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                  <text>Page A 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 9, 199ls

Pomeroy • Mtddleport, Ohio

.----..,.--Flower festival winners-__..,

PoFJt's Corner

Just that Way!

..••

DisJK.

.

Alii dream of is all lbe sadneu tl
lbe
aigbt.
Everywhere I so I see people in
"Wby
Oh, Wby" I'll never lr:JIQI!f
love, just lbe way I want to be.
only
blm.
"God"lmows.
How in lbc world did I let myself
Now
I
lay
me down to sleep wiib
set so alone.
·
my
eyes
all
so Wed as I go to sleep,
It's bell wben your heart: is in need
My
body
is
so worn. out aad
for SOO\cone.
heart
feels
like
it can't take anodl&amp;'
As. I sit wilb lbe rain coming down,
bclat.
~
I bave thoughts of ybu, being
S
be
was
tbe
most
beautiful
ball)'
tosetber and having all kinds of
out of tbe whole Upited Nation.
fun.
All I want Is to love someone and And wben God made ber be lllldc
,
let tbere be trust and not lefl in the lbe best aution.
Teresa
mu
Mllltlr
dust.
Letart FaJ!s
I want to feel wanted, and loved
and love them the same way.
My baud is reaching ouJ, but will
•
••
anyone take bold of it or will I be
·alone day aftCr day.
••
Teresa mu Miller
Letart Falls
For you I tried to better my self.
For you I tried to change,·
For you I turned my self
:
Into someone new and stranill. •
·I didn't lbink someone like you ;
Could-love a girl like me, ·
"
So
I
changed
myself
into
someono.
God ooly knows why sbe! bad been
I thougbi yqu )IVould want me to bli.
taken away.
Telling me that she's alright, but I realize now it waS somewhal sill f.
she is gone now and I know she To put on an act tbat way,
But no_w it's much to late, you see,.
will survive.
.
~
I hear her voice saying tQ me that · For you have run away.
sbe's alright
·
'
• · . ··
Teresa IDI MUWr
Into the rain, I hear it fall into the
LetartFaJt!l

PARADE WINNERS- Parade wlnnen In the second mn1111l
Racine Flower Festlv.. were, from left: K1ren mn for Karen's
Greenhouses, nnt place; Jarrod RUt for Vlrall HW &amp; Sona Farms
and Greenhouses, second place; and Crestfyn Hill for Paul mu
FarmS, third place. They received ribbons, plaques and monetary
awards.
·

For You

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Tuesday
Morning Golf l;eague wiU meet at
lbe Meigs County Golf Course at 9
wn. Tue~day morning. All ladies
are invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Narcotics
Anonymous, 7 p.m Sacred Heat
Catholic Cburcb, 161 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Helpline 1-800766-442.
YOUNG
-Josh Smith, Megan Williams and Jacob
Hunter, from left, were named flnt, second and thlrd·place winners, respectlvely,ln division one 'Kiddle Tractor Pull action at the
Racine Flower Festival. With them are Chris and Ted Smith who
directed the event sponsored by Ken McFann of Star Supply.

Garden club reports on highway cleanup project ·
· A report on the cleanup project
along the highway from the
Riverview scbool sign to Long
,Bottom was given by Nancy
Wachter when tbe Riverview Garden Club met recently at the home
of Janet Connelly.
Maxine Whitehead reported on
tbe project at the cemetery, noting
-

that Bill Osborne was ·oolpful with
the project Ruth Anne Balderson
gav11 a report on shrubs that bad
been set out by lbe historical marker at the Belleville Locks and Dam
park.
The program was given by Janet
Daugherty of Belpre, intnxluced by
her mother, Ella Osborne. She pre-

•

•

sen ted an informative program
showing slides of Russia aad displaying scans, dolls, watches and
other items that she received as
gifts from her friends in Russia.
Mrs. Osborne presented a gift to
MrS. Daugheny in appreciation of
presenting the program.

MIDDLEPORT -

Middleport

-

Vol. 46, NO. 8

C:opvrlght1995

Court rules in GJMV's favor
By GEORGE ABATE
. The GJMV district spent more AH ·district claimed the $50,000
Sentinel News Staff
than $50,000 in attorney fees bat- was set aSide for planning its new
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vin- ding the contrac~ Wilson said.
dtstrtct The GJMV district mainton Solid Waste Management Dis"Our
funding
was
eaten
up
wilh
t~in~d the departing two-county
-bict must give the Athens-Hocking attorney fee.s, but we prevailed in _ dtstrict
was breaking_the contract
SWMD $50,000, the· Fourth Ois- this matter;"- Wilson said. ·"We · _byllemandlnglhore money~ .
_
. bict Coun of Appeals ruled Tues- bave an action pending againsl
The GJMV disbict flied a fraud
day.
~eeems." for full recovery of attorney and breach of contract suit last
But the GJMV district director ''
June.
is calling lbe decision a victo_ry .
Because of the crunch the disJoe Kasler, Athens-Hocking
. "I bave reviewed the entry," said pute puts on its budget, the district waste director, would not say
Lance Wilson. "Our attorney was had to delay beginning a· more whether his district would appeal
upheld on all points."
aggressive recycling campaign and yesterday's ruling.
The court ruled that the disbict the hiring of a staff person, Wilson
"We'll leave all our options
must stick to its original contract, said.
open until we explore every oppor~hi~h . stated the Athens-Hocking
"This (lawsuit) was always on tunity ," Kasler said. "It was not a
district would gei $50,000 when it the back burner, so we bad to make unanimous vote."
·
split from GJMV in 1993. ·
contingencies for that," be added.
The Athens-Hocking dislrict
The six-county district. formed · "We put this on bold until all of the spent more than $15,000 in legal
in 1989, had assets of the more legal mess was resolved."
.
fees.
than $500,000.
In the two-year-old dispute, the

•
•
•

•

jl

POMEROY - Meigs County'
Board of Commissioners specw
meeting in commissioners' offioe
Wednesday, 2:30p.m. to review
bospitallease.
:

.EMPLOYEE RECOGNIZED -'Mary Hysell, a long-time
cook at Meigs High School, wlls recogniztd for more than 25 years

•

of service at Tuesday's Meigs Local Board of Education meeting.
Board member Roger Abbott presents RyseU a plaque.

'

D &amp; M Pizza &amp; Subs
, NOW DELIVERING%

Ella Osborne .and Janice Young
were co-hostesses for the meting
which included a tour of ·~Flowers
by Craig" at Coolville. He showed
annuals and perennials in attractive
gardens. The group also toured his
greenhouses which were filled with
blooming spring flowers.

Beginning Friday May 5
Syracuse Racine Minersville
Areas

COLUMBUS (AP) - Judges
would have more power to require
. HlV-testing of criminal defendants
under a bill that cleared lhe House
with ea.o;e. •
Representatives on Tuesday

teachers walk off the job for several boors a day.
"During a partial or Intermittent
strike, students may be left unsupervised between the time teachers
leave the building to strike and the
also:
time substitute teachers reach the
-Voted to block teachers and classroom," Wachtmann said.
olber unionized public employees
The legislation, which now goes
from staging partial or intennittent to the Senate, drew support from
strikes instead of full-scale walk- Rep. Michael Fox, R-Hamilton.
outs.
.
Fox said partial strikes effec- Postponed a scheduled vote lively moved picket lines into
on another bill that would dis- classrooms. "It's an insidious act
tribute excess Ohio Lottery profits of labor terrorism,'' he'said.
on a per-pupil basis statewide
Rep . Robert Hagan, Dinstead of putting the money into Youngstown, said partial striking
the stimdard school funding formu- was the on I y tool teachers bad
Ia
when more cdnventional auempts
Rep. Marilyn Reid, R-Beaver- at resolution had been used.
creek, won 93-4 appreval of a bill
Hagan said the bill was not
to increase penalties for proslitu- abOut education.
tion,
"It's abOut hurting the bargain"It\ increases the penalty for ing power of men and women
prostitution, currently a third · when ibey arc trying to negotiate a
degree misdemeanor, to a second fair contract," he said.
degree felony if the prostitute is a
The lollery profits bill on wbicb
known HIV carrier who engages in . the House ~ad been scheduled to
prostitution," Reid said. H!V is lbc vote was instead sent to lbe House
virus that causes AIDS .
Finance Commiltee for more bearThe bill, which now goes to the ings.
Sponsoring Rep. Ronald GerSenate, also would expand the
number of crimes for which judges berry, D, Austintown, said be was
could require HIV testing of defen- disappointed but recommended the
dants.
delay at the reque st of Hou se
Reid said judges now may order • Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, Rtests in cases of rape, sexual baltery Reynoldsburg.
·
and corruption of a minor.
•' I lhink the referral means that
She said the bill would extend Ute governor and the iulministration
the autliority to include gross sexu- have a concern for !he -bill," Geral imposition. felonious sexual pen- _beny said in an interview.
etration. prostitution, solicitation,
All lottery profi'ts go to schools.
and olher acts believed to have
Gerberry' s bilr would require
posed a risk of disease transmis- that starting July 1, 1997. a ny
sion.
excess profits beyond lhe $661.2
. Tbe House approved 64-33 a million expected at that time go to
btll that Rep. Lynn .Wacbtmann, R- schools on a per-pupil basis instead
Napoleon, introduced to stop a of through the complex formula
- union school sbike' tactic in which used to dlstriblite basic slafe aid. · -

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On iiPP'lJYQd creot Not responSible lor t~rali!cal errors

.

Lawmakers halt partial
-strikes by public workers

Syracuse, Oh

0

Monday - Saturday; 9 am • 9 pm
Sundar: Noon '· 6 pm

'

•

2 Sections. 16 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc:. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesay, May 10, 1995

•

'

·-- -

5

)

Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednes~,
bome of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
.
James Diehl will review "T e
Thread That Runs So True" aDd
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds will rev~
"The Johnstown Flood". For roll
call members are 1o name their rtr8t
review book.

1.- tonl&amp;b155, !builder•.
storms. [bursday raiD. H!ab Ia
60s.

•

WhyOh Why

-Comrrtunity calendar

TRACTOR PULL.WINNERS- Buddy Young, Tim Wolfe and
Jesaka Wolfe, from left, were named f1rst, second and tbird-plac:e
winners, respecUnly,tn division two In tbe Kiddie Tractor Pull at
the Racine Flower Festival. With them are Chris and Ted Smith
who directed the evtnlsponsored by Ken McFann or Star Supply.

Pick 3:
959
Pick 4:
. 2371
BuckeyeS: ·
14-19-28-29-33

Sports, PageS

mr

SPONSORS HONORED -lndlvldaal. tpOUOriq _entertaJn.
• meat at the second IIDIIual Racine Flo- Festlv.. were praented
plaques by Rac:lne Area Community Ors11nlzatlon PreJident
· Kathryn Hart. ReceMn11 plaquea -re, from left: Dr. Mel Weese,
sponsor of the MlclniPt Cloaen; Dr. ~lu Hunter, sponsor of
the Steve Pottmyer Shw; and Toin Wolfe or Racine Rome NaUon·
al Bank for sponsorlq the Johnny Lee Sbow. •

Ohio Lottery

.'

Reds win
third in
·row .9-1

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Federal authorities have filed
bombing charges against Terry
Nichols, who picked up his friend
Timoiby McVeigh here three days
before the blast, newspapers report~'
A sealed complaint was filed
charging. Nichols in the Apr) I 19
-bo-mbing that killed 167 people, the
Los Angeles Times and .The New
York Times reported ioday, citing
unidentified sources.
Nichols, lbe second person to be
charged in the :worst terrorist attack
on U.S. soil, was bein g held in .
Kansas as a material witness. He
was tq appear today before a federal magistrate in Wich ita, Kan., a
federal official speaking on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press.
On Tuesday, the FBI said it was
investigating wbetber Nichols'
husky 12-year-old son could be the
person depicted in lhe Jobn Doo 2
sketches. The son is not betieved to
be involved with the bombing, but
may have been with McVeigh
when be rented the ., truck believed
to have carried the bomb.

McVeigh was chargeq April 21
under a federal anti-terrorism law
lbat carries a possible ~eath penalty. He is being held without bail at
a federal prison ou ts~· Oklahoma
City.
·
·
Nichols, 40, of He gton, Kan .,
surrendered April 21 after hearing
his name on television.
At n federal court hearing ·in

Wichita, ·Kan., last month, prosecutors described a close association
between Nichols an&lt;! McVeigb .
Afler completin,&amp; Ariny basic liain.{ng together and serving in the
same company, they ran a military
surplus t:msiness, sometimes shared
a hou se and traveled extensively
together.
Authorities also believe they
shared extreme anti-gOvernment
views.

'

The Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building was bombed on the second anniversary of the fiery federal
raid on lbe l:lrancb Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, that ended
wilh the dcalbs of 79 cult members.
Federal inveStigators say they
.found a reCeipt for possible bomb
materials in Nichols' home

" If nothing more is done and we
lose our percentage due us, we'll be
sbon that much money," Kasler
•
'said.
The population in Athens and
Hocking counties represents :&lt;16
percent of the six-county former
district, Kasler added.
Despite the court bailie, the
Athens-Hocking disbict developed
recycling and'clean-up programs.
"We haven't wasted any time. I
don't think it was a waste," Kasler
said. "It was an obligation to the
citizens of our district and wbat we
may have to do in future."
The AH district's auorneys aad
six-member board will review this
ruling and decide its next action in
about two weeks, be added.

Meigs school board OKs graduation·list
The Meigs ·Local Board of Education, meeting in regular session
Tuesday night, approved a tentative
list of 140 seniors for graduation on
May2L
In .personnel matters, the board
accepted the resignation for retirement pmposes of Carol Ohlinger;
frrst grade teacher at Pomeroy Ele-

Southern Coal
pays $260,000
to w.·va. EPA

mentary School, effective June L
The board also hired Wesly
David Smilh as a substitute leacher
for the remainder of lhe school year
on an as-needed basis and· Dennis
Tillis as a substitute cusiodian .
. Mary Hysell, a retired cook at
Meigs Hig)l School, was recog-

nized for more than 25 years of service to the dlsbict Board member
Roger 1Abbott presented Hysell
with a plaque.
After communications .by interim treasurer Richard Koker, the
board approved a motion allowing
Koker 1o borrow from the diSirict' s

~pendi~g reserve if necessary pendmg rectept of funds from the next
real estate tax settlement
Present were Superintendent
Bill Buckley, board President Larry
Rope and board members Abbott,
John Hood and Scott Walion. Vice·
presidenl Randy Humphreys was
absent.
·
·

Middleport Council approves first
reading of cable service contract

By GEORGE ABATE
citizens and disabled residents.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Sentinel News StaiT
.
Mayor Dewey, Horton said be's
An Ohio coal company paid
Middleport Village Council' at received several complaints about
$260,000 in fmes for discharging • its Monday night meeting unani- cable rate increases, but the rates
untreated water from. &amp; flooded mously approved the first reading arc now determined on a fede(al ,
mine into the Ohio River, the state of the ordinance tbat will detennine not a local leveL
Division of Environmental Prole&lt;;- the cable.service with Continental
Since the cable company is
tion said.
Cable Vision for lhe next 15 years.
installing fiber optic tines throughIn a settlement that led to the
A ~5-year- contract with the out lhe village, tlte lower channels'
May 2 payment, the division company ended April I. ·
reception may be clearer, Childs
agreed not to pursue additional
The council bas negotiated with said.
clalms against Soulbern Ohio Coal the cable company several items,
In other action, the council:
Co., Director Dave Callaghan said . Councilman Mick Childs said.
-paid $10,000 as part or'the
Tuesday. It had assessed $1.8 mil- They include:
annual installment for the village
lion in fines.
- keeping a minimum of 12 fire truck; 1
"The complexity of the, case channels included in the basic ser- did not require lhe Blue Tar.made it necessary for us to reach a vice, since the previous agreement l~n to hold a public hearing to
settlement agreement," Callaghan only listed a maximum number of renew its liquor permit si nce no
said.
channels;
·
problems have been reported with
- holding the franchise fcc at 3 the estllblis.hment;
Southern Ohio's Meigs 31 mine
in Ohio flooded in July 1993 when , percent, since any increase in this
- . is working to fix water line
a · seal broke. The company fcc would be passed on _to the cos- leaks near the Dig Bend Fitness
received permission from lhc Ohio . tomers;
Center lhat were located on village
Environmental Protection Agency I
~ increasing the liability bond
lines;
to pump the untreated water into from $5,000 1o $7,000 in lhe event
- will make some contacts to
_several Ohio River tributaries, off1- of accidents; and
move the Valley Lumber sign; and
cials said.
.
- protecting a 25 percent dis- · · - may pursue pu rchasing a
But much of the 1.5 billion gal- count on basic services for senior cm;nputer to improve lhe village tax
lon~ of untreated.waiCJ' flowed into
parts of the Ohio under West Virginia's control above Point Pleasant. The divisio11 found lhe dis charges viplated water quality standards for iron, aluminum and manganese.
A person who answered lhe
phone at the Southcm Ohio office By GEORGE ABATE
The project involvennoving i.3
in Jackson, Ohio, said company·· Sentinel News Staff
million cubic. yards of dirt, 1 milofficials would not be available
The project engi neer for the lion yards of rock, 2. 2 miles of
until today to answer questions.
development of the U.S. 33/lnter- storm sewers, 53.000 tons of aggresta te 77 connector de tail ed tbe gate base and 10 miles of underremainder of this $12.3 million ground water removal pipe.
"It's an asphalt/paving job,"
project in a talk al Tuesday's meetHunter
said. "One thing that's realHUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)- ing of The Meigs Couniy Cbalnber
ly
kept
lhe price down is the numAttorneys for both sides requested of Commerce at the Senior Citizens
ber
of
bridges."
a delay in the trial of a Mason Center.
Two bridges will be built ncar
County doctor accused of taking ~
Scott Hunter, with Kokosing
Meigs
H'igh School to allow for the
his two young daughters to his Constru~tion Co.'s h¢avy highways
road
bet
ween the school and the
native India witltout his estranged division, saicLhe remains rcsponsi·
county
fair
grounds, lluntcr ad~ed.
wife's consent.
ble for moving U1c project forward.
Kokosing has operated for 30
Trial was supposed to begin
"I set the crew up and push
,T uesday for Dr. Bakshy A. K. them as bard as we can," Hunter years and last year it boasted sales
Cbbibher, but U.S. District Judge said. ''That holds the cost of the of more than $250 million. The
company has four divisions: heavy
Charles 'Haden delayed it indefi- project doW{!." ·
·
nitcly to give attorneys time to get
Kokosing - whi_ch is based in highway, asphalt. building and
information from lhe S~1te Depan- Fredericktown - aims to have 1wo trcaonent plant
The chamber's Horace Karr said
ment and ' videotaped testimony lanes open by November for the
from foreign -vitttesses.
2.25-mile section of highway he would have liked to have seen
Chhibber, 43, a Poinl Pleasant between Rock Springs and Five the ·onc million cubic yards of
internist, is charged wiih interfer· Points. This project marks the first waste sc!,up to form the nextovering with the rights of a custodial new 51ate hishway construction in pass at Five Points.
Karr questioned wliy this w~as .
p&lt;trent He is tree on $50.000 bond the counly in more than 25 years.
and must stay away from the girlS
unless accompanied by a lawyer.
If convicted, be faces up to three
'years in prison and a $250,000 fme.
Under a custody agreement,
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- pany committed pollution violaChhibber alid Bbairavi Chhibber A Mason County metals plant will tions over the last seven years.
exchanged custody of their daugh- ·pay the state Division of Environ- Kanawha County Circ'uil Judge
ters, ages 6 and 10. every other
mental Protection $250,000 in fines Irene Berger signed lhe selllcment
daf, while Mrs,.·Chhibber bad-full
.
.
to settle a lawsuit over air pollution _April20. ·
custodx of their 15-year-old "son.
violations, court records sbow.
The division filed suit in June '
Chbibber is accused of taking
American Alloys Inc. agreed 1o 1994 after American Alloys failed
thel!irls 10 India while be bad them
pay the fine ov~;r a two-year period, to com pi y wlth an order to cease
for visitation last August. Mrs.
conduct li broad environmental operations until it fixed pollutionCbbibber, after pleas to state and
audit and improve poUution-control control.equipment damaged by an
federal officials, went to India,
equiplllcnt at its New Haven facili- April \994 nrc. coun records indi(ound the girls with the help of
ty, records show.
cate.
police and brought them home.
Division offiCials sa'id the com-

assessor's process.
· Senior citizens day will be celcbrated•May 16, Horton proclaimed.
The village will host a "Midnigh·!' Magic Elf!C bic Light Parade"
beginning after 8:30p.m. Aug. 12. I
The parade will include area
marchin g bands and will use an
audio system to increase lhe performance. Roats will hegin construction later this month, show producer Bruce Wolfil said. Wolfe leads
the Midnight Cloggers.
The village police collected
$2,180.75 during the April mayor's
cour.t. The Middleport Police
Department mad e 37 arrests,
served 158 meal s. drove 4,358
md iles and investigated eight ~g:i- '
ems.
The Middlepon Volunteer Fire
Depanment answered 70 calls during April, with 15 fire and rescue
runs and 55 emergency runs . The
lire department logged 36 hours in
fire, EMS and rescue training,
while adding 125 hours for equipContinued on page 3

Dev~lopment

of connector
project chamber topic
·

Trial postponed

not cornplctcd when two businesses
had to close and the land was
already purchased .
· In olher business, Meigs County
Economic Development Director
Julia llouda,helt -Thornlon said a
recent tour of Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. was s uccessful.
About 300 Meigs Cou ntians have
'
jobs at this plant.
Also, Thornton said tlte countf s-~trategic plan sl!rulid be mmpleted by June. The county could
be paired with 28 other Appalachian counties in Obio to attract industry since these areas have· high
unemployment, low tax bases and
developabte resources.
In other ac_lion. Steve Story local coordinator for highway
development - told the .group lie
and . olhcr members of the, Sou'thc
cast Ohio Regional Council will
hold a meeting M'l.l'.1L ~
' Continuet:l on page 3

Mason plant will pay $250,000 pollution fine
Assistant Attorney General ·
Mark J. Rudoiph alleged _American
Alloys created and IJlaintained a
public nuisance by causing air pollution that. endangered publit ,
hcallh, safety and the environmenl
. The lawsuit said the company
was illegally discharging arsenic,
cadmium. chromium, iron, lead,
manganese, mercury, nickel. selenium and·silicqn compounds into ·
tlte air.
·

•
•

•

T

�,

•

WedNiday, May 10, 11115
•

:c ommentar
The Daily Sentinel

~-Area deaths-- Middleport
.COntinUICI from page1
meall mainttn•nce.
- Helen S. Brunner
The fire dqlartmeot
six brulllllnllb l1rel. two rescue

2 The Dilly Stntlnei
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PQ

Wednaaday, May 10,1885

re~ponded

Gramm ·can't close in . on Dole .

