Chad singled. Cass Cleland then bit a Meigs; 03(J.()OO.(JO • 3-S-5
live path. ·
· ·
·
Burton .singled. Brett Hanson smash down the line at thlrd.that
WP - Joues
The bill was approved 4-0 in a
LP- Newsome
voice vote by the subCommittee on
reached on a Southern error to Martin tnocted down near tbe bag
drive in a run and after a ground and was able to beat Staaley to tbe
antitrust, business rights and coml
"7
petition.

d
M
•
l
. Southern· softba .ers
e. ge
elgs
,
. .
.

6
I':"

·
- ~ ., ~. 'Soutlieffi looli: idV8Jimge or six out later; Emdy-Fackler-smgled;--~ Moore p1cked up a .strilce•~
Melas waits a two base bits In a · Amber Blackwell !ben ~bled In out to end the game. .
fiye run flftb inning to er'asc a fjve both runs before Bobble Butcher
Manuel and Cummms led the
run deficit and scored a sinsle run followed wiib a RBI single. Arter winners witb two singles each .
in the sixth in'ning to post 7-6 win Billie Butcher walked, Stephanie Roush also added a single, Moore
over Meigs In Tri-Valley Confer- Stewart cleared the bases with a picked up the win, scattering eight
ence. softball action Wednesday three-run Uiple.
. ·
bits, striking out eight and walking
:evening at Meigs Hlgb School.
In tbe fifth , tbe Tornadoes · _three.
·
· Souibem (3·1 overall &amp; in the opened the lonbig with two saalght
Stewart led Meigs with a pair of
·TVC) took a 1-0 leQ4. ill the third wallcs. Tassi Cummins and lonna . triples, while Faclder added a pair
:inning, Brandy Roush led off tbe Manuel followed with back-to· of singles. Billie Butcher and
;inning with a single, and later came bacl~ singles and four stritigbt Blackwell eacb bad a double, while
. around to score on a Marauder wallcs tied the game at six.
Bobbie Butcber bad a single. BUlle
:error.
Southern won ibe game In the Butcher scattered five bits, StruCk
• The Marauders (3·1 overall &amp; in sixth on singles by Cummins and out 15 lind bad :m uncharacteristic
:the TVC) came-b}Ck In thelrba!C of Manuel and a fielder's choice.
seven waits.
;the third inninJ with six big runs to
Meigs was able to ,get the tying lnnlns totals
001-051-0,;, 7-5-2
··take a 6· 1 lead. Jessica McElroy run on third in the seventh, but Sou. ·
()()6.()()().0 = 6-8· 3
:led off the Uining with a wal. One_
Meigs

a

.

--------~society
_ scrapbook
tASTER BRUNCH

Rudl Daniclle Snyder observed
ber nlntb binbday Mardi 11 at tbC
home of ber parents, William and
Kathleen Snyder of J&gt;om£roy.
Attending were her p.uents,
grandfaibcrs, David D. Campbell Cindy King and family, Pat and.
and Joe A. Rhoades, grandmotbcr, Richie Hagen, Mike and Mbti
: Linda S. Rhoades, Debbie Rhoades 'BreiNer with their IIAI arrival Trenand daughter Ashley A. Rhoades, ton and Tyler Brewer, grandmother
aunt Connie Patterson, cousins Elisoe Eblin. Out-pf·town guests
Rlclc, Cyndie, Alex, Chelsea and were Debbie Treadway and Beth
Cassandra Patterson and friend Maine of Statesville, N.C.
Nioole.Davis.
A power ranger
. theme was
g Rifts vvere
Others

because tbey blow now that I'Jt

saioua."
•
Kansu City dumped payrolt
too, trading outfielder BrlaA
McRae to the Cbicaao Cubs f~
minor-lelllue~tcben Derek Wet"
lace aad Geno ocoaes.
..
. McRae, 2 , bit .273 wiib fOil
home runa and 40 RBis laat a;aawt
·In bls four-year
~
City, McRae, who made $1.9 m"lioa in 1994, bas bit .262 with 30
homers 3IId 248 RBls.
!

.

CJRC:r-

The Meigs County Historical
Society will ·~:~r an Eastet
brunch with the
bunny at the
Meigs County Museum from 11
a.m. to t p.m. AprU IS.
An all-you-can-eat brunch with
eggs, pancakes, bam, pastries, bev·
erages aad .fresh fruits will be
served. Cost· is $2.50 for children
12 and under and $3.00 for over 12
·and adults. Reservations must be
made no later by Thursilay, April
13, by calling 992-3810. _
. There will be crafts for tbe chll·
drep, door prize drawilig, special
Easter readings, and a vid~o of
"HereComctPeterCottontail."

SCHOLARSHIP
· David Toundas of Pomeroy bas
been awarded' a_f~ .l2J500 a
year bonors scholarship to MiUIJan
College in Northeast Tennessee.
~oundas bas been accepted to Mil·
hgan for the 1995-96 academic
year. H"e plans to major in-history.
HONORS DINNER
. Ray Justis, wbn has leukemia,

left Monday for a· Veterans Hospi·
tal in Memphis, Tenn ., where be
wiD undergo a bone marrow trans·
plant. His sister, June Landlalcer,
Racine, is providing the bone marrow. Before leaving, his aunt;

1:

Mt.Rubmore

Olaa..... aa-kiiiii8Geld

__ ..__-

I.

Basketball
WACO, Texas (AP) - Baylor
University's ex-basketball coach
was acquitted of charges be helped
five recruits cheat to get into the
school. Three assistant coaches
were convicted,
Tbe federal jury found · !bat
althou gh Darrel Johnson was
responsible for the basketball program, be was unaware of improper
help ·his assistants gave to 'enable
the recruits to pass classes they
needed to enroll at Baylor In 1993.

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KILLER CATFISH - Tbae 35-pnund catfish were pulled
!):om near the Racine Loc:lrs IUid Dam after a 28·mlnnte ~t,· wd
Dan Brown. Dave VIIDCe, at left, -and Brown saki they iueil spoons .
to snag these monstrous eallbb. The catfish were later returned to
tbi river. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
.
·

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for years to come.~o send
this exclusive Teleflaa gift
anywhere, ca)l or visit our shql .

•EiedloricSiill
TJIJIIIor Cuo

.

.:

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:
:

·Gi..e the Tulip Garden
&amp;sket Bouquet far Easter
SIOllby, l)pril I6.

·cruae Cororot

........

SIZES·1 TO 12

Put Spring Into
Your Easter..

WITH
~1,488

..

:
:

...
:

CRINOLINE SLIPS

:
:

••••••••••
~-~

• Sola/Bed
• lnd1rect .Ughling
t

Special Aera Ground Eflecb

.

.. ..,. ..

POMEROY

112 EAST MAIN

NBT07

• • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •• ••••ooooo o ooooooo oo oooooooo o ooo~uuoooo o o o oouuoo

Children's Dress Shoes, Tennis Shoes &amp; Sandals
Friday, Saturday &amp; Monday

·Console
• CuStom Sport lb:lcel Seals
• Pass-Key 11 Thellllel&lt;!renl
• Reat Deck lid Spoiler
• Special Aero Ground Elloc:ls
and \'lhMI F~res
• Sport Suspensioo •
• Split Oual ElhaUS1
• 16" Cuf Aiuninum WheelS
• Loe&lt;led1

,-do{-"
*'¥ !-'

•

• Csptain Chairs

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC
· GRAND P~IX SE COUPE

APVVAN

~

.:
:'
;
..':
..:
:

l,,l

~~~=ji
tk ,.,.. .-,...
4eti

SWISHER 8 LOHSE .
·PHARMACY

BOYS
SUITS

NBTO 14

-

c
33

30%

k'
·
l
ar s,.. ewe.
1

39
4,49 O'NLY
OFF
~~~~~~----~--~~
1

• Power Steeri~
• Power Brakes
• TiH Steering
·Cruise
• AMIFM cassette
• Power W"mdows
• Power Locks

Tbing3 C}re Hop pin' · ·..__..,.

EASTER
DRESSES

~

!

BRAIII NEW ~ G-20 3141UN RAISBJ ROOF
CONVEILU VAN W1111350 VOS POWER
• RaJsed Root

"-l.-1,:~ ..

LARGE SELECTION

·,

Cassette T,pes
Loris Lumibrite Watches ' · '
Country &amp; Oldies ·
NEW SELECTION

BRAND R '95 CHEVY AS11IO EXTEIIJED .
CONVERsiON VAN

:/ :' ~'&lt;lY' • • • • • • • • • ··~"''J'r:::Jj '·. \ .

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS ·

1--.....:F:..:R;;:;;E:.:E:......_---if-R•..:I_·4_9_c_o_N_Lv_ _-1 d

• Air Con&lt;ltion
• Automatic
•V-6Power
• Dual Airbags
•POW..Steenng
,Power Brakes
• P.Wer Door locks
• Power Windows
• AIIIFM CasseHe
• TIH Sieeri~
• Cruise Control
'' "'.

~!"

AI

'

• Power Stee&lt;inq

_ _:.. __

.. ~~· • • • • • • • • .• • ·.41&gt;.~ .

• • • • • • • • • • ·.41&gt;.~!1;·-;"-.---~
.;.:... · ~~·
~"&lt;l)'' . . . . . . . ., ._.lft'($1r§'·.\ . .•

. Boy 1 Carleton Easter Card,

• Automatic Overdnve
• V1Sill Bay Windows

Doysl

\

SOC ONLY

· Indirect Ughting
• Prem1um WOOd Pkg.
• Futi Conversion
• AJum1num Running Boards
• Loaded!

.

ng
----

an independent baseball commla- sionCI'with authority to force play· ~-'ers and ,owners 10 end their labof
disputes.

Peanut"Butter Eggs

• T1RSteenng
• Crutse
•AMIFM Cassette
• Power Windows
•Power locks
• C"fllain Chairs

'

.

'

••

, ~----R-ee-,-.-,s----~~R~u-ss-e~I~IS~t-ov_e_r--1~

• Sola/Bed

.

urg~n~~e~:~fi~': ::~i

~--·

·Power Brakes

WEIGHTCONTROLCLASS .
Tbe Meias County Health .
Leota Massar, beld a dinner in bis Department wiU beJin '- aeries of
honor. Attending were Ray Riggs aix-week claaiCI for wdgllt -llOIItrol
and bis soas Marion alld Gene and on Alldll8.
· ·
Starling ana'Sandra Massar. ' ' - - Tbe clfi:Sies are fr~ to Mei1s ..:__,
County resident~ and will be of two ·
CANTATA
boun dtii'&amp;IU!. Classes will include
•
A musical or tbe redemption nutrition education, sueas m1011e·
stoty, "Alone on the Altar. .'..Cal· · ment, weekly weigh-ins.-relaxation .
vary' s Lamb" will be pre~ented techniques. recipes, diet recall ;.
Sunday at 8 p.m. by tbe cboiroftbe sheets, exercise techniques and :
. Middleport Fmt Baptist Church.
other phases or·weigbt con trot ::
Sam Cowan is director of ibe Classes are ID be held In the confer· ·. ·
presentation wbicb wiU be narralcd ence ~ .uf tbe Meist mu!ti-pur· :
by Mark Morrow. A love offering o pose butldmg, M'!l~ Hel~bts, :
will be taken at. the door. Soloists Pomeroy. Those wisbm1 to resilter ·.
for the program will be Sam and may call the Meigs County Health : ·
RyanCowan, andSarabAnderson.. ,Dcpartmentat992-6626.
:,
·

·.

'

• Extended Cha~s
• Dnver Side Ar Bag
• AI1ti~lock Brakes
• Air Condition

1be Dilly Sentinel-Page 7 · ·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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20%0FF
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3 ·~~ Onl~

·~'~.. TitE =fAB·RJ(·::

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•

•

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-2214
• Open 9 to 5 Monday thru Saturday

•

!

