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· Page DB-Sunday 11llles-Sentlnel

Point Pleaunt, WY

April 8, 1995

Taking fat
out of the.
..
burgers

•

WINS TELEVISION • Barbara Raynor, Gallipolis, waa
named winner of a 19-lncb remote control color TV presented by
tile GaiUpolls downtown Fooclland store last week. Presentation of
tile gift cUmaxed Foodland's IStll anniversary celebration. On left
Is Scott Worster,.manager ol the downtown store.

Intentional tort

I

EXPANDING BUSINESS- omce Semce
11
and Sapplyln Pomeroy recently added two
more employees, owners Donna and Jolin Tillis
staled. During Its tllne and a halt years of exls·
tence, bas grown from one part·time employee.

BY KIM HARLESS
By Broce Wllllaml
JACKSON • A family owned lJecause five incbes of the guard on
1 bad a bad falllale last August
and operated dairy farm in southern the PTO shaft were missing, it
ben !be ralli ..... I
boldin
w
""" wasoompanyg
Obio was recently ~orced to sell Irs could have been deemed intention· collapsed.
Thenglnsuraooe
entire berd aud lay orr all four of i!Ji al because tbe employer should says tbey bave only up to $5,000 to
employees, not beca11se of poor have foreseen the danger.
pay my bills, wbicb were illmost
The guard sbould have been on tb t b' b I 5 thl 8 f 1 1
AR
markeiS or excessive debt, b'ut
ar · "
because of tbe definition of two the shaft, no doubt. But at worst tbe · c!:m!!tl·
words: intentionaiiOrt
employer ·may be liable for ne'gliDEAR A.R.: 1 believe what
Intentional IOrt is a legal term gence, not.intentional tort. Even your insW'IIIICC company is talldng
!bar means an intentional harmful negligence is covered by workers' about Is !be medical payment cov•act: What it means to farmers, as compensation, including tbe . erage on the policy of the property
employers, is !bat they are open lo employee's..own negligenc~. And , owner. This pays without regard 10
an unlimiled amount of liability tbe fact !hal the employer didn't tiability. lf !be railing failed, as you.
that no amount of workers' com- require or even ask !be worker to described, obviously negligeoce
could be a consideration.
pen sa lion or insurance coverage unload !be wagon bas no bearing.
will prolect them from.
As !be courts see it, tbere is no
1.1
l'-'
Her~'s !be actual case bis10ry of sucb thing as an accident; the lY~Oney
t!Je dmy farm _prevwusly ~en- eQlployer sbould bave foreseen
Given !be insurance company's
uon_e d~The---dati')'-W85---parl of a -wbat eould-bave-huppmed.-- .Je!uctance 10 deal witb ymi except
f~muly farm partnershtp tba~ conAs long as the courts ·define wtth regard to the .medical payststed of a motbcr, father, thetr two intentional 1ort this way, . more thents, now is !he time to consider
sons and four employees.
farms will be put out of business- biting counsel. If your bills arc as
One son, J~ff, acted as manager put out of business because tbere is bigb as you've described. and negof the operauon. One di!Y tbree no liabilily protection for intention- ligence is demonstrated, I'm sure a
years ago they were choppipg al 10n charges.
silage and blowing it into a silo. It
The family with the dairy farm
srarted to rain, so Jeff had !be chop- decid.ed to settle out of court
ping stopped . He then went to because !bey could not risk a jury's
another fiel~ to tell another worker decision againsl them !bat could
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
to stop plowmg.
·
, have bankrupted tbree families. cigarette produ'ction rose 10 per~htlc be was away, the worker
Instead !bey sold the dairy bertl to cent last year to the secood-higbest
(a nme-year employee of the farm) pay for tbeir legal fees aud settle- level ever, pushed. up by growing
who w_as chopp1_ng silage decided ment charges.
.
demand overseas for American
to begm unloadmg the wagon by
Ohio farmers and other small tobacco as domestic use beld
himself Somehow be got his .arm businesses need House Bill IQ3 ·steady.
.
.
caught m the power take off (JYI'O) sponsored by Rep. William
Overall, U.S. tobacco compas~aft Doctors were unabl~ 10 save Thompson (R-Delphos), If passed,
nies produced 7'1/J billion cigarettes
hts arm. ·
.
.
it would more narrowly define in 1994, tbe mo$t since 1981,
No one doubts Ibis .acctdent was intentional ton as a delibemte aud accordiqg to Agriculture Departa tragedy. Accidents _like Ibis ~ inlenlional act, proven by clear and ment economisrs.
all too common m agncullure. Tbts convincing evid'e nce. In other
Americans smoked about 485
physocally demandmg occupatoon words, it wtlt~ld define intentional biUion cigarettes i1J1994, about the
as one of the most dangerous there -as you and I would define inten- same as tbe previous year .. But
is. BuiiO claim !bat a horrible inci- tional.
because of the nation's Increasing .
dent such as this was done with
Let's put some common sense population, per capita consumption
intent is abs~d. Ycl Ob!n courts in our courts. Contact State Repre- actually declined about I percent 10
have mcrcasa_ngly ruled •.n recent sentative John Carey and ask for 2.514 cigarettes - or 126 packs years that acctdents like thos can be support of House Bill103:
. per adult smoker in 1994, tbe
considerep an inlentional IOrt-and
·
damages can be collected above
what is already paid through workers' .compcnsatiiin and private .
· insumnce.
Workers' compensation was
established to protect employers
from such liabilities and to provide
insurance for injured workers. It
still docs both. until inlentionalton
is charged, then the em ployer's ·
insurance for liabilily vanishes.
The rea.wning is Ibis: Why should
~ploycrs be covered for an inte.nuonal wrongdoing?
But what you and I consider
intentional is something very different lh~ what the Ohio Supreme
Court considers intenltonal. ·In !be
case of the dairy farm accidenl,

ueas

Crenshaw
•
wtns·second
Masters

WASHINGTON (AP) -· A8fl·
culture Department researcllers
bave figured out a safe way to tate
some of lbe fat and clloleiterol out
of hamburger meat. But becaljse
!be process Ia expensive, its COlD·
men:ial appeal may be limited. ,
Tbe process uses carbOn diQX·
ide, compressed. and beated to a
dense atod liquid-like form. Wilen
the carbon (lioxide is passed
tbrougb tbe meat. it dissolves ibe
fat and cholesterol and takes lbem
out of lbe meat
· Silpercritical fluid exuactlon, as
\be
process is called, already Is
{
)
, used to remove caffeine from coffee and to exuact beer_bops.
,
l' ~
" \l' •" ....·.l,.i\
· ~_.
It also bas been sbown to
remove fat' and cholesterol from
to four part-time and one full-time employees.
milk and eggs and researchers are
Tile but_, recently bu expanded Into uacb·
•J en' supplies and added an lnsplratloaal section• . working on using it to partially
remove !he fat from eertain kinds
said; Mrs. TDlla·(far right) bandies a sale from
of
nuts, including ·peanuts,
Jollie Jewell ofDelrtor.
.
.
'
macadamia nuts and cashews.

seUiement is on the hoown. but it
,would best-be bandied by a professional.
DEAR BRUCE: I am in my 50s
and have gotten along ·without a
credit card all of my life. Late!~, I
am baving difficully _getting botel
reservations aud renting a car witbout a credit card. Do you bave any
suggestions, otber !ban obtaining a
credit C!U'd?- T.C., Manitowoc,
Wis.
·
DEAR T.C.: No, I don't. Credit
cards are a fact of life - wby fight
it? There are many cards you could
. get with low or no aunual fees 'and
no interest charges, as long as you
pay on a timely basis.
I think it'~Jeasonable...tbat car
rental companies,. for example,
don't want 10 be !be ftrst line of
defense in evaluating your !rustworthiness. You migbl offer to give
. th~ a casb deposit - _bow mucb?

A few bundred dollaJll? The renlal
companies want to know thai
somebody else thinks Y9U are a
good risk before letting you drive
away in a $15,000 -to $20,000 automobile.
_In Ibis day and age1.Q credit card
is a tool that the average person
cannot afford to be without.
(Send yo)lr questions to:
Smart Money, P.O. Box 503,
Elrers, FL 34680. Questions of
general interest will be answered
in ruture' columns. Owing to the
volume or mall, personal replies
cannot be provided.)
Bruce WIUiams Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For lf1rormatlon on bow to
-communicate electronically wltll
lhls columnist and others, coil·
tat! America Online by calUng 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

c ·igarette production up \10 percent
department's Economic Research percent from 1993, because of an
Service reported.
·
increase in volume and ,prices of
Use of cbewing tobacco also tobacco.
dedined last year, but consumption
Exports exceeded imports by
of cogars and snuff rose.
· $5.8 billion, a record and 45 perDomestic use is expected to cent bigber than a year,earlier.
decline this year, !be report said. .
Exports of cigarettes rose 13
"becanse of expected bigber retail percenl, to 220 billion, but shipprices, increased restrictions and ments of unmanufactured leaf
.prohibitions on smoking, 'adverse dropped 5 percent, to 434 million
publicity, healtb concerns and pound~. the report said.
, .
reduced social acceptance.''
U.S. tobacco growers indicated
The value of U.S. leaf .and last month !bey planned to plant
tobacco product exports bit a 692,000 acres tbis year, about 3
record $6.7 billion last
20 -·"""' more than in 1994.-

Pick 3:.
'
537
Pick4:
3845
Super Lotto:
24-25-31·34-35-47
Kicker:
135411

Page4

..

a1

..

'
Vol. 45, NO. 241

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April10,1995

Copyright 1995

'Fashion Alive
in
'95'-----.
"' V
v·

PARKERSBURG NISSAN
9070A
9186A
9190A
594·12
60111
404A
6195C
9505A
941A
94548
9564A
9566A
591-ti

90 Pontiac Lemans ...........$3795
90 Nissan Sentra.......... ,... $4995
90 Subaru DL................... $5795
90 Nissan Truck ................$5295
90 Nissan Axess ............... $7995
89 Peugeot 7 pass. wgn:.. $6695
89 Peugeot MF16 .............$5995
89 Honda Civic .................$4295
89 Peugeot405 ................ $4995
89 Dodge Dakota ........ ,.... $4995
89 Nissan 4x4·Truck ........$7995
89 Ford F150 ............,, ....... $779~
89 Peugeot 405 .. ,............. $3495
9~458 88 Hiundai ......................... $11
9513A 88 Pontiac Sunbird ........... $3595
8067C 87 Subaru 4x4 WD ........... $2595
81788 87 Honda
.. . .
9136C-.B7 Nissan Trusk ..~..... . ..
91398· 87 Plymouth Van .............. $3695
602-M 87 Nissan Sentra, auto .....$2995
60278 86 Nissan Stanza Van ...... $2895
7112C 85 PontiacSunbird ............. $795
8027C 85 Nissan Sentra.'.....,.......$1795
8187A ,85 Dodge 600 .....:............. $1895
9007AA 85 Toyota Van ...................$2795
902tA 85 Plymouth Voyager ..:.... $3695
9192A 85 Dodge Anes .................... ~.,~,
95448 85 Nissan KETK ............... $3995
82208 84 Dodge Anes Wgn .......... $995
91318 83 Nissan Sentra ................ $1695 -1
76{)8 82 Ford Granada .........,.... $1395

SHOW TIME - FMhlona anti music were featured In tile lOth
annual revue ol the Pomeroy Mercllants Aaoclatlon staged Friday
night at tile Pomeroy Elementa.ry School. ·
·
''Faslllon ABve In '95" was the theme of the allow wblcll fea. lured clotlllng, jewelry and slloes from Buttans and Bows, Cbapman Sboes, Clark'• Jewelry, and Tbe Fallrlc Shop.
'
-c-- ~ Sciitt-DUiolremceed tllrsllow wltb Anni..-C-bapman all ·narn· '
tor•. Numerous door prizes were awarded, and refresbmeniB were
served.
.
Among tllose modeling was Danlelle Grueser,left, In an attractive dress-up dress which she made.
.
.
The Meigs 4-H Faslllon Board, wltll Clbdy Oliveri, extension
agent, modeled gatments from tllelr wardrobes to demobStrate the
''total look", and 1994 Heritage Queen B~get Davis walked the
runway In one of her final appearances before relinquishing her
~rowil In June.
.·
Musk: included "Tears In Heaven"liy tbe Big Bend Conunonlty
lland, a trio clogging to "Dance", plc~ured left to rlgllt, Holly
Williams, Paulette Harrison, and Kay Hemsley; tbe Meigs Jazz
Ensembte playing "Ain't Mlsbellavln," and the Pomeroy Cllorus
singing several selections.
7

to financial self-sufficiency ·

added.
By GEORGE ABATE
"Since no other jails will lake
Sentinel News Staff
The founder of the Leading (Crisp) and the sheriff does not
Creek Conservancy District may go want to ·put at risk Mr. Crisp's
to jail after more !ban five years of bealih, the sheriff's plan is to
e'mpty the jail for 18 months,"
judicial wrangling.
.
· 1
The Fourth District Court of Lenles .said.
Felons may be moved to Ross
Appeals dismissed Jack Crisp's
appeal this morning because the County and non-felon inmates may
court Jacked tbe jurisdiction 10 con- be moved lo another facility or
placed on house arres1.· The Meigs
sider it, according to court files.
.
County
Jail consists of' five cells,
In February 1994, Crisp was
with
two
bunks per cell, and a comsentenced to 18 months in jail for
mon
dayroom.
five misdemeanor counts of receivThere are no provisions in the
ing improper compensation for
bonuse .
- - .._r ~ jail;:,l;o.r . p~;uplc... cunllnJ:ll .JQ
Last December, visiting Morgan wheelchairs, So·ulsby said. The
County Judge Dan Favreau 100-year-old facility was not
required Crisp to be jailed in !be designed 10 house peqpte confined
Meigs County Jail and pay his jail lo wheelchairs, he said.
costs including his medical expensFor instance, the single shower
and commodes do not feature bars
es.
On Jan. IQ, the ·appeals couri to assist handicapped people.
Also, Lentes said be bas been
ordered a temporary delay in the
beginning of his sentence while wary of incarccratin~ Crisp since
deliberating on his appeal. The stay Crisp's attorney could sue the
ended today and the court will county for .having inadequate
make Crisp pay for appeal costs, acco111modations for his mcdica,l
condition.
records show.
With a history of heart attacks
Since January, Crisp had
remained in his Kentucky home , and health problems , Crisp could
but he has a hislory of heart and· incur at least $40,000 during- his
health problems which complicate sentence, Lentes said.
Th e 64-year-old bas suffered
this case, Meigs County Prosecutor
heart
attacks, narrowing of the
John Lerites said.
"I'm concerned about Mr. Crisp arteries and a complete occlusion
if be's incarcemted, because· of his of the right cofonary artery 011
health and there may be federal which he had arigioplasty treataction that would have the jail ment, according to doctors.
Crisp had been set for ~ operaclosed like what happened in Jacktion
last ye·ar, but it did not occur
son County," Lentes said. ·
because
of.his condition. His time·
Meigs authorities may relocate
all county prisoners to accommo- in a hospital will not be considered
date Crisp which wOuld put exces- as time off his sentence, according
sive costs on the county, Lentes to court files.

Clinton administration considering
streamlining Social Security program
.

Congress, Newt look
beyond first 100 days

-&gt; for you during your pregnancy
and delivery
•
•) for your newborn immediately
after delivery
•:• for you and your growing family
Wheu yorr choose your medicnl care, come
where we can care abot~r yo11
as well as care for you.

-

,·
•

.

..

1 Section,.! 0 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia In e. Newspaper

SEN . BOB UUILI:
(To run for president)

~.o"l"a:le-,,,.

..,1,

a ....'fl=!: ~-----'--

fhl.fd IAIJ.I•"'e
WV I I &amp;'
House .bl.d
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)- Offering himself as "tempered by ad.versity, seasoned by experience.'' Sen.
Bob Dole is -launching bis tliird
presidential campaign vow·ing to
cut taxes, balance the budget and
''lead America back to her place in
the sun.''

.

Dole. the Senate majority leader
and early GOP front-runner, was
formally declaring his candidacy
today in Topeka. !be Kansas capital, as a symbol of his pledge to
shift authority over schools, wei,
fare and a host of other issues back
to the sta!Cs.
· ._
·
Only
three
times
in
history
have
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The Columbus Dispatch, Frenette sentative for Local 11 of !be Amersilting
senators
won
tbe
Wbite
Wben Richard Frenette became atlributed the turnaround to new ican Federation of State, County
House, ~d Dole, now 71, will be
general manager of !be Obio State management, cooperative legisla- and Municipal Employees, wbich
73
by the time !be 1996 election
represents 74 full-time fairgrounds
Fair, people bad p1enly 10 say.
tors and good weather.
rolls
arouQd, an age al which only
Union leaders and other o(ficials
Frenette became the fair's gen- workers.
Ronald
Reagan has been elected
The Legislarure also belpeli out
criticized his changes to !be man- era! manager in January 1993: The
president.
But Dole, one of the
agement team and bis renegotiation · former assistant director of tbe by cleaning up t.be fiscal mess left
most
enduring,
familiar ~d adaptof rentals for non-fair events and Mim\esota State Fair was appoint¢ by previous fair managers. It made
able.
figures
in
recent American
vendor conllllets.
for his knowledge of fairs, mtber up tbe deficit and paid off !be mort·
political
history,
Qpened his camgage on !be Celeste Cenler, which
Many feared tbe fair, wbicb sus- · than any political oonnections.
paign
with
~ optimistic spirit.
tainoo great losses under his prede"Wbat we brought 10 Ibis place was draining about $600,000 a year
"My friends, I have the expericessor, Billy Inmon, woulll slip was ·that we understood bow a from tbe operating budget.
ence,"
Dole said in his prepated
Legislators also became more
even further under Frenette.
place: like this operates; we bad 10
Despite the heroic efforis of a tifiecl truck driver saw the crash remarks. "I've been tested, tested
But as be prepares for the 1995 l~am about the politics," Frenette . involved. The leaders of !be House
and ran to assist, a Bodimer's in many ways. I am not afraid to
event, which runs Aug . 4-20, said "Witb a political appointee, aud Senate agriculture committees grocery store worker and a truck employee
said this morning .
o, lead .and I know the way. Let us
now bave seats on !be Expositions driver, a Bidwell man died Sunday .
Frenette said the criticisms bave lbe process is reversed." .
Wilfer
had
been
thrown
from
reon m our govemm~nt and set !be
at a Columbus hoSpital from
subsided. Organizers acknowledge
Frenette said be bas tried to Commission.
the
vehicle
on
impact
and
was
spirit
of tbe American pcopl~ free.
Last year's state fair lost a liule injuries he received in a one-car
be bas guided . the fair close to teach politicians about fairs.
burning.
The
two
men
used
a
blaQLet
us
renew our moral convtcuons
financial self-sufficiency.
·
"I'm able to talk fairs. I don't more than $57,000 during its 17- crash near Rodney.
ket
to
extinguish
the
flames
and
and
strengthen
our famahes by
David J. Wilfer, 3 1, was pro·
When the 1992 Ohio State Fair think they were ever educated to day run.
carry
him
away
from
the
car.
.
relummg
to
fundamental
values.
Frenette said that while prof- nounced dead at 7:27 p.m. at Uniended, !be Obio Expositions Com· that before. I tbink !bey appreciated
Colley
was
tr~sportcd
by
GalTogether,
let
us
reassen
?~
nghtitability is not a goal, fair officials versity Hospital He had su~fered
mission, which oversees the fair. that," be said.
lia
County
Emergency·
Medical
"
ful
place~
a
great
nauon
.
was $3.85 million in debt and
Even labor is ,happy witb tbe are looking 10 build up a cash sur-_ . third degree burns over mOl'¢ than
ServiCe to Holzer Medical Center · Dole eagerly embraced the
Inmon bad been ftred. Out by .fiscnl -· cbange.~-iniliated hy FreJJelte,
• plu' of Sl.S millio11 10 cover !be half of his body.
According to a spokesman for where he W:\S trcarw tor art nnxtcty- ngoodti-lbai-Mlped Rc_pulltlk&lt;U!S._!lL- - year 1994, the deficit bad
" The only problem we bad was inevitable year when ''it rains ·
reaction, a hospilal spokeswoman tbetr stunnmg success k'lSt
s
decreased 10$733,176.
when Billy Inmon was in cbarge," every day during the fair and chas- the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State said
Ibis
morning.
elecuons:
a
balanced
budget
Highway Patrol, Wilfer was southIn a story published Sunday by said Dennis William!• staff repre- es the crowds away."
The Rio Grande and Gallipolis . amendment, a hnc-ncm veto and
bound at 4:35 a.m. 'when his vehivolunteer
fire department were welfare reform, _all under the
cle w,e ntoff the right side of the
called
to
the
scene. Gallipolis umtm:lla of,dramaltcally sbnnli:!-"g
road and struck a utility pole. It
arrived
first
with
18 firefighters Wasbmgton s power and restonng
tl)\'11 overturned and caught lire.
and
two
trucks
and
used 500 gal- more authonty to stales and comStephan Zane Colley, an
mumlles .
employee of Bodirner's Grocery, Ions of water on -the blaze.
"My mandate as president
3747 Jackson Pike, and ~ unidcnwould
be to rein in tbc federal govWASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe must fltSt be resolved, although !be ties up tbe lines and keeps some ,
ernment
in order to set free the
people from getting througb with
Clinton administration is consider- move would redUOl its workload.
spirit
of
the
American people; to
Social Security keeps records on questions about their benefiiS.
ing stre8mlining Social Security by
reconnect
o'ur
government in
Staggering tbe distribution of
staggering the mailing of millions tile earnings of ahilost 140 million
Washington
with
the common
of retirement and disability checks working Americans, and the infor- checks could even out lhe impacl
sense
values
of
our
citizens:
~d to
now sent at lbe beginning of the mation is coveted by collection on financial institutions as well as
reassen
America's
interest
wherevagencies, private investigators and· Social Security's workload, partic'
montb. . .. .
WASHINGTON (AP) - . from tion, saying lhe courts would er and whenever they arc chaJ,
·The propased reforms are part information broker$.
ularly as lbc number of recipienrs
abortion righls to affirmative decide whether PrC$ident Clinton's lenged around tbe world. " he said.
or !be president's push to "reinvent .
grows 10 76 million by 2020.
Dole dedicated his campaign to
action. from family planning to flag "don't ask don't tell" policy
government.'' The ch~ges, wbicb
H&amp;R Biock Tax Services Inc.,
1
!be
hometown follls who stuffed
could save as much as $1 billion the nation's largest income tax
Under Social Security's propos- bGming, bluer battles over social would bold up . And be doesn'l cigar boxes with money to help
over five years, are to be return preparation service, is al, tbree more payment dates could policy loom on tbe. horizon as seem to have made any plans to get him recover from World War II
announced Wednesday.
already lrying to get in on tbe be added, sucll as !be second, !bird, Congress ·Jooks beyond the first school prayer legislation on the wounds suffered 50 years ago this
schedule this summer.
and fourtb Wednesdays of tbe 100 days.
' 'The purpose of these proposals action.
tbree
months
now,
lbe
GOP
Still, for all the big social legis• Friday . And to those who would
For
is to provide better public service at
month.
leadership bas held back oo a host lation that will 'be talked of ana $Uggest his ·age is a liability, Dole
less cost to the taxpayer." said
Social Security bas p-omised to
of volatile issues - not wanting then put off, much assuredir will countered by suggesting it was a
,spokesman Phil Gambino.
consider using the company and
Tbe laler dates would cost some big brawls over social policy to make it· to !be floor this _year.
unique asset, recalling an emotion.Some critics ,say the blueprint iltbers like it to assist people with recipients a little interest on tbeir
al
retiJm last year to !be battlefield
overlooks Social Security's most filing for all types of benefits, benefits - less than 25 cents a derail its "Contract Witb Ameri·where
be was wounded .in Italy
pressing problem: looming insol- according to correspondence month by Social Security's esti- ca.., .
For one thing, Gingrich"Standing
tbere ga1ing across
Welfare reform, after . all, promised leading anti-abortion
vency for the national relireJllent between H&amp;R Block and !be agen- mates.
ficlth I thought of
those
peaceful
seemed at times capable of bring-• Republicans that be would give
system. Others say turning over a cy. The discussions, however, are
\l'b y it is critical to have a _president
Social Security also wants to ing opposing lawmakers 10 blows,
small piece of Social Security's unrelated 10 !be streamlining efforts
them their day on the floor, after who knows wbat made America
Now
!bat
the
"100
Days'"
cele·
require recipients wbo bave b~k
work to private busineSS, which is now under way.
tbey agreed temporarily to put
accounts t9 bave !heir checks auto- brations are over, however, indica- aside a measure that would let great, who knows what bas been
also being consi&amp;red. poses a pri- .
Uonl .are lbal plenty of time.-wiU,be
sacrlficed to keep us free apd who
vacy risk . .
Another propos~d cbange matically~eposiled, ratber _!ban given to a GOP social agenda lbat states ojll out of using fedlirat Med- would do all in his power to lead
According , to dol'uments involves staggering tbc sending of mailed.
icaid funds to provide abortions for
• didn't even make !he "contraCt's" _ victims of mpc or incest.
America back to her place in the
obtained by The Associated Press, checks to retired an'd disabled
sun,"
Dole said.
Among tbc other proposals .small print.
· ·
the Social Security Administration recipients. Tbe cbange would apply
Rep. Ernest J. lstook, R-Okla.,
He
offered nothing bur scorn for
House Speaker Newt GingriCh, tbe measure's sponsor, bad won a
is considerin$ letting large employ- to future retirees, and tbose who being consldeted: closing five out
President
CliniOii. He said !bat after
tbe agency's 10 regional offices R-Ga., frequently causes tempesrs vote _in tbe House Appropriations
ers file a reltring worker's claims volunteer 10 switch payment dates.
being
elected
on a· promise of bold
and assigning balf of tbe 700 by suddenly' suggesting oontrover- &lt;:ommiuee to 1ag it onto a GOP
for benefits directly with !be agencbange
in
1992,
Clinton was now
cy, by oompuler. lul employee of a ' Checks now go out on !he !bird employees wbo would be affected sial actions - from reinstating a spending rescission bill. Now, be is
fighting
at
every
tum to block !be
participating tpmpany could stiii -of each montb to 49 million Ameri- to front-line operations dealing , ban on gays in the military to looking for another billlo carry Ibis
bolder
change
voters
demanded last
choose to ftle for benefits directly ·cans, prompting more ~)lao 2.mil- with me public. The rest or tbc jobs bringing a school pmyer amend- amendment. and says Gingrich is
year when they gave Republicans
lion calls during tbe first week of would be lost as tbe agency cuts irs ment 10 a House vote by July 4.
witb Social Security.
behind anti-abonion lawmakers all conttol of Congress for tbe first
worlc
force
by
4,500
over
!be
next
But
be
backed
down
on
tbe
gay
tbe
montb
10
!be
agency's
toli·free
Tbe agency acknowledges, bow!he way.
time in four decades.
ban soon after making the suggesever, that several privacy issues phone nUmber. 'lbe crush of callen four yean.
'

.F~~-11~!!~ guides StC!t~. Fair

NEW YORK (AP)- Citicorp
is retreating from ' the mortgage
securities business, Citing a slump
in demand for tbe investments
caused by bigber interest rates.
The nation's largest bank said
Wednesday that it will stop underwriting and selling derivative securities known as collateralized mortgage obligations aud will slash its
300-person monsage trading group
a third.
·

+Carol Gaines, D.O. + Le11ard G. Presulli, D.O.
'+ Gerald Rubin, D.O. + Donald G. Spaeth, D.O.
+ David Stroh, D.O.

