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)

· Pag~1~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April17, 1995

Those owning PCs can get Southern District honor rolls are announced
!~~!;!j_ervice Ye!~so~t~~e~~~t

Reds lose
first game
of season

•

Honor rolls for schools in the Cornell, Aaron Oblinger, Nathan
Southern Local School District for Martia, I jnckey Smitb.
This the !bird nine weeks grading period
Sixth Grille: Cara Ash, Chid
Social Security Manager ·In software is available free of charge have been announced.
Hubbard, all A's; Sara Ball, Nicole
Athens
·
from Adobe's Internet server.
Students earning a grade of "B" Benson, Bnmdoa Hill, Josh Larsen.
.. If you have a personal computer www.adobe .com. After you've
or above in ljll their subjects to be Matthew Wuner, Jeremy Fisher,
and access to·lhe Internet, you can installed and used tile reader so(llisted on the bonor' roll are as fol- Ryan Hill, Jessica Janey.
get faster service when you want a ware, complete lhe fonn and mail it lows;
Letart Falls Ele-otary
free estimate of your future Social back to Social Security t the
Syracuse Elementary
Third Grade: Jason Autberson,
Security benefits.
address shown on lhe fonn. You'll
. First Grade: Ryan Amberger, Ben Carroll, Michael DePue, ChelMore than three million people receive your benefit estimate in
Myca Michael , Chelsea Smith, sa Dilcber, David Gloeckner, Jackeach year write or telephone Social four to six weeks.
Jenny Warner, Bailey ,:&gt;eifert, all ie Gloyd, Tabitha Jones, Stephanie
Security to ask for Form SSAYou can access Social Securi- · A' s; Andy Kinnan, Nicole Michael, Paige Musser, Deana
7004, Request for' Earninqs and ty' s Internet server by direct con- McDaniel, Caitlin Nease, Joey Not- Pullins, Joy Rose, Christopher
Benefit Estimate Sratement In four nection from yqur PC, or through
tingham, Derek Roush, Tiffany . Roush , David Shamblin, Andrea
Co six weeks after completing the an online service to which you sub- Willis.
Tedford, Robert Weddle, Megan
Conn and mailing it back to Socilil scribe, such as CompuServe ,
Second Grade: Ashton Brown; Williams.
Security !hey receive tbe benefit America Online or Prod!gy. People Racbael Courill, all A's; 16mberly
Racine Elementary
estimate.
who don't have Internet access can Clark, Mirinda Davis, Timothy
Third Grade: Stephanie BradNow you can use Social Securi- still request Form ·SSA7004 by
Klaiber, Jacob Nease, Tyler ford, Milce Roush, all A's; Montana
.. ty's Internet server to get the_ !dllling SQ!:ial Security's, toll:free . Roberts, Christopher Warde!:t.
Jarrell, Amy Nonnan, Lis Warns,
tequest fonn right at ¥Qur personlil ]lumber, 1-800-712·1213, 24 hours
Third Grade: Bethany Amberg- . ley.
~omputer, shortening the request
a day.
er, Jordan Bass, Codi Davis, Sarah
Fourth Grade: Amy Lee, lenSocial Security and Children
process by about two weeks.
Hawley, Katie Sayre, all A's; nifer Wlilker, all A's; Adam Blill,
Here's how:
Not everybody who receives
Shawn Barnhart, Timotby Cogar, · Jeri Hill, Jordan Hill, Tara Pickens,
. If you use an· internet "web Socilil Security is old. More than
Kenny McKnight, Amber Mills, Brandon Smith, Tommy Theiss,
browser," ·such as Mosaic, connect three million children under 18 Andrew Philson, Joey Riffie. Andy Leasiann Deem.
to tbe Socilil Security Administra- receive Social Security too. These Smith, Justin Smith, Brandon SturFiftb Grade: Tyler Little. all
· tion Internet site at the address youngsterS receive benefits because · geon, Jeremy Yeager.
A's; Sheri Cummins, Amber
www.ssa.gov. Select "online ser- . their parents are retired or disabled
Fourth Grade: Minmi!Ciiancey, Duffy, Joey Manuel, Rachel Marvic.e s" from Social Security's or have died. You see, Social Secu- Cryslal Cottrill; Miriam El-Dabaja, shall, Lori Sayre.
~home page." Then select "SSArity pays benefits to the families of all A's; Rae bel Chapman.
Sixlh Grade: Brandi Codner,
7004.PDF," an electronic version beneficiaries JIS well as to workers
Fifth Gr;ide: Matthew Ash, Joe Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans.
of the request form, and download themselves. i
it to your computer.
.
Reduced Benefits
; If you connect to the Internet
.l!ven if you're not 65 yet, you
. fhrough the "ftp" protocol rather may still be eligible for Social
Honor rolls ·for schools in the · Wood. overall.
· than through a web browser, use Security retirement benefits. If you
Third Grade: Brittany Hauber,
the address flp .ssa.gov. Change opt for early retirement, you can Eastern Local School Distiict for
ilitectory to /pqb/generlil info and begin rece (ving Social Security the third nine weeks grading period Jonathan Owen, all A's; Alyssa
Holler, Kassandra Lodwick, Ryan
download by binary transfer SSA- benefits as early as age 62. To find have been announced.
Studenrs earned a grade of "A"s, Stobait, Rebecca Taylor, overlill.
1004.PDF.
·
out more about reduced Social
Riverview Elementary
: To read and print the form at Security benefits, call 1·800· 772- "B" or above in all academic subjects
and
a
grade
no
lower
than
"C"
Sixth
Grade; Amber Baker,
your personal computer, you'll , 1213. I
.
·
in
art,
handwriting,
music
and
Brandon Browning, Amber
':Iced a copy of the Adobe Acrobat ·
physical educa!ion to make the Church, Nathan Marcinko, overall.
honor roll.
Fifth Grade: Danielle Rucker,
The list includes the following overall.
Fourth Grade: Nichol Honaker,
temlil Order of tbe Eagles, Tues- students from their respective
MONDAY
schools:
all
A's ; Krystal Baker. Cyrus
RACINE- Racine .Village day, 7:30p.m. at the blill.
Chester Elementary
Abbi [fbompson, Ryan
.
Knotts,
RUTLAND - Rutland· Fire
Council, recessed session, Monday,
Sixth Grade: Cinda Clifford, ali Wachter, overall; Randall Mabon,
Departmenl Ladies Auxiliary, A's; Juli Bailey, Kristen Chevalier,
i p.m St.ar Mill Park.
academic.
Tuesday, 6 p.m. al fire sration. All . Josh
Clark, John Cooke, Wes
T~rade: Cody Ba rtrum.
:· LETART - Letart Township · members asked to attend.
Crow, 'Joey Taylor, Jason Wainer, Sandy Powell. Hollie Rose. Tyler
Trustees will hold a regular meetWEDNESDAY
overlill.
Thompson, Annette Tucker, overfig 81 7 p.m. Mon&lt;)ay at the office.
POMEROY - J\lzheimers DisFifth Grade: Tammy .Bissell, all. ,
ease/Related Disorders support Jon Duffy, Ben Holter, Garrett
Tuppers Plains Elementary
TUESDAY
group, first in series of four public Karr, Jon Will, Charlie Young, all
·
Sixth Grade: Joshua Kehl, all
MASON, W.Va. - Veterans of . education on AD/RD, Wednesday, A's ; Jessica Bartels, Anthony
A's;
Matthew Grubb, Kevin
t:oreign Wars Post 9926 Ladies I :30 to 4 p.m., Meigs Multipurpose Bearhs, Holly Broderick, 'Tiffany
Justin Robertsmi, Wesley
Keaton,
· Auxiliary will hold election of offi- Senior Center. Call Lenora
.
Hensley,
Whitney
Kar(,
Sara
Shafer,
Gary
Vierling, overlill
cers for 1995-96 Tuesday at 7 p.m. Leifheit, 992-2161, for more infor- Mansfield, Evan Needs, overall;
Fifth
Grade:
Bradley tliannon,
~tluck dinner after the meeting.
mation.
·
Michael Taylor, academic.
Lindsey
Cross,
Tina
DeLa Cruz,
POMEROY
Narcotics
Fourth
Grade:
Carrie
Crow,
aU
Tiffany
Kidder,
Chris
Lyons,
Kim. BEDFORD - Bedford Volun- Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
A's;
Travis
Batey,
Brent
Bucldey,
berly
Marcinko,
Sracie
Watson,
all
teer Fire Department committee, 7 Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
'Jessica
Dillon,
Cacy
Faulk,
AmanA's;
:rberesa
Baker,
Michael
Benp.m. Tuesday at Darwin town hall.
Mulberry Avt;nue, Pomeroy. Any- da Fetty, Sonya Frederick, Mathew ·
one with drug problem may attend. 0' Brien, Jennifer Thoma, Chelsea net~ Janet Calaway, Darlene Connolly, Ashley Hager, Jared
POMEROY - Auxiliary, Fra- . No dues or fees , 1-.800-7664442.

Emily Slivers. all A's; Michael Friend, Amber Hayes, Nikki
Blill, Kati Cummins, Tony Hupp, Robinson, Jessica Roush, Jennifer
Sbauna Manuel, Jessica Nance; Roush, Ranetta Wbeeler.
Tenth Grade: Emily Dubi,IeSsi. Fallon Rowh, Jamie Stemple, Erin
ca Sayre, Amber 'J"bom¥, all A's;
· Struble.
Brian Allen, Matt Evans, Nathan
Portland Elemeotay
Haines,
Hillery Harris, Mark
Fourtb Grade: Alan Moore, AllLewis,
Greg
McKinney, Tonia
son Smith. .
Ftftb Grade: Amanda Huddle- · Nazarewycz, Amy R,izer, Greyson
Taylor, Matt Theiss', Sarah Wlillston, all A's; T. J. Moore.
brown, CraiB Wolfe.
Sixth Grade: Gamt Kiser.
Eleventh Grade: Jason Barnett,
Southern Jr. High
Seventh Grade: Jamie Baker, C.J. Harris, Rochelle .ltn!tins, JenKyle Nbrris, Chris Randolph, Braii- nifer Lawrence, Denise Roush,
don Wolfe, Stacey Ervin, lill A's; Rayan Young, Iii! A's; Kim CorBrawn Herman: Kim lble, Amber nell, Jennifer Cummins, Robin
Maynard, Rich Sturgill, Sarah Gillispie, John Hanilon,, Paul lble,
Brauer, Dena Sayre, Jennifer Shain, Bea Lisle, Jyl Mathews, Jay McK•
Jon Smith, Jessica Alley, Erin elvey, Becky Moore, Jaspn Shuler,
Boliq, Willie Cgllins, Heather Dai- Samrni Sisson, Nick Smith.
.ley, Josh Davis, Melissa Francis.
- Twell1h Gmdl:: Brian Anderson.
Eighth Grade: Jennifer Carle1on, Grant Circle, Mason Fisher, Kevin
Jesse Little, all A's: Suzanne fhle, ·Man Morrow, Kendra Norris,
Evan s, Aslili Davis, Ty Johnson, Jim Randolph, Brandy Roush ,
Jessica Theiss, Christa Circle, Josie Courtney Roush, all A' s; Peggy
Jarrell, Kara King, Patty Lawrence, Caruthers, Erica Dugan, Chris Hen- .
Jason Roush, Kim Sayre, Jeremy dricks , Carrie Malone, Andrea
Johnson.
Moore, Shannon Morarity, David
Southerii"High
Pickens, Tracy Pickett, Jeremy
Ninth Grade: Cynthia Caldwell, Smith, Forres1 ·Teaford , Amy
Stephanie Stemple, Evan Struble, Weaver, Ry;m Williams.
Billy Young , all A's ; Amanda
Adkins, Crystlil Coleman, Jennifer

..__-Community calendar-

Marcinko, Billie.Jo Welch, overall.
Fourth Grade: Ashley Boyles,
LeAnn Marcinko, Thomas Sim mons, Tyler Simmons, Jaime Whitlock, Carrie. Wiggins, Aaron Yost,
. overall.
Third Grade: Jessica Boyles,
Hailee qine, Chrissie Gregory,
Ryan Kidder, Nicholas Weeks,
overall.
•
Eastern High School
Twelfth Grade: Julie Brown,
Jessica Chevalier, Janet McDonlild,
Delcky Mcintyre, David Toundas,
Iii I A's; Roger Arix, Charles Bi.ssell, Susan Brewer, Ryan Buckley,
· Randy Burke, Dina Combs. Beckv
Driggs, Ryan Ho'llon, Joe
Karschnik, Annie King, Heidi Nelson, Jeff Stethem, Vic VanMeter,
SL1cy Woolard, overalL
Eleventh Grade: Rebecca Evans,
Jessica Karr, Jennifer Mora, Ginger
Nutte d Connie. Pooler, Brandi
Reeves, all A's; Michael Barnett,
Brian Bowen, Holly Cleland,
Melissa De'mpsey, Jessica Frederick, Jorge Gomez, Robert Hoff.
man , Lena Knotts. Traci Lance,
Mike Laughery, Crystal Morris, ·
Nicole Nelson, Micah Otto, Crystal
Summerfield, Heather Well.

632
Pick 4:
4480

Buckeye 5:
2-22-23-30-36

•

'

Vol. 45, NO. 247

Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

·Copyright t995

WEST VIRGINIA'S t1 COIMRSlON VAIIIJEAI.EIIIIAS AIIINVEifT'ORY
IF OVER 300 IIIWIIIIEW CHEVROlET COIIVBISIOII VAliS. - ·
. .
'
Selectioo Includes Astra All Wheel Drives and G-20's, both avallallle with raislld roofs or low lops. Prices 1'111198 lrom $17,388 to
$36,988.

.

'

$11,388**

$11,688-

No Doc Fees ~IYflf«&lt;'

BRAND
'95 CHEVY
S-sERIES EXTEJIDED CAB PICKUP
• E•ler&lt;leO Cab

" ~itb.lg

.

• Rear An"-locl&lt; Blai&lt;"'

• Power Steerog
• Power Brak"'

.: CusiQffi CIOlh tnlef!OI

· P205/7sR wr,.,
• Steel ~ted Tm

"Sale Pnce lrclt.des GM"C F~st Tme
iluyef '""""''" ()..ailied.

Certified used car buyers will be oo haitd to give hlgiMist trade-in
value for your automobile. Please bring ·your title, registration
card, and payment book if applicable.
NO SALES P£Rfi1111Br TO DEAWIS. This clearance is for ietajl cus·
..m.rs only. Prices apply to available units only. No ordering permitted at these prices.
.

$17,388
P+o Oct Fees. Oelri«IJl'

BRAIIIEW '95 CIEVY AmiD EXTENIED1:IIIIVEBII VAN
• 16 Vallie Power
• Dnve! SMle Alttag

• 4Wheel AnM.od&lt; Blakes
• Power Steenng

r BQwer~

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• Power !loaf locks
·•• At.llft.l Stereo
• Sljled Whee~
• Sleet Belted Tir"'

•

c-~WellEquipfled!-:--== -

• E•tertded Chas•s
·PIS, Pia
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•
• Dnver Side All Bag • Pawl!! W!I1&lt;10Ws. • lrtd~recll~hiJnQ
• Anb-loc:j&lt; Boak"'
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• Prem•um \'lood ~)I·
• A11 Coml&lt;lian
Jtt,.(:rUJ&gt;f~~u llCooversK&gt;n
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· V1sta Bay W•rtdows • Captaon Chairs ·loaded!

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344-5947 • 422·0756

BRAIID NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVEIIJE
• Du~ An Comlortemp • Aluminum Wheels
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• Power ilr!v&lt;!tl;'r • to1!11ed! •• " · ~ · ..,,
• AMIFM Cassene
Passenger Seat
• All Condition
• Dual Awliag

Munday - Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cente
A MultlmedioJnc. ~·paper

Q!"llo, Tuesday, April 18, 1995

Law abolishes Ohio genercll assistance

..

COLUMBUS CAP) -. Gov. Goorge Voinovicb used bis veto power to
'"This ' legislation presents significant operational and funding issues ·
strike two sections of a new law tbal will end Ohio.' s Generlil Assistance and cannot be implemented as proposed," Voinovicb said.
welfare program Ibis summer.
He said the bill did not clearly identify people eligible for lhe medical
Voinovicb, who signed the bill into law Monday, said the two provi- · ~fits, could have provided benefits to people 1\'00 did DOl previously
:sions were vaguely defined and would be difficult to pay for.
receiVe Generlil Assistance, and did not put a time limit on benefits.
Voinovicb wants to use about $200 million in savings from the proHe said tbe veto would allow his administration and legislators 10
gram's demise to fmance welfare reforms in separate legisi~Jtion tbat bas develop an appropriate and affordable medical plan for low.income
Ohioans,
.
yet to pass.
.
Generlil Assisrance provides cash benefits of S100 a 1110ntb up to six
Voinovicb lilso vetoed a proposed adult emergency assistance program
months a year. Payments go to an average 61,000 able-bodied adults each for people.18 and older.
'
'"The provision is underfunded because it does not limit the number of
montb.
Voinovicb vetoed two sections of tbe bill that olberwise takes effect in times a person may receive emergency assistance for shelter, utilities and
work-related e~penses within a 12-month period,' ' be said.
90days.
Voioovicb said the legislation would duplicate coverage lilready proOne would have established a mediclil program for individulils who
previously had received Generlil Assistance.casb and mediCal benefits.
vided under tbe Family Emergency Assistance program.
.

-···

A Morgan County judge Monday denied a fonner Pomeroy attorney's
, .
request Cor post-conviction relief.
D. Michael Mullen was convicted of corrupting two Pomeroy girls, ·
. ages II and 13, witb drugs on March 12 and 13, 1993. Mterwards, the
youths were treated for overdose at nearby Veterans Memorilil Hospital.
In a recenl petition for post-conviclion relief subm1ned to Morgan
Common Pleas Judge Dan Favre~~u. who heard the case, Mullen lilleged
his prosecution was tbe result of personal animosity towards him.
· In addition, be lilleged key defense wilrlesses were not served subpoenas and that his life was threatened on at least two occasions with county
officials failing to take action.
•
1
In bis judgement entry, Favreau wrote that Mullen was convicted and
that the ·conviction was aff1nned by the Fourlh District Coun of Appeals.
He said tbe issues raised by Mullen were without merit or inappropriate
and bad no effect on the OUICOme Of the trial.
.

lly GEORGE ABATE .,
Sentinel News StaiT
Government officials may t3ke
sever;~! months before deciding
whether to drop long dis1ance
charges between the Pomeroy and
Mason, W.Va., exchanges, a telephone official said Monday.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and its West Virginia
counterpart are curren tly weighing
tbe costs to local and long-distance
telephone companies, said Pat
Cook. GTE coordinator for regulalory affairs.
"Right now we're pretty much
at a standstill until costs arc
resolved," Cook said.
Las! fall, slate agenci es held
public hearings in Po·mcroy and
Mason to detennine the need for
tb e service. Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant. W.Va .. exchanges have
had loclil calling charges for severlilyears.
In December 1993, U.S. District
Ju~ge Harold Green rejected three
similar requests for the first time.
Green changed his acceptance of
these s~rvices because of com-

'

a!

'I'

'

Three people were taken to area hospitals following a two-car accident Monday at the intersection of State Route 7 and Hobson Drive. Kathryn V. Hal~ 69, 37012 Wolfe l'en Road, Pomeroy,
was admitted to Holzer Medical Center, while Lonnie G. Browning, 55, and Fredda G. Browning,
4'1', both of 558 White Hollow Road, Patriot, were both treated and released from Veterans
Me:moriallfospltal. The Gallla·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Hall was westbound
on Hobson Drive at 9:40 a.m~ pulled from the stop sign onto 7 and collided with Lonnie BrownIng's northbound car. Both c;ars were moderately damaged and Hall was cited for failure to yield,
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
··

Pennsylvania men face charges
in alleged theft, high-speed ch~se
Suspects injured
after truck crashes
near Langsville

DAVID KASMENN
plaints from large telephone companies.
·
This case is uniqu e because
Green has asked the interexchange
c'arriers - . AT&amp;T, MCI and Sprint
- for input. Previously, these
companies had intervened because
th~ local clills cut out the long-dis:
tance proftts.
Once Green acts on lhe request.
arate structure will be decided, sbe
added.
Loclil clillers would be charged
(Continued on Page 3)

New housing·
starts reach
2-year low
WASHINGTON (AP)- Housing starts plun.ged 7.9 percenL in
March to a two-year low despite
falling mortga ge rates that had
been expected to spur the industry
during the spring home-buying season.
Tbc March drop marked the ftrst ·
three-month string of declines in a
year. Every region excepl for the
Northeasl shared in the loss, t~e
latest evidence of a slowing economy.
.
.
. .
. --- - ,. · The Commerce [)Qparunent saidconstruction of new single-family
bomes and apartments to~'lled 1.21
million at a seasonally adjusted
annual rate, lowest since a 1.07
million rate in March.l993.
Starts had fallen 3.7 percent
from a revised 1.32 million rate in
February and 1.50 million a year
earlier. They originlilly bad been
estimated to have fallen just 2.6
percent last month.
· The &lt;leclines in January, February and March were lhc fust three-·
month string of losses since the
first thre·e months of 1993. Starts

.'

"The Adult Emergency Assistance program, however, should mirror
tbe federlil Family Emergency Assistance program .in thai elllergency
costs should be covered only one time witbin a 12-month period. To do
olherwise would crea1e an ongoing entitlement program which is underfunded and probably unintended," Voinovich said.
. Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Galena, chief sponsor of the bill, said the
vetoes were understandable .
. ·~The amendments were inttod~ t!!e !ast minute witbopt a lot of
study,'' Lawrence said in an interview.
.
·
·
During debate in the House on the bill last month, Democrats portrayed the cut as an attack on lhe poorest of the poor.
·
Republicans countered that lhe issue was not compassion, but the best
way to help the poor achieve independence from welfare. They said a
government safety net remained in place despite the loss of Generlil
·
Assistance.

Crash leaves three injured

M·unen's request
·for prison relief
rejected by judge

No --decision
yet on area
phone service

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 800 BRAND IIEW
QEVIII,.ETS, IIJJSfiUIUS, PONTIACS, BIDS, GEOS AND CUSTOM
. YAir. All will be sold at &amp;tthstantlal di&amp;counis!

Lottery

Pick 3:

PageS

Eastern District honor rolls are announced
Tenth Grade: Meredith Crow,
Maria Frecker, all A's; Patsy Aeiker, David Baker, Angela Bissell,
Candace Bunting, Catherine
Coram, Billy Francis, Traci Heines,
. Martie Holter, Robert Keaton, Sean
Maxey, Amanda Milhoan, Leslie
Parker, Jeff Rankin, Erin Sexton,
Michael St. Clair, Lisa Stetbem,
Tracy While, overlill.
Ninth Grade: Kelli Bailey,
Stephanie Bearlis, Michelle Caldwell, Billie Pooler, Iii! A' s; Vicki
Adams. Chris Buchanan, Brandon
Buckley, Jamie Drake, Joanna
Gtimpf, Jeremiah Kchl, Jeff Kimes, ·
Lamar Lyons, Heather Naylor.
Angela Riling, Michael Weeks,
Nicole White, overlill.
Eighth Grade: Stephanie Evans,
all A's; Valerie K.arr, Adam
Sanders, Mike Sobieski, Jason
Stevens, Steven Whitlock, Aaron·
Will, overall'; David Putnam,
Heather Rockhold, academic.
Seventh Gqde: Matt Caldwell.
Maureen Heines, Jessica Pore,
Jos·hua Will, lill A's; Man Bissell,
Milll Boyles, Joshua Broderick,
Chasatie Hollon, Brook Nichols,
Edward Schaekel, Amanda Upton,
Amanda Wheeler, overall; Jeremy
Gillilan,
Guess, academic.

~hi~

From OVP Staff Reporl•
Two Pennsylvania men face
num erou s charges in Galiia and
Meigs counties after they allegedly
. stole a truck and led authorities on
a high-speed chase Ibis morning. '
Arrested by tbe Meigs County
Sheriffs Department were William
. G. George, 22, and Hugh James
Hawkey, 20, both of Greensburg .
The two ·lillegedly broke into a
garage at Bostic Motor Sales, 1010
F.irst Ave., Gallipolis, took the keys
to a 1992 Toyota pickup and drove
off with the truck, the Gallipolis
Police Department reported.
Meigs Sheriff James Soulsby
said the pair then put .gasoline in
the truck at Cheshire and drove off
without paying before proceeding
north into Meigs on Stale Route 7.
The &lt;:base be gao when a Mid ·

dleport Police Department cruiser
attempted to stop tbe vehicle on
Hobson Drlve. The truck struck a
stop sign and went through a yard
before heading northbound again
on 7, Soulsby said.
With speeds of up to 80 mph;
the chase proceeded along State
Route 124 through Rutland and
turned onto County Road 10 (Dexter) in Langsville before the truck
crashed.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Srate Highway-Patrol said George,
who was driving th e truck, was
northbound, five-tenths of a mile
north of 124, at 12:07 a.m. when be
los! control, went off the right side
of the road and struck a culvert.
The truck then ovenumed onto its
top. troopers said.
George and Hawkey were
injured in the crash, according to
the patrol. The Rutland .Sqaud .or
the Meigs EMS transponc:d George
to Veter~ns Memorial Hospital,
where he was treated and released
back to sheriffs deputies. Hawkey

was initililly raken to VMH but was
later transferred to Holzer Mediclil
Center, where a hospital spokesperson said be was treated and
released for a knee contusion.
. The patr~l lis!Cd damage to the
truCk as severe. George was placed
in the Meigs County Jail and
Hawkey was lodged in the Gallia
County Jail.
Besides the Middleport cruiser,
two sheriff's cruisers were also
involved in the chase.
Soulsby said George has outstanding warrants in Pennsylvania
while Hawkey has an extensive
criminal his10ry, including a charge
of fleeing stemming from an auto
theft in Florida.
Tbe men face Meigs charges of
felony fleeing and attempted vehicular assault, along wit.h numerous
traffic and safety violations including failure to wear seal belts, left of
center, expired operator's license,
failure to control an\1 reckless operation.