�•

.·

I

f

~Aprll6,1815

•
~ Tttunct.J,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Parent meetings being held in Meigs
MediDp pa~· ro help pareats
-~e~~:b·tbeir-cbl!dten skills wbicb

can ~lve belp 'In bow to work
with tbelr dllldRo.
will belp tbem m school are being
. Today {'lbursday) Meigs High
held In buildings around Melas Cllapter 1 teacben wUI present a
Local by tbe Cbap~ 1 p:ogram.
PJbJIIIIII on cmnputer uses In ~
Presented at SalisburJ Elemen- classroom from 5-7 p.m. at Metgs
tary were ways for ~tsto wodc Hlgb. On Friday from 1-3 p.m..
011 problem IOivlng wblle 11 Meigs
Mc.las Junior High tncbers wiU
Jualor High emphasla wu on a bet- • prcaent a prollfllll tb belp J1!UCD1S
ter Ulldcrslllldina or readlug com-: teach !hear child study skills a~
jliduuioa. Parents an: CIIOOUllllcd Meigs Junior Hlgb.
,
to allend tbe ses;oas so lhar they
Middleport wiU present programs on problem solving and
reading comprebensioll from 12:20

Ch UfCh

.t0

solving .and creative writing to be
covered. Rolland's meetiDg will be
rrom from 9 to l1 a.m. and Har·
risonville's from Ito 3 p.m. .
The goal is 1o act parents into at
least one or tbc sessions wbere lbey
can receive Information on informatlon about bow to assist lh~lr
children in academic developmqnL
Parents are encouraaed to t&amp;ke.
advanrage or lhe program. Queslions may be directed to the Meigs
Local School District at9?2-2153,
Wendy Halar, Chapcer I Director.

to 2:20p.m. April21 at Middleport
Elementary.
May 2 from I to 3 p.m. Salem
Center leal:bers wUI JIRl!Cnt computer uses in tbe classroom at the
Salem Center Elementary. On May
5 from I to 3 p.m. Pomeroy Elcmentary will have a program SIDII·
mer ideas at that scbool. Also 1o be
beld atlhat time will be lbc annual
.book fair, May I to 5. Harrisonville
and Ruliand Elementary will bold
their annual spring meetings on
May 12 with topics pf problem

serve Seder .
·oinner

•

The Women of St. Jobn and Si.'
' Pll!ll Lutheran Churches arc sponsoring a Seder Dinner 6:30 p.m.
April 13 at St. Paul, Pomeroy.
· Seder celebrates .Passover, an
ancient, colorful and significant
festival, wltb Passover recalling
those events which occurred more
than three lbousand years ago, lhe
Egyptian bondage of lhe Children
of Israel and their deliverance by
God, church officials said.
Tbey noted tbat according to
bistory, many other people were
also enslaved by tyrants, but the
Israelites were the first to rebel
against serfdom and to institute a
holiday dedicated to freedom. Most
nations observe .an Independence
Day, but tbc observance of the
birthday of Jewish freedom is
unique because of its profoundly
·religious Character, it was
explained.
"Every Jewish home becomes a ·
sancluljry, and every table an altar
where gratitude is exf&gt;ressed to
God, the Autbor of liberty, and
through prayer and song, ritual and
symbol, custom &amp;fld ceremony,
indl vi duals can look upon them- ·
selves as thougb they were among ·
those enslaved and then brought
· fOith unto freedom. ·
·
"This setr-identir1C81ion with lbe
past of God's people, helps in better appreciating freedom and .
understanding the plight of olber
wbo dwell under the shadow ol
tyrants. Tbe Passover calls upon ·
each one Ill do all in lbeir power to
.C~Dancipate them from tyranny,"
said Margaret Parker, a member of
the women's organization.
Reservations for the dinner can
be made by calling St. Paul Lutheran Cburcb at 992-2010 by Friday,
April 7. Seating is:limited. A mini·
mom donation or $6.50 is suggest·
ed.
.

.D of
A spring
'

permits, and all neceasary
demolition and construction
auparvillon, for the

Middleport OONR Division
of Waterways Project to be
undertaken at the corner of

··~,

ilrm •electod ohell comply
with all Equal Employment
Oppc:lrtu~ltleo ao required
:~y--Btote of Ohio ancUhe
Village of Middleport.
.
The VIllage reoerv11 tho
right to refaet any or ell
propoaoto and to wolve any
lntormalltiN In bidding. .
gewey M. Horton, Mayor
Village of Middleport
(3) 24! 31· (4) 6 3TC

JIMESIUIM
SEIYICE ,

...

\fHAT IS THE Ho:Lv G;n:osT?

WUtY'""IlLII

A free, one hour, in your home, Bible
. Study 'will give you insight in the
scripture concerning the Holy Ghost.
Call 992-4178 leave name and phone
number after prerecor~ed message.

Speeial TIW

NEW•USED

Houllhold·
~

Colltctlble
11-5 T-llun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
' SA33N
1182·7502 or 11112-5805

BUCKEYE SALT- In 1885 Oblo ranked
third In tbe nation In tbe production of salt.
More than 75 percent of It came from Pomeroy.
Tbe natural and economic history of Buckeye

salt Is told In the March Issue of Tlmellne, the
Ohio Historical Society's magazine. (Pomeroy
photo drca 1890, courtesy Oblo HistoriCal Society)

Pomeroy's salt-producing·
history featured in magazine
l'i~

The village of Pomeroy is
County,. it
not _long before
one bf several communities fearbe sal.me Sf;ln,ngs m ~omeroy
tured in.arlicle about salt in the . made It OhiO s premier saltMarch/April edition of Timem3Jiu~actunng center. Later m
lines, a pubUcalion or the Ohio
the n,neteentb ~entury. de~p
Historical Society.
w.ells drilled dunng the slate s
Since early settlement times,
Oil a'!d · gas b.oom revealed
salt wells have.played an impor·
extens1ve deposits of salt local·
tan! role In the Buckeye Slate's
. ed under ea~tem .Ohio, acc?rdcconpmy.
mg to blst~riCal . society
While lbe most famous early
spokesm~ Dav~&lt;l A. S=o.ns.
salt source was in Jackson
The article ouUmes lhe histo·

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump S)o'C

Baughman , of
Gooaacreak Rd.,

42025

to change hie name to
Darrell Jay RHae. .
.

FREE monitoring.

Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and IUrroundii!IJ

304. 882-3338

11'8!1. Call for rate schedulti.
Min. $2.00

mEn•••

·

J

of salt· mining and lbe important role played by sail during
the Civil War- fanners in lhe
South often encountered prob!ems preserving meat due to a ,
shortage of salt.
The Time lin~ article. was
written by Dr. Carolyn Platt of
the Cuyahoga Community College faculty. Copies are avail·
able from the Ohio Historical
Society at (614) 297·2415.

using

Public Nollce
................... :...............~.273
Baolc Utltlly Sorvlceo ........
................................... 3,212
General GovernmenL ...•...
................................. 18;273

Supplleo &amp; Materlato .........

TWO

manners,

................................. 13,245

township equipment or

TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS

using

owrl

equipment.

................................. 64,180

Stated amount of bids
should be for each mowing
of the 10 cemetarles, also
included In bid should be a
separate amount ·for
mowing of
Carleton
Cemetery, twice during the
contract year.
Board of Trustees reserve
the right to accept or reject

Tot•l Receipt• over/under
Dlaburaemtnts ............. 1,906
Exc••• Recelptl and
Other, Financing Source•
Over (Under) Expend. Olab.
&amp;OtherUaea/Net ......... 1,906
Fund Caah Balance
January, 1, 1994 ........... 2,322
Fund Caah Balance,
D.cembtr 31, 1894 ...... 4,228

.

County ot Melgl
..Thlalaan unaudited

Flnonclal Report"
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
S

Olacrlptlon
Tota~:~c;und a•lanCt
I

Sold -appllcallon will be . RI!CEIPTS·
hurd In uld Court, at tO:OO Loc 1Tox•'•
14,541
a.m:, on lhe 10th doy of tnt ~ 0 om.;;-;;;t;;j"'
.U.!f,. ms. •V'r~·ht•·Pourt . ..
.25,'a11.&lt;
of Molge County, v "o.
·ch
otrvlcto
~
1
Rober! E. Buck, Judge
argea or
........
(4)6 1TC
................................. IO,l64l
.
.
Flrlel, UcenHI .. Permit•
Public Notice
. ................................. 12,274
Mtacellanoouo .......... 3,498
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
ToUII Rocolpto .........e6,086
• TRUSTEES
DISBURSEMENTS
ClERKS OFFICE
6
Socurlly 01 .Per ton
Roctne, Ohio 45n1
Proporty ............. ,.; ...... 20•177
Lelou,. Tlme Ac:t!Yitloo.....
PUBLIC NOTICE

_r,.•.:.... . . .

Exceaa Recelpta 1nd

Other, Flnlnclng Sourcaa
ovor (Under) Expend. Dlob.
6 Other Uno/Ntt ..... (21,3~1)
Fund Cooh Balance
Jonuory,1, 1994 ......... 4&amp;.~81
Fund Caah Balance,
Dectmtt.r 31, 1tl4 .... 25,283

ToUII Bolanct .......... 28,5~1
Outolde10 Mll1 .................2
Eotlmattd Populltlon .600
Fe d._!!,Jj"-'- £• 21." I
Pojiijliuon ....................... 48f
I cortlly tho following
report to bo correct- and
true, to thl blat or my
tmowltdgo:
SondraK. Smith,
Ctorll Troaouror
•
337 Main Sl
Rutland Ohio 45775
(4) 1·1TC
'
'

I

-

') H ')

4.»

- .)(),)()

• Room Additions·
; New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roollng '
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
: 992:6215 .
· Pomeroy, Ohio
.
112Mn

~lne 9ewel'll(

..

992-6250

Stop &amp;·ComJIIIre

WHALEY'S A.UTO
PAfns

"

Specializing in Custom
• Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR .
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS \
992·7013 OR
:
992-55.53 OR
,
' TOLL cR_EE 1-800·848-0070 !
I : DARWIN, OHIO
I
.

Get Your Meuage ltr.ast:
. With A Dally Senililel

· UMITED EDITION

BQL_LETIN BOARD
•600 col,u111n inch weekdays
saoo colu111n inch Sunday · ,
OUR OFFICE AT .992·2155

WASHERS
• Heavy Duty,
Super Capacity

The Diabetic

• Regular&amp; Perm.
~rfi!SS Gycles

Support Group

• 8198Cti Dispenser

Tre~

Consumer ,..,..

planting
discussed at
Rotary meeting

· Rated~ ·

DEPENDABLE BAKETM

RANGES ·

Do you want your planted trees

• Oven Window,
Oven Light

to survive?
That was the question posed to
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
members Monday evening by Hal
Kneen o( the Meigs County Coopp.erative Extension office.

DEPENDABLE BAKE,..

Kneen offered the group several
pointers on proper tree planting.
"Sclec.t )'Our trees based upon
rbe site," be said. "Consider suolight, drainage, growtb characteris:
tics, color and what the tree will .
look like when it matures'."

RANGES
• Oven Window, .

He also discussed site selection,
tree selection and proper cultural
practices to insure success and sur·
vi val when planting trees.
"Even !bough we would Uke to
plant and for~et it, no tree is main·
tenance free,' . be said.
Trees c.an be purchased bare-,
roo~ conramer grown or balle&amp; and
wrapped in burlap.
'
·
Most tree roots grow out instead
of down so preparing a bole 12
inches deep but wider in diameter
is important, he explained. This
allows nutrients and water to get to
the roots.
The tree should then be staked
·'-•d'wa•~
.....h~ a·dd"". ·' . "' ~
.,.,.
""""· ~
""
For more information, Kneim
said the extension offiCe bas-bandouts entitled "Piantins Trees and
Shrubs." In additlon, ·obio Power
Comp3IIy has a limited supply of
the new Ohio State University btiiletin on the planting and care of
~and shrubs.

will mee~ Sunday, April 9
from 2 to 4 p.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.
Rock Springs U.M.W.
is having a
Bake Sale at Pamida

Oven Light

Sat., April 8 at 10:00 .

KARAOKE
, KELLY'S KORNER
• Strong Box'M
door hinges

FRI., APRIL 7

9-1 :00

• No-BreakrM bins

WAI\TEil
lllll.'llO.,

;1'-~1' (.~-,

·'

\I. .till .1!1cllh'l',J

1 u.dtl\ hl' .Lilll 111..,1.1 til(·.._·

lt;lll

I'JTIIlll:tl.

Huo..h

ltr11

:t~'i'lllli'i :\iillll~:tll
(it'll."!

.d

61-t-367-73:'6

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

J

·j

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
· ·•Convertlhla Tops .
··carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners .
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Ad.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-7587

flm·

•-

.-.stoe ....

-Aplll-?ZM-

R I

""".,_.,..,;..,,• .,.

•

Lor'gt~-.ApriiM,Iucll."

lttl

· (Specialize In
driveway sp~ading)

t0111
prd Comnlunlr
end -bulliltng
· LDI1t April
- ·
6-7, .., 3pm.
·
Vary lorgo- .........

u.:

Limestone, .
- .. ai wo, - . .."".
raN I ••Y:. tDol ..... fhted wlh ,
Gravel, Sand,
flthlng .....,_, ·
Top Soli, Fnl Dirt
, _ , rlllo ~·
·
614-992·;J470 . :=..":"nyt...:.o::. =.~·

-l.n=-·
·----·-·
t-. • -..

1 -.

.._

:a..----:..·_,::..~-::..1, 143,..,.
o...-. s-p

P••-·
10:--·

milt oil At. 7,
lfh.ap,

1:00pm.

•io II Rutland "--ean•
H&amp;HSAWMILL Yonl
Ltglon, April7 &amp; ..
Portable
.8
Public S.le
Bandsaw Mill
&amp;Auction .
::A:::Ick::-:Poo=,;:;w.;_,;:;AuotiOn:.:::;
.~Com"----.:
-32124 Happy
lui tlml auctklnllr, COII"'piltt•
MICtion
.......
Hollow Rd.
-,Ohio
•
....... , - •
. 77W785.. w.. VIr.-Uc&amp;tJJ~ '

Middlepon, Ohio 45760

Danny &amp; Peggy
Bricldes .

Dirw1n,'OhiO .'

HI- Rood 8QidO
8ut1118 ®,. FIM •rtwt ........
Thln.lfo~CIII~. .

614-742-2193

3

Aucllon E..-, Sllunloy 7:00·

P.ll., -

Auctlonl ' " "

Fotdtf_....,, .

'J'om, IlL Alto -~ 2-33
""CrOieroadl", Ron
ltll'
Moen. l_nctCIIIM. pll.- JaU
merit ld fraJI• uo.

