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Page 1o-The Dally sentinel

.

l\18adaY, Apt111S. 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Harrison compares food processing of today, yest~!~~ .....
cut up or use In s•usage. bead
Another e~ent lhat was looked for lbc workers. Quite dtfferent g~ '? eat, and also make deb·
cheese, udding and etc.
forward to m the fall, was the from IOday. when no.one seems to c1011s p.es.
. !
·
The &amp;og was !ben cut pen and arrival f the lbresblng madline and have any lime for anyone. but for
The only !aultl found wtlb them
lbe entrails nflpved. The liver was 111e crew or men lhat came along lbcir own gain.
was the slain lbey left on band~,
sent to the kitchen for frying, for wilb it. They would arrive in the
Recalling another part of the old mouth, teeth, and e\'CD bare feet tf
the family dinner. It was a lot dif· morning, set up the machine and life, was lbe laking of com, wbeat, you were barefooted. It~ .abo~l
ferent than wbat we buy today, proceed lO thrash your grain, usUIII· or whalevcr,' in the old wagon Wid as bard IO remove as lndta tnk IS
mainly because it was fresh it real· ly wheat. oats, rye, or whatever ~ou driving to Chesler to be ground al today. But they were good and no
ly added a Wll: of goodnes's to the bad raised. This always left ' a nice lhe Chesler Mill. The he mill wheel one seemed 10 mind the~·
.
noon meal.
pile of straw lbat lbe kids enj'!yed was powered by a large _stream of
One lastlhing, and I thtnk I will
The hog waS then left banging playing in for awhile, until taler on water that pour~d over II, from a ~ut the old pen away until anolher
outside until il cooled out cnouJ!)I when it was put in ~es for use m sptllway at the Side of the dam !hat time. A .lot o~ pcoplt and rarn.ers
of the t~mes ha~e een rc a~!r.~
10 take to lhe place to be c_ut up ~r the barn as bedding jfor the stock backed up Shade River.
further preparation of cunng. Tins through the winter
.
Flour was ground, corn mea 1 had thetr own milk cows w '"
was usually rubbing wilh coarse
The big p;irt of the day was !he ground and whatever you had provided milk and all the thin.;s
salt, smoked salt, or putting down . dinner that was prepared by all !he raised on your own farm. I can made from '~· that. we buy_·~ the
in salt brine. Later on, some of it women fofk, for a group of tired, remember corn meal P!lncakes stores IOday mcludmg plastiC)Ugs,
would wind up in the smoke bouse, hungry and sweaty menfolk. We ·. plate size, and covered wtth home card~ard·caflons, or whatever fills
that really added tbe finishing always bad to wait until they ate, made apple .buuer, whtch really the btll.
IOucb
and then 1ry to salvage a·meal from
made a man sized breakfast thai
Mucb as butter that was
This was not all, as lbe lard bad wbat was left. Sometimes it was really stayed with until lhc noon ob.tained by ~hurnin~ Jreamd
td be rendered, tbe feet bad to be enough and sometimes no~ accord·
meal.
.
sknnmed off m•lk you a save
pickled, and all the otber little ing to how hungry !hey were. We
Later on, a portable .gnnder for several days. It was putm an
things tbat 'went along with always made out, and enjoyed
mounted on a truck, used to com~- old wooden chum. powered by a
butchering time. This all took up. every minule of tbras6ing time.
around lhrou.gh ~ counlry and d1d . paddle !hat, was on the end of a
most of tbe day, but was enjoyed
Barn raising was another thing whatever gnndm$ you had to do. ' wooden handle !hal prolru,ded from
by' all members of the family ."
. !hat involved most of the menfolk
ThiS was not enjoyed nearly as • lhe lop o the churp. he butter that
CatUe were also bulchered, IJut in the surrounding area. If any· rammuch as the trip to the Chesler Mtll was left after the buller was
taken care of in a different way. All ily had a calamity .befall \hem. such
in the old horse and wagon.
. removed was a far cry from what
sorts or cuts that make up beef had as fire, wind, or whatever, or just
We p1cked blackbcrnes. ra.sp- we buy loday . It was. also a source
benics, and others m lhe last arucle of coua~c cheese. Th1s all made the
10 be cut and taken care of. Harn- decided 10 build a· new barn or
burge~ was grourid, and .cold building, !hey would all gather and I submiued to the paper. but I for· old milk c_ow, a great asset to tbe
packed in fruit jars. along with . help put up ·the building for free.
got another one, whtcb was the whole famtly.
.
other" choice pieees, to be enjoyed Tbe only expense you bad was lhe
mulberry. If you were lucky
In ctosmg, my only hope IS that
later on in the winler.
cost of the material and free fooc.l · enough to find a tree they were I have loucbed some of tbc memo;

. back into
. 1
0 n~e ag~
am gomg

~e past, to f~er ~~~:Y~:!~

. at appeare . ~n
.
une~O: ob'fu:;'::e and .~s~~~
~
we
n, wt
~~~rne
ben COO~ weather
rst.0 • w
.
.
arrived tnhllle falWt wasd'':~~~
butcher w at we
r:use ,
•
the summer • for our wmter s sup
ply ~flml~~\ng day was' usually a
. f
' an\ .but il also attracted
. hbo lh
. amt Y a• •
·- -tome ~f you~~~ ~·gitch ~~a:~
were · ~~ . ~ P k d .
help. ~ s ~ ~er~ Ydw~ ~0 ~~v~
~urr a ~~n a:'hfyayne~d~d it at
b c Ph~ .
utc . en~g .ume.
.
.
f
tb Ftrs:e~:~gs~J ~~ :~:~n'h~s
· e wa .
e iron ket~~s out·
":as done 10 larg .
Tb water
~·~e, ov~r an~n ~~el eand the
was putm a
dfecJ in .;,d out a
hog ~as manhan the hair eas . 10
few umcs t~ make
with t?'and
remove. Tbts was done . .
~crapcrs that usually dtd a good
JOb...
, k
om llsbcd
Fmally the tas as ace . P bind
and the. hog b:~~~ti~
for
legs, usmg a g usin one of the
II_Je purpos~, or
g
Th

urrY·

'l

::de

~::;::Je::;su.:~~~~~eJ'~;:· ·late~

;....---·-

Montana
announces
retirement

10

Inspection was held by Pally
Dyer, deputy when Hemlock
Grange 2049 held its regular meet·
ing rccenlly at the ball.
The fourth degree was presenlcd
in full form. Activily chairman,
Helen Quivey, reporled on gifts
scm to the deaf Kelly Farms and
Friendly Hills '
'
The ran ~ ban uet to be held
on Aprif 28 gat the ~enior Cilizcns

"

'

r

a lent and even the inside of a whale or fish. The
INSIDE JONAH'S RF.LLY
Norma
materials and hibor were donated, Hawthorne
Hawthorne reads to a group of youths inside a
said.
"I thought it was something lhe kids would
plasiic bubble she built f~r th~m Wcd?.esday at '
have
really liked. I would have really liked it,"
the Meigs County Pubh&lt; L1brary. I he pre·
Hawthorne
said. (Sentinel photo by George
schoolers imagined this as a spa«ship, a bubble,

TUESDAY
MASON, W.Va. - Vetcrans of
Foreign Wars Post 9926 Ladies
Auxiliary will hold eleclion of officers ·for 1995-96-Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Pollock dinner afler the meeting.

Copyrlght19!15

~ llDSMOBII FS, POIIllACS, BUICIIS, GBIS AND aJST0M
VANS: All will be sold &lt;It substantial dlsl:ounts!
, Plus $500 to $2WJ cash baclt or 6.!1% APR linancl~g available I~P
to 48 months) on selected models on approved t:red1t. Tenns avail·
able up to 84 rbonths!
·

wilb lbe conllact, testing should be . around $90,000 if the test drilling
' Sentinel news stair
done witbin 90 days, Blaeunar is successful, Blaettnar said at an
earlier meeting.
·
· · Test drilling fa: Pomeroy's new said.
In
addition
be
said
work
is set
water wells should start no later
The lest drilling comes about as
tp
~gin
on
a'
project
to
correct
a
lban April 24, Pomeroy Mayor viUage offtcials. examine the feasi·
I obn W. Blacunar announced at bility of improving lhe communi- drainage problem on Pleasant
Monday's meeting of Pomeroy Vil- ty's water supply by installing new Ridge Road and a project to replace
lage Council.
wens in Syracuse at a sill: near the apressuretankonLincolnHeigbts.
Work bas also been completed
Council members recently village's existing wen field.
entered into a contract with tbe
The exploratory drilling should on the Pleasant Ridge/Rock Street
..O.M. Baker Company of Dayton to· cost around $30,000 wilb the wall:r line project, Blaeunar said.
Also, one of Pomeroy's long·
drill tbe test wells. In accofl)ance drining of !be acwal weDs costing
.
.

I

10

:u .S. trade

·deficit

declines ~

Senior Center. Call L~nora
Leifheit, 992-2161, for more mfor·
mation.

l'OMEROY - Auxiliary, Fratemal .Order of lhe Eagles, ·Tuesday, 7:30pm. attbe hall.

POMEROY - . Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 1 l),l!l.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. AnyDepartment Ladies Auxiliary. one wilh drug problem may aucnd:
. Tuesday, 6 p.m. at ftre station. All No dues or fees, 1-800-7664142,
Help Line.
members asked to auend.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Mission Church, 7:30 each evening
through! Saturday, wilh the Rev.
David Hopkins. Gallipolis as lhe
speaker. Special singing nighlly
wilh lhe
of McArthur.

$11,688

.$11,388**
NO OcX Fees

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES EXTENDED CAB PICKUP
• Ellended Cab
• On,., Soda Aorba9.
·Rear Ant1·lock Bl'akes

· Custom CIOih lnlenor

• P 2P5175R IS'T•es
• Steel Belted T1res

·Power Steenng

''SalePnce llldlxles GMAC F1rst f1111e

• Power Brakes

Bu,.er lncentM!I II Qua~IIOd

BIWIIIEW '95 CIEVY ASlRO EXTEIIIEll COIIVERSIOII VAN
• t 6 Valve Power

• D~ver SMie A11ba9 ·

• 4 Wheel Anlr~ E&lt;akes
• PowerSteenng
• PoiNSr Brakes

• Power Door Locks
• AM'FM Stereo
• S~led Wlleels ,
• Steel Belted Tires
• Well Equipped!

· E&lt;lende&lt;I.Chass•s
• Dnver Side A1r Bag

·PIS, PIB
·Sola/Bed
• Power Windows ·lndlfect ltght1fig

• Anll·lock Brakes
• Power Locks
• Prem1um Wood Pkg
• A11 Cond ~1on - · ·--; lltt, CrUtse
Full ConversiOn
• Automatic Overdnve • AMIFM Cassene • Aluml'lumRunmng Bds.
· VISia Bay W1ndows • CSp101n Chairs • Loaded!
u

•

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947 • 422·0756

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE
• Alf Condillon
• Dual Airt&gt;ag

·-Antl·i.lJCtBrakfs
• Automatic·
• AM'FM Casselie

· Dual Aor Comlortemp • Alum1nUm Wheels
Climate Cootr~
• Pqwer Antenna
• Power Onver &amp;

A Multlmedle Inc. Newlpliplr

standing landmarks will have to
come down soon.
Blaeltnar said tbe village bas
issued a condemnation order' on lhe
old Sugar Run School building
which is owned by the Meigs
County Park Dislrict.
"A lot of people in town bave
ties to lbat building," be said.
In personnel mauers, cauncil
ratified tbe reinstatement of
Michael VanMeler and Orville Hill

to tbe Pomeroy VQlunteer Fire
Department.
Clerk Kathy Hysell reported the
following balances : general,
$73.749.33; safety, $8,159; street.
$14,890.68; state highway,
$9,022.26; r.re, $18,224.69; cemetery,
$14,240.47;
water,
$30,294.53; sewer, $62,478.53;
guaranty meter, $18,460.59; utility,
$8,530.43; ftre truck. $282.22; perpetual care (cemetery), $7,228 .52;

cemelery e~dowment, $38,1 ~8.~7;
police )&gt;eliSIOn, $2,303.78; budding
fund, $2,050.50; recreation,
$3,~ 12.89; permissiv~
tax,
$1,900.88; law enforcement,
$1,462.98.
Council approved transferring
.$49.000 from ~e general fund to
correct adefi~t m·lbe s~l fuod.
in olber busmess. counal:
- Met with Bob Titus wbo is
Continued on paga 3

One man wounded in shooting
incident; three suspects arrested
charged after his release from the
By JIM FREEMAN
hospital, said Assistant Meigs
Sentlnet·News Stair
County Prosecuior Chris Tenoglia.
One man .was hospitalized and
The four were involved in a dis·
lbree other men were jailed follow·
ing a shooting incident near Racine · pute witb Jobn Wayne Stobart,
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, said
· Tuesday nigbt
Meigs
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Sbawn Price, age unreported, of
Soulsby
said ~hawn Price start·
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, was
ed
struggling
with Stobart, who
admitted to Holzer Medical Center
was
anned
with
a shotgun. Paul
for treatment of two small-caliber
Price
and
Gray
then
entered !be
gunshot wounds. A hospital
fray,
with
Price
being
suuck and
spokeswomao listed him in stable
-itnconscious,
according
to
knocked
condilion.
Soulsby.
,
·' Jailed were Paul Price, 45, Art
Wben Shawn Price wrested !be
Gray, 34, and Cbarles Cuzzins, 27.
shotgun
from Stobart, Stobart's
all of Racine. The lbree are being
wife
Shirley
ftred two shots, strikcharged witb assault, menacing,
ing
Price,
Soulsby
said.
aggravated trespass. Price and Gray
Paul
Price
and
Sbawn Price
are also charged with disorderly
were
tranSponed
from
lhe scene by
afler warning.
Racine
squads
of
lhe Meigs
the
Sbliwn Price will likely be

Emergency Medical Service.
Paul Price. Art Gray and
Cuzzins entered innocent pleas
April 5 in Meigs County Cowt in
the alleged lbefl of bulldozer parts,
steel sbeet, sleet pipe and a pump
from !be Martin Marietta Plant, for,
merly Dravo, at Apple Grove.
Price and Cuzzins were arrested
later lbe same day in Morgan
County by officials wbo seized a
1979 truck and welder stolen last
monillfrom the Twin City Mac~
Shop. in Pomeroy, and a low-boy
trailer reporled stolen from Patrick ,
McDole on Jan. 20 near Long Bottom.
Shawn Price was also taken into
custody by Morgan County offi.
eials at tbe lime.
Soulsby said !be incidj:nts are
mpstlikely unrelated.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
U.S. trade dertcit, afler beginning
lbe year wilb a record gap, narrowed sharply in February even
though America's deficil witb
Mexico bit an all-time bigb. Ana·
lysts boped lbe overall improvement would provide ~upport for the
embattled dollar.
The deficit in both goods and
~rvices trade declined by 24.6 per. cent to $9.01 billion, as exports
jumped by 2. 7 percent lo the second bigbest level on record wbile
imports fell by 2 percen~ still the
tlllrd bigbest level ever, lhe ·Com·
mercc Department reponed IOday.
Tbe United States sianed the
year with a record deficit of $11.95
billion and even with today's
improvement, the trade gap is running at an 3JUiual rale of $125.8 billion, far above las't year's record of
$106.57 billion.
,
. · Tbls deterioration In the U.S.
trade performance has been a ml\ior
·
URG is one of CMIC's biggesl
"In a nutsbeU. \Ve believe CMIC
By KEVIN PINSON
cause cited for tbe 5ha!P fall in the
ctiems in southern Ohio. About 210 is way oul of line with other insurOVP News Staff
value of the dollar, wbtcb set new .·
A canceled contract between university employees are policy ance carriers in 1be area."
post-World War II lows against
CMIC claims the clitiic is cbargHolzer Clinic and Community holders- 149 of which are on lhe
bolb the Japanese yen and the Gerfamily plan. Another major client ing patients "grossly inflaled" fees.
Mutual Insurance Company . bas of lhe company is Soulhern LOCal
man mark on Tuesday.
In a leuer to its clients, the
employers
looking for ways to
. The problem, analysts bave said,
School District in Meigs County, insurance company argues !hal the
keep their workers from experienc- with about 1001employees on lhe clinic's fees are 44 percent bigber •\
·is tbat after years of a growing
ing higher out-of-pocket expenses.
uade imbalance, foreigners are no
plan.
.
tban slandard rales and among the
"We're in the pucess of looking
longer as willing to bold the flood
Holzer Clinic Administrator Jim highest in Ohio.
·
for another carrier," said Phyllis
of dollars the United Slales bas sent
Blevins
said
CMIC
bas
been
The
clinic
charges
32
percent
Mason, director of human
abroad to pay for imported cars and
resources at the University of Rio "ratcheling down'\ its paymen\s bigber fees than olher doctors wbo
television sets.
' Grande. "We're not going to allow over the past few years . Since practice in rural areas. the letter
Tbe decline in the February
our employees to be balance 1990, CMIC reimbursement levels adds.
deficit was better tban bad been
have dropped froin 92 to 64 percent
"We spenl months in earnest
billed.''
expected and analysts said tbey
oflhedinic's
billing
rate,
be
said.
talks
to avoid Ibis situalion and
In lellers mailed in late March
· hoped the improvement would lend
·
Tbe
result'
is
cost
shifling
believe
!be clinic bas wrongly choand early Ibis month, bolb tbe clinsupport to the dollar, which so far
paticnls
not
with
CMIC
musl
pay
sen
to
take
advanlage of its unique
ic and insurance company report
Ibis year has losL nearly 20 percent
DOUBLE TAKE- Some road signs along Meigs County's
higher
rates
to
make
up
lbe
differposilion
in
the marketplace at the
negotialions over reimbursement
of its value against the Japanese
state highways have motorists seeing doubt"' The Ohio Depart·
ence.
expense
of
the
patients it serves,"
rates for services to CMIC memment of Transportation Is In the process of exchanging faded road
yen and more than 10 percenl
"They're
essentially
grabbing,
a
the
CMIC
letter
says.
bers have failed . ,
against the German mark.
signs with new, more renective signs. Tbe old signs will be
and
forcing
higb
prices
Blevins
said
the
clinic's fees fall
discount
The contract is being dropped
· The dollar toolc a new tumble
removed and recycled Into new signs to be used again, said ODOT
onlo
everyone
else,"
be
said
.
within
state
averages.
but towards
June 1.
Tuesday as traders began .lo worry
spokeswoman Nancy Y oacham.
B
Ievins
added
that
the
insurance
tbe
high
end.
CMIC's members will still be
about growing friction between lhe
. Blevins said lhe area has a bigb
to go to lhe clinic for services, company's actions are profit-drivable
Uniled States and Japan over autos,
en.
·
·
.
number
of government subsidized
but will be billed for tbe full rate.
wbich account for more than balf
"They
are
reducing
the
amount
medical
claims, which results in
Policy holders will then send lhe
of America's huge deficit with the
higher fees for olher patients.
bill to the insurance company, · paid ... and then not ,passing it on
, Japanese.
in
lower
premiums."
"We feellbat we' ve got a social
MolOris!S seeing 1wo or'eac·b
· So why are molOrists seeing
which will reimburse them at its
. The U.S. ·side has threatened 10
Most
insurance
company
reimobligation
to provide .services to
rale of 64 percent.
sign along Meigs County Slale
double?
impose sanctions on more !han $1
bursemcnts
range,from
85
to
100
people
on
Medicaid and Med'i Any remaining balapce will
"One crew sels the post, lhe
higliways aren't necessarily seebillion of Japanese products if
percent
of
the
clinic's
charge
•
.
care,"
he
said.
ing double.
.
otber goes in and install the
have to be paid out-of-pockel by
Japan does nol agree to lower bani· Blevins said.
CMIC representatives were
Rather,
!bey
are
wimessing
an
signs,"
Yoacbam
said.
"They
lh~ insured person .
ers to !be import of American cars
~navailable
for comment.
ongoing project 10 replace signs
come around later and. get the old
and parts.
through .We Ohio Department of
signs."
.
Transportation's District 10
We're .not replacing new
which inciodes Meigs and neigh·
signs, Yoacham said. Even
·
boring counties.
tbougb some of the existing signs
r
Traffli:Cb Inc. of Cleveland Is
seem lobe in good condition,
conducting lbe $444,452.50 proOOOT considers the exchange
fotgery for allegedly falsifying
ject throughout !he 10 county dis·
be a safety upgrade, Yoacbam
COLUMBUS (AP) - A special property, the indictment said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Testi- !ric~ said ODOT spokeswoman
said.
Franklin Coumy grand jury looking
Ferguson promised lo fight the payrolls; and eight counts of
mony stopped and the O.J. Simp- NancyYoacham.
"It bas to do witb lhe sign's
into Thomas E. Ferguson's fund- charge's. .
- .
en$a.s .ing in prohibited politi~al
son !rial went behind closed doors
The project is supposed to be
reflectivity," she said.
raising practices has returned an
'.'I have never taken a dime 3CUV1ties.
The old signs will he recycled
80-count,indii:tmeot against the from the state of Ohio !hat I wasn't
as tbe judge ventured into tbe compl\iled by Aug. 31 and work·
- Joscpb Buck of West Libersequeslered world of Simpson's ers are in Meigs County rigbt
into ·new .signs 10 be used again,
fanner Slall: auditor and four of his entiUed to," be said in a lclepbone ty, Obio, nine counts theft in office;
jurors, quizzing tbem about person- now, she added.
she commented.
lOp officials.
interview Tuesday from his bome lhree counts forgery ; nine counts
'--~------------..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, ·
Feruguson denied the charges.
in Powell, jus! norlh of Columbus. engaging in prohibited political
al Wld..racial rifts.
.
Witb attorneys present but
Ferguson, a Democrat who was "I never solicited any slate activities.
audilodor 20 years before decid· employee cor money."
. Simpson excluded, Judge Lance llo
- Fred Waltz of Wapakoneta,
}.
ing last year not. to seek re-elecilon,
Arraignmem for Ferguson and six counts theft in office; six counts
moved proceedings into his chambers Tuesday and began bearing
faces nine counts of lhefl in office. the other four defendants likely en$ aging in prohibited polilical
13 counts of soliciting classified will be scheduled for early nexl . acuvnres.
·
from jurors one al a lime aboul
employees
for
political
contribumonlh,
said
Jobn
McCaffrey,
assis·
reports of animosily raging wilhin By JJM FREEMAN.
places an additional burden on lhe
- Harvey Takacs of Toledo
their cloislered domain.
Sentinel news-stall
state to produce jobs in soulheasl· lions a;tiJibree countt of falsifying tam special counsel to McLaughlin. one count falsification, lbree coun~
campatgn reports,
The grand jury slarted investi- en~a_ging in proh ibite d political
Wilb only four jurors questioned
.
Local officials apparenlly have em Ohio."
last fall. McLaughlin. a acuvtues. •
Tbe
charges,
,retumed
Tuesday,
ga
ling
and I4 more to go today, the judge mixed feelings over. the impending
"The real answer to we lfare
inclupe
allegations
that
he
con.
Cleveland
auorney and former fed:
suspended , all .. testimony . until demise o(Qhio's geru:ral assistance n:Iorm is Jt:~bsr" he a&lt;!ded· _ '" ·'
Tbe_ indict ments allege the '
,
·cealc11
·or
·
m-isrcjlfc~enrcd
the
·~er~l-prosee
utor.~was-appointed to ·"adlll1mstrators .falsified payrotl~ ~~r'
Thursday. He was also speaking program.
' ·
Liller control Dtreclor Kenny
wilb sheriffs deputies ass1gncd to
I
· 'Gov . George V . Voinovich Wiggins said the program's end reporting of contributions on earn· bead lhc invesligation by tben· . records to reOcct lbal they were
pi!ign reports be ftled wilh lbe Ohio Auorooy General Lee Fisher and performing their duties when lbey
guard !be predominanUy blllek Jury signed legislation Monday abolish· . will bave little effect on his office.
re-appoinled by current Attorney act~ally were engaged in political
who have been accused of ing the program in 90 days, ending
GA recipienls are generally secrelar)' of state.
Patrick
McLaughlin,
the
special
General
Belly Montgomery.
favoritism toward white jurors.
acUv·•Ues on behalf of "Friends of
tbe $100-a-month payments for the required 10 do some work in
appoinled
to
oversee
the
Montgomery·
did not immediate- Ferguson."
prosecutor
·
The inquiry intO lbe jurors' con- estimated 61 ,000 able-bodied exchange for beneftts.
investigation,
said
the
charges
ly
return
a
call
seeking
com·
m
ent
flicts was sparked by comments workers who are on GA.
