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                  <text>Monday, Aprll10, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~;;;;;;;;;;~~===--u_s_e_e~a.;;.;.;.;.~,;,.;,.;.:n,:-in_g_;_s....;.re_p_o_rt-:. ~-o~a-v-o-:-id~ov_e_r_p__;ay~
-. m....;.;....;.en-:t~s-.~ .
By ED PE'lERSON .
annual limits. Tbe anNB•IIimlts for .
Social Security Muqer, Atlle111
1995 are $8,160 for persona under
Social Security beneficlarle• age 65, and $11,280 for persons
wbo submit tbelr earnings reports belween age 6569. People wbo are
by lhe April 17 due date sbould overpaid by Social S~:curlty are
remember lbat lhe reports can be required 10 return tbe mooey, eitber
changed at any lime if lheir esti- by direct refuodl or by l!aving tbeir
quite of future earnings prove too benefits reduced to cover tbe overlow or too bigh, Social Security payment.
·
officials reminded. Tbe best way to
There is a substantial penalty for
avoid overpayments- benefits to not filing an annual report of earnwhich you are not entitled-Is to ings oo or before lhe due datePREVENTION - Wltll a minion statement of ''providing for
report any cbange in .your estimat' April171his year because tbe IJSual
the safety and secarlty of chUdren's spirit, soul and body," tbe
ed earnings as soon as it occurs.
due date, Apri115, falls on a Satur·
. Rejoicing Life Church and Christian School have a protection
Beneficiaries wbo work and day,
·
·
.
committee. Here revlewtna the rules,are church workers, left to
earn over lbe exempt amount are
Because it is difficull'to esti·
, right, VIcki Lona, Norma Torres, Katby Rice, Maggie Biggs and
requited 10 submit earnings reports mate exact earninas for lhe year, it
· Brenda Barnhart. ·
·
on how mucb .they made tbe prCYl·. _~IIC~U111Jles beneficWies wbo work
.
'
ous year and bow much tbey expect to call to adjust tbeir estimated
to make during lhe current year. earnings if lhey get a raise, work
1'be annual limit In 1994 was overtime. or otherwise increase
. $8,040 for persons under age 65, their IDCome.
and $11,160 for persons between
It's easy to report excess earnage 65 and 69. Benefits are reduced ings and olher events lhat would
$1 for every $2 in excess eamings · cause you to be overpaid. If you
. 11\.pril is Child Abuse Prevention imd otber personnel in· an effon to for peopie under 65, and $1 for live in Athens or Me1gs Counties
Monlh and numerous organizallons protect children. They bave eslab- every $3 in excess earnings for you sbould visit lhe Alhens Social
lisbed a training !program wbi.cb people 65-69. If you are still wort-· Security office or calllhe .toll-free
. ·are giving priaity to ch~d safety.
Among tbe groups mvolved is belps teacbcrs and otbers to ·recog- · ing at age 70,1he earnings limits do onmber, 1-800-772-1213, business
lhe Rejoicing Life Cburcb and nize symptoms of neglect and child not apply so you no longer bave to . days between 7 A.M. and 7 P.~.
abuse, to protect children in class- report your earnings to Social ·
.Christian Scbool in Middleport.
Did You Know?
Security.
Last fall the cburcb set up a rooms and at dle church.
-Social Security earnings lim·
Every
year
about
a
million
peo· Another phase of lhe committee
child safety committee composed
its
not apply to people 70 and
ple
·
r
eceive
more
money
from
of Pe1e Barnhart. Brenda Barnbart, bas been to set guidelines to screen · Social Security than tbey were enti- overdoduring
lhe .entire year. People
Norma Torres, Paul Rice, Teresa volunteers and paid staff before
tled
to
receive
as
a
result
of
unanunder
70
must
report lheir excess
Carr, Pastor Lawrence Foreman, children are entrusted to ' them. ticipated earnings. Most of tbese
earnings
to
Social
Security by
and BUI Asbeck.
. · Rules also provide for monitors, · overpayments occurred because
Aprill7.
That coriunittee bas established and open classroom doors unless
beneficiaries who work wbile
-Social Security benefits stop
policies to be carried out by adult · two adults are present.
. drawing benefits earned more than when a beneficiary is convicted of
they bad estimated and their a criminal offense. The ban· also
i~me exceeded Social Security's
applies to .persons institutionalized_

for crlmiual offenses wbo were
found guilty but insane, not guilty
by reason of ~saity, or inc:ompeteot to stand trial.
.
-&amp; of Jaouary 1 1995, Social
Set:Uritj will not ~ly tbe 3610 48
montbs limits on ume permitted for
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) recijlieotS to complete a Plan
to Acbieve Self Support (PASS).
The amount of lime permiued will
be decided on a case-by-case basis.
A PASS permits SSI recipients to
set aside income and resources for
a goal lbat will help tbem gain
greater financial i!ldepeodence,
such as getting a degree or starting
·

.April desig.n~ted _.

·:Child Safety M·on.th

. . Mk:bae1 E. Pblliips
Navy Seaman Recruit Mlcbael
E: PbUlips, son of Ronald and Carole Phillips of Langsville, recently
participated in a joint military exercise near Guam aboa(d tbe
amphibious command ship U.S.S.

Brandon Clark Bachner, son of
Steven and Tamara Bachner of
Middleport, observed his second ·
birthday' recently ~ith a party at. ~·· ""'·,
home.
, A Lion King U1eme was carried
out and his cake featured the L1on
King face.
.
.
Attending were his parents,
maternal grandparents, Bob and
Jonetta Davis, maternal_ greatgrandmplhers, Pauline Cunningbam and Virgi ni a Davis, paternal
grandparents, Jack and Carolyn
BRANDON BACHNER
Bachner, aunts and uncle, Don and
Carol Diddle and Lorna Johnson.
cousins Al)n and Ryan Van Matre,
and Mrs. Larry Kemiedy, Denver,
.and Lo~ery and Druno Casci, and
Nora and .Bill Rice, Mary K.
Diclc, Becca And Michael Owen.
Roush. Helen and Clyde Belcher
Sending cards and gifts were Dr. and Ilob and Joan Tewksbary.

~

$

~ r..""a f

l

"l

BULLETIN BOARD

6:30p.m. tiJMidnig/it
j(oy5t£ OYIJ( .'1(.1:SO!l(r:{
'Entertainment tRy: %.e Main T-vent
· 'l(araokf, rron(glit
Singfe $20.00 Coupfe $35JXJ
13.ry-.o.t:B.!Soft 'lJrink§ Jl.vaifa6fe

00

AT 992·2155

MONDAY, APRIL 10
Seniors 55 &amp; Over
FREE SPRING DANCE
With George Hall at the .
Hammond Organ
MOt::JSE LODGE 6 til

Pome!oy-~lddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Apri!__1_1,_'1995

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·.By GEORGE ABATE
government bas taken away;-''
Sen11nel News Staff
Gilmore said.
·
.: Middleport Village gave a 90:
Previously, any rate Increases
· day extension to Cable Vision to had to be approved by the village.
consider tbe village's franchise at Now, tbe Federal Communications
its regular meeting Monday nigbt.
Confmission accepts the bikes
. :rbe current 25-year franchise based on increasing operating
would have ended April 27. Tb? expenses.
, village will decide on a 15-year
The 'village pusbed back acceptfranchise by July 31, said Bob ing the new franchise because it
Gilmore; acting mayor.
could not read tbe ordinance lhree
·"A lpt of tbe restrictions and times before the deadline.
··
contrQl-'we used to bave tbe federill , 1. · Under the · terms of the fran·

.

chise, the village customers currenUy pay a 3 percent franchise fee.
The bigbest rate that coul!l be
charged is 5 percent, said Lester
Errett, CableVi'sion manager for
lhis area CableVision is beadquartered in Poil!t Pleasant. W.Va.
"As a businessman, I'd ralher
not go to 5 percent to keep my bills
lower," Errett said.
Councilman Jim Clatwortby
said be would like to negotiate a 25
percent discount for village resi-

School project
used by students
for math skills
·
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe toothpicks began to weaken, bend and then the bridge fell
down.
'
The expressions o( joy, humor
and sorrow spread over tbe
· cheeks of these 30 youths. This
bands-on project made the stu·
dents cooperate. ·I
Students at Meig$ Junior Higb
built toothpick bridges in the
school's math lab during the last
two weeks, teacher Julie Ran·
dolph said.
· "We liked it ex¢ept the glue
wouldn't dry," project director
Sarah Dean said. "We made a ·
bunch of triangles. It. took 12
.· days. to milke it."
Dean led Bricia Jensarobn·
.Co., this group of students won
lhe weight competition ~y holdBREAKING
_Meigs Junior ffigb students yester,
ing a simulated 3,380 pounds · day tested the toothpick bridges they designed and builL The stu·
. dents spent two weeks developing the projects and bave learned
· inside a bucket
The group's team members . much about math, teacher Jutie Randolph said. The bridges were
included architect Tricia Davis, judged 'o!J tlieir plans and strength. '1 would have nev~r expected
accountant Bridget Vaughan,
these weights. Some of .the kids ha~e said 1hey'll never. !Jiok at
bridges tbe same again," Randolph said. (Sentinel photo by t':eorge
transportation chief Jennifer
Lambert and carpenter Jobn
Abate)
Davidson.
Each team could spend up to
· $1.5 million on supplies in Ibis material); and $40,000 for wax
built there was no bridge."
The math skills used included:
staged project. The group spent paper.
- estimating spatial configuall but $34,900 of this sum.
The concrete skills used here
The "Randolph warehouse" can be translated in otber areas • . rations;
- estimating dollar. amounts
supplies cost $500,000 for card- she added.
"They don't even realize they
in the thousands;
board (land); $10,000 for toothpicks (lumber); $500 per cen: were using their math skills,"
- adding and subtracting
timeter for string (cable); $850 · Randolph said: "If they ran out of seven-digit numbers;
for day's supply of glue (welding
money befvre the bridge was
· Continued on page 3

$11,388**
N:)'t)}c1~

May 1 is the last day for businesses to file 1995 personal property tax returns, Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker, Campbell
announced.
In February, the auditor's office mailed a tax retum to every
business that filed in 1994. Campbell said tax returns are requited of
all timgible personal property owned by businesses, individuals,
partnerships, associations, imd corporations used. in business. For
further information she may be 'contacted at 992-2698.

Certified used car bu,eBS will bil on band to give highest trade-In
value for rour autamoblle. Please bring rour title, registration
card, and payment boolc Happlicable.
.
NO SAW PER,mm TO DEAIBIS. Th" clea'ance is for retail cui·
tamers on~. Prices !IPJ!Iyto available units only. No lll'llllring Jill'·
mitted at .
prices. .
·
.

~.9!18.

'

Academic excellence fete May 2
""·

The 'llth annual Meigs County Academic Excellence banquet
will be held on Tuesday, May 2 at 7 p.m at Meigs High School
cafeteria.
.
Sixty scholars from the fourth; sixth, eighth, lOth and 12th
grades in Eastell) Local, Meigs Local, and Southern•Local will be
honored. Tickets are being sold through April 18 at the individual
schools.

Sheriffissues warning

$11,688

Oil!WQ:f

'

l!itlcfFeE!. Oe!JYerOO"

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S-sERIES EXTENDED CAB PICKUP
• E•l""dad Cab
• Dnv"' Stde Atrbag
• Rear AnteLod&lt; Brakes

· 16 Yatve Power
• Dover SKie Mbag
• 4 Wheel AnteLocl&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng
·'Power Brakes

• Custom Cloth tntevor
• P 205175R IS' Tires
• Stee ~~led T11es ,

• Power Steer1ng

··~ Pnce Jndudes GMACF1rst Time

• Power Brakes

Buyer lr«niNe 11 Ouat1rt00

PARK AVEU

IIIAIIIIEW '95 CIEVY ASI1IO EX1EIIIl C011VE11S111 VM

'95CHEVY

• Exlenqed Chassis
• Driver Side Air Bag
, Anti·Locl&lt; Brakes
• A1r Cood~ion
• Automatic Overdnve

• Power Door Locks
• AWFM Stereo
·Styled Whee•
• Ste~· BeHed Tires
•Well Equii'lled!

•VISta

• PIS, P!B

· • Solw1led

•Power W~doWs
·Power Locl&lt;s
• Tt~. Crutse
• AMJFM Cassone
Cm.rs

•Indirect Lighting ·
·Premium Wood Plcg.
• Full Conversion
• Atum~um Running
• Loaded!

• Dual Air Comlor1emp ·Aluminum Wheeo
Clima~ Coo\'01
•Keyless Re&lt;oo1e
• Anli-Lack Blakes 'f Power Anlenna
Enlrj System
• Automat~
• Power Dn'ler &amp;
·• Loaded!
• AA\IFM cassette
Passenger Seal

• Air Cornilion

· DuaiAtrbag

:

Drivers must have insurance 10 opera~ a vehicle, Meigs County
·Sheriff James M. Soulslly said.
.
One shOuld show proof pf insurance: when an officer issues a·
ticket; at vehicle iilspection stops; in traffic court appearances; after
motor vehicle trashes; and during .random checks by the motor:
vehicles bureau.
.
Proof can be sbown by having 1\11 insurance policy, an insurlll)ce
identification card, a $30,009 surety bond or a motor-vehicle ceruficate of self-insurance.
Penalties include: loss of license for 90 days; loss of license
plates and vehicle regisuation; fees ranging from $75 to $500; and
paying bigh hsk insuriUice for five years.

District meeting reset April27 ·
•

. TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·21144.
344·5947. 422·0756
.•

Mondll!Y • Satur~: 9 am • 9 pm
, Sunday: Noon • 6 pm '

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l,

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.
.
.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinlf:)n Solid Waste management district will change its regularly Scheduled meeting from April 20 to
April27.
.
.
A buffet dinner Will be served at 5:30 p.m .. at lhe diStrict office
in WellstOI• wilh a tour of the new landfill following. After the tour,
the regular business meeting will be held at the district office's
. '
board room.

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2 Soctlona, 12 Pages 35 eenta
Multimedia Inc. New•paper
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dents over 65 years old.
1
A relationship between tbe fee
and the discount does not exist,
Errett added. Both would be nego- .
tiated separately.
"Somewhere we'd have to give
and take for eacb side," Errett said.
.. Tbe cable company haS chosen a
tess expensive route to renew lhe
franchise known as an informal
process, Gilmore said. This process
started 30 months ago.
Tbe formal process would bave

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greater costs .and would have
involved a more complicated legal
process.
Currently, Cable Vision bas
about900 customers in tbe village.
The franchise is not ' exclusive,
•meaning other cable companies
could com;:&gt;ete for customers.
In Apnl, the cable company
· increased its rates for the fust time
in two years, Errett said.
The basic rate increased 26

.

cents to· $9.21 for the 12 channel
service. The next tier of 17 cbannels had a $1.78 increase to'$12.22. ·
"We' re quite pleased to have an
e.xcellent relation~hip with:Middleport and look forward to serving
tbe ar~a for. years to come," Errett
said.
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CableVISIOn wtll negotiate w1th
.Pomeroy and Syracuse villages
within the next several weeks,
Errett said.

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Rural mail carriers assist
wildlife officials through
spring, summer surveys

Breaking
bridges

Pl!rsona.l-property taxes_ du~

OF OVER D B11A111 NEW CIIEVRIII.£T CONVEIISIOII VANS.
Selection illcludes Al&gt;bo All Wheel Drives and G-211's,·hollt avail·
able witll ralsad roofs or low tops. Prices range flam $17,388 to

L_ ,

TV firrri has extra 9(l days to ·consider franchise

Tickets Available At Farmers Bank In Pomeroy
Home National Bank In Racine, Bank One In Pomeroy,
Meigs County Chamber Office, Or Any Board Member
For More Information Call 992·5005 .

WEST .VIIiGINIA'S 1M CONVERSION VAN DEAI.SI HAs AN IIIVENTORY

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r----Local briefs---. Energy,

TOM PEDEN HAS AN IIIV~NTORY OF OVER 800 BRANit NEW
IHVIIIl£1S. llDSMOIII.ES, POifllACS, IIIDS, GBIS AND CUSI1IM .
VAliS. All will be sold at substantial discounts!
.
Plus $500 to $2Im cash bacll or 6.9% .APR financing available ("P
to 48 monthsl on selei:lri models on approved credit Tell!l$ avail·
. able_~~pta 84 months!

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: Copyright~~

.,.,

~riday, 5lprif21, 1995

CALL OUR

'-•

' VOl. 45, NO. 242

""

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel

6 column inch weekdays
1800 column ~nch Sunday

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LIM laalabt lD tho 50s,
windy, raiD.Wednesday; breeZJ,
wltb sbowo.._ Hlch ID mlcl 60L

.3-5-22·25-31

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,.Buckeye 5:

/i

. Blue Ridge.
·
Ported in Yokosuka, Japan, .
Phillips' service is abOard tbe forward deployed command ship. . '
He graduated from Meigs Hill!
School in 1993 and joined die .
Navy in February 1994.

-~ ~.F

713
Pick 4:'
5169 .

PageS

:Meigs Countg Cliam6er of Commerce
Si{tli Jlnnua{'])inner '])ance
')

Pick 3:.

splaries
slashed

a business.
Ooly Earnings COUDI
. Some p~~~ wonder If tbe .
money tbey · e frotD a ()QIDpa· ny pension plan will affect tbe
amou~t of lbeir Social Se~urily
benef1t.· Well lbe answer u no.
Only your covered eamiogs from
working or self employ~ent are
used to compute your Soaal Security benefit amount. Generally private pensions, savings, or inslll'IID_CC
benefits do not .affect your Social
Security. But please note ... your
total income .can affect lhe amOUDI
of taxes ... 1f any ... you pay on
your Social Security retirement
benefits·:
·
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In the. service-.-., _ - __ .

Second

birthday
celebrated

Baseball

Ohio Lottery.

&gt;

food costs
decline

WASHINGTON (AP) Wholesale inflation turned in its
best performance in five months as
energy and ·food co.sts declined,
helping to keep the overall price
level from rising at all in'March.
The ' La,or Department said
today l\lat itS Producer Price Index,.
which measures inflationary pressures before they get to tbe consumer, was unchanged last month
after posting 0.3 percent increases
in botll January and February.
It was the best showing since
wholesale prices actually fell by
0.4 percent in October. In advance
of.today:s report, many economists
bad been expecting a moderate rise
or around 0.2 percent.
Financial markets rallied on the
good performance. Prices of longterm bonds, which respond quickly
to wv hint of inflation, soared onthe benign wholesale price report
with demand for the benchmark
30-year Treasury bond pushing its
yield down to 7.36 percent, from
7.39 percent late Tuesday. ·
"These are Lerrific numbers; •
said Eugene Sherman, economist at
M.A. Scbaprio &amp; Co. Inc. in New
York. "From tbe point of view of
conswners, .inflation is not a problem and it does not loom as a prob·
Jcm." ·
Many economists arc predicting
that widespread signs that economic growtb has slowed Ibis year pro- vide evidence tbat the Federal
Reserve's string of seven interest
rate increases are beginning to have
their desired effect or slowing the
economy and keeping inflation
from getting out of control. '

'
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
In addition to delivering mail,
rural letter carriers lhrougbout lhe
siate perform another-job at cenain
nmes of the year - keeping track
of wildlife they encounter. I
Rural carriers have assis ed the
Ohio Division ·of Wildlife since
· !959 by recording lhe numbers of
rabbits, pheasants a.nd quail seen
along their regular route in early
April, according to Wayne D.
Rogers, district. manager for tbe
Columbus district of the United
States .Postal Service.
"Many of our post offices are in
cities, .rownsbips and counties that
have large wildlife populations,"
Rogers said.
.
.&gt; ,
· Rural letter 't:arries have an
excellent opportunity to observe
wildlife, "(1bey) are out delivering
mail six days ~r week in areas tbat
are not heavily traveled," he
explained. ·

At . certain times of the year, consists of voluntarily recorded
' they'll count certain animals for information ~llected over 12 conabou.t-a two week period, said Lljlla secutive working days, according
Hudson, Racine postmaster.
· to division spokeswoman Carol
. "They have a card they mark on Wells.
"· . .
·bow many they see that day," she
The information gathered by the .·
·said.
carriers is real useful, according to
They
don't
nonnally
see
a
lot
of
Dave Scott of the Olentangy
1
stuff, maybe a few rabbits, Hudson Wildlife Research Station in Asb·
added. The cards are then sent back ley.
to the division of wildlife.
Scott said rural letter carrier surHudson said the tally is not time veys are done in otber midwestern
consuming' for the rural carriers.
states.
.
The data collected by rutal carri·
Letter carriers are out there
ers provides biologists witb an every day, they generally use the
index to long tenn trends in popu- same routes, he said. The species
lation and assists i'n planning surveyed are easily identified, not
wildlife mimagement progrmns.
- requiring th.e eye of a trained biolo.
For e~ample, the low population gis~ he added.
of '.Wail reported ·resulted in the
The resulls of. the surveys are
restnetion .of quail hunting ·for a used to figure out effects of winrer
period of time, Rogers noted.
weather .and land use ·changes, he
This year' s survey runs until · said .
April 15 with another survey held
"Their information is good and
in August.
they s.,.m interested in doing it,"
The Rural Mail Carrier Survey he commented.
.
I

Middleport~ Council

to ·
buy lots for boat launch
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council
agreed 10 buy six lots that will
encompass the parking lot of the
h
·
1
new boat Iaunc prOJect at ast
night's regular council meeting.
Middleport grants coordinator
Jean Trussell will negotiate a price
wiUl one property owner who ~as
asked for $15,000. This sum was .
•2 •no rom• th•n the anpraised .

evening.
_
• .
booster station before the May 5
In February, donors from across deatlline.
·
the area pledged 10 give money for
In other business, council:
the docks . Dut, only part of tbe
~approved a third and final
$6,500 pledged has been given to . reading that will change the wning
the village.
from industrial til residential near
· Councilman Nick Robinson said where the Nazarene Church will be
he is concerned the pledges will not built on Gen. Hartinger Parkway.
materialize . The village bad to The church - ncar Vaughan's
co~ mit $21,000 as its match .
Cardinal- is waiting on the g~wh1c·h has been reduced by the eery .store to move ahead w1th
_oth_e_rpledges.
. gr&lt;J,und .breakmg, }\ev. Greg -Cun. · ~aJ·~';_ - ~· - ,. _ " ·. - · .-- . Donations can be .sent'to Mill::-·" ttlll'SU!il. ~
·-:
The project w'ul not be finisbl!d 'dleport Treasurer Tern Hockman.
- . passed the second of three
by the July deadline, but Ohio
The ventme conststs of a 30-by- · readmgs to all~w a gas hne to be
Department of Natural Resources 10-foot floaung dock. a w1der ramp la1d across M•ddiCI]Ort H.tll that
officials have agreed to push .lhis' and a new boater pa:kmg lot, wtll .connect over !he bndge to
date forward to Labor Day.
Trus~ell said. lletwecn ctgbt w:'d 10 Mason, .W.Va.
,
- b1red Vernon LttUc to work
'Tiie state grant will pay up to parkmg spaces for boaters wdl ,be
$94,900 of this.$142,800 project. added between WalnutandRuUand abou.t 35 hours a week for four
Tbe remainder will be paid for by
streets on Front Street.
.
months to mow lawns.
funding from the Meigs County
. In other, gmnt news, the vtlla¥e
-. listed mayor's receipts at
Commissioners and the village.
w11l apply for about $10,000 m
$2,264.75.
The commissioners helped save state grants to rcpll!f the fire depart-is seeking at least $2,375 in
the project by pledging anotber ment roof. Counc1l ~!so agreed ,to
donations
to cover ll1e $4,300 cost
$1_0,000 on top of !be $26,800, sai!l seel: grants for pavmg of Soutb
of
Fourth
of
July ftreworks ..
B'ob Gilmore, acting mayor for the Second Avenue and a new water .

