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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Nebraska
captures
NIT crown

Pick 3:
715
Pick 4:

9330

Buckeye 5:
12-15-17-20.29

Sports, 'Page 4

Cloudy tonight, low In
40s. Saturday, cloudy.
High In 601 .

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VOl. 46, NO. 233

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• 35 cenl8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 29, 1996

2 Sectlolltl, 12 I'IIIJM

A Gannett Co. Newapeper

Gov. Voinovich wants economics
to determine set-aside eligibility
Proposes awart;ling 10 % of state contracts on need instead of race

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AFFIRMAnYE ACTION- Senate Minority Leader Ben Epsy, left,
argues w~ Mike Dawson, spokesman for Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich, in a hallway outside a meeting room where the gov•mor wa11 holding e news conference .about affirmative action
Thursday' In Columbus. (AP)

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APRIL 1996 PROUDLY lARKS OUR 16TH
AS PAlT or THE PODROY BUSJDSS COIIUIITY AID A
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By TOM HUNTER
sentinel News Staff
Majo'r highways throughout Ohio
will soon \le evaluated for possible
·;lCed limit increases under the state's
uew speed iimil law. with four-lane
sections in Meigs and Galli a counties
to be evaluated within the next year,
Ohio Departmenl of Transportalion
officials announced Friday.
"All four lane highways in the
stale will be evaluated for possible
speed.limit increases. Only highways
which have interchanges, or on and
off ramps, will be evaluated at this
time," said John Dpwler, deputy
director. of Ohio Dcparlment ef
Transportation District I 0, Marietta.
Only four sections of four-lane
highways in the District 10 nine·
county .area currently qualify for
possible speed limit increases.
The four sections include US-35
in Gallia County, from Kanauga to
Thunnan; US-33 in Hocking County, from Haydenville to the Logan
rest areas; the US-SO Athens bypass;
and Interstate 77 lhrough Washinglon
and Noble counties, which already
has a posted 65 mph speed limit
The new speed limil law, which
toi!k effect February' 29, gives stale
and local officials until June .28 to
coAduct traffic studies to evaluate
exisling speed limits on freeways
wirh inlerchanges. ·
Local officials will conduct the
studies in incorporated areas, while
ODOT will conduct the siUdies in

rural areas. If eligible highways are
not studied, the speed limit will
automatically increase to 65 mph on
June 28, Dowler said.
All other four-lane highways in
the slate- lhose with a four-way intersections- will also be studied for pos·
sible speed limit increases, but not at
this time.
"The other four-lane highways in
the state, including those olhers in
District 10, will be studied wilhin the
next year," said Nancy Yoacham.
public information officer with
ODOT District I0.
The other four lanes to be studied
in Dislrict 10 include the State Route
7 bypass in Meigs County, and State
Route 32 through Athens County.
These studies wiII be conducted by
summer 1997, Yoacham said.
The study of the State Route 7
bypass will include th~ new 2.25 mile
section, scheduled for late summer
completion.
The new law gives ODOT the
authority to set speed limits al 60
mph in some instances, or remain at
lhe present 55 mph. Two main ·considerations in cvalualing speed limits will be accident rates and roadway
features."Just because a highway is
not studied does not mean the speed
limit will be raised 10 65 mph,"
Dowler said.
Dowler ad!Jed that new speed
limil signs will be set in Dislrict 10
as soon as the studies are completed.

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WASHINGTON . (AP) - Congress gave final approval today to· a
historic fann bill, which would end
the ingrained link belwcen fann
prices and govern men I subsidies that
has prevailed since the De!;'"'ssion.
"Fanners will finally j&gt;\ant for the
market and not .for the government,"
said Senate. Majority Leader B,ob
Dole as the Senate voted 74-26 for
the bill Thursday.
The House passed it 318-89 early
today in a posl-midnight session.
Speaker Newt Gingrich called it "lhe
largest refonn in the system in 60
years."
The bill went to the White House,

panics panicipating in the set-aside
program that do not meet the new
guidelines. And once the new slandards are in place •.companies would
be eligible to participate for only nine
years.
"The state should nol be in lhe
business of subsidizing successful
businesses," he explained.
To bridge the gap until the Legislature acts, Voinovich issued two
orders designed to improve the syslcm .
One requires that all Cabinet-level agencies continue trying to recruit
and hire mmorities and women in all
job categories. It also orders the
Department of Administrative Services to improve its monitoring of
minority recruiting and hiring.
The other order requires the
department to begin identifying
minority businesses thai also would
qualify as socially or economically
disadvantaged under the new guide-

and President Clinton has said he
would sign it despite some reservations.
The ·massive legislation covers a
broad range of nutrition, environmentah specific crop and rural development issues.'
The bill ends federal subsidies
based on prices, a legacy of the
Depression, and instead offers guar-.
anteed bul gradually declining "mar..
kel transilion payments" over seven
years.
It also tenninates government
conlrols over what fanners can plant
or what fields must be left idle.
Rep. E. "Kika" de Ia Garza, D-

Texas, said the bill was not perfect,
bul it "addresses areas of concern to
rural America and ... the poor. It
addresses human needs."
•
Bul opponents 1ried to portray the
legislation as a m;u;sive giveaway.
Rep. Gene Taylor, 1 0-Miss., complained it would "pay people. seven
years to do nothing." Added Rep.
Barney Frank, D-Mass.: "This is the
biggest welfare program we have got
left."
The chainnan of the Sen ale Agn culture Committee, Dick Lugar, RInd .. said, "The importanl lhing
about this bill is the unleashing of
American agriculture to make more

money. Net income. for American
farmers will increase, generating
dynamic economic renewal in rural
America."

But opponents warned that the
rcfon:ns could leave fanners unprotected during times of economic
hardship and lead to excesses.
"Farmers will not even be
req.uircd to plant a crop in order to get
the government payment . I have a
very hard time defending this as a
wise expenditure of federal dollars,"
said Sen. Herbcn Kohl, D-Wis.
Critics warned of an early windfall for fanners and increased govContinued on page 3

Parental rights school bill clears House
COLUMBUS (AP)- The House
has passed a parental rights school
bill that backers said was far less
comprehensive than they originally
wanled. Opponenls said it still was
fraught with unknown costs and legal
problems.
Represenlatives voted 67-25 on
Thursday for the legislation lhat
would make it easier for parents worried about curriculum to inspect the
kinds of books and other instruclion·
al materials schools use.
Parents, who already may keep
their children out of classes dealing
with venereal disease, could also take
them out of classes dealing with such
subjects as homosexualily and contraception.

The bill was one of three lhe
House apprQved dealing with education. The others would:
-Let dislricts require students tO
wear school unifonns. Rep. Randall
Gardner, R-Bowling Green, won pas·
sage on a 91-1 vote. "School uni fonns may not be right for every
school. but every school ought to
have the clear right to school unifonns ," he said.
- Let schools extend lhe length
of a student's e~pulsion under cenain
circumslances. The House voted 7814 for the bill that Rep. William Taylor, &amp;-Norwalk, sponsored.
All three bills now go to lhe Senate.
Rep. Michael Wise, R-Broadview

Heights, said the parental rights bill
was a shadow of the legislation he
introduced . It would have required
schools to oblain parcnlal consent for
children to attend certain courses.
lnSiead, the revised bill would
require the Ohio Dcpanmcnt of Education to prepare &lt;~ pamphlet each
year explaining parental rights under
Ohio law.
"That's it. No new rights. No
parental pennission before schools do
anything," Wise said.
But other Republicans won
approval of amendments that would
expand the definition of public
records to give parents access to all
inslruetional materials used in class-

rooms, and to blank copies of proliciency tests once they had been
administered.
Rep. James Jordan, R· West Liberty, won approval of an amendment
that he said would clarify an existing
law· that gives parents a right to
exempt children from classes on
venereal disease.

Jordan said such classes now go
beyond disease to cover contraception , homosexuality and other sensitive matters.
"This amendment simply ciarifaes
that parents not only have that right
to exempt their. children from venereal disease education but that also
applies to any other course dc~ling
with human sexuality," Jordan said.

Meigs Local students take part in diverse arts program

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Residents in the ·area of Middleport's South Fourth Street are proba·
bly wondering where the loud bang·
ing sounds have been coming from ,
during
the afternoons over the past
·ton's prospective rival, Senate Majortwo
weeks.
The sounds are only those
ity Leader Bob Dole.
of
the
students
at Meigs Junior High
Republicans accused the Democrats of political opponunism and School, who have been laking part in
a unique cducalional experience.
partisan attacks on Dole, R-Kan ..
Students at lhe school have been
Clinton quickly expressed disapworking
wilh Yvetta, a Cleveland
pointment at the Democrats' setanist,
who is the guesl instrucarea
backs in the House and Senate and
tor
of
a
cultural
program which
blamed Congress' GOP leadership for
incorporates
dance,
drum
rituals, and
barring effons "to give 10 million
song,
from
every
aspect
of
global culAJ11ericans an immediate pay
ture.
increase.,.
"It's been interesting lo get lhese
shy people lo get up and dance. We
want the students to feel positive
about Appalachian culture, Meigs
County, and themselves. This is one
of the areas we have 1ouched on
through this program," said Yvetta.
Recipienls ·between ages 65 and
The lwo,week program is pan of
69 lose $1 in Social Security relire- the Ohio Arts Council's "Anisls in
ment benefits for each $3 they earn Education" program, _which is in its
above the limit, which this year is second year at Meigs Junior High.
$11 ,520. There is no limit for people
"We've been reall~ t'onunate to
70 and older.
panicipale in this pro3nu\l. The kids
· Affecting nearly I million people,
have really had a great' time working
the House bill would raise the limit with Yvetta, and it has been a great
to $12,500 lhis year' and to $30,000 educational experience f9r them,"
by 2002.
said teacher Amy l'emn. ·

·Proposed minimum
wage
hike
rejected
.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Taking a
jab at his likely eiCClion rival, President Clinton is accusing Republican
leaders of hurting working families '
by opposing Dcmocrals' effons to
force a vole on raising the minimum
wage.
Those efforts failed again Thursday. bu1 the minorily Democrats in
Congress promised to continue try'ing. They want to keep the issue alive
this election year and challenge Clin-

''If you add more people to the
pot, you should broaden the pot, "
said Senate Minority Leader Ben
Espy of Columbus. "He's not talking
about doing that."
Espy also was angered that Democratic ' taffers were forced to wait out·
side the conference room while
Voinovich was speaking. An argument between Espy and Voinovich
spokesman Mike Dawson threalened
to disrupt the 'news conference until
the two men moved out into lhe hallway.
Espy did not disagree that the currenl set-aside program was not working properly, but he differed with
Voinovich on how to fix il.
"I think the program under his
leadership has been a flop because it ·
has not been properly monitored, lhe
data collection has not been good."
Espy said.
Voinovich also recommended a
one-year transition period for com-

Congress OKs historic tiJfm bill

Plan highway study
:for proposed. speed
·nmit increase in area

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COLUMBUS (AP)- The state ity vendors lasl year went to just 5
needs to retool its minorily conlract percent of the eligible enterprises.
Blacks and others typically con·
set-aside program to protect it from
opponents of affinnative action, Gov. sidered the victims of discrimination
would be presumed also to be socialGeorge Voinovich argued.
Voinovich on Thursday proposed ly or economically disadvantaged
· that the state award contracts on lhe under the new program, Voinovich
basis of economic need rather than . said.
The proposed changes still need
race.
"There are a lot of people who approval by the Legislature but could
don'tlike these kinds of programs," open doors for women, people wilh
disabilities and people with
VOinovich told reponers.
And because of a growing number Appalachian backgrounds.
"What we propose is a new sysof legal challenges against racetern
that, while still assisting those
based government programs, he prominority
groups that traditionally
posed aw~ing I 0 percent.oQ( state
contracts on the basis of economic rtceived state supp.ort, reaches out
need and social disadvantage instead and also includes deserving others
who have been left out," Voinovich
of race.
The state now sets aside IS per- said .
The plan. modeled after a program .
cent of goods and services contracts
and 5 percent of construction con- administered by the Small Business
Administration, was immediately
tracts for ll)inority businesses.
However, three-fourths of the criticized by members of the Ohio
$225 million the state paid to minor· Legislative Black Caucus.

Yvctta is an artistic director of the
Coordinated Arts Program, with lhe
Neighborhood Centers Association in
Cleveland. The program is a multicultural, multi-arts program, that services over 20 centers lhroughout the
Grealer Cleveland area, and features
over 42 artists/instructors of various
disciplines
"In the program here at Meigs
Junior High, we've incorporated sev-

eral cultures and disciplines into the
work, combining them with suggestions from the students. It has really
been a great experience for myself,
along with the students," Yvelta said.
· Among her credils, Yvetta cowrote and pcrfonned in the critically acclaimed PBS series "Panorama
of African American Theater." As a
director and producer, she has won
numerous awards and citations
· two cable ACE awards, the

American International Film Festival
Bronze Award, the San Mateo Film
Festival Gold Award, and a special
commendation from the Ohio House
of Representatives.
The program al the school has
involved all the students, particularly those in core groups during and
after school hours. The groups presented a perfonnance of their work to
the public at the school Thursday
n

Seniors will be able to
earn more under new bill
.' WASHINGTON (AP) - C'ongress voted to reduce tbe penally on
bc;nefits of Social Security recipients
who continue working afte~ age 65.
The measure, part of House
.Republicans' "Contract Wilh Amer_ica," was packaged with an increase
in· ;the federal debt ceinng passed
Thursday. President Clinton was
expected to sign the packase 1oday.

,

MEIGS ARTS PROGRAM· Meigs Junior High
School students perticlpllld in a drum exer-

clle during en Ohio Arts Council-funded program et the school earlier this week. The twoweak, multi-cultural program focuaed on

)

1epects of song, dai)C8, and other cu1tur111 ,
8rll81, end wa1lnltnteted by visiting artist lind
performer Yvetts, of
Huntlrll entlnel Photo)

Cleveland.

(Tom

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�Frklly, Mlrch 28,

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~-~ ~otrimenta

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Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

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Frtdlly, March 29,

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Satunlay, March ~

Ex·iiJV-e~tigator' lights

The·Daily Sentinel

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'Est:aDlislitii in 1948
111 Court St., Ppmeroy, Ohio
114-982-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

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A Gannett

..2r
co:

Newspaper

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

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CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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.Letters to the editor

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Must keep VMH
Dear Editor,
We surely should keep our hospital, Veterans Memorial.
Wheri my son-in-law, Joe Poole,
was attacked by a swarm of ground
hornets. he was left grasping for
breath. My daughter, Martha Poole,
rushed him to Veterans Memorial's
Emergency Room, where he was
immediately treated and began his
recovery. Martha said she doubts he
wou.ld have been as fonunate to

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recover like he did, had he been tak-

By Jack Andenon
and Mlctleel Blnattln
WASHINGTON -- The Food and
Drug Administration is giving its critics a dose of some familiar medicine. ·
Like the beleaguered tobacco
executives with whom they .are at
war, FDA officials are trying hard to
silence a former colleague who's now
speaking out against the agency. But
so far they've only managed to add
fire to a controversy that both sides
would like to end.
Just two years ago, Jim Phillips
was one of the government's most
feared gumshoes. As chief inve~tigator at the FDA, Phillips was a key
player in agency probes of breast
implants and blood safety. Phi,llips
.came to FDA at the insistence of his
old colleague, Commissioner David .
Kessler, with whom he had wor.lced
on the staff of Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah.
Kessler has been one of Washington's most celebrated-- and criticized
-- bureaucrats since taking over lhe
FDA in 1991. Appointed during the
Bush administration, Kessler quickly angered conservatives by taking an

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business " and misplaced priorities.
He has left do~ns of heated voice
mjlil messages for his former colleagues, criticizing them for failing to
stand up to Kessler. He's also volunteered his expertise to the House
Commerce Committee, which has
spent months inves tigating the FDA
on several fronts. Phillips wort.. for
the House Banking Committee,
which has no jurisdiction over the
FDA.
Under increasing criticism from
·Phillips and others on Capitol Hill,
the FDA made Phillips a persona non
grata. His calls weren't returned, anjl
his letters wen_t unanswered. Eventually, the FDA took its case to Democ-rats on-tlie House Banking Committee in hopes of 'putting a stop' to
Phillips' pestering phone calls.
Democratic staffers then approached
Phillips' J,osses on the Republican
side, who saw nothing wrong with his
activities. It.was this kind of persistence, in fact, that initially endeaml
Phillips to Kessler. ·
When quiet diplomacy failed, the
FDA took its case to the media -including this column. s clme highranking agency officials ponrayed
Phillips as a tool of the tobacco indus' try -- a c~ thai Phillips vigorously
.denies. One agency official mock[ingly nominated the lifelong non[smoker as "nicotine's man of the
year."
' · Phillips maintains that his crusade
against the FDA has nothing to do
with favoring cigarettes and everything to do with fixing long-standing
problems at the agency.
"My anonymous c'ritics • from
FDA say I oppose Kessler's curbs on
Joe Camel and other cigarette ads
aimed at kids," Phillips told oiu- associate Jan Moller. "Wrong. Philosophically, I favor the curbs on vending machines, but I worry about
divcning the 30 to SO FDA field
investigators that Kessler says would
be needed IO police the,machincs."
Repeated phone calls to Kessler
and FDA spokesman James O'Hara
went unreturned.
In the meantime, ·Phillips remains
undaunted. "The so-called 'Phillips
Agenda' used to be the Kessler agenda too," he told us. "Until he stopped
at the 20-yard line."
·
Jack · Anderson all'd Michael
Binstein are writers for ·United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

aggressiv~ stand oa several hig~-p!'Qfile regulatory issues.l'llillips bc!clme
one of his top lieutenants-- a troubleshooter whoSe years of experience as

when Kessler rejected his advice to
focus lhe agency 's resoun:es on tta·
ditional concerns .. rather t~an tak·
ing on an all-consuming crusade like
tobacco regulation, which has drained
Jack Ande S
FDA resources. By mid-1994,
·Phillips says, any discussion that didand
n'I deal with cigarenes fell on deaf
ears with Kessler. He began to fear
M/chtie/ 8/nste/n that the emphasis on tobacco could
compromise the agency in other vital
a congressional investigator helped public health priorities.
the agency cut through red tape. ,
I Frustrated, Phillips-left the agency
A picture from 1993 show Kessler in July 1994. Not long !lflerward, the
and Phillips standing arm in arm. sparks started td fly. A Sept. 3 letter
"Jim, thanks for all you've done -- from Phillips to Kessler sums up his
David," reads the inscription. , ' concerns:
. That relillionship has now gone up
"David, the scenario that frankly
in smoke, as Phillips has become one worries me is this: A•eontaminated
of the FDA's most vocal critics. shipm~nt of a bulk drug ingredient
Since leaving the a~ency for a job on comes in from China. A pharmacy
Capitol Hill, Phillips contends that , with a drug compounding marketing
several imponant issues bave been component (really a small or medi-.
neglected in- favor of'Kessler's cru- urn-sized illegal drug company) buys
sade against tobacco. These days, this shipm~nt and people die,."
Phillips refers to Kessler. as the
When his co~cems continued to
''l oundbite man" and speaks· deri- go unanswered, Pllillips escalated his
sively of the agency's "cigarette criticism. Several angty letters were
police."
..
sent to Kessler and other agency offiPhillips says his frustrations began ci~ls complaining of "unfinished

By

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enfanherawayfurtteatrnent~the
r-------------~------------------------------------------------~--~--------,
time of the accident.
Consider the lives of those who
will need immediate he1p. Consider
ihe need of a hospital if Meigs County is to grow economically. Consi_der what could happen to any of us
who might need immediate care.
Let's keep our hospital.
Nellie Parlier
Pomeroy

I UNDeRSTAND
VOU WERE
INSTRIM1ENTAL

YES.M .

IN HELPING
YOIJRCOM81NYS

IWAS

LAID OFF:

STOCK

To RISE

Two ·front-runners
An AP News Atu~lysis

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Never was there a more classic case of a presidential front-runner undone than that of Edmund S. Muskie, tbe Democrat who
looked like a sure thing - until he ran.
Ironically, while Muskie's fall is remembered in farewell salutes, a Republican who led the field as he did, and stumbled just as swiftly, stands atop
his party; the White House nominee in waiting. .
• . ·
Sen. Bob Dole managed the feat Muskie could not, proving that there is
a way back to the top, even for a politician who has been there and fallen.
Actually, Dole suffered more embarrassing early setbacks than Muskie
in the initial contests of 1996. He lost outright where Muskie won the first
of the primarie~ of 1972. But Muskie's standing slipped for lack of a major• ity in New Hampshire; Dole lost outright to Pat Buchanan, and it got worse
- he lost two more pnmaries to Steve Fortces. and was front-runner no more.
But while Muskie's 1972 strength eroded, Dole's was in reserve. He
changed campaign advisers, the competition moved into states where he had
supporters with organizational strength and he not only came back from
defeat, he swept the rest of the GOP field away.
He'd won 25 states in a row, crowiU'd by California on Tuesday, when
he declared, redundantly: "I am the ~~p~blican ~ominee."
In .1972, Muskie hung on until the Democratic convention before confessing the obvious, and ending his long-dormant candidacy.
.
A different kind of competition, differing strategies, the compressed
schedule of primary elections were among the reasons Dole was able to rise
again as front-runner. Muskie never could. He was an active candidate for
; only six weeks in 1972, dropping from primary competition although he did
• not withdraw outright and endorse Sen. George 'McGovern until the con'
.
, vention that summer.
•
Muskie,like Dole. was the pollsters' favorite, the name everybody knew
• arid, it seemed at first, the consensus candidate ..Their initial strategies were
: noi dissimilar-compete e~erywhere as national candidates instead of pick: ing target states, reap endorsements from governors, senators and party lead: ers, emphasize trust and proven performance.
·
Indeed Muskie, senator from Maine, vaulted to national prominence as
: vice presidential nominee in 1968 and as a leading party spokesman in the
; 1970 campaign, urging voters to choose the Democrats' "politics of trust"
; over Republican resorts to fear.
.
•
But as a campaigner iri his own cause, he tended. to talk like a senator,
: offering lengthy, intricate discourses on the reasons for action, to the dis: may of image advisors who wanted him to give a quotable summary of what
: he proposed to do.
• And in Senate eulogies ~fter his death at 8·1, the descriptions of Muskie
, and his style sounded not unlike things said of Dole in this campaign, at
· times not only of, but by, Dole.
.
He was called a model of what a senator should be. "He was a man who
,: got things done," said Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., a legislator with a
.: grasp on the intricacies of the task,
::
"He was a senators' senator," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
;·
In the crowded Democratic primaries of 1972, Muskic tried to run as a
:~ man of the center- his own dcscriptiQn - while the vote was being carved
:: away by candidates to his left and to his right.
·
_
Dole had faced something-like that with Buchanan coming from the nghl
•:
··• _ now the only rival remaining although he concedes the nomination to
;: the Kansas senator -- and Forbes waging his negative television advertis:: ing barrage.
.
. , . ·. .
,
When Muskie was runnmg, hts cnttcs sa1d hts campatgn had no theme,
•,
: no blueprint for the future, only a slogan, "Trust Muskie."
:~
Just as Lamar Alexander said Dole's was a campaign without new ideas,
:: a Buchanan line. too. Now all but Buchanan have quit and endorsed Dole.
·:
In the Senate tributes, there was only oblique mention of Muskie's lost
:. campaign. " He had a temper that verged on the volcanic," said Sen. Joseph
:: R. Biden Jr. , D-Del .. " and he was capable of weeping public tears over an
;• insult to the wife he loved."
.
•:
That was a reference to a New Hampshire campaign day Muskie chnked
: ; with emotion in denouncing a newspaper article critical of Mrs. Muskie. Dole
:• has a legendary temper, too, but this campaign he's kept it in check.
In his eulogy, Dole called Muskie a 'patriot who made America better.
::
•:
A generation ago, the Republican national chairman had def1.ounced the
~: Maine senator for "a sorry spec~le ... bad•mouthing the United States."
·
:• The chairman was Bob Dole.

Schools w9rse, .or' studen.ts dumber?
By William A. Ruaher
The National Association of
Scholars made a major splash recently when it released a study of curriculum changes in the 50 schools
identified by U.S. News and World
Repon as "America's Best · Colleges."
The association 's survey compared the curricula offered by these
institutions at four separate points in
time: 1914, 1939, 1964, and 1993.
For example, the number of mandatory general education courses fell
sharply: on average, from 9.9 in
1914, to 6.9 in 1964, to 2.5 in 1993.
Thus, composition requirements
administered by En,glish departments
existed in 98 percent of the colleges
' in 1914, and in 86 percent as late as
1964 -- but had fallen to 36 percent
by 1993. The percentage of institutions with literature requirements
fell from 57 to 38 between 1914 and
1964 -- then to 14 by 1993. In mathematics, the comparable percentages
were 82, 36 and 12. As for the physical and biological sciences, 86 percent of the-colleges had mandatory

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JtoCI.~Y..in .hi~torv!:;.,_/·

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scare over Sputnik) -- only to collapse, along with•everything else, to
34 percent by 1993.
In ad~ition, the survey found a distinct fall-off in "the rigor of such
requirements as survived'lilll993. As
late as 1964 three-quarters of all natural science courses requireil some
laboratory work; by 1993 the figure
was down to 30 percent. In 1939 and
1964 more than half of the schools
demanded a thesis or a comprehensive examination of every student
receiving a 'B.A. degree; by 1993
only 12 percent still did. The academic year itself sank from between
191 and ~04 days in the earlier years
to just 156 in 1993.
What is the explanation for this
collapse of academic standards? Most
of ihe news reports of the suryey that
I have seen tend to agree with the

stein.
But, since after all they wen:n'tlittle Einstcins, the only solution was to
dumb down the colleges in which
they enrolled. The major impact has
been on lesser institutions of "learning," some of which today will graduate students who have majored in
basket-weaving or lesbian studies.
B.ut the top SO schools (save for a
minbr fraction) have been affected
too, by a sort of "trickle-up" effect
Don't forget that it is only becau51! a
Republican governor (Pete Wilson)
vetoed it that California's proud university system isn't today compelled,
under a law actually enacted by a
Democrat-controlled legislature at
the behest of Speaker Willie Brown,
to confer degrees in the same.ethnic
proponions as the students it admits.
We had better get our system of
higher education back under control
before it spirals downward completely out of sight.
WOllam A. Rusher is a Distin·
guished Fellow of the Clare.-t
Institute for the Study of States·
mansblp and Political Philosophy,

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William A. Rusher

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by 1939,then curiously rose again to
90 by 1964 (probably because of the
boost science courses got from the

NAS itself in placing much of the
blame on ''the late 1960s and early
1970s when th~ rage in higher education was a radical libetarianism
based on notions of 'relevance' and
the assumption that a special insight
belonged to youth."
No doubtthat is pari of the explanation, but I think there was some-,
thing else going on. The truth is that,
beginning with the G.!. Bill of Rights
enacted after World War II, and
above all when the baby-boom generation began reaching its late teens
in the 1960s, the Amcrjilll education
system threatened to split iis seams.
· Unprecedented numbc~ of youngsters, well aware that college degree
was a passport to better c111ployment,
swarmed into the univC~;Sities. Unlike
almost every other ml\jor nation on
earth, America had no "two-track"
system that wquld allo~ highly qualified students, selected on merit, to
pursue an advanced education, while
most sensibly settle f~r vocational
training. In our egalitarian tradition,
every slack-jawed child had to be
regarded as potentially ·a little Ein-

Easter finery has a long l)istory

By George R. Plagenz ,
If you think it would do you any
good, you might explain to your husband that there is nothing frivolous
about buying a new Easter outfit. It
actually has a long-standing religious
significance.
If that doesn 't make him feel better about spending his hard-earned
money (or yours) to make you the
grandest lady in the Easter parade,
remind him that it once was said a
curse wourd fall upon anybody too
stingy to shell out for new Easter
clothes.
The practice of getting new East'
er finery dates back to the early cen~
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mean, vice pt:aident and i=ol~m- tunes. In his "Easter Book," Father
:~. nllt for'l)e ~ ~ ~ rep,orted 011 Wu~ and ullon· ·Francis X. Weiser says, "As the newly ba~tized Christians wore white
lllpol-formore-·,leyan.
~"
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garments
of new linen, so it became
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a tradition among all the faithful to
appear in new clothes . on Easter
Sun&lt;!iy, symbolizing the 'new life'
that the LQrd, through his res~11 PtliH ~ . . f 99. ,The
. • ., .2,71?dar , -ft. tion,liestowed upon all belieyers."
I
i• J'c!dey •.~. 'Man:h29, the 89th day o. I . 6., _ re~ · ys e
This,custom. acconlirlg .to Wei~.
~,_
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:•was
wi~prea4 ~urilli' rliedievil
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'tpihtlaht ill History:
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times. .In many pl~~:es '!a popular
' : ~ \ Q\1 Mardi 29, 1973, the last United Stales lfoops left Sou!l1 Vtetnllll, end- supersJition t~ned with,ill. luck
• ~ 1q •.t.....;,.••s direlct military involvCQICnt in !!Je VietMin W11. 1 • ,.,
all those who could alf&lt;ir!lto buy new
· ::• . ~~-;.......
•
•
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il
cloihes for Easter but ref!t~ to do
~
VII ..... ~.
'r
J
,·,
'• ' Ia 1638, Swedish colonQI$ rettled in pment-da) ~la~n, , ~: ·
so.
il ,
•. 1111190, ihe J()djlpreaidetJlOf abe United s._, Jjlllt.;Jylef,
born in .
"In many a_modCill funily, the
lnldltion of I!CW Euler clothes is pera.ta city Countv, v-.
·
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course~ in 1914; this dropped to 72

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haps the one and only Easter custom .
God keep you healthy, sane and
It is an age-old custom: handed
1
that is faithfully followed."
strong.
down from pre-Christian times, to ear
The origins of many of our EastSickness and stonh$.and all other the meat of the pig on festive occaer customs are lost in history. While harm
. ;.
sions. Weiser explains that the pig has
the symbol of the lamb is easy to
B~ far from beast and folks and long been the symbol of good fortune
identify (Christ is "the Lamb of God farm.
among European peQPies.
that taketh away . the sins of the
. Now give us,eggs :,.- green, blue
In Germany, a popular expression
world"), what about Easter eggs? and red.
'·
,
for good luck is "Schwein haben" (to
And the Easter bunny? And how did
If not, your chicks will all drop have a pig). In Hungary, the highest
ham become a traditional Easter dead.
1
~ard (ace) · in card games is called
dish?
·
As for the Easter bunny, its origin "pig" (diszno): Piggy banks carry out
Weiser traces the Easter egg to the . lies in pre-Christian . fertility lore. the ancient symbolism of good luck
Indo-European races. TQ these peo- Rabbits were the most fertile animals and prosperity.
pie, the Boston College professor our forefathers kri~w. Weiser ·
Easter, with tis proof and promise
says, "it was a most startling event to explains.
' ·
of immonality, . is the Christian's
see a new and live creature emerge
"Tiley served as sytpbols of abun- ''good luck." So we eat ham on Eastfrom a seemingly dead object. The dPnt new life in spring. In many sec- er Sunday.
egg to them became a symbol of tioits of Germany, the.£aster bunny
Georp Pla1eni is a syndicated
spring, which ~merged from the dead was believed to lay red eggs on writer for Newspaper Enterprilf:
.
of winter. In Christian times the egg Maundy thursday anif'eggs of other Aaodatioa.
. had bestowed on it a religious inter· colors the night before" Easter."
pretation, becoming a symbol of the
'rock tomb out of which Christ
emerged."
Ten years ago: Ae~ io Rome acquitted three Bulgarians and three nirks
Since eggs were one of the foods
of~~
they'd con5R!red to .murder Pope John Paul II inl981, citing insufdnce .forbidden in Lent, it-became an
ficaenl
~vtdence,.
'
.
,· .
oCcasion of joy 011 Easter to be perFive
years
ago:
Political
strategist
Let
Atwater,
who'd
helped
propel Presmilled to ~f llggs again. Consequently, egg~w re painted in bri11ht ident Bush to. his 198l election victory, died at age 4o of complications result·
ing from a brain tu!lldc. G,cn. H. Norman Schwarzkopf publicly apoiogiUd
~9lon and w.~re .given as Easter gifts
to
President Bush for_~uestioning his judgment about calling a ceaae-fi~ jn
to fiiends, e•pecially children. ·
the
GutfW•.
.
•
Weiser q~ ~~ little Auslrian ~
·
Oile
year
aso:
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1!oHouse
of
Representatives
rejected,
227;l04,
a
cbn·
song sung by children as they went
stitutionll amendment placing term limitS on lawmakers. (The rejeCted pro.·
around seeking Easter eggs:
We sing, we sinJ the Easter song: posal would have limi,ted terms to 12 years in the flou5e and Senate.) ·

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Minor injuries were reported by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol in a two-car accident Thursday at the intersection of
state routes 7 and 124.
·
Injured were drivers Phyllis I. Johnson, 4S, 40943 Parle Road, Shade,
and Katrina K. Anderson, 18, Raci ne.
'
Of the two, Johnson was the only one transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS, where she was treated and released. ·
Troopers said Anderson was eastbound on 124 at 7:54 a.m.-when
she pulled from lhe stop sign at the intersection with 7 and collided
with Johnson 's southbound car.
·
Damage to both vel)icles was moderate, the patrol reparted. Anderson was cited for failure to yield and no operator's license.