Announcements

g Wanted to Buy
C~Mn uw·cora ' br

Armouncementa

Or -.

10121/Mittn •

:

• CraJtsman Tools
! .
•Toys
•Guns
'
~ Lollds of Mls~.
',i .
Buy-Sell·Trade .
992·2060 101511 mo

14. 9 5 Plu s Pil rl s

30 4-6144

MODERN •

.... ~

51-1146457 . . . -

MD,DO~

Auctioneer

35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomerqy, Ohio 45769
Certified P~rsonal
Property J\ppralser
· Bonded· (614) 992-41179

LOIMbo..,_,tflolllol-

lor
own,""'
llln&gt;ld
- w:Fott,
- Jr.ihon "" F - VCR't, · 111-.
Dry1&lt;1, Ete. 114-256-1238.
IIEET NEW PEOPLE THE FUN
WAY TOOAY, 1oiQ0.7lWIIOII txt. ~ &amp; D'o Aulo Patio end
8002, U.B'mln. be 11 yro. buying wrockoJ- 1
of ogo. P-Co. tiG:IIIC l'C211. trucloa. Alto, poria
3047r.J..S343 ar 7'7'l-I033.
THE
PAMPERED
CHEF
"Tho KNchon 91.,. Tho! Comoo '7.fij~"i.iiii:iaii.""ii4:
~unll Con, 114 388 1012, 114To Your o-.• Looal c:o...Hant 441-7271.
AYiiloblo At:

Wonlod lo ....,.. antiquo and
~~
UMd tumltu~t.~ tt.m too llrge
LNwiiCIH For lnlonnatlon On Oodor· Of too ICIIOII. WIA, buJ ... plaCe
"'eomploll&gt; _....., o.a, llorlng ~-=-Or
.,_
unhl-.For ......
F,.. tln, ·-·l04t
.

4

llble.

Wanled To Buy: Junk Autoe
With Or Wlthoul Moten. Coli
Lllry Uvely. IM 311 iY\3. . - ~ •

GIVII!IW8y

1 Love SOot And Chllr, ltWif. Wlnlod To lut:- Lllllo Ctochoo Size IX To 7 Good .
0911 ••
Condition, 114-245 ~17.
:
2 tomalo 112 Slo- kh10111,

-.llod. ,.,...,.

"""" old.
3:104.
Block, moll, Coclcor Sponlll.
304-CI7W2011•

Kenny's Auto Rental

DAY CARE

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Co.

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

..

•Custom Made

•Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
•Free EStimates
•Starting At

S!&gt;M~ 304-e'IS-!Om.

•

malt,

Loot: Polr 01 Gold Atm Q'11 Found Ploooo Col 114-4C&amp;01711,114-3711-2303.
Lott: pelt of men'a g~..._ with
block Hlah
Sc- po~ngIt.... ~~&amp;..:Ma-3814
or OM-882-3711.
.

7

-

.

·-

.

bootd llot0&lt; With """""' Top,
&amp;14-441·1:170.
.
I Fomll)' Buon111~ Solo: April
sth '"'"' ah, w. etoch~ All
81-, 8oyo Slz• ~. l.i~­
fMw 8~ 1(61 liLM Heeltr,
Ex-lot ...... Sowing ....

......... f'l Flohlna ..., Wtlh

~·~==-~
~­
lowllood.
()jf - , I llloOt,l

RUTlAND .

742·2455

_..._,.

,...._,. • ll:ao · m.
Flldtv: ....., tdltloft • ~
()orport - : lt04 ~

end
- % DollY
. . s.nuno~,
trond'
.........
P.o:
l
721-02, ,.,.. ..,, CJhto

........

Compolor 24Ift fo7...211-3111a1-

.

Worll

~·

•

Com!KA•-"'_fiFOkiyr.
own
1111. 71441114311
...
.· - :~e·.
COOKW6RE

Wanted: ~-

Sot.

Pooplt
Doononotllllon.

I

c

In

:'tww.'

Homo

.....
Alhwca:Mit

..

Monell,
To
.....111- . . .bit, ,.,...,. .
lift.

on-

tlan. Send - " addrt
7 -~
pod
to Alamo Doot
112, 1407 Btndora Rd. llulio

ALL Y o r d - - Be Poklln
Mw•I08. DEADLINE.: 2:DD p.m.
!!!!....~~1M od .... Nft.

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

-·
_ _..

...:

~

:::. n:,.::;::._-....n:::-

~~~~

.Ext.-1861..;.

Plio-.

Clrpot lnlloll- limo, Qalllt, Pt.

Eam up to tt,OOO'o ......., lluf.
llngonv...,..llhomo.ltort ·

19M Gllttmlltet 8011 Whh
Duol Wl&gt;HI Tnollor..__I_O__IlP ln-

O....n

'"''
" "• lit..,.,

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

FOR SAU(OR TRADE
~

Brown NOIWOQIIn,

1ntw.,.. to N8Uitaf'. Reward.
304-458-t084.

"VISiT OUR SHOWROOM"

-

Lott: 1 v.... ad lllna.t:..-.
9chnauz•, YaM, 8-.ck With
White llolldngoilt Hao Coflor,
t.oh I Port
A R.,.. At·
toci*! To LNoh. &amp;14-36"J.7848
0. 114-31~75111. .

Loot:

*200· lnstalle4

LIVE
PSYCHICS
I .ON J ·

•TFtanka Mllgo •
surrounding Areal

&gt;

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

by appointme·n,I &amp;

$3.99 per min.
Mus~ be 1s yrli.
Proeall Co.

booutltul AVON

Hill II'M, t14.ff2448t.

110 l:ourt Sl., Pomeroy, Oh)o
"Look tor the Red and White Awning"

Golf Lessons

1-900-656-5000

Help Wanted
I AU Arooo I ShiTioy .

=~~·='~~·~~~~~­

3115/tl'n

oRel~goralqro ~TMZOfl •

11

We Hare Cars and Valls/

99i-5388 .

. · -club repair as w~ll
' Call John Teaford at
Chester, Ohio

s.v....
·-·
Rottw•ller/HuP:y,

old

...... 114-liC2-1410.

Kenny's is the place to ~ome .
when you need a car rental~

A.M. till 6:00 P.M.

COUNTRY
,CLUB ·

Pold: AM Old U.S.

Colno, Gold Ringo, Sl- Colno, .
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop
m Socond Annuo, Galltpolto. ·:

Ton old h'" II. Bomanll AVON to buJ otooll, lloriiY!', ,,..
dtptndtont rep. 304-112-26&amp;0 or
holl
Lob to OOOCf
·
good
w/chlldNn,
t'tOml.
114- 1-800-112-13511.
1185-3411.
AVON SPRING SALES
1Wo 1yr old, dogs, AIIWtgO II -$15 /Hr. At Work ·
..,.,H.
Dt.cauntill
1whtt• a 1bllck. to ~ -Homl
homtt. -·2155 or 304- Bonolhol No Door .uoar, tndop.
Rep. 1't00.1'1Z,..,._
882~0.
.
Kenny's Auto Center
•' ·800 · 486·1590 6 . Lost &amp; Found
Avon Wtnta lndivklu.la Int.,..
ted In Eomlng SB-1114 IHr. ,No
264 Upper River Rd. , BUS . (614) .446•9971
Door
To Dooi. 1-100-827-4640
,•..:... '. Found 4 Doro Ago: Rod I Whho
1 .(!~a:!l::lli:,:;O:::;Iis~,~O:.:,H.:;..,;:;4; :;56:: : 3;:.:1______..;;.~;;;.~m Hound Doa. R-niiY Hod Lea
.,
A-tN.Oronge Collar. e* Babromor No- In Our Homo :
441·11A.
.
I E...,lngo Por Woolt I To 2 .
..._, Roll...,... Roq..rod, '
Faund'.... Unooln
Jim Or Kerry, 6l44~$o5823 . ·
. ....
dog, lona holood,

Mon: thru Fri. 7:00

539 BitYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT ~·2772
Office Hours: MOn ..frl.
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
Vlnyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl •
·. Aaplacemef!l,
. Windows, Blown
lnaulatlon, Stonn
· Doors; Stann ·
Wlndowa', Garages.
Free Eattmates

Top -

' Employment Services

mo.

~14·985-4180

A - - . , ownoo. 114-112.

we.w• ...., ...- .

...... "'
Sill u. v... at, 1111 t will not be - b l o Don'
Wortdng
llljor Af&gt;l&gt;l"'-.
~
T.Y.'t, -.ncn,

Brochure

POMeROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
.Dally, weakly &amp; monthly rental rates. .
Job sites • Camp Sites • Fam!ly Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

BRETT

Dlconttld MOMWIIre. wan ,....
.......... old ":\':1..~•nUque
thor·
·momelera. .old
tumltw.. · Rlvertn. Anuq.,.L

lor..._

mode ls.

WV

5801 6 LMw Ma uga n No
Ont - · ThonllvSorlna _ , Ellll'll,... Fot With
Alkttlurollloduoo
Horbol ~ht,
-·~
Weight,
And
..,_ £nerar IM-441 2tl0.

Sol-.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Main S t.. Rip le y

742·3149 or 992·7285

PAINTING &amp;

5

We ser vice m ost makes &amp;

BARR'S Nursery

LINDA'S

Special offer incl u des:
1. Cll"' an moto r
5 Clean &amp; check fi lter sys tem
2. Grease roller bearings (i Check bell s
3. C l c;-111 &amp; r.hcc k agi l ;tlor 7 Cl1cc k e l ect r ical systrm
II. Clea11 ill I movmg parts 8 Rf'pl&lt;~ce fi lt er bag

One yc.lr warrilnty on wo rk performed.
Valtd on al l nationally advertised br.:wds.

Norway Spfuce ·

4W1

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

ALL FOR ONLY

Landscape Stock
White Pine &amp;

. CHESTER

•• 892-5335

POIMI'Oy,

i 1;::!!::::::~---==:.:.:::=~:!::J'~- ~ ~or....~.:,:'l:::v,=:: i=:..,
Trucko, :=
11Nf7 ...
- :=::1.. 1100

J&amp;L INSULATION

.

Crab, ..... 7tlt, .

11on

614·245-0437

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows
• Room Additloas e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

l

....

·wiCKS · =-.=.:~:.,::::.
HAULI.NG. :-":;......, • ,

State Rl33

':::::::::::==::::
· ~===~ ··

. (614) 88W881 or

(

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(.

·one mile out .
143 from Rt. 7
i
Tues. ~ Wed. • Fri. • Sat.

3/1411 mo.

Porto

Middleport
I VIcinity

' 614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

. I

•Lots of Fun aod
Learning
•Lots of
·Experience

1-900-562-7000
'Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be iS yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420 '

Sunday 1:00 p.m.

-.
..... 01..,.a-.
Atrul-.

0uelt. . . .

2mi9S

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

. Licensed

--11oi:Gtf4-

' Umiled: 740 ·
Backbore, 680 Fronl

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

CALL NOW!!!

oOiahw··•·
oH.W. Htalers
oMtcrow•- oOiopoeelo

.,~9-'~'c. MIKE MARCUM'S

2112J92tlfn

· DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
12 Gauge Only

E STi f.lATE '~

(No Sunday Calls)

TAMMY HYSELL'S

&amp;Serllct

f, IJONIJUl

614-992-7643
.r
.
-·

2AS1f
'RO/hANC2

•All MU.I o42 Yeo,..
.,.....t Rtltlbte •Waallero • t:rryoro • Raosll•l

I

.

-f

illt•!lth-. p titn II• l.t•llr
r,-.til

of'actory Aulftoriud

I

..' !'
.

1-6

·~

.,.

I

.

7/'DJ94

,.. -·

,,

.

'985-4473

949-2168

'-i,·J]Ii\ 1 (

FREE

1·800· 371·4477

Remodfln9.

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

[l ick!.,, h•l

LICEtJSED

•Complete

lth.l' \ 1HII ,qljdli, :tlll'lb

t~;ALL

CONSTRUCTION
•NeW Homes

FREE ESTIMATES

d .tlh• H. i.th •\' ].ill'&lt;,

LIMITED TIME OFFER!

ROBERT BISSELL

Gutters

1

-'

ROOFING &amp; REr.WDELING
SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RES IDENT IAL &amp; CGr.~MERCIAL
28 Years Expenence
PHO NE

.• ·. ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

...... _

ROOFING &amp; REMODEL ING

..1111

wv

~Jn miL

• NEW ' HOMES " --•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
992-5535
992·2753

v\1.

H011e Improvements
Clifton,
33151 Hoppy Hollolor Road . , Dine-in or Carry-out
Middleport, Ohio 45760
' · - 773·5612
.
•New Homes
·Bring in ad
•Acldhlons oSidlng
for-10% off.
•Roofing •Painting
oQaragea .Porches
L;WrHeeel
' •Pole Barns
614-742-3090
304-na-&amp;545

CUllom B&lt;lllcllng &amp; Remodeling

o\~.,.,,ot~\.

Magg!es Crnc!tpot

FrH Esllmatu

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION .

Bidwell, Oll45614
388-9865

--o..

RACINE

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Cr •• I' sq.. &amp;l'rlm
NEW HAVEN, WV
304 182 211116

P.O. Bdx Z20

•Gan~gea

Bill Slack
,,2~2269

KINGS'

I

PLANTING TREES - Hal
Kneen of the Cooperative
Extension Service discussed
tbe correct procedure for
planting trees at Monday'•
meeting of the Mlddlep~;~rt­
Pomeroy Rotary Club.

.Light Haultng,
Shrubs Shaped
·~nd RemQved
• Misc• .,lobs. ·.

Soil, Fill Dirt

()()''

a11p •..,..1,.,... o. sm.._

Acquisttions
91 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio

I

Limeetone,
Top

FUll. WAAIWffi' UKE NEW

Visa·
Discover
M/C

Financing Available
90 O.ys Same As Cash

...,

AND QMOVAL

Trueking-

FREE
ESTIMATES

.

Albany, , OH 45710, has
applied to the common
Pleas Court, Probate
Division of Meigs Caui1ty,
Ohio, for an order to change
his name to Billy Lee Reese.
Said appliCation will be
heard In said court, at 10:00

Hrs. of Operation: Mon.·Frl. 8:00·A.M. tl16:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00 a.m. 11115:00 p.m.
Sunctaya by appt. only.

.t Driveway..

Tune-ups
985·3879

scheduled for Saturday

Sec. 2717.01(A)

With every new
alarm Installed receive 6 month's

.
'
Sen!.....
Home Sileo, Luul ,.
Clearjns, Scplie Syllemo

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

Notice is hereby given
that Billy Lee Schwalbauch,
of 42025 Goosecreek Ad.,

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

992·9949 • 992·6471

......

Rootina, Siding, Room
Additil)ns, Concrete, etc.

.

'

Moruh

1'1

Open Monday 9-6
1
Tue&amp;day, Wedne•day, Thur•day &amp; Saturday 9-5
Friday• 9-8

Community Call Co. tnc.

311411 mo.

Returface Old Ctnm'ic n1e. And
FibllJI... Sllowtr Clxb Or Sap

Revised Coda, ....,

,

II 0\\

i

axceed $143,800.00. •
Albany,
The Vlllogo of Middleport OH 45710, hos applied to
wilt not dlocrlmlnate agalnsl the common Plaaa Court,
any applicant ljecauee ·of Probate Dlvloto·n of Molgs
race, cotar, •g•. religion, County, Ohio, for on order

••,, . national origin or
hendlc.p and lhe pereon or

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

28.95. han"dpainted &amp; enameled

Walnut and Front Streets
and on the Ohio River. The a.m., on the 1Oth day of any or an bids. Seated bids
Proprietary Funda
project will consist of: (1) May, 1995, lt Probate Court should be in clerka hands · 1 Operating Aev•nue•:
the purchase of six lots and ol Meigs County, Ohio.
by April9, 1995.
Chargee for otrvlc01 ........
the removal of all structures Robert E. Buck, Judg&lt;l
-··Sand written bids to Clerk (............. ., ................ 176,248
on· lhe sites; (2) the (4) 6 1TC
Paul Moore, 32785 Pleasant · Flnoo, Llconoeo &amp; Pormlto
pr•perat!Qn end paving of·
VIew Ad., Roclne Ohio
............,........ :............. 8.714
the site for boater parking;
45n1 •
Total Rocelpto .. ,.... 184,962
(3) the purchaoe and
Public Notice
Paul S. Moore· Clerk
DISBURSEMENTS
Poroonat Sorvlceo .. 43,379
ln1tallatlon of a 30 foot _ _:...::.:.:..:.=.:.:.:.....__ SuHon Township Trustee
lloat.l ng Courtesy dock on
~:~~~AJ~~,?T~~;';~~
(3} 3D, (4) 6 2 TC
~~~~.~.~t.~~~..~~~~.~:3:'49i
tho Ohio River; (4) lha
Public 'Notice i_ ' 1 Supplleo &amp; Mattrtalo ........
widening·and paving of an In The Matter' of Darrell
o,..a 6 feet by approxlmalaty J~nlor Baughman, Case No,
Thomoo E. Forguoon '¥
................................. 33,814
50 feet ot the existing 2
. Auditor of State
Copltal Outlay........ .,.3,412
approach ramp. A copy of
NOTICE
Financial Report Of
Debt Strvlce ........... 72,248
preliminary plano Ia
Rev toed Coda, ·
Townohlpt
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS
ovalllibte of r.equllt ot the
Sec. 2717·01 (A)
For Floctl Year Endlnll
............................... 20&amp;, 360
Notice IS hereby given
December 31 1914
• Total R•c•lpta over/under
village Hall.
~
The toUII cost of the project that Darrell Junior
Rutland Vlll~ge,
Dlaburaem1nta ......,. (21,398}
and lmprovementl i1 not to