TOURISM COMMITTEE - The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce Tourism Committee last week approved a list of goals and prlorllles focusing on the need for guest lodging
and capitalizing on local outdoor altlvltles.

Com'mlttee l'fielt\bers shown liere Include, clock-· ·
wise from front: Game Protector Keith Wood
Patty Pickens, Tom I&gt;ooley, Rev .. Dawn Spaid:
log, Dorothy Sayre, Rev. Roland Wildman and
Judy Williams.

•

.

•
'

•

�'
TueSday, Apr1,111, 1995

,Commenta

••

Debt~ceiling· hike ~ ~ay . b·o.ost

The Daily Sentinel

•

111 COart Street
~1101. Ohio

ROBERT L WINGETr
Publllller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
-Coialroller

GeneniManapr

•'

LETI1lRS 01' OPINION ue welcome. They lbould be leu IbiD 300
wordo lon&amp;. All Jetton ... IRibjoct 1o edlllng llld 1111111 be oigned witli n l&amp;ftelllld telepbooo numt.. No Wlli&amp;oocl Jeum will be publilbecl. Leu...
lbouJd be in Jood lllte,lddmliD&amp; ~~~-. DOl pononalitloo.

Vi.c tims' rights
and free speech .

.·..
•
&lt;

.

...,

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, April 11, 1995

By JOHN MATUSZAK
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -·Victims' rights and free speech could clash as Jaw.
.makers lry to expand Ohio's ''Son of Sam'' law to include the families of
, ·
convicted criminals.
The ·law, named after New Yoflc serial IeiDer David Berkowitz, prevent
convicted criminals from profiting by seUing lhe stories of their crimes to
publishers, film produc~ or olher media.
.
Last week, the state Senate passed a bill that extcl)ds that provisiOI) to
include lhe families of criminals.
Civil rights lawyers said the original Jaw and its extension violate First
Amendment rights.
"In order.to take away a person's ability to selllheir story, lhere bas to
be a compelling reason," said BiU.Saks. a lawyer in the American Civil
Libenies Union's Cleveland office.
Reasons for cunailinjl sptecb include obscenity and inciting •lawless·
ness, Saks said. But bemg the family member of a convicted criminal
does not fit that definition, he said.
The bill's supporters said it does not take aw.ay people's right to tell
their stories, but only tbeir ability to profit from it.
"We decided that if we must err, we should err on tbe side of taking
care of tbe victims," Senate Minority Loader Roben Boggs, D·Rock
Creek, said. "I expect it wiD be chaUenged.".
·
The(New York law was challenged in U.S. Supreme Court in a case
involving Nicholas Piie~gi, aulhor of "Wise Guy," which was made into
the movie "Goodfellas. '
The Supreme Coun ruled the was unconstitutional ·because it unfairly
targeted free speech.
"The ACLU believes that victims should be compensated," but the
fairest way would be to seize all of a criminal's assets, not just those from
the sale or a.story, said Art Eisenberg, an attorney with New York ACLU
who worked on the Pileggi case.
,
Bob Denton, director of Victim's Assistance of Akron and a board
member of ihe National Organization for Victim's Assistance, sees prob·
lcms witll including family members of criminals under lhe law.
"The criminal shouldo't get a penny," be .said. "BuJ how far do you
extend it'!''
The proposed Ohio cxtensioo came about because of the emergence of
serial klilers such as Thomas Lee Dillon, who killed five outdoorsmen,
and Jeffrey Dahmer, whose first victim was an Akron-area resident.
Dahmer's faU1er, Lionel, a Medina residen~ bas written a book about
his experiences an!! his son's crimes.
Dahmer has an unlisted phone number and could not be reached for
comment.
·
·
"They should pay for their crimes, not be paid for them," said Jean ·
Paxton, whose son was killed by Dillon. She testified before a Senate
~omm ittee last moHih.
The public has the final say on what to buy, Saks said.
"The ACLU would endorse the motto 'Don't Buy Books From
Cr~s; " he said. "If people think it is immoral, they can abstain."

Raising the debt ceillng t.bis
summer or ran could be the occasion for an epic game of "chick·
en" between congressional Republicans and the Clinton adminlstra·
tion - and almost certainly will
create an opportunity for Sen. Pbll
Gramm, R-Texas, to play some
heavy presidential politics.
House Speaker 'Newt Gingrich,
R-Ga., has threatened to allacb any
legislation that President Clinton
might veto to the "must pass" debt
bill, thus forcing him to· swallow
u11acceptable GOP initiatives or
sbu(down tl!e entire federa!IQY·
errunent.
Clinton 'adminislralion officials
fully' expect a "train wreck" wiib
Congress sometime this year (ooe
White House official said that
"September will be the month
from bell"), but they aren't sure it
will come over the debt ceiling.
Other possibilities are the budget
reconciliation or appropriations
, bills.
·
However, the debt ceiling is
being viewed by Gramm as an
opportunity to outshine his GOP
presidential rival, Senate Majority

Leader Bob Dole (Kan).
If Dole faUs to lind a 67th .,u1e
to pass a balanced budset ameadment to the Constitution, Gramm·

Morton Kondracke
plans to attach machinery to the
debt limit desi~ned to accomplish
the amendment s purposes through
legislative means.
Gramm's mechanism is similar
to the Gramm-Rudman law that
rmt made him famous during the
Reagan adminis\l'ation, and his new
measJIIll ~umahly .w~ld bum!!'
his image as the Repubhcan preaadenlial field's most effective
spending-cutter.
A group of conservative GOP
senators, including Connie Mack
(Fla.), Jon Kyl (Ariz.), S'pencer
Abraham (Mich.), John McCain
(Ariz.), and Trent LoU (Miss.), bas
been meeting regularly to devise
debt-ceiling strategy. Their plan
would be put forw11rd as the
enforcement mechanism even if
Dole does succeed in finding the
vote needed 10 pass tbe "DBA," as
it's widely called.

Gramm, Mack and LoU coB·
flmled ~ir debt-aliling plans. Lou
also ackno~ledged the stakes:
"There's no question it will have
presidential implications."
,.
LegislaUon is required to raise
the national debt limit and allow
the government to continue borrowing money. The current limit or
$4.9 trillion is expected to be
breached early Ibis faD, necessilat·
ing a vote sometime between July
and.September.
The debt ceiling is regarded as
veto-proof "must pass" legislaUoo
because jJ!e aovernment would
iiaV.: to shut down 11 if lsn'f passed
Md signed Into law.
· Grantm •s plan is to attach a
three-stage budget-balancing mecb·
anism 10 the ceiling. Congress
would be ,directed, in its normal
budget reconciliation process. to
follow a "glide path" to a bal·
anced budj!el by 2002, culling at
least $48 b1Ui011 per year below the
previous year's actual spending to
reach the'target
If it failed to do so, responsibility would be lranSferred 10 a Spending Reduction Commission -

Joseph Spear

·. ·letters to the editor
Who is
deserving? .

as

Tc;»day in history

easy for the lawnialcers to adjourn
early and go home and find booest
work for half of. every year. We
could then cut their pay and ax
their pensions.·
Finally, a suggestion of my own
for ·Mr. Kemp: To protect tbe Oat·
tax system forever from selfish and
small-minded politicians, we
should incorporate it into Th'e Constitution with an ameodment to tbe
16th Amendment. Sometbing like
this would do: "Collection of
income taxes shall be accomplished
solely tbrough the application of a
Oat-rate system."
·
,
Picture Ibis: It is April 15, 2001,
and you still haven't filed your
taxes. You stop by Ilie post office
at noon, pick up a postcard-sized
form, fill it out while munching.
your lunch in the park, then pop it ·
in the box on your way back to lhe
office. ·
Talk about an idea whose time
· has come.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact Am&lt;! rica Online by calling 1800-8:17·6364, exl 8317.)

Exorcize cyberspace demons now!

Berry's World

.

~

~..,Pr!I£Atrc:

"In the spring a young man 's"fancy lightly tutns
to thoughts of - of - well, REAL big-league
baseball.·

Wechwscla,, Aprllll
Accu-~1\x .....

MICH.

'

By The Associated Prea

Mack's Idea - which would pro; pose cuts much as the fedcr111 bueclosing commission does for military bases. The commisJ!on's recommendations would liave to be
voted up or down by both cham·
bers of Congress.
If the commission recommenda·
tioos weR voted down or if spend·
lng somehow outstripped the targets, Gramm's "sequester" medl·
anism would go into effecl, automatically imposing necessary
spending cuts split!I!lniY betwl:en
domestic and defense programs and
across the board in all domestic
accounts.
•
A new feature in Gramm's proposal is the ','look back sequestei," '
requiring a review of federal
spending eacb•June I' to. impose
cuts during the last ql,Uirter of e~~~;h
fiSCal year as weD as in the next.
Gramm's proposal also would
re!aln the BBA's requirements diat
any departure from tbe glide patb
- in an emergency or recession,
for instance - would have to be
approved by three· fifths votes in
both houses.
.
Far more. exciting (and danger·
ous)' than GOP budget poll lies is
the prospect of a massive crash this
fall between Congress and Presi·
dent Clinton.
'
The White House doubts that
Gingrich definitely plans to make
tbe debt-ceiling vote his vehicle for
a "train wreck," as be indicated
recently on ABC News. Aides hope
instead that veto confrontations
will come over individual appropri·
ations biDs.
Gingrich bas served notice that
be ~L10s to effect bis "revolutionary ' ·downsizing of the federal
government pardy by simply refusing to pay for many pro.11rams in
appropriations bills. Clinton almost
certainly will feel compelled to
veto some such bills to defend pro·
grams he deems important.
Lou also thinks that Clinton
might want to avoid a battle .ovcr
tbe deb[ ceiling as early as July,
and might prefer confrontations
oyer individual appropriations or
(in the e vent ail appropriations are
not acted upon) a continuing reso·
lution to keep goverrunent agencies
operating, ail of which would come
in the fall. closer to 1996.
(Morton Kondraclie is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Taxpayer heaven may be i,n the stars
'

Somehow I missed the Oscars
ceremony ("Darn! Last night?!
missed it again?"), but I under·
stand there have been complaints
that it was duU . Every year I miss
the Oscars, and every year lhe postOscars media are full of feature
articles telling us how unexciting
the prcsentat.i9n was. Surely there's
a lesson here. Surely, we wiU even·
tually learn that unless you're there
and actually nominated, there is no
cartllly rca:;on to. w.atcb the_Oscars.
I would submit that tbe only thing
as dull as an Oscars 'ceremony is
the whining commentary afterwards.
Well, Jet me take that back.
Oscar rehashes may have some
compelitioo. How about the media
furor about television talk shows:
"Ale they out of cootroiT' Maybe
it's just me, but I don't care; Tele• vision talk shows could blow all
four tires and explode in a baD of
OamC' on a deserted counlry road
and I'd just yawn . Do you bear?
Yawn!
While we're talking boring:
What about the debate over who
has less approval in the polls, Newt
Gingrich or Bill Clinton? I say
they're Tweedledum and Tweedledee. and I say who cates? .
Or: Is America ready to play
baseball agai.n? Is Pete Wilson a

Another cold
front moving
into Ohio .

•

I am not a big believer in fate working tbe Senate side witb a pltin simply calculate the allowan~s for
each adult and child in your family,
and astral influences and other similar to Arrney' s.
'
subtract
that amount from your
New
Age
mumbo
jumbo,
hu~ it
Talk
about
star
and
planet
align·
'
total income and pay a Oat tax on
must be more U1ali coincidence that
'•
tlle remainder. You could file on a
some truly reformational ideas are
forging their. way into the public
I O·line fonn.
Every person and every business
cognizance just as we are entering lilent.
And lhere's more: Senate in America would pay precisely the
a new millennium.
I mean, we are actuaUy conduct· Majority Leader Robert Dole, R· same rate, which means the system
ing
a national debate about bloated Kan., and House Speaker Newt would be completely fair at last. A
·.
government and balanced budgets Gingrich, R-Ga., recently fmmed a person who makes I 0 Jimes the
commission on economic growth income you do would pay 10 times
and a fair tax system.
·
Roll that last one around on and tax reform and directed it to 'the tax you do. And, here's a real
your tongue and savor it before you study the flat tax and bave recom· incentive: The 9,000-page federal
Now
we
are
talking
about
t8X code would be history and tbe
swallow
it. We are talking about a mendation~ ready by October.
mor~
American citizens who have flat tax- a system of revenue colAnd more : Former GOP con· parasites known as tax 'accountants
worked and paid ·weir dues.
lecting so profoundly equitable and gressman Jack Kemp will bead the and tax lawyers could be displayed
This is supposed to have some- efficient and simple lhat your aver· group. This is a man who is on in the Smithsonian as extinct
Dear Editor,
thing to do with balandng ·the fed- age politician, biased as they are record as saying the Armey plan species.
.
·
Second,
doing
away
with
tax
toward
things
that
gum
up
tbe
gov·
"sets
the
agenda
around
which
Oo Jan. 1, 1995, Social Security era! budget. Now maybe Ibis did
breaks
would
mean
that
political
Republicans
should
emmcntai
process,
can't
compre·
unify"
and
recipients and federal civilian and save a few million dollars on paper, .
·
would be ''the first step toward favors for fatcat friends could no
military retirees received a 2.4 per· but here is the irony or it: in anoth- bend it.
longer be buried in complex tax
As
someone
who
bas
been
agirestoring
the American Dream."
cent cost of living raise.
er news item, our government wflS
tating
for
a
Oat·rate
income
tax
sys·
bills. We could focus completely
Talk about cosmic collisions.
Well, the federal retirees cost of !?,Ding to give a grant (a giveaway)
,
on
Congress' spending habits. To
• · llvin¥ raise was-delayed until Apil , to Rns~m ~o help butld new ho';'!eS· tern for .the better part ofa decade, . ·J have three., things for re§POJ!Sl·
I
am
u'uly
astounded
that
the
i!Otlon
•
'pay
·for their extravagances, the
bic citizens 10 think about they
1 Nvw r contacted u.s . Senator fcrr1hetr army retlfees. : .
•. .J~hn Glenn and was told that the . Now who do you th111k ts.more seems to be catching on. House com pose tlleir letters to tbe com· squandermaniacs would. have to
raise the flat rate on our income.
' delay had originated in the U.S. deservmg. ~ell hang m there.
. Majority Leader Dick Arrney, R· mission: ,
.First, with a Oat·tax system, tax· We could finally understand the
House of Representatives,
.
Vugtl Walker Texas. has been touting a superbly
Racme designed pian for about a year. payer hell would be instantaneous· process and pass judgment at tbe
Minority Leader Dick Gephard~ D· iy transformed into taxpayer bcav· polls.
.
Because Congress spends most
Mo., has proposed a flat-tax en (well, relatively speaking).
scheme, albeit a flawed one. Sen. There would be no deductions, no of its time tinkering with tax laws,
By The Associated Press
·
.
Connie Mack, R-Fla., chai111lal\. or credits, no loopholes. You would their elimination would make it
Today is Tuesday, April I I, the JOist day of 1995. There are 264 days
the Joint Economic Committee, is
left ill the year.
TO(Iay's Highlight in History:
Fitly years ago, oo April II, 1945, during World War ll, American sol·
dien liberated the notorious Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald in Ger·
mMY·r-------~------------------------~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Gramm

now! Sure, experts are boring, but ·and Family ·arc -you've got \O
tbey have many important things to
believe me. We must exorcise the
teach us!) that major corporations
Father or Lies from our operating
systems before it's too late. We
will have to shift capital to retool
tbeir security systems after this virnCCjl digital priests! Virtual garlicl
tual onslaught. It could be tbe end
Why didn't they call it ANGEL
of the marketplace as we ,lrnow it.
(Applicafion Now Gaining Entry
In our obsessive concern with
But that's not wbatl'm worried
Levels) or KITTY CAT (Kinetic
lrivia, I don't lhiak we're aware of about. I've seen enough John Cat- . lnierface To Touch Your Cyber·
the seriousness of our situation penter movies to know lhat soooer
Active Transmilisions)? They could
here. SATAN bas ent11red the digi- or later disgusting tendrils will
even have called it MICROSOFT
tal domain. It was released as begin to ooze from those liUle tiny
2000 (Major Interface Created (fol
shareware (cybertalk for "free holes in the headsets of our .teie·
Reign Over Softwares Of Faulty
stuff")' in the Internet at 7 a.m. phones. Distorted faces of psycbot· Technologies 2000). Why, ob why,
April 5, 1995, a day that will live in ic ~erial killers will appear on our did they call this software
infamy. · '
· monitors, laughing maniacally . "SATAN".? Didn't they know
Stay awake now. I see your eyes Lizard-shaped zig zags of elecaici· what they're messing with?
glazing over. You're starting to ty will leap from our modems. The
Keep watching the skies! Kevin
mumble, "Internet?... Informatlon faces of loved ones wiU melt, and Mitnick was just the beginning!
. superhighway? .. . Again? ... No... they'll say things like, ''Join us, We're doomed! I'm hysterical!
must shut down ... before it's too unbeliever, and find peace," to Will no one listen to me? I'm
late ." Don't fall asleep! That's tbeir terrified innocent pre-teen off- shrieking here! Will no one give
when tlle pods ~et ym1!
·
spring.
me an Oscar!
,
.
You think I m making Ibis up?
I don't ·Care if you've never
(To receive a complimentary
.SATAN, aka "Security Adminis- touched a computer in your life Ian Shoale&lt; newsletter, call 1trator. T.o~l for Analyzing Net- (though you have - every time S00-989-DUCK or write Duck's
· wo~ks, ts a software program ._ you use an ATM. or Touch Tone a · Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada •
destgned to find the weak secW1ty number to a Friend ~nd Yamny;-- 'City;CAlJS'159.J - - - Jan Sboales is a syndicated
points of any computer system you're accessing a computer sys·
linked to the Internet. One of its tern), I don't care if you burned writer for Newspaper Enterprise
creators ("It's alive! It's alive!"), a your computer in a special cererno- Association·.
Dan Farmer, lost his job as a result oy when ·M)'st crashed for the
(For information on how to
of his decision to release this. fourth time in one hour, I don't communicate electronically with
unholy demon into the bowels of care if you're reading Ibis in this columnist and others, con,
cyberspace.
angu~ and frustration, not know·
tact America OnUne by caiUng !Experts worry (Pay attention ing what Mys~ ATM. or Friends 800-8:Z7-6~exL8317,)
. hypocrite? Arc movies getting
dumber? For goodness sake, shut
up. Give everybody an Oscar and
just shut up . .

