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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

hge-1G-1be Dally Sentinel

TUesdey, April 25, 1995

•

Plans finalized for Right to
Read Week programming
Ript 10 Read ud Malia Week
will be observed in the Melaa
Local School Dlslrlct nellt weelc
witb a Ylltcty of IICiivitlca cmph•
sizing the 1'1110 subjecu to be carried
out in the schools.
Various themes for ac:Uvlllcs
bave bee!! seiCctcd by tile !tt:lloola.
At Harrisonville tile theme Is
•Blaze New Trails with Readlna
and Malb". 1be focus will be Oil
Native Americans. Actiyilles will
include SQUIRT (S1111talned. Quiet.
Uninterrupted Rcadina and Time),
witb dress up, decorated a door,
videos; pictorsnpll writina, a pro.
gram of Native Amcric:an l~;gends
and tales, Crazy Horse bat day, a
school-wide totem poiC, ud a food
tastin¥ program. .
Middleport's theme will be
"Have a Ball wilh Lesm~"· Pennants will be desipcd ·
sbown
on MOIIday, then: will be a sports
dress-up day wltb cblJdren coming
in allire repte5enlalive oC a favorite
sport on Tuesday, a book fair will
be beld on Wednesday, Thursday is
a sporu bat day, and Friday, class
colonday.
.

•

"Reading and Malb are Ocew
of Fun" is the Rutland scllool
theme. Door decorating COillests.
sustained quiet reading time, art
and writing contests, read-Ins,
research projects on sea animals,
ocean pencil puppeJ.s, studylaa
ocean plant facts, and Olber activities oo sea life and oceans wUI be
Included In the activities.
A town center will be carried
out at ·Pomeroy Elementary. Eacb
classroom will be taldn&amp; a business
to represent and will design business cards to advertise tjleir business. There will be assemblies cacb
day based on careers in lbe fields
of medicine, law, money, educalioo
and military. The upper ciassea will
be1publishing a school newspaper,
running a scbool radio station, and
shadowing business people in
town. Some stu!lents will also be
working a school store and llelplng
run a book fair ..
The theme a1 Salem Center will
be "Journey i~;~to Fairy Tale Land".
Highlights of lbe week will include
Susan Brenner, a professional storyteller, wbo will bave two sessiCJns

of SIOI')'Ielling;

a radiDe coorest, a

dress-up as a cbanl:ll:r clay, and 111
awards proaram wbere students
will be rewlldcd for dlelr penicipallon.
.
Salisbury's theme will be on
dindsauis and will include a slogan
COOleSt, a door decorating COOleSt,
sustained silent readins prosnun.
recognition of reading and malb
students for the week, a book swap,
and a presentation by the Meiss
High School National Honor Society.
"Explore tbe World Tbrousb
Reading" will be tbe theme of
activities at Meigs Junior High
School. Cbaptcc 1 reading swdents
will be involved in crealive writing
and illustrations related to the
lbeme, a trivia track down, oral
sullllll8ries of favorite stores, and
oral readlilg of poetry and stories
from the classics to cbildren's literature. 1bere will be book cover and
boolanark contest.
In classes of malbematics the
activities will include computer and
word games, cusanaire block,
statistics, making graphs and inter-

Corey, were
Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs, Bud
.. Vinin&amp; of l;lulland.
Mrs. Ida Masb of Maloneton,
Ky. lpellt several days ben: visiting
Mrs. Ann Masb.
Guests at tbe bome of Mr. and
Mrs. James Gilmore over tbe week-

end were Mr. and Mrs. Kenzil
Scranton, Darby, Arimas, and Jor:
don of Marysville. Mrs. Sandy
Gilmore of Amlin, Mrs. Brenda
Haggy, Kim Haggy, and a friend,
Jason, and Mrs. Pam Glaze.
Those. attending the wedding of
Christy Masb and Billy Crane at
!be bome of ber grandmother, Mrs.
Ann Masb, were Vanessa Crane,

Cindy Klein, Dwight Cullins, Ben
Crane, Bert Masb, Rachel Norman,
Susie Masb Pullins, Jessie Pullins,
Peggy _Crane, _Bob and Alice
Thompson, Harriet Sinclair, Susie
Masb, Charles Masb II, Lisa
Yeauger, M!UY and Roger Gilmore,
Leigh Masb, Mildred Jacobs, Bill
Crane, Wayne Pullins. A reception
was beld after tbe wedding with the

RIGHT TO READ PROGRAM LEADERS
-These teachen are Ill ch...., of ript ·to read
and ma.tb week activities In their respective
schools. They p~hered lul week at Pomeroy to
finalize plans and sign a procJaa.tlon. Pktured ·
with Bill Buckley, superintendent, and Wendy
Halar, administrative assistant, center seated,
are from the left, .Julia
Salem Center;
Tara Barber, Melp 111gb;
RaUey, Melp
Junior High; Liz Story,
Teresa
pretlng tbem, and problem solvlDg
witb word problems.
Careers will be an em.,us;s of
Rigbt to Re.ad and•Math Week at
Meigs High School. Computer
I 0\11'1 I
research of selected careersfoccupations will be available to the students with assistance lbrougb !be
614-992-7161
guidance office and the library.
Individual students will be giving
sbon presentations on careers
wbich bave been researched during

c

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Fll TillE II \1 ,\\1 .1\1,
Hours M-F 8-5 Sat. 8-12

Middleport, Ohio 45760
BATTERIES
STRUTS

cake being baked by Pegjy ClliiiC,

SHOCKS

mother of the groom.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson
and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest. Vanlnwagen visited Mrs; Mildred Jacobs
recently.
Mrs. June Soulsby spent several
days visiting ber sister, Mrs. Jean
Carter, Logan.

CHEF BOY R DEE

2 Cheese Pizzas
$1.89 less 55¢ coupon

Net Cost

TIRES

~ulllres
• • • iii

Master Blend Coffee
$ 69 34.5 oz.

19

ClOROX

Russett Potatoes

gal.

Coca-Cola Products
2 tiTERS

c

69

Potato Chips

Reg. $1.49
6 o:r.

4

CHARMIN

Toilet nss.ue

c

"

Chicken Noodle Soup
.
2/$1
10.75 oz.

..

·c

4 roll pk.

CAMPBELLS

Orange Juice

.

.'

•

TROPICANA f·ROZEN

12 oz.

•

MR. BEE

GRADE AMEDIUM

Eggs
$

doz. ·

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES .EFFECTIVE APRIL 26, 1995 ONLY

'

•

,

•

••
2 Sections, 14 Pagee 35 cents

A Muttimedlalnc. Newopoper

Cremeans says GOP .rem~ ins
dedicated to balancing .budget
an

By GEORGE ABATE
But, Cremeans added be depart"I think we question wbetbez: means .added.
Sentinel News Staff
Dismantling tbis bureaucracy ed from his pany when it adversely
we can band a debt-free economy
New Congressional leadership to our cliildren," ·Cremeans said, and trimming !be .budget remain affected local constiruents.
has provided the greatest catalyst adding Ibis gift will ensure a con- key goals when be returns to
Cremeans did not support tax
for change, U.S. Congressman tinued bigh standard of living for Congress on May I.
relief for those individuals earning
Frank Cremeans told Meigs County lbeir future.
·"We're the party of cbange," more !ban $200,000 and be voted
Republicans last night
.
"Those of us in Meigs County . Cremeans' said. "Republicans are against lbe bailout of !be Mexican
Republicans remain dedicated to realize the value qf a debt-free trying to modify what bas hap- peso.
·
pened for the last 40 years."
·,
balancing tbe budget and reducing economy," Cremeans said.
Local Republicans need to conlbe national debt, said Cremeans,
Currently, tbe $4.8 trillion debt
Cremeans peppered his 20- tinue working and preparing for
· R..&lt;Jallipolis. Meigs·Coanty Repub- is stagnating the country. By reduc. minute speech with anecdotes next year's elections, Cremeans
licans hosted their annual Lincoln ing lbe debt by 2002, interest rates about some colleagues, sucb as added. Numerous county, townDinner, wbicb about 175 people and intlalion wiD remain low. This Strom Tbwmond and Bob Dole.
ship, and local officials, including
attended at Meigs Higb School.
He called Newt Gingrich a . judges, mayors · and planning
in turn, will spur on the economy,
Cremeans said he lalces pride in lbe Gallipolis businessman and for- visionary wbo Is misinteq&gt;reted by groups attended the dinner.
Republicans' tireless wort to com- mer school superintendent said.
the medial
Also attending was State Rep.
"I like to follow a leader wbo Jobn Carey, R·Wellston. The 94th
plete lbe "Contract with America"
The federal government bas
within the f~~St 93 days of !be 104th added too much bureaucracy, bas a goal," Cremeans said of Gin- Ohio House district representative
Congress.
·
wbicb .causes eureme waste, Cre- grich.
Continued on page 3

Meigs board hires
instructors for
summer programs

GOP DINNER ~PEAKER- U.S. Congressman Frank Cremeans, R-Galllpolls, addressed the Meigs County Republicans'
annual Lincoln Day Dinner beld Tuesday night a~ Meigs High
School. The first-term congressman is on a recess until May 1;
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

One week after
explosion, death
tt;'ll climbs to 98

OKLAHOMA CITY (APJ - A lion bours after the blasL
poses of F•ances Hunnel, edlica'
By JIM FREEMAN
week
after the catastrophic truck
Gov. Frank Keating asked Oklationa!
aide
at
Middleport
ElemenSentluel news staff
bomb
explosion
that
demolished
homans
to observe a moment of
tary
School,
ei(ective
July
1,
1995;
The Meigs l,.ocal Board of Eduthe
federal
building,
lbe
body
count
silence
at
9:02 a.m. today, the time
and
the
disability
retirement
of
cation Tuesday night gave the
~y
reached
98
today
as
investigators
seismologists
say the bomb- now
Mary
L.
Hawkins
effective
Feb.
28.
green light to biring teachers for
added
charges
and
pressed
a
search
estimated
to
bave
weighed 4,800
Tbe
board
also
hired
Richard
the district's suntmer pro~rams.
for
their
most·wanted
suspect
.
pounds
detonated
on WednesKoker
as
treasurer
pro
tem
until
Tbe board, meeting,m regular
. . - ,....r
day,
Apri\19.
and
Terry
Brothers
James
11.
July
session at Pomeroy Elementary
Nichols, previously beld as witWind gusting to 32 mpb hamSchool, authorized Superintendent
nesses,
were
charged
Tuesday
as
pered
the search early today. 9per,
Bill Buckley to post and bire teach1n other business, the board:
co~spirators
witb
Timothy
ations
were suspended in paits of
ers for the bigb ·scbool's SUIIUll,er . . - Renewed the contract wltb
McVeigh
In
the
construction
of
the
building
for fear tbe gusts
school program and for a summer the Educational Media Resource
explosive
devices
in
Michigan.
would
bring
down
unstable chunks
NEW
JOHN
DOE
remediation program for elemen- Center at $1.90 per pupil for !be
McVeigh,
27,
remained
lbe
only
of
debris,
said
Fire
'Capt. Todd
tary school srudents grades 2-6.
1995-96 school year and renewed SKETCH- The FBI Issued th)¥
person
arrested
in
the
acrual
bombCrews
used
brooms,
Matthews.
Also the board agreed to bire the contract with the Southeastern more detailed sketch of "John
ing
of
the
Alfred
P.
Murrah
federal
to
push
back
shovels
and
rakes
teachers for a summer enrichment Ohio Voluntary Education Coor:r- Doe 2," the still-missing second
building.
He
is
not
charged
.
i
n
the
debris
from
exposed
areas.
program for youngslets. grades 4-6. ative to provide computer serv1ces bombing suspect Tuesday. The
Michigan case, and tbe Nichols
The death toU was at 98, includThe'Sununer enrichment program is to the district at a cost of $.SO per sketch shows the bushy-haired
tbe
brothers
are
not
charged
in
ing
a nurse killed in the rescue
designed to help kids with bigber elementary student, $1 per junior man wearing a baseball cap.
Oklahoma
bombing.
effort.
The bodies of 14 children
(AP)
abilities to excel, Bucldey said.
bigb student and $1.60 per bigb
A
law
enforce01ent
source
in
have
been
found, including one
In perspnnel matters, !be .board school srudent.
Washington,
speaking
on
condition
located
Tuesday
night. Mayor Ron
accepted !be resignation of Mike
- Met in ·executive session to
of
anonymity,
said
traces
of
nitrates
Nor'icl&lt;
doubted
that
all the victims
Gerlach as junior class advisor discuss the hiring of personnel and
and
high
explosive
were
detected
.
would be identified, suggesting tbat
effectiv~ the end of the 1994-95
to bear an appeal by .a parent
in the car McVeigh was driving "anybody tbat was on the sidewalk
. school year; granted maternity regarding disciplinary action relalwben stopped for a traffic infrac- was vaporized."
leave to Pomeroy Elemen.tary ed to their cbild.
School principal Debbie Hapton- Toured Pomeroy ElementaJy
stall beginning around May 9 and School.
extend a contract to Greg BrownPresent w,ere Buckley, Koker,
ing as a maintenance man retroac- board President Larry Rupe, ViceCOLUMBUS (AP) - One of
. live to April 13.
president Randy Humphreys and the investigators examining fund
In addition, the board approved board members Roger Abbott, raising in former state Auditor
!be resignation for retirement pur- Scou Walton and Jobn Hood.
Thomas E. Ferguson's office said
!be indicttnents last week of Ferguson and four of bis employees did By The Associated Press
Salyers told tbe Portsmouth
not end the probe.
A woman with relatives in Obio Daily Times that when the exploTbc indictments resulted in said sbe survived the bombing of s1on occurred, "I felt like I was
additional calls io the special coun- lbe federal building in Oklahoma being pulled thrOugh a tunnel and ·a
·
sel investigating Ferguson, assis- City with encouragement from a loud whooshing noise was going
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) _: in passing !be state's f~JSI limit on tant special counsel Jobn F. fm:figbtcr sbe never saw while sbe by my ears and flashes of white ,
.
Gov. George Volnovich will fmd a campaign CO!)tributions.
McCaffery told The Columbus Dis- was trapped in rubble from tbc were going by.
''All of a sudden I was a1 a dead
blast
Tbe bi!Ycaps contributions at patch in a story published today.
gift from the Legislature on his
"He was on my left and my stop, I was face down an.d 1
desk when returns from a trade $2,500, increases the number of
head
was turned to. my rigbt so 1. couldn't move. I was aware I was
mission to China next month - a limes candidates must me financial
"There are leads !bat can be foldisclosure reports, and creates a tax lowed up," be sai\1.
couldn't see him, but having him trapped and l ·could feel big cement
campaign finance reform bill.
there meant everything in the blocks pressing down on my bead
It's not the one be would bave credit for small contributors.
McCafferty said the Franklin world
•." said Priscilla Salyers. I couldn't move my legs or
picked out · for himself, but
County grand jury still is impanThe biggest omission from the eled and could consider additional whose husband's family lives in right ann. My f~~St thought was 'I
Voinovicb spokesman Mike Dawneed air. ~" ,
·
son said Tuesday the governor plan favored by Voinovlcb and matters involving Ferguson. But be Lucasville.
Salyers,
a
U.S.
Customs
Service
Salyers
began
using
ber ann to
of
State
Bob
Taft
is
a
Secretary
would sign .the bill.
added that sucb action was unlikely
"Well liver 85 percent of !be limit on, bow much candidates can unless significant new information employee, is recovering at her clear an air pocket so she could
home in northwest Oklahoma City breathe. It took rescue workers
Voinovich-Taftplan is in Ibis bill," spend on elections. But Dawson was uncovered.
afier
falling five stories and suffer- about four hours to free ber.
said
be
bopes
the
Legislature
will
Dawson said after the Honse voted
ing
three
broken ribs and a col·
"I went through a lot of emoreconsider
lbe
issue
later.
62-35 10 go along with the Senate
Ferguson, wbo bas decline.d lapsed lung ..
tions. during tbat time - from
comment since tbe indictments
Thomas Hawthorne, 52, fonner· . tbrowing rocks with my one band
· were returned, is charged with nine iy of Franklin. was killed in last . and waving it in . an?er to telling
felony counts of theft in office and Wednesday's explosion . He had God. I knew he d•dn t ·let me live
16 misdemeanors alleging improp- gone to tbe building to assist a tbrougb Ibis much to let me die "
er fund-raising tccbniques.
friend at tho Social Security office.
she said.·
'

~- -_/

·c urable g,o ods
up 0.6 percent
I

Ferguson
probe will
continue

WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories for bigticket durable goods rose 0.6 percent in Marcb, rebounding from
tbeir first decline in four months.
The increase surprised analysts,
wbo bad predicted a second
straight drop for interest-sensitive
items expected to last at lc~t three
years.
"
. The Commerce Depanment said
today tbat the .increase in durable
goods orders was led by a 6.1 percent jump in electronic and other
electrical equipment.
Overall, orders for durable
goods totaled a seasonally adjusted
$164.3 billion, up $1 billion from
February. New orders for the first
tbr.ee months this year were 3.4
percent above the fourth quarter of
last year.
Durable goods orders fell 0.7
percent in February - revised
slightly from a previously estimated 0.8 percent fall. Tbe February
drop was the first since orders fell
0.8 percent in October.
· .
Durable goods include suc.h
items as cars, computers and appliances tbat often fall in sales as
interest rates climb. They are particularly sensitive to interest-rate
changes because they often are purchased on credit.
The Federal Reserve bas doubled its benchmark short -term
interest rate, from 3 percent to 6
percent, in seven increases iim:e
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wbo courtroom style only slightly after
an avalanche of criticism from
February 1994.
.
v was that bearded man?
It certainly couldn't bave been legal pundits: But after meeting
NEW LEXINGTON, Obio (AP) tive petition," Phillis said in an
Superior Court 1udge Lance Ito, with the jurors, be apparently toot
who bas been belittled by some for their concerns to heart. For the first - A battle to overturn the state ·interview outside Perry County
·
not bringing a semblance of conttol .time in a long while, it looked as If ~cbool funding system may end Conun011 Pleas Court.
"One of going to tbe people
to the playground be calls his court tbe trial of the century wouldn't wben a lawsuit reaches !be Obio
last until tbe end of the millennium, Supreme Coon. Then again, it may with !be .concept of ... an adequate
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe of law.
"It's a welcome and reln:sbins DOL
education for every kid regardless
But !ben: lie was Tuesday, robed
Supreme Court today !brew out a
A leader of the Ohio Coalition of where !bey live, or regardless of
federal law that bans possession of and hirsute as usual - only with a .change," Souibwestern University
a gun witbin I ,000 feet of a school, new persooality. The OJ. Simpson law professor Roben Pugsley said. for Equity &amp; Adequacy of. SchoOl the demographics of their parents
saying Congress lacked the authori- judge was glaring at lawyers, cut- •'I'm sure one that is most appreci- Funding said after an appeals court or the demographics of the commuting them off in mid-sentence, ated by the jurors and one thai will beard the case Tuesday tbat a nity," be said.
ty to enact iL
Another alternative: a federal
Ruling 5-4 in a \exas case, tbe telling them their questions were eventually come to be appreciated statewide ballot issue migbt surface
lawsuit.
court said lbe law does not fall irrelevant and refusing tbeir by tbe lawyers, if they're not if the schools lose in court.
already appreciating it."
"If Ibis route doesn'(wolk we' ll
, William PbiUis, executive direcwitbin Congress' autbnrity to regu· requests for sidebar talks.
Testimony continues today tor of the coalition !bat represents use another route, but we don't
Ito unveiled bis assertive side oo
late interstate commerce.
The 1990 Gun, Free School the fmt day of testimony since lbe when defense attorney Peter more than 500 of the state's 611 think we're going to bave to go
Zones Act "is a criminal statute Simpson trial was bobbled by a Neufeld completes his tougb cross· districts, said the group was confi- beyond the' Supreme Court," be
said. "We're not figpriug on los,
that by its terms bas nothing to do remarkable juror revolt Thirteen of examination of pollee criminalist dent of court victory. ·
with 'commerce' or··any sort of the sequestered panelists had Andrea Mazzola.
Still, be acknowledged tbere ing."
Mazzola continued to testify in were alternatives in the event of a
Pblllis also said be bad not ruled
economic enterprise, however refused to hear testlntony to protest
,
broadly one might define those !be reassignment of tbree of lbeir relative obscurily Tuesday, her · legal setback.
out applying to the State Board of
. statements overshadowed rust by
''ll I wen: to make a recoounen- Education to succeed state school
terms,"· .Chief Justice William H. guards.
tbe
juror
rebellion
Tbe
judge
had
adjusted
bis
datioo
it would be one of an in ilia- Superintendent Ted Sanders. wbo
Rebnquist M'Oie for the court.

Ohio House passes
campaign finance bill

~leach

$ 79

' - - loalgbUD tilt SO.,,.
doaidy. Tbu ...ay, niD. Hlp Ill

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll26, 1995

Domino Sugar
$ 49

us #1
15#

8•16-17-19-22

I .

MAXWELL·HOUSE

Eckrich Bologna
$

BuckeyeS:

5#

. I

28 oz.

Ill.

2575

Vol. 45, NO. 253

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1995 ONLY
lb.

Pick 4:

Copyright 1~

ONE DAY SALE
Ground Beef

061

..

- - -

Mr. and Mrs. Danny Dorst and

Pick 3:

Sports, Pege 4

-------Laurel Cliff news -lb-ewee~k.
SOIII, Cbristopber and

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers
top Marlins
••
tn
opener

i

Woman with Lucasvil-le
connections survives
Oklahoma City bombing

my •

Judge Ito steps _up
pace in Simpson trial

School issue may wind up on ballot.

Court tosses out
federal gun law

-

is leaving the post July 1. PbiUis Is
a former assistant state superinten-

dent.

. At issue Tuesday before three
Judges from the 5th Ohio District
Court of Appeals was a Per1y
County court ruling last July llbat
declared lbe current school financ.
ing method unconstitutional.
Judge Linton Lewis Jr. ruled
that education was a fundamental
right under lbe Ohio Constitutioo
and !bat the state-local system or
paying for primary ansi !.CCODdary
education was inadequate and
inequitable.
Joel Tnylor, the state's lawyer
said a 1979 Obio Supreme Couri
ruling that upheld the funding system was a binding legal p..,..,lent
Lew1~ should bave followed.
Continued on page 3
I

t

�•

Colnmentar

Page 2 111e Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy lllddleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Wedneeday, Aprll21, 1115

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Polliet'OJ', Ohio

.I"U.Tt'EEOA.INC

Danday,AprU 17

MARGARET LEHEW
ControUer

LEIIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing .and must be signed wilb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good Wle, addressing issues, riot personalities.