~92-215.6

·.

$9.00 each

Public Notice
PubliC Notice
Public Notice
·PROBATE COURT OF
The Sutton Township
PUBLIC NOTICE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Trustees will accept sealed
The VIllage ol Mlddleporl In The Malter of Billy Lee bids for year 1995 for
will accept propo1ala lor Schwalbauch, ·case NO. mowing of 10 cemeteries at
engineering aervlces at 28878
the directiol) of trustees.
Middleport VIllage Hall. 237
NOTICE .
Bids may be su~miHed In

A·lt engineering eervlcea,
obtaining ·of nece,aary

The News Ho-t line

.

Spring DofA rally at Meigs rally. ·
Chester.
· High Sarurday
·
Betty Young, district councilor,
Initiation was held for one can. The spring tally of District 13, presided at the meting. Scripture didate, Naomi Gundy or L'ogari
DaughteB of America. wUI be held · was read, the Lord's Prayer and Council 120. Helen Wolf was
Saturday at Meigs Higb School.
pledges to the Christian and Ameri· pianist for lhe meeting. Reporis
Plans for the rally to begin at can flags were given in unisoo.
were given by Janice Zwilling, sec·
9:30 a.m. were made during a
Officers received were JoAnn retary, and Opal Hollon, treasurer.
·reeent' meeting held at the Chester Baum, vice state councilor; Betty
Others attending were Mary C.
lodgehall. .
Biggs, Disttict 13 deputy; Esther Moose, Bernie Congrove, Irene
Members were reminded that Smith, past state councilor; Mar- Phillips, Ruth Bunthoff, Logan
iables will be prepared at8 a.m. for garet Cotterill, national represenra- Council 120; Robert Harden,
lhe luncheon which wiU be catered. tive; Eileen Clark, member, state Nathan Biggs, Guiding Star Coon·
A practice was' beld Saturday and legislative committee; Sylvia cill24; Jean Welsh, Everett Gran~
Friday nigbt at 7:30p.m. the meet- Bownes, deputy state councilor, Lora Damewood, Elizaberb Hayes.
ing room will be set up. MembeB Logan Councill20; Esther Harden, Doris Grueser, Thelma White, Opal
were asked to be there at 7:30p.m .deputy state councilor, Guiding Eichinger, Goldie Frederick, Laura
to help. Betty Biggs, District 13 Star Council, Syracuse; Erma Cle· Mae Nice, Mary K. Holter, Marcia
deputy, spoke briefly about the land, deputy slate councilor, 323, Keller, Kathryn Baum, Charlotte
Gran~ Ella Osborne 3Jid Erbcl Orr.' ·

Ohio 45760 until Monday,
April 24, 1995 at 3:30 p.m.
for the fdllowlng project:

..

.999 Fine
Silver
.
Rounds·or Bars

.

R1ce Street, Middleport,

April&amp;, 1115 ,

\ 1: I l
F \ L \\ \11\ 1;

•

rally~

Pomero~lddleport, Ohio

Dr,

F.!ldlr. ..._, ..... T.v• ._,

~-------------------------·~~~I~M~~~ ~~~~ T~

tSW!t,SonAnlonto·TXU.:

Eam.up to ttooo ~ •u~Mt ·
.......... home. "-" ,..
No u....-a. FrM et'JIP'~
F- lnfoo1ootlon. No &lt;lblljrOIIon.
!lind S.A.S.E to ~. Doot,
K, P.O. Boa 14e.n Oo1aiMio, ~L·
12814,

.

lndl
odio11 Pon....,-11~
Hovon-11_,, -

'·

tuoo .._

1-..

- · Dlllvory ....,••,

-loot·---.
--To·-.
Contacl A&gt;ron

2134oxtl24.
L.-

111or11111ng

11Joio

-.......

r..

Phyoeloltt And Hoollll c...
Foollitltt. 11 ..t . Hovo ~
Com-ion lklllt, Soil,
llotlvotod, And - . . . oonothr. · 1om Mtclcol Ex·
-od 1o A Pl.._ 1c1o11
Pa.fUon For RN. LPN, RT,
Or
PT L!&gt;ofUnll For A c:hongo. IDE,
All . . . . . Coolldol41ci1, ~
... To: CLA' Mt, oJo Go1.
lpollt Dttlv
121 TlliN
A'Nnu.t, o.liJpolla. d4 41111.

-nc:.

or.

r-.

,g,

..

�.·
•

Aprll6,11195

j

Ohio

OOP

11

l'llft:lllncll•

jvsf jq;Ep
~Ai 1 tJI:! To

•Q 6 5 2

y.~tzSHf .

¥8 3
tKQJ54
- •7 4
EAST
J4
• 9 8 7 •3
4
¥AJI095
109762 .
o8 ·
AJ9 6 3
•QI0 5
SOUTH
•A K 10
•KQ762
tA 3
•KB 2

"C utai&lt;&gt;St Ty
j&lt;::l , ....-;I&gt;

5I()LW e£

"1ii6
cA'f.:...

i'tJ \Jf'tHLL
fleKI TO FI\S.S:
~IA:i&gt;f.l

.o
0
D

•
•
74

Motorcyclel

Vulperable: Both
Dealer: South
South
West North
Pass 1 •
I •
'Pass 3 NT
2NT
Opening lead: •

11185 - etwft NVMIIe
ZIG 8lf~ric
Rod
,.......,,
1
1

....
11,2111.
Hc;.d. - 200 -...,Rid
3wlllllr
...... ,._..,.., aleCitrtl:
$100.~.

Mobile Hom•
for Sale

Mart

!

CODE #5!!

11114 GSX 7IOR 8uzuld. $1100.
304-175-3:121.

-JN.

UIIITED OfFER lEW MXlO
DOWN, 11111110.. FREE
DEUVERT a IElUP.
IIIH.

6 Motors ,
!..=71!:~~~fo~r~Sa~l~e== 175 Boats
for Sale

OM' 1 oom · ..,cnw~~, _..

a..,.,.....

PonuOf,

GOSSIP DON'T GIT
NO BEn'ER'N

S1letflno.,

1100 dlpDIII. no pll8. .,......,.

GoLHoi..YI!tlor--M,
IO_.!W.
Iron.
Call...,. ..,_, 01 FurMce,. 1-GC-,c!D"

eo-,... .Coli

;~~~==:.=~=-=:
....- now -trplj)l
'
Go o
dnlnplpa
In olock. Sldoro
~- For E. . WOtoo. Eot•l""'""', 304-1711-11121. -

Two

bEdroom

aplltment,

utllh.. pokl, ........ porldna.
rtvor
· 1310/mo.. 118.
aGD
..,...,noP~~~a,I1Mt2

=:

Aniund
Inc. Adl'llllllon ... 11t 3M 1300.

•

Pets for Sale

!liS

1141111117.

T~AT KID 01/ER TllERE ~ ~E

SO MAD IN

'f

Unfwnlehed
nnn1111,
- . . , , 2nd floor,
both, no poto, reM- oncl
114o1124271

- PEANUTS
J'vE NE'IER BEEN
ALL M'&lt;

WH'( DON'T '(OLJ SNEAK
UP.6EI-t1ND HIM, AND l-IlT
HIM WITH A STICK?

WON ALL M'( MARBLES!!
l-IE NEVER TOLD ME WE
WERE PLA'(tN6 FOR ''KEEPS'!

LIFE~

~-"11

......

. Furnished

. feet, running rings around your
nents. Round one!

Roomolor rant·- 01' mOI'IIh.
tltortlngol . - . Holol.

••••o.

304~'773-IM1,

=-=--wv.
2:00 p.m.,

'FRANK &amp; ERNEST

MallOn

---Ior-In
·--l
48 Space for Rent ·
~ -

0011111,

TF.VANCY SUPPOilT
G,OUP

and

- · Inc~ ooblo ovou-.
- · · IUot 10 mjnlll• IR&gt;m

Merchandise

estate advertising In
this newsPa"per i&amp; subject 10
All f881

PTIFT poop1o . - t o _ , .
Opportunity
lobolo o1 - C a l l ..W1-INOTICEI
'!1'14117 LDioll.
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSIINO CO.
....mrMndl lhlll J'DU dD ......
.,.. wllh pooplo y... k,_, ond
NOT lo oond- through lho
m•ll untH you hive ln.,.lplH

.the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes II Illegal

...IYihlna lo
304..1Hfl2.

Ola~

.

Household ·

TO

Goods

to adveitise •any preference,
sex familial status or national
orlglh, or any lntenllon to

BORN LOSER

,.
"'
11\JRRIC.~ AATIIE,

make any such preference,
Umltallon or discrimination. •

butlnooO.

Homes lor Sale

..