,.

Fourth - District ~
Court denies
Crisp's appeal

Bidwell man dies
from wreck injuries

Ohio University
Osleopathic Medical Center
Parks Hall614-593-2516
Coolville Medical Center 614-667-3134

blgb....,r80. .

•

Citicorp blames
. high rates for·slum·p

•

I.- tonight Ill tho 40s, partly
cloudy. Tuesday, partly cloudy,

••

•

·~-

I've fallen.and they won't pay up

Ohio Lottery

•

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· ~

The Dilly Sentlnei-Pege

Commentar
.

.

The Daily Sentinel·
l l l Coutlbeet

ROBEJlT L. WINGE'IT

' hbiiiiMr
MAJtGARET lEHEW

CIIAJlLENE HOEFLICH

. Coatroller

G

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Monday,Apr1110,1195

-

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Auoo:lated Prea
.
Excap1s of Ohio cdiJaiaiJ ot llllliooal and sraaewide interest:
The MJddletown Joumal, April J
. Gov. GeQrge Voioovlcb'a plan for effectively assuming cmtrol of~
Slate Board or Educalion bas failed - for now - and we lbiDk that s
probably In tbe bestinterests ot Ohioans.
Voinovicb had slipped a provision into the slate budget bill !bat would
have changed tbe way sial&amp;! acbool board members are selected. Currently
the 11 slate board members are elected by state voters; Volnovicb's provision WoUld have BiVen jlim and fUIUre governors the power to appoint the
members, taking voters out of the process.
Wisely, members of tbe House Finance Commitree removed the provision from the budget bill on Friday, and a disappointed Voinovich later
vowed to bring bact tbe appointment JXOvlsion - eilher before the full
House or when tbe budzet goes to the Senate.
·
The governor 8nd the State Board of Education have differed in public
on occasion,
on the issue of reforming tile Stale's system for

•

,

•

Misun~erstood

-

'

My divorce·.from.the ACLU---~~.

'

en,

• ...__.

L

-'

!¥..

EHF- not FLF.

sob story about bow be is hospitalized in the Phili~pines (thousands
of retired U.S. atizens live there)
- and -desperately. needs a fat chunll:
of his 'account balance wire-transferred to a specified account so be
can meet medical biDs. A complrison of the signatures on file at tile ·
bank with the one on the letter
from tlie Pbilippines indicates it is ·
legitimate.
.
According to the two-'Page
report, the letter is usually a
forgery, and the signature bas been
traced from a stolen check belong-·
ing to a customer who is probably
out of the country.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
)'eatureSyndicate, Inc.

.The Lima News, March :18
'
,
What iS Ohio Sen. Milce De Wine? Conservative, moderate, liber)ll? No
on an lbree. Like bis political mentor, Ohio Gov. George Voinovich, former Lt. Gov. Dewine is a pragmatist and a technocrat - one who
believes in government that works, regardless of whether the government's actions are constitutional. His voting record over .the years and latest stiltements about tbe gung-bo GOP House iUustrate this view.
DeWine wants to temper some of tbe actions being pushed by Republicans in the House, reports the Dayton Daily News. DeWine wants to bold
off on tax cuts.and retain federal job programs for young people and the
ban on so-called assault weapons. He ·does not support provisions in the
GOP's "Conttact with America" that-would cut off tax dollars for unwed
teen-age mothers or for those on welfare who continue to have children.
Furthermore, DeWine bas "waffled'' on term limits.
.
_
. On the other band, DeWine takes a thoroughly federalistic view about
state rights. He disagrees with many of the GOP freshmen about welfare
but supports giving states the authority to implement tlleir own welfare
JXOgraDlS with money aUocated by Congress. .
·
___ WiJL.DeWine rbe senator. follow the tecbn~ 11atb of Oe'Yine the_ - bonls. ·· - - ·..I.L~_.
representative? He's wavering on te1111limits. ffc; supports federal JOO proIn 45 states, the Centers for Dis. grams and expresses doubts about welfare reform - a subject constituease ·C ontrol and Prevention
tionally offlimiL~ to the 'feds. B~~ be wants to aUow sla~s "fle~ibility."
arrange for the testing of all newSounds like big government poliucs as usual - . pragmauc, efftctent and.
borns for HIV. Newborns are also
yes, technocratic.
· tested for syphilis, sickle-cell anemia and other conditions. but•only
the result of the HIV test is kept
from the parents and the child's ·
doctor. This is not a medical decisior.. The reason for the secret HIV
test is !hat if !be child is infected,
.sa is the mother, who then is
endangered by discrimination. So
the privacy of the mother_must be

Berry's
World
,.

IToledo I 80" I

~ct~~~~f: ~~:O~ds=u~

Roger Baldwin, fou11der of the
;\Jnerican Civil Liberties Union,
bnce told me, as be told many oththat "no civil liberties battle is
ever won- permanenUy."
·
Because the Bill of Rights and
the '14th Amendment are indeed
never out of harm's way, I did not
think I would ever leave theif protector, the ACLU - having been a
member for some 35 years.
Although I occasionally disagreed
with some of its policies, the
· ' ACLU did. )&gt;eep sounding the
warning that, as Louis Brandeis put ·
i~ "The greatest dangers to liberty
lurk in insidious encroachment by
men of zeal, well-meaning, but
without understanding."
.
Now, however, the ACLU itself
-' with zeal and without understandmg - is sacrificing the lives
of children and diminishing the life
expectancy of tlleir mothers by fervently opposing the mandatory
identification-of HIV -infected new-

•

br1ef1ng co~ts $14 m1111on

' II . bell rin
to 18111: about is vay • vay claaalfied.
essenua y a
- ger that •-"·
"""' a and I can't ~•'-to you about 11.''
"The Navy told me· that there submarine to surface to receive a
.....
"We're geltin&amp; 1&lt;1'1 ot oo seosimust have been some confusion message: Ef.F was suppose d to
between ELF and EHF, which is · protect American submarines from tl ve sround here now," said
detectioo by the Soviet Navy, hut Young, wbo added that the Seaale
. Kohl and Feingold dismiss it as a and House InteUigence committees
~:.Sme!nlh;..~s:a~ ~~ By Jack Anderson Cold war relic.
bad been briefed 011 ~F last year
'd
d
'th
·
biit ror some sttange reason tbe
$14 million by killing Project ELF,
. and
. Stevens apparently st e WI
two defense appropriations subthe Navy' a·outdated communicahis colleagues beca~Be be voted to
ed tba
cut BI.F s funding last monlb. But committees were not brie~ at t
tions system for submarines. lbe · Michael Binstein
House v~rsion of the defense ---~--~~--=--:--= when the House-Senate cooference time.
rescJUJons,'blll illil not Include the ·tbe subject on which they had comriiitlee cQiilpleted work Uist . "This surfaced as a result of
someone from the, the- well, I
ELF cut however so the matter briefed Cougress," said Sen. Rus- week, it restored EIFs fullding.
bad ·to -~ bashed ~ut in a cooter- sell Feingold, D-Wis. "They just
"After the Senate acUon, Sen. probably really can't get into that,"
rsoitall bri fed by said Young.
.
ence committee between the two coofused the letters. The Navy !1Jld· S
tevens was ~ ·
Y e
Feingold suspected that somechambers.
me ... tbe members (or Congress) the
Navy,'' a Stevens aide told our . one pulled 811 ll th hour Irick, so be
But !!!ell d!e Navy suddenly pro- misunderstood''
·
associate Ed Henry. "There: s a called the Navy and demanded a
vided cldssified briefings to Sen.
Last month we reported bow genuinely classified reason to keep
N
fficlals
Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, and Rep. Feingold and S~n. Herb Kohl, D- .it tbal (Stevens) didn't know about briefing ·Of his .own. avy o
·c .w. Bill Young, R-Fla., the · Wis., pleaded With the Pentagon to before." A Stevens aide blamed . ainved at Feingold's office and
respective ilefense appropriations eliminate ELF - even though It the House for Ignoring the Senate briefed him on tile blulider. "They
me there- was never a briefil)g
subcommittee chairmen. Armed delivered millions Qf dollars to
0 f tile !Jill and told us to . told
languase
w
· th regard to ELF," said Fe in1
with classified information, their own sUite each year. The Pen- check with tbe House.
Rep. Young was even more gold. "The Navy explicitly told me
Stevens and Young prevailed on lagon is fighting to retain the prothe conference committee to save jecL
tisht-lipped wllen we asked him there was no 'classified' reason for
ELF." In a soon-to· ELF for national security reasoos.
Feingold and Kohl tacked the why this orphaned project was maintaining
BANK SHOTS_
Unfortunately, the Navy now ELF cut on to !he defense rescis- spared by Republican budget-cutsays there's been a big misunder- sions bill that recently passed the ters. "Let me tell you why that's be released :'fraud alert," tbe Fedstanding: Stevens and Young were Senate. ELF - 01' ~tre~nely l..o~ not exactly right," Young said. era! ~epostt In~ur~nce Corp. is
briefed on a program known "&amp;S _Frequency commumcauons - . 1s "F'ust of an part of what we'd like warnmg the nauon s bankers .to
~~
·
beware of customers who wnte
'
.
lftAID
from hospital beds in the PbilipIJ
·
.,.
·
pines.
·
· ¥;
U.S. financial institutions are
fj
being victimized by a wire-transfer
scam that .is spreading across the
country and has become a •'cottage
industry'' in the . Pbilippi~es,
accordlns to government Investigators. Here's bow it happens:
A bank will receive a letter from

.

protected by biding from everyone
the outcome of the test. (HIV cauSes AIDS.)
.
Some 75 percent of the infants

But the ~CLU, insisting that the
privacy of the mother must not be
invaded against her will or knowledge, maintains that counseling
will do the trick. If there is mandatory counseling about HlV and
NatHentoff
AIDS, !be ACLU claims, mothers
will voluiuarily agree to be tested.
who initially test positive are not
There bas been counseling in
actually infec'ted. They are born hospitals iii New York state, with
with maternal antibojlies, having dismaying results - except for
been exposed to the virus as a Harlem Hospital. Yet there, Dr.
result of perinatal transmission · Elaine Abrams, director of Pedifrom the mother. The rest are attic AIDS Care, nonetheless urges
indeed infected, and call be identi- that "HIV testing become as roufied as such within three wee!Cs line as syphilis testing or eyedrops
after birth. But if the mother does at birth. Let's treat this as a disease
not know sbe and her child are _not a political problem."
·
infected, the child will soon be
Jim t&gt;wyer, a New York Newsattacked by opportunistic infections day columnist, tells of a mother ·
due 10 a weakened immune system. who found out by accident - a
And those are preventable infec- year and a half after her child was
~.
~-b·~~~=
·The A;ssociatlon to Benc~t Chi!- , HIV -positive. When she caned

dren, wb1cb cares for HIV -mfected
kids along with homeless and terminally.. ill' 'bildreil, mali:c:ubi.L.
point in a new lawsuit against tile
state of New York. Claiming !bat
thesc vulnerable children are being
deni~ eq'!al.protection of the laws,
the assoctauon emphasizes there
. are treatments now that '?3D "prolong and improve the lives of cbildren infected with HIV."
·
Agreeing are the J&gt;hysicians on
New York's Committee for the
Care of Children with HIY Infection, which ealls for identification
at birth of children wilh HIV, even
if the mother refuses consent:
.

Harlem hospital, where the cbtld
was born the mother was.. told' that
~be b!ld~t been given the .result5·
of the test at birth because it woul&lt;l
have been' an invasion of her privacy.
·
"That privacy," the woman
says,' "is ltilling us."
.
Some of the mothers at risk do
not get prenatal care, and therefore,
no counseling. They come to the
hospital when they are ready to
give birth. But those wbo do get
s ucb care can benefit from the
recent discovery that AZT, taken
during pregnancy, can prevent

many infants from being born with
the actual HIV vims by dramatically reducing the transmissibility
from the illfected mother.
·
If there were mandatory prenatal
testing, pregnant mothers with the
infection would be informed of
what could be done for them and
their cltildren.
But mothers have a right to
refuse such information, says the
ACLU - bo,tb during pregnancy
and when the child is born, even
though then !be chil&lt;\ has become a
"person" under the Constitution .
with his or her own rights. The bitter irony of the ACLU's zeal without understan&lt;ling i&amp; that a mother
protected in .her ignorance will
inel~etably fmd out if she is infected. She will know when her child
begins to die. .
·The five states where these
"blind" tests at birth do not tak.e
'place are Idaho, Nebraska, North.
Dakota, South Dakota and Ver. moRt. ln..the nrher slates, CIC!lJll fot ..
New York; most people do not
know that this waste of life is going
on. And the ACLU is not about lhe
tell them.
Nat' Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and 'the rest of the
BiU of Rights.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calUng 1800-8:17-6364, ext. 8J17.)

• •

q.i-..~
0 " " br NEA, lno:.

"When they said, 'This is where the boys
are' - THEY WEREN'T KIDDING."

•JeotumbusJ75"

·'

I

, the niomiog."
· · ·
The man bas not been able to recall .the attack, officials slated.

.
Appeals court to meet April13 ·

.
Inc.

___.;..__Weather----• South-Cmlnll Ohio
• Today... Panly sunny. A chance
-or
showers
or
. tbunderstorms .. .Mainly this mom,ing. High 60 to 65. East winds 5 to
15 mph: Chance of rain is 30 per· cent.
.
•. Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low 45
to 50. East winds 5 to 15 mph
· becoo,ling southe&amp;t.
·
Tu4;sday ... Partly
,sunny...Wanner and breezy. High
arouud 80.
Extended forecast

Tuesday nigbL ..Scattered showers and thunderstorms ...Mainly
west half. I..ows in the 40s.
Wednesday ...Occasional showers and thunderstorms. Highs In the
mid 50s northwest to mid 60s
southeast.
Thursday ...Fair ...Except for a
chance of showers nortbeasL Lows
middle 30s to lower 40s. Highs
lower 50s to lower 60s.
Friday...Fair. Lows middle 30s
to lower 40s. Highs middle SOs to
middle 60s.

. The Fourth District Court of Ap)JC:!ls will meet ~pril 13, 9:3.0
p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse to consider Metgs and Gallta
county cases.
'rbe court serves 14 counties in southeastern Ohio and consists of
Presiding Judge Peter B. Abele of Athens, Administtative Judge
Earl E. Stephenson of Portsmouth, Judge William H. Harsha of Cir- .
cleville and Judge Roger Kline of Circleville.
. .
The court directly reviews all cases beard or tned m lower courts
in which a decision is being appealed. These cases may have been
tried in common pleas, probate, juvenile, municipal or county courts
and may be either civil or criminal cases.
.

Articles of incorporation filed
Articles of incorporation bave been filed in the office of Secretary of Stale Bob Taft for Jeffers Coal, Trucking &amp; Excavating Co.,

Inc. wilh Robert F. Jeffers, Syracuse, agent.

l

'
CARLETON
CURRICULUM ~ Stadents from Ca1rletton
School c:ome&amp;rbon shopped at Kroser's recently. Primary students Alhley'IUtoedea, Robbie Johnson, Mltdlel Po-11, Nield Wllson and Vldorla Denney lind the Items that cost the least. T.Joe pro,gram teaches the children practical skllb sll!'h as using money,
lllkillll for llelp, pedellrlan urety and how to us.e commumty services. Carleton students have visited area restaurants, banks, retaD
stores, grocery stores, .llbrlll'lll, parlu and post omc~. (Sentinel
photo by Geofle Abate) ..
.
. ·

Meigs EMS logs 2? calls
Don Leach propeny;
•
2:18p.m. Saturday, VFD to
Powell Street, brush fire on Jim
Pratt propeny;
·_
7:14 p.m. Saturday, Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department to
Story's Run Road, brush fire on
Don Leach property;
9:30 p,m. Sunday, Page Street,
Freda Carsey, PVH .
POMEROY
4:52 p.m. Saturday. Pearl Street,
Martha Stewart, HMC;
7:53p.m. Saturday, ·YFD to
Willow Creek Road, outbuilding
fire, Charles Reiunire owner;
9:42p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy'

'Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
27 calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday including five transfer
calls. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
· 8:42 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Mae Lynch, Holzer Medical Center;
8:48 a.m, Saturday, Vine Street,
James Brewer, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
·
· 10:53 a.m. Saturday, Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department 10
Story's Run Road, brush fire on

Deaths~-- Bloodmobile collects_BO units of bl.-o...
Q__
d~~-lliiJ~~~u=,;~~ ~~eh~abmlilitats..lltion1ernCelOI'intelriL
•. ------.2
----L