Clar-a M. Follrod

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into the ·FDA

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Two injured in intersection crash

AccuWeathe... forecas1
MICH.

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The Dally Senti~ • P8ge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IToledoI 52'1 I

Clara M. Follrod, 94, of Alfred, died Thursday March 28, 1996 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 10, 1901 in Coolville, she was the daughter of the late Henry and LuEllen Carleton Barnen. She was a homemaker, a member of the
Alfred Grange, and attended the Alfred United Methodist Church.
She is survived by three sons and daughters-in-law: Richard C. and Margaret Follrod, Clair E. 'and Osie Follrod, all of Pomeroy; William H. and
Rose Follrod of Athens; a sister-in-law, Nina Robinson, with whom she
resided; four grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, and several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded i~ death by her husband, Rayt,nond Follrod; two brothers: John and Harry Barnett; and an infant sister.
Services will be held Monday, II a.m., at the White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Sharon Hauseman officiating. Burial will follow
in Coolville Cemetery.
Calling hours for friends and family will be observed Sunday, from 3 to
9 p.m.• at the funeral home.
W. 'VA.

[Sunny Pt.=

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A Middleport man was slightly injured in a two-vehicle crash Thursday on SR 681 , the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
David W. Haggy, 57, Happy Hollow Road, was not treated at the
scene, the patrol said.
Troopers said Haggy was eastbound in Bedford Township at 5:25
p.m. when he stopped for a pickup truck driven by Paul N. Smith, 4Q,
40512 Park Road, Shade, that was backing westbound in the eastbound
lane.
Smith's pickup backed into Haggy 's pickup, causing severe darnage to Haggy's vehicle and moderate to Smith's pickup.
Smith was cited for improper backing.

Peggy Webb Sayre

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Ice

Minor injury reported .in accident

· Cloudy
.

, .;..Today's w~ather fore.cast
. By The Auoclatect' Pniu

chance of__ !hunderstorms. Lows
Southealtem Ohio ·
around 40; m the north to the upper
'th
ba
f 40$ SO\Ith.
.
· : Today._..Cioud! wt . a,~ nee? ·· Suftday...Showersandachanceof
_: dnzzl~ this momtn~. High. tn lhe mtd thundersi'?J'DIS. Highs in the 50s.
• SOs. La~ht and vanable wmd. .
Monday...Fair. Lows in the u~r
.Tom~t. .. Mostl~ cloudy. l..i&gt;w 40 . 20s 10 the mid 30s. Highs in the u~r
· to 45. Ltght ~~ wand. .
30s northeast and in the 40s else~aturday ...Panly cloudy and where.
.
· warmer. with ~ 30 percent cha~ce of
Tucsd&amp;y...Fair. Lows in the 20s.
. showers I~ to the .day. Htgh tn tbe Highs 35 to 4S.
' mid 60s. '
•·
Kicltyka updated to change the
Extended forec:ul
wording for the overnight period.
Saturday night ...Showers and ·a .
· ·

Peggy Webb Sayre, 50, Wilkesville, died Wednesday, March 27, 1996 in
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Born Aug. 2, 1945 in Radcliff, da~ghter o( the late Orville Ray "Jack"
and Bernice V. Zinn Webb. she was co-owner of Sayre's Grocery,
Wilkesville.
Surviving are her husband, Danny B. Sayre; three daughters, Kammy
(Eddie) Frye of Rodney, Penny (James) Cox of Creola. and· Bridget (Keith)
Henry of Wellston; four grandchildren; two brothers, Paul Emmett Webb of
McArthur, and Jerry Dean Webb•of Columbus; and two sisters, Gamet
Lawrence Webb of London, and Glenna Ruth Webb of Columbus.
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Herbert Everett Webb; and
a sister, Lulu C. Webb.
Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the Garrett Funeral Home, McArthur,
with the Rev. A.B. Maloy officiating. Burial will be in the Salem Center
Cemetery. Friends may call at the f~eral home from 4-8 p.m. today.

Three cited to county court
Three people were cited to Meigs County Court on charges of disorderly conducted following an incident on Homer Hill Road off state
Route 143 near Harriso'nville, according to Meigs County Sheriff
· James M. Soulsby.
Cited were Lyle Bruce Hanning of Hanning Road, Kathy Jo Stanley and Charles Stanley, Gibson Ridge ~oad .
They are to appear next week in Meigs County Court, Soulsby said.

None injured in accident
No injuries were reported following a two-car accident on state Route
7 Thursday around 3:30p.m. in Chester.
Raben M. Laughery, 18, Rice Run Road, was southbound driving
a 1991 Nissan and struck a 1987 Dodge Charger driven by Keith A.
Arix, Chester, who was stopped in traffic to make a left tum onto state
Route 248,_according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depa'rtment report.
Damage to both ,vehicles was listed as moderate.

Guards suspended
after mock hanging

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)"It's something that cannot be tolTwo Cabell County Jail guards who erated and cannot be condoned,"
were suspended after allegedly pre- 1\dkins said.
Sgt. Gary Lambert and Officer
tending to ·hang an inmate say the
'
, By The AIIOCiattd Press
peratures were seasonal with early incident was just a joke, authorities Steve Rickman on Thursday were
suspended with pay pending coUnty
• Rain will exit &lt;the state today but · morning' readings in the 30s across said.
However, Sheriff Ollie Adkins and federal investigations, Adkins
gray skies willlinges until a new high the north and 40s in the far south.
said
he does not see the humor in the . said .
pressure
system
brings
clearing
skies
The
record
high
temperature
for
1
· Mike Tlf'omas, head of the Hunttonight.
·
today was 83 in 1910. The record low incident in which the guards plated
ington
chapter of the National Assoa
rope
around
the
f1!80'S
neck
and
tied
Lows will be in the 30s in the was 14 in 1887.
ciation
for the-Adv~ncement of Colnorth, with some 40s in the far south.
Sunset today is 6:53 p.m. Sunrise · it to a pole while his hands were
ored
People,
said he believes the incicuffed behind his back .
.iLUlshine will return to the state on Saturady is at6:18 a.m.
dent
was
racially
motivated, and the
The inmate, whose name was
. Saturday, but it will he short-lived as
Across the nalioll
moisture increases·and a cold front
Snow fell on Salt Lake City before · withheld, was all right, Adkins said. guards should be prosecuted for civil rights violations.
approaches. Showers and perhaps a daybreak, and patchy cold drizzle lin. , thunderstorm will spread into the gered across much of the Northeast.
state Saturday night and continue into Ch,icago .was 39 and cloudy.
'
. . Sunday. !'fighs Saturday will warm
Rain changed over to snow across
. . into the middle 50s north. and 60s Utah overnight and blanketed Salt
· across ·,he south. Highs on Sunday Lake City with I to 3 inches of fresh
. , will be a bit cooler with 50s to aroond accumulation. ·
· 111e State Highway Patrol will be "None for Under 21" campaign
A snow and sleet mixture will be
60 across the state.
especially
vigilant starting Monday in aimed at reminding teens it is illegal
While . rainfall amounts were possible on the East Coast today, with
main!~ light this morning, some parts flurries possible along coastal areas a month-long enforcement effon for them to consume alcohol.
"A statewide educ11tion and
of the south near the Ohio River from Massachusetts to New Jersey aimed at reducing highway crashes,
awareness
campaign is now undersaid
LL
Wayne
~cGione,
commanpicked up -up 10 balf II). inch. :rem- ._ !Jcfore p~ipitation tapers off:
der of,the patrol&lt;• Q~llia-Meigs Post. way which will attempt to educate
The effon will also target younger our youth on the dangers of drinking .
and driving," McGlone explatned.
drivers, ·McGlone said.
.
·"The
enforcement component ts
"Traffic crashes are the -number
- &lt;;pLt1MBUS (AP) - Indiana- 45.50. .
one killer of out'. nation's youth and designed to convince those who may
Sows: under 500 lbs. steady to
Ohio direct hog price~ at selected
April's enforcement blitz is specifi- not heed those educational mesbuying points Friday by the U.S. weak; over SOO lbs. mostly steady.
cally aimed at reduci~g youthful dri- sages."
U.S . 1"3, 300-500 lbs . .32.00· Department of Agriculture Market
He said troopers will focus on
35.50;
S00-6SO lbs. 34.50-40.50. • ver crashes, principally near prom reducing alcohol-related crashes,
.News:
a11d
graduation
time,"
be
~aid.
Boars: 25.00-30.00.
Barrows and gilts1 steady to
The effort is an integral pan of the decreasing overali highway s~eds ,
For the week: barros and gilts .50· weak; demand light to moderate on
and increasing safety beh compliance
1.00 tower; sows under 500 lbs .. 50- EMS logs 7 calls
a moderate run.
rates.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 46.00- 1.00 higher; over 500 lbs . .50-3.00
"Although we are focusing on
Units of the Meigs County Emer48.00, few 45.50 and 48.50; plants higher..
gency
Medical'
Service
recorded
sevyouthful
driver violations, it should
Weekend preliminary estimated
47.50-49.50.
•
be
stressed
that all drivers should
en
calls
for
assistance
Thurs(!ay
u .s. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 41 .00- receipts: 40,000.
including two transfers calls. Units obey . our traffic laws," McGlone
said. "We want to ensure a safe Ohto
respOnding inclujled:
MIDDLEPORt .
.
.
for everyone."
8:03 a_:m., s!ll(e Route 7 and 124,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic motor-vehicle accident, Phyllis JohnBoosten to meet
son and Katrina Anderson, refused
The Eastern Athletic Boosters Temple.
treatment;
will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m., at the
11:14 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Racine
VUI~~&amp;e
Council
· ·Eastern High School cafeteria. ElecCenter,
Francis Kearns, Pleasant
Racine
Village
Council
will
hold
.;lion of new 'officers will take place.
Valley
Hospital;
its
regular
meeting
Monday,
7
p.m.
·All interested parent11 are urged to
1:31 p.m., Sopth Fifth Avenue,
at Star Mill P11k.
attend.
'
Arthur
Skinner, Holzer Medical Cen.
ter;
FOE Auxiliary
Spec:ial meeting dated . .
Fralemal Order of Eagles Auxil- POMEROY
· Rutland Village Council wtll meet
9:42 p.m .. Laurel Cliff Road.
illry
2171 !"'Ill meet Tuesday, 7:30
· ·in special sessiQII Monday, 10:30
Christopher
Lee, Veterans Memorip.m.
witll
a
potluck
at
7
p.m.
·
a.m. to discuss personnel matterS.
al HospitaL
TUPPERS PLAINS·
Easter program set
Masons to meet
I0:08p.m., state Route 681 West,
1 "We S~l See Jesus", an Easter
· Midclleport Muonic Lodge 363
Angela
Edmond, HMC.
F&amp;AM will ·meet in regular session program will be presented at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, Main
.
'
Street.
' Rutland, Thursday and Friday,
.
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7 p.m.
Veterans Memorial
Thursday
admissions - Belinda
IIJSI'II213-MII
Lane, Middleport.
Pllbl•hed ...;y oflaroooa. Mooday IIIIOqll
Thursday discharges - none.
Am Bt Poou ar ........... ~.........41·,,
Friday. Ill, Coon St. ~- Olllo., _, ""'
Holzer Medical Ceater
Ollio Valley PIII&gt;HJI&gt;ina ~-Co.,
Alczo .................~ ....................55'4
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. I'll.
-21.16. Dischii'JCI
March 28- Allison
Aatdand 011 .......................... ·-"
ATAT ...... ~..............................60~
Jeffers, Ruby Baer, Helen Thompson,
' " ' ' - poid .. """""""' ()No. .
a.nk 0rte .:............................31\
-btn
Pre....... ""'I*&lt;&gt;
Wilma Smith, Garnet Straight, Robert
Bob Ivana ..............................15\
New Pl$ .Aoocllllon.
McNerlin.
.........................~1,4,
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Brian
• P081'MA.STIR1 Send addml Wuoc:don• to ,lorg-'1/eri'llf
Champion
lrM:I
.........................17
The Dolly S.ntl.. t, Ill Court St.. Pomfty,
Conley, son, Patriot; Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio45769.
Ch8= $NIP · """"""""..:.5\Dwayne Houck, daughter, Gallipolis;
S~RATD
Mr. and Mrs. William Hupp, daughI Mogul .......................
GMI'tllt
•..•
.:.
...........................
ter, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Richard_
..l.
Ooe ................................................$2.00
Qooclyear'TlR ......................51'1.
Martin. son, Gallipolis. ,
One ,...................................................... $1. 10
K-mart ................................lii.t.YJ.
One v................................................. SIOI.OO
(Publilbed with pennisslon)
Laltdl End .............................17'f.:
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.Cloudy weekend forecast

Patrol to launch accident
reduction effort on MQnday
.

Today's livestock ~eport

Two begin prison sentences
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department transponed two
prisoners to the Orient Reception Center, Orient, to begin serving sentences imposed by the Meigs County Coun ·of Common Pleas.
Transported were Holly Mullins, 29, of Detroit, and James R. Hannan, 25, of Pomeroy. Mullins was given an 18 month sentence by
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill for his role in the breaking and entering of
.Your Neighborhood Lender in Pomeroy. He had failect to return for
sentencing and was returned recently by Sheriff James Soulsby.
Hannan was given an 18 month sentence for passing bad checks.
A 3S-year-old Middleport woman, Teresa Alderson, was previously
sentenced on a related charge and Soulshy said a warrant has been
issued for another woman who has fled the area.

.Congress passes.c::tinued from page •
emment spending in the coming year
as the guaranteed subsidies are calculated on the basis of recent high
farm prices.
Backers argued that the plan
would save $2 billion over the next
seven years from projected farm
spending of $48.8 billion, and that
with guaranteed payments farmers
would be able to better budget for the
future.
The compromise plan agreed on
by House and Senate negotiators last
week meets some administration

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._Meigs announcements

The Daily Sentinel

demands by keeping the current food
stamp program going for two years
while Congress works to overhaul the
welfare system.
·
It also sets aside $200 million to
protect the Everglades and retains the
Conservation Reserve Program that
pays landowners to keep environJ11entally sensitive farm land out of
pr&lt;JPuction.
The bill creates a special rural
development program sought by the
administration and allows rescamh
_programs to continue for two years.

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~D31ST
AT THE

DDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
FIFTH &amp;MAIN

Come worship the greatestfriend eVe1j
.Jesus Christl .It couitf maR!, a aifference in your Cifeforever.
Worship -1:15. or 10130 am
Sunday School- 9130 am

�The Paily Sent~~~

~sports

.

t:' · Frkllty, March 29, 1996

,Page4

f

...... Final week

.Nebraska win~ title; Tu·lane gets third

:~ By The Aaaoclated PI'MI

•

t::·

•

Nebraska (21 -14) was physical.
"Moore has been unbelievable huskers, the fii'St team from the Big
The bumping and tenacity forced the the last · three weeks," Nebraska Eight to win the NIT since Colorado
Hawks (19-13) into 32 percent coach Danny Nee said. "We have to in 1940. This is the last season for the
shooting, including a combined 2- get some weight on him, but we Big Eight as it will merge with four
for-19 from the staning backcourt.
think he will be a big player for us." schools from the Southwest ConferThat style was just what worried
The Cornhuskers led 41-28 with ence next season to fonn the'Big 12.
St. Joseph's coach Phil Martelli.
16:36 to play, but the Hawks, playThe last Big Eight season ended
" We were fearful of them man- ing in front of 30 busloads of stu- disastrously for the Comhuskers,
handling us," he said. "They are big, dents who made the IOO.mile trip who closed the regular season by losstrong and tough and well-coached from Philadelphia, tied the game at ing 10 of 11 games. The NIT run salon defense. We felt t~ey would have 47.
vaged some pride and already stanthe advantage there."
St. Joseph's, which ~as never won
ed positive talk for next season.
It wasn't just the· guards, either. a national title in basketball, used a
"This is big," Nee said. "It's
Junior center Mikki Moore came up 14-2 run to draw even, with reserve
something never done before in I00
big on both ends ofthe court in .the . Terrell Myers scoring half the points. years. Believe me, it's a significant
.The run included an intentional foul
final·S 1/2 111inuies.
step.
•
The 6-foot-11 Moore gave the ·against Nebraska's 'l)lronn Lue that
"This was a year with three difComhuskers a 55-!19 lead when he turned into .a five-point play.
ferent seasons," he said, referring to
"The run took a lot out of us, but
dunked and was fouled. He missed
the 15-4 stan, the horrible close, folthe free throw for' the three-point we just didn't finish tbe game," said
lowed by the . NIT run. "I have to
play, but he grabbed the rebound, Townsend, who led the Hawks with give these kids credit for hanging in.
was fouled and made.two free throws 18 points. "We just didn't make the This couldr,l't be better."
big shot we had to."
with 5:27 left.
Especially because .it came in
Strickland made fpur straight free
Nebraska wouldn't score again
New York, Nee's hometown. ·.
until there were 40 seconds left, but throws in the final minute and Moore
"Wait until you see the'party I'm ;
Moore was there on the defensive added another with IS seconds left to , going to throw," he said,
·
end, blocking shots by Reggie seal the win.
Tulane, which lost to Nebraska in
Moore,
Jaron
Boone
and
Lue
Townsend and Rashid Bey that could
the semifinals, beat Alabama 87-76 ·
each added II points for the Com- Thursday night for third place.
have cut the margin to two points.

~·In the NBA,

.

"J3y The Assoc~ Press
1· Now that the Vancouver Grizzlies
·~ave tied the NBA.record for con·
secutive losses in one season, why
waste any time before breaking it?
'the expansion Grizzlies (11-57)
; '!irdppel! their 20th straight game
':'.fhutsday night, falling 92-88 at
~~orne to Denver. Tonight, they get to
"&amp;rab for solo possession of the top
' 'sp~l in league futility at Utah: .
"I think every time you lose it's
1:~;t:o hun," said center B.ryant
I!
Vancouver's No. I draft
,:~o~~~IB;·;·;A~fter a loss like 'this, it'~
:1
. draining for us, but we
to bounce back with another

game tomorrow."
/
The record of 20 losses in a row
was shared by the Philadelphia 76ers
(1973) and the Dallas Mavericks
( 1993). The NBA record for consecutive losses over two seasons is 24
by the Cleveland Cavaliers in 1982.
Vancouver also had a 19-game
losing streak this season.
.
"These are the dog days right
now," guard Greg Anthony said.

Cavaliers 83, Clippers 81
Terrell Brandon made a 16-foot
jumper from the baseline with 2.3
secorrds remaining. The Clippers
had tied the game on a three-point
shot by Brent Barry with II. I seconds left.
Barry made a three-point pfay less
than seven ~econds earlier to trim
Cleveland's lead to 79-78. Chris

... (Results as of March 20)
·· Lea~.ue - Early Wednesday
Tealn standings - Captain D's
:l7:Z-4ll), F.O.E. 2 L71 (72.-40), Thunmer.Jl.nev Cats (68-44), Tony's Carliivoul (66-46•), ' Meigs Coif Course

~~;~~~~~~~~~(42-70)'and
&amp; Roses (44-68),
R&amp;D
(20-92).
Te&amp;J!I.high series- Captain D's

..

high game- Captain D's
Men
Individual high series ,_ Roger
· • (545) and Bill Slack (539)
high game - Slack
and Carpenter ( 193)
·
Women
.]Jidlvidual high series - MarEynon (474) and Betty Smith

·'

