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Thursday, Aprll1 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Clinton says
·M ilitary fears its image·damaged
impeachment no by Clinton's Kosovo $trategy ·
'badge 0 f s·ham e
I

·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- about it."
dent Clinton says he-does not: see his
He also said he has no consuming
impeachment as "some great badge animosities toward those who pushed
of shame" and believes historians will impeachment "I don't wake up every
judge there were political motives day mad at those people," Ointon
behind Congress' action.
said. ·
· In an interview Wednesday with
"Any moment I spend full of
CBS News, Clinton said he felt "hon- anger and bitlet'l)ess is a moment I all)
ored" that the·impeachment gave him robbing from my wife or from. my
a chanoe to defend the Constitution. daughter or from my country or from
He said the American people saw the my friends," he blid. "I just think that
impeachment as an attempt by it's pnst us and we need to put it ·
Republicans to undermine his presi- behind uS. .!Dd we need to go on.
"We o•·" that to the American
dency.
people,
to lei it go .... All the great
"Those that did not agree with
what I had done and were furious l)lat players here, they need,to let it go," he
i~ had worked and 'that the country
said.
While the interview focused largewas doing well, and attempted to use
wliat should have been a constitution- ly on the crisis in Kosovo, Ointon
al and legal process for pol\tical endS, . also discussed how first lady Hillary
did not prevail,'' Clinton said. "That's . Rodham Clinton's ruminations on
running.for a Senate seat in New York
the way I saw it. .. :
"But I do not regard this impeach- and how his family is faring the wake
,
ment vote as some great badge of of the Lewinsky scandal.
"Given what we've been through,
shame. I do not," Clinton said. "I do
not believe it was warranted and ·J we're .,Poing reasonably well," he
said. "We're not a large family. We do
don't think it was right."
The interview, conducted at the love each other very much, and we
White House by CBS anchor Dan. work hllfd to support one another."
Rather, elicited Clinton's most · · He said he had no idea what Mrs.
detailed assessment yet of his Clinto".i wouid decide, but that it still
impeachment ,on charges stemming struck him that having a fi.St lady run
from his relationship with Monica for office was "a. highly unusual
•
Lewinsky. He WJIS acquitted by the . thing."
"And I can imagine that many votSenate in February.
The president said he . never ers in New York would wonder,'' he
said. " And ·that would be a burden
thought about resigning.
" I would never have legitimized she would have to carry in the camwhat I believe is horribly wrong with paign."
what has occurred here over the lnst ,
But, Clinton said, "I think if she
four or five years. So it never crossed could win an election like that, she
my mind," he said. " ....1 just, I prayed would be magnificent."

USDA proposes overhaul of milk pricing system
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department today proposed an over~aul of the nation's
60-year-old milk pricing system,
consolidating the current 31 pricing
.regions ·into 11.
" These reforms will help make
sure that America's dairy farmers
receive a fair price and that Ameri~
can consumers continue to enjoy an
.abundant, affordable supply of
milk," Agriculture Secretary Dan
Glickll!an said.
The changes will also "simplify ·

the wholesale milk pricing system,
making it more market-oriented and
more equitable," Glickman said.
The regions are divided into what
are called .milk marketing orders.
Milk orders were created during
the Depression-era when.dairy fa:rmers were having difficulty selling
their. milk to processors. ,
The orders, which set the minimum price for milk, essentially prevent processors from playing producers against each other to drive
down the price. .

By JOHN DIAMOND
Al8ocl..ed Pr- Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Military officials
worry that the lofty status gained by air power in
the Persian Gulf War declines with each day that
ethnic atrocities continue in Ko$ovo despite daily
NATO airstrikes.
Air .force officers and an active fraternity ·or
retired. air ~mmanders bi~terly blame _the Clinton
admimstration for. retummg to the mcremental
use of force that failed to bring Hanoi to heel in
the Vietnam War.
. "When you fly less than 50 bombing sorties
per day for seven days, you're not serious about
what you're doing," said retired Air Force Gen.
Buster Glosson, one of.the key planners ·of the
Persian qulf War air campaign. "At best it's sporadic bombing." •
..
· Officers, particularly in the Air Force, see the
reputation of air PQwer at risk in a mission laden
with restrictions imposed from the White House.
And they are growing increasingly concerned as
television images from . refugee camps provide
vivid evidence that the airstrikes are not preventing the human suffering of the Kosovar AI banians.
·
"I'm worried about us being blamed once
again for being over-promisers," said one Air
· Force strategic planner who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
No one in uniform will publicly criticize the
commander-in-chief over the campaign against
· Yugoslavia. But Lt. Gen. Ron Marcotte, commander of the 8th Air Force, underscored preconditions·for success from the air. ·
"We've got to be in it for the. long haul, ensure
that we use all our capabilities to the fullest extent
possible and ensure that our airmen have the support they need," Marcotte said.
'
The implication was clear enough: Without
that support and full exploitation of capabilities,

"Our concerns about the exorbita~t expense of the
independent counsel's investigation are well known,
but we 'II let this latest report speak for itself."
The cost. of investigating top administration officials during the Clinton era now tops $76 million,
according to the GAO 's figures.
Starr's $6.2 million expenditure in the six months
through Sept. 30 was up nearly 60 percent .from· the
$3.9. million in the previous six months, the GAO said.
The report did not cover costs for the first 2 1/2
months of Starr's investigation into the presidential
affair with Ms. Lewinsky and the cover-up. Starr
opened the Lewinsky investigation 'in mid-January
1998..The latest GAO figures start on April 1,,1998.
.The GAO totals do not break out Starr's costs for
other aspects of his investigation, such as the prosecutions of Clinton friend Webster Hubbell and Whilewater partner Susan McDougal. But those investigations
pale. in size and intensity to the Lewinsky case, which
involved a massive grand jury inqJliry that lasted
seven months.
•
·Starr wrapped up the Lewinsky investigation on
Sept. 9, 1998, with a report to Congress detailing H
possible ·grounds for impeaching the president for
lying and obstructiqn.
Jhe trial of Mrs. McDougal in Arkansas on contempt and obstruction charges is in its fourth -we~k.
Mrs. McDougal was investigated and indicted last
·May, a cost that would be included in the latest financial figures for·Starr's operation.
Starr has two court cases pending against Hubbell,
·one for income tax evasion, the other for obstructing ·
federal regulators looking into the failure of,the savings and loan owned by the Clintons' Whitewater partners. Both those cases were in the investigative stage
in the months.covered by the latest expenditures.
Independent counsels during the Clinton administration have investigated former Agriculture Secretary
Mike Espy, former Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros,
lnteQor Secretary )3ruce Babbitl and Labor Secretary .
Alexis Herman .

.

By LAURA MYERS
"At a minimum, they are entitled
As POWS, the Army soldiers· acting on behalf of the United States
Associated Press Writer
to POW status and the protection that captured Wednesday near the Mace- since the closure of the U.S. Embassy
WASHINGTON - The Clinton that provides under the Geneva Cononia-Yugoslav border could be held in Belgrade last month.
'· Swedish foreign ministry spokesadministration vigorously con- vention," Pentagon spokesman Ken· unti t e end of hostilities.
·.
demned Yugoslav plans to put three neth Bacon said Thursday. "We're
In elgrade, Sweden's ambas- woman Aasa Arvidsson said Ambascapture~ U.S. soldiers on trial, call- outraged by that," he added of amil- , sador t Yugoslavi~ forwarded a U.S. sador Mats Staffansson met with
ing for their immediate release or pro- itary proceeding that •.\ate-controlled · demand that the three soldiers be vis- Yugoslav authorities in connection
tection as prisoners ·of war from a Serb television saiil would begin ited by the lnternatioual Red Cross with the U.S. demand and that
today.
and that they be released. Sweden is "negotia\ions are continuing." She
military ''kangaroo court.:· ·

.

. Regional Briefs:
GTE wins approval to end
charges for ·some serv·i ces
.

MARION -The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has approved
a plan filed by GTE to eliminate charges for touch calling, reduce intraLATA long-distance rates and trim charges for extended local calling for
its Ohio customers.
,
The plan eliminates charges for touch-tone service for both residential and business customers. Residential customers currently pay $1 a
month for touch calling, while businesses pay $2 per month for each touch
calling line.
.
GTE will also lower rates for intra-LATA (Local Access and Transport Area) long-distance calls by as much as 27 percent. A toll call from
one point to another within aLATA is called an intra-LATA or short-distance toll call.
In addition, the company will ·reduce statewide rates f&lt;;&gt;r its Extended
Local Calling Plan. Fot example, a customer making a.four-minute ELCP
call could save as much a• 52 percent, depending ori the time of day and
distance involved.'
·
'
The Pomeroy, Racine and Rutland exchanges offer Cheshire and Shade
exchanges as ELCP calls.
"We're pleased that the commission took such quick action on our fil.
ing," said Davy M. Roach, general manager-customer operations for GTE
in Ohio. "This plan is consistent with our continuing efforts to increase
the value of the service we provide to our cu.slomers."
GTE filed revised tariffs in March with the PUCO seeking approval
for the rate reductions. The new rates become effective May I.
· Headquartered in Marion, GTE serves customers in over 80 Ohio coun.
lies.

Columb-..s man pleads innocent
to armed robbery at Legion post
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A Columbus man has pleaded innocent to
helping steal nearly $8,000 io watches, rings and cash from card players
at the Frankfort American Legion.
.
Khalfa~i Wright, 24, entered the pleas Thursday to 15 counts of aggravated robbery, one count for ~ach person involved in the March 16 rob·
bery.lf convicted, he could be sentenc~d to up to life in. prison.
He remained in the Ross County jail on a $50,000 bond, which was
lowered from his initial $500.000 bond when he was arrested March 18
in Circleville.
An informant identified him as one of two people who held up the players, said Sheriff Ron Nichols.
·
The men ordered everyone to get on the floor, put a gun to one man's
head, then forced another man to take a bag around the room for victims'
valuables, Nichols said.
Dark masks, jackets and gloves were found in Wright's car, Nichols
said.
.
Some of the jewelry was.reco~ered. including all of the rings.

fi!1DJ
Over to Bob's••• ,
rJeautlf~l

Potted Ecuter
'jlowers 'jor 'Jour
C.ov~d Ones

Report indicates O'U to extend
airport's runway to 7,000 feet

Choose ]rom:
e Symbolic EasterLillies
e Cjragra,n t Hyacinths .
e eolorful1ulips
e jlorallizaleas
•
· e Many, many morel!

Red' e Pink e White e Lavende

declined 10 give further details.
returned safely this morning. He !md
The-.,U.S.-led NATO bombing no de1ai ls on their targets. The B-l_s
campaign conlinued. meanwhile, and arrived at Fairford from the Unit.U
u:s. officials confirmed today that B- States Thutsday to join eight B-5~
1 Lancer bombers flew missions ·,.l;lompers that have been fly ing(
against Yugoslavia for the first time Yugoslavia missions si nce the-NAtO
Thursday night. Air Force spokesman campaign began.
.
•
Maj. Mark Phillips said JWO B-1s
The llentagon was trying to deterflew from Fairford, England, and
(Contlnued on Page 3)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Newl Staff
A Hartwell Hare isn't a traditional Easter bunny ·kind of rabbit.
It's unique by design and actually
has only been made over the past
couple of years.
'
Rabbits · have always been a
favorite of Bobbi Karr, so it was a
natural for her after opening Hartwell
· House, an antique and gift shop in
Pomeroy, to bring bunnies into ner
business.
As it happened one of her employees, Marilyn Spencer, a longtime
seamstress, was anxious to try her
hand at making stuffed rabbits. Her
creations of muslin, plush materials
and fake fur were called the Hartwell
Hares,
Since she made her first line of
Hartwell Hares, tbey have become
extremely popular with customers of.
Hartwell House, the only place they
can be purchased·. In fact, Marilyn
says sometimes it's a chore just keeping a variety in stock.
At first she used a pattern and
then as she went along, she made
changes in the .design. She' does
most of the cutting out, sewing
together and stuffing ~ith (l9lyester
fill , while. Bobbi does the faces, puts
in the button eyes, and makes some
of the clothing.
All of the hares have jointed arms
and legs and most can be positioned
so that they will stand alone. ,
There are three different sizes small. medium and large, with the
large being about 2-1/2 feet tall.
Some are dressed in vests and pants,
others in fancy or country dresses,
some have accessories, others just
ribbons or homespun fabric around
the neck- "to give them character,"
says·Marilyn.

Set .t hose
clocks
ahead
one hour·
Sunday
,,

HARTWELL HARES - For lhe peit two
yeera, Marilyn Spencer hea been cresting
Hartwell Heraa for esle .. Hartwell HouM In

POIIMiroy. The jointed rabbits ere madtt of
muslin, plu1h meterlsla end flke fur, and come
In lhrae elzee. ' ·

A few have been given names and
The hares are made in a rear room
all carry the Hartwell House tag. Cus- of the store ,which also houses suptomers are invited to name their own plies for the creations.
hare, have it put on a button and
Marilyn has no idea how many
attached to ali ear when they make rabbits she has made over the past
their purchase.

·Spring
forward

two years. but she knows there are
plenly more to make. Proof of thai is
in a large roll of white plush material standing· in a comer of the sewing
room .

.

'

Bal\ll'tltolll

· yaur claclta

IIICI Wltchft
farwlnfOM
h0urll21.m.,

...

~Aprll4.

12

A few 'places exempt themselves
from daylight-saving time: Arizona.
Hawaii, the part of Indiana in the
Eastern time zone, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin !~lands and American Samoa.
For the · rest of the nation, the
change means later sunsets to enjoy
working on gardens, playing sports,
having 11arbecues or just relaxing out·
doors.

CHURCH DONATION - Delry Queen of Middleport donated
$751 Thur~y for repair work to lhe Orange Chriaijan Church
near Alfred lhet ws• deeb oyed In • flood last summer. Nancy
King, right, pre1811tl lhe check on behalf of Dairy OuHn owner
Chuck Kitchen to church member Jim Deetar..
.

UMW chief says .members are 'under assault'

ALSO AVAILABLE AT 80BS:

Good Afternoon

• Frost Proof P.ulsies • Frost Proof Vegetable Plants • Bulk Garden Seed .
• Onion Sets • Seed Potatoes • Spring Flower Bulbs • Large Selection of SOils

Today•s .SeJ:ttiilell
zSectlo~ • 1Z Pages

'•

.""",.

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JW$tCONYENIENT LQCATIONS:

· Maao,n, WV
(~) 773,5721

Qalllpo!la, OH
(740) 446-1711 .
- -HouraM2!~at8 am· 8 pm ·Sun 10 ~ 6 pm

OHIO }
Pkk 3: 2-8-9; Pick 4: 7-9-6-0
Bucuye 5: 9-,13-21-30-3 ~
W,\'A.

Dally 3: 1-S-0; Dlllly4: 0-4-5-7
o t999011io Volley PllblllbinaCo.

,,

try soldiers

Not your traditional Easter bunny

ATHENS (AP) - Ohio University officials are expected to announce
next week that the university airport's runway will be lengthened to 7,000
feet, a newspaper reported .
·
· The runway near Albany in southern Athens County currently is 4,200
feet long.
· Extending it to 7,000 feet would let the airport ac'commodate larger
aircraft and the job opportunities they might bring.
. .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri"I th!nk it's g?ing tQ help out the businesses that are here and maybe
cans
will set thefr clocks ahead this
bring in new businesses. I think it's a good idea," Albany Mayor Gary
weekend
as the country switches to
Warner told The Columbus Dispatch in a story published today.
daylight-saving
time.
University officials declined to comment untill\tesday's announcement
As
usual,
some
will fo{get and
of the runway lengthening.
show
up
an
hour
late for work, ·
The next step is sec uring financing, but cost estimates and a complechurch on Easter Sunday or other
tion date were not immediately available.
events.
Warner said that once financing is available, the federal government
For most of the nation, the change
.is expected to pay for most of ihe project, with some local contiibution.·
means
setting clocks ahead one hour .
The Federal Aviation Administration has approved a design to extend
before
goihg to bed Saturday night.
the runway to 5,600 feet. But after Jesse Jackson visited southeast Ohio ·
Standard
time returns Oct. 31.
to promote its potential for jobs, university officials in Athens, 75 miles
southeast of Columbus, began contemplating extending 'the runway to
7,000 feet.

.' HARDY
AzALEAs ·
.

e

....,.en 1ne

.

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-Page4

r

U.S·. . co.ridemn.s Serbs' .decision to

'

Knlcks nip Cavaliers
with 4 point victory

•

a1

premium is up iLl cents to $1.235.
had increased about 8.5 ce'nts a gallon in the
Across the country, prices at the pump have two weeks leading up to March 19. The Lundsoared, in part because world oil producers berg Survey of 10,000 gas stations nationwide
agreed to take an additional 2.1 million barrels found the weighted average, including all
daily off the market, and bclcausc'\of anticipat- grades and taxes, had in,creased to $1.0869
ed increases in demand for ~pring ·and summer cents per gallon in that time period.
driving.
Other regional prices for self.-serve unleadAnalysts have also pointed to (f:finery pro- ed:
..
duction troubles in California, fpne · of the
~New England: up 7.2 cents to $1.054.
largest U,S. driving markc;ts. Gas is most
·- Mid-Atlantic: up 8.8 cents to.$1.032.
expensive in the West, increasing nearly 14
-Great Lakes: up 17 cents to $1.123.
cents in the past two weeks to bring self-serve ' ' -Mid)Vest: up 11.9 cents to $1.042.
regular unleaded gas to $1.243 a gallon.
. ' -Southwest: up 14.5 cents to $1.087.
Gas is least expensive iii the Sputheast at
The association's Fuel Gauge report Is
$1.003, an increase of 10.6 cents.
based on data from more than 37,000 transacA separate survey found that gasoline prices . t'9n on March 30.

Come·

•.

Actor gets 41
months In jail
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) - A
- man who acted in "Predator." "48
Hours," and .. Lockup," w~ sentenced to 41 months in prison for
threatening his ex-wife,
But before he was sentenced
Wednesday, Sonny Landham bhist·
ed his ex-wife and the U.S. Attorney's Office in U.S. District Court
in·Ashland .
Landham, convicted Dec. I of
"-..naking harassing and threatening'
telephone calls to Bel ita Adams at
her ~wis County home, sard that
U.S. Attorney_ Ken Taylor 'conspired wit!t Adams to convict him
and earn "a big, gold star."
Landhaf!l said Taylor encolir'
aged her to make false claims that
Landham· threatened her with a
knife and a ,gun during their 14year relationship.

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Aeioclated Prase Writer
CABIN CREEK; W.Va. - United Mine Workers President Cecil
Roberts didn't take the top job in the
wellspring of organized labor think·.
'ing the enil of the union was iq·sight.
· But~ he can see its demise - an
end, he says, made possible through
a mix of cheap coal. costly pollution
controls and unrealistic demands of
environmental activists.
"J...ike our brothers and sister~ in
the steel industry, the .me11 and
women who mine this nation's coal
are under assault as never before," he
said. '" The American coal industry
might well be eliminated." ·
At Roberts' order, about 30,000
union miners across the country
planned a a 24-hour, contract-sane,
tioned work sioppagc today, originally meant to .honor co-workers
killed on the job.
This time, however, the day will .
memotiillize the frail condition• of

America's most basic of smokestack
industr.ies. :ro Roberts. the future of
the U.S . coal industry -'- and the
cheap electricity ilprovides - hinges
on several things:
· • Stiffer air pollution standards
beginning next year under the federal Clean Air Act, the firs! stage of
which co!t thousands of jobs in the
high-sulfur coal fields of northern
Appalachia and the Midwest.
• A looming international global
warming treaty ' that would limit
developed countries' e~issions fmm
the burning of {ossil fuels , espectally coal, while exempiing big producer-consumers like China and Brazil.
• Environmental cltallengi:s to the
industry's most productive mining
techniques, especially the mountaintop removal strip mining that has
been the focus of protests in West Virginia.
On these issues, the union known
for its. fierce opposition to coal operators has allied itself with the indus-

•

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•

•

•

the Air Force should not be blamed for failure.
lgain. 'Glosson couldn't mention the word, saying
· ~ ~rikes on Yugoslavia intensified this week, only that the ••gradualism" of the campaign
so did the rhetoric from Wuhington warning igainst Yugoslavia " reflc:ctsan era we'd all rather
against expecting too much from bombs and mis- forget."
.
.
.
silcs."
.
,&lt;·
The Air Force strategtc plannmg officer
~·With respect to Slopping' ~~~ hnic cleansing~ likened the Yugoslav bombing to P~esident Johnwe.never supposed or reported that we had a si\- lion's "Rollinj! Thunder" air campatgn over Vietver bullet that would bring' tbat.!O a halt," sail! " nani that was designed to force Hanoi to t~e negoVi~ Ad~. Scott Fcy, operatiollllpirector for the . ti,tirt~ table. Then as now, such a campmgn.puts
Jmnt Chtefs of Stall.. !
·
the tnJ!tattve m the handS of the enemy, he satdAppearing Wed~y night on CBS's "60 a view echoed by Powell.
.
Minutes II" program, President Ointon said he
Dan .Kuehl, a professor at the NatiOnal
was aware of tbe military's concern over how air Defense University and an air strtke planner at the
PQWer is being applied.
time of the Gulf War, said, "The air pow~r. folks
"I understand the frustration of some of our -and I'm one of thorn- are very senstttve to
people in the Pentagon," Clinton said. "I have the criticism that;"''h, well, it's been six days and
worked very hard with them to give them the · the Serbs haven't stopped."'
.
maximum possible leeway, showing sensitivity
Air Force Lt. Col. Peter Faber satd the ·current
only to targets that miilht have JI!BI8inal benefits thinking within .the Air Force ~es aiistrikes ~ a
but cause a lot of collatenl ~amaae. I ~on't want . ~ay "to creal~ me~tal concltss10n. and paralysts"
a lot of innoknt Serbian civtlia~ to dte because m an ene~y :w•th stmult~n~ous .strtkes that d•srupJ
they have ' a man running their country that's . commu~tcahons, electrtcJtY: .mfrastructur~. and
doing something atrocious."
.
other hnks that .connect ct!tzens. and mthtary
Clinton urged Americans to "have a httlc . forces to leadershtp. But the campatgn must ope~­
resolve here" and added, "We caq ol view this as ate intensively, around the clock. "The paralysis
something that will be instantaneously success- school requires constant pressure."
ful." · ·
Retired Air Force Col. John Warden, author of
Within the Air Force•. sensitivity io criticism "Air Campaign," an influential book on air
stems in part from suspicion and distrust in other power strategy, said Clinton oppose_d the Vietnam
services of doctrines extolling the decisive role of War but apparently neglected to study the military
air power, a debate tliat dates back to Army air- lessons in that campaign.
man Billy Mitchell's promotion of bombers in the
Clinton, according to Warden, "concluded that
1920s and '30s.
that's the way we go to war. We do things like
Retired Army Gen&lt; Colin Powell this week escalating. We do things like signal-sending, like
warned that the Clinton administration may not gradualism." Warden was one of the develope.,
be able to end the Kosovo crisis without inserting of the idea of stunning and confusing an enemy
ground forces into tbe region. "At the end of the ·with simultaneous attacks on an enemy's support •
day, if you wish to seize the initiative, you may structure, an idea first tested in the Gulf War.
have to do that,'' Powell said.
,
Though more violent in the short run, Warden
• In interviews with active and retired Air Force said such a campaign may end it conflict sooner,
officers, the Vietnam analogy came up again and · and save lives.

Cost of Lewinsky inquiry stands at $6 million-plus
By PETE YOST
Aeeocleted Prees Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Boosted by the millions.
he; spent looking ·into the Monic~ Lewinsky affair,
Kenneth Starr's investigation of President Clinton and
his wife is about to become the most expensive independent counsel inquiry ever.
Starr 's expenditures totaied $6.2 million in the six
months through Sept. 30, when the Lewinsky investigation was going full speed~ pushing the cost of the
independent counsel's 4 1/2-year inquiry of the presi.dent and Hillary Rodham Clinton to nearly $40 million, according to figures released Wednesday by the
congressional General Accounting. Office.
..
Starr real aced prqsecutor · Robert Fiske, w~o ·
already had spent $6 million investigating the Cliotons' Whitewater real estate dealings and other matt~rs . ·
: The most expensive independent counsel investigation to date was Lawrence Walsh's $48.5 million, sixyear probe of the Reagan administration regarding its
arms and money deals with Iran and its secret war
-against the communis!-led government of Nicaragua.
· The former Iran-Contra . prosecutor said Starr's
cbsts would jump by many millions of dollars when he
concludes his investigation, because legal costs for
. witnesses would be included at that point.
'
"I'm sure that Starr will exceed me (in costs)
before he's through," Walsh said in an interview.
Walsh said-that Iinder the independent counsel law,
people who were subjects of Starr's investigation but
who w.ere never indicted arc entitled to reimbursement
from the go.vernment for leg;ll costs. Among th~ many
people who may fit into that category are the president
- who was impeached but not indicted - and Mrs.
Clinton.
Elizabeth Ray, a spokeswoman for Starr, said, "The
monumental effort required to conduct the investigation 9f Monica .Lewinsky and others required unusual
commitments of re110urces."
; And wliite House SPQkesman Jim Kennedy said,

·Fewer farms, anc;t counting, Page. 2
Meigs girls crush FH, Page 5
FFA members honored, Page· t2

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Income and spending growth strong in February
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Claims fell by 6,000 to 289,000. A four-week moving
Aeeocleted Preee Writer
averag~ of claims, which smoothes weekly fluctuations,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans' personal rose slightly, by 250, to,293,750.
·
income increased at a robust pace in February.and their
Americans' spending, however, has been· supported
&amp;pending even faster, sending the nation 's saving8 rate · by more than job income. They're spending some of
into negative territory again.
their stock market gains - the Dow Jones industrial
Personal income increased a seasonally adjusted 0.5 average closed above 10,000 for the first time on Moopercent in February following a 0.6 percent gain in Jan- ~ day before retreating Tuesday and Wed.nesday -. and
uary, the Commerce Department said today. Consumer tapping into their home equity through refinancing.
That's produced the lowest personal savings rate
spending jumped 0.7 percent after a 0.4 percent rise the
month before.
sinoe the 1930s. It was minus 0.2 percent in February,
Both figures were expected.by· analysts and illustrate the fifth month in six at or below zero.
the strength of the U.S, economy during the first quarter.
In addition to wages, other income categories
Economi_sts had been expecting overseas economic tur- increasing were business owners' income, transfer paymoil to appreciably slow U.S. growth but now concede ments such.as Social Security, interest and dividends and
it didn't come, at least to any great extent, in the quarter rental income. Farmers' income fell. ,
just ended.
..
Spending was led by a 2.9 percent jump in purchases
The department reported separately .that construction. of durable goods, big-ticket items expected to last three
spending jumped a much-stronger-than-expected 2.2 or rqore years. Much of that was for autos. Spending
percent, the largest increase, ip eight months and the rose 0.6 percent for nondurable goods such as food and
fourth in a row.
fuel and 0.3 percent for services.'
Income growth has been supported by rising wages,
Construction spending in February was l.ed by a 4.7
up 0.7 percent in February. Demand for labor is strong, percent surge in government projects, reflecting a HJ.4
with the nation's unemployment rate hovering near a 29- perceht increase for highways and streets.
year low.
Commercial construction increased 3.9 percent, wiih
Reflecting that, the labor Department said today that gains in industrial projects, office buildings and retail
first-t ime claims for unemployment benefits held under stores.
.
.
300,000 l~st week for the ninth consecutive week, a
Residential construction rose 0.8 percent, including a
1.5 percentadvance for single-family homes.
·
stretch unprecedented since 1973.

Aprll2,1tee

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Gas. .prices .jump nearly 12 cents in two weeks
WASHINGTON (AP) - The American
.Automobile Association says gasoline prices
jumped by nearly 12 cents per ·gallon in the
past two .weeks, the steepest increase since
1990. '
.
The national average price of self,serve regular unleaded gasoline increased 11.8 .cents
since March 16 to reach ..$1.088 per gallon, the
AAA said Wednesday.
This marks the largest increase since August
1990, after Iraq invaded Kuwait, when gas
prices increased 23.2 cents, the association
said. '
Prices for other types of gasoline had smaller increases: self-serve mid-grade unleaded
gas is up 11.4. cents to $1.178, and self-setve

. . Friday

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[ry, including longtime nemesis Arch
Coal Inc. of St. Louis, the nation 's
second,largest coal producer. '
The alliance has disappointed
env)ronmentalists, who had cpunted
on the union 's rabble-rousing reputation to put it on their side.
"Don't they understand that this.
could ~an more j!lbs?" asked Lau·ra Fonnan, a spokeswoman for the
Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition.
" If they can 't use mountaintop
· remo,val to strip it,. ti!Cy'll mine it
underground ," a .much more laborintensive method. she contends.
Roberts ·called that idea "ridiculous;'' ·
·- ,.
" If somebody could tell me how
to mine this muc;h co3l with picks and.
shovels, l'd be glad to hear it," he.
said. "But it can't be done."
Roberts, the union's president
since 1995,_said he fias an obligation
to UMW members. He accused·some
environmentalists of living in a fan -

tasy world .
" I have to liv!' in the real world,"
he said.
, 'In the real world, coal prices have
.dropped steadily since the post-oil
embargo peaks of the late 1970,,
Roberts remembers coal selling for
$tOO a ton; now it goes for $20.
Roberts also must · confront the
problems of an industrial-age union ·
at the end of the 20th century - how
to make his union grow while mine
employment rapidly dwindles, and
how to finance health care and benefits for a growing pool of retiree~:
Between 1993 and 1998 alone, the ·
number of U.S. coal miners fell from
101,322 to- an estimated 80,000,
according to the National Mining
Association .
From a pre-World War II peak of
• a quarter-million •. the number of
union-represented rpiners surik to
3(),606 in 1997, based Qn data compiled by the U.S. Energy lnfpnnation
Administration.