"Tbe (workers) we get don't
~eft in o~fice . and forgery are
from dismissed juror Jeanetle liar·
According to Meigs County show up anyway," Wiggin s com- slemmed from the solicitation of Tuesday. Her orftce said the inves· fclorues; falstfication and solicita· ris about racial disputes and squab· Departmenl of Human Services
menled. "Today we bad nine work· classifi6d employees in the audi- ligation bas cost $303,391 since it tion of classified employees are
·
.bles over trivial matters.
Director Michael Swisher. 402 ers Scheduled Wid two came out... tor's office, be tween 19~2 and, · bcgWllale in 1993.
mts~e!"eanors : and engaging in
The others indic ted were all proh1b11ed political activities is an
She told lbe judge that jurors people in Meigs County currendy
that's better than normal ," he 1994, for contributions to "Friends
of Ferguson," !be renner audittX' s . regional administrators in Fergu· unclassified o!Tense.
were sepl)l'3ting by race when they receive GA which pumps about added.
son's office. They are:
exercise, when lbey go shopping $37,830 a mDnth inlo the counly.
Current state Auditor Jamea
"We need workers, but can't campaign fund.
- Angelo Guarino of Punta Petro, a Republican, had sought
. The solicitations occurred dural1d when tbey watch movies. Sbe · '"Meigs County's economy is pay them anything," he said. "We
blamed some of tbe problem on not as stroug as other parts of the go tbrougb human service~ and ing working hours and on state Gord~. Fla ., charged wltb eigbt sucb an investigation during a 1990
counts-of theft in office; two counts campaign against FergUSOll.
Contlnuad·on paga 3
stale," Swisher commented. "This · .Continued on page 3 ·
'
.

Insurance contract between
Holzer Clinic, CMIC canceled

Double take

Notb::fees. Oclr.oa-eo:

~rYe~e:r

2 Stctlont, 14 Paget 35 centl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April19, 1995

. By JIM FREEMAN

•

Certified used car buyetS will be on band to give highest trade-in
value lor your automobile. Please bring your title, registration
card, and payment book II applicallle.
110 SAl£S PERMIT1BI10 DEAI.fRS. This clealance Is tor retail cus·
tomers ooly. Prices apply to available units only. lin ordering per·
mltted at tl!esl prices.

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DEALER HAS AN IIIVEifTORY
' OF DVBI311l BRAIID NEW CHEVROlET CONVERSION VANS • .
Selection includes Astro All Wheel Drives and G·20;s, both avail·
~Ia with ralsed 'roofs or low tops. Prices range from $17,388 to
$36,988.

.

Test drilling for new Well.to start next week

(Olen Harrison, retired .for
nearly two decades, Is a a life·
long resident of Meigs County.
For many years he has written
poetry, but more re~ently has
turned his talent to wrtting a~Jout
the changing limes. He and his
wife Louise, reside on Gold

WEDNESDAY
l'OMEROY - Alzbcimers Discase/Relaled Disorders support
group, first in series of four public
education on
Wednesday,
1:30to4

Law ...l&amp;ltt .. tlle411, ......
TltttndaJ,Ilto--,ltlp .. 7k

•

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. Vol. 45, NO. 248

(~)~!
TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 800 BI!AIID IIEW

9-11-14-23-37

.

Building was announced. h was
senled b~ Jess~e Wb11C. .. .
noted tha~ the State Grange w1ll be
. Rea~.mgs tncl~ded· Tn~c;. for
beld at Rio Grande on July 29 w•lh
Spnng by ~axme Dyer, My
lhe stxth degree be gtvcn:
.
. ~~~r B~nnet .. by Margarel IIat;t;
. Reported· ill were Sylvta Mtd·
t~g; . At~.tudcs by Sara.~ull~!l's ,;
kiff, ,Vada Hazelton, Edna Clark,
Smgmg Easter Bonnet. Wid H~
and Bernice Hawk. It was also were Ann Lambert and ~osa!.'e
noted !hal Wallace Bradford is
Story. There was a rcadmg, A
improving following his hospilalSales Person" by Golda Red; and a
ization.
skit "The Fanners Going to Town"
The lilerary ·program was preby Muriel and Wallace Bradford.

tecr Fire Departrnenl cornmitlee, 7
p.m. Tuesday at Darwin !own ball.

Pick 4:
. . 8301
BuckeyeS:

..

----Community calendar
The Community ·Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
pro(it groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. Tbe
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund . raisors of any -lype.
Items are printed as space pe\'ffiiiS
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

693

PageS

Hemlock Grange holds 1nspe~t1ons

Libra

Pick 3:

e3t

.

.

Ohio Lottery

ncs
W ~ow !bat unless some·
g~ucn. c.
Ibis world of
: : ~t~~:rC to go bllck
Y wt
. .
tha~~y.le
~~li~t~ghl
us one tbin&amp;.
10
i; if we ut forth tbe
aff~h!~ ~n :Ill sufvive by using
e
.
h
8 hand
the~·~,g~ :~ll ~~~~ 10 cut ibis end·
. ~ • as 1 hnvc some!Jting in !be
:fcro':~vc for P bedtime snack,
and even if 1 don't eat it at all I
have the refrigcralor or deep freeze
.
.
ready usc it
111 kX~p ~~~~~1 1l:n::rs out 10
!here,
Y r 1 d food usc all tbe
yo::_,r ~~~gsanJI: chavc 0 ~ haild, and
~~u will be hcaiing from me again
oon Keep up spirits and don't be
s
·
who don'tknow
h~~d~~ ~e~~slimes were.
The old timer from the past.
Ole Harrison
PoC::eroy

Ridg~.)

"'

• Ke~ess Remote

. Entry System' Loaded!

Passenger Seat

Monday - Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • ~ pm

•

Ex state au d I•t 0' r In
. d.Ict e.d

i=ung ends

testimony

10

refgUSOn, aideS face 80 COUntS

• • IS dOWnp Iay
. • 0 ff•ICIS
MeiQS
of GA program
l
dem ·se

I

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WedneSday, Aprll19, 1995

·commentar
The Dally Sentinel
I

J~
I

.I"Ul'MMOA.INC.

I
I

ROBERT L WINGETI
l'lllllllltor

!

CIWtLENE HOEFLICH

By Jack Anderson
.. ....
and
Michae/Bmsteln

MARGARET LEHEW

C..nl M•nltr ,

: Letters
.

I

I

Controller

LBIIEkS OF OPINION 11'1 welc&lt;mo. They llbould be leu 11w1 300 .
worda Jon&amp;. AU Jetton . , IUbject Ill .tltina!IDCI ·mu.t be aiped wilb nome,
lddreoa IDCI telepbono alllllber. No llllllaned letten will be publilbed. Lellen
lbnuld be ID lood IIIII, llldnainc iullll, nnt ~tiel.

•

I

to the editor

Responds to remarks

'

• · Editor:
have a deep an~ abiding care for
•
In reference to the attlcle enli·. our community and those children
• tied "School Targets Individual whom they serve, and lhey do so in
, Learning Needs", in the April 6, spite of the lack of funds to which
t 1995 Issue of be Daily Sentinel, I Mr. Douglas made reference. I
feel that several remarks made by know Ibis because they are my
John Douglas beg rebuttal.
family, my, neighbors; and my
First, I question wbeil and bow friends. To Imply that they do not
Mr. Douglas and the staff at his care is, in my judgment, unfair,
school became so well-informed in unkind and uninformed.
·
the area of curriculum and insll'UC·
The intention of my remarks is
tlon. If my understanding of his not to dismiss the relevance of pri·
background .is accurate, Mr. Dou- vale schools. Some of our counglas is not a trained educator or try's greatest schools are private
school administrator, regardless of and parochial schools. I personally
any liUes be may choose to allacb know children who have benefited
to bjs name. He is a minister in the greally from years in religious
' Church of the Nazarene, and all but schools in our community. They
one of the teachers that the article were, however, taught by trained,
refers to are simply members of his certified and capable teachers _who
congregation . As an education were able to give these students the
major at Ohio University, I resent extra attention that they needed.
the fact Ihat a group of church That" attention, however, is not the
members can open a school and only requirement of good education
call themselves teachers and princi- · - or good teaching; These students
plll with no formal training_to speak were taught in a conventional and
of, while I must spend nearly five · structured classroom environment,
, years in intensive training, includ· which education experts have
mg some 60 quaner hours In the proven is intrinsically vital to the
areas that I plan to teach, laborato- success of learners, especially in
ry work in schools, a multicultural the younger ages. For the sake of
field experience and student teach· our children, these schoolS and
, ing, all culminating in the grueling those who staff them should be
National Teachers' Examination.
subject to the same requirements
It is my opinion that teaching that apply to public schools. Sim·
the rudiments of elemenlary and ply stated: good intentions do not
intermediate education require make good teachers.
more than teaChing Sunday school,
If the parents of the students
and I resent the notion that it does involved are pleased with the
not
results of their children's educaSecondly, I wholeheartedly lion, I suppose that the tuition is
tbanlc and congn.tulate the teachers well-spent. Bu~ if local school omIn the Eastern Local School District cials look down at this school, as
, who were not oilly good at what Mr. Douglas claims, it is with good
they did, but who aflowed me to reason. I join those experts in doing
excel in school (and some of whom · so, and I encourage the like minded
Inspired me to enter tbe fjeld of to join me in contacting the Ohio
education). I feel that Mr. Douglas Department of Education and quesand those others who were quoted tioning the continued legality of
-in the articlt: in question do our schools which do not meet the stan·
teachers a great disservice by' dards of public schools. We owe it
•: accusing them of indifference. Our to our conununity and our children.
: l local teachers are not only good at
Brian J. Reed
!; · :what they do, .but in every instance
Reedsville

·!?,Foster politics

'
:~·; By WALTER 'R.
MEARS
,AP Special Correspondent
·
_:: ·
WASHINGTON- While it sounds like a bold political challenge,
.::-· there may be Republican wisbfulthlnl,ing behind Sen. Bob Dole's threat
to block lhe disputed nomination of a new surgeon general without so
:•: much as a Senate vote.
·:·
Ironically, in the awkwanlly handled selection-of Dr. Henry Foster, me
. ,.: White House may have dwnped a problem intp the middle of lhe budding
GOP presidential campaign.
·
•
:
:•
Dole \IOCsn't want a divisive abortion debate at this point, and the Fos·~ tcr nomination is bound to stir one. So he'd like it dropped. 1be White
House is not about to be so accommodating.
.• •
And Foster is caught In between - a symbol, he's said, of a polarizing
;.
issue after a career be describes as dedicated to sparing young people
:"the Choice of having abortions."
The Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee is due to open
'.
.•.
I '. bearings on May 2 -three months after President Clinton chose Foster to
•. be surgeon general, and saw what had seemed a safe choice erupt into
I .
abortioncontrOversy.
•'
The administration didn't expect that. After all, President Bush had
• honored
Foster in 1991 for his program in Nashville, Tenn., to curb teen•
age pregnancies. But Foster had performed abortions in his medical prac~lice and, ill,prepared for controversy, he at first gave incorrect number.;
::
on how many.
.
•
The count finally sellied !II 39, up from one or perhaps a dozen. Actu-:.
ally, to the anti-abortion ab$olutists, the number doesn't make any differ•:
ence: To others, the confusion and ,lnisstatements afuut Foster's medical
history are a way out, grounds to oppose him without making abortion the
only
is9ue.
•
That's Dole's angle now. "He.didn't tell -the truth," Dole said Sunday
I :.
•
on NBC's "Meet the Prc:;s."
Dole, the Senate. majority leader, said the Foster nomination may not
• survive lhe.commiuee's hearings next month. And iflbe COII\IIIittec docs
approve, or at least agree to send the nomination to the floor. Dole said he
isn't certain he would call it up for action. As the leader, he said, he can
decide
what the agenda
be.
·
•••
something
Dole
bad
"
t
alked
about
before.
"If
be doesn't have
That's
••
the votes, I don't see any reason to bring up the nomination," the Kansas
senator said two months ago. .
·
Since
then,
Sen.
Phil
Gnumn
of
Texas,
Dole's
best-financed
rival
for
•
1
,,~_; ,-th~ GOP presi()_enti¥ nomination, has said lie'd.block the Foster nomina-:
lion with a filibuster lflrgoc tlnlle Sena.e-flrooi'C'So DoJels-.-emindcr-that•
be could keep it from gelling there was politically opportune.
!
Butlhis is the talking phase. To actually deny lhe president even a vote
• on his nominee could give the Democrats ammunition .to fire back. Even
:
Dole bad said at one point that a president was enlided to cboOse his nOm:
lnees and bave them considered. Republicans made that case vehemently
•
before they got, and lost, the vote on the nomination of John Tower to be
'
:
secretary of defense in 1989.
" •
Sen. Nancy Kassebawn, Dole's Kansas colleague and campaign ally,
• beads the committee handling lhe Foster nomination. She does not oppose
:
abortion but bas complaiocd th!llthe White House badly mi~andlcd the
Foster nomination. She already bas acted to darnpcn. the abortion debate,
:
by allowing only written statements by activists against and for abortion
: ·rights.
·
:.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Wpalter R. Mears, vice president and columnisi Cor The Associated ress, bas reported on Washington and
ftlltlonal politics for more tban·JO years.

I· :•:
:z:

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WASHINGTON - During the Dies, wbldt buy the Iloo' s 11tare of
Cold War, conservatives in Iran's oil. 1be profits from thCongress urged restricted trade aales . , fueling Iran's rapid mill·
with the Soviet Union, warning that 1ary expansion.
we were selling Russia the rope
with which they would eventually
hang us.
A similar principle could apply
to America· s current trade with
Iran, which Sen. Alfonse D' Amato,
R-N.Y., bas called "subsidizing
Altliougb the transactions' are
Iranian terrorism .by purchasing
their oil."
·
'
technically legal, they violate lhe
The facts about !ran are clear: It sPirit of lhe 1nde embargo against
supports terrorism, opposes the Iran. American oil companies have
United States at every tum and bas been allowed to buy Iranian oil s0
been trying for more than a decade long as it's sold outside lhe United
to build .a nuclear weapon. Iranian States and not brought home. The
officials are trying to buy, beg or purchases are simply routed
steal any nuclear mai.erialthey can through subsidiaries that are local·
get their bands on.
ed in other COWltries.
Ironically,. much of the blame
Big oil used this loophole to
for Iran's renewed belligerence lies earn the America the dubious dis·
squarely with the United States. tinction of being the largest purThese hostile acljvilies are chaser of Iranian oil last year. U.S.
bankrolled by Ameridm oil compa- oil companies bought more than $4

,.,.ti'OJ', Ohio

.

.

~

•

billloo of peuoleum from Iran about one·founb of its output.
President Clintat bas received a
lot of heal for going ahead with his
upcOming trip to Russia - tri commemorate the 50th anniversary of
V ·E Day - even though Russia
bas refu~ to cancel its plans to
sell $1 billion worth of nuclear
reactors to Teheran.
. But Clinton deserves credit for
fmally standing up to American oil
companies. With prodding .from
D' Amato, Clinton recently blocked
a multi-billion dollar deal by
American oil giant Coooco to build
two new oil platforms in Iran.
One highly classified CIA report
suggests that Iranian P_resident
Hashemi .Rafsanjani may have
already acquired two nuclear warbeads from a former Soviet republic in central Asia - though be still
may not have a delivery system foc
them.
It's reckless for the United

Tbunday, AprO 28
Accu·W •JerA
MICH.

Slates to be providing Iran with ·
bard c..-rency, since it's being used
to pay for nuclear weapoos·that oile
day may be turned against us. The
United States should have learned a
lesson from Its experience with
Iraq. For years American officials
winked at Saudi sales of U.S. mili· tary equipment to Saddam Hussein
- and at direct contributions of
U.S. intelligence repms to him because they were being used to ·
harass the unfriendly regime in

INO.

•

Iran.

Sara Eckel

cent.

m:··

s

leagues, talking about India.
It was, said one insider, "a little
like introducing Vasser Arafat as
the Prime Minister of Israel:"

cent.

Joseph Spear
These were. not the first occa·
sions, I sadly report, that Helms has
acted as if be just dropped in from
a parallel qniverse. Sources have
described several other episodes.
When British Prime Minister
John Major recently visited the
United Stat~,fo~ example, be paid
a courtesy vtSII to Capitol Hill and
made the obligatory stop at Helms'
office. Pan of the dialogue that
ensued, according 10 , a memo
stamped EYES ONLy lEA T,
BURN .OR FLUSH IF CAUGHT
wm-1 TillS, went as follows:
"Y'all enjoying y'all's self in
Washington, Mr. Major?"
•'Q · Ratb
b'll b
.
nice, r:~~y." er c 1 y, ut qmte
''Tell me, y'all get passed over
Or something?"
" I'm sorry. I didn't quite get
thai."
"Rank. I'm talking 'bout your
ranjc . Y' all been a major since
Moses was a boy. Y'all ever gonna
make colonel?"
1, kn_pw it sounds strange, ~ut
that s the story my sources tell. On

•

a.m. '

40s.

Highs in the 60s.
Acrois tile nation
Sunday... A chance of sbow,ets.l
Snow and rain was falling .in the
Lows 35 to 45. Highs 55 to 65.
West this morning as an· unseason·
ably cold storm swept tllrougb the
area.

--Area · Death~·Rose Carr

Stocks

·---------32

Am
Power
AkzoEle
•.,....
.. __________.ss 314

-Rose Ellen Douglas Carr, 61, of Coolville, died Tuesday, April 18,
1995, at Ohio State University Hospital in Columbus.
,
.
Born Oct. 18, 1933, in Shade, the daughter of RE. Douglas of Alfred
al)d the late Mildred Peny Douglas, she was a retired supervisor for the
Bureau of Public Debt. She was a distr;ict officer for the VFW District1;l,
a 25-year advisor for lhe 4-.H Club, a member of the Orange Christian
Church, the, Women's Auxiliary VFW Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains and
the Women's American Legion Post 128 in Middleport.
·
She is survived by her father; her husband, Cbarle ~ -"Red" Carr of
Coolville; daughters, Teresa Courtoey of Williamstown, W .Va., and
Sonya Keirns of COolville; daughter and son-in-law, Marcia and Michael
,Guess of Tuppers Plains; son and daughter-in-law, C. Douglas and Madeline.Carr of Pomeroy; foster son and wife; Donald arid Jennifer Jackson of
Reedsville; 13 grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She W;jS preceded in death by her daughter, Kimberly K. Carr; broth.
ers, Gerald "Hank" and Alton "Wimp" Douglas.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at the White-Blower Funeral
_Home in Coolville, with the Rev. Charles Domigan officiating. Burial will
follow in the Tuppers Plains Christian C::emetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home 6-9 p.m. Wednesday and 2-9 p.m.
Thursday at the funeral home. Contributions may be made to the
Women's Auxiliary VFW Post9053 and the Women's American Legion
· flost 128 in Middleport. ·
'
'
.

selves don't realiz_e it. When a
development worker in India asked
14-year-old Rohini if she worked,
the girl said no . "Don't you do
anything all day?'' the worker
asked.
''Of course I do,'' said the
shocked girl, who proceeded to
give a . long litany of her day's
chores.
. · A young Kenyan, on the other
. hand, knows ·she is missing a lot by
being a girl: "Among my people it
is boys who are supposed. to take
care of goats, but my brothers are
in school. The goats can't be left to
just run around, can they? So I
have to stay home and look after
them, and take care ,of the Mme. do
the housewodc, fetch the water and
firewood, and mind my young
brothers ,and sisters. How I wish 1
could go to schooL"
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Associati!)n.
·•
Send comments to the author
in care or this newspaper or send
her
e-mail
at
saraeum
1/46!1aol.com.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

.
.
i
a~other oc~as~on, a delegatiOn of of sound mind. "I want to know,"
T1beta!' d1~s1dents dropp~d by Helms fumed, "who keeps referHelms · pff1ce and, accordmg a ring to this creep as Saddam who's
. .A'paper -., marked MADE FROM sane?"
Finally, · there is this story,
RECYCLED SECRET MEMOS,
the~ ensued this exchange,: , · . buried until now in secret flies to
For lhe life of me, I cant fig- keep you, the taxpayers, from
ure why y'all's leader is named knowing the truth about a man
afll!r a can tbat's.~auled around by whose every word gives pause to
lhc entire world:
•
beasts of burden .
Senator
Helms
was
speaking
"So SO'f)l. ~s honorable senwith a diplomat from Belarus, for·
ator refer to Dalai Lama?"
·~ob, ub, never mind. !thought merly known as Belorussia. "I'm
curious," said Helms. "Why don't
it was the Llama Dolly."
y'all ring it? Does it have a &lt;;rack in'
I do not exaggerate, dear reader,
·
i~ like ours?"
' and it gelS worse.
,
"Pardon?" said the Belarus
There was the lime Helms asked
official.
a Turkish ofncial why they named
"The bell of Russia, " said
the country after a s(upid bird .
Helms.
"Do y'all ever ring it?"
Then there was the lime be asked a
Footnote: With the excep!io!J. of ___ _
Sooe Department c!&lt;pert on Chile
the Kiril long II and Bbutto inci· ·
why anyone .would IW!le a country
dents, this column is the product of
after a porndge of kidney beans
,my perverted imagination. Several
and-ground ~f.
I wJSh I did not have to tell you editors and friends , however, intial·
these things, but it is my duty . ly thought the events I described •
actually occurred. fs that a COlD ·
Once Helms asked a Chinese diplo·
mat whether Paramount Leader menton me? Or is it a comment on
Jesse Helms?
n.ng
Xiaoping was "•ware that h1's
~
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
name in English sounded like a
writer
for Newspaper Enterprise
cow pattie. Another time - my
Association.
source swears the senaior was seri(For Information on bow to
ous about Ibis- Helms demanded
communicate
elettronlally with
to know the !d~n~~ of the "Slate
this
columnist
and others, con·
Dep~ent 1d~~~ who declared
tact
America
Online
by caiUng 1·
the diCtator of Eye· Rack " to be
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

, .

. Thursday ...Showers and, thunderstorms likely. High in the mid·
dle 70s. Chance of rain is 70 per-

Ashland 011--------.34 3/4
AT&amp;T

-··-----·-------..50

Bank On•·-----------.30 V4
Bob Enns--------.20 111
Champion Ind. --~----.21111
Charming Shop---------.5 111
City Holdin&amp;-----.,.----:16
Federal MOKul.--------·17.JIB
Goodyear T"&amp;R
111
K-marl-------------·14 3/4
Landi End - - - - - - - 1 6 SIB
Limited Int-----------21
Multimedia Inc.
--.38 1/8
People's · - -..- -.. - .....-.22 til

--------.37

Ohio VaUey----------..44

One Valley "'---------.29 1/4
Rockwell ----------A11/4
RobbinS &amp; Myera·-------..23
Royal Duteh------ ----121
Sboney'slnc. ·---..--.. --.11.718
Star
43
Wendy Int'L -----------171/8
Worthington 1nd·-------.1!15IB

Bank.---------..
_._.._

.Stock reports art lbe 10:30 a.m.
quotu provided by Advut o
Galllpolbi.

Directions to ground breaking
· The Belleville Hydroelectric" Project will bold its ground·
breaking ceremonleo at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Belleville,
W.Va., side of the dam.
The directions to the site are:
Cross the Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood.
Go· north on West VIrginia Route 68 about 12 miles. The
BelleviUe Dam will be visible on the left. ,
Pass a ball shop.
.
Turn left off tbe highway at signs stating "Bellevllle Locks
and Dam''.
,
.
Drive toward the river and pass a row or houses on the left.
The power company' bas purchased about 30 acres of land
near the dam. The site will have a series of trailers Installed
near it.

Meigs announcements
.

'

J ess_e 's gaffes ma
· · ke you wonde·
· '·
r
So thai you can fully appreciate
the significance of the exclusive
investigative story 1 am about to
impan, 1 will first review two inci. dents thai occurred this year in the
U.S. Sena~.
,
On Tuesday, Jan. 24, Sen. Jesse
Helms, R·N .C., chairman of the '
Foreign Relations Committee conducted a hearing on a proposed ·
agreement between the United
States and North Korea. While
reading from a staff-prepared documen~ Helms referred to the reclusive leader of that communist
nation as "Kim long Two"
No, no, the senator's ~taf( later
iold him, the man's name· is Kim
long 11. As il) ill, as in sick. In a
document the senator would read
·from at the-next day's bearings, the
staff spelled it out for him: "Kim
Jong
Helms, arguably the second or third most important person
in America on matters of foreign
poUcy, dutifully read the document
came to the Kim notation and
referred to the North Korean dicta·
tor as "Kini Jong Third."