Pomeroy
renews
cable TV
franchise
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News StaiT ·
.Pomeroy \tjllage Council
renewed the vi llage's cable television franchise with Cablevision of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., when it met
Monday .
Cablevi sion manag er Les!er
Erri u presented council with a proposed 15- year franchise to replace
the exi sti ng 25-year franchise,
which expires this month.
Pomeroy councilmen decided to
renew ·the franchise at the existing
ra1e where the village receives 3
percent of a monthly cable television bill. Communities can opt to
receive up to 5 percent, Erritt said.
Most communities are opting to
inaease lhe franchise rate to 5 pcrcenl, Erritt sai d. The company
doesn't like that because it resembles a rate bike when tbe added
cost is passed lilong to subscribers.
"We' re going to stay at 3 percent regardless of what other communities are doing," said Mayor
John W. Blaettnar.
"A lot of seniors rely on this
~ice and the village is financial ly sec ure enough to continue the
franchise at the existi ng rate," he
added.
Continuing the franchise at the
existing rate will save the village's
estimated 850 Cablevision subsct'ibers about $65,000 over the life
of tbe franchise.
Erriu said the company is currently upgrading its system· to
(Continued on Page 3) ·

Southern's
boardOKs
staff layoffs

By GEOR.G E ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The Sou lh ern Local Board of
Education laid off several workers
to allow ·for the closing of tbe
Racin e Elementary School a1 its
regular board meeting Monday.
The 'board agreed to end th~ ,
contracts for some secretaries, custodians and other suppon sraff.
Many of the decisions to divide
the students were based on the size
of tbe classes ar other elementary
evening after the June 12 m'urders Day,9 on the stand :-- the longest schools, said Superinlcndcnt James
of Simpson's ex -wife and her · stint of any witness so far- and Lawrericc.
friend, leaving it unaccounted for more hostile questioning from
" We haven ' t established a:ny
until the next day and providing an defense attorney Barry Scbeck .
romes" to shuttle students who live
. Judge Lance llo also was to in Racine Village to other schools,
opportunity for it to be planted.
But Gpldberg showed a video- decide today on a defense request Lawrence said . "Many streets are
tape of Vannatter carrying a gray to allow Simpso n 10 be present not wide enough."
envelope - the kind of envelope when the judge cond.ucts one-onThe building's remaining seven
thai Fung said conrained the vial. A one interviews with jurors.
teachers will be placed based on
less·clear video appeared to show • Ito plans tb question abput tl)ree seniority, Lawrence said. Tbe rankFung holding the envelope and a or four jurors a day about a di s- ing will occur after May I.
plastic bag be said was used to missed paneli st's allegations of
In response to parent questions
•
carry tbe envelope.
racial divisions and personal ani- from paren's about first graders
. • The defense said b!QO&lt;I smears • mosities. He also is investigating Jlei!'B _moved _inJo .~.e §tp3ll build,
-on -tlieboit()nl dcxii:]7illib i)'tSimri:""'the:conduclol"sbcfllT's deputies - mg i\'faf the jumor '!Ugh rather than ..
sixtb g('aders. Lawrence explained
son's Ford Bronco were the imagi- guarding the group.
nation of Detective Mark fuhnnan
On Monday, Goldberg
lhal the desks and bathrooms are
- who is accused of planting a whose courtroom presence will made for smaller stodents.
bloody glove behind Simpson's never be confused with F. Lee BaiTeachers Tricia McNickle and
mansion - and tbat Fung lied ley's - went about repairing Margaret Smith - who both bad
about taler seeing the smears 10 Fun~·s testimony in a slow, metiC· one,year contracts - were termicover up for Fuhrman.
ulous manner. ·
nated. They will remain on a reclill
But Goldberg showtjd a J?boto- .
The photo evidence pame early list for the next two y.ears if 'POSi·
graph of what Fung 1dent1f1ed. as .in the day. The res! of the afternoon tions become available, Lawrence
four bloosl spotS - one of whtcb was spent on lcss-effecti ve efforts said.
could be visible when the door is to explain apparent sloppiness by
The board also reduced two
closed, ,as . il was the morning Fung and his tendency to rake cred- four-hour secretaries earning full
Fubnnan srud he saw the spots.
it for work ~c only supervised.
benefits to one eight-hour secreFung returns to court today for
•
(Continued on Page 3)

Focus on bloo~ repairs standing
of .S impson prosecution witness

!.,.1~~

during the first three months of
1995 were 9.5 percent lower than
the same period of 1994.
Anlilysts had expectdl--starts to
rebound to a 1.35 million rate in
March as a re~lt of flilling mortgage rates and tile start of the
spring home-buying season.

LOS ANGELES (AP) .- " As
!heater, prosecutor Hank Go ldberg 's re-questioning of a bat!Cred
police criminlilist was as exciting
as a reading of the U.S. tax code.
Even the judge suggested i~ was
boring.
In substance, though, Monday's
redirect examination of Dennis
Fung bclped breathe life back into
a crucial part of the case againsl
O.J . Simpson -the blood evi·
dence. Goldberg presented yidcos
. lind photps thal bl:.,sllid refut~ -tOO
defense theory of a police frameup .
.
.
"It wasn't flashy, it wasn"t
exciting, but Hank Goldberg got
the job doll!),'' said Loyola University law professor Laurie Leven·
son. "! think they neutrlilized a
great deal of the de"rense attack.
The only question is whether the
jurors bung· in or tuned out."
Among th~ points Goldberg
made;
•
·
• The defense said Detective
Philip Vannatter never gave l-ung a
vial of Simpson's blood the

,,

�Commentar
The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Cout ltnet
PoaltiO)'. Ohio

.I"WMDIA.INC
ROIIEJP' L. WINGE'IT
Publllller
MARGARETI.EREW
Cofttroller

CIIAltl.tM£ HOEFLICH

GelieniMa-cer

U!TI'I!IlS OP OPINION . , -laJme. They obould be leoa than. 300
wordl Iona. Ali lotten ue 111bjoct to
ODd muat be aisned with lllllle,
lddreu lilt! telepbone number. No Ullli
lotten will be published. !.etten
abould be iD 100&lt;1 tatte, addruliDa u.-, mt .,...,.,o!itiea.

-:!f

The 1994 'Contract'
may spill into 1996
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
CONCORD, N.H. -Beyond the theatrical hundred days of the House
Republican "Contract wilb America," that platfonn of tbe last campaign
may tum out to have more impact on the next one, for the GOP presiden'
tial nOQiination.
In the pre-season' maneuVering for the New Hampshire presidential primary, conservatives are saying that GOP voters will see the House program as a commitnient for lbe entire party.
The poUs indicated that few voters really knew what was in it during
the 1994 congressional campaign. But it bas become a symbol of detenninatioo to change an unpopular govcmmeri't.
That could be a headache for Sen. Bob Dole, the majority leader and
leading candidate for the 1996 presidential nomination, who said, quite
correctly, that it's not bis contracL Senators didn't sign it.
Even so, an influential New Hampshire conservative said Dole will
have trouble in the leadoff primary state if he is seen as backing away
from the House contract.
"He'd ronip in New Hampshire today," this official said, asking
anonymity 10 preserve his early campaign neutrality. .
·
Dole said the Senate wiD approve a tax cui this year, but not the one
that passed the House as part of the contract That's always so on tax bills.
and on otber major measure. Compromise, in and between the two
branches of Congress, shapes biUs. "You know, we didn't sign the 'Contract with America,"' Dole said in TV interviews the morning after his
keynote rally in New Hampshire. "That doesn't mean we don't support
most of it. ... "
In the Senate, they go their own way, Dole said. "Always have."

Page 2

Pomii'Oy-Middltport, Ohio

1\18.c~ay, Aprll18, 1895

GOP health plans face rocky road
Beaeatb die uface, Republican years and up to $300 billion over
plana for healtb reform Ire just aa seven years, wbicb Heal til I!Dd
ambitious as the total overhaul Human Services Secretary Donna
President Cllnloa proposed last Sbalala calls •'reckless' • and
year. and the same fate may await
them - biller opposition and
Morton Kondrac""'
defeat.
- - - - -----...1!.'!!
Already, lbc ftnl "Harry and "catastrophic."
Louise" ad is' being tried out in
The administration baa yet to
New York state - a union-spon- recommend any new cuts in the
sored spot showing an attractive program, currently budgeted at
couple worrying tbal cuts for hOOle $175 billion. Officials say Clinton
care will foice them to put Grand· might agree to $SO billion over live
ma into a nii[Jing home or compel years.
.
the wife 10 quit working 10 care for
Focus groups conducted by a
ber mother. •'Grandma'' is seen . top Republican pollster confinn.
worriedly listening to the children tbat older people regard cuts in
debate berfate.
Medicare as indistinguishable from
Besides unions, GOP plans are cuts in Social Security, wbicb
being fought by retiree groups, Republicans have declared. "off the
"tbe most powerful lobby in the table."
countrywiththepossibleexcepdon·
What's more, when tbe GOP
of lbe trial lawyers," accoJ'IIing to · House and Senate task forces
Sen. Bob Bennet~ R-Utah, head of unveil their bealth care proposals
the Senate GOP· task force on shortly after Congress comes back
beallb refonn.
from recess, it's likely that they'll
GOP budget-balancing plans be attacked- much as Clinton's
call for Medicare to be cut by some plan was last year - for •'denying
$150 billion over the next five choice" and costing too much.

--------.....J

Letters to the editor
As the father of D. Michael
Mullen,' I feel that it is necessary. to
reply to· some of the statements
made by the Meigs Couqty Prosecutor as published in The Daily
Sentinel April 4th. ·
According to Micbael, his life
was threatened by an individual
who pulled a knife and said be was
going to kill him. Michael said that
'he called Pomeroy authorities who
came to the scene and took his
statement The matter was s~hed­
uled for hearing in the Pomeroy
Mayor's Court. On the day of the
bearing Michael was advised by
tile Pomeroy Chief of Police that
this appeared to be a.felony and, as
such, all infonnation was given to
the Prosecutor.
I am aware of no action whalSO·
ever being taken by the Prosecutor
or hi$ staff.
Michael said that at the lime
Brenda Fry6 shot' her ex-husband
she aimed her shotgun at him. He
said that be disarmed her, bad
anomer person secure the weapon,
anolber to call the police and EMS
and l)len restrained Mrs. Frye until
Ule authorities arrived.
It is my opinion that no one bur
a sober and alert person in full
command of his faculties could
have reacted as he did. I believe
that Mr. Lcntcs' statement of his
being intoxicated is botb a lie and
libelous. If there were any unusual
action.s by Michael, at that lime, it
is my opinion that they would have
come from having an attempt made
on bill life. I feel that only one whQ
· bas llad a shotgun pointed at. ~is
bead with the threat of death can
understand and appreciate bow one
reaCts under Ulcse circumstances.
In addition, if be were not
sober, certain!~ the Prosecutor or
the police would have prefe&lt;Jed
charges against him for intoxication. When the original 16 charges
were filed our investigator told the
Prosecutor, "You forgot ro cliargc.
him with the sinking of the Titanic
and llle Lindberg kidnapping." I
thjnk that if tbere were legitimate
reasoos to file another charge tbey
mostc::crtainly would have done so.
No charges were ever filed
again6! Mrs. Frye for what Michael
felt was an auempt on his Ufe.
When the stepfather forced his
":BY into the bouse on two occa-

sions on or about June 7, 1993 and
according to Michael threatened his
life, Michael was arrested and
charged with intimidating a wit. ness. The dwelling is owned by us,
Michael's parents. We both then
and now fear for the safety of our
property'1and, at that time, for
Michael's life . On June the 9th,
1993, we filed a complaint with
Robert Beegle of the Meigs Coun\y
Sheriff's office requesting a
restraining order· against this indi·
vidual. According to the Sheriffs
secretary this was given to the
Prosecutor's office the following
day, June lOth, 1993. As of this
date, April 5, 1995 nothing has
been done and we have never been
contacted by the Prosecutor or his
staff regarding this matter.
Michael has also requested a
restraining order against the Prosecutor and his staff, past, present
. and future, 10.prevent their harassing some of his witnesses and other
persons. We can only assume that
the request will be ignored as was
the other.
It appears that both Michael and
we will join the list of victims of
"the well known and infamous
Meigs County Justice."
Yours truly,
Don E. Mullen
Middleport
(Ed. Note: Statements in the
April 4 story to which the writer
makes reference were taken

from a brief filed .by Meigs County Prosecutor John Lentes In the
Meigs County Co,u rt of Common
'Pleas in objectlon to Mullen's"
petition for post-conviction relief.
[n reference to an all~ged
threat on Michael Mullen.'s life
by an individual with a knife, the
prosecutor said that complaint
and others were investigated and
no grounds for charges were
found.
As for the allegation or hara....
ment, Lenles said that none of
the wilnesse5 or others listed in
the pelilion for post•convlclion
relfef were contacted.
About the Frye shooting,
Lenles said that Mullen was
. q ue•tioned follo)¥lng the 1h~llng
and officials found no reason to
believe Brenda ,Frye also planned
to shoot Mullen.)

Seeks family information
Dear Editor
1 am appealing 10 the people in
the Pomeroy area to help me with
infonnatlon on my family .
. I have been searching for the
VerylJ family and have just recently ~earned they are from Meigs
County.
Ella Mae Venoy's parents were
Lewis Rickard Venoy, born 1862,
\

and Hattie Lenora Baker.. Lewis'
parents were Anthony Venoy and
Abigail Stanley, married, Jan. 21,
1851.
"
Anyone with imonnation may
contact me at Route 3, Box 382,
Millon, W.Va. 25541.
Sincerely •
Barbara King
Milton, W. Va.

On the surface, OOP ideas seem
far simpl~r tbaa the 1,400-page
proposal developed by ftrst lady
Hillary Roc!ham Clinton.
In reality, though, the Republicans have in tnind just as tadical a
transformation of Lbe current bealth
system as the Cllntoas did,
although in the opposite direction
from their govemmi:nt-!Jeavy proposal.
Beonelt ultimaJely wants to dismantle the 50-year-old e}llployerbased bealtb insurance system and
instead make each person re~ponsible for his or her own insurance,
the way auto insurance now woiks. There's a lotto recommend the
"paradigm sbift" be advocatesincluding tbe job mobility of
today' s workers and the fact that
workers aren't cost-conscious
when their employer is paying pre·
miums. But getting from tbe
employer-based system 10 the individual system will involve scary
transitions that could torpedo the
entire process.
'For instance, a favorite GOP

I "ftliNK T/"le'fRe GelriNG
To Tlie SPeciFiCS
OF THe SuDGeT CUTS.

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, bas reported ori Washington and
national polldcs for more tban 30 years.
·

Mullen's reply

The Dally Sentinel

•

•.

. [

proposal Is the "tnedlcal savi~gs:
account" :- or ~SA -:- wbtcb
almost cerlalnly ~ill be pan of leg-.
islalion proposed m both the Hou~
and Senate.
.
.
The problem ts that MSAs have(
a serious flaw: They may bankru~
the present health insurance s~stem
almost as surely as Republicans;
suspected that the Clinton plan
would.
.
·
Thai's be~aus.~ ~e 1dea ~i~.~
lnsu,rance 1s nsk-sharmg . ·:
Young, beal~y people pay P~~'
utns along w1th older and ~1cker
people to create a poollllat w11l Jllll'
the medical bills of whoeve~
becomes ilL
But M~As would gi_ve yo~nger
and bealth1er peoj&gt;le an mcenuve !'&gt;
abandon regular ms~ce. They d
take out ~b~ap pohc1es to cover
catastrophtc 1ll~esses and get cash
for ~-free ~vmg~ accounts 10 pay
ordmary ~ed1cal b1Us. . .
Mea~ume, regular m_surance
comp:tmes would be cove~g oldt;r
and s1ckcr people. To stay m bus•ness, they'd have to raise rates significantly. Some people would
bave to go uninsured. Others would
be furious at the politicians who
cost them so much money:
This problem with MSAs will
lead to furious opposition from
major insurance companies, ·large
health care providers, and some
moderate and conservative health
economists such as Uwe Reinhardt
of Princeton and John Cogan of
Stanford.
'A parallel problem exists with
Lbe most popular GOP idea of all
- incremental insurance reform
that assures "portability" of insurance from job to job, prevents
denial of insurance on the basis of
pre-existing conditions, and allows
small companies to form large
pools.
Such steps- especially the rule
on ('re-existing conditions - will
rruse msurance rates, agam anllering consumers and voters.
Asked about the cost problem,
Dennen said, " I don't have an
answer. If I did, we'd already have ·
a bill."
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Fund companies are coming .together
The latest mutual fund company I 0 to 15. percent of MFS' s equity
to bop on the let's-work-together money is invested in international
bandwagon ·is one of the oldest stocks. That money is managed by
fund families in the country.
a research team of six individuals.
Last week Massachusetts Financial Services, MFS, whose' fund,
Massacbuseus Investors Trust,
opened in 1924, announced it bas With the new alliance, lbe number
fonncd an alliance with two of the of international researchers will
world's oldest money firms: For· mushFOom to about 60, most of
eign &amp; Colonial Management Ltd., whom will be located in London.
money managers in London since
But more researchers won't
1868, and Munich's Bayerische change m~rket conditions. And
Hypotheken-und Wecbsel-Bank, ' today many shareholders aren't as
frequenlly referred to as Hypo- keen on the international and
Bank, founded in 1835.
emerging markets as they once
J effrn Shames, president of were. Many know firsthand bow
MFS, says the move will bring the volatile these markets can be as
development of some new funds, · they have watched the per-share
more international money man- price in their fund investments fall.
agers ·and hopefully "better stock
"I've lost a 191 of money in
picks" to MFS.
those emerging and international
• 'For shareholders this will funds," moans Julie Harris, a Boca
mean that we will have- new funds Raton, Fla., investor. "And while I
that are strictly international equity don't always expect my fund to
products like an emerging market make me money year after year I
product or intem~lional growth or don't want them to lose any of it
international blue chip funds. All of either."
which arc distinct from our global
Shames thinks that the market
fund," said Shatnes.
timing of the MFS alliance is fme.
One of the areas in which MFS
"We just missed the run-up in
bad limited exposure was in the those markets, so we are coming in
offering of international and at attractive investment prices," be
emerging markets stock funds , said. "But the bigger issue is, these
Shames said. Currently only about markets (both ,the emc;rging and

Dian Vu}ovich

intcrnat,ional markets) are incredibly involved.and people shouldn't
invest in them unless they do so
with a five- to 10-year time horizon
because that's wbat you need to
weather the volatile in the long
term.''

As in all the mergers and acquisitions that arc happening today,
there's another side 10 this alliance
that shareholders don't always see.
That's the big business side.
One of the things this union .
does is provide MFS with a wider
distribution base. This broader base
means that MFS, already a major
player in the sale of funds outs1de
the United States, will now be able
to sell their products in Germany
through Hypo-Bank. They will also
have sales access in the Middle
East, Latin America and tile Far ,
East. All of which can translate
into more assets for the firm to
manage.
~
The trend of mergers, acquisitions ilpd alliances is one that
experts expect will continue ove·r
the next few years. The driving
force behind them is competition
within the money management
marketplace - competition that
includes keeping investors happy
with their fund families by offering
them a broad! y diversified selection

--Area Death-- Meigs land transfers p«;)sted

OHIO Weather
WedDflday, April19

.

and competition revolving around .
controUing large amounts of assets.
William Rice, director of corpo·
rate communications at Liberty
Financial Companies, a Boston~
based fund firm which recently
merged with the Colonial Group,
said that merger now makes Liber·
ty "a $40 billion asset manager."
B ul just because fund families
arc getting .bigger doesn't mean
shareholders can afford to lose
sight of their own personal invest·
mcnt objectives.
"I know it may sound naive, but
for some reason I thought that by
investing into a large fund family
and picking a fund wilb a diyersifi·
calion portfolio, th at meant I
wasn't putting my money at risk,"
says Harris. "Now I realize that
diversification doesn't mean 'no
risk' and markets swing up and
down no mauqr whose fund you're
in."

Dian Vujovich is the author of
"Straight Talk 'About Mutual
Funds," which is published by
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
her in care of this newspaper.
· (For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling I·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

You say D' Amato, I say . Hiroshima ·
• Noted pub_lic official Alfonse · agreed on bow the Enola Gay 'ely.
.
.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki were,,pay·
DAmato, trymg to he humorous, should be v1ewed by the gawking
Surely ,- some m1ddle ground backs_for the treacherous Japanese.
unveiled his impression of Judge rourists. The righl seems to think could be reached between tbose .. bomb•~g.of Pcar,I Harbor, seems to
Lance Ito on Don Imus' nationally we should brag about the fact that who think that atom bombs are Llie me . specwus. 1 be ambush was a.
syndicated radio prognun recently,
greatest tbing since elecb'ic refrig· Sneilk a~ck, sure, but Pearl H~!J&lt;&gt;r
unleashing a firestorm of media
/an Shoa/es
eration, and those who think we was a m1htary base . No ~IVlhan
criticism.
should all commit suicide immedi- was va~nzed, as far as I kriow. .
Any firestorm of criticism on we dropped atom bombs on two ately. Alas, no.
I don thavc an }nswer to thiS
the head of Alfonse D' Amato is 'Japanese cities 40-some years ago,
The debate bas become a virt a1 quesuon (IS there, m fact, a ques-.
fine with me, but I wonder if this and the left seems to thin!c that we World war 11 all over again. Ja~ u~m?) •. but spcakiog as one eccen-.
particular teapot is worth the tern: should cut off some portion of our apparently wants an apology for tnc c!uzcn. I ? like to see the Enola
pest
.
bodies to offset the same event.
the dropping of botnbs on Hiroshi- Gay. m W.ashmgton, D,C.. acc?m·
The ~nl&gt;: pers_on, after all, who
I'm of two minds, myself. The ma and Nagasaki. Wby? Will that pamc~ w1th every pomt of v1~w,
has any JUStiflcauon 10 be offended occasion .of the dropping of a bomb bring back the dead? Will tbat '!Jere IS (space and budget penni!·,
by D'Amato's off-the-.cuff rernarl&lt;s should not be accorded the same undrop the bomb? Will that undo Ung).
.
is Judge Lance Ito. What does he festivity as Christmas, bir)h!lays or World war II itself!
•
As far as that goes, I'd l!J&lt;c to
think about a jerk from New York Thanksgi.ving, certainly. Huma,n
It's just politics folks. Tbepow- see a few more apolog1es m the·
who apparcmtl~ belie.ves. that sen_se· . beiJlg_s JICC _vapo~-~ed on s~cb, a!!_.."er!·that;be. in~~ap;!Ii arc tryino 10 world, too. A national muso:um of.
less nauermg m p1dg1~ Enghsh occas10~, humans who' ll~ noDung use American gu1It (if sucb exTsts, opologces . m~y be.. out of It~, or_
constitutes a form of w1t? So far, to do w1th tbc events Jeadmg 10 the demograpbically) 10 create an eco- ahead or cts ume, but, bey, I d par,
J_udge Ito bas. remained oddly decision to vaporize them. (lnno- nomic advantage for Japan. (This is money f?r that. W': could put;
sllent. And so w1U I. ·
cents, let's call them.)
lbe worst tbing about the modem
Jadge Ito m charge of ll.
.
~ell,. OK, I .won·~·
.
On the other hand, war is war. y;orld. Morality is only employed if
(To receive a complimentary;
P1dgm Enghsb nugbt have been Once you go down thai road, a cer- ll's seen 10 give one pany or anoth- Ian .Shoales newsletter, call t ~.
considered funny in the days of taip amount of death, disfigure- er an edge.)
800-989-DUCK or write Duck's:
vaudeVIlle. b~t we've bad a couple ment, psychic trauma, displaceEven if this cynical comment is B~eath, 408 Broad St., Nevada:
~orld wars Sl~a; ,then. In my opln- m~nt. tOrtllfe, and, yes, vaporiza- untrue, why should President ClioC1ty, C,A 95959.)
;
100, a few mtlhon dead tends to lion should be no surprise to any- ton apologize on our behalf? We
Ian ·S holes is a syndicated:
drain the humor from racial slurs.
body. A little reminder now and didn' 1 drop the damn I?onlb. did
writer f1&gt;r Newspaper Enterprise~
As P_r~f, I offer the flap about Lt!en that war is no respecter of per- we? (Baby Boomers are ~ften
Assocladon.
:
the exh1b1UOn of the Enola Gay at sonal belief should be welcome. A asked to suffer guilt for events that
(For information on bow to,
tbe ~ir. and Space. Museu_m in reminder that war is heU for every- happened before they were born,
communicate electronically with;
Washmgton D.C: Th1s exbcbll has body involved (excep11Jerhaps probably because my generation is
this columnist and others, con~ .
been abort~d, thanks to various tho~e who caused it) should even enthusjastically willing 10 comply.)
tact America Online by tailing 1-;
protesters ngl)l and left, who dis- be a mandate for any civilized sociThe mpside of lbis coin, that
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)
;
I

1\W Deily Sentinel-Pea• 3.