lncllivilllual high pme - June
L189) and Eynon 0 70)

~~~:ov.kiris

CONTEST ·WINNER '- Tammy Zuapan of
Mason, W.Va. correctly listed all the NCAA
men's Final Pour lnma to win the $100 prize In
the Final Four _!lOilteat aponsor8d by Sinlth

Saturday'' • pmeo

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York at Orlando, noon
Atlanla ;II Bmton._l :JO p.m.
New Jc:r~~ey atlndnmn, 2:30p.m.
L.A. Lakcrs ut Tomnlo, J p.m.
L. A ~ CiiPJIIIf!i at Minrv:MMo. :u o p.m.
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TAKES AIM ..... Nebrallal center Mlkkl Moore=() lhootll oVer
tMmmate·Erlck Slrlckllnd (to-r left) and St 'J
'1 Merk Ben
(1 0) during the NIT championship game Thuraclly night at Mlldl1011
Squ- Garden, where the Cotnhuakers' 60-56 vlctoty gained them
their first..,.,. national crown. (AP)

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanlil: Division

.!! L I A

Iaa

N.Y. Rangen .....Jt121
Philadtlphia ...... Jtl 22
l'lorido ............... JK 21
Wushington ....... J~ 29
N&lt;w Ieney ......,J4 28
T•mro B•y ........~) 29
N.Y. hlonden .... 20 45

14 90

Gf !a

2~2

89 2-ttt 188

9

K5 2J9 214

10 110 209 IM8

12 80 19'7 179
II 77 217 229
K 48 2M 286

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l,~ 248
216 2:14
214 2~0
)4 169 262

4
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9
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7
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St. Loui• at Dteroit, 3 p.m. ·

list.

IU
114
79
69
6J

VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: Acri -

Tran sac tions

FootlNill

BuelNill

Nollottol Foalltoll . _..

\ AMII'Iean lMpe
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: 0111ioned

CARQLINA PANTHERS: .Re-liaited
Murk Dennis. offeuivc Iackie:.
INDIANAPOL~S

COLTS: Named
tminer.
'.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Sianed
Johnny Johuon. N:Gnina blli:k. to 11 lwoyc:ar connacc. and Mike Caldwell, ~~
f'CI:dver. and Marvin Popc.linet.da.
DaY~: WtllsiOn OdiSUIJII

pitcher, to Roehclter of the llilanational
Leque. A••ianed Kelrh Shepherd. pitc:her, 10 their mi~lcl&amp;uc: camp.
MILWAUKEE 8REWERS: Releutd
M•&lt; Jlloku, Cllchcr.

•Hockey .

VA=~~'~1~u&lt;!Ki Fired

WtsrERN CONFERENCE

Rick Lo~.

....

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13218 214

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vnted Erjc Mobley, ceMer, from the in·
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on tho ihjurallill.

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Dll111:... ... :........,24 J7 ll 61 '1ITI ~

~

and Keady
.receive AP men's
basketball honors

OENVER NUGGETS: Ploced Mahmoud Abdui-Rauf, Juaro,· oa tbe injured
list ..

Dollas ar Chicqo, 3 p.m.
Anoheim at San Jose, 6 p.m.
Ta,..a Bm} Ill W&amp;lhin&amp;ton, 1 p.m.
Winnipee at Colaary. 8 p.m.

Mark Smilh. oulf.elder, - ' Rick K.rivda,

. l'jO&lt;tlltoit DMilon

PiulburJh ........ JI5 2~
M...,.oi ........... Jll 29
· 8oslot1.. .............. ~5 ~
Hortlonl ............. .IO :14
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l•landm. ~p.m.

Pitllbui'Jh 11 Jlflrlldelphia, 3 p m.

I

coocb few lilt,..., of lite,..

victories and plays Tennessee in the
Final Four semifinals tonight.
Rizzolti also averages 5.8 assists
and three steals a game, and she has
three times as many steals and assists
as turnovers while handling the ball
constantly in Connecticut's triangle
•·
offense.
"But more imponanlly," Auriemma said, "unless you sit down and
watch her play. it's like saying does
John Stocklon belong on tbe Dream
Team when you've got so many
greal players? Is he Michael Jordan?
'No.
"But when you watch him play,
you realize the things he does that
affecl lhe outcome of the game
regardless of how many points he
scores. It's lhe same wilh Jennifer.
It's a whole combination of things."
Primarily, it's her competitivem:ss.' Rizzotti hates 10 lose at anything, even sprinls ai practice.
Auriemma says she has never lost a
sprint at any practice since she was
a freshman. Quizzed onlhat. Rizzotti
said it's true.
'
"I always figure 1ha1 in order 10
prepare yourself for game-type situations, you have to be in the best
shape possible," Rizzotti said.
"There are times in practice when
you feel lao tired to keep going hard,
but then I think, the better shape I'm
in, the more prepared I'll be."

· ~amby

CHICAGO BU,U.S: Plo&lt;edl.u&lt;: L.ooley. unter. on the injured li11. AcriY.IIIed
DSQll Ca«ey, forward, from the injured

209

I)

I

'

By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP)
Jennifer Rizzotti and Angie Lee arc
similar in many ways. They're
.intense, they're bright, they're cuigoing and .they're winners.
They shared more common
ground Thursday when they were
· honored as the best in the nation in
women's college basketball this season by Th~ Associated Press.
Rizzotti, .whose hustle, drive and
fire has kept Connecticut in the run ning for a second straight nalional
championship, was named lhe player of the year in voting by AP news paper members nationwide.
Lee, who engineered a dramatic
turnaround at Iowa in lier first season. was voted coach of the year.
As both received their awards,
two major forces in their lives looked
on and smiled - coach Gena
Auriemma of Conneciicut and former Iowa coach Vivian Slringer,
whose depanure to ~urgers las1
summer left the opening that Lee
filled.
Of Rizzotti, Auriemma said, "She,
has the greatest impact on the game
' of any player'in college baskelball."
; A S-foot-5 senior, Riztotti aver·
' ages a modest 10.8 points a game.
. But her value 10 the Huskies is measured more by results than numbers.
. Connecticut is 34-3 with 20 s1raight

Buketball

Boll:on at BuffalO, ~ p.m.

~'

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Bureau took a pass from Turner Stevenson,
who was behind the net. and sent the puck past
Bill Ranford from in close.
Ran ford saved Lyle Odelein 's rebound of
Mark Recchi 's shol 56 seconds into the overtime
period and turned back 26 shots altogether. Montreal's Jocelyn Thibault turned away 41 shots.
Stars 3, Mighty Ducks I - The Stars
revived their power play on goals by Brent Fedyk
and Todd Hatvey.
The Ducks failed lo gain ground on the eighth·
place Winnipeg Jers in lhe Western Conference
playoff race as Anaheim lost its ninth straight to
Dallas . Anaheim, which had gone 6-1-1 in its last
eight games entering Thursday, remained four
points behind Winnipeg.
Roman Oksiula was the Mighty Ducks' lone
goal-scorer and Guy Heben was strong in front
of the net wilh 23 saves·. Brent Gilchrist added
an empty-nel goal with 2.5 seconds left for the
Stars.
· Devils 4, Blues 4 - Geoff Courtnall scored
with 2:06 remaining in the third period for host
St. Louis. Counnall scored lhe second of his two ·
goals on a power play after taking a pass in lhe
slot from Wayne Gretzky, who had a goal and
two assists.
Dave Andreychuk scored rwice for the Devils.
The Blues, winless in their last five games,
los! leading scorer Brett Hull, who left afler playing one shift with a pulled leg muscle and will
be out indelini!ely.

play.... It's kind of a waiti ng game

now."
Pirates 10, Yankees 6
At Bradenton, Fla., Orlando
Merced and Mark Johnson each hit
tw o home runs and Pittsburgh
roughed up. Dwight Gooden.
Johnson was 5-for-5 while driving in 1wo runs, and Merced 4-for5 with four RBis. Gooden, coming
off his I 1/2-year drug suspension,
gave up eight runs and 14 hits in fiv e
innings, and fini shed the spring 0-3
with an 8.88 ERA.
Denny Neagle gave up four runs
in !he first, but held New York scoreless in the next four innings. He was.
5-1 with a 4.50 ERA in six spring
stans.
Atllletics 4, Giants 2
At San Francisco, Carlos Valdez
forced in two runs with bases- loaded
walks in lhe sixth. Jusl 7,574 turned
out on a cold, blustery nighl at Candlesrick Park.
Dave Telgheder,allowed six hits
in six scoreless innings as the A's
won their sixth straighl over the
Giants this spring.
Braves 12, Orioles 5
At Fon Lauderdale,. Fla.. Fred
McGriff homered twice and drove in
five runs for Atlanta.
Ryan Klesko also connected for
the Braves and Bonilla and Surhoff
homered for Baltimore. Allanla
starter Tom Glavine allowed ,lhree
earned runs and five hits in five
innings to finish lhe exhibition season 4-0.
Indians 9, Cardinals 3
At Nashville , Tenn .. Albert Belle
homered and Eddie Murray hit a
two-run double as Cleveland won for
the ninlh time in 10 games.
Ozzie Smith doubled and singled
for Sl. Louis. He laler pulled his right
hamstring, bul said he 'd probably
OK to play today.

Whitt Sox 4, RM&amp;en 3
At Nashville, Tenn., Kirk
McCaskill allowed one unearned
run in two innings for his flflt win il
1he exhibition season. The ChicliJO
staner had nOl pitched since Man:h
20.
PbWies 2, Blue Jays 1 (1.1)
At Dunedin, Fla., Paul QuantriU
pitched three-hit ball for six inninp
for Toronto. The Blue Jays, playinl
rheir final game of the spring in
Aorida, and Philadelphia called it oft'
after II innings.
·
Twins 7, Red Sox 6
At Fan Myers, Fla., Rich Becker, subbing for ·Puckett, homered ·in
the bottom of the ninth inning for
Minnesota.
Tigers 5, Royall 2
At Haines City, Fla., Bobby Hitginson hit a two-run double for
Detroit in a game called in the se.venrh inning because of rain.
Marlins 3, Expos 3 (tie)
At West Palm Peach, Fla. , Monlreal reliever Derek Aucoin struck
oul the side in the ninth and pitched
a hitless IOth before the game wss
called. Aucoin will begin the seaso1
as lhe closer at Triple-A Ottawa.
Padres II; Mariners 4
At Peoria, Ariz., Brad Ausmus'
home run highlighted San Diego's 11
hits. Darren Bragg and Russ Davia
homered for Seattle.
Brewers 6, Rockies 3
At .Chandler, Ariz., John Jaha
homered and drove in three runs for
· Milwaukee. Jaha has live homers
this spring.
Cubs IS
Chicago M.L. all·stars 4
At Mesa, Ariz., Jose Hernandez.
homered twice and Ryne Sandberg,
Sammy Sosa, Brian Dorsett aqd
Brooks Kieschnick each homered
against Chicago's minor-league allstars.

Rizzotti and Lee receive AP cage honors

Pur""""'

~ .....etWA

.,

In the NHL,

·~

·· By The Aasoctatecl Press
in the final 67 seconds of the period.
After scoring eight goals in two straight
The Penguins won despite being outshot 42games, the Pittsburgh Penguins were off-stricje at
23. Barrasso had a terrific night for Pittsburgh..
Aorida. That didn 't mean a loss, though.
"I thought we dominated !he first period until
.,. The Penguins were held to three goals Thursthe last lw·o minutes," Panthers coach Doug
. day night, which was enough because goalie Tom
MacLean said. "It's a shame that we didn't have
' Barrasso kept the Panthers to only two. The 3-2 ·
anything to show for it.
.~ victory gave Pittsburgh a four-point lead in the
"It's frustrating. To wind up with 42 shots,
.: Ea'stem Conference standings.
you would think we'd have more than two goals
:; . Mario Lemieux and laromir Jagr, the top IWO
scored."
scorers in the NHL, became only the second
Also Thursday, it was Colorado 8, San Jose
, teammates to both score 60 goals in a season.
3; Montreal 4, Boston 3 in avenime; Dallas 3,
·: Jagr also set a record for most points by a EuroAnaheim I; and New Jersey 4, St Louis 4.
pean player during one NHL season with 140.
Avalanche 8,' Sharks 3- Peter Forsberg and
The old mark was set by Peter Slastny, who • Joe .Sakic each scored two goals for Colorado.
scored 139 points for Quebec in 1981-82.
The loss ended the host Sharks' most successful
"It's an honor for me," Jagr said. "This is
·
undefeated streak of the season at 2-0-1.
something I wanted to do. I knew I was getting
Colorado. which Clinched the Pacific Division
, close to the record."
on March 22, has outscored its opponents 110~
Lemieux got his 64th goal and Jagr scored his
65 in the second period and is 37-1-3 when lead· 60th. Wayne Gretzky (73) and Jari Kurri (71),
ing after 1he second period.
: then with Edmonton, did it in 1984-85.
.
"It's very hard for any team to key on one
The Panthers finished 0-for-10 on the power
guy," Claude Lemieux said. "We've got a lot of '
; play.
scoring talent. I've got good scorers on my line
,(The difference in the game was basically our
who als~ get me the puck."
penalty-killing," Pittsburgh coach Ed Johnston
Jamie Baker's penalty shot bit the right post
said. "Special teams were helpful tonight, and
at I :51 of the first period for San Jose.
. that's what is going to make a difference in the
Canadiens 4, Bruins 3 (OT) - Marc
playoffs."
Bureau's second goal of the season at 2:07 of
Lemieux triggered a scoring blitz at the end
overtime lifted the Canadiens. Montreal has won
of the first period, enabling the Penguins to take
all four meetings between the teams this season
control of the game. He scored a power-play goal
and is in fifth place in the NHL Eastern Conferand added an assisl as the Penguins scored twice
ence, one point behind No. 4 Florida.

CUJ111.

Sundafs games

, NY. Runac:nwNY

.

.;ltOO
.4~7

.

..0

.-493

.m

New Jeney 111 Pi~sburgh, I :JO p.m.

land's Dennis Martinez last Sept. 28.
Puckett's status for Minnesota's
opener Monday against Detroit was
uncenain.
" I never had any problems with
my eye before," Puckett said.
" Everything was going great this
spring . But right now I'm not worried about opening day. My health is
the most imponant thing.
"The doctor said this could clear
·up in a day, a week or more. We
don't know. If I can't see, I can '1

I ,, Penguins get 3-2 win over Panthers

Petkov:o~r:k. pitchl!:rs. ilftd Mike Gallc:J.o.
inlielder on rhe 1!1-day dl111bled Iii!. Assigned Moll Morris. p11Wr, llftd Peroni·
mo Pena. inllelder. 10 !heir minor-leaaue

Morureul ot Odlllwa. 7:l0 p.m.
Tamptro Boy at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at EdR'IOIIon, 10:)0 p.m.

·

Hockey

. 22

.7116
.6)2

~turday's gaines ·
N.Y.. Itiohclcru Honford. I :JO p.m.

don't want to ro&lt;;k the boat."
Bonilla hit a two-run homer and
an RBI single as the DH in the Orioles' 12-S loss Thursday to Atlanta.
Puckett, meanwhile, was in Baltimore getting his vision checked at
the Johns Hopkins eye clinic.
The Minnesota outfielder has
been having trouble seeing in his
right eye. Len Michienzi said it was
too early to tell whether the problem
was Serious, but doubted it was related 10 Puckett's beaning by Cleve-

good third baseman, but we 'd like to
give some of our younger play«!fi an
opportunity to play the outfield on an
everyday , basis ." Johnson said.
"Bobby llvill eventually play the
field, but ·early on we want him to
play DH."
Newly, acquired Tony Tarasco
will stan in right field Monday
against Kansas City. B.J. Sumoff will
be at third' base.
"It's a little disappointing. bul 1' ll
do what it takes: · Bonilla said. "1

••
••

tiurto.: L.I Ric:~rdu Junbm and C:U"Im Craw·
l"on.l , llitcbcrs, to S~.:rantun - Wilkes-Bam:
(lithe hu.:rnational Lcazue . Ani1ned
Rick Wrona. cat chef, to Scmnlon.
ST .. LOUIS CANDINALS: Placed
Mike Muraan, Donovan Osborne, Mark

·

S::lO p.m

CLEVELAND tu Sacran~nto, 9 p.m.

21 '1:

Mldwnl lli&gt;blon

l!! L
lt·Sun Anronio ....... $1 IH

Van~:ouver.

Ponlood llt Dallas. 8 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iwn

u

;

PHILADELP lA PHILLIES: Op-

Winnipes 111 Edmo,rnon, 9: ~ p.m.
Clli~o:a,o at Var~couver. IO:JO p.m.

presents surprises for Bonilla and Puckett

~

MONTREAL EXPOS: Nomed Chri•

Philadelphia lit Buffalo. 7:10p.m.
Onawa :n Washington, Kp.m.
Los Angeles ut Ci11Jary. !UO p.m..

Sunday's games

Phoenht Ill Sun Antonio, 7 p.m.

4~

..,.

Ham100nd ge~l manaJer of West Palm
lk:w.:h or the Aori~Siate t...eaaue and toI.'OOJdinmor of sprin training.

Tonlpt's&amp;ames

p.m.

Ow-lout at

Toronro .................. l8 S I .261

..
•

HOUSTPN ASTIIOS :
the
I.'ODim.:l of Tyrone Nun,:i&amp;S(, pitther. froni
1hc Milwau~ Brewm.

CoiOOido 8. San lox ~

Utl&amp;h 111 Seaule. IOp.m.
CLEVELAND at Golden Stare, 10:30

JR

list.

The last week of spring training
has brought some sljfprises for both
Bobby Bonilla and Kirby Puckett.
Bonilla learned Thursday that he
won't be playing third base or right
field for the Baltimore Orioles on
opel)ing day. Instead, manager Davey Johnson has decided 10 stan him
at designated hitter.
"Bobby is very valuable to us,"
manager Davey Johnson said. "He'll
be our cleanup hitter all year long."
"He's a good .outfielder and a

=

, BALTIMORE (AP)•·- After
Three focus groups were fanned.
weeks of waiting and speculation, Two of the groups were strong NFL
Baltimore's NFL franchise is to get fans. The olher group considered
a name today.
itself casual fans.
In the best of all worlds, BaltiThey were asked a variety . of
more fans would take the name questions to lind oul what would
Colts. But barring that, most polls make a good name and what did lhey
d6ne in recent weeks favor thinli about specific names that had
"Ravens" in honor of wr\t,er Edgar already surfaced.
,
Allan 'Poe, who died in Baltimore,
If Baltimore were a car, what car
and his poem "The Raven."
would it be'/ A Jeep. What person
Whatever the name, it I is lhc •most rcprese.nts the community'/ Cal
resul~ of thousands of hounl of sift- . Ripken .
ing through ideas and testing the fan
The answers suggested Balti.'
reacuon.
moreans appreciated sturdiness oYer
Tl,le process of picking a name
nilS: . utility over aesthetics.
began in mid-February,. almost
They were played soundtracks of
immediately after a lawsuil settle- mock football games, with the
ment with Cleveland specified thai announcer trying out possible names.
the Browns would leave their name
One of the earliest conclusions
and colors behind.
.
was that if Baltimoreans had their
David Modell, the ream's marway, they'd get the Colt• name
keting
chief
who
coordinated
the
back.
Buick-Pontiac oi Galllpoll•. Standing with Zu•
name
selection,
sat
around
a
table
. They found Admirals too stuffy,
pan are Smith IS·P nleaman Bob Cook (left) and
with
officials
of
NFL
Propenies
in
Lancers
lao wimpy, Banners too dull
Smith B·P generel manager G,..g Smith. (OVP
·
New
York
and
pored
over
lists
of
and
Bulldogs
too common .and
photo)
hundreds of possible names.
Bombers too militarislic. Marauders
The group came up -with a list of had a nice Mrong feel to il, but was
17 names, from Admirals to Steam- hard to spj:ll.
ers. Marauders and Americans also
Ravens, however, was a consiswere popular candidates.
tent favorite.

PinSbufJb 3, Aorido 2
New Ieney 4. St.l...oui!l 4 (tie)
Dalllll ~. Anaheim I

Portland 01 Housron, 8:30p.m.
MihlfiSLim: at Oenwcr. 9 p.m.

Aili:ntk IHwWon

Ioll
.!! '·
tll-tlrlundo
.............. ~2
II!
;New Yurk ............ ..40 2M

•"

.

The 81 points were il season low
for the Clippers.

Monlreal 4, Bailon 3 (OT)

Miami ul Detroit, 7:30p.m

" : EASTERN CONFERENCE
~

,,
"
''

Mills gave the Cavaliers a threepoint lead with _two free throws
before Barry's three-pointer.
After Brandon's game-winning
shot, all the Clippers could manage
was a despenjtion shot by Barry from
the backcoun thai didn't come close.

Thunday'sscores

L.A. Clippers at Olicago, I p.m.
Philudelpbio a1 Washmatoo, 7:30p.m.

NBA sa.ndings
'

:r

Baltimpre NFL franchise
to . receiv~. name
·today
.

Bowling
·results

~

''
:. ·

.

·i·G·rizzlies drop 20 straight; Cavs win

The Dally Santtuel • Pagl I

. On baseball's spring training scene,

Friday, Mat:eh 29, 1!196

In the NIT finals,
'&lt;:8y JIM O'CONNELL
!': . NEW YORK (AP) - The
&lt;;:f'lebraska football team should be .
. fi,Sroud - especially the defense.
"We played physical with them,"
' Comhusker guard Erick Sttickland
.:::Said. "We didn't let them come off
t:::picks without getting a bOdy."
;:·r · The bumping and tight defense
••h~lped power the Nebraska basket'(l'ballteam to the National Invitation
• Tournament championship Thurs-.
· day night, defeating St. Joseph's 60: .;~6 at Madi~on Square Garden.
'~'Where the Husliers' football team
:t'has won the last two championships,
this was the basketball team's first
national title in tho I00 years the
· "school has been playing the spon.
~; "I really thought about that when
·lhe game endC!I," said Strickland, ·
who was named NIT MVP after finishing with .13 points and six
""rebounds. "We won a national title.
Jo "We know it's not nearly what the
lo-rootball team has done, but "e are
·'''1'roud of it and ·I tell you what. I
II·know the football· players are proud
of us."
At least the defense.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t

NEW YORK (AP) - Marcus
Camby. ihe junior center who led
Mass!IChusetts io its first Final Four
appearance, and Gene Keady, who
guided Purdue to its third straighl
Big Ten title, today were named college basketball player and coach of
the year by The Associated Press.
The 6-foot-11 Camby, who was
one vote sh)l of being a unanimous
All-America selection, was prc!i(:nted the Adolph Rupp Trophy, an
award sponsored by the Common\ wealth Athletic Club of Kentucky in
the name of college basketball's
winningcst coach.
Ca.mby averaged 20.3 points, 8.2
rebounds and 3.8 blocks this season
for the Minutemen, who held the No.
I ranking for 10 weeks, including the
final poll of the regular season .
They play No. 2 Kenlucky un Saturday ·in the Final Four.
He milsed four games this season
after mys~riously collapsinll before
the St. Bonaventure game on Jan. 14.
He unde~ent a battery of tests lind
returned asainst the same learn 13
days lalef.- recording a career-high
nillC blocked shots. His three-year
total of330 blocked shots makes him
the founh Player to record his 300th

during his junior year, joining
Shaquille O'Neal of LSU, Tim Dun~ can of Wake Forest and Rodney
Blake of St. Joseph's.
Camhy, ·a native of Hanford,
Conn .. received 63 votes in the
national balloting of AP ·member·
ship, easily outdistancing-Ray Allen
of Connecticut, who had 29 1/2
votes. The~ were followed by Allen
Iverson ol ('Jeorgetown, 25, Tim
Duncan of Wake Forest, 15 112, and
Tony Delk of Kentucky, 13.
Keady led.the Boilermakers to a
26-6 season and a No. 1 seeding in
the NCAA tournament, where they
were eliminated by Georgia in the
second round. They hecame 'the first
team to win three consecutive outright Big Ten titles since Ohio State
in the early 1960s.
Keady's season Wl!S marred by
personal tragedy as his daughter suslained a major head injury in a fall
at home and his father died .
He was named head coaCh at Purdue in 1981 after two seasons at
Western Kentucky. He has a career
record ~f 386-167.
Keady received S4 votes in the
nati&lt;lnal voting of AP membership
and was followed by Tim Floyd

"It's like a Mom whose children
Lee prepared for her job by first
playing and then coaching under graduale and go out in lhe world,"
Stringer. She was an immediate suc- she said. "My daughter's handicess in her first season as a head capped, but if she could, there'd be
no better example to go ou1 ·and
coach.
After going 11-17 a year ago, the flake a name for herself than Angie.
"She's salt of the eanh. She's
Hawkeyes finished 27-4 under Lee,
won the Big Ten championship and pure . I love her to death."
reached the semifinals of the NCAA
Senior guard Karen Clayton said
Mideast Regional. And .she did i1 Lee gave the Hawkeyes exactly
with a team that had just ono senioL what they needed this season.
and relied extensively on six sopho"She kept us relaxed and made us
mores to two freshmen .
enjoy playing basketball," Clayton
"I guess it's just another compli- said. "We needed chemistry because
men.l to the team and assistant coach- rh.a1 was what we slruggled with my
es," Lee said. "I truly believe rhat. junior season, and that was what
They did a great job all year. Right Coach Lee was able lo provide for
from the very beginning, lhcy us.
opened their arms and heans 10 me
"II was very special for me to
and said, 'You lead and we'll follow.' have her coach me my senior year
I give them an awful lot of credit." because she has always been there
It was a proud moment for for me rhroughout the good times
Stringer, 100.
and the bad."

__....-

14995
_.

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1993 BUICK
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auto, sir, all power, low
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~

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~

1992 PLYMOUTH
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SKID·STEER
LOADER
A1nlly muiii·PIIIPOM piacl ol

1995 DODGE RAM
1eocl, 4114, auto, Y-8. SLT
pkg'. ,......,,, loctory WM'.

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�'•

'

-:~~~~------------------------------!P~ome~ro~!:·~M~Id~d~le~~~O~h~lo~--~-------~
--~--~--_2~~~Ma~~~h~~~,1~~~

~!!.!'!•'":

•

Sentinel

Friday, March 29, 1996

Pomeroy • Middle~ Ohio

,

The 0111y sentinel•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lal'l)' Wrtpt

Public Notice

Church Directo·ry
Putoc Rev. Roland Wildman
SUIIday sdtool and wonhip I 0:25

Church of Ch i lSI

-·

Wan!

.•

Put.ari J111101 Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
. . 7:30

- . , , O.rdl ofOrlll
212 W. Main SL ,
Pastor: And"'w Milu
SCNiday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodneodoy Service~ - 7 p.m.

Ep1scopal

a..., Ep!Kopal Chun:ll

...._.., Waulde Corell ofChrlot
33226 Olildron'• Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m .
Worship - IOLm., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Service• - 7 p.m.
MJ~Churdl

ofChrlll
5th and Main

Pat\Or: A1 Hanson

Youth Minio,.r. Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15,10:30a.m., 7p.m.

•
•
•

Free WIH Baollot Chun:ll
Allh Stn:et, Middlcpon
Pastor: Lea Hayman

•

.,• .

Sunday Service · 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wedneodoy Service-7:30p.m.
R•Uond Flnl 81ptlst Chur&lt;h
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
Flnt'Bapllst
Putor: Paul Stinson

•

••

....,.oro,

Racine FlntBaptlst
PuiOr. Rev. Larry Haley
Youlh Pastor: AaRJO Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:40 Lm., 7:00 p.nL
Wcdneaday Service•- 7:00p.m.

-·
..
·••

,j ,

.

j

·'•

Toppen Plain Church of Christ
PJotor: Stanley Mincks
SWlday Sehool - 9 a.m.
•
Worship - 9:45a.m.
Wedn01day - 7 p.in.

.,

PallOr. James

.. "". '

.••,.
•

•- '

..

..·-

Anllq•lly Bapdst
Suncliy S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
. Wonhip- 10:45 Lm .
Thursday Sa-vice•- 7:30p.m.

.
•I

"I ,

.'".
•

·· -:

CatholiC
Siocred Heart c a - O•rdl

., 161 Mulbcny Ave., Pcimeroy, 992-5898
•
Pu"11" Rev. Waller E. Heinz
!, SaL C.... 4:4S-S:I5p.m.; Mall-5:30p.m.
.,
s.... C.... -1:45-9:15 a.m.,

..

'

Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

Wednaday Services • 7 p.m.

PasiOr: Ron Fierce

Salem Center

Latter-Day Samts

Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m.

Reo'l!tnlrod Churdl of Jesus C~rlst
or Lau..- Day Saints
Ponland-Racine Rd.

SnowwUie
Sunday S&lt;hool - lO a.in.

Totll
Totel

cabinet

Maktn~

l•·t.• ...
'".::.1'1
~ -~

Syracuse

,..........

Pastor: 'Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Racine

Pastor: Brian HarknCiS

SWlday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II , .m.

Coolville Chur&lt;h
Main &amp; Fifth ~\.
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
.
Worahi~- 9 a.m .
Tuesday Semc:es · 7 p.m.
Bethol Church
Township Rd., 468C
SundaY Sdtool - 9 a.m.

Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wedneiday Services - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Grand Street

Sm1day School - 10 a.m.
WOrship- II a.m.
Wednesday Scivic:cs · 8 p.m.

•

Pastor: Sharon Hausnian

Worship -9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a,m.
Thunday Services -7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob IWtdolph
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · I0:30a.m.
Long Bottom
PaslOr: Rev. Oiarles Meh

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

RAWLINGS-COATS

Middleport

Tn111mr.-out,_, _,(1.100)

,,

•·

,, .

Youth Fellowohip Sunday, 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday seNicc, 7:30 p.m.
Faith FUn Gospel Church
LongBouom
Pastor: Soevc Reed
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m. l!ld 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

The BeUe•ers' Felowshlp Mlalstry
New Ume Rd., Rudand
Pallor. Reov. Mlf&amp;aret J. Robinaoo
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Harrlson•llle Communllr Chur&lt;h
Pastor: Theron Durham

(ll

EndUme House or Prayer
Burlinsharn &lt;hurdt off Route 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
SWiday worship - 10 a.m.
Wedn01day service -6:30p.m,

Tot•l
Oth•r
fin .
Sourcn!\1- ._........ (1,11141

Thursday - 7 p.m .
Sunday - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Chur&lt;h
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Paator: Sam Anderson

Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.
Fallh Tabernacle dtur&lt;h
Bailey Run Rosd

Syracuse MIIISICNI
1411 Bridgemlll SL, Syracuse
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.

Off RL 124
Putor: Edsel Han
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
DyeswUic Colnmunlty Church

Carleton 1•.., cle-lnall... al Church
KillaoburY Road
PuiOr, lfif Smidt
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip Savice 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip s.Mco-lll and 3nl Sunday, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday l!v.nina Semce
Fr..._ G.... Mltalon
Bald Kllob, 011 Co. Rd. 31
P1110r. Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 7 p.m.

W~l'-'• Chapel Wealeyan

Coolville Rood
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Lewt, W.Va. RL I
Pao10r. IWtkin Roach
Sunday School- 10:30 Lm. '
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SeNice - 7:00p.m.
Fallh Fellowship Cru...e ror Chrlll
Pa1tor: Rev. Franklin Dickcns

. Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Cal•ary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Reov. Blackwood

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedn~day Service - 7:30p.m.
Sll ..l'lvllle Word ofFallh
PaolO!': David Dailey
SWJday School 9:30 a.m.
E•enin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Rdolclna ure Chorch ·
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepott
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wr.dne&amp;day Services • 7 p.m.

Ch•rch or Jesus Christ.
Apostolic Fallh

lf4 mile pall. Fon Meigs on New Lima Rd.

Pastor: William Van Mou:r
SWlday-7:00 p.m.
Wedneoday_-7:00 p.m.
Ftiday-7:00 p.m.

CIIRon Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 7 p.m.

New Ure VIctory Ctalrr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Sta1en
Sunda~ Services. 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedneodoy - 7 p.m. &amp; Vouth7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Peni..,....IA . .mbly
St. RI. 124, Racine
. . . Pallor: William Hohacl&lt; ,
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· Evcnins • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Middleport P011t......l
'l'lilid Ave.
Pastor: Reov. &lt;lark Baker

Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 6 p.m.
Wodneaday Services -7:00p.m.

Presbytenan
Syrawse Flrslllillted Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Sunday S&lt;hool - I0 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
HarrlaonYIIe PreobJierlan ,Chur&lt;h
Wonhip - 9 Lm. ·
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Presbylerlao
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9 a.m .
Wonbip- 10 a.m.

SWiday School - 9:30a.m. .
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday s&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m.

Seventh -Day Adventi st
Seventh-Day Adventbl

Mulbcny Hto. Rd., Pcmeroy

Paotor. Roy Lawinoky
Satuldoy Services:
Sabbath S&lt;hool - 2 p.in.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Fallh G"-"P"I Church
long BoUDm

FuiiGeopel IJ&amp;Itl-

33045 Hiland Rosd, Pcmeroy
Pur.or: Roy Hunoer

PAUL HARRIS FELLOWS - Richard W.
• Dick' Vaughan and Joseph A. Young of the '
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club were recognized Monday nighlaa Paul Harrla Fellows by
Or. Met Simon of Gallipolis, the Gov•mor's Area

Un1ted Brethren
ML B-on !JBIIod llnlltrett
In Orlot Cllurdl
Te"' Community off CR 82
Pao10r. Roben Sanden
Sunday S&lt;hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30tm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicea -7:30p.m .

'Two members of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club were recognized as Paul Harris Fellows in
recognilion of their contributions to
the Rotary Foundation at the club's
Monday night meeting at the Heath
Uni1ed Methodist Church in Middleport .
Richard W. "Dick" Vaughan and
Joseph A. Young were presented certificates, medals and collars by Dr.
Mel Simon of Gallipolis, the Governor's Area Representative to the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary .Club.

228 W. Main

Rock Springs Grange honor~
Burdette for years of membership
· : The Golden Sheaf Certificate
f(Om the National Grange was presented to Genevieve Burdeue for 50
years of membership when th~ Rock
Springs Grange met recenlly at the
hall.
There was also a communication
from the Ohio Stale Grange masters
c0 ngratula1ing Mrs. Burdeue on her
long membership. William Radford
presented the certiftcate to Mrs. Burdelle wilh all of the offtcers participating in the ceremony.
Barbara Fry announced lhe baking coolest for April and also noted
the contests for stuffed toys and
handicrafts.

Pomona grange report was given
by Frances Goeglein . County
Grange banquel was announced for
April 26 at the Senior Cilizens Cenler at 7:15p.m. Barbara Shaner, state
grange legislative agenl will be
speaker. Subordinate grange baking
contest will be held at the May
Pomona meeting.
Pat Holter, lecturer, gave a report
and read the constitutional authority
acl which has been adopted by lhe
Ohio Sociely, Daughters of the
American Revolution, and urged
members to write their congressmen
in support of the act.

Pomeroy UMW to host Easter week services·
Special Elaster week scrvi~es
have been 'announced by the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.

b~ breakfast, Sunday school at 9:15
a.m. and
Easter celebration at
10:30 a.m.

Sunday OJ~rning at lhe Pomeroy
United Melhodist Church, there will
be sunrise service at 7 a.m. followed

Monday through Thursday there , r----~
ill be "four Nights for God" begin- '
ning wilh Bible sludy and prayer at
6:30 p.m. and evangelistic worship
at 7:1() p.m. Speakers will be Rev.
Kenny Baker, on Monday, Rev. Les
Haymen on Tuesday, Rev, Sharon
Hausman on Wednesday, and Rev.
Bob Robinson , pastor of the host
church on Thursday.
On Good Friday stations of the
cross will be presented by the Meigs
County Minislerial Association by
die Sacred Hean Catholic Church.

an

14KGOLD

¥NECKLACE

.204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS
Open Tuesday·Friday 9:00-5:00
Saturdjly 9:00-3:00

.9l.cquisitio ns

1'HE

614-992-6250

SYSTEM

992-2955

•

Pomeroy

YURENOED
DECEMBER 31,
RACINE VIL.L.AOE,
MEIGS COUNTY
Oovernmenl•l Fund

~:enue R-lpta:

Local
T -.....................-21211.00

lnt8rgove-

Revenu, ...............120150.00
Clut'IIH lor Servlcel .......
.. .......................... 31115.00
Fin . . , Llcenau, •
Pennl!.o .................... 5313.00
Mlecell•neou~ .... 14142.00
Tot.ol Racelpte •• 119551.00
Dlebiii'MIIMinta
Currant:
'Security al P•rean 6
Property................. 5111t0.00
Public H..l!h Hrvlcea .....
............................... 1001.00
LAieuN 111111 Ac1lvltlea ....
•..............................2474.00 .
•••lc
UUIIIy &amp;ervlcee .......
................................7154.00

.Trlneportlttlon ... 201412 oo
OentNI Government ........

.............................23858.00
Peraonel Servlcee............ .
.........................................0

ContriC!UII Servlc11....... .
..........................................0

Suppllaa and Mllerlela .... .
..........................................0
ToWOiabu.....,..ntJt ........
...........................171377.00
Tot•l R-lp1e over/under
DleburMmenta......23174.00
Tntnela,.tn .......... 1H8.00
Tntnele..Out.••.• (1H8.00)
Debt S.rvlc•...... ,(IOIIt.OO
Tot•l
Other
Fin .
Soun:ei/U-..........IOIIt.OO
Expand. Dleb. • Other
Uati/Nit................ 23173.23
Fund Cuh ••••nee
JlnUiry 1.............140357.71
Fund c .. h B•l•nce,
December 31 ....... 1113530.14
Proprietary FWida
~~~Venue R-lpta:
ClulrgH for Servlcft .......
.................... ........ 80032.00
Mllcellaneoua ...... 31158.00
Totll Racelpte .... 83888.00
Dlllbu,._ll
Currant:
Pel'IOnll Servlcn .............
............................. 13011.00
Tntvei Tntneport.otlan ,,,,,
' ............................. 14111 .00

Contrlotu.. Servlcee........