·L etters to the editor
VJSiting old cemeteries
Dear Editor,

pioneers used. Some of the Dye
• We were passing through the Cemetery stones are native, but not
coal lands of Guernsey, Noble aDd . all.
Morgan COtwles where we visited
Some our early people say that
the D e. Cemetery on top of the the highlands were settled in prefhlll. It could oot be missed erence to the lowlands because
of tall tombstones gleam- there was less 11ampness and sicking in. the sunlight
.
' . ness on the highlands.
Ezekiel J)ye, 17S.I-1830. a solEzekiel Dye may have been
diet of the Revolution, is buried given a land srant because of his
!bin beside his wife, Sarah. 1772- services in the Revolution. He
1844. There are other very early would have been mature then.
Obio pioneers bilried there, too. ·
This area was close to much
The names Tilden, Tbos. Stan- Indian activity and close to major
berry (who died of typhoid during Indian paths. The Indian paths Colthe Civil War), Culbertson, Moore, lowed the ridges and it easy to figVraks, Mahan and others are there.
ure out where tile paths went
Tbe interesting thing about this
One last thought - there are a
cemetery was the advanced age of few people still living in !be old
many of those buried in it, also the houses on the land owned by the
gieat number of those born in the coal companies and these people
1700s. Compared to Meigs County, paint a pretty bad P.icture somethese people were in Ohio before times of people who come into the
Meigs County was settled, but how area "with a beer can in one band
· a¢ Why? .Tbis area seems remote; and a gun in the other ... to roam
but Meigs County is on the Ohio · · around.
River with easy access. Many of
Gayle Price
the stones in the Dye Cemetery are
Ponland
of a better quality than what_our

Clinton's performance

•

ARC funnels money to the wrong projects

By~· Auoclated Pren
ObiOODS e111 ex~tllllotber coo-

Accu-We..re foret:lll for

WASHINGTON - The Repub- projects, like new roadl, is evidciiL a people out of poverty - educa· equipment at lbe behest of its
namesake (who was later sent to
lican Consress is forging ahead But it has failed to put ftirlb aloo1- lion.
with funding for a 30-ycar-old pede · term solution 10 povaty.
Tbe largest single expenditure jail tor cmuption). ·
The ARC wouldn't abandon
barrel proaram which promised
Cc:r1ainly Ibm: are other sip of the ARC made for education economic ren•issaoce but bas pro.
more than $400 million over the voc,oi programs when the Cabinet
duced linle more than t!asbed
laat three decades - was not for agency over education advised that
dreams.
cr
.., o
biBb schools or colleses io the what was needed was not more
We pointed out this hypocrily
repon, but toward a massive effort voc-ed trah1ing but more than
of ~ublicans who profess to be
building aDd equippinJ 700 voca- 200,000 college graduates. That
budget-cutters -but save the Lyo1
ilona! facilities at sto vocational number would barely bring the
rrrr
,...
I Sa8rn
schools. Tbe ARC's public rela· region up to national norms and ·
don Johnson-founded Apptl•cbian
Regional Commission (ARC) -in "
lions magazine, Appalachia, bas provide a truly educated job pool
a recent column that stirred contro- visible progress: Mobile hOmes and . touted this as one of their greateSt for high-paying employment.
versy on Capitol Hill. .
. trailers, purchased during the coal acbievemeuts.
Instead, one ARC staffer charged
Our four·month investigation of boom and not by the ARC, have
As one critic of the ARC put it, that tbe ARG was giving
ARC, including travel through all now replaced many of the Ia' paper this largest single ARC education Appalachhms "a choice of becom13 states affected by it, uncovered shacks. Indoor plumbing is 1 more expenditure did "a double disser- Ing skilled machine laborers, or
tbe fact that the commission has common feature than outhouses. vice to tbe region's people: It starving."
ARC fedellll co-chait Jacqueline
failed in its prime mission. Never- The ARC bulk $11 million-a-Dille locked them into the Ciclde iobtbeless, it keeps on collecting gobs roads, hospit-Is, and water and demand system of marginal indns- Phillips conceded in 1991 that vocof feder,d money.
sewer lines~
tries and deprived them of the an a.- .ed was "on the decline almost imiThe 1965 actlbat created the
Asked for signs of progress. lytical skills needed to press for versanr, in the nation" and that it
commission defined its prime officials most often point to a lodg·term reconstruction of the was a 'somewhat larger decline in
directive: ''To build tbe foundation Wendy's. Pizza Hut or MeDon- regioa."
the Appalachian region because it
for a vigorous. diversified, self-sus- aid's that's come to town in the last
Scarce education dollars have has a disproportionate number of
taining Appalacbian economy that decade. .
gone to programs such as the area voc-tecb schools."
affords a wide range of social and
Our examination revealed that Regional Truck Driving Training
The bricks and mortar aspect of
economic opportunities for the p~» one of the reaslios the ARC failed Program in North Carolina the whole ARC program bad them
pleoftheregion."
wasbecauseoftherelalivepittance ($89,910). The Arch A. Moore c011centrating 011 construction more
Tbat ba~ not happened. The . it apptied to what is considered the Junior Vocational Technical ~nter than CUJTiculum. Dr. Richard Powwindow dressing ·o r.public works most important factbr in propelling in West Virginia got $232,000 for ers, hired by the ARC to lake an inbouse look at the voc-ed building
program, warned: ''That the ARC
program for vocational education
construction bas been a success is a
statement that can be hardly chalIT WAS USINE7
•
lenged. However, it is limited to
RAD LAN6UAGE
•
buildings, thus. providing a place
where learning can take place.
IN
More than buildings is required. A
student trained in a new building
but in an obsolete program is as
inadequately trained as an obsolete
program in an obsolete building."
He cautioned that voc-ed programs lacked "job relevance" that ''relatively fewer in
Appalachia found jobs for which
their training was relevant," "relatively fewer continued their formal ·
education," and "relatively more
entered the armed forces than was
true for the rest .o f the United
States."
One aspect of IJle voc-ed program that truly disturbed families
in the Appalachian r9gion is that
they required graduates to leave the
region to find a job. Many saw it is
a way the ARC was solving poverty by depopulating central
Appalachia - an approach which
should not cost $400 million.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Featlire Syndicate, Inc.

ByTOMRAUM
.
Associated Press Writer
.
· DES MOINES, Iowa - President Clinton for the most part bas managed to strike a balance on the Oklahoma City bombing. rallying public
sympathy for the victims while cbannelillg outrage and anger toward its
perpetrators.
.
· ..
Just a week after Clinton felt called upon to defend his relevancy, his
administration •s handling of the crisis is generally winning praise from
the public.
·
. The president's performance bas been high-profile as be moves from
consoling victims and salving the battered national psyche to going after
those be considers "purveyors of bati:ed and division." l
· Bui ;Udcs are mindful that Clinton is wallcing a fme line, and that be
&lt;IDe$ not want to ap~ to be going too far, to be grandstanding at a time
of national distress.
·
·
For instance, White House aides were quick on Monday to rush to
insist that Ointon wasn't ttyins to accuse specific conservative llllk-show
)losts of encouraging violence after be complained about "some things
that are regularly said over the airwaves."
He's been involved in managing the crisis, but bas taken care not to get ·
too far out front of federal law enforcement efforts.
He went. to Oklahoma City and spoke eloquently and briefly at a
. ·memorial service Sunday and met with families of victims. But he also
exercised restraint in deciding not to visit the ghastly site of the bombedout federal building. even though his motorcade passed within a few
blocks.
Even critics have said Clinton bas risen lb the occasion.
And public opini011 polls reflect that
Clinton's public approval ratings increased dramatically over the
weekend as be spoke out repealedly about the explosion. A USA TodayCNN-Gallup Poll released late Monday showed his approval ratings rose
from 47 percent on Friday to 58 percent on Sunday, based on a survey of
758 adults nationwide. The survey bad a 4 percentage point margin of
error.
"I never want to look into the faces of another set of family members
like! saw yesterday - and you can help to stop it," an impassioned Clinton told a Minneapolis audience on 'Mondar. urging Americans to do
more to speak out against "paranoia and divisiOn."
And be returned to the theme here as be began a ty;o-day visit thr.ougb .
Iowa designed to draw attention to problems of rural America. .
" When you bear people say things that they are legally entitled to say,
if you think they're outrageous, if you think they either explicitly or
implicitly encourage violence and division ... then your free speech and
your responsibility requires you to speak up against it," Clinton said.
Clinton's attaclc on "promoters of paranoia" seemed to have struck a
chord with a violence-weary public, and put many conservative commentators on the defensive, if at l!:a5t tetnporarily.
What a difference a weelc, and a tragedy, mak~.
It bad been only a week since the same president argued p~tively to
a prime-time news conference - one that two of the three maJor broadcast netwOrks shunned - that be stiU was relevan.t in the political process.
· Clinton was able to call on his well-practiced strengths in responding
to the horrific episode of domestic terrorism.
He bas always been able to connect with the common man, to project a
sense of sympathy and engagement
·
Those abilities served him well as be led the nation Sunday in grieving
for tile dead, the wounded and the missing.
·
· And few could doubt that Clinton's emotions were real. Sevellll of the
victims of !be bombing he lrnew personally, including Alan G. Wblcher,
.40, wbo bad been a member of bis Secro;;t Service detail until seven
months ago when be became assistant special agent in charge of the Oklahoma field office.
.
"I saw the children of a man who was a football hero at the U~iversity
of Art&lt;ansas wben so many people who are now on the White House staff
were ftiends of his," he said.
.
Qinton was deeply moved as be met privately with family .members.
AftetVrard. aides said, be could scarcely spealc, turning his back 011 staff
memb&lt;:rs for a few minutes and Jeanltig close to one of his Seqet Service
agents and engaging him in whispered exchanges.
In-leading the country in mourning, Clinton fulfilled one function that
only 8 president can - even in a political environment in which the opposition party controls bo\b houses of C011gress.
Ar d no one was arguing that be was irrelevant .
EDITOR' S NOTE,- Tom Raum coven the White Rouse for The
,woclated Press.
1

Today in history
By The Auoclated PreM
Today is Wednesday. April 26, the 116th day of 1995. There are 249
days left in the year.
r
·
Today's Highliaht in History:
On April 26, 1986,,the world's worst nuclear !1Ccident QCCurred at tile
CbefnObyl plant in the Soviet Union: An explosion 1\D&lt;! fire in the No. 4
reactor sent radioactivity into the atmosphere.
' . .

FRONiOf
THE CHILDREN.

Is ·Hillary r~ally playing it safe?

..

•

When Newt Gingrich is glad to ered safer territories," said Nation- brothers may !Utend school. Some- deal with the .failings of your own,
bear Hillary Rodham Clinton ralk- al Public Radio's Eric Weiner, times they are abandoned altogeth- as the first lady did when she
ing about women's rights, you ''certainly safer than contentious er. Eighty percent of the children in examined the U.S. bealthccare sys- .
lrnow something is up. The speaker issues like health-care refam."
Mother Teresa's orphanages are rem.
.
of the House said he was "delightgirls. Throughout India, girls as.
Unfortunately, the United States
ed" to hear about the firstlruJy's
young as 10 ate sold as brides to bas little cause to be self-satisfied
recent trip to southern Asia, and
wealthy foreigners.
on this particular issue•. as it is one
Now wait just a second here.
praised ber for following' "a tradiIn Pakistan, a woman's testimo- · of only three industrialized counlion established by Mrs. (Eleanor) The first lady toured through a ny in court is worth less than a tries in the world (and the only one
Roosevelt, who pioneered as an region known for dire poverty, man •s. In order for a woman to · in the Western Hemisphere) that .
ambassador of good will."
.political instability and a general prove thai she was raped she must bas not ratified a United Nations .
Newt. obviously 'viewed hostility toward the emancipation · have four male witnesses. If she agreement on worldwide women's .
Hillary • 8 trip abroad as an of women. Sbe discussed policy
fails to get a conviction, the woman rights. The Convention on the
announcement .tbat she plans to with heads. of state ~d economic herself is often imprisoned for hav- Elimination of All Forms of Dis- .
embrace the role of traditional firSt freedom Wli!l wo~en m the I_owest ing "illegal sex." In Bangladesh, crimination Against Women was
lady. He's not the only one who _ rankS o~ SOCiety. Smce w~en ts that such women are frequently flogged set forth in 1980 to declare nationsees it that way. Both the liberal the ~u1valent of a charity garden or even stoned. ,
wide abuses of women as violaand the conservative press seemed pany ·
.
Much was made of the fact that lions of international law.
to agree that Hillary •s trip implied
OK, maybe unages ?f the firSt Hillary and ChelSea Clinton
Hillary was probably wise to
a promise to shut up and behave. l~dy coddhng orpllans m C;ilcuua dressed conservatively during their couch her message of women's
The New York Times, the Wash- (where. she~ al!out health care visit, frequently covering them- rights in nonthreatening language
ington Posl aft!! Newsweek all ror Indian children) IS less threa~n- selves from head to ankle ..Little for the folks back borne. Because if
mentioned Hillary Clinton's newer, mg than. tl!e fust. lady speakntg was made of the fact that women in Newt and his boys ever found out
softer image. "Aftet (Hillary Clio- before a JOint sess1on of Congress many Muslim countries can be that what sbe was doing actually
ton's) much-criticized work 00 the (where she llllked about health care arrested for deviating from such mattered, their hopes that she
U.S. health-care reform plan, for Amet!can children). Neverthe- attire.
become an ornamental first lady
Americans seem to be much more !ess, the !ssues of women· s rights
It makes sense that so m11ny . might just come true.
comfonable with her taking on the m ~e Thin! World "!'! not exactly Americans viewed Hillary ClinSara Eckel Is a syndicated
more traditional role of presidential J umo( League ~renal. These are ton's talk: of nutrition, health care writer for Newspaper Enterprise
spouse " said an approving Hous- extremely contenuous. very messy and education for women as harm- Association.
ton P~t editorial. "Hillary Clinton· human rigbl$ issues that involve less charity work. Such notiQns are
(For information on how to
bas become Mrs. Bill Clinton once: blood and sweat and a lot of other taken for granted here and, more communicate electronically with
and for all," lamented a Los Ange- body flui~. .
importantly, it is always easier to tbis columnist and others, con- ·.
les Times opinion piece . "(Sbe
I.n Ind1a, guls are frequently cluck your tongue at the wrongdo- tact America Online by calling J- ·.
focused) on issues that are consid- demed food, so that the1r brothers ings of another nation, rather than 800-827-6364, exL 8317.)
·
may eat, and education so that their

Sara Eckel

The Mc.P iot to ·privatize the world
. Remem'!er the global pri vatiza- · will be sponsored by a toilet bowl
tmn conspll'liCy I first exposed in cleaner. But here we are, still sitNove~ber 19917 '!'he plot ~Y three tins on our original World PrivatiAmencan comparues to se1ze con- zation Project tar~et date of Jan 1
trol of the planet, sell stock in It,
· '
and rent the world's governments
al)d .infrastructures back'l.'!! the
peons?
.
"
Well, according to a bunch .o f
bot docs recently left on my 2013 . Our agenis can't mak.: a
doorstep, It putschists have bad move for fear of drawing attention.
some probJe, •s but they have not That's because you, M-1, are gumgone away. t. 1st informative is a _ ming up the works. You guys can't
memorandum
marked seem to stay out of the darn papers.
SECRET 1 S I Z Z LING
"You haven ' t been reading
STUFF/SHRED AFI'ER READ- about BeiiWorld stirring up any
lNG/DON'T FOJ&lt;. 1ET T(j RECY- fusses, have you? That's because
CLE. It is written b. • a person code- · they' ve gone about their duties ~ui­
named "W-1/Wal- Vorld" and is elly. Soon, they will be pumpll)g
addressed to someor.) code-named television signals into every home
" M-1/McWorld," w. th a copy to in America and we wiU be control" B-1/BeiiWorld. " 1 'lis remark - ling the cranial content of couch
able document reads as o Uows:
potatoes from Bangor to Burbank.
"I resret having t 1 say the
"Youbaven' tbeardapeepfrom
lhinss I am about .to· say, but darn us folks at WaiWorld, bave you?
it, they have to be ~d .
That's because we calmly throw up
" With the astounding turn of a new store every two or three days
events last November. we should and preUy ·soon we will control the
be riding a tailwind, but here we national supply of ba!)lroom tissue
arc stuck dead in the water. Newt and disposable diapers and then, by
and the Newtoids are PUSHING gum, we'll have them where we
privatization, for gosh sa)ces. In a want them.
few years, the entire Defense
"But you, M-1, you have to
Department will be contracted out scald an elderly lady with your lava
to Lockheed and the White House java and get your buns--sued for

Joseph Spear

•
&gt;.

·s 2.9 million. And now there· s
somebody in Delaware whO wants
a few million dollars for a coffee
. burn, and you've got this guy Jn
London who is suing becatrse, be
says, the filling in .your bot apple
pie squir1ed 'like napalm' all over
bis arm and blistered it;
"Here you are, leading our
effort to extend our tentacles
around the globe and everywhere
you set up an operation. it seems,
something goes wrong. Wby are
you suin~ two environmentalists in
England . So what if they called
you McGreedy, McProfits,
McWasteful, McGarba~e, People
always root for the Davtds to beat
the Goiiaths. Even if you win, you
lose.
"And why did you stir up the
Israeli populace by erecting a
restaurant in the shadow of the
Memorial to tb e Fallen of tbe
nolani Brigade, a revered national
shrine? You should bC happy ,you
won the battle to serve cbeeseburgers in a country that doesn ' t mix
meat and dairy, but no, yon have to
push your luck.
"I have seen your last quarterly
report and am aware of your
accomplishments. Fourteen thousand outlets in 70 counaies is a lot
·of billions served, and I am very

impressCd that you continue to find
cows to cook. They' re buying
"Beeg Meks" in Moscowrand lining up at your 700-seat burger
·emporium on Tiananmcn Square
and eating and singing at the same
time in those Mac-Song karaoke
roo1115 in Tokyo.
"And I just love that wonderlul
story about the . woman who
claimed she was burned wben she
spilled Wendy' s chili in her lap .
Wer,e you guys bebind that one?
"All these are wonderful
achievements, but nothing will
erase the public memrnt of the day
you ran out of buns in Japan.
·
"Running out of buns! Tba(' s
like B-1 running out of wire!
" We've got to do .beuer. We' ve
got to bold the bow steady, keep
our noses to the grindstone, stay
the course and remember the secret
slo¥an.
·
'Today, Eanb. Tomorrow,
McEarth.
.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
.writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
tbls columnist and otbers, contact America Online by calllog J800-827-6364, exL 831?.)

.....

'

·,
:

ACI'OIII tlte nation
It was snowy in the northern
Plains roday, and rain feU 81ong a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-

~=-~~~~!of..~~:;

by the U.S. Department of Agricultwe Martret News:
Barrows and gIlls: •o
IS 1n
~ ceo
mostly 1:00 lower late; demand
light .
,
S
U.. 1-3, 230-260 Ibs .. country
points 3.2.50-34.00, late sales ·
32.50-33.50, a few 34.25; plants.
34.~~l'i~·
230 260 lbs .
. . - ,
• .
.• countty

points27.S0-32.50.

··~~S'~:;~f:J&amp;_~gg~b~~r24.so-

29.00; 500-650 lbs. 29.00-32.00. a
few over 650 lbs. 33.00-33.50
Estimated receipts: 35,000.
Price• from The Producers
Li'I'Htock Association:
Cattle: Sleady to 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 61.0066.SO;select57.00-6l.SO.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0065.50; select 57.00-61.50.

Pomeroy court news
•:Ibe following cases were processed recently in the Pomeroy
court of Mayor John W. Biaetmar.
Extended forecast
Fined were: Daniel Shane,
Friday ... Mostly cloudy north
with a chance of showers. Partly Racine, open container in a motorcloudy south. Colder. Highs from vehicle, $63 plus costs; driving
·near 50 north to near 60 south.
under the influence, $375 plus
Saturday ... Partly cloudy. Lows costs; impeding traffic, $50 p!us
3S to 40. Highs in the SOs...Except costs; Wanda rume. Racine, spe'ed,
$44 plus costs. speed; no insurance,
near 60 Sl&gt;!lth;
.
Sunday... A chance of showers $SO plus costs; Frank Matthews.
or thunderstorms south. Partly Albany, failwe to comply, $63 plus
cloudy nMil. Lows from the upper costs; Keith.White, Racine, open
container, $88 costs; Victor Coates.
30s to lower 40s. Highs S5 to 6S.
Lons Bouom, reckless operation.
$75 plus costs; James Hawley,
Pomeroy. expired tags, $63 plus
opposite would be to have a presi- costs; operatin!l under suspension,
dent,that no one was interested in $63 pfus c·osts; Kevin Whobrey,
attracting. Gordon Gee is unques- Pomeroy, destruction of property.
tionably the most effective and $313 plus costs; public intoxicadynamic Ohio State president in tion, $fl3 plus costs; loitering. $63
recent memory."
plus costs; underage consumption,
Gee said be was gratified by the $83 plus costs; Jason Hart; Rut- '
report and was committed to stay at
.Ohio State.
"I've bad a couple of really
extraordinary opportunities, but I
feel blessed to be at Ohio State,"
Am l!le P""er ·--------.31718
he said ~'It really is a great univerAkzo ·--..................................!7 liZ
s.ity. ! have wonderful colleagues, I
Aabland on ----------.36·718
hve~m a terrific community and 1
AT&amp;T.... -...,....--..- -..--..-.,50
don t think there is any greener
Bauit oae.--.. --..--.lt sill
Bob Eveu _ _;__ .................21 V4
grass .out there."
Cbamptoa l.nd._; _____ ,lO 3/4
Trustee Goerge A. Skestos said ·
CbarmiiJI Sbop--------.5 5/16
the trustees were pleased, but not
City Holdlllg ••- •.·--··-.17 1/4
surprised by the evaluation.
Fede111l Mogul.-.,..-----·17 3/4

Weather
Soulb-Centnl Oblo
Today... Mosily sunny. High in
lbe mid 70s. Southwest winds
increasing to 10 tti 20' mph by
al'temoon.
Tonight... B_!:coming cloudy.
Low 50 to· SS. South winds 10 to
20mpb. .
Tliursday ... Thunderstorms
· becoming likely. High In the mid
60s. Chance of rain 60 percent : ·

Gee gets·high marks at osu
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Obio State University President E.
Gordon Gee •s latest report card
gives him nearly all A's.
'Gee is completing his fd)b year
running the university and had his
performance evaluated at the
request of IDiiversity trustees by C.
Peter Magrath, president of the
National Association of State Uni:
versities and Land-Grant Colleges.
Trustees condocted the evalualions ln each of the last four years.
"He is one of the most respected university presidents in the
United States today; and be is obviousiy attractive to many other universities and institutions," Masrath

Stocks

-

wrote.

"This is a good problem. for the

Cremeans

says.~:ntlnued rrom page1

emphasized that he continues to
work on a rural jobs bill that will
create development sites.
Also, Carey said be remains
· conc~rned about tbJ! removal of
U.S. Route 33 in Meigs County..
from state transportation planning
budgets for the next four years.
After the meeting. Cremeans
and Carey were ' briefed by local
mayors on the status of reducing
the long-distance toll charge
between the Pomeroy and Mason
telephone exchanges.
Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton said. that reducing the charges

Goodyear T&amp;R --·----.37 7/8
K-mart-------------·14 518

would belp develop businesses in
the area
New Haven, W.Va., mayor Pa~
Williamson said that other areas
aiQIIg the river bave bad this service for years including Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Gallipolis.
and Parkersburg, W.Va., and Belpre.
·
"It's just a matter of time before
this bappens," Williamson said.
"We don't wain people dragging
their feet on Ibis."
Cremeans and Carey pledged to ·
make some contacts to move the
process forward.

School funding.issue... ·
Continued from page1
"A number of the trial court's money.
·
findings don't have anything to do
"What you ultimately are askwith providing a basic, adequate log tbe court system to do is in
,education,'' Taylor said.
essence to order the Lesislature to
Nicholas Pitmer, the coalition's , put more money into education.
lawyer; said the constitution- made that the amount of money ,that .
education the Legislature's respon- they're putting in is insufficient,"
sibility, but that Iesislators bad not Gwin said.
•
provided enough money to allow
Pittner said schools were not
all districts to meet basic educa- askins courts to act as a mini-legistiona! slal\dards.
lature.
.
Judge W. Scou· Gwin said the
The judges did not say when
question seemed to boil down to
,th:e:y~w:ou:ld:ru:le:._ _ _ _ _ _

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
April lS dlllcharges - Christopher Gordon. Violet Nunnery, Mrs.
Brandon Janey and son, ·Crystal
Dixon, Ruby Moore and Reva
Jenkins.
Printed with permission.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 11:1-'160)

:
•
:

Publisbcd every afttrnOOll, Monday through
Friday. Ill Cour1 St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, b y the
Cft1lo Valley Publishing Compnny/MuiUmedia
In(:., PomttOy. Ohio 43769, Ph. ·992 -2 1 ~ 6.
Second elMs JXmage paid a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.

•

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Newspaper Auociation.

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drop back into the SOs on Friday,
fORCas!en ssid.
The teeord-hiah temperature for
tbiJ date at the Columbus weatbcr
ststion. was 89 de&amp;rees in 1918
while the r~cord low was 26 1n
1972. Sunset t.ooight will be at 8:20
p.m. and sunrise Tbunday at 6:37

pie days o.f ~bower and ~understorm actmty be!lded tdto the
wee~end •. the NatiOnal Weather
Servtce said.
The storm clouds are expected
to rumble across the state ~bind a
cold front Thursday and contmue to
develop 011 Friday. .
.
. Temperatures w1ll warm to
highs of 6S-1S on Thursday, then

MICH.

By J.,..Ck And'...f.'""On
and·
.
••'cha...l B'n •

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maoa1e:r

More rain is in forecast for Ohio

OHIO WeOllllc'r

'

. 1bl O.Uy Sentll"'ll PIQI 3

II! AIL S\JBSCRIPTIONS
• lnskle Mel• Count7
13 Weeks ............... ,............ , ................$23.92
26 - . ......... -............................ ....... $47.06
,. W&lt;ekJ .............................................. $92.56
RaleoOutMoMtlpC-y
il W«kJ ...................... ............... ..........$1.1.6t
26 W« kJ .............................................. $49.66
12 W«kJ ....: ............., ......... .......... ...... ,$96.20

'

---.10

Labels End -----------.15 1/4
Llmltedlnc.---...;-...
3/4
Multimedia lh&lt;---·-··- --..37
People's ...................- .....--.ll lll
Oblo VaUey.• _, __ ,_____,___ 44

One Valley .. - ..--..- -..--.2911Z
RockweU ·----.. - ..- ..--.. 44
Robbins &amp; Myers.-----·---l3

warm ~root from Kaasu to lbe

Great Lake$. Showers also were
reponed Ia PloddB. but ellewbere
.&amp; werelllllltly c:lelr.
•
A IIIli!" dill cbnped ft¥e iDcbes
of SOOWI!II ander, Wyo., Tueaday
nipt was mavinS eaatwmd roday,
bringing sub-fn r ing umper3llllel
an4 more snow in a poc:tet llleldliDg from Colorado to North Dakora.
A separate weather s)'ltelll further south spawned bigh winds tbal
hampered rescue operati011s roc~ay
at the bombins site in Oklahoma

City, and min that fell from Kansas
~ugh Iowa and the Great Lakes.
Scattered sbowers also were
reported in southern Florida.
Today's highs were forecast in
the 80s in southern Florida and the
SOuthwest New England.:..ld most
of the Plai~ can expect highs in
the 40s and SOs. Elsewhere bigb
temperatures today should be'in the
60s and 70s.
Tuesday's highest temperature
was 98 degrees, in Tbennal Calif
The low was 19, in Grand Marais.
Minn.
'

M • EMS I
.
,
e1gs
ogs 4 ca11s
.
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency
~
call • Medical
. Service
. logged
I'·~'our
s •Or assutance me uwuJ
two transport calls. Units respooding included:
,
POMEROY

R2;\!t.P.!~=:~~
Plessant Valley Hospital.