Pom8rOY-Mkldltport; OhiO

Tullday, Aprll18, 1il5

Accu-W~ foncut for

condllionlllldhiJh

MICH.

• IColumbus lw I

Charles B. Steele
Charles Baxter Steele, 76, P&lt;meroy, di'&amp;t Tuesday, April 11, 1995 in
Hplzer Medical Centct.
Born Feb. 5, 1919 in Logan County, W.Va., be was the son of the late
Charles Grover and Ollie Vinson Steele. He bad worked at Steele Fumi."
lUre ill Gallipolis.
.
He is survived by two daugbters, Susan Hurst Colderone of Chevy
Cbase, Md., ;md Beverly Allman of Vinton, Va.; a brother, J.B. Steele of
Clearwater, Fla.; two sisters, Lois Varney of Richmond, Va, and Rowena
Gaierson, Or!mJOO, Fla.; and several nieces and nephews.
·
Besides his parents, be was preceded in death by a sister, Edith Sacgraves.
,
Graveside services will he Wednesday at 11 am. at the Mound Hill
Cemetery, Gallipolis. Pastor Wllliam M:iddleswarth will offiCiate. Tliere
wiU be no calling hours. Arrangements are by the Ewing.Funeral Home.

Columbia Gas reorganizes
plan to pay off its creditors

Meigs anllou.ncements

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 2B·960)
Pubh~hed C\'ery orternoon. Monday through
Frulny. ! II Court S1.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohto Vnllcy Publishing Cmn!JanyiMulumedia
Inc., Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph 9Q2-2156
Second class po~tage ptud .i't Pomtmy. Ohio

Member: The A~~ociated Press. urxlthe Ohio
Newspaper Association.

I'OSTMASTKR : Send addrct'l. cnmctions to
The Dmly Senun el. Il l Court St , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45?69.
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No ~ ~~b ~ rtpuon by m::ul permitted in JUe'as
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'

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsldt Meigs County
13 week.• ....... ..... .. ............................. $23.92
26 weet:.......... .................. ....... .. ..... $47.06
52 W~:eks ......................... , ............... $92. ~
Ritts Oulllde Meigs County
13 WoekJi., .................. ....... .. :............. SlS.61
26 Wet-b ... ,...............1 .... . .. ..... ""'"''''"$49.66

02 W,.lu ........... .................................... $96.20

.

Deed, Carolyn and Doran E1ldns

to Jay Jr. and Lilliane MarljlDe
Hall, Letart parcel;
Deed, Micbael Burke, Michael
T. Burke to Michael T. Burke,
Or.mge parcels;
Deed, Blyllie J. Theiss to Arlene
N. Wallace, Sutton, one acre;
Deed, George W. Circle to state
ofObio, Salisbury, 4.691 acres;
Deed. George W. Circle to state
of Ohio, Salisbury, 6.922 acres;
Deed, Robert E. and Gladys
Chaney to state or Ohio, Chester,
.146 acres;
Deed, Robert E. and Gladys
Chaney to state of Oliio, Salisbury,
· .155 a&lt;::r6;
Deed, Robert E. and Gladys ·
Chaney to state of Ohio, :
Chester/Salisbury, 1.700 acres;
:
Deed, Robert E. and Gladys:
Chaney to state of Obio, Chester,
.627 acres;
Deed, James E. Lucas to Dcva
Faith, Bedford. 6.12 acres.

.director; Jennifer Roush. girls bas·
ketball and volleyball; Mick Wine·
brenner, baseball and junior high
boys basketball; Barbara Lawrence,
high school cheerleader advisor;
Scott Wickline, assistant boys basketball; Alan Crisp, freshman boys
basketball; Joan Hudak, yearbook
advisor; Kim Phillips, Title IX
compliance officer; Jan II ill, Title I
coordinator; Dcnme Bill , Title l
treasurer; Grace Griffin. Title I sec·
retary; Joyce Thoren, lunchroom
supervisor and handicapped coordinator; Shirley Sayre, guidance; and
Diane Rice, Future Homemakers.
In other action, the board:
• discussed pulling a tax levy on
the ballot next spring in order to
qualify for stale school building
assistance:
• will accept applications for
superintendent until May 17;
• hired SitcScan Inc . of MarieTta
to complete three inspections ~ext
year at all scho\)ls to ensure
asbestos safety;
• kept next year's school calendar similar to this year ·with the
frrst day for teachers Aug. 25 and
first day for students Aug. 28 ; and
• changed the .make-up day for
classes for this year from Saturday.
May '17 to Tuesday, May 30
because ·support staff would have
to be paid double time for the Sat·
urday work.
' 1·

RACO finalizes schedule
for Racine Flower Festival

Pomeroy renews

.Nq decision yet on area
'(Continued from Page .J)
·
either a nat or measured rate, Cook
explained.
The nat rate would charge all
users in the calling area the same
fee. The measured rate would be
fairer because it would base
charges on use, Cook said.
GTE and its West Virginia

aaes;

Southern Board OKs layoffs

County residents to take
part in cleanup activities
Meigs countians are being
recruited for annual spring cleaning
in recognition of Earth Day and
Keep Ohio Beautiful Month, said
Kenny Wiggins, manager of l&gt;:feigs
County's Recycling and Litter Prevention program.
Residents will observe the 25th
anniversary of Earth Day on April
22' and ArbOr Day on April 29.
The Meigs County Recycling
and Litter Prevention Program will
coordinate local events.
Local groups are being asked to
volunteer 10 clean up their area.
The litter control office will belp
plan the cleanups, provide plastic
trash bags and pick up bags collected. Wiggins said.
Salem Center Elementary will
hold Earth Day activities tbis Friday. Activities include planting a
pink dogwood tree and demonstrat·
ing a composting system. ·
.Tree planting
Materials and posters will be
distributed to all Meigs schools,
and· the county's program has pine
tree seedlings for distribution to
elementary students.
· TreeSourcc, the Ohio free tree
program, will have a limited num·
ber of treeS. Schools should contact
the litter office as sOon as possible.
Westvaco, Inc. of Millwood,
'W.Va.. has donated 2,000 trees.
Adopt-a-highway program

·Amanda J. Young, Olive parcels;
Certificate, Henry R. Beaver,
. deceased, to LOwell A Bea"VU 8lld
• Bonna Sue Gibson, Sutton, 7.S2

Columbia Gas paying $3.6 billion
DOVER, Del. (AP) Colwobia Gas System Inc., one of to creditors, giving them 10(h:enl!.
tbe nation's largest natural gas on the dollar with a combination of
companies, and its Charleston, cash, new bonds, preferred stock
.
W.Va., pipeline subsidiary filed and other securities.
Columbia Gas Transmission
bankruptcy reorganization plans
Monday that would pay a total $7.5 Corp., the Charleston pipeline unit,
would pay about $3.9 billion,
biUion to creditors.
The proposals were a hopeful including $2.2 billion that goes to
sign that tbe companies could the parent fum to help pay loans
Otiiii5Acc:u--. lnc.
resolve I)C!!!:!Y fO!!l' years of Chap- and bankruptcy-related expenses..
Remaining creditors, including
ter 11 banbuptcy protcction. .
Included is a settlement with gas suppliers and customers, get from (Continued from Page 1) .
producers that sued after tbe 72.5 cents to 100 cents on the dol- lary. Donna Rae Wolfe will be laid
pipeline subsidiary; shortly after lar.
of(, and Cintra Winebrenner will
Tbe four-year journey through get the full-time position.
flling for protection, broke supply
Tonight...Sbowers and thunder- contracts that forced it to pay bankruptcy protection has been
Board member Susie Grueser
' stalled by litigation that reacQed the told one staii member to conlacl a
.
storms likely east early with a above-market prices.
chance of showers ancl tbunder- _ The plans envision parent U.S. Supreme Cour\.
union representative.
stonns west early. Then becoming
The board tabled action on clos·
ing
Lbe contract with cook Alice
~bs~londy. Breezy. with lows in
Williams until 811 special meeting
Wednesday ... Parlly sunny. Ballroom dancing
set for 8 (l.m. Monday, April 24.
Church bosls singers
Highs from the middle 60s north to
Beginner ballroom dancing
Ponland Reorganized Church of Action on that contract was
the middle 70s far south.
classes will start Thursday, at the Jesus Christ of Lauer Day Saints delayed due 10 Williams' seniority.
Extended forecast:
In executive session, the board
Riverbend..Arts Council, 128 SecThursday ... Partly cloudy. A ond Ave., ~iddleport. The six ses- will host Mary Dailey and family
discussed
bow many bus drivers
chance of sbowers and thunder- sions beginning Thursday will start to sing at 1:30 p.m, Sunday at the would be needed with the new sysstorms south. Lows in the 40s. at 8:30 eacb evening. The cost is $7 church. Public is welcome.
tem, Lawrence said. No decisions
Highs fmm the middle 50s to the per couple ·per session. The waltz,
were made after the session.
F"'e clothing day
middle 60s.
To cut costs, the board also will
foxtrot and· swing will be taught.
The Gallia-Meigs Community
· Friday ... Scauered sbowtrs and More
reduce the mechanic assistant posi·
information may be obtained Action Agency will have free
thunderstorms . Lows in the 40s. by caiUng 992-2675 or 992-5438.
tion
to a half-time job beginning
clothing day Friday from 9 am. to
Highs in the 60s.
July
1.-By the next board meeting,
noon, in the old high school build·
Saturday ... A chance of showers. Shade Lodge sets meeting
the
board
will have decided bow
ing in Cheshire.
Lows In Lbe 40s. Highs in the 60s.
many
hours
will he needed to com-.
The Shade River Lodge #453
plete
the
tasks.
F~AM will hold a meeting at 7:30
Other contracts not renewed
p.m. Thursday at lbe lodge. Work Scout banquet set
The
Meigs
County
Girl
Scouts
because
of uncertainty of state
in the third degree. ·Refreshments
will
have
their
annual
spring
gala
grant
money
included: Carolyn
afterwards. All Master Masons
banquet
Saturday.
Troops
are
to
Robinson,
junior
high study ball
invited.
have their money in Thursday at monitor; Donald Dudding, DPPF
the camp meeting to be held at coordinator; Dennie Hill, DPPF
The "Adopt-a-Highway" pro- Rock Springs health group
Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, 7 p.m. treasurer; and Joe Hemsley, high
gram involves organizations who
The Rock Springs Better Health
More
infonnation
may be obtained school computer lab coordinator.
adopt a 2-mile section of state Club will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday
by
contacting
Pam
Johqson, 992- Richard Koker. treasurer consulhighway during April. Eight orga- at the Rock Springs Methodist
6364;
or
Carin
Taylor,
99!2-6493.
tant, also will not be renewed.
nizations have already adopted 16 Church.
Secretaries for the venture capi-.
miles of state routes 7, 124, 143
tal
grant were cut because the state
and u.s. 33.
Racine July Fourth .
Revival
to
begin
next
week
program
wiD be restricted.
Recycle drop-off sites bave been
Racine July Fourth planning
Revival
services
will
be
held
at
In
other
business, the board also
established in six townships .
meeting will be held at 7 p.m.
the
Whites
Chapel
Wesleyan
renewed
·
numerous
contracts
Salisbury Township sites are at Thursday at the fire department
Church,
Coolville,
April
25-29,
7
including:
five-year
teaching
conUnion Avenue; Suuon, State Route annex. A~Y organizations in particp.m.
each
evening,
and
April
30,
tract,
Barbara
Bailey;
five-year,
124 in Syracuse; Olive, Forked ipating should ·send a representa10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Karen Hill; flve-year, Pauline H1ll ;
Run State Park; Salem, State Route tive. Public is invited .
five-year,
Joan Hudak; three-year,
· 124 at Salem Center Fire Station;
Ann
Sisson;
one-year, David
Chester, State ROUte 248 and Scout
Colvin;
one-year,
Alan Crisp; and
Camp Road; and Bedford, on U.S.
one-year,
Jennifer
Roush.
Route. 33 and Park Road
Supplemental contracts renewed
This year, more than 52,000
included:
Howie Caldwell, boys
pounds of materials ·bav6 been
Aucndants
include
freshman
·
basketball,
softball and athletic
The
Racine
Area
Community
recycled, in addition 19 11 ,000
Iayme Miller, sophomore Kerry
Association
finalized
plans
last
pounds of major appliances. Containers are being constructed for week for the se,cond Racine Flower Caldwell and junior Jennifer Cum·
1)
Festival to be held Saturday at mins.
additional sites.
The kiddie tractor pull will be (Continued from Page
Racine's
Star
Mlll
Park.
Annual river sweep
The festival starts at 10 a.m. on the- basketball court at 1:30 p.m. increase reliability, with the addiLater Ulis year, Meigs residents
and the Me-igs County Shotokan lion of fiberoptic'lines 10 be comwill work in the seventh annual with a parade. Line up will be at Karate Club will have a demonstra- pleted by August.
9:30 a.m . at the Racine Fire
Ohio River Sweep on June 17.
'tion at3 p.m.
The upgrades also leave open
The event covers six states, 72 Department Annex on Fourth
Country
and
western
singer
the
possibility of adding more
counties and I ,962 miles of Ohio Streel Several floats are registered Steve Pottmycr will perfonn at 1 channels in the future, be added.
and there will be a parade of tracRiver shoreline.
p.m. followed by tbe Midnight
Council approved the first readLast year, Meigs County had tors from the Big ,Bend Antiques Cloggers at2 p.m. Tbe Atbcns Dix- ing of~ franchise at its last meet·
•
more Ulan 275 volunteers. /li. waiv· ·ClUb.
ieland Jazz Band takes the stage at ing, but suspended the rules and
Anyone
may
enter
the
parade
er fonn needs to be signed ahead of
3
p.m. followed by the Billy Lee gave the agreement its second and
time by contacting the Iiller control which is sponsored by RACO and Show 'featuring country, western third readings Monday.
plaques will be awarded flrsL secoffice, Wiggins said.
·
ond
and third-place winners. Frrsl, swing and jazz from4o6 p.m.._ _ _"'&gt;'&lt;T in, a~ council met with
Call the liner control at 992·
The reslival will also offer food,
loPoweriLolumlius SOuthern
second and third-place winners will
6360 for more details.
receive $50, $30 and $20, respcc· flowers, craft booths, ·an antique Power representatives Ron
tractor display and McDonald's McDade and Ron Cannicbael, who
lively.
.
Hamburgerler.
pledged to cooperate with village
The flower queen will be
in the on-going Downtown
Twenty
vendors
have
already
officials
crowned at noon. Candidates
reserved
spaces
and
vendors
may
Revitalization
program.
include Jessika Codner, Erica
set
up
Saturday
on
a
first
'
c
ome,
Part
of
the
revitalization
process
counterpart would lose money if. Dugan, Sbannmi Morarity, Brandy fli'St Sl:~ved basis.
includes
relocating
power
lines
to
local calls are accepted, she added. Rousb, Courtney RousQ and Amy
Second.
Street
and
the
addition
of
"We will have to engineer and Weaver.
period ~treet lighting 'which
construct a facility; build and lay
requires action by the power com ·
cable; and add trunking facilities,"
Cook said. ''' That route doesn't
pant~uncilman Jobn Musser, who
C&lt;!tist today."
,
Units of the. Meigs County
9:16 a.m., Yost Road, Henry is spearheading the revitalization
project, commended the company
The process of getting the local Emergency Medical Service logged Salser, VMH.
calls. in the Big Bend ·area is com· seven calls for assistance Monday
TUPPI!:RS PLAINS .
for its assistance.
plicated by bureaucratic delays, including two· transfer calls. Unils • 10:21 a.m., VFD to ~tate Route
"We are Working with council
said David Kasmenn, GTE. regional responding in&lt;:luded:
./ 7, auto r.rc!, Tuppers Plains-Chester and Musser to fit the desires and
manager.
MIDDLEPORT
Water Distiict owner.
neerls of flie villa~e In Its lOngOhio's public ulility laws are
9:52a.m., volunteer fire depart·
range planning," McDade said.
more strict. than West Virginia, ment and squads to motor-vehicle
Kasmenn srud .
accident on State Route 7, .Frcdda
· "We b~ve rules they_don't bave Browning, Lonnie Browning and " Am Ele Power ........- ..........31 71B
to follow, Kasmenn srud. .
&amp; Kathryn Hall, Veterans Memorial
Akw ._............- ... ·-··-··-.58 Ill
· Before the Bell break-up, no Hospital Pomeroy squad assisted;
Ashland OU ........,...._ ...........34 1/4
division existed between carriers
8:27' p.m., South Second
AT&amp;T -----·-................ ~ ..-50 14
Bank One
----,.....31
a!J?ut local calling areas, Kasmenn Avenue, Jeanette Lunsford, refused
Bob Evans.-.....
.lO 314
srud.
treaanent.
Champloalnd.... -------.21 Ill
"There's a cost to us. We ·~'t
.
POMEROY
Charming Shop ..,.... __ ,.........S lll
e,yen do it willingly,''
Kasmenn
7:29 p.m.,. Pieasan t Rid ge Road,
.
City Holding -·--····--·-----21
317 N. Second Avenue
Said.
·
Autumn DeMoss, refused treat·
Federal Mogul.-------·-·-·18 7IB
Middleport, Oh. 45760
The Columbus area covers all of ment.
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ _ .....-.37 Ill
6141992-4015
southern Ohio .. GI'E_plans to c ut
SYRACUSE
K..mart ·-----·---··--.. --.14 lll
Judy Well, Owner
the f~~c~ tbne fees in half, KasLandi En_d --·--·-·-·--16-l.IZ
- """"""""" .......
menn added.
,
Llmlltd ln•---:..·-----.21 3/8
VISit "COUNTRY
Currently, about 80 percent or
Mulllmedla lac.
SIB
NATURALS · Gille
People's ·-----..···--..--.1llll
Meigs County can make local calls
· VETERANS MEMORIAL
&amp; Acce1aorlea''
OhkJ ValltY.--.. -----~- ..44
10 the rest of the county, Kastnenn
Monday
admissions
Lula
in historic
One
VaUey
----------·-.1111/4
said.
Hampton,
Pomeroy;
Charles
!hie,
Middleport, Ohio
Rockwell
·----------·413/8
• The county bas been divided
Monday
Robbins &amp; Myers....
into different charges becau se Racine.
You 'll ,find baskJ;ts,
Royal Dukh----------llO SIB
discharges
-•Della
Norton,
when GTE acquired smaller teleSboney'slnc.
---------·113/4
Evelyn Mains, PomeroY,.
bears, dolls, pottery,
phone companies that had these Pomeroy;
Star Bank --------..--.43 SIB
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
wreaths, wood, florals·
areas, anti-trust laws prevented the
Wendy lnt'L ----------· 17 1/4
Discharges
April
17Tia
WorthlnKton
Ind
.••
·
•.
_
..
__
,
Ill
Sill
consolidation, he added.
Johnson, Michelle Harkins, Claude
and so much morel
By 1999, the Portland area will
Dray,
Mrs.
Kevill
Taylor
and
son.
.
Stock reports art tile 10:30 a.m.
Houro: 10:00 to 5 pm
become completely digitized.
Birth
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gregory
quoteo
pro•lded
by
Advut
of
Tueodoy
thru Saturday
"As a businessman it's llard to
Bush,
son,
Long
BOitom.
GaWpotls.
Clooed
Sunday
&amp; Monday
put a $1 million switch for 500 cus(PubUshed
with
permission)
tomers," Kasmenn said.

Wednesday to offer brief
respite from rainy weather
By The Associated Press
The showers and thunders10nns
were expected to move out of Ohio
tonight, leaving a panly sunny and
mild day on Wednesday, tbe
National Weather Service said.
But the stormy weather is due
back on Thursday and likely will
continue on Friday and the weekend, forecasters said.
Highs will generally be in the
60s aud lows in the 40s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 89 degrees in 1896
while the record low was ,22 in
1953. Sunset today will be at 8:12
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
6:49a.m.
Weather forecast:

The following land transfers
were flkd recently in the otru:e of
Mei1s County Recorder, EmmogeDC Hamilton:·
Deed. Jinnie D. Allman an~
Robert L. and Carolyn S. Smith,
Syracuse parcel;
'
Deed, ~andy Mabon to Truly
Mabon, Olive, 11 acres;
Deed, Pab'ick L. iUld Julie uwson to Bruce W. and Dawn R. Ret'·
feU. Columbia lot;
Deed, Pab'ick L. and Julie Uw·
son to Bruce W. and Dawn R. Ref·
reu, Columbia lot;
Deed, Delbert and Loretta M.
Blake to Tammy 0. Quillen, Middleport part lot;
Deed, Edward Lemaster,
Katherine Lemaster, Katherine 0.
Lemaster 10 EdJWard Lemaster,
Columbia parcels;
Deed, uWrenc:e E: and D&lt;x'Otbf"
L. Hysell to L.awrence E. and
Dorothy L. Hysell, Rutland parcels;
Deed, Theresa Miller to Randy
L. Spencer, Letart 101;
Deed, Walter C. and Virginia
M. Wears to Walter Paul Wears,
Salisbury, .57 acres;
Deed, Virgil, Virgil L., Lona E.
. and Looa Cozart to Larry W. and

Squads respond to calls ·

·Stocks
·-ao·--..-•. .

n . . - · · - · · · ... ••••. .

Hospital news

We Give Mature

Drivers, Home
- Owners And
Mobile Home .
Owners Special
Savings.

Our statrst1cs show that mat ure dn·
vers and home owners have fewerand
less costly losses th an other age
groups. So 1t's only farr to charge you
less lor your 1nsurance. Insure your
home and car w1th us and save even
more w1th ou r spwat multr·pohcy
discounts.

st Jlnniversary

1

SJ41/E

Country Naturals
Cifts &amp;Accessories

·-------.38

-------13

-·-·-

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6687

vluto.O.,••• ~
Life ~

C.V

~neu

.,...ilj, llc6(,.,.'/iql.i•

."

�}

f

Sports

··

I

The Daily s!Z!~~l

PomiiOY Mlcldleport, Ohio

1\IHclay, Aprll18, 18115

iiiiiiil~~~ii~~~~~~~-~~~ii~;;~:;~=-~~~~~~~~~::=-~-:~~~~~~~~;:~~~~~~~~!P~•!gl!:! •

•

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
APSports Writer
An unassisted triple play, a tOron comeback and· three called lbird
strikes on Cal Rlpken bigbligbted
Day 5 of the exhibition season.
Runners-up: a near no-bitter by
lbe Mets, the Chicago Cubs' continued offensive onslaught,' Edgar
Martinez's .five RBis and Brad
Woodall's seven strikeouts in lbree
innjngs.
Tbrougb it all, ~ball's unsettled labor dispute with the umpires
continued to threaten a strife-free
opening day.
.
Randy Velarde of the New York
Yankees had the solo lrlple play in

Bulls top Heat for
fourth
win
in
row
.
·
tJwi
points _ ooe more
Jordaa'a
NBA season-bi&amp;b- in a victory
over Orlando.
.
"I wasn't saiD&amp; to leave him,"
said Jordan a siX-time NBA AUDefensive first team selection. "If
be was going to get a shot off, I
was soing to be in bis face.
"He's the ener&amp;Jzlns factor on
lbeir team. Rice Is lbe guy wbocan

Glen Rice topped Micbael Jordan. Two days later, Michael Jordan stopped Glen Rice.
.Jordan bad 31 points Monday
nigbt and held Rice to 12 oo 6-for18 shooting as lbe Chicago Bulls
·beat lbe Miami Heat 98-93 for lbeir
fourlb straight victory.
On Saturday, Rice s.cored 56 .

put up lbe big numbeta."

Not when Jordan is the man
assisne&amp;&gt; bim. Rite was held
scoreless for the rust 28 1/2 minutes and bit only rwo of.bis rnt 11
sbots.
·
"It was like a blanket," Rice
said. "He didn't give me anytbing
easy. II was one or the tougbe~t
nigbiS I've bad trying to getopl:n. ·•

·The lou ellmln~ted the Hea~ ·
from .the play~ff ptcture for th
lltlb wne in their se~t it
1n other ~
Y
96 .
was Boston 98, New Jyerse: 93 :
Milwaukee 99, ~ew or.
:
Charlotte .101, Phtla.delpbta 90,
,Orlando 111, Wasbmgton 100;
Houston.l21, Los Angeles Clippers
111; and Ponland 97, Seattle 93.

