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Pta•

•

16-111t Dally Sentinel

Wednaadey, -3,1811

PEPSI COLI

FIFTH WEEK..
21sr ANNIVEr.SAr.Y SAL

•

-

PRODUCft
, 24 pk. 12 a. can•

StORIIOUIS
MondQ lin
Sunday
8AM·IO P11

Meigs girls
advance in
sectionals

WE RESERVE THE RIGB-rftl LIMI,. QUarrrrrJD
PRICES GOOD ftiRU MAY I,
.

Vol. 46, NO. 4

liLLY OR JAM

.

Proposed change in state funding sparks
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A pro·
posaiiO give state highway projects
a share of $1.2 billion in public
worl&lt;s money that now goes to
)!&gt;!;a! government could jeopardize
voter renewal of !be program; a
municipal group said.
At issue is a voter-authorized
program of state aid for local
water, sewer, and road projects !bat
expires in 1996.
Pending in !be Senate Highways
and Transportation Committee is a
plan to place on the November bat·
lot a 1().year renewal of !be plan at
its current rate of $120 million a

.

18 oz.

sIll
Bacon ••••••••••• ~~·•••
sIll

JAMESTOWN BREAKFAST

CENTER CUT

Chops •••• ~ ••
KITCHEN PRIDE LAYOUT
.$
II
s129· Bacon · · &amp;lb. box
••••••••••••••

.

T-Bone ,Steaks ••••

s

ifications for the water projec~ he
added.
In other business, council gave
Mayor Jeff Thornton permission to
seek a Community Development
Block Grant through be Meigs
County Commissioners to be used
for sidewalk replacement.
Also, council will number !be
village's houses by summer, Beegle said. This topic was discussed
after Vine Street's April Hudson
told council of her difficulty in get· .
ling deliveries because of lbe lack
of a street number.
In other infrastructure action,
council purchased 27 street signs,

Racine Village Council will
spend $80,000 in state grants to pay
for waterline extension , a new
water well and water meter project,
council decided at its regular meet·
ing Monday nigbl
The appropriation ·or the
$80,000 from the Appalachian
Regional Commission was one of
several appropriation changes
approved at !be meeting.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District will
advenise and send information on
lbe project to contractors soon,
CounCilman Bob Beegle said.
Council also discussed the spec-

8.5 oz.

which completes tbe three-year
project of placing reflecting metal
signs across town.
It was decided to have the riding
mower repaired and permission
was given to !be park board to use
the backboe to repair !be Star Mill
Park building restrooms once sewer·
pipes are purchased.
Councilman Dale Hart stated the
Cross Mill building will begin
reconstruction during !be middle of
May . ·council also discussed th e
liability inherent with the property.
The month's financia l reportS
included:
cash
balance,
$250,083 .58; · general fund,
$45,944.98 ; trash collection,

$24,591.94; parks-m useum .projec~
$1,046 .25; street maintenance,
$35,053.35; s tate highway ,
$3,038.94 ; fire operations,
$52,212 .09; water re venue ,
$74,755.82; c~metery, $1,629.28;
water deposits, $5,084.05; and
ceme~t:ry endowment, $6,800.
Attending were co uncil mem·
bers Bob ·Beegle, Henry Bentz,
Dale Hart, Scott Hill, Henry Lyons
and Larry Wolfe. Also present
were Clerk Karen Lyons, Mayor
Jeff Thornton, street commissioner
Glenn .Rizer and firefi ghter David
Neigler .
Council set its next meeting for
7 p.m. May 15 at council chambers.

Police chemist stays calm under cross-examination
'

79

Beef or Pork
VIETTI BBQ
Limit.2
Please ~---11

SUPERIOR
......
-----~

The proposal, if approved by
voters, would continue funding for
local government at current levels,
but would force them to request
renewal after five years instead of
10.
·~It's notr.bat we don't lhink the
state need.s money," Collaniore
said.
"I guess what we're seeing out
there in terms of local infrastructure needs there's very little chance
that we're going to reach a point in
!be foreseeable ruture lbat we don't
need this money," he said.

Racine Council receives update on water project

S,.ARKISt
tUN.A

Chuck Roast ••• !:~. ·
. SMrrH~ELD BONELESS WHOLE
s
149
..
B
LB
T avern am ••••••·•• ·

c~ncern

for local government infrastruc· doesn' t mean we wouldn't be sup·
ture," be said.
portive of it. The governor asked
Committee Cbainnan Scou Oel· for it to be discussed, lbat' s it,"
slager, R-Canton said Wednesday Dawson said.
lbat the proposed change to benefit
The County Commissioners
Q_DQT would receive serious con· Association of Ohio said counties
sideration.
·
need the money they are rereivlng
A letter Voinovicb sent to lbe from the fund.
panel last monlb did not identify
"I think there's a concern that if
lbe source of the propOsal.
we foreshorten the lbin g 10 five
"1be governor ·tbinks Ibis is one years and the state bas half of the
of many ideas lbat ought to be money, that it inay he that much
looked at," press secretary Mike' harder to pass again,'.' said .Jerry
Dawson said.
·
Collamore, assistant director of the
"It is not his proposal. That association.

percentage vote in Obi(),"
year.
Gov. George Voinovich bas rec- Mahoney ~d in an interview.
Issue 2 is lbe name generally
ommended analysis and debate of a
proposal to borrow $1.2 billion in given to lbe 1987 infrastructure
five years instead of 10, Half the program.
"In 1987, we were selling a
money would go to the OhioDepartment of Transportation and . concept thai envisioned success. In
1995, we have a story to tell that
half to local goveinments.
·
John Mahoney, deputy director says it's no longer a concept, it's a
of the Ohio Municipal League, said program !bat's been extremely sue·.
Wednesday that including ODOT . cessfui,"Maboney said.
"I don't Iffiow if !be case for
in !be proposal may tbreaten voter
OOOT
money is anywhere near as
renewal.
.
.
"I'm very confident that given strong as the case !bat was made in
the success of Issue Two, .a pure 1987 and bas been over lbe years
renewal issue would pass by a large

LB

~ork

1
2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 4, 1995

Copyright 1995

JIF PEANUT
BUTTER

8141
~ork Chops •••• ~~~ ·

FAMILY PAK

~ IDDf&amp;bt In 40&amp;, raiD.
Friday, doUcly. Hl&amp;bsla tbt 6Go.

.I

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LB. ,

Kicker:
547906

e

KRA"
GRAPE

WE NOW ICCE" WIC COUPONS

USDA CHOICE BEEF , .

·Super Lotto:
1-6-7-10.19-23

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POMEROY, 01.

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Pick 3:
809
Pick 4:
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Sports, Paae 6

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ohio Lottery

--'

10 oz.

' SERVICES HELD FOR VICTIM • E~linda Guzman, mother
of Marine Corps Capt. Randolph Guzman, who was killed in the
bombing of Oklahoma City's feder~l building, lays. a bouquet of
Rowers beside his coffin Wednesday m Hayward, Cabf. (AP)

Crews close to ending
'
. search for bombing victims

US #I

COTTO NELLE
·BATHROOM
TISSUE

s

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) videotape by a camera in the car of
Bone-weary afler a frustrating two the state trooper who arrested
weeks of work, crews are close to ·· bombing
suspect Timothy
ending the search for bodies in lbe McVeigh, The Dallas Morning
r11ins of the bombed federal build- News reported. The truck pulled
over when McVeigh was stopped
ing.
When they leave, relalives of for a traffic violation, the paper
the victilns will be allowed to have said .
a last, private remembrance at the
site.
•
Authorities released two drifters.
"It's almost over," said police whose travels had seemed to con·
Sgt. Lynn McCumber, one of just a nect them to McVeigh, tbc only
half-dozen workers wbo dug person charged so far. Gary Alan
through rubble Wednesday. They Land and Robert Jacks were taken
found the body of two adults and imo custody Tuesday in a dawn
one young child Wednesday, bring· raid on a Missouri motel, then
ing the death toll to 146.
released 18 hours later.
·
About 25 people, including
Jacks, 60, ·initially told reporters
three infants, were missing today.
he didn't blame !be FBI, ,but later
Investigators continued to pur· criticized the agency in a televisi\)n
sue thousands of lips in the deadli· · interview.
est terrorist attack in Ibis country,
but the hunt for a second bombing
"All those morons bad to do ...
suspect, John Doe 2, remained
was
call that room .... Had me walk
unsuccessful.
outside
the room, have Gary walk
Authorities were trying to .
enhance the image of a pickup out there and they could have
truck license plate captured on restrained lis.

4pk.

79

c
Potatoes ••••••••
TROPICANA
.64 oz. carton $
49
·cAMPBELLS
Orange Juice ••
PAR KAY
SPAGHE'ffl
SAUCE
•arg,arine ....... .
28.5
MAXWELL
oz.
sa·99 H~GAN PREMIUM 5 qt:pau . $2 SI
c_
offee ••~••••••••• ~..... .
Ice Cream ••••••
,
.
.
&amp;IC
ORA IDA · Crinkle or 1. 21b. $ 29 ·
Paper Towels......
Fren·ch Fr1es ••
GRO
10 lb. bag

oz. ~

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A !be best way" or "That's not how I friend Goldman. Blasier took a
bloody shirt. was ·improperly stored would do it" kept croppipg pp in detour around that issue Wednesand grew slinky. A single swab bls answers,' 1he remained calm, day. instead suggesting that security was lax at the lab where blood
tested lbree sepataie pedals on a ·friendly, unapologetic and main·
was
stored and sloppy technicians
Ford Bronco. Blood was caked on tained eye contact with the jury.
Matheson 's style impressed may have altered evidence.
the outside of a test tube. Blood sat
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
around for days before it l'(as legal analysts, who said be put lbe ·
mistakes in context and made them repeatedly urged Blasier to speed
booked into evidence.
up bis cross-examination, interruptAnd what does the Police seem less serious than errors elicit·
Department crime lab field manual ed from evidence collectors Dennis ing with comments such as •:This
is !be third witness who has testiabout gatherin g, packaging, Fung and Andrea Mazzola.
fied
to this" and "Let's proceed."
..
·14w.professor
Erwin
Cbemerin·
~t_.~~~~?B and reconjiug..s.uch evi•
But
Blasier plodd.@.on with his
sky
of
thelJDiversny-or
Southern
l
challenges
to blood evidence, a
California
said
that
even
the
more
. Simpson's attorneys wanted
vital
issue
fQr
the defense. Prosecumemorable testimony - Matheson
to know, but !be manual was never
tors
say
routine
conventional serocom pleted and the entire draft describ in g the moldy smell of
logical
tests,
as
well as high-te'C h
Ronald Goldman's improperly
apparently hasn't been read by anyDNA
analysis.
show
that Simp·
body in the Scientific Investigation s1ored shirt - was defused by
son's
blood
was
left
near
the bodies
Division.
· Matheson's forthright altitude.
and
the
victims'
blood
endL'd
up in
Police chemist Gregory Mathe·
Matheson returns tu court today
his
Bronco
and
on
a
glove
found
·
son, tbe No. 2 m·an at the crime lab, for more ques•.ions from defense
behind his house.
spent the better part of .Wednes· attorney Robert Blasier.
Blasier showed jurors slides of a
day's court session testifying under
Matheson testified Tuesday that
test tube of Ms. Simpso n' s blood,
cross-examination· about these laps- routine blood tests link Simpson to
with crusted blood that had leaked,
es .
the June 12 murders of his ex-wife
or spilled on the outside .
Although phrases like '.' it is not Nicole Brown Simpson and her

Matheson acknowledged there
were some problems with the way
his criminalists collected evidence,
and !be defense hammered away at
that point. He said Mazzola erred
when she used a single ·swab to col· .
!eel three blood stains from the
pedals in Simpson's Bronco.
"That's not how I would do it,"
Matheson said.
\ "That's unacceplable?" Blasier
asked.
·
·" That' s right," Matheson said.
· "I try to limiflhe tise or a sWl!b to
one piece Of evidence."
Matheson also admitted that
.-Goldman ' s bloody shirt was
improperly packaged while it was
still wet. When be opened it in
J uly. he &gt;aid. " There was definitel y·
an offensive odor. ... 11 was not
stored properly ."
- Criminal ists used pcncit .to
fill out some crime rcpans and erasures we.re e vidcn~ suggesting pos. sible tamPerin g.

Point Pleasant physician-awaiting trial
of documents from !be U.S. State
Department. A hearing to resolve
motions and discovery material
was held Monday.
During the bearing, all motions,
except for one, were resolved: The
unresolved motion pertains to
Cbbibber's request for depositions
from India. Billups said the judge
took the motion under advisement
and told Cbbibber be must prove
!be need for the depositions.
Should the judge grant tbe
motion. !be trial could be further
delayed because the subpoena
power of the federal anorney 's
office doesn't bold up in India,
Billups said.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The dale for a federal trial against a
Point Pleasant physician should be
set within the next two weeks,
Ass istant U.S. Attorne y Pau)
Billups of Huntington said.
Bakshy Cbhibber, 43, is charged
with international parental kidnap·
ping involving his two daughters.
Preeti and Heeral.
Chhibber pleaded innocent to
the charge Marc h 10 in federal
court He is free on $50,000 unsecured bond on the condition that he
we.ar an electronic monitoring
device pending Ilia!.
Billups said !be ·COurt postponed
setting a trial date pending receipt

Cbbibber allegedly took hi s
daughters on vacation in ·August
1994 and did not return them. The)
girls' molber. Babairav i, discovered U1cy were in India and went
after the children. She and the chJI·
drcn returned to Poi nt l&gt;icasant on
March 6.

Along with !be federal charge.
whic h carries a three- year prison
tenn and $250,000 tine. Chhibbc r
also faces two felony charges of
ch ild concealment brou ght during
the Janu ary ter m of the Maso n
Cou nty grand jury

39

.

~

'

BRAWNY

'

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Good only It :

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EffectiVe 4 30 Thru 5·6-95

'Foodla•l.

1995

s2. 59

WITH COUPON .
ONE25.5oz. ,-12221s

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l'frtr~•ngtOfl'S. R.tlpn·~- J;r noy" B•g V• lu, t~·~ Svpa~~ ~lts.6u~r V.alu

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1995

Big Votlu, Tom· ~ Su~r valu. Pt'lwt&gt;lr\ S\Jp('l' V4lu

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tt(ll;l;l.:;!.~.:•;:J:;.-""'Qn DOtM tllii1011 _/IM S

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$

'

•

By JOHN D. McCLAIN
Ass""iated Press Writer , _
WASHINGTON - Americans
face a severe crisis with the aging
of lhe baby boom generation unless
they dramatically increase tbeir
savings and improve retirement
·coverage, top business and academic leaders predicted today.
'
"America's retirement system is
underfunded, overregulated and
soon to be challenged by unprece·
dented growth in the retirement-age
population," the Committee for
Economic Development contended
in a report urging immediate
reforms.
·
·The
recommendations,
announced here bf the New York·
based committee, include tripling
retirement saving, overhauling the
Social Security system, fully fund·
ing pensions and expanding pension coverage.

." If we take prompt steps to
!!Dplement !be reforms CED rec'
ommends, significant sacrifices
will be required, but they will be
manageable,'' .sail! Lawrence A.
Weinbach, chairman of lbe group's
pensions and saving subcommittee
and chief executive officer. of
Arthur Andersen &amp; Co.
"If action is postponed," be
added, "the nation will face the
very unpleasant choice of a sub.stantial cut in !be economic status
of the elderly or a crushing tax bur·
den on future workers.'·
The report ..:.. "Wbo Will Pay
For Your Retirement? The Loom·
ing Crisis" - noted lhat the baby
boom generation will stan retiring
in about 10 years, boo&amp;ting retirees
from the current 12 percent of tbe
population to 20 percent by 2030.
Tbat grow!b will be exacerbated
by an elderly population that

already is growing rapidly because kept without vastly improving pre·
of increasing life expectancy while funding or imposing a harsh burden
birtlware declining. The result..wiil on MIDl! ~or~ers." !be report said . .
" Clearly, fortlie vast majoriry-·
be a sharp decline in the ratio of
·workers to retirees, from about 3.4- of those currently in the labor
force, their future economic cirto· l to about 2-to·l, the ·report said.
cumstances
will depend greatly
In addition to demographic fac·
upon
lheir
own
saving and partiCi·
tors, !be report cited other econompalion
in
retirement
plans."
ic and fiscal trends thai threaten the
well-being of future retirees and
- "Underfunded .pensi on
workers;
promises
in botli private an.d public
-The national saving rlue bas
retirement
programs are a growing
declined to record lows in recent
and
often
understated problem.' ·
years and "private saving for
The
deficiency
for governm en ~
retirement is woefully inadequate."
civilian
and
military
pensions coin·
The committee contended that
private saving jler worker is only bined is estimated to be S l.~ trilabout one-third of what .will be lion, it said.
- "Rapid growth in govern · ·
needed - if Social Security bene·
POST OFFICE RENOVATIONS -The Syracu.e Post Office
fits are not cut, as it and other ment spending for the elderly
recently
received • focellR In the form of painting and new poSt
threatens 10 get so far out of con1rol
experts suggest may be necessary.
boxes.
Here,
Postmaster Thomas Bennett stuffs ldlen into the new
"It is now clear !bat tbe Social .when the baby boom generation
boX&lt;f·
Customen
say they lib the refurbishment.
Security system bas made promises retires that it cannot be fmanced by
1
to future retirees lbat cannot be reasonable burdens on taxpayers."
I

I

�•

•
Thursday, U.y 4, 1995

Coinmentar

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio
lhuradly, M•y 4. 1995

'

111 Colll't Street
Pomemy, Ohio .

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
'
~RGARET

LEHEW
~ Gontroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General~anager

.

.

