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Page 08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolll, OH Point Pleaunt, WV

Spring
JOHNSTON

Director, three new officers
are elected by OVB board
GALLfPOLIS • A new dirci:tor
recentlY by the board or directors
of Ohio Valley Bllllk: aa:ord.ing 10
Chairman and Chief Executive
James L. Dailey . The
' . GrriGcr
bank's newest director is Uoyd R.
(Shorty) Francis of Waverly, while
Nicholas J. (Nick) Vizy was named
a vice president and Cindy H.
Johnston and Paula W. Salisbury
were botb promoted to the new
• officer position or assistant secrerary.
Francis, a businessman in Pike
County, is active in real estate
development. He is a former partner of Pike Chevrolet in Waverly.
He is a graduate of Chillicothe
High School and served with the
engineers in the U.S. Army.
Vizy, who joined OVD last
summer, came to the bank after
serving a clerkship for a federal
bankruptcy judge in Columbus: be
· also was in private practice for ·
three years with the fll1ll of Emens,
Kegle{, Brown, Hill and Ritter. He
is a graduate or John Carroll Uni·
versity in Cleveland and earned his

law degree from The Obio State
University. He is OVB's ~
counsel.
Salisbury came 10 OVB through
the co-operalive education program
and graduated frtml Oallia A~· my Higb School in 1976. In addi·
lion, ¥~e bas received her American
Institute or Banking diploma She
will serve as assistant secretary to.
Ohio..Valley Bane Corp. and Qbio
Valley Bank.
Johnston is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High ·school and recipi·
ent or the American Institute of
Banking diploma. She initially
joined the Banlt in 1977 as a cti·
operative education student. She
will serve as as~isrant secrerary 10
Obio Valley Bane .Corp. and Ohio
1
V.aUey Bank.
The Bane Corp. is a one bank
holding company with Obio Valley
Bank its subsidiary. Ohio Valley
Bank bas offices"in GalUa, Jackson
and Pike Counties in Obio; while
· t)le Dane Corp. bas a Loan Origination Center in Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
·

Dy CINDY JENKINS,
District Forester
.
GALLIPOLIS - It's time to start
looking for UJOse huge monarchs of
forest, field and lane.
The Gallia County Big Tree
Contest is looking for the biggest
poplar tree in the county. Tulip
poplar, sometimes known as yel·
low poplar, (Liriodendron tulip·
ifera) is this years species for the
. contest.
The Gallia Soil &amp; Water Conservation District and the 0.0.
Mcintyre park District are sponsoring the annual contest for the fifU1
year. The winner will be pr,csented
an award at the Gallia Soil &amp;
Water Conservation District Annoal Banquet in November.

Deadline for entry in the contest is friday, Sep1Cmber22, 1995.
Poplar is one of the tallest and
most beautiful eastern hardwoods,
with a long, straight trunk, a oarrow crown that spreads with age,
and large showy flowers resembling tulips. .
It is sail) that the leaf of the
poplar tree looks like the silhoueue
of "Sylvester !be Cat . The leaves
can get from 6 to 10 wide and are
somewhat. aromatic when crushed.
To nominate a poplar tree for
the Big Poplar Tree Contest, you
can call the Gallia Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District at 446-8687
or the 0.0. Mclntyn; Park District
at 446-4612 and you !will be sent a
·
form.

.and three new officers were elected

Big Tree contest entry,
deadline set Sept. 22

' .

CHAPTER

pl~ntin_g

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio farmers
bave lbe machine sbed doors open
and the tractors are ready to run.
Once warmer temperatures become
more dependable and adequate soil
moisture levels become available,
spring planting will begin.
The spring calving season bas
in general progressed well due to
the mild weather conditions. A po$·
sibility of 2, 4-D, Banvel injury to
!be new variety, "Freedom" wheat
was reported. there is no evidence
to suggest that "Freedom" is less
tolerant of these herbicides than
other varieties.
More. on Crabgrass control.
N!!!!!e!'Q!!S calls conj;e~Tling. "application dates" for preemergent crabgrass control materials, Dr. Bill
Pound, Extension Turf Specialist,
. san that timing should be governed by three things.
1.) Length of time materials are
effective, 2.) Anticipated germination date for· crabsrass, and 3.)
Trea1men1 cut-off date. The treat·
ment cut-off date is dictated by the
need for applications to cease at
least one week prior 10 the anticipated germination dale, so materials can be activated and a "cbemi·
cal barrier" developed. dr. pound
says that most control failures
occur when materials are applied
ton late. He says that lbe anticipated germination date in Southern,
Obio is around April 15.
Some big changes are being
made to tbe old "standby corn"
plant. plant breeders have altered
the genetics,. the starch, protein and
oil content of corn 10 meet the special needs of the livestock feeder,
food industry, and other industrial
users of corn. There are currently
two starch variations of normal
dent corn grown commercially waxy com and high amylose com .
Special corns with l)igh protein levels include high lysine corn and
high-oil corn hybrids.
While hybrid genetics plays a
major role in determining protein
.content, environmental conditions
(temperature, rainfall) tllld cultural
practices (nitrogen fertility, plant
populations also significantly affect
grain protein levels, of the I 03 co.m
hybrids tested at the Washington
Court House, Ohio Research Station in 1994. the percent protein
range was 6.4 to 8.6.
. High lysine corn contains
increased levels of two amino acids
• I ysine and tryplopbane • wbicb

.

will begin shortly
lbeir performance under different
enviroomental conditions.' Specialty COOlS sbould be grown in an lsolatcd field, 100 yards from nmna1

Edward Vollborn Is Gallla:·
County's Extension Agent, agrl·;
culture,
"

868
Pick 4:
4353
Super Lotto:
. 5-15-16-28-33-44

PageS

Kicker: .
426336

.

pot, a restaurant featuring home-cooked meals~
opened recenUy in Clifton, W. VL. From left are

'

'"1 SOUTH THIRD

'

PHONE 992·2196 .

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eng., PS, PB, auto . trans., air cCind,,
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windows &amp; P. locks, 8 foot bed, rear
step bumper, cast aluminum wheels,
trailer towing pkg .

Pulp mill
opponents
plan picket

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351 eng ., PS, PB, auto. trans. , AM/FM
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.BE SURE TO CHECK OUT OUR U.SED
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'.

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eng., PS, PB, aulo. trans'., air cond.,·
AM/FM stereo cass., tilt &amp; cruise, P.
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alum . wheels , low miles, extra clean,
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WAS$24,995 ,

NOW

.
23 99IS
'

1987 CHEVROLET
C-20 CONVERSION
VAN
.
.
V-8 eng., power steering, power
brakes, auto. Irans., Quad captain
chairs with sofa bed, AM/FM stereo
cass .. lilt , and cruise, styled wheels
with trim rings

3,495

8

•

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power brake.s , automatic Lon'g bed, 302 auto., PS, PB,
transmission,
AM/FM air•. rear step bumper, ~ bed
stereo radio.
liner, extra clean, AM/FM
stereo.
WAS$1,295
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I

And esp~cially three individuals in our c:;lub that have, by far, done ··
most of the hard work involved in this project: ,

NOW 8
"

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Deluxe, 6 cyl. eng., PS, PB, 8
foot bed, AM/FM stereo,
radio, . chrome rear step
bumper, local truck, 2,000
miles.
•
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I•

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.NOW 8

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NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING
Bring lq yoU.. best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
wlll try to meet or Beat the Deal•
FOR A 0000 DEAL•••

5ee Jack Roush, Vlotor Arms or Bob Ross
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.-FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
MUFFLER SHOP MON.-FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.·FRt:
SAT. 8-3 P.M.

I

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- When opponents of a propqsed $1 billion pulp mill
protest outside the governor's
mansion this week, Gov. Gaston
Caperton won't be there to bear
them.
He is scheduled to be in
Wheeling on Tuesday afternoon,
then fly to florida for a business
meeting Wednesday.
''""
Opponents of the project plan
a candlelight protest on Tuesday :
Laura Forman, an organizer
for the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, said \between
150 and 200 people arc expected
to llike part.
Cli(JI:rton is a major hacker of
Parsoris &amp; Whittemore Inc.'s
.efforts to build the mill, which
supporters say would employ
more than I ,000 people. Tbe
company is headqu11nered i~
Rye Jlrook, N.Y.
Environmentalists say the
mill bes·ide the Ohio River
would release dioxin, a toxic
chemical', during its paperbleaching proces~.
Protesters on Tuesday will
sing and pass out information
about the proposed mill, Forman
said.
"We're a pretty calm group.
We're just there to make our
statement.," she said.
Caperton's spokeswqman,
Jill WilsQn, said mill opponents
have prote.•ted outside, the mansion before. She· said Caperton
did not meet with them on those
occasions ..

•·

LOS .ANGELES (AP) -· Trouble, trouble, trouble. Prosecutors in
the O.J. Simpson, trial hope 10 dig
themselves out of it this week. The
judge wants to get to the bottom of
it. "
.
Police criminalist Dennis Fung,
after a grueling week under barbed
defense questioning, returns to the
witness stand today for considerably more friendly treatment by the
.prosecution.
So far, prosecut.ion ·. testimony
bas been aimed ai'Sbowing motive
and opportunity. Now the state
must link Simpson to the forensic
evidence - the bloody glove, a
knit cap, blood spots and shoe
prints. So far, all remain unconnected to anyone.
"This is !be make-or-break portion or !be prosecution' case," said
UCLA law professor Peter Arenella. "If they can 'I convince the jury
they have reliable physical evidence 10 link Simpson 10 tile murders, then the case is ovp."
Will the bloody glove found at

M~n(fay!

.Low toolght Ia tbt 5GB, rata.
Tllfllday, sbowen, bltlh Ia 7011.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Apri! 17, 1995

..-Brunch with Peter Cottontail---.
.-

'

.

.

Local' youngsters bad the opportunity to enjoy brunch with Peter Cottontail, alias Kathy
Moore, on Saturday at .the Meigs County Museum in Pomeroy. Above, the Easter Runny and
Racbelle Davis watch Matthew Hosken and Nathan Cook, from left, paint Easter decorations. ·
(Sentinel photo)
. ••

Dole proclaims surgeon
general pick is in trouble
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole is
threat.ening 10 block a vote on Dr.
Henry Foster's bid to be surgeon
general and says the nomipation is
in such deep trouble that it may not
even emerge from committee.
Dole, a leading candidate for the
· Republican presidential nomination, also singled out the controver,
sial movie Priest for criticism. He
suggested political leaders have a
responsibility to engage the enter•
tainment industry ,in debate about
the content of movies and television programs.
"If I'm the president of tbe
United States, I'm gomg to encourage people to turn off their TV sets
and not patronize these movies,"
be said in comments broadcast
Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press.
Dole's comments appeared
aimed at conservatives wbo are
angered by what they sec as Ameri-

Tax bite
Average worker
toils until lunch
to please taxman

Gramm appeared Sunday on
ca' s' moral decline.
On the Foster nomination, Dole · CBS's Face the Nation.
Dole on NBC said he did want
said ·it may not even get out of the
Senate Labor and Human to be a censor, but that people
should express their views if !bey
Resource.~ Committee which plans
bave concerns about the movies
bearin~s beginning May 2. "If it
does, I in not ceruiin that I' II call it shown in theaters and on television
up," said Dole.
screens. "My view is !bat shame is
"I'd say the nomination is 'in still an important 1001 in America,"
extremis.' It's nol very viable right be said.
now," .he added.
The film Priest has generated
Foster bas run into opposition controversy for its portrayal of
on Capitol Hill for understating !be some troubled Roman C.atholic
number of abortions be bas per- clerics.
formed. "Things dribbled out
"It's about a gay priest, an alcoabout Foster's past record that bas holic priest. It gives the impression ·
· nothing to do with abortion. In fact, that all Catholic priests are like
be didn'tiCII the truth," Dole said.
these two," said Dole, a Methodist
Another contender for the GOP from Kansas. He noted \bat protests •
presidential nomination, Sen. Phil' by Catholic groups forced the
Gramm of Texas, reiterated bis film's distributor to delay its
pledge Sunday tq end affinnative national release, which had been
action and balance !be federal bud- slated for Good Friday.
gel by· U1e end of his first term if .
On other Senate business, Dole
elected president.
·
said that while he still hoped to

By DAYE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Taxpayers
jamming post offices to mail their
returns before tod!ght' s midnight
deadline can ponder this: The typical American works almost ~mil
lunch time just to pay federal, state .
and local taxes.
According to the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan research organizatioti financed partly by corporations, the typical person devotes
two hours and 46 minutes of every
eight-hour work day to earn
enough to pay taxes .
If that person starts work at 9
a.m., he or she would have earned
enoqgb to pay · federal taxes at
10:49 a.m. and state and local taxes
by 11:46 a.m.
Tax Foundation economist.
Patrick Fleenor said that taxes consume 34.4 percent of the typical
person's gross income~ 22.6 percent for federal taxes and 11 .8 percent for state and local. That's a
higher proportion of gross income
than a typical American spends on
food, clothing and shelter combined.
Looked at another way, the typical taJ&lt;payer Ibis year must work
126 days to pay taxes, putting Tax
Freedom Day -. · a.' the foundation I
calls it - on May 6, tied with last ·
year for the latest ever.
The Tax Foundation, like many
groups, uses today's IRS filing
deadline - when Americans'
minds are on taxes - to focus
attention on their own views:

Its report, an annual tradition, is
cballenged by such groups as Citizens for Tax Justice, a laborfinanced research organization,
which points to the value received
for tax dollar~.
'"!lie implication that somehow
'· DR. HENRY FOSTER
tltis money goes to Washington and
repeal a han on 19 types of assa ult disappears just isn't true," said
weapons, he bas no immediate plan Rob ertS. Mcintyre, the group's
to try to reverse the Brady Law, director. "It shows up in roads. It
which requires a wailing period for shows up in a cleaner environment.
It shows up •in national defense,
handgun purchases.
·
Both Dole and Gramm said they which I presume most of us want. ·
do not believe there arc enough . It shows up in taking care of poor
votes in Congress to pass a consli- people. Every nickel that goes in
tuti onal amendment to ban abor- comes back in some way or anoth·
er."'
tion.
·
Mcintyre also said the fou nda·
tion's use of statistics can be mis'
leading . The U.S . tax system is
progressive, meaning that wealthy
· people pay a much, bigger proporThe coal ilion has said ihc bill is tion of their income than others on
too complicated and leaves !oop- federal taxes . So any average is
holes for legislative party c.aucuscs . skewed, Mcintyre said . He said a
, to receiv e and spend unbmltcd typical taxpayer actually pays iess
amounts of money on lhw mcm- taxes than the Foundation asserts.
Tax Freedom Day occurs later
hers' \OMlP:Ugns .
"It's not anybody's prcfcr- in some states, earlier in others .
ence," ~upp said of thc.,bill '.'But Connecticut and New York rcsi·
I think 11 comes closest to sausfy· . dents have it the worst - May 24.
ingmostpeople's goals."
or three hours and nine minutes out
, Janet Lqwis, e~ccutivc_ director of an eight-hour day. ,
of Common Cause/Ohio, IS one ol
Aluska has the lightest tax burthe coalition's leaders. Sbc has Said den : two hou rs and 17 minute s
sbe would like to sec umpaign each day, and a Tax Freedom Day
contribution !imiL~ reduced.
of April 14. The next lightest burden is in Mississippi - two hours
and 21 minutes; April 17.

Pace quickens for state campaign reform
COLUMBUS (AP) - Lawmakers believe a campaign finance
reform bill can be sent tQ Gov.
George Yoinovicb by the end of
the week and satisfy a statcwidf
group that could put its own rcforln'
plan on the Nov. 7 ballot.
The House bas approved a campaign finance proposal and the
Senate will examine a slightly different plan this week. If it is
approved, a joint conference committee is expected to work out the
differences. with a final vote. by
,both houses sending it to the gover-

nor.
Voinovich is expected to get the
proposal by the cnu of the week
because the Senate will not be in
session next week.
'· A coalition known as Ohioans
for Campaign Reform has said if
the Legislature does not approve
campaign fmance limits by May 3,
it would begin collecting voter sig·natures to place a refonn proposal
"on the stateWide ballot.
The coalition's proposal would
set a $1,000 limit on donations to
statewide and legislative cam-

·O.J. pros-e cutors tr;&gt; try
,, saving Fung credibility

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAI.S
1988 CHEVROLET 1988 FORD F·I&amp;O
CHEVn=tE
PICKUP .

.

Authorities bavtiresolved an alleged "pup mill" case involving 59
dogs, Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John Len1es said.
The dogs' owner, Sharon Durham, must pay $500 of the expenses
incurred by the Meigs Humane Society, Ltintes said.
.
Durham, or Vance Road, near Harrisonville, was accused of not caring
for and holding her dogs in small cat carriers in the snow this March,
Lentes slud.
·
•
"Sbe is going 10 give up all but seven of the animals taken," Lentes
said. ''The seven animals are ber and ber daughters' personal pets."
, The remaining dogs will be placed by the humane society, Lemes
added.
Durham will be barred from running a kennel or dog pound forever, be
added.
That resolution was reached after consultation with humane society
officials.
The dog breeds included Pekingese, Yorkshire terrier, Shihtzu, Mallese, boxer, bassett hound and others, Lentes said. The 52 dogs will be
available for adoption.
l
Allllogs had been spayed or neutered while at an undisclosed sbci1Cr,
Lentes added.
A dispute bas arisen involving the shelter, Lentes said.
"Some of the people who have fostered the animals have grown
attached to them and are reluctant to return some of the seven do~s .to
Mrs. Durham," Lentes added.
The humane society wiU make periodic checks to ensure the family is
abiding by the agreement., Lentes 'Said.

MlODLEPORT; 0~

SPECIAL

Pomeroy-l\l!iddleport, Ohio,

:Officials . end
:'pup mill' case

RESTAURANT OPENS • M-afe's Crock-

Bank One
Owners, Store Managers, and Employees of:
Krogers
Jol\,nson's Super Market
Brown's IGA
Food land
Big Bear
.
Gallia County Ministerial Association ·
All participating area churches
Sue Johnson, Director of Outreach Food Pantry
Elks Club
Baxter's Harley Davidson
lhomas Do·lt Center
Tony's Ti~e·
WMGG &amp; WJEH Radio
' Community Watch 3, Cable Vision
Gallipolis Tobacco &amp; Candy Co., Inc.
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
'
Chris Cozza, Gallia County ·Chamber of Commerce
Dwight Daughtery Band, Jackson,Oh.
Garfield Bar &amp; Grill
Bodimer's Grocery
Mogies American Cafe
Pastor John Jackson
My Wife, Anita
Two of my staff, Lee Browning &amp; Karen Brady

Again, we thank everyone In the county for t1eing so generous this
Easter season.

Pick 3:

Vol. 45, NO. 246
_ c;opyrlll!!!!~

On behalf of The Gallipolis Chapter of the Harley Owners Group, we
would like to thank the good people of Gallia County and the following
organizations', businesses, and individuals that made our first annual
Easter food drive for the Gallia county food Pantry such a success: ·

Dr. John Strauss, Safety Officer
Gallipolis Chapter of the Harley Owners Group.

{"~

CU1I

Ohio Lottery

Reds win
fourth in a
row S-4

•

Gallipolis Chapter

..

.

. '

arc eaaential In !be diets of DOD
mmi-!t .,im•la Hybrl~ selccdOD
or lpccialty corn types IS compUCIIIed by a lack of information ob

' lttUI!q~~

Our Treasurer, Roger Bostic
bur Road Captain, Mike Pullman
Our Editor, Gary Tabor

.

April 16, 1995 :

•

· Simpson's estate prove to match
his blood and that of the victims?
Will hairs in the ski cap show !be
same characteristics as Simpson's
hair? And what about blood on the
Bronco? .
Answers will be up to DNA
experts.
Deputy District. Attorneys Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden
called 39 witnesses to suggest. thai
· Simpson was obsessively jealous or
· bis ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and that a ·careful examination
or his movements on June 12
showed be bad opportunity 10 kill
her. They contend !bat ber friend,
Ronald Gol~ was in the wrong
ploce at the wrong time.
Meanwhile, the defense has
used cross-examinations to plant
the seeds or its own theory: that
Simpson fell victim 10 a police
fmme-up, and that key forensic evidence is unreliable because Fung' s
work was so sloppy.
Defense lawyers were so giddy
over attorney Barry Scheck's attack

paigns.
"We are attempting to have
·somc dialogue wlt.h&lt;&gt;lbe committee
for the petitiQners," said Sen.
Robert R. Cupp, R-Lima. chief
sponsor of !be Senate bill.
Tbe finance reform plan
approv\)11 by the House sets a limit
of $2,500 on donations and
includes a variety of other provisions, including a tax credit for
donations of as much as $100;
enhanced reporting requirements
and limits on !be way labor unions
·can raise campaign money.

Eastern Board acts.
·on pers'?nnel matters
The Eastern Local Board ·of
Education handled a series of personnel decisions at. last week's regular monthly meeting, including:
• naming Richard Roberts as
interim elementary principal.
• a~proving limited contracts for
Dave Barr, Susan Climer, Jayne
Collins, Bryan Durst, Larry Heines,
Steve Jewell, Tina Kelley, Nancy
Larkins, Cynthia Linton; Angela
McGuire: Kathleen Pey1on, Kirk
Reed, Barl!ara Tripp, Deborah
Weber, Stepbeq Weber and· MilDll:NNIS FUNG
dred Wilson.
• approving continuing contracts
against Fung that they poked fun at .
his Asian surname and banded out for Joyce Hill, Doris Well, Randall
fortune cookies in court., drawing Boston, Gary Oil and' Charlotte
criticism from Asian American Smith.
orary basis
• hiring on a I
activists and police Chief Willie
Susan
Francis
as
play
.
William~.
•
nol
renewing
contracts
for
After tbey have a chancP. to
Dccdrab
Simmons
and
Margaret
rebapilitate Fung's testimony. Ibis
week, prosecutors plan to call Cauthom.
• ending the contracts of the folAndrea Mazzola, a rookie criminal"
ist who helped Fung collect blood lowing coaches at the end of the
current school year: Pam Douthitt, and other evidence from SImpson's
Sheryl Roush, Paul Brnnnon, Don
borne and the crime scene.

,

.,.. ..... .

