<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9530" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9530?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-17T07:01:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19964">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0f40ccaf1de22a074eba534be7be3af4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>438535abebe156fb56ac9e8207a4051e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30562">
                  <text>�i

Commentar
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be hiss than 300

words long. All letters are subject co editing and muse be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issyes. not personalities.
·

Letters to the editor
Wants immediate action .

I

stated as one of ten major fmdings
that Blue Streak Cab is charging
multiple 10kens in violation or their
long slanding contract.
Additional major findings
include fare inconsistencies, only
taking blue tokens (handicap and
elderly), improper documentation
or driver logs, going outside the
service area, and improper ,financial auditS. This is hardly state
ordered change driving Blue Streak
Cab out of business.
I find incredible that Gary
Snouffer is quoted Jhat "80% of the
routes would be charg.ed a token
and extra costS". This admission or
violations of his agreement or state
funding alone is or questionable
legality. In that regard, I quote
directly from an investigalive
report provided to the Village or
Middleport on February 7, 1995
which states as follows:
"Middleport had almost
exhausted their federal and state
contract monies by the· end or the
third quarter, September 30, 1994.
Because of this I requested Ute Village send in driver logs to see if
they were again accepting multiple
tokens for one ride trips. The driver
logs did not indicate multiple token
usage as had been discovered in
previous investigations.
Because the desk review only
pointed out more suspicious behavior by the .operator, according to
reportS from the Village. we (the
State) decided to investigate &lt;,mrselvcs."
I have provided copies of these
investigations to Mr. Abate as I
respeft his ability to dig out the
accurate facts. If such are funher
revealed, I shall leave this issue
alone.
Lastly, I must question the statement by token coordiflator and village employee Opal KaufLwhen
she said "If there was something
wrong with it whr, didn't Utcy say,
something earlier'. The investigative reports speak for themselves.
These reports were in the Village
hands for years yet the Village continued to pay Snouffers over and
above Ute grant from public funds
without apparent authority. Kauff
then states "What it boils down to
me is if Snouffer wan IS to go out or
business it's nohody's business but
his." Maybe. But if Middleport
wants .to pay Snouffer to operate
his company with taxpayer dollars
and then' not recover them or prepare legal action to recover these
dollars Utcn its Ute citizens of Middleport's business, not jjnobody's".
I suggest immediate actions by
Ute Village of Middlepon to recover these improperly disbursed dollars. To fail to do so smacks or
self-dealing and questionable
accounting practices. To let those·
monies disappear indicates misfeasance in office.
Charles H. Knight
Pomeroy

Dear Editor:
I congratulate your news hawk,
George Abate, for an excellent article exposing the ·scandal in the
operation of Blue Streak Cab and
the fiscal overages paid from taxpayer dollars of the Village of Middleport.
Over a month and a half ago, I
requested from the Village of Middleport any and aU docuq~entS pertaining to the contracts between
Blue Streak Cab Company. its
ownen;, William and Gary Snouffer and the Village of Middleport.
This request Included a request
for all accounting records related to
that contract,. These are public
records under the Obio Revised
Code Section 149.43. Notably this
request contained a demand for
copies or all contracts, former or
currenl
On March 16. 1995, I received
some documents released by the
Village or Middleport which pcrlained only to 1994. No accounting
records of !lOY nature were released
nor were any records of the overpaymentS by the Village of Middleport to the Snouffer company disclosed althougil they were requested. Thus I commend Mr. Abate for
his ability to ferret out these figures.
Importantly, I did receive certain documents which Shed light on
, certllin misstatementS or calculated
concealments which may supplement the recent article.
Let us first examine the total
public monies paid to Blue Streak
Cab. These have not been disclosed. In the past fivtl' years only,
$906,364 or nearly I million dOllars were paid through Utis contract
to the Snouffers at B-lue Streak
Cab. Additionally, and most importantly, $29,572 of Middleport tax·
.payer monies were paid to the
.Snouffers' company, over and
above Ute authorized .monies solely
by the cab company asking and the
administration paying. Although I
am not a resident of Middlepon, I
do understand that the financial
constraintS of Ute Village threateping tbe completion of the boat
marina and the m~intenance and
repair of the pool, yet nearly
$30,000 was paid out apparently
without auUtority for a cab company that violated some regulations
supposedly governing it. That
$30;000 alone could.have saved the
marina project.
Mayor Horton said "The state
ordered changes of one token per
person per trip". The docu!l'en ts
provided 10 me under Arttcle ll
signed by the Village and the
Snouffcrs state Ute Blue Streak Cab
Company agrees to transpon individuals within its transit zone for
"the letld~r of a. transit tokel), will)out aclditJonill cllargc or cost . Thts
is not a State ordered change . In
fact, the State in public findings
against the Blue Streak Cab issued
February 1995 to Mayor Horton

WASHINGTON -Last week's feared It would have to beamputat·
deadly blut In Oklahoma City ed, though they now believe It·can
prompted a team of fedt:nl Judael be saved.
to privately bind down a~~
For every near-miss, however,
Indictment of the security at their ·
own courthouses.
By Jack Anderson
On the moming after the bombing. 92 chief judges from across the
and
country met In Washington for a
routine training session. But
·Michael Binstein
sources Inside the room tell us the
conversation quicltly turned to
courthouse security; as one judge judges can point to a tragedy. One
after another bemoaned the "siege of the most recent took place in
mentality" they feel each day.
February in Seattle. Then:, a man
''There but for the grace of God with. a semiautomatic weapon
go we," one top federal coon offi- opened rue in a county courthouse,
cial said about the mood of the lclllins his pregnant wife and one of
meeting. "1bere's a eonslant secu- her friends as they waited to testify
rity problem In courthouses."
against him in a marriage annulCourthouse officials in Olda- ment bearing. . •
borna City narrowly avoided disasJudiciary officials say the
ter. They had recently vacated their ina-ease in cases involving domesold offices in the federal building tic disputes, drugs, gang-related
for newer chambers in an adjaoent activity and teriorism have caused
one. Stil~ the blast shauered glass violence to spill into the once haland sent furniture Oying, injuring lowed halls of justice. These offiseveral people. One,juror's arm cials worry about the chilling effect
was so badly lacerated that doctors this violence is havins on judges,

E)(.PI.OITAiiON . Of
~u

"--

THIS IS

REfi..LL'I'

~E~OLiiHG ...

"

Immigration: The next big
As if this country didn't have now being contested in the couns,
enough big problems on iiS plate, illegal aliens would no longer qualhere comes another one - one, ify for aU sons or benefits that the
what's more, that's getting worse government of the Unfted States
and bigger every day.
For forcibly calling our attention
William A. Rusher
to it, we have Peter 'Brimelow to
thank. Brimelow wrote a long and insists must be. sprayed benignly
thoughtful article on the subject for over citizens, legal immigrants, and
National Review a couple of years illegal aliens alike. (It is said that
ago, and has now followed that up two-thirds of all the babies born in
with a whole volume : "Alien the hospitals of Los Angeles .are
Nation," published by Random born to illegal alien mothers at the
House. It is a book not to be expense or California taxpayers missed.
with the babies, of cotlrse, becomIt is a piquant but irrelevant fact ing U.S. citizens at birth.) But
Utat Brimelow himself was horn in Brimelow .warns that legal immiBritain, and became an American . gration is a major part of the probcitizen only recently. But Alexan- lem too.
der 11amilton was born in the
What are !be figures? About 2
British West Indies, spent his ftrst or 3 million people (nobody knows
18 years there, and didn't set foot for sure how many) enter the Unitin Britain's North American ed States illegally every year. And
colonies until just four ye3ll before while some large number of these
the Declaration of Independence; leave again, the Immigration and
yet he turned out to be quite an Naturalization Service estimates
American patriot.
that net illegal immigration runs
Brimelow's concern reaches far from 300,000 to 500,000 annually.
beyond illegal immigration, the · That's on top of about a million
costS or which - in welfare, edu- people (including refugees and
cation, Medicare, etc. - . triggered applicants for political asylum)
last November's Proposition 187 in who immigrate to the United States
California. Under 187, which is legally every year.
·
Is a million and a half immi-

Ooly ·42 percent of the judaes

who responded to the GAO survey

said they felt secure wben they go

home for the evening. Since 1979,

three federal judges have been
assassi.Dated at their homes, including one In New York who was
mowing his lawn.
Judge Perez Jimenez of Puerto
'Rioo and his family bad to endure
24-hour protection by the U.S.
Marshals Service for several yean
because of threats on his life from a
temxlstl!roup. Jimenez, a former
chairman of the Judicial Conference Committee on Security,
describes today's criminals as
being "more daring, more violent
and more prone to strike at the
. judicial rntem when they don't ge(
what they want."
"Being a judge is not a popularity contest," Jimenez told ollr
reporter Kim Rubey. "In every
case, someone always loses, and
judges are prime and easy targets
for disgruntled losers.''
LIFETIME OF ABUSE "Florence," a widow who lives
near 'bangor, Maine, will never
receive as much media attention as
the late Nicole Brown Simpson,
even thougb their stories are
remarkably similar.
While the. brutal murder of
Nicole Brown Simpson helped
bring attention to the tragedies of
spousal abuse last year, millions of
elderly women like Aorence continue to live in fear of a relative or
loved one.
For two years before her husband of 44 years committed suicide, Aorencc was routinely chased
out of her home at gunpoint. At
various times her ribs were
cracked, her wrists broken and her
life threatened. Although her husband had been an alcoholic for
most of their 44-years together, the
drinking and violence escalated
aHer their three daughters left
home.
''I was made to crawl across the
floor with a gun resting on my
head, ready to rue," Aorence told
us. "I've been choked until I was
limp, and then he would drop me
on the floor with a kick."
Although Florence fmaUy found
help, cases like hers are increasingly common. Sen. Bill Cohen, RMaine, estimates that more than 1.5
million elderly Americans are
abused each year. That number will
continue to rise .unless public
awareness is raised.
r;'l'r.AJack Anderson and Michael
611.0..._:::~11\t::::. Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

problem

CDGNITfVE
NON~ ELITE
1f(NIK .
'(PJ.

.
A.~~- 1

,.

4')J••
'~
•
C 19941 bV NE_.,, I
I'll:

•

conducted by Connie Karschailf,
day 8 to 11 p.m. at the VFW build- R.N., Meigs County Tuben:ulosiJ'
Carson E. Dye, 89, RaVC!IIwood, W.Va., died Wednesday, Apri126, . b\g 'to Tuppers Plainl'. Happy Hoi- nurse a~ the Racine Fire Station,
199S in the Ravenswood Que Caller.
.
·
·
low Boys will provide music.
Moaday, 4:30 p,m. to 6:30 p.m.
Bom Ang. 29, 190S in Fn:IICb Creek, W.Va.• the son or Charles and
Anyone involved in food semce is
Mary Carpeuter Dye, be was a ni&amp;bt rwdil« with Ambassador Hotel.
Revival treheduled
required to oblaln yearly skin teat..
A U.S. Navy veiCnn ofWorlcfWar II, be.._ a 50-year member of the
Evangeline Michael Vance: of Evenin'l clinics are beld periodical~
F'~ United Methodist Church and a SO-year Mason. He taughllO years Columbus will conduct a three Iy at various locations in the coua-:
of high school in southem West Virginia and worked In the office of the night revival May 4-6 at the ty.
Charleston Blossom Dairy. He also was a state eJDployee for several Clifton Tabe~nacle Ch~rcb In
.
years.
·
Clif
w v Se ·
ill begm· Car Wash Saturday
Surviving are bis sisters, Loraine Moore and Lilian Dye of . at7 ~nigh~ rubi'ic~vrted.
VICA Club will have a car wash·
Rav~nswood; stepda~ghter, Ann Bower:&gt; of Iowa; and stepsons, John
Saturday, at McDonald's in
Berhng· aud AI Berhng, both of Washmgton, D.C .. and Ed and Pat .Benefit sale
Pomeroy, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cars,
Berling, both of Aorlda. ·
A. benefit church yard/artS and $2. trucks, $3.
Services will he 11 a.m. Saiurday in the Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush crafts sale will be held at the
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with lbe Rev. Dr. Dan Hogan officiating Cliftoo Tabernacle Church, Clifton, Benefit sale planned
Friends may call between '1-9 tonight at the funeral bOrne.
·
· Tuesday and Wednesday, he&amp;i.llA multi-family yard and garage
ning each day at 9 a.m. Hot d6gs sale will be bekl May 4 and 5 at the
Faulk residence on Whipple Road,
and baked goods also for sale.
Five Points area, to benefit tbe
Ada L. Holter, 93, Pomeroy, died Thursday, April 27, 1995 at Over- · Skin testlng.cllple ·.
Eastern High School golf team .
brook Center, Middleport.
.
A free skin testing clinic will be
Born Nov. 8, 1901 in Chester Township, daughter of the late David
and Ella Baurn Frecker, sbe was a dairy farmer and outstanding gardener.
She· attended the Trinity Church and was a membe.r or the Meigs
County Farm Bureau, Rock Springs Grange, Wildwood and Chester GarSows: steady.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indianaden clubs, Farm•Bureau W~mens Chorus, Meigs County Horse Club and Ohio direct hog prices at selected .
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 24.50Pomeroy Dance &lt;;tub, and was a world traveler.
, buying points Friday by the U.S.
29.00; 500-650 lbs. 29.00-32.00, a
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Roy and Patricia Holter of Department of Agriculture Market , few over 650 lbs. 33.00-33.50
Pomeroy; granddaughters, Ann Munafo Of Middletown, and Janice Davis News:
Estimated receipts: 37,000.
. of Pomeroy; grandsons, Alan Holter and Edward Holter, both of
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
For the week: barrows and giltS
· Pomeroy; 11 great-grandchildren; three sisters and a brother-in-law, cents higher; demand moderate.
mostly steady; sows weak to 1.00
Mabel Bailey of Cleveland, Bertha BuUard of' Tampa, Aa., and Arlene
lower.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
and Carl Ashbaugh of Chatham, Va; sisters-in-law, Marihelle Frecker of points 33.00-34.00, a few 34.25Prices rrom The Producers
Pomeroy, Hilda Frecker of Cleveland, and Arvilla Frecker of Reedsville; 34.50; plants 34.00-35.50.
Livestock Association:
and several nieces and nephews.
.U.S. 2-3, 230-26() lbs., COUn!fY
Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 higher.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Homer Ross Holter; and by potnts 28.00-33.00.
four brothers.
.
,
Services will be I p.m ; Saturday in the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. Burial will follow in (Continued from Page 1)
Chester 'Cemetery. Friends,may call Friday from 5-9 p.m. at the funeral Emily Stivers.
men -Cynthia Caldwell, Nikki
home.
Syracuse Elementary: second Robinson; Evan Struble, William
grade - Ashton Brown, Rachael Young; sophomores - Brian
Cottrill, Kimberly Clark:_third Allen, Mark Lewis, Jessica Sayre
Amber Pearl Warner, 93, Wolfe Pen Road, Pomeroy, died Thursday, gmde - Bethany Amberger, Codi and Amber Thomas; juniors -·
April 27, 1995 in the Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Uni~ Davis, Katie Sayre, Jordon Bass, Jason Barnett, John Card. Robin
Pomeroy.
'
Sarah Hawley, Jeremy Yeauger; Gillispie. C.J. Harris, Paul Ihle
Mrs. Warner was a seamstress and co-founder of The Fabric Shop, fourth grade - . Melinda Chancey. Rochelle Jenkins, Jennife;
Pomeroy.
,
Crystal Cottrill, Mariam El-Dabaja; Lawrence, Jay McKelvey, Rayan
Born Sept. 4, 1901 at Harrisonville, she was the daughter of the late fifth grade -Joseph Cornell, Young; seniors - Brian Anderson
George ReiCher Atkins and Ida Dean Atkins. She was a member of the Lindsey Smith; sixth grade :..... Cara Randy Bing, Grant Circle, Maso~
Zion Church or Chris~ a 50-year member of the· Order of the Eastern Star, Ash, Chad Hubbard.
Ftsher, Andrea Moore, Man Morand past worthy matron of Harrisonville Chapter, O.E.S.
Southern Junior High : seventh row, Kendra Norris, David PickSbe is survived by three sons and daughters-in-law, George ''Jack" and grade - Kyle Norris, Brandon ens, Jimmy Randolph , Co urtney
Grace Warner or Pomeroy, Dale .and Mary helle Warner of Miners ville, Wolfe and Q:bris Randolph; eighth Roush, Amy Weaver.
and Ted and Suzanne Warner of Pomeroy; two daughters and sons-in-law, grade - Christa Circle, Jennifer
StudentS were presenccd ·awards
Ada and Anbur Nease, and Lois and Gene Thompson of Pomeroy; an Carleton, Jesse Little and Ashli by Susie Gruescr. president of the
adopted kon, Mark Warner of Pomeroy; 18 grandchildren, 28 great-grand- Davis.
Southern Local Board of Educachildren, three great-great-grandchildren, Utree step-great-grandchildren, ·
Southern· High School: fresh- tion.
one step-great-great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parentS, she was preceded in death by her husband, Herman Warner; a daughter, Dorothy P. Higgins; and three brothers and two
(Continued from Page 1)
sisters.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy. Columbus, chairman of the House Appropriation s Commiuee, assurc.d
The Rev. Eugene Underwood will officiate and burial will be in the Wells loca) officials the money would not be taken away from lbe project.
Cemetery. ·Friends may call at th~ funeral borne from 3-9 p.m . .Saturday, · "We w~t to .ope~ !&gt;&lt;Jth ends up," S10ry said of Ute connector, adding
that the proJeCt tS cnucal to making the Great Bend development sicc a
with Easte11J Star Memorial Services to be held at 7 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Zion Church of reality.
Christ. Rutland.

Ada L. Holter

•

Today's livestock report

c 1195Acc:u-Wo-.lnc.

Rain re-enters forecast
for latter part of wee.k end
By The Associated Press
A second straight day of fair
weather on Saturday could end on a
dismal note, forecasters said.
Clouds will build over the state and
some rain in possible late in the
day.
Showers and thunderstor111s
remain in the forecast for Sunday
and Monday, the National Weather
Service said.
Tell)peratures under clear skies
tonight will drop into Ute 30s in
some parts or the state tonight ibere
is a chance of .frost in outlying
areas.
The record-high temperature for
. this date at the Columbus weather
station w·as 85 degrees in 1914
while the record low was 28 in
1967, Sunset tonight will be at 8:22
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:35

a.m.

Weather foreoast:
· TonighL..Moslly clear "-CSS with
increasing clouds late. Becoming
mostly clear east with frost possible in the outlying areas. Lows 35
to 40 east and 40 to 45.elsewhere.
Saturday .. .Increasing cloudiness. A chance of afternoon showers west. Highs in the mid 50s to
mid 60s.
Saturday night. ..Cloudy. Showers
likely · except
far
northeast. .. Also a chance of thunderstorms south and west. Lows
mostly in the 40s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday ... Shpwers likely. A
chance of thunderstorms south .
Highs 55 to 65 .
··
Monday... A chance of showers.
1..\lws in the 40s.