ThiS neW$PiiiP8r.wlll no\
advertisements lor rea~ e&amp;l'fe
which Is In violation or the taw.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings·
advertised In lhls newspaper'
are avaUable on an equ£1.1
opportuntfy basis. '

=

v.,_, no

2br - . m1 111
Coh 304.en.U7:1

=--·
a-

oftor

To Qolllpollo, suo-,
3

Bed~, ........

r- bod"""" houot In a,.,. Many updMM. Honing
..-us
-ua
· utter
dopool1
a1t
&amp;pm. roqulrocl,
Unlurnlohod 2br ........ llvlno,

CounlrY Fumlture-l'umMu,. lor
Eoory Room. lml., AI. 2 North,

PI.P....n t . - 0 . "
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wlohoro. drrono. ,.fltgorMore
llngt!l. !lkoggo _Appllo.- 'iii
Ylno SI-Lpoll 114-4441·73N, 1·

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolt homo tumlohlnao.
Houre: lion-Sat, w. 114-MI0322, 3 .,.._ out lulovlllo Plko
FreoDoiiYOry.
PICKENS FURNITURE
.
NtwAJood
No opplloncoo, Houoohold fur·
nlohlng. 112 mi. Jonlc:ho Rd. Pt.

.,_.,._n

P.ll. A1 Tho
O.lllpollt.

1Wo _

_,, 1r011or In Rutlond,

114-812-lm.

WH1om

32 -' Mobile Homes
for Sale

71100.

61 Farm Equipment

bod lilt. 2 AKC B - cloto, 1
........ 1 ......
11110
Lumina, 4clr, $3500. 304-I'JI..
1043.

t1-.

-·
-- :...... .
Pl....m. WV, call 304-175-14SG,
114 US IU8.

Quilting ..._ ......... 114-1112-

SWAIN

hoo•ohald tumiOiolngo. Will bur

~mr amount, largel•mtll. 501
Socond 81., ~.
Ownor-

Aocky

Gtovely And Twa Rkllna TIICo
tOI'I a 11a.c. SM-388-1144, 114·~11111.
•
JD 2 Row Com Planter, Good
Condhloro, 114-14U134.
Mo- Forguoon 15 P-r
StN~ng, Uvo PTO. 113,850; 1111
Ford Llvt PTO 13,850; Lolt
Modtl 37 Horet
Int.,....
tlonol Turf Tlreo, ...350; 1142118-1522.

AUCTION • FURNITURE. 12 Rae Fumlluro. w. ~pr, oo11 onc1
onllquo
,_,_
Oho . .. Golllpollo. - . Uood ttodo

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

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

lolwoon t A.M. •1 P.M. 114-1411-

wv.

-roon. :100·77W341.

-r

44

Apartment
for Rent

2010.

MocJ.I 12 WlncheM• 30 Inch
Full, E1collonl Condftloll, I Shol
Nor Johnoon 22 Plotol Vory
Good Condhloro, CoR Anytlmo,
814-317-7V27.

Af.l i MPl~IOI'id~

IIJt·.&gt; " ... . ' IMPl.O~IOt.:. "

18113 Nlooon Sontto E, AJC,
1mlfm radio c....ne, lutomllk;
ttlnamleak»n, excellent condltlon. mUe~~g• 18.000, call 614t14t4113ohor ...m.
.,.

812.em.

Plono, 1400 OBO, 114-

441-1111 L..v. ........

BIG NATE
HAVE A C:HIN I
&lt;I•

·I•

OYKFOT.'

I

re~IIY. affected me until Elv1s · - John Lennon

·

....

WOlD

I

H y MG I T

I I' I I I

I
.
I. I" I I /
uQ 5

E

~:

5

0

.

.

.

.

_

'

.

1fle chuckle quoted

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS

FOR ANSWE R

r l'

I I I

I'

3

'

I I I I

Grann y always taught us to lhink twice before we did
anythi ng. She believed that actions are best interpreters
of our THOUGHTS,
•

•
ii'ii~ [,·~·~~~!

Services
81

Home

;

Improvements '•

undersla~:~d:·~~~~~~J.~tl~~~~~

Specl•l FMder C. If S.a.: s.tur·

ASTRO · GRAPH

Frltloy. All Con-

lng Avollolil'!t IM-IIIWS3\ 814Alh.na Uveetock
!loin, Albony, Ohio.

on
by
ing the influences which are governing
you · in the year ahead . Send for your
Astro-Graph pred1Ct1ons today by mailing

$2 and a SASE to Astro·Graph. clo this

582-2322.