Jackson, Ron Hill, Dave Barr.. Tim
Faulk, Dan Tbomas·, Scott Wolfe,
Tony Deem, Chris Stout, Lori
Hensley, Susan Cljmer, Richard
Rupe, Mindy Barr, Shawn Bush,
David Hawulome, Roy McDimcy,
Jobn ·Slicets, Jared Ridenour, Ron
Hill, Doris Well, Debbie Weber,
Bill Blaine, Joe Bailey, Kirk Reed.
Jim Huff, Dryan Durst, Joe Bailey,
Jill Holter, Scott Wolfe, Penny
Aciker, Sheryl Roush. Scott Wolfe,
Josh Codner, Margie Bartee, Arch
Rose and Susan francis.
• choosing Cheryl Ferguson·and
Kathleen Moore as substitute
teachers for tht.st ol this year
when needed .
In other ac ion, the board will.
let the FilA students ancnd the
state FHA/HERO Convention
Apnl 20·2.1 in Columbus Tbc
board also accepted the schedule
for next year, with [Ivc calamity
days available. .
.
The board set Its next meeting
for 6:30 p.m. May 17 tn the EllS
librarY.
.

. The Tax Foundation study,
however, makes no allcmpt to mea- '
sure·!be quality and amount of state
anu lOCal crvlce.~ received in &lt;:onncctiCUt and New York versus
·
Alaska and Mississippi. '
"If you take tbe exampJe of
Mississippi and Connecticut, what
you get in Mississippi is basically
.wbat you pay for and what you get
is not tbc range and depth of public·
services that you get in Connecti·
cut ," satd economist Daphne
Clones of the Corporation for
Enterprise Dcvclopmcn~ a research
orgnnization tbat studies states'
economic development.
• " The more appropriaiC question
is, 'Arc you really gc,tting your
-~, worth?' If your state's
physical infrastructure is falling
apart and you don' l have an adc.quatc education system, then what
has a lower tax rate gotten you7''
she asked.
.
As recently as 10 years ago, in
1985, Tax Free&lt;lom Day came a
week earlier, on April30. A·decade
ago, the tax bite also was eight
minutes shoner at two hours and 38 '
minute&gt;. In 1945, il was only an
hour and 59 minutes.

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�Commentar

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The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-"(he Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
Monday, April 17, 1995
·

Tueedly,Aprilll •
Acaa.w...q....e forecut for
·MICH.

Earth Day is embarrassing for Clinton

. 111 Coart 8tzeet
Pomeror, Obio

WASHINGTON -

Earth to

.
.
for the public. The same pennissiveness docs not exlelld to mugs,
T-shirts, scarves or tote bags.
It seems pencils"- but not mugs

'
federal agencies and outside orga- ;'

issued new pencil-purchasing
guidelines in preparation for Satur- nizations, told us the memo was •
day's events.
never reviewed by any of tbc four :
. ,,
cbeck. ·
Clinton adminisiration officials ethics attorneys wbo help pversee ;
might have avoided ail embarrass- the partnership. She did add that •
The 2Sth anniversary .o f Earth
ing mishap had they devoted the tbe fund-raising guidelines had :
Day is less than a week away. Yet
same loving auenlion to donor been cleared by administration :
two memos we've obtained- By Jack Anderson
solicitation as the EPA did to the lawyers to make sure they meet •
from different corners of the
ROBERT L WINGETr
and
mugs-vs.-pencils·debate.
administration's environmental
federal guidelines.
:
•
Publilber
world - suggest that planning for
Three
weeks
ago,
we
rcpor1ed
Alas,
the
solicitation
went:
Michael Binstein
on an administration memo inviting unheeded. A spokeswon!llfl for the .
the event bas ranged from sloppy to
surreal. .
·
corpbrate
contributors to give National Oceanic and Almosphcric :
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARE'J: LEHEW
Tbe first memo comes from the or scarves -meet the so-called
$100,000 to "Project Earthlink" in Administration, which helps run ·
GmcniManqer
Controller
Envirorunental Protection Agency, "necessary expense" test because
support of the administration's Project Earthlink, says that no :
whicb .has come under largely they 're c!Jeap and_ "convey ames- · ''Technology for a Sustainable $100,000 donatiOl\S were received. :
· unjust critlcim!.from col)gression;ll _!age or mf~rmallo_n .t.~. an autho· ~ Future" inltiarlve. In return for
This is small comfort to some. •
. iLETll!I{S OF' OPINION .,.. wek:iiilie. They llhould be leuiliin 300
Republicans for, overzealous regu- nzed Age~cy function. AlThough
their generous 'gifts, contilbutors ''For Earth !Yay enlliusiasis it's :
words long. AD Jeam are aubjoct to editinc and JDUit be •\aned with name,
latory practices. The memo, a five- the other nems would also convey
were promised various goodies probably a good thing the adminis- ;
addrelo and telepbone nwntle:. No llllligned Jettcra will be published. l.etlln
page
legal
opinion
citing
case
laws
an
appropriate,
or
''au~horized"
from corporate name/logo tration failed .in this attempt to •
ranging
should be ill good tute, ocldleolin&amp; wues: 1101 pononllitiel.
and environmental statutes, was message, they were diSallowed recognition to inclusion in While secure corporate underwriting ," ; ·
drafted by agency lawyers in because the agency thinks Its a House events.
says Ryan Ross of the Natural .~
response to a pressing dilemma: waste of money to buy something
White House officials told us Resources News Service. "Dut it ·
Whether to buy pencils or mugs that the public actually might want.
they had not seen the memo before clearly wasn't for a lack of trying." ··
bearing the EPA logo for public
"Tbe link ·to a legitimate runeit went out, and quickly disavowed
MEXICO BAILOtiT -A clasdistribution on Earth Day.
, lion or the Agency becomeS more
any notion that the Clintons were sified report by the Central lntelli • •
Invoking the 'Clean Ai,r Act, the auenuated with respect to mugs putting Earth Day up for sale to the genee Agency recently raised quesNational Environmental Education and T-shirts because of their higher highest bidder. "There is no. one tions about Mexico's ability to.
Act and the Pollution Prevention cost and the fact that they have a authorized to sell face time at repay the emergency loans issued '
By JOHN MATUSZAK
Act, EPA's legal eagles finally useful purpose /separate from the
White House events, period ," a by the United States earlier this',
. Associated Press Writer
detennined
that
the
agency
is,
in
message
they
convey,"
the
opinion
White
House spokesman told us. · year.
COLUMBUS - A bridge arches through twilight. Men stand in a
fac~ allowed to buy pencils, pens, reads. With that weighty issue now •
Mexican Finance Minister ·
An
Official of Project Earthlink,
group talking. An auto's taill.ight gleams in the falling dusk. .
magnets, posters and other trinkets settled, agency officials have a public/private pannership of 13 Goillcnno Ortiz painted a rosy picIt is the Midwes~ it is 1940, and the scene is weighted with familiarity
ture about his country's finances
and remoteness. The painting makes no political or social statemen~ but is
during the Inter-American Dcvelprofound in its understanding of the signi!icanee of each small, lived
'opment Balik's annual meeting in
moment.
.
Jerusalem on April 5. Ortiz predict· ·
"They are confronting their own back yards," said Oavid Lusenbop
cd that Mexico would repay the ,
Jr., curator of "Midwest Realities: Regional Painting 1920-1950," on
United States by the end of 1995
exhibit at the Riffe Gallery.
and
would not need to borrow the ·
"Most people will sec pictures from their past," he said.
entire
$20 billion credit line of(ercd
Dut nostalgia is only the entry point to this display.
•
by
the
Clinton administration.
"Look for the edginess, the skewed perspective," Lusenhop suggestBut
the CIA report said that in .
ed. Look for a dark earthiness.
the weeks leading up to the .
.· The show brings to light some artwork that had not been seen for 40 to
Jerusalem
meeting, Ottiz was pri~0 years.
·
vately
telling
associates that he's '
When abstract an took llold after World War II, these works "went
pessimistic
about
Mexico's ability
into the basement,'' Luscnhop said.
to
pay
its
debts.
Behind closed
· The exhibit divides the artwork by regional influences, including
Ortiz
said
the deal was :
doors,
schools of expression from Cleveland, Cincinnati, Detroit, Chicago and
''
falling
apan"
and
that
he feared a
Milwaukee. 1be show also displays works by artists who influenced tbe
default
was
imminent.
.
'
regionalists.
·
·
1:hc
Clinton
administration
was
Absent from "Midwest Realities" arc any paintings done under the
alarme-d by the intelligence report,
auspices of the Works Progress Administration, which hired artists to pro'.
which was prepared by.thc CIA in
duce nationalistic work during tbc Depression.
.
late
March. Dut one intelligence
Also conspicuous by i!S absence is the socialrcalist si:hool exemplified
source
told us the admipistration .
by artists such a~ Den Shahn and Reginald Marsh. But that does not mean
has
been
encouraged by economic
that the Midwestern regionalists ignored social issues, Lusenhop said.
data
this
month showing that
"This is active an, social art. It is socially responsible an," he said.
"apparently
things are getting betThe works range from the more overtly political - such as Clyde.
ter
,'
in
Mexico.
Singer's "Communist Rally, Cleveland Public Square, 1931" and Hugfiie
·· Jack Anderson and Michael
Lee-Smith's "Boy with Tire," a deriction of urban abandorunent- to
Binslein are writers for United
townscapes by anists such as Portsmouth, Ohio. native Clarence Caner.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Carter, one of the most well-known of the Midwestern regionalists.
painted scenes in and around his hometown. On the surface, works such
l
as "Jesus Wept" appear to be simple scenes of small-town life.
But look closer, Lusenhop urged, at the strange positioning of images,
from the disembodied ram's head, tilC biblical legend of the title, and a
. \
.
child's loy. Within the images is an artist struggling with a realist tradition
Lis.11 Merdahl is the bravest sidcrs .in their own school and particular form of rcUgious serOne hopeful sigl! tHat this
· and·a modernist influence, he noted.
. Cecil Head's "Evening Light," Oakley Richey~ s "Bridge At Night," . woman in the state of Mississippi town.
devoted
but misguided notion may
vice.' •
I've had that experience, having
Aaron Bohrod's ''Night Shift" all spcak\to a knowledge of work, .routine, - and maybe in all of the United
In Pontotoc, thousands of signs eventually diminish came rccenUy
States. She bas six children, all of gone to public elementary school in on front lawns and roadsides have in a speech to the Anti-Defamation
with glimpses of something haril, real and sometimes beatific.
·
League of B'nal B'rith by Ralph
Luscnhop believes that if artists working now bad more of a commit· whom are baptized and auend a
app~arcd in outrage because of
Pentecostal
church.
Dut
their
mothment to realism, there would not be the political battle over public funding
Lisa Merdahl and her court case. Reed, tbc executive director of the
Nat Hentoff
.er bas become a pariah in her town
for the arts that is raging today.
.
Their message is: "Religious Free- · Christian Coalition. The largest and
Dut a resurgence of interest. in the work of regional anists may signal a of Pontotoc. She is accused, the Boston in the years before the dom." The indignant townspeople most effective conservative organiWashington Post reports, of being Supreme Court ever became do not understand that when the zmion in the country, the Christian .
sbift toward a more public-minded fonn of.exprcssion, he said.
· Work of this type; "cnnnects us all," he said.
"a devil worshiper, an atheist, a involved in cases concerning state- state forces religion on public Coaljtion has elec'!ed many local
mandated religious exercises in school students, the Constitution and state officials as well as memwhore.''
EDITOR'S NOTE: "Midwest Realities" is open ai the Riffe
Her sin is that she vigorously public schools. For weeks before has been violated. The kids can bers of Congrcss.
Gallery, 77 S. High St., through June 17. Hours are Mondays, Tues· opposes the practice in the public Christmas, we Jewish kids bad tO . pray at home or in a house of worSaid Ralph Reed: "Let me be ·
days and Wednesdoys 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursdays and Fridays 1~ · schools of that district of opening sing Christmas carols praising ship. And, Lisa Merdahl tells the
a.m. to 7:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays noon tp 4 p.m. Closed every day with a prayer over the "Christ our Savior," "the son of Washington Post, '.'They can pray clear: The Christian Coalition •
intercom. It is a Christian prayer- God." If we refused. we would be to themselves . They ca n pray believes in a nation that is not offi Memorial Day. Admission i~ fr.e.
The exhibit Is presented by the Ohio Arts Council and was orga· delivered by a member of a student "different," and few kids, at that ' before s~ hool. But they should nol cially Christian, Jewish or Muslim.
Christian club, which used to be age, have the courage to be scorned be allowed to pray over tile inter- A nation where the separation of
nlzed by the Southern Ohio Museum in l'ortsmouth.
called "Christ and You." The stu- as heretics.
com."
church and state is complete and
Lisa Merdahl will win, moredent reads from the Bible and then
The townspeople who arc so inviolable."
gives a devotional (a short religious over, because this is not a question angry at Lisa Merdahl arc utterly
There is still the question of
. service} with references to "our of a student-initiated religious club 'sincere. I've met people like them whether Ralph Reed's boss ; Pat
in the school - which Congress around the country. 'lbcynot only Robertson - founder of the Chris· Lord and Jesus Christ.'' '
Lisa Merdahl, who was mised as and the Supreme Court have right- believe that state-approved prayer tian Coalition - will publicly say ,
Hy The Associated l'rt'S.II
Today is Monday, April 17th, the 10701 day of 1995. Theie are· 258 Jl Lutheran, is not anti -religious, fully declared to be constituli\)nal. is essential to inculcate proper val- what Reed has. Robertson bas been
hut she firmly believes, as did What's going on in PontotQC is_ ues in public school students , but much less fonhcoming than Reed
days Jcfl in U1e year.
Thomas
Jefferson, in the separation state-compelled prayer as part of they also believe - many of them on whether this is truly a Christian '
To&lt;lay 's llighli ghl in History:
.
.
of
church
and smte.
tbe school day, and the Supreme - that those values should be nation.
On i\pri I 17, 1961 , about I ,500 CIA-trained Cuban exiles launched the
'
She
has
gone
to·
federal
court,
.
Court
has never validated that.
Christian, because this is a Chris-·
dis:L&lt;Irous llay cif Pigs invasion of Cuba In a failed auempl to overthrow
with the belp of the American Civil
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
Indeed, as S uprcme Court Jus- tian country.
lim government nf l&lt;'idc l Cuslfo.
·
Liberties Union, and whatever the Lice Hugo Black said, the framers
renowned
authority on the First
On \his dal e:
·
If there were to be a plebiscite
decision
in
the
lower
courts,
she
of
our
Constitution
''knewsome
Amendment
and the rest or the
of Americans as to whether this
. In 1492 .. a c~n~ct. was. signed by Christopher Columbus and a rcprcwill
almost
certainly
win
in
the
of
them
from
bitter
personal
expe·Bill
or
Rights.
truly
is
a
Christian
country,
mUscn~lllve ol Spam s Kmg l·erdmand and Queen Isabella, giving Columbus
Supreme Court. To begin with, rience - that one of the greatest Iions would agree. And that is one
(For information mi how to
a commission to seck a westward ocean passage to Asia.
having
the
state
·in
this
case.
·
dangers
to
the
freedom
of
the
indi·
communicale
electronically with
reason why anti-Semitism and prejIn 1524, Giovanni da Vcrrazano discovered present-day New York
public
school
officials
authovidual
to
worship
in
his
own
way
this
columnist
and others, con- .
udice against Muslims and other
harhor.
rize
daily
Christian
prayers,
make.'
lay
in
tile
government's
placing
its
(Jicl
America
Online
by calllng Lnon-Christians continues to exist
In 1700. Amciicnn..sla\csman, dirlomat, author and invcmor Benjamin
the
non-Christian
kids.
feel
like
outofficial
stamp
of
approval
upon
one
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
-and grow.
Franklin died in Plliladclphia at age 84:
In 1861 , the Virginia State Convention voted to secede from the
Union.
Pres~deot Clinton: Your environmental bureaucracy needs a realily

'Midwest Realities'
offers ·1ife as we I ive ·it

I~ YOUR

.

ROLE MODEL
NOw,
£0PAV
ATTENTION

Is this .truly a· Christia~ nation?

Today in .history

States ·aren't .immune to corruption

Berry•s World
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There are a number of elements
involved i'n the House Republicans'
Conuact With America, but one of
th~ most .fundamental was summarized in reml!Ch.by Newt Gingri~b
last November. It rests, he said, on
the Jeffersonian ideal of "limited
but effective government... in order
to liberate pco~le to engage in civic
responsibility. ' As the then-soonto-be speaker of the House rhetorically phrased it:
"You really want to dramatically reduce power in Washington?
You have to be willing to take
more responsibility back home."
It is a theme that touches il
chord in most Americans. It speaks
to the essence of our fllnn of federalism. And in I995, the aspiration
is almost as divorced from the facts
as it was in the early days of the
New Deal.
Speaker Gingrich knows as well
as anyone that the real .reason the
federal government grew exponentially over the past 60 years was
·that state and local governments
flunked the responsibility test.
From civil rigbts to medical &lt;are,
the feclcrai government moved in
only after the state$ failed to measure up.
Today, all of that is supposed to
be in the dim, dark pasL According

'
to tbe new conventional
wisdom,
• Contract·styl.e, the states are once
again tbe engines of innovative,
responsible government envisio~
.

Hodding Carter Ill
.bY the founders . It is the federal

government that is unresponsive,
out of touch and out of control.
Give the states the money to do the
job, and they will do so at less cost
and wit!! far greater efficiency and
responsiveness.
•
In a baodful of states, thoughtfu I
governors and wise legislators support the thesis by their actions.
!hey offer a measure of hope that
1f the Republican mfliorities in the
House and Senate make good on
the implicit as well as the explicit
prlllilise.s of the Contract With
America, it will unleash a torrent of
intelligent reforms across the land.
Unfortunately, what is more
likely is that the innovators are in a
small minority. In too many sUites,
the traditional combinatiop of special interesl power and small-bore
thinking is rirmly in the saddle.
~results feature regressive taxalion and anemic social services.
The evidence is · persuasive that
throwing money at the states in vir·
tually unrestricted bloc grantS will

"in the stale air of politics" has
gi.ve the taxpayers even less return
made
the state's legislators "cmel
on their money than they currently
• and selfish. Greedy and bitter. At
receive from· Washington.
Arizona's legislative session . least I hope so .... I prefer to
lhi.s year is a case 'in point. l/nder "believe that we didn't 'elect them
firm Republican control, with' a that" way'. That we didn't send peoconservative Republican governor pic to the Capitol on a platfonn of
and in a state which is marked by cruelty and selfishness, l&gt;itterncss
prosperity and growth, the legisla- and greed."
Over the same weekend, another
ture has managed to look like a caricature of irresponsibility. Earlier columnist in the Arizona Republic
this month, The Arizona Republic wrote of the legislature's "open
season on environmental laws WlcJ
offered this assessment:
"If cynicism of o.ur political regulations." As Joel Nilsson saw
institutions is alive and well- and . it:
"This assault on policies aimed
it is ...,.. Arizona's legislators need
look no further than the mirror to at cleaning our air, our water and
our land has been unrelenting, nur·
see why."
·
The Republic was complaining lured by big business· whose l1ighabout the state Senate's failure to powered lobbyists have found symapprove a measure to extend basic . pathetic cars among the new crop
health care services to 15,000 of of conservative legislators ...." The
tbe state's working poor at a five- head of the (Republican-appointed)
year savings ol a half-billion dol- Department of Environmental
lars. The Senate's "myopia," as Quality put it another way: "I think
the conservative Phoenix newspa- the business community saw the
per termed it, was lumped with last election as the opening of the
.
House ·action to increase members' door to the candy store."
Hodding
Carter
Ill,
former
expense mpney by foo percent a
day - just five months lifter Ari• State Department spokesman
zona vo!ers rejected a pay mise for , and award-winning reporter, edttor and publisher, Is president of
legislators.
MainSireet,
a Washington, D.C..
Elsewhere in the same newspaba.•ed
television
production cornper, ~epublic columnist E.J. Monpany
.
tini complained tbat too much time
~

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County board
OKs contracts
for personnel