Land transfers posted
The following land transfers . Harkins Jr., Georg,e Sauer, Carolyn
were recorded recently in the office and Richard Collins to Charles E.
of Meigs County Recorder Emmo- and Martha K~ Wheeler, Middlegene Hamilton:
. . pon parcel;
~
Deed, Clarence E. and Freda.
·Deed, Tammy L. Boggs, Virgil
'Mae Gilmore to Horace W. and and Lona Cozart to Larry W. and
Edward E. Gilmore, Salisbury par- Tina M. Sampson, Olive parcels;
. eel;
Right of way, Franklin Reaf
Deed, Martha 0. and James Estate Company to Leading C~eek
Vennari'to Davl1l and Shirley J. Conservancy District, Salem
Bumgardner. Pomeroy parcels;
parcels;
' 'Deed, William Kennedy Family,
Deed, David R. and Norma J .
et al. to Jim and Ruth Ann ·Ucker, Yates to Morgan A. Yates, Olive
Scipio parcels;
parcels;
.
·
Deed, Susan R. and Edward L. .
Deed; Ctaig T. and, SheJty S.
Shaw, Charles Dow and Cecilia · Chapman to Michael W. and
Roush to James L. Roush, Che~ter, Angela D. Mayfer. Rutland, .76
II acres;
acres;
Deed, Robett and Jean Lehew to
Deed, James t. Ward .and John
William and Margaret Lehew, E. and Jacqueline White, Olive;
Pomeroy parcel;
.
Deed, Jack R. and Mary E. CarDeed, Geraldine Cross to Gary roll to Arthur .carroll, Olive
Paul and Donna Marie Norris, Sut- parcels;
ton, 5.234 acres;
Deed, James L., Rose M., Alvin
Deed, Craton C. Wolfe to A. and Sandy Haggy to Mary A.
Bobby Jne Wolfe, Sutton parcel;
Layne, Pomeroy lOIS;
Deed, Curly G. and Margaret R.
Deed, Lucille M. Haggerty .to
Snowden to William N. Snowden, David R. Haggerty, Salisbury,
Rutland;
.
4.641 acres;
Deed, Guy and Geraldine
Deed, John L. and Sherry A .
Swadley to William P. Spencer, Ridenour to Corey Carnahan, ·
Rutland; · ·
·
Chester parcel;
·
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian MarDeed Linda K. Swan and Syllene Hall to William P. Spencer, ·van Cle'land to Paul J . Hatfield,
Rutland; ·
Salem parcels;
,
.
Deed, Roger B. and Ruth E. Dil- ·
Deed, Clair E. Jr. and Penny
lon to Home National Bank, Olive, · Ann Swan to Paul J. Hatfield and
one acre; ·
.
David Dunkle Jr., Salem parcels!
Deed, Mary G. Napper to Jack
Deed, Paul J: Hatfield to Paull.
and Joyce Ervin, Salem parcel;
Hatfield and Debbie Harmon.
Deed, Mary G. Napper to Jack Salem parcels.
·
and Joyce Ervin. Salem;
Deed. Mary G. Napper to
Southern Ohio Coal Company,
Salem;
Deed, Mary •G. Napper to Am Ete Power ....................... .31 718
........................................S7 3/4
Southern Ohio Coal Company, .Akzo
Ashland Oil ............................36 Ill
Salem parcel;
AT&amp;T .....................................503/4
Deed, Wanda Joan and Carl Bank Ooe ................ ~.............. .l9 118
Eugene Look to Allen K. and Car- Bob Evaos ...............................lO Ill
olyn S. Page, Rutland, 3.03 acres;
Ctiam pion Ind . .....................:..20 3/4
, Deed, Lois and William H. Charming Shop:.......................S Ill
City Holdlng ...........................l611l
Federal Mogul ..,.....................l711l
The Daily .Sentinel Goodyear T&amp;R,..................... .37 518

•

grants per year a lot? Well, it's big, ically? I am a great admirer of the
ger than the number that entered in performance of (for example) cereither 1907 or 1914, which were tain Asian immigrant categories,
the two peak years in what is called and believe they make, and will
"The First Great Wave" of immi- ·. continue to make, a tremendous
gration, from 1848 lo 1920.
contribution to our society. But it is
Rut that isn't even half the also true (as Brimelow demon.story. The First Great Wave was strates) that other immigrant catefollowed by a Great Lull, from gories merely tend to disp!_ace
1920 to about 1970, during which native-hom Americans-. notably
America "digested" ·the previous blacks....., from desperately needed
high influx or immigrants.
. jobs, and in some cases have
It was the 1965 Immigration Act carved out neat footholds for them(sponsored, wouldn't you !mow, by , selves in the Americap criminal
Sen. Ted Kennedy) that, kicking in underworld.
. .
about' 19?0, sent immigration
Th~re is far more to "Alien
statistics soaring again. What's Nation," and to the problem it
more, whereas the earlier immi- highlightS, than I can possibly do
grant Tiood had been largely ·Euro- justice 10 here. But every Ameritllln
pean, the 1965 Act .favored irnmi- citizen owes a debt or gratitudtHo
grants from Asia and Latin Ameri- Peter Brimelow for sounding the
ca - and immigrants from these alartn.
areas have incomparably higher
William Rusher Is a Dlstin·
birth rates than that of the basic · gulshed Fellow or the Claremont
Amer.ican population. Unless Institute ror the Study or Statessomething is done to halt the tide, manship and Political Philosothe U.S . population by 2050, phy, and a writer ror Newspaper
according tp one estimate. will be Enterprise Association.
391 million- and 139 million, or
(For Information O!l how to
36 percent, will be· post-1970 communicate electronically with
immigrants and their descendants.
this columnist and others, conCan this country possibly tad America Online by ca!Ung 1-·
absorb, let alone "digest," such an 800-827-63M, exl 8317.)
.
influx, either culturally or econom·

While recuperating from a lleart not a happy laugh.)
Bonham. It was as a boy in his
On Ute other hand, a pro-laugh
native Oklahoma, sitting arouod in attack a few years later, Bonham
group
!mown as the Fellowship of
Claude Chandler's appli.ance store and his wife were taking a walk in
Merry
Christians Inc. is distributlistening to Claude tell jokes, that the mall near their house, where
ing
reproductions
of a color paintthey were appalled to see gross,
ing
of
a
laughing,
happy, risen
tasteless and otherwise-offensive
George R. Plagenz joke
Jesus.
The
portrait,
used
by many
books on the best-seller racks.
Tbe next year the jovial, fun- churches as the cover for their
Bonham discovered he had a talent loving Southern Baptist minister Easter church bulletin.s, is said to
for telling jokes himself.
.
put out his first paperback joke he enjoying a "P.henomenal grass·"The apartment where I live is book, "The &lt;Treasury or Clean roots popularity. '
so small," Tal would teii ·Ctaude, Jokes"
Some people like to think of
(Broadman Press,
"that we had to teach our dog Nashville).
God as a happy, smiling deity.
Lucky to wag his tail up and
·Finding there was a market for Their favorite story is of the visitor ·
down.''
clean iokes, Bonham published a who went to church one Sunday
Years later Bonham came home s.equel to his rtrSt volume. Eventu- and ming.Jed with the parishioners,
to visit He went to call on Claude, ally there came to be nine volumes patting Utem on the back, talking
. who was dying. "After we finished in all, including "The Treasury of loudly and laughing. The people
praying and reading the Bible," Clean Teenage· Jokes," "Clean were shocked and asked him to
·
·
Bonham recalled, "Claude sat up Business Jokes," "Clean Country leave.
and said, 'Heard the one about the Jokes," "Clean Children:s Jokes"
On his 'way .out the man was
three old men walking down the and "Clean Spons Jokes."
ap,prmichcd by God who said,
street?"' Bonbain said he hadn't
Did Jesus tell jokes? In a survey ' Cheer .up. I've ~n trying to get
"One of tbem said, 'Windy , or 5,000 Lutherans, three out of into Utat church myselffor years."
isn't it?' ~other said, 'No, l think four said no. The report explained
George Plagenz Is a syndicatit's Thursday.' The thin! man said, that jokes and laughter are not ed writer ror Newspaper Enter·
'I am too. Let's go get a cold as~ociated with divinity in the prise Assqclatlon.
drink.'''
(For Information on how to
minds of most Lutherans.
'
Tal and Claude had a good
communicate
electronically with
(Actually there are only three
laugh at that. It was the last time passages in the Bible where God is this columnist and others, conthe two old liiends saw one anoth- described as laughing. In all three tact America Online by calllna 1er. The next week Claude died.
instances, lt is a laugh of derision, . 1100-827-6~ exl 8317.)

'

Dance •niHMinrecl
A rouud and square daace Satur-

carson E. Dye .

Stocks

G-rated comedy wins church . ap·proval

It brought.the'house down. Anyone waiting to hear an off-color
punchUne was in the wrong pew.
This is the kind of jokes they are
telling these days at church comedy
clubs on tOO West Coast. Now the
fad for clean is spreading eastward
to Dallas and Chicago.
The crowds tbal show up for
these G-rated comedy acts are
sending the message that people
like to laugh but they are tired of
raunchy.
Ready for another knee-slapper
that carries the church's .seal of
approval? "You !mow you are getting old wbcin you bend over to tie
your shoe and you look around to
see if there is something else you
can do while you are already down
there.''
That one is from ''The Treasury
of Clean Senior Adult Jokes (In
Large Type)"' by the late Rev. Tal

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

--Area deaths-- Meigs announcmnents

,,

bag·works.' ''

,

at.et&gt; Al'lt:&gt;

NAI'IE ?EOPI£ •

The emcee at the comedy club
came out on the stage and said to
the audience, "Did you hear the
one about the 'wife who ·pboned her
busband at the office and said,
'Honey, I have good news and bad
news. The good news is U!at the air

•

Plge 2 The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Aprll28, 1995

juron and wilnesses wllo might not
be willing to participate in controversial cases in the future.
"Courts are sceoes qf conflict
and they're petfed pltcCs .for people to act out their hatred," one
senior courthouse official told us.
"We have judges under threat all
the time. It s widespread and gelS
more serious the more you get
cases like the one involving the
World Trade Center bombing in
New York City." According to a
recent study by the General
Accounting Orfice, 86 percent of
judges perceive~ themselves as
being exposed to more job-~lated
danger lhan Olber citizens.
Security officers uncovered
384,335 conc;ealed guns and lmive~~
that people tried to bring into federal courthouses in .1993, a 10 percent increase over the previous
year. Funding for federal courthouse security has soared from $18
million in 1985 to $97 million this
year, and judiciary offiCials want to
increase the budget by another $17
million for next year.

THI&lt;i IS HORRIBLE'

a

Berry's World .

Ohio
\

Federal judges fear climate of violence

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genel'81 Manager.

•

K-marl .................................... 13 3/4

'
tUSJ»S 213-960)
Publi~llcd every aftenwOn , Monday through

· Friday. I l l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45?69. Ph . 992-2156

Se&lt;tlnd ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ postnge paid nt Pomeroy. Ohio.
Mrmbfr: The AuociDh:!d Pre: ~~ nnd the Ohio

Newspaper A5Socimion:
I

•

POSTMAS!fER: Send nddr~~~ cor rec tion.~ to
The Or~ily S.enline l. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45 i 69 .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
8)' Carri~r or Motor Routt!
Om: Wcek ,.;, .... :..... .......... .. ................ ...... ... $1 .7~
One Month ................. ,.............................. $? .60

One Yell{.......... ....................

.. ....... $91 .00

Lands End .............................. 15 3/4
Limited Inc. ............:.............. .lO 718
Mulllmcdla Inc..................... .37 Ill
People's ................................. .21 Ill
Ohio Valley ...................................44
One Valley ....................................30

Amber Pearl Warner

Area officials seek funds

Tombstone workshop set
A workshop to teach proper
cleaning and repair or tomb stones
will he held at St. John Cemetery,
Pine Grove Road, on Saturday
rro.m9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
..
·
' Landon Stepp 'Will demonstrate
proper methods for the resetting
and repair of tombstones. Stepp
and. his wife, Beverly, own and .

Meigs EMS .runs
Uni,ts of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
six calls for assistance including
one transfer call. Units responding
'included:
CHESTERVFD
. 1:14 p.m., Rocksprings Road,
electrical ftre at Steve Pullins residence.
POMEROY
11:28 a.m., Cave Street, Mary
Russell, Veterans Memorial ,Hospital .

.

RACINE

10:17 p.m:, s·tate Route 124,
Wesley Clark, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
RUTLAND
8:22 a.m., Horner Hill Road,
Peggy Bole, Holzer Medical Center;

6:21 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, David
McComas, refused treatment.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions -. none.
Thilrsday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges April 27 - Justin
Wiseman, Melinda Miller, Micki
Shaffer. Iva Smith, Stewart Puckett, Carl Trippel,!. Adam Dailey.
Birth - Mt . and Mrs. Brad
Graham, son, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

-·-·-

Siock reporls are the 10:39 a.m.
quotes provided by . Ad vest of
Gollipolt..
·.

SINGLE CPPY PRICE
Sub ~cnbt!rs

not desi ring tO pay the clllrier may
ndvance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on !I three, si~~o or 12 month basil. Credit will be
give n CArrier CllCh weel.

A Bible reading 'marathon will
begin Sunday to kick off activities
in celebration of the National Day
or Prayer. The maratlton will take
place at· the stage on the upper
Pomeroy parking lot.
The reading will be held Sunday from 4 to 8 p.m .. Moriday
through Wednesday from 8 a.m. to
8 p.m.. and Thursday from 8 a.m.
to !Op.m.
!i. rally and pmycr service.will
he held in front of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy from
II :30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Thursday.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS

CHEVY CHASE,
JONATHAN TAYLOR
THOMAS .
IN

MAN OF THE HOUSE PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

TURKEY &amp; DRESSING
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable ·.
Cole Slaw, Macaroni Salad,
Cottage Cheese, or
Tossed Salad
Dinner Roll

111

No $Ubscription by mail pernutted in are11s
where home earner ser\'ice: is avllil:~ble: .

Cuckler Consulting Inc.

M~IL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside M.elp; Counly
13 Week! .................. :..........................,... $23.92
26 Woek&lt; ........................... ...................... $41.06
l2 Weeks .............. .-, .................... ,............ 192.56
Rlilltlf Outside' Mtljp County
I] Wult~ .............................................. $~ . 61

26 Weeks............. ,................. :.............. 149.66
52 Weeks .....:........ ................................... $96.20

H

TRY OUR HOMEMADE PIES
Open Mtm.-Sat. 6:30am to 10 pm
Sun. 8 anHO

Real Estate
Appraisal

1050 CMer Road, Shade. OH 45776
Business Phone: 614·696·1400

W. T.ad Cuckler

IH·~

'""'

•U~

"iii

7 : 20 , 9:20 OAJLY
MATJNEts SATISUN

1 : '2 0 , ) :20

IPC r i J )
7;10 , 9:10 OA!LY
MATINEES SAT'/SUN

1: 1 o.]: 10

ft GOOFY

MDUil

7:()0 lliULT . ~ SAT/~ . 1 ;00, l:OO (G)

.., .......,., .•,......

BOY · · ~·••u
9:1(1 DMLY. II) 1¥1 li&amp;S. [P(H})

JDM,..Y

GIR CERTIACATES AVAULABLE! ,

...•

~

................• .

•

··~W Life Covenant

•
•
•

Church of (jod

•

9Ue6ef9tdin~hester

•

985-4157

•

•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•

•
•
•

•·

:J?t-v. Wi[[iam Jfinrfs announces
~w Su~day\ Scfw.o[ program

fora[[ages
Jl.du[t 'lJiscipfesliip 'Training
'JI[ursery through teens
Sunday Scfioo[ 9:30am -11:00 am

•
•

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

..•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
.•
•

..••

Worship &amp; Praise.- 6:00pm
•
.
h
'Ifiurs. Jamify 'Training fwur- .7:CX}pm :

If you 1re fooRf.ng for a church
fami(y,
rniere's 5l pface for you liere.
Peopfe 5lre Important!
.

:·······~··~····.
•
,.

,.i

\X '..·r•.: S f......

~Ho(

FAX· 614·696·1400

...'

\\71:\''l:nl"
' ·' -~·
•W \. 1 I'
1!1, "I
\X' l,il"- ,~ ...

Marathon. slated

Shoney 1slnc........................... 11 518

Star Bank ......................................41,
Wendy lnt'l........................... .17 118
Worthington Ind.................... tBI/8

'i\ C,-.,~ \1 'LET):

operate the Stepp Monument Co,
Point Pleasan~ W.Va. The cleaning
of tombsiOnes will be demonstrated
by the Meigs County Historical
Society volunteers.
The workshop on Cemetery anJ
Tombstone Preservation is being
sponsored by St. John Lutheran
Church, Aid Association for
Lutherans. the Meigs County Historical Society, with assistance
from Chesler Township Trustees.
Township truslees and cemetery
caretakers are especially encouraged to attend the session. Due to
the limited.access ibility, those
wishing to attend arc ·asked to call
the Historical Society at 992-3810
today. Lunch will be available at
Ute church.

Rockwell ................................43 518
Robbins &amp; Myen .........................ll
Royal Dulch.......................... ll3118

Dully ................................ ,.................. 35 Ceoti
remit

Future development. ..

•

•
•
•
•
•

�•
~age

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sports

Friday, April 28, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

Po~y~lddlepon,

In
l

(IDS)

OrlaDdo lllBCIItoa, 1 p.m. ('INJ')
Utllb II HoUitoD, 9:)0 p.m (TNT)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ea.lt.rn DITilion

Ium
'foro oto ..... \...... .........lr
2 "0 &amp;1.
1.00
8 0fiOD...................... I

0

New York ................ l
De:IIoil. ..................... l

0 1.00
1 .SOO

................0

!ill

Hockey

.$

1.00

.S
1
2·

2 .000

NUL standings

Ctntral Di•blon

Ml!waube ............... l

I .00

.5

MinnetotJ ............... . I

0 1.00
I .SOO

0

,5
I

Ch.lcaao ........ -. ...,..,...0

2 .000

l

w.ltu"

Dl...w!HI
Scatll e .... .'................ ! 0 1.00
Calilornla ................. O 1 .000
Oakland .............. 0
Tcxa~ ,., ..............1..... 0

2
2

1

.000
.000

I.S
l.S

AUanUe Di•IHn

X....

.lr 1. I Ell. W: w,

56 144 127
48. 125 113
47122 llj
45 132 126
· 41 104 116
37 tl6 136 ·
S 33 H9 ISO

y-Philldclphll •. 26 13"
New letle)' ..... .'. 20 17
Wuhiaatoa .' .... . 2011
N.Y. Ran&amp;.,. .... 21 21
Florid . .............. II 21
Tamp.Bay ....... l1215
N.Y. Waadm ... l4 26

4
I
7.
3
S
3

N•theU O.vWon
J ·QuebeC .......... 28 12

Thursday's scores

s

til 175 128
$9 110 141

l

5I llS liS

X·Pit..bwah ...... 2113 )

Toronto 7, Oal:Jand l
CLEVE.LA!\U J I. Tens 6
llofllwaukee 9 Chkaeo 4

, x·Boaton ........... 24 17
Buffalo ........ ...... 20 II
Hottlord ............ 1922
Montreal ........... 1121

Mtnnesor.a7, Bal ti more 4
SeatLie 3, Detroit 0

Today's games

A!MriranLea,iue.
CHICAOO WIUTE SOX: Aulaced
Rob Dibble, piu:het, 10 Bitmiaaham of
Ute Southern Lcaaue. Seat AI Lcvi11e,
pitcher, from Nuhvllle of the American
AQ.!)!Pi1tio11 to BlrmlnaJiam. Se11t Jason
Wartiol, pitcher, from BirmioaJtam to
Prl~• William of the CM'oliaa Leaaue.
ATLANTA BRAVES: A&amp;reed to

terma wll.h .Keut Merck•. pitcher, on a
ao~year eontrJct.
LOS ANOELES DODGERS : Plaeed
Tlm WaJtaetl, thltd bueman, on lhe IS·
day dia.blcd lill. Purchued the tonttaet
ot Zoe Muooz, c:atcber•.Ctom Albuquerque

ot the PacifiC C011t Leque.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Pl1ced
Manuel Lee, ICCOod baseman, oft lhe 1S·
day disabled Jilt. Recalled Tripp Crotnl.'r,
infielder, £rom Louisville or the American
Astociation. Agreed to terms with Rich
Rodriauez, pitcher, 011 a one-year con·
tnoct.

Detroil (Doherty 6-7) at SeatUe (Boslo

IS

42 120 139

OU&amp;wJ ....... ....... 133 S

19 10-4 163

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

Central DiriiiOI'I

.lr L I Ell. W: '!iA

z-Detroit ........... 31 10 4
I·St.l..ou\1 ........ 26 13 5

•·O.icoao ......... 211~ l

66 11.3 1()1)
S7 166 · 123
47 144 112

Saturday 's games
Ol aiL!ion S·S},I.OS p.m.

Califor11i11 (Sa nder&amp;on 8-4) at Toronto
6-7), 1;JS p.m.
&lt;.&gt; :~ ~and (Onliveros 6- ~ } at Milwautee
(Wei!ITUID8-4), 2:05 p.m.
New Yor k (Perez 9·4) at Kanw City
(Go rdon 11 -7), 2:35 p.m.
CL EV ELAND (Hershi ser 6·6 ) at
Texas (Tewksbury 12· 10). &amp;:OSp.m
Daltimil re (Fernandez 6-6) a1 Minn~ ·
t.a (l luwkins 0..0). 8 : 0 ~ p.m.
Detroit (Well&amp; 5·7) at Seattle (Fleming
7· 11 ), ~ 0 :0~ p.m
(le it~ r

z-won oonference tille

Thursday's scores

W e~lern

p.m.

$ OO

New New!
Large white
potatoes

.

Horida at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Burfalo Ill Washi11gton, 8 p.m.
St. l.ouili at Vancouver, 10:30 p.m.
Lo. Anaele~ at San l~oae, 10: 30 p.m.

· Dallat at Deuoil, 1 p.m.
Tampa Ba y al Quebec, 7 p.m.
N.Y. lslandcr1 at OUawa, 7:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
Toron1o a1 CalgiU)', 7:30p.m.
WiMipea. nt Edmonton, 10:30 p.m.

!ill
1
2

2

Sunday'-s games
Pittsbur&amp;h at Boaton, 3 p.m.
N.Y. Rallien at Phllndelph ia. J p. m.
CW ca~o at Detroit; 3 p.m.
Wad'ungton at Florid.a, 3 p.m.
St. Louis at San Jo~e , 3 p.m
Anaheim al Lo1 An11.eles, 6 p.m.
Quebec at New Ieney, ?:30 p.m
Calgary at Vancou\'er, Bp.m.

I
I

2
2

000

Dlvlsl.on

"' Colorado .................. 2 0 J.OO
, lAs AnJlc les ........... 2 0 1.00
San Dicgu ....... ,....... 1 I .SOO '
San Franci§CO......... 0 , 2 .000

10# bag

AIL Vegetable Seed &amp; Plants
Large selection of bedding plants ·
and hanging ba,skets

MEIGS FARM MKT
300W. Main

992-7527

$6.495·
~ra~~~~~o~~r~~ ~~~-~~~~ $7995
~~t!!:. ~-~~r~o
$7995
~x~. ~~fo~~~~~~~'. . ... . '..... $7995
~!v~~~~~:o.~~::~local
$7995
~i~ v~~~:!e~~~i.~~..~~.....$8995.
·9'i Olds Ciera
· $8995
89 Ford Aerostar

Pomeroy

Extended conversion, V6, auto, air ... .

·

..

WHAT A BLAST! - Tbe Cleveland Indians• Albert BeUe gets a
high five from teammate Eddie Murray (far left) after billing a three·
run boiner off Kevin Gross in the third Inning of Tilarsday night's
American League game against tbe Texas Rangers In Arlington,
Texas, wbere tbe Indians won 11-li. (AP)

.. .. ....... .. :........ ..

•

.

·
•
•
.

.