10

111 Court Street •
Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON - Until next ·to one source, Gramm sbot back: th placale Merrill.
ing - repeal itself.
February, New Hampshire Gov. "How the bell am I going to call
Senate Majority Leader Bob
If Dole's discomfon with fi5CII
Sieve Merrill's every wlsb will be them up and say, 'Well, look, I Dole, wbo had a "previously conservatism i&amp; on .display,
the command at Republican preai- wanted to come to speak to your scheduled'' appearance elsewhere, Gramm's misgivings about being a
dential cootenden wbo are seeking
has a commanding 30-point lead mouthpiece for social coost;rvaover Qramm in New Hampshire tlves is also evideot Amid a spale
'his prized endorsement in the seaSOI)'S first primary.
.
By
aod across the country. Yet be of recent stories suggesting !bat
When
Merrill
asked
the
candi·
seems
keenly aware that bis sup- Gramm is failing to counect with .
ROBERT L. WINGETI
10
boycott
Delaware's
Repubpon
is
broader
than it is deep, espe· . this group, advisers are ellCOilfagdates
Publisher
lican convention because that state
cially among tile most conservative ing him 10 raise the profile of these
bad scheduled its primary only four '
''
volers. Dole boasts a distinguished issues, but wilb limiitd success.
,
day&amp;
_after
New
Hampsbi.re's,
the
.
·
.
career
as a pragmatist and consenIt's more a matter of style than
CHARLF:NF. HQEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW '
substance,
as Gramm agrees with
candldates snappe~ the1r be~ls, convention, but it's to my political sus-seeker- both of which are out
General Manager
Controller
the
message
if not all !be methods
salu~e~n~Lolbe~w1se ac!~.li~J-.-iu~ hack OP m~ord.'.:.:.-.. o(po!jlic!'l_vqgue. .
. · .
of
social
conservatives.
"I can't all
sycoplfa'ii1s;
Gramm's "word" may write
Desplle a seemmgly msurSe~. Phil Gramm. R-Texas, was !be story of !be New Hampsblre mountable early lead, Dole is wag- of a sudden be something I'm
LE'JTI;RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less ihan 300
not," be bas told staffers. "We can
a
telli'ng
except1on. He cbo~e to primary: Do voters believe be will ing a stop-Gramm campljign words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed-with name.
honor a three-month-old proml~ to keep bis promises if be's the next trying 10 pre-empt bim on the right have (evangelist) Billy Graham as
address and 1elcphone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leners
address !be ~!aware conven~o~, president _ promises to balance by planting bis flag in conservative president and be can give all the.
should be in good taSie. addressing issues, not personalitie}.
while afftmung New Hamps~tre s the budget, lower ·taxes and shrink causes from affumatlve action and speeches, but if (we pass) BiU Clinsanctifted status as the first pnmary !be size of government? In a small assault weapons to Hollywood- ton's policies the country would
'
state. . ,
. .
.
and symbolic way, Gramm proved bashing. Dole bas been b!liZCJl, nor still decline:"
The big question is whether
Gratilm s dcc1ston may wmd up his word was worth something by bashful, about this transformatiou,
playmg ~ucb better am~ng New risking rebuke from a state so criti- especially when be signed the ''no-· GOP primary voters will buy the
Hampsbn~ voters tban 1t bas to cally important to bis nomination. new-tax pledge" last month in new, unproved Dole. Sources close
S&lt;;&gt;me
of hiS own camprugn stra:le- In contraSt, former Tennessee Gov. New Hampshire. He's n~ willing_ to Gramm say be is bearlened by
.,... __ -:-· '"'
~lsts.• W!K&gt; argued stre~uously dur- , Lamar Alexander and Pii.t to let the history of 1988 :-- when ihiemaiTOOiS grou~ studies show•
__ more exJX&lt;~se involved to continue mg semor staff meetmgs that_be Bucbanari canceled their scheduled · be rejected the same pledge ing that voters remain hazy about
Dear .Editor:
. with the opeiiliion of 5ervice! Blue should ditch Delaware. Accordmg appearances at lbe Delaware event ·because it would be too bandcuf&amp;_ what Dole really stands for.
Gramm pollster Linda DiVali
This is in response lO Charles H. Streak management decided !bat
recently conducted a focus group
Knight's letter of 4/28/95, wbicb with a limited budge~ it weuld not
. of about 12 New Hampshire voters
appeared in The Daily Sentinel be practical for either party and
concerning Blue Streak Cab Co.
thus !be decision to discontinue
- mostly Dole supporters - following Dole's ofl1cial announceI. To set lbe record straight service was made by Blue Streak
. ment last month. Participants were
there was no scandal in lhe opera- Cab Co., Inc.
Y e s ,
asked to dissect a key part of
lion of tbe Blue Streak Cab Co.
federal and state tax dollars paid
Dole's announcement speech: "My
2. It is my understanding that for tbe operation of Blue Streak
friends, I have the experience ~ I
Mr. Knight did not request any along with 33 more companies in
have been tested and tested and
. documents from the Village of the State of Ohio.
tested
in many ways . I am not
Middleport. Instead, the document
For the benefit of tbe public and
afraid
to lead, and I know tbe
request came from Atty . Linda' 'anyone who is interesled in reviewway."
. Warner.
ing this information, Blue Streak
Respondents reacted favorably
3. There were no misstalemems records are available on me at 172
toward
all but the fmal four words
or calculated concealments on any N. Second St., Middleport, Ohio.
of the passage. They couldn't idendocuments .
We also suggest t.bat you poll
tify Dole's vision or !be mark of
4. If Pomeroy Village would · any of our previous riders and ask
the Dole candidacy. "The wo~d
bave paid their share of !be admin- if they were ever unfairly taken
'pandering' doesn't necessarily
istrative costs (as tbey agreed to do advantage of by Blue Streak
come out but it reinforces the point
in 198~). lbere probably would not employees. Every effon was made
that be doesn't have an anchor,"
bave ,been a $29,572 deficit. · to assist the elderly with special
one Gramm strategist told us. On
Pomeroy Village paid nothing to auention to the handicapped.
·
the other band, Gramm's pledge to
contribute during this nine year
We also want to me·ntion that
balance the budget in bis fust 1erm
pefiod.
'
over the past, nine years, cars were
in t.be White House. or uot seek
5. Gary Snouffer made no quote bought locally, gasoline and repair
reelection resonated well with the
·ihat 80% of the routes would be parts were purchased locally, local
same focus group.
charged a token and extra cost.
mechanics were used and employWhat explain's Gramm's big
For !be past nine and one balf ment was provided for se ven pee.gap?
His advisers believe, perhaps
years, bi-weekly reports have been -pic. Feel free to check with past
self-servingly, that most of it can
filed by management of Blue · employees about bow they were
Streak Cab Co, Inc. with the Vii- treated.
be closed with improved name
Gramm's surveys
recognition.
. lage of Middlepen concerning the
Mr. Knight has had nine years
show Dole with 95 percent name
• riders and costs for service. Also, to question the practice of Blue
N~T
identification compared with 58
each month Blue Streak filed . Streak Cab Co., Inc. We find it a
percent for Gramm.
mileage and personnel reports.- bit strange t.bal he bas chosen t.bis
Blue Streak bas never misstated or time to ,stres1 such an ioterest.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
concealed any documentauon to Could it be because be is representFeature Syndicate, Inc.
Middleport Village or O.D.O.T, ing Sarah Snouffer in an attempled
(Ohio Department of Transporta- homicide of Gary Snouffer? The
lion). Over tbe years. owners of trial is scheduled for 615/95. Is be
Blue Streak have met periodically trying to cast a shadow of doubt
witb officials from Middleport Vii· over th e honesty, integrity and
!age and O.D.O.T. There was no character of William and Gary
·
·
mention of being over budge t or Snouffer?
Be kind to your mom. Chances wom!"' - intellectually fulfilled, that the two boys arc better off of us cannot find enough work to
anything else pertaining to the , The Blue Streak Cab Co., Inc. are, she's had a rough year.
emotionally barren . "Good spenaing evenings and weekends make ends meet.
Of course our bosses could ju~t
dai ly operation of Blue Streak Cab provided a decent and honest serBecause this was the year t.bat Lawyer, Bad Mother," scolded wiib tbeir mother's baby sitter than
spread the work around, so that
·' .Company.
·
vice to the people of Meigs Coun- we refined the way that mother- headlines across the country. "She with tbeir father.
But the Marcia Clark parable, as everyone can have flexible schedWe agree with the statement of ty. The Snouffer family are law hood is evaluated. It's a strange
with other tales of working parents' ules and leave lbe office at a decent
Opal Kauff. If somethmg ":as abiding citizens of this community. formula whose main variable is
traumas, misses the real problem, hour. But it's cheaper to overwork
wrong. then why d1d II take nme The Snouffers refuse to si nk to the .income level. A poor mother, we
years 10 bring it to light. Again to level of certain attorney ethical discover, is .only a good mother if can't bave it all," was the common The trouble comes not so mucb some and ur\deremploy others, so ·
clarify the records, Blue Streak was procedures. Perhaps Mr. Knight she works outside the home and refrain.
fro111 self-involved mothers or that's what they do.
For the most part, American
On the other side, we heard opponunistic fathers . The trouble
not forced out of busmess. needs to examme h1s own business puts bcr kids in day care. When she
O.O.O.T. set !be budget (or 199'5 . practices .before ·be starts "mud Tails to do this, she could risk los- - from the many working mothers. comes from the American system - workers bave PfQven willing to
accommodate lbemselves Ill. .IJ)eiK
for SI80,QOO with certain restric· slinging". Mr. Knight needs to ing her children to tbe ~tate orphan- who identify wilb Marcia Clark's of work.
lions .and later changed the figure beware from now on in altacking age. A wealthy .or middle-income plight. Who are driving themselves
The one thing no one ever ques- bosses' greed. Rather than be
to $120.000.
the Snouffer name, or be may lind mother, by contrast, proves her ·crazy trying to juggle work and tioned was why Marcia Clark or branded a troublemaker, we work
Blue Sireak and the Village of himself with a slander suit.
worth by staying home with the family, and who believe tbat soci- anyone else should be expected to the extra hours quietly. Rather than
Middleport were to meet certain
kids and forgoi[\g a wage-earning ety is punishing her (and them) for work 16 hours a day. Clark is ,be laughed out of tbe room, we
requirements as recommended by
William E. Snouffer. job. When she fails to do this, sbe being successful iii a way that soci- admittedly a well-paid attorney on don't pester them with such ridicuO.D.O.T. Changes for bot.b parties
a high-profile case, but sbe is far lous notions as on-site child care.
Jane A. Snouffer, ' risks losing custody of her kids to ety does not punish. men.
Will American workers ever
, . The interesting thing is .that both from the only parent having trouble
wo uld be time consuming and
Gary A. Snouffer her ex.-busband.
The Marcia Clark custody case sides a·re, in some ways, right. balancing work and family obliga- come to a breaking point? WiD we
is tbe cenlcrpicce of t.be latter prin· Society does expect more from tions. And sbe is cenainly not the ever demand back our personal
ciple. The lead prosecutor in the working mothen; than it does from only American sjiending well over · lives? I don't know. But we'll certainly do much better if we stop
0.1. Simpson case became a sym- working fathers - no one ever 40 hours a week on tile job.
each other, and see wb~;CC
'blaming
makes
·a
morality
tale
out
of
the
is
that
the
amount
of
The
fact
bol of the working woman's dilemt.bc
real
probl~m
lies.
time
Americans
are
sjJending
at
the
high-powered
father
who
neglects
ma last March, after her estranged
Sara
Eckel
Is a syndicated
bis
family.
And
yet,
wben
one
office
bas
been
rising
steadily
for
husband, Gordon Clark, filed for
wriler
for
Newspaper
Enterprise
looks
at
the
details
of
this
particular
the
past
two
decades.
According
to
By Tbe Associated Press
primary custody of t.beir two sons,
Association.
economist
Juliet·
Schor,
author
of
case,
it
does
appear
that
Gordon
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
arguing that Clark worked 16-hour
(For Information on how to
days and couldn'l spend enough ·Clark is the more appropriate pri· "The Overworked American," we
communicate
electronically with
now
log
in
160
hours
more
wotk
mary parent. Cus tody battl~s
The (Young_•lown) Vindicator, May 2
time with U1c boys.
this
columnist
and others, con·
per
year
(the
equivalent
of
one
should
be
,gender-neutral,
and
the
President Clinton's emb&lt;~rgo against Iran may' or may not hun the
The morality tales began immetact
America
Online
by caiUng 1·
month)
than
we
did
20
years
ago.
counlfy enpugb to make an impression on ils fundamentalist leaders, diately. Marcia Clark became the amount of time each parent has 10
800·827·6364,
~XL
8317.)
.
At
the
same
time
that
t.bc
majority
depending on which economist you ask.
. ,epitome of tbc American working spend with the kids is a legitimate
overworked,
near
I
y
a
fiftb
of
us
are
consideration. It's bard to argue
Hopes: We'd like to hope that it will. There's ample evidence that Iran
does everything it can to sJJppon terrorism, and there's little question the
Iranian economy ·is in serious trduble. Maybe a U.S. embargo will give
the mullahs an added incelltive to step into the 20th cciltury (even as most
·
oflhe rest of the world is beading for the 21st.)
But the shon- or long-term efficacy of t.be embargo js really a secBob· M. isn't happy. It seems c'ent; and the Loomis Sayle
One of the reasons Jeffrey down or ~e are in' a period of great
ondar)'Jssuc. MQff&lt; imPQJ1l!nlly, the United States found itself in a posi- that returns for this stock fu nd Growlb and Income Fund, up 13.31
Wardlow cites for the success or speculative excess." ·
tion of asking Russia 10 scale back its trade willi Iran -ili arms and nuclear investor aren't what he'd hoped percent.
Lipper think-s we're in a period
technology at a time when the U.S. was Iran's primary trading partner in , for.
Graham Tanaka is portfolio his fund, the Loomis Sayles
of
speculative excess, one that's
Growth
and
Income
Fund,
is
that
almost everything else.
.
of
the
Retirement
Planmanager
''Most of my funds haven't per.
partly based on the belief tbat tbe
the fund stays well invested.
There is ,little doubt tll3t. some companies will suffer in the embargo; Conned as well as the Dow or the S
''I think the rally this yellr i:lollar will always decline. "We
someone always docs when one nation tries to hit another jn· its pocket- &amp; P 500, so far this year," the Fort
caught a lot of investment man- don't think one should take the
bock. Dut such prices must sometimes be paid, and we can think o( few Lauderdale investor said. "If there
agers py surprise," said Wardlow, point of view t.bat t.be dollar will
times when the stakes are higher than Ibis.
arc stock funds ·out there beating
·
whose cash portion in this portfolio always bc'weak," Lippeqaid.
ning
Growth
Fund.
He
said
bis
those averages. I'd like to know
_S._o, ~bile l!!e typcs~ tlr equity
Ma~-rfeld News;tournal, May5 ~ ·
- ~
· - about them,.,_
- ~·~·
.-fund ·has done well this year - is nQrmally ar.ound 5 percent.
Dr. Henry W. Foster Jr.'s nomination to be surgeon general is in lfouAnotber reason for the success funds that have done well ibis year
Well, Bob, there are hundreds of because it bas had the right expoble. But Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole's threat to keep the nomination stock funds that have outperformed sure to the right industries and t.be is acquisitions. "Two of our hold- include everything from specialty
from reaching the full Senate- regardless of bow t.be Labor and Human · both the Dow Jones Industrial right stucl&gt; picks._ in each industry.. _ ings, Michigan Na!iQ!!a!.Jl.ank llllfL funds 10 growth as well as growlb
.Resources Committee votes after considering t.be oian - is unfair and Average and the Standard &amp; Poor's With only 30 stocks in ibe portfo- Pet, were acquired by foreign com- and -in-come funds·, short&lt;term
rank with political maneuvering. Not much better is tllC threat by fellow 500 so far this year ..
lio, picking the right stocks is very panies," be said. .
• resulls are only one tiny bit of llie
:
important.
·
·
presidential candidate Sen. Phil Gramm to lead a filibuster if the nominaA quick run through the Lipper
With between 50 and 60 stocks whole performance pictuie.
Lipper's
bottom
line
for
fund
tion reaches the Senate floor.
"I really believe in putting yo\ir in the portfolio and a rese3rcb staff
Anal.ytical Services data base
Senator Dole may be seeking to ftrrnly position himself as t.bc Rcpubli· shows that 396 equity fuiJds hav~ eggs in baskets that you know well of about 26 people, Wardlow looks · shoppers includes knowing what! s
cans' leading anti-abortion candidate - although he says at the issue had year-to-date total returns of at and not being spread out and at !be fundamentals wben making in a fund's portfolio and. then lookwiib Dr. Foster is not abonion per se, butlruth-lclliRg,
·
least'! 0 percent from Dec. 31: becoming a cloSet index fund like a his picks. "We don'ttry 'to time !be ing for funds witb good long-terp~
Truth-telling certainly is an issue in the case, and yes,
think the 1994, t.brougb April 20, 1995. Per- lot of people are,'' he said.
market; we ali just foc~s on finding . records - even if they mjgbt not
•
president could have chosen better. But it is irresponsible le ership to fonnance for both lbe Dow Jones
Tanaka likes undervalued good companies and good invest- be performing particularly well
now.
&amp;ppoint oneself sole judge. The full Senate deserves a chance t consider Industrial Average and the S &amp; P · growlb companies for which earn- ments ..:.'
Dian Vujovlch L• the author of
ibis nominee if the 16-mcmbcr commiuce, after the hearing lh began 500, wit.b dividends reinvesled, was ings will exceed expectations. That
And that's the good news.
"Straight
Talk About Mutual
. · this week, decll}S that it should.
just shy of 10 percent for the fttst search leads him into areas of leCh·
"That (396) is a ·large number
• •
· nology, bealt.b care, anll companies of funds to he beating tbe averages Funds," which Is published by
quarter of 1995.
~·
• Lancasler.Eagle·Gazette, May 7
·
Three funds with solid double· with new product development. when the averages themselves are McGraw Hill. Send questions to
'"' Last week, inmates wearing whire uniforrns imprinted with 'chain digit total relums include Fidelity's Three of his fund's boldin¥s pretty strong," says A. Michael . her In care of this newspaper.
(For Information on bow to
gang" got off five _buses and kneeled as guards placed the shiny steel Select Air TransportatiOJl Fund, a include Intel (the microcbtp Lipper, president of the mytual
sllackles a,round tbeor ankles: W1th that action Alabama took a step into specialty fund with year-to-date maker), Mercer International (a fuod research firm bearing his communicate ele~tronlcally with
t1JC past as the fii'St state in the natio~ to rcinstitufe chain gangs. "
performance lbrougb April 20 of large pulp and paper compan,y in name. "Norm'ally when a large Ibis columnist and others, con·
As shocking as it may seem, we ibink Alabama may have an idea wor- 22.85 percent; Retirement Plan- eastern Germany) and Seitcl (a number of funds beat the market. tact America Online by caiUDIJ J. •
thy of consideration.
n·ing's Growth Fund, up 18.25 per- seismic services company).
average, either the market is going 800-827-6364, exl 8317.)
. '
.)

Jack Anderson
and
Mt'chae/ Bt'ns*et"n.

,.

Letters to the editor
There was no scandal

1\tG

STi;P.....

~tAttS tor Ah\tRitA

Motherhood: The-rules are changing
Sara Eckel

_
W hat they are ·saying in
other Ohio newspapers

Ma·n y funds outperf

Dow and S &amp; P

I

WOld baa 1!eeo reeeiWld be1c ot die dcmb of Heiell Sldooer Brulllla', 111111, three .aervice runs, a vehicle
, fire, a faile alarm IDd a structure
93, of Cuyabop Flllll oo Salulday, May 6, 1995.
.
Born in Paueroy on April Tl, 1902, daughter of the !ale Benjamiu D. ftre.
Tbe balances. in funds for the
and Eslclla Hecolt StiJJDa, sbe gratluat.cd from Pomeroy High Scbool and
vlllage lo April iDcluded: .general,
·Obio University and taugbt boole economics.
·
. She is survtvc:d by a daughter and 8011-in·law, JoAIID aud William $56,314.53; fire departmcot,
·Sanden of Maccmb, m.; a' grandd•ngbtet and great·plllliloll. Local Ida- $712 .45; rue truck, $17,674.72:
. lives survlvins include two brolbers, Arthur Skinuer or Mitldlepo~ revolviog loan· fund, $14.918.99:
ODNR water, $1,472.68; re(Qse,
. Gecqo S!ciuuer of Pomeroy and xveral uieces and nepllewa.
' ·She was peceded in dealb by ber busballd, Charles F. Brunner; a sis- $14,924.37: street maintenance,
$6,831.38; Jaw enforcement,
. tcr, MarlaFoater, tllld two brotben, Oscar and Edward Sldooer.,
$9636.14;
water tan!&lt;, $359.55;
·
Services will be Thursday io Cuyahoga Falla.
.;·
water, $19;588.84; aod sewer,
$42,460.67 .
The funds with deficits includ·
· PLAY CAST- SHS ·seniors will p--.nt
Er 1ca Dugan, Kend ra Norris, Courtney Roush,
' ·Ronald "Sammy" Hovatter, 63, of Ostrander died Tuesday, May 9, ed:
$1 775economic
03
bf' development,
·
• ~~ a
•
·
:.
pu
tc
transportauon:
senior
play
Friday
for
tbe
first
time
in
four
Ryan WU!iams; rear - James Parsons, Mason
: 1995 at his residence. He b8d worked for Willmet Industries of Delaware
$52,223.56,
Issue
Two,
S-2,106.48,
years.
"A
Y•ar
In
th•
Mall"
was
wr1'tt•n
and
F'IS b er, Ch r1s
· H a ni m, Dav id Pi c kens , Amy
•
$4'9 19 · · t
~
~
~
· for 35 years as a slilber operator.
•
Ianung,
tree
P
~
·
;
mlma
ure
produced
by
the
school's
••ru'or
d"a11111
cl•••
and
W
d
T
·
•
oo , onl Sellers, Angel Roberts, Shannon
· ' He was a U.S. Air Force Korean C&lt;tDfll.ct veterao.
$1 •472 · 08 ; ceme 1ery, consis'- of four, one-a•t~plays. Cast
0 lr•
members
M
...
•
orar1't y and Crysta I Mi'hlb
1 ac h . 0 t h er cast
.
· · Born May 17, 1931 iu Nutter Fort; W.Va., be was the ,son of !be !ale ~ 3 442 83
d recrea t lon,
;
an
Include,
from
l•n·.
front
Brian
Anderson,
be
·
I
d
M
M
•
·
$6 579 40
•
mem rs mc u e att orrow, Jeni Stewart
Clyde Hovatter and Mildred Ford Foldeo.
.
• · ·
Brandy Roush, Andrea Moore, KellJe Collins,
and Jessica Capehart.
Survivors include three sous, Stepheo Hovatter of Worlbington,
. Michael (Peggy) Hovatter of Marysville; Gregory (Lori) H'!vatter of
Amlin; one daughter, Deirdre (Danny) Pyles .o f Ostrander; his former
wife. Clara Hovatter; five brothers, William Hovatter of Floreoce, S.C.,
Clyde Hovatter· of Cuyahoga Falls, Gary Hovatter of Circleville, James
· Hovatler of Augusta, Ga., and Richard Hovatter of Middleport; five sisSEORC representatives will Bsy Jt~IFREEMANff
b_rblrou~gsalryters, tdeenalg~rs '" Iotbve, e=canatllon, ·bhe saJd .• . d B .
. ters, Alice Spellman of Columbia, Md., Gerry· Corbio of Huntington,
t 'ib J
w d' tor f en me news sta
Sl mg nv
an cu mmate w1 a
s mem ers mc u e nan
. W.Va., Diana Hovatler and Gloria Hampton, both of Columbus. and ~~ o~:o Dee~rtrn~~i o~ran~For the ~II'S! time in four years, to~c~iug Christmas story about a Anderson, Jessica Capehan, Kellic
Karen Uuger of Powell; and seven grandchildren.
·
portation legJlalO from tbe uS
Southern High School seniors will uussmg parent, be explamed.
Collms, Enca Dugan. Mason F1shIn addition to bis parents, hewas preceded by one sisler, Betty Hughes. 33cc ·'
~s
&gt;- S · ·
presentaseniorplayFriday.
.
Theclassbrokeintofourgroups cr. Chris llamm , C rystal
, Friends may call one hour prior to the service, which will be held noon er ~%:~~:0-~biOS~ouse
"A Year in the Mall," consists and each group wrote ope play, Miihlbach. Andrea Moore, Shan'/Friday at the DeVore-Snyder Funeral Home, Delaware Ompel.
,
Jud Wil~~s~'tor~rdi- of four, oiie-act plays "- written Dudding commented. The rub !s ·· non Morarity , Matt Morrow,
Memorial contributions may be made to lbe Auduboo Society, I 06S nator ~or the chamber said tbe . and produced by the school's that each group performs anot.ber s Kendra Noms. I ames Parsons,
· · KendaleNorth, Columbus, Ohio, 43220.
eornmitlee received aboui 15 appli- senior dr~a class, according to play:
.
DaVId P1ckens . Angel Robem,
. cations for lbe art-lime tourism Don Duddmg, drama teacher.
In contrast to se!"or plays_ of ~e ~ra~dy Roush, Courtney Rou sh,
director positio/
Each play shares the same set, past, stu~ents paructpaung m th1s I om Sellers, Jeni Stewart . Ryan
This position should be filled but lakes pia~ at a different time ~lay rece1.ve cre~1t towards gradua- · Wtlhams and Amy Wood .
soon, since interviews could begin of year, Duddiug srud.
uon. The ~how IS the end prod~ct
.The students wtll perfc~nn 8 p.m.
The plays portray the experi- of .the semor drama class. Duddmg Fnday m the b1gh school , Charles
Chester R. Van Meter, 89, Racine, died May 9, 1995, at Pomeroy Thursday, WiUiams said.
"We know it's a full-time job, ·ences of an older couple harassed pot~led out;
. ,
.- .
W. Hayman Gymnasium AdmisNursing and Rehabilitation Center•
1
Born Sept 3, 1905, in Racine, son of tile late Milo and Amelia Holler but we'd rather start with a part_
In a way, . thts ts tbeu fmal s1on lS $1.
. Van Meier, be was a farmer and 14-year employee of the former Pomeroy time position," she a~ed. .
Elberfeld's Store.
!he chamber w1ll bosl a golf VETERANS MEMOR
He is survived by two sons and daugbters-_in-law, Dana and Annabel outmg at I p.m. May 18. The fee 1s
. . IAL
South-Central Ohio
becoming west at I 0 to 20 mph.
: Van Meier of Belpre and Roy and Bonnie Van Meier of Racine; a daugb- $50 per player; with the team ·
~uesd_ay admtsstons- Glada
Scattered thunderstorms ·devel- Chance of rain is 70 percent.
. tcr and son-in-law, Phyllis and Harold Gillmor of Fremon~ nine grand·
members needing to be selecled by Dav1s, M1ddl~pon
oping by late afternoon , Some of
Extended forecast
cbildren and four great-grandebildren, several nieces and nephews.
tbe players. Contact Jim Anderson
Tuesday discharges -none
the storms could be severe with
Friday ... Fair. Lows 45 to 50.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Gladys Clark Van Meter: sisters,
for details.
.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER large bail and dama·gi ng winds . Highs 65 to 70 .
, Erma Wilson and Murl Bell, and a brother, Carl Van Meter. ·
I
Saturday ... A chance of showers
In other busmess, the chamber
May 9 discharges • Emili Rain 'could also be locally heavy.
. Services will be· held Friday, 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in welcomed new member Kathy Payne Donald Craigo and Flo d Higb in the lower 80s. South winds or thunderstorms late. Lows 45 to
·Pomeroy witb tbe Rev. Ken Baker officiating. Burial will follow in Letart Schwanz. She works for tbe county Neal. '
Y increasing to 15 to 25 mph, Chance 55.
, Fans Cemetery.
·
'
Highs 65 to 75 .
· JTPA office.
May 9 birth. Mr. and Mrs. of rain is 50 percent. .
. Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at tile funeral home.
Tonighl...Showers
and
t.bundcrSunday
... A chance of showers
William Wolfe, son, of Gallipostonns likely. Some. of the storms or thunderstonns . Lows45 to 55.
lis.
.
could be severe early ·and have
Highs lower 70s to lower 80s.
Printed witb permission.
heavy rain. Low near 55 . Winds
I
Am Ele Power · -... --..--.......33
Akzo ........................................58 3/8
Rayboo R. Wallace Sr.. 68, of Highland Road, Pomeroy! died Tuesday,
Ashland OU ----------.37 718
:_May 9, 1995, following an extended illness.
AT&amp;TOne,
...................
- .....- ..;_.Jo
-...........5%
Bam Sept. 18, 1926, in Anniston, Ala, the son of Dora Arnold WalBank
_________
3/4
lace Robinson of Baltimore, Md., and the !ale Roben Wallace, he was a·
Bob E••lis-------~-.20 1/2
'
: retired Bet.blebem Steel employee in Sparrows Poin~ Md. He atlended tbe
Champloa Jnd.-------.203/4
.
will
be
given
In
Gallia
County
area
by
Middle River Baptist Cburcb, be. was a Navy veleran of World War II and
Charming Shop--------A S/8
· tbe Korean eonflict, be was a member of the Benedict A. Andrew Post
City Holdlng---------'-:28 112
· 296 American Legioo of Grasonville, Md., and a member of lbe Stewart
Fedenl Mogul.------.17 S/8
Goodyear T&amp;R -----"---.3!1'318
• Johnson Post9926 Veterans of Foreign Wars in Mason, W.Va
•
1312 Eastern Avenue, (Route 7)
•
K·mart ...........·.......... - .....-.131/4
•. He is survived by his mother; son, Raybon R. Wallace Jr. of ColumLlmds End ---~-----'·15 3/B
•
614·446·1744
:
. bus: daughter,, Naomi L. McCowan of Birch Leaf, Va.: .brother, Willliim
Umltal
·~----------.21118
A. Wallace of Baltimore, Md.; and two grandchildren.
•
Friday, May 12, 1995..; 9:00•Noon
•
Multimedia ID£. ·------.37 318
He was preceded in death by bis wife of 44 years, Leona E. Wallace;
People•a ·---.. --~----~2 3/4
• Call Toll Free 1·800·634-5265 for an Immediate appointment. •
infant brot.ber, Edward Eugene Wallace; and step-father, William C. I Ohio VaUey ...................................44
The tests will be given by a-Lkensed Hearing Aid Spedabst •
Robinson.
.
One Valley
t/4 · : Anyone
who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation iS invited to •
No services or visitation will be held at the family's request. The famiRockweU ·-------..--.44 3/8
•
have
a
FREE
hearing test to see II this problem can be helped. Bring this
Rob biDS &amp; Myen.------24
. Iy asks for a prayer memorial.
.
.
•
coupon
with
you
(or your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value,
Royal
Duk:h----------126
118
Arrangements are being.made by the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rut•
' . UMWA ', UAW ·ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER
II
Sboney'sloc
••
--------·11112
SOOHl G!RE
, land.
INSURANCE
PROVIDERS
•
DBMtEL
in
Star Bank ----------.41 J/4
GIFT
WALK-INS WELCOME
.
.
•
Wendy lnt'L ----------.16 118
Worthington lod.-------·1!1 1/4

.Ronald Hovatter

0

•

...