·~'ijztt

Umpires make new offer; seek 40 percent pay hike ·
"If they llargain in good failb, I
NEW YORK (AP) - A new mlike a deal around.''
fliillk
·we can get a deal·.before
LISt
Thursday,
owners
offered
a
proposal from locked-out baseliall
opening
day and have the regular
umpires probably won't lead to a 10 percent iuaease, up from a cost.
umpires
back,"
Pbillips said.
settlement that would have them of-living increase in lbeir previous
Umpires
prefer
to receive the
back by opening day next week.
entire
increase
in
lbe
ftrSt year of a
unfon bead
' Umpires, who · inake from
$60,000 to $175,000 per season, Pbillips called management's offer cOiltniCL In lbe deal reached on lbe
asked Monday for a 40 percent "shameful" and said it "exhibiiS a opening day of the 1991 season, the
raise, down from 53 percent in their . lack of respect for the umpires, pay for starting umpires was nlised
previous proposal and 60 pen:ent in their profession and their conlrlbu- from $41,000 to $60,000 and the
tion to tbe game.''
pay for umpires with 25 or more
·their initial plan.
Owners,
wbo
locked
out
the
regyears in the majors was raised from
"While be did make a new
$100,000
to $175,000.
ular
umpires
on
Jan.
1,
have
been
offer, it is not significantly enougb
In
addition.
most umpires
using
replacement
umpires
during
lower to give me encouragement
$20,000
each from the
receive
spring
training
and
intend
to
use
lbat we can make a deal in the near
postseason
bonus
pool under the
them
during
lbe
regular
season.
if
future," said Robert !{heel, tbe
deal.
The
umpires
original.expired
there
isn't
an
agreemenL
management Iawrer who negotiates
Pbillips said be hoped his latest ly sousbt to double that amount
oti behalf of both leagues. "Forty
because of the increase in playoff
percent is not something we can proposal ''would stimulate bargaining on their part."
~· and Phillips said lbe sides

~ires

·Nd~ti
JORDAN DRIVES - Chicago Bulls guard Mlcbael Jordan (45)
drives to the basket against Miami Heat forward DUly Owens during Tuesday night's NBA game in Miami. Chicago won, 98-93.
(AP)

w
Mia~~e~ob

Calirornla
Chh:liO

Atlantic IH\'IIdon

W L r.t
xy-Orlando ....... S6 23 .709
I·ftrlew York:...... 52 '1.1 .658
Ba.IOil...........
3S 44 .443

GB

4

Jl 48
28 51

.392
.3.54

21
25
28

Philadelphia ........ 23 56

.29 1

33

19 60

.24 1

'17

Miami ..........
New Imey .......
. Waahi.ft&amp;tnn.......
•

SO 29

..s

Milwaukee ........

32 47

.633
.629
.570
.526
..506

49 30
34
41 37
40 39

1
s

8 tn.
10

.405

18

Dttroll............
27 51
.l46 22 112
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t DhoW.
W L PeL
GB
~: - SanAllltooio ..... 5"1 20
.744
1•Uialt ...........
:S6 22
.718
2
I·HOUiloo........ 47 32 .59~. 11112
Den.,. ..........
38 40
.411
20
Oallu ............
3$ 4S .449
23
Mlnna;:ota ........ In 21 57 .269
37
P~~t

r-Pbocnix ........
t..Seattle ...... :....

c DiYitlon
S6 23 .709

SS l3

~

r-LA. Laker1 ..... , 48 3l
x-I"Mland ......... 41 37
Sacramento ....... 37 •t
Golden .State ....... 25 53

L.A. CliPPC1'- ....... Hi 63

.JOji

lfl

.608
II
.S26 14112
.474 18 112
.321 30112 •
.203
40

y-cllached conrer~nce tiUe
x-ciiDChed playoff bath

Monder'• GM~el
BostOn 98, New Jmey?t;
Milwaukee 99, New Ycrll: 93
Charlotte 101 , Philadelphia 90

BOSTON (AP) - Arecordtying three consecutive victories at
the Boston Marathon isn't enough
for Cosmas Ndeti. The 25-year-old
Kenyan wants more, a lot more.
"I'm going to come back next

Chicay.o 91. Miami 9
Houston 12l , L..A.Ciippe!1lll
f'onland 97. Seaule 93
T--•Y;• Gamel
Cleveland at Detroit. 7:30 p.m. :
' UtAh a1 Minnewta. I p.m.

NatiOII.. llorkly Leaaue
·
AI A Glanrr:
R1 The A•.orlaled Pre•
All Timu EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
1\llanll.r: Divl1lon
WLTPt1GFGA \.

23'. 13 450
20 14 7 47

131 113
t 17 102

1111 7 41

104 101,

11119 3 39
IS 19 S 35
1:5 22 3 33

109 105
93 105
101 114

N.Y. lshlndcr112 23 ~ 29 101 J34
Northr~ OiYbion
I
J ·Quebec
21 9 4 60 161 113
Pitl5bl8"8,h • 26 12 2- 54 1$6 129

Boston ...

20 16 3 ofJ

116 100

.Bufralo ...

17 16 6 40

!OS

98

J7 IS 5 39 110 liS
16 ·20 5 37 109 132
Ottawa
.... 4- JO 5 1J
14 143
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cealral Dl,-lRon
H

Momi~ .

W ~ TPt1

Gf GA.

ll3 19 ·

St. Louis ..

.29 I 3 61
23 12 3 49

Toronto ..
Chlcago ..

18 16 7 43
19 11 3oft

t9 1 n
13 21 632
Yfinnlpel
Paclnc DlvUion
Calpry ..
22 U 5 .4!J
Vancouver
15 15 10 40
San JO&amp;e,.
16 22 ·.2 3olLo&amp;A.ngeltt IJ 20 7 33
Anllheim
.u 22 4 l1
Edmootoo
14· 23 3 31
x-cllnehed, playorf'berth
~ondq '• Gamu
Montreal 5, Wlllhl.IIIJ'On 2
Torooto 3,' OlieaiJ:o I
J Vancouvtr 2. Oll1u 2, UeEdm:~ntoD 6, Willllipea 5
C•IPY 5, Loe Anaeles 2
Anaheim 3, Su JaM 0
Dallu ... ,

u

"r..aclt.J'• GIIIIMI

14S 110
113 120
130 102

112 104
133 152

1.46
127
103
127

118
124
131
155

102 139
113 1~3

•

" N.Y. Raaaen tt Pittlbut,tl, 1:30 p.m.
Hartford 11 BWfala, 7:30p.m.
· Qu&lt;be&lt;" N.Y. ul.u-. 1,30 p m.
New Jmey lllTU'flla B•y. 7:JO p.m.
Allladelpllia 11 florida,1:30 p.m.
YuCCJU'I'ff Ill St. looil, 1:30 p.m
Wedru:.dar'• Gamet
Buffalo It Botton, 7:30p.m.
on.wa II&amp; Moat.rral1:JO p.m.
Anaheim at Torooto, 7:)0p.m.
Winaipea .. Oettoit, 1:30 p.m.

St. Lou11 at OUcaao, I . )(.I p.m.
Su JON II 'Da11111, 1:30 p.m.
Lot An!Jdes·ll Edroooton, 9:30p.m.

Ellt .•l ..onl~~~eball
At A Glance

BJ'I'hiA.MI ....tPr•
AIITimn EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUI

r

3
4

.IIQO

BAS~B.!.U.

.600 .
.600
.600
.600

Ameri~Ldpe

.AL-Named Lmy Doby special at·
1i1tant 10 Ule league. preaident
'

BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Auian,ed
Francisco Saaeaux, pitcher, to Rod'lutec
or the lnternational League .

•&lt;Oil
.&lt;Oil
.&lt;Oil
•&lt;Oil

NEW YORK YANXEES-Ap'eed to

term• with Brian BoehriDJCr, Andy
Croah•n, Andy Fol. Jeff Pattenon •nd
Briea Taylor. pitcher&amp;, on one-jCI( con'
.tractJ.
TEXAS RANOERS - A&amp;recd to
term1 with 'stove Dreyer and llllio SIUl·
lana, pitchcn, IUld Lui.l Orti1. lblrd bue.man , on one-year" coatracll. Alfec4 to
terms with Billy Hatcher, outfielder, on •
mlnor-Jeaaue contract. Anlgned Roaer .
L.uce, catcher, and Bien Flaucr~, infield·
~.to Oldllhorm City of the Anaican Aa·
aociation. Optioned Danny Pat1u1oo,
pitcher, to Tutu of the Te1• Leaaue. Returned Ftandaco S~~neaus: pitcher, to Bal·
timolo.

.&lt;00

.&lt;Oil
.1!0

.200

NA110NAL LEAGUE
W L
Ptt.

Cbieaa,o

............ ~

0 1.000

Cioclan•i
........... 4
1.01 Allat:let ......... 4

I
1

.100
.100

Philadelphia .......... 4
ColoriCio'
........... )
Mootteal
,;., ..... 3
New Yort
......... 3
· St. Lwil
........ ,...2
1-lorilla
............. 2
Sao Diea,o
..........2
Hot.liton
........... 1

I
2
2.
2

.BOO
.600
.600
.600

AUuta

............. 1

Pittsbwah .... ....... 1
San Francisco ........ 1

J

.«JJ

3
3
3

.400
.400
.250

4
4
4

.200
.200

TORONTO BLUE JAYS- Apeed to

tttma with l)anen Hall, pkcher, OD a ODC·

ye. ecnttiCI.
,
·
NatioRal Le11ue
CIDCAOO CUDS-OptioDed Darron
CoJ,catchtf, to Iowa of the America~~ As·
aodatioa. Invited Joe Kmat, catcher, ta
aprina training u • aan·rotter pi•Y«·
CINCINNATI RED.S-Aareed to
term1 with BeoilO Saatiaao. c.lther, on •
ooe-ye. cootnlel.

.200

Mond.,.'a G-e•
Detroit 4, St. LoW. 0
Lo&amp;AnJeh• 7,Nc:w YOrk Yankees 2
,Kansas citr 10. cioc:innali 9
Baldmore l,,Bolitoo 2
Aoiida 9. Montreal I
N.Y. MetJ 4, Atlanta 0
PhiladeJphla 11, Toronto 4
Chieaa,o 'While Soi II , Pitubwj.h 0

Tueitday'1 Gamtl
Chleaao While Sox
Mym, Fla .. 1:05 p.m.,

year and I'm going to win aaain,"
Ndeti said Monday after romping
to a one-minute victory at 2 hours,
9 minutes, 22 seconds. "! want to
see how many times I can win."
Uta Pippig of Germany has her
own streak going: She won the
women's division for tbe second
, straight year, marking tbe rnt time
lbe male and female champion won
~nsecutive years.
·
1'ippig and Ndeti both set course
records last year. This time, they
· were not so fasL
Pippig's time of 2:25:11 was
decidedly slower than her mark of
2:21:45. But she still enjoyed a
comfortable margin over Elana
Meyer of Soulb Africa. tbe rennerup at 2:26:51. Madina Biktagirova
· of Belarus was a distant lbird at
2:29:00.
Six.of the top nine men to fmisb
were Kenyans, and lbe top American finisher was Michael Whittle- .
sey of Williinantic, Coon., who
was 29th, less than lbree minutes
fastez lban Pipplg. The top American woman, Linda Somers of Oakland, Calif., was II th.
Another victory would tie Ndeti

with Bill Rodgers as the secondbiggest winner in Boston Marathon
history, behind Clarence DeMar,
who won seven times between
1911-1930. Rodgers (1978-80) l!Jld
DeMar (1922-24) are tbe only otlters besides Ndeti to win three times
ina row.
Ndeti also would like to emulate
the IDOSt famous runner in the 99year history qf the Boston
Marathon, 87-year-old Johnny Kelley, tbe grand marshal of Ibis year~ s
race. Kelley started the Boston
Marathon a remarkable 61 times
and ftnished 58.
"I want to be like Johnny Kelley," Ndeti said. "I want to run as
much as I can and win. as many
races as I can.''
Of his three Bostol! victories,
Ndeti said Monday's was his easiest.' In 1993, be beat Kim JaeRyong of South Koiea by 10 seconds. Last year, he finished three
seconds abead of Andres Espinosa
of Mexico, as bolb went under the
previous course record of 2:07:51
set by Rob de CasteUa of Australia
in 1986.
Ndeti, who bas developed a

style of ronning the second half of
the race faster than lbe rnt, again
was relatively slow thrbugb the
rust 13.1 miles. But be was perfectly positioned in second place, not
far behind countryman Barnabas
Roticb. Nedti soon realized be
would win again.
"At 25 kilometers (15.5 miles),
I looked around and I saw the
Korean (Kim) and three or four
olber guys," Ndeti said. "Bull felt
stron~."

Ndeti remained just off the pace
until 18 miles. He then sped into
the lead; yielded briefly to Kim at .
20 miles, and then just as quickly
regained first place.
Another Kenyan, Moses Tanui,
the 1991 world champion at 10,000
meters, took up the chase and
dogged Ndeti until about two miles
remained. Then, Ndeti put in a
decisive surge and left Tanui far
back. Only the margin of victpry
was in doubt
Ndeti and Pippig each received
$75,000 from tbe record purse of .._;
$500,000 and were invited to run
with President Clinton at the White
House on Wednesday.
·

I

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

taau~

SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS-Op·
llonad Bobby Oamez, pitcher, to Phaai.lt'
of the PCL and Jamie Drewlqlon and
Lou Pole, pitcher&amp;, to ShreYeport of the
Ter• League.

Mootteal vs. N.Y. Yante.eaa Fo11

• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

BASKETBAU
,Nadonal BMiulhall A..otlal._
ClUCAOO IWlLS- Aetivaled Jud
Bueehlet, forward, from the injured liat.
Placed Corle Blount, forward, on the Ill·
jUred li lt.
LOS ANOEt.ES CLIPPERS-Sui·
ptlldod l..amoGd Mumy, forward.0 illdtfi-

Fla., 7:3:5 p.m.
Wrdnr.Uy'1 Guna.
Detroit n . Cleveland at Winter
Haven, Fla .. 1:0:5 p.m.
AUIID ... YS. Mmllreal at WOil Palm
Bead\, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
•

• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

ORLANDO MAOlC-ActiYited
Tree .R olliu, ceDter, £rom the iajwtd lilt.
Placed BrooD Thompaao, pard, on the
injured lilt.
~

-d.DETROIT UONSChOICe.

HOCKEY

.

National llMkef Leaaue
NHL-Suspe!lded n.uu Stars riaht
wina: Shane ChurJJ ror four aame. with·
out pay and fiDOd him $500 ror miltlna a
IIDCimaa Sunday a,aaJnat thJcaao.
BUF'PALO SABRES-Sill!cd Brian

HoWn. .; etater,.co..a ttv'et-)'ttlr. coDtnct.
ST. I.OtllS BltlES-Recallod a..,rr

-

three- year coau.ct.

- -·'-&lt;-'&gt;

Sarjeant, aoallender, rram Peorill of' the
IIIL.
.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS SiJned AklUdet Xbii'Jamov, left "WiDJ,
to •

·

Xa:nutCity va. Houltoulll ~uim­

992-2155.

butJ, Fla., I 'Ol p.m. .

.

Philadelphia ••· Ci~laD&amp;tllt Plant
City, fla., 1:0~ p.m.
Lot Anaele.N.Y. Meu w. • Vern
BetiCh, flt., t:OS p.m.
'
Cbie&amp;JO Cubl vt. Mllwaube II

Sentinel
f'

N.Y. Yank'"' ot Colorado, ~01 p.m
S.a Praocilc:o "'· ~- Peor11,
Ariz., IOp.m.

Clusifieds
992-2156

1

l .

•

l~

'

'

-

wer~~n the-bench in last year's ·
All-Star Game.
"I know I'm not going," Gas.. ton said at the Blue Jays' camp.
" I've heard .they're going with
Showaller an? Alou, and that
doesn't bother me. It's good for
them for what they did last year'
They deserve something."
This will mark the lOth time
someone other than the previous
World Series m,anager ran an An:
Star team.
The last change was in 1982,
when then-Oakland manager Billy
Martin managed the AL in place of
Bob Lemon, who was fired 14
games into the season ii'iter leading
the Yankees to tbe previous year's
World Series.

Meigs rips Vinton County for ninth
victory
.
walked, Bradley Whitlatch then
reached on a fielders choice and
Hoover reached on a Viking error.
The Vikings scored the games
fmal run in lbe boUom of the seventh inning when Ruckel led of(
th~ inning with a home run.
Stanler picked up Ihe win, his
fourth in five decisions. The junior
scauered six bits, s1ruck out seven
and walked one and hit a bauer.
Cleland went three for four at the
plate wilb three singles. Geor~e.
Pullins and Hoover all added singles,

Maerker was lhe starter and
loser·for the Vikings, he scauered
six hit s; struck out seven and
walked seven. Ruckel and a single
and tbe home run lo lead lbe
Vikings.
· Meigs will travel to Eastern on .
Wednesday evening 10 play Coach
Dan Thomas and the Eagles:
VINTON 300 000 1-4 6 2
MEIGS 000 505·10 6 2
Gary Stanley (WP) and Cass
Cleland
.
J. Mareker (LP) and D. Ward

Tornadoes defeat Lancers 5-2

EHS girls post
14 1 0 V'I. cto ry
•

-~

can Republic, wouhl become lbe
rust Latin American to manage an
All-Star team.
"I'd like to go home for a few
days (during the break), but I'd also
like to be the .first manager from
the Dominican," Alou said Monday after an exhibition at Vierra,
Fla.
.
"The thing about it is that I'm ·
going .to be there with my pal
Buck. To have two guys go from
managing in the Florida State
League (1987·88) to the All-Star
1
Game is really something
. I'm
looking forward to it."
Technically, the managers of the
last two World Series teams are
Toronto's Cito Gaston and
Philadelphia's Jim Fregosi. Both

.

SHS Ql"rls nudge Lancers 4 2

with this special offer from •••

ATHENS HONDA CARS

FREE

AIR

I

CONDITIONING

with the
purchase of
one of these
in stock

Eastern stops Trimble 7-6
.

so~~~iliU::at~~~~~-~~·in the

Sunday 12 noon-5 pm

.

:~

. Scoring the winning run in the
Eastern won il in the seventh
~i boltom of the sevenlb inning, the
when Man Bowen led off the frame
Eastern Eagles (3-4) rolled to a 7-6 with a walk, Ryan Buckley .was bil
!J , Tri-Valley Co.nferonce baseball . with a pitch and Frie~d walked to
' 1 • win over the Tnmble Tomcats here
load the bases. Eric Hill was at the
Monday night at Eastern High plate and auemptetlto bum, but
,• ·School:
pulled back on the bad pitch. Tbe
.; , Eddie Friend picked up bis third ball got by lbe catcher for a passed
J,win o.f tb~ year, alsoEastern's ball and Bowen came borne with
:.· third, posting. four strikeoutS,' lwo .the wlnnillg run, 7-6. ~
! ·walks, and scattering five hils.
Coach Dan Thomas said, "A
• ,Mike Smith was the catcher.
'W' is· a 'W', we'll take 'em any
! · Snyder was the slarting Trimble way we can get them. The kids
: pitcher (3 walks, 1 K) in three and played better tonighl This is going
• .one-third innings, while M. to be a laugh two weeks. We play
:·McClelland suffered the loss (5 evety night. Our young guys are
• walks, 5 K). r..nnis Osborne was going to have to continue 10 step
•
''
•:the catcher. · ~¥
forward . .
; • Trimble hiuers were McClelland
Eastern goes to Waterford
· :with three singles, Ward a single tonigbl
! 'and a borne run, K. Dugan two sinLine~
.
! gles, and Moore a single.
Trimble 0 1 I 2 2 0 0-6 9 2
•' Eastern hitters were Eric Hill a Eastern 0 0 3 3 0 0 1-7 5 4
; triple, Ryan Buckley a double,
Wp-Friend
:.smith a single, Steve Durst a sinLP-McClelland.
• gle, and Chris Bailey a single.

•l'

:r

Call · - -.

Dave or Bob
For More Information

mee, Fla., l:OS p.m.
MIMCICU " · Ta- If. Plxt Charlotte. A a., 1:05 p.m.
TOtQato w. SL Lou.il If. St. ~

~f

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 21,. 1995- 12 NOON.
INSERTION DATE:
THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1995

Tn~dW

_Aiou, Showalter._ will serve ·as AII·Star
managers
-

:l

..

Derrick
Moon, nmaina bac.k. to the San Fraocl•··
co .(9en ror • 1995 f!rtb·round dr1ft

Seattl11 v1. Qa.ldanllat Phoenil, 10:0~

Bndentaa, Fta.,I:05 p.m.

CHJCAOO BEARS- A&amp;reed to
tctb With Steve WaJa,h, quwterbKk. OD I

•
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Siaaed
Tim Ooad, no1e tac:kle. aad 1ohnny
Thomu, dr.fcn1iwe bllC'II:; Re.-•ianed Pio
Sag:apolutele aad M.-io Johnson, defr.nlin linemen, and Mib 1Schad, offe111iYC

AI., I :OS p.m.
Milwaukee w. Colorado at 1\ICIOD,
Ariz., 3:05p.m.
Cinci Rnali VI, Philadelphia al Clear·
water, Fla., 7:3.5 p.m.
CluaJao Cubs v1. Sa.n FraDCilco at
Sc(}{fsdaie, Ariz., 10 p.m.
·
C11li!ornia 'f'l, SSUl Dieao at Peoria,
Ariz., 10:05 p.m.
-

~ur•daf'• Ganu•

ReACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
lr'J ~HE l"RI-COUNTY AREAl

FOOfiiALL
National fqott-11 Le.. '"'

ooc-yw ton tract.

Beach. A•·· 1:05 p.m.
Pitllblr'llh vt. OliciJO WhU.e&amp;ox at
Saruota, Aa., 1:05 p.m.
·
St. Louil \'11 . Torooto Ill DuDediu,

·
•

Rlpken, meanwhile, had a few
choice words for umpire Jim Paylor
after be struck out looking for the
second straight at bat. Then, in the
sixth inning, Paylor called him out
on strl)ces again.
Paylor is one of the replacement
umpires working while the regulars
are locked· out. The regular umrs
· made a new contract proposal ·
Monday, lowering their demand
from a 53 percent.raise over four
years to 40 percent.

"It is not sisnificantly enough.
lower to give me encouragement
lbat we can make a deal in the ncar
future," said Robert Khee!. the
management Jawrer wbC) negOiiales
on bebalf of bolb leagues.
In the Cubs-Rockies game. i
· line drive by Rick Wilkins in ~e
first inning bit nrst-base umptre
Terry Bovey in the upper th1gb.
Bovey ruled it foul before crumpling to the ground, lben limped off
the,field and did not rerum.
In the Mets-Braves game,
Atlanta didn't .gel a bit until the
eighth inning. Starter Bobby Jones
worked four hitless innings and
Dave Mlicki worked three .

.

Ditely few Ulllpcci0od dilciplioary rC.ODJ.