-•

~~4 ~!~!~m~i~r~~~!te .. .... ..... ... .$9995
~o~~~~~a~.'!~.~-.S.~.~ · · $10,495
~~v!~=a~~~~~ .~~ ....$10,495
~~- ~~~~n~~--~-i~~.-~~~~ ~0 ,495·

·

Montreal (llcnry 8-J) at Chicago (FQII·
ter 3·4), 3:20p.m.
·
FMr1d:1 (Will 8· 10) at Sa n Frandsco
(Vanl..nndtngham 8 ~2 ) . 4 :05 p.m.
l'alt5burgh (Neagle 9· 10) at Philade1·
phi:~ (Quanrri ll,l ·2), 7:3S p.m.
St. Lou ts {Watson 6·~ ) at New YQ r~
(Sabertutgen 14-4), 7:40p.m.
CoiOfado (Ritz 5-6) at llouilo n (Kile
9-6 ). &amp;:05 p.m.
Alln nla (Avery 8· 3) at Lo1 Ange les
( Astacto 6· 8), 10:05 p.m
C IN C INNA TI (Ju rviti 1·1 } u l San
Dicgo Olaritillon 9·6}, I 0·05 p. m

.

.$11 995

91 Ford Aerostar XLT

c'

Extended length. V6, local owner

Sa lu rda y '.s gamll'\
St. Luu i1 (O&amp;borne 0-0) at New York
(l lat ntiCh

8·~ ). ]~ 40

p.m.

· Monl real ( Rueler 1· 3) at Ch icago
(Navarro 4-g), :uo p.m.
Fl orido:~ (Rapp 1· 8) at San Francisco
(Wtlson 0·0), 4 : 0~ p.m
Pittsburah (Loai~ 0·0) at Philadelph.ta
(Green 0-0), 7:(15 p.m .
'
Color.do (011 Vate&amp; 3..4) at Houston
(1la'mptoo 2· 1), 8.05 p.m.
Atlanta (M erckcr 9·4) ut Lo1 Angelea
(Valdes J-1), !0 OS p.m.

·,

Basketball
N8A playoffs
Thursda y's
n rsl· round scores
New Yti rk 103, CLEVELAND 19,
• Nc·W·Y'II'k lcad ~Sfr le5 1·0
Indi ana 90, Alla!llll 82; lnd1a.na lead1
' ~ent'S J.Q
Ulnh 102. llouston IQO: Ulah leada K·
rks 1·0
Seanle 95, L.A Laken .7 1; Seatt le
leads series J.o

Future ga mes
Tttnl8h't

Chic wgo al Ouvlutte, 1 p.nL (TBS)
, So' ton gt Oflando, 8 p.lTJ. (TNT)
Denver 111 S ~Cl Anl onio, 9: 30p.m.
(Ill 51
Portland a1 Ptioemx . 10;30 p.m. (TNT)
Saturd ay
CLEVEL AND at New York , I p m.

(ND CJ
L A Lak. ers ·al Seattle, 3•30 p.m
(NB C)
All.anta at lndtana, 7:30 p m (f'NT)
llou.tout Ulah , 10 p.m. (TNT)
SumbJ, Apr il Jt
BQ&amp;tan. a1 Or!IUido,12:JO p.m. (NDC)
Ponhutd at Phoeui• , 3 p.m. (NB C)
Q\Jco.go al Otatlotte, S:JO p m (l'oo'BC)
Oeo,-er at SID Antonio, 9 p.m. (TBS)

Mond•y. Mall

New Yor k 11 ClEVE AND , I p.m.
(TNT) .

Suttle 1t L.A. l•k en , 10' 30 p.m.

. (TNT)

·· TuuQ ,., May l

Jodi~

at AUJJita, 7 p.m. (TBS )·

•

~~~ ~~fi~~l~a~~~~~~~~~~ ..S12,995
~!a~!~~r~~~~ ~~~...~~'. . $12,995

$1·21 995
~~0~~~:!~!~~~·· · . . .. ~3, 995
~~~~~L~~:~~:w. . ~51 995
95 Ford Windstar $16 995
1
9J Chevy Astro

E11ended van. 7 passenger, V6, auto, air....

CINCINN ATI ($chourek. 1·21 at Sa n'
• Diego (S andrrs 4·8), lO:OS p.m.
Sund~fs games
Pitllburih at Pht!adclphia, 1:35 p.m.
St. Lou !~ at New York. 1:40 p.m.
Mootreai at Chicaao. 2:20p.m.
Colorado at llouslon, 2:35 p.m
Atlanta n1l.o1 Ange i t~ , 4:05 p.m.
CINCINNATI at Snn Oieao. 4:05p.m.
J-1onda at San f'fanciaco, 4:05 p.m.

1

ATTENTION!
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1995
On Thursday, May 18', The Daily Sentinel will
have a special edition with photographs of
high school seniors~g;raduating this year.
Now through Friday, May 12, Drop Your
Photo Off At The-Daily Sentinel or At- Your
High School Office To Be Included In This
Special Editi.on, At No Charge:
(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

Hottest mini van on the market .

Eastern softballers half]me~
Federal Hocking ~n 14-6 rout

******
ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL
. OR.CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOUL[)
LIKE TO HAVE AN-ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS ·
SPECIAL EDITION PLEASE
CALL. 992-2156. . ·
Ask for Dave or Bob

p"Where Better ReallY
Matters
.
. 641
East Stale Street
.Athens, OhiO .

593~6 ... __.. . .

"I would not be going to tbe
game if I bad to pay! No way! Not
Eddie Murray':s 459th career bome at alii" Brewers-White Sox witness Marvin Taxer said as sbowed
run.
Griffey's long ball came in Seat- up ~or opening day after his son
tle's 3-0 .victory oyer Detroit. In inviled him.
"It's disappointing ... but we're
otber games, Toronto beal Oakland
very
grateful for lhe fans who
7-1, Cleveland beal Texas 11-6,
came,"
Rangers presidenl Tom
Minnesota beat Baltimore 7-4 and
Schieffer
said. "We have 10 cam
Milwaukee beal Chicago 9-4.
Fans, still biller aboul the strike. the respect and loyalty of lbe fans
are voicing lbeir displeasure by again. II' s going to take awhile."
The smallest AL crowd of lbe
~laying away. Of the five games
Thursday in lbe AL, four were sea· day, announced at 26,425 for lbe
son openers at whjcb attendance Orioies-Twins game, may have
was way down.
·
, thought for a moment that they
· Crowds were at or below 30,000 were seeing the end of Cal Ripat Seattle, Chicago, Minnesota and ken's consecutive games streak.
Texas for night home openers. . In the second inning, Ripken
Toronto, playing its second home fouled a pitcb off his left foot. He
game of lbe season, bad its smallest hobbled aroJnd for a few minutes
crowd ever at SkyDome.
before slepping back into the boxt
In· Minneapolis, the attendance and grounding out to short.
· But tbat wasn't tbe end or the
was the lowest in lbe 14-year hisiOry of openers at tbe Metrodome. unexpe\:ted from Ripken.
The shons10p, a two-time Gold
Comiskey Park in Chicago bad its
smallest ftrst-day crowd in 13 years Glove winner wbo set a record in
despite tickel price reductions of 1990 wilb a .996 fielding 'percent50-75 percenl. II was the· same age, booted two routine ground ·
story in Seaule, where the first
balls lhat led to 1wo Minnesota
baseball game in tbe Kingdome · runs.
since July 18 ~as witnessed by row
" I really can't remember wben
upon row of empty seats.
I've seen him make an error,"

Twins manager Tom Kelly said.
"He's just a fabulous player. I
guess this sbows thai he's buman."
One of the errors allowed Matt
Merullo to come to lbe plale, and
be responded witb a two-run double that gave Minnespta the lead
for good. Jerald Clark's a lwo-run
single made k7-4 in tbe seventll.
Dave Stevens (1.0) got lbe victory by pitching one inning in relief
of Kevin Tapani. Brad Pennington
(0-l) relieved Ben McDonald and
gave up a double 10 Clark, a walk
to Marty Cordova and Merullo's
game-winning bit.
(See AL ori Page 6)
Now Open For The Season

Bedding Plants
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
· Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

Hubbards Greenhouse
Synicuse

992-5776

Open Daily 9 &lt;Jm-5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-5 pm

,\,

~'-,,

.

~~
~·

By ESTES THOMPSON

••

Philadelphi a 6, St Louis 2
Allantn 6, San Fmncisco 4
Montreal 2, Pi ttsburgh 1
Color ado 8, Ne w York 7
Sun Oi~go 13, f-low;ton 1 ·

.
. . sorry.
"My hearl goes outlo them,"
LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP)- A
guilty conscience plisbed a teen- sbe lold.lbe Fayetteville Observer• ager wbo was figbting a' murder - Times. ''I lcoow wbat il is 10 lose a
charge into changing bis plea to father. Death is neve~ easy and I
guilty in tbe slaying of Michael am sorry my son bad ~~Dytbing to
do wilb it. I am S().IT}' lbat il hapJordan's father. · ·
pened."
'
. Larry Marlin Demery. 19,
Disltict
attorney
Johnson Britt
enlered lhe surprise guilty plea
said
the
plea
shouW
show
doubters
Thursday and agreed to testify.
against co-defendant Daniel Andre that. the case was ·Solid from the
·
Green, 20. Botb were charged wilb beginning. ·
"We had a good case against
ftrSt-degree mmder, armed robbery
and conspiracy in the death of Daniel Green. We now bave bls
James Jordan, 56.
. accomplice 10 give intimate delails
Demery pleaded guilly to ftrSt· . ofwhaiiOOk place," Brill said.
He said Demery will have to
degree murder and 12 larceny and
robbery charges lbat date back to face a regular sentencing hearing ·
1991. The 12 were consolidated . on first-degree murder, wbich
iniO one for a 40-year sentence and means a jury could give.bim tbe
dealb penalty.
the murder plea stands alone,
Demery will be sentenced after
testifying against Green. He faces a
Demery· s plea came just a few
minimum sentence of life plus 40 weeks before his scheduled May 30
years, and could be sentenced to !rial.
dealb.
"This doesn'l ·necessarily save
Defense lawyer Hugb Rogers his life," Britt said.
said be would fight to k~p Demery
If Demery is sentenced to life,
from tbe death chamber. He said Rogers said, it'S' possible be could
bis clienl was not tbe person wbo get out iii 20 years "and still bave
pulled the trigger to kill the elder some semblance of a life left."
Jordan.
Asked if Demery had an auack ·
Michael Jordan, emerging from
of conscience, Rogers said:
a
closed
practice session in Char"Certainly be's been remorseful
lotte
for
the
NB A playoffs against
.about his limited role in Ibis !bing
lbe
Charlotte
Hornets, said "Nope.
the entire lime . II was bis deci·
none
at
all,"
wben asked if he bad
sion.''
·
any
reaction.
Demery's molber, Virginia
Demery, and his girlfriend, Angela
James Jordan was shot on July
McLean, sat in lhe spectaiOr' s sec23, 1993, as be napped in bis car
tion and occasionally wiped tears.
· McLean ani! Demery have a 19- late in tbe night on the shoulder of
U.S. 74, an isolated bigbway soulb
month-old daughter, Taylor. ·
Members of lbe Jordan family ·or town. He bad been traveling
from Wilmington, where lbe lorwere not in"the courtroom. If lhey
bad been, Mrs. Demery said, sbe dans once lived, to lbeir home in a
would bave told tbem she was community near Charlotte.

the Kingdome, Pat Henigen's ironmao performance on tbe mound or

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc~ ·

Demery pleads guilty
in James Jordan murder

trade ............

V6, 4 door, automatic, cruise, tilt, cassette ... ..