AACINE
1:® p.m., swe Route 338, Ver11011 Blevins, Holzer Medical Ceoter
·

S~CUSE

4:39p.m., Highland Road. Ray
Wallace, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
10;46. p.m.. Church Stree~ Amy
Patterson, HMC.

Meigs announc~ments

28 N, College Street, Atbe!ls;
land, loitering, $63 plus costs; pub- Volley ball games planned
lic iilloxication, $113 plus costs; · Singles are invited to play vol- Thunday. 7 p.m. at the First United
underage consumption, $88 plus ley ball at Carleton ·School gymna- MethOdist Church, Athens; Satursium 8 to JO p.m. Thursday. For day. 9 p.m. at SL Peter's Episcopal
costs. ,
.
more
infonnation, 9115-4312. ·
Cbwc.b, Gallipolis. For more in for- .
Forfeitins bonds were: Deannae
mation call help line a1 1-800-766Damron, Huntington, W.Va., $77
4442,
for speed; Janice Gleselcing, Mid- Racine clean·up eoniJnua·
I .
.
Racine VIllage Spring Oeao-up
dleport, $66 for speed; J e =
Workman, Rutland, $60 for s
· will continue Thursday. Place Market bog registration set
Market hog regislnttion for 1995
Debbie Smith, Retdsville, $67 f~ iii;DIS for disposal l,llons curb. .
4-H
and FFA exhibitors will be
speed; Lelenya Hankla, Rutland,
~ay 6, 9- It a.m. at tbe Meigs
$74 for speed; Bruce Gilman, New SIIIOI'Iiasbord set
A smorgasbord will be held County Extension Office in
Haven, W.Va., $67 for speed;
May
7, 12-1:30 p!ID. at the Lot- Pomeroy. For more information.
'Jonathan Miller, Middleport, $68
tridge
"Community Center. Adults contact Chip Haggerty 81 the extenfor speed; Randall Wilson.
SS.50,
children ullder 12 $250.
sion office at 992-6696.
Pomeroy, $8 3 for no operators
license and $40 for seal belt; Ken.
May FeUowsl!lp Day plonnlng
neth Burlce, Racine, $83.for squeal- Plan weekly meetings
Narcotics
Anonymous,
·an
orgaChurch Women United key
ing tires; Freddie Perkins, Troy,
ni~ation
new
to
the
bend
tirea.
women
will mee1 at 1 p.m. Friday
$63 for failure to maintain assured
meets
every
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
at
a1
Grace
Episcopal church to plan
clear distance, $83 for unsafe vehithe
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Church
.
for
the
observance
of May Fellowcle; Brenda Richards, Sbade, $83
ship
Day.
in
Pomeroy.
~ther
meetings
are
for failure to maintain control;
David Shuler, Mount Airy, Mary- Monday, 9 p.m. in the basement of .
land, $83 for failure 'to comply;
Divorce actions filed ·
Tony Andrews, Pasadena, Md., $63
for u-turn; Clifford Icenhower.
I The fl,lllowing actions to. end
$133 for public intoxication; Albert
lllllrriage were nled recently in the
Lee, Pomeroy, $83 for open container.
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Coons Larry Spencer:
,
Marriage licenses
Divorces asked _: Donald W.
Manuel from Joyce .E. Manuel,
· Tbe following couples were both of Racine, Aprii2S; Debora L.
issued marriage licenses recently in Michael from Raymond J. Michael,
the Meigs County Probate Court of both of Racine, April 2 I; Todd A.
Ackerman from Lorena F. AckerJudge R,obert Buck:
· Chad Allen Wolfe, 23, Racine, man, both of Pomeroy, April 21;
and E. Leann Dunn, .24, Pomeroy; Lilly M!lrlene Kennedy, MiddleKeith Lynn Rockhold Jr., 27, and port, from Billy Joe Kennedy, RutJamie LaW'llyne Buies, 24, both of land. April 21.
Tuppers Plains; and Bryan Lee · Divorce granted - Paula Marie
Holman, 27. and Jamie Lynn Van- Elks from Edward Moore Elks Jr.,/
April24.
·
Meter, 23, both of Racine.
.

.

Royal Dukb-~-------ll3 111
Shooey'sl.nc....--------·11 518
Star Bank --·--·-----.42 3/4
Weady lbt'L -------··-·17 118
Wortblagtoa IDd ...------.18 Ill

Jeffrey Friend died
April 22, preceded in'
death by~an unborn
.child born to
Mitzlann and Jeffrey.
Surviving are an
' extra special
step-son, Timothy,
Matthew Lewis,
daughter-in-law,
Vena and
• granddaughterin-law, Ashley.

._:==========:;

IF YOU EXPERIENCE:
-feelings of discontent
~a· lack of accomplishment
-chronic disappointment in love, work or life in
general
·
-or a general sense of meaninglessness of malaise ·
consider tl'ie following ...
Psychotherapy is not simply a treatment for
psychiatric-problems. Psychotherapy is also about
personal growth, self-awareness. and an indi vidual's development and fulfillment.

Our commitment to

convenience put us
on the map.
•

0

Announcing the newest Bank On£!® ""
Money Access Center®in your neighborhood.
Whether you live nearby, work
nearby or just happen to be passing
by, banking just got a whole lot easier
in Pomeroy.
,Our newest
-Money Access
Center is located
at the Marathon ·' •
Station parking
lot near the
Pomeroy-Mason

BANKEONE.

The process of psychother~py, an . honest . and
thorough exploration of your life, could hold the
key to solving matters in life which bother you
most.

Department of Psycholo~

446-5379
Holzer Clinic, 90 Jackson Pike,

L..~=:::..~------~~~~~o~w:·o~------l

•

Whatever it takes:
MemberffiJC

To lea~ more about this process of change and growth contact
Dr. Richard Boone of the Holzer Clinic Psychology St;rvice.
Dr, Boone would he glad to answer your questions or to arrange
a consultati,on. •

HOLZER CLINIC

bridge. Now you have yet another
convenient place to withdraw cash
make deix&gt;sits, check your account
balances, transfer funds and pay
your bills.
Easy access tci your bank
accou_nts24 hours a day, seven
days a week. Dur commitment to ··
doing whatever it takes to make
your life easier has put Bank One ·
on the map.
· ·
,

~[.

••

•

C1995. BANG ONf CORPORAhON

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

•

�..
'

'

•

Sports

The Daily. ~!.2~~

•

Pea•

•

Rijo .
to start
for Reds

4

Dodgers· edge Marlins 8-7 in .1995.major league opener
By STEVEN WINE
MIAMI (AP) - Fans greeted
hcebnll's return with boot before
the game and cbeln It lbe fln!sb.
The Los Angelea Dodprs with·
stood Florida' a nlnlb-lnnlng rally
Tuelday nlabt to belt the Marlins
8·7 In a game that ended baseblll's
record 257~~yoff.
Raul M
I bad two homers.
a double 1Dd four RBII for the
Dodgers. Tbey led 8-2. but Florida
scored one run in lbc ci&amp;blb and
four in tbe ninth before rookie
Charles Johnson struck out with
two on to cad the game.
"That was an exciting game,''
Dodgers 1118D11ier Tommy Lasonlli
said. "Tbe fans loved h, and It
scared lbe bell out of me."
While locked-out umpires pidi:·
eh:d outside the stadium, replace-

ment umpa worked wllboul IDY
arguments, but drew criticism ftom
the players.
Although there were a few thouSBDCI empty sealS on opening night,
lbe crowd of 42,12S was
II11IIOUDCCd as a selloul. Fans venled
their bitterness toward baseball's
labor problems wben lbc teams
were Introduced before the game.
With both cluba lined up ,aJoaa
the base paths, the public address
announcer explained that In a gesture of gratitude for fan support,
rpe playen would lip lbeir caps.
"We looked at each olber and ·
said. 'No, DO, wrong move,''' Marlins lbinl baseman Terry Pcadlctoo
said.
.
1
"Thanks to the loyal, patient
and lmowledgeable baseball fans of.
South Florida," lbe announcer

aid.
. Florida rallied In tbe lliDth with
Tbe .bats came off. The crowd tbree walks and tbree singles,
booed
iDCllldiDg Peodletoo's twO-run biL
"Obviously tbe lima an: bluer, Only · a few thousiDd fiBS
or I sbouJd say li'uslrlled. about DOt mDBiDed, but tbey made plellty of
golna to a same for tbe lasl eiabt DOilc.
months," QodJtcrs rust baseman
Rudy Seanez, tbe third piu:ber
·Eric Kanos said. "We have 10
or tbe lnning. then struck out 1o1m·
out or our way 10 aet diem bact.'
son looting with two out aDd run·
Exctling games such as lbe one · ners at fJtSt and SCCOIId.
Tuesday sllould help.
':It was one of thole fairy tale

r&gt;

Wahama
.boys
roll,
to
16-4
win
lnnq
ways on lbe liaseball diamond, as
tbe Bend Area team breezed past
River Valley 16-4 Tuesday
evening.
River Valley (2-11) made a weicontribution of 10 wa1b 1111!1
three errors to lbc potent Bend

totals

WHS
RVHS

062-200-6 • 16-9-2
(J()Q-002-2 • 4-6-3
WP- Albriabl
LP- Blaine
. A pair of six-run innin~s
Clllblcd the visiting Wabama White
Falcons to continue its winning

ame

win
over
Miller
.
Southern baseball team postsscore5-4
4-3.
Smilb, Dailey and Jones . .
lll8ke lbc

Trailing 4-2 going Into the last . ble.
In the fmale, Southern bad two
Southern, on a Jesse Maynard
inning, Southern's baseball team
out
and bead coacb Mick Wineposted a buge comeback and elttd· single, a Smith "sinsle and a sacri· brenner lboullbl bis troops bad fall·
ed an upset Tuesday Diahtto defeat lice fly by Eric JOIICI In tbe fourtlt, en 10 one or ibe teams in lbc league
· .
Miller S-4 in an imponant Tri-Val· went ajl:ead 2· I.
,
S
oulbem
went
up
3·1
In
lbe top · cellar. Ryan Martin got a single
ley Conference game. Soulbern ·(9·
and Jeremy Hill looped a pop up
7 overall &amp; 8-3 in lbe Hocking of lbe sixlb wben Maynard dou- that fell for a bit between the sec·
Division) is tied for first place with bled. adYIDCed on a Jay McKelvey ond baseman, centerflelder and
sacrifice and scored,on a Shawn
Alexander.
· sbortsiOfJ. Ryan Williams tben
MiUer too1c a 1-0 lead In the finl Dalley sacrifice fly.
In the lhb lnninJ, Miller scored hammered a single lbat 1knocked
and led by that score until tbe sechome both runners for the win.
ond wben Shawn Dalley walked lbree times on an error, lbree walks
Southern bitters were Martin,
and' scored on an Eric Jones dou· and bits to Braglin and Frye to · Hill, Williams 2-4, Maynard 2-4,

Watkins fanned 1bree SHS batters, walked lbree and Miller committed one error.
Marlin and Hill gave up four
runs, had five K's, eiabt walks, bit
two 'batters and gave up two h\ts,
which went to Jenks and Braglin.
Inning totals
·
Sou.
010-101-2 = 5-9·3
Miller
t&lt;io-oo3-0=4-2-1
WP - HiD
LP- Watkins

'

Belpre diamondmen get 9-1 decision over Meigs
Belpre defeated lbe Meigs
Marauders 9-1 in Tri-Valley Conference baseball l\Ction Tuesday
evening at Belpre.
Tbe Marauders went into lbe
contest wilb a six game winning
streak, but lbe mBfoon and gold
bad trouble getting untracked all
ni~t. Marauder roach Scott Gheen
said "it was our worst perf~ .
of the season."
·
1
Meigs jumped to a 1-0 lead in
lbe second inning. Gary Stanley
doubled to lead off the inning and
came around 10 score on Bradley

miscue.
Wbitlatcb a single.
Wbitlatcb' S base biL
·
Belpre closed out the scoring in
Belpre came bact In the bottom
of lbe third lnning with four runs In lbe sixlb inning on lbree straiabC , _:,Wellston (13-5 overall) leads
the bottom or the !bird inning 10 walksandasaeriflcetly.
A, ~ th'j TVC's Ohio Division with a
Jason Wesson picked up the Win . 111-1 mark. Meigs (10-5 &amp; 7-2) will
take a 4-1 lead: Reams led off the
lnbing wilb a walk, WiSe walked, b;Y scaftering six bits, sttlldna out hofot Wellston today.The Marauders
Newbanks sing!¢ and Richardson rune and walldng nine. Newbanks handed the Golden Rockets lbeir
doubled. Two Marauder errors put led the Golden Eagles wilb a pair only loss in the conference back on
April 7 by a 7-2 sc6re.
ofsingles. ,
Belpre ahead 4-1.
Belpre made it a 5-1 game in lbe
Brett Newsome w,as the starter Inning totals .
fourth inning on another Marauder and loser "for Meigs. Newsome Meigs:
. 010-000-0 = 1-6-1
error and Newbanlcs' single. Belpre gave up five bits, walked eiabt and Belpre:
004-131-x = 9-5-4
added lbree more runs in the fifth struck out nine. Cass Cleland and
WP- Jason Wesson
Inning on a pair of walks a single Newsome bad a pair of singles, .and
LP- Brett Newsome
by Ruble and another Marauder Stanley added a double, while

Q~er

011'"10 It

(lBS)

T~y'•openen

City (Appi&lt;t H),

Delroil (Moore 11- tO) at California
(Flllley UH 0),10:3$ p.m.

Detroit .. Seattle, 10:3.5

Friday'• aamos

f.m.

~nuaJ .................. 0
.New Yorlc, ............... O

Phlladelphia .. ........... o

Florida .......... ........... 0

0
0

o

SIUI..,I AprU 31

Mootnal It Quebec. 7:30p.m.

1 .000

0
0
0
0

.000
.000
.000
.000

S!: Louit .................. 0

0

.000

Colorado .................. o

.5

san Diego ................ o
Slln FranciKO ..........0

.

.

National ........,

VaDOOUver II ToroDto, 7:30 p.m.
Su late II Anaheim, II p.m

ATLANTA BRAVES: Aareed to
terTnl with Marqui&amp; Grluom, outfielder,
oo a: one-year co.atrac:t.
COLORA.DO ROCKIES: Place,d
David Nled, pitcher, oa 1he lS-clay dll·
abled list Releued lhrold Reyt~old&amp;, tee·
oad bueman. Pu.rchasod tho coatnct AJ.
Sager, pitcher, from Colorado Spring~ of
the Pacific C(Qt Lequc. R«:alled O~~rvin
Alston, pitcher, from New Hncn or the

Transactions

Area offenso, and !bat donation
lbe third on a wa11c
an
proved 10 be mere thaD caouab for error to lead by an 8-0 count with·
Gordon Spencer's 199&gt;5 diamond . out ever putting togelber any type
squad to register its iecoDd sttalabt of an offensive threat. Tbe Bend
win and 14th of tbe spring·against Area team scored twice mote in tbe
five losses. Wah•m• took advan- fourth to increase its advantage to
tage of lbc Raider gift of 10 10-0, as King doubled and scored
unearned runs and added a six-rull on a Yonker base knock before
seventh rramc for good measure to Tucker deHvered a three base hit
into tbe gap in riahL
·
log the easy 16-41riumpb.
Jason King went three for four
River Valley closed to within ,
in tbe contest ,with two singles and 10-2 in the sixlb wilb a two run
a double, with Dale Johnson frame as Kelly drove home a pair
stroking a pair of singles to pace a with one or lbe Raiders' six bits In
Dine-hit attack. Je~y .T~ker (1· the contest, but Wabarua came
2). added a RBI triple, wblle Scott back with another six-run inning In
Yonker (1-3 &amp;. two RBis), Gabe · the seventh with Scott (1-4) JohnScott (1-4) and !oey Jl.:iayes (·1-4) son (2-5) and King (3-4, do~l!le &amp;
cacb c~ up wtth a smgle In the two RBis) all posting base hits for
WHS wm. .
the While Falcons.
J.C. ~lbnght, the first of three
The Raiders uicked on two more
Falcoo pttcbers oil the day, J!urled runs off Mitchell in the bottom half
f~ur shutout in.nings to pick up. his of 1be inning, but Wahama bad the
slXIb mound ~m of tbe year agamst situation well In band by Ibis point
one loss. Juntor lefty Heath Engle wilb lbe Bend Area team easily
W?£ked the fifth and ~ixlb .frames laking lbe 16-4 decision.
w1t~ fre~bman Davtd l&gt;:f117hell
Daniel Maskew (2-2) bad. two
making b':' de.~t o~ the btU 10 the bits for River Valley, while
seventh 1n fmtsbmg uJ) on the Edwards (1-.1),clubbed a double.
mou~d for W~hama. ~he three Buclc ReynoldS (1-2), M.T. Blaine
combmed ~strike out CJgb~ walk (1-2) lind ~vid Kelley (1-1) also
three and btt two batte':'.
. collected base bits for the Raiders.
W~ama scored ~1x unea~ed
Wabama will return Ia action
runs m th.~ seco:n.d wtlb the :Ud of today 1n a 4:30p.m. encounter with
only one ht~ as River Valley ISSUed Wirt County before visiting Point
four free passes an~ committed two Pleasant Thursday to try and gain a
costly errors wht~b ope~ed the split wilb lbe Big Blacks in lbe
gates for the runnmg Whtte Fal- borne and home series on the 1995
con~. Joey .~yes, tile ninth man to . spring campaign. WHS will visil
bat m tbe ~mg, ~,lad the lone ~al- ' Ritchie County on Saturday for a
~ safety 10 ~ s~ -run explos1011, pair or games beginning at noon. ·
wtth a run sconng smgle to left.
River Valley will bost Jackson
WHS added two more unearned today.
·
·

·-

7
3
Florida .............. II 20 S
TampoBay ....... l724 3
N.Y. blaaden ... 14 25 .S

o .000

.5

.5

Tuesday's score
a; Florida 7

Todatsgames
Chica, (Bulllllltr 6- 2) ll CINCIN·
NA'Il (Rojo ~6~ M l p.m.
San Fnncilco (Mulholllllld G.Q) a1. AI·
lanta (Maddur 16·6), 4:0S p.m. "
1.DI Anflelet (Cu.dloui 7-7} 111. Fl«idl
(OwdDCt" 4-4), 1 :0~ p.m.
Montreal (Fanwo 8-6) It PltllburJ.h
(Ueber 6- 7), 1:35 p.m.
.
N'BW Yort.: (JoQCJ 12·7) at Colontelo
(Swift 11-7), 7, lS p.m.

Philadelphia (Sc:hUIIaJ 2·1) al St.
' LDu" (Hill 16-~. 1!0' p.m.
HoualiHl (Drabek ll-6) at Su Dieto

(Beaet 6- 14), 10: 3,1: p.m.

· Thunday'a gamos
Olicaao al CJNCINNATI, 12=35 p.m.
Pbiladelph!all St. Lou II, 1:35 p.m.
Su Fraacileo at Atllllt.a, ;2:10 p.m.

110
110

122
111

124
144

N~Wthe.ur IH"bion

l ·Quoboc ·········· 2112
1-PilllburJ.h ...... 2&amp; 13
8wto11 .............. 23 17
Buffalo .............. 19JI

4
2
3

60 174 121
!18 167 IJB
49 134 llS
44 ll4 107

6
Harllord .........•.. 19 21 ' 43 123 132
Montreal ........... ll 2l S 41 H9 138
O!tawa .•••.•. •.•.••• ~ 33 S IS 93 160

~lt.
.......... *~ ~ 't ffi ~
1·SL Loula ........ 26 ll 5 S7 164 120

f!ti, &amp;om

Ba sketball
• NBA playoff's

11

43 139 · 133

n 137 163
36 124 16:1

SAN i&gt;IEOO PADRES: Pllrcluooed the

eontract o( Funando Vateii%Uela, pi~eher ,
(rom La• Veaaa of the PaciCic Coa&amp;t

........

FootbaU

NaUonal Football Lc..ue
ATLANTA FALCONS : AJreed to
terma with Brian Pruitt, .runolllJ back;
Kyle Bmdy, wide receiver; Stacy EvaOJ,
Brilli Ha!hiltoa, Rick Cee.s~, and Alonzo
Etheridje, detcmivc end&amp;; Abdul Jacbon.,

1"~ •p.m.(INT) ·
(lBS.J....
H""'ID' ,.""
11 Ulab.
9,30 p.m. (1115)

Lawn-Boy's Easy ·tdulch"-mowerbrings an end to
bagging and dispa;lng of grass clippings.
This tirn.,.and effott... ving mower feeds clippings
back into ~lawi\ as f~. The best part is, when ·
your gras8"1S lljO long to mulch, the mower can be" adapt· •
ed to discharge from the side or bag.

'

The quick, aaay way to col·
orlul decorallng achemu
wbhoul ob)ecllonablt polnl
odors. For all Interior walla.
Washoble.

fm:

POMEROY COUNCI'L

PICKENS

Dedicated to the village' the
people, the bu$inesses,
and the· fut.urea

L--------' ........_____________.....
L.A. Later~ at Seatt l•. 10:30 ptm.
(INT) •

J

Paid for by the cendfdatt, 12 Lincoln Terrace, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

·Pirates to begin season .
at home .today against. Expos
By ALAN ROBINSO~
pagne in Pittsburg!~ only if tbe
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Not club's casb-suapped owners finally
much starting pitching. Not much seD the team. But with negotiations
power. Not much money. Not stalled again after Dine months of
strenuous haggling, even that party
mucbbope.
'flll"ee years removed from three is on bold. ·
Until lben, Leyland can cling
consecutive division championsbips and light years away in l.liJ.. only to hope - and DOt much else.
"I think there are enough posien~ lbe Piltsburab Pirates haven't
seen such dire straits since manager tives tlillt make it wonbwhile,"
Jim Leyland's second season in Leyland said. "I don'ttbink I
would ever surrender, but I don't
1987.
Coming orr 1bree straight last- think it's as dark as it necessarily
place finishes, they held a club- looks. Actually, I feel good about
•
bouse champagne parry tliat il"
He might not once lbe season
September after finally abandoning
·starts
and the glaring lack of power
!he cellar and finishing in fourth
and starting pitching are exposed.
place.
·
This season, they'll swill cham- Tbe absence of a proven starter

wouldn't be so bad if they bad
power, or vice versa, but they have
neither. No everyday regular bit
more than 10 homers last season,
and no starling pitcher won more
than nine games.
With no money to spend on an
eslablislled pitcher - the payroll is
$17 million, down from $24 million- ihe four-man rotation of Jon
Lieber, DeiUly Neagle, Paul Wagner and Esteban Loaiza bas exactly
39 career wins. The bullpen bas
veteran depth in Jim Gott, Dan Piesac and Mike Maddux, but closer
Dan Miceli bas exactly two career

saves.