�,

Commentary

Ptgl 2

Friday, April 2, 1999

Friday, April 2'

•

Death

Ohio weather

The Daily Sentinel 300·,000 fewer farmers

Saturday, Apr. 3

and counting ·

conditlcins,

By Jaek Anda,.n
farmers sell their cows, or through contract' farmA eoalition of 23 farm-state senators led by ·
and Jan Moiler
ers. Some lawmakers are concerned that the peek- Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Oluck Hagel, R·
This week, Dwight Peders are attempting to squeeze independent farmers Neb., have called for a formal White·House inves·
watched as a farm
·erson
out of the market by paying them less than their ligation into the "growing concentration" in the
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
auctioneer
sold
the
equipcontract
farmers.
agriculture industry.
.
74G-S102-2166 • Fax: 11112-2157
ment he's been .'using to
In 1918, after the Federal Trade Commission
. Agricultural economists say that, simply put,
grow durum and barley for
determined that five packers were slaughteri ng 70 big farms are growing because they can ha~~le
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
25 years.
percent of th~ nation's beef, Congress passed the low prices better than small ones. Take pig farm·
The auction wasn 't PedPackers and Stockyards Act. The ac.t made it ille- ing for example: The costs of production on farms
ROBERT L. WINGETT
erson's choice. The bank
gal for meatpackers to.."engage in discriminatory with rgore than 3,000 pigs are estimated to be .
Publisher ·
has already, told him he won 't make enough pricing practices or gi.ve unreasonable preference roughly one-third less than on farms with less .
money this year to save his last 720 acres. And it's or advantage to any person."
than 500 head.
not for lack of efforr. Pederson spends four or five
DIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'But because the pricing information is &lt;:onsid· · "Agriculture is undergoing a major paradigm:
Controller
Gene1111 Manager ·
days a week farming, and drives a tractor trailer to ered proprietary, only the USDA knows what the shift," said Dan Maternach, president.of the Pro-;
make ~nds meet. Before he' became a trucker, packers were paying for their meat. An' amend- fessional Farmers of America.
PedeiS&lt;ln worked as a mechanic during the day ment attached to last year's Agriculture appropri·
For centuries, Maternach notes, farmers them-'
T,. Sentinel w.lconw• ,..,.,.. fo th• ~ltor lrom ,...,. ott • brotld rM?~ of lopand farmed until two or three in the morning.
selves
ations
bill
would
have
required
mandatory
price
have driven the markets. " If they produced;
lu. ShOff ,.,,,. (300 word• tN l.u} fr•w tn. bHt chflnc. of '-lng publ'-'*1. '
The short North Dakota growing season •• 100 r~porting and country-of-origin labeling. But at .too much, prices went down. If they produced too·
Typ«J ,.,.,. .,. pnftrr«i •nd all may be R/twJ. Ea:h •hould lnchxJ• • Wgn•tu,.,
.
days in a good year ••
Ml~, 11nd dllytlm• phon• num~Nr. S,.clfy • dat• ",,.,...,. • ,.(.,.,.~ to • ,.- .
vlout llrflc,. or lett.,, Mill to: L11tt.,. to th• Kltor, TM Senlinel, Hf Courf St.,
leaves scant room for
PomMOy, Ohio 45769; or, FAX to 74~gf2·2f57.
er'rors. During last year's
harvest, Pederson lost
'
b"oth his mother and old·
est daughter. Then his
combine .motor blew,
costing him $16,000.
But what fragedy and
Excerpts. of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio backbreaking
work
newspapers:
could not do, low grain
prices have done : put
Pederson under. "I'm a
The Columbus Dispatch, Ma~h 28
.
.
50-year-old
man that's
A bill intended to ensure that critically injureqpatients are sent to the hosbasically
been
destroyed
pitals best-equipped to'treat them was all but dead in the Legislature . .
by
the
economy,"
Peder. · But lawmakers and the Ohio Hospital Association had the good sense to
son
says.
resuscitate the measure when they appeared- at last- to find the common
Pederson's situation
ground on whicl) to craft this important legislation.
is
not unique. Nation• Sticking points remain. The association and Rep. William Schuck, Rwide,
hundreds of small
Gol umbus, when they meet on April7, should get to work to resolve the dif·
fanners
are being forced
ferences.
··
out,
leaving
experts to .
Both sides have promised to work together to make a reality a statewide
trauma system which ·can save lives and alleviate the effects of seri&lt;Jus compare the rash of liq·
injuries. That's welcome news after years of discord over a previous bill and uidations to the farm cri(Jlncor over the latest legislation, which should be a priority for the General sis of \he mid-1980s.
Low prices, the result of
~sembly.
decreased
demand, are
• One hopes the parties can transcend their differences and agree on how
driving
many
of the farm
· to put this much-needed system in place. Already, Ohio has waited two years
forfeitures.
Market
tiX&gt; long to make best use.of its trauma facilities .
crashes in ASia, typically
a strong importer of U.S.
agricultural ·goods, are
Akron Beacon Jo~rnal, March 26
.
' . On good days, state lawmakers have little trouble convincing themselves partly to bl arne. .
But not every farmer
tOat they are capable of repairing the way Ohio pays for its public schools.
is
feeling
tlte pinch. Last
: They believe they are up to the challenge of reconfiguring the electricity
industry. Ask them to fix a misguided program that requires drivers to show · quarter, Iowa Beef
proof of auto insu·rance? Wei~ they seem determined to make matters worse. Processors, one of the
The Ohio Senate has approved legislation that would increase the·cost of · nation 's largest meatpackers, recorded record the ~ehest of a high-powered .group of lobbyists 'little, the prices went up. The paradigm we're '
profits: $205 million on $12.8 billion in revenues. led by the American Meat Institute, the amend- moving to is t~e markets driving production,"
the controversial verification-by-mail program.
While IBP's stockholder information credits ment was watered .down to a thr~e-month study Matemach said .
. In too many instances, drivers and notices have missed one another, or near·
"
strategic
growth," some on Capitol Hill are con- by Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., and Rep. James
In a report titled "A Time to 0\oose," thenIJ so. The state sends 5,400 proof-of-insurance requests to randomly selected
cerned
that
companies like IBP are banding Walsh, R·N.Y.
.
agriculture secretary Bob Bergland told Presiilent
drivers each week. Driver,; have 30 days to respond or risk losing t.heir.license.
togethet and using their near-monopoly status to
The threats had one positive effect: According Carter that unless the federal government
The potential for error goes beyond th'e reality of " lost in the mail."
squeeze
small
farmers
out
of
the
market.
to
farmers
we spoke with, hog prices rose 3 cents changed its policies, a few large corporations
Even a small error rate will translate i9to thousands of responsible citiUSDA
figures
reveal
that
four
m
·
e
atpacking
a
day
for
almost
a week.
.
would control the U.S. food supply.
zens grumbling about state government. Perhaps theE-Check people will be
companies,
IBP
among
them,
control
nea,rly
70
Meatpacking is just. Q~e of mariy farm sectors
pleased. Anger will shift to I-Check.
But the Carter administration·· and every suc·
·percent of the overall beef market. Further break- that is becoming more concentra\Cd. Returns on cessive White House occupant •• chose to do
down of the data reveals that the four packers equity for the top four cereal manufacturers, nothing. All of which helps explain why America
The (Youngstown) Vindicator, March 23
.
control as much as 80 percent of certain markets which control nearly 90 percent of the market, now has 300,000 fewer farmers •• and counting •
: Jules Verne had fantaSized about it in his book "Five Weeks in a Bal- within the industry.
.
have averaged 25 percent, while the percent of - than during the Carter administration. It's a list
IQOn. " Adventurers Steve Fossett and Richard Branson had failed in their
The packers buy ·their meat in one of two purchase price received by· wheat farmers has that now includes Dwight Pederson.
attempts.
.
":'ays: Eit~er frof!l sale barns, where independent dropped to less than 1 percent of the total price.
COpyright 1Wtl, Untttd Feature Syndteate, Inc.
:: But Bertrarid' Piccard, a Swiss psychiatrist, and Brian Jones, an English
pilot, have become the first to circumnavigate the Earth in a balloon.
: Their achievement is a tribute to their indomitable' spirits and to the tech•
no logical achievements that made it possible for the two men to remain aloft
'
- , at times, ~lose lo and altitude of 40,000 feet - .for nearly 20 days.
By TOM RAUM
"!f somebody has arbitrary saved?" Qinton said last week of
How can the United States·
: Perhaps breaking the sought·after record was meant to be accomplished Aa80clated Pr•• Writer
power in the country, then they act NATO's decision to confront Milo- get its adversaries to lil(e up to
b~ men w·ho were quieter and more introspective than the namboyant FosWASHINGTON (AP), ,.,... It arbitrarily. Whether they sign agree- sevic militarily.
sett and Branson, men who were less aware of their own fame and fortune seemed a familiar pattern: the Unit· ments or not; they can't be trusted,"
George Bush made the same pledges extracted lorgely by
and more aware of their having literally and figuratively transcended the ed States conducting airstrikes he said.
·
Hitler comparison in talking 'about the th.reat offorce?
inlolerance that divided the people of the earth beneath them.
against the country of an authoritar"nl'it's why force is needed," Saddam in 1990-91.
Not easily, when the adver: Being closer to God, it seems, was as important to Piccard as. the glory of ian ruler who ignored repeated Bugajs1&lt;i added. "Signing a paper is
Cuba's Fidel Castro has long saries are iroit-futed leaders
the record books and the million-dollar prize offered by Anheuser-Busch. threats and reneged on earlier meaningless with Milosevic. We been demonized by American politi·
promises.
·
should have dealt with him in a sim- cal leaders, 8s has Libyan leader . such as Milose;vic and Sad·
· Didn't that just happen ai few ilar way eight years ag()."
Moammar Gadhafi.
· dam.
months ago with U.S. and 13ritish
Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware,
Mickey Edwards, il former - - - - - - - . , . . . . - - - airstrikes against Iraq?
senior Democrat on the Senate' For- · Republican congressm~n from State Madeleine Albright. "Here we
v~sion
The United States wants eign Relations Committee, said "we Oklahoma who now teaches at Har· are in 1999 at the end of what histoI'm writing in regards to.~o ple parking on the sidewalks on Butternut
Yugoslav
President Slot&gt;odan Milo· have a different calculus now" and vard, said tl is problematic knowing. rians agree has been the bloodiest
Avenue in Pomeroy.
sevic
to
,agree
to stop his offensive that's why the administration finds thai a totalitarian leader may be ce~tury in the history of the world.
: Is there anywhere else they may park because when a person tries to pull
against
Albanian-speaking
citizens itself dealing more oftpn with lead· agreeing to something only because And we know how the blood was
Qut on the road from the end of Seventh Street where the small park is. It is
of
the
Serbian
province
of
Kosovo ers it considers to be thugs.
of the threat of force- and then to created and why it happened.
.
very difficult to see if traffic is coming toward the car because of the vehi·
and sign a peace agreement -just
·The world of superpowet:S was see him repeatedly brea~ his
"It happened because there were ·
cles. •
.
.
as
it
wants
Saddam
Hussein
to
keep
made
up
of
"fairly
cautious
actors,"
promise.
"It's
a
little
like
the
evil
dictators or aggressive leaders ;
It is dangerous because I know people who have to pull out almost into
his
post-Gulf
War
commitments
to
Biden
suggested.
"We
are
dealing
'
Peanuts'
comic
strip,
where
the
in
eountries
who felt that their own
the road to see what is coming and if they don't pull back in time they run
allow
international
inspections
of
now
with
a
group
of
tin-armed
dicta·
football
always
gets
yanked
out.".
space
was
not
big enough and that
\he risk of getting their front ends of their vehicles hit because the other driweapbns
sites.
·
.
tors
malevolent,
dangerous
dicla·
But
sometimes,
there
really
is
no
they
had
to
expand
it," she said in
V.ers can't see them eithe~.
In
a
similar
example
of
possible
tors.':
alternative.
"You
always
hav.e
to
defending_the
use-oLforce.-against, .
: So, is there a solution to t~e problem?
"These guys don't operate under keep trying in any case until it's Milosevic.
Branda DavldGn broken promises, the Clinton adminBut Sen. Ted Stevens; .R·Aiaska. ----t-'"
.
·
Pomeroy istration and members of Congress the same rational basis that we do. clear it won't work. We_t,-y to do
are alarmed that communist-run They are cunniq,g. They are smart. everything we can to avoid having a said he's troubled by a proc~ in
Nbrth Korea might be continuing· to • But they have fewer cards to play, military solution," said Edw~rds, which pledges ani extracted from
I would like to comment about an incident that happened to my mother- develop nuclear weapons -. in vio- and their cards .are less obvious," who was the senior Republican on foreign leaders by military force i~·law and myself on March 23. While sitting in my car at ou.r local grocery
lation of a 1994 agreement.
Biden said.
the House Appropriations subcom- or with a promise to slop using (orce
a car backed into us and blil'ilped' us pretty good. As I was getting out of my ') How can the United States get its
The quality of thug-dom may be mittee on foreign operations.
-as in.dealing with Milosevic.
c:ar to check the damage, the man quickly sped away. I realize you can ' dversaries to live up fo pledges intensified by the rhetoric used I&gt;Y.
As to demonizing enemies, "I
"That is using our armed fortes
xtracted largely by the threat of presidents and politicians in describ- think everyone needs to demonize as a process of negotiating; not for
· e·xpect·behavior like this sometimes if people get scared because maybe they
have no insurance or something, but in this case the man who sped away )· orce?
·
·
·
ing adversaries as evil - to help oui enemies. When you're dropping the purpose for which we maintain
from th.e scene was a former law officer.
I
Not easily, when the adversaries rally public support for. confront&amp;· bombs on people, it's easier if you our mi'litary to defend our n~tional
I was only.going to tell him we were all right and there was just a slight \ are iron-fisted leaders such as Milo- tion.
think they're pretty awful people," interests abroad," Stevens said.
place on my rubber bumper. Nothing to fuss about. If I" were vindictive I I sevic and Saddam, suggested Janusz
"What if someone had listened to he said.
could have pursued the matter, but I won't do that to you sir. However; I do Bugajski, director of Eas! European Winston 0\urchill and stood up to
When dictators break their word,
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum
hope you at leasi feel ashamed of yourself but I somewhat doubt it. So I just studies for the Center for Strategic Adolf Hitler earlier? How ..nany it's important to not delay the =~::,::~=~=~~':!:":
have this to say: shame on yo·u.
.,
and International Studies. ,
people's lives might have been inevitable, suggested Secretary of

I Mananotd l••no• l •

ol Cotumbua 141'/74' I

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¢~-~
..~Show••

Sunny Pl Cloudy ClOudy

Sidewalk parkers obstruct

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SfRACUSE - Sutton Townsh1p
tru&gt;tees, Monday, 7.30 p.m. Syracu'e
mumcipal building .
PORTLAND - Lebanon Town-'
sh1p trustees, Monday, t I :30 a. m. ·
town&gt;hip bu ildi ng.
(

SATURDAY
SAi.EM CENTER- Star Grange
778, regular meeting, 8 p.m. with
potluck &gt;upper, Saturday, 6:30p.m.

LETART - Le1ar1 Township
trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. office build- ;
mg.

.

HARRISONVILLE Harri sonwille Lodge 411 , F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30p.m. at the temple. Master
Masons welcome.
MONDAY
RACINE- Racine Village Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the
municipal huilding.

SALEM CENIER - Columbia :
Tow nship trustees. Monday, 7:30
p.m. ~~ the fire stati on.

RACINE - Friends of the
Library, 7 p.m. Monday, Racine ;
Library.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND- Rutland Township '
trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m. at the Rutland fire station. ·

Patricia Ann Rupe McKay
Patricia Ann Rupe McKay, 64, Warren, died Thursday, April 1, 1999 at
her residence.
Born May 7, 1934 in Akron, daughter of the late Gerald and Sara Reynolds
Rupe, she was a retired registered nurse, a 1952 graduate, M Middleport High
School and a 1955 graduate o[ the Holzer School, of Nyrsing in Gallipolis.
She was a member of the Ohio Nurses Association and served as president
of the Warren Private Duty Nurses Association, and was a lifetime member
of the Heath United Methodist Church in Middlepon.
·
Surviving are her husband, Joseph D. McKay, Ph.D., whom she married
on March 22, 1957; two daughters and a son-in-law, Sara and Michael Mills
of Baz.etta Township, and Cynda Tindle of Warren; a son, Dr. Vincent l McKay, M.D., of St. Petersburg. Fla.; and four grandchildren.
.
No calling hours will be held and cremation will take place. A memonal
se rvice will be held at a laier date.
,
'
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to' Hope Lodge,
in care of the American Cancer Society, 11432 Mayfield Road, Cleveland,
Ohio 44106. Arrangements arc by the Robert H. Roberts-Clark Memorial
Funeral Home, Warren.
'
·

POMEROY - Salisbury Town·
ship trustees; 6:30p.m., township hall
Units of the Meigs County Emer- on Rocksprings Road.
gency Medi cal Serv1ce recorded&lt;seven calls for assistance Thursday.
WEDNESDAY
Units responding incl~ded :
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Townshi~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
trustees, , 6:30 p.m. Wedn esday:
12 a.m., Mapl es Apartments, Pagevillc JownhaiL ·
Pomeroy, Gladys Blessing, Veterans
Memorial Hospual ; ·
10:29 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Jewel Curtis, VMH, Pom, roy squad assisted;
1.2:36 a.m., Maples Apartments,
Gladys Blessing, VMH;
I:53 p.m., Broadway Street, Vio- ·
let Young, treated at the scene, Middleport sq uad assisted;
7:41 p.m·., State Route 7,'
Pomeroy, motor vehicle accident,
·James Cooper, VMH, Pomeroy squad
assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
8: 16 p.m., Broadway Street,
Charles Young, VMH.
SYRACUSE
6:20p.m .. Third Street, Freeman
Alshire, VMH.

from 4.4 percent in February and was
the lowest since February ~ 1970,
when 'the rate was also 4.2 percent,
the Labor Department said today.
The rate for Hispanics, which fell
from 6.7 percent in February to 5.8
percent in M;rrch, was the lowest on
record since the department began
calculating a separate rate for the
group in 1973:

s2-u ......................... $t09.7l

Reader Services
Correction Polley
0.~ ..ie eoocen In oil lloriH II to
.c..l11tlto If,•• know or •• error to I
IIOI)'o .-II 1~1 . IIWII'OOII al (7&lt;10) 9912155. We wit chock your lorormolloo
oid ...... • cornctlon tr wor111nled.

be

New• Department.-

·•••be• ••

Tite - · ·
99l·liS5. Deport·
• mat estea11D11 1re:
• .. • Gtpral Mllllpr...................:.... Ext. 1101
' : Nn~ ................................. :........... Ex~ 1101
•

· or Ext IIOS

Other S.rvlcea

have the Red Cross or some other
organization visit thetn. l think it's
very clear from the photographs at
least one has been beaten."
'
The Yugoslav announcement
Jewell Curtis, 95, of Pomeroy, died Thursday, April I, 1999·at Veterans
added a new and un settling element Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
to an expanding Balkan connict.
He was born January 31, 1904 in Meigs County, son of the late Henry
The Clinton administration already is and Plooma Carper Curtis. He attended the Trinity Church, was a member
under fire from critics who say the&gt; of the Pomeroy-Racine Masonic Lodge 164, and was a fonner membe~ of
NATO air campaign cannot stop the machinist local.' He was retired from Okan Harbour, where he was
Serb aggression against ethnic Alba- employed as a machinist.
nians, and tkat a humanitarian di sasHe is survived by two daughters and a sOn-in-law, Mary Stark of Phoenix,
ter may result.
Arizona, and Carol and David Riggs of Pomeroy; grandchildren, George and
"It is incomprehensible to me that Gail Francis of Pomeroy, Mary and Tom Rose of Orlando, Florida, Donna
the U.S. military wquld send a three- Francis of Boston , Massachusetts, Craig Francis of Phoenix, Marianne Stark
man patrol near the borders of Ser- of Phoenix, Julia and Thomas Sayre of Pomeroy; Carl Gheen of Orlando,
bia," Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., Bruce and Debbie Gheen of Racine, and Bryan .Gheen of Pomeroy, njne great·
said in a telephone interview. He said , grandchildren; six stepgrandchildren; five stepgreat-grandchildren; and scvthe U.S. military had issued ·eral nieces and nephews.
Yugoslavia a " virtual invitation" to
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by hi s wife, Nonna
capture American s9ldiers.
Weyersmiller Curtis, in 1995; two brothers and sisw s-in-law, Blake and Elma
To augment a stepped-up NATO Curtis, Leo Samuel arid Jessie Curtis; a daughter and son-in-law. Ruth and ·
bombing
campaign
·against Lawrence Francis; a son-in-law, Edward Stark; and one grandson.
Yugoslavia, the Pentagon ordered 13
Graveside services will be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, April ,6, 1999 at
more F·ll? A stealth fighter-bombers the Rock Springs.Cemetery, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Roland Wildman ofli- .
and three cruise-missile-equipped dating. Friends may call Monday, April5, 1999 from 5-7 p.m. in the Fish·
warships to join. NATO forces that er·Funeral Home, Pomeroy, where Masonic services will be held at 6 p.m.
have been hitting Serb military tarMemorial contribution may be made to GOD'S N.E.T, P.O. Box 17 1,
gets since March 24 to· halt the Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
uprooting and killing of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo provinc'i:.
The radar-evading·F·ll7s, which
this weekend will join II in the
BoU order in eiTect
OES to meet
·region, can penetrate air defen ses for
Residents · living al ong' Spring
Racine Chapter 184, OES, will
bombing runs deep in enemy territoAvenue of Pomeroy are advised to ·meet Monday, 7:30 'p.m: at the hall .
ry, although one F-117A apparently
boil their water before using il for There will be mock initiation.
was shot down by Serb anti-aircraft
drinl&lt;ing or cooking purposes, John
. fire last Saturday.
,
Anderson, village administrator, said Lodge sets meeting
"We have made no 'secret of the
that the boil order will remain in
Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164,
fact · that the Serb ·air defenses are
effect until further notice.
F&amp;AM. will meet Wednes4ay, at the
robust and remain so," said Bacon,
hall. Refreshments will be served.
acknowltidging NATO forces have
had difficulty reaching targets
Easter egg hunt
because of air defenses and bad
An Easter egg hunt will take plac
Holzer
Medical
Center
weiuher, although tanks and troops
at
~artinger
Park Sunday at I p..m. .
Discharges March 31 -Charles
have been hit.
.
under
the
sponsorship
of (he MidThe Navy warships - an attack Tindall, Juanita Ginther, Charles dleport Fire Department.
submarine, destroyer .and· cruiser McCulloch.
Discharges April I - Ralph
from the USS Theodore Roosevelt
Henry.
Kay lee McCain, Mark Richtiattle group - ' were expected to
arrive in the Adriatic Sea to join -the mond, Charles Nesbitt, Kevin Kelly,
OCTOBER SKY
NATO force within days, a defense Michelle King, Mary Johnson.
WED. BARGAIN NIGHT
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
official said.
ALL SEATS $2.00
Back home, yellow ribbons, a Ewing, son, Wellston.
(Published .with permission)
symbol of families waiting for soldiers to- return from war, decorated
hometowns of the three soldiers captured Wed.nesday oy Serb forces
while on a reconnaissance mission
along the Macedonian border with
the Serb province of Kosovo. They
at Eastern Elementary School
were paraded on Serb television .
looking bruised, scrllped and tired but
Classes on Tuesdays &amp; Thm:sdays
'
in good health.
&amp;,..iltlll'!-.
3:
30
- 4: 30
" Steven and those other two soldiers don 't deserve this," said Rosie
Child Care Available
Gonzales: mother of Spec. Steven
Gonzales, 21 , of Huntsville, TeKas.
For MQre Information, Call 992-6893
' ''They're young men with their
whole lives ahead of them who were
put in a bad situation. We 're hopeful
.,
for t~e safe return of'all three."
Gonzales was captured along with
Staff·Sgt. Andrew A. Ramirez. 24, of
'
Los Angeles and Staff Sgt. ChrinoC[R'I'lfiED IN&amp;TRUCI'OR
pher J. Stone, 25, of Smiths Creek,
Mich.
·

.'

Meigs EMS runs·

.

Jewell Curtis ·

'

Alhertlliq. ......,..,:·.................... .Exl. lt04,
Clin.. lloo ...:..................... :........Exl. llOl
ausllled Ada ............................. .Ex!. 1100.

Pay to watcll the sneak prevley,o of
- - KI-(PG-t3)
starring Draw Barrymore and
David AlqueHo at
Friday only and

7:30 PM
slay

•
·without negatives
in minutes!
Make enlargements
with ease. Zoom 1n.
Remove red-eye.
EVen add borders.

Hospital news

'

, fit Togetker Aerobics
Jeannie Owen

'

to watcll F~ 01 Nalure
at 9:(5 PM lor FREE

.Create

Meigs announcements

•
,,

'
township
garage on Joppa Road

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township .trustees,' Monday, 7:30 p.m.

AEROBICS.April 6th

26 -kJ ............................$56.68

..

..

,.,~

s.-

The Community Calendar It
publlahed as a free aerv1ce to non·
llront groupe wishing to announce ·
meetings and special event1. The
calendar It not detlgned to promote •lea or fund raiHra of any
type. Items are printed •• apace
permits and canl).ot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.

Jobless rate hits 29-year low

{Continued from Page 1)
mine whether the soldiers were cap- ·
tured in Macedonia or had blundered
into Serb territory while on the run.
Yugoslav authorities said tbey were
caughl'in Serbia and resisted arrest.
If caught in Macedonia, the soldiers were abducted ·illegally and
should be released immediately,
Bacon said, echoing President Clinton, who sa1d Yugoslav !'resident Slobodan Milosevic would be held
responsible for their safety.
If captured in Serbia, the soldiers
should be treated humanely as prisoners of war under international law,
which prohibi\s trial for anything less
than a war crime, Bacon said.
Defense Secretary William Cohen
call,ed the planned Serb military proceeding a "kangaroo coun" and said
it was unclear where 11 might be held
·or·on what charges.
"There should not be a trial, "
Cohen said Thursday night on PBS'
"NewsHour W[th Jim Lehrer" program. "They .should be entitled to