Tobtl Recalpta over/und•r
Dllbu.......enll ...... 111!174.00

Financing

AVIIIabte

Rental

Expend. Dlab. • Other
UHI/Net ................ 111!173.43
Fund Cuh B•l•n••
J•nuery 1...............88043.37
Ftond C•eh B•lance,
December 31 ....... 1117&amp;11.80
Non-expend.
Fund C•ah ll•lance Jut .•
...............................1100.00
Fund Cuh ll•lanc•
December 31 ........... 1100.00

Totel:
Local
Tlllll..................... -21211.00
lnle'llovemrnent.ol
Revenue..............-.120150.00
ChVIIH lor Service• .......
...........................111117.00
Fin . . , llcene . . , •
Perml!.o .................... 5313.00
Mllcell-ue .... 17111.00
ToW Racelpte .. 283431.00
DlabtnaiiMin!.o
Currant:
S•curlty of Peraon •
Property ................. 5111t0.00
Public H•ltlt Hrvlcn .....
...............................1001.00
Lellunt Time AcUvltlel.....
•............................. .2:474.00

11.1110 Utility Servlcea .......
•..............................7154.00

Tntneportlttlon ... 2111112.00
Oentrlll Government ........
.............................23tse.OO
Pel'IOiutl Servlcee........... ..
.............................130811.00
Tntvel ~aport.oUon .......
..........:.................. 14111.00
Conlntc:tuttl Servlcee........
.............................31222.00
Suppllel Mil M•terlela.....
.......;.......................5813.00
Total Dle.........ente ........
........................... 2401t1.00
Tot.ol Recalpte over/under
DllburMiftlntlt ..•••. 42748.DO
Tntnel-'n ..........11M.OO
Tntnafwa-Out••••• (11M.OO)
Debt S.rvlce........(IOifi.DO
Tot•l
Othar
Fin.

90
LJIA.V S

PHARMACY
We F.ilt Doctors'
Prescriptions

I-

FOil THE FISCAL

.............................1$4314.00

151 Second Street
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
614 446 2842

91 Mill Street
Middleport, Oh 45760

GRAVELY

Public Notice

.................. "'"'"'"'31222.00

Various shape beads,
hearts or rounds
Available in Onyx,·
Pearls or Jade

: GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

R-lpll...................

&amp;uppllaa tnd Mllerlela.....
............................... 51113.00
Totll DllbUrMmentJt.,,.,.

savERS

992-5432

172 Nor11t Second Ave.
Middleport, Ott

I

Kenny Wiggins, Iiller control
officer for Meigs County was named
"Citizen of the Year" by Rock
Springs Grange. Master William
Radford told of all his community
service projects he has been
involved in and presented him a
plaque in recognilion of his work.
Williams spoke in appreciation. He
was accompanied by Mrs. Wiggins.
Members reported ill were
Louise Radford, Robert Burdeue,
Agnes Dixon,. and William Grueser.
Refreshments were served by
Roy and Pat Holter, assisled by Barbara Fry.

IIWIL nitl

St., Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE. SAFETY
SAl ES • SERVICE
tti2·707S

.

which is now lrnown as Rotary.
In addition, a report was given on
the Rolary Pancake Breakfasl which
served between 225 and 250 people .
The club commended the Senior Citizens Cenler for providing its facilities free-of-charge to the club. A
report was also given on the Crippleq
Children's Fund through which
$2 ,461.90 has been distributed over
the past year to families in need .
President Lloyd Blackwood
presided at1he meeting.

E- ll•ltod Brrllt,....lft C 2 1/2 miles nonh oC Reedlville
on State Route 124
Pao10r: Rev. Robert Matkley
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7:30p.m.
Wednetday Service• -7:30p.m.

"Filiii!Jring KeniJJclcy Fried Chk:ken"l

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992·2104

_

Simon was the speaker for the
evening and began his presentalion
by stating the Middleport-Pomeroy
club ranks first in Rotary Foundation
Giving in the district at $117 per capita. The Rotary clubs of Gahanna and
Dublin placed second and third,
respectively, he explained.
"To know where you're going. you
need to lrnow where you came from,"
he stated. He then gave a brief history of Paul Harris, one of the men
inslrumental in fonning the first club

Crow'a Family Reataurent

Memorlll Ha.plt81

tJ

ReprMenlallve lo the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club. Shown are, from left: Simon,
Young, Vaughan and club presldam Lloyd
Blackwood.

Vaughan, Young recognized
as .Paul Harris Fellows

Closed Monday

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor. Lawrence-B111h
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service; - 7 p.m.

&amp;..oc.ITun 414,010.M
• lm..,.ov.rniiMintltl
A..._
240,012.11
Chergee for Servlcft.......
•........................ 1131,111.0
Flnu, Llcen . . e,
Pennb ................. 37,133.51
MIKeileMOUI.212,724.12
ToW
.......................1,411.101.11
Dlebu_....
Currant:
Security of Peraon
Proporty ..............373,74U8
lelauN TIIIMI AcllvltiM.....
............................ H,47S.21
B.llllc utility Servlcea.......

Wonhip - 10 am., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7•p.m.

E-vening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;r. - 7 p.m.
Huel Community Churdt

~=.,... R-lpte:

T_•_.

S.UIIt lklltol New
Silver Rid..
Putor: Roben Barber
SW!day School - 9 •·11\-

Pastor: Rev. Emmd.t Rawson

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

~::T'·~~~~~:J:~~~~~U::._~~~~
. ..~~
o.c.mber 31
Fund Cuh ll•l•nc•.

Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
I!WIIIin&amp; 7:30p.m.
Tuesday. Thunday - 7:30p.m.

The Sai.. Uon Anty
I IS Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Saturday · 10 Lm.

VeterM8

.
r

Sunday aervice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Ueu/Nonop .

~·-·--(1,11141

SWISHER It LOHSE

P. J. PAULEt AGENT
~-2311 Pome&amp;oy

HobsOn Chrlsllan Fello-lp Church
Rev. Clyde Hendenon

llnlled Faith Ch•rdt
RL 7 on Pcmeroy By-Pua
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Senith, Sr .
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - I0:30 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wednetdoy Service - 7 p.m.

214E. Mlln .
992·5130 Pomeroy

804'/!. Main

Chrllllan Fdlowshlp Cetttor
Salem SL, Rutland
PallOr: Roben E. Musser
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Wonhip- 11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: - 7 p.m.

Racine FlJII Church ollhe Nazarene
Pastor: Soou Rose
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
'
Middleport Church of the Nuarene
Pastor: G~e~~ory A. Condilf
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

INSURANCE
SERVICES

of Cotumbul, 011.

Other Churches

MI. ou.. C0111munl'y ?ur&lt;h

Brogan-Warner

Nationwide Ins.·Co.

· New Ha•en Ch•rdt ollho N....-Paotor: Glendoo Stroud
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

You Don't Have To Loolc F(Jt
To Spy the Best Buys In the
Classified$

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
•992-5141

=

Worship- 10:30 p.m .
Sunday School- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
·

R&lt;edsvlle FelloW11tlp
Church of Ute Naarae

'

Pulor: Mark Matson

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
• Worahip - 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

UCIII MOWII CUIIC

t;-

'

Pastor: Hdcn Kline

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

264 South 2nd

'

Mos:nlna Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
. s...day School- 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 10;30 a.m.
Thursday Servia:• -7:30p.m.
Suuon
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st&amp;. 3nl Sun)
EasiLetart

Alf'rod

992
-3911
.
'

'

SW!day School • 9:010 a.m.
Worllhip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th Sun)

Melp Coop..-aU•• Parish
Northeast Cluoter

212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy

'

Carmel

Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

P - d t'lnl Oorclt of tile NuaroH

Pubic Notlot

Other

Putor: Kenneth Balcer

Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wedneodoy -7 p.m.

TrlniiJ Church
Second • (ynn, Pomeroy

Mill Work

Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

MI. Olive United Mdloodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor. Rc:v. Ralph Spire•
Sunday School - 9:30'a,m .
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Congregational

Rutland Churdl of the I'!IIIIJ'flle
Putoc Samuel Buyc
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WednOiday Services· 7 P~·

Pastor: Kermeth Baker

Gr.aham Unlled Melhodlst
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. (ht &amp;. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Churdl or God of Propheq
OJ. Whiu: Rd. off St. RL 160
Paotor: PJ. Chapman
s...day SdiOC)I- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
WedrtCJday Seoviceo - 7 p.m.

Ch....;. Chur&lt;h of the Nazarene
Pallor: Rev. Herbert Gnle
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneo&lt;fay,Serviccs - 7 p.m.

Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 Lm.

United Methodist

Chester

_ . . , Ch•rdl olllle N....-Putor: Rev. 'l'ltomu McCiuna
Sunday School-9:39a.m.
Worship - t0:30Lm.llld 6p.m.
Wedneldoy Services - 7 p.m.

Bethany

'

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

-Syrat:uJe Cburclt d llle Nuartlle
Pastor: Bill Slii'CJ
SWlday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip - 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wedneldoy Services - 1 p.m .

Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Coolville llolted Mcthodlol Parish

Evenins Service~- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday Servioet· 7 p.m.

Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Danner

Wonbip - II a.m.

C - Church of God
S. R. 248 A Riebel Rosd, Cheou:r
Pastor. Rev. William D Hinds
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 6 e.m.;
:Wednesday, 7 p.m. Family Traininc Hour

..

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Rulland Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m. ·

Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St, P001croy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School .1}:45 a.m.

Wedneodoy Services - 7:30p.m.

RACINE PLANING MIU.

RockSprlnas .
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhi~- 10 Lm.
Youth Fellowship, SWlday - 6p.m .

Sl. Paul Lutheran Church

Sunday S&lt;hool and W9r1hip- 10 a.m.

Sun. Ma11 - 9:30a.m.

Stulday School - 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m: ·

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip - IJ a.m .

Pastor: Reov. D~t.ovid Russell

Dailey Mus -8:30a.m.

Pomeroy
P11tor: Robert E. Robinsoo

Hartford Churdl of ChrlaC In
Cbrlsllon llnlon
l:laotfonl, W.Va.
Pastor. Rev. David McManis
SWlday School - II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sa-vicco-7:30p.m.

Syracuoe First Chur&lt;h of God
Apple and Second Sto.

Salem SL

Peart c•apd
Sunday School -9 a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m.

Christian Union

Worship· I 1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenins - 7 p.m.
Wednetday Service• - 7 p.m.

Worship· 10 a.m.

Walnul arid Henry Su., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnuim puton: Geo!Je C. Weinck

Rullllld Chur&lt;h of God
Panor: G..&amp;ory L. Sean
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

lnlcrim Putor: Tc~JM Waldeck

Sunday School.- 9 a.m.

Our S•viour Luther•n Church

Racine

R•UaH Free WJI Jlapllll

Pastor: O!arles Neville

MlnwsvHie

Wonhip - 9:00 am.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Putor Rev. James Sa1oerficld
SWlday School - 9:45 a.m.
I!....U.a,- 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servicca -7 p.m.

MI. Morllh Bapllal
Founh &amp; Main.SL, Middlepon
Putor: Rev. Gilbqt Craig, Jr.
s...day School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 Lm.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm.

Pine Grove
Pastot: Dawn Spalding

Church of God

Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship - II a.m.

(Middleport)

PaslOr: Vemagaye Sullivan

Sl. John Lutheron Cburch

MI. Moria• Church of God

PallOr : Arius Hurt

H~th

Lutheran

Reed,..llle Churc~ of Christ
Pas10r: Philip Stunn
Sunday S&lt;hool: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:3ll a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Forell Run Jlapllst

~

Thursday Services ·6:30p.m.

The Chord! or Jesus
Chrlsl of Laller·Day Saints
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday S&lt;hooll0:20-ll Lm.
Relief Sociely/Prioothood II:OS-12:00 no0n
Sacroment Service 9-10:15 a.m. 1
Homemak.ing meeting, h.t·ThunJ - 7 p.m.

Hemlock Gro•e Church
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday o&lt;hool- 10:10 a.m.
Wonhip -9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Roilroad SL, Mason
Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wedne&amp;day Servie%1 - 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Chules Neville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneodoy Services -7:30p.m.

Lanp•llle Christian Chur&lt;h
SW!day S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday Service 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Worship · 11 11 .m.

•Pine Grove Blbleliollness Chureh
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rov. O'Dell Manley
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

PulOr: Janice

Paoli&gt;r: Woody CaJJ _
Sunday Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Thunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Wonhip- IOa.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School . I0 a.m.

Laurel Clllf Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Peu:r Tremblay
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.mc

Dcxu:r

E. Keesee

Pastor: Keith Rader

Hysell R.. Hollneaa Church
Pastor: Roben Manley
SW!day S.chool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4Sa.m., 7 p.m.
. Thunday Service - 7:30 p.m.

.Wednesday Se~ices -7:00p.m . .

Vlclory Bapllst lndepe~~danl
525 N. 2nd St. Middlcpon

Fillwoods

Pastor: Rev. John Neville

Bradford Chordl or c•rlsl
Comer of SL RL 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Miniooer: Michael Teasanlen
Sm1day School-9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., !0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.

SW!day School - 10 a.m.
Worship - IILm., 6 p.m.
W..ttcsday Services -7 p.m.

'.

Pas10r. Keith Rader
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rudand Church of Christ
Putor: E'ugcne E. UnderwoOd
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Pu&amp;or: Re~t~. James R. Acree, Sr.

~rtoe

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middlcpon.

Bradbury Church of Chrlll
Pao10r: Rick Snyder
s...day School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.

Hllllkle Baptist C~urch
SLib. 143 just off Rt. 7

Wonhip- 11 a.m.

Wedneaday SeNicco - 1:30 p.m.

Sunday school~ 9::30 a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayermcetins-7 p.m.

W edne•day Services • 1 p.m.

28601 SL Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunclly School - 10 a.m.
Bvenin&amp;- 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

R.,.. or Sharon HoUness·Church
-Leading Cruk Rd., Rutland
Paswr: Rev. Dewey King

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RLI43)
Pu10r: ROller Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

llellll&lt;hom Bapdsl
Racine, 01-t
PallOr : Daniel Berdine
. Wonhip - 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bihle Study - 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Pastor: O.arles Neville

Sunday Scltool9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Service - 7:30p.m.

Zion Chur&lt;h of Christ

,. Old llelllel Froe WIIIBaiJIIII Chur&lt;h

•

Harrison-ville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

ML ll•ICNI Bapllal
Pallor: Joe N. Sl)'re
SWiday School-9:45a.m.
l!veuins - 6:30 p.m.
Wedneodoy ScrYices- 6:30p.m.

CenlraiCiuoter
Asbury (Syr.a.-)

Da..llle Holln015 Church
31057 Stale Rouoe 325, l.angsvlle
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
SWiday worship - 10:35 Lril. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Olild1&lt;11'1 churdt - 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wedneodoy prayer suvice - 7 p.m.

Keno Churdl ol Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.
Pao10r-Jc(frey WaD ace
Ia and 3nl Sunday

Uberty Chrlsllu Church

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services -7 :30p.m.

Holiness

Calvary Pllpim Chapel

Siver RUII BIJ'IIII
Putor. Billl..iule
, Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worthit&gt;- lla.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wed.....fay Services-7:30p.m.

Tuppers Pl.ilns Sl. Paul
Plstor. Sbarm Hausman

Coffu. hour rollowina

Wedneiday Services -7 p.m.

HkiiOry Hllll C~•rdt efCIIrlll
Evan&amp;elisl Jooeph B. Hookins
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

·'

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rec10r. Rev. D. A. duPI111tiet
Holy Eo&lt;hana and
SWiday S&lt;hooll0:30 a.m.

Beanvallow Rid&amp;• Chur&lt;h of Chrlsl
Putor. Jack Cole&amp;rove
Sunday S&lt;hool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 6:30p.m.

Eu1 Main St.

Sunday S&lt;hool -9:30a.m.
Wonllip- 10:30 a.m.
F1nl Soulknl Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
PuiOr. E: Lunar O'Bry111t
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - t&lt;H5 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodnelday ~rvices -7:00p.m.
FtniBapllsl Church
Pattor: Marl&lt; Morrow
Cilh and Palmer SL, Middlepon
Sunday S&lt;hool-9:15 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodneodoy Service-7:00p.m.

RtednUie
Putor: -Re•. ClwbMuh
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sm1day 6:30p.m.

1

Total Rae atpta _ , . . . ,
D l a b - •.--.(1,411)
~ .-.._2,000

fund

•

P•

&lt;, I nJ 11 ,I '

NO APPLICATION P'EES
·N o PltOCE.SING P'IIIIS

8~~

l . I ' /1

Offer good only with ad.
Offsr sxpims 4-3()-96.
1

Public Notice
u.../NII ................ 427441.M
Fund

Cuh

B•l•nce

Jentlllry 1............. 235201.118

F.und Cuh Balance,
December 31 ....... 277147.74
TreMury B•lance...- ........
...........................2'71M3.M
lnveetmenta ..........IIOO.OO
Ou!.o!.ondlng ....... (2755.12)
Totel B.II1111Ce ... 277147.74
lndeblednOu!.o!.ondlng, Jen 1, 1 R • van u •
Antlclplllon
Notn ......................27933.02
Rltlred
Aeven u 1
Antlclplllon
Notee ........................H81.07
OUIIIIndlng, Dec. 31, 1115
R even u •
Antlclplllon
Notn......................1t:l51 .115
Aanned V•ltllltlon ..........
..............................41H181
In aide 10 11111 ..............,,•• 2
Oullkla10 Mill ................ 7
&amp;tlmated Popull!lon ..... ..
•.......- ............................715

Fedaul
ClniUI
Popullllon ...................... 721
1 certify the following
report to be correct •nd
trtoe, to the b ..t al my
knowliclge
~ran SueLyona
Clark/Traaaurar
M•tn S!rnt, Recine 45770
(3) 2t; 1TC

Public Notice
FOR THE FISCAL
YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 1 MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE,
MEIGS COUNTY
Government•! Fund

"TYPe•

RevenueR-Ipt.o:
Local TlliH 414,oio.M
lntergovernmentel
R-ue
2t0,11112.81
Chergn for Sarvlcea .......
141,341-21

a

._...M0ll1.212,724.12
Totll Racalpt.o ................. ..
....................... 1,100,122.11
Expencll!ura
Dlebui'MIIMinta
DlllburMmenta
Curran1:
Security of Pereon 6
.......rty.............. 373,742.38
Lelaura Time Activltlel .....
•........................... 21,475.2:1

B.lllc Utility Servlcn .......
.......................... 147,401.23

Tntneport.oUon 111,544.M
GeneNI Government ........
......:...................170,801.72
Pel'IOnal Servlcu...........o
Contractuel Servlcee......o
Suppllu •nd 1 1 -.....o
C:.pl!.ol OuUllJ ... 80,475.37
Debt Service.... 143,087.81
Total D..buraementa ........
....................... 1,041,333.75
Total Racelpt.o over/Under
DlaburMmenta..... 52,481.05
Ml.celleneoua ................. o
Sele ot Fixed Aanta .........
................................. 111.81
Tntnefwra.ln ....... l8,t21.70
Tntnei.....Out .. (32,58o.ll)

Ohio Rlvar ·plm

441 -~0015

'Have you noticed the water level getting lower
since they installed !he drinking fountain?"
•

lntergowmment.l

Re...,ue ....................M,OII
Clutrve- for Se..-."-...._
......................._.•••••• •1 .
Fin . . , Llcen . .e, 6
Permlh ........................ t,711
Ml.celleneoue ... - •• 47. . .
Total R - -...... 230,472
Dlllbu..........t.
Currant
security of P•reon 6
lelaUN Time Actlvttlea.....

Genel'lll Government •••• ."...

•..................................a.3114

..........................170,801.72
Tfllnepoi'Wion ......... 1,542
P..-.-1 Servlcn.............
Ge..- G_,._,.,_,
......................... .2011,581.21
.................................. ..
P-nll Servlcea.............'
Cllll!ractuel Servlcft........
............................81,807.38
................................. 31 ,431
Supp- ud lllelerl•la.....
Contractu•! Servlcee........
............................54,010.70
.............................. ~.11,124
C•plhl Ouaay ... 80,4711.37
&amp;uppllea- ................
Debt Servlce....143,087.11t
.................................11,110
Total Dlaliw'Mment1 ........
C•plhl Outlay ........ 22,100
....................... 1,373,513.05
Debt Servtce........... 23,1110
To!.ol Recelp!.o
To111 Olab--ntlt;.......
Dllbui'Htnenta...117,581.14
...............................111,301
Mleceii•MOUa... 13,048.80
Totll R-lpte -lund•
Sele of flllld
Dlabui'Htnente,.........32, 113
................................. 111.11
Tntn•l-ln .............. 3,100
TNnale,...ln ....... 87,112t.52
Tranater.-Out.........(3,800)
Tntnate....out•. (32,510.SIII)
Oiher
Ue . ./Nonop.
Debt Service ... (71,535.79) Expendlturn ............ (3,877)
Total
Other
Fin.
Tol•l
Other
Fin.
Sourcai/U- ...... (3,011.84) Soun:ea/Una ........... (3,877)
Expend. Dlab. • Other
Expand. Dlab. 6 Othar
UIH/Nel ............. 114,581.30 UHa/Net .................... 21Fund Cuh ll•lance
Fund Cuh ••••nc•
J•nu•ry 1............2t4.740.45 Jlnu'lry 1................. 104,241
Fund c .. h ll•l•nce,
Fund c .. h ll•l1nce,
December 31 ...... 379,301.75 December 31 ........... 132,732
Trnaury B.ll•nce..............
R..erve For Encumbr.
..........................220,874.13 December 31 ................ 2.144
lnveatmen!.o .... -201 ,302.M
TntiiUry Blllnce..............
ll•lence............422,177.4t
................................. 74,411
Oull!.ondlng .... (42,11U4)
lnveatrnentl .............51,354
Total B.llance, 379,3118.75
Blllnce.................132,842
Summ•ry ollndabtedntll
Out.ot.ondlng .............. (11 0)
Oull!.ondlng, Jan 1, 1 To!.oiBIIIIICII ....... 132,732
llortg•g• Revenue.,,,,.,.,
Sumlftlry of lndeb!ed..........................385,000.00
OUIIIIndlng, J.,. I, 1 GO Notae ......... 411,111.50
GO Bonde................. I,OOO
OWDA lollna ...1H,317.00
Tolll .......................... s,ooo
Tot•1 .............. 1,025,552.50
Newl111M1
Retired
A 1 venue
Allllclpotlon
Mortgege Revenue ........... Not11......................... -32,100
............................ 25,000.00
Total ........................ 22,100
GO Notaa ........... M,487.84
Rellretl
OWDA lollna ....... 4,011.33
GO Bonda.................s.ooo
Total ................... 97,418.17
Revenue
~potion
Outatandlng Dec. 31,1115 Not1e .......................... 11,112
Mortgage Revenue ...........
ToW ........................ 11,111
.......................... 360,000.00
Outet•ndlng, Dec. 31.
00 No!ea ......... 412,817.1111
OWDA lo•na... 155,355.17
Revenue
~
Tot.ol , ............... 121,053.53 Notea.......................... to,. .
A•u11ed Valuation ..........
Totll ........................ to,.......................... 15,311,180
AeeiSHd V1lultlon ........ ..
lnelde10 Mlll .............. 1.70
.............................4,312,130
Outelcle 10 MIH ........... 7.00
llllk1110 Mll .............. 2.00
MunlclpollncaiiMI Tu ......
Ou!.ol~ 10 IIIU ........... 3.10
................................... 1.0%
E•!lmlled Popull!lon .......
Eatllftl!ed Population .......
......................................127
....................................2725
Federal
Ceneue
Fader•l
Ceneua Poptolllllon ...................... 127
Populltlon .................... 2725
I certify the following
1 certify the following report to be correct •nd
report to be corNet •nd 1rtoe, to the but ol my
1rue, to the but of my knowledge
knowledge
·•
Jomlce ZWIIHng,
Dennla L Hockman,
Clerk·TrHe.
Clerk·TNu.
p;o . Box2tll
237 Rece St.
SyracuH, Ohio 45779
Middleport, Oh 45780 (3) 2t; lTC
(3) 29; 1TC

AIH!.o.........

,_

FOR THE FISCAL
YEARENOED
DECEMBER 31, 1115
SYRACUSE VILLAGE,
MEIGS COUNTY
Governmental Fund Typ11
Revenue Racolp1e:

tor Servlcel .......

~-~~~~~:tJ~11~,587~

Dlabu.....,..ntlt
Clll'l'ent:
P-nal S.rvlcea.............
.. ~ .............................. 31,431
Contractll•l Servlcee........
.................................11,124
Suppllea Md lle!.orllll.....
.................................11,110
c.pttll Outlay......... 11,400
Debt Service......- ..........
Totll D..burMmenla ........
...... ~..........................11.114

.
:

·

.

Public Notice

Public Notice

M!M111111110111 ........ 14,1181

446·9100

A - RKelpta:
LocaiT--.........~,1131

Property.........~.......... 12,101

Total AICIIpta .... o... l5,1t3

Silver Bridge Plaza

To!81

•..........................147,408.23

. ................................ 11,121

GALLI.POLIS

c;;·h·--.,:~.

Tntnaportlttlon 1H,544.18

Tot•l
Other
Fin.
6 Penni!•
Debt Servtce
.................
(Ol
SoUn:ea/UHI .• , (38,451.33)
Expand. Dlab. l Other
UH8/N11 ............... 1111,1141.38
Tot•l
Fund Caah Bal•nce
DllbUrHIMntl
J•ntlllfY 1.. .......... 130,122.118 Currant:
Fund Cuh B•lence,
Sacurl1y of Paraon •
December 31 ...... 211,070.48 Proporty ..................... 12,105
Proprlet.ory Funda
LAIIUN Time Actlvltlee .....
AIIYetiUa R-lpla:
................................... 8,354
Ch•'ll•alor Servlcea.......
Tntnaportlllon ......... 8,542
......................... 381,125.30
Gen-1 Governman1 ........
ToW Racelpte...................
•................................ 441,1113
.......................... 381,1211.30
Pal'IOnal Servlc11.............
Oparatlng ExpertUI!
,,.,.,..,,.,..,.,,.,,.,,.,,,,,, .....0
OleburMrnen!.o
Conti'IC!uel Servtcea ........
Currant:
.......................................... 0
Pel'lllft•l Service..............
Suppllea and M•terl•le .....
............:.............. 201,511.21
.......................................... 0
Contrl~ll ServlcH........
C:.plbtl OullllJ ......... 11,400
............................11,807.38
Deb1 Service........... 14,te1
suppll11- Mll!erl•le.....
Tobtl Dlebururn•nte ........
·-····"'"""""""'"""54,010.70
............................... 101,155
Total OlabuNamenta ........
Tot.ol Racelpll over/under
.......................... 325,179.29 DIIIIUI'HIMntl ...... , .. 33,124
Tot.ol Racelpt.o over/und•
TNnafwra.ln,,,,.,,., 1,500
D..buraement.o•.... 51,148.01
Tntn.,.,.-Out.........(2,000l
lllecallaMOUI ... 13,041.80
01her
Uaea/Nonop.
Tntnala,.ln ....... 1t,007.12 E•pondlturn ............ (1,11131
Deb!S.rvlce ... (71,535,79)
Tot•l
01bar . Fin;
Tot•l
0! h • r
FIn_ Sourcai/UHI ........... (2,113)
Soun:ei/\IHa .... (3t.479.17)
Expend. Dlab. 6 Other
Expend. Dleb. a Other UHa/Nel .................... 31,411
UIIH/Ne1 ............... 20,..._..
Fundo Cuh B•l•nce
Fund c.. h ll•l•nc• J•;:'/1c;;'i;'""ii;::::.
JMUIIry t_, , , ......II8,'781.QI
Fund Cuh ll•l•nce, Decembar31 ............. 111,215
December 31 ........ 77,227.10
Reurve For Encumbr.
N~ Trull l'undl
December 31 .................. 11118
l'nlprle!.ory Funda
R._,ueRKelpts:
Clutrg~~lor Servtcee .......