Following three seasons of roster-wide salary slashing - among
the missing are Barry Bonds, Doug
Drabek, Andy Van Slyke and Zane
Smith - shortstop Jay Bell is one
of lbe few recognizable faces back.
Bu~ wilb his $4.2 million salary
constituting nearly one-quarter of
the payroll, even be is expendable.
(Continued from Page 4)
Emily Fackler scored from sec- out 16 and walking eight. Amber
"I don't know bow competitive
da said.
' 1ond base with one out in the eighth Blackwell bad three singles to lead we can be," Bell said.
"I try to play better every day,"
• inning to give the Meigs Marauders Meigs, Billie Butcher added a pair
Witb virtually no incoming rev- .Mondesi
"IT I 1bittwo home
j a heart stopping 2-1 win over Bel- of doubles. Fackler,. Bobbie Butch· enue since the season-balling strike runs today,said.tomorrow
.1 try to bit
· , pre in Tri-Valley Conference soft- er, Cynthia Cotterill and Ashley bit last August, the 10 oW..ers prothree
.••
• ball action Tuesday evening at Bel- Roach all chipped in with•singles.
ject losses of $13" million to $20 ·
Ramon Martinez (1-0) allowed
. Nikki Arnold was the loser million, or nearly as mucb as lbey
:pre. '
two
runs in six innings and broke a
· Belpre jumped on top 1-0 in the . pitcher despite pitching a good paid for the team in 1985.
lie
with an RBI double in the
2-2
;fifth inning. Nikki Aruold singled game. Sbe scattered nine hits,
"II can .be frustrating not to .fifth.
~and came around to score on a sin- struck out nine and walked two.
know what lies ahead for the franJeff Conine homered for Flori=gle by JuUe Waljdns.
Kathy Coyner, Arnold, Watkins chise, but I have 10 be very careful
da.
: Meigs tied tbe game in the sixth and Angie Hayues bad the Belpre not to let lbat interfere with what
John Burkett (0-1), a former 22:inning. BIIHe Butcber doubled wilb hils, all singles.
·
I'm
supposed
to
be
doing."
Leygame
winner signed by tbe Marlins
'One out and scored when Bobbie
Meigs (13-1 overall &amp; 9- I in the
land
said.
"If
you
do.
there
are
during
the torrid turnover lbat fol:Butcher singled.
Ohio Division), which holds a twosome
days
you
can
really
let
it
get
lowed
the
strike, allowed six bits
. The game stayed lied until lbe game lead over Wellston, will bost
to
you."
~nd
five
earned
runs in 4 2/3
.
·eighth, when Fackler led orr the the Golden Rockets today.
Wbat
encourages
Leyland
is
the
innings.
He
was
unhappy
about the
:inning with a single and stole sec- Inning totals
addition
of
his
fttSt
true
leadoff
bit·
umpire
dispute,
•ond. She scored the winning r11n Meigs
000-001-01 = 2-9-1 ter, center fielder Jacob Brumfield,
''When you have tbe greatest
owhen BIIUe Butcher singled.
Belpre
000-010-00 = 1-4-1 plus the emergence of rookie right
in the world, you should
players
i Billie Butcber .was the. winning
WP- BiiUeButcher .
fieldef
Midre
Cummings,
consid·
the
greatest umpires in the
bave
LP- Aruold
pitcher, giving up four bits, striking
ered tbe Pirates' best prospeCt since world," Burkett said. "Tonight
Bonds.
they were out on the sidewalk."
They'll hitl-2 in the order, folThe first boos came 30 minutes
lowed by Orlando Merced, wbo before the game, when lbe PA
I'
I
; Sou~ern's softball team fell 5-2 'Manuel a single, Jess Codner a sbifls from right field to first; left · announcer said it was lime to intro'
l ~Miller Falcons Tuesday double and single, Lisle·two singles fielder AI Martin; third baseman duce the Dodgers. Tbe crowd
Jeff King; Bell, wbo drops from applauded fOr the Marlins, with big
mg· at Hemlock during a Tri- and singles by Sisson. Cummins
second to sixth; catcher Don cheers going to recently acquired
and
Lawrence.
·
.
y Conference matchup.
·
Slaugbt
and second baseman Car- former MVPs Andre Dawson and
Miller
hitlj:rs
were
Sandy
Hem
,. Soiithein tOOk a 2-0 lead when
los
Garcia
and
Angie
Joseph
with
two
singles
Sammi Sisson singled and scored
Pendleton.
If tbe Pirates bope to hang in the
each and singles by Hughes, Lan.One banner in the stands said,
~n . a Jennifer Cummins single, then
race looser than expected, they'll "All Is Forgiven." But Pendleton
llea Lisle sinj!Jed borne Cummins ning, Wycinski and Planl
prol)alily need a swprise contribu- wonders whether that's lbe case.
Moore suffered the loss with
b:Jr the two-run Southern lead."
tion from someone like Loaiza, a After all, Marlins season-ticket
founlrikeouts,
six
"walks
and
eight
:· Julie Lanning singled for Miller
right-banded
power pitcher initially sales are down 24 percent from last
and scored in the second on two hils, while SHS bad one error.
expected
to
start the season in season.
Joseph picked up the win with
~olen basses and a passed ball to
Triple-A;
or
first baseman Mark
six •&amp;trikeouts and one walk. Miller ·
' 'The telltale will be the next
~alee the score 2-1.
Johnson,
wbo
could make the ros- few weeks," be said . "We'll see if
, A. Joseph beld Southern score- bad one error.
ter after hilling 23 homers in Dou- tbe fans sbow up tben. All opening
Inning totals
l~ss the resl of tbe way despite
ble-A
last season.
020-000-0 = 2-8- I
Sou.
days arc opening days.:'
~outhem getting eight bits. Miller
"We've
got a lot of young kids,
. 010-211-x = 5-8-1
lOok a 3-2 lead in the fourth and Miller
but they' re young kids who can
WP-Josepb
Scored in the fifth and sixth.
play," Merced said. "In baseball,
Now Open For The Season
· Southern billers were lonna . LP-Milore
Bedding Plants
anything
can
happen
.
They
said
'
before that Pittsburgh couldn't win,
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
and look wJiat happened.' '
But with an already unde!lized
Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
fan base badly turned off by the
... Shurbs &amp; Trees; Rose
.
strike
ami
with
few
recognizable
Bushes, Strawberry Plants
Alexander defeated Eastern 9-4 suffered the loss. Sbe raimed two names to matket, Leyland fully recG
h
ognizes th e enormity of tbe Hubbards reen ouse
ill a Tri-Valley Conference softball and walked five ..
Alexander took a 1-0 lead in the · rebuilding job confronting bim. .
match at Albany.
·
Syracuse
992-5776
. Merckle posted the win wilb fttSt. but Eastern came back to take
"I don't want us to fall into the ..
0
D
·1
9
5
pen at Y am· pm
eight strikeouts and eigbt walks to a 2-1 lead ·in lbe !bird inning when trap of feeling sorry for ourselves,
Sunday 12 noon-S pm
ber credit, while Rebecca Evans Jessica Karr was bit with a pitch so it's OK to lose or OJ(: not to perand Nicole Nelson hammered an form ," be said.
•
.
RBI.tlouble. Patsy Aeiker bad a 2-3
ground out that forced bome Nelson
for the lead.
~ag
'Alexander went up 3-2 in the
fourib when Merckle slammed a
: Meigs County bunters bagged a two-run double lbat scored Andi
tplal of 49 gobblers Monday on the Rolston.and Jarvis.
ftrst day of Ohio's wild turkey seaAfter that Eastern bad a defen'
son.
sive breakdown, while Alexander.
: Tbe county' s three turkey got some timely bitting (bat resUltobeckillg stations reponed lbe fol- ed in a five-run sixth.
lowing numbers: Baum Lumber
Easte rn bitters were Jessica
&lt;;ompany, Chester, 21; Eber ' s Radford with a two sing!~. Nelson
Citgo, Racine, 13 ; By Tbe Way a double and single and Aeiker a
Grocery, Langsville, 15 . Tbe single. For Alexander, the top bitlargest bird killed was a 23 I /4 - ters were Me rckle 3- 5, Dixon ,
pound gobbler.
Lovsey, Blair 2-4, Rolston, Jarvis
Las t year , bunters tagged 62 and Wilson.
·
birds lbe ftrst day of turkey season. Inning totals
.......
-lO,OOPM• 992-2556
The ·wOJsl opening day in recent Eastern
002-100-1 = 4-5·3
history was In 1993 when bunters Alex.
100-215-x = 9-10-2
killed oqly 13 birds due to wet,
WP -· Merckle
cold weather.
LP -Evans
J

SiMeigs softball crew tops
fBelpre 2-·1 i~ eight innings
l

HARDWARE
.

~ .~

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

VINE ST.
AT THIRD AVE.
·GALLIPOLIS

• 446-1276

LAWN &amp; GARDEN
634 E. MAIN St ·.
-t501JPPER RIVER Ro:-· . POMEROY •
GALLIPOLIS
446-78~6

. 992-5500

1994.
poat\IC

.

Gtand ~m S~.
.
dool, s\arttn9 a\. ................... .
4

Dodgers win ...

Alexander girls record
9-4 win over Eastern

Republican Candidate

cLEVEL~~- York. 1 p.m.

SIX PLACES TAKEN - Tbe Meigs County Josh Hayman. Standing are Instructor Mlclt How' Karate Club, competing In a tournament on the . ell, Larry Willis, Josh Wright, Eddie Willis,
Oblo University campus earlier lhls month, took Jonatbon Gibbs and Christl Roach. Teammate
six places In a 150-stroog field. Knee81111 are (L·R) , . Josh Van Meter wasn't able to be present for tbe
Adam Wolfe, Ashton Well, Ryan· Stobart and photo session.

Year after year, tbe Cincinnati
Reds ace is one of tbe most dominating pitchers in the National
League. And year after year, something gets in tbe way of baseball's
ultimate honors for a pitcher.
When be lakes tbe mound
Wednesday for the season opeuer
againsl the Cbicago Cubs, Rijo is
taking a different approach.
Awards and honors no looser are In
lbe back of bis mind.
..It doesn't matter anymore," be
said. "It seemed to .me I learned a
lesson lbe last co.u.Pie of years. I've
tried to reach tbe Cy Youna. (have)
an MVP type of year, but you can't
do it alone. You've got to bave
more luck than anylblng else.
"I've been lucky, but DOl lbat
type of luck. Tbe Cy Young is not
just conditioning and work, it's
also luck. That's something that I
don't have as mucb." •
Once again, Rijo opens lbe sea~n and is great shape - he dido 't
allow a run in 10 innings Ibis
spring - . and great spirits. He's a
leader on one of the best teams in
the National League, a consensus
pick to win the NL Central.
All the ingredients are there for
that breaktlirough season - good
defense, good offense, good
bullpen. But Rijo has been here
before and come up empty.
- In 1988, he bad the NL's
fifth,best ERA but was disabled by
elbow tendinitis and bad to settle
for 13 wins.
- In 1989, be missed half the
season with a stress fracture in the
lower back.
- In 1990, a strained shoulder
cost him a month and a shot at 20
wins. He did get 14 wins and the
World Series MVP.
-In 1991, be bad the NL~ssec­
ond-best ERA but broke bis anlcle
and won only 15.
- In 1992. a sore elbow held
bim to I 5 wins again.

f'Ailler girls beat Southern

t.ion.

SCOTTM:--DILLON

(llat-or-n..)

. NEW YORK lETS: Sianed Wayoe
Oltebd, wide receiver.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Slaaed

PHILADELPHIA PHI LIHS' Pur·
chased the contracts of Norm Charltoo.
pitcher; Dan GallaJhet, outfielder: a.nd
Randy Ready aud Marlapo Duncaa, Ia·
fleklcn, l'rom Seranton-WIIkea Bll'l'e. of
tbe.lnternational ~~e .
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Purchased
the contuct of Maouel Lee, Infielder,
Crom LoullviUe or the Americaa Alloc:la-

p_1 faier,la10CIUit&amp;,

RE-ELECT

Flnt-round aedon '

fOll'•yeat' C:Oilttld..

Ot-

Moatrell at Piuatn•ah. 3:05 p.m
New York at CoiOI'Id.o, 3:05p.m.

p.m.flori!UIM.SU flnm~, 10:0$ p.rn.

KANSAS CITY CHU!FS ' SiJoed
Tre2:elle1entju, ofreosive tactic, to a

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT ·
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE J868

e.

Toledo of the latanational Alloclauon..
MILWAUKEE BREWERS ' Placed
Jeff Broakey, pitcher, oa Uie. LS--dl)' "dl..
abled list, retro~t:Uve to April 22. Recalled &amp;all: Xltll pitdler, from Ok.llhoma
City of the Anw Cia Alloel.Uon.
OAKLAND AntiEI1CS: Pwchaled
the qtract of Brian Harper, cal.chet, aDd

Padllt DiTttkto.
1
Y·CaiJIIOfY .•....••.. 23 16 6 52 IS2 124

PitllbUtlh at PhUidciPbia, i':3' p.m.
SL Lo\lll at New Yoti:, 7:-40p.m.
CoJON!do ll J{QultOA,I:O~ p.m.
Atl.... o1 Loc All..... 10'0' p.m.
·CJNdN'NATI at Sail Dleao. IO:O.S

.....

INSUUNCE~

··d

DETROIT TlOIUlS: Purehaled the

45 121 1!1
Pall•················ 17 lQ I 42 132 Ill
WlnnlP&lt;J ..•....... 14 23 7 3.! 145 161

Friday's games
fdolltrelll 11 Cbleooao. 3:20 p.m.

DETROIT UONS: Signed Ktvia Di1aon, TOmmy Boyd and Mill Colema"b,
wide i'ecelven; Ron Rice, Jafa.y: Mark
Hatfield, arrcuive tackle'; Bryce Bevill ,
cometbac:k, lJld Brad Bower&amp;, defensive

...,lllrl&lt;lor ~~&lt;on I'Jt!&lt;hw, la_no111!!1 foo'l'

Toton.to ............. 19 ll 7

HOlWIOD at SID Dieao, 5:05p.m

Peanoa, safety, aad John Farquhar, tiafit

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

mcnc

45 139 Ill

Edn&gt;tolna •••.•••• 16 24 4

.....

detc1111W. Uaemu, 10 a two-,_. colltlrd.
WASIDNGI'ON REDSKINS : Slped
Mwc Logan. fullback. Wai\'ld EdWJ Hor~
toft, light end, and Leonlll'd MarahaU; defea•ive ead.

Reeilled David Bell, hlfieJdCII', from BWrolp. i&gt;ctipllod Tooy Mitchell. outlitld·
er, ud Jim Lewil, pitcher, for UlitD·

C.atniiM ...._

Vuasuvcr ........ l61711
lM Anaela...... 14 21 9

\ Mlb McCoy, q\lutcrbac:k; Malcolm X.

T~MPA B .. Y BUCCANEERS'
Siaood Ptter Tom Willie:, qu~N~bact, to
a one-,.ear contract and Muc Spladler,

Pl..,. Sudy Alolllll', c:atcber, on the IS·
day ~........ 11·~ nirOadl .. 10 "'"" 1~. .

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Cbl- ........:.. 20 19 l

oon.tract of Lula Aquino,
tawa of the lnternatl.o.a.al

thO C.. itorala lul\le; Seaa Hu,o, out·
fielder, Toby Lebman, pitcbet, aDd Je.rf
Michael, larte1der , to frederick of the
Cuolhu. League. Releaaed Keu Araold,
Infielder.
CAUFORNIA ANOELS' PurchaJed
the coab'Kt of AJtdy AliiDIOD, eatcher,
aDd ScoU Sudenoa, pitcher, from Vancouver of the Pacific CoMI J...eque.
,
CHICAOO WIDTH SOX: Optioned
Donn Pall tad Rod Bolton, pitdlera, to
Nashville of lb.e American Auoclation
and Rob Dibble, pitcher, to Birmiasham
of the Southern Leap~ e. PUrchased the
contract or Barry Lyoaa, catcher. and
Cbria Nabholz., pitcher, from N~viUe of
lbe Amt.ri.CID Aaocilllon;
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Purchaled
the colltnetl of BI.KIBI.::t SAd 11m Poole,
pltchen , aad Tony Pen.a, cllteher, from
B\lrfalo of tbe Amerlcaa A11oelatioh.

:w 1. I4 &amp;S6 .GI
sa
142 122

Jupct, .lintbac:lren; Brad Hul'lle(, punter;

Troy HDU111d., defen.slve 11114. and Miehail
Willi mil, c:onaerback.

~

,.rln.-Hawl!;d.
__JJ!.laJ!,.illfltl;';h '"l~ roey.
pltcbet, 10 Bowie o e
•:
Lwry Shenk, pitcher, to Hi&amp;h Detert or
·

ilnebacktt; Alton. Purdie and Ropr Pur·
aaaon, ofteulve U.Cklet; Arn.old V1ltal.
~t.~ant: Tyrot.e Brown. wide reeeiww, aod
RoN Sdullte, ticker.
·
CAROLINA PANTHERS: Sliocd
Don Beebe, wide. receiver, an.d Bubba
M&lt;Dowell, llfoty.
CLEVELAND BROWNS : Slaoed
I.Drell%0 White, ruaDinJ bact.
·
DALLAS COWBOYS: Re-tllfled Jctry Reyaolcb, of(cosive: liocmaa. SIJDed
Ropr Onham, Dominique Rou and CurUs 1ohuon, NDnina bac:b, •nd Rodney
Hmll, wide receiver.
·
"
DENVER BRONCOS: Slped Lorry
JaciiOn, dtfeuiye eJtd; Jim Holfllll4, de.foo•lve tactlo; Errol Small aad Shane

.......MONI'REAL EXPOS: Pur.haood the

BALTIMORE ORIOLES' Putdlued

1

&lt;41 122
45 l16
43 126
41 104
!1lll
33 ll"4

LOS ANGELES DODGERS : Purchased tho cootracl of Diet Sc:hone1d, ia·
fielder, and Milcb Wtbller, oulfieldef,
from .Aibuquerq\le of the Pacirlc Coul

the con.t11ct ot Kevin But, ou.«ielder, .
from Rocb't:&amp;ter of the Jateraatloaal ·
Leap. Opllooed O!oaJ Zauo aod Csar
-~--i11
Dtvaru, i&lt;tl£_hen, and Joe Borowtti,

EASTERN CONFERENCE
1

......... Loque.

AmukwiLeapc

__...-:--.

Ium

.5

.000

St. Louil li Edmonton, 9:30p.m. .

BasebaU

Hockey

· y-Philtdctphia .. 26 14
Nowlmey ... ,... l0·17
WaahiDJ(DD .. :... 19 II
N.Y. Rqm .... 2021

.000

0

p.m.

Allandc DIYt.ion

0 l.OOO
o

TORO!IIT'O BLUE JAYS: Purchued
the &lt;:OntractJ or Dannr. Colt, pllcher; Can·
dy Maldonado, outfie der; aad l..aDcc Pwrllh, c;atchcr, [rom Syracuse of tbe later·
national League. Optioned An.ael ~ar.
tioez, catcher, to Knoxvllle of the Southera Leape. Dcaienated Aaro~ Small,
pitcher, ror auiaDJIM:nt

TIUJl)aBay .t N.Y. Rallaen. 7:30p.m.
PIUiburih II New Ieney, 7,30 p.m.
OU.W. It Philadelphia, 7:30p.m. ·
N.Y. hlaador&amp; 11 Wuhlaatoa, 7:30

Bo1110a 01 Orlllldo.l2:30 p.m (NBC)
Pu11aad ot l'hoeaix. 3 p.m. (NBC)
Oti\:qa 01 C.• lou., ~ : 30 p.m. (NBC)
Dea'ver at Sill Antonio, 9 p.m. (fBS)

NUL standings
-

Wulel"n l)hitioft

1..£1• Angelet ............. 1

l(act.

Aortdl at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.

W.d ....yiMaJ3
Orlaodo at BOII&lt;oO, 7 p.m. (lliT)
U&amp;ah Ill How.ton, 9:;JO p.m. (INI)

Centr.t DhrWon

'

AllaDiaOl """"~,, )(I p.m. (INT)
Houlton atl111b, 10 p.m. (1NJ1

Toal&amp;ht's g~mes
H.ICI'fd II Bottoo, 1':!0 p.m.

Iii.

.000
.000
.000

Oiicagu ........ ........... 0
CINONNATI ......... 0
Hou1ton ................... o
PrtUb&lt;IIJ)l ..........•.•.•. 0

Loo All pl.. ~. Delroill

(1115)
Pboe.nilll Portl.111d , 10::1) p.m. (I'NT)

NL standings

:w

\.

buclay,Ma, 2
lDdilDI at Atlanta, 1 p.m. (tBS)
01.-loaellOdcaao, 8 p.m. ('INI1
San Antonio at beuer, 9:30p.m.

Oltlaad • Mllwaubc, 7:05p.m.
Cbiaac&gt; It Bolton. 7:05p.m.
California a1 Toronto, 7:35p.m.
CLEVELAND at Tu.•.I:OS
New York at XADI• City, 8:0 p.m.
Baltimore II MlnDC10ta.1:05 p.m.
Detrull II Seattle, 10:35 p.m.

AUanta ..................... O 0 .000

s. Winalpea 3

c.~.., 3. Su 1o• 2

New Yo(lrk at CLEVELAND, I p.m.
(INT)
· _,.-··· -- - - ' . _, - Tburwdo.y~.aames
Se'attle at L.A. Laku•;·tu:3o p.m.
Tllq)IBayll OUawa, 7:30p.m.
(INT)
DaUaa at O.icqo, 1:!!0 p.m.
lletrolt at Wloalpq, &amp;:30 p.m.

Mil-" au...,, am
p.m.
p.m.

t:.tua DMIIIoft.
I. Ed.

l!dmollloa

MmU,, Mooyl

o.tlaDd at Toroato, 12:35 p.m.
CLBVEI..AND It TeUI, 1;0.5 p.m.
Baltimofe II MIDDMDtl, I:OS p.m.

4, Vurouva- 3 (OT)

St Louill, Dallu 4

Sot......,

Tbunday'sgamos

Lo1 ADicl~e~

Tueoday'a ICOres
&lt;ll.ie~F

CLEVELAND 01 New York. I p.fn.
(NBC)
.
L.A. Lat•n at Seattle. 3:30p.m.
(NBC)
.

z,3$ p.m.

Qat:land (Stewart 7-1) 11 Toroota
(Cone 16-5), 7:15p.m.

Ium

1-cllDched pl•yoabath
y-clblcbed. divillon tide

- I I Phooolx; 10:30 p.m. (INT)

Mloneaotl (EricUoll 8-11) lit BDilOD
· (Sele 8-7), I :05 p.m.
Te111 (Rotert . 11-1) II New ·Yorll: I
(Key 17·4), 1'3$ p.m.
,
Olicaau (Fernandez 11-7) 11 Milwlllkrlt (Booect0-9), 2:05p.m.
Baltimore {Muuioat6-.5) at Kln111

3 3$ 111 tst
3$ Ill Ill

Allahoim ........... IS 24 ' S

(I'BS)
(TNT)

IOilDD. at Orludo,
.
Deaver 11 SaD Aatonio, 9:30 p.m.

AL slate

.

s.. J............... t6 24

Clur-.I p.m.
1 p.m.
l'rlllllr

Baseball

100.

River
Valley
runs In
aad

Scoreboard
Rick HoDCycutt, pitcher, from Edmonton
of the Patirlc Cout Lcaauc.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Purthued
the contract or Lee Gucttcrmaa, pitcher,
Crom Tacoma of the Pacific Coalt la.p.
TEXAS RANOER.S: Purchued the
cantntt~ of Mlll:e PaJilarulo, third hueman. and Erie Fo:1, Shawa Hare, and Billy
Haccher, oulfieldeta, from Oklahorr.. \City
or the American Auoelat.ion. Siped Ed
Vosbera. pitcher, to.a mlnor-ieapc oon-

By JOE KAY
CINCINNA:TI (AP)- Jose
Rijo bas given up bopes of winning
theCy Young Award.
A 20-wio season? All AU-Star
game ap~arancc? Forget !bose,

at-bats," Jolmsoo said. "U yliu get ping 13 bits, iDCludiDg five dou·
a bit, you win tbe game or lie It up. bles, one triple and Mondcai's
But It doesll'l work out like that all bomers.
·
tbe lime. That's why you play,tOOMooclesl, tbe 1994 rooldc of1be
some-odd games."
.
year, bit a two-run homer to
The game, kiddng off a sea&amp;OD stnligbtaway cenur fidel In tbe ftnt
shortened from 162 games to 144 inning. His two-run ~ In the
by lbe strike, was lbe flrs.l sports seventh uaveled even fartbcr.
event at Joe Robbie Stadium since
"If II dldn 'I bit the scats, II
tbc Super Bowl. Tbe Dodgers mlabt have gone $00 feet," Laserscored as easily as lbe 4!lerl, rap· (See DODGERS ·o n Pap 5)

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SUN.·S,. At-.1- :0 0~AM
u
'l''r 'l''r
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~ ~ ~~ 1 '1'1' 1 J11''~'r
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•·where Belter

Really Matters

east State street
Athens, 9h10

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The o.lly s.nunll

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohlq

Prayer for secretaries opens eyes of top management
.
.
weep
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Please, Ann, run il again -· on

·

Ann
.Landers

Secn:tary'sD8y. :WChavea~w~.
and we want him to see tl .. NO
NAMES, NO CITY, WE NEED

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Dear A. . Loden:(- few yem

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110, you printed a •prayer• for

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secretaries, an.d you ran it, on
Secrelary's Day. That prayer was
dedicated to all women·who work in
ofllces. It went up on our bulletin

,;
~-

When the No. I boss in our office ·
heard about it, he came out of his
plush oflic:e and read it. He smi!ed,
and then he blushed, but he didn't say
a word. 1 feel ceruin it "registered. •

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Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

boardand~asensatiori.