LE'!TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be ·less than 300
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
addtl'SS and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good tiste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
County snubbed again? .
; Dear Editor,
•· Has Meigs County been sbafteil
again?
How many times have you read
. where tbe spokesman from the
: Marieua office of !be Ohio Depan• men! of Transportation said tbe
: highway from Rock' Springs to
: Ravenswood, W.Va., should be
completed by the year 2000?
Now one section has been started and should be completed by tare

1996.
.
· · Well now I bare 10 aiticize all
tlie time, bul !be latest news on the
rest of lbe project is no more projected construcli!)n for Meigs
Count)' in the nexl four years. ·
Well now, from 1996 10 2000 Is
four years. Now I don'! believe lbe
goal will he reached, do you?
·
Vi.Jgil Walker
Racine

Fix government' with scalpel not bomb

The Editor
I was recenUy a patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
: The nfttles, x-ray, lab and emergency room employees, housekeepers and Dr. Mansfield and Dr. VIIlanueva, and two other doctors,
whose named I don'! know, all
gave me good care.
I want 10 thank them all ev~n

Robert T. AlexiPder, S2, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Wednesday. May 3.
1995, at b1s bome.
He was a truck dri\u for vlrious tniDipclft ,..,.,.ole!!.
Born Aua. 6. 1942, In Robettsblq, be was a~ of the late Marioo w.
IIIII Sylvia (Casto) Alexaader.
Survlvonlnchtde bls wife, Sandy K. (Carpearer) Alexander; two sons,
Robert T. ~sander, n, or Gallipolis Ferry ll!ld Marion Alexander of
Kings Mountain, .N.C.; three d•nabters. Liz Mullins oC Grove City. Julie
Carter of Pomeroy, Cheryl J~~~a oC Kings Mountain, N.C.; five brotbm;
two sisten; IIIII nine paodcbildren.
•
.
A graveside service wW be beld Friday, 1 p.m., at tbe Pine Grove
Cemelcty. Leon, with the Rev. Steve Templewo oftlclaling.
Friends may call at the Crow-Huuell Funeral Home Friday morning,
10:30 a.m. 10 12:30 p.m.
.
· .
·

The areat lfl&amp;edy In Oklalnnl mei11 climate of oplnioa radicr dian exttemlsts oC the fw rilhl" Wblcb 10 the rights IIIII fleedon&gt;a of ordiCity bas usbcred In a !leW enmlu• · the ldllen?
·
bappeos to be what OiniOIIIIId lbc nary cllizeos.'' (About as many UbDemocrats
bave been calling the erals as conservatives felt tbat
Wbo 1a'los politically? Posaibly
lion of !be role of aovemmeot, 8lld
Republicans
wbo support the Coo- way.)
some Jlarsb Intertwined polilical DO oae. Tbc:re arc 18 IIICllllbs before
'
Moreover, !be w~ tragedy II
rract
With
America.
If lbal be guUt
questions. Wbat caused it? Wbo
by assoclatioo, Democratic liberals (~y) 8euinJ anotbc'r beargains?
Ben Wattenberg
will make the most of il
Should the evil deed be seen
IDJ, even In !be liberal media. ClinBut liberals should not coont ton's statement on "60 Mlnutea"
simply as the evil acts of a couple a national election: The Los Angeof right-wing mad bombers? Or les riots occurred about seven those chickens. The ugly event In about tbe Braocb Davidlaos ("I
were the right-wing extremists . months before the 1992 election. Oklaboma City called auentioo 10 think tbat 10 make !bose peonle
influenced by the barsb anli-gov- Many pundits tbougbi th1t those another set of views,' wbicb do not · heroes after wbat they did, kiii1itg
emment themes of btasb Republl· bumio1 video pictures from bell normally surface in the mainstteam our Innocent federal officials, and
cans like Newt Gingrich? Were could weU be the deriDing image oC media. A Los Angeles Times poD ttien ldlllng their own cbildrea...")
!bey influenced by right.- wing · the political campaign. They asked: "Do you tblok that tbe ii at best a selective rendition of
Rusb-like talk {lldio sbows, wbicb weren'L Bill Clinton said it was the activities of the federal government wbat happened at Waco. In any
allegedly crca1e a climate of bate? economy;-siilpid. GOOrge-Busb said pose a threat 10 tbe constirulional event, wben the U.S. aovemmeot
Conve:!~· bave tbe liberals creal- Clinton was a bozo wbo waffled rights enjoyed by the average
ends up In 811 Ktloo that ldlla more
ed a F
enstein federal' 'ovem- and would raise taxes. (Clinton is · American?" Aboost bait (45 per- · than 70 men, women and cbildreo,
cent) or lbe respondents said yes. A DO matter wbat the circmn!Uances,
ment, running amok, wbtcb bas no bozo.)
caused anti-government sentiment, ·
For the moment. liberalism Gallup/CNNIUSA Today survey the least that is expected is an apolwhich in Ibis case wmed in10 evil probably gains. There was a terri- showed 39 percent of respondents ogy. That bas not been tendered.
behavior? Has liberal Bill CliniOD ble bombing !bat deeply offended 88fCCing !bat "lbe federal governDistrust of government is a rich
compounded and politicized the Americans, and it was (apparently) ment bas become so large and pow- political theme, wilb deep roots In
uagedy by blaming 811 anli·govem- perpetrated by "anti-government erful it poses an lnunediate threat American Ufe. It is not 1oing 10 go
away because Bill Clinton thinks
Rush Limbaugh is a nasty fellow.
Ask yourself: W'tll voters thiolc lbal
govenuilent is good because antigovernment tenorists are bad? That
is plain silly.
·I he political problem for
Republicans comes wbeo !be causes are blurred oc combined - por- .
traying mo~t all government as
inherently bad. That makes most
anti-government activists seem
heartless and mindle5s. It's a problem for a scalpe!. not a bomb.

Ada Caufman
-

John Lambert
~obn

Words of consequence Le'f t has its share of angry voices
are

Berry's World -

.

~

'

·

AJJJ

local briefs --....
Thppers Plains fire reported
No one was injured when a fue broke out in a Tuppers Plains
home last nigllt. The family wlli at cburcb, according 10 Cindy
Durst, who worts In Tuppers Plains.
.
"II got !be garage and room upstairs and one of lbe daughter's
bed rooms." Durst said oC the rue which Slruck the two-slOry struc.turc of lbe Mike Sanders' family. localed on State Route 681, just
cast of lbe routes 7 and 681 intersection.
Firefighters and emergency crews from Tuppers Plains and
Reedsville responded 10 the scene at 6:51 p.m. WedoeSjlay.

Recycle day Friday
The Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Program will
have a majoc household appliance recycle day Friday at lbe office
parking lot on Union Avenue, Pomeroy. Only metal appliances will
be accepted. Foc information, residents may call 992-6360.

Meigs ·announcements

Mary M. Wolfe

TOMORROW

J.-eii:J?

7:00,9:30 O.t.I LY

TOMMY BOY PG-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

~­

K4HNEBS S.t.TUJI:DAY/GUNUAY 1: 00,): 30

Yard and bake sale planned
.
A yard and bake sale will bel
held Saturday beginning at 9 a.mi
by the Reorganized Church o(
Jesus Christ of Lauer Day Saints. Jt •
wilt be held at Jo's Homema~
Crafts on Route 338 below tlie
Ritchie Bridge.

Yard sale planned
Harrisonville Cbap«;r, Order of
the Eastern Star, Past Matrons, will
bold a yard sale Friday from 9 a.m
to 5 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. 10
12 noon at lbe Fred George home,
Larkins Street, Rutland . In tbe
event of rain, lbe sale will be cancelled.

Our customers
apprecia~e perhaps the
rarest quality of.all:

are !fio~ who don't share bis political views.
Joseph PerkinS Is a columnist ·
for Tbe San Diego Unlon-Trlbupe.
·
(For information ·110 bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-8:!7-6364, ext. 8317)
.·

Dance slated
Round and square dance featur·
ing C.J. and the Country Gentlemen Friday, 8-1 I p.m . at lbe old
legion ball in Middleport. AU welcome.

· So.ulb·Central Obio
Tonigbt ... Rain likely. Low in
the upper 40s. Light nortbwesl
winds. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday ...Cioudy. Becoming partly cloudy in lbe afternoon. High in
the mid 60s.
Extended foreaost
Saturday .. .Considerable sunsl)ine. Lows upper 30S to mid 40s.
Highs from near 60 northeast to
near 70 soulb.
Sunday ... Dry. Lows 40 to 45 .
Highs in the lower 60s n&lt;irtbeasl to
the lower 70s south.
Monday ... A chance of !bonderstorms. Lows in the mid 40s to
lower 50s. Highs from around 70
notlb to around 80 soulb.

Rib dinner planned
The Olive Township V9lunteer
Fire Department will have a rib
dinner Saturday at the fire bouse .
Serving will begin at 11 a.m. I. 0.
McCoy will conduct an auction at I
p.m. The public is invited 10 atrend.

.J

Preu, and the Ohio

POSTMASTER: Senil uddrcs~ · correc tions to
The Daily Semincl, 11 1 Cou n St ., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45169.
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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FRI.• SAT., SUN.
TOM HANKS
IN

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager

992-2588
VINtON

FORREST GUMP PG-13
AND
JIM CARREY, JEFF DANIELS
IN
. DUMB AND DUMBER PG-13

Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Managers

446·1088

Announcing the newest Bank One®
MoneyAccess Center®in your neighborhood.

(USPS 213·9601

M~mbtr : The AuocJOJtCd
N~w s paper As.wciotion

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

!Jvfom &amp; (jrand11Wm;

The Daily Sentinel
Published e'tl ery afl~rnoon. Monday lhrOugh
Frid.'l)', II I Court St. Pom~roy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Vall~y Publishing Compony/Multimedio
Inc .. Pom~roy, Ohio 4.5769. Ph. 992-2156,
Second clau-posti!ge-paid 11.1 Pumeroy, Ogig ~

QUALITY
THAT ENDURES •

OuYi
convenienceput us
·
onthemap.

t£fegant new ramify Jewe[ry
. ~ ..on[y tfie 6est for ·

Weather

•

Open bouse planned
Tbe Syracuse Post Office will ·
have an open bouse Tuesday from
1 to 2:30p.m. The lobby was
recently renovated and all new PoSI
Office boxes have been installed.

446-0i2~

Mary M. Wolfe, 81, Racine, died Tuesday, May 2, 1995, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
. A homemaker, sbe was born March 8, 1914, in Pomeroy, ·daughter of
the late Monroe and Cassie Powell Weaver. She attended lbe Kingdom
·Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses.
, · Survivors include a daughter, Mitziann Klaiber, and two grandchildren. ;"unolby Klaiber and Matlbew Lewis, all of Racine; a great-grand.child; a sister, Rulb Betting of Akron, and several nieces and nephe":s.
Sbe was preceded in death by ber husband, Brad Wolfe; three ststers
and grandchildren, Tony and Cbad Lewis.
Arrangements are unde~ direction of Ewing Funeral Ho~e, Pome~oy.
No calling hours and servtces will be observed but memonal contnbutions may be made to lbe Kingdom Hall.of JeboYalL£ Witnesses, 37319
State Route 124, Middleport OH 45760~·:,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

,

Herbalists to bold tea
River Valley Herbalisrs will
host a rea· Sunday, 2-4 p.m. at tbe
Meigs Counly Public Library in
Pomeroy to celebrate National
Herb Week. Herbal tea an~ food
samples will be given along with
free plants.

-

Lawyers may lose on liability reform
Morton Kondracke

Divorces and
dissolutions

fltf

inducted into the Radio Hall of
Fame. TV talk show bost Sally
Jesse Raphael agreed to do lbe bonors. But rather than allow Limbaugb to celebrate tbe evening,
along with bls family and friends,
she cbose to humiliate bim. She
told tbe audience that the Hall of
Fame's recognition of Limbaugh.
for bis "significant contribution"
· d ustry "does not
to tb e rad'
· to m
express my opinion."
Consider lbe venomous remark
made by USA Today columnist
Julianne Malveau'x, while dis- ·'
cussing Supreme Court Justice
-clarence Thomas last November
on the PBS relevisioo show "On
the Contrary." "I hope his wife
feeds him lots of eggs and buuer,"
b
'd " d b d'
1 l'k
S e sat • an
e ICS ·ear Y 1 C
many black men do, of heart disease. He t~ an absolutely reprebensible person."
.- :!!.:.'-·--II
Of course, Clinton didn't have
Gumbel . and Raphael and
Malveaux in mind when be spoke
of "loud and angry voices" and .
deaied "things regularly said over
the airwaves.'· In ·his distorted
view, the only people contributing
to the climate of bate in America

Proponents also have been promoting olber amendments designed
to pick up votes, such as one sponsored by Sen. Olympia Snowe, RMaine, !bat would raise tbe limit on
punitive damages to .twice lbe total
of economic and non-economic
damages.
Sen . Chris. Dodd, D-Conn.,
who's bolb chairman of !be Democratic National Committee (a major
recipient of ATLA contributions)
and from a state wilb huge insurance interests, js sponsoring anolber amendment !bat would let judges
·set punitive-damage limit.!:
No,.,flJle is sure what President
Clinton will do. Tbougb warned by
top Democrats that a veto of malpracrice and liabilil)' refolliL will _
brand him as a "tool of ATI..A,"
lbe White Hou~e recently issued a
statement opposing limits on punitive damages and elimination of
'·'joint and sev.eral liability,"
whereby defendants can be forced
to pay all of an injured person's
costs even if !bey were only fractionally responsible for lbe injury.
Foc its·part, ATI..A isn'l sounding scared. One of its key lobbyists
said that Rockefeller's side was in
"disarray," with "purists" fighting "partisans" and Senate Republicans trying to keep up wilb House
Republicans in serving up •'veto
bait" for President Clinton.
Rockefeller can only hope tha~.
for once, ATI..A bas it wrong.
(Morton Kondracke Is ~xecu­
dve editor of Roll CaD, tbe news·
paper of Capitol mD.)

Meigs EMS
logs 8 calls

Hospital news

lu,,.,,., , .

Most Amaicans feel that far too
Clinlon decries voices of ism, as practiced by 'sick right-wing
many
unborn babies are aborted,
terrorists.
extremiSm.
but
they
don't go out and kill aborSpirited opposition, based on
So read lbe headline accompation
doctors.
Most taxpayers ·
nying a news story this week political principles and social valbelieve
the
government
Is claiming
detailing the president's speech 10
too much of their earnings, but
educators in Minneapolis. The
Joseph Perkins . lbey're not sending letter bom.bs w
president blamed hateful talk for
lbe IRS. And most law-abiding citicreating the climate behind the
targets.
zens are worried about aime, but
heinous Oklahoma City bombing.
But his admonition cuts across party and ideological lines .. And Clinton
"We bear so many loud and ues, prrodlasuceNd the berealigning t:iec- most don't become vigilantes.
r. E~tremtsm,
Tbe medt'a left would have us
himSelf bas been a victim of bis own choice of words more than once.
1
d
b
angry voices in America today," lion o · t ·ovem
His campaign againS! •'loud and angry voices'' in !be aftetmalb of the Clinton declared, "whose sole goal found ed m vto ence an anarc y, believe !bat people who bold conOklahoma City· bombing seems to 'bave slruck a chord wilb .lbe public. seems to be to try to keep some produced the carnage in Oklahoma servative. views on government,
I'QIIs sbow most Americans approve of his handling Of tbe crisis.
'
gun control, abortion,. taxes and
people as paranoid as possible and City.
Clinton's central claim is that words of hatred - on and off the the rest of us all tom up and upset ' There simply is no connection crime are kindred spirits with
beiween lbe two. Yet lbe president extremists like lbe alleged domestic
nation's airwaves - bave nurtured a climate in wbicb unbalanced people wilb each olber."
insists that there is.
,
can be driven to violence.
And as if lbe president's dema- terrorist Timothy McVeigh. It s
The president did not specificalAlready:
'
Ibis kind of media smear - this
ly name lbese purvllyors of social
-Harsb language by the NRA produced a backlash that could help unrest, but he vaguely alluded to goguery bas not been sufficiently kind of blanket condemnation of
;15sure lbal repeal of last year's assault-weapons ban, an NRA priority, · ".things that are regularly Sllid over divisive at a time wthben Americ;_mds conservatives- that truly aims 10
need 10 come toge er to set ast e · keep lbe public paranoid or tom
. up· .
wiU not tako place in 1995. An NRA ad refers 10 federal agents as "armed the airwaves."
'
,
differences, the left-lean- · or crseL .
":terrorists ... ·clad-ill ·ninj:r bli!Ck"-aml a'ii:tnd•raising letrer- talk8 ot "jack_ -On~:--neet!n't- -be a n:gular partisan
·
· 1 ed' b
1· · 11
booted government thugs."
f course, conservatives have
attendee of Renaissance Weckend mg nattona JD •a. as po t.Ul;a Y
- Suggestions by Liddy that lisreners shoo! federal ftrearms agents in to figure out !bat Clinton was refer-. exploited the Oklahoma City grown accusiOmed to ad hominem-lbe head or groin - though only in self defense- got lbe former Water- ring to such nationally syndicated.• tragedy as well.
attacks in the media, by liberal'
gale burglar dropped as guest of honor at a GOP fund-raiser.
who
massajournalists
feigning political neuThe
kind
of
folks
conservative radio talk-show hosts
Tbe event's chairman, Sen. Alfonse D'Amalo, R-N.Y., found Liddy's as Rush Limbaugh, Oliver Norlb cred t.~e im\ocents in Oklahoma trality, pretending 10 be objective.
words "despi~Bl!le. outrageous and ~ron g." accordi~g to D' Amato and Bob Grant.
Ctty .. bate tb_e federal governJust Ibis week, for instance,
spokesman John Heubuscb.
·
mcnt.
l!CCQrdmg
loa
fox
News
.
North
w.as sandbagged · by
This goes 10 sbow the shameless
It's only been a few weeks since D' Amato himself bad to.apologize for political depths to which Clinton Servtce story last week. !beY rant "Tooay'' show host Bryant Gumimpolitic talk-show remarks that mocked lbe Japanese-American heritage will sink to malign those who dis- agamst gu~. control, abortion, taxes bel, who is notoriously hostile to
of Lance Ito, the judge presiding over lbe OJ. Simpson murder trial.
.
. conservatives. In an interview .in
agree with his policies, who are and cnme.
Well many, tf not most, Amen- wbicb Gumbel supposedly was giv' 'When I use a word, it means just wbatl choose it to mean- nolbing unsupportive of bis presidency.
cans believe the federal govern- ing the former national security
more;nolbing less," Humpty Dumply reUs Alice in Lewis Carroll's book.
Rush an!l Ollie ;wd 6ob .have ment needs to be reform, ed from officer an opportunity to explain
"Tbrougb lbe Looking-Glass."
been hard on the president, as have
B t they re not out
. "The question is," responds Alice, "whether you can make words olber conservative talk-show hosts, top .to bottom
.. · u
.
why conservatives aren't tD blame
mean so many different things."
a.s have conservative columnists buymg ferttbzer an_d fuelb mi. b ld for the Oklahoma City bombing,
. Clinton has sometimes been accused of making words mean 100 many like yours lrul y .·
Half of Amen can ouse o s the •'Today" sbow host chided
. different lbings. He bas been by IUC11s. conciliatory toward .Republicans
But there is a' difference own guns and feel that lbe 20,000 Norlb that his "oath should bave
and hostile toward lbeir proposals. And be bas issued conflicting words belween spirited opposition, as · gun-control laws already on the been taken a little more seriously
on many of bis administration· s policies.
.
praqiced by conservatives in the books around tbe country .a~e before lying to lbe government."
In a speech on April 24 in Minneapolis, Clinton denounced "purvey- media, in lbe political arena and on enougb.
Butlbey don't plan tD JOm
Limbaugh bitd a similar experiors of hatred and division" for "t.bings that are said regularly over the air- . the grassroots level, and extrem- paranuTJlary groups.
ence two years ag~, when be was
waves.··
But White Honse aides were quick to claim that Clinlon didn't really
mean radio broadcasts even though he'd said "airwaves." But that's
apparently exactly what be did mean.
Despite lbe disclaimers, Clinton aides said privately !bat the president
After nine years of batUing the tern," though !hat amount includes . said be's afraid they will overburwas livid about conservative talk show hosts in general and Liddy in parmighty
trial lawyers' lobby on contributions from dozens of busi- den his product liability effon.
ticular, especially Liddy's talk about using drawings of lbe president and
Sen. Mitch McConnell; R-Ky ..
behalf
of
product liability reform, ness PACs concerned wilb a broad
Hillary Rodbam Clinton for target practice.
range
of
issues.
and
others pushing medical malSen.
Jay
Rockefeller,
D·W.Va.,
can
But lbe "airwaves" comments seemed unpresidential and gave talk
almost
taste
viciOry
Ibis
month
practice
reform, though, say that
show hosts like Liddy and Rusb Limbaugh new anununition. Clinwn larer
Rockefeller
Is misjudging tbe siwabut
he
fears
that
bis
allies
may
broadened his target to include all angry talk.
and
doom
his
effort
once
overreach
tion
and
that
lbe kind of moderate
House Speaker New! Gingrich chose lbe word "groresque:' 10 dismiss
changes they are offering actual! y
any suggested link between Republican-led moves to scale back federal again, .
Both sides are filling tbe air- will pick up votes, not lose lbem.
Once before, Rockefeller bas
government and militias lbal ann themselves against !bat government.
The key strategist behind ·mai· Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole bas found lbat· some of his more been at the edge of winning in 'bis waves with ads showing (in
ATLA's
case)
injury
victims
practice
reform Is washington
effon to limit the ability of plainacerbic comments, like suggesting Clinton was not "a real president,"
asserting
that
negligent
corporalawyer
Fred
Graefe, who represents
have hackrrred. He's sliD trying to live down a two decades-old remark tiffs' lawyers tD win huge damages
lions
will
be
free
10
wreak
damage
a
malpractice
insurance company,
from U.S. businesses, only to fail.
!bat alllbe military conflicts of the 20th century were ''Demogat wars.''
on
everyo11e
if
not
restrained
by
lbe
MMI,
and
after
three years of effort
On Sept. I 0,' 1992, Rockefeller
"
-···...
·.
threat
of
lawsuits
and
(on
lbe
olber
bas
finally
managed
for lbe first
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum covers The While House' for The · bad-commitments from 60--othl!rside)
LittleLeague~
disap~ing
tfuie
~gellils"ISsuelO
tile-floor of
scnaiOrs to break a lbreatened fili10
Associated Press.
because
otskyrocketing
liability
bolb
chambers.
The
House
passed
buster by trial lawyer allies; but
insurance
premiums.
bolb
malpractice
and
productliabiithen-Senate Majority Leader
Tbis year, ROfkefeller lbinks be ity reform just before tbe April ·
George Mitchell, r&gt;~Maine~ kept
is-wilbin
three or four votes of 60, reces~ _ ·though ·in a-tough fonn
lbe vote open for 45 minutes and but
be's
afraid
that Senate Republl- lbal President Clinton bas hinted be
used lbe time to convince three felcans
notably
Majorlly Leader might veto.
,
low Democrats to change their
Dole
(Kan.)
will
try
so
bard
Malpractice
refotm
proponents
Bob
positions, sinking lbe effon.
.
to
matGh
the
House
in
proposing
won
a
signal
victory
recently
when
Every year, product liabilily
u.s.A.
sweeping
legal
refotm
lbat
lbey'll
Senate
Minority
Leader
Tom
reform Is one of lbe most intensely
load
product
liability
down
with
Daschle,
D-S.D.,
agreed
notiO
!iii- and expensively - fought-over
too
'much
"baggage,"
losing
buster
the
issue
and
allow
votes
items on Congress' agenda. The
Center for Responsive Politics esti- enough Democrats to sink his beginning in tbe near future on
malpractice amendments.
mates lbal lbe Association of Trial effort ooce again.
Recently, as produclliability
Graefe, in a situation analogous
Lawyers of America gave nearly
$2.2 million to congressional can- legislation arrived o~ the Senate to Rockefeller's, bas been striving•
didates In the last cycle and $9 mil- floor, Dole planned tD introduce an to discourage amendments that will
amendment to cap punitive dam- lose votes by being too tough and
lion over lbe past 10 years.
Overwhelmingly, the mQney ages in all civil liability actions at to foster additions !bat will gain
but found be didn't have vo~.
•••
went 10 Democrats, lbougb A1LA $250,000,
1 .
The Amaiean .Medical Associabegan shifting money late in lbe lhe 'lotes to pass it and decided to
1994 campaign to help Republi- allow debate on medical malprac- ' tion, for instance, wanted an
lice refonn insread.
amendment that would cap socans, too.
.
Rockefeller says be strongly called "non-e.conomic" damages
Meantime, an ATLA ally, Citizen Action, charges that business supports limits on malpractice for "pain and suffering" at
C 1995 by NEA. Inc:
interests contributed $23 million to awards, but, in a key scheduled . $250,000, but was dissuaded by lbe
"overturn lbe Amaican legal sys- vote, will move to table them. He argument !bat it was a s\Jre loser.