--Area

~

Hospilli.l;
,
A total of 80 units or blood were League, -and Retired Seaior Volun- Hart, Laurie Wayland, Heather
9;51 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
collected when the American Red teers assisting with clerical work · Woods, Paul Marr, Debra Mora,
Berneda Boney. VMH.
Cross bloodmobile visited tbe were Peggy Harris, Helen Bodimer, George L. Harris, Jr., Rebecca 1. r
RACINE
Clella Fern Findley, 83, Racine, died Saturday, April 8, 1995, at her Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen- Lula Hampton, Ted Hatfield, NeweU. Dennis Giln:!on:. Janet Lef. 2:05 p.m. Saturday. state' Route
·
' residence.
Gladys Cumings, Jeanette fle, Debra Grueser, Paul A. Rice,
ter.
124, Clella Findley, dead upon
,. A homema)cer, she was born Jan. 19, 1912, in Shepherd, daughter of
Multiple gallon donors were Lawrence, Betty Sayre, Regina Jeffrey Warner, Patricia Barton, , amval.
the late James and Maybelle Mathews Bauchmayer.
William Snouffer, Sonia Allen,
Patricia Barton, eight gallons, Swift, and Gerald Wildermuth.
REEDSVILLE
. S)lrvivors include sons and daughters-.in-law, Charles R. and Ann Stacey Shank, one Bailon; Cyndi
Donors by community were as Phyllis Witherell, Cyndia King ,
3:54 p.m. Sunday, Reedsville
·Findley of Racine, Don and Nadine Findley of Reynoldsbur~; a son;
David King, Loretta Brown,
foUows:
·
Fire Station, Christine Westfall,
King,
two
gallons,
and
Edward
··Edward Findley of Racine; a daughter and son-m-law, Patncta and Cuzart, lbree gaUons.
Pomeroy: Geri Walton, Pete William Radford, Dreama Braley, . VMH .
Charles Michael Sr. of Racine; daughters Mary Findley and Linda J~ell.
Tremblay,
Gary Snouffer, Staooy Eunice Jones, Mary Voss, Virgil
RUTLAND
The canteen was served by the·
'both of Racine, and Shirley Shultz of Bear Creek, N.C.; 18 grandchildren Middleport Child Conservation Shank, Harold Norton, Thomas Windon, Bryan Shank, Brenda
3:15 a.m. Saturday. Main Street,
and 20 great-grandchildren.
•
'
Cunningham, Edward Cozart, . Tammy Haney, refused treaonent;
' Otber survivors include sisters-in-law, Belly Bauchmayer of Reyn,oldsRpger Abbott, Mary Spencer, Billie
5:24a.m ..Saturday, Meigs Mine
; burg and Ethel Kauffman of Columbus; a niece, Helen Marie Easonan of
Ji&gt;e Spencer, Dan Follrod, Gloria~ 31, Richard Kinnear. St. Joseph's
Columbus and a special friend, Philip Bearhs of Racine. .
· .
Peavley, Gloria Kloes, Ivan Powell,
Hospital;
•
hel&amp;ai 9 a.m. Tuesday.
.
She was preceded in dealb by her husband, Charles R. Fmdley m 1994; Meigs Chamber set
Carolyn Elam, Mindy Brinker,
11:12
a.m.
Saturday,
New Lima
The Meigs County Chamber of
five brothers; two sisters and two great-grandsons.
-Scott
Brinker,
Peggy
Brinker,
and
Road,
Tammy
Haney.
VMH;
-Services will be held Tuesday, II a.m. at the Letart Falls Cemetery ' Commerce will bold irs monthly Sunrlse'servlce announced
Geoffrey
Wilson.
4;27
p .m . Saturday, Salem
Easter sunrise service and com. ChapeJ.witb the Rev. Jim Satterfield ofliciating. Burial wiU follow in the meeting at noon Tuesday at CarLong Bottom: Henry Babr,
Street, Taylor Haggy, HMC;
munion
will be held Sunday &lt;\t 6 Bruce
leton
Scliool.
'
.
... cemetery.
·
.
.
·
Hawley,
Laurie
Hawley
and
5:26p.m. Sarurday. Malloons
a.m. at the Hysell Run Holiness
, Friends may c.all today from 5-9 p.m. at Ewmg Funeral Home,
Run
Road, Cindy Parsons, HMC;
Trinia
Hanis.
Church. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
Board of Elections to meet
' Pomeroy.
·
·
·
4:02
a.m. Sunday, Meigs Mine
Middleport;
Billie
Fitchpatrick,
Regular meeting of the Meigs morning worship, 10:45, and
31,
Lawrence
Shamblin. PVH.
Shirley
Fitcbpatrick,
Kim
Barrett,
County Board of Elections will be evening service, 7:30p.m. Easter.
SALEM TWP VFD
Tamara Nelson, Donna Hawley,
12:18 p.m. Saturday, state Route
Sam Rayburn, James Phillips,
Anna Browning, and Linda Haley.
124 , brush fire on Ross Shuler
. : Former Meigs &lt;;ouilty resident Charles Michael Fitch, 43, died Friday, ..
property, Rutland squad assisted, .
Syracuse: Laura Swiger, Kathie
;April 7, 1995, at Orlando, Fla.
'G . d J
SYRACUSE
Cumings, Darla Thomas, Dianna
· Born July 5, 1951, at Long Bonom, son of Charles us an ean
The following cases were Leyh, Centerville, speed, $30 plus Lawson, and Linda Holter.
4:28 p.m . Saturday, VFD to ·
_'Miele' VanMeter Fitch, he was a U.S. Arm~ veteran.
.
resolv¢d Wednesday in the Meigs costs; Debra L. Alshire, Cheshire,
brush fire on riva bank, Jack
Reedsville: Howard Caldwell,
~ Surviving is his wife, Brenda Bentz Fttch; a son, Thomas Michael
County Coun of Judge Patrick H. speed, $30 plus costs; Rex D. Barbara Roush, Teresa Talbott and
Williams
pr.openy.
p· b
d daujlhter April Dawn Fttch, of the home. Also sumvmg 1~ 3. O'Brien:
·
Vance. Rutland, speed, $3il plus Jonathan Sanders.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
'
;b:th~:"and sister-i~-law1 Keith and Cindy Fitch, a sister and brother-mFined were: Timothy A. Gra- costs; Ronald Coates, Pomeroy,
8:18 a.m. Saturd:ty , motor-vehiLangsvill11: Ellis Myers and
Jaw, Mar.yand Blaine Dailey, all of Portland; several aunts, uncles , bam, PomBroy, seat belt, $25 plus disorderly, $100 suspended to $25 Alva Clark.
cle accident on Scout Camp Road.
nephews nieces and cousins.
·
. Cha
costs; Teresa L. Alderson, Middle- plus costs, two years probation.
Racine: Patsy Cornell, Jeff Scyotes Fryar, YMH, Chester VFD
' Servi~es wiU be held Tu.esday, JOa.m. at Pine Castle Memonal · pe1 por~ speed, $30 plus costs; Wanda restraining order issucd;-.James E. Frank, Grace Holter, Janet Theiss,
assistc~ ;
Funeral Home in Orlando. Friends may call today lrom 6·9 p.m. at the S. Lauderoiilt, Racine. seal belt, ·Rose, Huntington , W.Va., speed. · Louise Frank and Clarence Frank.
10:44 p.m. Saturday, Brooks
:funeral home.
·
$25 plus costs; Amanda Eblin, $30 plus costs; Greta S. Turnbull.
Road. April Ritchie, Camden-Clark
MaSon, W. Vi: Brian Johnson.
Pomeroy, window tint violation, Letart. W.Va., speed, $30 -plus
Mcmorialllospital .
New Haven, W. Va.: Eddie
•
$30 plus costs; Stephanie Price, costs;
.
Bumgarner.
Pomeroy, spee~. $30 plus costs;
Hanie M. Rockhold, Long BotShade: WiUiam Cook.
William M. Lawson, Long Bollom, tom, seat belt. $15 plus costs;
Tuppers Plains, Chad Griffith.
A ·1 8
reckless operation, $100 plus costs; Ozzie E. Blair, Long Bottom, seal
Rutland: Marta Blackwood.
Melvin .C. "Johnny" Morris, 92, Pomeroy, died Saturday, pn ' Lantz Rapp, Athens, speed, $30 bell, $25 plus costs; Kevin B. Fink.
' t995 att!Je Veterans Memorial Extended Care Umt 10 Pomeroy.
plus costs; Allen White, Gallipolis, Wafts worth, seat belt, $25 plus
,
•
.. A. farmer, he was born May 15, 1902, in Pomeroy, son of the late speed, $30 plus costs; Debra Frost. costs; David L. Pryor, Cutter, seat .
Grant and•Nona Stanley Morris.
C
ot: Long Bottom, .faihirc tO yield, $20 __ bd!...$.15. plus.c.osts; .Mil!Jc ft.J'lo!J,___HOLZERMEOICAL CENTER
(.
• &amp;OGrY MDUI£ . OGI .)
.
·
Glouster, ~eat bel~ $25 pl~s costs;
· April 7 discharges- Mrs.
' H~lssurviv~tlby1!daughtGrandson=in.llm'.·R_nrh®d.lru:kD~rtym.da ... plus costs;
l:OO, 8:JO OULT Mr . SAT/9.1H t · ...V. 1 :OO ;'J: IJO
'·Middleton. Idaho; two sons and daughtcrs-m-law , Mclvm an ·bn .
Gary_ W. Adams, Rutland, Patncta L. Warson, Mtllford, Wilbur Woodyard and daughter.
~ ,u!.1 't .!E~r~ .,. . · ~R~
' Morris of WillianJSport and Clifton and c:~t Moms of Reynolds urg, · speed, $22 plus costs, $10 fine sus- speed. $30 plus costs; Charles S. Ressie Hess, Ryan Slone. Billy
1: •s. '1: ts w.a.r ..u .&amp;o..'I'/ I:UI ' MW . 1 :1!&gt;, J: rs
· nine grandchildren and seven great-grande 1, reo. 0f S
.11 • d Neva · pended; ~Misty D. Lane, Rutland, · White, Glouster, spe~.d, $30 plus . Clymer, Judith Clark. Patricia
I
BYE BYE. lOU( '""'·'
"7: 00.9:00 MQ..t "'-1' .SM'{U I \II.D. 1:00. J:OO
Also surviving arc two s•sters, MyrU.e Stanley
nowvt can
seat bell, $25 plus cos!S; Kenard L. costs; Mary A. Locshmg, Tr~nton, Webb, Herbert Morris , Howard

:clella Findley

Meigs announqements

·charles M. Fitch .

Meigs County Court

·Melvin Morris

Hospital news

I

·. Ator of Albany..
· ·
.
M ·.
•·. He was preceded in death by his wife, Ama.nda Stanley oms, two
• dau bters Hetty Cone and Max me Moms; two StSICJ? and two brothers. ·
.e m
Sgervt'ce's w'rll be held Wednesday, II a.m..at .Ewmg F.·uncr.al f11om
11 0 II
'•'Pomeroy with the Rev. Bruce Englemao offictatmg. Bunal WI
ow m
'·'Burlingham Cemetery·
· . .
·
·
· Friends may call from 9 a.m. Wednesday unul ume of scrvu;es.

Stocks

D~y Sen~inel

Am Ele Power .•.- .....:••--.32 SIB

(USPS liJ..%11.

'

Published tVtl')' nftc:moon , Mondtl)l through

friday. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 1he
Ohjo Valley i'ubhd11n8 Co mpanylMultlrnedm

Inc.. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-:2 156.

Second cla~s po~•nse pnid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
MtmMr: The

As~oc ultcd Pres~.

·

and the Ohio

Newspopc:r Association.

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' Ohio ;45769.

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Akzo ..............-----··----.56 71B
Ashland OU .....- ................. .33 71B
AT&amp;T ..............- ................... .51 SIB
Bank One .....................,. ......... .30 lll
Bob Evans·--···-··-··· .. ,.;. .............21

Champion lnd.-................ _.211/2
Charming Shop ....................... .S 31B
Clly Holdlng ..._ ............. - .....- ..27
Federal Mogtd.--............ -.18 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ·----·--·--.37 71B
K-mart ................- ........ - .... t4 71B
Lands End
--------17
3IB
Lbnlled
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Multlllledla Inc.
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--·-····-------44
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Robbins &amp; My•""'-·--··--.l2 1/2
Royal Outcb.......- ........... 119 318

Sboney's Inc. ,...._ •.,.......... _ .... 10 311
Star Bank -··------·---4211B
Wendy lnt'L ---·------111 71B
Worthington Ind ...._____ ,19 314

_._._

Stock reports are lbe 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Adveot ol
Gallipolis. ·

.

The exposed checkered cloth at the
top an!l bottom of most books' bind·
ings is called the "headband."

Prunty, Syracuse, drivmg under ~e
influence, $1,000 plus costs, SIX
lh · 'I
d d t 30 days
•
mon s Jai suspcn c 0
one year operator's hccnse suspen·
sion, one year probatiOn, 180-day
vehicle immobilization; no 0':-,
$300 fine concurrent wrlb DUI, stx
months Jatl suspended to 30 days
concurrent with DUI, .six months
jail suspended to 30 days concurrent, one year probation;
Dennis A, Foley, Syracuse,
underage consumption, $100 suspended to $50 plus costs, 10 days
jail suspended, three years PfObation; Charles Aciker, l'omeroy,
domestic violence, costs, two y~ars
probation, 30 days jail suspended
to 15 days; Sherry S. Herdman,
Middleport, passing bad checks,
$25 plus costs, restitution; Keith D.
Phalin, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
cosrs; Rodney L. Hopkins, Aurora,
Ind., speed, $30 plus ClJSts; seat
bell, $25 plus costs;
Jasan S. Wells, Reedsville,
speed, $30 plus costs: Brian p.

speed, $3\1 plus costs; Kevm A.
Swank, Jackson, speed, $30 ~Ius
T
A Petrel Rae me
costs; revor ·
• .
•
speed, $30 plus costs; Ltsa C.
Ramey, Charleston, W.Va., speed,
$30 plus costS; Cherylllalley, Mid -.
dlepor~ speed, $30 plus costs; John
A. Wood, Vinton, speed, $30 plus
costs; R. Ray Hall, Middleport ,
speed. $30 plus costs; Chnstopher
Hutchinson, llunlingron, speed.
$30pluscosrs. ·
.
Forfeiting bonds were; Mehnda
Justis, Pomeroy, passing bad
cnecks, S II S; Sandy Napper,
Langsville, spccd,.$100; Mary
Parker, Pomeroy ; ·l en of center,
$70; Donald C. Poole; Middleport,
scat belt, $53.

NOW OPEN
SPRING SEASON
•Pansy •Viola
•Broccoli •Cabbage
•Cauliflower ·
Cold Weather Plants

"Say Love With
Flowers From!"

-

KAREM'S
GREENHOUSE

. PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Hou111: Mon.-Frt. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3Y. miles past Southern High
School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio ·
614-949-2682

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) .992-6454.
(800) 433-6263

Mead, Russell Woodbun, Angela
Cox and Dorothy Lidcl.
· M
April 7 births - Mr . and rs .
Glendon Sharp, a daughter. of
Reedsville and Mr. and Mrs. Mark
vanco, a daughter, of Gallipolis.
April 8 dis.chorg•s - Tamara
Crossen.
·
April 9 • Mrs. Mark Yanco and
daughter.
Printed with permission..

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JDMMY

BOY

"" .......... ., .....0[.

r7:20,9:20 DMl.Y

U'C1JJ

··~

P$.'1' .~Tf!UI I

11111),\;20 ,3:

l1:20,9:20
. DULY
MAJQA PAYNE '""''I
.SAT19M
l :20, J: 20
I' 0!!!.1!-E~K....J:' •.c!" I
filM'

&amp; III!D.

'IU!I

l:OO,i:)(l MU.r MT.:JAT/!UII A WI) 1:00,):30

I7:00
MRN or THE fioun """,..,, I
r»JLr MT .SAT/ .!UI
1:00,1:00 1&lt;:01

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,~.:~:-:~,:::t~\

J

STARTS t. EO..,~:Siln. \l'KII 121'11
"Tin: 1-'t:RHU·: Mil Tilt. 1').. "(, li"-

&amp;HJlJRl

utn -

CIIT CERTIFICATES AVAIL·\OLF.!

........ : ...... -:.

.You Should Know!

.-

: Membership in Federated Funeral Directors of Amenca :
• is reserved for independent funeral homes that :
: ·consistently meet established standards of •
: professionalism , ethics and sound business practices .

..

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:
~.

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:

The customized business management, consulting and :
: Ifin&lt;~ncial services provided by FFDA permit us to minrm1ze :
; our costs and maximize ltle services offered families we ·:
'
: are privileged
to serve.
:

-:

We thought you shou.ld know.

·Straigfit :- Tuckgr -t]?.pusfi l

•

:Junera{:Jlome
Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152,\,/,

Preneed, Arneed- Po.&lt;lneed

Loc:olly Ownod

!

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A Middleport man who was allegedly robbed, beaten and then
dumped in Pomeroy bas returned borne after a month ip the hospi- ·
tal, officials stated today.
·
Melvin Durst, 65, of Middleport, was released late last week
from Holzer's Medical Center after originally being taken to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
·
Durst sustained sc;vere bead and neck injuries an&lt;rWasJound
lying In the snow with a blood temperaiure below 90 degrees in
front of Dr. Brown's office.
"We believe the motive was robbery," said John Lentes, Meigs
County prosecutor. "TbeJ'Ii was evidence to show he had a large
sum of money on him earlier in evening, but it was not on him in

700

The

or

.

· State Route 124 at the Athens Colln!Y line near HOCkingport will
close roc wort oo a major slip today, liccording to an Ohio Department of Transponation release.
Gary A. Rubel Inc. of Lewisville will repair the $2.9 million slip,
the release stated. The JXOject is set foc completion Nov. 15.
The official detour routes are State Route 144, State Route 7 and
State Route 681.

Middleport man impfdves

.

wisdom, courage and patriotism the president's direct or indirect
deserve unstinting praise.
bidding. .
'
But that's no excuse foc today's
Nor should it be forgotten that
the CIA consumes only a fraction sorry state of the CIA's "oubnoded
of lhe country's $30 billion-a-year culture," as former DCI James
(estimated) intelligence budget. Woolsey termed il What the nation
The military spends the biggest bas on its bands' is a rotting bulk of
an institution, an organization that
. share by far. OfficiaUy, the Director of Ce'htral Intelligence is the is unsure of its mission in a
president's intelligence eyes and changed world and apparently
ears and bas COOI'dination responsi- unable to adapt to changed circumbility for aU intelligence activities. stances.
Tbe result bas been !be. autoFactuaUy, the Defense Intelligence
Agency, the National Security pilot effect referred to ~lier. '1k
Agency, with its incredible com- CIA continued to subsidize
munications surveillance capacity, Guatemalan· killers right up until
and a large handful of other depart- the day before yesterday, simp!~
ments, offices and agencies all because it had always done so. It
. winked at Ames' drunkenness ani!
llperate beyood the OCI' s control.
FinaUy, the ClA is the designat- : inexplicable wads or money
ed ran guy and was long proud of because thal was the way it lraditionaUy treated its coven agents.
the role. Designed to be and often
utilized as. the president's right
Hoddln1 Carter UI, tor-r
band, It has frequently done covert
State
Department apokeama}la
bidding while giving bim what is
and
award·1ll'lnllllll
reporter, ed&amp;known as "deniability." That's
tor
and
publlllier,
..
prulc!enl
another way of sayinz that on some ,
MalnStreet,
a
WuhlDJI!on,
D.O..
of the numerous occasions over the
based
televidon
procluciJon
compast 4$-plus years when the agenc)'
'
pliO)'.
went off the re~atlon, it did so at

•

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Thuggish ~lA needs.complete overhaul
What Jtind. of intelligenCe agen~ The recent revelations about the
cy does the United States need in agency's paymaster relationship
with the accused Guatemalan murthe post-Cold War era?
Answer: One as unlike the cur- derer of one American citizen and
rent CIA as possible.
Question: Wby?
·Hodding Carter Ill
AnsYiler: Because today' s CIA is
a wasteful embarrassmeht navigat- the husband of another were
ing on auto-pilot. Long after the indicative, but hardly surprising.
taU of the Soviet colossus, who~
Nor was the Aldrich Ames case,
existence was its reason for being, in which the CIA piled .bungling
it continues to operate as though its ineptitude upon ineptitude while
most thuggish means are justified· the Russians mole did bis worlc, a
by the necessities of national sur- ft:eakish exception to some general
· viva!. The CIA Deeds to be rebuilt rules of exceUence. In terms of its
along fundamentaUy different lines. activities and of basic democratic
moce ~&gt;pen to public accountability, values, tbe CIA bas been a disaster
detached from virtually all covert area for years.
operations and refocused· on its
This is written by someone who
intelligence gathering and analyti- believes wholeheartedly that the
caiJ'unctions.
United States needed· at1d still
Question: How can you say needs an effective intelligen~e
that?
ca)mbility. In the world in which
Answer: How is it possible to we live and are likely to live for a
say anything else?
long time, we cannot so about our
What is publicly known is bu~iness blindly lsnorant of the
damning enough. Despite repeated perils and possibilities. It is also
promises of reform, the CIA bas written by someone who knows
been acting like a rogue elephant, and admtres a number of CIA
answering to itself and no one eisq' .employees, past an~ presen~ whose

Local
briefs--Slip clostts sta,Je highwp,y ·
\ .

MICH.

4

app&lt;iinanent provision is just the latest maneuver by tbe governor
to·bring an elected public body in line with his thinking.
We think Ohioans are smart enough to recognize what the governor is
doing. Voters are perfectly capable of ~ectlng _their own repre~~~
. to the state school board; just as they ptck ~u governor. Vomovtcb s
calculated attempt to b!ing the state school board under ltis control is an
insult to voters and a threat to o~ system pf cbeclcs.and balances.
The Columbus Dispatch, Aprill
Few states, including Obio, are overwbelntlngly happy with the new
National Voter Registration Act, and it should be considered, at lbe le&amp;t,
for a majoc overhaul.
·
Five states - Including Clilifornia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, lllinois
and South Carolina- are challenging the so-called "motor-voter" law in
court. The new law allows registration at license or motor vehicle
bureaus, welfare offices and other agencies. ·
A group of Republican governors, including California's Pete W!l~n.
argue convincingly thal this weU-inten¢d law to expand voter partiCipajion is an unfun¢d mandate on states tbal ~&gt;pens the door to voter fraud.
Ohio officials sbould join the chorus for a major revamping, or for the law
to·be scrapped as the new GOP administtation in New York. has suggested.
.
Secretary of Slate Bob Taft, a Republican, bas recommended a finetuning of motor voter at the federal and slate levels next year. But the law
needs more th:in that; it needs a complete reworking while the legislation
is new.

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W ASIJINGTON - A blund«
by two memben of Coogresa bas
triggeled a comedy or erron that
sent $14 million down the federal
drain.

Poaenr,, Oblo

OHIO Weather
, · Tueldlly, Aprllll
i.:

. Pqe .2-The Dilly Sentinel

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;o;,._ W/ Conl&gt;lolo S.W:. M

Ono l..oco1lon

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~~onc~ey; AprU 10, 1995

The Daily Sentinel
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. By DA.VE 11A.1UUS

Calllit:!:i:. .
lbe..Melg&amp;

to defeat the Marauden in the
nightcap 12·11- to piD a spliL

baseball
team won two of th1ee games
llliDSt J a - County teaml 'this
past we I end 1be M-.Jrn wiD
vhead In to Tri· Valley Conference
actioll on Monday at Trimble with
a 4-4 milk overallllllll a 3-1 mart
in lbeQhloDivilion.
Tbe Mlnudcn traveled to Well·
ston .Friday and defeated a good
Golden Rocket team by a 7-2 mar·
.. sin. ·Asainst Jackson Saturday,
Meigs defeated the Ironmen 10-4.
in tbe fust coolest fo a doublehead·
er, but JackSon came from behind

In remembrance of late mentor,

Crenst..aw captures Masters ~rown

of which Crenshiw loves so well .
"It was fate. I believe In fate. I
AUGUSTA, GL (AP) - Ben - tbc:re may not ha~~e baeD a more was just a lot 1uctier Cllan anyone
WOD- with help from HJKVey.
poignanl. emotiooal momeul
else Ibis week." be said after his
Justis be bas all his life.
. "I just let go,'' Crenshaw said closing 4-undt.r·par 68 produced a
"It wu like ·someone put his after becoming only the second 274, the third lowest willniDgscore
band oo my shoulder and guided American in eipt years to win this in Masten history.
·
dlroulh.'' Ben Crenshaw said title. "I couldn't bold it l!DY iooger. . "Obviously the best golf I've
Sunday after his ono-stroke victoly All day long !be galleries were giv· played in a long tiine," Crenshaw
.
ins me ovation after ovation. I was said
in lbe Mulm.
It was e tribute to his lifetoos fisbtlns 10 keep my amposure.
His close friend. Davis l.:.ove m
friend.
Jw 111111 menlllr, lbe late
"I don't know bow I got - "Davis Is like family," .C ren·
Harvey Penick. wbo died. a week through tbe day. r really doo'l I'll sbaw said
rbasal him to tbe tide
ago- 011e wcelt aftl:r giving Cma· never know.''
be flfSt won In 1984.
sbaw one last leao! - at the ase
There was so much going on in
. Love, who bad a saga of bis
of90 in Austin, Texas.
.
bis mind, Crenshaw said. There own. mwng-his way inio the Mas·
''Harvey was the ISth club in were tbe thoughts of Penick, who
ten. field only with a victory in
my bag IOday,"· Crenshaw said.
flfSt put lbe S-year-old Crenshaw's New Orleans last week. was second
All his emotions brotc tbrousb bands on a golf club. There was lbe with a 66 and a 275 toal.
hi~ Clll'efully crafted composure · struggle to tum ba!:k the world's
"At least they won't be asking
wiiCn be holed lbe finll putt. a litde greatest players in one of golrs
me. why I've never ftnl•bed in 1be
18·lncber.
great dramas. And there was the top lOin a major any more,'' Love
· He didn't stralgbten from his haunting tbousbt that this was bis
said.
putting aoucb. He dlopped the put· last, best chance. ,
Austmlian Greg Nonnan, wititheda
ter. His white Clip fell to the green.
"At 43, you don't know bow
68, and Jay Haas, with a 7 0 •
Bending from the waisL be clasped many more cbaaces you'll have,"
for third at 277.
both bands to.his face and. before a be said.
In the run down the stretch, it
huge gallery around lbe 18th green
He gave himself lbe chance with
was a tlJree..man race with Norman
and a nalional television audience, a third-round 66 that gave him a and Love playing together well in
be wept. Unasbamedly.
sbare of the lead, then nailed the
front of Cransbaw, applying the
pressure.
Wben bls caddy, Carl Jackson, vktory with tournament-turning
•
1
put a tentative band on his shoul· pullS on the 16th and 17th sreens.
Love tied bim, momentarily,
der, Ben straislltened, bugged the
Those birdies gave him a twowith a' great l!PProacb to two feet
for a birdie on the 17tb, Norman
cearsaddystreamandwalgkdedownoffhithes'•acsreee, tn , sbot lead with one bole to go and
10
1
0
I
the freedom to play the last bole
took himself out of it with a three·
signhiscardandslipintoasecond conservatively. He missed tbe
puttontbesamebole.
·
green jacket.
'
~reen short left- away from the
But .Crenshaw, wbo did not
· In all the storied history of this trouble_ and made the bogey-S
birdie the reachable par-S 15th all
tournament and this place - both that won it.

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CONGRA11JLATIONSI - J'* Marla ()lenbjol (left), 11M 1994
Masten# du1111ploa, llcl.. • " rh•mplon lien Cnonshew wllh 11M tre·
dltloael gnen jedlet roUnwtng tile letter's 14-eader·per Z74 win at
lbe ~upate Nadonel Golf Club In ~upate, Ge. (AP)
.