,newspaper. P.O . BolC 4465,: N ew York ,

Hay&amp;Graln

BERNICE

Plumbing&amp;,

•

~~~glooo top. tuoO. -

F•mon·o ~..,,~ AndCoollng.

lnllllalfaUo., • 'l md

a.t il~. "~'"~" ,,,

Corlllltcl. Rooldontlol, eom....,.
clol. 11441111-1111.

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

@

tV-••..

~

Froday, April 7, 1!195

to gelling 1mponan1 !hongs done Ooerate I
on your own

NY 1Ot 63. Be sure to stale your zodiac

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-tlov. 22) Today you

sign.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Beware of
inclinations today lo overreact when you
'others offend you. There is a strong "os-

might spend more 11me talkmg ~bout
inlelllions than do1ng "nythtng about
them . Pro&lt;;tuce ftrst and let the results
. speak for themselves.

sibility that you'll read more onto things

SAGITIARIUS {Nov. 23· Dec. 21) It os

thcin IS rntended .
GEMINI (May 2 1 ~ une 20) Fmancia! con·
ditlons could be subjected to btg sw1ngs
today .• Through carelessness or extrava·

b6st not tO become 1nvolved 1n SituatiOns
where ot~rs have more control than you
do. You weren't meant to play second f•d·
die.

'"'IUUI~'---.~---_,g..ance;--losseo might overpower any gaons

CBirtlld.ay

LI"IHA (Sept. 23-0 c l . 23) Partners
companions could be more of a h1
drance than a help today when 11

CAPRICORN ( Dec. 22·Ja n. 19) Your

you make.

mate m1ght be JUSt as determrned as you

CANCER {June 21-July 22) Plan all of

.are today 10 have his/her own way An

your moves caref ully today , because If

impasse wrll re sult 11 bolh parttes are

you dent you might do things the hard · unyoelding and stubborn.

. , Before. launching any, ne.~enoOl'&amp; OJo· way_1.-rl.Q.your SfT\biliOf'IS could go unfulAQUARIUS tJan. 2D-Feb. 19) C~:H¥ork·
• -~ntefpliie&amp; i~ thl!ty&amp;a:rahead. finish what fi lled.
"'\~
' ers might not pertorn1 up to your expects·
, ' you 've already slarled. Your bast LEO {J.uly 23·Aug. 22) Today ~00 might 11ons Ieday. Instead ol comong Clown on
· ...chances for success .will come from have difficulty dtstinguishing b~tween a
them and stirring up more trouble , sel an
1hings that alread~ have a good founda· fresh affront and \"old grudge. f'or your example1or iham to follow.

·~.

11178 Cadillac Sovlllo 30,000
Ortglnaf Mlloo, lmmoculoto
114k'111ho donotloro olo loonolruck Coridhlon, ~liking: ~~~ 1032
olnet lho .,...... It • not lor 441-«!00 Doyo; •
,
profh CGrl&gt;Oilllon. A oo~lflcalo I Evonlngo.
lof'f'llut Will ... ro·l ~ld for tax
· Co
U.. Fonn
MuooOHn Tuoit.sot 11-1 ol 304WV .... ftlrftt MuMUm II a..tl-

pu-

lion.
peace of mind, lorgive an&lt;llel go.
ARIES {March 21·Aprll 19) Outsiders VIJIGO {Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) Oo not let
are apr to find you easy and forgiving your curiosity get the better ol you IOday
today. bill lhls mlgh1 not be true of family and Impel you to poke your 'nose into an

17H737.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20/DO--net put
something you value on jeopardy ioday .
This could pertain to relationships, as

well as ma1erial possessoons.

members . If they anger you, there will be 1 affair where jt dOesn't belong. It mighl be

'' '

•

•

....-=Nothmg

A

'

Ml1tcl Hoy 11.110 /Bolo; 114-311- '12 Chovy 4140 NM grool,
11118 Or 111-441-2539.
boily --. 11100, 1143711-1401.
Round ..... ot lllled HIIJ, 114111111 JIIOP CJ7, !Uno gooc1, good
388-11123.

'

OK

JOEKHZT
BCH (i)ITFK .
PBE'I!OUS SOLUTION: "Rock 'n' roll os instant coffee ." - Bob Geldol.

V

~

. Heating -

In ~

&lt;;DTE ,

MCC

Pursue· Whoop · Tangy· Hurtle· THOUGHTS

82

Core

CTHEK

K U T

DE

- SB

SCRAM-LET$ ANSWfRS

BEDE OSOL

- -.
Lody
.........For,.

- HFK .

·e

WELL , UNDER.NE...TH IT
ALL , l AC.TUALLY 1)0

doy, April a At 1 P.M. Tho,. Will

· ~Autol"for Sate ·

' CSZT

bv fdltng m the m• » rng words
L....l..-L...l..-L....l........J yOu develop from sre p No 3 below

Flinch, Pon.roy,

Transportation

OPNTF .

.

71100.

64

HYYT

I

·uso
-

algnmen•• Are. Welcome, H•ul--

o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Suncloy 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 1-..zsae.

H F K

1-.....;;..16...::..,;1::._;..1...::..,;170--TI-;:1-.:;CJ.;."~OlJ.t~~p."j-e~~"

auno 10.11 Montho Old. Rtcl a
Bloelt, Somt Polltcl, 114-38;&lt;

On

PSOFHJT .'

FTVDDFTE

'H C C

My ·
in our
family history . \11/h i[e going over
some fam ily documents she
L-.J........J_..L..-1....-l " laughed , "\11/h ile re5e\3rChing our
B UT E
family tree I discovered a mixed

113,500, 8.11-245-1111.
.
. Threo point Contury oproyor,
$200, 114-812·71115..

P.M.

by Luis Campos

Celebnty Cipher Cfyp\Ofl'*ms are created trom quolai iOt'IS by tarnous ~ - pasl W'4'0fttMnt
Each lener ln !he apher stands lor anolf·lt'r. Today'• ciW P ~~· C

T

MOtor Homes
1m St1rcraft pop-up camp«,
Nfrlge,..orL IIOVI •nd tlnk,
oloopo olgm,
OBO. 114-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"-~_:_.,.::.....;....:..~~5

Regl11t1red Pu,.brtd llmoutln

Spinel

Buy or MH. Rlnrl• AnllqUH,
1124 E. Main SlrMt, on At 124,
Pome4oy. Hou,.; M.T.W. 10:00

--·

. E-~Pl!61 0~

Trenemllalona. UHd, r.buiiiJ..!II
lnlpeclld, CiJUll'lniMd. 304-a-,..

le ltnl'l1 Held Of ' Prec~
dhlorwd C.ttt• At Thl• S.le. All
C.tta. Mar a. B~hlln After 4

/lilt TNo0011,
2tlyro . ......~·lnourod, Mtlmld•. ...........1111 - 1..0.

. K.INDOf'UI(EAA

_j__A" "

Now ldoo Uni.Svotom 7060
Pow• Untt Whh COmbine And
Gl'lln T•ble, Good Condhkm,

Rocking 0

Stockomotlc For Solo, 1100, 814-

Wanted-to Do ·

1-JEU.., UK£ AA

Ohio, 814-712·3033.

388.f771.

18

,..

52 Hold on
property
53 Floh etKJI
1 -~...1......1......1 155 Whoellrock
57 Femaltahllp
-

1...,._+--!-

.. '

tricks before tryi ng a hea rt, bu t t
Stoa t takes the ace and the Crusher is
out for the count. only eight tricks won .
The Crusher should ·have Jried the
spades first, just in case the jack fell in
one or two rounds . Then, with this layoul , he cou ld have won on point s by
way or four spades, four diamonds and
one club.

Mlloo South l:it Gallloollt At Ju...
lion AI. 7 • AI. 211, •14~8-3717.

=

Quallly Houllhold FumiiUN ·RtflttlorMore. Stovoo, w.-.
And Applloncoo. G- Doolo On And llryoro, All Aoconcltlontcl. 63
Ll st k"
Cooh And Conyl RENT.a.o\YN And o.utotUtcll 1100 And up, ~;;;;~;;v~e~ociiiii4i.l;4:
And Loyowor lloo Avolloblo. Will DoUvor. 8Mo48N441.
2~. 114'311 11141, 114F• Dollvoty Whhln 2S Mllto.
RoraJ blue ~uln prom dreM ~11111.
tor 1.ono11o, olzo 1, lona a1o- •
52 Sporting Goods
..,rinp to match. 30.f.Q'S.I203. 3 112 yr.. Old whh•locod polt.d
ho..IOnl ...... bull, 114-1192•
..... ~ .. Sldo 'iOOnt. E"'O'YYhlna S.m 1om• wllle'a Anny Surplva, 207U.
Orlglilol ~ PIUO y_,. Oltl caniO&lt;IIIoao louby clothing, br Ont 3 year old Htroford bull,
~·-~~oe•nr Or Dolt&lt; ook ilonCh !londyvllli Pool Olllct, noon- wolgho 1- lbo., very gtnlltj
:ZXI FL Aootonglt Mirror, FrHiun. HooVI'· wlnlor live H.,.eford hel~. one 111a
W-n Canopy Wfth In Trlcolo
bono choCko). 304- twa' rrw.-okl, OJ*1: •o, f.t cat·
Carving, Two 1 A. ShoiVto, 3
tie tor the tr.zer; call 814-185Dnwo,. Corvod Wnh 011..
3805.
Pullo, Two 3d ·FL Corvtc1 Dooro !loo,. 11 hp. riding lownnoawor1
With Glott Pullo Corvtcl Loa $250; ._ high bock Lloya Roglolortcl ANGUS bullo, 1-24
With Cootore, $aM, OBO, 114' owlvol ·cholra, t1001pr.; 814-1149- month•, prtcld IIOO-S1200.
371-1111.

Soulh-ot Plck·U:r. Porto ltdo,
Cabo, Dooro Fon ,. a Mort. 3

I

11 Singing
oylloblt
19 Cor
21 Copllal ol

{018clly)

~BJ&gt;O ·

ther . He takes his remaining diamond

41110. Ablt to work Wlaomo •n Stlinza - ..,~H . 1tB7 Nl..an clol
ntodo.
Contury 11495. -r·o Uood
~ .... 304 ..82-3'112. .
j
Truck bodo. Chov., Ford, Dodge,
ond S.tO; ohort &amp; long. 3114-1751112 Pontiac Orand Am SE, 8288. .
•
quad 4, 4dr, ac, tilt, crut... DJI,
corod. 304-8112-2359 ohor 79
campers• .

=.(..

TRAVEL USA
lmmtcllott ap.nlnao For Freo To Slo~ AI 0.... No b ' In WV or Ohio .,.., l....at2- - .... _ ,. .lbcollonl et38.

Po_...
...........
Frklor, Aprtl
7th, 10 A.ll. To 4

Nlct Oldo Acnooonlo Plono

seoo; Okl a.ctroom Suit•, t2SG.

.,.,..-...

khchon, both, lo town.
1t.
11751month. sot.e75-241! oftor Wort&lt;-1
Spm.
VI'R~rfrt:URE
1118

b.,.,... Dl•••• AooounlforAndA .Three bt.-oofio, one blth, full

1812 FOrd TouNO V.e, loodtcl,
$9115. 1812 Oklo Cutlooo
SUpremo $121111. 1888 Chovy
VIII, loodtcl $111!. 111111 Ford
At-or Von 1191111. 111111 Oklo
M, loocltcl, $211111. 11181 GIIC
d._l pickup 119115. 1987 Nl•

- knowllngly accepl . • '

41 Houses for Rent

Trll~ Psowl~ld

..-' ..
'

mold8,

Real Estate

WIN)

limitation or dlscrtminauon
based on race, cotot. rellglon,

tho ollorlng.

Aluminum . concret•

tiiV~AwAY
.
- TON16t4T
(Nftt&gt; NOT 8E P~tSfNT

··· llAffL.E

Alhono,

F1nanc1al

,_
"

9 Tooklhe bul
10 Unclt'owlfw

animal•

Moving smoothly into the middle
the ring is Crusher Carter. He jabs one
heart with hi s 1~- poinl powerhouse .
After partner:s response of one spade.
he uppercuts to two no-trump. Partner
raises fo game.
Wes t , Wea sel Watkins . le ads his
fourth -hi g hes t cl ub. Eas t, Stoat '
Soames, punches in the que en. Th e
Crusher, not pausing for brea th, wins
wilh the club king, cashes his ~· :~~&amp;-~t
ace arod plays a diamond to d
jack. Th e Stoat's ' he arl discard
like a particularly powerful blow to the
solar plexus,
The Crusher staggers, realizing he
doesn't have five diamond tricks . He
turns to spades, but t,hey don't b·reak ei·

.

111
tllooplng raomo whh cooklna.
&amp;l.o tniler_ ~ Of'l ~.r. All

........ Clll

(abbr.) .

a Enouah

S Pononwllhl
loud voice
6--111

..._,....,..,..~: .. Tlbel
24 lnltalt
25 River in
!.....+--+~
lelglum
26 Root tc1ve
28 -table
(oarvo food)
30 Actor
Roborl31 fool part
32 lleglnner
34 Cut In cuboo
38 A lortlllzer
39 Morine floh
41 Slllpl~·
tlckneoo Hy
45 Ordoln
47 Fit
48 Wooden
poiH
49 Catches
51 Anllerod

In this column , try to stay on your

· Rooms

7 Cheml..ldyo

4 Storoge pi-

1 Drllfl egcy;
2 Bitter nut
3&lt; Firing uucero

East
Pass
All pass
6

·Despite the prais eworthy e fforts or
Mothers Against Drunk Driving
tMADDl, drunk driving is still a bane in l
our society. Drinking before or during a
bridge session isn't recommended. &lt;I
remember playing extremely well one
anernoon after two pints of beer with
lunch. But it caught up wilh me in the
evening and we plummeted out bf the
frame .J This led me to thinking about
bridge acronyms, and I have come up
with JABB - Journalists Against ·Bad
Bridge.

18ft Thu~Z:+ 1110hp Mor·
cury. 904-17
ool&lt; tar 1141 or
304-115-3MIIftor 5pm.. ,

~- You E- Wonlod To
.....

•. .

DOWN

Ouncan
35 Chop- .
36 Son ol Jacob
37 Reoplretor
40 Build
42 Aunlln ~eln

By Phillip Alder

1x10
Albor eo7 P.M .•M-441~127.

~~ ~ ~=:
12:oo. VInton Roc-

44 C - I t t pl.
bh~
46 8oii119'VIclory
5 plbbr. .
I R~
46 City In UUth
12 lllld
50 Revolutionary
13 Instrument .
53 ~
14 - Town
Chorl-15 Nonaw
54 O'Haro
oponlng
monolon
11 eomtDI'I
se Authok17 Genetic
Wletll /
mollrlol {obbr.) se Tobit ocrop
18 Typo of flu
51 Robbll tall
2D CoYO
flO Dlolort
22 Sl011h
61 l\1.,. of CUI'¥0
23 - deg62 Diminutive
24 Groin
ouffl•
27 Haul
63 Anglo·Sa•on
29 Lu•ury baal
oleve
33 Dancor-

And .in
the blue corner

THAT II

:11113.

.

org. . •

1 North A!Ynllc

PHILLIP
ALDER

-er--r.;:=

43 lllddll EM! ·

ACROSS

BRIDGE

•

• .I

�(

.

.

·~

Pltg1 12-Tlle Dilly Sentinel

:i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thuradey, April I, jlllf

father-daughter bond borders on obscene
: Dear ADD Landei-J: The man iD
1RY llfe is Sl. I liD 42. 'Chet"llld I
· ~ve bod! been married before. We
:Cet alons pretty 'A(ell, but 1 am
Jroubled about his relationship with
flia 26-year-i&gt;ld forma&gt;aepdalgh~·
~verna." They enjoy telling each
other dirty jokes and talk endlessly
~bout se~ . There are ~exuil
.~- 10 every ronversauon.
: When Verna 1s present, Chet
Jgnorea me: More than once, he has
shu! doors 10 my face at reslauranl.l,
havmg forgotten that I was .P~l.
Last 'Week, he IOid me 10 sll m,~e
ftont~ofthecar~~ecoulds1l10
, ~~With '\lema. (His mother was
drivmg.)
.

Vtmawearsb.ghtswea~_.low-&lt;:111

~l~ses and m1cro mm1sk1ns. She
tsn tat all ~fu.l about what shows
whensheSliS.ThJSyoungwornanhas
been theeause of many fights. 1have
!Old Chettheir .unh~llh~ father·
daug~ter relauonsh1p 1s very
upsetbng 10 me. He says he talks 10
~ about sex ~use she has ~o
su:lfnends and doesn tget along w1th
1

.

Ann
landers

'

I wonder how many widows this WClCb Iince he problbly hid line
lonely woman botheml 10 include weela of VICIIion a ,._:)
wheaslaewasa"wife.'111belitnever
No wonder the Ponunc soo
&lt;:rolled her mind. I'd like 10 say, companies arc IICI fortun~~e•. T.beJ;.pt
·, 110,
"Welcome to the 'club, dearie. Now a job performance worth
,._~.,.
you knowhow it feels.'
S.93,000ayearbutpaytheemp
·c - . ' - '
May I give a liule advice 10 widows only SSS,OOO. A.nd people t nk
. herrnodler.
who feel abandoned by former unionsarcnolongernecesaai')l. In my opinion, this borders on friends? Get off your rump and make ORGANIZER IN NEW JERSEY
.incest 1 aee trouble ahead and I'm a life for yourself. Nobody is going
DEAR N.J.: An interesting
limd qtflghtillg about it.
should . 10 adopt you. There is life after a~alysis. Anyone in management '
widowhood, but no one is going to · WISh 10 reSPOnd? Malcolm (Steve)
1 do? •• SOMEWHERE IN MO
DEARMO.:You'vebecnmuchiOO present i110 you on a silver plalte[ Forbes Jr., my line is open.
permi~ive. Tell Chet either 10 stan •• ONE WHO HAS BEEN THERE
Gem of ihe Day: One reason you
llaling~likeadaU,Ilhterandyou
DEARB.T.:Ireceivedasraggering can't like it with you is becapse
like!hernostimporl8ntW9flllllinhis number of letters fro111 widows. The ,...,_there's not much lefi when it's lime
life, or it's all ova:
ones who arc having the best lives 10 go.
lfherefusesiOmakeaclioice,hand are those who shan: your point of
When plann"ing a wedding; who
him his hat and show him the doot view.
pays for what? Wha stands'WMtt?
You would be 1 fool 10 continue
Dear Ann Landers: "Somewhere "The Ann Landers Guide for Britks"
playing second fiddle 10 his in Ohio" said he earned $55,000 a has all the answers. Send a self·
stepdaughte[