OHIO Weather

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Tbe Meigs County Board of
Education last week re-employed
Toledol64•
perslliiDel and approved bus driver
eertiftcates.
·
Rehired were Kathy Barrell,
teacher aide (two years); Julia
ScJtultz-Murdock, teacher aide
lManslleld l87"
(two yean).: Frances Sbrimplin,
IND•
teacher aide (two years); Jody
Howards, talented and gifted teadl·
,,,,,
er (two years); Perianne Bates,
'"'''
severe behavior handicapped lelich~ !columbual71~
er (three years); and Patricia Cook,
m11lti, handicapped teacher (three
years).
Tbe board also approved bus
driver certificates for Carolyn
Rickaid and Gary McKnight for
the Meigs Loeal School 1District
· Meigs Health Services, Dr. Douglas Hunter and Dr. Thomas.
. Spencer, were approved to give
school bus driver examinations for
I
the 1995-96 school year for $2S per
exam.
.
i
Tbe board agreed to pay for
hepatitis B vaccine for all employQUEEN CANDIDATES- The following Erica Dugan, Brandy Roush and Courtney
ees wanting to recieve the vaccinaSouthern High School girls will serve as the . Roush. Attendants include, front from left:
court for the Racine Flower }'estlval on April lZ. Jayroe Miller, freshman attendant; Kerl Cald·
tion.
Present were Superintendent
Queen candidates include, back from left: Shan· well, sophomore attendant, and Jennifer CurnJobn D. Riebel Sr., Treasurer Carnon Morarily, Jessika Codner, Amy Weaver, minst junior attendant.
ole J. Gilkey, Boanl President Jeff
Harris, Vice President Robert Barton and board members Howard
Caldwell, 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette
Marty Morarity of Racine; Brandy
By The Associated Press
Mrs. James Miller of Portland;
storms likely south. Cloudy with a Thomas.
Roush, daughter of Gary and Teri sophomore Keny Caldwell, daugb -'
Don.' I expect to see mucb of the chance of showers and thunderRoush of Letart Falls; Courtney ter of Howie Caldwell and Christy
sun over.the next few days - pos- storms north. Low froin the middle
. sibly all week.
Roush, daughter of M ~~tshall and Lavender, Syracuse; and junior
40s north to the upper 50s far
Debbie Roush of Letart Falls, and Jennifer Cummins, daughter of
The National Weather Service south.
·
Meigs
EMS
runs
Amy Weaver, daughter of Hilda Todd and Peggy Cummins, Racine.
says Ohio is in store for a potentialTuesday... Dreezy with showers
and
Carl Weaver of Syracuse.
Tbe festival queen will be·
ly stormy week.
and thunderstonns likely. Highs 65
Units of tbe Mc;igs County
~ix So.uthe.rn High ~cbool
Attendants include freshman crowned at noon the day of the fesSkies will be cloudy most days. to 75 nonh lind central with 75 to Emergency Medical Service logged . • sel)IOrs Will vte f~r tbe tttle of
Jayroe Miller, daughter of Mr. and tival.
·
Showers and thunderstorms are 80south.
15 calls for assistance Saturday and Racme Flower Fesuval Queen on
likely across central and southern
Extended forecast:
Ohio and possible in the north · Wednesday... A chance of show- Sunday including four transfer Apnl22.
Nominees include Jessika Codtonight. Lows will range from the ers and tbunderslorms ... Mainly calls. Units responding included:
COLUMBIA TWP. VFD
ner, daughter of Jim and Sandra
mid-40s north to the upper 50s north. Lpws upper 40s to upper
4:28 p.m. Saturday, brush fire at Codner of Portland; Erica Dugan,
south.
50s. Highs in the 60s.
junction
of state routes 681 and daughter of Shirley and tbe late
A very mild southerly flow of
Thursday .. .Partly cloudy. Lows
An ashtray emptied into a garbage can reportedly caused a blaze
air will cover Obio' .on Tuesday . 40 to 45 . Highs 55 to 60 north and 692 ·
MIDDLEPORT
Darrell Dugan of Racine; Shannon
that
damaged a Pomeroy-area bouse Saturday morning.
.
Showers and thunderstorms are 60 to 65 south.
6:43p.m. Saturday, Nonh Third Morarity, daughter or Joy and
Firefighters
were
summoned
at
9:41
a.m.
to
the
Rocksprings
likely. Highs will be from the
Friday.. ,Scatteted showers and Avenue, Jeff Friend, Holzer MediRoad home of Joyce Ralph, .according to Pomeroy Fire Chief
upper 60s to upper 70s.
thunderstorms. Lows in the 40s. cal Center;
Danny
Zirkle. Ralph said she emptied the ashtray into a garbage can
Weather forecast:
Highs 5S to 60 north and 60 to 65
in
the
kitchen
before leaving for work, he added.
7 p.m. Saturday, volunteer nre
. Tonigbt...Showers an~ thunder· south. ·
Damage
to
the one-story frame.home was limited to th~ kitchen,
depar!ment tb Park Street, brush .
rue;
Zirkle said.
2:51 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Pomeroy volunteer firefighters responded with two trucks and 18
Nursing Center, Gladys Parfitt,
men while Chester fuefigbters responded with a tanker truck and
five men, be said.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
9 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
Roy E. Annes, 7S, Minersville, died Sunday, Apnl 16, 1995 at OhiO Fred Bias, VMH.
POMEROY
Children who will be 5 years oW
State University Hospital, Col~mbus .
The Pomeroy branch of letter carriers ·will hold a non-perishable
9:46a.m
.
Saturday,
VFD
to
on
or before Sept. 30 are eligible to
Born May 12, 1919 in Cabin Creek, W.Va., son of the late George and
food
drive May 13, said Jim PulWJS.
Sarah Phalin Annes, be attended the Racine Church of God. He was ~so Rocksprings Road, structure fare at attend kindergarten during tbe
Tbe
food should be placed beside the mailbox that day and it will
a World War II veteran and a member of the Racine Post of the Amencan Joyce Ralph residence, no injuries, 1995-96 school year.
then
be
taken to the Meigs County United MeU1odist Cooperative
Syracuse squad assisted;
Tbe kindergarten registration
Legion.
.
Parish
on
Condor Street.
S:43 p.m. Saturday, State Route schedule for the Meigs Local
Surviving is his wife, Janie Annes; a son and daughter-m-law, Roy K.
School District is as follows: Brad"Butch" and Mary Jane Annes of MinersviUe; two grandsons, Brian K. 143, Amber Mintz, VMH.
RACINE
bury Elementary, May 1, 992"B.K." Annes of Pomeroy, and Randy Annes of Chester; two ~real·
8:32
a.m.
Sunday,
Stale
Route
2349;
Harrisonville Elementary,
grandchildren; and two sisters, Artie Grindley an~ Thelma Custer Miller.
A car bit a utility pole and traffic sign in front of the Pomeroy
338,
Clara
Adams,
HMC;
.
May 2, 742-3000; Middleport EleGraveside services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. m the Gtlmore ·Cemetery
Church of Christ early Saturday, according to Pomeroy Police
.. 3:26 p.m. Sunday, auto fire at mentary, May 3, 992-3387; Rut·
on Forest Run Road. The family requests no flewers.
Depamnent reports.
·
·•
Codner's
Garage.
·Jand Eiementary, May 4, 742-2666;
. Arrangements are by the Fisher Funerai 'Home, Middleport.
Brenda
RichardS,
40.
of
Pomeroy,
was
driv
ing
east
and
hit
a.
utilRUTLAND
Pomeroy Elementary, May 5, 992ity pole at 4:01 a.m. in front of the 212 W. Main St. building,
4:30 a.m. Sunday, Main Street, 2710.
records show. Richards was charged with failure to maintain con.
Elberta Cleland, HMC.
Kindergarten registration for
trol.
.
SYRACUSE
Southern
and Eastern school disHer 1981 Ford Mustang had ligbt damage and was towed from
Della Bwtt, 78, Accokeek, Md., foimerly of Huntington, W.V'a., died
. 8:12 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy tricts will be held as follows :
the scene, records sbow.
Friday, Apri114, 1995 at ber daughter's residence.
·
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Southern kindergarten, April 20
No injuries were reponed.
The daughter of tbe late Charlie and Laura Hawkins Birchfield, she Bertha Baker, VMH.
and .21, 949-2664; Chester Elemc;nwas a homemaker.
•·
.
tary, April 27, 985-3304; Tuppers
Survivors include a daughter and son-in-law, Shirley and Ralph Priddy
Plains
Elementary, May 12, 66:7of Accokeek; two grandchildren, Rev. Jerry Priddy of Accokeek, and
3310.
Stephanie Greever of Waldorf, Md.; and two great-grandchildren; three
.
.
Parents should call or visit one
sisters Alma Birchfield of Southstde, W.Va. , Maxme Perdue of HuntmgHospital
news
of
U1e
above
listed
schools
to
make
COLUMBUS
(AP) - Indiana·
plants
34.50-36.00.
ton, ~d Estella Lcport of Henderson, W.Va.; and a brother, Harold Birchan appoinlmen t for kindergarten Ohio direct hog pria:s at selected
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
field of Southside, W.Va.
.
buying
poi
IllS Monday by tbe U.S.
registration.
Parents
should
bring
points
28.00-33.00.
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
She was preceded in death by her husband, the Rev. Binus Barrett; and
Sows: mostly steady c ,.
their child's birth certificate, Social Department of Agriculture Market
Saturday
admissions
Nell
by a bwther, Kenneth Dircbfield.
·
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 25 .00-'
Services will be Wednesday in Chapman's Mortuary, Huntington , with Graves, Pomeroy; Darrell Bralley, Security card and immunization News:
29.50;
500-650 lbs. 29.00-34.00, a .
Barrows
and
gilts:
steady
to
rccord.to
registration
.
Pastor Herbert Reynolds and the Rev . Clark .Baker officiating. Friends Middleport.
fum,
plants
fum
to
50
cents
higher;
few
over
650 lbs. 34.50.
Children
should
have
four
OPT,
Saturday discharges- none.
may call Tuesday evening 'at the funeral borne.
Estimated
receipts :~ 1,000.
three
Polio,
one
MMR
and
one
TD
demand
moderate.
Sunday admissions - none.
1-3,
230-260
lbs
..
country
U.S.
skin
test
before
entering
sc
hool.
Sunday discbarges - none.
School nurses will be present at points 33.00-34.50, a few 35.00;
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
registration
to answer any quesDischarges April14- Delores
CAMDEN - Cheryl A. Ehm· Leach, Tiffany Cundiff, Catherine tion s concerning immunization
By The Associated Press
One accident in Preble County scllwender, 31; James R. Fish· Burion, Michael Sbong.
SPRING SEASON
requirements.
.
accounted for half of Obio' s six baugh, 30, and Gregory R. Linmer,
Scbool
personnel
will
assess
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Mark
•Pansy •Viola
·weekend traffic deaths, the State 36, all of Camden, wllen their pick- · Lemaster, son, Jackson; Mr. .and each child's hearing, spe.cch. physiup truck was .hit by a freight train at Mrs. Steven Campbell, son, Gal- cal and language abilities with
Highway Patrol said today.
~Broccoli •Cabbage
Three people died in the town of a crossing in the Preble County lipolis Ferry, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. infonnation ·about each child's perf
DON JHN DE MRftCO
J
•Cauliflower
Camden on Sunday when a pickup town.
1;00.9:00 DAlLY fld' . SICI'/U. I : OII,l:OO !PCU)
fonnance to be provided to parents
John Coleman, daughter, Vinton.
FOSTORIA - AmY, Ellington.
·. truck drove into tbe path of a
PEEBlE RND THE PENGUIN
Cold Weather Plants
Discharges April 15 - Patricia at a later date.
7 : 00 1:l0 nMLY JM'. B/Ill"/-: t:OO, 'J:OO C&lt;;J
freight train at a crossing tllat 20, of Fostoria, driver in a one-car Lemaster, Mrs. John Coleman and
JURY DUTY
crash on a Seneca County road.
lacked lights or gates.
daughter,
Mrs.
Steven
Campbell
t10,9:10 IJUl.!' ..,, &amp;M'/aM.l:tO,.l;lO IPC'IJJ
Announcements
. SATUJ,lDAY
The patrol counted weekend
and son, Darci Bissell , Dakota
R UDFV MDUIE
GRANVILLE - David L. Long, ChristiDa Ohlinger: ·
'traffic deaths from 6 p.io. Friday
1:0U , ltlO I»..LJ. tll!r.Mr/-. 1 :DO, 3:110 I G)
Songrest planned
Ross, 28, of Granville, driver in a
BRD · JOYS
through midnight Sunday.
The Old Dexter Bible .Christian
Births - Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
- ~-~-IlJ,
two-car crash on Obio 661, in Frazier, son, New Haven, W.Va.; Churcli will' have a songfest at 7
7: 1S, 9:15 -PMilJ' .-r.tJI«/
-. 1:1!&gt;,1:15
Uti
The dead:
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Licking County.
•
SUNDAY
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
Mr. and Mrs . James Polcyn, daugh- p.m Saturday. Leslie Allen, Coun• !.!t4~L~~~~ .
l:&lt;JI)',9:jl) aut.:t IM'.flll!'/- .lflD,J::ZU II'I;'IJI
AUSTINTOWN - Charles M.
3'h miles past Soulhem High
ter, New Haven; Mr . and Mrs . try Gospel, and singers from
I7:ii'0,91ZO CLUU
MRJOR PRVNE
I
Lavin, 17, of Nonh Jackson, driver Kevin Taylor, son, Pomeroy.
School, St. Rt. 124,
Believers Fellowship Church, RutMM'. :at!lllll.1 : 20,lt 20 IPC1 l)
in one-car cr~sh: on a Mahi:ming
Racine, Ohio
The Daily Sentiriel County
GIR CERTIFICATES AVAlJL.ABlE I
Discharges April 16 - Rick~ land, will be featured .· '
road.
. 614-949-2682
Plumley,
Juanita
Tennant,
Jeffrey
(USPS 213·'1&lt;)())
Moss, Mrs . !ames Polcyn and Time changed
1
••
Published every ofternoo n, Monday th rough
daughter, Mrs. Ronald Frazier and
Trasb pickup in Racille bas been ·
J:rid!ly. I l l E'ourt St~ l'of~?erO)I, Ohio, by thco
son.
·
. --changed from T.uesday.ro'lbursday_.
... .
Ohio Vnlley Pubhshing CompnnyfMultlmedia
with
permission)
due to truck·prob1ems. · ·
(Published
Joc .: Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992 -2 1!;6.
Am Ele Power ·---·---......32 S/8
Second clas.t pnstngc.paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

,l

I

I•

•

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I

w.w•. .

I

Sunshine expected to be
in short·supply this week

Crowning slated
·for noon on day
of Racine event

Local News in Brief:

House damaged in blaze

l

:
:
•
;
I

:
:
•

Roy E. Armes ·

· .

Postal carriers collect food

.

Della Barrett

Today's

livesto~ck

·weekend wrecks kill six

report

NOW OPEN

1

IICitUJU

00)- l ~• l ....,.

KAREN'S ·
GREENHOUSE

Stocks_

.

Mrmber : The Associated Pren. ond the Ohio

Newspaper A~~ocintion .
PO~TMASTJ':R : Send Mdrcs ~ c()rrecti on~ to
The Dally Seminel, I l l Cou rt St., Pomeroy,
Ohio45769

Hy Ca rrltr 6r M61or Route
One Wcck ............................ ,..................... $1 .75

One Mumh .................................. ......... $1 .60
Ooe Year
...................... $91.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE

Da1l )' ..

. ....................................... 35 Gents

Sull~cribcr~ not de/r~ng to pay the ctrner moy

remit 10 DdvanCe direct to The Owly Sentmel
Qn n three, si.ll Qf' 12 month b.1s1~ Credll will be
given cnrncr ench week.

:
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Jrulde Meip County

-----·-----.34
·-----·----·----.5

Akzo ·-..--.--.................. --..58

!

.
:
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Car strikes utility pole

No subscripuon by m;uf permilled in arems,
where home eWer .serv1ce is available.

1

·Kindergarten
registration
scheduling
set in Meigs

--Area Death·s-----:--

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

•

Flower fest queen hopefuls named

.

1J Week~ . . ....... ~......... .. ...............$23.92
26 Weeks .................-. . .................. ,..$47.06

52 Weeks .............."................ . ....... $92.56
Ra' u Outside MeiSs County
1~ Wee.ks ............. , ................................... $-25.61
26 W~ks ................'........................... S49.66
52 Weeks
..........................$96.20

Asbland OU
118
AT&amp;T
l 314
Bank One.-.....................--.31118
Bob Evan•-·--·---...... --.20 718
Champion Ind..-----·---.21 Ill
Cbannl!'ll. Sbop
Ill
City Hold.!DJ ...._ ................._ .......26
Federal Mogul·--···--..-.;....... 19
Goodyear T&amp;R ,_....,....
318
K-mart _ .._ ............._ ... _..;_.14 1/l
Lands End -----------16 314
Lbjtlted ln&lt;.-------------21
Mi'llllmedla Inc.
314
People's ---..- -.. - ...........a2 tJl
ObJo Valley....... ____ .. _"t ..--..44
One Valley -----------.29 118
Roc:kweU - - - -..----·40 314
Robbins &amp; Myen.:. ....----.22 314
Royal Dutch---·-----110 114
Sboney'c ln&lt;..----------ll S/8
Star Bank __,.._.......,_•._,_.43 112:
Wendy lnt'L -------·17 114
Worthington Ind.----.19 314

What Price Service?

1

Feder~ted Funeral Directors of America mem~rSh1p is
reserved for selected independent funeral romes nationwide.

---------.5
--.38

·--------.38

_._._

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotu provided by Adveot of
Gallipolis.

Affiliated with
RAYMOND JAMES &amp; ASSOClATES, Inc.
MEMBER NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
CUENT SERVJCES INCLUDE:

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or 428·2222

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417 Grand ·Park Dr., Suite 105
PMC Building (b~side the Olive Garden) Parkersburg, WV 26101

•

As FFDA members , we are obliged to meet rigid
profe.ssional standards and· maintain sound business
practices.
Our affiliation with FFDA assures the families we are
privileged to serve thai they will always receive quality
service at affordable prices.
·

Straigfit- Tucker- !Rgusfi
fun£,ra{ Home
· Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152
PreMed · Atneed - J&gt;oslnre.! .._,.,,!!•'WI
Locally 0wnoc1 a Oponitod
ono l..ocalion

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I

·Sports ·

.. ,

Monday, April17, 1995

The Daily S~!!~~~~!
Pege

In the NBA,

.

4.

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio

On the spring training scene,

:~ Canseco

.

Pacers increase lead in Centr_
al Division; Bulls beat Knicks
"They said ~·d take the Nc:w Ylrt loss out on
By The Asaoclaled Presa
SIV!W!IIC aod that s what they did;" said Minnesota
· Suddenly, the Eastern Confcrax:e playoff picture
is a lot clearer.
· assistant coacb Mike Schuler, filling in while bead
. Atlanta's 94-?3 victory over Charlotte, coupled coadl Bill Blair Is sidcliacd by a lower back strain.
The Paccn can clinch the division with any com~~:"ith Indiana's 114-75 rout of Minnesota. gave tbe
binalioo or two viCIPries or two CbarlOite losses. · ·
Pacers some breathing room Sunday atop the Cenbal
Division.
Rik Smits led the Pacers willl"22 pOinis and Der"It's ours to lose," said Indiana point guardMark
rick McKey added 20, including 13 in tbe opening
quarter. Christian Laettuer's 20 poinis led Minnesota. ·
Jackson, whose team is looking for its first NBA
division tiUe. "We're just concentrating on our"This is a big game for us, coming off a very
emotional loss," said Indiana's Reggie Miller. "We
selves. We wanted to loolt at it as if they (Charlotte)
were going 10 win every game from Ibis point on, so just wanted to come out with that same focused
effort, no matter who it was."
·
we just wanted to take care of Our own business."
In
otber
games,
it
was
San
Antonio
112. Denver
While the Pacers were dealing tbe Timbeiwolves
109
in
ovenlme:
Indiana
114,
Minnesota
75; and the
lbe worsr lOsS in franehise liistory, Chicago trounced
Los Aagelea Lakcn 125, DaDas 111.
the New Ym Knicb 111-90 and appeared set for a
Hawlao 94, Hornell !13 - Atlanta erased Charfmt-round playofflllllldlup with the Hornets.
lone's. 11-point second-balf lead with the help of
The Pacers likely will play the Hawks.
Coming off a wreoching 88-84 loss to the Knicks .Mookie Blaylock, whose three-pointer with one
minute to play lh:d the score .at 92.
on Friday, !be Pacen jumped on Minnesota and gOI
After tbe HM!ets took a one-point lead, Blaylock
their largest victory margin of the season. Their 50th
win of the sea5oa gave tbem a 1 112-game lead over ( got the ball to Grant Lo~g,~whose layup wilb tbreeCharlotte with tJin:e games remaining. · :' ·
·

''

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:Brind' Amour helps Flyers top Penguins 4-3
their cross-staie rivals. It was !be
sixth straight win for the first-place
Flyers, wbo lead New Jersey by
tbree poidts.
"You know wllen be bas that
fire in bis eyes be's nOI coming out
We jpst had to get him cleaned
up," PbiladClpbia' s Kevin Dineen
said of Brintl' Amour, whose goal
wasbis lOth of the year.
Brind'Amour acknowledged
that Murray's hit bad bim
up.
"I didn't see him coming and I
didn't expect to get bit from behind
like that. I don't know if be's the
type of player wbo would do tha~"
be said. "I almon lost my cool, but
I realized the situation. Hopefully,
he'll be around next year."

PHll..ADELPHIA (AP) - Pittsburgh's Troy Murray decked Rod
Brind'Amour with less than a
minute remaining, drawin~ blood
-and a major penalty and givmg new ,
life to !be Philadelphia Flyers and Brind'Amour.
Fifteen
seconds
later,
,Brind'Amour, a nasty gasb above
his left eye. was back on the ice. as
teammate Milcael Renberg forced
overtime wilb bis 23rd goal with
:t 9.9 seconds left.
. And in •the extra period,
Brind'Amour redirected Eric Des"jardins' drive at 1:30 to give the
.Atlantic Division-leading Flyers
.the improbable 4-3 victory over

ru-ed

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Centr-J Dl•lllon

Ium

NBA.standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtlantiC" Di.-IJion
~

I&lt;llll

J. 1!&lt;1.
.70S

• ·New York...........52

.667

3

Boston ... ................ 34 44 .436
Miami .................... 31 47 .397
New Jersey ............211 sq .359
Phihdelphia ........... '23 5~ .295
Washingto,n ........... 19 59 ·.244

21

30

,61S
.564
.526

.J4
"JI

.506

39
47
St

1~, !)..wit ., ................ ,27

.397
.346

.

.

27
3l
36

I&lt;llll

l·San Antonio ....... 58 20

.744

x-Utah ...........•...... .. S6 22

.718

:t·llousto'n ..............46

.590

32

Denvtr ................... 38 40
Oallas ......... ............ 35
Minnc.sota .............. 21

43

I.S

~s'.S

I

23

Boston 3, Mon!.real 2
; Winnipeg S, Toronto 1
Cal8ary 4, EdmonLon '2
Vancouver 3, Anaheim 1

18 ,S

Sunday's scores
N.Y. Raoaers 3, N.Y. bll.l)cters 2
Ph iladelphia 4, Piltiburgh l (OT)
Aorida 4, Tampa Bay I
St. Louili 6, Detroit S

!LII
2

ta

20

D:lllaa 2. Olic:!go 0
San Jrue 2, lns AnaeiC$ 0
·aurralo 2, Ottawa 1

23

New Jmey 3, Hartford 2

37

Quebec 4. Washioglon 2

Tonight's games

.709

37

.519

Sacramento ............ 17 41

.474

Golden Slate, ......... 25

!53

.321

62

.205

l-A .Ciipper~ ........ l6
~· eli nched

102
146

PIUsbuf&amp;h 5, Ottawa 2

n.s

Washinglon at Montreal, 7:30p.m
Toronto at Chicogo, 8:30p.m.
Vancou"Yer at Dallu. 8:30p.m.

a

.t-LA. Lakera ....... .48 31 .608
Portland ................. 40

99
119

Salunlay's scores

l .l
10

Pacirtc: Dlvl.lion
x-Staitle ............... :.S.S 22 .714
.t-Phoenix .............. S6

89
110

Edrmncon ......... 13 ~ 3 29 10.7 148
x-cllnched playoll berth .

.487
.449
.269

51

Ill
14.5
ll9
110
36 110
12128

SuJoe ............ l62t 2 34103 135
l.ol AnJOI&lt;a ...•.. 13 19 7 33 125 llO
Anllhelm ..•.. ., .•.. t322 • X&gt; 99 139

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MW.,••t Dl•hlon
l! .1. &amp;1.

.liE liA

61
49
41
41

P•ifk DIYI1ion
Celpry ............. 2115 5 1.1 11.1 l16
VODCOIIVOf •·•·•··· llll 9 39 Ill 122

l4

Ccnlnl Divblon
l ·lndiaoa ...............SO 29 .633

t ·Charlone ........... ..48
t ·Oliugo .............. 44
x-O.EVELANO ... 41
x-Atlanl8:........... ,...40
Milwnuk:ee ............. 31

3
3
3
7

Dallu ................ U 19 6
Willllipe,ll .......... l320 6

ml

x-Orlaodo ..............SS 23

26

l! .1. I &amp;

•·Detroit. .......... 29 I
St. Laui1 ........... 23 12
Chicago ............ 19 17
Toronto ............. 17 16

.~tnntP

IS

Edmonton al Wlnhipeg. 3:'30 p.m.

111.5

Los AnG,elef at Calgary, 9:30p.m,
San Jmoe al Anaheim. 10:30 p.m.