••
•• Earnhardt wins First Union 400
;:
,.
;:

By TOM FO~ Jr.
NORTil WD.KESBORO, N.C.
(AP)- Dale Eambanlt lladJI't won
· a race this Year before reacbinglbe~
First Union 400. Still, be would put
his record up against any of bls
competitorS.
Tbe seven-time Winston Cup
. ·champion broke his winless streak
by runnins away to victory at
Norm Wilkesboro Speedway. but
Eambanlt said be was already reel·

Gordon's bol Slllrt. Three wins and
three poles in his tint six races, and

the latter rose to four when he
~l
earned the pole for. Nortb Wilkes·
;;
boro.
"
In addition, Eambardt says Wilt·
l'
ing for someone else's bad luck
j.
doesn'twOfkasltonccmlgbtbave.
~
"Nobody blows engines any·
. make the cbange. The Orioles want
;.
more and nobody bas tbinp fall off By BEN wALKER
AP
B-bell
Writer
a backup plan. This is about com·
;:
tbeir race ca!S,' be says. "It goes
Of
all
the
signings
and
swaps
petition. Our fans deserve to see
·•
down to competitive. Hard racing
~
Iakins p~ tbe$e dli)'S,jt-possibla ~QD__!l!e sclled!"e. Our fllf!s
-·1:--:::~~~; ·goodabnut . tbo year~· andluckmeaoa!Ol . .
·
"Good luck is not bavms a flat . trade between Baltimore · and deserve to see a poss1ble c~amp1Cleveland involving Cal R.ipken Jr. · unshiP, race in September at
;•
ears) b11ve been there or not gettinsln a wreck."
might
be the most lnterestins.
home. •
:.
week, and we bave, too," ·
Earnhardt avQj,ded the flat by
Tbe
Orioles
want
to
be
sure
RipBaseball fans saw a few more
::
said after winning for lbe taldns care not to run too far ou.his
ken
can
brealc'l.ou
Gehrig's
conmoves
Sunday, although none
•• fifth time at the .625-mile banked tires and tben find himSelf behind
secutive-sames
streak
at
Camden
included
star players . Boston
;~ oval. "I think we've been just a lit· the pack ·on a track known for
Yards.
The
date
as
it's
scheduled
signed
Stan
Belinda and Reggie
•: tie more oonslstenl We've not got cbewins up tires. It)lelpcd 1Wn pull
l: in trouble here and tbere."
away frorn ·Gordon for a comfort·
·
pitcher Jaime Navarro, San Fran·
:: .. Well, tbere were tbe problems able g~~p · that be took to the cbeck· mme.
, After that, though, tbe Orioles (jsco got ~tfael~ Glenallen Hill,
.
·
· · Earnhardt encountered at tbe Food ered fll!g.
City 500 last week; enough to rele·
Gordon, wbo bad his best non· leave for Cleveland. A rainout Colorado sagned p1tcber Omar 011·
gat~ him to 25th. On tbe other
winnins finish Ibis year, wasn't could mess up Baltimore's plans, vares ~ Kansas City got outfield·
·· hantl, he'd finished second in three exactly bemoaning lbe interruption so it wants to trade a home series er Chris James.
There w~ a total of 80 deals on
races, third in another and fourth in in his early-season good fortune, with the Indians in May for that
Friday and aturday.
yet another outing.
choosing to give all the credit to series on Sept. 8-10.
· But Cleveland general manager
"To me, it was like the old win·
It's.just that Eambanlt's record, Earnhardt.
ter meetings," Cardinals ge?W'
·. wh.iCb bad taken bim 10 the top of
Mark Martin was· third, fol· Jobn Hart is asainst the 1Ja4le.
"Ownership asked mr opinion manager Walt Jocketty said.
e
the Winston Cup point standings, lowed by Rusty Wallace and Steve
on
i~"
Han
said.
"I
don
t
want
to
bad
basically
a
week
to
get
every·
bad paled in comparison to Jeff · Grissom.
·
thing done, so we ha~ to move
quiclc. l don't think ':"e,!l ever see
anything like that agamS d

week, saved his best until !be lasl
· He curled a 6-iron off the slope
to siX feet oo lbe 16th llld made the
birdie putt to go ahead.
On lbe 17th, be strotcd a 9-iroo
to 13 feet and dropped lbe left-toright breaking P.Uit into the heart of
the cup: ''Maylie lbe ~lliest putt I
ever saw in my life,' said the man
widely envied as one of golf's

8fC111CSt putters.

·

pro

lllllk1llg IOMOJS m· tbe'
field, l!astern's baseball team.
·behind lh&lt;; bat of freshman Steve
Doni, pulled out an exciting 9-8
come-from-bebind victory over
league foe Miller Friday nigbt
Eastern Is now 2·3 both in and
out of lbe league.
Eastern roach Dan Thomas said,
"This was a great win. I told the
boys before tbe inning, tl!eY needed
to think that tbey were the one to
get the job done in that situation.
There's no waiting for someone
else to do the job. They responded
well and each boy did their job
tonight! I'm especially proud of

tory .

"For all his pupils, Harvey will
always be part of us," Crenshaw
said
·
"He didn't just give golf
les~. He gave life lessons."

Southernls 1995
baseball rosters

.
.
·M"'"
;;igs-·reserVes
blank .Southern

~~-

Scoreboard
LA. Ubtlll Uub., 9 p.m.
l'boellllllll Selltle, 9 p.m
SKJamtato at L.A. Clippera, 10:30

Basketball
' I

p.m.

NBA standings

Hockey

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AdatlcDIYWilli

.W L

·I aJo

:~..Qrlaado ........ ,.... j4

21

•· Now Yott. .........49 25

- · ...................32
Mlaml .................... 29
New Jeney ............21
Phllodelphll ...........11

r.a.·

.GA

.120
.662
:417
.317
.373
.110

.• '

llecrok ...................17 47

· NHLstandings

26
33

ru.

.W L I &amp; .Ill !lA

A).iladelphla .. .... 20 13 4
New l«&lt;ey ....... l7 IJ 7

36

· Wliohi....o ......
N.Y. Ru1en ....
Aoridl .......... ....
Tompo Boy .......
N.Y. blon-...

)

7,5
1.5
ll .l
ll.l

.!65

Atloo• OIYioloo

44 121 106
!U

•t lOS

16 13 1 39 95
IS 19 3 33 .91

99
PI
1410 3 31 93 lOS
II 10 S 21 91 119
1-4 17 S 33 II

N - D t o -·
Quot..e .............. 25 9 4 54 ISS 109
Pittlb..ah ......... 23 II 2 41 141 119
804tol! """"'""' 19 14 l 41 110 19

11

BuiTaJo .............. 16 1-4 6

ll' L r.l.

l-Sa.n Antonio ...... .56 II

,,7

a-UtM ................... .$3

.707

22

-

22.5
36

.:no

Saawnento ............ 3S 19
Ooldoo Stole .......... 23 Sl
L.A. Cllppon ......... t6 59

.-473
.311

.213

6.5

WiDDJpeJ .......... II 19 6

"

PJdllcDirioloo
Colpry ............. II 14 S 41 124 106

30
31.5

VoncouYW ........ 13 14 , 9 35 Ill Ill
33 124 144

SonJooe ............ 14 19 2 30 95 ll2
Auholm ........... 12 .10 4 21 94 129
Edmonlon ......... l222 3 21 99 140

Salurday'•acores

S-e 125. Dolla 91

Saturday••...,....

' New Yort 113, Decroit96
Su Allonio Ill, Golden State 99
L.A,.Cilppen 112, s..,..,nto lOS

llooloo 5, T...,• Bay I
lt.1tord -4, Buf!'alo 1
Aori.da 2. N.Y. IIIudca2 nlel
Qu.i..c 2, Olawo.2 ~io)
M - 2, Pituboqb I '

Sullday••...,...
IDd'- 91. Chorlou. 61
BoaQn 110, Wllhillaton91

CLEVI!LAND79,0tlcqo71

• '

.

Tont&amp;hl'• pma

Bolton • Ch•lon1. 1:)0 p.m.

Allaot•ll Plllladololola. 7:·30 p.m

Tuadar'•camos
woa~~~.o.,.. 11 Pitub..sh. 7:30p.m.

Dall• MHOUAOJ,I :JO p.m.

.·, Portl&amp;D.d It Sill AIIIOGio, 1:30 p.m.

plk:het, OD the l!li·dly d{Abled lilt. Shift·

ed Eichhora from lhe IS· to the 60-dty
di&amp;ablcd lilt.

BOSTON RED SOX: AJreed to tern.
with Mite M~tf•laoe, catcher; Reule

•

1

Potted Easter Flowers,
Pansies, Hanging Baskets,
Shrubs &amp; Trees.
Also Vegetable Plants:
Cabbage, Broccoli, etc.

Inning tote~ 1
Jackson: 1()().()30.() • 4-6-3
Meigs: 100-414-x =1()..12-3
WP-Oeorge
LP-Hourscr

MUST GO!

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

' 1

t·l.

Of! ••ern s 995

""" .ll

•
ros,ers

~~~~

~ ~~~~e~ci~a~ll~y~a~n~er~t~h~e~w~~~~~a~~~s~tJ=~C~O~U~N~rr~s~m~a~J~8~U~dJ~~1~~~·
~o~0~-;4~6;6;q~6~7~1~~~~~~;o~h~·~;o~~~~
Trimble, the defending Division Ill

........................ Sr. Renee Turley .:..........................
AndreaMoore-p ..........................
...... ...................... So.
Amy Weaver-If .. :........................ Sr. Amy Northup ..............................So.
Kendra Noiris-rf.......................... Sr. Kristen Hensler...........................So.
Sammi Sisson-ss .............. :...........Jr. Missy Smith:...............................So:
Bea Lisle-cf.. .... :.......................... .Jr. Angie Carleton ...........................So.
Tassi Cummins-2b .......... :........... .Jr. Sarah Wallbrown ........................So.
Jennifer Cummins-lb ................. .Jr. Cynthia Caldwell ........... ,............ Fr.
Jennifer Lawrence-p/2b ............... Jr. Valerie Cundiff ........................... Fr.
Becky Moore·cf .......................... .Jr. Jenny Friend ............................... Fr.
Jonna Manuel·rf...........................Jr. Jenny Roush ................................ Fr.
Kelly Swisher·rf ... ....................... .Jr. Erica Amolt.. ............................... Fr.
Renee Turley·lf .......................... So . . Je,nnifer Yeaguer ......................... Fr.
Amber Tbomas-ss ...................... So. Asbley McKinney ....................... Fr.
Keri Calilwell·3b ....................;... So. Amanda Adkins .......................... Fr.
Cynthia Caldwell-cf... .................Fr. Alicia Mulford ....... ,.................... Fr.
Coach-: Howie CaldWell
Misty 1-lyscll ................................ Fr.
Trisb Holman .............................. Fr.
Coach -Alan Crisp

ONE·dedulreasons.
to a home_equity
ofcredit are
up one by one. ·~
cal1
to apply

dollar

summer at
prime·

closing

costs·

-•

......... ~··

.

-~

&lt;

•

.

......

.·r

'·

Pictllfe

• Fu11FurdiO'l
Ren101t COf\lrol

· An "audiologist" is a hearing care specialist who is
trained to provide evaluation and hearing conservation
services, as well as treatments to compensate for the
communi~tj,pn problems created by a hearing loss.
Following ctimpletion of a graduate or professional ·degree
in Auqiology, and prior or licensure eligibility audiologists
must complet~ a 9 month, raised clinical internship and
pass a standardized, comprehensive, national ....... in.
Audiology administered by the Educational 'festing
Service. Audiblogists evaluate hearing disorders in both
children and adults, using · sophisticated procedures and
techology, prescribe, fit and sell hearing aids and Assistive
Listening Devices, and develop and implemen,t complete
hearing care ·in(e.r vention programs .

~On·Screen

Monu IJisplay
• Sleep Twner

•181 Ch8f'ln9\
Tuoing

Name Brands
YonKaow&amp;
Trust .

$48888 .

Classic Pillow Arm Favorite

Extra Large Capacity Dryer
• S1ai~ess Steel
Tub
• Extta Large 3.0
· Cu. Ft. Capacity

• 6Cydes.
•3T~Iures

N.&amp;louiLeque
CHJCAOO CUBS : Alfeed to term•
with Jaime Nanrro , pitcher, on • one-•·

CINCINNATI REDS: Agreed tot~·

wllh Mib lacboa. pitcher, on a one-year
C&lt;l!IUIICO.

COLORADO ROCKJES: Aarecd lo
tenn1 with t..ry Walker, wtliclder, oo •
rour-yetr CODII'ICt; Bill Swift, pitcher. oa
a Uno-yar contnct ao4 Ornar Olinrea,
pltcbef, OD I oae-,._.- COD!ni:L

Sturdy hardwood
foundation
Pilbws anc1

D

• Sing~ Speed
·~.

• Aulo and Timed
Ooying ""'" Signal

Permel'leflt Press
arr:l Oelica!e
C)deo

dacroo wJtpped
•Accented with
WOQdlrim

An NBC-HIS "H.earing Instrument Specialist" is ·
licensed or regulated iri most states to fit and sell hearing
instrun'lents . .Hearing instrument spe~ialists with the "NBC·
HIS" designation have passed a national, standardized
exaniinatien. and agree to abide by a code of ethics.

Tempe~a ture

,f.m,.,,,,

•White Porcelalll
Tub

. 449

99

LE43 t7

LW:t505

w
_
@"
0
·=-= ' .

'

'

• 3 Wash/Rinse

tushions are

CA'Lay-A-Ways

R.J

lillE±::l

· Suite 112 Valley Drive
.Pt. PleaS~~nt., WV.

Mon., Tues, Wad. Fri. 9-5
• Thurs. !1-12; Sal. 9-2

C::all304-671i·l244 for ..tppt. or Information

'

.

FURNITURE S jEWELRY, INC..
'

' Member of .t.etaa PPO A Federal Mo ul PPO ·

.

Mlddleport,Ohlo45760

(614) 992·2635
1·80()..426·5581

M3
----

Ask about the Bank One and Only
Home Equity
Event.
Wrth our One and Only $100,000
And when you stop by, be sure
Home Equity Loan Swee pstakes
to check out our One and Only
$100,000 Home Equity Loan Sweep- ani! home equi)Y offers, we're the
stakes. just pick up a Match and Wm one and only place for loa,ns.
Sweepstakes Check in the lobby of
ariy Bank One branch while supplies
last. If your personal Bank One
MatchandWmSweepstakesCheck
Code matches one of the winning
check codes on the sweepstakes '
. display, you cou ld win $50.000 or
Bank Onr, Athens. NA
Membt•i HHC
andaskaboutourhomeequityoffeni. other great prizes.

Here's some exciting news!
Apply fora Bank One Home Equity
Une~ and your interest rate will be
the same as "prime" tlu'oulihout the
summer. You'll pay only one doUar
in dosing costs. And, you can apply
with just one phone call.
So if you want to remodel your
home, consolidate bills or pay for
your child's education. call or visit
yournearestBankOnebranchtoday

·Gl
-

' $499 minimum purchase. All prior sales excluded. Cannot be combined wilh any other offer..
liJ Credit
. ·
. Ave.
106 North. Second
, Terms

John A. Wade, M.D.
·'·

25' r;agonat

YCIIC OOIItnd.

YF COII.tl'lr:t.

. be f ore M I tt Bowen w alked. an d
"We didn't dO too well in the advance on ali error. Then Mike
field, but we didn't quit. We're Smith walked to load lbe bases.
young and just learning bow to
Durst then stepped to the plate
play together. We can't expect to and drilled a sinsle 'lo force Friend
get tbere (to lbe top) overnisbt. It's across the plate u .Dnrst did an
going to take time. We're Cl!pable Eagle victory sttut to fust base.
of winning, but we need to build
Friend picked up his SCCCJIId.win
our confidence."
,;
.of lbe year with·ftve strikeouts and
Trailing S-8 going into' the last three walkS, wbile Michael Barnett
inning. Eastern (2·3 overall and In bandied the catching chores. Jay
the Hocking Division) started the Jones suffered the loss witb three
frame with a pop out Junior Brian strikeouts and three walkS.
.Bowen doubled to right field and
Eastern bitten were Friend with
Don Gobeen blasted an RBI single a two singles, Durst two singles,
up tbe middle before Eric Hill Ryan Buckley a double, Brian
walked. Eddie Friend reached on Bowen a double and single, and
an error as another run came home.
·
·
• ,Jo. ,J.
•
•

a

""""·
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Agreed to
ter1111 with Orcl Hers hiler, pitcher, on a

DETROIT TIOERS: AJrccd to terms
with Alan Trurvnell, 1hortJtop, on • one-year coatnct.
·
KANSAS CJTY ROYALS: A...... to
termJ wilh Tom Brown\111. pildler, and
CbrillamcJ, wlfic14cr, on one--year CUD·
trac11111d Jote De1t1U1, pitcher, on a mi·
nor-lcape eontract.
·
NEW YORK YANKEES: A~Uoed to
terms with Dloa J~ . outnclder. ·on a
ono-year cootrw::t.
OAKLAND An!LETICS: Aweed to
tern with DaYe Stewllrt, pitcher, o-n a
one-year contract, IDd Rick Honeycutt,
pitch•, oa a nlaor·league contract
SEATTLE MARINERS: AJrc'd 10
Ierma wlth .Rich Amaral aod Orca Pir~.
infielders, aod Bob Weill, pitch.-, on ooey~ coat:ncll. Deai11Wed Olril Howard.
catch«. fCl' uala!lfilCIIt.
TEXAS RANOERS: Aareed lo lcrrt11
with Bob Tewbbury', pitcher, on a onc-

""-t." ·
S_,.;.
,..... uwo

An "otologist" or "otoiaryngolist" (ENT) is a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy (MD or DO). Such physician is
licensed to practice medicine and surgery,, and may
specialize in all aspects of ear and hearing care. This
specialist's education typically includes four years of
COII@ge, fOUI-¥J:af.S..Of llledicaJ.sc;hool,_.one Or mO!C Y!:l!JlU)(
general hospital experience in treating disease ~arid three or
more years in a hospital-based or resipency program . In
diagnosis and treatment, the ENT uses and prescribes
medicines, performs surgery and may prescribe, fit and sell
hearing aids, directly or through a staff audiologisl.

J.erml with Bob Pattenon. pitcher~ Rene
- Clonulea, ·mumter, alld-Rull ~.-· out-~ fielder-, On nioor-lt.t.JUC colltnctl.
,
CHJCAOO WIDTE SOX: A..-oed to
lerml with Jim Abbott, pitcher, and Mite
DcYereaux,'outfieldet, 90 onc·Yeat: COD•

ono-yewcontract.

f.P· Fox

Hearing Health Care

on

da, pilcher, oo oao-year contracu, aod
Mite U.Uey, pitcher, oo a rrinor· leaaue
collU'IICt. Traded Scott Coops, third bale.
mao; Cory 8-.!Jt.y, pitcher; and .• player to
be aiiDDd to SL Loub for Rhe&amp;l Cormier,
pitcher, IDd ~k WhiteD, outCielder.

Meigs: ()30.()13..0 = 7-UF1 ·
Wellston: 01()..1()().0"' 2·3-4
WP-S,Ianley

SOing three for four Wltb a double
by Chr'as - Baa' ley
two singles.
Ricbie
·slnsles each
.
· • - and
Burton,
anll Fetty
eachWamsley,
added a
Gobeen, Hill. andM. Bowe~.
.
pair or singles. Stanley. chipped in
S. Nell.and M. Bro~IDg bad . with a double, floover and Israel
lnnlntl tote!s-galllll
the lone Mill~ hits as Fn«:nd. scat· Grinun added a single each.
Jackson: ·011 .1100-2 = 12·9~
tered the two across seven '!'rungs.
Pullins was the los~g pitcher in Meigs: 019.()0()..1 • 1()..124
Thom~s Ct?ncluded, It "!as tbe relief of Whitlatch Newsome
WP- Schwab
sreat to wm wttb so many fielding · bed
ba
·. tb
LP _Pullins
mistakes. We were killing our· Plt•cllil.•t•o•t•w•o••tte•rs•l•n•e•s•e•v·•••••lill•••••••
selves. Wben we set some rhythm
in lbe field. we'll be all right."
Eastern will host Vinton County
tonisbl
lnnlnR b1b1s
)
Eastllm
22().010-4 = 9-11·10
Mill&amp;
04().301..0= 8-2-4
WP- Friend
·
LP -Jones

Who's Who In

~

Jeffcnoo., flnt bllcDW.D: aud Sw Belin -

Complete Medical/Surgical.Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

Now Open for The Seaeon

Sunday 12 noon·5 p.m.

Sullday'o ICOrn

Toal2ht'o gamos
PIUJbut&amp;h .. 00.... 7:30p.m.
New 111Hy• Moatte117:30 p.m.
Su Jete at Cl.lpry,l:lO p.m.

a..EVELAND • 6rlalldo.7:30 p.m.
bdiiDIIl CliC"qJ, 7:30p.m.
Detroit ot Mllwaukoe,l:30 p.tn

Open Dally B am-5 pm

'

San Jote !I, Hdn»ntoa l

ames
Miami at New York, ·rlO p.m.

992·5n6

'

'r_. Boy l, lbrtfool 0

Tueoday 'o a

Hubbard• Greenhouat

.·

Aamam s, Lot A.aaelm 1

l&gt;caY« al MIIDCICM.I p.m.
Golden Sllte at DaliJit, I :)O p.m.

$6.50/flat

Toro,.. 4, Wiooipoa 3 .
Pllllodtlph~ 3, WMIIi'IIOn I
VlDCOUwt 4, CaliiWJ 2 ..._

Bottoo 6, ·Buffalo !I
Dotroit 4, Olicqo 1
Dill• 3, SL Lw.ill ,
Now J,...y 2, N.Y. R..,on 0

SID ADtonio 101, t..A l.aken 17

Syracuse

21 113 I ]6

..., ......... ...... 13 17 7

Mllwoutee 102, Atlon!a 99
Phoenl• 104, Mood 94
Howton tl3,1:&gt;!ii!aftf 120

II

95

I&lt;

New Jmcy 103, Mi.,ru 93
Pbilldelpi'U• 109,.Clrlando 99

. $1/doz.

.W L I &amp; WI!: !lA

Chl~&amp;o ............ 19 14 3 41 126
91
Toronto ............. 16 l!li 7· 39 107 ' 113
lloliOJ ................ 1417 6 34 lOti . 'l6

~:-clinched playoff berth

.,.

c....... DIY.... •·

Detroit .............. 26 1 3 ll 131
St. LouJ.~.&gt;. ........ 21 II 3 &lt;S 130

.l

Putllllld ................ 39 35· .527

WESTERN (;ONFJ!RENC:E
I.ca

hellkDtobloe
.716
.701
.627 '

Jason Lawrence-in!. ................... So.

CAUFORNIA ANGELS: 'A greed to

3,.5 .

.4.52

•-Seanle................. SJ 21
a-Phoenix .............. 53 22
• ·L.A. lakcn. ....... ,-47 21

19

Ill

•·H-oo ........ ,...".iL)L...JI7 12.5
ll0n•.....................35 39 . ,473 "" ll
o.l1...................... 33 40
Mi.Mcaora .............. lo S4

31 100

llortlord ........ .... IS 17 l 35 100 107
Molltroal ........... 14 17 S 33 95 119
Ottaw1 .............. 41. 26 .S "13 76 121

~RNCONFERENCE
'
Mld-.llliYUioo

l'.ulll

11

Amerlc• Ltque
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Agreed to
termt with 10d Knio Browa, Joe
Borowski, Ruuetl Brock, Jimmy Haynes,
·Dou&amp; Joae•, Scott Klioaeobect, Rick
ltrlvda. Jaa OroKO, Billy Pcrc\bal, Brl·
u Sactiuky, pitchc:n; Paul Carey, firat
bueman; AJq Ochoa, Jim Wawruci., out·
fielder: aod Oren Zaua, atc:hcr.-on one-year cootractJ. Placed Mart Eichhorn.

wi~~~~fdeigs~thegame

·

header.
Inning totals-Friday JPIIM

an?-

~~~~~

.&amp;
"·Manths
Same A
Cash! ·

BuebaU

EASTERN CONFERENCE

l2
25

c....oiDtowl.·lndlua ...............49 27 .645
r.-Ciarlotle .............45 29 .601
•·Oii..................41 34 ..147
•·a.EVELAND ...40 35 .533
Atlallla ...................37 31 .493
M J -.. .. .........30 4S .400

Ddroil atn.IIM, 8:30p.m.
Alpibeim II, YllDCOUYet, lQ:lO p.,m

rour.

entb. The trio combined to give up
nine lilts, strike out eight and walk
six.
•
• _
· Schwab picted up the WID for
Jackson. McGee led the way with a
pair rl singles.
Alter today' s pme at Trknble.
the Marauders will return boine to
bost Belpre 'Wednesday and
Alexander Thursday. Meigs will
host Albens in a Saturday double·

HOMES....,

N.Y. b"ndera at Tamp• Bay, 7:30 ·
p.RL
Wilmlpelll St. LouJa, 1:30p.m.