year in his Fortune 500 position. He addressed, long, business-si•e
Dear An~ Landers: 1 Just read worked60hoursaweek.Icalculated ·. envelotnandacheckormoneyonkr
anOther letter in your column from a what he would have earned had he for $3.75 (this inc/udu po.!lage alld
whining widow complaining that no been paid for thoae extra 20 hours at hand/.ing) to: Brides, c/o Ann
one includes her for an evening since the ovc:nirne lllte oC lime-llld-a-half. l..muJers; P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
her husband died. .
Hisannual.unpaidovertimeeomes 10 J/1. 60611·0562. (In Canada, send
$38.000. (1 based this on 49 worlcing $4.55.}

Lot.._
wlW

1993 FCRD
.. PROBE GT
.•

·- MIDDLEPORT - TOPS Club,

ThurSday, 5:15 tO 6
weigh-in American Revolution, 1:30 p.m. port Group, Sunday, 2 io 4, French
followed by meeting at Middleport · Friday. at the borne of Margaret 500 Room, Holzer Medical Center.
Cblin:b ofCbrist
·
Weber, Rutland. Fred Crow to be a Dr. James Young, dermatologist,
1
special guest
· Holzer Clinic. ··
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladiea
$A.TURDAY
Auxiliary 1egular mcetin1 Tburs' MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Community
·day, 7:30 p.m. Members urged to Assault Prevention Program, egg
POMEROY - Easter breads
attend.
workshop, Senior Citizens Center,
bun~ Saturday, Middleport munici·
Pomeroy,
Monday, 10 a.m. to
pal park, II a.m. Prizes and candy
RACINE -Racine Post 602, for cbildren participating. Invited noon. By reservation wilb deadline
American Legion, Thursday, 6:30 preschoolers through third grade. Friday, call 992-6696. To be conmeeting wilb dinner to follow.
For additional information call ducted by Cindy Oliveri, Extension
agent.
·
Monica Dodrill, 286-6611.
FRIDAY
I
RlJil..AND - Return Jonathan
SUNDAY
Meigs Cbapfer, Daughters of the
GALLIPOLIS
- Diabetic Sup·'I '
•

•

~

Vol. 45, NO. 240 :

"Wildflowers" was tbe program fomia.
'topic of Stella Aikins for the Rut·
Pauline Atldns' article was enti·
)and Garden Club-meeting held Ued "Killer Mice" from tbe Farm
recenlly at tbe home of Pauline Journal. Sbe said they are carriers .
Atkins.
1
of a disease called Hanll Virus, a
Cloline Blackwood was co· disease wbicb is usually fatal. The
bostess for lbe meeting. Mrs. Stella disease bas only been recognized in
·Atkins •alked aboutlbe beauty and Ibis country since 1931.
· varieties of wildflowers. Articles
The regional meeting to be beld
' included "&gt;~1ildlife in Your Br.ck i;: Athens on April 22 was
: Yard" by Belly L~wry; "'!::lis of annob::r.ed along witb a board
:Spring" by Marjorie Rice, and meeting to i..t bcld Satufday at
·Marcia Denison on tbe "Irish Chester. A report ,·.'as made on a

Pauline Atkins,. Stella Atkins
and Mrs. Webster furnished flowers for cburcbes. Allegra Will and
Pauline Atkins displayed arrangements of daffodils. Faye Cottrill
won tbe door prize furnished by
Mrs. B lackwo6d.

Lowry closed the meeting
growin~~·~:~~"Jn:~ce;nl!vt~·s~i~l
IO~flle~~~· ~~De;v~el~-... withBeity
·:Shamrock"
meadows from (ound
Washington
10 II! ·• opment Center.
another poem called "Tbe
Daffodil."
·"
Ohio University
College of Osteopalhic Medicine ·

Family
Medicine

Alfred news
notes

1992 Plymouth
Voyager SE •

7 passenger, V-6, Auto, ·
Air, Tilt, cruise, Cassette.
1 - owner low miles.

1992 Foi'dTempo GL

.2 door, air, stereo cass.,
sun roof, 1-owner Local
· trade.

1

1994 MER(URY
TOPAZ

4 cyl., auto., air cond.,

4 cyl,, auto., air· cond.,

Extended length, V-6, all)o.,
air cond., front &amp; rear, PB,
PS, power wlndo-, power
doorlockll!.

V-8, auto., air conditioning,
AMIFM-cuaette, tilt, crulae,
all power equipment.

$349

2 Door, Auto, Air,
Tilt/Cruise, Cassette, 1owner low miles.

1993 Chrysler
Fifth Avenue

Northeast Charge Sunrise SerV-6, auto, Leather, All
vice will start 6:30 a.m. at Alfred
John C. Wolf, D.O.
power options. 1-owner
United Methodist Cburcb. Easter
Associate Professor
breakfast will follow.
of Family Medicine
1987 Dodge
Adults baptized on March 26
were Karen Follrod and Gary JohnColt Vista
son.
Children
baptized
were
KaitQuestion: I was in a car accident phase of wbiplasb is often followci
wagon, 4x4, 5-speed,
about one year ago. I bad a by a period of several months of lyn, Brian and Brannon Follrod.
air, cassette, 1-owner
whiplash injury lbal still causes chronic disi.:omfort. Neck acbc and · · Church visitors on April 2 were
trade. ·
'
headaches and soreness in my neck headache, as well as soreness and Pastor Hausman's uncle and aun~
• and shoulders. How long will tbe n:tuscle tightness in the upper back George and Mary Rhonemus of
1993 Saturn
discomfort last?
·
· between the shoulder blades are the West Union.
SW2Wagon
Answer: Whiplash injuries are, most common complaints.
Guests of Marguerite and Del·
in part, the consequence or human .
Air, AM/FM Cassette,
bert
Stearns are tbeir daughter and
In this chronic phase of
anatomy. Tbe head- a -relatively whiplash, X·rays, MRJ and other grandson, April Neely and Jeff
Sport Wheels, Very
bcavy object - is $eCUred to lbe tests often are unable to find a Noble of Fairborn. ·
Clean,
Low Miles, 1end of a llcxible suppon that we clearly identifiable abnormality
Sunday guests of Osie Mae and
owner.
call the neck. The suppleness ot lbc ~at ca~ses pain. Insurance compa· Clair Follrod were Karen, Steve,
neck allows us to move the bead so mes tend to assume those wilb this Katie, Brian and Brannon Follrod
we can effortlessly point our Spe· type of whiplash .complaint are of Athens.
cial senses of sight, hearing, smeU actually malingering •Or exploiting
Nellie Parker visited Cora and
and taste in the direction we i:lesire. the legal system in search of some Samuel Michael, Stiversville.
However, lberc· is a "downside" to undue compensation. My experi-·
Nina Robinson visited ber son ·
this flexibility - the muscles and enee, however, has been just the and wife, Bob and Janet Robinson
ligamems 1hat move and support opposite. I find that almost all of al Belpre.
·
,
the neck are easily inj~ iii situa·
Rose
Carr
was
taken
to
Univer·
my patients witb chronic wbiplasb
lions like your auto accident.
sity Hospital, Columbus, on Mon.
complaints
have signs of abnormal .day.
•
As you drive down lbe highway,
motion
of
the
muscles
and
your neck muscles arc only under
su fficien r tension to hold tbe bead bones in the neck and back. This
in a position to sec the road. When · abnormality iS subtle. It is not like
your car suddenly decelerates as il a dislocation or fracture that is easi·
strikes another object or accelerates ly identified with testing equip·
when il's struck from the rear by ment. Fortunately, the most sensianother vehicle, yOu{ neck is put _tivc of testing equipment - the
under tremendous strain. While trained human. band- can easily
it Osteopathic physicians, chiyour body - supported by the car ·find
STRAWBERRIES
ropractors
and physical therapists
seat, seat belt, shoulder harness, make their livings
doing Ibis.
feel and arms - slows nearly as
Unfonunately,
identifying tbe
fast as the car, the heavy head COD·
tinues forward dr backward, problem doesn't always lead to a
depending upon the forces in tbe simple resolution of it. Physical
and osteopathic manlpulawreck. The head doesn't stop until therapy
ti
ve
tre.atment
usually promote
it has reached or «~cceded lbc nor. healing, but Ibis is
no miracle cure.
mal limits of the neck's mobility.
ll
takes
time
'o
beal
the damage
·I
'
further. this immense strain occm:s
Uiat
bas
been
donc,
and
healed
tis·
so fast that the muscles don't lulve
sufficient ·timc to react. Tbey and sue is not tbe same' as "never
tissue. Most people arc
the ligaments of the neck get injured"
well
wilbin
a year but can stlU tell
Injured and become lbe source of in subtle ways
that their neck isn' 1 .
pain in a whiplash injury.
tbe
same
as
it
was before tbeir
In severe whiplash, the damage
injury.
Witbout
examining
you, I'm
10 neck muscles and supporting ligunable
to
tell
wbere
you
are
along
aments is quite apparent. Even
Ibis
path
of
recovery.
Your
dOCIOr
damage to the arteries lbat supply should be able to help you deter·
blood to tbc brain is n:lati vely common. People wbo suffer this degree mi.ne what to expec~ particularly if.
of injury - about 24 .percent of be or ~ bas a goOd understanding
wbiplasb victims - are only a of the subtle cbang~s that occur to
musculoskeletal system with a
milc-per-bour or two away from tbe
g_
whiplash
injury. Perhaps you
baving bad a fatal accident. Though would benefit
from an e..minadon
the majority of whiplash injuries
im osteopathic physician.
ale lliilder 'than .this, they can still by ''Famlly
Is • weel!ly
cause ·excrucialing pain that is column. ToMedicine"
submit
questions,
often incapacitating . This severe
300 W. MaiQ
'992·7527
pain typi::ally subsides sufficiently write to John C. Wolf, D.O., c
10 allow return 10 normal activities Ohio UnlvenltJ College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grpavenor Hall,
In two 10 eight weeks. However, as
Albens,•Ohio 45701.
you have discovered, tbe acute

This .Weeks Speeial ·

$1~2rt

CUCUMB,~RS .

3 for $100

...

1993 FORD F1 SO
0
LIGHTNING"

1993 FORD F1SO
SUPERCA8 XLT

351 V-8, H.O., auto., air
cond., tilt, cruise, PS, PB, P.
windows, p; . door locks,
loaded.

300 6 cyl:, automatic, air
conditioning, AM/FM c ...
aette, lilt, cruise, topper,
·
etc.

1992 CHEV.
G20VAN.

1992 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

$16;949.
V·&amp;, auto., Climate Control,

Convaralon, automatic,
air conditioning, PS, PB,
PW,' POL, tilt, · cruise, ·
·more.

PS, PB, PW, P&lt;!Wir door
locks, power seat, tilt,
cruise, leather: ,

$13 949

$16 949

1992
SPIRIT ES

1991 FORD
T·BIRD LX

V-8,

a~to., alr cond., AM/FM

PS, PB, . power
windows, power aeat,
ca•••~te,
l~ded.

s9,449

* Half Runner Bea,ns

* New White &amp; Red Potatoes
* Vidalia Onion Plants

* All corn

bean Seeds Are in Stock

MEIGS ·FARM MKT

.

.

By KATHRYN CJ&lt;?W
Sentinel Correspoildent
Sprucing up the village's
appearance was one of several topics discussed by Syracuse Village
Council Thursday night. .
Mayor James Pape and council
expressed concern about tbe
appearance of the village, particu·
larly the presence of disabled and
junk cars, and 'delapidated build·
ings.
By KEVIN PINSON
Tbe mayor asked for volunllry
,
OVP News Starr
cleanup by residents in order to
GALLIPOLIS - A jury rejectavoid possible intervention from
ed lbe idea that a local man killed
the viUagc:.
bis wife wilb "prior calculation aiid
He noted lbat then: are no gendesign,'' but did rule tbat be pureral relief workers available to the
ppsely caused bet dealb.
.
village and asked for referrals from
Johnny White was found guilty
council or others or someone to nu
of murder wilb a gun specification
a par.t-tiuie handyman's position.
following more than two hours of
Referrals should be made to Clerk·
• deliberations Thursday.
Treasurer
Janice Zwilling.
The eight women and two men
GUU..TY - Derendant Johnny White Is led rrom GaiDa County
Pape
asked
Kathryn Crow to
passed up tbe prosecution's charge
Conmioq Pleas Court Thunday by Gallipolis Oty Pollee Officer
cbec((
the
town
and develop a list
of aggravated murder, wbicb car•
Jell Boyer after being fO'Und guUty of murder lit tbe Dec. 2, 19!14
of
items
in
the
village requiring
ries a life sentence, (or a lesser
slaying of hb wife, Bonnie. White was senlenced to 15 years to Ufe
attention.
cbarge of munjer.
in prison. (OVP photo) ·
DOnna Paterson was sworn in as
A handful of Mr. White's sup· ·
Approached at bis omce after a new· member ofcouncil, filling
.porters quietly cheered when tbe Bennelt tried to lay tbe 'blame allbe
jury's not guilty of aggravated victim's feet during bis closing lbe verdict, Bennett said he did not the vacancy created by Don Shaffer, wbo resigned. It was noted that
want 10 make any comments.
murder verdict was read. but cried statement.
sbe is only tbe third woman ever to
Tbe defense was successful,
softly when Clcrlc of Courl.l Louise
Bennett alleged tbat Bonnie
serve on council.
Burger read lbe guilty fmding on a White broughtlbe shooting on here however, in cOnVincing the jury
Jay Hill, president of the Syra·
tbat
tbe
murder.wl!S
not
commuted
charge of murder.
·
self by following her busband fll'St
cuse
Baseball Association, met
witb
"prior
cMculalion
and
design,"
.
Angela White, the 16-year·old to the Henderson, W.Va., bar and
with
council
and revealed that tbe
tbe
definition
of
aggravated
murdaughter of the defendant and tbe lben to tbeir Chatham Jwenue resikickoff
for
lbe
season will be on
der ..
victim, Bonnie While, appeared dence when: she started a figbl.
May
6
at
10
a.m.,
with a parade
sloic after tbe decision.
"Who set tbe stage for tbis · During bis dosing argument,
and
game
day.
Sentencing was continued to uagedy by starting an argument?" Bennett said White alld bis wife
this morning, when Common Pleas . be asked the jury. "And who kept bad just ~ed divorce papers giv·
Judge Joseph L. Cain sentenced turning up tbe beat, land wbo ing him custody of their daughter
White to an indefinite tenn of 15 pushed the wbole thing over the and lbeir home and lbat be bad no
mo.tive for plotting to kill Mrs.
years to life wilb tbn:c years for lbe edge by pulling a gun?"
·
gun specification.
At some point during the trial, Wbite.
COOLVIllE (M') - A recent
"Why would be risk losing
The sentence was imposed fol- the defense's strategy seemed to
Ohio
Environmental Protection
lowing a plea from tbe victim's change. During most of the pro- bome, girlfriend,. daugbier," be ·
Agency
ruling has baited plans for
father, Denver L. Johnson.
ceedings, Bepnett seemed bent on said. "Would be risk losing bis
a
S7
.5
million
medieal waste incin·
"I feel Johnny White should get proving that the victim pulled the daughter? I think not."
eilltor
in.
Coolville.
·
Bennett added tbat a planned
lbe maximum,'' be said,
gun on ber husband and that itacci·
Tbis
issue
bad
divided
Ibis
Special 'Prosecutor John R. dentally fired during a struggle · murder would not have taken place
in White's borne wilb two wimess· southeast Athens County commu·