Gee

!,,

Thursday's st'Orcs

·

On Thursday, many chose not to
watch Ken Griffey's ftrst lOwering
shol of 1995 iniO tbe far reaches of

~~~!!~~~r~~r ... . . . ..... .. . $5995
=e~~: !:~~~~lean.- .. , .......... $5995

01ieago 6, ClNONNATI 5 (II inn.)

Today's games

the American League, 'and they're
missing some ·f amiliar players
doing familiar things.

297
·
.

Saturday's games

Ct'nlnl Divi.1iun
Chicago .. ..................!
0 1.00
lldtlston ................... 1. 1 .500
St. Lou is .................. !
1 .500
CINCINNATI. ......0
2 .000
2

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
A.P Sports Writer

.
51 1

Tonight's games

f; a.;lern Dh·ldun

.!r L &amp;1.

Fresh
Green
Cucumbers

Philade lphia at Hartford, 7 p.m.
Bo1ton at Pit1Jburgh.7:30 p.m.
N.Y. b landm at N.Y. Ranger1 , 7:30

NATIONAL LEAGUE

P1tt.sburgh ................ 0

tbe

3W Basket or more

Winnipea 4, Dettolt 3
Edmonton 3, St. Lou is 2 (OT)

0Jict~ go al Ooil.on, ! :05 p.m
·
Ca lifprn la 111Toronto, 1:35 p.m.
D ~ ltiu\ore ul Mi nne~~oti, 2:05 p.m.
Oa i:Jand 111 Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
New Yo rk at Kansas Cit)', 2:35 p.m.
CLEVELAND al Tna~. 3:05 p.m.
I)Ciroil ~~ Scuttle, B:OS p.m.

1.00

glecl with ooe 0111 and Pedro Caslei- inninss and -was-tbe winner.
lano walked. A&amp;:r reliever Kevin · rn other games, Atlanta beat San
1..oo1o11 (0-1) redred Jason Bates oo Francisco 6-4; Pbiladelpbla stopped
a liileout, Weiss sinaled on a 3-2 St. Louis 6-2, Montreal downed
piiCb.
Piusburgb 2·1 and San Diego beal
:rbe pitch before Weiss singled. Houston '13· 1:
be slatled toward first base after
Cube II, Reds 5 (lllnn.)
.
tbjnking be'd drawn ball four. A
Jose Hernandez bit a IWo-run
bauer before tbal, ·Lomon ques- single in the 11 tb inning tbat sen I
tioned a call by plale umpire Mike Chicago over Cincinnali. The
Riggers, wbo usually wolks junior crowd at Riverfront Stadium was
college games in Arizona. .
announced at 17,702, although
Mets manager Dallas Green, tbere were fewer fans aclually ~in
ejected in tbe opener, referred the park.
questions about the umpiring 10 NL
Hernandez made a mental mispresiileol Len Coleman.
take in the lOth thai almosl cos1 tbe
"You should bave talked 10 the Cubs the game. With two outs and
league president. He was bere lasl runners on second and third, be
oigbt and didn't bave the courteSy fielded a grounder by Reggie
· HE'S OUT- Chicago second ~~ase.Mn Rey Sanchez (left) lays
to come over to talk. Go talk to Sanders and looked 10 second base leather on Cincinnati's Barry Larkin on an attempted steal in the
bim. He's in cbarge of the so-called for a force play. Realizing tbere ninth inning of Thursday's National League game In Cincinnati,
umpires," Green said.
was none, be hWTied bis throw and where the Cubs outlasted the Reds.li-S In an 11-lnnlng alralr tbat saw
. Steve Reed (1-0) pitched two
Sanchez get three hils. (AP)
(See NL on Page ti)

l:fforts of Griffey, Hentgen &amp; Murray highlight AL action

1erm1 with Sean Mlllla&amp;lon, fullback . ·
Wajvod HoraceMorrla, liaebaeker.

Ripe Tomatoes .

Ottawa 6, Tampa B1y 1
O.icago .5, Dallas 1

Sunday's games

1.00
.500
.000
.000

WeiM ~ widllWO Ollllllld
tbe bases loaded, completilla a
o"""""'* from a 7·2 de11clt ill the
alxlb DIIDa. Qo Wec!Mtday niJbt,
in tbdr openef 11 Coon F'.eld, the
Rockies used·tbree lale ralllea Iii
defeat the Meu 11-91n 14lnnlnas.
Tbe Cubs, "'bo were not over
.SOO all ollaal1aeuoo, won 6-S in
lllnnings at CUK:Innatl.
"A lol of tbings happened.
There were a lot ol funny plays out
there," RlggleiUR said.
A crowd of 36,113 saw tbe
Roclde$ win in 52-degree weather.
Tbere were 4 7,228 fans al tbe
opening of Coors Field.
"Maybe tbat's wbal Ibis ballpark is built for- dramatic finishes," Rockies nfanager Don Baylor
said.
rn tbe ninth inning, pincb-biuer
Jim Tatum and 1Mlke .Kingery sin-

This Weeks Special
Mexican Vine
$

Padnc: DlviNon

y-Calsary .......... 23 16 6 S2 IS2 124
Vancouver ....... . 16 1111 43 141 140
Edmo11toa ......... 1124 4 38 127 167
SIJI J01e ............ 1724 3 37 116 J.S3
Lo• Anaele. ...... 14 21 9 37 137 163
Anahom ........... IS 25 S 3S liS IS6
l ·dlnched playoff berth
y· won divi1ioc title

Chicago {A lvar ez 12· 8) at Boston

0
1
2
2

DENVJ!R BRONCOS: Re-siaoed Jeer

Campbell. wide recclw:r.
GREEN BAY PACKERS; Slaoed Leo
Bectoa, rVIIDliiJ bet, ud MaJthew
Dorsett, ddeDJive bact. Placed KeShoo
lohDIOD, defeulve b~~elr:; Roolevelt Nix,
defen~ive Iackie; aad Knia OlellD, wide
receiver, oo wllven. '
PmSBURaH · STEELERS' Slaned
Frrie Ptgram, runaina btct.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS' AIV...S to

The fans are missing all around

I·ToroDIO .......... 20 1&amp; 7 47 126 1)3
D•llu ................ IHI B 42 133 128
Wlnnlpea .......... iS 23 , 7 37 149 171
•

4-10), 10:35 p.m

0

De~

6 46 119 107
l 43 123 133

ta (MUhomel9·5), 1:05 p. m

Allanla .................... 2
MontreaL .. ...............2
Ph ilad elph ia ............. !
Aor!da ..................... 0
New YQrk, ........ ,...... O

auard; Raul McCord, puater; aad
Mario VtuRbD, offeblive taeklc.

.

•

Oak.laod (S IOlt!em)'Te 7-7) at Milwaut ee (Scanl an 2-6), 7:05 p.m.
Ch icago (Bere 12-2) It BaiiOD (Carmi·
er J-2 ), 7:05 p.n1.
California (l.a ngslon 7-8) at Toronto
(G utman 12· 1\ ), 7:35 p.Jn.
CLE VELAND (Clart ll -3) at Texu
{Pavli k 2-S), !I 05 p.m,
.
·
New York (M cDowelll Q. 9) al KaDsu
Cil)' (Gubicza7-9). 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Fernandez 6-6) at Minneso-

Ium

Mitchell, defensive bact-tick returur;

LeOnard Larramore. IIOU tackle: DaYid
Lauder, kicker; Kevia Peiaflery, punter;
,and Brandoa J&amp;)'el, otrellllw r.c:kle.
DALLAS COWBOYS' Slaood Da•ld
Lana and Stephu McOulte, runni111
bleb; Jolul A.DckftoD.. AlfA=IU.,
kicker, Billy DIYII ud Jeff
, w~e
recdvcn; Joah Evau, &lt;h!fea•ive tKklt;
Artl1 HoUitoD, COfDttbld:;·lohD lOON,

.N.. I011al Leaiue

EA'STERN CONFERENCE

0 1.00

Cl..EVELM'D ......... I
Kaoiai Cily ............. !

Bueboll

wec~..._,,M.,J

J

FootbaU
Natlonol Foctball Lo....
CAROLINA PANTHERS' SIJoed
Willie BrooL!DJ, linebacker~ Billy

· PtlotDilll PoctllDd, IO:Xl p.m. (TNT)

Major leagues

B~t&gt;more

l

Transactions

NL,

By BEN WALDR
A.P I W Wrl._.
The Colorado Rockies, wbo
lblat tbeJ could ao Iii the playoffs
Ibis aeuon,. are two 1amea over
.SOO f01 the finl lime ever. Tbe
Ollcaao Cuba, wbo haven't been 10
the W'orld Series In SO :yean, are :Z·
0 under new manap Jim Riggleman.
Nol bad starts for 1eams tbat
know liiO muc;JI aboutloslns.
"Two games Into tbe season
and we've already come back to
win IWice." Walt Weiss said after
bis single in the ninth inning lifted
tbe Rockies over the New York
Mets 8-71bursday.
"Tbisleanl knows when it's the
seventh, eisbth or olntb inning and
we're witbln slrildng distance at
all, we've got a cbaoce Iii win," be
~-

Scoreboard
Baseball

-The Dally &amp;entlnei-Page 5

Rockies beat Mets; Cubs ·top Reds 6·5

I

'

O..lotte .r. O.ba:o.l p.m ('INij
Su Alltoalo at beaver , 9:30 p. m.

"

Ohio

I

Eas1em defeated Federal HockIng 14-6 In a Tri-Valley Conference soflball comest
Eastern (6-5) gol four runs in
each of tbe first two innings 10 .
break the game open.
Eastern bitters were Jessica
Radford with a single and tbree
runs scored, Nicole Nelson a single
and three runs scored. Patsy Aeiker
(2-3) and singles by Kim Mayle
and Amy Redovian.
Federal hiuers were Maborney
witb a single, and singles eacb by
Matcwn, Holsinger and Pullins.
Rebecca Evans posled the win,
walking three, striking out two and
scauering four bits. Pullins suffered
the loss with II walks, lbree strikeouts and six bits.
Eastern hosts Federal Hocking
in the Division III sectionaliOurna-

menton Monday, May I at4:30.
Inning totals
442-310-x=I4-6-S
Eastern
Federal
101-000-4=6-4-14
WP - Evans
LP - PuiHn.s

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Sl

Pomeroy, OH.

STARTING APRIL 3
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS

Open Mon.-Fri. 9:00.7:00 ·
Saturday 9:00-3:00

a

Till
GRARLY

~ SYSTEM ·
..

OHIO

1994 BUICK
CENTURY OR 1994
OLDS CIERA

2 Door, ABS, air bag, air.
tilt, cru.ise. cassette, quad 4,
dark purple

4 DR, V6, auto, air, power
· windows &amp; locks, till, cruise,
cassette

Your Choice

$14,~9

$10,995

1994
PONTIAC
SUN BIRD
Auto., air, stereo, 4 door

1995
CHEVY
CAVALIER
2 DR, auto , cassette, more!

$12I 677'
.
1994
CHEVY
CAVALIER RS
Auto, air, cassene, 4 cyl.. 4 OR.

$9,699

1994 CHEVY

1995 GMC
•
JIMMY

LUMINA

4x4.SLS decor . .el&lt;·cltoiliC sh tft
tr;_1r1 sfr:r. ~ uto . tJuckt:t srdts.

4 DR , V6, auto, air, tilt , cruise,

more naspl)erry

$11,995

$22,995

power windows

All Used .Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
T~es and title fee not included.
·All payments sul;&gt;ject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

•An pnees •netude
rebates IDdeal8f.
TAxes &amp; tees not
included .

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!
...

�I

'
P8ge · 6 ·· The Dally Sentinel

•

In.the NBA playoffs,

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Friday, Aprll28,~1995:::_ _ __..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __!~~~!!!!

F.rldfY, Aprll28, 11i95

The Dlill:v

Sentinei-P~ge

.

Knicks rout Cavs; Jazz also among victors
NEW YORK (AP) -

The

CleveiJDd Cavalien turned dcfcase
into M1 art form this seasoo, nearly
breaking an NBA record that bas

ltOod ror 40 yean.

ln Game 1 o( their-Eastern Con·
terence playoff series Thursday
nl~ the New York Knicks turned
~art form into a stick figure.
The Knicks sbot 63% from the
field in their 103-79 rout of the
Cavs, includiog 13-for-16 (81.3%)
in the third quarter when an 18~2
tun turned a six-point advantage
lnto a 69-47lead
"The Knicks were excellent in
so many aspects of the game,"
Cavs coach Mike Fratello said.
''Tbey were very prepared for the
aame, and !heir intensity level was
very higb. They shot the ball
extremely well. Yoo can consider it
making shots or a lade of defense,
whichever way you look at it.
Something out there enabled lhem
to shoot at a 63-percentrate."
Cleveland's defensive average
of 89.8 is second only to the 89.7
posted by Syracuse in 1954-55, the
first season of the 24-second shot
clock.
On Thursday night, that defensive blockade leaked badly; and the
Cavs had no answer offensively as .
New York's starters outscored
Cleveland's 77-29.
New York's. staning lineup was
35-for-53 from the field; Cleveland's was 10-for-37.
"It as a great win for us, a great
start," said Pat Riley, who coached
lhe Knicks to the seventh game of
the NBA Fmals last year. "But we
want to keep it.in perspective and
get as ready as we can for Saturday. I know for a fact that they're
going to come back real strong."
Patrick Ewing, who scored 21
points on .10-for,16 shooting,
seemed to have just the attitude

Rilel, WMliiiOlniiDto Game 2.
' We fell sbort last year in the
Onals, so we want to set bttdt and
set the prize," said "We played
tremendous defense, and 'IIC played
big on the boards. It was a team
effon."
Tbe Cavs, who not only gave up
the fewest points in the NBA's last
40 yeat'$, but also scored the few!'Sl
points in that span, stayed in lbe
game for one period before the
Knicks took control. They had a
15-0 second-quarter run to go wilb
the 18-2 spun in lhe third quarter.
Cleveland missed 26 of 37 shots
in those two periods. In the lhird
quarter, when the Knicks left no
doubt of lhe outcome, New York
was 13-for-16 from the field and
Cleveland 6-for-19.
''We made a run to make it
close at halftime, but instead of
chipping away at !hem, it went the
other way i.n the third quarter,''
Fratello said. "We bad our share of
mental· mistakes and physical
turnovers·, so it was a nice blend on
our part."
Charles Oakley had 19 points on
9-for-12 shooting. Derek Harper 16
on 7 -for-8 shopting and Charles
Smith 14 points for the Knicks.
whose 95.1 points allowed ·per
game in lhe regular season was a
·
distant second to Cleveland.
Reserves Danny Ferry and Tony
Campbell were lhe only Cleveland
pla,yers in double figures with 20
and 13 points, respectively. Mark
Price, slowed by an inflamed tendon in bis left foot, finished wilh
six points on 1-for-6 shooting. .
In Thursday night's other games
it was Utah 102, Houston 100;
Indiana 90, Atlanta 82; and Seattle
96, the Los Angeles Lakers 71.
The other four series all start
tonight, with Chicago at Charlotte;
Boston at Orlando; Denver at San

Antonio; and Ptxtland at Phoenix.
Juz 101, Rockell UIO
The Utah Jazz ended the regular
season with a seven-same winning
streak. They started the playoffs by
ktiocking off the defending champions.
Jobn Stockton's driving layup
with 2.4 seconds tO play gave the
Jazz a 102-100 viclory ov!lr the
Houston Rockets on Thursday, the
opening night for four of lhe eight
ftrSt-round series.
Stockton finished wilh 28 points
and 10 assists and Karl Malone
added 25 points as one of tbe
NBA's sreatest two-man combina·
lions managed to bold off a great
one-man show by Hakeem Olajn·
won.
Last season's MVP was 20-for30 from the field and finished with
45 points, but i~ wasn't enousb
when Vernon Maxwell's 3().footer
at lhe buzzer·bounccd off the rim.
"They're world champs and I
thought they were tremendous,"
Stockton said. "Wbo knows how it
would have worked out if It had
gone another 10 seconds."
As effusive as he was about the
opposition, Stockton was his usual
low-key self describing his gamewinner that saw him alone under
the basket wilh four Rockets.
"We just ran a pick and roll ...
and when that didn I worlc, we got
lucky," be said
The Rockets tied the score 100·
100- the eighlh tie iD the fourlh
quarter- on a l6-foot side jumper
by Kenny Smith wilh 16 seconds to
go.
"I did my ~t, but you cannot
have a perfect game," Olajuwon
said. "We lost. This was a golden
opportunity. This was our game
and we lost it."
Game 2 is Saturday in Salt Lake
City and .then the best-of-five series

•

shifts to HOUSIOII.
No NBA champion has been
eliminated in the fust round the
next season sinoe lhe Philadelphia
76ers in 1984.
"We've got to believe that we
can get a win," Houston coach
Rudy Tomjanovich said. "When
you Jive tbem second c~s. you
lose tt We ean't do that."
Malone s1n1ggled from lhe field,
going 8-for-19, and be didn't want
to hear any talk of lhe Jazz being a
two-man team.
"Everybody made a contribution. It's not just atwo-man team,"
he said. ,"All !he guys won't show
up in the slats, but they did a good
job, too."
Adam Keefe had 11 points for
Utah, wbile Tom Chambers and
Antoine Carr added ll&gt;'each.
Smith finished with 14 points
arid Roben Horry bad 13 for Houston, which losuo Utah for the third .
time in eight days.
Pacers 90, Hawks 82
Reggie Miller scored 24 points
and Derrick McKey bad 21 for lhe
Pacers, who began a playoff series
wilh the homecourt advantage for
lhe ftrSt time since joining the NBA
in 1976. They had to rally from a
70-60 deficit in the third quarter
and took the lead for good when
Atlanta went more than six minutes
without a field goal. Atlanta had
five staners in double figures, led
by Grant Long's 18 points: ·
Super&amp;l&gt;ni&lt;S 9Ci, Lakers 71
BAM! - Tbe New York Knkks' Patrick Ewing slams two points;
Seattle snapped a three-game through the hoop In front of teammate John Starks and Cleveland's.'
playoff losing streak as Shawn Danny Ferry (far right) during Thursday night's NliA playoiT game ,
Kemp scored 21 points and Detlef at New York's Madison Square Garden, where the Knicks won 103-·
Schrempf added 20. The Sonii:s 79. (AP)
blew a 2-0 lead against Denver in
SMALL
the opening round of last year's team record for fewest points. It
WANT ADS
playoffs and lost as the Western could have been a lot worse; except
for the 29]l0ints of Nick Van Excl.
Conf~rence' s top seed. They came
PACK
up with an impressive defensive The visiting Lakers missed 24 of
Allll PUM:HI
effort against the Lakers, who set a 28 three-point attempts.

AL action ..&lt;;o_n_un_ued_fro_m_P..:,a~_e5_&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _-:------,-..,-----~f--------,-------...._--Blue Jays 7, Athletics 1
I was going to lhrow around 100 their chests," Clarlc: added. "I hope
The record-low crowd at Sky- pitches." He' ended up throwing . now that it happened we can get
back to baseball. The fans who
Dome was 3,069 less than the 102.
Toronto took control with six stayed late were great and bad
34,139 who turned out April 23,
1990 for a night game wilh Cleve- runs off Ron Darling (0-1) 'in the some encouraging words for·us.'
Kevin Gross (0-1), wbo signed
fourlh inning.
land.
with Texas as a free agent after
I!tdlans 11, Rangers 6
Those who were there saw ·
It was a good night for home spending four· seasons in Los
Hentgen pitch into the ninlh inning
Angeles, allowed nine runs, seven
- be was lhe rust starter in eilher run hitters, as five Cleveland playleague to do so - and Ed Sprague ers and two from Texas cleared lhe earned, and nine hits in two-plus
innings. He, too, was booed. Den·
wall.
bit a grand slam.
The Indians' homers were hit by nis Martinez (1-0) allowed two
Hentgen (1-0) s1n1ck out six and
walked two in 8 1/3 innings as lhc Paul Sorrento, Alben Belle, Eddie runs, one earned, and four hits in
Blue Jays completed ·a two-game Murray, Manny Ramirez arid Car- six innings. striking out three and
walking none.
·
sweep in which they outscored los Baerga. Will Clark homered for
Mariners 3, Tigers 0
Oakland 20-1. The right-hander Texas and was booed as he roundGriffey's homer hit the facade
lost his shu lOut bid in lhe ninth . .
ed lhe bases.
of
the
third deck in right field.
''For my rust outing it was pret"You never e~pect to get booed
"He's
our bread-and-butter guy.
ty good," he said. ·"I !bought I'd at ·home. You do at Yankee Stadibow to provide
He
sure
knows
um,
but
not
here,"
Clark
said.
just go five or six innings, like
heroics,"
manager
Lou Pin ella.
"People bad things to get off
(David) Cone did yesterday. I knew

NL

contests ..

&lt;;o_nu_·n_ued_r_ro_m_Pa_ge_5_l_· - - - - - - - - - - - -

.barely got Sanders. .
\he Reds scored a controversial
run in the sixth after winning an
. argument and getting a replacement
umpire to reverse his call.
Tom Edens (1-0) was the winner
and Randy Myers got a save. An
error by catcher Benito Santiago in
the 11th led to Chuck McElroy (0. I) getting lhe loss.
Braves 6, Giants 4
. David Justice hit a tie-breaking,
three-run homer in the eighth
inning and the Braves won before
another small crowd in Atlanta.
The crowd was announced at
26,120. allhough it appeared only
16,000 people were in the park.
Last year, about 44,000 fans saw
the Braves' second home game.
Justice connecled with two outs
off Dave Burba (0· 1) for his second
home run of the· season. Earlier in
the game, Mark Lemke hit a threerun homer.
Reliever Mike Stanton (1-0)
struck out pinch-hitter Todd Benzinger wilh the bases loaded to end
the eighth with the score 3-3.
Rookie Brad Clontz finished for his
rlfSt big league save.
Starter Tom Glavine, the
Braves' player representative, was
booed when he took the mound.
Also, a spectator sitting· alone in an
upper-deck section in center field
put signs in a dozen seats around
him lhat said, "Striking Fan."
Padres 13, Astros 1
Dip Roberts tied a career high
with four hits and Tony Gwynn
homered, leading San Diego over
· Houston in front of a crowd of
7,468. Last year, the Padres' second home game drew 15,201.
The victory was the rlfSt in the
majors for new Padres manager
Bruce Bocby.
Ken Caminiti 'and Roberto
Petagine, among the 12 players
tr.aded between Houston and San
Diego last December, each hit RBI
singles for ibe Padres. Dave Magadan homered for lhe Astros.
Andy Ashby (1-0) gave up one
rim on four bits in five innings.
Shane Reynolds (0-1) allowed four
runs, all uneamed..in three innings.
Pblnies 6, Cardinals l
GreRR Jefferies had two hits and
scored three times against bis former teammateS as Pbiladelpbia beat
St Louis. Tbe game .at Busch Stadium drew a crowd of 13,483, and
there were more than 8,000 nosbows.·
Darren Daulton drove in three
runs and Dave Hollins had three
bits for ·!he Pbilljes. Tom Pagnozzi
went 4-for-4 and doubled twice for

.

7

the Cardinals,
.
red and drove in bolh ruris for the
David West pitch.ed five innings Expos. Montreal right fielder Moiand was the winner. Danny Jack- ses Alou preserved a run by throwson, who pitched for Philadelphia ing out Jeff King at the plate.
the last two years. gave up four
Pedro Martinez (1-0) Iield the
runs in six innings.
Pirates to two singles in 5 2/3
Expos 2, Pirates 1
innings, and Mel Rojas got the
Before an announced crowd of save. Paul Wagner was the loser. ·
7,047 - the actual attendance at
Expos reliever CarlO'S Perez
Three Rivers Stadium on a rainy made his major league debut. He is
day was about half that big lhc third Perez brother to pitch in
Montreal beat Pittsburgh.
big leagues, joining Pascual' and
Rookie Shane Andrews home- ·Melido.

'd.

~~···~···
~ • • • • • • • •

•

~

•
'

Wodoesday Sorvioea • 7 p.m.

K•o Cllurdt &lt;II Cllrllt
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Swulay Scllool.. 10:30 a.in.
S101day Kilool • 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Weckleoday Scmcc • 7 p.m.

. l

•.

•

•

IS as~

as 0.1is.
Sat., April 29th

49~~
Lavvn·Boy's Easy l&gt;l'!ich" mower brings an end to
bagging and disposing of grass clippings.
. This til]l..and effolt-savmg mower leeds clippings
. back into the lawn as fertilizer. The best part is, when
your grass is too long to mulch, the mower can be adapt·
ed to diScharge from the side or bag. .

O'DElllU

ER CO.

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

VINE ST.
AT THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOliS

LAWN &amp; GARDEN
150 UPPER RI.VER RD.
GALLIPOLIS

634 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY

448-1276

.446-7826

992-5500

$1

•

•

.•

.'
•'
•••

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•••

•
•
•

..

•'
'
.• ''

•

.•

••
'•

.• '••

2/$700

•

: ' 202 East Main S~reet [ VISA ]
:
Pomeroy, Oh1o
~ ~

I

•

9

•

•

•

y

•

•

~

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

r.: ................................. A&amp;.&amp;••••····· ..

•

'
••
• !

,

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

~ ~

.....

31057 Swe Rouoe 125, Langovllc
Putor: Rev. Rid&lt; Mal"!'ed
Sunday oebool- 9:30 Lm.
Sunilay wonhip • t0:3S a.m. k 7 p.m.
c:t..n:h- to-.3S a.m. Youth 6·p.m.
Wedneiday pny~r. aervicc • 7 .p.m.

Enterpriae

Putor: Keith Rador
Somday Sdlool· 10 a.m.

R'* of Sllaroa Holiness Church
Leadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Po-= Rev. O.wey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
. Smday wcnhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p:m.

, Pallor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wcnhip - ll a.m.

.I

Ryoell Run Hoi.._ Church
Pastor: Robert Manley
Suoday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship-10:45 Lm., 1 p.m.
Thursday Scmoe ·7:30p.m.

Rutland ComniunltJ Churdl
Pu10r. Rev. Roy McCarty

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
.Wednaday Scrvicet • 7 p.m.

Reorganl:r.edi]Church &lt;II Jesus Christ
.

.

Church of God

United Methodist

Churdl of God of Prophecy
0.1. Whi~eRd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servieet - 7 p.m.

New Life Cbun:h of God
S.R.
Ricbcl Road. Choottr
William D.

Lutheran

Now Ume Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Marg1tet I . Robinson
Scmceo: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· l0:30 a.m.