Transactions

4,5

. 43
46
47
,.
WllhiDifOD ........... 11 f1 .240

pia~!~·~~~~; ~~deDo~':.t:YF:ba:

Hoover added a pair or sinales.
Georae. Newsome and Bradley
Whitlllcb all added linSieS·
Gecqe went the diJaux:e to pick
up lbe win s.cauerin&amp; six bits, strik·
ins out eipt lllld walkins
In the fint pme 1gainst Jackson
Hatfaeld bad a pair of ainales to
, Meiss exploded for nine runs in lead 1aehon. HIJIII'S(% w111 lbe Jos.
lbe finll three innina• llld went on lng pllcbei.
to~ a 104 win over Steve Ut·
In lbe Disbtcap Jackson scored
tie s Jromnen.
1 eipt runs in lbe third 10 erase a I().
. Chad Burton led the Meigs 12 2 lead and tie lbe poe. Tbe Iroa·
hit attact with a perfect three for ' men plated a pair of runs in the
three at the plate mclpding a dou· seventh to take a 12·10 lead.
ble. StanleJ went two for two with
In the bottom of the seventh,
a double. David Fetty added a sin· Meigs loaded the bases with one
gle and a l!ouble. while Ricky out, but Meiss was only able to
score one run and Jackson escaped

Southern's only loss came to East· six girls with any dctural varsity ~onal cbampton, who should be
em, which Is also 3·1.
experience. "Hope~ully, as tbe sea· . one of the ~etter teams 10 the
•,
Caldwell said, "Most of the girls son goes on, we will become a bet· leag~. I looking forward to a good
are coming off a successful basket· ter team,"~ Caldwell. .
· year..
S~ock Model Only • 28 x 70, 3 bedrooms, 2 Baths
ball season, so that bas been a
So~thern ~schedule IS ~gain - - - - - - - - - .
carry-over into softball season. very difficult m .1995. Tbe Tn·V~·
Most of the girls have outstanding ley Conference ~ very strong watb
.
FEATURES:
attitudes and work habits. Tbey some excellent p1tcbers throughout
• Sliding Glass Door
• Fireplace
work bard at the various drills and the ranks. Southern also ba~ a
,
want to bave successful season.".~ tough non-lea~ue schedule With
,..-..I-NSU·RAN~I!~
Oii the downsiile, Southern bas Ravenswood, ab~a~ort-llrye"-.;
•
and Waterford makmg 11 to the
•Oak Cabinets
reponals last year.
.
111' Second St;, Pomeroy
. Rou~ndTub
• Family Room
SOr &amp;uS
Caldwell concluded. "The p l a y · I V E _ R D A L E .
ers bave come in with a winning
YOUR INDEPENDENT
, ___
Open Mon. • Fri. 8:3()..8:00
vanity player-pas.
:IJ:,· · Reserve player·pos.
fi. attitude, wbicb is a real positive.
~
w
Sat. 8:30-6:00
JessikaCodoer-c ......................... Sr, AmberTbomas ...........................So. COnfidence is much better this year
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
11iiit
Located at Junction of33 &amp; 395

Soulbem's varsity softball team
is off to a good start in 1995 under
the direction of coach Howie Cald·
well. Assisting Caldwell in 1995
are assistant varsity coach James
Ray Lawrence and reserve coach
Alan Crisp.
Southern is off to a 3.1 start
with wins over NelsonviUe, Meigs
Trimi&gt;Jc. all of wbicb are t~ug~
.Tn.Valley .Conference competitors.
·
·

S

Chris B'all-inf. ............................. So.

Nate Sisson-pfof ......................... So.
Chuck Roberts-of ...... :................ So.
Tyson Buclcley-of.. .................... So.
Greyson Taylor-of... ................... So.
Billy Sbeppard-c/oL .................. So.
Matt Dill-c ................................... Fr.
Mike Asb·c.................................. Fr.
Matt Riffie-of.. ..................... ....... Fr.
Corey Williams-pfinf........ :......... Fr.
Billy Young-inf... ........................ Fr.
Pete Sisson-inf............................ Fr,
Coach- Jeremy Dill

Pullins and C!elaod a linsJe each.
WellltotD ace Fox wu the k!Ug
p!tcber giving up 10 hlta, striking
out ellhtll!d Wilking ooe1 Mollban
led lbe Roekets with I double.

h d
Sout·II..er.n gi"r.ls
I· start.Wieek WitI I tl I ree Wins. tn . an .
·

~~~~~-6~~~ J•~.~c~~~sgm week.
~~~~~~doo~
h~•~~
.
.
J
Joe Kirby-inf. .............................fi.
So.
Chad Hanson ted Meigs with
three singles, Roush added a pair of
singles, while Matt Ault, Cbad
Blount, C.J. Powell· and Steve
McCullough added singles to lead
the Marauders. Mike Asb and Joe
Kit by bad singles for Southern,
wbicb bad two bits.
·
Roush struck out four and walk
tbree to pick up lhe win, Corey
Williams was the losing pitcher for
Southern.
Pete Woods' Litfle Marauders
will bost Trimble today.
1

bles by Chad Burton and Jlreat
At Wellston the Marauders Han11111
acor~ three runs In tbe second
~eip doled 0111 the tminl In
inning 111111 went 00 to poll tbe wie the abth iniling J)y p!etlng tbree
behind the three hit ·pitching of more runs. 1be Marauder~ ~
Gary Stanley.
on singles by Brett Newsome,
Cass Clelaod led off lbe innins George and .Wellston error and 1
with a single before David Fetty sinstc by Blll1on.
Stanley picked up lbe win, &amp;lv·
reached on • error. Two outs later
Paul Pullins slnsled and advanced ing up three bits, stritlng out live
on anotbeF error. SaJtt George fol· . and walking two. George ~ Bur·
lowed with a double to give Meigs ton bad a single and double each to
the 3..0 lead.
·
. lead Meiss. 'Newsome added ' two
Tbe Rockets· scoml single runs · singles. Hanso11 and Stanley
in lbe second and fourth innings to chipped in with a double each and
make it a 3·2 coolest. But the

Despite

•
•
d ate tra d lng
• With
• ' O rioles
n
tans
agaanst
I d
1

Manudc:n added POCher run in the
fiftb lnnlDJ 00 blct·to-blct dou·

Eastern diamondmen post ··9-8 w•·n· over
Miller
,

"I'll remember 16 and 17 as
long as I live," Crenshaw said.
And. of course. be'll remember
PCilick. die legem&amp;y teachinS
at the Austin Country Oub and for
31 years 1be gait coach at the Uni·
versity of Texas wbo came to
national attention in his 80's with
tbe publiciUion of "Harvey
Penick's Little Red Book," one of
tbe bEst-selllng sports book in bis·

yR.....
yan!ty
. wNI':.::.·p/II';'!~
•................:IJ:..Sr.
uu·
EricJones-plinf.* ........................ Sr.
Jimmy Randolpb·inf"' ................. Sr.
Chris Hendricks-of.. ....................Sr.
Jeremy Smltb-inf"' .......................Sr.
JeremyHill-of"' ...................:.......Sr.
Sbawn Dailey-of ......................,:..Jr.
He began visiting spring training
Kevin Deemer·p/of.. ................... .Jr.
sites, and predicted lbere would not
Ryan Martin-inC"' .........................Jr.
be anolber strike this season.
Ryan HUI-inf............................... .Jr.
· .n;'......-~~"·~Ja)'Ml;Ke!Yev·il![ )"'''''"" ""'=:.Jr,_;~""
Jnbn Caril-or ........ .......................Ji.
Paul Chapman-of.. ..................... .Jr.
'Travis Usle-c .............................. So.
Meigs broke open a close game
Jesse Maynard-pfinf ...................So.
with four fiflb inning runs and
• -letterman
behind the two bit pitching of Chris
Coach_ Mick Winebrenner
Roush went 00 10 defeat Southern

The O.Uy S1 11inel. Plgl 5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

s.........

·

.

Meigs diamondmen·top Wells.t on ·before,splitting DH with Jackson

Mondey, Aprll10, 1995
Pege 4

By •OB GllttN

.

'

,

-

Lisa Ko_
ch, M:S., C.C.C.A.
'

(61'4) 446-7619

4JS 2nil Ave. ·
Gallipolis, Obio

BANKiEONE.

Whatever it takeS.

One call to apply 1·800·800·LOAN (5626)
. 24 hou:s a day

•

0 1995 SANC ONE CORPORATION 'The lnlro(:luCtOfy vanabte raters the 'Bank Pnme Rate" and 1S tnfft!ecl th•OI~h Augvst 31 1995,
after whtcn rate Will convert to tully 1odo.oced APR The ~sank Pr•me Rat,· 1s based on the Pr1me Rate as pvblrShed by the Board of
Goveri'IOrS of the Federal Reserve System fat the wee~ Jf'lCiudtng t~ 15th day ot the prror month- The Bank Pr•me Rate' as of March 1

1995 was 9 OO'tb Offer valid on knes of $10_000 Of more The lulty mde~~:"" APR on vanabiEHa:te ~nes With an 80~ loan-to-value ratiO
as of March 1 1995 was 10 50'- APR lor lmes ot SSO CXX) m more 11 00% APR fOf l1rres. ol $20.000 to $49.999 and 11 50% APR on
EWIII..~ lines of $10.000 to $19999 The APR on \latlable rate Iones may 1ncrcasc or decrease. not 10 e'J(ceed 25% APR m Oll1o If your line 1s
~ diSCCW'IMue(I~A~IIhtn the hrS~ w-ear, appmxtmalt!l}' S350 tn ciOstOQ costs w111 bC charged fhe annuatlee 15 $!&gt;0 Oller !. a...a,tablc ontv to
Bank Ooe Alhen!. hOme eqwty line customers nn new vo~u•able·rate home eQu1ty ''t"ll!s wt!h a quat1ty~g IOan·tO v&amp;IU£! rat10 m 80~
Sul:ltfCIIO credit approval ~suit yOUr tax advtsor reoardmg deducbblhty of ~erest Property \MllfAf'ICF! may be requo~ed Olte· 811!p1res July 31' 1995
NO PUACMASE NECESSARY. Match and Win Sweepstakes C~s aVa•lable at part•ctpatlt\Q Sank One locat!Qns betwet!"l March 27 and dune 30,
1995 while suppltes last One Bank One Match and Wtn Sweep&lt;&gt;takes Chec'k per person per dey OltiC'•at rule&lt;; posred at par!lctpatlng Bank One
laca!lons Open to US ~at res1dems. 18 years of age or older V01Cl whf:rre proh1brled Oh1o iesrdents M may obta1n sweepstalo.es ct~eci&lt;. or .,..1(1.
n•ng check cO&lt;'Ies by ser.t&lt;Mg a seU-addre&amp;.SEKJ, stamped etweiOoo to Bank One Match and Wtn Sw.cepsrakes W11y Requests.[ PO Bo,:; 8!393
P~rs1ppany. NJ 07054 one request par enveiape Re~uasts must be postmaril;ecl by 6/2!9b and rece1ved by 6/9/96, Game eMs S/30JQS

or 1-800-967:-32?7

Veterans Mem. Hospital
Pomeroy

•

77 E. Malo St.
Jackson, Ohio

•

'

�PIIQI I

:rill D...,. S.ntlnll . .

Mond1y, Aprll1 0, 1995

Pornei-oy-Middleport, Ohio )

'

Love at ·first sight may -be·seen thro~gh rose colored glasses
.DeM-AII•' nzd n : '\bilrbeniq

lhreedlildmlllld movaloutorlhe ellvelopellitdaciteclcormot~eylllfkr
state to avoid paying child IUppOit. for S5.25 (litis i11cludes postage
That l~ng c:on artist drllned mo of a11d f!andlinglto : Gems, c/o 1.1111
everythmg I had llld left me wilh a
·

years of wedded bliss . -- out olher women right under my
CARPINTERIA, CALm
ROlle.
.
DEAR CARP.: rm glad your "love · I filed for divorce after seven
at lint sight" ~ IIImed out so mondls, but it lOOk,me a lot longer to

·~ 11 gaaally pretty good, but
)'911 hit a foullllll when you ldvjaed

~In LDve Bat FeelinJ Rushed in Salt
Lake City" to hire a private ineveryoneissolucky.Keep
v~g•lllr llld check out her fiiiiCCI.
.
SliCbldmethimlllhegnx:elySIOre,
Dear ADD Landers: I just had 10
llld he jii'-",..JOSCd after a very short respond to "In Love But feeling
lime. Real love.call happen just like Rushed." I hope she sees lhis before
t11at I know because it hapP.ened 10 she .makes a huge mistake: The
me. '
womandidn'tgivehcrage,butl11bet
It~'ttake long to
whc.n she is up there and in a big hurry 10
a relalioa3hip is right. At age 21, I get married. ·
met 1 youn1 man at an ice-skating
1rushed into my rust marriage and
rink.Afla'five dates, he asked me 10 Ji~ 10 regret iL "Ed" wined and
{llarryhim.lloldhimhedidn'tknow dined me and treated me like a
nie well enough · to talk about princess. l was wallcing on ail: We
marriagc.He inJis~lhathedidand planned lhe wedding 10gelherand
added. "llmowlhatyourlefteyebrow agreed to split !he~ I~ up
is higher lhln ~ur right and your ,· paying for e.verytltiOJ,_and Pri!J~
botrom ~eelh are crvok:ed.• (He was Charming went from Dr. JekyU to Mt
a dentisL)
Hyde in a week:
. Neither of us had met lhe olhel's
Immediately after the honeymoon,
palents or family members, but we he srarred 10 drink
night ani!
lqlew we belonged togethetAnd how
became verbally abusive. After siL
did it tum out?We just celebrated 52 months of marriage, he begin 10 take,

=~g:

mow

every

andtos;~•do"lwnl
WISand~~to~lhes~:
tuw
......, "
·~
colored glasses.-- MEMPIUS
DEAR MEMPIDS: My desk is
piled high with lettas from women
who have had.similarexpeliences.l
hope tdllay's column will serve as a
wake-up caD 10 .!hose who 'are stiU
asleep. I've said it before, and ru say
itagain --ifit'sreallove,itwillstand
the test of time.
Gem of the Day: Never get so
opeD..fllindedthBtyourbrainsfaUouL

Wltatca~~yougi~theptrsollwlto
ljii! llltrythlng? """ Landus'

booklet, "Gems, " 'is ideal for a
nighlsrand or coffoe table. "Gems" iJ
a collection of Ann Laltders' most
requested poems and essays. Send a

self-addressed. lo11g. busl~ttss-si:e

- - - - -· Community calen~ar---~Ladies Auxiliary, Rock Springs
grang~ ball, Monday, 7 p.m.

· Tbe Community Calendar Is
p·u lillsbed ai a free service to
non-profit aroaps wlablng to
announce meetlna ·aDd special
neDts. Tbe calendar II not
designed to promote salea or
fand nlsers of any type. lte..,
are .printed u SpliCe permits and
cannot. be auaranteed to run a
speclftc number
of dayt.
.
.

DARWIN - Tbe Bedford
Township Trustees will .bold its
regular meeting at 7 p.m. April 10
atiOwnbaU.
LEBANON - L.ebanon. Township Trustees will begin cleaning
cemeteries Monday. Remove flowers before then.

MONDAY
POMEROY - DA V and

POMEROY - Easter breads
worlcshop, S~nior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy, Monday, 10 a.m. to
noon. By reservation with dPmlline
Friday. call 992-6696. To be conducted by Cindy Oliveri, Extension
agent
'

POMEROY - Big Bend Fann
Antique Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m .
Meigs High School Library.
,
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, Mondlly, 7:30 p.m.
at annex.
RACINE - Greenwood CemeTruslees, 1 p.m Monday at tbe

tery

annex.

'

.

sioners, Judy ·wimllllisfrouris~
Chairperson, and the Middleport
One of the fl!St Ibis past month bas Council to try and save lbe Middlebeen to try to put the right people port Boat Launch ODNR grant
togelber at the right lime and it-bas which Jean.Trussell bad worked so
happened for The Obio River Bear hard to acquire.
Co. of Middleport.
This was, as you are probably
Susan Baker bad a need for aware, a success. We need to realfillding new suppliers for the 11181C- ize that Ibis is a project !bat will
rials from which she makes her col- benefit our local boaters, visiting
lectible teddy bears. It just so hap- boalers and Sternwheel Associapened that I remembered meeting lion. Also, wilb the help of Comwith Roger Reeb of Freedom Road missioner Fred Hoffman, wbo was
Foundation in Pomeroy to discuss the Mayor of Middleport at the
their capabilities and programs dur- time and Oflic:ec Wood,.lhere will
ing the past summer. .
,
be an observation pier built at the
After meeting with Susan; J. Wilson Wetlands in Hobson.
caUed Mr. Reeb and asked him to
Office r Wood bas already
stop by and see Susan. He did and installed several goose tubs and
the rest is history. The Freedom duck houses to attract and retain
Road f oundation is able to manu- tbi: various wetland wildlife
facture the rivets tha~hold tbe bears species. ODNR is working to bave
anns and legs togelber from scrap · this completed by the 1996 migraacry)ic donated by Tim and Edie ~ lion.
. .
King of King Hardware in Middle- . I have also had the opportunity
port I also have asked Don Rex of to meet and work with Jim TompMcigs Industries in Syracuse to Iei ns and Bill Oiler of the Southern
visit with Susan because they have Ohio Coal Co. We are working
the ability to cut ou t tll'e patterns togetber with tbe assistance of Mr.
for her, which will save Susan a Glen Enslen of Tri-County Comhuge amount of space and lime.
munity Action and ILGARD to
The next event of the monlh wao~ prepare a skills profile of tbe disreceiving a call from Paige Cleek. placed coal miners. This will aid
It was a surprise to bear from Paige them in fin.ding a new job and also
because she and her husband Cor- help us to attract new industry to
bet bad been worlcing in Atlanta, the county by informing inquiring
Ga., and Columbus, the last I knew. companies that we have an availPaige bad been my lifeg uard able and skilled workforce.
instructor at tbe London Pool in
Southern Ohio Coal Is the
Syracuse whe n I was just a few largest employer in Meigs County
years younger. I remembered !bat ·and. they have always been helpful
d.uring my test to become a life- in all of our economic development
guard, Paige bad chosen the largest efforts. Chloris Gaul, Denny Evans
male in the class for me to rescue and Mike Lively ate just a few of
. (be bad zero buoyancy!) . Thank the other Southern ·o hio Coal
you Paige -lilru: does not Ileal all • employees WhO'wmlt banl ·tu belp
wounds. Anyway, Paige wanted to Meigs County prog ress. I will
see l)le about opening a small busi· always miss th e help and dedica- ·
ness in Pomeroy. Initially, she was lion of Dave· Baker, who sadly
' and js still interested in women's passed away recently. Dave came
clodiing, however, ~ge h~ · quite in to assist us :Witb proposals, coma talen t for makmg mm•at ure puter programmg and anything else
reprod uctions of the buildings in. that was needed, during the day.
Pom~oy .
·
evening and even on weekends. He
Due to Ibis, I made an appoint- also invited us into his home to use
aient for her to go to Meigs Indus- his computer and color printer
tries in Syracuse to visit with Don when we bad a business lead to folRex and David Milliken to investi· low up on.
· I
gate their ability to help her m~
Speaking oj local companies,
prodpce these. They have the abil•- • the Economic Development Comly to make the wooden cutouts and mittee recently bad lbe. good forare working with her cuJTently on tune 10 tour the Ravenswood Aluthis proj.ect. The next day. David minum ,Corp. Jack Burlingame,
and Chnsty Smitb came 1n to sec Jaclcson County (W.Va.) economic
me 10 discuss their screen printing development director, was kind
busit~ess. Triumphant Designs.
. enough to set Ibis up fOF,IIS.
, David was my neighbor while
We were there for three hours
growing up in Syracuse, so it was and were pleased 10 be able to tour
grcalto see him again after several the facilitY. on golf carts and ·
year5. I asked them to call Paige 10 believe it, we still did not see
see if they would be able to screen everything . RAC bas 104 acres
print the initial design onto her under roof alone . AI Toothman,
woollen cutouts (not many screen labor relations and Todd Ritchie,
printers have this ability as I under- production ~ager gave us the
stand) .• Paige call~d me ~al da[ tour and explained t~ us !bat RAC
\Did sa•d sbe rece1ved theJ£ cal • provides approximately 300 jobs to
wen1 down t_o see them. !Did so they Meigs counlians. Profit and proare cjff and luerally run rung!
duction are up at RAC and the
Pjlige bas al~o been asked to future looks bright with more and
malc.e reptoducuons of the build- more products being made of aluings in Gallipolis and. Racine. Sbe minum. These gentleman have also
also will do penonal homes. CaD offered their assistance anytime we
now, because she bas lnwdreds of need them 10 work with businesses
ordq's dating badt 10 1992 10 catch . looking at Meigs County as an
up 'Vith. Paige•s Miniatures are on cxpansion/n:locadon atea.
display lit The Meiss County
We are fortunate 10 have such
Chamber of Commerce and Eco- helpful industry in our county and
nomic Development Office, so be also such good neighbors in West
sure 10 $10p by and see them.
Virginia.
The next project was having the
This monlh's quote: "Some penopportunity to work witb our pie see things as they are and say
·Meigs County Wildlife Officer 'Wby?" I dream things that never
Keith Wood, Special Deputy Dana · were, and say , ' Why not' ?'"Aidrldge. Meigs County Commis- George Bernard Shaw.
month of March bas filled
. myThe
sails with a blast 'Of projects.

'

...

•

held Monday, 6:30p.m., atlhe high
school.
POMEROY - ~eigs County
Garden Clubs, county meeting,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Meigs County
Museum, PomerQy. Eacb club to
send ~epresentatlve.
:rUESDAY
POMEROY - M~igs County
. Market Livestoc:k Sale and Show
Committee Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
Meigs High Sdlooi cafeteria.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Clerk of Court's legal office will be
closed Tuesday, April 11 for computer training. The title office wiD
remain opened.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange, Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the ball.

Creek Club- ·
- Middleport
speaker and Literary
Wednesday, 2 p.m.
bouse.
refreshments.
at the home of Mrs. Wendell
Hoover. Mrs. Eldred Parsons to
EAST MEIGS - Regular meet- revi ew "The Rise of Silas
ing of !be Eastern Local School · Lapham." Mrs. Hoover and ·daughDistrict Board.of Education will be ter, Laura Totten •. will present
selections

Budding scientists---.

I

:

_.,....,_Ulilo ....

lAnders, P.O. Box 11562. Clticago,
111. 6()611.0562. (In Canada•. ~end .
$6.25.)
•
•
i

==r:~~T~U~~gLoru":~ pi~e~.=:....
.... womenwhowrite I Local
-·-,
into somedling, she probably is. A
"gut feeling " is a built-in alarm
syslenl. It should not be ignored. A
divorced or widowed woman with
money can be .an especially
vulnerable taliel·-- 51\DDER BliT
WISER IN MINNESOTA
·
DEAR S. BurW.: You have a soul
sister in Memphis. Keep reading:
DearADa:Thisisfor "InLoveBUI
feeling Rushed." I was in the same
boat IS years ago. I met a man I
lhought was heavtn-senL. He had a
good,iQI!,anewc:arandanice house.
Everyahing lOoked perfect. We bit if ·
off from our first date and were
married 90 days later.
·Within a few monlhs, llearned that
lhe rat had had four wives befoJe me.
He abandoned his second wife with

Monday; Apr111 0, 1995

--IXTo7C. M

women participat&amp;i,n
e'"orts
to· al''e•iJ'ate
po·~erty .'
1ll
'' v
v'

CONIIBUCnoN
•Newttome.