-

1

J-;::r
Oecamber31 ............. . . .
Reurve For Encumllr.
December 31 ............... 1,SU

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARINGI2
The Molge County
Comml11lonera Intend to
apply to the Ohla
llepertment of Devel~t
tor funding under the CDBQ :
Small Citlee FY' 96
Community
Houelng
lmprovemenl I HOME
prDgntm which will proVIde
v•rloua housing •ctlvltl. .
to person• within the
County. The County Ia
ollglbla lor $600,000 of
Flecel Year 96' CDBG Chip
funding, provided the
county meals appllc.ble
program requlra,_,.t.o_ On
M.,ch 25, 1996, the County
conducted ll'a flrat public
hearing lo Inform citizen•
about the CDBG PfDIII'IIII.
A aecand public hurlng
will be held on April 8, 11181
•I 1:00 p.m. •1 the llelp
County Comml . . lonara
office, M•lga County
CourlhouH, P01111roy, Ohio
to give clttzene •n
opportunity to review •nd
comment on the county'e
CDBG
CHIP/
Home
~eel program actlvhiM
prior to the county
aubmlaslan
of thle.
appllcetlon .
Rent•! Aaalet.once, H01111
Ownenhlp,
Owner
Occupied Rehab, Renbtl
Reh•b, lnlraatructure,
Admlnlatr•tlon
•nd
lmplement•tlon
w•r•
lclenlllllld at tlut llrat public
hearing, •nd •r• •lao
Identified In the Melg1
County CHIS (County
Houelng lmprovemant
Sa.r.at)CIIIzene are encour•get~
to •Hand thte mHtlng ori
April 8, 1996, to expre"
thalt vlewa •nd commenllt
an tbe propoaed CDBO
Appllcetlon.
.
The '-ringle IIC-Ible
10 hendiCilpped pereona.
Peraona un•ble to lltand
th• h. . rlng mey m•k•
cammenbt by writing the
~.elga
County
CornmiUiontri,Cou~

Pomeroy, Ohio or by Clllllng
Jun Tr-11, CHIJ:I Or•nt
Coonllllll!ol, 11 814-H2·

71118.
Frecl'lloffnwn, P"elda1t
llllga County
Colnmlqlonft
(3)2t (4) 4 2TC

.

�-

/

r·

f

_,..

-., ~ ~

'..,.-

-

Friday, 118rch 28, 1996
..... 8. The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport.

Public Notice

Public Notice

PU8UC NOTtCa
• The RACIIII!, VI I &amp;QP 01'
. till IIIII manllor and NpGrt
anel)'tlcel -ulte of their

o...llw., .

,_or.....,.,_..,.

entrt point cleelgllalled DOl

during the time perlocl of
.lui)' , to IJaOenlllar 31. · .. required by the Ohio

AaenCv (Ohio !PI\).

.

Upon being notified of
; thle vlotdon by the Ohio
·EPA, the RACINE, VI~
OF hu had the drinking
· - anaiYad tor eull8te.
The RACINE, VILLAGE OF
;will tab atape to .ane,ura
.thl!l adequate monHorlng
will be perlormed In the

,,,

.._....... 1Nel ,_..
........__,7.12
Total
Other
l'ln.
~
17.12
Expand. Dla. A Other

···--·-·-··---(11..,..,
Tolal Other Flnenolna

a.....,.,_

---·-····· .......... .4,111,120
c-IIIIOn
• .._.._

.,_...., 31 .. - ... 45,314.2t
Talll..._...,um Onl)':
~

December31,1. . . 213,113

.................................17,101

Reeerve
lor
Encumbrencee, O.c. 31,

llllacallane0ua.1114,711.M

All
rR..,...ue ............
.................................44,411
Total Revenue "-~pte , ..

..._...... ....... .........a.soe.m
~

Charge• for Set ricaa.~ .....
.............................41,311.12
Fin... 'Liceneu, l
Plf'lftla ................. 41,!!I.OO
llllacel._..,st-,.111
Total R-'p18 .101,114.t3
EllpenclluN

. Diebu!'H!M111a

............................ 10,571.11
Tlenaportl!llon 113,714.115

a

Total
Expenditure
Dlllbur'Mmenta.....l,411,213
Tolel Recalpta Over
lUnder) Dleb............... ..

Contrectuaol lervlcae........

. ..

: ...........; .............,.......,

· Total liecalpta over/under

,.,....,.....OU(too,OOO.OOI

Current:

laclirlt)' of Pereoil a
Plcp a!ly ..................1,301.01
_T~I

·-;...-;;;.::.

~Pund- Caeli ,

January I
·. Fund ·calio Balance,
Daoembw ''·~·-·... 1,0311.75

.

Proprietary ~14ftda

Op •••"'":.,Revenuee:
SarJI cee.......
..........................347,371 ...
lll101lltft•ou1 ..... 2,101 ••
TOIII R.alpta.3e0,173.11

.

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

Dlillll .........

~

I

c:un.nt:

........ S.rvloe,oon"OO:iii
.............'_. ..........101,107

l

Coi*Mitullllr~

........

_,._ .................- 1,0,000 00
lupp ••• and lllal!l111a

.

NOTICE OF lilll£ ,
B)' virtue of an Order of
Sale l.. uad out ol the
Common Pie.. Court of
Melga Count)', Ohio, In the
ceea of Cheater Prottltt, II
el., Plelntlfft, ve. Pearl
111-1:
Prollltl, at al., O.tandanla,
Opel'llllna Trenefera.ln..... upon • Judgement therein
..............?.:.....:........_10,751 rendaaed, being c ... No.
Total Oth•r Financing M-CV-H3 In ..ld Court, I
s......... cu...,.........1o,751 w111 o11er for . . ., .... front
(under) Dleb. 1 Olhei' u... doer of the Courthoun In
...;............................... 7.312 Po!MI'O)', llalge Counl)',
Fund c..h Balance, Ohio, on the 3rd day of liar.
Jenu.y t,IIIINI-......70,724 1"'· at 10:00 a.m., the
Fund Caah Balance, following Iande and
o-mber 31,1111N1 ... 71,101 lanementa. A complete .
Ra a 1 rve
1 0 r legal d-rlpllon of the _,
Encumbrencea, Oec. 31, - • • aafollowa:

~·Chillw·~·=~···..-···
11on11 Prl.-n.ai.Par!Mnl..

T~t•l

•.

.

~'
,
~~/:i,(

• ..:.....
l'und f.-:."Z.:

~
,..
::ffi~ '

.

1 ~~~.'a.·_

1

'

Clo_argu ._ a..-:t ~1\; !..
·--·-·
til ,Mf

::

'

-

II

liiii

,,._Af'Golrtll •

.......

'

'

·---"""1 ~'

·

..,71

llelge, State of Ohio and In
th• Townehlp of Lebanon
andboun_and_l1_
•• lollowa, to-wit: hlng In
Section Number "'Wenn)'-tlve
(25), Town Number Three (3)

Deed.

==

:r.

~--~

A~Rc:ISED

a.

Hundred Acrt Lot No.

one

thereof,

Cotil--·•

:.

w"lch

Gl'll¥e)'1lrd In the lOUth Eaat
oomer ol nkllol daecled to
the Truet•e of Lebanon
To-hlp In lllalo• Count)',

1

l'aCJot:d·v.l. 111,

. ~"1!.......:Vol. 4,
(O.R.), Vol. 314,_p.
~e.tll

' ..: ••• .,, ,
~"'"':,"~IIID

a;;;- .

' li'.:..

· ·,~·

·

.

VALUE.

.

_l

hlghwa(e,

and

alao

excapt~ng a1 !he lend eouth

ollhe ..._ c1aaa11ac1 1U
aor.. , which mer be
Included In 100 At:te Lat No•
liZ.
The foragolno belna put
ot lhe.rael- wlolch waa
_.. to Clair C 8o
convey·
•o
b)' dNd NCOrdad In ' OHtl
Book 117, Page ' " of the
lllalga , county Dead
11econ1e.
fllelerence Oeadi: Vol.
314, p. 441, Vol. St4, p. 433,
VoL 210 p 217 Vol 211,.p
101 Vo
. 1' 222. ' ...;. II""'•.
•
•
• P· "" -..
Count)' DNol Reurde.
.
SubJect to Flow•••
Eaeementa to the Unlt-d
Slatea o1 ""**oa ,_.,..,
1n Vol • ....,,
.......
,..... 121 end
.
Vol. 225, paga 713, llaJia
County 0eeo1 Recorda _.
to an othar laue)!,
••..mente and rtghte .of
war o1 NCOrd
APPRAISEO VAlUE:

t:IOO.OO

•

.

S.kl !'HI niata 11u . .
a•••cw Auclllor'a Paroel
Num re: - - 000• .,,.
.,,.,....,..
00177 •ooo,""'
- o o o• ....
.,,_,..
008711.000, 07-ooMO.OOO,
_., .,,._,
,.;,.-..010·
.,
-__REAL
ESTATE
,
APPRAISED A'r. Parcel Hoi1
• Stll,114,.17; "-reel No.
·S38,211.t'1; Parcel No. 3· • .
. $14,000.00; Parcel No. 4· •
$18,111.17; Percel No.
...
N:.·,:;;

s:·

.ooT;IIPae":,~t .
3100,eoo
·00·

1

cenlllll be aold for leu then
twa·llllrda lha apprala~
vllue.
TERIII OF SALE: Ca~
Dll c1a11-v ot daecl.
· .
J-11. 8oulel!)'

lhertlfiii
llele• County, Ohio

(3)22. a;
(4) 5, 12, 11, 211; lTC

:

'
Public Nollce
•

•

·

PUBLIC NOTICE
:
NOTICE It hereby given
that on lllllurday, .._oh 30,
,•_
- 10 :oo •· m.• a fpubiJc
..., ••
hi
•Ia will be held at 21 Watt
Second Streat, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to aall for ceeli the
following collaWal:
:·

11~~:=.: :

. '

I.

•

'

Birth~y '

Kati
•

..,r;~:: :~~~;'.;:':"== ";: •::;:

u: ':' ··-

WANTeD: EMERGENCY REUEF

,Love, TGU.i

Renv•

.

Dresses
Levi's

to-you.
H Mon.-F!t; 1-3 lit. A IUI'I. l.lloiMd corillr of
St. At. 143 A r. POMroy, 114-1112-G114.

Mon.·SIIt. 1G-6

'

.

NOW ACCEPTING
AP~LICATIONS. AT
WATERS EDGE
.
. .
APARTMENTS

owt&gt;rook Or. Rlllll cancels.

UIIIHtone,

s.nd, Grayel, Coal &amp; Wattr

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985·3418

...

,,.,,
,..,.
SAWMILL

owner, 61+992-25215.

Clean late Model Car&amp; Or
Trucks, 1990 Models. Or Newe r,
Smirtl Buick Pontiac, 1~00 Eas t-

om .._..., GaiUpoll~

Full blooded Persian kinen. 304 -

875-«54.

•1.00 ofT any X-large 18"

file,.,_ a Nrlloe to bec1r I
Urvlng 8.E. Ohio. Well,. ..... .

.. rrlfh

CEUIIKS

up

Greenware Salal ·

26-60%0ffl

FREE

A * ) _ , . plllnta and

Pkl"tp._.•••

IIMIIIH• .
Sat., M8rc:h 30, April I
Noon-5:00 P.M.

.,.., .....w

~

3 mllae north ol Clleatar
off Rl. 7

Check II Out! I

·· ===~
J&amp;L INSULADON

·····-----........,;
SMITH'S
COISTIUCnOI

BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 112·2772
Ofllcl H~~~n: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 •.m. - 3:30 p.m.
VInyl A Alum. Siding.
Vlilyl ~ ........
Window, 8'-n
l!'llllll!tlon, Storm
. Doorl, Storm
Wlndowe, 0.1gu

a•••

CUIIoJoo lllolklng I Reo
Ill
•N.a wHocMI
•AdciHiona
•Naw G0!111181
•Remodeling
•Siding
' '
•Rooting
•Painting
.'
I'REE ESTIIIAT'Ef

ltll-5131

18 I iCI • 18 I &amp;I• IGIICI

-·'~" MANLEY'S ,t!~e,
•~••• RECYCLING CENTER ,,,,,

~a
Kitchen I Bath

503 Mill Sheet

Middleport, Ohio
(Spacial Price on Aluminum Cans
from Mllrch 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lbe. of aluminum Cl!na to
..-glller tor Bunn Cofteernaur to be given away.

Ramoclellng

Room
Alii!~
Siding,
flloottng,
Patloa
Rnaanabla
lneurere • Expertanced
· c~:·:-O:I!If

Ync••l

.

'.
6.WV

. .

~ICZ~

SMr&amp;fll*

:~==
'lh

.•Siorullbar)'

Wlt:IS · ·

·

.

Umeatone,
Au1harized AGA Dilblbutor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial ~ • Machine Shop
Servk:es • Steel Sales &amp;·Fabrication • Repair we!Cing
• AlumtnuOIVStelnltsa • Tool Dressing • Omamenll!l
Steps ·Stairs, RaiUngs, Pallo Fumlbn, Rreplace
Hems, Planter hange!'l, Trellises &amp; lot8' of other stuflll
"No Job Too LIJrge or Too ·Small" ·
.. We wHI work within your budgel

PI!. 773-8173

...
FAX 77Miij1

.

wv

~

Live Psychics
• 1 on 1

. 1·900-255·0300
ext. 5488 -

Gravel, Sand,
T~ Soli, Fill Dirt

614·992·7643

614-992-3470
'Need Dli-..c:tlon?
Love

New At lqles .lleetronies

,

Bu.lnae

ladle lllaeli Dealer

F1mlly....,._·
AllowYour ·
"-nnonnll Paychlc to

Yom favorite artist
on Tape or CD

Aaalllt You
1· 800 Ill !11100
Ext.1277
sa.•PwMinute

liluet lie II rra.

Touoft.T-IIaaulrad
SMv-41 (e11)MHtM

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825

· TOIJCtl· tone phone
required.

Serv·U
(619) I645-8434

lUGES
TANNING

FANS .
Let your fingers do the
· Wilking to the sports
Nne. Finance Stocks,

H, ltl CIIC:lf' ~IC· ci

' 12 Saaslon1 For

$20.00

NHL. NBA, NFL, Point
~da.Oflly

111

18 Saaslona For

Horolcope.
1-90().776-0700
Ext. 3685
$2.99 ptr min. Uust be

...,

Giveaway

$25.00

H l&gt;lllC

Open 11:00 19 3;00
4:30 to 10:00 P.U• .
O...a: ,... A Diane

rvllr!rll(•pc&gt;r t 011

992-5042

Handrlcka
· Phone: 814-4112-2487

18 yrs. Serv-U
819 845 8434

F 11'1 rlv C1·c

- · 614-«B·22U.

Weeks Old, Mi~~:ed ·
Chow &amp; Collie, 614--446-9442.

Wa nted : Quality Hand Crafted
Items For Seasonal Gilt Shop,
614-446·0586, 614-586·5594 .

Years Old, 614-446-9442.

L&amp;E

Manress &amp; box springs. 304·675·
5-416.

110

Mixed Beagle puppy, 6moa old,
good wlc:hildren. house pet only.

people wlio need to las.,
weight &amp; make money, to try new
pa tented weight -lou product.

My name is Snowball. rm wAle wl
short te;gs. I have 3 sisters ; 1
black, 1 brown, and 1 brQ'ffrvkJng
hair. " wa don't find a home before
Easter, we will be taken to the
pound. Please call 304 ·675-4506

30•·773-5083 2•1YSiday.

30&lt;-675-4650.

ADVERTISIN~

THE HAT lUI
Imprinting

and give us a home.

•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms

HaP1J11 Hollow Rd., Middlepoot

Puppies, Mother : Norweg1an Elk

Hound, To Good Homo. 614·2561323, 614·256-1929.

3rd St., Racine, Oh.
148 3321 3/21/J mo.

Puppies- pari Sheploeod a"nd Box·
or, 614-742·2754.

Three adorable pups to good
home, one Collte type female, one
male, 614-992-4252.

Legion #602
Bingo

Three outside dogs to good
homo. 614-643-5490.

Sun. Nights ·

60

with 21 players or more
Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the Number of players

lost: Addison Pike Vicinity, Small
Schnauzer Mix, Female Dog, An·
swatS To Treasu re, Red Collar,
614·367.()674 .

Lost and Found

lost one yaar old lemal&amp; Go~en
Retriever, green collar, wcassy' ,
SR 338/Apple Grove vicinity, e 14·

247·4035.
Eastern Avenue Vicinity, Ch ild's
f'e116 1H46-82MTIII5 RM.

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSIRUniON

LQst: woman's brown purse, V!Cin·
iry of Food land, ca ll 614 -742 -

•New HomBs

,MANAG~R&amp;

'/
:·"")ft-.."'. '
I

·.

• Training .
•Boarding
•Leuona

2639.

•

KARA9KE
WITH SOUND'SYSTEU'

COURT STREET ~Rill,.
SATURpA'f. ~MARCH 30TH

1

. ; :

•

OPEN HOUSE .
SUNDAY 2·5 PM
L&amp;E ADVERTISING
·THE HAT MAN

. .~ARTMIIITS

I

LAUNDRY, MANAGER &amp;
MAINTENANCE
ON SIGHT
•.- .
;
1
. .
Contact Wlltna Glllenwat,r, Manager . .'
• 949.2012 Or Come Into Office
•'

· Racine ·

FloWetShop
. Twtggys

Kou'ltfY Kitchen
., ·..

~-. Otllo 4l77t

Ume1tone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
SetviCII
HDUHSitea1nd
Utilities

(114) ID-2tiOO

All Kinds of Earth Work

LOIIIOM
·---·
30111 RQ¥ Jon1e Rd.,

Stop &amp; Compare

- P.~-~•139

. TMf ·CM~ey

-

ttor. A Tlllllt: ~II&amp;
~-

YOUNG'S ·

CARPEiuEI SERVIa

'GUllA.

•Room Aclclltlon1
•NawGanign
•Eia:blai lo Plumbing

·lelilla
,..
.

•flloon"tt

...., II SCI
I .....

"=~ICI

...

Woa1c
(FREEEITIIIATU)

'Jf I 1J

Alae AIIIIIIJiea . .
114-U7oOJIJ .
I!WIIioo.

.

•ll!llotor a Exterior

'

Babysitter Needed In Gallipo lis
City limits, For 3-5 Days Pe r
Week , Mostly Evenings, 614 -

446-7139 .

Developmen t Director For Multi county Family Planning Agency.
Requ ires Experience In lncreaa.
ing Major Gi ft Donations And
Skills To Develop And Implement
Planned Giving And Capital Campaigns. NSFRE Certilicarlon Desirable. Salary In Keeping WitP'I
Experience. Send Resume, 3 Professional References, And SaJar~
Expectations To Kay R. Aikins,
Executivt Director, Planned Par.enthood Of Southeast Ohio, 396
Rich land Ave~" Athens, OH

Home Typlsl8, PC uaer1 neec:~ect •

lmmediale Opening For A Full Time Medical Social Wor.ker In
The Home Health Department
ftespo~albilitiea ln&lt;:lude : Acceaa~
•ng Patltnla To Improve 01 Uain-tain "l!leir Social, Emorional And:
Phy11cal Health. Makes Home

&amp; VIcinity
· ~/ 1, 412, 3 Family: Houuhold
Goodo. womona Chlldrlna c~oon .

For Free ettlmate call 949-2512

ing,

.•____..JI!!!I~U~ICJN.~!!:'A~I~J~I~·~.AJ!~U~---.:-=~ -

Toys,

Vloill. Paoticipatts In The 0...1-•

Furniture. Belmont Dri·

opmen! 01 The Pa111n10 Plan 01 .

ca... Plovidta Couni11111'1Q.

OI1VIneSo001.

Ouallficatlona Include; ~a•wra 1

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

O.gr.., Ohio Llconao Ro·
qulred, PIOYioue HooJih Caro Ex·
!IO&lt;iooq foelerrecl AIIO, Oponlng ·
For Home HHith Hurling Aaaiaoant Muso llo Certilitd With
LISW

Advonco. DEADLINE : 2:00p.m.

MN512

ttle day before the ad Ia to run.
Sundoy tdiilon · 2:00 p.m. Foiday.
Monday edition · 1Q:OO a.m. Sal·

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

o..

uodty.

panda~e Tranaportailan. Must
Succe11fUIIy Complete Compel· ·
encr Eum· And Skills Demon'·

E'""y Thuroclay, Foiclay, Soourclay,
1699 McCormick Road,'BoiWten
160 And 588, Open 9:30A.M.·

CHEAPER RATES

WElDING I FIIIICIDON
uo.OOIIR.

alrl•on.

'

•

'

'' .

:;S:OO:.:...P...;.M..;.;Big:,:
' :_Vorio.;.,;..IY;:.·_ _ _ _ ' Sand Roau,.To :

• Lorge GltllgO Sale: To Soi1le E•
; 1011, 2 , _.. C!IOI- .S.O.
1oono ,WOOding Ou!llo, Homelloe

-··.Law-.
cto-.
·l'Bo••

2- ~
. Bihel, 1\oro 5 SpMd lllc;dn.
~
01 Woo~c
n w
Box Gr Alii llony Oihoo loamal

v.c~C:':· Nl

·-

Pomeloy, Ohio

-...rOopo.....,.
Oook Hill Coonor.onioy
MedUICemar

:IISOC-I!IIn.

.

OokHII.Oiolaf!IQI
'

•

EOE

.
':L-.,.....~---.:::::..1

.Gdlpatll.

·

- - - - ---:4:!t... '
\-

I

&gt;

...

' · /1, 412. 4/81118, 7tl Vine StrHt,

I

'

'

h5,000 income potential. Call 1~
800·513-4343 Ext B-9388.

Gallipolis

aystema, lay linea, underground borea.

Fl

Cedot Park, TX 7!1613.

Large garage sal• AprU 1-2. Will
Hill past Meigs Golf Course.
Children, adult clothing, toys,
misc. Rain/shine.

24 Hrs.

Springs,

Earn up to $1,000 'lfeeM.Iy Stuffing
envetopes at home. Start now. No
e•perience. Free supplies, infor-. .
mation. No obligation. Send self
addressed stamped envelope to ·
Express Dept 36, tOO Eu(
Whil011one BIYd .. Sullo 1•8·345

Fr~ay

Wa dig baaemants, put In septic

.

UNEMPLOYED

PEOPLE I Are you tired or scanning the claaaitieds to find the
sam&amp; d&amp;ad end j obs? Well look
no further. Growing compan~ has
positions open to travel the
U.S.A, with an enthuaia1tic and
energetic group. No experienctr
necessary. You must be at least
18 and able to amrt today. For a
personal interview see Julie at
The lowe Hotel, Thurs. April 4th,

32719.

day April 1, lormaly waa Joes' Gift
Shop, 32Q2 Syracuse, 4 fami~
sate, very nice clothing all sizes.
4 good tires, TV, what-knots.,
brass I ;tans.

587

J. E. DIDDLE, O'I{NER

992·6356 or 304-862· 2645, Ind.
Rap.

195609, Winter

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa id li'l
: Advance. Deadline: 1 :OOpm the
day before the ad is to run. Sunday edition- 1:oopm Friday. Mon' day tdiilon 10110a.m. Sature~y.
Garage sale.
29th &amp; Mon-

'

nu ·

lsll&amp;l

992-3838

Able Avon Representatives
needed. Earn money for Christmas bills at home/at wort~. . 1-800-

in1o.. no o~igalion. Sand S.A.S.E.
to Prestige ·unit IL, P.O . Box

&amp; VICinity

FREE ESTIMATES
985 4473

Jackh•mmer, Available

f Shirley

Earn l1000s weekly stuffing envelopes at home. Be your boss.
Star t now. No exp., free supplies,

Pomeroy,
Middleport

Remodeling

Racine, Oh. 45n1
JamBs E. Dlddla
Trlckhoa, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
P.O. Box

AVON I All Areas
Speoos, ~-675-14211.

45701 .

J.D. Drilling Company

Trucking.

$1 ,000 Weekly Processing Mai l
Free lnlo. Send Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope: Expreu
Depl.131, 100 East Whirearone
Blvd., Suite 148--345, Cedar Park

10am-2pn. No phone calls.

Lucky Ball $300.00

949·2044 or 949·2038

$-WANTED·$

1o

ATTENTION

Six week old Coll i a/Beag~e mill
puppies, wormed, 5 males, 2 females, 614-985-.C316.

Racine American

Help Wanted

1'108613.

Part RoV'BolteJ puppies, born Feb.
19th, to good home only, 33056

p..._________;.,;.__....;.______,

Howard Excavalin

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

Male Beagle Hunting Dog, ::

Mltrno.

• Trail Rldetl

Warned: Himalayan cat Or Maine
Coons Cat. Prefer You To Givea-

5 Puppiei, 8

31111 mo.

•Gar11gas ·
•Complate

Wamed To Buy: Junk AI.Jtos With
Or· Without Motors. Call larry

M...ons Old. 614-4411-94-42.

;-_.....,..__ _ _ _"' . Loso: While /Gray Small Male Ca1,

Cct1c fo1
Elclc1IV l!FI

1053.

6mo. okt Black La~ good W/Child·
ren, 10 good home only. 304-6 7S- ~
4650.

1J31111n

ATTENtiON SPORTS

Nova, 67 · 70 Camero, 614-441 -

Wanted To Bu,- : little l ikes Toys,
Sand Bo X; . P icn ic Table, Play
House, 614-245-5887

~ 12 Be&amp;jale, 112 Springer Male 5

SERVICE
Umettone • Gravel

&amp;•· 72 Chevelle, 64·72 Chevy il l

Lively. 614-380-9303.

ANY 1 STORY HOME, $2.995:
ANY 2 STORY HOME $3,995,
IOO..FNANCNGI
PHONE TODAY 6!4-265-7694 .

(No Sunday Calls)

$3.99 p,r min. ·
Must ba·18yrs.

V!NVI. SIDING

40

61~175

Wanted To Buy : 8.2 Ten Bait Po·
sitrack Unit To Fit A 1968 Chevelle Can Use Any or The Following Carriers, 65·70 Chevrolet,

Sparta fans· find out now up-to ·
date acoreatspreada and much
more. 1 -g00-718-0700 ext. g306,'
$2.Q9 per ~nule, must be 18 yrs.

5/I~TFN

Chester, Ohio

Wanted to Buy Used Mabile

Homo• Call:

30 Announcements

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

.Tile wateo lnlalmcnt company cordially invites you to
participate In a free, no obligallon, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardnnt, Iron, PH.
Pleue call R•i.So/1111 1112-4472 or 1--.3313
to eat up )'Our lrM water -'rtlt.

;,New Homes • VInyl Sldlllff'New
Garages ~. Replacement Wlhdows
Roomjddltlons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

IAULIIIG

742-2803....,

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

985 4422 '

992·7«1.

evanlng, keep jacket, ple. .e ,..
turn papers 10 church office, no
questions asked.

Dlrt•Sand

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.·

LowRIIII)

ortooStNn
P~n ""-1, c.H Toeltlyl

Downepouta

TII·STITE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

Used furniture · anliques, one
piece or complete estates, also
do appraisals, Oaby M8rtin, 61-4·

To person who took red jacket
rrom pickup truck In rront of Main
St. Baptist Church Tue1day

Guttera

1.....,.,

(U~SfOne.

o(ldcl

ECJulpment

Avonuo, Gallipolis, 614·«8-2842.

Personal&amp;

005

2l22m'Jj

Dutributed by

,_,(IHJ 111-TW

•TIM Trimming
•llowlng (fiiHidentlal
and commercial)

RQOFING
NEW-REPAIR

PorF,..~...... L~---D-~--ng--M~II~be~~~on~~---h-2Rh
__. _·~~~
992-3894
R. L. HOLLON
... . .. ... ·- -- ·- --- . .~
TRUCKING
TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
Water
DUMP TRUCK
DRAIN a.EANIHG
~.A~!:
1.Jf.-treatment
.... 111&amp; hj "lrl
JfiA;
I'V&amp; WdN
kiJtlffM Auf 'I

·ua"'l

ANNOUNCEMtNTS

Howard L. WrHnel

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVICE

~---·, ...."2..025

~Top Prices Paid! Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old ·
Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1St Second

Mond•y throgp Wednesday

Toll F,..1-100-a72-5817

IID ,tlm

J &amp; 0 '1 Auto Parta. Buying sa l·
vage vehi.c ktl. Selling parts. 304773-5033.

pizza

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

1~

Wanted to Buy

Antiques, collectables, estates,
Rive ri ne Antiques, Run Moore,

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brldcles ·
614-742-2183

Malntai!M!U
fOlia par rwque.t
·•No LIIWrl'1bo Lal'llf

-

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

90

·~o, s~ucusl .·
. '·

lCCEPTINtr
CATIONS AT
ELMYIOO.DTERRACE

.

Yood Sale 5aouodty, 1102 Mead·

T,_h Rt!IIOYII · Commercial or Rnldentlal
Sepac Tanka Ck Jned &amp; Portable Toilet. Rented •
Dilly, -idy &amp; monthly rentll rllae •

H&amp;H

....,_,_
I -:j

'

Pt.PitiSint
&amp; VIcinity

POMEROY, OHIO

..... . . . end OCMr I'ICycltblee end ........ 10
win i lllndcniftlcl IOIId Wl!lnul end OICIIIr ·lined
blenket cheat Vlllued .. $1110 to be gMn 11W1Y
MM:h 30111. Trt. Co. Recycling open 7 cs.ya • wwll \

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

t:;

I

Prom

IIJ8

'

C~l

814-448-4462

1

11p

..

lSth
'
.