Worship · 9:30 Lm. (lot &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd k 4th S~m)

SuOday ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneoday • 7p.m.

Old Dexter Bible CllrlstJan Church

Sunday School : tO a.m.
Morning Worsi';tip: 11 a.m.
Evening Wonhip: 1 p.m.
' Wedneaday SeMcc • 7 p.m.
.. .

Endtlme llouse of Pnyer.

P1stor: Rubert Vance
Smday wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday 1ervic:e ·6:30p.m.

s.....tue
Putor: Aormce Smid!
S~mday SchOol · 10 a.m.
Wonhip ~ 9·un.

The Salvation Anny
liS Butternut Ave.• Pomeroy.
S1111day School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Bethany
Putor. Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
, Worship· 9a.m.
Waloi~oday Services- 10 a.m.

Middleport Cbmmunltr Church
. ·s7S Pearl SL, Middleport

Calvary Bible Chun:h
·Pomeroy Pike, Co. !IJI.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m,
Wednesday Scmce · 7:30p.m.
Sdv•mlll• Wont ofFatth
Pastor: David Dailey
SlUiday School9 :30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Rejoklng L!f• Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Church

or Jesus Christ,

ApostolkFalth
1/4 mi.le paSl Fort Meigs 'on New lima Rd.
· Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday·7:00 p.m.
We~ead11)' ·7 :00 p.m.

Fnday·7:00 p.m.
Clifton Tab.,.nacle Church
Clj{ton, W.Va.
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pnllec-1 "-ably
St. RL 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
SundaySchool.- lOa.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servict.~ -1 p.m.

Pastor: Sam An&lt;k;rson
School tO a.m.

S~mday

Evening -7;30 p.m.

Wodneaday Service • 7:30 P·'1'
Faith T•bernacle Churchb
Bailey Run Road
Pulor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
S1111day School· 10:00 a.m.
Evening 1 p.m.
Thund•y Service· 1 p.m.

Mlddlep&lt;lrl,.,le&lt;ooCal

Third Ave.
Rc:v. Oarlc Baker
Sunday School • lO a.m.
. Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wednaday Scmcco . 7:00p.m.

PutQr.

Presbyterian

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syoaoue
PasiOr. Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

s,...._ Flnl Unlled Presbylerlaa
Pastor: Rev. Kri1111a Robinooo
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - I l a.m.

Haul CommuDity Church
Off RL 124

Harri90111YIIIe Presbyterian Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sdlool · 9:45a.m.

Ea" Letart
Pastor: Ken Molter
Sunday Sdtool· lO a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wedn~•day .'7 p.m .

Putor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Ken Moher

DJr:l"llle Community Church

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Middleport Preobyltrian

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - lO a.m.

Worship · 10:30 ~. m., 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Christian Fellowship Center
·salem 51., Rutland ·

Mulbeny Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Panor: Roy LaWlllsky
Saturday Seryices:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.

Seventh· Day Adnntlst

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor. Helen Kline
Coolville Chun:h
Main "' fifth St .
Sunday School • 10 a.m .
W~nhif • 9 a.m.
Tuesday ScMcu • 1 p.m.

'PallOr. Roben E. M1,1uer
Sunday Sc:hool · 10 1.m.
Worship - 11 ;}5 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday. Service - 7 p.m.

lletheiCllurch
Towouhip Rd., 46&amp;C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Wcdnesdly S"ervioea: . 10 I.ID.

M...,. Chapel Church

United Brethren

Larry Paw. Superintc:ndmt
Sunday Jchool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -1 p.m.

MI. H.,...011 Unlled Brethren
In Clort.l Church
·TeJ.u Community ctf CR 82
Pastor. Raben. Sanden
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship · t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m:
Wednesday Servi~t -7:30p.m.

\

M-dgs Coopci-•tln Pllrlsh
NortiJeast Cluster
Alfred
, Pistor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Hodd...,....Cllurch
G,..ds.Sunday School .. 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednesday Servicz1 - 8 p.m.

Fallh Gospel Church
Lons llouom ·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m:
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Chester

Torcb Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

ML Olive CommunltJ Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bwh

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
wOnhip ·• 9 a.m. ·
School- 10 a.m.

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. R1. t
Pa1tor. Rankin Roat:h
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wooship - 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
Faith Fellowslllp Crusede ror Clorlot
Pas1or: Rev. Franklin Dickms
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

(at Burlingham d&gt;un:h elf Route 33)

Sunday S!:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - It a.m. md 7 p.m.

Wednesday Sc:Jvice ·7 :30p.m.

ML Olive Unlled Methodlllt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Paslor: Rev. Ral~ SpireJ
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
W011hip • 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Thurlday Service• ·1 p.m .

Pastor. Theron Dwham

SuUon
Pastor. Kennelh Baker
s...~ay School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • )O:~a.m . (htk 3rd Sun)

Graham United. Methodlst

While's Chapel WOsleyan
coOlVille Road
Pastor. Rev. Phillip R.idmour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. , .
Wednesday SeMoe- 7 p.m.

.

Harrisonville Communlly Church

Pulor: Kenneth Baker
S~mday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - l0:4S Lm. (2nd k 41h Sun)
. M0111lngSiar
fastor: Kcmeth Baker
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m .
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Service• ~7:30p.m.

Pine GIQYe
Pastor. Dawn Spaldina

Freedom Goop&lt;l Mlato.
Bald Knob, oo Co. Rd. 31
Pallor. Rev. Roger Willford
. Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scmcc- 7 p.m.

Wcdne1day Services - 7 p.m.

·cannel

St. John Lutheran Church

SilverRidae
Pastor: Duane Syderl.llri.dcer
Suoday Scllool. - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Weckleoday Scrvioe- 7 p.m.
Carleton lnlerclenorolaatlonll Cburdt
Kingsbwy Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip serviCe t0:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service-Ill and 3rd Sunday. 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evening Scmce

The BcUenn' Fellowship Ministry

Salem Center
. Pastor: Ron Fien:o
S~mday School · 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip ·10:15 a.m.

The Cllurch or Jesus
Christ ..r Lauer-Day Salnll
St. Rt. 160, 446-&lt;1247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20·11 Lm.
Relief Society/Prieslhood 1l :OS-12:00 noon
Sacnmcnl Servkc 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakin&amp; meeting, hL Thun. • 7 p.m.

South Bethel NewTalaoomt

Wonh.ip ~9:30am. IOd 7 p.m.
Wedneoday • 7 p.m.
·
Friday • fcllow1hip ~ervioe 7 p.m.

Rutland
Panor: Anhur Crabtree
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Scovicet · 7 p.m.

'st. Paul Lutheran Church
Cornet Sycamore &amp;: Second SL. Pt:rnemy
Pa1tor: Dawn Spalding
. Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip -11 1.m.

Apple and Seoond Sls.

·Putor: Steve Reed

Youlh Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Neast Setdftll~nt Churda

Sunday Wonhip ·2:30p.m.;
Thursday servic:et ·7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Wcn~·lOa.m.

Hobson Christian Union
Middlepon, Ohio
Sunday School,IO a.m.
Sunday evening,'7:30 p.m.
Wedn.,day,7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David RuucU
Sunday School and Wcnhip· 10 a.m.
Bvcning Servi=· 7:30p.m.
.
We&lt;ktesday Setvia:o ·7:30p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
LMgBonom

Rodt Springs
PaoU&gt;r.Keilh Rader
S~mday School· 9: IS a.m . .

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnuland Henry Sts.• Ravenswood, W.Va.
Intrim pa1ton: George C.'Weinck
SWJday School._ 10:00 un.
~onhip - 11 a.m.

Syracuse First Church of God

Other Churches

Pomervy
Plstor: Robert It Robinson
Sunday School- 9:lS a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Bible Srudy Tuesday • 10 a.m.

Laurel Cliii'Free M&lt;lb- Church
Panor: Peter Tmnblay
Sunday Sehool-9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedntoday Scmce ·7:00p.m.

Services- 7 p.m.

New Haven Churdt of the Nazarene
Paotor. Glendon Stroud
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,7 p.m.
W~esday Services - 7 p.m.

Purl Chapel
Pastor: Plon:nce Smith
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.ni.

Hartford Churdl of Christ In
Chr151lan Union
Hanford, W.Va.
P8stor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wedne1day Services-7:30p.m.

~

Wedne~day

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.
Min enville
Putor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wcnhip · tO a.m.

VIctory Baptist Indepetldant
52!1 N. 2nd SL Middtcpon
Paswr: Jamea E. Kc:c~ee
Wonhip • !Oa.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: G~gory L. Sears
·Sunday School - 10 a.m. .
Worship -11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servic~ - 1 p.m.

Portland F1nt Church of the N-rone
Putor: Jolm W. Dou&amp;ln
Sunday School ·10:00 a.m.
Wonhip ·6:30p.m.

Heoth (Mlddlepoi'l)

Christian Union

MI. Moriah Chlll'ch ,r God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James S~terficld
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday Setvicet · 1 p.m.

Sunday School .· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pa1Lor. Vcmapye Sullivan

Service-7:30p.m.

Uer Da7 Salnls

Rutland Church fl the Nazarene
Putor: Samuel J;luyc

Foi-atRuli
Pallor: Deron Newman
SOlliday School· 10 a.m.
· Worship· 9 a.rn.
Thursday Scmcco ·'6:30p.m.

7! Pearl SL, Middlepon.
PallOr. Rev. John Neville
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

- . , , Cburch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Thomas M&lt;:Ctung
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
WonhiP • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedne.day Servioea - 1 p.m.
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Gr1te
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhit&gt; • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

FlaiWOoda

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church

SJrKUIO Chon:h oflhe Nazarene
r-: Rev. Riel&lt; StuiJill
Sunday School· ?:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Semces • 7 p.m.

~CborchflltheNua,...

Wonhip. 9 a.m.

Ploe Grove Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off RL 32!1
Pao10r. Rev. O'O.ll Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.in., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Penland-Racine Rd.
Pallor: Janice Danner
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m. ·

I

WedfltldaY Seoviuo -7:30p.m.

Wonhip • 11 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Panor. Ra,r Hun\cr

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
l!vcnins 7:30p.m.
Tucoday &amp; Thursday· 7:30p.m.

a-.a.. Felawoblp

O.rdtoflloeN...._
Puoor: John w. Douala•
Suaday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip ·10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scovicet • 7 p.m.

Sunclly School • 9:4S a.m.
Worship -11 un.

Colwa11 Pllpim Clulpd
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.

of

woclneoday Scovioeo - 7 p.m.

c./rata......

Clild...,.,

Wedne~day

Suaday School· !1-.30 ......

Wonllip • 10:30 UD., 6:30p.m.

AJIJUI1 (S,,.._)
Putor: Deoon Newman

Pastor: Philip Sturm

Mill Woo k
labonel Mak~n~

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
992-3785 'Pomeroy

Syracuse
992 ·3978

RAWLINGS -COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992·5141
264 South 2nd

•
• ••

·····•a.••·····:O.
•

Reed.11vllh: Church o( Christ"

VIANTADS

1

•

Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

o-o~•a•-a.

r-:&lt;mcory A. CuDdiff

Tuppen Plalao SC. PMII
Po-= Slwun !lawman
Sunday School· 9 Loil.
Wonhip -tO a.m.
Tuesday Scmcca -7::!0 p.m.

Holtness

Wedne$day Services ·1 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL

•

992-6983
·:
.,
•

H.,.loc:k Grove ChUrch
. Pastor. Gene Zopp

ReednUie
Paoior: Rev. C..ob:a Mash
Wonhip. 9:30a.m.
!&gt;onday School· 10:30 a.m.
· UMYF Smday 6:10p.m.

Full Goopel Ughl3304! lliJand Road, Pomeoor

MI&lt;Hl J ol1 Cll- of lloe Naror--

Sunday School ' 9:30 Lm.
Evening • 1 p.m. ·
Wedneday Senoia: • 7 p.m.

Wonhip- 3 p.m . ·

Eden Unlle&lt;l Brdllrea In Cbrla
2 1/2 miles north o1 Reedsville

on SUre Route 124
PastOr: Rev. Robert Mai\ley
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scmceo • 7:30p.m.

these area merchants

•

,SUPER SUNDRY

•

Lanpvllle Chrlltlan Churdl
S~mdoy School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scmcc 7:30p.m. ·

G,_ Epiocopal Cllurdl
326 E. Main SL,,Pomeroy
Rector. Rev. D. A. dul'lantiu
Holy ~ucharist and
Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m.
Coll'oe hoolr loltowina

Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m .

Sacr..t Hta11 catholic: Cllen:h
161 Mulbeory Ave.• p...,eroy, 992-S898
Pastor: Rev. WalU~r B. Heinz
.
S.L Coo. 4:4S-S:1Sp.m.; Mus- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4S-9:1S a.m.,
Sun. Ma11 - 9;30 a.m.
Dailey Muo • 8:30 a.m•

•

Sibs. 8 oz.

WE NOW HAVE
INSTANT
LOTTERY!

Liberty Chrlltlan Church
Dexttr
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evonin&amp; • 6;30 p.m.
Thunday Scm~ • 6:30p.m. ·

Wedneoday Seoviceo-7:30 p.m.

·sund.ay School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m .
Bible Study, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Catholic

•

••
•

Pa-. Rev. Owlet Muh
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
. Worship - ID-.30 a.m.

Ep1scopal

R1.7 ...
Pa11.0r: RC'f'. Robert
Sr.
Suaday S!:bool
a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Scmcc - 7 p.m.

W~ScMc:co-7p.m.

t.aa-

Hillside Baptist Church
SL RL 143 just off RL 1
Pastor. Rev. James R. Acree:, St.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Rolland Free Will Bapllot
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Bvonin&amp;·7p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

•
•

Laundry
Detergent

LOW! LOW!
·CIGARETTE
PRICES!

Wonhip • 10 ••·• 7 p.m.

Anllqulty BapdSI
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Thunday Services • 1:30 p.m.

•

•
•
•
•
••
'

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Forest Run Bapllst
Pastor : Arius llurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · ll a.m.
MI. Moriah BaptiJI
Fowth &amp; Main SL, Middlcpon
Paator: Rr:v. Gilbert Cnig,Ir.
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m. ·
Worship -10:4S Lm.

• •'
..
A FULL LINE OF MOTHER'S DAY &amp; GRADUATION CARDS •

.•

Worship- lla.m., 7:30p.m.

Hkkory Hills CIIUrdl fiiChrllt
Paotor. Joseph B. Hookino
Sunday Sc:bool • 9 a.m.

Fallh B~pUst Church
Railroai:l St., Masoo
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship ·lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

99¢ ·:
39• ·~-

PUR EX

Max Factor MakeUp
20% off Reg. Price

Bndford Church of C~rt.l
Comer of SL RL 124 k Bradbuoy Rd.
Evan4eli11: Derek Stump
Youlh Minister: Michael Teqaidcn
S~mday School-9:30a.m.
.
Worship· 8:00a.m.,I0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednes4ay Scmces -7:00p.m.

po

•

.

Rolland Church &lt;II Cllrt.l
Puwr: Eu&amp;cne E. Uncia wood
S~mday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Old Bethel Free Will Bapll" Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
·
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Servicea -

'•

• Huggies

:..: ITanning Supplies j-

· Pastor: T&lt;&gt;m Runyoo
S~mday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30a.m.
Youth Mee1ina • S:30 p.m.
l!vonin&amp; Semoe -7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Bapllit
Racine,OH
Paator : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday Sehool · l 0:30,a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
Thursday Scmcc•· .7:00p.m.

•

•

Bradbur1 Cllurch fl Christ

Evening-6:30p.m.

69

: : Styrofoam Coolers
•
•
$199
• ' Bait Buckets
•

Tu...,.n Plain Church ..r Chrllll
Pall«: Soanley Miacla
S~mday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:~ a.m.
Wednaday -7 p.m.

First Bapd" Cllurch
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wor&gt;hip·lO:tSa.m.,7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· S:30 p.m.
Lord's Supper Ia SlDiday of ev&lt;l)l month.
Wedneoday Service· 7:00p.m.

•
•

•

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scmceo . 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service• - 6:30p.m.

2/$
10# .$399 ',
bag

Rutland F1rst BopJbl Church
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip • 10:4! a.m.
Polaero1 F1111 Baplllt
Pastor: Paul SliJoon
East Main SL
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

7J.. c~...... "'a.rt.t
·~P&lt;cwmii..,..,IW'Y, HuriJonville !IJI. (RL143)
PallOr: R..er Wa11&lt;11
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Scmceo -7 p.m.

per Towels

• Rubbing
Alcohol

Saturday $emce-7:30 p.m.
Sunday School -10 a.m.
Wedneoday Scmcc-7:30 p.m.

Wednelday Services-7:00p.m.

..

Hangers

Putor: Leo Hoyman

MI. Unloo BapdSI
Paator: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:4S a.m.

•

Kingsford
Charcoal

Puwr: Jadt ColeiJO"e
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodneoday ScMc:co ·6:30p.m.

Alh Su.et, Middleport

Racine Flrllt Bapttsc
Patlor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aan:n Young
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Semces ·7:00p.m.

' ~

••

.........- Rlctc• Clloordt of Clorilt

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip ~ 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Hours: Mon.·Fri. 9-5
Sat.'9·4 &amp; Sun. 1·4
3Y. IJ)iles past Southern High
School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio
614-949·2682

• 8 Pack Plastic

l" .... 3nl Somday

F1nt Southem BaP.tbt
4 t 872 l'.meroy Pike
Pastor: B. Lamu O'BI)Iant

····························~~··········~
• • • • • a • a • a ~ a • a • • • • a • • • • • • a a • • • • • • • •
• • • •
~

We Have All Your Picnic Supplies

ra--Jotrny Wallace

Free Wtu Baplbl Cllll'dl

.KAREN'S .
GREENHOUSE

•
'
'

•
•

Sth .... Maia

Putor: AJ!Wuoo
y - MiaiJier: BiD Pruier
, _ , Sdlool- 9-.30 ....
Worship- i: 15, t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Ruo BoptiJI
Pastor: Bill UU!e
S~mday School· lOa.m.

.

•
•'
•' ..
•
•
•

Middleport CJoll'dl "'Clorilt

Flnl
Cllurdt
... Pastor:
Scott"RSIIIIday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday S!:bool· 10:30 a.m.

a.....

PP_t..,t•.,,, w.......
lfCiortol
33226Ciila.'a llcao Rd.
-~ Sdlool-ll ......
Wonhip -llla.m., 6 p.m.
WedneodayScmCIOI·7p.m.

•Pansy •Viola
•Broccoli •Cabbage
•Cauliflower
Cold Weather Plants

SUPER SUNDRY
SPECIALS
.

•
•

-

":r.i.:~
~-­

P-: Bob Raa.lc&gt;lpb

CongregatiOnal

Wonllip- IQ-.30 a.m.,
Wedaeaday Sorvi1101 •

NOWOPEN .
SPRING SEASON

Brewers 9, White Sox 'II
~ilwaukee won behind a six. run sixth inning and five strong
innings of pitching by Cal Eldred:
John Jaha, who hit a grand slam
in Milwaukee's home opener
Wednesday, had two doubles and
scored twice to raise his average to
.429. The Brewers sent 11 1batters
to the plate in the sixth and got
RBis from Mau Mieske, Fernando
Vina, Darryl Hamilton, Kevin
Seitzer (2) and Greg Vaugbil.
Eldred (1-0) allow~d four hits
and only one unearned run in live
innings. Jim Abbott (0-1) allowed
two runs on a three hits in 4 1/3
innings, but gave up four walks in
his White Sox debut.

Left-bander Randy Johnson
struck out eight in six innings and
allowed only three hits. Relievers
Bill Risley and Bobby Ayala did
not allow a hit in the final three
innings to complete lhe shutout.
It was the rust baseball game at
the Kingdome since last July 18,
lhe day before several. ceiling ·tiles
fell into the stands and forced the
closure of ihe building until after
che cancellation of the end of the
season.
I·
"It was great to finally play at
home again," Johnson said. " ·f
think if this team remains intact
and· remains exciting the crowds
will come back and suppon us."

Jop ...

Middleport

Ill~~

CHURCH
BIBLES

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

(.\\\;{( Slrttl Q3•.,~1
93 Mill Street
Mlddlepol1. Ohid 46710

'•

992-2975

Cucklei' Consulting Inc.
f ..... l'll'm. .,.....C!W !!Mt §tWt f.ew;e

1050Carte• Road, Shade, OH 4l5176 •
SutJnSu Phonl!l61 4·fl96..1o&amp;OO
.

. Mobilll. 614-541-Q296, F"X . 614·ll96· 14do

W. Tid Cuckler, Prnldenl

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

I06 Bullemut Ave.
992·6454

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

llli\1\_ .

Crow's Family Restaurant

ol Columbus, Oh.
804 w.

Main

992·2318 Pomeroy

w.

992-5432

R~~

tl]l"

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2259

~HABMACY
'we Foil Doctors'
Prescriptions

992-2955

EstabliShed 1913

992-2121

172 Nolth Second Ave

·''Dignity tmd Service Always"

EAST MAIN

992·2804

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

EWING FUNERAL HOME
REALTY

Walker Alley, Racine, Ohi9

SWISHER .&amp; LOHSE

115 E. MemOrial Dr.' Pomeroy
992-2104

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chickeri"
228
Main St. , pomeroy

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

06 Mulberry Ave.

992-7075

Pomeroy

. Middleport, Oh

Pomeroy

�..

Page 8 The Dally Sentinf)l

Scott named
toLuciana
dean's
list .
Scott, a senior at

Centenarian
:birthdays
·observed
·

~­

for listing on the National Colle-

·5 4 teams to participate in WalkAmerica

.. ... . . . .

"Say Love With
Aowers From!"

,

.-

-

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
•

106 Bunemut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

Public Notice

there are so many new· teams from

PubliC NQtlce
County Commlaslonero 200
Eaat 2nd Street Court
Hou.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Ia
called to all of the
raqulrementa contained ln.
lhlo bid packet, particularly
to the Federal Labor
Stendarda Provlalona and

RESOLUTION 2.95
IE IT RESQLVED, by the
Gallia and Meigs counties this Pleasant v31Jey Hospital. The City
year," said Ellison. Over 50 area of Point Pleasant is also providing Council of the VIllage of
Pomeroy, 111 m•mbera
schools, businesses and civic orga· special assistance.
thereto concurring:
·will
be
taken
by
Team
photos
nizations will participate in all.
That the Clerk/Treaeurer
Gold sponsors. of this year's Randy Houdasllclt of the Image of lha VIllage ol Pomeroy,
Gallery
beginning
at
12:45
p.m.
event are Subway, Shell Chemical
lranolar tho aum of
Company, the Exxon Point Pleas- Three regional radio stations, Big $40,000.00 (Forty-Thciuoand
Wages,
ant Food Mart, Big Counlry 99.5, Country 99.5, Lite 92 FM, and dollaro) from tho Gonerol Davis-Bacon
varloue
Insurance
Fund to the Stroot Fund lor
Magic 101, Lite 92 FM, The Image Magic 101 plan to broadCast live the
operation of current requirements, various equal
'from
the
site.
Clowns,
line
dancers
Gallery, AVI Foodsystems and
expenaee.
Thll resolution opportunity provlalona, and
Peoples Bank. Bronze sponsors and face-painters will also entertain deemed emergency for the requirement for a
include Appalachian Power Com- . prior to lhe walk. Designated operetlon at · current paymenl bond and
performance bond lor 100%