1

Women at St. Jobn Lutberan
Cburcb, Pine Grove and SL Paul
Lutberan Cburch, Pomeroy, are
amonJ SOC);(lOO women who are
doing something about poverty. ·
They are part of WOOlen or the
ELCA, the women's organization
of the S .2 million-member EvangeUcal Lutheran Cburcb in America. wbicb Is focusing on issues of
women and children living in
po'lCI'ty l!l(ougb 1999. ..
..
For the past several years, projects of lhe women l)ave included
monthly contributions 10 the Meigs
Coun~y Cooperative Parish and
providing sc.llool .s'upplies for -a
county kindergarten clats ea5=h
year. · As anotber outreach to
women and dilldren In 1995, se¢.
era! specificaUy identified families
will be provided food baskets and
clolbing tbrougbout the year.
"As members of tbe Women of
tbe ELCA we need 10 do what we
can 10 alleviate the suffering or our
. sisters in tbe surrounding community. The commitment we have set
forth for 1995 gives us an opportunity to readl out to lhose less fortunate and, hopefully, will make a
diffe~ence in the lives of those we
. toudl," said Margaret Parker, president of Women of the ELCA. the
women's organization at. St. John
and SL Paul.
"We are excited about being
pari of a cburcbwide network of
women thro11gbout lhe ELCA wbo
are making a difference in lhe lives
of women and cliUdren. We need to
work locally; however, we kliow
_lbal. what_ we do locally affe£1§ the
world and the world situation
affects us locally. We bave sislers
in many plac:es who are facing the
same iSsues women face here,
including Jack of employment
opportunities and/or job skills, illiteracy, domestic violence, health. care and education needs," she
added.
Women of the ELCA began its
1990-1999 empbasis on Women
and Children in poveny with a program that asked the women· s group
ineacb oftheELCA's 11 ,200congregations to nflJIIe a project that
will bring bope to the poverty situation. While the projects are carried
outlocaUy and. often include tangi-

•'

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION .

-R08ERr BISSELL

hie goods and/or servi~. women
in congregations also give their
money offerings to a common fund
to belp alleviate the effects of
poverty lbrougbout lhe world._Parker said tbat in the spnng of
'1994 the cburcbwide organization
awarcled $IS4,475 to 43 Pi11Jects
providing direct support for women
and children facing poverty. These
included adoption support for older
and special Deeds cbildren in the U.
S., $15,250; iiillllsttles with South•
east Asian refugees. $7 ,500; health·
care and education for Native
Americans, $12,025; rommunity
redevelopment prograJI!s1 in
Appalachia, S; O,OOO; fetal alc'ohol,
drug addiction, and prenatal care
~s. $11,200; global projects,
mcluding a v;&lt;men's water project•
in Kenya, scholarships for women
in Cameroon, ta;:J~b training for
women in Gua
$13,000; and
scholarships for Lutheran schools
to support education for cbildren in
tbe 0 :s, and in Puerto Rico living
below poverty level, $8,000.
Other programs funded include
parenting classes, literacy training.
suppon for domestic violence shelters,. and.economic development
project focusing on displaced lumber workers and rural poor,
empowerment of Hispanic immigrant women, youth-focused jobs
and anti-crime" efforts, and housing
rehabilitation.
PartiCipants in Women of the
ELCA's 9,200 member-units gave
$127,97 S to tbese poverty effortsexceeding tbe annual goal of
$100,000. The remainder of the
projects were ruilaei(tbiougb~llle"
organization's fund for tbe Development of Human Resources and
New Ministries Fund, wbicb were
established through tbe generosity
of women who provided for
endowments and bequests in lbeir
wills.
·
Women of tbe ELCA bas
cburc:bwide offices in Chicago, Ulinois, and includes 9,200 local
member.-units in 64 geographic
areas throughout the United States
and the Caribbean. The organiza·
tion •s emphasis on Women and
Children in Poverty continues with'
a focus in 1994-1996 on families
and poverty. ,
:

·a...• Complete

•ADDITIONS

'985-4473

·TIEE tiiMIII.
AIID.. RJMOYAL

CHESTER

.

Light Hauling,

Golf Lessons

. and Removed
'

'

lUI Slack
··2·2269

Chester, Ohio

NEW LISTING · RACIN E · 1982 • 14 x 70 Mobile
Home • Total Electric with Heat Pump Central Air, 3
bedrooms, 1 · bath, Ashley Wood Burner. built in
Book Shelves . Enclosed front and rear Porch.

-- . - ---

·· ·~

SCIENCE FAIRS- Various Meigs County schools are bos~
science fain this spring. TheH projects help spark many studeDts
curioSity, said Gary Reed, Riverview teacber. (Top) Clnda Cllft'ord
shows Carrie Crow and Amanda Fetty wblcb type or soU eroded
fldtesL (Middle) Many of the youngest students enjoy their clusmates projects, sucb as Joyce Hlll's first graders. (Bottom)
Riverview sixth gnder Chris Barringer explains bls selection,of 1%
liquids and their Ph levels to other·Rtvervlew superior project winners including rrom left Amber Baku, Corey Young and Brittany
ToUiver. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
'

'

•

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

' .......... 992·2259

• ROOFING
'
NEW-REPAIR
•
Gutters
•
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES I

•Faet Rellebfe Service

•Washere- Dryers· Rangea
•Rifrlgeratora •Freezers
•Diahwaahert
&gt;H .W. Heotero
411crowavoo &gt;Oiopooala
•ThaOlc.o Mlllga a
Surrounding Ar. .

(614) 985'3561 or
992-5335

from the

southernmo11

point of tile inl\'faectlon Qf
Cherry Street and Water
Stroot · In a southerly
direction to the low water

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
Ads
first! ·

614-992-7643
'
(No Sunday
Calls)

311411

Employmenl Serv1ces

mo.

&lt;.;p;·c:.JI otft•r

ln•~'ildt";·

Clcdn rnutor
~

Gr•·,".·f~

· MR. RIGGS

.\ Clr&gt;an k. c.:ln~ck ~Hjllator
I Clean dli ltHJ'JIIl4 (-I&lt;Hl~

ALL FOR ONLY 5

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
304·6144

3121/1 -

[jJ

- -..

LINDA'.S
PAINTING &amp; vu.-t
'Take the pain out
of painting - Let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.·Leave
Message; Alter 6 p·.m.

.

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

Al:cor.tna

oppllclllono
for
10giloloil long loom ..,. ....,..
lng -lol•nl tnlnlrig . . . .
lhiougll April ath tho

cl,tlllloglnnlng IIIW 2nd. P&lt;llnt

PI-nt N,.~"'l &amp; Jlohabllll•
tlon Conlor, Slllo Route 12.
Routo 1, llo1 3311 poiQI
Pl....,.,wv~IAG~o~&gt;­
"'""' Aoooc:fll11 Fdy) 304-

NEW&amp; USED
Household. Collectible
9-5 T-Sun.
1 mlle lrom Pomeroy,
SR33N
992-7502 or 992·5805

14.95 Plus P;His

:31&gt;8 IV. Main Sl.. Ripl ey WV

.

SHOP

Onr yf'nr wnrranty on \'JOrk pl:'rformrd
Valle~ Dn Clll notlronnlly &lt;td~·ert:secl branr..l~
w~-· ~crvrce mosl mJkC''i &amp; rn0drl~&gt;

AVON I AI Alooo I ShhloJ
Spooro, 3CJW7&amp;.1421.
.
•
AVON to buy Of oo11, lllltlyn. lndtpondonl rop. 304 111:1 * I ot

uoo IMI:I.aa&amp;.

WHlniMACALLIT

j Clc;m &amp; check !JI!c" '·Y'-&gt;I'·rn
6 Check belts
7 Check rl,clt1C11 sy&lt;;trrn
a. Repl.ICC frltf'r ();I(J

rul!pr !Jearrnqs

Help Wanted

11

Buy • S.ll -_!rade

Vac uum Cleaner Service Special

••

1'15-3001 EOE.
•
Cor- Oppo&lt;tunlly- . , az.
UOihr.
wllfl d l - Whh PorlyUII Qlfto. FooiUflna

or...,.

kw_._...a
...

flno quolhW condloo, cryMIL No lnltlol
qulred. For more IAiarmatkan

·

HONEST.. .
Cla.. ifiedo
Workl

cont1ct, IM--18:2~7711 or 3041143.:!1133.
.
Clrpot

lnololloro -

lull

limo, Galllo, Pl. Ploounl, lnd .urroundlng ..... StiMt
10oumo 'No Oo~IWI, P.O.
Bo• 721-02.
r. Ohio
45161.

Announcements

We Have Cars and Vansl · ·
Kenny's Auto Center
1.800 _486 _1
2 64
r River Rd .
Bus. (614) 446-9971
45631

-MODERN . SANITA710N .
.

'

'

.POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleanild &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp sites • Fam!ly Reunions &amp;Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

614-985·4180

.

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Eooy

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

World

E~eol"'"

Poyl

Ao-

-~~ PIOdUCII AI Homo. CoN

PRICISION AUTOMOTIVE

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
4.1 464 Starcher Rd ..
Pomeroy, OH .
992-7587

Tall

313.
1

Froo, ~-En.
•

4

31f411 mo.

.

12f14'rln

KINGS'
Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport. Ohio 45760
·N-Home&amp;
•Additions •Siding
•Roofing •Painting ·
-Garages .Porches
•Pola Barns
Free Estlmsres
614-742-3090
304-nl-9545

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT ~-2772 ·
' Olllce Houra: MOn.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lnlulatlon, Storm
Doors; Storm ·
; Windows, Garages .

Free Estimates
1f1Mtn

:111711 mo.

H&amp;HSAWMILL
Portable
32124 Happy

LIVE

I ON 1·

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

mark of the Ohio River
1-SD0-656-5000
wh.lch same ia located In
Hollow Rd. ·
100 acre Lot 295 In th e
· Ext. 1861
VIllage of Syracuse.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
$3.99 per m in.
Th is notice sha ll be
D
&amp;p
published once a week for
anny
eggy
Must be 18 yrs.
stx (6) consecutive weeks
Brickles
Procall Co.
wflh the laat rublf celfon
being on Ap r! 17, 1995.
614-742-2193
(602) 954··74~! 0. .. _..1
Action hereon
be • r~:;::======~
completed
withinshall
three (3)
months after publication of
(linest- Low Rates)
DAVE' S
the last notice herein. ·
VIllage of Syracuse by Its
.
SWAP SHOP
Clark
One mile out .
Janice Lawson Zuiilfng ,
143
from Rt. 7
(31 13, 20, 2.7 (4) 3, 10, 17
TUes.
Wed.
- Fri. - Sat. ·
(Speclall1e In
1-6
driveway apr~ading)
2
In Memory
•
Craftsman
Tools ·
,..-_...~""":~~-, ·. c--~=~~--l'
l
I
Limestone,
~====~==;
•
Toys
1'1'0-A•WAY
r
• Guns
MINI STORAGE
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Gravel, Sand,
In loving memory of
· l:.oltds of Misc.
NOW RENTING
Roofi ng, Siding, Room
G
R N· I. Is
Addition$. Concrete. clc.
eorge • IC!.o · Top Soil, FIII .Dirt
Buy-Seli-T'::da
Collljllll'llblf Slm &amp; Prices
P.O. Box 220
who deparred this '.life
614-992·3470
992-206u
NEW HAVEN, WV
Bid&gt;Neli , OH 456 14
on Jan . 2, 1995. ·On
'""'"""
304-882-2996
what would have been
r -:---:---=--:-,
his 80th birthqay,,April
Landscape Stock
WI;IALEY'S AUTO
io, 1995:
··
White Pine &amp;
FOR
OR TRADE
,.
PARTS
You w ~nt away. to
heaven
Norway Spruce
Specializing in Custom
BARR'S Nursery ·
Your final resting
· Frame Repair
""""
place
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
742-3149 or 992-7285
I'll always love &amp;
All MAKES &amp; MODELS
miss you
992-7013 OR
-~
And never forget your
.
2;4S1f
992-55530A
face.
........
'RO/h;4Ne£
·
TOLL
FREE 1-800· 848-0070
Someday we'll meet
DARWIN , OHIO .
CALL NOW!!!
again
In that home up in the
7131111 TfN
1-900-562-700o

Glglonllc Yord Solo'
Olivo Road, 10111, 11111,
A.M• .Sunool, llloe.
s_ lofrlloppor
S5!;
Phonic

Progrem $50,
1ona GIN
Clothn, Oueen Comforter s.t,
$25 ; Tuoo ·Wod,_
IJ.S, 1 112 111111
Out 325 South, ~gnt.

Pomeroy,
Middleport •
&amp;

WICK S
HAULING

.....

J~======"'=..,=-~1:::=::;=====~~
SA u ;;

-·-.........-

s~y

' I

.... 114-371-2711.

.

J&amp;L INSULATION

H$lp Wanted

recorded plat In Volume 2,

I

5116194 TFN

992-5388 ·

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

•Foctory Authorlzod Porto
aservtce
•All Makea o42 Yuro .

Page 34 ol lhe Me igs
County Pial Recorda.
(2) Being a pan or Peach
Allay, and deacrlbed aa a
15' wide and 305' tong strip ,
of Peach Atley e~ten dtna
from Collage Stroel to Sixth
Street whh relerence being
made to the recorded plat In
Volume 2, Page 34 of the
Melgo County PI!JI Aecor&lt;lo.
(3) Being a part of Cherry
Street, and described ee a
50' wide atrlp extending

..:·:.:·: ·.::..............

tf~ward 1... .Wrlteael

949·2168

•Lots of Fun and
· Learning
•Lots of
Experience .
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00 P.M.
3115/Hn

..

.ICIII'I APPLIANCE
IEIIICE

lEBANON TWP. • Ross Ad . - Approximately 60+
wooded ground. Utilities are available . Great
ASKING $400/acre
.

M. CLELAND.................................... 992·6191

'

.

follows:
(1) Being a pan of Bean
Alley, end described as a
15' wide and 294' long wide
strip of Bean , Alley
extendi ng from College
Road to College Street with
reference being m~de to the

MINI FARM · Acres -of ground located on Welchtown
tiill Rd . 2 bedroom home with living room. bath, utility
room. Gas warm morn ing heal, TPC water, some
fencing if you'd like to have a horse or some cows.
Also a barn and chicken house. Great Garden Alea.
ASKING $13,500.00
THINGS ARE REALLY HOPPING AROUND HEREII
BUYERS ARE COMING IN EVERYDAY II NOW IS
THE SELLERS SEASON . IF YOU WANT TO SEU
GIVE US ACAU TOOAYII WE HAVE BUYERS. WE
NEED LISTINGSJ!I
~.i]~~~ E: CLELAND........................................... 9112·6fi1
SRI f'&lt;~13E FL. ............................. ..........949·2439
!'(lr~~o·~·~r~:-::.·:.:.:··.:·:··::
742·2357
...
'
............ 992-6191

'2128195

TruckingLimestone.
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

ARE YOU SEARCHING FOR A BUILDING SITE??
HERE IT IS!! 8+ Acres of level/ sloping ground with a
t.sc:en,ic view on Gold Ridge Rd. TPC water and
electric is available. Site recently surveyed. Just
minutes from SR 33 on 681 . ASKING $12,000 Owner
wants to sell and with accept a reasonable offer.
MAKE AN OFFERI!l

'

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

&amp; Driveway&amp;.

i ntends to vacate three'
streets/alleys described as

..

G1rage 1rid Towing
Service .
Automotive atid
· Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service
and Welding

Clearinr!, Septic Syotemo

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

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
•

RuUdozing, Hackho·e,
Services.
Home Site111, Lan.J

Pl ease la ke notice that

MCNICHOLS AD. 5+ · Acres w1th Frame/Block
Building · Currently used as Bait Shop. Stock and
Equipment being sold separately. Older Mobile Home
on site is optional. MAKE AN OFFER
ASKING $12,000

B&amp;W

IIO\\ \IW
E\C \' \TI\(;

the VIllage of Syracuse,
purs uant to Chapter 723 ol
the Oh io Revloed Code,

OLD UNION AV~ . · Older home siHing on approx. &gt;;,
acre. Utilities avai lable. Possible fixer·upper or tear
down hOme lor nice lot. ASKING $6,000 MAKE AN,
OFFER Ill

:

·-

NOTIC E OF INTENT TO
'
VACATE

PR ICED REDUCED · POMEROY· CREW RD. ·This
2 story, Conte mporary home 1+ years old. Includes 4
bedroom. 2'1. baths, double glass windows, carpet,
heat pu mp/CA. Patio, deck, dishwasher, relrig.,
micro~ave, range · firep lace. bar anp 2 car garage w/
door openers. REDUCED $98,500.00
.

W.nlod: S-ng Tlmbor Cool!
Or Por..ntogo With A Q...,.,.

With every new
alarm Installedreceive 6 month's
· FREE monitoring.
304-882-3336

COMMERCIAL
and RESIDENTIAL
•
FREE ESTIMATES •

'

Salary plus commission.
.Must be neat in appear·
ance.
Apply in person to:
. ; .Mark [3rady at
COLUMBUS ROAD
AUTO SALES
134 Columbus Road,
AIhens

NEW LISTING · POMEROY • Have you ever wanted
to own a Mini farm with a nice 1'1. Story Home? Welt
here it is!I 6.67+ acres of ground-partially fenced, nice
garden area and a great yard. Home has 3 bedrooms,
nice large living room, bath , utility room, kitchen and
dining ro om. Close to town yet all th e Extras of
Country Uving. All this can be you rs lor $39,900.00

.,.,.. mo.

.

SALESPERSON
NEEDED

OFFICE 992-2259

35581 FlotWoodo Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Certified Peroonal
Property Appralur
Bonded (614) 992-4079

•.Room Addilions
i
• Ney; Garages
• Electrical ~ Plumbing
'
• Rooling
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting .
. Also Concrete Work :
(FREE ESTIMATES) I
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Butch Wilson,
992;6215
' St. Rt. 338, Letart, OH
Pomeroy, Ohio,.,... ·
614-247-3522
'

.11

REAIII'Y

Auetloneer

by appoinlment &amp;
·club repair as well

: Call John Teaford at

-·- _. . .
YOUIG'S
CAIPEinll SEmCE

--· -

BHETI'
MILHOAN

CLUB

Shrubs Shaped
· Misc. Jobs.

v-'

COUNTRY

.

'

'•'

Spe cial Thu
Mo11th

Ia&lt;

lorp dog. - -

:ljlril.

"

'

'

-.- 0111- ........ aftor

' • Roofing
Room AddltioDs

••

•---.w......,

. JAIIES ALARM
SE-YICE

Garages • Replacement Windows

Hra. of Operation: Mon.·frl. 8:00A.M. t116:00 P.M.
· Saturday 8:00 a.m. till s:oo p.m.
sundays by appt. ority. ;
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
area. Call for rate schedule.
Min, $2.00 .

(614) 992·5535
(614) 992·2753 " ""

'

Real Estate General

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

992·9949 .• 992·6471

• NEW GARAGES
•REMOOEUNG
• SIOING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FRI;:E ESTIMATES

Remodeling
Stop t. .Compjll'e
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC. .

·pwners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

•NEW HOMES

J :

!:...,"':
:.=, ~.Y;!
-Calnt.K.T.I.Coln....,_

Con11nunlty Cab Co. I-.e.

Cullom 111-.a ~-~~~

; I'M-2411111.

And live forever &amp;
ever
ln that sweet bye &amp;
bye.'
Your ever-loving friend
June Cole

Maggies Crockpot
Oiflon, WV •
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

Extension 7101
$2.99 per m in.
Mus t be 18 yrs.

Rick Poa...,n A&gt;H:tlon Compony,
lull 11mo oUdicMor, bomploto

ouctlon

ooNico. Uconood
W11t Vlrglnio; :W..

;;;:g;::. •

Wanted to Buy
Clun lato llodll eo.. Or
Smhh · BuickMo&lt;lolo Or -It,
1t100
Tlu&lt;l&lt;l,
£I
11om Avonuo, Gllilpodo.

9

~m """"oc

---

MORRIS EQUIPMENT·

Procall Co.
,·
· ·
RUTLAND
742·2455
..__(60
- 2)_9_5_4_
-7_4_
20--'• .' - - - - - - - - - - -'.....;"."'
;.;. ;.;'mo...; ., ~~~~~~~=

NHd .,.,.,.. to Uft..ln &amp;. CUI
tor elderly lldy, proJor ootlrod
couple ., widow, $20Qiwlo, I M-

~165.

••

�;

.

-·
'

Aprll10,1185

Ohio

lblt Dlllly

..

OOP

311 Ecllnllurth

ACROSS
1 Celt. prov.

~~...
42 eo.a.....
40

..-

•4 -~t:'
1 2 - -.

13--lhe~

PHILLIP

t~aeft'Jtn:'• r rl'llnncllt
!!"

~

100.000 I1U .. EMclanow
- Fumaco---...
Clni

~=~~~'=',.....:
~~;;.
. Or-

Rooms

c.ntr.l

•K 4

==:•

····~1'00111'- 111

a

wlh
on oooldna.
rt.,r.
.alter 1:00 p.....

-YIV.

=-

NJCO Oldo ~1100; Old . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

-

y

•A K 6 3

•98 5
SOVTII
lA 9 4

"'"*'

CoipOI In Block. Over U Pot,.,.. Ylnvl In Stock.' Hclafwl

c.rpoto, . _ . . . _

~.

m:::'i.:.-

L&amp;Wi411GW&amp; 1

•

Prom dr-., Aonl bhM Mo
qul!lo liM 'NI 1100. TMI blue

ootlfl. aiM 'NI $31. ~--

Obi.

THAT'S IT II

3•

wanled

•1rwurancet

__,.

· 'llold v....,.... HotldOY*?

•Aallu?

OoYouHavt:
• ctuo 'A' COL Llconoo?
• 1 'filar Tractor n'nll« EJ.. ·

17/::":rnotov
...nt HIIIO!Y
• Uvo Wlthli17S MUll Ot111Pfor1
B~ng

ACUoftnt MYR And Applr
Today AI:

FAIRPLAIN, WY
• EOE

PICKENS RIRNITURE
Now/Uoocl

ol 1968 which makes It Illegal

No .,.,.a._ lur·
!!lohlfti.
112 m1. Jomcho Rd. Pt.

t6 advertise •any preferenCe,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, colo{, religion,
sax familial status or nallonal
orlgln, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
llmhalion or dlscrtminatlon.•

. _ SHOHEY'S .
DISTRIBU710N CEHTEif
1-71 EXIT 132

,

AHfe{ll estate a~vertlslng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

:,; =•r.'' caM~-.

Rentals

OpPOrtunity basis.

---

K-; ..

Real Estate

)WI'8

A tl
~· ' aoc~._ ~- .;;;_ _;..::.n:;:.:q~u::e.:s___

CioN To Clllllpolio, 1350111o.

Fow boclraom unhrmilhocl
houlo In Middleport. $300/mo.
pluo ....,.,.... lnd ""-11. no
pot.. coil 814-1112~57 4pm.

53

Buy • Hll. Rlverbw AntlqiiH,
1124 E. Main IIIIMI on At. 124

P _.

-

42

Mobile Homes

1

Hou,.:

M.T.W. 10:00

a.m. lo 1:00 p.m., Sundlr 1:00
to 1:110 p.m. 114--2!128.
Cllony Clllpondalo ohalr, rGUid
lootlw top lobiO, lootiiOI ·top
ook tablo/dook,

~338.

.

wtc.,_

Pump, Cat

Furna~

pondHion,l r:~-lont
.

r~

m•nt, ~Joining IJCII'II lot,
storage _ epace over double
garage, $35,000, 6'J4.192a375a.

·p.,.....,

And Lol low Down
Eooy ~ormo, 3 Bodrooms, 1 Bath, LOcated Ntar

lloUII

Crown Chy k raa. Call t-60~
690DAak For Matthew.

