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                  <text>•

Mond•y; April 24, 1915

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

P•ge-1G-The Dally Sentinel

Community calendar Runaway, photographer meet 25 years after KSU
Tile Commullity Calendar II
publllhed aa • f~ee service to
non-profit gro11p1 wishing to
announce meetln1 and 1peclal
events. Tile ulendar It not
dealgned to promote sales or
fund rabtr• of any type. ltenu
are printed u IJIIM"' permits and
caDDot be guaranteed to run •
specific nwnber ol days.

prizes. Janet Bolin will assist with

program.
RACINE- Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, will bold an annual inspection Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at lbe ball.
Members to take a pie. Master
masons invited.
RACINE -· RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.

MONDAY
• POMEROY - The Meigs·
WEDNESDAY
County Veterans Service CommisMIDDLEPORT - Middlepon·
sion, Monday, 7;30 p.m. in the VetLiterary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
clans Seryice Office, Pomeroy.
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs.
REEDSVILLE .- A special George Hackeu to review • An
meeting of tbe Olive Township American Tragedy". .
TrusteeS will be beld Mooday, 7:30 Roll call amunent on tbe book.
p.m. at the township building.
RACINE - Wildwood Garden
POMEROY - Pomeroy Vii- Club. Wednesday at noon, Country
rage Council to meet in general Kitchen, Racine. Greenhouse lour
special session Monday, 7 p.m. in planned.
·
municipal building. Meeting open
to public. · ·
I
THURSD"-Y
l
REEDSVILLE
Tbe
'
TUESDAY .
Riverview Garden Club will tour
RUTLAND- Tbe Rutland Flowers by Craig Thursday
Friendly Gardeners, open meeting, evening. Members are to meet at
Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Rut- tbe Whitehead home at 6:1 ~ p.m.
land Cburcb of Christ. Open to After tbe tour, they will return to
public. Hal Kneen, Meigs Exten- tbe home of Janet Connolly for a
sion Agent, will give perennial business meeting,
pointers using a slide presentailon
and demonstrating bow to divide
POMEROY - Meigs County
and care for perennials. There will Library Board of Trustees, 1 p.m.
be free plants, refreshments, door Thursday, at tbe library.

.Names.in the n.ews
OLYMPIA, Wasb. (AP) Jason Priestley might want to keep
his day job.
The bunky actor who plays
Brandon Walsb on "Beverly Hills
90210" crashed into a ditch during
a 130-mile car race over rugged
timber roads Saturday.
Priestley, ;l5, wasn't burt, and
be managed to get bis modified
Toyota Celica back on trac~ in time
to finish 13th overall in Saturday 's
Michelin SCCA Pro Rally. It was
. tbe third national event_for Priestley, w!lo was one of 26 rmisbers in
the 50-car race.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - David
Geffen is his own studio chief these
days, and he bas Ia studio cbier s
estate to go with it.
Geffen, who teamed up with
Steven Spielberg and Jeffrey
Katzenberg to form Dream Works
SKG, is ready to move into tbe late
Jack Warner's nine-acre Beverly

. BOSffiN (AP) - Twenty-five·
years ago, they made history ffO!II
opposite ends of a camera lens.
Tben a 14-year-old runaway,
Mary Ann Veccb!o was pbotograpbed kneelmg m bDf!DC over
one .or tbe four stude!!IS slam by tbe
National Guard dunng a Viemam
War proleSt at Kent State University on May 4, 1970. •
,','I bitcb~ik~~ right i~to hi.story, she satd. I couldn t beheve
that people would kill people over
wllat tbey thought."
·
On Sunday, she rmaily met tbe
photographer who made tbe image
into an enduring symbol of a nation
divided ·by war.
John Filo, now deputy picture
editor at Newsweek magazine, won
a Pulitzer Prize for tbe picture be
took as a 21-year-qld student at tbe
university in Kent, Ohio.
The image launched Fila's
career, but Vecchio says it caused
her "25 years of trauma." For
years; Vecchio shunned publicity.
· She bad never seen or spoken to
Filo until they bugged Sunday at a
conference about the shootings.
"I'm glad ·we're OK, we've
been through bell. I feel like I
know you," she said.
Vecchio cried frequently during
tbe.conference at Emerson College.
wb•cb was attended by about a 100
people. But sbe said sbe wanted to
be there, 1o make a stand for peace.
. The famous photograph shows
Vecchio kneeling beside tbe body
of Jeffrey Miller, who was fatally
shot in the mouth after throwing a
, tear-gas canister fired by the

Hills estate.
He paid $47.5.'million in 1990
for tbe estate, including the 15,000square-foot bouse. of the legendary
Warner Bros. co-founder and has
been refurbishing lt ever since.
Geffen unloaded bis temporary
digs - a three-bedroom, 3,500square foot home in Hollywood
Hills - to pop songwriter Diaue
Warren for $2.63 million, The Los .
Angeles Times reported Sunday . .
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Laurie
Metcalf says she's stili got a lot to
learn about her harried character on
'' Roseanne.'' even after seven
years witb tbc show.
"I like to play a wide range of
characters. The more they're unlike
me, the better .I like i~" said Metcalf. "But Jackie is so close to my
own personality tbat I still feel selfconscious playing ber. She's someone I haven't. solved."

Nalional Guard.
.
. very early qe," be said.
Her bands BR raised in ,net, ber
Now llllllried, Vecellio Jives in
moutll twisted in a ,nmace.
Las Vegu llld wlllb at 1 c:uino.
Vecellio was bounded by tbe Sbe said abc felt suilty ror years
news media after lbe pbotoarapb, about lbe sllolltias, bea•"e sbc, a
and reviled by people who support- juvenile delinquent, bad survived
eel the war. Florida Gov. Claude lbe Kent Stale slloociop wbUe colKirk claimed she bad been planted lege studellts bad beea ldlled.
on the campus by agitators.
Filo said be bad been talking
Her parents recosnized ber in · wildlife pbotograpbs off campus
the photograph and bad . ber when be hurried back for tbe
returned home. She later was sent demonstration.
'
to a juvenile home and arrested for
"I went out tbat day to look for
petty crimes such as loitering and
marijuana possession. She said
police harassed her because of the
picture's notoriety.
'
ATLANTA (AP)- Tbanks to a
Filo said be bas mixed feelings huge police presence and a cold
about taking a picture tbat trans- · shoulder from many Atlantans, the
formed a troubled teen-ager into a annual gathering of black college
. symbol of national distress.
students known as Frealcnik didn't
"I wisb her well, she's bad a live up to expectations of fun - IX'
very tough time wilb. it ... to have violence.
that sitting on your shoulders at a
"It was too bard to have fun,"

Navy Petty Officer First Class
William F. Hess, a 1987 Alexander
High School graduate, recently
reponed for duty aboard the strategic communications wing one, Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma
City.
Hess joined the Navy in
September 1979.

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVEiiTOAY OF OVER BOO BRAND NEW

aEVRWTS, 01 DSMOII'I ES, PONllACS, BIDS, GEOS A1111 cusrDM

VAliS. All will be sold at substantial discolllls!
. Plus $5011 to $2IDI cash. hack or !.6% APR financing available (up .
to 3&amp; monthsl on selected models on approved credit. Tenns available up to 841110111hs!

BasebaD

ooe aoocl ~.. be llid.
!
Filo said lie took lbe film 10 •

Pick3:

season opens
toniglit · ··

PeiiiiSylV811ia to blve U deYeloped.
because be feared it would be cen~
sored in Olllo. He said be received
harassing phone calls for two
months after lbe pbotograpb was,·
blisbcd
pu A $200,000 memorial was cJedi: •
cated in ·1990 on tbe Kent State ·
campus to tbe four _students .slain
and tbe nine injured m the anu-war.
demonstration.

495

Pick 4:
9747
Buckeye!:

4-11-13-33-35

Sports, Pap 4

Chapter elects new officers ·
for outlying areas of tbe county.
Charlotte Elberfeld presided at tbe
meeting. Ann Rupe reported on tbe
trash and treasures program lleld at
the Catholic Cburcll. Repons of
Qlurcb.
Elected were Ann Rupe, presi- commiuee chairmen were given.
A picnic was announced for
'dent; Carolyn Grueser, vice president; Jane Walton, treasurer; May 25 at the Elberfeld Farm.
Dorothy Sayre and Rose Sisson, Donna Byers reponed on lbc prorecording secretaries; Martha gram "Let's Dance, ·the Story of
Dance, to be held by the River
McPhail, corresponding secretary.
Founder's Day dinner to be beld Bend AriS Council on May 6, 7:30
Thursday night at the Sportsman p.m at Me,igs Junior Higb School.
Inn was annou~~~:ed. The girl of the Volunteenng. to serve as greeters
year was selected by tbe cliapter to were Dorothy Sayre, Carol Adams,
Joan Corder, Charlotte Elbc:rfeld,
be announced at that that time.
A report was given on tbe Jane Walton and Jeanne Powell.
Refreshments were served by
upcoming ..cancer drive and it was
noted that captains are still needed · Ann Rupe and Rutb Riflle.
New officen were elected wben
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Pbi Sorority met
recently at .Grace Episcopal

.

9:30 a.m, witb tbe morning worship at 10:30 a.m. Barlow is a.religion major at tbe Nazarene College, while TroY' Nunley is majoring in psychology and Christian
education.
Melissa Neutzling of Pomeroy,
a junior at tbe college, will lead tbe
singing for tbe revival. Sbe is a
junior at the college where she is
majoring in general communication
and youth ministries. At Mount
Vernon she has been active in various activities including Mohican
Youth Outreach, Cougar Spirit,
Dfama Club, .and Prayer Warriors. _
Although it is a youlb revival.
ail ages are invited to attend, it was
reponed.

WESl' VIAGIIIIA'S #1 CONVERSIOII VAIIIIEAI.BIIIAS AN INVEifTIIIIY
OF OVER 300 BRAIID JEW CHEVIIWT COIIVERSIOil VANS.
'
Selection Includes Aatro All Wheel Drives and &amp;-20's, both available wllh raised roots or low tops. Prices range from $l7,388 Jo
$36,988.

$11,688

.

the party atmOSphere.

Tbe large crowds, traffic jams
and unruly behavior in past years ·
led officials ro close off 200 blocks ,
and crack down on lawbreakers,
But that dido 't prevent two I
episodes of looting, blamed mos~
on local uouNemakers.
f

'
Vol. 45, NO. 252

Consultant hired for Middleport dock job
•

ir

Mec!ical expense payment
~pproved by 4-1

margin

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Newt Staff
Middlepon Village Council agreed to bire a consulting r1111l to push
forward work on the widening of the village's boat launching facility
Monday night
·
Council unanimously voted ·to bir.e SBA Consultants at $8,430 to
desian· lbe widening of lbe existing approach~ the floating dock structure
and construction of a new parldng lot.
·
SBA Consultants bad presented the only bid during tbe three-week
advertising period, Mayor Dewey Honan said. The firm will be hired,
pending BJ?proval of tbe bid from the village grants administrator.
The village has planned not to spend more than $10,000, Horton
added.
Councilman Jim Clatworlby suggested the project move forward since

•

OBSERVES BIRTHDAY
- Lucille Braley was honored
on ber 81st birthday April 6
with a party at the home of
ber son and daughter-in-law,
Jack and Brenda Braley.
Cake, ice cream, ·and punch
were served to friends and
famUy members. She reeeived
many gifts.

car

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A lawsuit to
overturn ·the ·state system of paying
for schools beaded back today to
the same Perry County courtroom
where it stacled:
Lawye{s for the state were
expected to ask a three-judge panel
.llf,Jhe 5th Ohio 9istrict Court of
ApPeals meeting in New Lexington
to overturn a lower court ruling lbat
found the current fundinR system
unconstitutional.
·
But lawyers for the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School F~nding prepared to argue
tbat Perry County Common Pleas
'Judge Linton Lewis ]c. was on tbe
mark last July 1 when he said tbe
system was . inadequate and
inequitable. . .
.
No' matter which side prevails
on appeal, tbe case is expected !O
continue until it reaches the Ob10
Supreme Court sometime next
year.
. .
Although the State Board of
Education is on record against
appealing tbe case, it nonetheless
. planned to take part In today's proceeding.
.
. "The board recognizes that thiS
case is going to rmally be decided
in the appellate process and wishes
to parhcipate 10 that process,''
Robert McAlister, the board's
attorney, said Monday.
'
Among the poiniS be intended to
make before the appeals judges:
•'If ultimately liability is found
it is not only within the power of
the courts but it's tbe absolute duty
of the courts to fashion remedies
that would cure the problem,"

iiS remains under a deadline.
.
This $142,800 project, partially funded through an Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, is targeted for completion by Labor Day, the mayor
said.
.
Various individuals and groups in Middlepun and across the county
have pledged more than $6,000 .to complete tbe village's match to keep
tbe bond, Honon said. The village appreciates tbese donations, be added.
· In otber action, council agreed 1o pay $100 a month for the next year to
pay the medical expenses of an employee who bad been laid off, Horton
said.
By paying tbe amount to Misty Gibbs, tbe village is not admitting any
guilt but trying to prevent a costly legal fight, Horton said.
"We're doing this to avoid litigation. The village did not do anything
wrong," Hortoil added.
The village followed the advice of its solicitor, who had conferred witb
tbe state auditor's office, Honon said.
Gibbs bad alleged she was not allowed io buy grolip insurance after
she left her job, Village Solicitor Linda Warner said.
. ·
Council voted 4·1 to pay the amount. Councilman Nick Robinson
voled against tbe measure, while Councilman Steve Dunfee abstained.

McAlister said.
William Phillis, executive director .of the coalition tbat {ejlresents
more tban 500 of the state's 611
districts, accused tbe state Monday
of .trying to drag out lbe proceedings.
"The state bas been aggressive
in attempts to derail tbe case and to
delay the case," Phillis said at a
news conference in Zanesville. ·
Joel Taylor, the lawyer representing the state, denie9 tbe charge. ·
, "If by delay they are simply
talking about the fact lbat we're
appealing, I don't know that in tbe
view of tbe defendants it would be
appropriate to have a decision of
Ibis magnitude made by the trial
judge ... with no further review by
anyone," Taylor said.
School financing ·in Ohio is a
shared responsibility among state
government and local districts. ·
Districts raise their ,money
mainly from real estate taxes. Districts without valuable industrial; ·
commerCial and residential proper. ty must impose higher tax rates to
generate the same amount of
money tbat wealthie{ districiS can
produce witb lower rates.

No injuries were reported at a fire at Hog Hollow Farm Monday,
according to Racine Volunteer Fire Department officials.
The fire broke out before 10:39 a.m. at Jim Diddle's bunting
cabin and consumed tbe structure and a pool. said Assistant Fire
CbiefWayneLyons.
·~
·
The cause of the rue is undetermined, but it began at the back
side of the structure, which was listed as a .tqtal to~s. Lyons said.
The state rue marshal is investigating the blaze, be added.
·
Tw~nty fueflghters who responded to tbe alarm returnCflto the
station at 1:55 p.m., Lyons added.

'

·Middleport
schedules
cleanup

Crisp'·s .transfer
away from HMC

DR. Wll.LIAM PHll..LIS

~

In other business, council:
· ·
• continued negotiations with Continental Cable Vision about its 15year contract The group set a womng meeting for 6 p.m. May 4 in council chambers to continue negotiations.
.
• agreed to Jet tbe Middleport Volunteer Fm: Deparunem seck a grant
for repairs to the roof and beating system.
·
• approved tbe !bird and rmat reading,of action ·allowing an interstate
gas line to be buill through a small section of town.
• learned tbe Riverbend Arts Council will coordinate music for the
Fourth of July restival.
·
·
• accepted a carryout beer license for tbe Citgo station· aJo11g North
Second Avenue. Previous management bad allowed tbe license to lapse,
but tbe nearby churches bad said the company bad been a good neighbor,
Council President Bob Gilmore said.
.
. T
• !banked the rue department for hosting a recent Easter egg hunt.
• waS !banked by the Middleport Community Association for its Fourth
of 1uly donation. The association's next meeting will be at 5:15p.m. May
2 at Peoples Bank.
• signed proclamations ror national days of prayer arid week of the
young child.

Judge approves

Funding
decision
goes back
.to court

Fire levels area property

.S25,688

1 Seellon, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy·Mlaaleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April25, 1995

Copyrlght1995

. Police Chief Beverly Harvard
said she was appalled by allegations of rapes, sexual harassment
and assaults, as well as lbe behavior of some parly-goers, including
women allowing men to grope
them and videotape their bare
breasts.

Certified used
buyeiS will be on hand to give highest trade-in
value lor your automobile. Please bring your title, "'llistraUon
tad, and paymtlnt bot* Happlicable.
Ill SALES PBIMITIED TO OEAlSIS. lbls cl Ba 811.:0 Is lor ratailcustlltlh only. Prices apply to available 111111 only. No ordering per- ..
mltiBd at tflese prices.

$17,388 .

windy. HJa.. ID 70L ·

said Shawn Jackson, a Tennessee
State student from Kansas City
wbo blamed police for dampening

R
. e-VIVa
.. . I t0 be he ld

A youth revival will be held at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene Friday through Sunday
under the direction of students
from Mount Vernon Nazarene Col:
lege.
Aaron Nunley will speaJc on Friday night with tbe service to begin
at 7 p.m in the fellowship ball
beside the cburcb. Games will be
cdnducted by tbc Nazarene College
. junior who is majoring in matb.
Troy Nunley,
also of
Portsmouth, will speak on Saturday
night at 7 p.m. at the church, and
speaking at the Sunday morning
service will be Todd Barlow of
Jackson.
Sunday school will be held at

1.- toal&amp;bt Ia tH ..... c!W·
Wedllelday, pardy cloudy,

•

Rain mars Freaknik event

Military news
. JonatbanC.Hupp
Marine Staff Sgt. Jonathan c.
Hupp, son of Gerry Hupp of
Racine,. recently reported for duty
with the Fourth Combat Engineer
Battalion Fourth Marine Division
in Charleston, W.Va.
Hupp 'graduated in 1988 from
Belpre High School. He reported
for duty with the Marine Corps in
October 1987.
WUUam F. Hess

Ohio Lottery

.

By GEORGE ABATE
own personal recogni~ance from
Sentinel News Staff
Holzer at noon Monday, Lentes
The founder of tbe Leading said. Crisp bad five full days and
Creek Conservancy District was part of a sixth day reduced from bis
moved to a Columbus hospital sentence, be added.
Monday because an area hospital
As soon as Crisp's con.dition
could not treat bis health condition, improves, be must return to the
said Meigs County Prosecuting Meigs Jail from Riverside
Attorney John Lentes..
Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
· ,,
Jack Crisp, 64, bad-been taken LenleS said. ,
to Holzer Medical Center last Fri- .. Crisp was listed in fair condition
day after spending· part of tbe day before presstime this morning,
in tbe Meigs County Jail. Crisp was .according. to a Riverside
·
sentenced last year to serve 18 spokeswoman.
The county bas been concerned
months in jail for five misdemean or counts of receiving , about lbe medical -costs that could
improper compensation.
·
be incurred while Crisp is incarcerTbe hospital diagnosed ,Crisp ated, Lentes said. Since be was
with a lung disorder known as a released, the county will not be
pulmonary embolism, Lentes said. responsible for medical costs.
Crisp- who bas bad a history of
But the county may owe the
bean attacks - bas been ·confmed ambulance transportation costs to
to a ~beelcbair.
Columbus because Crisp staned to
Visiting Morgan County Judge be transported before the judge's .
Dan Favreau released Crisp on his order, Lentes added.

Last December, Favreau bad
ordered Crisp to pay for hi.s jail and
medical costs. Earlier Ibis month,
tbe Fourth Appellate District Coun
of Appeals refused to consider an
appeal on the terms of Crisp's sentence
·
Crlsp's indigence status bas not
been dete.rmined. but Crisp's a~or·
ney, W1U18111 N. Eacbus of Galiipolis, will likely me briefs substanti·
au.ng tbe cJaim• Lentes added ·

· Middleport will bold a spring
cleaning week to help spruce up
neighborhood yards, Village Coun·
cil decided when it met Monday
. night.
The village set tbe week of May
8-12 as "Pride in Middleport
Week," with rree. trasb service
scheduled for May 10-!1.
"As citizens we need to take
pride in our town," Mayo&lt; Pewey
Horton srua:
Community organizations wishing· 10 sponsor a cleanup project in
their neighborhood or along tb e
river should anend the next council
meeting at 7:30 p.m . on May 8,
· Honon added.
.
, Large 1tems. such as rdngerators, car partS and ures, Will not be
accepted dur•.ng the two-day trash
collocuon penod, the mayor added.
La!it yeru:. tbc cleanup removed

:::~\~~~!~~~dewk~~l~~soefd~
·
. ' th
.
b~ndled dunng. 7 routme tra.sb

p•cku~s. Counc•lma,n N.tck Robmson srud.
Ir some village residents do not
take advantage of these cleanup
days. the village will enforce current nuisance ordinances and may
call in the county health departmen~ Honan said.
The cost of the cleanup days
will be paid through tbe village
blood-alcohol level of drunk driv· refuse funds, Horton added.
ing suspects.
Council President Bo.b Gilmore
Pomeroy's 12,year-.old breath said he has .fielded numerous calls
analysis machine is broken beyond about the refuse problem.
repair and Middlepon's machine is
"I'm embarrassed when I get
in need· of repair, according .to calls of that nawrc," Gilmore said.
Police Chief Gerald Rought
. "Our residents are in the wrong for
Council approved tbe purchase letting us have tbe trashy look we
of a new machine costing about have bad."
$5,100. .
The RiveiMnd Ans Council i ~
Pomeroy conducte4 198 blood- organizing a program that would
alcobol tests last year, Rought said. reward neighborhoods for cleaning
To· have the tests conducted up tbe village, Councihnan Micl..
through urinalysis in Columbus Childs.said.
would cost about $2,600 a year,
Councilman Steve Dunfee said
meaning the machine would pay some junk yards and dumpsters in
for itself in about _two years, be town may need to have fence s
placed around them.
adeled .
Tb
The new machine should arrive
" e majority of tbe people do
within four to six weeks, Rought . keep ,up their propenies," Dunfee
said.
added.
The village is holding ·spring
Last year, the village worked to
clean up the remainder of the week. revamp its refuse ordinances. The
according to Clerk Kathy Hysell . . revisions were tabled for discus Residents are advised to put items sion, a(ter landlords objected to lbc
for disposal along the curb.
~ts ~posed to inspect their prop·
erues.