30.5
39l

playoff bt.'tth

TuesdaY's games
N.Y. Rangerc lit Piltsburah. 7:30p.m.
Hartford a1 Buffalo, 7:30p. m
Quebec at N.Y. blander~ , 7:30p.m.
New Jeney at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m
Philadelphia at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Vancouver at SL Louis, 8:30p.m.

Saturday•s.scores
SeatUe liS, Goldc.D Start 99
Miami 12),0rlaodoll7
Boston 129. Dettol1'104
f"hlladelph!a 97, New Jersc.y 17
Washington 114,Milwau'r.ee \1 0
Houston 98. Sacnm~ nt o 84
Utah !OS, L.A. Oipptn 83
Phoenix 119, LA. La'r.trstl•

Transactions

Dallas 102, Portland 90

Amrrkan 1Aa1ue
.
DA LTIMO Rli ORIOLES : Agreed to
terms with Kevin Ba ~s. outfielder, on a
ml nor·leaf:Ue contract.
BOSTON RED .SOX: Assigned Scott
Wade, outfielder. to Pay,1uckct or the In·
lcrn~tional League.
C ALIFORNIA ANGELS : Agreed to
Lerma: with Ricky Jotdan, first bueman ,
on 11 mi Dor·league contract.
CIU CAGO WI liTE SOX: Sent Larry
Thomas, pitcher, and Olea DiSarcma, Ill·
fie lder: outright 1~ Birmin(ham of t~e
Southern League. Optioned Robert Elhs.
pitcher, Chti1 Trtmie, catcher; ar.d Olme--

Atlanta 94, O•atlottc. 93
.
San Antonjo 112, Denver 109 (O'f)
lndtaM I I4, Minne&amp;Ota 75
Chie.ago I I I, N~ York 90
1-A. takers 12S, baiiN Ill

. Tonight's games
New Jeucy at Boston, 7:30p.m.
M1lwaukeut New York, 7:30p.m.
Olatlotlc al Philadelphio, 7:30p.m,
Washington a1 Orlando, 7:30p.m.

Chicago at Miami, 7:30p .m,
LA Clippers

a1

Houston,l:30 p.m.
.

Portland at Seattle, 10 p.m.

1

"

Basketball
N~~o l\onal

Hukdha\1 AuMialion

CHARLOTIE·HORNETS: Activated
Michael Adams. guard, from the Injured
list Wait;ed Tom Toll)crt, forward .
NEW JERSEY NETS: Placed B~noit
Benjamin. ceDter, on the injured list. ActiV&amp;tod Chris Monis , guard-fo rward , from
the iojured lUit. •

~~ft?
·~~

•

ONE·derlulreasons
to eta home equity
rne ofcredit are · ·
piling up one by one.

!!6 DfVf!S

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

~lrA

~ -~-

...

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

L
I.

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose -&amp; Throat Including

Football
Nation&amp;! Fool ball Le•ue

Baseball

Sunday;s scores

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS ' Op ·
otioned Sieve Whitaker. pitcher. to PttoeniJI.
of the Pacific Cout League, and Mareus
'ensen. catcher, and Aody Heckman ,
pitcher, to Shreveport of the Te:us
League.
,
-

Meter and Andy Doczi. Iii the second row is Derrick Knapp, John Lentes Jr:, Gabriel Jenkins and
Aaron .Bowersock. Behind them is coach Chuck
Knopp.
I

RUTLAND FIFTH-GRADERS --Members of
Rutland's finh-grade basketball teain are (front
row, L-R) Travis Siders, Ryan Kauff, Chris Van-

Brandenhera, pitcher, to Olc.lahoma City
of the American Asrociation; and Kerry
Lacy, Jerry Milr1in and Ritchie Moody,
pHchers, and· Guillermo Mercedes, shan stop, to Tulsa of the Texu League.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Agreed to ·
terms with Paul Gibson, pitcher, on a mi·
Jior· league contr&amp;cl.
N.alonaiiAaaue
1)"f. LOUIS CARDIN AL.'i: Agreed to
terflli with John Frascatore, Sean Lowe
and T.J. Mathews, pitchen; Tripp
Cromer, Darrell Dcat, Mike Gulan, Aaron
Holbert and Keith Johns, illfielden; and
Allell Battle and Terty Bradshaw , out·
fieldm. Agreed to terms with Manuel Lee
and Lui• Rivera, infielder•, on minor.
league contracts.

.Meigs diamondmen
sweep Athens in DH

~~'

Floyd wins PGA Seniors championship

Scoreboard
Basketball

NEW YORK GrANTS: Signed Mau·
rice Douglus. safety, to a two-year con·
tract. ·

summer at
prime··•

· Hockey

dnllar
closing

call
to apply

costs·

Natlonalllorkey Leaaue

.

now uses a curveball, ral.ber a slidSunday nigbl. joining the!Jl oo !be in the minors.
At 21, Park is hoping to be in er whicb, be says. caused ann probpicket line before the Bos1011 Red
the rotation on opening day. He lems.
Sox played Texas.
"You saw what .the game was'
like without the real players. It's
going to be the same thing without
the raJ. umpires,'' Caoseco said.
"I don't know bow mucb it's
going to affect their negotiations,".
be said. "I would love to bave an
impact''
Eigllt umpires beld informational picketing, wearing signs lbat said
"Scabs Go Home" and banding
out ~ets before tbe game in Fort
Myers, Fla.
"It goes to sbow you rigbt there
lbat ooe of the prime players in the
game is standing behind us," AL
umpire John Hirscbbeck said.
Canseco, wbo gave the plate
iiD!pire a stare after a ·called strike
during tbe game, almost homered
to left field in bis next at-bat.
Bonds left no doubt, connecting
for a long drive in San Francisco's
game against tbe Cbicago CllbS in
•
Mesa, Ariz.
·
• I ~
-1
· Bonds bas bit tbree borne runs ·
in four exhibition games for the
NO STEAL TIDS TIM~!: ,--- The Clncinnat Reds' Deion Sandtts
Giants. He bii 37 bomers last year finds bls steal attempt about six feel sbort of the mark wben the
in the strike'sboriened season.
throw gets w Houston second sacker Orlando Miller for tbe out durKen Griffey Jr. also bit his third
Ing Sunday'$ exblbitlon game at Plant City, Fla., where the Reds won
spring biille nm in Just tbree games
S-4.(AP)
'
for the Seattle Manners, a 360-foot
sbot against Milwaukee in Peoria,
Ariz. He led the AL with 40 .bome
runs last year.
"All three of his home runs
have been ·bit to left field, and
that's a good sign because it sbows
lice fly.
.
be's going with tbe pitch," By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs
added
tbree
more
runs
m.
Mariners manager Lou Piniella Sentinel Correspondent
said. .
. Meigs swept Athens in a dou· tbe tbird inning . With one out
Elsewhere, pitchers Ore! Her- blebeader Saturday at Rock George walked and Cleland
sbiser, Ted Higuera and John Bur- Springs. The Marauders won the reached on an error, Chad Burton
kett made their debuts with new first game by a score of 2·1 and reached on a fielders choice and !be
teams with miXed results.
defeated the Bulldogs 5-l in the three came around to score on
back-to·back singles by Hoover
Hersbiser looked good for two second game.
and
Newsome.
innings for the Cleveland Indians.
The first game was a pitcher's
!\Cored their final run in
Meigs
He gave up one unearned run duel between the Bulldogs' Joe
the
fifth
inning,
Cleland walked
Sparbawn and the Marauders' Brcn
against Kansas City.
and
Burton
and
Hoover
bad had"Same thing in an Indians uni- Newsome, with Newsome having
to-back
singles.
.
. :
form as a Dodgers uniform,'' he the upper band in the end.
who
went
!be
dts~
George,
said. "It's still 60 feet, 6 inches to
In the first game, Athens (7-7)
the plate, still-90 feet to fJCSI. Still jumped out to a 1-0 lead in tbe to pick up tbe win, scattered five
playing witb a bunch of great . third inning. Danny Jones led off hits, walked four and bit a batter
guys."
.
.
tbe inning wilh a walk, after a while striking out six_. Hoover bad
Hersbiser, 36, signed as a free ground out be came .around to score a pair of singles to lead Meigs, ·
while Cleland, Dunon and Newagent' this monlb.
on a base bit by Cunningham.
Burkett, ttaded by San Francis·
Meigs (8-4) took the lead in the some cacb added a single:
Matt Goodwjn, Lhe losing pitcbco to Texas in the offseason and fourth inning when Gary Stanley
laler signed as a free agent by the singled with one out and Paul er, gave up five bits. walked five
Florida Marlins, pitched four Pullins followed with a walk. New- and struck out four: Jone5, Pepper,
innings against tbe New York some then helped his own cause Perry, Cunningbli!D and Stroh bad
Mets. He allowed one run and with a single to tie the score at 1-1. · singles for Athens .
Meigs is scheduled to travel to
struck out three.
Pullins iben came around with the
McArthur
to race Vinton County in
Higuera, recently signed by San tie breaking run on a ground out off
an
Ohio
Di~ision
game today.
Diego after spending his whole · the bat of David Fetty.
Inning
totals-nr.
s
t game
career with Milwaukee, pitched
"Meigs was only able to manage
Athens:
001-000-0:
1·3-2
two innings agairisl .Colorado. He three bits by ·Stanley, Newsome
Meigs:
000-200-x:
2-3-3
allowed two runs on six hits .
and Cass Cleland, all singles. New·
WP -· Newsome
Jimmy Key of the New York some went the route to pick up the
LPSparhawk
Yankees and Chan Ho Park of the win, tbe right bander scanered
Los Angeles Dodgers had sharp three bits and walked five while
Inning totals-second game
· outings.
.
striking out five .
Athens: 100-000-0: 1-5-2
Key pitched five innings against
Sparbawk, the starting pitcher
Meigs:
103-010-x =5-5·2
Atlanta, allowing only one hit. He and loser for Athens, combined
WP
-George
walked none and struck oui two.
with Danny Jones to give up three
LP-Goodwin
Key and Tony Fernandez were hits, walk four and strike out five.
the only Yankees regulars who Anily Perry bad two bits for Fred
made the 45-minute trip from Fort Gibson's· Bulldogs.
Lauderdale, Fla ., to the Easler
game in West Palm Beach, and that
·Athens jumped out on top J.o in
upset Braves general manager John the fJCSt inning of the second game.
Schuerbolz.
·
Perry led off the inning with a walk
"! think it is bush." he said. and he came around to score on a
..
bit by Jack Pepper.
1 base
There are regulations that c1carY
Meigs tied the contest in the
111 Second St., Poineroy
specify bow many regulars each
team has to bring on ro~d games in bouom of the first inning. Scou
led off the inning by gelYQUR INDEPENDENT
th e spring. The Yankccs don •\ have George
ting bit by a pitch. Cleland folthcir ow n set of rules, but th ey
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
must have fell like they did today." lowed with a single and George
For years. spring training guide- sco~ed .on Rickey Hoover's sacciCOUNTY SINCE 1868
lines have smtcd that visiting clubs
m~st have four usual starters, not
including the pitcher. That regulalion was put into effec t to ensure
that fans who pay for a major
league exhibition- not a "B"
game or split-squad game - sec
top players.
Park pitched four innings and
struck out five against Montreal.
lie gave up one hi~ a home run by
Suite 112 Valley Drive
rookie Mark Orudzielanek, who
connected twice in Lhe game.
Pt. Pleasant, WV.
Park, the only player from South
Call 304-675-1%44 for Appt. or Information
Korea ever to reach the majors,
Member of ,\etna PPO &amp; f"'e41eral ltlo~ul PPO
sprtcd last seaso n with the
Dodgers but spent most of Lhc year

around bis neck? Now that's new.
Canseco lent bis support to
locked-out major league umpires

,tiog a 470-foot bane nm, fans have

seen before. Tbe sigbt of Jose
AP BIISeball Writer
The picture of Barry Bonds bit- Canseco ~g with a picket sign

tentbs of a seooad l!lft bellt Cblrlotle.
~ints froJn M·ichael ,Jordan to beat New York this
Blaylock led Atlanta with 24 points on 9-for-21
ume.
sbooting. Loll!! fmis!w:AI with 18 and Steve Smith got
Scottie Pippen scored 25 of bis 29 points in the
16 for .lbe vlsiung Hawks.
.
·rust balf and tile Bulls romped to their ninth victory
Cbadotte, wbiCb bad won six of its last seven, g01
in Ulth games. Jordan, who scored 55 in a 113- III
21 points from Alonzo Mourning and 17 from
victory at Ne;w York two weeks ago, bad 28 points
Hersey Hawldns.
.
·.
on 8-of-19 shooting.
.·
Spun lll, Nunets 109 (OT) -Denver's .
Pippen, wbo hadn't played since last Tuesday
Dikembe Mutombo blocked eight shots but bad a
because of the flu, shot 11-of-13 in the first half,
crucial ODe swaaed away by David Robinson in the
whim Chicago took a 67 4 7 lead.
j
waning seconds of San AniOIIio's overtime victory.
Jordan was 8-for-19 from tbe field and is shooting
Robinson, who had 42 points and 14 rebounds,
34 pe~ent at the Uniled Center.
sealed the win with IWO l"ree throws with 1.5 seconds
Toni Kukoc acldcd 20 points and 10 assists for the
left as lbe Spurs iaaeased tbeir Western Conference
Bulls.
lead to two aamcs over Utah.
.
Charles Smith scored 22 points, and P.a.u-id
The visitina Spurs, who have lbe best record in
Ewing bad 17 for tbe Knicks. who had a five-game
the NBA, overcame a 14-point farst-balf deftc:it but
wiMing streak snapped.
couldn't withstand a ferocious Denver rally in !be
Lakers 125, Mavericks 111 - · AI Inglewood,
· Calif., Cedric Ceballos followed up a 40-point effort
fourth Ql1811CC,Bryali\ Stith's tip-in as regulation time expired
with 33 points as Los Angeles beat Dallas and
capped a 14-S Nuggets run.
snapped its four-game losing streak.
!Wdney Rogers tied bis career bigll with 31 poin~
Rookie Eddie Jones added 26 points and Vlade
to lead Denver, wbicb had its three-game winning
Divac 23 for the Lakers, who won the season series
streak snapped. Mutombo had 20 rebounds to go
(3-1) against Dallas for the 12th time in 15 years.
• with eight points.
.
.
The Mavericks haven't won at the Forwri since Dec.
Dennis Rodman, in bis second game for tbe Spurs
12, 1990.
since coming back from a shoulder injury, grabbed
Ceballos' 40 points came in a JliJ-114 loss at
10 rebounds in 19 minutes before fouling out with
Phoenix on Saturday night.
Pittsburgh coacli Ed Johnston
36.4 seconds left in ovenime.
·
Jamal Mashburn led Dallas with 26 points, and
vehemently disagreed wilb the call.
Bulls 111, Knkks 90 - Chi?go didil't need 55
Roy Tarpley added 20.
"We were standing still ll!ld all
of a sudden, Brind'Amour .Is turning one way and suddenly into the
boards," Johnston said. "I interpret it a little different tban (referee Dr BOB GREEN
·
"I put that behind me a year strokes when be birdied the fifth
Paul) Stewart. It was a call that . · PALM BEACH GARDENS, ago," be said. "I do not play in the and sixlb. But Nicklaus, "playing in
should not have been made and it Aa (AP) - Ray Floyd's memory · past. I play in the prese11t." .
a fifib consecutive tournament for
cost us the game."
is jus! fme, thank you, and that's
An&lt;l l1e was very; very sausfted tbe first time in 25 years, was
Murray agreed.
not at all what Lee "(revino wanted. with the presenl
·
.
. equally unable to sustain the chal"It's not like I'm running up on
"He· bas a good memory. I
"I'm thrilled; very happy with lenge.
him," Murray said. "I was reading thougbt maybe be would bave for- my performance," Floyd said after
He bogeyed lbree consecutive
the play and be turned into tbe gotten what happened to bim last a solid, bogey-free, front-running boles !ale in the round, sbot 74 and
boards and I was rigllt there. I cer- year," Trevino said Sunday.
70 produced a 277 total, 11-under finisbed seven shots back at 284.
tainly .didn't intend to bit
Trevino, on the mend from neck
Now Floyd can forget the 1994 . par on the Champion course at !be
Brind'Amour from behind. I was back-nine collapse lbat let Trevino PGA Resort.
surgery and not yet a winner this
.following tbrougb and making_the grab the PGA Seniors Iitle from bis
Floyd, wbo bad three r,unner-up year, birdied the last bole for a 71
play." .
faltering grasp.
finishes but no wins coming into and a tic for second at 282. He
This time, Floyd played almost · this one, birdied the tbird bole from shared -the position with former
flawless golf - finishing with a about 15 feet and tbe fourth from club pro Larry Gilbert and Houston
string of 14 consecutive pars- eight before slamming lbe door stock ,broker John Paul Cain. each
of whom shot69.
and conf11111ed.bis stature as one of will! the long string of pars.
.
tbe game's great front-runners as
Floyd, now the winner of 10
do Saenz ud Chris Sa.opek. infielders, to
be converted a two-stroke lead into Senior Tour events, said the victory
NalbYIIle Of the A.mCricaD Alloc:lation
11nd MU;e Bertotti, pitcher, nd Jimmy
a five-sbot victory, the largest win- was built on t'\Yo factors: a six-foot
Now O~en For The Season
Hunt, outfielder, to Birminahitm of
ning margin on the Senior Tour this par-saving puu on the fifth bole Soulhern League. Named Gabc Morell
Potted Easter Flowers,
year.
·
"anythin"g could have happened
vt,itou clubhe~uie manager and Joe McNamara Jr. viliton elubhou5e anistant
Pansies, Hanging Baskets,
"He started great and then just there; I could have lost two
manager.
sort
of
coasted
in,"
Trevino
sumstrokes,"
be
said
and
"basicalShrubs &amp; Trees.
CLEVELAND INDlANS : Aareed to
teriN with David Bell, Infielder; Joe Roa,
marized.
ly, no one mounted a challenge."
Also
Vegetable Plants:
Carl01 Crawrord, John Carter, Jim Lewis,
It marked the fifth time Floyd
Jim Albus, a long time club pro,
alld Chad Ogea, pitchers; .and Brian Gile.ii,
Cabbage, Broccoli, etc.
outfielder, on one-year oonltacU.
bas won in the six Senior Tour · twice closed within three strokes
SEATTLE MARINERS : Agreed to
$1/dciz. $6.50/flat
events be bas led or sbared the lead on the fron~ but played the back in
tcrn'lll with Darren Braaa aod Alex Dlaz
going into the fmal round.
40 and was not a factor down the
outfie ldeu; Bohhy Ayala,Jerr Nelson ,
Hubbards Greenhouse
Derek Lowe, Shawn &amp;tes, Roger Salkeld
While
Trevino
hoping
for
a
stretch.
Syracuse
992-5776
and Kevin Kina. pitchen:;' and Oiomar
repeat of the finishing troubles that
Tbe man Floyd most feared,
Guevara, infielder, on one-year conuaciS.
Open
Daily
9
am-5
pm
Renewed lhe cont.rac:b or Tim Davi1 and
plagued.Floyd last year, Floyd said Jack Nicldau$, also got within tbree
Bill Risley, pitchers.
Sunday 12 noon-s p.m.
he wasn't even thinking about it.
·
TEXAS RANGERS : Optioned Mark

Hatfield. Standing ,teammates are Tiffany Priddy,
Amber Snowden, Nancy Wingo, Beatrice Morgan
and Bobbie Joe Haning. Behind lhcln arc coaches
Chuck a11d Maria Knopp.

LADY RED DEVILS- Members of Rutland's
girls' basketball team are (front row, L-R) Holly
Ferrell, Allison Williamson, Jenifer l'riddy, Elyse

NEW YORK JSLANDERS j Recalled
C hri~ Taylor, center. from Denvec or lhc

i{·

-:&lt;·=·"1"' ., ..,:&lt;r.:·~-

. ' );;&lt; ' ''f

IHL and Erie Fichlud, R,oa\tender, [rom
Chicoutimi of the QMJHL.
PfiTSBURGU PEN(JUINS: Recalled
Ru1ty Fiugenld , forward, (rom Cle•e·
land of the lHL.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS: Sent Pal
Peake aod Martln Gtndron, ri1ht wings,
to Portland or the. AHL.
.

John A. Wade, M.D. _

"'~"

~,,

Tuesday's games
ClEVELAND at Detroit, 7:30p.m
Utah at Minn~.ll p.m.
Denver at San Antocuo, 8 p m.
LA. Clip~ M Dalla~. 8:30p.m
Sacr.unento at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
Seattle 111 LA. Laker's , IO:JO p .n1 .
Portland at Golden State, l0:30 p.m.

Hockey
EASTERN CON.'EREN~E
Allartlk Di•l.Wn

~.I.
Philadelphia •·· 2.\ I)
NeW Jersey ...... 2014
Washington ... ~. 1116
NY. Rangett ... , l8.19
Florida. .... , ....... 15 19

I

•

3
S
TampaBay ....... lS 22 l

v

Gt' . liA
~ ru rfl
41 102

96

l9109 lOS
35 93 lOS
33 101 114

NY . lllandm ... 12 21 S 29 101 134
Northeut Dh·IRo•

1-Quetlec: ......... :21 9
Pl11$bur&amp;l'l ........ 2612
801100 ........,.... , 20 16
BuffJIO.. ........ ;.... 17 16
Uart!CI'd ........... 1718
MootrN/ .......... lS 20

4
2
3

60 161 113
54 1S6 1:29

4,3 116 19~·
6 .oW) 10!1
S 39 110 115

S J.S 104 J.30
onawa .............. 4 JO 5 13 14 143

-Sports brl~fs - Track and field
WALNUT, Calif. (AP) - Mike
Marsh b,;at world record -bolder
Leroy Burrell in·lhe 100 meters in
tbe Mt. SAC Relays on Saturday
will! a wind-aic'' · time of 9.89 sec·
onds.
Ato Doldcn was second in 10.01
and Durrell, whose world marie is
9.85. finished third in 10.09.
I

Here's some exciting news!
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NHL standings
'
.
Ium

. HOLZER CLINIC OF
MEIGS COUNTY

!Meigs County Cliam6er of Commerce'

Sitttli 5t,nn11:a[ 'lJinner Vance

"'

-:Jriaay, 5tprif21, _1995 .
6:30 p:m. to !Mianigfit
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..