Th urs day, Apn·1 6 . en. 'e
'I 1ms
met with Pakistani Prime Minister
Benazir Bbutto, th en took her to
the floor of the Senate and introduced her as • ' the distinguished .
prime minister of India." He bad
just spent " a delightful hour-and-ahalf' with Bhutto, be told his col-

,,,,,

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight ... Parlly
cloudy
early... Tben becoming cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunder·
storms afler midnight. Low ·in the
upper 40s. Chance of rain is 40 per-

Work day ·is yearlong for some girls
The aii'ocities committed against
On Take Our Daughters to OurDaugbterstoWorkDay.
children in the commercial sector Work Day, American girls will be dren' s Fund,
have been widely documented. In visiting the nation's law firms,
They, are also much less likely
China, the Associated Press found insurance companies, newspapers, to go to school. Worldwide two·
factories where 10-year-old girls.
thirds of the children who ~ not
worked I 5 hours a day, slept three
in school are girls. Parents keep
to a bed io company dormitories,
their daughters out of school either
and were paid $10 a month. In
relail outlets and factories as their because they need them to work, or
Malaysia, American companies parents introduce them to the world because it, simply docs not seem
paid girls 45 cents an hour. for . of work. Some will participate in ·
unskilled labor in lhe semiconduc- planocd activities, such as the girls worthwhile to educate girls, who
have little chance of career
tor industry, reports the Los Angei
who create their own newspaper at advancement anyway.
les Times. And in India, girls in The New .Vode Times. Others will
"Why should I serid my girl to
Sivakasi matchbox factories develbe showered with an array of . school?" a Kenyan mother asked
oped bladder infections, most like- TODTWD paraphernalia - bats, researcher Sheila Parvyn Wamahiu.
ly due to lhe fact that their supervi· buttons, T -shirts, mugs. But for ''Wbo, will lben look after my
sors forced them to sit on the floor
most of these girls, April 27 will" babies, fetch water, clean, cook for
for long periods of lime without simply be a fun day off from us when r~o to sell my vegetables?
bathroom breaks, say researchers school, where lhey get to dress up, Who is gomg to help me dig, weed
Gary Darker and Felicia Knaul.
meet their parents' co-wodcefs, and the farm, harvest the fields?"
In total, me International Labour possibly learn. something about
· There's nothing wrong with kids
Organization estimates that what they want (or don't want) to helping out at horne and even earnbetween I 00 million and 200 mil- do with their lives.
ing extra income that would help
lion children - boys as well as
The Ms. Foundation, creator of . the family survive. But there is a
girls - under the age of 15 are
the event, says that TODTWD is line at which a child's tasks
· .going global, with countries such become exploilive labor. In 1986,
working worldwide.
I'm stressing girls here because as Singapore and South Mrica par- UNICEF identifie!l the conditions
their work docs not end when (and ticipating in the three-year-old boli- under which a child's labor was
if) lhc_y come borne. Girls also bear Ciay. That's nice, but the concept unacceptable. They included fullthe responsibility of housekeeping,
must seem strange in a lot of devel· lime work at too early an age, inadmaking for a much longer day. In oping nations, where many girls equate pay, too much responsibility
Mrica and Asia, for example, girls spend their days weaving textiles, and work that hampers education.
work seven more hours per day selling cashews, picking rags, liindCertainly much of the domestic
lhan lheir brolhers,- according to ing books and caring for children. work that girls do falls into Ibis cat·
UNICEF. lhe United Nations Cbil- For these girls, every day is Take cgory, though often the girls them-

By-ne Aaodlttecl Prua
0~ got a brief alimpse of
the sun today before the rewrn of
stormy weather.
Forecasters said the clouds
would
start to tbickeo over the
I~Col~u-m~bus-,!~w~l
Buckeye State tonight and more
sbowes and thunderstorms will
· rejlim on Thursday.
Storms on Tuesday night and
early today, accompanied by gust·
big winds, deposited more than half
and inch If rain oo S01De areas.
Lows tonight will range from
the upper 30s in the north to the
upper 40s in the south, the National
Weather Service said.
An abundance of clouds will
cover the state Thursday. Showers
and thunderstorms are likely over
the west with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the east.
Highs wiU range from the mid-50s
northwest to the mid-70s far south.
More rain is forecast for Friday.
Exteodedforec:ut
The record-high temperature for
·
Friday ... A chance of showers this date at the Colwnbus weather
and thunderstorms. Lows 45 to-55 .
station was 86 degrees in 1941
Highslower60stolower70s.
while the record low was. 21 in
. ·Saturday... A cbance of showers 1953. Sunset tonight will be at8:13
and thunderstorms. Lows in the . p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:47

,,,,,

But that short-sighted lar¥ess
backfired when the Bush admmlstralion realized- after Hussein's
invasion of Kuwait- that Saddam
was just as bad as the Iraniluls.
Our own count shows that at
least 265 innocent Americans have.
· been butchered by the fanatical Iranian leadership since 1980. They
have never apologized for this
bloodlelting, and Friday prayers
routinely include thll chant, "Death
to America!"
·
DEBT WATCH - Most Amer·
icans don 'I mind paying their fair
share of taxes each April 15. \that
really gnaws at them is the fact ,that
their bard-earned tax dollars pay
for more government spend·l ng
instead of chipping away at thl'$5
trillion federal debt
·
Few people know that tb re
actually is a federal slatute that
enables taxpayers to bypass the ·
federal government and contri~te
money dinictly to retiring be
national debt. Thanks to Pu ic
Law 87-58- which was signed by
President Kennedy in 1961 - the
money goes straight lo the Treasury and can nevet be touched by
the big spenders on Capitol Hill.
But the law is so obscure that
only $12 tnillion was collecled
from it last year. So a bipartisan
coalition of House members has
introduced a bill that would put a
box on federal tax forms - known
as "The Check-Off for Our Children" - enabling citizens to contribute part of their tax refund
directly to the debt 'fbe bill was
sparked by Lucille McConnell, a
Washington lax lawyer who bas
started a non-profit organization
called The FWld to End the Deficit
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, In&lt;.
1

Southern sets concerts .
Southern Junior and Senior
High School choirs and bands will
bold a spring concert at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at lhe high schooL

Rev. Greg Gardner, Lancaste r,
speaker. Begins 7:30p.m.' April 24
through April 30 at 9:30 a .m. and
7:30- p.m. with Unity Singers to
cloic out services.

Weekend services announced
Weekend services will he held
at the Danville Church of Chris~ 7
p.m. and Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W, Va.
will be lhe speaker.

Revival services
The Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
State Route 143 will have revival
services, April 24· 30 , 7 p.m. each
evening . .The Rev. Kenneth Hoope,r
is the evangelist. Pastor is me Rev .
Victor Roush.
Canceled
A dinner at the VFW Post 9053,
Tuppers. Plains, scheduled for
Thursday night bas been cancelled.

Revival slated
Revival services will he held at
the Mt. Hermon U.B. Church in the
Texas Community of Pomeroy.

The Daily Sentinel

-

(USPS 213-960)

'Pubhshc:d every af1crn oon, Mondlly lhrough

Fr.idoy. I I I Cou rl St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by lhe
Oh•o Valley Publl§hins Company/Multimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio . 45769, Ph. 99 2·'2 1.56.

Second claM postngc paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press, and the: Ohio
Newspaper Association.
POS't_MASTER: Send address corMCtions

10

The 11nlly Sentinel. I ll Court S1 ., Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769

SVBSCRIPTION RATES
Ry Carrier or Motor Routt:
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.No •u bscr1 ption by mall permit1ed in areus

where home clUTier servi~

1s

available.

MAIL SUBSCRII'TIONS
lntkle Melp Counly
I JWcelc$ .................................. $2392
26 Weeks............,,.,, ......................,.... .. .$41 06
S2 Weeks ...................................... ,, .... S92.36
JIIIU Outtlde Melp County

13 w.cu..............

............. .......... .. Stl.61
26 Wecb ....................................... ..... $49,66
52 w.................................................... S96.l0

I

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Stormy
weather
returning
to Ohio

OHIO Weather

U.S. oil companies finance Iranian terror

111 Coart Btnet

I

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Wednesday, Aprll19, 1995

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Open Door s.S.Ion
Rep. John Carey will bold an
- open door session at the Meigs
County Court Rouse Friday from 2
to3 p.m.

Test
•••
Continued

from page 1
developing a piece of land along
Hiland Road to sell for lots. Titus
indicated the Leading Creek Conservancy District has installed a
water line for the area and thanked
council along with the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
and Ohio Power for their assis·
tance. Titus said three of the four
lots have already been sold.
- Scheduled a special council
meeting for Monday to consider
adopting an extension ·or Union
Avenue.
- Accepted bids from people
wishing to purchase old village
vehiCles; and ...
- OK's holding a canoe rally
on June 10 on the parking lot
Present were Blaettnar, Hysell
and councilmen Scott Dillon, Bill
Hap10ns'tall, Jobn Musser, William
Young, Larry Webrung and Geocge
Wright
·
•

I

DONATE 111REARMS -The Meigs Coun- .
ty HIStorical Society received two Springfield
rilla or tile type u.oed durbig the later half of the
1!lib cent11ry and • muzzle loading platoI from
M&lt;IRS County Sheriff James M. Soulsby and

Fung •..
I

Continued from page1
sheriffs deputies who handle the

24-bour job of keeping jurors insulated from publicity and outside .
influences.
· a. ·.~~
Harris also complained that
·jurors were bemg treated as if they
were prisoners and deputies were
fueling discord among them. The
Sheriffs DeparWient has refused to
comment
Ito rejected Simpson's request
to allend the jury sessiO!IS in the
judge's cllambers. The judge indi·
cated the penal code didn't require "
it, and said the situation is so
unusual there is lillie case law to
guide him.
Defense attorney Johnnie
Cochran Jr. said Fung's gesture
showed that his grilling by defense
attorney Barry Scheck wasn't personal.
"It's never personal. We're just
GUN MONEY ·- The Melp County Board of Cornnti5sloners
doing our jo&amp; and I think he
Tuesday banded over the money It received from the sale of 1,416
understood that. That was .it and I
guns Codeitecl to tbe county· by Robert D. Fife, Middleport. Cotn·
was glad to shake his band,"
m!Jslon vice-president Janel Howard presents treasurer Howard
Cochran said outside&lt;court.
Frank a $90,000 check from SteYen Wholesale Inc. of Ashland, Ky.
Expected to take the stand
Tburs!lay is .Fung's assistant,
Andrea Mazzola, who will face tough cross-examination about her
collection of blood samples and
other key evidence at the crime
scene and at Simpson's estate.
Sc~eck tried to paint FWlg as a
conspirator in a plot to frame Simpson for the murders of his ex-wife
and her friend, focusing on the han·
dling of a vial of Simpson's blood.
The blood evidence is crucial
for prosecutors, who say sophisticated genetic tesis show that Simpson's blood was found leading
ftom the crime scene, on matching
gloves found at the crime scene and
Simpson's estate, in his Ford Bron·
co, and in other incriminatin g
places.

Local briefs---.
'

•

Litter control group places benches
:rblrteen benches made of recycled milk jugs have been placed at
schools and viUages across the county by the Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention program, said Kelmy Wiggins, litter
control directQr.
The benches are impermeable to in sects, heat, cold, sun and
never need to be painted, Wiggins said.
· The benches were donated by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Recycling and Litter Prevention and the Gal·
lia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton 'Solid Waste District Wiggins said.

Eastern sets registration ·
. Eastern Local School District will hold its kindergarten registra·
tion soon, Superintendent Ron Minard said.
On April 27, parcniS may register their children at Chester Elc, rnentary. On May 12, parents may sign up at Tuppers Plains Elementary.
Parents must bring a birth ~rtific-dte and shot records, Minard
said. Contact the school secretary to set a reservation.

Meigs

officials.:~ntlnuad from page 1

they try to get us wodcers, but tJiey·
don't (report for work)."
Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaet·
mar said the elimination of GA will
not affect the village in a major
way since regular village employ·
ees bear most of the village's workload.
However, Blaeunar's limited
experience with GA workers bas
been more positive than Wiggins' .
"We've had some very good GA
workers ... but oobody's perfect"
"We usually pair them up with
experienced workers," be added.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
his office uses at least one GA
worker.
· ·"I don't know what effect it will

Proiecutor John R. Lentes T•eaday monalng;
Tho ftrear011 were among the 1,416 forfeitecl ~
the county by Robert D. Fife, Middleport, after.
o111eers confiscated tile guns from •11 home ·-business In July, 1!193.
·

have on that worker," he comment·
ed.
Soulsby said his experience with
GA workers, and with other wodcers supplied from lhe department of
hurnafi services, bas been "real
good."
However, Soulsby said elimination of the program could possibly
have other negative consequences
such as an increase in property
.
·
crimes.
This will take money away from
the people that have been getting it,
he said. They' II have to find some
way to mal&lt;;e up the difference.
"It could lead to. more thefl ~
people who bad been getting
(GA)," be speculated.

.

Met"gs EMS logs.18
" .calls'

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
18 calls for assistance including
five transfer calls. Units responding
included:
.
MIDDLEPORT
2:17 a.m ., North Second
Avenue, Terry Hayes, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
9:29 a.m., Page Street, Margaret
Johnson, VMH;
10:30 p.m., Stonewood Apartments, Mary Dunt, VMH.
POMEROY
.
9:40 a.m., Locust Street, Rea
Roush, VMH;
.
.
7:39p.m., Mulberry Avenue ,
Genevieve Demoskey, treated at

tbescene;

··

9:45 p.m., Pomeroy Fire Station,

Ira Vancooney, VMR

r--

RACINE
11 :09 p.m. , Apple Grove-Dor·

cas Road, Paul Price, VMH, Shawn
Price. Holzer Medical-Center (see ,
related story).
RUTLAND
12:10 a.m., squad and volunte.;r
fire department to Dexter Road,
motor-vehicle accident, William
George and Hugh James Hawkey,
VMH;
.
I :24 a.m ., Peach Fork Road ,
James Hess, HMC;
12 :57 p·.m .. state Route 143 ,
Kenneth Bonin, VMH;
3:57 p.m., Side Hill Road,
Debra Faw, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:15 p_.m .. Sanford-Davis ROad,
Rebecca Canterbury, tieated at the
scene.
TUPPERS-PLAINS
11 :47 p.m., Locust Grove. Road,
Joseph Bowers, Sl Joseph's Hospi·
taL

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
· Tuesday admissions- none.
Tuesday discharges - Darrell
Bralley, MiddlePQn; Nell Graves,
Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges April 18 - Kenneth Brewer1 Carol Kessel, Cody
Wimer, Shcllie Adkins .
(Published with permission)

Correction
The next visit of the American
Red Cross bloodmobile at the
Meigs·County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy will be on June 7, 1
10 6 p.m., instead of May 5 as was
earlier announced.

·IF YOU EXPERIENCE:
-feelings of discontent
-a lack of accomplishment
-chronic disappointment in love, work or life tn
general
-m a general sense of meaninglessness of malaise
consider the following ...
Ps'y chotherapy is not simply a treatment , for
p ~ ychiatric problems. Psychotherapy is also about
personal growth, self-awareness, and an individual's development and fulfillment.
The process of psychotherapy, an honest and
thorough exploration of your 1tfe, could hold the
~ey to solving matters. in life which bother you
most.
· To 'learn om~ about.this prQ~;CSS oLchange_JU]{lgrowth cont......._l
Dr. Richard Boone of the Holzer Clinic Psychology Sqvice.
Dr. Boone would be glad to answer your questions or to arrange
a consultation.
".

HOLZER CLINIC
Department of Psychology

446-5379
Holllel'

•

Clinic, 90 Jacbon
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

Pike,

..

�--

/

-

1

•

•
•

·.

Sports
On the spring training scene,

.

.

·

·

·

Mariners keep trio; Reds.see Santiago come and Morris go
.

tcaiDJDafes,

pitchers In the game today,"
Tbe Mariners' c;urrcnr player
Mariners cbalnnan John Ellis said.
payroll
Is about $33 millioa, al11108t
"ln addition. we have no current
plans to mate otber trades unless $4 million over budJICI. Wilb TuesVie believe
can sueD&amp;tben our day nlsbt' s announcement, the
club and Improve our chances or owners essentially ag~ to bite
wlnnins iD 1995 aad beyood."
. the bullet this year an.d leave lbe
.
Jobnson, the biabest·prlced team lntatl
Meanwbile, tbe day after lignMariner with a $4 million salary,
seemed particularly upset by all tbe In&amp; veteran catcher BeniiO Santiadislrlll:tioas. ·On Monday, be critl· go, lbe Cincinnati Reds learned be
clzed seneral111anaser Woody will never teceive a pitch from Jack
Woodwanl's bandllnf. of tbe situa- Morris.
Morris, an 18-year veteran,
tion and dcclated be 'would prefer
· to be traded" If it weren't for bls announced bis retirement Tuesday

we

.
and left the Red&amp;. At almo&amp;t the piu:bed aad 2,478 strlteonts. Ill bis
same time, SantlaJO, one of lbe only start this sprina, Morris
best defenalve' catchers In either walked lbrce in two innings and
lell8ue, arrived It Reds camp for . went deep iD tbe COUnt to vittually
bls fli'Sl day wilb bis new team.
every bauer.
.
"I baven' t picked up the ball
Oone from tbe game ia a 3!1year-old right-bander wbo belped Ibis S~D, and throWD it 90 mpb,'' .
lbree teams wiD World Series titles be,wd • Even tbougb I didn't fa
- Deuoit in 1!184, Minnesota in a wbile last spring, eilbcr,I realiwi
1!1!11 and Toron10 in 1!J!J2.1n 1!1!11, there was once a day wbere I got
Moais pitched 10 shutout inniDp out or bed and 1 could throw it !JO
to beat Atlanta 1~ in tbe sevenlb mpb aad It never burt. And I can't
play tbe same without ·know ins iD
game of tbe Series.
His career record was 254-186 my heart !bat tbe bitter's got no
wilb a 3.90 ERA, 3,824 213 inninss cbance."
Cincinnati's loss of Morris was
blunted somewhat by lbe arrival of
Santiago, a catcher who attended .
staff and I'm aolns to be patient tbe union-sponsored free agent
with lbcm. I just bope tbey don't . camp rather than accept an offer
get discouraged; because in the ($197,000) from Boston worlb less
futuretbeex~ncewUlpayoff.
!ban be once paid for a car - a red
/"We dido t give up," be added. 1!1!11 Lamborgbini Diablo.
"I just don't know why we can't
Santiago, who made $3.8 milcome out and play like we do late lion with lbe Florida Marlins last
in tbe games."
.
season, got a $550,o00 base salary
Eastern will host Meigs today.
with $600,000 in appearance incenlnnlnt!: tot.b
tives from Cincinnati. ·
Eastern: 1~1-5 =7·10-4
"I just can't walt to get behind
Waterford: 111·702-x "'12-7-1
WP- McLaughin
LP- Durst.

Waterford boys record 12-7 victory over Eastern
:: Host Waterford defelled Eastern
:12-7 Tuesday night in non-league
·liaseball action at Waterford.
:- Eastern (3-S) pounded out 12
:bits, but made four costly errors
•lind save up IS walks. FresbiDllll
.: ~tevie Durst pitched well but bad
:good control problems. Durst
·walked nine and struck· out five
l!altcrs in 4 113 Innings, while Don
Gobeen came In to walk six and
$trike out one. .
McLaugbln got lbe win with,
·Stollar picking up lbe save with

.

wodi.

one inning.of
They two comblncd to Sttlke out four and walked

Smilb with three singles, Brian
Bowen two singles and singles
each by Dilrst, Man Bowen, Ryan
Buckley, Jeremy Kebl and Don

five.

Eastern sustained a major loss
wben first baseman pitcher Chris
Bailey was los.t in tbe second
inning after spraining an ankle.
Bailey was to be a key factor in
pitching over Eastern's eight-game,
I 0-day schedule in the next two
weeks. Cliff Stephens came in to
n:place Bailey.
Eastern bitters were Michael

Goheea.

· Waterford hitters were Futell,
McLaugbin, Crock, Fauss and
Young all wilb sinsles. Smilb bad a
double and single.
Eastern coac)l Dan Tbonmas
said, "We started off well, took tbe
lead, !ben we went dead. Walks
really killed us. We've got a young
·

.

1-Quobec .......... 2ll0 4

l·l'illlb..at&gt; ...... Z7 12
B..... .............. 20 16
llartf...t ............ ll ll
Buffalo .............. l7 17
MolllrOIII ........... 16 20
ClaaWI ............ ,. 4)0

EASTERN CONFERENCE
A,._lellhW• .

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r.t.

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ay-Orludo ........... .56
1-New York...........l2
Botloo ................... 3,
MJunL ..................Jl
New Jene.y ............21
Ptlil.:lelphla ...........l3
WllhiO&amp;IOO .......... .19

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J)al1. ...... ............... 36 ~3
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y-c:lincbed c:oufereace titJe
x·clinciWld playoff betth

T~~tq~a Bay

Otherl rec:elwlna t:Z or more point11
ll (Uo)-MiUord Or. Fairbllllks, W...TERFORDI6.

IIi

121
138
ISS ,
139
153

Transactions
Baseball
American l.c_,u_e
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Ag:reed to
ternw with Manny Aleundet, ·Infielder;
NmaDdo Beaite&amp;. pitcher, Cesar Devarez,
c.tcber; aDd CUrtil Ooodwlo, outfielder,
on ooe-yetr conlractl. l.o~ltcd ADdy Van
Slyb, outfielder, to 1pring: trainina • a
nOD·fOil• player.
BOSTON RED SOX: Agree&lt;lto ler~m
with ZaDe Smith, pUthet, on a Of!Coytll'
coatrw;t.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Seat Rob
Doer. ouUlelder, IDd Rene OoDZales, IDfielder, to their mioor·league camp for reUiilnmeDt. Seat JWio Valera, Keo Patter·
lOB, Bill Sima1 , Jeff Schmidt. Shad
Willian-., Mart Ratekio, an.d Phil Lefl·
wlcb, pltchert: Luit Rann, Infielder to
their minor-Jeaaue camp for extended
sprln&amp; tninina. Seat,.S.&amp;.t¥e Hosey, out fielder. Chria Twa• and lOr&amp;e Fabregu,
C&amp;Jchen; a.ad Matquis Rl\ey•.olllfielder,lo
Vancouver or the PJ;ciflc Coyt Leaeue.
Asroed to ttmll w ith EduardO Perez, In·
fielder.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Apeed 10
lerma with Wayoe Kirby, outfielder, on a
two -year contract and Toa)' Mitchell,
Jeromy Burnitz u.d Rubel!. Amaro. outfieldeR; Alan Embree and Julian Tavarez,
pltchcn; Tim Coato, ioficlder; aDd Eloar
Diaz, catcher, oa ooe-year oootrw~ll .
NEW YORK YANXEES: Sent Jalal
Leach, outfielder, aod Aady Crog:ban,
pitcher, to Columbw: o( lhe lntcmatioaal
Leaaue. Sent Man Luke. Ruben Rivera,
IUid Juon' Robertloo, outfielden, to Norwich or the Eulera Leaaue.
OAXL\ND ATIILEnCS: Seat Scott
Baker, Heath Hayacs, MiJuel limenet,
Don Wenaert. Steve Wojeaechow'kl and
Steve Phoeaia. pitchers: Erole Youag 1
outfielder, 111d lu.y Molioa, catcher, to
Edmonton of Pacific Cout League. Sent
Ramon Fermia and Stacy Hollin&amp;, pitch·
en, aod Tony Batista, inrielder, to
Hunllville or \he Sou !hero League.
SEAITLE MARINERS :-Senl Scott
Davilpn and Tim Harikbla, pitchen, Alquimedtl Pozo, lnCielder, and Chrh
Widaer. catcher, to Tacoma o( th~ Pacific
Cout Leap. Sent Detek LQwe, pitcher,
ud Dai Relaford, infielder, to Port City
of the Southern Lea11uc. Sent Oiomar
Guevara , infielder, 10 Rlvenlde of the
Cllli!ornla Leaaue. Sent loh.D &amp;tea, pitch·
• er, to WiJCOOJPD of,the Midwall...eaiJUC.