Letters to the editor

~utland

~~~

·Community calendar

U.S. condemns Serbs' decision

'

hetir the greatest news ever to reach the ears of
The same glad Easter tidings .
mankind: "He is not here; he is risen."
are ours today: "He lives, our
Easter is our best reason for not giving UR •. no kind,.wise, heavenly Friend."
matter how unpromising the outlook in our lives.
And there is more.
A huge stone may be blocking us from what
"Because I live, ye shall live 1,.J~
we most desire in life. As we look at our situation also," says 0\rist.
:·realistically," there may seem to be no po~ibil·
This can !"can many things.
ity ihat it can change for the better.
But surely it means that the
As far as we can sec, there is nobody who can God who raised Jesus to new
"roll us away the stone."
life will do the same · for us
.
But those who know the Easter story will today •• that the God who restored the brokeQ remind themselves that there is an angel presence · hopes and broken dreams of !he women will
.in our lives which can not only "roll us ~way the restore our broken hopes and broken dreams.
stone" and unmask our fears as faithless fancies,
Surely it means that if we, like the women; .
It can also grant us even more than we wished for. never lose sight qf our highest dreams and pursue :
The women were willing to settle for an open them resolutely ·.· in good times and bad, through
tomb. When they got there, they found an empty thick and thin, even in the absence of any encourtomb as well. He who gave mell!ling and joy to aging signs •• we will see those.dreams, though
their lives and was the fulfillment of their highest they may sometimes appear to be de'ad ·· come to
dreams for' themselves was no longer dead but glorious life.
·
'
alive.
·
Copyrtght1ttt NEWSPAPER ENTETRIBE AUN.

Rain

was

Difficulties of negoth:iting with tyrants

I am writing in response to the letter about foster parents and children
needing help.
I fully agree 100 percent with what this person said in the Jetter. It has
been told and talked about for several years how the Meigs County Olil·
dren's Services has gotten inr.olved in family matters that don't concern
them. They don't know the whole situation concerning the child and/or the'
• par!les -involved, but yet they like to sit down in one's front room and try to
tell parents and grandparents what is, in their view, in the best interest of the
child.
·
Now I would like 'to know something. How in the world can a social
". worker know what's best if they don't have any clue as to how the family
works with the child, how they work. together as a unit, thus creating a loving home for the child to feel safe and happy in?
In other words,. why do Children's Services get involved in matterS it
knows nothing about? It's been proven that families can get along with each
other without the .interference of those who seem to want to only boost their
ego.
. Branda Jinks

r ...,.,,

~;
... ""'"

Jewell Curtis, 95, Pomeroy, died Thursday, April I, 1999 in· Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
.
Born Jan. 31, 1904 in Meigs County, son of tiJe late Henry and Plooma
Carper Curtis, he attended the Trinity Churcli, was a member of the Pome~oy­
Racine Masonic Lodge 164, and was a fonner member of the machinist locaL
He was .retired from Okan Harbour, where he was employed as a machinist.
Surviving are two daughters and a son-in·Jaw, Mary Stark' of Phoepix,
Ariz., and Garol and David Riggs of Pomeroy; 13 grandchildren.nine greatgr;mdchildren, six stepgrandchildren and five step- great-grandchildren ~sevcral nieces and nephews.
·
He was also preceded in death by his wift!, Norma Wey'ersmiller Curt!s.
in 1995; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Blake and Elm a Curtis, and Leo
Samuel and Jessie Cunis; a daughter and son-in-law, Ruth and Lawrence
Francis~ a. son-in-law, Edward Stark; and one grandson.
Graveside services wiH be I I a.m. Tuesday in the Rock Springs Cemetery, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. Friends may call
at the Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy from 5·7 p.m. Monday.,Masonic services will be held in.the funeral home at6 p.m.
.
Memorial contribution may be made to GOD'S N.E.T , P.O. Box 111 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576~.
·

By The Associated Press
A rainy weekend is in store for most Ohioans, the National Weather Service said.
..
.
,Showers and possibly thunderst9rms are expected to develop &amp;head of an
approaching low pressure· system.
·
.
Ciouds will start building over the state tonight and the stonny·co nditions
w.ill develop on Saturday and continue through Sunday, forecasters said.
Temperatures will 'continue to be mild, with lows tonight in the 50s and
highs on Saturday in the 70s.
·
The record-higti ·temperature for this .date at the Columbus weather sta·
tion
82 degrees in 1963 while the record low was 20 in 1907 . Sunset
tonight will be at 6:56p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:13 am .·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Weather forecast:
nation's
unemployment rate declined
: Tonight...Considerable cloudiness. A chance of sprinkles late. Lows in the
to
a
new
290year low of 4.2 per~ent
mid 50s. Light southeast wind.
.
.
.
in
March
- and was the lowest on
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A ·chance of showers and thunderstorms m the
record for Hispanics ..::.. d~spite conafternoon. Highs75 to SO, Chance of rain 50 percent.
tinued
job losses in manufacturing ·
: Saturday night...Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderand
sluggish
job growth elsewhere.
stonns. Lows m the m1d to upper 50s.
The
seasonally
adjusted rate,
Extended forecast:
based
on
a
survey
of
households,
fell
Easter Sunday... Mostly'cloudy with a chance of showers. Continued warm.
Highs in the 70s . ,
.
Monday ...Cioudy with a chance of showers. Lows from the upper 40s tb
the lower 50s, and highs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s ..
Tuesday ... Cioudy with a chance of. showers. Lows 45 to 50 and hig~s 65
toW.
·
'

A tribute to their indomitable spirits

By George R. Plsgenz
Somethihg was bothering the women ·as they
made their way to Jesus'.tomb on Easter morning
to anoint the body with spices.
"Who will roll us away the stOne?" they asked
among themselves.
It was a good question.
.
Mary Magdalene had been at the tomb on Frfdlty afternoon when the huge stone was placed in
front of the grave. She could vouch for the fact
. that it was too big for three women. to move.
The surprising thing is that · these friends of
Jesus •. knowing what they were up against, made
up their minds to·take the journey .anyway. ,
Of course, when they got there, they found that
their worries were needless. Somebody •• was it
an angel? •• had rolled the stone away.
They would never have known this, however,
if they had decided it was no use, under the'cir·
cumstances,to make the trip and had stayed home 4
instea4. They would have missed being.the first to

.

Warm but wet conditions
slated ·f or Easter weekend

To do the responsible thing

TammyCoza;:rt~~:

.

.

Sticking points remain

Social workers can't
see whole situation

'

'.

Cl 1999 AceuWeatllor, tnc.

Editorial v·o ices

otices

Jewell Curtis

'E.staDrisfutf i111948

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

It's easy with the

Kodak

~

ons Last
Special ile
$3.00 Per x10 Sheet
Ask about ou~ different packages
available on each slieet
.)IOV

by at tfie.Officefor rvetai[s
700 EMt 7lrM.. St.
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•

The.Daily Sent~~!

Sports

aptors top ·pacers
88-87; Jazz, Sixers,
Nuggets-also win

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

•

•

hiS mmd
: Only thiS .lime, he dJd
another
fhp-flop.
Dunn~ an extraordmar.y 30-hour
penod, Jm.' Hamck was mtrodu~
as Georg••. s basketball coach, dei:Jd·.·
.ed to re~a•n at Rhode Island because
he d1dn I want to leave two sons, tben
went squ11mmg back to the Bulldogs.
The upshot, when all :"as sa1d and
.don~ Thursday..then . sa1d and do~e
agam: ldam~k IS still the Ge?rg•a
coacht. B~t n w~s . ~ardly the •deal
way 0
gdm re UJ mg a program
that slumpe the last 1wo years under
Ron Jirsa
..
· .
.
I certamly belteve some temporary'concem s have been raised," university president Mic~ael Adams said
at a hastily arranged news conference. "How long- lasting that will be
remains to be seen." .
.
On Wednesday, Harr1ck -vas tntroduced as the new Georgia coach after
spending the last two years at Rhode
Island, where he 'led the Rams to consecutive NCAA tournaments. Harrick
called his decision a "no-brainer"
and spoke optimistically of building a
top program in the Southeastern
Conference.
But Adams; a close friend of
Harrick's since they both worked at
Peppei'dine in the 1980s, noticed later ·
Wtdnesday that the coach see':"ed
troubled . By Thursday mormng,
Adams' fears were confirmed when

Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA standings

T!&gt;nigbt's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DiviSion

fum

.

ll' L

Orlando ......... ....................... 22
Miami .................... :......... ... 19

New York ..
.. ......... 18
Philadelphia ..................... ...... l6
Washington ......... .. :............ n
Boston ........ .......................... 10
/Sew Jersey ...................... )....6

M

10
10'
· 14
14
17
19
24

.688
.6SS

I '~

.S63

4

.m

.m

.345

s
i-o~ ·

.200

IS

Central 0\viskm
tndiana .. .......... ...... ..... :.... ......20 II
l}e~r oit ........................ ,......... 20 12
Qilwauke.e ...... .................. .... l8 12
&amp;tlanla ....... ,.......................... l9 13
lbronto .................... · ... 16 14- •
('LEVELANO ...... .. .. .........14 15
Charlotte ....
. _... 12 n
Chicago ..
.. 9 22

.64.5
.62.5

-·-

.600
.!i94
.!i33

483
414
.290

~

I,,
I ';

3\

s

7
II

_ll'J..M

.....;.........22
.. ... ..22
.. .21
.. .. , .17
.............. 11

.733
.688
.677
.567
21 ' .33J
.. 9 D .18 1
. 6 25
194

Y:~ n c oU\' er

Pun land ..
.A. Lake• ~

i

cattle
hD~:IIIX.

. incrmnen1o
tioldcn State .

8
' 10
10',
13

l'adfic Divi!iion
........... 24 6
21 11
15 1 ~
15 16
.. ... 14 18

....... 13

.800
-656
50Q
4R4
4l8
433
lOU

17

.1 27

l A Chppcrli

Soulhusl Division
Corollno ...........................J t 28 16
Florida ............. ... ......... , .2129 18
· Washington ....................... :\0 38 6
Tampa 8 ay ... ,... ,............... I7 !H 6

-·-

Ctntral

Iwa

Miami at N~:w Jersey. 1 p.m.
Washinzton at Tcxomo, 3 p.m
Orlando al" Delroil, 7:30 p_m_
Sacramento a1 Minne1ota, s ·p.m.
L.A . Clippers at San Antonio, 8:30p.m.
Phoenix m Porliand, 10 p.m.
Gol&amp;n S1111e 111 LA. Lakers. 10:30 p.m.

'11lforllo !\It Indiana 87
Detroit 107. Chkugo 75

..
:

New York 7M. CLEVELAND 74
Philndclphla KK. fo.1iami B4 .

I '~

l
12'-:
14

6 82 221 187
I I 15 211 191'
7 59 114 236
12 ~8 178 233

88 218 1.88
68 \9.5 2'11
6'7 206 2 10
5.5. 181 2~2

'Sunday's games

Thursday's scores
(

N.Y. Rangeu nr New Jersey, 3 p.m.
Detroit at Dallas, 3 p.m.

Boslon 3, Montreal 2
Washington S, Aorida 3
Pittsburgh 3, Ouawa 3-tie
St. Lo uis 3, Tampa Bay 0
Philadelphin 2, Nashville I
PhQenix 4. Calgary I
Toronto S. Edmonton 1

Transactions
Amniun Ltaaue
BALTIMORE ORIQLES: Sent OF Johnn y
born." OF Eugene K.inasale and INF A.ugie Ojeda 10
thei r minor l eAgll~: comp. Rrauigned INF Esteban
Beltre, C Tommy Dowis, RUP Dave Evlln! and OF
Mike Murphy to their minor lr:ague camp.
BOSTON RED SOX: Purchased the cqnlracts of
LHP Rhea! Cormier and I ~ Brian Daubach from

Anaheim at N.Y. Rangna. 7:30p.m.
Chicago at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
·Son Jose 111Vancouver. 10 p.m.

Saturday's games
Philade lphia at Bos1on. 1:?10 p.m.
,New Jersey at Pinsb\qh, 1:30 p.m.

'

·Eastern again put 12 runners on
base, but was unable to get them
home in dropping a 4-2 softball
game to host Belpre Thursday night.
Eastern is now 2-1 and Belpre 30.

NollonaiLaoiU&lt;
ATLANTA BRAVES: Acquirc4 RHP Justin
Speier from Florida for a player to be named.
CHICAGO CUBS: Signed RHP Hideo Nomo to
o minor-leogue contract .• .
CINCINNATJ REDS: Pun::hast!d the contract of
RHP Scou Willi11mson from Indianapolis of the
lnu~m:l !inna ll..ea~Z Ue.'

Valerie Karr got the start for
Eastern and suffered the loss with no
strikeouts, one walk and three hit
batters in three . innings of work:
Stephanie Evans came on in relief to
walk one and strike out none.
Eastern's defense . made five errors.
Adams picked up the win with seven
strikeouts and four walks .
Belpre picked up a run in the sec-·
o nd when Thornhill was hit by a
pitch,' Mollohan reached on an error,
and Petty hit a 4-3 ground out to
score Thornhill , 1-0.
Belpre ·scored again in the third
when Wayan was hit with· a pitch,
Eastern made another error, Adams
walked , and Mollohan drew a bases
.loaded walk to force home the second run , 2-0.
Belpre went up 3-0 in the fjfth
when Adams singled and scored on a
·
Thornhill triple; 3-0.
Eastern fought back. The Eagles
had put at least two runners on base
·every inning bul the fourth , when
Becky Davis was the lone base run'
ner with a walk. Finally, in .the sixth.
•

EASTERN CONFERENCE

21

AUantk DiVIsion

ll' L I llL .li£ GA·
II 91 220
14 86 229
18 '86 218
10 72 202

180
20.'
180
204

..

[F\11\J.IItll
I' '
'

'

Buy LeMox H~~lunip this Spring and
get a three day, two alight Mekc;~ ~t any
Fairfield 1M., nationwide. Free brelkfast

a

close as the Heat would get.
· George Lynch and Eric Snow
each hit two free throws in the final
12 seconds to seal the outcome.
"I expect a lot more out of our
guys, from energy to .effort -to . an
intensity,standpoint," Heat coach Pat.
Riley said.
.

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MAIJAMA'S

..·.

'c

'

Heal, Cool aad Save'

..
~.

'.
.!

•

,. .
'

••

tom of the inning to score four runs.
Amber Vining, Shannon Price and
Tangy Laudermilt each singled, a
fielders choice a triple by Tanya
Miller and a Abby Harris single gave
Meigs a 4- 1 lead.
The Marauders blew it wide open
in the second inning by sending 10
girls to the plate and plating five
runs. Laudermilt had a double for
Meigs in the inning and Vining,
Price, Stephanie Wigal, Brooke
Williams, Miller and ·Harris all had
singles.
,
. Meigs added two more in the third
inning on a. walk, a hit batter and a
single off the bat of William s·. Meigs

made it 16-1 in the fourth 1nn1ng ,
Bethany Boyles had a triple in the
inning, Price a double, Miller and
Harris had s1 ngles to go along with
two walks and an error.
The Lancers plated five runs in
the fifth and one in the seventh
inning 'to close qUI th~ scoring, but it
was not enough as Meigs had posted
their third straight win.
'
Laudermilt pitche(l the first five
innings io pick up the win , Amy .
Hysell wem the final two innings.
ll1e two combined ta give up four
hils , walk two and strike out five
Miller had a triple and a pair of
single's to lead Meigs. Price added a

double and two singles, Harris three•
SJngles, Laudermilt a douhle and a
single , Wigal, Vining and Williams
Jwo smglc s each. Boyles a triple , and ' . ·
Hy&gt;ell a single.
· •
Highland was the Starter and loser
for the Lady Lancers, she gave up 19 · •
hits, walked three and walked four.
Jona&gt;. FoS&gt; itt , Bond and Callaway., ,
had singles. for the Lancers.
Inning~ ·
Federal Hocking ... 100-05(} 1=7-4, I
Meigs .............. 452-500-x= 16-19-3 ..
Highland (LP) and Bond
Laudcrmilt (WP), Hysell (6) and
Hams

ea·sebal.l Marauder·s defeat Lanc·er.s 6-4

family,
Harrick
again, saying
he changed
wanted tohisjoinmind
the
Bulldogs after all. Then it was up to
.
Georgia offi_cials to decide if they . By DAVE HARRIS
wanted Harrtck back.
.
Mei gs jumped out to a 5-0 lead
After discussing the situation for and held on for a · 6-4 win over
just over an hour by telephone, Federal Hocking in a·TVC baseball
Adams aqd athletic director Vince game Thursday evening at Meigs
Dooley, who was tourlng CJvJI War High School.
battlefields in Virginia with his
Meigs jumped out to a 1-0 lead in
gr~ndson, d~cided i&lt;? stick with their the first inning. Jeremiah Bentley
ong mal c)lmce.
.
. . . wal~ed and stole second, he then
" It was a very emotional deeJSJOn scored on a Rusty Stewart si ngle
that involved his fa mily," Dooley · M ·
d
5 0 1· d · · h
'd "If.
h
e1gs opene up a · ea m t e
sa• ·
II was any 01 er reason, 10 third inning. Once again it was
be very frank, I would not understand B 1 h
h'
ed · h
it and I would have moved in another
ent ey I . at got I mgs start Wtl a
direction in a hurry." •
one out trrple. Stewart and Ramsburg
"Sometimes you ~geLin a no-w in hit back-to-back smgles and J.T.
situation, .. Adams said. " I believe his Humphreys dou.bled to center field to
commitment to Georgia is real. I
believe he will rebuild Georgia bas·
ketball." ·
·
'
Eastem.charges admission
Harriek, who was scheduled lo
to spring athletic events
meet with his Rhode Island p(ayers
The Eastern Athletic Departme nt
and hold a riews confere~tce to announced that spring sports adm isannounce his re.turn, didn 't attend sion will be $1 for baseball, softba ll ,
either. Instead, he released a state- and track.
.
'
ment jhough Georgia expressing
The admission is· a token fee to
regret Tor his indecision.
help offset the increasing costs of
'This has been an emotional time spring sports.
and it's been all about family,"
--Harrick said. '.'I had to get back to my
Darkness halts
family and sort things out. Once I did
Ea•tern-Belpre baseball gam~
that ... Georgia is where I want to be,
The Eastern Eagles baseball team ,
it 's where I need to be." ·
• , was leading Belpre 6-3 after

Meigs, on top 4-0. ijumphreys then
made it a 5-0 co ntest when he· scored
on a single off the bat of Nick
Dettwi llcr.
· ·
The Lancers scored three cons in
the sixth inning on the strength of
singles off the bats of Matt Edwards
and Brian Poston, a walk, a sacri fi ce
and a pair of Meigs errors.
Meigs added an insurance run in
the sixth inning, Adam Bullington
singled and stole socond. After Rusty
s
tewart reached on a single ,
Bullington scored on a wild pick off
attempt ~t first.
'
.
The Lancers close'd out the scar-

Meigs County sports briefs

Davis walked for the rhird time,
Chasatie Hollon walked, but was
forced out on Tiffany Spencer's 6-4
ground out. The ground out brought
home Davis with the firs! run for a 31 score; Then Kristen Chevalier sin·
gle~ home Spencer to .' tighten the
score at 3-2.
Belpre added so!"e insurance in
the sixth when Hinzey reached on an
error, was sacrificed · to second by
Petty, and scored on two more errors,
4-2.
Eastern put two runners on in the
seventh with two out walks (Ev;,tns
and Davis),' but left them stranded as
the tying runs .
Eastern hitters were Chevalier a
single, Hayman a double and single,
Karr iwo singles, and Danielle
Spencer a single, B.ecky Davis
walke9 four times.
Belpre garnered just three hits; an
Adams double, A. Adams single, and
a Thornhill triple.
Eastern goes .to Federal Hocking
Monday. ·

four innings when the game was
ca lled l or darkness. Eastern was
unabl e to get a bus and got there a
half hour after the scheduled start.
Results of that game will be submitted when the game is comple ted.
Southern postpones
diamond games
The Southern baseball and softball games scheduled with Vinton
Coun ty were postponed Thursday
night due to inclement weather.

Get the late.st ·in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel

CD

.

up II hits, walk four and strike out
two. Casey Jo~es, ·Carroll, Jon
Sec hkar. Mall Edwards, Pasio n,.
Gue&gt;S and Brunty all .had singles for _
the Lancers hits.
Me1gs is now 2-1 on the year both
overall and '" the TVC. Me1gs will ':
!ravel to .Jackson for a doubleheader'
on Saturday and will host Belpre o~ ,
Monday.
lnnine ll!.llW
Federal Hocking .. Jl00-003 - 1=4-7-3
Meigs .....
104,0 IO·x =6-1 1-2
Brian Poston (LP). Keith Carroll
(4 I and Matt Edwards
J.T. Humphreys (WP) and Nick '
Dettwjller

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•

Inglna 1l!lali
Eastern ....., ..... ...... .000-002-0=2-6-5
Belpre ....................OII-0 ll-x=4-3-1
WP-Adams and Mollohan
LP-Karr, Evarrs (4th) ·and D.
Spencer

ing in the top of the seventh inning.
Keith Carroll ·was hit by a pitch .
advanced to second on a wild pick
off atlempt . and went to third on a
ground 0~1 . Carroll lhen scored on a
·wi ld pitch.
Humphreys, 'who picked up the ·
win for Meigs, scattered seven hit s.
walked four anll struck out five. He
also hit a hatter. Stewart 'led Meigs
with three singles. Humphreys added
a double and a single, Dettwillcr a
pair of singles. Bentley a lriple.
Martin. Ramsburg and Bullington
each added a single .
Poslon was lhe starter and loser
for the Lancers with relief help fro m
Carroll ., The two combi ned to give

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NBA action ... (Continued from. Page 4)

FREEWEEKEND"GEtA~wAY!

••

By DAVE HARRIS

Belpre softballers get
4-2 wio .over Eastern

League.

B-ball

Tonight's pmes

No latemt. po paymepg for fgQ
Take
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NHL standings

)1.-N(wJeuey..
4022
Pittsburgh ................. .... ..16 25
Philudelphia ......:............. J -l 2J
N.Y. Ranger~ ......... .-,, .. J l J3

·

)8
12
66
40

168
68 PO 189

106 2tS ISO
88
77
71
61

Pawtucke.l of lhe International taaue. Sent. OF J011
Nunnally outrighl Ia Pawtucket Si&amp;ned RHP Ramon
Martinez. Placed RHP RamOn Martina and DH-1 8
Reggie Jeffeuon on the 1.5-day dia.tlled Jill
"kANSAS CITY ROYALS: Sent ·OF Lea
.Norman, OF Scali Pott: and RHP Terry Mathew• to
their minor leasue camp. Placed RUP Hipolito
Pit:hardo on ihe I ~-day d1sabll:d list.
•'
NEW YORK YANKEES: Signed OF-.18 . Willi
Mo Pena to a fi ve-year contract. Released LHP lony
Fosns and RHP Jim Bruske. Optioned RHP Todd •
Erdos !O Columbu!l of lhe lntcmadonal l.e&amp;Jut.
OAKLAND ATHlEfiCS: Released LHP Mark
Holttmr:r.
•
TA MPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Named John P.
Higgins u:ni or vice prc:sidcnl·a~hniaistratioll and
general cou nsel. Placcd "RHP Rick Gorecki on the
! ~· day disabled li st. Optioned LHPTyrcll Wade and
LHP Alan Ntw1111n 10 Durtlam of the lnternational

Dallas at St. Louil. ) p.m.
Buffalo arMontrul, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Calgary, 7 p.rf1.
Anaheim ai N.Y.Islanders, 7 p.m.
· Washh1ston at Tampa Bay, 7:05p.m.
Ottawa at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Carolina al Chicago, 8 r.-ni.
Los ~ngeles at NBlhvil e, 8 p.m.
Edmonton ac C9 loradn, Q p.m
V~nco u ver .nl San Jose, 10 p.fn.

TAKE ME.OUT, COACH!

Hockey
II
' 11

160
217
115 1

Dlvl ~ lon

Northwest Division
·y-Colorado .. ................ ...... ~ 9 26 10
Calgary .. .. .... ,.. ......... ... ..... 28. 35 12
Edmonton ....... .............. ... 28 ~6 II
VancoiJver.:...... ........ ... 2242 II

II)'.

4
9
9'

220
88 242
81 188
79 193

ll' J. I &amp;

x·Oetroic .
..38 30
· St. Louis
.... 32 ) I
Nashville
....... 26 ' 2
Chicago ....................... _23, 40

Charlotte at Atlanta. 12:30 p.m.
New Jersey tll Boston. 1 2 : ~0 p.m.
Miami at Washingt On, 3 p.m.
:
New York at Indiana, 3:30p.m.
Houston at Sean\e, 6 p.m.
Philadelphia ;:u Toronto. 7 p.m.
Milwauk~ at CLEVELAND. 8 p.m.
Vancouver m Olicago. 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippm 111 Denver. 9 p.m.

fum

"f~ursday 's sc~res

,.
..

. I

9~

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Sunday's games

Mldwcsl Division

Wtah ..
Houston ......
!an Anlonio .
~innesota ...
Dallas.. .
Dcn~ r .. .

Milwaukee at Boston, 7 p.m. .
CLEVELAND at Phi ladelphia, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Atlanrn, 7:30 p.m. ·
· Indiana at Charl ene. 8 p.m.
Denver at Minne sota. 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers :n Phoenix, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Seattle at Penland, 10)0 p.m.
Utah at Golden Slate. 10:30 p.m.

. Saturday's games

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Lam

Northeast Olvlslon
x-Onawa ...... ................... ..42 21 II
x-Toromo ..................... ......41 28 · 6
Buffa.Jo..............................'3 3 2S 15
Bos1on ....~ ......... ;....... ..,... ,.:n 28 13
Mon~real .. ....... ................ :.29 35 10

Paclnc' Division
z-Dallas .......... .. ........... .....47 I ~ 12
x-Phoe nix ........................ J 8 26 12
Anaheim ...... .....................33 29 II
Slln Jose ................. .......... .27 30 17
L.osAnge les ........ ...,·....... ,.. 28 .41 S·
t•clinched pl aroff berth
y-clinched div11ion title
:.-clinched conf~rce tith~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5:

Meigs -girls crush Federal Ho·cking 19-7

Sentinel Correapondent
Meigs, behind a I 9 hit attack
defeated Federal Hocking 19-7 in
Tri-Valley Conference softball action
Thursday at Meigs High School. .
The Marauders with the win raise
their record to 3-0 on the season both
overall and in the ·Ohio Division.
Meigs will host Jackson in a doubleheader on Saturday.
The Marauders spotted the Lady
Lanc~rs a 1-0 first inning lead , as the
Lancers took advantage of two
By PAUL NEWBERRY
Meigs errors to score ·without the
ATIIENS, Ga. (AP) - For the
JIM HARRICK
benefit of a base hit.
second time in less than four years, a Harrick said he had a change of heart.
Meigs came right back in the bot' coach. embarrassed Georgia .by
In the afternoon, after flying back
a~cepung a head JOb, then chang•~g · to Providence and consulting with his

NBA roundup

N.Y. Jslanders ................... 21 45 ' 9 .5I- 172 224

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Harrick
decides to
stick with
decision.
to remaili.
at Georgia

seven assists, Marcus Camby had
Three nine points and 10 rebounds, and
NEW YORK (AP)
straight losses have turned the Pat&lt;ick Ewing added. 13 poinli,
84 with 47 seconds lefl. Travis Best
Cleveland Cavaliers into a sub-.500 including two free. throws with
then
hit 'a · three•pointer to give
team with perilous postseason seven-tenths of a second left to ice
an 87-86 l~ad, bu( Carter got . : Indiana
prospects.
.the victory.
the
winning
basket on a putback with ••
11te Cavs (14~ 15) blew a 13-point
Shawn Kemp had 25 points and
By
The
Associated
Press
1
8
seconds
remaining after Charles
lead Thursday night and lost 78-74 to 13 rebounds for Cleveland.
. ,
How
well
are
the
Toronto
Raptors
Oakley
missed
a shot·.
.'!
the New York Knicks, Cleveland had
After trailing most of lhe game,
playing?
Let
.Chris
Mullin
give
his
·
"I
felt
the
pressure,
but'l
just
fell
two chances to tie the game or go the Knicks used an 11 -0 run midway
opinion.
.
into a groove," Carter said.
ahead in the final seconds, but Derek through the fourth quarter to go
·"They're
playing
the
best
ball
in
Miller had 16 points to lead the •
Anderson missed a wide-open three- ahead 71 -65, their first lead since
lhe
league
right
now,"
Mullin
·
s
aid
Pacers,
who have lost their last three
pointer and. Brevin Knight missed a early in the game.
games
by
oDJ point:
Thursday
night
after
Toronto,
behind
· 12-footer.
Cleveland came right back with
31
point~
from
Vince
Carter,
defeat"We
didn't
have anybody. who
"I thought Derek was going to . an 8,2 run, holding the J{nicks withed
the
lndiana
·Pacers
88-87.
could
·guard
Carter,"
Indiana coac h
make. that one," Cavs coach Mike ·Out a field goal, and ti.ed it '73-73
It
was
the
seventh
straight
home
Larry
Bird
said.
Fratello said. "And Brevin's was a when Kemp scored off a n offensive
victory for the Raptors and their lOth
. In other NBA games, Utah edged
ch[p shot. It 's just one of those rebound following t:ovo.missed free
in 12 games overall. At 16-14, they Houston 88-87, Denver defeated
things. If it goes' in, we're still play- throws by Andrew DeClercq.
.
have matched their victory total for Seattle 11 3- 110, San Antonio beat ·"
in g.." ,
Ewing. convened two free throws
all
-of last season.
·
Vancouver 103-91, Detroit clobbered' "
Instead, the Cavs find themselves with 39 's~conds left, Ketnp made
"Vof,e
beat
a
ch~mpi
onship-cilliber.
Chicag~ 107-75, New Jersey defeat·
m lOth place in the Eastern one of two with 23. 1 remaining, and
.team,
tarter
satd
as
the
Ra(!tors
cd
Atlanta 90-85 and Dallas downed
co nference, I 112 games behind Chi lds made one of two with 20.7.
tied
with
'Philadelphia
for
the
·
the
Los Angeles Clippers 93-84.
stayed
Philadelphia mid Toronto in the race left to put New York ahead 76-74 '!nd
eighth
and
final
postseason
spot
in
76ers 88 Heat 84
''
for eighth.
·
set up the Cavs' final chance.
the Easter~ Conference. The 76ers
At Miami, Mat; Geiger scored 17' ,;.
The Cavaliers wi ll have a chance
Latrell Sprewell returned to New
defeated
M1
am1
88-84.
of
hi s season-high 25 points in the ;.
to make up some of that ground York's starting lineup for the first
The
Raptors
have
suddenl
y
second
half and· pulled down 10
tunighr when they play the 76crs in time since the second game of the
become
a
hot
ticket
in
Toronto,
a
rebounds
as the 76ers ended a threePhiladelphia.
season, but sat on the bench . for ·
hockey
town
getting
its
first
taste
of
game
losing
streak and a nine-game
" I was real pleased with the almost the entire final eig ht minutes.
NBA
games
th.
a
t
mean
somethmg.
skid
against
the
Heat.
effort," FratcHo said. "That's the
"Y&lt;;&gt;u ' re goi ng to ride whatever
mterest
JS
llulored
It
was
the
seven-footer
's best out·
Much
of
the
type of performance we've been unit is doing welf;j' ·coach leff Van
towa~d
Carter,
.the
leading
candidate
ing
in
the
four
games
since
coach
looking for the last couple of nights. Gundy explained.
NO,
SHAWN!
The
New
York
Krilclca'
Marcus
Cilmby
(right)
to
be
.the
Rookte
of
th~
Year.
Larr)'
Brown
took
him
out.
of
the
We had the lead at 1,3 points and they
And in this case, that finishing
blocks
tha
layup
.
of
Cleveland
forward
Shawn
Kemp
during
Wtth
.
t
he
sco
re
ued
at
82:all
,
starting
lineup.
Allen
Iverson
added
just started cutting it down . · [t was unit was comprised of Childs, Ward,
iu!l a simple case of us turning the · Camby, Ew ing and Houston as the Thursday night's NBA game In Madison Square Garden, where the Carter shpped w1th Regg•e M11ler. 24.points for the 76ers, but just six of
·
guardmg· htm, b.ut managed to keep those came in the second half.
h;all over. leading to easy shots at the Knicks won for the third time in four Knlcka rallied In the fourth quarter to win 78-~~. (AP) .
---~~~~-~~~~~~-;...~"l"'-~~~~-~!"
·
his dribbl~, get on hi~ feet and l!it a
Miami scored 12 straight. points
basket. "
games.
the
starting
five
but
had
only
II
time
on
the
bench
.
"That's
just
the
fadeaway
JUmper
to
g1ve
Toronto
the
midway
through the fourth quarter to
: Chris Chi lds sparked New York
Sprewell, who was unhappy co mpoints
on
.3-for;l)
shooting
in
30
min
'
way
it
is
and
you
have
to
deal
with
it.
lead.
.
.
.
.
.·
.
pull