Baltimore vs. Minneiobl at fort My·
en, Aa., 1:0.5 P·ffl·
Boston v1. Tn• Ill Port Olartotte,
Fla., 11 0~ p.m.
N.Y. Mets va. N.Y. YuU.1tf\or1
Lauderdale, Fla., 1:05 p.IYL
Florida VI. Kan~a~ City It Hainea
City, Pla, ,I : O~ p.m.
' Houston v1. (..(II Anl;ele.ll Vtro

"You can go 5-for-5 or do
whatever down here and it' doosn't
matter," Velarde said, downplaying lbe fear accomplished only 10
times in major leagne history.
The Royals bad a 10-run comeback against the Reds, but still
almost lost. Tbe gmne ended with a
10-9 Kansas City victory when

In the third Kim Mayle tripled,
Wbite bad an RBI single, Karr sio·
•
'~·· Tri-Valley Conference softball vic- gled, Nelson had a ground out and
;: lory over Ibe Trimble Lady Tom- RDI to advance the runners, and
Coach Howie Caldwell's grils · sixth when Moore was hit with a
· ~. cats at Eastern Monday night.
Aeiker tripled, the score now 8·0.
again continued their impressive pitch, stole second and third, and
r:. Rebecca Evans was the winning Trimble came back as Eastern start wilb a 4-2 win over Trimble came borne on Jemlifer Lawrence's
J: ·pitcher with two strikeouts, four began 10 substitute, scoring 6ne in that allowed the Tornadoes to keep single, Afler Brandy Roush
! .. walks, and tJu:ee sparsely scattered the third and ·seven in the fifth. pace with Eastern for the Tri-Val- walked, Lawrence came borne on
' : bits to ber credit in pitching a rme Eastern went back up 11-8 in the ley Conference top spot in girls' Bea Lisle's 4·3 ground out, the
score4-L
&gt;·: game. The Eastern defense • fifth after Trimble bad tied i~ 8-8. softball.
FH scored a single run in the
~. attributed for nine errors and ten
Tbe big bnlow in that inning was a
Andrea Moore again pitched a
seventh
as Mabomey singled and
:·:-llnearned runs, a misgiving towards . Nelsqn si~.sle, a bases loaded walk great game, dominating the action
i · the Eagles defense, but an attribute to Aeiker, and a sacriiice ny by ~ with an-eleven strike out pcrfor- scored on hits by Barnbart and
! to Evans pitching. Jessica Radford Evans. Redovian foreced home a mance, walking five, scauering just Daily, however, Moore continued
no to sl.rike out the side.
-.'was the caiCher.
run as she reacbed on an error.
three bits and bitting two batters.
Linescore:
;;. Love went two and two-thirds
Trimble cut it to 11-10 in the . · The senior hurler pilcbed five
·!: innings, Hoffman two and one- top of lbe sixth.
~oreless innings. giving up single Federal 0 0 1 0 0 0 1=2 3 3
::: third, and Tanya Trace one. HoffIn the sixth, White walked, Rad- runs in the second and seventh Southern 2 0 0 0 0 0 2=4 2 0
WP-Moore
f' man suffered the loss. They com- ford singled. Karr reached 011 a FC, innings.
LP-PuUins
•l: ·bined for three sl.rikeouts and eight then both ·bad a double steal before
Pullins suffered tbe loss with six
r ,. walks.
.
Aeiker again bad a bases loaded sl.rike outs, four walks, and scatter'
;i Trimble bitters were M. Flowers walk. Mindy Sampson bad an RBI ing two bits in another good effort.
·!~ with a triple, T~ce a double; and single and Evans II two run shot for
Soulbem.scored two •in the first
Now Open For The SeasQn
;t •Erica Campbell a single.
Eastern's 14-10 margin of victory.
when Renee Turley siQgled and
Bedding Plants
1)
Eastern scored five in the secEastern is 5-2 overall and 4-2 in scored after stealing second and
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
' ond wben Amy Redovian walked, tbe league. Prior to the game East- third. ·She rode home on an error
frosh Kim Mayle singled, White em, Southern, Alexander, and Fed on Sammi Sisson's misplayed ball,
Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
.:; reached on a fielder's choice, Rad· Hock·were in a 4-way tiefor r~tst.
the Sisson came home on an error
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose
ford bad an RBI single, Karr an
Linescore
on Moore's mishandled grounder at
Bushes, Strawberry Plants
•. RBI on an error, and Ni.cole Nelson Eastern 0 5 3 0 3 3 x-14 12 9
shortstop. Southern led 2-0.
~; an RBI sing)e. Patsy Aeiker Trimble- 0 0 o· I 7 2 0-10 3 5
FH.scll(ed a single run in the
Hubbards Greenhouse
,; walked tb force home a run, ami
'LP.-Hoffman
third as Maborney walj.ed and
Syracuse
992-5776
·
WP-Evans
came bome on Daily's single. From
;. Nelson scored on a passed ball.
,•
.
.
'
then on it was a pitching battle with
Open Daily 9 am-~ pm

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

SAN DIEOO PADRES-Added lill·
ly Bean and Cory Snyder, outf~eldll'l, M
noD-roatr:r playen. Scot Julio Bruno, oUt·
fielder, Lu Ve&amp;U of the Paciric Co•t

first .

Cincinnati's Brian Dorsett flied out
to. tbe edge of the warning track
wtth two outs and two runners in
scoring position in the ninth.

DALLAS (AP) - Tbe man- AL at tbe time of last August's
agers of the teams with the best strike. Alou and Showalter each
records in the National and Aineri- ·were named manager of lbe year
can leagues last yeat: will be lbe fortheshortenedaeason.
managet$ln Ibis sWillller's All-Star
The Morning News, citing
Game. ,
·
·
unidentified major league sources,
Felipe Alou of Montreal and said 'the leagues expect to announce ·
Buck Showalter of the New York lbe choices this week. The All-Star
·in tbe fourlb and sixth innings on Yankees have been chosen by Game is July II at The Ballpark'io
major league officials, .The Dallas Arlington.
Marauder errors.
Morning
News reported in today's
Showalter, the youngest manag·
Butcher In Hring the no bitter
editions.
er
in
the majors at age 38, is 234·
struck out tbe side four times,
The
game
traditionally
uses
the
203
lifetime
wilb the Yankees for a
including a rare four strike ouiS in
lhe seventh inning. Bobbie Butc!ter managers Of the previous year's .535 winning percentage.
Alou, 59, is 238-163 for the sec·
led Meigs with a single and a triple, World Series, but because the.
strike
wiped
out
last
yeaf's
Fall
and-best
winning percentage (.594)
Cotterill added a single and a douClassic,
major
league
officials
were
in
the
past
three seasons. He was a
ble, Billie added ber home run,
.
left
wilb
the
choice.
lbree-time
All-Star during his 17Stewart a double, and Blackwell,
The
Expos
(74-40)
led
the
Nt
year
career.
Fackler, McElroy and Stacey
Alou, who is from the Dominiand lbe Yankees (70-43) led the
Novak all added singles.
Hawk .was lbe starter and loser
for the Vikings.
Sweep pair from AilS
On Saturday, the ~farauders
swept a double header from By DAVE HARRIS;
Meigs finally came off of the
Albens. Meigs won the flflit game Sentinel Correspondent
mats in the fifth inning. Rick
9-2 and scored a run in the bottom
Meigs spotted Vinton County to Hoover reached leading off the
of the seventh inning to win the • a 3-0 flflit inning lead and e~ploded inning on a Viking em;&gt;r and Richie
second game 6-5.
for 10 runs in lhe fifth and seventh Wamsley walked and Scott George
Billie Butcher was the winning innings en route to a I0·4 win over wa!Jced ~o load the bases. Paul
pitcher in both .sames, going lbe t~e Vikings Monday evening al Pullins followed with a single and
distance in the first game picking McArthur.
Gary Stanley wilb a sacrifice fly.
up the win after taking over for
The win, fifth in a row for the Brett Newsome then reached on a
Fackler in the second game.
.Marauders, gave the maroon and fielders choice and Cass Cleland
Meigs scored. three runs in ead! gold a 9.4 mark overall and a 6·1 followed with a single to give
of lbe ftrSt lbree innings of tbe rnt record in tbe TVC, good enough Meigs a 5-3 advantage.- . ·
game to take a 9-0 lead. Athens for f~tst place in lbe Ohio pivision .
Meigs scored five more runs in
scored single ·runs !n the sixth and
the
seventh inning. Pullins walked
Tbe Vikings took advantage of a
and
Stanley singled, Newsome
seventh innings.
walk, a double, a bit batter, another
Meigs pounded out 10 bits led double and a single to take the walked and Cleland singled for the
third time. David Fetty then
by BlackweU wilb .three, and Fack- early lead .
ler and Cotterill witb two each
including a double by Fackler.
In the second game Athens
scored twice in the seventh inning
Scoring five runs in the bottom choice, followed by a Travis Lisle
to tie the game. But Fackler singled
of
tbe fifth inning, Coach Mick RBI single, a Kevin Deemer single,
and scored all the way from first
Winebrenner's
Southern Tornadoes and an RBI single by McKelvey. ·
base on a single by Stewart
claimed
a
hard-fought
5-2 l;ri-ValRyan Martin was also 3-4, while
Meigs was out hit 10-5, Billie
ley
Conference
baseball
win
over
Deemer
and McKelvey were each
Butcher led Meigs with a single
Federal
Hocking.
2-3
in
good
offensive nights for
and a dpuble.
Southern
was
beld
scoreless
.
b
Y
Southern.
MEIGS 220 312 2·12 10 4
premier pitcher's Chapman and St.
Eric Jones pitched yet another
VINTON 000 10 I 0- 2 0 2
Angelo,
but
broke
it
ojlen
wilb
a
great
game, going Ibe distance to
Billie Butcher (WP) and Emily
five
run
flflb
inning.
In
th~
frame,
fan
14,
walk four, and give up two .
Fackler
trailing
1·0,
started
out
runs
..
Southern
had four erfors.
Southern,
Hawk (LP) and Ford
wilb a 4-3 ground out.
Federal Hocking pitching fanned
Ryall Martin ~oubled, Eric five, gave up 12 hits, walked just
Jones walked and bolb advanced · one.and the defense bad one error.
on a balk . and Ryan Williams,1
Linescore:
who was 3-4 on Ibe night, had a l Federal 0 0 I 0 0 1 0-2 5 I
two RBI double. Jesse Maynard Southern 0 0 0 0 5 0 x-5 i2 4
then doubled home Williams,
· WP-Jones
,
Shawn Daily reached on a fielder's
LP-Cbapman

1'.~1;-· sixthEastern
plated six runs in the
inning to preserve a 14-10

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIESAIVeed 'to tcr1111 with Gary V•ho, out·
Helder, on 111 oo&amp;-yea.r C(JDtract. Sent Paul
Fletcher and Ryao Klltp, pitcher•: Tom
Marlib ind Rob BuUer, outfieldm; and
Anthony Manahan lllld Kevin Jordan , In·
fieldcn, to Scranton·Wilkea·Btrre of the
Jruematkmal J..e.a:ue, Sent Tommf· .Eaion,
catcher, aud Gary Mota, outCiclder, to
Readi~;~a of the Elllltern LcaJIUe.

Lauderdale, Aa., 7:05p.m.
.LoJ A.naela n . N.Y. Meu 111 I"Cft S1.
l.ucte,Aa., 7:10p.m.
'Cleveland va. Houston at. Klai!Mlee,

.,_ · AUifili ft . florldll til lliera.li1a., 1:05
p.m. .
.
Clevelaad n . Detroit It Lakeland,
Fla., 1 : 0~ p.m.
Baltimore n . Bolton .tfort.Myen.
Fla., l :OS p.m.
Chlcaao White Sox.,., Pittlbwjh Bl

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Billie Butcher Hred a no-blUer
while striking out 15, and added a
solo home run in leading lbe Meigs
Marauders to a 12-2 win over Vin·
ton County in girls TVC softball
action Monday.evening at Vinton.
The Lady Marauders riow own a
11-1 mark and a 7-1 mark in tbe
Ohio Division of the l'ri-Valley
Conference. Meigs will travel to
Eastern on Wednesday.
Meigs jwnped out 011 top 2.{) in
the first inning. Amber Blackwell
led off the game with a walk, sbe
scored on a one out double by
Stephanie Stewart. One out later
Bobbie Butcher singled to score
Stewart.
Meigs scored two more runs in
the second inning with oul the benefit of a base hit. Tbe Marauders
took advantage of wildness on tbe
pan of Viking pitcher Hawk who
walked five batters in lbe inning.
Meigs made it a 7-0 game in tbe
fourlb inning. Billie Butcher led off
the inning with a home run: Cynthia Couerill walked, Jessica McElroy singled, and King walked.
Blackwell foUowed with a RBI single and Fackler added another run
. wilb a ground out
Meigs added another run in tbe
fifth inning, Bobbie Butcber tripled
and scc;&gt;red on a saerifice fly. of the
bat of Cotterill.
Meigs closed out the scoring
with two more runs in the siXth and
seventh innings. In lbe sixth made
took advantage of a walk, a single
by King, a ground out, and lJ. single
by Emily Fackler. In the seventh
inning a single by Cotterill, a walk
and a fielders choice plated the
Marauders runs.
The Vikings scored single runs

'

Pedro Martinez:, Ro11 Powell, Shane
Reynolds amcl Dave Vere~, pitdxn; Tony
Euteblo, catcher; tbril Dannels, O.llllldo
Miller and Andy Stankiewicz, tatieldera;
and Driu Hunts and James Mouton, out. fielders, on one-year COIUtacta. Renewed
the contract of M1te Ha.lmton, pilCher.
MONTREAL 'EXPOS-Aareed to
terma with Uu• Aquino, pildler, ~ami·
1
nor-leap cootrtct.

Aorida YJ, AUanta at Weit Palm
Beach, Aa .. l:OS p.m.
Pitlliburah v•. Toronto at DWiedin,
Aa., 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore vs. Philadelpttia II Clewwater, Aa .. 1:05 p.m.
Tex• va. M~nne&amp;ota at FU1 Myers ,
Aa., 1:05 p.m.
Kan.laS City va. SL Lou.ili at SL PetenbUJg, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
San FranciiCO vs. Sealtle at haria,
Ariz., 4 p.m.
•
Colondo VI . Oakland Ill Phoenix:,
' 'Ol p.m.
·
California w . Chicago Cubllll Maa,
Ariz., 4:0S p.m.
San Di~1o VJ. Milwaukee Bl Chan·
dler. Ariz .....:Oji p.m.
Ciacion•i vt. Detroit al Lakeland,
Aa., 7:0:5 p.m. ·

. SAFE AT SECOND • Clolcago's Rey Sanchez II caUed safe at
second as Colorado's Walt Weiss bobbles the ball tn Tuesday's
exblbltlon game at Tucson, ~rlz. The Cubs won 8-0. (AP)

lbe ninlb inning of a 7-2 loss to tbe
Dodgers oo Monday. Runners were
on rnt and second and going wilb
1be Pilcb when Mitch Webstez hit a
slicing liner that Velarde, playing
shortstop, snared near secoud base.
He touched lbe bas and lben tagged
out Eddie Pye coming down from

Butcher fires no-hitter as
Marauders post 12-2 win

COLORADO ROCKIES-P1.ced El·

w. 801ton at fort

QqdJtt, Ariz.. 4:05 p.m.
OatJaod n. CaiJrorlll•lt Te~
Ari&amp;., 4:05 p.m.

·

lh Burkl , ou,trl.elder, and Arm.tlldct
Reynoao and Lance. Painter, pitche11, on
the lS·da)' disablod lilt. Alf'CC!I to teems
with Eric Youna. outfielder, ud Ja)'hawt
Oweu, catcher, on one-year comr.c~J,
HOUSTON ASTROS- Aarced to
terms w.lth Doua Brocail, John Hudek,

Cleveland 2, Houatoa 2, lie, 10 in-

Botllln al Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Mint101ota at Denver, 9 p.m.
HoUlton at Utah, 9 p.m.

•-Oaroit ..

........... I
............. l

Mond.,'• SporU TranMC:"-•
B:r The Auod .. ed. ......

niop

Denver at San Antonio. 8 p.m
L.A. Clippen at Dallu, 8:30p.m.
Sacramento at Phoenix, !Op.m.
Seanle llt L.A. Laket1, 10:30 p.m.
l'rlrtland at Golden Stille, 10:30 p.m.
Wednuday's GaJMI
Atlanta at New 1mey, 7:30p.m.
Orlando at Washington, 1:30 p.m.
Miami at Cleveland, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Indiana, 8:30p.m.

Hartford

........... .l

.....

.100

Minoootl8 , Tew IS
Mllwautae- 6, SaD Fraoelsco 1
OUcaao CUb! 8, Color.:lo 0
Sao Diego 8, oakland 7
ScatUe 13, CaliCotnia 2

Orlando Ill, Washlo!ton 100

Philadelphia
New Jeney
Wuhtng:ton
N.Y. Ra:ngen
Aorida ...
Tam(N! Ba.y

Cleveland

BooloO

Central Divlllon

l·lildiana..........
x-Chatloue.........
1-Chlcaao ..••....
I -Cleveland.......
l ·AIJaota..........

L
I

:.......... 3 2
2
............ 3 2
2
KaDauCil)' ........ J
............ 3 2
Toronto
l)etrolt
..............2 3
Mllwaukoc .........2 3
.........2 3
NewYurk
...........2 3
ChllwMI
.............. 2 3
Seattle
............. 2 3
Tex•

BaiUmore

Aln.;,EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE

..........4

have been talking about tfle pool
money.·
.
"They have never, ever said lbat.
we're not wOitb what we '.re asking
for. They said. 'We don't have iL' I
don't lbink we've been oot of line
at all," American League uinpire
Ti!D Tschida said. "It's always
been our "goal to be wbere tbe minimum umpire's salary is 75 to 80
percent of a minimum player's
salary ($109,000). A first-year
umpire in the major leagues is ·a
proven professional.''
Kheel said oWners will respond
to tbe milpires' new offer, but that
no negotiating sessions were scheduled. Phillips said be expected to
bear from Kheel today.

repeats as Boston Marathon winner

Scoreboard
N.Uoa.t B•btWA.otladOII
AtAGIMCe
87 TIM NIIOCI .... , _

Rich~e

5

Yankee player records unassisted triple play - .

4

By The Auoclatecl hess

1hl Daily Sentinel Pe,m

'

'

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'

GENERAL TIRE SALES
C0\11'1 TEl{ TillE II \U:\I:J:\4;
Hours M·F 8-5 Sat. B-12
Middleport, OhiO 4576Cf·

BATTERIES
STRUTS

SHOCKS
TIRES

HONDA PRELUDE
• Excludes Demos, previous orders, previous sales and
ex Hatchback. .
.
CONDITIONING OFFERS ENDS APRIL 2Q, 1995 .
FREE

�- -- .

.

,.

~~

.

•
~·

'

II 111e D..ly Sentinel

'l'ueldlly, Aprll18, 19115

1\llld8y, Apr1118, 1995

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Ann is one step at~ead o
/ n .second hand smoke issue
Ann
Landers
Dear ADD Landeri: You certainly
wereaheadofyourtime. lamholding
in my hand a column you wroce daled
Aug, 24, 1972. It · was about
iecdndhand smoke. I'm sure it was
t!Jefirsttimealotofyourreadershad
heard of it. I've kept the column in
my flies for nearly 23 years. 1 hope
)'ou will print itagain.
If the researchers had insisted .on
giving their findings the publicity
they descrY~ back in 1972,just think
&lt;If the millions of lives that could
~ave been saved. How sad. --

' you'd rllbcr not have smoke blo~

'

H.M.N.,GOLETA, CALIF.
DEAR GOLETA: Sad indeed. I
lost a beloved brother-in-law to
cigareacsmoking in 1976.Thepublic
had 1'10 idea in those days just how
deadly cigarette smoke could be.
The tobacco lobby is rich and
powerfu I. It was not, however,
powerful enough to continue
advertising on TV. Concern for the ·
health and welfare of the people
triumphed over the lllmighty dollat
It will be a glorious day when no
newspaper or magazine will accept
an ad promoting a product that is
deadlyandaddictive. Letushopethal
day is ~ fl)! ~- _:
_ _ ·
Here IS the cOlumn lhauan in f972:
Dear Ann Landers: How many
times has someone asked, "Do you
mind if I SJiloke?". And even though

'

twice as prevalent among young
in your face, you say, "That's all right. children whose paTents smoted at
Goaheld."Newevideoceshouldbe .home than among children whOse:
called 10 the allaltion die lading paralls did 1101.
public, Ann, and hete it is.
. Please, Ann, when your-readers 11e
Rllc:entexperimentsatlelasAAM asked, "Do you mind if I smoke?"
University indicate dlat 30 minutes urgedlemtosay,"Yes,ldomind. lt's
in a smolce-ftlled JOOIIl aignifiCBIIIIy bad for my heahh. • ·- CHARLES ·
increuesthenon-IIIIIObr's~nae, KLESEWETIER, EXECUTIVE.
blood pressure and the amount of DIRECTOR , TB AND HEALTH
carbon monoxide in his blood. A SOCIETY, WAYNE AND OAK·
team of researchers at the University LAND COUNTIES, MICH.
of Cincinnati Medical Center
DEAR C.K.: Thank you ror
reponed tl)at smoke driftinll from die provi«)ing the perfect response. For
burning ends of cigareacs, pipes and those who are too timid to SB)I "Yes,
cigars contBins cadmium, which I do mind ," I suggest that you clip
could definitely be harmful when 1 this column lind have copies made.
inhaled 0y Mil®ke1r.Another When asked the.question, simply
research team at Wayne StBte hand it over. Thai should clear a sinus
Unilt:ersity in Detroit found thatacule or two.
illnesses, mostly respiratory, were ·
Dear Ana Landen: In the D8S\.

or

Is tltal AM LlllfMTI col_,. you
youhaveprillled-.11'*"' 4 ci.fof clipped years 1110 yeUow witlt qt?
leg cramps, and they bave been For 11 copy of Air most ftequtfiiiY
extremely helpfal. You bave 1110
nques/111 poems ttttd e~s, -~II
helped)'Oia'ftlldccl wid..mnccliesfor ulf-4dllrtsstd, long, /Hullltss·sut ,
wans. Now can you tell us how 10 t~tvtlope llltd11 clrtck.oriiiOfltYOidtr
SUlp the hicciaps?
· ·
for $5.25 (this illcllldu poslllgt llltd .
MyhiiSblndhia:upcdlastniptfor /tatldlillg) to: Gems. ctoAMI..DIIIIus.
two hours ..t then too1c a sleeping P.O. Box J/562, Clliettgo,/ll. 60611·
piU. Thi,s isn't the tint time Ibis has .
0562. (In C(JII(JI/IJ, Wid $6.25 .)
happened. I would rally appeciate
itifyoucouldteHmeorawaytoget
rid of those darned hiccups. Thanks
foryourhelp.--OHIOREADER
DEAR OHIO: The old family
I
remedles are besl:. Several years ago,
I filled an entire column with
suggestions fronl midcrs on how 10'
By stop b~ps.
Jl!ing 10 print it
Dave
again tomorrow.
Gem of the Day: Profanity is the
Grate
mark of a conversational cripple.
of
Rutland
Furniture

,

·. The LiJht
·.Tou'h

WHALEY'S AUTO
•
,.,
PARTS

Mobile Welding
Diesel InjeCtor SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

•

985-3879

• •' •

'· .~

One of the joys of retirement
is keeping a list of things to
do - but not today.

lUNGS'

Home lntprov....ts
33151 Hoppy HoltMiddleport, Ohio 457110

(Beth Stivers). The grand prize winners were
pictured, len to right, up to two years of·age, ..
Robert Strohl of Pomeroy; three to five year
olds, Tess Thomas of Middleport; six to eight
year olds,, Megban Leslie of Middleport; nine
and 10 years olds, Lovlna Hysell of LaPort, Ind.,
and Tara Barber of Reedsville; and 11 and l2
year olds, Jlnuny Gilkey of Cheshire.

Middleport Literary Club takes glimpse inside Harlem ghetto ·
"Go Tell It On the Mountain" scene. Decausc of his prolific out\Vas reviewed by Sister Fidclis Bell put, novels, short stories, essays,
plays, biographies and the skill
ar Wednesday's meeting of the . involved,
Baldwin demonstrates
Middleport Literary Club at the
Ule paradox of being hailed as one
home' of Phyllis llaekeil.
The cover cif the book calls it of America's most famous writers
Jam es Baldwin's "lhundering novel and yet being completely unknown
of the Harlem ghctlo and or a fami· to others, she pointed out.
The reviewer introduced "Go
ly haunt.ed by lust and searching for
sain thood". Crit ics, th e reviewer Tell It On The Mountain" as Baldsaid, consider tile content as some- win's rust major work, a magnifi~
what. autobiographical as the aulhor cent novel of Dla.ck Consciousness
was born· in New York City in revolving aro und religion 'in a
1224. !he oldest of nine children. store-front church . Its unusual
Of brilliant. irllelleet, educated in structure gives it an air of mystery,
public schools, he was a boy . said Sister Fidclis, who noted that
preacher until a literary fellowshiP, in Part I readers meet John, an ado·
enabled him to turn to full-time lcsccnt. searching for his identity in
writing, Sister Fidelis Bell repon- an obviously strcssed·out family, in
Part II team about the memories of
ed.
She noted that Baldwin lived tbe three other major characters
much of his life ·in France possibly which weave !he plot togclber, and
bec:tuse l)lack v.:riters were not rec- in Part Ill U1e details of John's con¥'!':'&lt;~'"" '""'
ognized in the Arnerican literary

Duff..named finalist
Peggy Lee Duff, daughter of
Melvin and Robin Duff of Dexter,
has been named. a finalist in the
1995 Pre-Teen Ohio Scholarship
and Recognition Program to be.
, . .·~
beld June 9-11 in Columbus.'
The event involves girls 7-12
''
years of age ranking in the top 10
in·the state academically. Additionally, young ladies are invited who
have been recognized publicly for
Uleir outstanding personal achievements, leadership abilities or creative t&lt;Uents.

black man about black peop I e,.

Dawoyne E. Wllson
Dawayne E. Wilson , son of
Randall Wilson of Pomeroy,
recently enllstjld in the Air Force's
delayed enlistment program in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Wilson, a 1993 Word of Faith
Christian School graduate, will fol'!ow a technical training in the
mechanical field and earll credits
toward an associate degree. He will
enlist.in May 1995.

PEGGY LEE DUFt'

Discover The Difference Lifestyle
Can Make In Your Leisure Time

Public Notice
PUBUC ~OTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
thot on Saturday, April
22nd, 1995, ol 10:00 a.m .. a
public aole will be held at
211 Weat Second, POmeroy,

CALL OUR

Hurry

in

for

our

25%

now

rt~ervol the right to reloct
ony or ott bldo oubmlttod.