National Ltague

3, New leney l

Pllllldelphial, Florida I
St. Loui14, V.ncouvet I

Toatabt'•&amp;•m•s

Buffalo It BOlton. 7:30 p:m
Ottawa at Mootteal7:l0p.m. .,
Anaheim 11. Toroato, 7:30p.m.

.s

WlanipcJ. at Detroit, 7:30p.m. ·
St. LouiJ It ChiCIJO,I:30 p.m.

Su Jo~eat Oall•, 8:30p.m.
lal Anael~ at Ed.rmaton, 9:30p .m.

4J

Thursday's games
lllrtlord at N.Y. IWII'R. 7:30p.m.
Boston at Otl.awa, 7: 30 p.m.
N.Y . Itlanden al Ptri.ladelpbla., 7:30
p.m.
Qu-at T~~tq~a Bly,7:30 p.m.
New Jeney at Florida, 7:30 p.(Jl..
I Calaaryat.VlBOOu"YU,\0:30p.rn.

H.S. sports

Tontgbt'o aames

AtlaataatNew Jeney, 7:30p.m.
Orlando IIi Wuhioatoa, 7:30 P:m.
Miami at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Ptllladelphlalllndiana. 1:30 p.m.
BoltOn at Milwauu.e., 1:30 p.m.
MiMeiOta M OQaver, 9 p.m.
JlouatoD ~Utah, 9 p1m.

Ohio softball poll
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - How a
1tatc r•ael or coachea rate~ Ohio hlJb
~ &amp;oltball tearn1 io lbe 11nt poll for
The Auociated Prell (by Ohio HIJh
Schoo l Athletic: ASJodatloD diviliou,
with rll"st·place ¥ole&amp; in parentbuea):

Thursday's games
New Yoct It OiartoUe, I p.m.
Detroit at Oticqo, 1:30 p.m.
San A.Dtomio MI)a)lu, 1:30 p.m.
Sacn.meiHOat OokteD State, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Lak"rn at Ponlaod. 10 p.m.
Hou•ton at Seattle, 10 p.m.

Dlvlstoo I
Ium

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFEJl,ENCE
Dlvi1lon

Others rlcel.-lna U or more polnt11

I r:ta. llJ! GA
4 l2 134
1 47119
1 41 tOil
3 39114
.3 3S 104
l · 3l 94

r:ta.

l ·Airoa Spriaar..td (9) ........................99
2-Watctville Soulb ....................,.........91
l-Eiyria .......... ,......................................45
4-Clay1oD North mont .................,.......... 38
Waterville Nor1h (1) ........... .. ............ 31
6-Cellaa (1) ........................................... !2
7-0roveCity ................................. ........ l)
Whitehouae Aathooy Wayoe ............. 23
9·Carrolllon:.................................. ........ 22
N. C_llltOD. HOO~CI' .................. ... ......... 22

Hockey

~ L
Phllad&lt;lpllla ...... 2413
NewJmey ....... 201S
Wllhinaton ...... l7 11
N.Y. Ranaen .... 1120
TunpaBay ....... l622
Aorida ., ............ lllO
N .Y . blaDder&amp; ... J3 23

.152

N.Y. biiD&lt;ien l, Quebo&lt;l

12 ·
21
23
Ja

Dctnoit 15, CLEVELAND 76
Ullh ll J, Mi11.De10ta 94
San Aotoolo 107, Deaver 96
Dall¥104, L.A. Cllppen 91
Phoerlla Ill , SacrameDlO 101
Seltlle 11), LA. Lakerl97
Goldea StateiOl, PortllDdl02

Atlanl~

IO.PI•ut Hill Newtoa (l) .................. 17

)&gt;;1Ubutah6.N.Y. RuamS

Tuesday'• KOI'el

I&lt;am ·

Ehnore WoOdrnore ........................ .....lS
9-MowryJtowa Whiteoai. .....................20

Hartford 2, Buff&amp;Ja I ,

l

.600
9
.SI9 . IH
.461 19.5
.329 30.S
.200

··""

89
Ill
120
102
104

Tuesday's scores

Ga

.722
.S95

L I r:ta. m: liA

Dl-.iiiGIII
1-Caipry .......... 22 ll
' 49 146
VU.COU"ftf ,....... IS 16 10 40 128
SaD)-............ 16l2 2 :14 103
1M ADI'loa ...... ll20 1 33 ll7
Anheim ........... l42l 4 32102
EdmJDlOD ......... 14 23 3 31 ll3
x-c::lincbed. playortberth
I

WEStERN CONFERENCE
. Mldwet&amp; DINioa

~

• ·D«tuk .......... . l9 a . 3 61 133
. r.St)Aull ........ 24ll · 3 ll 149
Toro!Ko ............. lll6 1 "' 43119
Cbii!OI• ............ 19 II 3 . 41 130
Dall01 ................ ll19 1 l1 Ill
Wlonlpea ....:..... 1321 6 32 Ill

I
l
9
lO
IS
22

J9 ,5()6
Milwt.ukee .... ......... 3l 47 .40S

C•otral IHYWH

X.. .

li ·Tol . Cent. Cath. 19 . 12-Tol . Notre

114
10$
lCI

l'.&gt;ame l4. Canton GlenO.k 12.

Ill

:r..m

116
101

. Dlvlston ll

.

r:ta.

Holzer Clinic of Meigs County
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 schedule your appointment!
-="

=

-...-=&lt;=·;l '•&lt;F

r,• •

..

.

ilaskctball

n, Deily Sent!nel Page 5

.

Waived Ivaoo NewbUI, forward.
GOlDEN STATE WARRIORS: Actl·
vated Roay Selbly, ceotcr, from the iD·
jured li&amp;t. ·

tjtfs.

;1 Tbe Los Angeles Lakers, a
.Itotential ftrSt-round playoff oppolent fat tbe SuperSonics, bad beatIn them in four games Ibis season.
On Tuesday night, Seattle scored a
113-97 victory.
.
~ "'!'~ere W¥ no message to _be
!'nt, guar~ Gary P~yton sa!d.
,t We were JUSt playmg. We re
IPOking forward to playing any!!PdY. in the playoffs, but we ~n't
Jirorr!~d about the playoffs r.1gbt
low.
::; Tbe Portland Trail Blazers,
11)eanwhile, weren't worried about
. ite play,offs, either. Some players
stakenly thought IIIey already
d a post-season berlb going into
. eir game at Golden Slate. ·
io "We were .~n. weren,'t we?,"
ard Rod Strtckland srud after a
3-)02loss to the Warriors. ·
t Actually, Portland got in by·
lirtue of Sacramento's 111-101
~ss at Phoenix.
,. The Sonics built a 37-polnt lead
lb lbe third qua,ner and outreboundCfdtbeLakers47-32.
: · Payton led Seattle, wbicb

~ootball

N•ilonal Foo~b.IILI,..ue

•Stretch Denim.·

.

DENVER BRONCOS: SIJDecl Frank
Walnwriahl, ti&amp;ht end,lo a two-year contract· aatfVauce 1obllloD, wide recelvei;
Chuelr. Joha&amp;oa, 1uard; Sheldoa C.aley,
runruna bact.; ud M.u T111uvU.. defea&amp;lve laclde, to ODe-)'Ur contracb.
DETROIT UON$: S•aaed Doa Ma•
jtowskl. and Don HoUu, quarlorbacb.
lNDIANAPOUS COLTS: Matched a
throe-y~ contract the Carollo•
ofrue&lt;~ to luoa Belser,safcly.

t

.

i:

BAHR

Panthers

CLOTHIERS

Hoc:key

Natlonalllcwk•y Leaa...

• DALLAS STARS: Ro:~led Zoe Boy·
er, riahl wlna. from Kalamazoo ot the
OIL.
NEW YORK ISLANDEI\5: Anl&amp;necl
Paul Staatoa, defeueman, 10 lhO United
State. National Hockey Team.

145 N. 2ND

0

HOLZER CLINIC OF MEIGS COUNTY

·

Greg Maddux, wbo bas chicken
jiox, planned to throw on an isolat.cp field today and may find out if
lle'll be AUanta's starter in the seasOn-opener against. San Francisco.
1w

"

New Spring Merchandise Arriving Daily

Meanwhile,
teammate
s are
i)eing tested forhis
immunity
to chick~pox.

Justin Boots

40 pr.

30o/o

off

CLEARANCE
On Gym Shorts
$299 ,

• "Put it this way, I don't feel like
anything is wrong with me. If I
&lt;lidn 't look at myself and see the
~ots, I wouldn ' t know I had
tliem," Maddux said.
i Texas slugger Juan Gonzalez
Will miss his team's opener·. Gon~ez burt his back bending over to
tje bis shoe last Sunday and was
diagnosed Tuesday with a hernialtid disk. He is likely to go on lbe
disabled list and could miss up to
three weeks, general manager
Doug Melvin said.
Meanwhile, m;Uor leag ue baseball bas decided !bat Felipe Alou of
tbe Montreal Ex pos and Buck
Showalter of the New York Yankees bave been chosen to manage
in lbe All -Star game.
Tbe Expos and Yankces had the
best records in baseball when players went on strike Au g. I L The
game traditionally uses t~c man• a~ers of the previous year's World
Series.
. On the fie ld Tucsd;ly, the Chica. go Cubs stayed unbeaten in exhibition play by scaring two runs in ll)e
botiom of the 12th inning for an S7 victory o·vei California. Mark
Grace was 3.-for-4 with two dou-

Ladies Wear
175 pieces
9

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One Croup Spring

CARHART JACKETS

30o/o

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290 North
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.

remained a balf-game bebiod
Phoenix in the Pacific Division,
wilb 28 pointS despite playing witb
a broken finger on bis left ~ nonshooting - .band. Shawn Kemp
and Ervin Johnson each bad 14
rebounds in lbe Sonics' 17111 viccory in,21 games.
Antbony Peeler scored 18 poil)ts
for the !..akers, wbo didri't cut tbeir
second-half de~cit below 20 until
tbe final two mmutes. .
In other games, 11 was San
Antonio 107, Denver 96; Detroit
85, Cleveland 76; Utah 113, Minnesota 94; ~Dallas 104, tbe Los
Angeles Clippers 91.
Warriors 103, TrailBlazers 102
Portland clinched a playoff
berlb for the 13111 straight season
despite falling at Golden Stale.
The Trail Blazers bad two
chances to win down-the stretch.
Strickland's jumper with five
seconds left was rebounded by the
Warriors'. Chris Mullin. After Ryan
Lortbridge missed two free throws
. .for Golden Stale, Portland got tbe
ball back wilb 1.2 seconds left. but
Otis Thorpe's inbounds' pass was
intercepted at halfcourt.
Mullin bad 28 points and
Lortbridge 18 for the Warriors.

Clifford Rozier added 11 points .
and 11 rebounds.
Strickland bad 15 points and 14
assists for Ponland.
Suns Ill, lOop 101
Phoenix continued its late-season surge wilb a win over Sacramen to, wbicb 'Saw its playoff
chances dim with a third straight
Joss.
Cbarles Barkley bad 28 points
and Wayman Tisdale 18 as the
Suns won for the sixth time in
seven games.
The loss prevented the Kings ,
"Who have not made the playoffs
since 1985-86 rrom tying Denver
for the Wesiern Conference's
eighth playoff spot
Mitch .Richmond bad 28 points
for Sacramento.
·
Spurs 107, Nuggets 96
San Antonio moved wilbln one
win of clinching ·me NBA's best
record with a victory over Denver
a likely fust.round playoff opppo:
nent.
Avery Johnson scored a careerbigh 29 points on 12-for-13 sbooting and bad nine assists and one
turnover in 42 minutes .' David
Robinson bad 30 points and 10
rebounds, and Denni~ Rodman bad

13 boards before being ejected with
1:46 remaining.
Dikembe Mutombo bad 17
points and 16 rebounds ror Denver.
Pistons 85, Cavaliers 76
With jts seventh loss in nine
games, Cleveland is limping into
the playoffs.
The latest setback came at
Detroit, which snapped a five-game
losing streak despite scoring only
one point in tbe fourth quarter's
frrst six minutes. Grant Hill scored
26 points and Allan Houston added
23.
Bobby Phills led Cleveland with
17 points.

NOW OPEN
SPRING SEASON

KAREN'S
•
GREENHOUSE
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3% miles peal Southam High
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·

bles and two runs scored and· Sieve
Buechele was 2-for-4 with an RBI.
Chicago, the only team still
- -

undefeated in Florida or Arizon~.
will play the Giants tonight and the
Brewers Thursday.

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tbe bardelt day· ill bil life ..:.. IIIII .
mine too.
Jennifer Montana insisted llae
wasu' t .qiq ltim to mil'c, lllf'"lllt
sbe was hippy be did.
"I've gone tbrouJb this fm tO
many years wben be told me, 'Tbia
is it. I'm fwisbed. I quit.' Every·
body always !bought I was the push
behind bim, and reallv the only
.pusb I was, was to make sure be's
happy . I'm happy for bim now
because he seems so sure it's the
right !bing. e other years be was
never sure. He wasn't even cIose... '

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run with bis children if be htcame
disabled playing football&gt;. 11 was a
fear !bat was long on tbe minds of
his motber and wife.
"~. w~s afraid of his getting
burt, b1s mother, Theresa said.
"He's got. a long life to live and
be's got bis children and if be's in a
wbcelcbair what can be do? Wilbout a doubt be would like to play
again. He probably wishes be was
32 again. Don't we all."
Said Joe Sr.: "Everybody wantl ·
to sec bim play forever, but I know
be can't I always said it would b.:

·

Butskl

Middleport First Baptist Choir
presents an encore presentation of

directed by SAM tOWAN narration by MARK MORROW
"
"That God is on one side and all the people on the other side, and Christ Jesus, himself a
man, is between them to bring them together, by giving his life for all mankind ...

.

var!:

992·2351

. One Group·

.

fJaseba/I.~~ContinuedrromPage4)

MIDDLEPORT,OH.

CALVARY'S LAMB
·~~~~--a musical of~the-Jedemption ·story ~
Sunday, April 23 - 8 p.m.

150 MILL .s'l'RE,ET
MIDDLEPORT, OHI() 45760
(614) 992-218.8

By Tbe Associated Press
l, Seattle cleared one psycbologi. , hurdle on lbe way to tbe play-

•Brush Denim_.

I

·.

ling his cmodons run wild.
Dame 10 tbe San Francisco 49ers to
Tens of thousands of lima came lbe Kansas City Chiefs, Montana
to say thanks and good-bye, to ·played with a lllfC combination of
chant "One mon: year!" and to grace and grit that made bim not
shout, lausb and cry.
~Y a four-time Super Bowl chamIf ever a love affair bad grown p1on, but one of America's most
between a city and an atbletc, San beloved ·a thletes. He could do
Francisco and Joe Montana bad everything except give ujl, until
such a relationship. And today in now.
Kansas City, bis brief fling with
Witb his wife Jennifer and tbeir
that city was to end with anolbcr four children at his side, Montana
heartfelt farewell at Arrowhead retired at age 38 in a nationally
Stadium.
televised ceremony on a cool,
"It was so overwhelming,"
sunny day perfect for football.
Montana said of the San Francisco
"We always do disclaimers,"
lbrong. "They talked abOut 5,000 John Madden told the crowd "We
to 10,000 people, but there were so say. 'He's tbe grealest quarterback
many more. llitcrally was shocked I ever saw; or, 'He's tbe srcatest
when I looked o,ut and saw tbe quarterback this and !bat.' 1 say it
response. But when llblnk about it, with no disclaimers: This guy is tbe
I don't know what would make it greatest quarterback that ever
any different, because tbe one lbiDg played
that's been real steady over lbe
"Just lbink if we could all be
blm for ooe dliy, just be cool. ••
years bas been tbe fans here.
"I'm usually one to take tbe
Throughout Tuesday; Montana
quiet road and wallc away. But I'm 11\tpressed relief that the decision
glad I did it. Because those people be· d long dreaded bad finally been
.
out lbere _were what enabled me to made.
get bere."
He spoke repeatedly of his
For two decades, from NQ!!e beallb, bis fears of Dot being able to

Sonics beat Lakers; Pistons down Cavs

Levi's For Men

Nallonal BukerhaiiAnoclallon
DETROIT PISTONS: Activated Bill
C:urley. forwaid, from the injured list.

'

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

.

In theNBA,

$3400

'

NEW YORK ME:I'S: SilfKid Tim Boa:·
ar, iaficldcr.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Sent TJ.
Malhewa, pitcher, and Aaroll Holbert, iD·
fielder, to Louisville o[ lh&amp; American AI~
ID(:iatioo; Mite Gul1a, Xeith John1,
Dmitri Youna, iDHelden, and Sean Lowe.
piteher, to ArOnsu oftheTexu I..eque.

'

roo

•

Pedro Valdti. outfielder, to Orlando of
the Southern League.
CINCINNATI REDS : Announced the
~t.Jrement of Jack Morris. phcher.

HOLZER CLINIC 'OF _
MEIGS COUNTY
'

.

•

home plate and start throwing some :
guys out," be said.
•
Leaving free agent camp along "
wltb Santiago was Andy Van
Slyke, wbo agreed to an invilation "
·from tbe Baltimore Orioles to come ,
to camp as a non-roster player. He;,
turned down a $1 million offer.
from Baltimore earlier this spring. ,
"He can help us in a lot of .~
ways," manager Phil Regan said. '
"If be's beallby be can play cencer [,
field and can bit as well as steal a
few bases. He's a veteran-type ~
· player and a wiMer, a ~ood person 1
to have on tbe ballclub. '
· .,
Meanwhile, Roger Clemens ~
found out !bat be will not get to ,•
pltcb for Boston on opening day, ~
even tbougb be bad a pain-free,
workout Tuesday in bis recovery "
from a stiff' shoulder; . ·
'J
Boston manager Kevin Kennedy ,
said lbe right-bander bad already .~
missed so much time tbat be can't ·
possibly be ready for lbe April 26 1
game at Fenway Park against Min- '
neSO!ft. Instead, Aaron Sele will get~
•
(S~ BASEBALL on Page 5)
tf

CHICAGO CUBS: Sen t T&lt;'try Adallll,
pttchc:r, Brant Brown, fin;t baseman. and

I ·MlNFORD [l) ................................... !1
2·Col. Ro:ady (2) ....................................4S
l-U"" Both .......................................... 39

5 · Jl 106 136

.a.

l·SttubWJ·Frank:Jia (3) ................. :.... ,74
2-N. RobiDIDD Col. Cnwfbtd (2) ......... 69
Hcro..,.ville Hillldale (2) .................. 67
4-CtL Coo!llry 1Joy,.,,.,.,,.,.,. ..... ............ 39
S.Plyrnouth ............................................33
6-Colui'Jillana. ...... :................................ 29
7-Sy""""" Mob...k ............................ 2S

WESTERN CONFERENCE

2S

I·AllUll,,·,.,,.,., .....&lt;t()

51

Division III

Iii

Centrlll Dh'Woft
I ·IDdllDI ............. :.sp • 29 .633
•-Oiarkltle..............o$9 30 .620
1-0ticqo ............ ,.4S :14 .l70
•·CLEVELAND ...41 ll .SI9
Decrvil ...................21

60 170 Ill
2 S6 162 1:14
l 43 116 100
s 41 111 116
6 «l 106 100
l l1 109 ll2
l ll 14 143

•

do wbat is necessary to compere iD
the NFL. And when you do !bat, ·
it's
time to step away. It's not
~on~~ dido'! retire because of
his wife s naumg or Kansas City something wbere you can play
coacb Marty Scbottenbeimer' 5 balfbeal'tcdly."
tough practices or tbe slim chances
The timing of tbc announcement
of gettin~ to anolber. Super Bowl, a few days before tbe NFL draft
· or anylbmg to do w1tb advancing was not coincidental. He wanled to
ase or ilec;iining ability.
give lbe .Chiefs a chance to get a
For all the pundits who tossed quality replacement through free
. a~und reasons wby be quit or agency or tbe draft, aad be wanled
. s6'ould have quit sooner, Moniana to free up lbe $2.4 million In salary
· offered b':S own answer Tuesday. It be would have been paid this sea·
was as s1mple and direct as the son.
Monlana beamed tbrouBbout lbe ·
passes be so often !brew for tooch!downs.
beady afternoon like a mari liberat"I reached lbe J&gt;oint wben: tbe ed . .Tbe decision be bad labored
day comes and you wake up and over for so long was made. He oo
realize it," Monlana said. "It longer bad to WOIT)' abOut tbe fears
be and his family harbored lbat be
JUSt came upon me all of a sudden
I wasn't as flfed up about woddng might somebow wind up crippled.
ou~ I just wasn) looking forward
He could tum bis anentJOII now to
tbe easy life: playing golf, coaching
to 11 as much. There were signs !bat
said things aren't lbe same any · his kids, flying bis airplane, backmore.
ing an Indy car team.
"I just didn't think this is tbe
His fans took the retirement
way it would happen because I much more emotionally than be
didn't think I would ever Jose my did, which was no surprise. Monpassion for., tbe game !bat gave so tana didn't lead the San Francisco
much to me. I just lost lbe drive to 49ers to four Super Bowls by let-

50S's, 5 12's, SSO's and 560's

4-Be.tlewe .............................................~$
5-Coploy ................................................21
6-AlliANY AU!XANDER. .................21
1-worr .. OlJD1'io• (2) ........................20
I·LaOtu .. Keyotooe ........................... l 8
9--TDDIOPDJ Otacao...........,.. ;............... l S
IQ-TalllnadJe ............ ............................. 14

N..tlo..ll Dlololoo

NBA standings

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By STEVE WIL.STEl:N
SAN FRANCIScp (AP) _Joe

PRE·WASHED LEVI'S

Scoreboard
Basketbal l

I

'1"nesday, April19, 1995

{:

fiAontana cites loss of passion B$ reason for retirement ·

.

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
Randy Jcllnsoo, CbriJ Boslo aad
Edgar Martinez are staying put
witb tbe Seattle Mariners.
The trio bas been tbe subject ol
trade rumors siDce sprina trBIDlnl
ror regular players began April 7,
and manager Lou Pi!Uella said tbe
speculation was distractins players.
.On Tuesday, tbe. Mariners did,
somethiDg about it
:: "We have no IDtcntion or lllldjng Randy Johnson. He is our No. 1
slarter and one of tbe premier

.

'

HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
773•5583

LOHMAN GUN MOUNT VELPER
.

..
OI'IN
Wl!EKDAYS
~ 1:30-5:00
04-li7 5-Z988

GOBBLE BOX

DON WOOD

- .
Tri-County Sport Shop
-

OPEN

NEW STORE HOURS IIONOAV.f'RII&gt;AV t .30AIII:OO PM
SUNDAYS
GATURD.lV t :30AH S:OON
&amp;UNOAY tl:OOPI.t-S:OOPW
I 2.00 S:dO
IIV MASON COUNTY 'AIIlGROV~OS , I'OI~T PLE,SANT FAXlOHi!5 1'113

"Where·Better Re,aUy Matters"
East State Street
Athans, Ohio

593 664J
•

''·

•

�•

~nesda~April19,1995

P•ge 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

Readers share their sure.: cures for those pesky hiccups
From Jackson HeighiS, N:~:: This
method works when everydtmg else
has _failed: We swear by · it in our
family. \!Sing bolh hands, Slack your

Ann
Landers

finaen tn your ears. Take a deep
~lh. Have~holdyour~
while he (or she) gtves you a .drink
of water.
Miami: My dad hiccuped for
.nearlytwohours.Hehadlriedseveral
suggestions from friends and
relatives w!lhl?ut .suCcess. Finally,
someone Slid, Drink a few gulps of
'~lxmated soda.• He did, and the
htCCups stopped ~t once.Ash~~h10: My grandmother
1camcd IS hiccup stopper f~. her
gnmdmo r, and I am teachmg 11 to

Dell' Raldet 1; Whotun0118 us has
not been plagued at one time or
IIIIJiher with hic:wps? I promised to
JqJrint die column 1did several ye~n
ago on this pesky nuiJance. 1Cannot
vouch for lhese remedies because
llappily, 1 do not get hiccups very
often and havat'tlried them myself.