Holzer Clinic of Mei.gs Co1,1nty
Announces the Addition.of
Internist Louis M. Nardella, M.D.
to Their Medical Staff.
Dr.·Nardella will be seeing patients
beginning April20, 1995. Call today
to ~chedule your appointment!

~~~tt:
......

~­

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~

One caJI to apply 1-800-800-LOAN (5626) ·
24 hours a day .

.'

@

C 1995 BANG ONE CORPORATION "The 1ntroductory vanablc rate 1'$ the "Bank Pr1mp Rate" ana ISm ctlect through Aug.ust J1 t99!,
after whiCh rate w1ll convert to full't lflde;~~;ed APR The "Bank Pnme Ra!u " ts based 011 the Pnme Rate a~ publiShed by the BOard of
GCIYel'nors of !he Federal Reserve System fQr the weak mclud1ng the 15th dayo!_ the pfiOf inonm The ·sank Pnme Aale" AS bl Match 1
1995 was 9 00% OHer valid on lines of$ \O.CXXJ or more The tully 1nde)(ed APR on 11anabl&amp;-ra10 hn&amp;s wrlh an SO.. loan to-value rat10
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DMMn1.IITY l~n&amp;s of $10,000 to $19.999- The APR on varrable-rate ltnes may rncrease or decrease. not 10 axceect 2S'll. APR '~n OtliO tr
hne~
l.BIJQI
dtscQiltrnued wtttnn the hrs1 year, approxlfl"'ately S3SO 1n Clostng costs wtl1 be cnarged Tne annuatlee IS $50 Offer rs ava11=only to
Bank One. Athens. home ~u•ty line cuslomerg on new llanable·rate hOme equ1ty lines wdh a quahfymg k)an.lo-va!ue ' i iiQ ol80%
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nlflg cheCk codes by sendtng a self-addressed stamped envelope lo Bank One Match and W1n Swettpalakes Entry Aequasls. PO Bo11 8393
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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

HOLZER CLINIC OF MEIGS COUNTY
MIXED GIRLS' SQUAD- Members of Rutland's mixed girls' basketball team are (front row,
L-R) Carrie MarshaU, MaJor~ KlnR, Susan Tobin,

Brittany Williams and Allison
teammates are Brook Bolin, Kara Mu1sser, Racbel
Carey and Melissa Cremeans. Behind them are
are coaches Kathy Moisser and David Musser.

••
•

•

5

backs umpires; Hershiser makes debut with Indians

B)' BEN WALKER .

.

.

The Dally Sentinel · Page

•

,

. '

150 MILL STREET
MiDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 992-2188

''

�r"l~idrd~le~p~o~rt~,~05h~io~~~=5~~~~=r=~~~~E~E5~A~p~r~i1~1~7~1~99=5
Notice
NotiCe
·
NotiCe
NotiCe

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 17, 1995

.--tt-6-The Daily S e n t i n e l l i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i P i o i m i e r i o i y l,

I

PubliC

PubliC

Total

Exc. Racpta.

Olhtr Flnonctng

1\1-J:

Oporotlng Tronofo~n .....
...............:.........- .... 10,1

Oparatlng Tronafaro-Oul ..
................................. (7,071)

Total Other Fin. Sourcea...
................................... 3.101

Exce.. Rcpto./Sourcaa
Over IU"dtr) Dlab. ond
Other u ...........- ........ s,t14
Fund Coah Bolonat
January, 1, 111M ........... 7,881
Fund Caall Bolance,
Dactmblr 31, 11114 ...............
................................. 13,775

FUndi
Other Flnonclng So•orcaal
1\1-):
Operating Trolllfora~n .....
~tncy

................................... 71233

Optretlng Tronale....Out ..
'

-

~

,. •

li
Pictured are

,: . ' RUTLAND CHEERLEADERS members of Rutland's cheerleading squad. In
· front is Carrie Allen. In the second row are (L·R)

Trish Walk~r Lisa Eblin and Samath,a Tilley. In
the third row' is Jenny Allen , Jes.&lt;ie Jus lice and
·
Miranda Stewart.

................................. (4.381)
Olhtr Flnor)clng Soilrc11.
•••••••••••••••.•••••.•.•• 11,741,311

Pubic

PUbliC Wortla •.... 2,131 .D7
Hllllll .............-.1.110,117
HuiUn Set&lt;ic41a2....,m
c-rvellon-Rac...uon .

Outa-lng Jen. 1, 11114
G.O. Bonda ............. IO,OOO
Other Bonclal Nolte........
............................ 1,313,711

............................... 114.411

Totel. ............... ,;,,1,423,711

· The long-awaited Racine Area
Conununity Organization's Flower
festival is coming up this Saturday.
!pril22.
1\mong the many features and
one which I mighl have neglected
w incnrion oflcn enough will be a
kiMic tractor pull with Ted and
(,:hris Smith in charge.
.
, Youngsrcrs taking part will be
(lividcd into t~o age groups. and
uophies will he awarded the children 'taking flcst, second and third
places in each age group. The event
wifl he held on rhc baskc rball at

1:30 p.m. with sign up to take place
simultaneously at the location.
Ted and Chris, who arc always
willing to help out when _ca iied
upon, earlier handled somolar
events at the July. 4th celebrauon
and the fall festival in Racine so
they are experienced in ha!Jdling
the pull.
And at Saturday's festival there
will be a fund raiser for lhe Racine
Museum-Cross Mill Projccl.
Kalhy L. Dyer, an independent
consultant ror the Longabcrgcr Co ..
will take orders ror baskers and
pottery with 20 percent of the tolal
order money to go to the mill projeer. Kathy wiii have baskets and
pollcry on display as well as books
from which you can order. She will
be featuring the basket-of-themonth which is a Father's Day
mini waste baskel.

At the time I did a mention of
Michael (Mike) Roush for Sun·
day's column, I didn't realize that
he, indeed, does have local conncc·
tions. His parents arc none other
than Pat and Mary Rou sh who
. re side in Racine .
Michael is now serving as director of the· National Federation c;&gt;f
Independent Business in the U. S.
Senate. A resident of t:ecsburg,
Va., Mike bas been with the
National Federation since 1979 and
has appeared on nalional television
a numb.:r of times over the years
!fprcsc.nting lhe organizatio_n.
Hope you had a beautiful East·
cr-beauriful enough,. indeed. IO
help you keep smi ling.

Sorority pledges to
support .mission work
A pledge of $100 to support
Sharon Stewart in her mission
work in Kenya was made by Xi
Gamma Mu Chaprer of Bela Sigma
Pili Sorority at a.rncclill.£ ,held
recently at the Bradbury Church of
Chlist.
.
It was nolcd Ulat tl1 c pledge is
payable on Oct. 1. Another dmm'
tion made was $25 to the Easter.
egg hunt t11is year &gt;ponsorcd by the
Middleport Fire 'Department
-· Sheila Harris--presided-a~ the
meeting during which th e
Founder' s Day dinner on April 27
Public Notice
T.homao E. Forguoon
Auditor of Stole
C.oh Boalo Combined
Annuli Flnonclal Report
For Flecol Yeor Ending
Doc•mbar 31, 11194
County ol Melgo
"Thla fa an uMudited

Flnanclol Report"
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, REC'EIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Qovornmentol Fund
Typla, Revenue Rtc,olpta
RECEIPTS:
Tlxti .................. 2,M7,435
Chorgeo for ~rvlcoo ...... ..
........., ..................... 823,602
Ucenaeo 6 Permlto......... ..
............................ :....... 3,728

fine a ond ForfHurea .........

was announced . An Ohio River
bear will be used in a sj)Ccial fund
raising project at the diimcr. The
Girl of t11c Ycar was elcclcd. It w.,;
norcd rh ai a rca will be held on
May 7, and il was reported· thai
Kay Logan, Harri s. and Mary _
Woods had aucndcd other chapter
mcctin~a~m:lkc-up-mcctings:- ·
Pat Arnold spoke on diabclcs.
their syrnptorns 1 &lt;lict &lt;md management. Kay Atkins demonstrated
~ays -to ·rclic,v&lt;:-Siress. Refresh·
ments were served by Logan, Beth
Stivers. and Charlol!c Hanning.

' Notice
Public
......................:.......... 85,616lntergovernmental

ott.w. Htataro

; olillcrowa... oolapo1111
•Thonka ,_.go •
Surrourlcllng Aro11
1614) 1185-3581 or
Vt2•5335 12114111"

Advanc11~n

Not Repaid...
................................. 35,570
Advaiicta.Out Not Repo1il
............................... (35,570)

Federal

Cenaus

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

OFFICE 992-2259
NEW LISTING . 1 Floor Frame Home wHh 3 bedrooms, 1
1/2 ba1hs. Gas F.A. heat. lull besement with utility, balh,

Celebrates birthday
Benjamin Levi Tillis, son of
Don and Gina TiUis, Rutland, celebrated his firsr birlhday on March
'
25.
Cake and ice cream were served
to Ben's sister, Julie Anne, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Johnson, Ruth Tillis.
Geneva Shumate, Tahnee Johnson,
Sue Tillis, Bec~y Tillis, Esther
Kennedy, Sally Kennedy, Beverly
Felly, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Broadwater and Mandy, Mr. and Mrs .
Randy Pierce and Colin.
· Sending cards and gifts were
Mr. and Mrs . Ivan Shumate of
Mansfield, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Williams and Brooke , Brittany,
Beth and Cody, Middle·port;
Suzanne Dean of Colorado
Springs. Colo.; Brady Johnson or·
Goldsboro. N.C., and Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Tillis of Cjncinnati.

Celebrates sixth
birthday with party
Ross Andrew Beach, son of
Druce and Lori Beach, Genoa, eel·
cbratcd his sixth birthday recently
at the home of his parenrs. ·
Others allending were his pater"
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Kretz, Toledo; maternal
grandmother, Prcda Jacks,
Langsville, and his brothers, Joe
and Brad, and his sislcr, Shannon,
an aunt , Jackie Sigman of Millburg, and several other relatives
and friends.
Cake and other refreshments

Allegra Will or Rutland was the
winner or last week's mystery rann
contest. She along with •two others
corrcct.Jr identified the farm a5 that
orlJOrsef-Joroan, Carpenter:
Dyes ville .Road. The winner was
selecred in a drawing. Mrs. Will
will receive $5 from the Ohio Valley l'ublishing Co.- whtcb co-span-·
sors the contest wilh Ule Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Service.

AND RJMOVAL
Shrubs Shaped

MIDDLEPORT · Cule one floor frame home wilh 2 ,
bedrooms. bath, F.A.N.G. heal. utility room, fireplaces,
fenced yard with slorage building. Nice neat home close 'to
local shoppipg. ASKING $29.000 MAKE AN OFFER!!

and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

POMEROY · 2 Story Frame Home tocaled on Mulberry

Bill Slack

Ave. This uniQue home includes 3 bedrooms and full bath
upstairs, living room, dinmg room. equipped kitchen and

992·2269

.......................... ..... 128,874

~ .......... :........ , ...... 1 0,491.397

Public Nouce
Other Flnonclng Uoea .......
............................ :(112;323)
Totol Other Fin. Sourcos...
............................... 3tt.684
Exc:eaa Recelpta/Sourc••

Ovtr/(Undtr) Dlab. I Other
u .............................. sa2,345
Fund · Caah Balance
January, 1, 1994 .... 1,840,584
Fund Caah Balance,

Oecambor 31, 11194 .............. .
............................ 2,422,930
Reaerve

ror

614-742-3090
304-773·9545

Ioyer on the main level. Th~ partially linished basemen! has

B&amp;W

LIVE

Garage and Towing
Service
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair .
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt . 338, Letart, OH
614-247-3522

MIDDLEPORT · t 1/2 Slory frame Home wilh 3 bedrooms.
family room, living room , kitcnen with an bffice area. Utility
area built in book shelves, ceiling fans. Central air, N.'G.F.A.
heat. cement walks, privacy fencing, full basement. Cute
Place .. Lots of room II New furnace 6 yr. warranty. ASKING

$29,00Q .OO LIVE HERE AND YOU CAN WALK ANY
WHERE IN TOWN TO DO YOU SHOPPING.

windows, siding and rool. Home has a cellar and a I car
garage. ASKING $40,000.00

PSYCHICS
1 ON 1
1·900-656-5000
· Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.
(602) 954·7 4204/4/95

STO·A·WAY

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off. -

WE HAVE BUYERS!! WE NEED LISTINGS!!!!

HENRY E. &lt;;LELAND ....... :.................................. 992·6191
TRACY L.,BRINAGER.........
.. ..................949·2439
SHERR I L HART................. ............................ : .742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111. .................................... 992·6191
KATHLEEN M . CLELAND.................................. 992·6191
OFFICE.........
.. ......................................... 992·2259

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV

304-882·2996
Public Notice
Village ol Syracuse by Its
Clerk
.
Janice Lawson Zuilllng
13) 13, 20,27 14) 3, 10, 17

pursuant to Chapter 723 of
the Ohio Revised Code,

LAWN

intends

Public Notice

to vacate three

slreels/alleys described as
lollows:
(1) Being a pari of Bean

State Rl. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Vacation Money

WANT~brilg
Announ cHnol11s

=

Fiberglan Shower Cracks Or Saas

tor IINCJO. Elrtrl**

~:.:;~·~c..
,.

torr--

anrtt-,

~

.

IIEET NEW PEOPLE 1111 WAYlOOAY, ~-~ ....
8002,
bill iN.

u.-..-

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

...,.

dayo: . ~111111.

evMnga:..-••· \

SHOOTS

BATHTUB

Household·
Collectible
9-5 r,sun.
1 mile lrom Pomeroy,
SR 331\1
992·7502 or 992·5805__

Ch8r'tWed bUa to Clw ' · NC

GUN

Chip Repair In Tubs Or Sinks,
Resurface Old Ccnmic Tile, And

NEW&amp; USED

. , _ - Ce.I02.....'111:111.

4

Giveaway

2128195

ROBERT BISSJOLL
. CONSTRUCTION ·
•New Homes
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

o.t•••
....d11!tl

--u ~=""'
I H,lriHt

,,.M

I Sir-"!..,

985·4473
7/22194

tf

15' wide and 294' long wide

l ',_'1 strip
of
Bean
Alley
-..- eXtending from College
' ~ Road to Colle:ge Street with
· reference being made to the
recorded plat in Volume 2,
: Page 34 of the· Meigs
County Plat Records.
~

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

Savings Company, 211 West
Second Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio, according to its
1

bylaws , on

the third

Wednesday of April; 1995,

(2) Being a part ol Peach at 4:00 p.m. lor the purpose

•.Alley, and described as a

: 15' wide and 305 . long strip
' ·of Peach Alley extending
..·from ·College Street to Sixth
..... Street with reference bein.g
~: made to Ihe recorded plat fn
: volume 2, Page 34 of t.h e

of electing directors and the
transaction of such other
business as may property
come befOre said meeting.

Paul M. Reed, Secretary
(3) 19, 2614) 14, 17, 4TC

County
Plat of
Records.
"• Meigs
(3) Being
a part
Cherry ;1=1=:H:e:lp:::W:a:n:t:e:d=~

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

: Street, and described as a
:"50' wide strip extending
., from the southernmost
~ point of the intersection of
., Cherry Street and Water
~ Street in a southerl.y
• .direction to the low water
:' mark of the Ohio River
P which same is located in
100 acre L·ot 295 in the.

• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• POMEROY DAILY.SENTINEL .

!:

::' Village ol Syracuse.
~
0~

This notice shaiJ be
published once a week for
,. six (6) consecutive weeks
with the last publication

being on April 17, 1995 ..
Action

hereon shall be

AN's &amp; LPN's
needed for
Pediatric Home
Care case iri
Pomeroy area.
TrachNent
Experience
required.
' Please call

614·764-0960.

completed within three (3)
months after publication of

---t-1-··-'+ the• last notioo-hl!fein... _ -

~

Pomeroy. Ohio

.1

Encumbr •

Dacombtr 31,1tt4 .. 125.587
Fiduciary Expen&lt;abla
Trust Funda
Revenue Rec•lpta

Gllto (Trual Funda Only) ...
............... ~ ........ :.........:2,830

Total Racelpta ........... 2,830
Expondlluroo
Oloburaemento:

1

.

•

.

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

In

1

Sn1rn r ( 'iti ;~·n...,

qu ;drt_v hl' ;d th

r15

SEIJVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insured- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992·4405
For Free Estimates
•

4113195

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

Roofing, Siding, Room
Addilions, Concrete , etc.

P.O. Box 220
Bidwell, OH 45614
614) 388-9865

7
Yard Sale
--------

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

Community Cab Co. Inc.
Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

992·9949 • 992·6471
Hrs ..of Operation :- Mon.·Fri. 8:00A.M. til6:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Sundays by appt. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surr01lnding
area. Call for rate schedule.
~ Min. $2.00
,.,,,.,

J&amp;L INSULATION

l\;

l lhur;u l ('t'

..f

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
a Fomlly: So-hlng For
Everyone, April 121h ·20th, 114448.. 366, Oul 141 To Uncoln
Pika.
ALL Yllld S.lt1 Muot Ia Pold In
·A dvance. OEADUNE: 2:00 ......,
tho cloy balorl thl od II lo run,
Sunday edltlan .. 2!00 p.m.
Frldly. llonday odHion • 2:00
p.m. S.tur•J·

B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rlci!Ptaroon "'"''ion Compony,

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
• Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL aud RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

auct~.

full time

complete

auctlon
MMca.
UcenMd
1166,0hlo &amp; WMI Ylr111nla, 304- .
Tn.5785 Or 304-J73.5~n:
·.

9

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

' 539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 99.2·2772
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Rooting, Vinyl
Replacement,
WlndQws, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors; Storm ·
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

(jl4-367-7356
.

wanted to Buy

CJ•n Uta Model C.nt or .
Trucu, 11187
Or ·
Smllh
Bulcll- Pontiac
11100
e..tem Av.,...,, Gllllpoda.
~- .COMWira, wall •..._

pho!tel, old llmpo old th«·
momltorw, old &lt;~ ontlqu.

Riverine Antltfuila.

tumllure.

Ruu Moore, owner. I'M-IKII2·

2526. Wa bur ••ataa.

J &amp; D'o Auto Porto on&lt;! Salw~g~,
buying wr.cQJunk aUlae &amp;
trucks. Aleo, PliU tor ..... 304Tf3..5343"or 7n-&amp;033.

614-992-7643

lfUiftfn

W•r«ed to buy- antlque and

HO\\AHD
I

EXCAVATIJW;
Bulldozing, Hackhoe,
Scrvircs.
Hurnc Sites, LamJ
Clearing, ScJtlic Systems

&amp; Drivcw~tys.

Trucking· ·
Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Oirt

992-3838

•

wm

lin, 814-9!12·11141.

Larry Uwoly.ll4-,l88.1303.
Wolltod To Buy: Nl&lt;t Little Glrlo
Ctothll Sill IX To 7 Good

With every new
alarm installed receive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.
304·882-3336

Cc&gt;ndlllon, 114-245-688Z

lot&gt; Prlcaii Pold: AH Old U.S.

'

Wonlod•

H&amp;HSAWMILL
... Portable..
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleporl, Ohio 45760

Danny ~ Peggy

Brickles
614-742-2193

SUMMER
IMAGES

Employment Services
11 Help Wanted
AVON I All Aruo I Shltloy..

5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;

Speo.., -..75-1428.

Alsoc

1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.

Contmct. work

Procall Co

(614) 992-5291

(602) 954-7420

Morving,
Trimming
Firervood

.

•

AVON to buy"' 1111, lialltyn, tn.

do~---or
1400 Na..us&amp;.

Diane He-ndricks

Emergency Phone 985-3418

. ·Lonely? Call
Tonight!

lor

Waflled: Good Chest F,..,.,...
lluol RUn Good,I14-3J9.225a.

1118 1ttn

'

L&amp;W
Lawn Care

konnol

3pm.

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic ianks cleaned 6 portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job slles ' Camp Sites' Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel a11d Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Ucensed &amp; Bonded - 20 years experience
992·3954

.

outdoor

lolga dog. 114-11!12-5053 oltor

Open 9:00-2:00
Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

•.

Colno, Gold Ringo, 9._ Colr•,
Gold Colnl. II.T.S. Coin ~••
151 SOcond Awanuo, Golllpollo.

3111!/1 mo.

GRAY'S

·

Wanled Ta Buy: JW\k Autoa
With or Wit~ lloloro. c.•

Special Tl1is
Mouth

7f31f91 TFN

~.

uud turnltur., no ~m too large
or too email
buy one piM::e
ot complete IMtat•, o.by Mar.

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE

'

WHALEY'S AUTO
. PARTS
.•
Specializing in Custom
· Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992· 7d'13 OR
992·5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-600·848·0070
DARWIN. OHIO

__ 1L.J:Ielp_Wanted _

•

d .:2.l'

11 o Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

.

h)th hirthday Jin r Bu . . h
:tgl·nt In! Arli~!Rilll
( Jc llL'fOII

Auctioneer

NEFF REMODELING

club repair as well
Call John Teaford at ·
Chester, Ohio

. at .1tlunLthk r,t l t'"· lt ,~'u

MILHOAN

mo.

by appointment &amp;

older v.lu1 ~\dill &lt;~lh l ll t'&gt;' d

RHETT

41411

Golf Lessons

WANTED ·

y'

35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certified Personal
Property Appraiser
Bonded (614)992-4079

CLUB

3114/1 mo.

L1k c: your i!pplrt&lt;~ i HIIl . . .
rtlilll!b~ pri(II'· I·O \lltlr

57-946457

COUNTRY

992·7587

Free estimates
6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.
614~985·4180
licensed

CHESTER

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Cove~.,.
•He!ldllners ·
•Antique Car
•Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.

Befor~

Needed:
•
.Q UALIFIED INSTALLATION
SERVICEMAN,
good with public relations.
Benefit(s) available.
Call Monday thru Friday 9:00.a.m. to
5:00p.m. at (614) 446-9416 to schedule
an interview .f or convenience .

992-2155

742·2455
311fl/, mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.
"Take the pain out
of painting • Let us
do it for you" .
Interior &amp; Exterior

Bennett's Mobile Home Heating
and Coolin·g

Dave or Bob
For More ·l nformatioQ.

RUTLAND .

992-6215

with

Call

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

• Room Addilions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting 1
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

IMMEDIATE JOB .OPENING

ADVERTISING D£ADLIIVE:__ _
FRIDAY, APRIL 21,·1995 - 12 N~ON
INSERTION DATE:
THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1995

Du11l Wheel PoH

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
that the .-nnual meeting of
the
shareholders
of
Farmers Bancshares, Inc.
will be held at the main
office of Farmers Bonk and

.:.:Alley, and described as a

~

· 742·314g or 992·7285

RACINE
GUN CLUB

SHOP .

'

BAll'S Nur..ry

Chuck Stotts
614·992-6223
Free ·Estimates
. Insurance Work :(i~lcome ·

311711 11'10.

a finished family room and summer kitchen and also a utility
area. The lower level basement has access to the back
yard Central air, fireplace and some home furnishings is

•

'

Frtltl EBiimBIH

Please take notice that
the Village Of Syracuse,

.-

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

3 AnnouiiCIIIIenta

WHATYAMACALLII

HAULING .

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport; Ohio 45760
•NewHomee
•Additions •Siding
•Rooting •Painting
•Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns ·

Light Hauling,

NOTICE OF INTENT TO
VACATE

..

101511m:

MR. RIGGS

KINGS'
Home Improvements

Public Notice

·-

1-900-562-7000
Extension 7l 01
$2.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-"7420

Buy • SitU • lrade

WICKS

614·992·3470

· TREE TRIMMING

NEW USITNG · LANGSVILLE · Mini Farm · 20.52+ Acres·
Mobile Horne wilh 2·3 bedrooms. 1 bath. 2 drilled welts .
barn, cellar wilh a room . 2· sheds, sitllng patio, garden
space. and extra trailer hook·up. Asking $29.500.00

REACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
IN THE TRI-COUNTY AREAl

CALL NOW!!!

White Pine&amp;
Norway Spruce

"""'

Lot 01 House. Home in Good Shape. lmmedlale
Possession. Incredible Price of $25,000.00

•

Contest winner named

(LIIItsl• Lew Ratts)

garage in basement. Central vacuu~ system, aHic space. A

·were servcdt

' 992·2060

511~TFN

(Specialize In
driveway apniadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel; Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

dishwasher. Island Range; covered patio. Anached 1 car

included in lhe price. YOU CAN HAVE ALL THIS PLUS
WALKING DISTANCE TO TOWN FOR $37,500.00

-'t•YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$6.00 PER DAY.

.

992·5388

Rec. room. storm doors and windows, central air,

'RO/ki4Ne.£

Land.cape Stock

0111 Step Co11plete A1tt Btdy Reptir

-

TAMMY HYSELL'S .
DAY CIRE

lots of clOset space, Beautiful hardwood flOors, newer

Tol•l Recolpto .. 10,762,05S
Exc. Rocpll. over (Under)
EXPENDITURES
Dlab.............:............. 270,661
DISBURSEMENTS
Other Financing Sourcea
Legislative and Executive
IUMI):
........:................... 1,368,488
Proceodo ot Nbtu ............
J~dlclal .................. 500.58&amp;
............................... 239,282
Public Sollly ., ...... 603,212 ~ Oparatlng Tranafars~ln .....
Public Worko ..... 2,631,237.
............................... 663,682
HOIIth ................. 1,880.667
Operating tranatert·OU1 ..
Human S.rvfcta2,H9,958
............................. (669,648)
Conaerv1Uon--Recreatlon .
Advonceo·ln Not Repaid...
............................... 114,416
................................. 35,570
· Mlocollonaouo ....... 115,797
Advoncoa·Out Not Ropald
Capitol Outlay...:..... 13,092
...............................135,570)
Bond Principii Poymonl ...
Other Financing Sources.
................................. n,ooo ............................... 190,691
Nota Principal Payment ....

l,

oflllrlgarotoro of_,o
oOIIhwJIShlil
•

.£;AS')I

Onemlleout
NEW-REPAIR
143 from Rt. 7
Guuers
Tuee. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
'
1-6
Downspouts
•
.Cntftaman
Toola
Ouiter Cleaning
'
•Toya
Painting
· •Guns
LOIIde of Mlec. ,
FREE ESTIMATES
Buy-Sell-Trade
I
949-2168

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 .,,..

•Wooharo • Dryoro • R1ng11

DAVE'S
SWAPSIIOP

ROOFING

CWiom Buiklintl &amp; Remodeling

• Service
•All MokH -42 Yeara
oflll Alliable S.nrlce

RACINE . Nice 1 1/2 Story Home wilh 3·4 bedrooms. large
living room, dining room. k1lchen w/nook, lamily room, blJih,

II ENJ AMIN TILLIS

CONSTRUCnON

ofoctoryAu- Parta

Operating Trtnafaro·Out ..

. ~-toward L WrltNel

SMITH'S

:.......................~... 1681,017)

CALL OUR OFFICE AI 992·2155

Public Notice

-- --· -

......

ID'I .......CI

............................... 151,017

BULLETIN BOARD
•6°0 column inch weekdays
saoo column inch Sunday

lntanot and Flacol
Rocelpta ................. 5,903,311 Cho;gea ........., ............ 78,070
All Olhor Revenue:........... .
Totll Dlabursements ........ .
............................ 1,098,364

,_.................._ .. 1,401.20"
Total ..•...•.•.••.•••.••• 1 ,457.201
1 certify the following

OpartUng Trtnaltra·ln .....

Gel Your Message Across
Wllh A Dally Sentinel

-

Other._,,

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.• 231,282

Judlcla1 ..................500,586 Popullitlon .................. 22,987
Schedule ollndobtedneas
Public Salaty ........ 603,212

'
If you're graduating
from bigh
school this spring, you might want
to look into the scholarship being
awarded by the Rutland High
School Alumni Association.
. You must be a child or ·grandchild of a Rutland High grad to .
apply and appUcations must be on
tile by May I which is fast
approaching.
.
Your application must include
your high school grade transcript, a
resume of activities and career
objetti ves, a current wallet-size
photo, the name and graduation
year of the alumni parent or grandparent and the name onhe higher
educational inslitution you plan 10
au end.
All applicants will be ev:(luared
on grade point average, course of
study and compliance with requirements along with consideration for
~xua curricular, co-curricular activ.
irics and career objccli vcs .
Send all of your dara to the Rut·
· land High School Alumni Scholarl hip Committee, P.O. Box 125.
Rurland. Ohio 45775 .

Ou18181)111ng Dec. 31,11114
G.O.Iqilda ............. 41,11110
N-........

Ml..tlaneoua ....... 111,717
Nawlaauaa
Coplllll Outloy......... 13,0112
Othtr Bondi I Notte........ report 10 ba correct ond
Bond Principal Payment...
............................... Z:St,ZIZ true, to the b..t of my
..................,.............. 77,000
TOIII ....................... 23t,2112 knowledge:
Note Principal Poyment....
Rtllnd
.
Nancy Parktr Campbell,
............................... 121,874
G.O. Bonda ............. 12,000
Melga County Aud~or
lntertal and Flacat
Other Bondal Nol11........
P.O. Box 551, CourthOUII •
Chargea ...................... 71,070
............................... ! N,874
Pomeroy, Ohio ~ev
Totti Dlaburaementa.........
Tolal....................... 205,874 14) 17: 1TC
.......................... 10,481,414 1-----~-~-......;~------Exc. Racpta; Owr lUnder)
Real Estate General
otab........................... 273,474 1---------..;.;.;...;.;....;.;.;....;.=-----:0ihtr Flnonclng Sourc"
IUMI):
·.
.
Procttdo ol Notte ............

Other FlnMclng UMo .......
Other Financing Sourc11.
........................ (18,713,228)
.......................... 11,N7,077
Total Olhlr Fin. Sourcea...
Other Flnonclng u ..........
............................... (t3,877J
........................118,875,551)
Excaaa Rcpta./Sourcaa
Total Othtr An. Sourt11...
Ovtr IUndtrJ Dlab. ond
............................... 300,808
Other u-............... (13,877)
Exceee Recolpto/Sourcoo
Fund; Caah hlonce Ove•/(Under) Dlob. I Othlr
Jinuory,1, 11114 ....... 4ti,M7 Ue11 .......................... 574,282
Fund c,ah B•l•nce,
Fund C01h Balonce
Dactmblr 31 , 11114 .. 484,tt0 Jonuory, 1, tlll4 .... 2,347,412
Total a
Fund C01h Belonce,
TIXaa .................. 2,847 ,435 December 31, 1tt4 .............:.
Chorg11for 11rvlc11 ........
.. ......,................... 2,821,885
............................... 823,602
Aeaerve for · En'cumbr.
Ucenoao a Pormlta........... December 3t, 1tt4 .. 125,587
................................... 3,728
Oopoel1ory Balance ..........
Flnoa ond Forflturea .......:.
............................... 602,385
................................. 85,6t8
.lnveatmento ....... 2,500,000
Intergovernmental
Ceah on Hand •••• .-... " .6,941
RICIIPI1 ................. 5,to3,311
Total Troooury Balance .....
............................ 3,109,328
Glfta (Truat Fundo Only) ...
Lou Outatindlng ............. .
.: ...................... y••··~···-2, 830
............................. (187,631)
All Other Revenue ............ .
Total Balance ..... 2,921,695
............................ 1,098,364
Aaoeaaed ValuAtion ..........
Tolol
........................ 229,127,936
lnalde 10 Mlll ...............4.30
DISBURSEMENTS
Ou1alda10 Mill ............ 8.85
Leglolotlvt ond Exacullvo
............................ 1,368,488

PubliC

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a ·car rental.
We Have Cars and Vansl
Kenny 's Auto Center
1-800·486-1590
264l.Jpper River Rd.
Bus. ('614) 446-9971
Galli olis , OH. 45631
""""

�..

-

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April17, 1995

. Mond•y, April17, 1995

1 Sharp bark
4 Fut'lhermOI'e
8 Entruly

oM Wood cllltu.
41 CSA IIOidler
47 - - My Hurt
41 Deep y..mlng
so Swill r l 52 cantar, •·•·

14 Actor

56

ACROSS

QUATE! n-tt:
ou-r:;rOEIIS Hl\'11&amp;
\.001(.,

~TLIGHT

Win! lHEMI

PHILLIP
ALDER

'
' KIT 'N' CARLVLU lty Larry
Wrtpt

12 H~h •••·
13 Rl- In Fran~ 56 Above

I

NORTH
.a6 5
•A Q 10 8

. •A K 54
•A 6 3

I'M CCIIAFW.£D 10 HAVE TO /'&amp;&lt;~ A Srii!AlL ('OJT'RI~IO'J,

"""'

1

Wllnlell To

'

-dor.

lur: Fow wt I h a;'

hllll-'ip. ...........

75 Boati &amp; Motora
tor sale

Mer 111 ltwouQh

flo ueccablr t ~ 112 .1 1•.

Fa11n Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock

LIMITED . OFFER ·NEW 14X'/O Coucll • Loll- With llotdtSIHII DOWN, f115110., FREE lna V.lancO 1 · Fobrlc, .-otl. 114DEUVER'f I SETUP. :104·71ifo ~214 Evanlngo; Llo" -

a.

1171
0... II 114-245-S:m
Allor 1::10.

11111 ·

11onnnt11o

Pontloc

~----1112 MorcuiY :lidr, Milo, titrolahl

ooge.

ssee.

AUtos tor Sale

71

Now 11H15 14x711 :i br., 2 lllth, lnctudlo oklrtlng, otopol ~ko, 1

t,lnopooted. $710. 304-tTII-3111.

y•r · homeowne,. neurance,

A GOOO BOY
TILL MOMMY GITS
BACK

-m

end I monthl FREE lot rwnt.
Onlr f1021 and $213 por

1111 Plr-h ...... ~~­
ConoiiUOn, 11,000 ·Mitoo, AC1
~o, llandonl

mo. C.ll 1.aoo-137-3238.

rr...... •tan

NEW lANK REPOIJ, ONLY 4

:~~n

LEFT. --788-71111.

11000

e14-448'

-Gf

140 hp.
Shorollno liM trolllr
aorpot
botiory """ ...- . 114'1'124045
aftlf' 1::10.
'
118114' .._..... b o - . 35hp
llon:ury trolling
tloh Iinder, $3,~. C.II3CM
-3715. I

•

'4.":2

I'M NOT HER
6A~500. AND

SWEET ,
I WOIILDN T
WITi-1 HER FOR
MILLION DOLLARS!

BIMini top, olhor r

APPUANCE8
wo~,.... roldgoraloro.
ro~.
ApplloncM, 711

_...

.

Vlno ~~iti

Rd, rAaon•ble rutrtcUon1. No
•Ingle wide lnqulrn, plera!M. ln-tonnatlon mailed on r.quNt.
304-675-5~
.

WIH tab torJn or h01110 on tr....
or ea... ca·mpgrQUnda, 23 full
hool..,pe. Largo brick building
wMh "'"' holol roo-. lllroo
apanmente, room for more. Will
" " ' - 114-11411-2521.

Ovot'brpol&lt; C.ntor hu hiH time
.,...M- opon for o 3-11 RN.
Any kderNttld ~ ehoukl
• contoct Jan ar Sholl~ 614-GG28472.EOE

awn...~..OI'II

Corllnol Frolghl C.rtlon lo
hiring oxperlorii:od OfR'o to Nn
tlatbod, um pon:-go of
·groP revenue pulling eomp1ny
ft1i11rw or pulling own trailer,
heanh lnturance wldental I vj..
elon evalllble:, baH pial•
available, bob-4:all IMUranca
anll1ble, tuel C&amp;l1l ayatem,
ean~rMniA.

w.ekly

rider

~~· UIM hOmO. HIOII·220-

PTIFT peopll nMCied to prepare
label• .. home. C.H now ....aoD410-2857 LD toll.
Rotoll Salospo,_ Wlth AI

Least One Y•ar ExPM"~ II'!
TM Saln Of Hardw.re And
Building Material. Apply In p.,..
son. Thomat Do-H Ctilter, 171

Rood, OaiiiJ&gt;OIII,

UcCGrmlck

AI! real estate advenlsing in
this newspaper is subjecl to
the FedQral Fair Housing Act
ol1966 which makes II illegal
to ac.Jvef1ise "any prelerence,
limitation or discrimlm\ltion
based on race, color. religion.
sex familial status or national
origin, or anv. intention to
make any such pfelerence,
limitation or discriminalion.•

This newspaper will no't
knowlingly accept
advertisements lor teal estate
which Is in v1olation of the law.
Out I"Eiaders are hereby
informed that all dwelling$
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

31 Homes for Sale

Friday, 4-ti Salw-day 8-12', 4-8;
Sunday 8· 12. 4-8.

2...tory garage, beside New
Haven Supermarket, bottom

wanted: full lime Manaalng
Cosmetologist. Send retume lo
:m Union AvenUI, Pomwoy C?'
call -&gt;4-892·11M11.

Insurance

13

AMERICAN

NATIONAL

SURANCE

IN-

VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS •

COUNTS

AUTO DIS-

UFE&amp; HEALTH

&amp;l'S-2272.
HouM for ron4 ...., Mulberry

SWtoiN

42 Mobile Homes
tor Aant

5 MIIH On AI. 218, $250/llo.

PhJI UUIItl11, Depoalt, Re........

-

Roqul.-.1,

814-41113-4607

flo«· complototr romodolod, 2
bayo: (tront bar 40'128', roar
~y
32'x23'), 1DO'x40' tot,
$21,000. 304-882·7163.

Evonlngo.
·
Nico tnroo bedroom moblll
honM . on Aoc:kaprfnge Rd.,

3 Bedroom Capa Cod Style
Home In Rio Granda, Exeelln

44

Condition,
Now
KHchon,
Original
Oak
WoodwOtk,

$5.-,ooo, 614·245-5398.

can

1881 Yomaha

Chorloaton -

.

"tt

wa.. Run,., with•

~/ANI&lt;

new trOnot: two poooonger, ..,.,.

8pm.

...SOOI1t t48 1121

RobiiiH, AIITY-, W.ulblor To.

tran_.alon, v... Ctul• Air,
AIIA'II Radio CoHill. Exc.llonl
CondMon. C.U 614-446-1754 or
ll+t43,2162 c;oH anrjlme.
Cuoloml28d C.mpor For S.to
P.U. 114-21141-14111 Aftlf' I ~.M.

good COiKIMion, $2800, coN 114-i

----·
cHfrJ&lt;ING