-r-

1

-Chester R. Van Meter

Hospital news

: ~aybon Wallace Sr.

_ _...;..._ _ Weather--------

a

Stocks

.,

• ••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

~~HEARING AID CENTER

--------.30

•

*•

C~lNG

WASH[~

Meigs EMS ·logs 5 calls

. . Units of tbe Meigs co·unty
Emergency Medical Service
recorded five calls for· assistance
Tuesday including two transfer
, calls. Unit.uesponding included:
·
POMEROY
5:08 p.m., Hiland Road, Rayboo
· R. Wallace, dead upon arrival.
..
RUTLAND
. 7:24 a.m., New Lima Road,
• Helen Combs, treated at the scene;

· Marriage
licenses
.
.
Tbe following cou ples were
· issued marriage licenses recently in
. the Meigs· County Probate Court of
Judge Roben Buck:
Daniel Frank Short, 21,
. Cheshire, and Lisa Lynn Hoffman,
20, Long Bottom; Hugh Roscoe .
· Mcllwraith, 29, and Victoria Lynn
: Miller, 34, both of Shade;
Charles Raymond Roush, 25,
· New Haven, W.Va .. and Kathy
Renee Williams, 21, Langsville;
, Marvin James Ward, 36, and Jen·
nifer Louise Gregg, 22, both of
Coolville. ·

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
----·-:
Stock reporls are the 10:30 a.m.

2:13 p.m., New Lima Road,
Darlene Spangler, Holzer Medical
Genter.

quotes provided by Adnst or
GaUlpolis.
,

Fog blamed in wreck

Now Open For The Season

A heavy fog was blamed in a
one-car wreck at t.be junction of
Loop Road and Side Hill Road in
Rutland Township Tuesday around
!0:30p.m.
According to a Meigs County
Sherifrs repon, Peggy Yost, Rutland, went off the roadway and into
a ·ditch, causing heavy damage to
her 1979 Ford. No injuries were
reported.

- l'

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

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse

992-5776

Open Daily 9 am~5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-S ·pm

-

The Lowest Cellular
Rate Plan Available!
Our $14.95 plan features low per-minute
rates of just $.30 peak/$.20 off-peak with 2d
free minutes each month. To experience the
savings of Wireless One Network seiVice,
clip the coupon and bring it to your nearest .
Wireless .One Network location.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Publi,hed t\IC"ry ahernoon, Monduy through
Fri~ay, Ill Court Sl. , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Oh10 Vtllley Publishing Compllny/Mullimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2"6:
Seconr.l clas,s postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohi.a...

Dian Vujovich

......

~0~~~~~:-~nt SHS seniors write ow~. play

Member: Tho.Am)Ciated Press, al)d the Ohio
Newspaper A~sociation .
POSTMASTER: Send nddress corrections to
The Daily SeJllint_l. ! ! I Court..St., Pomcrny, •' Ohio 4.5769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
"

Ry Carrier or Motor Route
,
One: Week.~....... ~ -=.:-.:.;:;-:-.=.,.,~ ...... $L1.L .
One Mnnth ................................................ $7.60
One Yelll' ... :................................. ,........... $~1 .00

SINGLE COPV PRICE
Oaily .................................................... 3 ~ f;ents
remit in advance dir.et!f to The DiUiy Sentinel
on. a lhree, ~b. or 12 mont.h bnfis1Credit will be

given cimC! eoch Wl!ek.

•

No ~ub~cdption by mml periT!Mted in areas
w~re tmlmrnnier sei"\'Jce js av·rut:Jbft!o:· ·· ~

Spring Base
Low-Back
Spring base ' Lounger
Chair
0
'•

79 00

179°
.
·--

--~

'

ANDERSON'S

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

,

agoo ,-

(.

~

NETWORK
--

-

Our Entire Stock of Lloyd /Flanders is Reduced for
Mother's Day Giving.
SWINGS, GLIDERS, TABLES and LOUNGERS
7 COLORS· 3 YEAR WARRANTY

Subs~br:~ not desirin&amp; to pay the enrrier m:ay

,,

High-Back
Spring base ·
Chair

Iukie Melp County

" ~~ :=:::::::~::::::·::::::::;::::::::::::::::·::::·:::::::!~:~

52 W..ks .............................................., .s92..56
lbtH Outlide Melp County
13 Weeks ............................................... $25.61
26 Weeks ............ ,, .. :........................ ·...... $49.66

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

Cha~eston . WV
4227 MacCortde Ave., SE.
(304) 925-4000

Logan, WV
403 Justice Ave.
(304) 752·5200

Huntington West. WV
406 Adams Ave.
(304) 529-2355

51 WeekJ ...........:....................................$96.20

..'

•

St. Albans, WV
612 Thi!d Ave.

Huntington. WV
3322 US Route 60 East·

(304) 722-7500

.(304) 525-4101

Ashland. wv ·

925 Winchester Ave.
(606) 324-4426

Russell, WV

1440 Diednch Blvd
(606) &amp;33-2355

•

�I

•

•

•

!l hooking Marlin• 9-1,

I

·Heds capture third
consecutive victory:

Wedneeday,llay 10. 1815 •

•

Peal 4 :

--~------------~----------~====·=============:•••
Cllrtt Q o a ,.._.~

l!oolen .,.,......

t..":a
...........,. . .:'i
Ntw Yort ................ 7

~ ~

Baltitncl(e ..................5
Detroit...................... )

7

Ql

S -'13

I
I

s .sn
I

.4l7

N-.. r...Ntl~.ao..
..... ou.......,. .

3

ClEVELAND ........ &amp;
Ka.tt.s.- City .............6

4
6

.667
.500

Chica11o..........
4
M, ...... ................ 4

9 .301

I

.33'

o1-. or m. Ap-

, _ IIOd........, lbom 1o Bullalo ollbo

Amcric:ui AIIN'iec"'l.

N.-._.

Footbah

Holliet,li~,

two-,_

e«·

VIR&lt;JIN!Aoo\Jmouncod Cory AI&lt;IID-

dcr, juolor bublb&amp;ll tu-d, will fore10
bi• seuior year ud make bhrwel! dialble

'

•

•••

I

5
I

.sn

-'

TCIM ......... ............... 5

I

.)I_S

]

.636

~

•

Tuesday'• sc:Oru
8Q$(oo4,B~ti-~

Toro11to 9, New Yott 6
Olica" 6 1 MinntsOtt. I

J)elJoat l, Milwaukee 2 {9 iu., JUJP.,

1

s

California ], Tu.u 2

games

SHOP FOODLAND
FOR
·TOTAL

•
•
~

-''

Milwaukee. 7 :0' p .m . ,

COfl1'. or JUSP. pme

10:35 p.m ·
·
Teua (Tewksbury 1-0) ar. California

(Ssndeuo.n 0-1), 10:35 p.m.

Full

Customer Service·

Thursday'• games
Dettoi l (Bergman 0·2) at Milwaukee
(Weaman0-2), 1:15 p.m
Seatlle (Wells 0--2) IJ( o.tlud atartey
0- 1), :J:l5 p m.
Teus (Rogen 1-2}-at· (\aiiCornla
(Springer 0-0), 4:05p.m
Baltimore (Browa 2-0J at Hollon (Sele

Natures BEST
PRODUCE, USDA
Choice Meats &amp; Quality
Deli

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutern Dh-Woa

!ill

fd.

.750
.:SU

Atlanta ............. :....... 7

5

Montreal .................. 7
New Yori: ................ 4

6 .531
8 .333

Florida ..................... )

9

2

2.5 ·
5

-2-'0

e
a
prov1de
to wall. VALUE in our stores.
From Hardworking Low Prices
to Friendly Faces to Extra
'

:2-0), 7:05p.m.
,
New York. (Key 1-0) at Toroato (I.Ater 'I· I),J:15 p.m.

5 · .615
8 .429
8 .333

.5
3
"

Pittlburg.h ................ 3

9

5

.2SO

We.tnn DIYillon
ColOrado .................. 1 4 .667

San f-rancisco .......... 8 · 5 .6t' .
.533
.429

.5
1.5
3

Tuesday's scores
CINONNA119, florida I
Ph.lladelphll 8. Moatreal 3
Howton 1l, PiWbutJh 6
Atlanta 3, New Yorlc l
Oilcaao 3. St Louis 0

Lo1 Anyelu (Mutinez 2· 1} at Sao
(ValellZUela 0- 1). 4:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Jarvi• 0·0} al Florida
(Burt.eu 2-1), 7:05p. m.
Montri!.BI. (Heredia 1· 1) ~~!adelphia
(Green 1· 1), 7:35p.m.
.
Houston (Hampton l-1) llt PittJburah
(Wagner 0-l), 7:35p.m.
Atl anta (Merclccr 0· 1) at New York
(llarni1ch 0-0), 7:40p.m.
C1licaJO (Rli1tr 2-0) at St. Louia (Hill
Di~go

.
'

ea.
Offer good thru Saturday- May 13th, 1995
Motlh"r''"

Thursday's gam~

,.
.

}louJ&gt;tOn (Swindell 0·0) at Pittsbw-gh
(Neagle 0-1), 3:05p.m.
San Franci1co (Mulholland 1-l) at
Colorado (Acevedo ().I), 1:05 p.m.
ClNONNATI (Schourek 0-2) 1i. Aorl~a (Weathers O.(l), 7·05 p.m
At lanta (STJioltz ·1-1) at New York
{Jolles l-1), 7:40p.m.

Basketball

Carry out
Service

. Tuesday's scores
Pho~:nix

Tonight's games
O!it:Jgo at Orlando, 8 p m. (TNT)

Thursday's games

FREE GROCERY
BAGS I

lfolllilon at f'hocnis . 10:30 p .m. CI:N'fl

Bob Evams

Reg. Maple
Link Sausage

()rlanc\o ~~ Ch!c11go. Sp.m (I'NT)
San AnHHliO at L A. t..ak:ers. 10 :30

r m mm

Hockey
NHL playoffs
Tuesday's .scores
lklrotl 4, Dali!Ui I: Dctrotl lc::ada tenq;

Vanoouvn S. St. Louis 3, &amp;l.'fies tied 1-

Toronlo J. C'htcajo 0; Toronto trada;

l.O

San Jon S•. Ca.lgllf')' 4 {01). San JOfiC

lead.s

&amp;etta

2-0

Tonight's g~ril.s
Qucb'l;c at NY
illSPNll

Ranger~,

7 30 p.m·
.

Pbladttph1a3ilfu'ffilo. 7:30p.m.

Pilla burgh al Wutnngt:on ,7:JO p.m
Boiloo at NeW J~ncy, 7:35p.m

Thursday's games
Olicago a1 ToroAlo, 7:30p.m. (ESPN)
IXUOII II Dllllas, 8 p.m. (ESPN2) .
S.t . Lou•• 11 Vaneouver, IO:JO p.m.
(ESPN2)
-. CalaatyatSaa,Jos.e.IO~JOp.m..

FrJday's games
Quebre at N.Y. Rangers . 7:.30 p.m.
(ESPNl
Ptltladelphiaat Buffalo, 730 p m.
Pittsburah at WMhinatou.

7:JO p.m.
Boston at New Jeney, 7:JS p.m.

Transactions
RasebaU

Lt.,..•

Am6WM
CAUFORNIA ANGEL!: Ploced Br1·
u Altdenoo pitcher, oa the 15-day dis·
abled lilt retio.ctive to May 6. Recalled

•

•
'''

(

r

••
.,•

'

24 . . CUBE '5.99

Why Pay More?
Vegetables

Westover
Cottage Cheese

Sealtest
Buttermilk

24 oz.
ctn.

'

Friday's games

oo

I

PEPSI
2 LITER
COLA
·PRODUCTS

NO·EXTAA CHARGE

New 'l"ofk at Indiana, a p.m. (INI')

•

~

NBA playoffs
New York. 96. lodi:I.Oa 71: seriu tied

.

We'll Provide Materials and Experi Advice.
A treat for Mom, a treat for the kids and
•
NO CLEANUP!

We Bag
Your

.'

l

With T~ls Coupon

[X]
[X]

Money Orders
Velvet
$129
Western Union
Natural Rounds
13 oz.
"
[J[) Lottery Tickets~
Ice Cream ·cere~l 99
1/2 gal.
[][] Postage Stamps
Bars
PLUS .
7.8 oz.
for
[X] Double Coupons •
Everyday
~_,We Accept Personal
Checks
[X] We Accept W.I.C:
We Accept Federal
Food Stamps
[X] No Deposit on Bascarts
IX] ~oovenient Store Hours
·7 Days A Week (See store for de,talls)

2

Chiquita
Bananas

•

s
LBS.l

9(

GARDEH HEEDS

"
•

,.

.Wilkinson.and otHers need
.
to shed pounds, Shu/a says

Geraniums
99' ea.

Cypress

- 95
Mulch 1- o· 2~~-s22
$6
Top Soil • Cow Mqnure
bags

·

.. CINCINNATI (AP} _ Dan

·

)

.J!~'m!s ~ Potting Sod

tt::

~---------------------~
0,.

1
I

1

DAIRY VALLEY

9
· •,
-

PIZZABURGER

$174

I ·
3 Gal., 5 Ga.&amp; 10 Gal.

l---31.

'1bese are the
ldnd
of cars ~~~~
l!¥l~~~
we'd b~ fo! .....
t.!==== :.~.: :

9

PICKENS

•

.

HARDW'ARE

;,Where Better

MASON' W• VA• ·
773·5583

e.ast State
Athens, OhiO

St~eet

-~··

-

--------'

664~ -

593-. . I .

= r-:---:::-T-T::::--.,.-

..

\"
__ ,.._.,...,.!,......_, . ....,., __ . _............._. _ _ _ _ _

~ .

ourselves\

-

24 Qt., 52 Qt•.
&amp; 54 Ql

'

'I

(

t

t•r t•r
&amp;..;--------------------- :J
I' I'

RUBBER
MAID•
GOTT
WATER

ICE CHEST

Willtinsan, a form~r Ohio State I '
Thb WeeJr' Special•
star wl10 was last years No. I draft _ 1 1
•
'
'
pick , appoored to be at least 30
pounds over bis desired playing I
weight of315 pounds at last week·
end's minicamp.
1,
•
.
. Sbula . declined lo discloie
Wilkinson's 'weight, but made it I
....,.~:;..._
clear be was upset.
. I
, .
"Dan understands what he's got 1
•
10 do," Sbula said. "He can slill do
•
·
the things be did in college and "I
SUN.-SAT. 10:00 AM-1 0!00 PM • 992•2556
what be did for u~ 1as1 yeat, but 1 ~'I'' ntt "''~'r
r1 ~·
unlil he gets the wetgbt off il!ld gelS 1 • ~
'
~
...:......;.:;.
in better condition~ be·s going to

I'

..

'

Mickey Morandini bad four bits
and drove in three runs. Charlie
Hayes and' Dave Hollins homered
for the host PbiUies. .
-Paul Quantrill (2-0) won despite
allowing nine bits in 5 1/3 innings.
BuiCh Henry (()..2) did not last three
.
.
innings.
Braves 3, Mets 2_
t;:hi~ones,_ "':_ho m~ssed the ,
entire 1994 season becau se- of a-

Wilkinson, who got cramps
"Big Daddy" Wilkin son. has after about a dozen sprints Salurbecome too big, Cincinnati Bengals day said Sbula reached him.~
coach Dave Sbula said.
•
Sbula said Wilkinson and some
"He lias every right 10 ay
of lbe olher key players must lose tba~" said lhc 'defensive line
,
. bt ·
who
sig[led
a
$14.4
million,
multi1
we~~For
~.we've won 11 year contract in 1994.
glUPCS b_angmg
_ c__ ~~~ T-~1
. YmY 00!
h on ·a bunb
of guys that, obviously, football is ,.,
C()..X:LA~I
1
~ot.lhat
important
for the~
11:s I ,
- ~-D-OLPH'S ·
ume
to put
u}l or sbul
up, . satd
·
,
Sbula, whose team has losl37
~;:'C:. in hl~ t1ure seasons~ bead

99¢ and~p

•

slruggl~; ''

:~~·f~~~u:!eei;:sa~~~adelphia
·

··

Memorial' Day
Silk Spray Flowers

DtJ

~!.~u~~!a~ir .. . . .$3995
~o~~:!'m~!~~m~~... ,..........$6995

r

--------~--------------------------~
· No appointment needed.

Sao Francisco (leila- 1-0) at Colorado

Montreal (Peru 0-0) at Philadelphta

oa Sheet Cake

out or lbeir offensive slump. It took
only 10 as tbc New York MeiS and
Florida Marlins lcnow all too well
The Reds opened the season ().6
and wtte 2-7 before they staged a
dramatic rally to beat New York
13-11 on Saturday. 'lbcy added an
8-4 victory over the Mets on Sunday and "?'Jted the Marlins·9·1 on
Tuesday ntghL
''This is a very well-balanced
team. I'd be swprised if anybody
sbut us out," said M~, who had
four hils, including a homer and
double, and drove in three runs for
the lhird slraigbl game.
"Wilh lbe speed we _bave in our
lineup and the power in the middle,
we're going 10 be Iough to keep
down."
Morris, who began the game
batting .190, do.ubled during the
Reds' six-run fifth inning and bit a
solo home run, his second, in lhe
ninth.
"Earlier in lhe year, I wasn 'I
giving myself a decent cbance to
.bit," Morris said. "I Y'asn~ 1
preparing the way .I should. My
hands weren 'I going where they
should have gone. Preparation is
lhekey."
·
John Smiley (1·0) pitched six
strong innings and also doubled to
start lhe fifth . He allowed seven
hils, slruck out four and walked
two as the Reds won the.opener of
an eight-game road trip.
• 'Everylhing worked oul well.

We bad some great defense and I
had a 101 of ~round balls whcu I
needed lhem,' Smiley said. 1'1 just
'wanted to move the ball around and
· keep it In the park. My goal W$ 10
avoid walks and keep their speed
orr the bases."
Eddie Tau ben sec, maltin11 bls
second slart of the seasoo in place
or Injured calcher Benito Santiago,
and Barry Larkin had two-nnt singles in lhe fifth as.lhe firs! eiil!lt
Reds balter:s reached base. Larkin
has bits in all 12 games.•
"Barry is off to an incredible
start," Morris said. "He's such a
tough out. He bas 'come through
with so many clutch hits for us in
.the past, and we have solid guys
'bitting around him. We're not
going to be easy for anybody."
The Reds lOOk a 2-0 lead in the
first _Qeinn Sanders started with an
infieiil single, moved to third on
Larkin's single and scared on a
wild pitch. Larkin later· scored on
Morris's single.
Florida starter Pat Rapp (0-2)
gave up six ru!IS and seven hits
before being pulled in lhe flflh .
The game drew \7,312 fl!lls, lhe
smallest home crowd in Florida.' s
three-season history. The Marlins
were booed throughout the game.
"It gets tiring for the fans 10
watch. II gels tiring for me 10
watch. It 'ets liting for our ballclub
to waiCh, ' Marlins manager Rene
Lachemann said. "I certainly don't
. expect any standing ovations. I'd
boo, 100. They're very deserving.''

Rockies act civilized
while beating Giants;
Phils &amp; Cubs also win

..

I
I
I
I
I'
I
I
I

_$ 99

Hal Morris

_ByTheAssoc:latedPress .
. double in the fiflb- ·an off
Orel Hersbiser can only hope all McDowell, who is 3-8 in the regu·
his American League victories are lac season against lhe Blue Jays and
as easy as the fll'Sl
0.2 in two playoff slartS. .
In other NL action,
· The right-hander won 134
McDowell (I -11 went four
games in 12-years with lhe Los innings at SkyDome, giving up
Angeles Dodgers and he is 1-1 nineruns'on 12biiS.
since changing leagues and signing · Pat Hentgen (2-0) allowed six
as a free agent with Cleveland, runs and 10 bits overS 213 innings.
courtesy of the Indians' 10.0 v\ctoWhite Sox 6, Twins 1
ry over Kansas City on Tuesday
Jim Abbou (1-1) allowed two
nigbt.
.hilS over seven innings in a game
Cleveland 'lied a major-league delayed twice by min, Ihe second
knee injury, led off lbe ninlb inning
record by scoring eight runs in the lime for 1 hour, II . minutes in 1be By BEN wALKER
first inning before an ou1 was middle of lbe eigblh Inning. ·
AP Baseball Writer
with his firs I major league home
Chicago
bad
a
five-run
Ihird
as
All
Ih
·
·
ted
tro
ble
run.
Atlanta ended its four-game
tied
1
.
do
e stgns pom 10 u .
y •·
•
recor .
''Little League," be said when Frank Thomas bad a two,run uSan Francisco · and Colorado losing streak and sent New or,. IO
asked when was the last time be ble, Ron Karkovice walked wilb began Tuesday night's game wilh a 'its lhird stmighlloss.
was slalced 10 a lead like Ihat "It's lbe bases loaded and Ozzie Guillen history of brushback battles, so
Jones homered off Josias Manjust fantast!~ for lhe guys 10 get slapped a two-run single 10 center, · when Larry Walker of the Roclties · zanillo (0- 1). Greg McMichael (2·
lhose runs. Runs can really make all off 22-ycar-old rookie LaTroy was bit in the bead by a pitch in the 0) won despite giving 'up Jeff
you relax."
·
Hawltins (0.3). ·
frrst inning, lbere could bave been Kent's tying home run in the
Three of .the bits were home
big problems.
eighlb . Brad Clontz piiChed a hitruns: A leadoff shot by Kenny
· Brewers2; Tigers 2 (susp.)
Instead, Walker trolled to first less ninlh for bis fourth save.
Lofton, a two-run homer by Carlos
Cecil Fielder led off the lop of base without making a move ·
Charlie O'Brien bit a two-run
Baerga and a grand slam by Paul the ninth with a mammolh borne toward Trevor Wilson. on tb.e homer off Mets starter Bret SaberSorrento that made il8-0.
run to make il 2-2 and tht! game mound. Dante Bicbette followed hagen .
Hersbiser, in Ihe longest outing was suspended in the boltom of Ihe wilh a grand slam, and Ihe Roclties
Padres 9, Dodgers 2
by a Cleveland piiCber Ibis season, inniljg after a 55-minute delay. The went to beal the Giants I()..6.
Shortstop Jose Offerman tied a
scattered four hils over eight game will be resumed tonight wilh
Mall Williams homered twice . Los Angeles record by making .
innings, walking one and striking lwo outs, Ihe bases empty and Jose and drove in five runs for San · three errors in an inning, and San
aut five . Only 1wo Kansas ~ily Valentin at lhe plate.
Francisco. For once, though, the Die.go look advantage to win al
runners reached second and none·
Because Fielder's 450-foot bats made the loudest noise in a home.
gotiO Ihird.
homer came in 'lbe lOp of ihe ·inning Giants-Rockies game, not fists ..
Offerman's misplays set up
.. Kansas City starter Doug Linton and the Brewers didn'rfinish their
"li was a quiet night," Rockies three runs . He made lwo wild
(0-1) allowed two more runs in Ihe half, the game will be played from manager Don Baylor said, "which throws in the fourth inning and lei
second and then seltled down, the point il was suspended rather is lhe way it should be decided, not a grounder go through his legs.
worlting five innings.
lhan in its entirety.
by throwing at each olher.'' .
Tony Owynn bad three hits and "
In other AL games 'l'uesday
Athletics 7, Mariners 5
Walker was hit by an off-speed dmve in three runs, ani! Edd1e
nigbl it was Boston 4, Ballimore 3;
. Rickey Henders'!n; wbo had · pitch thai glanced. off .his helmet. Williams homered for San Diego.
Toronto 9, New York 6; Chicago 6, miSsed four games w11h a sore left . Later, Kirt Manwanng of the Scou Sanders (2-0) allowed one
Minnesota I; Detroit 2, Milwaukee shoulder, bit a pinch-bit, three-run · Giarits was plunked. ·
run on three bits in six innings. 2 in a game suspended by rain; homer in Ihe bottom of the ninih.
In 24 games between the teams,
Mike PiaZZl\ homered for lbe
Oakland 7, Sealtle 5; and Califor- Oakland tralled S-3 going inlo the 12 Giants and II Rockies have Dodgers . Tom Candiotti (1-2) lastriia 3, Texas 2.
ninlh and Brent Gates' RBI single been bH. Last month in spring edjust four Innings.
·Red Sox 4, Orioles 3 off J'im C--onverse (0-1) made i:t 5-4. training, Andri:s ,Gaj,arraga was hit
Cubs 3, CardlnalsO · ·
After a single aJ)d an out, left- by Giarils pitcher Jose Bautista, ·
Steve Trachsel improved 10 9-1
Pinch-hiller Wes Chamberlain
hit a home nm wilh one out in Ihe bander Ron .VIII one came on lo causing another war of words. ·
'Iifc'lime on the road - while being
bottom of the ninlh Inning as the face the left-handed bitting Jason
· Galarraga, whose 1994 season I-9 at Wrigley Field- wiih some
fll'S.t bitter facing Annando Benitez . · Giambi, but Henderson pinch hit ended after he was bit by a piiCh by relief from Randy Myers.
(0·2). Stan Belinda (1·0) pitched I and delivered his frrst home run of lhe Giants, vowed Monday he' d get
(See NL. on Page 6)
2/3 perfect innings for the win.
the season.
even if he was bit again .
Ben McDonald gave up lwo
Edgar Maninez bad a !;tome run
Kevin Ritz (1-0) piiChed 6 2/3
runs by walking Mo Vaughn and and three RBis for Seattle.
innings and siruck oul eight. Wil·
billing Jose Canseco with a pitch
:Angels 3, Rangers 2
·
son left in -the Ihird as Ihc Rockies
wilh the bases loaded. He alsiJ gave
Gary DiSarcina and EduardG took a 9-0 lead .
up a hamer to Vaughn . Chfis Perez bad run-scoring doubles and
Williams , who led th e majors
Hoiles drove in all three Baltimore Greg Myers bit his' second homer · wilh 43 homers lasl year, has five
runs with a two-run homer and an in three games since cqming off the Ibis season .
RBI single.
disabled list to back Mark
In other games, Philadelphia
Blue Jays 9, Yankees 6
Langston (1-0), who allowed lead- beat Montreal 8-3, AUanta defeated
. Rookie shortstop Alex. Gonzalez off homers lo Will Clark in lhe New York 3-2, San Diego stopped
drove'in.tbree runs as Ihe Blue Jays fourth and Dean Palmer in IJ!e sev- Los Angeles 9-2, Chicago beat St
beat Jack McDowell for the lOth enlb.
Louis 3-0 and Houston defe ated
time in 14 cateer starts. Gonzalez,
Lee Smilh, the fourth California Pittsburgh -t3-6.
.
whose olher four RBis this season reliever, worked the ninlh for his ,
Phillies 8, Expos 3
alf came on opening day, bil a sac- fifih save in as many opportunities.
Tony Tarasco led off the firs I
rifice fly in the second, a llffi-scorRick Helling (0-1) allowed lwo inning wilh a home run for the seeing single in the fourth and an RBI runs and five bits over five innings. ond straight day, but Montreal

~

-----------------------,
_
Only
&gt;
I

(Oitvares 1·1 ), 9:0S p.m.·

~ nu:

.,

FOOD LAND

Bring the kids to Foodland on
Saturday, May 13th, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. for some
sweet fun! We'll let them decorate one of our
"bakery ••-....,,h, 1/4 sheetcakes for Mom.