Further,

the

Alzheimers/Related
Disorders Support Group
. Firs! in a seri.e s of four.
Public Education on
Alzheimers
Wednesday, April 19
1:30-4:00'pm
At Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center
For more information
contact Lenora Leifhe~ 992·2f61

above

collaloral will be sold In the
condition It Ia tn, with no
exprooo ·or Implied

given. . Ohio, to ooll lor cuh the warrantlea
For
Further
Information,
following collateral:
contact
Mike
Ktooa
at 9921984 Chevy Chevette
2t36.
_,G1ABOBC3EY183991
Tho Farmoro Bank end (4) 15, 18, 21; 3TC
Sevlngo
COmpany,
Pomeroy, Ohlo r0oerveo the 11 H 1 W ted
right to bld at thlo .. le, and ;===e=p=:a:n=:::::::;
to withdraw tho above
coltalerel prior: to' aala.
AN's &amp; LPN's
Further, The Formero Bonk
ond Sovlngo Company
needed for
Pediatric Home
Care case in
3 Announcements
Pomeroy area.
. TrachNent
SHOOTING MATCH
Experience
Sunday, April 23
Feeney Bennet!
required. ·
American Legion Farm
Please call
Bailey Run Rd
' 12 gauge, I p.m.-?
614-764-0960.

off regular

7

pc. patio dining

patio

Childrens

bar

groups,

sets,
chaise

lounges, glider loveseats. and
much more. i\ssorted frame

&amp;

.

Hours Daily

le
Third·&amp; Olive

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

446-3045

9to 5
Friday
9to 8

Sales and
Service with
Low, tow Prices

FREE
ESTIMATES
FULLWARAAHTY UKE NEW
Chip Rt:pair In Thbl Or Sinks,
Resurfi\Ce Old Ceramic Tile, And

Fiberalau Shuwer C.-.c;:ks Or Sap

BATHTUB

Remodeil1:19

FrH E•llm•,_

Stop &amp; Campara
FREE .ESTIMATES

614-7G-30110 ·

'985-4473

Strvici •
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
Rt. 338,
OH
61

Houll All'*.

lAIR'S lurHry

ReiiiOdtlllnll

742-3149or

Kitl:hln ' 111111 Ran 1'1111
Room Ad •tons
Siding. Roafing, Plllol
~

StateRt. 33
Darwin,

lllllnll- &amp;piiilnced '
Call W~YM Iliff en-4405
For Frw EaiL 1111

Ohio ·

Bennett's Mobile Home Heating
and Cooling
·
.~

Needed:

QUALIFIED .INSTALLATION
SERVICEMAN,

has!!m!!-l!11!ll!!l!!l!;&lt;t9!1.:1!::1!:iW999!!!!.2Y""'!!IIO!AAL2w:a!::'t!::'t!::1£1!:~!\S!!IS!¥!!H!il!5!!l!!!l!'!t!Ulli!SJe!il!!l!!1'!aia5lQ

bowl set, Bean blue &amp; white crock, stoneware canteen w/blue, 2 W.C. Watts Ravenswood,
blue &amp; while swirl pattern stone pitcher, McCoy pitcher &amp; bowl. s.everal blue &amp; white
stoneware butters, several blue a white pitchers, Hamllt.oh a Jones 5 gal. churn, blue &amp; while
J ,slon&lt;ewaile kissing dulch, 21g. blue crocks, 1 lg. green crock, 4 sm. progressive pottert crocks,
Mr;Coy pottert, several pieces Rave~~wood poHert. lronstore urinal, A.P. Donaghho hat jar$
&amp;

' -

' ·

.,..--'- - ·

-~

..

(614) 992-5291

' -

·

.

AUCTIONEER NCJTE: Outstanding CoHectlon of antiques and collectable some have been
packed lor years. On Saturday we will be running two 1lngs most of the day so bring a friend
and spend the day. Don't. mlS9llhls one still unpec~lii{J boxeslll
·
.
•
Auction conducted by:

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Mason, WV (304) 773-5785 or 773·5447
·
Lunch
Auctioneer: Rick Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer: Kevin Meadows #A-116 ·
Terms: Cash or check wilD
·
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property •
Licensed and bonded in Ohio,
and West Virginia.

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

992·9949. 992·6471

614-985-4180

Sundays by appt. only.
SeNing Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
area. Call for rate schedule.
•
Mln~ $2.00 • .

9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Cali 992-2487

Bill Slack

COMMERCIAL
and RESIDENTIAL
.
.
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-3470

2121118

Open Mon.-Fri . 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Weekends Call 61'4-742-2772
'

LIVE

Custom Bu~ding &amp; RemOdeling

• NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
·PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 • roo~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SUIICE
•Factory Aulhorized Parts
llo Service
•All Makea o.ot2 ¥ears

ofaot Reliable service

•Washers • Dryers~ Ranges
•Ralrigeratora •Freezers
·
•Dishwashers
•H. Heaters
•Microw.aves •Diapoeata
•Thanks Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Areas
(614) 985-3561 or

w.

992·5335

'.

. .

12f14ftfn

PSYCHICS

. ROOFING

'
(No Sunday
Calls)
-~ '

-

'

----

MiiDIRN.SANITATION
. POMEROY, OHIO

Septic tankS cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Famjly Reunions a Parties
NOW OFFER ING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Ll
daB dod ~0
992-3954

1 ON 1
1·900.656-5000
Ext. 1861
· $3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·74204/4185

Emergency Phone 9851418

1

Announcemenls

Announcements

$2.99 Per Miri
Must be 18yrs.

FOR SAI.E OR TRADE

Procall Co

4

(602) 954-7420

...

'HPBIIHI
t. Slrll1on

Danny

Giveaway

2yr old . . . dog, port
Shophord good dog bUt
nol :p;i w/chlldroll. ~- ·
3013.

Old

14'x11'

&amp; Peggy

61042-2193

-

Dt.~~~IWhetiPu11

To (IOOd home, 4 bMiftlful mer.
Uon King puppleo, hrko old,
and -hor~oman ho... doga).
Con be II 2135 Unc:Oin

MORRIS EQUIPMENT ..........
'RUTLAND
742·2455
31,.,, mo.

6

lost &amp; Found

.....,...

PERFECT VIEW TAN
Wolfe Bed
Now Bus111e~:-; tn Op1 ·r&lt;~tron

Stewart Hollow Rd . Off
Bradllury Rei
Phone 992 4044
Owners Rolhe &amp;
Shrrley Stewart
Your Busmess Woulci
Be AppreCiated

20 Sn,;srons For

'25. 00

RACINE

GUN CLUB
GUN

One mile out _
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.- Wed,-.Frl, ·Sat. ;
SHOOTS
1·6
I
Sunday 1:00 p.m.
• Crattsman Tools
•Toys
12 Gauge Only
•Guns
Limited: 740
' lollds of Misc.
Backbore, 680 Front
Buy-Sell·Trade
2128195
992·2060
1o.-5'1mo

..Sl!l!.!f!Ok!.i!!l:
Iii Allin 7!Je WANTAoj

NllhlNIIINIIfHHfii/NII,WNHIIIIIII/IH6Hif!NtHHIIHII/IIHIIII/IIIfiiiiHIINIIIIHII/IIH/HKI/Iftllllli

.•

ouury ·willow sYsiil.ts -;.=~=~--=- ·

' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . : . ; ; :.:.:.:;;,:::.J . FOW&gt;d: Block

P.omeroy, Ohio
r/2,\Jn
'
_.__

wooden

·
- "114-802~115.
' rool, lnctucll"9 .....
tenta,

·

Brickles

. . . __

•

~

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Procall Co.
(602) 954· 7420

'

Sit! ~

H&amp;HSAWMILL
Portable '
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

Bidwell, OH 45614
. (614)388-9865

s •n

1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878

1-900-562-7000
Extension 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

992·6215

Additions, Concrete, etc:
P.O. Box 220

Tonight! ·

Bandsaw Mill

· •. Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing '·
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, Room

Lonely? Gall

CALL'NOW!!!

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

..

..

Adl\ltltb!.

1\0/Jtlltve.£

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

2112192/lfn

(Mol~ I I

2.f!Slj

Howard L. Wrltesel

614-992-7643

....m,.tc.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Home Sites, Laud
Clearlntl, Septic SyateutJ

• Room Additioas • Roofing

' (Depol St.) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

.

~

llllf·

Scniees.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

,lnrlaa's

(Specialize in
driveway sp..adlng)
'Limestone,
. Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

E\t\\\'11\1,

Trucking-

. (l.iiiJSIOIII Low Rates)

OUII

Ito\\ \1:11

Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

992·2269

...... Plrllullala,
lvlrlaltlng•, Banlillg

mo..

&amp; Drivewayl.

Garages • REtplacement Windows

Green

41411

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Owners: Pete &amp;
Diane Hendricks

WICKS .HAULING ··

35581 F!atwoodl Rd:
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
. Certified Pononol
Property AppralBonded (614) 982~79

Hrs; of Operation: Mon.·Fri. 8:00A.M. 1116:00 P.M.
Saturday 8:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.

Open

Misc. Jobs • . ,

Auetloneer

Community Cab Co. Inc.

SUMMER
IMAGES

and Removed

~ -.

BIIETI'
MILHOAN

Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
·Before 6 p.m .-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.

Firewood
Also:
Contract work

St~rubs Shaped

brushwork. Raisen Brook crock. 2 mini blue &amp; white wedding ring crocks, blue &amp; white pitcher

·

Mowing,
1inmnung
.
.

Light Hauling, ·

• · ~·•"• rolling pin, 3 nice blue &amp; white stone~are pitchers, water cooler w/cobalt blue birds

&amp; others .

Lawn Care

AND RJMOVAL

heads, rare adv. sign "The Sun Shines No More Perfect Plan! Old Hickory" work of KY Wagon
Mfg. Co., set ol47 graduating sleight bells.
· ·
DOLLS SELL SATURDAY:
,
Several small bisque dolls, 'dolls EFI'anbee, Marttia Washington. 5 small block dolls , Indian
doll, several bisque china dolls, Archie Bunkers grandson doll, bust of dolls, 1984
Temple doll &amp; others.
·
TOYS SELL SATURDAY
Lg. wind up bear, wind up squirrel, toy .balloon man &amp; others, Marx wind up lion, lottie toy gun,
loy printing press, MaiX motor transit, meet by friend signed Charley McCarthy, cap guns,
Jack In the box. old battery operated car In original box, Vlewmasler, roll bingo game. ball
bingo game. dice and others.
'
GUNS SELL SAT\IRDAV:
· · ·
·
·
. ·
. ,
Stephen 311 20 gu~ge double barrel, Rem. rolling block, 1886.Winchester lever action 12
guage, Merlin 336·30·30 rifle, 12 guage Bluefield Clipper shotgun, Model94 · 32 Winchester
1ille, Stephens 20 guage pump,'Win. model 37·20 guage. Belgum Browning light twelve. ·
STONEWARE SELLS SATURDAY;
'
4 gallon pure fulton whiskey jUQ Myersv &amp; Co. Covington KY, se~eral stone jars, 2 T.F.
Reppert· Jackson C.H. &amp; Palatine WV, Hamilton Jones. A.P.'Oonaghho, Michael Moo•e Prolor
&amp; several Parkersburg WV. A.P. Donaghho zipper pattern, Williams &amp; Pepper! 3 gal. jar, 4
AP. Oonaghho Parkersburg WV N2 and 1 Shinngton WV, T. ~. Reppel13 gal. jar, 2 stoneware
warmers, R.C .P. Co. NY bed warmer, adv. stone jugs, stoneware piggy banks, blue &amp;

UCMIId
57......s7

LINDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.
"Take the pain out
of painting ·· Let us ·
do it for you·

L&amp;W

TREETRIMMI~

avd . tins Country doctor, Edward Roblnsori Muriel, white ash, silver place pitcher w/ram

Help Wanted

good with public reJations~
Benefit(s) available.
-Call Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m. to
5:00p.m. at (614) 446-9416 to schedule
an interview for convenience.

-Roofing .Palritlng

Gan.gt and Towing

wire frame, hundreds ol antique books, lodge ribbons and metals, clock shelf. several ocarina
(sweet potato), old cas! iron bank, several good old fountain pens, Bordens mild jar, .1909
Whitehouse vinegar jug (small). 2 beer adv. signs, wooden butter mold, Steeple clock, quilt
tops, top hat, early teddy bears, Blossom DallY Co. bank, shine on coni whiskey jar, several
campaign badges, 1924 carnival liberty bottle, baby lullaby bank, marbles. old hats, Royal
Halburton china O.M.B. Liquor bottle 1973 f28 , wooden hand carved doll bust. shoo! dupont.
JlOWder tin avd. sign, lg. unuo;ual blue statue of Lady watering flowers. spongeware. Wagner &amp;
Griswold ware No. 8-1 o, baby plate. civil ware soldier bank, glass bank abd. Pittsburgh Paints,

with

\'

SEIVICI

Norway Spruce

B&amp;W

white granite pans, min. animals, opalescent cruet, early hat pins, rugs. okJ magazines , comic
books, old papers, 3" mini Teddy jointed head, .buhon In ears, glass eyes and floss nose &amp;

IMMEDIATE JOB OPENING

SHOP

assorted cushions.

Hurry in for best selection!

• Or Use Our
Fast Credit Terms.

MR. RIGGS
WHATYAMACALLIT

groups,

color

iuy • Sell • Trade

614-992-8223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

White Pine&amp;

. 4'1MI

Hiege• lamp. good early lamps, pr. slag glass &amp; bronze hanging' lamps , chandelier
w/opalescent shades, oil lamps. model12 Alladin lamp, olllamp w/reflectors, lg . Weller lamp,
2 blue Fenlon oil lamps w/ swirl shades, lamp signed Jefferson, 3 miner lamps, 3 lg. blue &amp;

, RACO
Second Annual Flower
Festival Parade
10:00 am April 22, 1995
with lineup at 9:30 on
Fourth Street at
" Fire Department Annex.
Everyone welcome to
enter.

11

-nuton, wv
Dine-in or GarrY-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

Chu~k Stotts

Wlndowa, Garage~.
F-&amp;11-

early pictures. Black American cream of wheat picture , sterling sliver· 10 sets salt and pepper
shakers, 11 sets of candle holders, 75+ pieces of sterlihg flatware, 2 rings &amp; others, Royal

'

best

retail.
We · have

AT992·2155

~: L........;~;:;:~~FFICERS

lection of patto furniture.

All

•

Public Notice

"Don't just furnish your Patio ... furnish
your !ife - with Lifestyle Furniture!"

• Free Parking
• Free Delivery

Coma on In and
~ meat us·at
Rutland Furniture.
We bava tbi ball ·
deals In town!

BULLETIN BOARD
$6° 0 column inch weekdays
1800 column inch Sunday

.[N m1 CLASSifiiD

Landscape Stock

Maaies Crockpot

PRECISION AUTOMC)TIVE

Windows, Blown

FURNITURE SEllS SATURDAY:
Curved glass oak china ·cabinet, Pie sale, natwall cupboard, 2 pc. Ai1 Deeo bedroom suite,
fancy oak hall tree, Ieney oak wardrobe, laney oak bed, 3 pc. claWioot parlor suite,
Hepplewhite school master desk, laney oak dresser, oak secrelal'f, oak wash stand, oak claw
and ball table, 8 tin WMhl Country Virginia pie sale, set of 6 oak chairs, Chlp·en-date claw and
ball round table, laney wicker blghback sola, wicker baby buggy, gale leg ta~le, child's
dresser, oak Ice box, oak draftsman table, chlpen-dale collee table and more.
GLASSWARE SELLS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY:
.
Imperial Glass cups, slag duck, slag bowl, opelescent bowl. slag mugs, butter dishes, green,
pink carnival, Imperial glass, carnival creamer and sugar. bowl, carnival plates, sauoers,
bowls, meat platter, bells and other plates, northwood carnival dish, carnival hen on nest and
others, carnival waterset. carom val pitcher and 6 cups with wlnd mlll pattern, I. G. Carnival
large blue bowl, carnival berrt set, beautiful carnival bowls, punch tiowl set, Fenlon carnival
shoes, Iris and herringbone creamer and sugar bowl, saucers, deserts, bowls and glasses,
carnival mugs, I.G. Rooster, Fenton bud vase wllh sterling sliver base, crystal buzz star
pattern punCh bowl set, carnival swan, carnival whiskey bottle (Schenleys) . large flo blue meal
platter Wave~ey, ruffled edge l.G. Bowls various colors, several pes. Heisey glass, two
beautiful cui bowls, Hull art vase, Federal glass, carnival globes, early butter dish wheal
pattern, St.uebenvllle pettern meal platter, early blJ11er dish with peius , etched bowls and
glasses, Heisey cream and sugar. dated cranberry and clear pitchers, Westmoreland vase
with grapes and several other pieces, Queenware wash bowl and pitcher. Royal Dover china
England, 8 place setting blue and white dishes India, depression pitcher and 6 cups, pink
depression bowl, 7 pc. pink depression water set, Bohemia crystal compode, laney earthware
pilc111!r decorated, glass ladel's, covered dish w/lrosted lion, R.S. Prussia hatj)(n holder, large
blue &amp; w~ l le Oriental pitcher, on Mercer cookie lar, Coca.Cola glasses, si!Yerat pieces red
rubv glassware, Jewell T glass, occupied Japan, Nippon, Smllh glass punch bowl arld 18
cups. Cobalt butter dish. Jumbo. 2pd:, peanut butter jars 40Z &amp; 16 oz. Jumbo peanut butter
jars ,3 t/2, 5 1/2, 7 oz. Jumbo peanut butter jars wnlds, candy containers, German stein
w/pewter lid, honey jars, compodes. glass Easter eggs, Fenton paperweights (love bi1ds) ,
!Oboe mug, l.G. Story book mugs, stemwa•e goblets and glasses, Cobalt blue bottle w/eye
washer, German bowls, Macy Gregory green pitcher &amp; 5 glasses, clear M Oeco vase, candy
dish poppy cookie jar, Shawnee sugar bowl, green depression cookie jar, Blue willow. 2
matching W.R. Candlelabra's, Shirley Temple pitcher, I.G. blue cake plale;plnk depression Ice
bucket, 1971 Elsehour money plate. 1964 JFK money plate, several collectors plates dated &amp;
in original boxes. Norman Rockwell, Umoggs, Mr. Spook. Scony, Dr. McCoy. Capt. Kirk and
others, 1970 &amp; 1971 Fenton Christmas plates and others, 1971 Christmas plate two turtle
doves, candlewick water sel with tulips , large Hull chicken &amp; mme.
•
COLLECTIBLES SELL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY:
.
Outstanding lg. Edison cyclinder player mourning glory horn, three bears cloth book, brass
band harmonica. early baskets, Indian basket, spooners, Ravenswood grocert spice box, old
clgarehe lighters. 1\CME ice cream freezer, hundreds early postcards, child's fork &amp; spoon,
Coke bottle radio, wooden kitchen Items. 1973 coke tray, Tynar camera. pocket watches &amp;
cases. brass chatillon milk scales .. paper cutter, early hi shoes, old flatware , Lance tar,
celluloid dresser pieces, several pieces jewell'f, Tom's let. slore jar, early wood churn. good
apple butter kettle, 1903 Col&lt;e adv. picture, C.A.M. Indian lady picture, VigeeLe Brum boy &amp;
girl wtroddle, Cunier &amp; lves .print. (a clearing) "Ballerina· sculpture by Anthony Cipriano, good

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

' '

o•••••• Ct•plttl .... 8tq ••, ••,

Insulation, Stonn
Doors; Storm .

Localed at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 in Mason, West Virginia.
Having Lost His Wife Mr. Derrick Is Selling His .,
Entire Living Estate And Relocating.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Derrick Had Collected Antiques For Over 40 Years.

gpiiUnDlUllllllmliiiimiiiiUiijjjjiiiiiiiiiUiijjjjiiiiiiilgi

you want it ...
you·ve goflt ..

Military news

Christopher L. Knight
Christopher L. Knight, son of
Vincent Knight of Pomeroy ,
recently enllstod in the Air Force's
delayed enlisancnt program.
Knight graduated in 1993 from
Meigs High School. He will enlist
in July 1995 and ·get trained in the
satellite and widcband communications equipment field.
~
He will eventually earn credits
toward an associate degree.

in pre-teen program

•

A conference is a meeting to
decide when and where the
next meeting will be held.

RuUand Furniture

VInyl • Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl :
Replacement, •

FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1995.
SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1995
· 9:30 a.m. Both Days

•••

version experience in lofty, lyric TIME magazine nonetheless group with musical selections
prose. Language gives the narrative · described tile novel' as "so moving including Beethoven's "Moonlight
II WIUIIIIOOID
its power alternating between black that any readet must listen with Ule Sonata" on the piano and Schu· 7110WRDOKI
dialect and beautiful, flowing liter· compassion tllat Baldwin 'evokes" ben's "Ava Maria" on lhe organ.
ary style English, she said.
and as ~·so intense that God's presThe roll call dealt with comIn fact, the reviel)'er stated, ence seems to live on the pages".
ments on the ci vii rights move-·
emotion overpowers action
Mrs . Hackett entertained the menL
·
IL 114, llltload, D~. 741..11111
tllroughout the book. Written by a ,__ _.::.;_;;_;,:;.;;.:.;.:..:.;:.;::..:.:::.:.:....:::._ _:::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1:00 -.m.-3:30 p.m.

ESTATE AU

Nothing makes a fish bigger
than almost being caught.

-

tN-Homn
•Addltlona oSidlng

•Pole Barna

•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTioN,
NewHomes ··
• Garagea
•Complete

oGaraiJes .Porchel

•••

MIDDLEPORT EGG HUNT - About 500
children scrambled over Gen. Hartinger Park
Easter Sunday anernoon ·huntlng for the nearly
2,000 plastic eggs hid there by Middleport firemen. Each egg had a prize Inside, made possible
by donations from area businesses. Making an
appearance at thl' bunt sponsored by the Middleport Fire Department was the Easter bunny

Ill &amp;RYAN PLACE
W!O!I!PORT I ' 2172
Ollloe H-.: llloft.ofrl.

---------

rm

Now we know why so many
people buy campers. They
need a place to live while
waiting to get out of traffic
jams.
.... *
Poise is the ability to keep
talking while someone else
picks up the check.

Specializing In Cuetom
• Frame Repair
NEW.a. USED PARTS
All MAKES a MOOELS
992-70130R
992-55530R
FREE 1-8100~148-007'01
DAA~IN, OHIO

J&amp;LINSULA110N

71311'81 TFN'

7-Soc[ety scrapbook- ,----;.--Easter festivities-· - - - MATH EXAM
provided in various a:eas of tile
Southern High School ranked country each year. The tuberculosis
Z50Ul in the 313 participating Ohio levy provides funding for skin test·
·
scbools in the 46th annual Ameri· ing.
can High School Mathematics
RUTLAND EGG HUNT
J!xamination, according to a report
Four $50 savings bonds were
from lhe Ohio office of ASHME.
awarded at the Sunday afternoon
: : The ASHME covers high school Easter egg bunt held at the fireijlllthcmatics exchtding calculus. It . men's park in Rutland.
is;a 3{Hjuestion, 90·minuie examiSponsoring the bunt were the
riaiion which bas as its purpose 10 Rutland Fire Department, its Auxilspur interest in mathematics and iary, and the Rutland Post 467 of
develop Went iii problem solving the American Legion.
through the excitement Of friendly
About a hundred children particcompetition.
·
ipated in the bunt for the about 800
. Other Southeastern Ohio eggs plastic eggs each with a prize
~c hools parlioipating and their
inside.
·
ranks were Marietta Higb School,
The bond winner·s were Jacob
'21, and Alhens High School, 137, Barnes, Gretchen Cleland, and Paul
&lt;l~t of lhc 313 schools lalcing part.
Michael of Rutland, and Jesse Jew•
SKIN TEStiNG
ell of Pomeroy.
• A free skin testing clinic will be
MEN'S HEALTH DAY
conducted by Connie Karschnik,
Men's
Health Day will be
R.N., Meigs County Tuberculosis
observed
on
April 29 with free
!fursc, at !be Syracuse Fire Departprostate
cancer
screenings for men
ment, Monday, from 4:30 to 6:30
40
and
over.
The
screenin·gs will
Jim.
.
take
pl~&lt;:~
from
9
a.m. to noon at
: All individuals who arc in food
the
Holzer
Clinic's
Internal
service are reouireo:l 10 obtai~ annuMedicine
Deparunent.·
al skin tests:Evening cli ni cs .v c

•., .........
'

Cockor Spaniel

lllophold typo dog &amp; black ...:..

•Custom Made
•Solid vinyl •
replacement
windows
•Free Estimtte•

tff.'·

-niOno ,,..__

FOW&gt;d: liNd dog Ill Union
campground .,., Cell 104 10

"~·

Loot-

.
.....

t.ovy

dll:mond rtng, tn
,.IMU'd, l'f4.11t2..liQ4.

•Starting At
$200 Installed

l:!d

&amp;-

~.

Loot: amaU . btacll oncl whh
lomar. mind Plli&gt;t!f1 CR' 11 &amp;
SR 124 vlclnftr, 114-MI-2177.

7

Yard Sale '

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
.110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red end While Awning"

992·4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1-800·291·5600
.,_______....,_..-.......;,_

Galli pollI
· &amp; VIcinity

. • . FM11(J: -hlng ~..
_.._.;:.
·• - - - - --. E v - AIWM 12th -20lh, t1&lt;1o
• 441-&amp;311; Out 141 Ta Uioooln

Kenny's Auto Rental ;;.=.~,-:.:~:.
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need .a car rental.
We Have Cars and Vansl
1 _800: 486 _1590
264 Upper River Rd. . Bus. (614) 446-9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631 ·
·
,,_
Kenny's Auto Center

tho cloy beloro the OCI II 1o run,

~,:,! ..:::1.~ •"t:. t~·

p.m. Saturdoy.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
"VIcinity

�..