~~~J~~---~~~~~·
Ui.-r 1808El, U · tMor,
open bOw, 114-441·1084 aftllr"

-

76

'

• AN{)

Auto Parts &amp;

Accessories

'
!!u!fllo4 T...._...loiw, Uood 1

SAVINGS

\

0

••

Parto,lt4-m-a131.
'
.CheVY -ot 307 114-4441-72114
Aok tOr -.,.
.
Oatorbock

LE.T'~ i'!OT LEHU... Y~·
Eb6S~L ... WKY

414 King C.b •2lllll, '114 For
a...._ f!IHII. '81 For Aorootor
Van •201~. '8&amp; Ford V.n $1000,
'86 Tovota 4-Runnor $3595. B&amp;D
Auto Bal-. Hwy. 110 N 114-446118115.
it!It Chevy PUc3,1011•I Cylinder,
4 SDMd, Vary ""lid Dodr $1,800
OBb, 114 4d-BOOI.

11!11 Ford F-2 pickup, lilt hud
v.a ongiM, tul color ond
chrome epo.ke whael~l..;. vary
llhlrp truck, moo, 114-w«o65Bt

altarSpm.
1f17 Chevy Plck.Up, Noodo
Tronamloolcin, &amp;350, 51~

nr Or Darlr Dak ~•nch
2ll4 R.
Roctonglo lllrror,
Woodoii C.nopr With In Tricot•

Carving, lWo 1 R. ShelvH, 3
Draworo C.rvod Wlfh GIUI
~ulla, .Two 3x3 FL Corvod Dooro

fllj.l 00

W€.00

W£Mm
5N.M&gt;OOTOF

'Ill Toyau 4JI4 $3215, 'Ill Nt-n

Ma

••

BORN LOSER

'81 Fard 414 PU Uft Kft Sharp!

Antique Side Board, Everything
Orl~~ 100 Ptuo Ynro~ Old

1

OVer 10,000 Yta111mlralon, Alao

72 Trucks for Sale

.

Wit b. Glllu Puii!J_ CarvR

'}118-7107.

11114 Gnnd Prix White,· ~~
PW, Cruloo, Tlnlod WI
614-21&amp;-11111.
:Ill Ctowtoncl onelno, . C-4
Nllulll: tnnunlalon, taw 14•
n.w tlrM on 1m Ford Torlnoi
3-tl.lohn Doen ploWa. C.ll 814'1'12-aut alor 1:00pm.
M
Ponlloc
Fllf'o
Rod,
Automatic, Puol tnloctod,. 4 .cyt.

·mlloo.
·Coman&gt;
Cite¥-. 3~
Ono - · Automatic

AUCTION I fURNITURE. 62
Hol"hto, Pomar
. -lor &amp;330/mo. Olivo 81., Galllppllo. Now I Uood
•
-~
tumhure, hutllra, Wut..-n &amp;
.~ua depcen and n
encee, no Work boota. 1~51.
pete, 304-882·2841.
Now 2 Bod,_.,A 1 112 Both
VI'RA FURNITURE
81....... 6-3158
Home
N..,
lo
Grende,
Qualhy · HouMhold FumHure
$350/llo. Oo-'1, 1 Yur l.aaH, .And Appllanc.. Q,.ot DHio On
Ll&lt;a- Yon:t, 614-4411-2801.
C.ah And C.rryl RENT·2.0WN
Two bedroom houH on ~ack· And Lay•w•y Alto Avellab...
top ro.d In £altern Olstrict, 1PC FrM Delivery Within 25 Mil••·
wator1 Baahon aroo, $225/mO.
Antiques
53
piUI aopoo., 514-IIG:I-7843.

2 Bedroom:. ~~Galllpollo, 114446-2003, I
. 14011.

SotMOM

To Care For Eld.,ly
Lady. State Rt. 1 S. 814 4484l34

Rolrlgorator Mogle Chef Appro1.
IMontha Old, (Modo Br llbytaal
18.5 Cu. Fl. $450, 61+448-6n?,
lt4-441-1471.

Pika, Trllh Pold, 114-38111000.

Ohio.

1113 .... Z2~~5~01dod,
SIO,OOOOBO.
•

eM-

2 lodroom HouM, O,pooM. •
UtiiMioo, No Pato, 1 llock From
Mcllonold'o 81-4-446-8841.
2br, both, lull boM..nt. 304-

-----ll!!!--irJa11;12$28SIIIo
Bedroom Trallor No Polo,
1200 Dopooll, Bulovllle
Real Estate

$21,000.

Roll'lgl!llar 2 Doorw, Advocada,
.115; F - F- Frlgldolro
Refrigerator, Coppertone, tl50;
Froot FrM Rolrlgonotor Almond,
f1115; Fraot F,_ Rofrlgontor
Almond£1!1011 1 YMr V/arronty,
1215;
trlc Rongo 30 Inch
Whlto, US; 30 1nC1r Eloctrlc
Ronga, H.lrvOII Gold. f125;
Waohor Sll5; llryo&lt;
Sll5;
Whirlpool Hoo.,.Suty Waohlr
AJmoiMf, Uke NeW, t208 1 YHr
1 Wlirronty; Skaga- Applla-o,

Rentals
--------41 Houses tor Rent
l:a~:S.~t~=~·

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

tra1. Balance ol loan approx.

PIMUMJ WY, Ml ~1410,
111 ,,, .....

258·1211, Aftlf' 5 P.M.

112' tona, ..

1188 2T C.nr1r .. _...,, ,.'
1own., a 112' ~m, 11111nr .., ~:

No oppllancM, ·Nouolhotd hlrnlohlng. 112 ml: Jontcho Rd. Pt.

HomHita·. Acruge, CION To

u, T1

,.
'·

PICKE~~ITURE

GaHipolle, Owner ~lnencN, 114--

30oU75- :.

1N7 CHatlon lid boot1 130 ..... '·
Inboard, opon - · aurvanclr ;
and whlta, 15700, 8'M..etl2~5644. r:

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compllle hOmO lumi"';':J:·
Houtt:: llonoSat, N. 11
0322, 3 mlloo out lulavlllo Pike
F- Dollvory. ·
·

S.32 oc-, 275 IJ'Ido rfdgo top
building 1M1, t13,180. RayiHim

13200.

•·

SOME 6U't'5
JUST ~TE
TO DANCE ..

condblon. MOOD, 6~ •·

1-7398, 1·

2147.

n

.-+-+--+-f

,;

Ntw gu 1•nb, one ton truck·
whMIS. radlalora floor mate,
ole. G i R Auto, R(ptoy, WV. 304;
312-31133 or 1-.213-11328.
Southwool Pick-lip Parto Bodo,
C.bo, Doon, Fendln &amp; IIGfo, 3
lllln South Of Gotilpollo At Juol
lion AI. 7 &amp; AI. 218, 11-4-446-3167.
Truck-· Chov, 1 ~ Dodgo, .
ond 9-10, ohorl &amp; ""'11· :104-t75-

sS

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·

. by Luia Campoa

'Cetebrii:V Cipher cryptograms •r• created !rom quotations by lamou• peoplrt, pitt .00 PfeMm
Each Wttte•IM the ciJ)her $lariCII IOr another Todlly's clUe. T equalS P

IRW

, F

N 8 W .L Y

RPTYZKNIW

NV

F
'

UFB

LNIR

RNY

I DON'T

79 · campers &amp;
Motor Homes

A LOT OF

MONEY .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "None of us has lived up to the teachings of Christ"Eleanor Roosevelt.
.
.