pany, Pleasant.Valley Hospital, "greeters" will be on hand al the IXplnMI.
of
•he cqntract prl,ce.
walk
site
to
answer
questions.
Paued
Aprll17,
1995
.
Pleasant Valley Home Medical, the
No
bidder may withdraw
Kathy
Hysell,
Every
person
wbo
completes
the
Children's Clinic, Burlile Oil and
hll
bid
within thlrly (30)
Clortc/Treoau
...
r
A-Z Rental, Inc. Signs at the start- wa'lk will receive a packet of
days altar the actual data .of
John
Muuer,
P"'aldenl
ing line will identify other sponsors coupons and favors donated by (4) 21, 28; 2TC
the opanlng thereof. Meigs
local merchants and compiled by
County Commlatlonere
and supporters of the event.
rea..-vaa the right to waive
Holzer Clinic, Bank One, Hein· employees of Fruth, Inc. A sticker
Public Notice
any
Informalities or to reject
to
the
packet
will
entitle
attached
er's Bakery and Indiana-Michigan
any or all bide.
NOTICE TO
finishers
J.Q
.
a
free
sandwich
served
Power will each sponsor a check.(4) 21, 28; (5) 5; 3TC
CONTRACTORS
point along the walk route. First aid by employees of Subway:
Sealed propoaalo lor the
stations are being coordinated by
conatructlon of a lire
Public Notice
station bay In Scipio
Townahlp will be received
RESOLUTION NO. 3.95
by the Melga County
A
RESOLUTION
Commissioners office In the AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR
New Life Covenant Church of God
Meigs County Court Houae, OF THE VILLAGE OF
Pameroy,
Ohio until 10:00 POMEROY, OHIO TO APPLY
on Riebel Rd in Chester, Ohi.b
a.m., May 12, 1995, and then TO THE STATE OF OHIO
at 1:00 p.m. at sold office FOR PARTICIPATION IN
985-4157
opened and read aloud.
THE SMALL CITIES CDBG
Each bid must be WATER AND SANITARY
Rev. William Hinds
accompanied by 'either a bid SEWER COMPETITIVE
bond In an amount ol·100% PROGRAM.
El Paso Drive Church of God Choir
.
of the bid amount with a WHEREAS, lhe Slate of
surety oatlolactory to the Ohio, Dept. of Development
from Columbus, Oh
aforesaid Meigs County provides
financial
Commissloner.s or by assistance
to loc~l
Oakley Square Church ofGod.Choir '
certified check, cashiers gover.nments for the
check, or Iotter of credit purpose of addressing local
from Cincinnati, Oh
upon a·solvent bank In the needs;
The Willing Vessels
amount of r,ot less than
and WHEREAS, the
1D% of the bid amount In VIllage of Pomeroy desires
from Columbus, Oh
favor of the aloraoald Meigs to participate In the
County Commissioners. Bid Program to receive financial
Bonds
shall
be aulstance under the Small
Saturday, April 29th
a~companled by Proof of Cities CDBG Water and
Authority of the official or Sanitary Sewer Competitive
7pm- 9 pm
agent signing the bond.
Program; and
Bids
shall
be
sealed
a'nd
WHEREAS, the Council of
Refreshments &amp; food servt;ld afterwards
marked as Bid lor Scipio the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Township VFD and mailed Ohio has the authority to
or delivered to: Meigs apply lor llnanclal
'

· P,ublle Notice
aaalatance and to
odmlnlater the amounts
received from the Stale of
Ohio, Dept. of Development
through Its Small Cltlea
CDBO Water· ond Sanitary
Sewer
Compotlllvo
Program; and

WHEREAS, tho Council of
the VIllage of Pomeroy muot
direct and authorize the
Mayor of the VIllage of
Pomeroy

to

act

In

connettlon with tho
application and to provide
such additional. Information
ae may be required
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED BY THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO AS FOLLOWS
SECTION ONE: The
VIllage Council ol Pomeroy,
Ohio authorizes the Mayor
as
the
official
representative of the Village
of Pomeory to make
application to participate In
the State of Ohio
Department of Development
Small Cities CDBO Water

SMI11f'S

c.-, 8lildlng &amp; Remodolino

opportunity,

decision-making, love,
succese,monev.
UVE24HOURS

1·900·861·

3800/bt. 4741
$3.99 min. Mull be 18 yra.

-

Procall Co.
(602} 954-7420

..

Counclla Proaldent
Kathy Hy..u

.

Clark of Council
Approved lhla 17 doy of
April, 1995.
·
John A. Blater, Mayor
(4) 21, 28; 2TQ
PubliC Notice

.

INVITATION TO.BID
The VIllage of Syracuse
will accept bids until 12
noon on May 4, 1995, from
legally Jlcenaed lnouranco

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

· :ROBERT BISSELL
. CONSTBUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages .
• Complete
· ·Remocfeilng

year, commencing May 21,

199S,commerclal properly,
commerclalgenerelllablllty,
commercial auto coverage

and commercial Inland
mariOe Insurance. Bids are

CALL 1·900-945-6100

Ex1.8587
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.
{602) 954-7420
4/25/lfn

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUOION
Carpenter Work
Free Estimates
Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614·742·2165 or
304-882-3704
AskforMika

Stop &amp; .(!ompara
FREE ESTIMATES

'985-4473
'

t

........

.

'

MANLEY'S
HOME
IMPROVEMENT '
I
Roofing, Siding, Room I
I

Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220
B~well,

OH 45614
614) 388-9865

.
'

•

•

--~

-

AGAIN

. .

companies, or their agenls,

to be In a sealed envelope
marked "Insurance Bid"
and submitted or mailed to
Jan lu Zwllll ng, Clerk·
Treasurer,
VIllage of
Syracuse, Municipal Bldg.,
and
Sanitary
Sewer
Syracuse, Ohio 4&amp;n9. The
Competitive Program, and . VIllage of Syracuse
to provide all Information roaerves the right to reject
and
documenlJttlon
any or all bids.
required In said Application
Janice Zwilling,
lor aubmloolon. ·
Clerk·Treasurer
SECTION TWO: The
VIllage of Syracuse
Council hereby approvea (4) 14, 21,28 3TC
filing an application for
financial assistance under
In Memory
the Small Cities CDBG 2
Water and Sanitary Sewer
Competitive ProiJram . .
In Memory Of
SECTION THREE: The
C o u n c II
he reb y ·.
MATTHEW
understan~s and agrees
(MATT) WEAVER
that participation In lhe
Program qlll require
Who passed
compliance with program
guidelines and assurances.
away seven
SECTION FOUR: The
years ago,
Council hareby commits
Itself to provide the local
April 29, 1988.
share funding as described
In the application.
Lovingly l)'lissed
Passed this 17 day of
by family &amp;
April, 1995.
John Musser
friends.

'NEVIl
BE LONELY

614·985-4180

to provide to the VIllage of
Syracuse lor the torm of (1)

.FIIMODIUH
SEIYICI ...

Advlee on future

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(6'14) 992-5535
{614) 992·2753

PubUc Notice ·
ATIEST:

PSYCHICS

CONSTRUCTION

Only 2,500 college students in
the nation are selected for the
national list. Sbe Is mM:I of the nominees for a number of scbolarsbips
to be awarded from a $330,0!)0
fund, and also for a national scbolarsbip.
tuciana, daughter of Steven and
Sandra Scott, Cheshire,, is '!"Orking
. toward a bachelor of science
de ree in accounting.

JOHN LOWEN and activities director JAMIE GILLISPIE
'

· Fifty-four teams and over l,SOO
• participants from Mason, Gallia
and Meigs counties are expected 10
· be on hand Sunday at Harmon Padc
· in Point Pleasant for the annual Tri·
• County WalkAmerica for the
March of Dimes.
The event is set 10 begin with a
· ribbon-cutting ceremony by
. WalkAmerica Ambassador Dianna
., Eads of Gallipolis, followed by a
· 3.5 walk through the streets of
· Point Pleasant. Now in its sixth
year, the walk ls .the llirgest annual
fpnd-raising event in the region.
According to the West Virginia
. State Chapter of tbe Marcil of
Dimes. the 1994 Tri-County Walk
. America was the largest per-cipita .
, walk in the United Slates. Approximately 1,200 participants raised
$47,000 to aid the fight against
birth defects, and organizers are
b'opcful that this year's walk will
· exceed that total. The money raised
· by WalkAmerica is used to fund
· the March of Dimes' programs of
research and education.
· .
WalkAmerica doordinator
Dianna Ellison gives much of the
credit for the success of this year's
. fund-raising efforts to the willingness of people from all three coun·
; ties to work together on the project.
"We're especially pleased that

'

giate~'sLisL

years.

-----~

.

sball University, bas been selected

Two Pomeroy Nursing and
Rebabililation Center residents
re&lt;:clllly observed lbeir 103nl biJthdays wuh a party at the center.
John Lowen was born in Virginia on March 26, 1892. He bas
been a PNRC resident for six years.
Mable Pickens was born in Clifton
on March 30, 1892. and bas also
resided at the center for over six

Pomeroy-Niddleport, Ohio

.,

Aprll28,1995

Maggies Crockpot

'Clifton, WV
·
Dine-in or Ca!JY-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

. MDDII• •IUn'lftDI

POMEROY, CIHIO
~
~tanka cleaned &amp;. poitiblatollata ranted.
Dilly, lfllldy &amp;. monthly rental rates.
Jab 11181 ' Clrilp Sltel' Fllll!ly Allllionl I Plrllea
!10\'1 OFi ERING GEIJEHAL HALJLitJG
Umeetona, Send, Gravel and eoa1 ·

. " - ' Rlpllr'
, Remodeling
Kitchin &amp; lllth AIAIIImllodel&lt;&gt;do!J,fng
Flaom Additlont
· Siding, Roofing, Plllae
AIMonlble
lniUIIId- Ex~
Call Wayne Nell992-4a
For Free Eatillllles
.

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL rOH SALE

.

992·3954

4/t:IIH

I ""'''J!''tt:y fJ~H.iiH'

'

.DII'IIPPLIIIICI

Your
Sweetheart Is

ofoctory Autho~zed Parte

Your Pho1e
1~945-6200

oDith-..

Surrounding Area&amp;
. (614) 995-3561 or

992·5335

4/25/ltn

ILIIIHI• low Riles) ·

WICKS

'

'.

(Specialize In
driveway sp~adlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fnl Dirt

614·992·3470 °

llo\\ \IW ~
E\c \\ \ 'IT\C

STO-A·WAY

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING

'

1111Wn

•.

Buy • Sell • Trade
WHAnAMACALLIJ
SHOP

Scrvice'11.
Home Site!, Laut.J

NEW&amp;USED
Household·
Collectible
9·5 T·Si.m.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR33N
992-7502,or 992·5805

&amp; Driveways.

Trucking.
· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dira

,.,.,

304-882-2996

11

Help Wanted

WAttT TO BE A PflrtT OF A
"·" " ~WIHHittG TEfiM? C7
APPLY NOW. ·
MUST BE WILLING TO
, ~WORK Ill HOURS;----._

412&lt;1105

SEND RESUME TO P.O. BOX 729·05
POMEROY,OHIO 45769

Chrla
Sch~rfel

fLEA MARKET
SJ, At. 33, Mason
773-6025

wiU

VAliS. All
be sold at Solbstlll~lal dlscoulls!
PI• $5011 to $211111 cash back or 3.6"/o APR llnatclng available (ur.
to 36111111tllll) on selected models on appriJnd t:redil. Tenns ani ·
abiLIIJito 84 montlls!
· ·. • ••' "' '

I SI d

Outside setup spaces $5.00 day.
Large selection ol Indians,
pitchers, shell chimes, books,
spices,
clothing,
furniture,
anlique, toys, Home Interior, lamp
shades, records, household items
&amp; lots more.

wil

car buyets
be on hand to glle highest ~n
value for your automobile. Please bring rour title, registration
cllll, and paJIIIIInl bot* Happllcallle.
1111 SALES PBIMITIED 10 DfAI.BIS. This cleanllce is tor 1111ail CUItamers only. Prices apply to awilable ualts only. lo ordering per·'
mllted at U.. prices.

Certified

WAYNE'S

PLACE
Presents

CHARLIE LILLY

,

,588
IIIIAIIIIIW 'li CIEVY AS1Il EXTBilED CIIIVEIUJII VAl

5-SERIES PICKUP
• Dover S&lt;de Alfbag
• Rear Aoi&gt;LOCk Brakes
• Powe~ Steef'•~g
• Power Brakes

• Custom Clolh 1n1er10r
• Steel Beited Tires
··Sale Price I ~ GMAC F~sl l 1me
Buyer ~n&amp;ve11 Qual,fied.

• 16 Valve Power
• Dn'&lt;!r S~e Airbag
• 4Wheel Anti-Lod&lt; Brakes

• Power Steenng

· Power Brakes

• Extended Chassis

• Power Door LOCks

• PIS, P/B

• Sola/Bed

• Dnver S&lt;Cie ~~ Bag • Power Windows · lnd~roct l9iJbng
• Ant"lock Brakes
• Power Locl&lt;s
• Prem1um Wooo Pkg.
• Full ConversiOn·
• Air Condoon
• TilL Cruise
• Automatk: Overdrive
cassene • Alum1num Running Bds.
• V1sta
Ch~rs
·loaded'

• AM'FM Stereo
• Slyled 'Mieeil
· SteelBetted T•es
• Well Equ!ll&gt;ed!

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVEIIIE
• Air Concl1110n
• Dual AntJag
• Anl&gt;lock Brakes
·Automatic
• AMifM Cassano

• Dual A• Coml&lt;&gt;tanp •Alu111num Whe.;s

Clma1e Contr~

• Power Antenna

• Power Onver &amp;

FRIDAY, APRIL 28
9:30 P.M.·1 :30 A.M.

DEE &amp; DALLA

COURT
STREET
. GRILL
FRIDAY, 28'h

No Cli:x I'M . DIMJ!Id'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY

• Key~ss Remote ·
Entry System
•LoiWedl

WRANGLERS
I

Presents

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·Z844
344·5947. 422·0756
•

•

DUI • SR-22
DISCOUNTS
I •~.

Best Rates
(614) 992-7040
Pomeroy 412Mtn

AND IUMOVAL

I ON I

1·90()..656·5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co. .
(602) 954·7420

41~5

I
\

SYMMES VALLEY
BAND THIS WEEKEND

(No Sunday Calls)

.&amp;n~.... Floo lli1rb~
2/l2/92Jifn

.,.

-

··--

-- - .

- --·

·-

Shr U bs Shaped
and Removed

Tor•,Miec.llema.
Moving Solo:

l.lmoll81ne for
Weddings. Proms

andSpeelal
Ot.~aslons

(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
~1/U5

AprM

Bond s.w.....~pulor- Color

llonhor, ..,.,._ Anllauoa, 214
N. AlWood,
GJOnde.

~

a;,;;id,;

Rio 'Tiro, Rio

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

.

Kenny's.Auto Rental

'

Kenny's is the place to.come
when you need a car rental.
We Have Cars and Vans! ·

!
;

Kenny's Auto Center

·-

264 Upper River Rd.
OH. 45631

C lamllv yanl Nil Llbbf
Fllhw"• Y'eltowbueh Ref, Raci~W,
lion. &amp; fh!a., lily 1-1, w,
rodl• lovo -~ 4 bor a l - . 2
cholro, ciGChlng .&amp;
mile.

- v- llldd'-' l oy

COO Rutland ill.,
1
1·2. It rain- Mrt dly. uwn
mower, adult, baby &amp; lodcler

clolhoo.

All Yonl SOioo IIUOI Be Pold In
1_800 -4 86 _1
-..-. DNtll,.: 1:00pm lhe
- . the ed le io Nn,
Bus. (614) 446-9971 . cloy
SUndoy edMion- 1 :OOprn Fttcloy,
,
,.., llondoy edllon 10:00o.m.
SOturdor.
AHTIQU£

OR

992·7013
992·55530R

/1.7,

· =-=~~~~Colo.
.. _.

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A

l oy

ChMie s.rgo,.•o o1c1 trw '"""·

Listen to voice mail messages left by. interes ting
Sihngl~s of a!Iages. Leave messages for singles
t at mterest you or open your own voice mail
box. It.'s fun, exci ting, and can lead to new
friendships and me&lt;mingful relationships. ·

~

SALE·

:t~.=';'.ai~.:U::•S:.

Interesting ullllJ;.ti;O'&gt;
. . Safely
And Privately
I

Fron &amp; Po'm, Apr. 30, 12~
~~.W:: ~•*o•,
Oh., r-nlillp Z7 left oft 111 i3

N. pullolrg--.

~a":-.~~-=:.:~

ct.~orHtu.2-pounc~-.,

1:1· rv, c~o~~o..
·
·
0orogo- 1 lillie.., 14s, tum

Week- 24 Hours A Day

;=:':'~2~-2~2=6=9~~~;=~D~A:R:W:I:N:,O::H:I0::::::::·:$:2.:9:9/:M:i:n:M:u:si:B:e:l:8~Y~r=s.==·~~~-~irlghlonLMRd., lloy·1-3.
sv!~~~OP
HAULING &amp;
Community Cab Co. Inc.
EXCAVATION
I

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septi1 Systems, Trailer &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates

J NS

oe • ayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
. '614·742·2138

: QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Custom Made
•Solid vinyl
·replacement
·windows
•Free Estimates
•Starthag4\t
$200 Installed
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

992·9949 • 992·6471

lluhllamlir yard _,. - o f
Lourol &amp; A11 t..wlo Sl-. llldd~, OhJo: . ..., 14. .

Hrs. of Operation: Mon.-.Fri. 8:00A.M. til6:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Sundays by appt. only.
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surtounding
area. Call for rate schedule.
Mln.$2.00
3f31!95

Von! s.• Roderick Grimm'•
nsldence.
828
Broadway,
Rocl,., Oh, Mondor !lor 1a1,
uUing real ehaap. .

POOR BOYS TIRES
FREE • Battery Check • Front End
Ch~ck • Exhaust Inspection
We offer major brand tires- Discou.n t SuprSwamp, Computer Balancing,
Auto Light Truck, Compir's Struts,
Shocks· Computerized FMCZ&amp;4
Wheel Alignments, ATV Tires &amp;
Tubos
Rt. 33 &amp; Hornton St. Mason, WV

Huge !loving &amp; Vord Solo. Fur·

nhure, clolhlng, Home Jnterfar:

toole, paint, '-wn mo•.,.. rnucti

moro. lui

Grandvlew

on rlghi-

Holghle
a1
faltQfound.. Frldly, s.twd.ly,
llariday I Tu-y.
·

Vard S.a.. 2305 Ltncoln Aw.
Sllturctar onlr. Home kMarior:

lawn erafta, mltc.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pooroon Aucllon Compon~
lull limo IIUCIIOI)Mr, complolo

--Sol-

aucUon
aervM:e.
Ucenaad
il66,0hlo I Wool Ylralnlo, 304-

Rl- Rd boolcloT:CIOpm;
lurlllo
OIL
Floo ll""'al Thut,
Ftl, Sal. ......_111.

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

H&amp;H SAWMILL

IMAGES

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

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

'

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

Diane Hendricks
Haward L. Writesel
•
• ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

t"

.

--

houM

773-5785 0. soc.~.

110. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Loo~ for the Red and While Awning"

SUMM~R

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

. 32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Dahny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

614·742·2193

4
I !Mr

Giveaway
Old Dog s-, Po"

SpOnill To GoOd K1c1a. I'M Ut 002'

·

WMh

412B/1fn

Rent a

.

Sun,

So~

·2tlh, .30th, H, Fumlti.II'Wt Toota,

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

Misc. Jobs.
Bill Slack
.

-7.

On Rt. 211, ,_, . . Rt. 7, ..,
Good
Clothing,
Chlldron,
WornM, Men 1 ruu 8lu Bad, 1
Borblo Bed, Lg. Toy a..,

Pomeroy, Ohio
-·

!loy 1811

Doole.., Crafts, Ilion&gt;
~ Colloctlon 01 Avon ....
Little Of E¥ti'Ythlngl 114-~208, 114-ZSU511.
Frl Zllh, Sot 28th, W, Lodl•
Sl- 1.., 112 Mile OUt Goorgoo
CrHI&lt; F.- Sla..
2nd,

J---.-----------..;;;:::o;:;::..,,.r,l

Specializing in Custom
• Frame. Repair
NEW&amp; USED P'"RTS FOR

Light Hauling,

LIVE
PSYCHICS
.

·Laure[LitTW
Service

Passenger Seat

•

•

Accidents/
Violations

614-992·7643

. ,WHALEY'S
PARTSAUTO

992·2060

Auto Insurance
Easy Payment
Plan

MASON

WEST VIIIGIIA'S 11 CONVEIISlCII VAIIIIEAlfll HAS AIIIIVEIITCIIY
Of OVBI300 IIIAIIIJ JEW CHEVROlET COIVERSICII. VAliS.
.Selllt:tlon Includes AslrD All Whlllllllrltlls and G-211'1, both avail·
allle willl ralsld 1!1ofs or low tllpl. Prices range lram $17,388 to
$36,988.
.

I

• craftsman Tools
• Toys
! Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy·Seii-Trsde

'A/I Ohio

TOM PEDU HAS AI IIIVEITORY OF 8VER 800 BRAIII lEW

-

"TREE TRIMMIN~

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

.. ClllillllllEI'S, C1 DS'il ~811 ES, PCIIllACS, IIUICIS, GEOS Alii CUSTIIM

-·

6

BULLETIN BOARD
'6°0 column Inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday

-~·

992=6215

One"\lleout _
143 from At. 7
'Tues.• w~: • Fri.• Sat.

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel

and RESlDENTIAL
· FREE ESTIMATES

!lor tal, 2nd~3rd, 41h, $111100 S.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
: ~. Room Addilii:ms
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing '
• Interior &amp; Exterior
, Palnling
.Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

MR. RIGGS

Bulldozi1'8, Backhoe,

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you!!! We're
live and waiting!!!
1·900·388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
. (602) 954-7420

.

.

-

AU Yon! SoiOO lluot Be Pold In
Adv..-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lhe cloy boloro lhe ad 1o to ""'·
Sundoy edHion • 2:00 p.m.
Frldlv: llondoy odlllon • 2:00
p.m.8owrdor.

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

539 BRYAN PLACE

Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New ·Haven, WV

.I

12f141tfn .

ton, lily , al, 2nd 3nl.

C~MMERCIAL

Open Mon.· Fri. 10 a.m.·S p.m.
Weekends Call6!4-742-2712

MIDDLEPORT ~-2m
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl :
Replacement, ·
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors; Storm ·
Windows; Garages.
'
FrM Estimates

HAULING

......

I

' J&amp;L INSULATION

Clearins,· Septic Syste1ns

- :=.1

(Depot St.) Rulland lo
Leading Creek, then ·to
Paul ins Hill. Just 2 l/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

oMicrowa- •Oiapoaela
•Thanu lhlga &amp;

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
:1 F11111llleo: 15:117 AI. IIG In Yin-

New Hom's • Vinyl Siding New
.Garages • Replacement Windows
• Room Additloos • Roofing ·

,

oH.W.HNiera

'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

...... ....

eRitrlgeratqr8!'F,.._,•

Ext. 2579
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra;
Procall Co.
($02) 954-7420

t·•

Bulle, l'lrlulall,
lnrla811ap. . . .lot

lServlco

•All - · &gt;42 YH,.
ofoa! Reliable hrvlca
•Weohero.- Dlje,. • Rongea

11

· Ingle's
Grealihouse

. 111111:1

As Close As

\•1111

rJ11

BilE'IT

MILHOAN
Auction eel'

35581 Flatwoodo Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certllled Personal

B&amp;W
Gar11ge and Towing
Service •
Automolive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank R~pair

Radia\or Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. At. 338, Letart, OH
614·247-3522

!1!6/kTFN

'

JID ..

Aulo---..

buying -ko,lunlt -

11\ICQ, Aloo, perle lor -

'773aUU-

ns.aoss.

-

-lurnl·-.. -

w...ld

•

.

.. buy- anllq. . -

too .....
•too-WIIIbur-pJoOa

-lin,_""'
.......... OolorI!Wa2-"-11.
•
,
W.rud To IUy: J .... Al1loe
With Or Wit- ...._
Clol
t.My tlvely, ·~ 311 "'1.

W.rud To llur: Uttlo 1111r1o
IX To 7 Good
CondtUon, 114441 1117.
Clolhoo Sizto

Wllnlod: ~ .......
GMMnr,
lt4 aer 1111

~

..

�-·

..

I

/

•

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Paw--1o-The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag• 11

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
•
PHILLIP
ALDER

t422MMo;bbil~le;iHolibm;;;;;a.;--·lll
lOr Rent

KI1 'N' CARLYLN by Larry Wrtpt

Hol•ahold
• Goods ·

---·-~

~-~

..... -

•••.aoca.

-

If.' I!!!!! .....................
Employment Serv1ces

44

.------· 11
iiiOit:ztt ln-,

•till 7
4o7

~.

-1

Apartment

lallllolo.
1 --~--No ....., Avollolllolloy
Holzor,
11t, 11t 1 •• 1157.

.AVON SELlS ITSEI.FI
A - U .fl!/hr, AI Wort
~
lonolkll _
....
TerrkO&lt;Y Oallonol. lnclop. IRop.

1

nom

17 Individuals
II More equine
20 Look llxodly
21 Tlrnelablo abbr.
22 Toch unlv.
23 Dlliciltl
piOCiamatlon
26 Egyptlon paper
30 Wool-weohlng
rosldue
Jl Lock openers
32 Sp. IItie
33 Neal-egg lnlte.
:14 Has
35 Large tub
J&amp;lnlemal
38 Shadelree

6llli ~,

"'" !t ;, 4

torRent

AVON to buy • ....
~30Wa

5 ~It
8 Biller nul .

r--------~»nnr--~~~--~ ' I&amp;Openwork
Iabrie

--~·WD,--

1Wo t I 00.11 ......_ home tar
rani In 'I'd M 1 art, Ml ..........

know

41 Dole, e .g.
42 Coualn'a !Mher
.-s Society of

' 12
poak
~·
13 GrMk
-Gardner
49 Me
c unit
14 Nogatlvoo
so er (prol.)
15 Scottish family 51 tlldure LL.!Io.'

73 VIlli &amp; 4 WD's

a~~~~114-441-MOi.

40.Aafar--

ACROSS
1 Crazy one

52 Biblical name
53 Sink in lhe
middle

5• Sicilian
volcano
55 libel's brothlr
56 25th lettor
57 Pavlngotone
DOWN
I Former N.Y.
mayor

7 Make lace

2 Clly In Norway

8 Intricate

3 Gravel ridges
4 Topeka's state
5. More rational
6 Without end

9 Mrs. Chaplin
10 Sly look
11 The

caam~

11'""_"""1,.,...""1'1"'""'

...-+-j-+-f

I-JII2-4t.l&amp;.

BARNEY

West

WE'RE GIVIN'
TH'TEACHER
A BODACIOUS

Pass

Pass

WHAT'S TH' BODACIOUS

SURPRISE??

Overlooking
the possible

SURPRISE
PARTY !I

'

To my taste , Ameridan beer is too ·
gassy. I much prefer real English ale,
which is pumped out of the barrel using
compressed air, not carbon dioxide .
And, yes, it is senoed at close to room
·temperature. This brings out the flavor,
much as One doesn't drink red wine

com_,

2 Fonl llolor
froni
End ca... (IIU) 1 Flto Thun-

-dolnd1FIIo-QT Whlllpoal UllllaN ...._ 11;1
Llko
Now,
114-24~32
cvblc 1oo1, whRo, 11..=.,Gi.Miii
Evonlngo,
1110.
2 Twin ,._ Mon.-. ,,.._ ~dlpr,
1308, 1-80C).28'N301.

• p...., o.- For Solo, All
Worn Cinco OrTiolc. SlzM7 To
12.8143881188.

I hp.lawn
~~~121;114-taWlnl'l
31•
__,.,,·t20;
!1301,