1.0), 8o0l p.m.

l-0

••

'JV(otf1£r's Vay is 5unaay, 'J..(ay 14th

.Private-Labels,
Regional labels
and National
Brands

Today's games

Phuenu: 130, Houston 108,
lead&amp; S«le&amp; 1-0

Trip

'

'

Colorado 10, San Fnhcisco 6

H

•
••
•·

Hey Dad, Hey Kids!

Storewide
VARIETY and.
SEt:.ECTION

San Diea;o 9, Lo• Angeleal

{Miiubs 1-0), 1:05 p.m.'

Win
A

..

Indians beat Royals
10-0; Hershiser gets
first victory In AL

'
•'

FOODLAND

services ...

Cenlrlll Oh'WOft ·
4 .667

6
8

.,
~·­

6 ·

Chicaao .................... l
Hous10n ................... 1
St. Louis .................. 6
CJNCINN4.11 ......... ..

Lo• Angeles ............. 7
San Die11o ............ .... 6

ALMOST AN OUT - Onclllllall outfielder Delon Sanders reach·
u for the ball bit by Florida's Charles Johnson In the second Inning
of Tuesday night'• 11•me In Miami, where the Reds won 9-1 despite
Johnson's gettln1 • single on this play. (AP)

-..
Anniversary

New Yor'k (Perez 1·0) •t Toronlo
(Guzman 0.0), 7:!l p.m.
.
Minne.ota (Eric bon 0·3) It Chie~ao
(Bero Q-1), 8:05 p.m.

tivero~l - 1) ,

•
~

(Hanson 1·0), 7:0S p.m.

Detroit (Moore 2-0) at Mllwl\ltec
(Scanlan 0-0), 8:05 p.m.
Seallle (AemiDI I· I) at Oakiii.Jld (On·

..

EASTMAN'S

City (Haney 0-0)--.t CLEVELAND (Naay 1..0), ?:OS p.m.
Baltimore (Fernandez 0-0) 11 BollOD

"3

•••
•

!

.!IS

CLEVELAND 10, 1Wa01 City 0

Ium
.»:
Philadelphia ............. 9

•••

•

I

California .................7
Oakland ................... !

Detroit 11

••

Cot lhe NBA .nt\.

4.3
!'

-4

Tonight's

r-.latiou.

.!

w....... Dk~

Klll~

eou ualltut llhletie dinetct for media

2.!1

SeatUe. .•....................7

raja)
oatJanc~ 1. Seatttc

College
OARTMOUTil Nlmed Sld!uy Beoder aoflbaJI Ct*h.
VILLANOVA: Named Karea Fr..-

or"-eAHL
QUEBEC NORDIQUES: Seat Oortb
Suow, plie, to Cornwall of the AHL.
Rec..Jkd Laadoo Wiltoa, ri&amp;hf. wlua, from
Corowolt.
SAN lOSE SHARX:.S: Rocallod S-

lOI
CIODtr8c:l
aDd Oullw.wt Clrter,IUilniDiliKL
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Woi•od
Barry Hawt.1111, dett:D&amp;lve wkJ~
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:
Apwd to tern-. with Jerry Willoo,

lheDIL- -

N-.. H..t.., ......

MIAMI DOU'IIINS: Siaood Dwlpl

BuketbaU
Nolloui-..NII"--oo,_ ,
VANCOUVER ORIZZU£,$1' Named
Jay TriQo diteclor o( c'ommually rtl~t-­
UOIII.

..••

·~" dtCe111maa,

BOSlOH 8Rlii!IS: Seot Oily !Mote,
idt wlli, to Plovidelceoltbe AHL
. MOftrREAL CANAOIEHS: Seat
~brio RoWae. Jell Wiaa. to Frederiao•

MIAMI (AP) -

lhou~!' waul~ tbc Clncin-~~ali
about 'TS g~UJ~esto .snap

••

Ooaava11, rlaltt wlai. a-.d· Vlutlmll
rrom·K.M t"kr o1

awt:.:k,oa a ttne-ywcoatratt.
H~~~:ktr

... WtJHaml, liMbacttr.
~ HOUSTON OILERS: Si oed Ricbard
-Saeu., cuter. ud Oeorae , ....u, tilht
eod.

LOS AHGEU!S DODGERS! Placed

Ceatr~ot.Wo.
M!lwautN ............... I
3 .727

·' -·

OREI!HBAY PACKilRS: SIIJI&gt;ed Bri-

CLfiV&amp;LAHD INDIANS : Slaaed
C.., c ' l lallckW. ud UO)'d M1&gt;
Oadoa. cutneld«, to mieor.._.. QOil•

4.!

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..•

CINCINNAn BENOALS&lt; Relouod

tioMCI bia to Vaconer. O...itllled
w.n
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.ltilcber, rar ""•'""'"
.
CHICAGO IVHITE SOX: NalDCd

, AMERICAN LEAGUE

........

•

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oCdlePidii&lt;O....._~._

Major leagues

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l!dooallold. . , - , Yaal.ya, plk:hc, rro. wai•wt •d ap-

Baseball

Tomlllo ...... J... , •••••••• :r

Scoreboard

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···--· ~

.... -

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I The DillY SltntiiWI

Pllge

••

In the NBA playoffs,

By JR.L BARNARD·

Divorced

· NEW YORK (AP)- Regale
Miller' wasn't mudl of a fiiCIIJI' this
time, excepl for lbe holdover effect
of his comments two days before.
Miller scored 10 points Ia Game
2 on Tuesday night, tile same num·
ber be bad in the last 56 seconds of
tile memorable opener.l~ng him
to label the New York Knicks
"choke artists" and suggesting '
Indiana would sweep the series.
" Miller and R.ilt Smits, who combined for 65 points in tile Pacers'
farst-game victory, had a total of 20
Tuesday night. And the Knicks
most responsible for Sunday's
embarrassing defeat - John
Starks, Derek llarper and Patrick
Ewlag - came throll&amp;b in the 96- ·
77 victory that tied the Eastern
Conference semifinal 1·1.
· "I cold a lot of ~le .I didn't
expect them to die, ' Pacers coach
Larry Brown said. "Since I've
been bere, every bi~ game we've
bad with them, they ve responded
very well . And Ibis was made a
monster game based on the events
of Sanday."
·
Brown bas no thoughts be could
ever prevent MiUer from saying the
wrong thing at the wrong time.
Like the litde Dutch boy, he knows
that putting his finger in one leak
doesn 't stop another leak from
springing somewhere else.
. "Sometimes be says things .
without thinking, and this lime il
bit him in the ass," Brown said.

room in frustration while Miller
stole tile game from tile Koicks.
Harper finished with 24 points
and eight assists Tuesday oipt.
"After Ill tile fait is over wilb,"
Harper said whim asked about
Miller, "we still have 10 play bas·
kelball."
Miller, wbo averaged 31 points
in his first four playoff games, was
unrepentent about bis previous
comments.
Wben asked if be choked, be
repUed: "I didn't play-well. That's ·
farst and foremost. The Knicks are ·
predicating their whole defense to
stopping Reggie Miller. I like it
lbatway."
·
The Pacers managed a 49-40
lead · late in the first half, and
Knicks coach Pat Riley said his
team seemed ·"discombobulated"
before rallying 10 close the gap to
50-48 at halftime.
Then New York staned the second half with a 25-4 run and bad a
73-54 lead with 4:06 left in the
period.
"Thef came out with a sense of
purpose, ' Miller said. "They did
all the light lbings and- we did all
the wrong lbings."
The Pacer$ had 14 of their 21
second-half tUrnovers in the third
quarter and finished with 34, two
less than the NBA playoff record.
Although it closed within 15 points
at the end of the period, Indiana
didn't have a field goal in the fust
5:26 of the fourth quarter.

•

NCAA claims $17M payout hike
.a nd secret memo.aren't related
By DOUG TUCKER ·

• 1-A, which ate the major sports
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) institutions.
Instead of splitting up $63 million
The money from the Division I
Ibis year from NCAA basketball basketball wumame~t is ~.by
tournament proceeds, the major . all NCAA schools, mcluding Omsports institutions will poeket $80 sions II and III. It's tournament
"
money that pays for such .tb!~gs as
million,
But the decision by the NCAA travel and per dtem for DiviSion II
E~tecutive Committee tO bike the and Ill tennis and golf cbampi·
payouts by $17 million Ibis year onships, for example.
.
bad nothing 10 do, NCAA officials
The memo urged the execu~~
say with a secret memo circulated committee 10 make sure the DIVI·
by Division I· A conferences.
sion I-A conferences got ·an
Meeting last week in Arizona, increase _at l~ast equal to the 6.S
the executive committee voted to percent hike m ngbts fees the CBS
increase the broad-based and the contract calls for each year.
tournament participation pools for
The Division 1-~. conferences
Division l·A schools by $8.5 mil- have long been sens111ve 10 the ~I·
lion each. This brings the total in icy of sharing the tournament ncb·
each pool to $40 million and pro- es.
The NCAA has a comp.lic~ted
vides what the secret memo was
asking for.
.
f~tmula to figure revenue dlsblbu·
A copy of the memo, stamped t10n based on bow many sports
· "For Your Eyes Only" and written schools sponsor, bow many athletic
after a meeting last month of Divi· scholarships they give and how
sion I-A conferences in Pinehurst, · many· tournament games a league
N C., was obtained by The Associ· wins in a five-year period.
ati:d Press.'
When asked if there was any
It insiJ!ucted leagues to contact possibility the increases would not
the budget-setting executive com- ba~e been approved _without the
mince and pressure NCAA e~ecu- memo , Dempst;y sa1d Tuesday,
·live director Cedric Dempsey "10 ." Not at all."
identify and recommend eliroina'"!be executive committee has
lion of certain (NCAA) serVices or been reviewing for some time a
programS if necessary," in older to . number of the. issues that were
facilitate the increased funding for raised in tbe memo," be said. "It

was already planning to take some
positive actions as to long-range
budget planning, which is the
major focus of tbe memo."
The autbor of the memo said be
regretted its tone.
"I'm sorry that it bas become
public," Big Ten commissioner
Jim Delany said. "If I were wrilinB
it for publication, I would Sa}
encourage rather than pressure the
executive direcwr, because Cedis a
friend. ll ut there is not a principle
in there that our people don't feel
sb'Ongly about."
,
The I-A conferences, such as the
Big Ten and Atlantic ~oast Confer·
encc, are those that make up all
majllr football and most major bas·
ketball programs.
"Our institutions are significant
players in generating revenues !bat
run the whole thing/' J.)(;lany said.
"We're saying we don't want the
revenues to be the last priority in
the budget. We want a plan which
says the direct revenues distributed
to our schools the next years will
grow at a r~e that reflects tbe
growth of revenue."
·
The additional money approved
for the Division 1-A schools came
from increases in rights fees in · the
7-year, $1:75 billion CBS contract
and other budget surpluses. No
funds were withheld from other
divisions Q1' departments.

.

'•'
•
I

Ann
Land erS

'

;::,t:,"t' 0 ·.,

•

0

"But I'm sure be'U bouooe bact Ia
Indianapolis. He's old enough to
lalow wben you say ~~~ like thit
what the repen;ussioos are.''
The third and fourth games of '
the best-of-7 scriea will be Tbursday night and Saturday at Market
Square Amla. with Game 5 back at
Madison Square Garden on
Wednesday night.
Ewing, bobbled.by strains in
both calf muscles and held to 11
points in the opener, came back
with 15 Tuesday night, nine when
tile Knicks broke open the game by
outscoring the Parers 30-13 in tbe ·
third quarter.
Starks, who missed two free
throws witb the score tied witb 13
seconds left in Game I, also bad
nine jloints in the pivotal period
and fmisbed with 19, but it was his
defense on Miller that was even
more impressive.
"I did a great job of staying
witb biro, and· my teai!UDlltes did a
great job Of helping me when be
came off picks,' Starks said after
Miller finished hls 3-for-10 shooting perfonnance.
.
Starks was one ot"-tbe few
Knicks to acknowledge being
spurred by Miller's remarks, saying, "When a player makes a state·
ment like that, l!f course -it motivates you."
But perhaps the biggest
turnaround was by Harper, ejected
with two technical fouls in .the
opener. He bad to sit in tbe locker

I

l

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Den Aan L.a nders: You've

printed severalleuers over the years
bashing ex-wives. Here is one in
supportoflbem.l hope you will print

iL
My husband and his ex-wife were
divon:ed m111y years ago. They had
two children and~ to work out
their differences amicably for the
sake of the kids.
My husband always paid child
support witho_ut a hitlt of grumbling.

.l

BAsKETBALL Is wbalthe New
York Knicks' ;John Starks (rlglat) executes against
Indiana's Reggie Miller .In the ftrst half of Tuesno·TV.. . _.,,,

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Suns down Rockets 130-108
.
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By MEL REISNER PHOENIX (AP) - Charles
Barkley bad tbe,flu and Kevin
Johnson was coming off a barnstring pull.
That was nothing compared
with what happened lO Housto"'s
Clyde Drexler. He got tossed in the
farsl game of tbe Rockets·Phocnix
Suns Western Conference. semifinal series, and it demoralized his

team.
"We let the incident get us out
of our game," Rockets guard
Kenny Smith said after the Suns set
a franchise record with 43 points in
the second quarter- when Drexler
was ejec(ed - and raced 10 a 130108 win on Tuesday night "Everyone was out of it mentally.''
"It was a perfect game as far as
the way it went. As far as I didn't
have to play a lot of minutes," said
Barkley, who fhrew up in the
morning and took intravenous Ou·
ids during the afternoon.
Tbe Suns shot 60 percent while
momentarily turning the tables on
the defending champions, who
knocked them out in last year's
semifinal round. Tbey t;mtrebound·
ed the Rockets 48-29.
Game 2 of tbe best-of-seven
series will be Thursday night in
Phoenix.
Barkley bad 26 points and 11
rebounds, and Johnson bad 21
points and 13 assists for the Suns.
A.C. Green hit eight of 1i shots for
a career playoff high 25 points and
.had IS rebounds.

makes my game-easier, .and it
makes his game easier,'' Barkley ,
said.
Dre~ler picked up two technical ,
fouls and was ejected with 10:12
left in the second quarter. Both.'
came for his strident complaints ·
.
after be fouled Dan MIIJerle.
After calling the fiJ'St technical, .
referee Jake O'Donnell walked :
away, but Drexler kept talking, and
O'Donnell ejected biro.
Drexler, wbo bad nine points In ~
tbe fust quarter, went balUstic and ,
charged O'Donnell, but. Tom- ,
janovich and Mario lilie held him .
back.
"II was a cough situation, and I
go."
know
exactly bow be felt," said
Sam Cassell scored 31 points
Olajuwon,
who picked up three:
for the Rockets and Hakeem Olajufouls
.
i
n
the
first 13:23 of play ..,
won bad just 18, only four
"From
the
beginning
of the game, ,
rebounds and one block. ·
I
could
see
what
the
referees
were:
"We look at this as a game to
doing
."
·'
throw away," Cassell said. "That
Johnson
made
both
technical
w3sn •t us out tbere.''
The Suns bolted to 20-point free throws, and Majerle made one·
of two foul shols, increasing the.•
leads over tbe dispirited Rockets in
the second quarter and led 75-57 at Phoenix lead to 43-30.
The three points were pan of a,
halftime .- They were up 106-81
22-5 run by the Suns, wbo were up
after the third quarter.
The ejection of the bigb-scoring 54-35 when tbe spurt ended witb a.
Drexler overshadowed a strong three-pointer by Danny Ainge with
defensive game by Phoenix centers eight minutes remaining.
Joe Kleine and Wayman Tisdale,
who each had 12 points and beld
coRAL GABLES, Aa. (AP) Olajuwon to about half of his 3SFormer
Miami coach Dennis Erick·
point playoff average.
son
denied
trying 10 cover up drull,Kleine was 6-for-7, with five of
testing
results,
saying be .bad no
the shots from the top of the key
obUgalion to inform athletic direc·
wl!ile drawing Olajuwon outside.
tor Paul Dee when a player tested
"When be tnakes that shot, it positive.
~
\

' ' I think we areveyY butrgry
right now," Green said. "We're
desperately trying 'to do what it
takes to win.~ ·
Wbicb means taking advantage
of a short-banded Houston team
that bad even more problems wben
Drexler was ejected.
"It was just like a nightmare,"
said Robert Horry, who matched up
with Green at small forwarJI.
"Everything that happened Ibis
game won't happen next game.
Mter a·while, we didn't even tty to
win. 'Dream' sat on the bench the
whole fourth quarter. It's one or
those things that, you just let it

--:-Sports briefs--

.

NL games ...
(Continued from Page 5)
Trachsel ( 1-1) allowed three hits
and struck out six in six innings.
Myers entered in the eighth with
the bases loaded, and retired Ray
Lankford on a ·grounder to end tbe
inning.
The Cardinals loaded the bases
again in the ninth, but Myers got
Darnell Coles on a grounder for his
fifth save.
Donovan Osborne (0-1) was tbe
·
loser.
Aslros 13; Pirates II
Shane Reynolds e~tended his
shutout streak against Pittsburgh 10
22 innings before slowing down
during Houston's win at Three
Rivers Stadium.
The Astros tied an NL record
with four sacrifice flies , one short
of the major league mark . Luis
Gonzalez homered, doubled and
drove in three runs.
- Reynolds (1- 1) blanked th e._
Pirates on two singles for six
innings, and left in a five-run seventh. Jon Lieller (0-3), also Pittsburgh's opening day starter, has a
9.77 ERA.
"Say Love With.
flowers From!"

POMEROY
.
. .
FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Ave. P{)flleroy, OH

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

··• a '

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who helped the Boston Celti·cs win
three NBA titles, is expected to
officially assume control of the
team's basketball opemtions Thursday.
The team bas called a news conference at which McHale, former ·
Celtics teammate Jerry Sichting .
and former University of Minneso·
ta teammate Phil Saunders will be
present.
McHale, currently the team's
assistant general manager, will
replace retiring general manager •
Jack McCloskey. It is uncertain
what title McHale will hold,
altltougb it bas been widely specu.lated be will be vice president of
basketball operations.
Altbougb Thursday's announce·
ment will make McHale's promotion fmal, he bas been making most
or the team's basketball decisions
for the last si1vwceks. He takes

over a team tbat was 21-61 ; selling
an NBA record witb· its fourth
straight season with 60 or more
losses
Sic'tting, who played with
McHale on Boston's last championship team in 1986, did radio
commentary witb the Celtics last
season. He is expected to replace
Stan Novae as Minnesota's scout·
ing director.
Saunders and McHale were col·
lege teanunates in 1976-77, when
Saunders was· a senior and McHale
a freshman . Saunders coached the
CBA's Sioux Falls SkyForce this
season and probably will function
as the assistant general manager.
A Hibbing native, McHale was
the state's Mr. Basketb'all in 1976
before joining tbe Golden Gophers.
He was a seven-time All-Star with
the Cellics, averaging 17.9 points
and 7.3 rebounds in 13. seasons.

POMEROY

* ** * * *
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Ask for Dave or Bob
.,~1.

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together in joint childrearing

•

written a letter lhat should be taped
DiVCX:CC~'tha~_tomeanyouare 10 several million makeup mirrors
~ICif~bfe.ThJSisnonscnse,and across the continent. No higher
IIIS~gtngt?all~cemed. lfyou compliment can be paid to any

night and early mornings, our sleep
is punctuated by an even bolder
crun~h. I work at home, andJt is

have children, 11 IS 1mportantto stay
involved. Beigg. civil,_jJolit~ a!l"
respectful 10 your ex works much
beuertban hostility and mudslinging.
On th~ wall of my guest room
hangs a PICture of f':IY husband's kids
~hen they w~re qu~te young. In that .
ptcture. standmg With the kids, is my
h~sband's ex-wife .. h is a lovely
p1cture, and I am dehght.ed 10 have 11
there. Even though the woman is a '
part of my husband's past~ she is~so
a part of our present famtly, and I m.
proud to know her... A SECOND
WIFE IN CALIF.
DEAR SECOND WIFE: You've

Army blasting acrofs Europe, tbe
galloping of a platoon of maddened
bog dancc:r.s. or a 43-foot, goose·
Stepping steel robol,.
The lady is not unaware of the
Have trouble sleeping at night and
~roblem . Sbe has apologized several don't wanllo get invol~~ed in a IWVtl?
bmes. We accept her apology, but Ute , ·A Collection of My Favorite GelrD
siOmping continues.
· of tlie Day" is the perfect bed-stand
~ecause she is ,expressing her mate. Send a self-addressed, long,
enure character through her feet, any business-size en~~tlopt and a chec1c
fuf\her discussion of tbe matter has or money order for $5.25 (illis
risks,. We Wonder if it is. ~umanly · includes posrage and hmullillg) ro.:
posstble 10 make the trans111on from Collecrion, c/o Ann lAnders. P.O.
Stoll!pmeister 10 Floatrnaiden.
Bo;d 1562, Chicago, I//. 6C6Jr.C562
How can WC&lt;persuade Ibis woman (in Canada, $6.25).
that glidigg is good? Please give me

has raised two wonderful sons .

some badly needed advice.
BROOKLINE, MASS.
,
DEARBROOKLINE:ThcSIOIDpmeister knows about the problem,
and sbe bas apologized. Now, why
don'tyou buy hera pair of lovely fdt
bedroom slippers7 Can't hurt- Mipt
help.

unnervin~ --ilsoundslikethcGrand

woman than to be admired and
respected by her ex-husband's wife.
What a terrific role model you are,
lady.
Dear Ann Landers: ."Betsy" and
I are quite content in our first-floor
apartment in an old tbree-decket The
only fly in the ointment is the
stomping on the floor by our upstairs
ne 1ghbor.
This woman cannot walk across a
room withoutl)ach step delivering a
crushmg blow to tbe floor. When we
are in tbe kitchen, she js shatteringly
above us. After meals, those noises
accompany us to the li.ving room .At

Tbe Gallia·Meigs Community
Action A11ency JTPA Program is
cuuently updating the Gallia·
Meigs Resource Directory for publication later this year.
Organizations currently listed
have been contacted and are ufld¥·
ing their infotmation. Those not
~- currently listed may submit infor·
mation for review and possible
inclusiot~ in the Directory . The
Directory lists providers of social,
community, educational, · employment, health, bousing, emergency,

and children's services. Listed are
non-profit' and government organi·
zalions which provide these ser·
vices in Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Private for-p(ofit organizations
wblcb provide substantial no cost
services are also lis~. ·
· Organizations wishing 10 be list·
ed sboul&lt;t submit tbe following
information: name of organization,
complete address, phone number,
contact persons, boors and days of
operation, a brief description of
services offered, and· a brief

description of eligibility requirements. If an organiz;~lion services
only Gallia County/ residents or:
only Meigs County residents, Ibis
sbould be noted. Listings are sub·
ject to edit and there is no charge
for a listing.
Listing requests thou ld also
include the number of copies of ll1c .
updated Directory the organization
wishes to receive. The request
should specify complete directories, binder .and insert, or just new
inserts. The new DireciOry will fit
· tbe existing blue Resource Directo· .