Pomeroy Council adds section
of Union Terrace to village map
Spring cleanup
will continue .
· through week
By JIM-FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The road system in Pomeroy
became 850 feel longer after Village Council members accepted an
addition to Union Terrace at a special council meeting Monday night.
. Council agreed to establish a
public highway from lbe existing
Union Terrace that links Union
Terrace to Hiland Road near Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Council's next step is 1o pass an
official ordinance at its next meet·
ing, .but according to Mayor John
W. Blaettnar. the ordinance is
merely a fonruility.
"We've given our word and are
looking to pass the ordinance at our
next meeting (May 1)," be said.

The road is the brainchild of
Pomeroy resident Robert Titus,
who had tbe road constructed, ·outof-pocke~ 10 open up his property
for development
In addition, Titus bas secured
electrical and water service for the
property wllicb bas been divided
into four borne lots.
· .
Biaettnar commended Titus for
his effons.
"It's not every· day someone
opens up a new subdivision in the
village," the mayor said . "It's
going to be a lovely neighbor·
hood."

In addition, tbe road will make
the Union Terrace area more l\CCessible to nre and emergency crews,
be added.
.
.
Now the village will be res~n·
sible for upkeep of tbe road.
"It's the same as any otiler road
in the village," Blaettoar silid.
in other business, council
approved tbe purchase of a new
breath analysis maehine to test the

~I*Fa~ed'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
8-SERIES PICKUP

• Dnver Side Anbag
• Rear Anll-lock Brakes
• Powe&lt; Steer•ng
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IN THE PIT - Ralph Gonzales of California worked Monday
In tbe area called "the pit" at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building In Oklahoma City as·crews continued to search the bomb-damaged bqUding for victims from last week's deadly car-bomb attack.
(AP)
r
·

By CHRISTOPHER SULLIVAN reponed.
AP National Writer
Others bad much to say about
OKLAHOMA CITY - As the suspect, suggesting be bad links
funeral after funeral· weighed on to anti-govern.ment .paramiiita~y
tbis . stunned city and res~)lers groups. And mvesugators sa1d
clawed tbrougb tons of debris to p~tic barrels silhilar to ~ose that
reacb more bodies in tbe tpmb of m•ght have held tbe chemicals used
tJlc federal building, new evidence in the bomb were found at the
emerged about suspect Timothy borne of a man beld as a material '
McVeigh.
.wimess.
The only person charged so far
Among lbe new details:
• A Florida militia leader, Bob
in the bombing, McVeigh bas
refused to answer any questions Johansen, told The Associa~ed
about the worst domestic terrorist Pre.ss on Monday that McVe1gb
attack in U.S. history. The death visited tbat state 18 months ago
toll rose 19 87 today, and tbe Wbitc with M~~ Koem~e. who broadHouse said it could rise above 200.
casts a nulitant radio show and dis·
McVeigh remained stone·faced tri.butes militia videotapes from
even wben shown photographs of · M•cb1gan..
,
children .maimed and killed in the
McVe1gb was .one of several
blast, several news organizations bodyguards for Koemkc at a gatb·

ering of right-wing militias from Perpetrator unknown at thi s time
across the country. members of tbe Oklahoma.'.' The fax· received 8 t a
Florida State Militia said in today's congressman~s office carried a time
f.ort Pierce Tribune. McVeigll . stamp that, if accurate, wo~ld indi came down here because be beard cate ' 11 was sent more than an hour
the Branc~ Davidians. tbe people be.fo~ the bombing, but Koemkc
who surv•ved Waco, .would be s:ud 1t was sent after the bombing.
here,·' said Kenny Kukland, a He also told rcpotters Monday that
militia spokesman.
.
be doesn't know McVe.igb.
Federal agents bave satd
• The Dallas Morning New.r
McVeigh was enrag~ by the gov· quoted a source as saying that a
eroment's attack on the Branch note found in the back seat or tbe
Davidian CODIJXl!lnd..More ~ 80 state police car that McVeigh rode
cult members died m tbe ra1d on ·in after he was arrested in Perry
·April 19, 1993- two years to tbe Okla., contains a detailed requcsi
day before the Oklahoma City for obtaining explosives. The
bombing. .
soutce gave no details
• Koemke .said his organization
• The Daily Oklah~na11 reported
sent the cryptic fax the monuog of tbat investigators were cbcckin a
tbe bombing that said in part, crumpled business card McVe gb
"Bomb threat received lasl week. may have bidden in die p&gt;llce car.

•

.,

�·Commentar
The
,. Daily Sentinel

House SpeWr Newt Oia~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF .OPINION are 1welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities..

·

Letters to the editor
Wake up America!
possibly know? Her son Is alive
My name Is Carolyn Burgess. and well. She knows exactly where
I'm certain tbal many of you have be is. She can talk to him, sec him,
no idea wbo lam. I am. a mother of and touch him. I can't do any of
·two chlldR:o and one of them was these things with my child.
taken from me and everyone who
I really know wilat it i.Uo lose a
loved him. It seems that II is all too · son, to agonize for 14 months and
easy for us to forget tbe innocent pray lhat somehow, somewhere ·be
victims so I am going to tell you is alive 1111d well. I know what it is
about my son.
, ~ to love your cbl!d above everyThe last time I saw my son be thing in the wor(d, 1 know what it
:was ·12 years old. His name was is like to beg people to give you
. Jeffrey 1111d be was a tender hearled just some small clue to help you
cblld wild had a dream of changing
if
ali
1
b1
·the world someday. He didn't like find him, · not ve at east to e p
the drugs, tbe violence, and tbe you find the body so that you Can
child abuse happening in Ibis put him to rest. I suffered for
months by not knowing because
world. He was small for his age, William LeMaster in my opinion
. about the size of ·a nine year-old; was 100 much of a coward to come
but, bad a lot of grown-§' ideas.
forward and tell the truth about
On February 8,. 19 I Jeffrey wbathedidtomyionocentcbild.
was visiting his father when a rob1 have read lbe letters to the ¢ibery attempt 'was made by two men
M L M
•
,with a shotgun. Jeffrey's father was tor. J ba~e seen r. e aster s
: -sbot three times; lllld without giv- mother on television. I bave read
the articles in the newspapers. Per! ;ing ita second thought, Jeffrey was sonally, 1 am sick and tired of see• )Durdered for just being there. His log letters to the editor from con: ·little body was left in the woods to victed felons stating that tbey are
• lle discovered fourteen months the .victims in these cases. 1 am
::tater. Jeffrey's murderers were _tired 'Of convicted murderer.s
; .found and convicted without ever
lk b
d ·
. :Once expressing any feeling of appear 1ng on Ia s ows an . m
egret or remorse. Jef_frey was magazines 1111d ·newspapers saymg
thai they are sick or lbat they were .
; -killed in a . flash without any abused as a child and that is why
• :thought of the consequences.
b
· · d b
'bl
:. Tbe convicted kiUers never besi- I ey commute t ese tern e
: ;.ated with their plan even after see- . crimes. Wake up America! These
people are not the victims. Tbey
· log that there was a child involved are cold blooded, calculated mur. : •• knowing that they would kill blm derers and they are in prison
wen.
. because a jury, society. and justice
·; By now you have grobably says that they have to pay for what
::guessed that the men w o I have they have done.
; ~poken about are William LeMasThese letters from Mr. LeMaster
·ler and Fred Drennan. I have been and bis mother still do not cb1111ge
thinking about my son a great deal . the facts that an impartial jury
-these past few weeks. I have heeD
Will'
Le"
11
f
lam ,,,aster gu ty o
: forced to do so because of the great found
murder and sent blm to .prison,
: deal of publicity that has surround·
1 have no. sympathy for him. 1
· ed this case in these weeks .. It only pray .that no one elSe does
: ~ems tbat Mr. LeMaster and bis either, My famil)' has been tbtough
: mother have forgotten lhat a jury of enough as it is. To give this man
· twelve people convicted this man, the new trial that be is requesting
: and even more heart breaking is the · would be a mockery of the justice
: fact that media outlets have forgot· . system. 1 suffered tbtough the firSt
: ten who the true victims in this trial because I needed 10 be there
· t ase were.
for my son. I cannot go through
: According to findings of the anQ!ber one. 1 hope and pray that
:J ury, my son died because_William tbe justice system does what is
· J_.cMaster, a man whom my son right and what is just: leave
: bad met before, put a shotgun to his William LeMaster in prison where
· ¥Dung face and pulled the trigger. be belongs.
: At one point Mr. LeMaster's moth·
· cr told tbe media tbat she knows
Carolyn Burgess
: what it is like to lose a son simply
Gallipolis
: because she bas a son. How can she
Dear Edllor,

Plge-2-Tile D•IIY Sentinet
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
1\Jeld•y, April 25, 1985 ·

R-Ga., charaoa that tbo ' .elile
media" 8le boldle 10 hil Rcpublit:aa• revolution, and the latest awvey by the Center for Media and
Public Affain iodk:atcs tbal be's
not bdng J*liDOid.
Tnckiog Dearly 7.50 front-pqc
news stories and editorials In ftve
newspapers during the mol)tli lof
March, the' center found that the
coveraae of the GOP Coopess 66 pen:ent negative oo the edllorial
pages and 60 percent negative In
the news stories.
Froot-page stories in The Washington Post and The New York
Times were both about 6.5 percent
negative, as were the Poll editori·
als. New York Times edltorl•ls
were 87 percent negative. News
stories 1111d editorials in The Wall
Sireet Journal and The Wasblnatoo
Times were close to evenly bal·
anced, while USA Today was
sharply negative.
A'n earlier study by the center
showed nctworll: TV roverage to be
even more skewed than tbe front
pages, with ·7 I percent of reports
on evening news shows tilting
against the GOP..
· ·
Gingrich bas two explanations
for the media's behavior: Ideology

r.e-

THE

PR£SID£NTIAL
RACE?

.I

1

: T_

::as

Bumper stickers
for
the
millennium
'?P..

Driving home from work the
other day 1 saw a pickup uuck
with a bu~per sticker, "Friends
don't let friends eat meat." WeU
now, 1 thought, that's a bizarre
qualification for friendship: "Put
down tbat cheeseburger, Bob, or
we're through."
There was something vaguely
hostile about tbe phrase as well:
That verb "let" seemed to indicate
that a lllle friend would simply not
permit meat-eating to occur A ttue
· tle
friend would go so far as to ·wres
tile meat to tile ground, or WI'estle
tile friend to tile ground as bis confederates (lllle friends alii) spirited
the meat away to a place of safety.
Behavior like this would make a
mighty interesting barbecue, but
l'd bate to think a lllle friendship of
the future might have to bave a
, "Don't ask don't tell" ptoviso
attached to i~ regarding the cook·
duce
so
much
work
to
make
wages.
ing and devouring of animal flesh.
; bear Editor,
They
said
your
arms
were
six
inchGood
grief, after all , food? One
. · In your Sunday paper our freshes
longer
at
night
than
they
were_
moretbingwemusm'ttalkabout?.
: man representatives complained
·
st
started
in
the
mom
Anyway,
I
was
stuck
in
traffic,
tilatthey were tired and weary from wben you JU
.
- driving home, amusing myself by
: jhcir w011c. in the f1rst 100 days of
ingj
remember
saying
to
Frank,
rewriting·tbe buffiper sticker. I bad
, the last work session of the new
"Dam I'm tired"
arrived at "Meat, don'tlet friends ·
• Congress.
He ' looked al me and said "My ea1 friends," "Friends eat friends.
· Now first of all I believe the
. the way 1 want-y'ou to Don'tlet meat," and bad graduated
bo thai IS
: gentlemen asked for the job.
be~;
· , to "Meat friends don' tie~ friends
, , What they said kind of took me
.So 1 would !Ike to. pass along ea~" when I noticed another pick·
'back to tile '40s and I was probably
these
same words of w1sdom to the
• J 7 and after my first day on tbe
'
genUemen.
·
' job.
Tbat is tbe way we want you to
, · I got a job tending Frank G.
.. Roush. a plas tering contractor, be.
Virgil Walker
: whom I am sure everyone knew.
Racine
As if Bob Dole wasn 'I carrying
, 'He was a g~ IJ!Skmastq.
enough baggage already, now be's
.; In those days, you had to progot people saying be's not a real
right-winger.
' .
You know the old knocks
against Dole. He's quick-tempered,
where a Boy Scout lioop try~¥ to they say. He's moody and mCIIJI, so
· I&gt;e&lt;ir Editor,
clear
weeds from a me.lian divider mean, in the words of a former
· '!be U.S. House of Representa, (ives recentl y passed a bill that in the road was chased off by city Senate colleague, lhat be "couldn't
officials who feared liability law- sell beet on a troop shiP,.''
·~uld help protect all of us from
suits.
And a recent national survey
' frivolous lawsuits. H.R. 956 would
Now 'movement ' conserva·
of
volunteers
determined that II lives are saying Dole is an antique.
, 'limit punitive d~g.e awards to
tbree umes a person s econ.om1c peri:ent of who did not volunteer in He "projecls a distinctly midwest. 'damages or $250,000, wbic~ver is the previous year cited "concern em, Main Street, balance-the-books
.grealllr, in all types of lawsuits. To about volunteer legal liability" as a brand or smaii·C conservatism, the
reason.
•
me. that makes good sense.
kind that was common in the
This
is
a
d1111gerous
precedent
. Now similar legislation is in the
Republican Party in which be came
. U.S.· Senate, S.565. I would urge . for Anierica It's time for Congress of age, " wrote Gerald Seib and
·senators Glenn and Dewine and all to stand up and protect what Is John Harwood In the Wall Street
memilCrs of tile Senate to ensure good and right in tllis country from Journal.
'tllis bill also applies to all typeS of those destroying it through greed
The Newt Republicans are not
lawsuits. They need to understand and opportunism.
goln~ to like It when they discover
'that an out-of-control legal system
Dole s "dirty litUe secret," wrote
John K. Schmitt columnists Jack Gennond and Jutes
.affects everyone in society.
Waverly Witcover, namely that "be believes
: For example, I read recently
government bas a useful function
to perforoL ..
In a story about Dole's ApriliO
•. Thought for TOday: " I think tbat the glorious thing about the ljum1111
announcement
of his candidacy,
• race is that it docs change the world -'- constantly. Tbe wprld .or 'life'
the
Washington
Times, a.k.a. the
',may seem to more often overwhelm the human being, but it is the human
:being'! capacity for struggling against -being_overwhelmed which is "movement" 'Conservative@'
·rematlcable and exhilarating." - Lorraine H1111sberry, American author- newsletter, informed us that " not
once in bis speeob· ... did be use the
. :dramatist (1930.1965).

Wants representatives to be tired

.

wi~ anoth~,r bumper sticker,
Russ1a_Sucks,
. Hello? Isn:t the C:old ,War over?
Sure, Russsa IS rullning 1!li former-

. Russia so«;king. The. veri idea is
nd1culous. It s a mCIIJimgless verb
anyway .. "That sucks." Sucks
what? Wmd? Empty s'traws? And
wbere would Russia get the ~ergy
''
to suck anything? So stupid, so
ly-known-as-mighty
armies shorthand.
through Cbecben villa&amp;es like a
Not to sound elitist or anytbing, .
ted br k m·~
tbr
b
harp
but
wby can't we get a litUe more
~~. th~ ~ana1b~ .J.~ o:er its · creative in our rancor? If you don't
economy, and all rigb~ President like a movie, go upstairs and stran·
Yel1sin looks like be might possi- · gle the projectionist. Sure, that's
bly have, well,llll alcohol problem, blaming tbe messenger (who's
but to say an entire country probablYa computer anyway) • but
"sucks" when it 00 longer bas the at least you're not muttering ''This
power to barm us is pointless and sucks" just to impress your meat·
extremely rude.
eating false friends,
.
Did this pickup have some kind
On tbe other band, we might
of personal stake in Russia, that it ask, docs Aleksander Solzhenitsyn
sbould be so venomous toward the , suck? According to The New York
homeland of Nabokov, Dos- ·Times, the Nobel Prize-winning
toyevsky, Tcbaikovsky, and author is now a television talkSpassky? was the venom random? show host in Moscow. He might
If so, why not "Bulgaria sucks," not match tbe ratings of rival
or "Madagascar sucks," or Vladimir ("Hey, call me Vlad")
"Fargo, North Dakota, sucks?"
Posner on another network, but
·(Pargoisjustan'example,lbaVe be's doing all right. He's become
' us toward Fargo 1 adml't the Lawrence Welk o.f Russia,
00 anlDl
tha~ as a boy, I once open~ a door . politieally speaking. Is that such a
in a Fargo motel and three frogs bad thing?
.
bopped into the room, but that
Apparently Mr. Solzhemtsyn's ·
should indicate that 1 consider technique for interviewing guests
F
1
f
d - haranguing them with bis own
1
e:::!~fn~c~d n:~spf:k ~at opinions until bls time is up-' bas
would, by its verv existeDce- suck.)
proved successful enough that be is

/an Shoa'es

going ~ dispellse with _gue~ts altogether 10 the future, HIS wtfe told
The New York _Tim~, "The phase
of the pro~ 10 whiCh be gave an
oppor~unuy .\o someone else to
speak IS ov~r.
1 ~ew JUSt bow be felt, stuck
there. 10 trafftc ~ I was, s~unded
by Plclcu)ls ~~ mys~ous lllld
aggr~~st ve opmt~?s.. Plcku~s
$Uck, . I tboug~t. F~lends &lt;1?,0 I
:::, f~~n.~~ dnre plcknps, 1
ug b , ave e,v,er med1 '?Tmbe·
one
o s actua
G Ia wArchi
1 '?"y Irea derede
.. ~~ Guta pe~~Pel ~on ck ,;
ago su s,
1 !bought. Do fnend~
,who let
fnends eat meat .suck? I wonde~, stuck there m traffic, smack
dab 10 the middle ~f the end of h!story. Ob,, bow .1 wish we could diS·
pense with thiS phase of the program.
.
· .
.

t

.

S~orecelv~~;m~:";~!X)..&gt;9~~

408

DUC~s0new~ D' ~· 8 ·
B d ~;"'"~ uc d s C~th,
CA
1

5959 )

·• eva a
y,
'
lan Shoales is a "tndlcated
_writer for Newspaper nterprlse
Assoc:ladon.
.
(For 1~':!'jat~n jn ~o;.th
common
e t&lt; on ca Y t
this columnid and others,, con=.tz~~~~':'J~.J.)calllng l9

Bob ·Dole speaks for himself

Frivolous lawsuits

t

'

tbe .. negatiVe,.. so-tailed "news,.
coverage during the period was
CBS News anchor Dan Rather's
March 16 comment that the GOP
legislative agenda is "to demolish
government aid programs, many of
them desi~ned to help children 1111d
the poor.'t'
·
If "there is 1111y good news in tbe
center's studies, it is lhat network
TV newScasts devoteil 549 stories
to Congress and 309 to the presi-dent during January, February and
March, and only 329 to the OJ,
Simpson trial.
· So, bow come more Americans
know who Judge Lance Ito· is than
Newt Gingrich? It could be the
public's own fault.
(Morton Kondratke Is execu·
dve editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol HJII.)

- On the day Dole announced is agio:
C-word."
The press, Washington insiders,
It seemed to me tbat Dole had bis c1111didacy for the presidency,
welfare,
taxes, crime, drugs and
been saying some fairly conserva- he i;igned 1111 anti-tax pledge similar
tive things lately, and I woodered to one be bad refused to endorse in deficits. 'There was another rumor ·
bis 1988 run for the White House.. going around that be wpuld soon
Bef&lt;li'C, he said, be bad to reserve come out in opposition to asparathe option of raising taxes so be gus-'tlavored frozen yogur~ but I
bow much red meat it takes to"sali- could negotiate with the Democrats could not pin Ibis one down. either.
Ob, I forgot Bobs . He says
ate this crowd. To check on their to lower spending . Now that
claims, I resorted to an old Republicans were in charge, be we've never bad a president named
Bob and tile time has come to have
reporter's trick. You want to know didn't have to worry about it.
- In a recent speech in Des one. I don't know but I would
where politicians stand, you have
to take a IOilk at what \bey're for Moines, Iowa, [)ole blasted Holly- guess that be is agio Arlens and
and wbat they're agio. Here's some wood, which "poisons tbe minds Lamars and Pbils, even thoug~
or our young people" with depic- we' ve never bad llijy of them in th~
of wbatl came up wjtb:
- Last fall, Dole stumped the tious of "casual violence and even White House either.
From tllis evidence, it is plain td
slate of Virginia in support of the . more casual sex.''
that the "movement" conser'
see
extremely conservative Oliver
An examination of the other
vatives
.(I wish I could claim tbii
North. During the lriiJI-contra scan- things Dole said oo bis recent five·
wonderfully
graphic phrase, but il
dal a few years ago, tbe Kansas day, 11-city, 10-state "annoulll=Cis
a.
term
they
apply to themselvesl
Republican bad excoriated North ment tour" offers some additional
are
right
about
Dole. He is not a
for selling arms to telfQrists - an clues about his fundamental poliresolute
conservative,
But oeithet
31;~ said Dole, wbicb " nms against
tics. Here are a few more tllings
Is
he
a
classic
moderate,
and be
e~erytblng we stiiJid for In Amerithat Bob Dole is f&lt;r.
certainly
is
not
a
liberal.
ca." Not so in 1994. Now Dole
The I Oth Amendment, experiBob Dole defies cauaorlzati~
was " very proud" of Ollie.
ence, leadership, religion, the flag,
becau&amp;e
he Ia for whatever wm
- In March, Dole vowed to defeQse and prayer. As I went to
get
him
IniAl
the White House and:
repeal last year's ban on assault press, there was a rumor going
:
weapons, "Gun con1r0l is a com- around be might be coming out .he'l agio whatever W..n'L
(For Information on bow to
pletely ineffective approach to the foursquare in favor of vanilla ice
lack of safetr and security in our cream, but I was unable to confirm commlinlcate eledro,UcaUy with:
ihls columnist and other~. con-;
communities, ' he wrote in a leiter it.
tact America Online by calnng l This
is
more
of
what
Bob
Dole
to the National Rifle Association.
800-8l7-'364. uL 8317.)
·

'Joseph Spear

v

Truck theft suspect --Area Deaths-.
set to plead guilty Mary Bair King. .