55

d:!Q .....................

llaak, brlcll; toro, Hla Orondo.. 0H Col IMo

-:r ,

Equi..,.-,104..,..'JIIZI.

.....

...

~ ='?.~~::~
a.

76

8, ..ul,.t•od
A".!P'IWhlaoolk
Old -•r
•

~,. .~
~PP-

Rump, 11,0CIO 010, 114-1112·1410.

tlur Form 8upptr, IIW

56

However, Shakespeare overstated my
views in "King Henry V" when he wrote,
"I would give all my fame for a pol of
ale, and safely:·
In today's deal , South didn'i'thi nk
about s1afely, and afterwards North
went to the bar to drown his sorrows. as
it cost them first place in a team event.
Against four hearts. the defense be·
gan with three rounds of clubs . After
ruffing. South played a trump to dum·
my's ace. East's discard was a bad jolt.
Now South 's only chance was to find
We~t with 3-4·3·3 distribution. Then, af·
1
ter cashing his.three spade and three
diamond winn 1ers, a trump exit al trick
II would en dpla y West to lead away
from his heart queen into South 's liing·
jack tenace. However. West (Uffed !he
third round of diamonds and got off play
safely with his last club: one ·down
The lrump suit is ideally set up for a ·
safety-play. At trick four. South should
cas h his heart king. !It is also fine lo
lead a low heart from hand, planning to
cover West's card. But that play may
unnecessarily sacrifice an overtrick. I
If East has alii four hearts , South
leads a heart to dummy's ace and a
heart back toward his jack. When ·East
discards, South continu es with a low
heart, using the power of dummy's nine
to hold the defense to one trump trick.

Supplies

a..dralnplpo , _ In

-or

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

1I7J Ford 421 cu In, aamplolo
A tnrwml- IIOWJt,.
JUl.

"11711'-"'","".,""n~:-::a--.--1-=m=-=,:-anl-,
1/•ton 4w- drive. 11172 Oldo
CUI._ 1110 Oldo CUIIua. tm
Rabbll. 1871 Oldll Toron1do,
w. Evonlngo ~1.

Pets tor Sale
Or_.ng,
Hvdro, Bolli. olul~

Groom &amp;hap FNIU~!!f

instruments

43 Ba11ball
team

44 Coagulate
45 Whari
46 Princely
Italian family

F!C'r!--t-+--1

chilled.

Building

24UI21.

France

J7 Overshoe
38- culpa
39 Leg joints
41 Rush
42 Hawaiian

By Phillip Alder

715 Boats &amp; Motors
forS.Ie .

54 Mlaceuaneoua
Merc!landlse

North · East
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
lead: •K

"''

" FRANK &amp; ERNEST

2
lru
o kS2l
- lar
biN
truck:
lar- balh...-J04.
1'/loiT.II.

Webb. CiiiiM-44114231.

wt'fY PIP YOV FLUN~ M~ Orl

(ANJNf'
C&gt;!?IVING
.&gt;CffOoL. .

Budgol Tron............, liNd I
Raboill1 All Tv-, Accolllblo To
Ov8f 1g,OOO Yranamt.lon, At8D
Po~.. 1144711o203$.

MY tm\IING TtST1
JiCAUS~

YOU Plr&gt;N'T
TUilN A((OVNl&gt; Tt4,tt
Tlfwttl 'ifO((i
PAnciNG . .

• ••

•

~ BORN LOSER

,.

.
~·

f\ELLO. Ci.AOYS 2

~ W'Qoi.&amp;R lW--T

19 Anger
20 Drinks slowly
22 Ballblll's·
Willie23 'lnlormallon
ogcy.
24 Aulhor Vonnegut
25 Call i l - 26 Actor Sean 27 lnvilatlon
Inils.
28 Europe's Mountains
29 Surfeit
31 Bridge on the
River34 River in

.47 Rage

48 Pholocopy
50 Opp. ol NNE

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeteDntv C1pt1er cryptograms a•e create&lt;! t10rn q1.10tat•oo$ by famous people past and oresent
Eact1tener 1r'l The c•pher stands tor anott1er 1oaay s clue X equals P..

GRUGTE

' Y A' E

G D.

VH V

' E S B Z

uz

N H R A. T

UK

zB Z

y

NTRGD .

KGN

U Z ' N

UK Z 0

RHDZRT

BSDDVD '
GDN

B S D

UGAZB .

CZA

y A!'

XGBAHD .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ~ The accomplice 10 lhe crime of corruplton ts

frequenlly our own

lndifferenc~" .-

"'£tfS"

Bess Myerson.

T~~~:t:~' S© ~4lllA- - - - - - EdiiOd loy CLAY I . ,OUAN
Reorrange letters of
0 four
' scrambled words

WOlD
lAIII

the
be·

low to form four words.

RORWEK

I

Transporta!1nn

at Bridge. " is avau.ao_te,
utographed upon request, for
4.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn

;,rrmr·~er

71
. Ownor/Q:&gt;Orotoro
Carclrwt · Frolght Carrtoo. II

hlrlhg experi.nced OTR'I to run
flatbid, urn perciNilaljpl of
grou ,.~_..,. pulling compeny

Twin Rlvtrl Toww now acc•Dt·

trallerw or pulllng CM"n trailer,
hNith hwurance wldental • 'IJ.
elon avallaba., baM plat•
.vallabla, bob-tall lniiUfl~
available, tuM card •y•am,

AU Jeal estate adver11slng in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
oi196B which makes II Illegal
to a&lt;:lver11se ~ any preference,

ilttllmtnla,
rider
~ram, time home. 1~220-

llmitaUon or discrimlnalion

...klv

Pan•lmo

Jobo

avolllblo lor

w...

Veter11na • The
VIrginia
Army National Guard nied1
prior
lndlvlduale who
want to urn thalr etala and
country. Our Joba come whh
Mneflta lllut llta lneurance,

""lee

eduCIUOOAI Helltance, rail,.
rnant, i.nd a monthly PlfCheck.
You mar be ab5e fo kMp ttN

nnk you w.,e dl.eharged wtth.
Annual Training In O.rmanr k1
Auguotl Call todor to lind out ~
you can anll• and enJoy all of
theu Hnfha and mor.. 304-

175-5837"' t-100..42·3618.

lng appllcotiiMII 10&lt; lbr. HUD
eubelcHzed 1pl. tor eldeHy tnd
h.lndlcappod. EOH !IOU'III68711.

Two

IMdroom
aparlm.nl,
utllltllo pold, prlvato portdng,

20 TrKto 01 Land, Land eon.
tract a To 21 Acroa; I Acr• river view, 1350/mo., 1200
N,SOO, $UO Down, $100 Per dapaokJ-!IO poll, GJ4.H2_.7114
llanth, Soulhond Oollll Cauntr, or H2-{lr..:4.
Jack Hagorty, .,........- .
Y1ry clean 1 btdroom apart·
uz ..,... m ft wldo ridge top mont lri ~~d~~~nLcoll814-1192·
building oko, 113,110. R&lt;iybum 1304or6
3001.
Rd, roooonablo -trlo11ona. No
Wodgo
Aportmonlo.
I l 2brL!'!'
alnglo wlda lnqulroo, ........ lno
lorrilotlan moUld on roqUMI. pelt. 506 Burden• Slre•t ~

based on race, oolor. religion,
seK familial status or national
orlgin, or any Intention to
make any such prelerence,
limitation or discrimination.This newspaper.will no~
knowlingly accept .
advenisemenrs for real osrare
which Is in violation of the law.
Our reade·rs are hereby

informeOihal all dwellings
advan!sed In this newspaper ·
are available on an equal
opportunnv basis.

1

'»4&lt;4175-I:IA.

175-2072 after Spm.

8conlc Vollty, Applo Orcwo,
-utll\l 2ac. IOio,_l!"blic woler,
Clyde - ... Jr., .....1Jt,.2338.
Tycoon Like- orw ..,. lol,
121110 mabllo homo, cauntr

45

wat•. ...... lllctrlc. $1i.500,

IM-lii2·21S7.

Rentals

Furnished
Rooms

Room• lor rent

~week

or month.

s~:,la' 11 $120/ma. Goula Hoool.

I

1580.

.

SIMplng roomo wHh cooking.
Alto trll* IPACf on rtver. All
~-upe. Call tfter 2:00 p.m..

lema.... I'Uppln, mlnlolNi11J ohomplon -lno, -

EntortoiMHOnt c - r 11310. Ell·
tro Nicol IM471o2720 AFT£11 I
P.ll.
For your laa homo or doole, , _
ot Point Pluo, 8 . _ Wood

Flnllh. JOI.I~.

I", 510' of 4" mloc.

bawo

,.~

11173 Doclgo Chlllongor - ;

UIO.OO 080, IIWI6-1111, I~
211-12GZ.

Ll&gt;ol: 1111-.11- Ron Tanlor 11113 Doclgo Omnl, .. FY aaod
!lot. lllcll Hood, Whkl Badr, oonclldon.l\100.~.
Homo: Docila, Cam~lan lar
Eldorljl Couplo,ll! 4'11:3111.

::~~:~~~~
PB,~tM-n
.

Truck llodo. Chov~ Doclgo,

and S.10, .._ A

1211.

NY 11577·0169.

.IIOW75-

I'r\ NATE
WRIGHT,
AMERICAN 1

I ' M HERE
TO SEE

Stoc::IL Call Ron Ev•rw, 1-100-

137·111528.
KHchon Coblnolll For lola.
Oood CondHion. CoD Alor 4
P.ll. 111 !41 1614.
,

3CM·'773-5651, M110n WV.

-=-·

d,..., ·

1014 .Chooy JamborM
motor home, 18,0GOml,

_

IIIII Oklo .Cutlaoo Supremo,

61 Fann Equipment

Rebulll MotQf', New Tranaml•

...

~

good Condltlon.104-4511-tl43.;
1868 Ytllowot...., atn lana on
350 Fonl m01or ln!M, 2,7tiOmt.
ApoiY 2221 Uneoln. i!OW?&amp;1:ich;
'
1014 ·lnntbnlc:k aompor, tui~r

alon, 2 OWnoro, Cond~
IH 12 R. Tlonoport Dloc, 7 Inch lion, 11.200, 114488- LMvo
llodt Spoc:lng, Condltlanl
IJ4.317.711M.
tUI Chov Comora 1,....;z Tuned loaftd, lola ol eldrte. takl cwwr
lnt~~n~Uanll
7151
Traclot, Pori ln~tlon Rod Hop, llnonclng.I04_.711_.803.
U,IIO;
lntornatlonol With L.oadodl 113,100, Firm, ........ .
30' travel 11'1llw W/Nhialf'ltor.
BUill Hoa • Orodar lladl, 0114.
MOVe. Nice. Call 304-e75-IOM.
14,110; Lafo lladll U lUI Int.,.
1111
lowd,
llopd,
••.
IIOWJt,.
natlorwl Turf Tractor, 11,350; 41Ziblloro4pm.
Nice 1987 Coachman camper,
114-2111" 2
aan, pun blhlnd, uoo. 304-77.11117 Oklo CutillO Cloro SL, sp1o.
JD 3 llaaom JD 7 Fl. runo pod, $1,200 080. 304ol71Sickle
- · · · JD Mot Grain Drill
Eocollo.. Conclldoll, 114-JII. 118111.
Services
1011
11111 Pontile TA Law lllloogo,
Joo·R- Form Equl-' And l.aodod,
Air, IM-245.&amp;411Ahor I ' c: - - - - - - - - Fortlllur, Locotod I 111111 South P.II.
01 Joe"-&gt;, On Slota Routo 13_11 1111 cavollor l·2•. IIPd. • ..,. 81
Home
114-281-:rnt, •tiiiH 4 WO, O.ov ...... laodod, 17.-.; 14,aoo.
Improvements
JD Cob A Air, 23110 ~JD With 1044711+104.
Loodo!. ?'00 fanl With Cab, ...
IIASEMEHT
A.C., 11'1 114, JD UOC Daur 1111 Corolco, E x - 8hopo,
WATERPROOFING
.
With 1 War ltodo1 , Round a II,OCIO lllloo, Cloon, t OWnar,
u-dltlonol lllotlmo guo"""
·
&amp;qua.., Solo,. A r11r Equip- ta,too, 1..-..no.
Loa&amp;l ,.,.,.,.. tumlllhfd.
....,., 01- - And Ulld E· 1188 llorcll'J Orond MI"!Uio, ·-·
Call 1"-.o5711 Or 114-231qulpmont.
Vorr Good Cond~lon, V4f Roooro Wal,.,.rooflng. EoAutomlllc, Pawor EV«ythlnal tablllhod' 1i71.
70,000 un.., $1,000, 114-44\.
04M.

- . -'

~

•.

vou&gt;

ACTUAL LV
NO ... I
TRIED TO
CALL
AHEAD.
~T

SORR'&lt;', SON .
I CI'N.' T
LET VOU

IN ."

BUT..
t

i3ROUGHT
CHEEZ.

DOODLES 1

!"\IE' •

THE

CRABBY .

••

ASTRO·GRAPH

...'

Graph Malchmaker instanlly reveals
Which. signs are romantically perfect tor
you . M~il $2 .75 lo Matchmaker. c/o lhis
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465 , New York,

IG)

Comp lete the chuckle quoted

by f,U,_
ng in the m1!.!.1ng words
you de ... elop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETT ERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GEf ANSWER

Did you ever notice that k[ds will quote their parents
accur.ately especially if its gossip about the NEIGH·
BORS?
.

...
'-Your
'Birthday

~

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) Your
pan•onship will be desired and ao&lt;~raciad
ed by others today. You w1ll 1nslmct•velyl
know how to make those you're w1th
they are lmportanl.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 2J·Dec. 21) Prolba· (

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Today you
might question whether the kindnesses bliit1eS for ach1evtng your ambi
'you ext~nd to~ard others is-truly appreei------objeettves-af&amp;-6UOnger tha'il._us_uat
. ateQ. Put your mind at ease; what you do so establiSh mean.'ngtul targets and
will be duly noted
after them full force .
C... NCER (June 21·July 22) A break CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) T 1
from mundane duties Could prove very. could be a romantically e~c•ling cycle
stimulating today . Select a 1un activ1ty. unattached Capncorns . Someone vou'vel
but also include several enjoyable com· had yol:'r eye on might serld signals
pantons.
that he/she is lnleresled .
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) You can do AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19)
someth1n9 worthwhile today with situa ~. could do an about face 'in a very imP•o•· (
ttons that offer only sparse promises .

tant matler you've been unable to control

Look tor those unique opportunities

Now il can be .final ized to your sal•stac:· l

because you'll know how to expar:~d

tiol'l .

· lhem.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) This will be a
good day to sludy subjects of practical

..,.There is 8 definite market for what you· vafue .. Not only w11t you absorb knowl •'have 10 offer.
edge easily, you'll knQw how and to use 11
"TAURUS (April :zo.Ma~ 20) Your leader· later.

PISCES (Feb. 21l-March 20) The llm&lt;~res· l
sion you make on others loday could
lavorable and'lasllng. Your charm will
capture their attention , and your sincerity
that wHI win them over.

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Condilions
• ship qualilies mighl be hard lo suppress LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23~ Lislen carefully lhal have an lnlluence on your malenal
·~oday , 50 don't be bashful about laking today lo any proposals broughllo you by · well·belng m1ght make lwo distlhct sh1ffs
'Charge when you feel ypu can do a butler an individual whose judgment you trust in your favor today. Watch tor opportun1·

4rrold- ....., uco111111
kld'l -

.

APRIL 28 .

Salurday, April29, 1995
Endeavors or enterprises lhal have
~trong artislic or glamorous elements
;should go well lor you in the year ahead.

,.,.._

.

Hebrew- Ninth ·. Grove - Theirs- NEIGHBORS

STRIK/i ABLOW IN THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CWSFIEDS. '

••••

4-11 ..............., ·~· 2017.

.

SCIIAI!'-LETS ANSWERS

KIND OF

•

.

My brother just turned fifty ."!
thinkit'sfact,"heconfessed, •that
a man is considered middle aged
when his stamina wanes, his
memory lapse~ and his forehead
becomes - - - - - -."

OPERATOR

SeEMED

NY 101'63.

PlUmbing a
Heating

II

TI EI NG

e
e

WELL , VOU
CI'N LEAVE
T H05E \oJ ITH

•a.

_rnont,_A_
IW._

•

E~PEc.Tu&lt;G

24ft

Cltr =:r.?:"n

Ij~~r:~~=~:

VH HUH .

15 HE

f!!-E SI DENT~

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

'I

.

THE

I

· ' 1 -"~:_
h:--rS_H....,.v...,u_K~-i·
Ic.._c.._,__,_,_ _..,__, ~
f,Sc-r.lG:--"T~-T~-T~-'T"-1

Otugo, 'ro, .-duooro, 41

,.lnblrd oprlnldoro wkh 2' ........
.
114-247-3644.
.
'
.Ill Sid, 1-1.0181.
JET
AERATION IIOTORS
Ropolrod, Now A Rebuilt In

·

I

114-381 IIIII Ev•lnp 114-JU..
11112.