W. VA.

A cold front will briog stroaa
winds of 30 mpb. gustiog up 10 ~
mph, and more tbunderllOIDia to
Obio tonight Md Into Wednetday.
Conditions will remaio on the
warm side tonight, with lows in the
50s, the National w~ Service
· said. Highs on Wednesday- will be
mostly in the 60s.
The showers are expecled to
move out of tbe state from west to ·
east on Wednesday.
But there will contioue to be a
chance of rain on Thursday beftn
conditions turn drier Friday and
.Sablrday, forecasters said.
The record-high ternpelaiure for
This &lt;rate ai tlie Collifuffiis weaDier
station was 88 degrees 1in 1930
while the record low was 23 in
1882. Sunset tonight ,will be at 8:05
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday ac
6:59a.m.

BLANKETS DONA,TED- Eleven blankets
were donated by Kroger Employees Advi.lory ,
Conunlttee melnbers to the Meigs County Sberllf'a Departm&lt;!nt Mo11day evening. The blankets
will be used to cover accident ~lctims until emergency vehkies arrive, and to provide warmlh to
those .being tmnsported, Deputy D,anny Leonard

'

Vil.4•e.eefn'or1Pr.MG~

Sou tb •Centra I Oh .to

Weather

T · h
omg !...Windy with occasion·
al
showers
and
th
understorrns ... Some.storms possi,
bly severe. Low in·the upper 50s.
South winds 25 to. 35 mph and
gusty. Gh
· ance of ram near 100 per··
cent. ··
Wednesday ... Breezy witb show·
ers and thunde.rstotms likely. High

cent.
Extended for.cast
Thursda A chance of a shower. Lows 5 to 45. Highs in the
11 pper 40s to mid 50s. .
Friday ... Dry, Lows in the 30s
and highs in tbe upper 40s to upper
50s.
Saturday... Dry. Lows in the 30s
and highs in the middle 50s to mid-

1. .

_65~to-7o_._c_h_a_n_ce_o_f_ra-in_7_o_pe_r·--d-ie_60....s._ _.

A:cross the nation
A band of snow, severe tbunderstorms and slrOng winds slretcbed
across the central portion. of the
country today. wbue both coasts
were under clearing skies.
·
st.·
Fog blanketed Cb1cago,
Louis, Indianapolis and Cincinnati
this· morning with temperatures
hovering in tbe 40s. Rain showers
stretched over Des Moii!Cs, Iowa,
Omaha. .Neb., and ,u..em ph tS,
' Tenn.,
and were expe~ted across most of
the central part of the nation
throughout the day today.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
Jon Christensen,
on tbe flfst day of
C
04
the 1 th ongress, exhorted fei·
low Republican freshmen to
"remember that the American peopie sent us to do change."
_ne_s_pi_te_s_o_m_e_s_e_tba_c_ks_an_d_d_i_vi·

Orville Phillips

GerlrUde Neece, 87. Middieport, died Monday, April 10, '1995, at her
OrviUe Phillips, 77, of Pomeroy, died Tuesday, April II. 1995. at his
borne. ·
·
'·
home. ·
A homemaker, she was born June 22, 1907, in Dante, Va.. daughter of
Born 'July 2, 1917, in Williamson, Ky., tbe son oflhe'late Thomas and
the late Noah A. and Margaret E. Wbite Herndon.
·
Angie Burke Phillips, be was a retired coal miner. He was a member of
She is survived by her husband, Charles Taylor Neece, to Whom she ..the Rutland Church of Christ and tbe United Mine Workers.
was married on May 22, 1930, in Dante; .a son, Howard Douglas Neece of
He is survived by his wife, Mildred Kapleina Phillips of Pomeroy;
Middleport; four sons and daughters-in-law, Charles N. and Sylvia Neece
daug)lter and son-in-law, June and Glen Mayes of Pomeroy; daughter,
of Pomeroy, Norman and Pat Neece, Roger and Donna Neec.e and Edward · Aori:nce Couchic of Orange City, Fla.; sons and daughters-in-law, Orville
and Rhonda Neece, all of Middleport; a daughter and son·m-iaw, Jan1ce
and ·Patty PbiUips and Eugene and Nancy Phillips, aU of Pageville, Paul
and Jack Haggy of Pomeroy; 16 grandcbildreo and 10 great-grandcbtl·
an? Diana Phillips and Wetzel and Sandra Phillips, all of Snowville, and
dren.
.
Virgil and Judy Phillips of LucasviUe; son, Earl Phillips of Pomeroy; sisShe was preceded in death by a son, Neuman Neece; three s1sters,
ters and brotbers· in-law, Bonnie and Albert Hatfield of Ranson, Ky.,
Myrtle Edwards, Rutlt W~ite and Bitty Kate Herndon, and three broth~rs,
Edith and Frank Evans of Switzer, W.Va., Ethel and Sid May of Hardy,
Roy Shaler and Oakley Herndon.
·
Ky.; sister, Yula Ferguson of Fayette; brother and' sister-in-law, Denny
S~rvices will be held Thursday, 1 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Mid·
and Bonnie Phillips of Omar, W.Va.; brothers, Sherwood Phillips of
dlepon with the Rev . .Andrew Parsons officiating. Burial will follow m . Fayette, and John Phi!Ups of Monaville, W.Va.; brolher~ in-iaw, Elmer
Bradford Cemetery. ·
.
Morris of Wilkinson, W.Va.; sister-in-Jaw, Sadie Carter of Cliicago, Ill.;
Friends may call Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
step-children, Marilyn and Roonie Wilt of Lancaster, and Shirley and Dan
Stanley and Roger and Cbarldine Alkire, aU of Pomeroy; 14 grandchil·
dren; eight step great-grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. .
He was preceded in death by his wife, Lula Greenhill Phillips; four
infant
children; and bt:Others, Arnold and Thomas Phillips.
Helen Ann Williams, 50, Middleport, formerly· of Youngstov.:~. died
Services will be at 1 p.m. Friday at the Rutland Church of Chris~ with
Monday, ApriliO, 1995, at Arbors Rehabilitation Center in Marietta.
lhe Rev. Eugene Underwood officiating .
A homemaker, she was born Oct 15, 1944; in Youngstown, daughter
Buriai will foDow in the Wells Cemetery.
of the late James Bud and Kate Hicks Stubbs.
Friends may call between 24 and 7 ·9 p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
She atteoded tbe Mt. Moriah Baptist Church.
Funeral Home.
She is survived by her husband; James Williams of Middleport.; a
daughter, Lisa Williams of Baton Rouge, La.; four so~s, Albert M1ke
Jackson I r. of San Diego, Calif.• Derrick Jackson of ~~~dlepprt, James
Hospital news
Williams Jr. of Middleport and Aaron and Amanda Wtlliams of Dallas,
Contln!Hid from page 1
.Texas, and seven grandchildren.
Holzer Medical Center
- multiplying and dividing
Also surviving is a brother, Henry Stubbs, and a sister, Mattie Jones,
Apr.il 10 discharges: Mrs. numbers of at least two digits; .
both of Youngstown, and several nieces and nephews. . ·
·
Glendon Sharp and daughte.r, Tim· and .
She was preceded in deatb by · two brothers, James Stubbs Jr. and othy Caudill, Herbert Htll and
-measuring.
Charles Stubbs.
The students also learned
Wanda Holle.
Services will be Saturday, 11 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy
April 10 birth: Mr. and Mrs , more tangible lessons from· bal·
with .the Rev. Eddie Buffington officiating. Burial will follow in Meigs Charles Exline, son, Wellston. ·
ancing accounts to maintaining a
Memory Gardens.
•
(Published with permission)
1ask schedule and accomplishing
Friends may call Friday, 4-9 p.m. at the funeral borne.
a common goal, Randolph said.
The physical laws taught
include
learning about' stress, the
I
law
of
gravity,
fulcrums and tile
Am Ete Power ·------·-....32 7/8
Bake sale to be held
. 'will .be held Saturday at the Me1gs Akzo·--········
strength
or
geometric
shapes.
..- -..--··· .......56 718
A bake sale wiD be held Friday, County Museum from 11. a.m. to I Ashland OU ---------.33 7/8
10 a.m. at Kroger in Pomeroy. The p.m. under spo~sor.sbtp of the . AT&amp;T ·----..- - - - -...-.511/8
Ladies Auxiliary of the Chester .Meigs Coun~y Htstoncai Soctety. Bank One.--..- -..- ........-.30 718
Volunteer Fire Department are The brunch ts an· al!·you-~an-eacb · Bob Evans-----·------211/8
Cbampioo Iod·-------....:Zl1/4
sponsoriog the sale.
event, $2.50 for chtldren ; $3 fo
Charming Shop ______ ,_..,...5 3/8
tJ:Jose
over
12
,or
adults.
Reserva.
..
City HoidiDg •"-··7 - ..............27
• tion s by ·Thursday, 992-38 ·. Federal
Sorority reschecluies date
Mogul._.,..______,l8 314
Crafts
for
the
children,
door
prize
The Preceptor Beta Beta chapter
Goodyear
T&amp;R ..- ..........- ....38 3/8
will cancel this Thursday's meeting drawing, spec·ial readings.
K·mart ..... ,....... - ....._ ............ 14 1/2
Lands End_ .. __ ,;___.., ... l7 3/8
and reschedule for 7:30 p.m: A~l .
20 at tbe Episcopal Church til Bub sale announced ·
Limited ln&lt;.----------.:12 5/8
Pomeroy.
· Easter bake sale will be held Multimedia Inc. ·--··-·--·.39 1/8
Saturday, 9 a.!Jl. to noon at St.' Paul Ohio
People's
...-...-..
- -......
Our statrstrcs shOw thai mature dri·
VaUey
,..--..
______
•__ov.l-2
.__ ..1/2
44
United Methodist' Cburch, Tuppers
Middleport TOPS to m&lt;!el
vers andhome owners have fewer and
One Valley --------·--·.:18 3/4
The Middleport TOPS club will Plains.
tess costly losses than other age
RockweU ·--..- -..- -..- -.39 718
'
meel'at 6 p.m. Thursday at the
groups.
Sort's only fair to charge you
Robblm
&amp;
Myers..------.2llfl
Middleport Church of· Christ. Bradbury science fair tohight
Royal
Dutcb-----------119
less
tor
yo ur insu1ance. Insure your
The Bradbury Elementary Sixtb
Weigh-in time begins at 5:15p.m.
Shooe)"s Inc....- ..... - ..--.10 318
home
and
.cai wilh us and save even
grade science fair and PTO meetStar Bank --~-- ..--..--.41 318
more with ou'r spec&lt;al multi-policy
ing wHI be held tonight at 6:30
Brunch with Easter Bunny
Wendy lot'L ------~-.16 7/8
Worthington
lnd;
••
..;
___
.,.,l9
7/8
p.m.
at
th~
school.
dr.
scounts.
A brunch with the Easter bunny

Helen Williams .

,

Breaking...

Couples issued
. marriage licenses
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recenUy in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
· .
Terry Lee Bell, 30, and Rita
Kay Rose; 21, both of Middlepoo;
Scotl Brooks Anderson, 24,
Pomeroy, and Elizabeth NeD Law·
son, 21, Racine; ·
George Randall Bunce, 24, Mid·
dleport, a.nd Lori Ellen Neal, 21,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Edmund
William Gilliam Sr., 24. and Vicki
Sue Conley, 25, both of Pomeroy;
Emmanuel Cundiff, 20, and Angel
Dawn Grimm, 19, both of
Pomeroy .

sions . within Ibis loosely knit
:'Class of '94" of 73 first·term
Republican members, Christensen's challenge was largely
heeded by his colleagues.
These Capitol Hili novices·,
most of whom bad signed the
GOP's defining "Contract With
America" last fall, essentially lcept
their pledge to help bring about
fundamental change in the way
Congress operates.

I .c,l

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls
RlJll..AND

5:40 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
Dwan.; L. Rees, l!MC.

, - - - STUTS 'J'OMC*IK*I-

P£Utl

I

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21J.%0) .

PubliJhed every aftern oon. Monday through
Friday, II J Cou.n St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the:
Ohio Valley Publishing .Company/Multimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2Jj6,
Second cln.u pqstngc: pnld m Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Prt:u, and the Ohio
Newspaper A.uoeintion

POSTMASTER: Send qddm!

correc~ol'!-•

to

The Da ily Sentinel, I II Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio457t59.
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Ry Carriu or Motor Rouer
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not ite.'iiring to pay ahe cllfl'ier mny
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on a three, 5i• or 12 momh basis. Credit will be
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Irwkle Mclp Count}'
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13 Weeks ................................ ,........... $2S.61
26 Weekfl .......................................... ~ .....• $49.66

S2 Wcekt ................................................. $96.20

•

Holy week services announced
Holy Thursday will be observed
at the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church at 7:30p.m. witb a service,
Jesus Chose the Via Dolorosa.
Eastet Sunday services will includ·
ed sunrise worship at 6:30 a.m.,
breakfast to follow served by the
men, an egg bunt for tbe children at
9:30 a.m. and a grand celebration
of Easter service at 10:30 am.
. . -- Seder dinner planned ·
Seder dinner, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. at St. paul Lutberan Church,
Pomeroy, SPflllsi&gt;red by Women of
St. John and St. Paul Lutheran
Churches. Reservations, 992·2010.

.!.,•.,

:OO,a: XI IJUl.T

Mow Open For T,he Seuoil

l ~ OO , 'll:OO

Hubbard• .Greenhouse
Syracuse
992·5776
Open Dally 9 em·S pm
Sunday 12 noon-5

. . TOMMY
...... .........BOY
,.. ,_ '"""I

I

MAJOR

,...

1: 00,3: 00

PAYNE ,,...

,I

I

I

O!,~!!l!IC....J~'··-P}U ~I

7:00,,:JO C...U.l l'la',Bitf/fUt I lB&gt;. 1 :011, l : JO

I1:MAN
OF TH£ HOUlE .... ""' I
00 DA.O.Y * '·!W'{fbl I ~ . 1 : 00,):110 4CI
( ,~,~~~.:~~;) }

THE ULTIMATE
PROM SPECIAL
· FROM

TERS

g,

TUXEDOS
AT

THE FABRIC SHOP

ANY TUXEDO IN
OUR CATALOG IS
NOW·ONLY~ ••
95

$34

Includes Coat, Pants,
:. Shirt, Tie , -·
Cummerbund.
.

6141992-4015

Judy Well, OWner

Hours: 10:00 to 5 pm

Dlll.tt.'r

Gin CERTIFlCATES AVAULl.BLE!

.317 N. Second Avenue

Tueadey thru Saturdl!y
Ctooed Sunday I Monday

_,.,tiA'I'~ &amp; ~ -

I

446-0923

. Middleport, Oh. 45760

and so much morel

l

1&lt;1

t .,_I 10(), ):00

1:20, 9:20 ot.ILY ._,.,M'l'/!ll'l I Wll . l :10,1: 20

One Evening Show 7:30

SJLJ./E

Potted Easter Flowera,
in historic
Middleport. Ohio.
Panales, Hanging Baskets,
· Shrubs &amp; Trees.
You'll find baskets,
. -Also \lagelable Pl,nts: - 1---lf- i)ears,.dolls;.pcltte,ry,_J__I
Cabbage, Broccoli, etc.
wreaths, wood, florals
$1/doz. $6.50/flat

MIUI£

Mt~.flltr/-

l:lO,'ll:lO IJUt.T Mt . SNr/~" IBJ:1 :20,l:20

Walt Disney
Heavyweights •a

. Country Na~arals
Gifts &amp; Accessories

•

'"""I

~·-

r
., •
.!!!t.. ,., r
7;1!.,9:1\ MJl.Y lta'.&amp;V/- IIBJ , l : IS,l:IS
I
BYE BV[ . lOU[ . , ... , ,

STARTING FRIDAY

st .91..nniversary

VIsit 'COUNTRY
; NATURALS· Gllla11.
&amp; Acceesorlea"

~

ltOW IJiowlltG I

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30.

Stoo:k reports ""' the I 0:30 Lm.
quotes provided by 'Ad vest of
GaWpolls.
.
.

1·

1:00,l:ob

DUTY
., JURY
........ ....
......

r . R BIOFY

The Brady Bunch
Movie •a
•

-·-·-

~,,.,,~.-..,

e

'r.:IO,'ll:IO DIULY J«&lt;,IJI(t/Q I _ . 1;10,J;10

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

_Owners
...
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

~

AND TH£ PENGUIN &lt;Ct

1:00,!: )11 DULl Ja'!'.&amp;W/- I

We Give
Drivers,

·~

•

Stacy, Camden -Clark Memorial
Hospital.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to five calls for assis·
tance Monday. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:16 a.m., Neece Road,
Genrude Neece, dead upon arrival.
RACINE
4:0( a.m., Yeliowbush Road,
Edoa Neiglcr, Holzer Medical Cen·
tcr
5:47 a.m .. New Ponland Road,
Kathleen Ward, Jackson General
Hospital;
·
5:38 p.m., Elm Street, Robert

Stocks

Meigs announcements .

said, In accepting the blankets from Thelma·Jef·
fers, center, and Wilma Davidson, representing
Kroger Employees. Containers to store the blankets In were donated by Pamlda . Buying the
blankets is one of several projects being carried
oul by the employees.

Freshman play significant "
role in moving GOP agenda

A rea .Deaths-------·

Gertrude Neece

Jan Shoa/es

•

•

•

If lf'1
OGAN

POMEROY
992-6687 ,
.Auifi-O.MI I /nnu:tutce
L•te Home Ca• a~

,,..

Hs~e

It

Mon.·Sat. 9:00 to 5:00

se~vice£

_ _2.14 EAS~AIN

, -"'No 0 . . .

- We

Hours:

C.£"·

~RNE}!~';?.
nsuran.ce

F~rmsl

·.THE·FABRIC-SHOP110 WEST MAIN

.,~.._....

"""""'""""'

•

•

POMEROY

992·2284
'

�..

-

'

•

1

'

"

·Sports

•

~

sibility tbere are just seven games
· " MINNEAPOLIS (~P)- One leftinbiscareerhere.
·
-moment Isaiah Rider talks as if be
''Basically the only thing we
rruly believes the Minnesota Tini- can do as a team is write Ibis seaberwolves have a bright future. The son off," the Wolves' leading scornext moment he sounds like be er said. "We thought we'd bave a
wants no pan in it.
'
.
much better
It's very disap- ,
So it goes for Minnesota's mer- pointing . We re right there. We're
curial shooting guard, wbo has ready to win". Next year will be
been as unpredictable on the conn adolher year."
'
· as off ~it during..hissecorul NBA
DuLaftcr being fi!!el! nearly .
season"
· $100,000 by the team this season •
Rider scored 27 points Monday for breaking various rules, threat.. night in th&amp;-Wolves ' liA-107 loss -ening a b.eal JJ:Jlllrter and barely.
to Denver, which moved tbe avoiding jail for a 1994 assault
Nuggets a half-game ahead of 1 charge. Rider said an off-season
Sacramento in the race for the final trade might be best for himself and
•Western Conference playoff spot.
the Wolves.
.
. · After tbt: game, Rider, who · "My agent let the Timber• didn't reach double figures iti bis wolves know that maybe we-should
last three home games, talked about go our separate ways," said Rider,
the frustrations of another dismal who has live ' years left on his $25.5
season with Minnesota and the JlOS· million contract •

rear.