.

Ethel Koenig

Ben Wattenberg, a seniOr fel- .
· low at tbe American Enterprise
Institute, Is the host of tile weekly
public television program,
~'Think Tank.''
.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically wltb
tbls columnist and otber1, con·
tad America Online by calling 1.
IIOQ-827-6364, exL 8317.)

ByTOMRAUM
Aasoc:lated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - President Clinton tells audiences, "Words do
have consequences." Tb;!.t' s been driven borne In recent days as incau. tious words have returned 10 spire those who uttered them.
· : · Conservative talk-sbow host G. Gordon Liddy and lbe National Rifle
: Association
high on tbe list of Clinton's favored- if unspoken-

.

The Rev. Florence Louise Manges Derouin Smith, 78, of Racine, died
Thursday, May 4, 1995, 8l tbe IKme of Dorothy Jobosoa.
Born Oct 11, .1917, in 'Franklin, Pa., the daughter Of !be late Harold
and Irene Donahue Manges, sbe was a minister allbe Snowville llld Pearl
Chapel churches. Sbe was a member .of tbe Grange, Meigs Ministerial
Associatioo, forioer treasurer oC !be Meigs Cooperative Parish, charter
member of the Parish and involved In radio ministry.
.
. Sbe is survived by ber brother, Carl Manges of Sayonburgh, Pa.;
daughters, Docotby and Jerry Joboloa Of Racine and Carol and Jim Freeman of Rooleo, Micb.; sons, Ma111n llld Jan Derouin of Las Vegas. Nev..
and Joseph and Sue Derouin oC Millville, Pa.; step-sons, Robert and Joann
Smilb ofButler, Pa., and William and Maryann Smilb of Millville, Pa.; 13
grandchildren; six step-grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and nine
step-great-grandcbildren.
·
Sbe Was preceded in death by ber husbands, Edgar Derouin and Robert
Smith; and cbildren, Degar Frank and Li!Uan Irene.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday a~ the Ewing Funeral
Home, with the Revs. James Waugh and Kenny Baker officiating. Burial
will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may c;an between 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral borne.

Units of !be Meigs Counly
The following actions to end
Emergency Medical Services
were nled recenUy In !be
marriage
responded tD eight calls for assisoffice
of
Meigs County Clerk of
tance Wednes$y. Units respond- Courts Larry
Spencer: .
ing Included:
Dissolutions
filed - Tracy W.
MIDDLEPORT
Lee
and
Sonja
K. Lee,. both ·of
5:v3 p.m., Second Street, Tonya
Pomeroy,
April
28;
WoodroW Hall
Burt, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Jr.,
Racine,
and
Judith
A. Hall,
POMEROY
W.Va.;
April26.
Cottageville.
8 p.m .. Pomeroy Nursing and
Divorces filed - Sherry Ann
· RebabUitatloo Center, George CunMiller,
MiddlepotL from Virgil A.
Ethel Koenig, 86, of MiddlepotL died Wednesday, May 3,1995, at diff, VMH;
Miller,
Long
Bottom, May 1.
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
8 p.m., PNRC, Bessie Brooks, .
Dissolutions
granled - Tina
. Born Aug. 19, 1908, in Chester Township, the d:lugbter of the late VMH.
Marks,
Albany,
and Joe Marks,
Valentine arid Minnie Fick Koenig, she was a homemaker. She was a
REEDSVILLE
Pomeroy,
May
1;
Stephanie A.
Methodisl
6:51 p.m., volunteer rore depart- Grueser, Rutland, and
Michael S.
Sbe Is survived by ber brothers, Wilbur Koenig of Middleport, Henry men! and squad to state Route 681,
Grueser,
Long
Bouom,
May
3.
Koenig of Cambridge, and Leo Koenig of Canton.
structure fire at Mike Sanders resi;
Divorce
granted
~
Coral
D.
Sbe was preceded in dealb by sisters, Susie Windon. Freda Krider and dence, no injuries reponed, TupSandlin,
Syracuse,
and
Roben
SanRossie Warner; and brolbers, Vern, Harley, Willy and Ebner Koenig.
pers Plains VFD and squad and
dlin, Bethel, May I.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral Chester VFD assisted.
Home, with the Rev. Eugene Underwood officiating. Burial will follow in
RUTLAND
lbe Mound Cemetery in Chester.
II a.m., VFD to Smith Run
Friends may call between 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral borne.
Road, T.O. Stewart property, false
VETERANS MEMORIAL
alarm, Middleport assisted.
Wednesday admissions
SYRACUSE
Bessie
Brooks, Pomeroy; George
5:04p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Cundiff"Pomeroy
Emma Searles. Pleasant Valley
LambetL 81, of Rutland, died Wednesday, May 3, 1995, at lbe Hospital;
Wednesday discharges - Rus.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Exreilded Care Facility, Pomeroy.
sell
Meadows, Pomeroy
8:37 p.m., E. Main Street, AshBorn May 24. 1913, in Logan, W.Va .. be was the son of lbe late John ley Roach, VMH;
·
and Mary Jane Browning Lambert. He worked as a 1001 dresser for many
9:05 p.m., Cherry Street, David
/tdil/f{7 I
years.
· .
Lawson, VMH.
He is survived by bis wife of 37 years, Kathryn Romme Lamben;
daughters and sons-in•law, Joyce Lambert of North Carolina, and Janet
Itt Allin l!Je WAKT
and Dennis Donohue of Florida; sons and daughters-in-law, Jim and
Annette Lambert of Addison, and Jeff and Mary Lambert of Pennsylvania; brolber, Bill Lambert of Columbus; six grandchildren: and several
COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
nieces and nephews.
.
He was preceded in death by lbree brolbers and four sisters.
CHEVY CHASE IN
I
."SWEET, SMART
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Flsber Funeral Home
MAN OF THE HOUSE PG
. ANDSEXY:.'
in MiddlepotL ·with lbe Rev. Vooa Spaulding officiating. Burial will folONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
low in lbe Robinson Cemetery,in Langsville.
STARTS
CHRIS FARLEY IN
Friends may call between 6 and 9 p.m. Friday atlbe funeral home.

AUVE!

though I don't remember all lbeir
names. I was treated like a person
and not a number which you find in
big hospitals.
·
If this hospital eootpletely closes, it will be a great loss to Meigs
County.
Nancy Willford
Long Bottom

.

Ada Jean Camfmao 86, or Gallipolis; died Thursday, May 4, 1995, at
Pinecrest Care Center.
·
_ Born Aug. 16, 1908, In Fairylew, W. Va,, the daughter of tbe late Noah
and Ada Edwards Roach, she was a retired nurse with Holzer Medical
Center. Sbe was a member or the-Gallipolis F1t1t Baptist Cbun:b, a Holzer
School of Nursing graduate and Wabama HighS
I graduate.
·
Sbe is survived. by bet sons and dau8btcr·ln·law,
Canfman of
Gallipolis llld John and Naomi C&amp;nfman of Marie 'Ga.; sisters, Alice
Roach and SreUa Johnson, both oC J.etart, W. Va;
grandchildren; and
three great-graodcbildreo.
Sbc was peceded in death by brotbtirs, Ollie, Dale and Elmer Roach.
Private services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at the WiUis Funeral Home
in Gallipolis, with the Rev. Alvis PoUard ofrtclating, Burial will foUow in
tbe Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call betw_een 6 and 8 p.m. Friday at tbe funeral home.

ITS

Good hospital care

The D..ly Sentinei-Pa~

----~--Area deaths-..-----Rev. Florence Smith
Robert T. Alexander

•

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

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Page 4 The Daily S.ntlnel

Sp~rtS
Baseball

.

,.

~:"York

. ....

_Toronto ......... ...........

3

Wed-.Jay's scores
1ill

.:s

.62$

3

4

6 .143 '

1.5

2.l

,429

3

5

3 .571
5 .216
6 .250

2
4
4.5

Wednesday's scorn

Fulufegama
r,;,~a~o~

.a CLEVELAND, 7 p.m.

Owlotte ar 0\ica.JO, 9:30p.m. (1NI')
Seaule at L.A: Laten, 10:30 p.m.

(TIIS)

frl.U,
Orlando Ill Boitoc, 1 p.m..CI'Nii
U~ at JloUitOn, 9:30 p.m. (I'NT')

Seanlc..S, Texu 1
Mlna~ota 10,_Kanau City 9

Chicago &amp;:t

Im'oa\o 8, C~o 1 (10 IM.)

Charlo~e.