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--~--.-.--~

--~

t........------.....:__ ..-. .............. ~-~..,......-~ ...........

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ry binders.
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Copies of the current Gallia·
Meigs Resource· DireciOry, Fourth
Edition published 1992, are slill
available. There is no ~barge for
copies of the Directory.
Listing and Directory requests
should be submitted to Galli&amp;·
Meigs GAA JT.PA, Box 27'1.,
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-0272. For
·additional information, call JTPA
at 614-367-7342 or 614-992-6629.
Listing requests should be submit·
.ted iounediately.

Middleport TOPS club welcomes new member
Middleport TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) chapter 1908
welcomed one new member at the
May 4 meeting with 30 members
weighing in showing a net loss of
23 114 pounds.
Sharon Stewart was the weekly
best loser. Sbe was also honored as
being the club's firSt KOP,S, (Keeping Off Pounds Sensibly) In Wait·
ing for reacbins her goal weight.
Sbe·was presented with a balloon
bouq!let and a sash.

Dreama l'icte 11 s presided at the
meeting and gave a report on Area
Recognition Day More than 1 000
members from i23 chapters from
southern Ohio were represented at
the event beld in Lancas~ It was
reported tbat in 1994, a net loss of
16,443.25 pounds was shown in tbe
southern Ohio clubs.
Pickens and Stewart presented a
motivational skit featuring two
women at an exercise club. The

goodie basket was won by lane
Hess.
Missy Myers was named April's
best loser at the April 27 meeting.
S be was also the winner of the
"Trailing Pounds You, Bunny Con·
test" and received $37. Twenty·
nine members weighed in with a
net loss of 35 pounds. Joyce Vance
won the goodie basket 31\d Debbie
Gruescr won the S0/50 contest
Two members were welcomec!

into the club. Low fat ~~~ and
s~ers for low fat Amish Fnend·
sbtp Bread were shared. Tbe meet·
ing ~nded with a song and the
Helpmg _Hand motiO.
Meetmgs are held every Tburs·
day _at the Mi~dle~ort Chu~ch of
Christ wtth we1gb-m tx:gmnmg at
5:15 p.m. and the meeung following at 6 p.m. For more informati~n,
call992-75?2, 7215 or 7196. Child
care 1s prov1ded.
0

Small business information fair set ·for May 24
A small business information
fair will be held May 24 at the
' Ohio University Inn in Athens
.from 10 a.m. 10 3 p.m. Admission
is free.
.
Sponsored by Bank One of
Athens, the fair will feature 10

exhibits as well as four seminars
throughout tbe day.
Seminars include "Rislt Management and Analysis," by John
Lavelle of Mathews Insurance
Agency; "Small Business Start-up,
Accounting and Tax lnfotmation,"
by Thomas W . Parfitt, CPA;

"Legal Issues for Small Business·
es," by David Frey, anorney; and
"Business Planning," by Marianne
VerMeer, Doug Green and Deb
McBride of the Small Business
Development Center.'
Representatives from the fol·
lowing organizl!tions will host
exhibits detailing their products

----Community·calendar

·

The ·Community Calendar Is revier book. .
Grange, 8 p.m . Thursday at the
published as a free service to
hall. Hemlock Grove Grange to
PO!V!EROY - Meigs County visit.
J¥1R·proru groups wishing to
imnounce meeting and special . Board o1 Commissioners special
meeting in commissioners' office
events. The calendar is not
FRIDAY
PORTLAND -· Freedom
designed to promote sales or Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. to review
fund ra.isers of any type. Items hospital lease.
.Gospel Mission, Co~nly Road 31,
Portland, Friday, Saturday and
are printed as space permits and
THURSDAY
cannot be guaranteed to run a
Sllnday, 1 p.m . e.ach evening.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Evangelist Rev . Johnnie Winnell,
specific number of days.
Plains VFW 9053, 7 :30 p .m . Charleston, W. Va. Special singing.
'
TUESDAY
Tbur~y at tbe post borne.
POMEROY - The Tuesday
Morning Golf League wiU meet at
MIDDLEPORT- Auxiliary of
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Post Feeney-Bennett Post 238, Atrteritbe Meigs County Golf Course at 9
l\lll· Tuesday morning . All ladies Office, open house, Thur~y. I to can I,egion, will have Poppy Days,
2:30 p.m. Tbe lobby was recently Friday and Saturday, on tbe streets
are invited 10 attend.
renovated and all new Post Office of Middleport.
boxes have been installed.
WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY Narcotics
SATURDAY
.. Anonymous, 7- p.m Sacred Heal
J&gt;OMEROY - Preceptor B!!"'
POMEROY - Bu~lingham
Beta Chapter, Deta Sigma Phi, 7:30 Modem Woodmen, potluck dinner,
Catholic Church, 1'61 Mulberry
Ave., I"omeroy. Helpline 1-800- p.m Thursday, Grace Episcopal 6:3.0 p.m. Salurday attbe hall .
Parish House.
766-442.
Camp to furnish meat and drink .
Mothers to be ·rccognized.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday,
-home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs.
James Diehl will review "The
Thread That Runs So True" and
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds wiU review
"The Johnstown Flood." For roll
call inen\bers are 10 name tbeir fust

apd services: Ent~rprise Development Corporation, Appalachian •
Center for Economic Networks,
Small Business Development Cen·
ter, The Women's Business
Resource Program, Southeastern
Ohio Regional Free-Net, U.S .
Small Business Administration,
Athens Chamber of Commerce,
Bank One of Athens, Thomas
Parfitt CPA, Mathews Insurance
Agency and Design in Advertising. ·
For more information call
Michael Mullins al Bank One,
· Athens at 1-593-6681.

. ARBOR DAY PLANTING -In observance of Arbor Day, the
fifth graders of Donna Jenkins at Rutland Elementary School
planted a Rower garden outside the school. Membe~ of the Rut·
land Friends and Flowers Garden Club" assisted in creating the
nower bed design and cliooslng and purchasing the plants•
Materials to help prepare lbe Dower bed were donated by Sugar
Run Mill, Pomeroy. Pictured here working on the projec:t are from
l~e left, Gabriel Jenkins, Amber Snowden, Melissa Richmond, and
Natasha Tackett.

color
the Sund

_.....,..-

Hawthorne birth
announced

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: K;lyla Marie Hawthorne, daughtar of Jim and Alice Hawthorne •.
vias horn April 12, 1995, at O'Bien~ss Memorial Hospital in .,Athens.
. The new arrival weighed seven
pOunds and 13 ounces.
·
. Paternal grandparents are Dar~
nil and Norma Hawthorne and
n(aternal grandparents are Roger
and Carolyn Ritchie. Maternal
'- great-grandparents are Carl and
Zetta Riicbie.
.
She bas a sister, Kim)\erly, at
home.
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Announcing the newest Bank On£!®
Money Access Center®in your neighborhood.·
,

Hubbards Greenhouse
Beautiful Blooming Baskets '
Ferns 10 in. &amp; 12 in., bedding
plants, double impatient~ - 6 colors,
Geraniums, Rose bushes,
Combination Plants
Large show plants
Open Mothers Day Week (May 8·13 only) 9 am- 6 pm Sun 12·5

Syracuse ·

Times-Sen

"

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992-5776

Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

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HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE

·

Our
to:
convenience put us
· onthemap. ·

Remember Mom on
-- her Day_
with flowers from

.. :---.cA.YLA HA-WTHORNE

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on top of things.
I .ocal Crow's
Hoeflich's 'round the bend.

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ANY PAOFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL
OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOULD .
LIKE TO HAVE AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS
SPECIAL EDITION PLEASE
CALL 992-2156.

THURSDAY 7 P.M.
MAY 7, 11, 18-MICHAEL PANGIO
MAY 2S•PROPHETIC MINISTRY OF
GEORGE MONI%
,.......~......_-

!n fact, when I com~limented htm on
11. he ~av~ me an mcre~ulous I~
and ~d, ~hy .wouldnt I pay 11•
Theyremykids.
Throughout th~ years, .both my
hus~~nd a~d h1s e~-~1fe hav_e
,~ipaled m.the upbringmg_oftJH:Ir
~tldren, ~~~~ w~n they bved Ill
dlfferentcllle_S- ~s toolc a~~ deal
of effort, bu111 patd olf. Th~ children
are now_fine ~oung m~n With a great
deal of l~tegnty and h1gh standards.
One SOD IS a professtonal ballplaye~
and. t_h e oth7r has an excellent
POSI~IO~ With a well-known,
mulunallonal company. We are very
prou~ of the~!'.
· . l,fhts ex-w1fe call~ and my husband
ISO tatholl)e, she Will talk to me, She
1s a fine, strong, lovely person and

111e Dally Sentinel P.lll r l

Whether you live nearby, work
nearby or just happen to be passing
by, banking just got a whole lot easier
in Pomeroy.
· Our newest
.
Money Access
......... ··- '
Center is located . . ,.. ...,, :z:::
l
. at the Marathon
)
Station parking
l
lot near the
Pomeroy: Mason

On Th~rsday, May 18, The Daily Sentinel will
have a special edition with photographs of
high school seniors graduating this year~
, Now through Friday, May 12, Drop Your
Photo Qff At The Daily Sentinel or At Your
Hlgh~~chool Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High-School to Photo)

SUNDAY 10 A.M.
MAY 14-MOTHER'S DAY TO ANN PANGIO
.MAY 21- PREACHING &amp; SINGING MINISTRY
OF KEVIN &amp; .GLORIA SYLVESTER

-

co~ple ~ork

ATTENTION! .
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
'
GRADUATES OF 1995

- SPEeb\L-5ERVIGIS-

.....

Po~-lllddleport, Ohio

/Oi' o~!!f!ltf{ij..jtJ/ew.{Y!Itti(rj.: !fAY!JJIJS

FAITH CHAPEL
200 W. SECOND ST.

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Ga1/ia, .Meigs directO,ry update in progress

Timberwolves expected to promote McHale .
to vice-president of basketball operations
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Kevin
McHale's bas bad success throughout his basketball career. That
record will be challenged with the
Minnesota Timberwolves.
McHale, a former Minnesota
bigb school siar and college star

-

Y•'ednlllllty, U., 10,1185

·

.Knicks defeat Pacers 96-77
to tie-semifinal series at 1-1
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·(11995 BA.NC VN1 COHPOAArtON

.

bridge. Now you have yet another
convenient place to withdraw cash,
make deposits, check your account
balances, transfer funds and pay
your bills.
,
Easy access to your bank
accounts 24.hours a day, seven .
days a week. Our _commitment to
doing whatever it takes to make
your Ilfe easier has put Bank One
on the map.

�I
Wednesday, May 10,1915

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally SenUnel

Wednnday, May 10,1915

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Endowment donors-.. Nelson
named Girl

The Dally Sentinel-Page

I

Postal service project

of .Year
Maurlsba Nelson bas been
named Girl of the Year for Xi
Gwnma Mu cbapler, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
.
Mary Woods. last year's redpi·
ent, presented the award to the Mn.
Nelson. It was also noted tbat Mrs. .
Nelson was the wiuner of tlie Ohio
River Bear Co. bear. Evelyn at the
Founder's Day observance last
w~.

' A Cardinal· Afllliated Supermarket

BANK ONE DONATION- Tim and Christina Stover and.·
Bank One ol Point Pleasant. W.Va. made a joint donation to the
Pleasant Valley ROI!Ipilal Health Foundation'• Endowment Fund.
Tim, a local CPA and member olthe Bank One board ol directors,
and Christina, Pleasant Valley Nursing and RehabUitallon Center
administrator made the donation to assist lj)Cal youthl pursuing
heallhcare careers. Here, the Stovers, left, present 1i'check to Vilus
Hartley Jr., member ilnd past chairman of the Pleasant Valley.
Hospital Health Foundation, as Charles Lanham, foundation
fundralslng chairman and chairman of the board at Bank One,
looks on.
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· Meeting at lhe home of Barbara
Welsh In Middleport the group
bear a report from· Linda Bates on
lhe income and expenses incurred
for Founder's bay.
Pat Arnold advised members
tbat fair ads are due this week. The
losing attendance learn will host
the annual May picnic to be beld at
the bolne of Cbarloue Hanning on
May 15, 6 p.m. Officers for 1995:
.
% were installed.
Mrs. Welsh presemed the cultural program on antiques. Several
' were sbown along with a variety of
ways to display them. Debbie Fin·
law, Debbie Miller, Sharon Pratt
.and Mrs. Welsh. served rcfresh-

'ments: --

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FOOD DRIVE -The Pomeroy Postal Ser·
vice will bold • food drive Satur&lt;lay. Pomeroy
Mayor John Blaettnar (seate&lt;l) signs a procla·
matlon as postmaster..CharUe Grim and.carriers

-

Elect~ic

FRUTH DONATION- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fruth, local business owners, presented. a contribution' to the Pleasant Valley Hds·
pi tal Health Foundation for the Scholars·Enclowment Fund used to
assist local students pursuing careers In the healtbcare ·field.
.Accepting the donation is Vitus Hilrlley Jr~ right, member and
past chairman orthe Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation.

j

cars' batteries could cause major problems

NEW YORK (AP) - Electric
cars may themselves ~use serious
pollution problems, loadihg ·the
environinent wil\1 toxic metal from
lead-based batteries, the New York
Times reported today.
Unless alternative batteries are
developed, the cars may cause serious threats to public bealth even as
they reduce smog, according to a
study by researchers at Carnegie
Mellon Univer.sity in Pittsburgh,
lhe Times reponed.

"We're talking .about very real
health hazards," Robert Hahn, an
environmental economist at the
American Enterprise Institute, told
lhe Times. "This could be lhe kiss
of death for electric vehicles.' '
A lead-acid baltcry in a conventional car consists of a single ceU,
and is used primarily to start the
vehicle. Lead-acid balteries that
power electric cars consist of twodozen cells or more, a dramatic
increase in lhe amollllt of lead. I

By CASSANDRA BURRELL .
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Before !here was Sally Ride, !here
was Barbie.
. Some feminists may sneer, but
little girls were clamoring for
. "Miss Astronaut" Barbie - clad
in a pearl gray space suit adorned
with tiny black zippers ~ years
before lhe U.S. spa~ program took
the idea ofwomen astronauts seri •
ously. .
Mattei Inc.'s "Miss Astronaut"
Barbie was introduced in 1965, 18
years before Ride, NASA's first
fem;lle astronaut, went irfto orbit in
1983. The first space Barbie will

make a rcappeljfancc in Washington this s urn mer.

Barbie's entire career in flight
- from American Airlines stc~­
ardess in 1961 to Space Shuttle
crew member in 1994 - will be
explored in an exhibit scheduled to
begin June 9 at the Smithsonian
Institution's National Air and
Space Museum.
Tbc dolls, some donated by
Mattei, also will reflect how
women's careers bave changed ,
since 1959, w!Jen Barbie w!IS born
as fully grown woman ~ sophisticated, fashion-smart and buxom,
wilh an implausibly small waist
"The display itself is direcled
toward children. But if you f:mled
to look at .it on kind of a ~her
intellectual level, you can see
reflected in tbe chronology of the

-

Missi Scarberry

1Cui orKe&lt;reFre'cn5ye
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costumes of the dolls some of the
changing roles of women in aviation and space fl,i ght," said Mary
S. Henderson, who heads the museum's popular culture departmenL
The dolls in the exhibit represent only a fraction of the thousands of careers Barbie bas had .
Mattei_ bas sold 900 miUion B~bi­
cs, Kens, Midges and olher Barbie ·
personaiities since lhe late 1950s
- 3.4 dolls lor cvcry man, woman
and child in the United States
today. •
If they were to organize and
Conn !heir own government, they
would be citize'IL of the third
hu·gest nation on earth, .after Cbina
and India.

NOW OPEN

SPRING SEASON
.• Pansy. • .Viola
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• Herbs • Perennials

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
.Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
SaL 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3 1/2 miles past Southern
'High School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio '

614-949-2682

Missi Takes
Collect Calls.
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Now you can apply for a Peoples Bank loan
or ,c redit card quickly and easily from the
comfort of your home or workplace!

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FELKER DONATION - John 'Felker, owner of Point Distributing Company, presented a contribution to Vitus ~artlP.y Jr~
member and past chairman of the Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal Health
Foundation on behalf uf the foundation's scholars Endowment
Fund used to assist local students pursuing healthcare careers.

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hotline riumber ri':gs·directly w Missi, so it'll
be practically no ti'me before you collect your
loan proceeds. Remember, when you need
quick cash; call Missi ASAP!

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"zero emission" vehicles by 1998,
with 10 percent of all new cars
meeting the zero-emissions test by
2003.
The only zero,emissian cars that
are close to mass production ·are
powered by electricity that is stored
by conventional batteries.
Conventional cars also use leadacid batteries, but only as a staning
device. Batteries needed to power
electric cars would necessarily be
much larger

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are demanding the introduction of

El:.issions from mining, smelting and recycling the lead needed
to power fleets of electric vehicles
would cause serious beallh prob·
iems, lhc newspaper reponed. Even
small amounts of lead have been
shown to hann the brains of young
children.
Electric ears owe their popuiari·
ty in part to the Clean Air Act,
which set tough standards for limit·
ing the level of ozone. To meet
them, California and olher s es

Flying Barbies on display at .space museum

EASTMAN DONATION -Bob and Sbeila. Eastman, ownen of
· Ohio Valley S11permarkets, Inc. are shown bere presenting a contributiou to Vitus Hartley Jr., member .a nd past chairman of the
Pleas·ant Valley Hospital HeJllth Foundation for the Scholars
'Endowment Fund. The fund-~ used to assist local students pursu·
ing careers in 't he healthcare field.

CHARM IN
BATH TISSUE

Jim Pullins and Carl Carmlc~ael Sr. look on.
The non'perishablc foods should he placed near'
the mailbox. The food will he delivered to the
county cooperative parish. (S.:nlind ~)

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Question: I've read abOut lbe people could be spamlthe discomnew chickenpox vaccinlltlon 111d fort of chi'*~x by tbe use of tbe
wondered if Ibis would give any vaccioe. But, your astute questioo
asked about lbe effect of lbe vacJll"l'Kfloo against shingles1
• Answer. I lbinlt you've posed a cine on lbose of us who've bad
very interesting and· important cblclcenpox and are, therefore, susqueslion. However, I lbillk I need cepu'ble to de-veloping shingles.
~shot of vzv vaccine -like a
!.G back up one step befoo: I answer
lt.
.
.
case of lbe chickenpox- causes
As you already know, but olbcr the recipient to produce antibodies
readers may not, lbe varicella- 10 lbe virus, Children usually get
zoster virus (VZV) causes several high le-vels of antibodies )IVitb Ollll
i~nesses. The fii'St exposure 10 lbe shot wblle llduiiS require a·secood
vtrus produces chiclcenpox wilb liS one at least one monlb later for lbe
itching, irrilall:d blisters and rever. same level of prOieCtioo. There Is
This common childhood Illness ongoing research to delermine if
usually cl!'l'fS up in a few days. The lbe initial &amp;hot or shots will give
most prevalent complication is life-long imiDunlty, It may be that li
pneumonia, which doesn't happen
very often.
·
Our defense system can't actual- . In fact, your question actually
,
FELLOWSmP D,. Y
ly llill off the attacking chickenpox addresses. the same issue, Does a
prevent 'shinChurch Women United or
virus, it only holds it under control. booster shot of
.
,,...,__
~Meigs
County observed May Fel·
As !be chickenpox sores go away,
Ies m """"'who -ve bad a 1181!!·, lowship Day Friday with a lun'g
lbe virus actuaUy goes into biding
infection.in cblldbood? Current- cheon and meting at Grace Episcoalong lbe nerve pathways - a state raJ
lr.v, I ean only gt've you a ·-ntau've
pal Church
you can lbink of as hibernation.
I
The h~st church .furnished
'yes."
When tbe body's immune system
The evl'dence at lh1's pom't t's cu·- . dessert and beverage for the sack·
becomes less active, the virus £umstantial. We know lhat individ.
lunch, wilb ·Faye· Wallace giving
begins to stir again, The weakening
uals
wilb
low
antibody
levels
to
lbe blessing. Edilb Sisson, presiof immunity is often simply a natuVZV
are
at
increlised
risk
for
shinden•
Welcome !hose atlending. _Tbe
ral byproduct of aging, bur it can .gles. We also know lbe ·chickenpox .
"
·
program
was presented by Mary
illso be caused by diabeles, AU)S shot does successfully increase
Kay
Yost
who took the part of
· other heallh conditions and lbe use
these
prolective
antibody
levels
in
Martha,
and
Rachael Downie, who
of some medicaiions.
!bose
60
and
older
-the
age
group
was
lbe
reader.
Those attending
The shingles blisters are painful ,
of
shingles,
·
were
given
cards
and made the
with
lbe
highest
risk
and erupt along lhe course of lbe
we
haven't
yet
been
able
decision
as
whether
they were a
However,
infected nerves instead of produc- 10 study a sufficiently large number Martha ur a 10
Mary and teU why.
. ing a generalized or "body wide" of people for a long enough period
The offering will go to the
rash like chickenpox. The nerves of
of time to be certain that this Meigs Ministerial Association.
the chest are most commonly increased antibody count will preInvolved, but any part of lhe skin vent shingles for most people.
may be so afflicted. .
.
Research to clearly show ihat
OLIVE ALUMNI BANQUET
I lhink some numbers wiU help • lhe VZV vaccine benefits an older
The Olive Orange High School
you understand .lbe scope of the pOpulation- while simultaneously
problem associated with VZ V. having very low expense and risk
According to one study, only 6. 7 - is necessary before it can be
· percent of men I'( to 26 years old routinely-recommended. I'd advise .
Harold W.Bird
.
who entered lhe Army lac~ed nato· you to keep checking about this .
Navy Petty Officer Second
ral antibodies to Ibis virus, That ·mauer with your ~amity doctor. · Class Harold W. Bird, son of
means 93 percent of young men In
Cenlers for Dtsease Control, lWilliam and Judy llird of Racine
our country have bad chickenpox. The
lbe
Food and Drug Administratioo; recently returned to Charleston:
This high percentage may not be and !he m!U'ufacture~ of lhe vzy S.C., following a six-monlh over. ~xactly the same for other young vaccme Will be Jc:.eepmg the medi· seas deployment aboard lbe' U.S.S.
men or for women, but lhere is no . cal commun_1t~ mfor~ed as ~he Robert G. Bradley in lhe Adriatic
reason to lhink lbat lhese groups answers 10 ~ts m1eresung quesllon Sea near Bosnia-Herzegovina.
·would have greatly different num- become avatlable.
Bird's ship was part of lhe 11bers. In short, ;r huge number of
ship U.S.S. Dwight D. Eisenhower

.

enced the numb feeling ca,.w by

am sending you a free copy of my

an injectioo of anan1rtic in prep&amp;· Health Report "Managing Cbiooic
ratloo for majClf dallal work. 'Onli· Pain." Other readers who would
narily, 1be elrec~~ of Ibis injealon like a copy should send $2 plus a
wear off in a lllliiCt ol bow's.
Ioog, self-addressed, stamped enveGOTT, M.D .
Nonetheleu, 4Dmetimes the lope 10 P.O. Box 2433, N'ew York.
aneslbetized nerve ~ontinues to NY 10163. Be sure IO'mention the ·
malfuitctioo. This causes persistiqg title,
symptoms, such as yours. In many
DEAR DR. GOTT: While in
instan&lt;:es,lbe reason for Ibis afflic- Vietnam, I observed a fellow Army . tric '~ecretions, thereby reducing
lion is impossible 10 determine; it officer occasionally sipping apple beartbufl! and indigeslion. Probably
~ 10 be an unusual but recog- cider vinegar .after a meal in an even water would serve the same
n1zed complication of lbe dental attempt to eliminate acid indigesprocedure.
lion. I recently suffered froD) Ibis pfr~ur antacids have become
I don't have any sage advice 10 condition and when D\Y antacid ineffective, 1 urge you 10 see your
offer you. Allbaugh -y our symp- ~emed no longer to. work, I tried doctor. Worsening indig.e stion
toms are unlikely 10 resolve sponla- the vinegar.It really wotks. I know
coul,d reflect a bean condition
lieously (afler 10 years), a dental lbat Turns, Rolaids and Mylanta (angina) or a peplic ulcer, both of
surgeon may be able 10 help you if, don't want to read Ibis, but I'm which should be treat¢ wilh preas unlikely as it sounds, a bone sure that White tlouse Vinegar scription drugs, such as nitroglycchip or portion of tbe dental root will.
erine qr Tagamet.
couldbepressingonanerve.
DEAR READER : Vinegar is
Copyl'ight191l5 NEWSPA·
In this case, further surgery siD)ply flavored, dilule acetic acid. PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
,
Dlight help. In addition, you might As such, 1 don't undersland how it
(For Information on bow to
find some relief in a pain clinic. could relieve an over-acid condi- communicate electronically witt._:
These clinics are often available .in · tioo. What I suspect happens is lhat this columnist and others, con,- ·
leaching cenlers.
•
lhe vinegar provides extra fluid lhat tact America Online by calling 1-:
·To give you .more infonnation, I itself dilutes lhe exu-eme acid g_as- 800-827-6364, exl 8317.)
·

PETER

OUT OF TOWN VISITORS : ·
banquet and dance will be held scholarships for lbe 1-995-96 acaMr. and Mrs. Arnold Yoho of
May 27 at the Tuppers Plains Ele- demic year.
·
Long Beach, Calif. and Mrs:
ment.ary School.
.
..,.Che!)'l.fri_g ofHuntil!gloo. W.Va.
Classes to be honored are lhose
SENI&lt;'&gt;R DINNER
· · d ·w M
d M R
An even1'ng dm
' ner w1'll -t.held Lee
VISiterccen~
WI Mrs
r. an
rs. obett
or 1916, 1930, 1935, 19408, 1945,
oe
y 0 h0 (Enid 'J
1950, and 1955. Dinner, dance and at the Senior Citizens Center, Sadler) 1·s 3Y·r· t.
f R0 beeanrt
·
0
'
Pomeroy' Thursday ' w1'th serv1' ng Lee h b us
.cousm
dues are $9 for alumni, •and dinner from
bad
1
·
·
5 to 6:15 .p.m. Cos1 for lbe
•w 0 s e
no VISited 'm 46· ·•
and dance $8,50 for guests, Reserea1 · S4
years. Her grandmother, Jessie Lee ~
vations arc 10 be mailed by May 24 m 15 ·Music will be plflycd by Thompson was a sister or Ra~h ~
. to Secretary, H.arley Rice, 41488 The Classics. A free will offering L H
lb 11
Sadl
2
will be taken for lhe musicians.
ee. er mo er, enc
er. ' '
Rice Run Road, Reedsville, Ohio
res1'des 1·n a nurs1'ng home
·
45772. Phone 667-3369 . Dinner
CHESTER ,.VRITERS
will be served at 7 p.m. and the
Chester Elementary School
PULL COMPLETED
dance will begin at9 p.m,
recently announced its lop aUlhors
The Big Bend Farm Antiques
for April. The students writing Club staged a:· test and tune tractor
URG SCHOLARSIUP
included Krislcn Chevalier, Sara pull over lhe weekend at· !be Meigs
Vicki Smilh of Langsville was Mansfield, Sonya Frederick:, County Fairgrounds. Providing lbe '
Meigs County's recipient of lbe Nathaniel Cook:, Ryan Stobart, ·pull-back tractor for lhe event was
Dorolby Daniel Hayes Scholarship Raymond Colwell, Larissa Rodney KcUer. The Meigs County
award given by lhe University of McGrew, Chelsea Young and Tim Highway Department assisting in
Rio Graride Women's Club. Ten Wolfe.
preparing the track.
·
students from Ohio and one from
~---•
W.est Virginia were awarded lbe

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battle group. Wfiile spending 129
days at sea, Bird visiled Crete,
Greece, Israel, Italy, Slovenia,
Spain, Tunisia and Turkey.
Bird and his shipmales became
lhe llfSt u:s-. sailors 10 visit Slovenia.
He graduated in 1990 from ·
Soulbem Local High School and
joined lhe Navy in Augusll990.