While all the Wolves (20-SS) Denver's seventh straight over ·believed to be serious and be
bave to shoot for in the final two Minnesota and its ninth in tbe last should be ready for Thursday's
weeks is the second-best record in 10 meetings"
·
game at Los Angeles.
franchise bistory - ·they need three
"We've played teams th!~t we
With Rider" and Gugliotta each
wins for that- the Nuggets (36- should win against, and Ibis is one · scoring 15 points, Minnesota took a
39) are scrapping to return to the of them," said Dale Ellis, wbo 52-50 halftime lead. But Williams
playoffs.
scored 16 _points. "Now we go to bit t\YQ three-pointers early in the
After winning four games to play the Clippers, and we should third quarter and added a threemove back into playoff contention, win tha~ too.
point play in an 11-3 run tbat
Denver last three straight at borne
"Streaks are a matter of playing helped the Nuggets to an 83,75
beforetr.uoclingJnMinnesota.__ _ well, and wll!! YQ!!'~ playin~. It's lead beading inlo the fmal period.
With Reggie WiUiams and Mah- , all timing. One thing is rertam, we
· Denver 1ibOt 61% in the third
moud Ahdui-Rliuf each scoring 20 bave to be more focused at home.:•
and held the Wolves to 35% shootpoints and Dikemhe Mutomb&lt;!_
Also Monday night, Dallas feli irig.
·
·
·
coming within one blocll of a 21/2 gamesbeh1nd-oenver tiy los..Warrlon 123, Move•ieks 112.
triple-double, Denver won its t6tb ing at borne to Golden State 123At Dalla~, Latrell ~prewe_ll
road game of the year 1o match Its 112, and Charlotte took Boston scored 30 pomts and Cbns Mullm
best road re~ord in the past five f19·95.
'
bad half ofbis 26 in the third quar;
seasons.
.
. The Nuggets, tormented by ter. Clifford Rozier ..llad 20 points
Denver has seven regular-season injuries alf season, got a scare an~,' 12 rebounds for f:be Wan:lors, .
games remaining, four at McNi- when Abdui-Rauf went out with a one of lbe leagues brggest dtsapcbols Arena, while Sacramento has leg bruise with 5:31 left in the poinanents tills sea5Qn.
eight. Monday night's victory was game. But the injury wasn't
Jamal Mashburn scored 29

points and Popeye Jones 21 for the
Maverlclcs, who )VOn eigbt of their ·
previous 11 and five of their last
six at home to move into. playoff ,.
contention. Dallas' Lorenzo
Williams had 14 points and a
career-high 19 rebotDids.
Hornets 119, Celtlcs 95
At Charlotte, Alonzo Mourning
scored 25 points and Hersey
Hawldns 23 against Boston"
, Tlte Hof!letS' shooting improved
from 33.8% in a defeat by the PB!!ers 1o 60.8% on 48-for-79 shooting
against tbe Celtics"
Boston, fighting to bold onto the
eighth and final playoff benb in the
Eastern Conference, struggled
offensively after 61% shooting in
the first quarter. By game's end,
Boston· bad shot 48.1% and saw its
five-game winning streak snapped.

.

I.

•

•

•

_ Catcher Chris Hoiles re- San Francisco, Bob TewtsDury .
signed with the Orioles for $17.25 dropped from $3.5 millioo 1o $1.5
million over five yeitrS. ·
million wbea ·be signed with Tcxaa,
- Pilcher Pete Harnisch re- Orel Hersbiser dropped from ~3
signed with lb
. e Mets for $9 million
million tn $1.45 million when be
over three years, and reliever Jobn signed with Cleveland"
Franco signed for $5 million over
On Monday, Teddy Higuera did
two.
·
·a deal with San Diego that would
-Reliever John Burkett signed give him $275,000 if he makes the
with the Marlins for $6.9 million team. He made $2.95 million last
over two years.
year. Danny Darwin signed with
For every one of those deals, " Toronto f_o r $300,000, a drop of
there have been three players wbo $2.1 mllhon. Paul Assenmacber
took big shaves: Terry Mulholland signed with Cleveland for
dropped from $3 .35 million to $700,000, a drop of $1.55 million.
$1.25 million when be signed with

d e.u;;lt
6" •
Southern
shakes
.. . .
_
_, .
..
.
_ ,_
to gets past ·B e'
'
pre
.,._5
. Jj I '
I
~•

North boys split twinbill; North girls get two wins

20o/o off 20o/o off 2 Oo/.()Joff
Ladies Mens Shirts. Boys and Girls
Levi]eans
Size 0-14 ·
Regular &amp; Slim

The Place For Work And Western
290 North
Sec.ond Ave., Middleport

992-3684

Scoreboard

Basketball

New Jrniy at 01arlotte, '7 :)0 p.m.
WadliDRIOI'I at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.

· . NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Ium

Allanlk DI•INon
I
~ I. J!&lt;L

lil

x-Orlando .............. 54
' • x-New York........... 49
• Bo,ton ............. ,. .... 32
• • Miaml ........ ,.... :...... 29

21
25
44
46 ·

.720
.662
.421
.ll1

4J
22.5
25

: New Jersey .... ,. ...... 28
' • Philadelphia ... ,. ...... 21
' Washinglon ........... 18

47
54
S7

.173
.280
.240

26
33
36

x-l ntliana ............... 49
x-O.nrlotte ............. 46
x-Oicago ........... .fl'l l
x-Or.veland ........... 40
Atl ama .: ................. :r7
MJIW11.Uiree ............. 30
~(r(l it ...................27

27
29
34
JS
38
45
47

.645
.61 3
.$47
.$33
.493
.400
.365

Hockey

2.5
7.5
8.5

IU
liU
21

. EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DIYialon
~ L I llL

Phila tldphia .....
New JerKy ......
W a.~h ingtb D .....
N.Y. Rangm ...
Rorida .............
Tampa Da"y ,. .....
N.Y. !slanders..

20 "13
17 14
16 1)
15 19
1417
14 20
11 20

Nur thell.!ll

wESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwnt Dl"•lon

Iwo

~

o~-San . Alltnni o .......56
o~- Vtah ...... :., ...........53

.c·HouSton ............. 44
De nver ... ., .............. 36
Dullas..................... 3J
Mfllllesota ......... 20

I. 1:&lt;1.

18

n

)I
39
· 41
55

.7H
.1o1
..581
.4110
.-446
.261

lill

:u

11-:'S
20.5

4
7
7
3
5
3
5

44
41
39
33
33
31.
27

427 5

l6.S

.S.
6.5
14
18
29 S
37.5

Mondar 's scoreS

.~4

1_55 109
-'0' 145 122
41 ll O 119
38 100 89

'40%off

Charlotte 119. BQ&amp;loD 95
~nvcr 114, Min~ot.JI 101
Ooldt:n State 123, Dallul l l

Tonight's games
Mmmi at New York. 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7;30 p.m.
o~"elnnd at OriiUi do. 7. 3Q p.m.
lndinna al Clucaso. 7 30 p.m.
Detrcut at MJlw~ukce, 8;30 p.m.
Da!lilli ~~ I fffilltco, 8:30p.m.
Pottl&amp;nd ~~San AJi toniu. 8:30 p.m.
L. A Wen at Utlil, 9 p.m.
~ni.l at Seattle. 9 p.m. '
SacramtblO ~~ l..,A. Clippe.n, IO;J()

Centn1 Oivbion
Ium
~ L I fU. liE lib.
~t - Det ro1 t.. ......... 26 7 3 .SS 138- 81

43
35
33
30

AnBheim ........... 12 20 4

2&amp;

13 1
113
124
')A

94 129

x~linc h ed

playoff berth

Monday' s scores
Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3

TOM PEDEI HAS AI IIVEITORY OF OVER BOO."BRAID lEW

this month!

109
115
144
110•'"

Edmonton ......... l122 · 3 17 99 I-40

Available At:
I WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
Memorial Bridge
Approach on Garfield
, Ave., Parkersburg

We have just revealed one of the best-kept of
alLgovemment secrets.
As far as we can tell, there are remarkably few
people out there who realize that the U.S. Postal
Service is totally self-supporting. All our income is
. from the sale of stamps, none of it (zero, zilch, nada)
from taxes. It's been that way since 1982. And it
makes us an excepti~nal· government service.
This is pretty remarkable when you consider that just
about every day tht: Postal Service delivers to 125 niillion
addresses from more than 40,000 post offices across the
country, generating annual revenues of $54 billion.
Or that we deal with 17.7 billion pieces of mail a year.
Deliver 400/o of the world's mail. And that, thanks to
automation and high-tech equipfl¥'nt, the USPS continues
to offer the lowest-cost, ·
tmt.:claSs postage rates of
UNITED STJJ.tES any industrialized nation.
POSTJJ.L SERVICE,.

Mon "-Fri. 9-8:30; Sat 9 -.5 :30

Mo ntreal 2, Ne w Jasey 1

428-1065

Calg:uy 8, ~an Jo.e 3

p.m.

Lear wins match
in all-star meet;
Sheets pinned
Ga lli a Academy senior Scou ·
Lear, competin g for the South
team. won a 5-3 decision over Bel·
pre's Shanno n Newbanks m the
,160- pound
in las t
Star Wrestl ing Match a t
High SchOOL
Lancaster's Rob Bruno pinned
Meigs junior Adam Sheets, wbo
was conipeting on the North team.
30 seconds into the 189. pound
match.
o
The North team won eigbt·of 14
matches and won by a 30·20 tally
Jn the ninth ann ual meet.

-

~

from any book

P.w:Jn., Olvlalon
5
9
7
2

.. ,

..

Patterns Selected

St. Louis .. .,....... 21 II ~ 4.S 130 9S
Clucaao ............ 19 14 3 41 126 91
Toronto ............. 16 1.5 7 . J9 107 l.l3
Dallas ................ 14 11 6 Jot 106 96
Winnipeg .......... II 19 6 28 113 136
19 14
13 14·
J3 17
l42Q

If it surprises you that the
U.S. Postal Service is nof funded
by tax .dollars, join the.crowd. , "

· Wall PapeT "

35 100 J.07
35 97 120
13 79 132

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Calgaty .............
V:xnc.ouver ........
[.llsAngdes ....
Sa n J~ ............

..

IMPERIAL

Dlt'i ~l u n

. ..,_ Q_llc.l?$c .... ..:,~·.. ~·· 25 9 4
Pltu.bw ~h ......... 24-1-1 "'""-1'
Bw; toll .............. 19 14 3
Dufralo .............. 16 14 6
llurtroilL... ,...... 15 11 . 5
Monlrt'al. .......... 1.5 17 5
Ottawa ............

liE lib.

121 I 06
106 96
95· 87
98 99
88 98
93 1m
9 1 1,19

23

P~Ktn c:

Divl•lon
o~ · Seattle ... ,............SJ 21
.1 16
o~ · Ph oc n lx .. ,.. ,....... .Sl 22 .107
I · L.A. Lal::cu ........ 41 28
.627
Puttland .... :............ l9 l5 ..521
Sacramento............JS )') .413
Oolden SU.te ..........24 Sl .320
L. A. Clippen .. ,...... i6 59 .213
x-dl nchcd playolf berth ..

The Ohio Division elf Wildlife
plans on stocking about 2,000 trout
in Forked Run Lake Wednesday.
Ac c ording
to
division ·
spokeswoman Carol Wells, the
trout will be released around 1:30
p.m at the Curtis Hollow Road boat
launch .

NHL standings
ltJom

Ctnlnl Dh•l•lon

Trout to be
stocked
·wednesday

Oicaao 111: Dctroit,7.:30 p.m.
Golden State at MIMeaola, 8 p.m.
San AnlonW, at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
LA. Lak.m at Sacramento , IO:lO n.m.

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FOUR BIG DAYS .
"
April 12th,
13th, 14th and 15th

• Western
• Casual
• Denim

.

SOuthern basebal·l team .gets 4-3 win over. Bel pre

1?ti~t~'C;(/ti6;.~~~~iitl.tl

Mason Bowling
League results

-

Bellilld six flms rn t1le fifth , Alfllrea Muore, Jonna Manuel ,
inning, Southern's softball team . Brandy Roush and Jess Codner haid
took tbe lead then bad to hold off a RBI singles. Another run came
strong Belpre charge to clai,m a 7-5 home on Sammi Sisson's ground
viclory Monday night in Tri-Valley ou~ while another came on J. CumConference play. ·
mins' fly ball.
· Southern (4-:'1) scored.ftrst in tbe
With Southern leading 7-2, BelSouthern's baseball team · held score 1-0.
,
In the sixth, Madison walked, they face. Tonight we concentrated second inning when Jennifer Cum- pre fought back. Crystal Goin
off a late game rally to defeat visitSouthern scored again in tbe
Wesson singled, followed by a on what we were doing and played mins walked, Tassi Cummins scored in the sixth after she singled
ing Belpre Monday evening.
third when Ryan Martin singled,
passed ball and flyout that scored errorless balL This was a good win walked,~ a run scored on a hard- and rode home on a Watkins sinSenior hurler Eric Jones pitched advanced on a, passed ball, and
Madison. Wesson then rode borne and our ftrsl home win of the year." bit ball by Renee Turley, that was gJe. Then in the seventh, Kim
a great game, striking out two in scored on a Maynan) ground out on Reams' double to make the·
Southern's hitters were Maynard misplayed for an error at second"
Arnold singled and advanced 00 a
each inning for a total 14 strikeouts and run down.
a
triple,
and singles each by
score 4-3 as Jones fanned Wise, the
Ace· pitcher Nikki Arnold then (Jy-out;• wliile· Kath·y Coyner
and six walks, while scauering just
lead off hitter for the last out with Williams, Martin, Smith, Dailey setUed down to retire Soitthern in walked. One scored on 5-3 ground
Belpre scored once il! the fifth
five hits. Wesson suffered the loss 'when Reams bit a home run, one of two !9nners on.
and Jeremy Hill.
order for the next two innings, out and anolher on N. Arnold' s sinfor Belpre, giving up six Southern his three hits on the night to make
Wesson and Reams accounted while Southern starter Jennifer gle. Lawrence then got Goin on a
One Belpre runner ;walked in
bits, striking out six and walking the score 2-1.
Lawrence was doing a good job for 6-4 ground out to end the game
the seventh, J&gt;ut Southern held on for the five Belpre hits.
two.
Inning totals
· Southern came back to mHke it for the win.
her club . .Belpre (8 -2) took a 2-0 leaving th~ runner stranded at farst. '
Southern (4-4) scored farst in the 4-l ·on Ryan Williams' single, Mar- ·
Southern roach Mlck Winebren- Belpre: 000-012-0; 3-5·2
lead in the top of the fiflh inn1ng,
Lawrence fanned five and
second when Jesse· Maynard tin's sacrifice and Maynard's triple.
ner said, "We've been taking too Southern: 011-020:x 4-6-0
when Julie Watkins walk~d, and walked four iq picking up the win,
walked, advanced on a fielder's Maynard scored on a Jeremy Smith many teams for granted. When this
WP-Jones
· Angie Rouse reached on&lt;fltl error in while Arnold ·suffered the loss witb
choice. and scored on an error on single.
LP-Wesson
right field . Watkins scored on an five stri,ke outs and five walks.
team stays focused and concenShawn Dailey's hit ball to make lhe
error at second and Roitse scored lnnlng totals
trates, they can play with any team
on a 6, 3 gmund out for ·a 2-1 lie!- Belpre: 000-021-2; 5-6-4
pre lead.
Southern: 010-()6(}.~; 7-4-1
Southern fought back wilh a big
WP- Lawrence
inning
when
Cummins
reached
on
LP - Arnold
Summer Erb had 17 points and was
Kelle Saxen added 15 each. Chris- an error and Turley did the same.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) goal attempts.
.
sy Billiter of Elida had 14.
Anthony Stacey of Grafton MidRyan Flet~hcr of Middletown one of live North players to score
South was led by Mindy Fusetti
Sports briefs-----view s~9red · 24 points and Twins- scored 16 points for. the South, in double ligures as North defeated
of Teays Valley and Brookhaven's'
burg Chamberlin's James Posey while Scott Marston of Cincinnati South 109-94 Sunday in the ,DiviJ~ckie Robinson won the
Babe Ruth was sold to the Yan.
Anitra Perry, with 16 points each. Natrona! League batting title in
added 20 as the North overpowered Oak Hills added 15. Galllii Acade- sion J.IJ high school game for
kees by the Red Sox in 1920 and
Ohio's Ms. Basketball, Beth Osten- 1949, only his third season in the
the South 115·69 ·Sunday in the my's Terry Qualls had six points . seniors.
bit a record 54 borne runs in his
In
the
Division
III-IV
game,
on
J.for-4
field·
goal
shooting.
·
36th Division I-ll all-star game for ·
dorf of Pickeringlon, each added ts· ,btg leagues"
ftrst season in New York"
.
high school seniors.
.
In the Division III-IV game, Kristina Bchnfctdl ofTinora scored points.
North opened the Divisioq JUIn the Division III-IV game, the Cruse scored 1 I of his points in the 20 .points as North beat South 102Family Rail Fan Excursion - May 5, 1995 ·
South beat the North 101-92 fourth quarter to lead the South, 79 : The games were played at lY game wilh a 16-1 run and coastTo Clifton Forge, Vlrghila
behind the 26 points of Chillicothe which went on an 18-0 run in the Otterbein College.
ed to viclory, leading in the second
1
Erb and Behnfeldt were chosen half by as many as 30 points. Toni.
Unioto's Jason Cruse. Southem~s fourlh quarter for the victory.
Wide Range ofFamily Activities/Events
Ryan Williams' 1-for-7 field-goal
Brad Hosdasa of Utica added 14 as the games' most valuable play- Pappas of Wellsville paced North
via The Mountain·State Mystery Train ·
shooting netted him three points points while Centerburg's Todd ers.
with 11 points, seven steals and ,
Round liip Fare- EARLY BIRD SPECIAL
In the Division 1·11 contest, four assists. Alisha Bable of
·
all on a three-pointer. ·
Sands, Ansonia's Jason HemThe North's margin of victory merich and Middletown Madison's · North .led 56-48 at halftime and Columbiana Crestview had 16
Board Htn. or Chas., WV Adult $99.00 Child $66.00
was up by a.i ·many as 20 points in points, while Jodi Dobran,sky of
in Oivision I-ll was the biggest in Shay Richardson each bad 12.
Early Bird Special Eapim 4/15195
the game's hi story.
Adam Kuhlmann of Holgate led the second half.
East Canton scored 15.
For TICketing ConiiJcr Unig/obe Lyndon Travel- Hrgn.
For North, Dana Sulenski of
Neslmun Coleman qf Toledo St. the North witlt 20 points.
Versailles' Jacki Raterman and
1-800-347-1231
M-F 8:30-4:30
Austintown Fitch scored 16 points Jennifer ·Hall of Felicity-Franklin
North girls sweep twinblll
John, who will attend Obio Stille
S nsertd by A. Mountain State Murder Mysiery, Hlp.. WV l·J04.S2~U
At Westerville, Lakewood's . and EasUakc North's Kate Mooney led South with 16 points each.
, this fall, added 17 points for the
and Toledo Central Catholic's
Norah,
all seven of his field-

a three-goal spurt by Calgary late
·
in the second"
.

...

. The Daily Sentinel-Page · 5

be

:Canadiens, Penguins and .Fiames win in light NHL action
Nieuwendyk scored two goals in
scored three goals as the Flames
MONTREAL (AP)- Stephane
"I don't know if it's that time in Pittsburgh won at Ottawa.
the
ftrSt period, then add another in
Rieber, a fornwneammate, knows my career or what, but I've got no
Goals by former Penguin Martin defeated San Jose.
bow formidable Montreal Canadi- problem putting a goal like that Straka and defensemen Stan
I
ens goaltender Patrick Roy can be.
behind me," Roy said. "In my Neckar and Kerry Huffman sent
"You have to have a perfect mind, it was a 1-1 game, they the Senators into the third period ,
shot to beat the best goaltender 'in weren't going to beat me again and . leading 3-2, but Pittsburgh defensethe world," Richer, now a New wemightstillwin2-1."
· man Ulf Samuelson tied the score
Jersey Devils for--:ard, said MonThe winning goal came from an at 12:07 to set the stage for
day night after Roy s 42-save effon unlikely source only 56 seconds Robitaille's goal.
was instrUmental in Montreal's 2-1 into the third period.
Kevin Stevens and Larry Murvictory. •'Patrick was the differTurner Stevenson, a founb-liner pby also scored for the Penguins.
ence. He stole the show."
who had ·played sporadically in 30
Flames 8, Sharks 3
With the victory, Ute Canadiens games this season, convened a pas.~
At Calgary, Joe Nieuwendyk
.
raised their point total to JS, same by Pierre Turgeon for his first
as the Hartford Whalers. But the career goal in his 33rd NHL game.
Whalers have lhe edge in the batUe
Steven son was bumped up to
for the eighth and fmal playoff spot the ftrstline to start lhe third period
,.,
'
in the Eastern Conference because because Montreal coach Jacques
(Results as of April S)
of bead-to-head meetings with the Demers wanted a physical presence
League -Early Wednesday
......,.
Mixed
·
. Canadiens. .
.
on his top line.
·
The Devils, second in the
·Turgeon, who has six points in
. Team standings- Captain D's
Atlantic Division and tied for four games since Montreal . (67-45), Meigs Golf Course (67·fourth overall in the conference obtained him last week from the 45), Court Street Grill (58-54),
"I:ops, Shorts, Skirts,
with Boston, were 6-0-1 in their New York Islanders, delivered the · Tony's Carryout (58-54), J&amp;L
"previous seven games" .
pass from the comer, as Stevenson Insulation (52-60), Thunder Alley
Sweaters, Dressy
. The Detroit Red Wmgs became was rushing toward goaltender Cats (52-60), Chainsaws &amp; Roses
Coordinates and
(46-66) and Banks Construction
"the first team to clinch a playoff Richard ·Brodeur.
: lierth with a 4:1 victory over
The Canadiens went ahead 1-0 (42-';!0).
City Shorts
Team high series - Captain
:chicago on"Sunday.
at 1.3:06 of the first period, as Mark
; . The only shotlo beat Roy was a Recchi redirected ·a point shot by D's (2023)
Team high game - Captain
· blast from the point by Tommy Odelein past Brodeur, who entered
: Albelin. which deflected off the the game with two straight D's (717)
·body of Montreal defenseman Lyle · shutouts.
Men
• In other ~ames Monday nigh~ it
Individual high series - Larry
Odele in.
: The goal, with 2:48 left in the was Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3: and . Dugan (561) and Roger Carpenter
; second period, tied the score 1-_1. Calgary 8, San Jose 3.
(546)
·
. But the Canadicns, outsbot 20·3 m
Penguins 4, Senators 3 ·
Individual hlgb game tJre period, might have· had a far
Luc Robitaille scored with 3:34 Dugan (205) and Carpenter and
worse fate if not for Roy. '
re·maining in regulation time as Bub Stivers (tied at203)
Women
Individual high series
Drema Ussery (583) and June
MoY(ery (579)
·
Individual high game Ussery (236) and Mowery (233)
\Vedne.!iday's g•mes