{Fernandet0-0), 12:3S p.m
~~~City (Appler 2..0) at MinneJota

(Hawkin•O·l),l:!Sp.m.

r·"' .

CLEVELAND (lletahi.!let 0.0) 11 De·

troil (Wells 0· 1). 1:15
Boston ( Uanso~ ·0) at New Vorl

(l'er,.l-0), 7,35 p.m.

Oiltland (StotUemyre 0-0) al Callror·
ola (Sanderson 0·1 ), I0:05 p.m

Friday's games
Miancwta at CLEVELAND, 7:05p.m.
Boston at Delroit. 7:05p.m.
Totonto at Ballimofe, 7:35 p.m.
Milwaukee al New Yori:, 1:35 p.m.
Kansas City at Chicaao, 8:05 p.m:
Tens at Oa.k.Jand, 10:05 p.m.
Seattle a1 Califomla.IO :OS p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanlk (Hvbloft

.W L I fiL JlE !lA

I:nm

y-Philadelphia .. 2$ 16 4 60 ISO 132
x-NewJeney .... n18 s

52136 121

I · WMhingtan ... 22 18 8
•·N.Y. Ranaen. 22 23 3

12 136 120
47 139 134

Tampa8ay ....... l728 3

.J7

Florida .............. 20 22

6

AtJanta .....................6

I

.857

2
J

.714

I

.500
S .286
Fl~ida .................... . l · 6 .143

2.S
4

S

OtiC8JO .................. .4
Jlouaton.. ..................4

3 .HI
3 .571

St. l..ouil .................. 4

4

I'IIIJburgb ................ 2
CINCINNATI .••... .•• !

5 .286

FootbaU
Natloul foolball Le•ue
ATLANTA FALCONS: Sigbtd Mitch
Donahue, defoosivo end, to a ooc-year

S I 130 119

1924 5 43 127 141

43 125 148

coblracl.

23 117 174

CINCINNATI BENOALS: Releaud
Steve Brouuard, numina bact..
DETROIT UONS: Sisoed Zefrou
Mou, ol'feu\ve tackle; J01h Heinrich, defensive end; Jeff Jonet\ offenli\le tackle;

WIUie Smith aod Darry Majcr,linebackera; Randy Nonhoff, auard; and Earnest
WilliaJTll, ruooing back.
HOUSTON OILERS : Signed Purvl•

Central Ulvblon

11: L J: &amp; 1iE !lA

x-Chicago ......... 24 19 5

.S

.500

2
3

6 .143

53 156 115

1-Toron1o ......... , 21 19 8 SO 135 146
.......... :. 17 23 8 42 136 13S
Wionipea .......... 16 25 7 39 !51 177

I· Dallal

Wntern DMRoa
I .87S
l.o• AJlgeln ............. 4 4 .500
s~ Dieao ..... :......... A
4 .soo

3
3

San

3

.500

y-cataary ..•....... 24 11 1
x-Vapcouvcr ..... 11 JB 12

-.
"

.,"
"..

.

'',.

SELECT fROM:

BROYHILL • LA·Z·BOY .,
LANE • BENCH CUFT
ENGLAND CORSAIR •
PAGENT • BUSHLINE

BEDROOM SOlTES

PIULADELPlUA EAGLES: Waived

tackle.

Wednesday•s scores
St. Louis 8, Pirtsburah 6

·

GENERAL TIRE SALES

Houston II, Oi.lcago 2 1
Colorado 12, San Dieao 7
Montreal3, New York!
CINCINNATI 7, Philadr.lphia 2
AUanla 6, Aorida 4
W• Anaele£ 7, Sail Francisco 6

CO:\JI»l TEH TIHE BALAI\CJI\(;

·I Hours M-F 8-5

Today's games
San Ftaneiaco (Wil•on 1·0) at San

Allanla (Avery 0-1)
0-1). 7,0l

p.m.

If Aorida

..

Sat. 8-12

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Dieao (Sandrn 1·0), 4:05p.m.

(Rapp

•'

BATTERIES

New YOrk (Harnisch 0-0) at 'Montreal

(l:lenry 0.1), 7:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Quantrill 1·0 ) at

STRUTS

CINCINNATI (Jwvli 0.0), 7:35p.m. (

Friday's games
Florida at Montiul. 7:35p.m.
New York Ill CINCINNATI, 7:35p.m
O.icago at PitiJburah, 7:3S p.m.
Phlladelphia at Atlanli, 7:40p.m.
Houston'at St. Loul•. 8:0!i p.m.
Lo1 An&amp;elcs a1 Colorado. 9:W: p.m.
San FrancJsetS at San Dlefo, 10:0!1

.

SELECT fROM:

Howton (Reynolds 0-1) al St. Louia

_ •.(O.born&lt;Jl&lt;lll.~r.&amp;L ~~

''That was a long 266 days
without a win, I'll tell you that,"
general manager Jim Bowden i8ld
as be got oo the stadium elevalor.
He didn't have to tell manager
Davey Johnson about it. Before the
game, Johnson bad recounted his
ltllelt aleepleas night- tbe fallout
from loss No.6 on Tuelday.
.

five innings off David West, but it
was a buae lift for a winless Willi.
"The big tiling was Roo Gant
getting us off tbe mat wben we
were down (-0," Barty Larkin

said.
It remained tied until the sevemb, when former Nasty Boy
reliever Norm Charlton made bis
rewm. Charlton. pitching at River·
front Stadium for tbe first time
since 1992. aot the first two out
and then aot careless.
Deion Sanders bunted batlt to
the mound, but Cl!ariiOn was slow
fielding and throwing. Sanders beat
it out for a single.
''That wasn't a very good bunt
•

at all, • • Pbillies manager Jim the right faelder."
F~gosi said "He (Cbar!ton) mi 2 bt •
Xavier Hernandez (1~) escaped
haveforgouenwbo wasrmming:"' . a threat in the seventh to get the
C6arlton then walked Bret win, and Jeff Brantley gave up a
Boooe and Larlcin and Galli drove homer to Mariano Duncan while
the second pitch from Ricky Bot· aetting the last five outs for the
talico up the middle for a 3-llead.
save.
. "It just seems like we"ve been
Lark!n ~ai'd be ~ever got ~oo
bitting the ball bard all year. we warned dunng the SIX·game losmg
just haven't bad anything to sbow strealc.
for it," Gant said. "Tonight they
".We weren't going to continue
went through."
to play the way we were playing,"
The Reds put it away with four be said. "We"ve got too good of a
in the eighth. capped by Larkin's team for that.""
.
two-run biple to right
That was easy for bim to say.
"Things were going well."
"I can honestly say that was the
Larkin said. "Three or four days toughest week I've ever spent manago, that ball would have been at aging a ballclub. especiall)"'a fine
ballclub." Johnson said. ' ·

Wells (0-1) opposing Cleveland
DETROIT (_.\P) - Tighter right-bander Ore! Hcrsbiser(O-O).
In winning four of sill games,
security kept lbe Tiger Stadium
crowd in cbe_ck. Too bad there the Indians b.ave scored 57 ruas,
wasn't something DebOlt could do including Tuesdafs 11-1 victory
about tbe b«?omlng bats of tbe over Detro!!. "The T!&amp;cn have been
Cleveland Indians. .
outscored 53-26 10 their seven
Paul Sorrento bad a three-run g~~·
homer and a career-best sill RBis
You lcoow what? Nobody can
Wednesday night as the In~ians belp_us wbe~~ we're giving up runs
r outed Detroit for tbe second .like this," Detroit manager Sparky
straight Wl,y, this 1iJM !Jy a 14·7 . AodersoJ! said. "Their side
Dllirgin.
couldn't beat ours If they bad our
The teams were to conclude the pitching."
. The Tisers' bome opener was
tbree-game series this afternoon
wltb Detroit left-bander David spoiled Tuesday by faiL'&gt; wbo threw

objects at players and ran onto the flee fly. He bad three bits in four
field. With tigbtet security and a at· bats in tbe game. Sorrento.
smaller crowd, there were no inci- whose previous bigb was five RB!s
dents Wednesday. The crow&lt;,! was last year against Texas, bas four
announced at 29,996 but appeared homers and two doubles this
to~ abo~t 10,000 less.
.
.
son.
We mtend to make. th1s stadi·
"I never remember leading the
um ~afe .for our faiL'&gt; and for teams league in bome runs,~ • said Sorrencommg m 10 play us," Tigers pres· to, wbo was out early for extra bat·
ideut John McHale Jr. said.
ting practice. "Hopefu lly I can
If the Indians were bothered by continue to do my pan and pitlt up
Tuesday's chaos. it didn't affect the other guys. That's the whole
their explosive offense that da-y Ill' thing i'n this 'arne, picking up
Wednesday.
everybody else. •
·.
Sorrento's RBis came on a douCleveland scored six runs on six
ble, a three-run homer and a sacci· · bits and rwo walks off Detroit

sea-

.

starter Jobn Doherty (0·2). who
was relieved with no ouUI and two
runnc;rs on in the third. Doherty is
0-4lifetime against !be Indians.
Matk Clar~ (1_-~) ga~e ~p three
runs o.n five bt~ m fi~e mrungs fo(
the wm, trunmmg b1s ERA from
60.75 IQ 17.05 in the process.
"The longer the game went. the
betier I felt," Clatlc said. "In Texas
I hied to be. too fine with my l'itcb·
e&amp;. Knowing that many runs w11l be
scored for xou·really boosts your
confidence.·
,
Manny Ramirez bit his third
homer for Cleveland; Eddie Mur-

SHOCKS

~--LEXINGTON • HOOKER~•ATHENS~

TIRES

VAUGHAN • FLORIDA • .KELLER • UNIVERSAL

'-c-- •

-~ ·---c-c-­

"
.,

•
"

DltiEIIE SETS

•

p.m.

Lukas·horses expected .to finish strong in Kentucky Derby
who will be entered as a separaie
LOUISVU..LE, Ky. (AP) -D. betting interest, also will have
Wayne Lult:as is going for three in many backers.
"He's sort of the ugly stepsister
a row in the Triple Crown. ·
At Kentucky Derby time last bere," Lukas said of Thunder
year, Lult:as hadn't trained a Grade Gulch. "He happens to be the
I stakes winner in 2 1/2 years, and least-heralded of our group, but be
bis son Jeff still was recovering is not a horse withootability."
from the near-fatal trampling be
None of the Lukas horses are
took from Tabasco Cat just befo~ witho'Ut ability Ibis year.
Christmas.
Timber Country. wbo will be
Now, Jeff is well and training ridden by Pat Day. scored an
again. That same Tabasco Cat, wbo impress\ve victory in the Breeders' .
was sixth in tbe Derby, went on to Cup Juvenile at Ibis same Churchill
win the Preakness and' Belmont Downs track last Nov, 5. He's
Stakes. Lult:as-trained horses- the failed to win in three races since,
colt Timber Country and tbe filly hicluding fourth in tbe Santa
Aiuulers - won both two-year-old Anita Derby on April 8, .but Lult:as
championships of 1994. •
· attributed that, at least in part, 10
And Lultas is back in Keubleky the racing surface.
witb· his strongest b.and ever,
Timber Country bas worked
despite career-ending injuries to well at Churchill Downs, and
Flanders.
Lukas said, "It's my experience
"I'll be bard-pressed for any that horses wbo work well here run
excuses this year,' Lult:as said.
well here.''
Lukas will saddle ·two colts,
Timber Country is. owned by
Timber Country and Thunder W.T. Youna. Grabam Beck and
Gulch, and the filly Serena's Song Robert and Beverly Lewis. Tbe
in the big Derby field Saturday.
Lcwises also own Serena's Song,
. That gives· b~ a ~d 2611fe· hence the betting enlry.
time Derby entries smce be fi~st
Serena's Soog. second by a bead
brought Partez to. Kentucky tD to Aanders in .tbe Breeders' Cup
1981. P,ar~z t:Jnisbed n.inth, and Juvenile Fiily, will pas~ up the
Lult:as dido t wm one until the fdly Kentucky Oaks on Fnday · to
Winning Colors led wire-to-wire in bl:come tbe 36tb ntly to run in the
1988.
·
· ·Derby. Only tbree have won it:
. "It's fun to run in the Derby, Regret in 1915 Genui.ne Risk in
and it's re~~Y fun if you think .Yq~ 1980, and Winn~g Colors.
have a l~g1timate chance to wm,
Serena's Song, unbeaten in four
Lult:as. Sl)ld.
. .
outings this year. earned ber shot ·
- - " 'fbts-year, the_enlr)'Jlf..."Imllllll'--f;y beating colts in the J.im Beam·
Cou~try an~ Serena's Song &amp;!most Stakes on April!, usin.g tbe same
cellalniy will go off tbe favonte, at front-running Lukas s&amp;d Serena's
2- I or betler, and Thunder Gulch. front-running style compliments

the stretch-running styles of bis
othet horses.
. . Still. bis decision w,put the filly
m tbe Derby bas tiS cnlics.
"If I bad those fillies, I'd stay in
my own division," said Nick Zito,

traineroftwoof~elastfourDerby
wmners. who ~111 saddle Suave
Prospect '!lis year. "I wo~ldn"t run
ber, but 11' s really exc1tm8' that
sbe's in it."
Thunder Gulch, owned by

Michael Tabor. "'?n the Fountain
Of Youth and Flonda Derby before
finisbi~g fourth in the Blue Grass
on April 15. at Keeneland.
Among the other top contenders
will be Blue Grass winner Wild

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llfEIIME WAAAANIY

lifETIME WAAAANIY

Magic an-d Jazz take
Garden if they don't advance to !he
By_HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - The Orlando second round. They move into !he
Magic can win !he big games afler new AeetCenler next season.
Also Wednesday night, Utab
all.
With so much going against beat Houston 95-82 to take a 2·1
them - an enemy crowd, a seven- lead in !heir series.
Tonight, Chicago can close out
game road losing streak, poor
shooting and a lhree-point defiCit Cbarloue at borne, wbile New York
can eliminate tbe Cavaliers at.
wilh less tban two minutes lc;ft and the Lakers can fmCleveland
!hey didn't give in.
ish
off
Seattle
at Los Angeles.
They scored tbe last eight
.
Boston
legends
Red ·Auerbach
points, beat tbe detetmined Boston
and
Larry
Bird
watched
from the
Celtics 82-77 Wednesday night and
stands
wilh
the
rest
of
!he
raucous
moYed witbin a win o( tbeir fust
fans,
but
i.t
was
tbe
Magic
wbo
playoff series victory.
played
like
lbe
old
Celtics
down
''This ·is a game we bad to
win," Magic coach Brian Hill said . the stretch.
With Boston ahead 77-74. Nick
"Down the stretch, we didn't ratAnderson,
who led Orlando with
tle.''
points,.
sank
a three-pointer with
24
. Leading 2-1 against lbe only
I:
10
lefl
Then
Anfemee
Hardaway
playoff team with a losing record.
SOl\fe(l
to
block
Dominique
Willcins
Orlando can wrap up !he best-of-5
layup
with
46
seconds
to
~o
.. And
series Friday ,night in wbat will be
(See NBA on Page ti)
tbe last Celtics game at Boston

•

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Syn .. Wood Memoria.! winner
Talkm Man. Santa An1ta Derby
run.ner-up Nte~oon Oec:lites, and
Elttsb, the English camp31gner who
was second in the Breeders' Cup
Juvenile last
·

WE WILL HoT BE UNDERSOLD
ON ANY hEM
AT
ANY
TIME
anv

2-1 leads in series

DON. TATE MOTORS, Inc.

ray bit his second, Kenny Lofton
and Carlos Baerga each bad four
bits for tbci,Indians.
"I don't think any of us ex~
to continue scoring 10 or 11 runs a
night.'· Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said . "But my mother
always told me never to look a gift
horse in the mouth."
Chad Curtis had a 1wo-run double for tbe Tigers. one of six
Dettoit doubles.
The Tigers scored four runs in
the eigbtb off Jason Grimsley ,
bigbligbted by Rudy Pemberton's
two-run triple.

a

I.

Cary Conlr:lia, .quanetbact. Announced
the retirement of William Petry, defen1ive

55 163 135
48 153 148

ofcoune.

By JOHN NELSON

Hunt and Neal Sharkey, auard•: Scotty
Lewis, defensive eDd; hmea Logan ,
llmebacket; DenniJ Lundy, running back;
and Keith Neal, wide receiver.

Parlfk Diflllon

Cokndo .................. 7

4

61 181 158

WFSTERN CONFERENCE ,

rnm

,.

ableg till, retroactive lo April 28.

z-Delroit ........... 33ll 4 70 180 117
x-SI. Loud ........ 28 l.S 5 61 178 13S

~ntral Ol•l"oR

..........4

1~8

J:lll

Montreal .................. 5
Phlladclphla ............. 3
New Yorlc ................2

Franci~¥Q

120 144

x-Bo5loD ........... 27 U 3 57 ISO 127
Monlreal... ........ 18 23 1
Ottawa .............. 9'34 S

I

Alan Benet, pitchct, oa lhe t.s·day disabled lilt. Signed Grea Cadarel, pilthu,
aod auianed him to Louinille of lhe
Americn Anociatloo. Anianed Crla
Carpenter, pitcher, to LouiniUe. Placed
Gary Bucttll, plteht:r, on the- LS-day dis-

127

Northeut DlvUiun
65185 134

l·Quobc&lt;: ......... . 3013 5
lt-PittsburJh ...... 2916 3

ll&gt;rtlord ............
E.lun Di'lillon

46 115

N.Y. Jslandm ... IS28 S J:i 126

x-Du(falo .. ........ 22 19 1

NATIONAL LEAGuk

Nolloaoll.eaauo

... ATLANTA BRAVES: Aareed to
tern. wllh Steve AY«'f, pitcher, OD I ODDyear eoll.trac:t. CINCINNATI REDS:
Aareed to WriDI with Tim Stieber, r,·ldl·
er, on a minor-leaaue contract. P aced
John Roper, pltdicr, on the IS·dlly di•·
abted lllt. mro.c:tin to May 1.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Placed

"I woke up at 3 o'clock buaeyed. just walking arouDd, IJ')'ing 10
fi'ure out something," Jobnsoo
Sllld. "I bad all my t:bOrcs done by
6 o'clock, I had 10 think up things.
I wate!W every plant that was on
the porch, I balanced my cbe'ck:book, I did tbe dishes, I did a load
ofwasb."
·
.
His bouse is clean and DOW be
bas a win, too, thanks toGII!l
Gant, playing bls first game
since setting two more cortisoue
shots in bis so~ right knee Mon·
day, bit an opposite-fteltl homer to
tie t11e game at 1 in tbe fourth
inning,
It was one of only two bits in
•

badly.
Tbe 0-6 uarled matched tbe
wtllllatart Ibis ceowry by a .Redl
team. The cooscaaua pick 10 win
the NL Cenlral wu bumbling Ita
way Into blltory and sutrerlna aUttie more with eacb winless day.
Wbo ~ countioa? Tbe Redl,

By HARRY ATKINS

.LIVI tiCi ltOOM SOlTES

or lhe Americ.aa AJ1octalo11.

NHL final standings

.

.

The 'Dally Sentinei-Pag&amp;-5

.-

_S orrento's bat helps Tr1be notch 14-7 v1ctory over Tigers

5. FREE LAYAWAY

'

Riven., iDfielder, to a mJDOr-lcaguc conlracl. ltlld MliJoed him"to ·OkJahoma City

Hockey

Milwaukee {Sc:aniiW O.O)·at Baltimore

1!: L &amp;1.

._TEXAS. RANGERS : Sian'ed LUis .

.

Houston at Utah, TBA, If oeCeUuy

Tuday's games

Ium

BasehaU
A._l&lt;ool.eopo
NEW YORK YANKEES ' Sigoed Bob
Melvin, &lt;:atcher, to 1 minor·IUJUC con·

TBA, if necea·

•an&lt;-

New Yort. 4, 8o&amp;lOD 3 (13 ina;)
, Calirornl• 8. Oakland 7 (IO illD.)

ecertaln I,Jmltltlon• Apply. Sit Store lor Dttall1.
~--..4. FREE DEUYERY . r-

neceasary

ncce&amp;&amp;ary

••

•

10 PAYMENT TILL MiY 1996

Transactions

Sllw-da,

BIG FIVE WAYS!

I.IUY OOREWIDE AI·IEDUCED
SALE PRICES
1
~---2. WI PAY THE TU ,.
-

L.A. Lakeu at Sealtle, 3:30 p.m.1 If
Sunct.J, May 1
Boston at OrlaDtlu, TBA, ir neccuary
CLEVELAND at New York, TBA, if

CLEVELAND 14, Detroit 7
Milwaukee 7, Balli more 4

\1

Floriclo •• PilllbwJ)l3
Buffllo 5, New Jeney •
Bostoa 4, MoatrfAll
Qu- 4, Hortlord I
Ol:taw1 .C, Tampa Bay l
au- 5. lAo AD&amp;da I
Ddrofi l, SL Louil 2
Calpy !J, Edmontoa3
VIIDOOUWII' 3, SaD Jme 3 (Ue)
Auileim 6, ToroalO 1

(TNT)

Wultm DhiRon
Seattle ............... ....... ()
I .157

CaHrcrnia.................4
Oaklaad ...................2
Tnu ................ ... ... ,2

2-1

New York

SAVE

Wedaeoday's
regular.....,a finales

Utab 95, Houlton 82; Utlh kacla .me~

I
3

C1nlrll Dl•blon ,
Milwaukec ...............6 1 .B$7
Cf...EVELAND .........-4 2 .667
KaD1u Clly ............. 3 3 .500
(biC8jO ................... l

Z•WOD COilfcre.acc title

Ort•do 12, Boston Tl; Orludo lads

, 8ollOD .....................4 , 3 .571
8altiTTJOR .. ,........ ,. .... 2 ~ .286
Ddtoil ..................... l
5 .286 .

Mill11CIOia .......... ,..". J

''

U..AIII"*······ 16 23 9 41 142 174

Pria2·1

~ ~

:If.s

'

l!dmou............ 17 27 4 :II 136 Ill
Alllllolm .......... l6 27 l 11 115 164
&amp;-&lt;llndled pllyoft bctlh
y-woa dhildoa IJ~

NBA playoffs

li:•l~rn DiYtlion

CINCINNAn (AP) - Tbey'~
ooloogeralccpleaa inCIDdDM!I ·
The major Jeapea' ouly willlcu
11:11111 finally got itrigbtWednclday
Digbt. 'fl!e Redl ellle!Jed rrom one
of their wont swu of the century
wltb a. 7·2 victory over tbe
Phllatlelpbia Pbilllea, then scUled
in for a good night's n:st.
From the manager on dowu,
theyhaven'tbadmanyoftbosc.
'I'm goina to sleep easy
tonight. I don't have to toss· and
tum," s:iid Ron Gant, the key play·
erin win No. l, "It's areal burden
off our shoulders."
Believe It: They needed this one

.,

Basketball

AMERICAN LEAGUE

By JOE KAY

I

.a -Suz-. ........ 19:15 4 ·42 129 161

Pomeroy-Middlepon,
O!'llo.
.

Reds collect season's first. victory by· downing Phillies
7-2 .
.

TAl DAYS ARE NOT ALL BAD
LET US PAY THE TAX .ON YOUR PURCHASE

Scoreboard
Major leagues

Thursday, M•v 4, 1995

Thu,.day, Mlly 4, 19951'

D'fltlrl

. by Purctator

bemlaY Low

--&lt; Ii- I

97
SZtff

$1.99 saleprico

·10 50 mf(S rtbalt !ltr o)UQ

149..... ,.

- .y... -

afterrtba..

AUtllltl

J

.

Syracuse, Ob

NOW DELIVERING!
~ginning

Friday May 5
Syracuse Racine Minersville
i\reas

Call992·7287

PldiUIII
11111'11 PIUIII
WEACml

·-=··
1•1

· usn oJL

'i •
:l"'·•

GALLIPOLIS

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Stont Houra: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
lillY 10. 1M.

209 ~pper River Road
446-3807

spettal orders

�Thursday, May 4, 1995
Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

PoirMroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Mey 4, 19115

Philippine medical
mission discussed
at
.
Rotary me~ting

In DiVision II softball ssctionsl action,

Meigs hands New Lexington 4-3 loss
SenliDel Corrtlponclenl
The Meias softball team ~
three runs In tbe ~ inning to
break a one all tie and beld off New Lexington to post a 4-3 win in
Division n sectional softball tour·
nament play Wednesday at Meigs
HiJb Scbool.
The Marauders will host Belpre
- the Golden Eagles blanked
River Valley 8-0 in a Northeast
Sectional first-round game - in
lhe championship game Friday at
4:30 p.m. Admission for lhe game
will be $2.
New Lexington jumped out to
an early 1-0 lead in lhe fust. Snider
Jed off the game wilh a walk and
Haugh followed wilh a pop-up in
front of the plale. Marauder catcher

on a passed drive to riJbt tblt.Jcssica McElroy
Emily Fackler gave a great effort 10 Fackler then
get tbe ball diving to make ·the ball, jarring lhc ball loose from lhc C811iht on a sboeslring before f'aing
catch, butlhe ball hit off lhe tip o( · . pltcber with her slide. The ball to secood to double off McNulty 10
her glove and rolled illlo foul terri· rolled Into foul territory, allowing end lhc tbreal.
tory for an infield single. Two · Blackwell to score from second
Billie Butcber was the winning
walks later, tbe Panthen went on base 011 tile play.
piteber giving up seven biiS, walk·
top 1-0.
·
New Lexington made it a 4-2 lng seven and strltlng out as many.
Meigs tied lhe game in tbe bol· contest in the tbird wben Cole Blackwell Jed Meigs at tbe plato ·
tom of the inning. Wilh twO outs, tripled and scored on Mohler's with a double, while Stewart, -CotStephanie Stewart and Gyntbla ground-out
teriH and Bobbie Butcher all added
Cotterill had back-1()-back singles
, The Panthers poRed to within 4before Billie and Bobbie Bu.tcbcr 3 in tile sixth and bad a chance to
· ble, lhe starting and losing
bad back-to-back walks to force In score more, but the Marauder pitcher, gave up four bits, struck
the tying run.
· defense came up witb two big out four and walked seven. Cole ·
Meigs scored three more runs in plays. Compston and Hupp bad led lhe Pantbers with a double and
· the second to take a 4-1 lead. Julie back-to-back doubles to start the a single.
King and Emily Fackler both inning to make it 4-3. Moore lhen
walked with one out. Then Amber walked 10 put ruDDerS on tint but Inning totall
Blackwell doubled to score King was plclced off of fust by Facltler New Lexington 101-001-0-3-7-0
130-000-xoo4-4-3
and make it a 2-1 cooleSt. Stewart for lhe innings first out A single by · Meigs
WPBillie
Butcber
then walked to load the bases. McNutty put runners on (irst and
LP-Kimble
third, but Padgett hit a sinking tine

sinl':;

We've Been ~Putting
· Quality First

1
. u
from Page 5)
..(Continued
_____
__,__
NB'HA p.ayous
ing, including 4-for-19 in the final
period.
The Celtics were led by Wilkins
and Dee Brown with 16 points
each.
O' Neal picked up his third foul
with 31 seconds left in the first
quarter and sat out the rest of the
half.
The Magic led 45-41 at intermission
and took their biggest lead,
case.
Last season, tbe first with the 59-49 with 5:50 left in the third
0' Neal -Hardaway combination, quarter. But an 11-2 Boston run cut
.
Orlando had 50 wins, but suffered thatto 61-60.
A
three-pointer
by
Sherman
a tbrce-game playoff sweep to Indi·
ana. .
Douglas and two free throws by
· It was going to be different this Wilkins gave Boston a 74-73 lead,
season. The Magic led the Eas1em its fust since lhe rust minute of lhe
Conference with a 57-25 record. second quarter.
Boston still led 77-74 with less
Then they handed Boston the worst
than
two minutes to go. And the
loss in its 49-year history, 124-77
Magic
hadn't made a field goal
in the playoff opener. But the .
since
7:13
remained. Then came
Celtics pulled a 99-92 upset Sunlhe
decisive
moments.
day, only Orlando's third home
Anderson
sank his three-pointer,
loss of the season.
Hardaway
made
his block on
Orlando won despite bitting just
O'Neal
dunked.
Wilkins
and
4 of 18 shots in the fourth quarter
Jazz
!IS,
Rockets
82
against a Celtics team playing wilh
At
Houston,
Karl
Malone
scored
11 rare intensity durinJ a season in
32
points,
21
in
lhe
second
half,
which lt was 35-47. But the Celtics
and
grabbed
19
rebounds
.
were done in by 31 percent shoot·

25 YEARS

FOR

QUICK OUT - Meigs pitcher Billie Butcher (left) watches her
throw make it to first base for the out against a New Lexington batter
during Wednesday's DlvislJ!n II sectional softball tournament at
Meigs High School,' where the Marauders won 4-3 to earn the right to
face Belpre Friday. (Dave Harris photo)

Shaquillc O'Neal got the go-ahead
basket on a followup dunk with 28
seconds remaining.
" I'm on a great team, whelher
people give us credit or not," s;lid
O'Neal, who had 20 points and a
season -high 21 rebounds. " We
showed a lot of heart in the last few
minutes."
That hasn't always been the

I

srored

By DAVE HARRIS

Quality Plants Po Make A Difference. At Bob's Market &amp;
Green~ous~s You'll Find Only Healthy Plants. Our Retail Stores
Are Stocked Daily With Plants Fresh From The Greenhouse!

•

This Week We're Featuring:
6 1h " NEW GUINEA HYBRID IMPATIENS$&lt;
.

.

I

ly, in the age categorlei of four ID ,eight, and nine
to 12. Accepting her check from Atwood Is
Sarab Clllford, a second place winner. Other
winners were from tbe left, Sara Mansfield, a
flrst;"Erk:a Poole, alhlrd; .KIItle Ann Wilfong, a
third; Samantha Cole, • first; and Sarah Boston,

flrsl,second•ndthlnlplacewlnners,respectlve-

aseeond.

ship Trustees, 7 p.m. Thursday at
the town baD.
RACINE - Post 602, Alnerican Legion, 6:30 p.m. dinner with

Dr. Mel P. Sinon o( Gallipolis, care for patients aflcr ..,.....,.
international service~ of the
The team in 1994:0r'ked In
Gallipolis Rotary Club, was the three different hospitals and plans
speaJrer at Monday night's meeting to return to tbe Pbillppines this
of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rocai-y year.
Club ll the Heath United Methodist
This wbole prognun is designed
Cbun:b. .
.
.
to carry .out lhe Rotary principle of
~r . .Stmon, cbat~man of .the Service to Mankind, be pointed
Pbilippme Surgeons m lhe Umted . out. The Gallipolis Rotary Club
MEL SIMON
States, bas beaded up a medical contributed $1 000 toward the promission to the. Philippines every gram and RoUmans in lhe Philip- were exhausted. be said. .
year since 1985. The total party in pines helped in setting up the proMost or' the cases involved CID•
the 1994 missio~ cons.isted of grams lhere. Individual physicians cer in some form, Dr. Simon point·
about 40 people mcludmg bus- took care of their own expenses
ed out.
.
bands and wives. Of lhese, 22 were oot of pocket.
' · Jon Perrin, club president,
doctors from~ far away as Seattle
Dr. Simon sbowed pictures of announced lhe Adult Basic Lilera·
and as close as Marietta.
,
many of lhe cases handled describ- cy and Education Banquet would
In 1994, tbe party saw more ing in detail many of the surgical be held on June 12. The district
tban 200 patients and performed cases. Hospitals in the Philippines Rotary conference will be beld in
127 surgical operations. The pur· lack much in lhe way of up-to-date Jaclcson May 18-20. Several of the
pose of the mission is to bring not equipment as well as experienced local Rotarians are planning on
only surgical relief to the low doctors. One example oftbe lack or a11ending. .
income patients, wilhout cost, but supplies mentioned was that in
Maxine Gaskill, who has been
more importantly 10 ttain local resi- some eases it was necessary to wintering in Florida, was ·wel·
dent physicians and interns so IIley reson to sterilizing newspapers for corned back . Ladies of the cburcb
served tbe dinner.
and use as linen when linen supplies

CommunityccalenCJars

meeting at 7:30p.m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO,
at lhe school 7 p.m. Thursday.
FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER - Meigs

County Pomona Gnmge 46, Friday,
7:30p.m at Star Grange Hall near
Salem Center. Jackson County
Pomona Grange to vislt; potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. County baking

contest to be held.
REEDSVILLE - Weekend
revival, South Belhel New Testament ChlllCb, Silver Ridge, Friday

lhrough Sunday, 7 ~.m . each
evening. Rev. Gilbert Spencer,
Chicago, speaker; special singing.
Public invi~e&lt;j.

.

POMEROY

MERCHANTS

99

· "Over 13 Bea.utiful Vibrant Colors"
-

COLORING CONTEST WINNERS Checks were present~ to the winners In tlte
annual Easter coloring contest sponsored hy
local merc:hants ID cooperetlon wltb The DaUy
Sentinel. Bob Atwood, achertlslng representa·
Uve, presented cbecka at $15, $10, and SS to the

THURSDAY
ROlLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
Rutland F'ue Station.
CHESTER - Chester Town-

•

.

6 Y/' POITED GERANIUMS
"In A Variety Of Colors"

1'WO

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114 Mile North ·ofPomeroy- Maso~ Bridge

HAPPY MOTHER'S
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Phone (614) 446-1711

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Open 9 to 5 Monday thru Saturday ·

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~

.-

(

..•

�I
'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

1995

The Daily Sentlriel Page 8

a .,.,..

PubiC Nolle»

PubiC Notice

let fMr ....... lcr011

Thursday, lhy 4,

1995

• 'llclnltY

.... A hiiJ S..lfHI

IULLETII IOAID
..,
6" col••• IRch weekdays

,_

1

.... •••••• •••• s••••,

•

CALl OUR OFFICI AI 992·2155

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Convenient Mini-Storage Units

HAULING

Owners: Robert Barton•&amp;
Harry Clarl&lt;

S. R. 7 Five Points

(Specialize In

992·9949 . 992-6471

Pomeroy, Ohio

992~15

drlv-y .,.._,lng)
Limestone,
Gr~vel, Sand,
To·p Soli, Fill Dirt

Mon - Fri _8 a.m. • 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. • 5 p.m.
Sun. by appt. only
SalVing PomeJOy, Middleport

Pomeroy, OhiO

614-992-3470

Call for rate schadule
Min. $2.00

992-5251

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUOION

Meet Interesting Singles

RHETI

SUMMER
IMAGES

Carpenter Work

Open

MILHOAN

Free Estimates

Auctioneer
35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certillad Personal
Property Appraiser
Bondad (614) 992·4079

tNewGar.ge.
t£lectrlc:IJI • Plumbing

-Roofing
·
-Interior • Exterior
Painting
Alllo Concrate Work

Yoar Phone
1-900-945-6200
Ext. 2579

Benefit Dance Hazilee F,liebel Family
ROYAL OAK RESORT
FRIDAY,-MAY 5, 8 pm-midnight
$5,00 Cover· BYOB. Publk: Welcome.

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

-Room Addltlona

As Close As

(FREE ESTIMATES)

SU9permln.

V.C. YOUNG Ill -

lluotbe18y,..

Procai!Ca.
(602) 954-7420
I

ATTENTION SHOPPERS
You don't want to miss this
huge yard sale. At the corner
of Locust and Maple Streets in
Cheshire, Oh. May 4th, 5th, - ~ ·
6th. Levi &amp; Arizona jeans,
shirts, coats, beautiful
women's and children's
clothes. Housewares, drapes,
microwave lots of window
blinds. Lots of misc.
Phone 367-7350

4IHMn

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you Ill We're
live and waltlnglll

1-900-388-1000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

-

(602) 954-7420

&amp; Ham Dinner

DI'JIPPLIIICI
IDIICI

May 7th
at
Southern High School
Sponsored by Southern Jr. High
11 a.m.- 3
Children •
75,

-Factory Authorized P.-ts ,
&amp; Service
•All Makn o42 Yea,.

~

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
CUllOm Building ARemodollng
·•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING
FREE ESnMATES
(614} 992·5535
(614} 992·2753

-Refrigerator• •Freezer•
•DIIhwalheril
ooH.W. Heelers
.Uicrowene •Di11p0aala
•Thsnkololelgo &amp;
'
Surrounding Area•
(614) 985-3561 or

-THE WATERING
HOLE
- In Tune With
KARAOKE
FRI., MAY 5TH,

9:30·-

TUES., MAY 16, 9:30
Tickets In Advance $6.00 '
At The Door $10.00

Ext. 8587

Taka the pain out
painting, ~et us do it
you. Very reasonable.

Help

a-11----- w~antrto-be -a

part of a

'----

-

0

winning team?
Cashiers, carry-out are needed.
Must be willing to work all hours.
-Pick~up

applications in person

Vaughan's Cardinal.

tom Carpets

. .c31

Free Estimates
" iietore 6 p.m.leave..
message.
After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180 312.....

ONE·derfulreasons
to eta home equity
rne ofcredit are
piling up one by one.
summer at
prime·

dollar
closing

. LIVE
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1
1·900-656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

GRAY'S

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

$18.99
.

AMERICAN MADE
_ Tight and Dense
5

W:t.'Y.(·g@&gt;t &amp;f.tw tri~ ... W-pad and normal
CM' .fl.~:tv:.~· thiS TOOrtthl .___ Installation ___.

19.99

'

_____

INGELS CA.RPE~ .MlY.

W-pad and normal
·
installation

.

\)'~ -j

Lauref.Limo
Service

call
to apply

· Rent a
Limousine for
Weddings, Proms
and Speelal
Oeeaslons
(614) 992·4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

STO·A·WAY

,•.

MINI STORAGE
NOWRENTINO

\,

Comparable Sizes &amp; Pri ces
New, Jlaven, WV
•. 304-882-2996 -

Here's someexciting news'Apply for a Bank One Home Equity
Line; and your interest rate will be
the NIJTle as "prime" throughout the
summer. You'll pay only one dollar
in closing costs. And, you can apply
with just one p~one call.
So if you want to remodel your
home. consolidate bills or pay for
your child's,education, call or visit
your nearest Bank Onebranch today
and ask about our home equity offeTR

DARWIN , O~

ROOFING

GuHer Cleaning
Painting
. FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
5!16194 TFN

MR. RIGGS

10NI mo.

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIOOLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hou,.: Mon.•Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Rooting, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
-Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free EstlmatH

1•800 _486 _1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

011 01~10, ,1

. . . =t!.f:...:S.

:!
~~alriO
c--WIIhA&lt;

o..

Rt. 141 Put s,.n~ - ;
~RighiF~l;
._., MoOtlocl
0
&amp;Endl,~

.

Clal-

3rd Thru

llh, St.

Ho~

, _ Flllllly Yud - · SM,..i
doy, lloy fill, N; Sunciay : ;·
1'1h 11..a: C
aet tn.k A
1

Milo From ·stile

Route

, . , _ F""" ltolloy Drl.._

Throo F11nlly: Frl I Sol lla~/::
IHh, -... Prom

Dr:-t.:
·
s:-..:.:r~~ Ill 12/1:;
From Rio O.ondo on a-,

::.:. .

·Ridge Rood.
.
,
Wid Thru Sol, . c:an- 01 11111
And !ColT Rood, • Oklo
Clalhoo, llloc, HOuoohalcl.
•

.
'
.
=
...,.

troY -

....... ,_

*pp!l·
•
da, curtain&amp;; ck»&gt;hhnn.

lo1aolmioc. ,

•

Yonl 101 2!1h It, 111jo ..._
Brlclc4hlng. . . . , . _

7. GIM G-4, top.
VOid Sole. ~h

..

St., · ~

lily 4-64, Thu, F~. Sol. ~?

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

10121/'MI'tfn

MODERN SANITAtiON

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented,
Daily, w~ekly &amp; monthly rental rates. ·
Sites •
·

• Cuttom Made
• ~olid vinyl
replacement

~

!!!!!~~ Sand

•

windows
• Free Estimates
• Starting AI -..
1200 Installed

'"I

., ;

:,,,.,

I

• ..

·.t·

•t

•

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418
Announcements

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

"VSIT OUR SHOWROOM"

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions , Concrete, etc.

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

P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 456t 4

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

(614) 388-9865

NEW&amp;USED
Household·
Collectible
9·5 T·Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
· SA 33N
992-7502 or 992·5805

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

B&amp;W

110\\ .\IW
'

E\.CW.\Til\(;

Ads

MERIT

Bwbs.Pennnlala,

REFINANCE
PURCHASE
lftrla1Ung•. Banging
llfuketa, etc.
.CONSOLIDATE
{Depoi St ) Rutland to
-~----------~----~t~1 Paulins Hill . Jus12 1/2
Bankruptcy, Judgements. Slow Credit.

MBm1489

110

loll MUI, a-uty
Ldo 01Shop,
Ckil._
Whloporo
ly M
Slu.l
:

~--2122

Darwin, Ohio

1-800-MERIT-98

Rl.

---·-·
-lo~
~-·
- &amp;endo.lloiii

~~ •.-- •-

Our Specialty

••

And - · •

Rei on ltft • -

Chuck Stotts .
614-992·6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Garage and Towing
Service .
Automotive and Truck
R(Jpair
Gas Tank ]'le p&lt;~lr
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH
614·247·3522

F' -

,.,

~.,.... Bolt. 1 . . -y,floy Sill. ...............

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Slate·m. 33

=~~ ~' ~
:= ~.:::

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

One $to~ Com~lete Auto Body Re~air

Angie' s
· Greennouse

.

.