to
80-79
on PJ. Brown's 17-foot
with nine of his II points in the ing off the bench over the previous
utes:
"It
was
one
of
those
nights
when
.
After
R1k
Sm1ts
lied
tl
agam
Wtlh
jumper
with
2:09
left, but that was as
fo urth quarter, Allan Houston scored 16 games, replaced the injured Larry
1
"
l'm
not
even
pressing
the
you're
not
feeling
it
on
the
floor,
but
a
JUfnper,
Carter
lnade
an
acrobauc
16, Chao'lie Wa~d had 14 points and Johnson (sprained knee ligament) in
issue," Sprewell said of his extended we had other guys step up."
driving layup to put Toronto up 86(See NBA on PageS)

New Jersey 90. Atlanta 85
Dallu 93. L.A. Clippers 84
San Antonio 103, Vancouver 91
Denver 113, Seattle 110
Utah 88. Houston 87

•

Friday, April ~. 1999

1999

Knicks· notch 78-74
win over Cavaliers ·

..... •

l

Karl Malone's jumper with 2.7
seconds to play was the ,game-winner
as Utah erased a 15-point fourth
quarter deficit to snap Houston's
nine:game winning streak.
Utah's dramati'c comeback over·
shadowed a stellar garrie by Hakeem
Olajuwon, who ·had 32 points,
including the 25,000th of his career.
' The Jazz won a\ hom,e for the 25th.
time in their last 26 games and \!eat .
Houston ·for the seventh straight
time. Bryon Russell led the Jazz with
25 points, and Malone added 16.
Malone hit a layup 'in the third
quarter for his I0,5 14th career field
goal, passi ng John Havlicek for. sixth
place on the NBA career list.
· The Jazz avoided losing three
straight for the first time si nce
January 1997 .
Nug11ets 113, SuperSonics 110
Chauncey Billup$, scored a career. high 32 points and backcourt partner
Nick Van Exel added 31 for Denver.
Billups was I(}for- 18 from the
field , including 4-of-9 on three·
poiin e~s~_Vail" Exel was 11 -for-23,
lhcludmg 6-of- 10 from long range.
Antonio· McDyess had 19 points
and nine rebounds for Denver, which
was 30-for-36 from the foul line.
Gary Payton had 33 points and II
assists for the SuperSonics, who
dropped to 4-11 on the road.
Spun 103, Grizzlies 91
•
.

.

At San Antonio, Tim Duncan
scored a career-high 39 points to lead
the Spurs to their 15th victory in 17
~ames . ·
.
Duncan was 19-of-3 1 from the
field and grabbed 13~ rebounds . He
topped his previous scoring high of
35, again~! Golden StateJast season.
Sean Elliott scored I 4 points for
the Spurs. Shareef Abdlir-Rahim led
Vancouver with 27 points.
Spurs center David Robinson
missed ilie game with an inflamed
left knee.

Pistons 107, Bulls 75
At Auburn flill s, Mich., the
Pislons had a season-high 38 assists,
including 16 in the first quarter, as
they shot 60 percent .- their .best
effort of the season.
·
Joe Dumars, playing · in his
t,OOOth game, scored 18 points as
the Pistons won their si~th straight,
including three in three nights.

1996 MERCURY
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V-'6, Auto, Air .Cone!., AMJFM Cass.; 11~. Cruise, All Power Equip.

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v:6, Auto, Air Cond., AMJFM Cass, Tilt, Cruise,.AII Power Equip

Only 814,880 .

·

Nets 90, Hawks 85
' New Jersey overcame .J4-point
deficit againsl visiting Atlanta, but
lost: Jayson Williams for the season
with a hroken leg. ·
Stephan Marbury scored 19 of his.
27 points in the second half and
Keith Van Horn returned from a twogame absence and'scored 24 .
'Manrlcks 93, Olppen IW .
Al Dallas, Micl!ael Finley scored
22 points, including three ke)l baskets down the stretch. as the
Mavericks snapped ·a five-game Tosing streak. ·
'
Steve Nash had 12 points, nine
assists and seven rebounds, Gary
Trent had 23 points and I 0 rebounds
and Shawn Bradley added 16 points
and 13 rebounds for the Mavericks.

J •

Phone
740-992 ~ 2196

461 S. Third
Ave.

Middleport

...
•

Only 819,480

Sale Priced 813,880

.

.

•

�-

,

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, ~prll2, 1999

Friday, Aprll2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Consumer group targets surcharge on ·ATM usage
&gt;

By MARCY GORDON
AP Buelness Writer
WASHINGTON -More than 90 percent of banks charge consumers for
usmg an A'!l-1 machme that doesn't belong to their own bank, up from 71
percent a year ago, a consumer group said Thursday.
The average surcharge found in the survey ts $1 .37, up from $1 .n a year
ago They averaged $1.42 for big banks (those among the nallen's 300
largest), $1.30 for small banks and 98 cents for credit unions
The U.S. Public Interest Research Group released its survey on the third
anniversary of the dectsion b.y the two largest automated teller networks owned by Visa and'MasterCru:d- to allow banks and other ATM opera,tors
to charge a second fee.
The surcharges, whtch are paid to the bank operating the automated teller
mach me, come on top of fees customers pay to their 9wn banks when they
use another bank 's ATM.
The nation's bankers' say the surcharges are outweighed by the 24-hour
conven)ence for customers and are needed to make the machines profitable.
"Today consumers have more choices than ever to get -cash when and
where they wanltt," Donal\! Ogtlvie, executive vice president of the Amer-

Yahoo! plans $5.7 billion
'

By NOELLE KNOX
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Yahoo! Inc. ts
buymg Bro~dcast com Inc. for $5.,7
billion in stock, addmg the Internet's
leadmg supplier of'·radio and video
programs to Yahoo!?s growmg array
of services
.
The transactton announced today
puts Yahoo ' m a sohd posttton to take
advantage of the' ht gh-speed future of
the Internet
Broadcast com ts perhaps best
known for tts Web-broadcasts of John
Glenn's second launch into space and
the Victoria's Secret faShton show.
But the company's serv.tces are
expected to grow m popularity as
connections to cyberspace get faster
and easier.
' P
•

The acquistllon "really positions
Yahoo! to play a defiqing role as we
'see the rise of audio and video con-·
tent on the Web," satd Paul Noglows,
a San FranCISco-based analyst wtlh
Hambrecht &amp; Quist.
"Fr:Om Broadcast.com's perspecltve, tl wtll make thetr servtces available to a much broader range of users,
considering Yahoo' attracts 50 milhon unique users to tis site a month."
Yahoo! agreed to pay $130 a
share for Broadcast.com's stock, a 10
percent premtum over Wednesday 's
closmg price of $118.18 3/4 on the
Nasdaq Stock Market. Shares of
Broadcast.com had run up in recent
days on reports the two compames
were talking about a deal.
Broadcast.com investors wtll

. A 1997 report by congressional investigators also found increases tn the
surcharge amounts and in the frequehcy of surcharges.
The Justice Department's antitrust dtvision last year started looktng into
whether the nation's largest ATM networks are tllegally preventmg small
banks from ehminatmg the double charges.
Former Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y.. until recently chairman of the Sen-,
ate Banking Committee, and Rep. Bernard Sanders of Vermont, the House's
sole Independent, have proposed measures to ban ATM surcharges.
'
A ban was rejected a.few weeks ago by the House Bankin~ Committee.
which overwhelmingly approved instead a measure that would require ATM
surcharges to be clearly disclosed at the teller machmes.
Connecticu\ and lowa have prohibtted the surcharges by order of their
banking commissioners.
The PIRG survey also found that:
• Banks are earning an estimated $2.1 billion a year from ATM surcharges.
• Nearly 25 percent of surcharging ATMs surveyed either had no stgn posted on the machine warning of the fee or a stgn that didn't disclose the correct amount. In those cases, consumers have to wait until they see a message on the computer screen disclosing the surcharge, but they get a chance
to terminate the transaction tf they don't want to be charged.

tcan Bankers Assoctatw_n, said today. He satd the surcl\;lrges "have led to
an explosiOn of new ATMs_in places that previOusly couldn't support them
due to low usage, such as theaters, hospitals and neighborhood markets."
The nation 's bankers say the surcharges are outweighed by the 24-hour
convenience for customers and are needed to make the machines profitable.
The survey covered 336 banks and 31 credit unions,in 23 states and the
District of Columbia, out of some 9,000 institutions nationwide.
The survey, conducted by the group each year, charts a dramattc rise in
the frequency of ATM sutx:harges. ll found that93 percent of banks charged
consumers for using another bank's machine in March, up from 71 percent
recorded a year ago and 45 percent to March 1997.
Ed Mierzwtnskt, the group's consumer program director, satd, ''Consumers
should not be charged twice to use the ATM only once."
. .
"The double-dipping ATM surcharge ts an outrageous example of ,.. gougmg by banks," he satd .. "Banks ratse fees, invent new fees and make it harder fot consumers to avoid fees."
ATM surcharges conttnue to increase, the new survey found The most
common fee ts $1.50, up from $1 a year ago. They range from 50 cents to
$2.50, up from a range of 25 cents to $2.50.

acq.~isition

receive 0 77 of a Yahoo share for
each Broadcast.com share.
News of the deal filtered out after
markets had closed Wednesday.
Yahoo!'s stock fell $3.92 3/4 to
$168.37 112, also on the Nasdaq.
Founded in 1994 by Stanford
University doctoral candtdates David
Filo and Jerry Yang, Yahoo! is one of
the premier destmations on the Internet. The company's turbocharged
stock, whtch has risen 264 percent in
the past 12 months, haS turned toto a
currency to snap up rivals.
Broadcast.com wasn't cheap. The
Dallas-based company, which went
public in July, has seen its shares rise
1,213 percent in just eight months.
The company, however, tsn't makmg any money yet. Broad~ast com

lost $10.5 million on revenue o~ ,,.
$11.4 million for the nine months
ended Sept. 30.
·
Yahoo!'s premium for a company
in the red didn't seem to bother
Yahoo! shareholder Charles Lax, a
general partner w 1th Sof!Bank Yenture Capital.
"What else 1s new?" he said.
"Htgh-speed access (to the Internet)
is very important, and this is just an
anchor acqutsition for that."
Thts is Yahoo! 's second major
deal thts . year. The Santa Clara,
Calif.-based company announced the
$4.58 btlhon acquislllon ofGeoCtiies
Inc. m January.
GeoCiues, based in Los Angeles,
ts the No. 5 Web destination and has
been used by more than 3 million

By MICHAEL WI:IITE
AP Business Writer
LOS ANGELES - With rock- .
bouom ml prices and mergers by
rivals threatenmg his company last
year, Arco chatrman and chtef executive Mike Bowlin launched a quiet
search for a merger partner.
After unsuccessful overtures to
Sll)aller and comparably stzed com,
p~nies, Bowlin in January called BP
Amoco, a huge multmattOnal big
enough to swallow Area and gtve
shareholders a significant premmm in
the process.
The fate of Atlantic Richfield Co
was revealed Thursday when the two
companies announced that BP Amoco would acquire Arco 10 a $25.6 btl, lion stock deal that will create the
: world's second-largest otl company.
The deal , expected to save the
combined companies about $1 billion
a year, would be the etghth merger of
the past six months in an mdustry
shaken by more than a year of plummeting otl pnces and mcreasing

Apostol1c

I

Hope llopltot O.urdl (South«a)
Pastor: Jim Ditty
S?O Grant St., Middleport
Sunday scllool- 9:30a.m.

Ash Street, Middleport

Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday St:Nice ·7:00pm
Sunday School- 10 a.,.
Wednesday Service-7:00 p.m.
Rutland Flnt Bapclll Clluith
Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
Worship -10:4S a.m.

Easter Servtcea
Sunday School
9:3pA.M.

Just Try Our
Welcome
Uoyd, D. Grimm, Jr.
Pa11or

,.

Marriage licenses ,
The following couples were
tssued marriage licenses recently in
Judge
Thomas Mallhew Bailey, 20, and
Crystal Lynn Rose, 19: both. of
Racine; David Walter Frim, 29, and
Robyn Lynn Rife. :32, both of Vinton;
Elmer Charles Brandt, 80,. and
Alexandra Vasiiyevna Fedorova, 52,.
both of Coolville. ·

Minister: Doua Shamblin

Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.rh.

Hk:kory HUio Claw-ch orc•rlll
Evanplist Mike Moore.
Sunday Scllool - 9 a.m.
Wonhlp · 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Servicu • 7:00p.m.

Sliver Rua Btptltt
Pastor: Bill Little:

Easter Worship
10:30A.M.

Singsplretlon Sunday
Evening II 6:00 P.M.
followed •v
refreshments and i
time of fellowahip

Bradford Chun:b ol Cbrlot
Corner of Sl. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Sunday Scllool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

ML Ualonlloptlll
Pastor ; Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
Eveoing • 6:30p.m.
·
Wednesday Sen~lcea- 6:30p.m.

Pastdr : Gene Morris

Sunday School- 9:30 a.m. '
Sunday WorshiP. - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday Btbte Study • 6·00 p.m.
Old llolbel Free Wllllloptlat Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
Thursday SeiVICOS • 7:30
HIIIJide lloptllt Chard!
St. Rt. t43 just of! Rt. 7 .
Pastor: Rev. James R. Aaec, Sr.
' •SUndaf School·lO t.m.
WorshJp • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services.7 p.m.

121,150*
V-8 Power
• Power Seat

o Rem ole

o 3800

School - 9·45 a.m.
Evening- 6 p .m
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.·

o Power Windows

120,450*
• 3800 V-6 Power

a Locka

Worship • 11 a.m.

o Prestige

Packlge
• Totally Loaded I

Anllqull)' Bapllot
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
WorshiP.· 10:45 a.m.
SundaJ Evening· 6:00 p.m.

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Grand Prix GT

Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedntlday Services. 7 p.m.

Cat holic

• Traction Control

Power,Wlndqwa I Loeb • Aluminum Wheels
• Loadedl
• AIIFM CaaHitt

Church of Christ

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Flreblrd
• C"-'11111111 .
WhHII

' o Aluminum
o

Loadidl

...,_ Cbu~ ofChrlll
2t2 W. Main St.
Minister: Danny Bi11
Sunday Sehool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 a.m., 7-p.m.
Wednesday Sen~lces - 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Wflllldt Churcb oiChrlll
332~ Children~ Home Rd.
Sunday School - 11 a.m.

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Sunflre Sun &amp;.Sound

Nazar ene
Mlddloport Cll..... of theNPuto" anaory A. Coadill
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 Lm .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servacc!l • 7 p.m.

Worshap ~ 9a.m.
Sunday Sdlool-10 a.m.
Thursday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.
Joppo
Paslor: Bob Randolph
Worahlp • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Twpptn Pl..aa SL Pnl
Pastor: Shuon Hau11man
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7:30 p m.

Episcopal
G....,. Epl,.....pol Cbun:b
326 E. Main S1., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev, Kalharin Fosler
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Cieri)'
Holy Eucharist aad
•
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.
www .froen~l.neV-deaneiy

Holin ess

Comm1111lty O.un:h '
Pistor: Rev ~ Amo~ Tillh!!
Mala Stree1, Rutland
Sunday School--!1:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship-10:30 a.m .
Sunday &amp; Wednesday Scn~ico-1 p&gt;m.

Doav!Uo llolkteu Churt•
310.57 State Route 325, Lanasvl[e
Pastor:-l;&gt;r. J D. Young
Sunday school- 9.30 a.m. ',
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 If.JD.
Wednesday prayer service - 1 p.m.

\·

Ceatral Cluller
Albury (S1racaR)
Pastor: Chad Emritl&lt;
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wonhap • 11 a.m.
Wednesday services· 7:30p.m.

Enlt':l'rloe

Past:or: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worsh1p -·9 a.m.

Flomooda
Pastor : Keath Rader
Sun~ay School - H.i a m.
Worsh1p -11 am

FomtRua
Pastor: Cllad Emnck
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Worsh ip· 9 a.m.
Thursday Servicca • 6!30 p.m. ·

'

c~~urc~~

ReodnlleFellowtblp
Qurdt oltlae NOJOIOH
Putor. Tereu W•ldcd:
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wcdnesd11y Services · 7 p.m.
II

sy.....,..oun:h oltheN........
Pastor,·Robert J. Coen
WOOS Radlo-10:30 a.m. daily 9 a.m. Sunday
WJ05-TV 27-3:30 p.m. Sunday
4-4:30 Sarurday
Sunday Scllool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - lO·JO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servaces • 7 p.m.
Wcdnesd1y Kids for Chnst- 7 p.m.•

I

......,., Cl!urdl oftht Nuomoe
PISIOr: Rev. Uoyd D. Clrimm~r .
Sutiday School --9:30a.m.
Wonhlp - t0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.IVic:eo • 7 p.m.

'

CbatorCburdoo(the N Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Servacca • 7 p.m.
Rutlaad Cburcb ol the NUII'fH
Pas1or: Rev. Samuel W. Buye
'
Sunday School • ~:30 Lm.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvicos - 7 p.m.

PortlaDd Flnl Cburdo of t h e N Putof: Mark MatsOn
Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Morntna Worship- 11:15 a.m.
Sunday S.rvl"' · 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Meipt&gt;n New Lima Rd
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wedneoday·7 00 p m
Friday-7,00 p m

J/4 mile put fon

,

Clltto. Toberude Church
Oifton, W.Va.
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worahip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1cc - 7 p. m.

LonaBouom

Pas1or: Sieve Reed
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. lnd 7 p m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Fnday - feUowsh~ semce 7 p.m.

o LCIIdedl

Sunday, 2·30 p.m.

Full Goopet O.urcb ol the U.ta1 s.. tor
Rt.338, Antiquity
•
,,. Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst Pas1011: Jim Morris
•
SeNioes: Saturday 7:30 p,m
•

HaniloavWt CotamUIIItJ Cbun:b

Pas1or: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
EDdllme H01111 of Pn)'tr
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor Robert Vance
Sunday worah1p • 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30 p m

Pentecostal
..._-'-tnbly
St Rc. 124, Racine
PastOr: Wilham Hoback
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evemna • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Mltldleport l'mlfcotlal '"
l'hird Ave.
Putor· Rev Clark, Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evemng - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Filth Valley Ta~ Churcb
Bailey Run Road
•
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson ·
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Ttlursdoy SeiVIc:e - 1 p.m.

1118 El.t Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457H

•

•
Srnaote F1nl Uolted Pmb1ferian
Pastor Rev K.risana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m
Worship • 11 a.m.

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m. •

u.m-.lle .......,_ Churcb
1

'
Dyuvllle Commutty_Clllftlt
SundaY School • 9:30 a m.
Worship - 10:30 a m , 1 p m

Mldcllepo&lt;l Pmbyterlu
Sunday School - g a.m
Worship • 10 a m

Morre Cllopel Cburcb
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship· 11a.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.

Seven th -Day Ad ventist

Faltb Goapd Cllorcb
Lona Bottom

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 · 4~ a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

ML 011.. c'oao-ky Cbun:h
PIIIOr: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evenlna • 7 p.m.
Wedaeday Service - 7 p.m.

Valtod Faith Cllarcb
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Putor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn,.day Service - 7 p.m.
Full Goopel u p 33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a m
Evening 7:30 p m.
.Tuesday&amp;. Thursday· 7:30p.m.

•

Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m

s....tla-Day

Alb-

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Rby Llwinsky
Saturday Services:
-Sabbllh School- 2 p m
1 Worollip - 3 p m

Un1ted Breth ren
ML H....,. t1oaitod ~
Ia CIJrlll Clourcb
. Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: ltoben S!Uidors
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhtp - 10:30 a.m., 7:JO p.m.
Wedn~sday Servaces . 7·30 p.m.
Eden Ualtecl Brdbmt In Clui11

2 112 miles north of Reedsville

on State Rou1e 124
Pastor. Rev. Raben Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Wonhlp - tO:OO a.m . &amp; 7·00 p.m.
Wednesday Services -1.30 p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m

'

South Bethel New Tabmeot
SdverRidse
Pastor: Robert Barber '
Sunday SChool- 9 a.m
Sun Wonh1p. 10 10 a.m.,~ p.m
WcdncWy Semcc • 7 p.m.

Culttoolntmlnomlo- Clnorcb
Kingsbury R011d
Putor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship Sei'Yice 10:30 a.m. __,
No Sunday or Wednesday Nagh1 Services

~GoopetM-

Bala Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor. Rev. Roger Wallford
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
. . ._
Worstup- 7 p.m.
Wl!Jte't Cllaoel WeoloJan
\.. Coolville Road {,
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednndly Service • 7 p.m.

'

.

Crow's Family Restaurant

~•lfn ~unerzd ~tnt c'!Jrn'- 1

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

264 South Second Avo.•MiddlepO!t, OH 457'601
740-992-5141

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Bruce R. Fllher • Dtroctor

992·5432

590 Eut Main Strwt • Poi'nori&gt;y, OH 45769
740-992·M44

local
churches
.·

7401112-4174

Place ·an ad in this

·&lt;

•

•
•
•

Presbyterian

SyracueM1411 Bndgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson.Pastor
Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Evening· 6 p.m.

Investing is risky enough. ·So why·take chances on how much
tax you'll pay? At H&amp;R: Block, we're familiar with ihe 824 tax
law changes. W~~ll he!p_~t.you every peDJI)' you have co~ing.

American

•

•

!francis FLORIST

HM-F
HSit
Dlle-r, lliMI/Mader Clsatp

''

N.., ur. VIctory Cealfr
3173 GcoracS Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Putor Bill Sraten
Sunday Services • 10 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m &amp; Youth 7 p.rn.

111&lt; Betlnon' FeUo...... p Mlnlllry
· New Ume Rd., Rutland
Pastor Rev. Marpret J. Robinson
Services Wednesday, 7:30pm.

Hu.et Commuatty Cburdo
OffRt. 124
Pas1or: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worahip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

or J - Chrto~

Apoatol1e Foltb

·'

olll Steering
o AMIFM CO 8yNm Willi EO. o Rill' Wlnd!M Dllro8llr
p~ Gl8u SWiroof

Tordt Cb•rcb
Ol.Rd.63
Sunday Sd!ool • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 1Q:30 a m.

·

Rood..We

Trllllty Cburcb
Se:ooncl &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and wo~hip-10:25

Adolda&amp;LIIeCioun:h
SOO II. 2nd Ave., Midcllcpon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
WonhiP': 10:30 am
Wednesday s.!rvkcs - 7 p.m.

ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

o Air Condltlrilg
0

-o!Ciourcb
TOW1Iship Rd., 468(:
Sunday School -.9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 Lm.
.,....._ .. Cllurcb
Grand Stiect
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Woi"ship • 11 L m~
Wednesday Servtces - 8 p.m.

Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sckool · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sundoy 6:30p.m.
Fust Sunday of Month ~ 7:30p.m. service

Congregational

• Somc1 Heort Cotllolk: O.un:ll
t61 MulbeRJ Ave., P"""roy, 992-5898
Pasror: Rev. Waller E. Helni
Sat. Con. 4:45-$:Up.m.: Mus- 5:30p.m. ·
Sun. COn, ..S:4s-9:1S a.m't
.;....-- _ _ $u"'M.,. ,J!:30 a.m._ ,,_...,_____,;__
Dailey Mua - 8:30 a.m.

•

LoaaHottom .
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worsh1p ·1 0:30 a.m.

Church oiGod of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Paseor: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a m.
Worship- 11 a.nll ·
Wcdaesday Services • 7 p.m.

Rudoad Free Wll Baptlll
Salem St.
Pasaor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

o

~2,950*

'

Cctoh'll1 Cburdl
Main &amp;: Fafth St

Sunday School- tO a.m.
Worsh1p • 9 a.m.
TucWay Servicu • 7 p m

Cbeller
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Syracaoe Flnt Chun:lo of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Rumll
Sunday School and Worsbip· 10 a.m.
Evening ScrYiccs- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

ML Moria• Baptist
Founh &amp; Mal~ St., Mlddlepon
Pastor: Rc11 . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worsh&gt;p - 10:45 a.m.

"

Alfnd
Pastor· Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonh1p • 11 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

RuHud Cbarc:b el God
Paslor: Ron Heath
Sunday Wonb1p- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicd • 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Keyleae Entry

~orthoaatCiwler

~unday

Fo- Rua Baptist
Pastor : Ariu&amp; Hurt ·

Brand New 1999 '
Buick LeSabre Custom

Grabom Unllfd Molhodlat
Worship · 9 30 a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun).
730 p m. (3rd &amp; ~lh Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7·30 p m.

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Putor: Brice uu

Worship - lOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
Fatlh BapHat c•un:•
Railroad St., Muon
Sundar School- to a.m.
Worsh1p • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

United Methodist

ul G n d
MLMDI'IIIICll..... tfGod

Pastor: James E. Keesee

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday Schi&gt;ol · 10 a.m.
Worship • U a.m.

Coolville United Motbodlat l'lrlob
Pastor: Helen Kline

Chnsttan Union

ML Olivo Uoltod Methocllst
Off t24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spireo
Sunday Scllool - 9:30-a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Serv1ccs - 7 p.m.
'
Mftu Cooper11dn Parllb

Stlvmvlllc Word.oiFaltb
Putor: David Dalley
Sunday Sc:hool9:30 a.m.
Eveninc • 7 p m.

Wednesday • 7 p m1

Hartford Cllurcb or a.r111ta

Chu rch

Vk:tOI)' lloptlst lode-nat
525 N. 21ld St. Mlddlepon

llutLelort
Pastor· Brian Harkneu
Sunday Sc:hool-10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a m

Corner Sycamore 8L Second S~. Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
WOrship · 11 a m.

Chrittlao V•IH
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - l1 a.m.,
Woflhlp • 9.31h.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday S.n~icoo • 7:30p.m.

Foltb Full Goopel Cllurth

MorntnaStar
Pastor· Dew•yne S1utler
Sunday Sj:hool - II a.m.
Worshap -10 a.m.

St. Poul Lutloona Cburch ,•

.,

·Saowvllle
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WorshtP • 9 a.m.

Jl.acine, Oblo
Pastor: Dewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S 1.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

The Church or JHUI
Christ of Latlcr·Do1 Salo..
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446·7486
Sunday School10:20-ll a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 .05·12:00 noon,
Sacrament Servace 9-lO:lS a.m.
Homemaking meeting, bt Thurs .• 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Cllun:h
and Henry Sts , Ravenswood, W Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School· 10:00 am.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Putor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Calnry llbl&lt; Chor&lt;h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
PuJOl: Rev . Blotkwpod
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne!lday Scrvlct • 7:30p.m.

C.rlltlaa Fellowllllp Cealfr
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday Schooi • 10 a m
Wonh1p • lt-1.5 a.m., 7 p.m
Wednelday Service. 7 p m

Hoblon Chrtotloa F.UO..lllla&gt; Churcb
Sunday service, 10 00 am, too p.m.
Youlh Fellowship S~nday, 7:00pm.
Wedne&amp;day Kmce, 7:00p.m.

Cannti·Suttoa
Carnic! &amp; Bashan Rds.

~Walnut

lleedmtte c•urch oiCbrtot

Faltlo Fellowtlllp c . . - lot Cl!rlll
PulOf; Rev Frankh11 OK:k.ens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m

Faith C11ape1
'
923 S Thml St., Middleport
Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

SolemCeater
Pastor: Ron F1erce ·
Sunday School· 9 lS a.m.
Worsh1p • 10 15 a.m.

Bethlny
Pas10r: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday-Servic:es - 10 a.m.

RfOI'(IIDIIOCI C..rclt of Jauo Cllrlll
ol t..tkr Doy Solota
Portland-Racine Rd
Pastor: Jerry Sinaer
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh1p·- 10:JO a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 30 p m

Lutheran

Hemlock Gron Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunda1 o:bool- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

- - Jlaptlll Churcb
.Clrtat Bend, Route 124, Raclno, OH

Rutlud
Su nda~ School . 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday services -7 p.m.

St. Joba Lutbena Cbun:•
Pine Orove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00 a.m.
Sunday Sthool · 10:00 a.m.

Llllpvllle Cbrlllloa l:hurcb
Sunday School - 9:30 a,m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School - !Oa.m.
Worship · !!a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

StTVIce t1me: Sunday 10:30 a.m
,
Wedr~esday 1 ~m

Rock Spriap •
Pastor: Keath Rader
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Worshi~- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowsh1p, Sunday ·'6 p.m.

Latt er-Day Sat nts

•

llltlae Flnt Baptist
Pastor. Rick Rule

Pomeroy
..
Pastor: Connie FiarCI
Sunday School- 9:1la.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

Pastor: David DeWall
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. ·
Worship. 10:30 a.m and 6 p m
~ednesday Service • 7 00 p.m.

Rudaod Churcb ol Chrlll
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Won;hip • 10.30 a. m., 7 p m.

6th and Palmer St., Middleport
· Sunday School- 9:tS a.m.·
Worship - 10:15• m, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Appe ur. eea...
"Fuii-Cloopcl Chorch"
Pastors John A Patty Wade
603 Seoond Ave . MUOCl

Laum CUll Froe Motlloci!Jt Clourcb

Bndblll)' Chun:b or Cbrltt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. ,

Ftnl Sapllll Cbrch
Pastor: Mark Morrow

r..rtctupet
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

HYMII Run Hollneot Churc:b
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10.45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7t'30 p.m.

Worship Servtce ~ 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 am
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m
Youth· ~.30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Flnt Soutbera BaP,flst
41872 Pomeroy P,1ke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'BryanJ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.ln.

Why nol comider
'lhe PonWroy Church
ofehe Nazarene on
ehe comer of
Mulberry and
Union Ave?

Su!'jay School - 9:30 a.m.
Woroliip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servtce. 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plain Church ofCbrlll
Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart

u.r.... Oo.......,., Mlalllrles

nl-5017