Syracuse, Oh

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Available only In stores
With Floral Shoppes.

•

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

:=~t~~~~!· ~~~~~~J:.

"FRESH CUT"

Mother's Day

John C. Wolf, D.O. .

' ; '.

••

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Always Kroger.

By PETER U. COlT, M.D. '
DEAR DR. 0017: In I ~BS J
had two wisdom teclb removed.
During lbe operation, the nerves
were disturbed and as a result, I
live wilh IIi lateral paresthesia.
Some days the Complete nwnbness
in my bottom jaw doesn't bother
me too mucb. Oo o1ben. I wantiO
rip my jaw off. At times my speech
is slurred because it takes every
effort to form some wools. Oo the
bright side, I don't feel any palo
when having my bottom teeth filled
and since1t takes too long 10 chew,
I don't eat much red meat. Is there
an answer 10 Ibis constant discomfort?
DEAR READER: I gather f10111
your question that 10 years ago you
· suff~ an in~ury 10 lbe oerves in
your Jaw. Thts ~ama.ge ~as produced pareslbes1a (tingling and
1 nu_mbness), anesthesia (lack of
pam) ·and. neurop~y (nerve dama~e affecting ceruun muscl~. espedally of the lOngue).
.
Almost everybody bas expen-

•

•

Tbl. Dally Sentinel Pig I

Jaw numbness linked to dental work

Ohio Universily
/
College or Osteopathic Medicine

•

qf) ...

WE RESERve THE RIGHT TO UIIIT OUANTmEI. NONE 101..0 TO

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

~01

respoosbl tor lyJ'lOO'RPI'MCill ~

.

:r,;::.~AWI.Miil&amp;ifAiJf _
,.....-..-~~

Momtay • SatuJday: 9 am - 9 pm .
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

�Pomeroy-IIICidleport, Otilo
11114 provide lcll1lin&amp; opponunitiea
Cor die youtb will be IICYerdy limU·
eel 'lbll pmject bas .,_ ideDtilicd
. u alllrllqy to lmprovins our quality of life by Kdlb Wood and Judy
William• wbo aerve 011 the tourism

7UP
PRODUOS

Mant tmd John Greenway of lhe
Olfla: ol EnerJy Efficiency toured
our counly rca:Dily to determine if
!bey could ' institute energy saving
p:accices wbicb can save our local
g~t, schools and business- , '
es money iu1d make tbeir pmduc- '
tivity rise. They were able to meet
wllh our County Auditor Nancy
Parker CarnpbeU, Facemyer Lumber, Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Imperial Electric and MidWest
S~eel. They offered many ideas and
programs which could be used by
our county.
They called the next day and
have asked to set a date to rerum to ·
Meigs County. They found ·every·
one to be friendly and our land·
scape beautiful of course.
This month's quote: ''The spirit,
tbe will to win, and tbe will to
excel are lhe lhings lhat endure.
These qualities are so much more
important tbat tbe events that
occur." Vince Lombardi NFL
Coach
.

12 PK. 12 OL CANS

........,...... 1114 c:lwnher.
Susan Covey, Rudt Gonser, Bill

I would DOl hive been able to.
bave a""MMed without !be cooperation and support of tbe Melaa
County COmmisaloaen, Columbia
G!ls. National Gas ol Oil of Racine,
GTE, Bank One, Fanners Bank,
Peoples Bank and Racine Home
National Bank. ILGARD or the
Institute for Local Government
Adminisb'l\Jion and Rural Develop' board.
ment through Obio University bas
· The area growers produce bed- offered to assist me with develoiiding plants, hanging baskets, con- illg !be necessary survey rams tmd
• tainerized pjants, vegetable trans- locatins specific documentation
plants and seasonal potted plants.
from wbicb to draw on the accom·
Obio's greenhouse production pa!lying r;eferences.
space bas increased 6 percent from
Following lhe course the Indus. JJ}92 to 1993 wbile Meigs County trial Site Committee met with
yowers increased over 10 percenl
Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley
• , Estimated statewide wholesale Regional Development District and
~oduction value for 1993 totals
the Appalachian Regional Com:$149 million according to !be Agri- mission to fmalize lhe site selection
~ltural Statistics Service. In 1993,
for wbicb we have authorized
t-ileigs Count~ ranked 9th in floriBurgess &amp; Niple to perform feasi·
cillture wholesale.sales receipts of bility studies on. During this meet·
an estimated $3.4 million. This is ing Dave Claborn or !be First Fron)ip from $1.81 million In 1992, tier Fund presented the full color
b;ased on U.S. 1992 ..Census of advertisement Of our Great Bend
"Agriculture. ~
~ ~
Site wblcb bas now been mass mar·
' Hal Kneen, Meigs County keted to the plastics industry.
Extension Agent bas estimatfd tbat
This bas been !be first time tbat
Meigs County bas 810,000 square such an advertisement bas been
feet of growing space under poly- developed and marlreted for Meigs
film greenhouses for !be wholesale
County. It was sent to over 15,000
beddinglflowering/banging basket plastic manufacturers wbom have
business (forty growers) and been identified as looking at
237,000 square feet ror..vegetable · expanding and/or relocating. Tbe
transplants in 1994 (69 growers). Meigs~County Commissioners Fred
Many. or the flowers and vegetable .Hoffman, Janet Howard and Bob
planl~ that you see on display at the
Hartenbacb and AEP are responsivarious large chain department ble for seeing tbis long awaited
MOSCOW (AP) - President
stores and grocery sto.res plus at the step come to fruition.
Clinton won partial concessions
privately owned garden centers, are
Another step necess!lrY in today from Russian President Boris
products of Meigs County. Tbe attracting industry is identifying tbe Yellsin on Moscow's proposed sale
~bovc informadon was kindly proquality of education available or nuclear technology to Iran. Rusvided by our County Extension locally. Dana Kessinaer and Jobn sia also agreed to formalize ties
Agent Hal Kneen.
Costanzo bave met with me to dis- withNATO.
·
. I sprang into Spring by attend- · cuss this issue and are working
. Yeltsin agreed to abandon tbe
·ing the first of three years of an with me to develop a Meigs County
··Economic Development Institute Educational Brochure that may be 'prop,osed sale to Tebran of a gas
:which is a program offered by lhe sent to prospects along with the centrifuge that can be used for
University of Oklahoma. Before other required community inrorma- making nuclear weapons and to
:attending year two, I must have lhe tion and demographics that they delay, ll(least temporarily, the sale
first draft completed of my thesis typically request.
of two nuclear reactors.
'entitled, "Marketing a Large Indus·
Speaking of community infor· . The two presidents agreed that
·trial Site in a Depressed Appalacbi- mation, Wildlife Officer Keith details of the $1 billion reactor sale
·an County", The thesis must be;. Wood, Keith Morrow of ODNR would be reviewed by a commis·specific yet replicable and since and Ken Dollison of ODOT met sion led by Vice President A1 Gore
:ulcre are 28 other co'untles within wilh me to view and discuss the and Russian Prime Minister Viktor
)he Arpalachian region of Ohio possibility of ODOT granting an Chemomyrdin.
easement into the Wilson Wetlands
"We advanced -the security
·this certainly fits.
· There" were approximately 159 area. Tbe Division of Wildlife ·interests of the people of the United
people attending year one and it is plans on con.structing an observa- Stales and of Russia," Clinton said
estimated that only 1)0 will return tion tower and pier as I mentione~ at a joint news conference after the
.for year two due to the intensive last month, however without acces- two leaders talked for more .than
sibility the ability to draw tourists . four hours in the K(emlin.
·study required.
Spring bas sprung and our bed·
ding plant growers arc shipping
flowers -and setting tomatoes
already·. Meigs County has. been
identified as an expanding horticultural area within the state by the
•Ohio Department of Agriculture,
The Obio State University, and
local 'itizens comprising the local
Obio State University advisory

STORE HOURS
Monday thn s.nday
IAM·10 PM

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,.OH..
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO .LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1995

P'ubllc Notice

valid Ohio teaching
· MEIGS COU1'4TY
certificate and must meet
COMMUNITY HOUSING
. IMPRPVEMENT PROGRAM certification requirement• of
. NOTICE OF EXPLANATION Ohio lor sports medicine
and
CPR.
Peraona
FLOOD. PLAIN
Interested should contact
DEVEL\)PMEfH
Lawr·•nee,
. Meigs County, Ohio Jim

Public Notice
centerline of said road,

North 11'21' East, (passing
a aplko al151.76 feet) for a
total dlotance of 234.60 lao!
to a oplke; thence North
16'45' East, 70.88 fool to tho
point of beginning

11 no practi cal alternative

for th,tt locations of portions
of the project. The housing
r ehabilitation activity can
o,nly take place where the
need Is determined and II II
.known t hat the need exists
at
th e te
locations .
Th er efor e, It Is the

judg ement of the Meigs

County Commissioners that

action, I will offer for tale at
public auction , at the door

of the Sherlll'o Office
Building, Pomeroy, Ohio, In

the above named County,
on Tuesday the 13th day of .

June, 1995, at 10:00 o'clock
A.M. tho followl'ng ·

d11scribed real estate,
situate In the County of
Melge, and State of Ohio,

and In the Township of
t he
benef.lll
to Sclplo,lo·wlt:
low}mo derqte households
af.l ected by the· project PARCEL ONE: (Parcel #17·
out wei ghs conslderatlon of 00635) _ S!tu@led In Section

I

E&gt;Cecutive Orders 11988 and

11 990.
A

m or e

d'etailed

30, Town 7, Range 14, Ohio
Company'•
Purchase,

Scipio Township. · Mel go

&lt;le,crlpllon of the protect County, Ohio and being
mora particularly descrlbell
nnd lhe FLA.FIDod Maps"ar• lfi
foii&lt;&gt;WIJ!"C&lt;&gt;mm•netng-at
avalrabl&amp; for citizen revieW
ofthe Meigs County CHIP the Southeesl corner. of
off ice, located at 39350 Section 30; thence along
Unio n Av enu e, Suite 82,

the East line of 'Section 30,
North 5°30' Eaat, 3,630.00

rod&amp;i thence West 80 rods ,
or 1/4 the distance across

East line of said Section ·
P21Mroy,..Qhlo 45769.
Said Promloeo A, ral.sed
Meigs·County foe~ to the Northeaot corner -Nort~ if:66 chains to th~ ·at su;soo.®and clflnol be
of a ~5 . 0 acre tract; _thence
piA.ce
of
b.eglnnlng ,
Commiaaloners
Fred Hoffman, President
(~) 10: 1TC
•

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Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e Southern Local
School District Is currently

'I

al~no the North llne of aaid

55.0 acre tract; North 84' 30'
Wool, 1,544.0 feet loa splk~
In the centerline of the
public road and the
Northwest corner of an

18.78 acr•tract described In
Volume 198, Page 662 of the
Meigs

County

Deed ·

Records; thence along the
centerline of lhe public

·seeking appllcqtlono from road, South 16°45' Weat,
certified appllcanla lor head 196.28 leal to a point, the
varsity football coach, true point of be~lnnlng lor
as alstant football coach, the following dascrlbed
jLtolor Ji!gh football cDach, tract; thence le_!lvlng_ the
junior high volTeyDall coach; public roaa. South 64' 00'
Junior high girls buketball East, 329.50 leal to a point;
.c oach ,. as'liata':lt high thence South 2&amp;•oo· Weet
.. chool glrlo buketball 296.92 laet to a point;
&lt;:oach, !!nd junior hjgh thence North 64• 00' Weal,
cheerleader advisor lor the 251.'78 feet to -. polnlln the
1995·96 school year. centerline of the public.
l!ppllcanto• muot hold a road: thence along the

containing 7.95 acres; more

sold for less than two·lhirds
of that amount.

or less.
·
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
SAVING . EXCEPTING AND OPERATED UNDER THE
RESERVING ·unto tho said&gt; DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
Granton, their helra , EMPTOR. THE MEIGS
executors, administrators COUNTY SHERIFF MAKES
and assigns, ell the oil, gas NO .GUARANTEE AS TO
and other minerals In and STATUS OF Tl:rLE PRIOR
under · the
a·toreaald TO SALE.
premloes with the right to Terms of sale: Ten Percent
drill ond operate' thereon (1 O%) caoh or certlllad
And the right to enter upon chock on day of oale. Any
oald premluo at any lime delay In depoolt will not be
tor tho purpooe of drilling or permitted beyond 2:00 P.M.
mining. The Rlghi·OI·Wa to The remaining ,bala·nce of
and from the plac/ of purchase price ohall be paid
mining or drliiing suHfclont wlthln"thlrty (30) Cliys •lrom
wator gao and oil 1
the dale ol aale.
oper~Ung thereon. The rig~~
Jameo M. Soulsby, Sheriff
to tay • pipe line loT tho
Melg's County, Ohio
purpo•a of conveying wale
Frodtrlck l . Oremus, •
Iteam, gae or oil over an~
A«orney
acro01 oald pramloeo The ("' 10 17 24' 3TC
ri ght to erect and maintain . ~,
' •' '

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1

•ucc n a, money.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$6.00 PER DAY.

•

LIVE 24 HOURS

1·900.161·
3100/bt. 4741
Muot be 18 yra.
Proc.oll Co.

$3.118 min.

_.. ....

(1102) 954-7420

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PUBLIC
AUCTION
FARM EQUIPMENT

•'

PEPSI COLA ·
PRODUOS

'.

119
•
LB.
We1ners•••••••••••••••••••

...

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AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS #A-116
OWNER: IRA POTIS
LUNCH MASON, WV 773·5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I. D.
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property
Licensed and bonded In Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
West Virginia •&amp;&amp;
I

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oz.

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(814) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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Klll'l IPPLIUCE
la,ICI

•Factory Authorized Porta
a Sorlltce
&lt;All Molcoa '42 Yeoro
of'aot Reliable Service
.Wooher.-• Dryero • Rongeo
-Aefrfgerato,. •Freefel'e

oOIIhwuhero
oH.W,f!ettero
.Yicrowaves •Disposals

•Thonko Meigs a

Surrounding Ar•••

(614) 985-3561 or
. 992·5335 """"'"

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV
30H82·2996

Angie's
Greenhouse

au••· Pueanlallt,

llrula•llnt•· Buging

.

llullelll, lllc .
(Depot St.) Rutland to

.

Leading Creek, lhen to
Paulins Bill. Just 2 1/2 ·
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR '7

s

)
Ice·Cream•••V11:..... ·1· ·

H~LLAND

~

$

Open Mon.,. Fri. JO a.m.·5 p.m.
Weekends Ca11614-742."2772

OFFICE

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'

5 bedrooms, bath, warm morning gas stove_. Brick fireplace,
built in book stielves. This is an older home iA need of much
repair on a nice large lot with some river frontage . Nice river
view. Paved road. Great building site or possible fixer-upper.

Aaklng $20,000

ARE YOU SEARCHING FOR A BUILDING S.,-E?? HERE

..

IT IS!! 8+ Acrs of laval/sloping ground wi~h a scenic view on

~

320Z.

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

992-2259

Gold Ridge Rd. TPC water and electric Is abailable. Site
recenlly surVeyed. Just minutes from SR 33 off 681 , ASKING
$12,000 . Owner wants to sell and will accept a reasonable
qffer. MAKE AN OFFER!II

(

MIDDLEPORT· Investment property· 2 slory brick building
wilh 2 apartments. Currenlly rented.
Asking $13,000

•.

tUCK'S PINTO BEANS

, MCNICHOLS RD.· 5+ acres with frame/block building·
Currently used as Ball Shop. Stock and Equipment being
sold separately. Older Mobile home on site is optional. MAKE
AN OFFER
Asking $12,000

NORTHERN
PATHliSSUE

15
,. oz.

1-900-388-7000
Ext. 9970
. $3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
· Procall Co.

NEW LISTING· SR 124 Near Racine River Fran! Lot. .66+
acre. Drilled well, outbuilding, septic. Hook-up for Mobile
Home.
1
~
Asking $12,000\ .
NEW LISTING- Letart- Older two story frame. ~ame . 8 rooms,

KERS .
GRAPE JELlY·
OR JAM

79c

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

• • NEW LISTING· Pearl St. Middleport· 1992 Modular Home on
Double Corner Lot with beautiful view ot the Ohio Rlver!l 6
room, 2 balhs, 3 bedrooms. Level Lot. Landscaped. New
Lennox H.P.IC.A. Nice Place.
\ Asking $61,900.00

'•

ARMOUR TREET
LUNCH MEAT
12 oz.

•

(602) 95&lt;\-7420

472cws

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
of!oom Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Pi~mbing
•Roofing
·
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting .
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1f12Jtln

Your

NEW LISTING· Just oul ol Pomeroy on Enterprise Rd.· 1 112

Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Ph'one

Story frame home wl4 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room with
fireplace , kitchen. Home has approx. 1+ acres, nice big front
yard partially fenced . 1 car garage. Home needs some work

but has lqls of polenli~ llor only $24,900. MAKE OFFER

LIMIT 8 PLEASE

4

ROLL PK. '

fenced. Asking $25,500. Make Olferl

: . PR"tCE REO'UCED· Pomeroy' Older home thai needs some
work located behind the new Auto Zone Store. ·
Asking Only $4,500.00
WE HAVE ALITILE BIT OF EVERYTHING, BUT WE NEED
MOREll THE MARKET IS GOQl:l AND NOW IS 'THE T!Mc ·
TO SELLII GIVE US ACALL- WE'LL WORK FOR YOUII
HENRY E. CLELAND JR ...............:...................... 992-6191
TRACY L. BRINAGER .............................:....... .... 949·21139
SHERRI L. HART..................................................742-2357
HENRYE; CLELAND 111 ....................................... 992-6191
.KATHY M. CLELAND.......................................... .992-6191
OFFICE..... ~.................... ...................................... 992·2259

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GREAT LAKES
.
SUGAR

5#Bag~ ~. $~ ~49~

$2.99 per min.
~uot be 18 yra,

'

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~.

. 1-900-945-6200
Ext. 2579

utilities , cement floor, access &amp; traffic flow. 1 acre+. Partially

-

-

DEL MONTE SQUEEZE
KETCHUP
28 oz.
79 -~ ·~~ -

NEW LISTING· Great Business Opportunity· Just Out Of
Pomeroy- Large 2 car bay metal garage on SR 33. Some

..•

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GROUND

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..'•••
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BEEF
10#

Using. the Classifieds 3 Announcement•
Is as Easy as .. ,
CHICKEN BARBECU~
AI Tuppers Plains

.,
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· Fire House
Sponsored by the
Fire Dept.
TUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
SUNDAY, MAY14, 1995

~

Serving Time Begins

.M11:00 A.M. Price $6.00

•

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..
I .

Cholc• Of: 1/2 Chicken or
Alba. Baked Bearis, Colt

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.. -"· .......,

,..

Procall Co.

(602) 954-7420
4/!Wn

~

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COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC. ·

WICKS

Owners: Robert Banon &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 . 992-6471
Mon- Fri 8 a.m. . 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. · 5 p.m.
Sun. by appt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middlepott

HAULING
(Speciltllze In
driveway apraedlng)

Limestone,
G~avel, Sand,

Top

Soil, Fill Dirt

·

&amp; surrounding area.

Call for rare schedule
Mir. $2.oo

614-992-3470

EASY MATCH

949·2192

MAKING IS

FARMS

RACINE, OHIO

lit 1\\ \I (II

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

1.\t \\\II\(,

S. R. 7 Five Points

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Serv~.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic

Open For Business

Systems &amp; Driveways:

Call for all ofyour storage needs

Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

-

992-~251

t)t)•) - ,.•) (0 ) ,•)) (0)

TREE tRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

,

Light Hauling,

REAQY NOW!!!

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

1·900·884·7800
Ext. 4466
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

AIKTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer

Procell Co.

.........

(602) 954-7420

Atttkjtles

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

'

Carpenter Work

Free Estimates

Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

1

Card of Thanks

NEVER

MODERN SANITATION

BE LONELY
AGAIN

POMEROY, OHIO
.
Sepllc tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets renled.
Daily,
&amp;
rental.rales.

CALL 1·900·945-6100
Ext. 8587 '

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

304·882-3704

$2'.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

Ask for Mike

(602) 954-7420

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;·CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior ·

Take the pain out of
painting. Let us do It l~r
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
I message.
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180 312....

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

GRAY'S

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

985-3879

4/131'115

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP.
One mile out

Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

SUMMER
IMAGES

Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
1-6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
.........

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

Hill Brothers
Produee

J&amp;L INSULATION

$6.00
Roger &amp; Tom·Hill
49534 State Roule 3"38 ·

· (614) 241-2015 daytime
(6t4) 949·2231 evenings

4128/tln

limestone &amp; Gravel,
Seplic Syslems, Trll~er &amp;
House Siles.
Reasonable Rales
Joe N. Sayre

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Reptaceinenl,
Windows, Blown
insulation, Storni
Door•,-Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates
11 19hln

Ada Jean Caufman

MERIT .

Perhapt you MOt a
lovely card.
Or 101 qulettf
In o cho~.
Perhapt vou.senr .o

Kenny's is the piace to com·e
when y~u need a car rental •.
We H11ve Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center

264 Upper River Rd.
Gall1pohs, OH. 45631

_
_
_
1 800 486 1590

'

Bus. (614) 446-9971

·

'""'"

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
'

New Homes • Vi,nyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDF.NTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

. 614-992-7643

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742-2138

Tonight!
1-900"726-0033
Ext. 8878

Open 9:00~2:00

Flowers &amp;
Vegetable Plattll
Hanging Ba•kat1
&amp; Flats

614·742·2193

PARTS
Specializing in Cuslom
Fram~ Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
" MODELS
992·7013 OR
992·5553 OR
TOLLFREE 1•800-848·007
DARWIN, OHIO

143 from Rt. 7

.

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

WHALEY'S AUTO

Must be 18·yrs .

Kenny's Auto Rental

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

Lonely? Call

$2.99 Per Min

t

I

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Mobj,le Welding
Qlesel ~njector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

• ·.,..; ·.•· .• :.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 7
in Chester across from '
·the Dairy Queen. Size ·
· IOx28 -stare cars,
boals, furniture, or
what ever you want.
Call 992-3961

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE ·

·•NEWHOMES
•ADDITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(6t4) 992·2753

.•.• ; =·••:.•

''""'"

412M15

Luran Falls, Ohio

( No Sunday Calls)
2112192/ltn

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately
Listen to voice mai l messages le ft by inlcresling
smgles of all ages. Leave messages for si ngles
that interest you or ope n you r own voice mail ·
box. It 's fun , excili ng, and can lead to· new
fri e nd~&lt; hips a nd mean ingful rclalioris hips.

Call 1-900-656-3000 E\xt. s·, s2
7 Days A We'ek - 24 !lou rs A Day
$2.99/Min MJJSI Be 18 Yrs.
ProcaJJ Co.. (602) 954-7420

tjoward L. Writes.e l

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
5/16/94 TFN

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New ·Homes
•Garages
• Complete
Reinodeli ng
· Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES.

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992~6223
Free Esti111ates .
Insurance Work Welcome
State At. 33
Darwin·, Ohio

985-4473
712219&lt;

.

1012 1~

POOR BOYS TIRES

h7~.J131

- h75-J.\J.j
llcndci~nn, \VV
C.ill Lon Neal h1r 1 ilc Deal AI The 1\,'11 Slnrc

funeral opray.
11 sa we fi:1W nthere.
PerhQPI you spoke the
klndelt WOldt.