~~~oc.o" 10111zl

r"=================~

OMLaay!

completed AN Nurse
Training March 18,
1995 at Hocking Tech.
Coli. Daughter of
Pauline Cunningham,
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

111, ~.:; 1 IMioOn Goo~ :

~·~-.~~ ..

2/12/92/!ln

264 Upper River Ad.
Galli olis, OH . 45631

:Jlappy 5Qtfi
13irtfufay

One cail to apply 1·800·800·WAN (5626)
24 hours a day
.'

•. --,.,-

SHOP

~-

u

( No Sunday Calls)

''"""'

5

Whatever it takes:

J

WHATYAMACALLIT

. :.. .:. '!=i

· ~ -e~~

Soturdoy, 11eJ lth. a,oo a.~

61'4·992-7643

Kenny's Auto Center

•

Moy 111 nwu lilt, 1.211._ CW'
!1o1M 211.
:•

ng.

FREE ESTIMATES

We Have Cars and Vans!

Down~pouts

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

1111Wn

-- ·

OOo-407-~634

·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
CmiMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

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

NEW-REPAIR
GuHers

Buy • Sell • Trade

WITH AWANT.AD

BANKEONE.
.

I

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

One mile out
143from Rt 7
Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
1·6
-craftsman Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade

992·2269

Howard L. Writesel

-

r.:.~:';"::....~•

Kenny's Auto Rental

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems, Trat1er &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonoble Rates
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

~:

"" .... •· - ~
••.
:::.........!. ~.";o.T·
.·
-N.. - · - - - .