GAlli
S©~JJ1A-&lt;2£trs·
- - - - - - - Ed;red by
I . POLLAN - - - - - - WOlD

THAI DAILY
PUUUI

ClAY

0 ·four
Rea rron;a letters of
scrambled words

the
be-

low to form four words

I

RHOORR

I

RIFTU

I

E6 RIR 0/ 0'/7

•

i

1--:~,'

A good motto to live by: "Re.1 .
.
.
member good deeds done for
.-----------------..., you byothers, forgetthoseyou've
0 NS U E V
dorie .. • • • .. " ."
.

I

.

•

~

•

•

.

e

Complete ttfe chudde quoled
by f.lhng 1n the mossmg wor ds

I.........J..-.J....;'-1-..L.---'L.......J you develop lrom !lep No 3 below.

.

.e.uT IT!;

5EE 7

FO~

SCHOOL!

50 HOiol

MUCH

I 'lL

L.E~RN
STUFF'

FUI&gt;I
C.OULD

IT 6E

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7

Buy 01 eell. Alverlrw Antlqwr,
1124 E. M•ln StrMt, on Al. 124,

-or- -:

~;¥ij~A BLOW IN THE WAR ON

II.T.W. 10:00
1.m. to 6:00 p.m. , Sun~r 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-812-2521.

My daughter experimented with all types of eye
shadows. makeup, and lipsticks. Her grandmother told
her that th~ best cosmetic for your face is true HAPPINESS
'

HIGH PRICES, SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS.

Pomaror, Ohio, 114-W2.:S858.

·I MONDAY

Apartment
for Rent

.APRIL 171

1111! Ford sao d._t ton truck.
dump bodL duel whlolo, good

3 BDdroom Ranch, FA."'Aodrwy

._lllan, t57N. 11-4·1112-2088.

Vlllaga II, $42,000, Phon. 8141148·2371.

1113 Dod~ Dlkolo Exlondod
Cob 311, '£1Collorrl Condition,

Ohio River Compgroundo """
_ . . 23 hill hook-upo, atoo

-

ll4-ll411-215o2S.

•

Services

.Gr&lt;~&lt;&gt;m Shop .Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Balh. JuU-.
Wobb. CiU 114-446-0231.

Trnnsportation

ment, •dJolnlng: extra · tot,
storaga __a_pac• over double
ga&lt;Jigo,_m,ooo, ~~1102-3'1511.

•

H"'e ICCJ
~-

baMment, two cer 01rrae. two
dKk•. new 1001. In ChMfer1 1M ~
885....1....

Outten Cleaned Ughl H.lullng,
Comm..-ic~!r R.MICS.nl'-1, S1eve:
614-446-1601.

a-v• Par1ablo Sowmlll, don1
haul your ~~ to tM mill Jult
coil »W7&amp;-1)57.

lntorlor poln41no- oxportohc«&lt;,

.,... ... lmat-. Work done to

'ra-r onytl-.
Nllstacdon. Cd '*892·
JMlT Roofing, Siding, l All
C.rpon4ry Frw Eatlmatoo, It+
2&amp;1-8011.

tor Sale

In

Middleport

-

romodo~

with
(nlcl)
1.15ac-. located on Addloon

Plko Rood.

·llol'-

ASTRO -GRAPH

Fumlohod Aporlmonl, 1 BldFDOm, 107 Second Avenue. Ga~
llpo9il:.e $275/Uo. UUlhiM Pakl,
11• 4 U11 After 7 P.M.

14x10 Commodo,. Ctuolc
thr• bedroom, one and \i2 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
batb. 10.11 deck whll roof, ••· BUOGET PRICES AT .t.4CKSON
coli""' cond~lon, $10,800 nogo- ESTATES, 12 Woatwood Drlvo
!rom $221 to Ullt. Walk to allot&gt;
tloblo, 614-1192-1064.
I movllo. C.ll 11-4-446-23418. Etlll'l $wlngw llotoi- - · qual Houolng Opportunhy.
CAlma Puff R...• Hllch. 1000
mlln on 440 engine $7000.00
114-446-3545
1i75 ·2br traitor, 1218S, newly

::eeoo.614-311'-11134

or 304-1711tiTS ,._

.

Wll'llod .. buy. outdoar bnnol
tor largo dog, l14-80WGSS oltor
3pm,

Badrooni Trolllf', Fumlohod EnlcllnoJ ftllllllo.
will 12xU, Newly R.mvd 11111, WJth Ulllhloo Pold, Shiro 8oth, 107

bobyoll onytlme, 114-91z.'7271.

Seoond, Galupol~ ••4 1tt 4411

!Nicol 1.61 Acfoo, Locatod On
Alhlr 7 P.M.
Pra.••fgnal
TrN Servlea, Add'-r Plko RC!!".J.II,SOO,
Coftllllltl Tru c...,, Buckel lt4-317·ll!l34, 30WriHIID.
Gorogo Aponm~~-Fumloltod, 1
u -. Utllftl•
Truck -so
.Ft. Rooch,
81_, Romo•at, F... bo
Paid, 211112 Noll• Galllpiolll, 814~..1 ...... 71'.M.
tlmiiMI lnouronco, 24 Ht.
Emo- Sorvico -Call And
s.ver No TIW Too Big or Too
114-38i-GII43,

114-317-

7010.

1172 ChoVJ 'Monto Corio F_,,
454, m 12 11o11 tt,400, Finn,

114 441 1101.

1-

~ Ram Van 1-250,

~:0 ~:

.,..-.
EnlartaiMIInl Contor $350'• Ex•

lnl Nicol
P.M.

1~7120 AFTo:R '

58

Fruita &amp;

vegetables

.-oo.

cruiN. 11,100. - -

Ill' lpm.

74

Freaman'e HNUng And Cooling,
lnatallatlon . And ~rvlco. EM
CortiRod. R011dantlal, 0omtriiF'clal814-258-1811.'

•C:,l~c."o.ll: 84

1114 Ford , _ Ooad Condl- Trlbuno, 121 Third Avo-. Oaf.
llon.:.:;.:t7110~,:..:6;:.1441S-23.:::.::..=.:71.:::·_~ Hpolto 01110.
:::
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PI
1181 Otdo flrenl8, n~rw ...., 1tt1Jiii0lllt•~
111 , 1GWtWr,
-.good. Reduced
304- - · Y-&amp;._~"! 0 • po, pb,

lad.-..

SlniHI

Motorcycles

at-

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

:"""""':":-:-"-::_;_;_~..:....=
Law...,.. Entorprlno T.W.
Lawrence, Q2Mt G• Furneca•,
l.P 6 H.lt. Hut Pumpo 1
Eloctrto Furna-. FrM Eotlmatoo. II You Dan1 C.lt U. Wo
Both "-111+441-6-, 1-aoo211'6301,
002145.
••
R_.dlntlal ar oon....,.lal ·
wiring, now _..,.,... or npalra. ,

wv

Mallor . Uc:ollood

oloct~clan.

Rldonour Eloctrlcal, Wl/000301,
,tQHlJ-1711.
~

,

Matchmaker instantly reveals wh1ch
s1gns are ro mant iCa lly perfect fo r you .
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker , c/o th1s news·
paper. P .O . 60)11 4465. New York, NY

VieW opt1m1Sl!Cal!y tod~y can work out as
env1510n them . You mustn't let a
card~c arrytng peSs1m1sl cloud your Out·
look .~,...·:,.,,
·

You

101~3.
.~
. __!AuBU$..(flpri1'2ltMar 20) Do th1ngs

' SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Siudy buSI·

for others today out ot the goodness of
·your heart . not because you eKpect them
to do someth1ng for you'" return

angle today Somethmg may appear to
be a._ bargam in one sense. but .be very
costly 1n a surpnsing way . .
.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Let yoor com-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-tl'ec. 21) Some·

man sense and knowledge from past
, expenences gUide you m your hnanc1al
alfa1rs today ~ A short memory m1ght
IOIIJ!e a costly mtstake

one wh9 enJOYS ·taktng pot shots at oth-'
ers m1ght. make disparagmg comments
about~ old tr1end today _letthtS person

ness and lin~ncoal proposals from every

know where yoUr allegiance l1es
CANCER:•.(JI.. ne- 21·July 22) . Thongs---· GAPRIGORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) You..w•U.·should work out as you anticipate today. be quile lucky today lf yOU keep your
prov.ided you operate along the lines of attention nveted on a reward1ng. practical
least res ts tance . New method s could objective. Try not to 1et1mpallence d1lute
1
Tuesday , Ap.,l18 . 1995
prO~e counterproductive .
your dnve.
•
'
'
L
EO
(July
23·Aug.
22)
Your
acllng
Will
.
AQUARIUS
(Jan
.
211-Feb.
1,9)
You
m•ght
In the· year ahead. you a•e likely to ele·
vate your obJeCttves and goals . ThiS W!ll be prelly good today as someone who not handMetty problems very well
be a good move because even 1f you lall ines to upstage you may diScover . Th1s t~ 1tlarg~ . complicated s1tuahons
short. wh1ch you're not l1ke1y .to do , you'll ~~d1111dUal_ coutd.kr-rr~l frorrl y9u develop , vou're apt to deal w1th them hke

'%'our

'Birtnday .

still come out ahead

·

about stealmg see~./

an e;.cpert.

.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Persons you

VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sepl. 22) Fmancral ·PISCES (Feb. 20-M8rch 20) Excellent

deal w•lh Ieday w1ll 1reat you 1n an open,
trank manner, prov1ded they are sure
you're not Wlthholdii"IQ informa110n from
them. Know where to looklfor romance

cond111ons look encouragmg today, pro·
v1ded you don 't dlsassefT\.ble present
arrangements . If •l's not broken . don't hx

and you 'll Md " The Astro-Graph

it
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 231 S•tuallons you
·,

'

F

KYEWKY .

YUNMW. '

I

I&lt;NOW •. NATE .
lHIS C.OSTS

ThiW bodroom; one both, hiU

Yard Work Window• Walhoo

L R V

Impose - Humus- Nomad'- Zipper. HAPPINESS

·

32 Mobile Homes

V X

ZNZWKY .

' YIFIW . '

TF PY

'!

I R W

F K W

' tFOWY

18

Q.,..l Malntenanc., Palnlll)g 1

ruler

PRINT NUMBERED
l fTlfR S ·

6288.

114-:~o~$-~~4411.

Waxad, $25, Will Pk:k Up, &amp;14-

Rusaian

57 Map obbr.
59 Ocean
60 n·a cotdl

_1--,..,e,.....TI=-.....:,1-=,,r=---,r:g~

\

Lta
•*

304-586-4251

446-i718 Erj&gt;orloncod.

24 fnio~ope
26 Alloy27Lave
2&amp;-.non29 Enthutlllm
30 Falae ·
appearonce
31 P1tron
32 Goalo
35 laugh
38 Bullring cry
40 Clll~lng
cl04h
43 Grad. !leg.
45 Romon
garment
47 Very rno&lt;leat
peraon
48 Dar• ol(paat)
49,1\ctrell
Arden
51 Nautical call
53 Pllalllr
54 -liKe
(obMialon)

I.

With CUI.,.., •~. 080,
3'11-11111.
'
.

Wanted to Do
I Room HOLJH For Sale, Mld
Ac• Trea Sarvl011. Compl1t1 trN $40's Eurikl, 150x50 Lot,
Fk:Jora,
New
earl, 20yl'l. ••P· a lnaured, frM Hardwood
..umatn. 614-oM1a11V'I or 1~ · Ba!hroom, 814-256-GOVI.
508-8887.
Five room brlcll hom8 In Mkf..:
~,,,
Handwa•hld, Hand dlepot1, ctnlrll hNt, full t.u-

ridge
20 Ru.tl ·
23 En-mont

nameukea

There is a natural reaction to take a
profit. And often any profit is better
than .no pr&lt;lflt - as people who dabble
in the stock market will altest. Yet, al·
though Mark Twain claimed that one
should never speculate, sometimes you
must take a temporary losing position
when it will resull in a greater long·
term profit.
•
In today's deal, would you end with a
profit or a loss? You are in th ree no·
trump after West has opened with a
weak two-bid in spades, showing a de·
rent six·card suit and SO!fle ~ - 1 0 high card points. West leads the spade jack
and East follows suit with lhe four .
After winning with the gueen. how do
you continue?
~
In response to North 's takeout double, South advanced with two no-trump.
whi ch promised some value s, North
had an easy rai se to game.
At trick two, South tried the heart fl.
nesse. However. East happily won with
the kin g and returned hi s se cond
spade. A 'momenf later. South co nceded
two down.
South had started with seven lop
tricks, given the spade lead. But as the
key heart finesse had to be taken into
the East hand, there was a distinc~ dan·
ger or th~ ac tual denouement. Yet
there was a sim ple solution . As East
was marked with only two spades,
South should have ducked the first
trick. West can es tablish his spades,
but he has no entry. And if he switches
at trick two, South takes the heart fi ,
nesse without danger because he still
holds a spade stopper. With the 3·3 dia·
mond break, South ends with I 0 tricks
instead of seven.
Don 't be dear to the information im·
parted by the auction.

1m s· r*• Trl-haul beet, 11',

USED

I

By Ph;Jiip Alder

1181 .......
Coprt
-onglne
- · :..
1111111 For..
ISlip
1181
EICOI'I '

GOOD

25 Debtor '• lnlla.
DOWN
27 Squeamlah
1 .Non-profit org.
30 -C. Scon
·
33 Actre11 Hagen 2 Bolllve -not
34 Hawallon
l.,.nd
3 e•nllonlng ...und
time
36 t..eborer
9 Inti nllaxod
4 dgllr Allan 37 Charractor In
manner
.
5 Hlumlnalld
Othello
10 Fencer's sword ,
6 Employing
311 Deft
11 Church part
· 7 Cult
41 Guided
16 - Breckln·
8 Calli. •ummer
42 Actre11 Ritter

The unnatural
reaction

w/oplnl dra. 614-446-3114 olhlr
tlpm.

• - ula.-

(alrlhie)

West North East
2•
Obi.
Pass
.2 NT ·' , Pass 3 NT
All pass
Operiing lead : ..: J

prlllct ................. ~ ,,., ..,

-r

,_ ,

21 Obserw,
22 Step ola

South

1tml 11' Mort&lt; Twlln. Trt-haul
boot. 1m 10111 llorcury out·
boord, 1 - lhon IIOhn on - a r
,.build, -W~ftN - . Itt.

1111
wbh

M ActUIII being
6.~ Time perllld
66 - Lingua

~-

Dealer: West

Houaahold
Goods

CorDOII VInyl In lLOII Yd
l Op 10 Pallonte Of KMchon ·
Corpot In Black. Over 31 PatVlnyt In· Stooll. llollolwl
_ _ _for
;__Sale
____ I ._
c.r,...,,t4-446-11144.

Germany

a.--ve

Vulnerable: Both

'·

SOMEBODY'S PECKIN' ON
• TH' DOOR, TATER •

32 Mobil&amp; HomeS

SOUTH
.aK Q 2
•J 9 4

63

.aK 7 4 2

Merchandise
5I

. ,0 6 3
eQ J 9 5

62 Rl-ln

•Q 8 7

~~blc":'.=...~=

Complnt
'11111011, pold
llmtlytype. _ ............
lor,

"Hiring a yard service Is cheaper than the marriage .
cpunseling we'll oeed if you make me do this."

•K 7 3 2

.u
p.m,

46 Space for Rant
,.,.,••1C n

&lt;18 4

•6 5
• J 9 2
'"' 0 8

oiJng.

-~-wv.

~

eAJI097 3

on rlwor•

hool..,pe. _Cell ollor 1:011

EAST •

WEST

0

11-'nll AJati lrilllr -

4-17-95

Spouan

61 ~In et ....

Johnny'15 Rouge or
1
e.g.
17 Binda
111 ~ian
'

111 -

EEK&amp;MEEK

t·

The Daily Sentlnei-Pegl

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--

career opportumUes may develop today.
but ~ou must follow through on them
methodlcalry 1f you h~ to reap rhe'ben·
efits they offer.

/

-'- -+

�I

)

· Pag~1~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April17, 1995

Those owning PCs can get Southern District honor rolls are announced
!~~!;!j_ervice Ye!~so~t~~e~~~t

Reds lose
first game
of season

•

Honor rolls for schools in the Cornell, Aaron Oblinger, Nathan
Southern Local School District for Martia, I jnckey Smitb.
This the !bird nine weeks grading period
Sixth Grille: Cara Ash, Chid
Social Security Manager ·In software is available free of charge have been announced.
Hubbard, all A's; Sara Ball, Nicole
Athens
·
from Adobe's Internet server.
Students earning a grade of "B" Benson, Bnmdoa Hill, Josh Larsen.
.. If you have a personal computer www.adobe .com. After you've
or above in ljll their subjects to be Matthew Wuner, Jeremy Fisher,
and access to·lhe Internet, you can installed and used tile reader so(llisted on the bonor' roll are as fol- Ryan Hill, Jessica Janey.
get faster service when you want a ware, complete lhe fonn and mail it lows;
Letart Falls Ele-otary
free estimate of your future Social back to Social Security t the
Syracuse Elementary
Third Grade: Jason Autberson,
Security benefits.
address shown on lhe fonn. You'll
. First Grade: Ryan Amberger, Ben Carroll, Michael DePue, ChelMore than three million people receive your benefit estimate in
Myca Michael , Chelsea Smith, sa Dilcber, David Gloeckner, Jackeach year write or telephone Social four to six weeks.
Jenny Warner, Bailey ,:&gt;eifert, all ie Gloyd, Tabitha Jones, Stephanie
Security to ask for Form SSAYou can access Social Securi- · A' s; Andy Kinnan, Nicole Michael, Paige Musser, Deana
7004, Request for' Earninqs and ty' s Internet server by direct con- McDaniel, Caitlin Nease, Joey Not- Pullins, Joy Rose, Christopher
Benefit Estimate Sratement In four nection from yqur PC, or through
tingham, Derek Roush, Tiffany . Roush , David Shamblin, Andrea
Co six weeks after completing the an online service to which you sub- Willis.
Tedford, Robert Weddle, Megan
Conn and mailing it back to Socilil scribe, such as CompuServe ,
Second Grade: Ashton Brown; Williams.
Security !hey receive tbe benefit America Online or Prod!gy. People Racbael Courill, all A's; 16mberly
Racine Elementary
estimate.
who don't have Internet access can Clark, Mirinda Davis, Timothy
Third Grade: Stephanie BradNow you can use Social Securi- still request Form ·SSA7004 by
Klaiber, Jacob Nease, Tyler ford, Milce Roush, all A's; Montana
.. ty's Internet server to get the_ !dllling SQ!:ial Security's, toll:free . Roberts, Christopher Warde!:t.
Jarrell, Amy Nonnan, Lis Warns,
tequest fonn right at ¥Qur personlil ]lumber, 1-800-712·1213, 24 hours
Third Grade: Bethany Amberg- . ley.
~omputer, shortening the request
a day.
er, Jordan Bass, Codi Davis, Sarah
Fourth Grade: Amy Lee, lenSocial Security and Children
process by about two weeks.
Hawley, Katie Sayre, all A's; nifer Wlilker, all A's; Adam Blill,
Here's how:
Not everybody who receives
Shawn Barnhart, Timotby Cogar, · Jeri Hill, Jordan Hill, Tara Pickens,
. If you use an· internet "web Socilil Security is old. More than
Kenny McKnight, Amber Mills, Brandon Smith, Tommy Theiss,
browser," ·such as Mosaic, connect three million children under 18 Andrew Philson, Joey Riffie. Andy Leasiann Deem.
to tbe Socilil Security Administra- receive Social Security too. These Smith, Justin Smith, Brandon SturFiftb Grade: Tyler Little. all
· tion Internet site at the address youngsterS receive benefits because · geon, Jeremy Yeager.
A's; Sheri Cummins, Amber
www.ssa.gov. Select "online ser- . their parents are retired or disabled
Fourth Grade: Minmi!Ciiancey, Duffy, Joey Manuel, Rachel Marvic.e s" from Social Security's or have died. You see, Social Secu- Cryslal Cottrill; Miriam El-Dabaja, shall, Lori Sayre.
~home page." Then select "SSArity pays benefits to the families of all A's; Rae bel Chapman.
Sixlh Grade: Brandi Codner,
7004.PDF," an electronic version beneficiaries JIS well as to workers
Fifth Gr;ide: Matthew Ash, Joe Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans.
of the request form, and download themselves. i
it to your computer.
.
Reduced Benefits
; If you connect to the Internet
.l!ven if you're not 65 yet, you
. fhrough the "ftp" protocol rather may still be eligible for Social
Honor rolls ·for schools in the · Wood. overall.
· than through a web browser, use Security retirement benefits. If you
Third Grade: Brittany Hauber,
the address flp .ssa.gov. Change opt for early retirement, you can Eastern Local School Distiict for
ilitectory to /pqb/generlil info and begin rece (ving Social Security the third nine weeks grading period Jonathan Owen, all A's; Alyssa
Holler, Kassandra Lodwick, Ryan
download by binary transfer SSA- benefits as early as age 62. To find have been announced.
Studenrs earned a grade of "A"s, Stobait, Rebecca Taylor, overlill.
1004.PDF.
·
out more about reduced Social
Riverview Elementary
: To read and print the form at Security benefits, call 1·800· 772- "B" or above in all academic subjects
and
a
grade
no
lower
than
"C"
Sixth
Grade; Amber Baker,
your personal computer, you'll , 1213. I
.
·
in
art,
handwriting,
music
and
Brandon Browning, Amber
':Iced a copy of the Adobe Acrobat ·
physical educa!ion to make the Church, Nathan Marcinko, overall.
honor roll.
Fifth Grade: Danielle Rucker,
The list includes the following overall.
Fourth Grade: Nichol Honaker,
temlil Order of tbe Eagles, Tues- students from their respective
MONDAY
schools:
all
A's ; Krystal Baker. Cyrus
RACINE- Racine .Village day, 7:30p.m. at the blill.
Chester Elementary
Abbi [fbompson, Ryan
.
Knotts,
RUTLAND - Rutland· Fire
Council, recessed session, Monday,
Sixth Grade: Cinda Clifford, ali Wachter, overall; Randall Mabon,
Departmenl Ladies Auxiliary, A's; Juli Bailey, Kristen Chevalier,
i p.m St.ar Mill Park.
academic.
Tuesday, 6 p.m. al fire sration. All . Josh
Clark, John Cooke, Wes
T~rade: Cody Ba rtrum.
:· LETART - Letart Township · members asked to attend.
Crow, 'Joey Taylor, Jason Wainer, Sandy Powell. Hollie Rose. Tyler
Trustees will hold a regular meetWEDNESDAY
overlill.
Thompson, Annette Tucker, overfig 81 7 p.m. Mon&lt;)ay at the office.
POMEROY - J\lzheimers DisFifth Grade: Tammy .Bissell, all. ,
ease/Related Disorders support Jon Duffy, Ben Holter, Garrett
Tuppers Plains Elementary
TUESDAY
group, first in series of four public Karr, Jon Will, Charlie Young, all
·
Sixth Grade: Joshua Kehl, all
MASON, W.Va. - Veterans of . education on AD/RD, Wednesday, A's ; Jessica Bartels, Anthony
A's;
Matthew Grubb, Kevin
t:oreign Wars Post 9926 Ladies I :30 to 4 p.m., Meigs Multipurpose Bearhs, Holly Broderick, 'Tiffany
Justin Robertsmi, Wesley
Keaton,
· Auxiliary will hold election of offi- Senior Center. Call Lenora
.
Hensley,
Whitney
Kar(,
Sara
Shafer,
Gary
Vierling, overlill
cers for 1995-96 Tuesday at 7 p.m. Leifheit, 992-2161, for more infor- Mansfield, Evan Needs, overall;
Fifth
Grade:
Bradley tliannon,
~tluck dinner after the meeting.
mation.
·
Michael Taylor, academic.
Lindsey
Cross,
Tina
DeLa Cruz,
POMEROY
Narcotics
Fourth
Grade:
Carrie
Crow,
aU
Tiffany
Kidder,
Chris
Lyons,
Kim. BEDFORD - Bedford Volun- Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
A's;
Travis
Batey,
Brent
Bucldey,
berly
Marcinko,
Sracie
Watson,
all
teer Fire Department committee, 7 Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
'Jessica
Dillon,
Cacy
Faulk,
AmanA's;
:rberesa
Baker,
Michael
Benp.m. Tuesday at Darwin town hall.
Mulberry Avt;nue, Pomeroy. Any- da Fetty, Sonya Frederick, Mathew ·
one with drug problem may attend. 0' Brien, Jennifer Thoma, Chelsea net~ Janet Calaway, Darlene Connolly, Ashley Hager, Jared
POMEROY - Auxiliary, Fra- . No dues or fees , 1-.800-7664442.