·OUR JOBS ·
DEAR NO NAMES: Here's the
prayer, again on Secretary's Day,
although I confess, it does seem a bit
dated the second time around .
Today's secrewy would be scream·
ing,"G~t me a11 assi.f1a111."
"Deer LonJ, help me to do n'ly work
well, to have the memory or an
elepllant, and by some miracle to be
able to do five things at once ..
answer four telephones while typing
alenerthat'mustgnouttoday.'Wben
the letter doesn't get signed until
tomarrow, please sive me the good
sense and the self-discipline to keep

my mouth shut
"_Dear Lord, never let me l01e
pabeDCC, even-when lhe boa has me
searching tbe files for hours Cor dati
that is later discovered on his desk.
' "Helpmetohavetheinf01111l11ional
backgroond or a ·college pmfeaor
. although I didn't get quite that fa
"Help me to understand and carry
out ;til instructions to perfection
without any explanation.
'Let me always know exactly
where my boss is, what he is doing,
aRd when he will be back, even
thoughbenevertellsmethesethings
when he leaves.
"And Lord, when the year ends,
please give me the foresight not to
throw 0111 records that will be asked
for in a few days even tboug_h 1 was

told emphatically, ·~suoy these.
They~ clutterina up the place.'
Amen. -·D.O., MON'IREid.
Dear Au l.anden: 1 went to

going to set you rn:e so ,00 C. fmd
someone ~ho is_ worthy of a
wonderful woman hke you."
1 was stunned by his reSJIOIISe,,U
t.oltforanewcomp~~~y in 1988.My wdlu htMIIick. I wa- (and
.iob.whichwassomewhatmundane, III'OIIg)enoughtotellhim,•Jt'sow:t
became a lot more interesting when Cloodbye IIIII jood luck. • But I still
an attractive man in middle loved him inti hoped he would come
managementsltowedsomeintuestin tohis.senscs.
me.
Two :weeks ago, I saw him waliiing
Before long,"Midcey" and 1begin · arm in mn with a 22-yeaN)ld from
to see a ~ot of each Olhet He loved the typing pool. What now? ..
my coolung, and I was ftxing supper VANCOUVER HEARrACHE
Cor two at least five nights a week.
l&gt;EAR V.H.: Now you c:angr&amp;tlate
By the time I reached my 33rd yourself for missing 1 speeding
bi.rthday_l!ISt February, Mickey and 1· bullet. Snnge how those guys who
had been practically living together aren't good enough for you always
for five years. I told him I Wlllted to wind up good CIIOUJh for somebody
seta wedding date. His response wis else. Mickey was stnnging you.along;
"I am n9t good ~h for you. I'm

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~ Heritage Weekend activities scheduled
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"!:feiga County • tOO Years
Ago will be the theme for Heritlle Wed end 1UDe 9 through 11
Tbe Hcri~ Wcelteild Commiitee of the Mefp County Historical
Society bas issued a preliminary
ICbedule of'events that will take
place at the Meigs C01mty Museum
during Heritage Weekend.
.
Tbe 'Ob8crVanc:e will get underway on Friday June 9 with the
annual dinner
7 p.m. 'Entertainment will be by the Historical Society Singers
Satwday events will begin with
the burying of a time capsule on

ai

the courthouse lawn by the Meigs
County 175th Anniversary Com·
mittee. Enrertainnient, exhibits and
• cootests will begin at the museum
at 1 p.m. 1bese include "The One
More Time String Band" from
Columbus, which will perform
throughout the afternoon. Apple.
peeling, pea shelllnl!, bike races,
boop roUing and several other his·
torical-relaled cootests will be held.
JOhn Rice. retired county exten·
sioo agent, will demonstrate the an
of sheep shearing in the afternoon
and talk about the history of sheep.
A horseshoe pitching contest
will be beld Sunday. Visitors will

also be BiVen an opportunity to par- the ~~cance of the recipe to the
ticipate in a game of croquet. famil&gt;:· IS to aceo~JI!IDY.the entry.
Entertainment will be provided by Deadline for submisston IS May 15,
"Mountain Top Singers,'' ''God's 1995.
.
Kidz" and others.
The commtUee reserves the
To commemorate the heritage of rigb~ to edit e~bies. For more infor·
Meigs County cook:s, the commit· . ma~tOn, restdents may call the
tee is compiling a cookbook of Metgs County Museum a! 992·
early Meigs County recipes. ~81~. Entnes are to ~ matl~d to
Emphasis will be on recipes which
M~tgs ~ounty Famtly Hentage
have some significance to the fami · Rectpes, PO Box 145, Pomeroy,
ly's heritage and have been used by Ohio 45769 .. ~be entry should
either a resident of Meigs C011nty include the rectpe, name of !he
or a close family relative of the rei· person who prepared the recipe,
alive submitting the recioe.
f~ily anc) ·person submitting it
An essay of 100 .words , telling w1th an address and phone number.
·

Virginia and the name came out
"Ginja." It was Ginger thereafter,
and she adopted her stepfather's'
last name to begin performing as
Ginger Rogers.
Lela Rogers worked on the Fon
Wonb Record as reviewer, and her
daughter met many of the touring
vaudeville stars. Eddie Foy Jr.,
member of the Seven Little Foys,
taught her the new dance craze, the
Charleston. "Hegavernemy ticket
into show business," she recalled.
Miss Rogers won the prize as
Charleston Champion of Texas,
and soon was fOuring the countJt in
a vaudeville act created by her
mother, "Ging~r Rogers and Her
Redheads." An engagement with
tbe Paul Asb orchestra at tbe
Paramount theater brought her first
New York engagement. She began
appearing in musical short films
and oo Christmas 1929 opened in a
Broadway musical, "Top Speed."
She began her movie career in .
1930 with Paramou!Jt's "Young
Man of Manhattan." It was a secondary role as a society flapper, but
she made a strong imwession,
especially with her line, 'CigareUe.
me, big boy." The phrase became
part of the vernacular.
"Girl Crazy," a tune-filled
Gershwin musical of 1930, established Miss Rogers' stardom,
despite the sensation of Ethel Mer-·
man singing "I Got Rhythm."
During rehearsals, the producers
were dissatisfied with the
"Embraceabl&amp; You" number and
called in the ~ltpen help of Astaire,
then starring on Broadway with his
sister Adele. Astaire watched the
routine in the theater lobby and
said, "Here, Ginger, try it with
me."
It was the first Astaire-Rogers
dance. They ·later went dancing at
the Casino in Central Park, but no
romance ensued.
In ber book, Ginger dealr with
the legends about her relationship
with Fred. She emphasized that be
wa8 no Svengali, creating a career
for Trilby; she had made 20 fihns

---Community calendar--The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-proflt groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is liot
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
. are printed as space permits and
cannol be guaranteed to run a
spec:tnc number of days.

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RACJNE - Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday at noon, Country
Kitchen, Racine. Greenhouse tour
planned.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary meeting Tbursday, 7:30p.m. at home of President
Mary Ball.

LANGSVIU.E- Rutland Garden Club meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at home of Dorothy Woo.;Jard.

POMEROY - Meigs County
churches of Christ, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Church of ·
Christ Middleport Church to have
devo~ons. ·

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THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE
The
Riverview Garden Club will tour
Flowers by Craig. Thursday
evening·. Members are to meet at
the Whitehead hooie at 6:1S p.m.
After the' tour, they .will return to
the home of Janet Connolly for a
business meeting .

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church, Texas
Community, revival underway 7:30
each evening through Sunday. Rev .
Greg Gardner, Lancaster, evangelis~ Unity Singers directed by Sue
Matheny, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Cou~ty
. .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport ' Library Board of Trustees, I p.tn.
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, . Thursday, at the library.
bome of Mrs. Eileen Buck . Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - OAPSE,
George Hackett to review "An
Local
17, will meet Thursday at
American Tragedy".
Middleport Junior High School, 7
Roll call oomment on the book.
p.m. in cafeteria..

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PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees regular meeting
Friday, 7 p.m. at the township
building.
MONDAY
PORTLAND - Letart and
Portland PTO will meet Mondav. 7
p.m. Portland Elementary School.

~verytltlttg?

news-----long ship before returning to pon at
Norfolk, Va
On Christmas Day, the U.S.S .
Gunston Hall hosted former British
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
and her husband. While in France,
King and other sailors helped huild
a home for the poor and elderly and
in Haifa, Israel, repaired a borne for
handicapped children .
King graduated in 1978 from
Wabama Hish School

'

Attn lAnders'

book/~ I. "G~III.S." Is Ideal for a

I

l
t Aft

MIDDLEPORT

..

WHEN
YOUR CALL
FOR SERVICE
IS ANSWERED
PROMPTLY
BECAUSE
WE'RE RIGHT
IN TOWN,
YOU'LL
•

Charter
draped at
grange
The charter was draped in honor
of Roben Ashley, a 46-year member who recently died, when
.Racine Grange 2606 met recently
at the ball.
.

I

its good to know that our team or trained technicians is based
right in the area. We respond to most S(rvice calls within H ' hours
and usually [or FREE. It doesn't take
·
!o see the real value of cable .

Ibn&amp;

PEACHES
29 oz.

WHITNEYS
PINK SALMON
14.75 oz. can

'

VAN CAMP
PORK N'
BEANS

Council to tell story of dance

A p,rogram entitled "Let's
Dance ' - the story of dance will be presented by the Riverbend
Art Council May 6 at 7:30 p.m at
tbc&gt; Meigs Junior High School
Auditorium.
Tickets are are going on· sale
this week at the Middleport Depart·
ment Store, the Ohio River Bear ·1
Company, King's Servistar, Midc's
Barber Shop, and the Fabric Shop.
'The cost is $4 in advance, and $5 at
the door, with senior citizens' tick·
ets at $2.50 each, Students through

THE VALUE OF CUSTOMER SERVICE FROM CABLEVISION

LIBBYS

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OFcABLE.

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SEE ·
THE:vALUE

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU
APRU··26, 1995

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Formulated Dietary Food
Supplement and Behavior
·
Modification
. Weight Loss Program
Available Without
Prescription At

614-949-2682

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH•

:

Using
Tri-SIIm&lt;• The Naturally

Hours: Mon.·Frl. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3Y. miles ·past Southern High ·
School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio

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IN 3 DAYS!

KAREN'S .
GREENHOUSE

. not be as important as we some·
.• times would like to think, yet it
, does encourage hospitality and
.~ good conversation. Sbe suggested
that wben we are' busy in our own
·~ kitcllens where the counter is full
·•• of appliances and drawers are
: ' crammed. with gadgets,
sboold
·• think ot bow our mothers and
.t grandmothers got along in their
.
' simple kitchens.
OmCERS NOMINATED -Left to right, Clotlne Blackwood
She suggested going back even
and Pauline Alklnl were nominated as new officer• for tbe next
farther 10 stand iB the kitchen at
two year tenn of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of , • Mount Vernon or Willlarosburg •
the American Rnolutlon. They are pictured here with Margaret
• remembering that the ,&amp;arden, root
Weber, bostea, and Elean!ll' Smith, regent, at a recent meeting.
: cellar,. smoke house, '*"yard 'and
; · orchard were the source of sup·
cultivate(!. Their early. wild rice ry and by 1771 Or. Baker went into
•• plies.
· at all .b ut beeaose It business on his own, and thus
Mrs. Reynolds pointed out some was not nee
of the origins ilf traditional foods
was grown in water was called began the chocolate identification
such as Ho~ping John in South
Indian Rice or Water Oats. Along "Baker's Chocolate" we know even
•
the Great Lakes, she said, the Win· today, Mrs. Reynolds said.
• Carolina, umbo File in New
nebago and Chippewa tribes
Mrs. Reynolds closed her pre·
' Orleans, Persimmon Pudding in
engaged in ' warfare for control of sentation with beverages. She said
Indiana, Linecae in Georgia,
territories where it abounded. Car· that about 850 AD a soat herder
Shoofly ·Pie from Pennsylvania rots originated ·io the Orient and named Kaldi, puzzled by the way
• Dutch . Indians were using 2000
were introduced to England during his flock acted after eating cenain
: different foods from plants by the the reign of Queen Elizabeth and to berries, hied them and became so
: time the Spani-'t discovered Amer· · the Colonies in the 1600's. Cucum- exhilarated that be ran off to tell
' icah~:~a. 1637, William Byrd ber and onion pickles were proba· the other goat herders. Aral\s soon
learned to dry and boil the berries,
l wrote about deer and elk ·"they are bly among the ftrst American sal- called
Gabwe, which Mabammen: not quite as large as the European
adS. Tomatos were not widely used
dans
drank
to keep awake during
: · ones but of much beuer flavor and . until after the Civil War, she said,
• big and fat all the year long" Mrs.
because they were considered poi· the interminable religious services.
sooous.
•
From Turkey it came to France as
l Reynolds said. Oysters and small . .Mrs. Reynolds added that the CAFE and eventUally to America
cfloshlocnot_usltds beapoglalberedogizedattbWiat.lltbandey
word Luncheon calile from the Old as coffee. Tea has been known for
English and meant a lump of food 1600 years ..Buddists made it popu•
with a noon drink while bread was lar; the Dutch brought it to the
1 could only offer lobsters to their
I guests.
·
a fragment until around 700 AD British Isles. The disastrous results
Yankees perfected the an of pre- when it became to be called a loaf. that followed its imponation to. the
serving meat, she said, by coming Combread was an important part of Colonies are well known to Ameri .
• it in brine flavored with pepper- the diet of ·Indians and the
• coms and other spices. Hours of Colonists. Hot Cross buns were canMary Kay Yost read tbe 22, 23
• soaking and cooking were required fi t baked b
,.,.~. ·
d 24th Am
: to tenderize. Red Flannel Hash was
trs
Y pre-uu.. uan inhahi· an
endments to lbe Con'•. made from the leftovers with beets tants of England to honor the God· slilution of the United States and
d ess of Spring. Bakers added the gave a flag fact regarding the c·or
; added. John Pyncheon of Spring. .cross when Christianity was intro· reel way to ·dispose of a flag which•
Mass, in the late 1500's is
1• field,
'd
duced.
.
is by buming .
~~s!:: the ftrst American meat
Nominated for officers for the
Mrs. Reynolds said that while
The pioneers also did not for¥et next two year term were Paulin.e
,
desserts, Mrs. Reynolds said. PtoAtkins, Clotine Blackwood, Patri~ Marco Polo's cbef is credited with neers spent many hours drying cia Holter, Abbey Stratteti and
• the iqveotion of spaghetti in trying pumpkins, apples and other fruits
Mary Kay Yost were nomin~.
l to recreate the noodles bis master and vegetables as this was the prinCo-hostesses were Pauline
• bad in China, Thomas Jefferson is
· 1
th d f
·
A
~ said to have introduced it in this Ctpa me o o preservauon. A
tldns and lotine Blackwopd.
country
at
a
formal
dinner
in
Vir·
nice
fruit
accompaniment
for
a
lun·
·Miss
Eleanor Smith, regent, presid01
cbeon would be scalloped apples. ed at the meetlng, durin~ whlch
l ginia.
.
· bad· veg- Wild cranberries were one of the
urn
·
e a spect'al prayer was· beld m
,
~
The early settlers
also
•
ftrst American fruits to be shipped
remembrance of June Ashley and
: e~bles and salads, Mrs. Reynolds to the Old World, she said, and · family on the death of Ro!)en Ashley.
: poinbltedcallouedt.ThAskeIndianA s buasbada veg- ·sailors ate cranberries to prevent
1 eta e
oot- sq
• later scurvy.
.
The next meeting of the Return
~ shortened to Squash • meaning
In 1764, Rev. James Baker gave
J onatban Meigs Chapter will be
"green things eaten ·green:• and is up the ministry and assisted John
held on May 12 at the Meigs Counbeheved to he the rust thmg they Hannon to set up a~bocolate factoty Public .Library.

640t

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunilay
8 AM•IO PM

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LOSE UP TO
10 LIS•

•Pansy •VIola
•Broccoli .Cabbage
•Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

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Mrs. Webernoledtbatfoodmay

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1 10

SPRING SEASON

ELL

we

t •t •

. NOWOPEN

Mawtel Webco-, Rutland.

.,

ttlg/Uslalldor coffee Ulble. "'Gems" Is.
a colltctiott of Attn Laltders· moll
rrquested poerN IJIId tDtl'JI. Stllll a
stlf-QJ/drrssed, lolig, buiM&amp;s-siz(
tn11tlopeiJIIdaclrukorlltOMYDifkr
for $5.25 ftlli&amp; ilu:llllles ponagt IJIId'
luutdliltg)to:Gems,cloAMLtuulers,
P.O. Box ll562, Clticago,/11. 606110562. (In Canada, und $6.25.)

Even though you seldom call our service depanmer.t,

Dale. A. King, ~!I .Of Vera ThompTeni R. Hodge
.
Air Force Airman Tent R . . son of New Haven, W.Va., recently
returned from a six-month deployHodge recently graduated from Air
ment
to the Mediterranean and
Force basic trainins In Lacldll!ld
Adriatic seas aboard the U.S.S.
Air Force Base, Sao AntoniO,
Gunston Hall.
Texas.
f B ky
King was deployed off the coast
Hodge is the daughter o ec
of
Bosnia in the Adriatic Sea
Walker of Coolville and Jim Hodge
aboard the three-sbir. ·U.S.S. Nasof Palm Bay, Aa.
sau Amphibious group off the
coasts of Bosnia· Herzegovina and
Dale A. KinK
Navy Petty Officer '!bird Class Morocco. King traveled more dtan
30,000 miles aboard tbe 600-foot-

'

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Church Women
United, planning session for May
Fellowship Day, I p.m. Friday at
the Grace Episcopal Church. All
key women asked to attend.

before they joined on "Flying
Down to Rio" In 1933, be had
appeared io one. They didn't bate
eacb other, "despite occasional
snits.''
"We bad fun, and it shows,"
she wrote. "True, we were never
bosom buddies off the screen; we
were different people with different
interests. We were a couple only on
film."
Besides "Rio," the RKO musicals were: "The Gay Divorcee,"
"Roberta," • 'Top Hat," "Follow
the fleet," "Swins Time," "Shall
We Dance?" "Carefree" and
"The Story of Vernon and Irene
Castle." By 1939 the AstaireRogers vogue had run its course,
and their careers separated.
· They bad one reunion In 1949
wben Gene Kelly broke a leg and
Fred came out of retirement 1o
replace him in • 'The Barkleys of
Broadway" at MGM. Then costar
J ody Garland became ill, and Miss
Rogers took over the role in a
musical about a battling star couple.

A prelelltalion oa "A Coloalal
'" Buffet for Today'• Kill:hcu" was
given by Mrs. Rae ReyDolda when
·• Return Jonathan ~· Chapter,
'" Daughters of the Amencu Re..olu• lion, met recently at the home of

someone who did wone.
W/IQI et111 yollgi11t tile penon wlto
has

SENECA
APPLE 'JUICE

,1 .

thingllbouiJIIIIril&amp;eisdlltwbcnyoa
look around, you will always see

RAIN GUTI'ER REGATIA- Cub Scouts of Salisbury Paek
146 h~ld • Rain Gutter Regatta at Rock Springs Methodist
Church. Conteslants placed their homemade sailboats Into a nla
gutter filled with water and ''wind powered" them to tbe finish .
line. Winners were, from left: front - Tim Hubbard, first place
Webelos 2; Wesley Fields, first place Bean (first place overall);
Nathan Brlcldes, third place Belli's; Rou WeD, llrst place Wolf;
rear- Andy White, oecond place Webelos 1; Jeremy Rousb, flnt
place Webelos 1 (second ovenll); Grant Arnold, second place
Wolf; Josh Rathburn, second place Bean; Jon 'Diddle, 1econd
place Webeloo :z. Den leaders Adelle White, Jeanie Wltberell, Dr•
Jim Witherell and BW Young UBlsted with the event and served

Dancer, actress Ginger Rogers dead at 83
wasn't planned. I thought it tuined
out to be magic. I was told even in
the first picture· people could see
something was happening. But
when you're in tbe eye oftbe hurri·
cane you don't see that yourself."
· In most of their 10 films togetb·
er, Astaire was tbe smiuen pursuer
and she was the reluctant beauty.
Despite the air 'of romance, !here .
were no love scenes. In ber 1991
autobiography, Miss Rogers
claimed l)lat Astalre's wife Phyllis
"didn't want bim kissing other
women."
"One thing's for sure, (Phyllis)
never warmed up to me ... and she
surely didn't want her husband to,
either,',' the actress wrote.
Miss Rogers continued performing her musical show into her late
GINGER ROGERS
70s until ill health confmed her to a
wheelchair. Even so, she toured
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. extensively to promote ber autobi(AP) - Ginger Rogers, the glalnography, "Ginger: My Story,'' and
ourous blonde who made dance received honors at film festivals
flOor magic with Fred Astaire in a andbibutes. Themostnotahlewere
String of unforgettable musicals the Kennedy Center Honors in
and won an Academy Award as December 1992.
best actress for the drama "Kitty
Her hard-driving mother, Lela
Foyle.~· died today at 83.
Rogers, managed Miss Rogers'
Miss Rogers died this morning" · career from the beginning to the
at her borne here, said Riverside glory years, steeritlj! her . into
County Coroner Veronica Mar- vaudeville and Broadway shows
tinez.
and batUing studio bosses in HoUy,
wood. It was Lela who intrqduced
Miss Rogers' career spanned 65' Miss Rogers to Christian Science.
years in every field of show busi- wbkb provided lifelong solace.
ness from vaudeville to television.
The career seemed to be every·
During the 1940s she was one of t~ing. Miss Ro_gers married and
the highest paid. most sought-after diyorced five umes. Sbe bad no
Hollywood stars, appearing in such children.
hits as "Roxie Hart," "Tom, Djdc ·
"I yearned for a long, happy
and Harry," ''The Major and the marriage with one ~rson," she
Minor" "Lady in the Dark" and wrote. "But my life has been
"Weekend at the Waldorf."
blessed in so many other ways that
But she was most remembered I wanted to share the good times
for the blissful partnership willi and the bard times with a public
Astaire in sparkling musicals that that has shown me unbounded
brightened Depression Amer.ica. appreciation and loy~t(,'
He in top hat and tails, she m a . She was born V':f'gtma Katherflowing gown, Uiey glided over ' me McMath on .July 16, 1911, in
polished floors in a perfect display Harry Truman s home town of
of grace and romance.
Independence, Mo. Her father had
She once called their teaming abandooed his pregnant wife. •
"just a wbnderful bappenin~ , It
A cousin couldn't pronounce

b

delr. But
no more, my lld:tt A
fai_led ~is. •kif: betler.than
being di\'QICOCI, wtth c:llildrea.
GemofthcDIIy:'JlleoneCOIIIOiing

The Dally Sentinel PIQII 7

Dorothy Smith, master, presided
at the session during which time
plans were made for a work day.
· The group will meet at the ball on
Saturday to paint the interior and
make necessary repairs. It was
agreed to establish a degree team
· with members learning the second ·
degree in full form for inspection.
Inspection was set for July 20.
The summer meeting will he held
at 7:30p.m.
The liext Pamona meeting will
be a potluck on May S at the Star
Grange , Hall. Gran~e banquet will
be Friday and the stxth degree will
be conferred on July 29 at the University of Rio Grande.
Members were asked to tum -in
old eye glasses in May for that project. The crib quilts for HIV -positive babies need to be completed
before the August meeting .

News policy
In an effort to provide our readers.6ip with current news, the Gallipolis Daily TribuM and TM Daily
Seruinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence. .
All materlai submitted for publication is subject to ediUing.

high school are admitted free if
accompanied by an adult. Senior
citizen tickets may be purchased at
the Senior Citizens Center.
The program will include clog- t
ging, square dancing, west dances,
tap, Civil War dances, ballroom
dancing, jazz, aerobic dance, modem dance and ballet
For those interested in dance,
Ohio University is hosting an
exhibit from the New York Public ·
Library for the Performing Arts'

Dance CoUection. The exhibit will
remain on display through this
week.
Created in the mid-1940's the
Dance Collection, based at New
York's Lincoln Center,. is consid·
ered a valuable resource center by
dancers, choreographers, teachers
and students.
National dance week is
observed AJ1ril 24-30. Exhibit
hours are 8 a.m . to S p.m. weekdays and until noon on Saturday.

JOHN BLAETTNAR

VIDA~A

·

..

s

· (

Onions•••••••• ~~•• S9

MANWICH

LIBBYS CORN OR PEAS
15 oz.

has earned our trust and deserves to be returned to
office as Mayor of Pomeroy. He has a can·do attitude
and gets things'done.

160Z.

'.

4/$100

(

LIMIT 8 PLEASE

16 OZ.

In addition to performing well the duties of his office,
he has many accomplishments, Including the
·
following:

HUNTS
SPAGHETTI SAUCE

- significantly Improved ·the water system through
the establishment of some new water lines, a new
water tank on Lincoln Hill, doubling water flow by
cleaning lines In Mlnersvllle, and starting the process
for obtaining new wells to improve water quailty for
the village.
- helped raise over ·$900,000 for the revl~allzatlon of
downtown Pomeroy, · Including a promenade, new
lights and an amphitheater.