Pometoy-Middlepor1, Ohio

. · Br ,RONALD BLUM
. ''It.' s ~~en _inctedibl_e, _iust
Players .;md agents say the of loss of revenue are paying ecoNEW YORK (AP) -A lot of . mcredt~le, acttng coiDDUssmner moves of the past week sbow the ·Jilll!lically."
.
~ase_ball players 8CCI!$tomed '?mil- Bud Selig said"
'
current system ~?f fRe agen_cy I!Dd
Even knowing television revhon'CioUat paychecks are falling to
Dav_e Stewart d~~ppe~ from salary a~bltratJon can adJUSt to_ enue would be cut by more than 50
the;~ of the JIW!CIY.well to do.
$_3.5 mill!on to $1 mtUaon \then be changes m revenue. Owners claim percent in 1994, the average still
l~.s a cbangrng market out ~agn~d ~tth Oaklan~ on Saturday. • they lost $700 million In revenue Ina-eased 4.6 percent in 11)93 and
there, Houston Astros _gener;~J He .~rdn t seelJIIo mmd, .
.
hee,~use ~f the strilce.,
.
8.6 percent in 1994, to about $1.17
man~~e~ Bob Watson ~d MonWhat the owners are dotng .
The trony of th~ labor dispute mlllion.
.
as fo~lo'\'~· .agent Randy
There were several bi)l free
day .. lt. s been, refl~~ m _a lot of now probably s~ould baye been QIJlay
the stgnmgs. It s an m&lt;!~~uon that . d~me ye:l!s ago wttbou! ~gus_ to . Hendnck4 ~atd: The P':3yers say agent deals last fall (Gregg Jef- .
!~x tb~tr ~roblem,
be s.at~. all along, We want faar-mar~et feries to Pltiladelphia for $20 milthe market has _changed.
What s gomg on n_gbt now asn t value _an~ clubs should exemsc; lioo over four years and Jay Bohner
Pl,ayers . jttbout _super stats
~~en. I 8"llVVg .\he btg bucks .any 11,1~re than what tt should have restramt andJ&gt;JlCf!lle on a, budget
re-signed .with Seattle for $15.5
taking a shave In the parlance of been.
.. .
The owners say. w_e can t do ~at million over three years). But since
In the deal most cnttctz~ by unless lhe p~yers gtve us artificial the end of the 232-day strilce, Ballisome agents and general managers.
.T?m Brownmg went from $3.5 a~nts, catcbe~ Pat Borders stgned m'7!ta"tsms.
.
more, Colorado, Florida and the
~tilton I? $300,000 ~ben be wtth Kansas Ctty for, $3IO,OOO, ~e
We have an etght·~onth labor New York Mets _all high rev~ SJgnj:d With K~nsas _~t~y. _B,ob made~gs mtlltOn last season Wltb war. And ~e end result IS we have enue clubs- have been tbe only
Welch dropped from $2.9 uullton Toronto.
.
. ~ · ma~ket-dn_v~n salanes that ~re ·· teams -to commit to multimillion,
to $22~.000 Wttb Oakl~n~. Bud
. • '!,remember. making $5 an fallmg prectptlously, and the strike multiyear deals:
_ J3lack, ~_h,o~ma,&lt;J~ $_2.65 uullton !ast hour, . Bordet;~ satd. "Y~ have tn as of nece~slty forced owners to
"- Outfielder Larry Walker .
year, stgned wttti Clevellinil for - keep thmgs t.n perspecttve. '!'be adhere stuclly to budgets . _Thc, signed with the-Rockies for $22
$350,000. Mtke Devereaux
salary I JUSt srgned for, you could owners when commttled enough million over four years and pitcher
dropped. from $'2,575,000 to make $5 an hourior about 15 years can adhere to prudent business Bill Swift signed for $131 million
and not make that kind of money."
practices, but the players because over three. .
·
$800,000.

Nuggets, _Warriors and Hornets capture NBA contests
.By RON LESKO

/

11(1~1/ion-do/lar paychecks headed for quicl( extinction

4

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lUelda~April11,1995

The Daily S~f!~~.cl
.

.

Monday - Saturdar: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

�J

Sentinel

1995

11 1995

Ohio

The

•

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.HEY BOYS AND GIRLS, ENTER THE 1995
EASTER COLORING CONTEST AND
HAVE A LOT OF FUN AND
EXCITEMENT•.¥0U MAY WIN UP TO $15
.. AND IT'S SO EASY TO ENTER.

.,

. -C.ONTEST.RULES
'v

FIRSt' PliZE••••••;•• s15.00
SECOND PRIZE ••••• s1 0.00
THIR·D PRIZE:••••••••• *5.00
t
I
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.

1. Just color one or more of the drawings on these pages,
fill in the blanks and take your entry to the sponsoring
store before 12 Noon, AprillS.
.
2. Entries will be j~~ged in tw9 diffe~Dt categories: -ages
1
4-8and 9-U. ·
3. Children may en'ter as many
pictures as they like but
.
can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

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IAddress·----'-----------'

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Phone

McCLURES RESTURANT .:

VALLEY~L\JMBER CO.

GENERAL .HARTINGER BLO. I ,
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Phone

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RIDENOUR SUPPLY
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FAMILY HOMES/PULLINS EXCAVATING •

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ENTER!

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CASH
PRIZES!

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EASY

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WIN

ENTER
AS

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LQTS
OF .
FUN! ..

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BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE:
.

POMEROY, OHIO

.

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�Page

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a

The Dally Sentinel

-

TUelday, Aprll11, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

M!!J!, TO~~C}!';!!...trim_:.,~l p~u!!~.....
Donna Vance was best loser and ·
Nancy Freeii!M, runner-up. at last
week. s meeung of the Muldlepon
TOPS Club. Tbe 29 members
weighing in lost a total of 57
pounds, it was reponed.
Missy Frazier announced a
"Trailing Pounds Behind You"
contest where a cash prize will be
awarded at the end ol each month.
Low-fat/calorie recipes were distributed, members were reminded
to keep a food diary, and it was
announced that a video on the food
pyramid will be presented next ·
month. Dreama Pickens is ,lealler.

ket. Kathy McDaniel, area TOPS
captain, presented a pogram on ber
personal weight loss success, of
losing 100 pounds, gaining it back,
then losing 92 pounds 10 reach her
goal.
.
It was noted that Dreama Pickens, Sharon Stewart, Missy Frazier,
and Peggy Hartman attended the
regional TOPS officers meelina.
held in Lancaster. Area Recognition Day was announced for ~prii
29 in Lancaster. Tbe club meeungs
31e beld on Thursdays, with weigbin from 5:15 10 6 p.m. followed by
. the meeting.

v.

Norma Torres, R.N . talked ,ing, Mante Bius and Phyllls .
about breast cancet ·and mammog· McMillan, runners-up; Lennie
rapby, presemed a video and gave Alelblre and Be:nt!ce DUnt. KOPS
out pamphlets at a recent meeting best losers.
•
of Pomeroy TOPS.
Programs for the 11ast several
Plans were made for a walking weeks have b_lcluded a motivational
prog~am at Yetera.ns Memorial tape 011 wetght loss shown by
Hosp•!al. The walks were scbed- Angela Sbalp, llfl!l an inspirational
uled for Tuesdays after .the meet- talk on losing we1gbt by Ruth Ann
ing, Thursday at 6 p.m. and Sun- DeLoog.
days at4 p.m.
. _Program covers at Area RecogStep~anic Snyder v.:as wei - ntuon Day
jud&amp;~ with Janet ·
corned mto membership . Best Thomas, Cbe.sbire, takmg secood.
losers and runners-up in TOPS for Jean Tbomns was the Division 4,
~last three meetings were Norma .CJrst place winner witb 11 ,75
P•llow and Frances Haggy , best pounds losL

Tueaday, April 11, 1995

•

Buying ANew Or Used ·Car

SHOULD BE FUN!!
It Wil Be If You Shop

wen:

I IIIII'
H... !•pron•eah

••
•

••

•

FrNE.,_

•••

114-742-30110
304-773-11545

''

.,

I

'

In the service

'

Air Force Airman Nathan F.
Baloy bas graduated from Air
Force blslc trainiJII at Lackland
Air Force Base iiPSan Antonio,
Texas. '
, Baloy is tbe son of Stephen
Baloy of Pomeroy and Rebecca
Baloy of Lexington.
He graduated in 1993 from
Meigs High School.

•

,

•AII-oUY_.

The theme of Ibis year's World
Heallh Month is "Immunize: Bilth
· to Two, It's Up To,You" and the
Meigs County Health Department
is taking advantage of the observance to remind parents and
guardians,IO make sQre the children
in their care are immunized.
At the·Health Department childhood vaccines are free to Meigs
Countians. These vaccines. prevent
nine infectious diseases (including
" polio, measles, diphlheria, mumps,
whooping cough, rubella, tetanus,
hepatitis B and Hib).
The national immunization
level among young children js 67

percent, leaving hundreds of thou- because there are so many other
sands of children not vaccinated clinics occurring at the Health
and thereby unprotected here in Depilrtment.
For those calling for appointM~igs County, according to Norma
ments,
Torres suggests tbat the
Torres, R.N., director of nursing,
child's
shot
record be in band so
based on the Ohio Department of
the
public
health
nurses can advise
Health's latest immunization
the
parent
or
guardian
as to tbe
report. 74 percent of children are ·
. immunized before me age of two. action to be laken. For those wbo
not sure if their child is fully
The goal, says Torres, is for 100
imm
unized; it is suggesred that the
percent.
Immunizations are given on the child's "shot record," be 'in band .
second and fourm Tuesdays of the when me caiJ is made. Based on the
. month from 9 to 11 a.m. and I 10 3 child's age and which immuniza.- .
p.m. Sriccial appoinlmen.S made be tions have already been given, the
made by calling 992-6626. nurses can advise the parent or
Appointments . arc necessary gUllfdian of action to be laken.

.·

ollllcrvwa- -Diopoool•

I' '

are

'

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

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob HoefHch

92 PONTIAC

31ue, automatic, air, T-Tops,
' stereo cassette,

one owner.

loaded'

,'

In Memory

In Loving Memory Of
Margaret Ellen
Nichols Who
Departed This Life
March 21, 1993 On .
· What Would Have
Been Her 80th Birthday
On April 11 , 1995:
You were the greatest
friend
Anyone could ever
need
You· were always
there
To comfort &amp; do a
daily deed
Now you're up in

Speaking of wedding anniversaries an opel). reception will be
held this Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m.
at me Racine Baptist Church honoring Mr. and Mrs. Everett Taylor,
formerly of Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, on their 50th wedding
anniversary.
Mr. Taylor was active in mao.,agcmcnl at the Imperial Electric
Co. in Middleport for a number of
years and Mrs. Taylor operated a
Hallmark Store at the Gallipolis
Plazu for a few years.
. The reception is being given by
their children who include April
Hudson of Racine; David of Wisconsin, and Robert of Akron.

~-~

Peggy Kerns, fonnerly of Middleport, has run into some back
luck,
According 10 a note from her
sister and brothcr-in·law, Marty
and TiP Cunninghaq~ of Lima.
Peggy had to undergo a, heart by·
pass operation in Orlan~o. Aa, on
April4.
Peggy will receive your note or
card at Florida Hospital South,
Room 8201, 601 E. Rollins St.;
· Orlando, Fla .. 32803 . Peggy and
her husband have resided in l"lorida
- ·· fortbepast-s&amp;VG~ years.
Frank 0' Brien, formerly of
Meigs County and now of the
Columbus area, is a blUijoist from
way back and bas entertained
extensively in the Columbus . area.
He comes here every year to play
at the Memorial Day services at the
Burlingham Cemetery where his
ances10rs are buried.

Now' that was a nice surprise for
Jeanette Thomas last Thursday
evening.. .•
~
Her husband, Dan, staged a surprise birmday party in her honor al
the fellowship room of _me Middleport Church .of Christ. ·You should
bave seen the expression of
Jeaneue' s face when lights we~e
turned on m me room and there Sitting a numerous tables were many
.
.
•, '
many fn ends to w•sh her many
h~P!lY retums of me day. Dali, was
g1ven a help•~&amp; hand by members
of the fam1Iy m servmg refreshments 10 the numerous guests.
c;ertainly hope Sunday:s cold,
windy weather was actually winter's last burrab? I, .for one, could
bave lived wilh Ure departing gesture, couldn't you? Do. )&lt;ecp smiling.

CLUB

Golf Lessons
•.

93 HONDA

a~tomatic,

89ACCORDLX

Civic OX, 1 owner, 5 speed,
air. stereo cassent.

air, stereo

Automatic, air; stereo cas·
sene. power windows&amp;.
locks. cruise &amp; till.

.passette.

23.000 miles.

$195.14 ~'::.

Per
Mo.

·.'

Mo.

•.

.,

·.
90GMC
Salari 7 passenger van ,
automatic. V6, air, power
windows &amp; locks.

Per
Mo.

84

Bli VOLKSWAGEN
Convertible, red. 5speed,
AMIFM,

'rearclean ..
57995

,

HONDA

Leslie Leigh Parker, 16, daughter of Lester and Pam Parker, is a
I fi ar . ·M, Oh' Am .
sta e m 1St m ISS 10 . en·can Teen Pageant to be held June
18 mrough 19 in Columbus. The ·
pageant is held for girls ages 16-19.
Her ac'ti vities include 4-H, horseback riding swimming and volleyball.

'

· News Hotline

992.;.2156

Near The Ohio River In Syracuse Ohio
'•
Now offering for Sale Custom Homes
on Developed lots featuring the energy
efficient Heat Pump

89HONOA
CAX, automalic.:,
stereo,
nice car.

. mileage. 1

·. Pomeroy, Ohio until 10 a.m.

on Aprll14, 1995.
·
Bldo will be opened at 1
(1)

Mo.

..

•

The ' person who always
agrees with you lies to others
also.
"'

•

87FORD

92 FORD

Corsica, gray. automatic.
air, AM!FM.
new car trade.

Aerostar XLT, air,
automatic, power wtndows

1'au,rus.
air, autcmallc,
AM/FM

&amp; locks.

.

Nothing Improves a TV
program · as much as getting
·
the kids to bed.
• • •
Common sence is something
you want the other person to
show by accepting your ideas
and conclusions.

.

·~·-

-

.... ··-

91 DODGE

-

·

o.

TIIA/IE '"

·~

·-LENDER

7 SHOWROOMS ' II WARIHOIJSIS

4,door, air, auto.,

90 CHEVROLET
COralca LT. white.

power. windows
and locks,
cruise,
one owner.

1111 S,lack
9.92•2269

949-2168
ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
Garages
Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

742·22LI

511W4TFN

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY·
•Convertible Tops
Seat COV!!rS
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992·7587

'985-4473

-=======::::
LINSULAJION

PubliC Notice

311411 me~ .

and lnapactlon a almlla·r '

,r

unit aa bid.
Tha Melga

CountY 1

Office Houra: Mon •..frl.
s·QO
• 30. p.m.·
• 1.mN:
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

:lny propoul....
28: (4)4, 11: 3TC
Public Notice

!31

tho lull name or the party or
partleo making !he propoul
and muot bo accompanltd
by an orlglnel bid bond or
cortlfled chock modo out to
Tho Molgt County
Comml .. lonero In tho
amount of Ton (tO) porcont
(10%1 ol th• total bid. Blda
ar•to bo pieced In 1 ooalod
envelope marked "BID FOR

PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• r•gular quarterly
m••llng of iho Board of
Olr1ctor1 · or fh1 M•lga
M•tropolllon Houolng
Authority will ba h1ld on
Wedneoday, Aplll 12, 1985,
at 7:30 p.m. In tho Houolng
Authority OHica at 39350

AMBULANCE".

Union Avenue, SUite 9·1,

Succn•lul bidder muot Pom1roy,

0 hI o.

Roofing, Vinyl
· Replacement, •
Wlnilowa, Blown
lnaulatlon, Storm
Doors; Storm . ·
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmotaa

.
;
:
·

111 -

~-----.::!:::.1

.-------""""1
H~HSAWMILL

All

.

~

With A Dally Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio 45760

'

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column Inch weekdays
18 00 column inch Sunday

end

havt

lntereated pereona •r•

Invited to ott•nd.
11; tTC

white,
• automatic.

1$422$, air, 5 spsi!d,

stereo.

~----

-

~

-

ATHENS

- ..-·

-- .

CARS

Ultltst... Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULI.NG
..

GALLIA COUNTY'S

drt!!.'; ::l~ng)

"FINEST
TANNING BEDS"

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

6pen Daily 8 am-8

. t!1

.

fl)

446-8922

810 E. STATE ST. • ATHENS, OHIO
Phone 594-8555

·. I· :I
I

•

264 Upper River Rd.

and Vans!

•

HONEST ...
Claooifieda
Work! .

r---------.
MaggIes C.rock pol
'Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612

:"' ~~"'7::Ws.With

()If

Hr.~lltr)

AVON I AM Arou I ShifloJ

Bus. (614) 446-9971

S!111k'y Slcw.trl
Yow Bustness Vliouhl
/\f&gt;fJH'Ciar~ 'd

?(}

:-JPSSI()Il~

Atcoptlno

through April 25th wllh the
clala Dllglnnlng May 2nd. Polnl

Pl..-nt Nur.Jng • • R.t.ablut•
,lion C.nlw, Slale Rout. 12.
Rout• 1, Boz 320 • Point
PIN•nt, WV ZSS50. '/A Q -

martl
"-laiN Focltlill) t7WOOtl EOE.

C.rpot lnolan... noodtd lull
limo, Oolllo, Pt.
Moll(t
anc1· aurroundlng .,.... 8eiid
NIUIM 11. DaU~nliiW, P.O.
Boa 72IHI2,
, Ohio

Announcements

,.- ..

-~ -

One

L&amp;W
Lawn Care

41711.

- ~·-

.

-------

. .-

'

Sto~ Com~lete

..

11

fltln

. ....

Auto Bodt

Re~eir

· Chuck Stotts
. Free Estimates
· Insurance Work Welcome
l'"'llf'~

Elm up lo 510110 •ooldr aluff•
~~nv.aop. at home. St.rt now. ·
No oxpo&lt;lonco. Froo 111ppllu.
Froo tnr.....uon. No Obtigotlon.
Send a.A.!I.E to Storuna, Doot.
~~· Box Me1~ o.toilllo, FL

(614) 992-5291

. LIVE PSYCHICS

Ea~y Worid Exc•llent P1yt AeMmblt Products AI Honw. Call
Toll FrM, 1-aoo..67..a566. Eld.
313.

•Custom Made
·~olid vinyl
replacement
windows
•Free Estimates
•Starting At

1 ON 1
1-9D0-656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420414195

,

·~

One mile out .
143 from Rt. 7
:
Tues. -Wed. - Fri. - Sat. '

Fln.t Hair l Tanning Slton" Ia
Naw T1klng Appllcallorui Far
Full Dr P1rt ni'n• PoatUone..

2

doorw

complete Granhoull workera

cld11U-.&amp;M-441-o501.

1Puppy

SHOWROOM"

110 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
"Look fQfthe Red and White Awning"

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

•Guns

Good Homo, 0
Morithl, American Eskimo · a
Chow, ShOll, OQOd Wllh
Children,~ 114-44Mi8Z.
.
Small mixed~~
~
tlo::'l;dl,
~h
·-•
To

co-mea.-:,....

.....,__.""'

1

Landscape Stock
W.hlte Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce

;;;250;;.•:;.·- - - - - - - aa4 ntl24.
.
&amp;_,.:Lo:.;.::st.:..:&amp;:...:F:...:o:.:u::.n::d~~MW
Modioli
SuPfliY
auot ....
.:.
NMde Pwlon TO- MID Sal•
Found: Doo On 1VO Alii Fer lllorflallng -OiioM To
Tony• Or Oonavan Bllke, 114- Phpc&amp;ani And HMith ear.
256-49211.
FociU- II... Ha"" Oood
Communlctllon Sklllo, Sot~

742-3149 or 992·7285

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Contplfftl61f SIIH ' PrkH
NEW HAVEN, WV ·
304-682-2996

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Gallipolis
'&amp;VIcinity

Roofing. Siding, Room
Additions, Concret.e, elc.
P.O. Box 220

Bi&lt;lwell, OH 45614
388-9865

FOR SAl,£ OR TRADE
Ololanlic Yard S.to: 1232 lit.
OlfYO Road, lOth, ttlh. 12lh. I
A.M. ..Sun..t, Ml".