Customer Appreciation
Days &lt;luring the Month of March
Do your f*1 tor our~ Bring ue your

Freel!etlmetM

nnfng

~:£.,;:;::All:..,___

Happy

Announ~

Silver Brlctoe PIIIZI

m

' ,In. too
private burring ground .
. t• Cc
· Ohio, Further, The Farmer• Bank
tltueted on the EMt aide of
,rlbad.
tollowa: and Savlnga Compan)'
•ld Lot and directly In front ~II lhe canter of
lha right to ~Jact
of the 11. E. Church abova St t;!!~ No. 331, on the ell)'orallblde.ubmlttlid.
1 '""'to
Eat n ... , 100 ecrelol No. Further, the abova
,..,,_ -~~lOUth llliiHI colla..,.l wlll.illti!Oid In !he
Alao, · ~"·•
'in-·ih;
RW.r';~~C. condition It Ia In, with no
.~-,.:nhlge i od Slati
the. ~Ohio upr••• or lmJ1Ued
. ':.'ni In the towntlllp
to the otaat ,,... of Hid -rrenthla glwn.
~
bounded . j'
Acre Lot No. 112,
For further Information,
:~
tolloWe: A
North ·1057.a ,... to o:Oootact 0..1-111112-2131.
triangular place of land I llla ' Center of State Route .@)2T, 28, a 3TC
lncluclad In the dool')'enl ·of I :_
lht dwelling hou.. ol
110 Help Wanted
Emeline · L. llcknal .
lhalnnlng on the Eal!l Una
of 1.o1 No 1M where lila
CO~
fence of ·the lronl rerd
MIJNrTY
SKILLS
INSTRUCTORS
(Subatioro.... the line end
running parallel to the
tutea) naaHd to tuch community •nd
public road alghty-lwo lael·
J)eraoul akllla to adulta with learning
thenca ., right MOgle• wnh
old nne running EHI of N.
llmltatlona In G.. llli and Meigs Countlea.
Seventy alghl'"' ao1ong 111e
High achool ct.gree, valid drlvar'a
aide of .hi dooryard 1enoa
and aide ot waeh houn to
license, three years llcenHd driving
the lnterMCIIon o1 the Eut
e~perlence, good driving record Md
line ol Lot No. 114
llloraaeld· thence South on
~uate automobile lnaurance cover·
Nkl Eaat Mne to the pa- o1
raqulrad. Houra: M acheduleclln
beginning and with ell of
the appurtenance• tenpae
naeded; mu-' be able to lilly ovemlghta..
galee, well, eum~r houn:
Salary: $4.75/hour, to atart. Training:
al!rubbary, lruH - . . weeh
hOUM, etc. In end ' on Nld
proviHd. Send resume to_: P.O. Box 604, ·
1o1 ot lend .. aloreeeld, aaold
Jackson, . OH 45640i ATTN: 1 Ceclll•.·
No 1M being IinaM! aa Lot
tM, 1n'Town 2,
11,
Deadline for appllcanfl. 415.'96. Equal .
Ohio Companr'• Purcha..
In 111811, Count)~ Ohio.
•
I uir.
A...nmems
I .... v
,...tor •Alent

-

,

Ill 1:1. IICYCLIII

Asba&amp;elle's

*.

Tha Farmere BMik elld
.iN. .;.:
·
I :! ~out• No. 338, end
S av I n 11•
·com P • n Y.
I ~ r'~. u.
Pomeroy, Ohio, ·raaarvea
~·
- • ••tat• the right to blelat thle ule,

:~. ':i. P2::-'p~7~: ~o~:~,'::e,:.:;~:P! .II :~1;ii

2110, p. 217, Vol. 2115, P· 103,
llalge Countv Oaad
Reoorda.
APPRAISEO VALUE:
$54,000.00
PARCEL NO. 4: The
following reel ••••••
alluateci ln lhe Count)' of
llelga, In the Slate ot Ohio
and In lhe . Townehlp of
Labli11on bounded and
deecrlbed at tollowe: All
that portion oil the
following deacrlbad lend
lying Northweet aida of
State Routaa 124 and 331
which ere the eame. Known
end d.. lgnetad •• filth
OMelon or 100 acre Lot No.
114 In Seotlone No. 20, 21
and H In Town 2, Range 11
ot the Ohio Company••
Pure he.. which •••
originally drawn In the
dMelan of land of the Ohio
Company'• Purch•• to one
of the eheree In tha name of
Alexander Hamilton, and lor
further d ..crlpllon ••
lollowe: Beginning at •
elaka or poet In the Eat
nne oil .. lei 100 Acre Lot 50
f. .t South of the
lntereacllon 1&gt;1 Stat••
Routee 114 and 331 and
running with ..ld ~ ~~~
In the Northq direction ""
ttoeHortheeoel-rof ..ld
lot; thence In • Watterty
direction acroae ..ld 100
Acre Lot No. 114 to the
Northw..t corner ot aald
lot; thence In ;. eoutherl)'

or....,aulljaottoalllepl

wee

clinvayed by c. 11. Brow!)
and Lucinda Brown, hie
wlia, to Jamae H. Hughea,
d d 1n .~
..-b)' deed - •
........
~
It, Page 77, llelge Count)'
OHtl RHOI'da
Furtharmo;• excepting
until. Clair C. Soeo, hie lialra

Hndrad and filghl)'·lhree
(IU), Saoflone Moe. .! 3, 14,
..
No ~ "'I
and
15, 1n ,own
· '""
.. •
In Range
No. 11
0111o
Purchun,
,_..,
1 rth 0 1
.Xcepl lh,..
ou •
an
acre (3/4the.) on the bel

--~teat and~~.""

'-"~!~'

·-;.

!!.',

•, '~II! ...::.;:

:o.•

..,,.il
;
"
u~r I~ aoid ~!~)'"=..am:
(~.--~Dfild-rP

I' ...

Recorda, II alga
County, Ohio, •• foli-e:
Sltualad In lha Count)' of

P{'"' ..•

No. 331: ....... 10 . . , _
North 2 0 ' - 141.22 taat
along the center ot Mid
a- Route No. 331 to !he
place ol baglnnlng,
.......... 13.2-. more

. ONSIGHT.
• :~::·=~~!",:_":'..::-.,::: .Contact Wi Gillenwater,
Manager
~d
·•i :;::, ·· 992-641~· Or Come Into Office ·
of -;~·!·
··
·• ·
~==========:.t=======:;:;:===~=~~~
.

ll.ii\ ~~
•:: ........._.... .•. ,-......;. ~-;.;;:/_of_ll....
; .~
...... ~~· ·~-"· . a_.~·R~=---::~ ~~~ . . -I
....
:
'
...._.., , I "·- - · - ..,. .. . . 111 ., the ·
- J&lt;: ..,J,
.,.,, ., ':: ·-,,-,. .:r ·
.

-....~

................1.;......... (173,112)

_

Oeed

unclerlylng

••1•

1

Fund c . .h Balance,
January ,,, ........174,114
Fund Caah Belence,
o-mber 31, 1115 ..... 1,412
R• • , rv •
1o r
Encumbrance•, Oac. 31 .
Flci1IIINI
........F..uncl
.......~
..................o
uo..Iai')'
Ellpand- Truet
All Other R -... 2,44t
TolaiRavenue R-'pta...
...................................1,448
Human 8ao&lt;'ln1 ...... 3,231
Total
Expenditure
Dl~...........3,231
1btal. -·~!oalpta ~r .
(U8:0:
; ••.::..:.,: . Total . ~th!~

.JDoe~·. r:_ro~. ~ !·1 , R;:g·~·~;;
.., •·

~ ' !he coil

hla helra and lit ~llova daecrlllall
......... llhlll....,. •....,.. p·t amle.. Ia herab)'
oHIIy 12 fMiwlde from the ,...rved and exceplad to
..... Road Ill North !!lonll
_ ....... ol ..... ...,..
the Eaat line to the Soulfi ~ ~.....";.ba
llnclol . . prapertr;
......... - .. _, d
Excepting lharetrom 41 neo••••l"'' to Qpan_.!!..
...,... and ...., • - - . .
ecru mora or 1••• ,,....,., wnh bulldlnga,
10
conve)'ad
Uoyd Harrla riiiNed . . . . . , ~
and Suale Herrle llr Althur to-""' ..ty Mid DMI from
R-h and ledla " - " llr
prenoleee; aleo lor
deed dated Sapta111ber 2, d.....,ao• and depoelt of
1141, recorded In Dead ,.._ IIIII the rlghlto haul
Book 110, page 411 of tl~rouoh and ove'r eeld
llalge Count)' 0 . . 11
d 1
dad
ooel an . rom
1
·Recorda. II • lnlan
' tod)l!cent pre,.- and ""·
.._.,.,, 10 Include and grantorelo be relieved trom
conve)' herein the lrM UM a!lf aurtece damage b)'
al the aprlng that waa re-n of mining tor coal
reearved In lila dead to
· Hid - •
Lloyd and Suala Herrle unilar
,.._......
_..
Any aurt-land raqul,_
alorllaokl.
tor u•• u above by Mid
Bolng the pert of lha
nme - • aalala conveyed grantore or any pereon pr
10 Sadie II. Roueh and p.,.one now or In the
Arthur E. Roueh by dead lutuno owning aaold -'-:::
-~- ........ In OHtl Book. 110, othtr right uceplad •
,_.,_
Page 14 ot tha lllelga re-.rv.cr or either or both
be
CouRt)' Dead Racorde.
•• •alated alore..ld to
Tha lui pravloue Pll4!. lor at . the rate ol
conu-anca ol the ...opemy taQQ.OO per...,..
Ia ~;......, In
Book
The above raal al!lete
•••
baing the eama property
483
• Deed deeded to William R.
175, Page
Recorda 01 lllelga Counl)', Paraone and lllartha C.
Oh~• dNd Ia Intended to P-n• b)' F. E. Tlc o - 17 -rae, more or alljl 11. E. Tlbbl.. bJ deedd
....or, ell on
- the NlhUowHI daliad II•)'
an
len,
~ 15, 11111,•-k
aide of Stale Rout•• 124 reca-dw'
,.,_ In 111-ft_..,..... .....,
and ·- · now or formarl)' No..L 43, Page14.
Vol
.....b)' the aild Hllrl')' .
Reltrance Oeede: •••.
owned
314, p. 441, Vol. 314, P·......,
lwlln.
Vol. 313, p. 711, Vol. 303, P·
Except I •1 ~•-•o': to 711, Vol. 211, p. 475, Vol.
:~!c'rlbed 111
2110 p. 217, Vol. 211, P· 103,
171 , Page 441 , Dead . Vol. 141, p. 584, lllalge
Recorda, Melge Counl)', Cou~ Deed R--a. .
OhR"!;._Vol
..
VALUE:
.,...nee .......a:
• 4•
or-p. 133 (O.R.), Vol. 314, p.
PARCEL NO. t : ,:h:
441, Vol. 314, p. 433, Vol. loiJowlng
d .. c r •h
2111, p. 475, Vol. 2110, p. 217, pr..,.laee alluetad 1n 1 •
Vol. 211, p.103.
Townehlp of LebaSnon,
APPRAISED VALUE: Count)' ol lllelga and tate
Sll,-.17
o1 Ohio;
PAfiiCEL NO. 5: The
Being too Acre La) No.
following rea1 ..tate ·Ill,. In Townehlp No.
ellueted In the CoiNII)' ot Ranoa No. 11 ot tile Ohio
llelp, State of· Ohio enclln Compell)''t
.Purchue,
Lebanon
T-"'p, ~lnlng100acrae,more
bounded and daecrlbed •• or taaa, excepting about
loll owe, to•wlt: Ona 8.211- on t h e - -

of
.. ld 100
Lot Una
No. ._..:.,...;,_ _ _ _ _
direction
withAcre
the w..t
114, which •• the line
bttwHn aald lot and land
now owned b)' Uoycl Herrle
to a poet In uld line 20 rocl•
South of alate Route 124;
'1111111
thanca ecrciaa aiald Lot to
the placa at beginning,
containing U acrae, more
orleu.
EQUAL
It Ia
agreed end
~!TY
underelood by former
Grantore and Grant- thl!l .
South to • ~h~e ~h the the Grenteee ahell hev, ••
ban' at the
o; enca mineral• and the rlghia to
with lhe mao••utn~·!~ ~..!'~ operate
.the
eame
tha "me
..............,. underlying ,II tlcree, more
to the place of beglnnln:, or laaa, ac-• tha Soulh
makln~:J. rig~',::!:.~• and of the ebove daacalbacl
..me
an
h N rt~ premlaae. It Ia fu(lhar
:::"w=~:h ·~ ~i
~ d
IInke, containing 71 en
h•
141/IIOtha olen ecra, poore that , ·r~~
or'"'· And being the nma rh•.·,·r........
· . .
properl)' conveyed by llaoac
Parr and lluth Parr, hla wife, balance .
m•
mlnerall
tlla
to Robert F. Johneon by ~~~~the
11H4 dalad ~rll 20, 1113,
.ncl reponled n Book It Ill
I·
..
. ,
P ..~ 324 ot lhe Deed
· H •• further .....d and
RHOnla of llelga Count)',
undare,ad:IIY lhe CIIMJare
•,
Ohio.
• river bent&lt; which

TOTAl;
.
Vol. HI, p. 471, VoL ·
~! · ReniMR•calpta: ·
I~ p.217,Vol.lll,p.~
., . . ...........,.-.a;.l,1111
County Dn

'

.

p:;,•• ell!:,:
In the Tawnahlp · of
Labanon, Count)' ol llelge
and Stele ol Ohio, and In
the Ohio Compan)''t
Puroh11e end bound~! nd
d-11bed .. fola-:,..ng
a part ot 100 acre or 5th
Dlvlelon Lot Nfl. 111 and
.Section• 14 and 15,
1bwntlllp 2 end Range 11
particularly bound ad ••
tollowe: Beginning at the
Southeeet c - of Lot No.
1U; thence North to a aiOM
at lha Northweal corner;
~· w..t 27 pol•• •1111•
IInke to • poet; thence

Ellpencllturn
Dlabu!'H!M111a:
Ctopltel Oulley....... tU,t12
Note Principal Pa)'IIMint...
.................................M,OOO
Total
Expandlture
Olaburaemente ........ 273,112
Total Recalpta. Over.
(Under) Dleb.......... (273,112)
Other Financing Sourcaa
(U...):
. P-.cle of N-.M,OOO
Oparatlng Trana~.....
................. ~ .............. 15,000
Tote I Other Financing
Source• CUMa) ....... too,ooo
(unclt!) Dlab. 1 other u...

it;;.-it;'r•iii;"'::'ftt";:
~ ·c-••~~ -afllaa.!Ch-gal Daauill!arll;
~

!:

~j·p-;;;j;;;;t"""'"'"'"""'0 lo~:~~~

iiii;:-;~;.-:::::ii1.:0

~

Public Notice

...............................111.112

IO...

,.,) 11,100·11!

.no..

1 . . - I Flecal Ch....
....:...........................10,212
Total
Expenditure
Dlaburnmenta........344,074 .
Total . Receipt• Ovar
(Unde!) Dlab..............(3.»'8)
Other Financing Source•

l!xpenollu- ,
. Dlilbl-nte:
IAIIalative and Execl!llva
':""'¥"-""_........ 1.~-!!1
.Judlclei .......... - .....,Ull
Public lalel)'........l14,ql
Publici ~.-......41,217
Heelth..............,.....13,51t
H,.....s.Maii .....
~ i Reart'!"Dn

111.'.:!._7-1~ .

w-.

Expenditure•
Dlaburnmente:
Bond Principal Par-..
.. ...............................77,000
Note Prl!101pel Par-••

.: ::.:::::::.....z.?M:-

Cllaflaa

Call an Hand .......... 5,11o
Total Treuury ..lance ....
............................3,1180, 111
Len: Oulatandlng Checb
and
oac. 31, 1IIINI
............................... 410,201
(llutt ~qual .Fun~! ~
CUh ....- ) ...3,-,110
Fund ~ ·Cah ...
...................- ..,••••2,725, 117
Proprletel')' and Similar
FlcluciMy Funda...... 3114,113
Grand 'l'oiiii........3.-,IIO
(3) a; 1TC .

............................... 340,111

..... _ ...........................4,138
RnH ll'orleltu-JZ,300
hotetgovemrnental
Reoalpte................ 1,301,171
All(ltharRe- ....-....
..............
...............
1tll,,.,
..
_ ... .._ _
_ Racel.,.....

oioRAA

............................ 3.144,171

Raaerva
for
Encumbrance•, Dec. 31,
'1115..........................1M. .1
DebtS.rvloe
RavanueR-Iple:
T -......................, 11,110
Intergovernmental
R-lpla ..:.:r•.. ~·•· ....117,411
All Other nevenue ............
............................... 133,33o
Tolal Revenue Rcelpte ...

...............................J10,132
l.lcanNe and P-Ile.......