. M~ Bair King, 38, of Columbus, died Sunday, April 23, 199.5 lil
Doctor s Hocpltal, Columbus.
:
Born Dec. 23, 1956, the daughter of John Laudermilt Sr. and the l8le
lletty Bland Laudermilt. she was employed by the HeaJ11and VlctoriaD
Village in Columbus. .
She is survived by her husband, Michael King of Columbus; dlulbters, Carrie and Mandy Bait of Columbus; father, John Laudermllt Sr. of
Middleport; brolbcrs, JoiiD Laudermilt Jr., and Robert and David I encW.
milt, all of Middleport; sisterS, Sharon Laudermilt of West Columbia,
W.Va., and Sue Buchman of Glouster; and father and mother-In-taw,
Richard and Charlotte King of CohDDbus.
Services will benooo Thursday in the Stewart Funeral Chapel, Oak .
Hill, with the Rev. Hermllll L, Stewart offtciating. Burial will be In the
Letart Falls Cemetery. Frie~ may call at tile funeral home i'iom 6-9
tonight and 6-9 p.m. WedneSday.

MICH.

,WHEN DID

The Dafly .s ;,tlnei-P•I• I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Acc:u-Weatber" forecilst for daytime~co~odl~tl~ons~and~~~~~~~

and cynicllm. Aplo, llc'ai*Obllbly each .of the five newspapers 'It scundbltes about blm were 6!1 per-·
not wrooa.
added
ex~n~med, except The New Yorll: cent bostile. This year be sot !15
tor Is tbal, like •:r new iqlme In Times, the tooe of its olflciaiiiCWI perccut negative cOVerlge In JaoWubington, bla II &amp;eainl • lnva- · . stories closely tracked those In Its uary, 60 percent in February, and
editorials. USA Today news ataric1 62 pm:mt in March. TV COVCJ1IIC
Morton
KOndracke
were 70 percent negative while edi· of congressional Republicans for
-""'""-&lt;L~""-.._._._L.U_.._.,._u;_..,_,._~az._ · ~ were 76 pen:ent nesadve. In those montlls was 61 percent, 66
slve "full body frisk" by media The Wall Street Journal and 1bc percent and 71 percent negative,
tbat now deem themselves the w~,:rtoo Times, both news sto- !eiJXledvely.
nation's seml-oflicial vctliDg aaen- ries
editorials were close to .50
1bc new study, covering newscy:
percent positive and negative,
·papers, shows tllat 69 percent of
The center's aew study, .like . "There' ,s a ~nlfied voice,'.' stories and editorials about Ginones it bas conducted PfCvlously oo Lichter said, tbougb be added he-- grlcb were negative during March.
Prcaident Olntoo's negative press, isn't sure whether tbe reason 1.s a 'For Senate Majority Leader Dol)
sustains the findinss of Syracuse common political culture among Dole, R-Kan,, the press was 64 perUniversity professor Thomas Pat- editorial writers and reporters or · cent negative. '
terson and other critics -that over specific direction from editorial
Of all major Republicans, Sen.
Alfoose D' Amato, N.Y., got the
the past 30 years tbe media have and publisbing bosses.
stopped reporting tbe news and
Ginr,lcb contends tbat media worse press- 85 percent negative
have bea&gt;mc relentleuly editorial ''elites ' are i.tredeemably "Hber- - followed by party-switching
and negative; ClOiltributins to pubUc al" and 1111y number of studies indl- Sen. Ben Nigbtborsc Campbell,
anger about politics.
.c;ate that top journalists do lean Colo., with 81 perce(\t lind Sen.
"News stories abobt the Repub- (and vote) left- though bls charge Bob Packwood, Ore., with 78 per· ·
licans read like signed editorials," that "socialisls" dominate the edi· cent.
·says the center's director, Roben toria1 pages is simply hysterical.
Tbe best press, 88 perCent posiLicbter, echoing a main theme of
lu Lichter's center bas reported live, went to Rep. Pat Roberts, RPatlj:rson' s I 993 book, ''Out of over and over again, Clinton is also Kan., chairman of the House AgriOrder," "The edltoriala say flat- the target of unrelentingly hostile cQiture Committee, wbo prevented
out that the ~blicans are bad," coverage, sustaining the Patterson the food stamp programs from ·
Lichter said. 'The oews stories thesis that ne~ativism trumps ideo!- being bkx:k-!ll)lllted, and at 87 per· .
quote otber people as saying It, ogy every ume as a dominant cent, freshman Rep. Greg Gansice,
with not a lot of balance on the media value.
R-lowa, who led a brief rebellion ·
other side."
·
Durins Clinton's first six against tax cuts for high-income
Lichter'.s study indicales lhat to montbs ill office, network TV families.
·
·
On issues, only GOP plans to ·
give enhanced power to states got
favorable coverage. Stories and
editorials qn school -lunches were 78 percent hostile; on arts and PBS
funding, 77 percent negative; on
HE ENTE~
welfare reform, 70 percent; term
limils, 66 percent; and the balanced
budget amendment, 62 percent.
The.center's favorite example of

•"IIOulb •

April25, 1995

OHIO Weather
Wednelday, April26

Maybe Newt's right about media bias

111 Court Street
Polllei'OJ, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Tue~•y,

•

..

• IColumbus l12• I

GALLIPOLIS - One of two uled bearing, Hawkey may testify
Greensburg, Pa., men accused of against William G. Geors'e. 22,
stealing a truck and leading author- wbo is also charged in the theft.
ities on a high-speed chase waived
George is acheduled to appear
his right to a preliminary hearing 'before Medley Friday foe his preMonday and agreed to plead guilty. liminary hearing.
.
Defense attorney Roo Calhoun
Tbe two allegedly broke iiito
of Gallipolis, representin~ Hu&amp;h I. Bostic Motor Sales, 1010 Fir~t
Hawkey, 20. told MuniCipal Court ' Ave., oo April18, took the keys to'
Judge William S. Medley bis client a: 1992 Toyota piCkup truck and
would agree to plead guilty to auto drove off witll the veblcle.
·
theft if the charge of breaking and
The pair allegedly stopped at a
entering was dismi•sed.
CheShire gas statioo and stole gaso· Assistant Prosecuting Attorney line before crossing into Meigs
Jeffrey Adkins said be would rec- County.
ommend a two-year jail sentence,
I
In Middleport, a police officer
to be served concurrently with IDY began a high-speed putsuit which
sentence Hawkey receives on ended in Langsville when the truck
Peggy L. Wood, 67, Canal Winchester, died Monday, April 24, 199.5 at
cbatges be faces in Pennsylvania
ran off the road and overturned. her residence. She was a member of Faith United Methodist Church
Medley bound Hawkey over to Two Meigs sheriffs cruisers were American Legion Auxiliary 220, Gallipolis OES 283 White Sbrinc
tile Common Pleas Court of Judge also involved in the chase.
Jerusalem, Grant Women's Service Board and tile can3J Winchester HisJoseph L. Cain, where be will enter
In Meigs County, the men f~q . torical Society,
bis plea and be sentenced. A bear- charges of felony fleeing and'
Survivors include her husband, Robert Wood; one son Robert (Raeing date bas not yet been set.
attempted vehicular assail!~ as well gene) Wood U of Canal Winchester; tbree daughters, Kitty (victor) AraoCalhoun also indicated ·that as as a nmnber of traffic violations.
brigbt of Canal Winchester, Cheryl Ma!llias of Lancaster, and Vicki
part of the plea negotiations, wblcb
. Tbe men remain in the Gallia · (David) Clalk of Goodland, Aa; her mother, Malinda Bradbury of Weattook place before Monday's scbed- County !all in lieu of SlO,ooo, to erville; one brother, Keith Bradbury of Westerville; one sister, Allie Haw1
ley of Middlepon; and II gr1111dcltildren.
·
percent bonds.
Sbe was preceded in death by her father, J. Perry Bradbury; and two
gfllllddaughters, Melissa and Malinda Mathias.
Tbe service wiU be held 10 am. Wednesday at Faith United Methodist
Church,
15 W. Columbus Slreet, canal Winchester, with the Rev. Dean
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. service. All but 60 days of tile jail
(AP) - Tbe mayor of Ibis Obio sentence was suspended, and that Feldm~yer officiating. Burial. wil! follow in Union Grove Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, contr1buuons may be made to tbe Faith United
River city was released from jail sentence was reduced to 30 days on
Methodist Memorial Fund or the cancer library al Grant Medical Center, .
today after completing a sentence. appel!l.
Holland said he cashed the c/o Grant Dtvelopment, 340 E. Town Street, Columbus.
for misdemeanor emj)ezzlement
· charge, bls administrative assistant check at the Water Department 1111d
beid the money for a weekend
said.
· Russell Holland was released at before turning it in to a town seae. .
12:0.5 a.m. and was back in his tary.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
U.S. 1·3, 230-260 lbs .• country
office when it opened today, . . But Prosecutor Damon Morgan· Ohio direct bog prices at selected points 33 .50-34 .50, few 35 .00;
Joanne Sauer said. "He was not in said tile $28 check was n011111 iso- buying poinls Tuesday by the U.S. plants 34.50-36.00.
wbeo a n:porter called 1111d did not lated incident. Last week, he said Dtpartment of Agriculture Market
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
return a message seeking copuneoL Holland routinely cashed checks News:
points 28.50-33.00.
.
In a bargain witb prosecutors, m;lde out to the town 1111d kept tile
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
Holl1111d, 64, pleaded guilty to one money in a cash drawer at \be cents bigber; demand moderate.
Sows: unevenly steady.
count of misdeme1111or embezzle- Water Department.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 25 .00Holland, a two-term Republiment involving a $28 check tbat a
29.00; 500-650 Ibs. 29.00-33.00, a
funeral borne wrote to the town for can, is up for re-election May 20.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER · few over 650 lbs. 33.50-34.00
His Democratic opponent is busitwo American nags.
~prll 14 discharges • Betty
Estimated receipts: 34,000.
nesSIDIIJI
George Vaughan.
Holland was sentenced Marcb
Bell, Clyde Ward, Kathy Liitle;
Holland campaigned during bis Myrle Gibbs, Anna Dow and Robin
29 to a year in jail, two years' projail
term while performing trusty Feustel.
bation and .200 hours of community
duties.around the courthouse.
April l4 births • Mr. and Mrs.
Terrence Conlin, a daughter, of
Rutland and Mr. 1111d Mrs. Brandon
Janie, a son. of Gallipolis,
Printed wttb permission.
Units of the Meigs County die property;
Emergency Medical Service logged
9:10p.m., volunteer fire depart·
14 calls for assistance Monday ment to Third Street, possible elecincluding two transfer calls. Units trical ftre on Rose Leah property .
responding included:
REEDSVILLE
MIDDLEPORT
9:44 a.m., State Route 124,
12:13 a.m ., . South Third Marvin Edw3rds, St Joseph's HosAvenue, Ray Foster, Veterans · pital.
Memorial Hospital;
RUTLAND
POMEROY
11:39 p.m.. Powell Street. Carol
7:07 a.m., South Third Avenue.
Near
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
Wines, VMH.
Middleport, Ray Foster, treated at
992·2588
POMEROY
the scene;
VINTON
4;28 a.m .. Mulberry Avenue,
12:53 p.m., State Route 124,
Gallla
County
Oisptay Yard
Edith Barton, Pleasant Valley Hos- Helen Le!tlley, HMC;
155
Main
51.
pital;
.
6:30 p.ln., Meigs Mine 2, Ter388-8603
12:50 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road, rance D. Conlin, VMH.
Paul Anthony, VMH;
2: II p.m., volunteer fire depart·
ment 1111d squad, Middleport squad
to motor-vehicle accident on West
Main Street, June Marshall refused
treaiment, Norma 1111d Carrie Mar- ·
shall, VMH,
RACINE
Between April 24th and May 20th, 1995 the first 12.
8':31 a.m., College Streel; Lee
Reynolds, Holzer Medicil Center;
customers that b~,~y a system,
10:39 a.m., volunteer fire
deparonent and squad to Hog Hollow Road, sllllcture fue at Jim Did-

Peggy Wood

W.VA.

Vlo Au«i. .d Preu G111p/ic-l

·Erratic weather pattern
will continue this week
Weather foneast:
Tonigbt...Incn:asing clouds after
midnight northwest with a chance
of showers or thunderstorms
toward morning. Clear to partly
cloudy elsewhere. Lows from the
mid 30s northeast to the mid 40s
south.
Wednesday ... Partly sunny
extreme north with a chance of
thunderstorms. Partly cloudy elsewhere. Warmer with highs from the
mid 60s northwest to 70 to 75
south.
Extended foneast:
Thursday ... Scattered showers
and thunderstorms. Lows 45 to .50 .
Highs from the upper 50s extreme
nonh to the upper 60s south.
Friday... Partly cloudy and cooler. Lows 35 to 40. Highs from near
50 nonh to the upper 50s soutil .
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
35 to 40. Highs from the upper 50s
nonh to the mid 60s south,

• By The Associated PnSI
Ohio's upJand·down, wet-anddry weather pattern will continue
into the weekend, forecasters said.
Temperatures will warm to the
mid-10s in some areas under partly
sunny skies on Wednesday, the
National Weather Service said.
On Thursday, it will be back to
a chance of showers and thunderstorms with highs in the upper 50s
and60s.
I
Dry conditions will return on
Friday but temperatures will be
even cooler, failing to climb out of
the 40s in some areas, forecasters
.said.
Tbe record-high temperature for
:tllis date at the Columbus weather
station was 90 degrees in 1915
. while the record low was 25 in
:t919. Sunset tonight will be at 8:19
· p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
·
6:39am.

'Meigs announcements

II :30 p.m. at the Royal Oak Activity Center. Must have advance tickets for 'Ill events. Tickels on sale
May I -June 8 at Baum Lumber and
.Summerfield's Restaurant ' in
Chester, Hawk's 76 and Keebaugb' s Shake Shop in Tuppers
Plains, Reed's Store in Reedsville
Fne clothing day
-·
and Francis Florist in' Pomeroy.
Free clothing day will -be held at Dinner, $8, dance, $8, both, $12.
. · the Salvation Army, Butternut . Prayer seminar
' Aven~e, Pomeroy, Thursday from
Ash Street Freewill Baptist,
·' 10 am. to noon.
Middleport, will hav-e a prayer
: Cemetery workshop set .
seminar May 1 and2, 7 : ~0 J?.m.
· St John Lutheran Cburcb, Pine with Chuck Stansbury, Gall1p&lt;\l1S.
. Grove Road, the Aid Association . Revival announced
'
, . for Ltitberans and the Meigs Coun- .
A weekend revival will be held
. :ty Historical Society will sponsor a at the Faith Tabernacle Church on
: workshop on cemetery 3I!d tomb· Bailey . Run Road, Thursday
.. stone preservation at St. John through Sunday, 7 nightly, David
-Cemetery on Satunlay from 9 am. Wedland of Columbus will be the
· to 3 p.m.
·
speaker. The Rev. Emmett RawLunch will be available at the son, pastor, invites the public.
·church. The purpose of the work·
· shop is to teach proper methods for
repair and cleaning of tombstones.
· Township trustees and those
. entrusted with cemetery care are
especially encouragl:d to attend this
session.
· Due to limited accessibility,
The Pomeroy Police Departthose wishing to attend are encouraged to call the historical society at ment investigated a two-vehicle
accident resulting in injuries to
992-3810 prior to Saturday.
three people Monday afternoon.
· : Alumni scbolarsblp
Almeda Marshall, of Middle·
Eastern Alumni Association will
port,
bad stopped to turned left
give a $250 scholarship to a current
from
West Main Street when a
_graduate of Eastern High School.
truck
bit
the rear of her car, records
. More information and applications
show.
.
are available through the school
Marshall
was
cited
for not carry. guidance couns~lor' s office and
ing
insurance
and
she
was later tO ·
-must be returned no later than
taken
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
Wednesday, May 17.
by private car, records show. ·
Alumni banquet scheduled
in her car, Lorena
Tbe Eastern Alumni Banquet andPassengers
Carrie Marshall were taken to
1111d Dance will be held Saturday, VMH by emergency squads. David
June 10, witil dinner beginning at Gammon, of Charleston, W.Va.,
6:30p.m. and the _dance from 8:30- bad light damage to his 1988 SID'face Banana Co. llllck.
Gammon was cited with failure
The Daily Sentinel
to maintain assured clear distanCe.
· Lincoln Day dinner IAinlgbt
The Meigs County Republican
\ Party Lincoln Day Dinner will be
· held tonight at Meigs High School.
Doors open at 6, with dinner served
at 6:30. Congressman Frank Cremeans, speaker.

·Accident ·
leaves three
people hurt

(USPS ll l-960)

Stocks

Pu blished every a! temoon. Monday through
Friday, I ll Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publ i~ h i n g Company/Mu himeWo
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156.
Second class postage paid m Pomeroy, Ohio.

Am Ele Power ·-------~.32 3/4
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Ashland on ----~-----.3711l

Mc:mbtr~

The AstOciol.ed Press. nnd lbc Ohio
Newspaper Association.

POS1'MAS'fi!; J(: Send oddrcu com:ction~ to
The Daily Senti nel, Il l Court St., Po meroy.
Ohio 4~i69.
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oi

Point Pleasant mayor freed

_Today's livestock report

Hospital news

EMS units record 14 runs

Super Cooling Deal With AHigh (fficiency Heat Pump!
Warner.Heating &amp;
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The Light
Touch
By
Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

It ~

• • •

Success us ually come ~ to
those who are too busy to
look tor it.

. ,. .

Mealtime is the period of the
day when the. kids sit down to
continue eating.

• • •

Polit;'cian to another: "Half
those lies you tell about me
aren 't true."
• • •
Thanks to j oggi ng , rnore
peopl e are co llap si ng in
pe rfec t htalth t han ever
before.

Jog on over to
Rutland Furniture.
We'rt the place
to vfsft for the belt
service, stlectl•
lid

Ice.

---------.42 114
Wendy lnt' L· - - - - - - ---17

7SHOWROOMS

26 Wcoi&lt;J ............................................$47.06
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$92.56
Ratts Outside Mtlp Cou nty

---~Stock reports
are lhe 10:30 Lm.
quotes pro•lded b y "Adveot o

Rutland Furniture'

·'13 w..u ..............................................S2l.61
26 Wtekt ................................................ $49.66

S2 W..kJ ................................................. $96.20

GaUl polio.

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742·2211
•

�!

J

I
I

•

'S ports

'.

•

••

•

•

•

·,'

The Daily Ss!!!!~
Pagl 4

Major League season opens tonight
..
..

MIAMI (AP) - Baseball's
worst winter and strangest sp:ing
are over. Tile boys or summer are
back.
·
The Florida Marlins and Los
Angeles Dodgers open the maj9r·
league season tonigb~ three weeks
late and not a moment too soon.
Recent r.:tarlins acquisition John
Burkett wiU 1brow lbe fltSI pitch.
·• After lbe eigbt-monlb layoff,
it'll be nice to be UJe one to kict it
off, •• be said. •'There were a lot of
times I was thinking tbete was no
way we were going to play, and
maybe all of tbis year would be
lost."
· The game will be lbe fli'SI since
Aug. 11, wben players began tbe
longest .strike in sports bistoty.
They returned early Ibis month for
an abbreviated three-week spring
ttaining.
Twenty-four teams are scbed··
uled to open Wednesday.

I

.•

a
..

••••
•

·.••
...••••.
..•
....•
...
...
•,

.: · · PRE-GAME CHAT •The Cubs' Shawon Dunsto11, left, and
:; : While Sox player Ozzle Gullen laugh while· standing next to the
:· : batting cage before an exhibition game between Chicago's major
::: league lea"!S Monday at Cornlokey Park. (AP)

...·

Scoreboard
Ohio H.S. baseball poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a
IItie panel of caaehe&amp; rates Ohio hig.h
aehool baicbtll tetml i Dihe flf'll regu larleMOn poll for The Alloclated PM.~ (by

OhiO Hlab School Athletic Auoclatlo n
diviliollli, wiUt fttlt- place vote1 Ia p lt'~D·

•

...
•

2-Tol. SIMI (8) 5-3 ................. ....... ...... ) 62

. 5-Sh- HO . (2) 6· 1.......................... .113

•
•
•I

6-Tol. Wb;lmer (J) I· I .......................109
7-W. 0!51.er Lakota (3} 10-.S ,. ......... ....'11
1- We~tmllle NIXth (1) 1S.. I ................ 85
9-MI.lll. Madilon IQ-1 .......................... 80

3-Hllllord (.) 9.0 ................................ .1 52
+Cin. S~. Xavier (9) IS-I ................... ) 33

Other• ncel•l, ll or more poi•t.1
II (tie)-LOGAN, Piqua ll .