•

- razed 14 abandoned properties and Identified 4
others for demolition. ·
- caused removal of derelict vehicles from
streets.

vlllag~

- applied · for a grant to put lights, restrooms and
concession stands at new ball fields.

,

. 4 ROLL
PK.

89c

BEEF
lON

· 9 LIVES
CAT FOOD
5.5

oz.

4/$1

•

•

49 .
GROUND

a

,.. purchased used pollee cruiser, Instituted a vehicle
maintenance program and addl!d one officer through
a COPS FAST grant.

Please, join the In returning Johq Blaettnar to the
office of mayor•
Pd. for by Roland E. Wildman, Jr.
213 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Oh.

. 34.5 oz.

NORTHERN TOILET
TISSUE

- Improved cleaning of downtown streets and
sidewalks and added 2 additional plows for Improved
snow removal.

and Is committed to eJI,tendlng sewer lines from the
Legion Hall to Mlddlepqrt and upgrading the water
system on Lincoln Heights.

CHASE &amp;
SANBORN ADC
COFFEE

27 oz.

I

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· Ylednaaday, Aplt126, 1895

Ohio

'

Drug therapy works for manic-depressfon

Ohio University
·
Cctlege of Osteopathic Medicine

By PETER H. G01T, M.D.
job. The use of lithium and otber
DEAR DR. GQTT: My hn~ drugs may mate a world of differ·
is a manic-depressive. He s ence to IUCb patient•
received medicaJ aild job training
I urge your husband 10 be examfor more than a year. The )Wblem ined by a psychiatrist, who may
is, be cannot bold a job and JDODeY choose to administer lithium, with
11 v.ay scarce. Is there 11\Y hope for or without psychotherapy . Tbe
tbe future thai be can overcome thla effects may astound you. There is
coadition and work for a cbangc? much bope for your busbancl, pii)Are tbere drugs that might flc:lp?
viding be seeks )WO(e&amp;sional atten·
DE'AR READER: More and lion.
.
'
more ''mental diseases'' ·have
To give you more information; 1
come to be viewed as truly physical am sending you a free copy of my
ailments, disorders of brain cbcm· Health Report "Mental and Emoistry. For example, many types of Ilona! lllncss." Other readezs who
depression respond beautifuiiy to would like a copy should send $2
anti-depressant medication, .sucb as plus a long, self-addressed,
'Prozac.
stamped envelope to P .0. Box
Manic-depression (bipolar mood 2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
disorder) is another form of cbemi- sure to mention the Iitle.
cal imbalance that can be helped by
DEAR DR. GOTT: My doctor
medicine.
left the area and I do not care for
Patients with Ibis affliction, wbo t.be one who bas taken over bis
sbow wide mood swings (from practice. After one appointment,
euphoria to severe depression), · I've decided not to return. Wbat is
often suffer from disturbed inter· the best way 10 imd another docperSonal relations; tbey can't bold a tor? I don't want to have to pay for

Family
Medicine .
John C. Wolf, D.O.

~iate Professor
of Family Medicine
' -.....~.....!.;::;.........- . . - - - -.....---......,.~J
HERPES CAN GET UNDER whitlow - a painful sore on t.be
YOUR SKIN AND lNTO YOUR end of tbe finger II( near a finger·
CET t S
nail. Cbicten pox llld shingles are
Question: Is It possible for a caused by yet another member of
man to give herpes to bla sexual Ibis prolific herpes family.
partner without bowing be bas
Individuals wbo have been
Ibis disease?
infected with one of tbe herpes
Answer: Many people use t.be · viruses usually - but not always
tenn "berpes" to desaibe tbe genl· - are aware of it. This is especial·
tal infection caused by tbe herpes ly true wb~n they have an outbreak
virus. just as you have. Bu~. there is of sores. At these times abundant
actually a whole "family" of berpea numbers of viruses are present, iuad
viruses tbal can produce a number tbe infection is very easy to pass on
of different illnesses.
.
to someone else.
AU of tbe members of tbe ber·
The most common method of
pes family are classified as DNA uansmission is by kissing, sbarlng
type viruses. As you may tnow. drlnts II( eating utensils, or by sex·
DNA Is present in every living cell ual Intercourse, Even when the
and contains tbe Mgenetic code" or infected individual is free from
blueprint. for tbc organism. DNA apparent sores, a smaller but still
viruses get tbelr II8IDe because tbey signif1C811t number of herpes virusreproduce by injecting their DNA es are presem. ·
'
Into tbe cells of tbe "host" organTbls low count is all that Is nee- He's my pal, my.friend, my buddle.
ism - .in other words, you and me. essary to pass · t.be infection to There's laughter in tbe air when ·
Once inside a cell, the virus anot.ber person . So, to directly be's around, .
DNA uses t.be cell's nutrients to answer your question, it is oossible be even gets out and works. wben
it's muddy.
rapidly reproduce millions of new for someone to pass herpes to bis
viruses. This interferes with t.be . partner without knowing it.
.
normal inner workings ·or the cell
The rist of sexual uansmission · He is such a humorous kind of .guy,
even though at work we cut blm
and may ultimately destroy iL .'The. of a herpes infection is reduced but
end result is that we get sick as a not eliminated by use of a condom. down, but
consequence of the virus' "gener- You see, tbe virus also often infects
b.e just looks at us with a big ol'
ous" sharing of iiS DNA.
skin areas other tban those covered stgb.
I
A person infected with one of by a condom. A little Iovin$ skin
tbe herpes viruses develops' painful contact is all it takes to allow. tbe Ynu'· coufdif'L Mk ofor a better
blisters, swollen lymph glands and always friendly virus to share its human being
generally feels lousy. The blisters DNA with someone new.
and be's very loving and very carbreak, leaving a red sore that clears
Question: Are there new treat- ing.
up in a few days 10 weeks. The lust ments for herpes?
episode is typically the wors~ but it
Answer: A cure hasn't been One of tbe luckiest people that be
may be followed by repeated found, yet. Fortunately though, sbares
.
attacks, ' particularly when the there is treatment that can signifi- · bis life with and that would be
infection produces cold sores ·or cantly reduce the severity and fre- Mary.
genitallesions.
·
quency of attacks. The medication,
Teresa Hill MOler
The most common herpes infec- acyclovir, is helpful for all types of
Letart Falls .
lion -about 90 percent of tbe total. . herpes infections, not just tbe geninumber of infections- is tbe cold .t al ones. It is taken by mouth for
sore. A virus with the lovely name milder infections or administered
of "herpes simplex Type One" Is by I. V. for more serious ones. It
responsible for Ibis malady most of isn't as good as a cure, but it is a
tbe lime, c(ealing a sore on the· lip, step in tbe ·rigbt direction.
Tbe future hOlds onto nothing,
mouth or throat
''Family Medicine". is a weekly . but dreams of the past
Genital infections. the ones that column. To submit questions,
'
get most of tbe attention in the write to John C •. Wolr, D.O., And dreams of tbe
future
press and about which you ·asked, Ohio University College of Osteo· bold nothing that lasiS.
31;e usually caused by the herpes pathlc Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
simpfex "Type Two" virus. Eit.ber Atbens, Ohio 45701.
.·
Hold onto your SOJTQw and dreams
of t.bese two ·types can produce a
oftbe past

Dreams

Aild tbey will turn into tbe future
and the future comes fast.
Teresa HIU MU!er
Letart Falls

Plans
Dear God,
'The little plans

I tried to Cilrry through
have failed.

I will not sorrow
I' Upause a little while.
Dear God,
And try again, tomorrow.
. Teresa HIU MOler
Letart Falls

People'Who Share
We have met many people in our
life,
Whose names will fade away.
But there are a {ew, whose memO:.
ry,
Is with us every day.
Wbo always seem to understand,
Whose smile is always there.
Those are the ones, whose names
we carry.
With us, everywhere.
Ones, who mean a lot to us,
Just like our very own.
All because of kindness.
From seeds, tbey eacb have sown.
So ta1te these lines and what tbey

say,
As our way to repay.
Tbe Jove and kindness you bave
shown,
When you did not twn away.
. When you took time to give a
smile,
When' ere we chanced to meet. .
To stop and say a word or two,
To help make life complete.
Brings a joy to each of us,
Just like you were our own.
So never let the weeds take over,
Those seeds, that you bave sown.
·
Olen D. Harrison
Pomeroy

The Drifter and the
Stranger
I

,_..., I, .......,_.,,, lfal"_lt_...,..........._

:

PETER

23-

·THI-

W IW!IrCll.nt!IISAND PilCH COOl&gt; SUIIIDAY, - .
IAniD\Y, ANI. 2t, 11M.. M .IIIIV! M IJGNT TO ~rr CUANTITI!S. NONI toLD TO DU'•

•

Always Good. Always Fresh.

•

-

GOTI, M.D.

Master Cud

Always Kroger.

---- -~

~~

'
able.
Picking a physician is a lot like
buying a new car: You want to
check out tbe new models and take
a $pin before making a commitment. Some cars look great but perform badly; others may not be
flasby but function reliably. Test
drive your doctor before making a
purchase.

The Dally SenUnel-Paga I

•

Your Total Value Food Store!

•

.,

U.S. INSPECTED

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE

fDD%Pure

Diet coke or

.

Copyright 1995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRJSE ASSN.
(For informatio11 1on bow to
communicate eiectronicaiiy with
tbis columnist and others, contact
America Online by calling '·800827-6364, ex,t. 8317.)

.'

6-Pack 12-oz.

Let's lonk inside and see, and let us
both behold
It says, Welcome my friend, I'm
¥lad you came, thanks for stopping

G~ountf Be~f

coca co111 Classic
Cans

•

--.........--.....;.__--Poet's Corner---.....;,_____
My Pal, My Buddie

Poll1el oy Middleport, OhiO

• =~=·~··=---lllflftf-104&amp;
J lfiWir ..... M . . alfwe.Ntoutof .. :iliidLM rs-.we . . .,..yOU'fiiU"diiiDioiiUDIPII ¢!; ..... ....
8cd t' ,,......... _
............. ' ........... ,..toJM,I'dWettw8d"a OCirmiRtM-. . . . III'ter
..._10di¥L_., _ _ , . . . . . , . . berr &amp;11dPM'IMIIIpurcl
1

a complete physical siam. only 10

imd I don't like tbe doctor doin4 it.
Is It possible 10 make an appomt·
mcnt for a t8lk - a get-together - ·
10 mate t.be detennlnation?
DEAR READER: Yon bet.
Most good doctors encourage
prospective patients to meet with
tbem for a free get-acquainted
interview. This is entirely appropriate.
In addition, you may not need
an Initial complete exam; tbe new
doctor should be able to gain tbe
information be requires· by reviewing the medical file compiled by
your previous physician.
To find a new practitioner, ask
your friends whom they use, contact your local hospital for a list of
doctors wbo are on staff, or request
(from your county medical society) .
the names of family doctors in your
community. Then, by a process of
elimination based op your getacquainted visits, choose the doctor
with whom you feel most comfort-

I

· 'Wedl11day, AIHII21,1115

·

Pound

'

/.

m

And I bear that you are looking for
peace, let's see where we begin
By the lime we finisb reading Ibis
bonk, I think you'll understand
That the peace tbal you are looking ·
for is right within your bands
It will ten you where the road
begins, and where to mate your
turns .
It will give you faith and show you
tile light (The Stranger) knew for
sure
.And I bet you didn't li:now my
friend, whO it was wailing on the
road

.

When you came drifting into the
town (!be Lord did surely know).
Gilbert L. Fitzwater Jr.

uyOne
Get One

Columbus

Is there any-place in this town a
penon could fmd peace
.
Wby sure my friend, I think I can
belp, there's a place right down tbe
street
Follow me 1and let's just see, what
awaits for us inside
Would you look at that, those stairs
are golden, my bow tbey do shine
Help me open up the gates, we'll
walk inside and see
It sure Is quiet in Ibis place, get
yourself a seat
·
Here's a boo~ that we can read,
wby lbat book is trimmed in roses
and gold

•v
•

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-••
..,..
~

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•

•*
·-.....

,.

-. ~

--·..
•

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....

-

-...•
I

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••

.- .

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r

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..r
TOM PEDEII HAS AI IIIVEIITORY OF OVER BOO IIRANii IIEW
CIEVIIIlfTS, II ''..,.. FS, PllfllACS, BUDS, GEIIS Alii CUS10M
· VAliS. AI will be sold at lllbstlllllal discotltlsl
Pia $5011 to $2000 casll bat:ll or 3.6"/o APR tkalcing available (up
II 31 IIDIIflll 011 111ec18d lllllllels Ill appnMd credit. Tenns avail·
able up fD 84 IIJIIIItllill .

Clrtill8d 111111 ear buyers will be on hand to give highest Jrade-ln .
value for your automobile. Pie- bring your title, registration
c:anl, and payment llol* H applicable.
Ill SALES PBIIIITIED mIIEAlSIS. This clearance is lor retail CU5tomen IIIIJ. Pltces applrto available units oniJ. llo onlel1ng Jill" ·
milled at lllele prices.

WEST VIRGiliA'S t1 COIMRSIOII VAIIIIEALBIIIAS AIIIIIVEII10IIY

· Of IMR 300 IIIWIII NEW CIIEVIIl.ET COIIVERSIIIl VAliS.

Selection includes Aslnl AU Wheel Drtwes and G-2D's, boUt avail·
able will! raised 100fs or low lltpS • .Prices 1111ge from $17,388 to
$36,988.
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$17,388

$11,688
5-SERIES PICKUP

• 16Valve Power
• l)iver Side Ailbag

•Custom Cloth lnleriOf

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• Power Sleer"'l

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• Power Brakes

''SM Price ll'dudet GMAC F~ nme
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Ooolillod.

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IIWIJIIW '95CIEVY ASINIU'IEIB -..ama VM

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• AnHocl&lt; Bral&lt;es
• Air Cood1ti011
• Automatic Overdrive
• Vista Bay Windows

• Power Door loci&lt;s
• At.NFM Stereo
• Styie;j Wheels
• Slael Beled Tires
• Well Equippedl

BIIAIID NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE

• Sola/Bed
• Power 'Mndows • Indirect Ughti~

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• Dual Ai Comlor1emp • Aluminum Whe~s
Climate Contr~
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• Anl&gt;loci&lt; Blai&lt;es . • Power Antenna
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If vov have suggestions.
(Omm~nts

TOU FREE 1·800·8224J417 • 312·2844
344·5947. 422·0156

•

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

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or questions ·

please contact ~rttur
store manager or c-;~11

.1-800-853~3033

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to soc
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•

Page

10..:..The Dilly sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomlroy-lllcldleport,.Ohio

-Sqciety scrap
Beat of the Bend ...
·by Bob Hoeflich

~Robin

~~~E~E~:E~:?"1FJ~~~
resident, $12.50 for adults and .$7.50 for stu·

TOMBSTONEPRESERVA· ·
'n oN SEMINAR
St. John Lutheran Church, Pine
Grove Road, the Aid Association
for Lutherans and the Meigs Coon·
ty Histoiic:al Society wiU s.poosot a
workshop
on cemetery
stone
preservation
to be and
heldtombat SL
John Cemetery Saturday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m:
.
Lunch will be available at lbe
· cburc~. The p~rpose of the wort·
sbo~, m addition to clean-up and
reil_au at the ceme1cry, is to teach
prope. r methods for rep.a ir and
1
f to bstones
c eanmg 0 . m
· d b
Townshtp trustees an t ose
entru~ted w1th cemetery care are
espe.Clally encoW!Ig~ to atten~ '!'Is
se smn Due to limited acccsslbiU
s
·
. .
•
ty, those wuhmf to att~nd .are
enc_ouraged to ca I the b1stoncal
SOCiety at 992-3810 prior .to Satur·
day.

Bowers, Canie Kennedy, Mildred
Meadows, Martha Childs, Mary
Dursr, Eileen Snyder, Dorothy Rus·
. aell and Bob and Bettie Pooler, res·
.ldent managr.rs. Guests were Karen
Reiley of Marietta, site manager;
Janice
Faulkner,
of
Martha Childs;
Reef daughter
Herman, spe·
c:la1 music, DiaDne Coates.
SCIENCE FAIR WINNERS
. Kristina Kennedy with her
exhibit "What type o1 fabric is the
mQ!t nammable?'' received a supe. rior rating at Saturday's Ohio ·
Academy of Science's 47th .""ual
-State Science Day at Ohio Wesleyan University.
·
Awarded excellents for their
exhibits were Rebekah Smith and

Ross, miraculous· dents and can be secured from Jenly escaped serious injury or death nifer Sheets or Hal Kneen. Reserin the explosion of the federal vations must be made by May I .
building in Oldaboma City.
IncidentaJly, you don't have to
Robin worked oa the seventh be an Ohio Slate Alumni to belong
noor of the building and on the to the organization-Ibis means
morning of the explosion bad gone that friends of the: university can
on an errand to lbe fourth floor also take part.
when the explosion occurred. She
·
escaped with only a few saatcbes
Tjle Racine Area Community
a11d bruises. She is unable to Organization drew a terrible day
remember bow sbe actually gqt out for its annual flower festival Satur·
of the damaged structure. Mean- dlly-extremely windy and cold.
Bridget Vaughan, while Virginia
Howerton and Timothy King
time, she bas not located any of bet Despite that. hundreds of residents
received ratings of good.
seven co-workers who were in the attended. Had. it been a beautiful
All five ·students attend the
. Meigs Junior High Scboo
. 1 and are
seventh floor office at the time. d.ay the Suit Mill Park in Racine
However, her ahiOmobile was com- where the event was staged would
pletely destroyed. Robin bas been have really been drowning in pen· HARRISONVILLE NEWS
science students of Rusty Bookman
emplnyed with HUD in the federal pie. A tough break but in spite of · Peggy Bole. entertained the Cir- who beads up the local science day
building.
tbal, the festival was very success- cle of Helping Hands of the Zion
program.
She is the daughter of Mr. and ful.
Church of Christ at her home for
CHEMISTRY AWARD
Mrs. Harry Grindslaff. Tbe family
the April meeting.
1as on Witherell, Pomeroy, a
resided on Mulbe ~ry Ave.,
!fyoubavelookedatcarslatcly,
Mr. and Mrs . Bill FQley and "fresbman atMariettaCoUege, was
Pomeroy, a number of years ago you may have suffered sticker children Crystal and Joey spent a recipient of the E. B. Krause
· several days in Michigan where Chemistry Achievement Awatd at
before moving to Oklahoma City. shock 10 one degree or another.
Robin attended Pomeroy ElemenHowever, through the contribu· · they visited Mrs. Foley's sister, the recent annual Marietta College
tary School while in Pomeroy. Her lion of Carl Gorby let me turn the Barbara DiU.
Spring Honors Convocation.
uncle and aunt are Mr. and Mrs. clockbllj:lcforyoujustabit.
Patsy Hively and children visit·
The E. B. Krause Chemistry
David Grindstaff and Linda Van
In 1938, a customer of the R. V. ed a friend in Georgia for two Achievement Award is awarded
annually to a student who bas
Inwagen of the Me igs Health Ebersbacb Ford Agency purchased weeks.
Department is Robin's cousin.
· a 1929 Model A Ford Roadster
Duane and Hazel Stanley spent shown outstanding academic
from the agency for $15. 1be state a day visiting their_son. Steven aru1 achievement in a rust-year cbemThe annual spring banquet of tax was 45 cents and the filing fees · family in Norwich.
istry~coune.
-~
~
the Ohio State, University Club of were $3 for a total of $18.45 . The
Ruth and Nellie Lowe drove ·10
Meigs County bas been set for 6:30 customer who was Willard Moore Indiana to bring Nellie's great·
p.m. on May 4 at' the Carleton of Middleport traded in a M:odel T granddaughter to their home for a
School in Syracuse.
.Ford for which be was credited $3 visit.
Rich Hollingsworth·, dean of making the IOta! cost of the change
students at OSU and as.~istant vice to the newer model, $15.45.
EASTER DINNER
president of student affairs, will be
An ·Easter dinner was held for
on hand for the annual event and
Hate veggies? In that case you'll residents of the Stonewood Apart·
the fltSI scholarship 10 be awarded be pleased to know that one com- ments, Middleport. in the complex'
by the local organization will be pany bas announced it is making recreation room .
presented. The $500 scholarsblp available Ibis spring, pills which
Prayer was by Carrie Kennedy.
, will be for a Meigs County student . will give you the vegelable nutri· Attending were Kathryn Metzger,
who will be a 1995 incoming fresh· ents. Who said life Isn't simple? Teresa ·Byer, Jean Sexson, Ruth
Francis, Loui sa Johnson, Eileen
Do keep smiling.
man.
Ticke ts for the banquet are
fainting at the end of the party for
friends Monday night.
"S he bad a good night and I
fully ex pect her to be re leased
some time this mornipg," Ms .
James said.
In 1993, Mrs. Johnson suffered
what was described as a minor
suoke.
Gay le Granberry, a spokeswom- .

an for Seton Medical Center, sai.d
Mrs. Johnson was in stable condi·
lion.
Mrs.· Johnson bas suffered from
fainting spells occasionally over
the past 10 years following long
periods of intease activity, 3CC9fd·
ing to Liz Carpenter, Mrs . John·
son's former press secretary and
longtime friend.

Real Estate General

••,,.

•
SMITH'S
•. CONSTRUcnON "
• c.... 11-.g &amp; Ael•-10

•NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
,
• NEW GARAGES
•REMOOEUNG
• SIPI!iro
•AooFING
•PAINTlNG
£STIMATES
•• • FREE
(614)
992·5535
.
(614) 992·27i3 •

AGAIN

CALL 1-9Q0.945.6100

Ext. esB7

.

MEMORIAL BEAR - Tile bear being illeld •ere by Saa:ldy i~ l

Hannlnc will be awarded at the ·annual Founder's Day oblernlacle·

yn~.

Procell Co.
(602) 954-7420

.......

:~. ~~~B=ISS=E~LL~

of Beta Slgnw PbJ ~rorlty to be held Tharsday at 6:30 p.m. at tbe"'
Sportanan hm, Alb-. Namod ''Evelyit" iA -mory of loJrtllme
s)loluor or XI GIUDIIIa Mu, Evelya Knlabt, the bear wu created by
tbe Oblo River Bear Co., SUAD ~aker, owner.lt wean a eroc:lleted'
s..wl tled .~lb • miniature yellow r-,lbe sorority's flo-r.
:
Love With
IP!owc'rs From!"

..,........

.

Middleport, Ohio 45760 I

Oanny &amp; Peggy
· Bricldes

614-742-2193

7f.12194

: I ........WAY

... . NOW RENTIN~
.. Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices

~..,

Carpenter Work

New Haven , WV
304-882-2?96

Free Estimates

$3.99 mIn. Must be 18 yrs.

Ask for Mike

(802) 954-7420

Henry E. Cleland jr..992-6191

MR. RIGGS

Tracy L. Brinager ...... 949-2439

Henry E. Cleland IJI 992-6i 91

992·75:2Ro~39~2-5805

...__.,.

31a'1...,.

...•
..

Only $500 Down
Finance 8,51111 at
9.25% lor eo Months

••

.•'

3•6% Financing

.•

For Up lo 36 Months

Ka thl een M. Cleland 992-6191

4.8% Financing

O ffice ..........................992-2259

O FFICE 992-2259

For Up lo 4~ Months

..

: 1 floor frame

home wi th fu ll basement. The 11ome includes·
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, gas F.A. heat, utility
room, recrea tion room, dishwasher &amp; ·island
range in kitchen. central air and I "Car garage

in basement. There is a central vacuum

system and plenty anic space. "A LOT OF
HOUSE f.OR A SMALL PRICE" ASKING
$25,000.00 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!

floor frame hame w/ 2 bedrooms, I bath,
utility room, 2 fireplaces, newer F.A.N.G.

furnace, permapayne windows. Nice front

silling porch and small shod (or storage.
Home also ha. a fenced yard. "PERFECT
STARTER HOME" ORWOULDMAKE NICE
RETI REMENTHOME" ONLY $29,000.00

CREW ROAD . GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD!
1.26+ acres of ground goes with this nice
split foyer home. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths,

some appllcances wrki!cheli ,~ newer Siding . ~
Nice large back patiol "THIS t:iOME IS
WAITING FOR ANICE BIG FAMILYTO FILL
IT UP I" REDUCED TO $51,500.00
ROSS RD • LEBANON TOWNSHIP • 120•
acres ol wooded ground. Owner may split
Into 60 acre parcels. $400.00 per acre split
or $350.00 per acre for all! "GET YoUR
LITTLE PIECE OF tiUNTING GROUND.
TODAY AND NOT WORRY ABOUT
GETTING PERMISSION TO HUNT EVER
AGAIN !"
.
RACINE · TACKERVILLE AD · Thi&amp; 1989
modular has just been completely remodeled
and looks fantast1c1 3 bedrooms. 2 full bathS,
2 1/2 baths, family room has fireplace and
buiiHn bookshelvBs, nice large open kitchen

MIDDLEPORT · RUTIAND STREET · 2
story frame home with newer vinyl siding .
and newer roof. s· bedrooms, lo baths, gas
floor furnace, new unit air, rea r Screened

124 • LONO BOTTOM · 1+ Acres of ·
vacant groUnd wJ river frontage. Near Forked

Run State Park. "GREAT BUILDING OR
·CAMPING SITE" ASKING $15,900.00

•.

&amp;l . :.;,,.

UKE

~'' DIAMONDS

APPLY NOW. ·
MUST BE WILLING TO
WORK ALL HOURS.
SEND RESUME TO P.O. BOX 729·05
POMEROY,OHIO 45769

-:!It . GeUour Message Across
A Dally Sentinel
- With
BULLETIN BOARD
6 column inch weekdays.
--- . '8 column inch S~ndar
- CAll OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
u.
-- 2:00BULLE
PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

FOR CLEAN, LOW MILEAGE·
.CARS, TRUCKS &amp; .VANS!

-·
-·
-·
-·
_,.,
-·
-·
-·
•..
-·-·-·
-·-·
-·
-·
-·
-·:-·
:

Buick Pontiac·
1911 Eastern Ave.
•

"Where Service Makes The

Gallipolis, OH.

Difference·~

t/oAY 7

'7 am-12

noon
Mamers only w/guests:
Prizes
Club will supply
nightcrawlers. ·
Nightcrawlers only for bait.
--------- ---

:

:

I:
•

RHETT
MILHOAN
Auctioneer

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

7/31191 TFN'

414/1mo.

Angle's
Greenhouse

Gar&amp;ge and Towln9.
Service
.
1
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
.Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt. 336. Letart, OH
614-247-3522

Rube, Palennlllle,

Evulutlnge, lluglng

· Bulcate, lite.
(Depot St.) Rutland to
Leading Cree k, then to·
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles fro m Rutl and or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

SUMMER ·
IMAGES

411SI't5

J&amp;L INSULATION

· 539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 99)-2772 ·
Ofllce Hours: llolon...frl.
. 8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Skiing,
Roofing, VInyl .'
· Replacement,
Wlndowa, Blown
·lnaulstlon, Storm
Doot11; Storm ·
. Window.-, Garages. •
Free EaUmatu

•n-

'

614-992-6223

Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. . l
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New ·
Garages • Replacement Windows
• Room Additioas • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
,

(No S unday Calls)
!!;~~==:!!::iii:!!~

8

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick p,,..,., Auction Compony,

tull tlrM luelloneer, compa.te
auction
eervlce.
Ucw.ed
ltiii,Ohlo I WOOl Vll'lllnle, 30477W7UOr-.~

AucUona .every Frkfey..S.turday,
7pm, lit Aho Auction, Rt. 2·33

"Croa&lt;,.&lt;il",
Ron Price, 8111 ,
IIOON~ Grocotio.!'J. pluo loio
moNI ~d "FruJer w.w.

· Js AuI o Ren·I aI .:::&lt;IIJ;.~ :..:-,.rdt.:.
E1.'b!'wrlda~
Kenny
~
Llloge Aucllon

I.

John.on Auctioneer. 114-251-

Kenny'S is the place to come .96JIIO, I14.Z5&amp;-l270.
Wanted to Buy
when you need a car rental.
· We Hare Cars and Vans!

Community Call Co~ Inc.
Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

-

·'992·9949. 99.2·6471
~

j

949-21~ 8

Mobile We lding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
TUne-ups .
'
.

•

!

...

- ....

985-3879

-~

1NMfn
.-...:------

LITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Custom Made
•Solid vinyl
repl eement
WI OWl ·
•f Estimates
•star lng At
,*200

...,.. u.,.. Stotts

$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

Howard L. Writesel
• ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
· Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
5J1&amp;'94 TFN

~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Tonight!

. Shrubs Shaped

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp;Bath Remodeting
Room Additions ' ·
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insured - Experlen~
Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For F~ee Estimates

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Lonely? Call

Owners: Pete &amp;
Diane He m jricks

.

2:00

Open Mon.- Fri. 10 ~ . m . -5 p.m.
Wee kends Call614· 742-2772

·•TREE TIIMMIN.
AND RJMOYAL

'NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

-----

y.''

Ext. 8878

992·22.9

--

57-946457

5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487

- - -

Blll~lack

:-tltlllll f111111111111111111111 tIft tlltllll t II II t 1111 t II II t lllr:

,

'

RACINE GUN CLUB
FISHING DERBY

Ucanaed

1 -900~ 726-00~3

- Misc. Jobs.

-

I

.

\IW ..

Open 9:00-2:00

·and Removed

1101 UVMftU ..........

'

,r;,~m

.Light Hauling,

00

$CASH PAID

YOUNG'S
CARPENJER SERVICE
' :.RoomAddltions ~

•• , .

'

B&amp;W

Best Rates
(614) 992·7040
. Po~eroy .,.,;.,,

~=-~ -~

' 1 00

RACINE ~ 198214' x 70' mobile home. Total
electric
with heatpvmp/ C/A. Ashley
great teature5. Much more all sitting on
approximately 1 112 acres. "ARE YOU . woodburner. built-In hutch. book shelves.
Enclosed front porch &amp; rear porch. 3
LOOKING FOR AHOME ALL SET UP AND
bedrooms,
f+ acres. "NICE PEACEFUL
READY TO GO? THE N THIS IS ITI COME
LOCATION AND LOTS OF ROOM TO RUN"
LOOK AT ALL THE GREAT FEATURES
ASj{IN3 $19,900.00
~~~TNGT~.~O~E HAS TO, OFFER"