CfMk

BIS$ELL BUILDERS; INC.

Bill Slack

NEFF REMODELING

GET SOME BREAD

And when you stop by, be sure
Wrth our Oneand Only$1oopoo
to check out our One and Only
Home Equity-Loan Sweepstakes
$100,000 Hon~e Equity Loan Sweep- and home equity offers, we're the
stakes. Just pick up aMatch and Win one and only place for loans.
Sweepstakes Check in the lobby of
4f!Y Bank Onebranch while supplies
last. If your personal Bank One
Match and Win Sweepstakes Check
Code matches one of the winning
check codes on the sweepstakes
display, you could wi n $50,000 or
Bank One, Athen!!, NA
other great prizes. Member FDIC

CARPET_____
\

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOL L FREE 1-800· 848·007

4./2 1195

Drend• Lynn

WEAR-DATED

.

· Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
· fii]'ector Pump svc
Tune-ups
. 985-3879

414195

SAVE an astounding (40%) on
choice Monsanto Wear Dated II Color

Center carpets during Ingels Carpets
Mom's Magical May Carpet Sale.
You'll be spellbound by the vast
assortment of shades in a rarige of
exciting textures th at create magic in
any room. And you· can be assured of
getting the perlormance level you need
with the "Mom Approved " carpet
rating system on an easy-to-(ead
scale. Come in this month for a magic
carpet rlde'that's high on style but low
o;.:; price! LOok at ·these:

7122194

· · - DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

•,

costs·

~

985-4473

1 N'~ -

1

'::D:i:a:ne=H:e:n:dr:ic:k:s::. "'!===P:ro:c:a:II:C:
'o:.(:6:02:):9:5:4-:7:
42: 0====. T-110.
I
1

and Removed

-''·

Monday, . May 1- Wednesday,
.
. - . . May
. ' 31

ELITE
Big Value Texture

of
for

7 Days A Week - 24 Hours A Day
$2.99/Min Musl Be 18 Yrs.

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
Misc. Jobs.

.,....,

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
11

Owners: Pete &amp;

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

$2.99 per min.
' Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·7420

"""-·

C~rner of General Hartinger Parkway and Pearl St. Middleport.

614-992-7028

CALL 1·900-945-61 00

min. Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.

Interior &amp;
Exterior

304-882-3704

4128111"

AGAIN

(602} 954-742(}

ATTENTION BUICK
OWNERS
Effective May 2nd
Buick Motor Division has
substantially increased
the incentives for
- purchasing a new Buick
during our Qualidays
Promotion. Please check
with us for details.
Don Carter, Bob Cook,
Brett Epling, lim Pierce 9r
-- Greg Smllha r' ·
SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
Gallipoli~. Ohio

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

614-742-2193

·BE LONELY

$3.99

Portable
landsaw Mill
Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Advise on future
oppo11unity,
decision-making, love,
success, money.
LIVE 2~ HOURS

·Safely And Privately

Listen to voice mail messages left by interesting
singles of all ages. Leave messages for singles
th.at interest you or open your own voice mail
box . It's fun, exciting, and can lead l,o new
friendships and meaningful rel ationships.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

:a7-:=.:

=-=~=

9:00-2:00
S:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487

-·

Hollow Rd.

NEVER

Call for all of your storage needs

Ask for Mike

32124 Happy

PSYCHICS

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741

MALE REVUE

175 N-2nd Ave.

12114/ttn

Open For Business

&amp; surrouriding area.

4/411 mo.

•Waahero • Drye,. • Ranges

992-5335

WICKS

Licensed
57·946457~

•Fall Reliable Service

MOVING SALE FRI. &amp;
SAT. 8 AM-7 PM
Cherry dining room, quilt rack,
curtains, toys, badding,
Rain or shine, Bradbury Ad, &amp; 124
on caport in back.

(lb ....

miles from Rulland or 4
i /2 miles from SR 7
Open Mun .• f ri. 10 a.m-·5 p.m
Weekend$ Ca ll e,t 4-742-2772

2 molhor cato I ldllono ro gl..
eway, 614-0D2·7UI.
F,.. 111 wooll old groy ldtt..-.

can bl seen In a.um Addition.

Bolly, 614--._
Hou• Cot Hout.,... Dod&amp;wod,
And Utlor t rolntd, 114-251-1431.
~~~~- lnd ..... 114-11112-20111.
Old megazJnM to gfv'*'"f, .,._

11112·2476~. ----:c:-;:;;=-;;::;-;;:;;;-

~.. lc old khtane, ,....,...
3076.

6.

'
LoSI &amp; Found

Found.Slbetllin
H~ ky.
SyracuH, tU-3165; 3 maa. tiger
tJt!.fped. Jl1t1t tl'llned khtana. lo
glva 1Wiy, 1'14-192-375Z.
Found: Bog ol dot -

on Bud

Chat11n RCIId. 304-e75-5857.

I~~~~! ~~...~

•

�- . ------

~­

•

..

...

'

Ohio

Thursday, uay 4, 1895f

~meroy-Middl~po~, Ohio

10-The Deily sentinel

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

.P HILLIP

ALDER

r.1 rrn'" r1d, sc

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

5-4·95

410 5 4

wA 6 3

CQ~H..~ A""f .1.~

..

·-·----41 HOUI8a for Rent

EAST
•J 9 7 6

11-E ll.ft( 11-11~ fli!£ GIJJJ3,
IT 1.001;5 UK£ (I..El.L HAVE.
:t&gt; WAIT ()fJTlL ffi" 10

1'~ ~~,.,.: ''4~~~&gt;ti•n:"

Ren tals

,,.

• 7 6 4 2
4A4 3

WJO 8 5

tK Q 10

1m 00 lU~~ ll-\1"!111-11~

•to
SOUTH

'....,..1. . .

4A
WK
tA
4K

42 Mobile Homn
for Rent

lrOIIor. . Ro- m

llllr

D1;

l

Mdl trallor, - h ol
--.
...,._
pluo
.... t,l1t 1814341.

Chair, 114-

• ......., Avenuo, Oalllpolle. .

...... d
No !IIPIIIIIMC t, HDI'tlhold fur..
nlehlng. 111 ml Jontcho Rd. Pl.
Pl. . .nl wv, -· 304-17J.MIO,

*--'"':N~,r­

To

dp

1Wo
bldRIOm
on
Klngobuly
Rd, IM-tiiN«&lt;I.
1Wo ~ 11 oom. tumllhed. ..
:104

Employment Services

enytl- '

.:.7•.:........:M.;:.o;:.:t~o;,.;rcy;:.;;.cle;;,.;;.a~~
11ao Hond•

Mot~.

cxsoo-.,.

114 441 iA11

I

I

!

1181 Hondl 250 ATV 114-3'7So

Apanmem
for Rent

2.508,4-8.

•

118t KN... kiBiyou 300, 2WD. :

Llmouoln bul, 11 old,
aood condllton, $11150, IM-IMI2·
Punbred.
...
prK&amp;M .. NOD. ....... JltO .... :~==M~11H=or~S:~3~~~·--~--~:

lab~oll10( Nmdod W11kdoya,
BldWoll AodiiOf '""""• lo IHuoh hog proporty In Nor- For Solo1 3 ..... - · Plonlz
Roqukad, f14388 834! 1 lhup one. Call 114-1112-3287 1~ Subdlvlo..,. Call 814-44W744
,
anyllmo « 114-4*115111 bl~
CEII11FIED
RESPIRATORY 11r 7pm,
WMn 7 a.m. 1 3 p.m.
THERAPY TECHNICIAN
'IJ11111r Dono· l.ondocoPIna: PolnUng; Roollna\Eic. Froo
Ea11malll, 114 4~42 F«
U...lnlo.

HouiM

tor

Nil

75 BOatS &amp; Motors
for Sale

Roglotorod umouotn Bulto, R&amp;d
Anil a~ac~&lt;, 12 -11 Monlhe Old,
Evenlnge: e144Pol600.
Wantad lo ,.,.. hooHhy newborn .
beef « dolrV boot, lilllor oall,
mull Nve had· mother'• flnll

on WWJ con-

lraclo. 30W7W722.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

•

Pt40NE

l.OMPANY

1•

-~.15011p OUibolrd, exc cond.
102 ~- Ad, Golllpolll Fony,

C.VSTOMttt

~~~---~--~~--~~
~
1i87 Chollon ekl -,130 hp. :

01&lt;681,

32 ·Mobile Homes
for Sale

..•

3435. Htgn.
:
1171 Cnl llahlakl • • •

3.3oeroo. :104-IS7-213S.

01!104.

f~JVIGE

Inboard, bow, DUrgandy :
anc:lwhl•, $4800, e14-112..p.c4, a
5 HP s.a,. &lt;Mboord, ¥«1' good !

.. . _,_,_ ..

condition, runa excellent, uNCI •
114-11112• '
Voty Utili, 1300, '7I8T betwnn epm.&amp;pm.
..,!

Transportation

. -Auto-Parts &amp;
Accessories
----~~~~..:;:::....,

'

.

1161 12dl 3 Bad,_.,., Tolol
EIIIC1~1 Whh 1112 Dock Wllh
!!oof1 NOW UndoriiiMing, Good
""""hlon, Sll Up On Ronlol
Lot, IM-2411-1408.

BathL AN Ulllhleo Pokl, $145/Mo.

118 tiKOnd Avenu., Gllllpolle,

814-44&amp;-31141.

Fumlahed Efficiency $'1a5!Mo.

Ulllllloo Pold, st.... Bath, 107

S.condJ. .GaiUpall•, 614 448 4411

. Elm up lo $1000

Allor7 ~.M.
Oollla Manor 1121 Jackson
Plko, Oalllpolro, Equipped For
The Elderly, Hondlco-.1, •
Dtub~N PMsona, 1 li!Mtroorn.
Appllcollono May a. Plckod Up
AI Spring Valloy Pllu, 1128
Jackoon Pike. Or Call 114-o148403i, Equal Houolng Oppor•
tu.nhr.
Graci- living. 1 ond 2 bod-

wooldy otuHing

envel~ Ill home. Sllrt

now.

No •• ,....._. Frw ·euppUoo.

FI'M lnti)JJMtlon. No Obligation.

Send s.A.B.E to Slorllng, Dool.
~~· llol Mll181; Otllildo, FL
Eopo-

Ortll . Cook,
Woll,.._, Solod liM; Bus I

Financial

1--------21
Business
Opponunlt.y

Dlah Pmonnot, Apply In P.....

only From 1-11

&amp;

ADOII., ~a111urant.

2-4 Red

mall until yow h.ve lnvatigatMI

lht oHering.

Lumber . cata up? ' Steel
bulldlnga •• low u 13.00 eq.ft.
Buy .. ctory dlrld ftom Nattonal
HIGH SCHOOL AND SENIORS • Manufacturw aa authorized
· II YGU nood 1 paMimol&lt;&gt;b while dealer. WUI tr1ln. Some Uarketa
,-ou continue your echoollng' Of' takan. Call 303~75,_3200 axt
Ju• to urn additional monay, :1200.
call tht Wut Yl!'9inla Army H.tiona! Guatd. Our lobe come

•tth m.~ny ta.n•lhe lib monthly
pt~ycheck.

educatloraal

..

olotnco,. lroe job trolnlng, ond ·

r.q..,..: een.

304·722..&amp;702, 304-341-6490, 7111-7347, Of 1-1011·842-3111. .

Jo&amp;n thl long·t..-rn hlanh care
llold. Sooklng C.nlflad Nurwlng
AOtlotanla lor a.bld ekllloCI

Sondhlll Ad, IlNdow Hlllo.
$8,01XI OBQ. 304-773.Q155 oftor
.ipilt.
Boono Co., WV, IPPfOI. 242,i20

nur.lng facUlty. Apply Polnl
Pl....nl Nwalng a··RWblltt•
t&amp;on C:.nl•, Stata Routa 12,
Route 11 801 321. Polnl PINUnl
WV 25550. lA Glonma111 Ao- 1

·

NoadporeoniOWorllfn- '
tonal cera home, ?pm.lam, 514ta-4Q23.

DOWI-.l 111£
~~7

t~~~r. t•U. OM lon lruck 1t
raclttot'll floor mala,
Ole. D AAulo, Rf-. W)l. 304- :
372-3833 or t-8Q0..273-=8321.
,

=y

Pets for sale

Groom Shop -Pol Grooming.
Featurlf:lg Hydro lath. Julfa
Concrwlo l
Plaollc Sopllc Wlbll. Ca~ 114-441 0231.
Tanke. • Tllnl 2,000 Clollono
Ron Evano E n l l - , _ AKC Mala Cocker S~nlel Party

ln•J*=I•,

Chovy Colobrtlr
Aulomotlc, 4 Door, o;;;/ C1eon dalnMda.

1D85

-,OH1~·

Color, UOO 080,114-~H&amp;.

I0

SN EEL T

at •t.
Comple1e the c't\uckle quoted

•

A PRINT NUMBERED LE!)ERS
~ IN THE SE SQUARES

I

b'( fdlmg 1n the m1U1n9 words
1

I'M l'&gt;OIN(;
TO SEE tF

304-67$.1 1
Vol, 1034. Able ro work w/t100111 ape- '
gLIIn~nteed.

I 1 1 1

LJ.--L-l.-.L-1-.J you de..-elop from s,fep No 3 below

lion RL 71 Rl. :111, t14.....1-371l .
Tranamlalone. UMCI, Nbuln. an:

I

1-_::;....;.:_..1:...,:;.1...:.-.1.,;.7....,1--!

Soul- Plcii.Up Pol1o Beds, •'
Cabo, Doorw Fondorw I Moro. sMIIII SGu!h bi GoiUDOIIi AI Juc-,

Molol Roofl'!ll &amp; SkllngL Chock
Our Price• BetON You tlillf. Atliar Forin Supply, IM~4UIU.

pear••n king

46 Dollar bill
48 Jrioh poet
50 Wegera
. 51 - Jannlngo
52 Country of
Europe
54 Stupefy
56 - McEntire
57 Egyptian
goddeSS
58 Small stove
60 Foodfioh
61 JFK Info

DY T R I
~~'
People hate lelev.ision so
l-..';~5~-6 -r....:.....--l ~ ' much these days. In fact my
L...J.L-...l.-.l.._J.......J
Dad hates itsomuch.hespends.
. . - - - - - - - - - , hours every day just - • - - - - •

I

w

•-•• • y
co••· Orovol-orplpo
1
1•• • -~-~- · •·•·,,......._.
dralnplpo
olocl. Sldoro
Hardly -Uoed,
Equlpmonl,,_In
304o171-1021.

1--+--+---1

(2 wda.)

44 Shakes-

0:

YOU

REALI..'(

HAVE E.5.P. 1•

Clr, $1,700, 114-25MBOZ
Truck bHI. Chew., Ford, Dodge/ !
1986 . Oldo Culla• s..,.._, •nd $-10, ehort &amp;, long. 3Q4..6~ '\ 1
.... ,
Rtbulft Motor, New Tranarrtt. 1281.
alon., 2 OWM1'8, Oood Condi'

STRIKE A 8WW IN THE W\R Qt.J
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE. CLASSFIEOS.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Yea sty- Query· Known· Useful- LAWYER
Our nephew broke offh1s engagement and was be1ng
sued ·by his former fiancee I told him ,thal you can 't go
back on your word Without first consulting a smart
LAWYER.

1...,.

:JIM-4711-5253.

.

•

cement your contract.
Phillip Alder 's new book. "Get
Smarter at Bridge.·· is available,
autographed upon request , for
4.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
, NY 11577·0169.

(:£){~6

tlon. &amp;1,200 1 ~~ LMve 79
"'
campers&amp;
AKC
Roalotarad
Cocker
Sponlll,
:M::oooa:::'
g!::o.:..__ _ _ _ __
•,.'
room a,-rtment. .t Vllt.ge, Couchobl~lr.._ColiN Toblo I
Motor
Homes
·
...... -Titl. . btacklwfitte, 1al ahata It _,.. 11185 R_.utt Alllanc11, cto. not
Manor
and
Rlver.lae Endt
mtd. 304-TT.J..5Dlt attar 5pm.
ru,_, lor ,-rta only, 1200 aa ... 18'71 28' Fl ,. Salf-Contalnttd, •
33 Farms for Sale
l.panmomo In Mlddlooon. From EIOOirtc
Whoolchelll
And
$232-$355 • Call 114-H2-S!J5i.
SCoot- And Ueod, fn. ""-'con Cockllr Spaniol PUJ'" :1*:.:.:11112=.:·520=5.=------ I ~J.l::f. Tnrllor, $2,100, 114- .,
Galllpofl• Feny, 11 lJ10acrt, Equal Houalng Opport...lllol.
do« And Ouldo« Modolo, plplonoo, BAKC I Aeglstared, Cham- 1181 Fard Eacart QT, $400,
1
mostly all lev.l w/naw fanca &amp;
Bownn'e lion ·,a.,.. 1'14-4*
loodl na, IM-4n-z728.
aftw 4pm, 114--14~368.
1181 Q.argla Boy motor home 1
bam, ·cny wal.,, 130,000. 3Q4.. Nice 2 bedroom 1partm1nt In 7283.
PoiMI'DJ1na pata, IM.f82...s&amp;$8,
U~3556.
AKC Blchon Frtoo For Slud Bor- -•• ~-nd Prt 2 •--· V-4 wtur dolly, '!,ii!I:O_'!)I. looded;:-"'
~
Nice one bedroom apa""*" In, Englondor !ladraom Sula, 1 vlce"-~vuble Small Whlla Cit· ~~i: ;;; front ~lr• . .hock.: Ilk• new. 304-e~.
Year 0!~.. lncludoe: Lalgo cue uuu•. 1'14-378-2341
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
gOOd
condition, HIW' on gaa, 11M ln~tbruck camper, tully
Pl. Pleuonl, 114-IMI2.a&amp;58.
wnh Mirror, I Drawtr &amp;lrdl, . lguanaa, TarantUiaa. 11450, IM-8512~1\
loeded, lOla of txtru. takt over •
1.11acn cl.. r.d lot whh city One bad"""" oparlmenl In PI Cheot, Bad Wllh lox mica. F1efi Tank 6 Pel ah,..,.,
Rnanclng. ~..a~.
! •,
wat• &amp; cable TV available. Pl.... nt, fum..Nd. d .. n &amp; Springe, lr Mottnmo, $1p!O; 241S Jackoon Ave. p;;;:;. 1i87 Oldo Dollo II Royall
,
Mlc,_.vo
OVen
I
cart
"'00'
PI
IIOUghom,
loodod,
flonl-whlll
n!"'!t
no
polo.
Phono
3(14.6'1&amp;$4,500. 304-576-2818.
21" ZonNh 'tV. $100, C.tl
- · 104o8J1.2083.
drtvo••3.8. V-4, Ike. cond., Ao.•:
Doyllmo Bolo&lt;e I P.ll. IM-368- Full blooded Poking- fo&lt; eiUd king w,IMIS. 304-IDe-31118.
112ac,. Southatdt, WV, well &amp;
,,
b.d100111 apa,.ment tor rant i11l,
- l c, ~,500. Phone 711-5116- One
earva
only,
1114-iS12-1201.
,,..,
Plymouth
..-nc..
.:
In
Raelne,
$250/mo.
plue
4612.
utllltlea, reft,.ncn and d8poslt
Slo,_ Killona: c.F.F. Rogt. $2.500, 114-441.Qlll.
81
Home
':
For
- 42"'- cut. aame
mow.r,
• riding
,..,
21 Trac1o 01 Land, Land Con- · ,.qulr... e14-182-6542.
•
- FuN Poinl - · IM-221- li87 P&lt;&gt;nllac TA Low Mlloo;o,
lmpravemems
•1
tract I To 35 Ac"'1; 5 Aer• ThrM room fuml.n.d apart· $2250, 114-11'21808
•
..
L.oMoad, Air, 814-245-6461 Anar a
11,500, 1650 Down, $100 Per
Month. Southtnd Gallla County, mant, utllhl• lnetuded,, 114-M2~
Ton month old AKC malo :P·::M:_:--~----~
BASEMENT
!
SIMI.
hound puppy, hu hod all 1g118 Dodgo Doylono Shelby z.
WATERPROORNO
•
Joe- Hagorly, 6-11-3462.
llhciW. $100, 114-002·7240. .
naw polnl, Ur•, 100 rn1ny ,... Uncondhlonal llfal.lme gua,.• :
1Wtn
Rlv.,.
TDWIII':
nOW
accapt.
1.32 Aer-. 275 ft wide rldge top
tM. l.ocll rtfMnc:• tumlshad. ,
Ina apollcollono I.W 1... HOD arovol't wolk-bohlnd1 L model WWKC rwg. Rotlwlllt:r puDDiaa. utraa to llat, 54500. 304-1~ Call
1..aOG-211o0511 Or 114-23J. •
bulldjng olio, tl3,160. Raybum au'beldfzad
wllh 30" ......,. ona 1'0101y liN I wka. old, vary booUI(Iully 306l
opl.
lor
oldorty
ond
0481
R - Walorproollng. Eo- ,
Rd, ruaonabla ,..tractlonit. No
handlclppod. EOH 3Q4.6J&amp;.. anachment, dUll whMII:, Nhl marked, hoo hod IIIII wormlltli
alngle wkle lnqulr•, pa.a ... lnau
lroc
Good
conclllon,
labllohld
1875.
. .
•
1
good, ~: 1110 8ogll - I a
fonn•tlon m•lled on

much mor•. Join today. Call

-lllu F..llky) EOE.