Stalratoppor
S55 ·
Phonic
Progrom S50, i'ono Olrlo

Clotl,.., au..n Comforter S.r,

S25i Tu.s ·W.cil. f.5. 1 W Mil•
Out 325 south, •lana.

Pomeroy,

(602) 954-7420

..

"iCi;;;;;;d;~;;;;:;i;;'-;;
lml r N1en1 •""-' ~
Pomllroy-llklcUeport/N•
'
Ha..MI-. Pl'ofM 51.200 loll

upon- Dollvory 3hrolllay.
.. Oontaet
.r.ron uw--.1-100 aaa.

BARR'S Nursery

Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

P.O. Box 111, F'DfMruy, Ohio
...,... EOE
·

ar.

.

Lonely? Call
Tonight! .
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

nttdtd.

light lifting r.qu-lrecl, ltatt lm-m.dlat.. y, ')1f.Mg..268Z.
'"lm_m_odl....:.·t•:..----'n-tng..=tar=-qua-llllod.• - - • In
• - - - parts perwon
Gal
Deal~ Send reaume to:

Motlw-lttd, And Plea..,.. p.,..
-..JNy. 1&gt;nr -ool · EIIDeNnce Woufd a. A Plue. Ideal
Poolllon Foi RN, LPN, AT,
Or
Lo.. : 15 lllanlh • Old ALIItrallan PT .._."G For A Chango. EOE
ltoplloil ConlldOnllot, iinil
ShlipMrd, Colora: Red1 .Er,•' All
OrNfl, U.t Friday, Add 110n RMum. Ta: CLA 34. c1o QN.
Hpallo Dally T~'-1! 1 .125 Thlnl
Plko, 614-36HIIU.
. . _ Gtilllpolll, ..... ol56:n.

· ' Lo11dlf of Mlac.
Buy-Sell·Trade
10/tVlmo

stonn

FrM Rrawood, Tr... Already
Down By BulldOzer. CUI Your
Own, Don, CUI Any Standing
lr"•· Not AnponalbM For Ate·

• Cra!taman Tools
•Toys

•

13~

' 'Wihll'dwlre. 304--875-1221.

I

992·2060

Flnoal Styling Salon,
Eutem Avem•, GaiUpolt..
OH 614-Ue-em.
Apply AI

Giveaway

4

s200 Installed
"VIS~T OUR

1,.&amp;

.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Mowing,
Trimming
Firewood
Also:
Contract work

...

'

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

25.00

.•

-oant.

Uconaed &amp; Bonded- 20 yore e•porlence
1

lor

appllcotto..

reglltteM tong tlfm car. ,..,.....
lng .......,.. trllnJno Cllta

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
lnjactor Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-3879

WE HAVE A-t TOP SOIL FOR SALE

f nr

-·-·-.DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

30W75-M21.

AVON to buy 0&lt; aoll, llallttn. lndei*'Mient r•p. 304-Ba-.2846 ot

Llmeatone, Sand, Gravel and Coal ·

8.

Be

Employment Services

~rl,

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

Ph Oil(~ ')1)2 ·1044
Owlli·r~;

Aowv~

Help Wanted

· POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned .&amp; porllible toilets rented.
Dally, weekly a. monthly rental rates. ·
Job sites • Camp Sites ' Fam!ly ReuniOns 6 Porllea

Oi'"l,t1:~lf

I lei lOW n·:~
Ur crdlur 'Y Hd

•

standing 11mbot Colh

W.nlod:

~---~~~1

MODERN •SANI'fATION

/V!J'fc· 8f'd

~;tt_.,r,'dll

111 - - ' ~"""""' GaUipollo.
wanltd- outdoor unnol 1or
targo dog, 114"112·50U -

HOG-111124351.

VIEW TAN

1\r,,, ...... •, lr•

Top Pold' All Old U.S.
Calno,
Gald
Rlna'!,
Gold Cain&amp;. ti.T.o;suCoin Colno,
Shop,

3prit.

Bring in ad
for 10% off.

1 _800_486 _1

1

8·5 Saturday
Call for Appointment

TilEIMPPf!lffJ/1011 PEfJPfE
•

614-742-2193

OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
-- CALLBULLETIN
SOARD DEADLINE:
--- . 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION!
-

$10595
'
.

94 HONDA CIVIC

.

Danny &amp; Peggy
. Brickles

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

1

~J ... .'.'

-

Olrto '

614-985-4180

J&amp;
'

to waive any Informality In

work

Kenny's Auto Rental

Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Mes'sage; After 6 p.m.

•Carpet~

Services, P.O. SoJC 748,
· Mulberry Heights. 992
Pomeroy,
7
Ohio 45761. (614,
-181 ·
Each propoeal "'uat contain

porrormtd

4K4,

$101.26 ~'::.

Rutland furniture
Rt. 124, Rtt'-d, Ol

Misc • .Jobs.

Get Your Me11age Across

•

Monaco

at9.3~ -

The Heat Pu~p Heats Cools and Saves!

. "i£
*a~

and Removed

available for damonatratl&lt;m ·

•Payments figured with $1,000 down ~ 93's for 60 mos. at 9.15 APR, e2 &amp;
_ 91 for 54..mos ~ at 9.20 APR. 90 &amp; 89 at 9.24 APR and 68 &amp; 87 for 36 mos.

.

Howard L. Wrltesel
'
• ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

! II ttl ill!::

Baby sitter to parents
returning
late:·
"Don't
apologize ; I wouldn't be in a
hurry to come home either."

992-7943-·-----.or 992-6316
-~-- · ·~

, AND QMOYAL
\-ight Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped

Commlnlonero reoerve to i
rlgbt to teJoct any and/or. all ·
539 BRYAN PLACE
bldo or any 'part !h-eroohrrd MIDDLEPORT ~-2n2

all

Limestone,

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

of painting - Let us ·
do it for you"
We Hare Cars
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Kenny's Auto Center

PE RFEC T

Oobf .....

· Trucking·

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;
"Take the pain out

2128195

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd: '

·Call Home Creek Enterprises
~

992:6215

.

•••

·Sunday 1:00 p.m.
12 Gauge Only
Limited: 740
:ack:b01·e, 680 Front ·

· may be obtained from the
ofllcn or Th• Meigs C(ountY
Emorgoncy Modlcol

guarantee

..

Per
Mo.

mo.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
. GUN
SHOOTS

Pomeroy, Ohio

Detailed

proposal
forma
and
complete apaclflcatlon•

Per

locrs. crt."lse.

jt

.

modular EMS

lntorm•uon, lnatructlona,

94 HONDA ACCORD

..

1995

Ambulan~:e.

90 CHEVROLET

41411

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
Room Additions·
·New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing '
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG lll

Proposala ah~l be for one

194215, atr, automatic. power windoW!: &amp;

Ill

·WALNUT PLACE SUBDIVISION

84 HONDA
Civic DX, 4 speer:!,

stereo, great gas

2995

•

Fletwoodl Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certified Penonal
Property Appr~INT
Bonded (614) 992-4079

p.m .• at the aame location
on the above date. ·

5

Just about the time most of
us get our summer vacations
paid· for, Ws time to start
worrying about Christmas.

-~---

Public NotiCe
PUBUC NOTICE
Sealed propoulo will be
received In tho office Of The
Molgo
County
Commtoolon•re, Third Floor
ol tho Courthouse,

900S. au'tomatic. air, stereo
cassette. power windOws
&amp; locks

I

stereo casselte, ·
gray,
hatchback.

Leslie Parker
advances in
teen· pageant

Auctioneer

35581

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
. • NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

-

Accord, 5 speed, · I'~
j.;;:''
LESLIE PARJQ:R

by appointment &amp;
, .club repair as well
' Call John Teaford at

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992·2753 ~ ...

85 SAAB

I

MD .ROAN

:=:C~h;es;te;r,;O;:hi:o~, . TREE TRIMIII~

Per

HONDA PASSPORT

With the angels
gathered .round
I will always feel
your comfort,
And he ar your
beauliful sound . .
Your ever-loving friend
June Cole

. Mr. O'Brien, you may remember, recently gave the American
Cancer 'Socie ty a gift Of over
$400.000. While visiting here to
present a part of the gift to. tbe
Meigs Unit of me Cancer Society,
Mr. O'Brien indicated an interest in
coming to Meigs in the fall to play
his banjo in the annual musical of
the Big Bend Minsttel Association.
He certainly will be invited.

COUNTRY

one owner,

heaven,

Wow!
.
Caryl and Joe Cook, formerly of
Lincoln Terrace, Pomeroy- · you
remember Joe as a painter in the
county for many years-wil l
observe their 74th wedding
anniversary on Friday, April14.
Caryl and Joe went to Connecticut about seven years ago to spend
the winter with their daughter.
Dorothy Junc ·Cochran, South
. Windsor, Conn. They became ill
while there and SO Slllyed on. They
now m~e mcir residence at a Baplis t home about 20 .miles from
Soum Windsor.
Caryl is an "older" womanshe's now 96. Joe is just a youngster. He's only 94.
Mail will reach them at tbe
Pierce Memorial Baptist Home,
Box 326, Brooltland, Conn., ~234.

CHESTER

.. - p l t l l .......
lin, 114492-1114~

Co.

RBETI'

~.~ lllllltooilrga

-

ariOoornoiLWNI buyontpiiCI!

3111/1..

•'

FREE
ESTIMATES

St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH
614-247-3522

W.nltd to buy- onlkjuo oncl

99~-5388

Butch Wilson,

Legacy L ;
2

SR33N
992·7502 or 992-580$

Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator .Service
and Weldin,g

. 92
SUBARU

and hold out
your hand ...

1 mile from 'Pomeroy,

Garage and Towing
. Service

Ptr
Mo.

·

a/1411' mo.

•Lots of Fun and
Learning
•Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
· . A.M. till 6:00P.M.

NEW&amp;USED
Household-

B&amp;W

·'

Firebird, white, automatic , T·
Tops. power windows &amp;
locks. air, like new.

(No SuiK!ay Calls)

DAY CARE

8-5 T-'Sun.

: .,.,...... MMvt a
Surrounding-

• -· ?1. •

92 PRELUDE Sl

With eve,ry new
alarm Installed receive 6 month'i
FREE monitoring.
304 882-3336

TAMMY HYSELL'S

982-5335

4·wheel steering, 5 speed.
one owner, dean,
•

Month

.

.......

Min. U-00

Col~lble

. (6141985 3581· or .

91 CAMARORS

CIIIBsifiod today

614-992-7643

.,.., CIH for me schedule.

OHIO

WHmiiUCIUR
SlOP

olllohw.......
-tt.w
. ......,.

..

NATHANBALOY
Place your

Serving Pomeroy, MldclltpQrt and eurrouncllng

MR. RIGGS

oWIIhn- Dryen -

:. .

World Health Day focuses on. vaccines

__.... _

a

Introducing ODYSSEY
The Honda of Minivans

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
'
FREE ESTIMATES

Specwl Thu

luy ·Sell·lrada

....
Haven, W.Va., won a color television, Middle·
port'• McDaniel wUI get a .weekend gebway to
NuhviUe. Tim Roush of New Haven, W.Va., not
plctored, won a shopping opree. (Sentinel photo
by George Abate)

-

D~RWIN,

N.-r Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows ·
• Room Addltloas • ROoting

Ht"'. of Operation: Mon.-Fri. 8;00 A.M. ttl 8:00P.M.
Saturday 8:00 Lin, till 5:00 p.m.
Sunday8 by appt. only•

'IIIJLLFREE~~~OO~~!

JAMESIUIM
SERVICE

IISSELL IUILDEU, .IIC•

992·9949 • 992""71

992-70130R
992·55530R

.Pole Barns

Cab Co. Inc.

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry ·clark

· ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

-oa,....IIPon:~

•

ATHENS HONDA 'CARS!.

"
PARTS
Specializing In Cliltom
• Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PAATS,FOR

'""~
•AddltlciM.
oSidng
oRooth~g ohlntlna

•
•
•
•

·co~n•unlty

AUTO

•
; 33151 l'tppy Hollow ACIIICI
Mldlloport, Ohio 45780
•

In Stock Ready For
Immediate Delivery
FOODLAND WINNERS- Foodland re""ntly aanouncecllta wllliiCn for lb alllllvenary .,.••
ebntlon. From left are store manager Chuck
Blake, James Diehl, Dorothy McDa~!-lel and
assistant Jnllnager David Sigman. Diehl of New

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

'
RUTLAND
.

742·2455
•

S/1111

�..

/

•

.'

I

1\IMdl)', Apr1111, 11115

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• Plge-10--The Dilly Sentinel

,1995

..
••.,"
....
....

Ohio
ACROSS · 41 Actreel

«

..•
~

7

PHILUP

'•
'~•

...

ALDER

..'

K9

J5
KQ J 95

•Q9762
•2

SOUTH

•• I

-..

&amp;4

Vulnerable: Both.
Dealer: North
·
South
West North
1"
1 NT
Pass 2 •
s•
Obi.
3 t
3•
Pass .Pass

ELVINEY 15 FIXIN' TO
GIVE
ME TH' DIRT ON
GOSSIPY
TH' FREE·FER·ALL
OL' HEN.S
THEY HAD
RIPPIN' APART ~~""
AT SAIR')/'5
· TODAY?

Pass

~· Oponlngo

In AlploJ,

i

Art You Looking For:
• Stoodr PoyciiOck?
• BenePta?

•lnurance?

• Pold v-~~one &amp; Hclldoya?

ol1968 Which makes~ Illegal
10 advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, colot. religion,
sex familial status or national
orlgtn, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
llrrMiatlon or discrimination.•

'R-?

36

t"'llor

WIIO ARE .
'(OO,KID?

..
zo. .......

l.ti~ERE 10

w- ...._

LEARN

P--..

TO

THUMB''
8ROWN .. JUST
A STRANGER
PASSING

LIKE

?

Rentals

knowllngly accept •
advertisement&amp; lor real estllte

• C._ 'A' COL LlcenM7
• 1 Yoor Tractcr trrllllr EJ.
.........?

By Phillip Alder

,

~·ra. w~I14-

This neww&gt;aper.will no)

Do You Hive:

kill,

Real Estate
wanted

W.nlod: l.ond
loclatod. Good
WcodetLNo RNJore
114-381 Ull12.

which Is In violation ot the law.

Our readers are hereby

rstoble E-montlllllcry
• Uve Wllhl~ 7t UU.a Of Rlpa.y?

Pass

·Trick one is
not too late

=

W.nt to buy w -

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Obi.
Obi.

lead: • K

WEDDIN'!!

.

Many players seem to think that it is
worth points to play immediately at
trick one. No sooner has the dummy
appeared than they have called for a
card, or followed suit as third hand.
And almost as often these players
make fatal mistakes at trick one.
Today's deal, it is lrue, would catch
out most players, but someone used to
taking his time at trick one might fore·
see the danger.
After an exciting auction in which
North-South found its heart fit very late
in the day, West led the trump king
&lt;when the nine might be a better
choice):
.
·
· Declarer won !he first trick with

dumt'ny's heart ace, played 'a diamond

Real Estate

PA/2~ .

31 Homos for Sale
IIOUN And Lc!. Low Down

z...crr

garego, bollldo Now
Hann Supernwket. bDHom
lloor compl.tily remod...d, 2
bays: (front bay 4D"x21', ,..,
boy :)2'1&lt;231. 100'•40' lot,

1521,000. :MM.aij2·2763.
3 Bedroom s.ctlon11 Approx. 1
Yur Old, Approi. 4 Mil•• Ott 31
On Bull'4111e Pllut, 114-441--4281.
C...b CrMIJ Ad. 10 roome: +bath,
, ..... $1e,ooo. 1104-t11-1358 .,
304-558-08101 doytlmo.

13

Buy

cw

dummy's winners and

HI. Rlvorlno AntlquoO,·

1124 E. Main SIJMt, on RL

42 Mobile Homn
for Rent

~

P-OW· llourw: M.T.W. 10:w
Lift. '- 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-112·25211.

14•10 2 Br. 1 mile South ol
Euroka, on BL Rl.7. No polo,

.. -.814411H0118.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2

8od- · ln~OalllpoUo,

4*:1~---· ~

114-

.BQRNLOSER

11' oOnCIIIIOn tralltr $3.000.
30W7HSI8.
.

ThrM

MTr-RD, /N\'11:JI&gt;IW&gt;J~,
J/&gt;JIIUICAN. rn~.:iWI~ 0\E:eiE.,

a:='

prom....._, .t•1. one

wedding ~n.
high nOdi, lew bo
hOOp, """ price, · IM-317o02811.

1VII Cllorolooo JHp With Trodo
Fer Pick-Up Truck· Alto UtUby
Ntc. thiN bodroom -~~ Trailer Sa ... 114 de MH, 114homo on · Rcckoprlnal Rd., 441.21111.

mo. 111111 3817.

ne,

-

..

$210-.

ThiN bonlrocm, ono balh, lull
batment, two car garage, two
Gan.,.l M1lntenanc;e, Pllnt!na1 decka, n• roof, In Chufar, 114Vard Work Window• Waanea 8115-41,...
outt... Cleaned Llghl Hauling,
Commortcol Rnldo!ntlal, Slavo: 32 Mobile Homes ·

IM-4¥-11ii!

tor Sale

o~Portable S.wmllll don't ·

houl .,.. loao to tho m1ll luot '10 VIlla 14X7V mobile home, two
call
71·t~57.
bodroom, ono bolh, ou .Ill•·

·~Int..-.: - pe'r'"SJ-w ~:,ft0 :::_:r:,!~~i\~~~&amp;:
'n:, ~:r;~:~On. ~II 114482• mull uU, 114-14 2823.
J;: IJnytlm..
14170 Commodore CIUI~~
Moth.- In Middle~ will
bebY'h •n~l~, 114..f82·1'271. ·
Pionc lo""one, boglnnoro, adojancod otudonllt • oduno\
LN~h chording &amp; tra,.poe ng,
lnt.,.tad call 61~892·&amp;4D:L

thrM bedroom one tnd v.~
bath, 10x11 deo~ with root. n Dlllant oandhlon. tl0,500 negoliable, 114-HZ-4014.
1H3 Clayton olnglo wldo, 3br,
:zt&gt;alh" Inside hlat pump. 114)l2-288T.

==-----1113 Skyline 14I78 3 Bltdrooma
1 lith, Bla'4e1 Atfrlglll'llat Ancf
luUMn Dlahwtatwrt. 2 O.Cka

One I•-Cover.t, On nice Rental
Let, $18,000, IM-245-0007.

eo Hew Moan 12x6o whh 121:40
7010.

addcn, now HP &amp; Gf, 10x10
deck, 4X8 porch, niW ltOVI A

lun V•lley Nura•ry Schoof.
Chlkktr• M·f ••m-4:30pm Ail•
2-11, 'foung Se'-1 Ago OurTng
BUmm.,. S O•YII I * Wttk Min·

refrigerator, call after 5prn, 114-76=2:.::-5::088=.-:---,.--,-=
Appraloolo lot your mobile
home. FREE: w,radlt.fna. 1-acJO..

knUm 114-4,....3857.

181-2:388.

dol-

1 ond 2 bodtoem
"""""'""'"'
lumllhod
ond unlumllhod,
II!C:IIt'ftY
roqulrld,
110
0
polo, 114-1112-22U:
1BodrocmNoll'125iiMo. Ph111 Dopoon, No Plio,
114 Uti 2117.
a Bod,_ , Apanllllt!l, Jllll
AYMUe,

c.n be ...n 1501 Klf111Whl. St.
Ud'- diamond hanuholl ring,

Whlllt -lng - . abo 3,
$70. Pink prom ij..., olzo t.
$40. Oroon prom · olzo 13,
$80. Pu~ prom ..._ olzo 11,
$50. 304'171'1851.
WV Stoto Fonn Muooum lo . lnglhO-Ionllolinea lho muoo... II I not lor
orofft _,atlcn. A oonlllao1e
for VaJUI WIH be provided for LU:
p u - Cal lho Farm
MuNUm T~t N !II :11114-

I 1'\EAN, IF YOll EY(R
FIXED THAT G,O.P SE •
TWEEN VOUR TEETH,OR
~TOPPED WEARING THAT
· STUPI t&gt; SWEA~tRT, oR

SODDENLY DEVELOPED
A

Ll~fLE

UTILE CHANGE'
MIGHT DO HIM
SOME

GOOD ...

O.AKWOOO

1:~~"ri~CTO~~~~w~

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
"'-nda that you do buol'lllh pooplo YOII k,_, ond
NOT 'I' oolid . , _ throuan 1ho
rn•lf UJIIII you hive hwtttrpted
1M aff'ilrlng. ·

-&lt;:

Lumbtr

coece

up_,

HOM~,_ NITRO.

ITUESDAY

at; alliin, utlllloapooltl, no polL

Ri'-en=w P71/mont:h, ftOD
oto•nlng
Can
1181aflllr llpm.

w-a111-

JrGDM apertnwnt, Neklrte
Hendef'I:QI\
tz711ma
pold.$10 ..._
_ _ ..WlutiiHIM
_
_

Fumlahed Apl.rlment, 1 ....,

roam, 107 S.oond Avenu., 0•'llpcllo, 1121'5/Mo. UIIIHIM Poild,
114 441 U11 Aftet 7 PJI.