•

. ~ ..

f1

•.

w/ iSland and lots of cabinet space All new
carpet, paint, wall paper a11d many other

WE HAVE A UTILE BIT OF EVERYTHING, BUT WE
NEED MORE! THE . MARKET IS GOOD AND NOW IS THE

1
_;· ' : : • • •• /

WflftT TO BE fl.PfiiU OF f1
WiftftiHG TEdM?

'
'·

$37.000.00

SA

WANT ADS GET
RESULTS

r-----=

J adestone fin!sh , power :&gt;t&gt;at.
power WindOW!:, power doer IOC.k5,
AM/FM/cass ette, alumin um wheels,
Royal S e al tire s , reclining seals.
rear defogger. Bumper to Bumpe r ·
Wa rra nty.

pQrch. some ORRII!'SnCe W/kitchen, fireplace,
block storage building &amp; wood storage
building. 3 room apartment with stora110 &amp;
cellar below. Quiet Streett "IF YOUR
LOOKING FOR A HOME WITH VERY
LITTLE FIXING UP · THIS IS ITI YOU CAN
MOVE RIGHT IN AND ENJOYI" ASKING

Birtbda~

llo\\

• Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR , ·
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS I
992·7013 OR
992·5553 OR ·
I'
: TOLL FREE 1·800· 848·0070 !
l : DARWIN, OHIO

...

p.m.

........

"Specializing in Custom

DUI- SR-22
DISCOUNTS

sure to get tesun&amp;))

GRAND AM ................................~•••••••••••••• SA¥1 UP TO $1 ,000
GRAND PRIX SEDAN .............................;•• SAVE
UP TO $1,000
\ .
TRANS SPORT ........:.................................~~$8VE liP TO $1500
BONNEVILLE SSE .......................;....;........~.SAVE UP TO $1750

1994 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

-'otb .

•

1CW/1m

PARTS

Accidents/
Violations

"Happ~

-

-1-..:-'"'"' -

E\c: \\ \'1'1\C;

WHALEY'S AUTO

Auto Insurance
Easy Payment
Plan .

((ClASSIFIID 1\DS

A NEW '95 PONTIAC THRU APRIL 30th!-

.I

: 982·2060
.

.

AI/ Ohio

• New Garages 1
• Electrical &amp; PluT
• Roofing '
• Interior &amp; Exterior ,
Painting
Also c;oncrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
11 He
: 992:6215
==l:p:W:a:n:led===----,
Pomeroy. Qhlo

WBENYOU
SAfAHJ8UY.
SMARTLEASE.

MIDDLEPORT c PRICE REDUCED · Nice I

In Memory Of
MARK ALAN
BEEGLE
who left us three
years ago today,
Aprli 26, 1992.
Love bears all
things
Believes all things,
Hopes alllhlngs,
Endures all things.
Love never falls.
' love and miss
We
you •.
Dad&amp; Mom
Daughter, Nicki
Twin sister, Melanie
Bruce-&amp; Jessica

~ L-~C:!Ia~u~d~la~&amp;~~~

BUNDLE

'\

·

~--

R.s.sidaa

'95 BONNEVILLE
SE

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

Happy Ads,.

5

NEW &amp; USED
Household •
Collectible
9-5 T.Sun.
1 mile from Ponieroy,

ALL Von! 8otH 111111 Be Paid In
'AdYIIICO. DEADUNE: Z:OO p.m.
tho day ..... tho od lo to "'"·
llunday odHion • 2:00 p.m.

(602) 954·7420

One thlle out
BuUdozh'!!, Backhoe,
1 ,
143 1rom Rt. 7
1
Tues. , Wed.• Frt•• sat . i HomeServiceS.
Siteo, Lam!
t-6
Clearing, Septic Syoleml
• Craftsman Tools
&amp; Driveway•.
• Toys .
I
Trucking. • Gun•
,..
,
Limestone,
' Lo11ds of Misc.
1
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
· Buy-5eii-Trade ' ·; i

SHOP ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs • .
. p.rocall Co.

"SWAP SHOP

WHAIYAMACILLII

•&amp;;818

. Only $500 Down
Finance 12,975 at
9.9% lor 66 Month•

-Diehwuhota
-H.W. ·Hutora
oMicrow•- -otepouto
- ·Area
..
•Thankl
SUrrounding
. (614)98H561 or
il92.a335 . l:wt

Yard Sale

7

1-900.388-7000
Ext. 9970

ofletrlge~ehj!e•F-..

••J ·Sell·;;;~~, ~==.,=n=·s=-_i . ·1

'94 SUNBIRD COUPE

Air conditioning, tilt wheel, AM/FM/cassette, rear Air condnioning, automatic. rear defroster', power
dec~ spoiler. air bag , auto . door lockr
s.,
. ;oillv;;;m;;;i;;;na;;;le;;;d;.,;.-~--.steering, anti-lock brakes. door .
entry, power steering, courtesy
f~UJ -tiftf
iocl&lt;s,j SK miles.
transportation.
II'
....
Bal. New Car Warranty.
3 Yr./36,000 month.warranty

.

-All Makeeo42Yura
ofut ~~~~84Nvlce
oWuher8.
or,eie
• "'"'IJH

Procall Co.

I

.

~~~I!!Wel!l'_arta

1•900•161•
3100/lxl. 4741

304-882·3704

GUYS!
We want to hear
• -'from you!ll We're
live and waiting !II

111111:11:

Advise on future
opportunitY,
decls!on·maklng, love,
1ueeasa, money.
LIVE 24 HOURS

CONSTRUOION~

Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614-742·2165 or

Per
Month

;

32124Happy
Hollow Rd .

· ~~~~~~~
· ~-~
· ~~ ·U.'l ........._
MITCHELL'S
PSYCHICS
:
MINI STORA~E
IIi

.(614) 992-6454 •
(800) 433·6203

"93 Musta•a or
Per
. Month
'93CnaDtr ·

212819~

4121195

Bandsaw Mill

Ruutface Old Ceran1ic 1ile, Aftd
F;beq1111 S&gt;ower a..b a. S.p

~ -5 4473 .

•

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy,

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

Pol,'table

FUll WARRANTY UKE NEW
Oaip Repair Ia Tub$ Or-Slab,

FREE, ESTIMATES

•

SHOOTS

u---for

H&amp;HSAWMILL

: •Complete
. •.
; ~ng .
: Stop a .Compaftt

FLOWER SHop··

Annou nc c· m·: nt;

GUN

lleata

.

.·. : CONSTButrloN

•New Homes
~ • Garages : .

Service

Interior &amp; Exterior . • . 'W'e,Minp, Pac=1
allll Speelal
Free estimates
Oeeuleaa
Before 8 p.m :-Leave
(614) 992-4279
Message; After 8 p.m.
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
614-985-4180

$2.98 per min,
Musl be 18

LaurefLimo

LINDA'S
.PAINTING &amp; Co.
'Take the pain out
of paihtlng - Let us
· do it for you"

BE LONELY

•

-- --- -- -·-RACINE
GUN CLUB
~

li

$26·900

I

The Dilly Santinel P1113a 11

Founders D

Lady Bird Johnson hospitalized after fainting
AUSTIN. TeJ~:as (AP) - Lady
Bird Johnson was hoSpitalized after
fainting at a private dinner party
she was giving at th e Lyndon
·
Baines Johnson Library.
Shirley James, Mrs. Johnson's
personal assistant, said today that
the 82-year-old former first lady
was held overni ght at Se10n Medi·
cal Center as a precaution after

•

•

Hrs. of Operation: Mon.-Fri. 8:00A.M. tll6:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Sundays by appt. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
area. Cl!ll for rate schedule.
L--------------M-in_
. s_2_
.oo_·_________.~
._·~·

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 C~urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio

POOR BOYS TIRES

Employment Services
11. Help Wanted
AVON 1 au ........ 't Shl&lt;lor
~ .:104-171-14211.
AVON 10 ""'., ;::z~·tn~

«

IIAHAGER TRAIHEES
.. l.tuniW Componr 1o an. 01
~~~...... F..arowtno
Componloe. Locollono Ari
Oponwl Crwolna ....., Job ap.

n.

--- lFinl
Out y..,
.....
gor
T
£amIna .._
01 " ' -24,000.00.
AII'OI 0...1'-lono Aro F....,
Within
• - - Aro 01..
N-ONiy.

..... go..

-140.,_

Co-MO- . 128 -ss.CaninciOI Saieo · l25 -$5.-

-ftolnctudo Hoopllallrallool,

Prot I Sha~ng And 401 K Plan.
IIIIIEOIAIE OPENINGS
AVAILABlE
N:fNOWtl
8M: .11m Amcld
Thuncloy, Apoll 271h
I A.lll. • 1 P.lll.

·

"Look for the Red and While Awning"

M

WII~&amp;,I.MNY

IIR1
Ooi=-~WY

An ~...J ,.,.,..,.....IJ , ......
rowDY.
.

997-4119 AUromm, OwHt' 1·800-291·5600
•

.... 114-3~

MWIIBER

FREE • Battery C heck • Front End
Check • Ex ha u st Inspection
We offer m ajor b rand tires- DiscountS uprSwamp, Computer Balancing,
Auto Light Truck, Compir's Struts,
Shocks- Computerized FMCZ&amp;4
Wheel Alignments, ATV Tires &amp;
Tubos
At. 33 &amp; Hornton St. Mason, WV

ln~fl lltd

Wanlod:
-n
limber
Cool\
Or
, __
Illo
wtlh
Aa
-

'

�J
'

.

Aprtl26,1185

Pomeroy lllcldlepOI't, Ohio

Ohio

.
·'

-to

,

NE"A Crossword Puzzle
.eo Rich ....,.

ACROSS

41 CeMir

1 Decay
44 Pallllw
48oxlngCOMHI
~
• ,... colot
45 -

PHILLIP

. ... __ _
..._

BEATilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

_ _ ,_,4WD,--

':)~EK REA~ c:a.et.;
Fait REAS"Q\lPl5l£ ~r
SHNL SET ..W F~'

A'S A ~ GF!i.'*'-

. . . . . 1 ••

LA~R. Cl\.Ja" SAID .. .
-.......,_ _, '~ IS 1-t:J

,.'!' t\:

i 00191 . . . . .

Crrr'rt

. _ ua=s:,

lothol

......_AirN!wlt'
Ccft.

Dill=••·

PICK- fURNITII. .
Neu'b d .

•J 8 7
+8

PI

.

ltiiCIIIvJ-C:.W.VIn,

-- liO,..,., ..........
--.E. . .. . .-....I,,.,,.
--1-Honda=
. - . 4UOO ....

oao.

M WV, oal 10W71-MIO,

••• ua iuL

1114 441

,

tii,IIIO,
-

dillon.--·
.54 ..8Celleneous

..,. 1n Mldd' r n. 011 11MII:I- • t • n • ....... w....,;.

.....

--.Olllca, ...- ..,.
•~-

no - ) .

t

--.
STQAAQE TANKS 1.000 Gollon
-~---~---:---

aooc.

-···--52 Sponlng

. - ; ~ Dmw,
lyo
11101 - . , ..
oilndti0.104471-UM.
.

a iiilvW,

.......

lmixed
a l o_
lollll l s l l -_1
_

011•.-.e?&amp;-721%

:al:t';;'oo
''-~:Lt.~
· I.M!'I - CGndf.
Sol,
gorogo, t4UOO, 1-·Tnl

-or

Lond Coni- To O..llllod ""
WUIohor11
sl dlwlduol
Wllh .,_, ,.,.....,., •
do

_,.:z-aN- ...

Antlaua Kllchwt C.blnM. tm.
Sronlwood
R-n,
121,
Antlq• Stand Toblo $150;-

By....._. reoenly Nft'l =IIIII d.

s .....,_, 1 112 both, , _ 2 •r
Yoor Old - . Wllh I Acroa

=.::

-

otootrtc," opfll..,_ .turtmh a wat• Jiold,

ohu-.
-···---.-~

11/L, I tied- 2 letha. Apholldaj IICIIvltiM ...
fMOlL 2,000 8q. 1'1. Or Will lloril,
aTa Unlvorolty Of AID L o - Apia., llh • ~
Orondo, 11Wl'II-DQ.
.
IL. taw H.v.n. J04.ea411t or ·
Pliny ( M - Col. - country home wllooolo orohord,

Ufll!glrl, Rort IYIIII l n t e .toou.n, Ohio, -.al'OIIa ·

~
wadding

=
-Herd.
f:.

Rocking Cl llonch, - - ·
0111o, 114-1112..:1031.
•

-~

"':!'r

-*Of·

UzorFarmSupply,l14~

·

a.

Pete for Sale

56

UoclliL :104.a37-2i:la.

...,. 10
,...,
Nro
~ /Whllo Dlipplod
Aunop, tt,ooo 80, 114-1'12'1410.
RogiTI_... bloclc Anguo • calf polro, aloO WIIOnfng
ogo builT, pliona I14-611N1181.
811 Roglllorod Chi holloro, ono
• ... kl(ou but~ ono ...,.,.
rom, .ono Roglol_... rom, 114-

14H007an.r..._,

...-

u.....lrod
rn c-. Col- And 10
eo.Cowl Will eo Sold.

.._

Evwtlngo.
Llko
-.

A-•~~·-...,-.
Old ar"""

Spoclll c:an.ta""*" Bolo:
Bilwrdor. Apotl :1!1, AI 1 P.ll. 21

Company ·f iEnd (SIM) , FH8 Tltun- A n d "! Flto- OT
2 -

All ConelannMnta Are Wtklaa-.
Hauling olvollablo, 11W91-3531,
114-511H321, Athono Uvoolaok
SliM, Alt.ny, Ohio.

·-

121110 1m ao..~ Wllh Add~
tlon, Uvlng Roam, Addod lad:
.181 A&lt;re Wllh 2 Trlllor

Mt: Varbhlro torr(or, • I 112
12110, ~-- Cit
I"',~·~-2117.
aae
:r.nlth
compu~or
· - - . 2 0 1 1 o a" am.tcan Cocllar Sponlal PupNard Drivo. 2 llog Rom. 8ol ploo, AXe Roalotorod, a -

lnl-. -

Will Do
Palnllng RouonobiD Rotao, Ex·
;;;:&amp;.need, Rolonncoo, For Froo

biiin.llo, COIIt14-24W758.

. . _ llolll /AIIamotlvo land

... Plo-.

SHidng -llot, Gullarlsl, And
Muol 8o Dodlcolad,
orr d hes,11t tttZIM.

----:--:----"""1'

-!::~Wdr."""'.....

21

............
·t.'Y --~~7:,:
i;CIOprrt.

8 usI11888
Opponuntty

-.tlpa,$17,700, ~
INII

14110

FunWehed 1 beclrootn apartment
on Ut Vernon Ave. 1 ~ ao-

woro lncludoo:

cuponcy,

7:oofiM

no potahno HUD. tl!M

.,.. e&amp;ectrk.

1t.ranc• •

llolllle bo-'1. :IOWl'll-aeat.

llllytlna

Homo, 2 Bodr-, SIO¥o,
~tor, ~ WindoW, Fumlthad 2 hdroom AJ&gt;I!r1·
mllnl, A&lt;ro. From Polk, CA, No
: ; ~~~-~...~~ Pall, Aofor~.•Do-'1 11.114'Mf·
•-~a.
quhd, S3501Uo. .w-448-0177.
1t8l Mx71 Commodore 2 a. Fumlthad Enlcloncy Jlllalllo.

' -

Both, fl07
O.E. olppl.._ In Utllhloa ... ~, Kllchwt And Control
Unll Second. O.mpoUa. 11t Ul 4111
After 7 P.M.
:I04o47l4341.

»

INOI1CEI

•

_ _. . , .... you cia -

k-, ond
NOT 10 ..net- 1"'-h tho
noD -

mal uniH you,lhoollerlng.
Na l&gt;qMioiiCO Nr

ryl -

*--

Lumbor - · up? SIHI
llulldl- ........ P-00 ~~
Buy toClcry . . _ .,_
Manur.ctu,., M 1uthortled
ctoolor. wtu troln. 8amo llarkslo

~ouguo~t

vau -

con _., •• lind au1 n
anllol ond onfoy oil of

1 -. bonii!O ond ...... f7S.I837 .. ~-·~-31111.
POSTolLJOU

11or1 tt:Z.CMI/hr. pluo bonilltr.

For 010111 ond IPC&gt;ilcoUon Info.
oatl 21 ..71111_. . 111. WV114,
-11pm7doyo.

fir+ _
IN _
Homo
lloo"h
_
.,oOpanlnt

FOr Thl I' ": -'":8 Poettlonli:
RH'e, LPN-e,' C. n.d. Nw.
olldoo, Po801f011 AN. IIUOI Ia

- ........ ,..

U: eud In WV And~~
fiO!Io- .. lloncfoiGfY. .__,.

..........
To

................. AllllmM

P.O.

lceaM7. 0IIIIII;' ,Ohla411h

. ,.:::.=-·..:
wv. .,_., a,
- :nt- ,.... .,

All fQ( 8S:IIile advenlslng In

this newspapor Is subject to

tho Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advenlse ~any prelarenoe,
limitation or discrimination
based on Face, co!ot. religion,
sew familial status or.. national
origin, or any Intention lo
make any such pteference,
Umltatlon or dlscrtmlnallon. •

This newwaper.will no\
' knOwilngly IICCepl .
advertisements lor real eatate
wt11ch I• In vlolallon ol che law.
OUr readers are hereby
inlolmed lhtl all dweUingo· ,
advertised In this newspaper
are 4Vallable on an equal
opportunity basis. •

5.32 ocrao, 211 ft wide rldgo top
building .... $13,1110. Royllum
Ad, IMtrlellono. No
slngiD wlclo lnaulrao, ploooa. fno
...,_ion malloct on

=
..._ ....

10 .... ""'

• I I' rio -

.

.............
loiolil" -

....

lor .........
~

ltFrnn Clll

-

1o

Steoe cete, •14 -4 41 1m.

mlnlot~n

Sconlc \'alloy, Applo Orovo,
bNUIIful 2ac loti, pubUc wetw,

lrrlgOIIon pipe,
~I'
llori, wado c:unnoct..., 2300' of
1", 110" of 4" ml*'. Plrta. el-

ncJiOn1

Furnished
Rooms

45

bowo Diu~, 'ro, rod..,.., 48
rotnblrd llllilnkl010 wllh 2'-.,

114-24~

e!ydo- "'·· 304-1-.
SOcludod llllnl '"'"'" up 10 20
- - o..llablo, loom, I br.
homo,
woodo,
.-dowo,

.,..,1141-_

Tyoooft

Lalw- one acra kl4,

12raa ~biiD homo, .•"'!nly
watw, eew«, lledftc, l1i.liOO.

114-1112-2157.

ReaiEIItate
Wanted

36

W.nllll: A
-

.

Small- .....

er-n Clly I Golllpo!ID.

,.....,.1121.

Lond Contract, Hrvo 81Hoblo

e;own Peym.nl,
w,nloct: Acr•go In Counlry To
B,ur, IM 388 Oft2.
.

"""""

tor -

In
oountf'Yo gor\MigO, - · ond
•••• lncliidod, .....- .
$1151-,
Juot
10
Alhono, IIMII2:211l

P.M.