.. ol-

,
l '

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

79

1114 .P ontile 11onnov1t1o, All
POWir," bollllnl ....... v.ry
Qaocl Condklon. 11- 080,

Irrigation plpo, ucolllnl GOncflo
lion, wade conn~~et.ON, 1300' of

t.ov. .at 1: Chair llauvt And
Blut, $100;. SIMpw Ioiii SSG;
Twin 81,. Rod $21, 114-446'
Real Eslate
6801,
46
Space
for
Rent
41 Houses tor Rent
Lorge CGuntry Lol For Trellfr, Moytag -hor, $110; Couch
2br, carpatlld, oarport, 2400 Ufto f751Mo. 6 ,.._. 3 ~~.
. $125; Air CondHionar, $110; Ootl
31 Homes for Sale
coin. Dopooft A Ll- oequlrod.
Iron Sot 115; Swing 115; 114ilon.~l 8111nellte PacUge lnRon! """!otllbla. 104_.7U1104. . Mobile Homo Lol For Rant, 614-. 448-3224. .
clucad. SMid Anum• To P.O. IIA&lt;rMAndBom·• - 3
Bod...._ 1 112 Bolho, LR I 3bodroom hauoo, 1400 piUI 3111-l'l3l.
Sor: &amp;87, GalllpoUI. Ohio ot5631.
Pav.dDriw.w.,.t,t 111 oeii.
depoolt. jRelorlncoo. No poto. "11,-ob"l:-lo-:hom--e-.-P..
-•-•-·""Iar-ront--:-1:-n
Tho llolga I.Qcal SChool -riol
aD4-171-441t.
country..
garbage,
....,. 1ncl
.. currently ••klt:1_9 apo
rnllkM.
1 Roame And Bath Plua Doub~ w1tw Included, cablt av1llable,
......,
bllldabottom
plication• from c:.rtlt~ .ap- 2Hawn
$85/mo., IU11 10 mlnut.. from
ptl&lt;onta far 71h A 8th grade flo« oom ..,. rornodolod, 2
Now 100,000 BTU HI Entcl_,.
lxt,. Nice, No Pete, Athan., 114-802-216".
F-blll c-h, Bop' Doh grado blylo: (hnt bar 40'1121', ,.., Gai'IIQtl,
·ou
Fumace N
. aw Hut Pumpe.
Relor•
Dopook
Raqulrod,
saeketblll Coach. Aurau~nt bar ;12'1123'), 100'x40' lol, No llmoko,. Plouo, IM-441o
Very I!HIOnlbiJ Prlcod, One
1fT
Wanted
to
Rent
Mlgh SChool Trock Cooc:h. Glrlo' $1d,SOO. 304-a82·2!U.
Uood 25KW Ellttrtc Fumoco.
15111.
Roso""' Bukotblll Coachl
Control Air Condft= Froo EoLooking
tor
bkle
on
oftlcll
Glrlt' Junior High luketHI
Cobin lor roni1Jolortllol oolo,
llmata, 1..S00-287
or ......
Coach,
High
SChaal
bonlorlng Chill CamOiolk, Rt. ·~· Mu• he ground floor. 448 .. 308.
handkJap
acceaalbJe,
44
offlc•
Churltldll' Advleor, Junior
21 0111. ~/IOU or 1'/lo
with ncaptlon aru and one Now Carpet All 81111 All CG!a.-1
High Churleadar Actvlaor and
3'1 f7 ....,. mllll(ll.
conflrtnee room, 1000·1500 eq. 14 A Vord, IM-3711-2720 AFTER I
M1ntor tor 1h• 11es.ge, ech~
ft. nHded. A1apond ln writing P.ll.
r•tr. AppUeahta muM hold a
Houee for ...,,. on Mulberry to P.O. Box 1'24, AthonO, OH.
valid Ohio teaching c.rUfleat•
Holghto, Pomoror1 $330/mo.
Pink prom , dN..; H, 171.
1nd . tor coaching pot;Hionl
piUII dtpotll and ,....ncea, no
Pooch prom
U, taO.
mull mHt certillcallon ,..
polo.304412·2041.
304_.7U414.
Merchandise
qulrtmentl of Ohio tor ~r11
m•dlcln• and CPR. PeraOM lnVorr AnrocUvo Utili Conogo In
lor011ad lhould contocl Bill
O.lllpollo, ...... wm.
Buckley, Superlnt•ndent. Melgl
Household
5I
Locol SChool Olatrlo1, P.O. 1101
42 Mobile Homes
3
IR,
I
112
.
S
otho,
Fom.
Am.,
GoOds
272, Porr),ror, Ohio.
CN: 10M F..,,_, Vlnrl Biding
tor Rent ·
Tho Southorn Local SChool ot.. IWindawll,
2
Ertro
Good
Solid End Tabloo,
'IWp, 12dl Troller, Eo01 Bathol 111-3711-2720 AFTER
trid, Mel~t Covnty, .. e·c tvarll• S$1,000 •lrrnL.::::
I P.ll.
Buroro
Jng for a Superlnttndtnt. lnt•
Church
-·
Nowly Country Furnltu....,umltUN for
..tad pertOfll contact o.nnJ. OniJ, 1~1N1.
Remad1lld, 0.. HMI, Air con.
E. Hill, Treuu,.,,. lox 171, 4 8od_., 2 Bolho, Dining, dHionod. S2501Uo. • n.-• E•ory RC&gt;om.~n~J Notth,
.
0.
. ...,.....,, Pl. Plouant.
Radn., Ohio 45771. O..dllne for utunr Aaam, Ollllpolll Clfr 1144174130. ·
sc-. Alklna: 130,oao, ......
appllc.ttlon '- May 17, 1MS.
Offw,l11 441 2331 .
2 I I hdroom ,._,.,.'- Hornta, 0000 USED APPUANCES
For Ront, E. BOihol Church Woohorw. dlpro, rolrigorotara,
Wantad tor· -~~ olote In
P6mtfoy .,.... aec,.tary wtlh I _ , . A bllh, 2107 ~n Road, 114-4411-7711 Dip; Akor rongM. llkaggo Apptloncoo, 71
VIne. StrHI, CaU 1'14o441--?388, 1·
part tlmo clork clu11•. II...C bl Av•.. owner ftn.lnced. aood I P.M. IM-441-01ZZ.
roqul.-d. ~751110o4Ho341111.
•
able to u• typewriter. oomwter ....._
and 04hll' · office mKhlnea. 1010.
2 B•dloonw;!,ou P•r Utllltln 1
LAYNE'$ FURNITURE
40/tva. weak. Mu.. bt able to
« Atea, l+38lo Complete homo lumlohlnga.
work wllh 1ho public. Sand ly OWner. I ltd~ FuU ~~· )n
Houro: M-.., N. IM-44&amp;reeunw with prevfow "WOrk • ·
&lt;IG A. Lol, 114- :lbodraam, contiol air, 7rnl Dill 11322, 3 mlloo out lullvllle Plu
,.rJence and lhr. . rat•r.,....: With
Sondhln an rtgnt~~­ F-Dollvory.
cJo The Dallr Sontlnol, P.O. 8al a'IWIIII.
STORAGE TANKS s,ooo Gallon
720-04, p~~- Ohio 411711. Flvo , _ brldJ homo In IJiklo uiUhllo. Dopoollt.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Upright, Ron Enne ~nterprlaea.
lllljoand by 4/3 ......
Naw/Uaod
Jac:kOon, Ohio, 1~7-052e. .
cllopaot, control hOI~ I\IN PIIIIIIIJ Fumlthod llabllo
ment, ~&amp;~Joining utm . 1111, Home, Rat.renot And Depot,ft, No appllancoo. Houllhold IUr·
nllhlng. 112 mi. Jorrlcha Rd. Pt. Twa .~bl. high ohllr, ... lkar,
13
Insurance
oloritl . ~.,... double 114-4414710.
.
.
.
P l -. lf!V, ooN 30W'/Io1450, ploy pon, blan~.... mannor, ......
go.-go,
_,.,000,
IM-002-37111.
Sm.U
I
lodraarn
llobllo
Homo
AMERICAN NATIONAL IN114 ........
tiH, n•wbom-18 montha. girt.
SURANCE
.., 1111 an lind • ..,. In
Konougo1 ,_ Ulllftllo Pold,
and bop clolhlng, 114·1112-2182. ·
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
trac:to. 304475-21'22.
1110/lla. 1 1 4 - SWAIN
Vtry Largo Dr-r Wkh lllrro&lt;
HOMEOWNERS a AJJTO ~
In Sri'ICUII, rocontr ramo doled,
011,.. St., Oolllpalll. Now &amp; liNd 3 liar COmer Stond ftOo With
COUNTS
AUCTION hul
A .
FURNITURE.
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath. ,... 2 car
A
tumltwa,
., Wnl.m 12
A Purchato 01 Dno-, f"' 080
UFE&amp;HEALTH
I'J4..367.Q4M,
•
...,
I
304 !II 4257
gmgo.l41,800, IM-81l:2·71'27.
I ;W::.:ork=b:.:"'::.:":.:";.;l::.:";.;';.;'.;..•.;..:11::.:151.::__

Progrnelve
Home · HMith
Agency HaalmmeGiata Optinlng
For The Following PoeiUone:
RN'a, LPN'a, C.r1Jflad NurH
AldH, Passparl RN. Mull Bo
U.enHCI In WY And OH. Ell·
porlo""" II Mandotory. E-po

ji'O'Odloo, Caol•llo, IM-117440oL

Autoa tor Sale

Coli ..... Jpm -

·-For8olo,l-.l
CGno,l..-..110.

·.job than others . Know where to IOi?k lor

romance and you'll find it. The Aslro·

\
·'...-

•

..-·-'

l

•

and respect. Something extraordinary

ties.

miljhl happen .

·-

·-

'

�•

P.p--12-The Deily Sentinel

Friday, April 28, 1995

Pomeroy-MiddlePC?rt, Ohio

Callers treat telephone, operator like jack of all
Dear Au Lalldtn: I worlc for lhe her real name must be something · CHICAGO
DEAR CONNECTED: Here's
Jel :;.liooecomi*'Y· Plwe don't print else. • The same caller wanted to
your
letter. Maybe more peOple will
know if she should have her bunions
my 111111e. I need my jab.
ay "thank yoo," but don't ~xpect to
I Mil u informalion operator. My operated on.
get
fewer weird questions. Mean·
Every
day,
I
am
asked,
"What
is
· lt:lpOIISibiHty is to usisl callers in

ihe temperalure?" and "Should I wear while, remember that a sense of
my heavy coat?" 1 am constantly humorcanbeavaluableasseLihope
.
you have one.
aslled which TV channels carry
Dear Ann Landers: My son,
certain programs. Yesterday. a
woman asked if you should starve a "Horace," is left-handed . His
cold and feed a fever, or the other grandmother keeps nagging me to
"change him over.' She is absolutely
way 'round. This morning, a man
asked -what city he was in. He certain that being left-handed is a
terriblehandicapandthathewillhold
said, "I know this sounds goofy,
but I'm a salesman, and I travel a it against me in later years if I don't
do something about it now.
lot •
This has created a problem
If you print this letter, Ann, please
between
us, and I need y~r help.
add that it would be nice if people
said "thank you" once in a while. -- Please print my letter and a
CONNECTEDTOTHE PUBLIC IN . supportive respcinse. --IOWA

rllldlna ldephone numbers. Period.
Pleue inform lhe public that I am oot

a veterinarian, a
IIUiritiollisl. a lawyer, a honicultural
1 physician,

specialist, a style consultant, a
librarian or a family counselot You
would noc believe the questions I am
asked a daily basis.
Rec:ently, a woman wanted to know
if it was OK to use 10 eggs in her
ar~FI food cake ins1t8d of 12, if the
eggs were especially huge. Another
caller asked what Mayor Richard
Daley's wife's real name was. "I know
they call her Maggie," she said, ""but

on

1• DEAR IOWA: My advice is leave
11oracealone. Many southpaws hive
done very well. For e~ample, Babe
Rulh, Leonardo da Vinci, Norman
Schwarzkopf, Ge01ge Bush, Bill
Clinton, Albert Einstein, Ty Cobb.
Michelangelo, Mark Twain, Cole
Porter, Robert Redford, Jerry
Seinfeld, Whoopi Goldberg and
James Michener.
Dear Ann Landers: ram 25 and
recently married to the man of my
dreams. It was imp&lt;!rtant for me to
. walk down the a1slc wearing \he
traditional bridal ensemble. I spent a
great deal of money to find the perfect
white sati!l gown.
My cousin is getting married in a
few months, and she has asked to
borrow
"Lena" is

•

•

a very nice person, and we have
arown up toplher. but she is a slob
and weig~s at least 20 pounds more
thalli do. I am afraid she would split
the seams and the gown would be a
mess. I want to save my "edding
gown for my daugh~ if I should be
blessed with one.
I don't know how to say no to Lena
without creating a major family flghL
How should I handle this? Please ·
answer in a hurry. My "Aunt Molly,"
Lena's mother, has already called my
mother twice. .-- CHAGRINED IN
PA.
..
.
DEAR CHAGRINED: I'm typing
as fast as I can. Tell Lena: "Sorry, no,
the gown has been heirloomed. I'm
saving it for my daughtet" (If this
hasn't been done, have the store

Ann
Landers

..__
....................
.,_--

it do so
once.)

' Ann Laltders' booklet, "Nugget!
twl Doozies," ~ everything {rortl.
the o~trageously funny to th&lt;
poignantly insightful. $end a self:
addressed, long. business-size ·
envelope and a cMckor miNityollie,;
for $5.25 (this incllllks postage and
handling) to: Nuggets, clo Ann:
4Jndm, P.O. Box 11562, Ci!icago:
111. 60611-0562. (In CIJIIoda, sen4
$6.25.)
•

Community
Beat of the Bend ...

calendar

by Bob Hoeflich

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit aroups wlsblna to
announce meeting and special"
events. The calendar Is not
deslaned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as SJMice permita and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
spec:lflc number of days.
.
FRIDAY
~
POMEROY - Cburcb Women
United, planning session for May
. Fellowship Day, I p.m. Friday at
the Grace Episcopal Cburcb . All
key women asked to at.tend.

The bad news is lbat Jim Brewer, Vine St, Middleport and a former Middleport Village Councilman, had to undergo triple bypass
surgery on April .17 at the
"Charleston Area Medical Center in
West Virginia.
Blood clots a,nd fluids developed and Jim bad to go back into
surgery on April23.
·
The good news is tbat1 be's
doing well and with a liJtle bit of
luck will get to come back to bis
home in Middleport this weekend.

You might want to drop by
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport Ibis Sunday. The Rio
Gmnde Chorale will be presented
in concert at 2:30 p.m. in the sanctuary. There's no admission cbar_ge
but a free will offering will be
Teceived.
A reader stated that be did not
bear any church bells in Pomeroy
on Sunday afternoon. He checked
1
with a relative in Middlepon who
said bells didn't ring there either.
The nation had been requested to
ring church bells at 4 p.m., the hour
of the memorial service for those
· who died in the Oklahoma City disaster. If you "know of any bells that
sounded in answer to the request
just give me a ring-perhaps, many
of us were unaware of the request
or just didn't bear the bells.

. read the letter as a part of their
studies i.n language arts and
responded. For a week the fourth
graders brought in their pennies
and "loose" change and the collection $16.65 was sent to the Waldnigs. '
. Mary O'Brien, head teacher a1
SHS PRtOM '-'U'UX
Sb:oru10n Morarlty, dauahter of Marty and
Salem Center, sent the money and
School's 1!1!15 Prom qufeil and king
Joy Morarily, Racine. King candidates are, from ,
wrote. in part:
selected Saturday night from this group of 12 · left: Brian Anderson, son of Jim and Becky .~
"Tbe students were deeply
SHS seniors. Queen candidates Include, from
Anderson,.Racine; MilSOn Fisher, slln of Gordon
touched by your words aod want to
left: Amy Weaver, daughter of IDlda and Carl
and Linda F!sher, Syracuse; Matt Morrow, son
try to sbow their concern for you in ·
PORTLAND Lebanon
Weaver, Syracuse; Kendra Norris, daughter of
of Mark and VIcki Morrow, Syracuse; Grant
some way.
Township Trustees regular meeting
Gary and Donna Norris, Racine; Courtney
Circle, son of Larry and Patty Circle, Racine;
"They decided to save their pen- Friday, 7 p.m. at the township
Roush, daughter of ManbaU and Debbie Roush,
Corey R. Hill, son of Don and Mary Hill,
nies and other Joos~ change for a building.
Letart Falls; Jessika Codner, daughter of Jim
Racine; Scott Hubbard, son of Jeff Hubbard
week and send it to' you in bopes
and Sandra Codner, Portland; Andrea Moore,
and Melissa Blssel, Syracuse.
that il could help in some small
douRhter of Dennis and Cathy Moore, Syracuse,
SUNDAY
•
way.
.
¥IDDLEPORT- Rio Grande
"Please accept our small contri- Cbol:ale at Heath United Metbodist
GENESIS
bution and know lbat il comes from Church. Sunday, 2:30p.m. A free
BIBLE STUOY CLASS
twenty small children with very big will offering will be taken. Public
An Easter theme was carried out Ella Osborne, ueasurer. Ethel Orr
hearts."
invited.
Every Sunday Morning
when the Past Councilors Club of and Lora Damewood conducted
Alter !he first week bad passed,
Chester Council 323, Daughters of games.
the students continued to bring in
·
1',
MONDAY
10am -1~ am
America, met~ the lodge ball.
their coins and that amoun t" was
PORTLAND - Letart and ·
For roll call mem.bers told what
also sent to Mr. and Mrs. Waldnig .
Ash Street
Portland PTO will meet Monday, 7 they liked about the holiday. Poems
The Waldnigs were quite p.m. Portland Elementary School.
included "Easter Morning" by
pleased by the gesture. So am I.
Freewill
Charlotte Grant; "The Open Tomb"
SALEM CENTER -Columbia by Ella Osborne; "Revelation" by
Baptist Church
And we lost another great enter- Township board of uustees, Mon"Easter
Prayer"
Thelma
White,
and
tainer this week in the death of day-, 7:30 p.m. at the nrehoose.
Middleport, Ohio
by Erma Cleland.
Ginger Rogers whose show bi z
It
was
noted
.Alta
Ballard
is
career extended well over 60 years.
RACINE - Free skin testing
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
home from the hospital. Ella
I was amused by a television c linic , conducted by Connie
Osborne and Inzy Newell were
reporter who, speaking of her Karschnik , R .N. , Meigs County
Diplomas Offered.
hostesses.
Mrs. Newell read scripdeath , commented that Ginger did Tuberculosis Nurse, Racine Fire
Teactler Les Hayman
everything Fred Astaire did but did Station, Monday, 4:30 to 6:30p.m. ture from Luke 22, and the Lord's
Prayer
and
pledge
were
given
in
it backwards arid in high heels yet. All individuals in food service to
unison. Officers reports were given
Do keep smiling.
get yearly skin tests.
by Erma Cleland, s~cretary , and

D of A share Easter poetry

. 992-7410

The new Ri~erbend Arts Council will be presenting a program
entitled, "The Story of Dance" at
7:30 P.m., next Saturday, May 6, in
the Meigs Junior High Sc~
ho~o~l~~ ~-·--~--~-,----------~-----

-·

1!- narration . will be given presenting the history of dance and
bow various dance s have been
handed down. There will be a num. ber of dancers on hand ·to dcmon·strate the various kinds of dancing
to go along with the narration .
Some of the dancers will be com. ing from Ohio University in Athens
as we ll as Parkersburg, W. Va.
T ickets
be purchased at the
Middleport Department Store, the
Ohio Ri ver Bear Co ., Kings '
Servistar Hardware, all in Middleport. aod at Mick' s Barber Shop
and The Fabric Shop in Pomeroy.
Advance ticke ts are $4 compared
to $5 at the door. Students through
high school will be admitted free if
accompanied by an adult. Senior
Citizens tickets are available at the
·Senior Center in Pomeroy at $2.50
each.

mar

This is all you need to get anew
Mustang or F-150.

You may have read the recent
communication from Mrs. Robert
Wa ldnig in tbe· Daily Senlinel" s
"'Letters to the Editor." The leiter
told of the financial pr.oblems Mr.
and Mrs. Waldnig were having due
to serious illnesses.
Fo urth grade s tude nts of the
Salem Center Elementary School ·

• Air conditioning '
• Automatic tJ;ansmission
with overdrive
·
~ AM/FM/Cassette
• Rear window defrost

1

Middleport
CCL hosts
district dinner
Middlepor t CCL ho sts d is tric t
members
The Middleport Child Conservation League h05ted a potato and
salad bar supper for members of
the South Central District members
of the Ohio Child Conservation
League.
Theme was ""You Are My Sunshine" and name tags were sun flowers. The sunflower theme was
carried out in the table decorations
and favors were sunflower seeds:
· Games were played with prizes
goin.g to Moll y Pl yma le, Nancy
Morris, Rosa lec DeLi lie and Jo ·
Ann Joh nson. Door prizes we re
won by Jean Gillesp ie and Nancy
Mo rris. A drawing for an Obi o
River bear was won by Catb y
Bostic. Patti Bodimer, district president, read thank you notes from
some who bad .attended the South
Central Cooference held recently in
Gallipolis. Cathy Bostic thanked
· the Middleport League for the invitation. Others attending were Jane
Tho mas, Gail Roush, a nd Carol
!Wpe. Gallipolis; and Ann Colburn,
Kitty Dars t, He len Bl11ckston,
Linda Broderick. Patti Arnold, and
Peggy Harris. ·

95 Ford Mustang

1

N .money down.

95 Ford F- 150 XLT 4X2

• Cruise control
· Tilt wheel
• Air conditioning
• AM/FM/Cassette
• Power windows and doors
' ~ Forged aluminum wheels ·
• Chrome rear step bumper

,
Now through April 29th
at Don Wood Automotive Complex.

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

per month, only24 ~

593-,6641
a:

~TOYOTA ~~

•

l• DONWOOD
I AllfOM01M &lt;"""""
. -ri!lllll
I

CAD,ILLAC
o !lOAn_,"

M-1~!1 ~~~ ....,:_.,

• ptus tax and bile. f1rst payment and s&amp;curity deposit due at lease nlCepfiOn . Closed-end lea$e. M1leage based on 12.000 m1tes per year. Subject to pnor sale. Ford
F-150 XLT 4x2. based oo MSAP 118.820, opt1on to purchase at lease ef)d $13.068.80 . Mustang. based on MSRP of St6,645, option lo.purchase at lease end~~
St0,725 75

l

•

·~·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="373">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9745">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30564">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30563">
              <text>April 28, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2620">
      <name>atkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="82">
      <name>dye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="800">
      <name>holter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="182">
      <name>warner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