But. for what they are worth. here
they .e:

my pandchil~.ltcan be fun! C~t
duee holes tbe SIZC of balf-dollars m
a paper bq. Put tbe bag over_your
head, and ~ _dcqlly 20 umes.

can't stand on your h~. put your
head belween your knees, Close your

Tacoma, Wash.: No one knows
why·lhiswotlcs,butithasneverfailed
me or anyone el5e who has tried it.
Fill 8 g1us willl wM« and cciver it
with a clean handkadlicf. Drink the
Wllerthroulh the hlnlde. No sipping
noholdingofthebrealh.The~
will diAJ"PW u if by magic
·
Emporia, Kin.: This ~ CUJe
must be done iD private beciu11e it
looks so aooty. But it WCHts. Open
your eyes as wide u you can. Stick
out your tongue- all the way. Reach
for the ceiling .. really ~h. Try to
sin1 "The Star-Spangled Banner.• or..
course, you can't do it with your

A tea to celebrate National Herb
Week, May 8-14, will be held by
• the River Valley Herballsts 011 Sunday, May 7 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs County Public Library,
Pomeroy•
There will be food and tea samples, a display of herbal products
plus free fennel plants. Fennel bas
been designated as the Herb of tbe
Year by tbe international Herb
Association.
Plans for tbe tea were made at a
recent meeting of the Herbalists at
tbe Long Bottom . Community
Building.
Repons were given on three of
tbe group's gardens - at Dave ·
Diles Park in Middleport, tbe
Meigs Museum In Pomeroy, and

12; Alexander, 21-lS; and Alexander again in tbe championship
mau:b, 19·18.
Scoring f?£ Mcij!S were ]~son
Taylor, 36; libby King, 35; AIISOII
GerlaclJ, five; Matt O'Bryant, four,
and Dorothy Leifheit, two. Other
team members are Michael Leifheit
imd Myca Haynes.
· Tbe tournament cbampionsblp
qualified Meigs for tbe state
regional tournament. Jason Taylor
was named to the All-TVC team.

II pk. II a. c. .

aone.

Tbe Community Calendar is
~blisbed as a tiec service to non. profit groups wisbiDg to announce
meetinB and special events. Tbe
calendar is not designed to promote
~es or fund raisers of MY type.
· ItemS are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
~pecific number of days.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
Mulberry Avenue, Pomer~y. Anyone with drug problem may attend.
No dues or fees, 1-S00-766-4442,
Help Line.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Mis·
sion Church, 7:30 each evening
through! Saturday, with the Rev.
David Hopkins, Gallipolis as the
speaker. Special singing nightly
with the Revelators of McAnbur.

Church. Pomeroy. '
RUTLAND_ Rutland Youth
League ball meeting Thursday,
7 : 30 p.m. at tbe fire bouse. All
coaches, parents urged to atlend.
RACINE - Racine Grange
2606, regular session, Thursday.
Plans will be finalized for work
day . .

.wEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzbeimers DisRACINE _ Racine Post 602,
ease/Related Disorders support
American Legion, Thursday, din.gh&gt;up, first in series of four public
THURSDAY
ner at 6 :30 p.m. meeting at 7:30
"education on ADIRD, Wednesday,
RACINE- Musical minslry .
. 1:30 to4 p.m., Meigs Multipurpose team for Bob Jones UniversiLywill p.m.
'Senior Ct~nter. Call Lenora .be at First Baptist Church of
REEDSVILLE. _ Revival ser- .
Leifheit, 992~2161, for more infor- Racine, 1 p.m. Thursday,
vices at the Reedsville Church of
ination.
POMEROY _ Preceptor Beta tbe Nazarene to be held through
POMEROY Narcotics · Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbi Sunday,_ 1 p.m. each eveni~g .
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Sorority, 7:30 Thursday, Episcopal Eva~geltst Paul Lucas . Spec1al
smgmg .

•••deylhra
I · •ey

Is life ptUIIitl yo11 by? Mlutt 10
improve 'yoiiT social &amp;ki/11? WriU for
AML:.oNkri'MWbookllt, "How to
Malee Friends and Stop Being
!JJuly." Stltd a stlf-adtlrtued, ~~, :
b.UiMu-size tiiW!Iopt 11111111 , . ·
or llfiJMY older for
;
$4.25 (tltis inc/IUI~s postage alld
handling) to: Fr1e11ds, clo Ann
Uut~Urs, P.O. Boz 11562. Clticago,
111. 60611-0562. (In C(llladp, selld ·

8AII-IOPM

•

•

/*:_

....

•

· WI RESERVE ftiE RIGft tO LIMI'r QUAitltiES
PRICES GOOD tiiRU APRIL 22, 1198.

7

WE NOW ACCEPT WIG COUPONS

$5.~5.)

iron and vit3mins, chives sprinkled
on foods stimulate the appetite and
aid digestion·. Garlic is used to

Bleni!erbassett Island.
Edible flowers are being incorporated iniO all of the gardens this
year and include such things as
naswrtiums and pansies. ·
Arrangements were mllde for a
Blennerbassett garden work party
laler this month in preparation for
Blennerbassett' s annual May Fair
to be held on May 6.
Herb of the month was a!Uums,
one of tbe mosi popular and
widespread culinary flavorings in
the oruon family. Alliums l!lso have
bealtb-giblog . properties, tbe
stronger the smel~ the more effective their healing powers, it was
reported. In Ute f\IDiiiY are chives,
onions, garlic, .and Welsh onions.
Medicinally, they all contain some

cleanSe blood and clear cough or
consestion and is used ~ protectioo against the common cold.
Angie Maynard and Denise
Amold reported on 11 seminar they
attended at the Carpentet Inn Bed
11114 Breakfast wbcre they learned
ali6ut Hatba Yoga and Aromatberapy.
Refreshments were served by
Sue Hayman, Ginger Cummings
and Jenny Ridenour.
The may meeting will be held in
West Virginia at the home of Deb-.
bie Young where members will
take a wildflower walk and then ,
have a plant exchange.

ROLL

I

BUCKE'I'

Cube Steaks ••••L:.

.

BUYS IN THE. CLASSF£0S.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE 1868

SDP~~IOR

FRANKIE

.

$199
C

_

~ Weiners •••••••• ~~ =~-79
ggc

Bologna .........L~~.

. DINNER BELL SMOKED

S159 Sausage 14 oz. pkg.
•••••••••••
Ranch Steaks ••• •• . ·

. USDA BONELESS CHUCK ·

All Remaining Chicks Must Go
5
for
6 breeds
a'!Least 255 to go

48 01.

SJ39

992·2164 ·•

399 W. Main

LB·. .

.
· LAY'S POTATO

SJ29

CHIPS OR
DORITOS

....

2/S DO

•

25 $13 ?

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

'

GROUND

Beef ••••••••••••••••~~·••

.

-

Pomaroy, Ohio

· . Thlo Slar• Wllh "All Kinde of Stull" lor Pilla, SIIIIIIM,

Large l Smoll Anlnt.a., Lltwna l Glnlena

.USDA' CHOICE BON.ELESS

Ll.

$109

SMUCKER

S139

Beef Chuck Roast. .

GRAPE JELLY
OR JAM

1•

32 01.

S159

USDA CHOICE BO~ELESS LB.

\ .

Beef Rump Roast ••

HEAD LETIUCE ·
.

99~;m;&lt;

2/S 00
A SPECIAL SECTION
In The .

i - -COUPON--,

• . POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

I

'

CUCUMBERS .

5 for·$1 QQ

Jim and Cindy Chadwell of
Long Bottom announce tbe birth of
a daugbler, Rebecca Louise, born
March 2 at St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The infant who weighed nine
pounds and was 22 inches long, bas
two brothers, Bryan and Roger, and
a sisler, Jenifer. Grandparents are
Clinton Wld Louise Pitzer of Long
Boltom and Virginia Chadwell of
.• Pomeroy. Grcat•grandmother i's
Eua Pitzer of Long Bottom.

. Flrst of the .Season .
Extra Sweet Vidalia Onions
,.

• Jackson Perkins Rose Bushes
• Creeping Phlox • Silver Mound
. • Hosta's • All Garden Seeds &amp; Plants

8
0
Salt1nes •••••••••••••• .
age
ZESTA .

..

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

Large
Green 2 for 89~
eppers ·

FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1995 ~ 12 NOON

• ~

...

Call
""'-

-

t

;- .• ~

~

,.._.

I

· lb. Box
.

·

Lunch Meat ••~~.~z····

THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1995
"" "-""---. •'t

•

AR~OUR -rREET

INSERTION DATE:

-

GOLDEN WHEAT ... -- . STARKIST

-

Dave or Bob
For More Information

MAC ·&amp; CHEESE
7.25 oz.

992-2155

TUNA
· &amp;.S oz~

4/S 00

MEIGS FARM MKT

·Syracuse
992·5776
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-S pm
•

'

Margar-ne_
.. . .
HAGAN PREMIUM
$299
Ice Cream •• 2J · ·

:· Max :
: ~ -&amp;OC ea. · :

:I . See ~I
ORA IDA~ Crinkle or rei. 2 lb. $ 29 : _Store :
: Eff~ctive :
French Fr1es ••
•J. GAL.

COTTONELLB · ·- !J!IDE ULTRA
BATH TISSUE

DE'rERGENT

4·roll pack

98 oz.

t

~Wed._ ..e. 1

:I 4/19/95:I

99 . :Thru Sat.•

:4/22/95!

. ,.
'

$

BLUE BONNET

REACH OVl:R 18~000 HOMES
IN THE TRI-COUNTY·AREA!

REBECCA CHADWELL

Coupon~

:
:I Good for:
Potatoes ••• ::~::~
·· I
·VALLEY 'BELL
$ 69· 1 5 triple 1
I
I
0
~ /o ~illc ....... :~L
: Coupon.:

· • GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
.

$ 79 :

US #I

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

2

Chadwell birth
announced

c

ALPO DOG
FOOD
13.2 oz.

bers, and it was noted that boxes of Harry and Tressie Hendricks.
spagbeni and potatoes are needed
I ackie Reed was named to banfor church camp. Nancy Morris die communion for April, with
was named to purchase a new Madeline Painler to handle it for
scrapbook for Lydia Council.
May. Devotions were given by
Carolyn Nicholson, vice presi- Cherie Williamson who used
dent, conducted the meeting during "Though Ue was CruCified" as the
wbicb time Mrs. Pickens talked theme. Sc~ip tures were read. and
about sunrise services and tbe need Mrs. Will bad prayer. Gerry Lightfor volunteers. A thank you note foot, Mrs . Will and Mrs. Wilwas read from Everett Smith for Iamson served .refreshments to
tbe March sunshine fruit basket be those named and lane Hysell. Sherreceived when be was ill. April ry Smith and Gerry Lightfoot.

Tltis ·w eeks Special

c

WESSON
VEGETABLE.DR
CANOLAOIL

ARMouR STAR SLICED

Left Over
Easter Chick Sale
YOU CAN'T ESCAI'E. THE GIIEAT

c

BOUNTY PAPER
TOWELS

pantry lists were given 10 tbe mem-- sunshine basket will be given to

Plans for the annual motherdaughter banquet on May 12 were
made when the Bradfonl Church of
Cbrist Lydia Courteil met recently
at the cburcb. Committees named
were Paula Pickens, Carolyn
Nicholson, program; Pickens Wld
Janice Fetty, special gifts: Suzie
Will and Diane Bing, favors; Karli ta Stump and Edie Hubbard, centerpieces; Madeline Painter, Becky
Amberger, Brenda Bolin and Sherry Smith, decorating.
.
Visiting lists and pack the

•

7 up, Dr• .
Pepper, Crush,
Hires

21811COID S'r.
POMEROY, 01.

.Mother-daughter observance planned

Hubbards Greenhouse

s

nGIEIOURS

S9~JO!IIIaveil,delraadcas.
If one auamtek doesn't work, try
anodlcr. Good lucid

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

CHAMPIONS -Meigs High School quiz team coached by Barbara Rostad, back left, and Mike Gerlach, back right, won the TriValley Conference tournament championship and now will compete In regional contests. Members of the team are front, Michael
Leifheit, second row, Libby King, Alison Gerlach, Myca Haynes,
and Dorothy Leifheit, and back, Rostad, Jason Taylor, Matt
O'Bryant and Gerlach.

_. Community calendar·_
- . ___,_~

Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
Shurbs,&amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

PEPSI COLA
PBODUCft

Tea to mark National Herb Week

·· Tbe Meigs High School quiz
team fmished a successful season
by captwing tbc Tri-Valley Conference tournament cbilmpionsbip.
· Meigs went through the tournament undefeated with victories
over Southern, 20-lS; Jackson, 22-

Now Open For The Season
· Bedding Plants
Vegetable Plants, Hanging

The Daily Sentinei-Pa~7

Ohio

FOIJlTH WEEK.. 21sr ANNIV r.SAlY $ALE

•

100gue llticldna out, but if you mate
the IOUIIds. dill is good CIIOUih· By
the time~ get 10 ·~ rockcU' Jed
glare; the hiccups will be

no attemptiO eat or swallow iL As
the peanut butter disappears so will
the hiccups.
'

eyes as tight as y~ can, take a~
breath" and r~711e Mary Had a L111le
The'!iccupswilldigppcE
Lamb or"L1nleBo~."
Chicago: I am 60 years_ old, but!
H~f~. Nova Scotta: My II'Cal·
lallC1IIbcr a sure CUJe for hiccups lhat aun~ s h1ccup s10pper has worked for
was given to the class by our four1h- us like a charm these last 2S years.
gtade teacher. She always kept a jar Make a ftSt, and bite the knuckle of
of sugar in her desk drawer. yourtiUicfinger. Takeadeepbreath,
Whenever someone got the hiccups, and hurry up ·and bite the ne~t, then
Miss Swanson would ~ta •easpoon the next, then ~e next and then the
of sugar on that persons tongue and thumb. By the ume you bile .r1 your
let it melt. By the ti~ the sugar was kn~kl~ tw~e. ~ou are ~ured. ·
g~. so .were the hiCCups.
.
Cmcmnau: Th1s. cure 1s ~_only
Rivers1de;Callf:: ~everything 100 percent elfecuve but delteiOUS.
else has f~11ed,th1s w1ll wOJ!c. lfyou Thke a ta~le_spoon of peanut bu~
can s1a11d on your head, do 1t.lf you and keep 11 m your mouth, maJcmg

Meigs
quiz team
qualifies
.for state

.

Pomero~lddleport,

L--------.J
•

I

�I

Pomero~lddleport, Ohlci

Page B The Dally Sentinel
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

·Family
M~dicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: After a routine eye 80. Fonunalely, a routine exam by
exam, my sister's eye doctor told your eye doctor can detect thia seriher that she bas glaucoma. ~ gave ous condition before you experi·
ber several different types of eye ence a serious loss of vision.
That Is why the American
' drops. and now wants to do
surgery. Her vision seems nne, so Academy of Ophthalmology recdoes sbe really need surgery?
_ommends that everyone between
• Answer! Glaucoma can be a 40 and 64 bave an eye examination
i•sneak thief' of eyesight. This is every two to live years. and those
because the most common variety 65 and over bave them cwry one to
causes a very gradual, painless loss two years.
oof vision that starts at the edges of
African-Americans and those
:your Held of view - what doctors wbo have a family bisttXy of glaucall your "peripheral vision." Since coma should begin regular saeenibe center of tbe visual field ing for glaucoma at age 20. This is
Jemains sharp and clear, the indi- · because members ·of these groups
Yidual with glaucoma doesn't usu- teDd to have an earlier onset of the
4illy realize be or sbe bas a problem · disease and, once it begins, a_more
until the disease_is quite advanced.
rnpid progression.
.
• You can tbink of the eye as
Your sister's glaucoma was
being akin to a basketball. Tbe obviously detected before ~be
sbape of the flexible tissues that developed serious visual problems.
- form lbc eye are malolained in the That's great! Medical treatment is
"eyeball" sbape by the pressure usually the nest choice for glaucowithin it; just as a basketball is held ma. and lhat is just wbat your sister
in its round sbape by internal air bas bad.
pressure. However, lhe eye is Hlled'
There are several types of eye
with a clear fluid instead of air. drops that lower intraocular presThis fluid is constantly produced sure for most people wbo suffer
· inside the eye and also conslllntly · from glaucoma. Apparently your
drained away. The balance between sister's doctor ·bas bad trouble getthese two processes Is what deter- ting her pressure lowered to the
mines lbe pressure within lbe eye.
desired level. I suspect that's why
In glaucoma, this within-the- she's been on several different
eyeball fluid pressure - "intraocu· medications and why her doctor
lar" pressure In doctor lingo - Is now recommends surgery.
higher than it should be because lhe
Surgery is done to decrease the
fluid isn't being drained away fast resistance to outflow - the
enough.
removal of the inuaocular fluid.
This higher pressure makes it This procedure may be done using
increasingly difficult for the beart a knife or a "bigb-leCb" laser.
to pump blood through the small
Regardless of lbe specillc 1001s
blood vessels within the eye - a the surgeon uses. the underlying
process that is necessary to no!lrish idea is the same: to .cr.eate an
the optic nerve. When the intraocu- increase in lbe rnte of removal of
lar pressure becomes sufficiently the intraocular fluid so that the
high, the optic nerve is damaged, overall pressure within the eye
thereby creating an irreversible loss decreases. Fortunalely, this surgery
of vision.
is usually successful at bringing the
Glaucoma is not often diag- pressure down to normal levels.
nosed before age 50. That is, the
Your sister's surgery should
disease usually takes a course of enable ber to keep ber sharp and
years - often 40 or more clear vision. You see, to be of benbefore it produces symptoms and efit, glaucoma surgery must be
can be easily detecled.
done before vision is lost, and the
,It affects about 5 percent of per· sooner it can be done, the better her
sons wbo are older !ban 65 years chance of maintaining a full Held
and 14 percent of thooe older !ban of vision for tbe rest of ber life.

VVednesda~April19,1995

VVednesday, April19, 1995

Alfred resident looks back on 99 years -~ife
Satul'llay Garner C. Griffm of
Alfred will oiJierve bis 99th blnh·
day,
The occaiibo will be celebnlted
witb an open reception at tbe
Alfred Methodist Cbarcb 2 to 4
p.m.
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Somdlme 110 in talldna witb a
friend, Mrs. NeU!e Parter, GrUrm
reminisced about bis cbildbood.
Sbe titled the story told to her, "'x
Tails and Wild Poniea."
I was born on~ 23, 1896, at
Grandpa Basob s farm ncar
Coolville in Southern Oblo.
This is a different wa-ld than the
one I grew up in. We bad good parents wbo protected us until we
were eight years old." Then they
taught us bow to protect ourselves.
Dad was a diversified farmer.
He kept 12 or 13 bear of Durham
11nd Red Pool cows, about 100
beard or sheep, a bam full of bon·
es, and lots of piss. WbeD we boys
were big enough to climb up in the

man1er and put the bridle oil a tie tbcir tails together to keep them
horse, we bad the privilege to ride close together. We soon bad them
wbelever we Wlllled to ao.
pulling small poles or boards. It
II\ those days people used lllllll· was surprising bow fast they
IS' oxen for logging in the woods. learned. In autumn we took the
In tbe sbeep and cow bam there oxen and the makeshift wagon,
was an upper floor, part of wblcb made out of old buggy wheels,
was used as a shop where tbc for- baking wire and a cockbar on the
mer owner made ox yokes. When front of the rear wbeels, to the
be sold the fann to us, be didn't woods to gather walnuts. We rao
take the yokes or P411tems, or the the wlllnuts through lhe cornsbeller
finished and unfinished yokes, , to bull them. We also gathered
made from asb timber.
bickory nuts and hazel nuts.
We selected the small pattern
The wild· ponies came from
and made a yoke out of poplar Oklahoma where Uncle Hirarn,
wood, complete with bow$ and Dad's oldest brolber, bad taken up ·
center ring. We selected two a homestead. Many wild ponies
calves, a little older than six roamed the western states then so ·
months to yoke-break. They would tbc homesteaders built a corral and
get down in various shapes with rounded up ponies in the spring.
twisted necks and would roll lheir After a bard winter ponies were
eyes back In lbeir beads, but they thin and not bard to handle. When
were tougher lban you would thi~. the homesteaders captured a largeWe would take them by tbeu buncb, thev picked out the four
tails, haul tbem back together year olds, matched them for size
again, get them on their feet, tben and color, and shipped them east

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The Dally Sentinel-Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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MIMIIflm n.IIICIUCY: Each Of thne 8dWt tllldltemlll requlr.cl ~ be reaci!IY av_.lallle fOr sale In each Kr1111er stare, except as
IPtdflceliY noted In thiS ad. If we dO run out Of an advertlled Item, wt wtn Offer you your choice of a comparable Item, when
aYiillalllt, reflectlno the same 11v1no1 or • l'llnc:hKk which wllentltle you til purchase the advetlse&lt;tltem at the advertised price
within 50 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per Item purellalld.
.

fo_r their. relatives. to sell. Uncle
Haram shipped a railroad carloal! to
Bellville, W. Va. for Dad to piCk
up and sell f~ blin.
Tbe pomes were not bard to
b!llldle because tbcy were WC!Ik and
tbin and would follow _a leader
almost anywhere. At ~ ~ there
were ~bars in tbe Obi'? River at
Bel1~1lle, and tbe_poo1es were
brought aaoss the nver and lllkC:O
to Bethel where lbey were sold m
four days.
Dad set four posts in the ground,
boarde4 them_ on the ri~bt side and
the front. Tb1s gave b1m room to.
prepare and mount lbe pony. When.
a customer picked out a pony or a•
team, Dad wool~ ~ out, rope. lbe; .
pony and ~g 11 10, saddle, ·bndle.
and mount 1t. .
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Most just stood there bewil- :
dered, so_me resisted but _were soon ·
tame. Thts procedure f101sbed, they
were proclaimed broke The owners :
were responsible for the rest.
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._·THE KROGER C:O. ITEMS AND PRICIS OOOD SUNDAY, APIUL 15 THROUGH
APRIL 22, 1185. 1M POIIIEAOV' GALUPOUI.

WE A£SEIYE T~ RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. - E SQI.D TO DEALERS.

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Auxiliary makes donation
-to llag protection fund

Thornton
writes thesis
on Meigs
.
I
Meigs CoUDty Economic Development Director Julia HoudasbeltTbornton is using her experience as
county development chief to assist
in researching and writing a lhesis
"Marketing a Large Industrial Sile
in a Depressed Appalachian County" tbrmigh the Ecomonic Development Institute conducted by the
Universily of lndianapoiis.
Thornton recently completed
year one of the three year program.

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Annete Johnson was hostess for
tbe meeting held conducted by
'Lorene Goggins, president. Poppies ·
were distributed by the president
The bulletin of the Eighth District
president, Nancy Brown, was read,
and Ella Dunsmore, legislative
chairman, made a report. Sbe noted
that there should be more concern
for veterans, and talked about lbe
ailments of Persian Gulf veterans.
Florence Richards, children and
youth chairman, reported lbat the
emphasis for the month is on childhood immunizations, prevention,

JULIA H. THORNTON

•

legislation, information, finan~ial ,
assislance. She noted that !here 1s a;
renovation program for the Chil·
dren' s Veterans Home at Xenia.
where there are 80 residents, with'
76 percent being veleran rela_ted.
Contributions were made to tbe
Protection of tbe Flag Fund, the
Government ·Test of Scbool Chi!·
·dren 's Fund, and missionaries of
. Africa wbc:n the Lewis-Manley
Auxiliary. Unit 263, American
Legion, met recently at Dale's in
Gallipolis.

------Society scrapbook------were Lisa Ritchie, Trina Brooks,
CHARGE SERVICE
Alfred United Methodist Church Debbie Barber, and Kathy Watson.
hosted the Norlbeast charge swuise To conclude the program the cboir
sang "I Know That My Redeemer .
service and Easter breakfast. .
Susan Pullins and Doris Livelb" and lbe congregation sang
Dillinger were directors for tbe "Christ Arose." Pastor Sharon
Hausntan bad the ben~ction.
sunris~ ~~rvice with Mrs. Pullins
announcing lbe program. The choir
Members of Chester, Tup~rs
sang "Day of Resurrection·: and · Plains and ,Alfred attended tbe JOint
"The Night Before Easler Came", service.
there were recitations bf. Sara Yos~
LIVE TELECONFERENCE
Danielle Spencer, Kirk Spencer,
The Small Business DevelopStacy Watson and Tiffany Spencer.