AA onv ft1end &lt;;0\*IIOY;
Perhopt you we~e not ·
·lh.,.e ot oR.
Just thOUQht of

PURCHASE
REFINANCE
CONSOLIDATE-

'fOU'dd to
coruole our hearts,

'Blmkruptey, ·Judgements, Slow Gredit
Our Specialty: ·

..

uolhotdoy,

Whateve~

Welhonk you 10 mych

whatever the port.

Slaw. Dinner Roll, Tea or
Coitee. Pit •nd Clkt 50
cenq Extra.

-

lttMltwiiiM)

you. Very reasonable.

Real Estate General

.VAN CAMP
PORK N'
BEANS
.
16 oz.

STD-1-WIY

I

can

•

(!'

'.

RICK PEARSON AUaiON CO.

WHITNEYS
PINK SALMON
14.75

&amp; TOOLS

245 M.F. Diesel P.S. 160Q HAS., 6ft. PTO Roto hoe;
J.D. 2. oow com planter, 6 ft. grader baide, 3 pt. Lime
spreader, New 3 pt. Potalo plow, t 0 ft. Diag harrow, 3
pt. 6 row sprayer wlboom &amp; tank, 16 ft. Lowboy trailer,
concrete mixer, vinyl ~ldlng, antique platform scales,
lg. lot of hand tools, shovels, rakes, wire stretchers,
3/4 sockel set, fruit jars, !g. tarps, rabbit cages, 8
Lowboy trailer tires, drag, plus much more!l
Auctioneer Note: Farm equipment sells at 12:00 noon.
Tractor sells w/a low reserve.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

;

$

'

'W'Midlngs. Prems
and Speelal
Oeeasloas

Located~ miles South of Point Plaeaant W.V. on
Rt. 2. TUrn at Crab Creak Rd. Watch for signs. Mr.
Potts has quit farming an~ will sell the following.

,.

.'

.

· lleat a
u-uslne for

·b.

••••
•

KAHNS

Laure{
.Limo
.
.
Service

SATURDAY, MAY 13, 19.95
10:00 A.M.
.

.

2 LITERS

more or less but subject to

Records

49

PSYCHICS
AclviM on fulura
opportunity,
decl•ion-making, love,

'•'•

lanka and other necessary

all legal highways. As
the Section; thence South surveyed by E. W. Hysell.
110 rods; thence East to the Registration M994, January
place
of
b'glnning , 31 , t947. Being a part of tho
containing 55 acr-.,, more premises ~onveyed to A. C.
or tess.
Dalley by W. S. Hart, Auditor
·ALSO (the · follbwlng of Meigs County, Ohio , by
deacrlbett'tract: Situate In Audltor'e
Deed dated
the Northeast- qua~ter of February 24, 19t3 and
Section 30, Town 7, Range re"c orded In Volume 109,
14 of the Ohio Company's Pogo 253 Deed Recorda of '
Purchase, Meigs County, Molga County, Ohio.
Ohio and beginning In the Being the same real eetate
~J.I!.i@r ot.t_h_e Pomeroy an9 conva¥ed to J.rvlo Ro~a and
Athens Road about 18 Luverne Ross, by deed
chains and 96·1 /5 links recorded March 7, 1947 In
South of the Northeast Recorda of Deeds, Volume
·corner of said Sectloni 157, Page 453 Meigs
thence ' North 50' West 4.75 County, Ohio.
chains, South 69' West 3.75 DEED REFERENCE '
chains ; South asg West 2.99 Volume 232, Page 935·936
chaJns , South 6.795 chains ;
Meigs Couni:J· D·aed
East 10.245 chains to the

CALL OUI O"ICI AI H2•2155 .

•
•

equipment lor conducting
oald buolnoss with tho right

gao well supplies or
appurtenances of any kind,
ALSO the following real
intends to undertake a Superintendent, Southern containing 2.00 icresr
CDBG
Round
#4 local School Olstrlct, P. 0. DEED REFERENCE: Volume estate being In Section 30,
Community
Housing Box 176, Racine, Ohio, 237, Page 721 and Volume Town 7, Range 14, Scipio
Improvement Grant project 45771 . - A leo, cont1ct the 232, Page 935 Deed Townohlp; Melgo County,
for the purpose of housing Treasurer, Dennie Hill, al'lha Recorda of Meigs County, Ohio, and deacrlbed ao
rehabilitation and sidewalk same address II you wish to Ohio.
lollowri, lo·wll: Beginning
constru ction In the target bid on materials 1nd . TJ\e above description was Ngrth_220 rods and Wast 80
lurnlohed by Harold D. rods from the Southea$1
'
area of the VIllage of supplies.
Whaley,
Registered corner of Section 30, (The
Ra cine , O~o . Portions ot (5) 10, 11, 12, 14, 15; STC
Surveyor
No.
4986, per Northweel corner of 55 acre
the project are located In
Public Notice
ourvey of May, 1'972.
tract); thence North 84°West
the baee 1oo year/500 ye1r
Being the same premiSes 223.4 leal to lha center of
flood plain.
Sheriff'&amp; Sale of
ao deocrlbed In deed of the public road ; thenc:e
Such locations are as
Real Eotato
record In Volume 250, Page ·along the center of the
follows ; Front Street.
The
State
of
Ohio,
247,
and Volume 250~~age public road North 9"45 '
Racine, Ohio, Owner Anne
Melgo County
530 Dead Records of Meigs Weal 259 feet; thence South
Scarberry; Third Street, St.
Firat Apootollc Church of. County, O~lo.
6' 30' West3t5 feet; thence
At , 124 , Racine , Oh io ,
Eat\ Baton Rouge, Inc.
PARCEL TWO: (Parcel South 51 ' 30' West 204.3
Owner : Jack and Rhonda
Plaintiff
Nos. 17·00973; 17-00974) teet; thence South 26"40'
~.Lyons ; Elm Street, Racine ,
vo .
Situate in the Township of E~st 315 feet; thence South
Ohio , Owner; Lee Layne ;
Ml Zion Propertleo,lll, an
Scipio, County of Maigs and 31 ' East 222.8 feet; thence
f ifth Street , R,a~lne , ~hio ,
South 32'30' East 341 feet;
Owner • Ronald Gnmm ; Ohio Limited Partnerohlp, at State of Ohio, to-wit:
at., Defendanto.
· Being 1to rods North from thence East 246 feet to the
47442 Rt. 338, Racine, Ohio,
Cue No. 94 CV·28t
the Southeast corner of Southeast corner; thence
Owner • Randy Marnhout ~
In pursuance to an Order ' Secllon 30." Town 7, Range North 0'45' 1815feet to the
The p r oposed pro j ect
of
beginning ,
c annot be undertaken In of Sole doted Fob. 21st, 14 of tho Olilo Company's place
any other locations as there 1995 In the above entitled Purchase; thence North t10 containing 18.78 acres,

•

•

Public Notice

to remove· al any time .any
and all machinery, oil and

.,...................
.................,,.
IIUEniiOIII

COCA COLA
PRODUOS

Clinton
nets small
·victory on
·nuke sale

Public Notice

... Twr ...... AINII
......., ••••1...

Jo!Yt &amp;. Rlcl101d
cautmon

•

1-800-MERIT-98 ·

A FREE VCR

oiVelway JUne

1st

Uslen tor

Winnel' on 81g Country Radio

MB#0489

----·•-__..._. •

..............,_~

�.. .

..
POmeroy-lllcfilltpOl't, Ohio
BRIDGI:

H,to.! TltAT IS WHV '!HEY ·
-EI&gt; ntEifl EXIT!
ntrt...,..
..,....,.,. our

NEA Crossword Puzzle

fW '--TI Wl5 HIWE

PHILLIP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by lArry Wrl1ht

Ann ounc cmc nl s

·-

ACROS$

THEio4 NOW!

. ALDER

1 Ded'ortlll1o
I •

FoatpM

8 Mr. Rickles
11 Verve
13RNI-

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........

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-....Giveaway

4

...............

TVa,

2

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and

IMP
14 Germen one
15 Brlolle
r---Ni:ooi'H--.:7.U:&lt;II . te Lowyor
talk
(ol.)
18 Wrfter•K J 9 6
Chrletle
'fA K 7 6 4
20 Poem port
tA 4
21 Provklecl

/i.EEK &amp; MEEK

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tor ......L....Uglll
-KIIplng .... . - . . -

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11

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R~ Plillnpn ••

.... puppr: ........ ""·

6

Public sale

8

o

I

IH,Ohlo I -

10-

42 Mobile HomH
for Rent

OpponunHy

Vlralnlo, J04.

tQJ752

•J 7 6 2

West

North
l•

East
Pass

1•

Pass

3•

Pass

Household
Goods

51

6•

Obi.

All pass
lead: •K

v--

Dan, Ju_. • • - 11o
lloh~Drywa,
......
l'r ·a, w-..

Color T.V.'o VCR'a,
All
.
.
.
.
. . . Comput-.
Ollloo M ohlnM, Eto. ,..,_.

.

To Buy: Junk AutO.

With Or WithoUt Motore. Coli
Lorrr Uvtly. 114 na 1101.

Bboll Yonl, 10-11: 2011 112
£111"" Ave. 1n _ , T-,
Docoratlng Equlmlnl, ololhlng,
Fumlturo, lllo.

'!op -

Pilei: All Old U.S.

--

nice ........ilto........., Lovt

....... v a y - a n d

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

·Yard loloo lluot Be Pokl In
Ad-. ONeil no: 1:OOpm tho
All

dey IMfOI'II the ad .. fo run,

SUildoy odhlon, 1:o1pm Frkloy,
llondoy
odhlon
1D:DOo.m.
Soturdily.

-·
tiS.

_,..,.. _....

ConcjldoiM mull hove ucoUonl
typing .......... Englloll

Camputor
~lodgo a ............ rMUmo
to lllnd; Kooma, Editor, Polnl
PINMnl Roolllor, 200 lloln

St-.

Polnl

-h ...
wv

Plluont,

21510. No phorlloolle.

..,

114-441·11171.
No IJporlonC41 N--rrt UOD
To $1100 Wookly lllolonllol ·
Procoool~

HriU'f..

Own

Mortra• Rohlndo.
Co

-715-2300

C24 Houri~

Ell.

uam and

31 Homes for Sale
-

Po,..-, Eur Torma, 3 8011rooma, 1 loth '-1111 Nur

Vlnlan 18-· line: Coii1-

448-GIIDIIAik

F«-.

t Bedroom
Condllfon,

HotM.
Convonlonl

poychoclt, oil for 1 porl~lmo Job.
GO TO GERMANY WITH US IN
AUGUST FOR ANNUAL TRAININGI -5-5837 or t.a!0-642·

,

WI$"ES COME TROE
In T"E CLASSIFIEDS!

-·
"""*" -· mooo.
For Solo brm. houoo, PloniZ
114-367-7217.
13

Sub&lt;flvlooon. Coli - U J I U
onytlmo or 114-446-115111 bot·
WMn 7 a.m. I :II p.m.
Modular tor a.a. thrH bed.room, two Mth, kttchen, DR,
don, LR, u1IIIIY room. CoU for
dolollo, 1114-ll8S.:1414. .
Now 3 Bodroom 2 Bolho, 2,000
Sq. Ft. ·Homo In Golllpollo, No
,fuM For 14 Yeerw,l 10% Down
And-- Ownw.

Financing

To

Forget abQUt the
rabbit's foot, fourleaf clover or wishing ·
upon a lucky star. All
you· need to improve
your luck is our
classified pages ...
There you're likely to
find the car, sofa or
travel deal of your
dreams at the right
price. S~stop wishing ·
and start fishing .in
the classifieds,
.
.today:
. .

with Uec:hllnlcal Abllh ..a and

hondiO RIIP.OilllbiiiiY. Gcocf
Wag11 Airiltiblo lo lho right
pereon. Mu.t han Re~L

114-448-4514 8AII-liPII

·

Wanted to Do

18

50a.aaB7.

C&amp;SAu1o Ropo~- ropolr o l makee and rnode~L C.N 114tll2-21143.
Oenera~ Malnten•noe, Palnl!ng1
Von! Work Wllidowa Woonoo
OUIION Clllono&lt;f Light Hauling,
Commericat, AMIM,.Ial, St..,.:
ll4-446-1611l
..

RuN Murdock, 1~251·6070.

Make 2 Plit'rMf"'lli 1nd mava lnl
New 14x70 2 ot 3br. Financing
Avolloblo. Coin R... llurdock, f·
ID0·2!1t-50'10,

All real estate adllertising in
this newspaper Is subjec t to
the Federal F'air Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illega l
to advertise "'any prelerenca,
!Imitation or discrimination
based on ra ce, color, religion.
sex 1amrllal status or national
origin, or any intention to
make-i nv-such pra113rence,
Umitatlon or discrimination.·

•

advertisements for real estata
which ls in viola tion ol the law.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised In tllis newspaper
are available qn ~n equal
opportUnity basis_

Fumlahed Efflclencr $1V51Mo.

••

. Antiques

J'
.
~') TIFFf&gt;.IW

BOOffN\T 1\T '"'
CITY f\N..L FOR N\ UP·Ib·11\E:/o\I~TE:. REFcr:.T.

Gil' . .11.

:J.": .....

Utllhloo Pold ShiN Both, 807 2 crlbo, 2 cor _., ploy pin, In- ·
font oorrlor, bottlol, dlopar
Aftor 7 ~.II.
blgo, mollllo clclhM nowbOm
to U month, bOy or girl, 114-1112·
Gnrolouo living. 1 and Z bod- 2182.
room •.-rtmen.. .. Ylllaaa
Illond ~lvorolilo 5 HP 8ulw Croftomon ratotlllor.
61
Aporlmonlo In Mkldlo)lort. From Uooclvory Illite. 1114-246-1313.
$232.-sss . Col 8f4.QV2-5858c
Equal Houolng Opporllrnhloo.
7 112' . _ . . 1114·'ni-

Inc

Nice 2badroom wid hookup.
Roforoncn. Dopoott. No polL

304-675-416Z.

131MI.
l'Win Rive,. Toww: now IICCipl·
11111 oppltcou..,. lor 1br. HUD

DOWN
1 Flat~ }1111
2 Oitolaner Hllr(

e Act

5 Spanish cheer
6 Bar order
7 Storehouse

Caoalnl

3 -

·

4 SpCaoh

9 River in

oFrance

. 1 Compiooo pl.
12 01 couroe
(sl.)

•

19 Heod growth
22 One or the
other

23 Male cats
24 Buayoa-26 Camero part

27 Llncled
28 Backtalk (If.)
29 -culpa
31 Strengeoeso
35 Actteaa
Archer
38 B•shy hair!lo

IIT.II.

Ballo Ru1h Story, lluotNiod,

opproL 100 . , . _ publlallor:
EP. Outlon I Co., Now York,

1841, good oollll. - - ·
llooll By Rod Wing ChiP-40 To roiD PlgrMe,lt.H.
Ouoronfood1 . . . , _ Prlcea, Tho

•awn

42A tntomotlonot T.......... 1142584001
Doutz 1801 Trootor 8lllrp,
te,ll50· 5040 AC 01oo11
T020 i!.;;;uood1.11111: 7 fl. Hoy
Bind i\815; e14-2de •:n

illoll l .uohllno Mvlnaroum
. . . . . of .brown ). rwlt
77Wil3.

$200. Wat..-bld, qunl't41ll, ful
w1w wlhMdbcYrd, m•n ..... '

.

In the February issue of New
· Zealand Bridge. mention is made of the
bridge travels of "Gulliver." I would expect that to be the editor, Richard
Solomon. except that he is a family man
with children. &lt;I know, all the bridge
widows are asking what being a family
.
man has to do with anything!l
In today's deal, Gulliver made a very
thin six spades doubled. However, the
analysis in the magazine is abbreviat·.
.ed . How would you plan the play
against the club-king lead?
In case you are surprised by the bid·
ding, bear in mind that the deal occurred during a rubber-bridge cilmpeli·
lion. Gulliver knew that they had to bid
and make a slam to stand any chance
of winning in the last rubber . West's
double will forever remain a mystery.
Given ·that West has four &lt;or five)
trumps for his double, the only chance
is a crossruff. For that to work, West 1
must have four &lt;or five) hearts. But do
you see the danger' If Soulh takes im
early diamond ruff in the dummy, West 1
will discard a heart!
This is the right plan: After winning
with the club ace, play a heart to dum·
my's king, cash the heart ace. discard·
ing a club from hand , ruff a heart in
hand. play a diamond to dummy's ace
and ruff another heart in hand. Cash
Che diamond king. ruff a diamond in the
. dummy, rurr the last heart with the
spade ace, ruff a diamond in the dum·
my and. at trick II, exit with dummy's
last Club. West is forced to ruff and lead
from the Q·7 of spades into dummy's K·
J tenace .
That was a Brobdingnagian perfor·
mance by Gulliver.

47- vera

b + - f-+--1 48 Former

Russian

ruler

49 Facilitete ·
SO Type of
lettuce
51 Towboat

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebrity Cipher cryptogr11ms are crealect!fom quotat1001 by famous peop\*. pas! and prnent
El!ld"l letter 1n th8 cipher stands ror another. Today'll due. S IKf~ls M

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M X I Y.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm not one of those puys who can think at;&gt;ou1 his
golf score while he's singing a love song." - Me Torme.

•

T~:~:~:~· S©tl~lA-l&amp;£~s· VAlli
_ _ _ _.....;._..: Edaod b1 CLAY l. POUAN - . . ; . . . - : - - - - WOlD

0 Reorronge

letters of
four scrambled words

low ro form four words

I I' I 1 I I I
VOTEAC
2

LOTHYI

I. I I' I

.
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I'
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~==~I~"'
S H Y U K

My son always acts first and
thinks
later. We 've tried to tell
4
- · h1m that it's easy ·to run head
.
.
.
.
.
~-------'_ _, first into trouble , but il'is hardest
., B R 0 J E B
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.

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by f./l mg m the mru1n g words

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· yo:' ~eve lop fro m· step No . 3 below.

1wi.~i;

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is
OH

sue&amp;:

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er

lfl"'

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r e&lt;J.s ions

ou know .

f

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T OVI OV i e!. •

Lau r t c.

G-•+
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Shoa C.ll~ 1114-441 on

Etr.:her - Savor· Eight· Rosary · SHORTAGE
My financial woes are simflle. I just figure if I can 't pay
any of my bills I havew hat is cafl~d a money SHORTAGE.

MAY10I

l•e (CC)

lNe jCC( •

C&amp;C
Gonolol
1111,....,_ one! Mobllo R........ For ,_ olllmllo col

~:

ASTRO·GRAPH

Chot• 114-CIII2.W2.

..
Couch &amp; motchlng choir,
gcld.tlrOMt lonn, . oxc. oond.l

40 Goaded
42 Is cleleotod
43 Scent
44 Sea aagfe
45 Remainder

~-:..,-6..,.,:.7....:,,...::.,,,:......,..--1 G) ~o.,plere lhe chu~kle quoled

Farm
. Equipment
. ,

Fl&lt;:lory Sola, 4 All Stoll
Bulkllnp, MxU, 33145, 481911 79
campers&amp;
euHidrzlld apt. lor ald•rtr and . Camplolo 2t Gal. Filii Tri &amp; 751188. Urnhod lnnntory. 1•
Motor
Homes
hondlcoppocl. EOH 304.e75- Slo'!rll I La. Slwfll I" ·10" 4 Como. 101 - · Call Now:
eou..., I"1C010111io 1l14-44fl. Prodolan - Fromo 304·TIJ. 11111 ;n: Than molorhomo, fully
11179.
113'11.
1650.
oolf.oonlolnod
doubiHoor
Upllolow, 3 Roomo I Both C1
Bodrooml, Furnlohod, Clun, ConcrOIT
Nfrltl«otor, mkrowrivo, - • ,lr,
~
•
IT
Plutlc
~~•ptle
.
63
Livestock
300 hru 2,000 -nona ,____....,,.,;,.,,...,;--..,....,..,. large pnllflltor, 20' awning,
Roforonc.o and Dopootl flo. on
qulrwd 814-44e-1St8. No Polo!
Ron nno Entorprtooa, Jodi· April 11112 AQHA Pteuuro Qelcl. 50,ll0Doril. S&amp;,DDD. 304.e~848.
oon, OH 1-IOO-a37.0528.
Ina, Fobruo/r 11114 Big Paint 18H a-QII Boy motor homo
Furnished
Efoclrlc
Whoolohalow
And Hall• fltly, 1183 te2 Hondo .,.., dof~8,10Dmf, ........
Seootora, And Uood, In- Hilnt Sold AOHA lion, 11114 BID llkl new.
75-2115.
Rooms
1
And outd- Modolo. Chollnul ADHA Rllf 114-~
Roome fOf' rent • WHk or month. Bowmen'• Homec•rw, 114-441- c""=Z=---- - - - Services
Starting 11 $120/mo. Golllo Hotol. 7283.
F - Pip lor llelo. 114-311'
81~0.
For your log homo or rfoc:lt, now 7031
Stooping roomo whh oooklng. II Point Plue. Sll&lt;k- Wcocf ~---,for~-,lo-,bl"'l"'t--.......,.,
"" '
y, nomy
81 .
Horrte
••
Alto trllller IIJKI on river. All Flnloh. 304-675-4G84.
~·~ .........1-3018.
hook~~- Cell ...., a:oo p.m.,
304·7J'3.165t, Maton WV.
AERAnJ~1oroAS
Now Auotrotton 8odc!ll. '' Inch, _.__lm....:.,p,.,.ro,v,.,e:-::m::e:-nt=s....._
Ropolrod, N- I RobuiR In Seat, 114-379-2120.
BASEMENT
46 Space for Rant
Stool&lt;. Coli Ron Evona, 1-aoo. &amp;4
WATERPROOANG
537-11521.
Hay &amp; Grain
U.-.dhlonal llfotlmo guo~nTrollor let for nnt In llldd._,,
••· Local ratlrlncM turi'llahid.
114-112·711A.
Now 100,000 BTU HI EHicl- 8ooond cutting hoy tor ulo, Call 1-8011-287~ Or 114-2111
Gu Fumoco Hoot oquoow boln, novor -~ 114- 0488 Rogoro Wolorprooflng. bVory Ruoanobly Prlcod, OnO 84~.
tobllohod 1871.
Merchandise
UNci .25KW Eloclrlc Fu"*o,
Control Air Conilh~~ Froo b8 - ' o Homt ...,.,..._...,..,
tlmatn, 1~17 · Drtl4- ·
Room Addhlono .OOOU, Ahd
448 13M .
PorchiO, El!*rloncod, F - &amp;.
Household
51
tlnllloo,'IM-441-8588.

Goods

me

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

BERNICE .
BEDE OSOC

Ron'o TV lorvfco, -lollzfng
In Z.nhh otoo ~ moot
a4her brlnda. Hou• eall-. 18DO·m4015, wv 304471o23tl.

holt!'!!_.•••· --~:o. 301175-"""' clop. or I
88 oflor
lpm.

...,
I

':"''

'Your
'Birthday

'

Thursday, May 11 ,

1995

escaped your nohce.
Trymg to patCh ' up a broken romance?
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov . 22) Today gen ·
The Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help
tteness can accomplish what 119mmands
you. to understand what to do to make the cannot Wh-en de.al!ng w1!h ..others .
rela t io n ship wo rk . Ma1! $2 75 to empha s1ze your compaSSIOn and toler Match maker , clo thiS neWspaper , P .O .. ~;~n e e and underplay your au•honty
Box 44 65 . New York, NY 10 163
SAGiTIARIUS (Nov . 2,3·Dec . 21 ) So.,;e .

QI;,MI!'II {,l,laYc ~I .June 20) .&amp;en_ ~". ~l'loflg that wr14J&lt;OJ!e_llll!!l1lllei)'JlenefiCia,l
you tf be qwte capable of tak1ng care of for you might develOp throu9h an ally
yoUr own needs today. persons who, hke
you m1ght shll go ou~ of lherr way to try to

toda . Be patient because what he/she

offer~ needs 1tme 10 grow

make you comfortable

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22· Jiln . 19) Con ·

CANCER (June . 21 · July 22} You can
make remarkable gestures· today tf you
took ou t lor the we lfare ol others. VJhen:
you only J&lt;ibk our for yourself. !hough. the

d1llons are favorable tor your worlc or
ca reer today 11 you 've been wa lttng 1o
push through somethtng 51 gmhcant, thiS
rs a good day 10 start .

results w&lt;ll be ll)edrocre

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 191 The need

LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) Information ' rom
unrelated sources can be p1eced together
today m a. manner advantageous to you
and to others. Bee om~ a hnlc m these

may .anse today tO exert your authonty

~T he

over seve ral indP-'tduals . To yC»J r cred!J
you 'll handle' thiS'" a manner that will Win
, you respect
PISCES (F,b. 20·March 20) A b~nef&lt;C ia l

qua lit y of the soctal contacts you cha rns ol success
: make in the year ahead coUld be super1or VIRGO (Aug . .23·Sepl. 22) Trends will be chan9e thai takes place today may be
~.10 those yOu'Ve made tn the pasl. Your mOiling tn your favor today that could screened !rom your vtew . but tl 'could
"''Ti eW fr ie nds wtll be more 1nclmed to do ~elp lulh!l your caree.r or fmanctal asptra - have an advantageous npple effect bnnghons Do not ~ Qfrald to take a calculat · tng gams to you and to others
ihings fo.? lhe common good.

full

TAURUS (April 20•May

114-:JU.-,

-

~·---

'( .·

O l ~ brNEA

it-lh TO YOU UVE.Fro'I\CITY IW.L
TO ~ H\~T THEID t-lan\lfiG
t-1E.t.1 TO R£FORI 0'-\
~TRIKE. ~T T\.\l:'&gt; \It-'£ I

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Profloolonol
TIM Sarvlca,
Complolo Troo CO.., BucMI
Truck lorvlce .eo fl. Rooch, ,
Slump Ro&lt;noval, F- &amp;.
llmldool lnouronca, 24 Hr.
Emorooncy SOMoa .eott .Mel
Snof No T- T.., ... Or Too
SmoHI
111&lt;14P-

'IOIO.