&amp; ·

I-MINFORD (3) ................................... 7&amp;
2-Col. Ready (2). .................................. n
3-Dellevue ....................... ....... ,.............. SS
4-Un Bath ....................... ,.................. Sl

.S-Wmen Cbampio li (3) .. ...................... 41
LaOnnse Keystone (1) ..................... .41
7-l:opley.....................................,.......... ]J

I -TaiiODdae ... ..... .................................. 32
9-Hamilton R 011 ................................... 2.5
10-0umantown VaJiey View ................ IR

1'0- Piqua l 0-1 ....................................: ....76

•••
••
•
•
••
I I
••

~ond

111 ll-Cln. Oat HJUI SB. 12
{lle)-WorthlngtOD Kilbourne, 8nm&amp;wl ct
49. 14·Wadlwotth 48 . JS-Hud&amp;Da-46. 16-Cuyt. Fal lt W alth Juuil 41. 17 (tle)We6Ull.ke, Euclid 35. 19-Faitfield 1• . 20Uamil!on 32.

....
,.••

Dlvlolon II

,

loa

&amp;

l · Belle(ontalne ( 10) 11-1.................... 260

••~

.,•:

9-Celina .... :................... .........................20
l O. N. C:anloa lloover ......... ;................... 16

Isam

i

•
••

-..;

6 -Spr111.Jfield Soulh ............................... 33
, 7-Carrolllon ................. ."......................... l5
S-Canlon GlenOak ................................22

Division II.
Division

:r.&amp;
1-Canton G1en0at. (8) 8-0 ...... ............ 205

••
••
••

.1

t h -):

••

l ·Col. Waumon (.5) 1-4 ..................... 23-4

Division lU

Isam

&amp;

1-N. RobifliOD Col. Cn~wford (4) ......... 84
2-Stnl.lbwa-Ftantll n. (3) .......... ,, .. , ...... 76
3-Ci n. Co unit)' Day ... ............................S5
4-Jeroll'IC:IYille llilbdale ........................ 48

5-Elmore Woodrricre ., . ........................·38

&lt;4-Jiebron Lakewood (2) 12-3 ........ :.... 165 ·
5-Hamiltou a.wn(I) 12-4... .................11
6-Parnw. Padua J. J ........................_..-.. ,.:.69
7-Falrfid d UnioD{I ) 14-2 ....................~
8-Frant.lln (2 ) 1+ 1.... ,., ........... ..............54
9-Col. DeSai" JQ- 3 .............................. 50

Other• reetl"l,.. 12 or more pol nbl l
11-Pieaum Hill Newton ( I) 17

Monda1'• Sporbl TrUU.~c:llon t ·
By Tht AMOrJtiled Pr-

:rum
&amp;
1-Johnatowo-Monroe (10) 13·1 ..........2.59
2-0li!Ucothe Untoto (8) 8-0 ...............242
3-M.rti" Ferry (6).11·2 .................... .1!17

4-POR'l'SMOtmt WEST {1) L'l• l .... l86
S-Oianville 8...0 ............................. ., ..... 141
6-B1oa m CalTOII (I) 1-'2 ...................... 130
7-P,Y (2) 18-1.. ................................ 117
8-Bloo mdale Elmwood 9-1 ................... 81
9-Geooa7-1 ...............................,..........71
10-0e. VA-St.Joleph ( I) 4-3 ................70

Second lt1 ll ·Coldwatet (l) 69. 12JCI'omuville Hillldale 68. 13-T oro nto 6 1.
14 -0n ad . lnd laa Vtll ey (L) 48 . I SBrookville (3) 46. 16-Zoarville Tulc:. Valley J!). 17-Cl n. h dla.n Hill 22 . IB·Cin.
Marieroont (1) 19. 19-Elyria Cath. U . 20·
Nr.-w loll doD 14.

1!11.

1-Steubea. Cath. Cent. (1 S) 1-2 .......... 263

t

'•

'•
'•,

.
.
.'

I •

t

•••
•

''
I
I

~

2-Fairporl Harbor IJ,anling (9) IQ- 1.... 257
l ·Creatli De 6-0 ............... V"'"'' '""""'" I81
4-Fremont St. Jo.eph 6-0 .................... I-49
5-Sartdusty St Mary'a (I) .5-2.. .......... 135
6-St. Henry (1) 7-3 .............................. 120
'7 JCwett-Sclo S·l ......... ,.................... .115
g Cedarville (2) 9-2 ...............................6)
1). ~.tabula St. Joho 7-3
10 &lt;Uyahog:.a Hts. S-1 .... ....

....... •.... _.. 42
.. .... 40

Srro~d l 'tt ll·Kalida ( 2) 38 . 12·
f't')RTS MOLTill NUfKE DAME 2•. 13·
Columbiana 2l. 1-t:An.na 22. 1.S (tle)•N.
Dailimore, CANAL WINGIESTER, Cia.
Su mrrut Country Day (2) 20. l i .Oid Fort
19 19-l..eipsit' 17. 20-Find. ,Liberty Beot(ln 16 .

Ohio H.S. softball poll

•.

COLUMR·US , Oh10 (AP)- How I
panel or coaches rates Ohio hlah
.schn(l l ~of\ ball team• l D the second poll
for 'Ill~: Anodated Preu (by Ohio tU llh

I

School Athlet[c ASiociation divi~ionl.
w11h fir~l·p lace voter. In pare.nthe~e~):

•••

••

st3t~

Division I

1!11.

It1111

] -Akron Spmafitld (9) ................:......99

2-Westernlle South ..................... , ........69
3 Elyria ..................... :........ :.................. 49
4-We&amp;tepsille North ............ ,................. 37
S-Ciayton Northmont ............... ~........... 36

•

•

•

l30STON RED SOX-Placed Rop

South ern
· gtr.s
• romp .11
1
.-

- Sports briefs .....

•

Our statistics show that mature drivers and home owners have fewer and
less costly losses than oth er age
groups. So it's only fair to charge you
less fo r your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save even
more with our special multi-policy
discounts.

Cleme.as aDd Stall Beli nda, pltche.n, a n
the 15-day disabled list. Agreed to 1ums
with Mo VauatJn, fi rst bMeiT\IIll, oa a one-

yew

~ntt&amp;ct.

P\lrchued th e conuaca o{ ··

Dent. Llll lqul st and A lejaDdto Pe na ,
pitchen, rrom PIWIUcket of the Jntecna-

tiO nal Uaiue. Optio ned Grci Bloaaer,
· Joae Malave an d O le.nn Mum~utfle l d­
r:n~ Randy Brown, shortaWp;
HaltebetR, catcher; a nd Mite Sulllnn, Joel
Be naelt 1.11d Gar .Finnvold, pllcheu, to

Pawtllctel.

S~ ot

Pat Lennon, outfielder ,

u.aaue.

'"'eAU FORNJA 1\NGEI.S- IJell gnated Joe Magrane, pitcher, for U1\ p ~nt .
Placed Oreg Myers, c•tchet, oo the ISday diubled llat, re:trOlllctive to April2 1.

CLEVELAND lNDIANS - Waived
WlllieSmitll , pitcher.
DET ROIT T IGERS- Placed A lt D
Trammell, •horUtop , un lhe 1~ -d ay dls-

llbled list, re.troactive lo April 21.
·
KANSAS CITY ROYALS -- P ur·
duued the contnJCU or Oru:y Oae«i, third
b~man;

Felll Jo~e and Michael Tucker,

outfielden; Keith Miller, infitlder; Dou&amp;
linton, pitc her. an d R:un MeG inn ll,
ca!c:het, from Omaha o( the Amerieao AI·
aoclation. Scot Mike MagDI IIJC, pitcher,
aad ROOney M~•· outfielder, outrljht lo
OmW .
MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Placed
Jeff 9ronkey, pitcher, on the U -day dis·
al)ltllllal. Recalled Scott Karl, piu:her ,
from N.,_. Orlu.na or tll.e American Anociatton. Purct\M ed th e oontraet: or OetTic t
May , ouUieldt'l', frolt1- New OrleaN or the

summer at
prime'

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after whJCh ralt~ will con ....art to lully 1ndeJed APR ThP " Bah~ P11~ Rate" •~&gt;. b~se;d on the Pmne Rate as pubhsheo b.y tl'le Board oi
Govemors of the Federal Reserve System !Of the week 11'1Ciudn1y the I Sth day of the orior monltl The "Bank Pnme Rote· tis of Marcl1 1,
1995 was 9 00% Offer 11aild on hnes ol $10.000 or more The fully •nde...ed APR on vartabl e-rate hnes wt!h an 80% loan-to-value ratio
as ol March 1, 1995 was. W SO% APR lor lrneS ot $SO 000 or mor~ . 11 00% APH lor lines of J20.000 to $49.999. and 11 50% APR on
~ hnes Of $10,0)) to $19 999 The APR on vaflable-rate 11nes may •ncrease or decrease , not to exceed 25~ APR 1n Oh•o If your line is
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The Dlllly Sentinel p •• • 5

Pomeroy--lllddleport, Ohio

Average ·p rice of basebail tickets increase 1.8 . percent··.
.

NEW YORK (AP)- Say it 1 .11-7 percent to $13.14 from
IIID't ~ Y"'k ! I C'IDOII Jlrdies Sli.t1.
.
Wlttl( a up OrloJes?
lnOatioa waa l. 7 perceat In
Sevta tams nlilecl die cost or 1994. accon~~a1 to the Cousumer
aa •wnae lic:bt IIIIa )'ICII', exdud- Price Index. Oaly seveu teams
ilia I'!C dlscounta ltiMy tcama arc iDCRUed their aYeriiJe lic:bt prit:e
offenng for ·a fe.w weeb to lure this year. Tbe otben were San
bllclc fans allcr die 2~y strlte.
F!at~Cisco (4.8 pacent to $ll.QI),
· Tbe averaae pnce of a tic:k~t . Montreal (&lt;t peroeotto $8.92 u.s.).
wetlt up ,1.8 peaceut to $10.65 Ibis the Chicago Cubs (0.4· percent to
Yell!· an ~ le&amp;s tball ~ llJIC $13.17) and tbe Chkago Wbite Sox
of mtlauoo and the lowest Jump (0.2 pcrg:ntto $12.93).
Ibis decade.
'
Six teams Joweed their IVen!IC
~e New .York Yankees bave. prices: D~troil (4.6 percent),
lbe bigbeat average ticket ptlce,w ··- Toronto (4.2 pen:ent), FliiiCia. (2:7
$1S.Ol, a j~ of 3.9 pen:ent from ~). Kansas City (1.4 pen:enl),
1994,11Cal1'ding to fi&amp;uh:s relwed San Diego (1 percent) and St
Moaday -by Team .Marketing Lcuis (0.1 perceol).
·
. RePort. The C'inclnoau Reds, wbo
F'lfteen tea11t1 made ao changes
dkil't c:bal:!ae prices, bave tbe low· in tbelr avetilge ti\Zet pice.
est average 8l $7.9S.
Alan Friedman editor of Team
Tbe Color~do ~ockies! wbo - Matkeling Report,' said lbe average
moved from Mile Higb Stadium to doesn •t include special discounts
~oars Field, h!ld the largest that many teams eslablisbed for tbe
mcrease, a 34.2 P'rcent rise to fust few weeks nf tbe season ill an
$10.61 ~ ,$7.90. The only other effort to lute back fans following
I clouble-dlglltnaease
was lbe Balli· tbe 232-day strike. The average of
more Orioles, wbose average rose eacb team is wel,bled to ret1ect lbe
number of seals m eacb ·pia: can:.

.

Tbe.averaae NFI. ticket Price
l a s t - .... $31.05, up 8.1 )ler·
ceaf from 1993. The av~ NBA
ticket thil season cost $29.S1, ap
8.8 percent from 1993-94. Tbe
avetase NH~ ticket this seuon
costs $33.66, up 13.6 percent.

IOif·
Liut year, the average ticket
pia: broke $10 for lbe flnt lime,
rlslna s .gJEI to $10.4S. nat
followed umps of 9 percent .in
1991, 12. percent in 1992 311d 2
perca~t in 1993. ·

Tbt faa c·oat Index, wbieb
lndlldea lbe· cost ol· lilllr IIVer"'!epriced tlckeU, two ,mall draft
beets, four IIIUII) 10ft drinks, four
bot clop. JIOIIIdn&amp; for ct1e car, two
proarams IIHI two bifeball caps.
fOIC 1.S pen:eatto $97.25.

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lenient sentence

• Easv mount window

• Easy-to-clean

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)Instead of spendin# lbe siDIIIDer in
jail, Darryl Strawberry could be

baFk playing baseball.

.
Strawberry received a lenient
sentence Monilay fOt evading fed·
eral income taxes, getting six
months' borne conflnemfnt ralber
than the tbree montbs in prison be
agreed to in a plea bargain . .
Strawberry was not fmed, but be .
- must pay $3SO,OOO in bact taxes,
interest and penalties.
U.S. District Judge Barrington
D. Parker Jr., also sentenced Strawberry to I 00 boors of community
service and mandatoty drug abuse
oounseling. He said l!Dbation offi·
.dais in California wtll set the dale
for UJe start of the bome detention.
He will not be required to wear an
electroni~ monitoring device and
· will be permitted to travel and
allen&lt;! practice if be finds a new
team.
Strawbeny agreed to serve tbree
· months in prison, and bis lawyers
. asked be be allowed to serve it near
~ "his borne in Rancho Mirage; Calif.
But Parker exercised his right to
disregard flle plea agreement and
determine lbe penalty on Iris own.
"We are disappointed that the
· judge did not impose the agreed·

Mason Bowling
League results

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upon sentence," U, S. Attorney
Mary Jo Wbite said. •'Prison sen· ·
tences are appropriate fOt violators
of the tax laws in order to deter
others frotri attempting not to ', p'ay
lbeir fair sblue of taxes."
Strawberry was suspended fot
lbe first 60 days of the season on
Feb. 6 after testing positive for
cocaine. The San Fnutcisoo Giants
·then released bim. If be finds a
. team, lbe earliest baseball would
allow bim to play would be June

24.

He pleaded guilty Feb. 9 to one
felony count of tax evasion for fail·
ing to report fllousands of doila111 of
inoome be received, usually in bun·
dies of casb, at aulograpb signing
shows in the late 1980s. Taxes. on
!bose payments would bave been
$101,000.
Tbe former Ail-S tar ad~ssed
Parker for ab'o ut lbree minutes
before lbe sentence was
announced .
"I apologize for flle mess I've
caused myself, my fans, friends
and family," be said. "At some
particular moments I felt it wasn't
worth it to be bere living."
Before Strawberry spoke, the
judge warned bim tbat he bad dis·
cretion in. determining the severity
of the sentence. He alsQ admooisbed Strawberry for using drugs
wbile the case was pending, a violation of bis pre-trial pf!Jbalion.

, 1D .tbi NR. Jut ,..,., tbe fla
coil index waa $111&lt;t.19'. It w"
$180.62 in !be Ni!A ~ $196.16 bl
lbeNHL.
•.
?
NFL teams play elab~ liOtlle
gam\ls, N.BA teams play &lt;tl IIIICl
NHL team1 usually play 40.

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(Results as of Aprll19)
League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
.
Team standln~ - Mei~s Golf
Course (77·51), Captain D s (73·
53), Thunder Alley Cats (68-60),
Tony' s Carryout (68-60), Court
' Street Grill (64-64), J&amp;L Insulation
. (58· 70), Cbainsaws &amp; Roses (.~474) and Banks Construction (44- .
84).
Team high series - Thunder
. Alley Cat (1933)
Team high game - Coun St.
GriD (662)
.
Men
Individual blgb series -·
Chuck Burton (560) and Bub
•Stivers (533)
Individual high game - Blirton (220) and Slivers (194)
Women
lndlvidual high series - Opal
Wigal (518) and Pat Carson (497)
Individual high game - Carson (191) and Drema Ussery (1,84)

Tbe Riverside Ladies Golf
Association met recently to plan
its swiuner leagues.
The Ladies Tuesday evening
league will begin today and anyone
wanting 10 play sbould be at the
course by 4:15p.m. ·The ladies
voted JO play their own game with
bandicap and play· with a different
partner each week.
Ladies day starts Wednesday .
'
morning weather permilling.
Those wbo would like to join
the Riverside Ladies Association
should contacl. Ne lene Petbl'e l,
Joyce QuiUen, (!' Rbonda Wood. A
scramble wiD be held every second
Saturday of UJe month, beginning
at 3 p.m. Anyone I wishlng lo play
should be at. .the course by 2:45
p.m.
.
Auending tb e planning session.
wete Delma Arnold, NeDie SmitlJ,
Norma Slanl ey. Joyce Quillen,
Cathy Zerkle, JoAnne Fergu~n;
Diana Bodkin, Teresa Creme;ms.
Mary Ingels, Avalee Swis!iell,
Debby Whitlatcb, Mary Burton,
Mary Arnold, Becky Triplett,
Nelene Pethtel, Sue Harbour, Dian·
na Lawson, and Rbonda Wood.
After tbe meeting lhe group
played a 9 bole scramble. The win·
ning team was compoSed of Delma
Arnold, Nellie Smith, :md Norma
Stanley and on tbe team that won
closest to tbe pin were Mary
Arnold, Becky Triplett and Nelene
Petbtel. Pizza was provided by the
Association.
Members are asked lo cbeck the
bulletin ·board in the clubhouse lbr
future inYitatiobal and &lt;oumament
infonnation.

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Summer golf
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American A.ssoci1Uon . Sen! Fra nci1eo

Oarnet .nd Byron Browne, pltchen, outright to El Palo of the Texu l..etlpe. Optioned Danny Peru, outnelder, and Maraha!! Doze ltld Sid f(obmoD, pi lchetl, to
New Orleanl.
NEW YORK YANKEI!S-AD·
. nounced tbe- relireme~! of Joe Hetketh ,
pitcher Optioned &lt;lorli(.e Ptlsadt, Mariano
Rivera , pltcheu, and Rus, Davia aad
Rober1 Eenhooru, infield.:n, lo Columbua
or the lnlcrnallonall..eaaue.
'OAKLAND ATI-tLEIICS- Waivcd

•

I

•

ONE·derfulreasons
to ahome
of
are
piling up one by one.

aud Bill WerU., pitcher, outriaJ'IIto Pawtu~bt ad Bill Seclby, p itch« , outrl;tt 10
Tre.oton or the Eulera League. Dea1gDat- ·
ed EriC Wedge, catcher, for MliJDtneDt.
Opt ioned Ron Mahay, uuUieldet, and Joe
Hudso n. , pilcber , to T renton. Opt io ned
Chril Howllrd, pitcher, to SIU'IIIOl• of 1he
Aqdda Slate

Division IV

Isam

'

In tbe nigbt cap, Cadiz went up · McConnell reached on an error, but game 3·3, tben in 1be sevenib after
1-0 on a Cowans single, an error
was picked off. T~eedy tben HiU retired the side, Marlin walked, ·
and an RBI single by Tweedy as
reacbed on a fielder's choice and Cbris Hendricks reacbed on an
Jeremy Hill got only bis s~eond
came borne on a passed llall to lie error, and Sbawn Dailey doubled
career varsity slarl as a pitcher.
the game, 2-2.
borne lbe winning run for a 4-3
Soulbem tied the game, then
. In tbe sixtb, Dalton reached on SHS win.
went abead on a Hill single, a Ryan
'n error for Cadiz and scored on
Hill gave up only tbree bits,
WiUiams double, a Jesse Maynard
Cowans double for a 3·2 CHS lead. fanned six, walked three and was
single, and double by Ryan Hill to
Southern gained its biggest backed by a two-error SHS
give SHS a 2-llead.
momenlum wben Ryan Williams defense.
Hill kept Cadiz at bay for
led off the sixth with a ttemendous
Myers and Woodward COIIlbined
tile ne'xt three innings. limiting a home run into lbe weeds in deep ·for the loss, allowing seven bits, six
1eam that bammered 14 bits in the lefl center field. The homer is one k's, and two walks. CHS made one
llrsi game to just two bits in the of the longest ever seen at the error. Southern hitters were Hill
first five innings. In the fifth,
Racine park. That blast lied tbe with a single, Williams (3·3) with a
double, single and borne run, May,J
nard a single, Ryan Hill a double,
and Dailey a double.
Southern was slated to pia~
Soutllem's Tornadoes were red nigbt, while olber bitters were Bea Eastern last n·18bt bu1·W as rat. ned
bot Friday nigbt as they drilled the !;,isle, Jonna Manuel, Kendra Nor· out
Trimble Tomcats Il -l at Racine ris, Renee Turley, Jess Codrrer,
·
during girls' bigb scbool varsity Lawrence, and Roush.
soflball acdon.
Misli Trace bad lbe lone Trim- ·
· Southern got two runs in ble bit
1
the second wben Andrea Moore
Tonya Trace suffered the loss HOCKEY
STOCKHOLM, Sweden {AP)
singled and Jennifer Lawrence for Trimble, wbile Moore picked
Mike J&lt;nuble, Craig Charron
reached on an error. Two other up another win for lbe Tornadoes.
and
Jon Morris each bad a goal and
errors 'allowed Jennifer Cummins Moore fanned nine a~nd walked
an
assisl
as lbe United Slates beat ·
and Brandy Rousb to reach base as
four in anolber good effort.
Austria
5-2
in its Pool B opener in
Moore and Lawrence came in witlJ
Linescore:
the
World
Championships.
In Pool
lbe only two runs Southern needed.
Trimble 0 0 1 0 0 0 (}.J 1 .
A,
Canada
beat
Switzerland
5-3 .
· Soufllern scored a single run in 5
.
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Boston
Soulbem 0 2 I 4 '4 0 x-11 8
the third. four in the fourth , and
right wing Cam Neely, wbo bad
four more in tbe fifth for lbe 11·1
I
five goals and two assists in tbree
LP·T. Trace
route.
viclories
last week, was selected
W.P=Moore
Eight different Southerners got
NHL
player
of the week.
biu. Moore led wilb a two single

Amtrlcu Lupe

Division Ill .