Nellie Parker gave lbe"Seven Last ment Center abd the National
Words of Jesus" and "Early Easter Technology University are sponsoring a live satellite teleconferMorning.
ence.
Taking part in a drama
The leleconference will be held
k"Bebold the Third Day Cometh,"

ti"om 1 p.m. uptil4 p.m. Monday in
'Ohio University's Stocker Hall
room 103. The cost is $10 per person, if registered tbis week, or
$15.00 at the door.
Sharon A. Wolf, president of
Enterpri~ Systems, in Farmi~.gbam
Mass .. wtll explain bow to build
an effective team" to create and
ensure a successful business.
To preregisler send payment to
the SBDC (checks made out to
Ohio University) at the SBDC of
Southeastern Ohio, 20 East Circle
Drive, Suite 190, Athens, Ohio
45701. With preregistration free
parking will be given.

.DEAN'S LIST
Melissa Maynard of Pomeroy
made the dean's list for the winter
quarter at Hocking College. Her
name was not included on the list
.earlier submitted to The Daily Set)·
, tine! by the ·college. To make !be
dean's list students must have at
least a 3.3-grade point average and
have completed 12 quarter bours.

FEDERALLY LOT INSPECTED
INDIVIDUALLY OUICK FROZEN
CANADIAN PINK {56-7()-CT.)

Shrimp·in
thePound
Shell

News Hotline

992-2156

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.
ORAiN FED BEEF WHOLE

............ _....... __ .~..·Lb.
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PUBliC

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVER$ION VAll DEAlfR HAS AN INVEimJIIY
OF OVER 300 BRAND NEW CIIEVROl£f'l:(lfiVEIISION VANS.
Selection includes Aslro All Wheel Drives and G·211's, botlt avail··
able with raised roofs or low tups. Prlcei range fnlm $17,388 to

. $36,91111.

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&gt;Red, Ripe
strawberries
Pound

R\T\TJ~VI~()JlY C3..1~Ulill~C~~!
TOM PEDEN liAS All INVENTORY OF OVER 800 BRAND NEW
CIIEVRII£TS, IIUlSMIIII.ES, POIITIACS, IIUD($, GEOS AND aJSTIIM
VANS. All will be sold atsubiitantlal disl:otllls!
Plus $500 to s-1 clsh back or 3.6% APR financing avaiiable fup
to 36 months) on selected models on app1owed credit. Terms avail·
able up ID 84 months!
·

CAL

BigK
Soft Drinks

sea/test

orange Juice

12-pack 12-oz. cans

Gallon

Certified used clir buyen will • on band to give higltest trade-in
value for your automobile. Please bring your title, registration
canl, and pavment book If applicable.
110 SALES PERMITTED TO DEAI.StS. This clearance is for retail cus- ·
tamers 111111. Prices apply to available units only. No onlerlng permlttad at tt- prices.
.

Limit four 12-packs, please.
SUGAR SMACKS, ASSORTED
FLAV()RS POP TARTS CRUNCH pR

$11,688

S25,688

NoD«. fees~·

HoOocFees

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY

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BRAIID IIEW '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE

$-SERIES PICKUP

• o.~er S.de Arrllag
• Rear Anti-lock Brakes
;.P~t~"-~·
• Power Brakes

Kellogg's
Raisin
Bran
11.1-2D-oZ.

• Power Door Locks
• AWFM Stereo
• Styled Whe~s

~

• Steel Belled Tires

:.Wtl Elll!IPOdl ·'

• E•ler1ded Chasss
• IJ!iver S~e M: Bag
• Anti-lock Brakes

• PIS, PIB
• power Wrndows
• Power Locks ·
• Arr Condrhon
•Till. Cruise
• Automah,OOifdrl\'e--. AlltlfM ea.sette
• Caplatn Ch~rs

• Sola/Bed
• lndirBCIIJghltng
.
• Premrum Wood Pkg,

'Full Con"""""

TOU FREE 1·800·822-11411 • 312·2844
.344·5941. 422·0156
• Ta•n. Taga, T~ Feetlllrl Rebeile ~~'~:Wed In salepru o1 t19W Y9hlc;:le ~lted where

,

• Alumlnum·fllin(llrlg·Bds.
• Loaded!

~· On aw&lt;Wed MCJI. Not tespOI)Sible lor lypogr~~Qflicaf errors. •

• Air Condilton

• Oual Arrtrag
• Antl-l.oel&lt; Brakes
• Autor.natK:

•m.wM·cassetl!'

U.S. GRADE A
WAMPLER/LONGACRE

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Whole ,
Chicken
Fryers
Pound.

• Dual AJr Comlollemp • Alumrnum Wheels
Clrmate Corrtr~
.• Keyless Remote
• Power Antenna
Entry System
• Power Dnver &amp;
• Loaded!
Passeh!Jer Sl!lll -···~-·--~-~-~""t

.ICRCIGER IS YOUR
.PHCITCII=IItiiSHIItiG
HEIIDOUIIRTE.S .

Monday· Saturday: g·am- 9 pm
· Sunday: Noon - 6 pm .

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2nd Set o

Color Prints

FREE!

see Store

For Details.

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Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

Week of Young Child to be observed
The Week or the Young Cbild
will be observed April 23-29 and
mayors of Middleport, Pomeroy,
and Syracuse are signinB a proclamation calling on cilizens to support and em:ourage agencies workin' for the well-being of young
cbildren. ·
The oatlonal celelnllon is sponsored to call attention to young
cbildreo tbroughou~ the country

aud to Improve efforu to ensure
that youna dilldrcn, regardless of
social or economic status, will

ruu ·lllial.
On Wedne~ AprU 26 from 2

reach their

being sponsored by Held Start,
Child Care Resource Network,
Carleton School, Gingerbread

you want ft ...
you'Ve gotlt ...

Centurtoil Ma111gement Group Ia currently
liking aRPIICIItlonl for en MDS COordlnltor 81
- Of our managed faclllllelln PomefOV, Ollla.
The Ideal Cllndldata will be 1 llcenMd AN
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with 2-3 Ysert experience In MDI. Thla Ia 1 3
''I
day per week poiHion but may be IXpincltdll
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ne'!ded.
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If you are Interested In thl1 challenging

..,,.., ••••• ac.....

House Prescbool/Cbild Care, Col- ·

..... hlly .......

laborative Group, aud the Meigs
County Early Intervention Pro-

-

BULLEnll IOARD
'6 00 colu•n Inch wHkdays
1 00
8 colu•n Inch S•nday

to 4 p.m., a Fun Fair wiU be held at
Dave Diles Part. Race Street, Mid- grall!.
dleport. The Fair will carry the
There will be clowns, games
theme "Early Years are Learnlag with prizes, face painting, and
Years
- Make Them
.
. Count". It is · refreshments. · ·

flower of the month which is the
jonquil. Daffodils need planting six
inches apart and six inches deep,
she said. The bulbs can be planled
at any time until the frost hardens
the ground in the fall. She discussed feeding the bulbs, and the
blooming scheduled in the spring.
Janet Theiss reported on GOior-

Public Notice

CAlL OUR OFFICE II 992•2155
BULLETIN BullHIJ IJtiiiJLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

ful trees, mentioning the crimson
King maple, the flowering cherry,
the sugar maple, dogwood, and the
red oak.

-

Business Services

1974 Ford 5610 Tractor,
130 hours- $16,995

MR. RIGGS ·

NTHE ClASSIFI~

NEWS. USED
HouseholdCollectible
9-5 T-Sun.
1 mile lrom Pomeroy,
SR33N
992-7502 or 992·5805

.Carmichael's
Farm and Lawn

r========:;
11

Tho VIllage ol Pomeroy will village employees.
accept sealad bids at the The specifications may .be
Clerk's office, 320 East Main picked up at the VIllage
Bids may be
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, on Hall.
health and life Insurance lor submitted until 12:00 PM

EST on May 1,1995. The
VIllage ruervea the right to
relvct any or all bids
John Blaetlnar, Mayor
(4!~h!sHysell, Clerk/True.

-:::::::::R:ea:I:E:~::t~:G:e:n:e:~;l;;;;~~
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3

Help Wanted

AN's &amp; LPN'S

THE
WATERING HOLE

needed for
Pediatric Home

Presents lrom Columbus. Ohio
L'AMOUR

~nc.nenta
SHOOTING MATCH
Sunday, April 23
Feeney Bennett
American l.egion Farm
Bailey Run Rd
12 gauge, I p.m. · ?

Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV
304-882-2996

IIDiit.EPORT . ~
om.. Houra: Moft,.frt.
8:00 ~m.-3:30 p.m.

'
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""" ...

Flw&amp;fimaiM

J
··,

' 814-742-30110
304-773-9545

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

dishwasher. Island Range, covered patio. Attached 1 car
garage in basement. Central Vacuum system, attic space. A

Lot Of House. Home in Good Shape. Immediate
Possession. Incredible Price ol $25,000.00
NEW LISITNG · LANGSVILLE · Mini Farm · 20.52+ Acres .
......_..,_ Home with 2·3 bedrooms. 1 bath : 2 drilled wells.
l ·barn. cellar with a room, 2 sheds, sitting patio, garden
space, and·extra trailer hook-up. Asking $29,500.00

Parts Plus
·t
t

POMEROY - 2 Story
Home located on Mulberry
Ave. This unique home Includes 3 bedrooms and full balh
a finished family·room and summer kitchen an~ also a utility
&amp;rea. The lower level basement has access to the back
yard Central air, fireplace and some home furnishings is
Included In the price. YOU CAN HAVE ALL THIS PLUS
WALKING DISTANCE TO TOWN FOR $37,500.00

MIDDLEPORT · 1 112 Story frame Home wilh 3 bedrooms.
family room . living room , kitchen with an office area. UtilitY
area buill in book shelveS, ceiling fans, central air, N.G.F.A.
heat, cement walks, privacy fencing, full basement. Cu1e
Place .. Lots of roomll New furnace 6 yr. warranty. ASKING
$29,000.00 LIVE HERE AND VOU CAN WALK ANY
WHERE IN TOWN TO DO YOU SHOPPING.

· QUArn"\(PAKfS
•IDWPRICFS
OVERNIGHfDEIIVERY

'.
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RACINE . Nice 1 1/2 Story Home with 3·4 bedrooms, large
living room, dining room, k-itchen w/noo~. family room, bath,
lots of closet space, Beautiful hardwood floors, newer
windows, siding and roof. Home has a cellar and a I car
garage. ASKING $40,000.00

•

Mix Master•M
Gas Container

299

Sallll'rlce 79'.

•

2 Gallon, Boz........
(t1228·08-442l

Bob Jones University Musical Ministry Team
The Musical Ministry Team from Bob Jones ·university in Greenville,
South Carqlina, is sc~eduled 10 be at First Baptist Church of Racine, OH
on Thu;sday, April 20, at7:00 p.m.
·
The six-member team is touring the midwestern United States this
spri ng presenting a program or familiar hymns and gospel songs
C6nslsling bf voca·r-and brass solos. duets. :md t~ios centered around thetheme' "Joy and Triumph through Trial". The leader of lhe·team, Randy
Hester, will close Ihe service with a brief message from the Word of God.
The me!llbers are as follows: Melody Hester from Alpharetta, Georgia,
and Randy Hester from .Roswell, Georgia; Amy Howe11 from Allen Park ,
Michigan; Kelly Patrick from Seneca, South Carolina; Eric Perry from
Wi~on, North Carolina; and John Mark Steel from Provo, Utah.
.Ro'?more information concerning this presentation, Call l'irst Baptist
Church of Racine, Ohio al949-2867 or 949-2545.

·

_,.....
3Q95

witt! ..........

Golet'tb 35.95
600 CA. {t24MBJ

-·

7 quart.

..........

1895
_
. ,_.......

_

-~ 211.95 •
165 CCA. 210CA.

::~:~~::.~~-~~~~~.'' ......1299

. . . . . . .1899

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9AIIICQ

WhenVUUIUd IN\'Gglii Mi'¥11
Ih .._(.liMo Anco WlPer Bl l'es
Pick ... )'011' ielliD film
at Pats Pbl&amp; Mall it In!

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······~~

Gartges
CO!nplete
Remodeilng .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

'985·4473 .

S1rvlca
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,

St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH

OIIAIW
PH-lA

PH~1A)

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i•OP1)

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FREE CAP
BY MAIL!
When you purchase any two
Wlx Oil or Air Filters. JIM pick up a
coupon for the hat and mail It in. This
Also enters you In the Wlx Weekend At

•••

The Races Sweepstakes!

"

Parts Plus Auto Store
Pomeroy, OH

FURNITURE SELLS SATURDAY:
Curved glaSS oak china cabinet, Pie sate, naiWall cupboard, 2 pc. Art Deco bedroom suite,
fancy oak hall tree, fancy oak wardrobe, laney oak bed, 3 pc. clawfoot parlor suite,
Hepplewi1He school master desk, laney oak dresser, oak secreJary, oak wash stand, oak claw
and ball table, 8 tin WMhl Country Virginia pie sale, sol of 6 oak chairs, chip·en-dale claw and
ball round tabla, fancy wicker highback sofa, wicker baby buggy, gate leg table, child's
dresser, oak ice box, oak draftsman table, cl&gt;lpen·dale coffee !able and more.
GLASSWARE SELLS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY:
Imperial Glass cups, 'slag duck, slag bowl, opalescent bowl. slag mYQ!!. butter dishes, green,
pink carnival, Imperial glass. carnival creamer and sugar bowl, carnival plates, saucers,
bowls, meat plaHer, bells and other plates, northwood carnival dish, carnival hen on nest and
others, carnival waterset, carom val pHcl&gt;er and 6 cups with wind mill pattern, I.G. Carnival
large blue bowl, carnival berry set, beautiful carnival bowls, punch bowl set, Fenton carnival
shoes, Iris and herringbone c(eamer and sugar bowl, saucers, deserts, bowls and glasses,
carnival mugs. I.G. Rooster; Fenton bud vase with sterling silver base, crystal buzz star
paHem punch bowl set, carnival swan, carnival whiskey bottle (Schenleys), large flo blue meat
platter Waverley, ruffled edge I.G. Bowls various colors, several pes. Heisey glass, two
beautiful cut bowls, Hull art vase, Federal glass, .carnival globes, early butter dish wheat
pattern, Stuebenville pattern meat platter, early butter dish with pears, etched bowls and
glasses, Heisey cream and sugar, dated cranberry and clear pitchers, Westmoreland vase
with grapes and several other pieces, Oueenware wash bowl and pllcher, Royal Dover china
~;:~:~:lo~B place setting blue and· white dishes India, depression .pitcher and 6 cups, pink
bowl, 7 pc. pink depression water set. Bohemia crystal compode, fancy earthware
pHcher decoraled, glass ladel's, covered dish w/frosted lion, R.S. Prussia hat pin holder. large
blue &amp; white Oriental pitcher, on Mercer cookie jar, Coca Cola Jlla5ses, several pieces red
rub.v glassware. Jewell T glass. occupied Japan. Nippon , Smith glass punch bowl arid 18
cups. Cobalt butter dish, Jumbo 2pd., peanut butter Iars 40Z &amp; 16 oz. Jumbo peanut butter
jars 3 112. 5 1/2. 7 oz. Jumbo peanut butter jars wnlds. candy containers, German stein
w/pewter lid, honey jars. compodes, glass Easter eggs, Fenton paperweighls (love .birds),
tobee mug, I.G. Story book mugs, stefl)ware goblets and glasses, Cobalt blue bottle w/eye
washer, German bowls, Mary GreQory green pHcher &amp; 5 glasses, clear Art Deco vase, candy
dish poppy cookie rar. Shawnee sugar bqwl, green depression C(l&lt;lkle jar, ~lue willow, 2
matching W.R. Candlelabra's, Shirley Temple pitcher, I. G. blue cake plate. pink depression Ice
bucket, 1971 Eisehour money plate. 1964 JFK money plate, several collectors plates dated &amp;
In original bo&gt;es. Norman .Rockwell, Limoggs, Mr. Spook, Scotty, Dr. McCoy, Capt. Kirk and
others, 1970 &amp; 1971 Fenton Chris\mas plates and others, t 971 Christmas plate IWo (urtle
doves, candlewick water set with tulips. large Hull chicken &amp; more.
·
COLLECTIBLES SELL' FRIDAY A_ND SATURDAY:
,
Outstanding lg. Edison cyclinder player mourning glory horn, three bears cloth book, brass
band harmonica, early baskets, Indian basket. spooners, Ravenswood grocery spice box. old
cigarette lighters. ACME ice cream freezer, hundreds early postcards, child·s fork &amp; spoon,
Coke bottle radio, wooden kitchen Items, 1973 coke tray, Tynar ·came.ra, pocket watches &amp;
cases, bross chalillon milk scales, paper cutter, early hi shoes, old flalware. Lance lar,
c8iluloid dresser pieces, several pieces jewelry, Tom's let. store jar, early wood churn, good
apple buller keHie. 1903 Coke adv. picture, CAM. Indian lady picture. Vigee Le Brum boy &amp;
girl wffiddle, Currier &amp; ·lves print (a clearing) YBallerina" sculpture by Anthony Cipriano, good
early pictures. Black American cream of whea1 picture, sterling sliver - 10 sets salt and pepper
shakers. 11 sets of candle holders, 75+ pieces of sterling flatware, 2 rings &amp; others, Royal
Hieger lamp, good early lamps, pr. slag glass &amp; bronze hanging lamps, chandelier
w/opalescent shades. oil lamps, model 12 Alladin lamp, oil lamp w/reflectors, lg. Weller lamp,
2 blue Fenion oil lamps w/ swirl shades, lamp signed Jefferson. 3 miner lamps, 3 lg . blue &amp;
white granite pan~ min. animals, opalescent cruet. early hat pins, rugs, old magazines, com ic
books, .old papers, 3' mini Teddy jointed head, button in ears, glass eyes and floss nose &amp;.
wire frame, hundreds of antique books, lodge ribbons and melals, cloc~ shelf, several ocanna
(sweet potato) , old casl lron bank. several good old fountain pens, Bordens mild jar, 1909
Whitehouse vinegar jug (small) . 2 beer adv. signs. wooden butter mold, Steeple clock, qwll
tops, lop hal, early Ieddy bears, Blossom Dairy Co. bank, shine on corn whiskey jar, several
campaign badges. 1924 carnival liberty bottle, baby lullaby bank, marbles. old hats, Royal
Halburton china O.M.B. Liquor bailie 1973 N2B, wooden hand carved doll bust. shoo! duponl
powder tin avd. sign. lg. unusual blue statue of Lady watering flowers, spongeware, Wiign~r &amp;
Griswald ware No. 8-tO. baby plate, civil ware soldier bank. glass bank abd. Pittsburgh Pa•nts.
avd. tins Country doctor, Edward Robinson Murie l, white ash, silver place pitcher wtram
heads, rare adv. sign 'The Sun Shines No More Perfecl Plant Old Hickory' work of KY Wagon
Mfg. Co., set of 47 graduallng sleight bells.
DOLLS SELL SATURDAY:
Several small biSQUa dolls. dolls EFFAnbee. Martha Washington, 5 small block dolls, Indian
, 1 several bisque china doll$, Archie Bunkers gra('ldson doll , ·bust of dolls , 1984 Shirley
Temple doll &amp; others.
.
TOYS SELL SATURDAY:
~
,
·
.
wind up bear, wind up squirrel, toy balloon man &amp; others, Mane wind up lion. tonie toy gun,
or;nt;no press, Marx mof'or transit, meet by frleRd signed Charley McCarthy, cap guns,
·J.ac• in the box, old battery operated car in original box, Viewmaster, roll bingo game~ ball
bingo game, dice and others.
GUNS SELL SATURDAY:
Stephen 311 20 guage double barrel, Rem . rolling block, 1886 Winchester lever action 12
Merlirt 336·30·30 rifle , 12 guage Bluefield Clipper shotgun, Model 94 · 32 Winchester
rifle:·steohei1S 20 guage pump, Win. model37:20 guage, Belgum Browning light twelve.
STCINE\1/AFtE SELtS SATURDAY:
4 gallon pure fulton whlske~ jug Myersv &amp; Co. Covington KY, ·several stone jars. 2 T. F.
Reppen- Jackson C.H. &amp; Palatine WV. Hamilton Janes, A.P. Donaghho, Michael Moore Protor
wv &amp; several Parkersburg ·wv. A.P. Oonaghho zipper panern, Williams &amp; Peppert 3 gaL jar, 4
A.P. Donaghho Parkersburg WV N2 and 1 Shinngton WV, T.F. Reppert 3 gal. jar, 2 sJoneware
bed warmers: R.C .P. CO. NY bed warmer, adv. stone jugs, S!Oneware piggy banks, blue &amp;
white rolling pin, 3 nice blue &amp; white stoneware pitchers. water cooler wlcobalt blue birds &amp;
brushwork. Raison Brook crock, 2 mini blue &amp; white wedding ring crocks. blue &amp; white pitcher
&amp; bowl set Searl blue &amp; white crock, stoneware canteen w/blue. 2 W.C. Watts Ravenswood.
blue &amp; white swirl paltern stone pitcher. McCoy pitcher &amp; bowl, several blue &amp; white
stoneware butters. several blue &amp; white pilchers, Hamilton &amp; Jones 5 gal. churn, blue &amp; •
sto11eware kissi ng dutch, 2 lg. blue crock3, 1 lg . green crock, 4 sm. progressive pottery cro~:ks.
Mc.Coy PDl!!!fY, sey~ra! ple~s Ravens\'o'(]od_po~ery, Ironstone ·urinal, A.P. Donaghho hat iars
&amp; others.
·
~~·
~AUCTIONEER NOTE: Outstanding .::onectlon of antiques ~nd collectable some. have .
packed for ye?rs. On Saturday we will be running two rings most of the day so bnng a fflend
and spend the day. Don't miss this one still unpacking bo&gt;eslll
Auction conducted by:
Mason,

992-2139
~1

(;:,':,;-.:J

State Rt. 33
Darwi!l, Ohio ·

•

~ 1 11

~ ~ ~

1:.•_1

.

•
•

•

•

WV

(304) 773-5785 or 773-5447
Lunch
Auctioneer: Rick Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer; Kevin Meadows #A- 1l6
Terms: Cash or chec;k w /1 0
Not responsible for accidents or loss of
Licensed and bonded in Ohio, Kentucky and 1111"'~+

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

'

DIVE'S

swiPstiOP
One mila out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Set • .
1-4;

• Cratwrn8n Toots
•Toy•
•Guns
l.ollds of M18c.
Buy-Sell·Trade

Safely And Privately

Garages • Replacement Windows
• · Room Addltloos • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
•
FREE ESTIMATES

Listen to voice mail messages left by interesting
singles of all ages. Leave messages for singles
that interest you or open your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead 10 new
friendships and meaningful relationships .

992"2060

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752

'
(No Sunday.
Calls)

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Knchen &amp;Bath Remodeling
Room Additions
$iding, Roofing, Pallos
Reasonable
Insured - Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Estimates

2/12192/ttn

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.
"Take the pain out
of painting - Let I,JS
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior

Sunday 1:00 p.m:
12 Gauge Only
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
. , Limited: 740
Message;
Aller 6 p.m.
Backbore, 680 Front ·
614·985·4180
'}J21JJ9S .

(614) 992-5291 .

SUMMER
IMAGES

• TREE IRIMIN_,
AND IUMOVAL

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry·Ciark

. 992·9949 • 992·6471
. Hrs. of Operation: Mon.-Fri. 8:00A.M. til ~:00 P.M.
~ilturday 8:00a.m. tiiiS:OO p.m.
Sundays by appl. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
area. Call lor rate schedule.
Min. $2.00
3131115
I)~~~~\ ~

v\l

~~V-'~'c

. Shrubs. Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

1111 Slack
992·2269

4113195

Licensed

57·946457

MILHOAN
Auctioneer
35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
. Certified Personal
Property Appraiser
. Bonded · (614) 1192.4079

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS

"1411 mo.

BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
28 Years Experience
PHONE
1-800-377-4477
614-245-0437

IIO\\ \IW
E\C:\\ .\TI \C;

;::;=::::;::;:;::;:::·-·r----....-.......-..................-.;;;....-_________;,...---,
tliaest•Low Ratesl

WICKS

HAULING
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Diane Hendricks

614-992·3470

· (Specialize In
dl'lveway spl'liading)
.' Limestone,

MODERN SANrrATION

POMi:ROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp;·portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates. ·
Job alles • Camp SHell • Family Reunfllrul a Perlles
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Graver and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Licensed &amp; Bonded- 20 years experlencf
992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

~

RHETI'

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

MIKE MARCUM'S

Light Haultng,

9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00
16for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;
Open

Community Cab Co. Inc.

o\\\1-l.

101&gt;/1mo

NEFF REM.ODELIN6
SERVICE

7 Days A Week- 24 Hours A Day
$2 .99/Min Musl Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

614-992·7643

Mowing,
Trimming
Firewood
Also:
Contract work

~

614 388·9865

Meet Inte·resting Singles

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

L&amp;W
Lawn Care

.

Addilions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box220
Bidwell, OH 45614

Kenny's Auto Center
1 .800-486·1590
264 UP.per River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-997-1
.....
Galli olis, OH . 45631

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

.

MANLEY'S
.
IMPROVEMENT
f.• HOME
Roofing. Siding. Room

We Hare Cars and Vansl

B&amp;W
Gar~~ge 1nd Towing

Kenny's Auto Rental

lnaurance Work Welcome

Surrounding (814) 885 3581 or
892-53311

Rick Pearson Auction Co.

Prices good at tilf'sc ra rtiCipJtlnq PJrls F'lus Julostores
Ouilnt1ty R;ghts f l"su1vecJ Riltrl Checks Avadilblr•

. .

•·
•·

.......-r.

plus tax

(148)!:XX SQnOI)

&amp;:s~:~~::~~~~~-~

,h

· '5 Quarts oil after rebate ............. 2.95
1 Oil Filler .................................... t .99
Oil Drain Pan .. ,............................ 1.49
Total'. ........................ .. .................6.43

::-::k:l.u~-~.e~.~~~~~ ... :..... •.. 899
(1111890XX, 892XX series)

'

I·

~~r'fa~:c~!l:n....................149

WIIGNER'

119 W. 2nd

· Racine, OH
:t

t
r·
••
••

Af8 30'1111111-in reball.
Saii1Prlce 11!1'.

Lawn &amp; Garden
Battetias

.·•

GREAT VISIBIUTY REBATE!

. .......................... .4A9

First 'Baptist Church

'

..

59~

2-cycle engines . 1 Gallon, ·4 oz. 1r1211 -os-«2l

'"'

••,,.

HD30W. Quart. Limit 12.

Sized for mi&gt;ing fuel and oil for

..

.-•.

Af8 30'maiJ.In f'llllabt.

Most popular applications.
Prices vary by application ..

I*Prictt 23.9/i (IM32211J)

.l

..
••

~II'Fi~~;;·~-~- .... :...............199

--.........

~

.....'••
...

sale price does not Include alate surchargoe t&amp;ll or

.. wAs

..

'·'•

49¢

(tPHIA.: PHI6: PH25 ; PH29; PH45; PH47;

•

•.
•.'.

10W30. 10W40. Quart. Limit 12.

Marina Batteries

I

Motor 011

86 Prizes total including great electronics!
Register today at a participating ·
Parts Plus autostore near you!

WE HAVE BUYERS!I WE NEED LISTINGS! !I!
. HENRY E. CLELANO ................................... ........ 992·61 91
TRACY L. BRINAGER. ......................................... 949-2439
SHERRil. HARL .................................. ............. 742-2357
HENfiY 1;. CLELAND 111. ................................... 992·6191
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND................... , ............... 992-6191
OFFICE ................................................................. 992·2259 .

OF HARD TO FIND PARTS

Change Your Oil for
less Than $]00 *
at.Parts Plus!

REGISTER TO WIN
A TRIP FOR TWO
. TO THE 1995
BRICKYARD 400!

•S W E E P S T A K E S*

1995

.,.

au os ore .

upstairs, living ·room , dining room , ~qUipped kitchen and

foyer on the main level. The partially finished basement has

New"omes

•Thlnkt~·

Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 in Mason, West Virginia .
Having Lost His Wife Mr. Derric~ Is Selling His
Entire Uving Estate And Relocating.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Derrick Had Collected Antiques For Over 40 Years.

•

992-2259

.
Frame

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

&lt;Microwo- oOiopoNio

FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1995
.SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1995
.
9:30 a.m. Both Days

J.

NEW LISTING · 1 Floor Frame Home with 3 bedrooms, .1
1/2. baths. Gas F.A. heat, full basement with ullllty, bath.

'

1/tMfn

614-992-6223

_,

· Free Estimates

-H.w.

ES,.A,.E AUC,.ION

•

_ _,.._,

.Wlndowa, Blown
tn1ulatlon, Storm
Doora; Storm ·
Wlnclowa·, GeregM.
FreeEatlme•

Chuck Stotts
'

r. •

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

PRil:es GOOD THROUGH APR

Replacement, •

WHALEY'S AUTO
,.
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
· Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992-70130R
992·55530R
FREE 1·8CI0-8&lt;18-00701
DARWIN, OHIO

'

FREE
ESTIMATES .

614-764-0960.

MIDDLEPORT • Cute one floor frame home with 2
bedrooms, bath, F.A.N.G. heat, utility room, fireplaces,
fenced yard with storage building. Nice neat hf&gt;me close to
local shopping. ASKING $29,000 MAKE AN OFFER II

a Alum. Siding,

W.llt-.

.L

c... ~.ltt1 A1ta lt~f R1~1lr
PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
0•• Stt~

Roofing, VInyl

. oPoleBama

•

'.

VInyl

•Addltlone.oSidlng
•Roofing .Painting
-oe,....-Pqreha

•

OFFICE

The Dally Sentinel-Page 11 •

Ohio

'

13eiAYAN PLACE

. -New ttoma.

. IT'S RAINING
~
BARGAINS...
I
inthe
, 1
CLASSIFIEDS ·, !

.

FEMALE REVUE
Thurs., April20, 9:00AM
$6.00.In Advance
$1 o.oo At lhe Door
KARAOKE

Carecasein
Pomeroy area.
TrachNent
Experience
required.
Please call

33111 Heppy Hollow Road
MldtiiiPDr~ Ohio 457111·

I

WHAIYIIUCALLII
SHOP

60" Deck - $5,995
Both absolutely like new.

J&amp;L INSULAnON

1
•

luy • Sail'· Irati•

1994 Simplicity Sunstar,
20 hp Hydrostatic with

Cheryl Kuns was welcomed as a
member. She was also the winner
of the door prize. A dessert course
was served.

Public NotiCII

Pomero~lddleport,

IIIIlS'
Ho••l ,..,_,,

·;

...

polltlon please contact Dick Huffer at 1-814992·2104 Ext.: 271. EO!; .

. 614·446-2412

Public Nolle.

~neadi~April19,1995

MDS COORDINATOR

Garden club discusses regional meeting
The Spring regional meeting
held in Athens was discussed when
the· Wildwood Garden Club met
recently at the home of Peggy
Moore.
Evelyn Hollon presided at the
meeting which opened with devotions by Betty Millhoan who read
about 'alms. Doris Grouser
read,"Yesterday. To6ay and
Tomorrow" and for roll call mem.bers named their favorite spring
flowering tree.
.
•
Heidi Elbedcl~ bad the birthday

..

Wed~ay, Aprll19, 1995 ~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8ulldozi11~,

Home Sites, Lam)
Clearing, Scftlic Systems
&amp; Driveways.

TruckingLime8tone,

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

"'oward L. Wrltesel

, ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR

II·B'''n

"'""

Backhoe,

ScrvicL-s.

Herb•, P.,ennlala,
hBJiaellnge, Banging

Gutters
,
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

lukets, 1tc.

949-2168

'

Angie's

Greelibouse

·

(Depot St.) Rutland to
l.eading Creek, then to.
Paulins Hill. Just2 1/2
mile$ from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

\

!'WlS/94 TFN

Announcements

Open.Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Weekends Call 6t 4· 742·2772

. Lonely? Call
Tonight!

1-900-726-0033
Ext: 8.878
$2.99 Per Min
· Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co
(602)·9.54-7420

H&amp;HSAWMILL
Portable
Handsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport. Ohio 45760

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193
Dual Wh. . l Pull

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

PERFECT VIEW TAN

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

New BIISiness In Ooeral1on

Wolfe Bed

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

Stewart Hollow Rd Oft

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

£;AS1j
'RO;h;Af\Je£
CALL NOW!!!

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

Bradbury RtJ.
Phone 9924044
Owners. Roll1e &amp;
Sh1rley Stewart
Your Busrness Would
Be Apprecrared.
20 Sess1ons For

' 25.00

·I-900-s6nooo

Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Proca.ll Co.
(602) 954-7420

99~-6215

Pomeroy. Ohio
1

Its Allin 7!Je WANTAoJ

~.IN/7MIIIMlltlllll1~! '!

1M 7

'l/11111/f/NNIHIH(fNHIIH/JHII/HIIIIntQNU.

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
RUILAND ··

742·2455
3t1611 mo.

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-56!2
· Bring in ad
for 10% off.

~---:------..
Landscape Stock
White Pine &amp;
Norway Spr
UCe

A&lt;-.

Ap.,.oi' oil . . _ 01

Flf-.

Eaay
Yau Cut, 114 Htl8034

Hilul, •

F- AppllaMM, I 111M. 114-

~

'""'::'!...hoipC: "t:!:i :

44f.1121.

. ~:._
CounciL
182

~-

-

304~7~-~m

•

...

BARR'S Nursery

lilac. Yud Solo home, You...,_
Toke " 11• 114-H7.04ee.

742-3149 or 992·7285

To A Oood

~;;;:;;;;;;:;::::=~====:::::=~~~

Homo:

' ·81•

w....

256-tm.
Old
K"t- Uttor T - , 114-

�•

VVednesda~~pril 19,1995

• I• 'J

Wednesday, Apr1119, 19~ .:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

ALLEYOOP

·-

I RID OJ:
ACFIOSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1· 111p ......
4 ...... llldlog
• ...... duck
12 Yilt...
13 Atlhl8 .,._
14--.
lllcl.achl8n

, , _•• ,. ~
=(el.j

..

.

17~ of

BEATIIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

.

..

Ouclrun

:x.r-=- ;.,
..

Rentals

·.

No-· -Appll-No---·-

VI'IIA FURNITURE

2--.~·

~Ouolly ..... - DilliOn
• - - l a t h - Double
COOh
Corrrl
RENT-N
.....,_ AIOo A..Uoblo.
~. Nloo, No Pole, -

UIIIKioo,
I - . FJDM
lleDcmaad'•l1t .......

;..,

r

ReiW- l Do-" RoquiNCI, -

.Pt. Pleasant

1111.

• VICinity

Do!Mry.__211_

Do-

Chu..h

"Actually, this isn't so bad ... I'm an arsonist."

Pomeroy,
. Middleport
•vlclnHy

......,

'-

.

":.'~~
Dolly

CloiiiJIOIIo

.

Boats
Motors
for&amp;Sale

1\/e 6EEH WORKING ON

Tl415 GREAT REPORT ...
WRITING PA6E AFTER
PA6E AFTER PA6E ..

s-11 Trtl...., In QaUipcllll, ClaM

::::---:-:-==-==--=-lin

•

OWnor/Ot&gt;efaiON

C..cl,.l Fratghl Cor...,. II
hiring upo~onl:o&lt;l OfR'a 10 oun
llatbid, aom porconllgo ol
graM rwvonua DUlling com~y
or pulllng own tn~IIW,

t,.u.,.
hNnh lneurance wtd.ntal 1: ,...

avallablo, plot. .
avallab'-, -bob-4.11 Nun~nc:e
avall&amp;b&amp;l.' lual urd aptam,
wMkly
aentemerc•,
'Tider
~..... u- homo. 1-f00-220--

·alon

Part limo, oV.nlngo, 111-111
laltphone Ml-. o.wM

voa for

&amp;14-~:131, houra of lpm-7pm.

. - - .. ....,.. entlq.. and
-t""!,!"' flam too lal'll•
W too 81111U. WNI buy one pltc:e

lor

44

.

AllfOal
.esiate advertising
In
this
newspaper
Is subject to
Jhe Federal Fair Houslnq Act
of ~968 which makes It Illegal

Ur._,
IM.."v· .,•••

2 Bed- Atlaltrnent, IIMr
Of Rio Grondil c....

pue.

to advertise •any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, colot. religion,
se)( familial status or natiOnal
origin, or any lntenUon to
make any such preferenCe,
limitation or discrimination, •

~a!:::'A!!ni.., 8:/SJ':,"• HOMEOWN~~ AUTO
llennal lor

DIS-

UFE &amp; HEALTH

att.r

30t 688 4257

caii81WII2-3711. EOH.
2br: all electric,

This neW$P8per.wlll no'

appl~

fufl.

ntol.;ii, troth • watar pold1
cloM to etorn, achool, anc1
chu,.,_, hallday IICtlvKI• ""
chlldran.
~1042781JM.

kn?WIIngly accept .
advertisements for real esutte
which Is in violaUon ol (he ta"w,
Our readers are hereby
Informed that aJI dwellings· .
advertised In this n9wspaper'
are evallable on an equal
opportunity basis. ,

1m
Bonlievlllo
Pontiac
Brougham, loadad. 1300. 3041711-7.181.
'

Laurwtand Aplo., eth • 0~
~Now Havan; 304-882-3716 or
-TTD l.aoo-882-8171 ot 6772.
EOH.
21lf1 otuq, ,.llhlao pold, no polo.

!IIIW-

IT'S

1184 SubiN Turbo 4WD,
oul-llo, air, ........ rellabll,
$1200, 114-1112-a725 •

TIM~

6fT UP.

TO

•

$37S/monlh. "00

Molal Rooting • StdlngL Chick
Ojlr Prlc11 You ~uy. AI:IIMr Farm SUpply, IM44WI113.

3room

apo~manl,
oulaklrto
Henderaon, $27Simo w/utlllll•
pold. $50 dapoolt. 304-41715-1680.

31 Homes for Sale

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wallwood Drive
2-IIOJJ gorago, beolda Haven 8-"'&gt;alkal. boltom lnHn $228 lo 1291. Walk lo ohctl
-.plataly remodatod, 3• • movlao. Coli 1114-14&amp;-2588. EquoJ Houolng Oppootunny.
beys: (Iron! bliJ 40'x28', bef 32'1&lt;231, 100'140' ' ....
Fumlohld Efflclancy .,-.,,
121,000.
UtltKioo Pald~_~.hlrl Bath. 1107
3 81J wm Clpe Cod Styte Second. Galh,..la, 114 411 4411
Home In IUo Oranda, lxcallonl .Allar 7 1&gt;.11.
.

--ma.

CondHion,

-

KKchan,

&lt;JJtgtnal
0111
w-..n,
$51,000, 114-245-4311.
1 Bodroom Ranch, FR, Rodnov
Vlllaga I~ $42,000, Phano
11411-2371.
'

•*

Employment Services
11

A ~tAPe' W!tiTH l"O
INQlllllt vlt-IAT ll" Mt1-tolf
WtltN YOu',e vi AllM ANt&gt;
(,OMfO/fT A, Lt Al4'iJ
SLtfPING ~NU(i£. Y
............ IN B~P1

pllancM fu-, llundry
, _ , loclfllaa IO ochoOI
In town. ap';;il.,;llono ovalleble
at: VIllage GrMn Apto. 1141 .or

Real Estate

lnsj.lrance
CloiiiM stu ex To 1 Good 13
Col dllooi, 114o245-6887.
.:.=::::::::-::-:-;~;:;;=:;-'""':::­
Top Pr- Paid: All Old U.S. AMERICANSUR~~~NAL
INt:olno, Gold Rlr.¥1Sllvor Coin.. .
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT .

out-

Transportation

e~W&amp;~tMGz.

2bclrm. opeo., tatll -trlc, .,.

.

~ dog. , .,.._.82 5053
lpm.

Apanmam

cloanlng dapoalt. Coli 30W711IIIIItltilr lpm;

Wa,.od To 8uy; Junk Autoo
With Or Wltlbit Motora. ~II
Unr Uvoly. IM-3U 0003 .
Wa- To ~~Nica Ultlo Glrll

Want....

l FOR60T WMO I
WA5 WRITIN6 A60UT

for Rant

« ""',.,. ........ o.br Marlin, ..... 112·1114~

SUDDENLY IT
14APPENED..

To ~- ' Groceoy, 114441-1151,

Mlddlo-togod ladJ nMdod lo u..
with
oouplo.
MUll do
be
aba.
to alda~Y
drive, run
.,.,.,

1

Gnocl- Avlng. I ond 2 bodroom aportmonll at Vlllago
Manor
and
. Alwrelcle
Aportmonlo In Mlddlaport. From
11232~ • Call 114-1192-5868.
Equai_HoUolng ~unllloo.
NJce a.. bedraam ap~rtmant in
Pl. Pt ...anlt 114-182.sas&amp;.

-

WJ.\E.N [ WI\S IN

. OFFICIN..LY

MYTWEN\Ie:S I

lolf&gt;.S OffE.NDE.D

R£Kfl.E.D

Pata for Sale

MID!X£ AC£1

Sobr

bod, atroiiOr, high chair, Groom llholl -Pol" Groomlna.
aar •at. ~~~ waiUr, pl•r FNiurlng Hrdro · Bath. Julie
Wobb. Cill 114-14tl-023t.
'
B•tt"'Y Opo&lt;.tod Botnw~ car, AKC Coclcor Spanlal Pupploa,
Black with WhM Nocko t150 oo.
-.liDO, 114-24~.
114-317-7!10t.

......

I THINK I'VE:

If~

f\':J(f.D 10
CI\E(.I(

My I. D

South

West

49

Pass

North
I NT
Pass

Phillip Alder's new book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
au.W&lt;JroiVn.ea upon request, for

Boola By Rod W11111 Chi-a

-10 To 40 Dog-e, 'li.H. Br-n AKC Roglat- Chi,... ShlrGuarantoOd. Liowoat Prlcoo, Tho 1111 pupo, flrat - · 114-84tlltt21.
Shot Cola,·~-=.

P.O. Box 169. Roslyn
11577-0169.

S:W. or 1

,.

Campers a.·
Motor Homes

wKh cool&lt;lng.

., . , =

AI• tra&amp;.., •pace on rtver. All

46 Space lor Rent

Sale

.

•

==-~=--:---::::!'-:M110 Commodora Ctalllc,
lhrN bedroom ono ond 112

y"'"'

1171-3020 INDIREP.

WUt . Do Spotng Clnnlng:
CloMia, Coblnot .. Wlndowo arid

Elc. IM-441-2111.
W06.11d' IIU to tNda houMe. 1 ac
In .Lokalond, Florldo lor 3br
haun In Pt Plolllnl lor thl
waok of Ju .. 11-24. C - IO
Dlonoy a ·baoohH.· Protar -"'

SETUP. ..,.-755-

1116 M110 3 llf.. 2 both, lncludoo aldrtlng, alopo1_blocka, 1
yMr

homeoWI'IW8

lft.Ur'lnce,

and I 111Gf11hl FREE lei llrll.
ontr l!025 clown end 1213 por

mo. eon 1-J-3238.

614445-1011

Services

51

Home

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

Household

Goods

. . . . .. .. •, . . . .

Jt.

~

4

•

•

'

,

'

•

•

•

•

•

~lender

.....

48Repaot
...-+-+~ -49 ~nglo-Saxon

51 Draft agcy.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

by Lula Campoa

~ C.ptw cryptovr-n&amp;.,. crNIId from quotiiiii'Jnl by famou. P"l* ,_. lncJ PftMnl
E.ch It«...apn.rltllllil for anol'ltr. TOtllty's w.· X ~ U

in._

'MXLOFC
IEL.'-

E

I E N F P
p

YFECW

'LFIFPPAZJ

N L T K P

ZMAFH

TH

Country Furnlturw-Fumlturw

LT

PXLREJ .•

'-. E 0 L PI'
C F Y Y W A I' C.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My uhimate dream is to have my own bank maybe
in Paris. I'd call~ Bankl' Bank on t~e Lelt .Bank."- Ernie Banks.
'

'::~:t~~, S©\\ct\lA-~t.tfs·

- - - - - - 141te4 ~, CLAY I ; POUAN

....

WGID

letters of the
0 Rearrange
four scro mbled words be·

low

10

form four wards-,

C L U HM

-Rr:-E-r-E--.T_A-r--11
";,''
1 1 1 ~

~

3

1

NUK CL 0

My brother-in-lawwasalways
complainingaboutsomeailment.
His wife says he's a hypochondriac because he can't leave
well enough-·· - •.

I0

TtiE E SQUARES

A UNSCRIIMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
W
TO GET ANSWER

The old timer gave these words of wisdom to his new
coll.eague. "\Nhen you're called on the carpet it has
nothing to do with the floor COVERING."

APRIL 191

~D\JR

l\ODY...

.

•

tw

Etmronlc:o; $100.00 114-44&amp;-

:1548

0000

USED

APPLIANCES

Waohoro. dryaro, rotrlgorat"'!,

... _ _ !lklggll Appll- "'
Ylni s•-· cilllll4-44&amp;-73tltl, ,.
IIQO.o4111-34111.

·Lots a. Acreage

r.q.-.

304-4175-5252.
Sconlc Yolloy, AppMi Grove,
booutlf\A 21C
watar,
etv• Bow.,. Jr.,
71-2336.

ELJ

G X~ N.

••

Evary Room. lml.. Rt. 2 Nonh,
Pl. Pleuant. 304-e7UII20.
For
Solo
Saloltt.
and

..

11173 Chovr Dump Trucll, :~~~ Ron'O' TV Sorvlco, -"'lzlng
~. Aophllt, '15,1100, I .
In ZenKh atao a«VIclng moo1
-~
olhlr bnlnda. oallo. 1·
1m Font PU, 302. 4 ..,... Good aoo-7ti7-GOII, wv 304-1711-:1391.
1800080

=~~':&amp;.0,:

'"' 82

romance? The Astra -Graph Matchm.aker
c:an help you _to understand what to do to
ASTRO-GRAPH
· make the relationship work. Mail $2,27 to
Matchmaker. P.O. Box 4465 , New York,
NY 10163.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You might
feel an urgency today to liberate yourself'
BERNICE
tram restrictive S1luat1ons and arrangeBEDE OSOL
ments. To do.so, you m1ght behaVe errat·
ically.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Be extreme·
ly cautious today in any situa1ion rqquir•ng a financ ial in\lestment , even If 11
1rivol\les close friends. Red fl~gs are up in
thJS ar9a.
'.
LEOJ~uly 23-Aug. 22) Try not 1~ let out·
s1de onfluences sway your judgmenl
today, especially in situations where you
Thursday, Apnl 20. 1995
have to make decisions under pressure,..
.son\e interesting changes could como VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Even though •
y.our way m the year ahead which .vou· you 'll on lend to 'get a lol accomplished
might initially resist. However, With 11me, toda,y, 11 osn 't likely thai you will. Too
you'll be happy thongs happened tho way many disruptions may distort your agenda.
they dod. ·
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20j To achieve LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Avoid calling
.yo~r obtectoves today. you m1ght be much upon someone you know socially to do
mOf'e Intense than usual. Temper your tavoi-s tor you in..the business wortd , This
behavtor and your words so as not to • person m1ght feel you are taking advan·
appear too dictatonal on the eyes of oth- tage of him/her
ers . Trying to patch up a broken SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II you do

q'our

Plumbing &amp;

'

'Birthday

lotoi:l&amp;"f'lc

•
••

fJ:S'TERII&gt;IG ON

Cllrpal • Vlnrt In Block 15.00 Yd
a Up 110 Potllmo Of Kllohan
C.r~t In Stock. Qv., 35 Pal·
larno Vlnrt In Stoclt llotlohon
Carpale, fM-14&amp;-11144.