Pl•t Gro~e Bible Hollaea Claun:h
t/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

W"'eru Bible Hollo.., Chun:ll
1S Pearl St , Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worsh ip· 9:30 p1m., 730 p m,
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7.30 p.m.

Z1oa Churcb or Cho1tt
· Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor Roger Watson
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Servicu - 7 p m.

Free Wlllllopllll Churdl

tll11rcllt

,......._.

•

Wedntsdty'Strv1cts • 6:30p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1cc . 1 p.m.

· '£Hi;,, hr A

~­
~­

• By HAL KNEEN
ts all that should be applied unttllate versity agronomists. In sandier soils,
Rose fancters, take a good look at May when the soil has warmed up, use 12-12-12 ferttlizer as nitrogen
_your roses ! It is time to prune back tben apply a two-inch layer of mulch wtll have a tendency to leach out of
the hybrid tea, grandtflora, floribun- to conserve moisture and keep weeds the sod.
: da, polyanthus and mimature rose under control.
Now ts an excellent liJile to plant
Roses need water to grow and dormant roses. 9.emember that roses
bushes to initiate strong growth spurs.
• The excepllon to spnng pruning l!re bloom properly, approximately one need well dratned soil, so make a
shrub and climbing roses which are and one hillf inch a week. On ratsed raised rose bed. Incorporate plenty
pruned, back heavtly just after. they beds the potential for excess moisture (3-6 tnches) of organic matter like
ts mmimtzed. Don't water late in the compost, composted manures or peat
bloom
In all roses remove all dead, bro- afternoon or early evening, water tn moss. Apply seven cups of superken and dtse:d&amp;i' ;.&amp;~ from the pla.nt the morning hours. Avoid wetting the phosphate per I 00-square-foot bed
"tn early spnn~ When pninmg, cut leaves of the rose bushes to minimize for beuer root development.
Dtg a hole into the rose bed and
just one quarter inch above an out- plant dtseases. Many ·growers use
ward f acmg bud.
trickle hoses or turn soaker hoses so plant the rose so that the bud union
For best rose growth, make sure they face (water) into the ground. ts at ground level. Make sure to water .
the plant so air spaces near the'
. you pay anention to their cultural Roses like a mildly acid soil with soil in
roots
are prevented. Do not fertilize
needs. Roses need a minimum of six pH at 5.5-6.5, if in doubt, get a soil
newly
planted roses until the plants
hours of sunlight daily, preferably test done. Fertilize roses after the new
more In older plantings, nottce how growth ts well established (May 15- are well established by Mother's
surroundmg small trees may have 30) and then again every 4-6 weeks Day
(Hal Kneen le Melga County's
grown into large trees, you may have unhl early August 1\vo pounds of 5extension
agent for agriculture
to remove some lower tree branches 10-10 or 6-12-12 per I 00 square feet
and
natural
resources, Ohio State
to allow more sunhght m. Due to rose is recommended by Ohio State UmUnlveralty.)
suscepllbthty ·to fungu s diseases
(black_spot and powdery mildew) and
a root system that doesn't hke to be
disturbed, don't plant other bedding
The capital gains form is now three times longer.
plants and perennials near the rose
plants Leave at Jeasttwo feet of open
Check your calculator batteries.
air space.
Mltlchmg does help reduce small
The average American spends 4 hours and 19 minutes
weed seedlings from sproutmg. A
1 ·light (1/4 - 1/2 inch) dusting of mulch
figuring !JUt the capital gains form. ,·

Beorwallow ll1dp Cburcb ol Cbrlll
Putor:Terry Stewan
~unday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Baptist

East Main St.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wo1'8hip • 10:30 a.m.

include up to s· trillion cubic feet in
Services.
As crude prioes began to' fall in Indonesta. At co also has gas reserves
late 1997,' Arco was hit harder than
most. The company had shed its
at THE OHIO RIVER BEAR CO ..we'
, chemtcals and coal mming opera'
ready for spring With our beautiful
uons, leaving tl mote dependent on
oil and more vulnerable tp price flucBUNNIES &amp; hilarious HARES!!
tuations.
Worried about Arco's abthty to
Things are
compete, Bowlin being ,looking
hoppin' in h~re!
around and finally called, an old
friend, BP Amoco chtef executive
Psst! 'come see "Baabs" our
John Browne.
Only weeks earher, British PetrO'
beautiful new lamb!
leum had acquired Chtcago-based
In Middleport IN Mon..sat. MC, 1/JN, DIN., Am. EJCp.
"'
Amoco in a $57.6 billion deal.
Browne jumped at the opportunity to
deepen his reach m the United States
by picktng up Area's Alaskan oil and
gas reserves and its West Coast r~fin ­
ing and retailing operations
Together Arco and BP Amoco
operate the giant Prudhoe Bay field
in Alaska. Arco expects to have tis
360 million-barrel Alpme field operating in about two years
BP Amoco also wtll obtam Area's
natural gas mterests in Asia, which

about a foot. In North Dakota, Bis- er lines in eastern North Dakota,
marck and Dickinson both received 9 causing outages for as many as 4,000
customers, satd Bonnie Lund, a·
inches of snow.
A winter storm watch was stilrin spokeswoman for Northern States
effect for parts of North Dakota.-and Power. By late Thursday, only about
as much as 6 inches of snow were 200 remamed wtthout power.
Tee also knocked out a maJOr elecposstble by tontght.
Snow wasn't the only problem. trical distribution hoe serving eastern
Wind and freezing ram downed pow- North Oakota

Sunday Sc)&gt;obl-10:30 am
Pastor-Jeffrey WIIIM:e
lit and 3rd Sunday

t110

47439 ~1bel Rd. , OtesteJ ·
Pastors. Rev. Mary and H.-rQid Cook
Stmday Services. 10 1.m. It t5 p.m.
.Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

ol Sbaroo ......... c•urch
Leacha&amp; Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev Dewey King
Sunday school · 9:30am.
Sunday worship -7 p m
Wednesday praytr meeting· 7 p.m.

, ......... Cllurdl
letart. W.Va. Rt. I
·Pucor: Jobn Han
Suocay sdioot - 9:30a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study - 7:00p.m.

Other Churche s

MI..,..lito
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Worship • 10 a.m.

-

· K..o Cl!vrcb·or Cbrltt
Worship · 9:30a.m.

......,.1 Flnt lloplill

in Qatar and otl interests in Algeria,
_venezuela and Russia.

It's time again to prune roses

Cburdl ofCbrtot
Srh and Ma1n
PallOr: AI Hanson
Youth Mlnlstc" Bill Fruler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:1..5, 10:30 a.m , 7 p.m.

Sunday StrvJccs- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

April storm pounds Plains states . .
By JOSH HOFFNER
Associated Press Writer
BISMARCK, N.D.- Plams restdents braced for more stormy weather today after more than a foot of
snow blanketed parts of the regwn.
In the Black Hills in South Dakota, Deadwood got 13 mches of snow
Thursday and nearby Lead received

M~

Mason, W.VL
Pastor: NeLl Tennant

Hooth (Middlepo&lt;l)
Pastm: Vemagaye Sulliven
Sunday School· 9·30 a.m.
Wor1hip -10:30 am.

Cal•ory PUpiJn Cllopet
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. V1ctor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a m.
Worahi~ • It o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Servtcts • 7 p m

managing director at Broadview .
International, a merger advtsory firm,
"I wouldn't be surprised to see
Yahoo! announce more bold strokes
in the fj.lture."

people -to set up home pages where
they can publish their writings, post
thetr family photos or try to sell
things.
The Internet mdustry ts both
expandmg and consolidating at ·a
rapid pace. New companies go publie almost daily and quickly become
targets or suitors in corporate
takeovers.
Yahoo'. America Online Inc . and
Lycos Inc. are JUSt a few of the com~anies looking for strategic acquist'
ttons that reflect ,the integration of
computer, televiston and telephone
services with information 311d media.
And Yahoo! may be back on the
hunt soon.
"It's clear ttiatthe Web"has been
in a race for market share since the
beginning," said Steve O'Leary, a

Worship - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
• Wednesday Scrvtccs • 7 p.m

Chord! Dl J-Chnot~
VanZandt tnd Ward d.
Putor· James Mlllc:r
Sunday Sch9ot -10:30 a.m.
Evenina- 7:30p.m.

of internet service

·A rea's merger with BP Amoco began with a call
demands for cleaner fuel.
Arco's senwr management,
tncludmg Bowlin, 56, will resign.
The new company will be known as
BP Amoco, but the Arco retail gasohoe brand wtll contmue for the time
being.
Bowhn said he was conftdent
Arco could have survived on its own
but the combination with BP Amoco
will be better for shareholders.
"We did thts because we think it
creates a really tern fie company
from our vtewpoint, even though n's
a biuersweet moment for us," he satd.
About 2,000 JObs are expected to
be elimi.nated from a combined wo~k
force of 115,000, mamly tn the Umted States outside Alaska, offictals
satd.
ldled workers wtll be able to pick
from several severance options.
Bowlin will leave Arco with $3.2
million in salary and bonuses plus
another $29.3 million in stock
opltons, accordmg to estimates by
Executive Compensation Advisory

&amp;

•

/

'

�,

..

.

..

I

/, p..-

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel.·
.

Page
Friday, April

DtiP\.AY HOMES

HEE0£0

begging people to reconcile with
parents You said, after they
d1c, it will be .coo late
Two years ago, I fi nally dec1ded
to work th mgs ou t wnh my dad, not
onl y because II sc~med the right
tlung to do hut because you told me
to do 11.
He d1cd last Chri stmas, and I can
on ly unagme the hell I would be.
gm ng through 1fl had not reconciled
w1th hun In tlm:-,c two years, we
became the best of fn ends. I miSs
h1m very mu ch.
Please pnnt th1 s let\er on Rcco n·
cl il:1t 10n Day, Ann Tell your readers
not ID put off mcndmg those lencos
because one day they w1ll reg ret 11. .
. ED INRI
DEAR ED: Thank you for a
frank and thoughtful letter. I hope all
my readers will be aware that today

Ann
Landers
Dear Ann Landers: I have read
column for more th an 40 years
Te n years ago , you fi rst menu oned
ReconciiJatl on Day You said Apri l 2
should be set as1de as the day when
c~eryo n c wo ~ld vow to wn tc a letter
Ol:. l(lakc a phone ..:all and mend a
sumned or Orokcn rclatJon ship It
yo~r

~.:a uld a lso be the da y wt: wo ultl all

ag ree to acce pt the u ll v~ hr .tm:h
cx tCndcd by a f01mcr fnl!nd o r t a m ~
il y member
'
· I fought w11 h my lat her 101 years
I read all the co lu mn ~ ) uu pn ntcd

n 't h11 her while he was awake, he ~ s leep and alertness problems.
come as a great relief tO her. Let's
meant no harm .
For the names and addresses of hope Dudley gets the help he needs
Dudley may have a sleep disorder accredited sleep centers, your read- so she can get a good night's sleep
known as REM Sleep Behavior D1s- ers can send a large, stamped, se lf
Gem ot the Day: To fa1l to for·
order (RSBD) Normally durin g addressed envelope to the Ainencan give is to destroy the bridge over
dream sleep, we are unable to move Sleep Disorders Assoc iati o~ . 630 I which ·one day you may want to
the muscles of the arms and ,legs. Bandel Rd ., Suite 101 , Rochester 'travel.
·
grievances
Wuh RSBD, the inhibittan of mus- Mmn. 55901 (www.asda.org). . · Forget to save some of you r
L1fe 1s too shon tQ hold grudges. ~ le move ment 1s impaired , and the LAUR~N BROCH, PH.D., DIREC- favorite Ann Landers columns?
To be able to forgive can be en or- person may actually act out palts of TOR OF EDUCATION AND "Nugget s and Dooz1e( IS the
mously healing and hfe-enhanci ng h1s or her dreams , unaware of,1he TRAIN!~ , AND jlo!ARGARET answer. Send a self addressed, long,
It is the best example of cast mg your behav10r until some inJury occurs.
MOLINE, M D , DIRECTOR, busmess size envelope and a check .
hread upon the waters and gcttmg
ll1e good news ts that sleep d1 s- NEW YORK PRESBYTERIAN or money order for $5 25 (thi s
back caVIar sandwiches. Do 1t today orders such as RSBD can be diag - HOSPITAL'S SLEEP-WAKE DIS· inc ludes postage and handhng) to.
Tomorrow may be too late..
nosed and treated successfull y.
ORDERS CE)'lTER
Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
D'ear Ann Landers: We read . P~opl e who suffer from msom·
DEAR DR. BROCH AND DR. 11 5.62, Chicago, Ill. 606 11 -0562. (In
your colun1n about "Dudley," the ma. excessiVe daytime sleepiness or MOLINE: Thank you for providmg Canada, send $6.25.)
you ng man who became violen t frequent leg movements before and an auth ontali ve explanalion for
. To fmd out more ahout Ann Lan·
when he slept and hu his g1rlfriend . dunng sleep, or who fall asleep at Dudley's behavtor You have made 11 ders and read her past columns, VIS II
She was concerned that he harbored work, at the mov1es or when dnving, qu11e clear that his sleep problems the Creators Syndicate web page at
smnc kmd ol secret hostthty toward should n01 hesitate to speak to their are not connected to his feelin gs for www.crcators.com .
her You sa1d as long as Dud ley d1d- pn mary·care doctors abou t these . his girlfrie nd -wlli,ch w1ll no doubt

., "

Remember
"Done right the first tinte"
"Priced right all the time"

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

•

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
Rooting • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

F;ee Estim~tes

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

GUN SHOOT

fam1 ly out1ngs held over the years.
Charter members sull mvolved
arc Mrs. Bowers, Mrs. Arnold, Els1e
Hmes and Lucreua Smuh . Th e
orgamza11on has 1wo other members
these days and they are Gwinnie
Wh ile and Texanna Wehrung
Mrs Bowers e nt~rtai n ed With an
ann iversary party at her reside nce m
Middleport to mark the 50th
an niYc r'lary ol the orgamzation ,
Souvemr cards and placemats were
presented to those auendtng. The
cards and mats were on a back·
ground of golden roses and both
were in scnbed: "Fnendly Neighbors Club -50th Anni.versary .
Marc h 22. 1949 - March 23, 1999".
Members spent tbe evemng renumsci ng about club activities over the
years A variety of finger foods
were served.

ing;
The date for the second day of
health screenings by L1fe Lme
Scr~e nin g to detect nsk for stroke has
hccn changed to May 7
•'Inc un1t1s l:9mmg to Me1gs Coun·ty; under sponsorship of the Me1gs

The um l will be located on the Me1gs
Mulupurpose Buildmg parktng lot
lnforrnauon on idenufyi ng and con- '
trollmg nsk factors as we ll as rccog·
niZIO£ the warmn g Signs and symp·
toms of stroke and &lt;&gt;!her vascular diS·
cases will be available.
For add1110nal information on Life

···-·•·Piullag
• l ...'a'•l Wall I Irick

.737 back bore

....... c.....

Carpenter&amp; Building America

Pilla Colietnaotloa

~;ct•IW,

Haning's Home

.Jere1nv L. Roush

Improvements

Howard L. Writesel

INC.

ROOFING
. NEW·REPAIR

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

. :..... -814-992·7643
.· (No Sunday Callsl

822150*
·'

• Color TV &amp; VCP
• Air CondHionlng.
• Power Windows&amp; Locks

•21,950*

• AMIFM Ceuette
• Rear Sofa Bed
• Loadedl

All New 1999 Chevy Silverado
Extended Cab 4x4 Pickup
• 4 Whc:l Dice erckcc
• Styled Wheels
• Nicely Equlppedl

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air CondHionlng
• AMIFM Stereo ··

~5,950*

All New 1999 Chevy
Silverado Pickup

• Air CondHionlng
• AWFM Slereo

• 4 Wheel Dlac Brllkn W/ ASS

~1,950*

PUBUC NOTICE
On Saturdoy, Aprll3rd, 1999
at 1o:oo a.m. tho Homo
National Bank will offer lor
aalo at public auction an
the Bank parklnglollhtlol·
lowing vahlcloo:
11191 Pantlllc Grond Prix
Vln 11G2WJ14T8MF2220
1994 Geo Trocktr
Vln
12CNBJ18Y7R89S097334
1990 Chovy B-10
Vln 11GCCS1425L2151581
19118 Dodge Dynaaty
Yin 11B3BC5837KD549710
1992 Ford 150 Plck·up
Yin I1FTDF15Y2NNA42071
1977 Honda 750 Motorcycle
Vln ICB750K2726387
1M8 GMC Von
Vln 11GKDM11Z4J8801051
Tht termt al. lhe Hie ore
08111.
Tht Home National Bank.,
rtMrvet tho right to rtjtel
ony or all bide or to remove
eny unit from the 11ft at
ony limo.

Unda's Painting

Arrangement•

be

made lo lnopect ony Ql tho
obovo namld vthlcloo prior
to tho oalt by C8111ng 740949·2210.
t:tom• National Bonk

• Styled Wheele
• Rear Step Bumper
• Well Equlppedl

In Memory
1:N M'DIO'Rl'o
.Uia •f. Cln rk

Brand New 1999 Chevy
S·Serles LS Pickup

• Air CondHionlng
• AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Wheel Anti·LOck Brakes

may

wfio departed tfiu llj•·

ajml )•

,,7.

&gt;

George Lawrence
Calloctlon Olllcor
Gl.ldm
(3) 17, 19, 22, 26, 29
(4) 2' 6TC
PubliC Notice
PUBUC NOncE
Golllo·Molgt Communny
Action ogency lo eooklng
epoct lor JTPA end Olhor
progromo In Gollla County
and Melga County. The
opoca muet provld• ofl1ae
occommodallona lor -tan
11111 mtmbero, and provide
on eru lor motllnga end
30 Announcements

d
every Satur ay
'

A

night

6:30p .m.

•

'lllke the pain out of
painting, and let me
, do It for you
INTERIOR

1101

110 mort,
1
Stiff In mttnory ypu lilt'
IVitfi U.S,
a'J yo11 always wt•rt bt'fort• '
Somtday. somt'tl!llt 011r

• Nicely Equipped

t}'t5 JVI ff Stf,
'fTi"t faa wt ~rtp

in

trolnlng ocllvllloo. Tho
opoco muet be olrcondlllanld, hove odoquoll
perking ovolloblo, mot!
.hondlcsp occooolblllty
•1ol'llndorda, hove oloctrlcol
olld phone wiring oopablo
of auppartlng computer
operotlcn, oncl othorwllt
provide 1 good wortdng end
cuetomtr
urvlco
environment.
lndlvlduolo or buo1n11111
wlehlng to offer epaao
ehauld eubmlt 1 olmplt
wrltllnpropoHiepocllylng:
1•nome end odd,.., aftht
op... provider
2·11rut oddrooo of tht
·~ olftrecl
3-oquerefeiiiVIIIoblo
4-monlhly It- ccm for tht
period July 1., ••through
June 30, 2000
All propo1111 will receive .
~

-

-

11 0

740.985·4180
Free Estimates

Public No.tlce
1 prtllmlnory review.
ThOll, which oppeor to bell
mill progrom nHdo will be
reviewed further end mey
be oeked to oupply
oddiiiOIIIIInlormoUon.
Prapa111o muot be
received by Wtdnlldoy,
April 21, 1999. Prapooolo
ehauld be Mnt to:
GMCAA
Office ReviBax272
Chtohlrt, Ohio 41820-0272
(4) 1,2,5,8 4TC

Public Notice

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
4/2TFN

mer1ean ""gum
Middleport
Post 128
Srarburst 12800. 00
Door Pri=e 1500. 00
145 people or
more wiU play
$1000 cover all.
Average $90 per
r&lt;'gulnr game

NOU! Open For :
Spring Sea•on

• Complete U~e Of
Vegetable &amp; Bed&lt;llng Plants
All Flllo $8.50
EzdMd•• Beddllv Gerontamu

Hanging Baskets
BlOoming &amp; Foliage
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•sl'trubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1·5

HUIIARD'S
GRIIIHOUSI

I'UBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby give~
SYIUCUSE
thll on Saturdoy, April 3,
992·5776
111119, 1110:00 a.m., • public
TFN
Nil will be hald 11 211 Wool
Second Str111, Pomeroy,
Ohio, Tho Farmtrl Bank
Public Notice
end Savlngo Campeny
perking lot, to 1111 lor 01111 fallowing calllltral:
1971 MARAUDER TRAVEL
the folloWing callllerol:
11197
FORD ESCORT . TRAILER 308223
The Former• Bonk and
1FALP13PSVW310551
Savtnge
Company,
lilt Former• Bank and
Pomeroy, Ohio, rnervae
sovlnge
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, raotrvoo tho right to bid at lhle ule,
tho right to bid allhlo Nlo, end Ia wllhd,.... the obave
end to wHhdraw the obOVI callotoral prior to ula.
callotaral prior lo ule. Furthtr, Tht Formoro Blink
Further, The Formtrt Bank end Sovlng Compony
and Sovlng Company ruorvta tho right to rt1ect
re11rvo1 1118 right to reJect any or 111 bide oubmlltld.
Further, tht obOVI callatoral
ony or ell bide aubmiHtd. ·
Further. the ebave callatarol will be aald In the condition
will be eold In the eandlllan H Ia In, with no expraa or
11 It In, With no •~pr•n or lmplltd worrtnlltl given.
far further lnlarmotlon,
lmpllld worrant111 given.
Far further lnformetlan, c:antlcl Shtlil at 741!-m·
2136 txttnolon 122.
contact Sheila 11 740-992·
(3)
31 (4) 1, 2,
2138 extonolon 122.
3TC
· (3)31(4)1,2, .
31C
'

-

Help Wanted

Mobile Home Park
Manaaer &amp; Maintenance

•

Full orPBrl Time Positions Available
with Established Mobile Home Company
FIT Benlfits package includes Vacation-401 K·
Profit Sharing &amp; Insurance benefits &amp;
can include housing!!

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE !1 hereby given
!hot an SllUrdoy, April 3,
· 1999,11 11:00 o.m .. • public
Hie will be held II 500 Eaot
Moln Str"l, Pomeroy, Ohio
457ee, 10 Mil far c11h the

Must have. ability to do home and lawn maintenance

or ability r'nenaglng rental property - ex:cellent
seml-retl!'4'ment Job! If thla aounda like you
send a reoume to PO Box 1033, Logan, Ohio 4313a

Country Parks Inc.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop' &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

llltiiiOry

9od wi/1/mli ,r,,
bro~'" cliatn,
Wlitn &gt;vt o/1 •fia/1
mttl a.9om.

'Dttply ml"'d by •on &amp;
wifr, .Corry &amp; Joy Clor'
9rondcfiifdrew 1'umra,
'Penny (,. 'Wt11dy
9rtat·SratJdcfiildrtll
Jonutliun, SIMn , Sitnnu
&amp; 'lltonno

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

' MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR IURST
$550.00

,......

s'fo.ooo.....

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Plwrm;rry Divi1l011 Frutlt Corporate Office,
Rt. 1, Bo" 332, Point rt.a•ani, WV
or teleplao11e (804) 675-1612.

•

Reg istered 2 Vr Old Oalmatlon
Good Watchdoo . Has Shots &amp; I&amp;
Spay ed , Rare Chocolate Dots
740· 44 1-o408 ~

Sliding Glass &amp; w oo d Door To
G1veaway, 740-256-6800
Two Malt Cats, Both Oeclawed 6
Neutered, To GoM Home Only,
A«&amp;&lt; 5 P.~ 740·25H909.

Two year old black &amp; white male
ttusky to country horne onl~. 740-

992·7614
Voung Male EtkHound Ru ns
loose on !arm Look•ng lor similar

Mon" Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

40 742-8888

Larry'• Lawn

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

Care

St. · Rt . 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Grind Feed

Call 985·38:51

1· 7 40-446-3622

3/15 1 mo.

Marty~

&amp; Mobile Homes

Free Eltimate~
~ Carpenllr · lJ.Ji
·" l!! B. Haning

Interior &amp; Exterior
15Yra. Experience

(740) 698·1713

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Bulldoaer &amp; Backhoe
Se11Jicea
House &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sytte"' &amp;
Utilitie•

(7401 992-3131 ·

.SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Contlruction
• Remodeling

•Sidurs
• :No Job '!Oo '1J'9 or
'!Oo Small
"Call Today"

FREE Estii'I'!Stes

17401 992·55~5 or
992·2753

Painting

~7

2·1701

DIPOYSAG
PARTS
All Make• Tractor &amp;
Equipment Paris
Factory Authorized
Cose- IH Parts
Dealers .
1000 Sf. Rt. 7 Soulh
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

Dog . Vicini ~ 14 t , 775, 740·«6l os t· white German Shepherd /

Husky mix. black eye.

bro~n

eye

l ost Male Beagle Pet. Can't Run
A Rabbit, Tr1·Co lored, With Leath·
er Collar. In Kerr /Bidwell Reward,
740-441 ·1440
Lost Male Beagle &amp; Female Get·
man Shepherd ~ wllh a choker
cn&amp; ln, In Ashton Area (304 )576-

Light Hauling up
to 8 ton

992-5455

TRUCKING

SELF STORAGE

Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

10.
lil'!l

~

10.
1iJ.1.1J

-on • 2.00 p.m.

TRUCKING
'

DUMP TRUCK
" SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Umeatone • Gravel ·
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
1012~n

31111111 mo. nd.

(UmeStoneLowRatel)

Dave's Garage

WICKS .
HAULING
Limestone,

.•

Grayel 1 Sand,
Top

Soil, Fill Dirt

740·992·3470

-Complete Auto Service-

April 1tt, 2nd, And 3rd, 5170

~

fi;J

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progre11lve top line.
Uc. I 00.50 ~~~·,.,
nWoUllt Musi&lt; To You• fon
When You Tune ~ To !he lltsr S.,.

Hoof Hollow

N'o Cradlt • Slow Credit' • Bankruptcy

Farms
740-698-3290

WORvmNG!!I

No Embarrsllment •••
You're Treated with Reapectl

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
• EIICiriC81 I Plumbing
·Raonng
.
• Interior I Exttrlar
• Polnttng ·
• Aloo Cancnto Work
• Plllo dickel guttering
V.C. YOUNG Ill

11112-1215

Pomerot, Ohio

·'

388· 1618
Frida)! 4/2, 5alurday 413, 9-5, Just
Past Guiding Hand School On
Route 7 Tf'aller On LeU {In The

Bacl&lt;) Lots 01 Vanely
Moving Sale · Friday. Saturday.

470 LeGrande , Washer, Dryer.
Swing Se t. Keroune Healers,
Chlkl rens Clothes /M11C
Porch Sa le 635 Third Avenue ,

2nd, 3rd. 9-4

005

Peraonals

Don't Worry Ab out Your Future
Let Our Psychics Put Vour Mind
A.t Ease Call Nowl ·1·900· 740 ·
6500 hi 3593 16• $3 99 Per
Mtn Serv-U 819-645·643-4 http II
www.thehotpages2 comlnstpsychict250291 him

30 Announcements
es, April 15th, can 740-448 · 2134
For Detail s, 0 J 's Craft Shop ,

New To 'roll Thrll't 5noppe
9 West Sl!m$0n, Att}ens
740-592· 1842
Ou{llllV clothing and household
Items $1.00 bag sa le ever.v
Thurs day, Monday thru Salurday

9 ll0-5 30

•

Opening 01 New Aestuarant In

C•-Ciiy
Betsy Roll' Eatery
24866 St Rt 1 SOutfl

234 lincoln ~t.ll. March SO.April 3
Toys , clo thing . rtew bike part&amp;,
tools, tons of mise

.3

fami ly, Aprll1 ·2·3 , 10am·4pm,
rain cancels, •cneap· , acros s
from the back of Powell's Super
Value. on Mechan+e St.

All Yard Sal. . Muat Be Paid In
Ad~ance . l)e1dllne. 1·OOpm the
dey before the ad Ia to run ,
Sundey 1 Monday edition·

t :OOpm Frldoy.

740·258-$495

'

Rich &amp; Sandy BUtcher residence .
SA 124 ac ross !rom MaplewoOd
Lake Saturday. 4/3199 9 oo-4:00
Go&lt;! Wing Chapler E·3

Pt. Pleeunt
8i VIcinity
Friday &amp; Saturday(Aprll 2/ 3) ,
2616 Lincoln Avenue, ,Pt.P I,
Ba ck Yard . Cloth&amp;s/Watnots/Fur·
nhure • More Ra1n Cancels.

I

Located Wllh ln Ar nol ds Food
Mart

Monday Thru Saturday
11·00 AM Thru 3:00 PM

Enjoy Counlry Coi.J.Ing And Fam·
lly Hospllallly By Betsy Ro88
Sheela, Owner And OperaiOf

"TASTE WORTH SAVOAIHGI" ·

6172

I

.

Ct ean lall Mod el Can Or
Trucka , 1990 Modtlt Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Edtem Avenue. GallipOlis

'

Used Mobile

Homes . Call 740-41(6·0t75,

3QI·

675·5965
dillon . 740·388· 9082 . 740·448·

PARI
EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC~p

110 Halp Wanted
at EARN EXTRA CAS!t at
Independent Contractor• Nuded
To Deliver The New C~emp l on
Publishing Telephone Olractorles
In The Ohio Valley Area. Must Be
At Least 18 Yea.re Of Age . And
Have Use Of An Insured Vehicle
Deliv ery Starts March 23 , 1999.
Call Now To Reserve A. Route In
Your Area . Market Oiatrlbutlon

Speclafists. Inc

CALL 1-18 ... 06·1100 TOLL
FAEE
AVON ! All Areaa I Shirley

Spea,., 304-675-1429.

·

Babysitter waKfed, Evening Shift
In My Home, 3 Weeks, 7-40-3e7·

7274.

en-

Busy dental office looMing for
ergetic tndlvldual to join dental
team , s d resume 10 . PO Boll

,

45769.

·

ers Neadtd War~
Own Hra I25K ·l8bK !Yr. HJOQ· .

Computer

47&amp;-8653 x nn. www t cwp com

Couple or single pe rson to mo~e ,
1n ana care lor elcterty person in
. Meigs County All living upens·
as, plua salary. Lilt work ht alory
and 2 relerences , Send name.
addrea&amp; and phone number be·
lore May 1, 1999 to Margaret,
General Deli very, Pomero)l Pot.t •

Ottk:e, Pomeroy. OH 45769
Oependabte, Athletic lndlvtduala:
Who Work Well With Kids No,
Experlenc' Necessary. Will.
:rfaln, Cheer Station &amp; T1.Jmbl 1ng
Center, 740-446-9603

DRIVERS .. fiWESOIIEI Chedl
Out The Best Deal In Tru ck l n~
Ted&amp;)! No Down Paymenl. N
Front Money, No CredH Neede
We Create OWner /Operators ily
Arranging Truck , Freight Co :
Contract, Operating Coats. And.
Know -How Tl'l lt Pla n 11 Guarameed. Vo u Need Class A COL,
1 Yr OTFI E•ptr ltnce , But No

Money!

CALL IIOG-377·310t

U"'

bel1avable Equal Opportunity Tl1)
Place To Start
Ouvers wanted to dell...er flowers, ·
no overnight, COl and med iCal '

e

• DArliNG POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:
Class A OTR
Single Dr iver Late Model Kenwortns With Reelers west Coast

Carrier
Clau BOTA

•

Team Straight Truck , late ~OQeC
Frei ghtliner~ With Sleepers Mus&amp;..
Have Air Brake EndorsemelltS ;•
800 Mile Rad l us~ome Deliver·"'

les

..,

Both Positions
AIIEiast25 'fears Old
Atleast2 Years Experience
Good MVA ,

WHidy Pai

•
•

•

Health lnstnnce Available
Wo&lt;k Woll With Tho Pl.l&gt;llc

For More lnlorma tlo n Call 600 :

437·8764 Hrs 8 30 AM. ·6 PM.
General Office / Sales. Exp.erl- :
eneAd P re le~red . Full-Ttmt , lm··
mediate Opening. Apply Lifestyle:
Furniture, 856 Third Avenue, Gal· ..
lipol~&amp; , 10.2, No Phonti Calls
Immediate opening for phone op-•
erato rf warran ty clerk. ApplY 1n
per~on Con Tate Motors , 306 ~
East Main Street, Pomeroy, OH :
EOE Applications accepted •
Monday Tuesday &amp; Wednesctay, •

April 5th tllrough ~ l'th

Garage Sale: miles out Jlfrya
Run Road/ A.ppte Grove Ap ril 1,

2. 3 9-1 (304)578-2635.
Large 3 Family 't'ard Sale. Old
dlshea fToys frf &amp; Sat 2nd
House right on Leon Baden
Road Off Rt 87
Patio Salt

116 Pltuent St ,
Men&amp;fWomens
Clothes eh ll drens name brand
clothes/S hoes , Oishea , cu rta.nll
rugs quilt&amp; . What/Nois Fan ,
carl House Paint chairs, lo ts of
Other things

80

3

Auction
and Flu Market

.
LPN 'S and CN A'&amp; - Ravenswqod
Center (formerly Ravenswaod
VIllage) Is now accepting ap,ll·
cat1ons 101 lu ll and part ·llme po·
alllons Excellent benerus pa"t-k·
age It Interested, please app~ In
person Monday ll'lrough Frioay,
9AM·CPM, or write, Attention. Conette Dugan , DON 200 South
Ritchie Avenut, Ravenswood ,

.
•
•
•

:

..
•
•

WV 26164 Phone(304)273·9385 :
Auction· Saturday, April 3, 1999.
Old American Leglol} buil d ing.
MlddlepOtl Lois or ne~ mtrchandiM Snact-: bar 6:00pm. Auction-

Hf'JI"'

A-

~'

Moo~lspaugh

crown C11y, onto

,Buying Slindlng Tlmbtr, 7~0·25&amp;-

card required , 740-247-2664

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.2390:=.:Ja:::ooo:=:n:.;P,::Ik8::·:..:G::•::IIIpo=lls-'-- l Sai./ Apr ll
Free
Dietary
Supplement
Bro chu res Write To AOF Dis trlbulors P 0 Box 563 C1'1e&amp;ttr,
W VA . 26034,

252ll

Thrusday. Friday. Saturday, 9·5,
185 Ambles lde Drive, Kerr,
A.cross From Post Office.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

• Room AddttiON I AlfftOftllng

•Nowq.,......

State Route 850. B -1. 8-5, 740-

Saturda)l , Ap ril 3rd , HUmphrey
resldaoce, Happy Hollow Ad , Ru·
tland 9.00 am to 3·00 pm only

"' !he cross/(...

Beginner Cake Decorating Class-

Buy, SeU, Tmln or Board

Frldoy. Mondoy oclltlon
·10:00 a.m. S.turdey.

I

HORSES

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
· $8.00 ·PER

e. Plld In Advonoo.
le to run. Sunclly

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garag· es Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding
"
ft
"Specinli•ing In Log H01ne1
ii!!J
Commercial &amp; Resid enJial
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ~
Phone 740·992-3987
~
John Dean; Owner ,12 ,

R. L. HOLLON

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM · 8 PM

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in t~e Great Bend

AU. Ylrd SIIH Mull

the d o y - the ...