2263.

\T'S

'

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

56

1...-+~1--1

A lew years ago, the English satirical
magazine Punch died. It began publica·
lion around t841. so it was something of
an institution in England. I was sorry jt lbri-'-+folded, but I must admit that I wasn't a l l,.......l~-1----1subscriber.
In 1878, Punsh included this line : "I
am not hungry; but thank goodness. I
am greedy." Well, the declarer in to· 11-....l.:.....t.......t.day's deal was greedy. And when the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
cards made him pay for his greed, he
by Luis Campos
had to go hungry, having lost the mon·
Celebmy Cipher cryp1ograms are craalad lrorn quota\101"1$ Dy lamous people. paat and pNMnl
ey with which he was going to buy him·
Each letter tn the cipher stands 101' aroother Today's ciU#I F eqllflls Y
I
self dinner.
•
CY
KPRRVZ
South might ha ve rebid three no ·
OYVOTY
'SLRXUF
trump to offer a choice of contracts. but
vu
he was worried his partner would pass
TYPURHRX
p
J! V V A
when the diamonds were too weak for
YJKYOZ
no-trump.
·
0 U V A L K H R X PRFZSHRX ,
After winning the clu b lead in his
hand with the king, South cashed the
OYPUT
OHVTYRKY .'
OYUSPON
spade ace, dropping.West's.queen . This
should have sounded a warning bell.
CPHTYF .
.
but. South felt confident that West had
PREVIOUS SOLUTION · "Petty laws breed great crimes:- Ouida .
play.ed the queen from Q·J - or maybe
"Public opinion is always 1n adva~ce of the law : - John Galsworthy .
even from Q-J -x. He continued with the
,1 .
.I
.
LS!)aaeking. When West discarded a low
South suddenly saw the error of
WOlD
his avaricious ways He had no way to
GAM I
avoid los ing four tri.cks: two spades. one
diamond ·and one club.
South shou ld have ensured an·
' evening meal by continuing with a low
spade from hand at trick three . Here.
East wins dummy's 10 with his jack and
returns, say, the diamond king . South
wins in hand with the ace, plays a heart
10 dummts ace and finesses his useful
spaae eighfUeclarer' draws East's lill
trump and concedes three tricks.
·
Don'! overlook a safety-play tha t will

CfW51N£SS?

,

114-~

11 Wont

19 swtucenlon
· 23 Actuol being
251naoct.,.....,....,.,...,.,...., 26 Moistens
27 Two words
of under·
otondlng
1-+--+--+---J 28 Mothlr of
Apoll\&gt;
..,...+~-~· 29 Ruaalon ruler
31 Burgles
32 Exact
33 Yoemlnge
36 woodr ptont
39 Whee canter
41 Hooten

o,....,

..pot1tr.
excell1nt

•rongi English
Com pUll&lt;
plua. S.nd rMUIM
Editor, Polnl
A1111lot0f, :ZOO Moln
Btrtet, Point PltiUnC,
25550. No phone Cllll.

!

Carry T,.namlealona,

446-11523.

Share

TranMI1Mione. Also, ,.,...., And

,.e£.C,N..&amp;

TE.U.. ME WfW WE:
~y 1\ CDfo\PNW
IS UQUICI\1"1H(, l-il£t-l
11" IS (:()lf.k:J OOT

1

Second Avenue, Galllpolla, No
Pels, Exeellent Condition, 114-

...

...

-*"'~.J&gt; CLIOS. Wf\0 Cfo.N

Robiil~l.:lllypm,
-llolblo To •
Ovw
TranemiM'M, Alao !
Poria, 8M-3n-2tl35.
'
'
JohneOne Tr•namlealona And 1
Sorltco Uoed And.. _~.obuln •

Fumlohad Apor1mont, U.lllllm
Pold, 1 Badroom, Upotolre,

s-4

.

___ ;
Budgol Tronamleolono, Uood I

EHielency

premium
7 Perch
8 Tee trees

9 ShldltrMS
10 Prol..:llon
11 MolechlldNn

z

;.,..,....,...,...:::::.,::;:;;:...,,...,.,-,,., •
'113 1T La- bloa - · 115 V4 :
Yornohe, loldod, ehoopl 304-l'Qo •

mUll, IM-ll12o3011.

Pliny (Jieeon COj, 4bed,_,
country home wlapp&amp;e CH'Chud,

Fumtshld

WEAl{ '!'OURSELF
LAD.. HAVE A
ClJP OF iEA ..

J.lE 1S 60HE ..

1NI 1100 Hondo Ooldwlng '
Loaded, $2,800, 114-441-1543.
:

IAZ.

GOING TO

AS SOON AS
I SEE ONE,

CUotom, With Falling, Good '
Condh~+ 11,'1111 Mllll, 17111, :

Molchod tomlteom o101u1eo, I 1H3 Hondo XA100R wtCoollfu· '
lrolllo;..'!""' - . , $1,400. :104' :
I 7 yr. old -hire, 1500 aea.aaa.
.
..... well ,....., """'"" 14500.
IM-J112.27110.
11113 Yomaho Tlmbonooll 4 ''
Who~1 Uke New, U,750, IM- •
.446-4 .....

Wanted to Do

6 Exchongo

By Phillip Alder

::._Lomba ""'

Ten • - of bottom land- carr
Rd. 1231 ( 1 112 milll WIOI ol
Allred) along Nil adll" ol ml6o
dla bionch ot Shedo ....... 1lla.aas.:!GIO oftor doriL

5 Mr. Frenlclln

Greed leads

Llvntock

Bookoholl And Clloll Of
llnwere, iotdiig 1400 OBO, IMc
1o11, IM-441:UJ.04113.
Aolll;_erotON. Slov11, - .
Apol1112- ... Qold.
And Dryero, All - - Ina; l'll!n*Y . ~
Point
And aa ...- And up, Mil• FUW, . 1111 1G ...,..
Will Deliver. 1..._..1-1441.
Hunl Al:»tA ...... 11M INa
loQHA Filly IM-28f:

.

·43 Farms for Rent

44

MY CUP I

Red Molal lunll Twin On
Top Full On --~ Wlh Mol·
t - lncludm uoak, With

- . polmo lot,- · . -~~~.... Rio. :a Ha~~~,1271 with WIIW,

.

tQ poverty
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

II.

53 Romon bronze
Sli Weird

lead: •Q

.THAT'S NOT

LOWEEZ.Y--I COME
TO RETURN ·
YORE CUP

PICKENS RJANITURE

.,. ........

,... ....... Pold: All Old U.S.
QalM. Gold Alnp, Sltv• Co1na,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

ot•••
114415-6811
·.,,Goad
Uoed -

lllg owsve. .

one acre, belCh. -1287. Col A. . 7 P.M.

Ohio -

K 8 3 2
Q4
3
7 6

POIIic Ume
50 Spoiling -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wesl Norlh Easl
f'ass 2 •
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass

"Nop.lLAI8otrllllrlol.

R1
Rd on right, PI
_ UN, LocUOI
_..1011.

5 2

DfO(Iuct
koreon city
-.
Tunlolen ruler

. 59 Left one'a
country
14 Chlri'Cior In
62 Superlative
OtheHo
ending
15 Wide thOe elze 63 wury
16 Thin paper
64 8ollerlno'a oklrt
18 Romuluo'
65 Storage brothlr
66 Wln)er vehicle
20 Grovel ridge
67 Brook
21' Droh ogcy.
auddenly
22 Mop abbr.
68 - - rule
24 DeclmaiiNIII
26 TrickiHI
DOWN
30 Smudgy
1 ·Ligef
34 Compo.. pl.
2 Snick ond35 Hey!
3 Alloy of gold
37 RICid
llldOII38 Hebrew letter
40 Heerlng organa 4 Bollroom
donee
42 Baker'•
wa&lt;k- -

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WJ'i&amp;bt

'lov

I Youth arg.
4 Construction
8 Pedll digits
12 Printers'
_,..
13 h'l olf to

43
45
47
41

AppfoX.

AU 1001 estale a·rtvtlrtislng
this newspaper Is subject to
tho Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1966 which makes It l!legal

to adve rtise ~any preference,
11mrtatkln or dltcrtmintltlon,
based on race, colo{.. religion,

sex familial stalus or nauonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such prelerence,
hmilatlon or discrimination:

This ne~paper. wlll nol
l(nowllnQiv accept •
adver!lsomants lor real es~e
Whict'l ls in vlolatk)n of the law.
Our Madera arEI hereby

board

._.

2ml

ltandlng

(Doyle), noar q,.rtor o.

aut

timber
304-l'U-

=I•

badRIOm
oponmom,
ulll"leo pold,
porklng,
nver vieW,
mo., &amp;200
dopooll.._no P"ts• 1Mcta.a7114
1Wo

100x200,

-n

ot H24f44,

Voty

{ap.i 11o\.MI-2701.

JET

AERATION IIOTQRB
Ropolrod, N- I Robuflt In
Slock. Coli Ron Evano. 1.-.

M'I-W8.
1 - - . aporl·

monl In lllddll!""', ""N - ·
11304 «lit Uf-30111.

I:JO:tlafter 5pm.

John Door riling lawn mowor,
lhp, 4 unlroylo 13" tkM. :104B'I&amp;-1487.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

z

1

LoaHdiiM-311-.2508, 4..e.

....; .

1888 Ponllec Bonnevlll•, axtra
cltln. 304.675-1&amp;41 oratter 5pm ·

304-475-41121.

'

ltD'

304-882·2402, I To 1.

1ncre8se w1th your elforts

45

ASTRO·GRAPH
'

61 Farm Equipment

10163. Be sure to slale your zod1ac s1gn.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may be
Inclined to coast today unless your ambi·
!tons are aroused by some type of mate"il·'

BERl'jiCE
BEDEOSOL

RHuilltl,500, 11t 111 31110.

Furnished

the influences which are governing yOu in
the year ahead · Send for your Astra -

Graph predictions today by mail1ng $2
and SASE to Astro·Graph, c/o thiS news·
papsr. P.O . Box 4465 . New York. NY

Rooms

lracl from lho riGht pony, 330M
-

-

CUHivollno TriiC1or fOil Solo,
Mo- 11err!oon Comlllolly

CampeH• sox100 $3,500 pao.
For ule CMW ac::,. mara or ...,
t.wn, houM, g•rden, ont 30•30
unlui'nl1htd tog houH alto full
buomonl whh houoo, price on
lne:pectlon, alto will land cc:.

61hott, 2 milt, 4 twnal-. S31D
M ., S\C-37M314.

.Limo Rd,, Ar.Oiond.

1m Bloar uo Wllh Holley eoo

llooplna ""'"'" whh oooklna.
Alto trillef ~ on rtver. -'11
hook~pe;. Call 1ft• 2:00 p.m.,
304·~5&amp;!1,

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

CFM 4 st-d. !..ookoul Hubs, 4"

1.111 33" 11-., linglno 1
Tronolw c..e Ex-.!, Exhlull, Dvnotune Holde,.
hkoo • Llnaa,
$1.11!10. inqolh: 210 Alvor, !.Jot 1,

u..on WY.

Informed tnat a" dwelllng:r
advertised In this newspaper'
are &amp;vallable on an equal

ICiniUga.

oppollunlly oaols.

-

walk .
CANCER (June 21:July 22) You m1ght
have some m1nor 'rustratJons to contend
w1th today, but 1! you treat them philO·
sophically, they'll prove man:tgeable.

'-Your

F111man'o H11tlng And Cooling, .
lnotolllllon And Sorvlco. £1'11
Corlllled. Rlaldonllal, CommwcloL 114-IZ!II-1811.
'

B4

al mohvallon When money talks , you,

'Birthday

Electrical &amp;

LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Conditions could
make a change for the better today and
·oHer opportunities where only lim11ailons
existed before. Prepare to move. and to

FncJay, May 5, 1995

SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov . 22) If you
_involved 1n some type ot compet1t1ve
span today . don 't became overwhelmed
by the repu tation at your opponent You
can gtve as good as you get

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21)
sllc concerns requrr1ng your ,;,.,M,on l
should be gtven pnonty over all
interests today It w11i put your m1nd at
ease when they are settled

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
amons m1ght dodge makrng doH1bult
51 ons today. but you won't need to You
c1;1n face life reahshcally , log1cally we1gh·
' ing your allematlves
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D·Feb. 19) F1nanc1al
torces w111 be favorable lor you today
Your posstb1!1t1es for personal ga1n look
good. provided you're w11t1ng to put fOrth

pro~s~it~io~lns~b~ro~u~gh~l~lo~~m~ov~e~l~as~l~~:~;~ii~~~:~~:-l~h~e~eff~o~rt~r~e~qu~rr~e~d~=~~
· ~·~R·~=~~- -~~~~~~~;~€~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~:~~------or
relatives . rn· VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) Today 's

listenorcaretulty
1o
i

1'

•·

1

might put you on the track to something
good.
·

""'*Ina

on oHico
-h.ondlclp
· Muoc be around
-·
44 ollie•
whh ,...ion ond oan-.no. room, 1000-'1100 Ill·
ft. naadtld. AII ~ ~ nd In wrttlfli
lo P.O. lloJint, - · OH.
1o&lt; -

-blo.

..
' .

'

vtdes ~th a boner understandmg
soma~
U've disagreed wath lately .
Lei bygdtt.. be bygones.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) ThiS could be
a very prOOuctlve and rewardtng day for

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) .Even thOugh
you might not be in complele accord with
a position a friend lakes, at least try tp be
support1ve today. He/She would be grate· you . so once· you ge1 rolling, keep mov·
lui. Get a jump on ilf&amp; by understanding mg . Your enthusl~asm will probably

the

populanty with your peers Make it a pomt

. nOt to slight-~nyone or play taTvorite~ be

1

ARIES (Mon;h 21·Aprll11) hiS WI
a
good day to atlend to mailers thai , up
un111 now. you've Jeftmt:omplete. Cut your
1o·do.list in haff . but start w1th the Iough·
est proj&amp;CtS.

�I

Thu...clay, Mly 4, 1185

Poinetoy-Middleport, Ohio

. Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Family

Meigs girls
captureTVC
softball title

Medicine

Sports, Page 5

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

·Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
9-6-0
Pick 4:
7-8-4-5
Buckeye 5:
2-4-16-17-28

I

,.

I

I

.

antibiotics; and
.
- ibuprofen and some other
anti-inflammatory medications.
Perhaps your rasb ocCIIIl'OO tJecanse
you have been using. one Of these
products and then went out in the
sun.
Tbe chemicals in sunsaeens can
also cause photosensitivity reactions. Aminobenzoic acid and the
chemically similar compound,
para-amino~nzoic acid (PABA)
along witb benzopbonones are
notOrious offenders and are no
lon~er used in most sunsaeen for·
mulas. Avobenzone, cinnamates,
homosalate and methyl antranelale
are now more common, but they
stiU occasionally cause photosensitivity.
.
It is also possible that your rash
is actually an allergic reaction to
·one or more of the chemicals in
your sunscreen product. The easiest
way to de~ if you are allergic.
to the sunscreen is to apply a small
amount of it to an area that will not
have sun exposure, sucb as the
inside of the upper arm. Leave it on
for 24 to 36 hours. A rasb will
appear in this time if you are allergic to any of the components of the
product.
.
If tbat doesn't give you tbe
answer, try applying sunscreen to a
small area that will receive sun
exposllfe, sucb as the back of one

arm,

before spending time in the sun. If
a rasb develops only in Ibis area,
your photosensitivity is caused by
one of the chemicals jn the sunscreen.
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O .,
Ohio Oniversity College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

·choir entertains at Delta
.Kappa Gamma meeting
· Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, met at Salisbury
School recently with Pam Crow,
hostess cogunittee chairman, giving the invocation before the turkey
dinner; served by the Salisbury Parent-Teacbers Organization.
Mrs. Crow introduced her
daughter, Carrie, ·wbo sang "Angels
Among Us." Sbe then gave1ll'ayer,
mentioning the Oldaboma City disaster specifically. "Angel on My
Shoulder" place cards, stickpins
and candles were favors. Tables .
were dec~nted in a ·spring motif.
The Meigs Higb Scbool Choir,
directed by Jennifer Edwards, sang
"Moon River:· "Now and Forever"
and selections from ''Grease."
President Fern Grimm presided
over the business meeting. Secretary Nellie Parker read a thank-you
note from Serenity House. Tbe
society signed a get-well card for
Viola Gettles, who is recovering
from surgery. Grimm led the society in "Pledge to lbe Founders."