•

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
OWners Special
Savings.

8- WATERFORD ................................. .lS

.9-Piymouth ....................... .....................22
]0 -~0WT )'S(OWD Whiteoak .................... 18

. BASEBALL

I

::o.~n~~~ ~n::~· b;;':~f::~

strikeouls, eigbt walks, and was
backedwilbafiveerrornigbt
Cadiz bitters were Cowan witb a
lriple and single, Woodward a double and single. Tweedy tbtee sin·
gles, Jacobs two singles. Culver
tbree singles, and singles by Cbelsa
and Dalton.
Woodward and Myers combined
for the win wilb two strikeouts and
one walk. Cadiz bad lbree errors.

6-Columblltlll (1) .................................. 33
7-Sycamore Mohawt ,............... ,.......... :30

Walllean ( I) 8- I ............................... ,;SQ

',

Sou !bern dropped the fltst game ·
of a Salurday double-header 14·2,
but came back to take the nigbiCap
against visiting Cadiz 4-3.
Southern is now 9-8 overall
under veteran coacb Mkk Wine·
brenner, while Cadiz, the regional·
semi-finalist in Division 111 lasl
. season, is again coached by fonner
Meigs Countian Mike Miller.
Soutbem hitters in lbe fltSt game
were Jeremy Hill, Ryan Williams,
Eric Jones, and Travis Lisle.
Deemer (two and one -tbird
innings) was lbe losing piicher with
r f bel r r
Rand 01 b
re •e
P rom tmmy
P

3·Steubcnville (I) 1-3 .........................232

~

aD winter long, and il' s still dilJe{·
"Everybody is ia tbe same
eat from coming out bete playing boll." Lasotda said.
lbe &amp;ames every day," said J&gt;mcUe,.
Rusty starters will burden
ton, wbo confessed be rcpoi1Cd to buUpens, wblcb could give the
spting training out of sbape. "I Marlins an early edge. Their tdicf
wlsb we'd bave a couple of more COIJIII rattb wilb tbe best in base·
The Dodgers will stan Ramon
days, butlhal isn'tlbecase."
ball, altbougb closer Btyan HI\IVCY
Martinez, wbo was 12-7 Jut year
Batting averagt:l mnged widely bas been lbe subject of lnldc talts
with a 3.97 ERA. Neither plldler is Ibis sprinJ. The Marlins. fOt eum· wilb the Cleveland lndiaos.
pie. bad ngbt fielder Gary Sheffield .
expected to last nine itumgs.
"H we quit talking about getting
(.440) and center fielder Cbuck rid of Harvey, I lbink our bullpeD
" I'd be real surprise4 if any·
body completes a game the 'first Carr (.088). Dodgers rigbt fielder can be a great asset," Pendleton
lime IIIOUIId. and maybe lite second Henry Rodriguez, wbo bit four said. "Every lime I pick up a papel'
lime," B·-'-·u
·••A.
bome runs iQ four at. bats Sunday . lbey'te talli;ing about lnlding Har,.,.. ...
., "It migbt take
a couple of turns for guys to go ~gajnst tbe New Yodt Mets, c~ly vey somewbere. I'd like to see
ts ready for lbe season.
eight(!' nine." .
Bryan Harvey stay rigbt bere,
'.'llbink you're goiDBtO see because you can't substitute for a
Because of the long layoff and
sbon spring. some players are suD . Bood bllsebaD," Dodgers 1118118ger great bullpen."
rusty, or even out of shape. The Ttmmy Lasorda said.
Pendleton is one of four newBut many \'!li:bers clearly aren't c omers who will be in Florida•s
task or gelting ready quickly is
espe&lt;;ially difficull for older players ready. Florida s five star1e1s all bad lineup. The albers are Bwteu and
sucb as 34-year-old Terry Pendle· fewer Innings than bits allowed Ibis two looties, Caleber Cbarlea Johnton, the Marlins' new third base- spring, wilb a combined BRA of son and second baseman Quilvio
5.74. Tbe Dodgers' Martinez Veras .
man.
''You can lift weights and run wasn' t mucb bener at 5.63.

South.e rn splits weekend·twi~bill

'

•

SGutb Florida fa1111• ~~ eqer
to we~ buebaD btlct. Ticket
sales were approaclliaJ a sellout
Monday. whicb would mean a'
~;' of 46,000 at Joe Robbie Sta·

. ~ Aprtl25, 1.915

•

,.-._...
. -·--

,.

Jo

DONWOOD

...

CADILLAC ,
BWCK' c;..._.,_, .,H.......,h-

•

·-&lt;!-·
•

• plus tax aM title , llrst paymenl and security depostt due allease rnctpf!On. Closed-errd tease M11Nge based on 12,000 miles per year SuQ;eet 10 prior sa ... For&lt;!
F·150 XLT 4x2. based on MSAP $18,820. option 1o p~rdlase a\ lease end $13,068.80. Mus~ang . based on MSRP o! $16.645. opt10n lo purchase 111ease lnd ol
110,725.75

•''

,.

•

�Pomeroy · Ml~leport, Ohio

•

· Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Tuesd•y, April 25, 1895

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f\meriCorps volu-nteers nip crime, violence in.the b·ud·
• • objectives, none is more imponant
than preventing crime and violence.
Ann
One group 1 of 'AmeriCorps
members. patrolled parks and
Landers
II!Crellionareasin NewYorlcCity last
summer. The New York Police
Department reports that, for the firSt
time in memory, there ·were no
· Dear AnD lflmden: A few 11101111t1 assaults in these areas.Another group
back. you gotate-=caboutcrimcand of AmeriCorps members in
!liolence from someone who was · 'Pittsburgh helped a community
~Burned Up in CoimecticuL" You survive the death of a high school
asked your.readers for suggeltions. student caught in a crossfire.
I'd like to suggest national sctvk:c.
According 10 school officials, the
· AmeriCorps, the new "domestic members prevented a likely
Peace Corps," began ~ss !ban a year retaliation that would have had
ago. Already, 20,000 young mooumentalimpactontheentireeast
Americans have comlftia.ed to serve side of the city. A !bird group of
full-time for a year, meeting AmeriCorps members in Atlllnta is
~hallenges in communities across leaChing middle school children how
~merica. Among · their many to resolve their connlcts without

federally administered naliol!al can wrile to: Eli Segal, Corporation
service programs •• ArneriCorps, the for National Service. 1201 New York
Senior Corps, and Learn 8lld Serve Ave.,N.W., Washington,D.C.20S25.
America •· are corning together 10
Dear Ana Lal!Ckrs: I am recently
participate in. a National Day of divorcecUdyex-wifeisaresidetiiOf
Service. They'll do community a nursing home, sull'cring from a
service projects alongside members long-lenn illness that has no known
of Congress. civic leaders, univenity cure. I have made a cornmillllellt to
presidents and. millions of ordinary tupp01t her and have~ visiting her
people who volunteer their time on a weelcly basis. ·
because they want to help make
I've mcta wonderful woman, and
communitiessaferandstrongerFor wearetallcingaboutmarriase.When
those who have never served, April
the subject of my ex comes up,
25 is a perfect day 10 begin. ··ELI J.
however, she makes it clear that l
SEGAL, CEO, CORPORATION
need to draw lbe line. Financial
FOR NATIONAL SERVICE, AND support is fine, but she says the
ASSISTANT TO THE PRESweeklyvisitsmuststop..Ann,ldon't
I DENT, WASHINGTON, D.C.
know what to do about visits "to my
DEi\R ELI SEGAL: What 1/. ex-wife. Can you provide some
splendid idea. Thank you for passing guidance?·· TORN IN TORONTO
it on. For more i.rtformation, readers . DEAR T.IN T.: I suggest that you

resorting to violence.
We can't $lop crime and violence
unless 'lfe addresS related problems
that are just as big and troubling. In
addition to tlleirwork to prevent and
control crime, the first 20,000
AmeriCorps mem!Jers are also
building homes fer and with worlci~g
families, making sure that mothers m
ilnder-served communities get
prenatal care, and teaching ·grade
school children 10 read. They are
joinedbylllllfamillionseniorsgiving
their experience and energies to
communities through .the National
Senior Service Corps. Thousands of
school-age ·and college students in
Learn imd Serve America are making
service a part of their learning
· experience.
'
·
Today, April 25, these three .

cut down the visill to once every
thft!e weeks (with an extr~r visit on
her binhday and ChriJimu). Your
girlfriend should be hippy dill lit!'
ruture husband hll such integrlt)t
Don't allow her to force you Into
behavior that will produce guilt.
Drwgs are ~vtr'ywltert. Tlley'rt
easy to gel, easy to rue tllld ewtt
easi~r to get hooked ott. If you /tim

quutioltS aboUI dlvgs, JOII n«d.Nt!l
lAnders' booklet, 'Tile Lowdown ott
Dope." Send a self-addnmtd, lo11g,
biiSintsNizt envelope and a clleck
or money order for $3.75 (litis
incltuks fJ(Jstage attd Jtattdlillg) ro:
Lowdown, cloAnn Laltders, P.O. .8(}1;
11562, Chicago, /II. 6()6JJ.&lt;J562. (In
CaniW, wui $4.55.)
·

~ocal history, genealogy resource guide available from OVAL
• The Ohio Valley Arell Libraries
XOV AL) has recently publisbed an
)mportant tool. for _researchers of
genealogy, family history and local
history.
• "Local History and Genealogy
Re~ources Guide to Southern
Ohto" has been revised in 1994.
The guide is a two-volume index to
l\le genealogy and local history
poldings of the libraries and his tori(a1 societies in Southern Ohio.
The "Local History and Genealogy Resources Guide to Southern
Qbio" details the genealogy and
local history colleclions of the leJI
OVAL member libraries which
include : Cbillicotbe and Ross

County Public Library; Log all ller guide publish~ In 1984: The lions in Kentucky and West VirHocking County District Library; revision greatly expands the first ginia. This addition will be helpful
Nelsonville Pubi!C Library; Herb_erl guide. The 1994 version i~ludes to researchers whose families have
Wescoat Memonal Library; Me1gs the genealogy and local butory moved back and forth across the
CouiJIY Public Library; Sylvester holdings of additional libraries and Ohio River.
Memorial Wellston Public Library; organizations in Washington, GalThe new edition of the Local
Jackson City "Library; Briggs lia, Brown, Highland, Fayette, History and Genealogy Guide. is
Lawrence County Public Library; Pickaway, and Muskingum Coun· different from the previous mdex
Portsmouth Public Library and lies. Selected holdings from The because it auempts to arrange hold·
Gamet Wilson Public Library of State Library of Ohio in Columbus ings by categories as well as geoPike County. Detailed information and the Ohio.Genealogical Society graphically. For instance, a
on each library's hours of opera- in Mansfield have also been includ- researcher can look f11st ill Volume
lion, inlerlibrary loan policy, repro- ed.
One by geographic divisfon to see
graphic equipment and special · · The revised 1994 edition of what is available at the Jackson
resources is provided along with "Local History and Genealogy City Library. In Volume Two the
their holdings in the areas of Resources Guide to Southern · .researcher can look by category
genealogy and local hisiOsy.
Ohio" also includes information such as birth and death records or
The book is a revision of an ear- about the holdings of a few institu· family histories to see what is
·

available throughout the region.
The "Local History and Genealog~ ~source.s Guide to Southe~
Oh1o W¥ edited by Gail Zachanah, Networkin~ Servi~es ):Jbrarian
at ~VAL. Asststmg WI~ us ~ecognmon wer~ Margaret Re1d, direc,tor
of the Br1ggs Lawr,ence County
Public Library; Tom Adkms and
Gay _Gowdy of .the Portsmouth ·
Public Library; Helen Young,
duector, and Mary Stahl of the
Nelson ville Public Library ~bo
served on the planning comm1ttee
for this project. The committee provided valuab~e guidan~e and
thoughtful assistance ~unng the
development of the prOJeCt. Terry
Torkelson and Margaret Downey,

-----------Community calenoar - - - - - - The Community Calendar is
JIUbllshed as a ·free serv.fce to
·non-profit groups wishing to
annoonce meeting and special
· e·v enta. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
are wlnted as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
sj&gt;eclftc number or days.
"TuEsDAY

RUTLAND - The Rutland
• Friendly GardeiiC!ll, open meeting,
Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Rut·
land Church of Christ . Open to
public. Hal Kneen, Meigs Exten·
sion Agent, will give perennial
pointers using .a slide presentation
·and demonstrating bow to divide
and care for perennials. There will
free plants,
door

prizes. Janet Bolin will assist with
program. .

RACINE- Racine Lodge 46I,
F&amp;AM, will bold an annual inspeclion Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at the ball.
Members to t.ake a pie . Master
masons inviled.
·
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Parle. New
members welcome.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Cburcb, Texas
Community, revival underway 7:30
eacb evening through Sunday. Rev.
Greg Gardner, Lancaster, evangeUnity Singers directed by Sue
Ma,tbetly, Suriday, 7:30p.m.

After tile tour, they will return IQ
the·home of Janet Connolly for a
business meeting.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs.
George Hackel! to review "An
AmeriG~D Tragedy".
Roll call comment on the book.

FRIDAY
PORTLAND Lebanon
TowliSbip Trustees regular meeting
Friday, 7 p.m . at the township
building.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Library Board of TrusteeS, I p.m.
Thursday, at the library. .

RACINE - Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday at noon, Counlly
Kitchen, Racine. Greenhouse tour
planned.

MIDDLEPORT - OAPSE,
Local 17, will meet Thursday at
Middleport Junior High School, 7
p.m. in cafeteria.

LANGSVn.LE - Rutland Garden Club meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at home of Dorothy WOOdard.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE
The
Riverview Garden Club will tour
Flowers by ~raig Thursday
evening. Members are to meet at
the Whitehead borne at6:I5

devotioos.

RACINE - Racine American
l!.egion Auxiliary meeting Tburs-day, 7:30p.m. at home of President
Mary Ball.
·
·

Now Open For The Season
Bedding Plants
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

Hub bards Greenhouse

·Syracuse
992-5776
POMEROY - Meigs County
·churches of Chris~ Thursday, .7:30
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
p.m : "at tbe Pomeroy Church of
Sunday 12 noon-S pm
Christ
Church to have . '--------;.....~..1

,

hoth of OVAL. have also added
immense knowledge and experH ··
ence to the project
Ea&lt;ib of the ten OVAL member
libraries have copies of the 541
page guide available to be used in
their library. The member libraries
also have a lid\ited number of
guides·available to be purebased
for $25 each. From OVAL, the
guide is available on floppy disk as
a FileMaker Pro me for Macintosh
computers for $30 'or as a Macin•
tosh Test File for $60.

1st .9l.nniversa'!f
SA£/£

TOM PEDEN HAS AI IIVEITORY OF OVER 800 BRAND NEW

WESTVIIGIIIIA'S 11 COIIVBISI01I VAIIIIEAlfR HAS AIIIIVEIITIIIY
OF DVBI3DIIIIIAIIIIEW CIEVIDET CD11VE11SDt VAliS.
Selectlon includeS Attro All Wheel om. ;n( G-2D's, both mil·
ablll 11M ralsld ltlllfs or law tajm. Prices IMgll from $17,388 to
$36,!181t;

• Driver Stde Albag
• Reer Anti·Lod&lt; Brakes

• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

•16Va.0"'• Dr1vtr Side Aittlag

• Custom Cloth ln1erK&gt;r
• Steel Belted Tres

• 41'/heel Anl&gt;lltck Brakes
• Pbwtr S1eering

Tirro

·"'-Brakes

• Power Door l.Od&lt;s
• AWFM Stereo
• S!)Oldv.beels
• S1eel Belled Tires
• We!E~jlped!

·Extended Cl\asSis
• Driver Side Air Bag
• Antl-lbck ll!al&lt;es

'PIS, PiS

·Sofa/lied
• Power Windows •Indirect Lighting
· Power LOd&lt;s
· Premium Wood Pl&lt;g.

• t.r Condbon ·
• Tin. CruiS&lt;!
• Full Conversion
• AuiOmatic OV.rdrive • APNFM C.ss8tte •.Aluminum Running Bds.
• Vtsta Bay Wi.-s · Captain Clliirs • Loadedl

TDU FREE 1·BOIJ·822-D411 • 872·2844
844·5947. 422-11756

•Air Con&lt;ltion
•OuaJ Albag
·Anti-lock llral&lt;es
• Automalic
• AM'FMCaslel1e

Carpenter Work

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

304-882-3704
Ask for Mike

........

. 8:00 •.m.-3:30 p.m.

VInyl &amp; Alum. Skiing,
Roofing, VInyl :
· Replacement, •
Wlndowa, Blown
lnsullittlon, Storm
· Doora; Storm :
. Windows, Garages. •
Free Eollmatea

'

.

BULLETIN BOARD
*600 column hich weekdays
'8" column inch Sunday

-----------

WHAnAMACALLII

BE LONELY
AGAIN

NEW&amp;USED
Household.
Collectible
9-5 T-Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,

live producer of "Homicide: L!fe on the Street,"
directs the 10 p.m. EDT Friday, May 5, epiSode of
the NBC police dmma.
.. .
-Eric Stoltz ("Mask," "Little Women, &gt;,plays
Jamie's (Helen Hunt) old boyfriend on NBC s Mad
About Yciu," 8 p.m. EDT Thursday; May II.

'

'

: .

992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
DARWIN, OHIO
713U91 TFN 1

Laure{ Limo

Service
Rent a

Must be 18 yrs.
Proc:all Co.

and Special
Oeculons
(614) 992-4279
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(602) 954·7420
4/25/110

IEBIICE ·
6 Service
•Att Makeo &gt;42 Yeara

oFMI Reliable Sarvlce
•Waahel'8 • Dryers ~ Rang~~~
•Refrlge111t~r• •Freeura

ott.W. Heote,.

tMicrawavaa .olapoNII .

•Thonko Malgo 6

1..
Surrounding Areal

.

STG-A·WAY

MINI STORAGE ·
NOW RENTING

Cqmparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven. WV

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

Maggies Crockpot
Clifton, WV
·
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.
-----=- -

MANLEY'S

HOME IMPROV EMENT

Roofing, Siding, Room
Addilions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220
B idwell, OH 45614

614)388-9865
- -- . - ::;.1

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

2(J.8!9S :

WICKS
(Specialize In
driveway spre'ading)
Li!Jlestone,
Gravel, Sand,
"'
Top ~oil, Fnl Dirt

......

614·992·3470

QUALITY ·WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Custom Made

Happy Birthday
Cry Baby
Haggy.
· •Don't ·cry,

You're Only 30!

u.t: In BulaviUe Plk.t .lrN, 10 .
llon1h
Old
.....
Golden
Rotriovor, Woorlng Bluo Collar
AaD ... Tag.

Anewerli To

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity .
All Yanl SOlos lluOI 8o Peld Ill

Advanco. DEADUNE: 2:00 tlio ..., """"" lho ocllo to ....
Sunday ocl~lon • 2:00 p.a
Frldoy. llonday oclltlon • 2:10
p.m. Soturdly.
•

Kenny's Auto Center
1-B00-486-1590
264 Upper River l=ld.
Bus. (614) 446·9971
G'a ll ipolis, OH. 45631
· """'

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Meet Interesting Singles
· Safely And Privately
Listen to voice mail messages left by interesting
singles of all ages . Leave messages for singles
thai interest you or open your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
friendsh ips and meaningful relationships.

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

8

Riel&lt; ....,,_, Auction c-pony,
· full t1mo - - ·

Calll-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A Week· 24 Hours A Day
$2.99/Min ]l.!ust Be IRYrs.

oonoplot•

:r.~1o
•"::t~~';t
7n-57i5 Or •
Lorgo .wetlon E""" Frldoy l

So1•••t St ~eo-n City.
~::::::P
:r:o:ca:I:IC:o:·:((:'0:2:):9:54:·:74:2:0::::::~~~~~~:~~
r
·11'10,114.:156-t:no.

Community Cab Co. Inc.

I

Owners: Robert Barton • Harry Clark

992·9949 • 992·6471
Hrs. of Operation : Mon.-Fri. 8:00A.M. 1116:00 P.M.
•
Saturday 8:00 a.m. till5:00 p.m.
Sundays by appt. only.
. Serving Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding
·area. Call for rate s chedule.

L------------~M~in~·~$2~.0~0----------~~~~m~

POOR BOYS TIRES
FREE • Battery Check • Fron t End
· Check • Exhaust Inspection
We dffer major brand tires· Discount •
$uprSwamp, computer Balancing,
Auto Light Truck, Compir's Struts,
Shocks· Computerized .FMCZ&amp;4
Wheel Alignments, ATV Tires &amp;
oTubos
Rt. 33 &amp; Ho rnton St. Mason, WV

•Sotld vinyl
retlaeement
windows
•Free Ettimatu
•Starting At
' 200 lnstlllt4

Mlh

2J12192!1fl1

We Have Cars and Vans!