.,

ASTRO·GRAPH

Blrdo!,

1111110-.
mlcL Flofi Tllltlc I
:1413 Jac:lciOn , ...
m~oko Mk• RoHwallor, lllilotl
d
, S50: 1110 len yr. Okl
Reg. AppUoolllj 114-1112-M1D.

Otmanetmlon,
.O.man"a
Hom1o1re. 1........._7ZI:I.
Entonalnmono COniOr 13150 Ell·
Ira Ntc.l 114-:1111-miO AFTkR I
P.M.

=· -

=:

FuA blocdotl RAI Tonier
old, 110. :1101-

~-­
.......

':t':l•1811
l:_!wpo
1111

1111 Iuick
Ill' LIIB•on

A.tu; 111ft CMv.II'1G
&amp;soob, ...-: 11111 Poro. Or

Prill, AM!; till 1 - I
.... . . . . _,.
Flnanolna.
~· ·Aulo
111111.

c.m.r,

~

®~

_._

Raglltotod Ragolar I Mlrllai-

Yoibhlnt T~rrfer ~ Blue
I Tin, 1G Pounda, .• P&lt;iundo,
Wormed, Tolls Cut, llow&lt;:lowo,
111 Sholo, For Eutor I Molhoro

2M-

'.

vai~~··-7w......... bur·

·---.
,AftariP.IL

3pm.

I

•

OU1- -

lar ..... dog, 114182 1011 -

'

Chrvolor
llh - Uko ......
Ell·
IOIIonl
Condftlon,

---..... ·72.000111 tttt714AIIer4RIL

-

- . . . - ....... ·1, AIC,

-~~

tnnomloolon,
-!ICI!'
t11,1f0,
...114MNIIIolfor Spm.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Try to keep
Astra-Graph predictions for the year people out of your private affairs Ieday.
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to Astra- They might turn an abrasive situation into
Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box something more heated and destructive.
4465, New York. NV 10153. Be sure 10 SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 22) Make lhe
BERNICE
state your zOdiac sign.
•
of what you do .today and even tf
BEDEOSOL TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Self ·cen · most
lhere .IS someone at the gathering who
'~
tared 'individuals will annoy you more rubs you the wrong way.
than usual today . If you encounter one SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doe. 21) Be
socially, give him/her a wide benh.
AXtremely careful today in front of per·
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) A good way . sons whose respect you wan! to earn.
to ruin Your family' s mood today is to Erratic behavior could severely tarnish
i11troduce an emolionally charged topic your image.
into lhe dinner conversation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) It mighl
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Before be extremely difticun again today to get
jumpmg 10 to support the underdog your opinions across to Individuals who
Wednesday. April12 , 1995
today, be s~re you hav~ all the facts. have tejected your ideas in the pa sl.
Be consistent, practical and pruden! in There is a possibility that you might , Don't lose your cool.
defend someone unworthy.
·AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If
___- I he year ahead when trying to enhance
LEO IJu!y 23-Atig. 22) Wgrk lhin~ Qut
your material base, ~oriartrons rn geneml
for yourself today insteaO. of risking your make
egate Sure
1
favor you, but there is~ no room for taking
effons and resources on a person who lh8 Sbility to carry
.. foolish risks.
.
mtght not be able to manage things as lully.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) The row you
well as you can
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Usually you
select to hoe today mlglll be unered w~h
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 Be mindlul of wel~me partnership arrangement&amp;, but
r
. . more obstacles thali you anticipated .
· your own faults and shortcomings today · loday it mighl be wise 10 avoid lhis type
.. Unfortunately ~ most of them may have
before judging olhors. II you are toleraRI of enlangl&amp;me/11. Play II sale and operate
,; been placed lhere by you. Aries , 1rea1
'
of them, they will be more toJerant of you .· independenlly.
yourseH to a birthday giH. Send lor your

•

~

Chav. CI!Mfco, 4 Door, .....
1lr-. ..- . - . . . . Vwy
Good Condl11on, 10 ....
Aluminum flohlng - · 114-

&amp; DOUBLEWIDES. WE OWN
THEMN ~:;LL FINANCE THEIL
304·7
5.

dul.r. Will ttaln. Some Market• lo'lOICN O¥Of1ccklna Ohio Rlwr,
taken. C.U 303·75f-.320G ext 2mllel - n 1112 wlih WAIW tap.
30W7HNCI.
2200.
Acno1111 a.. 114-'
· 'ro
Won1 Gel Rich OUic:lo. ft•llt':J
ownarFfe·~

Pr

8

E ll

oweeT? '

. V J P G l K P G

1 (CVJJVT

CLCK'O

KaRT')

GYWKLKS

XJVNOLB
TEBWWYC .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It's hard lo imagine Woody Gulhrle singing ~bout the
plighl of oppressed ballplayers." - (Columnisl) Scon Harris.

':~~:t:~'

contract

0

S@tt(l}A-l£t.trs· lAM I

WDID

b, CLAY I . POLLAN_..;__ _ _ __

Ed~od

Rearrange

letters of

the

four Krombled words below ro form four words.

•

I

HARGP

• I I' I I

~,I.~B
I' 1 1 1:~'",~.·
.~

RH T·E

· After

a long talk with our two

.

.

.

PRINT NUMBtRED /'
lfTTFRS
•

UNSCRAMBLE fORI •
ANSWER

•

bv ltl !tng

&lt;hu&lt;kle

ouo1ed

tho m•ssmg words
you develop from srep No. 3 ~~low .
if'!

I' 1 1· I, I' I' I' I' I
II I I I I I I I
3

Here's a quote from an Ex President, "Politics is not
a bad professioh, if,¥£!u succeed there are many rewards,
~ ifyoutlisgrace yourself you canatways WRITE a BOOK-:"
~
~
\

01111 e14-ta:a-.m1. IOH.

FREE DELIVERY • BETI!i!,
LAROE SELECTION Of' SINGLe

-

v_0

e

-

Steel

A lludy Cuh Income.
10So". HOG-alt710.

REF ~

EVA

Cankqr · Orbit • Libra • Grower·· WRITE a BOOK

11: ¥11111111 ·o.- Allllt. 148 or

Buy tlc:taty direct from National
M•nufactuw •• . aUihorlz.ct

1:%.

XV 0 T,

OY

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

2bdrm. 1pt1 .• Iatif ~~.ctrtc, •
plll'*l lumlohod, louncty
rcom foollbloa - t o ochoOI
In t-. Allt)lfoiilcM IVIIIIblo

building~ •• ktw N U.OO sq.tr.

Will

PT

51\ OF

1111-5737.

holM&amp;. 1-IQO..

LEFT. 304·7$1-?m.

Business
Opponunlty

G

t)

WOULDN'T 8E FAANC.\5 1

PI-30W7WOIS.
Four lomalo Rottwolllr~

21

i

8

~OORI&gt;I&gt;IATION, 'IOU J~T

UMrTED· OFFER NEW 14110
$995 DOWN, S185MO.,_~REE
DEUVERV A SElUP. 3114•71&amp;5561.

NEW BANK REP08, ONLY 4

RV K0 B C

VJPGLKPG

ACTUr\lLY, A

Bonk Roll&lt;* 2 • 311&lt;, ~e •
doubl•wlet•., 1-IOC).IU.
•

Financial

.

· ~--=D.., · . :.A~Ir=E_,CI"'s.: f,I..:.C_,.I:-g..,1 10·C·o:~~:,: -~~~

·

looking lcr UMd
11111-2388.

'

L.-l..-l..-l..-l..-.!.. ..-1

do!rlllrd And 1 Filii 1!occ&lt;1 OT
Uko
Now,
114-:147-2032
Ev~. ·
2 Twin llbit Man,_, I,.._
UDI, 1.-o417~301.

.

seventeen year old twins my husband shook his head and said,
r-:-:-:-:-::-:-- "Youwasleadvicewh!lnitisg iven

Transportation

Gllllpolle.11' , .. 8221.

d--"-

.. ;:
..t·s Y C

'l M

.

2 Ford Mofior Compenr Frant
End Covert (Bm) 1 Filii Thun-

Apanment
for Rent

by Luis Campos

Celettnty Cipher coyptograma are '&lt;rea ted from quol.ltiona by ramous people, past and preMOI
Each fetter on 1he cipher r;lands tor 1nolhM. !00.y'5 c;lw: X ~ B

7

Round ·B - 01 Mlxod Hay, 1143881821

....
1112. •rPm;'d - · ...ao
llnn.:IOW7

44

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

-.:aase..

Pomeroy, Ohio,
1881 Novo,. now point, boob
Trailer lor Nnl on CoM« St.'!!! $1200, 4th g•t bed, 1600 080.

In Pomoraw,
ploa • .,..
depod, 114-4517-3013.

t~e

made.
By now you will have spotted East's
mistake. At trick one, he must follow
suit with the heart seven. Then, afler
overrufling with the heart 10 and cash·
ing the heart queen, he can exil with
the heart two, forcing South to win the
trick. West collects three club tricks for
two down.
Bo honest - would you h~ve found
that play? If not, get into the habit of
thinking befo~ pjaying at trick one.

73 Valli &amp; 4 WD'I

2 BodRIOIII ~No Polo,
Htii/Mo f200 Do-n. Bulavllle 122 Cub Cadot, 12 liP, 42" cut,
SBOO; 8 liP Cuo C.dot, 38" CUI,
Plko, Trull Pold, h4-SIIIIOOO
$800; 814oiii2·20Q.
2 BR _, IIMC. No polo. $:126

HouH In Pomeroy area tor
trade or down paymenl an t.rm
In WV or Ohlo .,..., 114-102·
11138.

lo his ace, cashed the club ace and
ruffed a low club in the dummy.
East overruffed with the heart 10,
ca&amp;hed the heart queen and spade ace,
and exiled with the heart seven, planning to put South in his hand to lose
lhree club tricks to West. However,
South didn't cooperate. He played his
heart six under East's seven' East had
to lead a spade or a diamond to all

/VOAH:f

Payment, Eur 10rm1, 3 Bodrooma. 1 Bath, Located Heir
Vlnlon /Bidwoll AroL eau ,.-.
448~11011 Aak Few llaH._.

1 Rolt· - · 2 Zolotwolne
3 Food (ol.)
4 Joint
51nroadlneaa
(2 wdt.)
6 theater dlotrict
7 ExprHoln
, 10 Musical
· behavior
. compool1lon
(2 wdl.)
11 Verne hero
8 And nol
12 larMII airline
9 - Su1111C.
(2 wei&amp;.)

•A -

WHO ARE YOU

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

DOWN

•At08764

•
'
ona day a
Construction crew hit a water main.•

27 Voluntary

31 ActorNovella
32 Look-alike .
33 Pack animlll
35 Soft cheeiMI
36 Spreads out
40 Aroma ·

·

•J 8 6 4 3

•

·venice was a norr(lai city

57 Conned (a!.)
58 Sola

del-

EAST
&amp;AI08
•Q1072

7652

·

55-ToWer

21 Sloin dlver'o
anlro (2 wdo.)
24 C1rry

.s

IM-~U4157.

DefKII,.

20 Spain' a Colla

J 9 S

eK10843

lbiO - , -.to;
hon!t.
WII!!'J.

&amp;lmon
47 Gratuity
50 Gell up
53 FIIIH
55 Angry oulburat

18 Nile q-n.
far ahort

•A 5

All f881 estale advertising In
lt'IIS newspaper Is subfect 10
the_ftdtral Fair Housing Act

,13~
..NI&lt; IUtlate
•'-k
Merble

&amp;K Q

OM . . .

41 Pllywrlght

vllion ···- 11 Emotional

I

TYcoon LIU.

....
.
-nile

Gene-

1 NIW8progrom 43 Omelet
inti I dllal

.... Wlt,h
Dual
WltHI
TI011"5,.~_H.P
lo&gt;o
looartl Motw Willi '"""""' Top,

..·~

lmp!~r~••:in;t~~~=~~:-i

!

APRIL 11

I

�___...--·---

.•

~

~

Tuesdey, Aprll11, 1995•••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

PIISII 12-The Deily Sentinel .

.

-...
~

Getting involved·with. a married person .is never a good idea
'Dear Au lmdiTI: I know you (wilh me) Ill die OOIIIJ*Iy; Now he
t.w done !IIIII)' col1111,1u about "!he has no job IUid no l*uapccts, is S8
bulsinte I
one, I ye~n old and loots M. I don't Willi
would 1lkc 110 tdlaii.Ory lhltwuld to spend theta~ or my life with this
aw a Jot or women from Nining man, but I can't throw him out
thelrliwa.
hecausehehMnoplacetoBO.
lbepn•alfairwithmybolsfi~ I am gains nutstrying 10 fJIIUC a
years qo. I wish I could say he was way out or this mess. Ann, warn your
unlllpplly man'iec1 or tllatl was. but readers !hat it is 1111ver a good idea to
neil her is ne. It was pun: ~ex. Now become inwlvcd wilh a manied man.
!hat the romance and excitement are Never. We both have hurt so many
sonc.tlleaex isuulyboring.
people close to us lbatl will feel
"Mcl"movedinwiihmetwiceand guilty fortherestofmylife. Noname
left me twice 111 move back with his or initials, please. -- NOWHERE
wife. The last time, she said." I've had OSA
·
it;'llld ticked him ouL He is now
DEAR NOWHERE:I eannotadd
a single word to what you have
!ivins in !I)Y aputmcn~. .
· Mel- ftred from his job last year writttJn YOIIr teslimclay ays it aiL
for charging lunches anddiltn~u . Tbank •

Other_..,.

w•

"Joe' and I e~~joy beiDa IDplbcE 1..ut I
weet. he libel me tD marry blm. I '

Ann
Landers

- "''*"

lse:would and aid "yes'
witboula mmwd's hesinttim. But I
am b• 'llbled about IOIHihing, Ann.
Pur the last 20 ........ I've worn an.
.. upper plalc that ,-loots very natural.
Should llell1oe before we marry? -·

-

--·, .. ...,....,_

c..-_.

;
SASKATOON, CANADA
••
DEAR SAS.: By all meim, tell Joe
•
about your uppers, but don't be l.atuJus' lltW booklet, "How to Make "'
smprlscd if it turns outlhat he has il Friends aruJ Stop Being Lonely. • ~
· full seL
Sefid a self-addnlsxd,loftg, busillus- '
Clem of the Day: A man can fail siu envelope and a check or mont:j •.
many times, but he isn't really a orrkrjor$4.25(thisilu:1wksposlllg~ -;
failure until he starts to blame • and ltandliltg) to: Friellds, c/o AM
someone else.
I..olldm. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, ··~
l..olle~?Takec/taqtofyoiiTiifo Ill. 6()6114)562. (In CQIIQda, sent( .: ·

aruJ turn It aroWJd. Writt for Ann

$5.15,)

• • ·:

..
.
- - - -t·-SQciety scrapbook...;.,-~-____,;

Dale Franklin Ellis recently celebrated his thinl birlbday at his parent's home. His parents are Dale
8lld MarJie Ellis.
He had a Tweetle Bird cake. He
earlier had a party at his aran&lt;Jparcn!S Tom and Joyce Persinger In
KcnL All !be relatives attended.

EASTER DINNER
PRESIDENT'S US'I
1'be annual Easter dinner wiD be
The Washington State Community College in Marietta recently · held at the Senior Citizens Center
.
announced its presidenr s list (a Thursday at noon.
The
senior
citizens
cborus
will
4.0) and dean's list· (higher tban a
present a springtime program at 11
3.5).
a.m.
The president's list local mem. As a follow-up to a p[program
bers include: Kati'ina Turner and '
several
weeks ago, a plant
Carrie Morrissey of Pomeroy and
will lake place that day
exchange
Reedsville's Aaron Wilson.
from
11
a.m.
to 2 p.m.
The dean's list local members
'
Hal
Kneen,
Meigs County honiwere Coolville's Paul Richardson,
culturist,
will
be
on band to assisl
Long Bottom's Danett Jones,
Those
with
seedlings
or extra fiO)II·
Pomeroy 's Melissa Arnold and
er
plants,
especially
l!nnuals or
· Portland's Debra Tedford.

DALE ELLIS

pe~nnials, are asked to take the

plants to the center and exchange
them for something else. The
,exchange program is open to anyone.
EASTER CELEBRATION
The Eden Brethren Church out-

side Reedsville on State Route 124
will bold various activities during
this week before Easter Sunday.
Each night, teens can view films
about Chri.st at 7 p.m. through Friday at !he church.

'

T

·

The last two nlgh!S wiD featwe

Ohio Lottery

Magic ,
defeats
Cavs

•

1

Third
birthday ·
celebrated
,_

rQy!wl•nc~nowiiiCIIhen."l liMber
c~e.ty 11111 wcny !hat she will injln
heraelf IOriously in oae or her falls.
Any suueations as to how I can
conviace her 10 see a doctor? -·
OLENDALE,CALIP,
DEAR GLENDALE: Call.your
dociDr, and Ilk him or her to phone
your mother and tdl her to come in
for a routine checkup. If your mother
refuses 10 go, you will just have 10
stand by and wait until she injures
henelholwdlyshewill be forced to
see a doctor.
Dear A•• Landen: I am awidow,
aae 78 and have been keepfna
· COIIIJIIIIY wilh a widower 'Who is a
few yean younp:
isnothingwmngw~me.l justlose
Nowthttbothourmatesliesonc.

Dear Au I nden: I'm flcilla a
ICrioua dilemm• with '!IY aaf•1
"""'" Sl!o'si!PP'&lt;* hlai 80, inay
llllbbcmllldp:U-.pywhealliyone
GJ ··llllubueea docu:
ll'sobviouatllalMod!aila' ius
. from a bearinJ loa lise :of
111
admit, bulliiiR imporll!ld)\ lbe 1111
been faDins dowa a pat deal. Lilt
week; she fell wher! she was walking
out or a depliiD!fllt store. ThalCvening,sllefeUSCUinaoutoraclu!ir
· toiiiSwcrlhephooe. TwoMiebqo,
she fell facc-flnl iniD a mud puddle
· !ryington:tamoncofheratswller!
itlcaptfromherarmL
When I siluest that she set
checked by a dociDr, she ays. "''bere

Pick3:
718
Pick 4:

4320
·BuckeyeS:

PageS

.

.

8-12-16-29-35

·.e

1/ '

Vol. 45, NO. 243
·• Cllllvrloht 1195

'

Pomeroy-Mid~lep~rt,

•4

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Market Livestock Sale and Show
Committee Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Meigs High School cafeteria.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Clerk ofCopn's legal office will be
closed Tuesday, April 11 for computer training. The title office will
iemain opened.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange. Tuesday, 8 p.m. at !be hall.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middlepon
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2.p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Wendell
Hoover. Mrs. Eldred Parsons to
review "The Rise of Silas
Lapham": Mrs. Hoover and daugh· ·
{er, Laura Totten, will present
selections from musical theater ·
over the decades. Response to
name· an ideal. Critic of model
meeting by Mrs. Forrest Bachtel.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
Church of God will have communion and feet washing services at
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Good Friday
services. 7:30p.m. fqllowed by fellowship and refreshments.

POMEROY - United States
Coast Guard Auxiliary meeting 7
p.m. at Carpenters' Hall on Main
Streel Public invited.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
Junior High Boosters, Thursday,

'

THURSDAY·
POMEROY - Seder dinner,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul
l,utheran Church, Pomeroy, sponsored by Women of St. John and

St. Pau( Lutheran Churches. Reservations, 992-2010.

.

~

POMEROY - Hysell Run ,.
Holiness Church, Easter service ·
POMEROY - Morse Chapel
CHESTER - Good Friday ser- wilb communion, 6 a.m.• Hysell _,
Church revival. Thursday thtough vice, Chester United Methodist Run Holiness Church, Sunday ;
Saturday. 7 p.m. Rev. Gary Hines Church, 7:30 p.m Friday.
school, 9:30 a.m.; morning worship
speaking .
10:45 a.m., evening service, 7:30 ".;
SUNDAY
. p.m.
RACINE - "Lord is it I?'·' ·
PORTLAND - Sunrise serdrama .by Meigs Cooperative
RACINE - Racine Church of_::;.
vice,
7 am. Sunday, Portland Park.
Parish, Racine United Methodist
Nazarene,
10:30 a.m., will present ..
All churches welcome. Sponsored
Church. 8 p.m,
a
historic
accurate
demonstration of -:
by the Freedom Gospel Mission.
Jesus'
last
supper
explaining the '::
Pastor R&lt;iger Willford . In the .event
FRlDAY ·
importance
of
each
element to the ,;;:.
POMEROY - Good Friday of rain the service will be held at redemptive act of the .cross. Public
the Freedom Gospel Mission
service, noon Friday, Sacred Heat Church,
invited.
Portland.
Catholic Church, sponsored by
~

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
post Nomination of officers.

.