·Ditlll. a ~·::;:·

~y.~:,laed

and ClrWIIelll lhllla ~

a.-,

YMIIIIIIt

( Public Notice

~~~.!: ~~=-~ ~~ ~::.·
~·~~="!r:::~~ whloh
:.~ '!:'~~~d~~:~
":::
axcep
Ilea South of the

............................ I;J37,131

fll..,...ue Rcelpla:
T -..~ ..........." ..~..114,140
CMrgeelor S.rvleae........

I

and Range Number Eleven
(11) of the Ohio Company'•
Purchen, and baing the
Ope..Ung TlentiW-Oul....
It ( /21 of th•
................................ (2,127) North ona.ha 1
.. t quarter cit
NET INCOIIE ........ (IMI,415} Southw
Seotlon Number twanty.ftve
Fund Caah Balance, Jan . (25) conlalnlng Eight)' (10)
1, 1IIINI..................... 433,~ aoree more or Ieee, and the
Fund Caah Balenca,
~*ember 31, 1115.3114,113
C.tll llaconcHiatlon
o-raur•
... and removing the
For the ftecal Y"J' ended
a_.ma.
December31,1115
Reference Oeade: Vol:
Oepoeltorr Balance•, 314,
p. 441, Vol. 314, p. 433,
Fannlra hnk. ......3,144,171
Total Depoai!OI')' . .. . _

Fund Caah Balance,
.Janual')' 1, 1111N1.... 1,. .,230
l'und Caeh Balance,
O.C.mber 31, 1IIINI ..............

_,

thence Eaat to the
"-~-- ocimer of the 70
....,.,_,
...,.101; thenoa hilt on !he
I iiri-llna of 100 Acre Lot
1 ~ 0 •.. 111 to le..c Parr•e
~~·With corner; thence
Parr'• ...... to the
•n.,.
River; thence d-n lhe
River 16 the piece ol
.._Inning, containing 100
...,.
ecree, more or leu, within
the Ohio the place ol ·
beginning, containing too
acree, _,. or Ieee, Within
'h. Ohio Company'e.
Purchue, and lor a
particular daecrlptlon of the
premlna, reference Ia had
to the Ohio boch. And
being the ••m• property
conve)'ad by Edward Rouah
end JuUe A. Roueli, hla
wile, to Robert P. Johnaon
b)' deed dated Februal')'
24th 1-• end recordaclln
' ......
•--L
.... 100 of the
,
_ "4
• tt p -•
Deed Recorda ol lllalge
Ca ......, Ohio. ·
_,,,
Rlllerence
Dtede: Vol. 4,
p. 133 (O.R.), Vol. 314, p.
441, Vol. 314, p. 433, Vol.
111, p. 475, Vol: 2110, p. 217,
Vol. 211, P· 103, lllelae
County DMd Recorda.
Value:
PARCEL NO. 3: 011 end
••• rlghlt conveyed b)'
Ma-• and Leroy Hom•• to
,...
11 1

..............~.............. (15.111),

.......................:.......311,701

General Fu_nc1

. Total Dllburwmet.~·;;.

REVENUES ............. (85. . .1
INCO'IiE
UFORE
OPERATING TRANSFERS ..

Total Oilier Financing
Sourcn cu-) ....... 342,711
(under) Dleb. A other u ...

AUDITOR OF STATE
FOR THE f'ISCAL
YEAR ENDEO
OECEIIIBER 31,11111$
THiS II AN UNAUDITED
FINAHCIALSTATEIIENT
Combined atatement ol
reaalpta, dlebureementa,
_. o~~eng.. ln bal~nc".
Governmental Fund 'IYP"
and Similar Flcluolary Funda
tor tlla Fleoal Y•• Ended
D!!!~ 31, 1115

Atvenue.................. l,313.11
Total Recalpll .....s,XI.•
Ellpencllture
Dl....,._....

~T: . No·N:S:~~:la

............................... 124,014

~ra,,~r:

: ~.

411,744

01her Financing u - ......
.......................................(0)

COUNTY OF IIEIGI
CASH 11AS18
ANNUAL FINANCIAL

DICimbtr 31 ...... 213,. . .11

....

............................ (131,100)
01her Financing So)orcee.

Public Nollce

· Raaerve lor Enounobr.
oecember 31 ........ 10,701.M
Ev-ndlllll:

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

.Advancee-ln Not Repaid ..
............................... 142,113
Advance..Out Not Repaid

I certll)' the following
report to be correct and
trua, to the b..t of my
knowledge

· Dab18er'lloa ..... (t.OOO.OOI
· Total
Other . Fin .
s-cn/UNt.........1 ,574.12
Expand. Dla!l.. I Other
:u...,.. ........;.... 121,1t~.l7
l'und Ceeh Balance
January ............ 131,114.71
Pund Caeh Bala•ca,

. . . . . . . . ._

..... ~ ........... ,.......... (347,047)

Populllllon ...................2,2St

(31 a; lTC

.~

Oparl!llng TrMale...out ..

Olebureen~enta...120,240.311

.... of l'lndAeNte25.00
Other . Sourcee/
Honcp arating lle¥..1,5411.12
,.,.,...,.,.n ..... too.ooo.oo

FIDUCIARY FUND TYPE
AGDICY
Olher Non-Operating
Reve-..............1e,o&amp;7.0ther Non·Opara!lng

Operating Tr_le...........

1

.220,300

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

cu-I=
P-.c!e of Notea.l2,1111

Tote1 ................. 425,327.A4
lnelde 10 111111 .............. 1.70
OUtalcla 10 111111 ........... 8.10
lllunlclpellncoma Tax. 1'11o
Federal
Ceneua

.............................12,323.02

1.......... 0&amp;~

Other Financing Source•

..........................210.4&amp;1-01

,.,.,.. 8el'\"'ooii.............

............................... 23lj711

Fund Cull Balance,
Januery 1, 1115.... 2,4• 411
Fund Cuh Balance,
December 31, 1115 ..............
...........................2,721,117
Reeerve
tor
Encumbrancee, Dec. 31,

lntaNel Rec:al c~~a,...
............................................0

.
QO 8ondl .......... 41,711.70
Other Bonde I Ncllet .......
............................11.741.22
Total ... :.:.......... 1UI,4M.II2
Oulatandlng Oec. 31, 1115
GO Bondt ........ 144,15t.43
Other Bonde a Notee .......

............................ 10.114.31
l.eleufe Time AcllvltiH.....
............................ 12,500.00
IIUic Ulllll)' ServlcH.......

.
.
............. - ................27. . .
Other FIMiiclng u-......
............................ (111,4021
Total Other flnenclng
Sourcae (U-) ....... 303,401
,.,.., Oleb. a other U••

......................................... jo

Reilred

Security of Peraon a
Property ..............320,141.31
Public HNith Serllcee .....

Other Financing

Nota Principal Pa)'!MIII ...
............................... 101,37-t

Total ................... so,ooo.oo

;cutrent:

Aclv--out Not llep.ld

,_..,,.. - ...·-····-........... 17,101
.. ....._... ................. 0
capital Outlay ................. 0
lloncl Principal Pa)'IMIII ..

...............:............so.ooo.oo

·~

. . . . . . . . ..=)

J - ................. 112,134
Publlo lalel)'........ 111Public Worka .....2,775,1100
Haalth....................731. . .
Human SanlcN4,423,311
Co-..llllon • Recreation

.......................:....11,311.11

:Ttvenue R-lpta:·
,.:~~14401

~ii'Cii=~~~
...............................11M1,413

................................101,. .

..........................111,130.tll
ContractualllarAoae.......

FOR THE I'ISCAL
YEARENOEO
DECEMBER 31, 1115
· POMEROY VILLAGE,
•
MEIGS COUNTY
: Governmental Fund

...........~ ..................111,143
Opel'llllng ,.,........ OUt ..

IAtlelatlve and Executive

..-...c•• .......

Public Notice

Opet ...'ITIM ..............

E'qlandltuNe
Dltlbunamente:

.............................to,ae.t.31
LAieura Time ActlvHiaa.....
........... - ..............12,10D.OO
BMic Ullllty
.........- - ........- ..11.111.11
1Nnaportatlon 113,714.11
Peraonel Servlcee. ............

Expendllur•

Total R.celpta Over
(UncMri Dtalt..........!.(ll.ll7)
Olher l'lnenclng Source•
(UNej:
Pn:1CIId8 ofNotea ...... _ ••
............... - ...~ ...... 147,115

RICI~,.............I,712, 112

Sacurlt)' ol Paraon A
Prop 1rt) ..............311.117M
Publlo Haalth Sal o1 aaa.....

,.,...u,.,

Tolal

~...11,710,. .

IIIWgcloemrnental

Currenll

VHiaga ol Racine
. (3)20 (4)5 2TC

·~a"*-' Chargee
••••:............................10,212

.......................................... 0
FIMe l Fort.ltuna35,171

Dlabu-

· ~Lyona

..................- .........m,t•

···········-····""''''
.. '''102,324
Lie IRMI 1ncl Penftlte
.......

...................... 1,114,112.37
E"" uiCIIture
Dlellu,..,..ntl

Suppllea and .........._,
..........................211.470.41
Capital Outla)' ... 11,100.00
Debt llarJtce .....51,2lla.71,
Totll DllbutMmenl8 ••••••••
..........................ti2,24&amp;71
Total 1!-lpla over/undar
Dlabu-nta...171,M3.M
llala ot Notea.....IIO,OOO.OO
111'-llaneoue .......... 17.12
.... Gt Fixed Aaaeta ... ,.....
.................................210.50
Other
Sourcaa/
Nonap1Mting Aev•.'1,141.12
Trllnafara.ln ..... 1oo,ooo.oo
TrllnafM.Out(100,000.00)
. Debt Servlce.. C110. f47.i2)
Other
Ueae/Nonop.
EllpencllturH ...............,
Total
Other
Fin.
Sourcet/Una .... (13,318.01)
Expend. Dlab. I Other
Uen/llet ............. 10U74.10
Fund Cuh ' Balance
Janu.y 1............2115,371.115
Fund c; ..h a.lanoe,
O.C.mber 11 ...... 573,11411.25 ·
·Reearve lor Encumbr.
o-mbw 31 ....... 10,712.18 ·
Treaaury Bllance..............
..........................211.121.11
lnveatmanta....... II0,028.25
Balance............ 371,1117.42
Outatendlng ....... (1,711. 17
Tollllhlance .. 373,11411.25
Summary ollndebteci.Outatandlng, Jan 1, • •
GO lloncle ........ 184,571.13
Other lonct1 a ttote. .......
...........................300,214.23
Toiiii ................. 4M,712.3e
Hawluuaa
Other Bonde I N -.......

··-"""·······-····-····-77,000
Note Prlnclpel...,_. ...

Clwgee for s.r.tc.1 ........

..... - ........... - ......41,10'7.00

LEGAL NOTICE
· SEALED BIDS FOR
MOWING
THE
. GREENWOOD CEMETERY
WILL BE ACCEPTED Until
4:00 o'clock p.m. llonda)',
April 15, 18M b)' RACINE
: viLLAGE
CLERK·
TREASURER
KAREN
. LYONS, IIAIN STREET, P.O.
· BOX 375, RACINE, OHIO.
BIOS WILL BE OPENED AT
7:00 P.lll., llondlly, April 15,
· 1Ill&amp;. Prlca ehould be
eubmltled lor iual mowing
end • pr1oe ehould aleo be
· aubmltled or mowing and
· trimming. The mowing
and/or trimming will be at
the direction of the Tlul!len
of
GREENWOOO
CEMETERY. TRUSTEES
RESERVE TilE RIGHT TO
ACCEPT OR REJECT ANY
OR ALL BIDS. Blddera
muatfurnleh own lnaurence
·oralgnwalvw.

lll...-oue ...... II51,Cepllel Oulley.......1.,112
lionel Principal Permenl ..

Special..__
" - Recelpla:
TaM.................. I ,213,435

FlnM. u-..., a Nnnlta

. Public Notice
" _.;...:.=:~=-

8Jianoe,

,.._,......... ,_,,____,,,.25,.t0f

..___.......... ..IMII,207.M
Chargee lor ............
- - · ··- ...........78

•• e1a11e ., the No~at
_ , ot Mid 70 ...,. lot;

Hulhln llervloet........- ....

"--" 1, ~---142,0111

Tollll RICIIpla"-"'-""""

.............................. 5,312.11
Suppllaa ancllleterlale.....
' ............... - ...........51,313.27
' Debtlervlce......51,211.71
. Tolal Olaburnmenta ........

.............. - - .....712,412

ll ••lance
""-Y 1...c _..___
...,.,..01
l'und Cuh ••len.-,

Fund Cuh

..,...
'*"""• thanoe 11oat11
with Mid Cumonlnge 11M to

1tu1111c Worlul .... 2,111,717

-·--····--- - ........atFund c..h Balance,

fund

future.
·(3)2t lTC

Clerlil

.Juclle......._ .....-471 . . .

-,-,~--(110,004)
,_
01111.

~---"'·-17.12

No.,.,.....

~

March 29, 1906
70

Public Notice

'urch-. which lnoludM
the an11re ,.. a- Lot No.
•• and t11111y- Olf the
w..t 11nc1 ._,. •Ide o11oo
_.. Lat
and
bounded •• lollewe:
....nnlnt at • atone or
- . • lila bank ot lila
..._ 111 4laotle CUIIInolngl

- ·-·-····-,,...,_
..,......_.
................
··-··-·..,..,
. -·--·'
·141,310
......
__, _.,.....,

----·(17,11~

Oilier..-.-.'--· .
- · ---- ---147,711 .,......_...:
Oilier..-.-."-·-

ReMrva lor -Enoumbr.

Friday,

I Public N0111oe

'

Talllllewnue lleoelpla_

~NCII....­

lleaM!oiNr., -7a,171.11

· drinking wattr for tha

l!nvlronrnenlal Pr-lon

------.,...--.,.._1,.

........,1_.,.,1_
P11•tl Ceah 8alanoa,

Ottlo

The O.lly Sentinel• Pegle t

'·'

·'

~ .,.

�-

. ..

Frldlly, Marcl'l29, 1996

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

i ~F~~~!~~M~~~~~h~29~,~1~~~--~--~------------~-.-------!P~~m~MW~o~y~·~M~~~Ieport,~
~·~Oh~lo~~--------------_!n.~DI~I~L!~~n!U~~·~~~11
:;; ALLEY OOP

,..,

540 Mtsctlllneout

Small One Man Pruauro Washing Bualne11, ~nd Growing,
Fully EquiJ'ptd.
And AI, Ba
Your Own Bolt &amp; Make Your
own Hours, Can Pay For ~eolf In
One ·S.a10n, Great Investment!
61 ..3117.7755.

lgl&lt;l Schultz 3 Bedrooms. Gao
Hoot, Underpinning, I Blocks,
814·311&amp;-9075.
1V8g Clayton Newport Mobile
Homa t 4x83 Two Bedroom, Ex·
collont CondiUoh, $13,000 81 425&amp;&amp; •
147
gg
1 0 Clayllln 14x70, appliances,
~ontral ai r, oxc, cond , a1king
$1 5,500. 304-895-3243afllr8pm.
1'"'1 Broo~d II 14 X78 311edrooma, 2 B4tlto. Dishwasher, CA.
Deck. 15 FL Above Ground Pool,
·
D Ish, Now 0u I·
Pnmos111
building On 112 Aero
Located
20 M&gt;nutes Sou111 On SR 7,
Paved Road, $32,000 OBO, llo·
bile Homo Can Be Scld SoPtraiJr
jy, Bu t Must Be Moved For

s.-•·
_,18

.

'

"

Alraol-~ln

.. . l't .. Ia oOOjeCt lo·
FadOr!il Fair Housing Ad
~ llltgel

•anypraforenca.

'*-

-on-··-·
lfmllation

~ flimlllll- or 111111ona1
religion.
~.oranyinlonlldnto •

maiulllh)IJIUCh po-oc;o,

llmltlllpn or-tlotl."
Opportunity ·.~o~anagamont And
Davol-I Compon)' Cj~rronlfy
Expondl~. looking For llanage"rnent .Tralneaa, M-s. 10-4, 114·
-387-7780. '

Thli new1paper will not
Nnoo41ngly eocept
·-IOrrealastate
wllldols In lllolallon of 11a1aw.

· OUr-.. are toetebv

· Informed hi aii-~IQII

In this n o - r
manage 'mobile homo
are avaitabte on an equal
do' repair &amp;
' mobile homes. Sand re&lt;w&lt;JotuAity
P.Q. Box 1033, 1.o- . ....,._
_ _-_.- . . . .

main-

REAL ESTATE

2 bedroom home, 5 acrea, 2 car
garage with apartment, other
buildings, Home National Bank,

Aadne. On. 814-949-2210.

Sates Parson
Agent
With · Loads Bonefjll, Apply AI '2 Bedroom Homo, Patriot, 1
French City Pran. 4~3 Sei:ond Needs Work, $20,000 No
A"""•· GallpoNa.
' Conwac~ 61 ..448·.12117 '9 A.M. ·5

Scr~n Printer. Experience Nee-

, a nary, Sirioua Inquiries Only,

-----~-­

_
P._II_
.

2 homes in Middleport. live 1n
one, oonoct 2 nontsls oH.Ihe oilier,
$40,000 o!&gt;&lt;J, call Ron Caac1, 614·
· Social WOrkers; Now Hiring 123 1 11t?·2290.
Hr + ae'J8Iill. On ~n&gt;. Jab Toaln·
. lng To Apply fn Your Aroo. 1-800Bedroom Home 1a Island AYe3311-8150.
"
nue. Kanauga, Fenced Yard. Sell
As Is, Needs ~inor Repair, No
Land Con~act $22,000 614·448·
1207 9 A.M. ·5 P.M.
614·~·2388,. AakForCIYiL

lo'

Con~ar;t

Serloul
Inqui riNo
es Land
Only Please,
_.7,000 "Firm,
814·258·6391 L.....,llossage.

11192 14x70 Oakwood 2 Bedroom
2 F~ll Baths, .Groot Starter Homo!
Located Rl.2 WV, 814-258·1980
Afllr SP.M.
·
1895 14)170 Claymn 3 Bedrooms.
2 Beihs, CA, All Electric, Under·
pinnlng, Skirting, Extended War·
&lt;anty, Oilier Extras! $111;500, Allar
6 P.M 614-44" ••15
. .
"~ '
Bank Repo 's Only 3 Left! 304 :
7311-7:295.
.
·
F1rst ume buyers. E·Z financing. 2
&amp; 2 bedrooms. Around $200/mo.
Call Russllurdock 1-800· 251 5070

l lmilad Offer! 1996 doubiaw&gt;da,
3br, -2bath, $1799 down, $275/
month Free delivery &amp; setup.

~Y;l.?st~~d Homos, Nitro

New 14x80. 2 or 3beclroom. Only
make 2 payments m move 1n No
1 f
4
304 755
~::On 5 8 tor years
• . •

1 Bodroom;' iilco ly Furnlahed,
Hoa~ AC, All Utllldoo Furnlahod· Excapl Electric. Privata
-~81..._21102. .

Central

2 bodtoOm oportmont ln " " -·
nopau. 814-llllz..5868..
2 Bedroom Apartment On Firat
A,.,.., Galipolia, 814-448~1 .
2bdrm. ap11., total eloctrlc, appllan&lt;oa furnllhad, laundry room
flldllaoa, cloae 10 IChoolln town.
Appllcotiona available at:'VIIIago
••to. , •• 'o r 011181 • - 2•
·-·""
~3711
. EOH. _ ..;.:.;:;;;.;;__ _ _ _ _ _
3 Room Apartment. Traoh Paid,
NO PETS, On 554 Ntor Porter,
814-38&amp;1 100.
.

For loose: 2-Btdroom Aportit)ont
Pirtlall~ Furn1ahad Or You Furnish Yourself, Vary Nice Room&amp; lrl
Nice Area, Gallipolis, Celural Air
In Evet'y RDom, 114-818-717o4.
Furniahod 2 Bedroom Aperlmon'
Across From Park, AC, No Pels,
Reforencoa, Dopoalt, $350/llo.,
014-446-8235. 614-4-4G..05n.

New Benk Repoa. Only 4 ieh. Soil
in womtmy.
7ss- 71 g1_
Price Buster I New 14x7D, 2 or
3br. Only 1995 down, $195/monlh.
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homea, Ni~o wv. :104-

Furnished Allertmen~ 1 Bedroom.
$225/Mo., U111i11aa Paid, 701
Fourth Ava. • Gallipolis, Share
Bath, 814-446 3844 After 7 P.M.

755-5886.
Oak Wood Homea, Berllourav 111e,
WoJ 25!100 - · - · · '~
-

Furnished Efric•ency 2 Acoma,
Share Bath, 119!1/llo. Utllillai
Pl&gt;d, 807 Stcond Avenue, Galli·
poll&amp;, 814-446-4418 Afll&lt;7 P.M.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
108.5 acres in Meigs County, lebanon Twp. Call Gordon at e1•·
596-2551 .

Furnished Efficiency All Ulillt10s
P11d. Share Bath, $145/Mo . 919
Second Avenue. Gallipolis. 614c4_48_-311o1
::.;_5::_._ _ _ __ _ _

20 acres, 1873 mobile home, tree
res•denlial ·gas, gas producing

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and

well, Home National Bank. Rac1ne,

Riverside Apartments •n M•ddle-

Oh, 614-V&lt;II·2210.

port. From $232·$355 , Call 814·
992-5064. Equal Housing Oppor-

Froniaqe On Rt.
: 2 Private Lots
Each Unreatncted,
Call 614-446-8554, Or

turltiea.

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

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

814-~-0390.

--:..:.:=--~-~
One bedroom apartment in Pt.

Pleasant, no pe1S, 814.Q92·5858.
One bedroom efficiency apart-

••,.
....._lor '"'-Je
"""
.......
...
Groom Shop -~ G_,.ng, FM·
turing Hydro' Beth Julia Webb.

Coll81~231 .

8 Waokl Old Ameri can Eskimo
SPIIZ Puppies, Call Allor 5, 814·
245-VD33.
AKC Golden Ratrlovan. 111
1ho11 &amp; wormed, $225aa. 304·
458-2574.
'

=:.z: =--- - - - -Pup-

•S1te

:~~~~~~~~§~! 04:13.
"·
AKC ,R~I IIartil , Show Quality

Male Cocker S~anlal Puppy,
Good-lllaodllne, Excellent Mark·
lngl, Blade IWI\ito &amp; Tan In Colo~
Data Of Blr1h: 8/31195, Houaebro'
ken, 11&lt;1-371-2721.

20ft. encloaeG ca( trailer. 197 '
Plymouih S&lt;:amp drag car. tvee
Suzuki 250 '1-whitolor. 304-117S.
3773.

Black Female Chow 10 Week a
Old, Also '! "Female Golden Retriovt&lt;, 1 YMr Old 81 ..387- 7705,
814·387· 7043.

7 Fi UniSon SatoiNtt Dish, With
President PS 1,000 Receiver, 1
Year Old LNB, $400, OBO, 814·
446-8385.

Black Labrador RetriaYtr Malt,
AKC Registered, 1 Year Old, All
Shots. 814-4411-4572.

8' x 16' Tilt Goo Tfaller lighll,
Brakes, Sides. $700. 814 -448 7640.

t;;;-.~;;;~N.;;;;i,;;;;
~Iller Bunnies:

Dwarf llln Rex, II In lop, Mixed
Brood, Holland lop, French Lop,
814-3811-8577.

Carpet &amp; Vinyl Sale : Mollohan
Cwpets, 814-448-7444 Rt 7N

Good Home Only; 3 Year Old
Mala Black ~ W~llo Cocker
Spanael, AKC Registered, Good
81 379 27
Slre, 4. 2jl.
Registered Himalayan 8 Weeks
Old, ,2 Blue Paint. 1 Seat Point. All
Male, Shots, Wormed, 6U · ~467490
.:...:::.:::..
· -------Schnauzer puppies, m~n•atures,
ChampiQn Grand Sire: also Poo·
dloa, little toys. AKC, shots &amp;
wormed, 81&lt;1-887-340-4.

Champio~ Forge Blower &amp; 2501

570

~ oad,

car aoat, awing, stroll·
et, &amp; M.lker. 304-67$.-4548.
Baaoball Card Collection For
Sale, 014·245-5599 Lea\lft Ues-

oago.
Boota By Rodwlng, Chippawa,
Tony lama. Guarantood lowtlt
Prtces At Shoe Cale, Gallipola.

· 614-448-3886.
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr11e1, Jackson, OH
1-800-537·9528.
~
Couch And Chair Good Condl ·
lion, $100, 814-387-(1318.
Couch, Chair $100: Lovaaeal
Chair $100; Bo• Sprmgs, Mattren S35 Sat. Sears Washer
$135,614-448-3224.

Diamond aluminum truck toolbox,
$125,814-742-3513.
ElectriC
Scooters
And
Wheelcha•rs, New JUa&amp;d, Van 1
Car Lift Installed, Stairglldea, Lilt
Chairs, Call For Brochure, 814·
448-7283.

Floor model Capehart stereo, am·
1111 radio, 6 •ICk pilonopph $50.
blke $40. 4 country

lnstNments

Hoover Upr•ght Sweeper Good
Condition, P1cn1c Table Wtth

Valley Apartments. Mason, WV
now accepung applicallons for 2
and 3 bedroom apertmants: HUD
SubSidiZOd. 304·675·5548, ERA
Town &amp; Counr~ Real Estate.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repewod, Now &amp; RebuiR In Stock.
C.OI Ron Evans, 1·800·537-9528

Benches, 25' T.V. Cabinet Heads
WOrk, 814·446-2857.

Long P&gt;nk /Black Sequence Prom
Dreso, 614-448·3011t Altar 5 P.M.
Or 614·446-3278.
rent • week ·or month.
Starting at S1201mo. Gallia Hotel.
614-448-9580.
Sleeping roama with cocking.
Also trailer 1pace on rivet. All
hook· upa. Call after 2 :00 p m.,
304· 773-5851, Mtlaon

wv.

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

8' Sola, 2 Chairs, Color Green
And Gold, Very Good Cond1t1on,

PAINT SALE. Pillsburgh Ceiling
Paint $10.99/gal • Flat Wall Paint
$1 1.98/ga l. , Sem•-Giaas Paint
S 12.9819&amp;1., lnlroduc:rory Offer,
New Stkkans Interior Wocd
Sta1n1 anc:t. Flnilh 20% all regular
price. Deruato Wh1te or Black
Enamel , ($pray"Can) Bu~ One
Get One Free. PAINT PLUS 304875-4084.

Phonics reading game, oever
used. $200. 304-675-4075.
Porrable sewing machine, Hobart
meat saw, Gravely sickle bar, McC~ilough lear blower. 814-9g2307V, 814-V&amp;S-4400 morringl.

~-, !nwla. $4,000 080.

30oi&gt;ITS.21 ~ aftor I!Pm-

2550.

-:-:::-.,...-.,.---,-----1970 Honda Civi c, good cond,.
many new parts, mual 1111. 1400.
•"·'-"
•. 7•~••
....,-- ~
198't Plymouth Reliant Station
Wagon , 4 Spaod, Standar d
Transmiaslon 4 Cylinder, Good
Tirea..Runs Good f500; 814-258·
8024
· •·

-::::::-----~----'-1~ Okla Omega 4 C~nder. AuIDINIIic, lookl GoOd, !luna Good,
1t.2Cq, ~14-367-18111 .

875-1350.

I srop.

1988 Ford Taurus "G l, pw, cruise,
air, low miles, $2,800. 304·875·

_188,.,.:..~·-------1087 Choivy Celebrity, Good Con·
dillon, f14-48-_3523.
1087 Ford Tempo, motor re·
placed, new clutch. needs front
ard worlc. :IW·852-3141.

t~ illercury Cougar XL. loaded,
PS, llB, 1£, PW, 302, now liroe,
auiOm•tic, •3500, 814·9•9·2045
or814-0411-2879.
1989 Firabird, T-lopa, V-6 , auto,
loadad, 131195. 814-742-i[!illi7.

..

Export Sartes Pearl drum kn.
$550,814-742-3513.
Weaver upright piano, good
cond.• $300. 304-882·211e6.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

1965 ~aaaey F'!Q..U.~ Qn Tractor,

Very Good Condnlon~· Ruils h ·
ceiO.n\ 81 4;-742·2457. ·
- .t..
Mu~ Ferguson, 61o6-992477 N,H. Hayblne, Good 10 llo.
Old Reg. llmoulln BuH, 814-682-

3958.
Ford 9N Tractor With 5' Finish
Mower, Will Sell 'Separate, 14448-7881.

f

Gohl Round Baloro, !tl,_ Con·
dltlonero. Dlac M-ora, Dlac
Mower Condltionert,
Equipment Salta And Service.
Altizer Farm Supply, 614·24551113.

For•a•

1991 Olds Cullaas CalaiS.
128,000mi, 5spd , 4cyl, sunroof,

' •K Q 3

Weal

BARNEY

Pass

DO YOU PROMtSE

NOT8} TELL

SAYS TO ME SHE SAYS--

9650.

1093 ford Uu1tang LX, 2 door,
hatchtolick, very low mlaa, 4 cyl
automa~c. Will sell for loan, 614 _
1192-4111 .
1993 · issan 2~DSX, 34,000mi •
S13,
304-875-2219.
1994,\iercury Cougar XR7, V8,
32,QO!Iml., loaclod. exc. cond. 304 895-3287
1994 Mustang GT. 21,DDDmi., all
power, oxc. cond., $16,200. 304·

--.,.,

il081et

AUto Leana
'!Will aroange fi.
nanc 1ng even 1f you have been
turn.ed down eJaewherfi . Upton
Equopmenl Ustd Cora 304-458·
1

1974 tfl' Monarch bass boat, 35
hp. Ev.nntde motor wnh tra11er.
$1500, :IW-882-3802.

PEANUTS .

1989 Cns s Craft Cuddy Cabin,
19'. 305 V-8, 200hp, outboard.
sharp, $?900 obo, call Ron Casci '
814·992-2290.

I I-lEAR '(OIJ MADE

BUT I DIDN'T COLOit

A FOOL OUT OF
'(OURSELF A6AIN

TJtOSE PICTURES!!

IT WAS Mlf D06!!

1995 Polaris Sl750 2 Lila VOBIS,
&amp; Trailer, Still Under ~arran1y,
614-446-7518.
25 HP Su King And 7. 5 HP
Saara Motors Both Run Good.
61 4-446· 71181.

760

Auto Parts &amp;

AC!IISSOrles
New gas tanks, one ton truck

wheels, radiatOrs, 8ooir n"Bts. ate.

At-leAP FO,

Campers &amp;

14' Sunlint loaded. ~Dd
11on, $2,200 : Or Trade Misc. 614 448·3334 Allar 5 P.M.

c•..;;.

THE BORN LOSER

17' lark campor, sloops olx,
1hower, commode, r•fr~gerator

r

and furnaco, $800, 304-1182-3802.

~

1-lE.'VE &amp;Or,..,~ lo.Ji"ll\
PITa\~~ EC.Tiot-1. 'IW lUI'
~11-1&amp; UP MY :li~N..~!
YQOR

1177 Pra'f_VIer 20', 1877 W1ldlr·
ntll 24', 1973 Holiday Rombler
23', 1g73 Fleetwood 17', 1982
Jaycee Pop-Up 18· 112' Pontoon
24' Nice, 1889 llcCormock Aoad,
814-448-1511.
1978 Tarks 22' travel trailer,
$3000, 814·1192·5841
1993 Coleman Pronoor Pop· Up
Camper $3. 500, 614·446-7321
Attar 7 P.M.
1993 Dutclvnan 32Ft 51h Wheel,
Travel Trailo~ Uaed Once, load·
ad, S&amp;rlouo lnctuirltl Only, -3
P.ll. 614 441 - 1358.
~

oorr YOU K1-k)W WAAT OlE
...w 't\..lo f&gt;..ND TIIW::. N?£ ~

UL 1 ~E.VElt IJ~ VEF::&lt; (:IXJ)
IN AA.I"Il\ME.TIC.. 1

304-875-8803.
Campground
el udes All Major
Nearly 500 Raaono,

Treosurr You
thr
Sovinr You'H Find In the

Closslfled Section.

I FRIDAY

7802.

+

\ ••

I •
I '

+'
+ ~•

•

2 Bedroom Trailer 1 Mile From

11 year old Reg11tertd Quarter

children

or expenenced rldera, 114·107·
8830.

2 yoor old laahorn ...:. 7S. par
' bird, Gary ilichael, 814·815·

.

AITRO-ORAPH

VIllA FURNITURE
" 814-448-3158

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

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by Luis C.mpos
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION . "WIIhoul craftsmanship, inspiration is a mere reed
shaken in the wind.• - Johannes Brahms.

••••
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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCJIAM.t.ETS ANSWERS

•

304-875-1450

~

.

"Right! Yet41e coukiD'f6\illtlhe bid·
ding. How can he have the heart queen
u well? You must play out the ace and
king as your only chance. •
George Eliot's real name was
Marian Evans Cross.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1994 lnnalirook, fufly loaded. loll
of exlrla, .18ft. Serloualnqulriea

t

--

Pus

Pus
All pass

e

Rent, S2501Mo.. Localad Be._twaen
Addiso~ &amp; Cheshire, 614·367-

NowMttd

1NT
4•

.

••••

PICKENS FURNITURE

Sumtc

1--T~.:.:.:-11-:';-:...,Ir-..:lr-::,1-;:-8-l

2 Bedro_om Mobile _Home For'

=:

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8
9A- Btrrymort
11 Surrtndar

. .
dark side of everythmg . He
r-~:-::-:-=---..., seems to burn h;s bndges be·
CETTED
lforehe · ·- · to ·· · ·

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5 Btg
8 Enltrttlntr -

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2 Bedroom Furnished, On Clay
Chapel Road, S25DhAo. $250 Deposi~ 61 ..258-e718, After 4 P.M.

!i,..

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HANGOVfifl.. .

212 Btdrooma, 1 Beth, Gas H""t
$265/Mo. Includes Water, GarNo Pats; Deposit, 81 4·441 ·

4

7 Grtnny Smith,

Eta&amp;

sumably th~ in-ehllll.':c -

Holrit

horll mare, eXcellent

i

Motor Homes

Improvements

Holzer $300/Mo. ... D~ait. 614·
446-7321 Aher 1 P.M.

r~

""-

14x60 2 Bedrooms, Total Elecll;lc,
No Pots. 1 IIIIo South Eureka,
Reforenceo, 614-258-801111.

2 Btdraoms, 8 lilies 0.1 SR 218,
$210/Mo, Plus Depoait, Refer·
encea •. 814·448· 6172, 814 -258!1251 .

P~AYF:l&gt;
A ~F:ft,VATION.

,..,Anf vJF: st-tovLD !'4Ave

SLRVICES

Appllancoa:
Rocondltlontd
Waahera, Dryers, Rlnaea, Aefrl·
gretora, 110 Day Gueranteal
French City llaytag, 814-448·
77115.

Nortll
Pus

While looking up quotations for
these. columns, I learn some facts of
debatable value. For example, what
was George Eliot's real name?
In "Adam Bede," Eliot wrote,
"There's no real making amends in
this world, any more nor you can mend
a wrong subtraction by doing your ad·
clition right."
Another budding bridge player! If
you can't add up correctly, you have an
"incorrect view" around the comer Uke the declarer in today'a deal.
. A juml' rebid of opener's original
suit shows about seven playing-tricks.
North, with two trumps 'and a near
maximum for his response of one notrump, was happy to go on to the wl·
nerable game.
West guessed well to lead the dia·
mond 10, his partner winning the fil'llt
three tricks in the suit. Then East ~xit·
ed with the club queen.
Declarer won with his ace, pltyed a
spatle to dummy's jack and finessed
the heart jack. However, West pro·
duced the queen: one down.
When he noticed that West had begun with only two hearts, South said,
"Just my luck. I take the percentage
play in hearts, but the wrong line
works this time. Huh!"
"You can 'I make amends now, but
you didn't do your addition. How many
points hu East produced?"
"Well, eight in diamonds and pre-

140hp inboard/outboard MFG
boat, gOod cond., open baw, WI
1
c::orrif)lete cbY8rl &amp; traller $4,000.
304-882-2328 aflllr 5pm,

~:':08V~.,...--------·1USA &amp;·Canada, Sacrlf1ce,
1·800-238'1l32&amp;.
720 ltucks for sale

1300 089614-441 -0813.

34 Ctndlt
lngrtdltnt

1 Long n,.r
2 Uonktya
3 Cube-.t

By Phillip Alder

•"

790

Shl.rp', Call Or l~ave Messag.e,
814-258-1287.

32 Long-htiNd
ctl

COunt up the spoils

14 Fl. V-Bouom Ball Boat With
Toaaer. Now TroMi"'JIIbtor, &amp; Bet·
tery, All Acceaorltl, 614· 441-

1882 ~ hevy' lumina." low miles ,
oxc. .. $8,000. 304 -678-2825
or 304-576-2072. ·
•

''•

30 EltprHalonl

DOWN

Opening Iliad: • 10

SOUl.£?

111t2-Berllll, E&gt;coflorw ~.
lolll&lt;iall1t High, Asking $4;tDQ Call
Unroe 814·25HIISII Any1mt.

:::,9::8:;:3..;.F:;o-r-:d":"-~G::T-::,-:B::t'"ac-:k·,' l

Pus

#'SST II THEN EL\IINEY

CROSS MY HEART
AN' HOPE TO DIE~!

A UVtN'

750- Boats &amp; Motors
for Salt

Used Auto Parts: Don't Be S-1
Away By Hogh Poil:ea, can Dray'a
Today, 614-448-4024.

~.

8wMI peat~)

Dealer: North

1995 Yamaha 350 Big Bear, 4x• •
like Now, 25 Milos, $4,500, 814 387-7540

814·448-2781.

fiY ndanca s3: ooo Ioiii ea. 5

27

•A

Now. eo Miles, 15.300, 814--448 0845.
'

lltZ-114311. 814-742·2259. ;

~. Air, Aslllng $4,800, 61 4r

23

21 Couple

36 Soul (Fr.)

•AK10987
e6 3 2

needa l ome mtnor repaln, mull 882-3328. '
IH to appreciate, too
Transmisa•on Will Fit 1911 -1987
IllS to Mil. Will sacrifice tor
.Oidamoblle, Pontiac, Or Buick ,
OBQ. Call 814· 992·8822, 814,

19•2·

nKideCI
1 Quo 31ShoN
• Outdoor- 40C-..Item
10 lltdlclntl root
(2 wda.)
12 8
• II
42
of"'"
olllclel
45 Prefix for Dod
44 The llerc:henl • In~
of ~
15 Sttport In lttly 41 TMaoll
11 ..... of
(cugo)
~51 FMhW-IIIh
17 _u._ ·
54 lOIIf llbout
Jotnnt
55 Church olllclll
"YNI t 1111
515 Loch ,' A
Wll'mon20 llloumful cry 57 Full of cuntnl
~·l
lnlonnttlon

35=iout

SOUTH

19Q5 Suzuki Katana 800, Brand

Throtlle body &amp; distributor for
1987 Z24 Nissan engme 304 ·

am-fm cassette, $.4,000 304 ·

37 1 " -

Vulnerable: Both

1991 Oldamobile Silhouette, air,
automatic. PS, PB. VOry nice but

t.1arch Spaclalo. Ford tractor
motea S24,goo. 308 NH alurry
aproodor, 14DOgal. tandtm ulo,
$7,900. KMior's Service Contar,
St Rt 87, P1 Plouanl &amp; Rlpltr Rd.
-74.

•tO 9 8 7
•K 9 7 4

1983 Honda 200 Big Red 3wheeler, loloc ~jc stall, hi-low now
tiro' $800. 304-- 75,2074

875-2049 aht&lt; 5:30.

lntarnational Farmell 808 dloeaf.
International Farm•ll 708 wicab,
dleaat. Gthl grlndarlmlxar. Owa- 1 773-~71 .
tonna 7ft. hayblno, 12ft. tnnapon 1g95 Cadillac SOville SlS D1a disc, all . good cond. 304·279· mond White 12,000 Mlleo," Excol·
4215.
:~.'!~~ltlon. Alter 5 P-1!· 614·

model 88109, 7811p, 4wd, dual ..,..

•Q 2

, '

D &amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV 304·3723933 or 1 800-213-9329.

a~r,

.a

I =..:..::..:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:;:..:;_:;,;,;...:__ _

1988 Dodge Airea K, i uns good,
304-675-8031 .

2
EAST
•to 9 7 e
•&amp; 53
eA K J
•Q J 10

WEST
5 4

MoJorcycle
_,S
·
1974 Horda 350, $500 080. 304 -

ft....,.

Conaole Piano, Reapon~ble Party
Wanlad To Make low Monthly
Plymonta On Plano. Sao Locally.
f
1·800·288-8218

•Q 5 4

'"

'740

OS-21-111

•a e s 3

o.,. ,

·

1984 Niaun Sentra. 4 door.' au·
tomat•c. good .tlrea, very gOod
~IQiportatlon. 11500, 814-7421400.
-:::-- - - -- - -1984..Ronauil Alliance runs
$400, 614·992-8833.
.,......

1911 Mustang GT With sunroof,
Tillnum froll woih toltcl&lt; Interior, 5
&amp;peed, PB, PW, PS, PM, POL, air,
lots ol axtraa. 58,000 miles, excel.:
lent condition , $9800, &amp;1o4 -9o49 221 7 anybme.

NORTH
·• A J 2
•J 4

1085 Ford 150 Va n. Full Size. 4
Captain• Chairs /Bad, Good Con$
., 0
;cli tion, 1, 500
814· 441 ·
·
19 75

1982' Mon1e Carlo 11 .000. 304,
852·2144.

tlltt ~n Pri•. f7,100. 30&lt;1-875·
5375. ' &lt;

CONSOLE PIANO
responatble partY wantad)IO
make lo'llf montHy payme(tts on
plano, see locaiiV. Call 1-800·26118218 '

.

1992 Chevy Aatr o -.Oonvareion
Van, 41 ,000 mileo, 4.3 V-8. auto,
loadad, 4 captain -~~ &amp; bench,
new dr.., g~ IIIPt. muat lit,
aaklng f10,VOO, 814·940·2481 af·
llr5pm&amp; rdo.

1V81 Cemaro. nice ahlpo. 327 '2
sp. } ranamlssion, garaged lut 12
yra, 814· 742· 3190 or 81 4-742-

Black Ibanez RG55D w/Fioyd
Rose tre(llolo. 1250. 304· 875·

27

Twin Rivers Tcwar, now accep~ng
applications tor 1br. HUO subsid·