HouH ln Pom•roy aru tor
trad• or down paymltlll on t.rm

In WV or Ohio li'N, 8'J4.ii2·
61138.
ThrH bedroom, one bllh, tuil

dopollt, 8~-3011
2 Twin SIM llottr- 114-4*
Two boclroom mobllo homo In 1308, 1~-6308.
lllddllpott, call 114-8112-1060
3 Gmr... 1.o1 :ss, car..,
and leave name and nYmber.
T-nohlp, Gollirl County, c.n..
IIMlllry Comotory, Ylrglrill at444
Apartment

for Rent ·

11115-4144. .

Mobile Homes

&lt;We-4.8$7.

I

I/l.loo""

Aak 1i1r Ruoty.

!

Bull. 114-381-83M.

m

SLI6HTEST
ID~A ..

I

•

32"'-

1m Chevy Plck.Up $1110,

•M-

~246.et2=~0:.,.-=-.7"':',-:=-=tm ~ Plck.Up ..., -

814-41t-1011S

1180 ChiVY 8COII.Ie 1l2ton

· ohortbocl, V'4, auto:l~~oou I
.... goed. $1,800.

5-2MI.

11183 Fonl UO dl-,1 :'~
:~ bocl1 dull w 1
ltlon, oml, 114-J12·

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

-- ......

.

-

tonlto, -

ton ·-

•

3'12-3833«1~•

if::-"N lty-oclrlo oor
' ldlttl . capacity ....
Wootdng liolghl_25", poloo . _
llmt. 114-1112'1071. .

- Plck-IJ-'·:"'AIJ-.
C.
.... DoonbiFeGoiiiiJOIIo
-·
MIIMIIatrlh

,_

tkMI At. 7' Rt. 211. ..... $161.

Tra•• 'r'ana. u.ct. ~11~

...

ln-od,g............ ..........
4150. Abltt 10 work- -

Truck ..do. Cho•·~o,~ Dodgo,
1884 MuM, Cam.-: ' T..-, and
1-10, ohort a
• IOW71n.. Hor-d hoi,.,.. one ana Automatic,
R-. GOod, Tou 12U.
two vra. old, open; lllao, ... cat~
Good Sltol Gun On Plloo,
: : ' ... - ; 0111 .614-8115- 11,1110,111 381 ..1143. .
79
campers&amp;

-om

.drive, v.&amp;,
Umoualn yoorllng 111112 Toyota 4 w-,IIC, om-1mbull•, In llold d-.. pr1cot1 rtgllt,
_., loW rnllol, fl\0110. 114-378-1211.
Puroboocl

llAV'E TJ.IE

II AulD, Ripley, WY. -

GIIC UO Engine, lllondanl

Tranornloolon. 111

01= THE
MISSISSIPPI
ARE WE ON?

1 DON'T

MISSISSIPPI ..

I

.

l'

Motor Homes

•

1711-4121.

CAR£ :ro JOIN 1-'E
OOPI t:£ AA A.
BRI~ XX., BRUTU:l 7

..

NOT Rl6f\T flOW, i::J..At&gt;YS.

ool' or ol llud- 1 yr. old
Rog. olondard llrocl Oltilllon,

For

Rolrtgoralor,

$900j .....ford bull, Sl50i ....

pol .. 114-!1112·2218.

W11hor/dryor, . .._,Y crrgan 1
dlnotto 001, ~liM onot ono
lobi.., hutch, otlwr lumM~n,

Raglllorocl ANGUS bulle, 1-24
Rooklno
mcii'lthl,

il,..•, .au S. 64

$40. Greon prom - · lilo 1:1,
$80. Purp .. prom dr..., elu 18,
$50. 304-675-6~.
.

.

Hay lr Grain

800 lb. •11• ol llflalla/anu
ml1ocl hay, ..U 114985 3805.
800 Pc!undo Round Iaiii. Ill

WV St•t• Farm UuHum I• ...k.
lng tho donation of a Boomtruck
•lnce lhe muNum it; a not tor
proiH _...ion.· A oorllllcoto

Each. 114

AKC Aonw•l• Pupe, Female..

$25ll, 614 141 6341.

,

Bu~

Enter

For

Coil
0488 !log.o Wot_....ong.
tlbllth.. 11'71.

CIC
.

•

~

'

...••
~

•

Sa..:

••

asn

••

....,.,..,.,lljlllnv
Pometow, tl801mo.,

AYenUet

liDO clopwfl. no

pole, , ......,.

308J.

PI P-.nt. :zbr, portiiY lur·

T---•

· ... u-1... Hl/0 ....
c:oplod.:IOU7J.TIU.

IW

1\orln
Alvwll
lnG opDIIciiU,..
lllr. HUD
ouboldfud ilpt. lor oldorly """
handlc·ppsd
EON ....., .

11'/t.

50~=--

Today's deal is take n from a book
published in 1945, "Sorry, Partner" by
Dr. Paul Stern and A.J . Smith. The
Foreword opens with, "Another book
on Bridge?" Little did the authors realize how steady the s upply ol bridge
books would re main for the next 50
years . And the rate of flow shows no
sign of easing. Not that that is a bad
thing. Reading is an excellent exercise.
And reading about bridge is doubly rewarding.
·
In "Sorry, Pa rtne r ," th e reader
learns from the original players • mis·
takes. W~ere did South go wrong here?
Today, most experts sitting South
would overcall one heart. Then, if North
advances with one no· trump, South
should probably bid three no-trump (a
contract that makes easily with this
layout).
To defea t four hearts for sure, West
has to lead a spade . This is difficul~ if
not impossible, to' find . Hi s a ctual
choi ce of a club was de batable but
worked well when it lulled South i~to· a
false sense of securily. So pleased with
the free trick on the lead, South imme·
diately played a heart to dummy's king
and took the heart finesse : After draw·
ing East's last trump, South led the dla·
mond jack. However, Eas~ noting his
partner's twll, cashelf·both ~is diamond
winners before exiting with a club. Now
South had to lose two spade tricks: one
down.
After winning the fir~ t trick. S0 ulh
should have attacked diamonds imme·
diately. He establishes a winner in the ·
dummy on which he can di sca rd one
spade loser , the heart king being the
dummy entry.
.

52 Blul~n
53 Cr1vtng
54 Spar
57 Sou!Mrn
bllcleblrd

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Hemlock lor lonclocoplng. •11oc1

burllpped, compact, Well
groomocl, lrlglmlng 11 130.
SOnto'o
Foroll,
...-aplng controc:for, lk:on-

llc.,_

Md nu,.ery. 304-175-4138 Of

304..... 3001

'

Gormon

Sill~

Prole- POl G.-ning. /1.11
-blo ~~'••­

OuartntMCI 81tlafKI:Ion, Yow
Poto 8ocond Frlonrt
llo-~ H I C.n1 Got To
Phono, Or C.M Allor I P.ll. Coli
For Appolnlmortt, 114-

::t,:;,_

137·11121.

Wontocl to buy·

1~

Kenmor. ttlckablli waahlr &amp;

u...

out-

koftnol
for larp clog. 114-182.aGU .,..,

:lr:e:lt.od -·· ISGO. 304- ~3pm=·-------57
Musical

COin-.

'

torocl, ... chookOd, llrll .......
bllclc onot lin, . . . . . . _
.

JET
,
AERATION MOTORS
Ropolrocl, I Robul" 1ft

Stock. Call Ron £nna,

AKC Rogr.

e-.

1521.

,.

1-

304-6~

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

•

A 'lbur .

Z-24 C.vallor, Good Condition, C.N After I P.ll.

.

~ 'Birtl~ay

ca-..,

1982 C.vollor, a oa, 1111 - . wulao, lOeb. .. - . now~~-

..-

Tuesday . April t 1. 1995

lont - 2411.
. 11,2110. 304-671•

o...,·

Lurnlno, 4dr, $31110.
11041

ASTRO.· ORAPH

1HI Chovr- c...llor . No
RUII1. Good CIMn Cor, 1~

Largo Air
Kind
Clwyolor lilt Avo-." Err·
Thill
1o
Uoocl
1n
Gerogo,
1100,
-:::=.:.;ln;::st;::ru~m:::e:::nt:-::;;•~= ...
f!oh fln~ bolloty I
lint CondHion, Llko 114-411-4414.
.
. .,
72,0110
~AIW 4 P.ll. ' ~ 11.. won. Nlo!Ockllo.
Alvom Guhor S.rlol No. I
01.
•
llurr•r Lawn Troctor 11 HP, Llko $1110, l14o38U737.
1881 - . . - .. E, loiC,
$350, 114-25&amp; 1134.
rrmllrn ...... .. out-lc
FruitS lr
58
r-.o~or~. oxcollont condlo
olzo wotorl&gt;ocl Wll&gt;anlft
millage
11,000,
caW 114lion,
.· vegeta~lei
I hMdboord $300. Rogwor ~~&lt;•
MNIIJa!Wipm.
bod $50, 2 AKC Boxer t1o;o. 1
llmllo, t mole, IIOON. tHO

.
'
......., ___ . ,. _ _ ,.......,_

by Luis campos

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

Each 18tt81' WI the CfPIM standi lor anottw. Todly'• . _: V ~ U

.

' RC ' K

NYMX

BVCNMRH
GIRBNC

C F

K R S· B R S B

F P

JFFXil

•

YUFVC

C N H ·

F'G G M H K K H X

UYIIGIYDHMK . '

K L F C ·C

RTYBRSH

(LFIVTSRKC)

NYiiriMRK .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I wasn't bom in a log cabin. bul my fa mily moved lnlo
·one es SO&lt;&gt;n as lhey could affor~ ~." - Melville D. Landon.

r::!:~:~' S©RgijlA-lt£!fs•
::::
Ed;ted
CLAY R. 'OLLAN _..;__ _ __..;_
•
0 four
lleorro nge~ latt~rs of the
scrambled words be·
~y

··low -to... form fcur words

KA C ERN

J

I I PI
I 8 .R

I I
Here'saquotefromanExPresi-

~ dent .. "Politics is nota bad profes-

·
rewards. if you disgrace yourself .
can
. - - •• a •• - - •

.1..-

7
_,9
.1.- .J..- .l.-..J.L.J.

Complete lhe chuckle quoted

b)' ' ltlltng in the m1Uln g wo rds
yov deve lop from srep No. J below .

13 1• I'

I' I'

1• 1• 1

1 1 1A 1 1 1 1 1

SCit.AM-lETS ANSWERS

:::., "::: ~~jiaJi~1.,... a Ell.,...
•

•

7141.

1087 Berliner u. 17 112' lana.
vary good -.Inion, taooo. a14!

~m:::..;..:~:.;
•050.;.:;.._ _ _ _ _ __

'

from an Ex President "Politics is not

· ifyousucceedtherear~manyrewards, ..,.:,...

il v.o~&gt;d 1sgrace·y!:lur~elf you can always WRITEa BOOK.·

Motorcycles

NO'horlond Dwarf, Dulcft. Hoilon&lt;l Lop, lllnl Lop, Fronch Lop,
814-38&amp;

r~tar.nc•

turiUhed,
~-~ Or _ . , .

Cooluor lponirll Pup.
pl.., IJ&lt;C Raolllorocl, Champion Bloodilno,\14..:1711-2728. ·

Ono b I oom

41 Hawlllon

Here's a
.

Transportation

~Icon

$232-$3111 • Col 114in15818.
Equol Houolng Opportunltloo.