--

•

:n..cley, Aprtl18, 1995

PomeroY-Middleport, OhiO

1lle DallY 81nUnel P.gr I

Ohio

OOP

{

3$ Agcy.IO

ACROSS
6 Clenched

38ca=:

""nda

CNI•movle

1 Aspect

•9 4 2

-e::n.....

•9 6 4

Platform

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATfiE BLVD.®' by BnKt: Beattie

..

Dleler'a

42
45
411
41

Mo-'

lollcUy-,.
Nervoua (2

wdl.)

Rlaii.PM,........,.ca...,.

4· l8·95

a&amp;
96 4 3
oKQJI075
•K tO 7

'"'"' c ...,..., 'n ·~

77W7II Or -ns.M47.

j,.loN ""'-~ 'IT
"f« F'...e~ C.tR_(.us,,

'1"•1'

ITM~5

rvtc~ro

EAST.
. •J 9 8

A 1-JERJt .. ,

¥10752

0
0

SOUTH

D

•

·'

12wda.)
Haul with ellorl
Smooth
Shlp'a ellery

Not rMdy for
Nllng

5I Spenlah53Poated

IID'a c""~

full ...... ., " w, DOmlllllt
auollon · ...._
Ucrnr 1
,...,a.~o a Will ~. -

rae::la• Puall

39Hollmen-

Actor

KIT 'N' CARLYJ.U by LitTy Wrtpt

~to

On-nino

54 Wandered

Compuapl,
Without oncl
Wr11er'a .oncl.

55 Hoax
56Comelelo•

DOWN

R l-ln

1 Funeral plla

Belgium

2 ...,.and eye

Haveon-·a

3Eoger
4 Bright a111r .

Wild ahelp

Weruwuuve

5 Build

7 rutlve (lUll.) '

6 Ao.._l

&amp;Taam

9 Clothes (II.)

Jano-

aAQI032

•

•K J

•a s

•Q 8 3 2

2... -. ......-.

2 Bod- T..llor No Poto,
1211/Mo 11300 Do-. Butovlllo
Pika, 1rooh Paid, ••uaa aoao.

"I dOn't think he's got much of a future
as a skywriter:

In O o i l l - . -

Real Eslate

tPfuo
18111
On RL
211, UIIUIIoo,
Dopoolt,
R·
~
,..,...,. tl4 083 4807

Eild eo-o (Bno)l Rll Thllno
-dAnd1RI!I-GT
Uu
Now,
114-241-21132

E•eninge.

't·•C

'0""'...
"'"'".," NEA. Inc.
"'''"""
84

Nice tllrll" b1droom mobl ..
homo
- Rd.,
PomerOJ,onOhio,
fM-182~

44

U111o-

Coin~~, Ookl Ringe, SIIVIII

c:cwn..

Employment Services
11

:.'!:""
~ ~so:a.,ato, r:,
Hardwood
Ftoooo. , Both-,114-26HOH.

eon.

Tt'iomla Do-« ·c.ntw, 171
MeCOnnldl Floolcl. OoiUpollo,
Ohio.

~t.~
:a,_

WHATGAN
I SAY?

&amp;LESSIN'S?

3 NT

2 MORE

Opening lead: • 8

One of
the very few

PEANUTS
7 112' 1731.

I WAS

GOING TO.RUN
FOR CLASS PRESIDENT, BUT
I CJ.~AN6ED M'r' ·MIND ..

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

MA'r'SE I'LL
RUN FOR
1-lALF PRESIDENT

I;

':l::J

AVON I All ArMI I Shlrle)o

9pNn1, 304-6~M21.

AVON to buy ot atll, MarilYn. Independent rep. 304-i82-2&amp;4a er
1~WZ..&amp;356.

BORN LOSER

--ble

Prolo- Pol Or-nlng. AI
II'Mdo,
lraOuonntood lollalocllon, y...,
---FIIond.I.Mve
llo111go I I Con, Got To
- · Dr Col After I P.ll. COlt
~=--For AppolnliMnl. 11:1-

MOAAY ...

.

F:rultS'&amp;
Vegetables
SA

pianiL

124

...

oouih

111'71 2br INlier, 12dl, MWiy
ran ~lltd,
with
(nice)

1.BS.o,.., lac.ttd on Addl110n
Plkt ACIId. $18,500. 114-36~11134

or 30W75-5721.

1975 Two· Bldraorn T,..u.,,
12x65, Newly Rmtochdad, WHh
(Nictl 1.61 kr•, LDa.t.d On
A.ldlaon Plloa Road1 $16,500,

~

814-387-7434, 304-ei75-o72Q.

1m Falr~nl, 'tb?O, new e~rpel ' throuQhou1 1 thNI bed·
rooma, two blthll, l.llndwplnnlng, .tov• and refrigerator Included, l't4-SIBS-43U •fter 7pm. ·
1i~

Skylln. Mx7&amp; 3 Bedroome,

1 81th, Stove, Aefrlgar11or And
BuiH-In Dlahwu._rl.. 2 O.Ciw
Ono Ia Cove .... On Nice llontol

Will

Do

SprinG

Ctoonlng:

cr-o. Coblnoto, 'WI.._ oriel
£!c.IM-44WIIO.

Financial

Lot, 1118,000, 114-245-11007.
.
UMITED Off£" NEW 14X7Q
$11115 DOWN, $115MO.,_ ~REE
DEUYERY a SETUP. ~~~
5568.

Now 11105 MI'IU 3 .br., 2 both,·lnclud.. aklrtlng, atep.l bloclla, 1·
yNr homeowner. n.u,.nc•,
and e monltlll FREE tot NOt.
Only tiO:Ia dawn and .at3 per

mo. Coii ·1-I00-83J.3231.

ONLY 4

51

Household .
· Goods

2 E.,,. Good SOlid End Tabloo,

Co-

I~ AfTER

I P.M.
a VInyl In Sloclt ea.oo Yd
&amp; Up 10 Pattamo 01 K~chln
Carpet In Stock. o..r 35 Pol·
tomo VInyl In Stock. lloltohon
Carpoto, C14-441-JOM4.
CcMontry Furnltu,..,umftura lor
Evooy Roan .. lml.._"!c~- North,
Pt. PlMHnt 3D4oi~HWaU.
For
Slle
Sltellle - and

Eloctn&gt;nlco;

Of

61 Fann Equipment
Corn Pllnl-, No Till a eon.
vontlonol DloU - . cu~
tlvatNonu,. !1..-oodon, Feto
mont,

qulpment.

lldonl, Hay Eqult
hor Field Raod¥ ,
Howe'l

M
PontiM
....
Rad,
Alllomotlc, , .... In~-. 4 .Cyt.
$1,100-- ·
.

III'CM\Iro

rnu..

Ctwvtolll,

37,700

Ferm , ......,.laalon, V-1, Cruloe, .Air1

AIIIFII Rodlo
· Elccotoom
U.chlnery, Jicklon, Ohk). I* Condllon.
COlt114-441-7764
or
:IIWMI.
.
11t 143 21U 011A .n,tlme.

,..,.

Fonna~JT~4.

$1,100.

good,

Forauoon TD2D 'l'nctor 111.011;
8S Mu~ Fo!IIUIOn DIMII,
Wllh l.oaclo!,.,$4~; 1111 ... _
Forauoon ......,, $4,0111, 114211..1122.

l
.r
II.F.u_....,..,_

,.._,
=-~·:.,.....,.,,.,...,=....,...-,..,.....,
=-.1:4':

1I7T Chny Plok.U,., N -

ZSIII,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
CGmploto ·homo fllmllhlngo.
Houra: lion-Sat:, 1-1. 114-4410322. 3 mlloo out BulaviUo Plloa

,__ Unl With CGmblno And
~
o ..ln Tablo, Good -ion, 1m ~ PUo!:J4 opel. Good
P,IOO, 111 24111111
1 1401. $tOO 080 or

~

Now ldoo Uni-Svotom 711111

~

y - 171 Wit~ 300 . . . ~-odola 1l2lon
llniOnll'lnleh-- ~~.....
ul
•

· - ..iii
.... Cllll - . . . - - · ......... .
.
-ZIML · gcpod. ...100. :10447563
LivestOCk
I :,::,III:::.,_D_"e;_.-~-k,....aj-._E.rt___
_
100 4oM

r--

with
hollf
_.tmomo,
room lor ...... Will
tli&gt;onco, 114o04Wti21.

2 - - Houoo, Dopooll •
Utllhloo,
No f14
-·
-McDonalctl
...1 ·
1111~

11om In ~.

Cab 111,
IM-2411441.

-

Condtlon,

·e:ow::...~::c
:6
.,... .,....... ...

___

plall • - - _ . . _ ( 2

8elaJ1
-

Rentals
41 Houses tor Rent

P9a.

...

1.32 O..oo, 2'15 ft wldo rjclgo top
building olio, 1113,1110. Rlaybum
Ad, reeaonabM ,...trktlone. No
alngla wldo lnolllroo, plaoOL lntoni'lltJon rn~llld on reqUMt.
304-t7U:I63.

Prlcod to Slit 1~43U.

•

~·-od_loo,_
!!'Jii~A!d U"lo a or tor ..,.
em..--· ~
Uplan., ltW'llo

35" Lots &amp; Acreage

Will tiM farm 01 hauu an trade.
« ooloo oompgroundo, 2J full
hook.. po. Lotgo ....... ·~

•

Services

·· - - ·

Yondlng: Won, Oel Alch a.lciL
Will Clol A$1~oh lncomL

STRIKf A8WW IN Tl·f 'MIR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CI.ASSIFIEDS.

0.. owner, AlllomaUo

'""""'"·
- ~ l*-''1:111,
Appllo._ 71
Vlno
St1·
1

FI'M Qellvef)'.

SWAIN
FURNITt.ilr£. 1:1
Olivo • · Ooillpollo. a Uood
lumlto.., ~'."'."J. !!'~om a

a

--·AUCTION

GU

I X S S

WY

SIINY

Y D M

F X K J M
JX .UE .L '
JXUE.'

MOUWM

JXUEL .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Taxes are the si,.,ws oltne State." - Cicero.
"A hypocri19 is a man who pays his taxes with a smile.·- Will Rogers.

'::~:~:~' ~©~~~~&lt;Z~trs·
Edltod br CIAY a. POUAN
Rearronge letters of
0 four
scrambled worcis

WOlD

tAM I

the
be·

low to farm four wards ·

I

v E T I, L y
2
: I 1· 1

II

I
I [' 1· I l
GANYO

~

I

A R C Rl El

1...-;''

Theoldlimergavethesewords
of wisdom to his new colleague,
"When you 're called on the car.
r - - - - - - - - - , pet it has nothing to do with the
5

6

o:::-.

;ri;~;:~; -.~~:;h~:~.~gq~~:~~

PRINT NUMBERED

l't"t A L tnLE. ENVIOU5 1
WI\5H I NGTON HA'; Al WI\"&lt;'S 5EEME.D LIKE A
11YST ERY TO PEOI'L E:
LIKE. ME 'OU151D E THE
BE:.Ll w.._y·!

$500.00 114-44a-

100-4-...

J XU E

.n.

3545

GOOD USED APPUANCES
wa-. dryara, ratrlgoratoro,

w. v

AX OWL.

J XU E,

G C U

Y G.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

tlllu

Merchandise

FK

DXTII

W L

'1::1' LETTERS IN SQUARES

Holat.

Slooplna 100ma - with -na.
Alaa trillw apac11 on rlv•r. All
hoak-u,._ C.ll •h• 2:00 p.m.,
3Q4..77:J.66SI, U.eon WI/.

V 0 M X F

BSYytFXYM

~.-J..-J..-"---'--"---' yo u develop hom step No. 3 below.

Farm Supplres
&amp; Livestock

Roorn8 tor r.m: .. ..U. or monlh.

S::7lf
at $120/mo. GoUla
I
,

'F K

1-1

s,,.._, Vlogll'o ilonY Patch.
Furnished
Roome

by Luis Campos
Calebrily Cipher CIYPiogrAml are created from qUOTa\lons by llmous people , pasland priiHflt
Eacfllentr in the cipher standa for~~. Today '$ cluf1 A &amp;Qua/sP

_,:L:r,l=-/:. ,.(:. . :E;.i. .:N~, -rl-11

dog, 1~1013 atlllr

58

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

Nuroory lnaplctod blod&lt;bonllo,
..._ yollow ond black ruoborrY

45

North America, he won sev·

buy·oul--

Fot .... 11'x.T pr11ge doof,
UMd month, aU Mrdwere
Incl ....... $111; call IIUQ.2A02

•ft•7pm.

TKY '!'W.Itf~T~Ii'16
AT M£ ... t£T:S 5££ IF I
R£(cx;,t..IIZE: '(()t) ll-1£1'1 1

~ELLQWI~~
l£1 ~ Sff.fo.K WITf1

. In

national and many regional titles.
Away from bridge. his two greatest
loves were his wife, Jacqui. and horse
racing. He was so proud when Jacqui
won each of her five world lilies. And he
went to lhe tra~k almosl every day dur·
the summer:
·
this deal from 1967. North was Sam
Stayman, Mitchell's parlner for many
years. In their methods. three diamonds
promised a decent hand. West, thinking
So~th might be psyching. doubled.
After winning the first trick with his.
heart jack ·over East"s 10. Mitchell
played on diamonds. West won the sec·
ond round and. not knowing that the
heart king would fall, switched lo the
spade four.
If Milchell had won East's jack with
his queen, West. when in with the club
ace, would have had no option but to try
to drop the heart king. So Milchell set a
lrap: He won with the spade ace. Next,
South led a low dub. West rushed in
with the ace and played another low
spade. confidenl his partner would win
with the queen and lead a heart through
South's king for several down .
II didn't work lhat wey. Mitchell won
, the spade 10 and, when the clubs
3·3, he claimed two overtricks,
Viclor Mitchell was one of the very
universally popular bridge players.'
will be greatly missed by all who
him.

to
In town. Apollcat- nollobto
II; YUiogo
APIL MI .«
cotlft4402o3711. £011.

111111 y- Old AJU) Dolmollon
Good Willi Cllltci,., Good
Wrlchdof, AI S1JoU. 1110, 114241.\
.

-

Last January, when Victor Mitchell
at lhe age of 71, bridge lost one of
most colorful characters .
II•;::~fct~~~~~:~I~niM~i~t~chell
never
won
though
he did
gaina
silver medals, in the 1964 Team
I ~~~~:~ia~~ and the t974 Master Mixed

Help Wanted

14x7G Carnmodor. Clt•lc,
lhrae t.droom Of'lll lmd 112
bath, 1Dx11 d..:k with roof, uc.ll•nl condition, $10,$00 nego.
Uabll, 614-&amp;g2-4CMW.
•-

West. North East
34
Pass
· Dbl.
All pass

By Phillip Aldor

Apanment
for Rent

-wily • - ""~'*od, no
polo, lf4.802·2211.
2 ltdnom Apartment, Ne.r
3 lod.-o !loctlonol ApproL 1 Unl-y Of Rio O ..ndo ComYMr Okl, Approx. 4 MUee Off 31 pue, IM 245 UU, 114-24&amp;-5882..
On luloJIII Pllw,l14-441-4211.
2bdrm. epta., tatll lllctrlc, IP"

HOW ABOUT

South

Hay&amp;Graln

1 Mel 2 ' bediNhl ................
fwnlahed and untumlshlcl,

Gold ColnL II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Socond Avonue, OalllpoiiL ·
wareod- outdao&lt; umol lot
largo doa. 114.ftll-llla an.r Pa~ limo, onnlnp, ..Yolce for tlllphont Ul-. cal
3pm.
114-11112-4Zh, houn oil ....~
Waniod: Galli&amp; County Ohio,
Aotal ~- With AI
~In History To 1180, ~U.
Lout Ono y.., E.rpor'.-- In
County HlalorlcaiSocloty lno.
n..
Saloo Of ....- .. Building Motorial: In ...,.

I JEST HAD 3 BOWLS
OF YORE BODACIOUS STEW!!

I

Evonlngo.

w.reodTo Bow:Ciol'- SID IX To 7 Good
ConcUIJon, IM-24&amp;-UI'7.
T"' Polcoo Paid: AI Old U.S.

..

BARNEY
2 Fonl IIIGior CGmP!!')' F -

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

Tonneu oovw lincl
........ -.oalll14-

....

~lmMe., 114 Ul IIIIL

C&amp;C
Oonoral
Hon!o
llolntona- ond lloblll Nonlo
Rapolr. For ,_ ootlmoto coli
Chit, 114-ono:tS.
Ron'• TV - .

=

_...lzl

In Zonhh 111¥1cing
olhor brondL- ..........
100-m.Gou,WY~

82

_Plumbing •
Heating

.

liBRA (Sept. 23.0ct . 23) If YQU let rea·
,,
sontng
ove rcome you,r hu'fl feelings
• ASTRO-GRAPH
today, you'll d•scove r there is no rea~
NY 10163. Be sure to state your zodtac Cause tor anger. Your fr1end's motive w•ll
just1fy his/her behavior.
stgn
TAURUS (April 20· May 20) Today you SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov . 22) Instead ol
BERNICE
mtght beneftt from something of a secre· blam1ng others' for your f•nanc1al prob·
uve
nature . Take care, however, not to terns, concentrate on ways to add to yoftur
BEDEOSOL
resources . Something remarkable m1ght
1dentdy the- SOWOO Ol your Information.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) In ·an Involve· transpire today.
men! w•th someone today 11 m1ght SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 ·Da c . 21 )111
won'! be what you have that w1ll 1mpress
appear
If an UndeserVJng indiVIdUal
others
to(1a_y , so don '1 pre tend to be
W•ll reap the maJOr benetlti Do not fret ,
something you're riot. Your warmth and
though; you 'll come out OK. ·
CANCER (Juno 21 ·July 22) Keep your fnendllne.ss win attract others .
thoughts to yourself today when tnands CAPRICORN (Dec, 22·Jan . 19) Today
ask each other to choose Sides on a con· you m1ght think nobody remembers what
troversial issue later, you 'll be adm•red you've done for them. but you may be 1n
.Wednesday. Apnl 19. 1995
lor hav1ng walled.
for a btg surprise when someone '""·~·
Your soc(al life (lnd commercial Involve· LEO (J~Iy 23·Aug . 22) Taking a illtle llak , through tor you 1n a b1g way.
AQUAfli US (Jtn . 20 - Feb . 19) Day·
1'1)ents w•ll probably Improve ·in ~~~ year and tum•ng the other ~heek Is the ~ost
ahead Fnendsh•ps you make 1n both. sensible pohcy today After irate friends dreaming and w1ndow wlshuig IS for Chi!·
these areas should blend harmon•ously
have calmed down , they'll w1sh lhey had · dren . Your hopes and aSpirations are
4AIES (March 21 - Aprll 19) Just acted hke you
based on reality and _yol.lr obJBCitvt's can
t&gt;ecause you're a mce guy doesn't mean · VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) An outs•der be achteved tOday d you pay the price.
you'll get what you want today The only m•ght create a problem for you today
PISCES (Feb . 20- Marc h 20) Ignore
superfiCial individuals today Persons
reason you w1II IS because you'll make a concemtng your loyalties Once you get
heck of a tal of sense and thereby con~ yo'Ur emDt1ons under conh"ol, however , w1 th real depth are the ones w1th whom
vrnce others. Anes. treat yourself to a you 'I! know whiCh 11ag to f_ly
something producttve and wor1hwhlle can
b.nhday g•ll Send lor your Astro·Graph
• be achieved "

predtcuons for the year ahead by mailing
$2 and SASE lo Astro·Grapn. c/o 11118
newspaper, P .O. Box 4465, Nc~ York,

as

-~~our

~ 'Birthday

•

.
'

Horror.- Fruit · Order - Venous - A:!R 0 THERS
A~ood motto to live by: "Remembergopd deeds done
for you by others , forget those .you've done FOR
OTHERS."
·

\

�•
Page 1o-The Dally sentinel

.

l\18adaY, Apt111S. 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Harrison compares food processing of today, yest~!~~ .....
cut up or use In s•usage. bead
Another e~ent lhat was looked for lbc workers. Quite dtfferent g~ '? eat, and also make deb·
cheese, udding and etc.
forward to m the fall, was the from IOday. when no.one seems to c1011s p.es.
. !
·
The &amp;og was !ben cut pen and arrival f the lbresblng madline and have any lime for anyone. but for
The only !aultl found wtlb them
lbe entrails nflpved. The liver was 111e crew or men lhat came along lbcir own gain.
was the slain lbey left on band~,
sent to the kitchen for frying, for wilb it. They would arrive in the
Recalling another part of the old mouth, teeth, and e\'CD bare feet tf
the family dinner. It was a lot dif· morning, set up the machine and life, was lbe laking of com, wbeat, you were barefooted. It~ .abo~l
ferent than wbat we buy today, proceed lO thrash your grain, usUIII· or whalevcr,' in the old wagon Wid as bard IO remove as lndta tnk IS
mainly because it was fresh it real· ly wheat. oats, rye, or whatever ~ou driving to Chesler to be ground al today. But they were good and no
ly added a Wll: of goodnes's to the bad raised. This always left ' a nice lhe Chesler Mill. The he mill wheel one seemed 10 mind the~·
.
noon meal.
pile of straw lbat lbe kids enj'!yed was powered by a large _stream of
One lastlhing, and I thtnk I will
The hog waS then left banging playing in for awhile, until taler on water that pour~d over II, from a ~ut the old pen away until anolher
outside until il cooled out cnouJ!)I when it was put in ~es for use m sptllway at the Side of the dam !hat time. A .lot o~ pcoplt and rarn.ers
of the t~mes ha~e een rc a~!r.~
10 take to lhe place to be c_ut up ~r the barn as bedding jfor the stock backed up Shade River.
further preparation of cunng. Tins through the winter
.
Flour was ground, corn mea 1 had thetr own milk cows w '"
was usually rubbing wilh coarse
The big p;irt of the day was !he ground and whatever you had provided milk and all the thin.;s
salt, smoked salt, or putting down . dinner that was prepared by all !he raised on your own farm. I can made from '~· that. we buy_·~ the
in salt brine. Later on, some of it women fofk, for a group of tired, remember corn meal P!lncakes stores IOday mcludmg plastiC)Ugs,
would wind up in the smoke bouse, hungry and sweaty menfolk. We ·. plate size, and covered wtth home card~ard·caflons, or whatever fills
that really added tbe finishing always bad to wait until they ate, made apple .buuer, whtch really the btll.
IOucb
and then 1ry to salvage a·meal from
made a man sized breakfast thai
Mucb as butter that was
This was not all, as lbe lard bad wbat was left. Sometimes it was really stayed with until lhc noon ob.tained by ~hurnin~ Jreamd
td be rendered, tbe feet bad to be enough and sometimes no~ accord·
meal.
.
sknnmed off m•lk you a save
pickled, and all the otber little ing to how hungry !hey were. We
Later on, a portable .gnnder for several days. It was putm an
things tbat 'went along with always made out, and enjoyed
mounted on a truck, used to com~- old wooden chum. powered by a
butchering time. This all took up. every minule of tbras6ing time.
around lhrou.gh ~ counlry and d1d . paddle !hat, was on the end of a
most of tbe day, but was enjoyed
Barn raising was another thing whatever gnndm$ you had to do. ' wooden handle !hal prolru,ded from
by' all members of the family ."
. !hat involved most of the menfolk
ThiS was not enjoyed nearly as • lhe lop o the churp. he butter that
CatUe were also bulchered, IJut in the surrounding area. If any· rammuch as the trip to the Chesler Mtll was left after the buller was
taken care of in a different way. All ily had a calamity .befall \hem. such
in the old horse and wagon.
. removed was a far cry from what
sorts or cuts that make up beef had as fire, wind, or whatever, or just
We p1cked blackbcrnes. ra.sp- we buy loday . It was. also a source
benics, and others m lhe last arucle of coua~c cheese. Th1s all made the
10 be cut and taken care of. Harn- decided 10 build a· new barn or
burge~ was grourid, and .cold building, !hey would all gather and I submiued to the paper. but I for· old milk c_ow, a great asset to tbe
packed in fruit jars. along with . help put up ·the building for free.
got another one, whtcb was the whole famtly.
.
other" choice pieees, to be enjoyed Tbe only expense you bad was lhe
mulberry. If you were lucky
In ctosmg, my only hope IS that
later on in the winler.
cost of the material and free fooc.l · enough to find a tree they were I have loucbed some of tbc memo;