1.32 aeroo, 271 I wlda ridge lop
building alto, "S.IIIO. Rorbum
Rd, noaonoble -trtctlone. No
llnglo- lnaul•oo, p~~~-. !n-

•.
..; ., .........

•:

..

Elactrlcal &amp;

~

...-t-+-l

43 Actual being
44-Herl
45 God of love
46GrMkc47 Church

NOT tfo.St Sll'~~lt\G IN
1\- Qv~~~~~i\WE. CHto.tllil£~
\(~\IIING. '&lt;OU H~Nt
STR,..NGE 111\~i~NT B"tTtRIP..

2 Extra Gooil Solid Ena ToliiH,
114-371-:mo AFTER I P.M.

Financial

Vending: Won, Got Rich Oulck.
·
Prtcod to SelL -20,0353.

42 Gladden

Improvement•

1110 Chaw
-rune
- •
llhortbed,
Dauta,
IOOko good. f\1100. 304-1711- F-mon'o Hoatlng And Cooling.
lnllolledon And Sorvlco. E~
21141.
Cortlfled. Raaldontlal, Cammarclal. ·~5&amp;-1811.

-ation mallod on

28 Bronte
heroine
Janil29 Rockfleh
3t· PoetDlcklntof\
32 Majority
38 Laaao
39 HaMtll
goddett
41 Auatlc

\TS

_. .!fel!tlng

35

27-angry

Merchandise

. . . . -. CIIU 14tU41-72110.

WIN Got A StNdy?"ah -

IWEDNESDAY.

•
:
·
•

11114 lnnabnlck cam.,..., luUi' ;
loodod, lOla oloxtra_e,}alle ovor •
financing. 304-6715-41-.
•: -

watar I!ICIUd!ld, J;Ablo ov.allablo,
$85/mo., )uat 10 mlnutoo lnHn
Athlno, 114-1112-2t8T.

oallonl oondKion, .,0,500 -

tlabla, 114-112-1084.
1m F1lrpolnl, Mx?O, new carpat throughout, th,.. bedroom•, two bathe, wtdarplnnlng, stove and refrlg.,.tOf lncludad, t14-111-43il anar 7pm.
1893 Skyline Ma71 3 Bodn&gt;omo
1 Bath, Stove, R•frtger•tor An~
Buln-tn Dlahwa•hert.. 2 O.CU
One 11 Cove~. On Nice Rental
lun
NUrNrY School. Lot, $18,000, 6~45-11007.
AVON SELLS rTSELFI
' Chlldca,.II-F
Sam-6:30pmA - M 4\!lnlt. AI Work 2-K, Y 111 SchOol A Dunna LIMITED OFFER NEW 14X70
- . Banathal Diac:ountol au......:.", Doye .,... '""
1985 DOWN, "15M0.1.fREE
Torrllory Oollonol. tndap. /Rep. 1mum 114-44t-3117.

lion

Moblla home
· -.lor
In
count,..
gorboga,
. . .- and

deCk with root, ••·

lwll)lllr

mit.. on 440 engine 171100.00
114 441 3541
'
. 1184 ChoVJ ollm- ad
motor ho.,.., 18,000m~ vary ·
goad condllon. 304-441-1143.
11110 Skompot, Fotd-D-n Com- .
I, Exoallont Cond~

-.upo. Coli aHar 2:00 p.m..
304·773-SUl, M11on WV.

.32. Mobila Homas

ABLOWN 71-f ~ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CI.ASSF~

llotcw Homo.
Ctoone P u l r - Hllch, 11000
111'1t

Roome lor rani .. ...,.. or moot h.

SINpln; -

22~

23Sicw. . . . . .
24 Llnul't
country
25 Fencer't

Levity· Agony- Racer- Felony· COVERING

,30111.

~=~·~ 11580.
ot $120/mo. Gallla Holal.
I

WIN Do ln4otlor. Extotlor Paint1ng "--&gt;ablo R.at•, .Ea;;;:l.ncod, Rot..."'*!. !._or F&amp;tifnotoe, CoM 114-24o-o751.

IItts

::=-'...:

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Rooms

Avon. Earn 1&amp;-$14/HA. FuiVpart
llme. No door to " -· 1-eo.

5 Reataurant

11

11UMa.,._
20c-1011a

PRINT NUM8EREO LETTERS tN

Furnished

DEUYERY '
11588.

Drlvea off

Complete the chuckle quoted
-.L.
_.__
~.-1.-..1.--'----'·
bv f1/,lmg in the m1sstng words
1..
you develop from Jtep No. 3 below.

Very clalin 1 bedroom •ptrtment In ~~~~/;rt, cau 814-812-

-1'42-1131.

4

26 ClencMd
hand

I

tll7ll.

,.:;e

6 MO.t' IIndt
7 NeiGhbor of Fr.
8 Glldoeon Ice
9 Legend
10 Faahion

ecto

1--r.~,:-Tl-.-r~:-5-,~-,--1

Twin Rlvorw Towar;. now
lng -lcallone "" 1br. HUD
•ubaldfzecl apt. for eklerfy •nd
hln~ppod.
EOH 304-e711-

bath, 10x11

31-Zollo
338rndtype
34 Before
. 35Hebtew

1 OecoreteiP!n
2 Frav"• caualn
3 eppo.He of

East
Pass .
Pass

In a movie. a scantily clad woman
moves toward a closed door. II there is
no danger, the music will be light and
airy . But if she is in jeopardy. the
soundtrack is appropriately tense. The
audience is forewarned.
At the bridge table, half the cards are
there for you to see and half are hidden.
The snag is that no one supplies back·
ground music. You must watch for im·
pending danger unassisted.
North operyed one no-trump. as
would all of us. South jumped straight
to game. as would many of us.
West led the spade jack. After win ·
ning with dummy's king, declarer im·
mediately played the ace and another
heart. At this point. East rose to the!&gt;&lt;'·
casion. He went in with lhe heart king
and. in answer to his partner's accurate
diamond-nine discard. switched to the
diamond seven. Now .declarer was
dead, destined to lose four tricks : two
hearts. one diamond and one club..
True. South was slightly unlucky, the
trump b;eak being bad and the defense
good. But declarer might have tried to
avoid a diamond loser. (Music played
agitaloJ Taking the risk ol a bad black·
suit break, South should have won the
first trick in hand and immediately tak·
en a club finesse.
Lei's suppose East wins with the
club king and switches to a low diamond . Declarer wins in the dummy,
plays a spade to hand and takes a second club finesse. When that wins, South
discards his diamond loser on dummy's
club ace. Then comes the ace and another heart. With this layout. the or·
chestra plays maestoso.

t-101-1 I Cffi~~.RJ ,. •~ •• ..
IT 1\ CCI\Ift.l~

-•DI·

Help Wantl!d ·

for

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

SLI6~T PRO~LEM
HERE, MARCIE ..

Ill

-

mellculoUI
30 hrgNnl't

:r::-

lnsln CI I
80 Hindu
51 Anlltox
52Legelmetter
53 Pottlco
54 Photocopy
II Mr. Rather
5I Orient
57 Bllrgeln tvent
5I Spenleh cheer

Worry about
your losers

•

.

. -·

43'=

lead: •J .

10:00..10.

114-1112~
:~~#;~~~~~~=~~5~~;;i~~~

37 , _
. . . . . . .....
40 In ....... high
41 Conled CIOlfi
01-.1
441
..........

23w.ntf..t

2111ore

•

I

Dealer: North

OppoltunHy

ttghl - « k and oOotllng. Room, board •ond

Ilia

Vulnerable: East-West

1112 - k l 100 414 lavoll
Ulle N-, h,liO, 114o441WQU. ,

_..,..,..Me:....rc..,:..,.ha:....nd...;.,.lsa-:--= ~l========~~====o~,,..~.,=-=~~·~ 75

.........

sword

Motorcycles

·-·lonl

~.,,

•K93
•A Q 3
9 Q I 0 9 6 5 '4
• 8 3
.7 4

fr~ IIWII7-G444COiMI!iion,.
For
. ..,Or ....... _go.
~~

tK ' IO 7

SOUTH

Bualneas

All Yorcl Ioiii MUll S. Paid In
- · Doolllna: 1:00pm thl
!!tJ . , . lhl od t. to run,
~ 1111111on- 1:oapm Frlilor,

. ..,.. .

AI:

• Q9 6 5
Q8 5 2

•
·&gt;

1!187 au.dlllll 1011 4 ~
-Tap lEnd 11rlo, Pltlllc

-'Y 54 Miscellaneous

Aamadaled,
ou HMt,
CoridKioned.
QIOIIIo:
• Air
0opoe11,
114o317-ol30.

9KJ87

74

-=

-d,

--.3110

3

Tllbu~-.. A....... 01(.
llpolla
-

2 Bedroom, 1 1111 Ioiii
Home Rio Clflndo,
S350IIIo1 Y•r t-.;53
~:__:,:A::.:,nt;lq~u;:."::.,..,...Lorae Yon~, •~101.
,..
t1uy • ..U. R - Anllq42 . Mobile Homo
1UC E. llaln ~~~ an RL '124.
Poouoroy.
M.T.W. 10:00
for Rent
un. to 1:00 p.m., Sundar t:OO
IO 1:00 p.m. · - - 2 5 - 12xll TrolleS Eaat Bathol

.

J 1 0· 9 8

...

·lllc_,._
Dryw, .....
...
Blovo,
CGIGr
T.V.
114-256-1231.

Charlolle-

W ........ fl I rt• 4&amp;4, M •

--:0-o.:.t.

I

22 Actreu

EAST •
... 5 4 2

ond-.
IIIIo, PW,
, olr, - -·· •
30008
......
N..- Alg,.llb't, ~ j

41 HouSH for Rant

.,

..
)
'-

•K76
•A 2
tAJ42
•A J 10 6

-. '

. •viclnHy

11 F.....nt
20 Outiw epem
21 Type Df CUI'ft

•••

lhlrlgs in tTrs and slans loday , you m1ght
not even compl,ate an endeavor
should be able 10 take care of rather eas•-

ly.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) it osn't
unusual 1or you to take other people 's
•deas and 1mprove upon lhem, Today,,
hawever ,. this m1ght not work. and you
could make th1ngs worse,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
Splurgmg, whether 11's for yourself or lor
someone you love , should .have its hm•ts
today. You r:nustn't go overboard to gra(i·
ty a wh1m _
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20..Feb. ·19) You may
be tempted to renege on a promise today
ihal ybu ·made to a person wno helpGd
you recently, You won't iike yourself teter
~you oo.
•
PISCES (Feb. 20..Morch 20) II you aren't
careful today , you might unconsciously
reveal conf1dent~al •nformat10n to a probing acquaintance. What you say could be
misused.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Make a
shcpplng list before le~ving heme today,
even wyou'r'e just going to the local store.
You may be inclined to buy thongs you
&lt;lon'l really need.

.

.

•
•

•

•

�Vfednesdi~April19,1885

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-'-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Cavs
defeat
Heat

PlekJ:
711
Plek4:
6875

Super Lotto:

3-5-~·24-26-28

Kicker:

091868
'

'

..

••

A Cardinal · Afllliated Supermarket

. .

Vol. 45, NO. 249
Copyright 1995

J

_,..per.

2·Section., 16 Pogoe 3S cents
A MuHimeclalnc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April20, 1995

Bomb death toll c'OntinUes to mount
Four men
~harged in
shooting .,
·incident

·. At least 12 victiins
children; 150 FBI
agents are on case

I

Four men allegedly involved in
a shooting incident Tuesday
civening, including the man who
was shot, were cited on various
misdemeanor charges Wednesday.
: Shawn Price, 21 , Apple GroveDorcas Road was treated at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis for
treatnlent of tWO .22-caliber gunshot wounds. According to assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia,
Price was shot in the left sbou.lder
and left leg.
·
• Paul Price, 45, Art Gray, 34, and
Charles Cuzzin5, 27, all of Racine,
were placed in the Meigs County
Jail and are charged with aggravated men, aggravated trespassing and
(lisorderly cooduct.
, Shawn Price will aJso be
Charged, said Tenoglia
. The four allegedly confronted
John Wayne Stobart and his wife, ·
Shirley, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road,
Racine, according to Tenoglla Stobart, who was aJDied with a shotgun, detained the group pending
. the ani val of a sheriffs deputy.
· ·After the deputy arrived and
began to place Cuzzins in the back
of bii auiser, the remaining three
ContlnJ~ed on page 3

Jobless claims
are down 5,000

ELBOW MACARONI OR REGULAR OR THIN
16 OUNCE PACKAGE

Mv~&gt;uRT ED

VARIETIES
16 OUNCE PACKAGE

1

MUELLER'S
SPAGHETTI

TONY'S
PIZZA

Village of Middleport-spent
$13,000 on taxi service in ·1994

wi~~~::~=i~~~ple

Mueller·s~
thin spaghetti
15"18 OUNCE PACKAGE

the Alfred Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City Wednesday. More than 36 people
were killed a11d hundreds are missing. (AP)

ZESTA
CRACKERS .

c:

e

$

mi na ted tbe cables and other
debris, dangling from lbe paDCaked
floors of the buildb)g like tangled
stre.amen;.
"Tb.e bope tonight is tbat we'll
find some more survivors,'' Gov.
Frank Keating said at the scene lale
Wednesday. " The bopc tomorrow
is we 'II find some more survivors.
After that, we hope to rind out
who's responsible.· '
More than 150 FBI agents were
helping police search for the terrorists today. Suspiction centered on a
Chevrolet Cavalier the Oklahoma
Highway Patrol said it found in
Oklaboma City. " Follow-up interviews" ·were being conducted after
the car was found early today. the
Pa1rol said.
The El Paso Tlllle&amp; bad reported
that Texas anlhorities bad been
searching for ' 'two men of Middle
Eastern appearance,' ' possibly
wearing- bloodied clothing, driving
a Cavalier or Blazer toward tbe
Mexico border.
Police Sgt. Kim Hughes said
today that authorities believe the
1,000-to-1,200-pound bomb was /
carded in a National Car Rental
minivan with Texas license plates.
. But White House Chief of Sraff
'Leon Panena said today. that it was
too early to point the finger at specific suspects.
·
" Obviously there are some
characteristics here that are being
looked at, but at Ibis poin~ fillllkly,
we really don ' t have an y definitive
info as to who the suspects would
be, " Panetta said in an interview
on NBC's "Today" show.

By GEORGE ABATE;
said.
The Meigs County Board of
Sentinel
News Stair
Three individuals from the slate Commissioners contributed $4,800
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Middleport Village paid Department of Transportation into the program each year, said
number of new claims for jobless
$29,572.38
during the last four audited the program, Horton said.
Teni Hnclanan, village treasurer.
'benefits fell by 5,000 last week, but
years
as
its
cont.ribution
to subsi"Driver's didn:t have seat belts
The slate and federal grant procontinued to· show signs of what
analysts said was softness in tbe dizing the county's taxi service, ·rastened. They didn't have baby . vided in 1994 $55,183 .74 and
according to village treasurer's seats in place. There were anum- · $100,502.00, respectively, Hocknation's labor markeL
.
her of things they weren't happy man added.
The Labor Department said reports.
Last
year,
the
village
owed
Blue
0
today that first-time applications
Streak
Cab
Co.
$13,108
.38.
The
may
have
for unemployment insurance
totaled a seasonally adjusted slate, fedenil and local moneys bad been taldng more tokens than they ment from lbe village include: .
.
- fo r 1990, $172,109 and
· '342,000, down from a sharply paid for the rest of the service to weresupposedto, H!lrtonsaid.
By The Associaled Press
office bui lding and a congressThe state ordered changes $1,500.
revised 347,000 durin~ the week senior citizens and indigent resibuildings
in
man's office.
·
Four
government
·
including limiting one token per
- for 1991 , $1 62,133 and
ended April 8. Claims m the laner dents.
Obio were evacuated after an
No explosive devices were
Blue Streak Cab Co. stopped person per, t.rip, Horton said. Also, $7,400.
week originally were estimated to
eXjllosion
destroyed
a
federal
office
fo
und
in any of the buildings. A
operating at the end of March after the state ordered a handicapped- for 1992, $170,970 and
total338,000.
building
in
Oklahoma
City.
package
-in Ci ncinnati's federal
Many analysts bad predicted the state increased the regulations accessible car that would cost $1,384.
Federal
office
buildi
ngs
in
offace
building
tbat was considered
- for 1993, $180,745 and Cincinnati and Dayton, the down- suspicious was examined and
that claims would be up 2,000 last including handicapped require- $25,000 and mandated ltle 'compa$6, 180.
week, The decline was the f'U'Sl in ments and drug-testing stipulations. ny be on call24 hours a day.
town PoSt office .in Sp.ringfield and found to be harmless.
Despite
an
earlier
agre
ement,
·
"With
thos
e
restrictions
(tbe
_ for 1994, $220,407.90 and a county human services building
three weeks. They rose by 4,000 to
Lt. Cindy Johns, a police
342,000 during. lbe week ended Pomeroy had not cont.ributed to the operator) felt that he would not be $13,108.38.
in
·
Steubenville
were
evac
uated
spokeswoman
, said it contained
This year's receipts and expen- Wednesday following telephoned freon used by workers in the buildAp.ril I and gained another 5,000 local cost of providing taxi service able to make· money at i ~" Horton
that covered both Pomeroy and .added.
the following week.
diturcs are not kn own becaus e 60mb threats.
·mg.
Middleport.
"It was like any audit, they j ust tokens ·are still being returned to · Police in Cincinnati also .
Claims have ranged bet ween
Th e Cincinnati and Dayton
Middleport village administrat- . wanted to make some changes," the village, Horton said.
338,000 and.348,000 for the lastlO
received
calls
saying
there
were
buildings
and the Springfield post
The slate forced Blue Streak out bombs in a downtown hotel, an office were cleared of workers
weeks. Analysts at Mer.rill Lynch ed the g ran~ but when the carder · Horton said. "But Snouffer didn't
&amp; Co. have said the recent data are decided to get ou~ the village did want to change it. They started of business with increased regulaconsistent with slower employment not push lbe issue since tbe village tightening up on tbe regul ations lions and more rigid .enforcement
has been in a rmancial bind. Horton and things needed improving."
of existing rules, Horton said.
growth.
·
"It was n' t a real intentional
thing," Horton said . "Tbc state
hadn't called their hand on it in
years' before. Whoever is upstairs
started tightening up."
By KEVIN KELLY
set the mechanism for fundillg.·'Ibe
The new taxi company located OVP News Editor
governor seeks to preserve the forin Poineroy does not need tO comAs the legal and legi slativ e mula.
ply with federnl regulations since it debate rages over the responsibility
The suit, advocated by Phillis'
does· not gel federal funds, Horton for funding Ohio's public schools, . organization, alleged the formula is
an area group wants the public to unfair tb poorer school districts.
'said.
During the last 10 years, ~tate meet with the people it believes
.. "It bec;lme very clear to us that
and-federal mandates bad made lt · will aeciOe ~~~e· future of education. lhts w:is a big prob1em," Smiddie more difficult to operate, said Gary
Area legislators and Dr. William explained. "It made sense to us that
Snouffer in . a previous interview Phillis, director of the Coalition fer the problem should be resolved by
with Tbe Daily Sentinel. Snouffer Adequ~cy and Equity in' School the legislature."
owned Blue Streak Cab G:o. The Funding, wiU be on band Saturday
Tbe local g·roup planning the
ro utes and borders had been from 8:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. at meeting noted that expendirures per
changed. ·
Alexander High School in Albany student in 1990-9 1 ranged from
About 80 percent of the routes for a symposium on public school about $2,800 in poorer districts to a
- including the Maples, senior cit- coocems.
high of S12,000 in lbe more affluizens center and on edges of viiPhillis will be joined by state ent districts.
lages - would be t;harged a token Reps. Mary Abel, D-Atbens, John ·
Volnovicb's recent plan to
and extra costs, be added.
Carey, R ·Wellston, and Mike coonh;r lbe discontent "asks rich
Snouffer said the cab company Shoemaker, D-Bourne¥ille, and s_chools to shift money to districts
bad just taken two tokens to com- Ellsworth Holden, chairman of tbe like ours. Is taldng away from one
pensate for the distance. Athens County Republican Party.
child to gl ve to another child lbe
.. Nso. the.taxjsc~lce was forced
Qgb .SD!iddie of Poinerol', ·one best answc:d" ~group's ·litesatw-e
out of its contract with Carleton of the event's coordinators; said be asks.
.
Schools, which helped serve outly- and otber 'citizens have been meet·
Satu(~ay 's meeting is to give
ingareasoftbecounty, be added., ing since the Perry County school
th~
tbe opportunity to meet
The taxi service made about200 fundiog .case was decided last July Withpubli~
legislators
and discuss tbc
ru'ns a day, serving about 1,000 to discuss its future impact.
issue, be explained. Additiooal area
customers a year, be added. Nearly
Perry Common Pleas Judge Lin- legislators were invited but were
all customers were on fixed ton Lewis ruled Ohio's current sys- unable 10 attend, Smlddie added,
incomes, be added.
tem of funding public schools but ~tate ~en. J~n Michael L011g,
Use of the taxi servi ce had unconstitutional. The ruling has D-C11cleville, wUI submit written
increased, especially last year, Opal since been appealed by Gov. comments.
Kauff, token comlinator, said.
George Voinovich and other state
"I tbinlc: what tbe American peo"(Tbe
state)
thought
it
was
too
agencies .
JAZZ BAND '- The Athens Dixieland Jazz
whose appearan~e Is sponsored by the Racine
ple want today is government lbat
mucb," Kauff said. " Bu~ we were
Smiddie stlid be is among the worlcs," Smiddle said. "Our Joal is
Band will be one of the bands performing at the
·Area Community Organization, 18kes Ihe stage
over
bud~et.
Since
we
Were
over
group
lbat backs Lewis • decision ~o. discuss this openly and DQ( IU!D
Racine Flower Festival Saturday. The band,
at Star MID Park at 3 p.m.
Continued on page 3 .
and bo!lieves tbe legislature should, 11 mto a political football."

..............
elbOWS
~~~•ASSORTED VA RIETIES

INJURED RECEIVE HELP • Oklahoma
County she~lff department personnel assist a
child and woman Injured In a ~ar bomb blast at

By OWE~ CANFIELD
Associated Press Writer
• OKLAHOMA CITY - Wilb
200 people missing, rescuers armed
with tiny cameras and listening
devices probed for survivors today
. in a bombed-out federal building
while police hunted for the terrorists who caused the devastatioo.
Hundreds of rescue w.orkers
were operating at an excruciatingly
slow pace, pickiug brick by' brick
in hopes of finding survivro with-·
out loosing material tbat could further injure peopl!l inside or deslroy
evidence that could lead to l~e
killers
Th~ confmned ·death toll from
Wednesday morning' s explosion
rose to 36, assistant rtre chief I on
Hansen said today. At least 12 of
those were children, Dr. Carl Spengler, who performed tbe ini tial
triage, said today.
Authorities· said tbe total was
sure to .rise. About 200 employees
working at tbe Alfred P. Murrah ·
Fedenil Building were unaccounted
for; A total o( 432 people were
tn:ated for injuries, and 72 or them
. were serious enough to require hos. pitalization.
A 56-me.mbeo' W'ban searcb and
rescue unit from Phoenix worted
with flber-oplic cameras and acoustic listening devices in. hopes of
detecting someone breathing in the
rubble. Workers also brought in a
large steel I-bearn to shore up the
middle of the building.
The search las te(l through the
night, aided by backhoes, cranes
and. four giant spotlights that illu- _

gr!~nt~~e ~~~~:~~~i~: &amp;!~:

Four federal buildings
evacuated in Ohio

Public, legislators eye
school funding issue
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