~~~~f;;j~~~~~~~

740.949-2217

Former-"Velvei Hammer"
52954 State Rt ..I24
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Nascar Olecast Collectables

PEADLJNE: 2:00p.m.

J.D. CDNS,RUCTION

Antlquea top prices paid , Riverine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner, 740· 992·,

704, Pome

Sizes) Toys . Huge Collection.
Trading Cards Football, Hockey,
Nascar Home CD Stereo System,
Tower Speakers, 15" Wollera.

William Safranek, An ney At Law

29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

3111/99TFN

· Galllpoll•
8i VIcinity

For Information Regarding B;;z;Y contact:

Don't Need A Big
~
One Call a Little
f.;!
One
u

Yard Sale

household good s.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

DRIVEWAY STONE

Lost Reward OUtJedl 20 Inch
Green Softside Rolling Ctrry On
With Zipper 6 Locks That Con :
1a1ns Valuable Papers , II Found
Pleau Call 740·446·6186, 140·
448·5179

SOla. (New /Like New Clotlllng All

(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

.A.b&amp;olute Top Dollar All U S Slh
var And Gold Co ins. Proot1111'
Diamonds, An11que Jewelry, Gold
Rurgs. Pre-1930 U.S. C\lrrtncy,
Sterung , Etc Acquisi tions Jewelry
. M T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Stco?d ,
A'J81'1U8 Galllpollt, 7~2842.

LOst. 1 Fawn Cnlneae Pllg Fe ·
m~le In Bidwell /Porter Area , Aewardl740·388·9325

Ave nue, F.rld ay, Saturday, Furbie s, Beanie Babies, Holktay Barbin , Girls Pagents, Dresses,

keep ''exempt" property for his or h er personal
U!!e. This may include a car, a house, clothea, and

Wanted to Buy

child's pel , FlatwoOds Ad vicinity
please call740-992-70n

4 Family· 2018 112 Rear Eastern

debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fatr
diBtri"ulion uf assets. Debtors m bankruptcy may

90

Wanted Cars , Trucks Any Con-

9476

70

BANKRUPrCY~an reliev~ a

Wtdemeytfl AUCIIOM blfVICI ,

Wanted To Bu~

Lost and Found

Joe Wilson
(740) 992-4277

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Every Saturday Night 7 Plot.,
c ,..n Clly, 7&lt;0-256~968

60

'

740 887-8183

SAYRE
\

"Build Your Dream"

5827

new homo (304)675·2704

Lost Walker Pup, Ma!e, Lut
Seen VInton Cemetary Black 4
White, little Bit Of Brown, No Col·
lar, 740-388-8536

Homes, Decks

HILL'S

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

81

Power
Washing

Sidiilg, Soffit, Pamt,
Metal , Lamination, Pnle
Buildinga, Deekt, Etc.

Remodeling

Custom Homes

Auc.llon • .,..,y Thursday. Am .
VIII 8ulld1nQ. Gallipolll, on , tJ1
new Items , 8.30pm , call 740·992·

Want To Stl YOur Stuff? Call Rl~­
erslde Auction And Let Us Sell n
For You, 740-256-6989

Found Female Black Long Haired

•
I,

740·992·2075.

992·4028

Truck seats, car .seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

..... Gllilpoll&amp;

Galllpollo, Otio 740-379-2120

Shepherd/Beagle mix pupa need
home or Will go to pound, 740·

Rutland, Ohio

7

• &lt;

Fntth's pharmacy. growJh of wonderful
loyal customers requires added pharmal'ists staff in our area of operation. Each
, of onr ·pharmacies is a .~hometown enterl""iMtl stressing small town commitment
lllltf ft•iendly service. We offer competitive wagtls ond benefits ,and encourage
JH'a&lt;~tice of youurofession with resp__onsibilities ···elating only to the pharmacy.
Send yom· resume to:

3/ 12 ' I mo.

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Alto Riding Leuons

BINGo·

Phone (740) 593-6671
"

985-4473

forgontu.

&lt;Tliouqli ou eartfi you art'

•LSPaclcege

Public; Notice

Before 6 pm Leave
message. After ·6 pm

r _ ··

'Dtor :)fotfitr youart

• Aluminum Wheels

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleahing
Painting

.

GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY- The Friendly Neighbors
Its 5oth annlverury with a party at the home of Eileen Bowers In
Middleport. Pictured with a sign denoting the annlverury are seat·
ed, I to r, Mildred Arnold, Eileen Bowers; back, I to r, Elsie Hines,
Gwlnnle White, and Lucretia Smith. All but Mra. White are charter
r:':hc::w:ec:·k=e~nd=====-r:=::;:;;=me;m;b~e~rs=-=o~f_:the 50 year old organization

Brand New 1999 Chevy Astro
Raised Roof Conversion Van

Wood- Vinyl- Metal

BlSSEll BUILDERS,
New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• .Roofing

ROBERt BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Spol ,

Garde n

4036.

949-1701

Public Notice

Giveaway :

e

Auotlon Fr ida y Nlgnt At
P.M
Anotn.J Gra11 load Of Merc~an­
disel l,.ocattd AI 24 1 Th.rd A \11 •

RI'IERSIO£ AIICTIOH IIAIIH •

Giveaway

N1ne week Old puppies, mother
huaky·type , fafher golden lab.

&amp;-': ......

• MalcM•g

Line Screening or any one of thetr
stroke and os teoporosis detecti on
tests, or 10 make an appointment 'resi- ·
dents may contact the agency at (800)
407-4557.
Harrisonville news
Sue Fems of Kentucky was a
recent weekend guest of her brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop.
Mrs. V~rgtn1a Gibson was a Sun·
day dmncr guest of Mr. and Mrs.
R1chard Mansey
Ray Alk1rc of Columbus was a
weekend guest of Mr and Mrs.
Roben A l k ~re .
·
Mr Bud Mullins of Charleston,
W Va , was a recent vts itor of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Mahr.
Mr. Gary Foley. Mr and Mrs Bob
Mahr VISited Mr. and Mrs. James
Rose ol Crystal Lake, W.Va., over
Public Notice

40

(304)675·3030.

Free E•timate1
R1clnt Gun Club
•Professional Routine lawn
Malmonanco and ManiCUnng
NtaH Hollow Rd.
'Aesldential &amp;Commen&gt;al
'Shrubbery Malmenar&lt;:e
Every Sunday
'S81Ving Meigs and Gallla Counties
in Ohkl and lfason County 111 WI/
12:30 pll
' •o.;
...t ........ ' "
1·740..142·2803
or
limit 680 sleeve I

·LawaC..'•Ialp

'

County Counctl on Agtng.
The. screening wtll mclude three
tests, a Carotid Anery Screenmg Test,
Abdommal Ao1t1c Aneurysm test, and
an Ankle Brachial Index A bone den·
stty scrccmng for women to check for
osteoporosis will also be offered
The tests are offered lot $35 each

Fl11taH Art Required 1-800.53&amp;!t695 24 !Hr

CaD me at (7 40) 7 42- 2842

~

naie changed for stoke ri•k screen·

Rtg/IIS

Mik e Drehe .l
Sales Representative
. Larry Sch ey

Need a friend In tbe budnea

riendly Neighbors Club celebrates 50 years
gram to help 1he needy and the club
sent g1fts to the mhrmary and ehil·
drcn's hollle dun ng the Chri stmas
season
Ofte n members served as so!tcltors for local organizations need~ng
to ratse funds and took over the
sponsorship of the Naylor's Run
Pl ayground placirtg wreaths of
rememb rance the re on Memonal
Day and during the Chri stmas sea·
son. Club members made pads for
the cancer soc1ety for many years
and served dmners to famtl!c s at
limes when deaths occurred 10 the
nc1ghborhood
All of the club's acti vities over
the years were suppoltcd by the conin butiOns of members plus proceeds
ra1 sed fro m an occasiOnal bake sale.
But the so urce of the most enwyment for members were the many

Stop In And See
An Old Friend

Don·s
H~atlng &amp;.Cooling

Reconciliation Day - ts a perfect
time 10 heal old wounds and reach
out to those with whom you may
have lost touch. Please pick up the
phone or wrnc a letter It is sure to
bring a great deal of JOY to someone
who mi ght f&gt;c in pam because of past

.Fjfty years see ms l1 ke a long tunc lor s Run . 'At any rate. the fanhful
t&lt;J'be n ' lncndl) nc1ghbor" hut a fcv. few dcspue the passage of 50 years
~gs Cou ntv rcsrdervs h,l\'c man - . col111nuc to hold reg ular mon thly
aged that
.
rncct mgs hut hypass mee tings in
Tt was 50 year;" ago o n M.trc h 22. DcLcmbcr. Janumy and February
1949. that the Fncndly Nei ghbors these day s smce the weather dunn g
Cl!Jb was organi zed 1n the Naylor's these months so metimes make it d1f·
R,LJn scctr on ol Pomeroy
licult lor ;ncmbcrs 10 get to out.
E1lce n Bowers and M1lcl re d
Dun ng li S peak, the club was
Arno ld came up wllh th e 1dea of more ' than Just a group of "fn endly
sta rlin g the club m the1r ne•ghbor· ne1g hbors" getti ng together each
hood They re cruited th eir ne1gh· month lor a soc1al time
burs to be a part of the group and ·
The orgamzat1 on became a seracllviues were off and runnmg. At YJec group m the com munuy. Often
t une ~ through the yeaiS the club had
baskets of food were prepared for
as many as 30 members. However, underpn'vlleged fa mll1es, dunng the
ume marched on . Neighbors moved Easte r season eac h year, the c.:luh
away, death took 'i ts toll and others sent Easter baskets to reSidents at
JUSt lost mtcrest
the Me1gs County lnf~rmary
'foday, there are only four charter . Clothtng was collected for needy
members takmg part m ac11vittes children and contributions we re
and. none of them sttll ltve tn Nay· made to the Jaycee Chris tmas pro·

For VInyl Siding And Aep llcement Wlndowa 100".4 Fin1nclng
No ApplicatiOn FlefuMd low Low
M onthly Payments. B1tore And
Afttr P1cturu· Plu1 Adverllsfng

2, 1999

Reconciliation Day _offersa second. chance for strained relationships
the~r

Auotlon
end FIN Market

80

Announcement•

8

• Page ~

Dally Sentinel

The

Bill
Auetlonterlng
Complete Auctioneering Servleu Consign ment auc:don· Mill
Street , Ml'tldleport, Thursdaya.
Ohio License 17193 740-989·

1623,

•

c

Rick Pearaon ....ucllon ompany,
lUll time aucuon.ttr, comp lete
auction
service .
Licensed
t68 ,0hlo I Wtst VIrginia, 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

E 0 E

A Gen1111 ElderCare •

Facillly
MedK:at Proeesscx

-

FT/PT No oxperlen&lt;JO ntee&amp;IOI)'
Wm train , PO roq~red . Earn 40K

7
l~~~c~a~ll~~~~3-~
i.WOt~~
Pr ocllsor FT IPT No

, WIH

Wain PC Req

~:7: · "·.c. 8()0.663-7440.

Eam ..

NHd 7 L&amp;dloo To Selllw&lt;!n, 740·
~3358.
Needed 17 people to 1011 up to :
291ba In 30 dlya. Doctor. recJQ~no.. ,
mended. 100~1~~~81. G .ua~ ~ .

antMd. can 80().

7.

·- • •
-·- ....
~

�•

•

•
•

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April2, 1999
Friday, Aprll2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11 :·
'

BRIDOJ:

..
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -··

PHILLIP
ALDEl\
440

Apartment•
for Rent

Needed: Dedicated AN 'a With

Suong Suporvloory SkHio 1Sh111
Difllf8nllal Offered). Please Apply

198!5 Oakwood 2 Bedrooms, 2
Bllths, AU Electric, Totally New

In Peraon At Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, 31t euckrldge Ad , Bid·

230

wall, OH

Professional

111,500, 740-~11 .

Economy Heating And Cooling,
Factory 10 Years Parta &amp; Labor

741)-245·8008

Now accepting applications for

nlghl shlh, El Dorado Adun Horne

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee UniiiB Wo Wlnl
1-666-582-3345 '

Basic first aid &amp; BC II required,

740·992·5039
E11P8llence,
Class A COL
Pay, Bonus Program,
Late Comp
Model
Conventional,
740-441-0607

Plumbing, New Hot Water Tank,
Some Furniture, Mutt Be Mcwedl

Service•

Night shit1, 7pm-9am lull time
health care, 740·992-5023 lor Interview.

OTR Driver Needed t Year Flat

1\l..--------..

Coli Aller 4 P.M. 740-2.45-1302

•

Sloroge Building, LOCOIOd: 802
Wal~ Run Rood, Crown Clly, 740256-1183.

AJI rear estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subjecl to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 whldl makes tt Illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or d1scrlmlnaUon
based on race, color religiOn,
sex lam1llal status or national
ongln, or any mtention to
make any such preference.
llmttation pr d1scrtmlnat10n •

application E 0 E
Overbr ook Center, 333 Paoe
Street, Middleport has lull time
positions tor RN Vent Nurses
ava1iable tor all shlfls and weekends. Anyone Interested please
stop by and fttl out an apphcat1on

.

Part time person wanted tor pre·
ventlve maintena nce Inspections
and repair Inspection ana up·
keep of grounds and facilities Ba·
sic knowledge of plumbing, elec·
trlcal, carpentry and HVAC. Ab•h-

1999

Pe rso nal ized Resumes And
Much Moret Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared , 740-388·
3800

Three bedroom, 141170, $1500,
740-742-2545

B Bedrocms, 2 ~ . Brlct&lt; Homo,
Full Baeement With Fireplace, 2
Car Garage, 15 Mlnutee From-

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bolhs. $199/Mo.,
1·304-738-7295.
'

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

3 BR, 2BA. 2 Car Garage. 1 N;re

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

-

Lake View

Gallla

Counly,

$32,000 More AcreQge Available,

to appreciate, will sell house with·

out lois lor $89MO , 740·982·
2704, 740-992-5686

3585,Ed. 8827, 8AM·9PM 7
aaysldslnc

By Owner 2910 Meadowbrook

140

(Roof,wlndows,skllng,door.tv

Drive 3BR, LR, Don w/FP, IBA.
Newt~

Business
Training

remodeled

In

19981

C.Carpet) Nice Landscaping,
Fence
, $74,500
Privacy

Call (304)675·5143,
530PM

Getllpolll C1reer College

(Carears Closo To Homo) Gall
Today! 740-448-4367, 1-800·
214-0452, Reg f80-05·1274B

Alter

180 Wanted To Do

I, 1999, lo July 1, 1899. Buy 3
lots. get the 4th Jree Special
Sale· Companion and Individual

GriM! MerUra

(304)5~11-2779

Approxlmatelyo 3 5 Acros In Perry
Township Phone After 5:00 740·
446·4609.
.,
Approximately 30 Acres Just ~
Mites From Gallipolis, All Woods

Wllh Nice Building LOIS EleCirlc
&amp; Water Available, Calt After 4 30
740-446-7565

Building tot In Syracuse- nice
neighborhood, all ulllltlea BIJBII-

2 BA Houae In Bellemeade.
1300 00 a month, plus deposit .

No pelS (304)67S.1477.

Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to th8 m111 JUSt call

304-675·1957

men!, can 740-992·56811.
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,

Living Room, Dining Room, Eaf·ln
Kllchen Lg Family Room 740·
245-9337
Very Nice, Well Melnlelned Brick

Housecleaning Dependable Honest Good References, Years Of
Experience
740-446-7525,
Leave A Message

Home, Great Location, LR. Large
Ei!l•ln Kitchen, FA fGa&amp; FP, Lg
U A , Partial Basement, 3 Bed·
rooms, 2·112 Baths, 1-112 Garage,
Porches, Patio. E~rythlng's Bean

Interior &amp; Extenor Painting, Ex perienced , References, Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate,
'Z'o4Q•3B8•ao.l1
I

Done ·Jull Move lnl 1128,000.
740-'41-(1641

229 Burkhart Lane, ~ Bedrooms,

W/0 Hook·Up, $340/Mo , Doposll,
Call Tol Free 888-840-0521 ,
7 Rooms, 46 Oltve Street 740 -

448-3945

-

Counlry LMng, 4 Miles From Gal·
llpolls, Large Eat·ln Kitchen, L R ,

2 Or 3 !fedrooms, Front And
Back Parch, 2 Car Garage, Stor-

age Building, Plenty 01 Trees &amp;
Flowers. BeQutllul Yard $450 Per
Month, Oeopslt And Relerences

Required, 74Q·446·4254, Or 740.
448.()205.

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References, &amp; De·

3626
Mowing, Trlmm1ng, WeedeaUng,
Tree Trlmmlng , Stump Grinding,

113,000 OBO (304)875-3123.

for Rent

One 7'x9' Garage ·ooor With
Opener $150 . One 32• Storm

port From $249·1373 Cell 740·
992·5~ .

Equal Hous•ng Oppor·

IUMiiS

Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis Location No Pets $300 + Utilities
Reference Required 740-448·

0006

ulll-les nol
887·3518

~nciUde&lt;l,

740·

Now Taking Appllca11ons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. Includes Water
Sewage , Trast\, $315/Mo. 740·
448·0008
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms , 2
Floors, CA, 1 112 Bath Fully Car·

We Do Home lmprovemen1s
From Top To Bottom For Free

Esllmalae. 140 245cll046

peted Polio, No Pols, Lease Plus

Roofing , Yard Work , Land Scaplng, Mowtng, House Painting, Inaide 1: Out! Low Prices, Low Ea·

bile home, 740·992·5038

Doposll, Call Aller 8, 740·448·
4318.
2 Bedrooms, Cloae To Store.

Schools, Hospllalln Portar, ~50/
Mo , 1260 Dopos~. Traon, Weier,
1876 Ne&amp;hue 12FI• 85FI. Wlth A Sowpgo Paid, Moy Conlldor Land
IOFI X 18FI Addlllon. CiA, Now Conlract, 741l-3ii·P325

Carpet And VInyl, Underpinning,
Fronr And Back Porch Included

I help with elderly In their
home In Pt Pleasant (304)674·

$6,000, 740-245·5503

0048.

1978114X80 Hollypark Tfallor.

Will mow lawns, trlm 1 any' odd
jobs, hlluMng, 740-992-4288.
Will stay with elderly person In
their home, nlghtll only. Have

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications tor 1BR HUO subsidized apt for elderly and hand-

Icapped. EOH 304-e75-8879.

Two bedroom apartment In Po-

meroy, no pels, 740-992·5858 .•

460 Space for Rent

2 Bedrooms, In Porter Area, Oeposit &amp; Aeferencu Required, No

Po1ri.I2851Mo . 740-388-e162

Total Eleculc, 2BR, Price Re-

2 Bedrooms. Na Pets, Rettrenc-

ducedl For mora lnlormollon, call
(304)773-5543 allor 4PM.

11, Aher 5, 740·245-5880, a ...
lara 5, 740-245-5582.

740-385-4387.

'

Trailer lot for rent In Middleport.
near grocery stores, achoolt,
churches and park, utilities avail·
able, new trailer only, no pets,

513-851.()100
MERCHANDISE

510

HouHiloid

Gooda

Jacklon Avanuo, (304)675-7388
GOOD UIED APPLIANCEI
washers, dryers , retrlgtri\Orl,
rangee. Skaggs App~lances . 76

Vlno Stroel, Call 740·«6·7398,
1-888-818.()128.
Home Interior &amp; Otner HousetiOid
Miscellaneous Call After 3PM

"1'0-"'ii;.;Jn;;;:==:_J.
210

4PM.
Uon, 111,500,
1983, 14X52 Monolon, TOIII
2BA, Now Rtfrig. 6-Carpel
Nice Golllpollo Forry,
be
ready 10 pull. $7800 . (304)876·

20. Gauge Mo88burg Pump, $150.
080, 740-256-1233.

recommends that you do business with peopie you know, •nd

NOT lo oond money through "'moll unlll vou hllvo l~veotlgoled
1ho offorlng.

740-448-8157;~1tt~rll~~~~~ili~~~

1983, HX52 Manolon. Tolal Gao,
2BR, Now Rofrig. &amp; Carpel. Exira
Nice Galllpollo Forry, Will bt
~=y lo pull SUOO (3CM)875·

530

Antique bath tub with claw teet,
Mobile
for rent In ~lnt,
no p111. 740-992·5858

Rio Granclo Area, Clooo To Campuo, 2 Btdroom Mobllt Homo,
Wtlor, Stwtgt, Gorbogo Paid,
S3001Mo. DepooM Aoqvin8d, ....

:.:.:::..__:..__ _:..__ J 84fl.0621.

,,

Antique•

$250, oall740-992·3041.
Bu~

or Hll. FHverlne Antlquta,
1124 E lflin Slrool. on Rt. 12~.

Pomoroy. Hours . M.TW. 10:00

--·

a m.111 e·oo p IJI., SUnclly 1:oo .,

8'00 p.m 740·882·2528, Ruu

And

Tax

570

Mu•lcat
Instruments

Roland X P-60 Keyboard N•w

Condlllon, Now Model Slond In·
ciUdlod $1200 (304)773-Biell.
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Gallipolis, Ohio 741l-44B·2412 Or
1-8000-584·1111.
1964 Model Valley Horoo Trailer
Red, Good Condlllon. 11500.
(304)87S.1178.

23o

Mauey Ferguson Tractor,

400 Hours, Diesel, Like New, Call
Evenings, 740-448-2158

5 Fl Grog Disk $100 00, 5 Fl 3
Point Hookup Finish Mower
50% otr ali remaining m'erchandlse, everything must go this
week. Store will close forever at
noon on Sat. Hurry In for the best

deals In lown Siders Equipment.
U~ RoUie 35, Hondareon, WV
0·6·C dozer "Cargo 60 winch",

ROPS, rlsera. very good condl·
lion , 125 ,000 ; 1991 450 G.L T
dozer, 4600 hours, new underca.r·

rlago, risers, wl~ch. ROPS, excel·
lenl condition, $39,000, 740-892·
5072.
JD 7000 No Till 8-30 Com Plenllr
Dry Fartlllzor E•collonl Condlllon,
F14~0 5 ·18 JD Plow Excellenl
Condlllon, SMral Chloe! PIOWII &amp;
Discs . Several Tractors To
Choose From 70 HP -220 HP, 2
WD &amp; 4 WD, J&amp;H Equipment

Sales Inc. Wllkosvlllo, OH 740·
668·5101
Now Taking Orders Fior Tobacco
Floal Bod Planla, .$200 Plugs &amp;

$225 Finished. 740·258-6504,
740-258·8387.

ridk'IO mower, 8 hp , rear

englno, $400, 740-992·3802.
Solid Charry doHae Table, 740-

•

Waterline Special. 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, I" 200 PSI
$37 DO Par tOO; All Brass Com-

pression Flttlnglln Slock
RON EVAN&amp; ENTERPRISES
Jackaon, Ohio, 1o800-537-B528

550

Livestock

IOih Anoual Champion Drive
ClUb Pig Salt Frlaoy llpnl 9, 1998

7·oo P.M Fayette County Fair·
grounds Washington C.H Ohio

Soiling: 200+ Barrowo, Gllll, &amp; A
Few Soloe1 Boer Pigs. AIIJlloneilr.
Merlin Woodrull Sole Day 1740·
335·9120. Gener -Genetics, Don
Blade:, 61.a-B71-7697, Jady Swine
Farm, Joe Dresback., 740·88,4-

4847, Rlci&lt;Siarr, 740·998·2515
2 Registered AQHA Horaea Very
Gentle Show Horlls, 740·367·

7530
28 Bulehor Hogs . 250 Lba $65
Each, Fair Pigs, $65 Each, 740·

Building

Suppii•

245-9~7

Block, brick, &amp;lwer pipe&amp;, windowe, llnte4a, etc. Claude: Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
~121
.

POLE IYILDJNQS
Horse Barns, Garigea, Any Slyle.
Any Slztt, Free Eltlmates, 740·

3 Pure Brad Hampshire Boars &amp;

Hampshire Fair PIQ&amp; , 740· 3792805
Chickens · Brown EgQJLayers $5
APloco, 740-256-1233

Fair Pigs for SOlei Exc0Hant Blood

384-4587.

Llnesl For more Information Call.

560

(740)·245· 5872 or (740) 367·
0583

Pete for Sale

55 galion Acqua rlu m, Stand &amp;

Accenorln
(304)773-5051.

$300.

OBO

fish, (no leaks), IOgel/$25, 20geV
$50, 28gai/S75 (304)773-5051 '
AKC

L~b

puppl.. , proven gun·

AKC Labradoro Rolrlover

~up­

Market Lambs For Sale I Call: al·

ttr4·oop.m

(740)·~1534

Mlnlalure Horao. 1 Year Okl. Call
740-448-6783 A'IW7 P.M.
Quallly Roglalored Angus Bulla
Cumming&amp;

Angus

·Farm

( 304)8~.

83 Chevy h4 Silverado SWB, ·'
new paint, excellent condition, ·

• '2

44,000 mllll, $12,500 080. 740n:!-2574

•AKQ10 4

1888 Hondo 250 4 Tracks A.T,V. ·

• J 9 3

1985 MercUry Grand Marqula,
Automatic, 302, V-8, Remanufac·

lured Engine H11 62,000 Milos,
FUII-Si50, 740-448·7215.
1987 Nluan t.taxl . Good condl·

11on. $2,5QO. 1864 Chovy Cullom
Van. Good eondlllon. 12.500
(304)885-3829.
1989 LeSable Full Power, Cl11n,

Dopendablo, 740-258-1528.
1991 Bonnavlile, excellent condl·

tion, PB, AC, 3 8 engine, $3,700,
740-949-2045.
1991 Cavalier R/a • Doora, Au10m , tvc, E&lt;COOII Concl. $3.945 00

1881 Gavallor, 2 Doors. $2,385 00

Cook Molors, 740-448.()103

1991 Pontiac Flreblrd Red, ve
engine , AT, AC , Ttop, very low
n,lles Great Graduation Gift

(304)875-2153.

17,300 mllu; $7,800 (304)578·
Custom 51 oo mites Like new
condition Lots of chrome.

740-256-8128

Bike, ~

(304)885-3270

247-2022
1992 Red Pontile Grand Am

$5 ,500. Ploaoo Call 140·387·
5055.
1893 Chevy Corsica, V·f, AIC,
3.1 Liter, New Tires, Aoklng
$3,200, 740-388-0413
1993 Ford Tauruo, $3,000 I 080.
(304)862-3448.
1993 Grana AM , GT Loaded
Power Evar;-thlng, Mijat Sell!

$5,000, 1988 'Caprice 350, Molor
Runs Great! Body Good, 11 ,200;
7.40-882·1324
1994
Cadillac
Flellwood
Brougham 24,000 Aclual MIIR. 3
Year Cadalllc Canlllod warrenly,
Loede~ . Like Now, 740-448-4254,
740-446.()205.
1988 Cllavy S·10 Ellllndad Cob,
4 WD, Automatic, Power Everything! 62,000 Milas, Custom Kit,
Ground EHecte, Aluminum

Wholll, Excolent Condlllonl 740441 ·1628.
"
1997 Honda N;cord LX 4
Black Wllh Gold Package.
A/C, Cassollo, Has 58,000 Milos.
304·882-2343 DayUmo, 30H82·
2283 Evenings.
·
1118 Oo•Kort, 5HP Tecumoeh/
OHV engine. Adlullablo alnglo
seat with aeat-balt. Like new.
(304)675-7488. Nil&lt; 5PM
1998 Pontiac Trana·Am, Navy

Blue Melallle, 5.7 Llttr, LS 1 En·
glna, L&amp;aii'Mtr ln1arlor, 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo , 12 Disc CD
Cha,nger, Fully Loaded! Will Take

Pay 011, 740-448-4548

1977 GMC 6 Mise Peril, 740·
446-3243.

1990 18' Cheetah ski boar, 130 ~
np Mo&lt;cury 1/0 w/axtru, a, ~

1887 Kawaoakl Jol Ski 1100 ec 3 ~
Sealer, Aluminum Trailer. Lilt "

Jackel, E•oollonl Shape! $5,500, ,

..

Self Propelled Mower. S150.oo!
(304)875-31168.

l-..411:: '-'"''"'"'

Auto Parta &amp;

ShltzU'I, Mlni-Snouz.era~
Shtlte•r:

Peek-a·~.,.

(304)87S.

- Acceaaoriea
and Engines, AII'JYpoo. Accon •
To Over 10,000 Tranomlsolons, ·
740-245-5877.

are-. $1!5 eacn loaded o'n vour

2006 eom.ton A"'"""

lrucl&lt;. 740-885-3825.

Pari&lt;eraourg. wv 26101
304-185-1283

Square 'bales of second cutting
g09d green mixed hay, aaey ac·
ceaa dav or night, St 50 tach,

Pupploo&amp;Fulllno of Pill . . . . .

740-247-4322

Etlltr Blonnlu
(304)e7S.SCN4

For

Silo.

850 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Dokolb &amp;led Corn I 891 Botno
For Solo (304)8715-1505.

1/N.J.£~
i£NIIW~?

'i'E':&gt;, 1\~L*(.
1\fo...\TI€: ?

"'"Q.Jf\~1

Now goa tanka &amp; body ports D &amp; :

em ,

EYJ&gt;LNI'\ me:

-rnt-:.~.1~

•

4/2

,

TEN&lt;\WQU
f.\E).If.&gt; '1tlU ~~
f\1\'it:. 10 1N(£
TKt:.&amp;.N&lt;\E.
Wt\0-1 '(CIJ

:)(%£w'upl

On After Market Sheet Metal,
Fenders, Hoods Doors, Wind· •
ahlalda, Radiators, ~C. Conden· :
sora, Over 100 Cars In Laet 30 ,
Daya For Parts, Over 2&amp; Lata
Model Rapalrablea, Powerllne
Auto Systems, 740·532-0139 Or
U S Toll Free aoo-•82-6280 KIHs
HJI, Ohio
I

en a repnevc because when he contmued wnh anol her 1rump, Wesr
mcorrectl y split h1s ho nors, m serung
the 10. If Instead West plays low, the

South needs 10 ruff o ne d1amond
m, the dummy and d1scard the other
on dummy 's second top spade. There
are two bener plays. Enher lead a low
uump loward, 1he dummy tmmedi·
atcly, pl a nnmg to mse rl lhe nme 1f
Wes t follows (ow, or slart w tth the
heart J3Ck In both cases, eve rythmg
IS und er control.

·original 283 Engine &amp; Shony
Power llUdl Tranarnlulon. Out Of
1984 Chell)' $500 For Pair, 740· ,
:156-6854

PEANUTS '
IAIELL,WE WERE SEiliND
FORT'( TO NOTHIN6,80T

or)

morut

lime

num extruded running boards, ...