985·3879
1110/Un

245-MII7, 614-:IU-&amp;231.

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

Open 9: 00-2:00
5:00 -11: 00
16 fo r 25 .00
12 fo r 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pele &amp;
D iane Hertdricks

41201115

Found: Rocl 8oM F..,.lo
Around Rl. SZS North, H Nat
¢1e11Md WUt Go To Pound! &amp;..._.

Kenny's Auto Rental

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump S VC
Tune·L!PS

Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs. ·
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

• 814-3&amp;7-o2H. .

~===============~· '7.lllka, A•Wardi
1M-441-o43e.
Yard Sale

-~·'

1·900.388-7000

mod. ~ pup •.
blaclc w/Whllo 1oM, . , _ , - .•
Bldwllll A Blllavlllo Pilla liN.

1'

GRAY'S

GUYSf
We want to heaf
from you ill We're
live and waiting Ill

Lost &amp; Found

Found--

I

(No Sunday Calls)

•mllral*o lot ocrop, 114-

·6

614- 992- 7643

SUMMER
IMAGES

· (l.linestone Low Rates)

-

. H2.e5M.

• Room Additioas • Roofing
COMMERC IAL nnd RESJDENTlAL
· FR EE ESTIJ\1ATES

Open Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m:-s p.m.
Weekends Call 614-742-2772

·HAUL.ftG

304 .882-2996

Gar11ge and Towing
Service
Automotive and
Truck Repair
Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service

B11ba, P11ennl.J1,
Enllutlagl, Hanging
Bulcebl, etc.
(Depot St. ) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Paulins HilL Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
l/2 miles fro m SR 7

GUN
SHOOTS

•Diohwaolio,.

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(.

Angie's
Greelihouse

RACINE
GUN CLUB

-Factory Authorized Parte

B &amp;W

and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt. 338, letart, OH
·, 614-247·3522

4/2 1 /9~

Ill'S APPLIUC£

Happy Ads

1·900-656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420414195

: TOLL FREE 1·800·848·0070

Limousine for
Weddings, Proms

1:111..,;,.

1 ON 1

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

'

""1·900·945-6200
Ext 2579

·(614) 985-3561 or

I

Specializing in.?~~om
• Frame Replilt
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR

--

Announcements

LIVE
PSYCHICS

P~TS

,

614·985·4180

$2.99 per min.

5

.

511 6/9o4 TFN

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co .
"Take the pain out
of painting - Let us .
· do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.

Your
Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Phone

\
,

- -- . --

.......,,

( ~~~~

i"

Limestone,

(602) 954-7420

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753 ~...

992-5335

Trucking-

Tol! Soil, Fill Dirt

Procall Co.

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
• SIDING · .
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

l

Home Sileo, La11d
Cluring, Scplic Syolemo · ·
&amp; Drivewayo.

1

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

Cut1om Buildlng &amp; Remodeling

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Viewers, prepare for
Some serious gift-giving,
·
There are weddings, births and farewells galore on
television series, all part of the networks' beated
efforts to catch your eye during the month-long rat·
ings "sweep" beginning this week.
Specials such as CBS ' "Buffalo Girls" and
ABC's "The Langoliers" miniseries also are part of
the frenzy to pump up ratings and the rates tballocal
TV stations charge advertisers. .
.
..
So ·seize your remote control and get m posmon
for the last great couch potato fliQg of the 1994-9 5
season. Remember, suuuner"s bounty or reruns is just
·around the comer.
Some programming highlights:
IDO MAYBE:
·
-M~Iin (Martin Lawrence) and Gina (Tisba
Campbell) marry on the two-part season finale of
"Martin," airing 8 p.m. EDT Thursday, May 11, and
May 18 on Fox Broadcasting Co.
·
-Laverne (Park Overall) weds Matt (Stepb~n
Nichols)· Carol (Din3h ManofQ pondqs same w1th
Kevin(!). David Morin) on NBC' s "Etttpty Nest," 8
p.m. EDT Saturday, April 29. Kristy McNichol
retums for the series' fmal episode.
-Will (Will Smith) is doubt-ridden as his wedding to Lisa (Nia Long) approaches on the season
finale of !)IBC's ."Fresh Prince of Bel-Air," 8 p.m.
. EDT Monday, May lS,
-Murphy (Candice Bergen) is having second
thoughts about tying the knOt with Peter (Scou Bakula)- on CBS' " Murphy Brown," 9 p.m. EDT Monday, May IS .
. ·
-Nurse Hathaway (Juliarina Margulies) prepares
for ber marriage to.Dr. Taglieri (Rick Rossovicb) on
" ER's" season finale, 10 p.m. EDT Thursday, May ·
18, NBC.
.
- Dr. Quinn (Jane Seymour) and Sully (Joe
Lando) exchange vows in a two-bo\11 season finale
on "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman," 8 p.m. EDT Sat·
urday, May 20, on CBS.
-Amanda (Heather Locklear) is the maid of
honor as Billy (Andrew Sbue) and Brooke (~i stin
David) wed on the two-hour season finale of Melrose Place," 8 p.m. EDT Monday, May 22, on Fox.
- Not quite a wedding, but Joey (Joey Lawrence)
proPoses 10 Melanie (Marguerite Moreau) on the last
episode of ··o1ossom," starring Mayim Bialik. The
specialbourlong show airs 8 p.m. EDT Monday,
May 22, on NBC.
- A comedy of errors threatens Joe (fim Daly)'
and Helen's (Crystal Bernard) perfect wedding plans
on the " Wings" hour-long season finale airing 8
p.il'l. EDT Tuesdlly, May 23, on NBC,. .
- ..
AND BABY MAKES THREE OR MORE:
- Ross (David Schwimmer) bi.ckers with his ~x ·
wife Carol's (Jane Sibbet!) iesb1an lover (Jess1ca
Hecht) while Carol gives birth on NBC's :'Friends,"
9:30 p.m. EDT Thursday, May I I. Marcef the monkey takes his fmal bow.
-··step by Step's" merged Lambert buncb of
Carol (Suzanne Somers). Frank (Paaick Duffy) and
six children grows by one as Carol goes into labor.
·The season-ender airs 9 p.m. EDT Friday, Ma~ 19 on
ABC
·
·
FAMOUS FACES AND-OR NAMES:
-Hall of Fame slugger Hannon KiUcbrew plays
himself on "Step by Step," 9 p.m. EDT Fnday,
April 21, on ABC.
, .
h"
-Grammy winner Jon Secada smgs IS new
relea~e "Where Do I Go From You" on the 9 p.m.
EDT Thursday, May 4, epiSQde of Fox's ''New York
Undercover."
· ") , ext~:."u-Barry Levinson ("Diner," " Avalon

Scrvicea.

CALL 1·900-945-61 00
Ext.8587

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION .

FOR A TOTAL OF
$6.00 PER DAY.

Bulldozil'l!, Backhoe,

WHALEY'S AUTO

NIVIR

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

.

Howard
L. Wrltelel ·
.
• ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
,. Gutters
Downspouts ,
Gutter Cleaning .
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES ;
949·2168 " .. I

614-742-2193

SHOP

Networks offer
specials, plot twists
for ratings·sweep

E\c: \\ \TI\•;

MR. RIGGS

Middleport, Ohio .

•

(602) 954-7420

Pol;'table

Brickles

,., • Sell • Tratle

&amp;Acceooorl.. "
In historic

Monday • Satu,dar: 9 am • 9 pm
Sundar: Noon • 6 pm

WE HAVE A·1 TOP SUIL ~OR SALE

L'*ds ol MIK.

Danny &amp; Peggy

··2·2269

Get Your •••age Acro11
With A Dally Sentinel

Visit "COUNTRY
NATURALS· Gl111

• Key'oss Remote
Ent~ Sys1em
•loaded!

Umestone; Send, Gravel and Coal

llo\\\IW

Middleport,.Ohio 45760

Bill'S
lack
.'

1111Mn

J
"·

arid Removed
· Misc. ,Job's.

- -- -

. Judy Well, Owner

CliNie Control
• "'-Antenna
•00.. &amp;
Passenger Se~

Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must-be 18 yrs.
Procall Co

NOW OHEniNG GENERAL HAULING

H&amp;HSAWMILL
BandsawMill
32124 Happy ·
Hollow Rd.

. . Light Hauling,.
Shrubs Sheped

MESSAGE.
CAN BE SEEN HERE

• Oitall.r ~ • Mtmitum l'vltools

Job Illes' Camp Sites' Famjly Reunion&amp; I Parties

992-206o

YOUR

'
IIIWIIIIW '95 BID PARI AVEIIIE

1-~00- 726-0033

1

Buy-Sell-TDide

MITCHELL'S. , J&amp;L INSULATION IIEEIRIMI..
· 539 BRYAN PLAcE
CONSTRUOION MIDDLEPORT
1191-2772. lNDRJMOYll
Olllce Houra: l!on.-Frt.

614/992-4015

No Oct Fe~~. Detvered"

Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rale8\

Sat.

• C111!1amiln Tools
•Toys
. • Gune
,

992-7502 or 992-5805

S25,688

Lonely? Call
Tonight!

POuiEROY, CIHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; por:able toilets rented.
I

1-6

'

I""'_ _ ___..

'

Middleport, Oh. 45760

trtoOocFa._,

IWIIIEW '95 CIEVY ASIIII El1EIBI CIIIVEDI VM

:.'i
Tues•• Wed.• Fri. •

'985-4473

317 N. Socond.Avanue

$11,388~
BRAIIIIIEW '95 POifi1AC IIIWID AM

IWIP SlOP
~:,::

SR33N

Certified Ullld ell' btiyels will be on hand to giva highest liadHI
Yllue t• JOII' aulamoblle. Please IJ!:Ing your tlUe, registration
ant, _. Jlllll•tllloii Happlit:ablll.
Ill SAliS FdUiZIIED 10 DEMSIS. This clelnlcels for retal Cllllinll antr. Prices apply to avai._e IIIIIs only. liD an1t111ng par- ·
milled at tr.. prk:el.
.
.

MODIBI SUrrAftOI

DIVI'I

: CONSTSUCTION
· ·NewHomft
•Ganlgu
•Complete
t'"::.l
Rlimoaenng
Stop a. Comr-f"
FREE ESTI.MATES

· Country Naturals
Gifts &amp;·Aceestoriet
1

l

C1EVR11E1'S, II J5MD1111 ES, PIIIIUCS, IIIDS, GEIIS Alii ClBI1IM
VAliS. AI will be said at Melallal dlscotltts!
1'1111 $511111D $21111 cash bll:k or 3.6% APR f111111ting milablll(ur.
to 311110110151 on telllcted lllllllels on approuetl credit. TC11111S ivai •
ablll up to 841110110111

-'liQI'ERT BISSELL

.

You' ll find baskets,
· bears, dolls, pottery,
wreaths, wqod, florala
and so much morel
Moura: 10:00 to 5 pm
Tuesday thru Saturday
Closed Sunday &amp; Monday

. ..

.....,._................"""1
... ' •.....,....................=------~~~

. . - - - - - - - - . · - ~·~ ··· ·... - · ~- .. .. -..-·~ 1

"VISff OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

:.._"w:~'S:.: 8:~

-·I.

Ooc:otlloclot-...
.......... old lompo old ......
...,..._ old dOclo.L"Intlque

........... Al..iiiit.Antlq-

A- - . . · ,,..._
252L Wo " " ' J I .D'o Aloia Porto oncl Solvege,

wrocaJuntt ...... •
........
-.-'"""
~
... 773-11033. ..... buying

a~~~~nk~.~~

___

114-441-7271:

W.nlocl to buy- ....... """

_, .....

-~
•.!!!'11om
lao,.....
loJVO
....
- . ...
bur ....
~~o,.--.

_0.
_
_Jlol•
_
To
tur.......,\.MIIJ.IM 1• II t'
-To...,,_~

ato:to

--IXTo7Cuu 0' ...,. ~- gl[

Employment Services
11

"Look for the Red end While Awning"

a.

Tno:ka, 11181 . . . _ Or ·
Smith Buick _ ..., u1oo.
Eootom A..,ua, Oolllpoilo.

-- ·

Help Wantld

AVONIAI_I....,

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

.......

•
•

•

�Tuesday, April 25, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\laaday, Aprll25, 1995

.._

·--IUIIt
• ==..city
a

1 . , , . ...

a

~~

Khaff*"

ra ~.:-·

141Wt'0Wbend

PHILLIP
ALDER
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

BEATfiE.BLVD.® by Bruee Beattie

A¥DNio-.,.-.-....
. 1 F Mllnl.,;;tat1_..,w

~-

.......

. ~1112 ·===----

:-

.

· 2 I ll1droom Mobile Hotllll.,
Far
· E. .......
- Aft«
Roed,I'M-4*7711
Cap;
IPJI.IM............_ . .
2 ' 'wen T.....,. No ,_..,

...,,...-.A~:.~oCRTJI'"D

~-Do-8ula¥Uio

P1U.. tr.h P.W, .143all ~

SWAIN
FURNITUR£.

a

Wort&lt;-AUCTIOII

011..... -

...... -

73

a

""'-..::!1,4114, ¥-f. I

• .-

- - ~~J.!W~.
~ion: 1121

Choot""'- -

44

•-.aw.

Unlverlo!y 01 Rio Orondo Cam114-24H811, lf4.24Hit2.
2bdrm. lpll., , .... _ ,.., ....
pllanooa lumloltod, laun&lt;ty
roam t.cllltlee DloM to echoOI
In t-n. Appt{c;ilono ovallablo
II: Ylllogo Oroon .lpto. 141 D&lt;
0111 f114.1824711. EOH.

1080.

.

Five , _ brick -

d._, ...,...
JMnt,

In Mid-

,..~ lull -

ext.. ·· tot,

adjotnlng

·
-..,.... 614-1124751!,
-blo
QUIISJI,
$35,000,

In Syracu., ,.,.nly r-.nodeled,

3 bocl!oom1 1 112 both, 2 car
garogo, t4v,lfl0, 114-1182·772l

Land Conlroc:l To O...llflod Individual Wl1h Down Poymont, I

v- Old HouN,

With 1 Acroa

11/L, I Bodroomo, 2 Bolho,_ .lpPR&gt;L 2,000 Sq. R. Or Will ~tnt,

CIOM To UniHraltf Of Rio
Grande, l'f4.371.2343.

Six roan. and ..th

,and

utllttr,

,. .,., ...... work, a.klng
$1100, 114-1112·7212.

Split lt•ol: Molng ._.., dining
room, khehen, 4bfs, family
room wlkllehln~tte, 2 1/2blthe.
Avon Wlftta lndlvkluale
....... Trim In Golllpollo !IIM-1714961 """' lpm.
CllyDiotrlct,I14-44H021.
,. . In .....,. " -114 /Hr. No
Ttw. bedroom, 0n11 blth, full
Door T o - · 1 - - - . . o
allld c.ro 1n
Homo, · ~~~~. two a•r garwg•, two
Ind. /Rap.
Mondor ThN Friday, Doyo, deeD, n.w n:aaf, In Chelf•, 114Ex]lefl___., 1115&lt;1144.
Campull• ....,_ 1111 dId Work Ev.nlng~~, •
--114-2118112.
_,. -1-T!W11431111!101.
to tiOtc/yr.
:Min

tnt•....,

0ua111r

Mr

32 Mobll.e Homes

for Sale

· Eom up lo I1,DOO'o _ . , 111111Ang .,...., 1
II horne. a.M
.now... no
experltl-. ••
I n - no oblp
tlon. 'a.nd ......... I
Pool o n - to Alomo Dool
112, 1411'1' Rd. .....
I

121:80 1175 Gonmer With Addition, Ll•lng ~1 .Addod Bod-

room .686 kre w•lh 2 Tr1ller

.......

Hoolc.Upo, $17,700, 614-416-40115.

-lei

13W11, san A,.onlo Til 712110.

Eooy World Elo:olltnl Pay! , .
Nllo 10 llldo- toe
oombiO Ptoduo10 AI Homo. CaH In Lalcallt)d. Florida lor 31w
.T..I FIM, ..-7-6&amp;61, &amp;1. In PI Plouanl tar tt.
313.
wMk of Jun1 tJ-24. ao. Ia
Dlonoy I I&gt;Mct.o. Prolw non-

-

Skyflno Mobile
Homt, 2 Bldroorrtl, Stove,
Rofrlg.,.,or, Lllao WI-,
NC, 2 o.eu, on Ffented Lot, Or
1085

· eau ,,..,_.12110.
Financial

Mx1'0

to 1:00 p.m. 614-1112-2121.

Couch a ohllr, hand Clltwd
woo1 trim, .oKcllllonl _.Mion,
.....,.. ... lo ·~ ..... emok·
l n g - wMh Cloublo ...
rocu,· -tumnu..,6_..

2118. '

54 MlSC811flri80US
Merchandise
2 Fonl llolor

ComP!nf F -

CBrul 1 Flto Thun-

Encl -

e-t OT
uu And
New,1 Ft10t14-Z0.2032
Evonlngo.
Solo uu
RocUr,
WII8Mr- ·
a

Dryer, Lua• Microwave Color

T.V., 6M~·- Allor I

~=-i•:'m-=·~" ~~

f roorna • bllh, 2507 Lincoln
Ave., ·ownl!' flnancedL _II~
N . . . . IICM required. :IIJ441!Io.

P.M.

2 Twfn 8b:o Mollr-, fll4.446.
1301, 1-2174301.
3 room opartmtnt, utll~loo peld.
304471-3030 or 304471-3431.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA~j 112 W o - Drive
to $211. Welk to ohop
I movlaL Call 1114-146-2561. Equal Houalng ~un~r.

Fumlohod 1 bod,_. opor1mont
on Ill V•non An. 1 peraon oo-

21 Fl. T.Y. .lnlono T-•· 114441-1418.
281

Zonlth

Computor

TV, pk:ton to
picture, ;:;round IIOUOd, NNIJ
~. ....
080 lw.ll24411.
4 ~ol Nlghlo Orlando FL, Near
Dlo,.,tanil1 _ u.e Anytlmo, P•r
112" Zonlth -

apC girl.. white bedroom .uH
F'- modol ..... $125.

qultod, 1350/110. if4.4oi6.0577.

B..-hHo "'""' • - $100.
304·773-1111.
Bob)' bod, lllrollar, high choir,
Clr Mat.
Wllbr, pl1y
pon.30447
.

Fumlthod Elflclancy $11111/Uo.
Ulll~lao Ptld1 Shiro lith, 607
Second. GaNipollt. 114 416 4118
After 7 P.M,
Oroi:loua living. 1 ond 2 bodroom •p~~rtmenlll .. VIllage
Manor
Md
Rlverala.
11mtnlo lit Mldcllooart. Froon

24361 • 0.11 114-1112-111111.
uol Houolng OpporlunHiao.

Nice 2 bedroom •fYirtment In
Pomet oy, no pets, 114-lsal-5858.

Na one bedroom aparlrTMNrt kl
Pl. PIMNnL 114-ie2-5858.

$n, IM-470-0784.

n':li

Bono;y Oponll.. Batmon Cor,

New, 1100, 1MaZ4&amp;-1887.
..,_ 380 Somi-Aulomatic, 13
S400; And
Coli Walnut
Dla-boclc
31 ·Nickel
1100
Aotl Nicol CaR il
A.M . .. P.M. 114-25&amp; 8413.

a.. Wing Chi-•
-tO To .ao ~FMa,l4.H. Brown
-

Br

QuuantHd, ~#Meat Prlc-, The
Shoe c. .., ·~-146-4222 .

Thi'M prom dr. . . ., alze 7. OM
woddlng
high noel!;gown,
low long
bocll, - ··

~o,6-f.2481or

T&lt;O)'buiH Gordon Tlllor Far Solo,
N- CCindMion, Utod Very Lin•,

EOH

t.droam
ap~rtmMt,
ulllltiee Plkl. prlval• ,_rtdng,
rlnr view, $350/mo., $200
dt-'l.._no pola, 114-H247i4

bod•-•

55

Reglolorod

ThiS new~P&amp;per. wlll no\
lcno'Mingty aecep~ .
advertisements for real .estate
wl*;h Is In violation of 6.etaw.
Our raaOers are hereby
lnfo&lt;mO&lt;j lhat all dwoiNngo· 1
· advertised in this newspaper'
are •vallabte on an equal

Oppol!unHy basis.

Merchandise
Household
Goods

-

CountrY f\lmltu,..,umlure tar
E•o;y ~-. lml., Rt. ~ North,
Pl. PIMionl 30447HI20.

-... •11!"!'!1.1'

................ rtc.~.
lf4.111N117.

Real Estate
Wanted
W.nltd:&amp; ·- - Clawn City • Qolllpolls.
Land Conl,.at, .....,_ Blr:uble

Down P_.,t, 114-ZM-1526.
W.nlod: Acr- In Couot!J To
Bur. 114 311 0412.

Rentals

....
Far

ilatolllo
IJid
IEIOCCionlco; -.00 e...-.

-

Real Estate

I l:ldloom 1 lath. Attechtcf
GMogo Lftol ...... Unci Col&gt;-

, ...., OuOUIIod ...,..., lloclnty

VW.I. ,,. ••• aaot

I_,_

d.,....

APPLIANCES
rofrlgorotoro,
.........
ltk.o- .lppll•~. 71
Ylnt ,_,poll
1-

USED

100-4-...

LAYNE'S RIRNITURE
Comploto homo lummi--110-Ho•mt: Mon-lat, M. 1114-44
o:a22, I mllao"'" - - Plllo
F-Dallvory.

.

41 Hou... for Rent

-

0000

I'M OOVIOU':J...Y

AABI D()(TJI0.)5 1

Phillip Alder's new book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request, (or
4.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
tN&lt;s., NY 11517-0169.