Necrology committee cbalnnan:
Saundra Tillis led tbe necrology
program.
.
Dorothy Woodard read Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Mrs. Tillis talked about
Nan Moore's life as a young, widowed mother, and tben a teacher
tor 35 years. Rosalie Story read "I
Wonder." Becky Zurcher, Twila
Childs and Carolyn Snowden read
"Wbat is Death?" Mrs. Tillis read
."A Hundred Yearn from Now" and
presented a wbite.memorial rose to
Donna Jenkins wbo accepted it on
behalf of Mrs. Moore's daughter,
Elizabetb Hawley. Service closed
with prayer.
· Attending were Twila Childs,
Pam Crow, Fern Grimm, Jo Ann
Hays, Pauline Horton, Donna Jenkins, Nellie Parker, Gay Perrin, Carolyn Snowden, · Rosalie Story,
Jeanette Thomas, Saundra Tillis,
Dorothy Woodard and Becky
Zurcher.
.
The next meeting will be beld
Sept. 25 at Lake Hope Lodge.

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YOU HAVE TO SEE OUR PATIO SELECTION
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A Munlmedie Inc. Newspaper

County
official
pay hike
urged

ombing death toll stands
a 67 as workers qu(t site

,:ruL Pwr seat.

Financing Available
90 Days Same As Cash

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 5, 1995

·S earch ends

llio.

- -·--- Next to Powell's Supermarket

Ret.ail

2 Sections, 12 Pageo 35 cents

Vol. 46, NO. 5

Copyrlght111115

THE BIRTHING
FAITH CHAPEL OPEN BIBLE CHURCH
· THURSDAY 7 P.M. &amp; I 0 P.M.
APRIL 23·30 ·MAY 7, 14, 21, 28
PASTOR, MIKE PANGIO
200 W. SECOND ST., POMEROY, OHIO

--~·~~ 0 o/lJ -off

' '

TO PRESENT CONCERT -The Pathtloden Quw~et of eo.J
Grove will presmt a concert SUDday at 7 p.m. at the Flnt Solatllem Baptist Church, Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy. lbe .Rev. La-r
O'Bryantlnvltes the public to attend. A love ofterlnl! wiD be talon.

1993FORD
ESCORT LX

$384 · *
mo.

$389 mo.*
'

'Payments quOted are a! monlh Red Carpet Lease -1lle Pla/1' paymenls are based on $2,000 down
payment al time
· lncl\$d. Stale taxes not ilcluded.

By TED ANTHONY
Associated Press Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY - · After 16 days of gruesome, dangerous, heartbreaking work, searchers walked out of the federal building for the last
time today after retrieving the final seJ Qf remains they coqld eltttact. from
the rubble.
·Tbe bombing killed 167 people, including 19 children and two adults
wbo remain missing, said Assistant Fire Chief Jon Hansen.
· "Now we can put an end to i~" said Sgt Harold Thompson, a city flre'fighter wbo helped pull the last body from chest·bi~b debris.
· "You take your worst nightmare, it's like you re waking up. But it's
still there,'' he said.
The last body was removed at 10:30 p.m. Thursday. At 11:50 p.m., an ·
end was called to tbe search of the nine-story building that was torn apart
April 19 by a 4,800-pound truck bomb.
Among tbe about 20 bodies uncovered .on the last day of the search
were those of tbree infants wbo bad been in a day-care center on the
building's second floor.
"The biggest sigb of relief went up wben we found the last baby."
said Gibbs Hammond, a chaplain with the Knoxville, Tenn., f~re depart·
ment. "l1ley wanted to find those three babies worse than anything."
Detennined_to finish by today, firefighters worked into the darkness on
one last pile of rubble in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. They
ignored the 6 p.m. curfew established earlier this week when the building
was determined to be dangerously unstable.
"To the best of oilr ability, we bave tried to turn over every stone we
possibly could tbat tbe structure would allow us to tum over," Hansen
said. ''We don't know at this point.wbat happened to those (missing) peo. pie.''
.
Lt Fonnie Kemp was ·among the 30 Oldaboma City fuefigbters wbo
finished the search and then beld an impromptu service at the site. He
winced when asked about the last body.
.
" You're looking but you're not looking," a weary KemP. said. " I
can't remember if it was a man or a woman. Maybe tomorrow I II remember."
Rescue workers planned another memorial service this afternoon, Fam·
ilies of tbe victims will gather for a private remembrance, possibly over
the weekend.
The FBI, which bas been ~mbing the debris by the bandful for evi~dence, exrfucl§ to finJsbJ.(! s~b soon, spo_I:esmap Dan Vogel said.
Before e searcli eoncluHoo, Hansen srull worlrei's-Iilii'l reilm:ett once~-~
towering rubble piles to nearly eye level, and bad umneled to the Social
Security office on tbe first floor.
Using floor plans. workers mapped wbere people were sitting at their
desks and bow the buildilig feU. •'We liad some people that were driven
through cinder block walls by the bias~'' Hansen said.
. Now the federal General Services Administration in Washington must
decide whether to rebuild the structure. Sentiment is strong iii Oklaboma
City to raze the site and erect a memorial to the victims.
"II could be ldnd of like the Unknown Soldier, except this one is tbe
grave of the missing," said Mayor Ron Norick.

Long .slated,
as speaker
at banquet

COLUMBUS (AP) - Giving
lawmakers .raises along with some
,county workers will help ensure
legislative approval of the proposal, a task force member said.
•
Lawmakers' inclusion "was the
only ·way we thought we could get
it passed,'' sa id ' Rep . Robert
Corbin, R-Dayton, chainnan of the
Counly Elected Officials Compensation Task Force. ·
Tbe group will recommend to
the Legislature ·a 3.5 percent raise
PRAYER DAY - Melp County observed the National Day of Prayer in Pomeroy Thursday
for county commissioners, sheriffs,
afternoon. Above, Joe Humphrey led a prayer on the steps of tbe Meigs Couhty Courthouse. The
prosecutors, auditors, treasurers,
90-mlnute·long ceremony featured singing, Bible reading an4 prayers. Later, the howd released
tow nship tru stee s, clerks and
balloons a !the Pomeroy levee. (Sentinel photo)
.
judges.
County co mmrss ioners and
auditors bad their last increase, at 5
percent, in January 1994. AJI other
elected coumy officials got their
last increase in 1992.
The proposal also included 3.5
(l\:rcent raises for Ohio House and
Senate members. Their base pay is
$42,427 a year.
·
.BY GEORGE ABATE
Dignitaries, including State
srudCnts.
Legislators received their last
Sentinel News Staff
Rep. Jobn Carey, R-Wellston,
Frank Vaughan, representing
increase in January 1992 as part of
Meigs residents knelt in
addressed the crowd of more
area veterans, asked for strength
a four-year, 5 percent annual
prayer for the nation's leaders
than 150 people wbile the skies
for tbe members of the military
increase approved in 1988, accordThursday afternoon outside of·
cleared from rain .
and their families who may be.
ing to the Legislative. Budget
the Meigs County Courthouse as
Carey s;tid he relies on God
separated or constantly moving.
Office.
part of the county's observance
to make difficult decisions tbat
"We thank you for all the
The recommended raises, wbicb
of the Nalional Day of Prayer.
affect his cpnstituents in the
blessings you've besiOwed on
would take effect this year and run · ·
Officials and local residents
94th Ohio House District.
us," Vaughan said. "We thank
through 2002, will go to the caucus
. shared pmyers and concerns for
. "If o·ur country would tum
you for tbe opportunity to
· of each party for discussion before
·~- ooun tcy ' s d"treetion •.em pb
h•~kjQ P~fl!Y"-·
~r ~'J!
h• .lLbl.J; .JL
I . ~-~
serve"
.. WC'
. a· --- ·"""""
.. -""
~-·-·
_ _.. . .. ,_ legislation is draf!Ald.- ·sizing redirecting the nation
solve our problems, Carey srud. '
Emalene Pratt expressed her
The task force, funned to study
toward following God.
.
The event paralleled witb ' gratitude (or tbe privileges and
the pay of county elected employPeople should not fear sbout·
national and state 'observatipns.
values inherent in this nation.
ees, also will recommend forming
inll about and sbaring their faith,
Ohio's motto this year remains:
"Many hav e turned away
an 11 -membcr commission to
srud Steve Beha, coordinator of
"With God) all things are possifrom God . We bave turned to
review salary issues, including
tbe county observation. Resible."
violence and crime," Pratt said.
future raise requests.
dents rieed to set their priorities
About 20 residents pfC§Cnted
"We know you are th e same
The commission would be made
to be in line with God's.
public prnyers. They askoo God
God today, tomorrow and forcv up of people appointed by the gov,
"lt's been a wonderful day of
to guide legislators, law enforceer."
ernor, legislative leaders. the
refresbin§ prayer for us to sbare
ment, businesses, county chamDavid Spencer asked for proSupreme Court chief justice, and
together, Beba said.
ber of commerce, teachers and
(Continued on Page 3)
one each by a county official and
township trus lee association .

Ius

.~Day of prayer prompts
local plea tor guidanc~

Syracuse Council gives nod to construction ·

State Sen . Jan Michael Long,
assistant miliorily wbip, will be tbe ·
keynote speaker at the Meig s
Cqunty Dctnocratic Party's Annual
Jefferson/Jackson Dinner Saturday
at the Meigs Senior Center.
Long, D-Circlevllle, is a native
of Middleport and was re-elected to
JAN MICHAEL LONG
a third four-year term in the Senate
last November.
lion and retirement. He also serves
He was recently elected assis.
on
several subcommillees as well
tant minority whip by bis Demoas
four
conunittees on tbe Natioual
erotic peers, placing hitn in one of
Conference
of State Legislatures.
four leadership positions In the
Prior
to
his election to Ohio
Senate's Democratic ranks.
Sepate,
be
served
as an administra·
As ass istant minority whip,
tive
assistant
for
U.S . Rep . and
Long will play a role in tbe policy
State
Sen.
Douglas
Applegate, as
and decision-making process for
an
assistant
prosecuting
attorney in
· the Democrats iii tbe upper house.
Pick~way
County
and
as village
He is also responsible for assisting
.solicitor
for
Commercial
Point .and
Senate Democrats in candidate
South Bloomfield.
recruitment.
.
He and his wife, Susie, bave two
In addition to his new leadership
sons, Justin and Jason, and live in
respensibilities, be serve~ on t!te
Circleville.
following standing commillees:
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
finance, judiciary, agriculture •
following a social htiur at 5 p.l)l.
(ranking minority member), educa-

Bailey noted thai water and
By KATHRYN CROW
covenant with buyers.
sewage
lines have already been laid
Sentinel Correspondent
Tbe homes will range in price
Tbe go-abead was given to build from $70,000 to $85 ,000. Each res- thrOugh the area.
Also meeting with council were
approximately· IS new homes on ·idence will be 1,100 sq uare feet,
Bob
Crow and Michael Warner of
the former Norman Grueser proper· and wiD be built I 0 feet from each
ty when Syracuse Village COuncil properly line. The covenant will Brogan-Warner Insurance, and Bill
met Thursday night.
exclude mobile homes, apartments Quickel of Davis-Quickcl Insurance, 011 insurance bids for the vilMeeting with co uncil on the and businesses.
construction were John Lentes,
· Council bad earlier consulted lage.
The Brogan-Warner bid was
attorney, and Greg Bailey, contrac- with Solicitor I. Carson Crow about ·
tor. According to Lentes· and Bai- tbe construction and restric tions. $3,606, while the Quickel bid was
$3,995. Following a lengthy dis·
ley, there will be a restrictive He also auended the meeting.

HUNTI NGTON, W.Va. (AP) which Rep ; Cass Ballenger, R:
- A North Carolina congress- N.C., plans to introduce later this
1
man's plan to elimi nate the federal montb,
"Mr. Ballenger isn't convinced
mine safety agency is a threat to ·
there
is any longer a. need for two
the entire mining industry, an assisseparate
agencies," said Palrick
tant labor secretary said.
Murphy,
Ballenger's
chief of staff.
"The mining industry is a vital
pl
ans
to
discuss the
McAteer
industry, but it's also a very small
.proposal
in
a
meeting
today in
one, ·aDd people often don't recogCharleston
with
members
of tbe
nize its importance - or its hazWest
Viiginia
Coal
Association.
ards," satd J. Davitt McAteer:
McAteer said a number of coal
assistant U.S. Secretary of Labor
operators
alread~ bave sent letters
f6r Mine Safety.
to
Congress
s~pporting tbe Mine
McAteer said tbe Clinton
administration will oppo~ the biU,

COLUMBUS (AP) - A State would consume 20 or 25 beers on
Higbway Patrol repoi't said ·the lat- Friday nights and also drink
est candidate for s_tate inspector ibrough the week- a situation sbe
general regularly drinks several said contributed to their breakup in
beers on Friday evenings, Tbe 1991.
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported
"I don't think bis drinking ever
today.
affe~ted his job," Day said. "He
But a spokesman for Gov. doesn't think lje bas a 'problem... ,
George Voinovicb, who nominated He has always maintained conRoss County Prosecutor Richard G. . trol."
Ward for the post, sai.d Thursday
. Ward, 53, who bas been prosethe gov~rn()r is not concerned color since 1976, said Thursday he
aboutthepatrol'sreport.
· doesn ' t have an alcohol problem
And Ward played down the and couldn't possibly drink as
information in the report.·
·
much as his fonner wife told the

declared the weekend tbe close of
business,'' Ward said. ''These .
kinds of jobs can be kind of stress·
ful."
·
Voinovich spokesman Michael
Dawson said Voinovich considered
the drinking issue before selecting
Ward for the job as tbe state's top
watchdog .
" We are satisfied that it is not a
problem," Dawson said.
Ward - like Voinovicb, a
Rej)ublican - said politics would
not play a role in who, bow or
wben be investigates allegations of ·

In particular, Democrats want to
!&lt;now whether Ward will be an
invesligator or a mediator, said
Sen . I!cn Espy, D-Columbus.
"On paper, be looks very well
qualifted," Espy said. "I think be
can expect the same types of questions as we asked Mr. Cox."

Safety and l:lcaltb Administration
as an independenl agency.
Mine operators. union leaders
and agency officials took part in a
March 30 celebralion at agency
headquarters in Arlington. Va., to
mark the 25th anniversary of· the
law that created the federal agency.
"We believe that an organiza·
tion like MSHA is absolutely
required," said Richard Lawson.
president of the National Mining
Association. a. trade assoCiation
representing mine operators.

to cigbt beers
them on Friday
evenings but rarely imbibes on
weekdays.
But his ex-wife, Patricia Day of
Akron, told investigaton that when
she and Ward were married, he

colleges and
Ward will start the $89,000-ayear job May 30, subject to Senale
coofmnation.
Senate Democrats said they
want to know more.

vote.
said be was unwilling to
endure constant questioning of his
qualifications and doubts over
whether he would be independent
of Voinovicb. ·

.

.

"MSHA is the means by which
we keep tbe playing field level."
Lawson said. ''It is crucial that we
all meet the same standards.''
Ballenger's proposal would
merge the Mine Safety aild Health
Administration with tbe Occupational Safety and Health Administralion.
Both agencies are now part of
Uoe Labor Dcpartmenl.
Merging the agencies " would
be fine 1f mines were stag·nant
places. But lhey're alive and
changing," McAteer said.

•

Jobless rate offers
proof of slowdown
. WASHINGTON (AP)- Tbe
nation's jobless rate soared to 5.8
percent in April , the highest rate in
seven months, as the number of
new jobs fell for the first time in
mOte than two years.
In a major surprise. the Labor
Department said today that the
number of payroll jobs slipped by
9,000 last month - the first
decline since a 52,000 decrease in
Marcb 1993.
.Many analysts predicted in
advance &lt;If the
that~\~~~...:....7.

Former Gallia County Judge
Donald Cox was Voinovich's first
choice to replace former Inspector
GcneraiDavid Stun~. who bad
beld thqob smcc,ot was created in
1988. Cox abruptly resigned in

OI~Cij~k;~·~~;l~~·~~in~tb~e~:~ti~p~~~s~~M~mc~b~,~lc~s~sfth;an~t~w~o~m~o~n~th~s~~·~1I -~-~~1rn~~~:~~~~~Hw~~~~-~~~~~turn
-trt tll&lt;l Utat:!Would
cxpl~'
be said.
Ward acknowledged meeting
Friday nights with friends and colleagues at a tavern near his office
in Chillicothe.
·
"!' m tbe first to admit I've

cuss ion, the Quickel · bid was
accepted 3-1 , with two council
members abstaining. Bill Roush
voted no, Kathryn Crow and Donna
Peterson, abstained, and Larry
Lavender, Dennis ·Wolfe and Eber
Pickens voted yes. According to
Quickel, his bid offered more cov·
erage.
Council. and water board members Larry Ebcrsbach and Gordon
(Continued on Page 3)

Clinton to fight mine safety agency closure

yoinovich names new IG.., in spite of report

.

1.- taal&amp;ht .. 40f, ..UJ

cleer. Saturday, sany. Hlpa
• near 78.

••

'
I

Questiou: Afll:r being out in the
sun, I developed a bumpy itcblng
rasb only ou the pans of my body
that were exposed to the sun. My
mother thinks it is a reaction from
tbe sunsaeen I used. I don't tblnk
it is. How can I tell if I'm sensitive
to the sunscreen without getting a
rasb again?
Answer: Your question is an
important and timely one since
spring sunshine is again drawing
those of us in northern latirudes out
into the sun. Your use of sunscreen ·
indicates lbat you are aware of the
risks of sun exposure. As you prob- ·
ably know, the greatest health risk
produced by sun exposure Is an
mcrease in the chance of developing skin cancer. The risk Increases
as tbe amount of sun exposure
increases, and this is particularly
uue for individuals with !!If skin.
Those with skin that bums eastly
instead of tanning are at the great·
est risk.
·
The rasb you descrilied sounds
like wbat we doctors call "photosensitivity dermatitis... wben we are
using our professional vernacular.
This is a fancy way of saying that a ·
rash is' the direct consll(luence of
sun exposure. Some medications,
classified as "psoralens," are actually designed to cause photosensitivity. Tbis is useful In the treatment of psoriasis and other skin
conditions. More frequently, bowever, photosensitivity is an undesirable consequence of the use of a
medicatioo. Tbere are a number of
· drugs that can produce this kind of
rash . Here are the most common
examples:
- tricyclic antidepressants;
- .specific antihistamines;
- some bigb blood pressure
medications;
- tetracycline, and certain other ·

.

APPOINTED - Ross County and t_be
tal~ would ·
Prosecutor Richard G. Ward, In remam at 5.5
Tbe mcrease
an undated file photo, bas been ..,i~ the jobless rate was the largest
appointed the state Inspector smce January and pushed uncmgeneral, the governor's office ployment back to where it was last
announced Thursday. (AP)
September.
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