(Lonl PI_.., ,

35 Choice

West 1wo trump tncb And wnh
West so sh o rt '" clubs. South cannot
get bolh dmmond losers away m

'

RteH hitch &amp; receiver &amp; Reese ;
pinnal hllch w-h 2" ball and lighl
and brake plug, 1185 OBO; alumi-

34 - Tueeday

K

my 's heart kmg , beca use that g1ves

BIG NATE

Parll. Lolo Model Moloro, Trono·
minions, Body &amp; Suapenalon

r.grel
30 Maoeara kin

All pass·

Wllh dummy'5 mne, but whal next '?
He ha~ 1wo losmg diamonds 1n h1 s
hand He cannol ru ff one w tlh dum-

One Of Tht Areas Largest Se· '
lectlons Ot late Model Auto ·

pollrlotlc - .

_...

38Sclonllal'a
39 God 1

6REAT

IMK~a
.... ,.,..

48 Boaobell club
50 Nlllve of:
aulllx
52W...... ra
surf53 Nebr.....
Indian

CELEBRITY CIPHER·
by Luis Campoa

Ct4ebrity Cipher cf'tPIOOrams ~ cm~ted from QUOtatlonl b'f lamow people past and preMt'1C
eacn ienei in tM Cipher lllnda for ano~t~eor TO!iiry'l oo. R «&lt;UUls y

•J

LJK

J N N

SDNN

W D T

TZLFEDLFT

N D P F

E Z

HFXFNZYLFKE

zp

WDT

EWF

AZHR

.
Don't g&lt;t !lung by high prrctsl
Shop 1/Jt clos~(;,d seclron.

1881 Rockwooa PopUp Camper. '•
Bough! now 1111 Auguol Hu •
Fumact, AI&lt; Conditioner, Tlnled ,
Windows, 2 Ouetn Beda, 01- ~

1882 Toyola SR5, 4X4, EO!tnded
Cab, V·B. 5 Speed, E•cellent
Condition, New Tires, 740-258-o

1504

.

1883 Chevy S-10 414 TruCI&lt; V-8,
87,015 Mlltl $7 ,500, Call Allor
f:OO PM 740-448-2394.

840 .

Eleclrlcel and

1

Refrigeration
RnldenHal or commerctll wiring,

new Hrvlcl or ..,.,,., Mllllf I.).
cennd erectrtc11n

Ridenour

Elor:trlcal , WV000306, 304·&amp;75·

17111

.'

:not

Oattened willet
SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) It's
bird to ,believe, bul even you con

1

SDTWAZKF

WOlD
IAMI

I
I I I' I I
LUHLIP

A

LT 0 8

1~

'--;A,....;.,V
,..:I...;N;.:.,.E~l:·f,
'5
6.

1l I I I
~__,,s;:;.,...:H;I~:...;...,P....::;UI,...T.:.....,I-IIa;-~~m·p;o:o rt~o- ~hucklo

I've concluded that the se. • .
.
•
ere! of being miserable 1s to
.-------__,have the t1me to wony 1f you
0

quoted

LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCIAM-liTS ANSWERS
Eldest - Paper · Quirk · Velvet- TREASURE
"There 1s a time in a boys life," a popular author mused,
"when he has a ragmg des1re to go and dig for hldder.

TREASURE "

APRIL 21

ASTRO-GRAPH

Llvlngston't Baatment W1ttr

p

1lle

810

1880 Cargo Von,.J&lt;Ioodo Lillie Proofing. 111 boumont ropolrl
Body Work And Point, Pluo Slid· dona. fret 11t1matH, llfttl,..
lno Door Window Gluo , guerantee. 12yra on lob tMperl·
$1 ,00000060 740-218-1233
.... (304)885-3887.

z

four ocrombled
form four - •· ••

1998 Chell)' S·10 Slandard, Sllort '::'~::---~u~-~--~--- ;
Boa, Caosotto, No IVC, 31,500
...,.,,.
miles, $5,800. (304)685·3808, Or
lmprovementa
,
(304)895-3025
__...;..--=~='=--..; :
1998 F·150 XL Llko Now, 5
IIMEIIENT
.•
Speed. AC, Under 7,000 Milos,
WATERPROOFING
•"

mobile homo rapo~ and mora. FGr
''" nHmota call Chat. 7-2·
tnc br1k1 hook-up, ~ookt oharp, &amp;323.
runs groat e cyl. U.ooo. OBD
(304)875-8704.
-

Y J V E

··-"'*"-.Itof ....
low to

nette, Couch, Stove, lceboJC, Tot· ~

C&amp;C General Home · Main·
ltnenct- Painting, vinyl aiding,
corpenlry, cloon, wlndowo, bttha.

Z K F

r::~:~' \C~c(llA-l&amp;"E~s·
--..;_,~..;...;._~ NtH "' QAY I. I'CKIAM

i.

1988 Ford Customiz:td Conver·
eion van . Loaded, 4 Captain
Seata, Lg Sota ·llke back 11a1.
AM/FM Casaettt Stereo System.
AC, new tlrel, RttH 1hlteh, ttlc-

E W F

VZAFVE
PVZTE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He who lives wolhout commtUong any lolly •s not so
w1se as he thtnks."
La Rochefoucauld

I FRIDAY

ROB01'MAN

Appllanco Porto And Strvlco· All

HFXZEF

~ PRINT NUMBERED

no :

Name Brandl Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guaranlted,

of

hove week willpower al limes, and
lhis might be one of those days.
Instead of succumbing lo a setback,
rearoup and try, try again!
'SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) You'll be remdnc(ul if you look
the other way today when someone
who t.s been kind to you nffils assis·
lance. Stop what you're doing and
pitch in! Your project con wait.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Any lack of knowledge concerning a
venture presented to you 'today
should be taken seriOliSiy. Gambling
in ueas you know lillie about could
prove costly.
• AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
That egd of your&gt; that arose yesterdoy could Slill be &amp;ivina you trouble
today. Don't hang1here defending an
unpopull!l' position thai could conllnue to anger assoc:iales Let it go I
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Emollons muSl be kept al bay today when
it comes to decisions thai could have
an effect on your work or career No
!Miler how stronsly you feel about
sotnethins, le1 your Josle rule.

•

IIIII moon
4011-'m.-111. •
42 Slinging
"

9

'

con work.
CANCER (June 2 l -July 22) 1!'11
be important toddy !hal you don '1 do
anylhins !O &amp;ivc someone who dislikes you a chance to aossip.' JuS! be
exira mtndful of your behavior when
ou1 in soeial seuinas.
LEO (July 23-Aus. 22) Open disputes 10 lhe presence of autsider_s,
especially involvins family problems, can make everyone look bad.
Nothing will set resolved ••Don'! be
party 10 further compllcatioos.
VI ROO (Aus, 23-Scp!. 22) If you
haven'! earned il, stay weU oul of the
spolhght loday and let !hose who
deserve accolades take lhe bows.
They'll resent you if you try to share
theif limeliahl
•
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0t:t. 23) Should
this be your desiJI!IICd shoppina dey,
take Cll'e not to Jtl Cttricd IWif sat·
isfyinJ eve,Y frivolous whims you
aet. lfyoudo, you'll have 10 live with

,.
•

by lolling In lho mlsolng words
L-.J.-..1..--.1.-...J.L.......L.--1. you develoo
from step No 3 below

wow.

Tf.IEN IT STARTED TO
RAIN 50 THE GAME
60T CALLED OFF ..

Saturday. April 3, 1999
Seeds of success out of your fer·
tile imaginallon can be sown in the
year ahead. Give any unique or orig·
inal ideas a chance to prove lhem$elves, because this 1s where your
succcsS.s could be reaped.
ARIES (March lf·April 19)
Especially ';Ohen oosts are involved,
be extra c...,ful in joml ventures
today Unless the expenses are dislriblucd equally, lhings will fall apart
Trying to pa1ch up a broken
romance? The Aslro-Graph M~lch­
maker can help you understand what
to do to make the rela!lonohip work.
Mall $2.75 10 Matehmaker, clo lhls
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mumy
Hlfi Siation, New York, NY 101~.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ll'o
like you to rely on oihen, so don't
do so todoy. Pannet~hlpo could tum
OUIIO be more of I hlnchJtce than I
help. Fend f&lt;lr yourself.
GEMINI (Moy 21 -lune 20) By
attempting to crowd too muc:h into
yollr worklotd today, you could end
up accomplishinJ little or nothina.
&amp;t.ablish a senstble qendt ·· one !hal

Ta~

a
metl
22 Cl*'t
Cl'lllllono .
24HI...
28 Atii'ICI
28 Word of

milo&amp; I owner. (304)675·2883. lol Now acreonod·ln JlOrnll ( _ , •
AftarSPM
und). Sola for S9,700 . uklno ·'
188~ Ford Ranger Exlondld Cab, 17·000 (7401992•2806
~
¥8, 4.0 Automatic, Fully Loollod,
SEIWICES
$6,500, 740·3711-2427.

new palnl, S3.BOO, 740-992·7881

Obll'on

Pass
Pass

2•
4NT
6•

Nice block omall lnrcll lopper for '
:solo:::.,cal=7;.;40-.:...::992::-657..::.;.:8·~---- '

1982 Cbovy Full Slzt Silverado 1988 25' Slrnmlllt, kltcfton ln- Stepsl&lt;fo Pickup 5 Spd 44000 DfuciH mlcrowa..,, M:, flood bed, ·
mlloa. Like Now garage Kept. lloopl7, aoklng $6900, 740-882· '
$8000 (304)87S.3753,
8158
•

1994 Cheyy Silverado, ~)(4, Low

ballplayer
3 Coming up
4 Cotton St.

9 Tovern
10F11 ElflcHYI
12 A -

E1111l
Pass

Two weeks ago, I gave some sun
combmall uns that had lobe handl ed
dtfferemly, dependmg on 1he full
deal ; It wasn ' t always suffi Cient to
take the " textbook" hne Soon thereafter, I read aboutlhts deal , suppl1ed
by Jb Lundby from Denmark Taklhg
the heart sutt 1n 1soiai10n , what IS lhe
correcl play for onl y one lose r" How
would you try to make s1x hea rts g iV·
• e n Ihe 26 cards on v1ew 0 Wes! leads
the d1amond king
The safety-play to keep your heart
losers 10 o ne ts 10 cash 1he ace You
contmue wnh a lo w heart, cove(mg
West's card as cheaply as possible or,
1f he d1scards, rismg w1th dummy 's
kmg and lead mg back 10ward yo ur
Jac k All well and good, butlhe re are
other considerations here
AI several tables, South did stan
w1th the h eart ace Yet each was g iv-

:..:..::;::.;..;;.;;;=.:...::==---- I =,-:=,_.....,,..,..=~~ ~·

1892 S·lO 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed,
AM/FM Caoseuo, Air, 13,500,
74C)'245-9454

5 - Aviv
e Pertdluo
7 Ellllon
8 - Kippur

18

contract falls True, declarer wms

--......

Sc-

33 Actor MIMO

R ,Aulo. Ripley. WV. (604)372· ,
3933 or HHlll-273-8329.

1982 Dodge 1 Ton Truck Wllh 12 $45 OBO wllh brackllo, lull slzt
bug ond front bumper •~ '
$3.000, Aloo. Mini Monsllr Pa· lollor, S3S 080, full olze PlindUII&gt;- 1
rode Truck, Like Now, SI,BOO, Call er btdllner, lallaate and and pro- '
740-446-6783 Allor 7 PM
1oc1or. $155 OBo; full olzo bed· ;
mal, $35 OBO; 1~97 ARE fiber· ,
1983 Chevy 4 X 4 12.800.00. glass topper with front alkler and
Evonlnge 740-3711-2487.
sliding aide glau, coat $85 new, ~
Mil for $726 080. All came from •
1988 Chevy Truck, E•collonl 1885 full alzo Clltvy. all In grHt •
Body, All Original Wllh Original conc1111on Cal1740-9112·1117, W
Manuals. Rune Good! 740·3792928,
'
1886 N11son 2 WD Good sha~ . , 790
Cempefl &amp;
11.200Firm. 740-268-1421 .
Molor Homes
'

448-1104.

B.V......... ~UM

wf\0

\l\1!-IU till (:,()IN(,
TOTEW\'t"OU

Budget Priced Tranamiasiona :

Ft, Enclosed Flberglau Be~

1500 lb Round Bolo, 01 M(•od
Hay. $20 each lotdtd on your Hill Blazor 4WO, 8 cylinder IU·
llthlclo. (304)67S.7e08.
' tometic, 'i:,, PS, PS, IJIIl llhapo,
740·882·7478 or 740-849·
GOOd Groos Hay $1 75 Balo, 740- $3700,
2048.
I
·LIIIGO rouna ballo of mlood hay,

ur;'l'E:N&gt;\~

IFTKel~l~

0

1864 Ford Bronco 4 Whaof Drive,
Automallc, Good Rullbtr, 11,500, french Clly Maylog, 740·441·
740-448-2983.
7795

1000 lbs ot gOOd mhc•d hay tied

•

Sears 10• Aluminum Jonn Boat :
Wllh oara. Trolling and outbOard ..
motors $300 (304)862-3448.
'

Consignments Welcome, Cattle

wllh plaOIIc, $15 ooch; 740·898·
27!15.

viAS TOO

MOM.

;

Reg~n

1 Vlailor of

By Phillip Alder

AVANT·6A~l&gt;f
FO~ MY

1890 20 Fl Slratoa Fllh &amp; Ski,
176 HP Evlnrudl, loll Of Exlrlll

very cttan, new engine, no ruat,

Hay &amp; Grain

.1 6Vff6 IT

/

111500 OBO, 740-742·7101 .

Special Spring Feodor Calf Sale
SaiUrday April lOth , AI I PM All

840

.'

;58~n~--------------- •

Parts Beat Prices In The

OOWN

Wheel continues
to. turn inexorably

.l

1873 Slor Craft V Bo11om Soal, •
and e Horae Mercury and Mlnko-'

760

-nt•

36 Women'o

HOME .

14 Fl. Aluminum John Boot. WHh ;
osra, 1300. Call Anytime Afttr 4,
740-367-7878.
;

AKC Pomtranlan 8 Weeks Old.
I300; 12 woakl Old 1300; 7

(30~)675 ·

SWEET

for Sale

740-992·3537.

North

Opening lead·

7~&amp;Motora

44&amp;-0870, 1·800·287-0578. Rog.traWalorprooflng.

LIVIIIOCk Salea, 740·582·2322,

Pass
Pass
Pass

H.OME

'

$9,100, 740-2-t5-Qt08

Weal

t•

HON
It

I1 ,00000Finn.
,
12 Ft. Sunglow Boal, '$450 oo..,

Unconditional Utetlme guai-ant111

740-e96·3531

South

NO MOLASSES,
NO SU&amp;AR AN' NO

1987 Honda Gold Wing Aapan -!

cade New CondiUon, 3500 miles! ,

1978 4.. Chell)' hall 14n, lull IIZI,

monlhl old. $175
8195.

BARNEY

$13,000, (304)578-2833.

Ia Trolling . St,OOOI (740) 245·

1991 Toyota Corolla, excellent
condition, looks good. call 7•0·

rlalll
51 PMH:e of
moll
57 ,Mill

Vulnerable; East-West
DE\aler; North

1991 Harlty Davloon, Softloll

250 Honda Custom Strtlt

43 Come togelhei

t A 9 3

2383

•

..,._.
40 GrM leiiMa
41 Ordinance

2 New York

Battery, 2 seats, Du&amp;t·Covar,

runs good. Needa a little worll .

Ane-!oPrwiou'oPuzzlo

37 Dololro) II''I

...-

198-4 Toyota Camry. Good body,

Mull Selll $14 ,500 1 740·882-

AKC Rogl-ed Flmale Pomtra·

.s

• B.

3448
Local references furnlahtd . Ea·
::=::;...
_____;.__.11ltl1lshed
187!1. Cllll 24 Hr1 (740)

nian, Orangt·Sabie Color. "'

• J 10 6 5 4

•AJ87 65

Regllltrod Black ·Angus Sullo/
11-13 monlhs of aga. A.l. Sires
9FB3 Fullbae~. Ideal 1418, and
Sloop Easy. (304~75-2098

Will Be Aocepled Ahor 4 P.M. On
Friday, Hauling Available, Alhans

• 8 6

.. -

1880, Harlay Davidson Spertsler
1200. Windshield q ags. Now

730 Vana &amp; 4-WO.

GI11174Q.388.8642

• 7 2

• J 7 632

24 Chlllallver
25 Mild explellv8
v Prickly IMrb
28 Sulllx lor
31 Artful

Old, 741l-44B-2158.

Months Old $175; Nice EBiter

.

num.,.,..

32Lowlaland

Registered UmoU&amp;In Bull, 5 Years

Make ucellant Easter

• Q 10 3 2
t K Q8 7

• Q9 4

20 C!O PI'~
21 Dtclmal

23 - Francleco

East

Weal

740 MotorcyciM
--~--~--~~~-I !IN Gold Wing, 740-11112-1135
~·

IJifl• (304)458-2443

plea

North
04-&lt;12·1111
• A K 10 5
• K 9 4

19V7'Yamoho Tlmborwoffo 4WD
A.TV., $2,500 (304)862-3448,

Sou1h

1

3.9% Uaed Planter.s 5%, New
John Deere Tractor Financing
7.99% Carmlchall's Fotm &amp; Lawn,
Your Local John Deere Dialer,

1985 Wlndllar GL Aulomo11c, AI
c , Door Locko, 42.000 Mlleo,
113,500, 740-3117.()106

-

34 Caai!H

14 - . . . LIM« 45 llegollar. abb&lt;.
II AI r.cluced
441 Author lAvin
price
47 • Down bfww
11 £aoygolng
48 SoN 11•waii!M
51 EnJoy• 1 c .....
17 GUdt on anow 54 Navlglllt In lir
11 Actor 5pltrka 55 Excluol..

Ntlda starter, ataner clutch and
bllloty. $800 (304)682·3448.

720 Trucka for Sale

Sn~

7 Pleetll' crl Parle

Rope's. For Ll&amp;llngo Call 1-800·
3111·3323 Ex1. 4420

630

on

Sporting
Good•

Impounds,

You Don'l Call Us, We Both losel
553 Jackson Pika, 740.446·8308,
BOfl.29Hl098.

-

Holkloy IM Konegue SlOp

Pollc1

Roof. CD, 4spd Aulo , AC, Power
Door/Windowo.
$15,900.
(304)773-5117

New And Uaed Furniture Store

And sao us. 140-448-ol762.

1180 ·1880CAR8 ,_MOO

Will Pay Cash lor I lo 5 acros fo
Lend lor buMdlng oRe. Call: (740)·
245-53115

AKC Reglolorod Puppleo R11dy
10 go: Poklno•••· Poodloo, Mol·
1110, Mlni-Pino. Tlfllno Dapooill

(304)874-0087 •

In~

oklo/Out, 11.200 080, 740·4411·
1045.

1998 Red Cavalier Z2.t , Sun

dogs. relerences. 3 generatlona

For Sale Reconditioned waah·
era, dryers and refrigerators.
Thompsons A.ppllance 3407

Morel Runs Good CondiUon

620 Wanted to Buy

Acquarlums with acctllorlel &amp;

520

7792

'th•

1978 Chevy Impala PS /PB. And

Wholesale To
fJ'ublic We
Stoek Janttrol Heating And Cool·
lng Equipment, Ouct Work, Reg·
l&amp;tera, And Related Material&amp; For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Arrange For Lawrance En·
terprises To lnetall For You If

Mobile home alta available between Athens and Pomeroy, call

1982 Ftsllval14 Fl. x 70 F1. 2 2 SR Mobile Homo. Sandhill
Bedrooms, 2 Batho, CrA, All Eloe- Road, No PalO, Rolaronco Ro·
~~. 2 Porcha&amp;, Very Good Concll· qulrecl. (304)87!1-3834.

INDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

sumv
We Are Professional Installation

PHO 1.a

Tobacco for Lease. 2308 Lbs
(304)5711-2306

RelerenceBI!ixperlonce ·
(304)67S.1888, oflar6PM ,

Opportunity

888·285-2123.

446-3481, 740-448·0101 .

.,

Lot. 740-245-5871. 740-245·6482

Hmatt, 740-388-8318,

Prlmestar- new direct special·
tree installation, 3 months tree
programming, limited lime only, 1·

nora, ShOll. wormed, 1101 checked,
black f yellow, $1 ~o to 1200,
740-992·3879 allor 5pm
2 Bedroom Trailer, $250/Mo , &amp;

rooms, 1 1/2 Baths, On Rented

message.

448-1458 Cai!Mforo 8 P M

740-742·2714.

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

1976 Allanllc 14 Fl x70 Fl, 3 Bed-

Will Do L/ghl Carponlry Work,

Used Pentium Claaa compulfCB,
complete 1111, $500, call 740992·8700 , If no answer leave

Security Depoalt ReQuired, 740-

palnled oulskle Must be moved.
$2,000 (304)69S.38081895·3025

aage, 740-448-6802.

Door, Ono 32' Oulokle Door, 740258-6747

And Servlco Supply. We Soil

North 3rd Ave , Middleport, 2
bedroom, unfurmshed apartment,
deposit &amp; references. 740-992-

3BA, good condition but, need&amp;

Smalll References, Leave Mes-

Nice New &amp; used Furniture And

Gracious living. t and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vttlage Manor and
Rlverakte Apartments In Middle·

1964 Windsor 12x55 w/Expando.

Palnllng , No Job Too Big Or To

9·5 , 740·446·8308, 1· 800·291 ·

pos- Requlre&lt;l, Ubllllos Paid, 741)446·1519.

Clean, Efficient, 2BR Relerenc·

es, Deposll, No Pols (304)675·
5162 .

Sandy Or Sleet Colo~. 7 Weoko,
wllh Papers , $10.00 740·379·
92t3

$300.00 740·448-7732.

Appliances, 740·446·1004, 740·
448-4039 Anytkne

Wanted To Rent. House Or Farm,
Nice Kitchen, NeQ,r Gallipolis,

141170 two bedrooro trailer, $250
month, $150 dapoaU, no pets,

(304)675·

AERATION MOlORS
Repaired. New I Rabulft In SIDCI&lt;.

0088.

470 ·wanted to Rent

14x70 Clayton Mobile Home, 2
Bedroom, 2 Bath. Free Lot Rant.

Jo~ .

JET

ancas, Lease Call (304)934·

420 Mobile Homes

and Othar Odd

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or. 740-446-4525

0165

New Haven-2BR home, garage,

320 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Lawn Mowing Service, Small
Garden Tllllng b Clean Out Garage

Baecl1 Sl . Mlddleporl, 2 lledroom,
furnished apartment utilities paid,
deposit &amp; references, 740-992·

River Frontage Deposit, Refer·

...r

Rabblta Pedigreed Mlnl·lops,

15 ·20 u ..d Tracloro In Stock
8.9P% Financing, Uood Hoy
Equlpmonl Financing As Low As

Vt:R, Storoo, All The Exlrasl
$500, 740-448-2252.

1678 Sulc1&lt; LaSoblo 80,000 Milot,

$500. OBO (304)87H460.

Pump Acllon And Olher Equip·
menl, 740·448·9182, For More
lnlormauon.

Grubb's Plano-tuning•&amp; repairs.

741)-992-2319.

7~

2480

610 Farm Equipment

41151991n Cily, 740-448-3864

0165.

410 Houaea for Rent

From Klng't Call Them, 714G-44e·

Diamond Back Accent EX 24
Speed Mountain Bike With Hel·
met. Also Paintball Gun, Tracer

For sate- Furbya &amp; Furby
Beanies, call 7"1)..742-2511 or t·
BOfl.837.a211 Lrnlttd qu&amp;ll1lies

doposl~

REN TA L S

Restored VIctorian hOme situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded a11d private, appoint-

BeaUtiful Madero 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; UUIIties. lnllrvlew, References, No Pets, LNM,
Oepoall, Non Smokers. Available,

Riverfront Camper Lots, $50.00

Wo Buy Land: 30 ·5QQ Acres,
We Pay Cash. I·B00-213·8365,
AnltiDny Land Co

Lady WhO Bough! Fomolo Pup, 21
4199 For Her Daughjer's Birthday

9742

able 113,SOO C811740-992·7727

Real Estate
Wanted

Malo· $150 00. 740·379·2524 or
74().37t-2881

erator, Washer I Dryer, 740-446-

Nice two bedroom apartment In
Syracuse, $275 per month, $200

360

Golden Retriever AKC , Puppies,
Shots, Wormed, Female·$200 00

Tablo, Couch, OlnoiiB Set, Relrig:

740·446-6235, 741)-446.()577.

cial on Cemetery Lots, from April

For Sale Poklnguo Pup, 3
Montho Old, Biondo, 740 ·4484083, 740 He 0319.

Beds, Cheat Drawers. Coffee

Apple Grove Memorial Garden Ia
now offering a limited time spe-

$400, 740-379-8247

Serious lnqulrloo Only, $300, 740·
245-8213.

(304)675-7223

1971 Opal GT Now Corb. Now
.Carpet, New Headliner, Ntw
American Racing Alma. Very

E'aater Bunl'!leal Excellent Pets

Beanie Babies For Sale . Ants,

Beanie BUddies and Beanie Sables, for Easter Bunnies. Lambs.
Cuackara. Eggbert, and Others.

Sale

Or 4·H Prolocl Rabblll, 741)-367·
7018.

AKC White German Shepherd
Pups, Famout Snowcloud Line,

Early, Pounce . Sllll have lags
on . Good condlllon . $30. lor all.
(304)675-1311

710 Autoa for

Good Shape. 14,000, (304)875·
1038.

DOCior Recorrvnonded Free SOrnplos CaM 740-441·1982

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Acrose From Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Oepos1t $32!5/Mo ,

367-7802

Georg~s

Oramauc R11ults, 100% Natural,

740-367-7485

Launch And Dock Usage 740·

O.U Or Molgs Mine, 740-898·
7150

AMAZING
IIETABOLISII
Broaklhroughlll Lou 10·20.0
Pounds Euy, Oulck, Fast

New &amp; Used Furnaces · Gas.
Electric, Air Conctlllonlng, New AI
Low As $200, 553 Jack8on Pike,

Per Montn. Plus Ulllllles Includes

Nice Family Home. With Pool ,
Apartment, Albany Area 7 Miles

/Cold Unll, Honda Engine, 740·
388-8603

Call Ron Evans, 1 81J0.537r952B

Across From Addavllle School,

By owner, 725 Page Street, Middleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must eee

4,000 PSI Preseura Washer, Hot

Christy's Family Living, apart·
ments , home &amp; trailer rentals,
74().992·4514, apartments avail·
able, furnished &amp; unfurnished

740-3811-6678

6 Bedrooms, 4 Bath Brick Home,
Corner Lot Across Form High
Sch.ool, Same Block As Grade
School And Ball Field, For Sale
Or May ;Trade ,For Acerage , 740446-4794

(304)458-1821 or(304)87S.1032.

Fisher Entertainment Centet, TV,

8352

benefits Game wardensJSecurltyfMalnte nance/Park Rangers
No exp needed For App and
Exam Info, Call t -800-813·

Furniture repair restoration &amp; re~
fmishmg, custom built reproductions LIZ &amp; Benneu Roush, 740·
992- 11oo, Appa lachian Wood·
works

1 BA Apt for rent on Main Sl

Polnl Pleasant '(304)675·2174,
(740)448-22011

304·738-:MO!I

lng: Concrete Floor &amp; Loll,

Experienced Mother &amp; Babys•tter
Accepting Inquiries At 740·256·
6537 Day ShiH Only, At Her
Home.

5054

WV, $999 Down 7 9 Financing,

5 250 Acre Lol Wllh 50•70 Build·

Wildlife Jobs/12 1 60/Hr Inc

1 SR ll!&gt;arlmenl for rani, S275.00
per month In Masoh , WV rn-

$200 74 per monlh wllh $1150
down Call1-800-837·3236.

Holzer Hospilal 160,000, 740·388·

Call 740-448-1111 •
3 Prom Ortalll Size 8 &amp; 14

e

310 Homes for Sale

3518

740·256·1576

•

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
include&amp; months FREE lot rant.
InclUdes wasnar &amp;• dryar. skirting,
deluxe steps and utup Only

A Must See Letart (304)882·

Total Tree Power Line Cleating
Worker Needed. Top Climbers,
Start Today, CBII For Interview,

2957

Oak Wood Homes, Barbouravme,

RESUMES UNLIMITED Otters

STNA'S: Wanted Call Laura At
Medl Home Health Private Care
1·800-CB 1·6334

W/0 Hook· Up, Quiet L'
1279/Mo , Plus UIIIOies, 740·4411-

Single Parent Program 800-383·
8ie2

I

lime ofllr. call HIOil-77.8-8184.

Ground Floor Eco- tor Sptach¥1Y Grounds For Nas·
Rac:o ll!&gt;nl 11111..&amp; 12th, Good
nomical Gas Heat
"~'~~·: ~I car
WedneSday 7111 '!111 Monday 12th,

S3995. Quick delivery. Call 740·
385-9621

REAL ESTATE

month free prog(ammlng Umlttd

2 Camping Spoil On Brlllol Mo·

~tdroom

with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
' opportunity basis.

maroy, OH, 740.992·5813. Appll·

1 and 2 bedroom eportmenll, ful· t69 00 purchllt price with three
nlshtd and unfurnished, HCUrlty
depoen required , no pets. 740-

Good selecllon of u&amp;ed home•

lnlorme&lt;llhal all dWellings

cations accepted until April 10.

11" DlrtcTV Sattllllo Syattmo·

Bonk Repo Mobilo Homea. Single
Wlde I Soc11onalo Financing, Lll·
11o ~ $500 Down. 740-742.()510

advertJsements for real estate
whlcn Is Jn viOtatton ot the
law Our readers are hereb~

Meigs County Dis trict Public Ll·
brary, 216 W Main Street Po·

for Rent

8862.

kr&gt;Owlngly 8CCOPI

ly to pe~orm grounds keeping dulles and oo some llhlng InqUire at

l.aavo Mouogo

Doublewldo On Lol, 800-383·

This newspaper will not

Ro~lover

12 Church Pews , 10 Ft . Long ,

cludeo ullllllos Call (304)773·

2 Bedrooms, 14x70 Trailer Complttly Furnished Or Unfurnished
New ~urnace. CA , Also 8X1 6

Golden

$350, 740 He e308

1

Balhroo1111, Walk·ln Clooeto, Ullll·
IV Room. E1ec1r1c Heal Pump, , .

~ogl&amp;lored

AXC

440

A.ll Elaetnc Appliances, Porches,

Home, Three Bedrooma, Two

12-VInyl Replacement Windows
Doublt Hung Double Pane Tilt

While, 1950. 140-441-0853.

992·2218.

1884 18•80 Sunohlno Mobile

~-----

2 Years Old, For Stud Service ,
Papere AvAilable . Contact Mike
Brewer At 304-773-5011 Or

Apartments

1 Whirl

coD

TRANSPORTATION

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Ronl, No Pols, 740-&lt;148-072.2

1882 Norris, 18F1 X 70F1, VInyl
W~h Shlngloo, 2 l!drml • 2 Bathe,

frlgarator And Stove Included.