48 Actor II""Y

Canker · Orbit - Libra - Grower- WRITE a BOOK

Rtlri•ver Stud Strvicl, 114-37'a-

~~~lnd
AI From
_
_,.. In
lllddloport.

By Phillip Alder

•.

Building

2638 10 A,.M. ·10 P.ll.

Opportunity

12 wcfa.)
45 Stull'lfy
47 Conllructlon

8 ~:; 7;R~UMBER.ED 1• . 1•
o ri~~••s- 1 1 1

AKC Rogloterocl Female Cociuor
Sponloll200 /Eoch1 Of 1360'12.
AKC
Aoglotoroo
Goldan

- ....~- .. v~~s:

43 Fomllll
helldQIIIr

Not quite .
a8 intended

448 4031.

tM. Local

Gnclouo Mvlng. 1 onot 2 bocf.

I •

Pass
All pass

L-

BASEMENT

Business

Othello

1-·

,."

Supplies

a

lmourrl

t9l.Mgocl-..
21 Sly look .
23 Actual btlina
25 Wilding bjrcJ
26 Coin
'
27Chlt-ln

~

_

·'

WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonol . Allllrno g....,...

'""""""'
IINIIIo.
Ulllltloo PoldElllolonor
Shon lath,
107
Second. Goll!pollo, 114 4111 111
Allor 7 ~.II.
·

7 Ordain

tJG
I I
~
_
-~;:~~
- :::·==·==·=~..,sron . rfyousucceedtherearemany
--1W_O::_r,GnEiR,;;R~-jrou
alw&lt;~ys
1
8
I
.
e
II1

"

aprlcocl
Ronoh,·~·
Po,wrow,

Ohio, 8f4.J12-3033. •

White .- ding - · tiM :1,

55

....., HotllopooM, No POl..

igcy.

_;B~A~I_L~R~-l~,.;'.,

J12·23111.

Gravel-•rplpo
•
drainpipe now In atock. Sklere
Equlpmont, 304-675·'11121.

Financial

4•

lf~~~

dur1tion of

r--------~--~~

Services

·

I NT

'Sh8rp-

28 Reech oetWI
30 Puerto31 Preso
32 DevOUI'I
35Mormonlt8W
38RedYellllll .
39 u-ochllr
415- .

tot VIIUII WUI be ptOVIded for tax
purpro... Call the Farm
MuM um TUM-Sat N at 3046711-5737.

1 ond 2 boclroom .,.~,..,...
lumlohocl and unlumlohocl,
ooc:urHy cloi)OIII roqulrocl, no

for Sale

Livestock

FI'Nm, Color t.V.. MlcrOWIIVe,
114-~1238.
.

$70. Pink prom

· ~Pofto.l~

72 Trucks for Sale

-

Ono 3 yoor old llllrolonl bull,
Wolgho 1g:zl lbo.L Vory fllnlirli

IM-Vll2~2.

Tral18r tor ,.,. on condor S.rMt
In Pomeroy; S2501mo. pluo 11110

basemenl. two ctr garag .. two

dockl, ntw roof, In ChHfer, 114-

Dry~

Woohor,

brick home In 1110.

dleport, central hNt. full tM...

..

63

1 Acre,

Two Rog. Cocluor Sponilla;
prom dr- and crinoline, aiD
7; 614-Mil-2912.

AI~::::~

WlliCH SIDE

I.

l"1 QMory Pu.:g.'!:' a C!'l~=

STORAGE TANKS 1,000 Gallon 1 Anguo Buill And 1 Charollllo
Upright, Ron E•ono EntoJoc-., Olllo, 1.-aH112L . ~.b7 loy Window, 114-3711Toc:hnlco
llomoto Contnll 7 ODWII wlcaiV.
Storoo
Roc:el-11110.
UluoWater
- · March. I -duo to cahlo. 112 Gollon Eloctrlc Hot
Tonk. Good CondMion --440; 18247M.
RolrlgOralor 23 Cu. R. N - Ired 8/W F-.1 Cowo. 1 llaok
Com-, UO. 114-446-1151.
Llmooln BuU; 1 llock Anguo

~~1,114-M 2411«

1acre. $18,000. 30&lt;1-175-1351 ot
30HIIIi-®1't dayllrno.

n.bUIIt

~ llot01 'IQT 1Mo4*-'1214

0~=-.....,

.......... .

C..b CIMk Rd. 10 roomo • bath,
Five

$3,1110,114-2114811.

• - with tumtablo. doutilo

Two old p1111 . - - . 10\ OM I , 1~8_.2013.

i;;dg;ik~c;ea~ao~rta~~·~;;ri
I~ TNIWI IIIIIM, u.cl A

oiiO.

-Powor -UnM WMh
Unlo$Clomblno 711110
And
Groin Tallie, Good Concitlon,

.old. 171i loun. .lgn

Addloon .,... &amp;&amp;2,000,
a~'":&amp;;··737.
.

Auto Pana I

IIIII: 11112 P I , - Arloe,
2 o..:,:~a.son. Po,.., A•
Good No - · Or
LMU, 1110
114 441 - ·

wielding
..
high MCk,gown,
· law ~-·
blc
nelda

On Bulavllll Pilla, af4.4441.42811. ·
3 B1droom., 2 lithe, Heat

SAV
• JOEA6ATE'
IS TJ.IE 6E5T
PLAVER TillS
SID£ OF TJ.IE
Til~'(

-

ThrM prom d r -• .ta 7. one

for Rent

Year Old, ApproL 4 Mile• Ott 35

·
Alrlo ~r.1.....-;

12.100. 304471-43J1,

I

.

a- •

-Zdr, Hvunclol
· 4ayl,1~
.......
46,000rnl,-:Mmpg,
callllltl, . l\lnll . very ......

tt-"'1:.

6720.

~prox.

11171.

Quolfty HouNhold FumMII'o Sot o! twin bcrx ollllna • rna~
And~ OroiiiiMII On
- · goed
oondhlon.
;;::::~-::----::-...,::--= Cull 'lind Conyl RENT-2-0\YN ·
.._.,
anw
3rim. l30. 2br., laalh. outbulkllng, • • And Layawoy Alto AYOIIoblo.
deDMII, $11Sirno., ,.,__ ,.. F'l" Delivery Wllhln 2!11111oi.
I :.c:s~
qu1tld. 304-e75-M21.
for&amp;'clollvtry. Plutic 1011.,. US.
52 Sporting Goods
3 Bedi'OOin Houle In Ria
S.Cond box lno). A/1./1. SIGHS
Gnonde, 2 Bloclca F""" Unl-.. Ladloo' Wlilon god olubo, 010., . -40H33-3411.MjotloM.
oftloJ:_IIIIblo, . Juno
18N, 1110.114112181&amp;.
Singer ltnllllng rnochlno, rnac1o1
r.,_~~"~
HK·~ no- uoocl, Wluo - ·
3044111-7108.
Alter 6:110 P.M.
Smlll chellt frMzer, approL two
4br, 2 olwy, 1 \121rotho. :iOWJII.

Is.

':3~· 1. . C!VP- 76

-. .....
:; !1111
......,

VI'R/1. RIRNITURE

IJI

lluiOk

,.,....
12.005;.11181
Chov.EMil
11'10
1or Laloron
; 1t11
Exoab.::r; 1117 Pont. Or

Woftl llool&amp; 1-31111.

.advertisements for real estate
whlch'is in violation of lhe law.
Our readers are hereby
lnfonned !hat all dw8111ngs·
advertised ln this nOY1sp&lt;1per· l
are available on an equal

3 Bod-.. Soc:tlon•l

-

SWAIN
AUCTION ' RIRNITURE. 12
011.. 111 .. Galllpolll. Now • UOocl
lumft-, - . . . . WMiom 1

This newwaper.wlll no\
kno'Ntlngty accePt .

Pass
Pass

,,....

belm(2wclo.~

LAYNE'S RIRNITURE
Comptoto homo hrmllhlnoL
Hounr:J mil•
-..,~,~.
·1!322.
cHrl Bullville
PHio

•• StMdy Paych.ak?
• B...ntt7 ·

2 Golrl. 18rm .

Opening lead: 12

TATER
II

~eaiEtU!It

' ·• An You Looking FOI:

.!.~
Alii
.....!"_..

Dealer; EID;t
South
West' North East

I WAS FIXIN'·
TO FEIO

Opening. In Ripley,

O'Nelll'l

Vulnerable: Neither

•'

Wl1h !lui'

'==8a-='=-

;18=~

•AJ I 0863
•J 9
lA Q

.. Polnt. Piuol bul.,. • bocf.

~JIIghtly u.d

Colpot • VInyl In ...00 Yd
~!JIIIOPIItomeOI~

'

IK 10 8

•Q 9 2

dlnl!plonto. ~

Goocli

1m-

EAST

I /1..11. -1 P.ll. · -

onion ..... -

Household

~~=-

clougltohlp
.... pre!.
61 -Navy
.62 Critic Rer ~+:i~~
v63 TIIUIII
'1
24 ' Actor Da...,n 64 Unll ol
25 Ct*lneu
91ameM
211 Wolrd
currency
3 Son of Seth
33
34 Bird
Urge """
(on)
DOWN
4 Tropical IIIII
38 A c.rattwln
5 -,: ~!!1·~
37 Portldple
1 Jeot
.
611eaaura

IJ 7 4 3

Honl.roeil pn&gt; moilli .,_
oounlrY ~ no 1100.
30447S-63ea ooloro ilpm.

r,lerchandrse

20
22

•Q 10 7 4

. @~~..)

AI_.

CoiDol /1.1114-JN.:I72o AFTER I P.ll.
/l.loo

47UI

11 Rollglaue

17t-tenn
l8 Adi!Hive

IQ 7 2

-

UMd 25KW llialriD fuma

Furnllhed

45

44111nfo.._.
41Tanlcl

15 Wo Hlng
11 f'ottMr MH
oflran
.
Ul Explorer V8Ko 151 Sine - non

Very Rauonobly Pttlod,

• IKV

-

75 . . . . lllloeont
for8elt
Pt. PI I F:f. tt1 -

TRUCK

1' ~~flrll\

ALDER

BEATJIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Al.-rtDPusda .,.....

In the v.ear ahead. you might haw a very
important involvement that brings you
· before the public in some manner. This
can be a constructive development il you
keep working on ycur image.

ARIES (Marc h 21·Aprll1 9) Objectives
that are significant lq yo·u mlght ha~Je
' only a nominal appeal to your compan-

ions Ieday. You sllouldn'l 1&lt;!1 lhem pres·
, sure you lnlo altering your goals. Know
· where to look for romance and you'll find

il.

Th~

Aslro·Graph Matchmaker instanlly

reveals

wh1c~gns

are romantically per-

LI BRA

(~ep l.

23-0ct. 23) II you don'!

have ;;snythlng nice to say about others
today , keep your comments to yourself.
What you say wtlt be bOth dislor1ed and
recorded.

feel lor you. Mall $2.75 to Matchmaker.
c/o lhtf nl!wspaper. P .0 . Box 446S. New
Vorl&lt;. NY 10163.
~ TAU RUS (April 20:.May 20) ihere Is a
possibilily lhal you mighl'klave 100 much
'
up to chance loday. II you fail to conrrol

SC OR PIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22) ~ctions

your destiny , other factorsrmight·
do so
,
.• foryou . .'
"'"

lhan you were before .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc. 21) Upon

GEMI NI (May 21 · June 20) Usually ,
pretend to be unavailable to someone

occaston, your be tter judgment some times deserts you and you're inclined to
reward the wrong people. Th1s co'uk:t be
one of those days.

who needs you.·
CANCER (J une 21-Ju ly 22) An old

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 18) Jo~ay
there 's a strong chance tha~ you might

issue that previously generated friction
between you and a pal might surlace
again today. Try to treat it more tactfully

spend too much time on goals that won't
gratify you once you achieve them .
Double check your targets.

..

you 're the type Of person who tries to

help olhers. Today . however. you mrghl

this lime.

"""

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Thti might nol be
a goo~ day lor g? ing on a ahopptng
spree . You mrght not be able 10 assess
lhe true worth of products.
VIRGO (1\!D· )a-Sept. 22) Disagree·
m@Jlto btHween you and your male
should be resolved pnvately today. Avoid
bringing in-laws or friends into the picture
with their destructive comments.

mot1vated by spite or revenge could
backfire today artd leave you WO{Se pff

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fob. 19) Friends
might f ind you d ~fli c ult to undel'stand
today di.Je to your reluctance to express
what is disturbing you This is no time to

nurture secrets.
"
PISCES (Fob. 20·Mir~h 20) It wtll be
important today' to screen )'our associ·

ares carefully. Avoid being closely identl·
lied wHh som00&lt;1e who is always sliroing
up !rouble.

,

�Monday, Aprll10, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~;;;;;;;;;;~~===--u_s_e_e~a.;;.;.;.;.~,;,.;,.;.:n,:-in_g_;_s....;.re_p_o_rt-:. ~-o~a-v-o-:-id~ov_e_r_p__;ay~
-. m....;.;....;.en-:t~s-.~ .
By ED PE'lERSON .
annual limits. Tbe anNB•IIimlts for .
Social Security Muqer, Atlle111
1995 are $8,160 for persona under
Social Security beneficlarle• age 65, and $11,280 for persons
wbo submit tbelr earnings reports belween age 6569. People wbo are
by lhe April 17 due date sbould overpaid by Social S~:curlty are
remember lbat lhe reports can be required 10 return tbe mooey, eitber
changed at any lime if lheir esti- by direct refuodl or by l!aving tbeir
quite of future earnings prove too benefits reduced to cover tbe overlow or too bigh, Social Security payment.
·
officials reminded. Tbe best way to
There is a substantial penalty for
avoid overpayments- benefits to not filing an annual report of earnwhich you are not entitled-Is to ings oo or before lhe due datePREVENTION - Wltll a minion statement of ''providing for
report any cbange in .your estimat' April171his year because tbe IJSual
the safety and secarlty of chUdren's spirit, soul and body," tbe
ed earnings as soon as it occurs.
due date, Apri115, falls on a Satur·
. Rejoicing Life Church and Christian School have a protection
Beneficiaries wbo work and day,
·
·
.
committee. Here revlewtna the rules,are church workers, left to
earn over lbe exempt amount are
Because it is difficull'to esti·
, right, VIcki Lona, Norma Torres, Katby Rice, Maggie Biggs and
requited 10 submit earnings reports mate exact earninas for lhe year, it
· Brenda Barnhart. ·
·
on how mucb .they made tbe prCYl·. _~IIC~U111Jles beneficWies wbo work
.
'
ous year and bow much tbey expect to call to adjust tbeir estimated
to make during lhe current year. earnings if lhey get a raise, work
1'be annual limit In 1994 was overtime. or otherwise increase
. $8,040 for persons under age 65, their IDCome.
and $11,160 for persons between
It's easy to report excess earnage 65 and 69. Benefits are reduced ings and olher events lhat would
$1 for every $2 in excess eamings · cause you to be overpaid. If you
. 11\.pril is Child Abuse Prevention imd otber personnel in· an effon to for peopie under 65, and $1 for live in Athens or Me1gs Counties
Monlh and numerous organizallons protect children. They bave eslab- every $3 in excess earnings for you sbould visit lhe Alhens Social
lisbed a training !program wbi.cb people 65-69. If you are still wort-· Security office or calllhe .toll-free
. ·are giving priaity to ch~d safety.
Among tbe groups mvolved is belps teacbcrs and otbers to ·recog- · ing at age 70,1he earnings limits do onmber, 1-800-772-1213, business
lhe Rejoicing Life Cburcb and nize symptoms of neglect and child not apply so you no longer bave to . days between 7 A.M. and 7 P.~.
abuse, to protect children in class- report your earnings to Social ·
.Christian Scbool in Middleport.
Did You Know?
Security.
Last fall the cburcb set up a rooms and at dle church.
-Social Security earnings lim·
Every
year
about
a
million
peo· Another phase of lhe committee
child safety committee composed
its
not apply to people 70 and
ple
·
r
eceive
more
money
from
of Pe1e Barnhart. Brenda Barnbart, bas been to set guidelines to screen · Social Security than tbey were enti- overdoduring
lhe .entire year. People
Norma Torres, Paul Rice, Teresa volunteers and paid staff before
tled
to
receive
as
a
result
of
unanunder
70
must
report lheir excess
Carr, Pastor Lawrence Foreman, children are entrusted to ' them. ticipated earnings. Most of tbese
earnings
to
Social
Security by
and BUI Asbeck.
. · Rules also provide for monitors, · overpayments occurred because
Aprill7.
That coriunittee bas established and open classroom doors unless
beneficiaries who work wbile
-Social Security benefits stop
policies to be carried out by adult · two adults are present.
. drawing benefits earned more than when a beneficiary is convicted of
they bad estimated and their a criminal offense. The ban· also
i~me exceeded Social Security's
applies to .persons institutionalized_

for crlmiual offenses wbo were
found guilty but insane, not guilty
by reason of ~saity, or inc:ompeteot to stand trial.
.
-&amp; of Jaouary 1 1995, Social
Set:Uritj will not ~ly tbe 3610 48
montbs limits on ume permitted for
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) recijlieotS to complete a Plan
to Acbieve Self Support (PASS).
The amount of lime permiued will
be decided on a case-by-case basis.
A PASS permits SSI recipients to
set aside income and resources for
a goal lbat will help tbem gain
greater financial i!ldepeodence,
such as getting a degree or starting
·

.April desig.n~ted _.

·:Child Safety M·on.th

. . Mk:bae1 E. Pblliips
Navy Seaman Recruit Mlcbael
E: PbUlips, son of Ronald and Carole Phillips of Langsville, recently
participated in a joint military exercise near Guam aboa(d tbe
amphibious command ship U.S.S.

Brandon Clark Bachner, son of
Steven and Tamara Bachner of
Middleport, observed his second ·
birthday' recently ~ith a party at. ~·· ""'·,
home.
, A Lion King U1eme was carried
out and his cake featured the L1on
King face.
.
.
Attending were his parents,
maternal grandparents, Bob and
Jonetta Davis, maternal_ greatgrandmplhers, Pauline Cunningbam and Virgi ni a Davis, paternal
grandparents, Jack and Carolyn
BRANDON BACHNER
Bachner, aunts and uncle, Don and
Carol Diddle and Lorna Johnson.
cousins Al)n and Ryan Van Matre,
and Mrs. Larry Kemiedy, Denver,
.and Lo~ery and Druno Casci, and
Nora and .Bill Rice, Mary K.
Diclc, Becca And Michael Owen.
Roush. Helen and Clyde Belcher
Sending cards and gifts were Dr. and Ilob and Joan Tewksbary.

~

$

~ r..""a f

l

"l

BULLETIN BOARD

6:30p.m. tiJMidnig/it
j(oy5t£ OYIJ( .'1(.1:SO!l(r:{
'Entertainment tRy: %.e Main T-vent
· 'l(araokf, rron(glit
Singfe $20.00 Coupfe $35JXJ
13.ry-.o.t:B.!Soft 'lJrink§ Jl.vaifa6fe

00

AT 992·2155

MONDAY, APRIL 10
Seniors 55 &amp; Over
FREE SPRING DANCE
With George Hall at the .
Hammond Organ
MOt::JSE LODGE 6 til

Pome!oy-~lddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Apri!__1_1,_'1995

. ___ .

.

I

.

.

..

.. .

·.By GEORGE ABATE
government bas taken away;-''
Sen11nel News Staff
Gilmore said.
·
.: Middleport Village gave a 90:
Previously, any rate Increases
· day extension to Cable Vision to had to be approved by the village.
consider tbe village's franchise at Now, tbe Federal Communications
its regular meeting Monday nigbt.
Confmission accepts the bikes
. :rbe current 25-year franchise based on increasing operating
would have ended April 27. Tb? expenses.
, village will decide on a 15-year
The 'village pusbed back acceptfranchise by July 31, said Bob ing the new franchise because it
Gilmore; acting mayor.
could not read tbe ordinance lhree
·"A lpt of tbe restrictions and times before the deadline.
··
contrQl-'we used to bave tbe federill , 1. · Under the · terms of the fran·

.

chise, the village customers currenUy pay a 3 percent franchise fee.
The bigbest rate that coul!l be
charged is 5 percent, said Lester
Errett, CableVi'sion manager for
lhis area CableVision is beadquartered in Poil!t Pleasant. W.Va.
"As a businessman, I'd ralher
not go to 5 percent to keep my bills
lower," Errett said.
Councilman Jim Clatwortby
said be would like to negotiate a 25
percent discount for village resi-

School project
used by students
for math skills
·
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe toothpicks began to weaken, bend and then the bridge fell
down.
'
The expressions o( joy, humor
and sorrow spread over tbe
· cheeks of these 30 youths. This
bands-on project made the stu·
dents cooperate. ·I
Students at Meig$ Junior Higb
built toothpick bridges in the
school's math lab during the last
two weeks, teacher Julie Ran·
dolph said.
· "We liked it ex¢ept the glue
wouldn't dry," project director
Sarah Dean said. "We made a ·
bunch of triangles. It. took 12
.· days. to milke it."
Dean led Bricia Jensarobn·
.Co., this group of students won
lhe weight competition ~y holdBREAKING
_Meigs Junior ffigb students yester,
ing a simulated 3,380 pounds · day tested the toothpick bridges they designed and builL The stu·
. dents spent two weeks developing the projects and bave learned
· inside a bucket
The group's team members . much about math, teacher Jutie Randolph said. The bridges were
included architect Tricia Davis, judged 'o!J tlieir plans and strength. '1 would have nev~r expected
accountant Bridget Vaughan,
these weights. Some of .the kids ha~e said 1hey'll never. !Jiok at
bridges tbe same again," Randolph said. (Sentinel photo by t':eorge
transportation chief Jennifer
Lambert and carpenter Jobn
Abate)
Davidson.
Each team could spend up to
· $1.5 million on supplies in Ibis material); and $40,000 for wax
built there was no bridge."
The math skills used included:
staged project. The group spent paper.
- estimating spatial configuall but $34,900 of this sum.
The concrete skills used here
The "Randolph warehouse" can be translated in otber areas • . rations;
- estimating dollar. amounts
supplies cost $500,000 for card- she added.
"They don't even realize they
in the thousands;
board (land); $10,000 for toothpicks (lumber); $500 per cen: were using their math skills,"
- adding and subtracting
timeter for string (cable); $850 · Randolph said: "If they ran out of seven-digit numbers;
for day's supply of glue (welding
money befvre the bridge was
· Continued on page 3

$11,388**
N:)'t)}c1~

May 1 is the last day for businesses to file 1995 personal property tax returns, Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker, Campbell
announced.
In February, the auditor's office mailed a tax retum to every
business that filed in 1994. Campbell said tax returns are requited of
all timgible personal property owned by businesses, individuals,
partnerships, associations, imd corporations used. in business. For
further information she may be 'contacted at 992-2698.

Certified used car bu,eBS will bil on band to give highest trade-In
value for rour autamoblle. Please bring rour title, registration
card, and payment boolc Happlicable.
.
NO SAW PER,mm TO DEAIBIS. Th" clea'ance is for retail cui·
tamers on~. Prices !IPJ!Iyto available units only. No lll'llllring Jill'·
mitted at .
prices. .
·
.

~.9!18.

'

Academic excellence fete May 2
""·

The 'llth annual Meigs County Academic Excellence banquet
will be held on Tuesday, May 2 at 7 p.m at Meigs High School
cafeteria.
.
Sixty scholars from the fourth; sixth, eighth, lOth and 12th
grades in Eastell) Local, Meigs Local, and Southern•Local will be
honored. Tickets are being sold through April 18 at the individual
schools.

Sheriffissues warning

$11,688

Oil!WQ:f

'

l!itlcfFeE!. Oe!JYerOO"

.__,_

S-sERIES EXTENDED CAB PICKUP
• E•l""dad Cab
• Dnv"' Stde Atrbag
• Rear AnteLod&lt; Brakes

· 16 Yatve Power
• Dover SKie Mbag
• 4 Wheel AnteLocl&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng
·'Power Brakes

• Custom Cloth tntevor
• P 205175R IS' Tires
• Stee ~~led T11es ,

• Power Steer1ng

··~ Pnce Jndudes GMACF1rst Time

• Power Brakes

Buyer lr«niNe 11 Ouat1rt00

PARK AVEU

IIIAIIIIEW '95 CIEVY ASI1IO EX1EIIIl C011VE11S111 VM

'95CHEVY

• Exlenqed Chassis
• Driver Side Air Bag
, Anti·Locl&lt; Brakes
• A1r Cood~ion
• Automatic Overdnve

• Power Door Locks
• AWFM Stereo
·Styled Whee•
• Ste~· BeHed Tires
•Well Equii'lled!

•VISta

• PIS, P!B

· • Solw1led

•Power W~doWs
·Power Locl&lt;s
• Tt~. Crutse
• AMJFM Cassone
Cm.rs

•Indirect Lighting ·
·Premium Wood Plcg.
• Full Conversion
• Atum~um Running
• Loaded!

• Dual Air Comlor1emp ·Aluminum Wheeo
Clima~ Coo\'01
•Keyless Re&lt;oo1e
• Anli-Lack Blakes 'f Power Anlenna
Enlrj System
• Automat~
• Power Dn'ler &amp;
·• Loaded!
• AA\IFM cassette
Passenger Seal

• Air Cornilion

· DuaiAtrbag

:

Drivers must have insurance 10 opera~ a vehicle, Meigs County
·Sheriff James M. Soulslly said.
.
One shOuld show proof pf insurance: when an officer issues a·
ticket; at vehicle iilspection stops; in traffic court appearances; after
motor vehicle trashes; and during .random checks by the motor:
vehicles bureau.
.
Proof can be sbown by having 1\11 insurance policy, an insurlll)ce
identification card, a $30,009 surety bond or a motor-vehicle ceruficate of self-insurance.
Penalties include: loss of license for 90 days; loss of license
plates and vehicle regisuation; fees ranging from $75 to $500; and
paying bigh hsk insuriUice for five years.

District meeting reset April27 ·
•

. TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·21144.
344·5947. 422·0756
.•

Mondll!Y • Satur~: 9 am • 9 pm
, Sunday: Noon • 6 pm '

I,
l,

'
.
.
.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinlf:)n Solid Waste management district will change its regularly Scheduled meeting from April 20 to
April27.
.
.
A buffet dinner Will be served at 5:30 p.m .. at lhe diStrict office
in WellstOI• wilh a tour of the new landfill following. After the tour,
the regular business meeting will be held at the district office's
. '
board room.

I

•.

-

2 Soctlona, 12 Pages 35 eenta
Multimedia Inc. New•paper
- A--- ---~

•

.

.

dents over 65 years old.
1
A relationship between tbe fee
and the discount does not exist,
Errett added. Both would be nego- .
tiated separately.
"Somewhere we'd have to give
and take for eacb side," Errett said.
.. Tbe cable company haS chosen a
tess expensive route to renew lhe
franchise known as an informal
process, Gilmore said. This process
started 30 months ago.
Tbe formal process would bave

I

greater costs .and would have
involved a more complicated legal
process.
Currently, Cable Vision bas
about900 customers in tbe village.
The franchise is not ' exclusive,
•meaning other cable companies
could com;:&gt;ete for customers.
In Apnl, the cable company
· increased its rates for the fust time
in two years, Errett said.
The basic rate increased 26

.

cents to· $9.21 for the 12 channel
service. The next tier of 17 cbannels had a $1.78 increase to'$12.22. ·
"We' re quite pleased to have an
e.xcellent relation~hip with:Middleport and look forward to serving
tbe ar~a for. years to come," Errett
said.
..
.
.
.
CableVISIOn wtll negotiate w1th
.Pomeroy and Syracuse villages
within the next several weeks,
Errett said.

.

.

Rural mail carriers assist
wildlife officials through
spring, summer surveys

Breaking
bridges

Pl!rsona.l-property taxes_ du~

OF OVER D B11A111 NEW CIIEVRIII.£T CONVEIISIOII VANS.
Selection illcludes Al&gt;bo All Wheel Drives and G-211's,·hollt avail·
able witll ralsad roofs or low tops. Prices range flam $17,388 to

L_ ,

TV firrri has extra 9(l days to ·consider franchise

Tickets Available At Farmers Bank In Pomeroy
Home National Bank In Racine, Bank One In Pomeroy,
Meigs County Chamber Office, Or Any Board Member
For More Information Call 992·5005 .

WEST .VIIiGINIA'S 1M CONVERSION VAN DEAI.SI HAs AN IIIVENTORY

•

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

r----Local briefs---. Energy,

TOM PEDEN HAS AN IIIV~NTORY OF OVER 800 BRANit NEW
IHVIIIl£1S. llDSMOIII.ES, POifllACS, IIIDS, GBIS AND CUSI1IM .
VAliS. All will be sold at substantial discounts!
.
Plus $500 to $2Im cash bacll or 6.9% .APR financing available ("P
to 48 monthsl on selei:lri models on approved credit Tell!l$ avail·
. able_~~pta 84 months!

•

I

--·

: Copyright~~

.,.,

~riday, 5lprif21, 1995

CALL OUR

'-•

' VOl. 45, NO. 242

""

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel

6 column inch weekdays
1800 column ~nch Sunday

1

·

LIM laalabt lD tho 50s,
windy, raiD.Wednesday; breeZJ,
wltb sbowo.._ Hlch ID mlcl 60L

.3-5-22·25-31

.I'

'

~

,.Buckeye 5:

/i

. Blue Ridge.
·
Ported in Yokosuka, Japan, .
Phillips' service is abOard tbe forward deployed command ship. . '
He graduated from Meigs Hill!
School in 1993 and joined die .
Navy in February 1994.

-~ ~.F

713
Pick 4:'
5169 .

PageS

:Meigs Countg Cliam6er of Commerce
Si{tli Jlnnua{'])inner '])ance
')

Pick 3:.

splaries
slashed

a business.
Ooly Earnings COUDI
. Some p~~~ wonder If tbe .
money tbey · e frotD a ()QIDpa· ny pension plan will affect tbe
amou~t of lbeir Social Se~urily
benef1t.· Well lbe answer u no.
Only your covered eamiogs from
working or self employ~ent are
used to compute your Soaal Security benefit amount. Generally private pensions, savings, or inslll'IID_CC
benefits do not .affect your Social
Security. But please note ... your
total income .can affect lhe amOUDI
of taxes ... 1f any ... you pay on
your Social Security retirement
benefits·:
·
.

In the. service-.-., _ - __ .

Second

birthday
celebrated

Baseball

Ohio Lottery.

&gt;

food costs
decline

WASHINGTON (AP) Wholesale inflation turned in its
best performance in five months as
energy and ·food co.sts declined,
helping to keep the overall price
level from rising at all in'March.
The ' La,or Department said
today l\lat itS Producer Price Index,.
which measures inflationary pressures before they get to tbe consumer, was unchanged last month
after posting 0.3 percent increases
in botll January and February.
It was the best showing since
wholesale prices actually fell by
0.4 percent in October. In advance
of.today:s report, many economists
bad been expecting a moderate rise
or around 0.2 percent.
Financial markets rallied on the
good performance. Prices of longterm bonds, which respond quickly
to wv hint of inflation, soared onthe benign wholesale price report
with demand for the benchmark
30-year Treasury bond pushing its
yield down to 7.36 percent, from
7.39 percent late Tuesday. ·
"These are Lerrific numbers; •
said Eugene Sherman, economist at
M.A. Scbaprio &amp; Co. Inc. in New
York. "From tbe point of view of
conswners, .inflation is not a problem and it does not loom as a prob·
Jcm." ·
Many economists arc predicting
that widespread signs that economic growtb has slowed Ibis year pro- vide evidence tbat the Federal
Reserve's string of seven interest
rate increases are beginning to have
their desired effect or slowing the
economy and keeping inflation
from getting out of control. '

'
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
In addition to delivering mail,
rural letter carriers lhrougbout lhe
siate perform another-job at cenain
nmes of the year - keeping track
of wildlife they encounter. I
Rural carriers have assis ed the
Ohio Division ·of Wildlife since
· !959 by recording lhe numbers of
rabbits, pheasants a.nd quail seen
along their regular route in early
April, according to Wayne D.
Rogers, district. manager for tbe
Columbus district of the United
States .Postal Service.
"Many of our post offices are in
cities, .rownsbips and counties that
have large wildlife populations,"
Rogers said.
.
.&gt; ,
· Rural letter 't:arries have an
excellent opportunity to observe
wildlife, "(1bey) are out delivering
mail six days ~r week in areas tbat
are not heavily traveled," he
explained. ·

At . certain times of the year, consists of voluntarily recorded
' they'll count certain animals for information ~llected over 12 conabou.t-a two week period, said Lljlla secutive working days, according
Hudson, Racine postmaster.
· to division spokeswoman Carol
. "They have a card they mark on Wells.
"· . .
·bow many they see that day," she
The information gathered by the .·
·said.
carriers is real useful, according to
They
don't
nonnally
see
a
lot
of
Dave Scott of the Olentangy
1
stuff, maybe a few rabbits, Hudson Wildlife Research Station in Asb·
added. The cards are then sent back ley.
to the division of wildlife.
Scott said rural letter carrier surHudson said the tally is not time veys are done in otber midwestern
consuming' for the rural carriers.
states.
.
The data collected by rutal carri·
Letter carriers are out there
ers provides biologists witb an every day, they generally use the
index to long tenn trends in popu- same routes, he said. The species
lation and assists i'n planning surveyed are easily identified, not
wildlife mimagement progrmns.
- requiring th.e eye of a trained biolo.
For e~ample, the low population gis~ he added.
of '.Wail reported ·resulted in the
The resulls of. the surveys are
restnetion .of quail hunting ·for a used to figure out effects of winrer
period of time, Rogers noted.
weather .and land use ·changes, he
This year' s survey runs until · said .
April 15 with another survey held
"Their information is good and
in August.
they s.,.m interested in doing it,"
The Rural Mail Carrier Survey he commented.
.
I

Middleport~ Council

to ·
buy lots for boat launch
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council
agreed 10 buy six lots that will
encompass the parking lot of the
h
·
1
new boat Iaunc prOJect at ast
night's regular council meeting.
Middleport grants coordinator
Jean Trussell will negotiate a price
wiUl one property owner who ~as
asked for $15,000. This sum was .
•2 •no rom• th•n the anpraised .

evening.
_
• .
booster station before the May 5
In February, donors from across deatlline.
·
the area pledged 10 give money for
In other business, council:
the docks . Dut, only part of tbe
~approved a third and final
$6,500 pledged has been given to . reading that will change the wning
the village.
from industrial til residential near
· Councilman Nick Robinson said where the Nazarene Church will be
he is concerned the pledges will not built on Gen. Hartinger Parkway.
materialize . The village bad to The church - ncar Vaughan's
co~ mit $21,000 as its match .
Cardinal- is waiting on the g~wh1c·h has been reduced by the eery .store to move ahead w1th
_oth_e_rpledges.
. gr&lt;J,und .breakmg, }\ev. Greg -Cun. · ~aJ·~';_ - ~· - ,. _ " ·. - · .-- . Donations can be .sent'to Mill::-·" ttlll'SU!il. ~
·-:
The project w'ul not be finisbl!d 'dleport Treasurer Tern Hockman.
- . passed the second of three
by the July deadline, but Ohio
The ventme conststs of a 30-by- · readmgs to all~w a gas hne to be
Department of Natural Resources 10-foot floaung dock. a w1der ramp la1d across M•ddiCI]Ort H.tll that
officials have agreed to push .lhis' and a new boater pa:kmg lot, wtll .connect over !he bndge to
date forward to Labor Day.
Trus~ell said. lletwecn ctgbt w:'d 10 Mason, .W.Va.
,
- b1red Vernon LttUc to work
'Tiie state grant will pay up to parkmg spaces for boaters wdl ,be
$94,900 of this.$142,800 project. added between WalnutandRuUand abou.t 35 hours a week for four
Tbe remainder will be paid for by
streets on Front Street.
.
months to mow lawns.
funding from the Meigs County
. In other, gmnt news, the vtlla¥e
-. listed mayor's receipts at
Commissioners and the village.
w11l apply for about $10,000 m
$2,264.75.
The commissioners helped save state grants to rcpll!f the fire depart-is seeking at least $2,375 in
the project by pledging anotber ment roof. Counc1l ~!so agreed ,to
donations
to cover ll1e $4,300 cost
$1_0,000 on top of !be $26,800, sai!l seel: grants for pavmg of Soutb
of
Fourth
of
July ftreworks ..
B'ob Gilmore, acting mayor for the Second Avenue and a new water .

TOURISM COMMITTEE - The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce Tourism Committee last week approved a list of goals and prlorllles focusing on the need for guest lodging
and capitalizing on local outdoor altlvltles.

Com'mlttee l'fielt\bers shown liere Include, clock-· ·
wise from front: Game Protector Keith Wood
Patty Pickens, Tom I&gt;ooley, Rev .. Dawn Spaid:
log, Dorothy Sayre, Rev. Roland Wildman and
Judy Williams.

•

.

•
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