&gt;zed apt. lor elderly and handicapped. EOH :IW-675-68711.

-'&lt;lndl

ACROSS

e..,

111t1 ForG Expior• Spon 4114, 4.0
V-8 . two door. llandord , air,
cru11e, sun roof, l;:,aded , must
100, 614·949·2481 after 5pm &amp;

-vas
,......,..
1

814 ·'~!~8-l~

1~~~~~~~~~- 610 Farm Equipment
Gun cabtnet. .holds 6 nurta, S50.
30&lt;1-875-7951·,
•

U

PHILLIP
ALDER

:::
211;..71""•. . . . . , - - - - - - -

,Ti1 1111.

Pt Pleasant, nice location, unfurniBhed 2btdroom. ground floor.

I·

sc, two door.

lllrl!o V-e. oll ie mo4o1 turbo, PS,
PB,•AC 5 1pood, power 10111
and locka, " Greet Car." f 5200
nog., 814·11t2· 7478 or 8 1..041·

~; bodvo Daytona AC, 5
Slloring, $2,950, OBO

Musical

I~~~~~~~;;_.:.:.:....:

stove I refrigerator. Lease, de·

410 Houses lor Rent

llotal Roofing And Siding Gal·
,.,.zlld. GaiYIIUme And PllniOd,
814-245-51 113.

-~ 614-802-2178.

pos1t &amp; referenctts. 304·675·
5902.
' ·
· ·

RENTALS

·

'1111 T - b i d

\u

AI&lt;C
pies,
OFA

lls,~ooma, Avonuo,
AC, ·A=cao,
4!18-lll!'Saco.nd
Galipo- .•
14
; Utilities Paid,
l)e.
pool~ Ra eno;eo. 81.....,2120. .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS ir.T
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from 1244 10 $315. Walk IO thop
&amp; movies. Call !U·-448· 2588 .
Equal Houq Opporillnlty.

o

1970 Cadillac, now tlru , natda
aomo wor k . ~.w~ uaod mo bllo
homtl. 304·875· 5958' or 304·
875-2445.

1"";...:=.;...::;__ ____

Furnlahad 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstairs, Urllltlea Furnished,
Clean, No Pets. Relerence, Depoa~ Required, 814-448-1519.

:.w.

.oooa

a-

Furnlahtd Aplrtment 1 Btdroom-,
$295/llo.· Utilities Paid. 920
Fourth Avenue, Galllpolla; 814·
448 31144 Aftlr 7 P.M 1
·
•
' ~·,
Beach St, llicldl_, 2btdroom,
fumiahtd, utiHdos pold. Deposit &amp;
raforonce&amp; :!04-882-2588.

~lie•

1 UMCI Colomon Down Flow Gal
F
70 000 BTU' COrnplele
$~~· UMd Johnaoan Gal Furnaco, 180,000 Bt U's, Upllow
$250 , 3 Uatd Eloou&gt;c Furnocea
1SKW, 20KW, 25KW. 1 Used 3
Ton Rhoem Heal Pump, 1-800287 . 1308, 814_448 _8308, 1·to0·
201
•
10x85 Mobile Homo Grtll For
Sl • Sho
Offi $ 1 500
•
~~s/' r
ca, ·

81

--·-·

~lldlng

Merehlndl•

NEA Cro1sword Puzzle

..

/

.

Unfair · Yours · Pouch - Clause - YOURSELF
"If you fa;l the ftrst ttme, try agatn." gramps says "If
you fail aga&gt;n. qUI! There 's no sense mak1ng a fool of
YOURSELF !"

MARCH 29l
•

�•

...
·~ 12-•·The Dally Sentinel

Friday, M8rch.29, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.:unattended children are a tragedy waiting to happen

It's time to dp ·
that spring ·
cleaning- .C1

...

•

- - - - - - , . or 30 minutes when she is away.
The children could walce up and
Ann
go outside looking fbr Mommy. Or
Landers
they could stay indoors and entenain
1'1", Ull MJelu
themselves by playing with the
'Y1IIIa S)'ftdkak lAd C~t ·
stove, or trying to take a balh and
drown. Or they could choke to death ·
or electrocute themselves. If there
' f
were a fire, they would be helpless.
~ ~ANN J.ANDERS
The lives of those young ones
• :. Dear Ann Landers: Your response
'~ the 'neighbor of the woman who could depend on whether or not that
;left her twb children (7 months and neighbor speaks up. I wish you had
'':l y~ old) home alone and asleep emphasized the importance of
; ~ilc she went out for 20 or 30 min· telling that mother the risb she was
~ ~tes was inadequate to say the least. talc.ing. •• Another Mother in Lalce
:-'You suggested that she "speak to Elsinore, Calif.
Dear El.: Thanks for puuing a lit·
this· woman." That wasn't strong
tie
meat on the bones of my lean
• enOugh. That mother needs to be
' ibid what could happen in those 20 response. You made some excellent

... s,....._.

' y •

points. I hope that mother sees your
letter.
Dear Ann Landers: Shortly after
my ·divorce six years ago, I began
dating a newly divorced woman I
had met several months earlier. Our
relationship started when she
phoned and invited me to a dance.
She said I was the only man she had
dated since her divorce.
We Jived 40 miles apart, and
since we both had teen-agers at
home, we saw each other only on
weekends. My visits were always at
her invitation, and she usually initi·
ated our telephone conversations.
We socialized primarily in her town.
That woman read me like n book
and played me like a banjo. Within a

year, Cupid's arrow had found its
mark. Her words, cards and behav·
ior led me to believe that she felt the
same way about me, but we agreed
marriage was not practical until the
kids were out of the house.
Several weeks ago, when I proposed to her, there was a sudden
change of attitude. Imagine my
shock when I discovered she had
three affairs going on right under my
nose.
· I feel like a fool and am anxiously awaiting my AIDS test. No city
please, just -- Jack Without Jill
· Dear Jack: You dated the woman
for six years and were not aware that
you were one of a quartet? You
sound like a pretty dim bulb to me.

I hope this unf0f1unate experi· - Lived for the Moment, Paying for
ence will have t&amp;'ug~t you some· It in Hell
Dear Paying: Your life is NOT
thing. If so, it will not have been a
ruined. The disease you have can be
total loss.
Dear Ann Landers: Yesterday, my managed to the point where it will
life was ruined. I wentta the doctor, be only an inconvenience. You need
and he confirmed what I already to be educated. Please send $1 to
American Social Health Associasuspected. I have herpes.
I am 31 and have a college degree tion , Herpes Resource Center, P.O.
and a good job. For me, sex was a Box 13827. Dept. AL. Research Tri·
game. If it was human and male and angle Park, N.C. 27700.
Gem of the Day: If you have
had a pulse, I went for it. That fooloccasion
to criticize a mule, do it to
ishne$S ruined my marriage, and
his face.
now it is ruining my life.
Tel! your readers 1&lt;1 use caution
Send questions to Ann LaDders,
when deciding to have sex: Insist
that the man wear a condom. I don't · Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
know yet if I have something worse tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los An,eles,
than herpes, but that's bad enough: · Calif. 90045

•

LOW30s

Details on

Major leagues gear for actio, - .C1

pageA2

•

•

.

tmts
A Gannett Co. New spaper

tntint

Gall ipolis • Middleport • Pomero y • Pt. Pleasant • March 31 , 1996

Vol. 31 , No. 8

'

.-

~-..:~Community · calendar- Alcohol proclamation

' .'

: the Community Calendar is
:·•= : as a free service to non·

office building.

•roups wishing to announce SUJ:III)AY
BRADBURY .. Hymn sing at the
latH• and spec181 nents. Tbe
. ~endu is not designed to promote Bradbury Church of Christ, Sunday,
'
·;Ales or fund n~isers of 11ny ty~. 7:30p.m.
l*"- are printed as space permtts
POMEROY .. "The Crucifixion"
"lJaCl Cllllllot be guan~nteed to run a
a cantata on the sacred passion of the
;.p.tftc number of days.
Holy Redeemer will be presented by
' fRIDAY .
• ·• · BRADBURY •• Revival services a community choir Sunday; at I:30
• .. the Bradbury Church of Christ Fri- p.m . at Trinity Congregational
• y.and Saturday, 7:30p.m. and Sun· Church .
'. day, 10:30 a.m. Light refreshments .
-following the Friday evening service; MONDAY
LETART .. J,.etart Township
. f!&gt;tluck dinner after Sunday morning
serlices. Dave Lucas, evangelist.
trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the office
building.
·· sATURDAY
POMEROY -· Retired Teachers
CARPENTER .. Board of
Association, Saturday, noon, lun- Trustees, Columbia Township Moncheon and meeting at Trinity Church. day, 7 p.m. at the fire station.
John Milhoan, district director,
TUESDAY
speaker.
PAGEVILLE .. Scipio Trustees,
LETART .. Letart Township 6:30p.m. Tuesday at Pageville.
Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday, at the
'

.

Palm Sunday program
to be presented
Children of the Racine United Cantata "Alive" with Judy Pape as
ljfcthodist Church will present a spe- soloist.
,
cial Palm Sunday program during the
On April 5 the churches of
regular worship service Sunday.
Carmel, Sutton, Bethany and Mom·
The youth ringers bell choir under ing Star will join RaCine for the Good
the direction of Marlyn Bogard .will Friday service at 7 p.m.
be featured and there will be organ
There will an Easter egg hunt on
solo by Jennifer Walker.
the Saturday afternoon before Easter,
The Lenten drama "Lord is It I" and the Easter sunrise service will
will be presented Sunday at 7 p.m. begin at 7:30 a.m. with Rev. Brian
The Racine choir will sing ".In the Harkness in charge. A breakfast will
Upper Room" from the Joe Parks .'tx! served following the service.

April has been proclaimed Memorial Month in the village
Pomeroy to remembar young pjtOpla kUied ll" alcohol-ralat.d
fie crashes and to support program• aimed at the prevention of
drinking and driving. The proclamation Ia In conjunction with the
. "None for Under 2t • campaign by the Ohio Department of Public Safety. Here, Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan signa the procla·
mation while Pollee Chief Gerald Rought looks on.

tr_..

StudeRt's project to.
become countywide
school _
progra·m ......
By Jon Troyer
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. •
The idea came to him in an essay
· assignment. Last November. as Chris
Mitchell was in the middle of his
senior year at Wahama High School,
and taking college English at Point
Pleasant, his English teacher gave his
class an assignment: Write a 500word essay on a local topic.
Simple.
And from this flexible assignment
came the idea that Chris had been
mulling over for his three and a half ·
years in high school: Why not start a
self-help group for high school students so they can better deal with
depression?
According to Chris," If there
would have been something like this
four years ago, I would have bene- .
fited from it. because I was just basically fed up with high school. ... And
I have had people tell me that I'd
make a good counselor, myself."
Chris now faces the prospects of
graduation, and has narrowed down
what his major field of study would
be, to journalism or counseling.
After he wrote the essay suggest·
ing the school stan a self-help p_rogram, he took the idea to Linda
Rollins at the county office and Tere·
.sa Warner, a teacher at Wahama, who
in tum put a proposal in front of the
school board.
Qr. John Grace, the English
teacher at Point Pleasant . High
School, also suggested that Chris
enter the idea into the social studies
fair. The idea won first prize, countywide .

New officers were elected when
There will be a social outing on
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma ·Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Chi-Chi's in
by Bob Hoeflich
Phi Sorority, met recently at the Brad· Parkersburg. Those wishing to sharebury Church of Cnrist.
· ride will be meeting at the Rite-Aid
Elected were Barbara Welsh, pres- parking Jot at 6 p.m.
_.__ _.-..__. · idem; Lynn Wright, vice president;
Schedules were given out for the
I hope you have had an opportu· can buy beverage glasses, bathmg Debbie Finlaw, recording secretary; Meigs County Fair advertising pro·
rtity to see the March edition of Ohio suits, !-shirts, sweatshirts, framed Margie Blake, treasurer, and Beth gram that is currently taking place
Magazine.
·
prints, a variety ·of toys, clocks, Stivers, corresponding secretary.
; The magazine contains a feature plates, stain glass lamps, vests, the
Story on Pomeroy with some beauti·
wholenineyards.Alloftheitems,as
ful color photos included.
I say, have the Coca-Cola logo or
.Entitled "Between a Rock and a some product related symbol.
Sto~teller Deborah Hercsek will · Hercsek has an education degree
Wet Place" the feature includes a
the
featured speaker at a "Reading and a master's degree in storytelling
be
'"Eastah' time is the time for eggs,
~o-page spread photo, again in col·
and
the
Young Child" workshop for from East Tennessee State Universi"And the time for eggs is 'Eastah'
or. of the middle business block of the
children's
librarians and child care ty. "-s a classroom teacher and on
town. There is an effective picture of time."
stage as a professional · storyteller
And eggs there will be at the providers.
. if11i Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. The
The
workshop,
sponsored
by
Hercsek has used stories to motivate
siately Sacred Heart Church is shown Hartinger Park in Middleport on Ohio Valley Area Libraries and children. She is co-chair of the West.·
alo'ng with an attractive photo of Easter Sunday when the Middleport Logan Hocking County District ern Reserve Storytelling Guild and a
hoilses along Mulberry Avenue Fire Dcpanment stages the annual Library will be held Wednesday, board member of the Ohio Order for
'apparently taken from Breezy Easter egg hunt: The fire department AprillO, atlO a.m. at The Bowman the Preservation of Storytelling. Parijcights hill. In qddition to other pho- is planning on having some 2,000 House, 196 North Market Street, ticipants will receive two hours of
1\!S· a story presents a · history of eggs hi&lt;!den for the hunt and each, as Logan.
child care inservicc training crcdir
Pomeroy along with information on tradition goes, will include a prize.
This
workshop
is
free
to
residents
from the Ohio Department of Human
. The event is open to children
t&amp;e· restorati~n and current projects
of
Athens,
Hocking,
Lawrence,
Pike
Services.
now taking place or expected to take across the county and the Easter Bun- and Scioto Counties. The workshop · Reservations may be made by call·
j)liice ill the ncar future. Walter and ny will be on hand--and wearing a is opened to participants from other ing OVAL at 1-800-759-1537. The
t-fllfY Grueser are quoted several brand new outfit for the firsltime, I'm counties; however, participants from workshop is limited to 60 panicitimes in the story, the writer of the told.
The Easter egg hunt has been held olher counties, will be charged a $25 pants.
slOry apparent!y visiting them to
registration fee.
OVAL is the only state funded
tike in the views from the vantage in Middleport_for many years. It used
The
workshop
is
two
hours
in
regional
libraJ¥ system in Ohio. It
to be staged by t~e Rotary Club with
pbint of their Lincoln Hill home.
length
and
will
introduce
storytelling
serves
the
citizens and libraries of
: Just inside Jhe cover of the mag· the fire department members assist- as a creative way to extend literacy Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
azine is a· page devoted to "Historic ing. When the Rotary Club members activities. Participants will become
· ·
J'llrileroy Ohio" featuring the names decided to give it up a few years ago, more comfortable with storytelling
of a number of businesses as well as the fire department took over the while discovering how storytelling
several advertisements from local staging. Good for the department. By can enrich curricula. Participants will
ftfins including The Ohio River Bear th~ way the hunt on Easter Sunday is receive two hours of child care inser' CD., Peoples .Bank, Holly Hill Inn scheduled to begin at I p.m.
vice training credit from the Ohio
· allilttlerc 'are advertisements for the
Department of Human·Services.
Meip Cquoty Museum, the Meigs
$Cpior Citizens Center and the Meigs
Count)' Tourism and Visitors Center.
. : 11·ia, irideed, a nice spread on the
town. :You'lljust have to sec for yourTHE MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING AND LII I'ER

among the county businesses. All
members of Xi Gamma Mu will be
soliciting those ads for the Meigs
Agricultural Society.
The cultural report was given by
Margie Blake and Beth Stivers on
"Health Issues," an informative program on diet, exercise, and control of
fats and cholesterol in daily diets.

CHRIS MrTCHELL
Now the group, which will call
itself "Perfection Rejection," is set to
get underway this fall. And Mitchell
says he might stick afound to partie- ·
ipate, in a limited role, balancing the
activities with college life.
The program is different from other teen-help organizations in that it
uses the 12-step approach, made
famous by Alcoholics Anonymous.
"This way. instead of one person, or
a group of students helping other students. this will be students helping
themselves, but of course within the
·group setting, where there's also
interaction .... It's basically a way to
help students realize that their depression, though real, will most likely
end; that it's just a phase you can
work through. with help," said
Mitchell.

Those attending the meeting other
than those listed above were, Kay
Logan, Sharon Pratt, Mary Woods,
Sandy Hanning, Pat Arnold, Charlotte Hanning, and Maur.isha Nelson.
Refreshments were ·provided by
Charlotte Hanning and Debbie Finlaw.

Prates·sional. storyteller to address child-care provid_ers

'

'

.

developed by those libraries.
.
.

Fit Together
AEROBICS
NEW 9 WEEK SESSION
To Begin ·
April 1st
Mon.-Tues &amp; Thurs
7-8pm

~,.~nzi-e

'·

• By PAMELA BROGAN
: Gannett Newa Service
. WASHINGTON - President Clinton's 1991 budget request for the
Appalachian Regional Commission i~ $112 million less than this year's fundlog. but ctitics in Congress are still vowing to zero out the commission.
West Virginia Democratic Gov. Gaston Capenon .told lawmakers on the
House Energy and Water Development Appropriations subcommittee that the
. $170 million request represents "the bottom line" in funding.
In fiscal year IS96,the commission's budget was $282 million.
"ARC's small investments ... have often literally meant the difference
. between full stomachs and hunger, good health and sickness, good jobs and

enforced ld)eness. hope and despair, and life and death for many of our citizens ," said Caperton, who co-chairs the commission .
The ARC provides funds in impoverished areas in 13 states, including all
of West Virginia, for jobs, and economic and infrastructure development.
Other states that receive ARC funds are Ohio, Pennsylvania. New York.
Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, M1ssissippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
The fiscal year 1997 budget request allocates $83.2 million for the highway program . About2,177 miles out of 3,025 miles authorized by Congress
is completed.
By the end of 1997, the ARC estimates that 2.230 or 73 percent of the

MAKING CULVERTS - Old tire sidewall• cln also be banded together to make uHful cui·
VII1L tt-talcft about 10 tlrea to make a foot of 13-inch· culvert. Darren WHson, above, t)ancls a
new culvert.,The completed work elm ba set!~ in the t"t~;kgrpund. (T-~ photo)
'1

Local entrepreneur explores
new use for that old spare tire
By JIM FREEMAN
add a little paint and a pump for the
Future is the first operation of its
•Timea-Sentlnel Staff
water. and presto. a garden foun- · type to get state EPA approval.
HARRISONVD...LE- As land- lain.
Since starting out about three
fill space rapidly disappears, what
Cut off the tread and band the
months ago, he estimates they
.to do with used automobile tires is sidewalls together like a huge roll
have transformed about 1,000
_becoming a major question.
of'breath mints and you have a cul- junked tires into functional items.
One Harrisonville resident may vert.
One plus is that Past to Future
haye the answer.
Nicholson said the fountains·are
uses radial tires as opposed to old
Tom Nicholson, with partners Past to Future's most popular item.
bias-ply tires, which currently have
Darren Wilson and Kenny Jones, He foresees a day several years a market value.
has started a new business, Past to down the road when there will be
"About all we do here is think
Future Tire Recycling, at Nichol- lots of products made from old tires and do tires," he explained.
son's house near the Meigs Coun- tires .
Plans now call for specialized
ty community of Harrisonville.
Past to Future gets paid S I per machinery to speed the process.
In a small Hills Road workshop tire' that it takes from Meigs, GalNicholson is also examining the
surrounded by old tires and tire lia, Vinton, Jacl\son and Athens possibility of using the tread por·
products, Nicholson and partners counties in Ohio and from Mason tion of the tire to construct horse
cut, shape and band old, otherwise County i~ West Virginia. This is in fencing, an idea he picked up in a
junked tires into useful objects: sharp contrast to other manufac- magazine.
culverts, flower planters and gar- · turers who must purchase the raw
In addition, they sell usable old
den.fountains.
materials for their goods. fn addi- tires and propose to sell new tires
Wilson explained how three old tion, the company is awaiting a in the near future. ·"We look to
tires and wheels can become an grant from the Ohio Environmen- employ about six or seven local
ornamental fountain. The tires are tal Prot.ection Agency for its work.
workers," he ~xplai~ed,
cut, turned inside out, and stacked,
According to Nicholson, Past to

·- WASHINGTON (AP) -

For more information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992-6893

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Accomplish. ments by the first Republican majority in the Ohio House of Representatives for more than 20 years have
built a record the p'!rly will use to
defend its control of the legislature,
House Speaker lo Ann Davidson
said.
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, cited
welfare reform, response to ·crime,
campaign finance reform and a bal anced budget as some of the goals
GOP legislators set for themselves
following the flush of victory in the
1994 elections and brought to reality in the past year.
She made her comments 'Friday
during a fund-raiser for Rep. John A.
Carey Jr., R-Wellston , who is seeking
a second term this fall representing
the 94th House District of Gallia,
Meigs and Jackson counties and
eastern Lawrence County.
"In my best dreams. I never
expected 1994 to be the year it was,"
said Davidson , the fir st woman
speaker of the House and the successor to longtime speaker Vern
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg. "We expect

......,._
lill
. . .

Jo Ann Davidson
1996to be a different year, but.! am
proud of the rec&lt;;&gt;rd w~ have to run
on .
"We are realistic about what will
ha11pen, so we will prepare for that,"
she adde!l.
When the new maj ority took control, GOP legislators moved from the

reactive stage they had experienced:
for two decades to being proactive:
An agenda of changes and reform(
were publicly unveiled,' Davidson;
said, "because there was a lot of
attention focused on us to see if wo
could do OUf jobs.
"Except for one of the ideas pre-;
sented, we've accomplished what we:
set out to do," she said.
Davidson focused on the welfare'
reform plan designed to make recip-:
ients independent of assistance;
responsible about keeping jobs and:
malc.ing the system "family-friendly.'~
The plan has been widely dis·:
cussed and is currentiy on federalwaiver until it can be implemented ·
Davidson explained.
:
Crafting a new budget has been
one of the most important achievements of the past year because it
shifted some of the significant expen·
diture on soeial programs to areas like·
education, she added.
"We wanted to reverse that trend
and I think we succeeded in making
that re-versal," Davidson 'said.
Carey, who entered the 1994 race·
partly at Davidson's urging, told the:
(Continued on A2)

Freshman. GOR.Iawmakers.to.ut
Kasich as Dole's running mate
.

.

-

President Clinton pressed the Republican-con:!rolled Senate on Saturday to stop blocking a vote on raising the minimum
:wage because "we should not leave behind anyone who is willing to work
'hard.'' .

,ONo

....t ....

: . ''GALLIPOLIS A report Oxley, R-Findlay, sponsor of H.B.
ieleased by an Ohio consumer lmd 2500, the proposed change to the
tnvironmental advocacy QTganiza- Superfund law. Oxley ~ettcd $75,900
tion ·Jistcd Six.th District U.S. Rep . from the same contributors last year,
,
f1ll!lk·A. Cremeans as a major recip· ' Citizen Action reported.
The group also said that all but ·
tcrit of political action committee
contributions linked to toxic waste three of Ohio's 19-member congressional dele_gation received contribupqlluters.
'
· • :Citizen Action claims the .money tions from firms recognized as toxic
~as donated to g~n suppon f~ leg- polluters and related PACs.
Citizen Action spokesman lim
Islation changing the existing Su~r­
Lowe
said passage ol' Oxley's bill
fund law. The Superfund is a feder· ·
"has
become
a 'top priority for lob..ly~~ Jirogram to pay for clean·
byists
representing
toxic du,!llpers,
ins and reclaiming areas polluted by
their insurance companies, and other
!tic waste.
.
.
· Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, received parties responsible for cleaning' up
$44,725 In contributions dutlng 1995 more than 1.000 of the nation's most
from what Cldzen Action called the dangerous ioxlc waste sites."
The group noted
ill \he· I4~·nation's wor$t polluters and the
county
Six.th
Districr,
four
Superfund
P~Cs friendly to tbem.".
sites exist. lronica)ly, none are in
~ - The freshman congressman
Oxley 's Follflh District, The' lilllest
~nked second in . contributions
feCCivcd behind Rep. Michael G. number pf Superfund locations are

'!'ft

..

•
•
•

•

Making th~,case in personal terms, Clinton said that while a se nator's pay
has increased by a third over the past five years, the wages of rtulhons of
American workers have been stuck at $4.25 an hour.
"It's hard to raise a family on $4.25 an hour,'' Clinton sa id in his week-

eight in' the 1,8th Dis_trict, represented by Robert W. Ney, R.-St.
Clairsville.
''These sites poison our water,
threaten the health of our families,
and endanger wildlife and their habitats," Lowe said.
"Instead of paying to clean up the
lethal hazards they've created, the
companies behind these PACs are
putting their money into campaigv
contributions in the hope that Congress. will lei them off the hook and
force taxpayers to, bail them out," he
added.
.
H.B. 2500 proposes to change the
exisiing Superfund law by :
• Exempting generatO.rs and transponers from paying their share of tile
cleanup. ·
,
• Delaying cleanup and raising
costs by allowing polluters to reopen
and renegotiate existing cleanup

..
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly big, too intrusive and far too ineffi. among fellow GOP freshmen . Othe~
two dozen members of the House cient."
who signed includ~d Reps ..Sonnr, ,
·Republican freshman class suggested
As Budget Committee chairman, Bono and Andrea Seastfllnd of Cali~ ·
Friday that Sen. Bob Dole tap House Kasich has helped lead the GOP dri- fomia, J.D. Hayworth of ~rizona;
Budget Committee Chairman John . ve to balance the federal budget by Helen Chenoweth of ldaho~Ric~
Kasich of Ohio for the No. 2 spot on 2002 . GOP strategists consider him White and Jack Metcalf ofWasliingA
one of the party 's best spokesmen on ton, Jon Christensen of Nebraska and
the GOP presidential ticket.
"John is a leader, a believer and a fiscal issues because of hi s youth and Steve Stockman of Texas.
•
fighter:· the first -term GOP law- blue-collar roots.
Kasich's spokesman, Bruce Cuth·;
makers said in a letter to Dole that · In the letter, the freshman GOP bertson, conceded the complimentswas circulated among the freshman -lawmakers told Dole, " Regardless of were nice but said hi s bess had hi ,;
class on Friday. "He has demon - your deci sion. please be assured we mind only on getting a budget passecC
strated ability to bring people of both will work tirelessly to achieve victo· and getting reelected ·in Ohio's 12th:
parties together for the good of the ry in November' '
Congressional District.
•
The letter was signed first by an
nation. John Kasich would serve you
"Obviously, all this attention that•
well in your crusade to take Ameri- Kasich colleague from Ohio, Rep. John has received in the last few:
ca back from a government that is too Frank Cremeans . who circulated it weeks is nauering." he said.

Rep. Cremeana
plans.
; Reducing communities' rights in
determing how sites will be cleaned
up.
• Increasing delays and government costs with new avenues to litigation .

,.'

'

ly radi o address. "We must make sure the minimum wage is a living wage .· ~
Clinton and congressional Democrats propose to raise the minimum wage;
to $5.15 in two 45-cent steps over the next two years.

Bid award
clears path
for slip job

:Citizen Action raps .toxic waste PACs'
.~ontributions
to Cremeans campaign
. ..
•

0

highway will be complete. Another 10 miles will be under contract for-construction . and design and engineering work will begin on another 30 rniles.
Je sse White, federal co-chairman of the commission, estimated $4.5 biJ:
lion is n.eeded to complete the highway because the remaining roads must
be constructed through mountains .
But Rep. Scott Klug, R-Wis., has other ideas.
Klug, who is not a member of the appropriations subcommittee, Jed an
unsuccessful effort in the House last year to eliminate federal funding for
the ARC, and is gearing up for another fight.
·
"Whatever they want, we want less, "said Pamela Arruda. Klug's press .
secretary.

~linton presses -Senate for action on increasing minimum wage

Royal Oak Resort

PREVENTION PROGRAM WILL NO LQNGER AC{;EPT
I .
MAJOR HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES.

, ~I assume that others of you in
¥Ci,s have received your copy of the
Recycling Conlainers at the Office on Union Avenue
'·· ' ~ · &lt;;oca,Cola catalog in . the
I8C1'088 the county are for depos~ of ·soRTED RECYCLABLES
~· tl:!js wee~\.
. .
Items must be placed Inside the boxes. These sites are for
.;i. I dili!l't.e~n know that such a cat·
• ~ existed . but apparently lhere
24 hrs. each
. ' lllve been some prior to this spring
DUMPING IS ALLOWED, and anyone In violation PI this will be
. ~. ' laiiiop. . .
..
v, •:,·Cal) you imagine 40,paaes of arti- 1relleml&lt;l 10 the Utter Enforcement officer of the Solid waste Distnct,
1 , ¢~.111 bearins tl)e loso of one soft ITHIERE ARE No EXCEPT~S.
· cJdllk.?~ catalog shoW&amp; everything
• · • , ....~~ availlble in a wide priCe
MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING &amp; LITTER ~EVENTION
' Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7 PomeroY Ph: 992-6360
':
. . 1010 pnxluc:IS are
GJMV .
Dlstrtct.
• a~ ID IOday's"~igner~." You

'•

Meigs: Pike: Ross, SciOtO and Vi~ton
Counties Wtth programs of sefVIces

ARC cuts budQet, but Congress eyes elimination

House speaker ·trumpets -~·~ _,_
legislative achievements·:·\

New officers elected at Beta Sigma Phi Sorority

·Beat of the Bend ...

Nir.
.•• _.w,._.,___ '

HI 50s

TUPPERS PLAINS - Work to
repair a. landslide on State Route 7
near Tuppersi'lains will begin around
April 22. the Ohio Department of
Transportation District I0 announced
. Friday.
SR 7 has been closed at that site
since mid-February.
Bids on the project were opened
Tuesday and Shelly &amp; Sands of
Zanesville was awarded an emergency contract to repair the landslide.
Shelly &amp;t Sands was the low, bidder on the project with $~60,732.03,
well below tfie ODO'f estimate of
$1,145,000, according to ODOT
spoke swoman Nancy Yoacham.
Other bidders included. Tom
Mayle &amp; Sons, Bartlett, $910,244.46;
Gary Rubel, Lewisville, $988,90 1.46;
(Continued on A2)
'•

·~

Good Morning
Today's

ttimn-JJaadbael

16 Sections • 144 Pa11es
Cal!Qdar

Classifteds
Comics
Editorials

C4&amp;S
D3-7
lnsrt

A4

Qbjhrprip

Ali

Sports
Weather

81-8
A2

Co lu m ns

Ollio Valley N&gt;HsbiJI&amp; Co.

.
.Jl

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