Coeur

37 Plnell

I Shoe part
11 Nwrow

311:*40

::...-'J tho

opaninQ

'· ~~--~--------------~

Hey&amp;Graln

64

79

PICKENS FUANITUAr

Ntlllllood

No apptlanc., Hom rhok:l fur.
nlohlng. 112 mi. .Jorrlc:ho Rd. Pl.
·PI-nlil WV,
In 111 -ttl

caM--·

Ftllll, :IOW7J.1111J.

1605.

stu ... ua.

CCII..,_
Etc. EverythinG- Concltton,

F...,...--

111 2514171 Aller 6;00 P.M.:

100,000 8TU HI Etllcloncy
Goo
Pllcnpo,
V.., Roooonebly Prlcod, 0no
Uotid 25KW Elaclrlc Fumtco,

Canlrol Air CCindMiono• F- Eo'
tlmatto,. 1-«10&lt;117~ Or 114UI 'I1M

..... .
-

Carplll A l l - ... Colonol

t4 A Yen!, IM~AFTEA I

Mlf.contllnld

~~

r?._,.,

IT'5 "COOL ."

good,

rune flOOd.

1961 Ford Croom

Ylcl-.

Services

4613.

Ttmpo OLS, LoMod Tlr ... ~Poy Off, l~nii:

Coining
Dolly.
on NOwIn~D
Her Ectu._.
I.K Financing Or Cull
Bon• r
Check u.·ouu CARMICHAEL'8 FARM I LAWN,
OAWPOUB, DH llf4.44WCI2,
OrTol F ... 1~ 11..111t.

1083 POnllac LoriJano 11,000
1111-. Automatic, Air, C.-.tt.,
$1,0011 080, ·~11"· .....

And
FortUtz., Locotod lMIIoo South
OI.Joolcaon, On Slate Routo 13~1
Joo R - fono EA!ulpmont

114-:181-2731, 41111H 4·WD, 44..,
olD Cab • Alit, 2310 JO With

........ liDO Ford With Call ...
IM, JO UDC Do;;;

A.C.,

iH

w.r llodo, 11ounc1 •
Sq.... ...... •. Hoy Eqllft&gt;'"""'· OIMr And Uotil lqul-nt.
With •

A

t&gt;EI'IOCRAC.'C'.

DodtJt Duot•...Eicllllonl

CCindltlofl, 13,000 Ml- fi,IIOO,
Aflar I P••• 114-4CI4180.

.

81

'.

.

....

ASTRO-ORAPH

•

10112 OEO llorm, 28,000 mltoo,

..wtm c.Nlta, autorn~~tlc, AIC,

251-1252. '

Hood Far .... l'onl 4
u ua.r, 11t ue 5042

er-.

MECNDNKCP . '

S D 0 R A.
Z D 0 I C
LI:ILSJCP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "God made a Beethoven, a Michelangelo and a
Magic Johnson." - (Soccer great) Pole.
·
.
'

.....

••••
S©.\\~lA-~i-trs·
CLAY I . POllAN _ ; __ _ __

TIIA1 DAILY
_PUULil
_ _...;.;__ f41tN

~y

R•orrange l1tttr1 of
0 four
Krambled words

tht
be-

low to form four words.

ARE VA G

Z R A c' E .. ,

I I' I I I"

·~-Cr-N-r.A-,K_K-r--1[
I. Is I I I~f

"l'vehadsomanyrejections."
my friend sighed. "Don'tfret," 1
'-·__,_ _.....
_ _...
_ --'·'-told her. "If at first you don't
8
,...----------, succeed you're running about

, ••••• - .t·
Comple~e

•

.

.

the chuckle quoted

.

·8

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWE R
1.

I

I ,. .I

'

........-·

a-hiiM-241-.
teftl Plymouth LaMr, ExCondltlofl,- 11,000 Mlloo, AC.
AIII-Fm - - . flll!ldtrd
Tranemllllan $5000 I'M-4fl..
11112

D

NALDNSKUDO

Cotton- Wllisk ·Juicy- Exto/1 .-.CLOTHES
Gramps says that when figuring out the amount of
paint you need to do the house adil the 3 quarts you 'll get
on your CLOTHES!
I

=: ~r:::nq
. . ~ .....
~··· P'.t::"'O:

/5

THI~

1tftl Chtorollll Comtorolon Yan
IIIII! Ill, Loodocl, Roocly For Tt.

:lf!l

KJ

D PI

SCIIAM-LfTS ANSWERs

.,.,

Fully

12,000 Mil•, HeW
Tk•. $2.800,114 ... 0021.
,1089 24' enctc.ed car tniiC.r:
....1100. 3044711-4230 - 304-67J.
La.d.d,

....., - . 114-112-1181 altar

luoh
• llaclo,
14,110;
• lladlll 37 HP tm•
notlonol Tuct T-or. $1,350;
114-211 , , ,

AND lHE'(

CALL

'
·'"

ar,

1DoU
~ ·304-

1114 Toyolli CaUca

11flfl Ford 11810 Trocla&lt; 130 Hro.
Ullo -.._$f!,~J 1Wa 2140 olD
Tnaclor, •1Z.111UU uch. 4320 JO
TrKIDf. · t'tOiiOO; Itt; 110 l'ntctot'
I~ II,IN; Fonl 1000
Tractor I
Loodor sa,~_;
Yormoor 601 Super 0 Rouna
Bitar II,IM; IIIIQo, T~

--IMS.

'(()IJ THINK

ttilll Swllljltr - - Homo.
CrefM Putt R._e Hitch., 6000

1184 Buicll Re•l, 100,000mf,
v.a, llrL !f!11 ........., pw,

182&lt;1&lt;112.

Ford JubMM Traclor, Good
COttdllton, Rep~lrt..., A.buUt
IEnglno,
lnlomotlontl
'Ill
Trocla&lt;,
II,UO;
lnlornatlonol W11h

OKNLSDNESL

TCSSCZLS

doubl1 duar

out~1 •

1Wa malo Jock Ruaol llrrlor
pupploo, 1250/M., 114-'M2-2050 •

61 Fann Equipment

D PI

0 K V L

0

'

lk.ooo

$2.- 304-4l'...,..e.

~.

HKHKU;

K J

' A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
. ~ IN THESE SQUARES

60,000riil. h ,OOO. 304~1.

!lciNUZM pupplao, mlnl•t-.
::C~ chomplon bloodllno, IIDD
.... Cool•lllo, 614-667-3404.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

THE ART I'IU5EI.Jt1 eE

-""·"'.oao·-·
101111 2T Tltln rnotorhrome, tully

mllto on 440 ""f'lno $71100.00
114 tti3SCI
1t73 Dodal
Ct.llong«
·
Ollb, 114-216-1111, 1w;
1252.

10.. Fonl R - , lopd,
wn-, w1o d ••llntod, , _
tire.- a rima, ...... aot'M Work.
304-1711-3814 ••• 2pm.

D

H .D P

by falling in the missing words
'-...1..-'-...1..-Jo-...L.....J you develop from 5lep No. 3 below

. 501\R'(,\' NATE . WE CAN'T
AlL 11'001' e.H:.l&lt;. TO

ec,
".!~!""- _.big

..... - - Ftiond. Loo..
W I Can, Oil To
PMM; Or CaN AllOr I P.ll. Cal
Anvtlmo Far .lppolnlmont, 114-

1&lt;1 Conlan ... 01 rt. EctoiP_,. And lnarocllonlo Raqulnicl
To A I Qollon Botch 01
lloc• ..... tl50..1t 141 "51
'Muol SOli: I Plica
t.Mng ..... Sulto, - . - ·
Goo ~ atovo, tml; King
w_,.,1ng • ..., noo; MIO'
Qunoll\o. lilindo,

11172
ro&amp;lg. .torJ.

71 Autos for sale

For·Sale
or Tracie
Bluo, $100; Slaopor Solo $50;
Twfn
1-..

· campers&amp;
Motor Homes
Dodgo ConUnontal,

- . b l o lratH.
Ouarontood SllltiiCtlon, Your

2111-euo.

'LGLSX

•

,.~tor, .,.lc:row.w, root elr, ·
laro- g.,..,.ator, 20' •wnlng,

Prot.lll Nl Pet Oraolnma. All

llo-

by luis Campos ·
Ceiebflly Cipher coypto._,ram• are crea1ed from quotalionl by famous p8opl., put and present
Each llrtter"' 11\e cipher stands !Of .-.o~. TO&lt;My'• • · X ~- Y

t-..,.-•..;. Tli;-7-TI-'TI-"-r-18
.

'•

Transporlation

o....-.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

. AGE E NT

--·a

MINI HOllE BREWERY KIT Tt.

2 Extro Good Solid End Tabloo,
,114-3n-2720 AFTER I P.M.

t..U. ...........

.

'" BY 1\'£RI6f\T~DEOFT~E.BRJ&gt;JI-I 1·11\IG\ rootm.SI
lflTuiTI~ N-iD E./o\OTIOHS, N&gt;ID

DKII8. 3floi-I7J.1S0t.
lllxocl Allolll And Orclwd
$1.711 Bq. Baloo, Dolano

Furnished
Rooms

homo, Doter
- ·.,..,mudowo,
11,..m,
•~•

... -

.

Tl\1~ ~I(Lt. ":A'6 ':Cio'£ ~ ~ !XJo\1~\E.D-...._

oom. DKII8,
DK183, DK63f, DK814, Dlcl04,

Lo.-11 ' Choir ....... And

•:;~~t...;~~ r
hi

....

nm 8hot• a wonnM,

2br;:

51

. . BQRN LOSER

·.

"!!!.

Mobile Homo Lot Far lltnl, 61431'1-111:11.

t40T 01114·711--na.

.

..

Fl

P"l

AKC
R~lllterld.
m~~le,
Yo&lt;fcohlro ,Ttrrlor, Smoo.

Slaoplng ,.... whh oooklnQ.
AIM lr&amp;ller apec:e on rtnr. All
._..,,.. Call otter 2:00 p.m.,
301·77'S-511'1, ... 11011 wv.

....._ mini form. up to 20
..,.. evalloblo, born, 3 br.

34 HIWk

351Yrleoi31CIOIII--

•• 2

It is sad when anyone dies at a
age. It is particularly
that person was a rising ""''' m
Last December, Jeffrey Feldman,
Norwalk, Conn., died of brain cancer
the age of 32. He was a Gold Life ~asterJ
who "(On the Governor's Cup for
most masterpoints in the Soulhern
Connecticut Fall Sectional two years in
a row after his cancer had been diag·
nosed.
You will get an idea of his exc·ellemq
bridge ability from this deal, in which
Feldman sat East.
Defending against three no-trump,
Feldman's partner led the club
Declarer won in hand with the que·enl
and finessed the diamond queen.
winning with the king, what
Feldman play now?
It is difficult to reach five diamonds,
the best game contract.. It is v'irt•&lt;all:yJ
impossible in a pair event, wHen there
is such a premium for playing in·••·
trump.
Arter winning the second ·trick,
Feldman pl~yed the only card to defeat
the contract: the spadl! nine.
When declarer ducked, Feldman con·
tinued with the spade queen and another spade, allowing the defenders to
up four spade tricks for one down.
Note that no other spade but the
works. If East selects, .say, the queen,
South ducks and West is in a pre,dic:a-1
ment. If he plays the three, he mustvvtn t
the second·spade trick. Whereas if
I Ullblo.,ks the 10 or jack, South can
the spade nin~ and establish a trick
his eight. .
Bridge has lost a brilliant vo&lt;un1u
player.

$150M. 3CM-7'T.J..IO'JI•ft•lpm.

l.lrgo Count., Lot F&lt;&gt;r Trollor,
• $75/llo. lf4.37W343.

A/11881 estale advertl$1')0 In

·.

....

Metal Roofl~~g I Siding Clttck
Our Pricoo Before You ~uy• .ll11ur Farm Supply, 814-245--5183.

Wodgo .lpoortmoniL 1 •
pet•. · 104 Burd.tt• SlrML
875-201? •flltr SDm.

Apple O.O.o,
lca,J!U~ ......

''

.;

Dolcolb

Yolloy,

(MALe)

...

Block, brick, _.,. plpoo, window., llntel1, ·Me. _ctaude Win.
ltro, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614245-112\

PettSONS
(Ff:MAL.t)

Pf:ltSONS

,,

Supplies

AKC

orn2.or44.

4S

I

Building

Spt~nlela,

46 Space for Rent

this newspaper.is subfecl to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limi1ation or disorlmlnatloo
based on rt~ce, !ol«'lot. religion,
sex familial statuSor nalioflal
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitatiOn of dlscrimlnat!En.•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1Wa bunk D&lt; lingle bodo, w/4
Mt1 of ehMCa; l)lllowa &amp;
lncludod', 17$, 11411411-.2051.
Whit• prom ..._., lila 13, worn
~ Pold $110 ooH lor $711. Call
31¥..754711.
.

0~ BY Tf\E. L€:fl ~D(

Twa

.... ""'" ,.... ,... ln-lgltod
thoolfor~ ...

booutlful 2oc
Clyde- Jr., ..........2331.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

.....,._

yNr homeownera 111turanc:1,

-.to

Butchorfng hogo, 240,1SOt, 61411411-.2017.

114 448 8042.

cludto oklrtlng, otopo 1 blockt, 1

Lumber ••
- tow ..up?
bulldlnal
$3.00 -~ft .
Buy IICiory from Notlontl
llanuiiCturor aa IUihollzad
.,....,, W1H train. sen. MlrMI•
Iaten. call 301-758-3200 ut
22011.

...

Interior Hcomlng. InQuire, Box

N. . 1111 MK10 3 br., 2 beth, ln-

,

Tl-lAT WAS
FAMOU5
JUMP SHOT..
flo.'{

- ""'""m,

AKC Yorbhlre terrllr, I 112
-ko, $250, 114-1112-11112 or
114-1192-2117.

256-11144.

tor Sale

Swimming oqOI-·
oond llh• wkh plpoo at\cf val- . chontlcoto, loaf oqulpmant,
- h , 111133 ......
tor cov•, $71, 614-fllla.3301.

Make 2 ,.ymMlle a mov• In,
,... 1b70 2·3br. Call Rut.e Uur.
dock 1-aoo.31..fl01'0.

Norrie 1884 14~80 2 Bedrooms,
FP, Air; Fumlsh..t. Q»n Uvlng
Roome a Kftchlln, florch, I..C:.

32-Im

By Phillip Alder

1--.

9117

ll!lallln tllzo, $100. 304-811241Sn

INaiiCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
............ thai ,.... do buol, _ . .h pociplo you k.-1 IJid
NOT 10 _,., """"11hrouah tho

'

Taken too soon

IUNQUEIT WOLFF TANNING
lEOS.. NM ComtneraW Home
unno $11111.00. Lampol.lltloneo M:
Ia P~•
loW oo ~00. Call Today. FREE
NEW Color Cattlog.

614-317-7103, lf4.44&amp;.2302.

IJid I montho FREE lol ronl.
Only $102&amp; - · IJid Ut3 por
mo. Callt.-..:1'1-3231.

DOWN

-

lead:

Boats &amp; Molorw ·

Twin Rl.,.,. Tower. now ICCepl·
'"a eppUcstJON · tor 1br. HUD
.u"ba!JdfzMI •pl. ,_. ltk:lerty end

t.ndbrr d.
1171.
.

OR DOES SHE
TAKE AFTER
YOU?

ITORAOE TANKS 3,flfl0 GaBon
Up!lghl, Ron E.... l n l a .looUon, Ohio, 1-.uuua. .

47; RL 1, O.. llpolll ~ferry, WV
aau. e . - ......,_ numbor.

wu. lncluMe: SDrNd ShMC,

Fuml8.hed 2 lledruam A.pattPertc, CA. No

"'""'·-From
P.te, Referenc11, DIDolll 'A.

Merchandl.-.
savaee-•-uc co,.cL,SZ21. 3DM1Io3aZ.

"'-oolng, Camaolmort.
1325.00
IM-441-GaOI
ollor
7:ooPM

..., Move, Addt.on, $13,1100,

Business
Opportunhy

28 S.,r_llllr
27 Mueltbr.

IUihor

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
I
Soutb ~est 'Nortb East
Pass 2.
Pass
!NT
Pass ' 3NT
All pass
26

54 Mlecellaneous

Toblic:oo Bam 3D'x50', ldell tor

$300 S.ll

nc•

I BET SHE'S

PLUM' PURTY,
WILFERD !! !!

w!Uoltoef-nme Monitor. 20 Mea
Hard Drive. 2 ~ Ram. Soft

cuponcy, no polo, no HUD. 8261
ph.- .a.ctrlc. A.t...
a
Do-'1. 304-175-:1811.

i5

: =:.~

SOUT}f
6KB75

,._
Recliner,

I lA, 2 ltlho, Large Ell In
Knct.n. 401120 Lot Cll7t

104 ... ta57

~f..,':~ue

30W..,__

•Kas ·

Apartment
Buy 01 .... •••'11111 Ant~
11ZO E. Meln at-, on Rt. 124.
for Rent
,.,_ oy. Moura: M.T.W. 10:od
2 heel oocn ..,.menta. Lift. to I:DG ~~rom., Sundlll, 1:DD

ond unf\Jmlohod,
-""'• do-'1 ,......,.., no
plio, lf4.ti:I·ZI11.
1 8 lroom
NMr Holzw,
$2llilllo. No iloto, A•ollabloMoy
1111,
2 ...room Apo~mont. Near

AMERICAN
NATIONAL 111IUAANCE
1fl8. Hlgholll Blddar NolhVICKIE CAITO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DII- Aprll 30, 11M. Elclllltnl """'"
For Filii Tlmt 1111'• Or Ronltl
COUNTS
614-446-23311 For .lppolnln)Oill.
, UFE I HEALTH

a.nua ..,_

•A Q 2
• Q 10 7
•A Q 7

---------·llumlohod
1 and

...

10 8 4 3

446-1111.

"The neighbors
thrilled wrth the pet-door
we installed for our snake."

5I

23~

EAST
6Q 9 6 2
"J 8 7 4

.-.....
- Fumlohod
fiiO. 2.....
·
- t1'HU-3a70.
.......
.·
.....
Trollor,ln
Qolllpollo, aTo _
_ ,__,_
....

11 , _ _

Pt scsi..
end lin
11 Cl*lloil tulfb: 14 lledlo
17 Etlll
llchnlque

j 11 GiiYL-

6K 6 5

1,.-.

• I ala nn

' 11
1

211

•IS1063
•AJ932

vans &amp; • wo•e

._ Fonl
~-

.

Ra sa a' 10o1a

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

-••""
.•

Wednesday, April26. 1995
General conditiOns took more hopeful in
the year ahead than lhey did last year.
;: Q~r more of your bigger breaks could
~ come through a relationship you ' ve
•· already developed.
"' TAURUS jAprll 20-llay 20) Your
ch&amp;flces for outdistancing compet itors
lOOk good lllday becauS6 you're- not apt
' .. to tgnore opportunities thai go unheeded
by lilt other guy. Taurus. treat yourseH to
a birthday gift. Send for your Astro·Graph
w

prodipllons lor tho yeor ahead by mailing
$2 and SASE to Astro*Graph , c/o this
newspaper, P.O . Bmc 4465 , NeW York , ,
NY 10163. Be sure 10 state your zodiac
sign.
t
·
GEMINI CMay 2hluna 20) You could b&lt;l
an ingenious thinker· today. Answers to
p_reviously unsolvable problems m1ght
suddenly pop into your head.
CANCER (June 21-July 221 Starling
today and tor a briel period. of t1me, you
m1ght be lUckier than usual concerning
second sources of income. 1nvest1gate all
"opportunitie.s.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Wise counsel
could save yov wasted effort today. sa
don't be reluctant to ask for acMce In sit· ·
uations you do not understand. Go to
persons you know.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) There may
be a thin line between a great Idea and a
goofy one today . If a friend talks to you
about something that sounds &amp;trange,
dOn't shrug it off too quickly.
LIBRA (S.pl 23-0ct. 231 In this cycle,
you could b&amp; quite fortunate in drawing ,
people to you whose cooperation you
n8ed for your immediate plans Fill them
10 on what ypu're contemplating.

SCORPIO COct. 24-!'lov. 221 I~ ~~~ past.
you've been. a strong starter and a weak
finisher. Today thiS could begin to
change . You can now f1nalize thing s
you·ve lefl dang!ing.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23·Dec. 21) Set a
specific course today. but leave room tor :
revisions as events unfold . Une)(_pected.
propitious developments are poSSible .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Lady
Luck will favor you to~ay 10 s1tuali?n·s
that increase your eam1ngs . What m1ght
occur COI.fld be generated from a least
eJ:pected contact
·
AQUARIUS jJan. 20-Feb. 191 You need
to realize that the course you're sen1ng
tor yourself today could affect you for
some time to come. Take time to make
realistic projections.
PISCES (Fob. 20.Morcll 20) Your linan- ,
cial prospects continue tQ look prom1slng
in this t1me frame. You might reap be~·
fits from something you had almost writ ten off .
•RIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) New pro·
JBCts launched today h•ve excellent
chances for success, especially if YOI.I uti·
lize untque principles that contain unusu·
al or novel twists.