. back into
. 1
0 n~e ag~
am gomg

~e past, to f~er ~~~:Y~:!~

. at appeare . ~n
.
une~O: ob'fu:;'::e and .~s~~~
~
we
n, wt
~~~rne
ben COO~ weather
rst.0 • w
.
.
arrived tnhllle falWt wasd'':~~~
butcher w at we
r:use ,
•
the summer • for our wmter s sup
ply ~flml~~\ng day was' usually a
. f
' an\ .but il also attracted
. hbo lh
. amt Y a• •
·- -tome ~f you~~~ ~·gitch ~~a:~
were · ~~ . ~ P k d .
help. ~ s ~ ~er~ Ydw~ ~0 ~~v~
~urr a ~~n a:'hfyayne~d~d it at
b c Ph~ .
utc . en~g .ume.
.
.
f
tb Ftrs:e~:~gs~J ~~ :~:~n'h~s
· e wa .
e iron ket~~s out·
":as done 10 larg .
Tb water
~·~e, ov~r an~n ~~el eand the
was putm a
dfecJ in .;,d out a
hog ~as manhan the hair eas . 10
few umcs t~ make
with t?'and
remove. Tbts was done . .
~crapcrs that usually dtd a good
JOb...
, k
om llsbcd
Fmally the tas as ace . P bind
and the. hog b:~~~ti~
for
legs, usmg a g usin one of the
II_Je purpos~, or
g
Th

urrY·

'l

::de

~::;::Je::;su.:~~~~~eJ'~;:· ·late~

;....---·-

Montana
announces
retirement

10

Inspection was held by Pally
Dyer, deputy when Hemlock
Grange 2049 held its regular meet·
ing rccenlly at the ball.
The fourth degree was presenlcd
in full form. Activily chairman,
Helen Quivey, reporled on gifts
scm to the deaf Kelly Farms and
Friendly Hills '
'
The ran ~ ban uet to be held
on Aprif 28 gat the ~enior Cilizcns

"

'

r

a lent and even the inside of a whale or fish. The
INSIDE JONAH'S RF.LLY
Norma
materials and hibor were donated, Hawthorne
Hawthorne reads to a group of youths inside a
said.
"I thought it was something lhe kids would
plasiic bubble she built f~r th~m Wcd?.esday at '
have
really liked. I would have really liked it,"
the Meigs County Pubh&lt; L1brary. I he pre·
Hawthorne
said. (Sentinel photo by George
schoolers imagined this as a spa«ship, a bubble,

TUESDAY
MASON, W.Va. - Vetcrans of
Foreign Wars Post 9926 Ladies
Auxiliary will hold eleclion of officers ·for 1995-96-Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Pollock dinner afler the meeting.

Copyrlght19!15

~ llDSMOBII FS, POIIllACS, BUICIIS, GBIS AND aJST0M
VANS: All will be sold &lt;It substantial dlsl:ounts!
, Plus $500 to $2WJ cash baclt or 6.!1% APR linancl~g available I~P
to 48 months) on selected models on approved t:red1t. Tenns avail·
able up to 84 rbonths!
·

wilb lbe conllact, testing should be . around $90,000 if the test drilling
' Sentinel news stair
done witbin 90 days, Blaeunar is successful, Blaettnar said at an
earlier meeting.
·
· · Test drilling fa: Pomeroy's new said.
In
addition
be
said
work
is set
water wells should start no later
The lest drilling comes about as
tp
~gin
on
a'
project
to
correct
a
lban April 24, Pomeroy Mayor viUage offtcials. examine the feasi·
I obn W. Blacunar announced at bility of improving lhe communi- drainage problem on Pleasant
Monday's meeting of Pomeroy Vil- ty's water supply by installing new Ridge Road and a project to replace
lage Council.
wens in Syracuse at a sill: near the apressuretankonLincolnHeigbts.
Work bas also been completed
Council members recently village's existing wen field.
entered into a contract with tbe
The exploratory drilling should on the Pleasant Ridge/Rock Street
..O.M. Baker Company of Dayton to· cost around $30,000 wilb the wall:r line project, Blaeunar said.
Also, one of Pomeroy's long·
drill tbe test wells. In accofl)ance drining of !be acwal weDs costing
.
.

I

10

:u .S. trade

·deficit

declines ~

Senior Center. Call L~nora
Leifheit, 992-2161, for more mfor·
mation.

l'OMEROY - Auxiliary, Fratemal .Order of lhe Eagles, ·Tuesday, 7:30pm. attbe hall.

POMEROY - . Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 1 l),l!l.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. AnyDepartment Ladies Auxiliary. one wilh drug problem may aucnd:
. Tuesday, 6 p.m. at ftre station. All No dues or fees, 1-800-7664142,
Help Line.
members asked to auend.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Mission Church, 7:30 each evening
through! Saturday, wilh the Rev.
David Hopkins. Gallipolis as lhe
speaker. Special singing nighlly
wilh lhe
of McArthur.

$11,688

.$11,388**
NO OcX Fees

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES EXTENDED CAB PICKUP
• Ellended Cab
• On,., Soda Aorba9.
·Rear Ant1·lock Bl'akes

· Custom CIOih lnlenor

• P 2P5175R IS'T•es
• Steel Belted T1res

·Power Steenng

''SalePnce llldlxles GMAC F1rst f1111e

• Power Brakes

Bu,.er lncentM!I II Qua~IIOd

BIWIIIEW '95 CIEVY ASlRO EXTEIIIEll COIIVERSIOII VAN
• t 6 Valve Power

• D~ver SMie A11ba9 ·

• 4 Wheel Anlr~ E&lt;akes
• PowerSteenng
• PoiNSr Brakes

• Power Door Locks
• AM'FM Stereo
• S~led Wlleels ,
• Steel Belted Tires
• Well Equipped!

· E&lt;lende&lt;I.Chass•s
• Dnver Side A1r Bag

·PIS, PIB
·Sola/Bed
• Power Windows ·lndlfect ltght1fig

• Anll·lock Brakes
• Power Locks
• Prem1um Wood Pkg
• A11 Cond ~1on - · ·--; lltt, CrUtse
Full ConversiOn
• Automatic Overdnve • AMIFM Cassene • Aluml'lumRunmng Bds.
· VISia Bay W1ndows • CSp101n Chairs • Loaded!
u

•

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947 • 422·0756

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE
• Alf Condillon
• Dual Airt&gt;ag

·-Antl·i.lJCtBrakfs
• Automatic·
• AM'FM Casselie

· Dual Aor Comlortemp • Alum1nUm Wheels
Climate Cootr~
• Pqwer Antenna
• Power Onver &amp;

A Multlmedle Inc. Newlpliplr

standing landmarks will have to
come down soon.
Blaeltnar said tbe village bas
issued a condemnation order' on lhe
old Sugar Run School building
which is owned by the Meigs
County Park Dislrict.
"A lot of people in town bave
ties to lbat building," be said.
In personnel mauers, cauncil
ratified tbe reinstatement of
Michael VanMeler and Orville Hill

to tbe Pomeroy VQlunteer Fire
Department.
Clerk Kathy Hysell reported the
following balances : general,
$73.749.33; safety, $8,159; street.
$14,890.68; state highway,
$9,022.26; r.re, $18,224.69; cemetery,
$14,240.47;
water,
$30,294.53; sewer, $62,478.53;
guaranty meter, $18,460.59; utility,
$8,530.43; ftre truck. $282.22; perpetual care (cemetery), $7,228 .52;

cemelery e~dowment, $38,1 ~8.~7;
police )&gt;eliSIOn, $2,303.78; budding
fund, $2,050.50; recreation,
$3,~ 12.89; permissiv~
tax,
$1,900.88; law enforcement,
$1,462.98.
Council approved transferring
.$49.000 from ~e general fund to
correct adefi~t m·lbe s~l fuod.
in olber busmess. counal:
- Met with Bob Titus wbo is
Continued on paga 3

One man wounded in shooting
incident; three suspects arrested
charged after his release from the
By JIM FREEMAN
hospital, said Assistant Meigs
Sentlnet·News Stair
County Prosecuior Chris Tenoglia.
One man .was hospitalized and
The four were involved in a dis·
lbree other men were jailed follow·
ing a shooting incident near Racine · pute witb Jobn Wayne Stobart,
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, said
· Tuesday nigbt
Meigs
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Sbawn Price, age unreported, of
Soulsby
said ~hawn Price start·
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, was
ed
struggling
with Stobart, who
admitted to Holzer Medical Center
was
anned
with
a shotgun. Paul
for treatment of two small-caliber
Price
and
Gray
then
entered !be
gunshot wounds. A hospital
fray,
with
Price
being
suuck and
spokeswomao listed him in stable
-itnconscious,
according
to
knocked
condilion.
Soulsby.
,
·' Jailed were Paul Price, 45, Art
Wben Shawn Price wrested !be
Gray, 34, and Cbarles Cuzzins, 27.
shotgun
from Stobart, Stobart's
all of Racine. The lbree are being
wife
Shirley
ftred two shots, strikcharged witb assault, menacing,
ing
Price,
Soulsby
said.
aggravated trespass. Price and Gray
Paul
Price
and
Sbawn Price
are also charged with disorderly
were
tranSponed
from
lhe scene by
afler warning.
Racine
squads
of
lhe Meigs
the
Sbliwn Price will likely be

Emergency Medical Service.
Paul Price. Art Gray and
Cuzzins entered innocent pleas
April 5 in Meigs County Cowt in
the alleged lbefl of bulldozer parts,
steel sbeet, sleet pipe and a pump
from !be Martin Marietta Plant, for,
merly Dravo, at Apple Grove.
Price and Cuzzins were arrested
later lbe same day in Morgan
County by officials wbo seized a
1979 truck and welder stolen last
monillfrom the Twin City Mac~
Shop. in Pomeroy, and a low-boy
trailer reporled stolen from Patrick ,
McDole on Jan. 20 near Long Bottom.
Shawn Price was also taken into
custody by Morgan County offi.
eials at tbe lime.
Soulsby said !be incidj:nts are
mpstlikely unrelated.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
U.S. trade dertcit, afler beginning
lbe year wilb a record gap, narrowed sharply in February even
though America's deficil witb
Mexico bit an all-time bigb. Ana·
lysts boped lbe overall improvement would provide ~upport for the
embattled dollar.
The deficit in both goods and
~rvices trade declined by 24.6 per. cent to $9.01 billion, as exports
jumped by 2. 7 percent lo the second bigbest level on record wbile
imports fell by 2 percen~ still the
tlllrd bigbest level ever, lhe ·Com·
mercc Department reponed IOday.
Tbe United States sianed the
year with a record deficit of $11.95
billion and even with today's
improvement, the trade gap is running at an 3JUiual rale of $125.8 billion, far above las't year's record of
$106.57 billion.
,
. · Tbls deterioration In the U.S.
trade performance has been a ml\ior
·
URG is one of CMIC's biggesl
"In a nutsbeU. \Ve believe CMIC
By KEVIN PINSON
cause cited for tbe 5ha!P fall in the
ctiems in southern Ohio. About 210 is way oul of line with other insurOVP News Staff
value of the dollar, wbtcb set new .·
A canceled contract between university employees are policy ance carriers in 1be area."
post-World War II lows against
CMIC claims the clitiic is cbargHolzer Clinic and Community holders- 149 of which are on lhe
bolb the Japanese yen and the Gerfamily plan. Another major client ing patients "grossly inflaled" fees.
Mutual Insurance Company . bas of lhe company is Soulhern LOCal
man mark on Tuesday.
In a leuer to its clients, the
employers
looking for ways to
. The problem, analysts bave said,
School District in Meigs County, insurance company argues !hal the
keep their workers from experienc- with about 1001employees on lhe clinic's fees are 44 percent bigber •\
·is tbat after years of a growing
ing higher out-of-pocket expenses.
uade imbalance, foreigners are no
plan.
.
tban slandard rales and among the
"We're in the pucess of looking
longer as willing to bold the flood
Holzer Clinic Administrator Jim highest in Ohio.
·
for another carrier," said Phyllis
of dollars the United Slales bas sent
Blevins
said
CMIC
bas
been
The
clinic
charges
32
percent
Mason, director of human
abroad to pay for imported cars and
resources at the University of Rio "ratcheling down'\ its paymen\s bigber fees than olher doctors wbo
television sets.
' Grande. "We're not going to allow over the past few years . Since practice in rural areas. the letter
Tbe decline in the February
our employees to be balance 1990, CMIC reimbursement levels adds.
deficit was better tban bad been
have dropped froin 92 to 64 percent
"We spenl months in earnest
billed.''
expected and analysts said tbey
oflhedinic's
billing
rate,
be
said.
talks
to avoid Ibis situalion and
In lellers mailed in late March
· hoped the improvement would lend
·
Tbe
result'
is
cost
shifling
believe
!be clinic bas wrongly choand early Ibis month, bolb tbe clinsupport to the dollar, which so far
paticnls
not
with
CMIC
musl
pay
sen
to
take
advanlage of its unique
ic and insurance company report
Ibis year has losL nearly 20 percent
DOUBLE TAKE- Some road signs along Meigs County's
higher
rates
to
make
up
lbe
differposilion
in
the marketplace at the
negotialions over reimbursement
of its value against the Japanese
state highways have motorists seeing doubt"' The Ohio Depart·
ence.
expense
of
the
patients it serves,"
rates for services to CMIC memment of Transportation Is In the process of exchanging faded road
yen and more than 10 percenl
"They're
essentially
grabbing,
a
the
CMIC
letter
says.
bers have failed . ,
against the German mark.
signs with new, more renective signs. Tbe old signs will be
and
forcing
higb
prices
Blevins
said
the
clinic's fees fall
discount
The contract is being dropped
· The dollar toolc a new tumble
removed and recycled Into new signs to be used again, said ODOT
onlo
everyone
else,"
be
said
.
within
state
averages.
but towards
June 1.
Tuesday as traders began .lo worry
spokeswoman Nancy Y oacham.
B
Ievins
added
that
the
insurance
tbe
high
end.
CMIC's members will still be
about growing friction between lhe
. Blevins said lhe area has a bigb
to go to lhe clinic for services, company's actions are profit-drivable
Uniled States and Japan over autos,
en.
·
·
.
number
of government subsidized
but will be billed for tbe full rate.
wbich account for more than balf
"They
are
reducing
the
amount
medical
claims, which results in
Policy holders will then send lhe
of America's huge deficit with the
higher fees for olher patients.
bill to the insurance company, · paid ... and then not ,passing it on
, Japanese.
in
lower
premiums."
"We feellbat we' ve got a social
MolOris!S seeing 1wo or'eac·b
· So why are molOrists seeing
which will reimburse them at its
. The U.S. ·side has threatened 10
Most
insurance
company
reimobligation
to provide .services to
rale of 64 percent.
sign along Meigs County Slale
double?
impose sanctions on more !han $1
bursemcnts
range,from
85
to
100
people
on
Medicaid and Med'i Any remaining balapce will
"One crew sels the post, lhe
higliways aren't necessarily seebillion of Japanese products if
percent
of
the
clinic's
charge
•
.
care,"
he
said.
ing double.
.
otber goes in and install the
have to be paid out-of-pockel by
Japan does nol agree to lower bani· Blevins said.
CMIC representatives were
Rather,
!bey
are
wimessing
an
signs,"
Yoacbam
said.
"They
lh~ insured person .
ers to !be import of American cars
~navailable
for comment.
ongoing project 10 replace signs
come around later and. get the old
and parts.
through .We Ohio Department of
signs."
.
Transportation's District 10
We're .not replacing new
which inciodes Meigs and neigh·
signs, Yoacham said. Even
·
boring counties.
tbougb some of the existing signs
r
Traffli:Cb Inc. of Cleveland Is
seem lobe in good condition,
conducting lbe $444,452.50 proOOOT considers the exchange
fotgery for allegedly falsifying
ject throughout !he 10 county dis·
be a safety upgrade, Yoacbam
COLUMBUS (AP) - A special property, the indictment said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Testi- !ric~ said ODOT spokeswoman
said.
Franklin Coumy grand jury looking
Ferguson promised lo fight the payrolls; and eight counts of
mony stopped and the O.J. Simp- NancyYoacham.
"It bas to do witb lhe sign's
into Thomas E. Ferguson's fund- charge's. .
- .
en$a.s .ing in prohibited politi~al
son !rial went behind closed doors
The project is supposed to be
reflectivity," she said.
raising practices has returned an
'.'I have never taken a dime 3CUV1ties.
The old signs will he recycled
80-count,indii:tmeot against the from the state of Ohio !hat I wasn't
as tbe judge ventured into tbe compl\iled by Aug. 31 and work·
- Joscpb Buck of West Libersequeslered world of Simpson's ers are in Meigs County rigbt
into ·new .signs 10 be used again,
fanner Slall: auditor and four of his entiUed to," be said in a lclepbone ty, Obio, nine counts theft in office;
jurors, quizzing tbem about person- now, she added.
she commented.
lOp officials.
interview Tuesday from his bome lhree counts forgery ; nine counts
'--~------------..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, ·
Feruguson denied the charges.
in Powell, jus! norlh of Columbus. engaging in prohibited political
al Wld..racial rifts.
.
Witb attorneys present but
Ferguson, a Democrat who was "I never solicited any slate activities.
audilodor 20 years before decid· employee cor money."
. Simpson excluded, Judge Lance llo
- Fred Waltz of Wapakoneta,
}.
ing last year not. to seek re-elecilon,
Arraignmem for Ferguson and six counts theft in office; six counts
moved proceedings into his chambers Tuesday and began bearing
faces nine counts of lhefl in office. the other four defendants likely en$ aging in prohibited polilical
13 counts of soliciting classified will be scheduled for early nexl . acuvnres.
·
from jurors one al a lime aboul
employees
for
political
contribumonlh,
said
Jobn
McCaffrey,
assis·
reports of animosily raging wilhin By JJM FREEMAN.
places an additional burden on lhe
- Harvey Takacs of Toledo
their cloislered domain.
Sentinel news-stall
state to produce jobs in soulheasl· lions a;tiJibree countt of falsifying tam special counsel to McLaughlin. one count falsification, lbree coun~
campatgn reports,
The grand jury slarted investi- en~a_ging in proh ibite d political
Wilb only four jurors questioned
.
Local officials apparenlly have em Ohio."
last fall. McLaughlin. a acuvtues. •
Tbe
charges,
,retumed
Tuesday,
ga
ling
and I4 more to go today, the judge mixed feelings over. the impending
"The real answer to we lfare
inclupe
allegations
that
he
con.
Cleveland
auorney and former fed:
suspended , all .. testimony . until demise o(Qhio's geru:ral assistance n:Iorm is Jt:~bsr" he a&lt;!ded· _ '" ·'
Tbe_ indict ments allege the '
,
·cealc11
·or
·
m-isrcjlfc~enrcd
the
·~er~l-prosee
utor.~was-appointed to ·"adlll1mstrators .falsified payrotl~ ~~r'
Thursday. He was also speaking program.
' ·
Liller control Dtreclor Kenny
wilb sheriffs deputies ass1gncd to
I
· 'Gov . George V . Voinovich Wiggins said the program's end reporting of contributions on earn· bead lhc invesligation by tben· . records to reOcct lbal they were
pi!ign reports be ftled wilh lbe Ohio Auorooy General Lee Fisher and performing their duties when lbey
guard !be predominanUy blllek Jury signed legislation Monday abolish· . will bave little effect on his office.
re-appoinled by current Attorney act~ally were engaged in political
who have been accused of ing the program in 90 days, ending
GA recipienls are generally secrelar)' of state.
Patrick
McLaughlin,
the
special
General
Belly Montgomery.
favoritism toward white jurors.
acUv·•Ues on behalf of "Friends of
tbe $100-a-month payments for the required 10 do some work in
appoinled
to
oversee
the
Montgomery·
did not immediate- Ferguson."
prosecutor
·
The inquiry intO lbe jurors' con- estimated 61 ,000 able-bodied exchange for beneftts.
investigation,
said
the
charges
ly
return
a
call
seeking
com·
m
ent
flicts was sparked by comments workers who are on GA.
"Tbe (workers) we get don't
~eft in o~fice . and forgery are
from dismissed juror Jeanetle liar·
According to Meigs County show up anyway," Wiggin s com- slemmed from the solicitation of Tuesday. Her orftce said the inves· fclorues; falstfication and solicita· ris about racial disputes and squab· Departmenl of Human Services
menled. "Today we bad nine work· classifi6d employees in the audi- ligation bas cost $303,391 since it tion of classified employees are
·
.bles over trivial matters.
Director Michael Swisher. 402 ers Scheduled Wid two came out... tor's office, be tween 19~2 and, · bcgWllale in 1993.
mts~e!"eanors : and engaging in
The others indic ted were all proh1b11ed political activities is an
She told lbe judge that jurors people in Meigs County currendy
that's better than normal ," he 1994, for contributions to "Friends
of Ferguson," !be renner audittX' s . regional administrators in Fergu· unclassified o!Tense.
were sepl)l'3ting by race when they receive GA which pumps about added.
son's office. They are:
exercise, when lbey go shopping $37,830 a mDnth inlo the counly.
Current state Auditor Jamea
"We need workers, but can't campaign fund.
- Angelo Guarino of Punta Petro, a Republican, had sought
. The solicitations occurred dural1d when tbey watch movies. Sbe · '"Meigs County's economy is pay them anything," he said. "We
blamed some of tbe problem on not as stroug as other parts of the go tbrougb human service~ and ing working hours and on state Gord~. Fla ., charged wltb eigbt sucb an investigation during a 1990
counts-of theft in office; two counts campaign against FergUSOll.
Contlnuad·on paga 3
stale," Swisher commented. "This · .Continued on page 3 ·
'
.

Insurance contract between
Holzer Clinic, CMIC canceled

Double take

Notb::fees. Oclr.oa-eo:

~rYe~e:r

2 Stctlont, 14 Paget 35 centl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April19, 1995

. By JIM FREEMAN

•

Certified used car buyetS will be on band to give highest trade-in
value lor your automobile. Please bring your title, registration
card, and payment book II applicallle.
110 SAl£S PERMIT1BI10 DEAI.fRS. This clealance Is tor retail cus·
tomers ooly. Prices apply to available units only. lin ordering per·
mltted at tl!esl prices.

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DEALER HAS AN IIIVEifTORY
' OF DVBI311l BRAIID NEW CHEVROlET CONVERSION VANS • .
Selection includes Astro All Wheel Drives and G·20;s, both avail·
~Ia with ralsed 'roofs or low tops. Prices range from $17,388 to
$36,988.

.

Test drilling for new Well.to start next week

(Olen Harrison, retired .for
nearly two decades, Is a a life·
long resident of Meigs County.
For many years he has written
poetry, but more re~ently has
turned his talent to wrtting a~Jout
the changing limes. He and his
wife Louise, reside on Gold

WEDNESDAY
l'OMEROY - Alzbcimers Discase/Relaled Disorders support
group, first in series of four public
education on
Wednesday,
1:30to4

Law ...l&amp;ltt .. tlle411, ......
TltttndaJ,Ilto--,ltlp .. 7k

•

.

. Vol. 45, NO. 248

(~)~!
TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 800 BI!AIID IIEW

9-11-14-23-37

.

Building was announced. h was
senled b~ Jess~e Wb11C. .. .
noted tha~ the State Grange w1ll be
. Rea~.mgs tncl~ded· Tn~c;. for
beld at Rio Grande on July 29 w•lh
Spnng by ~axme Dyer, My
lhe stxth degree be gtvcn:
.
. ~~~r B~nnet .. by Margarel IIat;t;
. Reported· ill were Sylvta Mtd·
t~g; . At~.tudcs by Sara.~ull~!l's ,;
kiff, ,Vada Hazelton, Edna Clark,
Smgmg Easter Bonnet. Wid H~
and Bernice Hawk. It was also were Ann Lambert and ~osa!.'e
noted !hal Wallace Bradford is
Story. There was a rcadmg, A
improving following his hospilalSales Person" by Golda Red; and a
ization.
skit "The Fanners Going to Town"
The lilerary ·program was preby Muriel and Wallace Bradford.

tecr Fire Departrnenl cornmitlee, 7
p.m. Tuesday at Darwin !own ball.

Pick 4:
. . 8301
BuckeyeS:

..

----Community calendar
The Community ·Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
pro(it groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. Tbe
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund . raisors of any -lype.
Items are printed as space pe\'ffiiiS
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

693

PageS

Hemlock Grange holds 1nspe~t1ons

Libra

Pick 3:

e3t

.

.

Ohio Lottery

ncs
W ~ow !bat unless some·
g~ucn. c.
Ibis world of
: : ~t~~:rC to go bllck
Y wt
. .
tha~~y.le
~~li~t~ghl
us one tbin&amp;.
10
i; if we ut forth tbe
aff~h!~ ~n :Ill sufvive by using
e
.
h
8 hand
the~·~,g~ :~ll ~~~~ 10 cut ibis end·
. ~ • as 1 hnvc some!Jting in !be
:fcro':~vc for P bedtime snack,
and even if 1 don't eat it at all I
have the refrigcralor or deep freeze
.
.
ready usc it
111 kX~p ~~~~~1 1l:n::rs out 10
!here,
Y r 1 d food usc all tbe
yo::_,r ~~~gsanJI: chavc 0 ~ haild, and
~~u will be hcaiing from me again
oon Keep up spirits and don't be
s
·
who don'tknow
h~~d~~ ~e~~slimes were.
The old timer from the past.
Ole Harrison
PoC::eroy

Ridg~.)

"'

• Ke~ess Remote

. Entry System' Loaded!

Passenger Seat

Monday - Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • ~ pm

•

Ex state au d I•t 0' r In
. d.Ict e.d

i=ung ends

testimony

10

refgUSOn, aideS face 80 COUntS

• • IS dOWnp Iay
. • 0 ff•ICIS
MeiQS
of GA program
l
dem ·se

I

•

•

..

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