Emily Slivers. all A's; Michael Friend, Amber Hayes, Nikki
Blill, Kati Cummins, Tony Hupp, Robinson, Jessica Roush, Jennifer
Sbauna Manuel, Jessica Nance; Roush, Ranetta Wbeeler.
Tenth Grade: Emily Dubi,IeSsi. Fallon Rowh, Jamie Stemple, Erin
ca Sayre, Amber 'J"bom¥, all A's;
· Struble.
Brian Allen, Matt Evans, Nathan
Portland Elemeotay
Haines,
Hillery Harris, Mark
Fourtb Grade: Alan Moore, AllLewis,
Greg
McKinney, Tonia
son Smith. .
Ftftb Grade: Amanda Huddle- · Nazarewycz, Amy R,izer, Greyson
Taylor, Matt Theiss', Sarah Wlillston, all A's; T. J. Moore.
brown, CraiB Wolfe.
Sixth Grade: Gamt Kiser.
Eleventh Grade: Jason Barnett,
Southern Jr. High
Seventh Grade: Jamie Baker, C.J. Harris, Rochelle .ltn!tins, JenKyle Nbrris, Chris Randolph, Braii- nifer Lawrence, Denise Roush,
don Wolfe, Stacey Ervin, lill A's; Rayan Young, Iii! A's; Kim CorBrawn Herman: Kim lble, Amber nell, Jennifer Cummins, Robin
Maynard, Rich Sturgill, Sarah Gillispie, John Hanilon,, Paul lble,
Brauer, Dena Sayre, Jennifer Shain, Bea Lisle, Jyl Mathews, Jay McK•
Jon Smith, Jessica Alley, Erin elvey, Becky Moore, Jaspn Shuler,
Boliq, Willie Cgllins, Heather Dai- Samrni Sisson, Nick Smith.
.ley, Josh Davis, Melissa Francis.
- Twell1h Gmdl:: Brian Anderson.
Eighth Grade: Jennifer Carle1on, Grant Circle, Mason Fisher, Kevin
Jesse Little, all A's: Suzanne fhle, ·Man Morrow, Kendra Norris,
Evan s, Aslili Davis, Ty Johnson, Jim Randolph, Brandy Roush ,
Jessica Theiss, Christa Circle, Josie Courtney Roush, all A' s; Peggy
Jarrell, Kara King, Patty Lawrence, Caruthers, Erica Dugan, Chris Hen- .
Jason Roush, Kim Sayre, Jeremy dricks , Carrie Malone, Andrea
Johnson.
Moore, Shannon Morarity, David
Southerii"High
Pickens, Tracy Pickett, Jeremy
Ninth Grade: Cynthia Caldwell, Smith, Forres1 ·Teaford , Amy
Stephanie Stemple, Evan Struble, Weaver, Ry;m Williams.
Billy Young , all A's ; Amanda
Adkins, Crystlil Coleman, Jennifer

..__-Community calendar-

Marcinko, Billie.Jo Welch, overall.
Fourth Grade: Ashley Boyles,
LeAnn Marcinko, Thomas Sim mons, Tyler Simmons, Jaime Whitlock, Carrie. Wiggins, Aaron Yost,
. overall.
Third Grade: Jessica Boyles,
Hailee qine, Chrissie Gregory,
Ryan Kidder, Nicholas Weeks,
overall.
•
Eastern High School
Twelfth Grade: Julie Brown,
Jessica Chevalier, Janet McDonlild,
Delcky Mcintyre, David Toundas,
Iii I A's; Roger Arix, Charles Bi.ssell, Susan Brewer, Ryan Buckley,
· Randy Burke, Dina Combs. Beckv
Driggs, Ryan Ho'llon, Joe
Karschnik, Annie King, Heidi Nelson, Jeff Stethem, Vic VanMeter,
SL1cy Woolard, overalL
Eleventh Grade: Rebecca Evans,
Jessica Karr, Jennifer Mora, Ginger
Nutte d Connie. Pooler, Brandi
Reeves, all A's; Michael Barnett,
Brian Bowen, Holly Cleland,
Melissa De'mpsey, Jessica Frederick, Jorge Gomez, Robert Hoff.
man , Lena Knotts. Traci Lance,
Mike Laughery, Crystal Morris, ·
Nicole Nelson, Micah Otto, Crystal
Summerfield, Heather Well.

632
Pick 4:
4480

Buckeye 5:
2-22-23-30-36

•

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Vol. 45, NO. 247

Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

·Copyright t995

WEST VIRGINIA'S t1 COIMRSlON VAIIIJEAI.EIIIIAS AIIINVEifT'ORY
IF OVER 300 IIIWIIIIEW CHEVROlET COIIVBISIOII VAliS. - ·
. .
'
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1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cente
A MultlmedioJnc. ~·paper

Q!"llo, Tuesday, April 18, 1995

Law abolishes Ohio genercll assistance

..

COLUMBUS CAP) -. Gov. Goorge Voinovicb used bis veto power to
'"This ' legislation presents significant operational and funding issues ·
strike two sections of a new law tbal will end Ohio.' s Generlil Assistance and cannot be implemented as proposed," Voinovicb said.
welfare program Ibis summer.
He said the bill did not clearly identify people eligible for lhe medical
Voinovicb, who signed the bill into law Monday, said the two provi- · ~fits, could have provided benefits to people 1\'00 did DOl previously
:sions were vaguely defined and would be difficult to pay for.
receiVe Generlil Assistance, and did not put a time limit on benefits.
Voinovicb wants to use about $200 million in savings from the proHe said tbe veto would allow his administration and legislators 10
gram's demise to fmance welfare reforms in separate legisi~Jtion tbat bas develop an appropriate and affordable medical plan for low.income
Ohioans,
.
yet to pass.
.
Generlil Assisrance provides cash benefits of S100 a 1110ntb up to six
Voinovicb lilso vetoed a proposed adult emergency assistance program
months a year. Payments go to an average 61,000 able-bodied adults each for people.18 and older.
'
'"The provision is underfunded because it does not limit the number of
montb.
Voinovicb vetoed two sections of tbe bill that olberwise takes effect in times a person may receive emergency assistance for shelter, utilities and
work-related e~penses within a 12-month period,' ' be said.
90days.
Voioovicb said the legislation would duplicate coverage lilready proOne would have established a mediclil program for individulils who
previously had received Generlil Assistance.casb and mediCal benefits.
vided under tbe Family Emergency Assistance program.
.

-···

A Morgan County judge Monday denied a fonner Pomeroy attorney's
, .
request Cor post-conviction relief.
D. Michael Mullen was convicted of corrupting two Pomeroy girls, ·
. ages II and 13, witb drugs on March 12 and 13, 1993. Mterwards, the
youths were treated for overdose at nearby Veterans Memorilil Hospital.
In a recenl petition for post-conviclion relief subm1ned to Morgan
Common Pleas Judge Dan Favre~~u. who heard the case, Mullen lilleged
his prosecution was tbe result of personal animosity towards him.
· In addition, be lilleged key defense wilrlesses were not served subpoenas and that his life was threatened on at least two occasions with county
officials failing to take action.
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1
In bis judgement entry, Favreau wrote that Mullen was convicted and
that the ·conviction was aff1nned by the Fourlh District Coun of Appeals.
He said tbe issues raised by Mullen were without merit or inappropriate
and bad no effect on the OUICOme Of the trial.
.

lly GEORGE ABATE .,
Sentinel News StaiT
Government officials may t3ke
sever;~! months before deciding
whether to drop long dis1ance
charges between the Pomeroy and
Mason, W.Va., exchanges, a telephone official said Monday.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and its West Virginia
counterpart are curren tly weighing
tbe costs to local and long-distance
telephone companies, said Pat
Cook. GTE coordinator for regulalory affairs.
"Right now we're pretty much
at a standstill until costs arc
resolved," Cook said.
Las! fall, slate agenci es held
public hearings in Po·mcroy and
Mason to detennine the need for
tb e service. Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant. W.Va .. exchanges have
had loclil calling charges for severlilyears.
In December 1993, U.S. District
Ju~ge Harold Green rejected three
similar requests for the first time.
Green changed his acceptance of
these s~rvices because of com-

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Three people were taken to area hospitals following a two-car accident Monday at the intersection of State Route 7 and Hobson Drive. Kathryn V. Hal~ 69, 37012 Wolfe l'en Road, Pomeroy,
was admitted to Holzer Medical Center, while Lonnie G. Browning, 55, and Fredda G. Browning,
4'1', both of 558 White Hollow Road, Patriot, were both treated and released from Veterans
Me:moriallfospltal. The Gallla·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Hall was westbound
on Hobson Drive at 9:40 a.m~ pulled from the stop sign onto 7 and collided with Lonnie BrownIng's northbound car. Both c;ars were moderately damaged and Hall was cited for failure to yield,
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
··

Pennsylvania men face charges
in alleged theft, high-speed ch~se
Suspects injured
after truck crashes
near Langsville

DAVID KASMENN
plaints from large telephone companies.
·
This case is uniqu e because
Green has asked the interexchange
c'arriers - . AT&amp;T, MCI and Sprint
- for input. Previously, these
companies had intervened because
th~ local clills cut out the long-dis:
tance proftts.
Once Green acts on lhe request.
arate structure will be decided, sbe
added.
Loclil clillers would be charged
(Continued on Page 3)

New housing·
starts reach
2-year low
WASHINGTON (AP)- Housing starts plun.ged 7.9 percenL in
March to a two-year low despite
falling mortga ge rates that had
been expected to spur the industry
during the spring home-buying season.
Tbc March drop marked the ftrst ·
three-month string of declines in a
year. Every region excepl for the
Northeasl shared in the loss, t~e
latest evidence of a slowing economy.
.
.
. .
. --- - ,. · The Commerce [)Qparunent saidconstruction of new single-family
bomes and apartments to~'lled 1.21
million at a seasonally adjusted
annual rate, lowest since a 1.07
million rate in March.l993.
Starts had fallen 3.7 percent
from a revised 1.32 million rate in
February and 1.50 million a year
earlier. They originlilly bad been
estimated to have fallen just 2.6
percent last month.
· The &lt;leclines in January, February and March were lhc fust three-·
month string of losses since the
first thre·e months of 1993. Starts

.'

"The Adult Emergency Assistance program, however, should mirror
tbe federlil Family Emergency Assistance program .in thai elllergency
costs should be covered only one time witbin a 12-month period. To do
olherwise would crea1e an ongoing entitlement program which is underfunded and probably unintended," Voinovich said.
. Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Galena, chief sponsor of the bill, said the
vetoes were understandable .
. ·~The amendments were inttod~ t!!e !ast minute witbopt a lot of
study,'' Lawrence said in an interview.
.
·
·
During debate in the House on the bill last month, Democrats portrayed the cut as an attack on lhe poorest of the poor.
·
Republicans countered that lhe issue was not compassion, but the best
way to help the poor achieve independence from welfare. They said a
government safety net remained in place despite the loss of Generlil
·
Assistance.

Crash leaves three injured

M·unen's request
·for prison relief
rejected by judge

No --decision
yet on area
phone service

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 800 BRAND IIEW
QEVIII,.ETS, IIJJSfiUIUS, PONTIACS, BIDS, GEOS AND CUSTOM
. YAir. All will be sold at &amp;tthstantlal di&amp;counis!

Lottery

Pick 3:

PageS

Eastern District honor rolls are announced
Tenth Grade: Meredith Crow,
Maria Frecker, all A's; Patsy Aeiker, David Baker, Angela Bissell,
Candace Bunting, Catherine
Coram, Billy Francis, Traci Heines,
. Martie Holter, Robert Keaton, Sean
Maxey, Amanda Milhoan, Leslie
Parker, Jeff Rankin, Erin Sexton,
Michael St. Clair, Lisa Stetbem,
Tracy While, overlill.
Ninth Grade: Kelli Bailey,
Stephanie Bearlis, Michelle Caldwell, Billie Pooler, Iii! A' s; Vicki
Adams. Chris Buchanan, Brandon
Buckley, Jamie Drake, Joanna
Gtimpf, Jeremiah Kchl, Jeff Kimes, ·
Lamar Lyons, Heather Naylor.
Angela Riling, Michael Weeks,
Nicole White, overlill.
Eighth Grade: Stephanie Evans,
all A's; Valerie K.arr, Adam
Sanders, Mike Sobieski, Jason
Stevens, Steven Whitlock, Aaron·
Will, overall'; David Putnam,
Heather Rockhold, academic.
Seventh Gqde: Matt Caldwell.
Maureen Heines, Jessica Pore,
Jos·hua Will, lill A's; Man Bissell,
Milll Boyles, Joshua Broderick,
Chasatie Hollon, Brook Nichols,
Edward Schaekel, Amanda Upton,
Amanda Wheeler, overall; Jeremy
Gillilan,
Guess, academic.

~hi~

From OVP Staff Reporl•
Two Pennsylvania men face
num erou s charges in Galiia and
Meigs counties after they allegedly
. stole a truck and led authorities on
a high-speed chase Ibis morning. '
Arrested by tbe Meigs County
Sheriffs Department were William
. G. George, 22, and Hugh James
Hawkey, 20, both of Greensburg .
The two ·lillegedly broke into a
garage at Bostic Motor Sales, 1010
F.irst Ave., Gallipolis, took the keys
to a 1992 Toyota pickup and drove
off with the truck, the Gallipolis
Police Department reported.
Meigs Sheriff James Soulsby
said the pair then put .gasoline in
the truck at Cheshire and drove off
without paying before proceeding
north into Meigs on Stale Route 7.
The &lt;:base be gao when a Mid ·

dleport Police Department cruiser
attempted to stop tbe vehicle on
Hobson Drlve. The truck struck a
stop sign and went through a yard
before heading northbound again
on 7, Soulsby said.
With speeds of up to 80 mph;
the chase proceeded along State
Route 124 through Rutland and
turned onto County Road 10 (Dexter) in Langsville before the truck
crashed.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Srate Highway-Patrol said George,
who was driving th e truck, was
northbound, five-tenths of a mile
north of 124, at 12:07 a.m. when be
los! control, went off the right side
of the road and struck a culvert.
The truck then ovenumed onto its
top. troopers said.
George and Hawkey were
injured in the crash, according to
the patrol. The Rutland .Sqaud .or
the Meigs EMS transponc:d George
to Veter~ns Memorial Hospital,
where he was treated and released
back to sheriffs deputies. Hawkey

was initililly raken to VMH but was
later transferred to Holzer Mediclil
Center, where a hospital spokesperson said be was treated and
released for a knee contusion.
. The patr~l lis!Cd damage to the
truCk as severe. George was placed
in the Meigs County Jail and
Hawkey was lodged in the Gallia
County Jail.
Besides the Middleport cruiser,
two sheriff's cruisers were also
involved in the chase.
Soulsby said George has outstanding warrants in Pennsylvania
while Hawkey has an extensive
criminal his10ry, including a charge
of fleeing stemming from an auto
theft in Florida.
Tbe men face Meigs charges of
felony fleeing and attempted vehicular assault, along wit.h numerous
traffic and safety violations including failure to wear seal belts, left of
center, expired operator's license,
failure to control an\1 reckless operation.

Pomeroy
renews
cable TV
franchise
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News StaiT ·
.Pomeroy \tjllage Council
renewed the vi llage's cable television franchise with Cablevision of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., when it met
Monday .
Cablevi sion manag er Les!er
Erri u presented council with a proposed 15- year franchise to replace
the exi sti ng 25-year franchise,
which expires this month.
Pomeroy councilmen decided to
renew ·the franchise at the existing
ra1e where the village receives 3
percent of a monthly cable television bill. Communities can opt to
receive up to 5 percent, Erritt said.
Most communities are opting to
inaease lhe franchise rate to 5 pcrcenl, Erritt sai d. The company
doesn't like that because it resembles a rate bike when tbe added
cost is passed lilong to subscribers.
"We' re going to stay at 3 percent regardless of what other communities are doing," said Mayor
John W. Blaettnar.
"A lot of seniors rely on this
~ice and the village is financial ly sec ure enough to continue the
franchise at the existi ng rate," he
added.
Continuing the franchise at the
existing rate will save the village's
estimated 850 Cablevision subsct'ibers about $65,000 over the life
of tbe franchise.
Erriu said the company is currently upgrading its system· to
(Continued on Page 3) ·

Southern's
boardOKs
staff layoffs

By GEOR.G E ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The Sou lh ern Local Board of
Education laid off several workers
to allow ·for the closing of tbe
Racin e Elementary School a1 its
regular board meeting Monday.
The 'board agreed to end th~ ,
contracts for some secretaries, custodians and other suppon sraff.
Many of the decisions to divide
the students were based on the size
of tbe classes ar other elementary
evening after the June 12 m'urders Day,9 on the stand :-- the longest schools, said Superinlcndcnt James
of Simpson's ex -wife and her · stint of any witness so far- and Lawrericc.
friend, leaving it unaccounted for more hostile questioning from
" We haven ' t established a:ny
until the next day and providing an defense attorney Barry Scbeck .
romes" to shuttle students who live
. Judge Lance llo also was to in Racine Village to other schools,
opportunity for it to be planted.
But Gpldberg showed a video- decide today on a defense request Lawrence said . "Many streets are
tape of Vannatter carrying a gray to allow Simpso n 10 be present not wide enough."
envelope - the kind of envelope when the judge cond.ucts one-onThe building's remaining seven
thai Fung said conrained the vial. A one interviews with jurors.
teachers will be placed based on
less·clear video appeared to show • Ito plans tb question abput tl)ree seniority, Lawrence said. Tbe rankFung holding the envelope and a or four jurors a day about a di s- ing will occur after May I.
plastic bag be said was used to missed paneli st's allegations of
In response to parent questions
•
carry tbe envelope.
racial divisions and personal ani- from paren's about first graders
. • The defense said b!QO&lt;I smears • mosities. He also is investigating Jlei!'B _moved _inJo .~.e §tp3ll build,
-on -tlieboit()nl dcxii:]7illib i)'tSimri:""'the:conduclol"sbcfllT's deputies - mg i\'faf the jumor '!Ugh rather than ..
sixtb g('aders. Lawrence explained
son's Ford Bronco were the imagi- guarding the group.
nation of Detective Mark fuhnnan
On Monday, Goldberg
lhal the desks and bathrooms are
- who is accused of planting a whose courtroom presence will made for smaller stodents.
bloody glove behind Simpson's never be confused with F. Lee BaiTeachers Tricia McNickle and
mansion - and tbat Fung lied ley's - went about repairing Margaret Smith - who both bad
about taler seeing the smears 10 Fun~·s testimony in a slow, metiC· one,year contracts - were termicover up for Fuhrman.
ulous manner. ·
nated. They will remain on a reclill
But Goldberg showtjd a J?boto- .
The photo evidence pame early list for the next two y.ears if 'POSi·
graph of what Fung 1dent1f1ed. as .in the day. The res! of the afternoon tions become available, Lawrence
four bloosl spotS - one of whtcb was spent on lcss-effecti ve efforts said.
could be visible when the door is to explain apparent sloppiness by
The board also reduced two
closed, ,as . il was the morning Fung and his tendency to rake cred- four-hour secretaries earning full
Fubnnan srud he saw the spots.
it for work ~c only supervised.
benefits to one eight-hour secreFung returns to court today for
•
(Continued on Page 3)

Focus on bloo~ repairs standing
of .S impson prosecution witness

!.,.1~~

during the first three months of
1995 were 9.5 percent lower than
the same period of 1994.
Anlilysts had expectdl--starts to
rebound to a 1.35 million rate in
March as a re~lt of flilling mortgage rates and tile start of the
spring home-buying season.

LOS ANGELES (AP) .- " As
!heater, prosecutor Hank Go ldberg 's re-questioning of a bat!Cred
police criminlilist was as exciting
as a reading of the U.S. tax code.
Even the judge suggested i~ was
boring.
In substance, though, Monday's
redirect examination of Dennis
Fung bclped breathe life back into
a crucial part of the case againsl
O.J . Simpson -the blood evi·
dence. Goldberg presented yidcos
. lind photps thal bl:.,sllid refut~ -tOO
defense theory of a police frameup .
.
.
"It wasn't flashy, it wasn"t
exciting, but Hank Goldberg got
the job doll!),'' said Loyola University law professor Laurie Leven·
son. "! think they neutrlilized a
great deal of the de"rense attack.
The only question is whether the
jurors bung· in or tuned out."
Among th~ points Goldberg
made;
•
·
• The defense said Detective
Philip Vannatter never gave l-ung a
vial of Simpson's blood the

,,

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