"fHA_,.F- $' §·JO

'1111~ l~ TIFFN\Y WJffi&gt;S\T::f'E1lol(:"'

to 1;00 p.m. 114-...-2528.

a-goo Portable Sowmll~..don,
houl
to tho '""'
0111 ~ ._)l,..,.~"r
' •

'

--2142.

S.concl.&amp;. Gan{pona, 614 446 u1e

Pl ....nt, tumlahed, clean a
Phorw 304-175-.

Doublowklo R-. no- flvod
ln1 Ananelng Available. Call

knowllngty accept

~f4.448.3145.

iiiCII, no palL

This newspaper will not

Ac• TIM S•rvloe. Compa.te lrM
ooro, 2oynt. oxp. • lnound, !roo
ootlmot•.IM-441·11tf or .r-aoo.

Fumlohod EHicloncy Shiro
Both~ AU Utllhln Polrl, $145/Mo.
811· ::oocond Avonuo, Golllpollo,

Ono bodroom •l*rlmont In PI

TRICk drlv.r want.O. m1.11t hlv•
licen.•,
ttralgh1·bed
mu.t have awn medleal
dlyl per w..-, call

wllllna to wortl alone; •nd

.

AIVII"Ina Antlque~
112'4 E. Moln SIOMI, on Rt. 124,
Pomoroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to 5:00 . p.~.l..Sundoy 1:00
Buy

lid.....,. 2 101111, Hut
Pump, OU A.Wnlce, 1 Acre,

361D.

Wo,.o&lt;t oor- Door lnllotlor or

Young grllo - - SUlo lui
.... ltOodboonl. Db!. Hutcll wuth ......._.., Chul: ·Of
Dro-ro. Night Sllncl. COnd. eon: ·114-441·1581 Bet-1423oflor1Pin
11om IIIII lpm or • -

53

I

Eatlem Avan~, 114-446-8032..

apply · for educaUontl ..•1•

T.v.

114-258-1238.

$141.

Aaoa, SIII,DOD, 1~41-e381.

Sfyllll Wontod Fun Or Port Tlmo
For Buoy Shop, lnquhw AI:
Flnoll Styling Solon 13110

lance, and receive yQur monthly

w.-.

Dryw, R!frivlr!lor,
• - ..._ . . , Cokir

llel ot womon'o uood golf cfullo,

Orondo Loo.illon, Now Kh~hon
Now Roof, City SchOOII, 314

1875 mobllo homo, 3 bodroom. 2

r11llrement plan, ar. ellglbre to

APPLE COME FROM?

loul\drr

Rio

bath, goad oollllhlon, S40DD,
114-QV2-6251.
.

Join, ycu worll on o gcocf

.....-.

........, -hloo - • • oohool
In town. ~- anlloblo
11: Vlftoae~cirMii Apta. Ml or
oofi-4711.EOH.
211odroom, atnalo
fumlollod,
UII!Nioo
paid.
Rotor-· I -uriiJ doj&gt;ooft
roqulrod. 1114-77MOOf
BolCh St., llldd'"""\llo.Oh, :ztor.
fumlollod
""'· utA IIJ4.aZ.
pokl,
dopoafl a ,.,._,
25&amp;5.

52 Sporting Good.s

Mdl · Ou Hool. Now
Throuah Out. Now Corpot. 1-ton
c.nt. Air. ,,._.q..o,75 $8,850.00

Guard hu lmm.dlate opening•

,....,_.

-ponoy.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

for lndlwkluall with priOr
military eapttrlenca. When you

WfiERE'I7 THIS

: FRANK &amp; ERNEST

2bdmL ............ -trio, ....

And Lot · " - Down

Into. oall 21g..781- Ouollflod Buy•. 814-446-2957.
oxt WV648, flom.ipnl, s..... ,Pliny (lluon Co), 4bodroom
country homa w/appJe arc:hlrd,
3.3ocroo. 304.037~35.

The We .. Ylrglnle Anny National

.Building
Supplies

''MISSISSIPPI'~ ..

Rea l Estate

tioalqj"""""

.

I

55

£loy W_.l Exoellonl Poyl bt
Produoto AI Homot. Coli
Toll F - 1-..&lt;117o6811, Ell.

Gollll COinl, ILT.S. Coin Shop,
111 - - . Golllpollo.

Yonl Solo.- ZmiiM out
Clllrtl Chopol Rd. .._ "' vwy

~i~
..~
::

---1

GIVEN TODA'f' ..

Ringe, Sl- COinl, .loin tho long-t.m
llokl. 8Hidna Cortlflod Nunlna
Aalll..,. fiw ........ Nllloil
nurolng llollhy. ADIIIY Point
- : Good Uood Plono To PI-nt Nlhl!ll &amp; . Aihabll._,
-y,IM-24&amp;-aen
tlon eo,..,, Stota R...,. 12,
1, Bol 328, Point PI-nt
WV 251550. (A Glonmortl Mt .
ooclotoo Focllltrl EOE•
Ufo Guard appllelllano oro
Employm ent Services lltlng
·-plod lor London
Pool.
Sullmh
oppllcotlono,lnoludln~ trolnlng arid
u..-rllnoo lnformttlori. to
11 Help Wanted
Janleo Zwilling, Clarf&lt;.T,..ouror
AVON I AM Aluo I 8111rtoy Vlll.ooe ol SyrocUM Munlclpo1
luNcllng, l~rKUM, aiiO 41771 ·
~HW1S-1421.
Loool Foclqry Ou1!11
AVON to buy or ooll, Morlly~1 lndo!*ndent rop. 304-1182-26"'1 or Do to UpiMion '0 thla lfWII 1 tocal company hM aeverel
1-84o.H2-4WI.
pooNiono In AI up dlopfoy &amp;
Appllcollol\a A,. lolng Ao- MI'VIce.No IX~rilncl MC6o
coplod AI P~-- Cora~
.
••· 170 Plnec,..... Drlv.1 GaJ.. FICIOI)' Rocommoncfod Trolnlng
Upolloi&gt;Ohlo 45631 For Full Tlmo
Above Average Income
And art Tlra1 St1t1 Tntld llo.._nt Trolnlna Anlloblo
N•rotna Ao•lstonto. Compothlvo AU abOve to • - Wllo quoit,..
~a,
Dlfforontlol With Ell· 1300 ..-r - k lo llorl. u ..-r
- . Equot Opporlunhy wrltlon ogr"mont. Coli lor opployor.
.
polntmonl only. T.-y only.
COinl, Go1111

TO SPELL

BEST ANSWER '{OO'VE

1211:

lartyJ &amp; D.. Auto- a n d - buying~ outoo I
A L L - - - .. POIIIIIn tl\ldui:
tor-....__, DEADUNE: 2:00 """' 7T.HMI«
tho clly llollnlho od toto lUlL
Y odlllan • z:oo p.m.
.. ....,. onllqut and
, ....: llondop odlllon • 2:00 -uood lumlt""!,.!"'
..m too lotge
p.m. 8aturdoy.
or too omol. WIM bulo OM ploie
o r - IOUiu, Oob7-

I WAS TR'1'1N6

NICE GOING, SIR .. SHE
SAID Tt.IAT WAS TfiE

ProfHalonat
Sttvlcel

lllo-~

-

23 Paelflc l&amp;lencl
25 loroell airline
12 wdo.) .
2t trowel
30 Nerve -ork
32 Valle
33 Uncle
34 Aclr""
Perlman

.Gulliver
-travels the deck
By Phillip Alder

..... 114-81:1--. .

56 Ge.l

57 Slntcs In the
mldcllo
58 Before

17 Mine vein

South
0

Eom .. ..,. lltr. No To
- · Full/Pill Tlmo,
._
71Wt11111111 Rap.
.

!I,Op. Thuro, IIIII ftldor. N. No

53 Crk:ket
position a
54 Llrge birds
ss--lsay

-"

YardSale

·--ln-CIIyW.

·-

-t

52BamFI'M

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Wanted to

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

50 Wood

tK863
•Al054.

olww814-171-1111or-.t145

77W7110rJ04.~

Cdle

......

monl.
Nloo·Loolllon.
Avolloblo
With lUll
-

Buslneaa ·.

ctlon CD n...r.

•J 8 2
SOUTH
•A 10 8 3
'f3

Rentals
Wll .. - . , dop ohlft,
llglll .... . . . . ll _.. · - - - - - - - - ..-....-·~·1·
41 HoUIM for Rent
Fmanc1al
........ to low I IR.

_,

....

D

:t:l3::'11i
~
1811 ~- .. Col tor'::~ Ad, ~
tltl13 1141

~ mQng -:-~-I
-.

0

IE'I!IIAL 'JACAE . MJ!CFIL

.s

•Q742
•QJ09 5
• 10 9
•K Q 9

•

370nthl3t-Borgl ...
4tFIMnlng
ol4 Mletalta
46 Deny

• lood tor

EAST

•••,~~ ...... u..

· -..... Cil-1114

3

•

i

~0)

Financial ed IISk

:;.cpportuniltes wi ll surround you today and LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Dare lo lhlnk
~you might uncover ways to a~d 10 your b1g and proceed boldly Ieday If you .
·-rt:!sources or enha~ce your ea rn 1ngs Act e*pand your ohonzons, you ~U be c o~e
p ro mpt ly w hen y o u see the stgna l s aware of opportunlltes that prevtously
"'

- '"_

.......- ' - - -

ARIES (March 21 · Aprll19) It would
behoove you.loday 10 cooperate wrth oth·
ers. even II\OSe yOtr sometrmes feel you
ha\fe lo pampe r A pleasant surpnse
mtght result

..

..

�.·

)

Wednesday, lily 1O,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally SenUnel

J

Ohio ·Lottery

Reds cop

Pick 3:
263
Plck4:

fourth in

row 3-0

3490

Super'Lotto: 8-10-13-14·44 47

Sporta, Paae 5

.

Kicker:
899967

Low IOD!plla 4011, par11y
cloudy. Frld1y, partlyiiiUJ,
Hichlll~

.

FUND
RAISIN.G

I
.

.

Vol. 48, NO. 9

Copyright 1995

'

2 Sections, 16 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 11, 1995

County clears way for hospital .merger
By JlM FREEMAN
ing's functiOn, said Mei)!S County Prosecuting Atlorthey feel the hospital partnership is not living up 1o
One problem small hospitals face is attracting
Sentlnel news starr
ney John R. Lentes.
its end of the agreement
physicians. Lucas explained. The second problem is
County officials approved a revised lease ·.
The 'new lease is more flexible and covers all
getting them to slay.
Commissioners expressed concern over the future
'Wednesday afternoon for Jb~cterans Memorilll_ ~ types of health care .~ervices. The old.definition of
of the hospital's, emergency room"
--·
.
"A small hospital can' t.surviv.e.withouJ getting.
•Hospital building opening the door for an anticipated "ibe building's purpose bad to change for Holzer . . "We want to try to retain the emergency room forunder somebody's wing," he said .
·merger between the hospital, Holzer Clinic and Holz~linic and medical center) 1o enter, be added.
·
_ever. That's the last thing'we want to give up," Lucas
Commission President .Fred Hoffman agreed: "We
er Medical Center.
Lucas explained: "They intend to spend some
said.
all want to do what's best... I don't think there's any
The merger may be announced aS early as Mon- · money and don't feel able to .do so without those
other choice."
.
More than anYrthing else, the merger illustrates
day, VMH administtalor ~con Llleas said.
' changes."
·
health care changes throughout the nation.
,
'Ule merger will result in a better quality of health
The action came during a special meeting of the·
Under the new lease, the building, which is owned
With more insurers opting for managed care
care and in a better organized facility, Lucas said.
Meigs County Board of Commissioners and the
by the county, will be retained as a general hospital
options where .clients are directed toward a specific
"Our greatest wish is thaf it will be a big improve~ounty-appointed hospital board
for at least three years. In addition, commissioners
, ·
hospital, many smaller hospitals are finding it diffi- ' · mcnL..
The main difference between the .two leases is the
can cancel the lease following a 90-day notification if
cult or impossible to compete.
'.' It's a big move, but it's a move toward the
new lease contains a broader·defmition of the build•
future," he added.

•

1

M~igs

.---Helping hands---,

escapes
storm
damage
MARATHON

MARATHON

By staff and wire reporfs
J;&gt;espite beavy. downpour~ and
some high winds, Meigs County
was not severely affected by last
night's weather, according to Bob
Byer, director of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
About s.ix·tenths of an inch of
rain fell between 4-9 p.m. Wednesday, while winds gusted up to
about 25 miles per hour at 5 p.m.,
Byer said. lnfotmation was recorded by the county's Radio Amateur
Communication Emergency Sys-

992-3636
West Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

•

10 lb~ ea·g
* Vidal_ia Swee~
·Onions
.

•

·I

'

•

..

WASHINGTON (AP) _;:Retail
sales fell 0.4 pc;rcen( in_April, tjl~ second drop in three months and
new evidence of a slackening CCOO•
olny. Automobile sales posted the
largest drop in more than two
Y~S

..

'

'

..
•

•

,.i

I -

... .4i·

'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village officials vowed
to crack down on residents who are
delinquent in paying their water
bills at .the recent monthly council
meeting.
Individuals who refuse to pay
their water bills will be cited 1o village mayor's court, have meters
removed and then be assessed $40
to reconnect the service, Councilman Dick Fetty said . .
In April, 15 households were
delinquent for more than two
months, Village Clerk Sandy Smith
said. Tbc residents owe the village
more tban $7,500 in back payments.
Councilman Steve Jenkins said
people wbo refuse 1o pay their bills
will bave their water shut off.
"My question- is if they alreat:ly
got letters why continue wasting
their time and money by sending
them certified letters," Jenkins said.
"Shut them off."
Residents need to pay back fees
in full, be added. The village bas
about 240 water customers.
"If you mess with the meter
you' ll get fined ," Jenkins added.
In other business. Fields Construction Co. will be sent a list of

corrections that need to be finished increase the mayor' s· salary from
before the contract ends June I. $150 a year. For the last two years,
The warranty with this company salaric's were frozen.
ends one year after the completion
- listened to two Ohio Power
or the water project.
.
Co. representatives who stated they
In other infrastructure news. would not charge the village inslalcouncil learned the Ohio Depart- lation fees to turn its sueet lights
ment of Transportation will begin back on. The village street lights
paving State Route 124 lhrougb have been shut off for more than a
town as soon as July. The resurfac- · ·year because the village could not
ing project will be bid next month.
afford to keep them on.
Tbc annual Ph.il Dirt and The
- announced a community yard
Dozers concerl was a success since sale will be beld June 3, with food
the village cleared $770 after and icc cream on sale.
expenses.
- will purchase letters for tile
Council .thankcd all the area village sign.
businesses who helped sponsor the
Tbe village · li sted mayor's
event. The Columbus-bl)Sed g(oup reports at $1,504.
•
will return next year on April 20.
The ueasurer's repoit for April
In other action, the council:
included the following funds with
- learned the Rutland Ameri- balances: $33,216.32, ending balcan Legion donated $1,000 to pay ance; general fund total, $3,867.97;
for Jeffers Contracting to level and . general fund, $3,050.78; civic cenclean up .beneath the former Rut- ter. $1,755.09; law enforcement,
land High SchooL
· $187.33; street fund, $49 .09; state
- agreed to assess a minimum highway fund, $2,757 .06; wa1er
of $3,500 to pay for a simplex . fund, $2,162.18; water debt fund,
grinder pump and installation. A $1.700; sewer debt fund,
duplex would cost at least $8,500.
$14,75!.43; utilities deposits fund,
- fini5hed its application for $7.873.26; and replacement fund,
$13,141 in state grants to pave the $18,441.71.
streets surrounding the Rutland · The funds with deficits indudElementJ)IY SchooL '
·
ed: police fund, $937.90; and sewer ·
- tabled a motion that would fund, $132.

House bill will
Budget committee OKs
eliminate some
school mandates balanced .b udget plan

COLUMBUS (AP)- A bill the
House passed -unanimously will
free state education officials and
locai school districts from piles of
paperwork, its·sponsor said.
"Some people believe )Ve have
gone too far. Others believe we
have nbt gone far enough. But
today is imporlliJII because we are .
going farther than we ljave ever
gone before," Rep. Randy Gard-·
ncr, R-Bowling. Green, said
Wednesday.
Gardner said his bill, which
passed 98-0, will give districts. the
state Department of Education and
State Board .or Education a break
from meeting some mandated programs.
It would .free school districts
from, certain requirements dealing
with financial audit~. competency-.

based education, proficiency test·
ing, school breakfast programs,
business advisory councils, mentor
teaching, and distributing annual
•
·
. reports.
· The state board no longer would
be required to annually inspeCt
teachers that are under the control
of the deparonents of Human Services, Mental Health, Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities, and Rehabilitation and
Correction.
The Department of Education
would not be required to analyze
information on new education programs and would not have to
·approve student activity programs. - '
How much each district or agency would save will vary, Gardner
said.
··
-

Po me.roy Merchants. discuss.
Heritage
Weekend
agenda
.
·
Activitie~ for' Heritage Week·
0
d IO
di
·•A

nd J ,

adjusted $192.6 billion. down from held in the Bank One conference
SI93.3 billion in March, when
sales ·advanced 0.8 percent. They
parade at }():30 a.m. under tile
bad fallen 0.7 percent in February.
direction of Toney Dingess will .
Many analysts had expected lit- !ticll off the program. That will be
tle 'bange in the April sales figure followed by music on Coun Street
for several reasons, including slack by the Meigs High School Band
auto sales.
and the Bend Area Community
Car dealers reported a 2 percent Band.
decline during April that erased a
At II :30 a.in. on tho courthouse
1.3 percent gain a month earlier. It lawn a time capsule on the 175th
was the klrgest drop since a 2.5 Anniversary of Meigs County cclepercent plunge in February 1993.
bration will take .Place. Patriotic
Excluding the auto componen~ selec;tions, bric( comments from
sales inched up-bnly 0 .1 perceJ!I, · members of the Anniversary Com·
compared with a 0.6 p~rcenl' mittee, displays of the coverlet and
increase in March.
other commemorative items will be
Other signs of a slowing econo- , feat~red. Refreshments will be
my recently have included shrink- served following the ceremony.
.-ing housing starts and homc'sales,
Court street will be' lini:d with
drops in the in~ex of leading eco- craft exhibitors, according to
nomic indicaton, weak employ- Dianne Lawson, chfiirman, and a
ment figures and fulling factory variety of entertainment will be
orders.
'
'
presented early- afternoon . The

WASHINGTON (AP)- House
Republicans won a first vote early
today on tlieir plan to slash the size
of govcrnmen~ reduce social-weifare prbgrams and usher in a lialanced budget within seven years.
Defending the GOP proposal
against Democratic charges that it
would bring inordinate suffering to
the weak , the poor and the old,
House Budget Committee Chair·
man John Kasich, R-Qhio, said the
blueprint would require fair sacrifices or all Americans.
''It is across the board, and I
think it's shared and- ! think it is
something the American people
will accepl," Kasich said prior to
the I a.m. ''otc.
Rep. Bob Walker, R-Pa., challenged ·Dcmocrats 10 stop picking
apart th e Republican plan and
come up with their own ideas for
balancing lhq budget. "I've heard a
defense oTt1carly every govefriment spending program known to
man,'', he said during day long
debate Wednesday.
·

Democrats fired back, wilh the
White House leading the charge.·
''The Republican budget is
wrong for working families, it is
wrong for the elderly, it is wrong
for the economy and I think ·it is
wrong for the country," said Leon
Panetta, president Clinton's chief
of staff.
· The Budget Commillee vote
was 24-17 10 send the measure to
the full House. Only Rep. Mike
Parker, D-Miss., a conservative
who helped Republicans craft their
. blueprint, broke party ranks ·,o vole
for the measure, which would trim
some $1.4 lrillion over sc_vcn years
from expected spending in order to
bring the budget into balance for
the first time since 1969.
The Scnalc Budget Commiuee
was close behind, racing to finish
work on its budget plan today .
Doth budgets are scheduled to
move · to the floor for general
debate next W\:Ck.
The Sena1c proposal. putt\lgcther by committee Chairman Pete

Domenici, R-N.M., differed mainly
by not factoring in a $350 billion
seven-year tax cut promised by
House Republicans. The Senate bill
would reduce projected spending
levels by $961 billion.
·
There arc also some major diefcrenccs in tlle details- the ·House
version, put together by Kasicb
would tcnninate the departments of
Energy, Education and Commerce·
the Scna1c bill would li-ill only
Commerce. Kasicb targets 369
agencies, commissions and oftices
for elimination; Domcnici 100.
Bu1 they concur in relying on
savings from Medicare, Medicaid
and welfare programs for reaching
their lowered spendin~ goals. and
that's what infuriates Democrats.
. Republican~insiot that spending
levels for Mcdtcare and Medicaid
actually will go up substantially
bctwectl now_and 2002 . hut
Democrats co ntend that' those
increases fall Shorl of the am ounts
needed to meet mllationary" pressores. an aging society and growing
demand for tlle proerams.

duck derby will bi staged at 1 p.m.
Th
I I h been Cl" "
beascompletedtmal-t '
s· .
a meeting set for June 7 at 8:30 •
.
·
·
•
·
a.m.
·
·
-·
· ~Status of the-ro.vilalization proWASHINGTON (AP) - lnfla· report, believing .that the economic · the y-ield down to 6.94 percent.
jcct for downtown Pomeroy was lion at the wholesale level shot up slowdown will tend Jo motlcratc
The overall 0.5 percent increase
.dis'cussed with some indicating by 0.5 percent in April, the biggest fulure. price pressures . The rcpQrt it\ wholesale prices followed no
work on their buildings is under· increase in five months. But anotb. on retail sales followed news last change ~~ aU in March and 0.3 perway.lt was noted that construction . cr. report today showed a steep Friday lhat unemployment shot up ,·cnt gatos 1n both January and
bids have not yet been taken on tbe plunge in retail sales, suggesting to · last month to 5.8 percent
February.
parking lot promenade or· many analysts that a slowing ecim"We have an economy that bas
For the year, wholesale prices
amphitheater.
omy would keep price pressures in slowed markedly, but Wf! arc still arc rising at an annual rate of 3.4
Members were asked 10 deco- cbeck.
feeling the delayed price effects percent , While that is a big jump
rate their windows for the. alumni
The Commerce Department said from the earlier raJlid growth," from the 1.7 percent intTCasc for all
reunion weeken-d, May 27·28. that retail sales fell for the second said Robert Dederick, an economist of 1994, many analysts said the
Pomeroy banners. will be' put in time in the last three months, a 0.4 at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago.
growing signs of a slowing econoplace by the village, Councilman percent drop that was led by' the
"These reports are telling us my would help to moderate price
George Wright reported. Wright biggest decrease in auto sales in that the economy is making a soft pressures in coming months. .
also reported on the ne,foot two years. ·
landing,'' said Cynthia Latta, an
Donald Ratajczak, dirccior of
patrolman in the village, an(J"tbe
The Labor Department reponed economisl at DRI-McGraw Hill · the foreca~ting unit at Georgia
test wells for water wbicb have ·that tbe Producer Price Index Inc. "We have a slowing economy. State Univer~ity, said be was actu·
been put down in Syracuse.
.
surged in April at the fastest rate but not a sick economy."
ally reducing his it\'Oation forecast
It was voted 1o make a dOnation this year, driven higher by a sharp
The bond market took today's fw- .the. year because of this slowof $50 toward the rent of the build· turnaround in energy prices.
bad PPJ figure in sU:ide. A! mid- down, predicting that wboleule
ing for the Meigs County Chamber
Analysts said they were not mornmg, demand fpr Treasury's prices will rise by 2.2 JICn:ent .
of Commerce.
overly concerned by the bad PPI benchmark 30-year bond pushed

Departll)ent1131~.d~-:,Pomeroy
w:~:s:y's
;,;~~~fngs~rs~
-spnl;an:~s·~Wcl.sll
Merchants
Association nateFed,.qnal~~

roo;

,

""'

COMFORTERS TO COMFORT • Meigs County Coul"lrative
Parish members are helping the homeless, victims or fires and the
less rortunale wllb a special program. Tying comrorters is a pro·
jed now underway at both the Parish headquarters in downtown
·. Pomeroy and The Maples,- a senior citizens housing complex on
Mulberry Heights. From the left, seated, Helen T. Smith, Leona K.
Roacb, and Polly Curtis, tie a quilt as Mary Louise Rinehart looks
' .
"
on.

Commerce
The s~les
to~ay
totale~ a seasonally

/ Match Your Donation Whic·h
Will Be. Sent To The Shriners

Club For Crippled Childre~.
*"While Product Last"

April reta~l
sales down
0.4 per~ent

~-

"

Q

said, adding most of the worst
wea()ler including a tornado warning slld to the soutbeasl.
The Reedsville area bad a power
outage between 5-9 p.m., while
momentary power outages were
noted across.the county, Byer said.
Hale storms were sighted in
Portland and Langsville, be'added.
At I0:08 p.m., a car was reported in the water off State Route I43,
emergency reports staled.
.·
· Middleport and Pomeroy vii·
!ages reported minimal damage
because of the weather.
Across Ohio
Lightning killed a man in northwest Ohio and high winds damaged
a mobile home and ·a freeway construction site as spring storms
rolled through the state.
David Morrow, 49, of Cleveland, was struck by ' lightning and
killed about 1:15 p.m. Wednesday
as be walked to his car from the
Sandusky River where he had been
fishing near Fremont, pohce Capt.
Steve Dillow said.
_
Attempts to resuscitate him
were'unsuccessful and be was dead
on lirrival at Memorial Hospital in
Fremont.
'

,

.

.,

"I tllink we lucked out," Byer

Purchase 8 Gallons Of
Premiuni Gasoline And
Make A DOnation Of $1..00:
Or. More To The Shrin·ers
Club Crippled Children's
Fund And -You Can Receive
A 10 Lb. Bag Of
~Vidalia,- Sweet Ocnlons.
Riverside Food mart w ·i ll. Then
I

•

tem.

...

Rutland officials .to crack
down on water bill
violations .
....

ln~la"

•

tl•on-.J·um"p
"• 0 5 ,·n Ap~,-~-~-

'

'

•

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