Overbrook Center, 333 Page St .
Midd leport. has part t1me pOSInons, tor LPN's available for all
shih&amp; .&amp; weekends. anyone Interested please stop by &amp; 1111 ou t an

Postal Jobs to $18.35JHR Inc
benefits, No experience. For App
and. Exam Info Caii1·800·8133Sas. Ext 8826, SAM - 9PM, 7
Days fds. Inc

1888 14X70 2BR. 1BA Clay1on.
E•callenl Condition. (304)675·
5101 or (304)578-2101

Carport, . 740-258-6336

Days; 740-441·0558Nter6PM ,

EOE

for Rent

ACROSS

11913 lllaneled lor •

540 MiiCIIIaneoua
Merchandlee

420 Mobile HOlMe

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Preseason Bastbal Alo!Va Braves vs Ballimore Orioles {U.o) (CC)

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Page 12 • The-oally Sentinel

Along the River

Racine-Southern FFA members recognized during banquet

Easter
Morning

The Racine-Southern FFA held Courtn'H Haines won eighth
its annual banq~et on March II . place (Iironze rating) for experi During the banquet, many awards enced prepared.
were given to students and honIn sales and service, Jon
orary members.
Smith, D.J . Smith and Courtney
The guest speaker was Julie Haines got sixth place . T.J.
Mter Jesus wu crucified and placed in 1
Chance, the state reporter. She Moore got sixth place. in job
tomb on the fust Good Friday, the followins
talked about how she and her inter vi ew/ag science .: Sandy
Sunday momtng some women went to His
friends started a poultry team and Smith got sixth place in job interlomb with spice• they had propared for the
worked their way up from tieing view production.
body. They were concerned about how they
dead
last to being fourth in the
The FFA had a team that parwould roll away the large stone at the entrance;
contest
at
the
state
level.
ticipated
in the parliamentary
but, when they arrlved, they saw that the stone
was moved away from the entrance and the
The Greenhand Degree was procedure team consisting of 10
tomb was open. When they went inside, they
one of the awards given out to members : Joe Adkins, . Jimmey
discovered that Jesus was gone. Suddenly, two men dotbed in shining
Alley, Roberta Forester, Kacy
first - yea~ members. Those who
robes, appeared ·. before them. Their faces shone like angels, and one of
received
this
award
were
Travis
Ervin,
J.eremy Hill , Courtney
them said, •no not .be afraid; you are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who
Chris Proffitt, Lori
Adams,
Joey
.
Adkins,
Felicia
Haines
,
was crucified and put to death. He is not here, He ill risen from the dead,
Legan,
Brady
Bowling,
Tiffany
Sayre
,
Sandy
Smith and Matt
, as He sa~d He·wauld. Come and see the place where. He wU laid and then
go an(l tell His disciples that jesus will go before you into Galilee and you
Gallagher, ·Mandy Schaeffer, Wilson .·
shaU see Him there:
.
.
.
C~erissa Barnes, Tyler Johnson,
The county awards were given
In the days that followed, ]!'SUS appeared to many different people,
Richard Cogar, Buster Penix , out to the. urban and the rural soil
reflecting the message that the Messiah suffered, died, and rose again,
Kevin Tapscott, Jennifer Schaef- judging teams. The member~ of
· 'for the sins of the world, Bnd whoever shall believe i11 Him shall have
fer,
Stephine Chapell, Rus sell the urban team were Brady Bolsalvation. Thus, began the season of Easter.
BOEI LEE 4WARD - Racine-Southern FFA President Courtney
Krider, Jessica Hysell , Chri s . ing, Kacy Ervin, Lori Sayre, and Halnea, left, Ia presented the Bob Lee Citizenship Award from MariYeauger, Matt Johnson, Roberta Chri s Yeauge~. The members of lyn Wolfe of Peoples Bank.
f. "-d after T·go and prepare a place (or you, I will come bQ.ck and
Forester,
Lori Sayre, Amy M. the rural team were Courtney
talte you to myself, so that yo~ will bt whtre I am. ,
Wil son , T.J . Moore, Robert Haines, Josh Larsen, Matt Wil·Forester, Ian Wise, Brice . Hill , son, and Amy M. Wilson .
G(!Od New• Bl~l• Jolt" 14:3
Dally Hill, Jo.\ly Manuel, and Tom
· The FFA scholarship awards
Ware.
'·
were given .ou't to those students
The Chapter Degrees were wh o were on the honor roll :
given out to the second-year Roberta Forester; Bradon Hill,
members . Those who received Tyler Johnson , Josh Larsen, Joey
that award were Chris Proffitt, Manuel, T.J . Moore, Lori Sayre,
Brandon Hill, Travis Smith, Josh Kevin Tapscott, and Amy M. WilBaker, Kacy Ervin, Jimmey son.
Alley. Kayla Stover. David • The banquet ended with the
Nakao, Jeremy Hill, Josh Larsen, new officers taking their posi- .
Steve Smith, D:J. 1Smith, Nick lions in office . The old. officers
Bolin, and Tom Rob~rts .
were Courtney Haines, president;
The District I 0 awards were Sandy Smith, viae president; J.osh
.also given. Jeremy Hill .won first Larsen, treasurer; .Andrea Neutplace in fruit and/or vegeiable, zling, reporter; T.J. Moore; secre· third place in accounti-ng, third · tary; Chris Yeauger, student advi place in diversified crop and first sor; Chris Proffitt, sentinel.
place in floriculture-entrepreneur.
The new officers are Lori
J.R. Hall won seventh place in Sayre, president; Sandy Stnith,
beef production. Sandy Smith vice president; Robert Forester,
SPEAKING AWARD - Lori Sayre, left, Is presented the
won fourth in equine science. treasurer; . Amy M. Wilson,
good
apeaklng
award from Dan Smith. Smith also auctioned off
Kacy Ervin won fourth in sheep reporter; T.J. Moore, secretary;
excess
ham
to
help
the FFA defray expenaea. Sayre Ia also the new
production. Jimmey Alley won Chris Yeauger, student advisor;
president
of
the
RaciM-Southern
FFA Chapter.
·
.
Chris Proffitt; sentinel.
fi(St in floriculture-place'meni.
·
In the public speaking contest,
Honorary chapter FFA me111·
The Star Greenhand Award, National Bank, went to Jonathon
Nick Bolin won fifth place ·(silver berships were presented to Mr.
sponsored
by Farmers Bank, went· Smith. The Bob Lee Citizenship
READ ACROSS AMERICA - Syracuse Elementary studenta rating) for beginning _prepared . . and Mrs. Lawrence Bush, Mr. and
to
Jeremy
Hill . The Star Chapter Award ; sponsored by Peoples
recently participated .In the nation's largest literacy event ~ the T.l. Moore won. fourth place Mrs. Paul Milner, Mr. Kenny
FFA
Award.
sponsored by Home . Bank, 'went to Courtney Haines.
National Education Association's "Read Acrol8 America." Getting (gold rating) for extemporaneous. Wiggins, and Mr. Tom Weaver.
·
klda excited about reading 11 the goal of this prog111m.
A week of activities were held with the highlight' being a birthday ---------...:.;...-~--------"!""'..;_;....

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Friday, ~prll 2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

party held in honor of Dr. Seuss on March 2. Cakes featuring Dr.
Seuss characters and punch were served to the entire school by
PTO members.
.
Some of the other events were: dally silent reading, peer reading,
a lunch menu relat_Jng . to Or. Seusa characters, reading at home
· aach evening, end spacial readers from the community- many of
whom wore Cat In the Hat-style hate to read to the students.
,Here, third gradera from Mrs. Patty Struble's class have cake and
punch In honor of Dr. Seu11' birthday.
.'

____________________
_
MEJGS. .COUNTY£.'"S'
. E.R SER"/.CES.;----'---'-.f1

POMEROY
Hysell Run Holiness Church,
sunrise ·and c-ommunion

servi~e ,

Sunday, 6 a.m.; Sunday school 9:30
a.m.; worship I 0:30 a.m. and

rection of Jesus Christ" in word and
song on Easter Sunday, 7 p.m. Nursery provided.
'.

MIDDLEPORT
Community Good Friday serv,ice
in Middleport will be held •t the
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · evening,
7 p.m. United Methodist First Baptist Church, 211 S. Sixth
Enterprise
Church, silent communion, 7 to 8 Street, at 7 p.m. His hosted by the
p.m. Thursday; Easter sunrise ser- Middleport Ministerial Association.
vice,-6 a.m. with breakfast to follow. ·
Ash · S'treet Free Will Baptist
Zion Church · of Christ, Route· church, Middleport, Sunrise service,
BEVERLY HILLS ,.Calif. (AP)- Fabio was r~sting at home after being
smacked in the face by a goose .while riding a roller coaster at the Busch 143, sunrise service, 6:30 a.ln.; 6 a.m.; regular services, 10 a.m. and
7p.m.
·
Gardens theme park.
·
bre~kfast following.
Mt.
Hern:ton
United
Brethren
in
Hope
Baptist
Church,
7 a.m. Sun" I am grateful for all the cards and well wishes," the supermodel said in
Christ Church, sunrise service, 6:30 rise service, Easter morning; breaka statement issued Thursday through his manager, Eric Ashenberg.
Fabio was at the Virginia theme park Tuesday to help show off the Apol- a.m. with breakfast following. Sun- fast to follow.
Faith Chapel in Middleport, 923
lo's Chariot roller coaster. The park had pr.omoted the event as "Modern- day 5chool, 9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10:30 a.m.
South Third Ave., Easter weekend ·
Day 'Adonis' vs. Ancienf-Day 'Sun God."'
.
special services, Friday and SaturEarly into .the ride, a bird -slammed into his face. Fabio was treated for a
RACINE
day, 7 p.m. and Sunday, I 0 a.m.
one-inch cut on the bridge of his nose and released from a h~spital. •.
"I trust they will now install safety measures to make sure that this will
The Racine United Methodist Harry Wingler of Coolville, evange- ·
·
Church will stage "Watch the list.
not happen again,'.' Fabio said.
"Building a roller coaster on a lake inhabited by geese could cause more Lamb", an Easter Drama, on ·Friday .
serious accidents or possibly a child's death. I'm glad the results were much night at 7:30p.m. at the church. The CHESHIRE
less significant, " he said.
. drama will be performed by memUnited Methodist Cheshire
bers of the church. A simulated Charge, Good Friday, Addison
· HOOSTON (AP) - Fonner first lady Barbara Bush was released from a · church marketplace will be held in Church, 7 pm.; Sunrise service,
ho.spital, one day after undergoing back surgery.
·
front of the .church entrance at 6:30 Kanauga Fairhaven Church, 6:30
" II went very, very well. She's up walking around," former President p.m.
a.m.
Geotge Bush said Thursday outside of Methodist Hospital. "The doctor's
Racine First Baptist Church choir
happy with it, and I'm happy with it. The doctors took wonderful care of to present "Death, Burial and Resur- CARPEI)ITER

.I

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J

1

Mt. Union Baptist Church, Good
Friday services, 6:30 p.m.; Easter
Sunday, sunrise service, 6 a.m.
Church located near ,Carpenter on
County Road 10.
Carpenter Baptist Church, sunrise service, 7 a.m. Sunday at the fire
station on State Route· 143. Rev.
Floyd Ross will conduct the public
serviCe.
HEMLOCK GROVE
Hemlock Grove Church Easter
sunrise servi·ce, 6:30 a.m. special
music and a skit with Pastor Gene
Zopp, speaker followed by breakfast
at grange hall.
·
. . ·
LONGBOTTOM
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church will have Good Friday services at 7 p.m.'
- •
R~EDSVILLE

Eden United Brethren, State
Route 124 north of Reedsville, will
have sunrise services at 7 a.m. Easter morning.
. Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene,' Reedsville, Easter cantata/drama;&lt; ,"It is Finished", Saturday
and Sun~y. 7 p.m.
'
·

RUTLAND
Rutland Church of Nazarene,
Good Friday services, 7 p:m. with
play, "Look at His Glorious Ctoss." ·
Rutland
Freewill
Baptist
Church's 13th annual all~night
gospel sing Friday, 7 a.m., State
Route 124;·Rutland. Singers will be
Cross Creek of Buffalo, W.Va.;
Builders Quartet of Ripley, W. Va.;
Singing Hands, Dunbar; W. . Va.;
Jubilee Trio; · Called for Christ of
West Columtii.a. W. Va. ; Jody S~e
Rife of Gallipolis ; Delivered of
. Reedsville, and the Gabriel Quartet
. of Cheshire.
SYRACUSE
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene, Good Friday service, 7
p.m. with "The Earthen Vessel";
sunrise service, Sunday, 7:30 a.m.;
breakfast to follow.
'
PORTLAND
Reorganized Church of Latter
Day Saints, Portland-Racine Road,
sunrise service, 8 a.m. with a breakfast -to follow. An egg hunt for the
children will take place after church
.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Sunrise Service 6:00 am
Family Life Center

Alone on the Altar

Middleport Church of Christ

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· April 4, 1999

.

.

Vol. 34, No.7

provtston that would
allow school districts
C.~WK R·W.U.fwl,
such as Gallipolis to enter
,.. alcN the
into an agreement with
HOUtltt
FINI~
OSFC_
to build part of a
.
ApprOprllltlonti .&gt;'
project using local funds.
SuboommlttH on
It would work this
Eduo.t#On
to
.
way:
Gallipolis. City Schools are far down the list for assis- "disincentiv.e," while maintainin$ the
lnc:luM • p~
• If a school district
tariee through the state facilities commission. Among the "integrity of'the c.urrent li~t."
f1N1t would •lkiW
neWell ':'t. ~pgrade moat
300 districts eligibfe for aid, the city district ranJss as the
The state representative added an
"'ooo'"'LLAL _, ..... :..... ~ . of tts facthttes but wanted
227th.
·
amendment to the state's current cap1101
. , . . . _ ....,, • _ to bui.ld a high school
The state has committed $300 million a year 'for ital budgetthat sets aside 10percent
Info . ,
first, it could proceed with
school building assistance. (JOv. Bob Taft has proposed of. OSFC funds for school districts
OSFC
to
build,
of
•
pro,•ot
passing
a local levy.
spending an 'additional $400 million this year.
with critical needs - projects that
loctll
fund..
•
The
local levy would
Carey anticipates schools will begin to move faster cannot be delayed until a district
·
.' '' ·
then count toward the·.
through the funding·process as districts qualify for assis-. becomes eligible fqr aid.
match
the
stale
requires
when
a district.'s tum comc5 6p
tance, ''becau~ as·the school's tax base increases,.the
Thirty million dollars wss appropriated in the capital
on
the
school
building
811Sistance
list,
state's share.decreases."
budget for this purpos¢; ~d, it is estim~ that another
"This
would
be
another
tool
to help districts like
Carey called the·city's.ranking a "disincentive to I"""' $30 million will be appropriated in the biennial budget.
Gallipolis
who
are
farther
down
t~e list;" Rep. Carey
a levy for facilities. "If they I"""' one now it will not
The city school district is eligible to apply for ~hese
said.
·
.
.
count toward their local match when assistance from the funds.
·
.
"It
would
also
eliminaie
the
disincentive
to pass a
Ohio School Facilities Commission becomes available."
At the same time, Carey has asked the House Finance
Carey has proposed action he says would lessen this Appropriations S,uboommittee o? Education to include a levy because of the potential loss of state assistance."

School,building assistance:
.
'

Sat. "-"· John

'

St~te program shuts out Gallia's county district; City district far down the list
GALUPOLIS - Many school districis in southern
Ohio have reoeived school building assistance from the
state. Others will be eligible for aid over the next f~ years.
There are 611 school districts in Ohio. School building assistance is targeted to the 300 districts with the
lowest tax base. That base is calculated by the amount of
the district's tax property valuation per student.
"The legislature picked this as -an objective way that
cannot be manipulated to benefit one school district over
another," 94th District State Rep. A&gt;hn Carey said Friday. .
.
Gallia County Local Schools are not eligible for
building assistance because of the district's large tax
base...:... due primarily to the Value of the Gavin Power
Plant in Cheshire.The local district is not among the
state's 300 poorest districts.

ro .,.,
u.mg

Strickland: report reveals.
'startling evidence' about
prescription drug prices
GALLIPOLIS - Sixth District
U.S. Rep. .Ted Strickland will present a replirt Tuesday M says
"reveals startling evidence about the
high prices ·senior citizens pay for
prescription druR."
·
The Lucasville Democrat will'
host an open meeting at the Gallia
CQunty Council on Aging/Senior
Resourc;c Center on April 6, from
12:30 until 2 p.m., to discu~ problems (aced by those on Medicare;
~ the a~~t of prescription medi;
ctne.
~""'
~ ·
In a statement released Friday,
Stri~land lllid he wil.l reyeal the
results of a study conducted in the
Sixlb .District that finds •·...on average, older Americans pay over twice
as mueh for 'prescription drugs as do
drug .companies' most. favored cus-

tomers." ·
Strickland is a member of the
subcommittee on health and environment and the rural health care
coalition in Congress.

Spring
forward

watchee

811ouldh1W
been Nttorward one hour
at 2 1.m., Sunday.

Good Morning

Paces

Clllenclan

C1•!!1fteds
Cowlq

C4&amp;S
D3-7

IDK!1

Et!Uodlla

M

A.....,tbeRlrrr
Obltyadet
Sportl

C1

Bl-8

0 1999 Ollio V!lley l'ultlilto!OJ Co.

Cicadas
due for
17-year
return
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlme1-s.ntlnel Staff
POMEROY - Here come
the cicadas.
· After 17 yeus in silent ,, ·''"'"
~lusion, Ohio· largest brood
of periodical cicadas will make
their noisy pres~nce known
this spring, the Ohio Department ·of Natural Resources
reports.
.
.
Noted for their distinctive,
often annoyi,ng hum of their
collective mating calls, cicadas
can also damage .trees ~~d
CICADA ..:. An annual cicada, 1 clo•
ornamental shrubs tn heavtly cousin of the 17-ve-" cicada, IIi 811own
infested
areas,
ODNR here rMttng on the palm of lhlp Counforesters warn.
ty AgricultUral Eld•n•lon Agent Hal
They are about . 1.5-inches Kneen. The twig al80 ahown Is of the lbe
long, black and have reddish- typically targ.ted by female clcadae
orange eyes and Jep. Adults which depoalt their 111111 Into email
have clear winp with orange branch.., dam1glng them. Although
veins that arc held roof-like cicada•
large nt.., they do not
over.their bodies. Noted for its blla humane or 1nlmal1.
17-year llfe cycle, the insect is the longest-liv.ed insect in North America.
The insects arc commonly called locusts, which they arc not. My father
once said the insects arc really calling out "Pharaoh ... Pharaoh" seeking the
ancient ruler of Egypt which was plagued by locusts in the Old Testament
book ofExodus. Kids that would never touch a Jive insect, frequently play
with the ·empty "locust" husks that emerging cicadas J~ve attached to tree
trunks.
As youngsters fishing a shaded fann pond, my companions and I discovered the plentiful, buzzing insects njade irresistible crappie bait -- talk about
fabled fish bait, this stuff is available only once every 17 years!
"_Three species of cic&amp;4as will .emerge in mid-May over much of the eastern half of the state for tllis first time since 1982,~ says Dan Balser, with the
ODNR Division of ForestrY. '
•or the 17 to 20 cicada broods nationwide, four exist in Ohio. The brood
emcrsing this spring will number in the billions, mal9ng this Ohio's largest
and noisi~t crop of cicadas. This same brood will also appear in much· of.
West Virginia, the .southwest comer of Pennsylvania, westem,most Maryland and northwest Virginia." he said.
Although harmless tO humans, the insects. can damage deciduous trees,
· primarily oalc, apple, dogwood, and hickory, '"i well ·as newly planted ornamentals. While the cicadas' mar is produced by a chorus of mate-hunting
males, any damage is the work of female cicadas. Each female emcracs from
the ground to lay hu~dreds· of eggs in inch-long slits she has fUI in pencil·
sized .trce branches. These slits can weaken young or otherwise susceptible
..... PETER COTTONTAIL 111teled young vial- egp illroughout the patlc, •• did ..,_ who trees, killing off the affected branches or leaving opcninp for disease.
To belp reduce cicada damaac, Balser recommends to homeowners that
tora to the 1nnull Etlmr egg hunt eponeorecl
far • alrtlllar egg hunt at Reccoon '
they
may not prune trees this spring. Instead, dafuaged twigs may be pruned·
by the city of Glllllpolla In the city fMirk. on Sat·
rMk · Countt P•rk. lfiOMONd by the 0.0.
Continued !lfl page A2
urday. Youngawra 8CI'Imbled for candy-tilled Mcintyre P¥' Dlllrlct.
·

••••mbl•

Clockaand

Today'• ••
;, "
17 Sections -1

I

r •

Hopping down the ·b '!nny trail....
!:1118nd

Area-wide ·'~illennial Crusade' _
plarined in ·Meigs Co.
BY CHAALENE HOEFLICH

.,.."'*!., .

They're .back:

INews W•tch I

University of Rio Grande announces winter quarter dean's list

fi#ff

-

Details on
pageA2 ..

Feetured on P-ve C1

services.

Which would you rather have:
.. a chocolate egg or eternal life-?

HI: 70s
Low: 40s

Easter

her. ''

He declined to elaborate on his wife's condition, as did hospital officials.
A spokesman said Mrs. Bush, 73, had wanted to keep the operation quiet,
but, her husband ·made referepce to the surgery Wednesday during a fund· The following Meigs County Lilly, ~elinda K. Mc'oonald,- Elsie U Roush , Shell.y Sinclair, race A . Walters, Violet F. Werry,
raiser.
,.
stud~nts were named· to the UniMichelle L. Miller, Amber J: · ShirleY, ·A. Stephenson, Christy L. James M. Werry Jr.. Steven M.
~__,B,RISTOLr England -(AF)c-. Queen Elizabeth II altered her schedule so ver.s tty"of Rtp Orande's Winter-RcillmsoR;"Christopher R. Roush, Taylor 'Michael W. Walker, Ter- Wood. ·
shc could co.ngratulate balloqnists. Brian Jones and Bertrand Piccard on iheir Quarter !998-99 Dean's Honor
his\Oric round-the-world flight.
"List. To achieve the dean's honor
The monarch and her husband, Prince Philip, chatted with Jones, a 53·. status, students must earn a 3.7.5
year-old Briton, and his Swiss copilot Thursday at the Bristol balloon facto- grade point average on a 4.0 scale
ry that made their Breitling Orbiter 3.
· during the quarter.
Piccard, 41 , said the queen was "very interested in how the balloon was
Students named to the list
fueled and how we managed in the living conditions."
were: Debra K. Arnott, Racine;
"She gave me the impression she had been monitoring our progress. On Kathy E. Bolin, Rutland; Jeanie
Moat people would· aay "etemallife."
a really bad day, when we were both being sick, we receiveqa.satellite fax Y. Burson, Shade; Brian Cox,
The Eaater bim.ny brings chocolate eggs,
s&amp;ying i( we made it she would come and see us," said Piccard, a psychia- Middleport; Brenda K. Davidson,
trtst from Lausanne.
.
..
Pomeroy; Stephanie English;
but ]enu bringa etem:allife~
The men became the first balloonists to circle the globe nonstop when l\1iddleport; Rebecca M. Evans,
they landed in Egypt on March 21 after a 20-day flight.
Reedsville; Danielle E. Grueser,
It's for that reaaon we want to invite you
Pomeroy; Mistee D. Grueser,
to worahip with w thia Eaater.
LAS VEGAS (AP) -· Famed tenor I:uciano Pavarotti says he doesn't Middleport; Trina G. Hannan,
know quite what to expect when he performs for a third time in Las Vegas Pomeroy; Norma J . . Howell,
Maybe you have a big dinner planned ~r an Eaater egg hunt.
next week.
,
·
Pomeroy;
Robin
Hubbard,,
B.ut he knows _there will be some roulette tables waiting io take his money . Racine; Tammy Jarvis, MiddleWhy not plan tQ rnO.ke wor~hip part ofyour!day ·
port; Jessica R. Jo~nson, Middleagam.
Pavarotti is to make a rare appearance in this gambling capital April 10, port; Kathryn D. ohnson, Midand
sta·rt
in ,churf..h?
. .
.
christening the 12,000-seill Mandalay Bay Resort &amp; Casino Events Center. dleport; Pamela King, Portland;
The concert will be his first here since March 1985.
Judy Kirk. Langsville; Jennifer R.
•
He recalls being "very comfortable" With his Las Vegas audiences, and . Lawrence, Syracuse; Tracy Ohler,
•·
in the casino - at least for a while.
· .
Middleport; Micah J. Otto,
"I won a ·couple thousand dollars at roulette," ·he recalled this week. Pomeroy; Adam W. Roush ,
"Then I lost it, like everybody does."
· .
Racine; Jessica D. Sayre, Racine;
A celebration of the Resurrection with the Easter Cantata
Kelley Snider, Racine; Michael
Pavarotti , 63 , is having . a good 1999 after undergoing hip and knee
.
~
I
replacement surgery last · year. In addition •to solo engagements, he per- R. Sobieski, Long Bottom; Bevformed in Tokyo on Jan. 9 with Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras.
- erly D. .Stewart, Rutland; Jeni L.
Stewart, Pomeroy: Teresa E. Var· Breakfast-7:00 am
LAS VEGAS (AP)- Singer Phyllis McGuire -avoided a conviction on ian , Rutland; Penny Werry,
Worship 1-8:15 am
Pomeroy; Melissa A. Wilfong,
criminal charges stemming from a confrontation near her posh Las Vegas Middleport.
Sunday School-9:30 am
home.
·
·
· '
·
The following students were
Worship 11-1 0:30 am ·
In a deal announced by her attorney, John Moran Jr., misdemeanor named to the deaQ 's merit list,
~harges of obstruction of justice will be dropped after McGuire donates ,having achieved a 3.5 to 3.74
• $5,000 to. the Injured Police Officer-'s Fund and perfonns 40 hours of com- grade point average during the
munity service.
quarter: Robert E. Arnott, Sheri
McGuire was not present at Thursday's hearing, but Moran said she .is L. Billings, Anne M. Bis~op,
F'lfth at Main
expected to appear Aprill3 when the case returns to COlJit .
Mary E. Blair, Rhonda J ..Dep.ue, .
Police claim McGuire, 68, refused to get out of a car driven by her body- Maria D. Frecker, Cheryl A. Lau- ·
992-2914
Don't forget t.o set your c!ock ahead 1 hour.
guard when police stopped·him on March 24.
dermilt. Mar,k F. Lewis, Dale
•

$1 no

901JOf

-

.

Inside

I .

born. Tlie momentum to move forward with the crusade community choir, it was reported.
·
nmaa 8anttnei.8Uiff
came from Gary Griffith who had been instrumental in
Ways of raising .money to finance the ctusade were
POMEROY- Ari area-wide Millennia! Crusade for bririgi~g the Duncan Family from. Florida to t~ I'Qint discussed 1nd several ch~hes asreed to taking up.~pe- ·
Olriat will be held .June t -5 in the Meip High School PIC8¥ftt Armory JiSt fall for m&gt;lvalservil.1CII and envi· · cial offerinp. Ari account is being set up at. Peoples
JIYmnasium.
sion&amp;! a camp meeting in Meip County to sprad the · Bank in Pomeroy for church and individual donations.
Evanaclist for the non-denomin~ional crusade Will news thll Jesus saves. •
· Griffith reported on promotional activities, including
11c the Rev. Olirlcs Swigger who has been pastoring
The initial public meeting for mlnistel'l and othel'l . newspaper, radio and television prog~ming. as well ss
c:hurches, doinjJ Olristian teaching and cou~ling, and interested in a millcrinial cntJ!Ide wu held at the Senior outreadl work in the oomrpunity and llrough the churchevangelistic work fc;&gt;~ the past 40 yeus. He has held . Citizens' Center early this year and about 12 churdtes · a. Packets of information will be sent to area ~hurches
revivals in churches of almoat evccy denominati011.
were represented. At thll time it was decided to move asai11 inviting participation in the crusade planning. .
Swincr moved to Meigs. County three years ago forward with plans for an area·widc crusade. · ·
In preparation for Olristian counseling at the crusade
. after ;retiring from American Eledric Power• •He has
About 20 churchea are now involved in the planning, Lamar O'Bryant will be oondueting training sessions at
since putored the Rutland Nazarene Olurch and t:an- and the support of otltera.ls beina aolicited. Denom!na; the Southern Baplist Olurch for allaf workers and pas· .
dueled revival services in several churches before going . tiona include Nazarene, Olurch of Christ; Southern o.p. tors, Aprll26 and May 10, 7 p.m.
•
into fulltime cvan,elism Jut sumriiei'.
list, Ameridtri Baptist, Free Will Baptist, Methodilt,
It wu 1nnounccd that on April 17, a free seminar will
In talking about the crusade, t~c Rev. Mtirk MorriJw, Ameril:an Baptist, Pcntecollal, Olurch of God alan&amp; be co!ldufrted in Piketon by the Billy Graham crusade
pastor of the Middleport First Baptist Olurch comment- with scveral _nan-denominational churches.
·
· team and the possibility of so~ ~ttending that ~u disod that •AU great movements of God arw brought about
Monday night at a meeting held at the First Southern cuased. · Sample ttacts were dtstnbuted for posstble use
by prayer".
.
Baptist Olurdt, plans for the Crusade for Olrist were ·durin&amp; the crusade and a decision card is in the process
Morrow said that prayer for the crusldc began Jut furthered. Joe Sayre, chllinnan of music reported that he of being developed.
.
FOR CHRIST- A n - wtde
June when' community ministel'l 'attended a weekly and committee membcl'l had met at the ~~:hool and
Lawrence Foreman is chairman for prayer meetings · for
will be held at the Melge High
·prayer service organized ,by the Rev. Les Hayman of the looked over the gymnasium to detenninc needs for seat- in ~paration f&lt;!r the crusade, Bill Quickel will handle nal!um June t-5. "*- wortdng on piiM
Ash Street Free Will 8aJI!ist Olurdt.
.
Ina ~d sound.
.
parking attendants and ushers, and John Moore was ewnt .... the Rev. Chartae R. 8wlgger, ~ -n.
Morrow lllid 1hat it.was in those prayer group1 the . . Special m•ic will be featured at all services 'and elected chainnan of the building committee which will -gelltt, left; Mll'lt MoiTOW, cruiiiCie chiii'IIWI, and
Qary Grtfllth, thalrman of p«~motton, ltandlilg. ·
. Idea and vision fot an area-wide revival or ci'IISIICX wu Dennis Welver
hu been contra&lt;:ted about organizing a handle.preparing the building for the crusade.
.

.•

.

. '

.

.; '

.

\

I

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