Lentes ·said Thursday be was between the couple.
pleased witb the verdic~ despite lbe
At other limes, especially dwing es in the other room. If White bad nity for the last two years.
The Ohio EPA said it would not
fact that it fell short of aggqvated closing arguments, be stressed that planned lO kill bis wife, be could
act
on any pending penni! applica·
murder.
bis client sbot Bonnie White in a fit have done il wben the couple ~1:111
lions
that do not meet tbe new sit·
to Jackson after signing the papers.
"I think It was an appropriate · of passion.
.
"Johnny White did not kill Bon· ~n~ crit~ria for inlj:clious waste
verdict,': be said. :''Tbe evidence
Knowingly c;wsing the death or
.
was eqmvocal on whelber he bad · another "while under the influence nie on a lonely Jackson road and mCinerators.
Tbe. project may have been
planned it out ahead of time or, it of sudden passion or in a sudden fit dump her in a ditch 10 avoid apprewas a spur of tbe mmnent thing," of rage" is tbe legal defrnition of hension," Bennett said. "I think it is exempted if an EPA permit was
he said.
•
volunllry manslaughter, a lbird and indisputable thatlbe stale has failed issued before guidelines were
Lentes added that be was dis· less serious charge which ·tbe.jury to prove prior calculation and adopted. The rules are expected to
design."
•
. be adopted in July.
pleased that defense anomey James rejected.
Environmental Service~ Inc. of

.'•

••
2 Seetlona, 12 Paget 35 cen11
A Mulllr'Qedio Inc. N.wspaper

-

Many Democrats said Republicans wen: too optimistic in their esti·

mates.

·

,

·''This is a betier budget tbaD tbe one we got from tbe ~overnor,'' said ·
Assisllnt Minority Leader Jane CampbeU, D-Oeveland. 'But I IUD coo·
cemed that the budget we sent out bas some very dangerous things in it••
Despite considering more than 50 amendments, the House made few
substantive cbanges from lbe bill that was recommended last week by !he·
HouSe: Finance Committee.
•
One cbange would add another conditional tax cut for individuals if the
state's economy continues 10 improve.
·The bill already called for a $1,000 increase in tax exemptipns for
dependents and a $25 increase in senior citizen aedit if the budget surplus
tops $1 billion. Administration ofrlcials estimate ll!e "rainy day" fund
will be about $800 million by June 30.

Wingett, grants coordinator, to
apply for a Community Development Block Grant to complete a
portion of Marina prive, and
agreed 10 put renewal ~vies for the
rue department and street ligbts on
the November ballot.
In .other business:
• Councilman Larry Lavender
reponed on a ditch at Lee Circle
wbich needs cleaning.
• Those applying for livestock
permits were referred 10 the live·
stock commillee.
• An expansion iniO tbe soft ice
cream business by Helen Baer of
Baer' s Market was noted.
• Eber Pickens Jr. reported on
two brush fues where two fuemen
were injured.
• A conlnlct witb Meigs Indus·
tries in regard 10 m;tintaining the
·park&gt; was referred 10 commi~~te for
review.
• Mayor's report showed
receipts for March of $1,940. ·
• Police officer Tim Gillillan
reported be issued 39 citations and
.investigated four complaints in
March, and noted that be now bas a
pbone, 992-6365.
Tbe treasurer's report showed
balances of funds ·as follows: gen·
eral $28,228.13; street construe·
lion, $11.034.85; bighway,
$8,399.59;· nre $4,590.47; water,
$81.91; pool, $2,587.06; guaranty
meter, $2,992.05; • cemetery,
.$89.21.

He reported that ibe association
' bas painted tbe press box an"
cleaned the neld, and asked about
tbe possibility of converting the
village bouse into a concession
sllnd•. meeting rooms, omce space
and restrooms. Pape and Councilman Dennis Wolfe will meet with
Hill for further discussion on the
matter.
Bill Cundiff and Don Hendricks mel with 'Council to discuss
alley closings. Cundiff asked for
Ash Alley between Bridgeman and
Cheery streets be closed, and Hendricks requested closing Oak Alley.
No action on either request was
taken pending further consideration
by council.
.
Council gave approval to ~~ ~
purchase of an Excalib~ ••aw for
the Syracuse Fue Department. Fire
Cbief Eber PiclrertS told coundl tbe
saw would replace lbe jaws of life
now used in car accidents. Cost of
. the equipment to come from the
fire department is $89~.
·
Keith Eubanks, a substitute
teacher, auended 'the meeting and
.submilled bis application 'for the
position of manager qf London
Pool. The application was referred
to tbe pool commiuee. ·
·
The c(lndition of picnic tables at
the park was discussed by Wolfe.
· He.suggested needed repair \O the
tables be done, and that llbles not
needed tbere be removed.
· Council autborizeci Bob

EPA ·ruling shelves incinerator

WASHINGTON (AP)- Weary
but elated, House Republicans are
celebrating the end of their 1O&lt;klay
sprint - it was 93. days, actually
- while promising to return next
. month to take care of unnnisbed
business.
Wilb Washington's cherry uees
In bloom, Republicans returned to
lbe west steps of the Capitol, where
. they lanncbcd their "Contract Wilb
America" last fall, to underscore
that they had ke~t their promise. It
was a message tliat House Speaker
Newt Gingrich planned to bring
home in a nationally televised
address toni~bt.
, .
The fraymg, laminated card in
Gingrich's vockel now bas 10
boles puncbed in it - one next 10
each ,of the "conuact" proposals
Republicans promised to vote on
within I 00 days of laking over the
House.
But Democrats managed to
puncb some boles of their own in
the "contract.:' Ooly two of 115
provisions congressional
...ao.:counta~ility ,and unfunded man-

sa,449

-

Syracuse Co\Jncil recommends
action on appearance · ~f village

•

•

dates - ·have been signed into law.
Two others - the balanced budge[
amendment and congressional tenn
limits - were def~ted. And a
"Stat Wars'' missile defense measure was knoclced out of a national
security bill.
These setbacks led to a secood
theme JJf lbe Republican week of
celebrating: There is,more to be
done.
"Tbis· was the beginning . You
made il possible," Gingrich told
cheering Republicans Tbutsday
night, including dozens of exhausted congressional sllffers. "With
your belp we passed it. Wilb your
belp we· re coming bade in. May 10
even bi~ger and even more exciting
things.'
The celebration unfolded under
tbe banner, "Promises Made ...
Promises Kept." And il was a
theme Republican speakets
returned to again and again.
"Republicans have put an cod
to business as usual in Wasbingtoo
-lbey have kept their word," said·
Republican National Committee

'I

NEWT GINGRICH

Chairman Haley Barbour. .
Wbile Republicans celebrated
their success. they weren't declar·
ing victory. And while Deinocrats
acknowledged their foes had·.cored
a public relations coup , they
weren't conceding mucb more than
that.

•

.

.

businesses and .requires tbe sites to
be built 300 feet from property
boundaries.
· As planned, the Environmental
Services project could ntit meet
those guidelines, compaQy pre&amp;i'
dent Don Wallace bas acknowledged..
In January, the EPA rejected
plans for the incinerator because of
problems with the plan's waste
water treatment plant and storm
water
management,
EPA
spokesman Rob Berger s:iid.
Enviro'nmental Services is
allowed 60 days after rea!iving the
-rejection notice to com:a defiCiencies. but Wa! lace said be expects to ·
submit the information within two
weeks.

Marieua, had boped to build the
incinerator on tbe former Best
Pboto plant site.
A group of residents sought to
block construction because of
heallb and environmental reasons.
Karen Thome, wbo beads Con·
cemed Citizens of tbe Coolville
Area op.posed the project during
meetings and by contacting slate
legislators.
Other residents, including
Mayor Howard Russell, supponed
the project wbicb they bope will
bring jobs and tax revenue to this
town.
State legislation approved last
year prohibits medical incinerators
within I ,000 feel of bomes and .

.
Ex~O.J. juror's allegations spark probe

House GOP celebrates 93
days of.'contract' work

V-6, auto., air conditioning,
lilt, cruise, AM/FM, PS, PB,
power windows, power
doo.r loc:ks, power seat. .

-•75.

$33.58 state budget

..

.

so..

Low looiiPt Ia doe
raJa
IIWJ. S.bu'daJ, -tend lllow·
...... lhaadenlonu, 111&amp;11

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April7, 1995

·Galliii man gets
· 15 years-to-life
in wife's murder

1994 FOR·D
CROWN VIa. LX

1994 Nissan · ·
SentraXE

·-'

a1

White
found
94\ilty '

AM/FM ca... , tilt, crulae,
.PS, PB, PW, power door
locka, mora•

1994 FORD
AEROSTAR XLT

.

'.

.

ByPA.ULSOUBRA.DA
said bis spolreSII'Ian, Mike Dtiwson.
.
Auoc:lated Prea Writer
"Those are the foundations of tbe budge~· Dawson .Wd. "U you're
wrong' on .eilber one of those, it baS a big Impact on lbe budget.''
COLUMBUS -A pro.JlOSCd $33.5 billiiln Slate budj!et passed tbe lirsi
of lliree tests before becoming law.
.
·
Voinovicb also wants language rcsiOrcd that would abolisb the elected
. The House, oo a 59-39 vote Tburlday night, sent tbe bill10 tbe Senate
Sllte Board of Edueatioo and replace it with an appointed body, Dawson
where it likely will unde;rgo .mote linlcering.
.
said.
Nine House Demoaats joined majority Republicans in voting in favor
But whatever tbe Senate does, lbe budget likely will wind up in a con·
. of tbe bill, wbicb includes record spending on education and no ~\)' fees
ference commiuee. There. representatives and senators will try to work a
COI!Ipromise before sending itiD Voinovicb for bis signature.
or taxes. Six conserv11tive Republicans rejected wbat they said was an
. Rep~blicans lOOk an optimistic view of Medicaid spending and the
inftated spending plan that does little for tbc average Ohioan.
"The Senate obviously will have its own ideas on prioritizing spend·
srate's revenue smeam in creating a budget that trims $278 million from
ing,'' ·senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Ciilcinnati, said. "Ooce we
the plan proposed by Voinovicb.
''We lOOk a budget that was lean, and squeezed it and made it leaner,'·
have a clear picture on revenues and (Medicaid) caseloads, we can move
·forward on pulling tbe Senate's priorities in place.'~ ·
·
said Rep. Tom Johnson, R-New Concord.
It also includes a 2 percent across-the-board cut for stale agencies. ·
Those two items also arc of great interest to Gov. George Voinovicb,

1994 FORD
TEMPO

1

•

•

~ouse· approves

'$189

Pauline Atkins, Neva Nicholson,
Belly Lowry, Ann Webster and
Maria Denison participated in the
activity.

5-3-9-9
BuckeyeS:
9-18·19·22-23

Copyright 1lltl!i

$12,449

.Garden club.discusses wildflowers

9·1·2

Pick 4:

.e

4 cyl. turbo, 5 apeed,
cond., AMIFII ca11ette,
power ataerlng, power
brak.., tilt, cruiM, IIIOI'e.

AM/FM caaa., PS, PB, PW,
POL, power aaat, tilt,
cruise-.
'

Pick3:

1993 PONTIAC
GRANDAMGT

-----Community
calendar----p.m.

, Tbe Communlly Calendar t.'
p,ubllshed as a rroe servl~e to
non-prortt groups wlsbln11 to
announce ~eetln1 and special
ennts. Tbe calendar Is not
·designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space perMits and
·&lt;:annot be guaranteed tp run a
··· specltle number or days.
Tllll.RSDA.Y
.
POMEROY'- Meigs Ministeo
rial Association Lenten service,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the First
Bap~t Church, Pomeroy. Rev. Bill
H~)c to preach.

Ohio.Lottery

·Masters
competition
continues

• , LOS ANGELES (AP) - Aile·
gallons by a pro•defense juror
dropped from the O .J. Simpson
lrial have triggered an investigatiou
by lbe judge, defense accusations
of a conspillloy and questions about
the integrity of tbe rest of lbe jury.
As testllnony was replaced by
dueling news copferences Thursday, tbe defense also claimed that
prosecutors are harassing and ',PY·
ing on defense witnesses, parucularly science experts. The defense
sought a ·bearing next week on
prosecutorial misconduct. ·
District Altomey Gil Garcetti
didn't specifically deny the barassment allegations. "We are seeking
tbe truth ," be said, "and we're
·· doing it in an ethical, professional
and honorable way."
Court was J:anceled Thursday
and today because three jurors
came down with tbe nu . CBS
News ,reported that two of them
were not sick, but were protesting
the dismissal of juror Jeanette Harris. Since Monday bad already been

.

scheduled as a day. off, ICStimony is' forcing sex on her. Tbe 'papers
wen: ftled as pan of a child custody
to resume Tuesday.
dispute
in 1988.
Harris , a 38-year-old black
.
S
be
said
the episodes or abuse
woman. was dismiSS(\d Wednesday
"didn't
even
cross my inind"
because she failed 10 reveal that she
had experienced domestic abuse. wbcn sbe answered a questionnaire
She was the sixlb juror dropped during jury selection. Sbe said she
from the panel - ana easily the and 00' husband bave reconciled. ·
. Outside .their bome Thursday,
most controversial.
In a live TV imerview just hours Melvin Harris denied hitting his
afler sbe was ·dismissed, Harris wife. He Said neighbors wae lying
praised the defense, expressed wben lbcy said be bit ber twice,
skepticism with lbe prosecution's including once in October 1994
case and accused sheriffs deputies during jury selection.
of promotihg racial tensioo among
Defense attorneys spem I 0 days
jurors.
fighting to retain Harris while prosA
sheriff
department ecutors argued for ber dismissal.
spokesman, Deputy Jobn Castro, Jobnnie Coc~ran Jr . suggested
denied tbe accusations. but con- there was a campaign to remove
firmed that J u~gc Lance Ito was pro-~efense jurors from the panel,
investigating them.
although be didn't offer evidence . I
Harris also dispqted lbe reason or say wbo was doing it
for her dismissal; telling KCAL"We thinlc that Big Brother is
TV she bad "never, ever been a doin• more than just watching us
victim of oomestic abuse." But she on Ibis case," Cocbran said. · ·
aclmowled~ed Thursday that she
The Simpson panel - which
bad once accused her husband In originally numbeml 12 jurors and
court.papers of shoving fief ani!
tz alu:mates - is- sbrinkiilg 111 an ' ...
alanning rate.

•

'

.

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