�. I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

hge-1G-1be Dally Sentinel

TUesdey, April 25, 1995

•

Plans finalized for Right to
Read Week programming
Ript 10 Read ud Malia Week
will be observed in the Melaa
Local School Dlslrlct nellt weelc
witb a Ylltcty of IICiivitlca cmph•
sizing the 1'1110 subjecu to be carried
out in the schools.
Various themes for ac:Uvlllcs
bave bee!! seiCctcd by tile !tt:lloola.
At Harrisonville tile theme Is
•Blaze New Trails with Readlna
and Malb". 1be focus will be Oil
Native Americans. Actiyilles will
include SQUIRT (S1111talned. Quiet.
Uninterrupted Rcadina and Time),
witb dress up, decorated a door,
videos; pictorsnpll writina, a pro.
gram of Native Amcric:an l~;gends
and tales, Crazy Horse bat day, a
school-wide totem poiC, ud a food
tastin¥ program. .
Middleport's theme will be
"Have a Ball wilh Lesm~"· Pennants will be desipcd ·
sbown
on MOIIday, then: will be a sports
dress-up day wltb cblJdren coming
in allire repte5enlalive oC a favorite
sport on Tuesday, a book fair will
be beld on Wednesday, Thursday is
a sporu bat day, and Friday, class
colonday.
.

•

"Reading and Malb are Ocew
of Fun" is the Rutland scllool
theme. Door decorating COillests.
sustained quiet reading time, art
and writing contests, read-Ins,
research projects on sea animals,
ocean pencil puppeJ.s, studylaa
ocean plant facts, and Olber activities oo sea life and oceans wUI be
Included In the activities.
A town center will be carried
out at ·Pomeroy Elementary. Eacb
classroom will be taldn&amp; a business
to represent and will design business cards to advertise tjleir business. There will be assemblies cacb
day based on careers in lbe fields
of medicine, law, money, educalioo
and military. The upper ciassea will
be1publishing a school newspaper,
running a scbool radio station, and
shadowing business people in
town. Some stu!lents will also be
working a school store and llelplng
run a book fair ..
The theme a1 Salem Center will
be "Journey i~;~to Fairy Tale Land".
Highlights of lbe week will include
Susan Brenner, a professional storyteller, wbo will bave two sessiCJns

of SIOI')'Ielling;

a radiDe coorest, a

dress-up as a cbanl:ll:r clay, and 111
awards proaram wbere students
will be rewlldcd for dlelr penicipallon.
.
Salisbury's theme will be on
dindsauis and will include a slogan
COOleSt, a door decorating COOleSt,
sustained silent readins prosnun.
recognition of reading and malb
students for the week, a book swap,
and a presentation by the Meiss
High School National Honor Society.
"Explore tbe World Tbrousb
Reading" will be tbe theme of
activities at Meigs Junior High
School. Cbaptcc 1 reading swdents
will be involved in crealive writing
and illustrations related to the
lbeme, a trivia track down, oral
sullllll8ries of favorite stores, and
oral readlilg of poetry and stories
from the classics to cbildren's literature. 1bere will be book cover and
boolanark contest.
In classes of malbematics the
activities will include computer and
word games, cusanaire block,
statistics, making graphs and inter-

Corey, were
Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs, Bud
.. Vinin&amp; of l;lulland.
Mrs. Ida Masb of Maloneton,
Ky. lpellt several days ben: visiting
Mrs. Ann Masb.
Guests at tbe bome of Mr. and
Mrs. James Gilmore over tbe week-

end were Mr. and Mrs. Kenzil
Scranton, Darby, Arimas, and Jor:
don of Marysville. Mrs. Sandy
Gilmore of Amlin, Mrs. Brenda
Haggy, Kim Haggy, and a friend,
Jason, and Mrs. Pam Glaze.
Those. attending the wedding of
Christy Masb and Billy Crane at
!be bome of ber grandmother, Mrs.
Ann Masb, were Vanessa Crane,

Cindy Klein, Dwight Cullins, Ben
Crane, Bert Masb, Rachel Norman,
Susie Masb Pullins, Jessie Pullins,
Peggy _Crane, _Bob and Alice
Thompson, Harriet Sinclair, Susie
Masb, Charles Masb II, Lisa
Yeauger, M!UY and Roger Gilmore,
Leigh Masb, Mildred Jacobs, Bill
Crane, Wayne Pullins. A reception
was beld after tbe wedding with the

RIGHT TO READ PROGRAM LEADERS
-These teachen are Ill ch...., of ript ·to read
and ma.tb week activities In their respective
schools. They p~hered lul week at Pomeroy to
finalize plans and sign a procJaa.tlon. Pktured ·
with Bill Buckley, superintendent, and Wendy
Halar, administrative assistant, center seated,
are from the left, .Julia
Salem Center;
Tara Barber, Melp 111gb;
RaUey, Melp
Junior High; Liz Story,
Teresa
pretlng tbem, and problem solvlDg
witb word problems.
Careers will be an em.,us;s of
Rigbt to Re.ad and•Math Week at
Meigs High School. Computer
I 0\11'1 I
research of selected careersfoccupations will be available to the students with assistance lbrougb !be
614-992-7161
guidance office and the library.
Individual students will be giving
sbon presentations on careers
wbich bave been researched during

c

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Fll TillE II \1 ,\\1 .1\1,
Hours M-F 8-5 Sat. 8-12

Middleport, Ohio 45760
BATTERIES
STRUTS

cake being baked by Pegjy ClliiiC,

SHOCKS

mother of the groom.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson
and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest. Vanlnwagen visited Mrs; Mildred Jacobs
recently.
Mrs. June Soulsby spent several
days visiting ber sister, Mrs. Jean
Carter, Logan.

CHEF BOY R DEE

2 Cheese Pizzas
$1.89 less 55¢ coupon

Net Cost

TIRES

~ulllres
• • • iii

Master Blend Coffee
$ 69 34.5 oz.

19

ClOROX

Russett Potatoes

gal.

Coca-Cola Products
2 tiTERS

c

69

Potato Chips

Reg. $1.49
6 o:r.

4

CHARMIN

Toilet nss.ue

c

"

Chicken Noodle Soup
.
2/$1
10.75 oz.

..

·c

4 roll pk.

CAMPBELLS

Orange Juice

.

.'

•

TROPICANA f·ROZEN

12 oz.

•

MR. BEE

GRADE AMEDIUM

Eggs
$

doz. ·

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES .EFFECTIVE APRIL 26, 1995 ONLY

'

•

,

•

••
2 Sections, 14 Pagee 35 cents

A Muttimedlalnc. Newopoper

Cremeans says GOP .rem~ ins
dedicated to balancing .budget
an

By GEORGE ABATE
But, Cremeans added be depart"I think we question wbetbez: means .added.
Sentinel News Staff
Dismantling tbis bureaucracy ed from his pany when it adversely
we can band a debt-free economy
New Congressional leadership to our cliildren," ·Cremeans said, and trimming !be .budget remain affected local constiruents.
has provided the greatest catalyst adding Ibis gift will ensure a con- key goals when be returns to
Cremeans did not support tax
for change, U.S. Congressman tinued bigh standard of living for Congress on May I.
relief for those individuals earning
Frank Cremeans told Meigs County lbeir future.
·"We're the party of cbange," more !ban $200,000 and be voted
Republicans last night
.
"Those of us in Meigs County . Cremeans' said. "Republicans are against lbe bailout of !be Mexican
Republicans remain dedicated to realize the value qf a debt-free trying to modify what bas hap- peso.
·
pened for the last 40 years."
·,
balancing tbe budget and reducing economy," Cremeans said.
Local Republicans need to conlbe national debt, said Cremeans,
Currently, tbe $4.8 trillion debt
Cremeans peppered his 20- tinue working and preparing for
· R..&lt;Jallipolis. Meigs·Coanty Repub- is stagnating the country. By reduc. minute speech with anecdotes next year's elections, Cremeans
licans hosted their annual Lincoln ing lbe debt by 2002, interest rates about some colleagues, sucb as added. Numerous county, townDinner, wbicb about 175 people and intlalion wiD remain low. This Strom Tbwmond and Bob Dole.
ship, and local officials, including
attended at Meigs Higb School.
He called Newt Gingrich a . judges, mayors · and planning
in turn, will spur on the economy,
Cremeans said he lalces pride in lbe Gallipolis businessman and for- visionary wbo Is misinteq&gt;reted by groups attended the dinner.
Republicans' tireless wort to com- mer school superintendent said.
the medial
Also attending was State Rep.
"I like to follow a leader wbo Jobn Carey, R·Wellston. The 94th
plete lbe "Contract with America"
The federal government bas
within the f~~St 93 days of !be 104th added too much bureaucracy, bas a goal," Cremeans said of Gin- Ohio House district representative
Congress.
·
wbicb .causes eureme waste, Cre- grich.
Continued on page 3

Meigs board hires
instructors for
summer programs

GOP DINNER ~PEAKER- U.S. Congressman Frank Cremeans, R-Galllpolls, addressed the Meigs County Republicans'
annual Lincoln Day Dinner beld Tuesday night a~ Meigs High
School. The first-term congressman is on a recess until May 1;
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

One week after
explosion, death
tt;'ll climbs to 98

OKLAHOMA CITY (APJ - A lion bours after the blasL
poses of F•ances Hunnel, edlica'
By JIM FREEMAN
week
after the catastrophic truck
Gov. Frank Keating asked Oklationa!
aide
at
Middleport
ElemenSentluel news staff
bomb
explosion
that
demolished
homans
to observe a moment of
tary
School,
ei(ective
July
1,
1995;
The Meigs l,.ocal Board of Eduthe
federal
building,
lbe
body
count
silence
at
9:02 a.m. today, the time
and
the
disability
retirement
of
cation Tuesday night gave the
~y
reached
98
today
as
investigators
seismologists
say the bomb- now
Mary
L.
Hawkins
effective
Feb.
28.
green light to biring teachers for
added
charges
and
pressed
a
search
estimated
to
bave
weighed 4,800
Tbe
board
also
hired
Richard
the district's suntmer pro~rams.
for
their
most·wanted
suspect
.
pounds
detonated
on WednesKoker
as
treasurer
pro
tem
until
Tbe board, meeting,m regular
. . - ,....r
day,
Apri\19.
and
Terry
Brothers
James
11.
July
session at Pomeroy Elementary
Nichols, previously beld as witWind gusting to 32 mpb hamSchool, authorized Superintendent
nesses,
were
charged
Tuesday
as
pered
the search early today. 9per,
Bill Buckley to post and bire teach1n other business, the board:
co~spirators
witb
Timothy
ations
were suspended in paits of
ers for the bigb ·scbool's SUIIUll,er . . - Renewed the contract wltb
McVeigh
In
the
construction
of
the
building
for fear tbe gusts
school program and for a summer the Educational Media Resource
explosive
devices
in
Michigan.
would
bring
down
unstable chunks
NEW
JOHN
DOE
remediation program for elemen- Center at $1.90 per pupil for !be
McVeigh,
27,
remained
lbe
only
of
debris,
said
Fire
'Capt. Todd
tary school srudents grades 2-6.
1995-96 school year and renewed SKETCH- The FBI Issued th)¥
person
arrested
in
the
acrual
bombCrews
used
brooms,
Matthews.
Also the board agreed to bire the contract with the Southeastern more detailed sketch of "John
ing
of
the
Alfred
P.
Murrah
federal
to
push
back
shovels
and
rakes
teachers for a summer enrichment Ohio Voluntary Education Coor:r- Doe 2," the still-missing second
building.
He
is
not
charged
.
i
n
the
debris
from
exposed
areas.
program for youngslets. grades 4-6. ative to provide computer serv1ces bombing suspect Tuesday. The
Michigan case, and tbe Nichols
The death toU was at 98, includThe'Sununer enrichment program is to the district at a cost of $.SO per sketch shows the bushy-haired
tbe
brothers
are
not
charged
in
ing
a nurse killed in the rescue
designed to help kids with bigber elementary student, $1 per junior man wearing a baseball cap.
Oklahoma
bombing.
effort.
The bodies of 14 children
(AP)
abilities to excel, Bucldey said.
bigb student and $1.60 per bigb
A
law
enforce01ent
source
in
have
been
found, including one
In perspnnel matters, !be .board school srudent.
Washington,
speaking
on
condition
located
Tuesday
night. Mayor Ron
accepted !be resignation of Mike
- Met in ·executive session to
of
anonymity,
said
traces
of
nitrates
Nor'icl&lt;
doubted
that
all the victims
Gerlach as junior class advisor discuss the hiring of personnel and
and
high
explosive
were
detected
.
would be identified, suggesting tbat
effectiv~ the end of the 1994-95
to bear an appeal by .a parent
in the car McVeigh was driving "anybody tbat was on the sidewalk
. school year; granted maternity regarding disciplinary action relalwben stopped for a traffic infrac- was vaporized."
leave to Pomeroy Elemen.tary ed to their cbild.
School principal Debbie Hapton- Toured Pomeroy ElementaJy
stall beginning around May 9 and School.
extend a contract to Greg BrownPresent w,ere Buckley, Koker,
ing as a maintenance man retroac- board President Larry Rupe, ViceCOLUMBUS (AP) - One of
. live to April 13.
president Randy Humphreys and the investigators examining fund
In addition, the board approved board members Roger Abbott, raising in former state Auditor
!be resignation for retirement pur- Scou Walton and Jobn Hood.
Thomas E. Ferguson's office said
!be indicttnents last week of Ferguson and four of bis employees did By The Associated Press
Salyers told tbe Portsmouth
not end the probe.
A woman with relatives in Obio Daily Times that when the exploTbc indictments resulted in said sbe survived the bombing of s1on occurred, "I felt like I was
additional calls io the special coun- lbe federal building in Oklahoma being pulled thrOugh a tunnel and ·a
·
sel investigating Ferguson, assis- City with encouragement from a loud whooshing noise was going
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) _: in passing !be state's f~JSI limit on tant special counsel Jobn F. fm:figbtcr sbe never saw while sbe by my ears and flashes of white ,
.
Gov. George Volnovich will fmd a campaign CO!)tributions.
McCaffery told The Columbus Dis- was trapped in rubble from tbc were going by.
''All of a sudden I was a1 a dead
blast
Tbe bi!Ycaps contributions at patch in a story published today.
gift from the Legislature on his
"He was on my left and my stop, I was face down an.d 1
desk when returns from a trade $2,500, increases the number of
head
was turned to. my rigbt so 1. couldn't move. I was aware I was
mission to China next month - a limes candidates must me financial
"There are leads !bat can be foldisclosure reports, and creates a tax lowed up," be sai\1.
couldn't see him, but having him trapped and l ·could feel big cement
campaign finance reform bill.
there meant everything in the blocks pressing down on my bead
It's not the one be would bave credit for small contributors.
McCafferty said the Franklin world
•." said Priscilla Salyers. I couldn't move my legs or
picked out · for himself, but
County grand jury still is impanThe biggest omission from the eled and could consider additional whose husband's family lives in right ann. My f~~St thought was 'I
Voinovicb spokesman Mike Dawneed air. ~" ,
·
son said Tuesday the governor plan favored by Voinovlcb and matters involving Ferguson. But be Lucasville.
Salyers,
a
U.S.
Customs
Service
Salyers
began
using
ber ann to
of
State
Bob
Taft
is
a
Secretary
would sign .the bill.
added that sucb action was unlikely
"Well liver 85 percent of !be limit on, bow much candidates can unless significant new information employee, is recovering at her clear an air pocket so she could
home in northwest Oklahoma City breathe. It took rescue workers
Voinovich-Taftplan is in Ibis bill," spend on elections. But Dawson was uncovered.
afier
falling five stories and suffer- about four hours to free ber.
said
be
bopes
the
Legislature
will
Dawson said after the Honse voted
ing
three
broken ribs and a col·
"I went through a lot of emoreconsider
lbe
issue
later.
62-35 10 go along with the Senate
Ferguson, wbo bas decline.d lapsed lung ..
tions. during tbat time - from
comment since tbe indictments
Thomas Hawthorne, 52, fonner· . tbrowing rocks with my one band
· were returned, is charged with nine iy of Franklin. was killed in last . and waving it in . an?er to telling
felony counts of theft in office and Wednesday's explosion . He had God. I knew he d•dn t ·let me live
16 misdemeanors alleging improp- gone to tbe building to assist a tbrougb Ibis much to let me die "
er fund-raising tccbniques.
friend at tho Social Security office.
she said.·
'

~- -_/

·c urable g,o ods
up 0.6 percent
I

Ferguson
probe will
continue

WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories for bigticket durable goods rose 0.6 percent in Marcb, rebounding from
tbeir first decline in four months.
The increase surprised analysts,
wbo bad predicted a second
straight drop for interest-sensitive
items expected to last at lc~t three
years.
"
. The Commerce Depanment said
today tbat the .increase in durable
goods orders was led by a 6.1 percent jump in electronic and other
electrical equipment.
Overall, orders for durable
goods totaled a seasonally adjusted
$164.3 billion, up $1 billion from
February. New orders for the first
tbr.ee months this year were 3.4
percent above the fourth quarter of
last year.
Durable goods orders fell 0.7
percent in February - revised
slightly from a previously estimated 0.8 percent fall. Tbe February
drop was the first since orders fell
0.8 percent in October.
· .
Durable goods include suc.h
items as cars, computers and appliances tbat often fall in sales as
interest rates climb. They are particularly sensitive to interest-rate
changes because they often are purchased on credit.
The Federal Reserve bas doubled its benchmark short -term
interest rate, from 3 percent to 6
percent, in seven increases iim:e
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wbo courtroom style only slightly after
an avalanche of criticism from
February 1994.
.
v was that bearded man?
It certainly couldn't bave been legal pundits: But after meeting
NEW LEXINGTON, Obio (AP) tive petition," Phillis said in an
Superior Court 1udge Lance Ito, with the jurors, be apparently toot
who bas been belittled by some for their concerns to heart. For the first - A battle to overturn the state ·interview outside Perry County
·
not bringing a semblance of conttol .time in a long while, it looked as If ~cbool funding system may end Conun011 Pleas Court.
"One of going to tbe people
to the playground be calls his court tbe trial of the century wouldn't wben a lawsuit reaches !be Obio
last until tbe end of the millennium, Supreme Coon. Then again, it may with !be .concept of ... an adequate
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe of law.
"It's a welcome and reln:sbins DOL
education for every kid regardless
But !ben: lie was Tuesday, robed
Supreme Court today !brew out a
A leader of the Ohio Coalition of where !bey live, or regardless of
federal law that bans possession of and hirsute as usual - only with a .change," Souibwestern University
a gun witbin I ,000 feet of a school, new persooality. The OJ. Simpson law professor Roben Pugsley said. for Equity &amp; Adequacy of. SchoOl the demographics of their parents
saying Congress lacked the authori- judge was glaring at lawyers, cut- •'I'm sure one that is most appreci- Funding said after an appeals court or the demographics of the commuting them off in mid-sentence, ated by the jurors and one thai will beard the case Tuesday tbat a nity," be said.
ty to enact iL
Another alternative: a federal
Ruling 5-4 in a \exas case, tbe telling them their questions were eventually come to be appreciated statewide ballot issue migbt surface
lawsuit.
court said lbe law does not fall irrelevant and refusing tbeir by tbe lawyers, if they're not if the schools lose in court.
already appreciating it."
"If Ibis route doesn'(wolk we' ll
, William PbiUis, executive direcwitbin Congress' autbnrity to regu· requests for sidebar talks.
Testimony continues today tor of the coalition !bat represents use another route, but we don't
Ito unveiled bis assertive side oo
late interstate commerce.
The 1990 Gun, Free School the fmt day of testimony since lbe when defense attorney Peter more than 500 of the state's 611 think we're going to bave to go
Zones Act "is a criminal statute Simpson trial was bobbled by a Neufeld completes his tougb cross· districts, said the group was confi- beyond the' Supreme Court," be
said. "We're not figpriug on los,
that by its terms bas nothing to do remarkable juror revolt Thirteen of examination of pollee criminalist dent of court victory. ·
with 'commerce' or··any sort of the sequestered panelists had Andrea Mazzola.
Still, be acknowledged tbere ing."
Mazzola continued to testify in were alternatives in the event of a
Pblllis also said be bad not ruled
economic enterprise, however refused to hear testlntony to protest
,
broadly one might define those !be reassignment of tbree of lbeir relative obscurily Tuesday, her · legal setback.
out applying to the State Board of
. statements overshadowed rust by
''ll I wen: to make a recoounen- Education to succeed state school
terms,"· .Chief Justice William H. guards.
tbe
juror
rebellion
Tbe
judge
had
adjusted
bis
datioo
it would be one of an in ilia- Superintendent Ted Sanders. wbo
Rebnquist M'Oie for the court.

Ohio House passes
campaign finance bill

~leach

$ 79

' - - loalgbUD tilt SO.,,.
doaidy. Tbu ...ay, niD. Hlp Ill

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll26, 1995

Domino Sugar
$ 49

us #1
15#

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I .

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Eckrich Bologna
$

BuckeyeS:

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Vol. 45, NO. 253

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1995 ONLY
lb.

Pick 4:

Copyright 1~

ONE DAY SALE
Ground Beef

061

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-------Laurel Cliff news -lb-ewee~k.
SOIII, Cbristopber and

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers
top Marlins
••
tn
opener

i

Woman with Lucasvil-le
connections survives
Oklahoma City bombing

my •

Judge Ito steps _up
pace in Simpson trial

School issue may wind up on ballot.

Court tosses out
federal gun law

-

is leaving the post July 1. PbiUis Is
a former assistant state superinten-

dent.

. At issue Tuesday before three
Judges from the 5th Ohio District
Court of Appeals was a Per1y
County court ruling last July llbat
declared lbe current school financ.
ing method unconstitutional.
Judge Linton Lewis Jr. ruled
that education was a fundamental
right under lbe Ohio Constitutioo
and !bat the state-local system or
paying for primary ansi !.CCODdary
education was inadequate and
inequitable.
Joel Tnylor, the state's lawyer
said a 1979 Obio Supreme Couri
ruling that upheld the funding system was a binding legal p..,..,lent
Lew1~ should bave followed.
Continued on page 3
I

t

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