'

'

DON TATE

Gee ·

Children who will be 5 years old
on or before Sept. 30 are eligible to

Battle of
Buffington
scheduled

.;

TORS, l·nc.

SP ·lttG

,Kindergarten registration
attend kindergarten during the
1995-96 school year.
The kindergarten registration
. schedule for the Meigs Local
School District is as follows: Brad·
bury Elementary, May I. 9922349; Harrisonville Elementary,
May 2, 742-3000; Middlepon Elementary, May 3, 992,3387; Rutland Elementary, May 4, 742-2666;
. The Meigs County Historical · Pomeroy Elementary, May ~. 992.
Society will sponsor !he annual 2710.
Battle of Buffington lslani! reenactments on July 21.22 and 23.
Kindergarten registration for
On July 19, 1863, about 2,000 Southern and Eastern school dis. Confederate soldiers led by Gen. tricts will be held as follows:
John Hunt Morg;rn and about 8,000 Southern kindergarten. April 20
Union forces. The battle cost Gen- and 21, 949·2664; Chester Elemeneral Morgan 120 soldiers' lives and tary. April 27, 985-3304; Tuppers
700 captured.
Plains Elementary, May 12, 667This year's weekend activities 3310.
.
will begin at Gallipolis with a 55mile s!emwheel cruise aboard !he
P .A. Deni:ly ,following the same
Parents should call or visit one
route as gunboats chasing after of the above iisted schools to make
. Generai.Molg!lll. . . . . .
. _
an oppointment for kinder&amp;arten
At one lime, Pomeroy along !he registration. ~arenls should bring
banks of the Ohio was one of !be !heir child's birth certificate, Social
10 largest cities in Ohio. lbc cost Security card and immunization ·
for the Gallipolis cruise includes record 10 registration.
·
$35 from Gallipolis (with no ttansponation between pons) and $50
Children should have four DPT,
(including bus transportation from
the parking lot at the Buffington three Polio. one MMR and one TB
skin test before entering school.
Island baulelield .
The Civil War camp will open School nurses will be present at
to the public on Saturday morning. registration to answer any quesThe Sa&gt;&lt; tOn Come! Bands - one of tions concerning immunizaliGn
the most authentic Civil War era requirements. ·
·
bands in !he country - will proSchool person nel will assess.
• vide music for a ball on Saturday
. each child's hearing. speech, physinigh!.
For details, call Margaret Parker cal and language abili ties with
at 992-3810 or write 10 Meigs information about each child's perCoupty Hiswrical Society, P.O. fonnance to be provided to .paren!S
a! a later date.
Box 145, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

~

Meigs Ministerial Association.

6:30p.m.

IOtt
308 E. MAIN

1994 CHEVY

CORSICA
Auto.,alr, cassette, air bag,
. anti-lock brakes, power. ,
windows &amp; cruise, tilt, bucket
seabi; 4 Dr., l:lelay wipers.

$9,999

1·992·6614 - 1·800·837-1 094

OHIO

1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

$8I-688.

y
0
0

R

1994 CHEVY
CAVALIER ·RjS

c

B
0
I

$9,499

1994 '
BERmA "'
. 2 Door, V6, ~utomatic. air
conditioner, air bag, cassette,
more.

..

Z
Z
GREAT VALUES c GREAT VALUES

==='~

1995
PONTIAC
GRAND AM SE

$10I 995 :

.

1995·

-

~ JIMMY

4 Door. 4X4, SL decor, till. cruise,
auto .. air. 4.3 V-6, locking dill.,
Apple Red.

Air.bag, anti·lock brakes. auto.,
till, cruise, delay wipers, cassette,
rear defog,Brigh! Red.
WAS $16,250

#3128

#3t47

.

NOW$23,995

HOW$14,899
-199_5

. 1995..

BUICKCENTURY

GMC

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CIERA SL,

/(.

WI, auto., cauette, 1:r1Jiae1flit,

3100 V-6, crul&amp;e,tilt, auto.,

power windows &amp; locks.

remote locks, more.

BrtghtWMe.

13095

NOW$151 995 .

NOW '15,999,
1995
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE SE
Keyless ent.y. auto., air, 4 Dr..
ABS. passkey, !hell deterrent.
. cass., power seat, 3.0 V6.
WAS $22,657

#3137

NO.W$19 989

1990 OLDS.

y

o

1995

1994 BUICK

I CENTURY
$11,995 : $11,995
J
f
.J
'

GEO
TRACKER

. CIERA

GREAT VAI.VES c .GREAT VALUES

Air, convertible, cassette, 5
speed, Bright Red, 4X4, 15"
alloy wheels.
#3t84
$

.

·NOW 1 995

All 'Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
·~A
=t~l -pa
~y
-ments~l.ilifecrro· creoit approwt--1~

""

You#ll Come Up Ac~s With
The C/assifieds
'

.

.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

•

•

..

•

"

Ohio, W~dnesday; Aprll12; 1995

.
.
.
By GEORGE ABATE
and Nelson Road is bad too," concert. The event will be held at 8
Sentinel News Staff
. - --"-'- eouncilman DiGJc.Fetty-said. - -p.m. April-2~ at-lbe.Ru!lll!ld-Ci¥ic....
Rutland Village Council will
In otber infrastructure matters, Center.
seek a state gran! to pave the roads council me111,bers discussed conTickets are still available at Rut•
around i!S element;lry school, offi· ~eros about concrete sid~walks land Civic Center, the Quality Prinf
cials decided at its meeting last ms!alled by Fie)ds Excavating Co. Shop in Middleport and various
night.
that have crumbled and deteriorat· other stores . For more detail s on
The village will try to pave .~d . The construc.tion company other store•· where tickets may be
Union, Long, Hill and College ms!alled the water lines last year.
pu(chased, call !be village at 742streets immediately around the
The VIllage needs to gather any 2121.
school, said Duane Weber, Rutland · ~omplaints about last year's w~!er
It w\1' noted by officials !hat the
· council president.
line P~Ject by the June 1 de~me, village appreciates the Rutland
This year' s deadline foi,the Co~ncilmanSteveJenkinsswd.
American ·Legion's donation of
'Any pl~ce that's been driven another $500 to help fund the
Community Development Block
Grant fundin~ is May 5. ·
across, you II n_ot be a~l~ 10 bold even.Ll)le concert will help pay for
"We can t get every thing at (Fields Excavaung) ·to ·~ Jenkms repaus to !he community center's
once. If you ask for 100 much you . said.
roof. . ·
won't get any," said Sandy Smith,
In other business, the coun case
Pale Hart, village maintenance
Rutland village·clerk.
involving drainage near David supervisor, reported:
The council discussed the size Willces property still bas not been
- . The ground bas slipped about
of tbe project since last year's resolved.
50 feet up the bill from the sewage
CDBG requeSt was rejected.
Council also finalized plans for treatment plant. Fixing !be slip will
"We need Ibis by the schooHad' the annual Phil Dirt and the Dozers be difficult because of !he slope of
!he hill, Hart said.

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

.

Low toalght Ia the 40&amp;,
cloudy, rain. Thursday, cloudy,
lll&amp;b In 60s.

· 2 Se!;tlons, t 6 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Rutland Gounci.l seeks ·paving. grant
.

evangelist Keitb Kapple. Youths 1 ~
can win prizes includmg a billoon •
launcher thai burls a balloon 300
feet into the air.
'
The community is invited.
, DEAN'S LIST·
Teresa Dunfee of Middleport
made the dean's list for die last
quluter at Hocking College where "
she is enrolled in the nursing program. Het; name was unintentionally omitted from a list of students
achieving that academic level pro••\
vided by tbe school.

.

'

REVIEWING PLANS -Pomeroy Council President John
Musser, right, explains tbe downtown re&gt;italization plans to Sten
Beha. Beba is tbe director of the Meigs County Mental Retardation/Developmental Disabilities agency. The project continues to
moveforward, Musser said. (Sentinel photo by George Ahate)

.
"If you put anything on that it
.
will cause it to slip-raster and you' ll---'~
bury !bal'fence," Jenkins said. •
Jenkins and other council members
agreed· to look at the slip.
- The power washer bas been
purchased to clean grinder tanks
and pumps for annual maintenance.
Tbis work will begin in several
weeks.
Rutland listed March's .village
treasurer's balances at: total general fund, $4,711.95; general fund,
$4,711.95: civic center, $1,559.46;
police fund. -$632.1 2; high school
property , $405: law enforcement,
S187.33; street fund . -$544 ;60;
state highway fund, $2,609.82;
water fund; $3,299.42; water debt
fund, $1.27·5; sewer fund
$2,452.02: sewe r ' debt fund :
$11,203.93; utilities deposit fund,
57,363.26; and replacemem fun d,
$18,350.89.

Report: Cox
under probe
when he quit

Chamber ·receives
update on p~oject

COLUMBUS (AP)- The forBy GEORGE ABATE
weeks to complete.
·
mer Gallia County judge who quit
Sentinel News Staff
·An endangered species of pink
before he could be con firmed as
Pomeroy. co·uncilman John mussel near the amphitheater toea-·
stale inspector general was being
Musser recently outlined !he revi- tion had held up !be amphitheater
investigated by the attorney gener.
talization project status to t!1e development. This project is on
al's office, a newspaper reported
Meigs County Chamber of Com- hold until April 24, Musser said.
Tuesday.
merce..
The 41-by-28 foot amphitheater,
Attorney General Belly MontTbe revitalization project may, whic.b will extend partially, into the
gomery was investigating allcga- .
halt !he exodus of area shoppers to river and scat 500. will be able to
liOns of ''ser'ious mi'&gt;conducL''
the malls while increasing propeny he used six months of the year.
agains t Donald A. Cox, the Akron
values, Musser said.
Docking pegs will be placed on
Beacon Journal reponed. 1t said the
"This revilali~ation project is the side of the stage for boats to
inquiry
was opened " ft:w days
one of the most important projects dock onto, be added.
before
Cox
quit.
for. Meigs County," Musser said.
i The area included in tbis downCox
was
nominated . by Gov.
"It will put a shot in the arm for town section of Pomeroy Includes
George
Voinovich
10 replace David
downtown Pomeroy since it's been 52 buildings. The project will to!al
Sturtz
as
Lhe
state's
govcrnmcnl
going downhill for a numbfr of . about $1 million counting· state and
corruption watchdog .
years." ·
federa l grants. matching funds
The newspaper said Mont·
The project and corresponding · from local businesses ·and donagomery's
chief of staff, Jim Tilling,
time lines for the five phases tions from private benefactors.
to
describe the complainr
refused
include:.
,
The building renovations will
but
said
a
partial
investigation by
. - Facade renovation, will include for exterior buildings, roof
Montgomery "was beginning to
begin the last week in April and replacements and code violations.
lend some credibility to the allegashould be completed by March The project was awarded last year,
tions."
1996. With business matches; the beating Gut 13 applicants.
Cox resigned· March 28, shortproject wiH to!al $514.400.
. "They didn't want to spend
circuiting the inquiry. Tilling said.
-Promenade, should be bid another $10,000 and put it on the
Cox has said he resigned
within 60 days and completed by shelf somewhere," Musser said of
because he was tired of having his
the end of July. This $70,000 pro- the original design for th e project.
integrity challenged by lawmakers
ject is being funded t.tirougb an
Eventually, upstair apartments
BRUSH FIRES- Dry, windy weather . batlle a blaze threatening the Obio Pallet Com·
and the news media.
Appalachian Regional Council may also be upgraded to attract
pany at Rock Springs. Under Ohio law, open
Tuesday contributed to at least three brush fires
grant.
·
senior·citizens. Musser added.
He could not be reached to comburning is prohibited between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
prompting action by Meigs County volunteer
ment
today . A woman who
- Period style street lighting~
·In other ch3Il)ber business, Judy
during Martb, April, May, October and Novemfirefighters. Pomeroy and Syracuse firefighters
later this year. This project will Williams, wbo is helping coordi Continued on page 3
ber.
·nate tourism for !be chamber, said
cost $80,000 at $2,000 a light.
- Utility poles ·and lines a group of individuals arc trying to
removal from Main Street to Sec- develop cabins. Applications also
ond Street, which could begin by will be accepted for !be part-time
for !he fi rst time in 20 years.
. COLUMBUS (AP) - Welfare saw as the legislative priorities for
the ~urcau of Workers' CompensaNovember or December. 'This pro- 'tourism director until April 26.
the
House
when
it
returns
next
Three
in
particu
lar
had
been
refonn
and
reorganizing
state
govtiOn s mvestmcnt portfolio and
., ~ je\;t.wiU..oost.abillll :UOO,QQO.
A balf-page advertis~ment was
emmont
will
tep
!he
agenda
as
tbe
hanging
around
so
long.
Da~idson
rejecting a long-tcnn fill for Ohio's
week.
.
- Amphitheater, may possibly - placcil in -the Ohfo POlymer Central
Those
include:
said.
she
wasn't'
sure
they
would
school-funding
problem, she saiif.
.
Republican-controlled
Legislalllrc
be built by l]le Sternwheel Festival magazine to promote I he Great
Finishing
!be
task
of
welfare
ever
move:
getting
the
state
out
of
heads
into
its
second
100
days.
One
iss
ue
RcpubiJCaJ\:t may
this fall. This project is funded ·nend si te, said Julia lloudashell'
reform,
which
started
witb
!be
!he
liquor
business,
enacting
some
GOP
leaders
said.
·
·
have wished badn ., come up was
through an Ohio Departtnent of Thornton, county economic devel·
With the state's two-year budge t elimination last week of the Gener- kind of campaign finance reform abortion.
Natural Resources grant and dona- opment director.
and revamping Ohio's welfare sys·
A bill to ban !be "bmin suction
The chamber will hold its mmu- s~nt to !he Senate, two top Republi· al Assistance program.
tions from the local stern wheel
Revamping
!he
state
Medi·
!em.
association and private hencfac!Drs. a! dinner dance at 6:30 p.m. April can~ took a break from the spring
abortion" was bogged down in a
The liquor bill and campaign House commiuee until a group of
recess Tuesday to go over some of caid program for !be poor and disThe project will take six to eight 21 at Royal Oak Resort.
finance
refonn are in the Senate's anti-abortion lawmakers polled out
the House's accomplishments dur- abled.
hands.
Tbe
bill ending the state· s a rare procedural maneuver last
- Passing budgets for !be
ing its first 98 days.
Bureau of Workers' Compensation general assistance program is wait- week to force the tssue -,o tbe
"In our own way, House
Republicans have engaged iR alid and !be Ohio Industrial Commis- . ing for Gov. George Voinovich's House floor.
signature.
been successful in moving forward
sion.
Assistant Minority Le&amp;der Jane
Davidson, who is pro·choice,
. - Making the Ohio Elections
JJn a very hold. aggr~ssive. substantive agenda - every bit as. bold, Commission independent of the . Campbell of Cleveland had a dif- said she rather would have had the
\
.
..
ferent view of the House's first committee holq more hearingS. Dut
secretary of s~~~· ~.offtce, .
POINT PLEASANT - Point land read his statement. wbicb aggressive and substantive as
four months.
she said she woltldn' t lobby against
what's
going
on
in
W;tshington,
-Folding
the
duties
of
the
Pleasant Mayor Russell Holland's acknowledged his wrongdoing,
"They've
done
some
things
a motion to bring the btll to a vote.
.
D.C."
said
Rep.
Randall
Gardner,
Industrial
Re.
l
ations
Departmeot
jail sentence .was reduced by Cir- stated he was treated fairly, thai be
said
they
·were
going
to
do
they've
''My pos ition on any J!)Sues
!be
No.3
House
Republican.
into
!be
Commerce
Depanmen!
and
cuit Judge James Holliday from 60 was sorry, and it wouldn't happen
for
a.
long
time,"
Campbell
said.
The
Dowling
Green
representadealing
wt!b abortion " to pem1it
the
Ohio
Bureau
of
Employment
·
.
•days to 30 days in a bearing for again.
From
a
Democrat's
point
of
the
process
to work. and that I was
tive
predicted
!be
next
four
months
Services.
Along with reducing the senreconsideration Tuesday.
·
view,
that
means
making
it
harder'
would
he
equally
ambitious.
not
going
to
be an ob:-.141Ck Lo Jcg1s·
DavidSon also listed a series of
"I am 'disappointed that Russell tence to 30-days, the judge also
for
labor
unions
to
participate
in
lation
that
people fell strongly
Speaker
Jo
Ann
Davidson,
Rissues
!he
House
·has
already
laCk·
was not released today, but I am re111ovcd the restriction of carrying
political
campaigns,
getting
hold
of
said.
about,",shc
led since Republicans took control
grateful for the reconsideration of a firearm from !be probation agree- Reynoldsburg. outlined wbat she
sentence given by the coun," Hol- ment.
In his original sentence, Holland
land's attorney Ron Stein said.
was
given two years probation and
Holland was indicted in January
200
hours
of conununity service.
on three misdemeanor counts of
Morgan
said if the sheriff conembezzlement by a public official.
Goldstein, a KCAL-TV reporter prosecutor laugh~d an&lt;l lll ld
LOS ANGELES (AP)- You Scheck also tried to portray fung
tinue~
to
allow
Holland to be a
Holland pleaded guilty to one
as a poorly trained criminalist who
who says Harri s told him that repo;!crs and spectator.. "Get a.
knew
things
we!ll
going
badly
for
count, involving a $28 check. and trusty, his sentence could be !be OJ. Simpson prosecutors when improperly collected and processed jurors bad discussed the case hfe . Prosecutor Chris Darden
!he other two were dropped as part reduced by 'seven days. Holland bas !he bighlighr of their day was Mar· blood samples. rendering the
among themselv~s. the Los Ange· joked at a news conference that
served eight days of his sentence.
of !he plea agreement.
results of delicate genetic tests uscles Times reponed. Such a· discus- although Clark's hair is naturally
cia
Clark's
new
hairstyle.
Stein withdrew a motion for
In the bearing yesterday mornless.
sion would violate coun rules and straight, "Marcia told me !hal her
Prosecutors
bad
tO'
sil
back
ing, Holliday cited bis reasons for consideration for work release.
"Scheck was really on a roll,"
cou ld lead to a mistrial. Harris hair was naturally curly ."
Since Holland's ~entence, resi- Tuesday and watcb criminalist said l.oyola University law profesimposing the 60-day sentence
denies making tile remarks. wbicb
But that was !be extent of the
based on nO! only the $28 cmbet· den!S of Point Pleasant have been Dennis Fung, with dark circles sor Laurie Levenson. "This was Qoldstein said came during an off- humor for the day. Fung, dred and
zlement by public official char_ge, w~~ring ~reen ribbons to show under his eyes and fmstration in his probably one of the worst days the camera interview.
frazzled, appeared to have inherited
but also !be other two indictmen!S !herr support of !be mayor.. A rally, voice, endure another rourid of bm· prosecution bas had.··
The
only
bright
spot
for
the
!be
years Clark lost.
and live possible charges that were wi!h· ove~ 300 people, was.. bel~ !al cross-examination.
The
inquisition
continues
today
·
prosecutiiin
Tuesday
was
Clark's
And
Scheck spared no drama
not brought forth, acc~rding to Jlrotest of bis sentence. In addition, - -Defense auorncy Barry Scheck
Prosecuting At!omey Damon lJor- · Gene Steele. H011liiiU'l 'ClllnJlalgn Lurncd .up..b.is..altadUuLibe •oft-. wil!l..&amp;!!tl s fifth @' on !be sland. new look . '£banks to the able scis· ~sing bis voice during key ques:
sol'S of Allen Edward!;;'llle e;Jebri--- uons-and laeingiris-queries wiUr ' treasurer, announced a campaign spoken technician. suggesUng that Also today, Judge L'ance no is to
gan.
meet
in
chambers
with
dismissed
ty hatrstyltst who gave Farrah sarcasm and skepticism.
Fung
,was
fed
answers
by
prosecu·
Morgan said the .hearing was fund and a "Russell Holland 28
juror
Jeanene
Harris,
wbose
comFawcelt
her "Charlie's Angels"
The court day ended wilh
tors
and
was
shading
his
testimony
receS$ed for the mayor to compile.a Fund" to help defray Holland's
ments
to
the
media
prompted
Ito
ID
Clark
no~ has darker ,
Scbcck
showing Fung and the juty
mane
,
to
gloss
over
police
mistakes
or
wriuen statement on why !he sen- expenses have been established.
begin
an
investigation
of
juror
con·
.
slnlightcr
hair,
her
trademark
curls
two
.Phot~graphs
of a back gate
up
a
police
conspiracy
to
cover
tence should be reduced and bow
Holland is seeking his third
replaced
by
a
modllied
shap.
outstde
Ntcole
Drown
Simpson&gt;,s
duct.
'be could pay baCk the community.
four-year tenn as mayor. The city's frame Simpson.
When
asked
aboul
her
hair,
the
c.ondommiu·m
Ito
also
has
~ubpoenaed David
Using
photos
and
video.
clips,
wtlen !be bearing res.umed, Hoi- elecuon is ~la!ed for May 20.

House Republicans outline upcoming agenda

Holland's jail
sentence reduced

e

Fung undergoe_s brutal cross-examination

'

.

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