Merchandise

Rentals

HousehOld
. Goods

41 Houses for Rent

a

Bod,_ 1 Both, Anochoil
.._.. Lal, Land Con-

Gore(~'!

lriiCI, Ouliifllll Suyar, Rbclnoy
VUIItge .. l1t ... 2801.

· · - ........ f4GO

·~

w/1-M':i·- ._
1181

Ford

R~ng!r, ·

lepd,

llntad,w..-k.
-

tlroo

•1•2pm.

304-a

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61 Fann Equipment
11 C.F. sea,.. Uprlahl Fre1zer
(Whho) 2 112 YNra: 0no Sot Col·
tie 11ocko Slldo Into Bock 01

Truck.

1.........,1004, 114-446-

4038.

FOld :lublloo Troctor, Gaod

11187 Olda Cutlaoo Cloto SL,
'""" good, h,200 080. :104o77:a11118.

=-

tona

I II I I

I~"'TG_N~I:,,,'-r:'--i'
3

I

·1..

IL
, Rl 6 A I

;,'

G

3

.I·. I I I I'
.

.

.

.

.

My husband was going over ·
our monthly budget. He leaned
back and sighed , "Sometimes
you have to be one step ahead
just to- --- --- -."

I

1. 8 . ()

TI-lE HI510R'&lt;' OF 1 HE
WAR 11EI10RI'IeiLIA ..
COLPNII'IL ARTifi'C.TS ..

"')5

.·

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

.

rN floE VoM ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CWSfEDS, .

Ravage · Craze· Knack- Negate • AVERAGE .
- "I've had so many rejections," my friend sighed. "Don't
fret," I told her." If atfirstyou don't succeed you're running
about AVERAGE! "
·

IWEDNESDAY

APRIL 261

Home
Improvements

3ll17.
Aoono Addltlono
And
11112 Dodge Duotor Excotlanl ~Ex.,.........., Fno EoCondlllo~, 12,000 uiloo, 11,100, 11mo1oo, •14 4tl 1168.
• •
Aftor 5 P.M. 114-441-otiO.
.
e&amp;C
o.,. 111 Homo

0488 A_,. Wolorptoollng. Eolobllohod 11175.

Trl,_leolon 11000 IM-446- ::B=ornon=::-:.,::-;;H::omo:::--::lm-C,---~m...-nc-:-o-,

1tll2 GEO Storm, 28,000 mllao,
om/1m coiuootlo, auti&gt;mallc, Ale,
ollorp, f61)00, 1--6551 aflor
1pm.
.
.
10113 flonllac Lomona 11,000
Mllao, Aut..,.d~ Co-o,
=-~112.080, I
1111, •14-

JO 3 lloilom - · JD 7· Fl.
Sickle-... JD 14-7 Grain Drill
Ex-nl Condition, 114-254111011.
Joe AUlD Form E&lt;tulpmont And
Forllll••· I.Dcolod 8 Milas 9o~h
Of .lockoan, On Stoto Aouto13_a,
114-2841-2731, 4188 IH 4 WD, 44&gt;0
JO Coli I Air, 23110 JD Wllh
~ J'OII Ford Wllh Cob, 181
ol.C., '" 184, JD IIOC Dozer

1151 Ford F-:1 Dlckuo. llol

qul..,.nt.

v.a tngtna, 1101 Golor ond
..,,_ ........ - . VWJ
114 1112 11e1

72 Trucks for Sal&amp;
hoocl

Ma"'

w

::::'s:;n.ldi, -.
tlon, ~
I PJI,

Froomon'o Hooting And ~/!11.
lnototlodon And Borwtoo. £1'11
Cortlllod. floaldantlol, comm.
o&amp;ll. 114r251r-111t.

81+17f.2!2o

AFTER

=•· ~· - - .....,

fi&amp;.79JO. ~ •lldng 11,200. J04'

84
··

Elect.rlcat &amp;
Refrigeration '

i.Lo==-ie~=-~-:::::­
, _wronca
ntorptlooo T.W.
..wronco, 1211o GOr Furnacai,
"1 - Clllv. flU, IAOWido Poofl. L.P a Nol. Hoot Punipo a
u:vestock
63
ogo, c.- Mil- All O!rllono, EIIICirtc Fume- Froo Eo3 ~ 2 molao, 1 - . t25oo. 350, V~ AT, AC, . Loodocll 114- llmoloa. I You Don, Coli Us Wo
Both Loaot 1--1301, l.aoll'
Rico o1,:!4,1 11110 cralll Ad oH liZ 441 08oo.
21,_., WY 11021141.
Loon, .... 304 4181581.
1111 Ftoo Fonl. S2,oao. 30W75-

1211.

73 . vans &amp; 4 WD's
·es FOld ~. rod. 4114, v.a 1
::""~ --bod, ea.oo,

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

wv

82 . Plumbing &amp;
H
eating

I;;;-;;i:::::;;;:;;:;;:--;:;:-=:~
tm c;llrly Pick-liD. Folr Clondf.

ASTRO·GRAPR

Roponll~ froo :::::::,~11
~· ••• -~··
-~::;:
'.,;-'v;:;-:::::"":-;;·-;:-;::3::.=:::-'7:-:

Joa'l Homo llolntono!'!", "•lll
siding, raallng, ........ pointlng, - . . - woflhlnllo 1roo llmotM, t14-VII2-423:1.
Aon'o TV 8orvl.;.. -lallzlna
In Z.nhh otoo oorvlclng -.ii
olhor btondo. Houoa catte. 110a·"IV7:001S,
IICIW7&amp;-2301.1

quared

&lt;;TARS AND STRIPe.. CI\IIL

:

fi,ISO; 434 lnlornollonol Wllh
Bulh Haa I Orador Blotto,
14,850: Lofa 37 HP tnt•
notlonol Turf Tr.telor, U ,350;

ch~ckle

by· l1l11ng '" the m1uing words
you develop from step No .. 3 below.

~--tea, E
,
BASEMENT .
1188 ~
ICIIIont Shopo, .
WATEAPAOOFINO
56,000 Mllte, Cl•n, 1 Ownar, Unconditional Nt.tlm. tUIII'In-$5.100, I'Mr446--4110.
IN. l..oclll reftNnc.. fumlthed.
11111 fllymoorth Looor, Excollanl COli 1-iOD-287-o575 Or 814-23J'.

cu-o,

Co..,oieoe lhe.

' ARE EXHIBITS ON
THERE

on

Condition, 11,000 lllloo, AC1
Am-Fm
llondora

oolootlon
at
form
mu~~~n~ry ond porta. Slophonr
Form MachinorY, Conrad Hill
R01d, CCihiQWII\e, WV. 304-3121811
Now • Holllnd T hoy blno, ·~•
Jrow na '"' ............... GIN
grlndor/mlxor. AI good condJ.
flon, -.zn-4211. ·
.

VI /

Services

304-i7~4G4.

·~Ill

1 1 ENNAYO

"leo 11187 Coochmon campor,
2211, pul bohlnd, 1800. J04·771- .

.

WOlD

low to form four words

F0 F EST

-

RCEGUL·

Rearrange letter's of
0 four
scrambled words

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

CondHion, Aopolnlad, Robullt
Englno, 1-1843,
kdomoilonol 7111
T-.

114-2118 em

(BLTJUL)

- - - - - - - Edited ~y CLAY I. 'DLLolN - - , . - - - - - -

Tlave. Nice. C.ll304-e""086.

81

MI

T::~;~~, S©\\otl~-~~lfS•

Phone 304of15..1301.

c.-

EM J .

YM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ' Every man is a· borrower and a mimic : life is

Campers&amp;
MotorHomeil

•..

c

G MY' J

XC F

I C W U

C Y G

J U UJ X

T

theatrical and literature a quotation.R- Ralph Waldo Emerson .

RebUilt, All TYDee, •
r'bl1 To
Ovor 10,oaa Yransmtut '"' Af9o
Porta, IIW'II-21131. ·
.
.....,_ Tr---~•---.:r.
··S.rvlcel•l~.: And A I
Tronam
Aloa, Cub olad
~7' -loolonl, ~ .

llctar

I C W U.

ETPU

«1UMf fi

BTEETYVXCW .

s-

lwlngor

are created from quo\11110fll by famous people, pest and present

F A R A U F F .:

FCETOC. '

a ,......,. ....... 304ol"f'l.
-.
•
tm l'onl
1m Faid
114ton drlvo. tm OIGe
1110 01do Cull- 18111
, ..n t n g o T
8,....._
--..- ranomloalono, ~•

11117 Pontloc TA
MltoogoJ
Loaded, Air, 814-24U481Aftor a
P.ll.
1IIHI Covallor Z-24 Sopd, auno
root, loodod, 11,o0&amp;r;;t., 14,500.

MY ·' J

1173 Fonl 4211 .cu In, -pltto

11194 lnnobrucll csmpor, fully
lcaclod, loto at ollrl~1 _taka ovor
Port lnJocllon Alii ~~·14:• ftnonclng. 304.a75.a-.
l.o!ldllll $3,500, Ann, I
0114.
30' trovot troltor wlrolrlaarahlr,
---~

G

ETPU

c....... t-z Tuned

.

11~·

'·

6U 118 35&gt;45

ae.

t:cypl~ms

I L MY J

18'114

1188 louzl, lapel,
4628 boloro 4pm.

..

7e · Auto Parts &amp;
Accaaaortea

1888 Yoll-ono, 28ft

·'114- 211 1280.
Old ,....,.... " " pluo

ca~t

' T

rolrlgorotor, ..ilcrowo.., 1001 otr,
tl9 a_.nerator,. 20' •wnlng,

1188 a-

9 Loalo
10 Arr- polson

Each letter in 1t1e Cipher Slandllor anolhet. Toda)l's cft.HI · X

.

1185 Ford er-n Vlelorta, Fully 350 Ford mot..- tromo, 2,7110mf•.

Lorg_e_

Now C.rpll .... _ A l l Coioq(
f4 ol Yud, 114-371-:mo AFTER I

~-··- ....
;t::::'=::-;;:::;-:==:;-;:::;;::~;;;;:;
~ ,•i·ioio"""• .loot And Trrl"" t1,20G
,.._ 1 fill.

.,,OOO.IICIW7&amp;-24,44.

NeW

'

by LulaCsmpos

BASKETBALL .

18'114 21' THan -lllhomo, lulll'
ool,_,..,nad
cloulolo d"9'

Mil•,

EyH

amoniualy
8 Cllrua fruit
7 Former

Celebmy Ctpher

-tar.

12,000

......

Russian rulir
8 UK bfoed·

Spelling -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

11173 Dodgo Chollongor Body,
11,aaa 0110, 114-258'1811, 114- 1m Dodgo Contlnonco~ 21n,
za.tZu.
IIC,
nfrlplllor, si0¥1, big

Tlr•,l2,800, 114 446 0031.

to bone
WMPiut

Turn•

On the
receiving end

MIDNIG~T

11J,

1111 LoroOn 11GSEI, U
opon - .
1pm

c.oP u l l ' - lllch. mlloa. on 440 onglioo 111100.00

::'!.!
::~ ..-:"H.~E':;'..:
rnoi11. Orhor NoW And Uooil E·
llobllo.-

FOR ME .. I'M
601N6 OVTTO
PLA'1 A LITTLE

I~

Twa molD Jock A - puppt... I2JCII.... 114·"2-2050.

For Sale
or Trade

2
3
4
5

WELL, MA'fBE A LITTLE
NOON 6A5K.ETBALL ..

DON'T WAIT UP

ond - . 11111, 114-Ha.
• • Yomaho ntw ":!.':~..two p IIIII.-:, wry
l:t7P4• . ion, taaaa, Ooll

IO,OOOnil. Sl,aaa.104-I~G41.

59

29 Pouaa
PartugueM

31

By Phillip Alder

Nama: Dconlo, COinponlon to
Eldorty Couplo, 114 ue 34111.

~

slroom, Dllllor ,._ ,,..._
4407 ..

Tlr-. Von! Goo • Condl-

-.=-:""lci44.'
llUnrW-

79

lao, Cciolvllle, 114-a~M404

~WN
· 1 Irritate

Allonta • .....,

Pass

1281.

71. Autos for Sale

=

·

lead: ??

Truck borlo. Cho•·!!;~
ondll-111.-1

~~d champtaft lolaodllno, olto&lt;

114 Inch

unr..nlthad
2nd floor,· ·~ - - · · 1141nch Naill, 114:31"H13l
N1h, no·
,.feranc• end
do-'!, 1-2·2211 .... Enlon.tnmonl Conter t3!0• Ex·
I:Ciclpm.
Ira Nicol 114-37W720 AFT~A I
~
~- P.M.
Vory ctoon' 1 -room IPI•~ c:;;:;::::;:::-;::::::::-::;::;:-:::=
mon1 In lllddltopar1, ooM 114-- Far ycu loa or clock, , _
130401111 418 308'1.
at Ptlnt Fflue, llkU.. Wood
Rnloh. :104471-11184.

.-q-.

304-t'IIHI2N.

~-- lnou:wbwlllt.

..... Ww,...

. _ By Aod Wlna Cllt_.
-4G To .eo ~- li.H. Brawn
Guarontaad, Li&gt;wosl flrlcoo, Tho

Rodlol Ann ~..i.!"'"'''
NaiiQun-2
Ta3

-Of. Pet•.

~--

lloJ 111111. .....
..... C&lt;l..t Inn, , . 10
..... ~ .... lsl 2a8J.

chair,

w- -.

Cnftoman 2 HP I

PooHimo Jobo ovollabla lor

.... JCM!Trllntng
- ··- In Clonnonr
.... wllh.
......In

Selina...., pupploa.

Ron £vrna E n t t - .._

••ldr
m{rom, Umo homo: 1-80-

ond • monthly poyclllck.
You rnoy bo oblo to liMp tho

""lllmo For oll'fiOint- 114-

-211 1110

eon,OH1~ - ·

~MUrano.

Jobo
wllh
11111 --nco,

Con,

llo- H I
Got To
flllono; or QoN AllOr I P.ll. CON

c:o-..o a flloalla Soptlc
Tonka. 300 Thru 2,000 Gollone

oonl oyslom,
etttltmlnl..
rkllr

_........................

I hp. gordon tlllor, $211; Wrlnl'o
11" nn •• tper, tao; •Molla3301.

Bath ~... llool Col . . . _ •
A.ll. ., 1\M. 114--11.

fuel

"""""''
_ . , . Our
11M

12, . . 311"".

31 nickel And

......

Vot. .no • Tlio Wool ._.rglnla
Army Nallonol Ouonl l"io! ...leo lndlwld- ..... "' ...... iholr ..... ond

For ...._ AI

4 flnom -

'Worn once Or 1'tolc4l INZID1 To

Guorontaad Sollolacl~ PolO Socond Boll Frlotid. c..vo

'

Pass

Abloli&gt;---

Transportation

~7

lloiiiiA

colno
35 Princaly Italian
family
38 Polaon
38 Ceremony

com. DKeat,
South
bi 211,
Gold=~4:t:::­•
DKH3, DKe:ll, DK114, . Dke04, 111101
llon At.
7 I AI.
DK588. 304-4711-111011.
.
Tranam._lone. "-1, rebulll, d
1111111 Alfollo And Orchonl Ina-ad, guorontood. 304-aJI.
o... $1.75 Sq. lolao, Dlllana
JlcUon'• Farm, 304-6JS.1'N3.
10:14.
clalnoodo.
••

t.o.d.d,

.. pulllr&gt;t -fi!II'J'
frollero or pulling awn tralloi.
hullh lnouronca _,_, a vi-

... u..,

TV, plclun· to
plcluro, ounound ociuiod, roroly
ilaad, tt,OOO 080 114-11124471.

- , . 1400:
310 · .....
- . 11
Colt
Dloonaoidt.ck

_

28

Ookalb

Bsltory . Oporolod Bolmon Cor,

Twln R,_. Toww now - Ina oppllcotiCM j.;; 1br. HOD
ouO.Idlzod opl. lor oklo~ond
hlindlcepJ*f
EOH
'J'I.
1&amp;71.

•Q 10g2

:"::,":.:·:::---.--....,==

oroomana. All ·
II*.

..... t100.1'14o4'11117.

-IOI&gt;oni-

..... ovollobiD, enllable. bob-tall

32" Zenith -

P1a11 • ..,. PM
Broode,
Aouonoblo

::.. =-~ .WIIMr, ploy

COnlnol Freight Co'!'- to
hl~ng uporlorii:od orR o to run
llolbid, ponoorlllgo ol

•

pion lloodll ..,l1447S-2121.

Gorman Bhophord pupo, blodc
liM, oliUl, f14.tiU871.

--oacn

llaby bod, 01nolllr, htah

ln-lgalad

lolcon. Col :103o"153200 111
2200.

-

- d e-.

Wanl-aolng, ClornMI . , _
t325.00
oftor

304·1n-1111.

fiOOIIII you

60 Gol1 mound

CtMro.- Solo: Mlxod Hay 11.25 112-3833 ct 1
I.
Per Baa., ..,.,.......2531, 11448'J.
--~~
Porta
C.bo,
0ooroPlcii.Up
Fandoro
a 11ore.
t

ape gt~-.
- · t d - " oult Loot: Ro-1 Small Ran ToniD
1400.
Floor ....... · - $121. . 11ct, Slack H...r, Whlla llodJ
Bl-hha drMO ttOO.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

22 Shoola
24 Fertile spot In

Now DID tanko, ono ton truck
. - . roclo~- moto,
ole. D &amp; AAuto A
WY. 304-

Hay &amp; Grain

64

32 Mobile Homes
for Sate

·

=.,ua

Glldor, 1'11."11W17-!1401.
GrovelI
a.., or HI. Anllquoo, drii!IPfpo In
-.,
1121 E. Moln 811'001, on AI. 124 ,Equ.,...,..,I04.al$-1'12t.
•
Nouto: II.T.W. ta:Oil llolll -llnfr I llldlng, Choclc
LOL to 1:00 p.rn., Sunctor 1:00 OUr .._
-~- vou~. ..
to 1:00 p.m. l-o2ll28.
-·~· ••
-

~­ 54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
m-TTD 1400 va.am .. am.
EOH.

EAST
• Q9 2

Europe

~ ~-

=104=-a:::lW:::IIO:;-;.==~=·--=c=: 1
:;;
:;;..--B-ul-lcl-ln-g---1 ~~~
55

Block, brlclr, .....
. llnlolo, - CloUdo.
wtntaro, Rio Orondo, 0H CoU 114-

Pass

I:IOPJf.

· - · .... ".... For- Polled " · · - bulla,
gOwn, tong -vo, llaaad"'-o lloglolort.
""'h Melt, IDw baCII, ....ct. Wflle 01' calf: LYnCh Md HolM
~~ 114 14124,11 or
~-~~~
Zlll or I~ Ohio'•
Tcbo- 111m JO'dG', ldoal lor
lnlortor
~R\ -O!fng,
1, ,Golllpclllatnauln,
Fony, Bol
WV Rrgl 1 ad 1Jr o111 Yo1!!fng
...as. Enc- tolophoo10 num- Cll-.to lui. Colt II• 7poii

~upplles

HOW!!

IT TAKES ONE
TO KETCH
ONE

~ onor 7pm . . . 75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sa'•
19

llld'o
.,...._

'*'·

Antlqun

-

~=-~·,'!'::!..~"*l!:
J:ot..8un. (

I CAUGHT
HIM, THAT'S

1~ 12.2Q, ltok411-1012 Allar

- k Purbnod lllsfii..\nlou ...

~·"!""·~

unlum!.hod,

.

I 10 Croosbfad - · - - 11110 11' 11ark linin Tfi.Mut
tl03or304-,.HI!hft•lpm. - · 1 m IOhp . . . . . _ , bolrd, 111M than IOhre on tnelllor .
llooll Punbfad llofno.Anlou robulld, walfl.lhru bow, ur.
Sufi oM 10 Croo- Hallin fi'TTTI'IIn, am-1m ....... 1 - r
:104--1'13 1101 or - - - ,u. w~spore 1ko. 114 411 3114 aftor
torlpm.
lpm.
Sutc!-rlng ..... 2AO 21111, 114- ::1187=-::Citallon=:::-,;ok-,17
11~:;:-.!f:h:::'
II4N01T.
lnbollnt, ~ bow.

lpm

YOU SAY
SUCH A
THING?

c~

Will Dollvor. f14.tlll-4441.··

· Bondrvllli -

PAW !I HOW

4 Wllnlar: 1111 Hondl · • 1

~stock
•..,. _
....._ _
63

Merchandllf8
· And
~~o~~~gora~-.
- waoJ..
pr,.,.. All•Recancltlontd
And Gouranloodl ttoo And Up,

53

59 Profound

CIM'NnCy

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
South
West North. East
t•
Dbl.
2+

1110 Hondo

-·
1111 Hondo XR100A, mint

llcto

21 Sea aagle

•K, J954

74 . Motorcyclel

porta.S300.

56 Oppaatee of

19 Country of

•K 10 8 5

No pplnn:n Hot lit au fur.
~ 112 ...: Joorla....... Pl.

17 Autocrll

eo.-·

55 Equ1l

57 Oolo, o.g.
56 Born frM

+JI0932
•3

SOUTH

..-.
a.yo:- Allor
For -,_.,.,.
· E. .......
I P.M. lit 411 0122.

In

-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . '! ........

2 I J lt*oom lloMII HoiMI,

no .

A4

K54
AQI076

_.,.._,

tor Rent

..., • od,

A'S

MouN: . . . . . . . . .

42 Mobile HOifiM
1ZIIU T~--~
· -R8marhlld, 0.
clltloMd. ...... +
llWIUIJO.

~ 1!-liOO

LAnii'SPURIITURI

7 6 3·

PPnoeMv'-• Puala

s.-

48 Hoving I
glolay flnllh
51 ChGaa•
53

!

- ..

Actor....,.,

lngNdlenla
14 TtMidl15-----

, 18 Unit ol tlateen

•K653
.... Q 7 6
..8 2

1111.

48

RoiMIHnl

.... J 4

........

toK-IIIoll,.-- ·•
~1122.111 111 2031.

12
13 ~

•

-.

Ougr -~•....._
A I wioa I
Roaulrrol.

........,. p

Onl........

ALDER

'•

'Your
'Birthday
Thursday, April27, 1995

Greater emphasis than usual could b8
placed on your social relationships in the
y'ear ahead . You can play a prominent
rDie in the. affairs of friends, and they will
be active in yours.
TAURUS "(Aprll 20·Ma~ 20) Developments orchestrated by others could be
more tortu.nate for you today than things
you lnltia}G.your~lf . Hitch a ride on their
'bandwagon . Trying to patch up a broken
·'

romance? The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker SCORPIO (Oct. 2 4-Nov. 22) There aoe
can help you to understand What to. do to
opportunities aro·und your work or career
make the .relationship work. Mail $2.27 ~o today that could result in increased earn·
Malchmal&lt;er •. clo Ibis newsp~per . P.D
lngs If handled adroitly .
Box 4465 , New York , NY 10163.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Do nol
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Selecl com· be alraod 10 gel onvolved in sizable
paiuons who have high hopes arid aspi· endeavors today because. 1n your case.
ra tions today . Be ing in their company big is good. temporartly shelve less S•g·
could inspire you to elevate your sights
as well.
ni1•cant proJects
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 -Jan . 19) The
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ll .mighl be good deeos you 've done lor olhers wtll
necessary for you to take a calculated come back 10 you •n th•s cycle. Someone
nsk today to. h.elp yo~r ~~~eel'. It Y?Ur ' you treated gen~rously is p1anning some·
assets outwe1gh your hab1hhes, g1ve 11 a th•ng very special ro'r you .
shol.
I
•
.
.
2
LEO (~u ~ 3 Aug. 22) Thos Will be a
good day to allcx::ate t1me tor reorgamzlng
~our affans.' Once you put aU the pieces
.fogether.' ~ou should be able to operate

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) II you 're
asked lo parttctpate on or chair a oommil·
tee for 8 social organizai!On toda b all
means , accept 1t. Per~pheral :~n~flts
might result.
.

mor&amp;eltocoenlly .
. ' PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You mighl
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You could be be luckoer tn ftnanctal maHers loday lhan
lucky today fro~ two different arrange· you Will be tomorrow. If you have some·
ments that you ve been lay,~g some thing good going for you In these areas ,
groul)dwork for recently. They m•ght both tie lt·down now.
break stmullaneously.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) You ·
LI_BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Lady luck .shouldn'l w'ste tome Ieday imple~~nling
~tght prov!de you With some e~&lt;tra bene- . plans th.at might not work . Lady Luck is
f1ts today '" a p.artnersh•p arrangement hoping you·u shoot for something much
w1th 1r~ends . You have all been fortunate larger.

for one another prev1ously

Babycal&lt;es {1989) • • AA ove.-..gno

ner dream man

L•e ICC)

J

4

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